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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-02-14 - Orange Coast Pilot• •• • DAILY PILOT Blonde Singer Slates * * * 10' * * * MONDAY AfTERNOON, FEBRUARY 14, 1972 Tes~in,1ony on Irving \IOL. u, HO. ll, J Sf (TIONS, st l".&.CllS • • • • • • • • • • Two Supervisor Opponents Blocl{ed Steivardess' Operatio1i OK BELGRA DE, Yugoslavia lAPJ - Vcsna Vulovlc, the b I o n de stewardess who survived a 32,000- foot fall from an exploded airplane, underwent successful surgery today in Prague. the Yugoslav ne\rs agency T;injug reported. ~1iss Vulovic, 23. was the sole survivor when a Yugoslav DC9 jetliner exploded over Czechoslo- vakia Jan. 26 at 32,800 feet. Strapped to her seat. she plum· meted lo U1e ground and wa s found half an hour later lying in a stream. The 27 others a board were killed. Reagan, 'W arrn' Says Wife Nancy SACRAr-.1ENTO (API -Attempts to pain t Cio\'. llonald Reagan as an "un- fi:>rhng. unsympathetic man" are \.•:hat hothrr her most about public life, says his 111i!e. Nancy Reag an says the G<lvernor is really a n1an v"ho performs ';1\'arm and compassiona!e deeds each dl'ly that are llnknov.•n to the public" -like arranging for a dyi ng boy's visit to Disneyland with comedian Red Skelton . Mrs. Reagan make the observations in a weekl y ne1vspaper column copy righted hr the Sacramento Union . l-1 er un specified fee is donated to the National 1.cague of Families of A m er I ca n Pri soners and l\11ssing in Sout hel'lst Asia. Nudies Get Benefits SHEFFIELD. En gland (UPI ) -The Shefrield City Corporation has approved a request for special sick pay benefits for six women nude models at the Sheffield College of Art. The models said the pay is necessary because of the danger or their catching cold while posing. , Orange Weather Fair skies through Tue"lday, the weathennan says, bul sUghtly cooler temperatures along Orange Counly's coastline. Hlghs Tueada7 80 to 73. Lows mosUy In the 40'•· INSmE .TODAY A top.flight casl 1urna Neil' Siman's "Tiit Star Spangled GirL" into a hit fo r tht West· minster Con1mu1i.it11 Theater: Set review. Paf}t: 17. l.. "'' •• ,, ' hltlii. H C•lll9rnl• I CltUlllH ~·JO (•tlll(I I' C'Oll_,.. H Dtttll frolt!1<tt II .,lt.,.lal ..... ' e11t•r1•I~ u ,..,.1111« , .. " I'll' "" ·~ " -" .,.,, UMers ,. M1Ubt• ' Mt\'lel 11 N.lolltnll NtWI 44 Or•llt' Counl\' 11 SHrb 21-11 li.d ,..,.111111 , .. ,, TtlevltMll U "n!ttter1 '' ·-. Wlltt. w1• n w ....... ,..... 1).11 w .... ,,...., ... • ' 8 Million Londoners I 111 Blackout By JOSEPH W. GRIGG LONDON (UPI ) -Millions of Britons ~hivered today in dark, unheated homes and offices. Industry, bl acked out and disru pted by crippling power curbs, laid off te ns of thousands of workers. London city authorities ordered mos~ street lights, already knocked haywire by hours;.Jong power cuts, switched off altogether unt il the crisis ends. That meant a vi rtual wartime blackout, ~imll<1r t.o \Vorld War 11. for this capital city of eight million. Everl Buckingham Palace was dark and chill y. But Queen Elizabeth TI was not affected . She is on a state visit to Thailand with her husband Prince Philip and daughter Princess Anne. With a six-1veek-old nationwide strike of 280.000 coal miners biting deep into fuel supplies. Britain was gripped by its grim· me st .industrial crisis in a quarter-cen- tury and perhaps since the 1926 general strike. British newspapers called it "Black Monday." Government officials predicted millions would be laid off by midweek. The opposition Labor Party . limbering up for an onslaught against the govern· ment in Parliament later today, lam· basted it for "gross mishandling of the dis pute from the outset." In a sta tement published after· a meeting of the party's national exeCUtfve committee, it accused lhe government of ''incompetence" i• tackling lhe con· sequences of the crisis "which ll:Jould have been foreSeen and which have led to panic measures inflicting additional damage on the whole economy." '!be automotive industry wu hit hard~t. British Leyland, J a g•u a r , Trluritph, Rover, Ford of Britain,: V~x· hall -General Motors' British subiidJary -Chrysler and the Joseph Luca automobile components plant laid off_ or put nearly 50,000 workers on part.time. 'Ibousanda of YorkshJre and L;aocashire steel and textile workers were lent horile. The slate.nm Britilb railrolcl oys!em canceled 1.11111> lrainl IJ1d atow.ct heallng .-ltlll nnmlng to .... eledric power. Comll1Ulen '1llvered • """':Jammed Jn. to lhl'lralnsll11lll\imlllli-:-' Ofllclala l'""'""-lfaa~suppliel were ' ~·A~ J -ot 1be counJ'. mlll<"bOIWnl• · t!Okd IJ1d milk .,,.as rattonec1.-·r · , ..- Bread .af¥1 tQ .UDiJaes a~ were threatened btcause ~ IJ1d packing plants were without pOWtT. Rotating power cull lilacked out ID to 1:; percent 61 the couri.ky in turn for the rifth succesgive day. , str .. t traffic llS)lt.! went out in blackeck>ut areas, 'causing immense jams. On the London •tock market nearly 13 billion was knockel off share pri<a In the firsl few mioola of lnldilll. Selling built_ up· u lnvostors ahowed ISM STmKE, ..... II '\ I Flippin~ Flapja~k Flappers Will Fight Decision, SayswenKe By JACK BROBACX 01 Ill• 0.11"1' Plltl lflft Orange Co unty Registrar of Voters David Hitchcock refused to issue nomina- tion papers this morning to William Wenke, a cand idate for First District Supervisor. County Counsel Adrian Kuyper had ad· 1 vised Hitc hcock nol to issue papen1 to ~ either Wenke or another First District candidate challenging Santa Ana in· cumbent Robert Battin , John \V, "Bill" Jiill. Kuyper said his advice was based on a 1933 sr<ite Supre1ne Co urt decision which ' ruled that a potential candidate cannot mo1·c with his distrirl when its boun· darie.~ are changed if he has not rulfi lled !he full residency rcquireinent of the new district. . \Venke has cal!eri a press conference for late today but said this morni ng that he will take cour t ac!lon to compel J litchcock to Issue and to accept the nomination papers. Wenke and l·li!l were gerrymandered out of the First District when new Unes were drawn and approved by the Boa rd of Supervisors las t Octobe r. The new boundaries were hastily changed in tbe last 24 hou rs before approval wa s i:e· <1ui red by state Jaw. Four of the contestants in the annual Shrove Tues· day Pancake Race between Liberal, Kansas, and Olney, England,. practice over the weekerid before the big race Tuesday. Both towns have won the UPITtl ........ event 11 ti mes since the competition started in 1950. From left, th e contestants are Airs. Rita Johns, Mrs. Pat Clark, Miss Jolene Habi ger and Mrs. Cheri Van Sickle. The two candidates, both longtime resident s of the First District In Santa. Ana, moved In November upon legal ad· vice that lhey would then be permitted to run. Wenke wu the !irst candidate In Une al Hitchcock's office this morning the first day In whJch candidates for supervisor an d state ·and federal offices may take out papers. Countian Dies In Wild Chase Near. Clemente Bl' JOHN VALTEllZA • Of "" DI"' Plfrft SMff '4 SO.yut~ld man from Orange driVing a llo*t Border Patrol car 1t full bore w~ killed lnatanUy belore dawn today wl!in he slimmed the vehicle Into a brlilge . sbutinint· 1t San Onofre u aullloritia ...,.., In· hot pursull. 1'lie bhom crash had an even fn9re' 101usual \lrtltlde •aa Louis Edwin HJl1 of! 41t-Crest Road ·usertedly set up oeveral ruset before finally stealing Ute .,..... patrol car at lhe atten check point 10Uth of the San Clemente city li mil8. The series of incidenl8. according to highway patrol spokesmen in Oceanside, went like this: HJS)lway potrolm<n first noti<ed Hiii In a park e1r on the San DJego Freeway do'l!•coast of the cheokpoint 1t aboot 3 a.m. and the m.ant told Qfficen he needed 1aoollnt and 1 tow truck. 1bl orOcers called for a wrecker and (lee QIAU, P•I• t) ·~ • • Blonde Singer Slates Testimony on Irving NEW YORK (AP) -Nina van Palland~ a beautiful blonde folk singer. wenl to the federal courthouse today to le.lilly belore a grind jury probing her friend .CllUord Irving'• "autobiography" I or Howard Hughes. Tbe »year-old Danl.sJt.-born barone&ci, Htranpd from her Dutch busband, has · Rid 'tl\t~ Jmng didn't leave ber sight 1 long>"encJugh • to interview Hughe• when ohe 11111 Irving wm together In Mexico. Stld arrived at the courthouse In a chlulilur-drlven . limousine with htr manager, John Marshall, hi s wife and th!it lawyers. ' The federal grand jury continued Its in· vestigation of possible mall rraud in the case as Time magazine published ex· ocrpts of Irving's book which the magazine said proved much or it was pirated. Time, calling Irving "Con Man of the Vea r," uld lrvlns Admitted the hon to fedmal proaecutora In an elfort to spore .. .... -· ..-.-. his wife from Jail. Irving's lawyer, Maurice Neaen, called the Time artk:le "a Cloatlng, ,pranc;lng, distorting piece that la ""-nalble tn the extreme.'' The magazine prlnfed part GI Irvln1fs book alongolde · ....,,,ia, froal u ·un- publtabed manuscrlpi. • bt fne.Jance writ<r aames , Phdan· to ,._,phulze the 1imilarlUes.. ~ Ti!M , oald It did nol . kJMM. how' lrvlng p ined access to Phelan'• n.Wiltctlpt. The ma1azlne said Irving told feder•I invetUgators he y,•ould accept 1 prbon term for fraud and perjury fn n chanse for lo nlency by SwiM authoritit!! on for· gery and bank fraud charges against his wife. Edith. Jn Los Angeles. a spokesman for the Hughes organization was aaked about Tlme't allegatioM of fraud and replied , "That'• what we aaid Dec. 7." The spokesman. Rlr.hard Hannah, said (Set HUG HES, Paae l l '· He sa id he was under the impression that he would be given nomination paptrs but that when completed they would l\Ot be accepted by the registrar. • "I have no quarrel with either Kuyp,er or Hitchcock," the Santa Ana attoti»Y said. "They aro doing thelr jobs ';u prescribed by law as they interpret it.'' Kuyper said this morn ing that after consulting with the State Atto~y General last November he told both H"tll and Wenke that they could move into the new First District to qualify as can· did ates. 11owever, an appellate court ruling ln late January clted the 1933 supreme court decl1don which was concerned with a similar que1Uon tnvotving a Los Angeles city council race. "When the appellate court's ruling was brought to our attention we had 'f\"o alternrttlve but lo advise Hitchcock 16 wc did," Kuyer said today. If the two potrntllll candidates are (See PA f'ERS, Pa.ce St 'Spirit' Aide Dead SAN DIEGO (AP) -Herbert A. ThomJ>Mrl, a cablnrtmaker Who helJ)fd build "The Spiri t ol St. Loulo" airplane which Ch•des A. Lindbergh Oew to Fr• ce, Is dead at 74. l ~ % OAll V PILOT S t ----- ~New Book ll ~ Ex-Hughes Aide Irked by Irving ' 6y 808 THOMAS ~ LOS A~GELES IAI'I -"I'd like to IJpoke. h1m in the nose," Noah Dietrich J:aays of author Clifford Irving. lndlcalions are that Dic!rich'.s cen1- tniscences as a longtlll1e aide 10 111dustr1al . Howard J~ughes. soon to be publlshed, were used at least in part fnr ITv1ng's ··purported autobiography or the recluse 1L bilhonalre. .{ 1'~or ·~years. Dietrich so(OO ln the !Qng 4 shadoW of flr1w~1rd Hughes. .. Now, the crusty 83·yc<1t'·nld 1,1, 10 the ~..ipollighl and enjoying It irnmcnscJ:i-. Dietrich's reminiscences, •·Howard - The AmazinJ t-.1r. 11ughes,'' wi!I be publlshed late this month by Fawcett. He '"Was asked why he wrote the book. rf "l delayed a ·lpng time; 1 left Hov1ard '4n 1957," Dietrich remarked Sunday. :: f'or 'a Joni period, 'r debated whether ~ * * 1( c ·Frona Page J ii ~JIUGHES ... ~ ' there would be no further comment until officials read run accounts of the manuscript compe.riaon . The New York Daily News said It learned tt'lst U.S. and Swiss authorities agreed secretly to drop charges against -Mrs. Irving If her husband coope rates and "some<ine goes to jail." U.S. Attorney Wb.ilney North Seymour Jr. declined comment. but Swiss officials dismissed the report as "nonsense." They • said a courier was en route to the United States with a demand for Mrs. Irving 's extradition. Dr. Gerold Lucthy. Zurich'.~ chief prosecutor, said Switzerland •·could never agree to such a deal." Dr. Peter Veleff. the Zurich dis lric! at· 1~rney who heads the Swiss probe of the' case, Went secretly to f..1 ad r id , ftpresumably to troide information wit h ..,Span ish officials. , Baroness van Pal landt, a neighbor of ·the Jrvings on the Spanish t-.1editerranean jsland of Ibiza. declined to talk to reporters as she arrived for the grand jury hearing. Marshall said he expected he and Mrs. van Pallandt would make only one ap- pea rance before the grand jury. Time said Irving might have sought the deal for his wife 's freedom in fear that she might tell her side of the story in anger f ove~ his a Hair y,·ith f..frs. van Pallaridt '. • The magatlne also said that when Irv- ing was confronted with the new evidence Of manuscript similarities he com· rnented: "It 's more complex th an you ever think. You haven't seen the bottonl Jjne yel. There is going tr be some big 1hews breaking. So be careful." Irving's portrait appears on the cover 'of this week ':; Time. beneath the caption, ·•·eon Man of the Year." The artist is 'Elmyr de Hory. Irving's neighbor on the Mediterranean island of Ibiza and the )ubject of "Fake ~" lrving's book about a 1naster art forger. ,.,.. Asked what he thought of the portrait. t rving told newsmen , "It doesn't look at \II like me. It's a lousy picture." .r Time's parent firin. Time , Inc .. owns ·Life magazine. which purchased the syn· dicalion rights lo the book from tvlcGraw· Hill Publishing Co. for $250,000 La ~t week. Life canceled the contract after decid ing the book is a hoax In its story Sunday. T1n1c ma,'lazinc said that lr\·ing admitted lhrou~h his lawver in !he t.: S. aUorncy's offite last \vec;k that "his baroquely detailed SC('· nar10 was a fraud " Time said the admission t'ame after Jrving·s rcscarchrr, Richard Susklnd, told told aulhorilies that contrary to his earller affi davit he had ne ver seen Hov.'ard J1ughes and Hughes had never offered him an organic prune. ~ lo write t>ie story , because l didn 't wetnt lo be accused of pullinl!'. a 'kiss.and-tell ' act " "/ finally decided Iha! I had an <Jblig11- tion to the American public to show at close hand the abuses of ~reat wealth r had soo" morif'y n1isused by Jeg1sla1 ors and other public officials. I was com• pe!led on mora l grounds to write the book. "Obviously at ai.1r am not going t11 ('n· Joy the monetary rtwards from ~riting a book. J suffer !rurn n1ya::;!hepu1 gra> 1~. 11·hich is a breakdown be!v,.een the ner1 "S and the muscl es of !he fa«l·. ·· he said. J·:xcepl !or dr11opy <'velirls, f)ietri1·h shows tittle ev1dcnee Or his ailmenl, wh ich he controls hv rnedic ine His vo1te is as ~trong as when he htld a cun1· manding post in !he llu f.(hes empire. He was slowed by a prostate operation Fri· da y, but is expected to return to his vigorous daily routrne by t11e end of next week. Born in Batavia . \Vls Oietrich was the son of an immigrant <:erm an preacher. .He was a certified publi c ;:iccounlant in Los Angeles ln 1925 when hired by 19· year-old llughes. · "/ got tired 0f tid ying up af!f'r lloward's 1nesses." said Dietrich. ''I also was tired of Howard 's broken promises. f<'or years. he had promised to give n1c a capital ga ins deal so I wouldn't hand ovrr most of my salary to the government. ~!ere. I was being paid n1ore than half a million dotlars a year and l was pa ying more in taxes than Howard with all his rnillions ." Dietrich is a business consultant and still ~oes daily to his office in Century Ci· ty._ Whe~ he decided three years ago lo wrde his book. a law yer friend in- troduced him to James i>helan. a frC<'· lnnce writer of magazine articles aboul Howa rd l-lughcs. Afte r lv.·o years, Phelan produced a manuscript salisfactory to neither a publisher nor Dietri"h. Stanley Mey er. a film financial figure, o~fcred to . find . a new v.·rlter. George ~!dney, ~ fi lm dJ rFc tor familiar wilh my biographies of Harry Cohn, Irving Thalberg and WaHer Winchell, recom- mended me. Dietrich and I worked together to pro· duce a totall y new n1anuscript. f..1canv.·hile. a copy nf the previous manuscript apparently fell in the hands of Clilford Irving. The questioJl is : hov;'?' The man uscript circula ted in pu blishing channels and could have been copied . Dietrich noted that f..1eyer met with Ir~'­ ing last June in an attempt to ip terest the atlthor tn writing' Dietrich'S book. But Meyer has denied showing the Dietrich manuscript lo Ir ving. Irving has nol divulged how he ac· quired the Dietrich man uscript. From Page .1 STRIKE ... fears the crisis would seriously hit business profits. Throughout the country. pickets of striking coal miners blockaded power sta- tions to prevent delivery of coal. At least eight power stations have been closed and another 50 of the country's 148 power plants were forced to cut back power pro- dt.:ction sharply. In two incidents. violence flared ·when pitketing miners cl11shed with police. At Bridgv.·ater. in Somerset, 100 miners tri ed to prevent unloadinR of coal from .a \Vest German freighter. Bricks were thro1~·n through the windshield of a coal truck. At Longannct in Scotland. rnore than a dozen miners v.•ere atrl'sted and three policemen hurt in clashes outside a power station. The miners are stnkini; in support of a 47 perce nt pay hike claim. t' UPI Teltphot9 HOWARD HUGHES !RIGHT), AIDE NOAH DIETRICH AT 1947 CONGRESSIONAL HEARING Time Magazine Calls Irving 'Autobiog raphy' Identical With Earlier Manuscript Huge Student Boycott Meets Busing Program AUGUSTA, Ga, (UPI) -Jmplemen· la!ion of Phase l of a federally-ordered school descgregallon plan in1•o!v1n~ massive huslng met v:ith a widespread student boycott here today in Richmond County. Near-empty buses arrived a! rnany or the cou nt y's 52 pu blic schools anrl school supe rintendent Roy Hollins s;iid 1hc bnycott appeared lo be "right <'ffective." The plan for the county was ord£'red hy U.S. District Judge A!ex:inder A. Lawrence of Savannah . and is to be car- ried out in three phases. The initial phase today involved the c!uslering of seven schools, with the busing of an additional 5.68t studenls. The plan triggered a furor and brought about a call for a statewide boycott. Passage Leading Pack as Yachts Near Acapulco Special lo the DAILY PILOT ACAP ULCO -\V indward Passage v.•as occupying a glassy sea off Zihuatanejo at 8 a.m. (PDT \ toda y wi\h Jess than a 50-50 chance of setting a hew elapsed lime reC(lrd in the San Diego to Acapulco Yacht Race. Zihuatanejo is 110 nau tical miles from Acapulco. Blackfin and Sirius II were about 20 miles behi nd Passage and exchang!np; greetings al roll call. Blac kfin appeared lo be a few miles ahead of Sirius IL Enthusiasm began to boi l up at the Club de Yates here today v.•ith the possi bility that one or more of !he leaders would. be finished by midnight. The lead yacht. presumb\y \\'indward Passage, must fi nish at 9.15 p.m. i PDT 1 to set a ne w record. The present record <1r eight days, nine hours and 15 minutf's i~ held by Sirius II, now skippered by Bob L.v nch of Newport Har bor Yacht Club. Poor radio communications made reports from the other yachts impossible unt il later in the da y. No pickets appeared at any of the schools but v.·hilc parents milled on sidcv.·alks <ind drove past the schools "·ith chi ldren in their ca rs. The boycotL sponsored by Citizens fnr Neighborhood Schools and the Sa\'C Our Children c'.:1)mn1ittec, defied an ord er by Lav.Tence expressly banning boycotts. Stanley Cook. head of the Citizens for 1'\e1ghborhood Schools said his group 11·oultl sponsor ;111othcr boycott Feb. 28, JU St before im plen1enta1 ion of the second part o[ the judge's plan . Con k said he expects a ma ssive withdrciwal of studen ts by while parents laier this week . •·r know sonie members of our grou p hare been cont acting chufches and other organizations lo ask them if they can use their buildings for tutoring," he said. Butler High School, which was not in- volve d in the Phase r desegregation order, reported about 1.400 of its 1,600 students were absent tOOay. At Richmond Academy, also unaffected by the initial order, offic ials said onll' abou t 20 percent of ils J.400 studen is v.·ere present today. At John f..1 il ledge Elementary School, one of the seven involved in Phase I :inti the scene of a \l'h1te parents' protest this we ekend , 91 b!aek students arrived by bus to attend classes. but only nine v.·hites showed up. The school has a total enrollment of 489, including 307 whiles. Although the plan does not specifically set up racial quotas, il v.·ould mean that enrollment of each of the seven schools would be at least one-third bla ck. La"-·rence·s res training order threill C'ns a $!,000 fine and a possible one-year j:.d sentence for anyone taking part in such a bo.l'COI!. "! expect a v.-J1o!esale boycott on the part of v.•hite parents," John Ruffin Jr., atto rn ey fnr the black parents 1vho brought suit to force integration, said Sunday. "I really don't know exactly what lo expect. but I hope their plans are not violent." Bobby Beazley. attorney for !he coun!y sr:hoo! bo.:ird. said parents have the right lo protest the racial busing of their children. Air,vest !•'lig hts Set to Rest tme J-lughes Airv.'est officials announced they will resume pa ssenger service to 28 cities on Feb. 22. Flights to the other 46 cities on Hughes routes 1vil! be announced v.·ithin 10 days. An\icipal!ng con1plete sC't\\ement nf the eight-11·eek n1echanics s!rike. !lug h<'s rn;ide public the br1ck-tn-1vork schedule pending rritifico:ition of a ten\ati ve agree· n1ent reached F'cb. 6. If approved hy the Aircra ft ~1f'chanics Fraternal AssociatiLJn. !ht' pact also must pass the pay board. The 570 stri king rnl'chanics \vill vo!C' afler all procedures for c;i!J1ng ernployes back to \\·ork ha\·(' bec·n ironed out. The ilirl1nc rcach<'d back -lo.\vor k ac- cords 1vith pilots and stewardesses last v.·eek. F1·01n Page l PAPERS ... e!irninatC'd only t 11•0 others \\'il l rema in to t:Ontest Battin in the June 6 primary. Thc;i' arc \Vally Davis. a Foun tain Valley atto rn<'y and Paul Batch, a former aide to Hep. Joh11 Slhrnllz tR-Nc11,port Beach). 1-hll, a Joni: !1111e San!a An a busincss1nan, v.·;:is n11t a\'ai!ahlc for com- n1cnt th1~ 1nurn1nJ: bu\ an associate st1id he v.·iJI undoubtedly t<1ke legal action to regain his candidate status. So1neone 'flot' Over Movies \VICHlTA . Kan. ll'f'J) -Some one painted "Long l.!\f' Sex Fl1rks" tudity on the trunk of a rar bclo.1g1nli( to a rnini.ster 1\hfl ha!i foughl the sho1rinf! of obscene mo vies and then stt the automobile on fire. Thf' car v.·Rs dcstrovf'd. f~ven its roof 11·as mel!cd by th~ heat. "Jn everv con1n1unl!v there are sick people ""'1th :;1ek ;11inds," the Rel'. Hoberl Ely suid. Russ Fh·e New Lunai· Spacecraft By DAVID NAGY A10SCOW I Uf'l 1 -The Soviet Union today launched its first moon mission in five months and indicat('d the unmanned Luna 20 era!\ would attempt a soft Ian · dlng. The last Soviet lunar-landing attempt ended in fa ilure when Luna 18 vanished into the Apollonius Mountains Sept. 1 L Western spaee ('xpt_·rrs :.ald !l11•y lhoughl Luna :!O. like Luna 18, 1night he: earrying a nrw Lunokh1iU L'Xplorcr r111J11t or n1 u re sophistJL'Jlcd ,s(JJJ.~cooprng dcviL·c·s. "The Sovi1·l L'nion launrhcd the ;iutomn!ie station Luna '.!O tod:iy 11 Ith 1!1r ai1n of further e.xplora1 111n 1Jf the 111 0011 and ncar-1noon :-;pacc.'' th e official 'J';1~s I\'ews A~ency said. !n Soviet space tern1inolo~s. the pl1ra'ir ''exploration or the rnoon and near-moon space" has indicated landing mission<; as opros<'d to orbiters or fly-past n1isi.~11ns. "Accordine to trl<'1nctric inforina\11111. the station's on-board systems and equip· n1ent are functionin g norn1ally,'1 1'ass s;ud . It usually t;ikcs Sovi£'t Lun<i craft about f11·c d;iys to rc11ch the n10011. \\'h£'n Luna 20 gels there. it 11·11J find Luna 19 still in orbit. Luna 19 left earth a f('W weeks af!t•r the ill·fated Luna 18 rnission. popped inlo orbit Oct. J and h:i s bcrn there sinte. rarrying out research into spate radia· tion. magnetism and other areas. The Luna 18 mishap broke a string r,f Im pressive accomplishm'ents achieved by the unmanned Soviet moon program. The Soviets never cxpla inf'd whf'!her It crashed or toppled over upon landing. but announced Sept. 1 L that contact was ]fl~t :is soon as Luna JS l;inded in t!Jc rugged mountain art'a. Before that. in 1970, Luna 16 l>ecaml' the first unrn anned sp;-ice vehirlc l!l ~t·nop uo moonsnil and return to ear1h and Luna !7 fe rried the Lunokhod I robot to the Sea of Rains. Front l'"ge 1 CHASE ... routinely left the scene .. f\ few rninut cs later the s:irnc h1gt11c1y patrolmen received a call that molonsts had set'n a nian JyiJ1g in the road\\ay. 1'hey searched for th<' .. l'ictin1 .. hilt fou nd no one. The next call came at S· 10 a.m. as 1!11! appro<1 ched Border Patrolrncn on duty and asked for the Highway patrol because he had been ''invol\cd in an ac· ci dent." The san1c Cll r flfficer.~ lhrt kf'd the "accident scenr" and foun11 n11th1n~. 1\ppcaring .. shaky ;ind upscl," 11 111 thrn bcg.:111 11·alk111g 10 the l'idr nf !h<' high11t1y, a nd !hen suddcnl.r fl'ignr·d a 1•1Jll<ipsc. Bord er Pa!roln1cn helped lh<' n1etn In his feet then pla ced Hill 11110 a patrol car tn drive him a short di stance to the nf· fl ee. As the patrolmen 1valkcd inside to call :in ambula nc<', _Hill slid across the fron t sC'al and sped off in the car. Spokesmen from both agencies said th<' en suing pursuit n·as frantic. Hill allegedly dro ve the auto al spee ds in excess of !00 n1des per hour, heading north on the frcen·ay. Geueral's Wife f)ies \VASHlNGTON (U PI ~ Funeral services 1,1,•l!\ he held here Tursd<11' f<Jr \lrs. Emmaline A. Eichelh£>rCf'r. V: 1du\V of (:en. Hobert L. l::ichclber~('r' \.\ hn rom· mi!nd<'d the 8lh Arn1y in the P:1c1f1c dur- Jng \Vorld '\'ar II . lnJrrmcn! 1\111 /l(· 1n 1\rlingto11 National Ct•1r1elt•r1· \1 rs. 1:~1chelberg<'r. a nat1~·c of Ashc11!1e. ,\· C, died Friday. She was 8.l ORAW•I COAST ·~' . • You1/ Like Us • Navy Refuses to Comment DAllY PILOT N•wport IMl.li L., ..... K. CeiITTI .Mn• HNtl.,too '-• ,.,_...1. v.11.,. hliC~"'• OitANC.e: COAST PUllLISHIHll C"ON.PAMY ~ohert N. w,,d l"rir;IClt nt 1nd Publli.hW J1ck R. Cu,1•'1' ViU l'r1iid.,1 •nit G-r•I MtntfW Thom•• K11vil E<1llw · lho,..11 A. Murphino M•11t;l119 Edl111r Cht1!11 H. Loos Ri·c~•,cf I'. Nill Aallll~I Mt .... 11\rtl l:Gl!On Offk.11 co,11 Hollt : no wn: l\tf s••r.., NfWPCUI 11 .. <ft: J.U1 ~twl>O<t llcu'•v1Nf L•ll-llMcft: ,,.. Fn•"! A ••~u• MUf'lll"fll1'0ll 8Hcft1 l lflS bu'~ llourtv•.W k,t1 Ci.mtnl1: J0J Nor111 ll CtmlnD II.NI • On Loss of Barge, Gear BAYVJE\\'. Idaho (~\P) -Navy of- ficials 11t the Underseas Research and L)evclnpment Center. on Lake Pend Oreille near here, have refused comment nn the reported sinkin~ of a $5 mi llion batgf lnadrd 1~·11h electronic gear. Hcsidcnts of this northrrn ldnho com- munil.\' SH~' ii i~ ·'con1n1on knowledge·• thP bargr s;in k during a severe s!orm in \ale ,lant1'11'\ But !i1c N11vy in San Dicgn confirmed !ht' sinking and s111cl a n11val invest igation is under \\<1 1-. The gcar Which v.·as lost belonged lo it bu! "lherr is not hing more which can be said al th1.~ time." said a spokesman for hradquarl('rs or th<' Under seas Research and Developn1ent Cenler at San Diego. "We have absol utely no commen t on th e subject." CWO Richa\d Rohrbacher. officer in ch11rge of the \Navy unit 11t Bayview. stiid when quest ioned by reporters. "Any lnform11tion will hsve to be oh- taincd from nava l of!lcials in San Diego." He said he's no! sure who those of· ficials arc 11nd "probably won't know un· tll sometime next Weck ." He said the in<'ident Is based on hearsay inlorniation and :;aid he "sees no reason for pr lnlin& a news story on the su~ject." fd han(Jry, man11eer·of Bayview Resort ~·~ most residtntl know of the incident, however. "It was one of the worst storms wt''ve / ever had in the area." he said. "The barge. which is loaded with a great deal of electronic gear . .sank during the night. leaving a diesel fue l spill. ''However. the lake wa s so rough due to the storm that the spill dissl pated soon after." Landry said. The resort owner said the barge was named "Big Charlie" and w;i s used to lower a large submersible devi ce the Navy is using in· lhe lake lo test sonar and torpedo S}'Stcms. a project Landr said was highly ciassified . "The bar&•·!eighs about 80 toos and Is the only one •of lb kind,'• he said . "Its estimated Xalut is SS to $8 1nlllion. Land ry said sources ha ve Indicated lo hhn a deep-diving vehicle will be brought in in aa atte.m'pt to raise the barge. Max McK lnfey, a charter bo~t operator on the lake, said a salvage crew from Sin Diego "'wlll ha .. -probl•rns ~-tbe barge is locat.ed ln extremely deep water and It is not knoWn exact!y where it r;ank." Reco rdings on Sex? ROME 1UPT\ -A rrcord compeny ha.! launched lttdy's first sex educ.1tlon recordlng1, The idea I~ to spare em· barraumenl to• parents and teachers by having leSAOns rtad out In unemotiorniJ tones by men and women announcers. Full Selections of New and Used Items of ' All Sorts and Varieties EVERYTHING UNCONDITIONALLY GUARANTEED Diamond Center tor Orange Co11nl.f1 COSTA i·MESA OP.• Da lli 9 to d 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA I JEWELRY 6. • LOAN . ' Comt In and BrOIDlt ArlHlnd Phon• 646-77 41 Betw"n He rbor and 8r01Ldwt1y r I .. ...... -.. \ MondlJ, r tbruary 1<1, 1972 s OAILV Pll.O! I ., Boy~s Best'.·1 Friend is Dis Valentine • ! Five Mo1~e Co1111tia11s Die As T1~af f ic Ca1·nage Soars Fl\'C persons d1r<t in Urangl' County \\"C'ekend traffic bringi ng the total fatalities tnr 19i2 to 38. \\'h1rh eon1pares "·1th 20 at th is stage la st year. Four \1·erc killed early Sunday \\'hen flvo cars collided on a road\\·ay parallel- ing th£' San J)1£'gC1 Frre1ray on the soulh\\·est side near La guua !lilts Leisu re \\'orld The fifth \'lCllnl. a 2-\'ear-old Santa Alla girl. dit•rl Saturday anCrnoon in a bicyclc- {'(I[' are1dc111 The dead -\f'.-lrinc 1st Lt. J\'ormnn E. lla~ck, 2;i 01 2~982 Pres1d10 Or11·e. L.1gu na ll 1Jls. -Sandara l.1·e llasrk. 26. his \\'1fe of the s<1n1e <iddress -Chri stoprr LQn)!. Ii. uf 2:12-10 Tcrreno J)r1vt . .\-liss1nn \'iCJO -l)a nicl StC:Jr11~. !IL ul 2j!UJ c.1n1p() nnJO. El ·roro. ---.~u~;in Bri~o11, 2. ol 2226 HucklcbC'rr \ Hofld. Sa nta 1\na E. (;c nnan Escapes URA L:\SCl!\\.EJ(;. Germany ( liPI 1 - A 22-year-old ~:nst German border guard fled across lhe forlified dem<1reation line \\'ith his i;:irl friend Sunday . \\'est German rustorns 1x1hcf' s;iid tod:ty . The t\\'O ear crash took place \\·hen a north bound car driven by Long crossed o\'er a double line to p;iss a third vehicle al the crest of a hill. the California lligh\\'ay Patrol reported . All four \•1ctin1s "'ere trapped in the rlcn101ished cars in the ! :JO a.in. ac- cident. There \\'as no fire. The llaseks \rave three small children . ont·. h1·0 and four ,·c ars old. Thcv arl· be111g c;ired tor by fel]O\\' officers in the lieutenant ·s squadron at f'.:J Toro ~larinc 1\ir Station. Hasek "·as an A4 Sk~·ha\vk allack bomber pilot. l!c \\'JS from Sprinj!· field. Ore.. and recently joined V\1.'\ squadron 214 . S!earns. a passenger in Long·s ca r. Y.·a:-; dead on arri\'al <it ~tission Con1munity !lospit.11 ;ind lhe other three died al lhc :-;rrnt· of the erash. the Or;inge County coroner's office rr-portl'd . The Brison cl1ild. daughter of l\lr. and r.lrs . c;corge Brison. \l'lls riding on lhe handlebars of fl bicvcle 1\•ith her !3·vear-old aun! Leona \\'e.lchcr of Long BeaCh. police sal<t. The tv•o ,,·ere struck by a car driven by Robert 0 . Stoughton. 45. of Santa Ana , on ~:. lith St. near Huckieberry Road. Officers said the bicycle y,•as ridden in- to the path of the car. ~l iss \Vclche r is in satisfactory condition at Rivervie'v /lospital. police sairl. S!oughton v.·as not cited. BEST JN BERLIN BERLIN t UPJ I -K;iethe l..crn,. a 51-ycar-o!d house\vife \\'On \\lest Berlin's "f\1iss Boso tn'' title last \VCek \Vilh a 4~-i nch 1ncasu rc1ncnt. Registrar Loses Vote Affidavits On South Coast \:ot('rs along tnc south coast ,1·hose registration nun1bcr is bct"·een 8152801 and Bl52850 should i m tn ed i a tel y rer('~ister if they plan to \'Ot £' in this year's election. Copies of affidavits f ;i 1 ling brt1rcrn the IY.'O nu1nbers \l'Cl'C inadvertently destroyed b.1· a deputy rcgi slrar. :-;aid :>.!rs. Blanche Lonie. supervisor of tl1e registration division of the Rcglstr;-ir or \'oters office in S:1nta An:i i\lrs. Lonie said UH' regist ration number is found in the upper right hand corner of the yello1v copy gi\'en to voters \\·hen they registrr She said the registrations \1·ere taken in the south coast area during the past three v.·eeks. DAILY l"ILOT l"MtO• D' l " ... , .. SHARING -UNTIL YOUR FRIEND TAKES YOUR SHARE Wife Dies on Desert Trek Husbcuid , Cliild Survive Niglit111are in Australia PERTH. Australla 1 UP I) A kangeroo hunter has found the body of a young mother who died in blistering hrat at the edge or the 1'\ul!abor Plain after :-;he and her husband tried to carry their 18-inonth-old son 32 miles to civilization \1·hen their car bley,• a tire. The husband and child n1ade it. Kangaroo shooter Ron Sells. \\'ho organized a search party. found the body or ilfrs. Lorraine Audrey Evans. 28. lying a mile fron1 the tracks of the Transcon- tinental Rail'A•ay and seven miles south of her home in Reid. The Evans' au to bleY.' a tire 47 milf?s south of Jteid. but Norman Evans. JO, sluffcd it with rag s and managed to drive <tnother 15 miles. he said. Evans said they carried the baby for several miles Thursday then he and th e infant fell asleep in a patch of shade. \.'ihen he awoke. his \.\•ife was gone and he assun1ed she had gone on ahead and was already in Reid. He co ntinued walking down !he road\\·ay carrying the infant. stopp ing oc· casionally to drink "'ater from puddles left by a brief sho"'er, and m;ade it to Reid Saturday. They arrived in Reid and found r.irs. Evans was not there. SeJls then organized a search party. He found ri.trs. Evans' body, most of her clothes disca rded in the extreme heat. VEGETABLE COCKTAIL ''She must ha\·e dlrd hard. but she had a ton of guts," Sell s said today. "She had tried lo cut through the bush even though she u·as b.ir~led, to try and get help faster for lh baby. "She died thirst and could see the Rf'id tower, f ll of water," Sells said. "She must ha . realized she 'A·as going. She l;iy do\\'n in Rn open clearing. put her arn1s over her chest and died.·• The Evanses had been on a holiday In !he South Australian port city of Port Ar,usta, and were returning to their home In Re id, in \Vcstcm Australia . Evnns and the baby were hospitalized suffering from exposure . Dad Files Suit Daugliter's 'Promiscuity' Cited RENO, Nev. (U PI ) -A. father has fil· ed a $~~.ooo damage suit against the Uni versity of Nevada , claiming the col- lege's "U pward Bound " prog ran1 led his 17-yea r-old daughter to intoxication, pro. miscuily and u•aywardncss. S. F. llatfi eld. in a suit filed in Washoe District Court, said he let his daughter enroll in the program lo ''improve her academic progress." lie said officials assured him she would be properly supervised. Instead, 11atfield charged, the universi· ly released the girl from the program wi thout paren tal approval, causing her to ren1ain absent for a month, to become "frequently intoxic ated," and to participate "willingly or unwilllngly In numerous act.8 of sexual Intercourse." Hatfield said the program instilled "a mood of di ssatisfaction with her en. vi ronment'' and "Increased the genera- tion gap between parent and child." Hatfield's suit also nanted the state of Nevada and the univcrsily board of regents. Up1vard Bound a cc e p Is low. performance students will coltef!:e poten- tial fro1n disadvantaged fam11iCJ and tries to enhance thei r skills and moliv•· tion for college work. Participants fre-- quently take a summer session at the university before regular freshman enroUmcnt. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • The blend o'r vegetable j uices "·hat "W0\\'8'' them C\1ery time! ••• Serve it for breakfast chilled ••• for a waker upper of lunch time appetite." .•• fo r an introduction to the evening meal I And, every time you pour it, you'll be glad yo u thought to get it at El Rancho's IO\\' price! 6 oz. Add z.ing to V-81vith El Ra:ncho'1 Vodka •.. half-gall-On .•• $8.88! Aged Steaks • • • • • • • • • • 1'op si 1·l11in cut :; of U.S.D.A. Choice beef. naturally rigccl. \Viscons in tender Yeal, in slices that make Scallopini easier! Fresh Beef Tongues ................................. 6~i. For a change of pace ..• young. to be tender ! Fresh Eggplant ........................................ 19fb Dip in egg batter, crumbs :in<! fry. Serve \YiUt Scallopini. Pricrlf in rffrct ~f on .. Tuu., lVed., F f'b. 14. 10. lfi. No sales to dealers. Margarine .............. 29c Blue Bonnet ... flavor that's ao re\\'&rding! ... I lb. pkg. Crackers .................. llc Sunshine's Kriapica ••• and they really are! ..• l lb. box. Macaroni and Cheese ........................... 3 * $1 Van de Kamp'a , •• frozen! ••• 11 oz. packages go so fnr! Monterey Jack or Longhorn ....................... 49¢ \Vith Lent ahend, you'll be S<'rving cheese often ! Schrcibcr'l!i ~ ••• 8 ot. ARCADIA: sunset an d Hunt1ng1 on or /1/i'i/. PASADENA: i1/M. SOUTH PASADENA : /I/Al; HUNTINGTON BEACH : " /l/i'il· NEWPORfBEAl:ll:~2i2i'N'e~piri '81~d ~nd IEI Ran cho Center ) J10 Wcsl Color.odo Blvd · frenront and Hunllngton Dr .. .,,. Warner an~ Alion q111n •Roa·dw .11~ C•n'er. ... 1555 Eastblufl ·Dr (Eas\bluff.Village Conte1) ' J I \ • - : ~ ~ ... 1.1 .. Y PILOT \ \ •· I ~ps What's News With Hughes? By THOMAS MURPHINE 01 llM De ltr ,.llM Sltff UPCO ASJ', OOWNCOASI': No, gentle reader, I haven't any bttter idea than you do where the Clifford Irvlng·Howard Hughes .saga will end, or when, for that matter. It just seems to roll on Jlke Old Man River. One wag in our newsroom, however, in- £1st.s tha t If the Hughes thing ever does en:f, it will clim ax !Omehow ln Newport Beach. Why? "\'.'ell," he confi des In conspiratorial wr· 1er, "every time a big story break! on the national scene, there ':ii 1 Newport B· ·-::h angle in lt somewhere. Why should H"'ward Hughes be any exception ?" INDEED, THERE'S more than a shred of truth in Newport somehow managing to creep into a lot of stories on the na· tional news scene. But as for the elusive, reclusive multi· jillionaire, there ha sn't been an authen· ticated report of him showing up in Newport or anywhere else alo ng the Ora nge Coast Mind you it's not that the tipst ers out there in Pilotland haven't been trying to find him. Each week we get a num ber of reports that se nd our news sleu th s scur- rying nff to vacant lnts or empty store bu""ings. So far, no Howard Hughes. Once he was reported holed up In Newport's Balboa Bay Clu b. Another time he was In a yacht off Santa Ca ta lina Island. mining the ocean bott om for gold. UPON ANOTHER occasion, he was E,Jing to buy North American Rock well's whi te elephant ziggurat down in Laguna Ni:::;uel and tu rn it into a drydock hangar for that big sea plane he built, the Spruce Goose. That would have been a case of getting two v.·hite ele phants together -a heck of .a story -but it didn't pan out either. Hughes is reported fl ying in and out of Orange Coun ty Airport all the ttme. Often 'he's at the controls himself. Sometimes h(l's 1n sh irtsleeves in a Pi~r Cub or at nf'xt report, clad in overcoat and dark glasses, slinking off one of his awn Hr"hes Airwest jetliners. Each of th ese tipll sets checked out by our iriterpid reportorial staff but each time, :iiomehow, Howard has given 'em the slip. l'LL RA VE TO admit there was one r e'lOrt of Hughes on the Orange Coast wherein we d.Jdn't really check it out with our usual verve and vigor. That was the one where the telephone whisperer con· fided that Howard was driving around do wn 1n Monarch Bay at Laguna Niguel, just next door to Salt Creek Beach . "What's he driving," we asked, pencil poi~ed over notebook . "It's an old Edsel four-door sedan with ru~t on the fendets." ou r informer re· p!i"d. \Ve thanked him fnr his trouble. Recently 1\'C printed a composite pie· ture of Mr. Hughes, heavily touched by the artist's bru!>h. ll v.·as done over a 20. ycci r-old J!ughes photo and was suppased 1o show what an older Hughes might look like today. "TlllS LhTF:ST outrage will surely bring him out into the open," one of our cd1ln rs beamed as he inspected the ar·work. T11e effo rt, however, failed again to fl r:;h The Man . One thing appeallnc 1bout all the J-fughes stories i11 that nobody seem11 to be really hurt by all the ballyhoo. \\'el!. nf COU Ne, Clifford Itvlllg might not agree. President Grills China Experts WASllJNGTON (Al') -With b11 depu1Urt fw PU!ni only Uree days off, Pm.,..t Nllon boa u ked his lllaff for mott lntormaUon and called ln French lnteUectual Andre M•~•IL< for expert anawen on China. Nixon ha a been preparlnc for months for his historic talka with Chlneae leaders and bu everyone doing homework on H. Thll'1 the rtuon for today's White Houle meetlne with Malr1u11 the termer Frencb cultural mlnlater. • Nixon, In dl&clo1lni plans for lhe meet1Jl&, n ld he wu: lmpresaed with Record Stri·fw• MalrlUI' ana.lylil, la hll "Ant.lmemor- J..," ot China .oM COmmunill Chalrmon Mao and Pttm.Jer Chou En-Jal. Nixon sUJI 11 DOI 11U1fled with tho mountain.I of maiula.l he '1 been pro- vided. Prtsa secretary Ronald L. Zlealer saiid Nlxon, returning from Florida Sun- day night , had atked the Natlon al Securl· ty Counell for more anawers. "He had more questions he wanted explored ," Ziegler aald. But the press secretary wouldn't say whit they Involved. The China trip Is considered &o sensitive In the White House that for 1 Huge B52s Make Massive Attacks SAIGON (UPI ) -American B&.2 bomber11 flew a record 27 strikes ln11lde South Vietnam today during the Viet Cong Tet lunar New Year truce. One American was killed and three wounded In fightlng near Saigon . The Viet Cong truce (or the luna r new year began today and runs four days. The all ies' own truce began tonight and runs 24 hours. Asked why the crescendo of bombing, the U.S. spoke:iiman at a military briefing today said, "U.S. troop strength is down to 13.200 and we are going to use our alr power to protect American troops during tha t withdrawal." U.S. force were cut back by another 2,500 mew la.rt week and the 13,200 men left is the lowest figu re since August, !~. "We dnn't mean to suggest that the enemy intention is to hit only the Americans," the U.S. spokesman said. He said the U.S. bombing is meant to help South Vie tnamese troop s as weU. U.S. Navy and Air F'orce fighter· bombers backed up the B52s wlth 176 strafing runs. the most in South Vietna m since Sept. 24, 1970 when there were 192. All 176 of the so-ealled tac tical air strikes were in the Centra l Highlands where U.S. Intelligence expects any Com. munist ofle nslves will be Jaunehed. The 27 missions by the BS2s out- numbered anything in U.S. com mand records which go back to June of 1968. But many of the mis.!ioa.s today were by one plane each r1ther than the usua l three and well sho rt or the six aircraft per mission which wa s common when the air war reached its pull. four years ago. The South Vietnamese command said the Viet Cong had violated their own Tet truce at lea!t four times in the first few hours of the standdown, killing seven South Vietnamese troops in the process. The U.S. Command reported that as of 17 hours after the beginning of the Viet Con11: truce, there had been no attacks against American forces. Jn 46 incidenb In lhe 24 hours ending at 6 a.m. today at least 39 of them initiated by COmmunlst forces. 131 North Vi et- namese and Viet Cong were killed at a cost of 19 South Vietnamese killed and 13 wounded along with one American killed and three wounded. All the B52 bombing raids since Satur· ,._.., .. HfAS 0 ...,., 11 ., • ••tM·-' ..o•••'" ~'°i--'-.._ 1 C•• ~ ...,.,~...... • <::i • Ship Found A team ot divers Sunday iden· tilled the wreckage of the tankar V. A. Fogg which dis- appeared without a trace two weeks ago. The tanker carried a crew of 39. None have been found. day have been flown In the Central Highlands against a Communist troop buildup for what allled Intelligence says will be an offensive timed for President Nixon's vislt Sunday to Peking. Most of the B52s hammered what the Communists term Base Area 609. where South Vietnam, Loas and Cambodia come together. It was the most 852 raids ln a single day since the records began in June, 1968. Passe1igers OK Aboard Chilean Rescue Vessel P UNTA ARENAS, Chile (UPI) -The captain nf a Chilean naval ve.o;sel said lo· day that the passengers 11nd crc1v rescu ed from the grounded cruise liner Lind blad Explorer were safe and in good spir it! and awa iting clear weather for the 540· mile voyage to this seaport. the 1vorld's southern-most city. Capt. Carlos Barra von Kre chmann. skipper of the naval transport Pi!oto Pardo, said, "the passengers are in a perfect state of health, none is sic k or in- jured.'' Von Krechmann said he took aboard lfM passengers including 78 Americans, and 40 crewmembers of th e Norwegian cruise ship. It ran aground on rocks on King George Island between the ti p of South America and Antarctica Friday. The captain said the chaplain or the Chilean Antarctic Fl eet celebrated a special Mass of thanksgi ving for the re scu ed passenge rs Sunday . "The.re was great jubilation." Von Krechmann said. Von Krechmann replied in a radio message to questions radioed by UPI. He said the rescued passengers included the Americans, along with Argentines. Cana- dians, an Englishman, a South African . Belgians, Dutchmen, a Brazilian and Gtrmans. Von Krechmann said the Piloto Pardo reached King Georg e Island in the South Shetland Island chain eight hours after the Lindblad Explorer went ag round. lie said the rescue operation took two hours ••amid bad weather conditions." The passengers reached the Piloto Pardo in lifeboats from the cruise ship and the Chilean naval vessel. The skipper said the passengers' luggage wa! also tra nsferre<t without loss or damage. The British Icebreaker Endurance reached the scene Sunday and left a 11alvage expert to help the few crewmen of the Lindblad Explorer who stayed abollrd to try lo refioat the vessel. "If the Lindblad Explorer is not floa ted soon it will be destroyed on the rocks when the next storm hits the area."' said Adm. Ladislaw D'Hain and. commander of the Chilean Antarctic f'lcel. He arrived aboard the Chilean Navy tug Yetcho The rescu e passengers and crewmen jammed the tiny Plloto Pardo, which normally ha s a crew cf 44. An An tarctic blizzard had held up the departure for Punta Arenas. But a Navy spokesman said the wind and snow had abated aomewhat early today. Um• members or NllOl'l'a advance te.amJ didn't want to l&li about the boob Nlxoa waa readJ.nc on China, or even to give An opinion ol whot thoy thought ol Peking d11ek. One blllder eonctded : "There's an e.x· lr a dlmen,.elon of 4ecrecy to avoid ex- pectaUon' that coutaA•t be !uUUled ... But. the process of 1ettlng the Presi- dent briefed an d ready was begun well before Henry KJB!inger 's secret trip 10 Peking In July 1971 . Literally hundreds and hundreds of pages -perhaps 50 pounds, an aide ea:tlrnates -have been compiled for Nix- M aking Whoopee oa by tile Stile Oep.1rtment. NatJooal Securlty Council, C..t11J lntelll(ence A.j:ency and lndlvldual e:1pert1. There are huge notebooks filled with pollUcal. cultural and historical lnformatton. Malraux Isn 't the only China-watcher to get the call. ~1any other recognized authorities "wllh a feel for the Peoples Republic o{ China," including authors, dlplomats and jou rnallats, ha ve bee11 tapped. the White House says. ~lowever, spokesmen generally have shied away from ldenUfylng these sources. Among reasons given : They don't wan t to antagonize those who may hive befn 1eft out ol U\e coo1uJtation1. Bui, It hat bffn disclosed that the President also re1d some works of two China scholars at Harvard : hl1tor1a11 J ohn KJng F'1rb11nk's book "The United Stales and Chin•" a.nd polltlcal seltntlst ROiis Terrill'~ two recent articles in the A!lan!lc Mon1hl y. Nixon ha s been clued In by hla advance. tea m members wit h the ir personal ap- praisal s from talks ln Peking with Chou. And he has carefull y gone over the stenographic transcripts of meetinas K!sslnger and hls deputy, Brig Gen. Ale-I'.· ander M. Ha ig Jr., had wl!h Chou. Bangladesh Pla ys Host Tol(ennedy DACCA (UPI ) -sen. Edward M·. Ken- nedy arrived today In Bangledesh to a fl ower-strewn welcome punct uated by ch an ts of "we Jove Kenn-a-dee." He told 10,000 cheering Dacca U n I v e r s I t y students the people of America support Bangladesh "and the leaders of America \\'ill not be far behind ." Kennedy, his wife Joen and IS.year-old nephew Josep h Kennedy, son of the late Sen. Robe rt M. Kennedy, flew by helicopter la ter to the town of Khustia, 70 miles ···•est of Dacca, where he was shov.•n the whitened skeletons of alleged. vk:tirns of the Pakistan army repression. Foll wlng their return to Dacca the Ke n· nt>tlys and Joseph called on Prlmi! ?-.linisler Sheikh Mujibur Rahman. who nlcl them v.•ith his three sons at his of· fu:e. ·rhe senator spent about 70 minutes v.•ith Mujib and said afterwards their tal ks had touched upon the nonr ecogni· lion nf Bangladesh by !he United States, "I think recogniti on Is Jong overdue,'' Kennedy said. adding that he hoped wit l1 other senators to press for recognition. Ne \v Orleans carnival celebrators Jeannie Beck Courtney fl ) a nd Nanci ?¥1ace lean front French Qua rter balcony as t he Parade of the Krev.'e 9f Iris passes do\vn Orleans St., chanting the traditional "thro'v me some1hing. mi ster" to the float riders. fo~loat passengers trad1· li onally thro\v beads. trinkets and coins to crowds. Al Khustia, the senator was taken on a Jeep tou r of the town, which v.·as almost <.'Ompletely destroyed by the Pakistan army during the nine-month struggle for independence. He was shown three graves on the outskirts of the town, two nf them containing seven skeletons each and the third one skelelon. Sources with Kennedy's party s11id the senator told orficials who showed him the graves that he believed accounts he had heard of Pakistan army atrocities and did not need further convincing. Ammo Dump Site Blast l(ills I 7 in Pl1ilippin es l\ennedy gave tnwnspcople assembled at the Khuslia soccer field a brief rf'prisP of his speech !I Dacca Univer· sity, Scientist Goes Into Cave Today MANILA (UPI) -An explosion on the site of a World \Var II Japanese am- 1nunition du mp ripped through Mani la's crowded Pandaca n district today, shoot- ing cement wall and building fragments into a school yard and the hovels of a squatters· area. At least 17 were killed and 56 injured , many of them children. in the late af· femoon blast. 'IWo of the fatalities 'vere babies k1llrd in the arms of a mother and a granrlmother. Police cordoned off !he area while bomb dispos al teams searched for more bombs and bodies. The explosion dug a six-foot-wide crater in the compound of the Morales Engineering Works. a plastics man uf ac- turing firm. hurled fragments of a nearby JO.foot cement wall at an ad- joining elementary school and squatters area. collapsed tiouses and tossed cor· rugated meta! roofing over a wide area near the Paslg River. Irish Catlioli cs Stage Illegal, But Calm Mar cli Mrs. Purificacion f\.1orales, owner of the plaslics firm , said military bomb disposal personnel told her the explosion was caused by a Wnrld War II Japanese bomb. She said the si te v.·as a Japanese DEL RIO. Tex. (UP[) -A young, con- ammunilion dump during the war and fidcnt French scien tist carrying neither later bulldozed and made into an equip.. \Vatch nor calendar. !oday enters a ment yard by American military forces. remote West Texas cave to escape the ef· Manila Police Chief Gerardo Tama yo fects or Earth time in hopes of discover· told ne~·smen police in vestigators were 1ng what he calls "• new rhythm of checking two theories: that the expl osion life." \vas caused by a bomb or that it "'as Dr. i11ichel Siffre believe.~ he can ad;ipt caused by chemicals used in thf' m.1k 1ng to a ne1v and more efficient time of household plastics. l le said ini1ial in-schedule based on 36 straight hours of vestigations failed to find bomb shrapnel 1>.ork alternated with 12 hour s of rest. He and that inj uries appeared to ha\'e been plans to try for si:t months. caused by blunt rather than sh arp ob-Siffre will conduct his lonely ex- jects. perimcnt in a well stocked laboratory and "We are inclined to think Jt is Aot a living area 150 feet deep in Midni ght bomb." Tani;1vo said. Cave. 40 miles northeast or Del Rio. The r-.lrs. MoralCs lolrl UPI many of the project, conceived years ago. has been child ren who ~·ere killed Lived in an ad· delayed three months by frustrating jacent slum or squal!ers' quarters built equipment de lays. of packing crates, discarded v.•ood and ''Nothing can stop my descent" Si ffr e corrugated metal roofs. 11aid "I am absolutely ready," h~ said. ~~--~~~_::_..::.::::.::::::::...:..::::::..:.~~ l Northeast Storm Weakens BELFAST, Northern Ireland ;API - Four thousand Catholics st.agectl another illegal but peaceful march in Northern Ireland Sunday to demand immediate withdrawal of Brltlah troops from the province, abolition of the provincial Parl iament and a halt to the jailing of suspected guerrilla suspects without trial. Travelers Warnings Still Up iii Mou11roin Regions .IAIN ~lNOW ~ .__All ~NIOWf-""',.ow • Troops and police did not Interfere with the marth in Enniskillen, a lakeside resort town 56 miles southwest of ~liast, i nd the Cltholics made it a short one. They then Mid a rally at which apeakers rejected 1 compromise that reports from Lc>ndon aay the British government ls conoJdor1na a C.tboUc a1 deputy prime mlnllttt ol Northern ltelllld and 1 qtlota ol C.thollcl In the proVioclal cabinet Mlchlel Farffil, 1 leader of the es· tnmo lefllll Peopl<'a Demomcy. saJd Prime Mlnlmr Ednrd Heath, "hovlng lfveo up trying to beat t11 oil the ....-, 11 tryJni to buy us off." Kevin Agnew, vice president of the C&thollc-based Civil llJ8hts Asaociatlon. u.ld prominent C8thoUc polili.cians would shun a position in the provlncial cabinet. "They want to enjoy a few more sum· me.rs." he added, meanln.z any Catholic polltlciln who JNkes a deal with the l\ritl1h runs the rt&k or assassination by the lrllh ~publican Anny. The rally orlfinllly was tcheduled for the centtr o Ennllklllon, but the morohtts m-back to • housing proj- ecl In afK'ltber part of town after en-. countering barricades thrown up by BrltJsh troops. •••••Nor..;: [ -·· ,.. .. _,, .... , ........ --· ....................... . Shrine Desecrated U"I T ....... A ma!Gr controversy wu touched olf Sunday between r•lleloua au- thorities and the Jeruulem munldpallty over four hol .. tlrllled In the WaUlng Wall, J udaism'• holiest shrine Thlt neW1m1p shows the locaUon of the Wall in which Arab workers mist1kenly drilled lht boles 1s part ol an effo rt to prop up a 600-yeu old house. Tho wall wu buUt by King Herod in 70 A.O. ' -... - Monday ttbruary l~. l"l/7 'UAIL'Y' PILOT' G lndiana--a 2nd Chance Cattle fferded Tlirou.g lt Do -w1itow11. Democrats Could Bounce Back in Primary By HORTENSE MYERS lNDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (U PI) -The J !oosicr state could bf> the rE'rovery sta te f!1r some of the Dt1nocralic presidential /Jupt'ruls in the Indiana pr im ary . 1\l least, Gordon St. A n g e Io 1 Drn1ocralic slate C'hairn1an, believes so. "Jt is so nebulous at this stage, you t·an 't say for sure ," St. Angelo said. "But 1972 in Indiana v.·i!I be 1nore important than 1n 1968. because this state affords sonie of the IJentoeratic presi dential can- d1dales a chance lo recover .. , C.\ \I PA IG'I "7'!. St Angelo 's lh111ku1g is based on the f:ttl a potent101l l·nt ry in the Indiana pr1111ary l\1uy 2 can \1•:.iit until after the pr1n1;1rics in Nc1v llarnpshirc· and Florida ~nd then der ide that he could recover frorn a do11b1ful verdic! in both or either <lf thos e slates urnung the lloosiers. Till' Jndian:i deadline for filing is J\1.11"cl1 23. The New l!ampshire and J•'londa primaries are March 7 and 14, rr ·•:.'t'livl'l y. '1 11~ fnr. Ilic only contcnrter in either pa1 Ly to unnounr·C' definite plans to enter l11-<1:1n;i "s race is a home producl , Sen. \1:iuce I la rtkr. But offil'ials ur both parties believe contests 11·111 develop for Demoerats and ll('publil'an.~. CVl'll though they n1ay not be as ~lan1orous ;is four year:; ago, when Sens. Hobert F. l\l·nnedy and t~ugene J, l\leC;1rthy battled then Gov. lloger D. Brunigin, a stand-in for President Wicks r '/ts happened/ Mao made the ratings/' has tl1r most support among Indiana JX-mocrals at lhe mon1ent. President Ntxon is ronsidered a cer- tainty on the GOP side, Ir Nixon enters Indian a this Hnie, hr probably will run against his 1968 record vote in the san1e prin1ary. Nixon. t•on- sidcred a ~loosier once-ren1oved becau~c of the Indiana birth of his 1nother, recCl\'- ed 508,362 votes in 1968 with no op- position. u'• r.1 • .-i. This ti1ne out. \Vh ite House help v.·ns 1•11s l S111·f11ef!'s needed to suture a tv.·o-ye ar-0ld rupture .John ~-ll·Kcr. IHL prrsi- in the lndia11a GOP organization that d('nl nf !ht• l laltas \vould have v.'cakcned the President 's ('r 11 nc l 'o1nrni~si1111 , has Jioosier stronghold. bl' c n identified as James 1'. NPal . Noblesville newspaper .J:inies t\(•!l Zullui~rr. editor \'/ho becan1e Republican stair . 0 b \\ho .IUlllpt•tl ~hi JI in chairn1an only last n1011th, said, " ur JO in Indiana is to re-elect J)resident Nixon. 1 !)2;,, ;uul 1v:is listed bv lhc N:ivv at that t1n1C "llowever. if lh£'re are 11ny other · as a de~Crtt~r. , Rcpubliean candidate:;. lhey will receive -----------! the courtesy of the headquarters." The only Republican!!: who have shown lnterest in enjoying the ''<Xlurtesy of the 1 headquarters" are Reps. John Ashbrook '--------------' of neighboring Ohio and Paul N. State Gets Lottery Johnson who went on to campaign on hi! ' own. At the finish, it was Kennedy, Branigln and McCarthy in that order. Den1ocrnts in addition 10 ~lartke who have :;on1c potential base already established in Indiana include Sens. Ed· n1und S. l\1u skie, c:eorge S. l\1cGovern, Henry Jackson and Hubert llumphrey. i\1cCar!hy. and Mayor John V. Lindsay of Ne\v York. Spot-check interviews indicate rtfuskie McCloskcy of California. \Vilt IL l~ays Jr.. chairman of the In- diana Corrunittee fo~or the Re-election of the Presi dent, believes Nixon v.·ill carry Indiana next Novcn1bcr by a plurality even greater than that of 1968, wh en In· diana gave him the biggest margin of any stale. Indiana's population of 5.2 million in- cludes 7.2 percent non-white residents ranging fron1 zero in some small villages to aboul 56 percl'nt in Gary. Tomorrow: Oh io. llAJlTF'QR.D, <:onn. (AF') - Connecticut beeorncs t he fo urt h stale in n1 odrrn lin1es to sl.11rt a lottery \1•hen the first tickets go on :;ule Tues- da y. A total uf 3.5 n111l1on fiO-C"enl tickets have been printed for sale al J.000 speciitlly licensl'd businesses for thf' first 1veekly drawing on Feb. 24. 2 Labor Chiefs Give Nixon's Election Hopes Shot in Arm By Uni ted Press Interna tio nal T\'10 influential li'llxlr leaders have given President NDcon 's re-rlectlon hopes a boost. AFLrCIO President George Meany says he is opposed to Nixon's domestic and foreign policies. but would support him over any candidate who advocates "surrender in Viet- nam ." And Jan1es R. lioffa, the ex- president of the Teamsters Uniqn, says Nixon "is the best qualified man at this lime.'' \Vh ile Nixon, who has no plans lo even begin cam· paigning until summer, got unexpected support Sunday from traditionally IJemocratic lalxlr . the key Democratic candidates t·oncentr:iled 011 f'lorida's t-.larch 1-1 prirnary. Sen, Edmund S. f\luskie, the rront-running Democrat, will try to revive the whisllestop campaigning technique last used effectively in 1948 by President Harry S Truman. Muskie · rented a five-car train from Amtrak for $5,000 to run through the citrus belt this week in an errort to woo \Va!lace-country voters. Mike Casey, Muskie's advance man for the campaign, said, ''If this is successful, we will con· sider using it elsewhere." ' JOHN DAY. O<T. IUPl l - In 11 :os1>N'1acle oul of th" old \\'e~t 800 ht·•d ol llert'(Ortl cat- tle l'tt'J'f' dr1\1•n down thf' main strt't'I of thl.'l town in Eastrrn Ore~e»t's rt·inott C'OW counlry Sund11y Haneher Clyde tlollid11y said lhe.rf' J!; no other praet1ral way lo .Rtl !ht 11.nimals from 1 high from Long Beach to San Francisco 4 times a day. mounh1in ranRe lo his John Day Valley ranrh. 32 miles AWi)'. So with the help or eiRht rowboy111, the 1n1m11ls wtre driven for t"·o days. They ('OITif" right dO\\'ll \ht 111iddlt or US. 395, through Canyon Dly, population 650, and on throuatt John Day, population t.Wl. lo U1e lnttr¥«1lon or Us 26, 1heri ea.'il for 7 nlllt!:.!i lo~ llollid1y fllrK'h, 'rhe animals dutifully a\'old· ed lhe haU-dozr:n 11ulo:s p1u·k .. cl on li1a111 Strrrl 11nd foir the 1nost part sln)'trl on tho slrttls. -as Or take us lo Sacrornento or San Diego. Over 160 [lights a day be!ween Noithern and SouH1ern Ca!ifo1nla en8ble you to lake PSA often. With pleasure. Also with lowest llir rares. Your traval egent knows what's good lot you. PSA give• you • Ult. • B i lls Lag Mansfield Deplores Senate Abse11teeism On other .Florida fronts, Sen. llenry l\1. Jackson said ht' will introduce a constitutional amendment to oulla1v court- ordered busing to desegrate schools and Sen. llubert fl. llumphrey was buoyed by an endorsement by the S t . Jletersburg Times. Se n. George S. ~1cGovern cam- paigned in St. Petersburg and Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace made a television ap- pearance in Jacksonville. Vice President Spiro T. Agnew and Republican Na- lional Chairman Rober t J. Dole continued the ad- ministration's attack on critics of the President's latest Viet- nam peace proposals. Agnew .said criticism by Democratic candidates. except Jackson, has u11dermined peace ef- forts. She's one reason we need additional power plants. \\'ASllJNf;TQN \AP ) -1'he Senate, it s ranks cro"·ded "'ith absent presidential hopefuls and world traveler~. is sput- lcrin_g <.dong so far in the 1972 session \l"ilh a 23 percent ah~entet!1s111 average on votes. Majority Le ad e r r.tike Mansfield s11ys his colleagues are lol!ygagg1ng . They'd be fired from private Indust ry for such po or performances. sa ys the Mon- tana IJe1nocrat who notes the Senate has been oper::rting on n \veek of three days or less. r.lansfie!d is particularly unhnppy becau.~e the Senate. by the time of th e annual Lin- coln Birlhdav recess. had not passed a bill to expand en· forren1ent powers of the Equal F. m p I o ymenl Opportunity Comrnission. It 's been pending sin ce the session began Jan. 18. r.1ansf1eld"s i;lriclures pro- voked some rrplies. Sen. John O. Pastore (~ R.L) said the Senate lead~r­ ship itself has gone along with delays in votes which have led to the record Ma n s f i eld deplores. Others emphasize tha t the leaders should have recog- nized the EEOC bill is con· troversial and quick passage "'as an impossibility. The Senate has had 33 roll calls so far lhis year and avC'ragc attendance for lhose votes has been 77. T \\' e I v e senators have missed more than ha!f of these votes. Five of them were out campaignin_g for the Demo- cratic presidential nomination. or lhese five. llenry f\1. Jackson. Wash , has missed :12 of the roll calls; Edmund S. f\luskie. Maine. 29: Vance ~lartke. Ind .. 27: Hubert ~I. llumphrey. l\1inn ., 24: and c:eorge f\1cGovern. S.D .. 22. Tv.·o senators, l\arl F:. r-.tundt <R-S.D. l, and Warren t;. r-.1agnuson fO-Wa sh.), ha ve not been on hand al all this year. Mundt. a stroke victim in 1969. has not been in the Senate since. r-.1agnuson has been a w a y because of his wife's serious illness. The others with rectlrds of extensive ab s en tee ls m generally have bee.n on foreign trips, which they regard as important Senate business, or have been home campaigning for re-electi on. "If you were in North Viet- nam and you thought there was a chance that a man could be elected president who could cave in to every demand that you made, you wou ldn 't be rapid to rush to the harga1n1ng table ," Agnew said toda y. Dole said Muskie "made a mistake" by proposing a com- plete U.S. withdrawal from Vietnum a few days after Nix- on revealed his eight-point plan. Dole said in Albu· querque. N.M., that Muskie should drop out of the race to ''demonstrate his commitment to peace." lloffa, whose 13-year prison term was commuted i n December by Nixon. was ask- ed if his comment was an en- dorsement. "If there are no other candidates. my state- ment stands as I just staled it." he said. r-..1eany said chances the AFL-CJO would support Nixon are "very slim," but the 77- year-old labor chieftain srud, "I would not go with a guy who advocatts surrender, and this has nothing to do with the labo r movement; ft ha s nothing to do with Nixon. This ls me." Guaranteed Learning . r • a promise from The Reading· Game When peop!e f'md oat we offer readhtg instruction with a --Met guarantee they often wonder bow. The answer's eimple. We believe ln our 17at.em and we know it worts. lt'a a matter of thorou.ch te&Ung, · leunlnc --extelielftl7 trained teechers and pldoo and :'fr:'ndly moti•atlnc •-pbere. A --that odda :;f.::, making mcceedm oat o1. tidl w1io _.. i--ohig-1 "'w.c t Call for an appolu-t f<11r • p tie h1t'"c or Jlllt to....,. ""'"' about -teed 1-..tns. CALL THE READING GAME 213-597-3367 ..... -. ., llUITlllGTOll IUQI 71W42- 714-821·1990 flUDTOll 714-17NMI SAITA AllA 714GW237 14& UICI --maNll' ,_ Penelope started using electricity the moment she was born in the ho spital. She11 need approximately 445,000 kilowatt-hours during her stay on the planet Earth. That's a lot of electricity. And Penelope is just one of the 200,000 babies arriving this year in the 14-county area we serve. To meet the needs of our ' growing population, Edison must be pennit- ted to build additional power plants now. And the transmission lines to deliver that power. Otherwise, there simply won't be enough electricity to go around. Nuclear power plants are one of the ways to provide additional electricity.Nuclear • power plants are clean, proven and smog-free. Other ways to generate electricity are under intensive research or being developed now. Meanwhile, existing methods are steadily being improved. Electricity and our daily lives. The two go together. s' E Southern California Edison \ DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • 'Amateur' Hypocrisy -·· • ,_ ....... The Winter Olympic Games in Sapporo, Japan end· ed yesterday with the United States winning three gold medals, Lhe bl!st showing in 22 years. But co meared to nations on bolh sides of the Iron Curtain which sub- sidize their athletes, the U.S, performance was far be· low what it might have been had all contestants from all nations conformed to the same rules of eligibility. A major part or the problem for two decades ha.s been the influence of Avery Brundage. the octogenar· tan millionaire from Chicago who heads the Jnternation· al Olympic Committee. Under his influence. U.S. Olympic teams have been of a caliber well bel ow the nation's best due to his long-outmoded concept of "amateurism." Brundage belongs to an era when amateur meant competitors who were either wealthy or could command donations unrelated to their athletic skill. In a time when professional caliber should be something to be proud of, the Brundage concept has fostered hypocrisy and subterfuge all across the board, in Amateur Athletic Union as well as Olympic sports. Russia and East Germany. for example, pay thei r athletes and use them to promote the Communist imag'e of "superiority." And government subsidy for top ath· letes is common on the free side in France, Italy and West Germany, among others. Brundage's tortured reasoning in this circumstance is that ''everyone in Russia is subsidized, so you can't pick on individual athletes." This is like saying that if a whole football team plays dirty, that's fine, but if two or three do it, kick them out of lhe gall\f!. So Brundage influenced the Olympic committee to boot out Karl Schranz, the Austrian ski hero, (or "com· mercialism" and made him a greater hero than ev er at home. The spectacle is disgusting. It's time. to take the hypocrisy out of the Olympic Games, and out of "ama- teur" athletics in general. The obvious answer, as far as the Olympics are concerned, is for the U.S. and all countries to send their Hard to Say: 'Mind Your Own Business' One of the serious social defects in the English language is that there is really no nice way to tell someone to mind his own business. Every variation I have ever heard on "Mind your own business " SOW'lds insulting, ltfld thus seems to turn the speaker in· to t h e offending pa1·ty, instead of lhe Nosy Parker who asks questions he shouldn't. Even the Linguis- lically gr a c er u I ' ··,. .. ·. ·l' ' 1 .. -if ·~"·.• ' . . .... . ' : . French, so far as I know. don't possess 1 tactful phrase in this connection. To a d~se friend. one can say, "Moucbe ton 11ez.'' 11.•h/ch means "Go blow your ncse," but this is hardly ad visable with a stranger of Gallic temperament. TJIIS PROBLEM was propounded to me last summer by a friend who spent his mornings working on his new sailboat. a sleek and elegant craft built to his own t:areful specifications. People walking by his slip would pause to admire the ship, y, hich v.·as fin e wi th him. "But then ," he said. "many of the m v.ould sidle up to me confident ially and s::iy. 'Do you mind if I ask a personal <1uestio n'.'' I'd tell them I didn 't mind, but l knew what was coming. 'How much did this bo:it set you back ?' they would ask -Hnd I never round a suitable reply that "ould pleasantly suggest it wa s none of their business what it e<>st me." P.IY FRIEND IS of a kind and gentle Dear Gloorny Gus Why do ci ty inspectors let roa l'I contractors get away with leav- ing asphalt bumps in an oth er- wise smooth street? -0 . R. El Tl!l1 '9elurt ntltcl1 rtader1' ¥1tWI. IKlt ftftt1Hrll¥ ll!OM ti ll!t n-1-r. StrHI y111,1r Pit -Y• 19 GIH!ny CJu1, DtU' i-11111, disposition (except when racing). and he would writhe end stammer at this blunt question. The boat cost a great deal. so he didn't want to sound as if he were bragging, nor did lte want to seem disgustingly rich. "Can you think of an answer I can give them that might satisfy their curiosity without telling them how much it cost. and yet without hurting their feel- ings?" he asked me. \ Well. even after pondering a while. l CX>uldn't. I did come up with a ff'w facetious gambits, however. which he re· jected -like "You could just sa y it set you back about a year's income . and let them try to figure out now much that is.'' ··oF COURSE IT isn 't true." he shook hi s head . "f'd be an idiot to spend a year·s irteome for a boat." '"All right. then," I sa id , "hl)w about saying you won the boat in a ra fnc and don't kno.,..• how mu ch it would cost~·· "They wouldn"l believe tha t." he shrug- ged. ··Then tell them it doesn't helong lo you - a friend lent il to you for a week, to pay off a bet." "That won't wash eit her." he rcrlied. ''I even thought of saying 1l ""·as a \Ved- ding present, but rve got three kids up in th e ri ggi ng." I couldn 't help him. Can you1 All repHes gratefully forwarded. Off to a Good Start To the Editor: There are days ..,..·hen 1 am unable to work due to a heart condition. A recent :rtlonday was one of lhost days. The doorbell rang and a Uttle boy about six years old asked if be couJd OOrrow a band -aid. I asked if he had cut himself and he said no. Michael did . Michael was shy and around the comer of the hoose, as well as two more playmates attempt- ing to coax him to the door. Michael sho .... ·ed me the damaged hand. J asked the boys to come in. then washed the normally soiled hand of a playing OOy of &ix years. THE CUT DID NOT bleed and bottly pierced the skin. but was very serloui to all four boys. Then so as not to betray Mlchat:l'a feelings as well as hiJ friends. J opp\led Mertblol•I< on the supposed wound, then a baod·aid, and all wu rosy •gain. Michael thanked me •nd 11\1 four boys thanked me. Then the boy who rang the doorbell asked me in a very serious and poUte manner, 11·\bere anything we can for you? I aald you have ju!! done oomttblng for me by U..nklng me. They all gave a haPPJ boy's giggle and left. How can we condemn youth today when we see four lltUe young1ten off to such a good and undentandlng start at the age ol five or alx? WALTER R. STEVENS V11t,....t..,.rd1" Prle1t To tile Edllor: A C.thollc ~ vl1ltlng tbe United Stales from Nortllern Ireland, doubtl"' • IUailh<>x Letters from reader! art welcome. Norm.ally writers should convey th.eir mt$$OQea in 300 word! or less. The ri{lht to conderue letters to fit ~pace or climi?tOte libel is reserved. All let- ttrs muit include siQ1lature and mail· ing addres!. but nam1;3 may be with.- Mid on requ.e.!t if sufficient reaJon ts 'appartnt. Poetry will not bt pub- lilh<d. to raise money for guns for the IRA . has aid that the real problem Jn Northern 1reland is that a faction of lhe popu.latlon hu no faith in the government. This can alto be said aboot tM Black Panthen in the. Uni ltd State.. This can be &aid for the Black Panthers , however: They have not resorted lb mass murder ln their bombings of civllbn women and children. THE IRA °DYNAMITED t lru<:k full of bottles ln a busy shopplni: center In a Proteltant arta. among their other atrocities. When Catholic prlf!lt! wert 11\lowed to enter the prison to mlniltcr to the IRA leaden:. they smuggled one out with them 1n a priest's robe. Can we tn1st the word of 1ucb a prtest, now In the United Sta ta! ' JAMES BOLDING top athletes 1n al l sports. regardle11s of how they make their living. If thu; had been done over the years, the re's little doubt that the skill of U.S. a thletes at the professional level wo uld have n~tralized the propaganda efforts o( the Iron Curtain countries. The time has come lo put aside the Brundage "ama- teur ideal" with all its hypocrisy and face the world as it is today. Let Brundage a nd his followers fade into the mem· Ory of rich man"s Jennis. gol f and tiddlywinks. Thursday l s the Deadline As of next Thursday, the deadline for voter registr a- lion. the citizen v.·ho wa nts to vote but is ineligible can attribute his lost franchise to hi s or her failure in lhese circumstances: -Having c;hanged .address, did not re-register. -1-lavlng changed name. by marriage or otherwise. did not re-register under the ne w name. -Having fail ed Lo vote in the 1970 general election, has not subsequently re-registered. F'or nc\v voters wanting to vole in the April 11 city elections, qualificatio n to register means being a citizen at lea st 18 yea rs old and a resi dent of Orange County for at. least 90 days. The registrar's office at 1119 E. Chestnut Ave., Santa ;\na, v.ri ll ren1a1n open until 8 p.m. today through Thursday. But there are many locations more conven· ie nt for Orange Coast residents. These include all city halls. fJacifi c Telephone bui:;i· n~ss offices and deputy registrar tables in many shop- ping centers. J • ,: J Am~rican ~itizen s aren't forced under legal penalty to exercise their voting franchi se. as is the case in Ar- gentina and some other countries. But that's all the more rea.s~n l? up~old the voluntary way by registering and part1c1pat1ng in the electoral process. , .'1~£ (APTAIN'~ ~tLAYl~ AT TH[ ~ATL HE HAS A HIJACK[~~ ~HAV IOR f~Of\LE . S11r9eon General's Advisory Cot1i1nittee Wns Tni•ited TV Violence Report Under Attack \VAS~llNGTON I 11 d i g n a n t researchers. who \\'Urked on the Surg<>nn General's TV report , arc. privately de- nouncing it as a put-up job. The report cl aims th;il TV violrnt·e might v•hrt the passions of chi!rlren wHll aggressive tenden- cies bul should not influence 11ormal children. This d oes nl)t agree. say !he re- searchers. with the findings. 0 n e re- searcher. Dr. J\1on. roe Lefkov:itz. has written a sca lhing letter. chargi ng that the Surgeon Gener- al 's report "ignores, dilutes and distorts the rl'sca rch find ings," and, therefore is "potentia lly damaging to children and socie:.y.'' THE TV REPORT was prnduced by an adv isory committee, which was tainted from the start. We revealed on May J 1. 1!170, th;it I.he llealth, Education and \V elfare Department had given the TV in- ('-~· ' . ,.,..., ........... , .. ~-~ ~ ; \Jack" ktderison 1 • ~ ' dustry veto power over the committee's membership. The industry promptly vetoed seven di stinguish ed scientists who had been critic al of TV violence. In their places, five researchers with close industry ties, two of the m network employes, were named to the 12-man committee. As we had warn ed. they took a rather caval ier attitude toward TV murder and mayhem. But U1ere has now been a scientific backlash inside the advisory committee. DR. LEFKOWITZ, the p r i n c i pa I resea rch ~c ientist for New York State's Mental Hygie ne Department. fired off pr ivate lett ers to Senate Communications Chai rma n John Pastore. D·R.I., and Rep John Murp hy, D-N.Y .. a critic of TV violence, The Surgeon General's conclusions. Lefkowitz said, "are hedged by erroneous statements, arc over-qualified and are potentially da mag ing ti) children and society." Contrary to' !he official findings. he said, lhe !rue figures show that children of eight who prefer violent TV sho1vs are "significantly mer~ aggressive'" at 18. TllE GREAT DAr\GER , he added. is that mo thers who ·read the Surgeon General's report are ··understand ably ready lo believe that their chi ldren are no~ predisposed to be aggressive i and l now ha ve 'scientifi c' license {I) permit their children a violent televi sion diet." After receiving LC'fkn\\•11i· I c 1 t C' r , Congressman Murphy contacted ot{lcr researchers and huddled secretly with three of t.hen1 la st weekend in Islip. N Y The.y are Or. Rqbert Liebert. Dr John Neale and investigator Emil y Davidson. all of Ne~· York State Unive rsity. TllEY GA. VF. ~1 URPllY a 13-page dissent castigating the TV report as "inaccurate " Disputing the report, they charged "There is a stat1st1cally reliable and so<.'ially significant relationship between exposure to televised violence and ag. ~ressive beh avior .. , .Large segme nts of American society are profoundly affected hy aggressive or anl1-.~oc1al behavior '14'hich has been instigated by exposure to violent entertainment. ... on TV.'" They addC'd emphatically that "many studies of normal America n children from ave rage American homes" show tile relationshi p bctv.·een aggressi ve behavior and TV bloodshed . ~·IEA N\\'lllLE, FOUR n1nrc !icicntisl5 \\'ho 11·orked on the Surgeon General's rePQrl arc preparing ano ther secret d1ssenl taking issue \\'Ith 11. Senator Pastore has scheduled he arings on the report in March. \Ve ha ve reported in the past that both the Senator and h1~ counsel. Nick Za pp le, have accepted fa vors from broadcasters. It will be \\Orthwhi!e v.·atching whether they will now return the favors. A Close-up Look at the Vietnamese Saigon is hot . busy and crowded. T wouldn 't say It 1s a beautiful ci ly, but il is an exciting one . There are many broad, F'renrh-style boulevards, and myriads of .~mal!er streets and alleys. E\'erywhere there is the bustle of commerce: gift shops. restaurants , b e a u t y parlors; sr.ands selling sort dr inks and snacks: peddlers or shrimp and dried squid; furniture merchanls with their wares displayed on t h e sidewalks. forcing pedestrians to walk out in the street lo get by: vendors on the pavements with their offering spread around lhem : clothing, shoes, pillows, hats. kitchen equipment You never saw so many busy people! AND THE TRAFFIC! At first it's ter· r1lying because there are few traffic signals. But soon you learn that Virt· namese drivers are exceedingl y polite. Apparently the way to get rrom a side street into the stream of traffic is simply B" George --- Dear George : My dog can answer quesUons better than you! IRATE FAN Dear Fan: zatso? How much will your dog work for ? I have an awful lot or trouble getting help ln t h Is business. In fact. lut year J had to fire two Ph,O,s, one cryMaJ-baU gazer and a pan-ol °"'' George: . I sent for your pamphlet an needless worry COll!Jstl\ng. AD It consi.rted of was a lbt of dumb, stupid thJngs ••to wony about,'' thlfl$S to which l wouldn't ever give 11 second thought! Jlave you flip- ped? ANNOYED Dear Annoyed: J~ave J flipped'! No! What did you think a needless worry COUOJelor did? He sends 1 you nc«fless wor- ries. Hayakawa 1.o drive right in. because other drivers will slow dov.'n for you. Like any other American. I was fascinated to see what peopl e were driv- ing. First there are the French cars, dating back to th e per iod of French rule. 1954 and earlier. Big Citroens and Peuge<1ts. Tiny Renault ta x i ca b s • thousands of them, man y so old that their metal noors are rusted through . They are said to have l l h.p. but I think that is an exaggeration. There must be, I thought. some terrific mechanics in Vietnam to keep all these old heaps going. THEN THERE ARE the pedicabs - three-wheelers, with the passenger sitting between the two front wheels. the driver behind. There is also the motorized varie- ty. lower slung and much faster. Another kind of three-wheeler (one wheel in front) is the Lambretta mini-bus. carrying 10 passengers. These cruise the principal streets, almost always ful1 1 and often with baskets of live ducks and chickens hanging out the back . I was told that many or these mini-buses were given outright by the government to the men who drive them -a simple and direct form of subsidy fllr urhiln bus1nes~ to parallel the subsidies given to farmers. There are American cars there too, shiny new embassy cars. JO-ycar.:old bul equally shiny and v.·el!-kepl rental cars. as wel l as an assortment of mihtary vehicles. BUT r\10ST STAR"rLING or all is the number of n1 otorcycles. Most Qf them arr [)() c.c. Hondas -the sm;ille~! kind. There are son1e 800.00J motorcvclcs in Saigon alone. Since 1966 the mOto rcyc!r has become the basic form af all -purpose transportation. havi ng largely st1pplantcd .the bicycle. It is not unCQmmon lo see no t one or two . but three on a motorcycle -usually a CQ Uple and a small child. The most I saw was fi ve: two children behind the handlebars in front or fath er, a baby behind him and behind bab v the mother. all huddled cozily toge ther. Nobody seem s to wear crash helmets. Perhaps they arc not necessary with th ese low· power jobs. THERE ARE AN incredible number of worr.en motorcycli!its -mostly young gi rls. They are rea lly a sipht lo see. The baS'F \\1omen '5 costume ls the "ao dai," a two-plcce ou tfit consisting of pents, usuaUy black . and a very special blouse with a high , Chinese collar, long sleeves. bodK:e fitted to the waist. and from there A Crucial Year for U.N. CallfOMlia Fea&are Servke A p>d many observers feel that urn coWd well be: crucial for the United Na- tlonl. It· ha5 a new. untried compromist cho1ce la the aecretary a~l's chair. It faces ita ftrst billion dollar-plus budget, while ltill weighed down by a multi· mlltlon dollar debt. Jt rousted T1twan, a staunch. founding member and oow must put up "Ith a new ve~w\eldlng member of I.he Security Council, Red China WHAT KIND OP leader•hlp Kurt Waldhe.lm or Austria will provide la, of course, unknown. Not that he could be much worae, for the free world's in- tm1ts, at least, than the unlamented U Thlnt but can be tum to a useful course a conglomerate of naUons and new.a. Lions bloated far beyond any original con- cept? Thert: Is one, tometlmes wearying, role the UN can play, In 111 Its mad dlvtrsity or interests. Jt does provide a rostrum for tho5e who wouldn't be heard otherwise. They may not offer wisdom, but sometimes ll Is UJeful to know what the. unwl!le think and what they want. AS A MIRROR to mankind , con· celvably the UN might just help the im. mature to Qnd out what ~It are like in the mt or Ille world. It might Ju.t be, God wUllna, 1 -k that could help Ignite a new delire rof communle1Uon among the peoples or the world. One someitme.ii wonder• Ir lhlt small chance I> w6rth Ille cm. r1nwnw11rd rnnt1n111ng as a split skirt '-''hose lonR panels reach the feet both in front an~ back. The blouse can be while. pink. yellow. Javendrr, sky blue - usually in a single color. The "ao da1" is a costume of ex- traordinary i;i race. Don Obe rdorfer in hi~ bnnk "Tef' (Doubleday , !9711 says , "One of the rnost beautiful sights in all Viet· nan (15 the1 great swallow-fl ig hts of slrnder schoolgirls, their long black hair and their clean '14'hi !(' 'ao dai' billowing hch1nd them, pedaling their bicycles on their .... ·.1y to school" The gi rls look just. as good, I am sure Mr. Oberdorfer wiU agree. lln mo torcycles. I WAS IN \'IETNA ,\f for 12 days as a guest l)f the South Vietnamese govern - ment. I was (ree In talk to an yone. to go anywhere. lo come to my own con· c\usions. to write or not to wr ite about my visi t. 1 have chosen to wri te about it because there. is so much happening there ln the daily lives of the people that wt: in America have not been told about. J came away feeling. even after a short visit, that the people of South Vietnam - so cheerful. hardworking and courageous, so incredibly adaptable and capable of recovering from misfor\une -are pro- foundly deserving of out admiration and liUpporl. ! 87 S. I. Hayakawa Pretldeat Sa• FrandKe State CoDe11 OlllAMOI (OAIT DAILY PILOT Robert N. W<td, Pllbl!ah<r Thoma.s Ktevfl, Editor Albert W. Batu Editorial Pape Editor Th~ tditorf•I raire or 1he Dally Pilot M't'kt lo inform and rtlmu· latto r!'Mrn by p~ntln1t 1hl1 neva'5Pftf)t'r'1 011ll)ion1 11M com· ml'nt11ry on tQfJ!a of lnt.cnat •nd •l11:nifle11n~. by 1;rov!ding " forum toi: !he C'XJlf'H*lon of w r re9dl'rs' opinion..,, and by ~ntfnK lhct diVf'rxt' VH'Wl)O\nt• 0( lnftn'nlal t>b· arrvt:D 11nd •poke.men on topics of ~day. Monday, February 14, 1972 ,., . -. . ·-· ... __ ale! 20% off all bedrooms. Delivered and set up factory-fresh ,, B~ I Save 4780 Reg. $239, Sale 191 .20. 4·pc. Tradll!onal 1tyle bedroom group includes a 6·drawor dresser, mirror, lull size headboard and n1ghl etand. All drawers are do'.letallod and dusl resistant with centerguides. All pieces havo laminaled plaslic lops for longer Hie. Additiona l pieces available : High chest, Reg. S119, Sale 95.20 Student desk, ~eq. $99, Sale 79.20 Chair, Reg. $29, Sale 23.20 ~~~- at no extra cost. Sale prlcH effective through Saturday. Save s71 Furniture prices Include delivery within local delivery area. Reg. $355, Sale $284. 4-pc. Mediterranean style bedroom group includes a triple dresser, mirror, full size headboard and night stand. Dresser has a brown antiqued and distressed finish on genuine oak veneers over select hardwoods. All drawers are dovetailed and have centerguldes. Additional pieces available : 5-drawer chest, Reg. $169, Sale 135.20 I ~_) Save s71 Reg. $288, Sale 230.40. 4-pc. modern style bedroo m set includes a triple dresser, mirror, full size headboard and night stan Rich pecan veneers combine with fine hardwoods and matching plaslic tops. Hidden drawer pulls. Dustproofed drawers with centerguides. Additional pieces avallable: High chest, Reg. $149, Sale 119.20 Desk, Reg. $109, Sale 87.20 Chair, Reg. $33, Sale 29.40 Savings on mattresses, too. ··This amount represents the required minimum monthly piyment under PE!nneys Time Payment Plan for lhe purchase of the related Mom. N9, FINANCE CHARGE wfll be incurred If the balance ol tha account in the lirst billing Is paictln lull by the closing dale ol lhe next billlng period • .,.n Incurred FINANCE CHARGES will be determ ined by applying periodic rat6s of 1.2% (ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 14.4-te ) on lhe first $500 ....,,,.% (ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 12%) on the port!on overS500 of the previous balance without deducting payments or credilL JCPenney The values are here every day. CSl!> <42 Save s54 Reg. $270, Sile $218. 5-pc. French Provlnclal bedroom set Includes: double dresser, mirror, 3/3 poster bed, 3/3 canopy frame and 4-drawer ch1;11t. Brushed antique white l lnish with gold accent tono1. Solid core mar-resistant tops. Drawers due tproolod and centerguided. Add itional pieces available: Night stand, Reg. $34, Sele 27.20 Student desk, Reg . $69. Sale 55.20 Chair, Reg. $29, Sale 2l.20-• Saves20 Rog, 89.95 , Sale 89.95. Twin or Jull olze mattress or box spring. F1exo lator, Tuflex pad, quilted cotton felt and loam fo r super firm support SS a month•. Queen mattress/ box spring set, Reg. 249.95, Sale 189.91 King mattress/box spri ng set. Reg. 359.95, Sale 299.915 Saves15 Reg. 89.95, Sal• 54.95. Twi n or full size mattross or box spring. 12 mattress side supports and 12 box spr ing si de aupporlc ttssure firmness ac ross enti re steeping su rfa ce. 15 a month*. · · Queen mattreaa/box apring set. Reg. 219.95, Sale lit.II King mauresa/box spring aot, Reg.319.95, 81102•.11 • • Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.m. at the following 1tor9I: I NEWPORT BEACH , F .. hion lsl1nd . HUNTING TON BEACH , Huntington Center. u,0 Penney• Timo Payment Plan . .. ' :J ., I ) ' I DAIL y PI LOT ----Mond-'Y. r rbtuiry 14, 1972 'N o Bloodbath' Most on Death Row Await Appeals Ry OOUG Wll.LIS SACRAi\1~:NTO (AP ! -There won't be a bloodbath along San Quentin's death row -home of such condernned men as Sirhan fl. Sirhan and Charles Man,on-if lhe . U.S. S1.1preme Court rules that the death penalty is constitulion~J, California CJfficials say. That's because all but a handful of the 105 men and women on the nation's most populous death row have appeals eithe r on file or ready lo file immediatel y if the current unofficial moratorium on ex· eculions is li Hed. Sirhan and all fi\'e members of the ri1anson clan condemned to d1e last year ha ve appeals pend ing in slate or federal cou rts that have blocked settini:t of their execution dates. So do more than 70 other men on the row at San Quentin, where one-seventh of the nation's nearly 700 condemned. men and won1en live. A decision could come anytime after Feb. 21. when the Supreme Court reconvenes. California ofricials say they expect it not later than midspring. Basis of the death penalty challenge is the contention that it is cruel and unusual punishment-prohibited by the Constitu- tion. ~to~t or the death row inhabitants <1re poo rly educated and held un skilled jobs, Jf any, before convictlon. Only One has a co!\fge dcgr<.-e. Twenty ·n1ne are black, and JO are of other n1inority races. 'fhcre are fi ve women under a sentence of death. Thr~ or !1.lanson's ('Qnvil'led ac- con1plices. Susan Atkins. Leslie Houten and Patricia Krcnw inkcl. ;ire in a won1cn's sect ion of the rO\V hu!!t at the California Insti tute for \\'omen at Frontera, 4~0 miles south in H.iverside County. Dock Delegates Cite Complaints As Strike Ends A.i'Son In Scl1ool PJC? RIV ERA (UPll - Arso rtV.·as suspected today in I the $130,000 fire that destroyed a elassroon1 building al the Lav:rence ·r. !\1cGce elemen- SAN FRANCISCO it,:Pf ) -West Coast tary school Sunday. longshoremen leaders, considering a. con· The fire broke out early tract which could end the nation 's longest Sunday morning. about the waterfront strike , \\'ere confronted today same time as vandal s sacked with rumbles of discontent from their an adjoining school bu ildi ng, own ranks and co mpla ints from th e which did not burn, doing Teamsters Union. about $3,000 damage. The van- A caucus of 100 leaders from 24 west dais ripped up books , tore an coast ports will determine whether the American Oag rrom the wall 15.000 striking dock workers mu st ap-and damaged light fixtures. prove the new contract by a simple ma-A clock in the vandalized jority vote or by a two-thirds margin. building stopped at 3:55 a.m .. I Pipr Bo111l> Jlits GOP lluilding OAKLANlJ fAPI -A pipe bomb exploded oul.3ide the unottupled Republican party , headquarters of A I am e d a.1 County Sunday night. Police said damage wa s minor and no one was hurt. Oakland polk·e olflcer r.tike Brown suid the bon11> shat· lcre<I a plate--g,Jass wlndo11,· and chipped aw;:i.y part of a stone• p1llnr. GAS OUASAVER w~: ~t~~i~:N G;: AUTO NEW. EMISSIONS e STOPS FLOODING " e STOPS VAPOR LOCKIN(; • No M.c.hanic N•fll•d e No Ad jv1tm•nt to Motor e P•rt Fit1 in Fu•I Lin• e Typt A-All Cars & Pick·UPI $299 • Ty,. Pt-Inboard Motor Bo•fl Pa•I P•1d M•ll Cne<- •r MontY OrCltr (MG C.O.D.} PHARMACY WE OUOTE. PRICES OVER THE PHONE ... ANYTIME -CHECI{ THESE SUPER SALE SPECIALS-~u.,9 11 • 1 'Ou• Re~ . .,,,..' Alk• S.lh•• 25'~ , .. , , ..•.••.•......•••• , • , ...•.. -• 75 1' ~9' l•rn ptlt ~0'1 ,,, .........•...•••..••••••••.••••.• S I 9J SI 4/ lntentiv• Ce•• lotio~, lo 01 •• , ••••••••••• , • , , ••• , ••• 19r t.9(' 'li1ine Eve Drop1, I 01 ••••••••••••••••• , ••••••••••• \? 49 SI 99 lavorii, 20 ot. ···········•·••••••••••••••••··•·• S l.~9 ~I 2~ 2700 E. Coast Hi~hwav, at Fernleaf. Corona del Mar lilftltltil ~. AMPLE PARKING IN kEAR Hours -':30 • 6:00 Ooily 644-7575 Probably no more tha n three or four persons would be executed during the first fi(l days after the court ruling H the constitutionality or the death penalty is upheld, said Robert L. E k I u n d • California's deputy director or cor- rections. Harry Bridges, 7t}year-old president of which fire officials said \\'as the International Longshoremen's and about the time the fire broke I \Varehousemen's union . sa id t h e out in the one-story, four- lt(ldership meeting would pro'i.abl y con· ,_:C::.l•::':::"~"°:::_m:_b::u::.'l_:_d:_in_:g_n__.e_xt:_d_oo-.-__c._:========~ tinue through. today. Other delegates After that, the rate would probably be even slower, Eklund predicted, and ex- ecutiC>n date! would not be set "for many months, at least" !or Sirhan and Manson clan members. Twenty of death row's residents are pinning th eir hopes for life almost en- tirely on !he Supreme Court. Those 20 men -death row's longest residents -have exhausted most other appeals and llve only because of court stays halting th ei r executions until the Supreme Co urt rules. A ruling against the death penalty would mean immediate reclassification of all 105 death row inmates as life termers. Since 1938. 190 men and four women have been executed in San Quentin's ap- ple-green gas chamber, built jn 1938 and scheduled to shut down by the end of 1974. A new one will be constructed. But since 1962, when 11 were executed, two executions have been performed - one in 1963 and one in 1967. A proliferation of appeals caused part of the drop, resulting In 109 new trials for cjeath row inmates. On\y 48 of those men returned to the row , most of them during the past two years. Finally. more and more inma tes have been winning stays of executions to await the outcome of the Supreme Court ruling, creating what Gov. Ronald Reagan's clemency secretary, lierbert Ellingwood, calls a sort of ca se-by<ase moratorium. Death convictions have continued in California courts at the rate of 10 to 15 per year and death row -originally just one block of 52 cells -bas been ex- panded twice and split between two ab6tlt JOO feet apart deep inside the fortress- type walls of the pri son. Sirhan is the convicted assassin of Sen. Robe rt F. Kennedy, and Manson leader of a clan convicted last yea r of the Sharon Tate murders. UPI Ttl1plloto Stark Due Dancer Juliet Pro\vse announc- ed last week she is expecting a baby and does not intend to marry her child's father. Miss Prowse is four n1onths preg- nant. She said the father is J ohn McCook. an actor-singer in her night club act in Holly- \vood. Pauley Retiri11g Fro1n UC R ege11ts BERKELEY (U PI) -Oil millionaire Edwin Pauley will retire from the University or Californi a board of regents at the end or the month after serving as a member !or 32 years. Pauley, head or Pauley Petrolewn. Inc., which he founded in 1958. will altend his last regents mceling this week. Pauley is the board 's senior n1ember and has been chairman twice. He has donated more than $2 .2 million to UC. Gov. Ronald neagan will name o replacement who will start serving on March I. Pauley was appoinlcd a regent by Gov. Culbert Olson in 1940, but has been con- nected with the university community . since 1919 when he enrolled as a student in what later became UC LA. He transfer- red to Occidental College, but came to Berkeley Jn 1921 , receiving his B. S. degree in 1923 and starting work toward a master 's degree. f-le gave $1 million toward development of UCLA's Memorial Activities Center and the Pauley Pavilion there \\'BS named in his hono r. redirtcd it would la st several days. Bridges said the strike will not end un- til the union members vote, a process 'vhich could take a week. The employers group, the Pacific f\!aritime Association, must also ratify the pact. President Nixon has the power to order the longshoremen back to work by sign- ing a bill passed la st wee k by Congress. The strike is now in its !29th day. Heated shouting could be heard from outside the closed ca ucus Sunday as representatives of the local~ questioned Bridges and his negol\ating cornmittec about the contract terms. A union spokesman said a nc\11 guaranteed annual 'vage was the chief topic or di sc ussion. Under the union·s rules. any large local or several small ones can veto the set- tlement during the le3dership caucus. If this happens . the pact n1ust be ratiried by a two-thirds membershi p vote rather than by a majority. Teamsters union leaders have de- nou nced a proposed $1 a ton ''tax'' on cargo shipped to the docks in containers that were not packed by longshoremen. The provision was designed to end a de cade-Jong dispute over jurisdiction between the two uni ons. Einar Mohn. head of the \\'cstern Conference of Teamsters. said his union fea red the charge on teamster-loaded containers might lead employer s to give the jobs to longshoremen. San Jo'rancisco·s big longshoremcn's local 10 issued a bull etin Saturday criticizing the agreement on grounds its guaranteed wage provision was "full of fish hooks and exemptions" and that there were other "important jtems adversely affecting our membership." But the local said that Nixon was "sit- ting with a cocked gun ... pointed at the body of labor and more specifically at our head." Bridges urged ratification in a message to un ion members through the union ~ newspaper. Dernocrats Clainiing Caucus as 'Success' By GEORGE SKELTON SACRAME NTO (UPll - California Democrats hailed lheir fir st·rver presidential campaign caucuses as "a grea\ success" today and sup- porters nf Sen. GCQrge S. f\lcGovern c I aimed a "significa nt and dramatic vic- tory." in the public opinion polls. drew large crowds of youthful supporters lo his caucuses and generally ran neck-and-neck \Vilh the acknowledged front. runner, Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine. Early week special. Our 'Festival' perm is only 8.44. The do\·ish South Dakota senator, v.·ho has fared poorly Earthquake R eco rded In Onklund SAN LEANDHO !AP ) -A minor earthquake shook a sec- tion of San Leandro and Ea st Oakland but caused no damage. State party ch a i rm a n Charles T. Manatt of Van Nuys said more than 20,000 "grassroots'' Democrats turn- ed out on a mild, Spring-like day to attend Saturday's caucuses, which nominated persons to serve on each can- didate's proposed California del~ation to the •atlonal con- vention in Mia mi Beach. Although attendance figures for each candidate carried no official significance, party of- ficials beforehand had said they might indicate the direc- tion of politi cal winds in the natio n's most populous state. Sen. Alan Cranston ( D· Ca\il.l. who has not endorsed any candidate. had predicted the caucuses would "serve as a test of strength a n d legitimacy of the indi vidual presidential campaigns well before the New Hampshire primary on March 7." Use your head. On Monday, Tu esday, Wednesday you pay less. And. the 8.44 includes shampoo , cut, set. Fashion frosting special. Complete with set. 14.88 The Unh•ersity of California seismograph g t a l i o n at Berkeley said the tremor was recorded at 7: 19 a.m. Sunday and measured 2.75 on the Richter !tC!lie. ll was centered near Lake Chabot near the San Leandro-Oakland border and was in the Hayward fault , a sei.smologlst said. Manatt iruisted "the figures really don't mean anything ex- cept that some candidates did a good job or organizing the caucuses. The numbers of persons attending the caucuses did not necessarily demonstrate vote r appeal .'' JCPenney An officer at a sheriff's substation in san Leandro said he felt nothing but heard a rumble. O•kl•nd and San Leandro police aaid they received 11CVeral calla. One resident in Eosl Oakland reporting dishes WU< ahllMI olf a llbl•. Muskie and McGovPrn drew roughly 7,000 s up porter s apiece. according lo preliminary figures. 0 n t caucus of McGovern's in Oak.land 1ttractcd roughly 500 ]>tHON. Several Muskie and McGovern CIUCU!e! were 1i.. tended by mort than 200. • beauty salon HUHllHGTON BEACH ~v"""q10"<:•~'*· 2...i11oor••~1n1 NEWPORT BEACh ~o•Men 1,1e"d 2nd lloor ~~,, We like a knit that sticks to a girl's ribs. Body clings, $13 Slinky llttle bOdy clings of Amellllll tr iacetale jersey. Prints in br ight, llght, dark color combi· nations. 7to15. JC Penney The values are here every day. f<. Charge these values at your local Penney Store • • I 1 :1 ~s ~I .;, ,. ' ' .. .. ~ ~ • • ' • .J • ~J ' .. L.M. Bo11d ' H11ng Over? Eat Son1e Charcoal "There Is one advantage In a plurality of wlvet• they fight eucb other la1tead of their bu.sband1." ' 8Ulln11 Here 's how these marriage matters work among the Zulu : The husband lives with hill No. l ledyfriend in the big house. In a but to the lefl of the big house 1!11es his No. 2 lndyfriend. She's called his left. hand wife. In a hut to the right o{ the big house lives his No 3 Jad yfr ir:nd. And she 's ca!IM his ri,1thl-hand wife. Sons of No. I inherit . But if No. 1 has none, sons of No. 3 inherit. Sons of No. 2 don't count. TllAT OVf~RTl~IE operator known as the moonlighter nationwide earns an extra $.10 ;1 "'f'Ck on the average. AS FAR AS guns go, statistics show the smaller the town. the more likely you'll keep a weapon around the hou se. IN COPENHAGf-:N, men who do nothing for a living but make open.faced sa ndwi ches have their o"·n union. HANGOVE lt -Eat some activated charcoal, mister. That "'ill cure you r hangove r, if any. Or such is the claim of a medical fe!low. Impurities in liquor, not the alcohol, are said to be what cause that awful ailment. And actlv- vated ~h<i rcoal is thought to absorb said impurities. r don't knov.·. Clyde , ANY GOOD basketball athlete who plays all four quarters wlhtout a substitute can be expected to run about five miles during a game. WORTH REPEATING is lh t'.' observation that the four characteristics of a lady are serenity, sincerity, sympathy and sin1plicity. THE NAMES Kuznctsky in Russian. Kowal!lki In Polish. and Kovac:.-. in Czech all translate into English to just plain Smith. I'm told. E/\1fo:RGY -There's energy In noise all rh?ht, bul not n1uch. If 15 million human voices were to deliver in uni. !'?n th e Lord's Pra.ver, no matter how infinl!c the spiritual irnpact. !hey CQuld be expected to produ ce no more ~'allop sci<'ntif1cn!ly !han n1nybe one horsepo\1'er. 11'\TO THE BUFFET 11·herc I frequently eat lunch comes <i man 11•ho alwa~·s take.~ his tossed creen salad back to the meal counter to get it lfJpped off \Vilh light beef gravy. Big fellO\\'_ Been reluctant to ask him about it. IT'S SAIO one (If the stronge r strains of marijuana is as much as 70 times more potent than one of the weak- er strains of same. But lhe brighteyed boy at the street comer's point of purchase rarely knows lhe difference. certainly. Arirlress mail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0 . Box 1815. New- port Bracli, Calif. 92660. TV, Viole1ice Linked ST AN FORD ! UPI I -A re s ear ch team s ay s youngsters show hei ghtened aggression after• exposure to television s how s depicting violence. but !hat the effect decreases as the children grow older. Ranch to Get Education Use SAN FRANCISCO (UP I 1 - Nature Conservancy has ac- quired a half interest in <1 1,100-acrc ranch near La Hon- da in San Mateo County. The conservation organiza- tion said it "'ould be leased to the Santa Clara County Office or Educallon f or en- vironmental education pro- grams. One surpri9e finding was that "al! children understand whether a character is In- tended to be ellher a 'good guy' or a 'bad guy," said the scientists from St an ford University's Institute for Com· munication Research. Assistant Profes!Or Donald F. Roberts and research associate Aimee Leifer 1ald children as young as 5 "ap- parently do not understand motiva tions and con11equences as they are presented in cur- rent television programs." •·By about the third grade they understand about half the material they are tested on," the researchers re ported . "from this age on, there Is steady Improvement in un- derstanding. such that 12th graders under9land almost all the content they art tested upon." TWO WEEKS ONLY! PORTRAIT SPECIAL NINE FOR JUST 9.95 One large Bx I 0, two giftable 5x7's and six handy walleh . the broadway H1111rtl .. te11 c ...... -HIHlttlttf" ..... ,._,... ltZ·Jll1 -ltt'Ml.let11 21J Portrait Studio I st FICO< -.. ~' -· .. --- Press Subpoenas Attacked WASHINGTON IAPI Newsrntn should be exempt from testifying before grand juries or othtr non·lrlal hear- Jna:s. concludes a University of Michigan law professor who surveyed near I y t,000 joumalls!s. Mond1y, Ftbr1111ry 14, 1972 KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN SA TUR DA YS IN THE DAILY PILOT They also should be shielded by law frorn testifying in rtgular courtroom trials In- volving "vict!m\es9'' crlmes such as drug use, pornography and gambling , Prof. Vlnt·c Blasl says. KING SIZE SHEETS FLAT •• FITTID '<l•ltlllflt l"lllOW C•1t1 U .'1 f'r. $ 4 !.! .. ~~~ " ... 111 ,0 STQCIC UP NOW! WAMSUTTA BURL!NGTON But reporters should be re- quired to test ify in trials regarding crimes a ~a 1 n s I other persons or property lo whlc h they w e r e an eye"•itness. he added TAKE THE NEW S QU!::'. Bell & Batll PclSlllOl!,,~~.!)pS Blasi's JS.month study 1vas Every Saturday !1U1 MA !H IT , •I J l"tl"h Co"t•r •~"•A "''"c ••a Sale. Significant savings on the stereos you've heard so much about. If you like to save money, save Sunday, too.* Save 4195 Reg. 299.951 Sale S258. Penncrest • 3 pc. phono/ cassette/ AM-FM stereo component system. s11 a month• • Four air suspension speakers {two 6" woofers and two 2" tweeters in separate walnut wood cab inets) for full dimensional stereo. • Automatic 4-speed BSA record changer with full size turntable, lightweight tone arm and diamond needle. • 4 track: cassette recorder/ player with automatic shut·off and two VU meters. • Solid state AM /FM-FM stereo tuner/ amplifier un it has 8 easy·to·use controls for accurate adjustmen1s. And they were the best for the money at our everyday low prices. Save1195 Sa, lie 2Q95 Rog. 99.95, Salo t88. Penncres1• 3-pc. . Y ~ stereo component system. So/Jd at.ate Reg. 119.95, Sile S99. Panncrest• 3 pc. radio/8 lrack stereo component system. AM /FM -FM slereo tuner, FM 1tereo indicator lighl, 6 easy·fO·UH controls, pushbu tton channel seleclor, 6" full range speakers, w alnut finish 1pe1ker enclosures. 5.50 • monttt• chassis, AM/FM stereo tuner, BSA mini changer with 4 speed, 7" turntable, Easy·to-use controls, 5" full range speakers, wood grain finish cabinets. Includes 45 RPM adaptor and dust cover. $51 month• -~ Save1195 Reg. 159.95, Ssle 1148. Pennerut• 3pc. radio/phono component sy1t1m with 8 track tape player. Solid state chassle, easy·to-use conlrols, BSA mini changer with 4 speed turntable, pop-up tape 1ys1em, pushbutton channel selector, 4 speaker system, vinyl covered wood cabinet and speaker enclosures. t71 month• Sale prict1tffacllvt lhrouth .. turday. •Ttiis amount repr1tent1 the required minimum monthly payment under Ptnneys Time P1ym1nt Plan tor the purchase ot the relate~ Item. NO FINANCE CHARGE will be incurred if the balance of the 1ccount In the first billing is paid in full by:the closing date of the next billing period. When Incurred FINANCE CHARGES will be determined by applying perlOdic rates of 1.2o/. (ANNUAL PEACENT1.QE RATE 14.4%) on the first $500 and 1% (ANNUAL PERCENTAGE A1.TE 12%) on l he porlion over S500ot the previous balance without • - deducting payments or credits. JC Penney The values are here every day. *Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.m. at the following stores: NEWPORT BEACH, F•shion Island. HUNTINGTON BEACH, Huntington Center. Use Penncys Time Payment Plan. I JQ__!'AILV PILOT • For· Tl1 e Rec o1·tl I • 1 DiNsoftrlio11s Of llla1•1·iage Ente1N Jl,,.,11"'/ U C.•••v I ,,.,,,i, aM (•<·I loom•> ,,,. '"' ~,., 1..-t l•·''" •lr.11 I 1 ,,, . C.• ~' T •nn I-I.re-/. • I J,,.,p,l•••·nr .. 01 • • ll '"l•t ,., """ ~.,,, • ~ 1·, ""'~ lo"•-t d'd ~'"~'' ' \·., 1 .. ,.l<.•·•~n11\:r•, IJ<1 •i•~"'l n•• P.. I<>·. ~"II~-·~oc• ~<•· · fJ otv • •n.cl Jem• C •' 1·,,,·t1• ro c . ..,,. , .. ,,,, • o fJ••• N•n•"· :r.·•rn ""O 1~.,,.,,.,. ~' •• c;, "/ • • ~''" • •no J•C nt11 • 1~0 •• "a" •l\O 1, ,,, , '"'-'°' U"'" \ &AO ("f'• 1•r II lf><.•nn,~t P•dl">f •11••• •'II 1'/ol'•"•~ 0•~·· !:!•<.•.• '>~"' ,·,.11o O•\O P~u..n ,:•"'" P.)llP• •<." J~r.• 01 ~· J••'l•> 11 ~~111m• '·'""~ ~'"' ,1n.1 P.•J<• 'In• ~·oft J'l.O"" \1'111 °"~''"'' i Pro~·"••'"' Ii•'"'" M· I "'""'" Yioo<l;Co'. !'1•10y J•on ond L'OY!I I! t'·•'\Ool V•' (• ~ ~••d J "' I Ille'> r·•~<•o r,1 •no J •>'m, L OjO.ur l)•"'J"'""roJ,m••r-6 •owo [.,1<1 P•nl ~Ml l •Q"' v,,, .. ,1 ~l•10U "' "'~ l.\.H<. .. ,.I A oo l l•• V Fc11e ... :1 J"'r~• (~''''or.l'>•r •n\! De•• L•~ /!,Pr•·~ \'/.,kl'>. U~I• I "'"l "crm• '·'" 11c,1or• 1,1.10 /,'. ~"n JcOd't i. C••" "" lren• r .~,.,. •~d R,.i,, . ., ~/.o; ,,. t1ow Dnnn• Mol• ~nn Mirh•'I 6 ll•Q',..n '"t""" ,,nd r~cn"'' Oa; r. tQ>, J"l' • oc.unn!"" •nd so11 Rn•· r;.,,·'<• .,,, l:vcl•'' f-~•• •nr. 1'1• ••r '/Ir".• ' l•tll'' 11i .. roorlt £ •nr. RcDe•1 Nornian Vlocl!. '••llf'llo I .. 011 Ge••IO f J•n.en, s .. nOr• Lro •n<I Jam•' lv•n Wllli•m1. Gorlkln L •Ml Dor 1 El•1re Jlcbison, P.ir,ci• JI •Ml W•ll•• G 'Mrrell. 8onni<l' L't ••II Jot<n E(:I•••'" C>atn. Jr•nnt •n<I l!obrrl l!•y ~•tnl. J•n• Iii. ar.(I l!.o<lcre A Ho,.rv. Cnrl11ln• JI •n<I l(e.rn ~ l!Jtc~it 81•1>••• Jtenorta •no 11""' G•nt. Lano. ~nlrltv Ann 1na Jame• Edward. Oouy•n. IU•IWlr• A ana "lcnarcr A Enrentd FHrlll l'Y ? R~crer. Rul>Y K. •nd Paul O ll•r••• Loll i• Jean and t evlon Geo• lf Wt1t:•<>0. Mloole 5u~ •rd Rtv Dona ll> 6 ulot< C.••Y M•r!on ""d f"llr•l>t!lt! JfAtl "' O '· AO•I• L •nil J~l'ln A 11'1~1•n. Btvtrlv J••n ~nd Cl'l•rl" 1,1 ....... , ~·"().vl•on GtO'<>'• S ~nd l'••"klhl r.·r lloc:h. O•D•• """ •••II fr'"~ R~v l"'Orl' f'drl' lln• ll••r" F.olc•ri •nO Jo!ln ~·1C'1~\ fl>Om'·· ljll .. , Ft•<>C•• •nd GI•" Ol'v•r ll•nnlf. Ptno,. Sur •nil '111111,,n l>u!ll• W,11ke. Bennie 5 ""~ l!,cn•fO P R•vbu<n, OanT11 E<!w•Nl """ r.uo •• ,.,.~. D'lnn•<>· Freel Wlll1•r• •nd Lond• 1, • .,,.,,e Mf";ll. An1> M~r v •"(! (l'l•rl•• D T •vlN. Onn•lte R Ml<! Tt,o'l'l&I G Uhl. O••n• L•nn ""er l!obrrt Jc1ec1>. l!o~rts, Su,•n Lorr~lne and Dennls C:h••lf• GArc•&, MflV 1nd .lr,n!1>n10 G11•l•tOO. \colt , Jo.l'nt O ~n<l Prier l O•t~. Su11n L. ""'I Jf'l'lt' R rl'lo•on~rO. Q;•ne C. 1nd Jl obe•I S En•louo1. Sl'lerr"' 0 . 1ncr """"rew E \len•••· Stella R01>rrl1 1n11 \1'1'ne Vlr. 1enr Chancellor. Z"'ln(:l1 Fr1nc • •nd ll•UC• LYie 11·ori1oom~rv. Donn• •"0 ~'""l•v F Seou1ve111. ,.l1ori10 C •""(cl\~• f l•mono. Cl!herln• rJ.~•·• '"c 01v•ll 0<.01~v C1rt50n, Lin<'• I/I •n<i L •~·-.n P l owr. Jahn OcwQll• •"" /,\;rta I.' W•D•!er. M1rv Jene ano Rc~rl !loll f.\11\•r. M•fV Htlen lnll tJ•I·"" II F1(!Qen, G<•c• M •nd F.lrlt J Komln•kl. Vlllll•m J •<>II (l'I~• l ~l<>YI, (vnrnl• Alv• An<! f"Jopfld Seo•• !.oromo.,, L\nlli Jovt • '"" G•ri \11 lo1n· e1~"r:".~;. \l"Qlni• Sv• 1n<1 l!·c~••CI (llArte~ J"'''" G•r• I! .no M•tTh• ••"" N,•!""O \11•1 M•• 41\d (•illc•ll Fl'°VOf Jonobl!>f'd, WiUl•m And (ri•l,n•. (ran'l'IC•. Ptlrk!t II •nd ,·,111t•r L•" H.'o"k~. J~nlce ~•,l• •"'1 /,\erl• r 1l••n. M•<>~V Lvl• Mold••" '"" •mn• I No•nn Jamts Andr•I ano A~~A B•LI• l/,~Hfnr v. M~" lv~n ~l'rl (h3rle• IN r on· M~rv 5.,~•n •nll D•••M (·•i•~• !l•r-v. Delore' Jr•n~• •nl• l!ich••" •~u-.'0• Fr,ena L·,nn tnd Kt<in-11'1 Mi~::'n~1WHm• K~• ann !nhn Cell••• 1.11 l!u• Lol• I•"''" •1111 c••t•'"' /·"'"" F••ou;cn. Oo•o•hv t avrl •nll Ro1>•fl Cumm'"'" f'•vn• R"I" f nn~ '-'IOOorO' •/, Gu1~r1·0. J••""t l.\ar<~ •~d S••cn••• ':!____ --------BRANDT Vor~lnl• (ArOIVn llr"nOI )H ,-,.,,.~ ( ,m~1 llalb"" l •!An~. Dalt c' <1••'~· re~·•'~" 11 19/i Su•~••~ ~. l'lu<t-An~, C·''""' G Ar'An<ll. ~r,.. 01v•d, "' Don•·.' r~I(">~ l!ot1•'-8~1~ li l..iO l"'~' 0"•\ !•~yn ;f f:lrr>O~lr , t.-'" o•.·n~·~dr•el' S•r~ki1 Tuelcl~v. 1 Pl,'. r~,,. y,., r11"oel inl~•l"ltnl. Parll•' \I"" 1·~..-.0:•0·1 ""'-· fa...,•lv svv•tSh 11\C"t ,.,.,·r n9 101 r•>I • "'""' ••I' •·• • '" r "1 • trr-l rillUlf to me lcu<>(le1icn !or t~t Jun l>f \ llho<I. Pac.I·( v •• HOJl ~'YdlV-r rt<t.r•. • (lvde 1·co~~l•I 14erl' IJ! V • H~v••.I ti"""'""" ll•Arn 0~'" cl·"""'"· r•.•""' • 1• 1971 .,,.,.v,d t>• "'''" c ... ,,e,., < Hcrn1 •O<>\. l!cherl l.. 1nd R.ct>a·n A "~·I': <l~"orl•r. l>"hln Herr< "'I f'I tl•W""'' 8<:dCI!: mothe<. C••hu•"' "le•!'. PtaTI . Kansas. ~•SIP" llt l•n (to!r '~''"" cr~nlld1ifclr•n. Sl!f'~k•" W.clnt".d•1, 11 .. ,_, Pedl!c \l;PW Ch•P•I lntt'm ""'· ,..,;11c \ll•w Mrm.,.l•I P••• PAC•l1c .,,,e,; /\o\Cr lU•rV. aoc'~'f.'(• ,,,.,1 • 11.ocr<'t )1;1 ,o.lln~!i( lllvtl. Lon<1 r~~'" OATt <>I <lr~lll. Ftll•VA•Y 11. 1911. ,,,.,,,•n b• "''" P1u! M<><l'l•l. ShHloO (I 11•~1,,•r ()onJld Jc<>~I. Allwlmbr•: two ~ "lrttt" (t~ch<rt~ •ervkts. Tu,~· r 1.1 PAcll!C V!•w M!n"C""' P i•k V'f" //od UMY !)"e(lorl. NOLAN . ,,. ti''"' r1c1.1" R•·'rt~~! ot Hyti o• ... BC•ICh 0•'• "' r• .. th, F•~'U'"" "'' ~"''"""~ "• "•n•nr '"•'"~'"' I'•,,, •• : '"o tlto'~"' J~"" •nd f!rwM~ " ••<>~' o• . .r•rtr•·,'0'•'~' '''"0 "'""I· ~ ·"'J "'l<l•en G"l"'·''" •e•v•ct. !O<l•Y ' '"" 9 At' (~lv~·v r"""'~"' Lr• _.,,g•.. Ool(!AY i!•r•n•" Hu,,1rn9!0., ll•~•h ·;.n1'Y~fV ,,. 1/11 O·tP<IO" iTE•l!NS {.,,,,ol 0f'~n \tf'Mf'" 11 ~1 (amPo Jl~I" r 1 fo<o 0 •1• ol lltal" F~oruA·v ll. 1911 \,.r11ovPd b~ mol""• ,-. r• Ornn1 H"•1fnp~, ~, .. ,~ •. L~W•f!"<(e H~;1;,....,. b<:tl> gf tl'le ~,m,, \i1ler. !'>Mb6rl fi'M•ra. C!l~~A "••• S•rvict,. fuf\d~•· II Al.I. P•c•I"' \I,.., (1110f't lnte•mf nl, El Toro (•m tle•r ~1 c i!•~ \ll tw 1;00 1u1r~. Director•. , ARBUC KLE & SON WESTCUFF MORTT.:ARV 427 E. 17th St.. Cos1r ~-lesa " ... m • B.\l.T7. llF.Rr.ERO\' FL.'.'\ERAL 110,\l f: COr\111a del :liar +;~3.94ao l'o~1a l\l r~a • HJ-:1.L BR0<\0\1 •. Y \IORTL" i\ll r I Iii R ri1ad\l·a~·. Co"l:l ~lt~a I.I 8-~l'.t: • :\lrf0R\11 ('l-; \,,.\c ;t'.'\..\ r.EA CH f!IORTUARY 1;!:> La~UD3 ranytin Rd. 494·!t41S • PACIFIC \"IE\'I" :'111-;'.\IOlll At. PARI\ Ctmrte.ry ~lortulr) Ckaptl lilt Paclfk \'it" Dril't \t •-perf Beach. Callfern i•, 144-%711 • PEEK FA~tn.V COLO~lAL l'UNF.RAL llOME ':Pl Rotsa A"-e. \\'tilminster m4S!S • S'llTUS• MORTUARY m Malo SI. Hn•U•ilta 8t1ctl .,. ... lfeor~1a11i :atiott Plan Truil Harbor Unit to Add Parks?I lho '" fw Date Set !SAi\'rA A.~A -One ul 1110 1ntn accused of prc.~s1n~ at· t1:11r1ons ()11 a Siar · st rurk 1cc11e~er haii pir::idcd 1nnot ent 10 chnrges of rape and sex JM"rvcr.-.lon ()r:1nge Lou1,;1 Su ("le r 1 u r t 'ruirr Judgf' \\'dl1:in. \lurra\· o/'Ul'red E.ii!t'llt' l1nf!nd1 Jr. :i;., \\'e~t1n 111:.\f'1. to fnl'e 1r1.1I 1!;11,:h :!:7 <111d <t /1!!'111 . .I hc<i r 1og \l:irrti !O l111r111d1 \\<l'- Jt·,·1·11 1111 111~ prn1111,r 111 -'P· 1~··11 l!no nd1 y, Ill thu-Ju i n ·r110111::i~ ·rrul1". :u1. 111 An:ihf'im in f'111.u·1 nn huth d.111·"· Th«y dft 1u11.th .lcl'U ~cd j1f prtl· 11~1~1ng ;1 !~·:>P.1r-11lll ~1rl role~ I hat could lt•:1J 1•\ a 1 lolh \l"Oflfl !llOl'!t' l'!-ll'l't'I" \\lh.11 ~ht· gj1I !hl" pro· ~t:t·t11io11 ;1llt'f!t:. 11 ''" ;1 role in ;i :-;era·~ ol ~L'X <.irt" thnr look plaf'L' 111 tht-h:u·k j1f a rar p<11 kcd 11\ I Ile l.-.1-.1111111 1,J ;ind t'11111pll'X ill \1".rp1n I l\1·;\eh ,f1 1dll.t' \J111r;11 l1;1d l'nr!ier ortl1·1·1·d J111•111t11·s 11ilt', l.1•11,, r.: n1 1n ''· :;2. h> fate !f•j;\! April 24 on chargl'~ that ~he a!te1npted to intirnidate lhe rrosecution's key 11· i I ne s s against her hushnnd and Trulis. 1\'hO is !he 0\1•ner of the Sout h Lagun<i Dispo:<al l'om- pany. .\!rs. ln1ond1 wa s [reed on her promise to appear She v.'as ordered to return J\lareh 17 for a hearing on a motion to dismiss the chnrge.'i and 1111 :\1arch 31 for a pretrial he:ir· ing. Police arrested ,\'lrs. l111ondi follo11·ing hearings nn the charges filed agains1 ht•r hus- band aod Trulis in \\'est Or· ange Count.v 1nunicipal t·our! It is alleged that she fol !01\'cd the asserted l'iclim home and threatened her 'llUifGE COUNTY ' LJ11it :'1an1cs '7 2 Of fi .. er..; In t :ounl\ Tiu· ur.1nj~f' ( 'uUtHI ·rn ~ 11;11er :\ i\'i:o.11('1:1\111n ha~ t·lt·cted Ed1\ant t·; ll<111;1 rd ot .\.11ah1·1111 ri" i1:-; llli~ 11Jt•:-1d1·nt fl!her 11llu·e1' .uf' Barbar;i ,,. Ad:1111:-u { :-.:cll'por1 IJ1•;1r•I\ 1st 1·1et· prl'si- dt·nt and pn1gr·:1n1 L'h;i1r1na11 l.ill'<ltl :\orion uf ~a11l;1 1\11:1 :!llrl l'lo·t• J)J l'~ldPl11 :1 11 t\ 1ne1nhL"r.,111p chn1ri11.111 Al!-:v. l'l:11n• l\t•ll1.·.1 of ll1t11 t1ng1on Rl::1th, sc·1-ret :n·1 :111 d l )oroth~· :\'apkie o! "\l('11!l<1rt /11•:1ch. lrl·asurer Clift F1·niz1·r of Snn1a Ana hns heen re:i p- po111ted resolutinns chnirrn:in b~· the ne11• president I.cc H;ivburn of l-luntingto11 nc<1ch is inirnediatc pa .... t president Dues are $3 per person and $5 per couple and 1n.:iy be senl lo the associat ion in c-are of the Treasurer Dorothy Nn pkie. Bos 210:1 . Cosln i\1e~a. .\lcctini.: Slated (;AHDEN t:novE -'fhe :\ n1 e r i c a n Sch1zophren1:1 l\ssoc1ation. Orange Counr~· Chapter. v.•ill hold ils monlhl~· 111eeting at 8 o·e1ock tonigh1 <ti the United f''und Building 1141:! Slanford Ave. "1'11t· U1,11lf,t: 1·01.11111 !IJ1U..11 ;Hid U1·,u·hl's Co111rn1 s~io11 ha~ forr'n:.~!v :innounr('(t 11 w:u1ls ru :tdd "P:1rk' !u its tJtlr If lhl' a,•111111 1~ 11dn1)!e1! by n.c l'ounl1 B I I ii I 11 uf ,"oupt·r1·1sor:o: :>J'll.'L'1;1l h:.irli<11 11i ~!rit·1 1.1xt>~ ('nu ltt ;1ln1ost • {h.1utilt· Thi· cl I \t I Jl't l)fl(J,1 I 1111\'('I ( ]" 111JL1h! llkl•il <"lll'l~'\jK1rlrl t o :1 1!'d11r!1011 111 tlll' gt'llt'r;il 1·11u11 11· r11!t· and !,t~c·' :1~ :J 11holt· 1;<1ul<I ,fa1 :i1~111! !111· •;1111•' ('om1111s~10111·1'' 1l 1,r·11<i~1 ·1I 1\i•· prop11s1•d d l' t r 11· \ 1 ••1,rg.ul!1.1t101 1 a1·1 1111, 11c1-~ Thr lUunt1 ~11r1·r\ 1•11r" ;11 ,. f"\J.11'1'\C'<I 111 .1dop1 t lil' pl:1n 111 \l:11 II 1·:111-. fur ul!1t"1:1' lr;111•.f1·1 ,,1 t·ot111!.\' p;1rks ;H·1l11l1•·' 111 1l1t' h:irhtlr <]1,rrit·t .1 lutl\:l•Hll 11 h1rh 1 ~ ;ih·e;1l11 111 !hr d1~tr1t"t's h;lnil~ nn ~II Ul!llrn1.d h:l'I' 8-11011 r 11 i l.:t' A /011 {!, l~i t:er .\\.\T.-\ ,\.\1\ A ll111·c·ht•lll h1k1· ;1lf\ll!! tht S:111t:1 .\n:1 B l\t'r 11111 be spOl!:\Uff•d b~· !hr S1crr;1 l'Juh to :1l·<1u ;11n1 :ill 111- ll'rr:.\Pd Or:ingc Co 11 11 1 \ residents 1\ltlh !he 27-rnile p:-ir~ proposed 1n !he Sa11t;1 1\11;1 River (:rcl'nbell P!;in Hikers 11 tit ;1~~e111hlt' al !l a 1n Snturd:1.1· ;1! Fc:-i1herll Hegional !';1ri.. nort h ul !i11· Hil'CfSLd(' FrCt'U<ll .J ii l' ~ Spruill !n1111 tht" '1;1i1• F 1~11 and (;:irnc JJ1•p:1rlnH•11l 11111 ;11· 1·un1poll.\ hik1·1s Thi s 1s lhc· l;i.,1 i11 :1 't'l It'~ iii four lukt"S !11 acqu;11t1t l'llllll1 1 resident s 11 rtll the prop•lSl'ci park For n1nrt' i11for111.1 11011, eiill Cht1ek B1ili11 ;it fl47·!l.'i'i:! 'l'Jlh\ I~ 1\(J\I ll.'.)(.'(.\ in f\lUS! Ill Jc rel t't'cnee\ Th e o!fit"1.1l tra11Sll•r •ii pi111ic rs Y.vuld 1nr!ucll' a llt'Y. n1;1x111111111 ()J..,!r1('t t;,ix 1:d1· uf 20 •·tint' "J'Jus )C.ur;) l!arUorioo ;111d Beache s tax 11 h1l'h is pH~'l'd :ilong l''llh 1ht• pr11pt1\y la x 1111! wa s the lt1gh(·'·I t'l't'l' :•t I~ I !'l'lll~ Sl'\l'!l cents o! 1/1;.r 11.1-. d111·i 1 .. d lo11.1rd p\lrl'hJ~• 111 thr ~11.;ur l l:e.u·h. ll1,l 11r1 ott1<·11!~ •a1U Iii\ \t'\I .J t1d!!l' ' . .\ppointcd ·°'·\ \'T.\ 1\.\A Judgt• ! ll·rbtrl S. I !rrlnntls I» the ne11 jlt'l';'il(t1ng JUCtge or the Orange ~ .11111!, Supl"r1tn ( 'uurl 's ;1p· p1,llnh· d1v1s1i111 !1111:,!f' Hrrl;uuls.1 \\ho L•kl"s "1 l'f I n11n .!udgl' f{;iyrno11d Tht1n1psn11 111 th1· eourt s 1op :1ppo·lla t1• SIKJl. 1111! be jn1nrd 1)1) 1ht· 1h11·(··111tlge bl'11ch 11~ I .J11d1:e~ H1il1t•11 A M;un;1rd ,111U \\ 11\1;1111 s \.1·1· .Jud~:e l!c1 la11cl:. :-.er•.l'd 11 1th 1 .Judge.~ Thonlpsnn and \\'iliinn1 1 \l111r:i·. 0111 1<1-"! y rar'sl 111 h11n ,1I Auduhon Chief To Ci\c l 'alk SA.\TA /\\".\ N;i\i11nal Audubon Soc1et~· President Dr I J·'.h ts Stahr \\'1\1 address the I Sc.1 ;ind S:igC' Society ~fart"h ~~ :11 1111· F1 n;I Christ ian ( 'h11reh. 17~11 \\'. 17th Strcel :-.1ah1. f1wmer St'l'rl'tarv ul 1l1t• 1\n11\· 1111t1l'1' Presit!t•nl f<.('11111·d.1, 11 rl l discu:-s t·11 \ 11·011:11e11l:il pn1blcn1s n 11 d 1hc1r .-:0h1\l•Jn' ;11 lhC' 6 :10 p 111 d1nnJ·r n1(•et111g The no-charge checking plan for frugal people. Here·s how Fruga l Ch eck works. You ke ep a minimum da ily bala nce of $1 00 1n your personal c he cking account. and you can write al l the ch ecks you want. For fre e. No service charge whatsoever . If your balance dips below $100 . we 'll only charge you one dollar for that month. No matter how many checks you write. So you see. you will save money. Wi th Frugal Check. 61 convenient locations UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK ""\~ ~"" """" Where everything starts with you COST A ~I ESA OFFICE 1845 l\ewport Blvd. 17 14 ) 646-329 1 SOUT H COAST PLAZA OFFI CE 333.1 Bristol Si. 17 14) 540·5Zl I ll UNTING TO N BEACH OFFICE 302 Fjflh St. F. f ra nk Zrchiec. ftfo.nagt>r H. M. Stolte .. /.fnnag,.r ( 714 ) 5:16·9361 Victo r J . Ruedy, Afo.nager ' 1nax1111urn ur 20 (l'll[, 11uuld not iJ('!ually reprcsl!tl! :10 H!· 1Te<:1St', since cuunl~ l:tXt'' 1\01dd prob:ibl~ UC' rcd Lh'f'd \Oo'L!h th" absenC't: uf th•· fl<ll i..~ 1!t·p:1rt 1111.·11! l)lfit·1 :1\s b11pc !he l r;111~l1·1 ll'i ll bt• l'OlllpC\t'(J iHJrl the !;l\ r11!t ·'l'I bl' !be i:ntl vf 1\llgust Otta•r . h'aturts ur 111 .. reor1:an1zal1on 1111·lud1· -A Sl'l't•n n1;:i11 t'l)!llllll:o.:\1011 lt'l<,ll \ th(> f)!'l'~Ptl! 11\0 1'· 1lll'!llhrr bort rd '!'hr !1111 111·11 lllt'!llhl•!'S \\lllllfl bt· OIJ,!)!O IH!t•d Jro111 ,i b!':1<"h ( 111 ;ind ;111 111 LPul t'1l1 h\ tht• 1.e:ij.\111· 11f ,{ '1! II ' \t lt'it:-.1 'i.J pt 1 •·nl 1 f 1l1r pr11p·1 rt_1 laXC" 11uuld lu• 'll'l'rll 1111 1nlarlcl p:1rl. ,trl'ao,; uni 11 tlu· 1 '1.JtndiUut•\ «qu.d th"'1" '111'111 •;ii h.:iitiors ;111d lx':-Jt hl'' i\ rtporl rtui· 11, l1Jnt· 111 t!it· ('ounl.I :111dJl111·-cnnlr41ll•· on r hi· 1·\l1·111 •·I r Ii•• t·" l)t•lldtl111"· i;.1p b1'[\\l't'll 11il.111d p;11·i..~ ;111d !Ji•;u·li 1,u·i111u·• • A propo~t·d 1r;u1~!vl' "I .ill rt·111:1111111~ p:1rk !L1t1d'> In 11'1' I !;11'!101 I !1•l111·t [j ;1 I [, 1t I' \'Hl\\illl''""ll"f'.I iouiih 1 dl'iiT11lt1in:.: cl1:11r111:111 \\ ;i 1 \ I 11 l :-d 11 \ '1 l '' d 1111;1n11 111111.,11 t" .. u!JJ'"11 1111•, 11;111lt· vh;llll!I' ,111\J l'l'01").::lltll•1 l111n 1.'u111u1i..;s 11111 1•1 l'r•11il, l!ubirt•Oll •.ud. ··1\'e ;11r ""I~ lur!1'<1l11u11; 11h;1I 11.-h.1\t•' :1lrt'urty :1).(rted 111· 1 .. 111! 111 du" r'lt' i ~ w e • r '7"/.! rn e be~t 59 · !!!~.io n in town for double ~nit ~le ek~ t1 nd S:1o rt c oats. Rt>mem ber, I he br-11 11 .. lw,iiy~ e l j4~ 1 V ~ L.<lo-N•wocrl 8e1ch 61 l-4~ !O 5.99 sq. yd. Installed 'Chateau', our luxuriant shag. The price- unbe atable! The va lues are he re every day. Even Sunday . Chateau ' is the shag that's easy on your budget. Deep, luxurious nyl o n pil e stand s up Jo wear, c l ean s easi ly . Select yo• !CS now from four colors: bronze olive, peacock · tweed, fl ame tweed and tawny gold tweed . You can do the wh ole house at th is price ' Bring in your floor measu191T\en!S foranooallllgalion 1:81P1l-..ta today. JC Penney Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the following ltoru: A.v e ileble •t: NEWPORT BEACH, f•shion 1,1."d . HUNllNGTO N BEACH, Hu ntin9ton Center. Ule Penney i lime p•ym•nf pl•"· • . l • • •. . . ,, QUEEN!& Panth ers Cha nging -Ne wton ATLANTA 1l'Pl 1 -Black 1 Pnntl1vr lrader ~lucy Nr\vton) sa.vs tllt' black J)l}\\'Cr n1ove-1 ment 1n Arnrri('ll is at "lo"'I ucle" .1nd /us O\\'n n1ilitantl organi£atlo11 is undergoing! chungc. Ne\\·ton. Panther defense nl1111s1~·r. told an audll'nl'C of j neurly 1,000 at Georgia Stale I 'n1vrrslly thi1t thr Pantlu•rs had IX'cn ''arrogant" ln thel pasl <1nd •·failed 10 id('n\1(y "'Llh the masses." ! Comp.sired lo the "high tide of rf'pr<'ss1on And rrs1stance" 1n l!l67-6fl. N('vo'ton sfH<l ''there is ;:i l111v ti<le 111 thr freedom nu11 f'tnrnt 11011' " '"."iloo cuddlin~. or get \V et!'' He said th1· l'authcrs. in rcspons1· lo thf•sp t'hanJ.icS. haVl' becornc "rnnrc serious , and mort• n1<1h1t'1"' <ind \\'Lll rely l1·ss 1111 th~ );tnrmy\ Ga1nble Lost rhetoric that has thilra<.:· lerizl'd t!H•n1 llrfurL'. E11ibattled Caba.zon '/'he n1ost ly you11i.;, n1oslly bJ;11.:k nud1C!ll'C V.'<IS lold their trar·ht'f"S harl providl'rl th{'m \1'11h a lot of useless forniulas in the clas:-rooin Bt11 Nl'wt on ~ailt thl'V had not been told ih;it "t.t u• Ch1nrsc have dPvrlop1·d 11 formula to rnakc Nixon 1·01111· to lht'rn and no! lh<·n1 ;.:o to N1xo11." I Dies-W itli W lii11ip er Nl'111on pr;11s1•d C h i n n . 1vlueh he n•t·cntly visitrd. as lhC' '"1110:-;\ advanr rd r1v1li7.a· lt(ln in the 1yorld.'' but said, ''Our rcl"olo!ion may 1;1kc a different form." CABAZON IAPI -This dusty desrrt city died as it has lived (or 16 years, In turmoil. Cabazon d1s111torpor:itcd 1-1!'1 a city ;it rnidnighl lc1 st v.·cek amid fcl'11ngs as chilly as the desert night. 1'hc local pokrr casino. the reason for the city's in· corpora1ion in !955 And th e bane of its rxistcnce, closed \Vcdnesd;1 >' with a farc1,,,ell FDA Ur.-red t"l To Ban Food Dye \\',\SM1Nr;TON !AP I -The Food and 1Jr11g Adm1n1strat1on has bct>n strongly ur~ed ro perm<inl'ntJ y ban ;1 widely us- ed food . drug and cosmclits dye suspt·ctcd of causing cancer. fcl::tl death <ind h1r1h defects Dr S1dnt·Y ~1 W o I f c . coordin;11or or Ralph Narlt'r·s llealth Hcse atch (;roup. saul in <1 lCtl t•r to the FDA 1hat thf' riyl', k11011n as Fl) & C Red No . 2. is l>cing , used in pro- duction of $28-1n1Jlion worth of food each day. An l0sl1n1a!l'll I 5 n1ill1on pounds nf Hcd No. 2. made from co;1\ tc1r. arl' used an- nually 10 color bre;1kfast cereal, gum. candy. pct f11'Xls. gelatin d1·sscrL'i, sof! drinks, lipstlck and pill co;iungs. Its presence JS noted only as ··ar1tf1c1al cohJr1ng·· on a J;ih<·J. p:irty that lastt'd 1111\11 3 am. The fighl ov1·r poker -legal in California by city opt1011 - kepi the dcsl'rl roadstop in an uproar as the five city council scats kept changing th.rough recall and resignation. ''This city lived fn acriniony and it's going to die the ~R ml: way. Cabazon will die h.r1rd," said Mayor Charles Brow n shortly bf'forc! a final n1J.:!ll - 11n11· i:ounc1l Sl'Ssion lo l11r11 JUr1sd1cuon uf th1· 1·t1rn111l1111ty bnck to Hivrrsi1tr C1n1n\v Of thr JJant hcrs. Newton said, "Wr ;1 re ln a slate of 1ransform;1l1on all thr lime because we are: rcvo!u- lionarie!I and Hre <.:htinJ.":ing wit h th1• changing conditions or 1 h« 1>.(Jrld ·· ,\i1•wt1.r1 ki·pt hi s :111dil'n(·C I 11.1111111( 11l•:1r!y 11n hour, hul v.l11·11 !hr· >'(111 ng , AfrO-("fJ1ff1•d !'.!;11 k J'~1111h1·r 11,adct ;ip- 1''·;1r .. 1! tu· ~a<; J.:!"Prted by l•1r1g .q1p/;,11..,1· :u1rl shouts of "l'nw1·r" rind "Hight on." I Acl s \lonitore d This city nr 6J:1 n·s1d•·11l "I w;1s orgar11z1·d on a v1s1011 1)r :1 poktr p;1lal'c th;it would fll - lract hght industry, a resort hotel and ~olf courSC', anf1 a flock of hi~h rol!trs frnn1 1 lu' ne:irby plush rl'sort of 1';1!111 Springs. SJ·:A'/1'1.1·: i lJl'l 1 -Thel But the vision blurrtd in th« re~1on11I 11Hir·c of the Federal! po!1tiral squahblin~. (Inc ap-'fradc 01mrn1ss ir1n has begun pcuntcd couucllman served on· a systcn1!1l1r· and regular pro- ly 15 minutes. In the µast two gram of 1n 11 nil o r i n g ad- years 15 p1·rsons served on the vcrt1sing pl;iccd in major council and six v.·rre mavor. ncvtspa pcrs or Washington. 'rhe r1 ty a\·eraged five re-call Oregon, Idaho, Moa tana and c!~·ct1ons a year. Alaska. Jn .J;1nu<iry 1970 L. Dec ---- Tallr·111, a rf'a[ estatl' man who __ _ .... w,,~, • .,: ___ _ li·rl thl' incorporation and !lrrv-/ Q f 14 5 ed ;1.~ an early mayor, ran , , U ;ig;11nst 'J'fio1nas Dcl.uca in a re~·.all l'leet1on for the counciL (Lil([ C tllt't I ;1llt·n! won, but the counci l refused to seal him and he C ? 1ook tht• matter to Superior OltVeTSe. Court. The council w a !I ordered to seat Tallent but f\ noted publisher in Chicago rrfusl'd and "'RS found in' con-reports a 111mplc t~hnique. of trmpt of eourt everyday conversation which In the 1n~er\m, Deluca can_ p.11y you re~[ dividends in rest~ncd . In Marcb the council social and bus1n~s!I adv~nce­ finally sc:lll'd Tallent v.·ho rncnt and 1,1.·orks hke magic to subst·qu£'ntly "'RS e I c'c t c d g1vr you J>OlSC'. scl~~onfldence . . and greater popularity. ma~or. Th~n he resig~ed . Acco rding 10 thi s publi!her. saying he wanted to be hired m::iny J')('Oplr rlo not realize how Thi: FOA J.:<t"'t' !he dyl' a ::is c11y manager. He didn't get much thry r 0 u 1 d inn ue ncc provis1on<1l l1st1ni:: 10 1!'1fi0 prn-!he Joh and has ~en out of cl-others siniply by what they s.11.y l 1!1ng a f1na1 rl1·(·1s1nn, 1argeted ty government since th~n . and hO\\' lh•'Y say ii. Whf'ther for Det. l~lfl"l TtH· d(';1dl1n(• Currently, Tallent is ap-in husinrss, ;1t sncia! function~.j 11 >1s r111so;1·1! :1r1rl h:1~ lx·t·n ex-praling a Superior Court nr rven in 1·as11;d ronvrrsatlons t1'nd1•d p1 •1"10iJu•;d \\' :0-11!1"•' df'('l~ilOn ~·h1ch dcr ·Jarrd lhe 11•ilh rlf•W :it'fjllilinlilntf'S thcrr "l-"ur1hrr i11;H'l11111 or <H'l1on Sept. 14 vote for rt1 s1n - 1 an· 11 i1ys In n1akP a p;ood im·I i;h0rt ol run1 pl('l1• ri·rnoval of rorporat 1un !eg;1J.. Res1Je:n1s prf'st11on rvcry time you !alk. I f· O &.. (' li•·rl ,\11 2 i~ in-V?tcd 192·1:1! to dissolve thl' To acquain11hc rcadrrit of this e xcusahh· •ir1rl shoulf'I ini·ur c1lv. pap•·r wi1h thr easy-to-follov.· legal s;u1L11011s 10 those "I h;1vl'n 't R11·en up hope rulrs for drvf'!opinl! skill in respons1t,\r·," WolfC' v.· r o I e that v.·1·'11 bt ·come II <.'1ty "veryr!;iy rl)nv~_tinn . th<' pub- FDA Commissioner Charles C. ;igain ," Tallent said. "People jlishrr.~ h~vr pr~full d~t~ils F-:dwards. 1vi1I ix' hurt by Cabazon not1of thl'1r intrrrsltn~ 11elf-tra1n1n~ Wolfe !laid FOA srient!st!I bt-1ng a t:J\y. / won·r be method in ;i nr\Y booklet. "Ad· have <.:onfirrncd portions of satisfied untsl the Cali fomia v en l ure !I in Conversation.'' Russian srud1e!I indicating the Supreme Court tells us it wasl"•hich v.·ill he rnai li;J trc;~ lo ~ny­ dye: caust>s tumors in rats and a legal election." nne who requcc;ts it. No nbh~­ haS tox1<.: effects on ch.lcken ------lion. Send ~-our name, address. and rat cn1bryos. Us. rood Kids Like .,.,d 1.ip codr t?· Cnnvcrsation and drug laws prohibit any 55$ E. ~nee .;t., Dtpt. 509-81 food additive v.·bich causa T A k And '.\1undel~1n . Ill. 60060. A post· cancer in humans or anima ls. 0 S Y c11rd Wlll do. FOR A CREATIVE LIFE Ev•n • 1up1dic;AI \cio~ 1t m1r1"t ctpAbtlil••• "'u1I lmprttf upol'I "' !h• "'""'"1• v1r;,1y i nd •Mp•n••v• po!•nlitl wh ich ••••Y ind1.,du1l po 11•11•1. '(,t ,.,h one h41 lo 1cill'I• d•q••• t l•O 1,11 lh• fr u1lr1lion which co,.,,1 fro"' 1,,.,,+,d •i ll•t11ton. Ew•rvd1v mo•• i nd ;~<clw •h ••• di1to••""9 •"d pro.,nq I 1if'l'I• pie t1 w th1t lil"lo ltlion r•11•lh f•om focu1in9 upon li1nif1l>on ,.,o:I 1u<c •u i1 lh• ••11.11! of fol· ..,,i119 11po11 1ucc111 . Et ch i11d1•ro:lu•I 1•h hi1 own Do11111i1•i e1 . You ~·" ••p•<Mt yo"'r li f• th11u9h mort Ctt tli•• Hiouthf, Ston oow by dlall.. MOd ltllftf tit• CRIATIVI THOUGHT lot tltl1 wHI< -6~6·7757. Jf?_,.µ /tl ,dA;.&,jr'.v N1wp0rt Unity i::11ttf't of Creati ve Llvlnt 1•27 W•tfclltl Dr. N.wport au<h ...... ,111 i---DENTAL PLATES • Bridgework • Fillings • X-Ray • Extractions ALL ON INSTANT CREDIT TERMS All Credit Hendled By My Office! No Benk or F inance Co. To Deal With ((Ill Appr9'Ad Ctedltl PENTOTHAL ~ DR. OAKES IN MESA DENT AL CENTER 267 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA PHONE 646-1882 No Appointment Meu111ry Quick Piilo Repeln Y(hl!. y.., We lt CWIJf tAT. 'TIL f .. M • ' ' -~ . ·~-- TO S4VE UP 1'0 ~150 ON SYLVANM 100% SOLID STATE :-iYLVAN!A ("111.!l!l TV :'111'111·.I. r·1_.i.:1 :(} 111 l'r111l1 •11 quu·111y ~1yl•· 1111/1 1.:111nt ~-,·• ld11n::. !11••<ih.J C•1l111 H111.;!•I \(H)llMJ !d•• 111rr 11i11r• 111 t!1" 11<'11 ri·•·l1111i.;1dnr 1<h1tP"· (;1h1itl1;,r IO(Jl !MI ··1111 .... -.1 .. 11·1111 Jn-.H111l Pu ~li-h11I 11.n T11r11111·. SA VE $100 Now Only SYLVANIA CO NSOLE COLOR TV MOL>EL CL1257 In ,._.1l-oditer· n.ncan style fea tures slant 2&" (dia g. mca.~ ) screen , Gibraltar 85 'Ill chassi11 and Pcnna·1inL control. SAVE $100 Now Only SYLVANIA CONSOLE STEREO MODEL SC'1 '1 5 in Mediterranean ltyle 'With 120 walU; peak mu~ic pmret. SAVE $40 Only 100'/o SOLID STA Tl !'-iYl.VANJA ('(I[/ 111 'l'V ~1()1 JJ•:L l"l..H'i"\ 111 .\l1 ·0\1\.·1·1·n11•'IH1 :-.1ylr. ~·rl\1H1 ""-·~ >' 1d11t).:. Iii''''"' .,.11·•·11 1111rt lhf' ,,,11'1 .... 1111 ,. 1;1lll"ul!:tl" 1(1!11111.1 o·IHtSHI~ 111!11 fl1 '1il11l J'ush·h11tln11 ·ru nln~. SAVE $200 Now Only SYLVANIA COLOR TV MODEL CL1258 Jn handsome CJ1111Jc 1tyle bu i;:lan t 25" (dlag. meU.) Color Br1iht 1001"1 pictu re tube, Pcrma.nnt control and the Gib raltar 85™ cha.ti. SAVE $100 Now Only fiYLVANlA CONSOLE STERW MOD EL sc.;1 23 in Med I t.ftT'alleart atyle with f)() '!V11Ll• pr.1k mu.le pcnr.r. SAVE $30 Now Only -n\IA(llA :::t.7c0LoR fiYl.VANIA COi.Oil T V MOIJEL ('l.1 20:l 111 Conlen1p11 r1ry ~lylt1 h •~ lh1• i:lftnl '.!:," \1\1~1:. 1111•11.) Color llrl1ht 1110 1·.1 p\,-1111" 111t11., l'rrn11-·1i nl (untrol 11nd lh(I (;111111ILIH K~. IM ch11111lR. SAVE $60 Now Only ~'•MIA "'"'Ciil.oR SYLVANIA J 9" (O!AG:MEAR.) COLOR J.V MODEL CXl 174 huColor Brll:t 100 'picture tube and tht Olbral.t.at tib eh111ll with Jn11.&nt Color,."'iAYC and J>ernw1lot conlrol. ltoU-*bout at.and optloul ~tr•. SAVE $50 s3799s Oniy BYLVANI A CONSOLE rrrEREO MODEL SOl34 In a...ic 11y11 with UO 1'lita: pttk m~ pow•t SAVE $40 Nowt Only CLEARANCE OF PREVIOUS MODILS ONLY 25" c•l•I' c.,.~4 W.t'"" .wlvlll ultlMt, 11% aefW tt•t•· A11tM'l•tlc ,flM tunlne. l•w• NL Now only .$499" 4 WAYS TO IUY TV APPLIANCE and SALIS & SERYICI hekAmer1'41rd e l•t..wled Cre41t 2300 HARBOR • COSTA MESA • 540-7131 • DAILY 9·6; MON., THURS., FRI. 'TIL 9 ' ' • ' 1 z DAIL v _PIL_o1 __ l'A,,lll.Y CIHCUS .. tJ!onday, Ftbr11ar1 i4 1~72 b11 1111 " .. ,,,, .. 0Y1il l yo11 d rav1 a big heart , Mommy? tt1i1 lon't I,.,,~ a t it 'cause i f 's somethin' I 'm m..,~;11 1 for YOU . 11 M l1111 eso ta F lr111 Compan y F iling Bid Fo r Tropica11a Hotel I.AS VEt;i'IS 1Ul'l 1 -1'!tr> Nevada Gaming Co:1!rol Uo<i : d has appro\·cd an application to allo\\.' a l\1innC'stila co1np;111y In l:ike o\·er the Trop1cana ll•ill'I on the Las Vegas Strip. The parent Nevada Gaming Commission will lake final <1c- tion on the apppllcation at a meeting here Thursday. Consolidated F i n a n c i a I Corp., owned by De i 1 Gustafson of Minneapolis. is bu ying all Tropicana stoc k owned by Texas Internationa l Airlines. /'{ halt doien \\/holly nwncd subsidiaries of Consolidated Financial Corp . \Vere listed on the appltcation "'hich wa s ap- proved by the control hoard with Jillie cl I s c u s s i o n . Ch airman Phil l·lannifin :-;aid. however, that the ;1pplicat1on had taken many 111011ths to process. State ofl ieials refused to reveal how 1nuch 1noney \vas Involved in the transaction when they licensed the co!- porations. Gustafson and his associates Hoger Ne1~·st run1 and Robert l~ildrelh \Viii head the parcnl corporation as "·ell 11s all of the subsidiaries. A rnemo on ho!el policy said J .K. Houssels Sr. wou ld be re- tained as chairn1an of !he Lake T a l1oc E nvironme11t Plan Okayed CRYSTAL·BAY, Nev. (UPI ' -The Tahoe Regional Plan- ning Agency (TRPA J has adopled a key ordinance lo en- rorce a plan to protect Lake Tahoe from pollution and 4)verdevelopment. The California-Nevada agen- cy has approved a land ~se ordinance. one of three whi ch 'viii provide the teeth for en- forcing an "envi ronment~! 1·onslra1nt n1ap" adopted 1n December. ·rhe 1nap lists a!! land parcels in the lake basi n i_n terrns (1r the development 11 t·an suppo rt 1vithout harn1i.ng- thc env1ronrnent of the scenir. n1ilP-h1gh resort area The ];1nd use ordinant:C' in- C'llides provisions for hoLising de11,1ty, construction limits in- cluding height of buildings, and various other 111n1talions hoard Ill d1n·t·t11r-, t1f 1111· h11 t"I .I Kl'll /luu.-, ... e!:. ./1 11 :11111• 1•' 1<11ned :1s prtsident 11 t fl1j• po-h resorl. it l\';1s u1du ·atl'd 1 .. 1h1· board The 1nc111u s;_ud !ht· 1!11u-,~cls personal guarantee of " 1.-irst National B<.1nk !0;111 11·111 he released from then1 \1·11h1n a 1nonth after the de:i l closes. Gustafson told th e control board he planned no n1ajor changes at the resort 1vhich was .built in 1957 at a c11sl of $15 mill ion. Ed11cation By S ugµe.~l e<l f{ENO ( Ul'l 1 -'fhe tunber ind ustry 1v1ll fae<' dcn1ands fo r 1nore lun1ht·r 11' h 1 1 (' en- vironmentalisl :; insist fe"er trees be cut. according to Ca lifornia Stale Sen . Fred Jl.·1arler .Jr Marler told l hc 23rd annual Si e..r r a C asc.:adl' Lni.;L!1 ng Confercn("c la~! y.·cek the in- du"stry n111st ad;1p1 tu 111cet changing t1n1es. and !he Uest way to du it is to edticate legislators and !hr ptihlic about whal can be done and has been done to n1cet the pro- blem. '"If you c.:<111 educ<i!e those making the pu sh for lcg1 sla- lion, the prospect for sound legislation is n1uch better," he sa id . "Educate the cont'erned en- vironmentalist <Jbout I h c realities of f o re st r y . Personally. I think there is more roon1 ror a meaningful dialogue V+'ith t he en- vironmental and c i t i z e Tl groups." He sa1rl rnv1r11nn1rn!alists are mos11r 11 r1!-n1caning peo- ple "'ho arc un:i11;1rc of !he research a11d 11 ork the in- dustry and the Furl'~I Sl•r1·1ce have done !n pn 11 1de better ·practices. !\.1arler st11d there would be rnoves lo establish n1rire wilderness are;is bv t<lk- Jng Pores! Service l1:1ndS and putting lhe1n under t h e Interior Depar!n1cnt. lie said there will b<' conllnurd trg1sL-1- 11on seek ing lo r r s I r 1 r I h,1rvrsting and rnanagrrncnt I of forests on pri1·atr lands. and more legis lali\'c dcn1ands for 111orr recycling of 11ood products and to ban "clca rcu t- ting"' of limber. Sena te Cuts Vo li n~ Ti111e \VASHINGTON <UPJ J ''Passing the ordinc1nce sets 11 national precedent in lh:it it lies together lhe concept of land use and the concept of r nvironmental constrain!s." said Richard 11eikka. TRPA executive director. "We have clrawn :1 limit around the 11rbanization that is going lo bl' allowed i11 the Tahoe Basin" The Senate has decided to alot only 15 minutes for each roil call vote this year. instead of 20 minutes as w;:is the case / last year. I See by Today's Want Ads • AR~: noes YOUR CUP o~· TEA? Then you 'U flip n\"f'r !h('.<:e Liny teacup DCIOdlt>s. They'rl'.' register· NI and ha\.'t' had a ll their shots. • fll':~ER\"ES A l\TE:DAL: Timi's 1hi.s 1-~rigill1urr rc- lrii,:<'ra!r:ir frl'f'tr>r. Jrs 1·to!11r is hrnru<'. 1!"i; f1~1sf p1o••f11nol 1~ lti.{i1·11 hH f1•1•! -!1k<' 111'11 • r.1,,-,\f.L Sl·:T \\'1th n l\1ng "!I•' ros!un •p1•tli t' 111,.1. <"Qfh.,, ,111•1f'nrl1Hhles, " mn1 f'lung liar 1'hriir!i, l1111n C'h111rs <1nd a 1•hromt' k1tt'hrn .'>!>t. l'Jus l!flml' rhilftren" l'lo•h1>~ h.nd loyt. lka~nabl,. prlC'N. -. HURRY! SALE PRICES HONORED TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY ONLY! 3 Pc.-Polished Brass DELUXE FIRESCREEN SET . h 1· hed brass frame and oval filig ree. • Curla1n screen as po 15 •Bla ck mesh cur tains with automatic pull. • Blo ck fini sh poker & bru5h have brass hand les & ha ng fronl top of frame. ,, ' j I ,, ;: ;' ,_ , .. ' • l ., 1 . I 1, :, ,. ,. ,. :: REG. $2 1.95 SAVE $6.00! TU£S. & W£D. ON LY! POST LANTERN • Ebony black finished housing has fro sted panels. • Overall size, 18 inches high x 10 inches wid e. • U.l. a pproved- easy to install. •Mak es your home a real stand-out. REG . $10.49 TUES. & WED, ONLYI SAVE $2.501 3J.b . Polyeste r Fill ~ NYLON SLEEPING BAG • 100% nylon outers hell and lining makes it completely washable. • 100 inch zipper zips two bags together. • 33"x77" size-your choice of bright & wild col ors. •Sewn-in tie strap handles-for e a sy totin'. WOW/ EARLY BIRD SPECIAL/ .. LG . S. 11.99 SAVE $4.00 Waste King DELUXE • Pate~~~.8AGE DISPOSAL stainless steel·tom hlardened • • .sw1 ve irnpe /ler s. Stainless steel t 3tcel grin d . urntable-ca,t ring. • Powerful Y, ho rsepower motor ~~~s $2295 $7.001 ruu. " WEo. OHL YI 28 In ch Long FIREP LAC E LOG TONGS PAINT C'OSEOUT • Ex1ra slrong wrought iron. • Scissors type oction make~ them easy to hondle. REG . \;l.29 69' ""' TUES . & WED. ONLY! 7 Piece COOKWARE SET •Heavy quality stainl eis steel pons ore easy lo clean. • Includes 4 qi. covered sauce pot, 2 qt, & 1 qt, covered pans & 10" frying pan. REG. $9.99 $599 WOWI SAVE $4.001 Set TUES . & Wf D. ON LY! Latex Wall Paint Semi.Gloss Enamel SPRED SATIN SPRED LUSTRE e EllWlf Olt-COAI lllJUSEfllll IMr'EAIAI WNlf( •Gives you a velvely finish that 's tough e nough to wash again & again. •Dries in 20 minules. REG. $6 .85 • for kitchens, boihs & woodwork. •Cleans eo~ily--dries loo soft .sheen. RfG. $8.99 $6~.~ ....... lfG. $2.7t 5J 50 "" SUPER SAVINGS/ Your Choice ENDURANCE OR SPRED HOUSE PAINT • Gives your home beauty with long-term prolecfiOf'l, • Ideal for wood, brick1 stucco, concrete or primed metal. • Non-chalking, fest d rying. $600 REG. $7.95 Gal. TUEs. & WID. ONLYI -· --• Fresh a ir and fo rmal ity are mirrored at the window seats at d in ing ,table in Monarch Bay home . of Mr. and Mrs. John C. Crean. In side bouquets epitomize flourishing gardens and grass cloth wallpaper goes naturally with curving turf outs ide. DAILY PILOT PHOTOS By LEE PAYNE • HOUSE-PITALITY Touring Rippling lagoon reflects the pagoda, tropical ferns and d elicate flowers in Mrs . Arline Ba ker's Em erald Bay garden, one of the stops on Opera league's Home and Garden Tour. BEA ANDERSON, Editor Moncl•~• f"1bru1r~ 14, 1111 P1•1 If Great Indoors Lagun<1ph1le.~ \\·hn art-ruit arul about for the Art Colony's two-week \Vinter F'est1v;il happenings are re.minded by the Opera League to allov1 ti1ne n11dway in the sehedule for a Honie ;111d c:arden Tour on Sunday Frb. 27 ~!r s <;eorRe .\! Lawler. general chairman. extends the 1nv1tat1on to explore thr ~rr<il indoors of si:r< diSllllC!I VC rl'Sld('llC('S (rOnl II a.m. to 4 pm. Thr i!111erary includf's ocean v1e11s, l\"Oo<lland se\11n,1:s. art ('{)J]ect1ons and 1111:.talg1e menienlos. \\'h1te 111arbll' Ch1nt•sr Foo do~s ~uard the cntr;iner !n 1he \l;irr~ J L;iwrenee hnrnt' ;ind its arra~ of Oriental ant111uc ~. 11'•\I'~ 11nd jarlf'. The J\.1oss rnvr rs1::itr 11·i th ils Sl\'Ccping v1e1v of the ocean 1~ sheltered h.v pi11cs, barnbnn and wooded enlry. 'fhc tnur 1nl"ludrs f\vo ~lups 1n J\.lon;irch B;iv. ~1 r. and .\1rs. Louis D Evans 1\•dl oi>cn their hnrne In the leisure!\" ;ifter·1oon hrnwsr·r.~ and J'vlr. ;1nft ivlrs . John (' ('rran will offer rrfreshn1rnts. 'l'hr r:1·ans·.~ hon1r has thrre f'n1phases : ;in intf'rior Span1sh- stylr patio, a 1•"1nrrark 1\•al! in !hf' family roorn and a massive. hand- carved hf'irlooin breakfront 1n the dining rooni. J\.1ovit• rncrnor;ib11ta, trophies for model nirplanes. fishing and midget ;iuto r<1c1ng : a Florentine gamr fable and metal sculptures are part of the decor that represent diverse Interes ts of the Crean fa mily. Rich and vibrant ('Olors of Rnmcn neyna's adohr Jl ae1rnda Sf'l Off lhe In-house rsh1h1L of his wcnvin~. painting and rl;iy p1ccr.~. A hallwA.v display sh1ws cnnlracts ;ind letters received from various celeb rities. Decorative Mexican t ile trim• the An ;iu1h11nt1<· r.1ex1ran kilch~n !Ind cacti garden with aviary .!lrt designed for rriendly gathering~. Hrc1•nt and )1cirluon1 Oriental rurnish1ngs create the inlimatt and pt'rson;il theme of r.!rs Arlin e Haker·s ~1nerald Ray rrs1denrt A t'<irved Jade lamp rrsl11 on a gold inlaid Chinese Ria~~ 1'hest 1n the !iv· ing roon1 wh1lr frorn another van- tt1ge point a tropical gardrn is !>.ern through a glass wall. Frl'nrh l'rov1oc1al furn1sh.ngs cnillril~I \\'llh con l<'mport1r.v art 1n- el11d1ni.: an Ot"IRl11Al Chag;1l1. 1n lht'! ne1·;01 front honle of \1a i Crn. 1 rf'! 1 anrl .\Ir-; Charlf's .J <)uilrrr 1\L1sks fr11n1 .111 over !hf' 1\•nrlrl ;inrl other rxn!I(" kcf'psake~ indirate lht> uwnrrs" f'Xtf'nsiv(' travels Tht• $.1 11~·kets and n1t1ps ;:irt av;iilnblt• a! !ht!-Chan1ber nf Cn1n- 111{'rre nus ridrs fr om l.;1~una Hotrl 1\•1 !1 br provided for 50 cents. Sot:ial events. atn(lfll{ I h t frst1v;il '5 ~portive. arllslir ;1od rlr:-i111at1c offerings will start with 11 French 1o,·1nr and l'hf'CSe party sponsored by the C11•1e Len,l{ue fron1 fi JO to 8:30 p.m. F'rida.v. F'eh. 25 . 111 the La,l{una Reach Art 1__;al!t'ry Admission is $3 . Soroplitnists will host an an11QUf! show on Siiturday and Sunday. Feb. 26 and 27 in the Boys· Club. The nrxt weekenrt in the Bnys Club, the Mermaids. women '! division of th e Cham be r of Com- tnerce and 12 women 's orgaoiza· 1ions wi ll join for a fle."l market. Adn11ss1011 is free exce pt fo r th• prc111i rre hours 10 a.m. to nnnn on Saturd<1y. ~larch 5, \Vhcn $1 will be rhargf'd 'J'he j!iant auction 11 scheduled fo r 2 pm. Sunday, .\1areh 6. hood and panels 1ide1 of stove in arti1t Romeo Reyna' 1 kitchen that features hanging pottery and looks out onto patio garden. , .. _!_.j _O•_IL_Y PJL.:..OT'---- Golden Memories Untarnished by Time F'ifty years of n1arriagc \\'Cre n1arked hv ~1 r. and ~1rs .. Joseph 1'rindl of Costa ~le.~a '''i\h a· partv g1v· en for th em by thei r four chil dren and their 'cam 1- lies. 'fhe honorees, \vho have lived in Costa J\1esa for seven years. \Vere married in Los Angeles. Never Underestimate Men DEAR ANN LANDERS : Plea se prinl th is letter. It could help 11 rrRd er \\'ho onf' rii'l y might be f;iccd \v i!h a breast remov;ii. I wi sh someone had prepared n.e rnr the cxperienrr. :~~I Y:as in my 40s, recently d1\'0rt('d. and -posit ive that 110 m;in could po~s1btv want ~, woman .,.,·ho had had one breast ~crnov­ ' ed . Buying new clothes was lorture. The 61ileswomen tried to pretend they didn 't ,. notice, but I knew better. Sharing a room !•With anot her woman on a trip was always ' embarrassing. But !hf. most difficult ~ thing lo fa ce v.·as the rear that a man ! rnig hl fall in love v.•ith me and then be , horrified to discover the n1u 1ilation. : There seemed to be onl y one sol ution. ) \Vhenever I met a man I t.hought I might i c1re for. I told him on the second or third ~ d1te tibout my surgery. It wa s agony but I for ced myself to come right out with it. 1 wa s dire('! -and handled the subject with a touch of humor. That v.•as seven men ago. Believe it or : not , not a si ngle man dropped me . It : simply didn't matter. I marrird number seven . We have a great reh1tionship - fun , mutual interests and a lively sex life. J couldn't be happier. , I hope this letter wil l give heart to ~ women who, like myself, thought this I ' Proceeds Shared kind nf flJl('ration v.·n1ild render thl'n unsuitable for ro1nanrc and n1arr1a,i:e. rm ashan1ed of lhe l\'a}' I .;n- derestimated men -AUSTIN \VIFI'.:. DEAR A. W.: Thank you for wrillng. Thousands of women who have n:· pcrlenced mastectomy have had . the same t'Xpcrlencc. A n1an tn whom this sujtery "'·ould make a difference Is not worth having . OEAfl AKN LANDERS : My wife and I broke up after !8 years of marria~r. ll was no hasty thing. \.Ve rough! a divorce for years and then had a trial separa1ion. This, however. is not v.·ha! !'n1 \\Tiling about. lt"s our teenage daug hter I need help with. Linda"s grades have slipped bad ly. My wife says it"s the trauma nf our divorce. I say the girl's grades would im· prove if my v.·ife took her car away and limited her da tes until she sh apes up . I want Lind a to go on to colle11e but at the rate she's progressing she'll never get out of high school. Do you think lhe d1von·c is t0 blan1c·.• rr lhoughl sn. I'd gn back to my wife. Please hurry your 11ns\\'Cr. If Linda falls rnul'h farther behind J'm ;ifr;:iid she 'll drop nu t -\\'llRRIED I!' 1"1\lllFIEJ.fl IJEA/l \\'(J/{lllt~D : I gel lhl' in1 · pressio n ~·ou and yo ur \\'ife are betttr off 11parl. And so are your kids. l\ccpi n,1? a lousy n1arria~e together "for the (·hildrcn"' is birds\•ille. E,·erybody lose~. I suggest counsl'ling for Linda . She needs someone to talk to. Ut the counselor decide whether taking the ear av.·ay and restricting her d a I i n g pri\•ileges would be i:ood or bad. This Is too complieuted a decision lo be made through the mails by a third party via an embattled parent. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please. nh please -lead us out of the 1\lilderness of ig norance. \Vhat is a ,\1 et hod is t handshake? $1'.'l'Cral l\1ethodists in \V1n- dom. f\1inn .. whn need to know . -T\VO SWEDES AND A NOR\VEGIAN OEAR FRIENDS: A Meth o d is t handshake is a churc hy. strictly-business, parting gesture. And pl ease don't accuse me of being anti-1\.tethodist. I learned tbe expre&sion from the l\.1etbodlst1 at f\forn· ln11side College. Nuptials Set Your Horoscope Aries: Procrastination Can Invite Deception TUESDAY FEBRUAR Y 15 fly SYl)NfY 0.1\IAHR it Speak up. Then volunteer efforts 1n con1unct1on with ho~p1ta!. ('haritab!e organ1 za- t1on. Get signatures on dolled line. TAUR US I April 20-May 20 1: troth. Accent is on how you I J"espond to studies. messages, long-dist ance calls. Aquariu s pla ys pla ys prominent ro le. jewels by joseph uiarches for jewefs ,.., ... .,n IHIW .... 11111 lfwt""' ft ......... ~ Ill , •• ~ rt ... 19 • """ ....... lMwtloett. ff,.tUM, •1141 lfl1tttllY 1uurt ~"' ,.,..,Ill IWlklllltR •I "' 11w1 m•r111t vtl.,... W• wllt '' ,1 .. 1n i. •••ml.,. ~­t•m1 tftll •fVIM ,.,.,.11.., ll>t lr 1111· .... 1. C•ll Mr. Jo1•11f1 t r Mr. l'tlll 11 •• HU . s,;,1 01 tt 1~1 Si n Oi190 Fww. Coot• M1•• S•0-'10ti6 A reader named Carol. from Manass<1s. Va , writes to in- form me that I have "done it :iga1n " What I ha ve dont', ac· cordi ng to Carul. is to once n1ore extol the virtues of Leo. l'<1rol declares that. as far as she is C'oncerned. those born under this zr1d1atal sign are •·arro.c,anl. Jnud. push y . j.!O~'ilf)\ and hHek·s!abb1ng." ) n11r up1n1ons. please ~ Fnf'nds argue about money. Don't get caught in middle. Adhere to principles, but try to be impartial. By sharing knov.·ledge, you make signifi- cant gains. Ensure h<1ppiness by rising above Jealousy. LEC) fJu!y 23-Aug. 22 1: You lend now to carry a tori.:h. Key is to hve today, not yesterday. You will understand. \\lelcome l~§§§§§§§§§§~ change. for ii will prove\: beneficial. r.tember of opposite sex is invol ved. Gi\·e logic equ;i t t1n1e "1th emc.t1ons. Gl-:~11NI 11\lay 21-June 20 1: Those who put up big front are bluffing. Knov" this -re spond accordingly. Stress \'ersalllity. VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl. 22 1 Domestic :idJUStment is a neccss1t~· ''ou n1ay be making l•----------- .c;nn1eth1ng out of nothing, G1\e AHlt:s l:'ll;irch 21 -April 19 1: IJeeepl1nn is invited if you pro- crastinate ''ou are no t 'tl'ithout allies. Let oth ers know CANCER (June 2!-July 22 1: It may be difficult to stick to facts. ·buL no"'' it 1s necessary. Don't try lo play games v.•ith . To avoid ~is appolntment, prospective br1d_es ar~ remtnded to have their wedding stories \v1th black and white j?lossy photo-- ~raphs to the DAILY PILOT V.;omrn's De- partment one week before the \•.:edding. Pictures received after that time will not be used. n1ate. pnrtner full rein. I.Jc lo" (;ain shown if vou are a carl'ful. shrev.d nbserver . Put off signing of legal docu111ent. LIBHA (Sept. 23-0t·t. 22 \: Don 't insist, force or ("ajole . ·rake it easy. See situation as il exists, not as you wish it might be. Avoid trying to do loo much at once. Let others sho\v their hand s. P!ay con- servative game, \Va it and see. SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov . 21 \: Guard \'aluables. You exhiblt tendency to let things slip throug h your fingers. But ultimate gain is possible -if you don·t panic. Accent creativity. You can gain po"·erful ally. St ick t-0 ganie plan. SAGITTARIUS tNov. 22· Dec. 21 ): Be subtle. Accent BEARDED WOMEN For engagement announcements it is imperative that the story, also accompanied b;: a bla.ck and white glossy picture, be sub- mitted si x we~ks !Jr more before the wedding date. If deadline is not met. only a story will be used. glamor. Don't re veal all you know. Pl~y cards close to chest. Lel others m a k e mista kes. Best course now is ARE OUT!! conservative route. Fi n is h rather than initiate projects. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19 1: Strive to get on more OON1T BE: EMBARptASSEO, LET US SHOW YOU HOJ't EASY IT JS TO REMOVE To help fill requirements on both wed- ding and engagement stories, forms are <iva1labl e in all of the DAILY PILOT offices. F'urther questions will be answered by \\'omen's Section staff members at 642·4321. solid ground . Don·L bluff. Ac-EXCESS HAJ" WITH cept facts as they exist. You need not follow ro\!rse \1·hich is destructi\·e. Start ane\\". MOOERN ELECTROLYSIS 1 MEO ICALLY APPROV ED AQUA Rlt..:S f.lan. 20·Feb. S .,.SAFE, FAST, 18 1: tudy Cetpricorn n1cssagc Mardi Gras Ball Protect oissets. Someone is GE NTLE, CONSULT \\"ithholding part of truth. WITH OUR LICENSED Pageantry Named PI SCES tF'eb. 19·!\larch 20 1: 1-/eed your own counsel. One TECHNICIAN IH 00" \1•ho usuall y is dependable BEAUTY SALON. m;iy have head in clouds. The Phoeni x Club. Anaheim The highlight of the ball will Create your 01vn opportunities will be transformed into a be the unmasking of party· Be a self·slar1er. Expa nd Spanish garden for the i\Iardi goers when the identity of the hnrizons. There is room for Gras Ball to be sponsored by new king is revealed. ~ ou at the top if you s11 !he t-.1ystick Kre"'e of Komus f ollo\l"ing the pageRnlry. desire. l 8 F ·d F' b IR music for d~ncing 11·il l be pro-IF TODAY IS yo t..: n a p.m. ri ay. e · · 'd d b R o·R ·1 d b vi e y on Cl cyan t e BIRTHDAY ,.n .. La Vida de! Ilei'.· \\'Jll then1c . " P 0 s s e ~ s Fabulous l\t1ooog!ows. strnng creat11·£> drive. the annua l event, "'hich is pat·1 -------'---------''-'--'--'--'--'...':---~l I !crned afte r the Ne\V Orleans f\lar di Gras c e I e b r a t i o n preceding Lent. Partici pating in the pagean· lry will be Mrs. Thomas Coad. reti ring queen of 1971, who 'tl'ill wear a beige sheath gov.'n with brilliant wings of Chinese sil k for her role as a bulterrly. and Mrs. John Cochrane, 1972 queen. whose gown is while and silver European brocade. ROBINSON'S NEWPORT Area Groups Aided Deborah Jo Brock \\'ill become the bride of Raymond Joseph Del Gatto Sept lfi dur- ing rites in St. J\'icholas Ca tholic Church. Lai;:una Hill s. BLANKETS A variely of groups will benefit fron1 funds raised by Le Boutique Ln1que staged by th~ .Junior Ebt\J Club of 1''ev.·port Beach. .l\ 111cm bers.hip ""ilS purchas- f'd 1n the Cenll'r for l.;:i11· 1n the Public Interest A ta hle 1E>nn1s sr1 11;1 ~ dnnatrd rn Rn\·.~· C'luh.~ \len1bfrsh1p \I :i~ ai~n purch;1~f'd in lhe F.n1·1ron- mrn!:.il ;\;1t11r(' l'en!er Fund~ for Of)("rn1111J! rx - prn!'f'~ 11·rr£> i.:ivrn !he Ir \ 1ne C-011111111011~· Thca1er. l\CF.T 1elf'11:-1011 111t'1nbcrsh1p bought. tape rrl'o rdcr oind do?.cn tapes sent to ~l ardan School of J.:durat1011a\ Thrr:ipy. Soc1;il .;,1ud1f'~I r x t books were donated to !he Ora lingua i School for lhe l1caf. Cos t or ~ the phone for Ynulh F.mploy· ; ., men! Ser1·ice v.·as picked up ~ _r0r :i n1nnth :'lla 1I permit and ~ ~ I • s711 nev.·sl rtler costs for the Youth Their betrothal has been an- Problem Center \\'ere ad-not1nced by her parents, Mrs . \·anced. Donna Myers of El Toro and WE ALSO HAVE FULL AND TWIN SIZE MANY LOVELY COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM! Bed & Bath fashlOfl,§~.!IPS Also benefitting were the J ack Brock of Milwaukie . Ore. Vet erans· Charil.able Fnu n· The future bridegroom is the •IJ'I M"IN ST.,•! J l"~l~lt CtM ... -HUWTINGTON 9E,t,CH l1nk A1ntrl(•rd M••l1r Ch•rtt .~on of ~l r!i . Jo!'icphine Del Gat- ciat ion. and a 11 Orani;:e 0 1s--~to~nr~l.~ai~•~m~a~ll~,l~ls~.:::_~:_:=.!j~~~~~~~~~~~~!;!l~~~~~~!g~1;,1~ tricl supported philanth roptcs.1- Tenure Available ~lichii;:an Slate Ln1vers1tv hopes to have "'·omen OC. cupying 1.f.6 percent or its faculty positions in !he tenure system by the end of the 1973- 74 academic year. lf hiring goals are full y met. There currently are 150 v.·omen -or 11.4 percent -in the lenure systtm. • WISlllGTOl'S BIB'f.HDIY 1SA1il l FLOOR MODELS~&'DEMONSTRATORS Sing~· machin es in Si!JQJU ' cab inets or as portables, , t in perfect sewing condition at ex?iting savings now! Most are zrg·zag models; many ~~~~~~~::~;~~~=~I have built· in bullonholers. Co me in early for the cream of the crop! * ., Enter Sl"llor Golden Sw11p1tek11. No purch111 needed! ~!~;:,Jt~!~':.4~~~:: SINGER For lOd rttSSOl!tieS1ngerSew-ng now-wtthln )'WI' Mllftlt Center near~t you see While Pages · uOOtr SI NCEA COMPANY COITA #llA -a rtt .. I lwf!l19w.r SNtt1 '"'' ~Jt11, .... wi COSTA MtSA -Ull "',..,. ...... H1,..r C111ttr, 1'1 t-llft '" tr1at"'•1• o! THE 3tNGE R COV~A."1'f" OIAHOI -11 Slit-ltll "Tiit City" C.,..tr, Ml·"'4J eAIOIH OllOVI -tnl C"M,...atll Or•ftl9 c-ty ~••11, ....... ,. IN OUR BEAUTY SALON ... TIMID ABOUT TINTING YOUR HA IR? FINGERTIP FROSTING IS THE ANSWER! YOU OON1T HAVE TO CHANGE THE COLO R OF YOU R HAJpt COMP"LE:TELY, JUST LET US ADD HEAVENLY HIGHLIGHTS OF DELICATE FUTHERING, TIPPI NG OR ORAMATIC STREAKS , YOU CAN DEPEND ON ROUX FANCl-TONE CREME HAIR TI NT ANO THE SKIL L OF OUR SUPERB COLORIST5 TO CR£ATE A GREAT NEW LOOK P'OR YOU. ANO REMEMBER, FROSTING GROWS OUT SO GftACEFVLLY. !T1S ECONOMICAi.., TOO~ P'IHGEft'TIP FROSTING. 15.QQ. 8£AU"J'"'i BONUS: A OOMPl..IMEHTARY COND ITIONING Tltl:ATMEHT IS INCLUDED. BEAUTY SALON .. ROBINSON'S NEWPORT • FASHION ISLAND e 644-2800 ' MRS . W. A. PAXTO N MRS. F. B. DEAN Abhorred Awards Trophy Needed For Last Laugh By t:RMA DOMBECK 1'hi!! sure has been a fun ny year for awa rds. r:corgc C. Scott said if he won an Osc·ti r ht> wouldn't ac- cept II. lie did and he 'fuutdn '1, AT WIT'S END coun lry di d anyon e discover the ltall of Heroes 1.s a one· LEGAL NOTICE •••.Jll' •IJ"l••O• CCW M1 01' T"I llATI 01' CALll"0•1t111 1'011 T,._ lHI COUHT't 0 1' OllAHOI •• U':GAL NOTICE fl lCTITtOUt IUtlMl\S HAMI •TAT•Ml,,.l tollo,.I .. -M)fl II CIO" • kll·,..U .... ,,,,, .. , (l, .. SSIC l'IHISHING 1¥ "IOllM, 11" NOll(l Of' MIA•l"O 0, fllflT !O" Monro~l•. C9ll• ,.,,. ... (•I'°""'• ,o. fl1109ATI Of' "'ILL •"o ,o. """"'•" L•••v Hoov... 1e1., \.1"1'•11 t..ITTlll• TISTAMl"fAllT ttOMO G•t-ON ..... C•h,,.,,.,. WA!VIO I Ttolt ~\lll.._ i. !)el~ <O~IKl•O 01 •" t!ll•l9 of l°"'I• ""'•il<lt ill.°'"''°"· •l'<l lfld•vklv•I tM!Wn ., L.oul1 " ll 011<1'1011, •lw ~-" Noat"'•" I. HtvM •• L "· llobl"""'· •ho k,_n 11 Loul• r1111 tt•lf"'•"' 11ltd wllh ~"' Ce...,ly ""°'"tMI• 111<1 lr.nowt1 •1 Lou ,. llobln\(),,, (lf'H, ot O••ntt CO""" fl" Fon•~•·• 11 tl)O .,_,. •1 Lfl\I ll:Olll"''°"• O.'t •l.O 1'11 I~ Ar!h"' IE 1(11 .. 1, o..~•• (W'"' NOTl(E t~ t<to liEllV' Gl..,EN 11'•! Cit•~. MN • ~ L ll11Dln•(lll, Jl aW•I L lfl<.ot11"~' tna J.,nt t £ 11011""0" h••• hlrd "'''''" f'~bl"~·~ O•t nn• 4 p•h"°'' to• n•,,t)~I • ,)f "''" """ fo, t•C·~•·• :~. 11 'It. on~tl'(t ol Ltto~tt Tf$1•m•nl .. y '"I'•!• l•11nrr !fl()fl<! Wll~..0 1 •~I~"'"' IQ "'""!' --- . , ... fn•\I 0• I> I 11111 /,II/(~ I :t 17 )1117 MnnrlAf, r rbruarJ 14, 11172 '" " LEGAL NOTICE PIClltlOUS l \ollllllll fltl.a.MI ITATIMINT i.11-1...-_..,., I• IOI ... ftu1I"'" MOii\.( Stlll.10 SYl.TIMl. Mltl 1'111 .. Circle. Hu"t\ ... lon .. l<l' C1 tt .. $,..,.ttl l Teoll\. o0f1 1"•9'l"O (•r<lt, "~"U"tton t •Ktl. C•. Tnit !)oja.fntU 11 tonCIVC'fftll ay •" In t11v!OU1~ ~, ..... .,, L lab•• ll'll l 1111 ..... t M Wll l•I•<! wit!\ Ill.I (6y1' IV, ... ~ ot o ...... COU"!Y on Ffli>I Ul •W l. "" llllSMAM a ICHMllllNQ, fi/t~. ' - DAILY PILl)T LEGAL ~OTICE l---~,1c TiTious 1u11Jt11 •u'~-­ NAMI tfAllMlltl i.1 .... 1.. lllfMfl• Ill• ...... .,.. .. , I' I lt(l-IOUll GA~Ll;ll V-Kt<°"I.. 0 1< AltlS ANO C:ll "J''-11111 ..... 11•11 H .. n11t11•on ••Id>· C•tl..,., • .,.., Vl••lftlt Ill•"' ''" All'\tf\11 1'1•1~• ~unll""'°" lfKfl, (llilO<l\I• n+al l"•l•kll M tn1i., 11111 lun11111.1 DI ••~• H"ntlntlon lt•tll. C•llltll'll•I t ltt/ Tltll l\lllM U It N I ... <ondU(ltl IV • •••!n1"1t10 l"•lt1<l1 M f nt l• \ll .. o"ll )111\lt. Ill °""''' Drl••· Swill I .......... t •••<"· C.• ., ... 1'111 NO, FIM-1 Pvbll\ .. t d O••PI• (Hll 0 1nw F1br1,11rv I H , JI ll, ltll fl'lll tltll!''flll h'-<j w Ill !~1 (!l\fn'Y ..,,,, o• Ortl'M C.Do.11\t\I on J .. IU•rJ l!, lf1l th f11 •1rlv J Mtdd~•· Oel!~!v ''"''" l'olc! 1¥ Cll•• lU·11 11 m•at la' lu•!ntr P•'l•tUI•"• •"" !~•• LEGAL NOTICE: 11>, l•n•• M'<I pll(t ot /'lt~"nQ l1>t \~<1\f f'ut>ll V\r<f Or•l't• Cnt" 0 •"1 """'• ""I bf•" >rl lo• F1~•u•r. ~.It/), 11' JO ---;'IC1'1TIOU$ aU\INl~I LEGA L NOTICF. J.,1u1•11 I" JI, t1>a ,,., .. ,.,, 1 " t 01, In l/\e lll•.1!+<1»m o! Otl/l rlr'l•m ,.., "A~l 5TATIMINT 1---------------l ltn It+ /I l al >1 la tO\/rl, 1! 100 (o>'t C•nT•• p.,~~ Tnt i<>llO..-lnp l>fll Mln lo aoono b111m•n •IC TlllOUS I USINISI ""' '"'"' '"'" """ '"'· '"''°'"'' " ""' "'""'"' l.EGAL NOTI CE D•l.O F t Ol111'• /, ·~n ~lflE~!llE l:I FflJI ..... Ill )lYl INC. 1h• !O!l(ho<nf Pt .. on II llO .. ,. h\/lll\f \I ---w E St JO~N 110 [ 1'11• SI C6>ll M•••· (t l"O'",. t i ,tCT IT IOU\ IUSI N!,I Ca.in•• '"'~ Jot>n E M•llV J• f' (\ llo• '1• ll'tt l ((IMl'(ISIT[S l• .. Lt,,.IT(n en.,. NAMt STATIMI Nf D1vllf l . Ttl\tllf . J..,nwon I. Wlhoro, In< (~llo ll•~l)lr!\001 S1n J\1111 (OD >"l "<I, ..... NY )"' ~ eftn<! $1 , ~1n!1 •n1 Int te•l•1,.1n9 llt'"C/'I• l lO OO"IQ Dul "''I HI "'•wPOrl C1nltt Drive, Cih!<ifl\ll (1t11'(1t1"~ I \ Sul!t Nllml>M" ,,. '"'' t1v111•'" " b•l1'9 <0(\<IU(T"<! b• I n ltoll U•ll•!t•r. 111! ltu•t•nll •o•<! \ONl!I \Ai f \ l"flMI'••• .. ···~ ···~ NlwHrl fl••<~. Cllllorni. t1.U ll'lll••d~I Niw..,n 8t•rh r.:.i.'"'"" ,,, • ., 0110. N•,..llOlt fl•-'"· <•l·!f\t"f Toi: 4/1') ..i•·~ll J""" E Mnt r J< Tnl• """"'" 1• Dt •n<; <0<1nv<lt'O II>' 1n ~,...,., A110<n1~• !or ~1totlcin•" "f~" •IOltmtnT !olta .,.,,~ti•• (nun!< lttd•v!Gu~I {\Jiil 11•11 , 111C '" C• •·•~• PuDl.,1\fO 0f1n<;t (Ol\I 01>'1 Polo! C •1 It/I b • \ flt l tl Ill I n1an opera tion that publishes ~·11·~·· 1• •· 14· 1'11 3l11; ~~·;:,~; ~·~=~~~"6:p";.,J-;...,~ .• Cl••; rM, .1::~~;~1,11:1:.n ,.,,., '"• ("'""' ',.~';,,·., ~'~11 1~~~:1 ,o6.,~ " "" -----•is•1t Cl••• ol Or•n•• ~~""" "" J n•·~•-. :1 Tn' r"' no" " ~· ~w •0""' 't <l "· • Vows Nuptial Solemnized Walter Cron kite, on br111 g narncd one uf the best-dressed nu~n 10 television , said the award was du1nb and ht could have been sitting behi nd thal desk 1n his shorts and no one "'ould have kno11 n the dif· fe rence. And in a pol\ conducte<l by Dr. .Joyce Brothers, Spiro Agnew was named the sexiest n1an in AnH~ric a over Paul Nc"·1nan. and no one lau ghed . (Si x n1illion women defected to Canada, but no one"\augll- ed I Clltll IC books. J1nulfv l •. ll •NI r111•u1<~ 1 14 ·~ C:l0tlo. < ~ •11 W l •nl Pro• n•~· The late and vrry ~rcat Fred Allen abhorred a1-1·ard;; and refused then' \\'i!h the LEGAL NOTICE Pulllo\,lotll 0•1nllt" Co1.i n1u. f'olnl ltll l,.1!11v1rlY; .,..t110n• 01Pu'''"""l'"'"'"~'."" !t oi.t..,n t l ---,c.c,-"-.-lo CltEDlTO•S 1917 111 n f'•l4J.O '"'' ............. hi•~ "'·~ "" t~ ~,, SUPE•lOll. COU RT OF T H~ ~,,~1,.n•fl 0 •1nt • !.O~•I 0•"11 l'olN (It•~ 1'f O<•not (n"~" i Inn 11 I SllllE 01' c .. Lll'OliN IA FOR LEGAL NOTICE l••rn••· ,j, lt. •n<! Ftri•"''" I It ~" O••••!Y J, M•OOO• r;i .. >vl' '"·' 11 THI. COUNTY Of 011.ANGI: ltll 1 ~1 JI (.l••-t same Rctd "'It that "'Oil then1 Mo .... 11.0. FlCTltlOUS aU~INl!SS F >l•!f 01 llLLI( l'/o llUNl C>Pcr•>•ll NIIMI! $fA TIMl:'.NT . r I NOTICE I~ ME~E 8¥ Gl\ltN •o me Tn• lo llow1ng Pet\On\ ... <IO•ng hu>1n•u for l11m in the 1rst p ace ln cro<:111o" .,, 1n1 •llov• n""'"' 00<•o~nr •• . \' ff · •-b h . •nttt •II Pl"0"' hov1og d•''"' 090 1nS1 !ht reiec ing an 0 er u• r n1g ts ,1111 ntc~ent ••• ,.0.,,.,0 1n '"' "''"'·' entire radio sho1v tn perform w1•n tn• """•••••11 """'n"'· •N 1~• r 111c1 01 !~ "~rk 01 tn1 •IX>•• t nlltleo taun or NAMSC ~.\F t fl0.A T ~6LC '. l<j11 E>nll••c•dotO Pt ' O•n• "0 I II ' ' C11•! .. •n1• 976?• LEGAi. NOTICE l<ICTITIOU' IVilNf SS NAME SIATIMINT Pu~t .. n•L'! l"l•nl\•I• ~ J1nu1r; 1•. !! •• n i•n LEGAL NOTll'l·: p '"'· I "• "' '/, PAXTON-JOHNSON Janis K<1V Johnson and \Vi!liam A. Paxlon exchanged vows before the Rev. Thornas Overton in 1he Fir5L Chri stian Church. l-luntington Beach. Parents of-the bridal couple are Mr. and J\1rs. John A. Johnso n of Fountain Valley and f..1r . and Mr s. Robert A. Paxton of Columbus, Ohio. l\lalron of honor was i\1rs. Dan iel B. Kirks Jr., and bridesmaids were Mrs. Dea n Trivell, Mrs. Steven Dowd and ~1iss Al ice Kunreuther . Robert Me ssenger served as the besl man, and ushers were Daniel Kirks Jr. and Robert Paxton. Gina Bush · .... as the ring bearer. The bride recei ved her bachel ors degree in soc ial ~·elfare from Ca!1iornia State College at Long Beach. lier J1usband attended Ollio State University where he af- filiated with Phi Kappa Theta. They will reside in Columbus. DEAN -HAVENS Bozeman. Munt \v ii! be the home nf Frank (\.1;i rk Dean and his bride, the former Susan .Jane Havens who were rnarried 1n Christ Church by the Sea . Newport Beach. Parents of 1he bridal couple are !\tr. and Mr s. Da le Ha\'ens of Ne~·port Beach and l\1r, and Mrs. Frank Dean of Corona del Mar. Officiati ng wa s !he Rev. Dr. Ray C. Gery. l\1atron of honor was Mrs. Robert Walker arid bridesmaid was J\1iss Debbe Dean. Scott Dean was best man, and ushers were fo'redric fla vens and Donald Minder. The bride is a graduate of Newport Harbor fligh School and attended Colden West Col - lege and a dental assistant school. I-fer husband also is a NHHS graduate and attended Orange Coast College. fie serv- ed in the Na vy. Bob Hope was given a hun1anltarian award, bu t before he could accept 11 the humanitarians took it back saying he was a hawk. 1'hi s country gives awards for poe try, pickles, pecice, history, scien ce. foreign filn1s, hogcalling and the breast stroke. It decorates the \\'Orst actor, the worst dressed and gives an annual bonehead award to he figure who has co ntribu ted the lea st to sports . (This year il was President Nixon who shared his losi ng play "'ith Miami. l Sometimes the av•ard turns into an embarrassment for the recipient. Take the case of Dep. Alty. c:en. Richard (;, Klei ndienst. who was recently invited to be the first recipient in !he Hall of Heroes of out stand ing Americans. Only after the press releases were distr ibuted throughout th e at a functi on at Roston 111 1>rewn! 111om. ""'" 1n1 ,,.,~~·~•v vl)u(:nep . !<> tne 1inar'••onro 01 00 Jln<I Unive rsity he corn n1cntcd , s1re111. "o. 110~ 131,\. N1wJ>11T1 B••cn, Cofllar"I• tl66l, w"!cn Is 1n11 nl•'·" o• ··\\'hen a 1·ad1 0 con1ed1an 1-1•1ns ll<i•ln1u of 1n1 uno.,.lonf!ll In •" m•H•" an award, it seeins always to be co ntingent upon the con1· edian performing son1c lune· lion in return. Pl!fl<'llnlnu lo in• ••lo t• o• •••~ ooc•<l~nl wllllln lov• montn1 •Her Int j"'' "ulll>C• 110'! ol t!lll no!lt• DtllO J enu8•V 7S, 1912 Ft l!\C~l ~ fO~l l'drnln,1lrllr·~ nr !h~ t t !llf at tht •llc"t nnn1'd dtteOt nl HU•WITZ, HURWITZ & •EM!ll. "One year I 1-1•as given a •• J7nd strou P bod d Th . . I d ... 0 .••• llJS ea y awar · lS tnvo ve Htweort •••<~. c1tilorn11 tt••l engaging a tax1der1n ist lo 11111 •73-ttlt ff · d I d .\norn1y1 tor A~mlnhl••fr.( Nnt l~ .. rn•fi<•n M••I~• ~nl•• !11< '" C•11•n•ni• (11•00••1 • .. nl l•S\1 !ornh••C•ll•'O Pl O•n• P "• n ! C•ll!011'I• t)~l1 T~ll bu11n1u ll h•lnt con<11<t "" bv • Cor1><11 n!lon llon•ld O Dunrt " ~fCffl A rt T~., •l•Ttmt n! !•I~~ """ m~ Coun1y (lorl< cf Or t nO• Cnunlv on J1nu••• 71 "/7, I>• fle~•rlv J M•doo .. Dt~ui. Coun Iv Cieri< Pu~!l1nld Or•nv• Co•" D•1tY J•ru•rv q1, JI, •"d Fell•u•" 19'2 P,lc!, ' " ittt n .. r,l!'lll'11(:".H1 £1 [:(1 '1l(AI 11r.t<1 Ill(. :.EJ.!V\(£, •o L1n0•11 f'1•t•. Co"~ ~I C flTI OU 5 flUllNI\' N.t.MI 'Tllff_MINT Mo'" ll" !allowing lt"rton <> Oft,,,O b~• "~'' ln\fpn W ~•umom•. ~19 L1nrt•n ••· f'l~t· (O•!• .... .,. (f,l TU ll Y )! ~r•1 (\!/\Ir ~\\A Jnl• bu,.ntn •• M int t on11ut!td to• "" llMl\()t fl l. Cc"• Mt>ft. ( t lolntou• 11~:1 lt1!1,.,au•I. loni•• I( t.•1n~" ~JI J•vo, ! " '" )"'~I'll W ftl•"'"•nn M••• ('.ol1!0oft•• ~1•1~ Jh,o t1 •1em1•1! l•l•n wlln '"' ('aun!v lh•I nv•hi~u •• 1>!h111 <on!lv"'" 0' •·• (It•• nl Or .. ng• (ft'"'" "n f -11 10. 1911 lna•v!duel lh W•lh ! "f !i.l .... O•nuh ( .. unly (I••-l~n"I I( '''<'oft I) 1'11114 1~,. 1t•l1m, .. 1 t.1•d .,,1n Ill• r ... ,.,, ""bl"'"" Ot •n~· (Oii\! fl•llV f'llftt. (I••~ "'Otrt•v• ("""'I On ·-~h•u••. rc,n•u~ry 11 JI. ti """ M•«~ ._ '''1 till bV 11.•lnur I O:t0ltf D•Pulv (• ' f -,/~ /) Cl•r• ---------1 ~-l'uf!l""'d n, ... ~~ 1 ~·'' f'I",. 1 Ffnrut~v 1•. 11, 11, •"d Mote n • 1• • ~111 LEGAL NOTICE l'ICTITIOU S I US ll't l!Sl MAMI! STAll!MEl'IT LEfiAJ. NOTICE l<ICTITIOUS flUSINISJ "LAME STA.lfMIMT SIU me Into a ress Sul an Puhllloheo O•inat c01,1 o nuv ,.11 .. 1. \\'riling a ~peceh which later I J•"u•rv Jt e..a F~nrut•• 1. i.. n 1912 7.1.l·ll Tn• toll11w1n<1 ptrion1 t•t oo.na had lo deliver to a group that 1 ___________ _ LEGAL NOTICE looi<ed like an insolvent Rotary LEGAL NOTlCE Club that rented it self out lo 1>------------ attend drab gatherings (}f this sort. '·J am afraid you will ha vr butonf$\ 1\ •• ff .. G CON ~T RUCT tON co.v.PA.NY. 110,.T ll EEF'ER~, O('t Rlv ••l l d• ,l(TIT!QU$ llUINl!Sl lhtbor Gft On• Oll<~f. ,,Oct Pt1tr>Ofl llvrn~f. NPWPDfl fl~l(l'I, (•lllO!'llA NIIMI ~TAt•Mt!NT W••· Ca•I• M•••-C••ll"rnl1 91'111 9i6IO lro• Mllow1 no "'''°"1 .,. 0"". JMI' A_ Grlm•UO, 1100 Ptl~non W•Y J<,,•l'h T VAllt ln '11) Rlv•,.IO• lk1t1n1u 11 (0>!1 M~••· (1IUornl1 9i6l'-••onuo, Nowp0<I lie•<"• (•hl"'"lt l'~E D'$ Mlo ll lNE \(l>\l!Cf l"t u1...-porr l••t ~. l!ollt•t F llt•u<n•m11 J• 1100 9116{1 rl•<lt. fifty Onuo, P~!ot,on W•v, Col!I Mt••• Co1,to•nl 1 Tn,, t:>u1+~1n '> bt fn 9 <ondu<ll{! II' 1n C•<1•11tnlt 9i616 lnO IV•Ou81 ~ .. mutl CIAf> \to••Ul•t~n I I 1 I lfllth••<I L. fl••u<~1 mp, 2f00 P•lf•.on JOHD~ f V111110 ~""'Q""" ~ .. , •• ~ .. nl• """· (Alll·•fll'~ Wo;, (a>!• Moi•. C11.1crn11 9U11. h 1l1 •l•ltt'lign! 111•11 wllh tn~ Counl• F•e<l••lllt. M•• ~IOuDll!fn, 1111! 1."tt• O• 111.ob•rl F 8•1uc""''"· ,,()(\ Cl11k "' O••,,o• C<IUnt~ on F•h•u1rv \I, rvn111 O•lv•. ~nn11 An~. C•!Ll .. •nl• ,.ettrlCn W••• Co1t1 Mel•. C81•totnl t 191? fl• .t.r1nu1 E l(rtDt" Oeoul• Ccunh TM• t.u.in11• t• btln9 ro•1<lu<ltO b1 I 91616. Cltrk P1rlntr1n•n Thi• bu""'!" i. b11ng 'ond url9d bv • ,. IHll F•t0eroc• M ~t/)utl>Ttn (;enerol 1'1rlnri>Mlp f't1bl"~O<! (')rAno• rn .. .i ""'I ' p,,,,t, Tnl• '"""''"I !ll~<I w1in •n• '""""'' Joh•• A G•lnH!ld f •h<ul r; II, 11, ?I, •ml M•tcn A "11 C •~tlt. nl Or•nae tn""'V ~" ~tll•••l'V <lo Tl>I• ., .. tem•~! ril•ll wllh tno ("""'Y lJ0 1' 1~1) 8• 6 r1nur !. K••Q••. O•oon• '"""It Clerk a! O••nQe CQ•mh o~ J1nv~rv M, !911. Oy 8eVf rl• J MtOdo• 'IC fl TIOIJ' ll USINES\ tH\l'/of \TATFMl'Nf 11Fl ,.Nv r~l'l~IC~ 0 1 ~ cn .. ,1 l!·nn~, •. , L•~un1 8•t!n. C•u1.,,,,.n ?l•\I (II•' r,.n1,.n•!I O• ""u• r•b•u••• 11. 11 71 ,. 111/t '""'' .,. 1, f'ol• 1. •"1 IA1ttn 6. IOJ/ JI• 11 Luncheons , Parties ""'""" M ! """· II•?) r. f/111 \!r~•I ~""'" 1101•, ( •l••o•"'" ~11n, NEARLY EVERYONE LISTENS TO LANDERS I Holidays Commemorated Fashion sho~·s and parties themed lo American holi days and fore ign countries are being planned by Orange Coast organi:r.a \ions. YW CA Santa Ana-South 0 r a n Jl e County YWCA's annual fa shion show will be presented at II a.m. Friday, Feb. 18, in the Airporter Inn. Mrs. Robcrl Caverly. chairman. announced the theme is Shower of Flo1vers. Anchor Lodge Washi ngton and Linc oln's birthdays and Valentine 's Da y .,.,,ill be saluted by the Anchor LOOge. Vassa Order of America during the next meeting. Ha lecrest Clubhnuse will be the sett in~ for the 8 p.m. event Frida y, Feb. 18. Girl Scouts An international potluck din- 1 ncr will .. ~ prese.ntcd at 7 :~0! p.m. Friday, l·eb. 18, in Murdy Park Co rn m u n I t y Center. IIuntington Beach. c;ucsls will be parents of the sponsoring group, (iirl Scout Junior Troop 174( Dishes l from Mexico. ltaly and the U.S. will be served. Square Dancers Lace 'n Leather Square Dance Club will meet in the Huntington Beach Recreationj Center at 8 p.m. Friday , Feb. 18. Osa Mathews of Palm Springs will be the caller. ORT A potluck supper is being planned by the Irvine Chapter or ORT to take place at 7:Xl p.m. Saturday, Feb. 19, in the Park West Clubhouse. SC Juniors Members of the South Coast Juniors . Fountain Valley will staff POW-MIA info rmation tables from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 19. in various shopping centers in Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach. Ladies Guild Famoua outspoken designer, fl.fr. Blackwell will present bl! collection during a Flight Into Fashions lu nchecn show Satur· day , March 4, in the Alrportu Inn. Sponsorin~ organization ls the: Ladien Guild of St . John'• Greek Orthodox Church. Mr1. Katherine Preston, chairman, ennounced ticket deadline is F'eb. 27. Beta Alpha Ga ms Dr . and Mrs. Charles 0 . B & M FOAM HAS MOVED Gruber will open their Hun· lington Beach home at 8 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 19, for the an- nual benefit of the Orange County Alumnae of Alpha FOAM CUT TO SIZE FOR IOAT. CAMPER, OR HOME CUSHIONS. 642-3971 1635 Superior-, Unit #6, Cotta M••• TARTAN PLAIDS Colorful fo r new robes! combinations, spring ward. Specially good for an - kle length wrap arounds, or high >lit skirts. Sma rt for blazers, too! MACHINE WASHABLE Turbo Acrylic 54"/55" Wldo SPORTSWEAR PRINTS SOLIDS Terrific for fun and sun and active 11 90 places'' wearing. Colorful spring designs on sports wei ght cotton. MACHINE WASHABLE Cotton & Polyester/Cotton 44°/45" wide Excellent NYings NEW s.electionsl 00 theM NowZ(@vD. II HOUSE OF FliBRICS Coun!v J, U7l. Coufl l•j ,. ISHO Puhl11~ed Or•~Q• Cc11I D•l!Y I'll .. !, ~tbru•ry 1. u. n. 21. \911 lOl-12 l l .. Wl>ENCC EN I E.l>Pl>l~E,,1 ~t11no•• D<, Ntwl>"•! flttr.n, l"d•vo<lu•r I> L l •wro"c• Tn•• •l••tmt nl ''"n wltn I'!• (If•~ ~· 0•8"9' (0<.•nft Of\ f·r n fly Bell• J B1r1nt1n, o ,oul' C••·•• Puoll1n•o 0'A~9• (0111 O•oly F1b•u1t• I )0, 11, )!, 1917 ((l<J"I•' ], It,, (ountv 1'11 .. 111 ""~'' lll~ n 0,11~"~;1~~ LEGAL NOTICE JJl-711------------------l'I CTITIOUS flUil"ll!\$ LEGAL NOTICE NAMI IT.ITIMINT Tn1 '"llowong otroon 11 00•"11 llut•t'ltlll .. O•lrt 11~ Ill· n l\ln•" " n•.no <0"'1uc tt~ bl 1n lnt11.,.oyol M •ttn M I Ullr tn,. l t••t rntnt 1,1~ ""~" lht t"'"'I~ r I~·· ')I O••tlO• '""MV rn f .,, • ., •• ' 11 ,,,, ft ·; .... ~u· !'. l(rfg~r. o,~., .. (o ... o•v (111. , 11111 He is ROBERT S. ALLEN He is the newspaperman's newspaperman. He is a slugger with his typewriter. A lle n carries a pun ch in his columns. Once he gets in the ring with an issue he sworm1 all over it. He's a real investig•tive reporter with the inside word in m•ny high places. He makes his jabs quick , but full of impact. On tho CBS controvorsy •urround in9 "Tho Selling of the Pen1a9on " Allen said: Simple• statement. Full of im pect. When the trouble aro1e in Panama Allen deliver4 od his blows with deedly directness. "CBS e•caped prosecution tor contempt, ""' that'• all" "Tln11, "ut cruclaU11 strat.eglc Panama, with a long hbtor1t at tur,,ulence and mllltar11 power seizure•, appear• headed tor the uneatila,,le role of kin• the ne.rt countr9 to wltne•• • coup attenept." •lrei9ht forward punch. ., Another Allen is colorful , forlhright end indofat igoblo» Look fo r hi• column , • frequent leeturo ol the editorial page in your ·l - DAILY PILOT ' '· 1•u:;i \1.------------------------.. • f8 UA.ILY PILOf "·onn•r rt-.• ,. •. I 'I ---- DICK T1lACY TUMBLEWEEDS YAHOOO! ·-........... MUTT AND JEFF FIGMENTS PLAIN JANE I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R. A POWER I ACROSS 1 Hott I t mPIOyt't' S Co"'r to an rnd 10 Ru.,inalr 45 Oritd leavts ustd to ma~t a btvtrage 4b S. Aftlrrican mountain ra ngr: 2 words 46 Conv!fltd 1 l~ Th 5· ~,. chtc~ in to 15 ~~\of mo~ry r"o11:i;raph ~O Cier1slitd rtco·:is 51 Ont of I.ht H O •ll!'r E(D '"":"i~ ~Ill~ Cll~E ~-~~ l b O~d~r t~ \ht '·'~srs W!:S .l ~'0 1:!1 :-I:JJ~ barb t cut 52 L;,st, slraytd Olll'la!Of 17 Prctioun 18 Mode!~ reprcsrntinQ tile sojar sy~tem 20 Lighter·than· a'r craft 22 i ~r hea rt: Sla"g 2 3 In th1 s manntr 24 Yoiit l 2S L'1e w'll'k 28 Delens1vr footb.il l pl;1ye1s 32 A1~b cloak 33 Supenor quality 35 Town on 36 Sttel mil l product 38 Afllied lo \.mt' 40 \I/Inc's partner 41 Letters 43 Subterft:~ts l l 55 r:l':iwt~ after 8 -Va ll e~, ii sec·rt ldaho 5q ~ . .,d cl art 9 Kind or "'':1 •• 2: words medicine bl R .'er of Arric il 10 Madt ctrtai., b2 WJd ~~ bi1d sudden sharp 63 ErpLJ11gt noists li4 ~:..111 r~d •g 11 Listen bS R ~ 'Tt!' r antn11ve ly 6!i Lsrd cars 12 N. Amtrican li7 W ,~ l1tl1an ~ 2 14 72 34 MOle unusual 37 Descrip!i~r of sorre 9asol ints 39 S:a!ed rrrph:ilica lly 42 Assumr a .scornful l"anntr 44 All egrd 47 Northtm or lnstrU:'!IMl U HJ1r on Native - DO~N l Rivel' ol Colombia 2 Art~.llt' -· US \ermish champ 3 Ana!omlcll p1ssaqe 4 Lowtr In rank 5 Taken 19 Lv..isrti~e 49 Ear11Pr i~srct Sl Prefprrrd 21 Sen of Noah 5l lnclulge in an 24 loati':es aQ11!tiC spot! ll Proofreadtr's 53 Fc.-bicldtn for synbol grneral us e 2b Make ashamed 54 American 27 Breffl revolutl:Jnllry 28 Dlsclple or leldtr Saint Paul 55 V~tablt dish 2'J Ftmini nt Sb Shadr of red namt b Grctk l'IJmr 30 Rr igninQ S7 In add ition 58 Trar.sfe r l1>r Grrtc t' Hindu Quttn 7 As blind as -31 Sa71 -: Notfd -: 2 'l\'OfdS pro gG1!tr propl.'rty bO M:1~111ta1n: Pref ix IC !I 12 I l l ,~ 21 .. .. ,,. - " •• I"' • " r= , .. f. ., ' . TME FORCE SO W!Ak:l!NED "NIE ~OfJlP6SS, 1T'.S C.RUMBL-ING ! Gi:ss WHUT! /'UA'('S M' ~IRTHl7AY!! By Chester Gould "BETTER MOTi FY T>IE RAILROAO.'" By Tom K. Ryan ~RfAK OUT TH~ ~LACK ARM MN PS By Al Smith . GASOLINE ALLEY SALLY BANANAS GORDO ..------~ PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER 11J~H:N YOU A.~EED TO TA!(E MISS PEACH " I $~NT FOJ,ltr. VALENTINES ;µ15 YEAtr.. ! THE ~EALLY POETIC KIN D . J !~ ·~a • • •• PERKINS c By Dale Hale --- By Frank Baginski MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS By Charles M. Schulz JM ~ ~E UVE5 NA WllrTE V1NE·COVERED COTTA6E WrTH llDSE B011E5, A PICKET FENCE Ml) A WJL.lllW TREE •• I'll !<NOW IT W~EN I SEE IT! "" By Harold Le Doux EXCEPT i:oli? 6ESIDE5, I WISH vot.rD STOP \IN Ul.'.E 'fOll, MISS ABBEV, MA'AM, Cl-1Ali?LEY QUINN'S ONE 01=' MY LE~S ~OS.· PE'1'0\JS CLIENTS'. HE. PAYS ME Q~r; JM H"-M6Ul;6€1i?S •• Qt.IE 1--!0Uli? oi: LEGA.L TIME T\.IAT'S t.IOT SLIC~ A 6000 D€Al ... i::o~ Cf.1Ali1:LEV ~ SINC.E CAAIZ\..FV THINIOt.16 .... sour WAJJTS TO !~S.1 1./ESS 1'J.ID DEVOTE SEE ME_.lrLL 11\0'i:E TI ME TO SOC.!AL S.t.VE AW EX~ OBLIGATIONS, Tli?.t. Tli.'IP ! MltDli?lVER ! •• ONE HAM8Uli?GEli?! MAl!'CIA, DID ~ SEND ANY POETIC VALENTINES? 0><, sueELY. :t SENT ALl. 1'HE CHEAP NJCl<fL ONES ;: l!'ECE IVED LASr YEAe BACK' 1'0 Tl-IE Pll(El!'S Wf'OD SENT fµEM TO ME , By Mell IF T'MAT ISN'T PO!'TIC, Wl-IAT JSj' w .1' ... ~ ,., By John Miies i ~-?-:===-')-me-pi ­ -~/) '7- By Dick Moores w~~ ~rm 'Ou s::J NICI!, 1'~HUANA A\A/l.\A, IN lleiP1 N~ Me ON "' VAc<0N r1N.E' DAf E' WITH r>Z.eNO~ N0\11? bJ!;/r.¢>.}J. By Ferd Johnson By O(/,IJ ! • 6!!.T J<'EAI)'./ 'TO ~ 00~1<1/IG" iHERE Is A CL'El.R '6!l'.c:E. CCMl~G OP!- -~I ,tJ "l! #:' z . "' Roger Bollen . ' I 1'1'\lr. tried one oew "'eight-reduci ng gadget lifter another and the only tb.iag that'" happned so fa r is my carpet• • ! f I l . • ~ look a lot thlnner." DENNIS THE MENACE -- ..... -~ .. ,,, OAIL V l'ILDf J 1 r ~ ----. --.. lt'estnainster Co••tedy St ell ar Cast in 'Star Spangled Girl' Monday Evening FEBRUARY 14 6:00 0 B!1 News Tht Hollywood l11m lndu,try Is ttlmoned thi s 'ftltk 0 llNBC Ntw1 Tom Snyder . 0 Nt n Btnll, Schubeck (J ({) Wiid Wild W111 QQl NBC Ntwi m Tllt FllntnoM1 OJ I D111m of Jetn!M !l]) NET Plt)'lloine Blo11r1ph1 fE Hodrepod1e Lodre €£) Nolldtro 34 a;) Dt:Mrt Report 9 M1ybtrry ltfO ail El Amo (i) NtWI Jim Ha"1 1\o1ne 6'30 0 Pleue Don't [1t !ht D1l,lt1 0 "CAT BALLOU " * starring JANE FONDA and LEE MARVIN 0 Movie: (C) (90) "C1! Ballou" P1rt I (wesltrn) '6&--Jane food1 lte M1N1n. M1ch1e! Callen. Dw1ynt H•ckman, Nit JC.int Cole, Stubby JC.aye. Cll CBS News Walter Cron~ite 00J Tiit Mlll!lt F1ctory m Andy lilrllltth Sllow (E) Ntnny and !ht Proftuor fil Pl•rina the GLJil1r ID W1ndeihr1t °' C:.reen Ac1n @m L• RHC1cld1 CI!) Nino l :lD 0 (JI t JJibl1 I DI. StllU' TM l or1i Ecolo1y Is lh1 !~em• 11 Tiit Lo111. who S>'!'lks for !h1 lreu, m1~e, 1 de$pe1111 utempl to sal't ~.;, ~aloooed fo11st from ex!incl1on. m Trutll or Con1tqu111Ce1 9:00 f) "DICK VAN DYKE ANO * THE OTHER WOMAN " -MARY TYLER MOORE -back toe:ether aga in! 8 CJJ I IPICtlL I Dick V1R Dy\1 i nd th. 00« Wornan (RI Oick Vin Dyke and Miry Tyltt Moo11 ihlWI· c11e thtir sin11n1. dantin1 1n~ ad· lnQ: !tlents on lhls musical comeclJ 1oec11L 0 a3 NBC Mond1r MD¥it: (C) flhr) ''Oplfallon ~d B1othel" (dr1· ma) '67 -Neil Connery, Danltl1 81anchi, Adolfo Celi. 0 (f\ fl) crl Mondty Movi1: (C) (2hr) "Cle091tra~ Con dusion (spec· 1acul1r) '6J-fl11abe!h l1v\or. Rich· ~rd Burtoo. Rer Harrison. Juliu1 Caesar inleNtnes In the ,;v;1 wlf in Egypt, whe re ht fa ll1 In IO'lt w11h Cleopatra. He rfturns lo Romt and she follows with their child. Alter Caesar's assassin&ti<Jn 1h1 11· turns to Egyp t followed by Mart An!hony. both 1\o'T:lid captur e. bll1 !~ke !heir own lives. ([01 Movlt: (CJ "Siert! Ctr1mon,- (dr1ma) '69-Mi1 F1rrow, [llzabtth l 1ylllr, Robert M;tchum "' , ' a;) El Prol. S.aitlrio rn NtWI Victoria )ltntS 7:00 0 CBS Ntwt. Weltu Cronlute 0 m l'IBC N"'s John Ch1nce!\or m UfililJJ A Vlslt With Ml1trkt DAILY l'ILOT Sl•H ft~ote lht la!• Chev1h1r charms W•1h I TRIANGLE 111 · F h · h h } lour of his count11 eslate otferin1 -art1n UC !;; IS ag a s t at l c s 1g it 0 Tht Rillem1n I @ t ruth or Consequence1 @ Dr11ntt an eSiOrtn'\lnt of his hvorile )tin ts. of Ba rbara Garlich and Gary Saderup lnl.'kcd in a (ij} A Loot 11 Lincoln clinch in this scene from the \Ve s\.minster Com· 0 Wlltrs My Lint? lfQ.l Ad1m·lZ ED I JUC1M I Heart Attact! . • munity Theater comedy "The Star Spangled Girl." Recognition ind Responw Dr1matic ----''----------''---------'--~----­ ex1mination of 1 ht1rt attack's m I Lll¥t Lucy (D I Drtim of .lla•nil w1min1 sig1111~ tnd 1n 1111c-occur\. fD Hlrlory of Art ffi La Gita @I) Puente de Arn« ®I fht Virrinl1n (ff. FHm: "Lon H11 M1n1 rices~ a;) Ko Uores por Mi ail Estuel1 de Modelo1 what to do II CE Tiit P1rsu1dm 7:30 O Stand Up 111d ChHr Roy Roaen 9:30 O l'ltw1 Will:h .lohn Fullmer and Dalt [~ans Ruest. 0 Dr. Simon Lotl!e "The Meddler'' (ii Bfll Cosby Simi [131 Boot Be1t Ors. Loc~e and Sellers are heed w1tn • dilemma when I youni girl ilR. Fllm DdrutJ (R) "Seven s~mu· who must ~~e crutches until she i~ ril opt1rtled on , refu~es to do JO. 10:00 U Cl) SonnJ •.nd Cher Burt Rey· O Movie: (C) (21,.\111) '1ht Osctr" nolds displays his r.cmtdl talents IS (dr1m1) '65 -Sttphen Boyd, [l~e Sonny ind Cher's sped 1I guest. Somm1r, Miiion 81rl1, Tony Bennen ,1 0 m Nm Eleanor Parli;er, Jos~h Cotten. ,., 0 Gil'IM! ''"" rutnlessly 1mb1tious 1clo!' usts i ndl aJ Nrws H~lh Wilh~ms •busts e~eryone in his fanhstic! (1j) M&sterptKI Tllu~rt quest !or fame and 1h ultimate RO.ill €E) la Crl.d1 lltn Criad1 -!he Dscar. "Sl!cond LDM"' n1m1 ail El fomillo tlips ()( lonight's ITIOYie with que1· m MaJ!tnp lillrn lo which 'liewef1 phont In 1n· 10:30 D c.dld CIMtrt swers and win • pri11. m S.111'1 to .t.dftlll1"' @ T1 ftll 1M Tl'llltl @!) AionllelrtM.I (]) I DrNPI of JMnnit 9 Mo'lle: ''Tllrtt llf'MI Mtn~ 0 Miiion $ Mowlt: (C) (2hr) 11:00 fJ 0 Cl) t1gJ l!El m Newt "Ntwr Too Utt" (comedy) '65-I 0 ~rt l. Donli n Shaw Con nit Stevens, "'•utetn O'Sulliv1n, 1 ri) M111NI Dlllo11 Paul f"Clld. I 0 rn m News @)Let's M1h 1 0.11 0 MO'rie; "trJ T1"9!"' (dr1m1) ·~ m Hapn'• Ktr1111 -J1mn M1son, Rod Stei1er. (I) Drlp1t m To Till the Tntlt (_1j) In IM Spottifht IE For the Fun of Sewing ED Cllyw1tchtrs * Watch Lucille Rivers @D ()o.R•MI aJ Lucille Rtvtrs Home-sewln1 !IP' ffi L1ull from Miu Rivers ai) Ml1uellta V1ldu Show . tJ) M111tr1p 11 :10 aJ The llla:V1lky l:OOIJ ~lilllCJAt lH1'1 lour Do1,11o''°s10NEY POITIER . Charlie Brown (RJ Stloopy IOl't•ts rn his m1nners and finds him!.tlf be· * "A Patch of Blue'' int stn! b~ci< to the D1isy Hill Pup. Premiere Showcase of py firm for 1 re!1~her coon• in THE CBS LATE MOVIE obedience. I e CIJ CBS Ute M"": "A Pttcll " Qi @} €l;) Jlowtrt i nd M11tin'1 Blu1" {dr1m1) '6~Sldnty Poitit r, U uP·ln Carol Chtnnlnr 1uest! 1s Shelley Winttn. [liz:lbelh H1rtm1n. I nu~e. balle1in~ and Cr•lY Cl1r1.J Q ®.J m .lol'tmly Clrsotrr C1n:il a used c11 detler. C1meo 1uetls W1yn1 rJetls. •re Ch11lle Ca llat Dick Cavett. Ric", I 0 f_fl fl) tI) Did' Cnrtt Scned· aid C1enn1. Moo1 Te11 and Slappy u'.E d ~uest Singe: Wilsen P1~k!!t. \'/i'!11e ID Movies: "Ont Touch of V1n111'" Q \I) (l\ ffi I l•1(111l ! [I 1 I h· lromanct) '4&-Av1 G1tdne1, Rob· 11u1~1 ~ thril!ine ind someliml\ ert Wal~er. "Kidn1pprtd" !e1tur e"1 !ri1ht1nln1 1c11nt1fic look 1t on1 01; with Laurtl ind Hardy. n1t~rft most dens111.n1 phenom• 12;00 O MoYir. "'Mosbeet'" (dr1m1) '43 n1. --Luisa R1irwr, Arturo De Cordovi. mMdy Crlttltfl Jailow IZ:IOQ)Qnlt for ~Uri (I) Th• Vlrtln!1~ £E) (ff, Special ri tM Week 'Tht 1:00 lil 0 0 (J) ®° N ... Trial ol M111 Unr.ohf' Oper1 b•sedl 1:30 B MiMe: "'Anwtd Cct111rn1nd" en the actu1! it'l$anhy trl1l Ill P11sl (dr1m1) '6l-Ho11nrd Kee l, Elr1 d!~t linroln's widow. comPOSfld by• H~liman. 25 yNr<ild !llOITllS P1s1tler(. I m CilO> Kid B e nny 39 Again Hi s Se<;o nd Ti n1e Arouncl By VERNON SCOTT HOLLY\VOOD fUPI I Jack Benny·s donr it~ He"s Ja years old again. Toda y is hrs bi r I h d a y . \'alenllnc's Day. And the remark;ible com· edian has startrd on his se- cond 39th birthday. The accon1pl1shment i s television ;ind clubs down through the years. Benn y rents a hnrr:e in Paln1 Springs and plays JiO!f Rlrnn~t every day 11·hen he is in !he desert. lie Ot'('RS1onul!y scrs Frank Su1atra there. •·frank really seems lo en· joy being retired," ~enny s;iid. ''But l have no idea or full .II retiring myself. I just couldn't do that. note~·orthy because Benny "'as stuck at age 39 for mo~t of his adult life. It "'as one of "~fa ybe I might limil my his trademarks. ap~arances lo t oncerts. As Now he is douhlc that agr long as 1 'm doi ng som<'lhing. and going as strong as ever at But the se damnt'd benefits age 78. keep n1e from retirrnf:!;. I can 't Ilcnny is h~le. 1-fis blue <'Yl'S st'Ly no to good causes. So 1 rlo -e1·er a f;ivorrte topir ~'ith about one a l'.'eck all over the him, and always good fnr a country." laugh -are clear and filled In addition lo playi ng gol f with mirth. .Jnrk lakes Iring daily walks In few men have d!"voted <'LS keep fit. 1-fis appearance belies Jong and lirclcss a lifetime to his age. He is trim and as fast making-people laugh as has with his wits as ever. Jack Benny. And few have E.,.cry da.v, no matter where done so much for symphony he is. Jack Benny practices orchestras. He C<'Jntinue5 to his violin from 45 minutes lo appear at benefit concerts two hours. sawing a wa y on his "I feel pretty good," Benny Stradivarius violin . an in· said. "I have to feel pretty slrumcnl he plays surprising· good to do as much traveling ly well. as I do. Last yeek I went to He also appears at benef its 1\iexico City for the first lime for organiuit1ons ra i sing in my life. It \va s anolher money lo fight diseases. for benefit " "'orthy causes and fnr friends I;;.,..., •...eir!C au.JI IMlfW~' • m n. ret iring from show biz . ~-7' Retiremenl is !he farthest '1 lhing frnm Benny's own !))ans ~ j 0 I-le makes regular ap- pearances at thr Sahara hotel I in Las Vegas. slarnn,I! in his n1vn nigl1t cluh sh(lw three limes a year "I h;ive Ill keep \1·orking in Ve,l!as hecause I like to he 1 paid once in a while." Benny quipped. His phony penury also has been a staple of his comedy routines on radio. WALTER MATTHAU "KOTCH" p1u1 GEORG( HAMILfOH "EVEL KNIEVEL" 1 t1ur1nu Olivier, '1'olleW tht Hurrttr" !idv!ntur!) '5' -cnail!s Oltplin. f NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES l:oo o tc) "t ry '•r H•pl'Y" 1com~d11 j'~~;;;~!!~!ii!~~~~i!!!!!i!i!!!~~~~~;;;~~~ Tuesday '61-Gltnn Ford. Don1ld O'Conno1, M11ka Taki, Mytnhi Umt~i. DAYTIME MOVIES t:OD m "3:10 Ta Yuma'' (wutern) m ''TN !if Ht.r' (d11m1) '!)3-- -Glenn Ford, Vin Heflin. I ~ord, Glori1 Grahame. 9;30 0 '1111 Min Frc111 the f,!1' :DD (()" . A" (mystery) '49 -Ed· Club~ (r.cmtdYl '63-Dan ye mond Brien, P1mt!a Bntt. R:OD O (C) "A Quttn 11 ro .. n~~! "lrta11blll Elprtu" (1dwP1< (docum1nt1ry) ·~~N11r1 ~ tu r•) 'flS-..Gent Blny, Joh~ StllOl'L 2nd GREAT WEEK! "Must be seen by anybody who really enjoys 111aYles." -.lolwl -Ale-TV Feb. 9 through Feb. 1 S -6:45 open Conti nuous Running Show Sundty, 2:00 "THE HOUSE , OF WAX" S.ymour is coming -midnight Feb. 18 3-D Stereovision 7 ,. EXPEDmONS 1-~•t.olU•I ki·~I.·~. "ll" "SA YAGI WILD"(&) ljii, 6.30. 10 20, . "h••1e"l?.4S, 4.40, II.JO p.111. NOW SHOWI NG! EDWARDS HUNTINGTON CINEMA Beach Blvd. at Ellis 147-9608 By T0~1 TITUS 0! lfte b.lllY ,1 .. 1 1111! \\lh~n Nell S11non c-an1 e up "ith "The Star SpanR:led (;irl'' -aft('r b('eQn11n,i,: a budchnlo( Broadway le.:end \\'\th "l'Pn1l· Rlow \'our 110111." "ll;u1•f(1<1t \11 the Park " nnd "Thr ()dd Voupl r" -lie \Vf1' hi :1 n<·t11n~ ''""Y fron1 his patrntl'd, :ind 111 (' r a! i 1• 1•. a1111!1·nvr .. 1ch·11· t1f1C"a thlll furrnut~ <ind t'l1· 1·roru·h111,.: llll \1•rr1tur\ aln>.ulv l't;1kf'd (Jut h\ '.\tu1 r;1\ ' l.11\ • :\<'lu~,i,:a l 11f( thl' hc.tt1·11 11,11 \., ul 1·111111•rl\ ·r11u". \1 lu•11 ~11u 1\1• :->t,1r !\p<Ul)!l('(t (;1r['' Ill t'Hlllt1Hllll1\' lhf.,1trr ~1111 :11·~·r111ua1r lh•' 'l:tt11 nrl'S ot 1111· 11111( 1;,1l1r1 1h11n <1l!en 1pl lo (Tt'•1t1• 11u1· r rnpat hie rl1;1r:u·11·nn11 111111' A11d . 1>:1 rt 14·111:1r ly :-1111·r !here :1 rr onlv thrrr t'l1ara1·\1'r" 111 the pl~.v. you nrr<t perft'l'I <'<1s!1ng to pull 11 t>ff. Th c \\leslrn1n ster Cn111· n1un1ty '!'heater has pulled 1l off -and then snn1e -\\•1th <111 cxcPllent produ!'l1un of l111s Olltr;igeous ron1ant1c C'(Hnrd), despite the fa el that the d1rct" tor w;1s hospital1zrd and 1111· 1rr1111ieal dircct11r ll'ft thr l'how <hiring thr la:-.t \\\O \I rcks of rehearsal 1\ superior cas1 . the l1krs of l\'hlth 1s seen all too r<1 relv in local 1hra\C'r. lhrusls thr illay into high ~ear in the £1rs1 H<'t and keep s its fc<'t f1rn1ly pressed to 1he accelerator. The shirt in dirC'r torial gc;irs 1 ~ nrvrr e11dcnt. a!thuugh there are a few <·oughs and sputters from the tel'hniral cng1n<'. Sondra 1::vt1ns. 1he orig inal dJreetor who carried the i;hu\'/ as far as 1hc hn1ncstretl'h heforc cinergency surgery forced her olf 1 he sceuc. h;1s done a hrauliful joh l'.'1lh this essentially physit·al con1rdy, t'l'rill111g sonl(' i n i:: r n 1 o us ch111ccs of \\'f"ll·tunrd h,vplr1v _ Credit for prcser1·111)! thl~ and krcp1ng lite SLIEPEll: OF THE YEAR ! "THE RAILWAY CHILDREN" A rort flhn rkot •very m•mber of tlte fomll1 wilt enjoy! In UHpe n•• ! "ANDROMED A STRAIN" I OTH IN COLOll: ltoted IGI "Ti4 & l l Alt l'&NOL•O Ol •Lw " t0""'1!1 I)• Noll )I"'°" llHt Clta ~­~o:>l'd'• [•t M• ••ttt •'11•\lft• Glo•" a l ~"' '''""'t•I ~"•t •or ~.,., "''''"IM• '"' d••••·• "' •~n Pia" ,,, "felon , .• ••• woo••.,'•;'•• (~~-.c'" •v •·~···· I' <la•• IM~ \•1"'~11 \ It I 'I(\ •' tt\o f Mlt• ~<~<>61 au<I 16"""' I a ..... ~, ol T•~•• Wt•''"'~'''' 110 1~''"''""' t i' 11 t • ~·~?.~,~;,n~~ ,', 1.,~11 '·' ,,' ',", '' ,\~;•;,: •,;•: s,.,...~. ~""'r"'"'''' ~••N •Ci•• .. ~ ~huw ti,i,:ht illJ d po1l1shrd i.:1•1·s to l >IHI~ Allen ()nl\' h•1·hr11t'allv d·•r~ lhr \\ 1·,111\.1t~r r·1 11Hrr 1111:, f.ilt1·t , d 11 1• p1 1111.11 ilv tu l.1,t 1111111111' • h ;1 11JI,t'1' Ill 111.1l.r,h1H l,u'dllh'' .\1 1'.I., Hf '0illl\I, 11 .:hl•I\~ ;!l\d l'o!,lgt·~T.lft !,l\l :-.h('I ! 11{ tllt• 1nl,!.ll!C' •'\· crll1·1111· ll111111:h l!Hllt' !' 1·,.111· pl1•1 rly 111 r1111•!li:1I•\(' S11n••I\~ 1h;1t .111t'I'. 11li11 ITI 1111' 111.11 ;111· 111111 1· .11·1·11r.111·lv d('S!'l'l ht•d <I\ II I ' I\ d I'!! 11 11 e;1rir;+l 111·1·s. :111 • s 11 pt' r h I\' ('/H tt t<'rl hy t :arv ~;ul('r1111 ;111d fllart111 IL l'11!'!1s ;is H pai r of rad1l·;1ls puhl1,ti111i,: ;u1 1111 drrground t11<1,r.;11111\1• 1111 :1 shoestrir1~ ;ind H n r b ;1 1'" 1;11riu·lr as llrt'll' 1·ornph•11• 1111· t1thesis. 11 f!ng 11·avinl{ O\.v111 · pi(· s11•in11111'r 11l1uu,11h 11 01 a \'('r~· gnnt! 011(' 1 11 hn 1 u r 11 " thrr n off pol1l1l':illv 11 hllr !111'11· in~ t h •· 111 , ;1l!rrn;1!rly. 1\ll ph.vsirt1 lly. S;iderup, i n i t i ;i 11 \' !hf' •·straighl 1nt1n" of !hr tr;u1 1 1~ r lc arlv the l'trflnl!r sl of 1111· 11·el1-ciiosen <'fl.St !Ir bil es ulf i;reilt chunks of intense, rn10· t1onal tirad(' w1th cons11rn1nat1· s-kill ;ind di~pla vs an r11u11ll \I sharp ;iff1n1l y fur pieces ••f <·on1ie business. p;irl1t'ulurlv hts "~unburned" Sl'ene 1n the se!'ond ;icL It is the latrst in ;:i series of unfailingly strong perrormanres \J,v one c, r Orange County's finest yuuni.: actors. As the llternry grniui; turnrd into" fawn ing rna11 s of jelly by !he n1ldwestern !ihcrl)' brlll', $ong of: the Soutl1 I· 111.'hs 100 l~ fir~' r111r His Is 1!it rnn~I C"o1111c ch11ra1·trr 11r 111• lhl t't' illlll hi' p!.t~' 11 ha· ;;:: Ii~ ll"flfih l'.'lifl blil!Sl'\'l' 1111\lll j.! .1nd Ii prrt111111tll) I J1111 1t.;t!11~ t'lil)l'l'':!IU!l. JI lhC' pla1 \\!'ff' II \'Oll l')bllll ~lllll(', 1h1' illht•i, 1"1ulct :-r t np tht• l.1111! 11 11\l Ft11·h, 11 11uld :-p1k1· 11 1\1 1'~ l;;i rl11·h bl a~ls l1r r 11a1 iulo 1h1•1r ~b .11l1J\1 1/ 1111rld 1•1t11 ;l h111 ,( ut fu 1·1•t11 \..~. 1·~11!ud1111: Ill ;ii\ 1111'1'\'!Ulll', .'\"I'll l\t,1p p1·!1 p.irl..1,i,:t• nf 1!1111uu.111 •· 1hr::11111t r , 'hr l""'l'•s1·.; tlu• 111111.'l!l\1• a1 fill t1t1H''· 1'\~n \\ 11111' 'll ' ,. II !!( h I !I ).: \•• 111•11·1 .. 1 .. 1 I' \I iti.·rl 1·n1 .. 11111" lh•'UK!I r1·qu11 •'d 10 'u~t.1 111 h"r 1n!l,1111111a tilr 1·l1.1r.11·1 1•r 111 1•1 ;111 1'\1t•ru lt'tl p1•r 1od . ,11,• 1 ;1!'11'' hC'r p1•1fu1111,u11·1· 111th \11 hll" t1':111'11 1011s uf !1 1(1'1d :Ill(! 1·~ pt'•·,.~lnll Eu~r 111hlr ;11l111i.; 1' 1•\1't•llc11l ll1n11 11;h1•ul l!u• pn1Uur 11un l{,q1p1!1'! i!Jll•1llJ.: 1111• tl l! !'t' 1'<'l'lt1r 111l't'' I~ <I ll ;1 1111-:h pJll!lf' :111d fl1•;1.1h1!1 t1 of ~11·l u1n 111.~o 1~ ('I atrnt 1'hl' l'kdl 1111111•11hl's1nn uf !1 1(• \\'1•,111111 1~!1•r !r111 1·111n p;u''' l.i1nr :.hl\ 11 1!h 1li.1! tli,pl;l\c'<! on llr1• 1\lli'i ()r';1f!~(' ,..,h1d111 'l'lu•;i11·r 1111•1l111'!!1•n 11f ' I .111 " '1111·1 1• i~ .t 't•rnr iu !hr !;1,1 :1( I 11h!'rr1n .".t ch·ri1p l1a11d1·11tr , Fu1·hl' 1(1 1)\" 1'<1Ll1nh !11 !.t•t•p hun fru111 li•;11•1n.: h('fn1t' hr 4·111nplf't1"" h1~ \.\'<'Irk nn 1!1r • r11:1g;i 'l1nr. 'l'hr \\'rst1n1nstrr 1!1r:i 1rr i.:roup should handculf :ill thrrr 1·asl n1crnl><'rs :ind 111ut·k!y s!'hcd ule a produe!1011 of "Liiv." fluly 1 wo rnorc ~·eekcnds rr· 1nnin for one or th e season's ti1n111!':-I !'•Hllf'dlf'S. ' 's t ;l r Spa11gl1•d ! ;irl " plays Fr1d11,\'S a111I Sal11rd:i .v_~ !hrough Frh 211 al !hr F1nlry Sl·hool :111d11 or1111n. 1·:1hl'ards at 'J'r11 ~k 111 \1ic~!n11nster. lido NlllllJll'Cll'lllAnl -••-tal~ 1.Wa .. -OI. l.clto New York'1 Critic Award HELD OVER AGAIN THE FRENCH CONNECTION IRJ«» ro.OA ev ct LUX[• 2o. CAntury·fOI ALSO It CA RTOON "'!'~~~!!l!~~T~h~o~Miilii~l~<~P~o~o!'!'!'~!!~~'ll ~ 1: ALSO WALT DISNEY'S "NEVER A DUL L MOMENT" SHOWING NOW! A MARK RVDill Fn.M .Ji)-'1, W~f11: ., ,, "'-'• Pf"',iJ r ... ·ti< (fJ.'.F:Jf' r~ , . J'" ( • "; ;_/Y I f( rn.>f·'•l • f!fll,ll ttl>.1 . ct\ll ' ,, l:f Pol ;Vil ,, ~"' l),.,r;, t>j .Jrlo·~.,. ...... y_,~r<•1 '°1l"W'Oll r.,,.. t.!, l1r ••' ,, ... J< .~ ....... ti.:.J .. -r. 'l'rool t ..: oft\ 1 ..... ..: r,.l,ir\ ,,, .. r .->,... .. • 1 ........ ..,,. r0rr ·1,.,..,. f'/(1 A ¥•·"'t(ft"f .. '/ ~~=~ PG -""~i=--~ll•C EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY SHOWINGS •1 ... tYIL to.HJIVIL" ... ,,_ ........ •·· &DWA•D HARBOR,lll':.1 ,,,,._ 11.ftl "' tn!,,Mlll ''· !)Ill .... "''Ml , .... . ft"OHI: -64'·tllJ 3rd GREAT WEEK -··-·····-·-···-··· .... ,,. ·-· ·-· .......... ~ 1'1401'11 -'"·"'") DUSTIN HOFFMAN IN EXl'IDmONI Al SO · fllST All:U ll:UM "UlllllNT!" '" .,. , ... " ..... . • ()NEOO. ~ m:._~~Ml'O !GOJ PlUS ''TNf GA Mt TNA T COULON'T SNOOT STIAltNTw looCdPIO,, • KOCM stereo103FM the sounds of the harbor ~1=.dLS'.:~L7 24· hours a da1 •••• T11r1aaro11nd Chrysle1· Reveals 1971 Profits U}l rn~nt 101<1lccl 22.1>,!41 last year, against Z34 ,941 tn 1969. • DETROfT. r-.iieh tAP1 - Chrysler Corp .. ils &ales up $! billion, has reported a 1971 profit of $3.1.7 million 1n ,'I sharp lurnarounO from a $7 6 mdJ1on Joss 1n 1970 Chrysler said \\'Orldw1de its sales of passenger ca rs, trucks and tractors nit 2 6 million. against 2.~ million vehicles thr previous year. Chrysle r's 1971 earn 1 n gs \.l"l're e<Ju<1J 10 $1 .67 a share. l·On)p:tfcd \\llh a loss of 16 l'Cnts a share a year earlier on sa!es of $7 billion_ Sales in 1971 hit a record SB billion . General Motors Co r 11 , , larges! o( the four milJOr l ',S 11utomakers, reported 1 h a t 1971 had been lls SC{'Ond bf•i;t ye<ir, ll'Jlh earnings of SJ 9 bil· lion A rt'<·ord S2 I l)iJJion was rung up 1n 1965 SPORTS MODEL -Volvo's ne\v 1800I::s. the first new sports car from the Swcd1!ih automaker in 12 years. introduces an entirely new rear co mpart· 1nent design. The roof, ~1hic.:h extends ahnost to the back of the car. blends into a fran1eless rear \1·1ndow "h1ch serves as a door to the 35-cubic foot lug· gage area. While suffering its losses in l!t70, Chrysler cut back sharp- ly in its middle and lo"·er management ranks. rt'pur\lng its average worldwide employ· In lligli Ge"'' "THE WAT TO MAKI MONET IN IE.4.l ISTATE IS TO FIND OUT WHElf THI ,EOPLE All GOING, AND IUY LAND IEflOllE THfY GET THEii!" An1eriertn 1\lotors. sn1:~ll,,.-;1 of the SO..Ciilled Big Four, reported a turnaround similar to Chrysler's 111 AJ\1 C's f1sc11 I year ended Sept. JI. Ai1'1C rc1X>rted a profit of $10.t million, against a loss of $56 .2 million the previous ye a r A,\1C also reported a profitable first quarter. New VolvoSpo1·tsCa1·Debuts Will R°'•n U-C-11' h•t low <O•I l•nd, '" '"'°"'' •"" I l'I•~• •<•••o-lo• Mlt. o... t1rmt 1 .. 11 11w l"IC''· Ui-U'lj; Ir 144-4'1t lfWI, ford Motor Co .. No. 2 in 1hr industry, is expected to report 1971 earnings this week Would you pay an exlra $5.21 per nroulh for Full New Ca r Mainte nan ce~ Thal's all thr ~·x11·a ii t•>'\l \\'L!h a Johnson & Son Full J\1ainlcnancc Lc-11.:sf' on any of our brand nf'\\' 197:! ~fcrcurys. Just think 1if i1 ..• 11n rnor" 11nnoying rrpai• problems , .. no rnor" uncxpi•(·!f'd f'Xpcn.~<'s and brst 11r nll •.. a bcau1lh1I nrw full .,11,r {lff'1'{'11ry J\1arquis or t\otontrrC'y to drivf' in 11.bsolutf'ly fK'l'ff'cf c•o11di ti11n at All times. Find out for ~oursC'lf all th(' bcn,.fit.~ and pl<':tsur<'s this fantastic lease program 11rov1df's on all our Lincoln· l\1ercury Prrxlucts. Call BUD BO\VEN flt 540·56.10. , .• TODAY~ By CAHL CA RSTEN SEN There's an 1nterest1ng new offering from Volvo this year and the Swedish auto maker calls 1t "our first new sports car 1n 12 years." It features a lug!!'.age com· parlmcnt one and h;llf limes The Newport Beach office of Robert f:bty Company, Inc. has opened on Campus Drive and Bob Ebey has appointed Doug l as l)a volt a s vice presi· dent l n charge o f !he ne"· 1 fa cility. Prior to rnov1ng I o Newport LEASING? LOOK! NEW 1972 OLDSMOBILE TORONADO 2 DOOR HARDTOP MONTH 24 MO. OPEN END INCLUDES, A IR COND., FULL POWER INC. DOOR LOCKS AND SEATS, AM.FM STEREO, VINYL TOP. TINT. GLASS, TILT WHEEL, BELTED W /W , AND MORE. We lease all popular make cars and trucks LEASE DEPARTMENT UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE 2850 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA CALL NORM BREEDLOVE, 547-6750 Be11ch , DAVOLT Davolt served as the account executive for the Norlhern California zone of Levitt and Sons resldential building firn1 . The ~1enlo Park-based advcrlisin~ agency "'ill extend its s e. r v 1 c e t'apabilities to So u l h er n California advertisers. * Chuck Rubin has been ap- poinled marketing director of Va lor EleetroniC's of Santa Ana . He will ha ve rull charge of the firm's interna tional marketing activities. The Costa Mesa resident was formerly a sales manager at PCA Electronics in Sepulveda. lie owned and operated his 01vn electronics company for seven years, manufacturing magnetic components. * J. Thomas Ta lbot, 36, has heen elected president of Dunn Properties Corporation of Sein · la Ana. Talbot. a Laguna Beach reside nt. joined Dunn Properties. a subsidiary of P;i cHic Lighting Corporalinn, in 1971 as \.'1ce prl.'sident. 'fhe corporation spec1al11.ei; 1 n bu1Jd1ng. leasing and selling industrial parks for milntifac· lur ing and warehousing. * Graphic Sciences. Inc , <lf C<lnnecticut has announced the flppoin tment of Thoma~ H. KerKlall as vifc president 1)f marketing for the Los An~Ples subsidiary nf the firm . l\cn- rl.'i ll. a Cos!.a !\1esa rf'siden!. 1v;i s forn1erly G r a p h i c Sciences branch manager The firm markets communication~ oriented i n f o r m a t i o n ap- 1ii1J am•,.rtl•"m""' '" "'itht!r 11" rifft' llJ ,,,.// ""~ 11 MJ1ic:lro1ifl" of o" offrr lo bu;r th/$ ururi1y. Tiu offt!ri!ll h maM 011/y by tlu ProJpt!C:luJ, 1,499,320 Shares DEAN WITTER C5C: C:o. INCORPORATED Common Stock (Par Vtluc Sl.00 Per Sha.re) T1w pulltk oft'ert,. price lw lwn dttirnnlned b)' De&n Wltw ,.._m to. reqairt9IMt ol the NadoMI ~•titMI rl Sffwit:y Dealtn. Inc. thal .s price Irle"° ldllMI' tMai tt.t ""'*""' llWftd~ by two hwf~t lnfMmtflt banklna firm. Mmll L,.dl, Pl«tt, r_. A SMidl licorpantfld ud LAiltm&n llrotkn, who •r• noc pardd.,... .. dltl dllltlb9do., ... ti. flnm mak.lnc the r~ •" ~ Price SlJ Per Shan Copk1 of thf! P'ros~c11u may bt ob1a1'Md f•o"' 111, u!fdt:n(ttwd oNy (11. 1tatu /It .,,./f/cl! 1/tw PrOJprttlU may bf! kp/ly di.1trlbu1rd ar fro"' ot~r deal"' Of' brokPI _.M may ~fully offrr thi$ 1trur/1;r ht 111t:ll 1t01n. Dean Witter & Co. '~'"' F._ 10.1'71 that of Vol vo scd<1ns and in· !ruduces an 1noovat!ve rear conlpartment concept Called the 1800ES fa stback coupe, it largely resembles a 2 door wagon but ext er 1 or styling still is quite similar !O !he earlier 1800 coupe series. The new mode\ does combine plianccs. The t r ad e <.'<lr· poralion is represented in 35 couotries. * 'l'he board of directors of A 11 e r ~a n Pharmaceuticals has elected Or. Stu art P. Erikse n of 'fuslln, to the post of vice president for re.~earch and development Or . Eriksen joined the Irvine firm in 196:'1 as director of c ! i n i ca I rcse<Jrch He holds a n1aster of science degree and Ph .D. in p h a r maceutical chemistry fron1 UC Berkeley and San Francisco. * l)uane M. Slcpu tis, of Costa 1'1esa. has been appointed director of marketing for l\ctron IrKlu strics, Inc. of r..1 onrovia. As head of Com· puter Aided Design a n d ~1anufactunng, Steputis steps into a principal field of ac· tivi!y for the McDonne\1 - Doug\as subsidiary, * Fort y years of service ~·ith Stcurily Pacific N a ti o 11 a I Bank have been com· pleted by .I a c k f , Holl and, a VICC preSJ· dent w i t h the b11nk's marketing and invest-• 1nent group. HOLLAND The Newport Beach resident joined Securily Pacific Bank in 19:\2 as a messenger. A n.itivc of Oklahoma. llol!and is 11 j.!radut1lc of Stanforrl L n1,rr•atv and the Pat·ifl c Cn;i st Cr.arluu1e Schoo 1 of Banking. Unil·crs11y or \\1ash- ington. * Un it ed Can Compa ny has eleetcd A. G1eniord Dickson a vier president . ;iccording lo i\ T Conlin. president of 1he Nnr!un Si mon . Inc subsid1ar~. Dickson. of Corona del ~1ar, wilt continue lo be responsihle for all accounnng and finan· cia\ control activities . Prior to joining United Can. Dickson served in a number of finiln· cial capacities with Hunt Foods and Industries. Fi1·m Plans Irvine Move Tanco Developme nt Corp. begins construction in March on ne..,. corporate offices .11nd warehouse facilities in the Irvine lndustrial Compl ex. ac· cording to company president, Harry Tancredi. The new corporate building. containing 30,000 square feet, was designed by Kermit Dorius Architects of Corona del Mar. It ·will house ap- proximately 60 employes, who are presently in Tanco's Santa Ana facility. The com- pany will construct Its own building, whlcll Is scheduled for completion Jn Sepetember. . William F. C a r 11 n g , representing lht N e w p o r t Beach office of Grubb & Ellis Co., handled the real estate transaction. KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN SATURDAYS IN THE DAILY PILOT the styling of a sports car with the practicality of a stalion wagon . The completely flat and carpeted r e a r C-Om· partment has three storage areas with the center com- partment housing the spare tire. jack and tools. An innovative rear seat that can be folded forward to ex· lend !he luggage comi:artmcnt is another 1800ES fealure. The seat's backrest is hinged to prol'ide additional luggage spacr between the backrest and the seat cushion "' h e n folded . The new model has retrac- ting lap bells for rear seat oc· cupants. Three ·pOint automatic adjusting safety belts are provided for front passengers. Powering the 1800ES is Volvo's computer controlled e I e ct r on i c fuel·injeclion engine. first inlroduced in 1970. The 121 cubic inch engine operates on regular grade 91 octane gasoline. Controlling !he electronic fuel injection system is a com- puter unit that determines ex· actly how much J:d.~ the engine requires to run efficiently by a uro1nat1cally compensating for changes in altitude, air and engine temperature. thro(l\e demand and engine speed. The electronic fuel i n j e ct i o n system also im proves starting anrl cold running and reduces fuel "'aste during acceleration. Buyers can select from twn lBOOES transmissions -a three-speed automatic or a four-speed manual with elec· trically operated overdrive. Both lransmissions tiave floor- mounted controls. Standard equipment on the 1800ES includes self·adjusting power assisted disc brakes on all four ~·heels. I ea I he r upholstery, an electric rear window defroster and tintPd glass all around. 0 I h e r feature s include two outside rear vie"' mirrors. door map pockets and a locking console. The sports car's dashboard houses six wh ite-On·blac k in- struments. i n c I u d i n f:! a tachometer, An electric clock also i~ fitted Because it is such a full y· equipped car, optional equip· 1nent on the JBOOES is limited to air cond1!1oning ;ind a selec· tion of radios. incl uding an A~1·FM stereo un it. Volvo has extended its war· ranty pro¢ram on 1972 models to a full 12 months with unlimited mileage. Commenting on the new 1800ES. an auto n111gazine said. "PCQple have tried to make sports cars out of sta· tion w.!lgons. but it took Volvo to successfully reverse the concept." In terms of production, Volvo. lnc. President Stig Jansson said. "only a limited supply will be produced for the American market. thus assur· ing the 1800ES owner distinct exclusivity along Y:ith the Volvo trademarks of quality, durability and safety." J Acco mi ting Unit Set For Meet The Orange Coast chapter of the NationaJ AMoclation of AC(ountants will present Dr. Rodger Karrenbrock as gutst speaker at their monthly meeting Wednesday Dr. Karrenbrock will speak on "the Abuses to Generally Acc•pted Accounting Prln- ciples" at the Alrporter Inn Hotel. The accounttna expert is vlct presJdent of fmance and trecasurtr for the Bixby Ranch Comp a ny . His ba ckground includes an e1- ccutlve position with Eldon I n d us tr i es, Inc.. and managerial e1perlencc with Arthur Anderson and Co. C.rllflcd Public Accounts. The NAA meeting Includes a social hour at 6 p.m .. followed by dinner 11t 6:40. For rescrva· lions call Robert M. Se.Irle at ~7571. Finance Briefs e Smog Answer MURRAY HILL, N.J. ,, I • Engelhard Mi n eral1 & Chemicals Corp., says it has scored a breakthrough in solv- ing the ba sic problem of gasoline engine exhaust pollu· tion. Engelhard gid !ts solu· t1on to the problem is a ca talytic converter u s i n g recoverable platinum as the. catalyst to remove exhausl 1 impurities. The device was used in the1 Ford Capri car which won the , 1971 clean car race sponsored by Massachuselts Institute of. Technology a n d California Tech. The winning car was entered by students of Wayne State University of Detroit. Engelhard said Ford ~1otor , Co. now has ordered ils plalinum catalytic converters for optional equipment on 1974 cars . Engelhard said it hoped 1 Ford would adopt them on ilsl 1975 models. the year when rigid e 1 ha us t purification I standards go in effect. e f'bh Stor'y NE\V YORK -&tarine Pro- tein Corp., which rears !rout and fresh water salmon at l\.1i\loeim, Pa., revealed in a stock prospectus it has spawn. ed pompano and mangrove and yellow tail snapper in tanks at Plantation Key, Fla. It is the second company in recent we eks to announce th e. successful rearing of salt wate r fish in captivity in Florida. I e Suaashlng I NEW YORK -Collecting and recycling of glass bottles , into glass manufacture nov1 is approaching a rate of four billion bottles a year, The G l a s s Container ~1anufac­ turers Association reported. In the pas! year. the manufac·I turers h11ve paid out $4 mi\!ion l for 198,000 tons of old jars and ' bottles 1 e Gr'oml I• Sindy NEW YORK -The Con. fereace Board. an independent business research organiza-1 tion, has just published a new and la i r I y com prehensive' study on the implications for1 business and society of the growth of information' technology in the past 20 1 years. The study will be used / as a base for two conferen ces1 oo the subject of information technology, one in New York [ Feb . 14-15 and one in Brussels June 1·2. ettod Homes I NORTHUMBERLAND. Pa . -f\1odular Housing Systems . Inc ., has bought a 2~acre site in New City, N.Y., from City Condominium Corp. and has 1 signed a contract with the city ' to erect a $10 million of 237 I l\\'O-bedroom to"'" house units. Ninety-rour town house units already have been built and sold on the propert y by con· venfional methods. Modular Housing will employ its own method of mod u I a r con· structlon. e Nenl Plaut CHJCAc.o -Standard Oil Co. Indiana said its Amoco Chemicals division "•ill build a plant near Alvin. Tex.. to make one billion pounds of ethylene products yearly. Cost : was not disclosed. 1 e Cr'yoge11I" Unit NEW ORLEANS -The country's largest cryogenic gas processing plant will be built at Henry. La ,, by 20 natural gas producing com·I panics. The purpose is to pro.I cess gas collected from under the Gul r of Mexlco and gathered by Sea Robin pipe1 line. Texaco will operate the plant for all the companies and Houston Engineering Co., will build it. e Navy Or'de,. BETHPAGE. N.Y. -Grum- man Corp. has obtained a $54 million addition to 1 Navy , order for c ar r I e r -b• sed aircraft electronic warfare gear. e Coffee La11>ault NEW YORK -Struthers Wells Corp. has anoounced ii will be paid fl.f million by Gentral Foods Corp. in set- tlement or its patent in- fringement ault Maxim frteze dried coffee. In 1188, afttt G•nerol Foods b.....,,t oot the fr«ie dried con ... Struthers Wells and Ont of I t • subsidiaries filed 1ult.1 Jn several state.s e h a r g I n 11 Ce ntral Foods had lnlrlnged Its patents on the freeze 1 drying process. General Poods l filed a counter suit chargiJ11 • unfair competition. Strut.hen: said all the suits and coUJ>- terrulU TlM1t are b e 1 D Iii withdrawn ." FAME-LESS FACES HELEN J. SHAFfU~ -;;\:, r.;: . . . "" lt!CHARO l, WORSNOP ·~·. .. ' NA.TliAH MIU£A RALPH C. DEANS Think You Don't Know Them? You probaby don 't recognize a 5ingle name or face in this group and yet, if you're one of th. DAILY PILOT 'S very well informed editorial pogo readers, it is th is talented team of writers which helps you keep informed . They write the Edito~. al Research Repo rts. Though their own names don't appear on the articles which are pub lished under the Editorial Research Reports heading, these are the real pros -diggers who go after ell the backround feels which put today 's top issues into perspective -without thought of seeking the fame that goes with the name whon you're 1 national columnist. They're Your INFORMERS Yos, thoy could bo your "informers." It's fo•lur" liko Editoriol RosHrch Reports · which mako tho DAILY PILOT much moro 'tho~ just the most importont hometo,.n nows~por ovail.blo to residonh olo119 tho Oran90,Coost. Tho DAILY PILOT is the total package. It makes whatovor happens in tho world "locol neW." and delivori it doily right to you•"hom•. Lot t~is tum of dodi· coted ' "informers" holp you keep informed. RHd Editorial Roseerch Reports on the oditoriel p199 -end in tho other informotivo spociol futu...S in other parts o~ the DAl·lY PILOT • • • " " ' ~ . ' ' • •. • • ' • ' ' . ; ' .. •' < ·' ·~ ' " ,{ • .. ·' ' 1 l ' ' ' ' ' l ·1 ' • ' ' ' ' " • < ~ ·' ' < ' ~ ~ " J ' ' ·' • l ' ' ' ' l .. • Buy The DAILY PILOT For Peanuts! H1r1'1 here'• leat but not 11111, tie re'• CHARLIE BRO'WN, •• and LUCY., .11ld here's l 1NUS.,,1nd h11"1'a SCHROEDER,., and SNOOPY Phone 642-4321 (Circulation Department) to have the whole Peanuts gang come and visit you dally . -- • •• ' • . . . . . ' . . . Monday, Fri>rUM} 14, 1972 -- DAIL y P'ILOT 11•11 P'hort NO PAINTING FOR THIS ALUMINUM COMMERCIAL FISHING BOAT Big Vessel La iwaia Undergo ing Sea Trials Off Newport Beach Luxury Fishing Boat Alumi1ium Laiwaia T estecl Off Coast By ALMON LOCKABEY Of !ht 0•111 P'lllll 11111 Yachtsmen who have chanc· ed to see a big aluminum power boat undergoing sea triaJs off Newport Beach, and have wondered when it is going to be painted, \veJJ it ain't. No paint, that is . Now if you are wondering why a beautiful 76-foot vessel l!iuch as the Laiwaia is going to go unpainted, the answer is simple. The Laiwaia is not a yacht. It's a commercial fishing vessel , soon to be in service in the Hawaii fishing trade. No, not even a sportfisher. The all-aluminum La iwaia, 76 feet overall and 24 feet beam was built in C-Osta Mesa at I.he yard of Lew Mauer and v.·as commissioned by the Alpha Hawaii Fishing Company. Although the vessel is not a yacht in any sense of the word, it will be better equ ip- ped than most of t h e goldplaters seen around these parts. With accommodationl'i for six-including a crew of GOP Orders 64 Yachts For San Diego Parley SAN DIEGO fAP) -Sen. John Tower (R-Tex.) wants a yacht with 20 staterooms while he attends the Republican Na- tional Convention in August. Similar requests from others are coming in and &I yachts are sought, a convention spokesman said . sightseeing trips around the bay, and for fishing if time permits." The Sports Arena. site of the convention's te levised business sessions Aug. 21-24. is less than a mile from the Pacific Ocean and even closer to f\.1i ssion Bay. four-the Laiwaia was built at a co!;t af nearl y a half-million dollars and will remain a strictly working vessel. Her electranics and naviga· lional gear would make ~ ya_chtsman drool. Coun~ 'em : Loran, au to matic direction finder, VHF radio, single side- band radio, A.M. radio. Kone! fathometer, Decca radar. twa 30 kilowatt generators. That's all in the pilot house. Another console on he boat deck has temperature controls. crane control~ and miscellaneous gear for operating the vessel from that location. The hull was designed by Phil Caricof, well known in Newport as the designer, builder and dri ve r of offshore racing powerboats. The owner is John Sturges. The vessel is powered by twin Waukasha1v V-8 diesels and has variable pitch pro- pellers. Her wor king range will be 700 miles, but by flooding the fish wells with fuel. this range could be ex· tended ta. 2,000 miles. Although lacking in fancy -, - ·LA Harbor Recreation Plan Eyed LOS ANGELES IAP 1 -The Jia rbor C.Ommission has befn urged to adopt a policy ··util iz- ing Los .A.ngele~ Harbor ui part for recreational needs and to exped ite plans for new marinas,'' despite a com · mi ssio n plea that 11 was •·aware of tl1e small boaters' needs." The City Counci l Industry and Transportation Cornm1t1ee passed a re.solution lo th is ef· feel duruii: a puhhc hearing altended hy JOO boating en· 1 thusiasls, so1ne of whom com-1 plai ned Ma ting fac1t111es were being ehm1nated even thaugh I they sho\v a better return an in vestn1ents than commerc1al 1 faciht1es. Cily Council President John Gibson. who attended the meeting thou_gh not a member of the committee. accused the commission members o f ''dragging their feel'' on plan· ning small crafl faci lities. Fred Crawford , assist;.int general rnanager of t he !!arbor Department said work an th e F'ish Harbor n1arina wauld begin soon because pro- blems posed by ecology studies and o t h e r re- quirements had been solved. Hobie Cat Group Sets 2 Regattas The Hobie Cat Association is conducting I w o Mid1~·inter Regattas this yea r. The Midwinters \\14!§\ is being held at Guaymas. Mex· 1co. f'eh . 19-20..2!. I The. Mid1vinters East Regal · ta \vas held last 1veekend at Coca Beach. Fla . 1"hc 11·1n11ers : 1 f-IOBIE CAT -!I J .Jim l\1cCann, Orlando: 12 ~ Dale Barrell. Caral Gables: (3 ) Allen Stevens. Orlando. HOBIE CAT -14A -Il l Roberta Ba u r e I . Sauturce, P.R.: (2) J. Simm ond s, Mia mi; (31 Gaulden Recd , Daytona. HOBIE CAT • 148 -11) Marilyn Swan. Cocoa Beach ; (2) Grey Presnell. Orlando; 13) Jay Swan. Cocoa Beach. "The use of the vessels will be free to lhe delegations," said Paul Kettenburg. a cochairman of the Californ ia Yachtsman Committee for the '72 Convenlion, a state\vide group. Kettenburg said y a c h t owners up and down the Californ ia coast are being ask- ed to offer their boats. yacht accommodations, the ---------- "The idea of !he yachts ls to offer the delegations and other officials their use for en- tertainment offshore and for Top Wa.ter Skiers Set For H arasu, A tatal of 54 yachts will be des p· nated as host craft for the convention's delegations and JO more wi!l be host vessels for important govern- ment officia ls who aren't delegates. William de Groot J r .. chairman of the California Navigation and 0 c e a n Development Commission, is listed as consultant ta the yacht-procuring committee. Quest III Wins 2nd crew will be quite confortab!e in three individual staterooms, each with its O\\'n head and sho\ver. It has a full galley and saloon with the usual refrigeration e q u i p m e n t capable of making her what seamen call a "good feeder." After completion of sea trials off Newport Beach, Maurer will skipper the vessel on its maiden voyage to Honolulu. hopefully starting about Feb. 15. The reason for not painting the hull ? The Laiwa ia wa s built of s e I f • a n ad i z in g aluminum which w he n \veathercd \\'ill tum an attrac- ti ve gray, according ta l\1auer. REMEMBER Alatnitos Bay Event Junior Sailors Race Set Late in March Tap junwr sailors from throughout the Southland have been invlled to participate in Alamitos Bay Yacht Club's Olympic Sailing Se m i n a r fl.larch 23-31. The semlnar ls designed t() acr1uainl young sailors with !Kime af the sublties and IKlmetimes neglected varieties of sailboat racing. Instructorl'i will use Sabots aod suit them to the different a.spccts of competition such as match racing, team racing and collegiate style racing. All of the instructian periods :ire arranged to allow as mu ch uiling time as posslb!e . The setninar was arranged In cooperation with Sa i J ti1agazinc. Tap racing skippers have been selecLed as in- structors. They include Henry Sprague Ill. Andy 1'-1acdonald. Peter Parker, Rick Taylor allf Ken \Veiss. Heg1s!rat1on for the seminoot wil! close Saturday. March 25 at 5 p rn . Fee per person is $10 a day. Age limits are 12·2). Classes will start daily at I a.m. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 100<>/o FREE REPLACEMENT SHOULD THIS TIRE BECOME DEFECTIVE DUE TO WORKMANSHIP OR MATERIALS FOR THE LIFE OF THE TIRE. WHEN BOUGHT WITH OUR BONDED WARRANTY YOU ARE PROTECTED AGAINST NAILHOLE, ROAD HAZARDS, WRECK, COLLISION AND EVEN RUNNING FLAT: TUBELESS WHITEWALLS SIZE D78-13 or 700-13 E78-14 or 735-14 F78-14 or 775-14 G78-14 or 825-14 H78-14 or 855-14 J78-14 or 885-14 G78x15 or 825-15 PRICE ...... 20.86 22.65 1.97 2.24 2.39 2.75 2.95 2.6] ALL PRICES PLUS EXCISE AND SALES TAX ------w'-"'-'o-"-®-----H78-15 or 855-15 ...... 24.10 ...... 25.25 ...... 26.93 ...... 28.21 ...... 25.33 ...... 26.89 ...... 27.38 2.11 DELTA 140 TIRE NO THUMP NO BUMP NO VIBRATION FULL FOUR PLY TUBELESS WHITEWALL SIZE PRICE 650-13 '·····-· ·············· '1 5.40 700-13 . . . .. . . .. .. .. ..... . 16.80 650-14 or 695-14 ........ 17.49 700-14 or 735-14 ... ..... 18.20 750-14 or 775-14 ........ 19.52 800-14 ~r 825-14 ........ 21.13 850-14 or 855-14 ........ 22.94 900-14 or 885-14 ........ 23.04 670-15 or 775-15 ........ 18.07 815-15 or 825-15 ........ 19.55 845-15 or 855-15 . . . . . . . . 22.25 800-15 or 885-15 ........ 22.92 1.75 1.95 1.90 2.00 2.12 2.29 2.41 2.71 2.1 l 2.l 4 2.41 J78-15 or 885-15 J.01 • L78-15 or 915-15 ............ 30.14 J.16 DUNE BUGGY TIRE 11-15 .................... $21.44 EX.TAX SJ.47 • HIGH SPEED SPORTS CAR TIRES TUBELESS WHITEWALL SIZE PRICE 550--12 ........ • . .. . 14.09 600-12 ..... ' ..... 14.23 520-13 .................. 14.82 560-13 \. ......... ·•····· 15.90 560-14 ........................ 17.95 600-13 ........................ 15.63 All PRICES l'L US f'EDERAL EXCISE AND STATE SALES TAX EXC ISE TAX 1.11 I.JO 1.29 1.45 1.5) 1.61 TRUCK TIRES Four of the world's outstan- ding water skiers have been selected as test officials for the 1972 P o w e r B o a t Performance Trials at Lake Havasu. The skiers are M i k e MELBOURNE . Austral ia (AP) -Australian champion Quest II I won the second race Sunday in the best-of-seven series in the Litt.le America's Cup defense against t h e United States' Weathercoc k at Sarrento on Port Philip Bay. with ' 820-15 or 915-15 ........ 24.26 2.67 2.91 1st 9UALITY NYLON CORD Su yde roud , R ickey McCormick, Leroy Burnett and Lisa St. John . They wl!I be evaluating marine equipment for famil y ski use. Also expected to be present Is BiU Bennett. manufacturer af the Delta kite. "\Vater skiing has come to be the most important factor to be cansidered before buying an ouloard boat ar engine," according ta Cart Asmus. editar af Powerboal Magaline. "It is important that any com· plete testing program include adequate data far the water ski enthusiast." The performance trials are scheduled r.1arch 11-12 at Lake Havasu City. marking the first time a testing program of this scope has ever been held by a boating publication . The American catamaran was plagued by bad luck. On the first day of competition she was forced to dodge spec- tator boats. thus losi ng time, and on the second day she sheared her rudder fi tting with two laps to go. American skipper Chuck Milligan of Plymouth. Mass .• made a valiant effort ta con- tinue but did not have enough control in the 22-mile an hour wind and lumpy seas. When the fitting sheared Australian skipper Br u c e Proctor was leading by four minutes. DAVE ROSS PONTIAC Lease or .Buy All Models ••• DAYE ROSS PONTIAC 2410 H.AalOa II.YD. • PAii DllYI COSTA MIU Ph.• 5464017 ,Bob Paley And Associates SAFECC INSURANC& -474 E. 17TH STREET COSTA MESA 642-6500 -546-3205 PIERCE °"' -w;'"';.,-;..,_.,_,..,!I...,... n,,,.._.,;,,i-i.t,"l-"'"' T&""iW •'..tr .. _. ............. ~ ...... n.. -U... ..... 1 .. 11.io'"'""'' .. •'n"""-., __ .., ... , .. .i,.,_ ri.. .-... "' du .... 1--I\., """' ...... 1 ..... .. ·-· ~ ...... "~""Ii< -... n.. n.. r......A....W M«ot Co• T<"' ""'., ... , ....... , .. .,,,...,.,,_,. ........ ,1.,...1o1t ............... ,. , ..... '" '""'''"·" .. h ..... 1, _ ..... 1. ~ .... ,.11,. n. .. p,,,. •. .A..-M"'"'C....""""'" ht hu.I< •• ~.ot ... . n.. .... _...r1...-..... <>d. ....... n.. ........... ...-...... ~ ...... "" ... ,,,... "' ........................... _ .1 ... .,. .. ....... -c-~u'!~c-c-1-,._., __ _ ...... .__. .. ., ... '"""" ., ... _..,. --M ARROW Gearp N. Plt:m pnidue'.ed II•• f1nrt 1ut(lmobilt in 1901. Thti tl'.lmp.lny had NVtl'W ntme th•fll" (IYfr the )'l!•r• 1nd "'IJ rn1n11r1ct11ttd in h110 d!fltNlll l«1llona. Picm Arrow ..,,, 1 trulv 1rt1t e11111e 11110- mobiM ,.nrdltil of wher1 It "" mtde or .. hat it wu ralltd Thil 9d ftllufft ""-t~oted !>mt UmoV1h1e. Piettoe ArYV.,.'1 ~II produetkl11 )'Mr wu 192t wbe11 &,4?2: m1chlne1 wv. m1de. Hird hU bJ' the (ftAt dtprusion, llM Ifft modtl 7@1r -wu 193f "'llttt (Inly 11511 of the. 11Jt17'\flttnt nn .,,.,. JlfedV<'M. L SUPER WIDE FULL 4 PLY WIDE OVAL TYPE TUBELESS WHITEWALL OR SIZE WHITE LmERS PRICE '::!" D70-14 or 695-14 ........ 121.69 2.J I E70-14 or 735-14 .......... 23.65 2.5, •f10~14 or 775-14 ........ 25.25 2.,0 •G70..14 or 825-14 ........ 26.72 2.77 • • H70-14 or 855-14 ........ 21.48 2.92 -F70-15 or 775-15 ........ 24.18 z.,J G70.15 or 825-15 ........ 25.86 2.11 H70-15 or 855-15 ........ 27.33 .... • AYAILAIU IN WHm LmtUD llLTID n1n • INQUIRE ABOUT ROAO HAZARO GUARANTEE ON TRUCK TIRES SEE US FOR CAMPER TIRES SIZE PLY PRICE EXCISI RATING TAX 700• 14 TUHLISS • • • • • • • • 8 26.44 2.,4 670-15 ............... , 6 21.66 2.44 700-15 ................. , 6 23.27 2.14 700-15 ········-······· 8 26.81 I J.11 700-16 .................. 6 25.59 1.00 750-16 .................. 8 30.12 ,,,, 7-17.5 TUllLISS ••••• , .• 6 27.20 J,J, 8-17.5 TUllLISS •• , • , , •• 8 30.78 I.ti 825-20 ......... ····· 10 51.56 1.17 900-20 ....... '' ····· 10 62.12 7.Jt 1000.20 ............ 12 80.86 t .11 STORE HOURS: maste1 1 ha1gf! MON., TUES., WED., THURS., FRI. 1:00 A.M.-6 P.M. SATURDAY 1:00 A.M. TO 12:00 NOON CLOSED SUNDAY ' . ; OLIYllt AND WINSTON, INC. DELTA TIRE COMPANY 141 E. 17th St. 645-2010 COSTA MESA ,. •' .. , ' '· . •• ' '· . • . ' . ' . . . " . . . . ... ~ . Mo11d41, Ffbruary 14, 1972 DAIL V PILOf lJ Winter Ol ympics Open, Close in Controversy Sligl1t /tlis#1t1JJ nt Dt1ytont1. J 1111 Osgar lclr1 v1 ng-rar i\'o. 241 and :\l ickcy F'lorza rollidcd dur ing Sat - urday ·s run nin g of the i\H(':\ 300. Neither dri ver \\'as seriously 111- ••• •, ~ ·c .. ' JI..:~ .. , ' . ~ ~ • • • •. , JUrcd . 1"he san1e cannot be said for their battered vch1cles. • Bullets Force LA to Cha11ge But Still Lo se Cage Tilt May Be like Laver Leads Scene of Air Disaster Tennis Tot1r CO LL E<:E 111\liK. \Id 11\P1 -Los ,\ng{'l es coach Bill Sha rman adn111s !he Ra1!1morr Bullc1 s· niidgets forced his l.akers .. into several changes:• and guard Jerry \Vest add s the.v •·outre· bounded us for a long stret Ch " The Lakers. ho ping for an easy r ictory ,., 11h injured Ballirnorc center \Yes l 'nseld missing his r1 flh stra ight National l~askctball Association gan1e. had to rall y !he Una! n1inutes for a 121 -110 ,.,..·ict ory Su ndar. handing the Bullets th eir eighlh str;iight loss. 1.eadin g only 56-51 at halftin1e. lhe L;1kers fin all y caught fire in the late going as ror1vard Ji1n :\·Tc~l illi11n h11 19 of his ga n1c high 31 poin ls. including '"'O kel" bucket s in th e final 1:30 /'hil Chenie r. rook ie guard "'ho led B:.ilt1morc with 28 point s .. hit a bucket \\'11h 8:43 left lo tie the gan1c at 90-all. ·rhe lead swayed back and forth unlil LA center \V ilt Chamberla in, sidelined por tions of the second hair. stuffed a shol for a 106-100 lead with 2: 14 left. The La kers then hit three straigh t baskets. including t1110 by .\1c~1illian. for ;i 112·100 lead "''1th 1:26 to pla~·. The Bullets made lo ur turno1•ers after th;i t :ind Cha rnberlain. \11ho fini shed 1\·ith 17 point :;. sank three lo ice the ga1ne hC'fOrc a Baltunore club rctord of 14.239 l<1 11s at the Un1\'c rsil.>' of .\1;iryland·s Co lr 1:1cld House. Sha rn1 an. adnl itting t11s Lakers were forC'cd into several changes. sai d he too k Cha mberlain out .. because 1ve "'anted to ~Cl lo a pressing defen se" and hr didn "t 1h1nk that Gu s Johnson . "with his bad kne es. would he able !o dr 11·c on Lerny 1·:ll1s .. Loi Angtlt• /)11\ c ' ' ll>~•nn@rl~,,., ' " " F l'" " ' Good'''" .. ,. H~; \TO~ " • lk ,1,11,~n u " " l>1l•Y ' " , ltA~~ ' .. ' We}! " .. " Int~•< " 11 l> 111 Lo:;: A~t;tel~, ;;~11,1no•t FoulrG oul -NDn• B'll•mOr• 1110\ C '>•n••• (larl Dri1ro11 Jo~n•Ofl c ' ' I 1 1 7 • ?I I /I 11 0 0 0 0 '~ 11 ~ 0 D I~ 1 l J ,, I I I I 0 00 0 ~lorrl,·~ ~t.•l!wor·~ ' .. " • 101~1, JI ?1 ll ,, 0 11 } ·~ 10 11 110 71 i · 1'1 ;; JO -110 Tc!~I lcul~ -Lt>< "~t!-1~ "'l'f""t n<t -l•.1lt 'ronight the Jud ges 1v1ll g'J on Lrial su tn speak. as the OAJLY PI LOT sport~ strll f ris ks Jts per fC'cl basket ball rrcord a ~au1~t !he ~uµer stars of thr CI F front office The \1ritcrs. \\'hu h;ne bt·en ;1blr to s11 and judge dnz ens of teams ;ind players. \\•ill 1101\' be on tri al the n1selves. And 1\·hu kno\~S? They 1nay prove hurnan by 111iss· ing shots. thro\\·ing errant passes or just plain thoking againsl their rivals. The game LS being staged at Huntington Bea ch Hig h School ;i t 7 -0"clock 1see related stor~ page 221 as p<1rl of a St. V..11c.ntint'.'s Day massacre a la 1972. One observrr sa~·s the game wlll pro- 8 LE~H WH IT8 ----~ WHI TE WAS JI -------- bably rcscn1ble an air disaster more ~han a massacre. \vha t with wreckage and bodies f'Xpecled to be scattered all over the court before the last shot has bern taken . Tonight is ;1 ~hO\\'dO"'Jl of sorts. Thi• 11 . .\lLY PI LOT arid Clf front offic e ha1 e been near blo1rs o\·rr playoff pairings and seeding~nd the ens uing cri ticisms 11f th1· CIF which have appeared 1n print Of particular interest is thr 111;1trhlll) betwee n jelly belly Hoger Carlson uf lhr sports staff and chvarf Oarol Hound\ nr the CIF'. Houndy and Ca rlSO JI ;11'1• a n,1· thing but bosoin buddies. Also. this writer gets a bonu~. 111 ad dition to trying to fulfil l 11 VOW th al Clf•" commiss ioner Ken Fagiins w\11 nol score a fi eld goa!. ! get a chance lo settle ;i u old score \1•ith non e other lhan Joh11 ~1cDonough -!he Bi g Iler -if he riares sho\.\• fo r !he garne !\ilcDonough and ttus 1vrill'r ha\'e been at each other"s th roats lhl' p;1st 15 .vcar~ I clain1 his Orange Counl y officials are bush leaguers. incons1stLn1 rnoncy gr;1b· bers "'ho play the role pf (:od evcryl1 n1c the): put on their black and 111hite striped Jerseys. \olc()pnough ha~ la shed 1ne for n1ak ing Desert Classic . Champ Re·ady to Start Shal{i11g PALM SPRINGS. Calif, I AP l ~ lt had been 11 years si nce Bob Rosburg 1\·as a \\'inne r and the ~5-yesi T"·old grey bcsi rd of thr pro golf 1our \l'asn·l sure he could s1and the pressure . .. I was ~ady to stsirt sha king but it. never happened ." Rosburg said Sunday after collecting $29,000 as the winner o( the $1 45.000 Desert Golf Class ic. Lanny Wadk ins. 22. of Winston Salem. N.C .. was one stroke back and two 24-year-old Ca lifornians. Jerry Heard of Visalia and Johnny Miller of Napa , (l nishtd 11vo of f Rosburg 's OO·hole total or 344 , under par by 16. .. , 1\•as pleased with the wa y rny nerves held up ." said Rosburg. "Afler not hav- ing \\'On in 11 years. it ·s very hard not lo look at the bad things that might h11p- pcn ltosbur g's prn victories came In the !959 PCiA champiOn!ihl11 and the 1961 Blng Crosbv Pro-Am. "I've won a co uple of big tour event~ but to con1r back and just prove 10 myself that I r11n do It ... words can't 11ulil1c Tiu· m<iny ho ~slcs his refs have h1T 11 1nvo1h C'd in and for c;.1!11 ng a spade a ~p;1dr. Jr ht· !>hov.·s, it should add spice to an ;ilrcad} intriguing twin bill. 't'he Jal\cr hn!r rnatches Hu:itingl.on Beach and .\liJrJlla C'oaches. Both teams are young and talented and !he keen rivalry hc!1\ccn the two schools adds luster to the st ruggle. l!rrc and there: Santa Ana 1-Iigh athJttic direclor Larry Arason and forn1er Laguna Beach High !rack coach Red Guyer tean1ed as starter 11nd reC'all starter :.11 the Tim es Indoor (;a111es Frid:iy night al lhe Forum. Arason h:1d onl y eight fa lse starts -in· t•luding one in th e prep t\\-'O-mile, !'i1 ul .\·loro. former star athlete at Hun- !ington Beach High and Orange Coast College . \Viii continue his career at Cal State (Long Beach 1. Jim Ryun Fan Club members may as ,,·ell start disbanding. Your boy has had it. After being nea r complete exhauslion upon completion or a 4:06.8 mile effort in January and after running to a 4: 13.2. nexl·l<rlast fini sh at the Forum Frida11 nii:ht. he looks like a prime ca ndidale fo0r the ~('ra p hrap. \\"intC'r Oly rnpies television coverage n11gh! ha 'r been a lot n1 ore enjoyable 111th Jess toinrncntary overall and surely 11 1th less during fig ure s k a 1. i n g Pl'rfl.rn11:111ccs 1vhen the music they skate lu adds sn inuch to ll1 e prograni. * Bill J')uwc. the guy who hit a basket at lht-bu zzer to give Cal a i 9-i7 cage triu1nph O\er Oregon Friday nigh t. once sriarked Pasadena High over J\'t arina in the CIF playorfs. After \lictor)' • PlllLAUELPIHA 1;\P ) -Rod Laver lnrs to give you the impression that he laughed all the 11·ay to the bank artC'r los- ing the \Vo rld Cha1npionship Tennis Championship to Ken Rose1va\I last Noven1ber. Laver 1va s asked if he felt he gained a little reve nge yesterday \vhen he whipped H.osc1\"<i ll. 4-6. 6-2, 6-2, 6-2, in the finals of the \VCT's 12th or 20 "'cckly tour stop s. .. No. I don't. think ln terms of reveng°e ," replied the 3 3 -ycar -o l d Australian . "! think ifs a good reason !u work harder so you don't let a guy gel 11n edge on you." Laver. of course. could affor d io take ;1 condescending attitude. He b a n k e d $290.091 in 1971 , a record for tennis players. and became the gan1e's fi rst million-dollar-plus winner. Maybe Laver didn 't take the Rosewall defeat hard. Jt did, however. prompt a 2 ~ n1onth vacation from tennis. du ring wh ich he says he didn't touch a racquet for seveq weeks. He can1e bac k two ·weeks ago\in Richn1ond . Va .. and won tht: tournament. Aflrr losing the first set. La ver sho\ved ;i l-ro1vd of 11.81 3 \l'hy he's known as ten· nis· Nn. J ~upcrstar. He shattered the con- ~1s1cncy of Rose\\'<ill "s game by runni ng 1hr 37-ycar-old fellow Australian fr on1 ~1de llnc to sideline 11'ith forehand and backhand crosscourt shots . · Laver's big serve an d his backhand placc mcnJs were superb. The layoff had appa ren tly done ~·onders ror hi s game. lie Jost only two sets in fiv e matches in the tournament. Laver now leads the \VCT tour with i i po int s. 20 more than runncrup Rosewall, \vho made his fi rst WC.'T start of 1972. It's Dog( gotae) Ftin 'f herc's no base ball al'tiv ity In lo\va th ts time of the year. Instead it'ii ei ghl·ycar·ol d J ill ~lilpip re of Cedar Falls, l ow~. \vho's in the lime· li ght. lle rc she's getting un der way in the 1.75-mile novice race in the Iowa Dog Sl)dd ing Cha~pion sh i ps. She. won. Dissidents Say Brundage Not in Tune With Times SAPPO RO. Japan I AP\ -The I I th \Vinter Oly 1np1t: Games. dedicated to 1n· ternational good will , open~ with a rag. ing rontro\•ersy and closed on lhe san1e diseordanl note. ··\Ve should drop the \\linter Games - they arc not unh·ersal and they foster professionalism, es pecially in skiing ,'' said Avery Brundage. n1ilitant prcsidenl uf the lnlcrnat ion:ll Oly1npi c Comm ittcC'. "'Drop Brundagl•." ur ged a group of ~rassroot dissidents. argu1n~ both Brun - dac:c and the JOC arc areha1t· .uul nut 111 tunl' \\'ilh the ti n1es Pc!itions 1vere be111g t·1rr11l;1!l'd a1 nun~ !he athletes, off icials iil1d press. t·<1ll1ng !ur a restructuring or the Oly 111p1 l' con· rcpt 1o lake away ils e1nphas1-; on pu re a1na leurisn1. knock down its rul ing oligarchy and give con1pt::t 1tor~ a ,·oicr in the ga n1es. Expelled Austrian ace Karl Schrilnz cu l louse the fir st salvos at Bru11dagc and the cu dgels were picked 1111 by a pretty former U.S. Olyn1pic skier named Suzy Charfce of Ne\v York . .. Br undage has been comprofn ising athletes fo r the last 111 0 <lecadcs ," said Suzy as she bustled around the Oly1npic 1·on1plcxes seeking signatures un . a 10· µcunt plan to build a nc11· Ol)n1 p1c drea1n. Suspensions. dope te sts. sex t hecks. charges of scoring fi xes and 1>0liti eal \\Tangling t"Onti nued to 1nar this great \1•orld sports spectacle despite superb orga niza tiou and circurns1>e<:t conducl of !he Games by the .Japanrse organizers . Schranz. th e veteran Alpine star and former \Vorld Cu11 c:hampion. becan1e th e Ganles' centra l t.'Ontrovcrs.ial figure when he wa s ba rred fro1n con1pelition three days before the opening on cliarges he .al101ved his llilllle and picture> lo be used fo r co mn1crcial purposes. "'Brundage is a t.1·rant, a di cta tor.'' Schran z chargc1!. ad<llng· "'Ile 11·ould have a different alt1tud<• 1f lie 1verc not a millionai re.·· "S('hranz ha'> b('en n1;ik111i.: ht~ liv ing fro n1 skii ng fvr 18 ~'e,1rs." 4·nu111rrl'tl Brundage . Schr;inz rrt11 rnrd lo Vicn11a 111 a hr ro 's 11·elco1ne . In Sa ppo ro. the [Qt .. s action dre1v bitter protests. '·(;111lty 11•1thout a trial,'' cha rged the Austnans ... Schran1 . never got a chance to plead his casr " The ski people discreetly (:ove red 1he brand names on their equipme11t hut scoffed openl y at the idea that co rn- rnercialism could ever be separated fron1 this mushrooming sport. !l's common knowledge that the top skiers Burope a~e s11bsidized hy ma nufacturers. Sports 111 Brief t \lean11'hi!e. the Soviet Union and it<> satellites profess purr ::imateurtsm. ye.t perrn1t govern1nenl financing of athletc.t and athlet1t progran1s. niaking the m equivalent to profl'ss ionals. Hor:.! frl'Cse. an J·:ast Ger1na11 speed skater \1ho defected to \\'c:.t l:er1nanv , told ll[ :-.alar1e". bonuses and special fa \.-or-, bn 1shcd upOll t;asl (;e rm<in athlcll·~ ·\ppriSl'1i uf Sul'h v1ola t1011s Brunda c,. ,aHt · \11 11nr h11s r1 rr prrse11 1rd proof lt1lht•!t)('" \nnt' 1';11110•,1' 111 Frant"C', .1 !11ri in· !l"r nath1na l ,!.;11•1 1,as susperHll'd h~· !hr 1r 1t1•rn~11 1onal Ski f t'c!l'ra!io11 ' FI S 1 bcC':1Ut-l' ol ;1d1 L·rt 1~e111ent s I hat :shr 11·u1ild n111kc 01) n1p1e broa dcasts lur Radio Lu\• ('n1bouri.: A Cer1na11 hiJt"ke y pla~r r. Aloi~ Sehoc!t'I. \\'as barred fron1 the \.:unt'.'i because tl'sls shu1ved hr had ll "'<'d 11 forbidden drug. Drug tests arr taken or all Olympic charnpions ;uul fron 1 othrr con1petitors plucked at random. :\mcrican figure ska ter!!!. \1'hu had I\ di sappoint ing Olyn1pics \Vith only ~ bro117.C tnedal by Janel Lynn lo :-.hOI\' ror the (;ai nes. bill erly attacked the partlall · !~ of the JudgL'S and scoring proccclurrs .l uhn ~li sha Pelkcvieh. :\rnerica ·.• prcn111•r free sk:Her who ftn1ShC'd fift h Ill 1111'n's singles. ~:ud : '•Jl 1s difficult to get throug,h" !hl' Eastl'rn l::urope:1n bl<K· of judges. 1 !hough our three skaters (also Krn Shel!ry and Gordon ~lcKcllcn Jr. J 1\•erc th e best of any country. A tearfu l Jo Jo Starbuck o( Downey. who 1vith Shelley faj]ed lo win a meda l in the pairs. inti mated that the judges had their rninds nlade lip before the com· pf'ti li on. .. tr 1vc hud skute d J{t ti mes belier th:i n "'e did \\'C' still wouldn't hav• won a inedal." .-,he con1pla ined. ~1urk 1\'l ilitn110, the 17-ycar·old D1:r; !!il ls. N.Y. sk<1ter "'ho eo mpe tecl in the pa irs 11'1!h his \G-yca r-o)d sister. i\lrl1ssa, didn't l1kt• hi s 1narks. eithl'r. 'rhi· l" S teen-agers got :.i tren1cndou~ o\';111011 fron1 1hc cro11·d. 11·hich booed loudly 1vhC'n the poor marks wrre posted. Obscr\'{'rS said the judges low-graded the youngsters bec ause th ey broke wit t-. 1rad 1tion both in their peasanl·stylt cos .. tume s and skating routine . t\skcd whal the boos told hinl, MarK rf"pli~d: .. IL told rne the judges were no good ." So . Sayonara. Sa pporo. it wa s fun ...... but il was also bitterne ss and \ears. t• sccins it·s always so. Emerson Sweeps Foe ; Patti/ohnson TiesMark TO /tONTO -Three seeded playtrs breezed lo stra ight·sel victories Sunday in rirsl·round play tfr th" $50.000 \Vorld Ch a1np1 onship ·rennis tournament Ni nth-seeded Huy E:merson vf Ne1vport Beach got p;i st Bob \laud of So uth Africa 6-4, 6-4 in the closest of Lbe niatches in- volving seeded pl ayers. Charles Pasarell of Puerto Rico. the 10th seed , broke Allil n Stone's service three tin1es whil e holding his O\Vn serve tu get past th e Australian 6-2, 6-3. John Alexander, No. J l, stood behind his cannonball service to easily defeat Owen Davidson 6-2 . 6-4 in a battle of Australians. The left-handed David~on was on the defensive after Ale:icand cr broke service in lhe thi rd g;ime of thr first set. "" VAN(;OUVER -San Clen1en1e·s Patt i J ohnson eq ualed her own 11•orld record of 6.9 in capturing the ~meter hurdles in the Vancouver Indoor Games here Satur- day night. "" SAl'PORO, Japan -The Un ited States l1ockcy team captured the sliver medal and Francisco Ochoa became Spain's fir st gold med al wi nner ever by nabbing the special slalom in conclud ing events In the Winter Olympics here Sunday. Russia won the go ld medal in hockey while Czechoslovak ia "'as awarded the bronze n1cd allion. R u ss ia 's 5 -2 v ic t ory ovr r Czechoslova kia . coupled with Finland·s 4- .1 upset of Sweden gave the Americans second place. "" KANSAS CITY , Kan. -Costa h-1esa's Barry Asher fini shed third in the finals of lhe $50,000 King Louie bowling tourna· ment here Sa urday and was awarded $2.000 ror his efforts. . Larry LRub won the classic, defeating four opponents 1n the nationally televised finals. "" SAPPOllO -Slush and blind ing snO\Y closed the \Yi nter Olympic airport toda y and delayed .'lbout 2.000 homf'w ard bound athleles. touris ts and newsmen. A sudden lhaw ended near perfect skiing and skating weather just l\VO hour~ after the Winter Olymp ics closed and turned race co urses into rivers of melting sno v.· lcy slush ran ankle deep u1 the Olymptc village and 011 streets :ind highways lead· ing to L1l ito:-e a irport. 11hich serves !he S;,ppo ro (llyn1pir arr.-i The tha w 1vas <1ccon1p;i1ol·d by heavy wc1 !ino1v wh irh reduced v1si b1!Jly to near zrro and grounded all psi ssenge r rlig hts 111 and out of Chilos e for about six hours. Chitosc <1 irport was j a m m e d throughout lhe day with Olymp ic newsmen . spec tators, skiicrs. skaters and sledders wa iting for plane s to Tokyo, '!Vhere international flights leave for Europe and North Amcrirn. "" l\'[\\I YORK -Rod 1:11bcrl scored a goal on lhr !trst sbot of the game and th~e Ne1v York Hangers "'en! uri 10 a 4·2 ,'ll;i- tionaJ Hockey Lcagut> \ i1·tory over the Los AngeJC's Kings Sun day night. Area river Wins Rug d Off ·road Weekend 500 · PARKE R, Ariz. -Two of the top three places in the Weekend Dani SOO off-roa d race through the Arizona an d Califo rn ia desert went to Costa Mesa driv ers. Drino Miller, a veteran of .!Uch racing In Mexico and Nevada. teamed with Bud Ekins of Hollywood to co,•er the course of about 400 miles in 9 hours. 9 minutes and 56 seconds. George Hubbs, also of Costa P.fesa • teamed with Bill Riemen ln a Volkswagen dunebu ggy lo grab third place. Other area entrants fin ished well up ln the various categorl~ including Troy Marler of fluntlngton Beach who WIS S&> cood in production, 2-wheel drive utility in a Chevrolet ~ckup in 13 hours, 55 minutes. \.ordon Poff of Se11l Rench and l\1lle! !)etc of Sunse t Reach won the modUicd Volk ~wagen Ba ja Uug rlivislon in 14 hour$. 8 mi nutes. Hubbs rolled his \/Chicle near the end nf the race. bu t cmergf'ncy workers taped his cracked ribs and he ~·as able lo finish. lie co\lep.-;cd at the fi nish line bu t \vaii relt11se d aftt r lrealmenl at Parker ~·fedical Center. His inJury was lhe only ma)or one reporlG_~· • I ' , DAILY PILOT 2% Day Massacre Tonight at • • .. ,. - Oldl 'I' P ILOT 11111 l"!l.ol• • • IN ACTION TONIGHT -Elmer (Th e Great) Co mbs, sacre. Here he is guarded by DAILY PILOT sporls-o~ce the terror of the prep hardwoods, returns to \vrlters Craig Shef f (left) and Glenn \.Vh ite. The ~ his a1ma mater {Huntington Beach High) ton ig ht to scribes are playing a CIF all-star team, headed by lead Huntington coaches against Marina tutors in Cit' commissioner Ken Fagans, once a star at Ore· the 1972 version of the St. Valentine's Day ma~ gon State. Play opens at 7. ~-"'~=----"=_=:::::._:_:::::__:_~.:::....::~~~~~- onight's Lineups cur DAILY l"ILOT Totn Mort!•"' F Jim Nl,mlK Lou Jouol! F ,hi/ Ro•s ~ •• ICen FIGl<U c O''" $""'" 6-) ()joroS 11.WlldY G cti.n11 Wl'li!t S 10 Mllcl l"K• G Allier C:1rl.on S-I ~I~ ' Hwntrnlfon J Aon Llnch•v F J.c:k Ol10n t. J I Jim Sl111f-.n1 F SIM S.!!!t!und S-10 l Tom Lfo'<lo C Geortl Ct1mtn• 6· ~ 2 &<* Out1\&r G H911ry lek lllllt ld ,,_ I ~ Ml~1 Nnlv1n G Elmer Como• ,.. ' Rtw,...., ,CIF -8uoch Dyer, Joi\" l"COono!J'vll, 11011 1-!aP. . r, H••Olc:I De!lle. 0 ,ti!L'I' PILOT -Ardtn Mlllburv Ill, l•u•I• kluncr, ,....rlnt -Ll'On WllH!lt r, O.v1 Oku•I, Joe Crld- Jol Cotrt, Riv All ..... ' 11nll""ll:>r\ -G141n 8tdutr. P1ul Wood, Oo<I rt"I MIYI, 1!11 G1rl1nd, 0111'1 Wllktr. Roy llru"'· mt tl. Orange Coast Thumps Dons; Gauchos Fall Saddleback and Gol den West colleges sttempt to snap losing streaks'1his week wh ile Orange Coast tries to keep its hot late season surge alive as the junior rol- lcge basketball season heads into its flna l 10 da.vs of pla y. OCC captured its sixth victory in its last e1,1.tht games Saturday night. a 7(}63 triumph over host Santa Ana in South Coast Conference play while Saddleback 's f,auchos dropped their sixth game in a row lo host Riverside. 75-56. in a Mission circuit tilt. Orange C-Oasl's Pirates (9-14) tangle with invading Cerritos Wednesday night, !hen have roa d games remaining against 1'11. San Antonio and San Diego Mesa . 0••~9• C1•1! !HIJ S•ddll'tl•ck 15') •o •t p1 tp t1llpllp (on•DY • ' ' o Pfi(• • • ' " S•vmou• • ' ' !I Hel.,., ' ' ' ~""'"""''~ • ' ~ A1"r••lt ' ' • • Wl\\,~m\ ' s n 1Cr8!1 • ' • • N•h<111 • ' I n Crumlye • ' • ' v .. ~•f ' ' • I AoMr!t I ' • ' SA>IOn ' ' ' • G81Ht , ' ' ' Qe<>no\ • • ' o Nel•wel>der ' I "' Pt•tr ' ' • ' 1o'•I\ 1'1116 10 Toi.I• ll 10 '" H•U!lo"'' St ntt '"' ~-Orl nge (Ott! " kA llUm~ Al•lflldl J9. S1ddl"'-d' l• Pae·8 Roundup Husky Coach Wishes Bruins Had Alcindor By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS UCLA appears to have taken a £irm grip on its sixth straight Pacific-8 basket· ball championship, but the battered Southern Californ ia Trojans aren 't ready to concede just yet. "With that lineu p USC could oulre- bound UCLA ," said an im pressed Bob Greenwood after the Trojans. revamping the ir offense lo compensa te for the Joss of injured guard Paul Westphal, beat his Y/ashington State Cougars 78-66 Saturday night. Meanwhrte, UCLA kept r o 111 n g , matching use·~ second straight weekend victory with a 109-70 romp over Washington. Oregon State completed a weekend sweep by beating California, 74' 68, and Stanford edged Oregon, 82-78. The new USC alignment has only one gua rd, Dan Anderso n. and inserts 6-foot-8 forward Bruce Cla rk for added height. More import.anti;•. it moves the Trojans' all-time rebounding leader. Ron Riley. closer to the baskel >A'here he is more e!- rective. Riley scored 32 points, a career high. and gr;ibbcd 14 rebounds against WSU. "It seems like I i;iol a lot of e;isy shots.'' the 6-8 senior said. "I feel good unde r the basket and I don't find n1yself out of posi· tion so much." The victories over Washin gton and Washing!on State were Bob Boyd1s tooth and tOlst a.~ USC coach. They kept the Trojans in the conference race with a 6-1 record. while the \Yashington Huskies, who looked like contenders wit h five straight victories going into the weekend, dropped out of !he running at 4-3. UCLA has included seven Pac-8 vie· tories among its 19 st raight for the season. and Washington coach t-.1arv Harshmann, after the drubbing by Bill \Valton and h.is mates, lamented, "I wish Levi Alcindor were back with them." \V aHon scored 27 points and had 24 re· bound s against the Huskies ' talented Steve Hawes. "Walton plays with more enthusiam tha n Alcindor did," Harshmann said. "1 think this is Johnny's I UCLA coach John Wooden's) best team." Washington and \Vashington State will get another shot at UCLA and USC when the two Los Angeles teams travel north next weekend. Barth es Faces Spanish Star In Net Fi11als LOS ANGELES 1AP~ Pierre Barthcs, who has swept through the favorites in the $40,000 ln!ernational Open tennis tournament, fa ces perh ap s his toughest test tonight in \11e final s. His opponent will be eighth-seeded Andrew Gin1eno, a 34-year-old Spanish veteran v.·ho ga ve young Jimmy Connors a lesson in th'e third set Sunday to score a 6-3 , 1-6, 6-l victory. UCI Nine Faces Aztecs Barthes, of France, has knocked O\"Cr sixth-seeded Clark Graebner and second· ranked Ilie Nastase on his way to the finals. In so doing he has confounded the ~chedule·makers, who were planning on a Graebner·Nastase rematch after their re- cent confron tation in London. After Nabbing Twin Bill UC Irvine v.•armcd up for a dale with the San Diego Stale College Aztecs Tues- day aft('rnoon in the Border City with a doubleheader baseball victory over Whit- tier College Saturday on the Anteater campus diamond . UCL behind the strong pitching of Bob Barlow who posted his second win of the young campaign . defeated the Poets. 8-1. in the nine inning opener . Barlow workfil eight innings, giving up one run and striking out nine. In lhe second game, Gary Wheelock became the first UCI hurler to pitch a C()mplete game In the seven inning affair, winning 6-4 . He aided his own cause with. a pair of hits lncludlng a run scor ing dou- ble . Dan Goronedo 1parked the opening vic- tory with a ~8)-foot, three-run homer over th e left-<:entt:r flelil fence lo highlight a flve-run uprising In the fifth in ning. Joe Anderson had a two-run double in the .sfxlh Inning of the opener while Jerr Mallnoff tripled lo right center field In the first inning of the nightclp to drive Rich Molin• across, with the llrst run ot the came. Molina bad Ove hill In nine plate 11> ptar1nces for the two games 1s the An teaters continued to pummel the ball with regularity. In the two games. UCI had 28 base hits in 65 plate appearances for a nifty .431 average for the day. ,lllST OAMt: Wlllftlv Ill UC l!"lllnt fl l Nerio, cl K•llltt, 211 P1Ue!1k, r/ K~lcevlcll, •• WUll1lm1, !! Mf ton. 10 Arfl'lllt, Jb Urabe, lb Ft.lllvmoto, c C•1llllo, 11 Gt10tr, II York, 11 h n, Jlfl Allen, 11 Toll It •II r l!rlol lb rllrll\ • 0 1 0 MOl!nf, cl i I l t •11 p Ca•on•do.ltl J12t J 0 I 0 Ml llllO!I, lb ~ 0 1 O JOllSpt"!:l,11 0 1 0 j ooospen11i1,u ooo JOlOH1n...,,u 110 I OOOlyG<u,Jb j )JO I O O O Sn\'dtr, rl J O o O S o I o SCMnr. rl I o o o 1otoA.tld1~.c •l1t 1 o o o a1rrow.11 J111 OOO IP1!1r1,pl'o 1010 l o o I kl11VMflMr9. • o o O O I 0 0 0 XI t 4 1 "Tolt l' St•rt loy IMl!ll• )7 1 111 ' ' . 000 Iott 000 -1 • O 000 O» tittK -f 1S 1 S!"COND OAM~ Wl'llttMlr L'l UC Irv!"' 01 Htrto. ef l<•l>ltr. :lb r11!tl~~. ti l<•lttVl(ll, U (•iDQtn. It Me1on. lb Ur11M, Jb flltfl.o, ( Oclom. c Gt loer. 11 Tttt ll tll r 1',..I 11 r 1'1rlll J IOINi1tllno,d •tl G • o o ocaro111do, )II J o o 1 • O O 0 M1llrio!!, lb j 1 ) ' )011 s-~nct,ll j ~ll J1IOH1nt-11,•• lllQ l 0 0 0 Lvo~·· )II J ' I 0 2 I I I Sny(ltr, d 1 I I I llJt Sclltna.rl 1010 JOJ,Slvp,y,c 1 )10 0 0 0 I Wf\ftl<lek, II ) I ! 1 " J • • Tllt1l1 ta 6 I I • su re •l" 111111"'' • • e1eo••-' no 02011"-• ' . ' I H I That incident en ded when Nastase walked off the court and deraulted, claiming Graebner had threatened tCJ hit him over the head with a racquet. Graeb- ner said the Romanian had started it all by hec kling him. But th e rematch didn't come off here because of Barthes, who went on to beat 1'homaz Koc h of Brazil in Sunday'r; other semifinal 7-6, &-3. Barthes used a strong, accurate forehand to offse t Koch's powerful serve. Gimeno dropped his first set of the tournament to Connors. but ga ve the l9-- year--0ld NCAA champion from UCL.A 1 quick course in position tennis in the third set. He moved Connors back and' forth, wrecked his timing, and didn't give him a chance to use the powerful two-handed strokes which had helped him u,,..1 CUU Richey Friday nigh t. Celebration Set The excitemenl of the Winter Olympics is over, but it was just beginn ing ln Ch1cag0' toda·y as the city prepared to honor two young Olympic heroines from suburban Northbrook. Speed.ska ters Anne Henning and Dianne Hoium were to be honortd Jn parades In Northbrook and Chicago. Marina vs Oilers; Dail y Pilot vs CIF Intense rivals Huntington Beach and Marina High renew their keen basketball 11eries tonight at Huntington and the DAILY PJLOT's Black Hurricanes risk !heir winless record against Ken Fa- gans anti the Cll'' all-stars Action opens at 7. ll 's bi!led as the 1972 version of the St. Va lentine's Day Ma ssacre and could well turn out to be just that. Tonight's Huntington-Marina struggle happens to be a match betv.•een the schools' coaching staffs. And t he r;portswriters-CI F ronfrontation could al so be one for the books with aging, overweight performers using mu scles that have been hidden by flab in recent y£'ars. t-.·larina and Huntington each mel the write rs in warm up scimmages and the scribes have tabbed fl'tarina to pull out a triumph tonight-largely due to their im- pression of ~1arina 's outside shooting and depth. ~Juntington counters with a torrid fast break and even the old coach-Elmer C-Ombs-is slated for action, bringing back the golden days o( the 1940s when he starred at the Oil City institution. He'll be joined. by speedster Hank ''Lightning" Leichtfried and the rangy duo of Geo rge Clemens and Jack Olson while the balance of the Oiler ag· gregation will be composed of such unl1kelies as Pau! Wood (good heavens~ l, Don Walker. Don Terranove 11i11d Glen Becker. among others. Becker and Lcichtfrled are coaches of unbeaten tea1ns, by the way, v.•ith only two games left on the slate. i\1arina has awesome outside shooting with Ron Lindsay selling the pace -yet he says he ma y not even be good enough to start. Leon (the fireplug ) Wheeler will even be sui ted up in case the game turns out to be more football than basketball. llowever, since he's a foot shorter than the next smallest man on either team. he's not likely to see too much battle. Track coach Dave Okura is supposed to be f!;ood , allhough that·s hard to imag ine. And the rest of the Vikings have sparkled in workouts with Bob Duesler. Jerrv White, Mike Henigan and Tom Lloyd the suoer star s. The CIF-the body that makes up all the playoff pairings and seedings and which governs sports for over 400 Southland high schools -has taken up the challenge by the DAI LY PILOT. Cl!'' commissioner Ken Fagans claims he has never suited up for a game whic:.h he hasn't been a starter and for which he hasn't scored . However, DAILY P!Wf sports editor Glenn \l/hite has gone on record as saying that Fagans' scoring streak is over. "He rna y get a fluke free throw but he won't score from the floor ." White says. Fagans has an assortment of males 1.•;ho look much like they 've already been in a mass acre or two. Even F'agans ad· 1ntts !hat hi s publicist I .\1ike Peck) is 1n the v.·orsl shape of any man he's evef seen. Daro\ Roundy, the pint-sized Fountain Valley ~sidcnt v.•ho assigns off icials for the playoffs. 'fom r-.lorga~ -an obese re:.ident of Huntington Bfach. and Lou Joseph, the alien principal of Villa Park Hi~h. will round out the CIF attack . The DAILY PILOT doe sn't need any ri11gcrs since it's already been through a !cw-rin~crs that is. Pudgy Roger C;irlson. Orange County prep expert and a longtirne critic of Fagans, will huff and puff around the floor . Craij! Sheff is trying on a ncv• toupee and may be han1pcrcd by it falling about. Phil J~oss is comn1itted to selli ng corn chips hut !he fo~rito Bandido should be back in lime for the tipoff if his moustache and pot belly don 't slow down his motor cycle. Laurie Becklund, the DA ILY PI LOT's newest sportsv.•ritcr, is making her debut-if she gets through skating in time. She's in roller derby, reports say. The doors open at 6 and tickets are priced at 75 cents for adults with children and students admiltl'd for 50 cents . Penneys present~ The Wide Ones. 2 2 9 5 (A70·13. pl°' lod. "' and old tire) s17 (B7B·1J plu!.fed.tax and old 1ire) Scat-trac 70 series nylon cord. Raised white letters. Tubless Special buy. Ground Gainer 78 series nylon cord whitewalls. Tubeless Size Price Fed.Tax Size Price Fed .Tax A70-13 . . . . . ' ' . . 22.95 ............ 1.76 878-13 . ' . . . . . $1 7 ............. 1.81 E70-1 4 26.95 ............ 2.56 E78·1 4 $22 ' ... '' ... . '' ... ' ... . ............ 2.24 F70-1 4 -.. ''.' .. 28.95 ............ 260 F78· 14 $22· .......•..... 2.39 ' ' . ' . . . ' ' . G 70· 14 ... '' .. '. 30.95 " .......... 2.77 G78·14 . . . ' . . . . . . $27 ............. 2.56 H7014 . . . . ' . . . . . 32.9 5 .... " ...... 2.92 H78-1 4 . ' . . . . . . . . $27 .••....•..••• 2.75 G70-15 ....... '. 30.95 ..•.•••.. -• -2.88 G78 ·15 .......... $27 ..•..•.•••.•• 2.63 H70-15 ......... 32.95 •...••...... 3.00 H78-15 ... ' ...... $27 .•.••. ' •..••. 2.81 J 70-15 ....... ''. 34.95 .... 3.00 560-15 . ......... $17 ............. 1.73 Plus Fed. tax and old tire Plus Fed. tax 8nd old Ure 6~~ JCP1nn1y. hi•~ duty thock 1btorbtrt 10 make your car rldi like new. Hel p get rid of acctltr1tlon dip and deceler1tlon rocking. Alao aid In cornering, JCP1nn1y fore ign ctr 1hock 1b1orbtir1. 4.4' 11ch. Penney's Shock Ab.orber Gu1ranl•• II 1 Penn•>"• H11vy Duly Stw:n::k 111!1 1tt1r ln1t1!1111on by 1 P1nMy Auto Cent1r, d111 to d1t1c11.,. m111rl1l1 or workm1n1hlp or w11r-ou1 whi111111 orlgln11 puri;;h111r own1 th• Cir, lv•I cont1ct 1,111nd • Penney 1pei;;l1ll•I win r•Pl tc• IM d1l1c11 .... H••"'Y CUI)' 8hoek 1t no •~tr• cll1rg1. JCPenney 3 Day Service Special Your ggc Choice • Each shock • Each wheel balanced • Lubrication •Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M . at the following Auto Centers: NEWPORT BEACH, F"h;on l1 l•nd. HUNTINGTON BEACH, Hun1 ;n9ton Cent er. Uu Pon n•y• t;m• P•Ym•nl P,lan. ., Pro (age, Hock ey Standings ... f.ASTl!ll:N CONl'l!ltlENCE Allaftltt Dlv1.i .. h•IOtl Wt~ Lt1/ 1'<1. Nt w Y0r- P'lllll atlp/)•1 l ulftlo •l )9 JI 7l IJ JI I! •I ,.,,,,.1 0 .... 1911 ... "' ., "' &.lntTno.e 4H1n11 c1nc1,.,....r1 l• l• •'. 1: ll )!,/ II •I l"\" C+.v1!1"<1 11 <5 ''' W1!5Tf.llN CONl'f.ll:l!NC£ Mlll ... ttl Olwhlo~ "'l!w1u<11 1(1 ll ('li<l!IO u I! 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I~ •I IJ< IH Pi·u~·on " JI • '1 1-.. ,.~ Loo. 4n.1le-, IS ll I JT U• 77t i •IV'lllV"• 11.nulu l.'\onl•e~l •· l "' ~ no•lt • 5 Tl>l"or>!O J, (1htc•n•1 G 'ltw Yori!. ~ Pn"""'"'' 1 Bn1ron S. llYtl•lo I Chk.til<I ), OetrQ•I ). '•• <i Lou•~ s. v'"'°""'' • M•...,.5cl• !. P"oltctelft~•• S""dlY'I Rts.i.tlh Mon1r111 1, 11011on 7. ,;. CM<olt>O J, TOr()tllO I "l•N Yor~ •. lo~ .,noel~• ~ l"ll+l1ae4of\l1 a. e.utt.tto •· '''" l"ilftllur..,.. '-V1111:wv1r a OnlV 9M111 1clledu!ta T111l,hl'I Ountl No U•mtl Sct'!.OVlf(I lutid.IV'I G•m•• "It"' York 11 ll'&rKOU'l'tr Call!Qfftl• 11 Boston Cl'llcllOO al SI. Loul1 Onlv ''""' 1Chl<lul~ • W1fld 1tfld 1i11nprool • High vi5ibi!ily hea "V duly plashc Special This Week Only • I •. . ' CI F Cage Playoffs: How They Shape Up ~Iarirw High s Vikings and Corona de! ~1ar High's Sc::i Kings have clinched berths in the ClF AAAA basketball playoffs with still l\\'O rounds or leai:ue action remaining. F'lrsl round hosti lities get under v.·ay F'cb. 25. The Yikes of coach Jim Stephens are champions or the Sunset League \\•hile coach Tandv Gillis' Sea Kings arc 11erl \..·ith Los Alan11C'O:-! 111 lhP Irvine Lcag1H~- Should d1s:istt'r l1 c f ,1 I I Corona ;ind the :X>a King.; n1iss a portion of the Jr\ 1ne 11- llf' the~· would still qual1ly fnr the pki)Offs \\·1th th<· :t2·tl'an1 :.etup open to champions anJ runnersups fro1n C':lt h or th1· 14 circuits. Coach Elmer Conlbs' l\un- Ungton Beach quintet need 111in only one or its rc1naini11i; t11·0 Sun set League clashes to do no v.·orse than tie for second v:ith \Vestn1inster. providing the Jail er wins both of its last l\\>"O outings. And, should \\'estminstcr finish third in the Sunset ci rcuit there is an excellen t chance coach Don Leave~"s Lions 11·ould get in the pl:iyoff.~ an.vwa~ The el11ni11a\1011s prov1<te roo1n for 28 cha1nps and r1111- rleru p along 11·ith four cxtr;1 openings !or tr i -eh a rn p;. . teams tied for sel"On<l (lr strong th ird place lio1she rs J·lunllngton Beach. ho\\"Cvcr . appears to hal"c !he task of \\/inning at least once to cli nch a berth. ShOuld the Oilers lose to Western and l\·\arina it's conceivable that '\'eshninster \\·ould grab .~tto11d a 11 d \Veslcrn could tie Huntington for lhird -probably nullifying t"h.1nces for either lcani. And, coach Jerry Tardie's JI.tater Oei Monarehs St.'f.'m· 1ngly have assured themselves of a CH" playoff berth_ The ~1onarchs. picked n() better than fourth tn !h(' Angelus League, are alone In serond pla("t' 11'1th 11\0 garne s left A s pl11 11011ld ;t! 11·or"t put thr .\1011archs In ;i 111· lur ~t'· cund \Vith luur [i•at!u1• ehan1- µ1onst11ps 11 rappC'tl up and <111othcr quartet f1( tcouns Hi so hd pos1t1011 for laking lhl'lr ti tle. hrrc's ho11· 1he bal anct' uf !he CIF AAAl\ looks ~ga1ne:-. vital 111 CIF berths ll!"C in· tluded ). ~ervne M.11e< c~• Plus )( w ' ' ' • ' Sr Paul • l u1~av's GarTie~· P•.r.; )( •I l!osnoo .-.m~1, Malt• Oe, f ! 5!. P~UI. Friaa~·1 Gamn SI. Pav! •! Bi•'- Am•I. 51 An!hol>I' a1 Maler Oeo, St e v•tt al Pius X. l•1 Lelt ue w ' "lor!n 1orrancf" I I C.f"•>T•nn••I J Torr., net J S~nr~ Monlc8 J llveoncSIJiY"• G•m•' ~•~•• .O,.Wn.c .. •I To.,•nC•, (tnl•nn,•I •I Sg le• , ... ,. Fn<l"y"• G•rn•• fo.,dn<• ~• Con t~nnl•I, NO Tott~n<• •I S•n'" MC~1'• (h•nnel Lr••Ye 001 Pueblo~ San Marte• w ' Fr;Oi"I G•I''• 00\ PuNl\o\ •I S .. n w ' R8m<>n• 10 7 Fonr•n" l Red land' ' TueocUw'' Ga..-e• Eosen/'IOWer 11 Rdmon.,, ll!dl~no.. 11 P1cif1c, f on!dna di Rlv"f~lo;le f>OIY. Frl<11v'• G1me1: (lwllfn> •r Ramon•, Fonlln" 1! F!!dl•nd•. Coll ege Cage Sco res UCLA 10•. w1o;n1no1on ;n use 7f. w11•n;ng10., ~I 1.6 '~I S1 CLBl P' S-•n 0••110 SI •I Ho.,,,,; 96, U5!U 11 Or." Rorwn · 17), Fr•~no 5t, ,. C•l Pel• •Pomun•l ro, UC R!v~·~•d• .. P1c•J,~ n1. C•I Sr. 11.•l ·~ Lo•oll IGI, Peo.,..rCont IDI \"!f"\l'TI0•1! 9~. l'1,11oen1 Col'~•~ J• ~•<1ntor<I 17 Oregon 11 S•n JOM" sr.1 .. 6S. uc S•n1n B1tl>•"' " OC San o'"" 101. Cll•om a" •~ o .. ,.,on 51alt ,._ C•ll!or"'• U M•rvl'rd 11. LIU 60 Prnl\ ti, Co,nell 61 Ac~tl>I\ IJ 1;6, M"'"' Sl Princrton ae. Columbio 11 IU••Ma Tl. Brown 11 \llllancva\W. TtmPI• ... Svracu•• JS. Wett ll'i19ino1 I• St JOl\n'• 71. Fo•dn1m 60 Con~tlcut s.e, Ma•s.o;;l'lui1tn~ ~a Yal e 101. Oarl"'°"'!h 9t Cot91!• M. Northea•ler" I.I r!~?:~~ 9:~.105'l" IJPttor'1 IN J I ti (<>Yllrtlmt) .I Holr Cron 15. u~alte 7t so~tcn Coll~ I"], S.ton 11~11 /1 ¥~'~"t.~~IN> •u. ~r:.:1~~ 11 r.eoreia 91, Vana<!'l'bill fl P.nn St 61 1>11v• 59 "lorl~ C•r~ln• Sr. •7, C!em1on I' M•rsl'lall tl. BowHn9 Gr~n 67 Ge<>•ll" Washine!on 19 • .-.rmy a• Rul9•'' 11. G.orgetown IC .0 I II r1orrd~ ~I.''· Tul~ne I< K~n!uC~>' 'I<). Mi'""inpo 11 Furman 104, \/Ml 66 NorlM C•'o!in~ 11 ~, Geo•<>•~ l •t~ "l 1)11~• II 1'!1lll 1n• & /.'••Y Oi Au~urn IOJ. FIC••<I~ 100 ~ <l"'"nr~ I" R<1•·<'~ l·M"(I '~ l~nne--stt 11, /,';~•1s1iP1>• SI al I .,, r dfOltnA ,, (.,1 •• de• I) O~•O SI 1.4. Pt1•f!ue 6' No•••~ OA"'I• t J DePau1 I' •l•:>rA•\A 16, IOwd ~I II ~t Lou•• 61 Or-•~t 6' /_,,,~,<>~n IGS 1111•10•~ I ln.a••na I• W1>cons.n 16 lo•••t•,.,., o.,,., u ~9. I."·••<" iOnoc! 06 1~1•'1~ I~, 1(,,11 Sl 69 (<At•n.,dt• 88t> J.o{~\onv•ll~ I• !"l•!tool 6f. Xav;f", 16 /Jlo<h•l!•n St !Oil. low• 91 nau1on el. We•l••n lliOc~·~•n 10 l.'iuou" 80. O!.lanoma ~I 6• IC""'"~ II. Oklahoma 7• Mmne>oll II, "IOrl~w•\I .. ,., I! r~An>vollf "· 6tt111!'" 9] lt~"' ll. Ri<e 61 t°"·~•111e e•. 1111•11 6~ /'.\pmp!\f• SI !/, Norm le••• 51 &Cl l'"ll 1~••> St. 8). "l•w MHi<o SI 10 fr~5, T .. (h &O. B~vlor 14 Tetll IEI Pa5cl 7l, W~om1nQ 'it Arl1<>11a SI. IOJ, 8VO 100 Utah 82. Arhoo• 7J Ut.th 51. ''· Denver 74 New Mt.<lco 11, Colcr•clo SI 15 lovtrtime) CNll Lt ltUt w Wo"""' I ~ .~\OnteOPllD ~ /;)ON .... Y 4 ' weo........iaw·• Gamt• •Jl Lwn""ooo 11 Oown•Y· Oom11111u•I •f MonTf"WllC Fnd1Y'I Gtme• W""'" •' MonTP-btlTo. S.nl• Fe 11 Downtv Dtl lltY l..11'"" Vt '1">1lm O•• NO!ll 06mt D1ml.., w ' • ' ' Tue..i•v's G•'TI• S• f t1nr 1 ., Oam .. n F'"~•• ~ G•l"f'> Ve•1>un• Oel •' 0..nHe<I. LO\oOI• ii N~ttt 0 .t•" .. 5a•11•0 .... ·, GAR't "IO"t c~". ""'1•'1"' l''" '" Cr.n ·Jton C , . ...,, .. l n., ... 1 • di 1n 'l o~ I C''""t'"' 1111•• Burba"• Glt n<1a't w ' T,, .. ,oay·, '-•mt • 8ut!M"• •I .. ...,., ..... , Ill l!IJH d' l!u"O~I>'" 'I" ( ·e<ctnt;i ll'•ll•• 11 Glt n<1•I• F(<G~v·• Gamtt ~·e•ctn!a ll'a ''' •' fll•''· Bu"®llh> a1 l!"roan• Gl•Ao•" Ld l-100· • Sunn~ IJ .I~> 'm' Buena Park w ' " ' . ' fueMlaY'~ C.&mt".1i. Buen• Park A! Full•rton, Kenne<iy .tt L• Haora. S11n nv HllT• al Trov Frl<lav'< Gan't•• Sunnv Hiii• •I Flu.r1a "a1~. 1rc~ •! FYlltrTon, L• H1bta al L<rNtll. lrvint L~•tu• CO"Ofl.l de! M~r LO"! AldmilO\ Fo1>n1alfl Vatiev M~onol•d W L " ' " 'Nf<:!nt'(lay'' G~"'~' rount~·" ll'all•v ~· ~A 11'~1·••• E<!&n<11 ~t Los Al~ ""10~. Co•ot1" a•I 11o1• •' Co••• ·,•,.__, Err-~~ el M.•anoha Frlc~v'• r.~me• Corcna <lf l M~• ~! f,i.nc10, l'ou,,•a•n v~• •v •I rno!ltl•l M~<>noh1 ~· l M. .. lam<'~• /ll•tl•k•l" l ll Y!•I><>" LB ""'" Comc!Ofl M111•e L•••u .. w ' , ' ' ' ' fuosda1·~ Game•. E+ R1ntno ., Pelv, M•ll 1~~n "' L•~tw'OOCI 11 Ll!oCC. Wilson at Com1>ICn ();IS\ Tl>YrM!av" G•mes : Comp1'1><1 11 T:I ll:•n<l'lo (J:lSl. Lak""""°" et IN1IM1n, LS Pclv vs Millijfan at LKC P1cilk Lta'tllt w ' Pa~en• 1~ o ,O.rca!!il ~ • "lhambr~ 1 ~ Monro-ti• 1 l Wedn,SdaY's Gamt• (1,1}): "'h•m· hr• a! Moir, '""'"""I&~• Arc•dla. Fr•dav•s Gamts• Arca<l i.t •t .1.rro~o. All'l~mera 11 Mon•ouT~ Sky LtO'JU• w ' l"o•n•n<1s.ne ~ 0 Av1aHO" I l llev•rlv Hirl< P~lcs V••dt' l uE•<l•v'.• Game• (JI l!•YfrlV Hllh •t "'•••lion, Pll01 ll'trCtt al LfU1•n<I"' Fr;~aY'< Game'" A"l•lion 1• Rfilon co, B~ttlv Hill• ot Palo• Va•d•• Su1.,t l l..111u.· w ' M•r"'6 () Hun:'"""'" '•~< h • l we.im1n•t..,-e V/t ste•n 1 W!dne>i;lav's G~mes We•"'"~"'"' ~: A~a'1r.,.., We!••1n a r Hu~t·~9•0~ B•a<" I l'"ll~~·, G1mt,, Maron.t ii H"nt.no •on e .... (I,. San!• 4n~ •• ""'""''" Loar~ •• W•11m1"'''' I Whotrnonl 1..t••u• t • Sorn• "''IOM1• ""I' S•trrd w ' . ,, < ' We<tne$ddV'S G1m" ()): L• $e•na Al El MO<l!f, Whlllifl' 11 Sit rrt , R'-"lf· mea<I "' Mcnlt V!s!a. Fr;.uy•, Games: La Serna 11 Wlut I 1•ar, llen1 at Ro~<I, Monl• V<Sr. o! El Mon•t. 1: 1 s~~w CH~!~~ PASSENGER 10.1 6-S e 1sox11 I I I I TRUCK l l -16-S • 800xl6-S & CAMPER 100.s • 1sox16 SIZES , ...... , Sblft •OO•l6-L7 .. 15 ·-----~ sa ... ~'"'1 ,..!!~-, "'6epeildent cloMldltt ....... .... Ger.II 19'1. AVERY DON SWEDLUND COAST GENERAL TIRE GENERAL TIRE SERVICE I TlllE Ill W"t 1 M , Cest. M"• ~ MO·l710 er •4•·SOJJ "·-147·1150 ..J . . . --- UC I Trips S \vi111 f ,, .. Torn Uought·~ and .\likt> Carnah3n t1tch posted a pair of victories to lead ("1,)3Ch Ed l'\ewland 's t.;C lrv111C' S\1·1n1- 1ning tean1 to s G-4--19 victory 1)vl'r C.:il Sl:i.tP 1 F'ullt>rL\11 1 Sn turdav in the Titan pool. UC Irvin. tU l I"> C•I Sl1'9 (Futl .. t...1 400 m"<!loy rtl•• 1 UC hv+no IC.•1Unor, '°"""' l..•fn ••1 •~ Ooc~"1•n~1. ) ~I t 1.000 l•t t1!\I• I BOuill><• 111. 10 116. I SY!!Ofl \II 10 .,.1, l M•• !FJ. II 0-4 I :NV> lfff>!yl• -I Wa•~o H \ I I• r J F1rv11• <II, 1 II t .. l Wtllll F , I 11 t )0 !r•eoty1.,._1 B<rr>ar~ II\, 11 1 s~noeotrg • r 1. n t. J G.tra,...., 1 1 ·:)? 700 (ntt 11o .. n1•• t t~·n~n••· . L'~l ' C • l•r <F 11~1 (~•l!O" I Fl. ? i l ! , .. e ,.,~ •• r • ><r • ",..,_ , I 1ca t>u11t •ll• 1 c~'"'ll~n 11 .)I : C•r-Ol•" 111. J~l 6ttl ••n1111 • ~1r• tN "ft>•~•.. ! o.,~ ... •rn , ~ 1 I Aetni •d <I]. ~I I l ·A<~:•• r ' >00 bac~~tfO•• t 11°<19••1 1r ~I. I ~'/d''' tf I I• Q l Elfl~il"<• I ' I~ I 3(lO ,, .. ,\!,. • "'"''"''' I , •{"'I.> F¥•q" '•• " r 1 I 19 •· 100 ur~~-hO'O -1 lt~F •tV >J~. LW~••<I I!•~ .l l •""''' I 1 n~ 1,m~ Th ree-"'~t" <l•v•n~ l O"N~•ll 111 4M !·•r'f•I• 1•'~' ' Ufl B•rn•rd. C...rCMt F~•Qui. O.~,m~on ' j 1J i l:age !S tanding~ So"lh COol•I C0<1ftrtrK• W L PF P A Full.,-Ion JO 0 ~60 lot 11r. S&n .-.n!C"io 169 71~ t•rnl<>• 6 )61 69/ Oranor Co.o•I ) 111 llS Moodily, I rbruMy l4, 197.! For Coast Area T ennis Results UC If•-111 lU UC i lftt• la•l •r • 11.,to-o s.,..i... I UC I 1 "" Shr •O• • " ., /atucn.,.., •U(tl ~~• O 1jro11 ••. ' ! 6 I ~l°'•n0tt9"• iUC'-B• O•t ~o ..... 0 .. '"' ,_, Q:oc,_n ucse, <1•1 Oii'• •J l • • l E"d,.t•<I• (UCI/ .,.., L~• •I 1 1 C6rnlh•n I UC ! <!•! Fuqi. 1 l /I 09util•• cn-t "'"' :k!\n•.o'°' ,uc+1 a•• 5,,,,,,c .. r •n<I GroOfnOfr••t, •t •1 .. J•OIOt'I'"• •n<I 0\11~ IV(H aol R<><' ..,,,, I nd Feoli. 11 l·t, •• C ,,,... """ Ed w11<f• Ut 11 o•• O'N••O •n<I L,.., I • t • 1•M• .. ~ ..... Ctt Tt"'~'' Wt1tmoo1ttr •1o• S•n•ln ",~ ""''I aro .. • D•• • ~ I-" 14 ~ • E"an.<•• ""'<I '•~n•I "''' I D!" ov v, '"' "•'·•·' ' ,, ~,r·· "'•'~" ""' ,, ·•·mo" • · . '" 0o .. n101 ll o I ~h ~ "' ~n., Al •.l .. r•g' n•! r ~r ".~ 1~0 11 ,'\'.•m.in 1~•• • .1 • 0 , ,,.f Cot·~·" •nd 0 .,,..,., •l't,I\ I o ~ I .... : Oenn., M<"•.,., !<»I O>" IH-!fo,•• IH Doutolo• B"' W-oll<J Ton• S•""''' e1~• ~cf>•l<ll'lautr "'"" Como !FVt 1-0. ~1. <Jtt Royal d\11> ._.,, I ) Jo~n Ni1~ •nd Dou~ llovt def F <> wft'11J Ind Whltlltld l~Al 6-l), 1-1; lo•I •o Ar~Yo G••n<t• diJC. 1-4, 1-t. Hew"" H1rffr '" t lntl .. M~•~ RO'I' !!fl NewDv {Arro•<I Gr•n oel 1.0,, &-0. •·1 Roonte ,_loll lo l!o;1•••1 1lpnnf'Cl>I • l, ,.._ S·1. ... Dt>lllllt l Jim s-·• •"" S!tt• ,,..,...,, <1•• ~ "°'''""' •ncl JO<Ws (l(~nnsd> I t , t-7; Ost ll'e<" And Rlc>lllllC! 111\Qlt NOOO I • o .• l. lt•AoJ• M•t11 ,,.,., Ptul 0.,.,...,,,., ""' tlOhTWln Hld L~hlto)OJ: "'" tc ••1n•on """ °°""...,., J .. , .... F ... 11111" Vl lltl CM Sin•lr .. I Of'" Murad lo!il O• '-t~l~ So••no 1011 "I CH Do.iOl1• Cn•" Dorm•" An<I M•~• O 4n<>c .,,, .. ~ J b. 1 ... 6-). IOll to ~rug''' '~~ \I , o.ll ((•l•Pl<•f ) 6-). Jt i· I•• SJ"'''' J•"' ~"'~ 1.;.11 a• Oo J.,, f>•ul lo•' 0 b + ' le• Oo~b!•• P••• ll•u•nmcil'd ~~<I fl.-•" ... ,, < ' 1. .. .,,·1 '' i. • ,, B ,,.., ~ "unl,n•l~n &N<h S<n•I•• • ~" b • • • '"'' 'II l l ni Battlt'~ El Dorado U11ivt.·rs1ty lli gh 's '1'1'0Ja11s rt'!urn 10 Orange LeHKllf' baskctb.1ll \Vars T 11 es d a y afternoon \\'hrn coa ch J ohn Drisl'Oll's tea1n 1neets 1·:1 l)orado ll igh"s r ha nl pi o 11 OAIL Y PILOT 2.:J Vanguards In 67-62 S (l u 1 hr r 11 L' :t I J lurru .1 t.:ollcge·~ basketball t r ~ 1n <l ro p1.ied a 67~% dt'{:l.~uu1 !•1 Azusa-PariFle Collt'g1: Sahu tf<iy ni;:ht before 1.500 (:111s ,1' 1hc Orange Con<;t C"ol!r1-:e g_v111 111 th1· annual hon1l•rv111111 1: gil!lll". \ :1111·c { .11 r i•f !t1P \ 1:-.1tu1 1111 28 p111n1" iur 1nd111du.d .!·11r111g-tio1 1t•r~ 'l"hr Snl';il \ a 11~uar·1!, lllilll<H t'<i 111 ~t.1\ 111t h111 'II 1! 111.:! d1:-.t.1tl1T thn)ughuu! In:: ,11'1 c• 0('1 1·r .11Jl1• hf q11itr 1·.1t! 1l1t· \t'iJTH fro111 t)h• !1K1tlH I , "11t1t r1 111 \1u ... ,1 H11·I.. ~\,u1("t'l.11• 1l!·ll;!hll'd 1!i l11il lll'l'Ulll\ll)~ t"l"ll\\t l \~1 !1 1 \h•lrlt~ <llllt ,·,•11l1"r !'<•1 lJ1111 1·1.,1triht1ll'd 11, lo llu· ~u<". 1·;1u~e Jrrt ) H1 11k,·1 11;1~ ni·' 11 llh !2 J.11,ob• •·~n,n~fl Ou•~n llml<.,,- 1'\.JOCt DO ~·•e1tlfn '''"""" 1 01~·· !l•llhrt>'" SoCtl Ctll•t• Ull ' • ' . . ' " ~ ' • I ~0 .0 111u·~·P~c1hc 11 71 , . S•n Dit-11<> M~~il t U1 9•1 So!nlil An• 7 1r,tl i?J Siln Ole\IO I f55 J"1 •~<1~ "1elu1r Ot1 Cll.t~rs •'><I~ C.o l>"•ll • •. •-l; t.,;1 "' low" 11n~•~ """""' l ~ ... ( : o!dr n I l<t11" ks. , -:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::= Caine time 1s slaten for :L t~ and !he undefeated fl:ucler:; ;1rl' heavy f;:il'nr1 tcs 1t1 1n:'lkl' lhf' TroJ;ins their I Ith :.lr;ngh1 loop \IClilll on thr 11a1 tu 14 111 11 ro11· o\·er:ill 1 s1tur1l•Y" ~cores O•&nge Cc-.ur 10, S1nta ~n~ '"3 Full•••on 1\6. Sdn o .. oo t i (!<r•IO• Mo, 5an 0lt<)IJ M••.t •1 WedMMllY'• (;a,....; {r•to l~\ •t Ora nvt CO<!~I Ml. San .,nlonlo at Ful"'""" 5an O!t<>o di 5~nt& "'"" c .. DouDI., 1<"1 N'""" dn<I R1<> l •<ld lo • •c ""'''""'"" d"d Pt'"' llan G•u,..,1 •: 6·1.1~ 8111 S.on1m 1n<1 6••<1 s~.,m~" .. , .. ,. b•• <:•t fr"' ""O •I~''"\(""'•' • " Free Income Tax Preparation Save $30-$40"" professional preparation .,,..,, 1s7J California and federal Individual Income Tu Returns. Don't Delay Sign up ICMJ.y: appointments are free if you open an Anaheim Savings account of $5,000 or more, or for only $5 by opening an account of $2.500 or more. ANAl-IEIM SAVINGS AN.0.HElM 187 W. lincoln Ave. 92803{Tel: n2-1532 BREA 633 So. Brea Blvd 92621/T el: 529-497 1 HUNTINGTON BEACH 41 l Ma'in St. 92648ne1: 536-6591 We'll give you $700 a month to start a s1,ooo,ooo business. The bu siness is offering financial services. You11 provide fam ily 1nen and busin Pssmen 1.Yith tin ancial program s including estate analysis, pension and profit sharing systems, tax shelters and investment property. You n1ake no capital invest- ment. We pay the rent. And for a secretary. But first you11 need training. And our program, The Professional Way, is the equivalent of a co llege course in financial services. The training program lasts 30 months. While you're studying, we'll pay you $700 a month salary, plu s bonuses for sales achievements. The training course is free. After training, you 're essentially your own boss and your earnings are virtually unlimited. Quite realistically, you co uld be running your own million dollar business in four to five years. For. an interview, ca ll Mr. Jim Whittier, CLU, Vice President, Manpower Development at 714-675-0344. Or write him at Pacific Mutual, 700 Newport Center Qr1ve, Newport, Ca lifornia. PACIFIC mUTUAL PfO'<liding l1nt1ncial services for indivfduals. lamihes. lilnd business Opcnina soon: Pac.Ifie. Mutu.tl 's nf'W Nlf1onot1I tl('adquartt'f"s building in Newport 'lnnncl1l Crm:~r. I ) I ' • • ' I , ' ' ' I o• • . ... . -.. ,1,.4,,__o_•I_L_Y_P_IL_o_r _______ Monday, F'rbfu.vy 14, 1972 Super Cold Power Generator Seen •· By FRANK CAREY 1, Al' ki.t-t Wrtttr WASH~NGTON -Th~ Nixon ad- rr't!nlstratlon ls seeking 1 n r r e as e d "{ptarch into th~ ~f.lfld of unconunon cold as part of efforts to assure an abun · ~¥JI . rollutlon·free po~·er supply ~'ell M ore the year 2000. Admln1s tratlon 11clentist11 env1s1on suth re~arch leading to super.(·()oil·tl cltl'tr1c fdwer generalors and u n de r ii: r o u n d fransmisslon lines that Impart a hugt'l} i ~reased flow of electrtclly. ftesearchers use the term uncornmon World Watche1· " cold In referrln1 to the rel1tlvely new ac1t'llCe of cryogenia which dealt with cooling n1ate.r1al1 artiflclally to nearly 460 degrees below zero. At sucl1 low temper ature•. atomJ and rnolctules of all maltcr. incl uding me.tali used in power-transmlnion lines and n1agnets ln power generators. lose much of their characteristic dance-like motion .. \1et11ls and magnets undergo a change in their i:lectrical properties so that thty become beUer oonductor1 of elec· trlclty than usual In JOme lnatances, t!l('y even can become so-called supercon- ductors that offer 110 resistance to the now of electrical current. "It would be amazln1 If an electrtc eur- rent kept Oow ln& and flowln1 thtou&h a home electric circuil long after all c<:irl· nectloru with the power source had been broken, yf!t thl11 111 111hat happeOi'. In a 1111perconductor," 1ay11 a report by scil!n- tLsts of the Atomic Energy Comm ission . one of the agencies working In the field of cryoaenics. Applit'ations of cryogenics already are rocketry . but AEC scientists stress they are not yet at hand for everyday use . Against the background of cryogenici;' potential, President Nncon, 1n both his nr. Kurt Waldheim, United Natio ns Secretary Gen· eral, discusses future actions by the U.N. in crisis .aituations. Waldheim was interviewed by Bru<.:e Munn recently In his office at the U.N. most of one \\1aJJ is taken up by a "'orld map . ' ' \Moscone Off and Running ' Deniocratic Floor Leculer Wants to Be Gove rnor ~SACRAMENTO tAP) -Californians :won't choose th eir next gove rn or for ~ther 33 n1onth s bu! l.corge Moscone is running hard for lhc job right now. ~early every weekday n1eans a dinne r iiri luncheon speech for Mo s c on e . pemocrntic floor leader in the Senate. 1 His home is San F'rancisco but in hopes cftgetting his name better known in vote· rift) Southern Cali fomi21 . he flies to Los f'\n~c\es for spccchC'S at leas! f\\·ice a -week. • "It 's r!'<11ly not that bad." he said 111 an interview in his four1h-floor, rcd·ca rpeted eitol office . "Fur in.~ti:tnce. I can leave r on a 7 o'clock plane be picked up n there. give an 8:30 speech and ~e back on a midnight planl•. ' J ~uess 11 r<'all y h11s to be rei;:arded as .• farity 1f I'm free any evening other l:}i"1 hopt'.·full,v Sa turday and Sunday," '1/'\sconc say~ 1 ··vou 1vor11lcr how h1ng you can go with I littlr an1ol1nt nf slcrp. hut you can put I away 6111 hour6, which Isn't so bad.'' Moscone -married and the father of two boys and two gi rls -Is a handsome man with what seems to be a perpetually sunny di sposition. He is a lawyer who frames his sentences c a re r u 11 y . somcti ines opting for a complicated word when a simpler one would do. Whal makes Moscone run ? ··Anyon e that tells you that par! of JI isn'I personal ambition isn't being candid • l'l'ilh you." he says. "Obviously that's an ~ssent1al ingredient that motivates you 11,·hcn you're 1log-lirefl and you find ii nice lo stay in and sleep that nisht. "1 have found ·-It d()('sn't take a great deal of c1v1cs training -that up here if you'rl.' not the governor, you're just not go1nJ<; lo play anytlung in the nature of a niajnr role in determining the direction of lhi s state " He tells or work1n~ two years to get a bill through the Legislature only to have Gov. Jtnnald Reagan "cavalierly veto it f\Vi<le }'01·el1eads Mal{e Top a11<liclates , Artist Says \VEST Sl'HINGF!F.LO. r-.1ass. (UPI\ - re sident1ill hoprfu!~ w11h \~·ide forehfads l lhC' h11irli11r an· nnl' ur on their rivals, crordinit to quit'k-sket ch artist Mazury 'Connell. ~hr s:i\'!-thr t'h11r:1cleristic hows lradrr:.hip abil11~·. J\1rs. O'C(ln nell h:is tir\'l\cd .'l theory ~ hich (•Orrrla!t•s l~r~nn;ilily trails and , 1cial ch.11raetcrisr u·s lrnn1 her personal bserva!1ons 1•ver tl1r past r:i ycnr.~. She alls it "psychoi;:raph11·01o~y" lier ideal pres1dt"11lial cand1dflte sho ws n ind ividual -shr ·~ 1·.:irrful nnt to pin· int th<' sex -with crrtnin te\l .. tale haracteristi cs derlv t'd fron1 her throry . The wide forehead shnws a high Sl'nSe f order as "'ell as stronli! lcttdtrship bility. Big eyes ind ical1' th dE'i:r<'t to hich :i person is 00.Sf'tvllri And their loscness Indicates an abil ty to eon- ntrart:. Whtther ~1n. O'Connell 's lheorv Is ea nlnRful may be argued at length: but he someti mes illustrates tl1c corrrlat ion tween personality traits and racinl haractc.ristics by sketch inR 1~rsons ight unseen. Connt.-c:tlcu l televisio n viewers hnve ecn her in action. 1 Some she. asked lo telephone ancl escrlbe their pcrsonalltle1. She then etched them from their descriptions. nd the resulting likenesses wert con· dered close under the circumstances The wile of a reilml postman and the I ther or rive c#Hdrtn, lt1rs. O'Connell, ho m1intaln1 ·&west Springfield studio, -. said she discovered "people were dif- ferent'' when she was a little girl growing up In Oxford, N.C. Some characteristics embodied in her sketch of the Ideal presidential candidate are renected in a wide variety of things. -An exposed top eyelid Indica tes a tendency to be self·rcvelatory. The person with 1 well-hidden top eyelid tends to keep th ings to himself. -A wide nose bridge shows a tendency to feel strong emotions like anger and lovp for a Iona time. A very narrow nose bridge indicates short-llved emotional ex- tremes. -·A medium -sized nose bridge cor- responds to a personality which rarely experiences emotlonal extremes. The \l.'&ve of the top eye.lid line corresponds to nn Interest in people as lndivldu1ls rather than class.members and also correspond.a to an lnttrest In soclal problems. -Compassion is indlcsted by the degree to which a person's top outer eyelid l~ slanted. The shape of the lowtr outer eyelid cornsponds to self-preeerva- tion. The one thing 1ht lo0k1 for In all pto- ple, especially presldenUal candidates. Is a sharp slant tQ both the upper 1nd lower eyelids u•hlch. to Mrs. O'Connell, represents a ballllced tense of justice. She hus been known to go into restaurants, analyie the furnishings, plumb the mood of the ptace, and then draw the manager without lEiylng eyts on hun. She says tht rtMmblance is usually striking. and ha ve all my colleagues almost sun1- marily refuse to give nie a ditto of their prl'!vious 'aye' vote." Is Moscone afraid or "peaking" to early? "That may be a danger that people who are household words have to consider, but \\'hen you're trying' to put the message out to 20 million Californians, it's the lesser of all other evils." F'ellow lawmakers say Moscone's chief problem is si mply the fact that he's not from Southern California . With a population of abou! 7 n11 llion - larger than most states -Los Angeles Counly is the centerpiece of any statewide political campaign in California. And San Diego boa sts that it has 1nore population now than San Franr1sto. "I think his basic problem 1s a problcrn of geography." says one Hcpublican nf Moscone's officially undeclarcC can· didacy. Moscone. 42. says it's not r('ally a question of Nort hern vs. Southe rn California. "Most Southern Californians arc as lit- tle known in Southern California as any Northern Califomien. The problem of name recogniUon In the state has. I th ink, nothing to do with the place where you reside. It has to do wilh where you go, to y,•hom you make addresses, and how often you do it." Moscone says he has been keep ing at tiis five-speeches-a-week clip s i n c e January 1971. He hes no plans to slow down. He smokes a pack of cigarettes a day, he says. "J hope to make that 10 and someday end it. I ha ven't had much success with cold turkey because of the kind of tension th at goes on in this Ca pitol . Every time T think I'm cool T find there's a:lolher fire to put out and I fin d I'm putting out that fire by li1hting one of my own." When Moscone was elected to the Senate In 1966 after three yea rs as a &In Francisco County supervisor, the Assembly was dominated by a Southern Clttlfomlan who still has statewide name recoifliUOn: Jess Unruh, 1970 Democra tic candidate for governor, Polllle:al observers e:rpect Unruh to run for mayor of t.os Angeles in 1973, setting the stage for a pouible renewed attempt to become governor in 1974. Then comes a missile: "1 don't th1 nk I'd be In a position to regard anyone as 'chier opponent' btcluae while Jess would cert31n1y enjoy name recognition . I never hlve known what the impact of " ~ubstantial thrashing ha11 on a person's electibllity. '' Unruh Jo.i;t the governorship to Reagan by about S00,000 votes. · "It won't be an easy task . He'll have to confront Tom Bradley and Sam Yorty." Bradley Is the black city cou ncilman who lost a bitter 1969 race to lncumbtnt Mayor Yorty. He's expected to try aga in and re«ania a Yorty try for a fourth term as a certainty. State of th• Union addrtaa and fiscal 1973 budget proposals. caned for accelerated explorations 1n ttlt field, at least as It may apply to the nation's growing po11,·er need~. J F'reder1t k \\'elnhold. an energy speci<illst in the White House 's Office of Science and Technology, said two new projects. to be funded at $1 million each fur the first year, are envisioned for the National Bureau of Standards and the AEC NBS scient1sti would concentrate on trying to incorporate super-cooled, super- conductinl materials lnto the bulldln& of convent\onal power teneration that COO• vert steam rrom fossil - or nuclear-fuel· ed power plants into electricity. The objective would be to develop sm aller and cheaper generator& than those now in u.se and to ha ve the further ad van tage of greater efficiency -reduc- ed losses of energy -in ge neraling elec· tricity. AEC scientists would concentrate on trying to develop new types of un- derground power trans.mission cabt~s who.se wires wou ld be bathed in either 1uptr-co ld liquid h~tum er In ftql,jd nitrogen or tlydro1en. In another are:1, the administration has propo!'led increasing to $3 million the cur· rent $1.5 million Cundlna of the ~part· ment of the Interior fbr research to per fect 1 d evi ce c a ll ed a mqnetohydrodynamic (M.HD ) electric aenerator. It would convert heat into electricity wit hout an intermediary steam boiler or turboaeneralor by rapidly passln& a hot, electrified ga!'I throu&h a powerful magnetic field from wh ich an electric current iJ tapped . Youths Tal{e New Tact Student Lobbyists Hit State Capitols By TERRY RYAN Auod1ltd P'rt U. Wrlttr There Is a new force loose in stale c11pilols across the nation-student lob- byists. F'ortified with the 18-year-0ld vote, c·ol- lege students are lobby ing for increased funds for their schools, fig hting against conduct codes and having their say on en· vironmental issues. A sa mpling of 29 states with major in· stilutions of higher education found that there were student lobbying efforts in 23 of them la st year. Although n1osl observers felt the stu- dent lobby sti ll is far from a potent pol it ical force. such activity was rare four years ago. "Lobbying is seen as a way to get ac· cess to the system," said Lyaton Olson of the N::itional Student Lobby, an associa- tion that coordinates the lobb ying efforts or 88 schools. "Students have tried a num ber of ways to get their ideas across. demonst rations arrd things like that,'' said Olson ... They have learned to begin at hom e. in their own stateS, where they can be effective." Many legisl:itors stlll cast a "·ary eye on students \va nde ring through lheir do- main, but the arrival of the 18-year·old vote has tended to make them more responsive to studf!nt pressure. nuw a perinanent organization . the Stu. drnt Lobby, operating in the st.ate legislature. "Coastal zoning brought us out,'' sa id Joe Gray, cochairman or the Delaware lobby. '·But at that time, ~·e realizfld we had the vote and may as well do son1cthing with it all the time . not just on one issue." Student lobbying efforts have been car- ried out in a variety of ways. Students of the University of California hired people from their own ranks to represent them as full-time, paid Jol>- byists ln the slate capital. Student lobbyists in Idaho , Hawaii and several other states receive academic credit for their efforts . Thirty political science students at St. 1'.fary's Univ ersity in San Antonio, Tex . spend time lobbying as part of a legislative process course. In most states, howeve r. students spen· cl ing time at the Capitol receive neither money nor academic credit for their ef- forts. Lack of n1oney has forced student lob- Pa1·t of Scene byl1l! to adopt techniques far different from those of tht wtlJ·flnancf!d , pro- tessionel lobbyista who Inhabit most statthouses. University of Wiscon1ln s t u d e ~ ts recently invited state legislators tp a Dutch treat luncheon Of hot dogs 'all.{l ,oda In the basement of a drucstore nelP. the state Capitol. It was the fight to lower the voting 1ge lhal brought the first WP.Vt! Of student lobbyists into the legislative halls in 1969 and 1970. With the vote now In their pockets. students have made the winning of add itional legal ri1hts for people 18 to 21 a priority project. f\.1ost student lobbying has been directed toward bills related to education. Budgets for st ate collegel, funds for private institutions and conduct codes have been prime targets. Students have also lobbied on mattera not connected with education. Bills on en· vironmental protection, abortion law ch anges, fair housing and women'i rights ha ve brought a steady stream of Jtudents into the legislative chambers. "Three years ago, student s could not walk into legislati ve offices and sit down and talk with their representatives," said John F'eutz. a student lobbyist in Olym- pia, Wash. "This year, they are welcom- ed as voting citizens.'' The batting average of student lob- byists has not been high, particularly on matters unrelated to education, but there have been some 'notable successes. College Students Get Pay For Duties in Sacramento The Intercoll egiate Political Affairs Commission, a student lobbying group representing four state colleges in Washington, worked for a plan to tap hi ghway fu nds to reduce tuition. The bill failed. 'fhe commissio n, however, was suc- cessful in convincing the Washington Legislature to kill a bill that would have set up a conduct code for students and faculty in state schools and another measure that would have authorized the expulsion from state schools of students who engaged in campus disorders. Colorado students supported a bill that would have removed phosphate soaps and deterge nts from storf! shelves. The bill died. The student lobby did contribute to the passage of a land-use law. although student s were disappointed that a more stringent measure was not passed. Coll ege students in Delaware turned 011l for the first tim e last year to help pass a tough coastal zoning law. There is Kidtaap Victims SACRAMENTO IAPJ -Sludenl lob- byists who draw paychecks for th~ir ef .. forts have become a permanent part of the Capitol scene here. The ninHampus University of California is represented by Paul Gassaway, 23, and Kati Perry, 21 , who describe themselves as Io b by i 8 l "coordinators'' overseeing the work of 11 student interns. 'fhe interns receive academ ic credit for b ut ton ho 11 ng lawmakers on behalf of education bills. The IS.Campus state college system has two part-time studen1 lobbyists head- quartered at Sacramento State College about five miles from the gold--domed Capitol. UC s t u d e n t s began their lob- bying efforts Jn the summer of 1970 and the state college sludents about six months later. "The tuition issue was when 1tudents first became concerned that there might be so me legi slative move against their ... ,,,........,. Mrs . Gladys Tucker, 70, tells of her experience when ahe was kid· naped and hold hostage at knif•·polnt in Upper Marlboro, Md., by a pair of 13·year-olds d.-ng a 12·hour automobile ride. Mrs. Tucker's husband, Curt, wo wl! kldnar,cd bu\ released after four mile .. The two you ng SUSJ'."Cls were bol evcd lo be the youngest persons ever Involved in .• kidnapping. needs," says Paul Gl!saway, who dre.,.,·1 $1~ a month as the one of the two UC lobbyist coordinators. The UC studen t lobby hla an ta~.000 budget for its fiscal year ending in October, Gassaway to ld an intervif!wer. He added that about half the money com. es from student body fees and tM rest from fund-ra isin~ efforu a m o n g ·:various or1anizat1ons." The state college student lobbying cf· forts arl! also financed by sludl!nt fees, funneled through In auociatlon of the atudent body presidents. "The 1961-69 le1Jsl11.i vt .sessions are a prime example of real anti -student aen- timent" that mat In the Legislature In response to campus unrest, Gassaway s1y1. He estimates that abou t 90 percent or the UC 1tudent lobbyi sts ' effor ta during the 1971 session were devoted to educa- 1.ion bills 1uch as the Educatlonal Op- portunity Pro1ram of state and federal financial aid to needy students, faculty salaries (faculty members are slated for a 7.5 percent co!\.-Of·li ving pay hike iri Gov . Rona ld Reagen's $7.6 billion budget for 1972·73) and the general level of state finanCial support for the uni versity. The remaining 10 percent wa s work for environmental lcglslat.ion, particularly a bill authored by Assemblyman Alan 8leroty that would have regulated development along California's 1,071 miles of roastllne. The bill was killed late in.the session in the Senate Natu ral Retource1 and Wildlife Committee but Sieroty rein· traduced similar legisiallon th.is year. How effective have the student lob- byists been in getting approval for educa- tional bllla they like ? "Well, In tht Jssuea that we've tackled we think we've been tremendously sue: ces.sful,'' says Joe Hay, who teams: with Edward Murriy 1s the state college atu~ den t lobbyist. "With the exce ption of lhe budget, we b•d a really aucceuful year in 1971-but no one had any sue<:ess with the budget.'' Both the state colle1ea Ind UC were unhappy with lhe amount of state support a.noted to them in Reagan's budget for fiscal 197G-71. "I think I would hive to •Y the con Llct bit been very, very effective " e.vtn thouib laterna haven't alway1 know" the rl&bf people to 1ee or the n,ttt questions to a9k, GaW•ay said . "I tblnk they made a contribution •• lllYI Siii. Albert Rodda, (D-Socrament0) clWtnwl of the S.nale Education eom: mtttoe.· ''1Mf bdped oducat< membtra of the Leplature •bout Ptoblem1 lb the field of hlghtr education. They were conztruct.lve ..... uoe obvloual)' they .,... working within the 'etllbll1!wnent. I think 11'1 Im· portllll !hat lhls activity continue. "I rtal'1 do Wnk that on a number O! key l1Su•• the V6lo wwld Ml bav• been as ravoroble hid II not ....., for llttlr If. forts," be add&d. Th< student IObbylota do not work a1on• on beha lf of eiluc1u.i bllll detmeci worthy of at~ The Unlvtnll)' OI CaUIOmla his a Ml· Ume, non ,_ lolibyiat and IO do the •late collefts. c L A 5 5 I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 , • DAlLY '!LOT --------:-~-. . ............ - DAILY PILOT WANT ADS TUE BIGGEST SINGl..B lllARKETPLACE ON TBE ORANGE COAST -CALL DIRECT 84Z·5'78 ·~~-~-·' G•n•ral General Large Vacant lot -~~~~~~~ -~~~~~~~ Surroundftl by c~tom hontell and right next to the ~1ei;a Verde Golt Course. Enth·t' price SIB,495. Inquire 5'!6-1313. A Rare Find Newport Heights 2 Story Building Just can1e on the n1arket for the first 1in1f'. 5 bedrooms. ABANDONED ! ! 5 + FAMILY + DINING ·GOLF COURSE· 0\VNER ~10VEO EAST !'>lust sell 4 BR Pace5eller solid bit. din & lrg fam rms: CQ\" patio, play .)'d. Needs painl-make ofr. ROY J. \\"ARO RL TRS. 1&19 \\'estcliff Dr .. N B. &i6-D22S * OCEA:-iFRONT DUPLEX lolo."f'S! priced PIXlfJ('r!y ()f this kind avall. Ownt'r will ronsider tradt• for Orangr County units. $82,500. Ilalboa Br1y ProJ)t'rttes • &12-7~91 .. 4BR, l~ BA .. FormaJ dining area. Completely carpet'{'(] & drapN. Covered patio & nicely land~caped. Close tu shopping, sc hools & free-.,..·ays $29,500. Can sell FliA. or V1\. 8JO-.j()-J7 airer 5:30 PM. Clas~fied INDEX Adverti51ng HouNs for s.i. I~ Classification I 00-149 Reil Estate. Gener ii [jj Classification 150-184 fin1nci~I I~ Classification 200-260 ....... ,. .... I~ Classification 300-355 [ -..n-.,,. ... ]~ Classification 360-370 3 baths. 65 x 150' lot, l \.t \\low! An abandoned Alhen· blocks fron1 llarbor 111. ian \'ilia overlooking one of Great family hon1e, inimac· Orange Coasts n1ost ex<-lus- ula!E-. large bedrooms. A ive golf COutst's! From Cor-- true deli~ht In SN!. Pri<-f'lt nithian iron gateli to atrium rii-;hl at $-19.500. To see call lo the massive entry · J)e.. 6'16·TI71. luxe! 5 giant brdrooms -3 ONLY ILLNESS Could 1·1u1~<· this couplr to sell~ lr"s a ~ bd rn1. hc11nc \l llh n IO\C')y panl•h•d li ving rni., a ~parat(' leu11dry rni., lti 'x2·1' fan1ily rn1 v./a i.:as &-B-Q. all on a gi)tnntlc 65'x175' lot. Pru·c $:15,950, all tern1s. No\1', pay attention: In th1! trade, ttus is what \\·e call a baths. Huge fantily room + forma~ dining. K;.,g size 2il'x 16" hv1ng room. Deeoralors touch all O\'er. Park hke grounds ·+ DIRECT GOLt" COURSE \"1£\r · o n J y $39.500 -A fantastic valu('~ Call 11011· -645-0303. HIRlSl [ Ol.SON "' R E A l..70RS THE LAKES IN LAKE FOREST "'hot listing''. That means Livf' !he nautical lire by the it's gon11:1 sell TODAY! lake in your lov('ly 3 bed- B('lievc me! Don't fool roon1 . 2 1'!01y cas!le. Eight arouflfl • CALL N 0 \V . foot cp1Jings \Vall to \\'all ~16-5-111 1l'indo11s highl ight this nne APPLE PIE CONDITION Neat 4 Bedroom 2 Bath homr. Sparkling wi!h nC\Y paint and all ne1v carpets, near all schools and shopping. PriC'ed at only $28,000. 847-6010. V.A.-FHA Taki' a look a! this drsirahl(' :l BR . & SC'rrrnrrl l;i nai hon1r; 1.:onvr111c11\ loc.; 1!1n- ing n11, clc>c>. blt-ins. Carp. & drapes . loi_:i-burning frpk" Ovenuzcd gara~e. No dO\\'TI lo Vet s. & lo1o.• do1vn to aU! MORGAN REAL TY 673-66'!2 675-6'!59 ID UNITS J ust complrtf'<I. All 2 bedroom 2 bath, Excellent Eutsirlc Costa Mesa loca· tion. \Valk lo shopping. Rf'al quality \Vith low main· ~:car old former 111odcl. Cus- ton1 drapes. lavish \1·111\ paPf'1·, ~\Iosaic tile entry. shag carpets and giant n1as- ter bedroom rompletc the pic lure. Owner will sell or lease option. CALL FOR DETAILS 546·2313. NEW LISTING In fashionable Baycrest On quiet s!1•eet, 1vilh 3 large bedrooms, panele<l fam.ily room v.·fth brick firc1llace. Cheerful k1tche-n \\ llh hreakfast bar Forntal dining roon1 $64,500 tcnanrr. I";;:;:;::::::;; Call 546-5880 (Open Eves.) I• Classification 500-51 0 I 81TA6EJ I ......... I~ _..,,...,"" """ -Macnab-Irvine Rralty Compa11y GOURMET KITCHEN ON BAYFRONT Clas1ification 525-535 [ '--'°'_' .... _-_J[S] Classification 550-SS S I IMtrvction J[f!J c1.1sific•tion 575-580 [-.m-1~ Cl•ssification 600-699 [ ""'°'°""'"' J[Il] Clas~ification 700-710 Merchl.ndise I~ Classification 800-83 6 I Pet• and Supplies ILEJ C li111 $$ification 850-858 [ "°'"""' I~ _...,..,..,. Cla11if ic •tion 900.912 [ Transpor1ation J[iJ Classification 9 15-949 [ Autua tors.Mi l§J C lassific..st ion 950-990 TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PllOT WANT AD &42~5678 e e BAYCREST Buy of the Season 3 BR's., 2 baths, fi replace, Nice entry, ,;e"' of pool to 4 lcrracc heated pool. boat Bcclnn, family room with sli ps available. $87,500. Inviting rock firepl, kit-Frank Peralta 642-8235 chl'll-breakfast area. New ttpls & drps. $62.500. Macnab-Irvine ~~[.l~JM 6'!2-8235 644-62DO ~~ l:::::::::::WH:O:::A:I:::::::::: WHY RENT? SUBURBIA PARK Heres Why! 2. 3 & 4 Bedrn1, 2 ba!h Immaculate 4 bedrn1 hon1c hon1es, fron1 S21,500. ro on C'Orner Int. Pr\crd rr- duced 10 $41 ,900, as owner's new home is aln1ost rrady. 1 0?~ do1o.'n f>I assume 6'"f. VA lnan. Terrilic nei11:hborliood, I mile from nccnn. CALL 540-5411 Anytime LARWIN Lawer Than Rent By 01o.·ning this rine duplex w1 it front 3 Bedroom 2 l)ath hon1c reflects pride of own· $24.500. AU buil!ins, dish· \vsl1rs, a ll outside mainren· ance 1nelu<led -l unit f'VCn ha~ n lrg refrig. Low dO\\'n, E-Z monthly pymls, as low as $200. incl taxes & ins. Some immed. poss. Call 546·5.SSIJ {Open Eves.) f'rship. Ideal convenient 4 Units -$75,000 Corona del t-.1~r location .-Peninsula Point \\'Ulk 1.0 shopp1n~. SoUd in-3 _ 1 Bdrm .. 1 _ 2 Bdnn. con1e 1n_ rear uni~ over gar· Ri"nted month to mon1h. age. Private patio -only Close to bay & bea ch. Lot $63,SCKI. Call now 673-8550. 35xlOO. Call : 673-3663 642-2253 Eves. l.f>/THEREAL "'.)<'. E~'.J'~J:E;~~ Chennelfront Home On R-2 Jot, with pier & OoaL ;;iiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii $65,ln:l. For Appol.ntinent Call: 673-3663 836-IYll8 Eveg. TWO LOTS· R/4 on Canyon A: Banning. Good for famlly units. Call WI for details. PETE BARRffi -REALTY. 6'!2-5200 associated BRO K ERS-REAL TORS 2o as W Bo•boo 61 J-1661 "0-er Wants Out" Make Maney On This One! APPLE PIE CONDITION Neal 4 Bedroom 2 Bath home. Thi•. one nttda llOme tender Sparkling with new pa.int loving care. A littJe paint in- and all new carpet!, near side and out 11o--ould make all l!IChool.s and &bopping. this spClCiows tlne bedroom Priced at only $28,ln:l. and ~ room homt>. 841.flllO. Very desirable Comer lot giver tuy boat accua. ThUI JI .WI a bargain at $28,500; Call fol' appoinbnent to tee. 1147.e>JO. TH[ REAL ~ 1·:-;TATERS tustt. MNdow1 $30,950. f1lA. VA tmns. •O THE REAL '"\,( ES TAT ERS -" '•, , ,·, "' ~ de..n 3 BR. 2 Patios. I=======:=:=: Calli. kltch. NeRr nt>W. Beaat. lodK'J)d • fenced. --GEM11111-- t6to w. Coost l-lwy., N.B. REALTOR.<; 6424623 OWNER Tta111. 4 bed~. 2 btlthl, t'ntry hall, mRny ~xtr81 lhrooghoul, bu lJt.ln t a"*" + oven + dilhwatht>r, for'Cftl ll Ir heating, 2~ ~an new, Brlc .. $06.000. -112). NEWPORT HEIGHTS Ntw I.Isling on Powell St. -4 BR, 2 bnthl, 1800 Sq . Ft., 2 used brick flrcph~as. Qul~ cul·dc·sac street & clo11e lo 1111 JWhools. Pr\Cfl.I right 1<3.500. CAIL 675-5'nll -~-'-•• * * * * * * TAYLOR CO. LINDA ISLE -$155,000 EACH Great Opportunity! Architect O\\'ner of 2 brand NE\V '~·aterfront homes \\'ill consider in exchange: your sn1aller hon1e. land. apart· n1enl bldgs., or Trust Det>d;", Or \\1ill lease/ opti on. Each has 4 BR . FR. forn1al DR lt.;. study. "Our 27th Y tar" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 General PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP Three Jovl'ly 1o.·ell-plannf'd units only hvo yrars young. UPPER BAY area -l'X('t>l- lcnt .EASTSIDf.: COSTA MESA rental an-a. One TliREE·BEDROOM. 2 bath horn(' unil \\0 iU1 J<;hake roof Rnd qu.ih!y shag car- pe!ntg. Cr1u1d piaM-sizc living roont 11·1111 fireplaC'l'. A 1vall of finr fini'>hcd c up- boards separates the cl1n1ng roon1 and l111;i:r kitchen. Covered patio, fully ('nclo!;cd back yard, and double gar· PLUS 'J\\•o 2-bcdroom apartments \Yith large living room. con· vcnient kitchens and cheery dinette arra. Designed for privacy and r.asy maintrr1anC't'. TOP VALUE at $69,500 for all lhrCf' units. SPANISH!! BEACH FORMAL DINING See this authentic Spanillh entry! t'rom there step do1vn into !he spacious vaulted ceiling living room "·ith ma s s 1 v e firl'place! .Forn1al dining room! Thi.~ gourn1ct-garden k i t c h en takes you out to pol io grande! Giant 1n11ster suilf' "'ith dressln11: 111ble and \1·alkin close! + 2 nlore king size bedrooms - 2 baths! Bike to beach or take a jOg -$25,995. Call 645--0303. IOl!ISI L 01.SO\ . " R£AITORS Mother's Snorin9 Doesn't have to keep you a1o.•ake any longer! She can sleep in the SEPARATE GUEST JIOUSE \Yhile you're entertaining in 1hc Family roon1 or 1his 11\1l'oiACULATE 3 bedroom home. Located near Ornnf(e Coasr CoUcgr and proles~ionally decor11.ted inside and out! Priced al only $35,9JO with FllA and VA lrrms. 01o.·nrr Rnxioull, so call 646-7171 NOW! \o ·THEREAL '.'."'-ESTATERS " ' ·.· NO DOWN GI $29,995. Clt>IJH."On~nient home .,..;th &tove and rtlr!g. Large paneled rec. room tn back yard. Newport et Fairview 646-1111 l•nytime) JUST LISTED!! Stt this cu1tom built home in Ea11t11lde COtlta Mesa. !luge living room and I11m. ily room combination with beamed ceilings. 3 large bed· rooms plus 2 big baths - on a wt>U land1eaped Joi - All for onJy $17 ,600. Call 646-7171. ,_. 'T HI.: REAL ~ESTATERS $30,950 SWIM POOL Lowly Mt>u NortH home with S .spaciou1 bed rooms, 2 blltta, built In dream kltch- tn, family room with fire. place. LOt'ldt of dttklna. pnUo. Encloled pool -u.le tor s:m.all children. 540-1720. TARBELL ' ' W h l 1 t> Elephant•" ovt't- n.innl"'2: your hou1cl'? Turn them ln:f' "CASH" • M!U II.em th· · Dally P 11 o l Cla.utn~ r '" -5678. General Newport Bay Area + HORSES Guest House Custom 1 /3 Acre Plus! \\"o"·! J-IORSE.: PROPERTY Al! PLUS 3 he<lt'00111 gut>s! houst-1or n.'ntal H )Ot1 C'hoosel \\'ilh dining roo111 and ro\·e1-cd porch! !Ire's the 1cing-cuslon1 bui11 :; lwdroon1-2 bath cs l n I e : F1xin1 the St'C'ludcd a lr1un1 r ntry tu slate rovered fO)'l't" "·i th "'rou~ht 1ron rails-detu.xl'! Huge living room, massi\·e 11 Ion f' fittplace \Vith b u i l t-I n planters + r aised rock hearth? FORMAL DINING ROOM , Family room and out to red\\'ood covered patio \vith brick BBQ! Only 10' ~ doY.•n! Giddyap -Call &l:r-0303. IURISI L OlliO~ '" R£AI TOR~ THE VIEW Almost makf's you miss SN'· ing the home. After you'vr finished oh'ing & ah'ing. you'll see a truly outstand· Ing 3 bedroom beauly -11 woman'!! kitchen and the warm and . friendly family room in a home you'll love for the rest ol your life. Sho,vn by evening appoinl - mrnL S3S.750. and O\~'ner v.·ill help finan1 ·r. **** VACAN1' -3 bedroom one 11tory condo, 11'i miles lo ocean. Carpels & <lr Hpes, 2 car closed gil.r and sliding door to privale patio. A REAL BUY at $31.500. CALL 546-5411 Anyt ime • LARWIN • LA HACIENDA- OLE! BEACH AREA 3 + FORMAL DINING + 2 See this authen!ic Spanish entry! From there i'ltf'p down into the sf)8.cious vault· ed cl"1ling living room with n1a!!.sive firrplace! }tormal dining roon1! This gourmet- ga..rden kllchen take!\ you out to patio grande! Ginni ma!lter suite with dressing table and walkin closet + 2 more king size bcdroort)ll • 2 baths! Bike to beacly'or take a jog · $25,995. f all 645-0303. I ORIS! L Ol.,O\ RE' At TVR~ POSSIBLE 5°/o DOWN PAYMENT Check this fine 4 bedroom 2 story home in Huntinglen Beach, Only 2 yean: young! lArge space for boat or 1railer atoragt.'. Spacious family room with firepla.ce. Jl-fA tenns av11ilable, for $33,950. co: rs WALLACE REALTORS _ _,5.,41.,.4141- (0pen Evonlrtt•l HOME AND POTENTIAL You v,'On't belln-e thla lw:lme until )'1>tl tee lt! Solidly buUt and abaolutcb' IOfltoUI 3 bedroom, formal dlnlna, breakfut room and bonUI of txtra bulldable lot in- cluded. Grtat Easlllde Jo. cation ne111r shopping. Call 540-1151 fOpen Evt1) $22,750 BY OWNER In Santa Ana. 3 Br. 2 car ptq(', Sh&& cpta. Covtttd p1.Uo, f~ yard. Will con- oldeT """""'· ~ . enerol VALUE PACKAGE $24,950 Y •'II $:<'\ ll ;l br.dt"Mlll ("o i-111 \l f'S I\ "IAill l[OU~•'" \\llh ~ ho!h', ,,1 111 k 1•n lh!1\i.: r,><•n1. ro•· ll\'I" lu1, 1)1~ ShlHi> 1 1'1'<'~ l\lltl if '~ ~111\\'al\l f"o•d lo 0(• \hf' h••st \RIUI' 111 t••11·11. \\·011·1 last. 0 11·nrr 1vlll sf']I Fl-l1\ t1r V ,\, l lurry ~ BARGAIN TIME MESA VERDE $27 ,500 VACANT Call IJf' ~ : n1ul 11 df'n or A •I b1·dr"1•111 -lol.s or roo!ll r,, •. ''xr.andin.I{ fa111ill•'S, I :1,. b11\hs. Con· \'f'Hient 1Ju1lt-in kilC'hcn v.·ith I u a cl s or CUP· boards, ~nra.I{(' convert- ed to !inlsbcd gan1e room, quif't prestige nr!11:hborhood and large fen(•ed cul-de-ssc loL Steal thl!ii one today. 3 YEAR OLD 4 BEDROOM $29,950 Job trnnsfr'1· forer~ tn1· n1c<liate sul r. fl rll•·r thRn nr11•, rnmpl('trly la11dSC'8!K'<l. llf'll' ('/l!'!lr'I, lnrgr fn rnily ruon1, l.J rit·k fireplace, buill·in kitch- en and br!"akfast bar. :.! baths, doublf' 1<:nra~C' and Jnv1·ly nl"ii.:hbor- hood. Prh·rd be I ow mnrkf"l value fol' fasl sale. Sec lt. MESA VERDE SPLIT LEVEL $54,000 · POOL This gorgcou.11. 21 00 sq. ft. lri-JrvC'I home fea· _,,,Sale VALENTINE SPECIAL HARBOR VIEW HOMES llantly to school :. :tnd ~11opµ11 1g . 'l'h i.~ ~!'':\:\'· !Sil :-t~·l r 3 bl'd 11111111 . :! bntti'. d1 11111.1:, rn111 11, l1 rC'plt11.:l', l'Xlr:i l:1r~1· lHnlt1n 11111.!i•rn k1 11·ht•n, <'(trpt~t s & di.l ]h'~ l\l u Ll·:\"l·:t . 11:\'!'llL S('c tlus delightful u11e .\ l'llr ulll lu·aut y 3-l8,7tKl. YOU'LL FALL IN LOVE WITH THE BLUFFS You have a v1t1\\' of t h1 • buy fron1 Hll \\'indo,v.s . 3 bcdroon1s . :!1 ~ b;.llli~. bniltin lo;itchc>n \\/Ith self cleaning ovt'n. t·:X'l'f{/\ 1•,1\'l'IO, on the greenbelt. A 10\'cl y IJuy at . . . $45,950. A "LOVE" OF A HOUSE FOR YOU J;\I 'J'liR'l'Ll'.: JiOt"I\. 3 8C'clroo1n s. family roon1 . 2 IJath s, :1tr1u111, built ins \\•ith sc lr t leaning OYen . :-;/HIJ.: carpeting an fl custom drapes. Large l"OVl'rl'd patio \rilh super lnnd- scaping. WOU LD \'OU BELIEVE $47,900. "LOVE AND KISSES" IN THIS BEAUTY This three bedroo111, 2 bath, fireplace and FAMILY ROOM, carpels & drape•. 2 lovely patios, pool end r ec reation roo m. Easy ac· cess to San Diego freeway. In m odel con- dilion. .. .. .. .. . . .. .. $33 ,500. A TEMPTING HONEY FOR THE MONEY THIS CONDO-IN THE BLUr'FS . 2 bedroom, builtin kitchen, upgraded carpets and drapes low association fees. ON TllE c:llEEN l11-~l.'T' . See and compare. Only ....... , . , .. $27 ,950. r/"4tbe-Sfltid ~.,,- REALTORS 644-7270 2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. 4' •• I turc5, 4 spacious bcd· llJ••••••••••••••••••••, room!! on the upper level, 3 ! u 11 balhs, i'lunkcn family r oom with fi replace and wet bar at lo"'•rr I ev e I. Beautiful built-In kltch- ('n, formal d lninK room and llvin1,; room at mid· level. Fantastic large o[lt'n effpct and beauti· fully ke1it. Authentic "'alrrfall spills Into I.he sparkling heated ponl. Enjoy fir<' ring and bar· b-quc combination at pool s idf'. Divorce forces sale. l\lakc offer! 2100 SQ. FT. ,3 BEDROOM, 2Yi BATH MODEL ELEGANCE Ideal home for a not too lari,:f' exr cutlve famlly "'hn \\'nnt~ presllR;r and room in a ~ brdroom hon1e, only 5 yrani old and rxtravagantly up• graded. Separate famlly rnom "'Ith Palos Verde f i r ,. p I a c ~ , s(>llrkllng d rl'am kitchen, h uge maJ1tt'r bedroom suite, deluxe Sl5.00 yd. car- peting 1hroua:hout and profe11lonally JandJeap- ed cul-de-sae lot with boat entry. can't be beat a t $37,500. Stt It thlt weekend. LEASE OPTION MESA VERDE $360 PER MONTH -POOL .. J-re who heJJltate1 I• JoaL" Thi• beauty hu • 1parkllng ()001. 2 pa- t.JOI, 3 bedroornJ. 2 b&thl, tam Uy room. Fant.attic family home on cul-de-cac JoL Daily Pilot Classified Ad$. ,oJ for Action ••• Call 842-561.' o I General LIDO ISLE ESTATE ·I 7 BR. home (or use 3 Bil. !or guest suite) with lanai, pool, beautiful grounds &: prl: 1 vacy, on 3 lots. Fine buy at $159,500. Eugene Vreeland 60' ON BAYFRONTI Slip for large boat. Beautiful oool. Spaciou• home with 5 bdrms .• study, 4fh baths fam· ily room. Next to sandy beach. $189,0oo. Carol Tatum BAYCREST . FEE LOT 70 Feet on 2100 LEEWARD. 112 ll. deep. View of Upper Bay from rear. Great neigh· borhood. New 2-sty. one lot away. Asking $28,000. Al Fink llUY OF THE WEEKI Vacant & ready to go. Charming Engll•h ' style home. 3 Bdrms .. dining rm. & den. ' Secluded patio & pool. $50,500. Mary Harvey ·· LUSK NEW LISTING 4 BR., 3 Ba., ocean. canyon vjew. Owner 11 transferred. Custom cpt., dr.1pes & wall cov· , erlngs. Woody den. 2 ~·rplc1. Call !or app't , LaVera Burns ! YOUR OWN PRIVATE HOME WITH INCOME '' /Uk your tax man about this lltue goodie. 2-; Story 4 Bdrm. colonial w/pool pita 3 Bdrm. cite. $78,5-00. Mary Lou Marlon TWO CHOICE BAYCREST HOMIS " 3 BR. 2 'h bu. 18x36 J>OO\. •dull occupied, lmmac. Only $82,500. Good buy tor family: , 5 BR's., frml. DR, tam. room; new decor. $55,950. M. C. Buie PRICED TD SELL - 3 Bedrooms &: den, Ivan Wells home, w/large ' pool in • beautifully land«:aped setting. Im· ' mediate occupancy. $72,800. 1 Kathryn Raulston 133-0700 _._ Coldw9ll,Banks 644-1430 ~ 550 NEWPORT CENTElt Dll, N.I . •• • '' .. . .. ---_.,.,. -. 28 DAILY PlLDT Everyo ne Has Some thing That Som eone Else Wa nh DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a W an t Ad ·rhe Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results BE FINANCI ALLY INDEPENDENT I lnVl'.'SI )11 ""••fl) HAl.V ACftF: ()F l.ANIJ 111th thr •'<' '''l~I· )Ill:: lll•~lll]I' ll<lfljl'~ .. h•J\11!1;' 1111 A/\','lL:/\L C./~OSS /,'\ co:•,.fF; 0 1-· S4.92l'J 1-:!(('•·llt·n! 1-:A.'!-J'SIOI~ Nl·:11 ;J roon lfOOD. llarprr .~•hllill 1~ /)ll)l:k: 2 /)loi·ki. ti\ l·.11•'1 17th SI, ~hnpi;, ~:x tr;, S/10!1'•' If) build 4 add111on;1I .ofiilr! 'nr>n1s. Our """''"st ~:xc.:t.t;­ !'IVF: pric<'tl ;;r S~l7.500. 0\\'ll· f'f may hl'lp /tnHlll~' rry $3.750 1nil bal inv"'llm<'nt. BAY i B£ACJ.I REALTY " $40,000 BALBOA DUPLEX Closf' to hsy, ocean hc1ch '1 stores. Fine rental area. Each Apl , 2 Bdrms., w/ SwC'dish frpl(:l!. In Jge. Jivini:: rm. AnxioWi owner neetls capital. FalT<'ll Sn1ilh. 675-3000 2-407 F:. Coast lhvy. BAY• B£ACJ.I UEALTY '"' HAPPY FAMILY • HOME· BACKBAY AREA 1 Jkdrm11, formnl d1ning- room. largr lot wil l1 trui! 111.'cs & play area. Owner leaving $1aLe. Newport at Fai rview 646·8111 (a nytime) **SHAG PAPER** PJu,11h shna: c11..rJ>('t find lovt-ly "'Allpapcr h i~h li~ht lh1s 3 hedroon1 2 hath honir. \\'i!ll .. "'f . ·' _ •• .:.,i ..... ~~ • .:. 1! -~~ .... -.'..\ .• ' ' 'l!niqut 'llom~ UNIQUE HAS THE BEST HOMES • , , ..•• , • IN THE BEST AREAS IN CORONA DEL MAR: A Duple x So uth or t he ·highway , sheltered by trees and close by a park overlookin~ the bay. 3 bedroom 3 ba th ov.1ner's unit has interior patio, all electric ki tchen and a roomy feel- lng. Upstairs 2 bedroom 2 bath unit ha s so1ne vie w and a neat-as-a-pi n tenant. Chec k this one for rnany unique duplex features. PRESENTED AT $74,950. e PHONE 675 ·6000 l~M'i~A VERDE: Two Stories and Pool Very in(e1·esting! 'fall house on big lot n1a kes for 1nuch roon1! Leaves land for heated pool, plus play area, sunning spots and storage. 'J'his home has it all. plus four bedrootns, pa neled den, f ormal <lining and a quiet loca· tion near r ark and srhool. PRESENTED AT $47,500 , e PHONE 546-5990 Gene ral 24"13 Eaat Coast Higl'lwl'IY Corona deL Mar 675·6000 ;:~50 M1·sa Vcrrl<! DrlvP. L osta Mesa 546-5990 '11£utporl 'Bro.cit. Comin g Soon General G e ne ral $209. PAYS ALL ONLY $2'J,950. Qu1:1in1 3 bt•d 1·111 horne on larJ:r k)I, pri· ,,;111• lrP•• shaded .~!r1•••t. Sub- 11111 YHA OH VA NO lXl\\'N. C<1ll 545-.11424. fOpen 1·V1'.•.J F-OUTII COA~'T flF:ALTOHS. FORECLOSURE BcauriluJ 3 ~l<'drn1 2 harh h•1ri11· -l'.1.1·1•llPn1 lo1·at111n. 1'11'1•pla\'<'. ~hlll(r n~1r. wall- 1•1! )Hl"d 111111 J111rna<·uJa 1r. S2ti0 1110 1n(·]~ !;i .~r.~ "' lrs<I than S~l <tn1111. C'Hll 54!"»-R424 IO p1•n e ,. r s . I SOUTH COAST Hf::ALTOHS. CLOSE TO BEACH l .. ur)i:r :t Bit. 2 ba . d1111Jcx \l'llh :l fJrf'p!a,·rs. $;,5,000 -Ti':Hill~ G eorge Williamson Realtor 548-657 0 645· 1564 ~\ 131·:0:-479\v;ilnu1 Pfr1~·{'. fo.,1;i ,\Jrsa. 6 ·I 6 -7 I 7 I . $:JG.~i00 Sun. 1 IH :,. ------c-----Balboa Island l.11vrLE Tslnnd, So. Hay front, 2 lots, house on on<', 3 AH, 3 BA. i'llaid~ roon1 & hA th, liv rn1 ups1air.~ w/11•r t hur . Sho1lln by appt. only. Min $315.000. Pnn1·ipals only. 01l•t)(>r 1777 L1:1 Crr stlt Dr, Pas<iden;1 . Balboa Peninsula BAVf'"RONT. P!ER: 5 BIL 4 Ba. DIR. fpl. Pa110 . \1;irshall Rra lty 67:>-lf,()() OCEAN side>, Bal. Blv., cor· n1·r duplr.'(. Sii,000. Marsha.It Rralty 67:i--u;oo Corona del M•r * DELIGHTFUL * Spa rkling 3 BR . 2,000 Sq. ~·1. Altractive u.sr of 11·<Klfi, insidr & out. Ac- Cf'S~ to privfllt• bca<'hrs. Salisbury Re.1h'I' F,vl'~: li7J.. l302 :llj ~\1\HINE ,\VE. 67~.-(;900 HAU~OA ISLA;\J) M OV E-RI GHT-IN -:::-----,------11 rvine Ir vin. E xecutive's Dream 1.;;;;;;;;;;;;:;_;;;:;_;;;:;_;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;-;;;:;-;;;:;;;;;, $41.500, Spat10Us 2 bd1'r)l ,t.i• d('.ll, lari;ic ffill'>h•r twlrm su1!1•, forn1al cl1n1n2" 11lus hrf·akfMsl r0<1n1 , wf't liar, libr1try ~h••lvr~. 111ri11m . ichag enrl)('!. tlrn~s. ~hur­ t<'rs. On cul-1!e-sa1•, ndj:u·rnt FAMILY GONE? Or just ge lling started? Be su re to see this VEHY SPECIAL 2 br., 2 ba . tow nhouse. A great greenbelt locati on for only $30.500. FAMILY STILL HOME? In !f•r1n1s & ~111111 1·luh. Ownt•rl hrnk,.r ~.·,7.44r;7_ VAC ANT & -RE.ADY- s1 !ARP EASTS!DE ll0.\1E • 3 Rig hrdrms. Then be sure to see this large family size tov,inhou se 4 br., 2~2 ba .. enclosed sundeck. 2000 sq. fl. + for only $34 ,950. It 2 Full h:t!hs. * Plush shag t·rp!, • 5:i' x 110' lot * Boa! •HTr-.s * S:.!7,!"JOO l ull prl<'<' FHA/VA TF:P.1\il ~ AVA IL . 110~ 1:\•llil, ---1qenltor *FULLER REAL TY* Huntington Beach 546-0814 •........... 1\nytune -vAHJ:::f'O. 3Bi"L.2-n-;,- S2'.l.7:,0. $1:.0 Dn. s:r1!~ \In. Atllhl)1·1zed Bnik1•r 5 1S-6.li0 "OUR LESS, YOUR GAIN" - -----II isn'1 \\·orth it, cr1r1! Ou• \\'llAT you !leP 1~ 11·h111 ynu j 11•i:-•· man 11h1•n !\·lanhattnn ,t:cl' Sf'r rtus bca11l 1ful OPll, 1 ... 1.ind ~1lrl for ;1 soni;: and 2 ~li;r;y hou''' IV<· 1IC'•I 111 d;tfu'P, Tiu.~ 111tly hon1<' in Y.:a~1si1fr. fn~.la ,\1 r-s a. Hu111 111gl<J11 BPaeh 11 ilh eas.v ln1a,i:::1111" ·I BH. 2 BA, lgL' [1nanC'1ng lo1:111l'd closr In fncd yard. I a n d s 1· a p e rl , S('hw!s i.~ JUSl wailing for frp!c. dble i;:ar, hlrns, t'rn1s you, only S-.13,995. Call us .t. 1lrps & many other now! 842-2:i.15 fcalurrs. Call 64t-;..;1;;::7 01· 642-1.l36 10 see 11'h<1t ynt1 must i::-et' * DUPLE X * B<'aut. nc1v 01\lncr's unit~ 2 iOiiiiiiiiiii-iiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii & flcn, 2 baths, bl1 -in nven, TWO BEDROOM ran,i::c & rli!i1h.,.,•11shcr. rarp .. $17.000. fu!l price. 9 Yn;. 1!ra1ws & frplr. PLUS sharp nr11•. 60'x100' fPnced lot, O\'• 2 BH. hon1r 111 fron! for in-rrs1zC'd dhl i::a r w/rrar hoar i·omr to !u•lp puy lhr \1·ay. 1[1)(Jl', clrr'I blrin RIO, crpt~. flli1 y 1~·r sbuw you this7 dJ'i)S, 1~1lyn1ts. !css rhan MORGAN REAL TY n·n1. 673-6642 675-6459 SALE hy 01v1wr. LrJ.! 4~2 l' ba, <·or !01 , nn lnr hoal !..· 962.4471 (:::~I 546-8103 traill'r. $25,000. All terrns. illage Real Esta~e s:~:4~\VN. No 0011,n ~A . --·.··w"""a"""1k""""to""'"B"e"a"""e"h"•"• r:xquisilr 2 sty, 3 BR. 2 Ba. \\'rlrun1c Cl's or rasy n1oncy :.Nxl7 rurnpu.~ rooni. s:JJ,ij() do11•n, you ('1111 rurch.1S(' a 2 year old <I bedroon1 honu· 011·nrr, 5-1:1-61 74. ----at llK' unl>cl1evable price of :\1ESA Verde, J BR, 1''. BA. $25,lXXJ. ! . .ocatc1l in J·lu nr- SW,7j{). Ry 01vn1 T, Eves: ing1011 Reach elosc to all ~9-4'.!2.\ Days: &M--2501. schools and shoppin~. Don't B\' 0\\1'.\IEH. clC'11n 3 BR. lge frn<'ril ~rl '.'11any up,i::radt•s. $23.800. 64~>-\j\J -------El Toro ·IBR. 1:i. RA. f'"f•rmal d1n1n:;:- arC':1, Cnmplrlcly earpe!ed ,f,,; drOlpl'd. ('ovc-r<"d patio ,'!; nw1'ly l;1ndse11r<'d. Clnse tn IC'! 1h1s on<' gr1 a1vay. Call lll!ll', 842-:.i;l.t"• GARDEN KITCHEN '·SJNCE 1946" 1st \VC"stcrn Bank Bldg, University Park, lrl'ine Days 833-01 01 Nights Laguna Beach WHY RENT? Ea~icst or trrms. Thts Wf'Ck· enrlrr 1h1s future polcnrial of c•omrnl'n·1n! drvPlopn1t'n!. 21, Rdrn1<;., 2 rar ~11r;ige: canyon 1·1cw~. 1v11h l1Jts of pri,·acy. Full pliC!' $22,.",00 1vi1h lt'rrns you'll have to stc to behf'vc: (1-31 ,,.,JG tan REAL ESTATE 1190 Glcnncyre SL •194-9473 549--0316 ALMOST NEW Custnrn hon1e 1v1th bram rril 's. &.· frplc. I\ Bdrms., 2 balhs. Lgc. v1('1\l liv1ng rm., forn1al rii n1 ni:;: rni. Cheery fan1ily rm. nfr well <"cruirped kitchf'n. A heau!1f11!1 y fam- ily hon1r 111 xlnr nc1i::hbor· h001t. t'lnsl' !f) sehools, Pru:rr! ;if s:12.:ioo. • ~!!9·:!800 * * OCEAN VTE\V * 3 Bdrm. rontemp. !oc. on Lagun11's fan1ed Riviera coasll!ne. r~rplcs, ('!pen hC'11ms. bltns, l'icw decks, din1ni;: 11/"l'a. s.~~.500. :\llSSION RF.ALT\' 49-1-fl731 -QUAINT COT TAGE- D1amon<t Jn thr "RUFF." 2 Br, 2 b;i, sr<'IU!'i1on, trees. "Old Laguna" in a n1odern ccologiC'al setting. Room to s pread ou ! 0n e1mnst 13 Herr view land. !\'r beach. $47.CXXl. Ne wport S.•ch 2 HOUSES -DBL. LOT Re•I f:tt•le. Gener•I Cemetery Lots/Crypts 156 1/2 BLK. TO BEACH e 1 lri!s m Harhor Like new 2-sty. 4 BR .. 2 l;l;!., :\lcrnor1al Park, C ;\I, formal din. nn., bltns: f<llll . •'<ieh. • .~IG-15'14. r!11. wl.,.,•et bar & BBQ. Commercial } rplc. 2 1·ar gar.; llnn1e p t could be made into duplex. roper Y 158 Also • eu1e 2 BR. rootti<'. ----------~~-~--" Both only $71\,!lOO. Optn1CD.\I l11gh11ay fron!age 11·rPkrnr!!> 1·5. land &· blrl~!>. C-1 C'A\'\\'OOD RJ<:,\LTY 5'111-12!() ,\~C'nt. 675-7225 Jl I. -OPEN SAT. &-SuN-:-Condominiums fo r sale Harbor View Homes 160 4 Br. 2 b<i & fan1 rm , Co11n!ry fr<'nch ri£'ror. BPaut. lnds("p.1"1-1-·1-s-, .-R-,-. -L-. --,-,-, _B_R,_I_' ••• v • 1\111(; .• ' '2 Chnire liw· $•19,500. IX:lli Po1·t J~1\. Cpts. d1·1·~. blt 1n~. \\'cstbourne. NB 644 -401'1. Pri1·;it.• Jiillio. L n 11 n d r y ll ARBOn View l!on1l'.~. illnv-fac1l111c-s. Lise of J"CC"rca1inn ing E;i.:.r, n1usl s"ll aln1n~t fr'IOrn and la.r~c pool. By nrw Por1of11J.l 11101!cl. Ex-011r11T 519--06i~. lras. $60,500. &11-SS.ll. 0 --1--1-U-.-------------up exes nits \\'ATERFRONT· Tirrd nl NB sale 162 pnecs~ Tty !his. hrs! lot·nl---------- inn l!unt'ln~lon llarh.-.ur 55' D1\N1\ Pn1111 _ :'\1•1\' rfup!r)C. B;iyfrnn! <i<'tTlss hTl1n l>o:h S-19 .. lOO. S1!\·rr !.;111rern iii La & yac:hl clubs. JJtnut. 2-stry, CiY'"1<1. \\'cbh-Bkr 6!2-1'.J<Ei. l1v.r111, ~ nr •I 131''. fan1. din, ----- deck, dork. $110,000. Oi~·ncr. • REAT THE TAX HAP * (71 4f 846-254:1 .>;(>lrct<'d Invcstmrn1~ BY Ownrr: Nn do11•0 -VA , l yr old, 3 Br, 2 ba, 2 lrp!c"s, crp!s/dq1s. <lhl g;ir. I hlk heh. $47 ,.100, 612-7523, .\!rs. l/11·1s. * BIG CANYON * Golf Course Estate, SpC'('tac· ular vu. NC\ll Homr. 0 11•ncr fl1r. Lee 6'12·3025. R3~·57l2. * 'Z i\.1<"1iical blc4:s -full • 22 Unll -1 & 2 brtt"m. * ~ L'nll · 2 ,i:, 3 hrlrn1. • 2 Dll!JIC'XCS & hnn1e • ~1 ArrP gro\'f' • R1t * !"IOIXJ Al'f<' ran<'h • ~11rs -Comn1. & n1fg. ~:-XECUT!V~: Jlr.:il E~1;iic • 1111·1•..,tmE"nts .. 1714! 832-l:l.i.1 * DESPERATE OWt\ER 2 BR ll:\!TS 11:1n!t'd. l!a\"f' bu~f'r5 td£'n 21 ·; Ba.good 1·ie1\l. lot• dup!r'l.P~ 11r In li;e units. Ai;t. 675-7225 H.LR.. Ai::C'1H ~r.;..iz:ri 111n.. ----------CUTE 2 hr, 2 ba 1011·nhnu~t>. Income Property 166 S1r1n1min~ pool, fee l:inrf . Ahen1. Gi.'>-7225. 11 1.R. Co ron a Del Mar \V ESTCLTFF tiy onr, ·I nr· . l 7 Units 3 ha. 2300 sq. fl . nriily llr..,t lnr;111nn for \'1r11!i. decor. $51,000. 612-9!1.ll!l. <'"llrn' rrn1;il rrt~r<l. F.x- lo· Newport Height s BY 0\1'ner-ANXI OUS~ Elegant 4 RR, 2 sror~ Colonial. 20x42" ll&f' fl')Oi. 1 hlk oU Chlf Dr. $.i!l,000. 1·0111<' 0vrr S'\l/lflf! pf'r yrar. Lislrd at S26f!.OO'.J. Try Jr,'(- do11 n. B~st Eas tsid e Location $5900 1\1111 handlr: Cash or 15 Units boa! cam~r, TD s. Jc11clry or ?.642-29-IO. Ju~t .<;o•llh of S.1nt;i: An a Cnunrr1• rluh, 7-2 Rd Tn11"n· tin11~"~ I, 2 R<! I\. 1 Brl: ~. Ba1 •h. E.x!'1•llcnt rrn1rtl ::irr•;1 Al! lll'its tr;i~f'rt. In· r·nn1r nl'rr S2.'i.~m P"I' ~"ar. L1•.1 r'I al Sli."i,001, 011·ner 11·1U carrv 2n<i T.!). Santa Ana $22.750 BY OWNER In Santa Ana. 3 Br. Z 1·ar garage. Shag <'pll'. rnvrrf'd patio. f('nC'cd yard. \\"ill r·on - ~ider Sl'COnd. Rl6-5672. San Jua n Capistrano 10 Unit Money Maker lO'x20' fn mlly rootn' Sl'!>-I iiiiijjjiiiiijj-jjjiiiijjjiiiiiijjiiijjjji-iliijiiiiiijjiiiiijjiiijljiiiijjjiiiij Pllr dining 1"()0111 arid hull!· 11 Arti.~t ~ \l'ri1rr"' l.n11frr? 'You 'll love !he 11uirt i·anyon lot·. J1nnu1.c. 3 BR .. drn, h 1~h bean1 <·r1l111,1ts. shake 1~1of. l.ll1\l cnre in & ouf. SGOOO J")(,J1v11. Un iversity Rea lty 3001 E. Coast /hvy. 67:{-6.510 ~1·hools .t· frrrways. $29.!"ll)). PLL'S mu•·h n1orc 111\•ai!s C:tn srll f11A or VA .. vour pleasure in !his 3 hcrt- ii~;;rJ.'i7 11ftrr :=.:]} r~t. rnon1 family mon1 hon1,.. in ----------·! a prin1e l()(·ation. Full prier Fountain Valley only S3l7JIJ. No do1rn Cl !ri-n1s. I\'ICllOLS Real Es!a1e 2025 SouTh Coiist ![Ivy 494~7220 ON 1hc beach. Laguna Roy;ile. 2 br, 2 b11. con- don11n1um, huge patio deck 11•!1h .~urf. sea & coa~t l1n(' vie1vs. E levator to pool & beach. Consld<"r 2 yr le11sr at $625 furnished. As king $-17,900. 537.<l;'i!O. alt 7 & \\•knds. •19!}-3992. CASrTAS CAPISTRANO The mosl popular model'. Tv.·o bcrlmon1s, 2 hath!. w1rh largr pallo. All on onr floor. \Veil !l)('atrrl a"'·ay from lhe fN'r\1•ay. Lt" your ('qui1y ~rn1v. Local- f'rl in prin1e Ea"t~lrl(' rental arc-a. Clnsr 10 c.olf rourse. 5 ind1\·1du;1! 2 hdnn. hrinies. 11·i1h bram crilings and brick fireplares. Also 5 barh. quar!C"rs. Income ove r $1 2.MO per yC'ar. Listrrl at $89.500. Owner lllil! srll or trade ror lat'Jl'er properly. h1 !';lcp-sa.vC'r k.it<"hrn. Nor1h Costa. 1\1esu kw:atlun. Jusl 11111('<! II $28,000. Can'I lt1.sl- Calt 540-115J (Opf'n l::\'<'S) If Contemporary i.!! yriur ha.I{, call us 11 hout this 1'.-rrl llng D F: AN E ~;ARDEN 1101\1E. A f<'1v (If !hr n1any o 11 1 !! t a n rl i n R fr11111rr~ Ar'!': ~arinR 11n11d 11nd he;1n1 r11thrrlrttl rri!1n~. :t hrdroon1s 111!h l1txur i(1u~ TllllSl<•J' !llll!r, f II 111 fl II ~ tH·'.1\,,..: 1 :ART>t·:N 1.;1r. <'Ill-'..._, l:n111!Hl Ra!h 111!h p1'11 :~11' ntriutn, ,\.~D 1!s BEAUTIFUL BAYCREST POOL PLUS - 4 Rcdroo n1s, 3 ha's., f;;in1ily rn1 . d ining rm. Bc<1.m ceili ngs in livin g areas. Servi ce area 1n ho111e. Soft \Va ler cquipn1cnt. Buil t-in cen· tra! vat·11un1 cleaner; clCl'. ,c::irage door open- er. Ga s BBQ under covered patio. next to pool. Ne\v heater & filtc·r & all pool equip· n1e nt. 21s c·ar garage . ll eavy shake roof. All located on n1 ost drsi rablc sl reel in Ba_v· crest & built bv Ivan \\'ell/.. Fee si111ple land. Asking $79.500. Cal l for arp't. lo see. CHILT ROBINffi Realtor 644·7958 OPEN DAILY 1~5- fil4 LAftKSPUR. 2 BR ., ne1llly c111·1w1t•rl. CR n budrf 2nd unit . \\'alk !n mark<"I.~ ra11 P;it \Vontl 548·0201 . '-"·rnir Propf't11<'!1 6i5-5726 -----------LO VELY \IC'I\' rif Ca taJ 111n & h11.~ 11r~•a. Cu.~rnn1 h111 !1. \\'rl! lncn!rrl. 2 R1•dr111 11/hltl j'Wll. n1111!(l(lr l\'f'I har .~. 1-:11s BBQ. Bra1J1lf11I ("(llld. Ca!I 1111·111'r ;11 ti4·l-!:1:{(i. J'ru1('1pal~ fll•I)', ~----JRVr~·~; Trr1', 1 RH .~. f.111i. hui.:-11 fpl. Ii,: .\d Si.i.:oo. c H. !\;111 1"1'.~S ]t<',1]ly . 6!2-1 !S."i. -. -· - VETERANS WINDFALL \'011 mu~t sec this <"Iran 4 SHERWeeo RE,o.i.zy 189f>4 Brookhurst. \ f".V. BR 2 BA hon1<' -ll is VA ''Two Story Home. appraiscd at S.'ll,500. O\vner O S p , ,. 11' pay yQur r!osinh COl'lS, ne tory rice anrl no rlh111n payrnl rC'q 'd. \·ou'I! l'njoy !he kirl~ unstairs Pn;o;s1h\r rarly JJ.1sscss1on -\1·hile yn11 slf'1•p priva!rly in ('all today. 11 :;unkt'n n1astrr ·ui lr rln11·n l' illage Real Estate 962-4471 l ~~: ) 546-81 Ol ---• RATED X e fnr \lr;i largr f11111i!y rm. 11· hu11!-1n har. c;n·111 for pnrt1P~ k PntPr11tin111~. t rr- J!1·adPr! ··t'PIS, f)l\Jl!'l111g and s!:11rs. cnjor fann!y IO.t::f'lh· r rnrss 1n thP s•'pl!ralr fan1- ilyr(l(lm. \~':Uk 10 SC'hools. b1- ryf'lr to 11<-ach .......... .. Call 114i-2:1:r1 dr1'nr:1tnr n11rrnrs niakr 1h1~ $20,500. :i BR hon1r ll)flk hke a1J Bed rm . -J l/4 Bath n1rnlrl. Only 1 1~ yrs old. Crp1s., d1·p .... , bar stools, fnut l ido Isle 4 BR. 3 ha 7QxS.S $123,f)OO 3 BR . 3~, ba. f<1n1 rm, pool nn. rlin rni. .i0· Int ~~ri.~oo LIDO REALTY INC. 3377 \'I.\ I IJ)L 673-7300 --~ ----BAY FR f JN T Honr "''/dock $1.59,~ FEE'.' Br1!!1n;::-tia ni, RC'allor * 675-0123 * NO\\/ ONL \' S27,;.oQ CAPISTRANO VALLEY REAL TY 31501 Can1ino Cflpistrano 493-1124 1 )4 Units • 6.7xGross Realtor Since 1965 i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill1r11u!1ful 11111ts I<"!'.\ th.in l \·r !Jlrl SrhC'dlll('rl inrnme 01·~r S245.000 per yr. Full pri<'e Mobile Homes Mobile Homes For Sale I ~ 125 ~-c-,,-,._-~~~~ MOVE RIGHT JN Sl li,~,000. Srllrr \111! t11ke S2!"J().000 rlo\1'11. i1·1ay takl' twach JJIUJl('rly for part of tquity. 65 Units Near Harbo r * 'r.6 S;ihara 20x50. 3 RR . And Baker 1nt11lly 1111rroundf'd h.I' 11 i 12 Generar Genera l fl pt'll'IH'y 11:dl. ()It 1 y ';;;;;:;-;;;:;:;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;------------;';;;·. IRVI NE TERR. VI EW Chann1ni.: 2 Hr & <l"n -2 R11. !dr at for !1111. SJ7.~ro. T ~;j) HUBEIIT & ASSOC' :1·171 V111 L1rlfl fii:).ll."100 Century 11 841-4474 trees. \\'Ork bench. Loads nf BEAiJTY°"4 br, 2 ba, rn1 rm, ccn1e111 .... ·ork 11·i1h nags!nn<' p;tl10 & brick B·B-Q. Xlnl ---.1 RR all hllins, i;kirting, 8:o..2l rorrh, i;fnr-Grnss 1n<"omc over S140,nno. agr sheds. Fan1ily park. Gross sprnrfable app. JO'i. near D11na Point Mnrin11. tn!11l rloJl;ir invrst1nrnt re· $41.~j(l. Cl.Ill iiT3-Ki.'")I"}. • OPEN HOUSE2-5 -a-THE BLUFFS ARt: you lil"f•t1 nl tho~ rnrl· lrll.'l ,1tarrlrn1ni.: rhnrcs~ Thrn Cllll Ull lor 11n ll~f)tllll!TIH'lll 111 llllllll'<'! lt1!S :J ll<'Ch'fllllll ··o ndo rn I 11I u111 111 tht' BLUFFS. 1<0011111 ar<' li;.:hl It.JU.I Jll)ll\'IOU5 Rlld !Ii(' !1lro l)tl lin is ·~n111lr!rly 11rlvfllf'. $4G.OOO. !ir.1-49:\0, G-10·00~. NEW LISTING Larftc 4 hdrn1 .. 2111 hRlh t::a..'!I· bluff vie"'' hon1r . C1tll nur ottice for t•o111111r1<' detfl1 ls. ornu:td. . .'.at Sot9.500. CORBIN- MAiTIN ' REALTORS 644-7662 I ' • $'25,750 NO dOWtl tt:rms, 11· bedroom. 2 beU) boml/ fll"Cl~f!d llV· lnp room en.nanct.'O' by "'"' Pt1tllfli.!irepl11ct'. p8tio. Jr. e111tale ~lwd ground•. Air cnndJlit".IM.r. NNLr achools /. 1hopplna. ~J'l'lO , : T A RBELL LIDO ISLE WATERFRONT 220 LIDO NORD Corona dC'l fl1er duplex. :\ Hd1·n1., 1 Bdrn1. 3(1:) Iris. O"''nl'r/Agcnt. 6i5-02.lll. HARBOR VIEW J.lomes - Popular bdrm + rlen. pro- fcl.iiona.l lY lanrlsca.pcd. 111r;c:c Jot. $47,500. 644-1815, 011·n"r. LUSK 2 story, 5 br, 4 ba , 3 frplc, j!;recnbel! localion, fee land. Agent 675-7225 II.LR. Brand ne\v home. 5 bedrooms, 4 11~ baths, lovely \vallpaper & carpeting. La rge water· front living roon1 \11ilh fireplace . 2 stai r\''ays. Deck & Dock, Pri ced belo\v $200.000, Shown by Appointment BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR Costa Mesa 341 S.yside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161 Gener el STOP IN 192 Buoy. op('n d'nHy 1~ EASTSIDE COSTA MESA l:W11ut1ful 1'(rlttornled J bt'd· rrion1 2 bath hon1c, ~"'~hag rrp!~ & dq~. Uvlng le din- ing n11 + M"parale fam\Jy rn1 11 ith \11rgc brlt'k f~ pLRf'c. 1 ... '\ri:t' IMrU· ·.t patio for cntrrtainiJ1i. ~oner tr1111~fl'rrrd, Only $.tJ.500. Lo"''• Jo1v ~11: Lachenmyer Realtor Ul60 Newport BIYd., C.M, Cell 646-~ !,'\·rs. 673-'575 WALK TO OCEAN 4 BEDRM., l BATH $25,500 R<'nl sh11r11 beach hon1t'. i'oi'il'l' "h1t{I: <t1trpel, buill-fn RfO pluJ rli1hv.•&t1r .. pal\o, W11.lk to AthoolA I.· ti.hopp1nit. All term111 . Cail. 847-1.721 Generit l INVESTOllS CAMEO SHORES $92,500 UNITS! UNITS! 4 B" 4 Ba, Pool. Swo<p;og oceanvil'w, Apack>us & elc· BEACH AREA gonl. Luxurlo"'ly •ppl 'd. 1)(111'f t11iss 1his rnrr bargnln Exclus.lvc llstina - • Li't lrn.1n!.~ pay your rent! ~ \rrry spari4JU!> unilll. Ckist ·:"'~ to Ot'f'rin. r.'\l't!I ,;tvle kltch-[a '~)&ff <'ns -fully e<Juip~ -ovens, .-~f -\o 1 U t1'n,l.!C!I and rl'(l"igf'rl\fllrll! ''"" ~/ Dining rooins~ 2 bedroom.~ ~! r-rca 11 y pj'r unil . Ganien 11 k f' ':.6.,,:. grounds. Extr emtly anxillull 241 4 Vh1Ja Del Oro 011rn('r JUST' REDUCED Newport Beach PRICE 1'0 ONLY $27,<XXl! 644-,11;13 AN\"TJME Call at once • 545-6303 I --~~--~--- I OKI\ I J Ol.,O\ "'' '4 < ! CR I -HILLSIDE - WITH A VIEW 3 BR .. 2 BA., forn1nl dtn rm., huge lo!. VACANT! ~111'1 aell ! $3>,250, t'or 1mn1, ct\11 • 846·'21181 .. RED CARPET RHllors 4 BR. $29, 900 Near Newport l!ls. on E. ltiJh St. A ft'W a!eps to park 11ntl plnyJ:rotlnd!!. 4 BR'., 2 ""· 811-ln~. FA healing, n('1t.' cpt/drps., largt> yard. A rood investm('nl. Let U!I 5how .vou this or olhcn In !his pric~ ran~C'. 11.f no obliption. CA L L G> 646 ·2414 At•'-. . Ta t ALTY N••r Nt w11•rt P•1I orrlte boa1 door. pool size-yd, \\lashr.r /DryC'r. Ne11' rrpt. frph'. 2-<:Ar garage. S~.000. Aft 6: 497-1076. * 16x45 Double Exp11ndo turn o'·<'r 35%. Li:<1!f'f! price Trailera111a, fully skirlerl, $980.000. C'U~l1Jn1 frpl<', palill, 22x3S. HAFFDAL REAL TY n11 nrr. S~2.9:i0. 962-4913. -----~----·1 g,12-440.'i Hunting1on Beach Eves: 96R-9006 Mesa Verde porch, slora11:e sh('ci. Chil- <lren &. pe!s OK. Beach lll"C'fl. OPEN Hou sc-0\lln<'r. Sat 10· * '65 Re~f'nry 20x58. 2 BR & $20,900. NO DOWN TO VETS 5. Sun 1-5. 4 Br, den, form. den. 9:-:21 cabana wl"''OOCI-CALL lTI41 ~1600 Bring p11int iin tl elhow gl'('ase, 3 Bdrm., hardwood floors, R· din rm, prol. deco r &: burning lirrpl. Skirts, a1vn· TNVESTfllENT DIVI SION FIXER UPPER nnd savr dollars in lhis 4 2 lot. A steal. Call 84a--t46G. landscpcl. Xtras. A dd t d lngs, Garden, fully land-I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii hrrlmon1 in a finf' neighbor· storage. water so f r n e r . scaped. Dc!.irable family INCOME UNITS hood, VR<"anl for ln1 m~I many others. $45,750. 2030 park nrar beach. DUPLEX • 2 BR ea .. fire- occur. Only SZ!l,IXXI. Submit Baltra. P t. 540-0204. * l0x50 Maynowcr, All elec-place, crpts, drps, garages. ynur term.~. C11.ll 540-8555. tric kitchen, Bltn washer $34.950. RF.AL ESTATE SHERweeD REAL TY 3 BR, 2 BA. l5x30' encl. Newport Beach & dryer. Dana Point. 18964 Brookhurst, F.V. . C ts d b . k * '69 Champion. 1 BR. front TRIPLEX --S QUICK $ ~~~·Cl~ '10 ~:ry~hfn~! ~ porch. full sklrts, paflo 3 BR. 11., Ba. fircpt. dbi gar B utl I W •. s~ 1• cover, carport. Lndscp'd, and 2-2 BR un ils. $49,950. WE BUY HOMES 129,500. 84S.5769. Own.r. ea •~ Ad"II Pa.k. Co•Ia M•M. Mr:.. t(~"v\BI AN 11 .. 7.!16()4 IMMAC. 4 BEDRMll f'ferc's ju!!t under2,000 sq.fl . * 8x27 Aljo, New awning!!, KASABIAN *SPANISH DECOR* of comfort afid luxury ,,.ith Restored Interior. New Medallion kitch~ shag crpts! huge btxirooms, 3 beth!., furnace &. wtr heater, $5.S prof lrlll('pdf xtra.s! p:d tnns! m11gnil.k-en l shag w/w car-mo rent. Garden Grove. 8 UNITS HAFFOAL REAL TY pcting, And bea u 11 f u Ii * h45 New Moon, Complel-Comer location. Sl00.000. GOVERNMENT 842-4105 Eves: 968-9000 ground!!. Best buy In the ely furn. s45 mo rent. Roy McCardlt Realtor Atta at llniy $45,IXXI. If you Buena Park. OWNED FOR u.lc by owner, l mi. to have befon in mililary scr· * '6.1 12:4.55 Angelus. 2 BR 1gio Ne\vport Blvd., C.M. Fl!A & VA repossessed beach, 4 Bdrs, 3 Ba, 2500 vice. Alive your c11.sh and buy with add-a-room 7x20. ,.,,~~--~71'7•2•9-..,.~ Townhouses & homes. Low Sq, Ft. Principles only. GI NO 00\\'N PAYMENT, Westmin11tcr a.rea. No l= clown, No points or E8CroW m rioo. 962-898.1. reasonable offer refused. PRIME UNITS tees. Gllv't payJ closing I"°-==~~-,--~~~ * Udo Peninsula. jw:t a few SIX 2 BR, 2 BA 11pt1. -near costs. All price ranges. Call 1 BDRM Twnhse, Sl<l,995. stepa: fnlrn the 'water. Ask Westclif~ Shopping Center. 968-4441 ASS'U me S~ '-" FJ{A loan. about this, less Ihan BH·ln kitchens, f r p I c 's , CREST REALTY Prin . only, -1413. 1 B 1 . $12.IXKI! arge r .. aundry. Seasoned ,,,,,,..,=...,,,,..===== lrvlM • Many other near new A: new adult tenanta:. Good return HEART OF EVERYTH'tNGj;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o *3 Westcllft Drive ,..Obi.le homa available. + tlUC 11helter. $135.000 with Col"'11<,.Cen1or, Frwy., Sch1' CHAM,PAGNE TASTE 646-ml Open 'tll 9 PM Many Eagor lk!)>en! Oexible tenru, &.lpenor d e.c o r a t J n r ~ ThlJ beautifully decorated W!: BuY -SEl.J.. -TRADE lnd1epg. Be proud of this nd rofculronally land-R Raf'• Trailer Salts hoc.uostb loweon JA. one! ~ BR .. 2 ~Aw/a hap-:C:a.pl!dp"Yae" townboJuse la TIME FO lmJ Bellch Blvd, St&nlon 34"", Via u""00°1'°" py ktlch $33.950. A11k for . uo.i. 11 "' 615-4562 CY nt h \" . KATE L L A • 1~'',!tla~le ,,J~s~t:J~:~ QUICK' , CA' . SH =-~*,....,*,,-.,-:'/89.'l-=_,,1.,,34_1~*,.*~ _T_l_M--E--f-0--'-1'-"=I 841-<061 Eve ~ :lllx57 l,'LAMINGO. l bdnn ., · ~ · hu~ master bcdrootn sul!e. • one Is k.ing-11ize. 2 h11 th, VALENTINES p11.rlC'UM fan1ily room ancl • d AND ROSES f~rn1nl dining roon1 all r.oni· THROUGH A ;;s~~~s~r. : ~:ys~~ QUICK CASH \Vouldn't pll'i.k' he:r rMrr bulf' lo produc:t • symphony t dn t ~~~:,";;; ..::~:n ~n~.~ 'j u.edllvl ... h·11 DAJLY PILOT ~:-~~w l'Vk'.°'P.~ ~~ THROUGH A J'O llo Jn !ho, .. , yud P"' . ' r I WANT AD I =F:sr=ATE~sA=LE-: ~S--I•n DAI LY PILOT vlde.oi: year-toun<I tnjoymtnt. , f\i obile. Hom~ II 1tt. cabaN Your' children ca.n w11.lk lo 6 UNITS on 1-2: acre lot. $69,500. St-:YMQUR REALTY 111J1 Rf"11<'h Bl vd .. llun! &h O..•nlrOnt Duplex QulpJ bomt Itta. Nffds I~ famll.)i. S98~500. OROSE RE.ALT\' tin -:t012 Tbe rute:1t dnl• UI the Wesl a Dl\Uy Pilot Cluslllcd \ i 642-5678 -. ~Ln' "'/dtsired furnl8hing11 on w NT AD ;~'1C:~1o~rk1 uvm •tll Univ, PIJ'k Centtr, tMline 642-5678 beaut. lo! in Laguna Hills A Century 11 142-4474 C..11 A""lme. &l.l-0820 P8'k, 532-2511. • 1-------- • ; -..... -· ..... .., 14, !'72 Dolli Y PIUIT • ~~ I~~[ -_ ... -_J~ [ -·--I~ ·~ 1---·c.._·_·_~:-~_,._ .. __ I ~ l Hil I _ ...... Income Property 166 Money to Lo.an 1------'---240 Houset Unfurn. 305 Hou101 Uftlum . Townhou•• Unfum. US JOS A.ptt. Furn. .. ~ Apts. Fum. MO -....;. _______ Apt. Uftlurn. 345 Apt. Unfum. Newport Booch Coste MeM 7 HOUSES Lake Forest Costa M.aa Costa Meu Irvine LAKE:SIDE Park. new, 3 Br . . . . on 2 lot:!l, downtown Co.~111 ~fesa. S87i monthly 1n. <'fltne. $10,000. do\1·n. llurr~. 1'1'..l!1'1 !:s~i· On !;· - 1st TD loans ~Go __ .... __ ., __ _ HOME FOR RENT OR LEASE OPTION 6% 1ib INTEREST , BR 2 L-"'300 C'rplg, dJi>s, air ooDd., o~·. · ..... ••·•• ······· .. b!trui, dbl carport, enc Unbeliev•bly S.autiful VAL D' !SERE Gardt>n Apls. Adults 7 no j'l('l.S. Flo.,,..•ers l!Veryv.-hf"N'. St.N".?tm !: \Vah.•11al1, 45• pool Rec. Rm. Saun11.. Sgls 1-2 Brlrn1. Furn- Unfurn. from Sll5. SEE IT: 2000 Parsons. 642-8670. + • OCEANFRONT 3 Br, 21 -i~iiiiii Ba. Dt-luxe. \Vinter. Adult's!-iiiiii LRG 2 BR. New only. No pe!.$. 67l-SOSR. HARBOR dra~s $130/mo. 2nd TD loans ~ Bt"drrn tn N. Costa l\lcsa. Shake rnor. N'tll('nt d1·1ve. Pnrt of rent will aply !o the (101vn paynit•n t - ~ RR., 2~ baths ••· ·•· SJ.50 pa.I kl, lndry rm, yd, "'"Ork 3 BR , 2 ba. horn_. •• $._"1001:l.'\5 & I ~ · 1~ Newport Heights .. .. >18-7209 • * incl. Pool a""' pnv. .vu. '.I litt., 2 ~ ha ......... $:~ i21J) 327-1851 oollf!'<'t. J BR, 'rll Aug ......... $400 _c.;:._;c__:c_____c___:._ __ $79,500. 8% in t. based on equity. CLEAN l or 2 BR . Adlts. no petS. lg kit, $125-$150, 2121 E: 16th St. :-.IB. &H>-HIOl. TOWN HOUSE 1-~-:;-·,-:-~"'-.,,,.-.. --vie-w -•• ,, PF.P.nON HF:,\LT\" 6·12-177! li£17 Oran~r A1·e., (' ;\f. £""1r,.22-1J°"t:LL'Xt--:--;;nli_""";", rnmn11 t1f'l \far, N'p1 Hl'fll'h !V-IJ r1r Px1·hang<" &l i-li\ 11 The lr.,,..·1n Co. H.f'Kl1<lr.( 111 L'n1on R:1nk TOl\t'r lilfl :'\"pt ('f'nlPr f1r , N B. Also NE\\! ~5'1~ o! salc-prit'e loons Sattler M tg. Co. 642·2171 545-0611 Serving llarbor area 21 yrs. LOAN available for bu~iness expans1 (l n , operaling r apll;d, etc. ~1r. Cline 303 : 232-1814 28 UNIT 2 ,If,, l Rr, 2 Ba. Nr ~hnr'r.: ~y Wanted 250 112"11 Ell is Avf',. JIB. S420 M. JNVESTO!i \\'anied. Earn _:;!17·3~57. J11gh return • joint venturE' !'l:J.\11:: Ba!IY!a ~-p!x 1~ blk I nn <'nnst,-uctli:>n. 833-9595 ~~·h.. Si5J.OO, r1. Sfill.000 Mortga ges ALSL) :'I Bcrlrm hnnlt'. Colle.1:e Pnrk. Nice sh~ crptg. $2-40, per IJlO. 546-9521 OR 540-6631 Nichols Real Estate Corona del Mar NR ocean. 3 BR , 3 BA . cif"n. rlln rn1, h!!.ns, bean1 Cf>tl· ings. lrplc, $·100 I st'. 673-3-in. Costa Mesa (ired hill REALTY Un iv. Park Ct'nter, Irvine Call Anylimt', 833-0820 Laguna Beach ~.,.._...,.,_.. ··-LAGUNA NIGUEi. 4 bdrm. 2 bi'!. tiv rn1 & rlining l'll'<'ll. f;irn ily rn1, frp!, buil1 -u1s. carprls, drapes, fenred & )>11rinklcrs. 2-car gar;;igP, ilnn1ac. $310 n10. lsr, lasr Ne wport Beach * AOL'LTS PREFERRED * 3 BR. 21 ~ ba. hJ1"ns, "'''""' crpt. 2 carport.s, pool. $27j HE1\LTOR 5-18~966 Duplexes Unfurn. 350 B a lboa Peninsula S.\1L redec. l Br. tluplex. Brick (rp!, ~am ~11. priv p.a.!io. $140. l 11dH, no l)('t. .~36 £. 20th. ~.>-1317, • I BR deluxe S139. Priv pa!10, tropical riool. Qu \"t 145 E. 18th St , Apt 10. T\\'0 3 Ar . 2 Ba., llf'w &l,}-5-129. 1h1pll':>.. Annual lt>ase Bit----------- in:., 1·rpts, drps. lrplc. * \\'INTER RATES * 673-.ll-19 or 67~3l4. Attrac furn Studios S\Jj , 1 Costa M esa BR's $125. Adults, no pell!. 2135 Eld<'n, ~lgr. Apt 6 :ian Cltmtntt I Bl OCK PIER I Complr\t>ly furn1sh!"rl & !m- n1acula!t'. 2 Rr"s. 2 bAth5. 2 pnflo~ & garagl', A\·atl Yearly. S'~l(XJ NU-VIEW RENTALS 67.1-1030 or 49-1-3248 A pt. Unfurn. 365 Back Bay 2217 lfarbnr, near \\'Hst1n bar, din a.Ala, bv rm, la;e br 2 BR, l \1 BA STUDIO &·bl. Balcony, oew sha.ll: cpl 'J'O\\'NllOUSF.. $140/nio. & d111S, bllns & retriJ:, $16.'i., • llr11.ted Prool-Nr. Shnp'g S37-J92'7. S37-5178. Adult' only, no nat1 -D-,-_L_U_X-.-,~B-R-~.~,--,--1 r-. . uUpt'X, .... ,; Forced air hrn11n1t 2 rhtlclrt>n \\'l.'1<'11m" llol & ('O!rl 1vnrer furn 3 Bdrn1, 2 Onlh . $150 Car[lf'is an.1 rlrapcs Bu1H·in !ilove Carporl ·~talJ ~howt'r rlf'n, Ocl'an \'\J, 1650 sq ft 2 frplc's & sundt"<'k.~ \\'~l bar. S:r.i.1 mn. ll.\/~7-1457 East B1uft EASTBLUFF XL.NT Location.2 Br lft'att"d Laundry roon1. ~-ridr-VHt"<1n1 li7~S32i. , Trust D;eds 260 Lots for Sa le 170 e RARE lndf'ed-1 Rr, st1•f ref. 1n!anr nk. All util 1n1• $110. and deposit. 495-4244. Cl!EERf'UL 2 br. separatf' ~~~~"-'--'-'--~I FURNJSJ-IED 2 Br. apt, util pd. Sl70/nl0. 2Z77-B :O.lap!e St. !>-IS-5913. Pool. No fJf'tS. Rer.'!. Call F'PnCf'rt yaf-d. Nn fW'l !i >ls-1'45 MESA VILLAGE Apts. 2 Rr. 2 ha upstairs \'1f'1v 11;pt. ll\l'J"H"ll'd. rlraJX'rl. hltns. 2 rnvr~rl parking ~pa t•es . .1116 "O" Amigos. S250 n10, y1•fl rl.1· 2 TRUST DEEDS; $27,000 ls! LAGUNA NIGUEL 3 BR. 2 dining. RPsp cpl. No Ba lboa Island 1046 El Ca m ino O r. •A • • '75.,oso Q ..... lll'lfMllf ct.,K GOLF COURSE LOT 'J'D at 7"; inl. sf>HSOned. RIG CANYON I s 1:,.~i00 \st TD. 5-16-.1676 or ALA Renl a ls e 645·3900 BA. Jiv & din areR. frpl. bit· chi 1 d I p f' t . j ~ 5-6 4 I 2. irl,S(' cpts, drps, 2-car gar. 6-12-9139. l BH furn apt., adults, no pets, 687 Victoria. * S.18-f.13S * 546-7331 LGE. 3 Br. 2 Ba, frplc. nrl---------- So. B11y. Ne1vly 1°fllf'C. $.iOO SIJ'f'f'I 10 Fain1 ay a.IS-9710. 17.748 sq. fl. ·-~~~~~~~~~~ ~~jlJ.7ll I O!" 64<\·7777 ;:. ~ CllOICE Joi 100 '>.:lZJ', R-2. l __ "°'"_'_'_'°'_"_'"_'_] ~ pa 1·" rl 11Jlcy. 3i:;1 E. . · e I !ARD to brat'. 2 Br, huge r yrd, kids smJ per. $1:15. ALA Re ntal1 e 645-3900 sprnklrs, vie1\•, paved stor· age arC'a for campcr·boat. lmmac. $285 mo -!st, last & dep. 495-4244. NORTH ENO I Ap1rtmenU for Rent l ~ 2 Br, lg rn1s, pool. nr shnps, util pd. Adults. IS84 r.Ion· rovia, C'.\1. 548-0336. e NEW DE LUXE e 3 BR, 2 BA Apt for lea~. UNUSU,\L I BR. duf)lf'x Inrld spac. nia51er s\1he, din Lirr lsl. $27.'l yf'a dy. Sl11 •t'f' -21-mi & dbl garage; auto door n10. !l7 Diamond. 675-.12AA. IUeSliBJlll Hochc~1e r St, C.f\'i. Short \1rtlk to lilh St shopping r1ur. 521.i :>O. 673--9509. JOO \\!ANTED: to !l'asc 2 Br housf'. Rrsponsihle f'Ollplf', nn ehitd. no Pf'ls. 5'JJ .J37~ or 836-1?.()5 Pves. ~Ir. Jon Gihr.on 2 BR. Duple)( iv/privacy & •. Apts. Furn. nice \•ie11·! NP111 carpels "" l BH !urn apt, uti\it1t>s in- cluded. SltO. Oldt>r tenant. 6•12-6560. n1mr1ng avail. 673-7171' Al'ARTf\TENT~ opener avail. Pool&. Recre. --'--''-------·l:Z l~R. )1 , BA ........ Sll'O. 11;tio n area. Ba lboa Peninsula 3 l~L· ·1 8 2 n. _ A .......... S 55. e $175 e Houses Furnished pain!. \Vasher & dryer. Ge neral 2 BR, l Ba., ne11·ly rPd<'r ~Al.SO A\'All.. Fl lRN .1 865 Amigos Way, NB ----Mobile Home/ l.ieneral S1 nglf' g a rage, Good 'iiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiii 3 RR . Nc11 rrpl!<, I}('\\' Ulf', strirar.(' S200. • nl.'11· drps. Fneci }ard. QtH<i NU-VIEW RENTALS A 1 AR . Duplex. Qui1>t m11turf' ndults. Ref's. Unlurn $13i Furn $1-13. :>IS-8007. $2'.5 Nr. ocean f..-n.~y. No Ne w adult g arden Apts. l\1anaged By rhilc!ren nr J>f'!~. tii3-959\. 151 E. 21st. 646-8666 \\'JLLIA!\I Y.'1\LTERS 00. Trailer P a rks EASTSIDE Hrra. S200 n10 , on leasf' No 67.~.-40:~0 or 4!1-l-32·18 Bold New Concept Df:SEHT CREST I STA s ! [ ! . I 011·n )our 011·n Int CO ME A t" ll t ren, 00 sing "s · 1:\1;\IAC. :l BRR· fam. room, 172 2 RR . Furn. $1 j5/mo. Adul ls, no pels. 820 Cent('r S!. &12-5848. Corona de! Ma r BAY MEAOOW APTS NVEllWPGORTdBEAACH , ..................... --------. ..... ---• 1 a rana a pt1. I Golf, CLUBHOUS E, 1\""atur-Rrnl 11! Slfl5 or op!ion lo huy. 5-l~jS,'iO. 2 BA .. cp1s., drps .. b!tins .. ,d 1101 Pools. $3!"191l. 1n :1 twdroom. 2 bath. doublr CHOICE E. s1(!f' 3 hr, den: p11noramlC' canyon vif'11•. Si:!!XI Free R1'.)<'hllr<'. garage, f<'nc•ed yarrl, ne"' boat 11ccess. Near schnol.-. $300. 30:10 '.\fountain V1rw J-.:LDrtlDGE llEALTY CO . shag earpets, freshly rain!-Nr1v shag. Children .~. pc ls , Dr., Trip or \Vorld. 49-1~!18-1. P. 0. Rox 61l6-0 f'd. Call BrokC'r 5'15-!H!ll O.K. $22.'i 64&-10l7. SEVERAL large :l & 4 RR Desert lln! Srwin•:s. Calif Open Evt>s. REDECORATED insirit' ,i;, hon1C's now fnr !ea~C'-$260 1n __ fi~3~~411 Sl<IO !UR sngls OK ot•!. 4 br 1f4 bath. 2 r<1r' $315. Property i\tanagrn1Pnt M ountain, Desert,--S il~ ulit pd, Collage, vac. garage. S200 mo. S.l&-o259 Div .. Lingo Rr;il Estatf' Resor t 1]4 $135 lra1l<'r, C.!\l. rla ys or 6'15-{)263 eves. tn\'<'S!nien1s, 49!l-3J:l0. ~~25 ~13~ t~,;~ C/'l· 1 J BR. l ha. crpt, 'vatt'r furn. :-.10P ~:R:'>l3-E:R'.-28,\. **BIG BEAR LAKE SHIO "1<..:1 1· 1 ~ h u ~ ~n Encl yard. Close t n ~1·,u1mo. C'rrt, rirr~. l"ll 'nc . •FISH 8 .Hunr • Ski ct Rf'· I 979.~4J0P(' ac PAGE NT I f'\'f'1-y11ring . $210. 546---0-l'Jfl. _ ;il r1u111. dhl r:irfl(i1'1. Avl I l11x , In t h1~ ~ ~rri!'n~. 2 sln_i·~· .1 BR 1 BA. g;ir. fcncrr:I ynrrl ;\\·11Tli 1 l!'!l-~1·16\ '"~h1n. ONl.'i .~10,.Klo'.). l -Z B ... lboa Isla nd $200. n10. "J:li. 1 131,-:-1irf'pla~2-('l\1" FURNITURE RENTAL 3 BR, I BA. Nt>I\' r a1n t. rrpts 2 ~r. hf'an1 rPthngs. rir1v pn· Fou r bedrooms \vith balcon-,d· & drps, beam cC'1hng. frplc. Ill). l'f'<'-fncil., elosrd ~nr-lrs above & belo1v. Gracious .... , rangr, \'l'(rig, ha 1 r n n y , agr. r.as h('at, c·onkin~ ,t· living & qu!et ~urroundini: JI' l\1on1h 1n l\·lonth SOO·l Br rfurlex. 1 adull non-garage. Ocrans1rle of !!Ivy, ivn!rr ?11 pd. A.II adults, rlfl fnr fami ly ivith children. smoker. Stove, ref rig drps. Adlt non -smokers. $285 per pets. 1' tu m SHi.l. Nl'ar Corona dcl lo.far High l * 100% Purchase Optio:1 No ""ts, deposi!s, Ref. 954\V JS 7 \\I B St C r-.t * \\1ide Selection. ··~ nio. 642-5531. · ay ·• · School. Fireplace, wet bar & • ]71h 645-3787 u"XLifilOtiS'fi;:e;;;:h!C;g.;;.l--~c::·~ll_l6~16~-~00~7:1~--b ilt . kl h 1· Style-Colors "--"-'-'-'-'-------I LUXURIOUS French Regen . ~ ·In tc en app Jl\nC'es. * 'I Ho"' D"i''·"-Dana Point 3 ,_. 2,, b lh 835 AMTGOS \VAY 6-1-1-2991 ,,, " ' ~·J <'Y. uo:uroom, 1• 11 New Villa R ivi•ra Cold II B k Co. FI D .. R we, aner &: ~ irep ace. in1ng ~ oom 2 Br. 2 futl Ba l\fanaglng Agent ri\[ J¥.!U!TO~E ~:1 LIVE IN STYLE ! laundry. $400. Agt. 675-4930 . families Wclconle l=--~.==~==--L~ ~NTA~ ~ I Now Ope n -All New Adults only. Shai: cpt/drps, patio, beam Fountain V•ll•v 2 BR., Bltns. \\'alk to l'f'il. 1<flr,1gf's , Nice Arca Ne.wly palntal. U A DI U A INN beach, Sl!XI. Oran~n Co:is! 622 llanllllon, Cl\1 l...11rgt> 2 Br., Kit. hltn1., ~17 \V. lfllh, C'.\-1 ~-18·3,181 ITT ~m.. I\; Re.al Estate. Call : 64·1 --IM~ Sef' l\1gr l\1r. & fl1ri;. Hohan $13:.i. MO. Call 549-1704 ,'' 2i~1h N. '·l;•1n. 'f.1\ .1-lT-0.11•1 ~ ~""" ' * ~"till r,_]..,dC'rn hilrhcns ,,.Jo·.:<~12 1 I * 1-'rr" TV * l.inf'ns lncl'd 'fRIPLEX, 1 .1·r old , '} ll'lr~f'IH·;u;n;l;i;n;g;lon:::;;Bo:;;;a;ch:;;:::;:;:. ~ * Pn(l! * Siiuna Baths ... -hrlnn!'. l1v111~ rn1 , rl1n1ni.::: I• lf'nn~ ll 11 nn'1 Ills!. I . · ' 646-~!!11 ,;•i·;r r•. hlork lro1n hrarti. l)lt THIS _ :.! S!ni")-r ixf'r-·I Hli h~n1e \1•11h .h~e. pa110 & 1 • -Balboa Island · l'l1f'{'r for ~fi.ijfl, r1rr 11·1th bcaut1ful v1e1v & 2 BR, crpts & drrs, g:ir1tr,f'. ~rt.J.(i'.;i:.!. ______ _ Cnll n riss 1fl1• liffl-17::~ 01. Sn R;i~·rron1. S-150 . nio. No p<>rs. 2 sn1;i!I ch1lrlrf'n 4-ll!~. 2 Bi\, Farn rn1. F.xef'. 11 nte SpPnl'l'r He;il i':~l;\I(', \\"1 nton R.E. 675-33.11 $14.i/nio 646-271!1. ::u·ea Crpt f..· 1!rp~. $32!1 n10. r.o. Box :2l:l21( B1 ~ Bf'ar Bal~ P e ninsula 3 BR, l:V. Ba .. Halern>~t ~:Jl-l ";"ll! ______ _ L.1kP, (';i!1fnrn1a. --.... al't'a. Crpts, flrps. Nr. ~hpg . Lido Isle , --- ---COZY J rni cottage nr hay. 102· l 961 "'6-1P Rt-: S T I G C: Lot·Hunn1ng -<> . ..case. -u .•. 1. ---------$1 0:1. rno. 1o 6/1. ·'lillurf'<l ~ I'" I' b I I So lh I Spr1n:;:s, f!o~r tn r1'1'!'f':t· I I " ,7,1162 r-.'.E\V 2 BR, 2 BA hnu~C'. E· " "' ~ (L ll"f'fl · u I I I ~ C er prl' . ,,n pris. ,,... na;~n. S300 1nn yrly l~f'. tion:i .<IC'I. ss .. ,,,, ash nr ~ldf' Cri~la .\1l'!>a . ,\dulls 011-,. Cos t a Me sa Av111I /\pr. 1. 61.i-j~J·I. 1 ;1~~1111u1 lonn. ;~io.ti92fl ly. $1flj. 1110. &J6.-S66J. --- 1 5 All1J·:s nr. /\nza. 11·!1', f'l f'c. LOVEl·.Y 2 Story, 4 Br .. 2 ' 2 Bt. lfouse. No. Prts. 56.500: SG5. On 63-1-iilO ii 10 I 10 A:\1. 53R·:!2S6 P:\1 . t\i;t . Ba . 1\1·1 n sinks, 2 n1ast. I 3.Ql E. 18th SI. Business Opportunity hfs, fr·plr, \\'3Sh/dryr1d1shes I Crill 6-12-0084 linens. Ln.: yd . lnq. oivncr. • BRIGHT & Cheery 2 Br. 1:_'1"\1_?;19-1~1:;, or Tennn r. nl<\ll)' closets. s!v n:'fng. 919-01-.i, !116 Denl'er Or., S150 200 R E SIDENTIAL BURGLAR/F IRE ~~_i\t. · , ALA Re nta ls • 645-3900 ALARM SYSTEM Hti!'r t1pportu111!y !fl !1\11ld a rr11f!l;1hl1 hU<;H1f'<;S ltl f1'1f' nf !llf' top i,:ro11•th 111rl11str1rs as 3 t!1sTrihu1nr/01•alf'r of a 1·r1·0!1111onr1ry, 101\' <'Ol"T, h111« gl;ir/f1rr al;1rrn sy~tf'111, f'n- J::Hlf'f'l'<'d f.. n1nr1u 1a~·turf'rl hy Da na Point e NEED tnore room? 3 Br. f yrrt, enrl gar, kids pe!:.. \l11d rrn k11chen l\'/bll·in bar. l S\85. 2 BR. FRPLC HOME Ir~. barh 11·/Roman !uh. ALA Rentals e 645-3900 c;00<1 clos<'lS & s1orage. 4 BR ., 2 BA. Double garaA"C'. \\"C'll-lurnished. S2;i}. 1-~ocd. yard. Clo~e to ~hops. NU-VIEW RENTALS park. S230 mo. !!6!i-fi070. fi73-IOJO or 4M-32-18 N11r1nn;tl !'w.~rn lur!u~!r1Ps, Laguna Beach ll~!rc! NY!'I·:. Con1plr!c ----------• BEACH Lovf'r-Bach pact. training. !'irnall 1n1·C'st-'~ hlk in beach. All util incl. I n1('n1 in invrnlory rl'qu1rrd. r-;n franrh1~f' fee \Vrilf' SllE. c;l·orgl~ Darro11._ V.P.. nr ALA Rentals • 645-3900 rail c·nll of'I (2J31 47.11.--0<Ml , I ;11111tln1P Gli/IRDlllN Sfn\rJrt: • !'I·:runtT'i' ~i'~TE;..ts fl" of (,•nt11 r1t1 ;\h•ld!<Taft • ON !hf' BC'ach -Fahuloui; Bnrh, All util incl. Consider pi't ~l 10. ALA Rentals e 645.3900 Hou sPs Unfurn. 305 I Cnrr. :ti.~:! S S1011er Al'f'nllf' G I Los ,\nj?C'lr-s. C'al !)(Xi25 e nera I A Pltl·:srn CO~IPAKY ---------- -1.\:"!lY :-ilil'f>LY-Rnt ·TF:° (-el =I ~ I \NII ~F:LLl:"G IN\"Cll.VED1 1-RENTAL FINDERS /'\HT r n FliLL Tl\11·; :: <1)5 w. l ttll, COSTA MES.A :-.On11· il\'t11l11hlf' 1n OrAn;:" I-Hous•s * Apts. 1·,111n•\ and s111'round1ni:: i--* 645 0111 * Arf'a~ Ynu rn:iy kl'rp Vll\11· I f::= - rrr<;t'nl j)(•~tll•)n All Jt'IC'a· Frl'r to U111d/11r1~ hnn" arc 1·on1n1f'rl'la) or fac" !n1'\J fur111shrd by 11 s Da na Poll'rt 2 BR. 2 BA. FRPLC Nitt housP 11·/b!t-ins, wlv" crp1s , rlrps, gara~l". Sn1aH lenceri yard. Children or singlf's ok. S2'1:i. NU-VIEW RENTALS 673-4030 or .jg.1-.12-lg Huntington Bea ch IS VACANT HOMES R t"nt W hile You Buy J .t· •I BR honlr~. snmf' w/pools, 1st nw. r lu:i1 S\00 rlrp. f\'10VF. IN NO\\"'. }'ron1 Sl:fi In $225 fl"T mn. Roberts & Co. 962-5511 e QUJf.:T Re!rf'al -1 Br nr hrrtch. furn, rp! drpl'. S1fl(I, ALA Rentals e 645-3900 • FREE\VAY!ianrly-2Br. l yrd, encl gar. Kids pcls. Mesa Verde ;\IE~A Vcrrle. 'Valk rt1o;, lo sh1JpS, -3 Bdrn1 , 2 h~, rlrapP5. crpls .. lrpl .. p;it1n. 1311/Ins. 837-8508. 5"6-2R26 Ne'.('parl Bea ch e STUD!'.:NTS! Oceanfront Bachelor, furn, Rll util 1nl'I S90. ALA Rent•ls e 64S-3900 e STEPS to bf'arh~ 2 1 Br. kids 'pels ok. All util inl'I Sl25. ALA Rentals e 645-3900 TIIE BLUt'FS. HoliQ.ay on the Cote d'Azurc, Pool. 3 Bit 3 BA & den. 50· dt'ck overlooking the bay below. Short term rental only. S3!Jj. -19'l-29i-l, &14-Ji36. Tl!I~ DLUf·r s . .i BR. 2 ha. Jrpl, S32:i. ~ BR. 21':1 ba , 1'ac<1 11I , $.'C:.Xl. 3 BR, 21~ b.3 . Super rleluxe. Vif'I\', s::ion. Rrokrr &i·l-1133 any11111c lli\RBOR VIE'\~ home -4 Br. ri1n, ran1 ,r., \I \", pool ,t club pnv1I . 181 £1 Porr Sterling. fii.i-0771. 3 BR & 4 BR . homes, nr11r hPach. Yearly lcaSf'. $325 ~10. each. Agen'. 5-18-1200. Lt-.:1\SE/op!lun. '2 hr & rlen . 21 z ha. some view. Anxious. AEent 675-7225 HIR Houses Unfurn. 305 Qu:il1f1cd JWr):ll/l \\ 1 11 tif't'fln1r rhstnhuror fnr nur r:1 nd)' ~:"\<'~!le~. Plar.trTs, Tr:.lt:,1(' Roll~. ~!ilk Durl~. ;\l •ll1 Sh~k,... P:i.1' Day, I l er~hf'~' !?ally -ad1·C'r1isC'c1 nationally on 1'.V., ctc.l \\'(' arl' a n11tionaJ CQ rnpany. Vrry hiizh incomf' potential. Yoo mu st have 2 ro.. 8 hrs per Wf'ek spare tim(> (day5 SK-rURN. Bachf'lor pa.d. Huge fpncerl yrd frir Pf'I. Ut1I pd. Sludenl fillf'. $140. Santa Ana Height1 or evei;!. SJ 77.i REQUIRED For more information "'Tile: '' R 0 U TE DEPARTMENT NO . 23" P. 0. Box 1739. Covina , Cnlil. 91722 lnclurlr phone no. *-*BIG BEAR LAKE ].J(lUO R STORE r or Sale NC'!~ Rpprox. $j{),()f)(l. yr. Owner will carry financing. OpJX>rtunity of a IHelimc! Call ROSI f714) 536-1738 or wri1e: Spencer Rea\ Estate. P.O. Box 2828, BiK Bear La~. CaJitomia. LIQUOR license. Orange County, off sale general . No fix tures or blue ok;y. Bell cfJer ovrr $32,S(X) plus v.ery 11mnll b8slc stock, 536-4510. All 1 &. wknds. 499-3992. LAUNDREYE'ITE fluff A !old, LftgUna Beach. Priced for quick sale. Ill heaUh. s:ioo> or m1tke oUer. 49f.9951 VERY 11.ltractive new f"olo Frame line. Nationa.1 SAle1 Rl'i~urcd. Ntt<I w (Irk I n g rapltal {~ecumll . 496-2500. * $100-PARTL\' furn 1 BR. Great lof'. Child pet or sin~les ok . * ALA R entals • 645-3900 4 BR. cpfs, frplc. large fen c· •\VE have a large selection ed yd. patio, 2 rar garage of 3 and 4 bedroom homes $290. 544-6671 or 5<1J...9930 all that can be moved into 6 pm 11lmost immediately on our R e n t • o p t ion p l a n . ,w~·~·~•~c~li_f_f _____ _ SHERWOOD RE A LT Y · $165 . 2 BR. cpts/drps, bl!ns. Sl~SF.:CLUDEO 2 BR Cot- tage, park hkr y1J.rd. E/side. Ideal for couple. 54~555 beam cetl. Heated pool. * $145-\\'0N'T Last. 3 Br. 2 Ba. Bltns, crpts. drps. kids/ per ok. 3 BR, w/w crpts, drps. garb quiet adult!, no pt' I 8 . displ. gar. call 962.-8,;78 tor ~"'=2-c.25::lc.4·~-----­ in fo. & appt to see, No pets, Houqs Furn. or * 3 BR, 2 Ba .. fam. rm .. crpls, Unfurn. $147.50-PRTVATE 2 BR drps. dshw, nr. all. $25(), 310 home t'ncl gar, fenet"d yrd. 1 _m_o_. _54_8_-1540 __ . ____ _ Kids/pets/singles. 4 BR to1vnhse. $225 mo. * Day ca\1 646-1226. Sl7a--LAGUNA Canyon 3 Br. Evts call 645--1573 2 Ba. Frplc. Fenced ynf. LEASE. 3BR, fenced ('Or lot . S•ovt>. l{URRY'. patio. crpts. drps, clean. * sm mo. 968-1884 ROOMMATE SERVICE -RentaJ8 to share. malr or OPEN house Sun .. 4 BR. 2 remal<". from $60. BA. lmmt'd~ occupancy. BEACON * 645-01 U 8022 su""t Circle. 492-4915· J BR, 2"" BA townhouse av ail now at $240 mo. 962~. ownerdlgrnl. SOO 1BR kids OK $100 tBR kids/pets OK $135 uUI pd pvt hm C.M. S80 2BR tot/pet OK $125 2BR gar, kids OK $135 2BR gar-, ldck OK Sito 2BR gar, Irids OK tm .. Sl45 %BR kida OK C.M. 1150 2BR • .,. vaC S16S 2BR w/swlm pl N.B. 1150 3BR klds/.pt:t3 OK S16S 4BR. kids/petl OK $10 2 11;cres horses OK 979-8'430 AGENT LANDLORDS! Irvine 2 BR. 2 bath!! ' • $265 4 BR, 2~ ba:, Wn rm. $340 3 BR. 2 ,. •,lrulpl 1335 3 BR. ' Ba., on>· -· 133$ WE-HA VE O'lllERS CoJta Mesa LEASE 3 Br, 2 Ba College Park. $325 I mo unturn or will furn, cpt/drps, trpl, lge rear fncd yrd, wtr & garck<nt'I' pd. Refs req. Avl April 15. 540-7570. Condominiums Unfurn. Costa Mesa 320 NEW de luxe 2 Br, crpt/drps, dshwhr, bltn.s, priv pal.ios . encl gar. Pool pr:lvU. Child ok. 549-2069 for appt. Huntlf1Vlon hac:h J Br Condo, 1 'iS b&.. Use of 2 p00ls I: planmd, Kids ok/no pet.a. UlO mo . 53&-7863. T-nhouto Unfum. 335 Cost• Mesa fnvestment \Ve SpeeiaJii.e In Ncwporl Opportunity no 1 Reach • Corona del Mar • "SINCE 1946" 2 Br, 1 ~-ba. Twnh11e, pat~. gar. bltrui, tf'Pl. Pool Ir! elbtw accc!tl. Adult M!(tkln, $2{1(1 mo. Mfr.9289. I Laguna • .1r Dana Point. £.XCllANCES. inwstmcnt~ Our ~nla.I Service ts FREE & LaJC f!belten. Home & 10 y001 ln\'~s•ment Realty. 6Ta-7225. NU-VIEW RENTALS 67J..403o or 4!M·3248 Sell Idle Uem.1 now! Call &12 5678 Now! DAILY PlLOT tor action! call M2-5t78 I Savt! -·--------- lat Wt~ Ba.nk Bldg. Univer'l'fty Parle. Irvine Doys 83~101 N ights The fastest Gn!l• 1n tlw West •..• o.!ly Pilot 9-111<!1 Art 642-5671 Owner, la 4 BR A lam rm. 3 BA; lottn dJn. tWUm In. S.19.~. Prine only 557-1823 The Wtest dnw 111 the West ...• Daily Pl.kl! Cluslfied Ari 642-S8'78 * \\'O.\JE'.\'-s1n;::!c k i tchens I T'' !)a -\\" k -\1 o , 67:-.-JGJ::. roo1n<:, r oom. S1itl lip, Ba lboa P eninsula e $2'i \\IK & Up-On Ort:'an e LOl'L'lr Bar-h-1 Br·-r:.ooms Maul servil't"-Poo!-Util pd • Call fi'i';...Si-Hl e HO'.\TE hk" 2 hr <lupli>x, 1Jt11f'I r!"'s1dcntial 11rr11 near beach. s21:i 11 1n1rr. 673-761;'] -----Corona del Mar Slfi:i f'p;1c1rit1s furn fiingle nnn1<n1oker . 11:entlcman ex- l'l't1 T1VP fireplace. Qu1e1. 67:r-4R.'i!'I Costa Mesa • Ph<ln<'s * Patios r66"' rin, !'hag rnrfl{-1.". d!'AJ1f'l', otJ * :\1:>1'1 Sr1v1ce bt"I• hu llt-u1s, pAt 10 & 1;-11ragr , ~1 * U;il1.if's [ncludC'd I ti I 11 $1 \'IJ-:\\'S OF THE HARBOR ON TEN AO'.ES fllln ry fll'I Ill's. AA rnn. 2 BR Unturn Fr. $230/mo. Available ~111;rch I. 6"15-11i7 F I"·-A u bl BachPlor Unils . $5£1.50 \\'k 1 • ' BR. F Unlu S'" "''l urn , ....... .,. va a e .,. um. & rn. or """"""'·) ca-ls •,a---d•"•hw•••·r Some l & 2 Br Units left la • ..-""' ..-.~ ...,,"" Cl La "· Firep ce1 I priv. patlo5. * LOWER * heated nnnJ.saunas·te"~•-ose 10 guna Rrh. ,-,,w Pools Tennis Contnt'I Bkfsl. ......., •u,.. C!cn1en1c & Dcihcny State 900 Sea Lane, Cd M 644•2611 GOLD fl'ledallion, Inuit 2 Br. rec room~an vle\v• Park. fMac ArlhlJ1' nr Coll.st Hwyl 1111110. encl gar. la11ndronial. patlos-8.m pie parkln1 PH . (714) 496-2353 Adulrs, no (lf'!!'i. $15:'>/mo. Security guard$. 34902 De l Obispo SI. "'·'515 "' 6'Z.&19'1. HUNTINGTON Oa na Point Harbor NEW CPTS & PAINT --. W-IL-SON PACIFIC BEACH! Huntington Beach Attract i\'e 2 Br., "'/blt-inli ,i;, GARDENS e 711 OCEAN AVE., H.B. tcrra('f'. Oouhlf' rarporl. 2 BR. l '~ BA , cpt rlrp!i, (Tit) SJS.1~ EXECUTIVE SUITES Near Pool. $200. Enr ! r arJn. $1-10. 6-12-6.\11 1 Ole open 10 am.ti pm Dall)' • MOTEL APTS. NU-VIEW RENTALS $50 Move in Allo\\·ance un1 11 WIU..tAM WALTERS.al.· 71.7 Yor ktown Blvd. 673-1030 nr 49-1-3248 Feb l~th. 1 BR. $130. Pool.l !!'!""""""'·..,""''""'""'""""~I 19'171 BEACH BLVD., N"R ocean. New, rtcl~ I nfant~ ok, Nr ..Ul shop '~. O~LUXE l BR, 2 &., = AT YORh."1'0\VN level, 2 BR. 2 BA. bean1 1887 !'<lOJll'OVla Av No. 3. ~U'eplace, cpt, drapes, bullt- 5J6..041 I Cf'i]., frp]c, bltns, $.10() Jse. 6.J.1-1060. 1n5, d8hwasher ; near School. STUDIOS FROM $35 673-3477. SPAC!OllS 3 Br, 2 Ba , Shl'lg s235/mo. 968-Dl4o. Casa del Oro l BED oo bll R fl.1S AVArLABLE BLK. to Ocean & mkt. 2 Br., crp~s, ns, drps, patio, DELUXE 2 BR, 2 Ba., cpt, ALL UTILITIES PAID e Fu]! kitchen frpl., beams, patio, nu S16:J mo. 6·15-4&17, 548--0324 d r 11.pes, bn!lt-ln i, Compare before you rent · • Heated pool paint/crpt. Adults, $230. art 3 pm. dish"washer. Near 1chool. Cus!om Ocsrgned, featuring: • Laundry facilities 6'1Z..l276. * $170 * $170/mo. 968-0140. • Spacious kitchen "'I th in-• ~~ree urilJties . J BR. 1'2 BA. pafio, bllns direct lighting • Free linens OCEAN view, el~gant J crpt.!i, d rps. Ask ·About our 2 Wks Free Rent • Separa!e din'g area • T.V. & maid serv. avllil. ~-rocm,. 2 baths, ltreplace, discount plan. 880 CPnl~r Walk to beach, new luxurious • llome-likc. storage • Bar-B-Que d1n1ng room. Adults only. St., CM. &12--S34o, 548.2682_ lrg 1 BR, Shag crpt, Blt.ns, • Private patios • Phone servict' $.500 rer mo. Agt. 675-4930. ---drp8 patio lana! area bbq •Closed garage 1v/~tora ge FRL'E u .1 CLEAN E·side 2 BR 1 1~ • • • • "" t1 .. furn. I BR., nr. CLOSE 10 beach, lrg. 2 Br, 2 Bo., ·-i·, ·d-•. ·b,ll"s. 11ubt_erran('nn _park'g, g." •Full !"ngth marble pull-'--h p I •130 ~i 10 h s •-~I .... ,, ~ '" '' L 1 '"-. oo ~ . ~v t t., Ba, ope11 uo:ams, u p c, pMvare paf it60 ava1 Baton1e11, l'.rplc 11, man 5.16-3777 I 536-7282 / 536-1366. bltns. priv. JXlrch, priv. g11r. moolhly R"·11 gar:~.,e.""'-'-lndry ff1ci). 539-1661, 536--0109, ' • Klrib·SZ Bdrm<. " ea or <nu-v""" BACHELOR UNIT 330-A Margut>r lre. 67.1-0937. · ' · 536-5015. 1 e Pool • Barbcqu"'s -sur-* ~1ESA Verde 2 BR rounded 1vit.li plush land· SlOO mo. Cal! 646-2Gl\7 * GREAT VTEW-2 Br, frpl. blfns ,,,~ · ._~ ., * FRESH AIR I 1200 . • ..gP, nr. S1~·pp1ng. scaping * • BLOCK to Bench! Al· bltns. sundeck~. poo · Adul L~. no pets. s J 4 5 Walk 3 blks to Beach: Adul t livlng 111 11~ h<'st tractive 1 BR. SJ 3j/mo. Jn. up. 644-6344. 675-520-I. 548-6357. l...ge 3 BR Art. newly decor. J:;1~~E~,~~!~.~ fan! ok. 12131 433--0264. Costa Me1a Spac-tous 2 BR ., 113 Ba., Dbl aftac-hed gar, frplc, 1% 36.'i \\'. \Vrlr.on 642-1971 ~!OVt: In Torlay! Lrg 2 Br. I liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii encl. Rar. pvt, patio nr. ~;;.; b~ns. e~ept rt>frig. a!J xlra!i. pool. $150. 847-3669 HARBOR 1'hnp.~. $175. 296 E 16th Pl · 0 sng • no pet.a. * $30 WK. & UP * or 968-7,.10 ·· 536-1711. • ~ ~A~ps'~·2C~.-;:-:---;;---,.,,.c--·l i'S'i)RM;$i35."j;;:-;;;;o.17j6' SI dio .t, I BR Apts 2 BDRM $135 i~-Laguna Beach 3 BR, Z ho . 2 .<m "h1·1,1~rn 1 ' • per mo. •.101 • R 5 \.VK"' Up. TOWN HOUSE . ' " Quee1111 Ln. Nr Beach & • TV & Maid Service AvaU OK . laundry lac1l avatl, Slater. New paint thruout. • Phon<' Sr-rvice. U!tl Pd SJ6:i 103.1 Mission Or. CM . e Al! major credit c11rds CITY Lights & Ocean 2217 Harbor, Nr. \Vil/Ion 5j7-3lfi0. -'-"-~"='"-=-· --=-=-=---==c---1 2.376 Ne\vport Blvd. 5-18-97£; Sn1all. but NICE 2 BR 2 BR on l fir, Xlnl cond. 2 BR Uppei" c l! d LRG. :Z BR. $140 Thi~ ,\d \Vor!h S:i fln R"'n! GartH!" & deck. Older Pf'l Lrg closet~arport. S125; range, oven, ~t'fr~. No~!: Under New M~ement Childr<'n & Pet Sf'C'linn ok S2IO. e Healed Pool-Nr Shop g SlJ5 968-l45.5 548-772!1 Ask about our discount plan Sll')/nio dlx i\.loh. home. NU-V IEW RENTALS Adults only, no pets. · ' _· __ &: move·in allow. Children I: 67l-i10.'.!0 or 494-3248 · MESA Verde new 2 BR., small ~ wrtcome. Newly conipl furn, hid pool, adult dishwshr, 8hag crpl. drp8, redec. Sea Air Apa. couple. no pets. 4 Season's CHOICE location 2 BR, 2 Park-Lik• Surrounding patio, infant OK S 1 8 5 . l blk N. of Adams CoU Beach) Moh Est, 2359 Np! Blvd BA, Pvt, patio. Garagt>. Utll QUI.ET • DELUXF. 5'16-02Sl. 729 Apt 6 Utica 53&17'96 1 54.'\-63.12. paid. $195 mo. 538-209:1 aft 5 1-2 & 3 BR APTS 536-7070 0 P pn1 & or 9 a.m. p · ti * fl d p 1 H LI DAY LAZA rv pa OS t oo s * LRG. priv. patio . Garage t BR $125 up. 2 Br, 2 Ba. Sl60 1 DELUXE Spaciou:i; 1 BR. STUDIO $87.50. 0 Ider Nr shop'g * Adults only W/\\'Orkbench, Z BR' 8 , up. Cpt/drps JXX>I, rec rm, furn apt. Sl35. lleated pool. salaried man, no pets. Martinique Apts. c pt Id r pa:. S 1 6 o Imo . walk to beach c~ to &olf Ample parking. Adults -no 1 ~'-'94-8'-':..".:.'·-------1m Santa Ana Ave., CM 673-3690. 220 12th St. · ~92; n9 JX'ls. 1!165 Pomona Avt'. CM 1 BR, oor1h end, close to ~fgr, Apt U3 646-5542 ** BEAUTinJL l & 2 BR. 15th St. :>36-1244 . I ~f~:Uu~.E!~b ~t ~:~ :~r;~~ & bt'ach. $I~/ 13 Bdrm ·* 2 lath Contemporary Carden Apu . BEACHWOOD APTS. 1 or infant okl 5155. 642-95a>. 'l~11S~.~,,,-v~,,~Y-1-8~R.-v~;.-w-, -"'--LMna: room with cathedral Patios. frplc, pool. $.150-Sl6S. Brand new 1·2-3 Br. Walk , SEE & GET BONUS •-1 ceiling 4 trplc c-A-ter Ca.U :w&-5163. to 'beach. Cpt/drptl, bltn.1, 1 u.:ach. Ul i pd. Resp. empld · """.-.a. trpl. 125 16th St. 847-3957. e MOVE IN TODAY! • adlt. 494-4200. laundry area. Enci ~tlo. SPAC. 2 &: J Br. Apt. $140 updl:--CB"'R=--~-~~~~ Kids & pets welcome. 2 Br.. N B h Swimming pool & chUdren'1 Pool, cpt/drp., bltns, Kid!! ok apartment 2 blocb •wport eac playground. ~-2206 College No. s 642. 703.'i trom the beach. fireplace A $164. All extrai;. Pool. gar., --'--------HARBOR CREE'NS 1994 Maple No. 3 642-3813 dlghwuher. $150 mo. a'.>7 f1~~~·J~9A 0~~80~0~·· 8P~~Afu~~~hY;. ~~.cour; MS-4353 3 Br, 2 Ba. cpl!, drp8,1-1-6'~h~S~•·~H~.B~-~SJ6.~~1882=~- LOVELY 2 Br._ furn. apt.s, sta.irs. 1 blk to bc h. ahop8 •BEAUTIFUL GROUNDS• bl!-lns, dswht, 2 pooi.g, e OiEZ ORO APTS e shag crpts, Pool. Close to f'Ct. $210 mo. lst It \11;11 + SPANISH DECOR clbhOu~. $235. 546-3710. 8234 Atlanta. 1-2-J Br'1. 8ton.>s. Adulls, no pe!A. Sl60 clea"nup. Util pd. 673-9034 Alr/cond. Gas, wtr. pd, LOVELY 2 hr b &-~ 1 POOL.. Privale closf('I 1ar. per mo. all. 6 pm . Car1~, Pool, Rec. nn., pallo, pool, ~dulata. 75,; ~-Wuher/dryer. ~_:__ 19<1 Pomo"" Ave C 'I OCEANFRONT Irr 3 BR, 2 laund<Y.-l BR ll<O, 2 BR 181h SI, M~ •o. CM· . BEACHBLUFF APTS. ,,.. ., ·•• . BA , 1 yr IR $325 mo. $160·J16S-S175. 6 0 r Spac 2 Br 2 & Pool Patio. • REAL Value! Crpts, drps, Locat(.'tj at 23rd I: W. J{ackmd a de Meu. Apl• 2 BDRM, 1unken Jlv nn, D/W u31 EJ.ti.S 847,Jss7 <Wi\\·h'r, pool, 2 BR. Sl45. Octanfront. To Mt caU, J60W. Wilson, See Mir'. No. l frplc, cpt1, drp8, Gara.ge.1~--·-------- Mature adults, no pets. &14-..tilll. "GABLES" A "SEVIl.LE'" S.l75, 833--0285. Irvine Qu iet. 2295 Pacific Ave. 2 Br. w/1ar., adnli.. cpt. LARGE 2 BR Condo. 11,) BA. --------- M8-M78 or 642-4429. Gl'l.OOVY 2 BR, ll'eat patio, dt'Jlll, bltns. fncd yr d . WAJ, Carport. PARK WIST 56' fro m beach. Se&1hore I !lo _,. ....i "'~" ~ ...., .( AVAU. NOW! t & 2 a,., '"po • "'' ~-~1~. 637·29<3 APARTMENTS Dr. J225 mo. incl, util . Thru 2439-"C'' Ora.nae Ave $155 $ lurrf .. pool, rec nn., gd loc. June. 67S--0884. 1 2Sl9-"J" Santa Ana A~. Sl55 * 2 WEEKS FREE! • 1 Bdrm. From 161 No chUdren or p e t•, I .C3 ~V~ER~Y,:.....lrg-""':.C...-.l..---1.=;.-.::...::=::::..::::.::.:::..:::..::= 1 BR S125 op -2 BR S140 up 2 Bdrm., 2 a.. 646-5.S24. Bclnn's, 1 blk to MOOERNtBdrm. apt. Cpts. POOL** 6f2..:mt From $1ts beach . New cr p ts . d ..... d&hwft fi l l J -~ I Br 1130 •-2Br1160. Pool & ·rr• ' -ns • • 0 BR 2 BA --10 .-..,, Parkvlew Lane N $ 225/winter. $32S/yeatl)I. • ........ l bUd k All t1l • • D1 vu , 1-.1-J h!JTace. IdtaJ for bacl'll'lon. 642-1403. ~--· c o . u CrptJ drpl Plltio POOL 1 • .-u,,... ( utt otf no childrrn. 1993 Church, pd, lJ!ll~, 307 Avocado, child ' ok. 0646-0496, San D~ao Fwy at'CUJ~r Rd) MR-!J63J 2 BR, frplc, JI u n d t' t k, Apt 9. CM. 645-093-t , SHARP! 2 bl~ lo heh. vr\> BRAND NEW 2 BR + 2 & 3 BR. r rplc. Blt·lrui. L N I I 2 BR /•-ti ~ ,. • Clo-~ •• -... N•.•r •-·1h •gun• gu• w "& pa o. vim· $225. Adults, no p e 11 . FROM $ISS ""'" '°' " ~ for1ably furn. PRrvACY' 67~2124. N COA~t P\a1.11. ~$-2311. Laguna Nigu.I Aptt Arlulrs. 763 Scoll PL CM. ear ~f)A. encl"W"l'f illr"·l ='~'='.;=;::;:...:;;c::::::.:.~~ I R DELUXE 1 BR llpt. Step11 to ages. built-inii. rncl patios. SHARP l BR. CIOlf' to OCC 8 . 1 BA + 2 ~R. 2 ~ &1&-2J2J. oce11n. l1.J8. 10 Jun!! U . l!lllracth•c lndK"p. Adull& & UCI. $135 mo, F"l.OM..., $185Tv Crpt!i:, dr'pt!, Ri\CHELOR Apt-~:w.;e ' 673-2671. only. No pels. 1970 W•ll11.ce ** 557·1'76!1 •• llUI .,..., ca ' wa • 1m Santa Ana Ave. C~f .:...;....._______ St u• -w -ST""NING 2 B G all bltna, lndry att•f. tttd. . ~. '"°""uw' * , v,~ Z' arden pool BBQ' prtv tim A: Mat". Apt 1U 6i6-55!~ ,. BR,,_,..~ le dn-s. Choloe Apt. PooJ. $165, 61~. $Xl ,_,00' -•-·. :;,_n IO .. A.M. ~ " or 3 Br deluxe dupl!X apl. .... .,.... ,... w1 d _. •ue11 ..,.~ ""' + + XTRA lra 2 Sr, 2 8 'l blk M bc:h I-beJ, All nu loc. in Mesa Verde. 1ro.med. lh 8 · 9 P.M. 49!H272. $22'11. pool . Adults owr 3i. U1 I ml -.. ..... ¥ occupancy. $150 per mo. HOUSE Huntt-! Watch the 29041 Aloma. oU Crown. Val. ,..M U tutt'. 11 1.rv.u><>. • .. , p<I. $145. 646-429'2, '548-Uf!JI. 9&-!894 . OPEN HOUSE C'Olumn. It)' Prkwy. ·----.-------' ' • %8 DAILY PILQJ Mond.Q, ftbruar~ 14. 1972 [ --IO<RM I~ [ ............ -1 ~ .___[ -""""'~'~ ~[ _""'""~'~ ~[ _ .......... _. ~]~[j] [ ....... .-!al [ ---!~~[ ---]~ ['----'.""'-'"-~" ![fl] \pt. Unfum. U.S Apt•... Room1 400 Office Rental 440 P•rtotM1l1 S30 Lost 5SS Carpenrer Muonry Help Wented, M & F 710 M.tu Verde OEWXE 2 Ii 3 Br., 2 Ba., encl. gar. $150 up. ~ntal O!c. 3095 Mace Av r . 5-J6-1034. PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS Furn. o,. Unfum. Costa M.u 370 R00:-01 w/pr1va1e balh &: kit. chen prlv. working womf'n. l ('h\ld O .K , El Toro/Mlsaion Vl~jo area. e SPACIOUS e S80 month. 330-5057 aft. \\leU-Des1&ned Apt1 S: JO. 1 &: 2 BR. W/ Terraces. ROOMS • $1.l \Vk. up w/k11. From t140 • S275/mo SJO \Vk up Apts. 2376 Shag C"pl.s, drp11, &aU!l88, J/e.wport Blvd.. c. '.\!. pool, jacuzzi, t>ncl gar. 54&-9r;i5. Qull'r A1hllt lh·lnP PRIVA'rt:: room for ff'maJe MERRIMAC WOODS on Balboa Island. c an Lin· 425 J\1errirl1ac \Vay, C/'11 <la, 642--2702. SPRING HAS SPRUNG Rt.!. Pri. home 1-m . Nr. Brk- and your hou!('('Jean ing is hurst, Coasi hwy. t.11. only. done! Enjoy your 1arden SIS \Vk. 926-2029 H.ft. 4 apartment v.·ithout v•ork! I -~--~-----­Stroll the gardens, pllly gol f, R00.\1: w/priv t-nt, pr1v ba & :iiun at the pool. lho"·er, utLI pd, part. turn. .,, 1500 squart> feet. S20n 11 8. 962-.S578 eves for appf. monthly PRIVATI:: roorn lor lemalf' EXEClrrrvE SUITES Nt-wport Cntr-R.odefier Bkl&:. Sf'rviCi!S incl'd 6+l-3080. Bus iness Rent.11 445 !1-TANUFACTURJNG, Sales, vttlce 'pacv. G<Jo<I Laiuna locaUon, $100. to SJ9(). n10. "94-465.1. Industrial Rental 4SO 4,000 S(j). FT. Sprinkled • Good locaUon. .$-150, per month, 5,000 S(j). FT. $650. per month Roy Mcca rdle Realtor mo Ne\lo"J>Ort Bh·d., C.1\1. S411-7729 on the bay Luxury apar1ment living ov- erlooking the water. Enjoy $750,000 health spa, 7 ""''Im· ming pools, 7 hghled trn- nis courts. plus miles of bu:ycle t.ratls, puttill&', ahuf. fleboard, croquet. Jw11or l 's from $170 monthly: also 1 and 2-bedroom plans and 2-story to-.~"" ho·1ses. Elec-- tric kitchens, private pallos or balconies, c1tr('l('t1ng, dra· perics. Suhte1Tt1nean 1><1rk- * Gracious entertaining area un Balhoa Island. Call J ~~~!!!!!..,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!..,,. with fireplacf', pnlio l...1nda, &12-2701. S.\1ALL industrial uni! -\\'rsl • 2 bedrooms, de.n, 2 bath11 l''OR ttni 10 lady, Oedroom 16th St., Ne11porl Beach. $60 on 2nd floor, garage. J'l,'eitr nlO. &l&-l71-1. ing with elevators. Optional JUJ!it a few al maid service. Ju.'11 north of The Vendom• Fashion Island al. Jarnbor-lS4.5 Anaheim Avenue, C051a :\lesa Park. 646--066!!. 415 Guest Home ee and San Joaquin llills 1 ..,,___,,_,~"='·~28~2=4=~-~ Rood. * 2 BEDROOM * *PRIVATE ROOM* Telephone f714) 644-1900 1., 8 for ambulatory person. Good ~ a Townhouse concept. 1 for rental infonnatlon ood, nice cheerful l!lurround. Beam ceilings, exlrn lrg In bed "'· SEACLIFF MANOR Apts-2 rm1. encl J. 1tio. recrea· * Call 548-4753 * Br. SlfiO Unt. S175 furn. tion rm, sauna bathl!I, ~c. CplJ, drp1, bllnl, garb displ. Adults. Our Sunday alter. SCO'l'T'S Guest Home . 1525 PlacenUa Ave, Ask noon B-B-Q's & Free Arl Beaut. IJJW'IC. !'!emi-private about our diacounl 548-2682. Lessons starting llOOn. roo111 for ambulatory lady. Ydy Dix 2 Br·B .. ch HARBOR GREENS 557-4187. "'6-5025 2 Ba., bltn1., d I 1 p I. , Rentals to Share 430 2800 Sq ft, 2 offices. lrg rear door. 12-ID Logan St. 646--068l eves. 646-5033 days. INDIVJDUAL GROW'llt • UEVLLOPMENT GROUP UM! of Gestalt, b'loenef'ietlc & lf'nsltJ\"lty aware n e-s s tt"Chlllquts v.·111 be use-d "'tit-1~ a11propriate to bring a.bout a gtt!lttr 11wutr.t'Sl of your entire being. Call CounM'llng Center 4!!-i-975.l. PROBLJ::~I Pregnancy. Con- fident, sy1npathetlc pregnancy coun!W!ing. Abar· tion & Adoption re t . AP-CARE. &12-1436. BE pampt>:red and ma.!l.!aged by attracli\~ \Yo men. 833-2100. Social Clubs S3S FOTO DATE s~l!'ct your companion lrom 100'1'1 or photo referraJs that v.·e mall to you . NO CONTRACTS 24 hr. recorded message 714/&15-2220, 213/42& ll22 Found (fr .. ads) 5SO Rf."W A.RD! SlOO lr return of large bro~n leJithtt C8M' 2/important p.q>era.. Keep motlt'y, ~tum papttS.. No quesUon asked. VJC of Ne14·port & 17th, C\I 5'f8..tr;;l or P.O. &x tS1, LARGE OR SMALL BRICK. BLOCK l A B .. ullful ld11 All Types Work: CUt docn, SfONE \VORK Div or Gen'I 1'~oods nM-iis JW>E"I, remodel, finish , S40--0929 l'.lr G46-004j you. Lfoani & tl"ar.ll prof fnme, 1"t'pltln: tile. 962-1961. makl"up te<:>hs. Exre. pos. ALL I r b Painting & I 000 ..... local= o carpuiry Y Paperhan9ing ava1 , O'U.·..W.. 53&-lSU Accounting Cl r k to $450 0c~'71,_· ,--,.,-,--,,--c I Cement. Concrete S:\1ALL 5'>hLa1re duunonrJ engagen1en1 ring, 105! 218. \'le Cd.\ot, Grt:at sentimenW value. R.eY.-ard. 673-7974. PRESCRlPTJO~ gla.5.ses. bl.Ii frame &: C"ue. Vie. Mf'Sa Theater. Reward! !HS--0201, Nu •\\'11.~;1ng Like lu wu rk ,1/fi.xun:!'l? tf * WALLPAPER * M•. )U\I will lo1r thJs :-.!XJL \Vhen )'OIJ call "M:tc'• l:Wauhlul Jrv1nt> area ore's. apt. :aw.. LOST; ffik & brwn Dachshund puppy. VI c: J~untlngton St &. f"'ranktort. 11.B. Ri'Y.'al"d. ~- LOST Irish Setter, male, !'Oe\ .. ·port Beach, Thurs e\'e. * 548--1370 • LOST, all gray long hatred younl! female cat, vie H.B. 968-23&1. CALICO cal Josi vi<'. Avot'a<lo & Cst 1-lwy Cdn1. 3 mos <1ld. 673-0852 673-8080. 1---1~ Appliance Repair & Parts t'O'.\'CRl:."'TE \\'ORK. f'air :i48-l444 646-1711 Xln 't eo. & jup bellt"f1ts. Call i'ttli:..~ Dillrl<', 557-6122. prices_ f 'rre tist. L i c . JO DAY Special, Inter/Ex-AbigniJ Abhc.ll Pl'rsonnel bonded, quality work . ter. pa.inllng. IiJCal refs. 30 Agency. 23{) \I/. \\'aruer, &12-1403. yrs. exp. ~"ree est. Call Suite' 209, S.A. CE.~IENT WORK no job too ~Ch~"~ck~,~64~'-'lll09~"".:·~=-~ll-a-;a-.~--;--1 small. reuonable. F r ee PAlNTING I PAPERlNG • • e e • Estim. H. Sluflick. S4JH61.), 18 yrs in Hllrbor area. Lie & * Accountants -CEMENT-WORK bondcd. fuol'• Jum. 642-Z356. ~ t $1 JM Free Est. 645-0826 R00.\1S S10. Accoos. Ceilings O PATIOS, v.allu!, drive, irutall .sprayed $~, e-xl!"r S200 & E~IP YER PAYS FEE new Jav.·ns. sav.·. break, up, Good pa.ml. 847-1.'!.58. l"l"l110\"e. S.18-Wi68 for nt. PAINTING, prof. All \\Ork PT'('frr ae(·nunting rlrgn"f'. \\·1:-;TEJl Ra!es! ~ guarn. Color special 1st St1,1ni:: 1111rk barkground in flool"!I, patios, d r i v e 1 , 842-1386, 5-17-1441. n1a nu fil(·tur1ni;:-standard s idev.·alk!. Don. £42-8514. PAINTING-Guarantt'€d pro-l'0S1S a i\1UST. Also a gen'l C~o-n-,~,-.-c~t-0-,------I fessional work a.t fair prJC<'S. kno1\ li'dl'.;c> of sy!':ff'ms & pro- Llc'd & Ins. 67a-5740. f'f'durr.~. Ori.:. County 1ll'Tll ==oo-~~~=~c--1 r('ady to h1r£•. ROO~t A<ldiJ~ E 1. 1 SIDING & }'acia $129, 2 story F°"" lob• Al ... • <VOS, s ima es, $:!'}9 E .1 nl &12-27•• . ~~ ,,.., plarui & layout, slngle or 2 642_j40; er 0 Y· :J;J 01 ~· n. Pierce story. LT. Uin.struction. · AsSO('iates Agency, Tnc. 8-17-1511. FOR clean & neat painting, 1885 Newport, CJl.1 642·672{) J A c K Ta u 1 a ne-Repair, interior ?r ~1'1erior & reas. ttmod ddlf 20 rates. Dick, 968-4065. Accrg Clerk/Constr S450 Ll 'd ·M• "w . yrs exp. PROF . . . I AI R & Payroll-Mfgmg $6'1 c . y ay Co. 547-()036. • painting-inter exter. ('J"e{l't Cl k/C _ ••• . Honest Y."Ork. L i c I I n 1 1 r ons.. .JJO::i A~ll1or:is * Remod:ling S48-27S9. 540-l#I, ' Construction Sec'y S600 Gf'rv.·1ck &. Son, Lie. Ex{'c, Sec'y-Anaheim to S700 6/'....6041 • 54~Zl70 YOU supply the paint, Exc-c. &-e'yrsranton to $650 d•h..,hr .• 1n<1..,, hookup . FABULOUS 2 BR 1-------STIJDEi'IT ,.,_ 713, 387-2257. $ISO & $16S Furn /Uni 200) to 9600 Sq, f't. 4001 Birch, N1vpt Beach J\lr, Baumgardner 541-5032 RENT J\1-1 1125 Sq .. Fl. $13;J/n10. 1355 Logan, C.i\1. \\'IU~ the people who lost e daschsund nr. Cliif Dr . .t Dover, N.B. Thur. eve., ,.,·/1970 Ile J\"o, 4321. Call 673-3'172. .FOUNU )!al<' shaggy dog, apricot 11·/11'hite chest, black collar. Vi cini ty LakC"vicw School. 8~7-7878. Electrical Rooms painted $10 tia. Also Medical Sec'y S50'.'l Discount Appliance Repair I'.'.:"'""":---------e.-;terior. Call 540-70..16. C('n'I Ofc/lnsuranr~ $500 \Vasher, Dryer, Dish'4·asher. ELECT H IC/\ L, resi<I., ENGLJSl-f Paper Hanger & Clerk Typis\/,\dvert1sing 5475 CSCLB stdnt. seeks per. 2 BR. e'Jec bltn!I', dlllpogal, You ""on't find a larger. nicer already Jiving on Bal. Is. cpl, dri>s. laundry hokk-ups, apt for less. Beaut. garden that 1.,·ants to !lha?J! nict', al· pool &. ~bana. Children area, patios. Quiet dead-end trac. 2 bdr furn. hse. or apt. OK. S165 mo. 673-0234. street, just S. of Nt!!wport & expen. Will share v.·/ GUAR.Ai~TEED * 546-6694 con1m'l, irxlus, A 1 ! o , Painter. 3ll yrs. exper. Call Clerk Typist/Purchasing $400 Babysitting remodel. repa1rl!, insrau. Ed. 968-7461. NEWPORT Ave-. Adults, no pets. 2020 OCEANFRONT lrg 3 BR, 2 Fullerton Ave., C.M. (Jusl 19-26 open, !ritind!y & pa- BA, 1 yr lw, $375 mo. E. of Bay) 642-8690. tient 1\1 or F, Rent not over Located at 2206 W. Ocean-S125fmo/ulil. Ph, Mike at front. To 1tt call, 64Hl1J. 897-7791 alt 5 and talk. HACIENDA * LARGE 3 BR, 2 be, cpts, HARBOR I woold like to !Share my Jrg drps, bltna. Garage. ~ blk 2.4l AVOCADO STREET a.Urac. horn(' VI'/ a pleasant to bay. lblk oce.an. $280 mo. AduJts only _ No Pets relined woman d ('sir i n g IM. 548-287.0. Deluxe 1 & 2 BR. Poot above average environmenL NEW 3 BR. frplc, dshwhr, Garage. Dlshwshr. Paid ulil. Priv. dressing nn & ha. Call 6Tr5116 Rentals Wanted NEED SPACE I Prefer horseo property, S.A. Heights or Laguna, with 2 BR. house. Have 130 lb. obedience trairw>d puppy. Xlnt ref's. Please C'&ll NU-VIEW RENTALS 673-4030 or 494-32-18 HELP! FND. l0-11·k, Brindle-colored 1----------· fml. pupPy, Vlc. Fairview COLLEGE girl will babysit 11 for V11)maIJ "'ho "·orks osp. grounds. C , 11 • S.16-r>73. nights. ~lust start im- mediately. Very good FE.i\tALE Germen Shepherd, "'/children. Eqperienced. black &. brown, vie. Na· Call Lynn. 531-3885 aft 6. ti01V1.l/Victoria SI., C.J\1. 548-8.120. LIC'D Day Ca.re, 7 am-5:30 pm. Hot meals. Xlnt cart'. \VHlTE male rn!nia!11re poo-11arbor!Baktt IU"('A.. 546-1539. die or cock-a-poo, Vic. Mesa V -• c M u Ca.pet Service e1ut', . . ngTOOmed. Big/small. L1c'd/Iru. Free Pl '1 p 1 h R • Personnfl:I Agency tist. a.!6--0211. as er, a c , epa1r 833 D D N B ""'"°~====c-~-~1 ---=-----over r., , . EL E CfRICIAi~. licensed, * PATCH PLASTERING 642·3870 bonded. Small jobs, maint. All types. Ff('{' eslimates & repairs. 548-5~. CaU 540-682.5 ARE YOU Gardening Plumbing Planning aht'ad for your va-1----------·I caliun? Earn f'xtra money AL·s GARDENING PLUf\ffilNG REPAIR no1v! F'uU or part time. For for gardening & s m a I ! No job loo 1mall interview call 540-0928 landscaping servicfts, t"all * &12-3128 * ASS JST,\N'f l\1ANAGER: S.\0-5198. Serving Newport, COLE PLUMBING Fasf('st grn .. ving tire k a.C"- bltnll, Nea.r ocean &: be.y. FROM $150. 646-1204 Spac acrom. for gracious $285. (213)694-1183. t'nlf'rtaining. 830-JO:J.L Is there a kind person in the OC area that can offC"r a !aw s1dnt, a n1ed. 1 bdr. furn, apl. on Bal Is? Seek R clean. a!trac. apt. not over $125/mo/util. \\'nnt )Tly - sumr? \\'ill do some rC'deco for consideration. Ph. Mike at 897-7791 alt 5. r>16--l82i all 3;30. Cd:\1., Costa ;\1es.a, Dover 24 hr. i;ervice-. 645-1161 cessory retallC'r nerds a m- Shon>s. \Vestc.htt. R,.-.__-,-;-.-=--;---b1t1ou.~ man 1•,:ith :1ome t'X-----------1 ===~~---c=--•modfl:I & Repair INTERESTED 1n buying GARDE~ r.fa1nl. Clean-up.I-------'----per1encl.'. J-..'.arly promonon WES TC LIFF area. 2 Bedroom, 2 bath. Adults on- ly. $275. Ag! 675-4930. E~·IPl..OYED shlll'C home. 11-·i th \1'0n1an \1' 1 I same 3 BR LARGE black female dog, pos. part German Shepherd ''ic, 19th & Anaheim, C.:\1. 646-545.",i. major brand carpel a! tilt! rototil!ing, new Jay.,·n prun-Build Repair Remodel 11·11h 2j.-~. increase certain. moi;;t competitive price7 See ing, sprinklers. Oda GardE'n \V, C. KER.\IOOE, JR, Star! $7200. BRAND NEW From S145. DWtwuher, shag carpeting, \Valk-ln closets. Forced air hear, eJCtra large rooms. Beautiful game room, heated J>Ool. BBQ's, encl0&- ed prages, qu.Jet «WTOUnd- 1nga &: d05e to d>oppilJ&'. Adult Jiving, no pe!s. 893-3439 us~ Carpet \\'archouse, 1920 Sen·. 531-4-Wti dy!'i, alt S, Consln1c11on &.· ~1aint. Call Bob \Vilson. a..10-60.15 E. Edi~er. S.A. 541-:AJTI. 839--9585. • 548-1961 e Coas!;il Agency * LRG 2 hr lower apt, frplc, bltns. Nr. Lido. Yearly !i08 35th St. 642.-0507. LGE 2 Br. 2 Ba. Yrs lse. $190/mo. 215 Prospect Avt>. Newport Shores. 494-9502. e YEARLY..Spe.dous. Near Ocean, 2 BR. Den. Only $2::n. Appt, 673--1909. GOLD Medellion 2 Sr. 2 Ba. cpt~/drps, bltn~, encl gar, patio. Sl'l'S. Adults. 548-3708. Santa An• FAMILIES WELCOME! El CORDOVA APTS. 20T1 Charle St. 642-4470 Near Harbor &: HanUHon St. FURN l BR'11, also unfurn 2 BR Studio apt. Cpts, <irlis. gar. Swirn'g pool. No children, no pets. Quiet nt'ighborhood. 642-8042. Huntington ileach F'E1\ilALE roommate needl'd, yrly rental on 1vaterlront. • 673-4624 * GIRL tu share beach house, Ne1vport an:"a. $76.SO + Utilities. 642-155.5. Office Rental MEDICAL /DENTAL Best location • 745 Dover Dr. l.350 sq fl. office avail. Im· med. occupancy, custom interior. -···,"~!~O 1200 1q. ft. office for Sub Lease CdM Apt. \Vanted. Unfurn. 1 BR. modem. Top floor. QcE'an Vil'VI'. 1'.tax $180, Single business U'Ontan "I \\'aflt a PER}.tANENT H0~1E'". Ref's. Res, 714/636-4460, b us 714/630-1440. Announcements soo .fOUND: \\'hi!e poodle • Vic. of l.."lmb Elemenlry School, Brookhur!I, ILB. 962-1561. Si\o!L breed fem dog. Bl'O\\•n/Blk-isilver patches. Vic \V. Bay' St. Leather tit" col.Jar. &12-1955 -548-7881. FND Bassett Jlound Vic. Task lfarbor ViE'w Hills, 644-0694 Lo1t SSS * * * Carpet Service * * SINGLE STORY South Su Atmo1ph1re 2 BDRM-2 BATH S175/mo. Carpets and Drapes Air Conditioned Private Patios HEATED POQ[; Carport & StO?'ai"«' • OCEAN VIE\V • From S1J5. l BR. Furn or unturn. Di~unt for students. CASA PLAYA. 14th k. \Valnut, H.B. Call 536-8367. 1aJO sq, rt. plus of useable aren incl. 5 private ()fficcs. reception room & large gt'nera.l area. $450 per mo. 17th St., C.M. Phone ~9631. DRAPERY Cleaning Special Tak(' do11·n, Ian fold. re-hang $1. 7:1 Panel. Unlined to 9' long. {reg. price $3.50) Ph. A\JE"l'I \Veston 536-357 5 before 5:30 P1'i or 968-6925 aff. 5:30 Pi\'!. Trader's Paradise Nr, School! Nr. So. Coast Pl11z1t HIDDEN VILLAGE 2500 South Sa!rn (enter 2 blks W. of Bristol, off Warner on Linda \Vay, !IOU!h to \V. Central) San!a Ana e 54&1525 1 BR. Unlurn $130, will turn. Overlooking beaut. garden patkl &: pool, Adults, no pet!. 1035 1Zth SI. Across from Lake Park. 53&-2692. Laguna Beach DESK apace av&ilabJe S50 mo. Will provide furnlture at $5 mo. ~service available. 17875 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach. 642-4321 DELUXE 360 sq_ IL OH.ice in ANYONE .seeing \\'Oman fall 1/2.S, 11 a.m. on Newpor t Blvd., nr. 22nd St. laun- dromat, please call 540-5589. .___._.,._ ... _1. _,II• l :\10DERN gar<len townhoul!E' Cnrona <lrl itar. Near Post apt. 2 story 2 BR, 11~ ba. olf1ce -Snack Shop. Priva te sundeck. patio. 1 block park i ng ; a l r-cond r beach, i;hopping. r-.·e\V cpts. Rcalonomics, Dkr. 675-6700 I••••••••••• drps, Adults. Refs, S255. DESK 11pece available S50 Personals 530 \ lines times dollars 3 Healed Poolt Llu-ge Clubhouse e tc. BBQ Child Care Ct!!nfer Great new 1 2 & 3 Bdnna F'l"om Sl49 SOUTH COAST VILLAS 494--9982. mo. Will provide furniture S/\DDLEBACK Sauna & at SS mo. Answering service Newport Beach availablt!!. 222 Forest A.\I('. l\f a~.<;age for tlle hes! relax- Lquna Beach. 4~ i.11g feeling. 'You need lis lo VISTA DEL MESA knE"arl you. At 1 ra ct i v e Trader's Paradise 1101 M11cArthut Blvd. 546-88ZI Westcliff Apartments DESlRABL'!:; off!C'f', 600 "11 technic.1ans, Private roomr;;. Jlave Antique Bathtub 1 & 2 BR. f'urn. &. Unf. Dish-It, never occupied. Air ron-20'0 DISCOUNT \l'ith this \\'ill Trade u•asher • Stove &. Retrig -d itioning & ulilitit"S in-arl. Cal.I 639-8W. 3417 E. }'or Shower Shag crpt'g-Lge Rec center. c ludt'd, Centra1 Costa Mesa Chapn1an. Orangti, Open Evenings RENT starts SlS5 area. $14() mo. S48--0259 days JOam-lam. Call 675-2300 or 64:>--0263 ew. r o-====-,----1 ---------lrvine A Mesa Drive ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. \\'ANTED: * S4S-485S * • OFTICES • Phone 542-7217 or write ~:rci:: ;;1~: 2 G~e~ OAKWOOD-GARDEN ~ & ~~i· ~~ll Me-!a, P.O. Box 12'13. Costa Mesa. pat io, Si ngle .s tory, Apartments SINGLES Dance Lessons, Units. lfarbor a~a. llAVE: Soundproof, Bltns, F' J A (Resort Living tor l-&'xl6' Ole or rtore, mod. Privaie or group. Adu!!' Only) bldg. 444 Newport Bvd. N.B. * * 645--0T:>!I ** 4br.3ba. Agent 675-7225 HfR heal, Lrg din rm. Walk to Ope S85 548-5300 -+-:-. Westclill Plaza, acmiS from NE\.\'PORT BEACH n. mo. · FULL YLICENSED 2 Clean rented homt's in Coco's. 1665 Jn·!~. $195. 16th flt Trvine LARGE I room: pvt. entr. Rcno\\'~d Hindu SplrituaJiJ;I. S.J\. at Fr.fV. Low !st TDs. Adlts. 642--0239. 645-0550 or 642-8170 NeVl'ly dee S65 Mo. 548-1290 Spiritual Reading given Consolidate S26M eq. into ----------1ABOVE A.LL! New p o r t 6306 W. C06.sl, N'pl, Beach daily. lOA}.t-lOP~i. Advice Orange Co. units. Milt Apts.1 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Towers, from $350. Bay WILL Buy your ear paid for on all matters of life. 312 N. J-faru;on, Rltr. 494-9471. tronL 2 Br., 2 lJa.., docks. or not. Call Ralph Gordon El Camino Rtal, S a n Costa Mesa PALM MESA APTS. MINUTES TO NPT. BCH. FURN. OR UNF'URN. Unbelievably large apls., huge pool, J acuzzi elect bit- ins, ahag crpls, drps, sauna fl:tc. Adult8, no pet!. SING~ . • • • . From S135 1 BEDR..M .••••• l''ron1 SJ40 2 BEDRM. , . . • From S160 You're rtaht, lhey're under- prtced! 1!61 J.1cc;n Dr. (5 b1kl from Ne11'Jlflr! Blvd.) ~' l---.:DELUXE APARTMENTS Alr Cond • ~e's -3 Swtm- mln1 Poola • HNlth Spa. • To""" Crta • G.,,,. & Bil- liard Rdom. 1 BEDROOM FROM $1'5 MEDITERRANEAN VILLAGE 2403 Harbor Blvd .. C.M. t71'l 55T·tm0 RENTAL OM'ICE OP~ JO AM 1'Q 6 PM 3121 \V. Coast Hwy . 673--0900 -549--3031, 1970 Clemente.. 492-9136 or "68 Camaro, A·l , full pwr, 714/642-2202. Harbor Blvd., Costa Mtisa. 492-9034. low mileage. Tradt!! tor Van :;;;:::;;;;;;;:::;;;;'::.::::.:::::::::::.::::.::::.::.::::.::::::::::::::=;;;:::;;;;;;;:::;;;;;; I or Bua same condition. Must be automaUc. * 633·3.176 * S@\\~\'l-.lt£~S" Th• Pun/• wifh the lfuilf-ln Clruell~ I• C 0 T I S f .~· , I I I I Ur.del11and1ng wffei one . . . . who hos the pork mops ready r--::--:-~,,....,.,...,,-..,wh*'1 the . old mon <x>mH ~ NAGANI lhon>efroma-rrlp. ~·It I ' I' I' I 0 Compr.,. ""· c.hud:r. qllO"'d ~ filllnQ lo the minino word. -• you d..,.lop from sl•p No. 3 below. $ PR INT NUMBERfO llflfRS IN lf.IESE SQUARES 6 UNSCIAM8lE tEH!IS TO I GET ANSWEI • $30.000 eq. in 8 unit apt. Inglewood. $15,500 annual Et"O!lS -for clear land ln Orange Co. or ? By owntr. 673-3449 80 Acres. Shasta Acres. great play l.n!:a, Shut& CUcade wonderland. $13,500 F.q.: for sm. duplex or home. Bier. 673-6510. \VANTEO: Unit.I, Harlxir area. HAVE: ' br, 3 bo. """' 615-1225 H1R AUST. Prhe r.attle 1taUon nr Barrlor Rttf., 145,920 ac. 600 cattle, new hom•. $250.· 000. value For real eJal('. 673-3817 WANT AIRPLANE • • • . trade '68 O nyaler Crown fmperhi.1 or '68 Volkrwqen or both. Call 5«>-6997. Ask for John .. COMPANION Crypt, ,_ dom Ccurt. Form Lawn, Gltnd&lt', val ue S18'7U. Trade for 11imllar in Pacific Vin'. -ft'a alwf.11 the rflbt dmt A o1....., tbo rfaht place If JOU w&nt RESULTS! Call -.. plAco that od ~I ---- -------- SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800 * * * * * * t j 1 * 549·2015 * 21 ~. exp. fut: Est. H•rbour Tix Service 15 yrs CXPl"I'. M!l'Vb at )'OUT "°""'· ..... &ppl 8'Ml8T. Secrwtarles Typists Repro Typists MTSY 2790 Harbor Bl n f Adam!! 16 Fashion Island Newport Beach TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 842-5678 ''Make Room For dy'' .. c·lea n out ~­Jenltorl1I """ ________ ,, ................... !!!!!I ....... , .. ,...., '"'"' .... ~Lt CAS7! SPARJCLE JantlOrill Wln-SELLING Your boltf "'List" wttb 1 DAILY PILOT don, an. c.TJ1CH'ald. 6 WSrb at.. ..ttll tt tut Da.ll1 O..ltwd ad, ......,,, ,.... ... -Pilot Owl1le<I. r Mond1y, ftbruary 14, ltJ72 DAILY PILOT J9 11~ ----·~l[ll] ! ____ ._,,_,_,~l[Il) [ ~·~··· l[ll] l.__"_:...._ ..... ~J [Il] I J[Il)I ..__ _ ...... _, .... ~J [Il) I Help Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wemed, M & F 710 Help Wani.d, M & F 710 I iH ... el•p•w•.•.•,•ec11!'.1!M'!l'!!&l!F!!ll!!7'11!!a Help W•nted', M & F 710 Help W•niMI, M la f 710 M iscellaneous 118 Pets, Gener•I C ----------·I t\.tAN we.nted: Somoe ex~. I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ I ::=~:;;~;:-~--=~:;:;;.1 ·--;:';;-~"L'E,l<~--roR -.It" s· ~l\'tt .5()1a . lERK TYPIST I JfOUSEKEEPER. -Cook in laying nooni. 1-iave O\\'TI RESTAURANT HELP TELEPHONE Salt's. Top LOST LEASE J'OC'kifl.i chair, 3 Parton$ \\IANT£0; YeUow l.&.b. 11!\Jd 5erv1ce. CAll S4J2..$525 Per Mo with rf'ls. 5 day wN!k at !nHH>p. ~7 day 1, Sar:dwil."h .t Viii tra.lnH ftlr SECRET ARY o..mmis.sKlns and bonus. Ap. Co••f P•wnbrokers iablro!li, lamps, vt>l\'f't ot· Must have ahll!ty to m~t N.,,,...I &ach homf', live out o.•• ""15 eves. lunch shift. 10.:i Mon 1hru .,..,., •e I I I ' · '---------= •"-bl' G d •. ,. O'I-~ Bank exper. •i t>t.' ..,., \\'.p,m. ply in person beN.·een 9,00 s c ear ng out. ,,ur n11!1i-tonmn, 60 watt A,\l/F'.\t•cD s ... • 968-7614 • Ul'I'. pu Ir .• ra uatJon /rQm 673-1805. Fri. Apply in ,_.....,.n alter-s 70 F II ro~ Is'~ Ir I ~ -"I " "-I · I · 1----------M Tu R '· 1 I ,,_...... h .,.,.,pm. U lln\t:. anrl 12 00 rioon al SJ.SI BolSI!. "unr ,,. .. ur gnrir or uni•. luner, all like nrw, '195-$RJ9. -.. "g,. se,......, Int• Udlfli or liUP· A .., recep ,-lypis · fKlOrui, Deli Sht>f, Laguna LT d eel t f II ----------1 plementt'<I by t•oursrs in l!OUSEKEEPER, ll('t'<lc_tj for f'ull-bn\c. Lynv.·ilco Lats-a-Hills ShoppiT14 Centt'r, 1!'.I Apply In Pt'r~n AvPriu ... , l\.1irlwl!.y Ctt)'. kl~~~ ~:~ ~f'\ ~~r:s fr~c!l~n AD)'JIR.AL Air cone!. 10~ TOY Poortle puppy, lo ff'· ty11l11x & or oitief' practlt'l'!i. motherlesi; honlt'. 2 girls. 1u1•1e5 646·:!9.l\ !or appt. Torn. No Calls Plea~e -U-;:gentl'V Nud;d--(ll thtitr \'alur. \Va tr hr~. HTtJ ·~. 1 !ipd \\ lndn\\ i;~1n~1hlf' h<imt", N'f!Ulff'S. ni1t File apphea11on by Friday, 7'i &· 4. Prcfrr l1ve-1n !ll ECHANIC. Sen•ice station, ':\LFS Lad E '!0-4~ Je\\'elry, !yfl('i\Tltf'rs. rhri· nit'.lllf'L }o~xt"t.'l cond. SQ. onl} IOl'f' hut Jot~ of ar irnl· Frb. 25th in the personnel 1!:J~j~7. Corona dt>l l\.lar •r e a 1-1'1,,,,:~ s',· r ,',"1 r,. :,,, .',· l 1t Western Bank Flexowrr'tAr Opr •l1nnfi, tnu~11·nl rn1'!n11n1'nl~ ~ll3 alt 6 pn,, ion. adul!~ onlv Rrasonah!r. 0H11·f'. room 511 • · v "'" i·;i.m('r~s 0· 18, t·r~ i·t ~ rt·.' M' 11 ti42·<\.il.l~. 5'.M·.'W!5 afier 6 pm CITY o r <.'OSTA 1-IE~\ l!SKPRS Ernpl}T pays let!. Salary to StOOO per mn Chtldrens Stnrl', So C~t 16932 Goldenwest Full •lr p 11n1r ('\I'll " " 1 • 1 1sce aneous George AUen Byland A1::rn-Al l,1.:n1ncnt & air'l::."llnd. f'.ICIJ. pJijz.a. C~!. Appl y 6j() El Huntington Beach ln!i'rvicwln~ Hnur:ro Hu~h rnrr fnr ht:-! lruy\ \\'anted 820 AIXlRAR!~I·: Pf'f'k·POO & I 17 f"air Drive, C.r-.t 92(126 ey 106-R £. 161h S.A. prt·f. Rl'ft'rf'n<:es rrqull't!d. Camino Real, Tu s 11 n. Eq f 1 9111n ltHnl & lpni .. lprn 14:.!4 Nr111'10r1 IJlvit . inr\I ro 'f~:rtrtl 1'00 SIO. &12-4SlR. ( 7141 834-:.r:l.JO~--547--0'.195. Phone 673-7233 for appt. t.ion-fri only ual Oppor. ::m p oyrr \\ i~rk 1~hf'n & 11 hrrc Antu1u•· H"" 1 C \I, 5'lg·ti.ll11 \\ A~TED !<> buy I '1 ,; I\ !)3;t :~~) 11fl<'r 6 pn1. COCKTAIL M ? SECRETARY ' STERl~0-.-197:.! 1;;1rr ard -"."'."rl 1~_1t ,Ror,_1r1111_d 11 -FREE &-LOVIN-G WAIT RESS HOUSI::KEEPERS tu!J f..· Need E x tra oney SALESMEN you 11'anL _ I WANTED Interim nuldrl. full "'l'rt'O cha11.:1•r, (h11stn111.s florr. i..1·1-16~.. '\'n<. ~nil hrf'1•1l /rn1 f1fl<> 21 :rs ptumr. Con11. Hosp f'Xpc'I' ~1any Al'on sa rs rrps ram Need men \1•ho are ready 10 ' -, . Don Jose Reslaurant, k Personnel s., .. ,·ce a rr )>llS{len'>~l/I speakers. Off'1ce Furniture/ •~rv.'11 l"\lk !'1J\'el ''''-""' onl} 6'12-2410. an <'Stimated S40 a " or learn the car business t1nd Rtal F.:s tate de\·r\opmi'nt ... • '1 9093 E. Adams. l!unt. BeaC'h. E 1 h & 778 W • 20 L C M A:\11~ \1 ~ti'J'N1 ra<l10 + Equ'Jp. 824 So l'll!f f..· <tffc,1·1innate! I mort'. ·urn x ra rai; -are v.•il!ing to lrain. ?-.lust r1r1n niov1n,:: In N B. h11s • tn, . • . COCh.'TAJL \Va1tres!i, f'."<prr. havt fun . too! 1'"or Details have ........i personality, be J>Hl'l!C"ul11r emphao;is on high 642-7523 546-2592 lt1f)( deck. S!llJ hrAnd rH·ii· ,f,; \\'r() Tn1111"1l1 r.d •v chlrt. Pl " ,~ ~......,... .c.u.'ll'an!('r-d. \~'n.~ 1 t' ft :-.IATltlN1\I. Ca~h Hri;:1strr • :0.lt.A...,i' F/1\[) C,0<1" JJ IJ,I'.· umr evci;. .:;i or over Call, intPrcsted in a futurr, drf'!<S rflir1tnry Of sr"rr!ar1aJ ..., r 67:>--0:ic:JJ alt 3P~1. 540..7041 ·well, salcsminded, Benrfits · skills. Perm. posi11on, lutt1re \\'A:-iTED exprr'<l nu:;h1 ("(J(lk unt hulili·d nn la;,-aii'ay ·'11"' !("ll;il 1111 h 10'''1111111 Pl.EASE 111':1.P' ;,.;:;1:;·,.sr e " 11 r Sold lnr $,!:!:1, pay nf! runl l~'ll. l1kr n_1'w. ~ . ~·n11r \\ \R-,,1-,1 ... ,,,1,11--COOK . HOUSEKEEPER ~. NURSES Aldl's, all shLfts. Denio., group ins., guaran· auvancrntt>nl, H l'l!\~e apply in !)('l'SOn. Viln (!(' hailint'<' or $'.b nr !;ikr 011,r Jnt,d~ .\ 1 r\lf• xdrlllli,: ~I • Y 1n.Ht<ll1Jre Grncral [J trrl utie~ +even-..... F.xp!'I'. Only in Conv. Hosp. tl'cd salary plus comnus· hcnf'f11s & year e11tl t11inu~. Kan1p:r:: 3099 So. Br1 ... 1QJ, snlall pynints. t"ollec!ron nuu·hrnf"; 1,...111 Sll ,\n.\ u:-· · llllllu;rr pupp1rs, .\KC ini;: meal 12 tn 7 pm . 01.1·n ..::: s.12_2410. sions. Unlimited in("(lml" AP-S<-n<l full r('Sunl!" P 0 flo"< (.'.\I. i)PJll , ii I ~!l.~-<f.Ol 1 , u 1 !' n i;. ,\lJ ~hnr~. Jo:1nn" l\f!<'r car. 6.J.1-13\!i. N.B. Rrea . -----~--ply in Per.son. UN!Vf.rtSr-221S, Anahrin1. Calif. 928fl.I. l('-;-;_,.1.,., ,,,,._,1 ""'I 0000,.,-,,, •,:'1 _ n,;;~,~~11~1.r~n~l. r '1 •· pin f: lj-~:J'.!!l: Ii \!-:i.-,H --• NURSES AIDES TY OLDSMOBILE. 2S50 SE CR.ET-ARY V-J '-"-' .... I ----·11."\' ,,., .~ .... -.11.-,. b '·' • • f:XPER. ,,...,,.,,..., J!<lrhor Blvd., Costa ri.tt!sa. ~ C ain, i n1at<'na . f'1i« L Pl'l '\E\" n<•11r, 1oa1I npf'nrr. COUN1'ER "Ori for "r" "•n ·"~! I ll§l h ' " I I ---~ .~ " .. ,. ,. r!ran1ng p]a,!! . .Apply 2200 WANTED Merchandi1e V link 21 2 Ion~. 1~~ .. \\'ldf'. niodrl t. ,\. hkr nrii· r .. n.I r1.,,g1,.,1eri'd .~· i,.hotc;, $III. Harbor Bl , C.r-.1. ~foce -·n. OPERATORS exprr. s1n:::lr SALI·:S\1AN. Need .iggrrs-Real Estal<' <!evelopnlrnt '------~ eon , ~11 "8'i! onov IRVINE PERSONNEL needle -s~·im\\'('ar. 37fi0 sive hard 11•orking Nc11• Car f1rn1 n1ovin~ In N R. has' '!-Ill! .. ------.. !! JI.it: pt'r It. :-.1arine Surplu.~ s~7·1 c .i.,1 !WI' SJ:ill Call . =··_· _. ~~~~ DELIVERY H Pr a I rl E."<· SERVICES ~'GENC{ Cam nus Dr . NB. SaleSTTlan, Liberal Ornin I' BOO Co.. 3307 S. :-.lain, SA S.IR-2Ztll. r:-.1 ~\ ! llEGISTERED poorl!f's, S.i:J . .,,.,... •· n;1rt1cul<1r f'.mpha~1s nn hLch Antt'que• .. ,,, ,.~., •1·1ooy -k I'" s m1ner auto , . .,_,,, ca-Pl M !hi Bo ""' & ,. ·"'~1:i · .. Lv.. ·!l·J'JO<'~. -·1• . ._..,_., ' ,~ ORTJIOPEDIC TECl/NICIAN an, on 'i n f'lfl l'lrnC'y ol • ~rcr('tan11l -----------~ 1\1 fl ho i! an Y I In IS •1 &h & Dana Pt al'Cil, full tinic. rlayo;;, n1 1n1mum l Insurance. Experience de-skills. Prr111. posi1icw1, fut11r!' \VANTf:J) in huy, 1~6 ~ * AUCTION * Dh!l<'lll'P. .c.1n~s top. rlf'~k ; .. 11-c"'~·~;,_1 _~~ 492-144L p !Of sired See Don Crevier at •d•·•n-m•nt, ,11 -.,,,~ S\1edis ... Rorstra11d s nartit1n11s. 1n101nbteGREATDAN[Pupi;,AKC.~ Secretary $500 yr ('X"p, req. rrsonnf' · · .... " u' '" " :Fine 1'~urn1ture ,. DENTAL Asst. exp er , Good skills. ability lo Roll lice.~. Coast Comm. Hosp.. Theodore Robins Ford, 2060 herll'fit:s &· year end bonus. Chns1n1as Plarf'. &14-46R7 .i:: Appllancrs M·rrensl SIO f'R 646--0~j, \i ks. Jlarlrquin & h!k. Sho1v Prelerrerl, intrllo'g•nJ •ag•' &·<. »m•n•. ·-1111. An J-larbor Blvd ., Costa r-.1csa. C I I I I'd 1· l I 826 ,(: pct f'[Uflli!\' 586-7035 .. " .. With The Punrhes. Ex-~... .,,,...,.. omp e c Y con 1 m ia o SCRAM LETS Auctions Friday, 7·3(1 r n1. Pianos /Organs · ·' · girl. willing ro work tn busy celll'nf Potential. f'llua1 nprortunity employer. all rf"Pl.vs. Send lull resume -Windy's Auction Barn ENGLISH ~tier, femalt'. s ott2ice. some Sa! & eves. Girl Friday $SOO up OVERSEAS P . O. Box m R. Anaheim, 21'.lT:i *HAMMOND ORGANS mo's old, :Ul champs. 4 in- 64 -9942. Bkkrr.<T, !) .... in''" Sh he!"-t10REJOBS T!-IAN PEOPLE ''Sales-Brokerage" Calif. 928(}1. ANSWERS :i~~ NCl\'port, C:II &16·86.% Lar-:l'rt & olrlf'l\I, deR1er in ternat'I charnps. 6Q.~7 1. DENT , .. ,., ,. ... ,-Bchin<l Tnny'~f\lclg ~la l'I 11 ~-Al! modrl~ ne1v-u.~Pd lcc==-o-o--c----co--1 AL asst, exp'd. Take ful. Miis\ be sharp & de· All skills & professions SECRETARY AKC Black Lah puppy, 6 mo. X·rays. Non smokl'r. Prefer 1>Cnd;ibtc. e Hight'r 11.'agt!s e Lci1.1'ef Ban ish -Forty _ S1oic -NAT 1 ON A L l.N>graphl('.!i, Tu>forr you huy · givr us ll ~hots, p11prrs. Ire. doghouse 2"0 5 d N T "-I c Id y 1~2R-1!17\ ('01)1nle!f' f'Xrr pt ll'v B " ... OR"O e F T 1 1· For N"\vporl Brat·lo Ad Agon-fnr ~rvrn rr1·rnt i-:s11"s 20 PENNY OWSLEY CO. ages .i-.>J. -'\ys. e"·port C r & Collections $580 l'xPf'n~t'S • a.'< .,.·ne its OU QU Angina -FISHING ,. • · Sfli f>.18-142·\. eac.,, D'l'f· n . C & C c.-.:pcr. Back,...,,und rl'e ran~por R ion .. Unr!rrslandin,:: i1'Hr : Ont' CER?.1/\N S1'l1':PllERDS ~-----,... CALL 541 •345 rv .. All skills including Sil. h I rarher 1ssu1•s lrnn1 1fl2.1 al...o 17141 Rf!2·111·1 01SH\VAS/I F:H, days Sap-in l't!<ll r~tal!' ht!!pful. _.. w o 1as th!' pork chops rrady AKC, chan1p srock, 11 \\'ks. S G I Sharp JOOk!i, Jong hours, I d 2 indf'X<'S anrl o·ollt"('for 's 1 l'.152 Rrneh Rlvrl list Conv. Hosp., 66l Conl•r Bkkpr·E DP to $550 . crvl('f' uarantrr< 11• l('n !he ol n1an ronH'S * ",7-~2.'•3'. * d B good pay, R33·1610. J;:Ul<lf'. Sl'.r.i f1rni. !lfi2-4S27. 1So. nf Kalc\1111 ".r-St., C.i\1. 54!1-11.li:i. C:ood l?l'n'l <LCC't'g !'Xp!'l'. Un til <'mplnyrnent acC('p\e e a hon1c from R F ISHING trip. _ ---11-~ _ __ --"S~IB~C~.R~!~AN llusky puppir~. DRIVE \V A)' sal.;me;, Exl>')~UN' to EDP hrlpf11I OV ER~F:A~ S~l~VT~~s 3 Sec'y Jr. fo $425 Appliances 802 LOW-HEAT WOULD YOU ,\hC, S i1·e1'ks. Brautiful , &I- 1vflube c:qwr. Clean & Document Clerk $433 1617 E. 1 111 . t •.. uite \Viii train brigh1 high school STAINLESS STEEL BELIEVE fcct1ona1c. 832-9169. -•· "r 3 da)•s • ,, .... k ' · Sh id 1· · TV' I 1 · c,·-Id "om• d•n>o .,«, 1'ak· as long as you l ike ~ No fl'<· SAMOYED Pup, 4 mo's old. neat. Apply in PE>rson, Boyrfs Opera1 ... blurprint ma -p,\RT tlmr. housekce'JX'r S2 Merr'ill Jrr"ad 1.1·/skils. Ois tn ct olc of Major Appliance Sale W o!ite rless Cookwo!lre Set ~ tlEE OTtGAN LE~SONS Arco,49()E.17th (Crossroad l'hine , litf'1YPini::. Soml" .. ~ "·· Loe ,·• maJorcorp. ou 1ve1n s, s ereos, re rigt , •JU ",.." """" L · · 11-a 1lay ''IV F Own II B -·mrndou->"as"•r· & d C 1 + •~. '"'". Bo••s o•v"r istration. No obligation. Just Champ. line AKC $100. Irvine! c .ri.1 . f' . .,.pcnrnce as cnginN'r· ,.,, · · · · · or near , . ,,., " • "" .~ · ryers. os .c" ...,,.,, " " ... Ing c lerk. rransporta!ion 10 a.n1 . to 2 oppor. Call 1'1isi; Joan, 557-107'<>. Con~enient te r ms', opened. 100~0 1'·ac1ory Guar-Conie Mondayi1 7: 30 pm, i ~'='"""=~O~'~· ~-----" EXPANDING S & L Typist fo $500 p.n1. 846-2133 L h 6122, Abigail Abbot Person-Fircslont! S!orf', 475 E. 17th antecd COAST ·MUSIC GREAT Dane, fem .. AKC, in these ueas: \Viii train 70 w.p.m. typ-PT/time box olfice co nscs· nc gcncy. , . 11111cr. t., ... ·..,.. ., . .,. SEEKS qualified candldatcs & ync I A 230 \Y \V s c '' &1"2••• (7141 638·108/l ____ s.r2.~_ .. 1 ---show "'1al .. 7 mo!\:. Trade or ]. Operation nianager ist 011 ;o..1 Ts T -!'ion gir l. Port Theatre in Suile 200. S.A.. OLDE R r-.iaytag matcherl se! QUEEN Sz. hc<I f 1 r 01 , PIANOS ** ORGANS sell. 642-:H\85 or &l>-4209. 2. EsC'roW-FHA/VA Clerk Typist $433 CdM. See 6'7',_a~~3g7er aft 6 pm SALESGl'RL 21-40. Tl'nnis & gas dryer . gri CQnd. Mov ing \\'fhdhd. Kf'nmorc' mod 600. K.~.i ·ar, Stein~·ay, Lo 1.1•rcy, TOY Poo<llr Puri. !iilver J. Loan Type 50. good S/)('\ling. .,-;xi Account golf i;hop. Exp. For Coi;la lo apl, must sell. SlOO. open lop d1sh .... •ashf'r. All A,lf.'n, Baldwin. C'I~ Fm~ femalP, Al\C regislt!l'ed. 4. Conv. Fl!A/VA Self !il<1rtrr for 1 girl off'. Proclui:tion Supv. to manage l\1esa storf', apply 1~27 5.16-647R 8391 Lomond Dr. hke ne1v. St'r \\'rd Sat / ;1~1~, 11f0.r. R ~~,;A1~·-5 1 ~=~~-''_1.~_&~'~"~--- S. Telll'r-Of.'1\1 aerounts File Clerk $325 !<a ll boat production lines . 1-larbor Blvd. Also for Palm Huntington Beach. Sun. 645-4325501 Tustin Avf'., FIELD'S PIANO CO 3 l\10old lf'mall' Irish Se!ll"r, cnmr iaboard for tha1 1'11rcer Prefer 23+. No exper. Supervisory PX"per. l'ssen-E , ? Springs s1ore, phone F R 1G 10 A 1 RE , Npt. Bch • AKC reglsteded. ,o; h 01 ~. opportuni!y. Ct1\I r-.trs. Miller F'N'c/FE'l' Posilions ti11l B<">a t buildini:::-exper. xecut1ve 714-325-1381. 11133 Neii•porr Bll'<I. 01z_f\fV\r' rcfr1g/freezt!r, fros! prooL U!'ED vacuun1!i In xl nt ron-Co.'i1fl i'.Irsa Tl1 1&\:1-3Z5(l ,~~==~~''==~=---(2131 610·0150 , ~AA E. 17th lat 11''int>I C~\1 tin! l'f'q'd. Fast gro"·ing co. • SERV ICE,' S!Ruon AJtcn{tant, 16' ! h L'k " ~ · CM · f'u. 1 • ronzr. 1 e <lition, inclurl ini;: !( l r h y. l'llAJOR BRAND ORGANS BOXER PUPS Af\C reg, EMPLOYi'.lENT 642-1470 l6.~l Placcnl i;i, .! · p / lime l'Ves / \vknds. r>.'!'af nc11'. 67}-0372 or 673-9119. · I Th k b , A Priv. ply, 496-7498. Frorn S39:i inc. Allt'T1 . Conn . Ch11mp1<1n 1ne COUNSELOR PURCHASING in a out rt-re in af)pt!aranre, t'Xpt!r. only. RECON D. Appliances & * 714 962 8067 II you likP to 1.1tirk 11·1 \h DIR ECTOR of purchasin)'.;, you sincerely ,. Apply Z590 Ne"·part Bl .. L!GllT gn'f'n ny!(lll (~rpf'1 Hanlninnd · v:urltlZl'r. etc. : · peoplt' & ha\"l' had ~alei; or IMMEDCIALTEERfcLAACLE:r-.1ENT "'ants assiss1 ant 1.1·illing to interested in a career C.Jl;t. b~~~.·~u::is ; t' wOf!p.~~d~ '~·1th pad 12'x16', L1kr· IK'\.\' Arl<;Cl 1-1 a r P s 1 c 11 or d s & DAhoLMATION A.Kie Ppu· S:~ pu bhc contact ex[)(!ricnt;e \earn: <1ua·k, aggrf'ss1vl', in securities ,<!I les 7 cond. Phone-. 67.1-~. JBf11'1~. s "' or prt qua ity, MC•:u we i1·1ll train you in an in-POSITIONS gOl'M'l wi1h flgurt>!<. 'l'nunJ;: Are you dedico!i ted SERVICE CENTER Bl\•d, C?.1. 54S-77SO. <:OULD ~1USTC CO. 10 sell. 673-6785 <'Vt!s·wknds. 1eresting c 11 re er . Com-Grf skil!!i or hu~incs:r:: exp. n1alr or ren1alc O.\{. Salay h AGENCY e \VHIRLPOOL-KENMORE * STEREO * 2(1..\j Kn. tltrun, S.A. OOXl::R PUPS STENO CLERK to a c ievem•nt, re-1!172 GRrrarrl mrwlcl full :1'17--0fil!t • * S1nct! l!'lll mission + Salary provid{', (lpen. Call t.1r . Long at Coast b I d h rpr. man has 1vashers/dry-$5(1 & Up. Call After ... . ~" 000 S" 000 Typ'on< •• ,,. p on Sl•no 90 C I •93 •031 •ponsi i it y <!In t e ft''' ••Js ''°521'· o"" -,.,..,... stcrro l'hRngt'r, air sU!i""ll· WANTED' 6 00 ~01g27 n1gh earnings . .,.,, . '" "" .. , . ~ a an1ara11 .,, .,.,, . substantio!il remuner•-*Secretary to $600 • . ·"" . .,...,.. . ,,,,...,_. -""-"' ,... . p.m. ;JOO'" • CA.JI '.'11 Har""r ~ ..... p n1 srovr· T ,., A sion speakers. J\M /f"M '.'111''< P '1ano Ben<h · r. ""' ·. . .. E CH P·GEE INDUSTRIES t ion that c o!in go along Type 60-70/i;h 80. Back-~. appan, w 1 e. " speakers. AM /l<"M i'.tPX AKC reg. Poodles. All siu1 Coastal Ag•ncy K YPUN d · ··' k b"rn•c, s~. 5 -. b-•klasl 11,, .. ~ ... n"hl•' 0 •2 °-1 & 1 ,. s~ , N d T ' 'th 't7 A groun In _,!?'i or m tng '· ....,, .. ~ "; •t·-,,d1·0, ' Jra•k la""' "·"''"' " ... "" '"'M • co ors. rom .,,., .,. up. 2790 !!arbor RI at Adams r-.1ust have 6 mo':r:: \~·orking ee s ra1nees w1 1 re you se:t. $25. 64:t-5S5l. ~"-.,, .. ..-<'XJlf'r. on <'i!her 11 keypunch. $508-$650 Per Mo. bright, ho!ird.~g . dC'pl nf romm'I busin!'S!' deck opp. \Vas \e[I unc\aim-PRIVATE PARTY \VANTS 64&-0142 or a4S-W22. ESTIMATOR kcytapr, or key di~C' rlevicc. productive? Do you *Acct'g Clerk to $450 SEARS F'rostlcss r<'lrig-t!ri on l:ty ;11v11y. sold tor TO BUY PIANO FOR Horses Construction Knowledge 'r'nung nif'n nlf'!.:hanical ex-enjoy deo!l lin g w ith Soni<' t'xpe r. in acct'g pro-l'rator·fN"ezer. 14 cu It. A·l $295. pay oH balance of $SR, CASH. 835-2278. 156 Call Lorrainr PACIFIC MUTUAL llf'r. helpful, but not rcq'd. people on an in teUi. C'('(furt>S/typc 45/KnO\V 10 <'Ond. $00. ~5-3433. Colleetion dept. 638-1080. HA'.'11:VIOND l)rgan, · \VESTCLI !FF Free rlRily 'bus transpor!a-l\lu1;1 be \!I or over. Able 1o gent basis 7 Do you kr.v. * KENMORE e ! e c Ir i c l.'i" Cw;lom wht'cls, fit Ford S699tbcst offer. :-,1 3. Q.H. Gelding, 12 yn. Show or pleasure. Reasonable, Show Mrldle & blt. 675-0987. PcrsoMe Agency 11'0 0 tor ,,~,k ,·0 Los ,\0. ·l•o·J work immNlia·tcl~·. if h II *Bookkeeper $600 drver, ...,.,,..,, condition, ·~. e 67'-"'"'01 W. 1·11 n-NB " " "' ~ a ve o!I co ege ·~ ~....,,... ~ or ChI"}·~ler or adapt to V\\'. .,.....,,,... 2043 estc 1 1Jl • · • gcl"s unlll move •o Nr .... ·-::iCCf1)tcd. For info on job Know AIR, A/P &· payroll/ Call 962--0218. 645-2770 11 ·" 9 ba ckground' <!i nd a T.B. und•r ,,_.,,·,;00. $40. for 4. 67!>-l.1-[1. Sewing Machines porl. plac{'menl~. ca Tue:.uay I • ~.. KENMORE h & J proven r•cord' o *S 5550 1 was er e ec- EXECUTIVE Personnel Agency SEPTEMBER 1972 am-1 pm on!y, h ecretary ,_. d _ 155 ea " G ar success in w atever u 1c C)'.c•, en. u • lntcrvit'\Ving Hrs In 776 8551 Xln 't typist, li te 11h. Some NE\\'PORT FINANCIAL CTR • you've don•, dictaphone. Know front of· and del. >16-8672· t.londay & Tut'srlay preferably ,ales} lice proccdurr. Furniture 810 9 o'clock Ar-.1 · 2:00 Pl\f PROFESSIONAL p h 0 n e If you Co!ln truthfully *Gen'I Machinist Silt! Of 0~11New Bldg ~!i~~:ie: g:;~='·a::: so!iy "Yes" <!i ll the wa y ~ill~~~ H~=r. ~" 1;~~~i Exec. Sec'y fo $600 To OPf.'rations mgr. Good skills, figurr aptitude. 10 key hl'lptul. Fee Paid. PACIFIC ?>fUTUAL Work in your 01vn home. down the line, we'd machinccy/Clost! tolerance Cornt'r Santa Cruz &: Best deal In are/I. Phone like to heo!ir from you. "'ork-read blut!prin!s/o,1·n Nt!1\·port Center Dn,·r 835-1465 bet\\·een 9:00 •1.m. If you qualify, you hand tools/2nd shift·S"i> drf. Acct'g Clerk io $600 Financial stmts. cost a("('I~. bud~J>I analysi:r::. E.~posure lo ins k payroll. F'rr Paid. Clerk Typist $475 Background in ,.tat1stics. Good math ~ptitudf' and noon. mo!iy be of fe red a n ferential, 1'-rec & Fee Pos11lons Call Betty Bruce 410 W . Coast Hwy., NB Suite H 645-2716 EXPERrENCED s t r " t g h f needle operators. on Jr. i\liss dresses & spor!i;.,.,·ear 64&--030l<. EXPER. tow truck driver & service s1alion attf'ndanL 26988 Orlega ""'Y· San Juan Capo. INSURANCE OPENINGS ?-.Iany ~ccretarial & grnrr0l C'll'riral pnsilion:r:: inC'lurlinR nnr 1'r~n.~crihcr to hr !rain· f'rl !or r-.lTST .. Thr~r Jl!'!~i1 1on!I 11re 1\'ith l!nnie Ofli•·r of l\.lajor in- surance 1'0m pany lnrarrrl in LA but moving tn ne1~· builri· in~ in Nr.,.,·porl Beach latrr this year. Free rommu!ing hy bus to LA until move is complete. Ln1v cost lunches provi<lrrl. Good s.alary & frin2e benefits. Fee paid by l'mploycr, For Int erview & Test CALL ................ . <T't:id 2mo""' "'· J·y 1,....-.. IJJ.11ft FACTORY Ht'!per, varying manufacturing duties. $2.50 hr. 979-)623. IRISH I BRTTISll rh ythm FUl..L or pttime, j\fgmt guitar player to play & slng !:mt', no exp. n e c . part time w/4 m a n Sa lary/comm . Fuller rroup. "The Belfast Sing· Brush. 962--0416. m;." Ca ll 5.11~127. e R. E. SALES MANAGER TRAINEE r-.tan or 1voman net'rlcd "•lt h managerial potential. Our <'XIXlnsion plan requirf's 11.1·0 C'Urrrn! Jirensees. salcsmt'n or hrokrrs, 1ri he groomrrl for office n1anage r in H.B. or Anahrim. Plannrrl O))f'n· ings in r.1arch & May. De· sire minimum of f'.1'0 years eXJ'l('rirnce hut 'viii ("(lnsidf'r o!hers baseil on ablli1y. Ex- cellent bl'ncfits. Call Mr. Graves for confidential i n t er v i e w appointmcnl. 893-5063 & 697-61~ COLLINS & WATIS INC. 13651 l\1ag- nolia, Garden Grovt!, Calif. .,. f<euben j Santa An• Now Intetvil'wing for DAY BUS HELP Gen'I Ofc-Lmbr to $450 JANITOR, full lime. Conv. In · · H on1 Call d Apply In Peraon teresting vanely position osp. exper. y. a · ln lovely new olCK of lop ministrator , 642-2410. Before 3 & 5 P .M. rated co. Beach arr.a. Top KEEP important job 8 5 Or Before 11 A.M. ~nefil~. Call Miss I.aura. house"•ife & mother. Earn 567-6122. Abigail Abbot Per-in spare time. Min. age 20. 231 l No Bro•dw•y 100nel Agency, 2-M W. \Var· Sarah Coventry Jl'welry. ner, 9..tile 209, s .A. 540--0614. 1 ,.."",.."'"~0~p~por~·~E!}m~pl"o"y•,.r..,. I GUARD> ~KE~Yl'U==-~N~CH~O~P~ERA""'T~O~RS~ RENTAL PATROLMEN 029 & 059. r..11 lime. •II Permanent aulgnml!nt. C.M. ahifts also · pt/lime &. AGENT area. M.il. exp. de1 irable. wknd1. Good pay. bonus. AttraCU"re. we.II . groomed Full le part time.. Pttm. pay, Expcr'd Alph11. Numeric on-woman w/ dynamic person· Lile ins., Bonus, PaJd vac. ly, .Nr. O.C. a Ir po r I . ality. Must have knowledge Apply SUile G 54()-1984. or leases .\ rental agrce- 523 No. Grant!, S.A. "KI-TCH~~E~N~-,,.~,~p-lo_r_p~;-,,.-ments. Good typl~. I-lours Help W&f\lt'tl M & F. parlor. Must be 21 or over. 12;30-9 pm. A w~k~nda. Fu.II or put ti.me full or part time. AJ.90 need, ~-~P~h~-~=--5025 __ ~" No exp. needed 5.»1129 _,, -' · busboy . ...,_,,,.,.,, JUX:EPTIONJsr: ,Jlow would HAIRD~ w/followlng LOT MAN you like to work for only, Xlnt \.1-t)rkin& conds. Ii Neal, clean appearance, go00 fhfl lutMt growing real loc. Call 548-4179. 1. bl Pho "I•!• • ln'-•lm•nt -.•. penrona 1ty, sta e. ne ... '-" HElJARC we Id tr, ex-546-9665. Yountl' modern 00--\lolOl'kcr. perienced In 1t1tlnles~ stt!el w1U welaime you AbOard . k 11,luminum, .Also 15hould ./ Maids. C'Xp«!r., over 21 · Ce.II He len HAyt:~. ~ I AIM llOUSEBO'l'S. I hAve good koowlcd&:l' of Apply Ben Bto"'TI 's, ~1106 Coa.slRl Agency mari"C hardw11re. 1 2 ~ 1 2790 Harbor Bl 11t Adams S. Coast !fwy, So. A1tuna . Tu!jtln A11P: .. N.B. &IS-4520. RN le. LVN, dRys lr Pi'.!. Call M•tur1 Hotte•se• HISTOLOGY TEO -INICIAN , TO INTEflVlEW Adm inistrator 111 P11rk l~ldo exp, Tues thru Sal, 6 •m -t'EW RESIDENTS Conv. •tosp. 642-1410. 12 pm. Soulh Cout Comm. -P11.rt Tlmf'-Vacanciea C'O&t moneyJ Rtnl lfoap .. So. Laguna . P(!'t50D-CAR It TYPEWRITER NEC. your boll~. apt., !tort ntl Office. 499-1311. An lMO p E. Edln&.er. S.A, hldr., t tc. thru a Dally Pilot equal oppcrtunlty f'mploYfJr . Cf11 547.3095 C111~slf~ Ad. opportunity to *Mgmt T rainee $900 become .a Closing Assistan!·~lor1~::tc:e stockbroker with Loan . r.lin . ]!"' yrs e.xpl'r. 902 Merill Lynch. .,.,./constr .. insuranre or title co. Comm 'I prc'd. 0egT"c Th e Merrill Lynch R.F.. or finance. Gn1\\'lh np.. Account Executive por. ha s virtually no c eili ng on his income. In fo!lc t, efter 5 years in securitie s so!i les, the o!lverage Merrill Ly nch A ccount Executive is in the top 2 "/. of <!ill A merica n' in terms of income . SI X-MONTH TRAINING PROGRAM weve esteblished on• of the mo1t comprehensive s•lo!iri•d pro9ro!l fl"l s to trein future •ccount •x•cut ives: b montM of study •nd... testing on ev•ryfhin4 from corporation fln1nce to the Federal R•serve System. Could you mtke the 9r•de? Think 1bout it .a91in. And if you'r• sur•, pl••se send r•sum• includin g sal•ry history, in confid•nc•, to Steph•n D. Franr , Employment Dep1rtment M•rrill lynch -460 I Birch St Newr.ort B••ch, Cali • q5306 MERRILL LYNCH , PIERCE, FENNER & SMITH INC, 4262 Campus Dr .. N.B Suitr B-4 551-2711 llelcn &haJfrr &>t•'y P.R. no Sh to S7o0 Sec'y, sh !10 SSOO Rf'C'f'pt /Sec'y, li1e. sh S4~ B~r·Assistant $450 General Olfice S.190 ln11. Clt'rk to $551) RCCC'pt/Al'g fih S.iOO Typist to $450 Bkkjlng r-.taf'h 0rrr $450 Fl'N' & F'er Positil'!ns RUTH RYAN AGENCY 1793 Nc\1•p0rt. 0.1 646-485-1 17931 Bacch, HB 847-9617 SERVICE glation atlt'ndant, exp. prcfl'tl't'd. Full &. part timl' shilt11 avail. .Apply al Shell, 17th & Irvine, N.B. SEWING machinE! operators. exper. Overlock, special need.It', singll' n c e d I e , womem wear. Rojel, Inc .. ltiM Bab coc k, C.~f. 646-7448. Tellers UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK Piart time lt>llen. l'xperience desired. Call 54(i.52ll. 2 KING beds, refrig., kitchen 1ablf' w/lree chn. etc. 4815 Bruce CrC?Mnt, N.B. Jewelry 115 904 Ncvt'r a ~a ln nll!iS a call . • • 12' inboard CzrptalM GI.If or bl' dist orbed by a tclc· 1 ll 1 full y equip'<!. bea u I If u I phonc pest ~ FrH to You cond, 673-14-41. P•rfect for Sala1m•n • -· Bo R lu1lneu •nd Pr•f•11lonal 3 Lln*9, 2 Times, $2.00 •t•, ent/Ch•rt'r toe Men e lu1y Hounwlv"1,.••••••••••I e Active Slntl•• e Stv-1" CATALINA 27' SLOOP dents • THch•r• HAVE a Heart: 6 mo·~ male Brand new boat .Aux power TIFFANY SETTING e Answers your phonr Shepht>rd + ? nt>l'rl!! homt' 1lttP1 six. SIS' ndk> Ror' TRANSCRIBER, exper. In ~ C•rat promptly, glv<'s callers for V • 1 en 1 i n e '!I day. 6'2" headroom, con~eruenl all aspt'CL'I of medical Diamond Rine your recordl'.'d ma«age. 494--8722. Newport slip w/ple.nty of records. accun le typist, 65 546-5710 Eves/wknd11 • Rceords Incoming mett -VERY lovable maJe cul. 6 J>Arldng. elub ratea. For Info wpm, f\111 lime, days . Miicellaneout 118 saa:es. word for word. mo. Housebroken. par 1 call 5ST-9<M6 alt 6:30. l,"enonnel Oftlce, South • Lc1s you hear '"'ho's AllROMl. 5'57-4056, 2 ~ 2 O Boats, Sall f09 Cout Comm. IJ~p. So. STEREO, 1972 Ga rr a r d calling without touchlnR: Mlnutl"man Wy, CM. --,------- ' >M --"-I El I ho •-r II ynur phone ... or li't· -. . ..aguna. -t.,.~1311 . An t.qua! r"vu.: ec rop nt\; u l in11: caller know you're 2 Yr. old frmale dogs. \Vhl!e CORONAn() Columb1a kit opportunity employffr. f 7.P. !ltereo chanier ba!IJI t here. Shepherd & Brow n m 1 )( • hna!,'I. Pl!c1fie P • s s 11.1 e r l'f1 Px &p('akrrs , • Pltui:1t: lnln ordln11.ry ex· (;oort \\'lltCMog,..:, gl)o d Y~cht<1. 2912 W. CJJI, Hv.')'. TY PI S T /Re c e ri 1ion1st. p I t l me , Thul'l/Sa!/Sun. l\l'ctn'g Mr\(j[round. 1'l'Onl ofe apl>('arianct. Meli/\ Vrr<lr C\Juntry C1ub !}lltl-0377, Nita Myer. TV REPAIRMAN F'IM" •hOP rondiUont I ben t- fita in this local prt1ll11:e Rrvict firm. Tn $800. Call Boh wn'°"· ~ CM!Oilal AEency 7790 Jl&rbor 81 at Adams AM /rMIMPX. stt.,.oo A IE>nlllnrt jllcit .,.,./kld11. 548-6.395. N n &l:J-ll2t , track tape pl11yl'r. Still --007~~~~-~-1 brand ntiiv In box, h~ft nn • ComJlllrl" . ff'Alu rr f n r 1\ Rr11I Ong' ":O.lerlin '·, shag-COt.t :1181A 21i. deluxe int. lay-ft-\\ a)' OrlglnR l!y 110lil ~~~~~(' ... ~~11'1~r::. 0$~~-,in~ fO'. '..! yr~. ~hllggy, black ,t, ~1feo II~. Wtirk ing sails "- for S,186.95, PAY nfl bel . ol lflv11hlc. Lt'~v1ns: countnr. eno11 . Johnson n.h, !'1or-For • l'hone-M•t• ,.'40-44lS II 6 fl\R{' A\'llil. 968-1397 $189.47 nr pymnts of $9.00 Dem•nstr•tlon C•ll th\, · a · mo. U.S.A. S!trt'O Equip. 'hon .. M•t• LOVING &. l'l('t'dS \ovt:. Sn1l' 'W ht! t Eleph.11111$" <lver- Warclnuse, 179 E. \7lh St., Information numMr: yr111: fem. dog . TNLlrll'tl Co!la Mf'sa . 64>2442 5414046 Gd/w thld . So cu t t ! running your ho~; Turn luv• Your Nama and MA-7881 . lhr.m iolo ''CASH " -11ell SELL gr!. Chev. 283 ene. k ~ Phon• NumMr On Th• :--.--c--.,,..--,-,---,1 ' 8P· tran~. SIOO. \Vant 1016.5 Phone-Matt M•INft T•!M 2 purt!bre<l poodles t 4 rno~. 1 lhtrn thrn Da lly P 11 o t rim• Ii tins for trk. Your c•ll w ll l Ille ltetvrMCI 2 yn, 11 mo. old Greal I 642-3683. 'romptly DMe f 1 ~27~ Clas~\licd. &1l-j&i8. ----------· ·~~~~~~~~~~•---·-•_m_•_• ___ "_·_~'-t ------~---1' ~ " I ' I · -.. :T~ OA!l'/ PILOT 11\0lli:fay, r l"bri1ary 14, 1'lil 1 °.___ .... _!:'1-_''!"" ___,)~:~·-""-J[i] -[--,, .. -,1~'-''' -L~-,~, ~., .. ~.1~""~' ~j~~Q 1 .__I '_'"'"'_""_,J§J 1 ~1 ~w .. ~ ....... ~j§J~111.__ _ ........ _ .... _,!§] I ._ .. ,.. 1§11' '""'"''''' J§J 970 1A•u•t0•,•.•l•m•po-rt•ed--!_-701 /Auto1, UNd 990 j •A!u;lo;s;_;U;s;ed;;;;~~990~j[~A~u~to~sjj, jjU~sed~-;;;;;;~990:1 Boals, s.11 ~'}:F: !ht' illl IH'I\ l'urvrw.1!i.1 I I a t ri1·1!11· Pa,~,i.:f' y,..,·ht ~. 2911 \\. ("Ofl'! lh•1 . '\A 94.S Auto1 W•nte<I WE PAY TOP CASH 961 Autos, lmporf9d JAGUAR VOLKSWAGEN AMERICAN I CHEVROLET MERCURY 970 Autos, Imported Ol'EL A , M j 'lj4 ltnpa!:1 All ', r;1d10 P l:-'. MERCURY '70 '70 VW CAMPER '70 OPEL GT y,,1 \u11 \\J!h Bia• k l11 1rnor, 1 '.!'lS I Boats, Slip1./0ock1 •10 1 s1.1P. "111'" 111·' ~1· 1° ~r . i~ Bu y. Sell, Trade 11"r 11. Ali-•J 1!ry "I •1 1 " i.: • I • . tor used Cllrll A tn1rk1. Jufl <."all U• for fr!:'!' f'S!lma!es. HELP THE ECOLOGY! BUY YOUR NEW $2099 POP TOP l 'rnt. !~.irlH'l , '\:r!r~lrp. Hymp "'I' (;u;int~. 111(1'. \\'arra11t.\' 11 97AS/\f1 mer1can otors I oni:. u" n~·t. ! :\I :\I .\ ('. Y"Gremlins ""Horn~ts _Kso_:i.;:..J f'\c~. ~l .... J7J I 1tu.1 . VMatadors VJavel1ns 19&'1 El ca1111no. 'H,l,llJ() 1111 ,;Ambassadors j H.tH . 11.ir Sli i!. 1'1"h t "JI MONT£GO MX CPE. 11 /!,11.1rlr h1n11 f111•1I. up lu '.'1 ~'2:l & :i;:ti 1"'r "·''· ;\•·111..u r 1,, ... 11,. .• r l··.i.1 1:f,,,~ Hl•'ll l' .\lrtr1n11, :.it11i1 ,'\l, .~<I .o:'~I ( \II 'Ill'"· 1.-.11 f•l'O't':< !· i(I\ 14 Boat Space Nr . Lido ~;u .1 .1 ~lti -~1 1 ;1~1,11S'."l A+ * (';i ll 1.7::.t;l;~J * ih 1\ l'o l::ul1;t l'> ~)'>(~I GROTH CHEVROLET A~k f1'1' &.i.Jri'" !llar111gf'T Jf.!11 Ut'111·h Blvd. lll111tl111:to11 Beal'h TOYOTA OR JAGUAR $3199 1!111 I ff'• 1'1\ (• , CREVIER MOTORS II •· I ·71· & ·~·i .\11h•. T1\Hl' ~,..,I \'~. p1111 <>r ugP .~!oc,,; O s 1~ 5 t;.12-~l~,,ll 1lf1r 1· 1 p111 B• • S • ,,Tr·o·1·111 ~, 1 ~•11• f !11.d1<·~, >111 19-819 av1n9s I ·t;~f )~i;-g,,\\(>o"Hi -f·'.~ldl;::-\\i..:n (OlllillllOJlll'ol o]',;\\',>;1 Harbor American l•1 11 11 . ~111· 1 ... :.d.-d. 11111 p11 r S:t:~~(i. tiO:l-Hi7 l 1101111• (Jr Cv111·1•n1r11t $1795 I ,-:. \I,,~, ~I o'l 1 11+.1.,.,..,.,, s.1,0 117-60'!7 J(l 9-1111 FREE! ~ ~. COSTA Ml ~A )49·JOll t ... oo-67-tol :111\ \\ 1-.1 ~!, Sa111a Ana 835-3171 l'<1yr11r11ts 1969 Harbor Blvd. ·11~1 ~1np,1J:1 S.\ :-pi , P"· I•''' lhan lihu· BH(J!, 11 ,, ~ 11;~11-:J1J::;1, ~:1·1•s. t.·I~ -1;~'i;1. -,70 Chev. Impala I l/l ( '.\,...; l.J• .. \,.;I". TG,,) '\•'\\!~11 !, (\I \\'f·. I ;-A ~-;-TUI'-riJJ.LA/l Jo (lH TOP liSf;U CAltS II ,\u Ir 1·.1 r 1., r;i.1r1 l"h.•.u1, u~ '..rsl PERSONALIZED LIC ENSE PLATES PORSCHE OVER 25 Costa Mesa ~6-.0261 ---1---'66 Fastback BUICK 11 Afr. U:.'t oh . ~1~-0t)li7. .\ /l/VI SIL):-, o~· "n\ I'll !·.!::-. f'1\l JF 1,.,1 '\.\TltJ:'\,\I. H.\,\'I-\ Newport Natl. leasing Aircraft 91 5 1/1 ;>.1111•·"' (''"''" 1~·111\• .•11,~ .•. ·np "" 1111,. .•111k_ ''"'''· .t 11.J. !,11 , .. !l•t ~-··· "I' .tf.11 "!' ·; ll \l'I· n l:l 'l('I\ '.!.'.~ ~:. 17111 s· '11 •!h 111 1~ ;;d• :.:•~,d rhru Clean, Reconditioned, & Gu.1ranteed. L1a1J.. l1lue Jini:.h. ~:,,·rll,.n1 ,71 RIVIERA 1"011<li111Jn. ~ ... ,1 ~ l1rak(·~. <I "l'r f'll, 1 <it!iv, l1r11 tr r. I SQY CHRYSLER ("llR r sLEJl 1•11_,,; " ,. "I Yo r·krr• 2 '11· 'rd.111. \!I f'Mrs .\J1•.«1 ~..ts i71i:"i --~-\\ i-: l1uv .Il l 111;,k•·'> •1f • h•,1n Auto Service, Partt 949 ''•lU!' • j,,.,, •• 111 71 ! '(:::!<:ti~~) PORSCHES '.141)-;,H;4 !':4:1Ub :t. rar! 111r Al l 1-"\1 "'"''~' flffrr DIAMOND AVIATION f 'l,\'I 1,,·.u! \' ~ \f,.,, 11,,.i, !l•1·1t 'f~" 1, • .u '· fl·' ,d l•n ,,,• 11<,! J 'Jr:o"" 1h 11 , 111 I•<! 11 1·r :111111 ,,1,;,) ~ 11nrt~ t•J ):"IOI\ 11rd lr'U fll'U\ (' Hl"lll "' (',.Id. "•'Ul"g~· - 11 ht 11 ,11111 IHU'r!1a'I' }l)Ut" II•"" l •>,\•/l!I or .J ai.:u.1r fro111 91J 's. 912's · 91•4's 1957 to 1971 I h;tl• S6~:i. •!Ir t 'l1ff \\alrlrop ·F '\"•·111 11 <' 1ar full pn\11'1' '61 -VW BU G 11111:1· 1'11\lllgS ••ll~J l !~l~I l'tfl\\(T ,.,·1u1ri , p!u~ 11 1r 1 "n1! 1J,1~i.. :..J.)...>:1ll. {'I I'' It \].1n1 l~t "U~h;1111, :! .ti', h1. 1 111~) "111 1111 1·, 114pr Slud• nl !'l;,11 \\;111.d •I•' • .!() !'1 ::: • ca;;;pers, Sa le / Rent 920 VANS -CAMPERS Chevrolet, Dodge, Ford & Volkswag•n "' "' ' 1 ~·' • • lw•·u I I ,.,,i !•·•I I· I • lt,o'"' 111Jl, lo \ ti I Ii II I I 1 ·;•l)o 11. c ... ,,t 1111.>, ,\,.11 l~•rl l",o·:u 11 642-9405 J\\l'l)f:'J'.>; 11'!\.~T~__;D (Jra n~r ('011u11<'~ 'l'O!' $ HUYER Ell.I. \J .. \XF:Y '/'OYOTA l ~SSI Bc<1,·h Bl1·~r. T oyotas Oealin Dealer NEWPORT IMPORTS mar•uis '1 ""' II" 0 ""'' 11 "l· "' :\1·11 prirt H••,,,·li m•t•rs 642-9405_~- 'J'<•1 ,,1., 3, .J a_t;uar I >!"d1·r ~~JO S. t "na,.,1 !!1f:il'1l11' l.<1g1uu1 H1·;i,·h ~-'.:11)(} BAUER BUICK '(;)( J•OH 4'C/IJ·: !111-L. \111,.,1 Sl•!I, ~1 .. ·11111·•'. ·r;,ugPn nr- lolk lllif'l 1•1!', .~11·/'1•\l l'ild . 1·11,JJ.:,,, .\f'•·•l~ 11rwk 011 'fr;,n~ ,(; '1'P11.,1\•ll•-r -Otlir1·11 1~1" PPr t 'rn111 . ."1•1~ l:IHI td! :: ;;o p rn. \'"1 .1 'lt',11 1 l:ho\\n t1n1,1i. 1111, Jtltt'l lH)' ;)~~:1/•'.l.l , $649 TERRY BUICK j i11 t.. l\'ttlnu!. Jlut11lnf(t<i11 H1·t1 536-6588 i,~ l.\IPEHl.\l. 1 P1 1:,•.11 1! f',111d . !·•ill,\' '~1 111(1/H'd ~1 7~~1 t).12-1.:.111 , Id:' :!7\'J d1•1·j., lll!illl!•" ",,!~, )'!I)()() )!Ill•" l1ho• 111'11. (' :t 11 1'1.~ 1•17: h(•J111•••11 'j .~· 9 /!Ill l•td1 ·:,;; ('111",>~1<1 1{1•,_i\Jt t' fi ll • hlo \1J:I{(' ('•oi<,11~· /';i r k, 9 l'ill'•' 011;>' \',,,1 11a 111 <;r 111 ,1~1 i'"'~ 111.:11 -'"'· ful l 1••11 11', ~ ~. ----I SP I!. h•·~I ufi!'I'. ~i:!-l:.'~1 I '67 Buick l';u k, .\Int '(•!Id. !';!<Tl fl~'(': \l 1hl ~•·II , .1 1.'<~:>fi7!. COSTA MlSA j.49-JOll E>.t,6b-b7·08 '66 -vw $600 __ _ '142 I·:. I !'11 h. C':ll ---~-1 '62 VW BUG Au1on11111c. PS. fa(•tnr~· 11ir. Special Wagon CONTINENTAL '!i'I \11·:1(\"\ l!Y l '•Hl~:!<J.00() n\I. :! )l'ill' :.;11a!';1111rr. $1::00 'iH l.!.\'('UL;"~. hl;H·k. !iw•k' 'Hil4llil;! 1-lf l !i µ111. :-h:•rp '. \'r .. d.~ "'in 1~ '1"1 k ----- :1 1;:1!-.:1• ot!t•r. c .• IJ ;.r ... :!!10:! MUSTANG Antiques/ Classics 953 Jr. Bf'a•·h. p 11. 8·17-:'l:i.i.l /'OH . 'Ux \I I:.! T;1t').:<t , Rl:iu. ~:n,1:h1P uvrrhaul. N1'11 1•.1in1 Z.Sl ':!7ti. 1 t:111 11t>r. lot·<1I (·ar 1T<;Yf.G!11 ~t.'!"IJ "1 1 ('():-,"I' \la1k 111. Full , ~ al 1·rllu·lr 1!rµn1·tn1r11t COMMONWEAL TH MOTORS, l TO. V1111, 1 "r11i~a 11·~ 1·a1111)('1' <01: \'l'l'.~101\. \".~, /U llO, ~Ir. i.11·r~·n, :.lp.~ ~ ;i1111l!.•. ~ !!\'(J S.1:-0~'.!·1~.it. (ycles:-Sikes-,--- Scooters 925 \!:-. ~kids. plATf'~. ;! .<;f''<; ~· h.-i,,'I\. 'J. l)ll)f'CO, 111:1.;fi,· fo'lll\<•r, fnJk hr.Hf'. 11.ll• h 11101"< ~,'I;,, '!iii l l;i rlr 1· r l;t1 11h ,u1 '.!.)() I-: .. 11!1 I i :1u·1·1 . I' \ I.•'-' ,{ I ! !)l i\.1•. f'\. ""Jiii !. ~}••II ~~w:n.~. 1,1f,...11i:t, h·1.-1 .11. '70 DATSUi'f TRUCK SJ ~,~ilt * • Trucks 962 '72 GMC VAN II i 11'1'! ;.:la""· """"'"!l!::•'1' ~··a l, h<'ri \ 1 d111.1 ~h"' 1 •. ~ t.: "rw111~s. :111111 111 (111<' ! r·,111s ! ''"' • ·1· "to•f'rlll'i:, rip1war:u1•·•· J t'll~h!lll 1·11111 f<>l'I #,"~101 .""1, :, 1!\Hli' 111 t'l1·~··"' !!'••Ill. S3995 ALFA ROMEO Alfa Romeo '\()\\ I);>, J)JSJ'I..\ ,. .-;,ol•·, :-;,..1,.1<·" I ',111, / I ;,1.J.1 ."ih"f' COAST IMPOR TS I Ot~J l'llli.I \\. ('""'! !h1r. \,·,11~·rl ll1· • .,·l1 ti·t .' OlOfi .·\I .I'! t. I I: IJ \] /-'. IJ 1970 XK E 2+2 l\Hlll.'>, \'•·!') ~ •.• 0-.(lli."1 1111"• 1• ;\11·;1'. I• ;I I' 1 ~ e ··~~ l'IH tSC'll~:~ll T ;1q.:a e 1 .\11 "",.I. ni.1~ 11·tir•'I~. ·, :<Jl'l. j ,s;;,:1.l(l t 'all: 1;7_)..;t":::1 ("r1111w. Yrl lol\' \11tl1 hla•·k lr:1ilu·r 1Jl1<'J"JOI'. A111om:u u ":16 />01: . ..;(.'JIE !'pd.S I 1· ('lun 1nl' ri ni~. J11•11 lop. ,·rr~ t•lf"o,111, .j!J.\-:1~J! atlf'I' ti J'Hll ---------'f,l roH.')('Hf: 1600 SUpt1', $999 ~ ~. COSTA MlSI 549-3031 f •ll.66·to7·b8 '11 \'\\ \It ·.-:.-r 111, <:111u;.: 01 1•1·.~··11~. S.•\CJ~!t'ICI·:. StJ:iO. Tommy Ayre s Chevy 1,,11r 1· r qlllp., A \I I r \1 \-, · 1 "fld, p1J11 1'f . )11'.!1)-tlU1.\' ~h1i·ri alr-i·onif_ .. r,-Sti!MIO I 'll~P"ll'l!J11. 1011 11111~'<1&"" ,t· !l-lli S. (_'11:1,1 1 1 1•~ 1;7;.,.011~J!J . 1;0 : 1i:!OO ~1 '1 1 'hdl'JJ $1'~~1. Ca ll Lai.:11n;1 H1·h -,.,,-----I .d h 'll•i I 1;:, X\"t:J :TllH.I· .\1•11 , l.'/l l 1,, 4'.14-ii4•1 ."l>lfi !r.11,,j ! II I ll'(" . .\Jnl l'<llld h.t. .\ulu, !'/'\, ~SKYLARK-GS I f~!~,111'~1~ 1)1'.!-!0i:O ~;'.:;;,111, 11.:~,1;11'.~',~ 1'1.: I J~·1;·~1 : 'l Dr ll!op dlr. \'S. !\.1110. Lari· CORVAIR jill ,,·;r:. dau !op. A ir C'on.I. Xlnl 1'<11ut.1 ---. '65 Mustang, 6 Cyl. Sar \11<·1" \\'111 1111'111<"1'. Pl't. 1%1 c·.H·1a11·. (.Ot/ti 111 1·~ .~-s-11:. * .\f1rr ti: lii:i·ll61 '.: trnnsn11ss1u11. f;i1·!v1·.v l'l ir condi1 ioning. pn11·rr stf'rr1ns,: 11& br;ikf'.~, Ph1ll1ftll A.\1-Fi\1 S\I' r11d1u, r !r· •• Ju~I th!' n11r you\'" hr1·11 lonktn~ Jnr. 1'.!li lBQDJ P1 ,1. 1\IYX14Pf ~i~fi-i!/:lli al! 1, .. ,10,., J' ,,. ("II "' ,uns, u.i, ;; -\It·~· .. ,,.-~ 1.o ~~ 11_~!1-\-6!<:11. :1::f ... !~'1 . "!A\1,-,,;.,. \'.•. :i ulo. rh. SHiJO. !\r11• t·lu!ch-<..'IPal!! ·i;!J '19-1-:~icio -~~-~ Squ;;rrba\'k. \"\\ "~prri<1l1~.i11i:: ln Qua!11y" BAUER Buick-Opel-J a guar' :!::.1 I•:. li\11 SI , JAGUAR ·119 Xf\I·: :!+'.!, .-111· }1111o1 1\\l/F\I , 11 11·1, 11 h r~I~. l!IUJ;Undy . ,.,, r l ]i.1,7:'1 .• 'j' l 1/:!lli-1tfiti. o n rl . ---Cl:i,.:,.,11· l!Ood lot:1k~ 'Gl:i J agUal' J.S :-~PdtHI. 67:\--071:1. TOYOTA YOU'RE WASTING MONEY!! IF YOU DON'T "SHOP" US 'l'hr Lilllf l ~r.il rr \\ho's l31K on s.·1·\ 1.-r 1111!ragr l'<11·k. Tnt1le \'."111, $1600. l;ii:,...zy-1~1. 'iO SQUARERACJ\. X lnl '64 Skylark, :"\Int, ,...,11d .• '\'r11r rij'11· 1i1'<'.•, P /R , PIS, H /l l. S·17.I. !'~r,._1;.·i0:, --1·011<!. A.'k fur f )111:1, fll;i-:;;.,.~:, 1~161 I\ 1\'11'1'•1 . S l!A P.P' ln1c·IH'l sr:11~. :.hil rr•. Runs \\'A\.'TEIJ -"l!lli."•" or l;,1t•r j.!n·;,t. S7:!:1. (h1·11rr. 67J.-.:m.ts . n1odr·I t~or1·a1r Conl'rrTihlr Ill Xhil l~~;r, \ll 'ST.\:'\l; \'-~. ;.uto, I •l".1 l.;\l+,111 l'flllfi. Si:ill. Rnd,1 1 11 11~1 "" sh<1pr sx~::li71 or !11.i~·OO'.!.~. ~~---1 ·~;6 \'\\" Bl'C. (ll'IJ'.:. o\\11rr. \J1;1d1•d'. A11·. l·'ull 1 ~11111·. }!lli:!. -l'l)l{\'Alk -. -,1-,.-,,.-,,-,,-,,-,, _s 1~:i0. (';\II .">-lX--l J:i l. --1:u11s \\1•JI. ~l:Jll. :,~!<t-IS~I ;, 1'1-117,·,:, l!~ih \J11 -.l <1 1l~ Ii i'~i ~11~. T1q1 1·<J 11d, Lr;n •ta: s1;11r, .~.~o;,• ·1·h· :;::11:'.! lo111 11111, .\1!11 n111d .. 1~2:1. .~::ll· l :YI~ ti I \'\\" Bu11;. Sunrn,,r_ ""tl•( '.! 11(•11 1l 1r1 t1 rr~. :Xl nl Slil:1 '66 VW BUG En:::-int' ~II;,~;:: n1·r r haur. Sh;irp. 'fi·I HL'Jf"I\ Sk)lark S t11 \\lgn. Air. s r~'. t:1Y1d cond , ·i;) Rl"JC I\ \I 1!r!\·;i1. ft1 11 po11·p1·. .'\Int 1·11nd. SSOO or hr:-1 •lff1·1 . ~lli:l4i01:! CADILLAC $899 LARGEST CORVETI"E \ll "ST \:-,(;, \' ~. Xlrit tiS '!ih c o r:\'ETTE FR. 1 ..... ~ ,.,.11•1. f;11 I. .11r. H .. -.1 11fh·r I '1 ·11 ru r.v fi•hi-:!~:!·I. I'll)..'.. J ll'Hll<, ill p.11 111, 11 ,.:p1i !1! l'•\.'I. IJ,.,1 <1lf1·1 !'.Pt' OLDSMOBILE DODGE i·:XPErr1;-,1101on·~···I,. 1 t>11a 1r Any nn1kf', 1\ork ):uo1r. 1-"r+·" ""tnni1tr~. 1' ron1 9 10 : •. 11.lon thru }''ri. ("0111;1,·1 .l11n Hrrry ~f .... '.';:',1).1 IJ1 rr 40 l;impt>rs /.· 'l'ntrk~ Avallahlr Mike McCarthy Sp1U"r 1<'111 ilf'it111 1: Oni: 111 11r 1·.' ShiOO. !.11 11ul1?s. 1111y~ ·.r;-:~~:11. r1·+·~ t4~1t:9 --· ----- --·-=':""=::'-_:.'_c':":·:0:nc':·'--,,1.r-,1 l!nnu•v Sp1dPr 1 l!lti.~. la "•-CAD ILLACS IN .... ~ ~EYBUYSFROM SELECTION OF 't;'• (11.J)S \"1.,111 1 ·n11~rr r1·r 1y -----------1 \lr;1, 1111 llf'llt•d 11rr.:. \Int '6.", !l;'lrl. 4 d r. 6 • .>l, «ulo cnn~!. :::\.1100 nu $~'!lGO. 1111n~. r/h. J:d nrr $, \,..11 hal1f-1·~· Very 1·lra11. hrau11fu!. ti7: ... 0l 17. IR~ i\1'\1 fl(ll"I Hi\'tl. r.. tt. ~9 YA-i\1AJIA-1:?:, -,;:nrl;;r; \'.1111 l ''1l'1t. fin!~ ",,lil\f1 n1 il•·' R~I <lflrr O\f'!" ~~.1n, ('~\I ,:..-.0.;:11;,7 :l!t :"·OO !• 111. ;H:l Y.\:11\I!.\ '.:!".Or·· llT-11~. l1kr• 11r•11 . 4i00 (Ji 11:. n1 $1:.o. r·11 r11 ..• ::1-0f!'r . fl tl 1'!1 1 :\I I\ r!,ikt;-:_ ::• .• l op . l<\C'f'llr o• 4•011d. r.1111 -.~· J1~·.1,~ l1k1 II('\\. S9:i. ,\II. :.-::o. GMC cor. B•ach & McFadden, Westminiter 894-1336 531-2450 • IH. ln:Prnation11! 11111'\'l"Stf'r f:ECJ:rATION IJ-:NTf.H (;n•al i·1111d. OriJ;::1n11 l 1111&r. JEEP \'h!~I J.Pll. ~il ~ll l 1. AUSTIN AMERICA Al "ST!:-. ,\1111•1u-;1 ·+;fi, lt;,flfll1 n11lr's. ,.,,.,·1 nuu!. ~~:.o. :-;,.,, ;•ll "r ·' p111, !It'~ .\la~111>1i<1, (i1•t.1 \i1·sn. ----- BMW '70 J;u11!•·nus1'r. ha.rdtflp. 4 "hl"'l d rn·I'. \\'a.rrrn hu h~. 1u•1,•r Rhu~"rl , r xr rl\rnt 1'0!1- tl 1non. I !I'.!~ HZ.L. J $2fi~i-. '.1."•I-·,:!I:!. LOTUS '69 LOTUS HAN llt1 i·d 10 l1nd. \'rry l.1111 .\!ilf'- agr 1.i69('('L1 llllltfS -, ORANGE COUNTY Au11toi i1t<cl S:dt'.s & &i,·u·" 11711HARlllR ILVll.. SALES-LEASING COSTA MISA AUTHORIZED !"'111 ~-Coa~I 1!1gh11<1~· .S49·JOJ1 l•t.66-t.7-61 LaJ?utia Bri< .. h ~·1 100 '70 VW--Camper Nab~s~nvC~dillac --'72 CELICA Fullr rql!ipp('rl 1~lAGA1 . .11 1 2600 HARBOR BL., Slf'~l a! S1:l~5. COS"l'A 1\-fESA 1-:xc1 ·11111r ,1 .... niu. v.111. 1111 Tommy Ayres Chevy rt<10-!lHlO ___ o,,.,_n_ s11nd11y i\hig~. ~ki 1·11··1(. 1·,.1·y lr111 __ _ 111111'~. lull /IH'llll'.1 c11111·ori· '70 EL DORADO !r". 1 ·~111 flW 11111 1•111·1'. !1·1ii .". C'ua~I !h1·y., J.ag1111<1 H1·h 4"4·i744 :..iti-9!161 -----------1 FALCON FORD ...,111. \"•'l'Y r·lran ]rw;,J, 1111;.:rn.1! , .1 r. :\11·, rte. Sll~l."1 V1r111 :,1 ..,}(IS~. 'li7-RUl.TAf'O LoHito 100 ,.,. Expa n~ivn 1•h11n 1lwr 1v•11• !Ir.-~. Run!! prrr"•'L '.\:17:,, 979-1:':19. ROY CARVER, Inc. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 2002's & Bavaria's $3295 CREVIER MOTORS lill'!l ll •rttis I ~tnll•ts 'tj) \"\\')HI~ II ilh 'ti6 ('111'.:'lflf' &· 1<';,1' f'lld, .\!n kr o rrf'r . 64:).0QR.J, '65 FORD WAGON "67 DEL TA 88 SllllO. ;.** 55i -l.it7!1 29~.1 1 ra.rbor Bh·d. ) loi::ta ,\Jr~a !'!·16·4444 ~1h.1-;-ra"7;~.-1 :ioo. Lik1• br;itir! nf·11 \lu•t n,,n1 L ;1 n111~1 ~rt! hr~1 oHrr. ~;:!-4Z!ll 'f;."1 ~Olt l • Fflll·nn. 1vi11'10" \,111. rrhl1 1 r11 11~. cu;ir 1 11 ''" F-70'~, 1•.,••111 1 .t11 " l"'' Cl• .111. S:f;,o 01· h1".<;I nf f•'I' h I ... :; lj~J f'\I .'•i T"ti.I. 'r-111: :'.d1 "01) \111r11ln Cl. lf~I '\l:1k1• (>fir • f."01• 1111>1 •• 1n1••. I ,,.) .'-!I'\" <O ,~ t~, • ; .int.·' ; •. 111. 1, 1111 ·:-: r '...' "'1 ~. ''" 11.•10. :,.,·,I .1111111•11' \In! 1"1:d !li1~-!:.~~ ur• •')'Ill. 111i•1\,, '71 110.\:Lli\ p-~1 "1 111\"I • f:Hl'lllJ:, 11 1r l1orll •. •·1•' \•'I'.\ , 11•,,,, ~1 ::~1.11r1 1:i<:11 !'; Sl'I· J-'P ::1·~·n .~, h111t;n~1;i n r!r11. I .1\;r !\•'II'. A1·•''"""I If'~ ~1~11. Finn 1:1 •, .'t :; :::1wul :1~1 \1,1r~,,.~,! 1•1 ;\,H d~·l 0~d 'ii 111 111•, Xh1t , "' 11 ~ ·; •. \ : .. -!"'"' I>, 11 111 <)ne i:o1 k1 u~-·d1•· :l h:"i!h j 1~· .. shrr /.· •h) 1•1. n r 11 I 1tii<h11.i,hrr, ~ln•d. •"•-11p 111 fan11l ~ p111 I.. l'r l j• I.. ~~1-7~'!4-l. Motor Homes 940 *Marvin Pearce* Motor Homes Sales • Rentals 55B-3222 ]4JJ S. \'i\1:1~1' \\ U\ ·' \, -ARISTOCRATS • NF;wr•oHTS • AlJ'/'(l \1i\1'1·.; I /Jl!O. stvcral uwl s.:r, t. 11p '\~'ORSHA'ftf tft.A ILl-~lt SAJ ,J-;,c; 2709 \V, 17th ~!t'•'•'' ·1:.~'t'!u "l'I I 'Pfl f' ! (',di 1;.11; l.'.i' !,I,' 1~: .• '1.11~ IM !I I! :J .. \ o1u ! ;'""I • :111•1 I ;t)t,.t 111 1'' I<'< <'Ill '' l\;1111 ~·~~I. :~1.' :::~I'~!:' ~'\1 1 ".., i 'l!I \' I' I i :1lf\rl t·nnd, ,\l.1 11•. •\Ii ""· S;l•I * 1;;-' -":·~~~ • ll~•I f '1i1•\\ ~.! ("Alllll\O 4Jri,1:l11:d 0\1 rY.1'. ~~:i: .. l.~I F :,;1~1 s1 . c · \1 +:.1: ... 1 n:-. Auto Leas1n9 DODGE '71 CHARGER SE 9&4 11hr• I.~. n •11\flll' :'lirie l•i h'lY•I', I 1o:a:-iz1 [I \ il'I\ $100.00 prr. 1110. -·-·-LEASE All MAKES ANO MODELS 1\ Pf\'!S!ll:-J Ill·' :-:1!\'TllE!l.'J !'i\LIF 1 ~1 ,\1\'l'IO;\.Al. H1\NI\ NEWPORT NA TL. LEASING 20?'1 1~11~111"~"' {'rntrr llrivf l r11nr. I ':il1f. !l",.166-4 714-~:'..t.11620 -~--~~ ·~N§] ·rr~· n111· Jr,1. .... "'-Pf'M!I for ,.;;t1ings. ::1.R11qf11 r 1101n. SC'r· \ lt'f', \\'I~ LV\.-:.F: ALI. r>()J'(JJ.AR )111l ~1111\f·:.-:. AT t '0\11\}-;fl. T f\'~: II\'!'!.-::;, t'.1 1J \J.11, riJ111 1:1 ·1d rv1· f111 llwr •i•·•a11,. THEODORE ROBINS FORD I Sl\nta Ana t 714 • :~l l :!1!1.1 1 ESTAtt .SALE : l!l'i l j A1l!ltJ"Mll JnWI b'Pr. 1.Jk~ + ntW, fWl1 •fl\l lp p erl, .21~-(J Harhur Rh"!. ('ns1.t \Jr"-' f;.12-0011'1 ~:1571. 1111~·~ ;)ffi,.rhin1 )-'Ol.1 "-'llfl~ Arll ~ f'IA~lrit'd 11d~ d" It "rll • 1·311 ~ow fi.f'Z-.'"7rt • ,.._t·:E I.., ;\f·,fH iT Overseas Delive rv CREVIER MOTORS 1,.,1 .>;1 :' tl11.1 \11 •• 835-31 71 Au1on101 1~r· E.\!'f'lle-nce & ROY CARVER, Inc. ?92::> !!arbor Bll'd. Cn~la .\lrsa S-l!i-4444 DATSUN '72 DATSUN 510 H1K S1·d~1n. ii sp1•1-d tllr. \·in' 1 P.uof. \"1111t·1· 4.01)1 1111 11•• r. t.• tJ +-\I SI\. t-°1111 j•I t• •• Stl"~i . ( ·Hn f!n1.1n• •' a ll. 1 •:!1•11:!.'11 ('all 4!111;s1 I :.11 10 atn t.•IG-!17?.G ·G7-oa1 ~un-\\'<1gon, :\1111 cond, $73!i or bf>s! ofl!'r. !'>48-9i11 ·67 ~porl!! 1600 Convt'rl. Stic_•k ~hi f1., Rill, top rond . l1n- ~TI8.t. int. S!l7:i. !'16~01~•~1. 'i0o,\-:1-sLiN-PIC1\UP. $~~1:). . ~1.1 1~1'0:1111111.1·, l.n1:11nn H<'l1 , 1~~1-llO~·I I)('( f: p111 * * ·1;1 nA·rs1 1.~ Hl>O ,.. J:u:ut.-.11•1". '1. dr., H/ll, \:lnl c•C)nd . SiOO. li 12-!ll."«l '65-BfG WAGON <I Srd fllr lfllfe httd lovlnj;: 1·;ir,.. \\'111 s~1t·ri r1<·r 111 S~J86. l ';i n finan1·f Pvl. Ply. (19'1 BX!\ Call ~J46-.Si'.!4i 11fl 10 11111 494-6811 RAT '67 B50 Sl'IDER l.in·u· i.:r('r/I '\\•Ith htAt k lop. 4 spr1't'I, 1111110, hf'R trr . 1 •h11.nu• wllCf'l!I. , Likl" nl'\\ c·111utiti11n, \ITI'1)S.1. c·~1 1l rllt' I ·r1rr \\'nlclrop ~.;,1+;-1 ''J ~·12 flt)~:L Tl-M=E--F=cO"'R=--- Cj) UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT -AD 642-5678 '.?!}'; \\". 1s1 Sr.. Sanra Authon1.ed S;ilt .• J. Scr1·ic., 900 :-:. Co.1~t H1gh11ay f.11.i;:trrlfl Bra1·h :->10-.~lfJO -'-----'II \'\\' Rug, l.1tf' hh u'. •'•l•d. X1ras, $1ti."l0 PINTO R 1< ___ a~~J.!_71 __ _ '70 TOYOTA * • .~::·~-::!!Sii • .. P. /f I. ~1~:1 MAZDA • NOW OPEN SL. Co11f)(' Hnad!;1rr. Pri\·. p:1r1.1. ::C'l,OOCJ 1111. ~."119."1. ti 11 -::!:::,~ . ·1;:: \ll·:tt"c~1.~:D"1-7: .... 7· ~I 7'1cO-S~I.. Cla ~Slo ' S:ii~JO. C;\'lt 11•1, Srr 111 :::;111 St>ill h :IJ :iin. :0:11111;1 Ana or i•:ill :.1i-.• 11 1:!. 't~'i \1•1·e1•1lr'< B1•11t 2."..U ~Jo: ~rr. All', 1111 ~t ra.". \Ju·hrhu 811--H;io or 612-l:•9R f'\'ri;. MGB 'G,-, .\lGR \\"llTTE CONV'f, Good l"OIKI., A,\l/Jo~:\1. $750. "**•675-~··· Ol'EL '68 Ol'EL S!ation \\'agon. R8dio, Roor tl111•k, 4 !IJ'lfl. j~'Vl\R971 $999 ~ ~. COSTA NllSA 3•9•3031 lar.U.·67·61 ="c,-, -.-'-1 ~11;--;-· loot'-i n)-07.r l_.vi,-.. ~II lllOM b1tublt>~ tor '"btJ<"k,,''. Call Clasaltlet1 li4Z-:i67~. ('01'0n;1 llrhl\€', Harli••. llt>.11 r 1 ,\llhl T1 .1 11~. I l."~i!~S\\ I ~11:~1 ~ ~. COSTA MIS.lo 1.-!>49·JOJI 1~1,0b ·O/·tol GET OUR TOYOTA DEAL BEFORE YOU BUY! .,Perut LewiA W TOYOTA -·-SANTA ANA TOYOTA Sf>r'I i1·r 1l1•11l. O!K'n 7:.10 an1 '11 9 111 11 ~IOthlay rtiru Fri- da\· . PHONE 540-2512 417 '11. \rar11cr, Sa.n!a Ana TRIUMPH :\HARP 1971 TR 6. A:\f/F:\1 srf'l·N , 12.000 n1 I . Im- 1nat'nlatf''. S?.000. 67'".H619 f'\ PS. '6.1 TR ... , Xlnt tond, ~· 2249 'A· Rutger'S or. OU ,,, \\". WllMin, C.M. Afl, 5. VOLKSWAGEN '69 BUG 1\uton1elir Iran!!, b<'lge "'ilh bT01vn hlll'rinr, \1rry tl!'n11. 0401\fi l). $1299 ~. COfilA MISA , ... 3031 f1f ... •67•N 'ii:t \"\I , 111>'1 1·r1111d1 \1·11 111 1'' poll :l h11n ,.ll. ('rdl S lf,-:',,1t ·, ~fl :1 µ111 . -~-•jJ \'\\' 1111~. X(}(}O 1111. I pa"s !.11.'t> 11''11, \'\\' 1··111 .t-f11ll- Jr 11glh Jug. l'<l \"k: 111"!, S:ti95. 675-771.'-I -------1 Ill I :'\Pl\ G•l:!·~1~."1 l. 1111'•. 'j j t·u11-. -,-.-,,-,-,,--1,-,-,-11-1 .. -,, I Blue Hook. Dn.1s 11::s-:iQ;(1. l---:1 t'S. G·l;H::S."1. "if) ('A fl . ('.[) V. l.oarlPrl , :i ir. A\J-1-"\t. 111 11111,..,, f 1r'>1 11\1 tiP r. I>.!".!-I !S: •. 'jf) \I\\' (';un~,-. 1~1p!np. rr nt, ,1111 1··uu1. s::1 on. s....11 011--C-H_E_V_R_O_L_E_T __ rr:i•lr 1'1·1. pt~. 96t--H-tl:l. 'ti 1 \'\\' Si piarrh;u·k. gnod 1 M l'b !"Onrl., l'll!lS \\I'll. $77."1 01·) 68 Chevy a I u iw ~i l1fff'I., 4 !1 !I · •13 O 7 , \"r1·dr. i::rl'r11. \'111} 1 roof 1\u!r>· 1'.ll 1200. 11111111·. PS. /'B. l;i1·101)' ~11·. f'\;!'t'plion;ill_v r·lf'an' l;\l·::\' r1a1·1y 1nus 1 79~1 si;,9:,. · s:HTlliCt> 'tii \'\\' ean1per, ,.,.,,,,. ,,,._ ,;"" , , , 1 • Tommy Ayres Chevy &.17-!l.l90 PHJ\'ATE PLYMOUTH- e HOT WHEELS e '67 PLYMOUTH \l11r!ilu•d fol' h11:::l1 i"'t'fnn11;1 n. r• 11ni1 -•P11r11111111 1•' h\l ~·r )Hll 1.1·11 .!, <11·. 1 ir1~ I :l!l ".>;T SFLI.' ha!'d lnp. 1 n11·nr1·, .'\11 , ~l'IS-7~~1 SS!(• 1~111·1·r. l~ra l g1101I 1·011rl 1--------- Hl".1"'111111l!r offrr. (·.~n ;d lr f '69 Val1'ant r, fllll. ;,111-0.~~~l. ---·~··01·rl-l:rD~l •11\·nri-. 2-1 ,000 R11n!I gf)()d. Hl11r 11•lt h \1·h1tr 1n1, -!t i Frig-, <ll\<' 1111r r . 1·\n.\'I lnp. 2 0.-.01·. 6 1·yl1ndrr 1 1n~I Ip, a ir, full p11r, i;:•I auto11111t1c, rarl10. hral"I'. 1 11 r ~. ~Hll-:::~R~. 1YHA l'.">'li 3 1:019.") <lit'. I liff ----\\';ilr!rnp !'14H-!'>l!i4, 11~:.1-f)r.~I. 1~17() /-"O!'<! (;11J;!\lt' ;.!)(), !'If{~: F:;>-:{;1~E r:1-;n, 4 1tt·. p11 r slcrt'1n!i -~· hr:1kc~. ra<!•o ,i;, h<'11 lr r, C;11•l1w~ ;ur. J.!•HWl eo11r\. $1,IOfl ,h11•, ~:.1 • .-11;11. hl·onD-V;;;-:-ltuns }!OOll 'iili Fl 'l{Y lht ha~ llH£""tl. 111110 \''! .. on!.\ $5:!."1. pr. 1>•}. :.::n-:t::in PONTIAC- 1t 'j>fi V\V t- Original. Oean. i\lust :llak:e offer. 962-1782. Custom 1n1. :\lusl i;t'll. S 100. :.,~_,-::.,.,,-.,,-,,.,-,-,_-1-,0-,-,-,,-. -,-,...,-,-"-'I or bf>st ofr. 1139-6631.___ ,i;, lu·;;krs Hadiq/helllC"I·. 196!'1 1'"orrl \'311 ~-:..100. Vfl.. Jo'11('1. air. Nr11· lirrs r·i7:l. 11 utoma li•·. i11111lH(·ula1e iu-G7:,...8:Jl+i. !H6 ~-\nii!)t lh1·y., sid<' & oul. 642_2!WJ9 l.o.~,~Bo""'.C:.-,1c1-,~----l~aguna Brh ..::c::..:::...:.._~--~~-"c-1 lll){'VJ I', P11·r 11•illdoii·s. 494-TI44 /M6-9967 '63 ~'ORD G11lax ir 500 XL. P/B, Pt.", Air conrl. Ne\.\' '70 IMPALA Good cond. $2.iO, !inn: tirt>s. Gn'al sh:o f!f'. Rc~t of. '70 V\V Sundial, CamPf"\· dlx 6i!S.?.S.i4. fer. 811--0322. 8.13-l!l2.). model. S2895. 847-7l!~i1 11ftf'r V-R. Auto,. 'rrttn,;., 1'-ac1ory c.6C..,"",0.0°,cd-cL"r"o,-s",=•=0=,-. -4,-.,,,;:,c .. 1 '·<67,-;p~o'°N""T71,71ce-2C-',,c,.0. ~o~_c11-_c".-6 J pn1. Air Cond .• Po11·('r Strrting. •1;:: -.;w Bus, Ust><t for i:an1- p111g , SJOOO. 'IT •• '·,_ ·.t('-n. n<''" Tire.~. E:con 20 :1r1r1 • ·..riooo "''. Radio. Jlr11!rr. f197AP J\ ' "' ,.. ·· u, . .,, " n1cch. xh11. $207.'i. .it47-:J007 Rad1uls, C'lr11n $ s 1 5 . 646-:14&1 af!cr 6 11·rrkdays $22!Y.1. dlr'. Clitl \\"8ldl'o p. Call !'i-!<1-.~:~I :1'10-5164 01' ,11~2-0li'.11. ('\'('$, ---- VOLVO '70 Impala Sta. Wagon --------1 GET OUR VOLVO DEAL BEFORE YOU BUY! SA VF. ON EUROPEAN DELIVERY ~tu.Lt.IN W YOlYO ~';11•1nry 11 ir. PS, Br:u1tiful 11'11 In 11·hile ""ilh saddle in- IC'l"ior 4257BS\'l $26.<JJ. Tommy Ayres Chevy 9-IG S. Coasl 1/\.1')'., Lai\Jna Bch 4!M-TI44/546-9967 '71 Vega station wan, l 10 4 !pd, 1ilver/blk. m a .it• , 13,tm mtlf'i, 12.450 or best c'966=c.lc.1''-'"°c::.'c.· -'C~-'-'---&M\-'·9.103,:,;;1 niter. 630-4600 u a y 1. Autos, Used 990 673-318.1 f'I'('. e HOT-ELS e '67 PLYMOUTH ~fodilicd for high flf'l'for111nrh'C and 11pprarttn1·r ! 1\111 . ..,..r SEU.! ~·7881/$895 '63 CllEV G reenbr i l'r Cen1pcr. Xlnt ronditlon. -t:t21s Fernlral. Corona rlcl :lola r. BV -Ov<nl'I'. 1007 (';amnro 2!13. (ffli rlrr~. f'.lCt'fll 11101or. $900. "E"S~T"A"r"E';-s"Aclc.Ec.-c.;0o~F~o-,--<t 'GS P11nt l11 c Ca1l.1l1nn. 4 rir, LTD, 2 rir, ai r·. a ulo. l'yn lop . :11110, ph, 11s, nir. Xlnt l'Olld . kl nHlcagl'. 5.12-2'.iil. ll'ill trad('. 673-67~. JEEP ·si PONT1AC:~i;\v-,-,,-x-·i-.. , l'Otid. Orig. Oll·Tlf'r. Air rond., r/h. $1 l!li. &12-.1203. 1969 Pontiac 1.£>;\lanit. 2 Or., Air, vinyl 1op. tmmar. lnr. :'\fl'ch. ~Int. • 8'12-58i4. AYIPHJCAT-n('11'. Bargain! Also '65 .Jeep \\'a~nt"{'I'. Loaded~ 5 46 -367 6 01· 54 9710. '66. CT() ron\',n., flJll p11·r, 11·1~'5. Air, immacula!t' 'f.6 Conlinenlal . Soi,000 milf's. l.;"°.:::""=··c:: 1895~·~·~5"~7~-;~;;~1~·~"~~:'.:... I \llholC'saJe book price, Get-T ·BIRD LINCOLN ting ne'>'' car. Would rather! ~=-=~-o-------1 i,:ivt lo you than to agC'ncy. J9G6 T-Bln1 . ext>cl cone! S79;; 51~7117 d8y!. 646--3176 ('ves. or !redc for plck·up · 67?...12-IJ ----MERCURY '67 THUNDERBIRD, fm. '69 COUGAR nuu·. Loarlcd! l n1vrlt'r. Shnrp! Local l 011·nrr, fftc-~;·~0 inll!'s, P r1v. r>arly. 101-y tiir. 8u1"kcts. Vinyl ronr, ~·.--:-occ-:~=-- PS, PB, IXYT'l701 $2195. . VALIANT Tommy Ayres Chevy '60 4-dr, Good cond., $151). ,-.-,-,-,,-,-1-o-Elepll8111 5·· over·i ~--~C_•_ll_;J<;-_:19_26_~­ n1nn ing )'Our houser Turn V•r~nclea cost 1nooo)'. llt'nl them Jnto "CASl-l" ~ te.U )'OUr hou11t, apt.. atorti l·lou11t JlunbnaT Walch tM n~m thrv OaUy P 11 o t bldl( .. ~tc. thnt a o..ifY Pilol OPEN }JOUSJ<:: colnrnn. .Cl1M1Uied. &4~78. Ch1s.111li"d Ad. &46 s. Coa.tl 11 wy" l.agunM Bch 4.'K-7744'~·9167 ... 64UJ!rf .... ------') ! 7 ' 7 San Clemente Capistrano VOL. 65, NO. 18, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES -- EDITION ·~ ORANGE CO UNTY, CALIFO&l~1" , --...... Today's Final N.Y. Stocks MONDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1972 TEN CENTS Edisori Offers Huge Atom Plant Impact Study The ma ior utllity planning to expand !lie Snu Onofre Nuclear Generating Sta - 11011 has sent a massive, two-volume un- pact study to the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission proving. aides say. that the t·<in1 p!ex \vould have no ad\'crsc effects on the cnviron1ncnl 1'he 750-page im pact report. :.ay off1c1al spokesmen of Southern CalUornia Edison Company, con1panies \Vilh the new en - vironmental rules governing the AEC. And as fa r as the utllity is concerned , the Evidence Eyed report Is as complete a! It can be. The environmental issue is one or two major factors in cosl\y delays in ob- taining the AEC licensing lo expand the Onofre complex with the addition or twin reac tors cos ting a half·billion dollars. The cost or the report , say spokesmen. is as husky as the document itself. Edison press aide Jim Flora said that calculations of staff time and pu blication costs show that the reports run $400 apiece . Antonia Thomas ·Due New Hear·ing A hearing tha t could result in the frecdon1 of convicled killer Antonia Thomas of San Clemente "'as ordered to- day in Orange County Superior Court. Presiding Judge Bruce Sumner agreed to hold the evidentiary hearing following So 111eo1te 'Hot' Over Movies WICHITA, Kan. (UPI) -Some one painted ''Long Live Sex Flicks" toda y on the trunk of a car belonging to a minister 1vho has fought the showing of ob.scene movies and then set the automobile on fi re. r The car .,.,.as destroyed. Even its roof was melted by the heat. "fn every CTlmmunity there are sick people with sick minds,., the Rev. Robert Ely said . Russia ns Launch New Lunar Craft To Make Landing By DAVID NAGY ri·lOSCO W (UPI ) -The Soviet Union tod:iy launched its first moon miss ion in five months and indicated the unmanned Lun a 20 craft would attempt a soft lan- ding. The last Soviet luna r-landing attempt ended in failure when Luna 18 vanished into the Apollonius Mountains Sept. 11. \Vcstern space experts said they thought Luna 20, like Luna 18, might be carrying a new Lunokllod explorer robot d~vi~s~ r e sophisticated soil-sco;oping "The Soviet Union launched the automatic station Luna 20 today with the aim of further exploration of the moon and near-moon space," the official Tass News Agency said. In Soviet 1pace..terminology, the phra~e "exploration of the moon and near-moon space" has indicated landing minions ss (See MISSION, Pago I) the granting to attorney Dudley Gray of a writ of babeas corpus signed Friday in San Bernardino Superior Court. Gray rep1·esented the Fllipino woman in two superior court murder trials. Gray said he v.•as granted the ·writ on condition that the hearing be held in the Orange County court. No date ha s been set (or the new inquiry but Judge William P..furray has been assigned to lhe special court session. Glay said today that Mrs . Thomas, who is now 29. has served four years of the life sentence she received from Judge Robert Gardner in April of 1968. Gray said he Intended to prove at the new hearing that the Orange County District Attorney's Office reneged on a promise made to him before the trial. The To rrance lawyer said it was agreed that vital evidence later used against his client at the trial would be turned over to the prosecution if Mrs. Thomas passed lie detector and hypnosis tests. Gray said she passed those tests but the prosecution immediately utilized evidence that would never have been allowed to pass Into their hands without the promise that it would not be used against hiS client in a CTlurtroom . ivlrs. Thomas v.·as convicted four years ago of the murder of her infant son. James. Jr., following a tria l in which it was successfully alleged that she added a ci>uslic sol ution to the milk in his feeding bottle. The solution was never identified . And Mrs. Thomas denied in two trials that she had ever fed her child anYl.hing other than his formula or that she had ever conterdpl ated the murder of the baby. Gray said today that Mrs. Thomas is highly regarded by authorities at Frontera prison and is "ideal ma te rial for release and rehabilitation." Nudies Ge t Benefits SHEFFIELD, England (UPI) -The Sheffield City Corporation liaa approved a request for special 1lck pay benefits for sil women nude models at the Sheffield College of Art. The models said .the pay is necessary because of the danger of their catching cold while posing. The AEC received 300 copies for distribution to all government entities which 'Would be concerned with the en· vi ronmentaJ impact of the Onofre com- plex. San Clemente city officials will share one copy . The report, Flora said. compl ies com- pletely with the National Environmental Policy Act and is a formal part of Edson's application for reactor licenses in the expansion project which now is several years behind schedule. Francis A. ~1cCrackin, Edison en- vironment al planning manager, said the amount of Informat ion in the report is "staggering." and it is largely a co111- pilation or thousands of bits of data ac· cumulated before and after the site was selected for nuclear generators. He said the report covers the effects of the proposed expansion on the terrain, vegetation and wildlife. Charts, maps and graphs are included. • Background lnrorn1at1on about the general area also 1s Included and an e.x- mpha sis is not ed on th e n1ar lnc life. The study crnphasizes, he added. that the San Onofre silC' harbor§ no en· d::ingered species of pll'lnt or 11•lldlife and the actual eco logica l effect 1~·ould be con- fined to about 60 acres of coastal tidelands and bluffs "'here the proposed expansion would take place . The report 11·as drafted during a J)t~r iod of nearly a year after upheavals surface CAil Y l"ILOT II•"''"'~ Fire Headquarters Vp Carpenters are at work In San Clemente on the rough· framing of the new $140,000 fire department headquarters at the civic center. Completion is scheduled for spring. The old fire· station on Miramar was reactivat,ed during building. Police will take .over the existing civic center !-ire depart- ment spa·ce wh en the new headquarters building is completed. Co.unty Declines To Issue Papers To 2 Ca1tdidates By ,JA CK BROBACK Of ft!• D1U7 Plltl Sltfl Orange County Registrar of Voters David Hitchcock refused to issue nomina- tion papers this morn ing to William Wenke, a candidate ror First District Supervisor. County Counsel Adrian Kuyper had ad· vised Hitchcock not to issue papers to either Wenke or another First District candidate challenging Santa Ana in- cumbent Robert Battin, John W. "Bill" llill. . Kuyper aaid hill advice was based on a ltlS state Supreme Court decision which ruled that a potential candidate cannot move with his district when ill boun· dartes are changed.ii he h&1 not f\Jlfilled (See PAPEllB, h p I) • Capo Tract Hearing Slated At City Coun cil Meeting A public hearing on development plans for a 210-acre tract a mile east or the San Diego Freeway off the Ortega Highwa y will take place at tonight's 7 o'clock meeting of the San Juan Capistrano City Council. The developer, John K~ug (Pacesetter ·Homes), is appealing a plailning com- mission decision k> deny his tract map. King is proposi ng SIM units on lots that range from 7,200 MjUare feet (R-1) to one acre (E-l ). His plans were denied by the commission 3·2, with commissioners Roland Olsen and Jerry Gaffney casting the dinenting votes. The tract was denied because Jt was not "compatible with orderly develop- ment." Specifically, there were ob- jections to its secret system and the layout of the homes. A furore over development erupted soon after the Klu g land was rezoned. The planning commission denied the rezone and the developer appea led to the city council. The councll upheld the ap. peal 3-2 and anowed the rezone. Some councilmen said the rezone was com· patlble with the general plan and did not constitute approval of tract pains. The land in question Is scenic hillside acreage joined. mainly, by homes with estate zoning. Many homeowners In the area ha ve proterlecl the development because they feel the lan<.i should be kept for large estate development. Laura Bezotte' s Rites Conducted Britons Shiver Due to Strike Aircraft Radios Taken by Thief Funeral 1trvicts wert oondUcted ln Sin Clemon!• today for retlrtd Orange Coun· ty n""'oman Laura Bnotte. 87.· "ho died Ill• Jul week llfMlaslon Comntnnlty Hospital. · Mn. Bezotle, ol 117 ;w. Ramona, bad been active in community projtctl and served for several yw11 u a wrtlt.r for two major newspapen se"ing Orance County. Servlcta: were coriducted at 11 a.m. ln Lesneski Mortuary Chapel. The Rev. • Jo•eph Stephen• ol the San Clim<nte United Prebyterion Churoh offlctated. Mrs. Btzotte was an 11cllve member of the church. Burial followed in San 0 1 b r I e 1 Cemetery. Mrs. Bezotte leaves aevtn coua:Jns. tn- dudlng Fuol Smith ol Anlb<lm and Mrt. Et¥ K<tler ol Orange .. Walko ut by 280,000 .Coal Miners Affects Millions By JOSEPH 1f. QafGO LONDON (UPI) -Mi=" Britons sbjvered today Ill dart;· d homes and olfk:et. Jndottty, bllltnd out and dbrupted by crippling power curbs, laid olf Wit ol thousands ol '""'.kll'I. London city authortU.. ord«od rn<>'lt street lllhll, a1 .... dy -haywire by hour•long power cull, owttclied oU altogether until the crtar. enda. Tftat meant-. vlrtu81 wartime blackout, 1inillar to World War Il, for tills cApltal city ol eight million. Even Buckingham Palace waS dark and chllly. Bot Qu«n Eliiabeth Jl wa. not affected. She 11 on s state visit to Thailand with her butband Prince Philip and daughter Prlnceu..Annt. Wltb a 1b·weelc .. ld nationwide strike ol :1111,000 coal minm blUng dee p fllto fuel supplla, Britain wu gripped by Ill grim· mest industrial crlsi.! in a quanu~ tury end perhaps·tince the 1916 general atrtke. BrtU..h new1papen coiled K "Black Monday." Government offlclal1 predicted ' mllllona would be laid of! by midweek. 'nit oppoaltlon Labor Party, limbering up for an onslaught.against the 1ovem-- tnent ln Parliament later today, Jam· basted It !or "grost ml•handlfllg of the dbpul<> rnSm the oul!el." Ill a otatanent publlohed alter • meeting of the party's naUonaJ e1ecu1We comllliUee, It ac<UIOd the aovernment< ol "Incompetence'' la tacklJnC · the coo- seq~lnces or the crisis "which should ha,ve been foreseen and which have led to panic · nieasum lnflJctinC llddltlonal damase on the whole tQmOmy." '""· ,.,.tQl:nOtlve industry wa1 hit hanfeil: SrKlih Leyland, J 1 g u a r , 'lrtwnph, RowT. Ford ol Brltoln, Vaux. ball-General Motors' British.subsidiary -Chrysler and the Jooeph Luca automobile companent.s plant laid off or put nearly 50,000 worker• on part.time. ' Thousands of Yorkshire and Lan<:R shlre steel and l.eltile workers wert sent home. The state-run British r~llroad system canceled t,000 trains and stopped heating those ltlll running to save electric power. Commuttn ahlvtr«I ar they Jammed fll. to tho tralnl 111111 running. Radios valued at more than $2,000 wtte wrenched from a parked aircraft at Capistrano Airport during the weekend and Orange County Sherlff's ofricers were lnveatlgatlng what they btlieve were attemptti to re.move tquJpment from nelghbor lng planet. Deputies 111d two rad ios wm pulled Crom the cockpit of a Cessna aircraft owned by Charlu H. DnvWon, 54, of 34702 Laa Flores, Capistrano Beach. Intruders who may nave been scarred of( during the attempt also tried to remove radios from at lta11t two other planes, of. Heers nid. ShcrUl's oflicers are still Investigating a wave of burglarles that plagued airplane operators li the lime San Juan Caplttraoo Airport 1lx monlhl ago, • it !n the lrad\l ional role of tl1e AEC. A frdrrHI court judge in the ~1 id.,.,•e st ruled tht th{' Al'X would hi.JV(' to add the en\'1ronn1en! as ano ther of its criteria ir1 granti ng reactor licenses ~ Tht a~cncv then issued ord1'rs fl) license apphc«•nl i> lo Curnish detailed {'11- \•Jronmenlal stuches. One olhC'r ure a .,.,.hi ch threw n1a S!.l\'lt kinks in the reactor plans v.·as a dispute in the srien1 1fic-community O\'Cr the tSee L\1PA CT, Page :?J ' ase Coi111ty Man Slams Auto Into Bridge Ry JOIL'll VALTERZA 01 Ill• o.n, ~1101 Sl•ll A 30-year-old man from Orange driving • stolen Borde r Patrol ca r al full bore was killer! instantly before dawn today "'hen he slatnmed the vehicle into a bridge abut111ent al San Onofre as authorities were in hot pursull. The bizarre crash had an even more unusual prelude as Louis Edwin Hill o[ 415 Crest Road assertedly set up several ruses before finally atealin1 the green patrol car at the alien check point south of \M: 8an Clemente elty \Unit.I .. The 11erie11 of incidents, according to highway patrol 1pokumen Jn Oceanside, went llke thl11 : lllghway patrolmen first noticed •rtll in a parked car on the San Diego Freeway downcoa st Of the checkpoint at about 3 a.m. and the man, told officers he needed gB..'loline and a tow truck. The office rs caJled for a \\'reeker and routinely left the scene. A few minutes later the same highway patrolmen received a call that motorists had Set'n a man lying in the roadway. They searched for the "victim'' but found no one. The next call came at 5:JO a.m . as Hill approached Border Patrolmen on duly and 1sked for the Hi ghway patrol because he had been "involved in an ac· cident." The same CH? officers ch~ked lhe "accident scene" and found nothing. Appearing "shaky and upset," Hill then began walking to the side of the highway, and then suddenly feigned a collapse. Border Patrolmen hel ped the man lo his feet then placed Hill into a patrol c;ir to drive him a shorl distance to the ot· lice. As the ~atrolmen walked Inside to call an ambulance, HUI alid across th e fror.~ seat and sped off in the car. Spokesmen from both agencies said the ensuing pursuit was frantic. Hill allegedly drove the aulo at speed.t In excess of 100 miles per hour, heading north on the freeway. The pursuit lasted about three miles and as HUI approached .the San Onofre Crttk Brldgt, OUicers said. he lost con. trol of the car, fbiafly swerving fi nally In- to the center divider area, which ·has no fence . AJ patrolmen came c I o s e , llill assertedly aped off again in a cloud ot (See CJIABE, P•&e II Wea.Cur Fair skies through Tuesday, tho weathennan 11yt, but 1UghUy 1 cooler l.emperatum alone Orange County's coa11Ulne. Highs Tuesday 60 to 73. Lows moatly Jn the 40'1, INSWE TODAY A top.fligh t CCIII turn.t Neil ' Simcm'1 "The SWr Spa"fltd Girl" into a hit for the Wt•"' 1 min.sin Community Theater. Se~ Ttt1't101 Page J 7. Mtllllt• I ...... ,.. ,, H•ll.,.11 ..... 44 0!'1"11t Ct1111t1 II '"'" tl·1' I i tfCk IMrltW. l•lf Tt"¥\t!H '' • "'""" ,, WM!tM f 'WM'-WI"' 11 ..._.. Nnn U-IS w..w ....... ~ . .. .... -• I\ '2 OIJ!L 't' 1'1' nl SC Monday, 1t:bt!WY lC, 1972 --- New Bool~ ~ Ex-Hughes Aide i ---. ~ ·capo Beach CofC Ey es New Light Irving I .Irked hy ! By BOB THOMAS ~ LOS ANGELES iAP l -"I'd like to +.poke hitn 1n the nose. 11 Nt'.lah Dietrich :iays .or ~uU10r Clifford 1rv!ng. · lnd1cat1ons <it e that DletrJch'! rem· in1sceAces a:ir a !fingtime au)e 10 1ndustrlal Jtowi rd Hughes. soon lo be published, were used at least in parl ffJr Irving 's purported autobiugrBphy of !he recluse b1tlJona 1re. r·or l2 years. Dietrich iQO(Xf In the long : i hadow of l~oward llugh&. t( Now, the crusty 8.l-year~1ld lli in the \(gpotlight a~ enjoying it immensely. L Dietrich's. reminiscences, "ll ov.·ard - "!'he Amattn6 Mr. •l ughcs," 11ill be published late this month by Fawcett. He was asked v•hy he wrote the book. '"I delayed a !oog Ume ; I left Howard ~n 1957," Di~trich remarked Sunday. .r·For a Jong period. J debated whethe r ~ -tr -tr ~londe Set ~or Probe .. Of Irving NEW YORK tAPJ -Nina van Pallandt, e beautiful blonde fol k singer, wen t to the federal courthouse today to testify before a ,!\rand jury probing her frie nd Clifford Irving's "autobiograph y'' of Howard Hughes. The 3~year-old Danish·born baroness, estranged from her Dutch husband, has r;aid that Irvin g didn't lea ve her sight Jong enough to interview Hughes 1vhcn r;he and Irving were together in Mexico. She arrived at the courthouse in a chaurfeur-driven limousine with her manager, Joh n Marsha ll. his v.·ife and their lawyers. ' The federal grand jury continued its in- vestigation of possible mall fraud in the case as Time maga zine published ex· cerpts of Irving's book wh ich the 'tnagezine said proved much of it was pirated. Time, calling Irving "Con ?o.1an of the Vear." said Irving admitted the hoax to federal prosecutors in a.n effort to spare his wife 'from Jail. Irving's lawyer, Ma urice Nessen, called the Time article ··a gloating, prancing, distorting piece that is irresponsible in the eztreme." The magazine printed part of Irving's book alongside n:cerpts from 11.n un- published manuscript by free -lance writer James Phelan to emphasize the 1imilarities. From Page 1 MISSION ... .,opposed to orbiters or fly-past misisons. ""Accord ing to telemetric information, .the station's on-board systems and equip- ment are functioning norma lly," Ta ss sa id. Jt usually takes Soviet Luna craft about five days to reach the moon . When Luna 20 gets there. it will find Luna 19 st ill in orbil. Luna 19 left earth R fr.11' v.•rcks alter the i!l-fated Luna !8 mission. popped in!o orbit Oct. .1 and ha s been 1here si nrr. carrying nut research into spare radJli· lion. magne!lsn1 ;u1d other areas. The Lunn Ill mishap breke a Strini.; of lrnprcssi ve accornpli shn1en1 s achirvcd by the un1nanned So viet rnoen progra1n . The Soviets nrvPr expJ;un ed "'hrtller it crasheO or toppled over upon la11d1ng. but announced Sept. 11 that contact 1\·as lost as soon as Luna HI landed In the rugged mountain area . OIAHtil COAST ' DAILY PILOT 'ORA.NCI!: COAST PUil ISHINI) C™"AHY Rob•ri N. We.I Prr1.0t~I 11111 Plltllot.W J 1c\ R. C11tl1'f' Vk• Prn .0 ... 1 •nd 0-11 MlfliO• Tho1'1•1 K,,~a E do!Or Th0"''' A. M~rrtl.i1 1 M~irall Edl!Of' C~1 rlt1 H. leot Ricl.•rd '· Nin A111ll•n./ MINtlne Edltora a...iiw1• leacli Office 22? For11t A'l'•nu• M1.ilin9 •ddr•111 P.O. l of 6116, t16SZ S11111 Ci.t!M!111t1 Offic1 305 Nor/Iii El Cimino R1 1J, 926 ~2 OtW Offlc n C01t1 M .... JlO w .. 1 B•Y S!-.•t "'"""'°'' •t•t~: lJJJ "•"'""" eewr1••rd 11llAlll'lllOI IMdl: llVJ e .. '1\ e;i.utt~•rd ,.. lo \\'r1le the ,1ory. bccausr I didn't \\ant to be accused ol puUln.1t a 'kiss-~d-!eH ' act" "]finally decrtled th<1t I had an obl iga- tion to Ult> Ameru::an public to show al close hand !he abuse!!! of ~real weoill h. I had .see11 mQney m1su.~ed by legislators and other pubhc orfk·1als. r \\·:i~ con1- pclled on rnoral itrounds to write the book. •·Obviously al 83 , J am not gu1ng to en· Joy ltlt monetary rewards from 1,1:r1 ung a book. I suffer lrom myasthen1a gra 1 is. "'hlctr Is a breakdown bel"'een the ner1 .. s and lhe muscles nf the face,'' he &.aid. r:xrcpt for droopy e.1·!'J1ds, D1etrii h sho1~·s htt!c ev1de11ce of his arhnc·n l, "'h1<.:h he controls by medicine. l11 s v111t.:e is as strong as when he held a Ch ill· lllfHtdinJ? po~l in the llughes empire. lie was slo\ved by a prostate operation Fri· da y, b11t is e.~pcctcd lo return Iii !1L'I \'1gorous d.1 ily ru111ine by tl1e e1MI of nt~x t \\'CC k. ~1embcrs or the Capistrano Beach Chan1bcr of Commerce th is week are i:halking up a v11:tory or sorts in tht'ir years-Old battle for a traffi c signal at lhe col ony's busiest intersection. A Jetter sent by the county road de part- n1enl to chamber President Hank r-.t cCarthy pron1ises that planning for a tr;iffic light at \1lctoria Boule~·ard and l>ohcn y Park Road v.•ill begin in cominf: "'f"eks. Ted J. ~fcConville, county road com- rn1 ss1oner , said tha t the si,i:nal would pro· hably be incl uded in the new CilUnt;,r budget and construction probably would be cornplcted son1et1n1e late this year, or e<ir\y in 1973. The intersection lies in the midst of the ("Omn1unity·s business di strict wh ere Vi c· toria channel heavy Palisades traffic onto Doheny Park Road. Chamber officials ha ve clarnorcd for yc<irs for a signal. Born in Aat;ivi.<i. Wi s . f)1elrlc.:h V•11~ lhe :;on or an 1rnn11gr;irit <icrrnan preacher. He was a certified public accountant 1r1 Los Angeles in 192~ v.•hcn hired by 19- year-old l-lu ~/1es. • .. • UP I Trl•P~or. HOWARO nuGHES !RIGHT), AIDE NOAH DIETRICH AT 1947 CONGRESSIONAL HEARING Time M•g•zine Calls Irving 'Autobiography' Identical With Earlier M.nu1c ript 1'he traditional respon!:ic from the coun- ty was that the signal in sta lla tion would have lo wait un til a massi ve widening and extension project on Victoria was con1plcted . ""( got tired of lidying up after Hov.·ard's messes," said Dietrich. "I also wa s tired of 1-loward 's broken promises. For yea rs, he had pr11rn1sed to ~i\'C rne a capila! gains deal so J \.\'Ouldn 'l hand 11vrr most of my s<1lary lri the ~ovrrnn1c11 t. fl ere, I was being paid 1no re than half ;:i milli on dollars a yea r and I v.·as paying more in taxes than llow<trd 1vith all his millions.·· Dietrich is a business consultant and still goes daily to his office in Century Ci- ty. When he decided three years ago to write his book, a lawver friend in- troduced him to J an1es f~he!an, a free· lance writer of magazine ar!icles about Howard Hughes. After two yea rs, Phelan prod uced a manuscript satisfactory to neither a publisher nor Dietrich. Stanley ti-feyer, a film fin ancial figure , offered to find a new writer. George ~idney, a film director familiar with my biographies of Harry Cohn, Irving Thalberg and \Valter \Vinchell, recom· mended me. Dietrich and I v.·orked together to pro· duce a totally new manuscript. ~1eanwh ile. a copy or the previous manuscript apparently fell in the hands of Clifford Irving. The question is: bow? The manuscri pl ci rculated in publishing channels and C{)uld have been copied. Dietrich noted that Meyer met with Irv- ing last June in an attempt to interest the allf.hor in wriUng, Di~rich's ·book. But Meyer has denied showing the Die trich manus.cript to lrving. Irving has not divulged ho w he ac- quired the Dietrich m11nuscrlpt. Pas.sage Leadi11g Pack as Y nch,ts Near Acapnlco Special to lhe DAJLY PILOT ACAPULCO -Wind wa rd Passage wa s occupying a glassy sea off ZihuataneJo Rt 8 a.m. f PDT l today \~·ith less than a 50-50 1·h;in('(' nf setting a new elapsed tlrn e recvrd Jn ll1e Sa n D1ei;n !o Acapulco Yacht Ra ce. Z1huatanejo is 110 n.atJtlca l n1ilcs rruin Ac.:il pulc:o. Bl<ickf111 ;ind Sirius JI were .-.bout 20 n1ilcs bch111d Passage and exc'h~ginl!_ gr('etings al roll c;ill . Blilckrin ;ippc;ireO In he a rev.· rniles ah rad of S 1riu~ II l·:n1h11sia~111 hcg;in 10 huil 11r ;i i the Club de ,.ates here l11dt1\ 1l-'1th !lie possibility that one or rnorc or the leaders would be finished by n1idnigh1. The lead y11chl. presurn lily \\'indwar rl Passage, must fin ish 11t 9 15 p.m. (PD'l'\ to set a new reco rd. The present record of eight days, nine hours and 15 minutl'!'i ls heJd by Sirius JI . now skippered by Bob Lynch or Newport !-!arbor Yachl r;1uh. Poor radio Cilmmunicalion~ made 'report1 from the Other yachts in1possl ble until later in the day. Navy Officials' Stories Co11f lict On Barge Sinking BAYVIE \V. Ida ho (AP ) -N;ivy f1f. fici;i!s at the Undcrse~s Rese~r~h and Dcvclopn\cnt Ccntt•r, on Lake: Pend Oreille near here. h[lve refused L'Omrnent on the reporter! ~inkini;: or a $5 million barge loaded 1vith elect ronic f:C<ir. Residents of th is northern Idaho con1- munity say it 1s "co1nmon kno"•ledge" lhe barge sank during a severe storm in late J<1nuary . But I.hr Na vy in San Diego Cl'lnf1rmtd the sinking and said a naval investiga tion Is under way. The gear which was Inst belonged I() II bul "thert' is nothing more which c11n Pe: said at lhls time.'' said a spokesm11n fnr headquarters of tho Under!'eas Re~earch and Development Center at San Diego. "We have absolu!!'.'ly no comment on the subject." CWO Richard Rohrbacher. offli;-er in charge <lf the Navy unit at Bayvic.w, sairl when queslloned by re-porters. "Any information will have to 'be ob- tained fro m naval otCici11ls jn S.n Dttgo." lit laid he '1 not i:urt> who t.hOIO of- ficials l!lre and ''}lrobablv won 't know un· ti! somelimt nezt week:·• From Pagel PAPERS ... the full residency requirement or the new dJS k°JCI. \\1enke has called a press conference for late today but said this morning that he will take court action to compel Hitchcock to issue and to accept the nominati on papers. Wenke and Hill were gerrymandered out of the First District wh en new lines were dra wn and approved by the Board of Supervisors last October. The new bou ndaries were hastily changed in the last 24 hours before approval 1vas re· qu ired by state la1I-'. The two candidates, both longtime residents of the f irst District in Santa Ana, moved in Noven1 ber upbn legal ad· vice that they ~·ould then be permitted to r un. \Venke was the rirst candidate in line at Hitchcock's ofUce this moming the first day in which candida tes for supervisor and state and federal ortices may take out papers. He said he was under the impression that he would be given nom ination papers but that when completed they would not be accepted by the registrar. "I have no quarrel with eith er Kuyper or Hitchcock," tile Santa Ana attorney said. "They are doing their jobs as prescribed by law as they interpret it." Kuyper said this morn ing that after cons ulting with the State AUomey General last November he told both Hill and Wenke that they could mov e into th e new First District to qualify as can- dalates. Fro111 Page 1 CHASE ... dust. headed south and once control. more lost Pursuing orficers reported that at that poin t the stolen un it made three complete "dnugnut'' skids at high speed. Hill !hen swung a tJ-turn across the di vider stretch and aµparentt y floored the accelrrator once n1orc. sending the car s trai~ht into a bridge abutme nt at Ba silonr 11oad . Thf' au10 hH !hr t'onc.:rrte, pat rolmen sa 1cl. at about 90 mil es an hour: ''Th<11 \~·as all she 111rotc," sa id a C~IP SfM'1kcs man. Official s said there v.•as no apparent nl· tempi by the fleeing driver to hit the breaks or correct steering. "The car just headed straight for the bridge," they said. Rescuers from San Cleme nte police and fire departments spent an hour cuttinR And prying the 111reckage lo free Hill's body. Fro11a Page 1 IMPACT ... rela~ive safety or reactor emergency cooling \\'ater sys ten1 s. A test of a l-!o-10-scale model in the 'fipcky Mountain.$ and 1 a s t • m ~DU t e chant:es and additions ot components pointed up posSlble problemk"-ln "lhe' cn1crgency cooll'ng sys tem . Because of ttle hasti!y<ftnduct~ tests 11·ilh a small -model and aSSj!!'tcdly unrealis tic d~{gns, controversy sur-- rqundcd the AEC expe.rlment. The agetiey plans another test OL the eooling system In a much' larief.' lcst model this sumriter wlth__,no JaSt.-mlnute experimen_l_al:ch~nges in the.des""., l':xperts •anocjated with the nuclear in· .dustry predfct that the new , test Will prove that the~~lng tyStCrt\I th lar.i. The systems-In quesuon·-are no thole whic h Involve se11 water coolinj, bUt\ ln- stead, a closed, fresh-w11ter· ·srstem wblch I~ designed to keep the reactor to0I in emergencies. •, Jf the operf!ling reactor were to become overheated after a rupture of cooling ,pipes, tbe entire radlolcUve a5"mbly would ntelt. .. , Such 1 disaster could release deadly radl11tlon Into the atm91phert, the ex- pe rts say. • Mistake Parolee Gets New Freedom Chance Convicted heroin dealer Henry Cortez 1vill live the next 257 days minute by minute. I-le may count them in his sleep. He may become a free man -again - in 257 days. He n1ay not. The Corona man ·who became an ad· diet. !hen a pusher, then in 1962 • prisoner, for his crimes against the stat!" of California will be eligible for parole Oct. 26, after being mistakenly freed late last year. lie and his family -includi ng a sister employed by Hughes Aircraft Co rpora - tion's semiconduc tor pla nt in Newport Reach -rejoiced at his release from the stone and steel fortress of Folsom Prison. Then the nightma ·e that bLgan nine years before was repeated. California Department o( C.Or rections personnel discovered his parole was a clerical error and C-Ortez \':as picked up lo resume se rving bis 30--year-to-life term, as a four-time loser. He nearly \vent insane at return to the old prison, after a 33-day taste of free- dom . His parole officer even joined the out- , Airwest Flights Set to Resume ~lughcs Airwest officials announced !hey will resume passenger service to 28 cities on Feb. 22. flights to the other 46 cities on Hughes routes wiU be announced within 10 days. Anticipating romplete settlement of the e ighl-week n1e chanics st rike, Hughes niade public the back-to-v.•ork schedule pending ratification of a tentative agree- n1cnt reached Feb. 6, If approved by the Aircraft Mechanic~ r~rn te rnal Association, the pact also must pas~ the pay board. The 570 striking mec han ics v.·ill vote after all procedures for calling en1ployes b;H·k to work ha l'e been ironed out. 'rhe airline reAche d back-to-work ac- cords 11 ith pilots and stev.'ardesses last v.•eek. cry, saying Concz -convic ted and sentenced to four !(}-year terms for sale of about 30 grams of heroin !o support his O\.\'n habit -was an ideal ca ndi date fo r re ha billtation. He had been shot by agcn!s du ring his 1962 arrest; he had supposedly learned his lesson. • lli verside County Superior Court Judge J ohn Nebl('l! agreed to review the heroin dealer's stiff sentence several weeks ago and on Frida y ann ounced his decision. Judge Neble1t had heard testimony from Cortez -some of it rambling, hesi- l<1nt and aln1 os t plead ing -as v.·cJt as nev.· info rmation lrom a state narcotics <i gen t involved in Co rtez ' 1962 con· \'1ct1ons. Robert A. Bark toned do"''• his pr ior testimony, suggesting Cortez w as definitel y a major dealer but certainly not the brains behind a smuggling opera· lion that threatened to kill him and his fa1ni!y 1r he ta lke<l. ··l think there's tha t potential , .. " Bark sn1d v.·hen asked if Cortez was 111erely a rncssenge r for R major deale r. Concerned cilizens and legal aid groups challenged 111hether Cortez' return to pr ison might not constitute illega l cruel and unu sual punishment, based on his ac- ciden!al parole and chances f o r rehabilitation. ".4.nd th is time ... I kne"· I wa s v.Tong .. " Cortez told the judge in stating his side of 1he str<1nge case. "'\\'hen I was released it made me realize that I had a familv. To be a C'll1zen . . I did oot kno111 · v.·bat I had before ," he said . Judge Neblett noted he has received more than 20 letters regarding Cortez' wide!y-µub licized release end re-im· prisonmcnt. The majority urged th<i( he he given a chance. \Vritrrs of tw l) notes urged that he be imprisoned . "The lnform 01!1on bef(lrl' me does rctlcct that perhaps t0ns1deration might be ~ivrn In 1\1r . Co rt ez ·· J udge Neblett ren1arked 1n ::i prefat·c In stnking down three of the four co unts on wh ich Cort ei was convicted . But that proposal has been delayed ror several years because of technical pro· blem in winning approval fr om specific property ov.·ners, coun ty aides sa id this n1onth. Becau se of the \l icloria extension and widening delays. county road offici als now ha ve agre ed to build the signals first. 1-~vcnttJally Victoria v.·11! be 11 main arterial which \V iii link up with an ex- panded Del Obispo Road. 'fhe boulevard will be extended from its present ter1ninus al the Santa F'e tracks, follow a new bridge across San .Juan Creek. then become a ma jor part in a network of roads lending to Dana Harbor. fl-1cConv 1!1e said the closest pro jection for that project ·s <·omp!ction is son1ctin1e in the 1973·74 fi scal year . Final design pl<ins "'111 be completed on the Victoria project th is summer. but ac· tual construction \VOUld have to v.·ait unt il funds are ava ilable. B usi11g Foes Get "Commitm ent' From Prcside11t \\IASH INGTON ~UP!l -President Nixon today gave congressional busing foes a firm cnn1 m1tment tn take !lers necessary to end forced busing of school t•hildren "as 11-'e know it today,'' spo kesmen said. But he v.·ith held his immediate support for proposed eonslitutional amendment~ thn ! "·oul d outla w busing. After an hour and 45-min ute meeting v.·ith the Pres ident , Sens. Hn1\•ard Baker ::ind \Vi!l iam E. Brock, both Tennessee Republicans, said Nixon pr omised such action as necessary to ha lt forced busing. But they said he did not decide between three possible avenues of aclion : -Seek changes in Justice Department action toward schoo l desegregation suits. -Seek changes thro ugh legislative ac- tion in Congress. -Support the proposed anlibusing con- stitutional amendments. Brock quoted the President as saying: "\Ve cannot and "'lll not lea \'e the sllua- l1on as it is." Sen. Robert Griffin of tll ich1gan, !he Senate Republ ican wh ip, told reporters aft& the meeting at the \\'h ite House th;il ''the President made 11 cle;ir tha t he i~ not going !o be salisfied \1'ith the ~tatu ~ quo. There JS something that v.•i!I be done ." Try\ Us • • • • You1/ Like Us Full Selections of New and Used looms of AU Sorts and Varieties EVERYTHING UNCONDITIONAU Y GUARANTEED Dia-• Cent.,.. for Orange Count11 COSTA MESA o,,.,, Poilu 9 .1o'6 • · 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA JEWELRY & LOAN ' Come In and Browst Around Phone 646·774'1 letwMn H1rbor and Broadway ,. I ' ______ .._ ------------ [:"-..... ---. -. --lt'est111inster Conaedy ;·TV DAI LY .. LOOI ----........ Stellar Cast in 'Star Spangled Girl' c OOW•OOO ~ I c#,t ·tij t(, I H•AT .. ~--....... ,,, ........ ._ __ .... ___ ., ___ _ Monday Even ing FEBRUARY 14 6:00 0 811 NtWI The Hollywood fil m Industry Is 1i1m1ned lh11 1<1etk, 0 llNIC N!'W'I Tom Snydet 0 News Benti, Schubtck 0 (fl Wild Wild Wtlt (]Ql NBC Jr111n m Tht Flinbto.tt• ID LI Recorih ai) Nino l:lD 0 (fl [lll'91~ti~\l~l l>r. Stllll' 1'111 llr11 [colon Is th1 lht mt 11 Tht Lor1x, w~D spe1ks IOI' th1 ll'IH, m1i.e1 1 dtsper1te •t!tmpt to Sl\lil hi1 btlovtd fornl flom edlnct io11. m Truth or Consequtll(.I 9:00 f) "OICK VAN OYKE ANO * THE OTHER WOMAN " -MARY TYLER MOORE mt Oru11 of Je1n~ -back together again! (BJ HEl Pl1)'1'1ouse Blo1r1phJ 8 (II i iHcll~ I Dick Vin O,tt fil) Hocl1ePGd11 lodp ind lllt Otflff Wo1111n (R) Dick Vin a1) Notldtfo l4 Dyke tnd Mary Tyler Moort shD'll'-m Dettrt lltp!)l't C~Se Their S1n1in1. d1ncln1 tnd 1ct- @ M11berry ltfD ln1 t1lenn on this music1I com!dJ a!) El Amo s~i11 ffi News Jim Ha .. 1hom1 0 €D NBC MoMltJ Movit: (Cl 6:3D 0 P!eaw Don't [1t ttie Dilllts (2hr) ''Opt'f1li1111 ll!d B1olhtr" (dr1· 0 "CAT BALLOU" rru) '67 -Neo! Ccmnery, Dtn!elt * starring J ANE FONDA Bianchi, Adolfo Celi. and LEE MARVIN 0 (J1 @m Mond11 Movie: CC) (2hr) "Cluip•tr•" Conclusion {wec-0 Movit: (C) (90) "Ci t 1111011" latulir) '63-Eli11b1th laylor, Rith· Pari I (weste1n) '66--J1ne fooda, ard Bul1on, R!x Hirrison Julius !.ee Marvin. Michael Callan. Dwaynt C~esar intervenes in the c!~il war Hickman, Nat K1111 Colt, Stubby In Ervpt. where he falls in loYt Kaye. (}l CBS N11n W*lter Cronki!t wifh Cleop1!11. He returns lo Romt and she follows with !heir child. OO) The MouM r1cto .... ., Aller Cae~ar"s assassin atio n sh• rt· m A"d1 Griffith Sllow ffi NinnJ ind tht Proftuor turns lo Egypt followed by Mt rc f1il PiiJlnl the Ci ullir Anthony. both avoid c1plurt, but a! Winde rhnt la~e their own lives. llQJ Movi t: (CJ "Secrtl C.11monJ" ~ lireen Acin (d11m1) '69-Mia farrow, Ellz1b1th ail E1 Prof. S.(ilario c:I) NtWJ Vicloria James l1yl0t, Robert Milchum. 7:00 0 CBS N"" Walter Cronkl!e m I ,,1c1•\ I A Visit Wltll M1uric1 The late Cht~al1er tharms .,,ilh 1 0 iD Nltc Ntw1 John Ch1nctllot tour 111 his country rshte otterin1 0 Tht lti1!1m1n (i) Tn.ittl or Contequttteel t n assortment of his lavcr!te &anrs. (ll Drirnet fijJ A look n Uncoln ft Whit's My Linet ffi 1 #Jit1ll i He1r1 Atlid! -- (1§) Retoenitlon ind ltesponst Or1m1tie m ~~lZLucy examination ol I heart 1!1ack's 11) l Drtim ol Jeinnlt 1o.·1min1 si1n1ls and what 10 do i1 EID Hlflor-, or Art an 1tlatk oecurs.. ai) Puente de Amor o;J U liiilt 9 The Vir1inl1n ~ f~m: "low H11 MlllJ f1cn• a!) EKIHf• dt Mod1lo1 a!l Na llotes por Mi CE The Pertu1d1rs 7:30 0 Sblld Up ind Cllter RCIJ Ro1ers 9:30 O Jllns Wi t.:h .lcl'ln Fullmer and Dale Evans 2u1st 0 Dr. Simon locilt ''The Middler" ID Bfll CosbJ Stiow Drs. Locke and Sellers i re h eed l'fil Book Btll f1i) Film Od)'UIJ (II) "Sevtn Sa mu· with a dilemma wheo • youn1 1irl, ... who must use trutcl!es until sht Is, rai opar1led on fth1s1s to do so 10:00 IJ r]) Sonny Ind Cher Burt Rty· O Movit: {CJ (21/ihr) '111• chair" nolds displays his com1dl talents It (dr1m1 ) "66 -Staphen Boyd, [Ike Sonny and Cher's Sptdal 1uest. Sommer, Millon Be rle, l ony Btn111M 0 m NIWI fleanor Pa rker, JMeph CoNen. >. D liilfllt '"" .. n1lltleuly ambitious tetor uus ind m Nns Huah W1lli1ms abusts 1veryon1 in his fintistic/ (ij) M1mrpiec1 Thu~ra Que.st for lame and its unimi le io.1· ~ U Crlld1 Bl1n Cri1d1 -tht Oscar. "Second Lool'' rllm a:J [I Torn111o dips of lonithl's movie wilh ques I m M1 ntn1J lion s 1o wh ich viewers pllone In an· 10:]0 O c.ndid Ct111er1 SWf fS and win 1 pn11. I!) S..l1ri to Adllf!lturt 00 To Tell ttlt Truth ail Atomellltdli m I Dfttm of Minnie 9 Movie: "Thttt Bran Man• I) MRlion S MO'rif:: (C) (2trlr) ll:QJ IJ CJ (!) ®J til m IWS "Ntwtr Too LruR (comed,) '6S--O lt1ibtrt It Donl1• Shtw Coonie StlVMl:s, Mtur•n O'Sul!iv1n. f6) lll1rsbl Dillon Paul Ford. 0 fIJ Q) Ntw1 @) Lii's M1h 1 0.1 O Morlt: "try T•mlf" (drama) • m Ho11n's tferott -Jame.s M1S011 , Rod Stei11r, m Ortptt m To Ttfl the Truth (Jj) ''Ult 59otllfht m For the Fun of Sewing ED Cltywrtchtrs * Watch Lucille Rivers ~ ~R•MI ffi l udll t RiYll'"I Hom1-sewin1 tips ••,• lrom Miu Rive!l, CD 111tHto Y11daz Sllow l l ·ID .n Tht 8. V H Q) M1ntr111 · 'CJ' II I ey 1:00 B CJ) l l!•CIA~I Kt's Your Dot. ll:lO . Ch1rl!1 Brown IRl Snoopy tor11ets fJ ~!ONEY POITIER 11 1n his m111n1rs and finds himse ll be· * A Patch of Blue inr sent back to tht Dtlsy Hill Pup. Premiere Showcase of PY Ftrm for 1 refresher cours1 in THE CBS LATE MOVIE o~ience, 1J Cil C8S Late Mwlt: •A P1tth of 0 ®) iD ltowtn i nd Mtrtin's Blue" {dnm1) '6S--Sidnty Poitier, U usfi·ln Carol Ch1nnin1 11.1t!ls 1s Sh1!1ty Winters, [lizabeth H1rtm1n. t nurst, b1 lle1in1 and Cltzy Cl111, Q (fQ) (D Johftny Carton Carol 1 used ttr d11fer. Ctmeo 11uests V/ayne KU•sts. 111 Ch1rt!1 Callas. Dick Ctwtt. Rich 0 (1) (j) (l) Dick C....tl Sch~d· ard Crennt, Mona Tera ind Slipp~ ul ed guest . Singer Wil~on Picktt!. White I m MO¥in! "One T.uc.h ol YtnutR 0 Cl) (j) a> I SJICIAl IE 1 r l h·1 (romantt) '4B--Av1 Gardner. Rob· Quake A !hrilhng and ~m!!imes, er! Wilker. "Kidnap!)f(I" ftaturetl• !rightenina scientific loo~ 1! one or1 with Laurel end Hardy. nature's most devtstt11ni ph1nom1· 12:00 O Mowit: "H&st.aiU~ (drtm•) '43 na. --luist Rainer, Arturo De Cordovi. m A11ly t;rlttft~ Show 12 :10 m Quest for Aclventurt Ql Th• Y1r1ini1n l:OO ~ .. O ~,...., NIW'I f1i) [$1 Sped1I et! ttlt Wttk ''The o.,v _. ~ ~ Trial 111 '-l~ry Lincoln" Op:1r1 based on the attuel insanity trial o! Pre5i dent llnttiln's widow. CIPl"'IPOSed b, 26-year~ld Thoma s Pa1a!itrl l:lO 0 Mo'tie: "Armored (dram•) '61--Howard Holliman. m Cisco ~d Comm1 nd" Keil, [lrl D•llY l"llOT $1•!1 Pholl TRIANGLE -?-.lartin Fuchs is aghast at the sighl of Barbara Garlich and Gary Saderup locked in a cli nch in th is stene from the \Vestrninster Com- munity Theater comedy "The Star Spangled Girl." B e n ny 39 Agai11 His Second Ti 1ne Around By VEllN0:-.1 SCOTT television ctnd clubs dov.•n HOL LY\VOOD (UPI) th ro ugh the years. Jack Benny's done it~ Benny rents a home in Paln1 He's 3!:1 years old again. Springs and plays golr aln1nst every d;:iy "'hen he is in the Today is his b i r t h d " Y • desert. He occasionally sees \'alentine's Day. I-'rank Sinalrct there. And the rcn1arkab\e com- edian has started on his se-··r·rctnk really seen1s lo en- cond 39th brrthd;iy. jo~· being reltrcd," Benny The ctcconiphshmenl is said. •·But l ha\·p no idect of note"·orthy because Benny fully retiring 1nyself_ I Just "'as stuck <tt age 39 for most couldn't do that. of his adult life. It v.·as one of "i\1ctybe I might limit n1y his tradem::irks. appearances to concerls. As No\v he is do uble that age long as I'm dorng sornething. and going as strong as ever ctt But these dan1ned benefits age 78. keep n1e from retiring. I can 't RPnny is h.!rle. ~!is blue eyrs say no to good c·auses. So I do -ever a favorite topic with about one a "·eek <tll over the him. and always good for a country." laugh -are clear and filled In addition to playing golf with mrrth. Jack takes long daily \Valks to Few men have de voted as keep fit. His ctppearctnce belies ng ctnd tireless a lifetime to his age. J-le is trim ctnd as fast akinj:! people lctugh as has with hi s wits as ever. ack Bcnnv. And fe1v hal'e Eve ry day. no mcttlcr ~here one so m;ich f11r symphony he is. J,1ck Benny practices orchestras. He CQntinues to his violi n from 45 minutes to appear al benefit concerts t"·o hours. sawing aw ct y on his "I fC'el pretty good ." Benny Stradiv.1rius \"iolin, an in-sctid. '"I have lo feel pretty str ument he plays surprising-good lo do as much trav~ling Iv \veil . · as I do. Last yeek I went to · He alsn appears at benefits Mexico City for the first time for organizations r a i s i n g-in my life. It \\•;is another moncv to fight diseases. for 1 __ b_eo_e_I_d_:_· ________ 1 v.•orthy causes and for friends retiring from show h12:. Retirement is 1hc farthest thing from Benny·s Ol\'n p!ans. [i:i1J:lll!illilf:i~il)li He n1akes reg u I ct r ap- pc11r11nces ;it the S<1hara ho1el l in Las Ve~ns. s!nrrin,-: in his n1v11 n1gl1l club sl1ov.· three limes :i verir. I '"I ha ve !n kf'f'Jl v:ork111g 1n \'ci;as because r like to he , pa id once in a \\'hile," Benny! quipped. llrs phony penury ::ilsn hcts heen a staple of his WALTER ~~AnHAU "KOTCH" plu1 GEORGE HAMILTON "EYEL KNIEVEL" Tuesday .. ;·~c~o~m~e~d~y~~r~o~u~ti~n~es~~o~n~~r~ad~i~o~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~I L1ure11ct Olivier. "follow tht Hunttf'I (adventure) ·54 -Charlu Ct11pnn. I NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES DAYTIME MOVIES 1:00 O {C) ''Cf} !or Hippy" (comedy) I ·61-e1enn Ford. Donald o·eonno1.r~~;;~~~!!!!~~~~i!i!!!!i!!i!il~~~~~;~;;~~J Miiko Taki. M)'Mhi Umekl. 1:00 m "l:IO Tt Y~mt" (•es11rn) '57 m "Tht lir Htrl" (dr1m1) '53-- -G!enn ford. Van Henin. I Gltnn f0td, Gloria Gr1h1m1. 9:30 0 ''TM M111 rr .. tlM Ol111r'1 3:00 (j) "0.0.A." (myittry) •49 -[d· Club .. (corned,) '63--D111n, ll1ye.I mond O'Brien, Pamela Britt. 12:00 O (C) "A QuHn 11 Crowned" ;lg) (CJ "lrtlnblll Uprtss" (1dY1i1· (documentary) '55--/i1r1at1d bJ Sir tu11) '6&--Gtn1 Barry, .lohn St~li. 2nd GREAT WEEK! "Must be seen by anybody who really enjoys movies." 0 ·su• -John Sehubeck. AIC· TV A him by Bruce ("Endless Summer") Brown Rated lGI 1111• ,1eyl11t rwte4 fGJ "THE HELLSTROM CHRONICLE" Fob. 9 through Fob. 15 -6:45 open Contlnuou1 Runn ing Show Sund•y, 2:00 "THE HOUSE OF WAX" S1ymour i1 coming -midnight Feb. 18 3-0 Stereovision EXPEDITIONS 2 ... 11 .. 1u•f fri.-Sot-Soo. "JIA" "SAVAGEWllD"(G) 2.:J0,6·30. 1020; . "S•,•1•"12 4~. 4 40, 8·JOp "'· EDWARDS HUNTINGTON CINEMA B11ch Blvd. at Ell is , 847-9601 By 1'~t TITU~ 01 l~t O.lty Pll91 l t•Tt When !\'ell Sin1on ellrnt up with "1'he Star Spangled (;1rl " -after bl-criming a budd\ng Broadway le~end \Vtth "Conic BlU"' Y11ur Horn."' "Barrfflflt in the P11rk" ;1ncl "The <)cld Couple'' -ht> \\ilS hr;1111•ht11g 11>.1a~ fron1 hi.; p<ilt•ntf'd, and l 11 (' r n t I 1 l' , at1d1Pll('l•·id<'11· ILfH'lil\Oll f11rn1ula and P11 - ('ronrh1nj? on tf'rr110r\ ;ilrr;iclv st<1kl'd ~1ut II\ .\h1rr;11° 1"L111 ··1 S!·hisgal nff thf' hr,t(f'll 11"<1\'lo. of l'UIHt'dl 'fhu~. "'ht·n .1ou do "Star Sp<111gll·d (;rrl" Hl (jlt)HllUIHll' thertl l"r _1·11u <ILTf'nluHte thf' z;1n1ness uf the plot r:1thrr thtin at1en1pl tn crf'<ilr true l'rnpa1 hie· eha r<1.e1 (•r1za1 ion.;; And, p;1rtieut<1r!~' s1nc·f' lhf't'C art'.' onl\' thrt'.'e l'ln1ra\'ll'J'S 111 the pl o:i.v, yo u nf'ed per ftct c:;1sl1ng to pul l ii off_ ·r he \!Jesln1 insler C0n1- n1un1ty Thectter has pulled it off -and then son1e -\1'11h an excf'!lf'iiJ produclton of 1 llrs outrageou!" ro1nant1c corned.\', drspile the fact that !hr diret·- tor \Va ~ hosp1tct!ized and the trchnic:il cl1rec!Pr left the sho1\ r!urini:: the last !110 \\'eeks of rehearsal t\ su perior cast. the hkes of \vh1ch is seen all loo rarely in local theater. thrus1s the play into high gear in the frrst act aod ke eps its feet ftrmly pressed tn the accelerator. The shift 1n dirr<'lorial J!ea rs is nevrr evident. a!rhough !here arc a few coughs <1n!I spu1ters from the technical enginf'. Sondra Evans, the origin;il director \1•ho carried 1he show as far as the hom eslret t h before emergency surgrry forced her off the scene, h;is done a beautiful job \Vith th is cssf'nlially physical con1edy, creating so n1e i n gen i o us choices of well-limed bypl<ry. Cr ed it for preserving this ground>.1•or k ctnd keeping the SLfEPER OF THE YEAR ! "THE RAILWAY CH ILDREN" A tore fllm thot ew•ry memb•r of tlte famil y wUI 1njoy! and o fantllltfc oi:lw•nturt In 1111ia-n .. ! "ANDROMEDA STRA IN" IOTH IN COLOR Rat•d IGJ "THI lfAll SP•H•L•D O!lllL" A CO"'•<IY II~ "'l•U S•"'Ol' II•••<'•" I)• Son<I•• E.v1rio, "••• m1n•H• GI••··•• 1 6.,. 1..--1,.1 .,,.~,,.. S9"' e ·•~e1•" \OI Olt'~" II• l'lon l'l•ll "'.''"''" ~· I~• W111mtri1l1• {ommunl!v Th••"' '""''' • ..., ~otu•n•·· •I I JO •I "'' <"1ntr, ~<~nnl •""•!c<1um E<l•••••a1 •I 1·•··· """""""''•'· ll1>f'•'1·~~· •• , l 16' THI C•tf •~P> 111•~~" r,,,_ ~•U•'''" N~• '~" (uo n•ll Vl~I!·•• •• 'o "' Scoh • ll•ulrf""''" lloctM'O (;•·• 'I :.hp11 t1J!ht and pi.11tsh1•d i.:11rs !ft [>.1ns Allt·n 01111' tf'ch n1t·alh rin('' tl11: \\'f',t111Ln5tt·r offer111~ fRltP1, ;t111• fJt 11 n;inl ~· 111 IR ~1 11111 1u1 r I h ;! II ):{'' ill !H ollo.t"•llllt f,t('1 l111rs. .\rt'as nf :.u111ut. h_i.:h11nR anr1 lil<l,l!l'rr"fl f;j!J :.hurl ,,f 1hf 011,la.C.t' r\· ct'llf'n(•l'. th1u1~h n1111e 1:-l't'lll· plr!rly 1rrr111rdt:1hh' S1111nn' t'h<ll"<ll!t'r.s. 11h11 In 1h1s pl.~_\' ar1· 11!01 •' ;i1·1·11r.ll!'IY <l1':"-r1h1·d "' 11 1· I I d r .1 11 11 t'ill'!l'.!lt ttfr'<;:. rrrr :-; up er h Iv l'!11H'1 rd h~ (; ;i r~• S<1d1· I'll r ;111d J\l<irtlll !I. V11L'li!' HS ;1 p;irr· of rad1rals puhltshing 1111 1111 rlcrgronnd n1ngazinf' Pll :1 !>hOl'S1ring :111£1 R ,1 1" h :1 I' 11 (;arlu·h :is 1hcir rornp!rti-;u1- t11hcsis. 11 fl;1g·11·n1·1n~ 111.v1n· pie S\l"lllllll{'r !lhOLlj.!IJ IH1[ ii \'rry goon onr\ \\ho r u r 11 s thf'nl off"pnl111ca!l.v 11l11lr turn- ing I hr 111 , altcrnatr!y, 11n ph~·sically. Saderup. i n i t i a 11 y !he •·straight man" of the le1un . rs c\eiirly the slronl{cs1 of tile \\'ell-chose n ca.~I. He hitc~ 11ff greAI chunks or inten.~e. t'rno- tiona! tirade 11•ith Ciln.~umni;ne ~kill and drspl;i ~·s an cquallv shA rp i1ff1n1ty for pieL·cs of t·on1ic Uusinc.~s. partlcultirly his "sunburned" scene in the second <1<'l. It is the latest in ii series of unfailingly sining perforn1ances b,v one o f Orange Coun!y 's finest young actors. As the literary grnit1s turned into a fawn ing ma ~s nf jelly tiy the mid,vestern liberty belle. ALSO WALT DISNEY"S "NEVER A DULL MOMENT" Fuchs loo is first r111 t-. ll1s Is l !hr n1o~t <'OfrlJC' charartrr of1 !!11' !hr"" er:rl hr p!:i:.~ :1 fr:r 1111 1! S >.111rth \\J!h bullSt'\'l' t1111111J: :u1d a per.:r1n1ai1_v, hant-:dn~ e;i.:prr:;s1on. I f~ !ht' pl;1\' 11('rt ti \Ulle~'l:J.:llJ j.°:dlllt'.1 !hf' othf'r~ 11~1Ltlcl .'>t'l uµ !hf' brill ;ind F111·h'( \\'OU!d ~µ1 kr II ~II.•'\ 1;11rlll'il bl;1~1~ hf'r 11 .11 !l\l<i ltlt'rr sh:11Jo11~ 11 u1ld 11!\h A l.Jur~l nf f1rl'\\•H l..s r~plod111~ HI .lll fill'f'\"!Ulll~. :\ \\1'1l·1\r.1p p1'd p.1rk.1i.:e of 1hn11nu111 ,, 1!111!\!lll[t•, !>ht' f)O~$i''·'"' t ill" 111111;1:1 I (' .11 ,'l!l I l!Jl('~, t'I l'!l , \I hi ll' S U l' I' U 11\ ti I fl J.: !", l1rr 1•tnf1•11' :.Hflt'{1 r1n11! 1"11' Th1111,1.;h 11•q111rt•<11.1 ,\l,t,1u1 lw1 1ntl1111111111hlr 1·h;o·;11·1t•r n11·r ;tn t'\lrnrlf'rl prr1nd . 'hi• \ill'l1'' brr· Jl<'f"fPrn11u11·r \111)1 ~11bt lt• 11·;111,1111111~ of ni.l\•cl :ind t'.\ pr1•,,1,111 ~:n,1'11\lllt• ;i1·t111g 1s l'\f'!'ilrn1 IJ1n111gh11111 1!11' pr11dtt!'l11111 liapp1ll"L 11111011~ 1h1· 1h11•r p1·rr11rr111·rs 1' 11n .1 h1~h plan(' and flf'x1hil1tl' <•f aet1nn ;dso 1~ ('11dr11l 'fhe ·..,kill :incl <"nhr.~111n (lf lhf' \\'r.~l nun:;trr lriu r11n1 p.irr' f111111·ahlv \l'il h th;il <h,pla.\'{'i\ 1n thl" 19fii l1rani::f' Studh1 'l'hl':llrr produl'tiun 11f "l,111 .• Tl1rre is a scene in tlii• l.1~! :u·t 11 ht•re 111 S::idrrup hanrl!'Hff~ Fuehs tn the rarltnJ! !n krf'p hun frnn1 leav111i:: hrforp hr romplt•lrs )H!l \1:ork on !hr 111:1.i:azrne. 'l'he \\1rst n11n.~trr lhra te r iirour shnulcl tu1nclc11ff all lhree \:as! n1cmbrrs 11nd qui!'kly schedule a producl1011 of "Lu v." fl nly two n1ore wcekrn£1s re- 111a111 fur 111\f' of the sei'1so11·.~ furn11rs1 1·0111rdies. '·St ;i r :-:pa nglrd c;irl " plays Frida~s ;111d Snturdays throu,R!t l•'eh. 16 ;1! !he F rn lf'v S 1· ho o 1 :11ulit11r1un1. Ed";ards at 1'r:1sk ill \Vesln11nslcr. :Jido """'°" K•Cll -..... -H Jt\.1-Uoh 11i. -Of. l ·•l!D i \ SHOWING NOW! A MARK llYDEll F1lM J{'l-rl1 WAVNI. ., ' u.,~ ~ r .... -TH( ro,o,mvs e,,~ ..... < l'C'..O'X. 1 er I'~( · BP\.(;( ((flt1 -m u ru 11'M! !!ir r. t"' IJw: bl-........., Wl ,.-ns • ~,., ~ L.....,i. !' ....... :-~ ~. 11 ...... : r '""' .It .,j v. ""' cw ............ . 1'1crl:.(td """ Llo.,le<:f il'; 1.1¥1 P·rtll.J r,,.,..,.,,. 1~• rttfl\ v..,,.... r~a. A ~,~ I PG l,_"' ... ~•..._.noJ....l: """'.,, ___ I . . .. _ ..... _, ,_,,_ ...... _ ..... _. EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY SHOWINGS CALL THEATRE FOR SECOND FEATURE PHOHI ~ J .. lltl fXClUSIV! INGAGEMENTll JOHN WAYNE & THE COWBOYS P IUt • fYIL ICH llVIL" ioi r _,,.;.1• .a11 ... -• ~ · • II IC.,._ tHOl'l'll'I Cl-.rll · • •ow•"'o ~!!9r'l~~ COIT.l 11114 6'1· l 111U fOUTll OI 1A111 DICIO !"HOHi! -'''·Hll 3rd GREAT WEEK -•·•·•••••••••••o•••••' , •.• ., •... °'. •••·• ...... , .. ••11. PNOHI -1'1·00fl DUSTIN HOFFMAN IN AlSQ.,llSTIUll "DlllY" IGP! 111 Color H ~ .... w1aTM1 .. 111 .. ClNT'l.i. <B·:•2 "'"""''"" •• .,.,Pl~ '"" 111WIU 0 .. 00• ..... o ... f>I .. ,..., !"HONE -atl Ufl ~m EXPmlTIOlllS ALSO -PIRST AIU IUll w lltllllANT!" ""'"c'"' 111t ~ PlUS "TNI GANI THAT COULDN'T IM OO J ITIA!iMT" I• Colo-fG KOCM stereo103FM the sounds of the harbor ~-'=d~i=f---7 21· hours a day • ' ,, J " f 'l 18 DAIL V PILOT SC M()lll!~J. Frb,u.ry 14, l!l7? T11naoro11nd Clu·.ysler Reveals • 1971 Profits UJl DETROIT. Mich rAP\ - Chrysle'i-Corp .. its salr.-i up SI billion, ha s reported a 1971 profit of $8.1.7 m1!11on 1n a ~harp turnaround fron1 a $7 6 n1Jl!ion loss 111 1970 ment lotaled 225,141 la:;t ye<.1 r, against 234,941 in 1969. • ' • .. Chrysler said world'w1rle lts sales of passengt'r cars, trucks and traclors hit 2.6 milho11. against 2.4 million vehi cles the previous year. Chrysler's 1971 ea r n i n gs "'ere equal lo SI 67 a share. t•omparcd wllh a loss of 16 cents a share a year earlier on sales of $7 billion ::)<ties 1n 1971 hit a re<"ord $8 bill1011 . <;ent:'ral Mot(lrs c; o r p . , l.:irgcst of the four maJor U.S. au1ornakers, reported I ha t 1971 had been its second best ,year, with earnings of $1.9 b1!- l1on. A r(•cord $2 I billion was r ung up in 196S. SPORTS MODEL -Volvo's new 1800 I::S, the first new sports car from the Sv.1cdi~h au lon1a ker in 12 years, introduces an entirely new rear compart- rnent design. 'J'he roof, which extends almost to the back o! the car, blends into d framc!ess rear \vindow which serves as a door to the 35·cubic foot lug. gage area. While suffering its losses in 1970, Chrysler cut back sharp· Jy in ils middle and !ov.•er n1anagemcnt ranks, reporling its average world wide employ- I•• Higli Gea1· "THE WAY TO MAKI MONEY JN REAL ESTATE IS TO FIND OUT WHERE THE PIOPCI ~RE GOING, ANO IUY LAND IEFOfll THlY GIT tHERI!!" Anil'rican Jli1o!ors. smallest of the so-called Big Four, reported a turnaround similaf to Chrysler's in .AMC"s fiscal year ended Sept. 31. AMC reported a profit of $10. l million , against a Joos of $56.2 n1illion the 1)rcv1ous y car. AMC.' also reported a profitable first quarter. New Volvo Spo1·tsCa1~ Debuts Will Ro9ers L•u1n cov11ty, Tl•t 1o..-cotr l•nd , t•w ll'N'I•, •"" I ll•vt a r .. ot tor "If. Good tfrmJ '"cl low pric•1. J41--St1S t r ..... ~,1t fvt. ,•\1rd ft·lo1or Co., No, 2 in 1he industry, is expected to report 1971 earnings th.is week. Wou.ld you pay an extra $5.21 per 111onth for Full New Car Maintenance'." Thal's all the r.Xtra ii c .. ~t \'.'i1h 1l J1)hnson & S(Jn Full J\1ain1('nanef' U-11sr nn any of n11r IJrand O<'\V 197_:.! i\fcrrurys. Jui;! think nf lt , • nf• n1n1·p Hnnny1n~ l"C'!JAI• problC'n1s •.. nn n1ore u11cxpi'l'1<'d l•.-.:pl'nsC's 11nd hcsl nf a ll , , • a hr11u!i!11I ne\\' full sizr' !\lrreu1·y Yla1·11t11s nr l\Jnnlercy to driVC' in ahsr1!U tr!y rC'rfrt•t !"Ondilinn al 11!) tin1('s. Find nut for yourself all !11(' brnrfits anrl plrasur('$; this fantas tic ]('H:'" prugra1n provides on all our Li11eoln- i'ITercury Pr1)(iucts, Call BUD BO\V E!\' at 540-5630 ..•• J"fl f)Ai''. Or"•lt Co11n 1)'1 "f ""'ify of r int [.,,,~ ohnson & son \J:W''''.'""'* I wi···- 2626 HARBOR BLVD .. COSTA MESA • 540·5630 LEASING? LOOK! NEW 1972 OLDSMOBILE TORONAD·O 2 DOOR HARDTOP MONTH 24 MO. OPEN END INCLUDE S, AIR COND .• FULL POWER INC. DOOR LOCKS AND SEATS, AM -FM STEREO . VINYL TOP, TINT. GLA SS, TILT WH EEL, BELTED W/W, AND MORE. We lease all popular make cars and trucks LEASE DEPARTMENT UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE 2850 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA CALL NORM BREEDLOVE, 547-6750 By CAllL CA RSTENSEN 01 !ht 0 .. 1~ Piiot S1'fl There's ;1n 1n1cresting 11e1v offering Jro111 Volvo this year and the Sv.•edish auto maker calls it "our first ne>v sports car in 12 years.'' lt features a luggage com- partment O[lC and half···times The Ne1vpnrt Beach office or Robert Ebey Company. Inc. has opened on Ca mpus Drive and Bob Ebey ha s appointed OOUJ:la s Dav olt a s vice prcs i· dent in charge of the ne1v facility. Prior to moving to Newp o rt Bea c h , DAVOLT D a v o 1 t served a s I h e account executive for the Northern California zone of Levitt and Sons residentia l build ing firni. The Menlo Park·based advertising agency vd!l extend its s e :--v I c e capabilities to So u the r n California ad vertisers. * Chuck Rubin has bee n ap- pointed marketing director or Valor Electronics of Sa nta Ana . He 1~ill have full charge of the firm 's internationa l marketing act ivities. 'l' h e (;osta Mesa resident was fornterly a sales nlanagcr at PCA Electronics in Sepulveda. He owned and operated his ov:n electron ics company for seven yea rs, manufacturing magnetic components. * J, Thomas Talbot, 36, has been elected pre sident of Dunn Properties Corporation of San- ta Ana . Taltiot, a Laguna Beach resident, joined Dunn Properties. a su bsidia ry of Pacific Lighting Corporation. in \971 as vice president. The co rporation specializes i n building, leasing and selling industrial parks for n1anufac- !1Jring and warehousing , * Graphic St:icnl'CS, Inc:, t)f Connecticut has announced the appoinlmcnt of Tho1na s H. Kendall as vice president of marketing for the Los Angeles sttbsidiary of the fir lll. Ken- dall. a Costa Mesa resident , 1~·as formerly G r a p h i c Sciences branch manager. The flrm markets communications oriented i n f o rm a t i on ap- Th11 1uii'ffli.frll!trtl i.r 11rithrr 011 oJftr /fl ,Jt:/I rtor a 10Ucitalir111 of ,a11 offrr to buy thil 1ecuriry. Tlir ojftl'i1t1 U made oltiy by tlte ~ooptttUJ, .. , ... .. " • • • " ••• • 1,499,320 Shares - DEAN WITTER « C:o. INCORPORATED Common Stock (Par Value Sl .00 Pct Sb'are) The poblk offtrina prl" MJ bHtl ~tn11blitd by 0... ~In« ,._flt to• req~ ti tbe l'\•tklnal'AMOd1tlOft fi Stoirity I>tt.ltn, Int. thal IUdt prfct be no blab« tban that~ ~ b~· i.o lnd~dmt lnmtment ~h• ftrmt. Mtnill Lynch, Pitf"ce; f"'9« 4; Smltfl l~tff. 11\d utunaft erothtN. 11bl> •rt Ml rttrtklPlt(lna h1 tbt dittribadoa,...,.. !be ftnnl makina tbt l"KOCIUM•tdlltloni .. to SM"k't- Price 523 Per Share Cop/a of 11te Pro1put11.J _,. )Ho t'htainrd /""" lht llltdw~ M/y llt 1U11tt lN wltlch 11t1 ~"' MCtl' bl lrfo/ly dUtrlburtd or /roM t>llttr "1tolo1 IW ~ ""9o ma)' Mtwfa.J/1 nff,,-llf/1 ttCUl'Jty /M l f'd llol#I. . Dean Witter & Co. lncoJlM)nlcd • that of Volvo sedans and ln· ll'oduces an uinovalive rear co1npart ment concept. Called the IBOOES fastback cot1pe, it largely resembles a 2 door ~'ago n bu t e x l e r i or styling still is quite similar to lhe earlier 1800 coupe series. The new model does combine • pliances. The t r a d e cor· poration is represented in 35 cou ntr ies. * The board of directors of A I I e r g a n Pharmaceuticals has elected Dr. Stuart P. Eriksen of Tustin, to the post or vice president for research and development. Dr. Eriksen joined the Irvine firm in 1965 as director of c I i n i c a I research. He holds a master of science de gree and Ph.D. 1n p h a r maceulical chemistry front UC Berkeley and San Francisco. * Dunne 1\-1. Steputis, of Costa Mesa, has been appointed director of marketing' for Actron Industries. Inc. of !\1onrovia. As head of Com- puter Aided De sign a n d Manufacturin g, Steputis steps into a principal field of ac- tivity for the McDonnel!- Doug\as subsidiary. * Forty years of servi ce \\'ith Sec urity Pacific N a l i o n a I Bank have been c O nl- p!ctcd by J a e k f . Jlolland , a vice presi- dcnt w i l h the bank 's marketing and inv est- 1nent group. The Ne\vport Beach resident joined Sccuri1y Pacific Bank 111 l9.12 as <t n1essenger. A n::itive of Oklahoma, l~oll:ind is ~ gradua le of Stanford L.!niversi!y and the Pacific Coast Graduate Sc ho o 1 of Banking, Uni versity of \\'ash· ington. Firm Plans ' Complete-New York Stock List S..• M•I 1.._I *• L .. c-. Cl9 • I /• I 'I 'I • N :o 0 :§ .o ' . ' • , ,w .. • . ' • • 1 • ' J ' I ' I I I J I MO!ld11, r11>mry 14, 1972 !C DNLY nLDT J9 Monday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List • .. I • ' ... ~,, -•. • f0 DAILY PILOT Monday, Ftbru.&tJ 14, 1972 I LA Harbor Ala111itos Bay Event • • I .. .• • Recreation Plan Eyed LOS ANGELES (AP \ -The Harbor Commission ha s been urged lt1 adopt a pollt>y "ut ih1,. ing Les Angeles J1arbor in part for recreationa l need s and to expedite plans for new marinas,'' despite a com - mission plea that it wa s "aware of the small boaters' need s." NO PAINTING FOR THIS ALUMINUM COMMERCIAL FISHING BOAT Big Vessel L1iw1i~ Undergoing Se1 Trials Off Newport Beech The City Council Industry and Transportation Commitlei! passed a resolution to this ef·1 feet during a public hearing attended by 100 boating en· thusia sts . so1ne of "'horn com· I plained boating fac1hlles were / be ing eliminated even though they show a belier return on investments than commercial fa cilities. City Counci l President J ohn Gibson, who attended the meeting though not a n1ember I of the committee, accused the commission members of "dragging their feel" on plan- ning small craft facilities. Luxury Fishing Boat Alu111i1iu1n Laiwaia Tested Off Coast Fred Crawford, assistant general manager of the J1arbor Departn1ent said work on the Fi sh !!arbor marina would begin soon because pro- blems posed by ecology studies and other re- qu irements had been solved. By ALMON LOCKABEY Of lllt D1llr f'llor sr1ft Yachtsmen who have chanc- ed to see a big aluminum power boal undergoing sea trials off Newport Beach. and have wondered when it is going to be painted, well it ain·t. No paint, that is. Now if you are wondering why a beautiful 76·foot vessel such as the Laiwaia is going fo go unpainted , the answer is simple. The Laiwaia is not a yacht. lt's a commercial fishing vessel, soon to be in service in the Hawaii fishing trade. No, not e\'en a s~risher. The all-alu ·num Laiwaia. 76 feet overall nd 24 feet beam wa s built in Costa Mesa al the yard of Lew Mauer and \vas commissioned by the Alpha Hawaii Fishing Company. Although the vessel is not a ya!'hl in any sense of the word, it wiU be better equip- ped than most of t h e go!dplaters seen around these parts. With accommodations for six-including a crew o f GOP Orders 64 Yachts For San Diego Parley SAN DIEGO ~ API -Sen. John Tower IR·Tex.) wants a yacht with 20 staterooms while he attends the Republican Na- tional Convention in Augu st Similar requests from others are coming in and 64 yachts are sought, a convention spokesman said. "The use of the vessels will be free to the delegations," said Paul Kettenburg, a cochairman of the California Yachtsman Committee for the '72 Convention, a .statewide group. "The idea of the yachts is to offer the delegations and other officials their use for en- tertainment offshore and for Top Water Skiers Set For H llt'£Lsu Four of the world's outstan· ding water skiers have been selected as test officials for the 1972 P ow c r B o a t Performance Trials at Lake llavasu. The sk iers arE' ti.'1 i k e Suyderoud , Rickey McCormick. Lerny Burnell and Lisa St. .John . They will be evaluating marine equipment for famil y ski use. Also expected to be present ls Bill Bennett , manufacturer of the Delta kite. "\Yater skiing has come lo be the most important fa ctor lo be considered before buying an outoard boat or engine.'' accord ing lo Carl Asmus, editor of Powerboat Magazine. "It is important tha! any com· plete testing program include adequat.e data for the water ski enthusiast." sightseeiryg trips around the bay. and for fishing if time permits." The Sports Arena. site of the convention's televised business sessions Aug. 21+24, is less than a mile from the Pacific Ocean and even closer to J\1ission Bay. Kettenburg said y a c Ii t owners up and down the CaJHornia coast are being ask- ed to offer their boats. A total of 54 yachts will be designated as host craft for the convention's delegations and 10 more will be host vessels for important govern- ment officials who aren't delegates. \V il!iam de Groot J r . , chairman of the California NavigaUon and 0 c ea n Development Commission, is listed as consultant to the yacht-procuring committee. Quest III Wins 2nd M E LBOURNf:. Australia (AP I -Australian champion Quest fl l won the second race Sunday in the best-"{)f-seven senes in the Little America 's Cup defense againsl the United States' Weathercock at Sorrento on Port Philip Bay. The American catamaran wa s plagued by bad luck. On the first day or competition she was forced to dodge spec- tator boats. thus losing time, and on the second day she shea red her rudder fitting ""·ith two laps to go. American skipper Chuck ~fi!ligan of Pl ymouth, Mass., made a valiant effort to con- tinue but did not have enough cont rol in the 22-mile an hour wind and lumpy seas. four-the Laiwaia was built at a cost of nearly a half·million dolla rs and "-'ill remain a strictly working vessel. lier electronics and naviga· tional gear would make a yachtsman drool. Count "em: Loran, automatic direction finder, VHF radio. single side- band radio, A.M. radio, Kone! falhometer, Decca radar, tv.·o 30 kilowatt generators. That's all in the pilot hou se. Another console on he boat deck has temperature controls. crane controls and miscellaneous gear fo r operating the vessel from that location. The huU was designed by Phil Carlcor, well known in Newport as the designer, builder and driver of offshore racing powerboats. The owner is John Sturges. The vessel ~ powered by twin Waukasha\v \1-8 diesels and has variable pitch pro- pellers. Her working range "-'ill be 700 miles. but by flooding the fi sh wells "-'ith fuel, this range could be ex- tended to 2,000 miles. Although lacking in fancy yacht accommodations, the crew will be quite conforlable in three individual stateroon1s. each with Hs own head and shower. It has a full galley and saloon with the usual refrigeration e q u i p m e n •t capable of making her what seamen call a ''good feeder." After con1pletion of sea trials off Newport Beach, Maurer will skiPiJer the vessel on its maiden voyage to Honolulu, hopefully .starting about Feb. 15. The reason for not painting the hull ? The Laiwa ia was bui lt of s e I f ·a n o d i z in g aluminum which w h en weathered Y:ill tum an allrac- ltve gray, according to Mauer. REMEMBER with ,Bob Paley And Associates Hobie Cat Group Sets 2 Regattas The ~lobie Cat Associ.:irion is 1 conducting t \Vo Midwinter I Regattas thi s year. The Midwinlers \Vest is being held at Guaymas . Mex- ico. Feb. 19-20·21. The Midwinters East Regal- ia was held l.:ist "'eekend at Coco Beach, Fla. The winners : f-IOBIE CAT -11 l Jim Mccann, Orlando : (21 Dale I Barrett. Coral Gables; (31 Allen Stevens. Orlando. HOBIE CAT -l~A -<1 ) Roberto Bo u re I . Sauturce, P.R.; 121 J. Simmonds. Miami; (31 Cauldcn Reed. Davtona . iios10 CAT . 1rn -m 1 11arilyn Swan. Coco.:i Beach : (2) Grey Presnell. Orlando ; t3l Jay Swan. Cocoa Beach. -474 E. I 7TH STREET BAFECC INSURANCE COSTA MESA 642-6500 -546-3205 PIERCE 0..-; .. 1-.1 .. i.. .. .....,."" .... ..i l'lt•-1'"""'"'"'-'"'"'"" Toi..,•!.:! ...... , ..... 1..-..................... n,. _ ... "' .. 1 .... ri. .. ~ • ., ....... .., ...... - ·--.. _, ............ ii.. .i.-." Junior Sailors Race Set Late in March Top junior s1llors from some of tht sublties and throughout the Southland have,. some!imes neg!ecled varieties been invited to participate in of sailboat racing. Alami~os Bay Yacht Club's lmtr~clors will use . Sabol! Olympir S;oiling Se m i n a r and swt them to the different March 2S.31. aspects of competition such as The seminar is designed to match racing. tea m racing acquaint young sailors with and collegiate style racing. All CJf the Instruction periods are arranged to allow as much sailing time as possible. The seminar was arranged in cooperation "·Ith Sa i I Magazine . Top racing sk.ippers have been selected as In- structors. They include Henry Sprague Ill . Andy f\.1acdonald. Peter Parker, Rick Taylor afi!i Ken Wels.<i . Registration for the seminar \\'ill close Saturday, March 35 at 5 p.1n. fee per person is f!O e day. Age limits are 12·21. Classes will start daily al I e.m. 1000/o FREE REPLACEMENT SHOULD THIS TIRE BECOME DE FECTIVE DUE TO WOR KMA NSHIP OR MATERIALS FOR THE LIFE OF THE TIRE. ALL PRICES PLUS EXCISE AND SALES TAX WINSTONl!I DELTA 140 TIRE NO THUMP NO BUMP NO VIBRATION FULL FOUR PLY TUBELESS WHITEWALL SIZE PRICE 650-13 ..... ' ........... '15.40 700.13 .. ,, ............. 16.80 650-14 or 695-14 17.49 . '' .... . 700-14 or 735-14 ........ 18.20 750-14 or 775-14 ........ 19.52 800-14 or 825-14 ........ 21.13 850-14 or 855-14 ........ 22.94 900-14 or 885-14 . . . . . . . . 23.04 670-15 or 775-15 ........ 18.07 815-15 or 825-15 ........ 19.55 845-15 or 855-15 .. . . . . . . 22.25 800-15 or 885-15 ........ 22.92 820-15 or 915-15 ....... 24.26 1.75 1.ts 1.t o 2.00 2.12 2.29 2.41 2.71 2.1 l 2.]4 Z.48 Z.67 Z.91 SUPER WIDE FULL 4 PLY WIDE OVAL TYPE TUBELESS WHITEWALL ' OR SIZE WHITE LETTERS PRICE •;:, ... D70-14 or 695-14 ........ '21.69 2.Jt / E70-14 or 735-14 .......... 23.65 J.56 WHEN BOUGHT WITH OUR BONDED WARRANTY YOU "ARE PROTECT~D AGAINST NAILHOLE, ROAD HAZARDS, WRECK, COLLISION AND EVEN RUNNING FLAT: TUBELESS WHITEWALLS SIZE D78-13 or 700-13 E78-14 or 735-14 F78-14 or 775-14 G78-14 or 825-14 PRICE ...... 20.86 ...... 22.65 ...... 24.10 ...... 25.25 H78-14 or 855-14 ...... 26.93 J78-14 or 885-14 ...... 28.21 G78x15 or 825-15 ...... 25.33 H78-15 or 855-15 ...... 26.89 J78-15or885-15 ...... 27.38 L78-15 or 915-15 ............ 30.14 DUNE BUGGY TIRE ,,,7 2.24 2.l, 2.5, 2.75 2.95 J .11 !.01 !.16 11-15 .................... $21.44 fX.TA.X Sl.47 HIGH SPEED SPORTS CAR TIRES TUBELESS WHITEWALL SIZE PRICE 550--12 .... ' ... 14.09 600-12 ............... , ..... . 14.23 520-13 ..... , ............ 14.82 560-13 .................. 15.90 560-14 .................. 17.95 600•13 .................. , 15.63 ALL l'RI CfS l'LUS FEDERAL EXCISE AND STATE SA LES TAX EXCISE TAX 1. II I.JO 1.29 1.45 I.SJ '·'' TRUCK TIRES !st QUALITY NYLON CORD INQUIRE ABOUT ROAD HAZARD GUARANTEE ON TRUCK TIRES SEE US FOR CAMPER TIRES SIZE PLY RATING 700-14 8 TUIELESS ••••••• , 670-15 6 ................ 700-15 .................. 6 700..15 ............... 8 PRICE IXCISI TAX 26.44 2.64 21.66 2.44 23.27 2.14 26.81 J.1J The pe rfonnance trials are scheduled March 11·12 at Lake Havasu City, marking the first time a testing program of this scope has ever been held by a boating publication. When the fitting sheared Aust ralian skipper Bruce Proctur was leading by four minu tes. .,,. ...... ,_ -r.. _, .. ,,, .. 1 ''"'' ... • ...... n..-..t • ......,. ''"'"""' _. ... n... tho "-·A~ M"'"' C.. ,.,.. ..,......_ •F70..14 or 775-14 ........ 25.25 J.60 700-16 .................. 6 25.59 J .00 750Jl6 ............ : ..... 8 30.12 DA VE ROSS PONTIAC Lease or .Buy All Models DAVI(' ROSS PORTIAC J4M HAllOI ILVD. • PAil DllVI COSTA MDA Ph. 546·8017 ONJll 1 ~YI A WllK I r• .t.,M, TO 111 .. '-' IUNDA't'1 11 A.M.. TO t ,.M. • • '!Ir.-I .. -·-l ... .... -- ' .. ...n.. • ...i.., •• _, ........... i, '"''""" 1oo.,... .. .....,,.~.,.i,.,,.....,1n,..r " •u-•lr -·'* " t..ii...... .. "'""'· ""' p..,.... A.-"'-C...u•-J...._,h io lid• ..... 11... ....... ..i-.i.-...1.-• .. n.. ................... .,,_...., "" "" ........ ol '-·11..-.--.1.,,.i.._ .... -c" .... J11~._~r .... 1--. . ._ __ ARROW r.-,. N. Piere. produ<'td hiK fl~ IUIC!ft'IObtle iPI 190 1. Thf C'Glllpllny had ll"f&I n1rnt ch111.r•• Ov«f th• rr•f'11 ind w1i m1nuf1e1u,...(j 111 two difft~nt klations. Pk~ Arrow WlJ • lrulv c~•t d•NIC 1111~ mobile rtprdlea ol whert it 11'H m1de of whit 1t wu c1lltd. Tl'lill lid ftlhltft UM lntltlWd Drive L!l'llOll~lrlf. f'lfrte Alt01"'1 bflt ~ ,.., •h lt2t •htn f.f22 m•cbi11t1 ..,,,.. M•dt. lbrd hit bf ttM INll depr'fflbl, lh IHt .iodtl .)'fll" ..... 1931 wh1n or1l1 lft of Utne llnlftllittnt ftf'I .-. ... prod.-d. . . .. . •G70..14 or 825-14 ........ 26.72 • H70..14 or 855-14 ........ 27.48 F70-15 or 775-15 ........ 24.18 G70-15 or·825-15 ........ 25.86 H70• 15 or ·855-15 ........ 27.33 e AVAIL.AILI IN WMfTI LmlUI MLTll TtllS m.i,te r r l1arge • J.77 J.tJ J.6J .... J.ot 7-17.5 6 TUlflUS ••••• , •• 8-17.5 825-20 ?00-20 TUllLISS ••••••• , 8 1000..20 .............. 10 .............. 10 ············ 12 STORE HOURS: J.6t 27.20 J.16 30.78 I .ti 51.56 &.17 62.12 . 7.JI 80.86 f .11 · MON ., TUES., WED., THURS., FRI. 1:00 A.M.-6 P.M. SATURDAY 1:00 A.M. TO 12:00 NOON CLOSED SUNDAY OLIVO AND WINSTON, INC. DELTA TIRE COMPANY 141 E. 17th St. 645-2010 COSTA MESA . . • .. • :. .. I ' I • • -·---- • Laguna Beae,h ED ITI ON • . -. ~ . ---- 'l'oday'~ Flnal "N.Y. Stoek.s VOL. 65, NO. 38, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, A;QRUARY 14, 1972 TEN CENTS ne of Biddy Play By PATRICK BOYLE 0 1 1111 D•ll r l'lltt Slttl Their old and n1lsmatched uniformg did not deter their cheering parents from rooting them on and, each time a baskel was made. the Laguna Beach player nearly got a standing ovation. Some 100 piftents and [riends turned \Out Friday night at the Boys' Club gym- nasium to see th~ Lake rs meet the Hawks In regular Biddy Basketball League play. The players, aged 7 to 12, came to play basketball. not to win a basketball game. The game. which began at 6:30 p.m. and lasted for nearly an hour, was mark- ed by youthful enthusiasm a n d frie ndlin ess t(lward the opposing side. There was no pressure to win, no com- mercial spo nsor nagging a nervous coach and no players getting upset over a miss- ed shot. "This , Is not a hig h pressure, com· petitive-type of thing," says leape dlrec· Countian's tor Dan Lewis, who was also coaching the Lakers F'riday night. "It is a learning ex· perience." S ports-minded Laguna Beach youngsters this year for the first time have ait organized sport lo particlpale in during the winter months between the seasom of Junior All-Ameri can League Football and Little League Baseball. The Biddy Basketball League -the name c<lmes from the I o w e r e d backboards -began Dec. 1 when the city Death Bizarre Freeway County Withholds Papers From 2 Battin Opponents 6y JACK BROBACK Of tftl 01Uy Pilot Sltll Orange County Registrar of Voters David Hitchcock refu~ed to issue nomina· tion papers this morning to \Villiam \Venke, a candidate for First District Supervisor. County Counse l Adrian Kuyper had ad- vised Hitchcock not to issue papers to either Wenke or anot her First District candidate ctlaUengin& Santa Ana in· cumbent Robert 'Battin, John W. "Bill'' )fill. Kuyper said his advice was based. on a 1933 state Supreme Court decision which ruled that a potential candidate cannot move with his district when its boun- daries are changed if he has not fuUi lled the full residency requirement of !he new district. Wenke has called a press conference for late today but said this morning that he will take court action to compel l-litchcock to issue and to accept the no1nination papers. Wenke and Hill were gerrymandered out of the First District when new lines were drawn and approved by the Board of Supervisors last October. The nfw boundaries were hastily changed in the lasl 24 hours before approval was re- quired by state !aw. The two candidates. both longtime resident-S of the First District in Santa Ana, moved in Noven1ber upon legal ad· vice that they \l'Ould then be pe rm itted to run. \Venke was the first candidate in line at 1-Iitchcock·s office this morning the first day in which candidates for supervisor and state and federal offices may take out papers. lie said he was uhder the impression BofA Execu tive Dies WALNUT CREEK (AP) -Funeral 15ervices are scheduled here today for Donald R. McBride, a Bank of AmeMc1 executive who died here Friday after col· lap!ling with 1 blood clot. He wu 6.1. McBride. with the bank 34 yean, was an authority on credit cards and aa presf. dent of BankAmerica Service Corp., w11.1 instrumental in &preading ttie Ute O[ the BankAmerlcard throughout the country. that he would be given nomination papers but that when completed they would not be accepted by the registra r. "I have no quarrel with either Kuyper or Hitchcock ," the Santa Ana attorney said. "They are doing their jobs as prescribed by law as they interpret it." Kuyper said this morning that after consul ting with the State Attorney General last November he told both Hill and Wenke that they could move into the new First District to qualify as can- didates. However, an appellate court Tuling in late Janaary cited the 1933 5upreme court decision which wa s concerned with a similar que stion involving a Los Angeles city council race. "When the appellate court's ruling was brought to our attention we had no alternative but to advise Hltchcock as we did ," Kuycr said today. If the two potential candidates are eliminated only two others will remain to contest Battin in the JWle 6 primary. They are Wally Davis. a Fountain Valley atlorney and Pau1 Balch, a former aide to Rep. John Schmitz CR-Newport Beach). Hill, a long time Santa A n a businessman. was not available for com- 'ment this morning but an assocfate said he will undoubtedly take legal action to regain his candidate status, Wave Saves Seal On Lagu11a Coast An injured seal about to be put O!ft or its "misery'' by a Laguna Beach police officer Sunday evening caught an in- coming wave and escaped into the sea. Police said they were called at about 6:30 p.m. by a woman reporting an in- jured seal on the beach at Fisherman's Cove. just off Cliff Drive. Officers relayed the call for aid to the Society for the PrevenUon of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA). According to pollce, the SPCA officer on duty refusecr to holp with the !QI, saying he was only authorized to act il lhe llOlmal was dead or blocking traffic. A poUce officer was then sent to destroy the animal, but just as be ar- rived. the seal was swamped by the wave and swam away. Someone 'Hot' Over Mo vies WICHITA, Kan . (UPI) -Some one ~ainted "Long Live Sex r~licks ' today on the trunk of a car belonging to a minister who has fought the showing of obscene movies and then set the automobile on fire . The car was destroyed. Even its roof was melted by the heat. "In every community there are sick people with sick minds," the Rev. Robert Ely said. . .. FIQOr F, urnace _../I : Spar'ks ·$5;ooo- Fire in Laguna A fire started by a floor furnace In an empty house did an estimated $5,000 damage Saturday evening to a Laguna Beach residence. There were no injuries and the blaie was under control with the former oc- cupant of the house man11in~ a garden hose by the time fire men amved. Jay Tilton , of 1153 1,.i Glenneyre St., told officials he had just moved out of the residence and wa15 returning to make a final check of the premises when he smelled smoke. He rushed in and discovered a door. the wall and tbe ceil· ing aroWld a floor furna ce in flames. Tilton used a fire extin guisher and a garden hose to battle the blaze until fire men arrived. Investigators speculated that the bathroom door, which had swung over the floor furnace. caught fire first and the flame s easily spread to the wall and ceiling. 24-foot Sloop Smashed to Bits LOS ANGELES (APl -Five perl!Ons returning from c1talina aboard &-ff.foot racing eloop escaj)ed unhurt when lt ran agrQUnd at Playa del Rey and waa smashed to pietes. Robert Baslle;"lll, laid he ond ·four friends had gooe to the tsland Saturday in the "Tflnket," owDed by hia mother. On their trip back Sunday, he laid, the sloop ran into rough waters and Ill engint filled. He end.his friendl jumped overboard and awam ubore, Basile said. New Hearing for Anton~a • Convicf£il Mur.deress May Gain Her Fre_edom A bearlnr that could relull In, \hi r....iom o! COllvlCted ltlller AQtoal1 'I'tloJhi.s of s.n Qementt WU ordered t. ., . dly In Orange County Superior Court. Pre.siding Judge Bruce Sumner agreed to hold the .. identiary hearing following the granting to attorney Dudley Gray of a writ of ht1beas corpus signed Frldny tn San Bernardino Superior Court. Gray represented the Filipino woman ln two superior court murder trial&. Gray s11id he was granted lhe writ on condition that the he•ring be held In the Orange CO\lnty court. No date hab been 1et f0< the new Inquiry but Judge William Murray has been 1ssigned to !be special COUI'~ 1eulon. ' OrlJ said todlJ lllol Mn, Tboaw, wbO II now 8 , bu ......S !oar JUl:s1•I tile Ille Mnlence she re61hed lrith JtMl(e ROberl.G~ ir(Aprlllof. J... • Gray oald he Intended to prove If the new belrlng that the Orqe Cciunty District Attorney'• Ofllce mroged on a promise mode to him be!ore the trial The Torrance lawyer 11id It wu agr...S •that •1\01 · eo/iclence later Uled against Ma client at the trial would be turned over to the proStCUtion if Mr1. Tbom11 possed lie detector and hypnosts tests. Gray oald she passed those tui. bul tho prooecutlon Immediately uU!lltd evidence that would never have been aOowed lo pa ... Into their hand• wltboul ' the .,....,we thll 11 ,110UJc1· not bo Uled ...... t bf1<1lail·ln.I Glllflivom. Mrs. Thomas w11 convlcttd four years l(o of the inurder · ol "ber IDWtt son, J1me1, Jr., [ollowlng a trtal to whlclf II woa succeHfully 1ll<sed lllot 0. odded 1 crusttc aolution to the milk In hts feedlnJ bottle. '· The soluttoo "111 never ldentllild. And Mrs. Thomas denied In two trllll lllat !he had "" fed her dllld'anl'l!iir\i • othtr than hl1 ronnula ti-that 1iil had ever contemplated the .ll)urder of the boby. Gr1y ilid ll>d1y lhll•Mrs. Tllomao ii highly _ regarded· by-. 1uthorllJ¥ 1t Fronten pr!IOll and •Js "Ideal motulal tor l'tltut and rebabllttaUon." r t Scores Recreation Department organized a sma1l le1;gue for eight-and nlne-year--0lds. After each boy had paid $5 rdf unifonns. the depart,ment discovered it had neither the time nor lhe personnel to run the pro- gram. The Boys''Club offered to take over and it soon became so popular that the original teams had to be di vided Into l"'o sepafate leagues. There are now some 160 boys divided into 12 t e a m s participaUn& ln the program. Ends Chase Stolen Auto Hits Bridge In Onofre By JOHN VALTERZA Of trl• 0.11, l'li.t Sllft A 30-year.(lld man from Orange driving a stolen Border Patrol car at full bore was killed instantly before dawn today when he slamm.ed the _vel!icle into a brldile' '11iUbnent at l!otl ' Olli!te' -.. 1ulhorities~ were in hot pursUU. The ~e cra1h had "'1 ev~ mort . u~ •• Louil 1'4Jji;Ji!ll;,Jt . 415 cleat· Road assertedly aet u·p aeyeral rusei .before finally stealing the green patrol car at the alien check point south of the San Clemente city limits. The series of Jncidents, according to highway patrol spokesmen in Oceanside, went' like tJiis : Highway patrolmen first notlced · Hill 1n a parked .car on the San Diego Freeway downcoast Of the checkpoint at abou t 3 a.m. and·the man , told officers he needed gasoline and a tow truck . The officers called for a wrecker and routinely left the scene. A·f~w mi.cutes later the same highway patrobnen received a call that motor i6ts had seen a man lying in the roadway. They searched for the "viclim" but found no one. The next can came at 5:10 a.m. as Hill approached Border Patrolmen on duty and asked for the Highway patrol because he had been "involved in an ac· cideut." The same CHP officers checked the "accident scene'' and found nothing. Appea'rinlJ "shaky and upset," HJIJ then began walk1n1 to the side of the hig hway, 'and then suddenly feigned a collapse. Border patrolmen helped the man lo his feet thf:n placed Hill into a patrol car to drive him a short di!tance to the of- fice. · As the palrolqien walked inside to c1ll an ambuiance, Hill slid acro11s the front seat and sped off in the car. ~emien from both agencies said the tniulng (Usuit wu frantic. H11r a~edly drove the auto at speeds fn ei~e!I OI )00 mU•• per h<!ur. heading oortli .on the freeway. 'll1e puriult luted about tnm m11., and as llJJI ·approached the San Onofre Creek' Btldge, officer!! said, he lost COD· trol of the.car, llnaUy swerving n .. ny In- to the ctnter djvlder area1 w,blch hall no ftne;e, As· patrolmrn came c I o 1 e , HUI wertod]y sped off again Ip a cloud or du.ll.i_. ~ •IOUth and o~ more lost CODuw.1 Pilriuinc olt!c<n repo~ !hot 1t that point the ot<>1'n unit made thr,. complete "doutllnUI" skids It high !peed. HHI •tlioa "'11111 1 IJ.,!un> l<:r<ll lhe -·~·ond 1ppoienllflloored lhe acctJetatGr once more, ltJldlnl' the ctr :=rlt ... brldte ·11J!a-. 1t ,,._ oilo' hit lhe concreto, patrolmon 161, I{ 1boil!.IO mlla 111 hiur. •'Thor ;..111 .... wrote,"•llfd I CHP 1pol(Mman. OfflClais said there Wiii no apparent at- lempf by the n..ing driver to hit the breakli qr c01TOC1 lleorln(. . "The car just headed 1trallhl for the brld&e," ~ said. Rescu.-1 from San Clemente poltu and fire deporlmenta 1penl° on lioUo cutllnc Ind prytna the wreckqe. to ·Ir .. Hiii'• body. With Six or the teams play on Saturday - they are the original Recreation Of:part· men t league -and the ren1ajning six play on Wednesday and Friday nights. Lewis notes thaL coaches \\'ere solicited from the comn1unity and a1nong high sc hool students and that gan1e referees are volunteer Boys ' Club members_ According to l.k'vl'i!i, lhe coa('hc11 all have I.he philosophy that Lhe ga1ne ls br- ing played for fun and the boys should 11ot be pressured inti) winning. Parents "\Ve don·1 let the 'superstar~' pla y all the tin1e . c1t hrr," l.t\\'is acids "'\\'e let all thr kids pht) " Ea~'h youngster is allo11·rd lo play because ut a sµc-cial rule Hdopted for thr leflgur. l 'ndrr this rule, each playrr nu1st partic1patr 111 at least one {}Uarter of cvtry ga1nf'. ··rhis i,ti\'rs tile boy without lhe natura l sklll for basketball an opporlunily lo play (Src BASKETBALL, Page 2) DA ILY P'ILOT 11•11 l'tltlt HAWKS BATTLE LAKERS IN BOYS' CLUB COMPETITION Young1ter1 M•k• Up For L•ck of Height With Enthusiasm General Plan Controver sy R eturns to City Cou11cil The controversia'l land use elemeot ten of the Laguna Beach General Plan will return to the City (',ouncil Wednesday night after further review by the planning commis9ion. Pursuant to a request by Mayor Richard Goldberg. the commissio n re- !itUdied the text and has recommended two amendments, one pertainlng to the eventual holding capacity of the city, the other modifying a paragraph on hillside development. The latter amendment, Instead of specifying "only low density de veloJr ment" makes a more general statement to the effect that hlll!!ide development "should be encouraged to be of a planned residenUal nature with ... clW!tertng, minimum grading, pre!lervatlon of natural features and open !!pace and overall arthltectural review." In ID accompanying lefter, the mm. mission note1 th11t the question of specific density will be taken up In a M!parate ordlnanc9 for planning r e s I d e n t I a I development. The commission's reply holds to its oMglna~pufation projection or 20,000, which was questioned by the mayor, but emph.lslzel that, In view of factors that are dlfflcult to forecast and measure, the figure need1•to be restudied annuslly. The commtuloncrs stress that any population flgu/e, In the land uae element should' be regarded, not a1 a• Uaiit, but as Sick Wife Folind Near Oead Mate • I l ' TOPANGA (UPI) -Mn. 'l'hWno Con-non. a, an lnvaUd, ha.I been famd *!:mi· conldoul, lllf[erlng ll'om malnutr!U.. ind debydratton. In her·hOme only 1 [ew fc« IWm the l>ody ol her hu.oblnd, Jock, 65, who"dttd four daya earlier. Sberlff's dep.1tles were summoned Saturday by 'a neighbor, who worried whtn the CoMors were not 1een for. aeverll day,1. Connors 1ppar.,,µy died ol llllurol ca._ and litl wlf• w11 1¥,111bl1 ~ bolp be,...J[, deputlos said. She woa recovering 11 the Santa Monico Medk:al ee.t.r, ,• • l a 1Uide and pro vides the council with 1 detailed explanation of how the 20,000 figure was arrived at. Noting that the Daniel, Mann , Johnson & ~tendenhall estimate of an averag~ 1990 occupied household size or 2.5 persons sho uld not be applied to all dwell· ing units because of a 20 percent vacan- cy factor, the planner5 come up with " population esdmate of 22 ,328, using the DMJM figu re. However, the reply notes, the com- mission feels that use of the exl5tlng household stu figure of 2.3 persons would be more a~urate and, combining this figure with the vacancy factor, produce a population of 20,542. The reply note1 lhat there 'has been agreement on all other points. in the land use element a.net concludes t}lat, if it is understood the population figure ll su~ ject to annual review, lt sbould be po8!~ ble to keep It from betng "overem- phasized out of proportion to Its real meaning In the land use elellent." 0r .. ,. Cout We•t•er !'air skle1 through Tuesday, the weatherman uy1. but allihtly cooler temperatures, along Orange County'• coostllne. Highs Tllelday 60 to 73. Lo ... moitlf In. the 40'1. INUDE TODJ\ Y A 101>/lighl ""' tur118 Neil Siman'1 HTht Star Spt1ng~d Girl" Into a. hlt f or the Wes~ mimter Cornrnunl111 Theattr. Ste: review, Page J7. L. M. lml t ~:~:,. , ci..1111M ,._.. (.IMI« It Crt-11 lt ~,..~" •ci"rttl ..... ' • ... ~ 17 '1n1ru 1 .. 1, ,. ... ~· IUlonl ,. ...... KtM ,. A1111L....,._ M • ·- l , ... '" .. - I z DAILY PILOT LB MonUi,_1-14, l'll2 J New B·o--ok-.. ---~---'-'-" . ---• .. ; • Natm·al Gas Syst~m~yed ' l Ex-Hugl!~~. Aide ----. For Bu ses ' ·-. .,... . ~ Irked hy ~.l~vi~g ~ By 808 TltOMAS :;: LOS ANGELES (AP l -··rd like to J poke him in the nost ." Noah Dietrich • says ot author Clifford Irving. ~ lndicaUons are that Dletr1ch's rem. ln,iscencea as a longtime aide to industrial Howard Hu ghes. soon to be published, were used at least ln part for Irving's purported autobiography of the recluse bill ionaire. For 32 years, Dietrich soood in the lo ng * * ft Jury Quorum Lack Halts :Irving Case NEW YORK (AP) -The beautiful, : blonde baro~s, Nina van Pa llandt, w11s unable to telti!y ln the Cifford Jrvtng case today because not enough grand jurors showed up to make .J quorum. The law says at least 16 of 22 must be present to hear testimony , but th ere were only 11 there when the Danish cabaret singer arrived at the federal courthouse to tell what she cla ims to know about Irv· ing and Howard Hughes. Although delayed in her grand jury ap- pearances, the 11inger was b u 1 y elsewhere. She will appear on the Dick Cavett Show for ABC on Wednesday and the David Frost Show for Group W later in the week. Asked whether the publici ty sur. rounding her romance with Irving had upped her price for.performing, manager John Marshall said : "You 're damned right it ha s. l 'd be a fool nol to take advantage of it." Meanwhile Time magazine published excerpt! of Irving's book which the magazine said proved much of It was pirated. Time, calling Irving "Con Man of the Year," said Irving admitted the hoax to federal prosecutors in an effort W spare his wife from jail. Irving's lawyer, Maurice Nessen, called the Time article "a gloating, prancing, distorting piece that is irresponsible in the extreme." • The magazine printed part of Itving'1 book alongside excerpts from an un- • published manuscript by free-lance writer James Phela n to emphasize the similarities. Time said It did not know how Irving ga ined access to Phelan 's manuscript . The magazine said Irving told federal investigators he would accept a prison term for fraud and perjury in exchange for leniency by Swii;s authorities on for· gery and bank fraud charges against his wife, Edith . In Los Angeles. a spoke sman for the Hughes organization was asked about Time's allegations of fraud and rtplied, "That's what ~·e said Dec. 7.'' The spokesman. Richard Ha nna h, said there would be nn further !'ommenl until officials read full accounts of the manuscript comparison. The New York flail~· Nrws said 1l learned that U.S. ;ind Sv.·iss aut hori ties agreed secretly to drop charges afi:a1n st Mrs. Irving if her husband cooperates and "someone goes to jail." U.S. Attorney Wh itney North Sey n1our Jr. declined com ment, but Swiss officials di smissed the report as "nonsense." They ~aid a courier was en rou te to the United States with a demand for Mrs. Irv ing's extradition. Dr. Gerold Luelhy. Zurich's chief prosecutor, said Switzerland "could never agree to such a deal." 01AN51 COAST DAILY PILOT OAAMG"e COAST f'Ulll!SHIMO CQMP'ANY Ro\t1rt H. W114 ,,_.Ideal -Pllllllt.I* Joe.le ft. Curlty Vim l'taldtat •1111 O..t4 ..,.... Tl101111 Kowt1 '""' T1it'11111 A. M11~\i11• N.ano111111 f:dl~ Cli•tlt1 H. Looi Riih1N P. Ntn Au.lll•nl MIMOlno Ecll19r> Let•" s-e• ornc. 21? For.it Av1nu1 lll•m119 •ddr111: P.O. l ox 6&6, 92651 S• C.._..Of'fk • l05 North El C111t1!no Rt•I. 92&71 .,_ °'""' CO'lll MIM• JJll Wttl a1y SI,...! ff-•! ll••cll: m J ,.,_., 10 .. 1.v1•d' h!Wltll* afllCIW IJl.ll •ue11 &oulevud • shadow of Howard Hughe!S. Now, the crusty 8.1·ye;ir-Old 1s in the spollight end enjoying ll unmensc!y Dittrich's reminiscences, "Howarrl - The An1azinl Mr. l!t1ghes," will he published !alt thi~mon!h by Fawrell l!c was asked why he wrote the book "I delayed a Jong time . I left Jloy,ard tn 1957," Dietrich rcrn;irkrd S1 u1d,1y, "For a Jong per!OO. I debated "'ll(·lhcr to write the story, because I didn '! w:.n r to be accused ot pulli n~ a 'kiss.;1nd·tcll' act." "I finally decided that I had an obhg:'l · ~11~~e1~a1~ t~:~~i~:;s ~~1~~~ati° \::~1~~ ai had see n money misused by legislators and other public officials . l v.·as com· pc!led on moral grounds to write the book . ' ''Obviously at 83. I am not going to en· joy the n1onetary rewards from writing a book. r suffer from n1yasthenia gravi~. which is a breakdown between the nerv"!s and the muscles of the fa ce." he said. - Laguna Beach's 1ttractivr new buses, barely three mont.rui old, may $000 get a -..{fmodeling job and a change in diet. 'rhe City Council Wedne5day will con- sider a .. proposal to ha ve propane tanks and conversion unit! installed on the vehicles so that they m&y operate on prcr pane rather than gasoline. According to city official Clyde Springe, propane operation will be cleaner for both the ve hicles and the air. Besides that, if the council approves the plan . it will mean a less expensive operation in the long run. reducing the maintenanc8 needs of thf' vehicles and costing less per gallon of fuel. "It wlll be a cleaner operation." Springe said, "both as it applies lo the effect on the equipment and the ecologi· cal needs.'' Except for droopy eyelids, Dietrich shows little evidence of his ailmen t. which he controls by medicine. His voice is as strong as when he held a com· mending post in the Hughes empire. l-le was slowed by a prostate ope ration Fri· day, but is expected to return to his vigorous daily routine by the end of next week. ( '-Ul"I Ttltpl'IG!t , HOWARD HUGHES !RIGHT ), AIDE NOAH DIETRICH AT 1947 CONGRESSIONAL HEARING Tim• Magazine Calls Irving 'Autobiography' Identical With Earlier Manu~cr ipt Under the proposal, the ·ruslin firm of Mutua l-Callis Propane will install free the conversion units and tanks on the btises. The city will lease the tanks and con verters from the con1pany and bu}' fuel fro1n the firm lor 16.5 cents per gallon . The lease agreen1enL if approved by the council, will run for three yars. Springe says that the buses will travel about the same number or miles pe r ;-gallon of fuel as they do now on gasoline. Born In Batavia, Wi s .. Dietrich was the so n of an immigrant German preacher. He was a certified public accountant in Los Angeles in 1925 when hired by 19· year-Old Hug hes. "I got ti red 0£ tidying up after Howard 's messes," said Dietrich. "I also was tired of Howard's broken promis~s. For years, he had promised to give me a capital gains deal so I wouldn't hand over most of my salary to the government. Here, I was being paid more tha n half a million dollars ~ year and I was pa yi ng more in taxes than Howard with all his millions.'' Dietrich Is a business consultant and still goes daily to his office in Century Ci· ty. When he decided three years ago to write hiS book. a lawyer friend in- trodu ced him to James Phelan , a free· lance writer of magazine articles about Howard Hughes. Patriots Parade 'Biggest Yet' The sixth annual Laguna Beach Patriots' Day Parade, scheduled to march off at 11 a.m. next Saturday will bt "tht blg'gest yet,'1 With more th an JOO entries from some 50 comm unities in the Southland, sponsors have announced. The parade, which kic ks off the Art Colony's 17·day \Vinte r Festival celebra· lion. will include a re cord 29 bands this year. including the famed Santa Ana Marching Sainls and the \\1hitti er Cavalier Youth band. Also in the line of 1narch will be 19 ma- jorette groups, 12 marching units. six drum and bugle corps. nine floats. a dozen antique cars and 17 equestrian en. tries, ranging from the J6-men1ber [.QS Alamitos ~founled Posse In indi vidual !'rl- tries in traditiona l Spanish and \.\-'est· ern garb. Grand marshals of !his year 's parade \vii! be Bobby Burges.c; and CJSsy K1n1':. rl;;ince tran1 from the La1\TCnce \Velk television show. The parade wilt move down Park Avenue to Glenneyre Street. and up, Foresl Avenue past City Hall In the Festival gr ounds \1·here trnphles will be presented at Ir vine Bo1\•l. Medical Center Near UC lrvi11 c In First Stages A team or three ar chitectural rirms has been hired to design the first phase of a private hospital complex its backers hope will become part of the UC Irvi ne nledica l center. Don;dd S. Burns. chairman of the board of Western World lvledica l F'oundation, snid the firn1s will design the foundation hospital's first unll of its own $400 n1il· !illn complex at a cost approaching $2.'i milli on. '!'he three architects are Langdon anti \Vil son of Los Angeles, \Villiam Blurock Partners of Corona del r·ol ar and Rov.·lett and Scott of Houston. Texas. Burns said that \\1estern World has already received the results of a topographical and land plan study and an economic study for the project, planned at the southeast corner of MacArt hur Boulevard and University Drive, adja- cent lo the UCJ campus. Burns .!!a id the new medical center "will be the first any•,1ihere built from the ground up ." He said it will consist of lhe foundat io n ho spltal -the first stage of whi ch will have 182 beds~ the UC! medica l college, the UCI hospital and out·patient fac ilities. Burns also said a hotel is part of the long range plan for the complex as are buildings for medically oriented businesses such as pharmaceutical, biologicals and prosthesis manufacture. ''Provision ha s also been made for specialty hospitals when re.quired.'' he said . Burns said the architects hired by Western World ''have completed or ha ve under construction 112 medically oriented projects and have completed more than 900 projects in 41 states and nine foreign countries. Burns said Western \Vorld is ~!ill plan· ning tn start construction of the first phase next January and hopes to have lhe hospital open in 1974. Frotn P11ge 1 BASKETBALL • • Youth Offender Policy Called Laguna Success By FREDERICK SCllOEMEHL • Cf !~1 01U1 PllOI S1111 A monlh-o!d Laguna Beach Pollce Dep artment policy for handling youthfu l law off ender s got high n1arks today. J)e!ective Carlene Ambros said !he ne1v policy -wh ich stresses counseling of juvenlles instead of detention and bunking -is very successful and "the on· ly way to go." Since taking effect Jan. 18, Lhe policy h01s been used in 11 juven ile cases - ranging from misdemeanor possessfon of manjuana to curfew violations . Serious offenses ....... such as the mar i· juana charges -requ ire that both the of· fender .and his parents appear for counsel ing at the police department with Mis s Arrfbrose . For lesser offenses. su ch as curfew viol at io ns. offenders are counsel ed in the field by individual officers and a letter sent to the parents Informing them of the incident. Three high school students arrested on possession of rnarijuana charges were counseled with the parents and given si.x Original Songs In Aliso Review months "informal" probation. with loss of search and seizure rights du riPJg that period . ''The parents were very cooperative ;ind took a st and . It loo ks like the kids \\'l!l stt:llghtcn up," con1mcnted Delce· \1ve Ambrose. An other counseling session, said ri.tiss A1nbrose, inl'olved tv.•o boys. ages 8 and 10. '~·ho were found trying to break into a food stand. Tl\'O young 1nen, "'ho were throw ing be rries al cars and hit a woman . were counseled and requested lo 'vrite two pages on why their activity ~'as unsafe. ''If they do it again. ~·e·n bring them in and let them read "'hat they've written/' she said. Detective An1hrose said the new policy "'ill also allo v.· for preventive action. "If for example. a JS.yea r old girl is seen out in the Woodland area trying to make drug contacts. the parents shou}d ~e nolified . I think thi s type of thing ts gond." Runav.•ays. persons on probation or felony offend ers are still detained and sent directly lo juvenile hall as in the pa st said ti.1iss Ambrose. .( Th'e goal of the policy. said P.olice _9'11~f Joseph Kelly, is to release a 1uven1le 1n the fiel d whenever possible. If ne cessary. the officer can issue a citation to the juvenile and notification to the parents ordering them to appear for Several original songs. with words and co un seling . . . music v.·ritlen by students, will be in· Dur ing such intervie\1;s, case disposl· eluded tn the annua l Aliso Elementary lions are ;ii;reed to ~·hich might include School Patriots program to he presented h. ts Thursday at 7.30 p.m. in the Lagu na releasing the juvenile to IS paren . Beach scli ool. referral lo a county agency or to county In the program. marking American juvenile authorities. . . History Month, students re v i e w The policy broadens the di scretion of Ford Motor Company. manufacturer of the bus engines, has also informed cily officials that use ol propane in the vehicles will in no way affect the war· ranty on the engine. Springe says that by using propane, carbon will not build up as quickly in the engines and they should require )ewer tuneups. The city began operation of the buses Nov. 29 after purchasing the vehicles under a federal transportation grant. Through the period ending Jan. 31. the bus line had transported I 3 , 5 7 7 passengers at an average cost of 72.5 cents per mlle. According to Springe, the cos t per mile dropped in January as con1pa red to Decernber. bul he noted that the December figure of 67.3 cents per mile had included the cost of dri ver uniforms and the printing of bus schedules . The average ;or .January was 61.7 cents per mile. .. rt is unlikely that we \\'ill get a mean· ingful and reasonably accurate cost per mile or cost per passenger figure until we have had at least one year of ex· perience," Springe feels. Waste Program Meeting Slated A public infor mation meeting on the cit y's new waste management program \\'ti! be sponsored by the Laguna Beach Coordinating Council at 7:30 p.m. Thurs- day in city hall council chambers. City Manager Lawrence Rose will ex· plain the new program, whi ch includes a ba sic waste collection l.:1x for every parcel of property in the community, a sliding scale or colleclion fees for residential and commercial properties, mandatory trash pickup and, ~·ilh some exceptions unlimited collection. Thert will be a question and ans~·er period following the city manager's presentation so householders a n d business people may obtain a clear understanding of the new program which covers. in addition to trai;h collection, sewa ge handling and beach and street cleaning. p~triotism in all facets of their lives, the officer in the field. said Kelly, which de veloped around 8 five.pointed star gives him more freed o1n of decision. "We d representing school , town, state. country feel it is a more rea sonable approach,'' 'S pii•il' Aide Dea and the worl d. he added: ·rhe Blue Tide Band u!ider lhe direction "I'm encouraged by the coope ratiOfl we SAN DIEGO (AP)' -Herbert A. of elcmcritary n1usic supervisor Deane have had sn far. 1f 1hings get big. we Thompson, a cabinetmaker who helped Bottorf ~·i ll be featured in the program, have to work son1ethi ng oul and hopefully build "The Spirit of St. Lou is" airplane Report Slated On World Meet produced under the guidance of ti.tr.;. get some more manpower in lhe juvenile wh.ich Charles A. Lindbergh flew to Fran· 11 lot ... he says. Barbara fl.1udge. department," co mmented Det. Ambrose . ce, is dead at 74. Another major difference bet"'ecn Bid· Ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;::;::;::;::;::;:;:;:;:;:~::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::============::::~ A report on the for lhco1ning UN. World Environment Congress i n Stockholm Will be presented hy the ltev. Gary Herbertson of the L;:igune Beach Methodio;t Church at 1he seventh annual meeting of !he Laguna Beach Citizens' Town Planning Association next week . Herbertson. a member of the advance planning committee for the Congress, \\'ill show slides and report on his recent trip to Stockholm to make arrangements for the .lune gathering for represenlalives of 120 governments throu~hout the world. The public is invited to attend the 8 p.m. meeting Tutsday in the Laguna Federal Communitv Room. Reports also \\•ill be gi\'en on the Laguna GreenbeH . the ne1Y llbrary. the Festival Plaza and local transportation. Six to Receive Committee Posts dy League play and high school or college basketball is that lhe baskels ha ve been 101vered to accommodate . the shorter players. from the traditional 10 feet to only eight feet six inches. Lewis explains that the basket is tern· porar1ly lowered without any major con· struct1on work by clamping another backboard and hoop to the perma nently instnllrd ha ckboards at the gymnasi um . "Some of them can't reach th~ higher hoops to shoot .'' he notes, "and that takes the fun OUl or the game." He says that only the Saturday League playe rs -tho~e who paid the $5 to the Recrealion Department -have matching uniforms for play. The Wednesday and Friday League pla yers have been issued old uni forms belonging to the club. Lewis poin ts out that there are ":'Btl~ dupllc~t~d nvmbers and different Uhl form .colors <!n the same team. ' The prnbli:ni: was partially alleviated r~ently, he; says, when a parent 1t one of the games ·btame concerned about tbe' lack of unlf&'mS and donated $50 to. tbf club to bli}' ~w~unlform... ·: Blaie on Boat Annou11cemen l or !he names of six ~ .-.. ": persom who will serve on a spncial com. K' ll.,'l:.M·-Do mittee to study conservation and open I S: r 8D.,~ g space will top the 11genda at toala:hfs ... • Laguna Beach Planning Co mml,.lon SA N PEDl{Q_ (UPI) -A 1.~• •bo•rd • study session. moored converte9 lishinc·y,epel killed en 'l'he committee. accorrtifj" to Wayne unidentified man and a ·dog ~arly today, ~foody, director of plannin&"nd deve lop. officials rep:irted. -.; ment. will research the topics and aulst' Both were found In tlte sltt~lng lhe rity staff In preparation of Che open qua rters of the wheel house aboard the space and conservation clements of tbe "l!Jances Ann," s 97-foot trawler moored General Plan. . · .In LQs.Ang~les Harbor. ~ • Also slate<! for the 7:30 p.m. mej!llllf°al-· A fir1 ·departmenl spokesman said the city hall I• discu,.lon or r. street lll!ltlnl , vWel :was ownod by Al Kldman of santa PQ!lcy 1nd 1 pr-d de1lp rt'111W Bili>orl and was u...S 1o tranlporl ~~in1nct for an commercial ind multi· t&lva):e dl~err and for general repair urut dwellblgs. work. ' Try Us • • • • You'll Like Us FUU Selections of New and Used Item.a .()f ' •• All Sorts and V arieti.es EVERYTHING UNCONDITIONALLY GUARANTEED Dhnnond Cent-tor Ora1tge Co""'" COS'tA MESA JEWELRY 6. LOAN Oj>ttf'Dailv·'D:~ l · : . ' Come ln afld BrOIOlt Around 1838 NEWPORT ILVD. Photle ~7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA htw•n Harbor end lrMCfway ) I I I I I ) ' \ I I I l 7 ( I I I \ I I I I· l. 7 -·--·~ .... ----' . -.. ....... ~ --., • .. . .. Saddle hack T oday's Fln a l ' ·- N.Y. Steeb VOL. 65, NO. 38, 3 SECTION S, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY I 4, I 972 TEN CENTS Big Irvine Ranch Area Association Urged By G~ORGE LE!D AL Cl 111• O.lly ~I tel llfll A call for a giant .. assoclation of homeowners' associations" capped a da y. Jong conferenc.1! of more than 300 represt>ntatives of Irv ine Ranch com- munity associations Saturday in the Ne wporter fnn. Newport Beach. Conference chairman Woody Linton. president of Narland Corp., the rea l estate subsidiary of North American Rockwell corporation, urged fo rmalion of an Orange County Council of Community Associations and proposed a set of possi- ble by-laws to tie together the associa- tions. Homeowners or c o m m u n i t y associations frequently own and manage common recreational facilities a n d greenbelt areas within planned com- munities. Linton's proposal was made at a clos- ing lu ncheon that followed a variety of workshops in which representatives of 30 Irvine Ranch associations participated. Orange County Assessor A n d r e w Hinshaw detailed the history or assess- ment practices that affect people who own homes or condominiums in planned developments. He elicited an audible groan when he noted that recent changes in the way common ly owned property is taxed "will not lower your tax bill." However, he added that instea d of a homeowner be ing taxed for his share of a tract's greenbelt and recreational pro- DAILY P llQT Slt rt P"91t It's a Sweet Setup Wendy l-t oekstra. from sixth grade class at Linda Vista School Jn Mission Viejo, works \vith her model city made from su gar cubes. It is one of the city planning exercises cond'ucted at the school. The creation also is on e of sever al displayed at an edu~ cational montage at l\1ission Viejo High School. Santa Ana Partisans Cited Sonie R eside1its of Irv ine Seen Favori1ig La.wsuit Council or Communities of Jrvine of- ficia ls toda y said they suspect there are some Santa Ana supporters Jiving in the new city of Irvine whic h CC I act ively worked to create. W. Fred Fry. CCI chairman, cited the several .. John Does" listed in section nine of Santa Ana's suil seeking to dissolve the new city . The anonymous persons. all sal cJ.tto be residents of the new city, are listed as joining wit h Santa Ana in its bld to dissolve Irvine. Santa Ana alleges that the Dec. 21 inrorporation election in which Irvine residents approved forma- tion or the 18.000-acre new city by a 2 to 1 margin was called illegally. "Although these 'Benedict Arnolds ' are •till misled, it should be no surprise who they in 'fact' are," Fry said . a thinly-veil· ed in reference to the Forum Against Passage Leading Pack as Y aclits Near Acapulco Cityhood Today (l<~ACTI. That group op- posed incorporation and ccr and other community groups co nte nd Mr~. Joan Irvine Smith financially supported the anti-.cilyhood grou p. Denny Glenn, public relations chairma n for CCI. said today, "I personally wit· nessed Lyndo! Young (attorney for r-.t rs. Smith) pay t.he printer that pr<Xluced !he F' ACT sheets." Others actively supporting cityhood in- clu ding City of Irvine Now tCOINJ chairman An drew Ma y have told the DAILY PILOT they believe Mrs. Smith sup)Xlrted the FACT campaign. FAC'I' was among several organizations that did oot file a campaign expense statement with the Orange County Registrar of Voters. Fry said today the Irvine opponents ob- ' viously won 't be 1nembers of the Irvine Compa ny. "They won•t be membe rs of the CCI. COIN or, I assume. Irvine Tomorrow," Fry said. Irvine Tomomiw t&k no formal stand for or against cityhOod, bu t did endorse four persons for City· Council, three of whom were elected. Fry concluded that the Irvine re sident s joining in Santa Ana's suit ''are probably in FACT mem be rs of that other group . . . supported by ~!rs. Smith and Young." "\Vha t is amazing to me ," Fry said, "is why the citizens of Santa Ana , who have problems of their own. will allow their ci· ty to subsidize the few Irvine citizens who do oot even believe in the very democratic process they are using to at- tempt to overthrow the will of the people." Firms Hired to Design , ~ h1itial Hospital Complex Special lo the !>AIL Y PILOT A learn ot Uirte archlloctunl firms bu ihe UC! bospllfl;and ool·patient facilities. ACAPULCO -WinClward Pw1ge wu bHn hind lo design ihe lint phue of • B\ll'llS 1lso :Uid •· holel Is part or lhe occupying 1 ~,..off Zlhuallmojo at ~·lo boapllll'complex lllbl<kers l!<>P< l"lfl ranee~ f0< the complex 11 are B a.m. (PDT) foday,with 1 ... Uion,1 50-IO l'~I ""'°me parl of lbe UC lrilne bWldlnc• ~ medically or i ented n•-,,......., time -medical cenltt. boll~-· .-h u pliarmaceullcal chance of se.-.. a .. new -.-. "llonlld S. Bl11'111.chairmmof ihe board . ........,..._,_ ' -''-I of l ' --' • the San DI o to •-pulco • _,...,... ... -·~·' man IC ..-e. , .,... • 19 ea . ..,... of Weotern World Medical Foaodallon, " hu ilso been made for .Ylleht !Ii'"· ZiboJatanojo 11 UO'D1ullcal _ oald'ihe, llnnl,wW clelign ·lho lo!mdatlon • JIPeCJalt.y M.nilaJI when n qulred," be mOa from· Aca¢1co. • hoiqJilal 1 !Int unU of 411 •olrn HOD ·mll-.Ofo!;. -,..-r fq~if'ln 1 aOa ~\JI II wm li!OU ~ lion=-iii . 1 • ·COlll-',l~ll ~Ji,..-ihe archlltcls . hired by mifn fiiblnd PaS11ge · amt ,w:iu.n.ing ~. , ··-'-· Woa~ld "have completed or have '"'"""" at rOl1 call. 'BtackllJi·.apP.lred w~ ~~~ •;iru;;,r.-h!.,~ under ~1\rucUon 112 medically oriented • to ' · 1:iew mil" 1he1d of Slrlut I!-Porlnen ol Corona.det' Mar-and JIOWleti . !!!~~ have completed more than Enthusiasm began to boil up at . tbe and ~t of Houston, ~s. ~,';' in 41 states and nlne foreign Club de Ya tes hero today with the Bumi 11id that Western World hu Bll'lis ;.id Western World Is stm plan- poaslblll ty lhal one or more of the leaders alreoey received the ~J.. of' 1 ni to &tart 0001lrui:tlon of the Dr.sl · • idnl h lopolf&phlcal and lam! plan at..., and an = . would be finished b, m ~ t. . • """'°mlc itudy for ihe irol•cl; planned nen. January and hopes to b•~e The ltrod yacht, presum61y Wlhdwird at the soulhea1t corner of Mi.cArthur rpJi.i -open In It74. Passage, must finish at 9:15 p.m. (PDT) Boulevard and .University Drive, adJa· --~ to 1et a new record. The present record cent to the UC J camj>us. '~pirit' Aide Dead or 1'1ght days nine hoClrt and 15 ~lnute! Btrns said the new medical center ~ • is htld bf Sirius It, -skippered by Bob "wlll be~. flrot 111ywhere hulll from the • SAN DIEGO (AP) -Herbert A. Lynch o Newport. Harbor Yacht Club. ground up. ptOn, a cabinetmaker who helped Poor radio communlcaUons made He sald It will consist of the founda tion build 11The Spirit o{ Sl. Lou is" 1Jrpl1ot """"' rrom !ht olhtr yachla lmpoaible hospital -the lint llage of which wtll which Charles A. Lindbergh llew to Frao. until laltt In tlie d.oy. haVe 1112 bed1 -tlie UCI medical colltge, co, II dud at 7t. r l perty through the membership fee paid to the association , the changed law will pro- vide some lncpme tax benefits. Association membership fees have not been ded uctible. Now, a complex system of assigning shares of the property ta x bill for jointly owned property is being set up, Hinshaw said. Thus, each homeowner wil l get the tax bill for his share of the property the com· munity association operates. Because the Irvine lax bill will include not only the taxes on the property in \\'hich a pe rson lives. but taxes on the shared po rtion of the com- mon land and raciliLies, the total taxes being paid \Yl!I be ded uctible from slate and federal income taxes. Hinshaw sa id the first 1'mult1ple ownership" planned developments in Orange County were launched in 1964. Since lh<'n. three types of planned con1- munities have i'volved. Some sell a home along with an "undivided interest" in the open space ift·ithin the commun11y jnd H:; recreational facilities. Others ~t't u1> ownershi p or the con1- monly used properties in a c:omrnu ni!y a~sociafion 11·h1ch is controlled bv 1!10 O'ft"ners Of all the properties Ill the tfai.:I. The !hird type is the "'condurnu11un1" property, where ell the ownt'r buys is Iha airspace \1•itlun the lh·lng unit. nnd .'.l!I else in the de1·elopmcnt is join tl y 011·11cd, (Ste IRV INE, Pagr. %} Fights Suit City Issues Strong Repl)~ to Santa A11a By TOf\1 BARLEY 0 1 Ul t Dl llJ PllOI S!tff The city or Irvine had a Valentine's Day message today fDr the city of Sa nta Ana. But there are no hearts and flowers in this particular miss ive. And the count y clerk, not Cupid, ensured its delivery to Santa Ana's attorneys. The document contains I r v i n e ' s response to the lawsuit filed last week by Santa Ana in which City Attorney James Withers called for the imn1ediale Man Operating Stolen Car Dies During Pursuit ' '} By JOHN VALTERZA ot •• 'D.ur , .... ,_., A,30.year-old Jl\an from·Oranae driving a llqjfll il<>rdtr Patrol car at 'fiill bore wai '.tflled lnstaDtly before dawn toda y wben::be slammed the vehicle Into a brid~ abutment at San Onofre es authaJIUes were in hot pursuit. The~rre crash had an evui more unusu¢il>relude as Louis Edwi n HUI of 415 Crelt,;Road a.ssertedly set up several ruses t>lare finally stealing the green patrol ciP at the alien check point south of the s8i£lemente city limits. The ser.lls of incidents , according to highway ~rot spokesmen in Oceanside, went like tliis: Highway patrolmen first not iced Hill ln·a parked car on the San Diego Freeway downcoast Of the checkpo int at abou t J a.m. and the man. told officers he needed gasoline and a tow truck. The officers called for a wrecker and rou lioely left the scene. A few minutes later the same highway patrolmen recei ved a call that motorists had seen a man lying in the roadway. They searched for the "victim" but found no one. The oeit call came at s· 10 a.m. es Hil l approached Border Patrolmen on duly and asked for th e H.igh"·ay patrol because he had been "involved in an ac· eident. .. The Jame CHP officers chec ked the "accident scene" and found nothing. Appe aring "shaky and upset," Hill then began wa lklng to the side of the highway , and then suddenly feigned a collepse. Border patrolmen helped, the man to his feet then placed Hill inf4"ll. patrol car to drive him a !hort distance to the of- Uce. As tlie patrolmen walked \ii¥11t to call an ambulance, Hill slid ac1'03r.the front seat and sptd off in the car. Spokesmen from both agencies oid the ensuing pursuit was frantic. ... Jll ~lltgedly drove the auto aHoeeds In ~SS of 100 miles per hour, hetdlng n 6 on the freeway. '!be pursuit luted about three miles and as Hiii approached the San Onofre Crtt~ Bridge, officers aaid, be lost cOn- trol" of tho car, finall y swerving finally In- to the center-dlvidtr area, which hu no fence. Al patrolmen came c Io 1 e , 11111 ustrtedJy eped off qain In a cloud of dust. headed touth and once more lost control: Pt11'tldn1 offlcer1 r"11'i!'Led Illa! al that point the 110Jen Unit made three complete "d1111ghnut" aklda at high 1peed. HID' lhdl •.-g a U·turn acr<>111 the divider il'rttch and apparerillf floonid !he accelerator once more, aendina: the ~ar lllraJ&.bt Into . 1 br1dge ahulm<nt at e ... u ... !Joail. . -The auto hit' the concrtle, patrolmen said, al.about 90 miles 1n hour. i~t was all she wrote," taid a CHP spolesman. Officials aald there waa no apparent at. tempi by the Oeelng driver to bll lbe breaks or correct steering. "The car Ju.rt headed llnll&hl for the bridge," Ibey IOld. I dismanUing of the brand new city and the reversion of 18.200 acres to the status ex· isling before th e Dec. 21 election. That lawsuit boldly proclaimed: "There is no city of Irvine.'' Irvine's answer equally s tr o n g I y responds: "'The city of Irvine is here as a fact and here to stay and will be here for all the ge nerations coming." Irvine attorney Mike f\1cCorm ick of the law firm of Rutan and Tucker said toda y that its finn "'ill ask for the immediate dismissal of the latest Santa Ana co1n- plaint. J\1cCormick said he will argue Feb. 24 before Superior Court J udge Lester Van Tatenhove that the Santa Ana lawsuit is based on a wrong approach in Jaw to the Jtvine incorporation issue. ··v ou can no t hope to take this kind of action in the form utilized by Santa Ana,'' ~fcCormick sa id . ''We will a.~k for im- mediate dismissa l of 1he action and I think \l.'e have an excellcnl chance of achieving this." Sa nt a Ana's la test la wsuit represents the 9ty's: new move ln ill .bid 10.saJn cOllttoi of tl\e 9Jkm •ptom11ed lliid" tha t allegecQy became part ot, an agree. ment nine years ago betweto the cttf aftd the Irvine Company. . Santa Ana claims that the Jrvloe Com· pany promised to take no action in con· nection with the area for an eight year period at the end of which time Santa Ana would be allowed ta aMer the tax· rich enclave. Santa Ana hes also sued Ult Jrvine C.Ompany for $15 million in a breach of contract action tha t ill schedaled for Antonia Thomas Evidentiary Hearing Ordered A hearing that couJd result in the freedom or convicted killer Antonia Thomas of San Clemente was ordered to- da y in Orange County Superior Court. Presiding Judge Bruce Sum ner agreed to hold the evidentiary hearin g following the granting to attorney Dudley Gray of a writ of habeas corpus signed Friday in San Bernardino Superior Co ur t. Gray represented the Fil ipino woman In tw o superior court murder trials. Gray said he was granted the writ on condition that the hearing be held in the Orange County court. No date'has been se t for the new Jnqulry but Judge William Murray has been assigned to UJe special court session. Cray said today that Mrs. Thomas, who is now 29, has served four years of the life sen tence she received from Judge Robert Gardner in April of 1"8; Gray said he intended to prove at the new hearing that the Orange Coqnty District Attorney's Office reneged on a promise made to him before the tria l. The Torrance lawyer 111d It was agreed that vital evidence later used against his client at the trlal would bt turned over to tbe prosecution it Mrs. Thomas passed Ue-detector and hypnosis tests. Gray .. id she pulled ~ ttsta hut UMt -lion Immedia tely uUlited evidence that would never have been 1Uowed to pass lnto· the.Ir hands without llje prom ise !bar ii. w<iald Doi be used •~inst his clltnt·ln,a eourtrooin. ' ' • a. Thomas was cmYtcted· foor yar1 agi of the murder of · bet lrifllll ·-. •• Jaml1, Jr., following a tttat In which it waa purully alltged that Ibo added a ctuifl! eoluti.on lo lbe mJlk rn ~ feeding botUe. Tlit' ~utlon wu Del'tr Jden!Uled. And Mro. Thlimas denied In two tr~ Iha! she had ever led her cliUd 1nylhing other than his . formula or , lhat she bad e\fer contemplated the munler of tho baby. Gray nld today Iha> Mn. Thoinas ~ highly regarded by aulbo<ttlts ot Frontera prison and la "Ideal material for release and re.babWtatlon." • prelimina ry hearings r~eb. 21 in Superio r Court. Irvine council men las t Friday author· IZ"ed today's reply to the Santa Ana Jaw· suit in a sta tement that contained th e comment : "As a council we have pledged lhc full resources of our city and its peopl e to preserve and protect the city or Irvine and the human rlghts and prln· ci ples it stands for. "We are confident both on the la\v ;111d on the moral posture of lhis matter that the city of Irvine will prevail co mpletely and decisively." Whet1n ore Se t To Run Agai1t S l\CRA~1ENTO (UPI I -Sen. James E. \\'hetmore (R·La Habra!, announced today he will see k. re- election lhis year. Whetmore, who has been In the Senate since 1986, served two term• In the Assembly before wlnnlng eltttio n to the upper houst. City of Irvine To Get $100,000 111. Bank Loa1i Ov er the objection of Councilman Henry Quigley the city of Irvine wil l bor- ro w up to $100,000 from the Bank ot America al an interest rate of 2.76 per- cent. At Friday's city e-0uncil meeting, Quigley reiterated his opposition to bor· rowing money ''when the city has ne> specific idea of a budget and how the money will be spent." Quigley ended up on the short end of a 4·1 vote approving a Cfluncil resolution authorizi ng the loan. Wil liam Woollett J r .. administrative co nsultent to the city. pointed out that the city con11ervatlvel y may expect to receive $250,000 in unrestricted Rtate-col· lected taxes. That money can be used lO repay the bank-loan. he said. Mayor William Fischbach su pported the loan resolution on grounds that the low interest rate ts avallabl' to new cities only -once. lie indicated he believes there ·i:ii no question that the city will be able to repay th-i loan since Woollett's estimates do AOt include revenue {rpm two city. enacted laws which levy a six percent bed tu on hot.el room rents aild another d ty levy on real estate property transac· lions. Henry Quigley said he was "appalled (See LOAN, Page I) 0r .. ,. Wet!dter f'•lr lkiee through 'l\Jeoday, !be wuthcrmM soya, hut allghtly cooler tempel'llturu along Orange , County'• OJ ll,l tline. Highs Tuesday GO to 73. Ldw1 moally In tlic IO'a, INSIDE TODAY ii top-/Ught ""'' 1u,... Ntll Simcm'1 "Th• Siar Spangled Girl" i11to a hit for the W11f. minrter Communitlf Thtott r. Sit rtvit t.o. PaQt 17. l , ·~ • .,., ... ti.... ' ,,_ c1 ... HIMI • • • ..... ~~"' :: DH "'""' 11 ••1 '"' ' • • 11 , ..... :_.__..••tt ...... ,....... It ... ,. ••• \I; ~· U..W. M Mlllllt• ' Mnl.. ., "''''""' ..... 1-J 1)(1,_. C..ry I f ._.,., n.u ti.ell ""'"''"' 11·1• Ttlt •ltlffl IP TIIHt-1t ... "* • W.i1t W19'I ?I 'Wt!Mll't N....., 1~11 --.. . . .~ ,, ... i f D4ll Y PI LOT SB . . : Ballot Hassle ., 8.Millio11 ! ;Registr~r· Bars ' Londoners f W enk ~-~s';:Pap~i-1' -• ' In Blackout . . By JACK BROBACK Of 1~1 l>lllf P'll91 11111 •• .t; Orange Cnun!y Hcgi strar of Voter!i ~David Hitchcock refused lo issue nomina· -: Lion papers this morning to Wilhan1 Frorn Page J IRVINE • • • Hinshaw said. .,· Of most concern lo the assessor's of· ' fice, Hlrahaw &aid, ha ve heen the planned communities with as.!OC1&t1ons that con- trol and manage the jointly hel d prop. erties. He indicated lhel until the new legisla· tion is implemented there wi ll continue 1() be so me inconsistencies in !he way the three types or developments are taxed. Slowing the setting up of the assessing 1 macftlnery is the rapid growth of planned ';community projects. Hinshaw sa id there '·were 34 condominium and 35 planned ~'.community projects recorded last year '"more than in all the past history or Oaange County." There are now. 17,000 existing planned community un its arid single family tracts that are affected by the changing Jaws. But. Hinshaw pledged. "from now on all will be treated the same 1n Orange C-Ounty ." . The taxing picture was JUSt . o.ne of several topics of interest to part1c1pa~ts in the six -hour work shop that Irvine Company officials describe as the first of its kind on the west coast. The associations participating were drawn from the cities of Irvine, Tu stin 11nd Newport Beach. . . Morning workshops off ered d1scussrons of association or g a n i z a t i o n. c~m­ munication financing and legal affairs, manageme~t . setting and en~orcing rules. and associ ation programs. interests and activities. In most instances, peo ple from associa- tions with ex perience in the various topics of discussion shared their expertise with other associations. A proposal for a you th progr_ams development organization i n v o ~ v l n g associations from Irvine. Tustin and Newport Beach was offered by Rev . Ron Allison of United Methodi st Church, Irvine. Reaction lo the proposa l spurred discussion among participants that if youth programs were lo be sponsored by the associations how would young pecple be transported between the various com· munities to share in the pro~rams. A panel includi ng Ka rl Berner of the Bluffs. John Sluart of Transyt Corp., Newport Beach ; Dr. Gordon Fieldin~. director of Orange County Transit Authority: Mike Kadletz, owner of the Pink Bus Line. and Robert Jaffe, Newport Bea ch traffic engineer, disc.uss- ed alternative t r a n s po rt a t 1 on possibilities. Most concern was expressed for pro· vision of a way for youths to get lo the beach this summer. although Stuart con- tended residents of the area should not be afraid or confused by the technical jargon of mass transportation ex~rls in pushing for lonR range plan ning of systems to meet communit y nreds. Mrs. Elizabeth "'Lee" Sicoli recountrr1 the successes of the Universi ly Park association·s rrcreat1on prograrn which blends volunteer effort.~ with those of a pa id direc!or. Association members rtltending !he commu nications workshop heard ke vnnlr speaker Thon1<1s Kee1•1I, eriitor nf t)1e DAILY PILOT, urge .-.irnplicity of language to promote effcrlive com- municat ion particularly in a lin1c when ma ny med ia are vying fo r the tinle of the receive rs of information. OUN•I COAST DAILY PILOT 011.AHC.I! COAST l"Ul l UHlNG COMl"AH'I" Jtobt•I N. w •• d P'ff'loclwit •nll P110!1sner I J 1t\1 J:. 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""*"'"~ ~y, Ht MW• 1tor~. 11 ..... l'o'ltlol\1, •i!liriM , ,...,. • ..., or •••llWN!!h lw-tth• _, M . ~_. •lth!NI lfll(itl ,.,-. lft~ .. ....,,,lthl -· . --&.tcM(-... , .... , ,.111 ti N_.. 1-111 .....-t;M11 "M ... , C1!ito....l1, 1-vOo<•"'"'" w tmnltf n.n -"'r'r 11y mtll ,,_,t -.itril'YI 11'1111....,. -lllMlitool, U.JJ ftWl!flly, \\1enke. a candidate for First Dbtri i:t Supe.rvluir . "' County Cnun!11'11 Adri an Kuype r had <td· vised Hitchcock not to issue paper~ 10 either Wenke or another First Dist rict c.andJdale challrngin.1: Sant.a Ana 1n. cumbent Robert ~!tin, John \\', "Bill" }~J ll Kuypl'r saul his adv 11 e wa~ bA!i'd on a l933 state Supreme Court de c1s1011 ·wh1rh ruled that a potential ('and1da!e cannr1 L w.ove ~·1th hl!I district v.•hen its bo un· daries are changed If he has not fulf illed !he full residency requ irement of the nr\\' d1slrict. \Vcnke hal! called a prc~s conrerencr for la te today but said !his morning that hr y,•jlJ take court nction to compt'I Hitchcock to issue and to accept the nominn lion papers. DAIL'( l"ILOT S!lff l"hO!I By JOS~PH W. GRIGG LONDON ( UPIJ -Millions of Bri tons shivered today in dark, unheated hornri and office:i. lndustry, blacked out and disrupted by crlppling power curbs, la id off tens of thousands of workers. London city authori ties ordered nio~t ~treet lights. already kn ocked hayvt'irr h'I hours·lo ng pov.·er cuts, switched of( altogether unttl tht crisis tnds. 'l'hat meant a vi rt ual y,•artime blackout, sin1ilar to \Vortd War IJ , for this capital cily of eight rnil/ion. Even Buc k111gha rn Pala ce was dark and chilly. Bul Queen Elizabeth ll was not affected She is on a slate visit Ill Th<1ih1nd with her husband Prince Philip and daughter Pri ncess A11ne. With a six-week·old na1ionw1de strike nf 280,000 co<1l miners biting deep into fuel supplies, Britain was gripped by its grim· mest industrial crisis in a quarter·ccn· tury and perhaps since the 1926 general strike. Wenke and J.lill were gerrymandered out of the First District when new l1nr.'\ were drav.·n and approved by the Board of Supervisors last Octoher. The nc1v boundaries wen' hastil y changed in 1hc last 24 hours before approval w;1s re- quired by state Jaw The two cand ida tes. both !11ng11n1e residents of the First District 1n San111 Ana, moved in November upon legal ad· vire that they would then be permitted to run. 'D() Yo1i Sole11inly Swenr • • • ' British newspapers called it "Black Monday." Government officials predicted millions would be laid ofr by midweek. Wenke was the first crindida te in line at Hitchcock 's office this morning tbe first day in which candidates for supe rv isor and state and federal offices may take out papers. He said he was under the impression that he would be given nomination papers but that when complel ed they would not be accepted by th e registrar. "I ha ve no quarrel with ei!her Kuyper or Hitchcock ," !be Santa Ana attorney said. "They are doing their jobs as prescribed by law as !hey interprel it ." Kuyper said this morning lhrtt after consulting with the Slate Attorney General last November he told both !·/ill and We nke that they could move into the new First District to qualify as can· didates. However. an appellate court ruli ng in late January cited the 1933 supreme court decision whi ch y,·as concerned with a similar question involving a Los Angeles city council race. "When the appella te court's ru ling v.·as brought to our attention v.·e had no alternative but lo ad vise Hitchcock as v.·e did," •• Kuyer said today. If the tv.·o· potential candidates are eliminated only two others will remain 1o contest Battin in the June 6 primary. They are Wally Da vis, a Fountain Valley attorney and Paul Ba lch, a former aide to Rep, John Schmitz (R-Newport Beach). Hill , a long tin1e Santa A n a businessman, was not avaUable for con1· ment this morning bu t an associR!e said he will undoubtedly lake legal action to regain his candidate status. Blonde Singer's Story Dela yed·; Lack of Quort1n1 N~:\V YORK iAP l -The bct1ut1ft1 1, blonde baronrss. Nint1 van Pallandt, v.·;is unable to testify in lhr Ci!ford lr\ing r;ise today becau se not enough grand jurnrs !ihowed up to make .t quorum The !aw says at lea sl lfi of 22 tnui;t be present to hear testimony . bul there were only I l there when the Danish cabaret singer arrivl'fl al the federal c11111"lhn11\C lo lf!l v.·hat she rlfl1n1s In knnw ;iboul lr1 · ing and Howard Hughe!i. Althou gh del;iyed 1n her griinrl j1 1rv <ip- pearances, !he si nger v.·iis bu sy elsewhere. She will appear on !he !)1c k Cai r11 Show for ABC nn Wcrlncscfa.v an1I 1hc Da vid Frost Shoy,· for Croup W later in the week. Asked whethe.r the publicily sur- rounding her romance v.•it h /f\'in.1: had upped her price for pcrforn1ing , manager John Ma rshall said: "You're rlamned right it has l"rl be a fool not to take adva ntagr of it." Meanwhile Time maga?.ine publish('cf exce rpts of Irving 's book Y.'hich the magazine said proved much of it v.·as pirated. Tln1e, calling lrving "Con Man of lhe Year," said Irving admi1led !be hoax to federa l prose<:utors in an effort to spare his wife from jail. Irving 's law yer, Maurice Nessen, called the Time article "a gloating, pra ncing, di stortiug piece Lhat is irresponsible in the extreme." ' • The mllgazine printed part 9f frCing·s book alongside excerpts from an un- published manuscript by free-lance \\Titer James Phelan to emphasize the similarities. Time said It did tJQt kno"':how ,Irvi.(11 ga ined access to Pti_eh1n's m!!l·n~rtpt. ·• The magazine ·said Irving told federAI Investigators he would accept a prison term for fraud And perjury In exchange for lenif!ncy by SwLu authorities on for- gery and b.8.nk triud charges aga"'t his wife, Edith. In Los Angeles, a spokesman for the Hughes organization was asked abo ut Time's allegations of fr;iud and replied, ''Tll8('1 what )lie sait'f Dec. 7. '' • · The l'ipokesman. Richard H11nnah, said there would be oo further comment until officials rtad full Account.a of the manuscript comparison. •• The New Ybrk Dally ~ew1 .. 1a • n learned that U.S. .and Swl1s authorities agreed iferetly t(I drop ch111rgts agAlnsl Mr11. Irving It her husband cooperstcs and "someone .goes to jail.·• City of Irvine's fi rst municipal treasurer, Paul T~n­ kovich, takes oath of office administered by Acting City Clerk Norissa Brandt. Tonkovich, an attorney who lives in North Irvine. \\'as s1vorn in last Wednesday. AJthough post is required by law, job is largely honorary and officeholder receives no pay. The opposition Labor Party. limbering up for .an onslaught against the govern· menl in Parliament later toda y, lam· basted it for "gross mi shandling of the dispute from the outset" From Pagel LOAN ... th~t th e city was charti ng a fly by the seat of the pants fiscal course" by con- sidering lhe loan "without ha ving a budget." Councilman E. Ra y Quigley Jr .. an airli ne pilot , took exception to the negative connota tion ascribed to the term "flying by the seat of the pants." He noted that lhe term ori gi nated in fl;,.-1ng circles and "sometimes it is still the most effective way lo go ... even v;ith the most so p h is t i c a t.e d in- strumentation." "Even the astronauts found they had to do some scat of the pants decision n1aking." he qui pped. Cou ncil mnn Gabrielle Pryor, who al an earlier meeting opposed raising the loan amount from $75.000 lo $100,000, <1gain said she \\'as worried that by borro...,·1ng more !he city v.·ould spend more. Howe ver. Mr.~. Pryor voted for the loan, onot1ng •·1 know there are people v.•ho have extended credit to the city and th ev need to be paid." Woollctt noted tbat the tables at whi ch the councilmen were seated, and all of the city furniture and office equipment r.ad not ye t been paid tor. The loan mone v will allow the city to pa y its bills. he idded. Further, because of the low Interest rate cha rged new cities on the one-time Joan. \Voollett speculated the city could make money by depositing it in a savings account that wou ld earn slightly more than three percent interest. State Hospitals Get Bad Rati11 g In CMA Probe SAN FRANCISCO (U PI ! -Con · fide11t1al reports have been compiled that show alleged substandard performance bv the medic<1I staff of dozens of 11;isp1'e1fied Cali fornia hospi!;:il.~ Thr reports, corn pilcd _by a s ll r v ,r .V r·omnul.tcc of the Cal1forn1a Mer11 cal Assoe1arion, nan1cd as offenders mostly sniall nnd privately owned institu tions, arcording to J)r. Bert L. Halle r, charrrnan o( the conimrttec . The com mittee has examined the performance of doctors at more than 500 hospitals in the state during the past 11 yr11rs. A physician was lo arrive in San Fran- tisco today y,·ith a subpoena from Sen. Edward F. Kennedy's subcommittee on health and v.·elfare to ge t access lo the detailed reports. The association. holding its JOl st an· nuat meeting with about 6.000 physicians, said it would have officialii meet with Krnnedy 's representative. A spokesman for the association said members wish to keep the names of the rlcfi cien t hospitals secrel. and would negotiate to release the information on 1he stJrvey while prolecting the ldenlity of the hospitals. Airwest Flights Set · to Resume .. Hughes Airwest offlci&b anoounced they will resume passenaetjervice to 18 cities OQ Feb. 22. Flights to ,the other ~8 cities on Hughes route.twill be ~ed ·within l~ dayf~~ · r I Antici pati ng complete aetUernent or the cight-wtek 1Tlechanics. •trike. ,Hu.gbes m<1de public tbc back-to-wort IChtdult pending ratification ot a 1.enta:Uve .. agfM.. ment reached Feb. 6. · lf approved by the Alrcrart Mecllanics FrRterna l Association, the pl!Ct al'° must pa ss the pay l)oard. Thf! 570 striking mec.hanic1 will vote ·a!ter .all procedure! ror ~lllng. ernptoyt.! baek to Work have' been Ironed oltl: The airijne rtachtd , back-to-work AC· cord! with pilots and 1tewardwes last v.·eek. l Mistake Parolee Gets New Freedom Cl1ance Convicted heroin dealer Henry C.Ortez \\'i ll Jive the next 257 days minute by minute. He may count them in his sleep. He may become a free man -aga in - in 257 da ys. He ma y not. The Corona man who became an ad- dict, then a pusher, then in 1962 a prisoner. for his cri mes aga inst the state of California will be el igibl e for pa rol e Oct. 26, after being mistakenly freed late last year. 1-fe and his fam ily -includin g a sister employed by Hughes Aircraft Corpora- tion's semiconduc tor plant in Newport Reach -rejoiced at his release fr om the stone and sleet fortress of Folsom Prison. Then !he nightmare that began nlne years beforr wa s repeated. California Department of Corrections personnel discovered his parole w;is a clerical error and Cortez \\'as picked up In re surne serving his 30..year·to-life lerm , as a four·time loser. He nearly v.·enl insane at return lo the old prison. after a 33-day taste of free- dom His parole officer even joi ned the· out- cry, saying Cortez -convicted and Bl aze on Boat Kills Man, Do g SAN PEDRO IUPJ 1 -A fire aboard 11 ~red con \crted fishing ve~sel killed an unidentified man and a dog early today, off icials reported. Both were fou nd in the sleeping quart.ers of the whee! house aboard lhe ''France's Ann," a 97·foot trawler moored in Lns Angeles Ha rbor. A fire dep;ir tment spokesman said lhr vessel was owned by Al Kidman of Sanl<t Barbt1ra ;:ind v.•as used to transport sal vage divers and for genera l repair work . sentenced lo four !O.year terms for sale of about 30 grams Of heroin 10 support his own habit -was an ideal candidate for rehabilitation. I le had been shot by sigents during his 1962 arrest; he had supposedly learned his lesson. Riverside Cou nly Superior Court Judge John Neblett agreed to review the heroin dealer's stiff sentence several weeks aga and on Frida v announced his decision. Judge Neblett had heard testimony from Cortez -some of it rambl ing, hesi· tanl and almost pleading -as well as new informalion from a slate narcotics agent involved in Cortez' 1962 con· victions. Robert A. Ba rk toned dov.·1, his pr ior testi mony, suggesting Cortez was definitely a major dealer but certainly not the brrtins behind a smuggling opera· lion that threatened to kill him and his fan11!v if he talked. "l ·think lhere·s that poten!i:i! " Bark said \'<'hen asked if Cortez was merely a n1essenger for a major dealer, Concerned citizens and legal aid groups challenged whether Co rtez' return tn priJSon might not constitute illegal cruel and unusuAl punishn1ent, based on his ac- cidental parole and chances f or reha b1l1tation. '·And this time ... I knew I was wrong , , . " Cortez told the judge in staling his side of 1he strange case. "\Vhen I was released it ma de me realize that I ha d ;i family. To be a citizen ... I did not knn w v.•hat I had before." he said. ,Judge i'\Jeblctt noled he has received more than 20 lPtter~ reg;:ird ing ('.(]rte?.' w1dely-pubhc1zed release and re.im- prisonment. The majori!y urged thal he be l!ive" a ch An ce. Writers of two notes 1Jrged that he be imprisoned. "The information before me does reflect that perhaps consideration might he RiVC'n to Mr. Cortez," Judge Neblett. rrn1arked in ii prt'face to stri king down three nf the fnur counts on which Cortez was convicted In a statement published after a meeting of the party's national execut ivP. committee. it accused the government oC •·incompetence'' i11 tackling the con- sequences of the crisis "which should have been foreseen and whi ch have led Ill pa nic measures inflicling addi tional damage on the whole economy." The automotive industry was hit hardest. British Leyland, J a g u a r , Triumph. Rover, Ford of Britain, Vaux- hall -General Motors' British subsidiary -Chrysler and the Joseph l.u c<1 automobile con1ponents plal)t laid off or put nearly 50.000 wor kers on part·lime. Thousrtnds of Yorkshire and Lancashire steel and texlile workers were sent honte. The slate-run British railroad system canceled 1.000 trains and stopped heating those still running to save electric power. Commuters shivered as they jammed in· to the trains still running. Officials y,•arned that \'it;il food supplies Y.'ere in danger. In some parts of lhe country, milk bottling plants closed and milk was rationed . Bread and egg supplies also v.·ere threatened because bakeries and packing plants were without powtr. Rotating power cuts blacked out 10 In l~ percent of the country in turn for the fifth successive da y. Street traffic li ght s went f)Uf in blacked"()Ut areas, causing immense ja1n s. On the London i;tock market nearl y $,1 hil!ion was knocked off sht'lrc priceS in the first few minutes of trading . Selling burl t up ;i.~ investors ~howrd fears the crisis v.•nuld seriously hil business profits. Throughout the country, pickets nf striking coalm iners block;idcd pov.·er ~ta· lions to prevent delivery of coal. At least eight power stations hal'e been closed and another~ of the country 's 14R pov.·cr plants were forced lo cut back power pr o-- duction sharpl y. Baseball J\'l eet Se t The Irvine-El Torn Lillie Le;.i~ue will hold a general meeting of parents fl pm. Tuesday in the RCner al purpri~c room of the Rancho San Joaquin lntermed1111 s school. The purpose of the rnecl1nj! is to discus.<; dates for tryouts. re1•icw the prn· Rram for th is year and-answer <1ny ques· lions. Try Us • • • • You1/ Like Us Full Selections of New and Used lte111r1 of . All Sorts and Varieties EVERYT>tlNG UNCONDITIONALLY GUARANTEED ;H,;-4 Center tor Or•nge Count11 COSTA -~ lllSA 0pc .. Dollv· .~~ .1 1838 .iff\VPOIT ':ILYD • DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA Jl.WILRY &-LOAN · • Comt Tn amt Bro10ic A roaind T . "'°'"' 646· "41 . ' I I ( I I I • " • • .. " . Huntington Beaeh Fountain Valley , • VOL 65 , NO. 38, 3 SE.CTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1972 Valley By RUDI NIEDZ!Et.<;KJ Of !ht 0.U\' f'IMI ,1111 Fluorjdation of the city's water supply -a long-simmering controversy in Foun- ta in Valley -a'ppears to be beaded for resolution this June througb a vote of the peop le. Councilmen are ex pected to set June 6 as the day of decision when they meet at 8 o'cloc k Tuesday night in city hall. The special fl uoride election is meant lo coin- May Set June cide with the statewide primary electio n. The ';Yes" or "No" question ¥.'3.'i forced on the ballot in last June's muni- cipal election during which voters .11~ vroved by a margin ·of 86 votes a new fluoride ordinance. That ordinance re- qui res-the city to caU an election before fluoride can be added to the city's water. Fluoridation of one part per million is being pushed by Dr. Roy Richard.3 , a den· tisl and a candidate for the April 11 coun· cil election. Pro-Ouoridalion forces claim the com- pound reduces ca vi ties while its detrac- tors say it could ca~ other healttl prob- len1:s, especially in older people. They also charge that adding it to the water would constitute "forced medicine." A strong contingent of anti-fluoride residents known as the Citizens Com· miltee for Pure Water is res ponsible for 6 lhe new ordinance which will be te stt'd this June if the council adopts the elet·- tion da te. Led by George Lindeg ren, a reti red Army colonel , the group succt!ssfully circulated a peti tion which resulted in placing the authority to fluoridate with the people and not the council. Results of last June's election sho1v that 1.421 favored the ordinance while 1,336 were-against it. The council ilseU 1s split on the subject, as illustrated by an earlier 4-1 vote to add 1he nuoride to the water. Counci lman John D. llarper cast the dissenting vol('. It was that vote which prompted L1ndegren and his group to ci rculate the pe ti tion cal Hng for a decision by the voters. f luoridation was first :i1uggested in february 1970 when Dr. Richards and Today's Flaal N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS Vote Fountain Va!ley resident Do n frank pro- posed its use . Since the city's water already contain!ll a high natural nuoride content of .6 parts per million only enough fluoride .,., ould he added to bring the level up to nne pa rt per n1illion . Should f'ountain Valley residents ap- prove fluoridAt1on, the city will pay for it through $14,000 it has already budgeted for the project. Black Monday in London ' LEUKEMIA VICTIM PAUL McLAUGHLIN AND HIS MOIHER In S.•I Be•ch, • F•mily Faces the l111vlt•bl1 OutsUlers' Help Boon To Lezikemia Victim ,, By JOHN ZALLER 01 !flt D•llf 1>11•1 S!tff Few ~pie in West Orange County can boast as many unknown fr iends and well wishers as 3-yea r-old Paul f\.1cLaughlin , a leukemia ''ictim from Seal Beach. The only regret of his parents, Charles and Jeanie McLaughlin. is that for all the help Paiil has been given. he isn·t any nea rer to a cure than he was two months ago when he became sick. Enough blooll has been donated in Paurs name to replay three-fold what the youngster 'needed from the Red Cross Blood Bank to survive. Teachers al Dwyer Intermediate Schoo l In Huntington Beach. where Mrs. McLaughlin was teaching when Paul's disease was discovered. took up a col- lection to enroll her in a statewide teacher organization , thereby makin,11: the family eligible for special emergency funds . And trustees of the Huntington Beach City (elementary ) School District have granted Mrs. McLaughlin riVe weeks ot emergency leave with pay. · All of thlS'' has been tremendously helprul, the McLaaghlins say, beCause the ir health Insurance hasn't come close to coveri ng the cost or Paul's expensive treatmenls. "So many ~pie have asked tO. help us," said Mrs. McLaughlin . "We just wish. there were something they-could really 'do -something to cure Patt!. But there Ian 't." Althoug~ doctors bave.1et·Paul'1 IH• expeclancy at 24 to S6 m0nlbs. hi•. •P- • Young M~~eians-. Set for C.On~est ~.fivo .liidenta ore •arrolnr up tl!Olf Jnslr\lmenls for lh< lllll~ FOW!taln vibe; School Olati:lc\ SOio Coolest .~for l:IO p.m. Wedne!day bt lhe YlirdlOW SchoOI auditorium. The 1tud .. ts HI to "'mpele were seltclod from 174 solobts and IS ln- dlVlduaJ entemblisls who played at a dlstrictwlde Solo and Ensemble FesUval J19. 21. \ The winner o( tho Dnab compeUllon will recei ve a·t~week acholarahlp to the Am>wbear Musk: Camp in·· the San Bernardino Mountains, countty of the coote1t's IJIOMO"· the F'oun\iln Valley Cla!&lllod Employes As:ioclalion. I pearan ce is almost normal. "He runs around and plays just like he used to," said 1.·trs. McLaughlin. "All or his athlet ic ability has relurned." This is cha racteristic of the stage k'nown as "remission" into which Paul has now entered. About half of his hajr has fallen out and his voice is mildly hoarse du e to an intense radiation treat~ mcnt which he just fini shed. but, other than that. Paul is so normat tha t he could aln1osl. pass a s1andard heal lh ex- amination. Bul de spite the fact that Paul's laughter an d squeals or delight now wann the J\1cLau gh\in household, he is far from a healthy child. For one thing, his resistance to disease is very low. "Most leukemia victims." said Charles ~1cLaughlln, "don't die of leukemia itself. They die of secondary infection. usually pneumonia." Twice in two months Paul ha.11 had pneumo_nia, but both times doc- tors have been able to catch it early, For this reason the McLaughlin1 screen every vlJltor to thOJr hoine at 2SO 171b St.; even clote friends. "W8 just can't af· ford to take any chances," he.sakl. Bui jusf as big· a worry ta 'the a.~cLaugh)ins' ls the. danger of a retapse of the blood Imbalance •that characterlu• le ukemia. "All we can do is wall and hope and try to carry on our Uves nor-- mally," said Paul's father. "We don~t allow ourselves a11y morbid thoo&htt. We have utmost confidence lhat Paul will survive." Theorelically, !bat Is -ible, though statlstlcally, virtually nb on• aurvlvea the type ol leuke!)1la ·P•ul hAs conltacled. Paul'• chances ~·be better than most. however. In Uiat 1he'!ls one1oat of ··~ ~ ·ddldren ,Oft • a .• new, U· • perii\iootal -~~ i:roir1111., ~ h the ,...,.ram -11 CJOIY'• t....mOiltho old, r.r•lhi ·~ents ba ""'' .... -nqne, ... '!'· . . ~~ Clll .. u'sali" t.-·11 1hll 111tt: .Part ""' ,~ aliead wltb Paal's' educa!IOn'Wlth ijlecla lulorlng.lil UG hdilie: • • "Ev~n U he ciould go to school ," (See LZIJK1!:MJA, Page I) Bonfa to Fill Post Dim Sonia, city •\to'!'•Y .ol Huo~ngton Beach, hu be<n cltdld secrelli ey- trusum ol the Orange County ctly Al· tomeys' AssociaUon. The association Ii a voluntary COUJl~ywide ganlzation aet up for the exchang' onnatton relevant to thal professio . · • Darkness Leaves Eight Million Britons Ashiver By JOSEPH W. GRIGG LONOO N (UPI) -to.1illions of Britons shivered today in dark, unheated homes and offices. Industry, blacked out end disrupted by crippling power curbs, laid off tens of thousands of workers. London city aut horities ordered . most street lights, already knocked haywire by hours-long power cuts, switched off altogether until the crisis ends. That meant a virtual wartime blackout, similar to World War II, for this capital Man Operating Stole11 Car Dies During Pt1rsuit By JOHN VALTERZA 01 lh1 D1H1 Plitt Sltlf A JO..year-old man fhim' Orange drivinJ • a stolen Border Patrol car at f\rll bord was killed instantly before dawh toda'# wheilfle "\Yim.med the vehicle Into a bridge abtltment at San Onofre as authorities 'were in hot pursuit. The bizarre crash had an even more unusual prelude as Louis Edwin Hill of 415 Crest Road assertedly set up several ruses before finally stea ling lhe green patrol car at the alien check point south of the San Clemente cily limits. The series of incidents, according to highway patrol spokesmen in Ocea nside, went like th is: Highway patrolmen first noticed Hill In a parked car on the Sa n Diego Freeway downcoast Of the checkpoint al about 3 a.m. and the man, told officers he needed gasoline and a tow truck. 1·he offi cers called for a wrec ker and routinely left the scene. A few minutes later the same highway patrolmen rece ived a call that motorists had seen a man Jyi11g in the roadway. They searched for the "victim " but found no one. Th e next ca,] came al 5: 10 a.m. as Hill approached Border Patrolmen on duty and asked for !he Highway patrol because he had been "involved in an ac- cident." The same Cl·IP officers checked the "accident scene" and found nolhing. Appearing "shaky and upset." Hill then began walking to the side or the highway' and then suddenly feigned a collapse. Border patrol men helped the man to his feet the.n placed Hill into a j>ati-ol car to drive him a short distance to the of· fice. As lhe patrolmen walked inside lo call an ambulance, Hill slid across the front seat and sped off in the car. . Spokesmen from)Joth agencies said the ensuing pursuit was frantic. Hill allegedly dfove the auto at speeds !See CHASE, Page I) city of eight million. Even Buckingha m Pala ce \v as dark and chilly. But Queen Elizabeth II was not affected. She is on a state visit to Thai land \Yith her hu sband Prince Philip and daughter Princess Anne. British newspapers called It "Black J'donday." Gover nm,nt officials predicted millions would be laid off by midweek. \Vith a six-week-old nationwide strike of 280,000 coal miners biti ng deep into fuel supplies, Britain was gripped by its grim- nlest industrial crisis in a quarter-cen- tury and perhapS since the 1926 general The opposition Labor Party. limbering up (or .an onslaught against the govern- ment in Parliament later today, lam· basted it for "gross mishandling of the dispute fron1 the outset.'' strike. · In a statement published aft er a rn eeting of the p<irty's nalio nal exec utive committee, it accused the gov ernment of '"incompetence" i11 tackling the con- 9-year-old Has An swe1· To Mysteries of Love Ed.itor'i Note: "f~rh-aps 11014 and .uour re~rs might cnjo_~ rta4r ing a c'hild's viewpoint of love ," wrote Mrs. Mary Ann Iacm, a foutth grade ~acher at LeBard School in /J untington Beach. She e nclos~ the follow- ing ti nes written by 9·yectr-otd l\fari.e Satooya., one of her 1tude~t1. We* n;o1,.-tJttm and t11oughC~o11. miah& on I.hi.I ·Valentine's D.o11. oa 111111!1~ day, for that matter. "What is Jove?" asks th e breeze. "When you blow through us," answer the trees. ''What is love?'' a little bird cheeps. "A fly to catch," said a frog that leaps. "What is love?" asks the sea. "A delicious dinner," says the abalone. These are the-topinions of different things , Of thing s that leap, or things that sing. Wh at is love to Marie ? Just wait and you soon y,·iJJ see. Love to me is my pets. my sister's goldfish, And our tv•o rats. Love to n1e is my yard , the plants. birds, lizards, And the frogs. I love every living things -the frogs that croak . The birds that sing. I like snails. I like ants I like green and juicy plants Love to n1e is knoy,•ing just y,·hy things crav.·I. Things walk, ;ind why they fl y. Love to me is dreaming ancf writing. Love to me is never fighting. Love is pea ce and no y,·ar. Love is lea ving your apple core F'or birds and bees, For the rabbits that live In holes and trees. Love is knowing hows and why, Of the corqets and stars in the sky. Love is knowing why and when . Love Is knowing there is no end. MAllll SAWAYA v.s. Exports Affected \ Nixon Eases China Trade .. WMll!llGTON CUPIJ -President N1i&m rem.,..! eome of the reslrlcllons oa ,'.U.S. eqiii'tl' lo Ollna todily, giving PUlal the -ll•lal .. the Sovtel. Union _-AJnirlca'1 trading parlnera. The step wtll permit American b\lllnusmtn •to sell locomotives, coo- atructlon equipment, Indu s t r I a I chemicals, Internal combustion engines, rolllng mills, and aome other goodJ to OUna without obtaining specific govern· ment ptrmissk>n. Nixon acted thrr:t days before: his departw-e on his trip to Peking where he wUJ meet with Chlnt:.se leaders. (See r<lil<il story, 1>"8• 4) Pt.., Sea-elaty Ronald L. Ziegler who annpm\cecl the !fade step said the Unlttd Slates "WOl!ld hope that they (tho 011n ... leaden) would .,clcome thb ad· ... dition1I slip lorward In openJng up ad- dltlon1l chaMefs to trade." Nixon's decision· gives China equalit y -. ' with the &,vlet Union and most of Its Eaatttn European 1lllu In terms or lrad<! with the Unlttd Stales. But It left Peking well 1hort o( the moat--faYOred na· lion atatUI accorded to non.COmtnunls• countries and Poland and Yugoslavia. In June, Nixon Ufitd what had bffn an virtual embargo on trade with Chilltl . That order permitted free export to China of 15 to 80 percent of the ~oods which coutd freely be exported to the Soviet Union. Only Q.iba, North Korea and North Vietnam rtmaln on the highly re stricted category which once included China . The President's order did not afrect Jmporta (rom China which hav e been sd· r mi tted without restrlcUon to the l!nlted States slnce June. Zie&ler said he knew of no nport reslrlctlons In China that couJcl pre•rnt the shipment of lloods to the Unlled States. The President's June order marked tht rJrs~ relaxation in U.S.-ChJna trade ln 21 ycarf. The President's ne w order gJves China equality with most of Eastern Europe regarding both ln direct export.a from th e United States and exports from other na· lions of products made with U.S. tec hnical da ta. The President •lso eliminated some of the red tape which has entangltd deallng1 with China by U.S.-<0ntrolltd !Inns operating in Western Europe, Canada and Japan. sequences of the crisis "which should ha ve been foreseen and which have led to panic measu res lnOicting additional damage on the whole economy." The au tomoti ve industry was hlt hardest. British Leyland , J a g u a r , Triumph, Rover, Ford of Britain, Vaux· hall -General Motors' British subsidia ry -Chrysler · and the Jose ph Luca automobile componen ts plant laid off or put nearly 50,000 workers on part-time. Dietrich Longs To Hit Irving In Hughes Flap By BOB THOMAS LOS ANGELES (AP) -"I'• ll~e to · poke him in the nose," Noah Dietrich sayw of author Clifford Irving. Indica tions are that DletrJch•1 rem· inlscences as a longtime alde to Jndustrlal Howard Hughes, soon to be pub!Lshed, were used at leut in part for Irving's purported au tobiography of the reclusa bi llionaire. For 32 years, Dietrich soood in the long shadow of Howard Hughes. Now. th e crusty 8.1-year-old Is ln the spotlight and enjoying it imme nsely. Dietrich's reminiscences. "Howard - The Amazine Mr. Hughes," wlll be published late this month by Fawcett. He was asked why he wrote the book. ''I delayed a long time; I le ft Jtoward in 1957," Dietrich remarked Sunday. "For a Jong period . I debated whe ther to wr ite the story, because I didn 't want to be accused ol pullin~ a 'kiss-and-tell' act." "I finally decided that I had an obliga- tion to the American public to show at close ha nd th e abuses of .great wealth. ( had seen money misused by legislators and other pubtlc officials. T wa!! com- pelled on moral grounds to write the book. ''Obviously at 83, I am not going to en· joy the monetary rewards from writing a book . I suffer from myasthenla gravis, which is a breakdown between the nerv'!s and the muscles of the face," he said . Except for droopy eyelldJ, Dietrich shows lltUe evidence of his ailment, which he control• by medicine. His voice Is as strong 11 when he held a com .. manding post ln the Hughes empire. He was slowed by a pro5tate operation Fri.- day, )?ut is expected to return to his · vigorous daily wutlne by the end of n11t week. Born ln Batavia, Wis., Dietrich was the son of an Immigrant German preacher. He was a certlli.ed public accoont.ant In (S.e DIETRICH, P11e I) Weadter Fair skies throuah Tuesday. the wutherman says, but sllghtly cooler temperatures along orange County's coasUlne. Highs Tuesday 60 to 73. Lows ~ Jn the lO's. INSmE TODAY A lop-flight «11 t tM"" N<ll Sim<m'• "Th• Star Spangled Girl" into a hit /or tht Wtst• mimter Community TMatn. Ste revitw, Paa• 17. L. M. lerlll • M1llMX • lullllt a ·-" C•lllttlfll ' N1!!erl•I liltWI •• C1ttllllM ,.,,. ...... """" " l:omi(I " ..... 11•1J c,.. • .,.,.. " lto<ll .. """ ,.,, Dt•lfl ... ~ " T1l"'1tf• 11 h lter11L '°"• • -·~ 11 lllfwn•'-1 11 ·--• r 1r11o11ce 1•1• Wlllte W1tlt " ..... "" ·-· " ·-ll't,.... ,,.,. -·" " -~· .... .. All• Utlder• " New Asslgnme111, Bernard E. Rodgers will be the first principal of Huntington Beach's new Kettler Elen1en· tary School \\1hen it opens in the !all. Rodgers. 33, currently is principal o! Peterson Sc ho ol. I-le has been with Jiunt!ngton Beach Ci ty School District sin~e '!963, Center 'S aved' I rt Huntington -For 3 Months Donations from churches and private groups. have given the Hunt ington Beach Community Center a new lease on life. That lease. according to the new volunteer coordinalor, J essie Martin, will last about three months. "The money should last at least that Jong but we hope it \v ill be forever." she said. "But right now we have enough donations to keep it going." The financially troubled community help agency on 307 Main St. appeared to be headed for bankruptcy last January when the Orange County Community Ac- tion Council withdrew Its funding to the center. "\Ve are getting very positive response from the community, and with the $100 per month allocated by lhe Huntingto n Beach City Council, we are trying to make a go of it until Y.'e get permanent funding ," Mrs. Martin said . The center. which supplies food, clothil).g and shelter to needy families, has schedu led a serif! of fund -rai sin g drives to keep its doors ()pen. The first of these is a rummage and bake ,sale scheduled March 4 at the Com- munity Center. Anyone with Hems which could be donated to the sale should con- tact Mrs . Martin at 538-6541 . Another fund raiser will be e fashion show and luncheon March 18 by the women .of Christ Presbyterian Church, 201112 Magnolia St., Hun ting ton Beach. Proceeds will go toward the Community Center. Blaze on Boat , Kills Man, Dog SAN PEDRO IU Pl l -A fire aboard a moored converted fishing vessel ki!!ed an unidentified man and a dog early today, ()fficlals reported . Both were fount! In the sleeping quarters of the wheel house aboard the "Frances Ann ," a 97 -fool trawler moored in LAJs Angeles 1-larhor. A fire department spokt:'smnn said the vessel was owned hy Al Kielman of Santa Barhara and 11,as used to !ranspcirt :i;alvage divers and for general repair work . ORANGE COAST Ha DAllY PILOT OAANGE COA'.51 PVBlU!-llNI) COMPAH'f Robert N. Weed f'Tt)ld9rlf Ind F'11bthhff' Jee.le: R. Curley Vk1 Prnld111t and Gener•! Manai;er 'tliom•s K11vil EOl!or Thom1s A. Murpl.in1 M1n1a1n~ Editor T11rv Coville WH't 011n~e CovnTr Edllar K1H1t h1q1011 Btoth Offite 17875 E111c.fi 60~1,~.ud Mtilin9 J.ddre111 P.O. Box 7'10, 92MI Other Otf1,K l1171N 9nd1: 721 fll<l!'!f .Avon11e COtll M9s•: DI W~t ll•V ~1ftott fl.wporf" llMdl: .U» NIW\'IOrl lleu1 .... 1rd lfin C.lllMl'llt: ~ Nortb IEI Clmlm ll_. , ....... 17141 '42-'4J21 c1 .. 1w Amm.i111 642 . .1611 ., .... 'Right Eflective' :Georgia &sing i -M~ by; Boycott' AUGUSTA, Ga. lUPJ\ -Implemen- tation of Phase I of a federany-ordered school desegregation plan involvin~ massive busing met with a wide!pread student boycott here today in Richmond Courlty. Lawrence of Savannah. and is to be car· rled out In three phases. The initial pha ~e toda y involved the clustering of seven schools, with the busing of an additional 5,68t students. 'fhe plan triggered a furor and brought about a ca11 for a statewide boycott . Near-tmpty buses arrived al many of the county'i; 52 public schools and school superintendent Roy Rollins said thr boycott appear~ to be "right effective." No pic kets appeared at any of the sc hools but white parents milled on s1dev.·alks and dro\'e past the schools v.·ith ch ildren in their cars. The plan for the coW1ty was ordered b~· U.S. Di.strict Judge Alexander A. From Page J CHA SE ... 1n excess of 100 miles per hour, eading north on lhe freeway. The pursui t lasted about th e miles and as Hill approached lhe Sa Onofre (.'reek Bridge, offi cers said1 he st con- trol of the car. finally swervlng ti lly in· to the center di vider area, which his no fence. As patrolmen can1e c lose , Hill asserted!y sped off again in a cloud of dust. headed south and once more lost conlrol. Pun:uing officers reported that at that point the stolen u1it made three complete "doughnut" skids at high speed. Hill then swung a U-turn across the divider stretch and apparently floored the accelerator once more, sending the car straight inlo a bridge abutment at Basilone Road. The auto hit the concrete, patrolmen said, at about 98 miles an hour. "That WllS all she l'lrot.e," sa id a CflP spokesman. Officials said there was no apparent al· tempt by the fleeing driver to hit the breaks or correct steering. "The car just headed straight for the bridge," they said. Rescuers from San Clemente poli ce and fire departments iipent an hour cutting and prying the wreckage to free ~lill's body. Service Station Owner Slugged By Yow1g Thief Charles Southard, opera!or of a Hun- tington Beach service station. responded with a chuckle t.'hen a !'surf tr-type" rob- ber raised his fists at him Sunday night and demanded his money. But a swift righthand to the jaw and an empty wallet convinced him it was no laughing matter: Southard was taken for 170. The operator of the station on Golden West Street and Edinger Avenue told police officers he was pinned against the wall by the pugilist while another took his wallet and removed the change rack rrom his belt. Both were described to be in the ir late teens, about 5'10" anct wet1ring s.houlder- le ngth. surfer-type hair. They left in thei r own car. Southard said the n1en can1e to his i:;ta- tion at 7:33 p.m. ancl initially asked if he had change for a $20 bi!t. R eaga1i 'Warm' Say . ., Wife Nau,cy . - SACRAr.YE!\'TO !1\r1 -A~tcn1pli; to pa tnl Go\'. Ronalci Hcag;1 n as an ··lin- feeling. unsympa!het1 c 111;111 :ire v.•h;il bother her most about public life, Sa\s his wife. · Nancy Reagan says the (;overnor Is really a man who performs "wri rn1 and compassionate deeds ea ch da y thal are unknown to the public" -like arranging for a dying boy's visit to Disneyland 1~1ith comedian Red Skelton. Mrs. Reagan make the observations in a weekly newspaper colun1n cop_vri~hted by the Sacramento Union . II e r unspecified fee is donated to lhe Naliont1l League of Families of A m e r i c a n Prisoners and Missing in Southeast Asia. Brand Elected To School Post 2-:ly Bnnd, &;& Ma.t Vista Ave., Seal Beach. ~..u bttn decled chairman of U!i 14--membtt goals oommisslon of the Hun. t1n-:t.oa Be.ad> Lr.Mi High School District. The ~ 11 charged with devUopmg edoca?>0nal priorities at each of the district 1 f1\·e tug.ti 1ehools. 'fhe boycott, sponsored by Citizens for l"\e ighborhood Schools and lhe. Save Our Children Commiltee, defied a11 order by Lawrence expressly banning boyeot~. Stanley Cook, head of the CiliU"I"~ for Neighborhood Schools said his grou p· would sponsor .another boycott Feb. 23. Just before im plementation of the second part of the judge'• plan. Coo k said ·he expect1 a mas~ive V.'!lhdrawaf of students by white parents later this week. "I know Some members of OQr group have bee!l contacting churches and other organizations to ask them if they can use their buildings for tutorlng," tie said. Butler High School, which was not In- volved in the Phase I desegtegatlon order. reported about 1,400 (){ its 1.600 students were absent today. At Richmond Academy, also UJlaffected by Uie initial order, officials said onlv about 2ll J>ercent or it.! 1,.00 student's we~t .. p1'!3Qt .today. -· At· ~rt. )fiUedge Elementary School, one of the seven involved in Phase I and the scene of a white parents' protest this weekend, 91 black students arrived by bus to attend classes. but only nine whites showed up. The school has a total enrolltnetit of 489, including 307 whites. AlthOUgh the plan does not specifically set up racial quot.as, it ¥:ould mean that enrollment of each of the i;even schools would be at least one-third black. Lawrence's restraining order threatens a $,1.000 fine and a possible one-year jail sentence for anyone taking part in such a boycott. .. , expect a wholesale boycott on the part of white parents." John Ruff in Jr., attorney for the black parents who brough t suit to force integration. said Sunday. "I really don't know e1aclly what to expect, but I hope their plans are not vio lenf." Bobhy Beazley. attorney for the county school board. said parents have the right lo protest the racial busing of their children. "ll is my individual judgment Lhat the only two things that an American citizen has gol to do iB pay taxes and depart this life." he said. ·rhe desegregation plan. drawn up bv two education experts from Rhode Island and along the same lines as their busing program devised for Charlotte, N.C., schools, calls for five more schools to be desegregated by March L A total of 26 sc hools are to be desegregated by the beginning of the 1972-73 school year. A plea to President Nixon for in- lcrvention failed. On Friday, Suprerne Court Justlce Lewis Powell refused to stay implementation of the plan. Mean\\·hile, the drive to put a con- stitutional ban on racial busing gained ground on tv.·o fronts today i n \'lashington : President Nixon called con- gressional backers of the idea in for a talk, and Sen. Henry M. Jackson. a presidential contender. said he would !land Congress an amendment proposal o{ his own. Weapons Station Conversion Gets Wasl1ington Test A ti1!1 which woulcl convert a portion of the Seal Beach Naval \\-'eapons Station in· lo a national wildlife refuge is headed for a committee test in Washington . O.C. Rep. Craig Hosmer (R·Long Beach) i:;aid today the bill is scheduled for a hearing before the House subcommittee on wildlife and conservation March 10. Hosmer, who claims to have the sup- port of U.S. Senators Alan Cranston and John Tunney, both Democra tii of C<1l1fornia, for his bill. introduced the legislation last August "lo protect the t'COloi..'Y of one of the la at remaining sa lt 1narshes in California." If passed. the bill would stop the pro- posed Pacific Coast Freeway from cut- ting across the weapons depot , Naturalists believe the freeway would wipe out thousands of birds now uiih1g tht salt marches as nesting areas. . H_osmer's bill is supported by the ad-· ~n.lstration of ijle nav1L,weaporu: 1t1tion whlch has created a s&11ctu1ry aroudd the mile square .marsh. l'"!'fl Pqe l LEUKEMIA. • • . ' Brand. who wu actiYe in wnrkinl for the d.rstr1ct' 1 t.u O\'enide election Jaiit June. i.s a resurdt and development enginttr llK an aerospace firm . He and hi! wife have a son, David. 7; And a daughter, RiU. 15. who ia; • freiihman at flunUftCUlo Beach High. Planners Meet Se t Charles Mc&auj!illn old. ·111\e-wouldn't wanl to. Hl.s Ifft tew weeks pi school were so unpleasant for ·hlrn due to leukemia -though we didn't know· ht h11d it at that point .L... tha~ be has associated those~bad !eellng With IC~. He doesn't even Uke to dr1ve by-it ln I.he car:• What the McLauRhlins are look.In,: for Huntington ~ach • Planning O:>m· now is a used 16 mn1 projector for educa-~ltllt, 1m, Ort~• CMir "11t111'~"" ml ssioner5 will facf: <a s'-~r1, etght·item 1· t 1·~ t · d b b I CtMPtnr, ~· -11t1r1.,. 1111.111r11fer!.. •IV 1ona lur1 s rtps an A a y i tter·tutor .;11or1e1 ""'""" « •""'1r11•-" ri..-.i" agenda when they meet at 7 p.m .• Tues-who could take care of him one or two ;:r~1on1MtfrTo,j',;; ,;;.~' ''*'1411 ,.,... dey, fn c:fty coundl chambers. • · days a w~ tihlle they wort. , .. . td., Ntf<'llOft !•~ Most agenda items ~em mlnct zone.~~. "He'• a.. vay -ibod learner;em:b•p• ai. !::""'c.~:!.~ c1:111fti.. aubnrlP'• changes, Md DOQt of the •• requested smartest hr our children ":.aid ·· Mti. "' u,r~~ .. ::i~.'L..11~~1~ Chllnges affect • i>'ret:I Targff' than five McLllu&hlin.-"We hopt fie jet& a ctianct ._.,,IYJ J •cres. j to use It some day.'' ,.__; ( -..... Cited by YMCA Robert Jackson and Mrs. Marcyn Cl ements have been named "Man and \Voman of the Year" by members of the Huntington Beach YMCA. fi.frs . Clements is Princess of the White Buffalo Nation in Y-Indian Maidens. Jackson is chairman of the YMCA Board of Man- agers and heads the 1972 fund raising campaign. -'----'-~~~~~~~ Schoo l Enrollments Less Than Predicted Near zero population growth is held responsible by some school officials for lower elementary school enrollments in \\'es t Orange County this year. •·we used to watch the rlsi ng birth rates wilh concern," said S. A. Moffett, supe rintendent or the Huntington Beach City (elementary) School District. .. But I think this trend has reversed now and we will be watching the declining rates." The Hunt ing ton Beach, F o u n ta i n Valley. and Ocean View School Districts all report enrollrnents rower than they bud,gcted for last spring. Total enrollment at all three did increase. but not as much <i s new horne construction had Jed of- fi cial s to believe it \You\d. Son1e administrators attributed the missed projection to smaller families due to the greater effectiveness of birth con- trol methods. •·There is a lot of evidence that in- dicates the counlry is near zero popula- ti on growth," said Charles Palmer, depu- ty superintendent of Huntington Beach elementary schools. "Of course we won 't be sure until the 1980 census, but it 's looki ng that way.'' In Huntington Beach e I e m e n I a r y schOJ)ls, the enrollment stands al 100 tq, 150 fewer children than anticipated. but ~Ificlals there are pleased because the dist~ict ha~ been oo the verge of double sessions. ''The drop relieved pressure at a crucial tlme," Moffett said. '•if the dif- ference had been on the plus side rather than on the negative, we would have been in trouble.'' Palmer reported that new homes in the area are producing an average of .5 elementary school children ea c h • Formerly he said, the average has been about .7. The average in California is 1.21 Wlietmo re Set To Rurt Again SACRAMENTO (UPI ) -Sen, James E. Whetmore (R-La Habra), announced today he will seek re- election thls year . \Vhetmore, who has been in the Senate since 1966, served two terms in the Assembly before winning election to the upper house. elementary school children per home, Palmer said. Fountain Valley and Ocean View school districls both report even larger drops in anticipated enrollment. At Fountain Valley this has caused minor problems. Last spring's projections ror average daily attendance (ADA ) were off by 400 s tudents, and this has caused a $230.000 reduction in state aid. Much of this was saved by not having to hire as many teachers. but some minor construction had lo be curtailed. The drop at Ocean View was the greatest of the three al nearly 500 student.'!. Offlca!s there said the drop is preiienting no problems . From Page J DIETRICH • • • Los Angeles in 1925 when hired by I~ year-old Hughes. "I got tired of tidying up after Howard's messes," said Dietrich. "! also was tired of Howard's broken promises. For yea rs , he had promi sed to give me a ca pital gains deal so I wouldn't hand over most of my salary to lhe government. Here, I was being paid more than half a million dollars a year and I was paying more in taxes than Howard with al! his millions .'' Dietrich is a business consultant and still goes dail y to his office in Century Ci- ty. 'Vhen he decided three years ago to \vrite his book. a lawyer friend In- trodu ced him to James Phelan. a free. lance writer of magazine articles about Howard Hughe~ After two years. Phelan produced a manuscript satisfactory to neither a publisher nor Dietrich. Stanley Meyer, a film financial figure, offered to find a new writer. George ~idney. a film director familiar \\'ith my biographies of Harry Cohn. Irving Thalberg and Walter Winchell, recom- mended me. Dietrich and I v.·orked together to pro- duce a tola!ly new manuscript. Meanwhile, a copy of the previous manuscript apparently fell in the hands of Clifford Irving. The question is · how? The manuscript circulated in publishing channels and could have been copied. Dietrich noted that Meyer met with Irv· Ing la st June in en atten1 pt to interest the author in writing Dietrich's book. But r..1e ycr has denied showing the Dietrich manuscript to Irving. Irving has not divulged how he ac· quired lhe Dietrich manuscript. Testimo11 v • On Irving Postponed NEW YORK (AP) -The beautilul, blonde barone6S, Nina van Pallandt, w;o i unable lo testify in the Cifrord Irving case today because not enough grand jurors showed up to make J. quorum. The law says at least 16 of 22 must be present to hear testimony, but there v.·ere only 1 l there when the Danish cabaret singer arrived at the federal courthouse to tell what she claims to know about Jn-· ing and lloward Hughes. Although delayed in her grand jury ap- pearances, the singer \\'as bus y elsewhere. She will appear on the Oick Cavett Show for ABC on Wednesday and the David Frost Show for Group W later in the week. Asked whether the publiclty sur- rounding her romance with lrving had lipped her pr ice for performing, manager John Marshall said : "You're damned right it has. l'd be a fool not to take advantage of it.·• Meanwhile Time magazine published excerpts-of Irving's book which the' magazine said proved mu ch or it was pirated. . Time, calling I~ving "Coll Man of the Year," said Irving admllted the hoax to federal prosecutors in an effort to spare his wife from jail. Irving's lawyer. Maurice Nessen, called the Time article "a gloating, prancing, distorting piece 'hat is irresponsib le in the extreme." The magazine printed part of Irving's book alongside excerpls from an un- published manuscript by free-lance writer James Phelan to emphasize the similarities. Time said lt did not know how Irving gained access !o Phelan 's manuscript. The magazine said Irving told federal investigators he would accept a prison term for fraud and perjury In exchange for ·leniency by Swiss authorities on for- gery and bank fraud charges against his "'1'ife. Edith. In Los Angeles. a spoke sman for the Hughes organization was asked about Time's allegations of fraud and replied, "That's what we said Dec. 7." The spokesman. Richard Hannah, said there would be no further comment until officials read full accounts of the manuscript comparison. The New York Dailv News said it learned that U.S. and Swiss authorities agreed .secretly to drop charges against Mrs. Irving if her husband cooperates and "someone goes lo jail." U.S. Attorney Whitney North Seymour Jr. declined co111mcnl, bul Swiss officials dismissed the report as "nonsense." 'The.v o;aid a courier was en route to the United States with a demand for Mrs. Irvin~·~ extradition. Dr. Gerold Luethy, Zurich's chief prosecutor. sa id Switzerland "could r:ever agree to such a deal." Helllth Plan Hit At CMA Meeting SAN FRANCISCO (UPI! -Several resolutions attacking the Blue Shield health plan were introduced at the California Medical Association con· vention. Attacks on the Catirornia Physicians Service program were h('aded Sunday by a group or conservative Uis Angeles physicians who said the associates should end ties with Blue Shield and turn it loose "as just another insurance company." The plan . which the state medica l association founded 32 ye11rs ago, covers n1ore th:in J.J million Californians. The move to scuttle Blue S~ield is ex- pected to r:ome br'::re delegates for a vote Tuesday. Try Us • • • • You'll Like Us ,. ' • 'Selections of etiJ and Used ft,ems of AU Sorts and Varieties EVERYTHING UNCONDITIONALLY GUARANTEED Di•-" Ceooter for Orange! County COST~ MESA JEWELRY &. .. OAN W llallr ~,.to;f .• -: ,. • ' Com• ln ""d BrbiD11 Around 1838 ... to•r· ILVD. Phon• 64.·7741 . DOWNTOWffCbs'l'A 'MESA lelwMn H•rbor •nd lra•d••Y I I I • -. - • .. -,, # • •'-.. ,.,. .. --' "' • -·- H . -~ -. DAILY PILOT 3 I I• I ' Boy~s, Best Friend is His Valentine ,. 'Ii.~: :;< •.,. • '! I I l i .. PETER MEECHAN, 4, COSTA MESA, AND FRIEND, TRIXIE, DIG IN TO BOX 0 CANDY AND PETER LEARNS THAT VALENTINE'S DAY IS FOR DAILY l"tLOT f'lleM llY LH ,., ... SHARIN G -UNTI L YOUR FRIEND TAK ES YOUR SHARE Five More Coi111tia11 s Die As Traffic Ca1·11age Soars Five persons died in Orange t:ounty "'eekend traffic bringing the total fatalities for 1972 to 38. \Yhich con1pares \1•ith 20 at lh is stage last year. F'our \\'Cre killed cC1rly Sunday "'hen two cars collided ·on a road1vny paraltcl- 1ng the San Diego Free11·ay on the :-.ooth"·est side near Laguna Hills Le1surc \\'orld The fifth victi m. a 2-year-o!rl Sa nla An::i girl, dit>d Saturda.v afternoon 111 a b1rycle- l!ar accident. The dea d -:\Larine 1st Lt. Norn1an t:. Jlasek. 25. of 2498" Presidi o Ori\"c. Laguna Hill s. -Sandara Ltt llasek. 26. tu~ \\ 1fc uf the s;11ne addrrss -Christoper Lon~. 17. of 25240 Terrrno Drive, r.-tiss ion ViC'JO. -Daniel Ste.srns. 18. of 2;i18J t:afnpo Rojo. El Toro. -Susan Brison, 2, of 222~ I IUl'klcbcrry Road, Santa Ana. E. Ge ri nan Escapes BRAUNSCHWEIG. Germany {UPl l - A 22-year-old East German border guard fled across the fortified demarcation llne ''ith his gi rl friend Sunday . \Vest German customs police said today. The tv.·o car crash took place "'hen a north bound car driven by Long crossed over a double line to pass a third vehicle at !he crest of a hill. the Cali(ornia Highway Patrol reported. 1\ll four vi ctims \1•ere trapped in the demolished cars in the 1:30 a.in. at· cidenl. There 11·as no fire. The llaseks leave three small childre n. one. lv•o and four year!'! old. They arc being cared for b~· fellow officers in the lieutenant's sc1u~dron at El Toro illarine 1\ir Station. Hasek 1\·as an A4 Skyha\1•k altflck bomber pilot. He v.·as from Spring· Jleld. Ore .. and recently joint>d V.l\t A :.quadron 21~. Stearns. a passenger 111 Long·s car , \\'as de~d on arri\'al at l\1ission Community Hospital and the other three died at the scene of the crash. the Orange County coroner ·s ofrice reported. The Brison child. daughter of 1\lr. and l\1rs. George Brison, 1vas rid ing on the handlebars of a bicycle "'ith her IJ..-year-old aunt Leona \Velcher of Long Beach. poli ce !aid. The two V.'Cre struck by a car driven by Robert 0. Stoughton. 45, of Santa Ana, on E. 17th St. near Hucklebe rry Road. Officers said the bicycle v.•as ridden in· to the path of the car. Miss Welcher is in satisfaclory condition at Riverviel'• Hospital. police said . Stoughton v.·as not cited. Russ ians Lcuincli Neiv Liuiar Craft In La1 iding Try By DAVID NAG\' ~tOSCO\V (UPI\ -The So\•iet Union today launched its first moon mission in five n1onths and indicated the unmanned Luna 20 craft \1·o u\d attc1npt a soft lan- ding. '~he last Soviet lunar-landing attempt ended in failure 11•hen Luna 18 vanished into the Apo!lonius ~lountains Sept. l I \Vestcrn s p~itc experts said thry thought Luna 20. like Lu na 18 . 1nighl br carrying a nev• Lunokhod explorer robot or m or,. sophisticated soil-scooping de1·ices. "The Sovie! l1n1011 launched the automatic station Luna 20 today '"ith the ain1 of further exploration or the rnoon and near-moon space," !he ofricial Tass Ne\vs Agency said. 111 Soviet space terminology, the phrase •·exploration of the moon and near-tnoon space" has indicated land ing missions as opposed to orbiters or fly-past n1isisoni;, "According to telemetric information, the station's on-board systems and equip- ment are functioning nonnally," Tass said. It usually takes Soviet Lun a craft about flve days to reach the moon . \Vhen Luna 20 gets there , it will find Luna 19 sti ll in orbit. ' 'I Two Hatti•• Foes By JACK HROBACK 01 !ht DtllY .. !IOI S!t ll Orange County Regist rar of Voter s !Jnvid Hitchcock refused to issue nomina- tion papers this morning to \V illia n1 \\"enke. a candidate for First Districl Supervisor. County Counsel Adrian Kuyper had ad- \'ised 1-litchcock not lo issue papers to either \\'enke or another F'irst District tandidatc challenging Santa Ana in- cumbent Robert Battin. John \V . "Bi ll'' I Iii!. Kuyper said his ad vice wa s based on a 1933 st ate Supreme Court decision \Yhich ruled that a potential candidate cannot move v.·ith his district '.''hen its boun - ctarics are changed if hi!' has not flllfilled lhe full residency requirernenl of the new district . \\'rnke has called a press conference for late today but sa id this morning that he will take court action to compel 1-litchcock to issue and to accept the nomination papers. \Venke and 1-Iill were gerrymandered out of lhe FiNit District when new lines v.·ere drav.'n and approved by the Board of Supervisors last October. Thi!' new boundaries were hastily changed in the last 24 hours before approval was re.· quired by state law. The two candidates, both longtime residents of the F'irst District in Santa Ana, move.cl in November upon legal ad- vice that they would then be permitted to run . VEGETABLE COCKTAIL \V enke \\'a s lhe first candidate in line al Jlitchcock's office this 1nom1ng 1hc first day in "'hich candidates for supervi sor P assllge Leading Pack as Y llc lits Near Acapulco Special to the DAILY PILOT ACAPULCO -\Vind\\•;ird Pa.~sagt> \\'as occupying a glassy sea off Zihuatanejo at 8 a.en. (PITT I today with less than a 50-50 chance of setting a new elapsed time reco rd in the San Diego to Aca pul co Yacht Race. Zihuatanejo is 110 nautical miles from Acapulco. Blackfin and Sirius II we re about 20 miles beh ind Passage and ex changing greetings at roll call. Blackfin appeared to be a few miles ahead of Sirius IL Enthusiasm began lo boil up at the Club de Yates here today with the possibility that one or more of the leaders would be finished by midnight. The lead yac ht, pre sum bly Windward Passage, must finish at 9:15 p.m. (PDT J to set a new record. The present rl!'cord of eight days, nine hours and 15 minutes is held by Sirius JI, now skippered by Bob Lynch of Newport Harbor Yacht Club. Poor radio communications made reports from the other yachts impossible until later in thl!' day. , 8'rred :u1d statC' and federal off.ices may lake out p<iprrs. lie :-;ud he we~ under the impression 1hat ht! \\"llullt be given nominAtion paperll Uul !hat 11·hcn completed they "'·o uld not bt' ;1crcptcd by the registrar. "I ha ve no quarrel with either Kuypl!'r or ll ilchrock ," the Santa Ana attorney said . "They arc doini;: lhcir jobs as prcscr1bt'd by lawtas they interpret it." Kuyper s:11d thJs morning that alter consulting with the State Attorney C:encral last Nove mber hr !old both Hiii and \Vcnke !hat they could move into the ne\1' ~~irsl Uistricl to qualify as can~ 11\datcs. HO\VC\·cr, an appellate court ruling ln late January cited the 1933 supn!:me court dec ision which was concerned with • similar qu estion Involving a Los Angeles cily council race. "When the appellate court's ruling was brought to ollr atte ntion we had no alternative but to adv ise Hitchcock as we did," Kuyrr said loday. If !he '"'O potential c8ndldate& are clirn innted only two others will remain to contest Dattin Jn the June 6 primary. They are Wally Davis, a Fountain Valley attorney and Paul Balch, a former aide to Rep. John Schmitz (R-Newport BeachJ. Hill, a long time Santa An a businessman, was not available for com- ment this mornlng but an aMociate said he will undoubtedly take legal action to rrgai n his ca ndidate sl.atus. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • . .. . • The blend 9f1 v~gct.able juices what "wo\\·s'' them every time! ... SerYe it for breakfa5t ch illed ••. for a \\'ake.l' upf)er of.lunch t in1c appetites ..• for an introduclion to the evening meal! And, every time you µour it, you'll be glad r ou thott.R"hl to get it at El Rancho's lo\v price: 6 (IZ. Adrt zino l o v.s 1i-ifh El Ra.ncho'1 Vodkn ... lwlf-oallon ... $8.88 ! Aged Steaks ........... $19! ·Top sirloin cul.!! or U.S.D.A. Cfloice beef, naturally a11ed. Sliced Veal . ~. ~~~~!~' .. $18! \Viscon.sln tc~d~r veal, in slices that make Scallopini easier! Fresh Beef Tongues .. .. .. . .. .. . .. .. . . .. . . . . . .. . 69~ 1:or a change of pace ••• yo ung, to be tender J Fresh Eggplant . . . . .. . . . .. . . .. .. .. .. . .. . . .......... 19~ Dip in eirg batter. crumbs and fry, Serve with Sq.llopini. Pric1R in rfff'ct ~fotr .. Tue8., Wed., F eb. 14 . JS . 16, No JJalt8 to dt.aler1. M . 29c argar1ne ............. . Blue Bonnet •.• flavor that'a ao rewarding! ••• 1 lb. pkg. Crackers .................. 33< Sunshine'• Krisplc11 ••. and IJ1cy rea lly arc! ... I lb. box. Macaroni and Cheese ........................... 3 1or '1 Van de Kamp's .• , frozen! ••. 11 oz. packages go so far ! Monterey Jack or Longhorn ....................... 49' \Vith Lent ahead, you 'll be .serving cheese often ! Schreibcr '111 •••• 8 oz. ARCADIA : s1.ncc: .ir~ 11.11111•,1011 o, i'ii,.'. PASAD EN A: :·111• SOUTH PASADENA : i1li'ii· HUNTINGTON BEACH : 1 11/i1/, NEWPORT BEACH'. 1111 Newp011 ei;d "" [I RJn LhO Ce1!E1, · J)U /i f ,t C : , .1 ,,, E,' .. i. frfmo1.: ;ind H unt1n~lon Or · W ~rner Jll~ Alio11qu1n 'Ro111lwJI~ f.en!p1 155~ f a~tblulf Dr £a sthlutf Village Cen ter I . -• • , • • , , •. • , , , " , , ,. h • ... ' . .. MOflday, Frbruary l4, Jqn President Grills China Experts . ,. \ \ •' I ~ps ,What's News With Hughes? By THOMAS MURPHINE Of ,,,. a.1t1 l"lltf '"" UPCOAST, DOWNCOAST : No, gentle reader, l haven't any better Idea than you do where the Clifford Irving·Howard Hughes saga will end, or when, for that matter. It just seems to roll on like Old Man River. One wag In our newsroom, however. in- ; sists that if the Hughes thing ever does ! end, It will climai aomehow in Newport ' Beach. Why? "Well," he confides In conspiratorial ,"'"W .. 1-per, "every time a big story breaks on the national scene, there's a Newport Beach angle in it somewhere. Why should Howard Hughe! be any exception?" ~ INDEED, THERE'S more than a shred : of truth In Newport somehow managing '. to creep into a lot of stories on the na· tiona l news scene. But as for the elusive, reclusive multi- jillionaire, there hasn't been an authen· tirated report of him showing up in l'Jewport or anywhere else along the p :·1nge Coast. • Mind you it's not that the tipsters out ~here in PilotJa nd haven't been trying to find him. Each week we get a number or ·reports that send our news sleuths scur· rying orr to vacant Jots or empty store buildings. So far, no Howard Hughes. .' Once he was reported holed up in ·Newport's Balboa Bay Club. Another 'time he was in a yacht off Santa Catalina ;island, mining the ocean bottom for gold. UPON ANOTHER occasion, he was j:oing to buy North American Rockwell's ~hite elephant z.iggurat down in Laguna ~iguel and turn it into a drydoc k hangar for that big seaplane he built, the Spruce toose. That would have been a case of getting ~wo white elephants together - a heck of ;a story-but It didn't pan out either. ' Hughes i& reported flying in end out or Orange County Airport all the time. Often ~'s et the controls himself. Sometimes ·s ln shirtsleeves in a fiper Cub or at xt report, clad in overcoat end dark ~lasses, slinking off one or his own 1i1·"'hes: Airwest jetliners. Each of these tips gets checked out by f>ur interp!d reportorial staff but each time, somehow, Howard has given 'em the slip. I'LL HAVE TO admit there was one te~rt of Hughes on the Orange Coast wherein we didn 't real\y check it out with pur usual verve and vigor. That was the ~ne where the telephone whisperer con· fided that Howard wa s driving around j:lown in Monarch Bay at Laguna Niguel, )ust next door to Salt Cree k Beach. "What's he driving." we asked, pencil )>oised over notebook. "It's an old Edsel four-door sedan wlth rust on the fenders,'' our informer re. pt;.;. ; We thanked him for his trouble. llect'nt!y we printed a composite pie· ture of Mr. Hughes. heavily touched by t he artist's bru5h. It was done over a 20- .yea r-old •l ughes photo and was supposed .to show what an older Hughes might Jook like today. "THIS LATEST outrage will surely bri'lg him out into the open ," one of our ~~tors beamed as he inspected the e r'\vor k. ' T·1e effort, however, fa il!d again to lli--h The Man. One thing appealing about all the Hughes stories is that nobody seems to be r eally hurt by all the ballyhoo. , Weil, of coune, Cllfford Irving might not agree. • • WASIUNGTON (AP ) -With bis departure for Pek!ni only three d•Y• otr, President Nlxoo has asked his staff for more lnformaUon and called In French Intellectual Andre Malraux for expert answers on China . Malraux' analysis, b1 hi! "AnUmemOr· ltt," of China and Communiat Cb&innan Mao and Premier Chou En·Jaj, Nixon stUI ii not sahs!Jed with the mountains cf material ht's been prG- t1ided. Pre&s secretary R-Onald L. Ziegle r said Nixon, returning from Florida Sun- day night, had asked the National Securl· ty Council for more answers. '"He had more questions he wanted explored ," Ziegler said. But the press secretary wouldn 't say what they involved . Nixon has been preparing for months for his historic talks with Chlnese leaders and hAJ everyooe doing homework on it. Tbat'1 the resson for today 's White House meeting with Malrsiu:, the fonner French cultural mlnbter. Nixon, In dlscl9slng plans for t~ meeting. 11Jd he was Impressed with Record Strikes The China trip is considered so sensitive in the White House that for a Huge B52s Make Massive Attacks SAIGON (UPI J -American B52 bombers fl ew a record 27 strikes inside South Vietnarn today during the Viet Cong Tet lunar New Year truce. One American was killed and three wounded in fighting near Saigon. The Viet Cong truce for the lunar new year began today and runs four days. The allies' own truce began tonight and runs 24 hours. Asked why the crescendo of bombing. the U.S. spokesman at a military briefing today said. "U.S. troop strength is down to 13,200 and we are going to use our 11ir power to protect American troops during that withdra'>\·al. '' U.S. force were cut back by another 2,500 men last week and the 13,200 men left is the lowest figure since August, 1965. "We don't n1ean lo suggest that the enemy intention is to hit only the Americans.'' the U.S. spokesn1an said. He said the U.S. bombing is meant to help South Vietnamese troops as well . U.S. Navy and Air force fighter· bombers backed up the B52s with 176 strafing runs. the most in South Vietnam since Sept. 24 , 1970 when there "'ere 192. All 176 of the so-called tactical air strikes were in the Central Highlands where U.S. Intelligence expects any Com· munist offensives will be launched. The 27 missions by the B52s out- riumbered anything in U.S. command records which go back to June of 1968. But many of the missions today were by one plane each rather than the usual three and well short of the six aircraft per mission which was common when the air war reached its peek four years ago. The South Vietnamese command said the Viet Cong had violated their own Tet truce at least four times in the first few hours of the standdown, killing seven South Vietnamese troops in the ~ocess. The U.S. Command reported t t as of 17 hours after the beginning of he Viet Cong truce, there had been no attacks 11gainst American forces. In 46 Incidents in the 24 hours ending at 6 a.m. today at least 39 of them ini tiated by Communist forces. 131 North Viet- namese a.nd Viet Cong were killed at a cost of 19 South Vietnamese killed and 13 wounded along with one American killed and three wounded. All the B52 bombing raids since Satur- • .,., .. lltU • ..... ~•o-o•<> . Ship Fo111ul " U•I TtltPMGIO A team of d ivers Sunday idcn· lilied the , wreckage of the tanker V. A. r·ogg v."hich dis· appeared without a trace two weeks ago. The tanker carried a crew of 39. None have been found. day have been flown in the Central Highlands against a Communist troop buildup for what allied intelligence says will be an offensive timed for President Nixon·s visit Sunday to Peking. J\1ost of the B52s hammered what the Communists term Base Area 609, where Sout h Vietnam, Loas and Cambodia come together. It was the most B52 raids in a single day since the record! began in June, 1968. Passengers OK Aboard Cliilean Rescue Vessel PUNTA ARENAS, Chile (UP I) -The captain of a Chilean naval vessel said to- d<ty that the passengers ~nd crew rescued rrom the grounded crui se liner Lindblad Explorer were safe and in good spi ril s and a~·alting clear weather for the 540- mile voyage to this seaport . the world's southern·most city. Capt. Carlos Barra von Krechmann , skipper of the naval transporl Piloto Pardo. said, "the passengers are in a perfect state of health, none is sick or in- jured . ., Von Krechmann said he took aboa rd 104 passengers including 78 Americans, and 40 crewmembers of the Norwegian cruise ship. It ran aground on rocks on King George Island between the tip of South America and Antarctica Friday. The captain s.!rid the chaplain of the Chilean Antarctic Fleet celebrated a special Mass of thanksgi ving for the rescued passengers Sunday. "There was great jubilation," Von Krechmann said. Von Krechmann replled in a rad io message to questions radioed by UPT. He said the rescued passengers included the Americans. along with Argentines. Cana· dians. an Englishman, a South Africa n. Belgians, Dutchmen , a Brazilian and Germans. Von Krechmann said the Piloto Pardo reached King George Island in the South Shetland Island chain eight hours after the Lindblad Explorer went aground. Ae sa id the rescue operation took two hours "amid bad weather conditions." The passengers reached the Piloto Pardo in lifeboats from 1he cruise ship and the Chilean naval vessel. The skipper said the passengers' luggage was also transferred without loss or damage. The British icebreaker Endurance reached the scene Sunday and left a salvage expert to help the few crewmen of the Lindblad Explorer who stayed aboard to try t.o refloat the vessel. "If the L!ndhlad Explorer is not fl oat ed soon il will be de stroyed on the rocks when the next storm hits th e area." said Adm. Ladislaw D'Hain and , commander of the Chilean Antarctic Fleet. He arrived aboard the Chilean Na vy tug Yelcho. The rescue passengers and crewmen jammed the tiny Piloto fardo, which normally has a crew of 44. An Antarctic bl izzard had held up the departure for Punta Arenas. But a Navy spokesman said the wind and snow had abated somewhat early today. ' time members of Nixon's advance team1 didn't want to talk about the boob Nizon wss rtadlng on China, or even to give an opinion ol what they thou&hL of Peking du~k. One insider conceded: "There'& an ex· tra dimension of secrecy to avoid e.t- pectallons that couldn't be fuliilled ." But, the process of getting the Presi- dent briefed and ready was begun welt before Henry KJ.ssinger's secret trip lo Peking io July 1971. LlteraJly hundreds and hundreds of pages -perhaps 50 pounds, an aide estimates -have been compiled for Nix- on by the State Department, National S<curlty Council. Central Intelligence Agency and individual e1pcrU. There ate huge notebooks !llJed with political. t·ultural and hlstorlc1J infonnaUoo. Malraux lln'l the onJy China-watcher to get the call. Many other recogni:ted authorities "with a feel for the Peoples Repu blic o( China," including authors, diplomats and journalists, have been tapped, the White House says. However, spokesmen generally have shied away from identifying these S-Ources. Among reasops given : II'hey don't want to antagonize those who may Making Whoopee New Orleans carnival celebrators Jean nie Beck Courtney (L) and Nanci ,..lace lean from F'rench Quarter balcony as the parade of the Kre\l'C of lris passes down Orleans St., chanting the traditional ··throw n1e something, mi ster'' to the float riders. f~loat passengers tradi· tionally thro\v beads, trinkets and coins to crowds. Amn10 Dump Site Blast l(ills I 7 iii Pl1ilippines MANILA IUPI ) -An explosion on the site of a \Vorld \Var II Japa11ese am- munition dump ripped through Man ila's crowded Pandacan dis trict today , shoot· ing Ci!ment wall and building fragments into a school yard and the hovels of a squatters' area. At least 17 were killed and 56 injured, many of them children, in the late af. ternoon bla st. 'IWo of the fatalit ies were babies killed in the arms of a mother and a grandmother. Police cordoned off the area ~·hije bomb disposal teams searched for more bombs and bodies. The explosion dug a six-foot.wide crater in the compound of the Morales Engineering Works, a plastics manufac· luring finn. hurled fragments of a nearby 10-foot cement wall at an ad· joining elementary school and squatters area, collapsed houses and tossed cor· rugated metal roofing ove r a wide area near the Pasig River. Irish Catholics Stage Illegal, But Calm March Mrs. Purificacion Morales, owner of the plastics firm, said military bomb disposal personnel told her the explosion \\'as caused by a World War II Japanese bomb. She said the site \Vas a Japanese ammunition dump during the war and later bulldozed and made into an equi~ ment yard by American military forces. Manila Police Chief .Gerardo Tamayo told newsmen police investigators were check ing t'A'O theories: that the explosion was caused by a bom'b or that it v.·as caused by chemicals used in the making of household plastics. lfe said initial in- vesUgations failed to find bomb shrapnel and that injuries appeared to have been caused by blunt rather than sharp ob- jects. "We are inclined to think it is "ot a bomb," Tamayo said. Mrs. Morales told UPI many of the children who were killed lived in an ad- jacent slum or squatters' quarters built of packing crates, discarded wood and corrugated metal roofs. . Northeast Storm Weakens BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP I Fou r thousand Catholics staged another illegal but peaceful march in Northern Ireland Sunday to demand immediate withdrawal of British troops: from the province, abolition or the provincial Parliament and a halt to the jailing of suspected guerrilla suspects without trial. ' Trave lers Warnings Still Up iii Mou1itain. Regions llCINO----~ B•AIN l;~1!ij1MOW " Troops and police did not interfere with the march Jn EMisk:lllen, a lakeside resort town 56 miles southwest of Belfast, and the Catholics made it a short one. · They then held a rally at whlcb,speaktrs njecled a compromise lbal feporls from London say the BMUsh government iJ conalderfng a Catholic .. de!>!ty prime mlnleter of Northern Ireland .00 a qUOll o/ Catholl<s Jn the provlncfal cabinet. Michael Farrell, I leader o/ the ... treme le!Ust People'• Democracy, aald Prime MJnt.ter Edward Heath, "bavillg given up trying lo heal ua oil the -· la trying lo buy us of!." Kevin Ajnew, vice -ldenl of tl)e Cathol!Cobased Civil Rli!>ts A5'0ClaUon, &aid promtnent Catholic pol!Uclans would shun 1: position ln the provlncial cabinet. have been Jett out of lhe consultatiocs. But. It has been d11cloled lb1t the President also reJd some worb of two Chlna scholars at Harvard: historian John King Farbank's book "The United States and China" and political s:clentil t R05s TerrlJJ"s two re<:ent arll~les ln tha Atlantic Monthly. Nixon ha s been clued in by his advance- team members with their personal 1p- praisals from talks In Peking with Chou. And he has carefully gone over the stenographle transcripts of meeting• Kissinger and m deputy, Brig Gen. Alex· ander M. Haig Jr., had with Chou. Bangladesh Plays Host Tol(ennedy DACCA (UPI ) -Sen. Edward M. Ken· nedy arrived today In Banglede:sh to a flower-strewn welcome punctuated by chants of "we love Kenn -a-dee." He told 10,000 cheering Dacca Un i v er s i t y students the people -0f America support Bangladesh "and the leaders of America will not be far behlnd. '' Kennedy, his wife Joan and 18-year..old nephew Joseph Kennedy , son of the late Sen. Robert., 1'-1. Kennedy , new by helicopter later to the town of Khustia, 70 miles west of Dacca, where he wa~ shown the whitened skeletons of alleged victims of the P11kisi3/1 army repression. Follwing their return to Dacca the Ken. nedys and Jose ph . called -0n Prime Minister Sheikh Mujibur Rahman. who met them wit h his three sons al his of· f ice. The senator spent about 70 minutes \Vith Mujib and said afterwards their talks had touched upon the nonrecogni· tion of Bangladesh by the United States. "I think recognilion is long overdue.'' Kennedy said, adding thal he hoped wit!t other senators to press for recognition. At Khustia, the senator was taken on a Jeep tour of the tO'>\'n , which was almost completely destroyed by the Pakistan army during the nine·month struggle for independence. He was shown three graves on the outskirts of the town, two of them containing seven skeletons each and the third one skeleton. Sources with Kennedy's party said the senalor told officials who showed him the graves that he believed accounts he had heard of Pakistan army atrocities and did not need further convincing. Kennedy gave townspeople assembled at the Khustia soccer field a brier reprise of his speech at Dacca Univer· sity. Scientist Goes Into Cave Today DEL RIO . Tex. (UPI ) -A young, con- fident French scientist carrying neither "·atch nor calendar, today enters a remote West Texa s cave to escape the ef· fects of Earth time in hopes of discover· ing what he calls 1'a new rhythm ot life." Dr. r.1ic hel Siffre believes he can adapt to a new and more efficient time schedule based on 36 straight hofti.s or work alternated with l2 hours of rest. He plans to try for six months. Siffre will conduct his lonely ex. perlment in a well stocked la boratory and living area 150 feet deep in Midnight Cave, 40 miles northeast of Del Rio. The project, conceived years ago, has been delayed three months by frustrating equipment delays. "Nothing can stop my descent," Siffre said "I am absolutely ready," he said. \ Uf't WfAOtll •O'IOC:AST . ~ ..._ ... 1_ ~lllOWlll ·'I{ •1ow "They want to enjoy a few more sum· mers." he added, meanin1t any Catholic politician who mlkes a deal with the British runs the Jilk of assasslnation by' the Irish Republican Anny, ""'' ........ Shrine Desecrated I 'Ille rally orlllnally was llCheduled for the center ol Ennlaklll .. , bul the marchers mewed book, lo ,a houlfng proJ· ec:t ln another part ci town aner en.. countering barricades thrown up by Brltlab troofl<. • A major cono:'oversy wu touched off Sunday betwMn rellgloua au· thorltlei and the Jerusalem munlclplllty over lour boles drWecl Ill the Waillnf Wall, Judaism's holiest shrine. 'This newamap ""°"' the locaUon of the Wall In which Arab worlrers ml!takenly drilled the bbles u part of an effort to prop up a 600.year old house. The wall was built by King Herod in 70 A.O. ' I I .. .. x -. • • Orange f;oast EDITIOtli Today's Flnal N.Y. Stocks VOL 65, NO. 38, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 14, ·1972 N TEW CENTS Power Strikes Crippling British Cities By JOSEPH W. GRIGG LON DON (U PI ) -Millions of Britons shivered today in dark, unheated homes and offices. Jndustry, blacked out and disrupted by crippling power curbs, laid off tens of thousands of workers. London city authorities ordered most street lights, already knocked haywire by hours-long power cuts, switched off altogether until the crisis ends. I That meant a virtual wartime blackout, lmilar to World \Var J[, for this capital city of eight million. Even Buckingham Palace was darJt" and chilly. But Queen Elizabeth II was not affected. She is on a state visit to Thailand with her husband Prince Pbilip and daughter Princess Anne. With a ai.x-week~ld nationwide strike of 280,000 coal miners biting deep into fuel supplies, Britain was gripped by Its grim- mest industrial crisis in a quarter-cen- tury and perhaJJ3 since lbe: 1928 general strike. Wrong Connectlont· British newspapers called it "Black Monday.'' Government olficials predicted millions would be laid oU by midweek. The opposition Labor. Party, limbering up for an onslaught against the govern- ment in Parliament later today, lam- basted it for "gross mlshand.Jing of the dispute from the outset." In a statement published after a meeting of the party's national executive committee, it accused the government of "incompetence" ia tackling the con· •. ' • c--· ~ ' . I t~-'. ,, OAILY ~II.OT 11•11 ~h~lf ~ .:;~/fiNk"''... ~ .... Admitted.Jy,· there is a ,good bit of physical action in the movie "The French Connection:• but that hardly would qualify the film for a-Golden Glove award. Actually, what the Lido Theater in Newport Beach means to say is that the flick won three Golden Globe awards. Medical Center Near UC Irvine In First Stages Newport Pilot Perishes In Freeway Accident A team of three architectural firm s has ~ hired to design the first phase of a private hospital complex its backers ho pe· will become parl or thr UC Irvine medical center. Dona ld S, Burns. chairman of the board :if \Vestern \Vorld r-.Iedical Foundation. 5pid lhe firms will design the foundation hospital's fir.st uni t of its ov:n $400 mll- lion complex at a cos t approach ing 525 million. One car crashing into a second catapulted il through a' San Diego Freeway divider in Long Beach early Sunday, slrikin g a th ird and killing Newport Beach airline pilot. yach tsman and Boy Scout leader Clyde Horn. lie died almost instantly in the 2.30 a.m. acci dent. whic h left two other pe rsons hospitalized and the third dri ver 1n jail. Funeral services for Mr. Horn. 51. will be Wednesday at 11 a.m. in Pacific View The three architects are Langdon and Memorial Park Chapel Corona del Mar, Wjlson of Los Angeles, William Blurock with interment to follow there . Partners of Corona del Mar and Rowlett A Western Airlines pilot for 28 years, and Scott of Houston, Texas. Mr. Horn lived at 133 Via Havre, Lido Isle, with his wife Geraldina. Burnir sa_id that Western World has Survivor1 also include sons"Robert and already rectived the results of a Rlch:ard Horn,. a daug)Jter Robin Horn, ·au topographical and land plan study ond an of N•wport Beacl>,.' ;iu. ·hla molhtt eeonomlc study for the project, planned · Kalberine liorn; a .tilter Mrs. 'Helen at the southeast corner of MacArthur . Eble, bpth of Karlua 1 and thret Boulevard and UoivetsUy Driv~. adja... trandehiidren. ceJ'lt to the UCI campus. The-well-known v1ctlm 'wal _pi1st com- Burns said the new meillcaf center m!>do~ of lite Li\lo Ille Yacbl Cjub and a "will be tho flrsl anywhere bulltlrom lhe leaderc Qf Boy Seoul Troop U7, ollo of ground uj>. '' · -. • Lld(i Isle. . He said it will consist Of the foundation Qallforilia Highway Patrol officers said Mr? Hom was en route to work when the hospital -the first stage of which will fa tal accident occurred on ·tha freeway hllve 182 bed.s -the UCl med~cal college, near the Lakewood .Boulevard exit. the UCJ hospital and out.patient faCWtles. He was dead on arrival at Long Beach .,-j.Buni! also said· a hotel is_ pai:t Cr 'the Community Ho~ital. whm John Gib.on, ioog range plan for the complex as are 47, or Orson. ahd hi• feinale pa1Stnger 'Ouildings for medlc8lly or i e ~ t e d ,1were U.ken !or treatment of injuries. Investigators for the CHP arrested and booked Wayne Griffin, 23. of San Diego. on w spicion o{ felony drunken driving and misdemeai:ior mansla·ughter afler the collision. His car, southbound on the freeway, collided with Gibson's, hurl ing it through the {ence and into Mr. Horn's northbound vehicle. the CHP said. Reagan, 'Warm', Says Wife Nan.cy SACRAMENTO (AP) -Altempts to paint Gov. Ronald Reagan as an "un- fee~. Wll)'mpatbetic man" are what ~ther her tn01Jt about public life, says his wile. Nancy Reagan says the Governor is really . a man who performs "warm and compassionate deeds each day that are unknown to the public" ~ like arranging for a dying boy's visit to Disneyland with comedian Red Skelton. Mrs. ·Reagan make the observations in a w.eekly newspaper colu·mn copyrighted ~!~~~ Sacramento Union. .Her Wlllpeclfled fee is donated to the National League-of , Families of A m e r i c a h Pt-.S •¥'Mll1ing in Soulheut Asia. ' ' . sequences of the crisis "\\'hich should have been foresten and which have led to panic measures inflicting additiona l damage on the whole e<;<>nomy." The automotive industry was hit hardest. British Leyland , Jag u a r , Triumph , Rover, Ford of Britain, Vau x- hall -General Motors' British subsidiary -Chrysler and the Joseph Luca automobile components plant laid off or put nearly 50,000 workers on part-lime. Thousands of Yorkshire and Lancashire steel and textile \vorkers were sent home, The state-run Brit is h railroad system cance!ed 1.000 trains and stopped heating lho.se still running to save electric power. Commuters shivered as they jammed in- to the trains still ru nning. Officia ls warned that vital food supplies were in danger. In some parts of the country. milk bo ttli ng plants closed and milk was rationed . Bread and egg supplies also were threatened because bakerit>s and packing pla nts wt>re without po\ver. Rotating pov.·e.r cuts bla ... i\ed out 10 to I~ percent of the country in turn for the: fifth successive day. Street traffic tights went out in bla cked-out areas, causing immense jams. On th e London stock market nearly $3 biHion was knocked off sha re prices in the first few minute3 of trading. China Trade Opens Nixon Lifts More Restrictions WASHINGTON ( UPJ) -President Nixon removed .some of the restrictions on U.S. exports to China tod ay, gi ving Peking the same status a.s the Soviet Union among America's trading partners. The step will permit American businessmen to se ll locomotives, con- struction equipment, i n dust r i a I chemicals, internal combustion engines, rolling mills, and some other goods to ·China without obtaining specific govern· ment permission. Death Ends Wild Chase In County By JOUN VALTERZA ........ 't,llllfatef I A 3o-year:0ld man from Orange driving a stolen ~der Patrol ~r al full ~re_ wri~ before"'dalift•tli11W' when he slammed the vehicle into a bridge abutment at San Onofre as authoriUes were in hot pursuit. The bizarre crash had an even more unusual prelude as Louis Edwin Hill of -415 Crest Road assertedly set up several ruses be-fore finally stealing the green patrol car at the alien check point south of the San Clemente city limits. The ·series of incidents, according to highway patrol spokesmen in Ocean.side, went like this : Highway patrolmen first noticed Hill In a parli:ed car on the San Diego Freeway downcoast of the che ckpoint at about 3 a.m. and the man, told officers he needed gasoline and a tow truck. The officers called for a wrecker and routinely left the scene. A few minutes later the same highway patrolmen received a call that motorists had seen a man lying in the roadway. They searched for the "victi m" but found no one. The next cal! came at 5:10 a.m. as I-fill approached Border Patrolmen on duty an d asked for the Highway patrol because he had been "involved in an ac- cident." The same CHP offi cers checked the ''accident scene " and found nothing. Appearin~ "shaky and upset," HiU then began walkrng to the side of the highway, aJid then suddenly feigned a collapse. Border patrolmen helped the man to his feet then placed Hill into a patrol car to drive him a short distance to the of- fice. As the patrolmen walked inside to call .an ambuJance, Hill slid across the front seat and sped off· In the car. Spokesmen from both agencies said the ensuing pursuit was frantic. Hill allegedly dro"'° the auto at speeds in excess of 100 miles per hour, heading north on the freeway. The pursuit lasted about three miles and as Hill approached the San Onofre Creek Bridge, officers said, he lost con- trol of the cart .and finally swerving in· (S.. CHASE, Paa• ZJ Nixon acted three days ~fore his departure on his trip to Peking where he will meet with Chinese leaders. (See related story, page 4) Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler who announced the trade step said the United States "would hope that they (the Chine se leaders) would welcome this ad- ditional step forward in opening up ad- d.itional channels to trade." Nixon's decision gives China equality with the Soviet Union and most of Its 'I'd Ptinch Bi11i' Eastern European allies in terma of trade with the United States. But it left Peking well short of the most-favored na.. tion status accorded to non-Communist countries and Poland and Yugoslavia. In June, Nixon lifted what had been an virtual embarga on trade with China. That order permitted free export to Chi na of 75 to 80 percent of the goods which could freely be exported to the (See TRADE, PBge %) Longtime Hughes Aide l11censed by Irving Book By 801 THOMAS ~~:~~ (AP)~--·~~ say! of autbor Cllf}:lfmng. Indications are that Dietrich's rem- iniscences as a longtime aide to industrial Howard Hughes, soon to be publl.shed. were used at least in part for Irving 's purported autobiography of the recluse billionaire. For 32 years, Dietrich soood in the Jong shadow of Haward Hughes. Now, the crusty 83-year-old ·Is In tbe Busing Foes Get 'Commitment' From President WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon today gave congress ional bu.sing foes a firm comm itment to take steps necessary to end forced busing of school chi ldren "as .,.;e know it today," spokesmen sai d. But he withheld his immediate support for proposed constitulional amendments that would outlaw busing. After an hour and 45-minute. meeting with the President, Sens. Howard Baker and William E. BrOclc, both Tennessee Republicans, said Nixon promised such · action as nectssary to ha1t forced busing. But they said be did not decide between three possible avenues of action: -Seek change. in Justice Department action toward school disegregatlon suits. -Seek changes t&roUih legislative ac- tion in Congress. -Support the propelled antlbwl/ng con· stitutional amendments. Brock quoted the Pruident as saying : "We caMot and wlJI not leave the situa· til,in as it is." Sen. Robert Grilfln of Michigan, the Senate Republican whip. told 'rep6rter' alter the meeting at the White House that ''the President made it clear that he is not going to be satisfied with the status quo. There is somethlng that will be done.'' 1potUght and enjoying it immensely. Dietrich's reminbcence.s, "Howard - '!be• Ahlaiini Mr. l!utbal " W!ll be published late ll!lil month by Fawc<tl. He was asked Why he wrote the book. "I delayed a long time; I left Howard in 1957," Dietrich remarked Sunday. "For a Jong period, I debated whether to wrJte the sfory. because I didn't want to be accused of pullina a 'kiss-and-tell' act.'' "I finally decided that t had an obliga- tion to the American public to show at close hand the abu ses of great wealth. I had see" money misused by legislators and other public officials. t was com· pelled on moral grounds to write: the book. "Obviously a1 83, I am not going to en· joy the monetary rewards from writing a book. 1 suffer lrom myastheni& gravi.s. which is a breakdown between the nerves and the musdes of the face," he said. Except for droopy eyelids, Dietr:ich. shows little evidence of his ailment, which he controls by medicine. His voice is as strong as when he held a com· manding post in the Hughes empire. He was slowed by a prostate operation Fri- day, but is expected to return to his: vigorous daily routine by the end of next wee k. ~ Born In Batavia, Wis .. Dietrich was the son of an Immigrant Gi!rman preacher. He was a certllled public accwntant in Los Angeles in 1925 when hired by 19- year-old Hughes. "I got tired ol tidying up after H&ward 's messes," said Dietrich. "I also was I.ired o( Howard'I broken promlses. For years, he had promised to give me a capital gains deal to l wauldn't hand over fnOlt· of mr salary to·,thfi goftr'Dlnent. Here, I was being pa~_m_ore lhltn half a million dollan a year and I was paying more In taxes than Howard with all his milllom." Dietrich 11 a business consultant and (~ DIETRICH, Pq• ll Orange Wudier • I ~sinesses such as oharmaCeut1caf, blbloglcala and prastheslamianulacttire. ·"Provision Jias also been ·made for 1pecially holPlllJt, whln•t"JU...,. '' ·fie U:ld._ ' + I """"""'\:.. !Bumi> ~!!! lhe. ·~bil•ct•\ hhd by wuw.t •World "have C\)lllpl!l*l ""11toe tmd~ =stnictlon Iii~ wlilm!I lfv.~ne.:Jle~poiids Firmly ' ~ to Santa Ana Fair sklei lhtougb, Tu-y. the wealherman cays. -but-""8btlY cooler tempotatul'el'-alq;'Ofln"ge County's coastline. l!liJll Tll;odaJ 60 to 73. Lowi lll(lllUy ID the 40'•· ~ ind';liitt cumJl[fted mon lhan jlrottcttln•ll i10tei-"'·ntne"r~p rlet." -. - • uroa laid Weatem World 11 atUI Plan· ~· to start conslno<:tlon ol the fint ~ue neit January and hopes to have ljie hospllal open ID 1974. 'Spirit' Aide Dead ' SAN DJE('.0 (AP) -Herbert A. Thomp&OIJ, a cab~etmaker woo helped build ,,,,,. Spiril ol s~ Loub" airplane which Charl..,A. Undtier&~ llew to Fran· ct, ii 1!ead al 7t. r ,. 1IY TOM; • • . -~·....,..,;,,~ t' TbO di)" al ,..,._ "'"'~.Valh!IDi'i Da» ~ ~'i:i~lft di>-di s:inia Ana , But .. there art no htarta anc! nowm in Lhls particular m.ltsive. And the . county clerk, Mt CUpld, ensured Jll deliver/ to Santa Ana 'a attomey1. The document cohtalns t r v I n e ' s res~ to tJie Jawsull}iled.last week by Santa Ana In which. City Attorney ~ames V(lllM!rs called for the lmmedlale dlsmanUJni of the brand D<W cllY and the rever,lon of 18.200 aero to the status ex- btln& before the Dec. 11 elecUon. · Thit lawsuit bo)dly proclaimed: "There ' . .. llOiatfol'l\!IDt·" ~··;-equally 1tron.ly '•n:;o!the·~ o11rv1ne "11ere ... I · ~ liere to 111)'.and will be hero for all the generations coming." Jrvlno attorney Mike McConnlck of the la• firm of Rutan and Tucker said tDday lhat )ls lltm wm ask Jor lhe Jmmedlalo dismlual of the latest Sant.a Ana com- pJ•toL "McCormick aald he will argue Feb. 24 before Supu~r Cow:t Judge Lester \ran Talenho .. lhat llM!·Santa Ana lawsuil r. based op a wrong appi:oech in law to the Irvine lncorporatlon·boue. • ' ''You C111 mt:bope io like this kind of aclion ID·the Corm utillJ.Od by sam. Ana," ' • M~c~. ~14., "We Will .uk for Im· JDOCllll& .wssal of the octlon .and ! lbl\lk lft Jiave an excellent chance of acblevtac Lhla:." Santa Ana's latest lawsuit npruents the clty's new move in ils bid to ail'n contrOt 6r the 931-acre "promised land" that allegedly became part of an agrtt· ment nine years ago between the city and the Irvine Company. Sant.a Ani clalma that the Irvine Com· pA11)' promised to ·take no action in co n- nection with tbe area for an eight year period at tile end of whkh Um• Santa Ana would be alJowcd to annex the tax· rkb enclave. ( Sanll Ana has .i.o oued the Irvine Company for lt5 million In I breach O! <:Ontrict action th•t· · 11 scheduled for preliminary hill•rln11 Feb. ·211n. Superior Court. Irvine councilmen last P'rtday author· ir,ed' today's reply to the Santa Ana Jaw. suit In a statement that eontalned the comment: "As a council we have pledged the ruu resources of our city and its people to preserve and protect tM city of Irvi ne and the human rights and prln· clples It stand, for . "We are confident both on the law and nn the moral posture of this matter that the city of trvlne will prevaJI completely and decisively.'' • INSIDE TODAY A top-fUghl <08t tu"" Nell Simon'• "The Star Spanillid Girl" Into a hit for th.-Wnt- m:imter Communit(I Thtdtfr. Set revitw, Page 17, l., M. '''' t ... 11... • (f lllwlll• • C1•ttlllff J.._ Ctmlet II CP'Ottwtftl lC Ot•lfl N•tkn 11 ••ll'Ori.t ,... ' •IM'•ri•I!!_. " 'lna!IC• l•I• '" tilt llt(W 11 "•l'fK-14 ..... Uillftn 14 M.111111191: ' Mn!• IJ NtllNllt Nfft ..... Gr•fttOI (o0af1 11 SHttt tl·U Sf'f>dl Mii,..,. 1 .. lt TeltllitleA 17 Tl!Mft1'1 IP WdlMr 1 Wlllft .... 11 w~,.;. ......_ 1•11 ..,..,~· 44 .. t I I • , .. ~ . . ·~ DAILY PIL.OT N Mondi,, February. 14, 1972 Irving Probe De_layed . ' ( Jj_uroness S]ujJif~-.lJ:p' ·But· Quorum Lackirig ----·-· ~ ... NEW YOA.K (A P) -Th~ beautiful, • ' ;rtie laW4j ays It.least J6 ot JI m1,11J be The magizine printed part or Irvine'• -blonde baroner;s, Nina van Pallandt, w,:is pruent to hear testimony, but there were book along.side excerpts from an un- 0\tOable to t.esl.ify In the Cifford lrvlng on1y 11 U1cre whtn Ute Danish cabarel published Jnan uscrlpt by free.Janee case today because not enough grand slnger arrived al the federal courthou se writer James Phelari to emphasize the Juror& &bowed up to make J. quorum. to tell what she claims u.i know about Irv· similarities. Navy Admits Secret Barge u Sinks in Lake ~AYVIEW, Idaho (AP) -Navy of~ f1cials at the Underseas Research and Dtvelopment Center. on Lake Pend Oreille near here, have refused comment on the reported sinking of a $5 million barge loa ded with electronic gear. Residents of this northern Idaho com · munity say it ls "common knowledge" the barge sank during a severe storm in la te January. But. !he Navy in San Diego confirmed the sinking and said a naval investigation i! under wa y. The gear whicr was lost belonged l-0 it but "there is nothing more which can be said at this time," said a spokesman fnr headquarters of the Underseas Research and Development Center at San Diego. "We have absolutely no comment on the subject," CWO Richard Rohrbacher, orficer in charge of the Navy unit at Bayview, said when questioned by reporters. "Any lnlormation wi!l have to be ob- tained from naval officials in San Diego .'" He said he's not sure who those of- fi cials are and "probably won't know un· tiJ some time next week." He said the incident is ba sed on hearsay information and said he "sees no reason for printing a news story on the subject." Al Landry, manager of Bayview Resort said most residents know of the incident, however. "It was one of the worst storms we've ever had in the area,'' he said. "The barge, which is loaded with a great deal of electronic gear, sank during the night, leaving a diesel fuel spill. "However, the lake was so rough due to the storm that the spill dissipated t1oon after," Landry said. From Page 1 TRADE ... Soviet Union. Only Cuba, North Korea and North Vietnam remain on the highly restricted category which once included China. The President's order did not affect imparts from China which have been ad- mitted without restriction to the United states since June. Ziegler said he kne.w of no export restrictiona: in China that could prevent J>.Jtie shipment of goods to the United States. The President's June order marked the first relaxation in U.S.·China trade in 21 years. The President's new order gives Chin a equality with most of Eastern Europe regarding both In direct ex.po rts from the United Stales and ex.porl.!l from other na- tions of produ cts made with U.S. technical data. The President also eliminated some of the red tape which has entangled dealings with China by U.S.-control\ed firms operating in Western Europe. Canada and Japan. The President elln1inated a re- qu irement that U.S.-controlled firms ob- tain export permission from I.he Treasury Department as well as from the country in which they are operating. Re- qu irements of the host country \vould not be affected. OUH•I COAST DAILY PILOT CIUllll: aMSI' f'UIUSKIMO ClOml'Alrr loltort N. WoM ,,......, ... 1"ulllllW' J1c\: •• em'T Vk8 P'nlld911 Md G91or•I .,,_.,, llumut lt'o.nl "''"' llio"''' A. M..,111•• Man.t;-4 Edflclr L Poler ICri'f R.wpor1 ._di CllY Edltw N~IMUOffke llJJ Newport Joule"•"' Mtm., u.1,...: r.o. In 1111, 926,J -°""" c.fl ~: DI WaT .., S..._. ......,_ •ee<11: m F-r A.-.. ....... a.di: l1VS •..cfl 9oo.o1...,.,.. .. ~ -Nwll 1J Qmlt» RMI .._ 'f' PIUfJ'~ """ wtlldl It ClllnbfNf .. .... ,. ..... ""111"'*! 4euY -.;..-f ,._ *' ... ....,.. .. •1tiw. ............. •ooctt. ...... --« °"'" #Nil•. .......,""*' ...,.; ·p--Y•n•,.. s... c.....w =:.i-.. =. ~.!t~·,:,,...-:.-=..-: • -.... ..,. Strwc, C.0.11 M-. J~ ••• t 17141 '4l~U1 ct ......... AtMilt 111 64J..U71 6MlllllMo '"" Or ..... COUt ... lttlllll ~'· ·"'' -....-. 10 ... ,,..ttona. .,.,.,., _,,.. -Ofl\'Ofti.-11 ..... .- ing and Howard Hughes. ·rime sa id it did not know how Irving Although delayed In her grand jury ap-gained access to Phelan 's manuscript. pearances, the $inger "·as bu s y The n1agazine said Irving told federal elsewhere. lnvestigatorll he would accept 11 prison She will appear on the D1t'k Ca\'l"!t Show for ABC on \Vcdncsda.v an d the David F'rost Show for <:roup \V la ter 1n the week. Asked whether lhe publkity su r- rounding her romance with Irving had upped her prlce for perforn1ing, manager J ohn Marshall said : "You're darnncd right il has. I'd be a !ool not to take advantage or it." Mea nwhile Time magazi ne published exce rpts of Ir ving's book which the magazine said proved mllch of it v.•as piraled. Time , calling Irving "Con Man of the Yea r,'' sa id Irving admitted the hoax 10 fede ra l prosecutors in an effort to spare his wi fe fro1n jail. Irving's law yer, Maurice Nessen, call ed the 'fime article "a gloating, prancln~. distortinf{ piece that is irresponsible in the extreme ." * * * Fron& Page 1 DIETRICH ... still goes daily to his office in Century Ci- ty. When he decided three years ago to write his book, a lawver friend in4 traduced him to James Phel11:n , a free- lance writer of magazine articles about Howard Hughes. After two years, Phelan produced a manuscript satisfactory to neither . a publisher nor Dietrich. Stanley Meyer, a film finan cial figure, offered to find a new writer. George l"idney, a film director familiar with my biographies of Harry Cohn, Irving Thalberg and Walter Winchell, recom· mended me. Dietrich and I worked together to pro- duce a totally new manuscript. Meanwhile, a copy of the previou!'I manuscript apparently fe!l in the hands of CAifford Irving·. The question is: h~w ? The manuscript circulated in publish ing channels and could have been copied. Dietrich noted that Meyer met with Irv- ing last June in an attempt to interest the author in wr iti ng Dietrich's book . But Meyer has deniea showing the Dietrich manuscript to Irving. Irving has not divu lged how he ac- quired the Dietrich manuscript. He terrn for fraud and perjury in exchange for !en ient y by Swis.!I authorit ies on for- gery and bank fr aud charg es aga inst his 'n'Jfe, .Edi th . In Los Angeles. a spokesman for the Hughes organization wa.!I asked about 1'1me's allegatio ns of fraud and replied, "'fha t 's "'hat we said Dec. 7 ." 'fhe spokesman, Richard Hannah , said !here v.•ou!d be no further comment until officials read full accounts of the manuscript comparison. The New ·York Daily News said it learned that U.S. and Swis.s authorities agreed secretl y to drop charges against Mrs. Irving if her husband cooperates and ''someone goes to jail." Bicycle Safety Flag Designed B y Students Due A Newport Beach sarety f!ag, which lwould be flown at all city elementary 5i:,-hool!'I with outstanding bicycle safety records, will be selected from designs by students, Police Chief B. James Glavas said today. In a report to City Manager Robert Wynn, Glavas asks for official sanction and participation in a desig11 contest by the City Council. Councilmen will consider the proposal tonight at 7:30 o'clock in City !!al!. "In conjunction with our bicycle safety program at the local e I em e n t a r y schools,'' Glavas said. "the students have exprcsr.;ed a desire Lo establish a clty safei.v flag ." Cfla vas suggested each elementary school could submit one or two flags to a judging panel of councilmen. civic leaders, judges, community me mbers and himself. They would pick the permanent flag. 'J'he flag would probably be a pen nan t abo ut 12 by 18 inches and would be of city colo rs. he said . Glava s said the police dt:partment and the Ne wport-Mesa Unified School District plan to sponso r the contest in February or -March. Past Long-time Balboa Man Remembers By CANDACE PEARSON Cll t~e D•ffY Plkll S1elf J . J . Parks is 81 years old. Jives alone in a little apartment in Balboa and doe sn't see mu ch anymore. '· "Nope. r can 't even see \'lha l you look like ," he tells visi!ors. sitti11g only a little more than a foot away. "I can't read D.t.ll'f P llCIT S!eU 1'~~10 SEEING IS REMEMBERING Retired Ba rber Pa rks anymore either." When he goes for his daily "'alks to the antique shop up by the block or the grocery store around the corner, ·he uses the Identifying white-tipped cane . But it doesn't matter too much that J. J . Parks' ef es can't see forward anymore -bfotause his mind and heart can see far back into Newport Beach's past. "Why , when I first came out here in 1914. it was real different,'' says J. J . His initials stand for "Jesse James." From l90C up Until three years ago, Parks was a professional barber. In 1914 , he began · working daily in ~ two-chair shop ln Tustin. But summers ~ those long-Ago. dusJy summers -he worked in Newport Bea ch. There were only five cars In Tu stin al that tim4 and about the ssme In Balboa. Street cars were the main form of transportation here and there were no weekly salary. ';I knew most everybody who lived here," he remembers. "A barber meets all the people if he works Jong enough ." As he speak s, one can almost see him fl ying down dusty streets and rickety wooden bridges to work at the one chair in the pool hall Jn Newport Beach. His haircuts cost 25 cents, but "at the cheaper shops you co uld get them for 10 cents.'' he scoffs. His shop v.·as always fu!I with fine con- versation. but the craziest day he recall s was in 1916, when Newport Beach went dry. "T never saw such a wlld day,'' he chuckles. "The drink v.1as cut off at mid· night and everybody had to ha ve their last one. Boy, the jails were full that day." But <1n even mor e inde lible memory re- mai ns. almosl haunting him. It is associa!ed v:il h a yr:J!owed, rou r- page docun1 ent : the last co py of the Tom ato Springs Gaze tte. Published in November, 1943, its con- tent -ediloriali7.ing against t h e Japanese -is not important to Parks. But its publisher -James Joplin, was. "He came to me one day and delivered that paper and asked if he could borrow my gun," Parks says quietly. "Said he had some rodents he wt1ntPd to tAke care of. I wouldn 't le t him ha ve it. "A few days later -he committed suicide. I guess he got one from some- one ." But most of the little man's memories are not unpleasant. He 's lived through many very different decades and watched the tremendous growth around him almost like an outsider, ever-adapting. ''Not like today, but Balboa was ashamed of Newport Beach 1n those early days," he says emphatically. "Balboa was one of the most high-toned places whe re society Jnlxed.," he muses, '1but Nev.·port -that W8! just bums. But they were some of the best old guys. '1 His blurred Vision ls clear in reca(>:- turing the times whelf "there were very few houses -just barleylield1 and good apple grounds." J. J. moved to Balboa pcrma,,enlly three years ago. One of his Jhree daughte.fs owns the old duplex, half of which he' occuptes. 'l'be three dattghttrs live iii BiShop, Sahta Ana and Tustin, A son Also Jlvu In Tustin. And he ·has "many, ma it y •' grandchildren, and g~eal-grandtjlildr~. Their visits keep him busy, as ,d9 his walks to the antique storf. , _ The barber who began balding at 18 ad· n1its that "so many changes go so fast, you don't noti ce them till they 're there. • ...,. .. ,...,.,... •tlbout ~ ,... ~:•,.,,....., ...,.. re.~'iEt~i pa ved roads. _ _ But Park!!, also fitt ingly · known as ••shorty," owned a prim itive mororcycJe. And he ltved welt but simply In a rtd cottage near Newport Pll'!r wh lCh rentca for S8 11 week, almost half of his $1 5-$18 "It's ~t the same 014 Newport and Bal!JOa ·anymore. You didn'! ~ive to ch.1ck autos all day Jong then;" he nys wl.!tMly. "But it's stlll okay with me. r don't think I'd live 11ny other place." UPI Ttl•PhOll Stan!!ing Tall Seven foot. two inches tall Terry Evans received a quick hello and goodby fro m the army today. The St. Lo uis college basketball player, \vh o _h.a d been classified 4F because of his height, \vas recently re· class1f1ed and ordered to report for an induction examination. Shak· ing hands ,~;ith Spec. 5 Donald Bo..,,iman , Evans said he wouldn't mind going into the Army ''if they u.·ant me." Maximum height in the Army, however, is 6'8". Huge Student Boycott Meets Busing Program AUGUSTA, Ga. (UPI) -Implemen- tation of Phase I of a federally-ordered school desegregatio n plan involving ma ssiv e busi ng met with a \\'idespread student boycott here today in Richmond County. Near.em pty bu ses arrived at ma ny of the count y's 52 publ ic schools and school su pe rintendent Roy Rolli ns said the boycott appeared to be "right efrective." The plan for the county was ordered by U.S. Dis trict Judge Alexander A. Lawrence of Savannah , and ls to be car· ried out in three phases. The in itlal phase today involv ed the clustering of seven sc hools. \\•ith the busing of an add itional 5,68l students. The pla n trigg ered a furor and br ought about a cal! for a sJ atE'"'ide bovcott. No pickets appeared at afiy or the schools but white parents milled on sidewalks and drove past the schools v.•1th children in th eir cars. The boycott, sponsored by Citizens for Neigh borhood Schools and the ~ave Our Ghildren Con•mitlee. defied an order by Lawrence expressly banning boycotts. Stanley Cook, head of the Citi zens for Neighborhood Schools said his group \\•ould sponsor another boyCQt t Feb. 28, just before implern entation of the second part of the judge's plan. Cook r.;aid he expe cts a massi ve withdrawal of stud ents by white par~nts later this "'eek. "I know some membe.rs of ou r group ha ve been contacting churches and other organizations to .ask !hem if they can use their build ings for tutoring," he said. Butler High School, which was not in- volved in the TJhase I desegregation order, reported about 1,400 of its J,600 S!lldents were absent today. At Richn1ond Academy. also unaffected by the initial order, off icials said only about 20 percent of its l,400 students v.•c re present today. At John Milledge Elementary School. one or the seven involved in Phase I and the scene of a ;vhite parents' protest this weekend, 9l black students arri ved by bus to attend classes. but onl y nine Whites showed up. The school has a total enrollment of 489, including 307 whites . Although the plan does not specifically set up racial quotas, it \Vou ld mean that enrollmen t o! each of th e seven schools "·oufd be at le ast C1ne·lhi rd black. Lawre nce's restraining order thre11tens a $1 ,000 fine and a possible one-year ja il sentence for anyo ne taking part in such a boycott. Fron• Page 1 CHASE ... tD the center divid er area, ~·hith has no fence. A3 pa1rol1nen canu: c 1 o s e. llill as~ aped off agalh In a clOud of dust, ~headed iOuth amr .once mO~ Jost control. - Pu rsuing officers reported that 1t that point the stolen unit µu..de three complete "doughnut., skids at high _s peed. Hill th~n swung a U-tur:n , 1cro11s the divider stretch and apparently floored the accelerator once more, sending the car s traight into a bridge abutmei:it at Basi lone Road. 1'he auto hit the. concrete, patrolmen said, at 11bout 90 miles an hour. '"f'hat was all she wrote," said a CHP spokesman. Officials said there was no apparent at· tempt by the fleeing driver to hit the breaks or correct steering. "The car just headed straight for the bridge,'' they said. Rescuers from San Clemente paliee and fire departments spent an hour cutting 11nd prying the wreckage to free HIJJ'3 body. Harbor Leader~ Of United Fund Given A, wards Officials of the Harbor Area United Fund have honored fh ose individuals and organiza tions who .thade significant con• tributions to the organization's 1971 fund- ralsi ng effort ' At a dinner-meeting recently it was re vealed that $427,000 was collected dur- ing the 1971 ca mpa ign, a JO-percent in· crease over 1970. Dr. Robert Moore, chairman of the campaign, presented leadership awards to Mrs. Merle Amundson, Clarence "Chic" Clark, Mrs. Richard Cramm, Robert }!eild, Ed Hirth, Mrs. Robert Krone. Vic Sherreitt, Fred Sorsabal, Leon Meeks, Cliff Wesdorf and Lou Yan· torn. Special awards went to the employes of the citif!s of Costa Mesa and Newport Beach and employes of Orange Coast College and the Newport-Mesa Unified School District. Outstanding campaign achieveme nt awards went to May Co., Sears, Avco Financial Services, Southern California Gas Co., Philco Ford, Southern California First National Bank , Bank of America. Hyland Labs, Pacific Te 1 e p h o n e , Southern California Edison Co .• Newport Marina Su pply, U.S. National Bank, Buf- fums , Saffell and McAdams, Merrill Lynch, the Automobile Clu b of Southern California . Union Bank. United California Bank and Security Pacific Bank. Airwest Flights Set to Resume Hughes Alrwest officials announced they will resume passenger service to 28 cities on Feb. 22. Flights to the other 46 cities on Hughes routes will be announced v.·Hhin 10 days. Anticipating complete scltlement or the eight-week mechanics strike, HugheJ made public the back·to-work schedule pending ratification o! a tentative agree- ment reached Feb. 6. If approved by the Aircraft Mechani cs Fraternal Association, the pact also must pass the pay boa rd. 1'he 570 striking mechanics will vote after all procedures for calling emp\oyes ba ck to work have been ironed out. The airline reached back-to-work AC· cords with pilots and stewardesses la st week. Recordings on Sex? ROME (lJP[) -A record compa ny has la unched Italy's first sex ed ucation recordings. The idea js to spare em- barrassment to parents and teachers by having lessons read out in unemoti onal tones by men and women announcers. Try Us • • • • You'll like · Us • FiJU Selecti.ons of "New ailla sed lte.n:r.s of . .. All Sorts and Varieties EVERYTHING UNCONDITIONALLY GUARANTEED CQSTA •fSA JEWELRY & . LOAN ·DPJ1fDaill'J·to I •• -~ .~.... ' ·.: Come 1n onil '!row.it A;ouftd .. • 1:939 ·iffWP,OllT. IL-YD: .. Phone 646•7741 ·• DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA. ltlwHn HarbM end llniadwiy f I If ,, ,, . I' , J } I I I I • • • ---· • Orange Coast Tedayts Fl•al N.T. Stocks I VOL. 65, NO. 38, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALiFORNIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1971 c TEN CENTS Power By JOSEPH IV. GRIGG LONDON (UPIJ -Millions of Britons shivered today in dark. unheated home5 and off~es. Industry, blacked out and disrupted -by crippling power·curbs, laid off teris of thousands of workers. London city authorities ordered most street lights, already knocked haywire by hourg..Jong power cuts, 11witcbed off altogether until the crisis ends. That meant a vlrtual wartime blackout. si milar to World War lL tor thi.! capitaJ Man Killedf In Stolen Patrol Car By JOHN VALTERZA OI 111t O.Ur P'llll Sl•lf A 30-year~ld man from Orange driving a stolen Border Patrol car at full bore was killed instanUy befor~ dawn today when he slammed the vehicle into a bridge abutment at San Onofre as authorities were Jn hot pursuit. The bizarre crash had an even more unusual prelude as Louis Edwin Hill or 415 Crest Road assertedly set up several ruses before finall y stealing the green pa trol car at lhe alien check point south of the San Clemente city limits. The seri es of incident:!, according to highway patror spoke smen in Oceanside, went like this: Highway patrolmen fi rst noliced Hil l In a parked car on the San Diego Freeway downcoast of the checkpoint at about 3 a.m. and the man, told officers he needed gasoline and a tow truck. The olHcers called for a wrecker and routi(lely left the scene. A few mtnutes later the: same highway patrolmeri received a call that motorists had see n a man lying In ihe roadWay. They starched for the "vfctiffl'' but found no one. The next call came at 3: 10 a.m. a~ Hill approached Border Patrolmen -on duty and asked for the Highway patrol because he had been "involved in an ac· cldent." The same CHP offi cers checked the •·acciderit scene" and found nothing . Appearing "'"1aky and upset,·· Hill then began walking to the side of the highway, and then suddenly feigned a collapse. Border patrolmen helped the man to llis feet then placed Hill into a patrol car lo dri ve hlm a short distahce to the of· lice. As the patrolmen walked in&ide to call an ambulance, Hill slid across the: front scat RJ'\d sped off in the car. Spokesmen from both agencies said the ensuing pursui t was frantic. Hill alleged ly drove the auto al speeds Jn excess of 100 miles per hour. heading 11orlh on the freeway . The pursuit lasted about three miles ;ind as Hill approachod the San Onofre Creek Bridge, officers said. he Jost con- trol of lhe ca r, and fi nally swerving in- lo the center di vider area, 'vhich has no fence. As patrolmen came c Io s e , HHI nssertedly sped off again in a cloud of dust. headed south and once more lost control. Pu rsuing officers reported that atihat point the stolen unit made three complete "doughnut" skids at bl&b speed. Medical Center ' Near UC Irvine In Firs~·Stages A team' C>f three arcll\tectural ,fltm111 has been hired to design the· nr.r..J~ ... o! • private hospllal cwnplei·lta1!0clters hoJie wifll become ·port: o! •tho UC lnllne mediCll ctnter:" Donald s. auma. cha)riun,of tho boin( o! Weotem World M ..... I Touildation, said tbe. finl)I wm dtli&n lilo lolmdallon hollital'1 fin) IUllMJI .!Isl.own flOO mll· Uon C.mplU at .. a,, coot\ lf'lll......., '25...mUQon. . ~ ,,.. ...... • Tiie tlr• uobltocll ... ,.,.,,. ..... ... w11iori\t1 1.o1 -Anclkl. ,wuu.. -Panii«s Ol'CorOna de! llw 1iii;11ew~ on<! ;s<btt 0Nlba1u./, Tnu • .,: . , Jci Burn• 11id. that 1\'~ •WW hu already tece!ved the iault.• · o1 • ·topoirllihlcal and land pllA itllll1 ind an e<'Onomlc olu<ly for the project, plJlnned it tho Sbulheasl ~n•r or , MacArthur Boulenr¢ •t>d University pri... ad)•· cent to the UCI campus. Bums 1atd the new medical center !"will he the flnl anywhere ~t from lhe ground up." He Hid It wi!I conslsl of the foundotlon llospital -the first 1lage oi• which wtll have 1112 beds -the UCI medlcahollege, the UCM10spllll and' Olll>potienl !1tWtle1. - Crippling British Cities city of elght mfillon. Even Buckingha m Palace was dark and chiUy. But Queen EHzabeth II was not. affected. She is on a stale visit to 'Jbitiland with .her tNsband Prince Philip and daughter Princess Anne. With' a six":wetk-o1d nationwide strike of 280,000 coal miner! biting deep into fuel supplies, Britain was iripped by IU grim- mest indu strial crisis in a guarteN:en- tury and perhaps. since the 19%8 general strike. British newspapers called it .. Black Monday." Government officials predicted millions would be laid off by m1dweek. __ b The opposition Labor· Party, Umberingo up for an onslaught against the govern- ment in PMliarrient later today, lam- basted it for "-gross mishandling of the dispute from the outset.'' In a . .statement published art.er a meeting of the party':! national executive committee',:i~accused the government of "incom~tenee" ·iA 1ackling the con· Ol!L Y Pit.OT ,.hot. DI' ltkh•r• KatPtltr Cheer l l p fly . J .ingo Bill Tischler, a Hantington Beach pilot belier known as ""Jingo The Medcidine Man" cheers Mrs. Orpha Renken. 84, prior to her surgery for a broken hip today at Costa Mesa Mem orial Hospital. Mrs . Renk en was recovering thJs afternoon . Preview of Fairview Parli: To Precede Voting Meet A special preview of plans fo r Costa Mesa'tt pending Fairview Park \irjider- ness .recreational area pr ecedes tonight 's Meet lhe Candidates forum at Estancia tlig b School. The 7 o'clock session is the second in a series setting Uie stage for the upcoming April 11 Costa f\1esa City Council election, \Vilh 20 ca ndidates in the running. Sponsored by the Govern men t a I Awareness Committee . the forum is limited to challengers only. Car Thief Gets Helpful 'Boo8t' ~~ are tblf tt ~ owos '°m . , 110meb<jd)lc.-_:;m ,t~1 u. veter.llH>Olice' ~(~g~rs aay. Alan II. Elief to\{-Odsta M&o p0Uct safurday that tomeone made off wlth hL, 19$8 1Volbw•gen plrked at zoa Thurin Ave., listing a '300 'loss estimate. ·He expJalned' it 'has a broken starter and'the dftermlned auto thief would have li'ad to:enll1t I.he aid of lin accomplice to puah''H~wlfh another car to·get lt started. "S!l:fir, ifhun't beon r0<0vored. ;,11 Stephen Gustlin ls chairman or !he group. whose maqing addresr; is listed as 845 Joa nn St.. honle of city council can· didate Ted C. Bologh. He. said two weeks ago 1n announcing no incumbents would be invited to outline thei r p!atfonns for re-election that they must run on the basis of their past records. Questioned about. his affiliation with the Governmental Awareness Committee at a Thursday Meet the Candidates Night sponsored by the Harbor A r e a Democratic Club, Bologh explained its size and function. Membership is literally 75,000 er thereabouts, he noted, since theoretically every citizen of Costa Mesa is interested in and aware of good goveroWnt. Bologh responded to council candidate Tom. Martus ' questioning of lls mem- berslilp by uying the Governmental AWareoeBll ·Committee does include 11 specific persons in positions o f leadership. flyers reminding vcters or the meeting 1\st BQlogh a1 committee coordinator and Gustlin .as ·its chairman. A, series . or slides and film presen· tatlons will ~ Jncluded in the showing of park .~!ans ·!&' the, Eotancia lligh ·School Ecology·Club and !acuity advi•on. sequence!!> of the crisis "'which should have been foreseen and which have led to panic measures inflicting additional damage on the whole economy." The automotive industry was hit hardest. British Leyland. J a g u a r , Triumph, R.Over, Ford of Britain. Vaux· hall -General Motors' British subsidiary -Chrysler and the J06e ph Luca aut.Q.i::nobile compon ents plant' laid off or put nearly 50,000 workers on part·tlme. Thousands or Yorkshire and Lancashire steel and textile workers were sent home. The state-run British railroad system canceled l.<XXI trains and slopped heating those still running to save electric power . Commute~ shivered as they jammed in- to the trains still running . Officials warned that vital food supplies were in danger. In so me parts of the country, milk bottling plants closed and milk was rationed. Bread and egg supplies also were threatened because baker ies and packini; plants v•tre wilhout po~·er. Rotating power cuts blacked out 10 tl'I I ~ percent of the country in tur n for the fifth successi"e day. Strett traffic lights went out In blacked-out areas, causing immense jams. On the London stock market nearly $J billion was knocked off share prices 111 !he first few minutes of lrading. China Trade Opens Nixon LiftS1More Restrictions WASHINGTON (UPI ) -President Nixon removed some of the restrictions on U.S. ex:ports to Chlna today, giving Peking the same status as the Soviet Union among America's trading partners. The step will permit American businessmen to sell locomotives, con- struction equipment. i n du st r i a I chem icals, internal com bustion engines, rolling mill s, and some other goods to China without obtaining specific govern· 1nent permission. Nixon Makes Com1nitment To Bus Ban \VASH INGTON fUPI J -President Nixon todQ gave congressional ~sing foes a. firm commitment to take steps necessary to end forett.I busing of achool childreo "as we know it today;• •Poh.!mfll' said . But he withheld his immed iate support for proposed constitutional amendments that would outlaw busing. After an hour and 45-minute meeting with the President, Sens. Howard Baker and William E. Brock, both Tennessee Republicans. said Nixon promised such action as necessary to halt forced busing. But they said he did not decide between three possible avenues of action : -Seek changes in Justice Department action toward school desegregation suits. -Seek changes through legislative ac· lion in Congress. -Support the proposed antibusing con· stitutional amendments. Brock quoted the President 8$ saying: ''We cannot and "'ill not leave the situa· lion as It is." Sen. Robert Griffin of Michigan , the Senate Republican whip, told reporters after the meeting at the White House that "lhe President made it clear that he is not going to be satisfied with the f,Jalus quo. There is so mething that will be done " Thief Steals 5 Men's Suits A busy browser bundled up five suits at the Sears, Roebuck & Comp a n y menswear section Swlday and breei.ed out lhe door to a conveniently waiting car. The only trouble is. store personnel told Costa Mesa police, he didn't pay the $425 listed in a burglary loss repart filed afterwa rd. Clerk Judy Dabiuch realized ,what was happening and managed to get a license number before the getaway car zoomed out of the South Coast Plaza Shopping Center. A vehicle check run through com- puterized crime records showed the car listed by Santa Ana ]X)lice in a similar bur(lary cast, investigitors said. Nixon acted three days before bis depa rture on his trip to Peking where he \Viii meet with Chinese leaders. (See related story, page 4) Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler who announced the trade step said the United States "would hope that they (the Chinese leaders) would welcome this ad· ditiona l step forward in ope ning up ad· ditional channc!st trade." Nixon's decisi gives China equality Y:ith the Soviet nion and most of its 'I'd P111ach fJitn' EA.!ltcrn European allies in terma of trade with the United States. But Jt left Pek.ing well short of the most-favored na. tlon status accorded to non-COmmunia t countries and Poland and YugOlilavia. In June, Nixon lifted what had been an virtual embargo on trade with China. That order permitted rree export to China of 75 to 80 percent of the goods whlch could free ly be exported to Lhe !See TRADE. P•ge %) L~ngtime .Hughes Aide Incensed by I1~ving Book By BOB THOMAS LOS ANGELES (AP l -"'I'd like to ]X>ke him in the nose,0 Noah· Dil~h ll!'l'of<llutl19r Clifford !t<vli(. " · Indications are that Dletrlch's rem. lnisce11ces as a longtime aide to industrial Mesa Planners To Recommend Okay for Lots Howard Huch<•. soon to he pobi!Wd, were UHd at Jea11t in part for JrvJtia1a purported autobiography or tilo rtcluso bilUonair<. ' r For 32 yei111, Dietrich llOOod Jn the Iona shadow of Howard Hughff. Now. the ~sty 83-year-<ild ls Jn tbt spotlight and ·enjoying It immensely. Dietrich's reminiscences, "Howard - The Amazinl Mr. Hughes," will be published late· UUs month by FawceU. Ht was asked why be lVTote the book. "l delayed 1 Jong Ume ; J left Howard in 1957,'' Dietrlch remarked Sunday. "For a Jong period, I debated .whe.thtf ta write !he story, be<:ause I dJd;;•t want The Costa Mesa Plann ing Commission ~t~ accused of pullln.ll' a 'Jtis.s.and-tell' is expected to recommend tonight !or !uture city council action the divi sion of "I finally decided that I had an obliga· 57 acres .south of Sunnower Avenue and tion to the American public to show at 'vest of Bear Street be divided into 340 close hand the abuses of great wealth. I rrsidential lots. had seen money. mi sused by legislators -and other public officials. I was com· And a petition to rezone approximately pelled on moral grounds to write the 39 acres west of Bear Street and between book. lhe San Diego Freeway and South Coast "Obvlously at 83, t am not going.to en· Road to commercial st atus wlll be also joy 1.he mo netary rewards from writing • analyzed . book. T suffer from myaslhenla gravis, If recornmended. this would be in viola· which is a breakdown between the nerv'!s lion of the city·s General Plan for 1990, and the muscles of the face," he said. bul only 10 acres south of South Coast Except fer droopy eyelids, Dietrich Road would be a high-density residential shows little evidence oC bis ailment area. ~hich he control11 by medicine. His voi~ Commercial zonlng would also allow IS as strong as when he held a com. development of a $20 million recreational manding post in the Hughes empire.. He comple:t proposed by Four Seasons was slow~ ~ • prostate operation Fri- Villages, Inc., a private Newport Beach day, but is expected to retlll1l to his firm . ~orous daily routine by the end of next A long-term lease on fair grounds land week. . . was previously considered by the direc--Born in Batavta;Wls., Dletrtch was the tors of the Orange County F.sir Board for son of an immigrant German preacher. the same complex. He w.u a etr:tlfTed public acco.untant hi If the rezoning is granted and Four Loa Angel~ In 1925 when hJred by 19- Seasons does not develop the property year-old Hughes. the add ed 29 acres could become a poten: "I a:ot tired· of tkbilng up... after tial high-density residential area for Mt Howard's m~,. &a id filetr~. "I also units. The resulting population, services (Sfe Dlfll'RICll, Pqe 2) and traffic increases would be much ~ooner than the city expected . The commiss ion wants ta delay ill! declslon until it determines how to insure the development or the recreational com· plex and how to halt the additional 8~1 units if it Is not developed. .,. .. ,. ..... ~ , .. _JT~ine-Resp(tnds:Firmly to Santa Ana l ·'W'·.·.. . Weailier Fair 1klea thJ'Oollh ~. the wtatht~ • • ~ but · aJJc!!tly cooler l<!nf>et•~ Oranp County's coutJlne. HJclii,Tlleoday 60 lo 73. Low• mortly fn the 40'•· .. .... ~· "i.i~·i;o· • :<( 11=,~~Y 1tron11)' 1~ :W .~Iii( .a II-• •alM"'~'"l'llo"l!lly ol !rvlne la here as a 1?!~.m .. ~.f<!'Ufe~_dlfof 111\nll !1Ct and 1"ft'!O llaY aJld,"Will be here for ~-all lhe (ti>eral!oos coming." Bui '\bf~•, an .,.;~. and "-1. tn il'Vlne attoriley Mike McCormick of the thla partltUlar, milllff. And· tfle.;iSOilnty law flnn o! llutan artd Tucker said today clerk, not pipjd,·"'11UNd Ila ..Sver1,to !hat lta llrm wUb aok !or the lmmedlite Simi Anl'o•atlomeyt. · ·" dl.omlual of the lal•ot Sanla Ana com· 'fhe Joa/1110111 C(Onlalt>< I r v t n e ' s plaint. ret~ to Q>e faWitllfllled JU! week by McCormick said he will argue Feb. 2~ Soutll;Aila•ln,wllldl.Ql)l,Allorney ~ames be(ore Superior Court Judge Lester Van Wllhcil cillaf " lilr lij. Immediate Talenbove tlial thO"Santa Ana low•ult is dilmanttlllg Ii lhe 'brand.,.., city ·aild the baiOd on a wrong approach in law to the reMk>n of 18,200 acru to the atetus ex· Irvine inc;»rP,Ott&n.lsaUe. lstlr« beloro tbe Dec. IL •lecllon. . "You can nOt bOjie tp take thb kind o! Thal'l1w1uit boldly pl'OCl1tmed' ''There •ction in the forniU\lllJOCI by.Sonia Ana.·• ' ' . . ,, ' • ,,,_ . -----. ~ Mce..-mick Slid. "'We wUI "k for im- medllte dlllnlual or the acllon and 1 think. we. baVe an ticellent .cha.nee of achie•lni tjlll." Santa Ana's Jateat laws~lt repreSents the city'• oeW move In U.1 bid to gain control of the 938-acre "promised land" that alle&edly· becamo part ol an 11ree- ment nine ye•rs ago between the city and the Irvine· Company., - SantP. Ana claltns that tbe Irvine Com· pany promised to take no act:ion In con· nection with the area for· an el«ht year period at tho end ,of whloh time Santa Ana lfOUld be allowed to annex the tax· rich enclave. • • • 1 ... • • • ' . Santa Ana bas alao sued tbe Irvine Company !or It~ rnUllon In a breach of contract action that Is sclfedUl~ for preliminary hearings Feb. 21 fn Superior CC'urt . · Irvine council men last Friday author. Ired today's reply to the Santa Ana Jaw. suit Jn a staterhl':nt that contained the ~m ment: "As a council we have pledged the ruu resources of our city and ita people to preserve and protect the cfty of Irvine and the human rlghts and prJn. cl pie.a It 11Land1 tor. "We are confident both on the law and on the moral JJ(lfture oC thi.! matter that the city of Irvine wUI prevail completely and decisively." , . - INSQ)E, ~D~'I' A !41>-fllghr ~I lun11 Ndl Simon'1 1'Th1 Siar Spangltd Girl'' into a hit for the Wi1i-1 mhuter Cotn!D"nltu Tll<aU... See rt"Pio.l, Pao« 17. =~'a' • " NtflMlti ...... 4-f °" ..... -CWtltr ,. -,, ... •• 'Mlthtl 1••• ,......... 11 --u • •• .,..,. f llil'lllt. Wtltl H ........ ....,,}).IS w .......... . " -. - .. % D•IL'I PILOT C M-. ~.....,,. 14, 1912 ----.~~~~--==-:.:::=!_:::.__::;! ~avy Sile11t " r~~inl<lng . pCBarge .. • HAYV IEV.', Id:.ho (AP1 -1\'.avy nr. !ci11ls at the Unders eas Research and Pevr!opment Crnter, on Lake Pend Orrille nea r here. have refused comment ~ the reported sinkin" of a $5 million J>,arge loaded with electron ic gear. Residen~ or this northern Idaho eon1· munity :!lay it is ''common knliw !edge'' the barge sank duru1g a se•,.ert .~lorm in la te January. Bui the Navy in San Diego confirm~ J.be sinking and 1a1d a naval investigation ~ under way. :, The gear "''h1f'h wall Jost belonged to it ~t ··there is nothing more which can be 1aid al this time," said 11. spokesman for headquarters of the Underseas Research and Development Center at San Diego. "\.\-'e have absulutely no comment on the subject," C\VO Richard Rohrbacher, elf1err in charge of the Na vy unit at 8ay\·iew , said when questioned by rC'J>Orlcrs. ··Any inrorn1ation will have lo be ob- ta ined from naval orficials In San Diego." \ . r '· , -ur1 T111111t,. No .Jury quorum Irving Testimony Hits . Snag in ·NY • NEW YORK (AP ) -The beautiful, blonde baroness, l'fina van Pa1i;indt, w;i,! unable to testify In the Cifford lrvin g case today because not enough grancl jurors showed up to make .1 quorum. The law says at least I& of 22 mu st be present 10 hear testimony, but there were only 11 the re when the Danish cabaret singe r arrived at !he federal courthouse to tell what she claims to know about Irv- From Pqe 1 DIETRICH ... was tired of Howard 's broken promise!. For years, he had promised to give me a capital gains deal so l wouldn't hand over most of my sa lary to the government. Here , I was being paid more than half a million dollars a year and I was paying more in taxes than Howard with all his mill ions." ing and Howard Hughes. Although delayed in her grand jury ap- pearances , the singer was busy elsewhere. She will appear on the Dick CaveU Show for ABC on Wednesday and the David F'rost Show for Group W later in the week . Asked 1-1·hethcr the publicity gur· rounding her romance with Irving had upped her price for performing, manager J ohn Marshall .said : "You're damned right it has. l 'd be a fool not to take ad vant;ige of it ." "'f\feanwhile Time magazine published exce rpts of Irving's book which the 1nagazine said proved much of it 1-1•as pirated. 1'ime, calling Irving "Co n Man of the Year," said Irving admitted the hoax tn federal prosecutors in an effort to spare his wife from jail. He said he's not su re who those of· ficials are and "probably won't know un· W sometime next week. 11 HOWARD HUGHES IRIGHT J, AIDE NOAH DIETRICH AT 1947 CONGRESSIONAL HEARING Time Magazine Calls Irving 'Autobiog ra phy' Identical With Earlier Manuscript Dietrich ts a business consultant and still goes daily to his office Jn Ce.ntury Ci- ty. Wh en he decided three years ago to write his book, a lawyer friend in- troduced him to James Phelan, a free- lance writer of maga:r:ine articles about Howard Hughes. Irving's lawye r. Maur ice Nessen, called the Time article "a ~loaling. prancing, distorting piece Lhat is irresponsible in the extreme.'' The magazine printed part of Irving's book alongs ide excerpts fcom an un· published manuscript by free-lance \\1riter James Phelan to emphasize the similarities. He said the incident is based on hearsay information and said he "sees no reason for printing a news story on the subject." - Al Landry, manager of Bayview Resort said most residents know of the incident, however. "II was one of the worst storms we 've ever had in the area." he said. "The barge, which is loaded with .a great deal of electronic gea r, sank during the night. leaving a diesel fu el spill. "However, the'lake was so rough due to the storm that the spill dissipated soon alter," Landry said. • Charges Pe1iding Against Three In Sale of LSD Criminal charges are pending today against a couple of Carlsbad men and a Costa Mesa companion, following t h e alleged sale of 2,000 LSD tablets to an un- dercover police agent Friday night. Exhaust Fumes May Have Caused Mesa Accident A Costa ~1esa man ~·ho told police he has comp!ainecl to lhe car dealer about toxic exhaust fumes inside his 1972 car making him drowsy has a new gripe to· day, but he isn't dr iving !he car anymore. James V. Barngrover Jr., 56, of 3006 Clubhouse Circle, finally dozed off completely Saturday night. ran off the road , ramming a power pole and a park· ed car. The victim escaped the 6 p.m. acc ident on Baker Street near Labrador Drive \vith only a nose la cerat1on, according to police. tlis car and the second vehicle it struck. hn1vcver, susta ined nl a j or damage and power lines 1-1·ere do1\'ned by impa ct with the pole. Barngrover told police he 1\'0 uld go to his family physician for medica l treat- ment. but the car he had complainefi about -plus the Southern California Edison C:Ompany pole -req uired major gurgery. • P.ark Official Retires; He','70 Going on 40' Laurel Shot•,,,.el! reached 70 tod ay. but s;iys he feels 40. He is retiring after 22 years as park superintendent for Costa Mesil. Although his first day as superintendent for Costa. ~fesa 's only park found hirn 11·\thout the keys to the tool shed a.nd \vater pun1p, he renu1ined to bc<:ome in- ~trun1ental in developing tl1e city's e ~· pandcd parks systen1 . lie was honored recently by past and present city official s, fel101v employcs and several civic organizations <1t a luncheon. He knew about the luncheon <1nd that people connected with the parks department 1-1·cre in\'ited , but he ,,·as astounded 1-1·hcn 125 sho11·ed up at the 1'.1esa Verde Country Club. City Manager Ffed Sorsaba\ led !he presentations of plaques and gifts loll n\\•· ing lunch, and Shoty,·ell closed the pro- After two years, Phelan produced a manuscript satisfactory to neither a publisher nor Dietrich. Stanley Meyer, a film financial figure, offered to find a new writ.er. George ~idney, a film director familiar with my biographies of Harry C:Ohn, Irving Thalberg and Walter Winchell, recom- mended me. Dietrich and I worked together to pro- duce a tota lly new manuscript Meanwhile, a copy of the previous manuscript apparently fell in the hands of Clifford Irving_ The question is: how? The manuscript circulated in publishing channels and c®ld have been copied. Dietrich noted that Meyer met with Irv· Ing last June in an attempt to interest the author in writing Dietrich's book . But Meyer has den ied showing the Dietrich manuscript to Irvi ng. Ir ving has not divulged how he ac· quired the Dietrich man uscript. From Page 1 TRADE ... Soviet Union. Time said it did not kn ow how Irving gained access to Phelan's manuscript. The magazine said Ir ving told federal investigators he would accept 1 prison term for fra ud and perjury in exchange for leniency by Swiss authorities on for· gery and bank fraud charges against his wife, Ed ith . In Los Angeles, a spokesman for the Hughes organization was asked about Time 's atlegatlons of fraud ;ind replied, "That's what we said Dec. 7." The spokesman, Richard Hann;ih, said there would be no further comment until officials read full accounts of the manuscript com parison . The New i'ork Daily News said 1t learned that U.S. and Swiss ;iuthorities agreed secretly to drop ch;'lrges aga inst Mrs. Irving if her husband cooperates and "someone goes to jail." U.S. Attorney Whitney North Seymour Jr. declined comment, but Swiss officials dismissed the report as "nonsense." The trio was arrested and booked on charges of sale of dangerous drugs ;ind auto theft, after a rendezvous at a com· tnerclal district ju11t off the San Diego Freeway. David P. Blevins, 19, Kenneth E. panchero, 22, both or Carlsbad, and Jack lngram, 22, whose street address in C:Osta Mesa couldn't be confirmed, are held in lieu of a recommended $20,000 bail each. He Counts Days OtVy Cuba, North Korea and North Vietnam remain on the highly restricted category which once incl uded China . The President"s order did not affect imports fr om China which ha ve betn ad- mitted without restriction to the United States si nce June . Swiss Pushing For Extradition ' They were snatched up by waiting police, moments after detective Bob Len- nert allegedly paid $1,500 cash for the hallucinogenic drug tablets. "We feel this particular load was head- ed for the younger users in C:Osta ~fesa, ' Detective Sgt. John Regan said today. He and colleagues in the department's new beefed-up narcotics detail have been making a concerted effort to cut off illicit drugs d~tlned for local school campuses. The assigned fcader of lhe team eslabllshed by Chief Roger Neth -and characterized now as Neth's Narks - hinted It was through campus sources that the three suspects' activities came lo attention . Subsequent investi,l!:al ion led the rar us- ed by Slevin~. Bancharo and Ingram 1n be impounded as a probable stolen veh i· cle. Police ha ve no owner listed for the car. but noted engine serial numbers and other identifying marks had been strip- ped from it. The registra tio n also reportedly did no t check out ~·:ith records kept in Sacranwn- to. 01AN61 COAST DAllY PILOT CMIWlfli OlAS1' PUIUSHntfl COMPNIT l:tkrt N. W..I '""'*"" -h!MW. J1c.k a. C utlty Vlclll l"NiHrlf eM 0.-•I Mlflllllll Tlto1111•• K1••ll E<tllor Tlto1111i A. Mar11i.l11e M•M9i.nil li.di!OI' CIMirlt• H. Looi lticlri•f'i P. N1Q AAW.111 Mtntvll"ICI Ed•IW• Cuk M-Offlu 130 w,,, 1., srr,.t M1 m1t AJ'ron: P.O. JQ IS60, t26l6 --....... ._.: un .. ...,., ao.1tvm ......... -.Cll: m ,_,A-.... ~!!;!:. •wt1: 17t1S hod! ~ _, __ ,,. .au ..... ., ~ .., RETIRES AFTER 22 YEARS Costa Mesa's Shotwell Ziegler said he knew of no export Heroin Dea.ler Nlc1y Be Free Agai1i prisoner, for his crirnes against the state restrictions in China that could prevent NEW YORK (UP!l -Sy.oiss authorities ~rmally demanded lOOa y the extradition of Mrs. Edith Irving. In Bern. the f<'ederal Justice and Police 1'.i inistry annuonced it dispatched a 1ine· page demand to Washington by diplomatic courier for the return of Mrs . Irving. a Swiss citizen. She is wanted there for prosecution on chargell of fraud and passport falsification. Convicted heroin dealer Henry C.Orte z will live the next 257 days minute by minute. He may count them in his sleep. He may become a free man -sigain - in 257 9ays. He may not. The Corona man 1\·ho hccan1e an ad· diet, then a pusher, then in 1962 a Anto11ia Tl1oma s Evidentiary ' Hearing Ordered ' A hearing that co11ld n:!~U IL in !hr freed on1 of cnn1•1c-ted killer An1 n11 1::1 Thomas of San CIC'Tnrnle 11·as ordered to· da y in Or<inge County Su perior Court. Presiding .Judge Bruce Sunu1er (lgrred to hold the cvidcnti;iry hea ring foll owing the granting to attorn ey l)udley Gr:iy of a writ of habeas corpus signed Friday in San Bernardino Superior Court. Gray represented the Fil ipino ~·oman in two superior court n1urder trials. Gray said he was grantecl the writ on condition that the hearing be held In lhe Orange Count y cn11rt No rl:i1e h:is hrrn set for the new inquiry but Jud~c \Vi\liam J\1\1.(ray has bern assigned to thr ~pecial cofttt session. Gray said today that ~trs. Thon1as. who is now 29, h:is served four ye<1rs of the life sentence she received from Judge Rnbcrt Gardner in April of 1968. Gray saicl he intended to prove at the ne1v hear ing that the Orange Counly District Attorn ey's Office rcnc~ed on a promise niade to hi;i1 before the trial. The To rrance la•v ycr said it was agre<'d that \'Ital c\'\dcncc tater used against his client at the trial 9.·ould be turned over lo the prosecution if i\lrs. Thomas passed lie detector and hypnosis tests. ·Gray sa id she pa ssed lhos:e tests but the prosecution im mediately utilized. evidence that would never have been allo11•ed to pa ss into their hands wi thout the promise that it wouid not be used against h~ clien t in a courtroom. Mrs. Thomas was con11icted four years i:igo of the murder of her infant son, James. Jr., following a trial in which It was successfully alleged that she added a crustic solution to the milk in his feeding bollle. The sol~tM:ln was neve r identified. Afl<f ~1rs. Thoma.~ denied in twn trial s that she had ever fed her child anything other than his formulA or that she had ever contrmp\at~ the murd4lr of th« baby. Gray said todaf that Mrs. Thofnal 11 highly rtgardtd b~ outhorllies •I Fronleri:i prl ~on and is "ideal mate.rial for release and rehabiHtatlon." I nf Californi a "'ill be eligible for parole gram with his thanks. the shipment of goods to the United Oct. 26, after being mistakenly freed late ·rhe Shotwells 1-1·il! now spend more States. last year. l1n1c at their desert hol"!le "·hich they The President's June order marked the He and his family -including a s1s \C'r built north nf Yucca \.'si!ley. They may first relaxation in U.S.·China trade in 21 employed by Hughes Aircraft Corpora· retire there later. years. lion's semiconductor plant in J\1ewport ~le 11·111 continue his hobbies of sket ch· The President 's new order gives China Reach -rejoiced at his relea se frrim the 1ng, pa1~ting and photography and equality with most of Eastern Europe stone and steel fortre!'s of F'olsom Prison. co mmercial art. He says his subjects regarding both in direct export! from the Then the nightmarC' that began nine 1nay be scenes from proposed travels United States and exports from other na· yea rs before 1-1·as repeated. around lhe U.S. lions of products made v.·ith U.S. California Department of CorrC'ct ion~ technical data. personnel discovered his parol e y,·as a The President also eli minated some of clerical error and Cortez 11·as picked up Gc11e1·a J's Wife Dies the red tape which ha s entangled dealings Dr. Gerold Luethy, Zurich's chief prci5· ecutor. de rti e d Ame rican newspaper reporls that Swiss and U.S. official! agreed to drop charges against Mrs. Irv- ing if the lrvings gi ve back $650,000 In publisher's payments for the book . to resume ser\·i ng his 30-vear·lo·life with China by U.S.·controlled firms Recordings on Sex? term, as a four-time loser. • \\'ASl!li'll"GTON IUPT I Funeral,. operating in Western Europe , Ca nada and He nearly went insane at return to !he services 1vill be held here Tuesday for Japan. old prison, after a 33-day taste of free-f\1rs. En1malinC' A. Eichelberger, widow The President el iminated a re-- dom . of r.cn. Tiob<'rt L. Eichelberger who com· quirement th at U.S.~ontrolled. f.irms ob-ROME (UPI\ -A record company has ll1s parole. nfficrr C\'en jninC'd Ilic nut-111~111 rl cd 1hc 8th Ariny in th e Pacific dur. tain export permi ssion from tnt---i'reasury launched Italy's \ fir st sex educ ation cry, .~a~·ing: Cortez -rvnVH'lrcl <111d 111g \\"nrld \Var JI. Interment will be in Departn1ent as 11·e1J as from the country recordings. The idea is tri 6pare em· Sfl.ltlC'ntcd to lour IO·Jr Cflr 11•1 rns fnr .~.111~ ~r·l1n,gH111 Nat ron;il Cemetery. Mr s. in which they are operating. Re. barrassment to parents and teachers by o~bou l 30 grarns of hcrri1n to .<.Uppon 111.~ 1".ithrlberger , a native rif Asheville, N.C.. quirement.<; of the host country would not having lessons read o~ in unemotional own hah1t -was an ideal c<1 nd1date fu r died Friday. She \\'as &l be affected. reh;ihililatinn. lr---.;.--.;;i.;;i _______ ;iiii;i;;~;;,;;. .................... ~l~o~ne~s~b~y~m~e~n·~a~nd~w~o~m~~·~n~n~ou~n~c~er~s~.;;;; He had been shot by agents d11ring hi-; II 1%2 arrest : he had supposedly learned his lesson. Riversid e Count~uperior Court Judge .John Neblett agreed to review the heroi n dealer's s~iff sentence se\'era! weeks ago and on Friday announced his decision, Judge Neblett had heard testi1nony from Cortez -some of it rambling, hesi- tant and almost pleading -as we/I as new information from a stale narcotics agent involved in Cortez' 1962 con· \•tctions. Robert A. Bark toned do1\•r, his prior test1n1ony, suggesting Cortez was definitely a n1ajor dealer but certainly n_o t the brains behind a smuggling opera- tion I.hat threatened to kill him and his fan1il.v if he talked. "I think the re's that poU!ntial , .. " Bark sai d \\'hen asked if Cortez was merely a messenger for a major dealer. C.Oncerned citizens and legRI aid groups challenged whether Co rtez ' return to prison might not consti tute illegal cruel and unusua l punishment based cw his ac· cidental parole and' chances I o..r rehabilitation. ' "And this time ... I knew I was wroag · .. "Corte: told the judge iD stating his SJde of the strange case . "When l was released It made me realize ttfat I had 11 family. To be a citizen . . • I did not know what J had before," he said. Judge Neblett noted he has nceived more than 20 letters regarding b>rtez' widel y.publicized release •nd re-lm· prisonment. The majority urged that he be g1ve11 a chitnce. Writers of lv•o notes urged that he be imprisoned. "The .information before me doe~ reflect that perha~ conside"ralton mJaht- be given lo Mr. Cortez," Judgo Nebfell remarked in a ~refRce to 1trlklQ8 down th rr.e of the fou r counts on which Cortez was convicted. Try Us • • • • You1/ Like Us Fu f Selections of New and Used Items of . . . 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