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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-02-23 - Orange Coast PilotI . , I 7 • • • n Alien Suluggl~r . . • , . . .Gives -Poli~e ·Slip ' ' .Jn S _an Cle1nente . ' ' DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * *. , -- WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 23, 1972 VOL, "' HO ...... saCT IONS, ......... . • • ' r A New. :fri~nd · .; f 1 ' ' ·~ ' • -Air· Guard· Brass Eyed • ID Politi~al , ' " ·I Sall~~et-: ~·~.>.'; . ' •• • ... , ....... FIRSf 'LADY HUGS YOUNG CHINESE sru~ENT IN P~KI~ . • Vlaltl n11 Chinese Commune S.hool While P.WldOn~ Works , • • -, 'People' Exchange 'Eyed By 2 Leaders in Peking By HELEN THOMAS In the other. They Aid lt•wu more likely PEKING (UPI) -President Nixon and that the contululng contacts ,..,Uld be set Premier OJo~ E~lal were believed today up in Canada, Ol'·IOme other third coun-- to ~ve agreed'upon a broad exchange of try. stu~ts1 scholars and newsmen between Both parties appeared..-tn high spirits their countries rm were discussing a far· and satisfied with 'their progress when reaching declaration of peaceful con-<Jbou drove through a A!JOWfall -the first tstence. foul weather since Nixon's arrival Moo- Titls was repprtecl by resident westorn day -to call on, the Prealdent. . dip.ts In Peking following a meeling Pr~ meetings .bad been held at a of ·inore than \four houra between . the site selected by Chou,_. the ornate Great leaders at Nli:on's luxurious lakeside Hall of the People. No significance wu gu.est house, dubl:Sed temporarily <lthe attaciied to tbe '~e in site. P,e~ Whtte House."• · . Mn."Niion, me1Awh.lle, wls ~S!UmJng A6other con£erence Is set for Thursday. the role ol herJbU.•nd'ls ambassador to The meeting ~ with a hint from China's 80\) .million -le. Ignoring t1ie CbOu that American newsmen ac-snow .and the co1d, obe ga~ly trotted conlpanylng Nixon may be lnviled to stoy , lSee NIXON, Pip ,z) heh~ wh•n the President leaves in five , , day~~.. '. UPi l»ptomatic Corraaponderil Stewiil't-fl' ' HWley,~bo '8id .an agreement on some u' bby A ..Jm:ts form! ol ijlplomatic contact -short of t4' " ' fo1]11ll' dlJ!lomatic recognition 1 -:--· wa~ \ ,,. =· to'\lave ~nailed 00.wn •l lhe ; • Slaying Wife ne. Chou-~ ta10, 1rJ , 111ear-·: . • I rangement of the two g<JVerMtents, ·are • PORTLAND. Ore. (UPI) -A a. ' kepi In 'ljtmost ¥crecy. No Off~ • .,.. yt&N>lhlian baa pleaded cnllly to , nouncemaits on •hat bu t>een dlicqssed a; charge of manallNll!ter ln :tha wULbi"-e unlll the talks end. · • fatal ahlotlng of.bla •lie who wu But H~y said the lndlCations are dying of cancer. · ·' strong that the meetings ultimatefy Rogef Wl!Uam 'Powell told a would end with a landmark declaration of circuit court Judge Tueoday that hi.I peactful coexistence which could have a wife, Beryl, 3$, l'U'Wab\ud from majoreffeqonA1laandthe....,rld. • •the ,..a'lst dO!ln,,_conlbled to a And lfW1s' a~umed that Secretary, of· wheelchair and, actordl/lg to doc> State Wiiiiam P. Rogers In his talks with t«s, had about two montha t\, Uvo. Chi,,Ose Foreign Minister Chi Peng-fel Powell told Judge Alan F. Davis might be working out the 1PO<ilic details he Wal depmaed and had been of Sino-American ex•bange agreementJ drinking at the Unl\e of the fatal and the manner of utabllsblDS continuing abootinf Mardi II, 1'7l, 1t the conta<ts abort of diplomatic relalions. couple's Portllnd home. O!flclall womed against Houmlng uch country wvuld establish • trade mlaaion ' Gets Away Buff, Champion H.eM After. Sh<Jw On Coast , OKLAH~, CITY (AP) -Miss Nude Universe ol lll1•'12, 1trlpped for patrons of the Play,irl Club, reporters and vice squad de~ve1 here in •·test of the state's ot>e:enity: laws. . . ·BY JOBN 'VALTEl\ZA Susanni Haines, 21, of Sacramenlo, . Of ""' O.ll't "'"' 111H Calif., W'j.s taken l:bto custody, aloilg with A suspected. alien smuggler be1ieved cl ub operltors Mr. and Mrs. Don anned with, a pistol and his companion L'Udington, shortly after she appeared remained. at large early today after nude in a danClng act, Tuesday rtlgbt. fleeing on foot from B<inl~r Patrolmen Oklahoma JIW requires topless dancers who Qad stopped th~m.w1thin sight of the ~{o wear "pasties" and forbids bottomless Western Whlte House be,fore dawn. acts · The pair's human carg<>t however, will · A ~evlslon camera crew followed Miss Haines to her dressing room and waited outside with police as •he. dressed and posed foc photograpba. A detective said Mlas Haines,. who won her tiUe last summer in San Bernarilino, CllH., would be charged with ffillecent exposure. Several p~trons of the nightclub, ob- viously puzzl¢ by the proceedings, ap- plabded as Miss Halnes 'left In the eJC<Jrt of lhe polite. · "I'll be . back," she said 11 she was led: out the door. be shipped back to Mexico. ' < Five Mexican nationals were found in , . £ • N • al G d B ~~.~i::s ~f.J.he car after the pair ol d lr . at1on uar ·. rass Patrol Capt. Gene Harris said the in-· cident began when the two men. drove up to the·cheCk point soUtti of San Clemente and officers asked the men to open the trunk of their car. , Instead, the pair Oed northbound with patrolmen in pursuit. Indicted in Solicit · Case Officers finally managed to· pull the speeding car over into the median strip within sight of the Presidential complex. At that 1*nt. Harris said, the driver flashed a star-shaped badge slmllM to those available on mail order. He said he was a "private in- vesUgator'' and then made oflicera aware of a snub-nosed revolver be wu car. rylng. . But before the officers could take the pair into custody the two men darted into nearby brush after running across several freeway lanes. "We looked awfully hard, but ·they got away," Harris said. Pati'olmen then looked Inti> the trunk ol the car and found five men cram.med in- side like sardines in 1 tin; The aµens will be deported to their native country. PresUmably the fees they paid to be smuggled north are aUU with the amug· glera. ·Security olficiala at the Westorn Wblte House, Camp Pendleton and local police all were alerted after the eacape, reporta said. . The suspect with the badge and cnn was wearing 1 white ahlrt and dark pant!:. The only description availible on his partner wu that be wore his brawn balr long. The pursuit was the second chase by patrolmen ·at the checkpoint In a week. 'Early fut \reek an Orange man uaed a aer(ea of compUcated ruses to eventually steal a Bor4er Patrol car then ·~ north al 1peeds nctedlng 100 miles per hour. ·At almolt the same location as this morning'• 'Incident, the man plowed the car Into a bridge abutment and wa1 killed lnstenuy; · lllcbway l'8trol lnvutlgator1 have uld they 1t111 have DOI determined the rouona for Iha! blzam lncidtDI. WASHINGTON (AP) -A federal grand jury bas Indicted the commander of the A11bam1 Air NaUonal Guard on 1 charge of conspiring to Illegally solicil 13,200 In political contribuliona from Air Guard officers for candidates in the 1970 Alabama election, the JU!tice Depart· ment announced today. . One •of the ccampo!IJll Involved, the department-aald, waa that ol George C. Wallace, the governor of Al1bem1. Atty. Gen. John N. Mltcbell aaid the alngle count lridlctment ·was returned to- day In U.S. Dtstricl Coull In Montgomery, Ala.,· against Maj. Gen. George Reed Dooter. · Three ol• llooter'I' IUbordinales allO were lhdlcted and·were ldentllied aa;Cols. Henry Fllllnglm Jr, and James E. ' Ligh.t Quake . Hi ts Southwnd I . TORRANCE (UPI) -A light urthquake wu telt ln communities aouth of Santa Monica Bay today at 1:0 a.m. The tremor registered·2.0 on the RJchter acale, aecordinf to • 1pokesman at the Ca II o r n I a · . lnsU!llte ol Technolo11 , aelsmologlcll lsboralory" No. d11111ge waa r e p o r t t d • Numerous residents phoned police to report the tremor which seemed to bt centered on the lnClewood la ult Hardwick and u. Col. Alfred B. Gurley. Named as unindlcted co-conspirators were Alr Guard.Cols. Lawrence A. Doyle, Wj.lllam P. Baker,·Willie L. Whlbnan Jr~, Edward D. Gilmer and Maj. Lomtie J. ··mauaon Jr. The Indictment charged that the defen- dants conspired, beginning In March .1970, to coerce other .. Alr Guard olfictrs to cOn- tribute ft.,700 . to Wallace'•. campaign..; $1,000 to Conner governor Albert Brewer, a candidate for governor in 1970; $400 to Hugh Morrow 1111 1 cllf\dida~ ~or lieutenant a:overnor, and S100 to Stite Sen .. Lelll\d Chllda, who wu not nmrtlqg for re-election: · Tbe Indictment said that, as a !'lit of the conapiracy, the deleodanta. llled government fsclllU.. • to sollclt tho poUtlcal contrlbulloos and threatened lo doW111?ade certain Air Guud offictr1. JI they falled·to contribute. . , . • The Indictment quoted !loiter u tellln1 an Air Guard mafor, WlljWn H. Beddow Jr., that tf11e ~·-by. the 1;'111 • Beddow could choee one of three courses of actlori: ''biOw y00r brains out; tum 1tate'1 nldepce or tie JI Interviewed." . ' Tbe lndlotment 1tld· Doo~. lllUested .Bed\!OW follow th~ third altemaUva. , The Indictment also alleged t)lat Doote; dlJtoled · Gurt,y -19· undertake the 1fJt<m1Uc IO!lcltaUon of polltleal COl\- trlbut10111. , According to the Indictment, F!Ulnglm told Air Guard MaJ. William B. calhOUn, who d<cllned to contribute, "I want to aay again that this la voluntary, but I ad- vise you to contribute If you like ynur job." • The Indictment aald llolter on one .0. caalon told three of the ofllcen: "Genta, (let 1ND1cr, hp I) ' Link.Eyed ' ' . r , By Police By ARt'IWR R. VIJllSBL or ftM Df''T''' ... .lttff ·· SabOtage of publll: -.buildings entered ,11eg1tlons tod~y .as f ents jOtned San B.eroardino,Cou Sherif de1>9t!e1 plej:Jng together.4: : puwe in !~Ing five persons and aeizbre of 130 poundl of itOlen. ffiultary explosives. A Huntl~t,on .Bea~ man ,ouil-eil\1eitd Tuesday, joining a Lliguna Beach 11tl ar- rested wttb ·tl\f._ other meh Monday afternoon in Fontana.,. , Ronnie D. Ponder, 21, ol 318 E!ihth St., Huntington Beach, and Dianne Bayle_ss, 18, of 695 Tempie Hills Drive, Laguna Beach, are among , those booked Into county jail on auM>fckln of recklts1 and malicious posseasJo~ .or explollves. San Bernardino COu~ty Sherllrs bomb squad lnvestlgaton claim they ar'e lm- pllc.ated In a plot 1o obUterate the county civic center, aherlffa 1tation and Fontana Police Department Questioning of at least one among the five suspects led to thll d!J!:losure, ac- cording to Deputy, Mark Winger, of. tho bomb sqµad. • ' Tile Fllfhas entered the caoe; since the · posflbtllty of· anll-establlahmenl 11botage wal\ raiaedi and· the. cache of exploelve1 (See llAJIO'l'.AGE,.Pare I) Weatler . I You probably ....,.t,.. much o! 1 the sun on Thunday, either, ,c.. cordtng to the weatberlldy. ~ 1 clouda and , fog will tske up IJl9ll of the day. Highs of Q lo 71 are predicted. Lowa in the micMO'L INSIPE TODAY For a lilt of &he we:11'cnd'1 1 lit.te theater attraCitoni cind G look at tht top 01c4r nomit'Ca. ••• todou'• ••~IGl•....nt ... , -a1. · • ,-··--' " . L.M. ..... \ 1 aNHM 2' C•l!fnl! • c ....... c.-,. Cle..,_ a• Ctflllc•· 49 c .... ,..,, • o.t• "'""" t . .,,.,_ "'" ' ............ t1 ·-..... 1, .......... ,, It ,..,...... JI ........... ,. -. • • , ' I! DAILY PILlfi • Nixons See Gym Show • 'Billionaire Authorizes Lithe Chinese Athktes Give Display PEKING (UPI) -China paraded Ill --and ....... eymnastl Ill two boun ol ~. a~tle psform.o-loday for a blcb!Y •P-proclallve Pnllldenl and Mfl, NIJ<>n and 11,000 conllantly applaudlnir aitneae. Tile Nlxons accompantecl' by Premier Cbou El>Ial. -their beadJ Ill wondtt-ment .. the lltbe, athletic omnaall psfonned. The Preaideril; Mn. "Nlloo and Cbou at Ill front --In the lm-Cap!lal Gymnaalum-tupots Ill fronl ol them, k<!ll fllled by waltruae1 -and joined thouaands of Peking school cblldren Ill rhythmic 1pplau.e. Particularly oulalindlllt "" Ibo work cl the •hlle<lnllonned men OD the lllll rlala and the high blr. 'J\e women, atrona: and m111CUlar but From Page 1 SABOTAGE. • • duf up bebbl a Fontana home II llolen mllllar)' maftrial. "Y t1 we do, but we're not aaylng untll loderal a,..i. llnlab their lnvlllliatlon, • Depuly Wlllfer uld when asked II the bait of oriflll 11 known. Crlmlnl complalnll chlrllllf Pooder, Mias Baylea, plua Robtrt G. Christley, 20, Gary G. Whalley, 13, and Robert A. Asemko, 20, all of Fontana, were to be IO\llht ijlls afternoon. Su BernardiDo c.wrty. Dlatrlct A~ 1on>e1 Lowell ~. Lathrop'• office' wu not due lo ncelve comprebemlve nporia un- til 1111 today and IO declined CO!llll10nl. Tough new U.S. lawt lmpoted. lo crack down an.r a wave cl terrorlam and bomb- 1"" peaked Ill 11111 ...id alao lead lo f1lrtber p:wecutloll and federal prlaon lermt upon convlctlon. Ball for defendant Asemko . ls et at ,U,500 -making him the obvloua key suspect -•hlle only •t,l50 bond waa aet ' !or the otben. Tile expkltlvet cacl>t wu one of the Iarpol e•er telaed 'in CalJlcrnla, uperta . noted. A Iola! of Iii pounda of powerful C4 ·. ·olutle uplollv .. a a e d commonly In Vietnam combat wu aelzed, along with • 15 poundt of TNT, fiYI pouad.s of a aopblstlcated, coUed bluling compound called Data Shed and 100 feet of delonaUng cord. Oae element lnveatlgalora are probing II the relatkmsblp among the flvt suspects. I . • "AU had ~ledfl of tho ... ploa!ve1," Deputy Wlllfer alleged, aM nollngW: one defendant bu mentioned a .. • plot. •• Miu ayl.... motl>er cootae!led tlMt DAIL y PILOT lod.oy to declare she underatood her daughter had only brought some Roman candle fireworb ha.ck from a trip to Mexico with a boyfriend. $be added that the boyfriend waa ac- quainted with one of the -delendanll involved. San Bemardlno authorities denied that Miss Bayltu, a foriner Laiuna Beach High School llludent, waa charged only with rnlademeanor posaesslon of lllqal fireworks. She and all suspects ucept Ponder were arrested neat the house where deputies dug up the underground ·u· ploa!vea cache Monday. Dluppearance of mlUlar)' eiploa!ves In the s.. Bemardlno County ana hu boeo under lnv..Ugallon for .&Ix months, Autliorltla tald. Tile cumnt cui wu broken when depatla maldnc a· roullno traffic llop 1pottad what allllWed lo be explosives In the nar of tbO vehicle code vlol1ior'1 car. Tralllng It on lo Ill destination, a teareh warrant wu oblllned lo check the premllea, Jeadlllf lo dlscov'f)' of the cache. DAILY PILOT ...., ............... ... _ ..... --c.rr. .._ S. Clie1•1 OIWt9a COUf l'Ult.ISHlte ,.,,.., IMert N. W ... ,.,... .. ,... ...... .IMli: l. Cllttey ................ ~ ....... ""-" Kwril ..... t1o ... ...::.J;, ll.:,:t1 .. OsrfH H. lMI lktist4 '· Heft ----0.-. ......... .., .... ........., hlcM -........ ..,.,,.,., ............... ~-...... TIWJ ... ~ .. . ...... ~ ... ML'f I'll«, ... _....~...._ .. ....... -Iii ............... ~ ......... ---'--. ......,. _..., Qll9 -. ......... 4 r:-w _. r =•:.. <::-= -----· ..... ..,.. ..... Cllltll. .... "t'it ,, me MMlft Q P I M:ellsl I -.-11 Ill C'1 ... M I 0 S tel ,. 7 4'M4lt 5.E~-=-~ ..... ==:;: .......... -· ---~::...oooz:.: UCZ;=r ~-:..:: ' very feminine In red 1hlrll and tlihl blue -· performed best on the baian<e beam and tumod In spoctacular moves Oii the uneveo parallal bon. Tl>e Cl)I-do ,DOI parllclpate In Iha summer Olymplct, where the gymnutlc cbamplonlhlpa are held, largely for poUtlctl naaona. But judging from the lbow they put m for the NlxoDI, they would be conlmdera for Iha gold medal. At one po)nt. after the men'1 bigb bar perfomm-, the -threw b!J handa lnlo tho air, shook his beac( In amazement, and looked lo his right lo Secretary of State William P. Rogers. The Chlneae are an athletic people. Workera gel two J$.mlnulo breaka dally for mandatory uerdael. One o f Chairman Mao Tte-tung'1 quotatlona 11 ~Promote phyalcaf culture, buUd up the Senator Reports Expenses Waived During Absence Ono of the II Bille 1enalora mlulng . from last Friday's abortive attempt at a Senate 1e.,1on eaplalned today that he w11 away on exc:med personal leave and had waived bll $30 per day upense allowance. Sta(e Senator James Wbetmore (R·La Habrll) aald he bad been granted a personal leave for last Wednesday to Fri- day. By law, the Bille senate may not take off for more than 71-bours at a strttch without losing 1e11ator1' per diem a- pe111e1 for the ttme Ibey are oil. With It membera absent Friday, and ll needed to be present to conduct businea, It appeared' for a lime !be Senate would be taking a IOllM!ay weekend lmtead of , the three allowed by Jaw. After 10 hours and 14 minutes,' however, Senate floor leaders foWld the one-senator needed to vote adjournment. However, Whetmore uplained, the rul<s committee <!etennlned that the missing tenalors should be docked not only for Friday but the full W11hlnglon Blrtbday "J'kend they lengthened hy a day. That ilnounll to some •t,71111 Ill per cltem pay. But, added Wbetmore, "it doesn't af- fect me, 1ince I already bad waived my per diem." Friday'• only senate action was to act. journ, yet those who showed up will receive their full weekend expense ~tmenll. Rocks Halt Traffiq • mwnf (UPI) - A moul.111n rocksiide forced the closing early today of Encinal Road north ot the Pacliic Cout Highway near Malibu, olficiall said. The .Ude caused no nported In- juries or properly damage. Proxmire Gets Crop of Hair WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. WllUam Pro=lre (D-Wll.), IJ ge~ ting a hair lranapfant. Prom1lre ahowed ·up at 11 Jolnl Economic Committee hearlllf to- day with ga111e bandagea covering bis bald bead and Issued a prw release dbcloslng that be began the treatmenll TueadlJI nlgbl Proxmire two weeks ago turned up in a committee hearing with two black eyes. He refused to say how he got them. The New York Dally News Aid Ibey were cauaed by a face lift. peoples' health." Nixon, a somelbne bowler! a now-and. 11aln golfer but an avid oolbali Ian, talked anlmatoclly wttb O>ou, remarktog about the performanct. The gymnula were followed by Chinese badminton piayen, one of them the women's national champion. 'The gi.rla ahowed excellent form , lluglng the sh~ llecoc:k so !be eye could barely follow ll It wu a far cry from American backyard badminton. Badminton gave way to the table tennll players, the world's finest. It was the Chinese invitation to the American table tennis team last year that opllt the Bamboo Curtain and led to Nllon'1 lllllDIDll trip lo Peking. Throughout the• long program piano music set the tempa. From Wire Senlee1 LOS ANGELES -There wUI be an authorl!ed bloeraphy of Howard Hughe• after all, but a spokttman for tbt bllllonalre advises against holding your breath walllnr for ti. As tnvesllgallom conUnued fit New York and elsewhere into the purported auloblograpby of Hughes wrlllenJ>y CUf. ford Irving, a Hughes Tool Co , spokesman dl..sclosed Tuesday t h a t Hughes' most trusted aides will help prepare an official blogaphy. "This doesn't moan the blography'wlll be published tomoJTOw or the day.alter/' aaid the spokesman, Dick Hannah. From Page I NIXON ..• Attentive Listener He said an author h1m't beei chosen and gave no estimate of when· the book would appear. Hann ah said the tli-ytar-0ld~l!ugbes sold the rlgbll lo his Ille ,1ory "and any commercial exploitation of bir'name or likeness" about seven years ago to Rose- mont Enterprises, a Nevada ~aUon. along dusty yellow dirt roads on a tour of. r-. commune west of Peking where 41,000 poaaaalB live and farm. Alabama Governor George Wal)ac. puffs on a cigar while listening to Vic. President Spiro Agnew address the opening plenary session of the winter meeting of the National G-Overnora' Conference. This is the second day of a three day meeting in Washington. ''Rosemont ls not a Hughes , Tool subsidiary;'' he said, although some Rosemont ei:ecuitvea .also work for The Fin! Lady, wrapped Ill a fur-lined coat, visJted 1 pig farm, a primary acbool, the medlcal clinic, a hot bCluae tnd a general llon. On Tburaday, the lfaona probably will mike their long anticipated trlp north of Peking to visit the Great Wall of China, a 1,500-mlle barricade built about the 4th Century B.C. to keep foreign invaders out. RFK's Son, Passengers Hughes companies. ' "Whenever the biography 11 published, lt will be done entirely by Rosemont." be said, and noted that the company has been collecUng lnformatlon on .1fughes' Today'1 talkl brought lo nine hoara the Umo apent hy Nixon and O>ou In formal buslnelSaesalons. Freed; Air Crew Held llfe for several yeats. ' • , Meanwhlle, fed eral authorities pressed their Investigation into Irving's book and a Swlss prosecutor said there would be no In addiUon, Nixon held a rare hour-lori& sesaloa with aialrman Mao Tse.tung, the aging plllloaopber of the Manis! move- ment who leaDJ heavily on Chou to make mostdecJalms. Western cllplomall to Peking are con- vinced that this unusual dlsplay of good feeling betw'een countries which have been antagonists for two decades is bound to be followed by some forrn of declaration. It could pledge them, daplte their pro- found differences In Ideologies, aoc1a1 systems and polltical poalllona, lo worlc togelber lo elimlnate polala Of conllict Ill Asia. Looming over their talks Is !be brooding shadow of UJe BoY!el Union, which came close to going to war with China during their border dispute of 1969. Moscow, which Nixon will vlJit Jn May, has .shown great suspicion about the Pe- king .summitry. In addJtion, an uneasy Japan wonder• bow the talks here w:lll affect Its future relatioM with China and Tokyo's role in Asia. AU the small natlom of Asia, Com- mifnlll and aoo.Qmummlsl alftte, have shown almllar uneutness about what tramplres here. Each IJ worried It may be sacrificed as a pawn by one side or the other in a realignment of the balance of power m Asia. ' * * * TV Coverage Of China Set By United Pm• Internattoaal A special Lufthansa plane carrying U9 hijack vicUrm including Joseph P. Ken- nedy Ill left Southern Yemen's Aden airport today for Athens and Frankfurt, Aden airport offlciall npor!ed. Another planeload of YlcUms left earlier but 14 crewmen remained bthl.nd Mills Proposes Social Security Increase of 20% WASlilNGTON (UPI) -Rep, Wilbur D. Mills (D-Ark.), Introduced leglllltion today to 'increase Social Security benefits by 20 percent on June 1. He called on the Senate to include the boost in a pending welfare reform bill. The across-the-board increase would be aublUtuted. for a proposed 5 percent raise approved by the Houle 1aat year when tt. passed its verslon of the wellare measure. Mills, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, told the Hou.. that a fresh study of the Soctal Security system completed alnce the House paaaed Ila bill showed that the program was being .. overfinanced." . He said hi! proposal lo further boost the benefit paymenta was belnr coupled with a downward provision in the House bill's proposed Iner..,. In payroll lases. Milla' proposal for !be extra Social Security benellll for an estimated 28 NEW YORK (UPI) -The major million beneficiaries vlrtnally assured networka have announced their scheduled that It will be approved. coverage !0< lod.oy and Thursday morn-Mills said the 20 pereent boost would Ing of Pnaldent Nixon'• trip lo China. raise the average Soc1al Security cbecl: Tile ocbedules an subject to change. AU from '133 to 'lllZ per month. Payments to limes sho-.a an PST. the average couple would rise from $Z22 CBS -Tonight, coverage on the CBS lo IZ69 1 month. Evening Newa, 7-7:30 p.m.; Tbarsday, '!be average check for widowa would be coverage on the CBS Morning Nows, 7-1 raised from 'Ill lo •153 per month, Milla a.m. told the Honse. NBC -Tonight, coverage m the NBC ''These people will still be at or below lfigbtly Newt, 7-7:30 p.m. evening spectal the poverty level If this IJ the only tn- program 11:30 p.m.·midnlght Thursday, come they have.'' Mills told bis col· coverage included in the "Today" show, leagues. 11I th1nk tbeae are the people 7.9 a.m. mcm in need of our belp.0 ABC -Tonlobt, CCJftl'age on the Eve-ll'9iiiiiiiimm-m;iiiiiijiijji ~~r't::.7i:.;:t:.;t\~n~ I GEM TALK p.m.; Thursday, spectal program 7:»J a.m. deal involving Irving's wife, Edith. 11 hoslages. Zurich Dist. Atty. Peter VeleU said Ill The first group of 50 -Including rr Switzerland that Swl" authorities are women, 11 children and 011e man _ ar· determined to 5ee that Mrs. Irving ii rived in Frankfurt today from Beirut punished for her alleged role In the in- trigue. where they told of being terrorlz.ed by "We repre 5ent justice, we don't do Arab commandos who threatened con-deals,'' he snapped when asked about the stantly to blow up the hijacked Lufthansa possibility that swiss charges against 7!7 Ill !Ughl Mrs. Irving would be dropped if bu h ... A spokesmaa be thought the 19-year-old band cooperated with U.S. authorities. Kennedy, aon ol the late Sen. Robert F. She is charged with forgery, em- Kennedy, would catch a direct flight bezzlement and theft In coMection with from Alliens lo !be United Slates. the handling of '650,000 that McGraw-Hill The commandos hijacked lbe jumbo jet Publishing Co. Intended as payment to over BombaY. Monday night on a fllaht Hua;hes for his asserted cooperaUon 1n from New Deihl lo Alhena and forced" It • the Irving book • to land at Aden at ilJe aoutherw tip of the The Irvlngs and their 1awyer1 met with Arabian Peninsula. federal prosecutors in New York Tuesday It sat there today Jn a blazing aun with but there was no comment on the out- the five or ail: commandoa refusing even come of the meeting . lo nqollate its releaae. A federal grand jury entered 111 lourih Mahmoud Araz1, the SOutbern Yemen week of inquiry into the Irving book. It director of civil aviation 68ld the hl-beard two wttneues whole names were j -•---•·-~ lo ot1a' ~· t not made public. a-• ·~~ aeg le w•~ WO M bll Hugba challenged New German offlclata who a.rrlvedln Aden· to-Yor=~te~ aubpoena power to nacb day lo tiy lo bargain for the nleue of him In his Nicaraguan bldea11ay Tuolday the crewmen and !be '2S mllUon plane. by making blmaeU a peraonal piainlill lor Ho ldentUled the Germana u Kurt the fll'1t Ume to the raah of court ...., Muller and a Mr. Ernest and aaJd the stemming from the 0 autobioil'apby" by guerrlllu aboard the plane reluaed lo see Irving. . them or evea lo negotiate wilb tho Hugbea joined Rosemont Entuprllet In Yemeni authorities, a State Supreme Court suit lo ben l8le of '"!be guerrlllu say Ibey will only sweal!hlrla and buttons reJ,llng lo tho negotiate alter discussing mattera with autobiography case to •ho.PS In Manha~ their leadership in the occupied Israeli tan. territory," Arazi 1a'kl. Ju.stlct Vmcent A. lAJplm:> granted a He said the guerrillu told him they had temporary restraining order and HI Fri- their own means of crnmmunication with day for a hearing. their Arab alllea. Asked about the crew-boalages, be uld ''They are flue. I saw them today." But be Aid uplo1lvea placed aboard the plane by the guerrlllas still are there and that they still threaten to blow It up. The guerrillu have not made public their demands and Arazl said "they will only oegoUate after con.sulilng their leadership." The first group to leave Aden was mobbed by more than 150 photographers and new1men as it arrived in Frankf<rt. The scene wu 90 chaotic Lufthansa offf.. clals .said they would keep the press away from the men passengera when they ar· rive at Frankfurt on the aecood relief lllgbl From Page I INDICT ..• J know what I am about to do 11 illegal as hell, but I've got lo have a political con- trih.ltian I've got to have $100 from each of you." Doster and the other lndlviduals in- volved are tech.nici.alll employed by the Air Force whllo at the same tlljle holdli1a commissions In the Alabama At National Guard. Maximum pena1ty upon conviction on a charge of conspiracy is five yean in prison and a •10,000 fine. '. Two Charges Dismissed Against Talent Agency TODAY by '-C. HUM"'RIU An Orange County Saperior Court judge hu dismissed gand theft and CODlpiracy charget !Ued against roar prlnclpall ol lbe now delunct ''Tab One" lalent qeo- cy and onter.d the !oar men lo lsco trW March :II OD the nmalning chargu of viola lions Of the sllte'a corporaU0111 code. Jodge Wdllam Murray set the trW date for Orange attontey Richard Mur • pby, tl, brotbtn Jerry, 41. ol Santa Ana, and Don Hegg, 40, cf Gardin Grove and Roba1 McGinnll, .. ol Sul& Ana. AU lour wera lndfcted by !be Orange County Grand Jury lollowlnfl alleptlona that they aold,F. estimated fll,000 wortll of •loct In "Tau Oae" lo .. ..., employta wttboul llnl rqlsterlof the stock 111111 tbt Bille'• ---com. ml-. . 'Ibey bad --named In • dvD -broaCht by the atate and the dfJtrlQ allomey't oflioe In wblcll It WU allopd bf Deplly Dlatrict Allomey 'IJ 111 o r Mallbew1 that Ibey t o o t thoolPnda cl dailan from parenlf attlnc -""claimed ...... --1 -.. --lolll for lbelr dlfldra. ~ who anlhorlmf Iha dYll.., Gia ...,iDst the !oar clelmdanlo, llald the ,"'l'IM·Qo>o" -aofd ·~ ,.wm, -..to• lo pormta IDie-lo .,.... Inc tllelr ddl4rto lar lllO'lla ul TV WOl'L • ., ' • He llald adulll teekln( the ume work were charged '9115. Deputy District Attomey JIJ Moseley, who now heads the ollke'1 fraud squad, uid Tueaday that the "Take One" opera- llon hu now -1hnt down "with the lino undl!r•tandlnl en both 11des that It will not be opened again.'' Murphy WU ncentiy convicted by I Superior Court jury on charges of cor- porate cocte vlofatlon.fJtemmini from his role In the operation of the Calllornla Caduceus Company and the Casaalty Insurance Co-. He will bl ... -AprU I. He was cltand Ill the same trW ol frand theft abd coOsplracy cbariet relallnc lo the allegedly lllqal - o!-.illO,OllO lo ln•etlorl' funds from ODO lnlUra!loe fl'OUP lo the other. Songster Dies at 33 SAN DIEGO (AP) -Mlllird Dtlbert Wm Jr, ss, a ...,.,.ucr and - member of the New ~ Jllnllnll, -bmied at 11,,,a CaMter1 TueacS.., to the tuna cl ol IU on "'"'P"''"'""-"Pm lllDd." W-~.U'l11ndayP!e& at Iba lane cl • lrllod lo • • BEFORE YOU BuY A DIAMOND The purchase of a diamond u an engagement riag or a spedal gilt of Jove Is lllU8lly a one-Uma occ~sion in every man's life. Btcause this purchase !avolvea deef meaniag as well u a 1lgnlll- can Investment, you will went lo buy wisely and with a pride al pur- clJase which will !art a lifetime. There are definite ataDdmda for the pricing of diamonds, and four definite laclon In detmnlnallon al valae, CUtUag, color clarity and cant weight are the foiir measuru of • dlaJilond'• value. Bach of. llle11 ladon niqulre complete unclOl'- 1taadlng by the llllJer before 111 lntelllgmt purcllaae eaa bo made. We would appreciate an appal' lwtlly lo explaln.adl al tbtK fa<>. lora lo you per10llllly. So •bell you. bava the time, come..,, In aa4 see m. No matter what or when you enotuall1 bay, we a1,:~ bave Ille tlma lo help 7ou Ille rlibl cbok'*, "' A specia l remambranco from every mtmbor of Iha family with fR>m 110 9 GENUINE Blrthltonu aracefully HI In 14 Kt. whltt or yellow &old tram ~9.10• ---~··-··· 1823 NEWPORT ILVD~ COSTA MESA • • f I • ( I I Going V i siting Mrs. Nixon meets a young Chinese mother and her child during a visit to the Evergreen Commune near Peking. The infant wears a gause mask to . protect her from influenza g~rms. Sacramento ·Junket Slated Bo ard, Cou nty Aides to Chri sten Lobbyist Office A junket to Sacramento ls tentatively 1et for March 30 to formally christen the new Orange County lobbyist's office in Sacramento. Firth District Supervisor and Board Chairman Ronald W. Caspers, of Newport Beach, who last week got broad approval of the new office, Tuesday pro- posed the mass journey to the state capital. California (CSAC) pool and paid by Orange County. Paul Balch Of Tustin, an announced candidate for the first dlstrlct supervls- oral post now held by Robert Battin, sug- gested Tuesday that the secretary should be 11elected from the unemployed ln the county. Caspers said hi! request would be con- sidered. The cost of the trip will be reduced considerably if Air California agre;e11 to transport the crowd to and from the cup.- ital free. "l understand they have of!ered to do that," Caspers said later. "ff they do not, only the board member' should go." Caspers proposed and the board ap. proved a trip to include board members, their wives or lady friends and all county department heads. He suggested that they check out the new office whlch will "open quietly" on March 1, visit the county's legiJlatlve team and stage a luncheon for all con- cerned, including "hopefully, Gov. Ronald Reagan." County Sup ervi sors 01\. Niguel Beach Park Plan Caspers suggested establi!hment of full time offices in Sacramento and In Washington D.C. to "further lhe county's interests in the two capitals. Through the County Admlnlstratlve Of· flee, office space was secured 1n a bullding across the street from the capitol building. Costs of keeping Ted Craig, a former speaker of the assembly and longtime county representaUve and Joha Andenon of the County Counsel'• office on the Job fulltime were estimated at $1,000 a month for office space and f1l) a month for a permanent office secretary. The secretary will be chosen from the County Supervlaor1 Aasociatlon o f Plans and engineering drawings of Niguel Beach Park, the former Salt Creek Beach in the Monarch Bay.Dana Point area, were approved Tuesday by Ute Board of Supervlaor1. , Kenneth Sampson, county dlreetor of harbors, beaches and parks, told board members that the pla111 had been sub- mitted to the Harbor Department and the Harbor Commlsslon and approved by those agencies. He added that lhe State Lands Com- mlulon would conduct a final hearing on the project Thursday in Sacramento. A previous hearing by a State Lands examiner W'a1 held in Laguna Beach JasL Mao 's Office Furnished In Early Salvation Army By JORN V ALTERZA Of .... Deify ,..., ··~ Invariably, when Pruldent Nixon ind Henry Kissinger IP'fft oome visiting VIP the plcturu !or the prw an made u III Ibree 11t on l)llendld office fumJture Jn Mr. Nixon'• oftlcea. When the President la In residence In San Clemente, those 1bot1 are produced at the rate of .ooe or two a day, So llllJly, lD lac!, that edltor1 olleo reru,. to ille them becau.e they are ao common. But the ·~ lhot that moved In Tu• day1 popel'I wu far from cllche. Beca111t II bad Mao TIO-IWlg Jn It WHAT IS MOST rtrtkinl aboul the expan1Ive photo, however, II not that lt'1 a claulc IWDIDlk>mlerern:e photo ..Wp, ' Jl'I Mao'I lntttior decorator. VALTIRU. 1be contrut betwem that m111't reception room 11111 that ol Mt, NW>n Jn San Clemente ore lllaggertng, At the Wutern Wblte Houle, mllk·w!Jlte, plUJh corpeta link IDlderfoot ond the appolrltmenll are qui<~ but •le(anl. . The co!!ee table ID the center o! the room b campalp ttylo and very '''° pensive. Around It ore brocade-covertd ..t ... and I pelt of UI)' chain. MR. NIXON'S MAHOGANY -b lu11 ml llunntni- ln llJJ1UIW7, tt'• a 'knockout. But MM:li'• ••• 1be ury chain arw covered, It ...,.. wllb ollp coven bouaht Jn 1 gar- .,. sale I011lewhere ID oouth Ptllng, There an what oppw to be opltloonl 111 the lloor .II the loot ol acb cholr, POod t!Jree.!ttt hlgb oo tibia In betwetn ore ...W ol lhdva pap en. , TUE SPITTOONS ore obout the only decoraUve llCC8lt llOUlld, Ironically, the Nlsont are r ... ol Oriental art objecto and Mr, NW>n It etped•llly partial to elephant ltltuary, much ol tt rnim the Jl'ar Eul He hu NVertl In hit olOce, and at the raldence nearby Orient.II acroola and pottory 11'1 part ol the decor, One ol the ml"1 Josendt about Mao 11111 hll pals ue that they reolly do ...... the finer trappinp ol teadmbip, 1be pldure proved that What a shlme In 1 nation that for cmtm1a bu poduc:ed IOmf ol tbe -Id'. finat objecto d' art, • ' The three-mile beach and parking lot development will be done by Avco Com· munlty Developers Inc. at a cost of •s.s mllUon The Salt Creek Beacb con- troversy, which ls re!K>lved by the agree. mcnt, surfaced more than !our years ago..... South county residents who had used the beach for swlmmlng and surfing for many years objected to the abandonment or Salt Creek Road to the Laguna Niguel Corp., predeceuors or Avco Inc. After many debates and an abortive recall movement against then Board Chairman Alton Allen or SOulb Laguna, the board finally approved the agreement proposed by Avco. Two large parking Iota, beach con- ceulon buildings and restrooms are In- cluded In the "turnkfy" project Turnkey meanJ that Avco will complete tho development before turning It over to the county. Sampson said prevloUlly that this arrangement would uve the county a great deal of money. The· beach 11 ICheduled to be retdy !or general public uae late thJs 1JUmmer. month and all pre.sent agreed that tht project was worthy or Jmmedlate ·~ prov al. Fake Pregnancy Gimm ick Of fered By 2 Designe rs NEW YORK (AP) -A "preanant" woman anives at a party. Men I.etch her canapes. Women whisper about how ra,.. dlant she loolu. But suddenJy lhe an- nounces 1he'1 not pregnant at all. She'• only playing pregnant -wllb o 1mall, utln, egg-1haped pUlow, tied oround her walat with pint ribbons and trimmed wllb anllque lace and nnettet, It's called a 'lpu.U" or PWF, Pregnancy Without Fear, Two New York women, costume deslgner1 Linda 8amJ>50n ond writ.,. K, T, Moclay, are trying to 1tll the Idea to otora, They hope to produce It !or f!J to $20, Why would anybody want one? The maker• lhlnk It could gel a woman a te.at on a crowded but or auure a woman protectloo In a protat march, On the other band, they hope thlo pretnd1"finlllCY routine would force people to rwumlne their pr"""""Pllooo about prefnant women, "U you don't know who'• rtall)' preg- nant, you ore lorctd to relot. to 1 prfl· nant woman .. a penoo., not u • rnoth«-J<>be," 11111 K, T, Friml Leaves Ho pital HOLLYWOOD (AP) -C:Om- RucloU frlml, 12, II to be dbc:horpl to- ::~ Hollywood Prab)1«1an Harpttol T1>t Progu.bonJ com-.r ol M:h wtU-klwMn operettoa '" "Role Marie" and "'lbe Vopbond Kine" rntmd the 11oop11.11 n:='4 nllht 1u11 er1ng rrom w!Jat w• 11 lntntlonol prol>-len>L • Saddlehack To Ex pand Board Size By FREDERICK SCllOEMEHL Oi' .. D9~ ...... ll•lt By 1 I to 1 1pllt vole Tu"d1y nigh!, trustees ol Iha Soddlehack Community Colle1e Diltrlct paved the way ror .,. panslon or the board from five to 1even member1. Under a proposal 1ubmlttt!d by trustees Hans Vogel and John Lund, the hlli• Sad- dloback Valley will be mado lnlo three separate trust area1. Trustees, although they must reside In the Individual artas, will be elecled by oil the voler1 In the college district Trustee Alyn Brannon wa1 the lone dl.ssenter and 1ald he would have liked to postpone the declllon until after the up- coming unlllc1Hlon election Jn the Tustin, Irvine, and Mission Viejo are&s . If a unified bo11rd 1!1 created for the Irv ine area, 1ald Brannon, It should have a 11ny In the board expansion decision. If the new boarda are created, cour.- tercd Vogel , they wlll be too bu1y 1ettlng their own district.a set up to worry about Saddleback College. "We might have to wnlt a year and a half while they get act up," commented Vogel, "aR<I the Saddleback·lll)ne area la ju11t too under·repre1enled to •that." Some 32,000 registered voter• now reside in the rapidly growing Sllddleback· Irvine area, he pointed out, while other trustee areaa have only 11,000 registered voters each. Dy splltllng the Saddleback area Into three districts -Irvine, Mlllslon Viejo and Leisure World-Laguna Niguel - another reapportionment of the college district may not have to teke place until 1978, e~plalned Vogel. The expansion plan will now be 1ent to the Orange County C.Ommtttee on School Dl11trlct Organization for contlderatlon and ls llkely to be submitted to voter1 on election day In November. Vogel aald the ltsue could not be placed on the June primary ballot b«au.se too many other Issues are going before the voter1 In that election. Homosexual Wins Joh Back BELLEFONTE, Pa, (UPI)-'-JOHph Acanfora, 21, hu been ordered rtlnltated 11 a llUdent t.ai:her at 1 local Junior high tehool by • Judat who 1ald tho 1Iudent llhould not bt pet11lilod btco.,. al ht1 membttlhlp ln a homosexual oraanlza· tlon. Juda• R, Paul Campbell or Cenlra County Court 11Id the ochool bocrd arbitrarily dlJCrlmlnated agalllll Acon- fora because of hll membership In l!omophllOI of PeM Slat. (HOPS) when It sutpended him from hll practlca - teaching assignment. Campbell ordered Aeanfora, or Brick Town, N.J., reh'lltatfd ar>d the PeM State Unlver1ity 1enlor be given lull credit toward <;<>mpletlon ol Ihe aulgmnent. 1be judge allO ruled that Acanlora must disauoclate hi• HOPS Involvement from the cla11room and deal only with the tub/eel• or "biology and earlb 1elence.' • Wtdnt1d17, Fm1t1 U, 1971 s Thln·liing of S p ring ? Not really. Though "°mo Mldwc•torncrH mny be drcamln(I or •prln£, tbe!le two girls, Cron1 Zeurlng, Iowa, 11ra hond over hoelH In a hof1 they've dug In the fun !!Luft of \vlntcr. SJlrlng Hnow banks are 11carce, 10 they Ioko advantaue o! the winter world while It IHt•, Vitamins by Ton 30,000 A pproved for Saddleback If the theory holds thll.l lnr.we nmounh1 of vitamin C keep people from cntchlnii colds, athletes 11t Suddlebnck Co mmunit y College have got to be tome or tht! heallhl.,t In the slate. While routinely reviewing purcha1e crden al Tutaday nlRhl'11 rn eetlng, trustee John Lund observed that $220.Ml w11 earmarked for the purch1u1e of vitamin C. SUpt. F'red It Bremer qulckl y n1t1urcd Lund that glvlnK vitamin C to athlete• wa1 standard practice. L.und then wanted to know how many tableta were being purchnsed. Bremer said 30 000. "11 th";t for lhe entire year?'' qulued l.und . Orcmer quickly dh1patched 1n aldt1 lo rtnd out. "No ,·• he reported, "we a:ot 35,000 11evernl month I ago." "'rh\1 wou ld make a Mrent aclentU\c ttudy tor 10meont'1 doctornl the1!1, •• commentl!d Pntrlck Backus, 1h1klna hi• htud . Mennwhlle, tund Wllntet.I to know U tht 1chool ever purchused vitamin E. "No, thut '• ju11t tor old KUYll llke yo11 &ind 111e," c1ulpped Bremer. Whether or not vttam ln C 1lopt coldl or not, truMtee1 wer1 unanlmou1 In •if provlnl( the purch111e or the S0,000 lllblell, which nre expected to httl untll the ind of the 11chool year. Supervisor s Nrune 3 Aides To Marine Institute Unit Three repre1ent1tlve1 of 1upervll01'1al Baker. . dlltrlct1 were named to the Morin• Supervltoro William Phllllp1 1 n d Stud!•• ln•lltule Board of Trustees Tue" Robort Ballin Hid they would nome thtlr appoint.ea Ial<r. . day by lh• Orange County Boord of DohlborK '• !Inn 11 a pirtner In Supervltoro. development and le11in1 or oil boll berlha Robert Dohlberg, pre11dent or Morine In the h1rbor'1 ' dev•foI>od !!:alt B~ln C..pltal fnc. of Dana Point, where the where the lllltltutt 11 located, C&lpera Marine lnttltute 11 located, w11 n1med old. by Supervl10r Ronald Cuper1; Don lie 11 a rormer 1uperlnlondent ol tht Dougl11 ol Anaheim by Supervisor Rolph TU1tln Union llltth School Dl1trlct and • Clark and Dr. Donald Shipley of Hun· trultee o! Caplllrono Unirlcd 8cl>ool t1n11on Beach, by 8uporvl10r o .. (d . 011trlct, 4 DAYS ONLY r ::i::-1::!-·) SA VE f 78.00 ON 'l'B18 5 Pc. TABLE SET JAMPICO :z~::~.:r~"'l 69 :~. $247 . ...... -C:HAISI LOU Nll LllT ...... $103 '69 llU DIUYDY IN otAM•I COUWIT CNAR·IRO/l ~ GAS COOKERS MOBILE BASE I All1w1 y•• .. ,,11 ''"' .,111 ..t •f the wey wh111 ,. .. 1111 •••• $89'3 POST MOUNT St..-,_,,...,.,ltt4., ht ffl• .,..114. 10" ,.,., , .. t k 'lltt ,.-1tfe4, .... , .... .4 . '7274 PATIO MOUNT o .. i,"'4 ,., t ... 1,n .. ti•• ••• ,i.rt,.. ,,,, ... 11,.,, .. ,, '7cr4 • I " 4 Oall V PILOT Wtdntldit, FobruilY 2', 1972 \ \ Columnist Says Nixon Lied to U.S. ... WASHINGTON (VP)) -Columnl81 Jack AndtrlDD alld Tueadoy the United StaUr rllked nuclear war wJth the Soviet Union durln1 the lndl1·P1ldatan war ia.1 llJ TRoMAS MIJBPBINE ll<ctmher whlla Prtaldtot N!Jon "lied to Of ... o.ttr ,.... .,.., Congrtu'' and the American people IACllAMEN'IO CAU.ING• 0 re• t about IL IJWllllla of teeth bu been htlfd In the / "The only aubltltute Jor truth 11 a lle," Andenon told the NeUonal Prea1 Club." billowed halll of the Lealal•ture over the "1bat lJD~ a pretty word to uae with the alltptiool of hooty·playU., by II of our President, but 11'1 true." He uaed the 11a1e· leDll«I on Friday of the term numerous tlmea In hiJ apetcb in Wublnrtoo'• Birthday ,...ktnd. m:,.: ~~":·tau force of the u.s_ Wblt happened WU that oomebody . 7th Flee! WU ltJll Into the Bay of e..,11 caDad the Friday ltlllon and ooly 20 on 1 war footing, lacma a auperlor Soviet leDllon -ed up-lacklria 0111 ol bav. fleet, while Nixon waa telllD1 the •-am~~ to lllow ID offtclal bualntll Amer!CID people that the United Slat.a ~ ,_ --was neutral In the conflict and that the ltlllon. taak force was there only if needed to They 111 around lib !hit, twiddllnC evacuate Americans. tbeJr thwnbl all day, Senator Clark L. The task force was given secret orders Bradley, the San Jou tuper~rvatlve, 1: ·~~~the lookout for poaalble actk>n," llDlll)' 1hunbled Jn about 7:15 o clock that (Ander10n'a colwnn appears regularly n1'11~ allowloc 1 quick' clll to order and on the editorial pa1e of the DAILY tben lmmedlate receaa of the "ofBclal PILOl'.) malon." The colwnailt, who pubUabed what he said were secret Whlte House documents on U.S. policy in the war, said a warm.. volvi,og the United Statea, Russia and China was closer than many su!pected at the time. AMONG 111E HOOKY pla)"n wero the Or1nce Coall'1 Sen>lor Dtnnll E. C.rpenter (JI.Newport Bt1cb) an d Orqe County'• Senator Jamt1 E. Wht~ more (Mllrden Grove), Now, folb, before you atart gathering to -up the rill for 10lo111 C..,.nter and Wboimore, maybe you ought to bell' the otllet lldo of the • ....,, • Finl of all, the Slate Sell!te doem't ordlnatlly bold l'tldif 1t•lo111. 1bl1 allo111 lho boy1 to .. t an early jump baclc Into their dlllricll, mU.,le with the home folk and maybe 1et 1 o m e problemo Ironed out . l!lllae'word bu'll, however, that just before the !Olli Wllihlngton's Birthday holldl)', tome of the boys were banging -.cl the Sell!te Loun1e acrou the llrdl from the pod ball. or someplace lib Iha~ and they decided, "Hey, wouldn't It be ne1t II we could have a li~ Ue Miiion l'tlday and pick up aome pay for the threMay bolldly!" TBll WAS conaldlrod a dtllght!ul no- tkn. So the malon w11 called for 9 a.m. Jl'rfday. Now rully, folks, you have to ask youraell jusl bow m1ny momentous declllona you thlnlc they would hive 8">und out up there In the billowed halll when they mot on Frldly? \Vey, 111 bet that would have been I roll lln(er. Yw can bet they weren't about to st.art a rewrite of the Callfornl1 Con1Ututl~ Nobody wu sOflll to opoo debate on Iha , death penalty. NO SOONER would the 1avel have fallen than aome wag in the back 19w would have moved for abrupt ld- joUnimmt. AU the wblle mUU., certain, of coune, that tlJo 1t1alon 'IU'lilled· IOI' a llttle add, ed -on the aenstorlll paycheck!. Al It deftloped, the euy payday didn't tum out IO •UY· Fllllng obort th1t one 1en1tor needed for an ofnclal seuion, the 20 IOions wllU!li In the htll had to ocrounce ltOUDd Ill ovtr the lllate to find • colleque who would make the paycheck olflclll. ' 1bey lound their w1y to San Joae. But It took Ill day. MEA.NWJDLE, W HE R E were o u r genUemon, Senators Whetmore and ea.,.nter• Wtll, Wbttmore11 wher!abouts was -.in. But u for Cupenter, our in- fomWU lndlcate he w11 right bere on the Oranc• Coast. He wu, in fact, work~ ma Oii the.ovtrcrowdlng problems within the San Joaquin Elementary School lliltrlct whlcb face. a crlslJ In at. tempting to serve the 8">Wth boom ln the dty ol lrvlne and the Slddlehack Valley. M1Ybe that wu just a little more Im-portant than mooilng on the senate floor, wllllng !Or the IOth man to 1UMintee ,,... payche<t. So If you're gollli to l'tllt up 1 rail hlc:auae " Stcr1rnento'1 1'rlday Follies, oend 11 up north whero they should we ll AndtrlDn said the U.S. tuk force had asked and received permlJson to un- dertake uwartime 15\lrVe\llance" of the Soviet fleet and had permission to land troops In India. AndtrlOn said be did not know U lt•wu the United Statea' inlenllon actuaJIY to land troops. Judiciary Unit Predicts Nod ' For Kleindienst • WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Senate Ju.dietary Committee will give its unanJmow: endorsement to Richard G. Klelndlenst as the naUon'1 next attorney generaJ, committee chairman Sen. James 0. Eastland (D-Mlss. ), bas announced. He said Jt could come before the week 's over. Eastland made the prediction after klelridJenst'1 initial appearance before the panel. The 48-year-o}d Ari1.0nan, who went on record against legalizing marl-- Juana and in favor or wiretaps for na-- tioo.aJ aecurity, was ca·Jled back for a second round of tebimony today. Even committee llberaJs, who greeted the nominee wltb a: volley of questions often hostile to his more conservative Vlewa, conc"1ed_ EuUand'1 predlctlon wu·Ukely to be right. 0 1 probably will vote for blm myself," shrugged Sen. Birch D. Bayh (D-lnd.), "even thou1h I disagree with hlm vJgorously on hlJ ideas about civil rights IJld civil liberties. If that'• the kind of a~ tQrney 1eneral the President wants, rm inclined to give It to him." Wicks 'And this is otie of me hiding IHJhfnd II ttN!' Saigon Bars General; Gls Left Holding Bag UPI T•~ U.S. RISKED WAR Jack Ander.on Police Hold . IRA Leader After Blast ; l.ONDON (AP) -J. leader of the (l!uUawed Irish Republican Army was ar .. rtsted in Dublin early today as .police in Bliiain· hunted an IRA revenge squad • that bombed an· anny base near London. The blast .at the Aldershot head· quuters of Britain's 16th Parachute Bri&,de killed seven persons -five wai~!es, a garde.ner and a Roman catholic chaplain recently decorated for bravery in Northern Ireland. An estimated 100 pounds or gelignite blew them to pieces. Seventeen persons were injured. The IRA's leftist official wing assumed responsibility, said the bombing was in retaUation for the death! of 13 Catholics in clashes with paratroopers of the 16th Brigade during Londonderry's "Bloody SW1.day" on Jan. 30. As British police sealed highways and checked planes and ships leaving the country, Irish detectives arrested Cathal Goulding, Marxist chief of staff of the IRA O!llcials. Goulding, a 49-year-old housepainter, was one of four men seized in a aeries of Poll 1Jlldnlght ralda In Dublin 1nd lb suburbs. SAIGON (UPI) -south Vlelname•• police today barred rebel Geo. Nguyen Chane Thi lrom reenterU., Vietnam and sent him back alone oo a Pan American 747 j'umbo jet, 1trlJldi"l 189 Gls who had booked aeats oo the plant let leave, U.S. spokesmen uMS. Thi ll'rlved aboard the big jelllntr from Washington, where be had 11id several days ago he had received an in· vltatlon to come hack to Vietnam after nearly ab: yean in ezile to take a position in a new government here. But as the big Jet ..,1nged In from lb previous stop in Guam, Saigon police chief Trang SI Tan, who was at the a1rport himself, had the control tower ask whether Thi was aboard. The pilot said he wasn't, but added that there was a "Nguyen C." on the plane - the only Vietnamese passenger. Tan and other police officials boarded the craft as soon u It was on the ground, and located Thi, who once commanded government forces in Vietnam's five northern prov· inces. Tan advised Thi that the government had barred him from landing here. Then he ordered the plane to -shut its doors, power up and take orf with the general as the only passenger. Neither Thi nor police spokesmen Svetlana Has Family Woes PHOENIX, Ari•. (AP) SveUana Peters, daughter or Soviet dictator Josef Stalin, said today she has not left her husband and hopes he is not contemplating divorce. "My God, I can't think of it," SveUana said when told tbat her husband said divorce seemed "inevitable." "I haven't left my husband, we're not separated," she said. "I never had any intention to separate from him. I am fond ol him and I respect the work he's doing. I disagree with bis way of life." Mrs. Peters, ~s. revealed earlier thls week that she and her family had moved out of the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation's oom.mlDlal headquarters, Tallesen West. would eiplaln officially why the jet was forced to take oU with only Thi aboard, but Vietnamese. 90tD'Cf:s 1ald lt was done to "punish" the airline for brU.,lng 11 unauthorized passenger into the country. In the meantime, thougb, that left 189 Gii and II other passeoter• who had booked aeats oo the je4 atrlJldtd at the gates of Tan Son Nhut, spokesmen said. Most of the Gls were bound for leave in Hawaii or the continental United Slates, they aaid -and JDOSt of them were ho~ Lead-free Gas ping mad aboUt what happened . The airline managed to find stab tor 51 of them on other alrllMr1 boWld., from Hong Kong, where they would have to book other planes onward to the 1tate.1. The rest were stuck. here at least..unUl the next 747 arrived on Th41'sday. The securlly cordon arolllld the a'frport wa.s so tight that dozeoa of-cor- respondenl.s were stopped a mlle from the terminal, ond al leul one who 1ot . thrqugh was briefly arrested. Service Station Pump Seen as Smog Weapon WASlllNGTON (UPI) -Propoaed government regulatiorus to curb aJr pollu- tion envision a new kind of service station where the gasoline that powers old cars could poison new ones. The station wouJd have three pumps. One would dispense regular gas and the second "premium,'' just as~ today. But the third would pump lead-free gasoline through a smaller nozzle designed for a smaller fuel tank opening on new cars starting wilb 1975 models. NoZ%1es on the "regular" a n d ••premium" pumps would not fit new cars. As an extra precaution · against pumping leaded gasoline into a new car, the lead-free gasoline would be clear while the leaded gasoline would be col· ored. A station could be fined $10,000 a day for pumping leaded fuel into a new car. The regulations, proposed by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Tuesday, were designed to make gasoline accommodate to the exhaust cleanup devices planned for 1975 model cars. Most stations would have to offer lead-- free gasoline, effective tn mld-1974. Auto makers say their best hope for meeting the emission controls demanded by laws for 1975 models iJ an untested device called a catalytic converter. It reduces emissions but can be ruined by a dose of leaded gasoline. Bushmills. Lead has been added to gasoline since 1923 to increase octAne, or power. Cars are now built to run on lower octane. lead-free tu.el, but most models prior to 1971 require higher octane, usually~ ing. leaded gasollne. Since many10Jder cara will sun be on the rood, the EPA decided It could not baO lead frilm all ... gasoline. ;: • Leaded gasoline costs about 1.6 bents a gallon ntra, according to the EBJ., The cataJysta and other exhaust crN.nup devices will hike the price or 1976 m&leJs by $250 to IOOll, depending.'•• yJIY(ng estimates. And the devices would reduce gas mileage, burning S percent more fuel according to EPA estimates. 4 Bodies Recovered • In Crash Off Hawaii HONOLULU (UPI ) -Four bodita were recovered from the shark-infested waters 70 miles from Honolulu where • twin-engine aircraft crashed Tuesday with eight persons aboard. ~ The Coast Guard had no plans to eo& Unue the search today. . 1bt plane was en route from Honolulo on the Island of Oahu to Lanai whe,n it crashed. The other three men were members of Sinn Fein, the IRA's political seetlon, in- cluding general secretary Tony Hef- fernan. All were htl,d under the Offenses Against the State :Act, which permits authorities to detain any person for 48 hours without charge. The arrests set off apeculaUon that Prime Minister Jack Lynch of lreland has launched a .promised crackdown on the IRA, which is waging guerrllla warfare to oust the British from Protestant-dominated Northern Ireland. The whiskey that spans the generations gap. Discrimination Bill Gets Okay WAS!l!NGTON (AP) -Tbe Sell!te baa passed a bill providing enforcement authority for the federal ban on job· discrimination ~sed on race, reltglon, 1 sei: or national origin. Jn an unusual procedure m a d e 1 necessary by the die-hard resistance Of two Southern opponents, t1ie Senate ac- tually passed the identical bill twJce Tueeday by votes <X 73 to 16 and n to 11. The effect of the double vote, forced· by Sens-Sam J. Ervin Jr. (D-N.C.), and James B. Allen (0-Ala .), may be to com- plicate further action on the legislation in the House, which passed a companion bill last September. Cold Nu·mhs Northeast New Eiiglaiul, Upstate New York Below Zero NATtOMAL WIAtNflUIVatlfOUCASI •7AMISJ 1•2 .... 11 • :II ... :II • • For 300 yea~ a whiskey from Bushmills has l>een with us. Charming us. Beguiling us in a smooth, poli shed and altogether lighlhearted fashion. 15 generations have refined it.15 generationshav~ sipped It. The verdict : Ne. rperf ection. Bush mi I ls. Fu 11 of character. But not heavy·handed about it. Flavor- ful . B~l never over·powering. Bushmills. It reflects the past with a Iightand livelyOa\/Or that is all today. • , . Compare It to your present whiskey. You needn't purchase a bottle. One sip at your favorite pub wiU tell you why Bushmills has lntrigoed so many gen- erations. It is, simply, out of sight. l,l4POlllB) BUSHMII ,,I S noM THE WOIWS OIDm D15!1Llfft _ 1 MRS. NIXON TRIES TO BECKON PIG AT COMMUNE NEAR PE KING f lr1t L1dy Br1ved Snowstorm in Her Visits to Peopl• of Chln1 Visit Get s , Top Play In China . Pat Goes Visiting First Lady Views Acupuncture By FRANK CORMIER douif\' needles prolnldlng lrom Peking Glassware Factory, PEKING tAP ) -Bare-her right arm and leg. Mrs. Nixon 1poke to at least 20 headed as usual , Pat Nixon The woman said lbose limbl workers _ mostly girls, who braved a North Ch I n a had been ao numb before she snowstorm today to visit an began a week-long serie.t of ' were work ing on a wide rang• agricultural commune where acupuncture treatments that of glassware. she m i n g Jed w i t h she could hardly walk around Mrs. Nixon was asked to schoolchildren, observe d her sm11ll home. Now she can visit the facto ry again, j'ln the winter c u 1 t Iv a t Ion o( cook, she r~ported. meantime." the First Lady vegetables and saw a 68-year· "We wish you well," Mrs. replied, "I hope you will ct>me old woman getting an Nixon told her. and see us ." acupuncture treatment. "It didn't look painful ," she The pig Mrs. Nixon lried to The First Lady walked remarked as she left the entice within petting distance through intermittently heavy clinic. was corralled outside a tlny, snow that glistened in her hair. spotlessly clean cottage. · do II d During a one-hour visit to a moving wn a eys a n Warned by a reporter that across furrowed fields at lhe -----~----the pig might bile, Mrs. Nixon 6.~acre Evergreen People's said she Jived on a (arm as a Commune west or Peking. MRS, NI XON g~J and "l once raised a ~1 rs. Nixon was captivated prizewinner - second prize." by the schoolchildren she saw , marveled at the growing of RA PS HEAD But Jh< pig Ignored her en- out-0f·season vegetables under treaties, and finally she leaned glass .and even tried futilely to into the sly to throw him a make friends with a rather PEKING (UPI ) -Pat Nix-chunk of cabbage. on bumped her head on a • dirty hog in a sty. In another schoolroom , two warm air blower while touring l" Id She seemed most surp rised , h p k' lr"year-o boys were playing however, to observe in the t e e ing Glass Factory to-table tennis with rather unlm· day, but she apparently was commune clinic the ancient not hurt. presstve results. Pointing to Chinese mediral treatment Whlle she watched 3 young the table, the First Lady said : based on the insertion of long 1 h ''We have one in Florida, and girl a11 ioning tiny intricate .needles into the flesh. an imals from colored glass we do play Ping Pong." The two young women who cylinders, Mrs. Nixon rapped To the 8·ytar-0lds learning give the treatment told fl.1rs. her head on the blower. multiplication -several of Nixon that they attend to Afterwards, she k e pt them gave wrong an.swers about a dozen patients a day. touching her blonde hair, but while she was there -fl.1rs. They showed her a gray·haired she insisted that she was not Nixon said she bro u g ht Wedntsdiy, Ftbtull')' 23, 1972 ,_ ________ ;......._......_, WORLD SAVINGS ISNOWOPEN SATURDAYS Commencing February 19, our Reg ional OHice in Laguna Beach,292 South Coast Highway at Forest Ave- nue, 494-9481 , will be open Salurdays from 10:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M. Th&Se added service hours are for our eus- 1omers who work Monday through Friday 11nd who would lilfe to conduct 1h1ir financial business In tho leisurely atmosphere ot th• weekend. R1tsourcffovtr S300.000.000 WOBLD SA ,._NO lOAN ASSOCIATIOl\I HOME OfftcE: l YNWOOO, CAUFOFINIA Rt0ion1I Oftleee: Brentwood /Fount1Jn Viii~ /Laguna BNdl/Narthrldgef Onttno/Sln Bernardino/Sin Oi100/WNt Arcld!1/Wlll/l~/ Ytbod!and Hllll woman lying on her side on a hurt. g)ir~ .. ~l~in~gs~f~ro=m~a~ll~th~e~c=h~ild=r~e~n'===================== PEKING (UPI) _ The cot with more than haU a o~ America. Chinese government continued ---------------------' PRESIDENT NIXON CHATS WITH WIFE OF,MAOttU Interpreter Alda Convers•tion •t Cultur1I Show 'Revisionist' Ranking Professor Admits Past Errors PEKING (UPIJ -Choo Pei.yuan, one of China 's best known professors, sipped tea with Americ1n newsmen today at Peking University and con- fwed he once harbored revlaioniJt and b o u r g e o i s thoughts. "After I stekiied the works of Chairman 'Mao, I rulized that I had made mistakes," Chou aaJd. "I now follow the correct theoretical line." Chou would be. 1 credit to any college faculty. A pro- fe&aor of theoretical physics 1lnce 1929, he graduated from the University of Chicago In 1925 and holds degrees from universities ln China and Europe. Ke was dean of Tsinghua University before mOving to Pekln1 ~n l952. A man in his 'IOI -be declined to give ex• act 11e -he wears a hearing aid. Hil hair ii gray. Although HaJl,gchow On Nixon Itinerary he speak! perfect English and chatted informally w i t h newsmen, he used an in· terpreter for his more formal talks, correcting t h e ' in· terpreter 1t times when he disagreed with the translation. A Chinese newsman ex- plained that Chinese pro- fessors 1f,eak Chinese when they are talking formally. "You are in China," he iald. Chou is head of the phyaics department at PO:ing ind i.s vice chairman or t h e university's Revolutionary Committee. Some newsmen in Oilna covering President Nll:on'1 visit were invited to tour China's m o s t prestigious university, Peking something of a shrine now because the May 4th movement whlch spawned the Chinese Com- munist party began there Jn 1919. RepGrters gathered in a faculty roo,m at the Russian language building; DriMing tea from flawer.dtcorated cups, they inttr\'lewed Chou and Chiang Chun-yu , 36, a former printer who now Is described. a~ "a I ea d Ing member of the Revolutionary Committee and a leading member of the uni venlty branch of the Communist par· ty.'' to give major publicity today to President Nixon 's visit. The official "Peoples Daily" published four photographs showing Tuesday's activities and meetings of the President. One photograph showed Nit· on and Premier Chou En-lai seated on opposite sides or a long conference table during their meeting Tuesday at the Great Jiall ot the People. Each was flanked by a num- ber or aides, the most con- s p 1 cu o us among the Americ11ns being presidential adviser Henry A. Kissinger. Among the three advisers with Chou In the picture, the rank· ing man was the high member of the protocol department. The "Peoples Daily" printed a second photograph of the meeting which Secretary of State William P. Rogers held Tuesday with his counterpart in the Chinese government Chi Peng-fei. Rogers and chl .'also were Oanked by a number of advisen , the most prom· inent In the picture on t h e American 1lde being Marshall Green, assistant secretary of state for East Asian aUalrs, ind presidential consultant John Scali. The other two photot In today's edition were taken at the performance T u e s d a y night of the revolutionary ballet and during Pat Nixon's vi1il Tuesday to the Pekihg Hotel'• kitchen. The photo al lhe ballet, Liken 1t the end of the perforrnance, showed n I n e Chinese and Americans, in- cludi.nc Chou and Nl1on, stand- ing and applauding the per- formen. Wes t Germans F avor Visit TUEBINOEN, Germany (AP ) -Ninety perceilt of West Germans queried in a public . opinion, poll were following Presiden't Nl:xon's trip to China with inter'4t and 70 percent viewed it positively, the Wickert Public. Opioion lnsltute said. TOKYO ((AP) -The east Cliina lake city of Hangchow, wbtre •·President Nixon will stay ovtrnlght Saturday, was described today as one that ha1 retained its beauty and charm while upanding into a thriving .S.Clalisl lndtl!trial 111etropcil1. The ~" China News Agen- cy, Peking's official news 1gency. uid that 2.~year­ old Hangehow was noted in the past !or Jll tradlUonal silk and ooltol\ leltlle Indu1trl..,, Panda Clamor Zoos Co vet Chi~ Gift · T<idlt,. th< agency said, Hanccbo" alao f1 noted for itt indliatfy. -iron, s t e e I , m1chint buil d ing and cllemical1 -caused by the •" S oc:llU.t tranaformaUon" ~ed CMJt by the wotklng people linCfJ the Communi1ts took 00\'er · the ma inland In ll49. '1No lonaer a avnicolonial oonsi.nn~ city. Kangchow is now a 'lftlptl'OUS SOcialbt ln- duatrial ttnter," tbe agency ~poNd. Prof. Predicts 'No ..Miracles' • SAN DIEGO (AP) -Pres!· dent Nixon'• vtJll lo Chin• la a "IJ'Ul atep forward" bul ltn't likely to IOlve any major prob- lem• between the two coun· trlu, llJ_• a Chinese profea10r al San QltllO State Colit&e. By Asaoclated l'ress While U.S. and Olinese leaders maneuver t h r o u g h high level talks, American r.oo directors have begun diplom1tlc maneu11trlng of the.Ir own aimed at getting the two rare giant pandu given to the United States by Premier Chou En-lai. "There ian't a zoo In this country that woul4n't tell Its soul for thOst pandas," 11 Y• Jack SI mm on 1, naturalist guide 1l Staltle'a Woodland Park Zoo. There are onl7 four pandaa In captl\'ity outside of Ollna - including a malt In Moacow and a female in London. Ef- fort. to m a t t the btar·llke animals have failed . The othtt two pandas are in North Korea . other nations to the United Stltu," 1ald Director Dr. Theodore Reed . "1 would assume we might be called upon once again in thla case," M added. But Rted atrtsaed th1l there haa been no offlcl1l word from the White HouSt: on where the. animals would be kept. The: animals were given to NJs,on, who ii vlsiUng Peking, In return for two North American nwskoxen Nixon is pr .... 11,,. to the Chlneao. A Chi<aRO "'° b making Ila bid 10< the pandas through pcllllcal cha..,.b. Dr. Letter E. Fllher of Llncoln Park Zoo hu contacted an Tilinoil con- greuma:n ind was reportedly tryln1 to reach Stns. Adlai St.even10n Ill and Olarlu Percy for their help " well. V 4 DAY SALE THURSDAY, FRIDAY 9 to 9; · £1 • SAT. 9 to 6; SUN. 10 to S i.tl . I QUALITY ROOM SIZE REMNANTS 11 GO. WORTH $79.00 TO $125.00 IF PURCHASED ;i BY THE SQUARE Y:AID. Choose from a select g roup of nylons and polyesters in shags; hi lo pattems, level "loops and-tweeds. Hurry in for A best selections. Dffp, spr+ngy pile yorns of 100% nylon. Sturdy and eosy to c'-on. Gives a bright luJl.'utiOIJS k>ok to ony room setting, ytt if'• ptoe1kol and cor• f,.e. II.Off!/ beautiful colors to chooM from.. 18 sq. yd. D•PONT501 ltY.LON PILE -"-ed,tnul,._.. btoodloom tn.SOl oybt . plJe.. Attract;... in ony setting, modern Ul'trodi-- . tionol Sturdily constructed. Morry deep-dyed cfec:orotor colors to choose from. • 9·8· sq. yd. POLYESTER SHAG •• l 00% Polyn•., shag. Pol.,.1tor plle .. 1n1oru<1 I withi hard twi1t yams for better perfor~ Eoty to core for tnture wlll wfthstond octive• fomify ~· WicM ae*tion of exciting colon. SHOP-AT-HOME SERVICE Servlnt Th• Lart•';" a.fflii.C.rpet S~I .. ArN '" Callf.rnl1 If y•u c•ft't c•m• '"' fu1t ,hon• •ntl elllr repN1eRf•ff¥• will C•ll with • fvll ••mpl• ••lectl ... Ne •flll1••1•"· CALL TODAT 546-8548 3040 lrlstol Ave., Costa Mesa (JUST 0,, THI SAN 01100 •HIWAY) "! dor\:I think the v1t11 will erule Jnir1clu or change a0clal 111Ucturu, bUt it may nlu tol\llono btlween the two dWltrle1 Ind Improve com- chlnaea." But Simmon! and most other zoo of(icials contacted 1<e111 r.,tped to th< ldt1 that the two luzry, black tnd white glfu from the Chin.,. iiovern- ment wlll wind up a I Wuhingtoo't Notional Zoo. "The Natiooal Zoo hu bttn !ht r<po1ll<lry fnr more than Ill-years of ouch gifu frvm . Acquiring 1 panda. 1ay1 Denver Zoo Director Clayton Freiheit, 11would be 1 zoom1n'1 dream .•. lt11 the kind of anlmalyou make room for." Tht "'° In San Die10. ha• OPEN DAILY 9 A.M.-9 P .M. SATUADJ\Y 9 A.M.-6 P .M . SUNDAY 10 A .M .-5 P .M . bttn tryin, 1o ,.i • papa:::ir,.:o1zr-- panc1as rince the wly I"' • Ull oua CONVINllNT CUDtT TlftMi-ALL LAIOR CAltatH " Ll,.TIMI GUAltAl4Tll I ,. • ' • , ' ·•- I I • • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORLU; PAGE Voters In I.be Capistranq Uni/led &boo! District will be asked March 7 to conUnue a 50-cent tax override tor the nut three year•. U I.be override tails, drastic budget cuts that will .. rfou.sly Impair the educaUonal program will have lo be mde -cuts the SupL Truman Benedict •V• "will set back the educationtl program 20 years." There should be no question in the voters' minds that perpetuaUng the current 50-cent override .la: not only desirable but necessary. The DAILY PILOT en· courages a "yes'1 vote. Some question per.slats about trwtees' wisdom in asking for so litUe at a time when the district I! facing potentially explosive growth. There is little doubt that unless assessed valuation figures rise beyond ex!"'ctations, the district will be faced with financial diff1culties before three yean have elapsed. Voters should realize that trustees are asking for • minimum amount. A ye.s vote is very much in order. View Grows Brighter Laguna's long-dreamed of "window to the sea•• will become a reality in the rather immediate future. Tbe ancient beachfront buildings that have blocked the prized Main Beach view from Coast Highway for many years will be gone when summer comes in 1972. While it may take some time to d~elop the park that will reelace them, the sweeping vista of beach and ocean will be there for all to enjoy. Two factors are speeding the demolition project. By evacuating the commercial buildings it acquired in the beacbfront purcllase, the clty was able to get them Best Reason To Support Women's Lib Tboagbt• at Larae: The best reason -psx_chologically and IOcially -for supporthlg Women'• Uberation t. lhat, II ~ iS successful, women "ould no longer have to ~mpetf: by tmllallng male aggrosslveneu, 'but could remain feminine In temperament wbUe aharing dutiea, funcUom and rewarda with their male counterpart., (Ag lhlnp It and now, only the women who act mOll like men cet ab tad, wblcb makes the whole sttuatlon abrasive.) • • II t. abourd lo 1 p e a k of govern- ments being ''friendly" with each other. for at the most they can only be allies: a frJend la someone who likes the aame lhlnp yau do, while an ally i. someone who dlallkes the same people you do. • • • A prophet ta without honor ln his own country (and his own lime) chlefty because he summons the people to live up to themselves, whtn they are intent upon dying down to thenuelves. • • • Most men are lorrlfied by the thought Dear Gloomy Gus A. R. V. "''* ,..,.,,. ,....,. ,...,,. ~ .. ~'"' tit-. ., fllt lllWUIMf'· S.llf -"' ...................... Dallr , .... . of extra "leiaurt" than they are troubled by the threat of extra toil; for leirure m1111t be creaUve in order not to become a bore, whertu work ia most oft.en a retreat into rote, and an escape from the 1earch for identity. • • • A "mob'' is aimp1y a "group of aroused ciUzens" we have not yet seen fit to join. • • • Why do we speak of the ''mind's eye,'' but never of the "mind's ear," when we can hear mtWc in the mind just as well as we can see pictures there? (Indeed. that's where Beethoven "heard" most of hia ireatat music.) • • • A preponderant majority of men or genius -whether activists or in- tellectuals -have been shorter than average, which may be nature's form of compensaUon. • • • The main discomfort in being a middJe- of .th&-roader is that you get aide-swiped by parllsan1 1otn1 In both dlttctlon•. Angela and Free Speech An assistant to state Attorney ~neral YoW\ger wrote to the television station (CBS) wbkh carried the Angela Dav!J in- terview emphatically denying censorship intent, but looking with di sfavor on the one-hour program, Its content and pur· pooe. In part, the letter , &aid, "The broad· .,cr!f casting of this dis-· t o.J cussion makes clear ~~ the patent falsehood ,,-0 · , of the charge that ,,-'· ..::k .... ·, "~ there is, or has been, ~ · any effort to prevent Miss Oavis from upresstng her views," (but) "it is for you to decide whether the nature of the discussion ... "(results In) "a ronn of 'special pleading' for MJss Davis that is consistent with the right of both the defendant and the people to a fair trial :' ,,~·~-~~,. ·~ . . Royce Brier ' Interviewer was the Rev. Cecil Wiiiiams, who fed her questions which would not embarrass her position. Her reaponses were informed with an unremitting flow over a wide spectrum of her rigid cre- dence. CON CO MIT ANT WITH her credence, ls one that her people cannot get a hearing before the general ciUienry, or the establishment, s~alled, but as the Jetter to the television station foresaw, her un- trammeled presence on the screen refuted that conviction. and In an im· portant way. Beyond doubt Miss Davis's bro11dcast was et p.lrtt pleadlng, since !he and her interviewer espllcltly made It so. but lhere tre other element.I in this ex· traordlnary communications event which merit examination. It would be dealing In cllche to say her revolutionary falth would be publicly tolerated in few nations today, none or them dominl~ by doctrinaire cM'I· munlsm, or of • fascist or mililtry stamp. The whole question, af course. was not breathed to her by her Jn. terviewer. Yet convinced Americana cannot rtSt on such usy laurels. Their posiUon must ~. and has been since the ConsUtutionaJ ConvenUon in the 1780s, that a free 10eie- ty must make room for dissent, and that dlnenltr1 hive a con1Utulionol rl(ht lo their beliefs, and to exprw.ion of thtm. The only qualmcalion Is Iha! dissenters may not commit overt 1cts against the free society lnvt>lving \llolenee. All THE WORLD KNOWS, Miss Davis, 1 black, b in custody charged with murder, \ll]der aUegaUon she provkled !he guns used In !he fatal shootout In Marin County Superior Court In August, mo. Al 1be told l~ MJu Dlvla's story was In Jow key. She 1'15 barred from dllCUSSIOO or her pending Cale, bul nol from advancina: her racial and Com. munlsl philosophy, prtmarUy related to the admlnll!ratloa or jualice In the United State" Then ...,. no l101Jl'llu. Miu Davia Is cor·iln<cd bu race and !hose or her po !cal hello( are "oepreued," u •ho sat and that tho on11 OIC&pe Uu In ,.... ·:1onary action wblcll w o u 1 d "de .• ey" !he American IOCial orde. Her ,, In this Uaht, MiSJ Davb'1 btoadcall was an affinnaUon of, oot a menace lb, our tree soclety. It cleared some air which needed clurlng llnce Mb• llovis la a roremoat expooenl of bltck radJcaliam. For ..., lbe majority. mUJI llllen lo minority p1tv11tea, wbethu or not Ibey wt •atld, and 1hou who wW not havo often faDed In the p,ul, and have 1 quo- tlonablt rutur. or their own, • Ill Order off tho tax rolls before the March 1 assessment deadhne. Also, the vacant structures threatened to become an "attractive nuisance," causing police 1.nd fire prob- lems. so their removal became a priority Issue. Because murb of I.he park development is funded by. a government grant, a formal bid advertising pro- cedure was required for the demolition assignment, but Jt should be under way within the week. One landmark. the Standard station, already has been removed by the former owner!. The view out the window is getting brighter. Soon a Safer Freeway YOU C'Y.lV ~ po ! LOOK LIKE A pru& FR£AK? I'M NO'f Gt1'11N' H\JHG UP ~ 1\IAT 5C£Nri AND AIN- ONE yjHO JOO, OUGl!f 10 ~ 1llSSEP IN ~IL! _..,r,.: Time and again newspapers -and the DAILY PILOT is no exception -are assailed for presenting graphic account! of death and injury on Orange Coast roadway&. I'M KIPPING ... \'I'S A COCKT'AJL PA!i!TY.I :;--.,.,,,....,,......,. g~ 00! )$ lllAT ALlf 5URE,F~El>, ¥*.'LL~ !Hf.RE! WOULDN'T MIS5 ~l~l~!~~t:-..,.....~~~7~·~'\ And among those stories in recent years have been many describing the carnage on the San Diego Freeway In the South Coun ty where unguarded center strips have created a new Slaughter Alley. Several editorials have appeared in this newspaper appealing · for center protection. Similar appeals have come from traffic enforcement agencies. Someone in Sacramento must have Jistened. Recently it was announced that $750,000 has been committed to installation of full center protection along the freeway. And t.h,e completion date won't be the original one gcheduled for the late 1970's, but before the end or this year. Those fences could save scores of lives. The state Division of Highways is to be highly commended for committing the funds to make the free- way safer. ~,, s Code Does Not Proliibit Flying Old Glory at Night ,Can I Display Flag Around Clock To -~ Editor: You published a letter I started sending out abc!ut a year ago trying to inspire a ~w interest in Old Glory u a symbol of our redc,dication tD our ideals and pri.n-- cipJes. Our Dag has been considered a living thing; so l maintained that it should be treated like a truly living thing and not folded away during the dark hours, or during 1tormY weather. . A LE'ITER' jU!t received from the Atne:ri~an Legion's national headquarters in Indianapolis informs us that the Flag Code ls being c'banged to fit into our present way of· ur, -a w<rld of light. lt follows in part : ' " ... the revlslon of Public Law 929 .. (the Flag Code) is yel in the kgislative mill in Washington. There has been a bUI introduced into this Congress, asking for the Pre.sidential appoiptmenl of a flag commission to study and revise Public Law 829, but passage appears doubtful for this congresaional session. "'IHE AMERICAN Legion National Americanism Commission w a 11 in· stnanental in the adoption of a resolution at the S3rd nationaJ convention in Houston, which would perm~· di splay of an all-weather flag U hours day. pro- vided that it ls lighted. xtensive ruearch confinn~ that Public Law 829 doe1> not prohibit the display of the United States flag 24 hours per day as long as a patrlotic effect is desired." KATHRYN FIS"!'ACK M11. Fish.back hm been nomi*td for a Freedom1 Foundation awa d. -Ed or Special Interests To the Editor: The removal of Edward Lorr from the Laguna Beach City C'Aluncil is Jong overdue. No one interested in the well being of our community can accept a public servant who has consi!tently flouted the opinion and the most legitimate interests of those who elected him. Mr. Lorr's actual constituency consists of out-of.town hotel interests, land &peculators, and those elemenb nf the local business community which equate progress with the roaring crescendo of bulldozers, more tourists, traffic con- gestion, and further ecologic damage. Mr . Lorr has aerved these interests faithfully, but not with much poll ti cal flair : chances are that his own sup- porters find him at times embarrassing. and will not be too unhappy to see him return to his beauty parlor. HOWEVER, MORE lmpor!an! than Mr. Lorr's controver;t&J aims, hls verbal excesses, and hi& aUeged mlsuse of city rund1 Is the qu"tlon: who will tale his place? It would be foolhardy to believe that Mr. Lorr's remov•I from public of· lice, desirable as It is for a seU-respec- ting community, wouJd lessen the J.n. fluence of those ht represents. Already new r.1ndid1tts p r e 1 e. n t themselves for the city councl.l, can· Mailbox Letter1 trom read.err are-welcomt. Normouu t.Drit.trs 1hould convey their me-ssages in 300 word$ or less. The right to cottdense-letters to fit space or eliminate libel i.t resnved. AU let· ters must include .rlgnatttre and mail· ina addre.ss. but namts may be with· held on 1'eque.!t if 1ufticitnt reason is apparent Pottn; will not be pub- li.!lu:d. dldates who command cmainly more respect than Mr. Lorr but whose goals for the community cannot possibly differ very much from his. l must admit that l view with considerable apprehension the recent announcement that Harry Lawren· ce will run for office in the forthcoming elections for the city council. I RESPECT Mr. Lawrence as a busine~sman of stature and of personal integrity, but I also vividly recall a discussion r had with him on the high-rise issue in wh.ich he dismissed the anti4 high·rise initiative as "mob rule,'' preferring presumably "Chamber or Commerce rule" or "business rule''! This Is precisely what must be avoided in the forthcomlng election for the city council. As on past occasions, candidates like Mr. Lawrence identity themselves with "realistic alternatives to current a~ proache.s." concern for the 1' welfare of a community he has served for two decades." "more effective control of drugs and hippies." and other non· committal euphemisms. BUT WHAT WE really want to know is whether these candidates will continue to support developments overwhelmingly and unequivocally disapproved by the electorate, whether they will revive the ~bsurd notion that high-rise hotels at our ~ach would make our city more "Viable," and whether the Immediate in-ter~ts of a !ew businessmen should take pr~ence over the ,Physical and mental weUire of lhe entire community. ln "terms of city planning and com· munit; developments, Messrs. Lorr and Lawrence are two different represen- tatives ~f the same interest groups. and cannot possibly be supported by those who regard Laguna Beach as a place tor re1axaUon\ contemplative pursuits, rais· ing of famJlles, and an island of peace and stabWty in a rapidly industrializing county. FREDERIC C. LUDWIG M.D., D.Sc. Profes&Or of Patholoa:y and Radiology UCI College of MedJcine Recall All Three To the Editor: In 1 public show or pn>Wt at a counctl 11euion last Sept 11 Civic League. Presi- dent Joa Brand, featured vocaJlst for the local organllations and group.s, de- •11 George-------- Dear Geor10: What ti !he namt or a person who collecta rock&? I P. T. Dear r. T,: Ar1hur WU!ingtoa, al.I M a p I t Avenue, Bark, Mk. Ho'I already IOl 23. Dear Geotit : Do yoo believe In old.fashioned home remodlea, or ahould • Poctor be called! rvo been ha~ u tit< argument with my husband , UlUISE Dear Loulat: J see absolutely no reason to call a doctor because you'te ~en hav· Ing an ar1UJnent with ;our bus. band. Sheesh! No wonder doctors won't make hoose calls. I think I'll make some n.ssafras tea and 10 lie clown, (Send your pmblemJ to George. Ho bumed ,his 1 llbrory card by mistake and has nothing to read ). nounced the aborirve recall of Lorr , Ostrander and Goldberg , branding il. ''unmerited and unwarranted," stating. "Inasmuch as the three councilmen mentioned have backed placement of the 36--foot height limit in the zoning, and inasmuch as they have actively backed the rapid development or Main Beach Park, long and cherished objec- tive of the Civic League. etc .. the Civic League directors are against lhe recall action." Brand admitted "areas of ba sic disagreement between the Civic League philosophy and the three councilmen" but added, "These. disagreements concerning the future of Laguna are cau~ for discussion, hard work and coopera- tion-not ttcall." IN A 180 DEGREE turn defying human logic, Councilman Lorr, member of the unpopular voling bloc. was targeted scapegoat for a rec.all by Brand despile all that was forgiven . Brand aJlain demonstrates hi~ talent for understanding little of what he has done and much less about what he is doing now. Tt is folly to believe the ouster of Lorr will create a Utopia. The political stakes are high in the Laguna elections. The high money interests of the lrvine com· plex and the professional bureaucrats of the State Highway Commission are well represented by our Chamber or Com· merce whose bullpen il'I stocked with blue ribbon challengers ready to charge the Political arena with as impressive backgrounds as those now confronting Boyd and Holms. TO THOSE WHO are truly dedicaled citizens £or good government. J urge in fairness for those who also seek the recall of Goldberg and Ostrander to abandon the present movement in the best interest of the community and join the recall or Lorr. Ostrander and Goldberg which will be initiated soon . Our goal is common, that of a responsible city council where we may all exercise our rights, SPERO JANISE Keep School f>ro9rnnu To the Editor : We Have li'Ped in the Laguna Beach School District since 1956. We have two sons. Qur,.old~st son, now attending Sad· dleback. &tai:ted his education at Aliso Elementary, transferred to El Morro when we moved, attended Thurston and graduated from Laguna Beach High School last June. Our youngest son started his education the first year Top of the World School opened, attended kindergarten. then transrerred to El Morro for the first grade, then back to Top of the World for the second grade and h8s continued there and is presently in the fourth grade. WHEN AN oppnrtunlty was offered to me. lo become a hoate11s.gulde at Top or • the World School (A volunteer project), I. declfled to accept the challenge because t would really have to know what was golng on at the school in order to be able to tell visitors what the educaUonal pro-- gram was all tbout. l have. been a guide for lwo years Md tbe educators and parents that have come from al1 over the United State.• have been ~ lmpreSSfld that 1Gme: of them hive. returned several times to learn mnre so l.hey can try to implement some of our programs in their own schools, BECAUSE OF 1'RE aa• span of our two boys and the fact they have 1tttnded all ol lhe schools in the dlatrfct, we have been able to evalualo the. difference In I.heir education. Our youngest 1nn h11 · been motivated from the dly he ute:red kinder1arten, <njoya !Choo! aod It en- thu.o;iastic about learning. We are pleased with the progress that has been made in recent years in the Laguna Beach schools and hope that drastic changes will not be made in the existing program s. MRS, DEAN WHIT AKER /Hake \'ourself Heard Tn tht Editor · Tht ac1 ions and lack or actions our city leaders are 11;etl1n~ away with ire a.o;lonishin,1?! But rhe really appalling thing is what nur "Lhree dedicated school bnard members'" are doing to our schools and with .~ IJtlle opposition from the community. I GUESS I WAS very wrong thinldng it could never .happen here. People don't even bother tn txpre.~s an opinion. let alone fighl for Rn outst.anding system which has taken years to build. It wiO shock even the unconcerned to see how quickly Thomas. Gillette and Linke will destroy it, as planned long before ''elected." and long befGre they have studied the situation . Please take a minute of yDUr time to make yoursel f heard. M. S. CROWE 'Eddie, I s Thb True:>' T(l the Editor : . Mrs . John Q. Public is working in her kitchen. Sounds of quarreling kids a.re heard from the back yard where the council kids have been playing with some of Mrs. Public's kids. Mrs. Publlc hurriet out. . "Here, here, what is goinR on?" "Eddie Council was stealing cookies from the cookie jar." says Bea Public indignantly. ' ' "MY GOODNESS," says Mother Public. "is this true. Eddie?'' "Eddie's older brother, Ricltie. shouts, All the kids knew he wa.~ going to and they didn'I say anything." Mother Public smiles. "But. Richie. 1 asked only i£ it were true or not." Bea Public. almost in tears. "And he's s~eaky1 Mother . You told us not to pla1 with those tall building toys, and he has been ttlllng us we can, if you don't see us." "NOW THIS IS 11 serious charge" says f\.1other . "Eddie, is this true?0 ' Eddie: "She's only telling half the truth . I'll tell you the whole 'truth tomor• row." R.ichie inlerrupls. "Why didn't Bea tell on Eddie before, huh?" ~other Puh!ic &ighs. "All rlghl children . let's wait until tomorrow when Eddie feels like talking. Meanwhile, try, lo get along, huh?" MRS. C._ ft •PUTNAM O"ANGI COAIT DAILY PILOT L. M. Boyd ·Most 'Orpl1ans' Have Parents •'Orphan: A llv1D1 peraoa wbom deatll lriu d&- prlvld of ?"o power of flll&f lasrotltude." PeeuJlar, t true, t~·o-tmrcb of the youngstm lD orphana' hom .. aren't orphans, actually. They have molhera and ft!hera bqth. But aoid parents just can't or won't take care of them. Almost all the rest of the· children have one parent each. Fact is only one orphans' home resident in every 100 is a full orphan. IF IT'S FINANCIAL security you want. young lady, marry an aero- nauUcal engineer. EucUy 10 yean ago, that was the advice of an au· . . lhority on occupations and professions. My, my. It's mightily o~tdated now, t guess you know. Actually, the physician ts •till the faireat catch for ooln. WH.EN THE temperature drops, dress a lltUe on the light aide, •ot too heavily. That has 1long been the advice of the Eskimos. Claim. ls H you feel cool, you're all rlghl But i! you bwtdle up enough to perspire, you're done for. WHITE -Whal'• perfecUy white? Nothing on earth, not nen fresh mow, aay the lclence boys. RJMEMBER, in the freezer, garlic flavors get stron~ er, cbW novors get weaker. SURVEYS indicate more women than men watch TV after 11 p.m. How do you explain the why of that'? AT LAST REPORT he was living with his si1ty-nlnth wife in a small wooden house ln the suburb of Geylan near Singapore, Pttr. Atmarissen was. Unquestionably, he's the world record bolder in that contest among bu .. bands \\'ho marry repeatedly. Please note. wer're talking about monogamous men who take UJelr wives one at a time, not those polygamous fellows who wed platoons. Anyhow. Mr. Atmarissen says he just can't explain how he blB managed it. Sorry, genUemen. QUERIES -Q. "Any slot machines in China?" A. There are. The Chinese call them hungry tigers, Q. ''THOSE stagecoach stqps in the Old \Vest -how far .fpart were they?" A. Maybe 20 miles. All! ASKED how fast your blood passes through your heart. Depends. Get ·exercised and it can pour along at a rate of p.bout four gallons a minute. That,, as fast as Water runs out of an ordinary kitchen faucet. SO WHi\,T is Dr. Albert Einstein 's epitaph? There's none. No marker, stone. plate, sign . Nothing \\•ith the re- mains. Sucb is what he ordered. THE BRIDGES acl'OS! the Pt1ississippi River are at their !hor1¢sf. now. Or almost. In midsummer, they 're all · several inches longer. ,. Address mail to L. M. Boyd, P. O. Boz 1815, New- port Beach, Calif. 92660. DllGe 20 F11hlon lslond, Newport BHch, Phono 644-2525 SUNRISE . SUNSET • • • fashion fabrics . . . new spring look POLYESTER PHOTO PRINTS Lovely potterns ond beoutiful rich coloring to delight the eye in wonderflj), woshoble, pockoble, core.free polyester. ,SUNRI SE ... looks end feels like silk. Morvolous body end deep lustrous finish , o perfect dre55 weight. +5" wide. 5.19 yd. SUNSET ... motching s~eer to use os sleeves, skirt, or best of ell over Sunrise for o foscinoting effect of depth and . movement. 45" wide 4,00 yd. Ull YOUI IANlAMlllCAID 01 MAITll CHAIGI ~-· ; Small rugs. ·Big ·sa Sale. 15o/o to 25% ' tMi'if 1sws2 IIUI tealH 'Plateau' 2 E • • • Sale price• ,ltecttve through Sunde~· only! , .. ' ' ' . . • Latex bac Ing .•. 1 'M1pri1r zt X 48" ••• reg.5,99 .• •'ot 38 X 80" • , • reg. $11' ••• 48 X 7'1:' ••. reg. $19 •• , t ~ boltnal .... Save 15% on made~~ .. =:: ' . ·measure draperie~i La·st 3 -d a. ~~~ .. • • ~------------~---....---·-----..,, ' . DOD . DOD ODD DOD • t= . ~-= •hul ldl I Id Ima t ...... od odl ...mr IJlllOlq Draperlto mod•to .,...,,.,,.,,... l1brlc1 tn over 70 1~ .. r \D01dt 700 decorator colort. Select from rayon/acetate 1a1ln1 and Jacq~o, pqtyoater sheers, cOHOl\Pfil'l"- othera. Valancn a~d tfeblckt available. Fino1t quality precla1:i workmonahlp and 1111,~'!lllng en1u,e1 tining yourwlndowtl"X y. Ma(chfng bed1pread1 available In. aome fabrfca. ·r ·To Measure: Width; meaau .. lrom (Gj tq (H), or wldtb ol ln1t1lled ,dr~ry ll>d. length: Forc1ll ng.t0Uoorlongth, me11Ur• (A) IO (B). • For rt0ular floor lenoth ,,...u,. (C) to (0) . For 11il lenglti mouuro from (E) IQ (FJ. Add'3 lnch.1lf l'Oll W.tlll btlow- 1111 length. Bring lhftlfl)HIUr-11 1n and we will rec:ommond the proper ltze dt1periel. ' I JJ,-->"-!ll-.H-.J-\Jl_.~c..J-'~.J-UJ.L-JL.l._~ .. · JCPenney The values are here every day. ' - *Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.m. at the f ollowlng stores: NEWPORT BEACH , Fa,hion l•lend . HUNTING TON 'BEACH, Hunitngton .Center. Ch.,g• ltl I ' \ ' l. .• ..,._ ,. '. ·:., " 6 Judges In Recall Se:wer Fire, Blast Jilli 3 • f · · lnlng the Wll!hlre ~ 'Raling with sol· lotch, flro Four. o~rs. running for another manhole, bad reached the ladder and were aa;am· bllni up it whin aa explosioo boomed 1brolh·lhe ·tuMe1. j • Top ·nian the·laddet•was James,f,farx. The force of the blaat catapulted him through • hole in a puff ·of aa not hurt, e:s:· r leg bruises. ' • men behind hlm. • The force of the explosion jolted the upper. rqost off the 30-tooi ladder to the surface, fire officials said, and be fell backward•. knock· Ing the two below him back to the bottom of the tunnel, where they died in the ex· plosion and the flare of hot gas """"""'°k'' lhat s u r g e d tbrougb the shaft. "" 'Jarm .. Buys .JS;OOQ t'~~ Acres Mcf~P IAP) -ROtieiijflm )'WI' Jnc., bas ... l10UlJCtd 1liise of lS,000 1.n!i"Of ' 'firt-County fann land from Tenneco West. Inc., l0r '4!1lliillllOll! P -ction brings the lo& '11!t61 lamf purchased b)Y .,.,,,,. ...... the tl ftill'1 .. 'ti!Dlbf<fi1>m Tenneco lo 70,.~ million, said l!l'05ideoll 11!ollla • B . ~ 'l'Uesdly. Rol>erfl aald he now farms uo,ooo ,1cm In Kem County. Tiie new porchue lncludos 10,080 ...... devtloped with llmonds. or~ and grapes -the~lnrow cnJ'I. Roberta oald. · llolloi1a aald tllo new land w11 11t purdlMOd by a,ooo llmltlld portnen In porceJa of lllnt lo Im -. The ~ name wtD bl nta1ned mi Ila land and U. company • 'Anti.busing' Bid Killed by Solons ·- Returning Dock1nen Find Jobs 'S.~arc ' Operations r at most of1 the 24 West Co t porb Tuesdpiy after .iever.al ays of preparing docks and equip- ment.1 The Pacific· M a r i m e Associ~~lon said 163 lps were Ming worked an 60 were waiting for crews. The record strike en Saturday ·when 71.percenl f thl!: ILWU' membership vo to accept.a new' 18-month tract Providing a 24·l>ercen pay incrU.se. - • Qui'bQling Over 'Ms.' .SACRAMENTO IUPf) - Califohiia's all-male sen- ators, now· facing their !ll'\t-bill .allowing women to ~ themselves "Ms." are i,quibbling over just who '{alls into that cate· gory. \ After' some discussion Tuesday; the senators de· cided to bold up action on the bill Until they find a definition. Sen. Mervyn Dymally, (0.Los Angeles), author of the measure lo allow some women to designate themselv.es as Ms. when they register to vote, said, ·"If you~re a Uttle old lady. 11ot mar:rted and not a }'OOn.I( girl, you could use Ms .. " R·ing yourself u .a.nd don,t ·stop with ne. They're special at 19. :a. 10K gold 'Cat's eye' quartz. 19.88 10K gold with pink coral. 19.88· , 1 OK gold pearl and • diamond stone. 19.88 10K go1~;.~lnd~"1tar sapphire. ·19;88 -.. 10K gold with Jade stone. 19.88 1QK_~!1ot-: gold with genuine saPphire. 19'.88 • 10K gold 'three QUftu* 10K gold with op·a1 fOK gold with diamond • 19.88 . pearl ' ring. . stone.. • 19.88 · 19.88 't. ••• 1PK g~ld.~ii~ ~mo!<Y.: .1o~_go14w1thgari>f!iind. 10K yellow 'dplf.Wilii .: .. .' qUartt atone. cultured pearl. cameo stone. 19.88 19.88 19.88 11lu$lratlons enlarged IO Show det1ll JCPenney fine jewelry . The vakHjs are here fNelY day. ' •. . ' Shop_ Sunday noon to 5 P .M. It the following 1tore1: ., .. : ROBIN.SON'S . \ \ ... . . ... ril ,.,,,, It, lie aald. The .,_. fl betwsm F,.JD'lOIO .. A.1il1bl1 ti: NEWPORT l~CH, Fu~ioo r,1 .. d .. HUNTINGTON l~CH, Huotf•9to• Ct•l1r. 'CM'9• it. NEWPORT CtN FASHIQN.JSLAHD .. -·-' 1•11 • I ' I ' ' • , ' '); • • t • 644-2aoo • • . . For The Record • , =. • D41L '(. Pll ff I Battle Won· ' Veterans Def end Mayor Eyed In Lawsuit ·county Highways Benefit From · Beautification Plan SANTA AJIA -Sant. Ana M1yur Lorln Grh1et and the owner• of hl1 Jeand 197l Courthouse Site Mercury have been sued for SACRAMENTO -Two The site on Route 5 In Tustin Chan1u are planned ml flSO,oOo by 1 woman who Oranae rA>unty altu Mre In· ind Santa Ana 1tretche1 from another aectlon of Route I, ln hold• !he mayor reJponsibl• eluded In a 13 mll!lon plua Mai n s1r .. 1 to .I mile 10ulh or Allih•lm at tht H arb n 1 SANTA AJIA 0-Oranae repreaenlallve of the Para· for a col111lon •In wblch ahe st.le hishway planlinl project SanU110 Creel<. Tha plan In. Boulevard ' lnterc ha••o. tht ~ .. ~ approved recently by the ., """""~y·vetbrans won I batUe lyzed Veter1ns Auociatlon was Injured. Ca lllornli HI I h,w 1 "I Com· clude1 pl1n.tlng o( 1hrubs, maJQI' ftetwlf eotrlnce te Tuesday when tht: couniy aid reatrooma with l'ki• doors Beverly Jo Glbba of Garden I lo trees and -ou""' cover to nd nd ••--~_.. Grove cblr111 M4yor Grl1et m 511 n. •· '"f DLlneyla a OU111r com-Board of Supervlaon agreed.._ for wheel cha in are uu1.uul · ind Newport National Leis-Among . the JT projects rtd1.1ce the <1ta.rtneu or the mercl•I and r 1 1 1d 1 n t I a I 1 to leave t.he county Veter1n1 tory. Ing, 2022 Business Center autho rized 1t a buslneu 1lopes. develop~t.1. Servlet Office tn the riew SUpervbor Robert W. Battin Kids Like or 1 v e , Jr v 1 n e. w it h meeting in Sacramento were 1 Route & runs throuah a Trett, ahrubl i nd cmund courthouat. ~:~:~~~ of'/;e ~::~I~ t:! :ai;::~bi~t.y /:1.th!t a:d~~~ ~~·~ ,nc:m:.r:r:m~~ .~ ~e:!d~~t!'n=:ncu~h~~ 1::: cover ~Ill bl planted to con.- A week ago, aupervlaon courthouse. Baker cut the on-TO Ask Andy tersectlon of "!'..dln&er Avenue 1nolher in Anaheim costln& fiUed for eonatructlon of the pl~ent 1bcJtlnc rreewm and decided that the office. whlcl> ly diuentlna voi.. and Broad way, Santi Ana. $11,000. roadway. bulldln1 do velopmuto. lwldlN ve1<ran <<>11111ell1111...::...:.::.::::::;~:..:...~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~:.:.;:.;.::.:..:......:..--~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'-~~~~~~~~...:..~...:..~~~~ arid papeiwork, ahould he moved to the fonnu 11w library on. Broadw11 ·at ltJi s1r .. t 1n Santa Ana. Ben de Leon, vettra.ns aervice ·offi~r. and repreeen· tative1 of tervlce or1aniu· lions protested the move. Qt Leon n id'tbe. former law library Is inadequate, lacU parking •nd tha t the pro~ move would Inconvenience hundreds or veterana who use the atrvices of tbt affice. De loon aald hlJ ·office serves an average of J,000 people 1 month, or 38,000 a year. • He did aJfff that ii it ls necessary to provide ad- ditional apace for t h t Munklpal C.ourta compui.r of- fice , he woull:l not object to a move ta oUler offices in the courthouse. Superv bor DaYid L. BaW of Garden · Grove favored thi move to the law library building. "It I• I Sood building, formerly uaed hy the Dlalrlct Attorney and wltb remodeling and provision of hetl<r parl<ing· It could he more 1atiafactory In the long run," he arllJld. De Leon protested that restrooms are ft0t .actequ1te 1in the old library buildlnl· A Silverado Abuse Eyed By Caspers Supervisors Bet $6,300 .o;,, c"ensus ' CHICK Out FIRST SALi OH MICHELIN RADIAL TlllES IN IPOITI HCTION 0# THll PAPU HEIBW L MlW Tllll CO., INC. Int-I ... ,,.,._._, ...... UJl4 .. IAllTA A11A PUCllmA Sale. Save big m'oney now on oUr space-saving refrigerators and freezers. Save 1095 Save 1595 Save 20 95 llog. ,,. .... -""· llog. ,.. .. , .... 141. ,enncr_. 4.1 9'L tt. oompect retrtiar .... Great for lpartment1, hotels, motels, llog. 1"f.t5. ~ S1M. ,...,"~ I.I cu. ft. compeot retrt .. ,....,_ 'ffturea 4 s helves (3 adjustable, 1 glu1), family room, and dens. Workable woodgr1fn1d vinyl tops, automatic defrost button. Copper-,__ 7A • IL ao--111•111111 Nfrlgorotar. For •'1'811 apart.,.Jrta. mobll• ho"* or second home. large ,,_., eornpatl-.t with let tray. Autofnatlc defroct button. ChooN harvest gold or 'ava,cado. Size 49 $/t':H X 21 1/2" W X 20 3/4"0 ,. large freezer compart ment with let tr1ya. automatic defrost button. Come1 In evocedtt. Size; 53 5/8"H X 23"W X 23 3/4"0 . t1 I-·· tona or harveot gold. Size: 331Ho"H X 21~"W X 23"0. tlawth• " - LN ,..,,.,.! I Save 1595 , , llog.1NM,-S1"- ,.,. __ U cu. IL-' chest frHzer. Rubberized ateef wire buklt th1t'1 movable for •IH In storage. Adj ustable temperature Control. Comes In wn tt1 whh walnut grained ·vinyl top. Size: 33'ii'H.X 29\lz"W X 23%"0 . 17 I llAAilli• Great .buy on a portat>le black and whi e T.V. Speci sag Save 1095 flog. 71.11, -IH. ,...,.,_ 2.0 .U. IL compect rtffitlr'1tor. For dens, 1tudent'1 dorma and 1m11t offiC... 2 rubbertz,ct ttMI 1lldlng 1helvu, frtezer compartment. Coppertone wtth woodgrain vtnyl door. Size: 1911/18"H x 191111e·w X 2211111"0 . SI a""°'"'• JCPenney The values are here every day. lllop lwMlay noon to I PM It tM followlng atorw. NIWPORT IEACH, F•shlo!i lsJ.nd. HUNTINGTq!-1 BEACH. Huntington C.nter · • \ I .· , ' J• DA!LT PILOT QUffNIE ~· f·t ' lly Phil lnterlandl ''It's been quite a day-so Car you've blown your top at the same time in three time zones." 'People Peril' Traffic Gets Heavy On Region's Rivers ., ,,_.,, .. ,, ... Park otfic!ata throughout the \Vest are 'Worried about Irr crt:asing traflic on some of the t.'orld's roughest byway&-the region's semi-tame rivers. And even old river runners, who make their living boun- cing touriltJ over roller· :roast.r rapids, agree thJt the r-New Parks ' Proposed For 1976 WASfDNGTON (AP) ~ The American Reyolutlon Bicentennial Commbaton has prOj>osed ·a nAtioliwlde nety,·ork of Bicentennial parks to be. built on land donated to the states by the federal government. David J. Mahoney, <.'Om· miasion cl\airman. said the 1 parka would serve r•11 focal i points' in. each Jtate 1,ot 1 celebration of the nation's '""'200th aruUversary in 1.976 and • 1 remain as perm-anent ' facilities. i Plans call for donation of 1 federaU~woed turplwi land 1-in lots of from 100 ta 500 I acres, with federal govern- ment rundlng design and con- &trucUon of the park facilitlu, with pouible 11tate !haring. I The states )VOuld mao1ge and operate the porks. f Ataoewsconference, , 1'1ahoney displ ayed a model ~ prototype of a Bicentennial ~ Park P,a1vi!Jon which Is to be ~ t})e loca , point of each park. ~ The pavllioh Includes a' state ~ historical exhJbit ball, a state ' crafts bazaar where arts and ~ crafts of the state could be • , display~ and 90ld, a theater ; for films of state or reglo?Jal \ history · and an amphitheater rlvers may be In more danger than the thouaands who brave them each year. "1.1ost of us feel 1 lhere's 10Jng to have to be tome kind of limitation" on the number of the people lllowed on the rivers, says Bill Belknap, prealdent of the Western River Guldu As!n. WRGA. The Grand Canyon National Park reporll 10,ttz persons baUled the canyon11 stretch of the Colorado River last year, compared to 2,099 in 1967. With people ispending an average of one well on the river, this added up to more than 70,000 villtor days in 1971. Robert Lovearen, park superintendent, 1a1d a limit of 90,000 vlaltora days was im- posed Jut year but it has been increased to 105,000 for 1972. He said most ol the problem comes from garbage and human waste. But beaches along the C.Olorado have Im- proved since a rule that boaters must carry chemical toilets on el'.pedltlona, Lovegren .saki. He said such 2roble1D1 did not exl.st before .tlie Gleb. 'Can- yon Dam wu built because flash floods used to clean it out each spring . Lovegren said pawer boats have been dJacouraged where the river remainl free , and the number of persons on ex· pedltiom has been lim1ted to 6.1. Guides on the Green and Yampa rivers further north have been allowed to carry no more travelers than last year. In Idaho, there ls no limit on river runners, but the number of operators is being cut from 18 to 15. Officials say they may try to cut down traffic on the Snake River with limits next year. Belknap's group, includ.Jng about 120 gu.tdes, stands to lose business if there are to many relltrictkms. I for live performances. Jn addition to the pavilion, 1'1ahoney said the parks could ~ · include a Bicentennial Plaza for major 'CereQlOl'lies of the · But be said n;>ost guides recognize the ecologic a dangers. Belknap said the main problem Ls deciding what commercJal operations will be allowed along the waterways. ''There's ·tl1!mendowi con-- cern," he said, "And It's a tremendous problem.'' celebration, food facilities and I recreational facilities. AmNTION IACKPACKIRS UAlN PROM THI EXPERTS AIOUT WILDERNESS TUYIL IN11RIS110? PAT'S Sit & IPOIT lllOP "THI P«OllSSIONAlS" Will IRING YOU "THI PIOFISllONAl.S" PAT'S SKI & SPORT SHOP ,.,.,Hr. THf OPIH SPAC!S MOUNTAINllllNG COURIE "GUIST lECTUURS" lnclujt *DICK KILTY *Wlllll IA:CAlll l~.,.1'111 "' Hi.. rnllvo ~ RRTT ~'"""'PACK ,,,.. 11111 \•~ Cly) u.1 ... 1 • ..._,_ VAIQUI' IOOTS •JACK OILlllT .,,;.,,,...i4w •A, M•"'H< el It.I Or1A .. Qi~~l'J' ':f.r.=':: :::!.'" $1•lCM • USM •U.I. ,.,.tt ·~r.'• Tt"Mwo C•n10• IT'S 1111, S Ot( UI At OUt MIW HUM HUfnl .. (UON ~OCAflON fTAlfl •n. 21th • p~t~ Ski & SPORt Shop ''NIW" HUNTINGTON LOCATION ··....:.... .~ ADAMS AVINUI fCCJlNU Of MAGNOUA I AOAMSI (714J t62·1121 (2U) 5t2·2121 I Hard to Corral (UITOM TAILORS 0,.... II e.lfto Plane Bandits Hit It Big in West ". ''"" All Hr LOS ANGELES CAP) -As more and more persons in· crealingly take to lhe air in private planes, I a w en- forcement aaimclee race a new problem: the plane thief. Lut year 200 planes were stolen in 1he southwestern UnJted States. More than 26,000 Ught planes a r e re&Jstered In California. "It'• easier to steal a $50,000 plane than it ls a car and there'• much less chance of being caughl ," saya one in- aurance investigator. Auiliorities have a hard lime handling the problem, as Res Rose. owner of Rose Avla!lon Inc. o( suburban Hawthorne found out recently. When a plane be!Onging to him was stolen, a police officer from the auto theft detall took a report but C1>tlld do little else. Police agencies say they are not equipped to chase down plane thieves. The Federal Aviation Admlni!tration said It could not help becawe ft didn't deal In law enforcement. The FBI said it would enter COSTA MESA STORE ONLY , San Diego Freeway at Bristol Avenue SAVE ,840 I: ELECTRI&·: MASSAGER .. •.fP'#~ W'" ·~f!JY ' STORI HOO••• OAILY & SAfU•DAY r I ·cM•l•f "oa utfocit MONlM~\' tMtTAUMfMll 10 AM 10 t PM SUNDAY 11TO1 , the case If he proved the ltolP"l plane crossed a state line .• The mlooing plane, stripped of itJ radio, ...aa found two months later at an airport in Vi.salla, about 200 mile.; away, after Role received a letter blllill1 him for parking. security officer, agreed there rack•t• DNI ~rr•LE s 5 0 is "very little chance " of an 1 1111t su11's airplane lhJef being CIU&ht 1 s,.rt C..t Siik 1.l~ll.llr 1vl!' IS ... f 1 Pair Sl•ckt Sl1k Sh1rk•kln l!o'llS •t.tt immediately because 0 ntW hi \VDOI ~h•rO.lklto 1Vllt Jf.tt numbers and the thief's ability 1 s rt Fl:w wa~1ea i~n~ H.M s I I 0 SPOtl (G•11 ,. ... to fly far away, Cvstom rMat •lllrts .... The plane theft could beat be(I L---,-::~0.,::-:c=:;;;;:;;;;:-:;;;;--' ·--died by the FBI. Lang, 'LIE.t.$1 CALL 'Oil AN AJiJiOtNTMl!NT. As: IWl.11 • tw Clll""" IMMIMI' Mr. JACK SAHi, 1r Yb By simply painlin& a ne\v number on a plane's tail, it can be. flown to any airport iD tbe llnlted Stat., without fear of delectlon, says Charles W. Funaro, a North Hollywood private detectiv,_e. says, but noted that t!>e agen-1 ,, UGUNA NOTIL ,II.I ff4·115I ba ·--tkA cu """' CHll MhJh-•Y· \."9111'• •••th cy s never u=.i• given ue:i!b;••;•;"~'"~'~·;•";"~·~~;·;··~'~'"'~'~,..;·;"~~~~~~~~ re3p0nsibility. "And it is a new problem to E tbe FBI." he 11id. "They are Nearly i veryone not aviation oriented and a this ume. at 1e .. 1. '" not Listens to Landers capable of handling thls type \Valler Lang, an FAA of crime.'' I Small APPLIANCES I MUNSEY CORN POPPER ] qt, Many us as. Haal· ing & Wlffl'lil\9 \Ollpl. Y19at1bl1•, babi bar· ti••· . CORNWALL 368 HOT ELECTRIC TRAY K11pt foff hot i nd laity whil a you c:oolr and slrYa, 41s CORNWALL SLECTllC HEATED CASSEROLE 7.48 WISTINOHOUSE CLOTHES BRUSH 3.97 I SPORTS DEPT. I TRAIL ILAZER PROPANE CAMP LANTERN Dou91o m11111t. Pl .1 100. 14~7 ' I ._ 'COMPL.ETE VOLLEYBALL SET Offic.iel 1i11 I waiqht b1U. Non-rust polu. 20' by 2' nit. 51s I GARDENING I MUL Tl·COLORED WEB CHAIR Slron9 wrap around 1rm1 with shirdy l19•. c.m,oro at J .. 97. NOW 441 I HOUSEWARES I VICTORIAN STYLI WAU MIRRORS ll11vtifu Uy decorated edq11. Squ1r1 I 0~11 s h 11 p o s. Pitl1bur9k plate tla11. 0<1r r19. 8.97. NOW . 500 t -pc. STAINLESS ITllL COOKWARE SET I qt. ind 2 qt. c.0~111d 1avc1pan1. < qt. ,.; IO" '"'"'' 9'' pins. Poli1h1d. Easy to c.11111. Iv Roy1l Crist. · Comp1 r1 et 14.99. LARGE CERAMIC COOKIE JARS Fovr 1tv!11 to choos1 from. Pig, liar, Owl •nd El1ph1nt. 129 HANGING ASHTRAYS Many stvl111 & c.olors, Something to 1 11 i t ov1ryon1'1 d1c.or1lin9 11aod• •nd id111. 5'7 I RADIO·PHONO I • G.E. CLOCK RADIO w ...... ,.,. ,,, 141s '' ol11rm. 5110011 efarift. • ' FEDERAL WALKY TAL• PAii 9.'1 I · AUTOMOTIVES I PTA BY OUMOUT Hi Parform1nc 1 Oil Tr11tm1nl. IS or. .97 HOLLINGSHEAD IUMMIR ENGINE COOLANT . Go\ "''' fot '"m' 3·;,100 now. I SUNDRIES I: GEM MANICURE KIT Ntil tlipp1r, n1il fila • tw1011,., fiva 1m'1ry boirds, 111d lo111eil cli,ptr. 2.00 Y1!w1. .99 IATHE AND GLOW BATH OIL Ench 4•v 1ki11. l uy 7 01. boH lt , t•f 2 01. fr11. 2.7) Y1lu1. NOW Q-TIPS -119 FAMILY CHEST 314 do~bl1 tip sweb1. 99 On1 a y1er 'pec.iel. e ,ACQUJN iXTRA ORY SKIN LOTIO~ . Moi1t.iri11s, 1mooth•. 78 1oflons. ID ot. 1i11. e ITOY CLEARANCE I MATTEL HIGH TAIL HAULlR Tr11i11 i nd l1yout power ch1r91d al1c.tr ic tr11 i11 and trac.k. Ovr r19. 1.99. NOW 500 TOP THE TOP by IDEAL Spi11 th, top, 1lack'1m 100 hi9h. T•••s 1t 11d y. "''"'' I a lr••n eya. A91s 9 I up. R•t· l.22 I HARDWARE ) Pit.ICE .FISTIR-W•ll Mount FAUCET SET Cm•d• with ''"''"· 1 oss MARK 1-'JO..plN.e SOCKET SET ' t· 92s MAJOR APPl1ANCES, TV'S & STEREO CLEARANCE! -. . R.C.A. 1911 Portable Ac cu. Color T. V. Wilh four funcfion Romofo Control. w/cerf, 1ulomatic flnt tuning. Mod'\194HWl 479°!0 ONLY I Admiral 20" Portable Color T.V. Aulom.tic fin• tuning. 3 sfage l.F., w/cart. Model 2T571 '319°~NI ONLY Costa Mesa ,. Packard Bell 25"'" Color Consolette T. V. . ' Automlfic fine luning. lo!odtl • ZCU4WL 43900 '. ONI O~LY Adr-.lral 25" Color Console T~V. Autom1lic fine tuning. Model •SLIOlOI 44~~0~LY 'lb81 BRISTOL AVl: SAN DllGO FREEWAY AT 1111.IS.TOL ' • ' \ •• WednHd'1. Flllroory 2.l. 1972 DAILV '1L01 JJ WIN ONE, LOSE· ONE Role of Early , Viral ,Damage Is Being Studied NAPLES, llaly (UPI\ _ The Anltn1l Protection League has .Prabed and attacked the Naples school auperintendeney for two essay contests It is running almult.aneously In the dY's eltc:nentary's schools, t111 first II-for the best com- ~ltlon on• wildlife protection. 2J~ acond Is for papers on rwntJng. Veterans Tricked On Graves WASHINGTON <UPI) - Hundreds of U.S. veterans are being trapped into cnstly buti•la rra n gem en ts by private cemetery owners who oCJer "free'' grave sites. a g~up of George Washington UJ'livfirsity Law students says. The students said a growing number of private cemeteries offe; veterans "privileges to burial plots and services at advantageous rates," and then overcharge veterans' widows for crypts, markers, and grave opening services. The students c I a i m e d that cemetery owners o f t e n represented themselves as government-backed agents. The students cited an elder- ly Norfolk, Va ., woman , Mrs. Raymond Wolford, who had to exhume her husband's body because she was unable to pa v Sl ,100 for a "free" grave. A New l'ork veteran signed a $7*.I ~ontract with the Ptnelawn, N.V., Memo r i a I Cemetery after a salesman told him that veteran!) who died after 1980 would be cremated, they added. The Ni:it 1onal Associat ion of Cemeteries had no immediate comment about the charge11. The students said private ctmeelries began ma1cing of- fers of frtt space in 1966 due to the· growing shortage of space for veteran! in national cemeteries. The yeterans · Adminlst rp- lion to1d the students there are ~ national cemeteries ror veterans but 39 were closed by last year. Another six cem- eter~ are ei:pected to close withift the next deca de. The students documented for tl;le' co mmiltee what they calle8 ''objectionab le featufes" in the "Free Graves Editor'J ttote -Mort and mort thf! niJpicion U ipreadittO mnong sdl!!:ntULt that tht viru.s is implicated in ?UOTlJI all of man'1 dis· tasts, from lht common cold. to cancer, This iJ tht 1tcond of two art1cttJ 011 tht viru.s and tht link with disease. By BRIAN SULLIVAN A,. kltfl(t Wrlltt NEW YORK -Many scien- tist! are beginning to look at a range or human disease from a new point of view: that the initial damage was done by a virus. "Thi.s is a more popu1ar way or looking at disease than just a few years ago," says Dr. Sol Spiegelman, a virus and brell.!lt cancer researcher at Columbia University, ''It ls a tremendously rapid· Jy developing field ," says im· munobiologist Robe.rt A. Good of the University of Min- nesota. "We're just beginning to scratch the surface of the fantastic world of viru!l in- fections." Scientists have suspected a link between viruses and cancer. and now~ been sug· gested that even hl'art attacks and arteriosclerosis may be the result of early viral damage. Further. researchers are now looking for a pouible viral role in diseases of the central nervous system, .such as multiple sclerosis. As a result or this ei:plo!ion in virus research, and with virus diseases becoming more It's spring! Fresh· en your w•rdrob• with • s•l•etion from J•c.k's new sprin g shirts •nd t ies. R•m•mb•r1 th• best is •lways ... ' . ' . 1467 v;, Lido Newport lt•c.h to Veterans" prograrru;. l;::==========.1 They said they have receiv- ed 118 complaint! involving 42 different private cemeteries in 16 states. They said the worst offenders are cemeteries in Florida, Maryland, Michigan. NortW'Carolina. Pennsylvania and l(irginia. l I .. BACK A WINNER TAKE THE NEWS QUIZ We Dare You .. , Every Saturday &OYllNOt IONALD IU•AN INVITES YOU TO JOIN W"H HIN TODAY ( .. ~. 2Jl IN Sl•NING THI P'ITrTION TO 'LACI THI NIXON 'LIDGID DILE6ATION ON THI JUNI ltfri ll· PUILICAN P•IMAllY 14,LLOT. IUENA PARK l ut111 Po1tlt Shoppin11 C1nf1t St11tto11 tncl lo1 P•llfl • COSTA MESA •' Seuth Co••' Pl11• S•n Diego fttt••Y I lrhtol FULLERTON r.rf•c.tien c1 •• ,..,·, ISJI N. H•rltet II~. • • '""'rv M1 tk•t l•tf•nc.huty tllcl Mtrlior Or1n91ft!r Mo1ll H•rlio1 •118 Or11n91lhorp1 Ill.VINE Uni,.ertlty P•rlt Shoppl119 Ctr. N~WPORT IEA CH Ric h.rel• Lido Vi• lido •nd N•wport Rich•rd1 M•rbor,.iew Mtc.Artlt11t .~ S111 Joo1q uin Hilh El R•11c.he E•ttliluff Eett l luff Or. •ncl A"•nid• Ctl'l'lpO ORANGE n. Citv, Mt11ch11t•r t11d Ch•pm•n Th• M•ll of Or•nt• Tu1tl11 •IHI M•th Tow11 •ncl Countrv 61rcl•11 Gr•11t FtttW•Y tn' Mtl11 TUSTIN l•rwi11 Squ1,t N•wport fl'I' Flnt For Furlher-lnlormtt lon Ctll s••·llll Import.ant as antlblotlcs cure bacterl.al illnesses, a leading cardiologist suggests th a t virology laboratories should be set up across the nation fnr doctors to use In their dally dealing with patient3. "In America today, we hr1ve good bacteriology," says Dr. George E. Burch of Tulane University. ''We can isolate staph and strep, but there are very poor facilities for the study of viruses and the diseases due to viruses. We should establish. all over America . virology labs for doctors to make use of in their WHITE serv,ices to patient.s." Burch. who has suggested the viral role in heart disease, also believes there should be more research In such areas as the relationship of bacterial and viral infections, sug- gesting that a strep infection might condition a person for a viral infection, Further, he says, there should be a study of multiple infections, of several viruseii acting at the same time and of their combined effect. "I think there should be !more work done on what th" ·diseases are that viruses pro- COSTA MESA STORE ONLY I San Diego Frffw1y at Bristol Ave • FABRICS & SEWING ASSORTED REMNANTS Clioo11 froll'I .u 11111l1rialzoo/ / off lilo1ncl1 i" •nort•d r1111· /0 n•nl 11"9th1. Sp1c.i•llY redvt•d for thi1 •d. DOUIU KNITS 100°/o Polyester Doubte Knits Choose fro;,, 800 ;<t~rd• of solid• end some jacquards, availeble in summer end winter weights. Rtg. to 4. 99 yd. NOW 2.99 yd. I ITORIHOURl1 DAILY &SATUID~l UAJI. TDtP.M. IU"DAT10T07 duce," Burch says. "Viruses are causing more trouble than we know about." you are infected. you <:arry it for the rest of your life," Sanders says. "The herpes h1 lurk.Ing there all the time. then it comes out. with exposure to sunlight or a nasty note from the bank." thJng, Sanders 11ys, It Is nol surprisln& that vJruat1 wouJ4 have 11ublle longterm effects. Virologist F. X l n s I e y Sanders of the: Sloan-Ket- C.Onsldering this sort of tering Institute for Cancer•----.-,-,,...-,.,-.-~-,---­ Research caUs this new emph- asis "viral ecology, looking at how viruses behave in nature." •SINGLE AbULTS* FOTODATE I One avenue of research is concerned with S(Kalled "slow vi ruses," viru!es that do not produce any effect until as long as years after the initial infection. The common cold sore ls caused by herpes simplex virus, for example. and "once Eat! '" \ \ If yeu W•llf •11 •1,ur•cl w•y le '"''' •in9I• P••,I• will<! whorn "'u '~"' ld,.ntlfy -1.1 FOTO DA.TE ••II yov kow you Ctll re111lwe 100'1, of pith1recl eli te r•f•rt•I• ""' eelli119 17141 111°1210 er: 1111 1 416°1122 ' J4 lir, rHM4e4 ... ~ Ne elili.-ti .. -, N• c:..tt.ct I WIES' FASHIONS AT LOW "CLEAR-OUT" PRICES! I •• ladies Corduroy Pants Jeon styles eveileble in p•slel shedes. Sites 8 thru 16. Reciular 5. 97 NOW 4.00 Winter Coat . Clearance Available in synthetic furs, embroidered vinyls and colorful plush lebrics. Nol every size in every style . RIH]ular to 44. 97 NOW 10~00 & Up Limited Quentilies Brassiere Clearance Meny styles, meny differ• ent fabrics to choose lrom. Not every size in every style. Regular to 2.00 NOW .99 each Limited Quentities I MEN'S WEAR AT LOWEST PRICES EVER! HURRYI MEN'S JACKET CLEARANCE All our winter weights re- duced up to 30 '/.I Choose from win ter corduroys and C.P.0. J•ckets to e•rryover lighter weights. R,.. to 27.97 I NOW 98! MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS Choos!ll from solidi, 1.trip11s •nd dobbies. Most •r8 perm- •nent-press11d. A fant•stic buy! .... ,. l.'7 ... 2 FOR 3oo MEN'S CASUAL PANTS Choos• from stra iqht leg1, flares, continentals, ivy 's, 11tc . M•ny, m•ny c.olor1, end styles to chocis• from. .... t• l.'7 NOW GIRLS', BOYS' & INFANTS' NEBJ AT SAVINGS I GIRL'S PANTS AND CAPRIS Av•il•ble in •s1orted feb- rie1 end essorted colors - prints, stripes, and solids. R,.. to J.9~ 100 & 2on BOY'S VElOUR SHIRTS I 00 -;. cotton velour1 in sol. ids •nd 1trip•s. Ribb•d cuffs, long 1l••ve1-ju1t lik• ded's, •"'l· 4.t7 NOW INFANTS PLAYWEAR Choo•• from an •s1ortm•nt of inf•nts eloth•s. Ave ilable in 1iies J mo1 . fo 24 mos. Al1 0 toddler's 1i2•1 2 to '4. .... 2.97 .. 4.JI I SHEETS, TOWRS, DRAPES, RUGS ••• HURRY & SAVEi CURTAIN BONANZA Major ele•r•nce of f•ctory buy-outs. Sel•e+ions eon silt of c.urteins , v•l•nces, ruf- fl1cl p•irs, some \hort dr•pes. R,.. to ,,t7 100 200 Now & LIM!TIO OUAHTITt•I AREA RUG CLEARANCE Round •nd r•c.t•nguler 1r11 • ru91, som• w; th frinqe d edges, some il'I sh •g•, •II in delic.iou1 dec.oretor colors. .... lt.99 Now 26.66 WINDOW SHADES All types, •II 1ir.e1; •11ort- m•nt made up of r•cent pro- motion •I residuea . R ... to •.t7 .. - Now 50°/o OH M..t.od l'rlco TERRY TOWELS Full b•th-1i21 towttls in thir1- ty t•rry. Av•il•bl• in solids •nd prints, I few in strip11. .... 1.50 No• .88 "· DECORATOR TOSS PILLOWS Assort•d 09e0r1tor pillows in square •nc( e i re u I a r sh•pes. Most •'• Kapok filled ; ell •~tr•ctiv•ly eov• er•d in y,ou! l•VOrit• febries' •ncl color•~ ' .... to 1.za 1 so 200 Now & 9UILTED BEDSPREAD CLEARANCE Gr.at •uorhn •nt ef fiut t1u11itt u11id •nd D•in+eJ, ciufll•d ttt••clt. Ch1101 1 fro"' +.,:", full, 1111••11 er kin9 1•1t 1. All 1•llluc1d! 300;0 OFF Costa Mesa 3088 BRISTOL A VE. SAN DIEGO FREEWAY AT BRISTOL • • II • llAILY PILOT Fle...-lsh In Area . TROUBLES SNOWBALL Hughes' Gadgets Installed CHECK: Dating Agencies ProvUle EASTON. Pa. IUPI) Cb1rlea Cortwrlahl and Jiilin Nutt.I, both JO, f1ce a he•rlng thil week on charges they made 1 nuisance out of a snowball. MANAGUA. N lea r a & u a !AP) -A clOHd-circuit t.tltvlaion camera, 1 squawk bo1, a peephole and an e:rlra lock have been inatalled at the entranct to the Managua hotel auitt where Howard ll . Hughes i1 bel1eved holed up. A caller al!O can be llCt'llliniU<i tbrou&h • tiny. brass·rirnmed peephole now vilible in the door. man on duty said when . a photographer snapped • pie· iure of the security array· The watchman presumably a Nicaraguan, rose lrom hit chair and for emphasis bran- dished the boOk he had been readln&. OUR FIRST SALE Escorts for $25 to $55 About II inches below the camera ia a plasUc, two-way talk boJ about four inches square. On the door, just above the regular Ir. e Y • <1perated knob, is an additional lock-round, apparently brass and about two inches in diameter. ON MICHELIN RAOIAL Tl RES IN SPORTS SICTION OF THll, PAPIA Pollet said the men were ar· reated after they rolled a LOS ANGELES (AP) -A or youn& -man. "Sex lhreatem them ; II'• snowball, four reel I n datt. by d.lct'°°9ry descrip-And for many businesa ex· the last thine they're looking diameter, down the main Uon, mum to have an ap-ecutivu. ae1 ian't all that im· tor. But give them a pretty street of town, obJtrucUn& polntmtnt with. On any givtn Port.ult in tbt escort date. ac-lirl to talk with and a good traffic. Many of the numerous U.S. newsmen who came to the hotel , hoping to see Hughes, began leaving early this week, their mission unfutlil\ed. HERBERT L MILLER, nlC~ many men would Uke to cording to one psychialrilt dinner, and they're more than -::=========; ba.ve an appolntment with a who asked not to be named. happy to pay the escort r pretty ctrl and v\ct versa. "They'rt anxiety·ridden. .uvlce 130 to f.o a n d But unle:a t.bty know each higta..atrung, drained of all maybe live the girl $20 olber or introcrucUons are villlily by the pressures and bt1ldes. made by frieod.1, there's little pace and compeUUon," be '1ft's problbly all on lhe cbance of a date, unless the says ... 'All they want is a company eJpeme account, THE BEST Readenhlp po 11 • prove "Pea.nuts" 1t one of the world's most popular comic ttrlfll. Read ft dally tn the DA.ll..Y Pil.OI'. The TV camera, about the 1ize of a hom~movle camera, was Installed Monday on a wa ll ol the corrk!er leading to the new and still unnumbered door on the seventh noor of the ln ter-ContlnentaJ Hotel. The camera ls on a fleJ:ible arm and can be swiveled toward the elevator or in the oPpo!lte direction toward the door. More discouraging than any of lhese devices t.o a hopeful visitor, however , are the neaUy dressed young men who one at a time kee p watch in the hall. ''This is the most frustrating assignment I've ever had," ooe said. There has been .speculalion that Hughes might be staying) at one ot the estates of Anastasio Somoza. TIRE CO., INC. 17Jt SUPIRIOI I •t 17tll •" .... ,.rtl \ 1'11.l '42-))14 olN SANfA ANA PLACINTIA dateleu.,.. wlllln( lo pick up friend, someone to talk to. anyway." or be picked up in bars and l--:--::;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij!iiiiiiiii!!iiiiiiiiiiii •·Js prohibido in hotel," the botel restauranta. I '!be JOlution to what can be a pi<>!esaional daUnc and ucort service - of which almost a dozen now opera.te in the Los Arigeles area. For a ree - ranging fro m S25 lo '51 !or a single date - they provide the unattended man or woman with a com· panlco !or lbe day or evening. And contruy to common belltl,, almoit no agencies are IJlouihl by police lo be lronll for prostllullon. Many male customers of escort services are traveiinJ businw men who want al'I at· tractive dinner companion or gu ide to tht sights of an unknown city. One is a guy named Walt, a Detroit-based adveriitlng executive. "It makes things much simpler," he say1. "Two of us gu ys u.su•Uy travel to1ether, and If we don't have a meeting at niaJil , "e like to ha ve din- ner, drive around s o m e , maybe tee a show or whatever wit h· a couple of nice young girls. "With the agency, we just call the escort Aervtce, drive over, mett the 1lrl1 and we're on our way." The operation of escort 1ervlce.s vary from aaency to "We eal I t he ' •ert>ice, meet the girls alld tce're on our to•lt•'' 11tncy. One, In Inglewood, provides no information about the al/I -just her photo. The cU!tomer 1eleets the girl he llkea, the agency calls her and he picks her up al home. The agency never even aaks his name. ln contrut, one 'Hollywood agency requires each man to dbpl1y proper ldentificaUon and complete a questlonnalre on h1J background, interests and what kind ol &irl he seeks. Hla repllea are coded for race l·whlte, 2-black, :J.ctber and type B-businenman, H- hlp, liq-IC!Utre, both lo be lili- ed Jn by the 11ency. You pick up the girl 1t the agency and must return her there. Why does an attractive, sophisticated young woman want to spend an evening ~ith a total atranger when ahe surely must have many ellgi· ble men amona: her acquaint· ance1? "This Is just a good way to meet different guys and have different experiences,'' aays one. J avad Emami, a San Diego psyc hologist -who has done reatarch on persons who date by computer matchings. say1 many a:irls who "think they want to swing but are in· hibited can UM. the escort service as sort or a home aublltltute." Other &iris, he aaid, may want to avoid the "un-- contf'ortable tmotlonal prob- lems" that often resu1t from dating neighbors or fellow workers, and turn to the escort service for insulat ion. "I'd guess, though, tl\at most of the glrla who sign up are JookJng to get married," he ·•dds. "In our Rludy, that's what 92 percent ol those who c1me to the computer dating companl!s wanted." SU:. it seems, Is mentioned eventuaUy on most escort d1te1, but ls e1pressly forbid· den for many of the Je1itlmate escort girls. But 1t most escort services, the girls make their <1wn deciaions about sex -"just like I "ould on any other date," 11y1 one -and almost fill mm to agree that ad- v•ntlge of ocort dates more than outwel&h the occasional ....i lo fend of! a dirty old - Smog Copter Will Be Used LOS ANGELES (AP) -To '-'* lta 111t111lllan«. the Air Polltltlon Control Dillrlcl pi.. lo UN a l'ull-Umc lltlloopUr. n. ~ calf walcll an .,.... ti more lhiln !Gt oquare mu.., 11o~ ... .n o1 _,, polnll ... llld ob1trve poll-~, .... , .... wlzldu lo loes< :•ie ..._ an of- llclll '""'- PRICES EFFE.CTIVf FEBRUARY 14 THRU MARCH 1 CLOSIN .G OUT ENTIRE STOCK OF WORLD FAMOUS . S SHERWIN·WILLIAMS PAINTS ~ -----------------------------------------SUPER KEM.TONE Deluxe latex woll point, the flnest interior polnl you can UM. Com- pletely washable. Your . easiest way to lovelier rooms. 1000 cut-- tom colors available. llMlllO TO srocr 0# HANO REG. 6.97 99 GAL. ----------------------------------------LATEX COVER THE EARTH HOUSE PAINT A,,., all ortund lal•• peint fer ••l•ri•• wMd •"'" fft•Mnry 1urfowt. N• "™ f•r a MP'O••t• fe.rmulo f.r w.M trim er 1iclln1. Oive1 your hemo •lllN fH" ef bffwty •nd pret.cti•"· 1000 cvt· t•"' c•len ..... aoltt.. . ALUMINUM ITEP LADDlll llMllEO 10 sroct 0# NANO REG . 6.88 99 GAL. 100%·-.11 alumin~,;,-weu construcled and re-inforced a t all 1tre11 points. U.L. apa proved, s n. s11E ~-------------------------------------99 KEM-GLO ENAMEL IA. For liitchen and ltathroom watf1, woodwork, cabinel1, clrie1 to o tmoeth t•rnj.9loa1. Durable and c•mpletety washobJe. Goes on easy with brush or rolJer~ 1000 cuslom colon available. llMITEO 10 lrOCl 0# HANO Li"'lt •n• ,., cv•••m.•r wit~ thJ• c•wpen. I•· ,ir•• M•rch I , 1972. REG. 1.99 I'.~. REG . 10.69 SS • GAL. U,.,j.... .. it.ft -"•"'· ,....,.,., .,.1, .,.. '• • -· ---------- 6 FT. 8'.!. RWIN-WILLIAMS PAINTS GALLONSllE EVERGREENS ~eolthy plants. Fott 9rowin1 varie tifl. leautiful os occont plants or 9roup plantint•· •TAMJUl:llHll • GOLDlll.AnHYnAI • lfAUAll CY••lll YOuaCHOICI Hi9h nitr•1•11 f•r qw l(k 9reenin1 . .CANDLE WAX Ct5 BIG 11 LB. SLABS It's fun,· if's easy to make 18 your own candles. Today'l li"'h 4 p•t rw11 .. rn.r with this c•ll• ,.11, l•piNI Meteh ;::::::~~ .. ""· . TIX A CO MOTOR OIL REG. 33' 20·30•r40w•l11'11 . 2 Limit 6 ~''· p•r 4" cw1l•IT'l•r wilh .'hk \t c•wp•n. l•p1re1 It"""-'.,... Moffh I, 1972. QT' BERNI TANK REFILL ,,..,.M RKM *-' •• l•rch•t, •l•'f'•t eit41 ...... ,,~ ... lilT'l h 2 I"' c'w•t•m•t w~h thlf cM1'9n. 11· pht• M•r. I , 19 71. REG. 99' 77.~. J M.11. IA't Of:.$ ~lS POMONA 6SSLlllUS NI.ti HOl.J A Milli popular hobby. o ... it.your· Mlf crea,;n9 •f Mautiful candles an" figure•. ANGW IYDYDAY 'LOW••ICI l.9t ,7''xl7'' C~!J:!cl.llLE "floe ""illr -4 MIO'f 19 C•lfMll 1""'' -·· n ........... ..., ";.•"'t • '"" ,.., .ff tM ...... ""' •"",.... .._,.,s .... -1....,,_ .. /lll20X IA. REG . 17.99 11·~ TYLO ENTRY LOCK ROMEXWIRE •Y•w1a1n <-.lit• •Ith , .......... .. , •••• ylWI W•tll••"I 4e•t '-c\1 with !Mt \..,.... • .,,.., ..... ,,...........,...,_ - -··_~-4, IEG. S.99 IA. w .. ..,..,Ml•"' .,,.....it11 ....... ~ wloM!f. C~wltll t,.....,.i..,_..t.'1• 14·2 se ' ff. IUSl 14Sf °'MtAN MIU II.YI. IAN•D•A•••o ,.. .......... llT"WllM10,··1"1 ,,,..,. • I I FULL llll 4'x8' PRl°FINISHID PANELING ttaOACllA . •PACIFIC FIRST QUAllTf WESTERN PANELING •'•l'·Pl .... MllHID SH!fl REG. 4.99 PRE-RNISHED WALNUT SHELVES 1Hautif1o1lly finished, prt-cul oncl ready to inatall. l''x24'' · l ''s36 '' l ''x36 '' VALUES TO 3.59 IO''x36'' • 10''••1'' 10''•72'' VALUES TO 4.S9 12''•36''.12''•'8" 12''•72'' VALUES TOS .59 DOUGLAS FIR PLYWOOD si.., 9r111l1. The "aucl91t l itht" woy I• ovoid <•II· ty heme 11"1· ptft'•rn•nt bill•. Con be poit111cl, 1toi11-4 •r fin· i1hM n•lurol. 90LB. 99~. 169 u. 199 u . •• IHln ROLL ROOFING Mineral faced: 3 c~or' from which le choou: Silver Gray,RanlerGreen and Cedar Tone . Full lhicli fiber9la' in 70 sq . ft. rolls. lell It out and place be· twffn c•llin1 joi1t1 or wall 1tud1 for 9reater year ro1,1ncl comfort. ltEG. 5.99 •• ROLL ROU GRAPESTAKE FENCING Complete 5 ft. hith fence includes .t"ll4" posls, 2"x4': roil1 ~nd 1rado slalies. A favorite in California. . REG . J.43 RUNNING fT. l /16" thick. Do not con. fuM with lho 1 /I " thitli " often advertiMd • • • Many home & ~puses. c==~J DOWNIY.NMWALK flllST• llVI. AT SJllQAIR .Ml IA,lOftOS "WY. GARDIN GROVI U .. J CIAl'IUI 1• Ytl. IASfM ..... not•YO, •• IHIU IS PILOT ·AOVERTISE-. E duca tional Work . • Agriculture J ob Area Men Ill Service Around the World • Prospects Listed Navy s.ntor Chlcl Petty Of. iicer William T. Buol, son of Mr. and Mn. Sargent Ableman of 18541 cottonwood St., Fountain Valley, was awarded the Nnvy Achievement l.1edal during ceremonies aboard the nuclear submarine USS A s p r o , homeported in Pearl Harbor, for his superior performance as the Leading Sonora Techni· clan aboard the Aspro. equipment a b o a r d the submarine was in a h I g b state of readiness throughout the sub's operations. Cadet Grant was sel~ted for his outstanding academic achievement. He wUJ b e granted special privileges and war a siJver star designaUng the honor accorded hlm by the academy dean. Dennis R. Welch, son of ?.tr. and Mrs. Floyd B. Welch of 17525 Sanla C.tallna Circle. Fountain Valley, graduated rrom recruit training at the Naval Training Center in Snn Diego. Moffett Field. C.llf., after • six-month deployment t o lwakunl, Japan, with Patrol Squadron Nine. Freeze's \Vinter-Over-Group, an~ will be et the bottom or the world ror the next seven montti,,, coniplet~ly lsolated except for oceaslonal r1dlo contftct. By JOYCE LAIN KENNEDY °"" Jo~: I WOll\d like lo know about becoming 1 4.11 (:lub A(enl. -S. A. W., Musllcld, OillO. Thanks to the c a r e e r s~lallsts at the Wisconsin St8te Employment Service's Occupational Analysis Field Center for this answer. The Ca r eer • • Corner Field Cen!Or has published a fact~(illed Dew bookJet, for "AgrJc?Jtutal Service Jobs." EJl'fENSION S E R V ICE WOIOCERS perform educa- tional work· in agriculture, home economics, youth ac- tivities aod community resource deVelopment. Much of the educational work is car- ried on in groups, through me- etingi, seminars, workshops, lectures ·ana: discussions, or dem0nstrations in the home or on ~e farm. County agents also :'Tely on mass media - newSpapers. televi.sion and radi(j · cdUNTY EXTEN SI ON AGl!liTS are jointly paid by the 'tounty for which they wor~ state land -grant uruvm1ttes and the Federal Agr(Culture Department. They may; be hired by a county govirning board or a land- grant university. (It varies Crom state to state; call the county courthouse to locate the !tate extension service). THE COUNTY EXTENSION TE.Uf includes agricultural (or agrl-business in urban areas), home economics, 4-H and youth agents. These workers are complemented by area agents (specia l is ts serVing several counties) and state eqension specialists in such '"sUbject-matler fields as livestock, farm management, horticulture, recreation, con- tinuing education, forestry and envy-onmental quality. Dulles of county agents vary from county to county depending on needs that exist. For example, an agriculture agent in a coun- ty wbeP ..PllDY cattle are rais- ed has dOttes of a Somewhat dllferene niiture than a n agricultural agent 1n a county whete;~IUJny iiheep are raised. The basic functions ·Of in- formation giving a.n d in- struction are the s a m e , however. EDUCA TI ONAL RE· QIJIREMENTS vary by state, but gen~rally a bachelor's degree i, required for county extensiori agents; a few states requir~· master's degree. (An a 'lgent usually needs a mast s degree; a state ei:· tension specialist -who is often located at a land-grant university -needs a master's or doctOr•s· degree). Average 1971 earnings for all co1i1hty and area agents was $lo,-iro11 Agricultural agents averaged $11,680; home economids agents, $9,750; and 4-H agents, $9,lm: ·There are nearly 15,500 exter$i00 sirvice workers na· tionwide. ' .. THE ~H cµJB AGENT and the yoUth agent work with boys, girls and young adults In the county. SOme counties have only a f.H agef!t, others have l>otb; the 4-H agent working primarily with the boyt B!ld the youth agent with the ~irl~ They administer and COCl'dlnite , the countywlde projectl and activities such u munbershlp drives, camps and fairs. They also train a du I t volunteer leaden in pro'Ject areas such as manual arta,.animal bu1 b a nd ry, ho.rticutt u re or, home ecol!"mics, ob the adults can in tum instnlct their club metnber1. The overall aim: ls to Wia the poroonal dev~p­ meut of members. AJ a new !rttlde 4-B Is becoming more Involved In urban-oriented projects. . , , OTHER JOBS. In addllkm to county e1tension agent1, .. AirlcuJtural Service Jobs" d-tbos a 'all ol agrlcullural careeri, lncludin( aeverat I h1•e not seen covered in, other pubUcaUonJ. Althoullb sdpplles ore Jimll<d, the Field Center wiO a)lempt to acoommodate g~.... counselors a n d leochers with a alngle free copy. of lhlB 50-1"'8• booklet. Wito: Mr. Kenneth SI s, Lead Analyat, Oc- cu na1 ~lyals Field Cent , Wls<onsln $ta I e !~Li~~~ SATURDAYS' IN 'TJ'fl• DAI LY Pi ii.OT Employment Service, B o x 2209, Madison, Wis. 537t6. • • • Too many people dampen chances for success by hoping employers can determine the niche they're best suited for. By becoming familiar with the vast ·cavalcade of careers available, you gain a com- petitive edge. Send career topic suggestions to Joyce Lain Kennedy · at t b I s newspaper. The mo,,t popular and interesting will be used in print, but personal replies are not given. $enlor Chicl Petly OUicer Hunt was cited for his keen foresight and technlcal com- pe~nce · in preparing the Aspr01s sonar equipment for an extended operation cruise. Througp his effort.s, the sooar Army Private Robin H. Bradley, son of Air. and Mrs. Homer C. Bradley, 16648 Spruce Clrcte. Fount a In Valley, recently completed eight wee.ks of advanced in- dividual training at the U.S. Army Armor Center, rt. Knox. Ky. Cadet Gary B. Grant, son of Mr. and Mrs. Emmett H. Grant Jr., 4580 Dogwood Ave., Seal Beach, has been named lo the Dean's Lisi at the U.S. Air Force Academy. He has also been selected for the position of project or- ficer with the rank of cadet second lieutenant. Mnrlne Pfc. Mark S . ft.tunsoa, son of Mr. and Mrs. Cha'rles !. Munson of 13882 Plne St .. We s tminster , graduated from basic training at the Marine Corps Recrult Depot in San Diego. .....__, • Navy Seaman ApprenUce OUR WAREHOUSE IS OVERLOADED! NOW IS THE TIME .TO SAVE! N11v'y Seaman Apprentice Damon F. Lelevier, son of ~fr. and Mrs. Lambert A. Lelevier or 1432 Fullerton Ave .. Corona. graduated from r e c r u I t training at the Naval Trnining Center $t San Diego. r;avy Petty Officer Third Class David ~. Sb1nds, son of l\1r. and Mrs. David \V. Shands of llunUngton Beach, has returned to his home base at -1.tarlne Pfc. Steven \V. AUbet:, son of J\lr. and ~1rs. Wlllla1n S. Qunllers or IM31 Alden Lane, ll u n • i 11 gt o 11 Beach, graduated rrom basic troinlng ot the 'Pi1arhl(' CA:lrps Recruit Depot in San Diego. Navy Petty Ofr!cer Third Class Cburles J. l\1oran. son of 1.1r. nnd liirs. Charles E. ~toran of 9424 Col'tnoront, Fountain Valley, \viii soon be enduring the longest and col· dest "night" on enrth. He ls part of Optirntion Deep \VAC Private First Class l\tarle K. Lonon, da1.&ghtet of J\lr. and flirs. Louis E. Larsoo, 21871 Newland SL, lluntiRgton Bench, recenUy was assigned to the Womt>n 'a Army . Corps l)(·toch1nt~nt at Ft. Sheridan, Ill. PFC. t .. nrson, 11 com· nlunic1Hions center llpeclalist, rntl'r.xi the Won1cn's Army Corps, 1·on1pletcd bas I c I rnhung ttt f't. J\1cCleUan, 1\la. CARPET TILES·SA VE $ Fuls li ke n lve t-"twurs ·other r DO·IT·YDURSElf carp et ~e1sy to install 12"x12" • l~••11·a~1•101 • I Dtc111111Ct lt11 SAYE 29c • lG·Yr. W111 Tt1tt• • 100% NJltl P1l1 • Sl11R 111111111 59c NOW SALE PRI CED . . . . . . . . EA. NYLON Hl·LOW 100% Continuous filament nyloi1 pile. 299 Popular nylon hi·low that combines beauty and durobilily. Many colors to choose from. 1?a:r· NOW SALE PRICED n .oo COMPARABLE RETAIL •..••••••••.••• $4.99 DUPONT NYLON SHAG TRI-COLOR .100% DuPont Nylon Pile. ' 3" Rich Oun;ble Sha.g. Beautiful, so. YO. New 3-Color. Designs. SAVE NOW SAL Pl ID $l.OO COMl'AllAILE R11AIL....... •.... . . . .. $6.99 KODE"-PLUSH • lST QUALITY NAME BRlND CARPUS AT LOW DISCOUNT PRICES · , SELECT FROM THE LARGEST CARP(! INVENTORY IN THE ~EST •EVERY ROLL OF CARPEi IS MARKED l PRICED FDR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE J.ifz-JI/ PATTERN r.WJ II' POLYESTER I 00% Kodel Pol yes I er Pile: R.ch. 499· · . Luxuriously 'Thick Pile. New Decoro1or Color s. so. ,0• SAVI NOW SALi PRIC ED .•.••.. , u .oo COMPARABLE RETAIL •••••..•.•• $7.99 •All LABOR UNCONDlllONALL Y GUARANTEED 100% AVLI N® Polyesler Pile. Extra heavy. !hick patterned design. Rugged, ,durable and ea sy to mainta in, hlade wil h NEW continuous filament DACRON SHAG I 00':-~ Dacron Polyesrer Pile. Beou11tul New Deep Shag With A Full Deep 499 AVLIN(<1) polyester. · .AVLIN!t) is a TM of FMC Corp , COMPARAB LE RETA IL •••• : .$8.99 5!? $&Vf Sl.OO • Pile. Mony New Decorolor Colors To Choose From. Jt . fO, SA'tt NOW SALi PRICID. .• s2:00 COMPARABLE RETAll ............... $7.99 CONTRACTORS! APARTMENT OWNERS! NYLON SHAG KODIL SCULPTURED HOME .OWNERS! SAVE$$$ YOUR CHOICE: CUT AND CARRY • New Heavy, Deep Shag, Styled to Add Beauty to Any Home; eu {ti ful Decorator Colors. 1~ NYLON COMMERCIAL 9 9 · T errlflc for Office and D•ns. 2. NYLON SHAG . , Ar c Ji#'"": fft,11 • -/!hi mflW 1i /(,.Y.J/{~1u,~r //fi.H • G11111ff1 ,,, ' Ideal for A .. artments and Rentals. NOW OOR SALE 3. INDOOR-OUTD PRICED Excelleat for All Areas. 4. FOAM BACKED CARPETING No Pad Needed ... Limited Quantities SQ. YD. SAVE s3,oo, ·--·""" ___ _ COMPARABLE RETAIL ••••••••• 54.99 KODEL TRI-COLOR SHAG DEEP PILE 100% Kodel polyester pile, rich, detp, luxuriously th ick pile. Mony new Hi-style deco?a1or three color shag to select from. Resist dirt and soil stains. NOW Sil! PRICED COMPARABLE RITAIL. •••• $8.99 99 THI TllTID NAMI IN !l•••I . 100% Fortrel polyester. lush, deep, long-wearing arid hard to sail. NOW Stays beoutlful with o minimum SALE of care. Very resilient. Beautiful PRICED decorator three color shag. COMPARAILE RETAIL ..... $1.99 WEST LOS ANGELES ' 11141 Wil1hlrt lld. WEST COVINA ANAHEIM LONG BEACH 3001 ltllfltwor 11•4. ·421-8934 477-5525 Son Dlt!io frttWOY to Wi1s}l\rt Turn otf. 6 bkKb Wt1I on Wil-ll>lrt. 2526 L WorkMH ""· I "' N. Euc ll4 St. 966-4471 · ., US-7674 Son &trnordino Frwy,. 10 Cilrui :2 blocks North of Sonto Aid f,.... S1. 2 blockl No, on Chrui to Work·~ woy on fud'id Across from Col if, .... ltd. CANOGA PARK 21 031 Shor01t• Woy • 347·2'34 Vtnlllt'O Ftwway to (Of\OIOAW. Horth to Shtrmon Woy !!WI t. . I Son Dltoo fr#Nov to hllflowtr llvd. TIKI) elf Horrfl on Bttlllowtr. VENTURA 2501 l. Me lo St. 641·5041 3 blocks Wt" of r Poll\li on Main 9 9 ~' I 00% Kodel Pol yes I er Pile. 3 p,1e . ' 5 99· Height Pattern tn GroceflJI Design. Rugge.d Durobility. Beaut iful Color s. so. TD, SAVl NOW SALi PllCID... ..... u .oo SQ. YD. i" __ c_o_M_P_A_R_A_B_L_E_R_E_TA_l_L_ .. _ •• _. _· ._ •• _ •• _._. :_$B_._9_9_ SAVE s·6.00 '' COMPARABLE Encron Random Sheared RETA!l $T2.99 _ .... _ SQ. YD. SAVE $3.00 100% tncren poly1sler pi l•. f.dr1 ht1vy, thitlt 5 99 r1ndom sh111td P•llt1n. Ru11td, du11ble ind 11sy to m1ln\1in. Very 11,llirnl. B11ulilul dee · or1lor color~. 10. YD. NOW SALE PRICEO ::.~~ COMPARABLE, RETAIL ••••••.••..•••. $8.99 ENCRON POL YE STER Pile of 100% Encron Polyester, Deep, lhick, 999 luxurious Corpet, Optimum Per·formancc, .. long Wtor, Cosy Core ... Re siti'enl . Many Col. 10 ,0 ors To Choose From 1Aw1 • NOW SALi ,llCID................ ...• I t .OD COMPARABLE Rlf AIL ... $15.99 DUPONT DACRON TRi·COLOR SHAG . 100% Dacron polyester pile, beau· tiful new, deep shag. Eosy·to main~ toin, many new decorator colors to choose from. • "ow SALE PRICED 99 SQ. YD. SAVI $3.00 PASADENA 26MI E. Colordo Jlv4. '77·1'00 TORRANCE 42i 6 Artt1l1 llY4. 542·'696 OPEN SUNDAYS It EVENINGS r Colorodo B~d. °'' Son Gobrlel !lvd. MONTEBE LO 7.U W. W~lttler I I••; 72MU 7 Cotntr of Monttbtllci ond Whit! Blvd, I llOck (011 of Howthome llvd, on Me~ COSTA MESA \714 Now,ort l ld • . '41·2020 -.... " 1111111. SAN FRAN CISCO MILLllR AE 320 If Camin o a"I 692·2555 I I I 1 1 I DAILV PILOI Husband Need Aid? Nag Him By Dr. Peter Stelncrohn ' Your husband ls ill. You sense it or you know It. He won't admit it. The problem is getting him to visit a doctor. Not always easy. Sometimes the wife bas to wear down his resistance. When health is in question, this is one time there ls a good excuse for ,nagging. The choice is one of being a nagging wife, or ~coming a nagless widow. Here's a familiar scene: SHE: Henry, you've been Joslng weight. Your appetite is nil. Look at your collars They're getUng much too big for yuu. Why don't you give our doctor a call? At least make an appointment. That doem"t mean you have to give up your golf match today. HE: I feel fine. Forget It, Helen. SHE: Have you been on a scaJe lately? Have you taken a good look into a mirror? HE: U I were too fat, you'd also find something to nag about, M for the mirror, my looks haven't cracked it yet. (And so far into the night.) Tj\10 WEEKS LATER: HE: I've just called the doctor't I'll see him tomorrow. SHE: I'm so glad, Henry. NEXT DAY: HE: 'lbe doctor round some sugar. Here's my diet sheet. 1 may be able to gef along without insulin. SHE: I'll take good car< of your diet, Henry. HE: Helen, I should have Iistened to you months ago .. 'You're a sweetie. I appreciate it. SHE: I know you are upset by the news, Henry. But you are better off knowing what the trouble is. HE: (Shrugging his shoulders): l guess so. In my experience in practice I have noted hundreds of similar cases in which wives have prolonged the Jives of their husbands, whether' the trouble was ulcer, h e a r t disease, high blood pressure. cancer. It takes courage to be a health-nagger. But it pays in the end. And besides, admit it or not, men, most husbands appreciate the genuine con- cern of their wives. TIP: Don't become upset when your husband roars and rears up and calls you "nothing but a n a g g e r." Consider it a badge of honor rather than something' to be ashamed of when his bea1th is in danger. MEDICALETIES (Replies to Readers) Dear Dr. Steirlcrohn: ls there some miraculous cure for compulsive eaters? I need help Thanks. -Mrs . D. COMMENT: I think the most preciOUs Ingredient of a miraculous cure is rinding the proper motivation. Re a I I y want.lng to Jose, and knowing why, neutralizes the com- pulsion. Sounds easy. It isn't. Dear Dr. Stelncrohn: I am 15 and have been smoking for a year. J have just quit and have a dentist appointment next week. My prt blem Is 1ny parents didn't know I smoked . can tbe dentist tell? If so, would be be obligated lo ln- from"'my parents ? -Signed, .. Worried To Death" COMMENT: Perhaps be can tell you have been ·smoking. But I do not think be Is obligated to Wt -your parents you formerly 11110ktd. KIDS LOVE UNCI.E LEN Saturdays in The DAILY PILOT l 'PtlOT-ADVERnsE• 4 HAVE YOU VISITED OUR NEW STORE AT: 30222 CROWN VALLEY ~ARKWAY AND HILLllURST IN LAGUNA NIGUEL . . PCMHffAlll YAU.ff -11* ....... M. " T•IMn flOUMTAJH VAu..rt -Mltl NI,..,. .......... ICllWW •'-TOllO -11 Ttn If •.ofi.111 .... N\OITIHCl'TOfll llAQt -11111 ..... I~. •I Alllllll UHTA NfA -t• W • ....., Mii ll'lft91 SI. WltTMINST..__, ........ If G9lclen wtitt No Liquor 1t the Westmfn1ter, Vlll190 <;entor, BMch Blyd. 1t Atl1nl1, Ad1m1 11 llrookhurst Stores. MONEY-SAVING BONUS BUYS! Made •1 a famous Callf. Mfr. f $3i~u•• Men' S : . ~-Knit I ? Sport lr1.'::o:.:=:· Shirts f In Stii•• l . Pottemt r S J99 :.,· ,,.,.m ......... lliiiii _ , Othon SolliOf ~"'=-;L;;.., •t$1.1t . --- All ~ .. '-'* -.i.onJ. ,1...,.c1, -"eek botk~ ahlM wilti 11Htly h_,_j kttOM, lqlNI,.. c.hett poclet. fr-a fOfMd Colifonilcr INPer &. aold .i...ti-. ot Sl.98. Prlmllllll cotto" 111 •u11ny ltriP9 pottt"""' ,S.~. •XL ! lt0.C.Sl11 49c h.., ... Prlct 63c Yovr cholu of ... .,1cr,,,,.,,. tttol•U... Family Spray .Deoclorant 7DnceJr11 Cotton Balls 1a.c;ofaoo 2~aac flvffy. •!:wor- ba11t. Pric•d IOW9r thanaut .,.rycto,, ptlc>t af 66c • .., COSTA MIU. _ t• H• ...... ltM at WllMll II, COSTA MllA -Ill a. Inti SI. ,.....,... HUHTIHOTON lt:A(H -M'1 Alla ... 11 1 I r HUHTINCJTOH lllAC:H -lta<.11 an: ui;.;:1• HUHTIHOTOl't lllACH-W.mtr .. 01 $2 Values New Spring Jewelry 28c • Ropes, Ntck!ace1 • Bracelets and Earrings All 1n beautiful aaort- ed colors i~ 1mcut 1tylM il'I metals, enamels, flower1, ontique1, pi1rt:1d, <lip1, buttons, drop& & hoops. SAVE 72c to 1.72 =~.ri ... ii M!:L' c ... ,.nio ~ ,J !":!) Othen Stlll• ,t...,;; · $16.95 & $19.95 VALUES! ~$298 Men's ,.,.· . Nylon ' : ... Jackets .:11~., -s229 :\ Unli11ed diell Jod1tta 6 ~ lncludl119 w .. tarn. becly pa,.. ~~"\\;I{ el frollf, htckleti eollar IMicrd. Cltai'° .t wwhfCllt ~ ~,... .... ~~~·~~~J1!1911~11!P.1 $391 Women's Polyester Knit Tops s2aa , .... ..,.... ... "-'· l'lllllld -.ck. •ntdi lt)'ln iri. ......,., 10!0,. hi lfriP" •ncl tollcft •nd co.bil!Oti-thiP9 ., eolicla. Dlfp dry, _, con. •M-L Sweater Coats for Women D°"•I• Knit Acrylic Di~coont s 1299 Pr1c1 Grwt jpffrtg hnhion to -fd1tlltt1, tlocb. •Ughhl'tight, ctmfortablt, ttyltd 'lrith 1 .-lty pocieli. Wtcrr .-Ith ., wlthtrvt '*L •M-L .. ,.... --., ... feyer Thermometer • 91$1. Jl / Super Plus Platinum Rq. 79c 250 "'I• Bottle of 100 @:L., Vitamin C 64c Reg. $4.19 200 JU Bottle of 100 @ :Li} Vitamin E $299 '"""'' Prict$J.5t Razor Blades 69c • hlf'Y41Y Price 7fc: D••l1tq1 Pock1f 10 tic~ Foaming, 32·01. Sl11 Bath 011 :.:;=" .• 79c 111, 79, \i#t'l•-'?Bttty Woods 16 Oi. :::·:-i~y Lotions ••• 67c ~ C•11tlftlnt10tMn•t$l.29, · 69c ~ Glrc-all lectal Evacuant Amller1r 1111, 12-tr -,(.;. Suppositories::: 58c Mouthwash :;: .• 44 c < .. pent• othertSIUlll ~:l~ .,,,, --,_,.,... .,, -,j ifoi. Otflms.11"'9 ~·Y et6tc JOw-30 Premium Motor OH Spray Starch 220..C.Sln leg. $249 to $2 79 lnido1,111t Gold Carnlwal Glassware , .. , $1199 aoic• I e•acrt• fro• 0..1 Caritllt' 1...a, PikhM, 4 Pc. 9 0&. Gohl.t s .. , ' Ca•clr Jcir •r W•d· ......... AntlquMI Flenntln• Cilllag Fldwe• Disc.,., Pric .. 99c la9Mi ""° ..... eocht. ... 1rhlte ..tlqM flllith -U,L •PJllWNli for CMI)' ~ $J 2'&$J:i-Vedra llaM&WrLetl• er Mel1twhhot ,,... =..3:·$1 3i$1 00 '",.,.,. Price3'c ... a:..,. dot!!.."-"-'· -u. '"'"'"' -1.tt lwery4., 1rkt Sfc: $1'!!. .. Deluxe Pedestal & Stacking Type Jumbo Mugs • 2:s1 loy2&San$1 Attrectl•• •"•• 111 .. __. calon and'°"' tann.N-.IU)'MVDr- •I for ho.. a11cl offlc>t --.... ~ O* 1cdad bnl, 4 6• hul;. vfchiaf ......._ fort & .,_.. .... af , ........ -~ Di1hwo1h..-...r •••• olMOlt hbNolcobJ.. $22! ... Lavoris Mouthwash u-::.~ SJ 18 , __ .. ,,_ 99c Gillette Platlnum"Plus Blades =:;77c Westclox: Men's .; Watches ;;,~:: $9,97 7..Jewtl Aa:wrott , dtp.tl'lcloblt -rd!· •• wi1h rodicrl brvthtd fl'"" S backgrcrw•cl, dh1111crn4·Cwt awe -rl•n &. ""'""'It. Cllok. :S$$1 af a 1po11•lae er l1atli•r ~ ba11di. All Flnt Quality ColOI' ~i.atM eo- bo1h ,_.i, '• tlri.,.. & .. ~ ld1. Thidi &. thirsty cott011 i;;;,,,._:., t•"l"• 111 c. .. llia Pinl, Old Oolcl, ll11e hli., V•11•tl11• a~~ Regular $499 Deluxe Kerosene Lamp Discount Priced $)97 8•1ufiful 8" 9l11l 9lob• tnd b11•. H1ncl1orn• 2 tone ruby .& •rn~er err blut & 9retn. Cornpl•tt with burn•t .unit, c.h1mn•y incl 1dju1l1bl• ..,.;c,l, lcl••I for f1rn1ly room, or •rntrg•ney li9hlin9. kLIU ,,. Ail ..._ fcnoorite at • ..... c ~ 1aTi11g hr a lillllled tiMe .,,,,, · PaHsenlc Clock Radio --...c.:.•:ru-. $1995 • .... ,!. ..... 21• Ptestttne Antl·Fne11 & Collant ffl• ..,,, •• r..,.. -• ""-.1 ...... dl. •cloc\hir..,~ 11111 ... ,,. °""'"'"· .,... .,..,.. ..,_.. ....... .,. Tablets or J> 0 . ~ Enwelopes i69c 1 s~~SJ78 . r t • ' , 3 ~ILOT·ADVERTISER Wednfsdly, February 2.l, 1972 W.1111•ar. rebtuary 23, 1972 DAILY PILOT J 5 Saddlebaclc Tabs 2 9 £or Honors r Or ange Coast Area Men in .Service UOUNA HILU DOii 81ilfY, 0-ld 9111, R1lllh lllld, Ht1lfltr Coll, D1nlel Curtl1, Mii" H1nl.Oll. Cltudl1 Llndtre!I, Klltlllfn Locke. Johll O'Ml lU, K1thlttn WIOd .... 1,...i1 11"'""""'"° i.AOUfllA MIOU•L er11 l tft•ori, f11rNr1 C1mpbll1, Miry C1rtton, P1lrlcl1 Dtr11, Clltl'f EUJt, Oonlt1 1-lltks, ROfllld MIYft. Tlmoth'I Mytr1 Ind Robtrt R-. MllllOM \llllJO Otonet Anntnl1. Ch1rln f11k1r, JIJ!tf 9Mtllm. Pllll 11rbe•• Glor!• 1111111, P1trlel1 l"1erlr, M1rv Blrmtn"''"'' P1Trld1 9 1edtbllrn, P11ron e11k1, G1rv I~. OonllhY l 11rns. Ool'lne C.tvll, G1r Cllltl'lltlm. JIJ!tf Clerk. Jlkhml C--~dwlnl COi.id!. MN 08"1111, Ktftlllth D1vl1, Kwen Dod J11nne Dubberly, H1M D1111C1n, ltlchlrd E'9•••, John E1lly, Laure Fllk'l'lor1, Robert Flt-mint, Chllrlft Gollfenhoftf, Ol1n1 Gr1nl •l'Mll t<Mry ~IN-' "'"° Ml~I Hit;ktv, Sh•ron Kuffl, Carvlrri L1,._ Oline LeraurnNu, G""°"' Llp;t, o-on.ld Mlrkowllt, Glwll M.thlllA. • Klrstllll Mixson, Rholldl MtGowtrl, 0Ktr M1Ytr, Otvld NttJ'flr, G1rold M'fll'I. lruc1 P1ltll. Ren1!d 11'1111, L1urln ,._NI, Hll'lll' Rtnlltt'I 1f'MI Otbbll R_.. Alto Doneld lltld, Grworr s1n11t01. Af~can Art Show UttHer Way S LOVE CLE LEN- BOSTON ROCKING CHAIR • Old time comfort at on old time price. Solid hardwood construction. Ready to stain oc_,p.JJint. See our complete line of unfinished furnitu re. HIRSH ·MODERN SHELF UNITS 24" HIGH 2.99 . 36" HIGH 3,99 · 48" HIGH 4.99 Sturdy, oU ... teel conatructiOn with walnut wood-groin finish. Shelves ore adjustable at 1 V2" inteivals and con be ro ised, lowered or removed without disassembling. 24"X24"HX10"D THREE SHELVES 3'' POULTRY NETTING 12" HIGH SO' rolls, 2" mesh, 20·gauge net. 4ilNC" DRYIR VINT HOOD Heavy gauge galvanized steel. Po'sitive action,...-----... flopper. l9 C Complete with flange. 4-INCH DRYIR VINT DUCTING . HeO'.ly duty v;nyl covering with plastic 1upport wires. Will notteor or "tretch. 29,,. SUNPOWIR AUTO BATTERY 24·m~nth guarantee. Big savings on this model. Fits most cars to 1971 (except ford, Mercury and Lincoln) i1&41J·i·S #24. 1299 WITH IXCHANGI SLEEPING BAG Scout bo~. 2V2 pound polyester f;ll;ng. Rugged waterproof vinyl bottom ground cloth. Quality cotton lining. Cut size 36"x72". 4" SUPER TOOL 4-WAT MUAL AND WOOD SHAPER Reversible blade for use on metals, plastic, fiberglass, wood and plaster. Can be used as a file or plane. 2'' I.CWIK KOVIR ADHESIVE PLASTIC Choose from o wide selection of patterns. Adhesive MAKE.ANY AREA OF YOUR HOME SPARKLE WITH SELF-ADHESIVE ICWIK KOVERI plastic to cover walls, shelves, and many other household uses. nuclear deterrent force of long ranie bombers a n d in· tercootl.oental b a 111 s t i c m4slle1. Larry \Vayoe Dodd , son of Mr, and Mrs. Charles A. Dodd Jr., of 93!2 Flttslde Drive, Huntington Beach, enlisted in the U.S. Navy. He is at recruit training in the Naval Training Center with the hospital corp! program . Marine Cpl. Ste\•eu L • Halbert, son of Mr. and r-.1rs. lloward L. Halbert of 265l1 Via Lara Road , ~fission Viejo, is in Puerto Rico with elements of the Second Marin Division, undergoing training In artillery tacti cs on Vleques Island. been assigned to Keesler Af:'B, Miss., tor training la the co~ munlcatloos field. Airman Robtrt R. l\101ler Jr., &0n of Mr. and Mn. Robert R. Motltr ol 2111 Z3rd St ., Newport Beach, hu com- pleted h1' U. S. Air Force basic training at the A1r Tralnlng C:Ommand'a Lackland AFB, Tex. He has been aslgo.. ed to Keesler AFB, Miss., for training in cornmunlc1tions-- electronic1 1yatems. Alrman ~1osler ls a graduate of Corona del Mn High School. Timothy W. Boy et, 20, son of ~1r. and Mrs. Paul E. Wellman, 10182 Larson Ave., Garden Grove, recently was promoted to Army Specialist fou r ln Germany, where he is serving with the 3d Armored Division. Spec. 4 Boyes is a driver In headquarters Company. 2d Battaliolli 48lh Infantry of the division near Gtlnhausen. SUPIRLICTRIC ELECTRIC ROOM HEATER • Automatic thermostat control • Instant deluxe ' fan.forced heat • Safety tipover switch •chrome safety guard • Hideo.oway handle. 999 R•OF COATING Forma a tough, fibroua, elastic, waterproof aurface. Resista nt to cra cking, peeling ond extreme weather changes. Bonds to composition or metal· roofing. Contains Canadian asbestos f/bera for additional insuloti n and strength. SO-TARD ROLL 0 WEBBING Summer ii fust around the corner. Moke th at old choir or chaiae look like new. Your choice of atrong, colorful webb;n g. RYIGRASS ~e Grass UM.Ill. Give your lawn a fresh start this spring, Hove a green lawn in a matter of 10 doy1. 10 lbL covers 1000 1q. ft. Clt•rencel Whllt '1UDntftlt 1 l•1t, 24ll1 ROCKFlllD 1!1i1n•••fll '711 WISTlOINST .. AVE, ·-A PAIK 1160 VALllY Vl lW ST, TUIT• 1111 IRVINE ILVO, IL T~IO AT f.t. TORO RD • At GOLDIN wtST n . Af LINCOLN AV E. 'ONE ILOCK [.Of NEWf'OAT AVli . COITA lll I . 17th ST, LA HAllA 221.1 W, LA HMIRA BLYD. fULLllTOH 2.tiS I . CHAPMAN AVt. OIAHGI lll lA AT SANTA ANA AVE. AT 8E4CH .LYO. AT STATE COLllG~ ILVO. ---... ,.:i.1 LOS AN(illll •SIMI " I • ,.,.,. ""'tll • HIV!if'~lui • \Ot..l\HNA°9LA CRiSClNTA • UCiRA h .......... • THOUSAND O.l.1.;. t CHATSWORTH • T•RtANA • RISIOA • UPLAND 'IAUUUS • GOl.ETA • VICTORVILLI • GlllANAOA Hill.I •SAN BE"NA"OINO • CORO~A t CAMAIUllO • IAKlRSllllD • HACllfC>A HllCHTS • ESCONDIOO • SflRI NG YALLIV • SANTA CL.AAA , . ••• 'JA3 (, KAT[LlA AVE. AT TUSTIN AVE, • • / . ,. • ' ' .,LOT •ADVERTISER-$-- 5 oz. KING SIZE ~~~~1 Anacin Bromo-Seltzer . TABLETS ••• For Fast Pain ReITef. For Stomach Upset & He.dache 1.98 SAY·OM f/EIY DAY $2.11 LOW PRICE 4LB~BAG OF Little Friskies CAT FOOD In Delicious flavors SAY-ON EVEIYDAY He LOW PllCE 53c 5/r ltrt ... Reinfo<ctd Nyo'n Higb' Pressure Hose witll 10 Year Gparantee. SAY-DH 0 EVERYDAY 5.31 LOW PRICE PmDLEUM JELLY Rec.Uc 40c llz. '1- SIGNATURE &Or GARDEN HOSE • 5/1" lor• ••• Green pl11- tic w!tli h•1vy full ftow br••• coupli1191. 10 yr, 911lr· int••· . RiG. 3.69 . 2. 98 Alarm-Clock ROOM-MATE If 12 I ·~· -·\2 I ~ t l . . ....,/. 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Shutting oul the din created by her passengers, she remembers the meet ecord she set when she won the fiO.yard hurdle race with a time of 7.8 seconds at the recent Times Indoor Games. But the time was disappointing -she '21Vanted .to make it in 7.7 er 7.6 seconds. More reassuring was her performance in the SO-yard hurdles at the Vancouver Indoor Games ttfe next day when she tied her own world record of 8.4 'Seconds. 11 But the most exciting memory is of the Friday night three weeks ago when ·she actually set the record before JS,000 cheering fans at the Toronto apie •Lear Games. Pushing down the bus accelerator. the 21-year-old girl recalls the pres- sure or the metal starting block against her Jangaroo hide track shoes as she and her competitors kneel at the startin~ line. · Her hands in position on the board floor ahead or her, she begins to psych herselr up for the r~e. "Relax, you'll make 'it. You're going to come in number one. Relax," she tells herself. ' ..._ . In answer to those directives., she hang11 her head heavily below her ' blue-jerseyed shoulders and shakes curly blonde hair from her face. The muscles in her back begin /o loo!l'n . Good. ' ' .. •• She continues to cha with herself: "Now. remember th~ hurdles are obstacles between you and the finish line. Attack them. And brihg your trail leg down as soon as It goes over the hurdle. You 're not jumping the hurdle; you're just going over it in an ex.aggerated stride." l She prepares herself 1for the sound of the gun, and gwifUy heads for ttie first hip.high hurdle as soon as the shot sounds. ''Good slart," she echoes, blinding herself to everything but the lane and hurdles ahead ... Suddenly, she feels flerseU break the string at the finish line. Time is 6.4 seconds. a tent ho£ a sec!nd better than the world record!· An·d the coaches who were watchin~ say s e was the first one to take the first hurdle -not like her normal "catch-up' start. "I was more surprised than anybody." she says, "l just didn't expect to win. I didn 't think I'd ;otten to that level yet after training alone the way I do now, or sOmetimes 1wilh my husband , running or lifting weights. But evel')1)ne else seemed to expect me to break the record." Funny," way back in 1967, when she won the 200-meter hurdles in .11 national meet in Maryland, no one expected her to do so well on ly a year after -she had started tracW as a l!>-year-old sprinter. FUMY too. that when she went to the Olympics in Mexico in 1968 as the second-ranked U. S. woman hurdler at the age of 17. no one expected her to take fourth , ahead of all the other U.S. team members. "But now I'm numbtr one . _ . it sure is nice to say you're number one. It 11eemetl like I was numbfr two for a long time," she adds. "Mexico, AustraJia, Chile. Rumania, Poland, Germany, Scandinavil!I, Colombia, Peru, U.S)5.R. 4 .. I'm really a veteran now. I've made every in- ternational team I've everlried out for and that's neat." ''This year 1 hope to be In real contention for a medal at the Munich Olympics -my goal isn '~ just to make the team the way it was before." "And t'll be in still petter shape for the '76 Olympics ... Jf t can keep my lntere~t and training up. "But it's been seven years now and there are other things 1 want to do too -the normal fcmale lstuff lilte be with my husband when he gets out or the ·Marines ln September~ and move back to Seattle. have a couple of kids .. , " "And J. want to go to college, study history or soclQlogy or science, not tum into a run-of-the-milf, PE teacher. Maybe t could coach my own team . .'' But that's still a ldlg time orf, she thinks as she drops off the 1tudents and,heads for the fir con1er of the Khoo! track about·9 a.m. Peeling off her nalY USA-AAU wann-up 1Uit. she sets up the hurdles , · kneels at the starting block. and ·digs her fingers Into the rust-colored dirt. "Relax, •tt.ack the hurdles ... " she tells herself once again. ' • ' W1d"'1<10), February 23, 1972 DAILV PllO_~ J f • •• Pistons Clip Lakers, 135-134 in Overtime - Distressing Loss Says Sharman INGLEWOOD (AP) -The game was close all the way. Each team had a number of chances to wln . It was only one of 82 games iD a long NaUonal Baske1ball AMOCiation season for both team.s. Yet Tuesday night's 13~134 overtime defeat suffered by the Los Angeles Lakers was a distressing thing to coach Bill Sharman. And it was a shot in the arm and a great accomplishment for winning coach Earl Lloyd . "This game certainly will be a morale booster," said an effusive Lloyd In a cheery dressing room after the game . "Inconsistency has hurt us this year but we played very well tonight. We got It together and took it to them." Dodgers Sign T\iree Players; Spencer Inlis LOS ANGELES -The Los Angelv; Dodgers reduced their unsigned roll to nine players Tuesday with the signings of pitcher Bill Sing~r. outfielder Manny Mota and catcher Bill Sudakis. Singer, bothered by assorted ailments last season, sli pped.to a 10-17 record but was 3-1 in September's stretch run at the San Francisco Giants. · Mota hit .312 last season to increase his lifetime average to .300 for 10 seasons, ninth among active National League players. Sudakis missed much or 1971 with a knee injury but underwent surgery this winter and will be battling for the No. 1 catching job. Still unsigned were pi tchers Al Down- ing, Don SUtton, Jose Pena and Mike Strahler, catcher Duke Sims and in- fielders Bill Russell, Steve Garvey, Bob- by Valentine and Jim Lefebvre. The Dodgers' first spring training workout is scheduled Sunday at Vero Beach, Fla. Y' First baseman Jim Spencer, who hit 18 home runs last season for the California Angels, 11greed to contract tenns Tues- day, The signing of Spencer and six others left the Angels 'with four regalars unsigned-th1Jt'd baseman Ken McMullen, pitcher Andy Messersmith, 11 eco n d baseman Sandy Alomar and outfield@'r Mickey Rivers. Other signed contracts received were from pitchers Alan Foster. Andy Hassler and Rick Young; infielder& Bruce Christensen and Charlie Vinson, and out· fielder Billy Cowan. Y' NEW YORK -Dick Stockton and Juan Gisbert scored upset victories in the $30,000 Clean Air tennis classic Tuesday night. Stockton, of Port Washington, N.Y., eliminated seventh-seeded Tom Gorman of Seattle in a fierce struggle 7-fi, 5-7, 7-6. Gisbert, or Spain, ousted fourth-seeded Clark Graebner of New York, 4-6, 6-4, 6-2. Gonnan rallied from a 3-1 defi cit in points to go ahead 4-3 in the deciding tie· breaker game, but then netted two suc- cessive returns to give Stockton his surprise triumph. Gisbert's great passing shots proved too much for Graebner. Top-seeded Stan Smith of Pasadena, who now plays out of Sea Pines, S.C. overcame Joaquin Loyo-Mayo of Mexico, 6-3, 6-2. Third seeded Cliff Richey, Sarasota, Fla. whipped Nicola Pietrangeli of Italy, 6-1, 4-6, 6-0. Y' KANSAS CITY -The National Collegi- ate Athletic Ass;ociation filed a suit to- day against the American Basketball Association and Howard Porter, former Villanova University player. and seeks damages from both the league and Por- ter. Y' STANFORD -Slanford football coach Jack Christiaosen has completed his staff with the appointment of defensive line co11ch Norb Hecker and offensive line coach Bob Jones. Acting athletic director Bob Young said Hecker, 43, a graduate of Baldwin- W a 11 Ace College, has been head defensi ve coach of the New York Giants the past three y"3rs. He had pla yed pr~ fes.sional football with the Washington Redskins and later coached' at Green Bay and served as head coach or the Atlanta F.alcons. Jones. 48, has been head coach at West Valley College in Campbell for eight years, turning in a 49-20 winning record. Even thoua:h only one point separated the team&, the Laker dres,lng room by comparison resembled • tomb. "Th•t 's how we lost championships," said Sharman. f/We weren't up !or this game. our ofrense was sporadic and It was one of our worst games of the year on defense. Losses like this sneak up on you and permit teams like Milwaukee to pass us for the all important aeventh game in the pll!lyoffs ." The re£erence was Lhe NBA rule which gives the team with the better season record the odd game at home in aeven- game playoffs. The Lakers, at M-10, still hold a 3'it-game edge -and five in the losB column -over the Bucks, who are SZ-15. Dave Bing, who scored 33 points for the Piatona ln the victory: now has 10,006 for hi• career. He became the 46th men in the history oi the NBA to reach that plateau bul when asked to comment on t.he feat, be 1ald: "I'm very proud of the ac- complishment. I've played a lot of games and I don't remember too many. But the one1 really do remember is the first one. J played against Oscar Robertson. I didn't score.''. Tbe real hero of the game, however. was Bob Lanier. the Pi!tons ' fi-11 center. He threw in a hook ahot with 22 seconds remaining ln regulation to send the game lnto overtime and his four-foot jumper, with three aeconds to play in the e1tra Judge Rules .,_ Hearing Planµed For Cage Stars MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -The Big Ten Conference, in the face of a deadline set by a federal cou·rt judge, will hold a hear- ing Thursday in MiMeapolis for two suspended University of M inn es o ta basketball players. Commissioner Wayne Duke ' s an- nouncemen t of the hearing involving the conference athletic directors followed an earlier ruling Tuesday by U.S. District Court Judge Earl Larson that unless the conference held a hearing and upheld the suspension by 6 p.m. Friday, Corky Taylor and Ron Behagen would be reinstated on the team . Meanwhile the players returned to practice with the Gophers who will play Michigan Saturday. ''I made a mistake and I'm sorry.'' Behagen said prior to Tuesday's practice. Behagen said he has been punished and has suffered for the incident Jn the game between Minnesota and Ohio State Jan. 25. "I hope we can get a fair hearing and get a chance to play again,'' he said. "Corky and I have been hurt. But the team has been hurt more." ' Head Injuries Prove Fatal To Canadian WINNIPEG (APl -Stewart Gra y, his dream of a Canadian light-heavyweight title shattered in a seventh-round knock- out Monday night. died Tuesday night of injuries suffered 24 hours ea.rlier i" his fight with champion Al Sparks of Winrii- pe~. Gray, a 27-year-old native of Windsor, N.S .. fighting out of Toronto, regained consciousness briefly -..about two hours after the fight before slipping back into a co ma from which he never recovered. A sopkesman for the hospital made the announcement of his death, saying the exact cause of death woud not be known until after an autopsy. Gray underwent two hours of surgery Tuesday morning to relieve intra-cranial pressure from A severe concussion. His manager, Irv Ungerman. said Gray 's first words during his brief period of consciousness ere : "Al Sparks? Al Sparks knocked me out? Not Al Sparks." He is survived by his wife, Carmella, a 4-year-old son and infant daughter. Gray had won 13 fights, Jost 11 and had two draws prior to Monday night. George Chuvalo, Canadian heavyweight champion and 11 close friend of Gray'1 called the death "tragic , . . such a waste." "I just can't understand it. He wag a well-conditioned fighter ••• It meant so much to him ." Sparks, who spent several hours at Gray 's bedside Tuesday, was not avail· able. The Manitoba Boxing and Wresiling Commlssion opened a hearing lnt.o the in- cident earlier in the day and Ls continuing !ta Investigation today. Norm Coston of the commission said Ungerman, who returned to Toronto a rew hours before the boxier died, is ex- pe<:led to appear before the commission. He sld lf Unguman does not appear to- da y, a subpoena will be issued. The hearing had originally been scheduled for Chicago. but was changed after attorneys for Behagen and Taylor asked that it be moved to Minneapolis so their witnesses could be heard. "We appreciate what the Big Ten did ," said attorney Ron Simon, Duke's statement said the conference will follow guidelines set in Judge Larson's ruling, including notice of the hear:ing· to "involved princi pals." "In these days when juniors In cQ!leges are able to suspend their formal educa- tional training in exchange for multi- million dollar contract to turn pro- fessional, this court takes judicial notice of the fact that. to many. the chance to display their athletic prowess in college stadiums and arenas throughout the country is worth more in economic tenns than the chance to get a college educa· tion," Judge Larson said in handing down his decree. The judge also said the hearing record miat be made available to the players in the event they wish to appeal the decis ion to the faculty represent11tlves of the Big Ten schools. The players had argued that their sus- pension for the season without a> formaJ """<l"&.o.,rl••-.. --.. d~ proce1s or law guaranteed by the 14th Amendment. · · The ~layers were su!pended by both t~e.1cboOI and the Big 'Ten but the school Jilted its suspension after three games. Judge Larsop '11aid the Big Ten Com- missioner tlas the power to suspend players temporarlly because of the possibility that their return could lead to other incidents. "The highly emotional aspects of the original altercaUon had been so fanned by needless post-game comment of sup- posedly mature individuals and spec· tacular press coverage that 1be ·l!lt- mosphere aurrounding the Minnesota basketball team was highly charged," he said. •• period gave Delnllt its Jlrd vic!MJ .11gainst 45 defeats. . .... The Laker1 hit the road for toruabt'f encounter with the Hou.stqn Rocket~ PJ " neutral court game at Waco. 'l'e.x. A y:~ lory by L«s Angeles would be ~o: IS .OJ the year and equal lhe club r8CC>rd (et season ti-iumphs. l>tt,.11 (l.U) Lt• ... tlft Cl.Ml I 0"T 0"~'°' ll-1' I 2·l 11 HtlF\IOn J 4-J • .W Ditll!Cllger t o.a 11 Mc~U111"' 1 l.J .() L1nitr U J.J JI (;l'lt'T'lltl;ltln 1• J·7.,. 111...., 11 J.J JJ Gmdrld'I u . ...s a Wtlktr II S.J JJ Wttl 14 .. lJ I# 0.~I, 0 1.J I E!llt 0 0.0 • Hewitt o M o 1ur.v J o.o ' ICom!vt\ 1 1 J J TrlPO I 0.0 t Horwood 1 1).1 1 Toi.II '° n .u lU Tottlt • II 20-U lM O.tro11 2' 11 ~•ti 1• -iu - l.6S •~!1•!~ 31 .n JI JJ U -IU f'eu11e1 ou1 -O.t<111!, BIM Tot.i ltlul1 -O.!rvlt :U, lot.AMtltl \I Tecllltt l foul -Ht !rJIOn WHL Scores· Smashing Hit; Parent Jumps ·: DETROIT (AP) -The !~st allot hu been fired in the 11>far undeclared Wiir between the World Hoc..ktiy Assoclafk.t and National Hockey League, and It wis a direct hil in Toron(o. I . . . Bernie Parent, the yquhg Maple Leif goalie. acknowledged' Tuesday that'1 he would jump to. the IJe(Jgllng WHA ·htxt season for a guaranteed $750.000 contr\C~ that w~I be paid even U his "'""team, the Misml Screaming Eagles, or ovtn lbf whole league never gets oft tne iroUnct • ''Anyone would be stupid if he'd fel•AQ. offer like this and tum It down.' iild Parent, who sat out Toronto's M toff against Detroit Tuesday nlg~l. ~· "At my present 1al~ry, it would take me 10-15 years to make the kind of money I'm going to mj\ke wlt~.Mla~. Even tr this new league doesn't get started, I'm going tO get my money and that's all 1 care about." Parent said he would finish the current season with the Maple Leafs "if they want me." He .said he had not heard from anyone in the Toronto organization but had heard some of the comments they made. "H·arold Ballard (president Of thl Leafs) said that if I'm going to mike this much money in the WHA, he wasn't goln& to interfere.'' .z.~renl was drafted by, catgary o! "" w J1A but was not Interested in pljyin& tliere. Rights were tranalerred to Miaml Ind lbi du.! waa workfd out by hll ~·· y~r , Howard Casper of Philadelphia. '.l'll• cantract with the Screaming Eagle& COf.; e~s five years. r ~ .<'By the time the. five years ~e up,'' •aid Casper, "~e'U be 4 mijllonalre. ~ close to lt. By the time he's 31. he'll never have to wori another day. unlets be wants ·lo." Parent is the first playef to J!Jmp from the established NIU. to the ntw leagye, Steve Arnold, personnel director for the- WHA. indicated that more wouJd . follqW but ~aid be hbped t~ere wouJd ~no more announcements until the 1easpn is oYer •• "I.hope there are no more Immediate amtouncements of slgplnga:" SaJd AtnOii. "Signings 1bouldn't be annoupced prJar ~ a player finish.Ing the exJstitlg Seuon:•, .. Contra~( Dispute Led 1o Trade GREEN BAY, 'w1s. (Ah -Donny Anderson. tbe Green Bay Packers' "Golden Palomlno" who klgned for an estimated 1600,000 1\x yeflrll •go, said tliesday hi s lr<>llbles Jhal ultlmalely led to his departure ftom the team stemmed from a 1971 contract dlspute. Anderson, whose 3,061 yards rushing il'I ktCth on the Packer11 all·tlJne lilt but who l.aa ahunted to the baclc~ound last ytar by rook!< John Brockinalj>•" went to lM SI. Loula Cardinals for runnina btck MacArthur Lane In a tra\ght player swap. The National Football League clubs confirmed the deal Tuesd1y aft.er LAne has been located and told of It. F1llure to find Lane reportedly caused the 1n- nouncement to be delayed s day. Anderson said In Lubbock, Tex., he was "~ery excited," adding that Packer cO.eh a..11d general mMager Dtn Devine had catled him earlier to inform him or the trade. • "I know lh&L Devine has m1de com· men~ ond I don 'I deny Uiat lhoy were damaging lo my ego. but I hope I om man enough tn accep,t thenf a1 thay art and •IOUlh them o!f, ' Allderll<l!I aald. Anderson, who never signed a 1971 con- tract but Insisted he had not Intended to play out hla option, said his problems with Devine ol-iginaied over the contr11ct. Devine bad no comment on his rea sons for trading Anderson, but he had said 11ever1l th;nes he was dissatl11ied with the player's blocking. The 5-fool·I, 220 pound Lane, al 211 • )'ear older than Anderson, presented a 1fmilar case. Like Anderson , he had hls beat-· in 1970. rushing !or m yards and ICOrlng lS lOUchdowns. Ande.raon's flgur .. lliat year w.re 1153 yards ruahina and 414 t11ching pa,.... Lane slumped lo 502 yards rushing last season snd was 15Uspeoded for the final game after pubUcly criticizing St. Louis vice president Wllllam V. Bldwill in a aalary dispute. ' Lane 1ald he was surprised but happy with the lrade. Ande.raon was. drafttd as a ruture by the P1cker1 In 196.l while 1t Texat Tech. Ho ocored four touchdowns In his first 1lartln1 role wllh lhe NFL club In 1967. He has 1 career total of 3,061 yards rushina In six NFL compalgns. ranktnc llltb in 111-Ume Green Bay 1tatisUc1. "'',...... A Bruised Brave Buffalo'• Bob 'Kauffman Is attended to by trainer Jorry McCann allor •u!Ierlng a cut !hat required thrtt stitches, Kauffman returned to tho game to score two baskets in the last 20 1econds to &Ive lbt Braves a 91).98 win over BalUmore in NBA action . • JI OMl.V "I.OT Corona , ·1n Tall Timber "Loco "' .. --11111 " their pme, .. " bow a Wbltlltr ·~ tmnl the ""' "' 'La krna Hilb'• Lanc<n. Tllo 1-.n provide tbe ""' 1'91111oa In tlJO llnl rCIWld "' 1111 Cll' AMA bui<tball ulnolls 1pinll C«ooa dcl llor Frldly '""11 11 0r1np Clout and llwY'll bnni w1tll ta.m a lronl lloc that mu-111'• U . •7 and M . The bll lttm that COICh T1ndy G\Uil ind hll lrvlna taaue eo<hlmplonl •rt f•e .. od wllb ii La S<rn.1'1 Fred Hoberecbt, the H Poll man who hu doml .. led Whli.rnont Ln1ue oppooltlon with 1n •vrrap of 1& rebounds per pw' ind h81 twatttd away 1 ball ddiln 1ttmpt1 per outlni with hll defmalve 1blllty. And polrln1 with hlm In the double JIOll .. wp ol La S<rn1 11:1-1 koU Fullerwn, 1nother eenlcr. Fullerton h11 ICOl'ed at 1 IU norm wblle H•berecbl ii •IJ«blly hlaber with 1 11.0 nte, lfnlor Guy B'llnkltlln CMI robndl Oil! the front Una. The Llncen are • typlcal blah echaol teem " h I c b pou..... !hat lyp, ol hellhl In the front line wfth the lack ol overaU ttam 1peod the m.o· Jor handlcer· "We don' have 1ny bl~lnJ 1pted/1 fl)"I La Serna COICb L)'!111 Vlleui. 1 Tultlil rt1\· dent. 'Estancia Spikers Rout MD Playoff Preview Bue Nine Huntington Five, Posts . 6-1 SaxonS Similnr Triumph Dan Qulaenberry pitched a Estanc:i> '• Eagle1 openod tbeir 117% track and fleld ......, by walloplnc visi1fn& Moi.r Del. 77.51. Tueaday and thtrt were some tme early- awron marks on both 1idu of tbe 1...,.. The hl&b Jump wu tbe mOlt domlnant event of the day u 1ir compeUton on tbe three levelt (vanity, t0phomore and freshman ) cleared the &-0 mark. TORRANCE -A ltudy In M•eo'I playod llll)'OIH! with a synonymity appean to be a 21..f record. either. focusir!C point u lbt Suons of .. Jt k>oks to me llU we're Nortb Torrance Hi&h 1wa.it playing l lint place lw?•" he the invWoo of Huntmcton adds. Buch Friday ni&ht In first On 13 ocasions the Saxona round bostililles ol tbe CIF have been involved in verdicl> AAAA basketball tllmJnations. that were settled by five Coach Ruu Bierley'• Bay points or less. League clwnplont from North Torranct operate with 1 front Lut weei:'1 Joor ovtttime line that measurt1 6-3, &.J and 6M7 victory over S a n t a &.2 and with &-1 and $-JO Monica clinched the cham· glW'da it's o1most an identieol . . __ ., Sa ,_ M · nd physical setup to the Hun-PIOuauiP: . n.... ~ruca . a tington Beach crew lhJt giin· Centennial finished tn a tie for ed a btrth in the plJ:yoffs with JeCOnd, both making the a second place finbh in the playolli. SunM:t League. five-hitter and his Oran&• Coast College le am ma lea backed him up with • 10-hit attaci: a1 the Pirates tripped visiting Mira Costa, 6-1, TUe. day in a oon-eonlerenct basebaJI game. Quisenberry allowed }ult one unearned run 1n going tht route for coach 8 a r r 1 Wallace's nine . The fruhman richl·hander from Costa Mesa High struck out four and walk· ed just two. The Pirates collected all the runs they needed In the Hcond iMing, &COring three tlmes. Doug Martin led. a Mater Dtl aweep in the varsity high jump with a e.2 leap while mates Chuck Hanahan and Pat Feenty and Estancia'• Ken M1lthan followed in that order, all at S-0 .. Eagles Kevin Willingham and Ken Conner established school BOph and frosh records Jn the same event aa both sailed S-1 . Spearheading the Saxons' attack is &.l junior Jim Dykstra. He's averaged 21.S points per league outing and is that circuit's leading scorer. Mli~' Walk! to Wayne OUellette and Tom Sampson. sandwich· ed around Glenn McKinley'! t1 single loaded the bases with no tt out!. Quisenberry and Paul :tt Fleming then followed wiilh li sln1les for two runs and an er4 n ror got the third tally home. And most of his offensive thrust has been off jumpers ,,,."' .. ,;tr''in M•~ Del from inside the lS.point range. :a.'ec'"'Tt.:0 ~':"~~i, 'io~J~ LhMJ• 1E1 &imilar to the antics of Hun-s.~ T·~·r•O¥k 1E•.2. v1v1t11e cMi tington Beach'• No. 1 threat, t11 fMl. Tfmt. u .1 St B ks • ~ -1. :T.:!1Ei 2. Tur~ IMJ ev@ roo . . FlllNtr ML ti.n.; 51.0. tt• I ' 8 1 "'°11;-1~1• tirnei ~~oJ: .Herold !Ml 1. 1! owesl output Ul 10 ay 'M'lil, • -•1Sc11urtmt111e i 1. eown... League starta was 15 points ,.Jn.~ f~\~:-1.!· 11.~: ~~·iMl 1 and he clicked for 32 in one 11o111"' 11!1. '''"~ 1t:lol.2. . loo t t 1JT ri:wn:. s~rn.11 IE! 1. 11w~111 P es · l» LH _ t ~~er.of . ....,.. Despite his scoring pace. his 1r1 1. Mtrti." 1 1. T~: BJ· coach says one of hil best Sl~ 11• v -• M• · Tr~: assets is his unselfish ways. ~1,. 11:ei.v -1· E•ttncl•, Time· He 's the No. 2 auilt min on :a: 4l·-1. Mer11111w 1 1. Kat1th•11 tM; the Saxon rosier. I.~ I~. H1loll1: ~J, .. ~ it1h1 ""!~~~ 1,.:rr~ ... fl!! 1· Jim ThomplOO (6-2, sr.) and ~ -I. !.( rl'rP!tll }e1 1. Dix.,. /El Ri k Dyl (•2 j ) f th t JIM!• 11!1. 0111!~J:· u 2.f'h. c er r r . orm e ,,.. -l . or,u,.. ) . o.""''' 1e1 1 baJ r th •-• r t ,.,,...., 1M1. 011,'"i': 1. · ance o e 1>111XOns ron 11taM1t ~111 1f,l Mal# Del line while guards Pete Belanto 1~1.-:oi~?~r0,i;~"?,~~~~~YSc::"' {5-1 11r.) and Dean lrgens {S.10, 1Ei"1.-wuroP!1'1'J. "?e l. Ir?~,;, ,.,. sr. J round out the starting ~ -1.rF..:111C1 111 '· v,,,,....,·,Mi 1. five . ""'1~'~ T.'rd..'~lfli 1 ~D\16 IM) 1. Nort Torrance s tarted M•!Jlld !Ml. Time: •:O..I. I I los1·ng en r 13 non 1 1rv1 H.:'-1. Lr1ri:er ll!l '· G•rc•• sow y, sev o . 11 Wallace 's crew got two ~ more in the fourth on a single § by Mike Easterling. a walk to " Quiseaberry and o n e -b a s e H blows by Fleming and Rich Fielder. Fie.lder's hit should hav@ gone for a triple, but the Pirate was called out for pass- ing Fleming between first and 5'CCnd. The final Bue run came in the seventh on back-to-back doubles by Bob Wickersham and Ron Martin· Marina Foe In Playoff Orange Coast. now 4-5 on the season, is idle until next Tues· day when the Bucs hos Palomar ins 2:30 tilt. HI• hell handlers ere 1uord1 Jem' Kins 11-ll 1nd Rock Borden (5-11 ), • p1lr or junior• w~pend lllOll of their lime try I to 1et the bill to IX-MARINA ACI MARK SOOERBERG STARTS FOR UNIVERSITY OF UTAH. HI ht 1nd Fullerton In· ---------'".20 ·LH1~'°"1.'ToY1"~~'1 t\0i. G•rel• league tests before catching ~ l. Ht111to11 1M1. Tim•: IS.l . fire in league pla y. O ltt11w -1. E11tnc11. Tim•: 1' J'·_ 1. w11111111111.., (l!I 1• ?omtln And although this year's COll\PTON -Long Beach Wilson and Comptcn High clash tonight at Compton College in a special playoff game to determine Marina High's oppone,nt in the first round of the CIF AAAA playoffs Friday. Mir• cni. Ill .. ' ' . ' . • • I o Adtml, cl W\1110<!. )It CM111, 11, T•vler, lb HOOVl'f, II Muir, rf 81n1.n. c Octtll, !II Heck!11"9t,, D Fury. D TO!•I• ' "' ' . • • ' . ' . ' . Ilda on offen11. 'J'Mre are no returning ll1rta fl'om the IA 8<rna quintet thlt hlndod Hun-llllf\Oll Baach a quick exit from tbe pllyoll1 IHI ye1r. "I thlnk we IUrprilld I lot of people," 1111 V 11 • u r, "wt're )'OW11 111 d In· expirllnced. So I'm protty pleuod about the 'ec><ham· plonlhlp even thouch we IOI! 10le pouwlon ol tbe ttlle when we IOI! to Whittler In the llnal leasue 11me." The Whltmont L e • 1 u 1 repr111ntltlv11 hlv1. Jllyld flVI Of&nlO C:.Unty teama, but 111 from the Fullerton-Brea ire• In TOW'nlment action. TWO other& ..,.Id see plenty of 1otlon ofl the La S<rna bench, They ire frt1hm1n Jim Sha•ky C&-11 and senior Eric Banp llJ.10). Sh11ll:)' w11 1 1t1rter dur1na loutntY 1ctlon but loot the Job to Bllnk1teln. Rustlers, Barr Trip FJC, 84 By Cl\AIG SHEFF Of !tit Otll'I' ,01i.1 t11fl S o p h omore right-hinder Mar'K Birr tolled I \ v • accreleu lhnlngs In relief to 1park Golden Weit COiiege to •n M win over ho1t Fullerton Tueaday Jn non-confertnce bl,.b11I action. Birr pitched the final five frames for coach F r e d Hoover's Rust.Jeri, 11lowlng just two acratcb 1l111Je1 and 1 dcuble whlle strlklng out 1ix and walking ont. A three-run explosion by the o Ru1tl1r1 In the llf!h wiped out ~ 1 4-3 Hornet le1d and gave f! Golden West. the adv1nt1ge for '' &ood. " A bl•e•loaded triple by Phil :; McCartney w1s the ,cllnchlng !l blow rn lhe winning r1lly. '' McCartney's three-bluer :: came after Fullerton pitcher " Al C.1111 bad w1lked the bl1es :: full . McClrtney'1 hit actually "' should have been c1u1ht. but ~ the Hornet center fielder didn't '' aee it untll it was too late· r. 0Utllelder1 from both te1ms .. were bothered by the aun 111 " arttrnoon with two of the Rustler Tilt Tops Jaycee Cage Slate The naul11 junior toll••· bl1ketNll 1t110n ccmea to 1 hilt tonllhl with Golden W11t Involved ln tho only 11mi thot hll laythinJ la do Wllh I O>nfertnce cliamplonsblp. The Ru1U1r1 ho&t Southern Ca!l!ornla circuit co-I01der £111 LA. Meanwhile. S.d· dltblck end• 111 long 1111tm a1at~at v!1 ltl n1 Sin JIOrnardJno Valley In 1 )lllllloa Qmlerenca lilt 1t MllllOll ·V!tjo Hieb 1 n d Oraall Coast journeys to S.n Dfaro Mala In South COut play. AD 1am11 1rt 11 !. SUI I.A oom" Into the Geldla Wall Uff with 1 t-1 inaR. ldltllktl to 11\at o! Rio HoMo. A llultlv victory, ~ wttll u LA Harbor win -latldlltl lllo Hondo -w *" Illa ltllll 1111 .. ..... .... • tllr•!1111 lit. H..WllN. · ElllLA't9!1"'"~ed ol1 Oolilla Wtll. UH.. IA I llrtlltlld-.... Al II • 1 ~ RIP. W-•1t11te to• an ...... ... ..... lo ltl -.... ,,,. (Jouobol, lali la .. "-ttlndlne, """" -Jutl ""'' ol • .. -a... Oeul Wtll bo •kloC .. 11111 ylolorJ "' 1111 - """' (tploli ,. •••ll ...... I ,,.11111..., ollllll mm .. DlltJO "- Rustlers' five error1 comlrti on mlJJud(ed ny bells. Golden Wtst plcktd up tts first run ln the aeco"d on a walk to Baine Calder, a 1tolen base and MJke Dodd's two-cul ~· Rustlers ~ot two more In lht lourth on 1 triple by Pal CUrran, 1 w1lk to Calder, McCartney's (l'OUnd out lo the rlcbt aid• •nd Dodd'• double to lbt bese of the lel! lleld fence. Golden Weat 1dded sln11e t.tlllea In the seventh ond el1hlh rnmu. A w1lk •nd 11ttcles by Phil McCartney ind Of:ne Recllatelner did 11\e d1maae in the aeventh end a welk lo Scott Wlbon, Wiii McCarlntY'• alqlo and Cur- ran's double pl1tod the lln1I tally. The victory w1s t h e Rustlen:• third ln 1 row and ran thtir se1son record to 5-4 . ..... ....,(.) .. ' • ... WH-, .. ' I • • ·~·" • I • • W MCC..,,,...,, ~ ' • ' c ...... " • • ' c ...... 111 I • • ~ Mt'Ctl'tM\', « • • I -.. ... • • • -.. • • ' It ........ " ' • I ...... ' • • ' !( ............ l • • -· • • ...... ' • ' .... ... ..... ff1 • " -...... .. ' • "' • • ' • =.. ...... • • • • • 1 • • ~· • ' ' • • ' 1 ' • -='\· • • ' • .. -... • • ' I on"*" t I • • • =··.: ' • • • ' • • • -· ' • • • Ctllll. • ' • , .. ""' • • • • • • ..... ' • I • ... • I • • -· .. ' • I _,,_ --••• t it rat,.._,.,. J -tit -._. •• 1 Soderberg Start,s For Utah Cagers IM\ J. no 1t11r11. H•/q_111: .. ,. contingent isn't in the same U -I. l uH,111 f l 2. l!wlno fSI J.' o~rnc!Orf.,. 1~ • D1f~P1Ct: ,,.,, mold 111 some of the towering E .J.~. 11E'f'dri,~""-'~ l1.1~1' U!l J. quintel!I of prior seasons, the J fi~ h.1f~l!i11~e:~,2.J.1tw•r.u cr i results are the same. "' -•1 H.PM• ' '· Sheol•• re, J. It's the fifth league cham· .t.lvo CM , Tl""' .I. 111111e1t cnfr., Maler °"' pionship in six years. It is, 1 1~,;i~·rer•T/~!,1·,f}.Lhic111 tt:i however, the first time the ito -1. 1111m,1v 1E1 ~ s11nr• un Saxons have lost more than Tipoff is set for 7:30. Compton's Tarbabes and the Bruins of Wilson titd for sec· ond place in the Moore League. along with Long Beach Poly, behind champion Millikan. J. Dtv1dto11 Il l Tl~e: .J. "° -1. ''"ne' c 2. tuJrr• rE u . eight times (they are 17·9) in .. ~ IMI. Tlmt: 1; 11.0. . h . D' cti •• c -1,,. "Tt:'" 1E1 1. '""'"''" 11111 a season in e1g t camp11gns. ll'e on1 w om pt on 1 i 1r'H 1~1·1. lf:.:..!~"tl1 2. Grtid!.• Another factor ls the home College are west on San Diego By PHIL ROSS Of tfle Otll'I' 'lltt Jlttt IMI '• !wlllfl \'1· rim.: 111" rt d I N lh To F rlh Lo B h Play· in 1 Utah uniform at the un •l•v -~ E•••~l•. ..,., "·'· cou a van ag@. or r· reeway. no on ng eac 1-\J -I. c , CE) 1. Hll\Jtfl 11!1 s. . be I lb' . F 17) t A t . begiMing of last month In the G[~tn_r r 11,,='i E~'t. _...1 Llddltl IEl r 1 . 1 anc 8 .!m". un 1 en 1s year 1n reeway , wes on r es1a • • ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . " ' tlr•"9t Cini U) Flemlllf, Ill Fltlclt•. 711 P•lmtr. ct Wl(tl'f•ll•"'· rl au.U1"9. e Mtrfl/I, c MclCJnn~v. 11 5tmPSon. II E•1ttrllt111, lit Cu11.,,btrrv. D Ttt•l1 .. ' ' . ' . ' " ' ' • . ' ' . . ' ' ' " . • • • • • • • • • • ' . .... ' ' ' ' ' . ' . ' . ' ' ' . . ' ' . ' ' " . Mark Sodelhera I• finally .. ttllng dcwn. At leait, thlt11 what M~rk 8o4or6trg• 1t hoplng. :t. H1uotr1 rM1. 0111u1e•j· ,,.N. P>~ Blvd. The school i!1 located conference opener a g a Inst w'1A!1f,u; 1t'M~1 "f16dr~~ ~.~ .. w.rc1 1r1 ,. "It helps to play at home." one-hi!! mile past Long Beach • ~ • Ariwna and he's been a -.!>l!'~-i01.-'•1'1wL.'.!!"!<'!!'>!!' ._• ... !"'.,",."-'-'-' _•·_cc:;::::n;:ced:::es:....;!:;l::lr::l•:::Y::·-"b:;u::t_;;w::e_B:;)c.vd:;. ________ .._::~'C:1;•:!;--~~:.::.•!!.'..!::::..!:'"-';:::::-::J:..':;:..:.l S5hllll!13 EJ. Dlt1•111;1: ~· k•r• 'Y lnnillJJ A much·soUght-after ba11kit- b1ll prospect at Marina High four years ago, Soderberg did whit he thought was right for him.self and 1lgned up with the dean of America's collegiate cage mentors -ancient Adolph Rupp -and the Univer1lty of Kentucky. "Rut," as the 6-10, 224·paund stnlor puts It, "I think my ml1take was going to Ken- tucky at the wrong time with the kind of pl1yer11 they had there." A c<1uple of the "kind of players" Soderberg refers lo who were at Kentucky are 6-11 Dan Issel and seven-footer Tom Payne, both playing pro- fe11lon11ly th111eeson. So, with a 1c>ur taste In his mouth Jn the land of the Blue1ru1, White Llghtnin' and the Cimptown Races after three seasons. Mark Soderberg w11 a youngster with a year of college basket- ball ellglblllly !tit and the desire to go elsewhere. Flndlni 1 last r rl e n d , Soderbtrg almost immediately contacted University of Utah assistant co1ch Jerry Plmm and lht latter penned the ex- VlkJna:'• name to a Redskin hoop schelarshlp. That w1s ln January of 1971 ind Ullh h•s since replaced he1d coach J1ck Gardner with former Rut1er1 tutor Bill Fo1ter. who retained Plmm on hb 1t1rr. Miking 1 km& ol<>ry ·ohort. Soderberg be<ame ellalble to regular ever·1tnce. Of his current aspirations, the two highest are hoping to go high in the pro draft 1nd qualllylng for the U.S. Olym· ~team. "I came to Utah because l wanted to pick a school which recognized basketball as a good thing and where I'd get a better chance to play than I did at Kentucky," he says. "l guess a noticeable dlf· rerence belween high school and college ball is this: you get much more enjoyment in high school but basketball becomes more or a business- type thing In college, even though you still enjoy it. "A kid just out or hiah school, as I was when I first enrolled at Kentucky, i1 still raw to the facta of what to look for." Not coming along as quickly as he'd prefer to, Soderberg ia averaging about 11 points and 11 rebounds per game In a guard-oriented offense. .. "I have to be underneath a lot." he admits. ' · a n d sometimes I won't gel a re- bound because l 'm screening oU someone or something for one of the guards . , . the layoff I had also hurt me to a certain degree." Now, with his ship hopefully stra.ightened, Soderberg Is anxiously awaiting the im· pending oonc:Jusion of his off. again, on-again college c1reer. With luck, he'll aet both oi his wishes. UCI Invades NorCal In Must-win Situation TURLOCK -UC Irvine 's baskelhell l01m h"ds down the stretch of the fin1'1 week nf the recul1r season tonight against St1nlsl1us State with 1ctlon at Turlock High School itarUna at I o'clock . The Anteatn, 1lill 11urter1ng pangs or injuries tl\at have lhlcltled Iba club In rteenl outin&1, 1r. IJ'llplng at·• lh1n str1w with 1 poulble NCAA cc11tte dlvl1'°n re a l o n a 1 pl•yoll berth at the •nd. A polr of victories this -k lo brine Iha _,.n rttord lo 1•10 art a Virtue! must for coach Tim Tift'• ch111es lo l•ln l\ICh consider1!lon. UCI cloou the home ,..llOll with CoJ St11• ra.rusn.14) s.tur- dey nlchl In 0'1wlont Hall (I). Stlni111U1 Sllla'a Wll'riort 1ia .. ....,, ao •fM!ICklown out· ' I flt thl11 season. They defe1ted Far Western Con£erenct tn· trant. Chico State, *>-68. in their la.st ouUng. Phil Rhyne Is expected lo pass another milestone in the all·tlme. UCI scorif18 ~ade •;ohm the Woniors. Rllyne currenUy has 8llO polnta In 41 game.s over 1 two-year career at UCI and b 111 behi!ld Nick Sinden In lourth placa on tlJO all-tima acorlnc lbl Rhyne'• t,...)'far 1ver1p ls &ee0nd. only to JeU Cun- nlngb1111'1 muk ol 11 . 4 . Rhyne ts ,..,.q1ng 17.1 por lill Bill Moort, the otlier UC! forward atartar, Is In third ft... In the atand. witll ,111 point. bUt Is 1• bthlnd Milo! lleclan1n In ~ pl1ce. O!••inshl!ft Is Iba moot ininc I/Cl llCOrill( If.tr wltll I.lilt I« tbret ywt. ' • Meet us halfway, and we'll swap skilled training for a little of your time. It comes down to this: you scratch our back, and we'll scratch yours. We think it's a pretty good trade. Here's how: Join the Army Reserve. Want to learn helicopter mechanics, electronics, or a medical specialization? Or administration an~ finance, heavy-vehicle driving? There are many, many others to choose from depending upon the specific skill requirements of your local unit. After you've finished a short tour of active duty (from 4 to 6 months) that also includes skill training, you'll return to the Army Reserve unit which you joined near your home. While on active duty training, you get about $300 a ·month. Plus quarters. Plus food. Plus medical care. Plus PX and commissary use! It's the kind of training that'll put you ahead in civilian life ••. for a lifetime. And all the time you're going to meetings and taking training in your skill, you're getting paid for it. If you're a guy who wants to direct his own life, a guy with purpose, come to our swap meet. We've set it up so it'll pay you. On purpose. The Army Reserve. .................................................................... ~ • • : '1Dkwy.__..Co-..I OC'. : ; AWi: Mr. H&ldtr : ' 2.34$ • ..,..., ~ • ' SUia .. ~ CIW.tJ10t ' I -. I ,_01~....-10 ! ' . . ' . ' i : I I I .. . ... .I • • Bucs Zip To Swim Victories SANTA MONICA -Orange Coa:it College's s w I mm in g team. warming up for its titanic South Coast Conference meet with Fullerton JC Fri· day, defeated a pair of op- panenls Tuesday at Santa Monica City College. Coach Jack Fullerton's Pirates turned back the host Corsairs, 52-48, and routed Citrus, 82-12. Friday's dual meet with FJC (at Orange Coast) Is the conference opener, but it 'll probably decide the dual meet championship since t h e Hornets and OCC are the two top teams in the circuit. Or&llft Cull 1121 !It) Cllf\lt Mt'dley rtlty -I, 0rt"9t (Mt! {Jonn, MCAl!f ... y, K.i>I tncl Frtnrom ) J :!t '· 1,000 ''" -1. W11r11er 10) ,_ IHI 10). Na lhlrd. lmt: 11 :21.1. 200 Ir" -1. Moan (0 ! 2. (lrpen"'r IOI l. 811•9*U ((I. Time: 1:5 1. 50 tree -I. Gr..,r ~Ot l . Hyl11\d (0) ). ~It !CI. flmt: 21.•. :10G !l\d. med. -l J0t>t1 (0 ) 1. RlclitY (0 ) J. McChtlnfY (Cl. Tlmt: 2:'l.O. No cll~lne. 200 llw -1. Wur1trr !Ol 2. Currier IC) 3. 1-l~blt !O>. Tlmt: 2:11.t. 100 l•er -1. P:r•ntom COl 2. 51•nl0n lC! l . GrNr (0 ). Timi: S2 I. 100 b1ck -1. Jont1 (01 2. lutltr (0) J. McCllt•MY ((). Tlmt: 2:11.0. loOG Ir" -1. Ktnl !Q) 2. Ctr.,entc• 101 J. Gibb• !Cl. Tim•: s·n .1. 100 brt1111trokt -I, Fr1nrorn (0) 2. llk r..v 101 l. Fl•chtr IC!. Tlmt: 2:11.•. • Fr19 ttl1y -I. Or•ng.t (Gall (Grffr, 8oflmtn, Wurltft tnd Moon). Tlmr: J::it.2. o ...... coet• un (411 ''"'' Monie• Mcdlty rrlty -1 OrtnQt CNtl fJ-l, MCA-y, Ktnl tnd Frtntomj. l lmt: l:~ 9 1.000 lrff -L !-1111 CSL 2. Wur11tf' 101, J 1111 40!. Time: 11:21.s. i1lO ''" -I. MOOll !01, 2. A11orlu {Sf. 3. Oh.on CSL Time. l:Sl.7. 'Joo lree -1, ElllJ (51, 2. GrHr (0), l . Hyltnd COi. Tl,,,_: 21.0. 200 Ind. m~. -1. J-t 10) 2. Sll1r11 (5) 3. RlcheY (0). Time: 1.IJ,O, 01~1n, -1. Boen csi No tecono e< ttilrcl. Poi nts; ti JS. 200 tty -1, Mtr!ln !Sl l . Htl! (SJ J, w u .. trr COL Time: 1:!S 1. 100 ''" -1. A1lorl1t lSl 2 Frtnlorn IOI J Ntwmtn !Sl. Time: Sl.J. 100 1110. -l. JOMI CO) 2. Slltrp ISi l . Butler (0 ). Time· 2:13 0. !00 lrot -1. Krn! 10 ) 2. Hill ($) J. C••1>en1e• IOl. l•rne 1·71 2 100 brr111stro~t -I. Fran1om {0) 1. lil lcllt• (Q) l. O!!lee• ISJ. l omt: 1:71.9. FrH rel11 -1. Senlt Monlc.t, Tlmt; J .21 .•. DAIL V 'ILOT J 8 Ramona Is 2<1·2 Unicorns Cop Victory Prep Swim Results Allen Out • 6-7 Wh .iz Paces At Tustin 200 ~ 1tti.r -I, l8 wo-. rl'?lii Fi'1 1 "'..,.,;:''YT,"'~T" IHI'). WrMr-1~1 !l l Ti!ftt : u 'J _....hi In a bard fought rugby fool· , ... 1141 rJ?~\i WILSON SIUlmf"~C~,, ,~"f~f!:.....~l ~':t-';_ 1 l~~~l!.;..1:""o~:,.1 Il l l~C1t1llr Tustin tligh rootbltl coach ball gamt, the llWltington 11nw: ,, "·'· ~r?tn.!!l iCi ~-sJ;rdi-rwi.' ': , ~.!'~r ~ii:.""}.~ I' ,,..11.w 1L1 Ge<1rgr Alltn his rt11.,....... s Beach Uni<.'Orns ou tlasted the '°° "'"" -1 ••111J•'1'cl iwi 1· 1.00.1, • •ec1i -1 '"'" ll f 1 QulMI tNI position the DAILY PILOT U<d"1~Cl,J.~:.,m~ 1r'1w~':', UJ'1: 100 ''" -I ""'"lllD!Ofl te l 1. 1. tffn lfU. Tl"". tf4 Irvine Club's second team 13·6 M1.,1u <W> 1 "•1..,., 1cl ~"l,,_.: k.."'"" 1w 1 >. t°""'"* 1w1. T1m1; IL'~'l":I~ tl l· ~~~,1~;.~ v~ hit s learned exclusJvelv. J 1 t S..I, ,..oo F .... lltltY ~ I. l•.--0. H• at Marina High School Sunday . le"'"_ 1. w1.,,, 1w! t. 1r1111v ..oo ''"" -1. •~'f ic1 t. ,,... Applications are be.inc ac- MD Playoff Rival RIVERSIDE -It's like an old replay for Mater Dei lligh's Monarchs and the Rams of host Ramona as the first round of CIF AAAA basketball action awaits the two rivals Friday night. Coach Doug Stockham's Citrus Belt League champion Rams are in the playoffs for the third straight year against an Orange County contingent while Mater Dei enters the eliminations fur the second time in three years as the Angelus League runnerup. The two clashed last year in a tourney Issue and Ramona and Mater Dei tangle in scrimmage sessions prior to . seasonal play. "We've lost to Orange Coun- ty learns Servile and Troy) in the first round the last two years and we 're aware of what Mater Dei has got." says Stockham. "so we fee l like we're ready for them." The Rams are led by 6-7 center Dwight Tyler. a 200- pound senior whose defensive skills have been the backbone of their defense . "Dwight's very quick and mobile and he plays super defense. He has arms that hang down to lhe floor and plays like he's 6-9", opines the Rams mentor. He 's averaged 11.4 points per lilt while (orward Bill Montegil is the leading SCQrer with a 18.5 norm. He was the league·s MVP as a jun ior but has been ham- ered with the flur the past week and missed two loop starts. Teaming in the front line with the 6-4 Montegil is 6·0 junior Frank Mcclanahan. The backcourt duo consists ICJ J, l>I04!He IW . Tlmt : JJ ), lqj:idfll IWI ., l'ow1U IWL llmti ,_ It>'<"'•< '" ( I 'Tht Unicorns now stand 11.t r~ oi;l~. _ 1 "''" iwi ,, '1 rl.D~. lttll _ 1 lf'•c1• IW \ " ,'°° M'H'io~ Rtii!• _ l. ~wooci cepted at Tu11ln or 1rep11c"'" o( Gary Staunch (6-0, sr.) and 6-0 in the second di vision of Krumot1ol1 1c1 '· ;-.. ,,., Yw1. t 1m1: St•lfm•~ tc1 l. "ow•• tw 1. 11"•: 1,.,. 1 $.lo mtnt (or Alltn, who coached Da'' Henni'nger ('9 sr I the Southern Califurnia Rugby .1\:io "'" -J· Moo111,. 1wi 2. ono '''to•·,,...,1 -1, SttioMt\tl• tw1 j· 1t1fOJ Ft:'«~; lL1~~.fli.1;J:,,51•rln the Ti'llers !or elaht years. ,,... • ' HO\ J, l•outtr IWl -Tim•' .11 0 Crlmo !Cl l W•IMO !(.J, 1 tntj_ l!OI . 100 l»d Mt(ll"" -I, 1t1;Ji'11 ~I t, Henninger Is classified as Union with three gan1es to "'10 'r" -1. Htrn~ 1w1 1. 400 "'"· ••l•t -t. c.or11119 ,..1 "'''· a11•11 1N1, Glib Ill. r 1m1i 1 ~ ·l "I' 1 ed., All play. Irvine's re-<.~rd is ...._2, Krumono11 1c1 ,_ L1m11 <WI. 11m1: 11,...: 1:JQ..S. · .,.~.::.~ili.111..!:!.~'~"i. t. w111 N 3. ve res gn , 1ays en, lhe sparkplug of Ramona's Irvine opened the scoring • ~·BIK'k -i1 o.Go41•1w1 2. Lortnt LI wu.ori l\"'iif.':. n. loci 11 1v -1 JT..,1,,.., 'L' t. M1rw11 "I witnt to get my mastert !Cl ) PtllYltr f'· TllYlt ' Jt.I It JL,) ]. l'tllcllmt1111 INl 1\mt l,·n ,,_ fast break attack. He with a try by Larry Sheldor1 1oo ·a,1111 -,_Mtrr1u' cwi't. Ml!ll'IC N •• ..,, 1 > l l•lt--4 100 ,,.., -1 iYtl'lt 1L1 i ••••• and I've just never had the 1(1). Ono ICI. Tl-· !:or,•, '100 MtllltY tit• -l. 1.lllitwooct. (NI , PttltO(I ll l ime S!. averages 6.3 points per game converted by Terry Miner but ..oo Fr .. A•l•• -1. .. wn.on. Tl!ftt •:•11. 400 "'"' 1 •t<t.o 1L1 1, v--• lime to do It. Tlm41: l.~.6. 'li' JOO Frtt -l, Alll CNI 1· Ge<llOfl Ill Il l J W•I! >NL T nw •"Ii b I has Sho · 1 the Unicorns led 7·6 at hJilf 3. Gr..,. ll !. T1mt: J :SI~ loo ••ft. 115cr.m1c111N1 t. Jlml nt1 .. 1 11 t II 1 I u wn scoring po en-ct1M 1•1 ,.., L• wu-200 11111, "';l',J;. -1. tnltv ILi t. 1L11. 11 .... 11 N• Tl"" , 01.1 wun o even u11 y ge n-time after a drup goal by Greg 200 Mte1I•• R111v -1. la wnMlfl. R'f!!&n tJru a. ... u.1. ""'' t· • J 100 ,,,,., ... 1 1t•t<~O"l I\/ , tial , hitting 18 points in lhe Schnee\.\•eiS and a penally goal Tl~:FI°"!: •. I. a_,..,~ fCI t. l obOelt Jilt ~.rtt~I~ l~/'.',-4r:.': lfll· VWNI ~f.1 .. ! Ill J. Htroro'<t IL), mt' !O !he COllt'ge Jevel 0 f Rams' final CBL victory by Danny s c h n ·e ,· d er . !W) J ~.,~ !Cl. llrM. t :o.J.$. No Ol•lflO. llD ''" 1t111v -1. N•-1. Tl-· ('(Ill Ching." ' 100 Incl. MIOdl•• -' Scr•h111 CWI l . 100 ,,. -I. MueUtr Il l ' W•M !NI t.01 •. -------- And, the Rams have an ex-/-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;~..;;;;;..;;;;;;;;:::.:;:.;.::.:;,-;;.;;~~-~-;;,,-;;;;,;-;;-;--;·;;;;:;;;;~;;;;;;;.~;:;;;:;;;;;::;::;:;;:;:;;;;:;:;:;:;:;;:;_~~..:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;; celtent sixth man who comes SALE SPECIALS FOR TODAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY! s. hoblo Espanol off the bench when the offense needs a shot. WESTMINSTER SANTA ANA FULLERTON He's &.a o,,, Barnett. the 152211£ACll llW.• PHCJllE ... • '"' 120 E. ARST ST. AT CYPll'SS• l'llOllE 547-7411 1530 S. HAIBOR BU'D. • PHOllE 17M700 younger brother of Golden ~ State's Jim Barnett. "Dave doesn't get with lt mentally right . away," says Stockham, "but he's great coming off the bench and he goes to the basket real well ." De!ense, however, is the Rams' biggest weapon and il centers around the 6-7 Tyler. No Citrus Belt League o~ ponenl" has been able to crack the 60-point barrier against the Rams' defense. Among the Rams' 24 wins (lwo losses) are victories in the championship finals or the 'Bishop Amat and San Bernardino Invitationals. 1l1m0flt 04-J) " Rl¥erslcle l"olr ., ·~ ,.n11ltlm .. '" 811dwin Perit .. " F,,.,11111 " " ll1nett ff " Stn 8tr111rdl"o " " Stn ll1rn1rcllfl0 " " Wtlltr" " " Apple Vtlltv .. .. C•lon " " 8urbtn-.. " Fon11n1 " .. lil!vtrslclt PolY " " Pa~ltlc " .. lill<lltl!dl • " FOl\ltnt " • Stn Gortonlo .. " Ellfnllowtr .. " Cll1H"r .. " lil lVtfllcl• l"ol~ " ~ •Ptclll~ • " Rtdlt"lll " " Stn Gorgonlo • " Fonr1,.1 " " EIHnllow1r " n Cllttl1r " MONDAY THIU fllDAY •• 1:00 A.M.-t P.M. SATUIDAY ••••••••••..•• 1:00 A.M.·41'.M, SUNDAY •••••• , •• , • , •••• t :OO A.M.-4 P.111 . UTILITY BAGS AND TRASH CAN LINERS H.o..., clutr .,1;1tlr. LHkpnoof, r•u•al>I•. w1 •• tiet. rns u, to ,. OAl. PKG.OFIO 39c MONDAY THltU fl!DAY • , 1:00 A.M .• t P.M, SATURDAY , , , •••••• ••,,, 1:00 A.M.·4 l'.M, $UNDAY ••• , ••••• ·' ••••• t :OO A.M.-4 l'.M. I I MONDAY THIU FllDAY • , 1:00 A.M.0t P.M. SATUIDAY • ,,,.,, •• , , ., , 1:00 A.M.-4 P.M, SUNDAY • , • , ••• , .••• , , , • t :OO A.M •• 4 P.M. President's Cup Opens Fire At Santa Ana Country Club 94 ""'" -..~ ...... ,,,. ,, .... ~., ... f••.t II.fl ... -· ·~" ... -·--......... , 1244 ,. LOWPR\CES oMEVERY CORNELL T\RE \ .,...,, 4 PLY NYLON CORD 88. . .. ,, ...... , J>resident's cup qualifying rounds are currently under way at Santa Ana Country Club and run through March 11 with members using net scores of the single round of competition lo pa rticipate in the match play competition. Meanwhile, the se n iors tournament is nearing com- pletion. In the Old Crow flight (70 and over ), Ed Sylveste~ and George Woods hleet fot the title Saturday. This is the only finalist ma tch to dale. .Fred Walker advanced to the semis with a victory over Les Boyle and wiU meet Len Hint>S to determine a finalist opposite M. T. Patterson in the Renaissance night (~9J. Patterson defeated Leland Finley, I-up on the 19th hole. In the Ponce de Leon flight (50-59), Gerry Werner ad· vanced to the finals wit h a 2 and 1 win over Jerry Helperin. He will face !he winner or a match between Lloyd Stocker and Don Snively. Irvine Coa•t High-low competition Lakes ovE!r the spotlight at Irvine Coast Country Club next week with a shotgun better ball or partners affair scheduled for Wednesday as a prelude to !he 18th annual Frank Crawford memorial evtnt. Players may choose their own partnel'3 for the shotgun affair on Wednesday but the two-day, 3 6 ·ho I e perpetual trophy competition is 1 blind draw which will be held Mon- day. Handicap spreads are usually aruund eight for the two players. Mls1ion Viejo President's cup competition at Mission Viejo Count ry Club will begin March I. Competition is by match play with the two finalists in Edison Finishes Last In 3-way Spike Meet Edison's Steve Timmerman had a top effort of 53-10 in the shot put and teammate Dave Powell clocked 15.2 in the 12D- yard high hurdles, but lhe Chargers finished last In a trianRUlar track and field meet at Bolsa Grande High Tuesday. Bolsa won the meet with 64 points, followed by Long Beach Wilso n (59 ) and Edison (36 \. The only other winner for Edison was miler M i k e Alvarez. He had a clocking of 4:38.9. ·~.., ltht Ort1169 llMI L_, •ttcll Wlbtfl f.lfl IElllMR (1'1 100 -I Nie~,._ (WI f. Gvlf. 1 .. 11 181 J. Rlldlalloll <•I •, C•Jfl tWJ. Tl"": IO 1 no -I Nkllt'-(WI f <:-vn- trrl1 Cl ) l. GlrM <IE J 4 C..th <WJ, Tlmt: 22 J. U1 -1. M .. rll (II) ! IClno 1111 1 1'1t""-" (WI 4. Wlln.I! C•I. Tlfl'lt; $l.]. .. -\, "'8jor CWI t. l -(Wl J. Ols.cus I. &olu Gralld1 ! tolu Grtlldt J. Eel!'°" •· Wiholl. Ohllfl(t: No Oh1tn<t. '" .. IN Orlllft I Ul . l"" •Hdl Wli-Utl It'-C411 100 -I, McQu1rrlt ti ) I. K1i1111M CWI ). Mcil"f\tflon (El '-G"""' CWI. Tl-:" 10.•. 270 -I. kt.$11M (Wl 2. Gr-(W) l . McOvtrrll 1a i •. Powell (WI. Timi' 2•.l . tiO -I, C1111 IWl 2. Gr1y CW\ J. •orotf {E) ot. RIWr IW). Tlmt: l:U.l. 1J21D -I, Mllfwd !El 2. Smllll (W) 1 Drloy CWI •· Moort IWJ. Tlmt: l :4J.I. no HH -I. Font .. (W) 2-Hunt•r IWI J. Alddlt Cll I. "° le>ur111. Tlmt: 11.S. 120 LH -l. For11!e-r (W) '· Hunt-'' lWJ J. John'°" {fl •. 8ttl .. ccturl Cl ). flll'W! 11.•. M Re!oey -1. lWllMotl 2. IEclliOn J, M rl!lrd. Tlmt: J7,7, HJ -1. Mc:lll'llr-(f ) 2-Nol111 IE1 1, Smllll IWI 4. JolMn~ (II. He]flllt: l '"'· U -1. G1M (E) t. MCOu1rrl• (I) J. MCPlltrlOfl (El 4, P"rMM !WI. OltltllCt: lP'•''. ..... -1. Ardllbtld 11!1 ! Lord lWI J. llltrrOI'! (El 4. llelllloftr CW!, .H•10111: IO' Sii -I 119tlow {IEJ J, J..,,,lntf, lEI >. WU*" CW! 4. Htlt IW!. Oft.. l•no:•: ....... lolo Dlac111 '" lllltt o. ...... {fll each flight meeting In a 36- hole competition on April l for the championship. Mission Viejo CC will hold Its next stag day and evening smoker on Wednesday, March 15. Jtleadowlark The men's club staged a partner's better ball tourna- ment recently with J i m Crusenberry and Joe Gurzi gaining first place with a score ol 55.· A tie resulted for second between teams of Don Nichols and Ralph Brandemart on one side and Jotm Heath and Ed Palmer on the other. Each had 56. Crusenberry and J i m Rowland came in with a 57 for fourth place. Barry Sutherland, head golf professional at Mesa Verde Country Club in Costa Mesa, is touring these days but not on the PGA players' tour. Barry recently r e t u r n e d from a two-week trip lo Japan to consult with Japan Promo- tions, Inc., new owner of the Mesa Verde course. Following his return from overseas, Sutherland wenl to Nashville, Tenn. and El Paso, with return home late this week. In a better ball of partner's mixed competition dubbed the George and Martha touma· ment, Mr. aod Mrs. G. T. Pegg came in with a net score of 62 for top honors. CIF Cage Summaries IAAA Dlwltltll) Co'llnt '1, Pi-JO ....,...._. Vtllft' 13, M1111lcl1lr .. Senti M1rl11 71, Hirt JI Ill~ Moma°""ry '3, .. ffltll1 SA F°"'lllH '2. ltl111owt• Jt S.., 8-rdf.., SS. Vpl4'fld 'I ltom,. HIHt ,tt, Lo. .......... " !t Mtdfr\I "'· l• ..,,..,.,, Wll10fl Sf Ktltllt IJ. ll:lvfrtlCH Mtf1'11 M CMllGnllt 7l, G1rdtn GfW9 M Ott.., .II, "°"1IW+tw SI Corm.I "'°""" -clcuh, Co,...,.f'fo cl!ok• lo ,....ft11CJI -•0!1011 for btl!tr 11111 "'ii•· ..,,., -•!tr .... rting. ... .... CAii WITH AUTOMATIC "'°" 99c SETS UKE A WILO BODY FILLER TEMPERED STffl SHEARS AOAOH.UAIOOllAIANTll• THf PIP •oYS OUAIAHfll COlNfLl ltlfS Pot A 5'1CI· 1110 NUMlfl Of MONTHS AGAINST AU IOAO ltAlAIOI IH N<>lM,.l 'AS!fNGfl CAlt USf. OAM .. OlO 111E Will If tf,lACfO WIT H 'lO•IATfO MONTHLY AOJUSTMfNT CHAIGf U.SfO ON llOULAI SfLUHO ,llCI AT llMl or nllCHASL ~~r IE SURE TO CHECK WITH .US IF YOUR TIRE SIZE IS NOT SHOWN BIG SAVINGS ON AllQ.IJ .. 1~ .. , ... -!tli'lf ~i1Jr 1.&Mep(TM GUARANTEE" TRUCK TIRES FOR PICK·UPS, PANELS & CAMPERS BIG SELECTION OF SIZES 15t~~!~ 16~ .. /J-W~~ ... /J8!~ .. / J91..~ .. Tu•to #lJ!.~llU JUlfP 1\lillt ffPr Yo\H 1rr1 l"'1 1----HIAVT DUTY ILACKWAllS---'C.:.. ~!i I~~~ I ii:. I ~z.:· 1 ~~!: / ~!:· rt .. ,..t.rn.Tooc .-tttli.ll .,..;., NO THUMP TIRES CORNELL ARISTOCRAT 8 ....... TIRES FOR VW' s TOYOTA'S, MG'S, OPEL'S AND MANY OTHEI fOIEIQN CAIS FOR VW's 98 •PLY NYLON COIO TUNIJ lllUClfWAU • t:'~i~ .. ' Mc:Dllwlll CWl 4. Str11tnl l•I. Tlmt: t:n.s. M,le -I. Alv1r11 !El J. v....,_ (El >. Nol04i 111 1 lri:twn !I I T'""': 4! •• t. l"" 'Ndl WttM. Utl lllh9 IU\lil IOI -I. lllOdrlllotll !WI 1. I«* l •l l Lllttlft (El 4. IUoll Ill. llfl'lt. 11.t . ltlltllclou!c n, °""rll HIM 1' Ctrnar'llle .i, lllOlltltl H W..1 C"O\'fM ff, Ml. Ctrmtl J2 c .... rtfr a... "'· Oltnf•• f1 Mtyftlf 11. H.....,.,. U Sr••itt• ....t ·-·..,..... .. ..... JW -t ~I o 1111 •'· 1.wylhlflt ,.... .... ~­... ..,. r.,..lt•. .5.201113 J.'°11 l.5 6.00• 1.5 "''" 12'5 UOxl•l4'$ \ 2Mll9 -1 H11ir!WCIOlll (I I 1 Wetl• llfl !El J. Wit"" !f l L WhlN-(11 f l-: lf•'60 lfl •HN -I. PO'Wlfll (,1 t ,...,.,. IW! J Mt rle Il l 4. W!llk< llE I, 11"": 11 I 1• llf -I, M •l'N CW\ 1 ......n (IE ! J, Wlif1 (W) •· Wlldf'r lfl. llmt: " •• U) ll'lltY -I. lolwl !. @d!Mrl J. "° llllrd Timi: 4$.•. Mlle 11tt1tv -1 wn.-. ' eo1w1 J. fdl•ooo. Tlrnt· 1·• 1. HJ -1. '-°"' !WI J "'""'4t 111 J ~Iron !WI • C11Ulrigt Ill. ~lllM: f'l " U -I SP....., ! ft I 1 "-uc.,_.le 11 1 J. ~ 1•1 •· Ctl•W... tf l. Ol.-t.w.1: 11'9\V'. l>V -I Wl6n' fW) 1, l~ IWI J WllMl'I 4. 110 """"" lttltM1 11 ·1 ~. "" -I flfNlili """" llJ 1. D;tt 11 1 I C...~ !WI 4. .. ...., JW), 0.. "1Kll1 D'lt''' •• -I lloctr~ tw) t ltLtnH IE I J, Nl'l~1 IWl 4. Oii"" IE). Tlm.1: lt.i. MO -I J....,lfl!U !El t. lllflm Ill 2. H.-IWI l I: •· M-N ff I. Tlmt: l:ft.4 l»t -I M~ (f-) 1. Tvnlt 1•1 J. Mc'()lllrtn ' l t&-#11 !I J. 11"": J;J1 .. 1)0 lH -1 lttll•tt tel t Ltt !El J. Mtllu,.s l,, •, lwtt IW), fJIM; 1,,, 6C llN'& -1. lolllo 2, fdlM!I ~. .... ffl]td. Tl!N~ "'·4 HJ -1, Ire'"' 11!1 2. Mnltr (II >. l(tlllvm !WI '· H•,...,_ I I!.). Hf'IOlll: S'•"· U -1 I«~ fll 1. Lin' Cl!:! S. lvrw1dl Cll 4. fell-. (W) OlattflC•; 1''1" '"' -I Ht""""'" Il l t ""' !IEI >. l,,te II' I ; Ti<J lt'otrwr1 fW) ltllll °""1;:na !El. ~' 10' P -I l(lo"WI Il l 2 I,_ t!I l C.n:'Oll Ill ._ k-1111 IW). Dito """"' ; " 7\11 M. lU DlmMI ,.........., At. Mot.,, lltY •1 Ctffltdf"M !ii, VtlftK!t W 11111• 11.tlllt 11. Ct~ .. H-1 ... W11lrovl •1 Mlr•l"hl n, Mor-Vl'llty tf , .. ~, l-~111,,. l'tlrnt l•, fll,...rlldt Cl>tiltlllfl .. lAN '111t lllr, I' Vtthly C!lrl1lllfl o ll .... 7.t. llO .. lflt )6 He.-.•nl 17, SI. MIC:llMl'1 t4 VtlllY Chrht!MI M, l.tfl Dl""I ft (.,-,j._ JI, ArnM1.adlr M "°"'"'' •1. lfll!lll'ltl ., YllC'C-11 Vt".., iii. Ortlllrlo C1'1111IJ1f1 U L.A. •-"•I II, .! . .__.,,,,.. 67 ~ "· •It '"' J1 ltfltrmi,..J.....,_ •1. M...ic111r ·-. ..... ~ "· l .... ldltr » l """'tlM 7'-11, AllltP!y ""'4111,., h ~ 11' lvc:1t1.., • ~ °"''""' .. ,.,.... "dY 6 PC. KIT 77' DflUXf CHROME DOOR LOCK KNOBS ,....._,lrooott.Dd· f*'4t ... itH14'M HI ........ -.-.. Ml\Jt mvllff YHCIT ~44~ 27 MONTH GUARANTEE· RADIAL TIRES THE WIDE ONES 6 PLYnUD ... 70 SERIES TUIEUSS WHITEWALLS MA.Of WtfH mo• I.AYON COID. NO fl.AT AU NKU ft\11 rl•, l.lC. TU a «O nllt. TCMlll Ol9 ,,., 4CCIP1tO llN••l1' Of CC*tHt'IC*. . .. I • • • • /> Wodnesdll, Ftbnlr/ ZJ, 1971 - Bogdan Gets the Joh Done ' CIF HOOP )~. TICKET ' ff'•lFO UC Iri,ine, Jay1~ce Golf For Marina High Hoopsters Tickets for fir st round CII AAAA basketball games in· valving Orange Coast area high schools corona d~I Mar. Huntington Beach, Marina and Mater Dei are on sale at each of those school's financial of· fices. U ti S1• 01-l:t) 41'1 UC lr'"llM G11v S•llllfr i i:. H,4d. Jll!:i WlllOrl 1SJ. n •.O 5•1v• Yt.,..••1' (S!, n, lltl. D1r1 l lbll (I). t.l, H . By PHIL ROSS Of ,.. .,.~ ,...., lltlf There's nothing reaUy spec- tacular about the Marina Vik- ings' 6-7, 210-pound center Dean Bogdan. It's just that the unbeaten Sunset L e a g u e basketball champion Vikes have seen their big pivotman become both the leading scorer and re· bounder on a team loaded with talent. In fad, U there's one thing which has impressed Marina coach Jim Stephens about Bogdan, it's this: Dean has been pretty consistent all year with his scoring and re· bounding. "He doesn't have a lot of God-given talent and he's not especia11y quick but he has improved all the tlme, though. ... Dean gets me pretty fired up sometimes and then again, he sometimes 11eeds to be motivated and pushed,'' Stephens says. As is the case with many high school big men. Bogd_an has to work harder than ID08t.· smaller players to put his 1 point across and al!tO bas to pace himself more. "He sure tries hard for · a player wbo dotso't have a lot of natural ability," stephens saye:. "Dean lan't qt.lick but he has a good shot and he uses his size to advantage. "I'd say he complementa our other players well because the opponents sag in on him , thus giving the others more open shots." In Marina's low J)Oit cf· tense, Bogdan mans the all· important low post slot and he's made hay while he can. The tall senior is sbooting a keen 52 percent from the field and is among five Vikings who are hittin& over 70 percent at the [oul lint. Jn order to get where h~ is tQdayi though, Bogdan bas -had to trim down considerably in Calendar DA VE ROSS PONTIAC Lease or .Buy All Models ••• . l i;iJA~·IQGDAH, (RloHti STRUGGLES FOR A .REBOUND Area Net . Results Cage Re11ults --Mlrt!MI lllJ IMl NIMtf-.illR Ktfkk {22) I" 111' Weir ' Kotllfl' I"' I" 161 SUIWIMkl Lllfld111'9 (4) C ltl ~Ill Ho-/J) G {•I Contrera• Mulllnt 'l , Q IOI Clflre!U MM'IM ii*: H~ (•I. Hilftrtnlltl'lt Mlltl Clfl1_ ~ 111. H11ftl111t: ""'rliY, Jt.D. l l DAVE ROSS PONTIAC 24IO HillOI ILYD • .t FAil DlllYI COSTA MISA Ph. 546-8017 OPllt 1 DAYS .l Wl.EIC't i• .l.M. TO'''" P.M. SUHOAY1 11 A.M... TC ' P.M. DO ALL TYPES OF MICHELIN X RADIALS OFFER SIMILAR lllNEFITS? • There ore different types of Michelin X radials to suit different vehicles but oil hav• thr•• thing• in common : th1 redial corcciss, the it.el hilt ond "the quality.'' That's why Michelin radials aff•r similcr benefits when you compare tktm with ordlMry tires ••• longer tread-life; more precise handling, ideal drivi ng security and comfort, important fvef 1ovinos and last but n&t least ••• Sofetyl XSTOP n.. etl9!11Ct] J .. lfkil ti .. tfiot It .till I" ,,.,, 11 .. 11101111 kHloy. f.tT. 1.0S. A 13Sxl5 flt• lel\Mlt 1.a; 1.10 I Citroe n. %X The hiliol 1ln1 lh1t ou11r11 you ~I _, • 1011 brok· 1119 ,-a11d a 1rnoorll ~Ill· fortobl1 rill• f« yoyr 1111· por11il fomily CoGr. $2901 F.l.T. 1.25. A 14Sxl3 tll1t t1t1 th1 ftl/1win9 tlra: At.1ttln, ff4it, M.G., SlrM1. XAS ,., '"' '•""" .,.,i .. -Ille llN M llt •11~ M)'lll'""'C ........ 1 ...... ,.,,., ~ .. --··' ...... 1"" .... ..... St1•1fH lhM •ll•lillllf, ~ .. .-\ftt .m-1 -... ......... f.LT. 1.60. Sb:11165·1.tior ~ followlrtt un: Au41, 11'\W, C..prf · Why not stop in and inquiit a\;oul tbese exceptional tires, ,speciolly while the sale pricts are in tffecf. WI AUO WIT A COMPUTE uiltl Of WIUTIWAU TlllS FOi DOl\WTIC CAIS - PLACENTIA '524·9280 SANTAANA S47·8201 PLACINTIA 144 South lnodfol'I ·---- SINCE 1920 COSTA MESA 642-3314 ' C~STA MU.A 'I 1709 Superior Ave. n7tfi I Hrwpettl SANTA ANA 209 lu•h It. ,,,. I IWi\I "Wl'll Ill Ill UDWS" AUTO· TlUClt • fORllGH· DOMISflC • - the beef department. · He's lost more than 20 \)Ounds since performing all a 6-6, 235-pound junior and it's ahown up In his strength, as aUe.sted by hl1 lC-15 rebounds a game. Bogdan has attended Marina s.ince his freshman year but didn't try basketball until he was a sophomore. As a spph, he was 6-5 and the ~tarting center on the junior varslty. Last winter, Bogdan was prombted to the varsity and shared the rebounding load rposlly with now-departed 6-4 Brian Sanders and 6-5 Kipp Baird as the Vikes won a piece of the Sunset crown, along with Huntington Beach. Stephens figures Bogdan may try out -for a junior col· lege or small college team somewhere but adds. "It depends on who's interested in him for next year." When Bogdan 1 e a v e s Marina , he'll take with him the repUtation of being a player who wasn't very fla shy but one who merely got the job done -and who did it con· sistently. Tickets are priced at $1 .50 for adults. 75 cents for students and 50 cents for children under 12. The student price I s available only at presale ac· tivity. Huntington Beach reports a maximum of 500 adult and 250 student tickets available for its test at North Torrance. SCC Ends With Loss G1•1 ll•ltlll (S), 111, d9!. l llTI Ql/1111 (I), IO • ...0. II.Of' "'oo~•n (!1, 11, lltll l o& Mire/I (SI. 11 >-l. Ml~• Morr!A (1), ''· a:.t. Ari 8<1KO isl. n. J.1. Al ;>tlll•f,\I' {JI, n. Qlt. Rick GFllo (S). 11. •·J, o••n•• coett !JO UI StlllllfbMk 111 1t¥lM Co11t cou111r, Clu~l kl'>111ppMr !01 •1 1111. 1411111 !SJ 6t, ... •• Frtt• 10 "di/ Oomtnlctlllll (11 70, ... Srnltll COi 1J 11•1· N1yl11 (I ) 61, S·I, 1C111t lCI) 61 di!. ~1(1V (Sl 6t, S·l, W11lnl119ton (0) 1i lltl. SchU\ll \SI 79, .. ' Ripp! !Ol n lilt. 'kc*w CS) 11 . ~. GolM11 w-.1 (Kl 1111 lllt Honlle 111 Hunllftflllll UiKHffl Ge<>rDt IC:.J ll tled Aljlrt!ll \Rl 13, !- ). RoKn IRl 71 lle1 llv1n (~\ U. l-0. M1rlMW1 CG) 7' a1f. khllllne i ll ! kl, •O. !ldd lftl !Gl II c11I, Sm•"' (R} I,, 6· •• H•rlZell 1R) 16 lltl. llobtr11an jG) AZUSA 'l-' Southern Calif or· 71M~;.1,v tQ) 11.a11, J•U 11i "• +1. nia College o{ Costa Mesa !-==========--closed out the 1971·72 basket· ball season here Tuesday night, dropping a 119-76 de- cision to ho~t Azus.11-Pacific. IDC•I Cot119t IHI 11.lnktr Hot1m1n Quinn M1N:IDO Slvtr1Hn J1ccbs W1ldrlp 'l~OlnlS 'lal•l5 H1!ttl..w: fl 11 ,1 I• S 1 I 11 , ! ' • 11 I ' :lO s ' ' !6 1 D 0 1 , ' • ! 3 I 0 7 o e • a 11 l2 " 76 Al1iK·P1clrlc 51-33. Pll. 1714) 776·5100 I ANTHONY SCHOOLS )111 $. lroakl\IU'lf $1, Anlhl (l!'I, C1f. '21111 Penneys presents The Wide Ones. 70 series raised white letters or 78 series whitewalls • 22 !'~-''"''' '"'"' old tire] Scat-trac 70 series nylon cord. Ralse.d white let· ters. Tubeless Size Fed. tax Price A70-13 ... ,,..1.76 ...... 22,95 E70--14 ..• · ..•.. 2.56 , , .... 26.95 F70-14 ....... 2.60 ...... 28.95 G70·14 ....... 2.77 ...... 30.95 H70· 14 , ...... 2.92 ...... ·32,95 G70·15 , ...... 2.88 ...... 30.95 H70-15 , ... : .. 3.00 .. , ... 32.95 J70·15 "'.'". 3.00 ...... 34.95 -. ., __ s1787tl·1 3,plu~led taxan.d Jld tirei Special buy. Ground Gainer 78 series nylo_n cord whitewalls . Tubeless Size Fed. tall F>rfce 878-13 ....... 1 R 1 ....... E7R-1 4 ... '.'. 2 24 . . . . . . . F78· 14 ....... <39 ....... G7R·14 " ' . ' . ' 2.56 ....... H78-14 .. ' .... < 7, ....... G7R-15 . ' . " ' . £.6~ . . . . . . ' <378-15 .. '." .<.8 1 . . . . . . . 560-15 ....... 1.7~ ....... 49ss Mint tilt t htck ,t1r10 t1p1 ••ck. sm.u but powerful unit dtl;,.,,, 14 Wt1!tt• of continuo111 RMS T\"IUtic: poll.er. Volume, ton;• .nd b1ltnc:1 c:o11lrol1, c:h1nn1I lndic1t,f Utht, built-i 11 ~urtl•r •l•tm. I 7999 Port,bt1 I ff-tci lip• d1clr witfi AM ••dio. Pt1v1 1U pr1•rteord1• I trick +•,,e1, J.1111 r1n91 .:if th"1119 co11trol1. 16 with of contin11ou1 ~MS 11"111tlc po-t ' ouiput. T1l11coplc 1 11!1"111, I $17 $22 $23 $27 s2t $27 S:i7 $17 JC~e,iney auto center The values are here every day i • l Shop S~nday noon to 5 P.M. at the following Aul o Centers:\_ NEWPORT BEACH, Fuhion lsl•nd, HUNTINGTON BEACH, Huntington C.nttt, Ul• Penney' tltne ptymef\t pltn. t 1 • W .. nts41)', Febnmy 23. 1~72 DAILY PILOT 21 Checl{ing Coast Area's Pr~p Tennis Outlook Corona del /Har C o a c h i n g championship teams is becoming a habit for coach Tandy Gillis and he's not restricted to just basket· ball. Tony Sawaya and Doug Rove. Senior Rick Stanton, sophomore Herb Kandel and freshmen John Ni.sbet and Dennis Meyers round out the current roster. Wade and Gayner and Sawaya and Meyers ligure to be Estancia's doubles tan- dem s. Gillis doubles as the Sea Kings ' tennis tutor and hls defending Irvine L e a g u e champions appear lo be on a F I I V ll collision course with Estancia OUll a ti ff Cfl In ll bid for another Utle. There Is a way to unlocklng Leading the Sea Kings' con· the Corona del ~lar-Estancia tingent Is senior Dick Miller. lock in Irvine League tennis an all-round performer who play and coach }~pith Helmick was the No. 1 player on last says his Fountain Valley crew year's squad. may have the right com- He's a righthander with few bination. weak points and concentrates ~ "The top four doubles teams Oil singles play. in the league graduated last Another top singles player is year and I think whoever can junior Jeff Dyer In Gillis' e<>me up with the right doubles stable. teams has a good chance at Three sophomore lettermen the league championship," are in the fold with John says Helmick. Gulick, John Lewis and Jeff Helmick has four returning Harris complementing t h e lettermen in the picture with Mlller·Dyer setup. , seniors Mark Schildhauer, Brotherton are rlaht behind Walku, Paul TutUe, Clint Junior Jim Speers figures io Sa&ely and Doua Ralls. him. Knit.z and Randy Brown lhe starting alignment. King i1 the No. 1 singles All of the remaining, with Mark Mauer and junior Others who may help the player whUe Ralls backs him the exception of 1 en i or transfers~ Mike Fort o P"' Newport express are senior in th N 2 I t McCarter, are juniors, em-(Rancho AJamitosJ and Craig Bud Forbes, sophomore Mark up e 0• s 0 • Robbin.! and ~.1Ultr a.re coo· 1ldPrtd the toJghest sinales thrcals ~t-ile Bitr:i:'!r a:'ld Riddle h~~e ~ltn l"o~ina 'ocd as a <!o'J~les IJ r::!e'll. Schroll 1od Walsh ore mnlles prospects. Hahn takes over vltllty dutiea after coaching the junior varsity for yeara. phasl.z.l.ng Laguna 's future Miiier also figure heavily In Jones and juniors Steve Myers Up to help out and round out strength . the Diablo camp. and Dan Cohen. the Tritons' roster are junio rs McCarter and Ja cobson Last year's junior .varsity Juan Luna •nd Grea Kelley figure In doubl es but they may Newport llarbor ~'as undefeated, making the and sophomore Charlie Brown. be split to give added power to future tougher for rivals Sa n Clemente's do u b I e ! His team lost eight let· \\lilh no hn:""".e co'Jrt and tcrmen to arsduaUon and he pracllce li:nltcri to c-1r1v 11.m. considers the campaign. & sef;sions 11.t UC lrvix, tftt 'Tro-r£building year. Jans i~hl ha\'C a rtlJ~ti rold -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ ahea .1. \vifh oo home md.tchcs. 1• Laguna's doubles. For the first time in a Marina, Santa Ana and Loara combo of Dowling and Mad· Freshman Steve Spalding is decade t.he Sailors of Newport in loop play. docks is further enhanced another bright prospect and \s Harbor High's tennis team because of M 1 d d ocks ' 't'estt11i11ater definitely • starter in singles enters play without a ranked Saia Cletnente southpaw deliveries. r player in Southern 'California Coach Inve Hahn has three or the Artists. age group circles . Coach Roger Frost has five 1Jtalveralt11 senior letterman to build /ti 1 However, co a c h Pat returning lettermen in the around as his tennis con· ar1ona Wilson 's depth-laden Sailors Tritons' tennis e<>ntingent but University High is in ill first tlngenl prepares for Sunse:t Southpaw senior Mar Io are still hea vy favorites to cop they don't figure to break up year of leMis but coach G1ry League pley . Parker .is a solid contender to the Sunset League cham-the Foothill·Katella domina· Sise! says he e1:pecta hi.s 'fro. Topping the list are Rick pionship. tion In Crestview League jans to finish in the middle of Schroll and Mike Walsh. the garner the Sunset League Possibilities of successfu l circles . the Orange League pack. two besl singles players 10 the singles title and coach Bill defending their CIF cham -Tops in the Triton attack is He bases his outlook on Lions' stable while Brent Keller says he has several pions.hip, however, are nol the Mike Dowling-Nick Mad· several solid prospects, Jed by Smith rounds out the other blue chippers In camp in . quite as optimistic. docks combination in doubles. senior Greg . Robbins and monogram trio. Leading Wilson's crew is The Triton seniors are e<>n· sophomore Ri ch Miller. Up from last year's junior the Vikings' bid to unseat junior lettei:man Jim O'Reilly, sidered good bets for CJF Bill Riddle Is lhe only other varsity to lend a hand are Newport Ha rbor as king of the along with . senior lettermen laurels. senior who figures in the 13eniors Keith Lyall, Carl Pen- Sunset League. Dave Eastman, Dave Nichols The other doubles team is starting aJignment, w h 11 e tis and twins J\fike and Bill Aside from Parker the Vik· and lefty Do'ug Rosener. undecided . juniors Matt Brenner, Tom Callahan along with juniors Sophomore Cody Small Is Aside from Dowling and Hull and Paul Simon and Jim Isbell and Mike Hill. Cl:t,ECK OUR FIRST SALE ON MICHELIN RADIAL TIRES IN SPORTS SECTION 011' THIS ,A,IR HERBERT L MILLER TIRE CO., INC. 17lt SUPlllOI l•t 17th •114 N•w,•rtl 1'11.: '4J•JJl4 ., .. Also in the running fpr Mark Como, Mark Mikelson starting beith s are juniors and Marsh Toppen forming Matt Shoemaker and Craig the nucleus of the Barons' at· lngs have five other returning the sixth returning letterman Maddoc ks , other senior let· freshman Ken Vierra round Smith, Lyall. Pentice and lettermen. _."_••JJ1d~Co~s~t.".a~M~e~sa'."._1H~i!_gh~tr~a11Jns~r~er':.._~l=er~m!l<e:'.n~ar~e~Do~n~a~ld~K~in"lg!,:,~Bo~b~_'.'.O~ut~th~e~to"!p1_o~r~t~h~e_i:r~oo~·1~er::. __ ,_1~s~be~l~I ~fJ~g~u'.:'re~in~d~ou~b~le~s~w~hi~le~~~~~~~~~~~ They are seniors B i I I•· SANTA ANA PLACINTIA McCarty a-•n d sophom ores tack . . Blake Webster and Mike Dale. Seniors John Ovitt and Jeff Paul figure to aid that quartet, Cosfa ltlesa along with transfer Barry It's 1 e<>mp\ete rebuilding Nikitman, a junior from the San Fernando Valley. year for new coach Dick Oran Senior Jarrett Yasuoka and and hl.:s Costa Mesa tennis freshman Eden Murad also team . · · k Oran comes to Mesa after a figure heavily in Helm1c ·s foyr-yea r stint at Excelsior pl~~o and Mikelson are pen. High and he has only one ciled in as the Barons' No. I returning varsity letterman doubles tandem but the No. 2 and, two returnin~ junior team could vary depending on varsity letterman. Scott Endsley is the f\iesan's the opposition. No. t player while the JV ffu11tingto11 returnees are so phomores Tim Bearla Carrico and Tony Large. ' P..tesa was jolted by the loss The annual combinati on of of junior letterman Jim Speer, Newport Harbor-Santa Ana· who has transferred to Loara threatens Huntington Newport Har bor. Beach and the rest of the The Mustangs picked up Sunset League contingents as transfer Gene M a g u ire . the season nears. however, a senior from North But naw coach Tom Harlow Torrance. expects his Oilers to present a Othen who figure to help in representable combination of VIJ'!ity ci!cles are junior Bill their own with six returning Smallwood and senior Steve varsity lettermen and a couple Smith. I of freshman prospects ln the Edbo" ro1d. Topping the Oilers roster Six returning lettermen and are seniors Stan Cowen. Bob a Newport Harbor Hi I h Boucher. Martin Bailey, For· transfer paint the Edison High rest Miller, Brad Wallace and tennis picture bright as the Art West. Charw;rs p~epare for the cam-Freshmen Glenn Gunnarson palgn. and Joe Shanks round out the Coach Bo'b Ralston has ad-current alignment. ded Tim 1r1ang to the coaching Wallace and West figure to fold and the latter will handle concentrate on doubles play the varalty and Ralston the while the other doubles team janior varsity. is a tossup with several com· Mang is a former Newport binations available to Harlow. atandouL and he has a number of good candidate! to work Laguna Beach with in F.dison's quest to un· \Vurhman, Jim Wolle, Rick Rosales and John Hamburg and junior Tom Testa. Up from the junior varsity are sophomores Mark Monson and Randy Hamasaki. Keller says his doubles will be the e<>mbination.s of Ham- burg-Rosales and Test a· Parker but he may move his premier singles player around depending on the opposition. Worhman figures in doubles when Parker is busy in singles. The latter's best assets are volleying a n d well-placed shots. JHlsslon Viejo Six returning lettermen, and a pair of transfers - yet no seniors. That's the situation at Mission Viejo High where terr nis coach Bill Smith is getting his Oiablos ready f o r Crestview League action. Mission Viejo's tennis pro- gram got under way last year and the Diablos went with freshmen and sophomore s on· Jy in an effort to get a solid foo ting. Tope in the program is junior singles player Don Hebet.s and he '11 e<>nsidered on a par with any of the juniors in the Crestview circuit. And Smith says he has a freshman in the s a m e classillcation -Ed Berry. Others who appear pro- minent are sophomores Bill Cage Scores seat the corona del Mar·ES-The Artists are P r l m e tancia roattblock in Irvine threats to lhe Orange League ,,.1,. • ·am~ cir· cles. teMls championship w i t h hi'"" 114. P'-nl~ 10;.1 ~ •"" [ ,,....., York 12', l"orth1nd 10.S Buff Bogard is the team's seven returning varsity et· 1u11110 "· 11111m01"• " d t t ba k rl'()m • ru•-rup Cl!1C•90 Ht, Pt!U1dtlpfll1 U Ho. 1 player, a secon ·earn ennen c ....... Goloe"' 5,.,, no. se1tt•• uw a11·1eague choict last year. contingent and a host of other~ coLL101 Fellow 1 en l 0 r 5 Poul who won the junior varsity ti· 75Lavo11 cLAl 11. Nevad• <L•1 Vtt11J 1-"ersen, Chuck Price , Dave tie last year. Puttt Sound 145, CMP'Tlln ,, ~ Co h R Ros hi"s UC hnt1 l1r111r1 75, W11tmon1 '5 P'ritiler and Kim Stevenson ac on s says Mtl'Ylend 1,. 1uchomn11 " --•e the Chargers a veteran team 's major roadblock is El "'°"' cor11 "· •1. Jorin·• n u~ l the I tte Oh1o 14. LO'l'ol• {Cllk190) 16 crew. Dorado. bu a r may l'orelf'lim "· Nol•• D1m1 n Juruo. r Scott Rice figures as ha ve trouble in depth -an w 1Kon11n "· Pul'lkl• '° t be ll\Cll1n1 to. lltl1>C1!1 11 the No. 2 performer behind item Laguna appears o w1c11111 s1.11 ti, or1k1 n Bogard. . loaded with. Tcu "· 11:1c1 " t SMU 11, Tt••t Tttll 7) The Newport transfer 1s Topping the Laguna ros er Te••• n. Ark1n111 u 1or1 d · · Clayton Berryhill T•~•1 A&M 101. 11v1o• •i ioTi sophomore Peter Perkins an is se nior · .ruNio1t cOLL101 fre shman Tom Block is given And mates Norm Bedell, Tim M~"11t ... Cerrl9f'e11e• T I D J b Scott Lont IHCI! in. P11ed1n1 ,. a good chance at breaking into ay or, an aco son, s•n11 Monie• n. El c1ml!'IO '' the varsity alignment. , __:M:::c:::C::•::_rl:•::_r •:_:G:i::rr~T::•::bo::::._r .:'::nd:· :D:a::.n __ ':.:':::'"::'..:"::.· ::'="::".:"::":.".:."---- E 1 ta11c la Like Clay Evans of Hun· tington Beach High's swim team or Neu')>Ort Harbor track star Terry Albritton, Estancia High nas a trul y standout ten- nis performer in junior Steve Mallett. Mallett Is considered by manx as: the best lndividual prep player in Orange County and made the CIF indi vidual qua rterfinals last year as a sophomore. . Coach Jim Jenner opines Mallott's best assets are his quickness, aggressiveness and his fine touch for the ball. Others In the Estancia pro- gram that could provide the Eagles with a tough com· bination are juniors Biily Wade, Scott Gayner and John Nettels along with sophomores ROLLER liAmES Fll .. fll. 21 COSTA MESA FAIRGROUNDS L.A. T-Birds vs . N.Y. Bombers H•l~I-M•kll loce Ttrrl lyn,h •1. T 011•t+• ktdrmt• ALL lllTS SJ.SO , Tktlet1 ff Mle 1100 P.M., htfff fltr llMlf'tlllMI 111111 lllftr1111tlll! Call lit ..... ,_,,,, PIP··· The lllpplelt, friend/lest, most dependable answering girls In town! FOR 11111 llUT SlllYICS, IDT RADI, IDT ... RPOllllANC&,,, Write or "'11 548·5522 ALL AMERICAN ANIWllllNQ SlllVICI 535 Center Street, Costa Mesa C"9 •:to l'O(I• •1 l ll ''"'~I -··-·"'""'-, ........ '. 1 •• ""-11 91l IJ.11 (t-1 .. ,0fttoH, •WIDE 78 SERIES TREAD """' •AITP Ull YOUll: ·-ClllOIT CAllO ""'""" .... A'°'IJllCAtlO FISK CUSTOM 3 60 m •48 M~TH GUARANTEE •13/32" TREAD DEPTH •TREAD FllTIFlEB WITH STEEL •BUAL WHlTEWlll ,. --l WJWJ~L,W.llJ.ll!_ TUBELESS Sill WHIT'£WALL l'LUS '10. •I l'L'I' Ji!'l'LON COAD • 11/)7" TRE AD OEl'TM ..... -... -...... ...... . .... c-'"• •-•-''°'"' SS97 112.97 HER ts WHAl WE 00;1 • RE LI NE All FOUR WHEELS c • .., n•• 'lw••••Hl 1•1•1 ••••·IWf •v••• .. •r :" , .. :-:.::. .!:": .... '::. .t'"'~ :r .............. , ....... r:: ,, """ ,,_ ................ ... :O'l' .. "!r'-': :~ .. ! .':': ::::1-:: ··-·-· -... -· ..... . '"' ..._,,_,, ..... _ ... .. ::::· i•~:. ...... ~~.-,; -·-.. _ ............... , 10101 1101 1v•o•o•l l r. • • ..:.=~~" ... "'!:.: .. " ... "':": ........ -· .. ..,,, ......... ...... ............... --.. .. '"" .. , ........... " ..... .. .. .-JU'•,..., ot ... ,..,...., ~ ::::.-. .!:":...··~~"' .. ~i;.:r; .. •"·--· ..... _,..,, ,, . :i ... ~:'J:o:,b~':.:.."" ~-.............. -· ... -" ....... -~ ..... , _ ................ _ ....... -.. u .......... ..,_ ..... ~-.. ..... -... ·--·"loo •• • CLEAN & INSPECT BRAKI DRUMS • INSPECT ENTIRE HVOAAUL~ SYSTE fw' INSPECT FRONT ¥!HEEL GREASE RElAINERS INSPECT BRAKE SHOE RETURN SPRINGS ADJUST BRAKES ON ALL FOUR WHEELS, HAN D BRAKE , PEDA L CLEARANCE FINAL ROAD TEST 'Any ..tdh"""ll pW11 ~-!Cell ~~ but "01 hit"' 'Mii t.ltt'I' I ltlllfll-.... 1•1 d\lf'Vt. f RfSfRYf THI I H FISK STANDARD SHOCKS $2!~ P[US INSTALLATION l1tl WT MU!IUR ICMr'U ll!R 1111 fGW TOii lllrnitT CAI 91111.NO 'lllC£ 1)1. TAX COOE ttl1 1'£11 SET I~ TUii C7S.13 f700) I TM E7S.14 (735) 4 •>< F78·14 (775! 2.U G7S.14112!51 Fii ... G7S.1511251 1 :t . .," H78·14 18551 l--''"-~1":"',:,_·,,,,:~,'~ s 1 0 0 1--'-~:,,:,_· ---l ns.1s !8851 2.12 L71-15 11151 3.Z7 Al ~-,..... '"'· b . ,.,. """,. ... F,• Tn ..,,....,, ... i lliH ..... W11f1 Tlr<I '"-'-. TUR RE PAm WAX KIT ' BUENA PARK a·liENA PARK COSTA MESA SANTA ANA WESTMINSTER -~ lllwd. It Lllltwellor SJOI _., ...... 523.3040 LI-It Volley VI"' sns LlocolnA•e. 826-5800 I H.....,M.ot'Na- 2200 H.W lhd. 54S.2082 ""''"St. It ..... 15+40 ..... ..... T4001dleger ..... ........... . 546-7832 UZ.21181 - • tJ DAJ\.V l'tlOT LEGAL N011CZ LEGAL NOTICE •ICfl'T'ttMn I UtlllleU ,,CllTl'OUl •utntut ,IC1lt}OUt tlJlllilllSS NA.Me STATIMl"T ....... ST,t.TI Ml•T NAMI tt,t.Tfl!llHT n,, t11111rot·i. ..,_ b ..,,.. -..~ ... " T1'lt ,_loe'i,.. W1oOM 11'i tMil• 'TM ftillewl"9 M r..., 11 llO!flt MlfltM $ llutl-t •t. M : ........ ,,... ••1•. J)} 1l1' llfffl, ' .. ' (.ONltl UCTIOM. Ml Sl'Utt cun1• NIW~llT -aAT i.&ll$. ,..._, '-ti, (.fft, t1UO ,._..,. 0t , N.._t IMC"· ,,... IU 'W. (Mtt Hwy , Juli. I . M~Pel"I •Wf'ot Wll1Dfl J-. l ls t, '•lll '•Mlrk • lcN'J. ,.,, ·~ l-.cll ~ ·~· Na. U. Hullt!~ f Ndl.. C:l'MCMll Orlw , H.,.,_, lltdl ANIOlif S Attho1n1, tllll llM J1tltfl CeJll'. J.U M1r•ll(lft M\191\, Ult l rl,ICf (Ir., Hu"tb1wt ... hKfl TMl M •-1 "' loe"'9 ~ 111¥ I"' C•t1oC. .... OtM, .,........,, IMUI TM1 M l1Wt l It HI"' ~I'll llv I f\ INfMdll l T"tt OvtiftfU 11 llfllll Cllrofut'9ill ..., I l~J. 9.,...1e w. J""" ... ~.,.,.,11 AtfWlld t. Atlllolnt Tlllt .. ....._. fl• wl"' ff'f C...,..ty Jtu lo! tmlltl .. ·~ Tll!t t ll ltm-Iii.cl wllll ""-Cou111'1 C:IW\ Ill ~~.,,: '*· 16. lttl ,,_,, ,141-1 lllN w1tli IM (11;11w Cltork af Ort llft "twl'llY 11111 11'1b. 14, 1Jrt fy . ...._.., J. ~ ....... &-.utY c.,i.,,.,. ti."' 11'1 c>111tt Cel.IAlv .,,: ,..,, 1, ltn. l 'f' h~trt~ J, Mtddlllc, Det11.1"'° C9UIITT Clittl.. I J Wtlftr 1' ICl!lt. ~ ,_,.,. Cltr~ C...._, P UW 1"111)1 "UIN ........ ( ... Or•-C.0.sl l'Hll'I' ... ,.... l'uMllMd o •• ,... c .. ~, DallY "''-'· "utohll\1111, 0r.11 .. COMt! Otllv "lie!, ,...,,,,.,.., 14. 1i. •f'ld loU;r(.11 I. L 1m --,....,UI.., •• ''· n. ,.,. Mttdl '· 1911 l'tbr\ltr'f' ,,, 1).. .... ""''(.!\ .. •. 7t .,, ,.,2 .o!·7' LEGAL Non a U:GAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE l'ICTITIOUI t Ulll'lllS llllCTIT1$1JI IUlllllllS N•MI ITATIM.llllt fllAMI ITATI Ml•T ,.!(TITIOUI IUllllllll TM l•llt,.1"' _,..,_ ''' delflti Wt1<1t" "Ill' fto!Wfllt ,.,_ Jt ~lflt Wti11et1 HAMI l"IATIMIHT A ; u · Tht. ll!l!ltWI"" MrlOM ••• dolnt r&• l'Ulll INDUSTl llS. 1'?1 w•u CAlO'O•HIA IOC.llTV 01' &o.\TINO M l ... SI .,. WMrw. Stnll At\t, C•1'°'"''' t71~ ttMVSl(I AMI, 1"'5 A'-1!<1 St , Hu11. 0AKW000 11NNIS 1H0" $0UfH, Attl!+t C. Br1y, '"" l ull•fld ll!Off, lflltl911 I N OI, Ctlll, 901 "'•~!!. N1w-I l•tel!. Cll•lorlllt "'"""''' IMd\, C•lll ""° H.W M.S. c ... -.1--IA C•llN11111t M••• I. t ulen. 2.00 !ld111~ND. 1J, JOSEJH I CAATA, 2Ulf OYt<ltllt c.r-1111111) !UU Alfolo4ul11 St., HUI\-(.ott1 Mt1•. C1!1tot11l1 OrNe. El lllft, C•llMr..i• tllltlWI ll<l1(1!, Cttlf. 0111 I mo" (wll•), >• fldtll No. 1J. "--it L A..i-cl, lN11 Jl!(llr11 Tlll1 bc.llll'lttS Is Mlf'tl c~ ... -..., 1 Cetlt lro\eu. Ct!lfor11!1. LIN, HU"!I ....... """· (.1llf. C•lllMllll (et"Hf'ttlM. Tiii• tvllllfU 11 Nl111 celldvcl•d by .~ TIW bc.llll!Ui 11 NIM ct"llluciM bY • 5•11dl'I Sllrt. I INllY141Ull (llu••·~ ·~ wllf!. OrMftt '•rllllftl•IJ. Stc:•tf•rv Mtl"ll; I I! 1!1ott Ardlle C. l •tV T).!1 titl-1 Ill.cl W11'fl tt... Cll\l"'Y Tll!1 1t•ltml11t lllM wlt!I l<lt ( ... m!Y Tlll1 '"'-fllM wUll tM Ceufl!Y Cltr\ ., O••• '9Ullf't' .,,: , ... 1. 1tn. Cl•rk ef Or1n11 c .... 111'1 "' -"•••u•,., n. C:ten"' °'-c~ Ofl: ..... ,, lt/1, ,., w'"'' T. l(lne. OffUhl Ctunl'f Cltrll. ''"· ~ ,,.,.r!y J. MtMo.o:. 0.ll'VIY (11\111·1 a,. htTY J. l1rotltfl, 0..Utr County (llllnJ "1 Cltrk. c~. J'*llll!M Orin• c .. 11 Diiiy •um, I' 16021 l'Unl ,,8or'\lll'Y t, 16. ll,. 11111 Mt•Cll l, 1971 Jubllthlid Ort111• Co.11 Dl'IY PUo!,I Wani ta Bu v A Murnm y? DALLAS !UPI) -The Neima n Marcus Christ· mis calaloe: offers such luxuries u: Chine&e junkl, Asi•n elephAnta and hi1 and he r luxury Thunder- bird Automobiles -blue ror him, pink for her, And Stanley M!\rcus actu111ly sold some simllar oddities from its 1971 catalog. In a newspaper ad reply- ing to a letter fro m a Oa/. !as man, i\1arcus said : "To answer yo ur spectrlc questions, yes. we did sell the his and htr mum. my cases: yes, we did sell 11 cruise on the Fl'ln- dango: and yes. we did 11ell the gre at white whaJe." 'ubllllleil Ort,... (011'1 o.11y '1111, ~n l'tbrlHll"f a. •llCI M1rc11 1. t, u. 102 l'etir!HI"" 1t. n "" M•t'Cll 1, .. ,:'J LEGlL fll6Tlcl' .w.12 1 .... ___________ _. JlttltUSUI 1Glhllll N~f tTAflMIN1 LIOOAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Avco Tells ll'lt ftt!O'Mftll WMll It Mlllf bc.11l111•11-------------5U,l•IO• cou•T O' Tllll u : 5TAT• o• tALll'O•NIA 1'011 SUMMl ••UN C~l'ANV. I •• , '~::~o,uTs.:~.!~:Tu TH& COUNTY 01' OIUNOI 1'1"c• N-. I, COit• Mel•, C.111. New Financial Breed .S haggy-haired Advisers Aid Executives By JOSEPH ST. AMANT I..OS ANGEI..ES IUPI I - The mod generation has pro- duced I breed or independent fln1nci1I advistra who work much like a doctor, analyzing n's financial condition mmending therapy. I com1>1ratively e OU Arthur J . Groesbeck Jlt. 30, bachelor head of A.J . Groesbeck Finan- cial Advi11or1, which gro111ed about SM mlllion last year. Groesbeck, 30. shaggy of ha,ir and bush y of mustache and fashionably mod in dress, 111ys hla company la the only one or its kind registered with the Securities and Exchan1e Commission. The )'leart ot a conservaUve btatl beneatti t.hlt mod exterior, friends .11ay. I ' protected under the Jaw for 23 years. Some faulty tax shelters. Groesbeck 6ays, have vague and uns ubstantiated fi nanci al forecasts, high risks and ex- cessive manage ment fee 11 • Some tax deductible feature may not be clear-cut. insurance planning . and relll estate planning. Thtst men 11nalyze a client's fh1anrial health and rec'ommcnd the besl ways to solldil y and im· prove the lndi\•1dual's pos1tio11. One 0£ the advantages of his service, Groesbeck says. Is that ii has no connection wilh financial institutions. It 1s strictly independent of brokerages or insurance com· panies. "We are advisers or ad- visers." he says. "\Ve are not business managers. \\1e de11l ~·ith people "'ho can \vrite their O\\•n checks. Traditiona l sources of financial ad l'ice are generally incapable of offering truly dimensional analysis of needs and the means by Y!'hich those needs can be satisfied." Groesbeck. a Kansan b:v birth. majored in business ad- ministration and p ol I t I ca I science at Kansas Slate at ?Ylanhattan. After gradaution. SST Bid Mock-ery SEATII.E Wa<h IUPJl -The hufte. fuU -1Sc1lt1 n1oc:kup nf the American i;upcr~on!t· I ran .s p n rt pli:inc that cni;t $10 68 1111lhon to t·onstruct has bl'l'n olferrd fnr sale bv the J!OV('fl\ITI('tll -and the hili!he!.t blddtr 111 a Nebn1<1k11n v.ho offered $31.11~ .\l.~rk Cl . .\lnrrison or L\•n11u1. 1'\eb . 1\hor;e bid t~pped 17 other rnmpeti- 1nrs. ii;:tid he "·;1oterl to huy rhe 2'.>fl-fiKJt. one· \1 in~E'tl n1(1t:kuo lo l"n- 5hrine H on l't;;h's Bon· neville S11lt l<"l<ils. l\lorrislln ·)l hid wa~ the hi'1hest b' $15.000 dollars. The birl 11'1!.S in contrast tn thfll of :i Br,,n1erton, \V ash .. firm that wanted !~t> !rll\'t>,.11111""' In lli!V it $44.625 In h11ul the mock- up a\\·ay for scrap. Mt. A·f1tq lll ... rt O•rtt GM!,..UI (c.tltrtl 'hi• l•Howl11t "'lel\ ll dolllf bu.intu HITICI 01' NIAlllH• II' f'ITITION "c'o"ii•'.111'), 1111 Mlldlttl If .. 1, Tvt!l11. II; Al'l't.ltD "LANNING OVNAMl(I. l'O• ••OIATO 01' WILl AND l'Oa L.ITTlllt TISTAMI NTAIY !•OHO Tl'lll blltl11tu 11 .. 1111 cendutled ..,. 1 2lO I!: Htll S!rlt'I. Suitt 11J, Coslt Earnings During '71 Very frankly he offers the expertise of his staff to find a 'tax 11helter 1ulted to the needs of a specific client. He aims at the family with an income of $20.000 a year and up. "There's some thing serious- ly wron g with about half the tax shelters that cross my desk,'' he says. he served in Washihgton as an ~-----------' administrative assis!ant to a WAIVIOI Gt111rat l'lrtMrWlll M!1t, Ctllto<nlt t1'J1 ftflk ot JEANNEnE ,OMO.IN !lobe.rt 0 G""'"'HI l!NGI Nle•1111G s E II: v I c e CO•· D9c...... . 71111 '"'''""". IJll!f Wit/I /flt c .... 11.., JOllA t ION (A Ct!\!. CetP ), ll11 Wti.1 HOT1Ci IS Hl•EIV OIVI N t!l•I , .. ., !'-'k ti et•ntt (OU'lfv '"" .. .., 1f lt72 WtW'lllllfOll lfv,,., lOI Ant I It 1 , "· POl'llll'111 Ml fl!ld 111,..111 1 ftlltlOll ftl' Y ltvtrlY J. MWll~. ~tY Ct11111Y ~:,1!1D~~~~,11 I• c....,vcttd "" , CM· ..,...,. et wllt "'id tor llw•l\t• of lttMrt i.r11, 1er•tton T_,.l'llWllltY ff "°'IHol!tr (Mfld w•Jo/M) "1bi1 l'IMM bi.r1 .. H t lnlcllY 51CflltrY f9foffnu • ...+itni r. 11'1111• ,.,. fllrtllff" , , tll#/tl1 Or•• c.o.tt O•t~ tt111t, Tiii• '"",,..' w11 fl l•d :,..1111 ni. c&11<1-A v c o C o m m u n i t y N rtlw••r&. •!Id ""' "" 11"" •IMI .i1c. ""' "" 4 t) ·~ Mlllfll 1• L \tJ! ,., Cl•rt ot Ort11t1• Gw111Y 1111 Ftllrutry Develo~rs Inc. reM~·· coo-ot ,,,.,,,. 1111 """ "'' Min t11 '-' , a.1.n 1., 1m ,..-.-·~cu M1rt11 1. 1m. '' t :» 1.m .• 111 t11e *"-· , ,.... solida.ted re ven ue 1 of -et o.trtmt111 No. ll ,,, 11t• murt. LEGAL Nones "211« d lid t "' ~ c~1c c.n11r °"""' w111, 111 tt. .. ut111'"'° °"'11 .. Colit °''Iv ,.1181, $63,791.000 an conso a ed That's where Groesbeck and his staff prove their \\'Orth, he says. On the sl11ff a r e economists and specialists In the fields. ot estate planning, congressman and helped write tax legislation. He later worked as an ac. countant in the Los Angeles area and three years ago started his firm ol financial adv isers. ,,,., "atl'ltt Mt, c.rltwnt•. HOTICfftl' INTt:r,1&N ,..,.,.,.,. '" » ,.,. M•rc11 1, t. itn net earning sjor $1 ,226,000, or D•I .. Ftb•ulr'f' lS, ltJ2 T6 OIPICAll Ill MINT 4112·7! 1. w. I . t t JOH N H011CI IS Hr ll:llY OIVIN tlltl "''!-------------2Q ct:nls per common lllnare, . c.u11tr Cl•rk "'• 1Jt11 d•.,1111 ,..,u.~. ,,,,. ""1o1rt1 for the year ended Nov. 30, .ln-WAOt11111:. ANb scuo1•1 • tlllurt.ri (If fftt Mt-tM.., U11HtH LEGAL NOTICE f .ittt,..,. 11 uw 1C1M1e1 Dl.trin of or,,... c.u1t1v. eluding gains a ter ta.xe11 on hit.....,,..,.., w111 u1 c111,.,,.1,, ...,.,. , ••111111*' of 1,.1tn.1-------------sales of amenilies of Sl.18 LAI AllMIH. Clll4'ntl• '°°" 110!! te tlltlk1!1 •n •111mtM lo Orinff l'ICTITIOUI IUIOlllS Tth (tllJ .,....., ..,. ., .. ,11, eou11w "'-c$111,111 D!lltl(I,, Midy ur· · NAM• 1TATIM1NT million, or 19 cents per share. "Nine ty-nine percent of the people don't know that taxes are their No. 1 expense.11," he said in an opening ei::planation of the services hl.s firm alfers. "lf, fQr example. a person has '20,000 in taxable income he usually pay1 is,ooo in federal and state tu es." Groesbeck warns that tax shelters may be r i 11 k y • Generally apeakini, he sug- gests that an investor get an unsecured loan as a down pay· ment on an interest in 111n apartment house since this type ot ltanaaetion may be Tax Rebate Eyed Economists Contradict ArNrMn .., J'etfllol'ltr ,.,1" ,,.. ,..u11c, ror s1M..., ,,1111 '1ld lM 1111.w111t "'""' ••• 0n1"' Comparable figur,. r 0 r .lll .. 21 llP\lfi.Mlll 1lttl(l\lrt t\lf...... Ultl bc.ll!MU II: '72 Econon1ic Forecast "~ OrtnM COiii 011111 l lltl, •Mnltftl fill IN loctllld ..,, "' ~ N!Wl'OlitT I E.ACM TENNIS ClU S fiscal year 1970 wer e "*ut"' '" 1r. tJ. ltn •11·72 tc,.., ...... et 11111 .. Id H•ctl ... lend .... o &HOI'. 2'01 1111 lluH. Ntw-t ltctttd ,, Newwt Mt!'W Mtt11 ttl'IHr. 9t1c11, c11110f'"'' '1Mt. $32, 794,000 in consolidated rev-LEGAL NOTICE i100 lr¥t111 A'"nw' 1n 1111 c11V ., Ntwflft't Ant11&11Y M1e1111t Prod111. 111 S1•1u11 enues and $340,000 Jn con· •------,--------JtHttl' ,.., 1D1, Ntwpert 81Kh. (1 l1lor"l1 tA• 11'4 A M lle m"11119 u-""' _11.,., et two. solidated net earnings. or 7 auJtllOlit COUIT 0., Tllll "'•lllftf •ucll dNlc•tlerl wo1 111 11t1tt 11 Jt11tt H~llnd 'rod•"· wife. tu cents per common share, in· ST.I.Tl Ofl CAlllJO•HIA llOI M1rlnw• l ltm'"t•rv klleel. 11 0 0 .. HUH No. 101, Ntwflort lt•dl, d' . f THI COUNTY Ofl O•AN•• ~,,,..,. "'lw, N~I I •• ( h ' Ct llh11'11I• t2UG. clu 1ng gains a ter taxes on Ni. A·1*2 c11uor1111, °" "'' 7th tt1., ., M1rt11, 1t12, th11 11u11ntu 11 t>tln1 c1111du.c:1.r bv '" sales or amenities of $574,000, HOTICI 01' NIAIUNO OH ... TITIOM "'lllt hOll• ti' 1:llO •'&loct ,,M. llldfv!lfutl lnu1b•nf •lld Wiit). or 1• cents ~r •hare. l'O• PIOIATI 01' li!llLL AND IOA•D 0,. lOU(ATIOH All"*tJ M. l'red•" " ,..-CODICIL AND '°.. L. TT... Nl 'W(llOltT-MISA UHl,110 TN• tlfl-nt llltd Wiii! It'll Countv Average oulsland1'ng -m· TISTAMINTA•Y SCHOOL DllTl lCT Cl•rk el o''"" Coi.o"tv Oii ,..,,,...,., n, .. u !'1t1i. ti f~ANC!.S DONNA DU"· Dellald I . Sm11iwo. 1•n.11V IMrlJ J. Mtddo•, ~""' (OY"· mon shares were 6,161 ,437 in ll'IELD, .... krlOWll •• DONNA OUI« Clerk tre ,_ et 1116 IOll•d l'I C!trll. 911 d 4 8 I 6 9 . 910 Fll!l..CI. ,, .. lullwn •• , .. ANGIS DONNA l'Wlltn.11 Ot•llOe C-t Dlllv JUot. " 16tH 1 an ' 1 ' l tn l . MAGu1•1 OUFFt lLD lflll •• l'JtANCIS '""""' n. ''" 411·71 Publlt11M orint• Ce••1 Dtliv Piie!, Accord ing to Harry L. Sum· D. MAOUlll. Of!et,..... l'ftn.llrv n. •nd M•n:h '· •. u. lf12 U.S. Drea1n Threatened --Reinecke NOTICE 11 ME l l l Y GIV EN '"'' LEGAL NOTICE ..._12 mers. Avco president. "among MA•SHAll ou,F1l!'l D •l'ltt •1t11t o. 1------------the reasons for our increased COVINA (AP J -Lt. Gov. O•EENllllLD !\Iv• flltcl 111rtl11 • Hit· •tCTITtOUI l lJllHlll LEGAL NOTICE tlon 1or "r•t• of wut 11111 ,.. 111U1nc• HAM• IT.t.TrMINT revenues and e1rnings was th e Ed Reineckt says the United .. LMl•rt T•l-ll,.., to Cllflt!Ofl9t•· SCHN!MA• SlltV ICE COMJANV.1-------------1 significant growth at Avco's Statu -uld fill to com-~ .. tnel! lo whlc.l'I II mtoe '°' l1.1rlll1t INC .. • C•llf~tr"ll (lf'POrt!IOll, 11 fOlf'tl •1cTITIOUI IUllN•SS "u 11rtlcul•r1, •nd 1h11 "" tlm• •ncl 11lec• 11u1111111 •s HAMI STATIMINT three ma jor division: New mun.ism if the n a ti on ' s .i 11e1r1111 !tit c1•m• II•• 11tt11 1•1 fM s c H H r r o r 11: M r o 1 c -' l Th• 1euowin1 "'_,, •r• 0e1 .. 1 Commun ities, Neighborhood t-hnol•~ is ellow·• to lag. M•rdl J, 19n. •• t :llO '·"'·• 1" tttt U.to•ATOll!'I" se•v1crs 1tU1tn.,• ''' ~ ..._.. ~ tourttOOll'I 01 btst•l'fflltnt N1. l tt 111d w1111 1111 ,..1"Cll•• ol•t• ct lH/1111111 •d· , .. 1Nc£ss M•Nt:s. l l'O., 1110 w. Communities and Recreational "We cin afford certain raurt, •1 100 c1v1c c1111t• Dr!V• Wtat, 111 ll••H •• u1 Hot•ll•I •M•, N,..,.,, Oc••" "'""'· New1Nrt • • • c ~. Communities and the sale of a ty-• ol gaps," Rei'ncke sai·d ,,.. CllY ef 511111 -'"'' Ctlltof11l1. l•1t11, (•tli.t'11!•. Ctlllor11lt . r-01ftd l'1 i,tu1rY 11, ,.,, Tlll1 IM11l11tu 11 (Clf'lducJH bY , CM· Jt1111 wt1c11 Miiier, n10 w. 0<1111 shoppin& center and CATV at a recent dinner. "But a WILLIAM E. t.1 JOHM 11er1tfon. Freon. New1>er1 l••tl!. Ctillor"J•. t t • NI J Coi.o111~ (lt•k !CMN!MAlt t!l!vtcE M1r11vn J''""' MU11r. 1110 w, Oc••ni o:':,Y'=•=m='="=a=g=u=n=a==gu==•=· ==; technology gap could pla ce us DUllYI A. CA ... llllTI• • IA•N•• (OMl"AMV, INC. "r1111t, NfWl'Ol'I •••di. C•lfler1111 II ,finally unde r a Communist ll Y1 ••NIST J, SCH.AO. JI.I ·~ IHfl!Lf'I" M. SCMMl!IOE ll:. Tllll but111•11 11 w1 .. , C01"1411tltd lw •n tolalltar1'an governmenl." •s» M"'4tfltllr t lW, M.D. u111nc.,..,.,•tt11 enec:t1t11111 ""'' 111111 • ... o .• ., ,,.. ... ,1111e111 ,,,1,,.rt1111. Kl OS LOVE He bl 11 m e d "anU-Ni1.on, M•waort •"d1. ~nr. HMJ 11111 tttlllfll•M ... 111t11 wu11 ""' eeu~· Jlflll w11t11 MUMir 1,·•·raI ~--ra'·" a·• t•·'• ,.,1 111') ,.,_..,.. N C\trlr; M Ort ... t Ctuftt>, tfl l'•11trt Mtrll..,,. J. MIU.,. ---~ ..,..,...,... i.. 'II" •~u ""-'' fon ,.1111-1 n. 19n. Tltlt 1t11~•n1 111«1 wi"' "'' coi.o11t• UNCLE LEN "ca-ing crltlci11m' of Nixon ttvbll~ Or'"" COiis! Otllll Jllel, CllTll'l(AT ION Ci.rt llf Ct•n" County 111 l'ltlr1,11ry 22, 't" FWutrv tt, 21. ,., 1t12 40.12 1 l'llr•bY c .. 11f¥ 11111 "'' ,0,-1,,. 11 , 1m . ~.; li•vt<IY J. M•ddelf, 01Pu'Y covn· SATURDAYS IN for what he called a war on -------------Jeorrecr CffY Of"" or111"'' .., 1111 '" ll'IY IY c..,.11. technology. c. rstAL> l"u-ttst'ltd or11111 Ce.tit OtllY PUO!, THE DAIL y PILOT "These a.re the peo ple who LEGAL No11cfl' ... ,k .. • 11111 I ---"·"·~,cl(clcO-,~.-.. -.~.c,---1 WILLIAM I . SI JOHN, 1'1Mu1ry 11. •ntt Mtr(ll I, •• IJ, IJ72 woul d stop the American Cov11ty Clll'k ..U.n llAL l'llOPl ltTY AT ,..IVATI SAll l y •-iv J. M•Har. 1---:-:=::--::===---l!::============'-~dr~ea~m:··" :_he~~u~Id~. _____ , • N•. tlt1U DffVIY •ulJOl'lor covrt of 1t1• •i•t•"" C•n1ern11 ,.1 .. ,, LEGAL NOTICE :.~~~~~~;,~:,;~:~~,;::; .. =:,~::i:,~:~~~;r, :'I~~ •o"~·~r·!~~;::~~~?,t=:, .. " -....-~1-e-0~0 ... 0-.;c-1 •fltr trr. _,,, d•'f 01 l'tb .. lf77, 11 lllt 01• lllt Utlt "'vol F•brufry, ltn. lht !tetrd ORDER '1c1 of Mtrtlll C. C•llw•~· Sul141 711 , 9•S4 IAI i1'J Of Edvtttlon of 1111 Ntw11e•l·M11t un.llf(f Wllllll,.. !tlvd. h~rty Hllll, C•lllor111t IU•lllOll COUit 01' THI Sd'loel Olstr ltl of Or1n11 CDU1'1y, 9112U C1 u11I¥ el lOI ,t,,.1,111, ITATI &• CALl,OllNIA '0• C1!1for11!1. •~fl<! I •ft0t ut1011 of ln1t n· M•I•"" Cetl lOrft l•, le"" h!9Mtl T"• COUNTY 0' o•ANta 111111 te ftd!tllt '" t1Mmt11t to~ Clly ..,, Mt• &rddtr, 1!'1d ill&IK I lo toll· Ht. A-7*1 el C0-1• Mt ... • mu11lcle11 cori>0rttlon, "'""'''""' lly ••Id su .. r!or Court. •II "'' HOTICI 01' MIA•1111• ON ••TITIOH IOI' oo;lltlc 1lrtd tnd lllll!Wt¥ •U•POHS. tlthl. till• tnd r11ltrell ef 11111 0tct1sed "01 •llOIATI Oii Will AlllO ,.01 •tfd ••1tm1m to bt lec1rtd ever, on 1nd •I tllf ti"'' of •t1tt, tnd •II rlle rlt/11, i\llt ll1Tl•S TllTAMINTA•V tc:re11 1trllons of lh•I .. Id e1reel of !tnd •1111 lftflrHt tt"t tl'HI' e.t1tt of ttld E1l1!1 llf W. IT fJH!N MI OOAUGH. klctlld ll 11Jt Pltcentl• Av• ........ 1" !111 ffctlttd lltJ tC11Ulrtd bY OM<tllon (ll i.w •IM k-II WfSSfl! STll'HI N MIO. CJIY llf COllt MIU. et ttf11twf11, otlllr lt!ln Of' 111 fddlllon te DAUGH, •kt W. S. MIDOAUGH, tkl A aulllc mttlllll UPOfl lt. ~Ut,l•&n ol ...... of MJ4 dtettlld 11 1~1 Hmt el ITfVE MIQOAUGM, 0«1•*· "'l~lllO tl.ICll d911lc•llon Wiii bt hlld •I tltttll, ti\ •llf '"•II "'; cfrlllll re•I oro-NOTICI IS MllllY GIVIN lt!lt M1r!111t1 Elellltfttlrv Sc1lot11, 2100 "rty lllu•lt' 111 11'111 Cou11IY ot Oflllft, AllC I J,f,NE WOODIN llts 111111 lltrtll! I M•rll'ltfl Or!vt. N1w11ert lllC~. C•llle'I'· 11111 of C.llfernlt. 1'1rflc11t•r1V dutrlbtd Mllllon fW flrllll1t of WHI •<Id ltr nit, OJI tM Jiii dtY of M•r<ll, 1tn. 11 flit e. foHewt, •-It: l••"'"'' ef l •lllrJ T .. t1m111ttfY to l'ltl· flour of J:lO o'doct P.M. LEGAL NOTICE Lot 11, 8ladl; 107, et •• ., Clly, •• P1r n1ntr. rtt.tlll(I to ~!(II " "'* let 10 ... ~o OF EDUCAl'IDN • mtP recMded 111 !tlOlt ~. J1tl lt el furlhtf' 11trtlcu11r1, 11\d "'" tltl fllN ttlf NIWftOl!T-MESA UNlll l!O M!ic.1l1lltfl\ll Mt"a, •ttO!'dt ol 0f l/!9tl JllCI ef hff r/<11 1111 ''""' M t ~.,. $1'1 SCHOOL OIST ll:ICT County, Ctllt. Comll'IOJllV ~-•• tn ter M1rcft J, lf1l. ,, t :)O '·'"·' 1 .. IM Oo!Yld t . 5m1llweod 1111 St .. kll lle•ct" c11u. to1f0 ceu•tr_,, el o..-rtm111t Ho. l of tlld . Cl•rll pro tlll'I ol 1tld loerd Ttf'fl'l.t of "" c•lll 111 lfwluL l'ftOlll"I' of (ll\lft, ., HO Civic c-·· Dt!w W111. In .. vbl•lhed O•tllle COMll DtllY P!Jel. ti>• U11lflld 51•101 Oii eonflrm1ll011 cf 1111, t1'H1' City of 11111• '"'' C111r.,"11. Ftl•Y•,., 23. un 1.36-n "" ~1rt Cltl't •nd bll•11C:• •vltleneed II~ Otltd "lbr\llrf 11, lJJ"I. not1 ~rtd b'f Mortl••• or frust Ottll WILLIAM I. It JOMN. 1111 1111 p,_rty Ml $Old, TM HfCllll of (9l,llllY Cl4!11l YOURS TODAY! Personalised • Stylish Jeautlful Stick0on LABELS • Efflclellt Order For Your10lf or • Frltnd· WASHI NGTON (UPI! Three prominent economists ha ve p'tedicted that unemploy- ment i.s likely to remain significantly a b o v e ad- ministration forecasta this year. One of them urged a $100 r'b.ate for every taxpayer to give the economy a shot in the arm. Arthur M. Okun, chairman of the Council of Economic Advise?'3 in the Johnson ad- ministration who proposed th e rebate on 1971 income taxes, joined Professor Saul H. Hyman11 of the University of Michigan and Yale professor Henry C. W11 ll i c h , a Republican , in pred icting that the White House will miss its goal of bringing the jobless rate down to 5 percent by the end of the year. Okun, the most pessimistic, saw an average un employ- ment rate ol S.7 percent and a rate of 5.4 percent by the end of the year. Since each one-tenth of l percent in the unemployment rate represents 80,000 Jobs, the unemployed cpuld n u m be r nearly a quarter of a million more by election day than the economic advisers to th e ad ministration calculations would allow. Okun's advice to the House- Senate Economic Committee dlffe red :sharply from that of Gas Firms Get Order 1f"l\l\ll'lt lid 10 bl dt-llld wllll ltltt. DUITIA, CA••INTI• & IAINl l 8lft 9" llffers te be !11 wrlll"' Ind W\11 1111 l•N•ST J, ICMACI, J•.I bf !Kl fYett It It'll •lof'luld offlc• ti •ll'f 41U MHArlll11r l l'lo(I, 111ct1T1ou1 1us1N1'' M•y be u1ed en env1lope1 es return eddre11 COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -,."""'' ., ... ,,M,,_.,. 1 b 1 Al h d ., 111· 1• Th p b1· u1·1· t1rn1 •fie• t~e ""' PtJllllcall&n 111raof •nd •.o. ••~ 11U •1or1 d•le ot w it. H1w1ert Inell, Ctlll. tl .. I Tf'lt 1o1iow1111 111r-1 1,1 del"' • • s. so vtry 1n y es 1aen JCI ion e u IC I 1ties Com- bus•11''' 11: libels for m1rkin9 porsorial iftm1 1uch •• missio n of Ohio has <lrdered Cited Fttt. 1, 1t'1. Tel: (n4) 111 ..... GOl!OON VOU NG AHtrnn• .., •t11t11Mr •1111 CLA•INCE VOUNG Pu-lltl'Md O••llOI (011t Cltffy "'Ill. ..._n l'llGHT ASSOCIATES. Xlllt Qv•ll b I d II . St•ttt. New_.1 1e1CJ1, c1111 •MO oo 1, rttor 11 ph otos , otc. lebels stick on a major natural gas com- !'UH:\ltel'I of 1M Wiii l'W\ltl'Y t2, U, 2J, 1t n of Mid dlctdellt, l:c~!~';;,,~ .... ~1::if'tt:J tW 11"'' 9 l1ss e nd may be used ior marking home panies in the state to stop 11011e11 L. TrteY, 1mn C••wltl•tt c..". c•nned fo c.d items. All Jebels •re printed .soliciting new business. f1'1t1t11 t . C1ltw" S11rftl n1. "" Wlb111f't ttwd .. •.vll'fY N!llllo C1lll. "11J Atto!'My i.r 11..:wlln LEGAL NOTICE Y~.~1~ si~~.,:""'· l~::;:~::~ ~' with styli ah Vogue type on fjno quelity whlt.. The order was part of broad nu ~d111ntt. Sou1f'I l •ou,.,, c1u1 ti•n numm•d pi per. • new restriction! approved by NOTICI TO C•IDITotlS Tllomlt N. 1'e1 5r., J.lll W, Wltttrlt ' "JI 1u,111101t coull t &F THI ,1 .. 5,1111 ,,111, c,111. nit.1 the commission on the ex- "~-lltJ'led 0rl1\ff (OMl1 fletirwry 16, 11, 21, lf12 •::~ecg~,.c:.;•;:~~1:N~~· .. ~~~!.:i~.111ss '' Nino co~ucted b., • pansion of natural gas service H•. A·1M1J Euttnt M. 'l••c• Jr. r ---------------1 to Ohio consumers. ''"'' ., IE llHHA•o ltASMUSSIN. Thli 11.,.,,,.n1 11111d will'! "'' coi.onlY Fill I" niti u u ... c111 t..1tlf .,,u wlttt St.JS tot Ch1tlnnan Henry ~-••-~ LEGAL NOTICE t>tet11... Cl•rk "'°''"'' CouftlY 111; "•b. ,,, 1tn I Plllt 1'<1111J11t L•Ml or ..... P.IJ, l•l' tut LA.AilaJ ~ --,,,==-oc-=~--,.,--,,.-1 NOTICI II HE•l•v GIVIN to ''" ·~ ••v••IY J. Mlddu. o ..... !Y coi.o~tv 1 C.JN Ml&I; CllU. nil' 1 said a recent inYeSlii atlon Notice 01' t•USTll'I SALi tl'Ollltor• of "" '""' 11•med dttfl!lt<1t t•••k. I showed there 1·s no assurance f ,I, Ht. t •f1Mt l'l'tlt •II 11rNftl lltvln• d1lms ••l!"rl lilt 'llU1 J °" t:t1t1•v M•ttll 10. 1tn. ,, ll•M Mid OtCedtftl •r• rHulrtd te 1111 tl\enl. Jllbl!llled Or1<11e ce11t °'"" ,.11o1, that an adequate supply of A.M .. GIB.AL TAI: 0110 COMJANV •• ,.'"~ .. "",."!""',. ""Veud\tfl, l111M .tllct Flbr u•ni If, J3 •nd Mtrch I, a, lt1' I I 11utv 1ppe1n1ed ln.•t• ul'ICI.,. •nd c .. ~ 1111 •btYt '"'"lid ceurt . ., )f1-n I I natural gas will be available •,.w:.~111:., 1~ ,,~, 1:!, 1~'~ • .'~..-.= ~:~"~ ::!":,~;~~11~"'.1 ~~:i'ii;:1-------------· I l 11 1 l6 meet demands of coti-~. H • :w of ooic111 •~ 111 ttw Of Mir,,,.,,...,,, •ONAlO 5. llKKI Jt, JOO LEGAL NOTICE 1umer11 next wlnte r. emc1 "' ""' courotv • ..,.-.. "' °''"" N•!!_'!:! ~ ,0·,~~~~"""""'1 "''1-------------I 11 "Restrk"••• UJlOn n e w Cl\l:ll'IY, C•llft1'<1!t, Wil l Sill AT __., ......,.,, ' ,..,,,. ,_, Wll Cll !s "•·Sil Uuuo ""11L 1c Aucr10N To HIGHt:S T 110. ni. Jttci' of blll1•• et 1111 u,,.,,....,_, ... 1u,1•1o• cou•r 0, ™' I PILOT PRINTING I cuatomers and on customers Dl!lit l"O• C~SM 411•~•blr ., 1111'1• tJI .. 141 '" ""1''"' •rt•!11•1111. la """' ''"'' 01 tTATI 0' CAlU'O•HI" .. o.. L te I r b t 111 i.wt\11,,...... ti/"'• Ullllflt Sttf") 11 ....... ~.-....... !:.,"',,.,""'~ ~,.· ... -,#_lh• llltr Tiii COUNTY 01' O•ANG I __________________ _. .con mp a ing 8U s anU11l in- "" IOlltft fftlll "'"'"'' to "" 0111 """'"' ... m ..... "•· '·"'" crease!I appear to be Oi'll'WI Ctu'llfY (O\lfll'louu. lettlt'd 111 lfll Oll'lll J•nutry 31 , lJJ!, N&TICI 01' N•.t.ll:INO 0' JITITION J<h 100 Medi tll Wttt $1<111 A111 kule'ff,,. Tt!O!'tllld 11!"'"11..... '0• l"•OIA tl 01' Will AND '01'.l~~;-;-;-;-;;~;-;-;-;; .. ;-;;-;-;;-; .. ;-;-;;-; ... ;;-;---;-;--;;·;;--~-;-;·;;-;;-;-;~;j;Us;t;U;ied;,;";Ec;;art;;·;ai;d;.;;;;, UOl'll'lfl'IY W11I 1111 $1•.,it S~~ll Al\t l•tCIJfrl• ti/ tltf WI" ef l lTTl•I TllTAM lNTA•Y C1Ufltrftf1 •11 ''-"''· l!llf .nd tlltff•t! ceft. IOl'll&.L:'s ~.i:ed llKll(!111t. E1l1t. of lUCY ... s ..... 011 ... , °'<••~. W'l'od to •Pod MW ""Id llY It \11\Mr 1tld ' NOTICI IS Mlltl V GIVEN Tll•I °'" of Trust J~ ""' '"'""" sltv1ttd 111 .. ,...,_, c ..... Dr •• ''"' ... H•I'" I . Kist 1111 !It.II .... ,1" • Mlll10ll w lcl eo.,,....., 11111 St1t1 dlKrlllM ,,. ......., •Mdl. C:.11 .. nil• """ ftl' ..,. .. et w111 •lld fW llw.ntt ol Lit lol6 ef Trld Mt 2f21, •t ~"" '": (Pl 4I Uf.H11 lttl trt T .. lt"1eru1,.-, to Jttlltor., ' 111 .. flltl'IOI r-dfoO l<1 hl* lit, Att.rlltt fw l aaffk 'lltrtnu te ~ldl It ""'dtl ter ""'"* ,Ifft ll to It lnc1uttw. MIK•ll•l!Mul '°ull41111ed Ol'lllM Coest 0•11¥ .,"."'n' HrtlCIJll"-l'lllt lhtl lilt tlmt tlld &ll(t M•••· rtetlf'Cll ti Ml& o''"" ceu~IY. •Wut.rv 1• '· "' IJ. lt'1 ti 11t1rl"' 1111 1•"'• 1111 bttn wt for f'IW 1!Ttt'I t«hlrlill told ot111r -LEGAL NOTI-.MtrCl'I lt , ''"· 11 •:a • "'·• 111 "'' •f'IMl\tll, II •Ill'• '111 it!I re•I Pf'(IMrtv \,oO C-"'-" of 0..•rfnltrll Nt. 3 llf MIO 4ffc:t lbH Hovt 11 flClt'"rlllll ID Ill: 2'9f ceu/'1, 11 IOI) (Mc (lllllf Ortvt Wtst, 111 J ec••llG• AWl!IHI, CMt• MIN, (•ll,...n/1 SU l'Olto• COU•T 0' TNI 1111 Ctty of ltntt AM. (lflPorf'l1, mw. ''"'' o• u.L1111ot11114 •o• O•tM FMru1,., tt 1•n ™ t111den.ltflld TrullM dlll.ltlr'l'l.1 '"" THI COUNTY 01' O•AN•I W. f . St, JOHM titbtffr, w -1ncorrect11t1• tf lhfc '""' JlfO. ... ....., '"""" c11n *'*'arid ettilt' c.ml'l'Klll dffl0!\11\ofl. II N&TICI 0111 llllAl lNO 01' ttlTITION NI NSNI Y, •tlMAN ANO WIYL f!'I:• ....,. Mrtfn. •&• OltDll A•NIMTIM• TIUITll 'W "-"""" ~-. flla. 11• ........ wlf! bt mHt. llvt w!llleut 01' TIS TAMINTA•Y t•UST TO •It.I.. ...,..,....., CIHIWl!lt .. ~"',, ..,,.flf't, ..,., ... ., ll'lls>llH, VA(&.N(.Y uu••• • ., OIATM 01' , .. , ltll) 4ll•J4Jf ~119" lllM, .._....i.n, Ot fft· N •ION NAMIO •• Wll.l TO ACT Al AnottWYt for Ptfll'--' Free Income Tax Preparation I _.,,/ldS. to M Y 1t!t ~tll\JM &r ift. TIUSTll . ~lllMd 0!'1"" ( .. .t 01tt., flllel, c• ..., et It'll flefe *""" lv W. ''"'' llf llllAlfTH JUOAH JOHl!S. 'Mil'V•rv n. t4. 2'. 191? MG-11 DIN Ill T"""' ......,..: w.-.a.1. "'"' i... Ottffwod. "1ft4 ..,.,,..... '' ... ~ I" ..W lletlo, HOT ICI Ii Ml•laY GtVIN tMI ofyorolo tf •.W, Ullfllt N NnM tf ••Id IAltlAlt.I. JIAM •IM Jiii flltd Mrllll ~ 111 ,,,,.., ,..._ dlt,_. d ........... I Otfffklll 111tlttM "l'ITITIOH ,0. Ill ,.. TfV'* ~ flf 1111 tovtH Cl"fltM Ott Dllt A. .. ftOIHT ING TI USTll 01' '" MJll °""·"' tl'\llt. 11$TAMINTA•Y TIUtT "10 Fill ,,_ ~ \IF'dl!I' •W OW tll VACANCY CAUIED IY OE.A.TH O' ,.._.. ~ ~ f!lll ..._K .. rtd JIUlSON H~IO !N WILL TO A(.f Al flt -~...-t •1"911 0.ltrlfltft Tl!USTll" (tft•ffl(.t .. ..rild'I.~ lfltclf Save $30-$40 on piaftalaNI pttplllllOn ot)W 1911 elf Ol'lllllt ... ~ W ..... tlW t fOr fvr1lltr .. r!IWltt'-W Itri•! tM Tllftl ....,.,.. N1tft!1 "' Ol'Mlllt ... 1.Ullfl l<t •fld •It<• of llN•li'>I 1M Unit ,.._ ... 11 -..!L TN ...,....,.. c.9Ulllf ... Nll'll<t Mt fler ""rdl I(, 1'1!. 11 •1• t .l'ft , 11' !ht tf Olft11ll ..... E,"'* " ... ft bit ~ II Olallrtr111nt N•. l of w lf ....... lft ... ~ ....... ... !'Ml ClllJl'I, ti JIOO (IYic Clt'lllt' l)rlvtl Wt1I, In -11 -.ltd lflt City tll 1'1111 A,.., Ctll1N1'1t. ............. OIP .UTAJt OllO t:lft#l'A,,., Ot1'llf '""'""' b, ttn • tt .. ~ TrvdM. W.I! it JOI-IN. [eulltJ' titn 9Yl Ttfto ....,,..... • n-1 Wt.LU.ti, alOWM & C•AI• ~' ettf'lt m .._ Dl!W, hilt 11 t t tOOlMA G, QtfPMAN Tit: 111•} ... ..,,. illfl ~ lttcfl, C•IM, fHlt .. WJ. ,...,_. •, lrrt A"'""" .... ~ Phone 6424321 For Week ender Ad vertising ~ l6-n e ,.... U 1t11 A Mt tt. l"1 ~ '--.---------' ,........... or-.. """" llllr ,fJllll ~~ 0r-c..I o.,1y ,,lat, I CIU!omla Ind F edtral lndMdUll lncamt r IX RllumS. Don't Delay S1111 uplodlY:11JPC1lniments .. 1re•lfj1111 op1n 111 Anlh•lm Srlf!ll$ eccount o($5,000 or llJOlt, orlorOl!ly IS by op1nlt11 an ~ Of $7,500 0t MOrL ~!IAt!EIM SAVINGS -9 AHAH£1M 117 YI. U""'ln AYI. 9210l(Tll, m-1532 BREA 63! So. Bm B~tl. 92621/T~<5!M971 HUNTINGTON BEACH 4II Mtio St 92'U/T1I, 53l>S591 I • Business Council, a prestigous group of executives of the 100 largest CQrporations, \Vho fell the ad ministratinn's policies are so stimulative that in· flat1on,is likely to be resumed. ''As 1 read history," Okun said, "it reveals that never have we made the fiscal error of doing too much too soon." There is li ttle likellhood that Congress. already wary of a projects $25.5 billion deficit in the budget for the next fiscal year, o,1•ould take Okun's ad- vice. He proposed quick legisla- tion under \•;hich e\'ery tax- payer would receive a $100 rebate on taxes o .... ·ed by April IS on last year's income. Th is would pump up to $7 billion in- to the economy .. with the in· creased spending c r e a t i n g more jobs. Babcock Eltttronics Corpor- ation, a s u b s id ia r y of Esterline Corporation, has named Ted C. Schroeder vice president of marketing· Schroeder, of H u n tington Beach, w i 11 cont rol mar- keting in the control pr~ ducts grou p. He joined Bab- SCHROEDER cock in 1969 as control products marketing director. Prior to t h a t. Schroeder wa!m a r ke ti n g manager for Westinghouse Alr Brake Comp.any. * The CaUfornla Tr u ck I n g A150elatloa has elected W. Max Bla1wan1er of Newport Beach as chairman of the board of directors for 1972. Binswanger, president of his own Santa Fe Springs trucking firm, was past p~1ident or CTA. The election wa held at the Associat ion's ann al con- vention in Coronado. * Ralpb B. Hatfield hH been appointed vice president and director of marketing for 2otb Century lnsuro nce Company of Los Angeles. The Huntington Beach ex· ecutlve Jo ined 20th Century laat year as developmuL ma na ger. Prior to thal. Hilt· field worked with the Public Employees ln~ur11ince Com4 pany of Los Angeles. * Rn&tr Hall , of Corona del Mar, has bttn named vice prdtdent of the community development division of Kalaer Aetal and promoted t o gentra1 manager of Ranct>o Clllfomla. a n 87,SOO.acre deve.lopmHlt In R i v e r s I d e Qlunty. 1 Hall takes lhe Uip ma~Jl~ ment post at Rancho GaUfQrnlL The co mp any malntalns executive offictJ on Chev rol et Sets Rec all On Defects DETROIT IAP J rhevrolef Di v1sinn of General l\folflrS fnrp has beJ!:Un a massive recall which ultimat~ Jy 111ill involve over six million cars with potentially defective motor mounts. lt is the largest recall in the hl~tory of !he auln industry. Chevrolet annnunced il has begun n1ai\ing certified letters to nearly 1 3 million owners of 1068 Che\'ro!ets. Camaros and Norn~ equipped with V-8 engines. The owners are being told to take their cars lo Chevy dealers for in5\al!ation of engine restra ints . The restraints are designed to pre- \'ent the engine from twisting, pos~i bly causing a stuck throt· tie and po"·er steering and brake f;iiJure . in !he event of a molflr moun! t>rr:>k. The National High"·ay Traf- fi c Safet y Administration has received numerous rep()rts of engine moun t fa ilures in 1985- 69 Chel'rolets. many or them resulting in accidents. Campus ~each. Drive 111 Newport ' * Fountain v.,u,y resident D. Linn Wiley . vice president and manager of Fir1t \\'e1tera Biillnk's Orange Count y regional office. has been nam· ed to the Pre:Jident's S1le1 Clul) for 1972. The President's Club is made of up First Western branch and trust of· ficers who surpass sales and business development goala for 1971. * Bill O. \Vbilman, m.tnli'er of Sec urity Pacific N:Y.loaaJ Bank In Newport Center, ha• been elected president of the Newport Center Association. He succeeds James P. Felton of Avco Financial Strvlces. * William 8. l\iarstoa ha11 bet n appointed d ir e c t o r of m a r k e t i n g fo r Electronic Engineering Company's com· puter equipment division. The Corona de l Mar resi· dent t a ke s over sales and marketing du· tiH for EECO computer sy•· tema for ho- tels. He is a graduate o f UCLA. Prior to his new position, ~1arston held m1nagvnent rea:ponsl bil· ltit1 at Bunker Rim() 11s di- rector of western iales. * The Automnblle Club of Soutbtra Co!Uorala hu 1., ponted Otto E. ''B a d '' Schrotder N dlstrlo t managtr. He will serve lh• 14,000 member·motorlstJ from tho Costa Mat olfke. Schroeder joined tho Aul<> Club In 19111 ., 1 AIOI rnanaaer. Prk>r to becoming C..to M mua1er, ht "" dl1trkl m.Jnager or t b. La1W1J Btt<b ollke. • I •• --____ ,, .~, .. • It isn't easy. Our account executives, for example, have to measure up to professional standards that are unusual for any business . Could m make it at Merrill Lynch? Scan - these 18 questions. If you can answer "yes" to 14 or more, we'd like to hear from you. 1. Are you bullish on America? We are. We see America's economy growing in many different ways, and we want our customers lo share in that growth.] f you take adim view of America's future, you'd find us insufferably optimistic. D 2. Can you stand up under pressure that would have most ordinary mortals climbing the • walls? D 3. _Are you discreet? Our clients trust us with a lot -of ~ersonal information. This is no busi- ness for blabber-mouths. D 4. Are you intrigued by all hinds of invest· ments? lf you can't see beyond "stocks and bonds" -you!' vision wouldn't-pass muster at Merrill Lynch. D 5. Can you ride out a storm and con1e back stronger than ever? D 6. Are you an instinctive teacher? For many · people, investing is fraught with mumbo- jumbo. We like people who can unmuddy the waters. D 7. Could you survive a tough seven-month training program? One part of it: 11 rigorous weeks in New York City, where you'll study and be tested on everything from corporation fi. nance to the Federal Reserve System. D 8. Do you have a well-stocked vocabulary? Fuzzy talkers make wretched brokers. D 9. Do you follow up? "Loose ends" in any busi- ness can drive you crazy. In our business, they can paralyze you. D 10.Are yo u willing· to make less while you're. training to be a Meriill Lynch Account Execu- tive than you are probably makingrightnow? D 11.Doyou mind lugging home a full briefcase? We're not wild about it either. But no matter how well you manage your daylight hours,' you'll have to lay on a fair amount of midnight • oil. Our Research Uepartm ent is very fertile. They publish about 60,000 words a day. 0 12.Do you have the guts lo say, "l don 't know , ·I'll just have to call you back when I've got the facts.'"! We don't deal in calculated guesses. D 1~. Do you have good manners'! Boors arc bad news in any business. When you 're in a business that revolves around other people's money, you 1nust be sensitive lo the feelings of those who trust you. D 14. Do you have a proven recor~ of s ucces.s in a variety of activities'! Quite frankly, we look fo.r people who have a habit of winning. 0 ., 15. Do you really study the newspapers yo u read? Our business moves with the news, often anticiputes the news. Good account exec utives are much like good news analysts. They dig into things to uncover clues to the future. D 16. Are you looking for a job with exceptional advancement possibilities? Virtually all the- people who run our offices were acco unt exec- utives. So was our president-Ned B. Ball. So was our Chairma·n of the Board-Donald T. Regan. D 17. Do you welcome responsibility'! Yo u'll have all the facilities of Merrill Lynch behind you- research, private newswire, instant quote ma· chine -, but, when you pick up that phone, you i. are Menill Lynch. D 18.Can you help other people handle their 1noney as carefully and conscientiously as you handle your own? If you cannot say yes to this question, you can forget the rest. D How did you do? If you answered "yes" four- teen or more times, and would like lo try for a place ·in our Account Executive Training Pro- gram. send us your resume. Make sure it in· .eludes your address, telephone number and salary history. Here's the address: Mr. Stephen E. Franz Employment Department Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc 1901 Avenue of the Stars, Suite 1235 Los Angeles, California 90067 • M•RRILL LYNCH, Pl ... C., F •NN•llll a •MITH INC . An equal opportunity employer. I ' • - • ' ' . \ < • l l I ;14 DAILY PILOT s Wtdnes4oJ, Ft""'"' 2.l, 1972 ltlone11'1 Woi•tJa • ' Uninsured Losses Tax Deductible? By SYLVIA PORTER With burglary now 1mona: the most pervasive and rapid- ly rising of 111 crimes In America, you easily may be amon,: the huge numbers buralarited or robbed In 1971. U so, this column I s enormously lrnporlant to you. t You know t.hllt you can take an item· lied tax de- duction for if challenged by th!.> Treasury. you must technically be able lo prove three points : (I) that you were in fact robbed or but· glari.ied of the particular items 1 that are missing. (2) what · these Items originally co.5t you . and (3) what they were worth when taken from you As a practical matter. you simply may be unable kl prove any or these points -which Is why examining agents 50 often disallow theft loss deductions when they audit a ret urn, But the Tax Court in '71 con- tinued to help taxpayer s caught in th is squeeze It .' virtually overlooked th~ re· quired proof of cost of stolen items. probably because most such items generally become worth less than their cost. Instead, it a1lowed a deduction for the estimated value when stolen. And as to whether the cash and property were in fa ct stolen as claimed, the court used its own judgment. • , CONSIDER THESE cases. ln one, an individual claimed a Joss of $2..385 for 14 items stolen from his home. The Treasury agent disallowed the ~ entire deduction apparently •. becaase the taxpayer couldn't .. prove they were stolen (lr their cost or value. But the Tax , Court used its own judgment i and gave the individual a deduction for half of what he claimed. In another case. a taxpayer .-·claimed $1 ,388, the Treasury allowed nothing and then the court permitted a deduction of • $1 ,108. ln still another s1tua--;;;==========, r lion. a fisherman c\aUned a r • $229 loss for a stolen ' aluminum canoe plus equip- • m e n t and tackle. The M~fw.v,e;.. MOTOR HOMES SALES • RENTALS 18 It. to 28 It. UTE LINER ~ SALIOA-PIACI ARltO"W LOCATID ON THI NIWPOJtT :PJtllWAY, JUST SOUTH 0, 11;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;~ THI SANTA ANA FJtllWAY. I) TAKI THI McFADDIN TURN Off. TUIN Lin ON VILLA.Cil. WAY. 0 N > • x u • IOIJ,jQf:lll i CHECK OUR FIRST SALE ON MICHELIN RADIAL TIRES IN SPORTS SECTION OF THIS PAPER HERBERT L. MILLER TIRE CO,. INC . 17Jf SUl"EJtlOI laJ 17th •nd Nawportl l"h.: 642·1114 1411 S. VILLAGE WAY SANTA ANA, CALIF. •••• SANTA ANA Pl.ACINTIA Would y ou pay an extra $5.21 per month for Full New Car Maintenance? That'• all the extra II cost "ilh ft .lohn~on &. Son Full MainttNn~ Ltu t nn &ny ot our brand nr\v 1972 ' Mercury&, Just think of it .. , nn mnre 11nnoyine; ttpajr pf.Obleml .•. no more uncxpt'ctf'd. tXl"Jt"nScl'!: 11nd brst of i.JI •• , a bt'o1~Hful nrw full i;izr Mrrcury )larqul1 or Monterey lB drive In ahsl)!Utely ~rf~t condition et all times. Find out for youn:l'lf 11 U lhf' l)(!ru!f1t$ and pl,.asu~ this fanta1t1c letise pr01r!'3m provlde1 on sll our Llncoln4 )lercury Produca. Call BUD 80\VEN at $4()-563() •••• TOnA Y! o'"'"'' ,,,,,,., "f••U1t/Fl•t c.n• ohnson&son -$1-= ·- • • OVER THE COUNTER ·-lltln l~IN.MllW .-.111oti!• II ...... ~ltMt11\1 f 1,1111. tf'llll N.\..0 "f"" .. ,.. 111(1 .... ,.,.u .,. •• ,.~ .....,_._ •• , •"'""' ..... NASO Listing• for Tuelday, F1bru1ry 22, 1972 $200 Europe Tours OK'd i • ' .. --- _, .. . . -Closing. frices-Complete New York Stock Excliange List Complete Closing Prices-American Stock Exchange List Stiff llft Cl'Mls.J Hltll low Cl-Cht hll• ,,,., (11111.) Ml1ll u. ci.w Ch• SlfH 1111 (IMll.) Hltll Lew C1Gll Chi. . . ,.,.. ..., 111111 I Hlltfl l.no ci. .. Cllt Stl• -Uwh,J Kltll LN Clew c11., • • . ' I ' • • I • . . . . . . OAILV PILOT Wtdnt>d.11, Ftl!Mty 23, 1972 SAILING BRAIN TRUST -Mapping strategy fo r campaigning the new Colum- bia-52 are from left: Richard Valdes, president of Colu mbia Yachts; Fred Mac- Dona1d , NHY C; Bill Lawhorn, BYC, co-ski ppers; Don Vaughn, ace foredeck tnan and winch grinder, and Kenneth Watts, sailmaker. Midwinter Regatta Lightning Paces Yac hts The Los Angelts Yacht Club wound up its section of the Southern California Yachting Association Midwinter Regatta Monday in light winds after the threatened fog failed to blank out the race as it did on Sunday. Winner in the et'ass A division of handica p ocean rac- ing was Theo Stephens's 57- foot sloop Lightning from St. Francis Yacht Club which is in Southern California to defend Its tltle Jn the Whitney Series whlch gets under way ne1t Saturday. Because of the fog which canceled Sunday's race, the LAYC portion of t h e Midwinters was setUed on a two-race basis, with a number of ties re!ul Ling. Final results : OCEAN RA CING A -(I) Lightni ng, Theo Stephens, St. FYC. (2) Tribute, Blatterman. Riley, Lawhorn , MacDonald and Holleran, BYC; ( 3 ) NewsBoy, J ack Baillie, BYC. (3) Restless, Bob Young. LAYC; 14) Vivant, Morl Haskell, LBYC; (5) Duello, White & Rastello, LBYC. CAL-36 -fl) Whimsey II. Hugh Rogers, LAYC ; (21 Caguama, Murphy & Cabot, BYC: 13i Pleiades , R.K. Smyth, CBYC. ERICSON-35 -(I) Aquariu s, John H o 11 d a y , LBYC; (2) Donlee. Don McFarland, SBYC; (3) Easy Rider. Paul Miller. LBYC. COLUMBIA-36 ( I ) Liebchen, Bob Helfer , •IHYC: (2) Lumaran, Bill Rohrs, VYC : (3 ) Sjoy II, Scott Rice, WYC. RHODES-3.1 - ( 1) Mistress. Bill Taylor. BYC; 12) tie between Therapy, Gayle Post. BYC. and Fiction, BI a i r Barnett. BYC. SHIELDS -(1 ) Tornina, lfoward \Vright Jr., LAYC; (2) Dainty, Rick Evans. VYC; (3 ) Katherine, Andy f\.1arcus. Orange Coast College. KL 36-40 -(1) Papoose, Cliff Tucker, LBYC: (2) Tortola, James Cowie, LAYC; (3) Ophelia, Rob John s, LAYC. CLASS B -(I) Red Rooster, John ca\ley, CYC; (2) Diabetica1 111 , Mareia Campbell, CYC; (3) Altamar, Jay Jones, LAYC; (4) Blue Norther, Sullivan & Allen. LAYC; (5) Cygnus, Ernie Chi pman, LBYC. Lloyd Bridges in Water Again for New Program OCEAN RACING C - (I) Star, Dave Crockett, ABYC; Bettina JV. Tom Schock, NHYC; (3) Trend, J I m Linderman , BYC: (4) Quicksilver, Pa Im I er I & Gussian, WYC & PMYC: (5) Lucky Puff, Richard Fon, BYC. OCEAN RACING D -(I) Invictus, Hugh L a m s o n • LBYC; (2) Primera, Phil Morgan. NHYC; (3) Coun- terpoint. Bil l Headdon, BYC; ( 4) Tomahawk II, John Arens, BYC; (5) Whitecap, William Eisenberg, LA YC. CAL-40 -(1) Viva , Gorham Getchell. WYC; (2) Flam- boyant, Barney Flam, LBYC: Lloyd Bridges is the star of a new television series devo ted exclusively to boating which gets under way Saturday, March 11 on KHJ·TV. The series, entitled "Lloyd Bridges' Water World" will be shown on Saturdays from 5:30 to fi p.m, The I 3 · w e e k non-fiction series was produced with the endorsement of the U.S. Coast Guard and the Coast Guard Auxiliary. Mercury Marine is one of the sponsors. The 13th program in the series will be one hour long and will consist of a fi lm test on boating presented i n cooperation with the Coast A~apul~o List Following is the corrected time order of finish for the 11th San Diego to Acapulco yacht race: . NEMESIS (Ericson-39) Tom Tobin, SDYC, Sd :lOhr :ZJ mm: SO secs. 47,;TORRANTE (Cal.J2) Burke Sawyer. NHYC, 8:!0:- DOROTHY 0 (Columbia-57) Bob Beauchamp NHYC 8: 11:09 :40 . • NALU IV (48 ft. sloop) Peter Grant, NHYC, 8:14:00:59, ALEGRE (PJ-43) John McAllister Lahaina YC 8·15·-~:03 • • .. BLJTZEN (Morgan-3.11 Bill Corbett SDVC, 8:17:47:46 SIGAME (C.1·36) Sid Renkow, DRYC, 8:17:55 :19 WINDWARD PASSAGE (73 ft. ketch) Mark Johnson LYC. 8:18:40:00 Guard Auxiliary. The test will encompass 25 of the most fre- quently asked queslions about boating· Viewers will be able to participate on test forms pro- vided by the Coast Guard Aux- iliary and available through Mercury and Mer Cruiser dealerships. Viewers w h o complete the test forms cor- rectly and send them to the CGA office for grading will receive a certificate of com· petence from the auxiliary. Gold Cup R aces Set The Newport Harbor Yacht Club has issued invitations for its Spring Gold Cup Regatta March 11-12. Eleven classes are listed for inside the bay starts and 16 on outside courses. The latter in- cludes an IOR level class. Inside starters incl u d e Snipe, 505, Lido-14 A and B, Kite A and B, Adult Sabot, Flipper, Sabot A, Band C. Outside classes are IOR Level Class. ORF, Soling, Star, Rhodes-33, PC, Shields, Finn, PH RF, MORF', Luders- 16, Thistle, International-14, P- eat, Flying Jr. and Endeavor. 'Tribute' 52-footer In Debut Southland yachtsmen are eyeing with more that a liUle 1 interest a new 52-foot sloop which was launched a few days prior to the Midwinter Regatta . TONIGHT'S TV HIGHLIGHTS ABC (7) 8:30 -"The Kopykats:" Comedy- variely hour with Rich Little, Frank Gorshln, George Kirby. Raymond Burr hosts. CBS (2) 8:00 -"The Carol Bur nell Show:" Miss Burnett's guest is Nanette Fabray. NBC (4) 8:00 -"Adam-I2:" Four people con- tradict Officer Malloy's account and contend a policeman was driving recklessly when he struck a pedestrian. KCET (28) 9:00 -14Vibrations:" Victor Borge becomes a serious conductor with a performance of Liszt's "Rhapsodie Espagnole." The yacht is the new Colum- bia-52 Tribute which placed r second in the Class A division of the. Midwinter handicap racing neet. Tribute is the first of the ._. •• .,...,..,._..,_._,,..,u._ .. .,,,,.....,.., •• v.i~" class and will be campaigned by Balboa Yacht Club syn- dicate composed of Dick Blat- terman, Bill Lawhorn, Herb Riley and Fred :P.1acDonald. This is the same group that :1 campaigned the prototype of the Columbia-43 so suc- cessfully during the last two years. The ''52" was designed PY the late Bill Tripp and built by Columbia Yachts of Costa Mesa. TV DAILY · LOG Wednesday Evening FEBRUARY 23 -0 Movlt1: (t) (2\ftkr) "Wl!lln Rcve111•" (llorrOI") '7l -!tin~ Sa· war1, Mtchlllo H1~1. ''ltoOall" (hor· 101) '57-Kenll Slw1r1. Sails for the Tribute were built by Kenneth E. Watts of Torrance. l:OO II 0 C1J ~ !!ii ill Nm 0 cv 00 m Aec c.111"" " •• , "Th• Kopykab" Raymond Bu11 ls host. m Movit: (90) ''Yoy119 tt tllt P1an1t ol rrthlstellt Wo1111n .. (sci· fil '66--M1mil Yan Dorin. She is equipped with Barient sheet and halyard Winches for which Don Vaughn of Newport Beach is lhe sales represen- tative. The "52" features a uniquely designed rudder w h i c h stretches the effective 1,1,·aterline a full two feet to 40 feet 4 inches. The yacht's driving power is built into an extremely high- aspect ratio sailplan with a "l" measurement 63.5 feet. O L1ker1 tadtlb.111 l.A. L1ke11 n. Houston Rocktb 11 Waco, Te1. 0 rIJ CD News fJ 00 WHd Wild Wtd ED l11J Ttlb Wetk m The Fllntston1s 9:00 0 ill Medical Ctnttr Crait Sle¥tns ID I °'111D of Je1nnit plays I doc\OI' .tio 11111kens 11\u tlIJ Zoo111! thret yean in a com• ind faces lht Eli.I Hod1epod11 Lodp 'critical problems of the tim1 l1pM. 9 MIJtllrry RFD His utr1n1ed wile Is portrayed br Gl) ti Amt Barbar• Rush. ED (ll) Vlbm:ltfts Vidtlt Bc:wp 111- 'o;JO "I'll TAKE SWEDEN" c.omes 1 serious conductor with 1 performance of Liszt•s "Rlllpsodil * 808 HOPE, TUESDAY Esp11nole." WELD & DINA MER RILL !!iii."" 0 Movie: (C) (90) "l'U TIU SWt-~TIM Vlrtbil•• cl1n" (comedrJ '65--BOO Hope, CE N1taclla hrtsd1r Weld, Fr1n~ie Avalon, Dina Merrill. A wtalthy oil extcullvt takes !:JO 0 (J) ({) (D Thi PI f t II •.• e r I his d1u1hter lo Sweden in 0<der to "Huiu~ Yalut" Dinny W1ld1 fs break up her rom111ee wllh 1 jobless 1aused of ~idn1pin1 • t1t11lhy NATIONAL GENERAL TH EATRES l Gwrt• C. k 1tl "HOU'll"AL" !Wl"I Al11 Ptllr Sttler1 111 "THE P.IR TY" "M.IDE FOlt EACH OTM llt" '"' "OH .I CLl!Alt O.ll'" "SUND.IT, ILOOOT SIJ HD.IY" 0110 CO.Orge 59911 "WHERE'S POPl"A" "T~• l"fMl(fl (fflllKllfll'" (lit) ·~ •'V1nhlllfll 1"1lnt"" (It) Boat Show 'Exhibi ts' youn1 man. rouna 1!rt •!lo is siayin1 1t I~• I S . fj • GM ... SeQIL -Robtfl R9dloN (JJ aJ HeWI same hotel n p1in. ~J~~ "HOT ROCK" CGl"I ®l MIMi; (C) ~aa11id ol Josi•" O Nm W1tth John Fullmtr 1-;~~~~~·/~(~·~j-~1!1.,~~~~~~~·~~~~~~~~~ ('1115itrn) '6&-0oris Day. Petti (8 li!I Cosby Show _ ....::.. -~-"THE THOMAS CAOWH .11",.llA" .. Enter Race Two sleek racing powerboats directly off the showroom floor of the recent SCM A Boat Show and three sister ships of the displayed speedster will be in the starting fleet Saturday for the fourth annual Long Beach· Catalina Island race cruise. The show room starters will be the 24-foot Pont Galore II and the 21-foot Pu mp er . A u t a c o a s t Marauder-built boats to be driven in the SpoJ'\ and Pacific classes. respec- tively, by Autocoast President Ernie Kanzler or Costa Mesa and John Drake, Santa Ana . Drake. member of a well· known engine·building family, will be making an ocean rac- ing debut in a boat propelled by a new jet drive built by Drake Engineering. At least three S p ectr a Marine boats will also race, including the 21·foot Spectra Marine Special in which Gil Gilbert of Beverly Hills cap- tured the 1971 L.B .-Catalina event enroute to the West Coast championship or the sponsoring Pacific Offshore Power Boat Racing Associa- tion. Some 25 boats in five classes are expected to line up for the IO: 15 a.m. start off Belmont Shore Pier in Long Beach Harbor. The boats will race 60 miles from Long Be a c h around Catalina Island hnd in- to Avalon Harbor Saturday (or an overnight stay. A final 44-mile leg begins at 10 a.m. Sunday off Avalon .with Belmont Shore the finish Jine. 20 Million Hit Beaches LOS ANGELES (UPI ) There were more than 20 million ' visits to the Los Angeles city beaches last year, according to the Depart- ment of Parks and Recreation. Graves. 10:00 IJ (}) MannlJ Whtn a polite offictr ---m AndJ Crillith Show kills 1 man 111inst 111hom ht wtl fD H1nJ!J ind the l'roltPM known lo hold 1 1rud11. 11'11 dep1rl· (@ Flrint li111 mt11t suspends him despilt his In· m fht ColllOrllfi V'ltW 5f$jenct that the killlnt 'fllS not m W1ndlrlust planned. SIM Ihnat 1uub. ®J lir•RAmJ I H a;) AfidonMos 61 1-Co111unldH Q !lg) m fllclit Ii• lety 1 n r J .loots, Se'llrn 01rclen. Btodtritk 7:00 1J (}) 0 m Nm Crawtonl, Cloris LtlCllm1n, Lani 00 Truth or Conwqu1ntu WCl!ld Richud Thom1J, Ger1ldint (i) Draprl Paae.' Midntl Dunn ind B1!t111 O wt.Ifs Mr U111? Stetl• sl1r In two dramaJ •bout ro-m 1 LM Lucy bots m1nu!Ktur1d to ordtr 1r11I sln· m I Dft111 ol Jt1nnit tattl'l hired lo ht!p purity !ht dead ED HbtiNJ If M iil P'uentl dt A111tr 8fll111: (C) "'Tht M1• WM "fWI Wit" 1:30 II DKW • tlM "'41'9 ""'" tM But M111 .•. " Dinny Moolty i nd M\th111 Upton betomt r\nlt tor the affections of 1n 1tt1x tiv1 lab tech- nici1n. ot theit sin~ 0 Tlll '"'" C111e m flktn Pete Miller, Ken Jooes m•-CllJ s.u1t EE! Multrplect Tlrit1bt ''Tht Mir· rill• '-•mt'" Is tonldlt'' tpltodt " th1 "DluHtll R" 1erits. m ltodlH T1p1tl•s le 9o1 lnttnlllhi~ Q Tiit Mo11M FldDr, Oen Knotts 10:30 (J) Thi Coldd!Utfl and rasldenl Disney ch1r1cten. like (!)Doctor 111 rhe Hom 1 21n1 look at iihysicll litne:is. O This Is Youf lite Ricll11d Crtn111 (I) To Ttll tbt T111Ui i1 the surprised CUIJl O C.ndid Cam•l'I Cl) I Dr1a11 ti Jl1nnit 0 Ml!H111 $ Mo'rl1: (C) (Ztlr) "The Hell fichtan" (drlftll) '69-John Wa1ne, Kalh•rint Rim, Jim Hutton. Rtuniled wlth his d1u1h!er 1fter m s.1111 1o Adwntllfl fl) A1on11t1rtld1 a n1111: 1CJ .. , .. , •I" Q) Tiit Mowit CIM mlnJ Jtll'l, I .wccmlu1 oil wtll firt 11:00 IJ 0 0 (I)~ m m """ lifhter Is dist1es.sed to learn th1t (I) Mmbl Dlllt1 sht has l1llln In live with 1notl!er 0 (}) Q) 1'tws lire fi1ht11. 0 Mowlt: (C) "A M111 Called C11-m Hop11'1 Htrtn IOI" (westtm) '6!J-Tony Fl'lf'lciou. m (]) Dnptt m Tt Ttll tfM Trvlil l]j) S.n DllfO 11 Urp Q) f1slllons II Snint fD Tiii Frend! Clltf l1j) Tiit Co11rs1 at Owr Tl•u EII L11elll llbrt m It It Wrltttn (DHews 11:10 (!I Mowil: "'T1NI l lut C1rde11l1" (mystery} '53-Annt Bider. 11:15 m ftsti¥•1 film lct 1:00 O Cl) Clrol Bumttt Burt Reynolds . i nd Hinettt Fibrar Ille$!. ll:lO IJ Cl)CIS Ult Mcmt: (C) ".5'111- ,. .. post ti Munlet" (mysttty) 64-0 m ~·•·!Z Back-Up l·~O Jo1nn1 Woodwtrd, Stu1rt Whit1111n, four witnesses c.onlradlcl Olhctl [dwird Mulhire. Thriller 1bout 1 M1Ua,.'s eyewitness ·~~ and It-youni housewilt wllo t111ds h!rsell CU51 Srt. MacOon~I~ (Wrlll1m Bor· held prisoner in her O'Wn hom1 by 1 1tt) of reckless dnv1111. man wflo hti 1scaped from 1 m1ntll 0 m (j) m T1tt CourtshiJ ti [d. hospital. di1'1 ftthtr ''Time lor 1 Cl'la111t" ~ 0 ®} m John"' CMM11 Ro ., Tom decides Eddi• llteds more room Riintf ind flort!ICll HerHltllOll '° he pl1M lo buy "1 fuer-u ppt(' hollSe. m Andy lirifffUI Sflow m "" Vktlniall fm (RJ A '11bllc AJ11lt/Otdioll '"n a;}Nln1 1utst. O (l)@ ED Oltk tmtt Uw- 11nce Welk b 1 sdltdultd iut:Sl m Mcrwle: "Crum fra CM Ht.W Su" (sd·li) '61-AlllhonJ Clrt.iorw. BllJJ Jolla MOftl111d. 1:15 O I.akin Wra,.Up 12:00 O MooM: "'T\11 lu•rk-" (sci·li} '51 l :lO B ®) m Nit MrstetJ n..tr.--Rod Cimtrofl, M1r11 Windw. MtClolad ·"GM My R11flb to Broad· 1:00 (])00(I}91kws way" A fellow offictr Is killed while m Al-ftirM $Miw: .,.ltdff 111 thl t1kin1 M1rsh1l M(Cloud'1 pl1e1 on Rid ""'·" "'Nlcflt loll " Dv&tl11" duty IS I lmir. Dennis W1mr, WllO 1114 (C) '1111 Wfrltlt T ..... 11111 IS McCloud, pl1ys pitar 1rtd slnp In this •amen!. MHIOll !trtl ):JO O Mevlt: '11M llcUt" (dr11111) 1uests. '46--l111int Dir, Robert Mitchum. £lJo NEWPORT BEACH -01 the entrance to the fobulou' Lido l\le OR 3·83SO . . ........................ ;--..-;-;;-.-; ........ . WINNER OF 3 GOLDEN GLOBE AWARDS BEST ACTOR BEST DIRECTOR -~"'..;Fu THE FRENCH CONNECTION IN TH£ 6/ftAr rlfADffJONi Of AMtRJCAN nt/tlULlfl. _......___ ···-...... SECOND llG THRILLER "STEVE MCQUEEN "THE THOMAS CROWN AF FAIR" ~ ..... ~ THEATER ~ -2.fOS-!AST COAST HIGHWAY ~~OltONA OEL MAit '11·62~ ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATION GLENDA JACKSON -BEST ACTRESS SMT W T F •• s VIXEN <Ericson-39} Frank Hope Jr., SDYC, 8:19 :22:\6 TZCHAK U (Ericson-39) Man uel Senderos AYC 8·-IO :~:~ , . . TATEi (Ericson~39 ) Carlos Cardenas, AYC, 8:23:27 :33 Sffi !US ll (113 rt. cuUer) Bob Lynch. NHYC, 9:00:08:34 BLACKF'IN (76 ft. ketch) Ken De Meuse, St FYC, Clubs List R esults P•trici• Morison, Robert lowttJ. 1:01:15:08 MELTEMJ (Sanlana-37) Bill Jonas. Corinthian YC. 9:01 :36:53 PERICUS (Ericaon-41) John Williamson LYC 9:02 ·-2$:57 ' . . WINDSTAR -(Comanch-t2) Walter East, SDYC. 1:03:39 :53 SAYULA (Cal-40) Ra-Carlin. SDYC. 9:04:15:49 VIC'l'OR II (NZ-47) Herb Johnson. SDYC, 9:04 :24 :~ THERA (R<dllne-411 James O'Hem. SDYC. 9:!0 :04 :58 m ALIA IV CC.1-4111 John Barbey, SDYC. 9:05:47:04 BARCO DE ORO (Cal-481 Enrique Braun. AYC, 9:14:- 19 :49 SALACIA (Cal-41) Joe 0.Meter, Richmond VC, 9:I4:- '1:40 . IEMANJA (Cal-401 Jorge E9<:alant• AYC, 9: 15: I4:26 SANGRJTA II (Cal-30) John McGee, SI BYC, not re- <Jt>Nled llA1HY DAY (17 ft. sloop) Robert Levi, sssc. nol recorded ALERT (II fl ketch) Dorolhj Radcliffe, SDYC. not recorcted STA.Rll1iG Ill (5I ft. yawl) Norm Ream. SDYC. flnllhed under pow..-. Of Valentine Race Results of the Va lentine Regatta. co-sponsored b y Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club and Lido Isle Yacht Oub: Bill Leilh. NHYC. FLIPPER (41 -(I) Hulla Blu, Brian Carter, BCYC. SABar A (15) -(I) Racing Macir>e , Mark Gaudio. NHYC; (2) No. 7162. DaVid Sigler, BYC; (3) Rip Up, Kurl Schmidt. LIYC: No. 6424, Bill Thursday DAYTIME MOVIES t:OO m "TM lrtt Mltll" {4rJllll) 'U- Pal O'Blitn. Robtrt Ry111. t:lO 0 (Cl """"' ., ... ...... (t.Olllldy) '50-Qirtoll Webb, Je11111t Cr1i11, M1Jlll lor, llrbani Aa!PI. >JJD O --t'"""1l'4l -MlrY M1!11ft, Dlcll Poli!tf\. "Qttt11 tf tit ........ (tdwnltn) •• ,_ J:OO Q .. Dr1np" (4 r•m•) '57-Jert Chandler, .IOlnnt 0111. Jullt londan. m.' T" • M•rnlfkl., A•btn1111" (drlft\1) '42-Joseph Cott111, ""' MOOf'fhud, AMI !uttr, Dolores Costello, Tim Holt J:OD ({) "H.r CctncluMon (4r1m1) ''3 -Paul Nrwm111, r11rtci1 Httl, Br11t-- dD1L deWlld1, M1h)il Ooucltt • a§.,...._ tf YllW" Part I (4111111) '57-W HlldlaA, SldMJ hiUtr. LllJ0.14A 112) -(I) Avec de Vant, T Mulvaney, VYC : (21 Little 1'wilch, Ch 1 d Twichell. LIYC; (31 Upsel, Al P,rez, BYC.; (4l Karal, Ed Gold. vvc. BU..brough, BCYC; (S) No. ------------------11 7222, Mark Alllone, LIYC. LllJO.IiB (17) ( I ) SWaUow, Hank Wag n er, NHYC ; (2) No. 3587, Don Palmquist, LIVC; (3 1 Julie fl, Fred Toepel. BYC; 141 El Cin- co. John Holcomb, BYC; (5 ) Fannv Soaker, Bruce Orsborn, cove. KITE A (I) -(I) Vortex. Brue. 1'wl<hell. VVC. SABar B (8) -(I) No. 7240, Regina Parker. NHYC; (21 Cyclone. Bruce Crary, NllYC. SABaT C (2) -(I) Lltlle One, Donna Palmquist. LJYC; (2 ) Nova, Laura Shelton, LIYC; (3) No. 7288, O.von Palmquist, LIYC; (4) No. 5225, Margaret D e n eh e r , LIYC; (5) No.~ • Gay Koll . Fo r Ad vertisi ng in Out 'N1 About Ph one Norm Stanley 642-4321 ALSO ''Where's Poppa?" It COIOR ·1'1<1.r• 1!11111•1! •11 ·11·.1· Continuous Running Show Sunday Starting at 2:00 KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN KITE B (5) -(!) No. 92S, LIYC. ----------------!---------------- __ ... --. l 970's Winners .Head Oscar List By VERNON SCOTr HOLLYWOOD (UPIJ -Two of last year's Oscar winners and three movies with little In comm.on lead the parade or Acadetny Award nominations. Among the nominees for best actor and best actress an· nounced Tuesday were Glenda Jackso n and George C. Scott, the winners last year when Scott set tongues wagging by refusing the Oscar he won for Patton. Scott was nominated this •year for his performance in ''The Hospital,'' and Miss Jackson, who ~n the 1970 award for '' in Love " was nominat~ for her aP. pearance in "Sunday Bloody Stlnday." Three films tied with eight nominatinns each -''Fiddler on the Roof," an adaptation of the Broadway hit musical comedy about Jewish life in rural Europe, "The French Connection ." a fast-paced and violent thriller about a tough New York 148.r<:qtlCI detective, --~~ ~j-._Ililll· •1 "* * * * A MASTERPIECE" -lf.r. OJJl.r ,.,.,, #onOllM.L 'b.~~·F•~• TllE 01~0 DE LAURE~TllS -~BIBIE rillMl m 0.1.il" CAl.r ~, Dt i.....: _,~ ... .'~ ... and "The Last Plctun Show," a ae1y study of adolescerwe and provincial morta in a small 'has town in the 1950s. The otfier fUms nominated for best picture were .. A Cloekwork Orange ," and "Nicholas and Alexandra." Contending again st Scott for best actor were Peter Finch ''Sunday B 1 o o d y Sunday," Gene Hackman ''The French Connection," Israeli a c t o r Topol "Fiddler on the Roof," and Walter Matthau "Kotch." The best actress nominees included political activist Jane Fonda ("Klute"), and Vanessa Redgrave: (J'Mary, Queen of Scots"), both of }¥horn were regarded as controversial in Hollywood ror the ir antiwar pronouncements. · The other nominees for best actress were Julie Christle ("McCabe and Mrs . Miller"1, and Janet Suzman "(Nicholas and Alexandra"). The nominees for best sup- porting actress were : Ann-Margret ( ' ' Ca r n al Knowledge"), Ellen Burstyn (''The Last Picture Show "), Barhara Harris ("Who i~ Harry Kellerman and Why is he saying Those Terrible Things About Me?"), Cloris l.eachman ("The Last Picture Show"), and Margaret Leighton (''The Go- Between"). For best supporting actor: Jeff Bri dges ("The Last Pie· ture Show"), Leonard Frey f''Fidd ler on the Roof"), RichRrd Jaeckel (''Sometimes a Great Notion"), Be n Johnson ("The Last Picture Show"), and Roy Scheider ("The F~ch Connection"). For best Director: Stanley Kubrick I ' ' A Clockwork Orange"), Norman Jewison "!Fiddler on the Roof"), William F·r i e d k In ("The French Connection"), Peter Bogdanovich (''The Last Pict ure Show"), and John Schlesin~er ("Sunday Bloody Sunday" L The winners will be an- nounced and Osca rs presented at the 44th annual Academy Awards ceremony April 10. Jimmy Stewart Show Canceled HOLLYWOOD !UPll Actor Jimmy Stewart bas been notified that his new television series has been canceled after a single season on the air. PETER FINCH 'Bloody Sunday' GENE HACKMAN 'French Connection' WALTER MATTHAU 'Kotch' ' ! 'I 1 GEORGE C. SCOTT 'Hosp ital' . JULIE CHRISTIE 'McCa be, Mrs. Miiie r' JANE FOND'A 'Klute' GLENDA JACKSON 'Bloody Sunday' VANESSA REDGRAVE 'Queen of Scots' t .. Theater Notes 40thelw' Opening at VCI ; 'Brigadoon' in Long Beach ·sy TOM TITUS CH I~• 0.HY f'll .. Sl•tt Theatergoers looking for new productions this weekend ha"e a clear-cut c h o i c e be twee n Shakespearean tragedy and musical comedy as UC Irvine launches a nine. performance run of "Othello" and the Long Beach Civic Light Opera revives "Briga- doon." The two newcomers will join a jam-packed ached.ule of live theater along the Orange Coast ind its envirOM. Four ol the current attractions, 1n Laguna Beach, Westminster. and Fountain Valley, wrap.up their engagements t h i s wee kend, while four other local playhouses continue their current productions. The UC I staging o f "Othello" opens Friday for nine consecutive evenil)gs at the 100-seat Studio Theater in the university's Fine Arts Village. Drama p r o f e s s o r Robert Cohen is directing the classic tragedy. Larry Chatman will take the title role of the Moor of Venice, with Ann Givin as his wife, Desdemona ; Ashle y Carr as the scheming Iago, and Francesca L'hoir as Iago's wire. Emelia. Others in the Irvine cast v.·ill be Eric Johnson, Greg Silva. Chris Muno z. Robert Schneider , Raul Garza. Robert Cosle!\o, David Wollos. Tee Koch, David Olaver, Greg Wal ker. Michael H;ins, Andee Rabyne, Stuart Duckworth, And v Ordon, Duke Fagan, lieni·v Kirker, Roger Gomez, Don~·ld J o h n son , Gary Graham and Dan O'Toolc. Performances u·HI be at 8:30 p.m. Friday through the followinl!'. Saturda v. March 4. Reservations 833-66 17. * "Brigadoon." the f i r s l Broadway success from the team of Lerner and Loewe - which later produced "My Fair Lad y," "Camelot" and "Gigi" -wilt reunite the stars of Long Beach CL~'s "Man of La Mancha,~· ·Dick Johnso n and Leanna Nelson. Rounding out the featurt!d players are Carol Stromme, Roger Galloway, A l l e n Johnson and Bob Connor. Gary Dav.ii 9.ifects µie musical , fao4sf of t w 9 Ameri can! lost In a }D!!J· for1otten Scottish. vlllage. Jan Ritschel Is musical director with Richard Tar c z y n s k I choreographing. The show will be staged for three weekends-Frida ys and Saturdays at 8:30. Sundays at 2:30 in the auditorium of Jordan High School. Atlantic at Artesia, Long 8 ea ch . Reservations (213 J 432-7926 . * Cornpleting their respeciive runs th is week are three com- edies and a melodrama - "Teahouse or the August ,_loon" at the Laguna ~1oulton Playhouse, "The Star Spangl· ed Girl'' for the Westminster Community Theater, ''T h e .<\1norous Flea" for the Irvine Communit y Theater, and ··No No, a Million Times Ne(' by the Fountain Valle y Com- mun ity Theater. "Teahouse" will be on the Laguna boards tonight through Saturday under the direction of •tap Gfaham·, with Phil lnterlandi, Jerry McCulloch, Tr;ivis Bryan, Helene Brisgs and Walter Dudek heading the cast. Curtain is 8:30 at the pl<tyhouse,' 606 Laguna Canyon Road. Laguna Be a ch. Reservations 494-0743. One of the nc\11 year's best productions is Westminster's "Star Spangl ed Girl.'' gi vin~ its last two performance~ Fri- day and Saturday at 8:30 in the Finley School auditorium. Gary Saderup, B a r b a r a Garlich and r.tartin Fuchs comprise the cast under Son- dra Evans' direction at the sc hool, Ed)"ards at Trask, We s !minster. Reservations 897-1164. lrYln•'• "Fl.~" hu been held over for a fourth week- end with extra performances Friday and Satu rday at 8 o'· clock in the UC Irvine Human- ities Hall Playhouse. Richard Dow heads th e cast, with Ellen Robinson . Gino Gaudio, Carla Dow and Don Hayes in re11· lured roles. Reservations 547- 7733. Curtain time is fl o'clock fOT the Fou nta in Valley n1eller. ''No. No. a Million Tirnes No." Da vid Ma iville directs the show. \\'hie~ features Bec ky Forstadt. Casey r.liller , Vic Gonzales and Lois Farah. Last ~r(ormances Friday a n d Saturday at Tamura School. 171MO Bania Suuinne, Fountain Valley, Reservations 847-9821. * . South Coast Repertor y brin.R:s ba r k another performance or Its ori ginal rnus'ica l "Mother Earth '' Thursday night. then continues It s run nr •·The Innocents" Friday through Saturday. Cur- tain lime Is 8 o'clock for all performances. M;:irlin Benson directs the rock-ecology revue along with musical boss ,James dePrlest, \Yhile Jack \1aughn is guest director for "Innocents." Performances are given al SCR's Third Step Theater, 1827 Ne"·port Brvd ., Costa Mesa. Reservations 64~1363. The suspense drama ''Kind Ladv " goes int o its second "·eekend for the Fullerton performances Friday and Saturday at 8:30. Betty Strom- qu ist, Martin Cl~g a n d Marvin Colter head the cast at tbe Muckenthaler Center, 119 Buena Vista Drive. Fullerton. Reservations 527-4415. * Also preparing fo r their se- cond weekends are t h e orli:inal three·act tr I I o g y "Mavhem" bv the Santa Ana Com'munity Players and ''The Happy Time'' at the Long Beach Community Playhouse: Roberi Pn<J[ directs , hi.Ii own producUitl of "Mayhem" \\'i!h M~q?fl ret Boye r fe atured in ;ill th rl!e srgn1en ts. Charles Pait . Ailee \Valke r and Bobbie r.tcnrl also arr in the casts at the Plavcrs Theater, 500 \V . 6!h St., ·Sa nt;i Ana . Curtain ls at 8:30 Fridav and Saturday ; reservations 541 -2188. "The Happy Time" con- tinues Friday and Saturday under James Brittain's direc- tio{l. yilh Jerry Herbener. MlliiSirel Dtan and Larry Daggett among the prlnc\pals. Performances are Friday and Saturday at 8:30 in the playhouse, 5021 E. Anaheim St., Long Beach. Rtservations (213) 438--0536. Stewart was one of many TOPOL motion picture stars to fail in 1 ___ ':..F..:ld:.:d:..l~•:..'..:•_n_R_:oo_f' ____ '_N_lc_h_o_la_s.:., ______ 1 , .. -,, .. c-··-~·­••1 c~·~ IUI per C•rload ...... ,_,,..,"'""''"'"'~ ·~~,-,, "lltu th ln11 I lloo (~11401" !Pl ! '11TS KAil Jf.ISIC.t. TO 01.t.Tll" "TWISTID "llVI" (Plil , ......... .. • ,, ... _,.,,,.1 ffJ U l l ....... .,,. t ........ ,_. I J I 1171 f'..J, '1• l!••I ll• W "~'"JM/ c• , ',,.h..,, • ~· .. "DllTJ 11.t.llT" II) • • "Siii! G.t.MI" {Pli) ......... '" .. '°'"'"- S14 IJIJ v.~. r c "' ••n1·.a "•••u tMt" Ard;•v A~.~, "110111011 ANO llOOMSTIC IS" {Gl & "l1 lr1rch 01 T•t C11l1w1r1" !GI '-=="::''°::':::IN ~~01-1~ 1111 ... _ ....... ..... _ ............. l lJ lllJ :\11/Hl,1111" •~-lh• "' 1 ..... ,-..,0CllT MOlllT" IPli) ,. ... c. ~.~ .... •cot .. "SOMITlll .. li l lli" IPli) ""-== ..... -,_ .. , -·-MJ•Nlll t....,.,,,,..,,w""1•,.,.,., /<11•i.,.11#/~IArMl"97 AM •fib ''"''' 11•'4J h14'1y (I) .... Wll1rt't '"~''="=':::::::;"' -·· M•• ......... tlf•Htt 12.00f'tt c••~°"' .! ...... , ..... .:!. "WIUAll"u•t1 ' •ittHt TM1 t..-,t4 I M4 IPll "I01•t •f tt.1 ll•lwt DM4"' the 1971·72 video year, in- cluding Shi r I e y Mact.aine, Anthony Quinn, James Garner and George Kennedy. Acode111y Aword Be1t Document1ry "THE RA EXPEDITIONS" MESA .. _ ,,..._ ....1111 ,, . PRIMIERI ENGAGEMENT 2nd ATTRACTION Peter Sell er• In "THE PARTY" Detective Harry Callahan. 'tbu don't assign him to murder cases. You just turn him loose. 2nd at Vie lo 2n4 at Harr.or I 2 "SKIN GAME" "WILD BUNCH" 2ND HIT. GEORGE C. SCOTT In •:THE LA5T llUN" NOW '""'IWH'M'""'""~ NOMINATED FOR { I I ~c:::i:: SHOWING <D, fododlo1 , GENE :~:=-.~.:.=~ BEST PICTURE·ACTOR HACKMAN ·DIRECTOR NOW! NOW AT IOTM CI NIMAS 1. DAILY "LOT ft1 ""<CO o1 •O•.,S, (°'1~ ,.,!\ "!DMI ll .. ,lel O• -•Oo '"' • O~I ......... 01 .... OI--· HELD OYfR 3rd WEEK • • ••AC:H , ... T •LLIS • I 1lCT. COA•T MW¥. A •1oH 1>1ae • ..,,.,. -l'·9-S • HUNTINGTOM •9MIH MAf~EESSAT.& SUN, fROM 11 AM WALT DISNEY- """'"" BedlUIDDs Ind 1raams111:111s 1-_,,, "' TftHNICOtOll' IOI• .... -o ........ :Tw•.GGY • NIT "WILD BUNCH " "Olrly Hlrl"f" 1nd "Ski~ G1n1•" AllO Pl.t.Tlllct AT IDW.t.101 CINIMA YllJO, MISS ION YllJO •' Slo.6990 ' ~ ' . .l • I Strong sirtn mo in b1orin 11 1ngi~1. Mos! trou~!e fre• '°" rilodt..-} ,• • . t·· . . . . ·. . . . Wtdntsday, Februaf"f 2j, 1972 ' .~ . BULL PRICE FOR A • . . . . . . Cl'IJiS!CWOUtic. power s!etr· ing, po)l(.er !rt di~ brokes, radio, heater, special tolor glow pain!. $2. oa9 IMMfolATE.DILIVfRY , ~ BLUE BOOK $2200 · ·B=:D 1972 :L~~:~~ ·$'· $2699- . BLUE BOOK 2575 ~OW110079) ONAUSE01971 . · pluitax&license plu1tn& !Teon" ON A USEO 1971 . . IMMEDIATE ··----.------------'-· 1971· MUST,ANG .. DIMOllSTRATOR 2 OOOR SPORTS ROOf DELIVERY Brand New 1972 TRUCK & . ~2899 ' · , pJU1 taX-a,1ic11(s1.. . Crui10•-o-matic tran1mi11ion, 5 • bthtd wliift iidt well tir11, tir · conditionin9, power 1te1rin9, , tilt ileirin9 wheel, AM /FM ' 1ftrto 1port clack , rttr sett, powtr front disc: brtke10, eolor ktl,td, racing mirrors, tinftd gle111 whet! cOYtfl, .#IF02FI ... 6807. IMMll>IATI on1mv llLUE BOOK $3265 ONA USED 1971 ONLY WESTWOOD CAMPER I ' "•bov1r, sto~•, 1inli., ie• bo11, dln1tl1, rt•• 1icl1. Amm1+1r & oil pr11111r• geu911. R.1due1d SHC l1v1l ~ 1xh1 u1I, eig•r lighl1r, C1J if. Emi11. sy1. IS) 671xl5 ~ ,;,,., ho .. y d,ty .,,;,,., FIOARNOS824 . $3399 . plus tax & lice"se . $129 DOWN $5935 Per Month -~~ . . ·1'971; FORD . ·LTD $129 is total dn pymt. SS9.3S is tolal ma pymt. ind. tax. '72 license &. all finance charges on approved credit far 36 mos. Deferred pymt price $2265.60 i11d. all fillllnce charges, la11es, 72 license or if you prefer lo pay cash, full cash price is $1932.95 incl. sales lox.. '72 license. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 11.06 ~~ 1972 LTD STATION WAGON 2 DOOR Hll.RbTOP Vinyl roof, •ir ton- d itloning, p o w e r b r ,-. 1 1, power 1t11ring, r 1 d i o, h11t1r, 1ic. U1ed low mil11. ( 763· CMR I PRICES REFLECT REDUCTION OF EXCISE TAX Getting Income Tax ~ack? $J199 WHYWAITI · .• ••n•uc. · BUJTODAY-ASKUSHOW $5099 Fully h.ixury equip. ped inr.luding fing· 1rlip Sf:!e~d contr~~ power 1e1f1 .'~ window•, F1ct. Air with 111tomahc +imp, c:o11trol, -f.M St1r10, power door loc:li.1, MC"" 1u(p~" 1ion. Much, Mu,h, more. 2576N (21 ·· 05. Blue Book Price $6 .. ,.4. now pti' •d _____ ...,. _______ ._____ . DUNTON AF''FORD'' ABLE USED CAR 1t $5099. Plu• T•11 ind licln1 '63 CHEVROLET NOYA SS 6 cyl, A11fo. +r•n1., r1dio, h1.t1r, extra cle•n. IOHY512l- $477 '64 T·BIRD F11ll power & f1ctory ' 11it. !OZB074l $477 '66 DODGE Coronet: 2 Door h1rdlop. VB , Aulo. T11n1., Power S!11ring, Pow•r 8ra~11, Ra· dio, H11t1r. !THM306 l . $577 '67 OPEL Coup1. 4 1p11d, r1dio, he1t•r. !VGL104) $577 SHOW US A GOOD CREDIT STATEMENT- W.E DELIVER ON THE SPOT! We are approved hy all Credit Unions; police, fireman, civil service, tele• pho"e co., htsuronce co mpa"ies, etc. BRING US YOIJR FLE~T DIAL · WE TRADE HIGH! '66 vw BUG s· UPER BARGAINS 2 Door Hardtop. VI, Autometi, Trans., 2 Oooo Good $'i'77M ll81 ~is~;:,t;" $1'277 v;,,1 Roof '67 MUSTANG '66 FALCON '69 FORD 2 DOOR .....,. _______________ ... Gohnde SOD 2 Dr. HT. VI, Auto. Tr1n1., Slick Shilt. Run1 good. ( RSN644 l F1elory Air, Pow1r St11)ing, Power Br1k11. $577 '69 MUSTANG $1277 ---2 Door Hardtop. lo~k neW. 6 cyl. stick shift. radio, heat&r. YXU017 ,,,,,,.'!! .. ~~~~~?,\~.~ .. '"· $1 ·177 ! M,.,.,,,:~~ .~.E~.~.~~~''" •;" tory Air, Pow1r St1erino. CPEY659.) Po..;..., Sl11ring, Pow1r Bra•e1, Radio, $777 "----------------t Hu+ ... <VMX65ll --~ ....... --51277 '67 FORD ·'69 YW FASTBACK '64 CHEVROLET FolrloM GT VB, ·Auto. Tr1n1 ., P.5., Power Brakei, Ridio, Hietir, Vinyl Roof, Chrome Autom1tic lr1n1 .... dio. h11ter. (lZYl07 ). A r11I b1r91in 1t CORVml Whul•. !T5 R4$777 $977 <·•pud, R/H$E1'377 U72DJMI WE WILL PAY TOP ·DOllAR FOR YOUR CLEAN CAR PAID FOR OR NOT ·REMEMBER: WE WANT YOUR SlRVICE ., R·EGARDLESS OF WHERE YOU BOUGHT YOUR CAR '69 FORD 2 Door Hardtop. VI, 1uto. tr1n1., radio, h11!1r. (S490PYl · $1477 '68 BUICK Elec:fro Full pow1r & f1clory 1ir, vinyl roof tYWR936 ) $1677 '71 TOYOTA Wgn. lo1ded crm. pf, lo mis .' (l/IOCTNI $1677 '70 GALAXIE 500 2 Dr. Hardtop. Factory Air, Pow1t St11r• ing, Pow1r 8r1k11. 11/11/ASWI $1777 Our Salesmen Have the · , Finance "Know How." Just· tell us the Payment you'd like NO DOWN PAYMENT PROBLEMS 1-;..,-.;..;,.' ..;.,· ------------------------------"f We wiil sincerely try to help you finance your car throygh the best outlets we know •. Call 546-7070 For Free 10 Minute Credit Check ' ~ . FORD .. •I ! -. I I I ' • . . ·. ,· • ' • . . , • • . ~~·) • ·' • • • ' ,, ' , j I J I I ·l ., .J • • ' " ' - j I I j ' ly CAROL MOORE Of t11t Dlltf' ,lltt lt1H \11ually lt'a th...UUdents who go to the little red achoolhouse. But 1n lhe case of ;&villi Coto'1 home economlc1 class at Orange Coast College, the lltU• red ''school" goes to the people. :Was Coto and her assistant, Miss Nan- cy Berg, head out four days a week in a red bus labeled "Taking the College In the Communlty." They spend one day tach In Huntington Beach. Costa Mesa, Westminster and CO!onia Juarez. Youngsters 1eam colors, numbers and ABCs from Miss Bera: while Miss Coto teaches their mothers to be better homemakers and consumers. 'She lectures in Spanish, s h o w s rllnl!trlps and translates rec;ipes in order to emphasize "the prlce difference between nelghborOOod and c h a I n markets. cooking from scratch vs. pre- paftid mixes and using margarine in!tead ot-J>utter. , , l'l'J'hese housewives are verY conscious their budgets," she said. "If there's no anslation, we show them the package so ey will know what to look for when they o shopping." Besides teaching the basics of nutrition, food~paratlol), budgeting arid meal pre · tioq, Miss Coto al&<> tries to key the l son to the children's class. For in· atance, It-the youngsters are learning the color red, her recipes will feature tomatoes, so both lessons get reinforced at borne. The hardest lesson to match is blue. But Miss Coto succeeds by teaching the moth tc tint the cottage cheese used to atuff el sticks. Value1 of e Economics in the Com· mianlty work bo ways ,, Miss Colo's demon trations teach the housewives to be more thrifty, bargain- conscious and sell-reliant. Their feedback and problems shared in class discussion, in turn , give her ideas for class topics. "One woman . was di1tre!sed because hh home was bordered On three sides by barkin& doas. So we incorporated that .. Economics conslderaUon 1n our lesson on home aelectiOn, '1 she said. 1 And thanks. to the culturiJ milture, thtre is an intemaUonal interpretation of cuJslne. ·"We translated a recipe £or Mexicali Pie and an Australian wompn reported back that htr husband had loved It and she had taken It proudly to a potluck sup- per;" Miss Coto recalled. Her own family ls In El Salvador and she came to California eight years ago on a scholarship from the Baptist Women's Mis.sionary Society of S o u I h e r n Califomla, She earned her bachelors degree at CalUornia State CoUege at Long Beach and Is working on her masters, intending to qualify as a nutri· tionist. ·Women from '21 to 67 years or age take the year-long class covering such topics u prh1clples of food preparation, nutri- Oon, your home, money management, home.management , clothing and textile!. The course Is midway in Its projectio n, having evolved from a parent-child pro- gram, and Is aiming toward an 1,tltimate goal of patterns for faJ11.lly life with discussion"centered on the various age c a t ego r I es : infant, childhood, adolescence, adulthood and senescence. Thus. Mi ss Coto includes family tactics and philosophy in her cooking lessons. "For instance, we will recommend an oven stew since it combines meat and vegetables for good nutrition, needs a minimum of preparation and clean-up time and bakes for a long time by itself. "Thi! frees the mother from un- neces sary housework, gives her more time for family enjoyment and appeals to the taste or all family members." Class publicity and attendance have come mostly by word of mouth from the students, "graduates'' and volunteer housewives who translate recipes from Spanish. Those who complete the course receive an attendance c e r t i f i c a t e . Emphasis is on self-improvement and no credit units are given for the no-fee course . -· Rolling Along • • IEA ANDERSON, Editor w.....,, ,...,..,, u. 1'11 ,, ... IJ Evelia Coto and Na ncy Be rg check leuon suppl ies (et left ) for teaching ehild'ren the letter "G" and mothers the nut rient val ue of grap ~ products. Abo ve, t hey boa rd tha bus that takes home economics cleu to fou r citie s. i • • ·Flaws Pared From ,Canned Fruit Standa~ds By DOROTHY WENCK 0!'1191 CMtltr '49mt •• ,..,..,. • Canned fruits are a popular Item in OW' diet, eipecially during the winter months when fewer of the fresh fruits are 1vailable. Accoiding lo U.S. Department of Agriculture statistics, abouh thlrd of the non-c.ltnJ1 fruit consumed Jn' the U.S. Is in caMed form. We eat a totil o( about 100 pounds of fruit per per10n per year (DQt countln« cltius) and aboul 34 pc>unds 'Of thls ia canned as either fruit (i:i pounds) or Juice ( 11 poondJ ). In addition, we cons ume about i pounda per per10n of citNs fruit, and 1imo1t bill of thl1 (IZ pounds) 11 In the form of frozen juice. · Teat yourself on these questions aod answers , provided by USDA, to ace if you know how to chooae canned fruits: Q. Which of Ibo followta1 ii aol ~ qalr<d by Jew to be on the front paeef of labtl1 oa caued aad (roiti fruJta? (1) Tbe common n•m• of the lrult ; (bi . I Home News Liquid In which It 11 packed (c) Quality. •A. (c) QuaUty. Federal regulations do not tequire the grade of the fruit to be shown on the label. Packers may show the grade If they choose. Federal law does require the label to state on the front panel Ule common or usual name of the fruit: the form or 1tyle of fruit (such as whole. slices, or halves): for 10me fruits, the variety or color; the 1lrups, sugar. or liquid in which a fruit 11 packed; and the total weJa:ht of the contents. An ingredient list and the packer's name and address must be somewhere. on the label, but not on lhe front panel. Q. ••u.s. Fucyn canned peacbn are: (al A 1peclll variety; Cb! EJtra·ilri• J • \ and Views peac~ (c) Top quality peaches. A. (c) Top quality peaches. The grades e1tabll1hed by USDA lo defln< specific levels of quality in canned and frozen fruits are : U.S. Grade A (or U.S. FAnt)I) -top quafity : U.S. Grade B (or U.S. Choict) -very good quality; U.S. Grade C (or U.S. Standard) -fair quality. When a fruit has been officially graded ror quality under continuous USDA In· spectlon, It may carry the offlclal grade name, such as "U.S. Grade A." and the statement "Packed under continuous 11>- spection of the U.S. Department of Agriculture." The grade name and 1tatemeot may 1lao 1ppur within a USDA lhleld. U the • • grade name appears without the '1U.S." In front of it, for example simply as "Fancy." this means the product has not been officially inspected and graded by USDA, but it should meet the grade stan- dards for the quality shown. (The in- spection and grading by USDA is a volun· tary program , paid for by the packtt.) Q. ne term "txlra heavy alrup," found on Ute labels of some canned fruit&, mean1 : (aJ A sugar sirup thickened with com starch; {bl The sweetest. thickest sugar alrup used In canned fruits ; f c 1 The alrup weighs more than the fru it Jn the can. A. (b) The sweetest, thickest augat 11.rup used in canned fruits. canned fruits may be packed in light, heavy, or extra heavy slrupl'. in water, or in 1lighUy 1weetencd water. The heavier the sirup. the liWetler the fruit (af)d thf,. higher the calorlea) and IOmetimes the higher the price. Since the nel we1~ht listed on tbe label Includes both fruit and 1lrup, you wW 1et • \/ • proportionately more (rult and Jess sugar U you choose a lightly sweetened canned fruit that weighs the aame as one packed In heavy alrup. Q, la cuaed and frowi fruits, re1a.lar 11.ud pieces or whole fr uits are 1eneralt1 more e1pea1lve thaa mlJed pieces of vll'lom 1lztt ud 1bape1. Cal True; (bl falae. A. (1) True. Whole frult1, h1lvea ao4 1Uce1 of similar size are more expensive to produce than mixed pieces. even though the food value 11 comparable. While you may wl.lh to spend more money for whole fruits or halves for specl~I purf>ORI, mixed pieces are a good buy for gelatin molds and other dishes where the appearance of the fruit 11 not Important. Q. Canned lrulta will retain tbelr qaall· ty for 1 year or more: (a) II kept at 1 temperature no warm!' 111111 71 desreea; (bi U kept at 1 . ' •• ... .. .. ~ lemperature no warpler than 90 de~> (cJ Regardless of temperature. • ·. . A. (1) II kept 11 1 temperature no wanner than 75 degree&. Canned fruJ~s that have been atored 1t very •arm temperatures or lot long periods of ~e may Jose quality tcolor, navor, or texture may change). The· fruit wW llW be oaf• to eat. however. Q. I.I aeledia& cuaed fraltt, ypa 1bould 1vatd : <•l Dented cans; (b) Bulalna or IWelJ.. lng Cini. A. (bl Bulging or 1wellln& cans. The swelling or bulging la a algn of 1a1 pro- duction inside the can. and thla meant that microorganism have been, growln1 and that the food may ht unaafe. Bul1lng cans should never be used. Sm11\I dents In a can will not harm the contents unless the dents have pierced the metll or loosened the t:ln ttam. Do not buy can1 that ore dented 11on1 the seam llnt. .I ' I • . . .. . ~ . , I Wtdnesday, Ftbruar)' 23, 1q72 8 DAILY PILOT Makes '.,Perfect Delivery t Practice By JACQUELINE COMBS Of ltlt oallY ,.lltl SllH Don and Rusty Ackelson hive a slethescope. Each night they turn off the television, snuggle up to each other and Don places the stethescope to Ru•ty'• growing belly. They are listening I<> the heart beat or their first ahout-U>-be-born child. The beats never surpass 130 per mtnute. No doubt it's going to be a boy. The Ackelsons are fast approaching Rusty's due date -a time that brings sweat to the palms of many a man and ghastly images to the women who remember the old wives' tales passed from generation to generation. The Ackelsons remain cool 4nd confident. Cool and confident. Mrs. Marjo~ie Pyle, RN, likes to take the credit. The Ackelsons are prize pupils in Hoag Hospital's childbirth preparation class, a course originated by Mrs. Pyle , obstetrics supervisor, and Mrs. Marsha Winslow, RN. LIKE ATHLETES "They aren't nervous at all. They ape_ear poi.sed and well versed," pointed out Mrs. Pyle. The Ackelsons, are. like athletes: With hours of practice behind them and the strategy keenly prepared, they are ready to enter competition. They probably have some of the fears. lhat most expectant parents have about getting to the hoSpital on time or forgetting the suitcase. But Don and Rusty each have a job to do and their individ· ual jobs, done together as a team, will . bring them through il. And they know it. "It takes a lot of hard work, firm conviction and real dedication to have a baby this way," said Mrs. Pyle, ''but it can be the most binding exper· ience of a marriage -man and woman working emotionally and physically together to give birth to the child of their creation." ty Ackelson, 22, and husband Don, 25, Coste Mesa participate in Hoag ·Hospital 's pared Childbirth Classes. Above, she practices ·£tg lifts to strengthen inner thigh for delivery. Coasting along in a pregnancy may look easier -neglecting any hospital-sponsored or other child· birth preparation, letting the doctor do all the work during delivery, not bothering to exercise. "Actually, prepared deliveries seem to be faster. easier and take less medication and anesthetics," continued Mrs. Pyle. i ' ~· ~ r ' ' ' • •• • " Piecing pillow between legs aids relaxation. Don gives back rub. • More and more doctors are stressing the im· portance of the classes, initiated last spring. Most doctors don't have the time to explain all the de- tails of pregnancy and delivery and women, not knowledgeable about medicine and their own body changes and demands, do not know what they need to know, Mrs. Pyle pointed out. POSSIBLE MEDICATION Classes include the theory, anatomy and physiology of labor and delivery along with the possible medication and anesthesia. "We think that a certain amount of medication at a vital point helps the process. Most girls have a saddle block at the end." Mrs. Pyle emphasized that physical and emo- tional preparation for labor is not a substitute for medication though it often reduces the need or reinforces their effects when used. Most private prepared childbirth classes place great importance on unmedicated births. They be- fieve that both mother and child are healthier, the child having more color and being livelier at birth . "We don't set goals that are impractical for all patients. We don't worry about the medication factor. Our goal is a healthy, happy mother and baby," explained Mrs. Pyle. "Many women are able to realize a completely unmedicated birth. And we help them. To most we say. 'You're ptegnant. Now let's have a healthy baby.'" ' The later classes coordinate theory and prac- tice. The women practice their breathing and co- ordinate it with each stage of labor. During the first stage of labor as the contractions mount, they are taught abdominal breathing. According to Rusty Ackelson, abdominal breathing "is lifting the abdominal wall of the stomach rather than the chest as you breathe. This takes· the stomach wall off the uterus. Jn between contractions, you use normal chest breathing." DISPELS MYTHS Mrs. Pyle also attempts to dispel any myths or bad experiences during previous deliveries by discussing the common fears of labor and delivery. "One girl was so afraid of hOspitals and medical personnel I invited her to have lunch with us and took her on a tour of the maternity floor. She just had to realize that we are people too." Hoag's prepared childbirth classes are the only justify hospital-based classes in the area. They were initiated be.cause they were in demand. Growing numbers of Orange Coast women were becoming interested in such childbirth theory as Lamaze, Grantly-Oick Reid's husband-coached childbirth and the American Institute of Family Relations Lamaze Plus. "We saw a definite medical need for the classes as girls were coming in, demanding one thing, Don whispers to Rusty as she rests in relaxed position (in between contractions) • ~t right he supports her during pushing practice. ( ' I I \ Pillows in hand, tlie Ackelsons enter hospital door for classes. DAILY PILOT PHOTOS BY RICHARD KOEHLER needing another. We wanted a proiram ·that both patient and nurse could appreciate." Mrs. Pyle and Mrs. Winslow, joined by a phys- ical therapist, visited the various private classes. "We adapted the good points from each class. Al registered nurses, we believe we were best quaJi. fied to recognize the, good techniques of each theory." The program is working. The faces of the new parents show it is working. Fathers don't have to have their . first view of a newborn through the glare of a nursery window. They are beside their wife, wor~ing with her and bringing romance into the pregnancy. Thanks to the class, Rusty and Don are cheek to cheek, whispering hopes and fears as-they prac- tice for that great performance. Typical of the growing awareness of today's expectant parents, the Ackelsons are taking it all seriously. They have read 8-10 books on prepared childbirth and have taken a little from each. ''We have devised a pattern that fits our style," said Rusty. "We practice it every night: It is an adapted psycho prophyl actic childbirth." The hosp!· tal doesn't demand that the couple adhere strict- ly to their program, she added. "We want to have the most information •. the best tools, to participate and to feel as much 11 possible when we have our baby." r l !' ._..__ ..... Wtdnesctay, Frbniary 23, 1972 OAILY PILOT 3• ~~~~~~~~~--='-- .. ' . Decisions Accelerated ... . . . Options' Multiplied 'Future Shocking Unless Pate Adjusted By CAIIOL MOOIIE OI Ille Dllt'I' '11111 Stiff Sociologist Alvin To ff I er urged a sellout Laguna Beach Town Hall audience to be more selective with technology and shift the emphasis or education to soften our C1ll- lision with tomorrow. "Change rips a c r o s s America today with a fre- quency and magnitude unknown to mankind," he said, "And the capitalist- materiallstic goals shared by one-third of the world are on their last leg." The author cf the best-seller, "Future Shock,'' criticized pol· ltlcians as "small thinkers who plan only 18 months ahead to the next election," advocated "plug In and out education" and described the scrapped SST as "the major turning point of our super industrial revolution." That revolution, T o f r I e r predicted, would play itseU out in about 30 years but in the meantime, is cramming cen- FUTURIST Alvin Toffler tur\es Into our lifetime with profound psychological effects. MINUTE DETAIL ''New things are pumped in- to life with amazing turnover which automatically changes the way we deal with things around us. "Where once people had fe\v and precious possessions built to last, toc;t.ay's society is heavily based on throw away products and moclular con· struction that adapts to tern· porary space. "We're almost to the point of throw-away people. People used to grow up and stay in one place. Children made best friends who la sted. Now 37 million Americans ch a n g e their place of residence each year and youngsters must work hard at finding a sue· cession of friends, revealing inner thoughts and developing trust." His other thoughts about children concerned h o w present educational philosophies rob them <1f forethought. "Future is rush- ing in but it never appears in the classroom still geared to rote learning for rote oc- cupations. SCHOOL ~UIIIIOR ''Education works well when it simulates the society of the future. goes beyond the text. book to personal relationships and encourages more ques- tions than answers. "Schools must be re-ori ented in time. A child is crammed with as much history as he "'i ll hold slill for, introduced to current events and then time stops. He is blind to his own future and unsure of values." Toffler challenged the need for youth to spend so many years in school, removed from social responsibility. He preferred shortening college years, "re-channeling young adults as a vital resource rather than a parasitic in· vestment'' and plugging back into higher education later, perhaps for a change of career. "The hard-hat vs. student confrontations were directly related to rate of change and which tge group Is being short-changed. You~h are pinned down and old age is phased out in the squeeze <ff middle age imperialism," he said. CRAZE CAUGHT He hailed the abortion of the SST as the "healthiest hint of newly sop his~ i cat e d in- dustrialization" because for the first time a major new piece of technology w a s argued and evaluated before it hit society -unlike the automobile, televi,sion, com- puters or transistors. "Such a change may seem remote to most of us, yet it drastica lly affects the way we think, work. exist and relate to each other which is mere im· portant in the long run of history." he said. Each person makes daily micro-adjustments which are multiplied by thousands of new experiences, Toffler ex· plained. These changes are further magnified into sub- cultures until larger units , like government and Industries. are caught in the same crunch of accelerated crisis decision making . "Yet present govern1nent leaders and cundidalC's lar k any sense-of the revolutionary transrormatlon we arr rn- gaged in." he said. "\Ve \\'Oul rl do better lo conce11trale on 1hc grass root s . 11nt icipc1lllry democracy to effect change " MORE NOT MERRIER Toffler remarked on the change of attitude fron1 "mass Is best" lo "do your O\\'n thing" to "can't rope " as ac- celeration of change keeps in- creasing. "Instead of the prevlouslv predicted uniforn1i1y n n d heterogenity. technology and n1ass production arc lean ing tow~rd differentiation. ~1ost .J businesses are n1aximizing choice and a d v e rt I s i n g customized products with just the right color, brand, sl7.e, options. power and accessories for you. "The future will sec a return to one-of-a-kind products based on trchnolog ical know -how. One f a b r i c manufacturer already has a computer-based L;1scr beam that can cut spcc1fic11lly siied shirts as t>ronoinically as several hun- drt'tl 1nass-cut ones." l'HICt: PAID Toffler nllowcd that the in· creast>d diversity and choice of Hfl• st~ les were good but carr1rrl :i price tag for per- s1:no;; l'l'<l('I ing rasler anlid un- prrd1tt:1bil1ty, "l'rcssurcs or making more de<.·1 s11n1s more often lessens <1t1t' rarat>ihty. Future shock I cut." 1k·f'p 111to our problem cap;u·1t\ \\'(' are numbed by scC'm1ngl\ unending crises." 1\llhou!;h conflicting direc- l inn.~ 11f t'Ul1ural drives create illnrss, anxictv, bewi lderment ;1r1tl 11a111e, Torfler did see sonll' s:~ns of relief. ill' 1n·l·d1l'lcd that a commo n pnlilirn1 r,nal. suc h as ecology, l- \Vould hr1ng the similarly sup- pressed young and o Id together for the satisfaction of \vorkini;t toward a commo n goal \~·ith long-range benefits. ---.... a:: '-'" aw ~::l'.!""""'""""""""'""--"'"-Oll'"::',.CC« .. ----.. _ ... • • Memories Recalled • 1n Fashion Peering Around Area students In Limelight MR, AND )IRS. Van D. l\flCHAEL. Skewin. a junior at the University of Redlands, l will play the role of the Rev. Clothier of Ne wport Beach and Los Angeles entertained 130 at a sit-down dinner in the Balboa Bay Club during their golden wedding anniversary celebration. Sam Parris in the university's production of 'The Crucible." Skawin, a ~raduate of Estan- cia High School, is the son of f\1r .and f\1rs. Gene Skawin of Costa Mesa. \VI NNER of one or the grand prizes during a drawing at Robinson 's bridal fashion showings is Kathy Root of '\ Balboa Island. The prize in- JA NET Claire Bake r , daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gaither E. Baker of Costa Mesa, was one of 42 Hollywood Presbyterian Hospital School of Nursing freshmen t o receive her cap, symbolizing the completion or the student nurse probationary period. l • cludes a round-trip flight to Puerto Vallarta and week's accommodations while there . ELECTED treasurer o f Delta Delta Delta on the University of Arizona campus was Connie Hickman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hartzell D. Hickman of Newport Beach . She is a graduate of Corona del Mar High School and no'v is a math major. COAST residents vaca· tioning recently In Santa Barbara included Or. and ~1rs. George Hodges and Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Allen of Newport Beach, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Hines and Mrs. Louise Maynard , Laguna Hills and Mrs. Bernice Brewington, Laguna Niguel. ~\..~ .... jA"-o-;:,--~h/-~~ 't9-~~ To avoid disappointment, prospective brides are reminded to have it.heir wedding stories with black and white J?iossy photo- graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women's De- partment one week before the \Vedding. P ictures received after that time will not be used. Fashions through the years from 1898 when Zeta Tau Alpha was founded to the present will be paraded at the annual State Day of the sorority planned for Saturday, Feb. 26, in the Airporter Inn. Modeling representative ensem- bles are Oeft to right) the Mmes. Albert H. Hahn,-Ted Risc hard and Jerry Nash. Receiving 50·year pins will be Mrs. A. W. Crisell of Newport Beach and Mrs. Gridley Wright of Lagu na Beach. fo'o r engagement announcements it is imp(_!rative tha t the story, also accompanied by a black and white glossy picture, be sub- mitted six weeks or more before the wedding date. If deadline is not met, only a story will be used . To help fill requirements on both wed- ding and engagement stories, forms are available in all of the DAJLY PILOT offices, Further . questions \Vill be answered by Women's Section staff members at 642-4321. Lipstick Loses Out Female Value Detected September PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) -decided right then to be a PeMy Orazettl carries a bi~ police offiCt!r," she said. The purse but barely finds room in • woman was Capt. Clarissa It for lipstick aod comb. Young, still a member of the Mo!t of the space in her Lansing force. oversize handbag is taken up Miss Orazettl worked her by, a .38 caliber revolver With way through MSU as a legal a four-Inch barreJ, extra am-secretary and graduated in munJUon, handcuffs, flashlight 1954 with a degree in police and notebook. administration. Pertny, 29, a b Ion de She learned through a Micl'\lgan S t a t e University former professor that there I r a d u a t e who wears were openings for women in mlnlaklrts on lhe job, b the the Portland Police Bureau, first woman detective In the a p p I i e d and was ac· Portland Police Bureau. cepted. After Clve years assig. ur wouldn't trade It for ned to the Women's Dlvi!lon, anything," she said in an ln-she was promoted to detec- terview. tive. Miss Orazettl decided to be As her first d e t e c t l v e a police officer the day she assignment she drew the fraud found• she could get a day off detall. . . from hl&h school In Lansing Her supervisor. Sgt. Ed for a Carter Day visit lo the Clark, chief ol Jhe fraud ct.tall IOCll police department. and 32 yean1 with the Police "A women who worked Bureau, satd assignment of a there wu IO f&.'lclnaUng I woman to detectives waa long overdue. "In certain areas within the Detective Division a woman investigator will be a distinct advantage, '1 he said . Clark said fraud particularly "has a large number of women criminn's and a woman also can be especially effective in dealing with young women narcotics addicts." There are a few hint! aroµnd the police station that there are some reservation! Rites Set • A Sept. 30 wedding in Our Lady Queen of Angels Catholic Church, Newport Beach ls being planned by Deborah Lynne MacAdam and Gary ~tichael Gillan. about Miss Orazettl's move to News of the forthcoming detective. One reporter In-event has been announced by dicated It appeared to be more the brlde-elect's parents, Dr. wariness than opposition. and Mrs. ~-tillard P.1-acAdam of "They'll watch the I r language for a wh!l~." he said. Coma del Mar. "Then they'll get used tr her.·• Mlsa MacAdam ts a One thing Penny ha.s had no . graduate of Taft High School complaints about 1s h er . ' miniskirts. "The department Woodland H1Us and attended wants us to dress in style so Ornnge Coast College. that we blend In and are In-lier fi!lnce, son of Mr. and conspicuous," 1he said. Mn. ltoland Gillan of Arleta DEBORAH MocADAM ' \ Hawaiian Celebration •1112 Mesr. Mr. and Mrs. John P. McCarty of Newport Beach celebrated their 50th anniversary with a t\vo-week tour of Hawaii and were feted during a bon voyage party given by their daughters. Mrs. Richard Knapp of Costa Mesa and A1rs. Thomas Hickler of North Hollywood. McCarty retired from his third career in 1969 and they have Jived in Ne\vport for 15 years. "Organic· Care" adds natural beauty to your hair! 1, We add savings .•• La Maur's fROTEIN ORGANIC $10 PERMANENTS UP lncludft Shampoo •nd Stt e Feature High Qnallt11 Serlllees At Lo1c Dl•eonnt Price• -Tr11 Vs! • IVlltY DAY PRICIS-W•G STYLING SHAMPOO & SETS $3.50 vp HAIR CUTS $2.50 •p WI Sl'ICIALlll IN MAIRCUTI l"O• C"ILOltlM COMB OUT ONLY $1.50 up WIGlET ....... -............... $4.00 1/1 CASCADES ............. -.... $6.00 1/1 SYNTHETIC ............... -$3.50 1/1 HUMAN HAIR $6.00 up STYLING ONLY . $1.00 Leu FOii l OA'I' Sll!\llCI -Jk IXTltA ' • • . . ' . IW\.V.PJLOT <S pring Brings Carnivals, Birthday Parties ~·(Edilor'1 Nolt: A -d<-~ud lo /'i""1J"rt ll<a<h, i:!Golta Me•, Lao11no Btoclt and Minion Viejo porent· f'~acher oroanilotimu 10tll p~trrin the DAILY PIWT e_pch Wtk. ln/ormati.on 1.~'!I""' bt received by the -toom.en.'1 dept.rrtment or tr.t.Mr1 ... Gartd Smjth, 1746 Cenklta Pl4c.r, Newport Beach blf 5 p.m. Thu.r1da11 for p11.blJcatlon W edntl• ai,P<u.1 ,,'.'"),.dams PT A : ,.. llifn. CUI ford Dcnrm •. President .' JIEPORTS: Mn. Doris Shor!, ~ .~ aecond grade teacher receiv· eel the honorary service award. .. ~frs. A. f'. Dugger Jr. announced ant .. tht:ft poster contest winners are Janis Tomei, Lynn Williams, Scott Davis, Susan Meleall, Kevin Rou, Cindy Sandeen, "targie Sullivan, K a r e n Campbell and Jim O'Shaun- ecy. Balearic PT A Mr1. 11tomas Lal"ffd Pr~ident REPORTS : Honorary service award was presented to ftfn. Thomas Lar· ned ... Ant1 • theft poster contest winners are Kris Terrell, Su!an Scott, Casey Sutton, Donna N o r t o n . Vickie Simpson, Michael ~~Fashions Keyed to Spring Garmon, Traci Lillywhite. ~11chae\ Ferril and Heidi Ruby. California PTA J.1rs. Boyd Mc:CaUoa1b President CO~il~G UP : Mrs. L)'111l Bosen ia chairman of the school's 10th anniversary c e I e bration .•. Mrs. Joe Mtng and Mrs. Oscar Brown are accepting nominations for the honorary service award . REPORTS: PTA voted to purchase science k i t s , reading kids. a kiln, a handball backboard a n d e d ucatlonal aids ... State PT A Redwood Grove fund "". (rul:Ceyed to spring fashions will be the Mother-daughter•tea to be presented at 2 ,•op.m. Saturday, Feb. 26, in TeWinkle School. Eighth graders modeling are Oeft ., ... ,.to right) Maxine Bowen, Terri Chase and Wendy Ward. i·~":" will rece1ve $95. Cordillera PTA Ron Rldiardto• President COMING UP : Unit meeting Tuesday, Feb. 29, v.1 11 1 featu re San Joaquin School Board candidates and last chance to sign petition for a four-way stop at Cordillera Drive and Jeronimo Road . Petitions may be obtained from Ronald Shaver, safety ch a i r ma n , at a» 0589 ... Preparations are in full swing for Cotton Candy Carnival events on Saturday, March 11, including hot dog barbecue. bake sale. game OOoths and crowning of a 11irth grade king and queen. Ea stbluff PFO Col. H. B. Eliker President REPORTS: ~1ore than 300 din· ners were served at the fat her-son ·dinner ... The unit announced the bicycle path through Eastbluff Park has been completed. Killyb rooke PT A Mrs. Ronald Aroold President COMING UP: Suds tlle Magi-· cian will present a magic show at 2: 15 an<t 3: 15 tomor· row in the multipurpose room. REPORTS: ~I Zeidman, prin- cipal, received the hooorary service award , a special award, The Heart o f Kil\ybrooke was presented to the school secretary. Ms. Mona Casey. Moni e Vist a PT A ~1rs. Thomas Herodon President REPORTS : Mrs. Mark r-.1orris recei ved the honorar y service award. Paula ri no PTA Nick Hanson President REPORTS: Appointed to the nominating committee are the Mmes. Jack Sikes, Paul Dumain, Tom Mullen, Richard Schmick, J e r r y McC!ellen and Fred Palmer, with Gordon Imler, principal as ad visor ... Large magnifiers on stands. paper on special rollers for all classrooms and monetary donation to the library were approved ... Mrs. S i k e s reported a profit of $85 was realized from the dime-a. dip dinner ... Glen Dyer, ~ad custodian is th e honorary service a w a r d recipient. St. John Aux. Mrs. Anthony Becker President COMING UP : Book fw and Open House are scheduled !or Sunday, Feb. ?7, from noon to Z p.m. Books donated by students will be added to library. REPORTS : Amendments to bylaws were ap- proved ... Anti-theft poster contt!t winners are Stephen Schulist. Joseph Jiminez, Jay Carr, Karen McCormish. Steven Shan- non. Lisa Sampsel. Maureen O"l'oole. Sheryl Young and Patrick McNamara. Sonora PTA ~trs. Burch Pickett President REPORTS: Anti-theft poster contest winners are Ka ren Williams. Christie G u th, Cathi Bouck. Karen Doyle, Jl.1ark Carnahan, Brend a Lonner, Bobby Lane, Ronnie H o pp e an d Donnie Hempst.ead. , .Mrs. Richard Riley and Mrs. W a I t ' Hemp ste ad received honorary service awards. Turtle Ro ck PT A Orin Potter President . .,. Everyone 's a! Wir:rner COMING UP: PTA will com- memorate the PTA 's 15th anniversary during a meeting at 7:30 p.m. tomor- row in the multipurpose room. An honorary service award will be presented and the school chorus will en- tertain. Victoria PT A Mrs. Douglas Bowler President I A winning menu is planned for the Harbor View School Father-son Breakfast to be served at 9 a.m. Saturday, March 4. Afterwards films on ractng will 'be shown. Racing to g't early servings are (left to right) Brad Fryer, Mike Par· sons and George Frrer. COMING UP : Paper Dr ive will be conducted from 9- 11:30 a.m. Saturday. Feb. 26, on the school parking lot. Mrs. Dean Shadle i s chairman. REPORTS: Bowling team and student councils purchased a new handball court. Viej o PTO Mrs. David Davin President COMING UP: Bicycle safety check will be conducted .at the school al 9 a.m. Thurs· day, Feb. 24. Woodl and PFO Mrs. Mark Hansen President COMING UP: Interested parent! are invited to a Block Parent meeting at 7: 30 tonight, in the multipur- pose room ... Officers will be elected at the 7:30 p.m. meeting Tuesday, Feb. 29. Book Fair will open then and continue through Thursday. I County Conlierence Emotional Health Probed fourth Districl PTA ahd the Orange County Dep Mental Health will spo r a confertn~ on children's emo- tional health. The seMion will be n at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday, Feb. , in the Orange County Mtdical Association building. I Keynoter will be Dr. David Albin, deputy director of Children's and Youth Sert'ices, Orange County Department of Mental Health, who YI i 11 discuss Children's Me pt al Health Services -Present and Future. l Problems with Schools aod their Communities will be the subject of Ruth Rich, EdD, Los Angeles School District. Also on the program will be two UCLA associate pro- fessors of psychiatry. Dr. ~lorris Paulson will talk about Child Battering Syndrome and Dr. Edward Ritvo will di$cuss All You Want lo Know About a Child Psychiatrist. Topics for workshop include School Phobia, Child Batter- ing, Psychosomatic Problems, Management of Behavioral Problems, Sex and School Age Children, Childhood Psychosis, Resistance to T h e r a p y , School's Role in Emotional Problems of Childhood, Hyperactive Chil4ren. En;io- tional Aspects of Leatn:ing Dif· ficulties and \Vhat Is Child Therapy? Other workshop leaders Drs. Robert Steinberg, BW1.on Lagb.,. er, Leonard Lesser and James Hall of Child Guidance Centers in Fullerton, Costa Mesa, Or· ange County and Huntington Beach, respectively;,cbild ~Y· chiatrist Dr. William Loomis: consultant Dale KwU;el; child psychologist Dr. Claf! Riley, and Dr. Mark M1rkowitz, Orange County Med1cal Center. 2:;Studer:its Vie for A,rt, Ta lent, Sales Honors • :fosk Force Crafty A task force of volunteers work in the learning cehter and classrooms at Cox .school each week, aiding with arts and cralts projects and asslsUng teachers. CompleUng their Geor·ge Washington puppets with the help of Mn . Bradley Co mbs are Derek Stephens Ocft) and Francine James. ' I • (EditoT's Nole: A page devoted to fountain Val· ley, Huntington Be a ch, Ocean View and Se a t Beach School District par· e11t-teache r organizatians will appear in t/1e DAILY PfLOT each week. lnftJr· mation must be received by Mrs. Gilbert Turnbull, 5671 Ma ngrum Drive, Hunt· ingtan Beach bu 5 p.m. Thursday for publication \.Vednesday.) Cle gg PTA Mrs. John Shaw President COMING UP: Spring carniva l is scheduled on the school grounds Saturday, Feb. 21i. from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Game booths will be featured and refreshments will be aold. Cox PTO Mrs. Glenda Dickerson President COMING UP : We Ha v e Patriotism ~ Ameri ca n ~Style is theme of the :American heritage program at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 24. Nearly 150 students will participate in the program which will include voct1l and orchestral music, choral readings and m ti d r i g a I groups. All selections will be based on a patriotic theme. Mrs. John Cairns, learning coordinator, will direct the program, and Mn. Gary Belew and Mrs. Gary Bland are in charge of chorus groups and the b a n d • Program also will b e presented during s c h o o I hours for the student!. Dwyer PTA Mrs. Pa ul Dugmore President REPORTS : Prin<lpol Harry Turner received an honorary service award. . . .Unit voted W donate $50 for rtmedlal readi.ng aids for Ille achoof. .•• candy sale I• in progress. • • .Student variety show winners were Jona Bergland who won $10 for first place and Cliff Huber and Kenneth Neeld who tied for second place and each received $5. Ead er PTA Mrs. Jame1 Powers President REPORTS : Unit presented a Founders Day fashion show. Edison High S c h o o I Madrigals performed. . . Selected to serve on the nominating committee are the Mmes. Robert Arthur, Milton Vander Mo I en, Arthur Bailey, George Foster, Kenneth L e s so r , Harold Becker and Gordon Hough. Edison Hi PTSA Mrs. Verda HJnkle President COMING UP: Plans will be formulated for the annual fashion show at unit meeting Thursday, Feb. 24, at 7:53 p.m. in the cafete r ia. Nominating committee will be selected. REPORTS: Unit donated bake sale proceeds of $li5 to the student welfare fund . FY El a. PTO 7'fr1. J, ScoU Fawcett President COMING UP : Am er i can heritage program will b< presented at g e n e r a I meeting 1t 7 :30 tonight in the multipurpose room. Harper PTA Mr1. Kennelll Keller President COMING UP : A rt •I> preciaUon lectures for fiflh grader• will begin Monday, Feb. 28. according lo Mrs. Fred Voss. cht1Jrman . REPORTS: Trophy case has been financed with PT;\ fund> and 11 b<lng con· 1tructed by Herbert Joelln. Identification bracelets "" and necklaces now are on sale ... Culminating a flve- month effort by PTA. city traffic safety department and city council, crossing lights now are operating at Magnolia S t r e e t and Nightingale Avenue. Mrs. 1 Jack Wilkinson served as chairman. Mesa· Vi ew PT A rt1rs. George Blank President COMING UP: Dinner dance will be presented Saturday, Feb. 26. in ~1eadowlark ' County Club ti> raise funds for PTA projects. Prime rib dinner will be served at 7:45 p.m., and the Joe Diamond Trio · will provide dance music. Parents and teache rs are invited to attend. Ticket inrormation can be obtained by contacting Mrs. Jay Lansfield at 842-7059 or Don MacAJlister at 842-8452 .•. . Guest speaker at unit meeting Tuesday, March 7, will be the wife of a POW or MIA. Executive board will present recommendations for a Jong-term PTA project for t.he school. Nieb las PTO ,. Mn. Carl Hobkirk "" President COMING UP: Memb<rs win assist eighth graders wilh a car wash Saturday, Feb. 26, from a a.m. to l_p.m..,, tbe schoof. groundJ. froceeds wm 1>e; used to help !Inane• !be eighth grade clw trtp to Sacramento. llCCOrdlng to Mrs. Rob<rl Stebb l n •. chairman. . ~ . Unit wlll sponsor tee Cream Da y Tuesday, Feb. 29. Proceeds will be donoled to the SUperintendent Parent Coun· ell awards fund to provide awards and medals for Fountain Valley student win- nen In district compeUUoM. -- ' . Going to the Roundup · A lot of fun has been lassoed for. tbe Glll PTA Western Roundup to take place from 11 1.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 26. Featured will be a>chuck wagon, general store, sweet !hop and game booths. Getting roped Into coming by Lisa Sabula 11 Joey Alla!. Proceeds will be used to purchase educaUOh· al gifts for the school. • • ....... Wednesday, ''bfuary n , 1~72 DAtl. y '11..DT H ' Coastal Clulowomen Study Sundry Subjects 1 Reilon&I conventions and Dibirlngs to honor new of. llCm and out1t1ndln1 mtmbtr1 fill club agendas for thla week. Programs of music, dlBcusglon and workshops are pj1111ned. Hoag Hospital Mr1. Frank Flynn will serve as president of the Hoag Memorial Hoapltal , ~byterlan Auxiliary. A member of the 11000.member auxiliary alnce 1960, she has ejven more Utan 4 ' 7 0 0 volunteer hours. Also serving will be the Mlftea. James La Flamme, Tbomu Raffetto. Rudolph Baron and Hobart Smith, vice preaidents: Larry Root and Charle• Whitehead, &ecretarles : Robert Miller, ~11asurer, and Matthew Ken- ney, parliamentarian. Newport CofC C&ndystrlpe.ra, the junior Your Horoscope Mrs. Flynn auxiliary of Hoag Memorial Hospital, received the Dolphin Award or the Women's Division Ol the Newport Harbor Chamber o! Com· ·Aries: Discard Haphazard Way THUR SDAY, FEBRUARY 24 By SYDNEY OMARR Ruearch now Indicates that the composition of human blood can be altered by 1un1pota . Magnetic dl!turbances coincide with certain planetary positions. Psychiatric admissions, I n turn, i n c re as e during magnetic a t o r m s . The Ultimate contribution of astrology to knowledge about ourselves and the world in wh.lch we Jive can and will be great indeed. Humon>usly . u each 1strological factor is accepted. astronomers attempt to label it "astronomy." ARIES (March 21 • April lfll : Pract i cal issues dominate. You can Rel things done. Build on solid base. Leave wishful thinking to others. Creative endeavor suc- ceeds U you are prepared. Means discard haphazard method.a. Be serious about 1ucce.ss. TAURUS (April 2().May 20): Accent on short journeys, messages, relations with close relatives. Older woman may make demands. Be willing lo learn. U patient. you receive surprise -of pleasant varie- ty. You may be called upon to explain position. GEMINI (May 21.June 20 ): Emphasis is on what you own and how you utilize asset!. Debts can be paid and col- lected. Informat io n is aV1ilable. Be selective. Avoid trying too much, too soon. Obtain hint from Taurus message. CANCER (Juno 21.Joly ti): Lunar cycle high : judgment improves. You perceive what Is needed -and you can do something about it. Take in- itiative. Make new starts In new directions. Stress In- dependence , originality. Buy new apparel. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You Designs Revealing Ole Borden, designi ng for ~mbrandt clothes, believes ln the nearly-nude look f o r spring. but "only when it's done with good taste." Strapless bodices, b a r e backs and deeply plunged or h$.lter necklines are marks of hla evening clothes. "In an age of aemal liberation.'' Borden uya, "women Want to 1how lhelr bodies. "If any status symbol eJtisll, It is the body beautiful. There ii more emphasis on the body than on clothes." succeed by working In con- junction with organization, civic or charitable group. Routine changes. Intellectual curiosity is sparked. You come alive. Be involved. You'll be happier as result. vmGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22 1: Adjustment o c c u r s in domestic area . Friendlier at- mosphere prevails. Some or your desires can be fulfilled. Surprise gift is highlighted. Socialize. Improve public rela· tions. General gain is shown. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 22): Aceent on ambitious, aspira- tions. You may have to realign priorities. One you respect pays tribute. That's fine , but don 't fall victim to raise flat· tery. Get agreements, prom- ises in writing. SCORPIO (Oct . z.'.3-Nov. 21): Good lunar aspect now coin- cides with long.range plana, success which comes from past efforts. K e e p com- munication lines open. You get credit for efforts. This Is overdue, but avoid any display of bitterness. SAGmARIUS (Nov. :ii. Dec. 2Jl: Investment pays off; your views are vindicated . Study Scorpio message. Put finishing touches on project, assignment. Money discussion is on agenda. Be frank but understanding. Mate , partner is involved. CAPRICORN Ille<. 2 2 • Jan. 19): Let others show th~ir hands. Take special care wiith legal papers. procedures. Time is on your side. You will gain access to additional in- formation. Don't rush deci- sions. Play waiting game now is winning jlame. AQUARIUS (Jan. 21).Feb. 181: Go alow. Obtain hint from Caprleom message. Stead~ progress should be advocated over sensatk>nal jl1lns. One who advises otherwise is ill·in· formed. Give credit to friend who preforms special service. PISCES (F'eb. 19-March 20): Favorable lunar aspect now means you can fulfill creative urge. Break free from rut. emotional or otherwise. Ell'· citemenl of f(reater self. discovery is . featured. Be ready for c.hange, variety, possible travel. IF TODAY 18 VOUR BffiTHDA Y you ha ve sense of harmony. You are poetic, tm. aginative, capable of making abslract Ideas come to lire. For you, love can be all - and, by August, there will be constructive outlet for emo- tions. Some basic relationships are subject to change. Don't hang on to past. merce for FebrUBI')' today at a luncheon ln the lrvlne Coast Country Club. Kartn Ordneal, pre.!ldent of Can<l)ll!rlpers, accepted lhe award from the Accent on Youth Committee of the group. Ju nior Ebel! Working Together Day to Day will theme the Thursday, Feb. 24, gathering of the Junklr Ebell Club or Newport Beach at 10 a.m. In the Ebell Clubhouse. Luncheon w 11 I rolloW\: Recipients of philan- thropic runds will be honored. A baby-sitting clinic will take place Saturday, Feb. 26, Crom 1:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the multipurpose room or Eastblufr School. Oo's and Don'ts, Fire Safety, Ylrst Aid and Bathing and Feeding will be considered. " Te mpl e She ron The members of Temple ( Sharon will ctlebrate the com· Ing of lhe Purim F•stlval StJn. day, Feb. 27, from 10 a.m. to non with a school holiday program and carnival on the temple grounds. Sym,phony Newport • Mesa Symphony Association wiU present the second Orange Coast College Community Orchestra concert Sunday, Feb. 27, at 4 p.m. in Orange Coast C o I I e g e auditorium. Violinist William Kurasch will be reatured. Musicians Bass-baritone Dr. Daniel Scott, P.1rs. Scott on piano and harpsichord, soprano Shirley Rood and an organist will be featured at 3 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 'J:l, in a vespe.rmusica le presented by the , Orange County Alumnae of Sigma Alpha Iota music fraternity in First Lady Captures the f irst Presbyterian Church of Garden Grove. Work Party A work party at. Thun- derbird Park, Dana Poin t Is planned for Sunday, Feb. 27, at 10 a.m. by the El Camino Real Junior Women's Club. The park Is to be a long-range project of the club. Seminar St a n fo r d University p~ fessors Daryl and Sandra Bern will present a seminar on Training a Woman to Know her Place starting at 10 a.m. Sunday, Feb. 'll, in the Cen- tury Plaza Hotel. L<is Angeles. A dozen sessions on varied topics are Slated. Homemakers Orange C.ounty H o m e Economists in Homemaking will gather in the home of 1'-ir1. J. D. Matthewa, S.nta Ana at 7:45 pim. Monday, Feb. 28, for a proif&m on fabrics by home.economlca ln- structor Jean Hardy and Mrs. Glenn Vetter or I fabric llrm. Toedmistreu Laguna Toastmlstre:u Club wlll co nduct preliminary speech contests at 8:30 p.m. Monday, Feb. 28, In the LagUJll. Hotel. The Mmes. Frederick Atcheson, I re n e McClure, Raymond Newton, Merle Ramsey aod Miss Marlene Burdette and Ms. Mary Peterson will compete. Kappe Delta Child Development Center of United Cerebral Palsy will be discussed by members o( the Newport Harbor A I um ti a e Association of Kappa Delta Sorority at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Hearts of Chinese Feb. 28, ln the Fountain Valley home of Mrs. Peter Schaefer, HB Woman's Club Mrs. Gordon GemmUI has been selected as Woman-of· lhl'-year by the Huntington Beach Woman's Club. She has ae.rved In all levels of club of- fice and is a past president of the group. Coast Juniors Mcmbera of lhe South Coaiil Jun ior Woman's Club will at· tend the Los Cerritos District of California Federation or Women's Clubs fine arts festival at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Feb. 28, in th~ Huntington Park Woman's Clubhouse. Rancho Viejo Ran ch Viejo Woman's Club will meet 1-fonday. Feb. ~. at 10 1.m. in the Montanoso Recreation Center. Mission • Viejo. Women's WberaUon wm he d lscumd by 1pe1ket1 !tom the Women'a Center In Santa Ana. ~ Mrs. Ann Cordes will open her home for 1 potluck lun· chcon Wednesday. March 1. The txecutlve board will met' Monday, March 8, In the bom1 of Mrs. Alicia Coopu. DAR Let Freedom Rina will Iheme the &4th annual ,con· ference o( the CallfQrola Stile Society, Daughters of the American Revolution, Mon• day, Feb. JI, through Thursday. March 2, in the Disneyland Hotel. Highlights of the four-day confab will be tours of ~ Berry Farm, Flr•t M~ D i v i s i o n Band, Cirid)J Pendleton c o n c e r t : B1ml· tennial luncheon; a w a Jot! pre~entatlorui and electloa. f officers. ' Hea rt Sunday Campaign Closes Heart Sunday, Feb. 27, will culminate a week·long fund-raising drive for the Orange County Heart Association. More than 2700 volunteers wlll visit their neighbors from Huntington Beach to San Clemente collecting funds under the direc- tion o[ Mrs. AI. DeLucio of Garden Grove, county~chairman for the 10th year. Volunteers also will distribute a leaflet which lists warning signs and steps to be taken when a heart attack occurs. Area chairmen are the Mmes. Nick 'fi ckncr. John Meisinger and Alvin Hart, Huntington Beach; ~lu gh Berkley. Costa Me sa; Margaret Hatch, Newport Beach and Irvine: Rachel Bartling, La~una Beach; Bob- by Sanford, San Juan Capistrano, and Rex. E. Straw. San Clemente. Contributions also may be mailed to the Heart Fund, P. 0 . Box 1704, Santa Ana, 92702. Marri age of Futu re Commitment Erased ' ' ' • • ., IOWA C1TY, Iowa (UPJI - Anthropologist Margaret Mead says marriage or the future won't be a lifetime prop- osition. llglout IJ'OUPI· About t ,11!111 studenta heard the-1peectl, either In person or by cJOlld circuit te levision. "In the past, a man and a woman cou ld be married 30 years and still have something to say to each other," Dr. Mead said. "But this is not the way life is today and it's reasonable that married in- dividuals "should have recur- rent choice in their mar-riage." Dr . Mead's speech at the University or tow8's Changing Family Structure Workshop was 11pansored by several re- She 1aJd parent1 of the future will be. asked "Ir they want to lake on the responslblllty o( child bearlna and ir they decide they do, they will be asked what make11 them think they will make good parents." She said women will have an average of two children and they will not be "preuured in· to early marrlage and long child hearing." Society could not exl1& without children, ahe said. Mrs. Richard Nixoa, after being presented with a corsage by the Peking m !J/J. ' /J J l Hotel's flower arranger, pretends to pin the Clower on the worker. allie 6 VVig.6 Camp Fire Gi rls Mrs. Nixon toured _th_•_h_o-te-I-;k:i:tc:h:e:n:t:o=se:e=au:t:h:e;:n;:ti;:c;:c;;h;;In;;e;;;s~e=d:-i-•h_e_•-;-l)Ttax Redu . being prepared. WI HAVI YOUR SIZE 2 V2 TO 12 '"'---i Not all •tyles In this size renge. 1----i District Council Named Mrs. Robert F. Smith has been named chairman of the 1972 Camp Fire Girls District Committee which coordinates group programs and provides services to leaders in Hun- tington Beach. F o u n t a i n Valley and Sunset Beach. She will be assisted by Den- nis Hossreld , vice chairman ; Mrs. Neland Sprik, secretary and sub-committee chairmen including Paul McLain and the Mme1. Jack Howell, Tom Fleming, George Freeman, Ronald Weller and Donald Thompson. The Mmes. Howell, Harry Dell and Norma Mccanless were elected to the 1972 nominating ctlmmittee. Top pr1or1ty projects ror the new officers are an ecology walk to observe the 62nd birth· day of camp Fire Girls, a Grand Council Fire, day camp and resident camps. Assisting with these efforts will be the following Hu11- tington Beach and Fountain Valley residents l)amed to the 1972 Board or Directors: Em- mons Miles, Robert Findley, Donald Gugeler. P 1 tr I ck Downey, Dell and the Mmes. Smith, Gordon Tompkins and Paul McLain. ~~1 OPENING THURS. FEB. 24TH !l1eo •••• •l,.•o & '"" wo~• •II!•• tl.M ntn ,,._ __________ _. ~f.ltuJqeM- WENDY WENDY Si1e1 $to 11' Width1M to D COLORS1 •BONE • NAVY • BLACK •WHITE f r11h' young Spring 1tyling in 1mort CMhed (.other. You'll wolk .oftty Jn fo1hion when you weor Heel Huggers. We've goto big 11lection of 1tyle1 ond colors for you to try Or\. YESI WE HAVE C ond D WIDTHS HIGH QUALITY CHECK TH ESE OUTSTANDING VA Ll/lsf ;; 0 100 % HUMAN HAil WIGS -UP TO 10'4 Off.r , 0 ••CHINI •••• •0•19u1 w"u $~9" .... S•t.tl NOW 1-. Style • , , . , ,, •• ,, ,, ••. ~ 0 HAND TllD I DGI WIGS lef. S7f.tl NOW -IHI. Style , • ••• •• • ••• • 0 HU MAN HAi i HANDTllD w1•s .... Stt.tl NOW -IHI. Styte •••r•••••••••• 0 IUIO,UN HAii ,AIJSllNNI '¥1M .... $140.00 -NOW ONLY •• 1 •• ····••••••• SPECIAL ! ----"I IUIOPIAH Mil~D MADI Wl•S Lit._,, .. & CHI JUST $89 95 1 • ... $240.00 • • 100% "·--H:w llYllSllLI fALL .... 111.0f WIGLETS ... '8" 111.H ,.OW CASCADES NOW '12" ... .,, ... · ~ Dl1cov•r a new '* concept in •' cloth•• & , J · • 1cces1orle1 - Ditcov•r.,. 'Jhe SHIRTS ••• $4 NOW 14891 ONLY f Enna Jettick Shoes .__ ___ ~5~,!11e.-.i 'SYNTHETIC WIGS ~~~l· CLOSE0 0UT PRICE $4.95 Shirt 'lale COSTA MESA STORE: 333 E. 17'"11ehlH)><, ...... H._l OTHll LOCATIONSt IRllLT HILLS WllTWOOD, HOLLYWOOD, WOODLAND HILU OPEN MON, S T. 10 A.M. • 3 P.M. ..... , .. n... ..... . ' W1STMINSna CINnl _,...,. ANAHllM 1M WUf UNCOUI A'll. IPMONl ..u.+MI OOWrl10'WM SANTA ANA Mii IA.Jf 41tt ft ....... MWH1 I m BE] MOUi~ t i1S t1 6:00 Fll. 'tH t '""' '"'" SUNDAl OVER 100 'RE-STYLED WIGS AND HAIR PIECES FDR YOU TO TRY WIG and BEAUTY SALON 250.D E11t I 71h St •• Hillgron Square Co .. t Mo,. • 5-41-34"6 • • • • • ' .. Wedding March Char.iges Her Tune Storitl by JJAL BOYLE NEW YORK (API -M. every husband comes to reallu, no .1nan knows a woman untt! he marries her. ransacked the cookbooks to children. ThE"ir name~ are find new rtcipes to try on him , Cwendolyn, Sarabelte, Beulah , and he'd put on an apron and Ronald and Christopher W11sn'l she gay •nd lovely, cheerful as they \'oo'k the fU-6t Nothlng at 111, 'lbe aid of h hill dreams merely married the day lhty came back from step! on ttlelr long pat him. Time, the chief vill11h of their honeymoon and rt(:ed up togelher. Now she has decidtd our lives, did the rest. three. flights of stairs to their that her future has become /;;;;;;;;iiii:;::.ii~iiiiiiiiiiii~ belp do the dishes. ~1arr1age, she told hlm firm· But it has been )'ears now ly before the c e r e 01 on y . since be has done anything in must n't be the end of her the kitchen, l!nd he complains career. She wanted to "be that her cuisine specialty is somebody" and n1ake the l V:·room love nest in the her past. p · e ROOM ADDITIO~S f~ven then. as the slow years mutter their way to eternity, he Is never really certain he comprehends her ·nature fully. Jle Is sure, how~ver , of certain ch11nges in her . slums? Oh , well , don't all such She looks in her hand mirror e KITCHEN REMODILING days pass'! and says, "The world has no e PATIO SCRllN ROOMS For example, when lh.ey first rnet she loved, to go on 1oni:: v.•alks with him, and she'd half \rut at his side for miles withoul wearying. Today she couldn't even walk down the aisle with him again 'A'ilhoul vet11n!I( for a taxi . "four-day hash.'' most of her talents. "You tell me who yo u want · . for president," she said in Her talcnl. it turAed out, earlier years, "and I'll vote was checrlcading, For the last for hun. 1 don't kmllv anything 25 years i;he has been trying to abou~ politics.·• pep lalk him lnto working use for a woman over 40. With Now she mopes beca,use the a man it's diUerenl . No, don't cathedral living room ln their lell me you still love 1111e. I l~room house in the suburbs know you'd be happier with looks so gauche. '' f) n I y someone else." barbarians have cathedral llv· Dumbly her husband ing rooms anymore," sht tells wonders what he did wrong to What happened? Well , she ha1·der and making more thinks now that she knows money. her husband . ;~m~a~k~•;lh;1~·n~gs~tu~r~n~ou~tO:t:::his~· ::w::aO::yo., \;; Their quarrel11 once were as brief and impromptu as sum· n1er storms. he rec a 11 s wistfullv, and were followed immedfately by loving and laughing. !TliEN FASHIONS -Samples of her collection of !period fashions will be modeled by Mrs. Martius ;King (left) at the Tuesday Club of N.ewporl Harbor tbenefit luncheon, Tuesday, Feb. 29, m the A1rport· )er Inn:Mrs. King models for /drs. Albert Hall. · Th£1n. enchanted, he could listen for hours to the music of her voice. Now, disenchanted a bit. he can 11l1tl listen for hours to her voice, but the music has fled. He can't rtmemher a note of it later. Durll)g their courtship, she everything about po Ii t 1 cs. ·rhrre \\'as a time "·hen she Whoever her husband is for, prided her self on v.·ashing tfer she \'Otes against -and in· ov.•n tresses and making her sisls on giving reasons. o\vn dresses. Now her annual He told her he didn't wRnl bills for CQilfure and clothes any children for fea r that hav. v.·ould pay for a paint job on ing them might hurt her . She the Statue of Liberty. said that no. they must have But she still shows up for tv.·o children -to be named breakfast looking as if she had Jack and Jill. spent the night whir Ii n g She ended up having fi ve around in a laundry machine. How Things Change But now, he feels, "she starts jabbing at me on r·riday night and is still at it on Mon· day morning." They are \Veekend horrors. She was so hopeful and Twilight Years Dim Romance NEW YORK (AP I Courtship is the way life gleams. 1.1arriage is the way life is. He used to give her posies. Now , after 25 years of mar· riage, he brings her in a pale tomato he grew in the backyard as if It were a lhousand roses. mering candle. Ah, sweet days of yore. And what is the last thing he read to her lately? It was the riot act. wa sn't it? They v.·ere wonderful -those long strolls in the moonlight together, side by side, arm in arm, they took when they were still falling in Jove . bloomed on the plant in their kitchen window. Today when he comes home he doesn't want to see a flow- er, he doesn't want to hear whether the kids are flunking or passing in college. All he wants when he opens the door is to see her standing there, holding out to him ~ frelihl y made martini. The quarrel starts after the third martini. not to cry because he simply couldn't stand it. But that time was long ago. Today, if he sees the sug· gestion of tears in eyes, he mumbles impatiently. "Well. waterfall, what are you v•eeping about this time?'' Who Cares? jewels by joseph No other ncv.'Speper in the .,,,0 rJd cares about your com-searches for jew~ls munity like your community I conYfff Wfl••ntK l...tr7 ,. 1/1'1~ dally ncW!'ipA]X'r does. It'• 111 ,1,11 ty w•• ,. • 111111 Wll6&1 the DAILY PILOT. ~11ew1...,11 1.-pwtltl, 11141 lllt:r•~ "';;;:;;;:~-~II ,,..,,.. ....., c1mv1 1vt1"''"" ... ••'f9 ll'llrktl 'll'lhlt. REDGEN BIO·WAYE ::.~',.." .lw~Hll,.,:,_~"'il:,': The 011ly Tr11ly ~Mr. Jltljlll 1' M• '"" II .... OrQal'llt Pe-1m•M11t lolly0 WO... C11 Scii. hr Lllll1tff Tilff 011ly WAS Jll Seven Nations Coiffures JOO W. Coott H'Jhway (C:1r11t• 11 Dtwtr) BLANKETS s711 ,'•.I.;~;, KING SIZE 'Wit,,,: c11,1 WE ALSO HAVE FULL AND TWIN SIZE "'";, MANY LOVELY COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM! Bed l!J Bath fclshlOfl,~~.!IPS im1 MAIN ST .. •I s l'•I"'' c.", ... -MUNTtNGTON IUCH &•nkAm1r,lc•rf M11ltr Cll•r11 Ageless Concern In the old days thef told each other there would always be perfect truth between them. Now, if he tells her 11omethlng. neither of them is sure whelher he is fibbing or no t. He tells her what is con· venient. Now when they go for a walk -and seldom it is that they do -he walks three steps ahead if he is mad at her, and she walks three steps ahead if she is mad at him. How much fun it was, before they were wed. to !l(O on a pay- day spree and s t u f f themselves with spaghetti and cheap red wine at that little Italian rest a u rant in Greenwich Village. Now before they go out with nei~hbors to dine at some glossy suburban inn, he warns her. "Remember, don't ordtr anything a la carte. That place is a robbers' roost." He used to have eyes only for her, and swore no other girl on earth was worth a sec- ond look. Now at coclctail parties he makes big talk with every strange blonde under 40, and she suspl'Cts that al the!~==---------~ Aid Fashioned ' . therapy for stroke victims and · counseling for troubled .,, routM are goals of the Tues· daY Club of Newport Harbor's Then and Now fashion lunch· eon and bridge benefit pla11ned Jor Tuesday, Feb. 29. I The day will begin wilh a social hour at 11 a.m. in the Alrporter Inn. Newport Beach. with luncheon and fashions at noon and bridge play until 4 p.m. Then he dreamed of her every night when they parted. Now, every night, he has nightmares about some aspect of his job -and how he has fouled it up again. She remembers fondly the poetry he once read aloud to her in her small apartment by !he light of a single glim· It was fun in the old davs to work the crossword puzzie in the Sunday newspaper together, sprawled like a young god and goddess on the floor of his tiny apartment Now he lies in bed until noon on Sunday. and all he wants to read is the sports section. When she "'as a bride , she couldn't wait for him lo come home from work to point out the new nower that had There was a time -!hey were so young then whenever a passing sadness shado1Yed her face, he told her office he has begun takinJ. his new secretary to lunch V1ree times a week . She wonder11 what 1 has changed him from the shy. grave, chivalrous lad who led 1 her so happily to the altar. What happened lo them? Was it her fault? Could things ha\'!' tumed oUI differently? No, no one's lo blame. Th e boy 11iMply married her, turned hito an American hus- band -and grew older. Fashions will capture the old and new theme. Then fashions will be shared by Mrs . ~iartius King, special projects chairman, from her own col- lection. Funds realized from the event will be used !or therapy equipment for in-patient stroke rehabilitation at Hoag Memorial Hospital, Presbyterian and for out-pa- tient recreational activities. Straight Talk a Masquerade? ~ . Aid will be given to the Youth Problem Center In Costa Mesa for refurnishing a counseling room. The center offers counseling to parents and children to.prevent serious emotional problems. DEAR ANN LANDERS' I'm 24, have a good job, I enjoy good health and am a happy hom osexual. I'm what is known as a closet queen. No one would guess I go both ways. My parents are all the time finding lovely sirls for me to take out. I pretend to be grateful for their in· l'l•.t~ ,. July Date Selected Author lerest because ~ don 't want them to minded, crazy or both please tell me. ~ty suspect anything, But l really don't enjoy wife says J am out of my mind. If you girls very much and I'm beginning to l I ·11 l 1· think it's not worth the trouble. say so oo, w1 ge some munse tng. Our daughter is 11early 11. Carol and The problem is this: When l take out her Uncle Jim have become inseparable the same girl oiore than once, n1y this past year. •le is my wife's brother, a boyfriend gets very upset because he's handsome bachelor in his 30s. Awarded afraid I am going straight. If you think When Carol was a small child she th is letter too w~ird lo print let me tell showed a special fondness for her uncle you it's a common problem in the gay and it has grown !~rough the years. He v.·orld and a word of advice fronl you takes her to the movies, biking, Acclaim \vould be a big hel p. Please don't suggest ballgames and ha s aJ\\•ays been a willing that I seek psychiatric help. I do not con· and available babysi\ter. sider homosexuality an illness. In fact, 1 A few week s ago lie asked if he could am a lot healthier emotionally than many take Carol for a weekend to a city Author Florence Roe Wig-of my heterosexual fr iends. Thank you -several hundred n1iles away lo see a gins has been named woman GAY BLADE. circus. I said no, my \Vife said yes -so of achievement for 1971 by the DEAR BLADE: In light of your ap. they went: parent adjustment 'fJhy not put an end to Now I'm beginning to wonder about this Laguna Beach Branch, Na· the masq uerade? People are hecoming closeness. ll doesn't seem natural for an G\eM A. Freshour o f tional League of American more understandlni and J say it's about attractive bachelor to have no lady · ~ Ne'A'port Beach will claim Pen Women. time society stopped viewing a JI Iriends. At the same tin1e, a JO.year-old Margaret Louise Griner of The Lag u n a Be a ch homosexuals as loathsome fr ea ks. girl is only a child. I have a couple of Balboa Island as his bride dur·· res id en l • s c 0 0 k book. Anolher reason I su1gest you put an end nieces and I can't imagine myself in any lng July 29 ceremonies in the "Strawberry Point Kitchens,'' to th e dupllclty is because it's unfair to role other than an uncle. I need some ·~th Shores Baptist Church, has achieved some success. Il use girls as a cover. You'd be surprised if outside viC\\'S. \Viti you give me your ~ guna Niguel. ts her sec<>nd book, followina: you knew how menynajve women fall in viev.·s on this? -O.B.11. '• Their parents are Mrs. "St bt p ·nl " love with homosexuals and are DEAR D.: I think Uncle Jim need11 ""'-anlel C. Gr1"n•• of Napl<s, raw rry 01 · x .o Mrs. Wiggins received a he.arlbrokt!n w~en they learn tht tn.lb. psychiatric help and your daugbter will 'a. and· lhll· latt Mr . Griner plaque Which waS awarded be needing it before long unle11s , .. ' ..... telling you now that you and your wile should not ha ve permJtted 1 a c b togetbemess, but I make lbls point for the benefit of other reader• who learn from this column. I suggest that you start now lo un'flnd the relationship gradually by engaging a sitter, and replacing Unele Jim ln tome of the activities a•bich be haa pre-tmpted. You must make no accusatlon11 or you will meet wilh bitt'r resentment and angry denials. But get going. CONFIDENTIAL TO ATLANTA READER : If your garbage collector wants to be known as a Sanitation \Vorker it's all right with me. They perform a vital service and t would hate to think of life withoul them. Bless them, one and all. Can drugs be a friend in time of stress? If you keep your head together can they be of help? Ann Landers' new book\,t, "Straight Dope on Drug11·" separates the fact from the ficU011, Get It today. For each booklet ordered send a dollar bill . plus a LONG, seU·addresse.d, &tamped envelope, with 16 cenbl worth of stamps UI Ann Landers, In care flf the DAO.. Y PILOT. 1nd Ralph f'reshour' of during a ataft conference of DEAR ANN LANDERS: If I am evil· sometbin& ll done. There ts no point In Elkl'lart, lnd. an!. the late ~1rs. ~grou . .l;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; _____ ;;.;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;""""""""";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ •. Freshour. Thti' bride-elect is a graduate of Miami Universit!i. Oxford, Ohio and is a teacher in the Fountain Valley Sehool District. KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN Her fiance attended the ·university of Mary land alld .San Jacinto Junior College and ...... a recruiter for the Marine .:• '•COrps. Soturdoyl in Th e DAILY PILOT I l'IKGINIA'S SNIP 'N STITCli SliOPPE 3334 E.,t Co•1I Hwy. • Coron• del M•r Phone 6 73 -1050 DOUBLE KNIT FABRIC SALE! I 00 '1. Poly1tt1• N1w1ltv IC11ih llt•9wl1r r,:,, S7.00 to S•.oo ,,, .,.~ 0~ W11k 0~\y! 5.1t Yiu 5.oon! \'!R;.IN!.\ rs. N1w ''"'"' f1~rlt1 ."1 .. 1,., d1il., for VOUI t11!1r 11w1~9. e UHU.MllJCA.ID e MAJTll CHAlGI • __ ,,--\ ( •. . . •.~ ... ~ ... -. ,,..., ,, \ "·r·-. ·,. r> , .. _·.,r:, .,.. .). '. -··· ·.• -Q. _...,. ~·-~· .. -~· ... -·~ ----" . NAVEL ORANGES ~ $ s .•• -. ..... -. 608 EAST BALBOA BLVD., BALBOA REFRIGERATEO DELIVERY SERVICE, PliONE 673-1310 S,ICIAU THURSDAY, flltlDAY, SATURDAY, FEIRUARY 24, 25, 26 Springfield·Certified SLICED BACON c lb WI IUll~I THI llGHf fO LIMIT QUANmlU MUNCHOS NEW POTATO SNACK REG. 49 ¢' • c A IAG "SOFT WATER IS CHEAPER THAN DIRT'' RENT $275 g;~~ ($ .. H£Y C,Yill,GAN MAN!" 534-2233 I . ; I I : , . I .!. ; . ·. ~\ .~\ " . Vassarette·\'·\ W'rt'filjj)~c flfrcl]l[p \ ~fu® \ "\ \\' . ' rmnlID~fl.:., \iru: 9 \' ~~.' lr Qll.UJ vvfilW o , ·, ·i \ · --··--·· .. ''' c1' \ .. ,\ • " L•1d th1 ,oft lif• in V1111r1tt1'1 ow11 pl1nh '''"'tiori,,. "Y1lw,lo11r", Y1lw1ty f11l of poly11!1t wo11't wri11~l1, wo..'t crv1h •• , i1 m1chi111 w11h 1lll1 i nd clryo1 bl1I Av1U1bl1 l11 l l11•b•r"V 11111, W!t4 Poppy •r Y•llow Dehy, Sllll r.s.M-l ............•..... S25. 27J7 I. c .. t Mw!. ,., .... .i ... • -•1l·ltl0 • • • • • • ' • . ' • LARGER SIZE ALWAYS GUARANTEED TO BE A BITTER VALUE ' • SINGLE·ITEM PRICING-NO CONFUSING MU LTIPLE PRICES \ • ADDITIO'L SAVINGS WITH OUR "KEY BUYS" • • NO CHARGE FOR CASH ING CUSTOMER 'S CH ECK S • TRUTH IN MEAT LABELING -NO FANCY NAMES •OPEN-CODE DATING-FRESHNESS IS GUARANTEED FROZEN FOODS ' CANNED FODDS CHUNK TUNA •• "F.'';'~~39 • CHILI W/BEANS •••• ,,.~:\'!:l 34' MUSlARD •••••.• ".:~~:25•. ~RELISH •••• .'~~:,'n:: 54' .,... SHORTENING ••• :"~"5:1!: 67• .,...GRAPE JELLY •. ":''."~.'::!:59• PACKAGED GOODS llDYICOTY 2.~'Jf lOILIT • 2 Pit f"I 140 SQUAii fOOT .OlL ,.lfm'.011, CMllSl O• S4\IUCil "'!liri.'l!mllill: VEGETABLES '"M"'"""""'""4S• ". . " " "' . • ~•v.u1n1snooinr; _A-COOKIES !lMwtJolM'ft11014 AWAKE •••••••• !11~i;t0r:d_.~37 • ..,..--• • • • • • • iooz~G 9• CHERRY PIE """'™'1 OS WHEATENA •••• : •• nir.';!47 • ....... 1601"1 • DRINKS.; ,;•t•t1:_.~~c.~:~~i~~: 10 ·0"4SPAGHETTI .•••• :t~~~41• -. .KEY BUY ~ M.J.B. RICE •••.. l~Ga~·~~ss• ~SAUCE MIX ••• ~~'1s.':rz~~22• . POTATOES .,.+SOUP MIX •••• ""~i~~31• lllBLETS . CORll ll·~:CI 21~ HOUSEHOLD ITEMS DAIRY PRODUCTS WHIP 0 ..••••••• '!T.~:"~41 • o-4 NUCOA ••••••• ,.~;~.~ 32• oA MARGARINE ~1~~~i~~= 36• GRAPEFRUIT JUICE .;:r~,,:9 5• ICE CREAM ••••• ·~~, ... ~:,i:.65• PET FOODS oACAT FOOD ..... ~~1:~;~~15 • KEN·L-RATION • ~:~~':l'::tl.45 KAL KAN MPS ••• ':"~:':':,'1::27• OTHER ITEMS 11~L~~~:~3gc TEl°i'AGs ~~ ~.:'~ ::1~'=65· AU GIATIM · PUDDINGS · 0 ••• , , .r1 :Z0~~ 12• BEVERAGE • • • •(&vum'1~;~;~::1 Q• sv.-ouNCE _.PRUNES "'""'"""79 BUDWEISER ""1 69 IOX ._-• .. • • • • """' " • .. " "'"""' • o'4CAKE FLOUR ••• ?"~:::47• GOLD SEAL GIN •••• ~~7.11 -~PIE "CRUST ~~~ON0G~,,,.._,.~~~~':c~ JJ• (Spirits O¥oiloble al our slorts with liquor Dtpt) M.J.e. coFnE ... '~;a3· w ~Van de Kamps m n;GU!M, tlil1,. o• llf(lllC f'\U M.J.B. COFFEE"<:! 2.22 .,... PAMPERS •• '.',:';..'"."~~~a.5s AN OUTSTANDING VARIETY """" """' "~001 ,u ~ G,LAD BAGS ••• "!"~"~;;,'\:30' OF FRESH BAKERY GOODS M.J.B .. COFFEE . !lnl»IT 1.25 -'PINE SOL Ol~ .. Kf.lMl89. tf1Av1il1bl. •tour llOl'~I wirh v." a. K1mp'1llt -<SANKA corn£1 99 Q'"""" •••••• :llOl lO!lll ~ -•• ' ••• 0 nozo.11 • _.....WINDEX (;.t•\ltt1•Hr~41 • l\IClllC: PUI Cit llGULAA T;'f-. • o o o o o lOOZ llOlHl APPLESAUCE •••••• '""~:22• ~MIRACLE WHITE ~~~':".;.~:10• .,-.PIE FILLING •• '.":"~\i':'!.::47 • .,-. PINEAPPLE •••• ::"'~':l~i:36 ' OfJ!l«I. UUSHIO OI; ~uo -+NECTAR · -""'"'"""35• li1" • • • • • • • UOlUH o'4GOLDEN CORN •• ~~:~;1!: 17• uti.M \!'Ill Cot ~\{ HfNll _.PEAS "''""~23" "'".. • ••••••••• 110l011 • Q'""'GREEN BEANS 61':i~4:'1',1~~~ 23'" <(4 TOMATOES .•• , • :U,:'J;1!: 23' APPLE JUICE 45~ Everyday Discount Prices On Health And Beauty Aids ~ ... K6j&fl o MENNEN BABY MAGIC LOTIOll Soothes, p;o· 71 C tee ts baby s skin and yours. 9 O% Re gular or mint w11h Fluo ristan, 6.75 OZ TUil ... --BBHY ~taGl(I <1f) lotio11 SECRET s oz ANTl·PfRSPIRANT 7 oz DEODORAMT SPRAY ~ ... K6j&fl PRELL ~ ai!AMPOO I\ II ·~~l~l:L $119 SIZI Extra r ich , a little goes a long way I ARRlD ExlraDry Protects against perspirotlon odor oncf . $137 wetness, from s howe r to shower. Choice of scented o r unscented. • OZ SIZE ~~i~~c~! 8 1~~~0~!!!, !!!.ERG4~~I IOX 6 JC !i~ln!~no~!~!~!gh~r~TER~~~! IOX $2ll .,.+::~~~:'s1 !!!,:~!dDB~gh!n~r!E~P!~1!x $ J 99 ~,!~, ~!9~~n!on!!!!'-!~~T 32 o z I TL 81 C ~~!nl~!!~~ ~~!!rir~gronct.3·1/2 OZ IAR 13 C U.S.D.L FOOD STIMP COUPONS Gladly Accepted FARM FRESH PRODUCE BANANASA ~ CHIQUITA IRAND \.( GOLDINRIPI IUNCHH 12~ u.s.110.1 GRIDE RUSSET POTATOES 10~~:o37c WMllM . 111 S.. ltlt• ( ...... "'" WMllM • 1!0 W. LI, .... A••· AllllA • 27J l. , ..... ltfMI IAlDWIJI PAii • 11'4t 1 .... lhl. CAflll'Ga PAii • 122t M11111 '''· •• COVU&A • f• .... lk,,-. Ct11. DOWIHY • aJa ,., .. _ ... ~. GUDIM GIO Vf • 1Jl11 IMW St. GUNDAlf • 1111 W. GM_. 11'4. GUltOAll • 1000 t.. '"'""' A''· MllMlA•D PAH • IJJ W, Attllllll 'S MUMTINGfOll IUCM • •OSI At191tl At• LA MllADA • ~ MiNfl Mi ..... C11. LAllWOOD , Llikw1M Ml•P"'t C111, U.W .. AU • lt411 $1, Mtwttlt"" ..... U•MOI • 1Mll '"'"' Att. LTWWOOO • 10P11 At*tlt "''· LOfllG llACM • t JJI' I. .,,.., Jt, I. LOS ANG.ftU • Jtts J, lf11Wp A•t. MOtflOVIA • tJ2 W. "'"''"''"' °"" MOMn11uo • as1 ... wuur NOIWAll • 11Ht _....., l k l. OIMf" • 26» L CM.-1 At1. PWDPtA ••• r. VI• Strt•f SAN lllNAIDINO • 2RtS ....... St. f.M• GAll/fi • •» f,l1tT.i111 lhL WI r lDtO • It» • 111' It. MITA •OMCA • 26D' U..111 11¥1. IOUTM IATf • J211 ,.,,,, .. 11'1'1. 1100..00 llACN • 2111 ArttM 11'1'1. fOHAMCI • 2'SI r1tHlc c .. ,, h y. TOllAMCI • )fMI """'''' llwil. "'""'" • ,,. ftlfldl .., .. T\IST• • 1Jf10 N1wp1rt Att. 1t Tit SI, WISfCJ11m11 • 1101 U.ctll ..... WISTMMITll , IJOJI lti"'t4itM It, wtltTTlll • lltJI l•t• ft A''· tn•nn~. 111111. •lllffi• u.•. WK.Ml~fOlf . 1111 Mt. At4M WDODUND 111\~I • 121'0 Vlrlttf ..... d 01Pltr ht~f Sutlt,.,..,,~,11 To Strvt YtN ,. ' " CHUCK ROAST FRESH FRYER UNC~~~~:l~~!LLY 6 7 c I ON Ol!Oll!ll' , 1ll U..::~Lo,~:::v" 2 9 C CMICK1NS J'•·lL•• LI T-BOllE STEAK SJ 49 T.ti lliOPl' ........................... LI ~,~9~~,~~.~~~u~,~~,q!a3c I I ~~J.H,,!~.~O.~ .............. 77c i PORTERHOU.SE STEIKS J 55 TAllSOl'I' ........................... LI ~,~!!!P .!~.~F ............ LI 65 • f,~~~!~~~~<~!!.~}.M.LI 68 C SLICED BACOll ~.~:~:~ 77• f All Mlll JOHN 0 11 PATlllCI( CUDAMY RIB ROAST UMC~{~~;.~N:°:LlV 99 c IONOI Dll!l!I< LI SMALL END.•• 11.14Lt ' ~.~~~ .. ~.\It .!~~~! ...... LIS J 5~ FRESH OYSTERS 79c 1iiliiii~°FiLLET :::::::::~ 58• BREADED PERCH 79• 'ltl ·COOl(IO ....................... LI ~.,J~J .. ~}]!~~ .... :~~.'..~~ 59c ~~!.,!,,P~.~~-,f~.i!.S~-~~87' ~~~.~.~~~~~.!~""' ........ 97' SLICED BACOI LAOYL11 1 .~0UNO l'ACICAO• ~--DISCOUNT CENTERS ARE DIFFERENT! Bigger thGn a Supermarket I More than o Vori'ty at.ore I On-the-spot shoppin g for a pon or a pantsuit I •• A rug or a rake I .• A blanket ora bike ! And much, much more .· ·at dnev saving low discount pr ices I • , Th/1 1ymbol d1not• those items a vailable ONLY ot DISCOUNT 1 CENTERS. ~~; $600 PRICI Pa tch-pocket fla res with frol'lt buttons; prt •t hrunk, color· fast. Atst'd colors, size• 6 to 16. filOT .tiVAILllLI: AT l.tiNTA MONIC .. SPUTJJR GUARD K••ps grease from 9 g C ""'"- splo1terlng stove. r HlllD MIXER Heavy dury hand mixer wit h ongltd ho ndlt and ny\on gtqro for 1moo1h, $141 •asy operation. / • < '' CllA 0 MIC CUP •SAUCER Giant 11 .. <Up· 99 n ... uc:er 11t in C 01st'd de1lgn1. Toy that 1tretches oncf 84 •n•p• bock . ocluolly C walks down 1Joir1 I IY LA KISIDI GUMBY and PO KEY 62~ ... The super-flex toys. thot bend, twist , hong on. 1it ·th• perfect po\1 t 10·10 TOP IY HOWARD No molter how you throw It, it co mt• up spinning I COLOR FORM STICK-OMS Ploattc cartoon ctlorocttr stick llkt magic. No glue 99 c f:""·~-:.~ ·· :-, ; lflllfflllll._~~, I IY NORTH PAC ~~9 RED BIROll KITE 76 ' ALUMINUM TEAKETTLE • Ouolnt "Counlry Kitchen" •lyle s2•J with wood Mondl1. Avocado. •oo• ,.la PlO~TJOH IOI.ICY <iUAUNTlG THBI ,.KU TO !I lHICTIVE rtO.'A \\£DNl!::tf.'t. Fltl ~J'D 1Mt~i.:.~ Tlll~OAY, ftl, 1'TK, ltlt. • ~ .' 'I • ~ . , .., e ~ i:· . ' • OAILV PILOT WITH .SALLIE OF MEAT AND MEN AND RICHARD'S 5 AND 10 Think back lo ~ap Year lte8 .. 64 .. !G. Whal did we do? •• Shame, shame on you .•. 'l11e que! Is $ and 10. What makes a Leap Year a Leap Year •. February %9, next Tuesday. Mark your calendars .. You all come. Join the run. Nickels and dimes never nad it so good. ' That loving big thick juicy bWlk of 7 bone roast .• perfect perfection to sizzle In the oven with the potatoes. carrot.s & onions aoing round and round ~ • Blg family favorite, too, for stews, and brews and Pol a feu . . See bow deliciously white the fat iJ ••. hOw beautifully skinny is the trimming . . . Nope that l!n't grlssle .. those gentle 1triplng1 of itsy-bltsy fat running through apell navor, If the mere mention ol fat sendJ you awooning. do it on a rack . The fat leaves. The flavor stays. It's so great, you don't even have to add salt. Gravy lovers .. throw away the rack 11nd do your umptious pot roast gravy things. TURN ON AN IDEA Red f l1pnel Hash . . Fflzzled Beef .•. the ease of the mean falls into shape. The big meat show is aJ. waya on .. Racks of lamb with confetti c o I o r e d panti · and the shin bones . . A rack ls to a lamb. what a prime rib is to beef • . • The most precious navored part to roast ... Fresh little neck clams flown In from Boston to steam open and eat tight out of the shell. Ground Beel, extra Jean ground beef. leanest ground beef. Easiest way ls to look at the price. You'll know which is sirloi n. The one done up in little 1avory 1fi pound roset· tes wlth a sprigg le of parsley ln the center .. Those beautiful l pound packages of ground beef all IO glittery wrapped in 2 neat half pound patties .. Recipe right, freezer right . . ground fresh every hour. It ls not Uncommon for ~ pie to write their meat orders from Long Beach or San Diego or Palm Springs. SomeUmes we freeze, other times we pa~k in freezer· lainers . . Ground beef is right up ·there with steaks and strippers . . . TELL 'us OUR EARS FLAP Very sincerely, all of our meat is guaranteed ... every little pink Eastern com fed pork chop . . • Every Long Island Duck t marinated ii\ Orange Sauce . . . Every piece o f WW!onsln milk fed veal ~ •. Every round steak, every bucket ot chicken gibleb .. Prime Beef, choice beef .. Turkeys. ham bocks . . U you feel something Isn't real wow. Comt in! Shout! 4 . Ground bee( opcm · the · 'door to a wqrld of family eating : . Skillet suppers, MQJISlaka, Sloppy Joes. Buy a pound and whiz up a culinary storm. lf you r whiz.zer is in a diz.zer, buy a pound of Prize Winning meat loaf with the veal, pork, and beef all keeping happy ta ste com pany .. imtant meat loaf, stuffed . peppers, spaghetti, cabbage rolls. fJste change . . ground veal . . or 11fllburger1, 5 perfect patties ~ the pc>und. Wrjlp Jn bacon, add ketchup and .broil away . Jimmy Dean's pork tenderloins, one of the nire things left ovez: from his sausage ... Bake whole. slice and fry or cut11 up and do Hawaiian sweet· sour dishes. Richard's, the Pe o p I e Stores, Newport B e a c h , where turbot Is the fish of Lhe hour trom the lresh fish market at Harbor View. and our meat men Jove to spend the thm of day chit-chat- ting over 1 pot r<NISt with you. ' .. . ' . ,. I . ' . ' ' • MJ .l rcJJui/;s. ·Pi-oll11tfJ so ~ouial? Our produce is sq ·special because it is so .fresh. And did you know, the fre,sher the pr~uce the more vita.mins7 Over·ripe or bruised fruit has alread'lt lost up to. 80°/. qf _its vitamin!! Richard's always has tke pick of the market because we b~y ·."fiv.erydfJ'f_ in· .~mall .i~ounts. (Never carload lots .) Of • course, the' f1'ri&st costs J "few centsi mor,e , but isn't it worth it • ,. 'for ·yoilr. fa'!'ily's he alth? I • RICH~RD'S, 9UA YOU CAN COl,INT ON. , . ~ .. \ . . • • , . . , , . .. \ • ' ) /'J~i8 . ' • RICHARD'S SELECTS ONLY, THE FINEST EASTERN . ' THE MAGIC !NGREDIEN COOKIES, PIES ANO-CA GOLD MEDAL POR.K, F.RESH .• CALIFORNIA CHICKENS, ·Ml~K-FED Wl.SCONSIN fN HOMEMADE ; VEAL, AND AGED U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF. · ' . WE GUARANTEE OUR QUALITY. · S IS LO~E. AND •• , , , 53¢ F~~k~~~~~~!~I B ~~~~•••~:.:1p:rk Bl• one night, c.Ombine th~ l•ftovers with our fresh ch!_p suey ,.. ve9•t•bl•s +.h• next night. FLOUR 5 t~. BAG ARDEN AA BUTTER 1 LI. ' BEST ' OF ·THE FRYER NABISCO .. Pecan Shortb'd Cookies "oz. 53¢ · Fresh California . ' . FOLGE~ Chicken curry is.q_uiclt encl dtlic,ious, serve wi.tb ~ fluffy riCe, chopped _P••nUts , Chutney. end-crumbled bacon. THESE AAE . SO $WEET, THERE'S NO NEED TO ADD St/GAR! !EXAS, Ruby Red GRAPEFRUIT 8 for 98¢ APPLE sAUCE, APPLE MUFf!NS, APPLE PIE, "1' OR APPLE SALAD ... FANCY, CRISP PIPPIN · APPLES · · La. le)¢.,, 79~ COFFEE 1 LB. FOLGERS COFFEE 1.57 Bonele. SS TURKEY ROLL . 1 59 TENDER. TASJ:'(· RIC\i WITH VITAMINS B AND c ~ . . . All Wh1t1 Moat e L~ ZUtCHJNf . , La." 19¢ J LI. FOLGERS COFFEE ' ' J LI. ' Pet Non Dairy Creamer" oz. MARY .. KITCHEN '· ' 2.29 49¢ ROAST BEEF HASH 1s ·49¢ Jt Oz. , SERVE HASH .WITH ... OAC French Fried Onions ''"oz. 25¢ SNOWS NEW ENGLAND CLAM CHOWDER 11 oz. 3 for $1 L1gh~ & Dark T.ur.key. Roll aoneie .. le29L.. FOR HoRs ci:~E~vREs, 1N sALADs oR TURKEY ROLLS ARE AN EXCELLENT BUY-EASY TO LUNCHES. PlUMP, RED,. JIPE FIX., NO BONES TO FUSS WITH-AND SALE PRICE(>! Ch . t t 19d FRESH FROZEN DUCKS ........... -79, •L . erry· .om .. oes a ..... , · FRESH CHICKEN LIYER·s ""'' ... ''" _..,. 89c •L ~J-l U /tctettJ,afJpiJefie&u4 f~7;~~1i~~ BACON errs '•· oz. 69¢, FRESH TROUT v. Lb ... ,h JIF CREAMY OR CRUNCHY I ~ ,, • WESTERt.i"OYSTERS ••• , ... 1s. • oz. JU IF ·YOU H.AVEN.'T , TRIED TH.ESE YOU SHOULD! MIXED; VEGETABLE.S Wl·TH ZIPPY SAUCES PEANUT BUTTER 11 oz.63,d • SAND .1DA,JS ~ ·0 .......... .,.-,. .... _ BETTY CROCKER ' ,. 1 • 98c 1.29 u. BIRDS EYE 10 02. . International VEGETABLES ALL ~ ' .. . \ ' LAYER CA'KE MIXES a... 3 fol' $1 · ~·· . BEn:Y CROCKER 1 , , ' :/l.,,n. +-1 FROSTING MIXES IG. 39¢ ,'.AN tuAJc)J lt .. li•n,1'Chin•st,, J•p•ntse, Sptnish, Meii.c1n, 81vt1rien , D1nish, Pari1i1n · -or Hawaiian . .f A CLEAN-UP MARVEL •.. LYSOL SPRAY • ..,,,..,.., ,4 oz. AJAX LIQUID CLEANER 28 oz. GLEEM TOOTHPASTE ,.!:., ;,_ ·79¢ ' MILK BONE cot........ ii pz. .i9¢ ,~ . ~#11-~m SOMETHING GOOD FOR YOUR SALAD! REESE "GREEK SALAD CLASSIQUE, 1ECCELENTE SALAD. DRESSING .· ~ 39¢ A BLEND,OF SOUR CREAM , MAY SPICES AND ROQUEFORT CHEESE, OWN RICHFORT DRESSING BAR M All MEAT WIENE!l.S CASINO BRAND Monterey Jeck Cheese 12 oz. DORMAN'S SLICED DANISH CHEES Tilset o~ Port Salut •or '- NAISE,' CHARD'S 49¢ .. 69¢ 75¢ 59¢ i I ' . ' FOR THE IMP;, TIENT GOURMET! STUFFED' CHiCKEN BREASTS 1.79 LI. BOn eless and stuffed with Rich1 rd'5 sp.:.-;i1J dressing STUFFED · CABBAGE ROLLS 98cLL The beef 1f11ftin9 is se.sonecl with onion, bell pepper, celery end e dash of 'erlic. ·' MARINATED MEAT BALLS A blend of beef en~ pork in•e spicy tometo sauce. ' , I 98( LI. STUFFED 1RPUND STEAK To brr:ise in wine end herbs. 1, 19 LI, Stuffed ROASTING CHICKEN 79c LI. Just pop in the o~en! AD PRl,CES EFFECTIVE FEB. 24.27 ENGLISH MUFFINS WITH SPICY TO~PINGS 10 oz. PICCADILLY CIRCLES •• ,......, 49¢ Treesweet Orange Juice •oz. 4'for Sl • • Skinner Egg Noodle& ·a·oz: · 29¢ GLACIER I MELON . BAL_LS Glacier MIXED FRUIT . ,, oz. 39¢ I 3!• ' . Glacie ~ ·sl~e-d Peach's "oz. • r '· ' ATIENTION! ··Do ,you belon9 to • Youth Group, PTA, Aujtilli•ry?' Is yoor 9rcfup plannin9 a JAKE SAte, RUMMAGE SALE or aoy oth•r event?'Plan to hold it at R.ich•rd's durin9 oor .(4th Anniver11ry, March County Fair! 01 ... Do you have a hobby or skill or collec. tlon you wouW Ii'• to ·shef'• -Show it at Richarcfs. 'I For. rnore information and dates, call M1r9arat Starks or Hugh Mynett et Ri•hud's -· 67l-6l601! . " I ' I 6 72¢ HONEY BRAN' MUFFINS HOT CROSS BUNS 6 "for 59¢ I CHOCOLATE F.UDGE LOAF DUTCH CRUNCH BREAD • 79¢ \1 49¢ OUR MASTER BAKERS BAKE FRESH DAil Y IN OUR OWN KITCHEN RIGHT IN THE STORE! HARBOR VIEW 1660 Mac Arthur, OPEN DAILY 9 -8, SUN. 9 -6 wport.Beach f .. I 67J.21SS 1 !XCLUSIVEL Y LIDO. . . IUY :llN ARMFUL OF SUNSHINE ' . . ' DAJfODILS .. ' ' 95!: DOIIN ., • .... 1 ., t • LI DO CENTER 3433 Vja Lido, Newport Beach • OPEN DAILY 9 -7, SUN. 9'...., 6 ' ' • " • . , ' I ' < ' • ' ., • )f. • t, " ' l'ILOT·AOVtATJSER I • ·~.·:····. •; -.; ·.v • USDA Choic:· 'r' - USDA Grade ~ Whole or Piece$ 09 Shoulder Grade Beef ''A'' Quality • Ideal for Bladt Cut Flavorful . Poppy Brand Baking · USDA Choice Blade Cut 4 to 6-lb. Wt. It's Nutritious Grode Lomb DISCOUNT Range And Delicious! DISCOUNT PRICED! DISCOVNT . DISCOUNT PRICED I PRICE DI lb. PRICIDI · ' lb. ' . '. Round Steak Pork Steaks· USDA Choice Beef Full Cuts -Bone-Jn ~ Euten Gr1 i1-Fed Leon Butt Cuts $10' Boneless Roast uso1c~.1coa•" 99c lb. · . Chuck-Ro lled & Tied lb. I• lb. 79c p··· e ·ce Bologna st1.-•10"111' 59c . In Random Weights lb. Shoultler Blade Cut 99c USDA Choice Gro de lb. O.,.Bone "o~s_t_·_us5_~:·_i~~_1,c:s_''.ef_~_~::_8 ..... 9_c Lamb Chops . Rib Steak ~D':~::i::i ,.1109 FRESH FRYER All Beef Franks e:~ 'i~'.69' SAFEWAY QUALITY , CANNED HAMS • ' -j :;~;'c:!k~d s· -lb s499 Discount " Pricttl Can· F•ESH PICNIC STYLE PORK ROAST Eastern Grain- Ftd Pork A Great Ta1t1I • 1~59c Top Sirloin J.':~::~ ,..11" WINGS Fryer,r.arts •·;:;,;-,;;~"' .. 69' SI .Iced Bacon "'"""'m"' '"' 79' Spa '1bs 1'"'m'~' 89' '"'klo>O ,.,: Ecinomical •~us.a 1' Cooked Ham ~.=~.~ 59' i11~::~:·1 2·9c Fis kes ~:= 'i;;.<39° B ef P. tt• chuck'WGfOll 89' P · So '1llet cairt.Choict ,., .. 99• e a 1es '""''~"' "· m•! 1b. '""'''"'" , •• 1-Dor. Ctn. SAFEWAY SUPER SAVERS . 81opChoiceDogFood ~l~!z. "; 8F.olger' s C.off ee 3 c~~ $2 22' -~~!~.~-=u~~rH~~~.~s39c ~ •. 'Pr'eserves . ' Empress a.:and . 28-oz79c a formula 409 69c ' , Blackberry or Strawberry . Jar , . , I Sprny Cl"'1" ll-111t1 l tl. '1 •. f J h C $,38 A Beef Stew 65 c :'.' es.co ras ans ~~I: ~ • ~n~Moore llo"CICH • S f · w I Drinking ''4 \ .a eway , a er De-1:!ized_Gal.~~ t • , ,,_ > l • ( ' l ,1 • FACELLE BATHR~O.~ TISSUE · • ~:::: · 27·c 2-Roll Pack FROZ£N FOODS AT DISCOUNT ' • \ .•. BEL-AIR PIZZAS · sausage ~kg. of 4 59c . (Pepperoni Pkg. of4·69~ ,, ~ ' ! • GLAD SANDWICH ·~"$ Stock·U11 • 1· ·9· j Buy I ;' ' Pkg.of80 , ' • l ... \, •' ' HEAL TH & BEAUTY AIDS HAIR SPRAY Sprays Invisible 13·oL STYLI ' 59c ~ Net To Hold Hair. Can . . • , SAFEWAY LIQUOR BUYS fj!U.$ ffftcti~• In lktnitd Sofrwoy DiwlvntL 'WHISKEY BLEND ,Cold Brook $J98 IO·Proof V.-Gai. ~fh-An~ Mellow , ~22~~~~ .... ,, $ 4'' 8 Coldbrook Whiskey .~ "'" '3" Tartan Royal Sc6tc~., ~ ,,. '4" Stanton's Gin v~~~"-'"" '41' SAFEWAY BRAND Regula r or Th ick Sliced DISCOUNT PRICED! 1-lb. pkg • Pork Sausage Farmer John Pure Pork ~ Regular or Hot 1-lb. roll Vacuum Pack -Rich ••~nt flno• Aunt Jeniima Waffles ~:::41 • Meat Pies 'O::~' ~:: 25' Brussels Sprouts ~ ~Ii 25' Mini or Crest Toothpaste ';'.::~ 77c ''" Contac Nasal Mist ~~-$)39 " Coffee Cake •• .':'t.=~'c:::!':,.,,,29' " English Muffins 'lh.~~,... 33' _.~~!!!ES 311• $1 !~H~rt~UTS . ' 0 J • .... ''"22 ' range UICI •• II• ·~,~~~~" NOODLES l!l1h Jo Protolo -l·IL 19C Quolity And Convenience Pka. t -~~~,1h~F~~~or:81e:M:T:bl:ur:•::::-;---~ , "" ~ IPflCTIVI IN .- 0$ A GHlS & DR ANGE C()UliTY (tltlPT tlTAUllA) Flin,tone Vitamins ~:~$1•1 I Skylark Brea4 '~...!'~"' 3 t::, '1 REEN BEANS c SQ~ASH ontuckyWondtrs ii. 29 JtolionVonety 11.19 GALLON TAMS Stotk.· 7 .~r,, 7c GALLON AZALEAS l,.,.., $J25 "cri11J 111111 POTTED AIR MUMS FERNS ' w~~ $199 '\::~ 99c •11. Pit 3·11. Pet . I l • . . . ' • • Wed~. F""""' 23, 1972 , , • LEAP YE'AR WINNER · v •Steak That Man ·Way to Heart " ·Mush.rooming • 'Steak that man -thla being !Aap Year -U ')'OU'd claim '9'1 loYinJ admiration "as long ';.you both shall live." \:Dressed with a mushroom pmlsb, steak is twice as tempting, It's upecially good, too, with aauteed or creamed mushrooms served as an ac- compaJ\Ylng vegetable. Use either fresh or canned mushrooms with steak. (Blot canned mushrooms with paper towels to prevint spattering when sauteed in hot fat.) U mushroom caps are to be broiled. brush liberally with melted butter or margarine, aet on a bat proof platter and broil four· or five inches from the beat IOlltu. Allow about two. minutes per aide, turning once. Flambe the bot mushroom c:aps to produce a spectacular. JUst as they are to be served, pour about a half teaspoon warmed brandy or rum in ucb m~. lbeu touch with a match. ClrTY them to Ole table with tbt blue flames licking across the platter. 1If you really want to show your e1pertise u mushroom ~kery, learn to Dute tbem. Very French. very attractive. Hold· a .sharp small , knife ateady In your right hand ; tbe mushroom cap ln your left hand approaches the mo- tionless knlle and cuts Itself on It. '6'tart ·in the center of the mushroom cap and cut a &ri.ceful curve or arc down to tile edge cf tbe cap. Thb lakes yhctlce, but it's fun to do and most Impressive. ·Until you perfect your mushroom nuUng, make him happy with Swiss S t e a k Jardiniere which r e q u t r e 1 mushrooms, also a deHcious Mwhroom Marsala S t e a k ~·"- SWISS STEAK JARDINIERE t pound fresh mushrooin or 2 cans (6 to a ounces each) whole mushrooms Aristocrat Sprouting Aristocrat of cabbages is the ptrt Brusael• sprout Thtae doll -1iud cabbages '1• best cooked rapidly In a J11inimum of bolling, sailed w1ter in a covered 1>0t about 1 ~o minutu. Good quality . sprouta are hard or compact, trllh, or bright =~ance with a ~ green ,\void purry sprools and !boll wttb willed or yellow 1 ..... Jruuell sprouts were so nuned boclllN they wore Cini Jrown on a Jatf!:t scale around !Jnlllell In Bela:ium. By 1793, &hty nre ln markets on 1n ln- -llollll ocol• ro lhey have -wllh 111 quite a while. lni-1I gproufl ara highly Jiutr!Uoul, • I p e C la U 1 Jn vtttania "~;·. 2 poUnds boneless beef rump. round .or chu·ck, ~ inch thick ''• cup flour 3 tablespoons oil 1A cup chopped onion l·small clove garlic, minced I can (1 pound) tomatoes, broken up 11/.t teaspoons salt in teB.spoon ground black pepper t 6 medium carrots , peeled and sliced 2 green peppers, seeded and cut into l·inch pieces Rinse, pat dry and 'halve fresh mushrooms or drain canned mushrooms: set aside. Dredge meat with flour. Pound flour into both sides with a heavy plate. In a Dutch oven or heavy pot heat oil. Add meat and brown well on both sides. Add onion and garlic; saute 3 minutes. Stir in tomatoes, salt and black pepper. Cover, reduce beat and slm· mer 45 minutes. Add carrOts; cover and cook 30 mJnutes. Then add green peppers and reserved mushrooms. Cover and cook 15 minutes longer or until meat and vegetables are tender. Serves six. MUSHROOM MARSALA STEAK SAUCE ~ pound fresh mushrooms or 1 can (3 to 4 ounces) sliced mushrooms 3 tablespoons ·butter or margarini!, divided I medium onion, fmely chop. peel 1 clove garlic, minced 1 can ( 10 \ii ounces l con- densed beef broth-!\\ tablespoons tomato paste \\ teaspoon ground black pepper 2 teaspoons cornstarch 1 tablespoon cold water 2 tablespoons Marsala wine Rinse, pal dry and slice £resit mushrooms ( m a k e s about 11/~ cups) or ttrain can- ned mushrooms; set aside. Jn a small saucepan heal l tablespoon of the butter. Add onion and garlic and saute un- UI golden. Add broth, tomato paste and black pepper. Bring to boiling point; reduce hellt, cover and simmer 10 minutes. Meanwhlle, In a.small iltillet heat remaining 2 tablespoo'M butter; add mushrooms and saute until golden. Set aside. Blend cornstarch w l t h waler. Mix some of the boJ onion mixture Into cornstarch mixturt and rtturn to saucepan: cook until clear and thickened, stirring. A d d saulted mushrooms a n d Marsala . Bring to boiling point and serve over steak or me.at loaf. Makes about two cupa. . ' • • • • l • • FOR 25. /_ - ......... ·fl "'t4 '!2 oi .. c.t,t{: 2 2t= =•·, -~· ' . .-ea ·,lb,'. lfD.CIACltls ,~ " . t STACI.PA«""-"' _ ·+ 41C · ••cu~ 7-SC' -U,.n I QTS.-, . SC!llU•·s 83~ • • " CA11,K SAIT ••·oz.· ...... ,. ' -~ , r ( .: .. 11(\Wf~Wf"{~j-~~: ·~ .. • • Van de l<am)is .; ' •• . ' . sfttlALS •• Tln.·S•., fill, 24-21 .~ ~"' ., ' .:: . . ·~ llrp E~ •. · .. •• ·:· S111m1 r'e,d_ .. 21 111:• .. • • " y · .. Bran·· · !t Mutnqs ....... f'll, ~ ~- ' • Apple SIUCI !t Cak,.,.,1 ....... 1 lallr, 1111. • wt1r11n1r11n11111· r , • • • ' • • ~YFAIR~S_ S.~AfOOD .SPEC·IA'S , FILEt Of .GREENLAND TURBOT ,. . ~ ORrENl~ND TURS'ot ,: : ...... ·f ·lb.-6f ~FRESHFILETOFOffEA.NPEce ..... : . t ... 1b.3f . ~FRESftFILEIOF PACIFIC c RPH ···:·····"'· 9ac ~fRESH ,FILET~FBUTTERFfgo ... . J;: .. n..9' ~RESH FILET OF SOLE H . ., ...... "'· 9ac """6-'-:-.~· ~~~ .. ···; ...... ; ....... ~ ... · .. ·;;;,;;··· ~ lb.sl.19 I ......................... . . , CERTIFRESH FISH STICKS . 45· c; tOz. '-KG ••. ~..: .. :................................................................ ; I • ~~~!!,~.~~~ .. ~.~.~~6 l~£E 4. FOi $ ~.; . ' "~ DAIRY SPECIALS . , ' .·~ 175 E. 17th St. eo'sTA MESA .. ' • f ~RIP.LE ."' ·.t$TAMP!I l ' 1 wtn4MINIMUMSS.Db""°4A$1 "" t;Oupo" Good feb. 2-. .. March 1 ....... ...,..._ ..... ,_....,.. __ . . " ...... . "'--~--.............. _____ .,. ...... '(,f,~. ONI HIMTOMll:AiDUlflONl'" ' .. ....,, '•.tu .. 5HOllTINl"4'.'~CAff ; LIMIT ONE ·COUPON PEit ADUlTCUSTOMElt '~ ·~ a~ FEB. 24 th~MAltC!H I 1 . SAYl'lOcWITH')'H~SCOUPON ( .. ·· a·AGG,E$~.:, . • ' SANDWICH IAGS 1SO COUNT • . . ~ u~i'to~e • · "3" ' ... . )~' · COUpqN~R • · '. . ADliL T CUSTO~lt I I ' fEI. 24 lhrv MARCH 1 , '' f'. ' • • • Reception Expe rt Lore Moser checks a platter of meats to be serYed: at one of the more than 10,000 wedding recept,ioqs over which she has presided as banquet m,anagtU: of a popular restaurant in Ce ntral Park. Al~hough an all-champagne reception hardly soundS e~ nomical , Miss Moser says it costs less than ·a lull bar. Fiddle Grocers As Cooks . Houswives from coast to coast are concerned about the rise in food prices durin1 a ~riod o( wa.ge controls. Some are downright angry, suggesting · such ~es as serving leas expensive cuts of me8t, growing .their ,famllies' veget(lbles or turnlng t o government food stimps to supplement the .weekly pay check. But,' In general, housewives Interviewed seemed . to ·fee] they are fighting a loiing bat· tie agal'l't atoendln( pr!.., at_ gie groceey CX>Unter.,"' .. ~ · "I'm getting p~e(ty sick of tht!e ri,,tng, prli<e; ••·said Mrs. Sally Matero, • Brookline, Mass., mother of two.• "'h's getting so you eal1't !vep 'feed >"DUr children. 1 ?~like; sen- ding my food' bill' to Spiro "'8;new." . 1 Mrs. J o h n PennU)gton, a, molher of three who Ove.s in an 'Atlanta suburb, said, "l don't see how you can reconcile wage c o n' t r o I s \O(lthout . . . stopping Jood price increases al.So. "Jl prlces keep golng/p/' ahe .,.s,:iltl, "I suspect .w. fl'e going to have to do as they' do In H;olland where people have a little plot-0( land outside the city and bicycle· out and care for ti.,.. • Tht women -,..ere com- menting . on an Ag~lcuJtW't' Department prediction, that the average American con;- sumer will upend nearly I per· cent more on, food this year. "Not.bing makes' me mad· der,"·!ald Mrs. Greg Chausse'e of Granada Hills. "You get a dollar ahead and the next weelt you've gOt to pay out two ... Right now the govemm~t ls giving everybody the effect of a laxative ~ they're Clean- ing you out." Of four New York housewives interviewed, all said that their food prices had risen sharply in recent monl?u and all felt that such prices should be placed under ledeial control. Raw agricultural products are e1empt from economic pmtroli and retailers ue permlUed under Phase II to pass along any added costs they incur. 1 tn Des Moines. Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz said he would Oghl like I "wounded ateer11 to ketp t h e ad· ministritk>n from p(itUng a celling on food prlceJ. Butz woi ln "the Mldwes etumplng for s~pport of l'llx on,1 fa~ program. "T~.lnequlty of the present price-wage control program ii bat ... n In the ooarfng food prier, I'• ore experi<nclng ~ ~, ' Mid Al H. Oieml. presid .. I ol the H 0, 0 OD · member United Trlnsporla· lion Un ion headquarte'red in Cleveland. • ''Food costs• 1f1 skyrocJ<etlng; · beef' and pork especially,· and we 111 knOw that it is the waae 'eatne'r that Is hit hard est will\ the .riling cost of food . · ' ''A greater percentage of his wages go for food, and a.ny ~ crease not oftest by wage in- creases. only serves ·to lo"er . his standard ol·llvir\g1" In a San Frencilco suburb, a housewife pompJalned1 ".a .c"n of dog food that was ,&IWJIYS 9 cents was 10 cents yesterday. "I asked the stotek~perilow come,·• she said. ~·~ .said ltf: had to cover hlgber wages ahd '° forth. Well, the dol food went up 10 percent: not 1 per· cent. And if ,thfre 'are wa&e controls, how cab . his labor costs be going up?' . . Mrs. Diana Richards. of . Cimbrldge. Mus.. said· , "I don't buy th.at qiuch . fpod. because I have a. 1m1a1I' fal1\llY but even so I feel the"J>lnCh. "I eat a Iii& bf_. yogurt and even yogurt ptl~s a• r e skyrocbeting," be said. · The cost of tomatoes was bugging Mrs. Jo~n • V • Richards of Pafoi Verdes. ''They've got so expensW'e ttf1t I simply am not goin1 to tat them until the p~lce goes down," she sl.ld: "I went Jnr a su~arket .the other 'day .. Ind ' ·ttieae scrawny, green to'mltoes cost.. about 50 cents each_.'• ' · · ' Mrs. Mary: Thomis o f Pitt.!iburgb, who With her hus-- band r<eelves SO<lal ~rlty, said "I simply ca'n't cUt .any more. . ' •iwe 're goln~·to' lpply for food stamps becau .. ·•• Just c11ft live' on what comes ln." Mrs. Hazel W.alih o f Cleveland said ."The lbuytr Is caught In Che· middle .•. " I have seen the price of 1 box of cereal co up 20 cents in HtUe more than a year. Some~'• making ro me ·mont)" SC1mewhere." Flavo r Te am canned sp1ghetU 'a 'n1d ground beef team up Iii • navor·packed casserole. ~­ ed with a greea sal1d and I canned (rult dessert It ma~u a satis:(ying, time-saving meal. Brown I pound 1round bet! wUh II cup cooked onion, I inedlum <love 1arllc, ml'oced and II teaspoon crusbod ortgano untlloolon la !e'Jd••« Pla c a In a 111-<[IWI casserole with 1 cans (tsv, ounces each) spoghetU hi tomato sauce with c'hee5e. Mix. Bake at 3!0 degreta F. for 30 minutes. Top wtlh greit.ed Parmesan ch e ea f'. Serves 6. • I ' r -- ff OAll V PILOT -' . • ' ' . ,Travelers' F.oreign I Fare , Taste Bud~ Are · T antali.zed With D!Ak NAN: My lluablnd whit l meet. 1he ~pidmLl method. now and then. Add I more cup to 1re1se all over. Cover, let be:twetn I and 91ncbea acrou broiler, 3 incbee a.way from ..-------,,..,..., ... I Uve w tM aood ]U.af cowitrlei lay claim to Mi1 2 cups flour , 1 table-flour, beat at hi&h apeed 2 rile in a warm pllct(90-&$ on a li&htly floured cookie beat. for about ont minute. L.f!T'S ASK ltrt:ue tA '9Vt' traiveled a lot tbtlr apecial natbreads bUt I 1poon sugar. 2 teaspoons alt minutes. Then atlr in 2 to 3 d eta) untU double. abeet. Slide that clrcle ricbt Watch carefully because this ,I: I M .._ _...__ are from far think thia one 11 what you and I pac,age of dry YeJat in more cups flour. whatever ll down, turn oo( onto Into a preheat~ Iron 1klllet, can happen rather faJt. THE F"AK ~ • ~ want. II comes from that your big mixer bow J • takes to make a rather aoft t board aaain but merely • place on the lo~ttt rack of a 11 lt.lt'I ~ th•• , c11.,. .,. \J,W • :... ~ ~Ja:':~.~ ffn 1 ; ~f~1~ ·b~t~t:'1atna~e il ~~~~·~!r~ir w~~e: (i~1~ ~~ oot on a floored board, ~~:.~ ~~w"®J:iJ!5\~i! 1 : 4~dk~~v~nitnutM or UD-f1~.LTc!lf.?~•::!!r;:=. (~ by.~:-. . 1 Ndfl a,1.Y•bere. lt 111 fttt tbat would cJve mom for stut degrees ). knead untJI smooth and ' equal pieces. Shape each into til done. tht J;P won't be "'~:~"·w,,,.,.. boolll.t "Doll•• $•"'"' .,._ brtM .-i we b1ve really· Clng. Some others don't. Thi! Bea't 2 minutes al medium elastic, about 10 rnlnutes. a ball brown but you do that by a :;:1 g11~ i.,~·1~·~,·~,=:~ ~~~~~ Nin '\~' l?OWI tit Wk. 2s~yr!~a~n~B~reod~_:ca~n~be~m~a~de~b'!y~•~P•~•d~-~Sc~r~ape~d~o~wn~th~•__lbo~w::1~P~la~"'~in~•~lf~"~'ed~bo~w::1:.., ~tu~rn'..___JRo~ll_:•~•~ch~on~•~so~m~e:;wh~er~e~l~ig~hl~b~ro~wn~in§a~~und~er~t~he~i~::."!:'#~,,..~fi~1t!~o;t~,~Lo~~:·":"~"'~'~====~~~~ I tldllt JI la lat rru. WINoi 11 · aay tM!t l meal •• nit II I ' pucake. JYllu yoa eat It la laal! y~ 111•• iw• llttl• pocketa t. llaff With 1oodle1. SollledlDCI I cu 1et It •t tile 1ton S.,t oot oftu. Do Y°" tblnlc y111 caa help' GAYLE KJTTU:DGE, Wahloboro, Mt. Lucky )'OU! U there ~ 01Jt thllla tbat..8"11 me dOwn ii ls those who travel abrOld and Ulen compl11Jt becllJle they can't &tt thick steaks or toe water everywhere. l'll try " Rarebit longtime Favorite r~ fads come and go , new product.a and recipes p(()o. liltl'att', but there's an en-· durlb& ~up of dish" which ha1 8toOd the ·t1st or tlme. Wel1h: rabbit or rarebit holds a hallowed lead In that group. The original dish is definite- ly a Welah Rabbit and is the oldest known melted cheese recipe. dajing back to lhe 7th Century. In those-days, as now, the Welsb wer't great lovers of wild rabbit. When a hunter came h ome empty-handed after-promising his wife a fat r_abbit for supper. it was. in· deed. a sorry state or affairs. Some enterprising woman one day probably saw her hus- band approaching the house with nothing to show for bis hunting and created this dish aJ a !llbstltute -for it can be prepar¢.quickly -to save his pride. Or at Jeast, that's the way the story goes . It Is easy lo see how the cor· ruption of rabbit to rarebit came. about. Many persons who have tested the dish for the very first lime mu11t have commented, "Ah, what a rare bit!" But whichever you Prefer to call it, it's ba11!cally one of the easiest d I 11 h e 11 to prepart drsplte ils glorification over the years. There are only two absolute Jngredienl.!: cheese ~ beer or ale. The amount f beer or ale needed wlll vary nding on the moisture content and age of the cheese you are ut- ing. Frequently. a tablespoon or two of butter ii melted in the pan to Prevent the cheese fn:np sticking. The t>ter or ale sh6uld preferably be room temperature to a v o i d a tendency to make the cheese mixture lumpy if Ice-cold JI· quid it added to hot melting cheese. A Welsh rabbit can be made over low direct heat , in a chat. ing dish, or 1n a double boiler. In 811¥ c:;ase, it must be stirred COf14.llnUy with a wooden 1poon. · To serve a Welllh rabbit properly, everything .must be hot. The plates should be al· most too bol to handle. the bread steam.in~ hol. and the rabbit ltl!elf still bubbling from the stove. Of cour!e. the ideal bevu1ge wilh .!I Welsh rabbit 111 11 large mug or glaS! of ice- cold beer or ale. CLA IC WELSH JIABBIT I pound aged natural Ched· dar cheese, 1 tea11pbon butter. 1.1.i: to I cup beer or ale. 2 tea· poons dry mustard. I teaspoon 'Vorcestershire saucP, I tea• spoon paprika. large round loaf fresh wllite ·breed . Remove rind end grate cheetre coarsely or cut in small pieces. Mell butter and tip pan to coal bottom . Add cheese and as it begins to melt. gradually add beer or al' which has been poured out and allowed to reach room temperature. Stir constantly with a wooden spoon. Add the !lfasonings and con· Unue to stir until the cheese "follows the sr>90n around the pan." 1( too tfi:lc'K, 1r11dually add more beer . To ha,•e bread ready for Im· mediate serving. cut loaf Into servln& &«lion~ and butter well btlween sllce1 . Rew1mbte lotf ind wrap in aluminum foll . Heat In 350 de1. F. •"" while m1klng rabbit Heat dllhes In oven for l11l few mlntlteJ before serving. I " . CONOMY SIZE IS .NO ECONOMY WHEN OU 'MUST' BUY ' MORE THAN rou ·usE CIH!R CUT .CHual Cl 7f BEEF ROASTS 'Comish Ga e Hens :,;:. Sliced Bacon #81.0 c.. • 1.u. Pm. ............. 59c ..... DlilLT ,_ '-1.alt.,... fX Fresh Pork r~oast ":'"='~ 55t Fresh Pork Butt Roast ,-:::: 75! I Fresh Pork Steaks "'~"""" 89! • TOILET TISSUE p••DMAnD11n11n11m11111n111111111111 ·- 1~.J!!'!.~ ............... 79' ' . !!"'~y.~! .. ~ ... 4r • • • I 1 I ~mn1mnm11111111mmo1 .. ?1t1111m'f"11'••RmH1111111nn111!1'unl11 lhkw .. v,,..._ ,,_,~,..,_ .. v_ , TIAIPOON, DINNIJt fOlK DINNR l<NIR · SALAD .PORK A SOUP s..boN TUSPOON "~ 1111,~ .,.,,, ..!..fWI•• ..... ,,,, .WC Y•h.ie. Wllll p.(IO """*-·. • • • • • • • • r 01~ • FRESH BREAD 25 ' Wishbone Dressing · ::..":'.. 59' · Pepsi-Cola ~~·-~ 6-PACK 69' I Tomato Sauce · ·~~ 3!25' Great American Soups,;.;;:23' .Scalloped Potatots .. ~ 35' I WITH PURCHASE OF $I 0 OR MORE Exc1vdet liquor, Tobot.co one/ Ooiry ProJuds l lff.ctl..., .. b. 24-Mordl 1 li111it I ,., Al'ull Cv11- r ......... ·--~ ..... 'v ... -' Lliw '*-661: !!!~.!I ... '!!!~~~ .......... 771 PIOIElli '21' Sll'-"POO ·9ftt llO.. Dirt', Oll.1'. lta. lk CW. 7.0Z. II\..,.,,........ 7 . AU S,heer Panty Hose s149 ,. I ' I PIWlUIY llSCUITS 91 ~Miil DI!. wn--... M>l. TUN • ., ............ .. :,. !!'~.!~.~~ ...... 27' f ' Sliced f.1eat ~ 35 r. ' ' !'!!!!..!f.f!...l.! ........ •4" UllO. IPAllUA Wiii fl n Homm 's Beer , . s 09 I NIBLETS CORN GIEEI GIAIT '~t PINK GRAPEFRUIT JUICE 46:.. IWGOD.IUYSI !!~!~!.98~ Halibut Steaks :. '1~ Fresh Trout .:-.:= '1'! Finnin Baddie .::'I. '12! . . . ,,...,, JealofNI Jeo4tcfJ.ttt .;..fliM11M11 Pi.ti SfkD Nt'""' ............ ,f1c ~_, PWrl Sf1cSil l&.Ct. ................. 9Jc .uw. .... flih lficl!t M4L ............... , ... ..........,_. M rri.,.1'°" -. ............ 11.1• °""""'' c.M rm... , .... ,.., ................. "' 0--'• tWdoek filleh 1..ot. ............ 11.29 M Md.y ~ Sfw .. _,.,It OIL , ti.ff • Frozon Food Eldr'a Va/il~•i ~I Pt.1 10.0.. 11118, "'"'"'""""'"'"''" '" itidrfttt C11tG1;9111 kin1 •«l'I0. ... ., ... ,1.~ rsmw.t rNMh Cit.._ ur...., ............ ~ .. .Jrle ~f!.ON-.. .!D~~ Alf """'"'' ............... HO .. UoOollJ.:W, J Wtkh'1 CrwlMny Jwb ML Wt .......... ~ •• ,. .. ft• DOWll,....._Hlf...._ *•.1 ................... a. vene......,..&ct....--. ...... .,., ........... 21. trW'fl" .... ~"""""IOI. ............ i.. . I W• Wiimot UJ.D.A. ,.. si..., I ·--•-11111 1t ... ~ ... 6poon hol rabblt ovor thlck 101 ll alictl of hol brtad Ind IUY~ Adams Ave., at Br;oo,kh~rst, Huntln~n Be· ·b ·s!22 Elli111er Ave., at Sp.le;· ll\tlltinrtun Bia~ Laruna Hills . Pliza, £1 Toco 21082 Beach Blvd., H.mlnrtM .... 17950 .a. Fountain ~allef ~ti=~ or ale. Yltle, 34081 Doheny Park Drive, tapistrano Beac~ I I I ' ' f IDChBPB Sitiak.-:~· ..... : .... 15! lT,S.D.A. Choice Beef! Hearty goodness that comes wi!hlfiner quality.· •• Hei'e!s,dinin~ delighU frBBh frti& ........ ~~ ..... 411! " ' , ' Perfect.1iie tOr frying .•. average weighL 5 oz. each ••. next best to catching them yourself! · I , • ' ' ' I • I . . . ' IJ.!!.!!.'!.~!,!'lf !l.i!~ ~:~~:f'! ; . . ~ . Chuck Steak.~· ..... ~·~~~·~' ..... : .. ~~. 69·& .... Want El R4ncho Quality, and a budget price?;. l Choo~1lJ.S.D.A. Choice Chuck Ro-.t 'tfus we&! , 811116 uf Sh/1 ........ ~ ........ 14! • ,.. » Mi\d sweet flavor ..• Jhe kir,d that makl!ih11ost people declare it their favorite fish: \I H ' ·1~L t' . St . k CENTER CUT! $f 09 a 1..,u e._ s ...................... ~ lb. S9 many delightful \\·ays to serve it, but particularly goo d ,,·hen it's broiled: ., . . Stuffed . Flank ' .. \' • ' r Steak .. ~!~.~~! .. ~1 49 ··.~ .··.-Green Shrimp ........... 5• ~8: .8?~ ....... ~ 4 95 Talk about quality! ••• We use U.S.D.A. Choice beef -stuff it with.Cubbison'• dtessinr! . Pork Tenderloin ............. 'T.09 lb. Potk Sausage .... oLo FASa1o~Eo ... '. 69Ji. .Bonelis1, lean, tendel!, for; a real taste -delight ! Pure! •.•• with old style seasonings! and F.i:e·sl1: . . . Roasting Chicken" .......... ., . S9~ Ground 'Beef ~: ..... !XIU w11 ... : .. :S9~ · Frµ ~. ai>d bi11 r·.~.1j> 7 lbs. avJap weight! I !Y,~\ Fresh always ••• bulk or p~~.at·this price! . 1, • ' ~-.: ' ' ~ ! .,,,, ...;-·' ... . ' ,: .. ~~ :GRO ERY ~A.LEt . ~; ,. , Gala P~p.er Tow els .... :;.~ ........ 29' Wi~ up so many spills wjtlt the big roll, knowinr you saved by af\.01,>pi~ El Rocho! Fro.it 'Cocktail ............ : ...... : .. 4 for $J Del Monte .,.,. a brand j·ou're proud to serve as a cocktail or dessert. No. 303 CAll!· Tabby .. :(at Food ............ 6 fo;.$1 Choose Tabby Treat,-Tuna or Sardines. You and the kitty will be glad you did. 6V. oz. cans. ' Total Cereal· ............... 53~~ . ' Start the day really f~rtified ! • .. 12'..Qllnce pkf. 1 , ... I ChiP$' Ahpy .11~~-· 49' .Chun King Dinners 69' Nab~ chocolate chip cookies; Celebrate New Year's. Frozen ' Hi HO Cro.ckers 1,.qz. 43¢ Egg Rolls ............. 59¢ · From the happy Sunshine bakers. ' Chun King favorites l Frozen. Clam Chowder . ~for '1 Cranberry Juice 4 "' '1 Snow's New Enil'nd recipe f 15 oz. It's new! It's frozen Welch's! 6 oz. Chicken Broth ... 4 for '1 Zucchini Slices .. 4 1or '1 Lyndin'1 ••. aid !or cooks. 14 oz. Froi:'n eoodness from C4o W l 12 oz. , . . 0 & C Onions .... 4 1or ·'1 French Fried flavor! No. 303 Kendall ~ Food 39' Biscuits or kibble~ •.. 26 oz. ctn. Bold ..... Gl.\HT SIZE, .. .. 68¢ For hard • to • waah challeniea I Spinach ·Souff le ... 49¢' What' a to aay, 'xc;ept Stouf!er'a ! Th~ ...... '.''. .......... 43• "Peach! liquid deterirmit! 22 oi. , Pet Creamer ........ 59; N~g-dairy product ••• 16 oz. 1iz,e! " ' !sn't it time you ·J id something 'siJciat 'with shrimp1 Like save ! (l lb .••• 1.09) ' . . ~iilg Crab Legs .............. '1.99 ,b. Fill~t of Halibut ................. 89t. FrOm Alaskan crabs ••• for quality and value ! Firm white meat ••• mild flavor! , ' fresh Steamer Clams ........ :6~ Serve a hearty choMier this week! Sliced' Bacon .... :.u RA~CHo'S.~ .. 79~ ' . . Lean ranch ~tyle slices • .;. thicker l P·1n 1;. · ~,a~··pefru·1t· TEXAS UGLIES! 10 for $1 ' K ~. ', ~ . ' .... I •••••••••• "' •• ' Behind the blemlehed> skin ~es ~-1 lush sweet ~";'dness of the finest Ruby Red !111itl Larg·e Artichokes ... · .. !~R!! !~~~' .... 4 for $1 You'll find the !l3vor you favor in tli.e tender tips of each tasty petal l N ' Broccoli.., .................... 19~ Anjou Pears .............. : .. 19~ Ther,e is a difference in fresher flavor! You can't offer a finer after achoo! mack I • .,. ni\,ICATESSENt ; ? . , .. • ' B I . OSCAR MAYER'S 69c o ogna ......... ~ :!~~"...... .. , • California's favorite lunch meat ••• wy qpen, euy closing 12 ounce packapl Crack~ Barrel 10 oz. 79' Mild, Sh~, Extra Sharp. Stix. Danola Ham .... c.ot .••• 59! Deliciously DaniJh ! , , , Sliced. 'Iceland Cheese .... '1.23 lb. Knudsen salads .....• Jr,,. Semi-sof~ natural chee1<1 .• part skim ! Potato, Slaw, Carrot, Yacaronl • LlQUORl' •. Scotch.~.~~~~;:·.~ .~0!4 .... ~998 llnported Scotch, bottled !or El Rancho ••• Quart tettlt ••• $U9 -. Rose Wine ......... :: .. '1.99 Vodka ..... HAll GALION .... '8.99 Allanca,,, ·for any dinner I Qt. Save 50c on Wotrl<hmidt'al Burgundy Wlne ...... '1.69 . 'Rum ...... 11Alf GAWN., ••• '8.99 t ., . • • Pal•llve ........ 6 1ar ·•1 p,;.;µ Ill •ffect 1'~r. throvg/I S1111., , MJ.B. Coffee ....... 77k Bath ai&e ban , , • pink or rreen l , Here'• nal flavor! (3 lb. W. 2.'19) Fe•.t~,t51 U,t7.No lllll<• to doajtr1. a,.,. diMlv I to'" .. SMl!dav io tor Paul lluson .. 10 complimentary! 5th Enjoy aavi111 on El Rancho'a , , ARfAOIA · 11 11111rt1111111111111 111 11 i1/1 1 1/, PASADENA :·:i,: SOUTH PASADENA: ;1:i'1;. HUNTINGTON BEACH: !W1i; NEWPORT BEACH : 1121 N•wpo:t 01 .. : ,.,: 11 ki 'll·u Ct11h• • 320 Wf''I Col[lr.11'•1 B'1 1 • f11·11• ,: 1r1C: u"" 0 11~:11•· !Jr • W.1rner ~11d Al~•ir11111n R1:u!lw1lk Cf'11t1'1 ·: 7)~~> ( 1,t:iluf ! [h (,J<;lh\ull VillaRe Crnt tr ' ,. I I • I \ - iff DAil. Y PILOT w~. ''br"" 23, 1912 5 PILOT-ADVE!TISE~ 6 Arts on Paris Barge I} JOllNA BUNN a bllf, on tbt river. right In wt'd hav' jam sesaions. ti duck very much. Ptty wife, For the pbeasan11 Guava jelly spice bag. Toss with kraut, 'NEW YORK _ Peter the middle of Parla. We cook· "·as fun. When It rained we Cheray. is an excellent cook:. 3 cleaned pheasants, 1 ~ to Brush pheasanta with bran· carrot!, onion and r11riiway Duddn, who hoatda old WhJte ed and we had a maid whost went below and tried lo plua SM can do anytftln1." 2 lbl. each dy: iprinkle w\lh tall. pepptr seed to1tether. And kraut n1h;-~---L •• ba d 1 •·r and up tht leaka. I cooked on 1 lit· B d 1 1 •·-h •· ..._. menua and mementoa 1~ n was" grea cu~ 1 ed PETER'S KRAUT ran y, opt ona and paprt .... Stuff p easants ture "'ilh spice u.ig to roast· of auut.n atate dinners. that helped a lot 1 e pot-btlli itove. & PHEASANT Salt. freshly around pepper, wlth vegetable mb.ture and ln& pan aboul 30 minutes .be- MOICoW. clra. Stalin. wu • •Cook ln&·wlse on the Duchln conUnue., to enjoy and paprika truss birds with helvy thread rore birds are done. Reniove tutored In the culln1ry arta *' bar&t.' .. Peter uld, "we would hl:i: hunllfll and fishing -and For the vegelable ml:r1ure g slice:i: of bacon tor skewers). Arr~nge birds. phe1sant.s from oven and dis· a boy \y Averell Harrlman'I mostly atflw away tn large he's a good cook . "We ha ve ~' tart apple, chopped 4 juniper berries breast side up in shallow card vegetable mixture. Keep French chef an1 polished off pota, boulllabalase. pot au reu. have II place. a log cabin, up I small onion, chopped 6 whole cloves roasting p;1n : place two strips warm on serving platter. hia eookery and piano virtuosi· coq au ·vin. tht sort of stuff in the woods in Canada. where l tablespoon chop p e d 12 peppercorns or bacon lengthv.•ise on each Stir sour crea m into kraut ty Uvtnc on a barie while a yoc could jusl leave there all we 1pend most of the summt·r. parsley 7~ cups u n d r a 10 e d bird. Bake in pr~-he11tcd 350 rnlxture: add salt anri JM!pper etu6tnl In po.1l-W&r Paris. day while. people ht 1 p e. d ltte about tivt hours northwe.'tt l rib celery. diced sauerkraut degr.ee F. oven 2.'i minutes tor to taste. Return pan lo oven; ~ While HOUll: menu• them.selves. of Montreal. There I hunt and ~i green pepper. rt1ced 2 carrots. peeled and chop-until bird!! tesl done): baste cook about ID min utes more were collected by hla lither. "Wt d.idn 'l have a phone. flah and cook a lot of fish . , 1 small clove I a r 11 c , ped occasionally ~·ilh pan drip-(or untll kraut mixture is hot), ••There are a bunch from din· Friends just e1.me.oot whether .lHere ln town I cook less , crushtd I medium onion . sliced pings. Discard spice 'bag. Serve nera that he played. Malnly. we were docked or fl01tlng. I but t do like cooking game, Combine all ingredie.nts in 2 leaspoons caraway seed Enclose Juniper b c r r i e. a. pheasants and kraut miXlure HOARDS MENUS he Uked . the 1aea of bavtnc, _:hl::d::_:a_:pwio!'::· =:_:M::_:tbt~,::bol::::_t :.•:nd:_:quall:=:::·~do:v.:•·:_:d:uc::k_:•n::d'...:w:::il:_d _ _:bo'.:'.:w'.:I ' :.•::•t_:•::•i:::d•:_· ____ _:_I :::':::"P:_:d::•:::ir:_Y.:'°:":' .:::'':::'::' m:_ _ _:_c:::l•:v•:•_:•:n:_d _'pe~ppe::'.:rco:;:r::n::• _:i::_n _:•:_:w::i:::th~gu~•v::•~ie.::1::1Y:_:· Se:::."'::':_' :_' .::to:.:6::.· __ _:_.P•.:.'.:."--0.:.u_ch_l_n __ •· them 1ufozr1pbed for m• byl· people who were I.here. My fathtr wu a very clOM friend of Harry Hopkin1. who WU FDR'a Kl11lnier. "And another ol bis bat frltnda "'a! Averell Harriman. wbo was ln thon daya work\n1 for Pre!ident RooseveJt. TM menus from Moacow. of course. were collflcted for me by Averell HJ.rrlman from dinners he had there with stalln, Molotov. lnd 'ther ltuulan le.aders." CES Pru __ ••• Tht Harriman'! r a 1 s e d Pettr when his father died and • ·tt was In their home ori ex· clustve S2nds Point. Long .. · hland, that he. rot the French cooJdni l•saoos. The cooking a la barge came when he wu 1tudyin1 music at tbe cooserv11:tory in Paris. He .shared the barge with Bob Sllven. also a •tudent and now head of the New York Review of Books. "We lived there a year and · Chicl<en Lowers • • . ~ Fo.od Fat • • ~ Ezpe11.s recommend that no more than 20 to 1.5 percent of "t the total calories in the. · Amtrlcan diet should be in th• • form of fat. I Problem Is. moat AmeriC11'16 \ aren't listtnlng to the experl.!. ~ Fat consumpUon in t h e • average American die.t is ~ reported lo be two . or three . thou th~ prescribed amount. One of the dana:en of con- ) IUJ1\in~ 1.oo much fat. ls \, cholesterol buildup in the ;' iyattm ... 1 If your husband has a \.. cholesterol problem, his diet lltould Jnclude meats that are hl&h in protrin and low in fat. . An _Ql,ltstanrlinc: source of COJ1: _ ~ cei'ltraterl, high quality protein ' la chicken . According to the National ~ :Broilu Council three ounces ~ of broil~ chicken without bones suprilies 2.1 grams of ! protein and only nine 1ram.s of lat. ~ In tepns of fat content. no meat la lmver. The fat it does cOntain. h.,we ver. hu. more , unsaturat'."d fatt.v acids--64 pttcent of the fatty acids in clticft.n is unsaturated. .... Another ~reat advantaie of chicktn Is that you don't have to add fat while broiling. bak- 'ing or roastin.i::. The nAtur1I fat in t"e chicken skin, Al· thouvh nu!te small . is sufficient · -w "self-beste'' the chicken meat. . , Chicken with Zucchini Is a low fat di sh with succulent navor. CHlCKEN WITH ZUCCRINI 1 broiler.fryer chicken. cut in serving piece! 1 112 te.;aspoons salt. divided i. teaspoon pepper \I teaspoon paprika 1 medium onion, slictd 1 can 11 pound l tom&loe.5 ~ tea~poon dried I e 1 f oregano 1 powld zucchini. sliced Sp.rin\:le chicken with 1 te1- -1poon Silt. pe1>per and paprib. UIDA-GIWIS A ~11111 FRYING 2 ,~~~1rb•.:29 CHICKENS lb. • llJCID-1 L&PACKAU RALPHS 89 BACON 1b. • . C•Hfornl1Qrown-Day1 Fresher Grad• A 85 FRYERS Wh•I•' Iba. a Up. lb. , Miat Meeter lt•f -SPENCER STEAKS Ctnttr Cut lllou!Jd BONELESS STEAKS Firmer John PORK SAUSAGE Far!J'll( Jot,n-1Hc9d lb. 2!89 , ... 1.19 lb. 66 ftO/I I BACON , lb. 75 paek•SI• • C•Nfoml•ft•Qrade A irroztn HEN TURKEYS lb .• 45 HOUSEHOLD VALUES Heavy Duty ,lt1Uo L.tttr Fllta end CHECK FILES Hth 2.88 Your ChOk•-100 ct. or L~•I Slz• e"• Plaln •nd io"L•o•I ENVELOPES Pkg .• 81 Co"tt• ftul• Or Wld~lne FILLER PAPER Pkg.of 68 JOO' icE CCU1BE TRAYS N•w llttlt Prune ''Tummy T1mtr .. PANTYHOSE HCh ,49 Pkt.1,99 TrM,OlllAlllV lllrDUCIO ,lt!Cl PLUStBUY llU-.C-••· -··· '41.ltW•<Otl -··""""_ .......... IAYINQI FROZEN FOOD DEPARTMENT Chlllcktrl>o•rd Food• Turkey a. Gravy or S..oL Chicken A La King pkg. .21 Gr••n Qlant 12-oz 44 Vegetable casseroles pkg: • Plcadllly 10-cz.. Circles or Pizzas pkg .• 58 frtah N' At•dY OMELETS Pkt· or 3 .88 Ch~ktrbaard Food• s.oz.. 21 Macaroni & Beef pkg .• Dtluxe 18-cz. 87 , GINO'S PIZZA pkg. , Jeno's 1 PIZZA ROLLS P-:~: .59 fttlpht Golden Prtmlurw ICE CREAM Pint ,27 PrlC9' '"9Ct!Vt troll\ FlbNuy 24 V'tN March 1, 1t12 You could spend a Jot of time running from oton to store looking for the best buys. But you don't have to. Ralphs ha1 Jow prices on everything, everyday. And if you keep a close watch on food bills,. yoa know that the everyday item• are the ones • that mount up the faateoL · Ralphs thinks specials are great (we call ours Plus/Buy1), .but the everyday prices have to be low too. That11 what we mean when we say •'.LQw prices are Ralphs prices everyday:• CALll'OllNIAN-l'llOllN TOMS GRADE A TURKEYS 11·201b. 38 Avg.wL lb:. MUT MAITlll BllF-IHOULDEll BONELESS lb.1 09 BEEF ROASTS • LENTEN SEAFOOD SPECIAL AT Karo Br1nd-H1•t 'n ••t 85 BREADED COD 1b • Chu·Chu-Pleln or Shrimp EGG ROLLS lb .• 89 DELICATESSEN DEPARTMENT FARMER JOHN 1·lb. 89 ALL MEAT FRANKS pkg. , Ralph1 COOKED HAM ~::: .55 Alp1 Austrl1n • l ·oz. 49 Sliced Swiss Cheese pkg .• Mlr•CI• KRAFT MARGARINE :~: .87 Soft Whlop•d 1 _,ti Blue Bonnet MargarinePko: .41 DAIRY DEPARTMENT Ralphs SOUR CREAM 1' Pini .27 Pini ,47 A1sorted Aavor1 RALPHS YOGURTS 9-<>LCUP .21 Our built-in corner drugstore" has low, everyday pnces. From bandages to cosmetics, ~rom aspirin to !hampoo, most of ,your "drugstore" needs ar~ at. ~lphs everyday lo~ pnces. Over 1,200 health and beauty items at every Ralphs bu1lt-1n corner drugstore. There's more to Ralphs than just low price!. ' A-a.• Mlnt-Famlly Crest Toothpaste ·~~i~ .77 John1cn BABY SHAMPOO "~~1'i 1.48 .MAALOX 12·•Lbott101.08 Large Can Aaua Net Hair Spray "~~ .82 a-Tip COTTON SWABS 80':1.34 Cold Contac capsules Pkg. 0110 ,99 Ralphs Old Fashioned ICE CREAM ~~~.59 PANTRY FILLERS Ol'Clund HILLS COFFEE Ground HILLS COFFEE Queen Anne -10·oz. box Choe. Covered Cherries .49 Betty Crocker 42-oz. 58 PANCAKE MIX Pk1. , B•rtolll OLIVE OIL krett , French Dressing Saffo I• MAYONNAISE Cr•amettt ELBO MACARONI 17·ot. B7 bottll I ..... 09 bonla ,, 24-or. 57 J•r • 7-0L pkg .• 12 BAYER ASPIRIN Botti• 78 Of 100 I Antlseptic 14-or. 92 LISTERINE bo•I•, Ultre-Lesh Mavbelline Mascara .. , .• 74 Antl-~•-;•plrant-Sctnted l Unscented ARRID EXTRA DRYo-oz.con .89 Mia• Cl1lrol Formula Creme Hair Color Pk;.1.82 Intensive Cert VASELINE LOTION l!-:!1~ 1.84 Plastic COntalnar AJAX CLEANSER .21 HOUSEHOLD NEEDS Accent-Atiort. Scent• Room Fresheners ?a~;tt~ cry11ar WhH• Liquid Detergent Softlque Bath Oil Beads St1 Puf FABRIC SOFTENER PUREX BLEACH Easy On SPRAY STARCH F1m11y .. GALA NAPKINS ..... 88 oen • 22-oz. 89 bottle • 48-oz. 68 boHI• I 17·0L 77 pkg. I 1'-g•I .• 89 .~1: .31 22·01. 56 can 1 Pkg. 09 of180 ,c,, @IP> EVERYDAY LO.W PRICES PRODUCE DEPARTMENT Extra Finey W&shlngton Red lb •• 25· DB.ICIOUS APPLES U.S. No. 1 Ruasat 10-lb. 87 POTATOES .:::·; Sunkl•t ~AVEL ORANGES CYANJOU PEARS Mild, Sweet BROWN ONIONS Solid GREEN CABBAGE lb .• 17 lb, .19 lb, .10 lb .• 10 FRESH.FLOWERS Larger Bouquet• STOCKS POMPOMS (+l•x) .79 (+111) •71 Excepl Panorama City •nd Simi 1tore1 BAKERY DEPARTMENT RALPHS BREAD Bullermllk. Herders, Cracked Whe1t 1·1b. a-oz.101f .35 Relph• Maple Pecan Danish ... h ~66 ro"l'.iN01c°Ai<E'1 wh•I• .45 R1lph1 HOT CROSS BUNS P•~'i .88 Dl•h Uquld U-o,; bottle AJAX DEIERGENT.47 HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS Scope Mouthwash ~! 1.27 Lotloft Head & Shoulders 11-•r.1 88 bottle , Plus Pltllnum-Dblt ldge SCHICK BLADES T•bl•t• Pk11J!_S _0 81 EXCEDRIN ·-Bottle of IO ~81 Rq., Surf Spr•y, Menthol, Ltmon Ume FOAMY SHAVE 11-0LCAft .84 Coets CottOn Squares Denhlrt Cltlntr Efferdent Tablets :rkto.47 :,\ 1.16 1kr. 88 botU.t. - Place on broiler raci 1bout 4 inches from heat : broil until browned on both sides. turnina once I about 10 minutes \. FROZEN FOOD DEPARTMENT HOUSEHOLD NEEDS HOUSEHOLD NEEDS PANTRY FILLERS PANTRY FILLERS UQUOR DEPARTME/ofr Place clilcken In large atillet. Add on:ion. tomatoes. artgano ;ind remaining 1, ttupoon sail. C:Ove.r: aimm~r 20 min utes. Add zucchini : cover and cook 10 mlnutti longer. until chicken and lUC· c:bini an fork tender. Yield: 4 suvings. •bout JOO calories uch. Hot Salad Hot bw! .. 11d -oo 1ooc1. oo different. 11 a c»mpltment to your !avoril< moln 41alt. ... _ ORE IDA POTATOES -h-,,UIED HALllLIT --MIXED VlGETAILES it •··~ PEA PODS ... h_ MACARONI A CltlUI ..... _ .. ILU!UARY PIH ........ ..21 D~IVI DITlllOINT ~.72 -.-..17 ~'i's'liwAIH~R ALL •.;;:.ea ";:: .43 WllKLIQUIO ...... 7 LUX IAAsd AP ,_,.... .47 -.oe ";: .aa PHASE Ill JAR SOAP -.1a ~1.11 -TOILET TJISUI ':l.11 nC'1ALT1HUH .";l .27 .... r.i. ...... """""• CHOC. CHIP COOKIES ~.H -a:;:h Hut loby Food ~.OI TOWEL HOLDIRI -.u ·--....... HI PAPER NAPKINI .'II; ... ";.91 ..... l•tch Nut ltby Julct TOILETTISSUI ~.21 --1:.21 CREAM OFTAATAA ZH PAPIR TOWELi -.a2 .. .., Yellow cun1 Pt1chet ":.H -.H -UNOTPINt HILLICOl'PH ";t.fl ' More than just low prices ........ ROYAL CROWN COLA ••• ALMON ~.I.I SALMON ·-RICE KAISPIEI ~--... LIGHT CHUNK TIJNA ULAll OIL .._ • .-..71 IOURIONt'll'.1111..._ .. ~.,. -1iei'rci···--~Al OCH --... • ......, ...... .,. ..... L1~1-.....,. -.73 GIN "'VODKA .:1 ... ";: .41 ... _....,~~ BEER .._.111._,. ':.':M ... __ .... -·a• IMPORTED RUM .. 3.M t:.41 'loflJllll.....,._._ U•bfraumflch Wine ... , ... Coupon Worth 11c-Pkg. of IO BAGGIES ·19 IAPIJWICJI BAGS a Umtt 1-0fttt Ont CovJOrt lltt Cuttolfttf Coupon Goo4 ,. 24 lflni M•rch 1, 1'11 Cook \• cup 1Uced ct"'7 In 2 llbl,.poons butler or martal'tnt until llllder. Add 1 can (I p!Mlndl bar-bunt. i. 'cup -a1Jl>lp, v. RALPHS cup chopped cucumber aJl4 2 loi>Jeapoo111 1ldalY I JI c I d r-Hut: oilr .,,., ul lbtn.-lotl. STORES ARE LOCATED AT: 9901 ADAMS BLVD., HUNTINGTON BEACH; 15471 S. BROOKHURST, WESTMINSTER-STORE HOURS: 9-10 DAILY, 9.9 SUNDAY 1.7261 17th ST., TUSTIN 401 N. LOARA, ·ANAHEIM . • ' I S9uce Slimm d ,I Down J By BAl\BAIIA GIBBONS qallln& Ill lcitchen 1neaks! 1iere.'I' how to make your own home m • 4e low-<alorle a~ plesauce without peeling or coring a r1ngle apple. All you n~ is a, can opener. · ' •Homemade" applesauce from a can? DOUBLE BLUE .CHIP STAMPS VOID AmR SUNDAY, FU. 21 NO MINIMUM rURCHASE-NO MAXIMUM rURCHASE ONE ORD£1t ONLY ANY AMOUNT HUNT'S SNACK 29' PAK GELS -' I • • l • ' • './I • 'l\l I ---. I NABISCO DAILY PllOT R 3i19' TRIAL ,.SIZE Wfth thh c•uJll•"• II• "'l11im um -,urch••• requlr.tf. Llr11tt t per Mup6" -011• C•UJll•ll per cu1+.mer. Veld •fter Su11d•Yi Februery 27, f ,\••I l II l '~l --~--------- Why not? This apple.sauce has that tangy tart, eltghUy c~unky, ri~from-the-orchard freshnts.5 you e:s:pect from homemade. It'• not at all like the soupy sugary commercial stuff, and it's inexpensive too! What you need to carry off this JltUe deception is a can of I THE SLIM GOURMET .GLAD OVEN BAGS PKG. OF TEN BAGS 10" BY 16" 49c WITHOUT COUPON 29' ,~. I CHIPSTERS 3 F $1 I I ~~~~ •• ~.~!,~KS ~ LARGE FRESH GRADE AA EGGS 3i$1 With thi1 c.011po11, no 111inirn11rn p11r1h11e requir.C. liinit ·1 p1r coupon -One coupen p•r c.111to1111r, Voicl 1ft1r Suncl1y, f1br111ry ]7. -GOOD ONLY AT UIGAIM U.SUT HEALTH 6. BEAUT f AIDS SPRINGFIELD RUBBING "FLUID oz. ALCOHOL PLASTIC 1om1 15' VASELINE INTENSIVE CARE ;:~~ ... ~~~ ·~~l~~~i~~~ t'.~1~09. .. ~~,!~2.~.. $159 duct.I and pie fillings in your llG. SJ.4t AT OTHll STOllS supermarket.) Look for unsplced, unseasoo-PEPSODENT I ed, unsweetened sliced applies ' · 4 I $1 -not "llPPI• pie fltltng," TOOTHBRUSHES which al80 contains sugar, llfi. ''' U.CH starch, spiCt and Jots of extra i... ......... __ ._.._. ___ ..,. __ .,..._._,..i calories! ,... QUICK LOW.CALORIE APPLESAUCE 1 can (1 pound, 4 ounces) pie-sliced apples 1/4 cup cold water 4 tablespoons sugar FRANKLIN 12 LI. PK •. I FRENCH FRIED POT A TOES ¥4 teaspoon vanilla 2H"A· SH BROWN Put the apples, •Ugar and . 4 I s1 water in a saucepan and bring POTATOES . to a boil. Simmer, covered, n LI. PKG.I over a low name until apples Mii 01 MATCH are very tender. Stir with a ------------~-- fork. Remove from heat and FOllMOST PllMIUM 75' blend in vanilla. A half-cup ICE CREAM !ervlng ii 80 calories. 1/1 GALLON" IOUND CARTON Why the vanilla? A few11.,, .... _.,..._. ___ ..,.. __ .,..._... ___ ~ drops .added to applesauce tends to heighten the effect of -"---:' sweetness without adding any • calories. Vanilla should be ad- ded alter the cooking 1s com-'\ plete, for best results. For (~change of pace, try ' i.a, ~ • fresh -pj>lesauce. You can W-• make R jiffy-quick in your I · · blender;and it needs very litUe extra sweetening. fRESH BLENDER APPLESAUCE (It'• Uncooked!) 4 apples 4. apples 14 cup cold water TISSUE 2 ROLL PACKS MEDALLION BRAND Peel and core the apples and cut into quarters, then into eighths. Put the water and three or four or the apple wedges in your b lender. Process on high •peed. Add remaining apple chunks, a few at a time, and blend. Add a touch of cinnamon, if you like. Serves four, about 80 calories 1 serving. Callirfg all che.eaecak·e lovers, America's grandest desserts decalorized! For slime<ktown cheesecakes and other recipes. send a stamped, self-adifresse.d envelope and ZS cents to Slim Gourmet Cheese;:::llie Recipes, in care of the oA'ILY PILOT, 16 lroquo~ Road, Cranford, N.J. CORNISH Know-how GAME H·ENS ~~ e~~ut looks to Its shaggy shell, it has thret soft spots near one end . Pierce these with an ice pick and drain olf the milk that is Inside the shell. Now tap the shell all over with a hammer until the. bard shell .cracks and falta oil. There 1s the deliciDWI tenderi nttat to use as you like. To ~hett the quality of a 11 OZ. SIZE c ea BAR M HICKORY SMOKED ' Our-priCa without coupon 39c With thi1 coupon, no minimum "purche•• req_uired. l imit ) per coupo11 -One coupon per cu1tomer. Void ofter SuACley, Februory 27. CARNATION INSTANT 53c TAB COLA6~49' 10 oz. BOTTLES R SUGAR FREE ~ FACIAL TISSUE BOX OF 175 2 PLY TISSUES 4~$1 OUR OWN CURED CORNED BEEF ~~~" OUNG • N • TENDER BEEF LIVER BAR M BULK STYLE SL-ICED .... 1ee that no mold 1s present; ~~: ~s:r:h~ ~°;'~ ~:id~ TAVERN and tbit the "eyes" are not wet or pierced. Lehovers · HA.MS WHOLE OR HALF $ 49BOLOGNA • Use tbat leftover chJcken or turkey to enrkh a bwty rtcel---------------.... - ·lb. MORTHllN FILLET· OF TURBOT ' soup for an indoor picnlc IUJ> per around the fireplace.. OICAI MAYll Empt7 a can of 'oonclensod m1 POii ~~.i;:!,p~~11: LlnLE FRYERS with pockaged e nr I c bed AWUN SLICID SALMON precooked rice, right from the1----------------------box. ~d w1ter to WI can; then add mJxture to saup .. ..... M HIClOlY SMOUD Stir In 1 cup cut.up chicken SLICED BACON· or turkey. Bring to • boll; almmer, covered, for about 5 minutea. ; MORTHllM 79' ... FRESH OYSTERS I I 10 oz. JA• Wltli tlir1 ceupo11, 110 ml11lmum purch••• required. Ll•ft J O.c. per coupon -On• COUJllOll per •u1tomor. Void oft.r Sv"•'ft Fe.,very 27. • D ONLY AT IGAIN US e :l•l•)II3-I ~ POTATOES U.S. NO. 1 RUSSET 10,~ 9c OR·ANGES SWEET "N" JUICY NAVEL BROCCOLI FRESH 19c LOCAL . 1 lb TOMATOES :1· ' CELLO ONIONS MILD-SPANISH c .DtlT DILt•HT FRUIT ..... , ·~1$1 C~O-=-=-C=-KT ___ A-=-IL .__"1.,-,--v. ~o------=.~. HUNT PUDDINGS CHOICI OP CliliCOU.TI •.'39' VANILLA 0 1-llUTTIUCOTCH ....... . ..IUMIO 1 U ., 11 OZ,. CAN lff ... .. .. . SCHIUIN• TACO CASSEROLE 11Va OZ. C SCHILLING • 9' TAMALE ·PIE zi v. ~~ .. cH01ci 4· lb . NalollCe 49 CHOCOUIT!l PllfWHllLI • ..._ ff< C l~M7.~-,~,~ ... -k~W'--:: ......... ~--:f~fk ___ __;.;;::;c:.;,;:___•9 PANCAKI Ml~ a ·es. l•Jl" .... ITC .. c Pal"'°lf" Lltivfd GIANT •. 9c DITUGINT 22 PluW Or. 11%1 C MlllACLI WHIP IAUID DllllllNO '"'' -·19c lb c lb 89'.,. ' Prices Effactlv,•f '111ursclay thru Snd9y ..... 24, 25, 26, 27 ' l'rlces .. ,.., "' _. • .,.._ WI fiADL Y ACcaoY U.S.D.A. l'OOD COUroNS • ' WI •IYI ILUI CHI' STAMPS WI •IYI ILUI CHIP STAMPS COSTA MESA PlACOOIA 19th and Placentia 710 w. Chainat ' ' \ Wtdnelday, Fobrv"1 2', 1972 PRICES EFFECTIVE WED., FEB. 23 THRU TUES., FEB. 29 AANY VAl lETlfS Of OIJfDOOI llOOMING 4 ~~~PLANTS COLE PtANT 48 RAINBOW MIX C PANSIES DA ISIES MARIGOLDS EACH DECORATED 'GALA' TOWELS \NstA"" COfff.E MAXWELL · HOUSE . 6 $105 OL d • V.OY sct>f{ Bathroom TISSUE -, 2·7c ... Cltlll-n, Svgor, Hon.y, Rollln Sheepherder NU,GGETS 6i69c JUMBO ROLL 31c 3-LB. $2.55 ALL GRINDS COFFEE 'YUBAN' 1-LB. TIN 99c DETERGENT GIANT 'FAB' 69c LIQUID BLEACH 'PUREX' 34c HALF GAL. PLASTIC REGULAR MARGARINE 'MAZOLA' ~;~:41 c ~IJMYEI 1601 95c 101. 49c Braunschwelger <•·' •• ·•·• OSC.U/IMYfl 101 55c Sandwich Spread ••••••••••• ~ OSCAltMAYfl 6 53c Ha111 Salad Spread •••••••• :1~ l'Ut.J.SICI 32 o1 39 C Sauerkraut •••••••••••••••••• ; """"°' ' 59 Kesher Midget Pickles •• ';:~ c ~fflEY JACIC-MUNi,ffl-MOZZAIEUA-OIAWAY-lllCIC 83 C K.;aft Casino Cheese ••••• ,,, .. IEEf-1£.t.H .. GREEN CHIU, IEAl'I .. CHEESE, ,OTA.TO & l fEf 27C Afex Burritos ••••••••••••• ! 01. WliNO ICOSHEI 12 01. $I 09 Knocks, Franks & SalamJ,,,.,. ' LHtUOR DEP'f. FAIRGROUNDS ·BOURBON FULL QUART 99 ,.;Df <>'CANADA fifth $399 CANADl~UI WHISKY ....... .' .. DANTCH.UCOAl.,ElfECTEO fiftb $399 te ft, STllAIGHT WHISKIT •• r.---------------------, I KAltASOV HALF $6991 rVODKA GAL 1 '---------------------'· SPRING BEER . ·-.. 6 ~~~ IS&? .. -' ·' -· --" .. ~·· ., ... •'' ,. . ~ ,-;:: " .. • DEL MONTE ~ VEGETABLES •CUT OR FRENCH GREEN BEANS •GOLDEN CREAM STYLE OR WHOLE KERNEL CORN •GREEN SWEET PEAS •SPINACH 16-0Z. TINS MIX OR MATCH s ·oo x • . ~-· CHINESE MENU TO TAKE HOME FOR 3 or 4 PERSONS •EGG ROLL$v ... ~l\iu •• 11.ct.65c} SJ~~~ : AD:s~~~ET}· s:~~~s} •CHOW MEIN ....... »o<7lc $l 93 I •ORK $2 82 • FRIED RICE ::~7 ... ; 11.oz.SJc • I J;_89c . • SEE HOW EASY & INEXPENSIVE AH ORIENTAL DINNER CAN IE c;t\H\1''1'EEI> FHESll! ... Bl\ TllE l'\l('l'S \CH: LIKE BEST U.S.D.4. INSPECTED FRESH CHICKEN e DRUMSTICKS ........ . e LB. 5'J,~ TllHIFTl\l.\H'l'·s l>ISCC)l 1'T LEi\'l'E:\ SEAFCHH> NORTHERN WHITE FROZ EN ..... $129 Fillet DoYer Sol• ...................... · ii.. FILLETS OF TRUCOD OR ..... -79 Fil let of Butterflsh .••• · · · · · · · •• · • • • · • · 1t. HALIBUT STEAKS $1~~ '···· ..... 79 Rainbow Trout •••••••••••••..•••. ~1~·. •• .".. FRESH ROCK COD 89~-..~ ..... , ..... _ 69 ' Turbot Fiiiet •••••••••.••..••.• , •••• , •. '~- THRIF'l'li\IAHl"S l)ISC<>ll~T FHESll FHl 'l'I' & VE<;ETABLES ~~GRAPEFRUIT ... -. --, . . ' ' . . . f.'!it\ .wGMn--Mt'fftMO.-.llMG. • 7 9c ~CREAM PllS!'P.'!".r.'!~'! ••. ,. ... C6W-WlfltQl(Sl'/\IUfl 47• CHINESE PEA PODS •••••••• :·::-• """""""' 48• HOT llEAD SLICES ....... ""•• OflM>T --ir~PlllJi$ 95• 10.l O'PlllA .•. •·••···•••• ,, ... SfOUtrft'I ::=·~~,::~;:n 49• SIDE DISMIS "'•"-" •-•.. u .. WHITE OR RUBY s FOR flESHYOUNG I-lb.beg 15C TIMDIR CARROTS ••••••••••••••••••• •a . U.S. NO. 1 &AG 3 LBS 29C BROWN ONIONS •••••••••••. OF •• .- NUITT fl.AVOI 39c AVOCADOS••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •o. SUCINGSIZf PACIC 3 FOlll 39c RIPE TOMA TOES • • • • • • • • • • • OF ••• SWEET JUICY 2 5 C Alil..IOU PIA8S •••••••••••••• , ••••• ••. 1b. a-tQ'S -fDlWllt • 1• ... Ud .... 6 5 c CHllH PIJIA ...••..••••••• 1•"' l'ICl'IWtO -........... Trfnt" 42• MIXED YNITAILES ....... ,.- ~ _. _ _.,.., 35• ~ HONIY IUNS .••.•••• •••· .lf"'°'1 -"f<l'...._.C••O.NlftlMf"' 91 C SllACll YIAY •.•••.••••••••• 1... . IOl.l-t!SMl'•)ll"-(U ..... l · '1" IRIADED FISH SJICIS ..... u- ... 0 1 •• ,.,...,, 23, 1972 •A $16.00 VAlUl WESTWOOD CATERING DAILY PILOT ICE CREAM All FLAVORS HALF GAL 59c BANQUET FROZEN ~ CHICKEN PIES · ALSO BEEF AND TURKEY 8-0Z. 15.~. JERSEYMAID -FRESH ~ SOUR CREAM PINT 49c SUNS WE ET PRUNE JUICE . .40-0Z. SOTTlE 59c CREST TOOTHPASTE FAMILY SIZE SCOPE MOUTH WASH ........ ':•:.'!"°.~.7:'!'.'7:.$1.14 ALICA SELttERS •••••••••••••••••••• ":•:.'!".;.~.51c GILLmE ANTl·PERSPIRANT RIGHT GUARD .19c SMART SHEEN BALSOM W/PROTEIN ..... ~::.lie ritiiUJiff iff rT1iffffDi$ITitfjj, THIS COUPON GOOD ·"'WED., FEB. 23 THRU TUES., FEB. 29 1-.1----'25 c 0 FF'--i-.11 ON PURCH.O.SE OF A CARTON ! OF ANY BRAND i: CIGARETTES i LIMIT 1 CAaYON AND i;:, lit::::::::~o~··~c~o=··~o=·~ .. ~·=·~··~LT~C~U~ST~OM~·~·~ THIS COUPON GOOD · · WED., FEB . 23 THRU TUES., FEB. 29 .. i'~~ScOFF I ~ ON PURCHASE OF ANY 4-PACK ~ BATHROOM ~ TISSUE Oiii:5/. LIMlf O"NI ,ACICAOI 'f ONI COU,ON 'Ill' ADULT CUIYOMll l.-~~~~~'.!'~~~~~~~I\~~~~~---~ 'llCES IFJ[CflVE All STOllS IXCl'1" SIMI VAlLfY 2701 HARBOJ BLVD., COSTA MESA e 13922 BROOKHURST, GARDEN GROVE e 1308 W. EDINGER, SANTA ANA 5858 WARNER, HUNTINGTON BEACH . e 23811 EL TORO, EL TORO I' \ f \ DAILY ,!LOT W«inelday, F•b<uary 23, 1972 • I .... BOI GROSULAK STORE MANAGER 2200 HARBOR BLVD. m Wl WELCOME FOOO SUM, IHO,,lftl COSTA MESA featuring 80 Double Discounts in this Ad." YOOR A1.rHA BETA NEIGHBORHOOD BUTCHER fTHE MAN WITH THE REO APRON) PROUDLY Off~S: DUTCHEll'S PRIDE MEATS MIA. n YOU'LL IE PROUD TO SIRVl • QUALITY AHO SATISFACTION GUARANTEED • DISCOUNT PRICED ll. 't ,,_. ,..~' r c"' ,f'r,j:. '!'. l - '{(j .. . ' ivrcf:.:• ~fC/Pf./IJDf w'?~ •o.4sT o,.,..,. BANANAS CENTRAL o\M[RICAN 111 a11'f lOS &l'ttlfLIS, 11w1•11er. 01 Olllllf COUllfT All'Kl •ltl lfOAI HOl.llS MON . .fRI. 10 AM. TO 9 P.M. SAT. & SUN, 10 A.M. TO 7 P.M. BEST FOR BAKING OR MASMING 101L:i US #I RUSSET POTATOES IOWA MAID • I LB. PKG. SLICED BACON WHOLE BODY • 2-21'2 LBS. FRESH FRYERS GARDEN FRESH LARGE HEAD LETTUGE I c lb. +A rll ~'.111. Ll~l.Uli ~l'- 1 ~I fl Y 111\ r , ..,.. "" . OLSCOIJllT !'RICE 3-0UNC& llorn.E ~ CUTEX POLISH 291 ~REMOVER, . ___ ,_ IJ.OUNC! CAN• AU. V.uumA f8 WHITE RAlll 971 ~HAIRSPRAY OECOMTOR ST"'ftZD • A.560$ COLORS AND smts • 3.JNC 9c .. PILLAR CAllDLES fo??fi!'HS~ l~ :a;, A?KOIOL • mnt SPMT ron l'S Mllllllll -=-< PROTllll 29 93c -·------ lfOUKCZ DtSmm3 ~ JOHllSOll'S 'iiiiif BllY POWDER tCO COOWT tei: fBJOHllSOll'S ~ COTTOll SWABS 191 991 --- 7.otJNCI JOT'TU ~ ~DHISDl'S 961 }iiiii llt Mort Taql• -~ttW>"UTr • llLW.• wrmu.r- r.!2'1 BLUETTES 14, 'jiilil(' llUIBER GLOYU c IVICBll'I 11111 FRESH J LIS. OR OVtl EC ONO· I" AK GROUND BEEF SWln"S • l ·Ol. l"lt6. • f'ROltN lrown 1nd S1rv1 Llnll: S11i11111 ZIPl"EE • lOlh.OL I"~• FlOZ[N CORN DOOi c lb. 65~ 49~ .---L1111'1N n&1URU---, T-.Sl'E.O·SE~ • 1 ll. PKG •• 1110UN aa• .. SOLE FILLETS ,I •' Fl.Ofl!OA lHDIAH RIVEi GRAPEFRUIT LAIG£ JUICE ORANGES swe:cr , BIOWN ONIONS Fll[Mt C.111' BUNCH SPINACH TRtSH CUT MARGUIRITE DAISIES LI, ... 6 ~ 1°° CHERRY TOMATOES 29! 1 0 ~.. CUCUMBERS or 2 29' 10~. 19~. 1 0 ~ ~~01.L "~'EPPEIS '" 1 0 ~u. ~~,~~'~GE ITALIAN SQUASH I.OUNCE PACltAC[ SALAD AND 1 0 '· COLE SLAW - 20 l'OUNO UG 77 C THESE PRODUCE PRICIS EFFECTIVE FU. 201AR. l RUSSET POTATOES THURSDAY THRU WEDNESOAV .... llllllillill --.------ f ANTASTIC 015t;OUNI \ fVfkY OAY \W.l'ffA IETl DISCOUNT PR ICE l GAU.ON • FAMILY PAX: ALPHA BETA ICE CREAM ~ 3'·0<, PKO. • l'llOZEN ~DRE IDA ~ASH BROWM$ @ 12-0Z. PJ:G, • BMI t nchilcJdis f'.ft Mell'lcan §.trl• • F1o~e11 63¢ YAN DE MMP'S DIMMER ©VANDtU.Mf''S 9-0'Z. BOX• FROZEN CHILI l TAMALES CKJCJCEN OR SHRIMP • FRoztll @ &-OZ. Pl'G. KEUOGG'S EGG ROLLS 571 l'.'.Q\ SARA LEE • 10~.oz • 11\0'ZtN G'l< ~CARMEL PECAN ROLLS IN' 17Vi-OZ. • DAJ\K OR UGHT . ~ gf0COl.AJ£ • fROZrn 61 i ~ llRDS ETE CDOL l CREAMY • SALISBURY STEAK • CK/CfiN ~· TURk'EY• MEAT BAU.•FROZENj16• ~SWANSON'S MEAT ENTRIES 'I 2'.0Z. PW. • f110ZEN PEACH OR APPLE . 34• PET·RITZ PIE ZZ..OZ. Pl:Q. • 11\0ZEH • CUSTARD PIE 3h 69' a.oz. PXO. • PilMESAN & ROMANO 83¢ BORDEN QRAT[D OHEESE S.OZ. PK(}.•ltANS & CHEES!•POTATO & IEEr llEF ' IEAN/GR!EN CHIU 2u IX IURlllD U' M'o'iRfi'.l: AU MEAT WIENERS 88; --------- I-ti. ,ACK~f)E•ALL MEAT OSCAR MAYE! ae. WIENERS VII' 15-0%. C9fil~lNE:1t AL,HA IHA COLE SLAW ~ CONtAIJCD 371 ... fANIASllC Dl~t:O UNI '.> £VERY UAY ~MA.KATMA • ~9-0Z. PXG, ~LONG GRAIN RICE ~ J2-0Z. CAN • !NSTAI"!' ~ IDAHDAN POTATOES ~~.oz. JOX • INSTANT ~ 1a*0liocw SCALLOPlD 39; ~J~ifot~X •IN5TAN? -~BITTY CROCKER AU GRATIN 481 @ ~Tsil ~iwm.atXtfis"°" 31; @ 12.oz. PX::G.•MOSTACCIOU.01128' LA ROSA RIGOLml s.ouNc;E PIG •• ).(ANJCom ,,.. ~ 21.oz. •o< • .. , 1mnm:" 39; ~ROMAN MEAL HOT CEREAL ~ 2'..0UNCE !OTTLE ~LOG CABIN SYRUP ~31-0UNCE JOTTLB ~CHBSYRUP D l&-OZ. CAN . "RED, soim. .,...._ PITTED" •••••• SUPREMA CHERRIES ~ 15-0'Z. l OX: • CHOCOLATE ~NESTLES QUIK @ g PACI:: REC:. 01\" DI?'t (ll-02. NDBl MUG ROOT BEER ~ lO.OUNct CAN ~SEGO LIQUID DIET ~ i7.0U1'1CE CAN ~ unrs FRUIT COCKTAIL 331 46' 88' 23• 28' @l~iiv~~iil1~°i"EA~lunu 231 t::ii:::\ 121/,-0Z. CAN • IN luntK \!!::::;:/LIBBY'S COIN 22' ~ 13.•·Cl'l. CA> • JN IUTT!JI 221 ~ LIHY'S PEAS ~ 1'~()1 CAF.•lli!!m'!R 24' ~ LIBITS PEAS l CARROTS @ f~~¥·~clo'fl(o MEAT 26; ~ ilr.r!'[Hicltit"frt:"' 8&1 ~ ll:8£ 8.t.\' IL'lt ;'lf..W mw II: l::P:::\ 11-0UNCE 19X • !lfACI: \!!::::;:/FIRESIDE CRACKERS !.!JI. CAN• RlO-• OJ\IP Ek_E:CTRA-1.lA/lC YUIAN COFFEE 5-0UN~ JAR • ltlSTA1'J:'!' MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE l'.'.Q\·, PAi;.IC '2C-OZ.).' VARIETTEI ~HUNTS GEL SNACK PACK ~ 2•..0UNCE )!Ont.! ~CRISCO OIL S ~UJ!ll BAG IDLD MEDAL nouR ~fYOMSTOC~ • 21-0Z, CAM ~APPlE PIE FILLING 11.oz. JAJI • CJ\!JNCK OR CREAMY JIF PEANUT BUTIER ll-OUN'ct S:AN PET ETAPORAT[D MllX ~MAQ:S 20 ~Q_AJrtS ~PET INSTAllT MILK l'.'.Q\ 27.0Ull<;! _JAR '=1 TAMQ INSTANT DRINK ~40-0tlll~JOTTIZ ~SUMSWEET PRUNE JUICE ~ (S,.OlJNCE ~AN ~ TWTDP AP,LE JUICE f'.]i:;:\ IS,Q\ll'CJ <;l,ll • SPEAR! '=1GRll'N &IAllT ASPARAIUS 29• 80' e&• 3r 861 tr 211 111 67; 461 71 ' ~ 1tffr.'\'~.• ll·OZ, IOX ~ JLCNUt'1um1 CUPS IY HOn.I • POICEJ\ • INDGE • Pf)l'OC'JrLI PLAYINI CAlllS Y. 10 PACI:• DOUIL! tD01! • C'KJl;OWMl WllXIMBDM ILADES 111 @ r•WN"lif;+·,w <§&"R°aW'ifA~'f18sHWilWs • @lWT'l~~i~i'EHW'ii1~ U' 1™"1Till'l~W&'-""'111 88' VA~"(ljpc~ORK l IEAMS Zif · . . I OITA 11\•IA -241 I . 1nll 11. c•nA MllA -not ... ,,., IM. HUNTIHOTON llACH -,.., 4'1!M HUNTINITOH llACH - 1 ... 1 fll, M1lfl It. 'O"NTAIN VALLIY -l)ft Wll'Mf UIUNA MILLI -llMt Clrl• ff~ I.VIM llVINI - 1 ... C11¥et, U11t¥"'1ty ,,.,_ IOUTH UIUNA -~ I . CUM Mltltw'Y WHAttTA fANIA,llL IJ1'LOll NI\ ! V[UT UA¥ Dl&eOUHT f n re1 @ ssocour•o< BAGGIE SANDWICH BAGS 80 COUNT JOX ~ 150 COUNT IOX ~GLAD SANDWICH BAGS 111; "' 49; ~$0 ~FOOT JtOLL 28' ~STRETCH 'N SEAL , l'.'.Q\ 140 COUNT .PXG. • ASSO!lTED .,._ ' ~VIVA NAPKINS llU' @ 2 PACK• PNJn' I LADY SCOTT Z4I BATHROOM TISSUE ~I" er .• "'H'. fAC!AI. 22; ~LADY SCOT TISSUE ©200 COUNT JOX •'COLONS ALPHA l!TA 2'1< FACIAL TISSUE 11'1 111 ~;:; ~mtls':,.uo n• llAt'11ETA EMILISll MUFFINS 31 ' l(/ifl l!TA HOT CRDU IUNS 47; it~lilfi i'mtW" 361 •' I I . - . ff 0.\11.Y PllOT S• PllOT-ADVERTISE-• OSCA.ft MAYEfl: • SLIClD Oftr: THIN UCON __ u-oz. o~ OICA,Jt MAVlft Ofte SLICED BACON ___ ,.La. N- 'MoftRftt ,,iuoE ~ SLICED BACON •.. --LI. "" MORRELL PftlOE • ALL BEEF 7-5c DINNER FRANKS __ u ' OSCAll MAY'"• LITTLE FRYERS Oftc PORK LINKS PUIE-----ll. N- OSCAft MAYElll '7ftc SMOKIE LINKS ..... _ 12-<>z. 1 ;i- z1,,E BRAND 10.s.oz. l'KG. Cftc HOT DOG ON A STICK ...•• '101- PERCH FILLETS v:~79c "FIESH FIOZEll LB. .. . . HALIBUT · PriCtl Effective 7-Ful/ Day•! ALL•AT U.S.D.A. 'A' GRADE WHOLE BODY CHUCK ROAST STATB nos. CllTll'llD IHF • GUAllANTHD • C ROUND STEAK LB. . STATJlllOS.CHTIFIED IEEF 0 IOl!IE-IN $ 07 .. Ate llAN • MIAT AND IAT ZIPPE BURRITOS -····-'"''°i.111ta.391 POUNp BONELESS -·-LB· Sl.11 GROUND ' BEEF FIUH • UAN •DELICIOUS GUAllANTHD TO Pl.EASE CUT-UP~ FRYERS • . PAN-SIZE HADY U.S.D.Ai. 'A' GllADI ' I.I. tvlENIR5 _srATH110S.can11D-95c . sT•mllllOi.CllT1'llll-·GUA1A11T1111 -~ M~.~~L 4 .9c RUMP ROAST ....................... u. RIB 'STEAKS .. _,_ ................... u.Y9c 1-STn.IJS.THlll .•. La.SI.Of 83 WIUTllMMID•LIANAHD.,_R s 9 , -STEAKS CEllTEI .CUTS FRESH FROZEll • 09 -"' 1 • 2 .0.,.z.,..'K,..o . .,...~"!""-lllJJiii. RIB ROAST 1-TH&7·TH11as .... u. c STEAKS ==c:i ..................... L1. 12 . fl'ATERBROS.llONEY l!*BISS-SHOUlDB • . s 103 NOTAILS•GUARAtmmTONASIYOU $-' -!~~.~~!·.:~~~.~~~~ .. "' ROLLED ROAST ............. LI. T -BONE STEAKS ............ L•. 145' wm4 Aill STATflt MOS. Mf•'S-MllY jljf(f °' LIAN TINDll GUilANTllD ,!L._~,GU .. ·~_:::_;}_if._\~ .. ·~.·.:if.:;'"•&.:..~.-~ ... _:~.,,· ROUND BONE ROAST .......... LI. 7 s c P'oiiiiiioiiiilS,,,_ LI. s 14 ' · iiic'm BACON ....... u.65c io'P.iiii'oiim;,Ull .... Ll.s 17' Ol!A!§J5 _ !¥J;jlif.1j!M91=11!)ji#iiif.i'4§1¥f4*'•M!•M#j;J(3:ii#j!!J.i=''''fi*''""'if4¢,tA--SMl•@!•t.,#j;l@J-1#l SUNKIST NA VIL 2~. c • ~11~11s - CONT ADINA• ASSOWllD RA VOIS COOKBOOK 300 SAUCES .-.............. ~.~~ ... llGULU •ITALIAN • OI PUlll CONTADINA 300 TOMATOES--~~.~ ~MATl $ FOR .t-.&. ~ 1H4 A'"4. EA. NON-DAIRY . aaowN CREAMER ................ ~~~- Of.II •M • ...... ,. _. • DICX9I • 1 J.ouNCI C CHINUEDINNERS ............... 75' IOIAlfTA .. OI 09ll" 3 ENCHILADAS -··-···················· 11<-m. 7' • 1X1U FANCY llD-4 5c TOMA TOii 2. 11 . ..,.. ONIONS HUNTSASSOITIDRAVOIS $MAUUANCYWASl•IGTOll . 39c APPUl::iaous _ ............. 2 LIS. FANCYSOUll--9c CABBAGE ---·····-·················-······LI. u.s.No.ISWllf SKILLET 3i 27c DINNERS._ ............... !. .. ~~~-.. DE MIX·N-MA TOI PAPER VEGETABLES ~~r~':... m 25' COCKTAIL~~·.~~,:~-....,,. Tl FRENCH BEANS STOKELY-€.~ 27' SONASAFFLOWER 'OIL -U-Ot. 67' GREEN BEANS STOKELY __ ,'l\1 25' DAfl<A PASTRIES ··---... or. 33' curwAX BEANS STOKELY •. _ •••. m 31• NOODLES !=~.'111~.r'J:l~. ----LI. 3f PARTY PEAS STOKEL y -•••••• l2~ 33' JAMS & JELLIES ~t..'l~~'*1~. 11-0• 39' SWEET PEAS STOKELY •.•••.••..•.••.•••.. m 2r WOO LITE LIOU ID _ n-oz 11.89 CORN ~i~~,~~Si.l'o" ·····-·········-···· c'.l'~ 24' EASY ON STARCH u.ot 65' GRAPEFRUIT sTO«LY -······--·· c'J\1 36' NAP Kl N S .................. cJWNT cooKING BAGS M••tc .......... _ 59' FRUIT cocKTAIL STOKELY __ m 29' ' ENDUST DUSTING AID _o.oz. 1!1 SPAM WITH CH"EESE -1»0• 59' CiiFFON 3 2PRKi~~ HUNTS TOMATOES BATH TISSUE ....... .. STA-PUF FABRIC AJAX CLEANSER SOFTENER ........... : ... ~~ Sl'IAYllUM,IOTIU FANTASTIK CLE AN ER ..................... 2l1fl· RE-FRIED BEANt ~~.so ____ 2 '~t 39' POTATOES,:m~~.. a.511-o< 47' . PEANUT BUTTER .... ,. .. _ 11-ot 66' MAZOLA MARGARINE , .. 42' INSTANT COFFEE.~ •oz11.13 CHEESE SPREAD ~'c1,·· 11-ot 85' LIPTON SOUP W1THCHIC<IN 33' ...OTH l ·ltAlt «IJj WUEDUlt UJ.D.A. fUOOITAltl'I MARGARINE :rr.:l':.rt,• __ _ __ " 35' . u'SHROOMS "'""•"•u ... o< 59' IJU WHOlf: 0111 SUCf:D -... PEACHES DllTDILIGHfY.~ 303 27' KALVf:S(')lflSUCf:D CAN FRUIT COCKTAIL g<.'J.., _ m 34' CHEESE CHALUNGICOTTAGf 37' OUAlllTS .•• MG·--· !'TL ZIPPE BEEF TAMALES _ 51-oz 11 STAR-KIST TUNA ft!i'!.'!".__ * CAH 38' BISCUITS ~'a'u'l'l:::f& _3_ 2f GRIFFEN SHOE POLISH .~•oz. 29' PINE SOL CLEANER _,..,,, 11.02 . l'IOU.IWTA j')i:;JblO-S \ 911e COCKTAIL TACOS_u.oz. w· PIZZAlllACKTRAY _,...._ 11· MAll·Kll OillEUil l l-OtlHCI 55cJtNO'I ~ CHILI BURRITOS __ · PIZZA ROW ' -.w· ·~~ JX«" ,[,, • "...,,. 11 oi. G& .-w · "'5Sc MORTON DINNERS-o». TAMALE & CHILI -,... · l'OUNOOllCl+OCOL>.T( Cl)cll(f.l(Afrl lli,C MORTON CAKES~,...._ iN ALEX BURRITOS-!-1..t "'\" --•Y "\" f 129 ROUND SHRIMP ~~-····· 1..oz. WMOUIUM11.0 t ••• 4k•l .. OLSk 23 ORANGE JUICE ........................ oz. c VAN Of ICAllll'lfffMCMICUN £'7C \'_.,LUI l'A~ lff' 011 llU.l 11-0Z. cfti ENCHILADA-_,,.., "I BUTTERED PATTIES -iR PICTIWtrT . llOtlNCf . ,el)c 81 ~D5 EVE 4ne BRUSSELSPROUTS -W TASTI FRIES _,.,. ;:r- ifEYJ'V£QEfABLE 4f MAC."1cHEESE,~20-D1.4~ PRICD EfFEC. THURl lhnt WED.; FEB. 24-¥,~.1 1•1•Uli.A..-.o..;. llMW• .. ...., ....... IUJWWf ldlll ..... WClll I 'w 11 .. ....,_lfM.,C..,.M .. FUIUR ~'r.':'"i"'"'""· alOI. 82' DRY TIEND DETERGENT! 12 ~.oz. 41' 409 CLEANER _ u-oz 79' FLOUR :ttr.=. , , ... fl' NEWS OETtRGEllT -·-•ooz:aa' SAUCE ~;:~:~l~,.. 1-oz 41' ........................... _ 717 Wiit ... ,_.. "'-'• C... IHM mt ..... A-. Hwl ... 1 ...... ••ER1111 -.• -...... 79' INSTANT FELS POWDER _11K-0.z.l9' SUGARCHEX :e~~o· •·ot 47' WOODIUIY IOAP ..... 4 .... 33' PUREX DETERGENT ""' DRESSINGS " .... ow••• 44' • ... ---•l·OZ. 1H WHA••-·-t.O< I ' I l4GJ w ...... , ... .....,. s-.,... ancti••••._.._.....,.. UM Nd TllfltA--. ._..,._ J4JtW...,U....A--........ lt71 .... lftwt,C.W.M• J6Jt ..... ..--........ • •• , .............. , .... IUI M11,..._ ............ AM 14211 ............. W...... r • f 4 PILOT·AOVERTISU -> "UP GOES THE CURTAIN" On tomorrow'a house today. 1'be llnes of thls modern home are &traliht.forward and clear, free from gjngerbread. Large atrium brings the Clutdoora Inside, PriVJLCY galore! 4 huge bed-rooma ~d family room. 842-2535. GI-FHA $31 ,500 No down GI 'br low down FHA. Great family home has 2% baths, 3 good size bedroom plus a upstairs partly finished bonus room with pool table and i,s bath. Large built-in kitchen, laun- dry room. Concrete block rear yard with patio newly painted. Shake root. Cut this out and call right.now 673-8550. LUXURY AT LOW COST When you own thia plush 3 bedroom home. 'The 6oot plaa*...uper B. an4 lt'1 super Cleen with upgraded carpet and drapes throughout To•see II to buy. Cell 847-6010. TREES, TREES, TREES COLLEGE PARK ALL TERMS 4 bedroom. 2 bath, buUt-tn kitchen, large yard and a nice pla)'bouse for the children. Near ahopplng and all IChOOls and priced at only '29,950. For further Information call 546-2313. HAPPINESS IN HARBOR VIEW Join 1.he care-free IUe with community park, PQOll. and court&. Come home to a portofino aittadY !an<jlcaped and finished Wllh mapy extra goodies. Park your bQft or traUtr next to the houte. Extra clOM!ll A bookshelves-aolve storage JrOblems. 3 lara:e bedtoomi, 3s,ii baths, 2600 IQ• ft, of luxurlOUI living makl' th!J an execaUvt '1ream. DON'T MISS IT! Call 546-2313. •. -~.., -.,.._ '...- DAILY P'll.01' 4'1 NO ONE OFFERS MORE! TATERS ~~ o. I No. I No .. I 11111 a.r.ic. -....... 1M 1tt1r tM ..... 112 tralM .. ...,_,i. In 6 erftc• te fellew ttwu. In -•lnt-C_ ... •-• °""'"°'' ''.LUXURY AT LOW COST" 'ftats HUntb\gton Bet.ch beauty Is designed and built for modern living with this added feature of a 15 x 20 ft. family room decorated In excel· lent taste. Tomorrow may be too late so don't wait , , ,, • c&ll 842·2535. DON'T Look any further. This ls the best 4 bedroom in Turtlerock. You get a view on a park and a playground right across the street, plus a s~· clous famDy'room ani:l formal dining room. This ls brand new on the market and will not last. So caJI now. You will be surprised at the many custom' features. Only $43,750. Phone 673-8550. NEW . ON THE FAIRWAY' 5 BEDROOM · 4 BATHROOM Brand ~w custom-Built atngle-atory with 3450 aq1,1are feet. Situated on one· of the most desir-- able 1~ts in Mesa Verde, this home provides spa.clous1 llvl,ng on one level yet allowing ample room fer Swimming Pool, camper or Trailer, etc. Too many features and attractions to be described. Mu.st be seen! F<U" additional infor. mation and.appointment, please phone 546·2313. Norm Bender. Prlct?: $109,500. THREE OR SIX Two Triplexes, all 2 bedroom, 2 with Fireplaces. Located In beautiful Newport Heights. A won· derful .place to live or for investment. Close to Irvine s.hoppl,ng Center. For information and a~WC~t. ple85e phone 546-2313, Price '4J,870. -~ ·. "EASTSIDE DUPLEX" Fine for starting your Investment program. 2·2 bedroom aeparate units, one with a fireplace. To~·Prlce '31,500. CAU.. 546--2313. .. MESA DEL MAR • Assume 6% FHA Loan e Total Payments $175 e 3 Bedtoom, 2 Bath - • Comer Lot With Alley • Room For Large Trailer • Call 546-2313. DEANE GARDEN HOME Exciting and contemporary with-goodln galore. 3 bedrooms, den, famUy room, area tor formal dining, and. only 10% down. $40,950. Call 673- 8550. "NEWPORT HEIGHTS i STORY BEAUTY A RARE FIND" Just on the market for tile first timt?. 5 bed· rooms, 3 baths, 65x150 lot 1 % blocks from Har- bor Heights. Great family home, immarulate large b:edrooms a true delight to sec, Priced right at $49,500. To see call 646-7171. FIXER UPPER LOW DOWN • Now :C bedi'oom • Wu Dup!eX-RZ-Lot • Cha.nee baCk to Dunlex e Owner Arudous-Wlll Exchange Up e Only $24, 750.00. caJI 546.1600. "IDEALLY LOCATED~' 'l'h1I &llg:hUul 3 bedroom 2 bath home with crackling fi'replace ts just five m1nutn from : • San Diego FreeWay e Newport Freeway e Souih Coast Plua • Orange Coast College • Cotta Mesa Ovtc Center J"J e Orange County Airport "t' Priced •I $21,MIO ond worth •11 or It Coll 646-7.17.1 TWO STORY HOME • ONE STORY PRICE You will enjoy the kids upstairs while you sleep privately down1talrs. This home ls only 5 months new: 3 bedrooms ~ownstalrs and a super large bonus room upstairs. Priced at only $35,750. Call 847-6010. I. ..., ALADDIN'S TREASURE HOUSE See this remarkable prestige home filled with wonderrul things. Large private lot with unend· Ing view. Extraordinary grounds with heated pool. 4 large bedrooms, 3 baths, Formal Dlnini' Room, Wet Bar. You owe it to yourself to see this at $115,000. Call for appointment at 673-8550. MANAGER OP THI MONTH H1rry H. Wint.rs, Ill H1rrv I• rNN11tr of our 1100 Ntwport eou1 .... 1rd Offlc9 In COfll MtM. His IC!h•lllK lncllilde .,.. followl1111: Pre.ldency of Pony Ltevll'9 11 .. i.111 vice ~.,-,c.r ., J Ml1bml CMU ch•rt.r mtmw of Ta1nn.1ter11 J1111llN' Ol.,nbtr of Cemmen:e1 Mtn'lbt.-ef, GortK, a, Orw/111' County Cllamber or cornrnerce1 'Member of ll01rd Of Ofrtelorl, NfWPOrt Herbor·Gosll Mtu IOlrd or R .. lo tor11 Mtmbtr or loclt Mrvlce clubt ""'kh lnch,ldn ll .. I Estate AJll)relMn lo Mor1g1ge lenktrL Ht Is alto e GRI lnllrUCIOr. Hll teUOlll college cits_, end 1111 10011:1n et locll cl!Jbs ff lffl1 es Slate ch1bl1 tnd ~ ~ry tell .... Ill DIM ... of rNl "lelt, lncludll'lll rNnY commit!-of CREA. He Is 1 lff1Um. mtmbtr of 1111 Real E1l1te Mllllon OOH1r Club, wlnnff'lll fllt Top Salt .. min Aw•rd '" '"' •1111 Tiit R••• 1!'111t1r1. HI Wll '''° owner ef Carll. Tu Affn(y, I , .. , ,,,,,, ll X firm. His b6ckgrt11,1nd In 1t11 rNI "''" ..,vice field 11 you un lff 11 varied, hi• t!IPtl'llnc:• v11t ind hit ~ tM best an)'lllhlre. For t111 b9tf In rNI n1111, '" H1rry or -o1 hl1 toP notdt peop11. q/I ""-7171. ALL IN ONE 1. Large family room with wet bar, Blc titt· , plaeo & BBQ 2. Four bedrooms, 3 baths £: dinln&' room 3. Large 23x40 Heated Pool 4. Intercom & t ire alarm 1y1tem throulhout 5. Super patio with huge BBQ 6. One bedroom has private outalde egtrance 7. On a quiet Cul-de-sac 8. Large 6% VA assumable Loan-Price '48,950. CONVERT TO DUPLEX, $24,750 With approval of authorities. This 4 bedroom home was converted to duplex In 1966, 1ubse-- quently converted to home. Opportunity to pyra- mid. R·2 Lot. Submit terms. 646-7171 WATERFRONT • NEWPORT SHORES A fantastic family home right on the canal, 4 bedroom and den, Bonus room plus all the amenities of Newport Shores living. $49,950 -Good Terms. Phone 67J.8550, SOUNDS UKE Wishful thinking, but It's true, Here'• the com• biner tranquility of 1uburt»..n living with every town convenience. Near churches, 1chool and shopping center. Priced at $41,?SOO. 847-6010. TWO SALESMEN NEEDED ..... s.r. • • • Mori Mori httlt' If you're ao ofort, clyo9nlc ,..... who's loolifnt for a grfft -·· wllll oae of tt.e fcntnr 9rowl1t9 Componln lo OrClll'J• C...oty, S.. UL We N...i You II • SUBURBIA PARK 4-BDRM. + RUMPUS ROOM $42,900 Ex~pUonal opportunity to Uve in ttie best location and neighborhood in Hu.ntln1ton Beach!' This home featul'<'I 4 bedrooms. family room, 21Ai baths, and charming upstairs rumpus room. It's In very sharp condition, vacant &: available for rapld occupancy. 1-la.s a 6~ assumable VA loan. Priced to sell quickly. Owner moved ou t of area. For addJtJonal Information call 546-2313. , PRESTIGE LOCATION Great home tor the executive. Plus a drearn kitchen for the housewife. Large 4 bedroom home plus den with fireplace laland 1tove with large eating area In kitchen. Plu1 H.&F. Pool. $47,990. Call 847-6010 . "THIS IS THE SPOT!" HUNTINGTON BEACH CM you believe -walk to golf· flshlria: -en· joy this 11Ai year old charmer. 3 ~nu, h.uge lot and catch thf! price -only $32.500. can now. 842-2535. "YOU CHOOSE .THE COLOR" For the new carpetln& you can hav• in thll adorable 4 bedroom home. It hu lntereatlni In- novations throughout. You've seen the rest, now see the best. C&Il 842·2535. "HUNTINGTON HARBOR" ' Gorgeous maje.tlc ~auty In Fabulous Hunting .. ton·. Harbor. 1Thls remarkable rrlodel rtnia with pdde and -commandl )'OW' .. lnwstJ1atloni Only $46,000. All term1. 842-2535. "Hl·HO SILVER" Owner says take It away, which makes ft euy to acqWre. No down pa.yment and owner w.111 pay your closing costs, balance fa less than rent. Thia Huntington Beach Beauty ls only $28,950, Hurry C&1l 842-2535. 15 UNITS BEST EASTSIDE LOCATION Just South of Santa Ana <;ou.ntry CJub. 7 .. two bedroom tawnhouses: I .. two bedroom; 4 • one bedroom; 3 bachelor. Excellent rental area. fu. come over $25,700 per year. Usted at $175,000. cau our Inveatment Div. at 546·1600. HARD TO PLEASE U ao, thll charming home Is for you. Value fl written all over it.I face. When we 1ay It's a bargain. make us prove 1 t. Five bedrooms. plus pool A: covered patio for ONLY J37,950. call 847-6010. BUY OF THE MONTH This home Is located Jn an area In Huntlna-ton Beach where homes are selling for $40,000 and over. This home 11 extremelv sharp. Three bed· rooms, upgraded carpets,?' 18x20 patio near 1chool1, shopping, parJcs and ocean. All for Only f29,9!SO. CALL 847-6010. ALL THE LATEST FEATURES In home detlgn, atrium, zero 1lde y1rdl, garden kitchen, hl&h beam ceUlhp, lar_ae family room. 3 bedrooms. Loll ot p&tkt, BullUn au BSQ soft water, 2 years new. Solid Mahot;acy walls, on the end of a Mesa Verde cul-de-aac. $35,~ call 846·7171. OWNER SA.YS SELL and hu reduced orke f4,000. Thia charmlnr Rustle Duplex In Corona Del Mar hit 11.rse 3 bedrooms, 2 batht. _ _p~u1 lncome unJt over the pragt. Now only '59.500. Owner will help on t.enn.-Don't delay 67a.R5SQ. . h• S.ttt In the Hartt. Arel ,, .. , ,..1t,.._ Thll II whlN'"I "Tht Actlen l1o • REDUCED TO $32,450 AND ALL TERMS Thls Hou.so Has lt! 11) 6% Assumable V.A. Loan 12) VA·FHA Tr rfns 13' Cul-~Sac Street 14) Near Schools Sc Shopping ( 5 l Excellert Sheg Cftr[K'lt (6) Beeutl!ul Tile Pa.Lio I 71 Paneled Farilily Hoom 181 Heavy Shake flnof (9) $215 total monthly payment all thlll with four bedroom• and a family room. Great Family Home. Call 546·2313. "WHAT YOU SEE IS WHAT YOU GET" And wh&t )'OU get ls a lovely 3 bedroom, 2 bath home in an excellent Eulllde location, near Weit Clift shopping. Large 1hade lrff• 1urround thls well landscaped over size lot, plu1 2 patios. Priced at only $36,500. Seller ii wantlng to move. So come take a loo k. CALL 64&-7171. ' BRING YOUR GOLF CLUBS Thi.I unJ_que home Is located acrou 1treet from Meadow Lark Golt Course In Meadow Lark Et- tatK Cor?Jtt Lot 3 bedroom, A d&n, 2 flreplacea_ former mOdel home. $41,~ Call 847-6010. "NAKED TRUTH" IN MESA VERDE • L&rie 5 bedroom lrl·lewl fam ily home wit.JI room to .roam. Open-beam vaulted ceUln& In llv· In& room, ae_parate formal dining room; eaUna area In kitchen, wet bar Jn family room. All thll and much more for $49.~. For more in- formation, call 546-2313. DESIGNED BY A WOMAN It lhJa txdUnc 5 bedroom CUiiom --with picture ocean view and acce. to prtvatt l>etcbH -Kuuun W /W corpelJnc U.....rb- ouL 3~ blthl, marble •Ink topa. BuUt-ln vu- uum 11)'11.em. Healt<I custom J)OOL .\ tnlly pluoll homo ot SU0,000. Call for ·-1 llUllllO. THB REAL ESTATBRS NEWPORr BEACH 1700 Newport Blvd . 646-7171 COSTA MESA 2790 Harbor Blvd. 546-2313 HUNTINGTON BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH CORONA DEL MAR 17931 Beach Blvd. 6014 Warner Ave. 332 Marguerite 842-2535 847-6010 673-8550 INVESTMENTS 2790 Harbor Blvd. Su ite 20 II Cotta Meui 546-1600 • ' I ' I i ff; DAil 'f, PllOT DIQ tlACY TUMILIWEEDS ceu:11RA11NG HALLOWEEN IWll.Y1 HltllE6AAl7? 'lllLPfeAllro' 1J 'ill.I 1116-fj())',~L'...-r""I MUTT AND JEFF FIGMENTS PLAIN-JANE --.--.:_ . --.. - .. ~j I DAIL y CROSSWORD • · •• by R ... POWER I ACROSS 42 Bring out Yl!mrday's Puz.zit Solved: «Entry In .. 1 FlllOVI acccurt -tonectl' 45 On -: In ho$le .ater of •Hing a • 5 c.b ,..,It 10 FJsbsmi1• 46 s...,. drlnt taH 41 F,...,t wl .. 14 ~ tlh! liquids lllscOll'lt 50 Achlntd 15 AtdtltK\&nl SUCCHS ln M drd« effort 1£t Assm 51 l>tposft at I st~ rlttf's MOUth 2123172 17 SWH't .aterlal Sl End.,glf 9 Make I loud, 33 Ambler and ' Made fTOM I S7 Ont lnellned piercing Sevareld tree sap: to lltetal truth soind )b Yleld!CI as t wonls 61 tltlns of nil 10 Stctlon of retirn 19 Md tf'St lo ~ •2. WHl\lft9ton London: 39 Sing~ JO lntro&Jci.Ol'Y ptU:: 2. wonts 'Z words .40 Breakfast stat~t M To bt: French· 11 Evang!list dlsh 21 \nhlrtn1. b5 Ustful ltlll'lll -Robtrts 43 Cring!d .,.uurs m Mi Stab 12 8othtf in fear charlcltt nt 67 Gm1 1J llllltary Alr 45 Geflllan prison • t~t 68 Lmf -· Tran5POl't camps 23 Ordl'*J 69 Slate ol Service: Abbf. 47 Kind of llving writing agitation 18 -Derr thing 25 X.~e Bl.,.s: 49 1lrust Made with 11tl5ll'e DOWN Charlle a ll)lnt!d W!!ap:n Z6 H~ Chan's ettator 52 Sta eagln: t9 Dl•kit Into 1 Cowse hollliny Z2 Ont who 53 Roman date thin tayen; 2 Culbft llltdllll fllakts an 5~ Title 34 As easy u l Sufflclently attempt . 55 Minute orifice falllng off -actvmictd In 24 Picked out 56 Be deprived of -: 2 words ave to be used 2lt Bakery~ 58 Image: Y•. 35 Spacious sld 4 Kind cl t": P'odUCt S9 Indian of 11\tnCIOStcl 2 wonts 27 Escap& Sonora lltir:lco rt Awatd for best 5 Stain d!lectlon "1' 60 Allowanct to MYSl«Y novtl 6 Profligates 21 Mmtrt•I •ena offset 38 Crude s;ugat 7 Part of lht 30 One's shart dettrl<ntlon ·39 AIJrk:ultll'al 8dtlsh Isles: of the In tt1Mll vehicle Abbr txpeftset: 63 Important lll Friend, '" 8 "Anna.-! the 31 ~ world frMCe king of-" 32 LIOft-power: Abbr. ' By CIMster Goald OUR APPR/il.ISIJI: WIU.. •t OUT """"""'°" M#I! "°"" 0E£D AllD TilU! Rl!O.OV. ITMICiHTWORK OUT! GASOUNE ALLEY By Dick Moores .. By Tom K. Ryan SALLY BANANAS By Charles . Borsottl ...--------. .--------.--------. . By Al Smith GORDO MOON MULUNS ' ,. I ; ' By Frank Baginski ANIMAL CRACKERS JUDGE PARKER By_ Har_old Le Doux YES, OOC.TOR •• MIS NAME IS a.tAkLE'I QUINW! IS ME &OING TO MAkE rT?' WE PON.,. kWQW! ME!t MAP " SEYER'E ME.AP INJ'Ui'Y! Ml~T A&OUT MIS FAMILY? WE'P LIKE TD NOTIFY TMEM! 00 YOU ME OWNS A 51.\ALL IOKlW WMER'E PINER ANP ME LIVES ME UVE5?' 50MEWHEie .. EAlSY! tu. CllEa IT Ol!T AllP &E IN TOIO! WITll l'Olfl ri ' MISS PEACH By Mel PERKINS • · 'T•• ~Scout" C"'-4•< A h; ""~;j,.. ts~ 1"'4;1JtTW61.TJl'f. \O'iAt.., 1-111.P~L/ ~«NtM..Y, CNA.1'•0CJS', ~IHI) DM1M£MT,O.. .... ,,TY, &•A-tt, 0-<Ai.. AHO Rl'ISR11...i,-, ~ ~AW SO, IT'S AGRllD; THI< WW PATJl:OL W!l.I. 8E TRUSTWO'"!ff1 TM5 MusKIMT PA'T>'OL WILL 'N LOYAL-, TME ~IR~"-PATllOL l'IJLL , BE ~ELPFUL- QUESTION : WILL W8 9HITCM A'D!JND , FROM TIME TO TIME 1 • By Gus ArriOla By Ferd Johnson By Roger Bollen THE GIRLS ' ' DENNIS THE MENACE ,... I • 'lf ti SFelT ~TIME.(!" lt:l!IE,m .NICI' Ill CDWW<llH6 }ll:AJT ! • , ' 15 PILOT-ADV£RTISt« DAILY PllOT 4fl Everyone Hos Something Thot Someone Else Wonts DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS ·rhe Biggest Mark~tpJace on 'the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Wont Ad -...... JGo·--~,lt~•r_•_l __ 'ic~-----,lt---G:.:;tn:~:'•:l:..__-lf: _____ -lf: ___ Gienoiiri01iiiiiiiiiiiiGieinoiriailiiiiiiiiiiilG~e=na;;:;;.raml;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;Go~na,;;;;r~a=l;;oo-~;;;;;,~;;;;;,-· ;;;;;;;;;- TAYLOR co. clinJa Jjle LINDA ISLE· $155,000 EACH ;i:vo NEW bayfront homes ready for immed· u.te occup~cy. Unusual design by well kn_own architects. Spacious open plan, high ce1lmgs, sun deck. 4 BR. FR, DR & study. Owner will consider exchange for land apt bldg, smaller home or TD's. Hurry. 1 ''Our 27th Year'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 Sin Joiquln Hills Road NEWPORT CENT·ER 644-4910 General Gtntr1J CdM DUPLEX Rare find -3 bdnn. 2 bath beautifully decorat~ o~ er's home pha bachelor unit. AH in xlnt cond. $49,500 * 7 * 1.tnique~ 675-3000 2407 E. Coast Hwy. A 3 or 4 BR w/l or 2 family rooms? Tree shaded resi· dential area close to schools &: shopping. Cozy indoor B-B·Q, dW firepl I. low maint ,,.,-d. Be quick - $31,500. THE BEST HOMES ...... ... IN THE BEST AREAS IN MESA VERDE : Goll Course Castle lt bas a secluded pool, 4 bedrooms, massive game room and an enormous living room with an all glass conversation area that literally "hangs out" over the famed 18th green. There 's maids quarters (or teen· agers retreat), a 3 car garage and a unique location on the bluff overlooking a lake. It's the ultimate ! BAY & BEACl-I Call 545-8424 (open eves.) REALTY ,~ \outh , (. oast --HELP! Anxious owner, 2 br, 2 hi., IWim pool, good Joca-, lion. Agen1, 67$-7225 HIR Oener•I "G,...ena-r-•'"I ----- HAS DRAMATIC FLAIR $100,000 Will buy this custom 3 BR. den ~ome in gated, bea.ch prestige area. Charm- ing European motif. Bob Yorke VIEW OF BAY • S BDRM. i.. Block to bay & ocean. Suitable for lge. family living year 'round. Also .. fun beach house. $63,950. Triona Bergin A SPECIAL WAY OF LIFE Is yours in "THE BLUFFS". Lovely 3-4 BR. townhouse; 2Mi ba., frml. din .• thick shag carpeting. billiard rm.; bayfront Joe. $57,900. Belle Partch UNIVERSITY PARK Close 'to sho.pping, churches, school; a spac. 2 BR & den charmer. Orie-of-a-kind home; ideal cond. & location. $36,900. Chuck Lewis l'RIME BAYCREST • $72.SOO 3 Bdfnl. & den by Ivan Wells, with POOL. Can be seen anytime. You'll like it. 1801 HOLIDAY (at Santiago). Harry Frederick 5 BEDROOM • BAYCREST With large swimming pool; family room w/ fireplace; breakfast rm. & updated kitchen. See this buy at $89,500. Eileen Hudson LIKE A SHINY PENNY 4 Bdrm. & fam. rm. in Lusk Harbor View. Great ocean-<:anyon view. This is really it at $69,500! Jim Muller A MUST SEE PROPERTY One of a kind, in best part of BAYCREST. Immac. 3 bdrm., fam. rm. & formal dining rm. Lovely adult lived in home. $79,500. Bud Austin OCEAN VIEW • NO SMOG PRESENTED AT $165,000. e PHONE 546-lml 'Unlqut Offta1 Corona 6t{ "ll1or 'llltl4 'Vtr6t :;!443 E-t Coeat Hl&hwav CorOna del Mar 675-6000 PERFECT LOCATION Stores, theaters, 11eh:>ol1, all within walking distance tn this kively 3 bdrm. with rumpus room ho m •. FHA/VA terms on th1Jll 3 Jxlnn., family rm home. Owner w1ll paint colors of your choalng. $31,900. Newport •I F•Jrviaw 646-1111 . (enytlme) PANORAMIC Exceptional view of harbor A: ocean, night view you must lei!. 3 B<lrms., 2 ba·a., lge. family rm., all immacu- late. Best Corona del f.1ar buy at $50,500. 675-3000 2407 E. Coast Hwy. BAY & BEACl-I REALTY " CONDOMINIUM lBR 2BA, lrg. Best for •• · •••••• $21,950. 3 BR 2 BA, plush &: lmmac •.•..• $22,500. 2 BR 2 BA-Goll course IOKISI L Ill.SO\ ... p~-~tTCN~ DOWN TO EARTH PRICE Beeutlful. level 80' x 110' BA YCRFSI' lot. View of Upper Bay, bullding plans included. Our best NEW- PORT BEACH bvilding &He b\AY at only $23.SOO. , .. COLwi:;LL PROPERTIES. INC. Formerly loBordt· RE 220 f . 17th St .. C.M. Call 646 • 0555 Eves. Call 646-8406 INVESTORS PARADISE PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 3 Linda Isle Drive Beautiful new 5 BR, 4Mi Be home. Water- front living rm & formal di.Ding. Handsome oak panelled lam rm. frplc, wet bar. Large master suite has frplc & ·cozy lounge area. View of Bay & the mountains. , ... $179,500. For Complete · Information On All Homes & Lots, Plt1se C11l: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR - 341 Bavsldo Dr .• Suite 1. N.B. 67S-6161 Ge neral UNITS!! $3000 OFF! INVESTORS DREAM!! BEACH-PLEX! LET TENANTS PAY YOUR WAY! Country kitchen ful· ly equipped. FORMAL DIN· JNG. King size bedrooms. Almost 1200 square feet of lovable livin& per unit! JUST REDUCED 10% Call Now 643--0.103 I ORIS! E OISO\ " PC A l TORS MODERN BEAUTY 2407 E. Coast Hwy. BAY & BEACl-I REALTY ,. PARK BOAT •• ••• ln front. • .your car In rear · rent out an Apt. &: you'll have ll made! New· General Macnab-Irvine Realty Company BEST BUY UNDER THE SUN The greatest bay view! Charming newly decorated 2 BR, 2 bath condominium. Pool, underground parking, boat slips av&ilable. Will consider lease o p t I on , $52,CXX>. Joel Smith &U-8235. ISLAND ATMOSPHERE 4 BR, Ocean View. Exotic sunken pool w/fountain &: waterfall. Lush tropical gar- dens. Total privacy. Call for appt. 644-6200. $82.500. EXECUTIVE'S CASTLE Master BR llllite·study/slt· ting room -3 BR ·-3 baths, formal DR. $66,500. BALBOA ISLAND - PIER & FLOAT Great duplex (or single fam- ily). East Bayfront -Little Island. Top locat i on! $155,CXX>. Tom Queen 64-H.200. SCOTSMAN'S SPECIAL ?tfuch for little -better hur· ry! For fast sale reduwl to $29,500 -2BR's, 2 baths -409 Gloucester -Amy Gaston • &U-8235. Macnab-Irvine 642-1235 644-6200 I OKl\.I [ OI SO\ '" PC Ai TOHS ~~1a;;:1°:~ ~:.000· --=F"'IX"'ER=-u=P:::P:::E:::R,...- CORBIN Best value -pJime loca· · • tion. 3BI\ 2BA, la!nlly room, lill bltns 4:: corner loc. For MAR.TIN tlle•lwldymon and bargain Fre~ clean view in all directions! Walk & swim at priv. beaches! 3 King sized bdrms., fqrm. dinin~ & nook. Only $57.500. loc ...... $34,900. Call 545-8424 (open eves). hunter -$28,500. NEW on market -'€asts1de REAL TORS 644-7662 Call 545-8424 Copen eves.) Bill Comstock NEWPORT WATERFRONT 61h 0/o LOAN AVAILABLE ON THIS TOWNHOUSE in BACK BAY AREA. 3 Bedroom. 3 bath, builtin kitchen. COMMUNITY POOL & REC ROOMS including billiards, cards and sew· ing. CARPET & DRAPES allowance. Only .................. '. ' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $26.250. 31 UNITS WAITING FOR YOU Five I-bedroom unfurnished, 11·1 bedroom furnished, 7-2 bedroom unfurnished, 8-2 bed· room furnished CLOSE TO SHOPPING near Santa Ana freeway. OWNER WILL TRADE UP et .............................. $365,000. "OLE'" WE SAY IN HARBOR VIEW HOMES Handy lo schools and shopping. This SPAN· ISH style 3 bedroom, 2 baths. dining room, fireplace, extra large builtin modern kitchen, carpets & drapes, two LEVEL PATIO. See this extra sharp one year old beauty. $47,900. "THE TALK OF THE TOWN" IN BAYCREST Lovely planted ATRIUM ENTRY leads you to the sunken living room with all glass, looking out to the professionally landscaped patio and yard. 3 Bedrooms, 2Mi baths, fire- P.iace, FORMAL dining room and large fam- ily room. Kitchen is the gourmet's delight with a builtin Jl.Jl.Q plus breakfast area. 3 CAR GARAGE. An ego builder for .. $69,950. "BEAUTIFUL OCEAN VIEW IN CAMEO SHORES" Spaciousness and elegance. await you in this 3 bedroom, 3 bath CATHEDRAL CEILINGS, dining room, fireplace, carpets & drapes, GOURMET KITCHEN, sepill"ate maids quar- ters. Lovely POOL & GARDENS. A lasting investment in gracious living ....... ,116,750. A"4Hll-Sl#ld """"""" MD lS.SOCIATtl REALTORS 644-7270 2121 EAST COAST HIGHWAY $30,950 NO DOWN • POOLI 1'1esa North home with S Macnab-Irvine apack>ul bedrooms, den, 2 Realty Company batha, bulll In d r. am .CAMEO SHORES kitchen. family room with Oct an · & Canyon View fireplace. Loads ct decklni, A wann I: beautitul home. U paUo. Enclose pool~aate for ycu enjoy dining bY a crack- 1mall children. P 1 u • h Ung tire whlle watching' the carpeting', drapea. Great SWI sink Into the sparkling family heme! 540-lm. Paclllc, If you enjoy watch- TARBELL lni wlldUfe in the Canyon In a quiet I: peaceful set· ting you will probably love 2955 Harbor, Costa Mesa this aplJt.JeveJ. multl·view home. $69,500, Tom Queen THE FAMILY -· 2 Yr. old two storv 4 or 5 BR.. 3\0 baths; dock for 50' boat. View ·of bay & ocean. Pri· vacy. Good parking. Owners anxious. $149,500. George Grupe 4-plex. Good condition. High1=------- income -low maintenabce. IN Sandpointe nr. South AnxioYJ owner has priced Coast Plaza; 1875 sq. It. 4 this property at only $46,000. Br., .2% Ba .. For. din., tam. NO down VA tennl avail. nn., 2 blks to ele. achl. 12 H .... ,. THAT PLA y5· TOGETHER • urey an u ... one. min. to NB &: CdM . bch8. --~===--1 Macnab-Irvine * FHA-G.I. * Vacant 3 BR. 2 ba. Comer fenced lot, in good Co«ta Call 546-5880 (Open Eve>) Shag crpL, Mly landocaped, DUPLEX needl I blg playroom. Th~ F;jiiijiji~iiij~l pat. Fenct'd .~. Less than 2 • -..~ 2 two year ofd 3 ~m. dln- 1 .~. I Id ~... Steps to ocean • .J' oul1us. lni room borne bu a huge JlllTlGI ,,... o .· By owner. fW.900. baths up; 2 Bdrms., 2 baths •·-uy room w1~ llrepl•-I';;:~~~~~~~=' ..,. M BJAn: $7-3111 or 832-9600. uu1w IQ ""-C, I ~ 642-1235 f.ASTBLUFF 3 BR . 2 BA., FAM. RM. $44,750 "SPARKLING" Ne\v listine, best value in this fine area. Recent major "overhaul"; new carpets, d r a p f! 1, shutten, pa.Int, vinyl, THE WORKS! "Put· ling gree:n" front yard. A brlght & exciting small home, Ideal for &tarter fam· ily or young couple. On a friendly street &: acrms !rom your 01\'n park, Better call today. ,·!~ &st ~j}) .J!iqr 6 rcully 2414 Vista Del Oro Newport Beach 644-1133 ANYTIME NEAR BEACHES 5 + FAMILY + DINING UNDER $25,0001! VALUE! VALUE! Twin atant palms hlUte this mlni estate! Kings llvlne room, a11 birch paneling plus m11.sslve used brick fireplace! Big family room cloaked In knotty pine! FORMAL DINING! All tile gourmet kitchen. 5 queen size bedrooms. J og to beach! Don't mlu this best buy! Little down! Call now. 645-0303 I OKISI L Ol\O\ " Alr,Jll T(IR\ ROOMS FOR THE KIDDIES Want separate room• tor the little ones'!' Well, hen's a 5 bedl'oom home )'OU ca.n , afford. Buy with no money , down if you're a veteran. I or low down P«Ytnent wllll FHA tenn.. Norlh Costa Mesa location. It'• JUST LISTED at $31,950 . COATS ... - WALLACE REALTORS -546-4141- (~n Evonlntsl DELIGHTFUL MESA V~RDE Sparkllrii', clean, freahly painted tbree. bedroom home wlth nice carpetln.r. brick Bar-b-que, panelled garage and many many more ex- tras. Just lovely for famJly life and entertainlni. VA/ FltA TERMS. ond -ria:ht at $30,500. ~uLWELL • PROPERTIES, INC for111cd\' l t1flord(' W: ! 220 E. 17th St., C.M. Call 646· 0555 Even1np Call 919-IJIOI OWNER trans. Spanish styl- ~ with authentic arches, plllan, &: Wf'OUlht iron fences. Rich v.'OOd panellna, bup tamUy rm., ehtry hall, rear llvtrw rm., brk. $30,500. Call coilect. !Q..1373. 133-0700 -- Mesa loc. Carp., drapes, bJlns, trpl., I walk to schools ,._1..1.·-'I n--L-&: shopping. Owner arudoua! """'"""' •--129,000 Willi low monthly ~~~==:;:=::;:''liirs"B:EciR<Xiii\S* down. Nicely furn. Both Newport Ht• area. S39,950. VER.Y nice 3 BR. 2 car ~ * 5 BEDROOMS * have "Pks. $69,500. PETE BARRETT rarase. Sher cpto. Cover.<1 OWNER mo"-es. Beautitul Top res1dentt.al }ocatlon ill Call: 613-3663 64U963 Ev~ patio, fenced yard. By ~C~o-m~lo-rt~.~b~le~&-c~...,-- PalOll Verdes stone trim, Costa Mesa. 3 Bath.II, neW -REAL TY -Owner who will pay closihg 2 BDRM home In the San 64-4-2430 ...,;,___REALTOR~ paymll. -* Broker 642·0177 * outstanding exterior, large carpet'.c. 37 Ft. pool. 642-5200 coils. Full price $22,75o. Fern&ndo Valley. Laundry room• thruout. 3 baths, Ov.oner transferred. $40,500 .,.,.._...,.,. ____ I With min. dwn., t o t a 1 room. hardwood noon. SSO NEWPORT CENTER Oil, N.B. For that Item unc!<r $50, lbo!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!J~!!!!!~!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~l try the Penny P!nch<r family rm., 4 bdrms., dining •Balboa ~ Properties DAILY Pilbf fDr aCtlOn! monthly pymt. ol $184. laq:e feJlced yarcJ. Creal ln- nn., bt'k. $34;950. 842-2561. ? 60-7491 * Call &f2..5678 4:: Save! SJ&.$12. vestment 830-8333 eves. General Gen1r•I GetMral 1 General Gener el G1ner•I Gen•r•I General Gener•I ~ WALKER & LEE REALTORS ~WALl(LH ,v, Lll -real tors HUlil ADDID family room wt\h firfplace tilUI 3 bedrooms, 2 be.thl. Sl.000 ender market l'aymenta $163 mo. SH.ARP!! $~. HACH conAliElll Alm06t new, upgraded carpell, kltcht.n, l>ullf...lnJ. Walle. to beach. Paymtnll $186 mo. p:J,500. HUlil POOL Jrun howc for fun-lovt.na tamllJ. S btdroom, added family room, tlreplaet. No down VA $2G,500. Fountain Valley Office 1721J Broelihurst 968-3371 Open E•enlnt• DOVH SHORES -$107,000 Over 3,200 sq, ft of comfort, luxury, and prestige in a mag· runcent Newport Beach setting with an unforgttable VIEW. Four spacious bedrooms, 4 baths, large family room and FORMAL DINING ROO~t. Shown by appointment only. LARCENY IN U.liUNA It you can steal thlJ: fantastic 4 bedroom. 2,400 sq. fL Spanish vma with a pennanent breathtaking Ww at only $69,500. IUILDllS 55x300 prfme vacant properiY In Back Bay area. Owner 1ay1 an have 12 unJta. Exce~cnt price ot only $20,SOO. . MODR HOMI Betttt than new. Gol'l~UI thick shag carpeU. CU.tom dl"tl· perltt throua:hout. Immaculate ls1an4 Jdtchen with all built· Ina lnclud1ng dishwasher. Llr&t brick fireplace. Sliding slap doora from family room and; muttr suit.& to huge covtrtd pe.tiG. 3 large bedroomi A 2 be.lhl. At.olut.el)" fant-atlcl Anyone can auume GI Joan: $34,950. Newport Beach Office -646-7711 2041 w-u11 Dr. "'Im•• Op•""'"" SAVE $2,500 Vt ry sharp swimming pool home (16x32 pool). Lovely c&r· pets I: drapes, covered patio. GI no down FHA low down or take over low interest loan wtth Stif payments. Only $28.990. Unbelievable. $26,000 FULL PRICE IN HUNTINliTON l!ACH 4. bedroom, 2 baths with carpets I: drapes, 2.ca.r 1ara~ with a pclrtJally complelt>d room in ,prage. All thla plus you can take over a 69' VA loan. 2·STORT HOME WITH IVHTTHINli 4 bedrooms. raml)y room, 2':)00 aq. ft. plus a brand new heat- ed pool. Bt1t Huntington Beach location. NEAi NEW CLOSE TO HACH 3 bedroom~ with formt.I dlnlng t rtl and lara:e family room. Owner anxious. He b worktns In Albuquerque. Tty 109' down. · Huntington leach Office -842-4455 7612 ldl•ter Opot1 l•nl191 540-5140 t ~WAI KlR & I fl -real tor-.. lWO ON A LOT Iii NO DOWN Beller .lff thft !'l!'e value today! 3 btdi-oom plus 1 bedroom home on n~ lot. 3 bedroom now vacant and ready for lmml'dlate oceupaney. I bedroom rented at $120 per month. Keep u rental or ute ll Mother-In-law boust. Only S24,500. Won't be around lon1. DOLL HOUSI FAJtalde Costa Mesa for $19,950 full prlct. Gr1 no down also $500 down ntA. O.rllng home illtuated on huge R-2 lol KJnc size bedrooms. areat coun- try-style kitchen. also lob of trees. What a plact! Let'11how It to yoo. call Costa Mesa Office 2790 Herbor Blvd., Open Evonint• ' . 545.9491 545-0465 I • • l "' ... ·····i······· •• • ' • .. DAILY 'llOT PlLOT·ADVERTISEl ]8 W"""'4.lr. ,..,,..., 23, nn ·--~ . ~-.. _, ... I~ 1· _.ht .. I~ I ---l~I _ ..... l~I -.... I~ I ~~ ·1~[ 0.-al General Corona dtl Mor Huntlncfon 'lleoch Lag..,. -i;;:::;;;::;;::t::;c;:::;,J~S~BR;;-~$;":;3;';7"';5:-;:';00-OCEANSIDE of Rwy.~ JUST LISTED Acroa'" for Mio 151 Acrea ........ 1. 151 Mountlln. Doser!, iiiiiiii l...,!!R~OMrl~~~_.!17~4 MESA DEL MAit • ..Uin& at 1ot value, tum 1 $15,500 cio.. m, 1-bdnn. bunplow Sina"le.levt1, wlth t.amlly rm. BR b::lule, ccmpl 1ncd oo 111A 221.02. $liOO down, total on valuable R-1 lot. $29.500. RECREATIONAL ACREAGE NEAR SEQUOIA & YOSEMITE 5 ACRES nr. Anza. wtr, t:lee. t&.!00:. 165. Do 6.13-mo a oo 1D AM. -PM. A&1- 1st TD ·LQans -IEAUTY -C1o1a 00 sr. Jdw. acbool.I 3Q<IU, M to~ 131.960. pa,ymta 1nc1 , .... " mabtt. * 52800 * You'll fall to' lovt at fint " •hoppio&. Lovely homt Prlnclpala CNll,y, ~. $158. Xlnt condo. d ote IO --'kt 6'!4 % INTERES'I: 2nd TD Loans llibt. ~ Jd.«111 on lht ~~ 0....... • lit. 6% 496-2355. roaJor shop. cent, lbc1a . ..,~......,_ Properties near Bass, Shaver, Plnellat, Mil· outald<, aqulalte d«loratina -~. c1rpo. ....,. dlyer ~ lerton, McClure & Don Pedro Lakes. Parcel APPLE Valley: 5 acres w/cabln. AllO Sptin1 Valley !Ake Jot. 8U.im8.' oo tot tmlde of lhla la.ortte 675-3000 lrvlno T•rr. View ··~· w ' ' •=-~= sizes from 2~ to 40 acres mosUy, Larger 4 bedroom modtL Ruge, 2417 E. Cout Hwy. ~ 2Bedroom • ~ !::" Paymll cheaper tha.n .... -. ........ Cllllllir parcels such a1 amall ranchos avail. 21h to Out of St•t. Pr..,. 171 1% int. huod on '®ft>. A1ao NEW 1115!1 ot aale-p:ice loabl Sattl•r Mtg. Co. spartcllng, healed, Wtaod I Ba., Ideal far owo. l5T,IOO. * OCEAN VIEW * 5 A's from '4990, 20 A's & up from $400 per 1111<1 ltlll1 equipped pool. TEO HUBEl\T ASSOC. If 3 Bdrm. ........ Joe .., acre. WW soon market fUlly improved pri-HAWAIIAN LOT Panoramic vu of Kon1 lteady to buUd, all util un- d6'1f'O'l!nd and in. 10,010 sq. ft. TERMS. 548-3316 <>w.... tn.nsf....., oot of mt Via Lido · 67M!OO 1.oguna•, lamed RI;;.,. vale golf course & river frontage lots near ttate and can &Ive early oc-Cost• Mesa t62-4471 ( ;::: J 14W1 OJ coutline. Frplo, op e o Oakhurat. , '42·2171 545411 Serving Hvbot ._ 21 yn. CUPIUlq'. A!trt<tlve t...,.. $25 750 Na D beams, bltno, view decks, areavaU ... w.-. Prk ed • • own VACANT & READY SHOWCASE dining ..... S38.500. JOE WESTRICK, BKR. 121i1s41.2in -1or11ent I~ tor q~ II.le at SJT.SC.O. lermt -S bedroom. 2 bath. SHARP EASI'SIDE llOME NEAR-TifE.BEACH. 4 Std-MISSION REALTY 494--0731. 601 Silver Spur Rd. 8340, Palos Verd•s Ranthff, Parms, • fl!- • COATS oecluded Uvin& """" .,.. * 3 Big -G 1ao I~;;;·---;;;;;-~, & hanced b;v appealing flr.: * 2 ruu blthl. rm, 3 Bath, tamUy -rm. Lkle tsl• ;;;;;:;'°;;;;v•;;•;;;;;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;;:;:; ll WALLACE pl&cf', P•tlo. Jr. ntate * Plush lhl&' crpt. ~~~" =~r ...:r--4-B;..E_D_R~OOM--S--Duplexe1/Unit1 Appl'OXlmately f4 iacres with Hevse1 'urnt1hed 300 • llEALTOltl :!,~ ~arpetai::. : :..~~~t separate. Best Sboweale Close to clubbou&e. New ll••I 111• 162 an excellent lo c at i on Generil n..:......n EvenJ ... 111 t.Jear acbooll A lho-'R-. *"""KN>, •·u prl-floor plan. $39,900. Call furna ce &: water heater. tilt"""'9 . O\'erlookJng Lake MattheW1. I_.;.... _____ _ ""t""" .,.. 1~ VJ"-''6 ..,,....,., •u .... .. ..... ,,,. Owne W -•---t ~--;;;--;;~~ UNITS wanted. Have buyers •· 9624454 • 641).Im: nLVVA TERMS AVAIL. ()'U·'l'flJO --•· r .., i~ra,. •do· °'it tor duple:tes·up to l&"e unill. 6437 Valencias on tro~ 1.,..,,....,..,....,...,...,...,1 *FULLER REAL TY* "'~• your ouer A&ont 67>-1%l5 WR. planted tn 1963, l<>i•lher 4 BDRM., 2 BATH il<&-081• ............ Anytime y.......it. $5.1,000. Mobllo HomH I with a nJce ranch h9<-lll><I $12,795 bOCDCl'llb low....,,... For Solt 125 ncomo P._rlY 166 line shop. Lut ye<r'1 pro. 2955 Harbor, eo.ta M... NEAR PARK 1 -==-=-52~6~5=00~-1 •eal•on I -:;;;:;==::=:/~==~~~ •uctJon wu •••=1mately 4 Bdnnl, 2 baths, FA heat-3416 Via Lido 6'JS-4FJ62 / • 2 BEDROOM plus den, fire. 26,000 boxe1 with an ' ex· Built On Your Land WALK to BEACH Ing, new CpVdrpg, la''" I MOVE RIGHT IN pl_ on 11 Aero. $13,500, U.mely eoo.t pack-0ut. A .... ~, -lJ43 IQ, ft. llvlne area CHOOSE yard. Near Newport ltts. & 4 BDRM.· 3 YRS. 3 BR., 3~ ba, den & * '66 ~ nic50, 3tBR, price tag of $325,000 cer- -AU lath Ii pluter Enjoy living:\Jn th1J 3 bedrm 2 doors trom park & play. YOUNG playroom·········· $89,50P skirting, 8x24 porch, stor-TRIPLEX talnly merit• your in-.. ...,:Li~ -Hai'd'WOOd cablnell 2 bath hoihe ·--"'1' or -.. .... '. •-ann. Near Beach Ii Shopping 5 BR. 3 ba. strada corner. age shed.a. Famlly park, vestigation. For turthtr in--•...i-~ ,,,..._ .. ,,... .... -.-Pool $12500'.I near Dana Point Marina. S BR. 1~ Ba. ftrepl, dbl gar --....... bo• u .. It u -lncom• ,,.... CALL ,... u .. JU4 * Century 21 * LIDO.REALTY INC. * '65 a--·~·. 2 BR" and 2-2 BR unlla. $49,950. formation, pl<ue ca I I -Pullman baths duclng property. Ldacpd 9~-' ~""'•""""''SN/WO Ernest Eckhoff at -Spacious wardrobet patio w/eotrance from ~ Recll Estate 3377 Via Lldo, N.B. den. 9x2l cabana w/wood-6 UNITS Eckhoff & Anoe., Inc. JUST $9.53 SQ, FT. Strada. $32,500. RIAL TY-842-8821 673-7300 burning firepL Skirts, awn-on ~ e.c:re lot. $69,SOO. Ml-262l Evrtl/\Vknds 633-6974 Strvine Newport.co.ta Mesa Ptannina·Dr1lp-Financing Nt•r Newpor1 P•11 Offlte 118Ti Beach Blvd .. H.B. SACRIFICE I lngs, Garden, fully land-·atta. Over 500 rtntaAI avail· Also Duplexei and Tr!.ple1':er ONE hall bloCk to \\1estcliU SMART MODERN ! Bdnn, newly decorated scaped. Deairable family I UNITS VISTA 6 ac. hone ranch, able now. We iuarantte ~ CALL 537·0380 '~~~~~~~; ahopplna'. Nice Eutside Custom built tor luxury Uv· older home, frplc, lae dbl * ~k~i::c~.BR., front Comer location. $100,000. pool coltap, avocado, Citrus ~~~I~ :11::~t~1=-ha~ 1C6G6 Wtstm.Jnaler Ave, G.G. home. 3 bdrm., 2 bath, lna. 2 hedrm 2 ·bath, featur· garage, ~t mooring avail. porch, full akirtl, patio CCV· Roy McC•rdJe Re•ltor Aaent. 615--7225. H1R. you. want, yott don't ~· 'OPEN 1 DAYS tlreple:~, large Jot, built-Ing sunken firepl with con· 548-1335, m-0631. @!',carport. Lnd9cp"d, Adult 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. Reil E&t•t• Fair'! Call now. ina. Assumable 5%% loe.n. versation area, all mod bJt· M••• Vtrcl• P&J'k Coata Mesa 541-772t . Exch•Mo 1n 1 n--•-~-•·•-•, ~119, STA NC 0 WHY sftENTr By owner. PrinclpalJ only. in ldtch. Prime kic, nr Lake,r---------* sxzi Aljo, New· ~wnings. ~~~~~~~= ··• DCU.l\IUllJ ;,, ...... Ullloll~ ., When you can own th1a 3 $13,000. 548-009'· Park. $39.!00. Call Jl68.44U OWNER. 3 BDRM, 1!< bath. IWIOrtd tntorlor. N • w -10 UNITS WANT beach property for 3 Utillti'9 P a.J d. Private IUILDlll; lllC. Bedrm bom• ""lb pa,yml> BY Anxlotu o,,_, • BR, 2 CREST REAL TY bltno, panelin&, beautiful furnace ol wtr beater 155 ""'"" In Rtver•Mlo. Owner t::::;;,.., Brand New $160 ~=-a: =~t°:u~ BA. Iri &2 lot 155 X 55, ~tedpa:;, ... ~11hcio!°n:; mo rent. Garden Grov~. Pride of owntt1~p 1 Bednn -Hal Evry, 357 So. Van Oilldttn ii Peb OK,~aHo Fun' prU:e $23 <m GI • DO bloclc wall fences w/alley, GOVOEWRNNEMDENT schools ~,,.. cn%"' 540-2461. * '63 l2x55 Angelus, 2 BR furnished apt.s in top cond. N'51, Im: Angeles, Caill. Garage, Fenced Yard. ' UNPRETENTIOUS ' · Priced IO sell. 210 Palmer • -·~· •ith add-a-room 7 x 20. Never • vacancy. 115,000 3 Bedroo H $200 Hu SECLUSION s':i'EnR'w.'e~R~Y st., c .M. ~354 ~wni!.e;~ :,::,se~ N•wport ~·~ ... .. ::.-b1; 0':,:·~~.':_' ... down-awn$1 i''s.~~· I . -..:...~ j[j) Refr!g. ~ &:~. Private MESA Verde 4 B <>w.... · • •-• Yard&Patlo.FamW"witb Deltgbllul famtlY home In ,_Brookhunt, F.V. r. down. No pointa or Es=w HiGHLANDS * '64 Dual Wide 20x53 "''' c 21 ;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;~·~~ Pets Weloome. tranquJI "park like tetting in OWNER anxioul crJ.u..crogg trasf. Reduced to $31,500. No fees. Gov't> pays clogini Im de show ch. entury Upptt'&y area of Newport Colonlal Cape Cod~.,. dn. VA. 1616 Elm Ave., costs. All price ranees. cau 4 SpaciouJ bdrms. family Comp~~e bltna includ'::ac. EAmlDE Beach. ·Larr• living, dlnin& shutters, decoratlve roof 557-6151. Jl68.44U ;;:j :. ':i,~ :1~.~'! cleaner, d""'" A blonder. Buol-• COSTA UESA' "family room~ Two raJaed Une, built-Ina, large kitchen BY 0..'0er. 3 BR. Walled lot. CREST REALTY cpt/drps, AND a """""'"" Fully lndacp'd, lklr11-awn-642-lm ANYTIME Opportunlly 200 "' . hearth fireplaces, pleasant pantry, buge pe.neled family Clo9e 'lo l<lhc:4s. O:wered _ HIF POOL. Prime Harbor ing, porch. $57 per mo rent. -===-:-:--::-::-:--.,.,-,...,,.--"'"-".,,.,.""""~,....-= Rent at $195 or optkla m tqr, buUUn ldtcMn with eating nn., 3 bdrms + den bric. patio. 2195 Meyer p I. WALK to the BEAC~ Highlandi attL $4.1 000 \Vestmtnster area. No rea-CORONA DEL MAR COCA COLA 3 bedroom, 2 balh, double area and seyarate utility $28 500. 842-6691. 646-1576. from this ~ear new 4 bednri. ' • sonable offer refused. 2 Duplexe11, ea. w/3 BR., 3 garage, 1enced yard, new room. Genuoua master ' . , home featurtnK bltin R/0 , CALL • i;\. t46·J•J4 * '70 Skyline 24x00, 2 BR, 2 ba. downsta.frs & 2 BR., 2 CalUornia Chrpon.Hon wants attar carpets, freshly paint- -·lle, •-autltul~ mani-··-OWNER leaving. A~ ARCHITECT s Home. 3 Br., dabwahr 1• nice shag ~tg. A.'!'·-' · ~A d ~-~ h ba. u-+•i.;. Pr1 patios men or women to .ervioe ed Call Broku S&-9C91 ;;; ~and ~uch ~;;. 6~% loan, apr. 4 Bdrm., 3 1" ba., tam. -rm., trplc., Fullpr,ice$25,500. GI&~ffiA ~ ~·H:-M.porc ' cov'd ~-~than 2 fut movtnaautomated oPen EveL S59,s0o. On fee lahd, baths, circular drive .r 2 =rz.. ~!8!; .... By owner. terms. pwner,Wilt help pay Noa·r N·,.•i••,t,T,Y 1·0111 * '63 Angelus 12x55. 1 BR yn:. old. Immac. cond. equipment Proaucta pro. ~·-==~"B"°a-,h,.-pa"'d,,...u"'tll,,....pd.,.._ 1tory New En&land ~led ....,., ........ .....,...,MW. buyerS ooata Call 540-8555 · •r • t• w $70 500 E h d ced by ulti-bWk>n dollar "'·""' • Call 546-1151 <Open ove&) home. Picture windows, BY Owner' Xtra Lri •Br, 2 SHERWeeD REAL TY 2 HOUS S. DBL. LOT tum. dtmln•ter area. , ac . •• 0 ~!IM1. m ;:1~ :,k.:~ ok •hutten, lamlly rm .. brk. ba, corn. Jot. R'l' tor boat. ,_ Brookhunt, F.V. ~ BLK. TO BEACH , , &75-&0M $150 pvt hme lncJI vac. ...... 138,!00. 962"5566. 124,900. 642-M59. $ QUICK s lJke new 2-sty •• BR., 2 ba., -"Mil I 5 ..... Can IWt part of ruu time (5. 2 BR -ocean !mt . kld1, NB -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ J oWNER must sell. 4 Bdrms., BESI' in College PK. 4 Br., 3 WE BUY HOMES ~~8!.,~g nn~blr:•: ::Q: !~1a1:'~r ~';:mi;:~ ms bik to bcb, kld•/pets !! large famll,y rm·~ feet in Ba. 1925'. VA/ntA or ccnv. MR. KASABIAN 847.9604 Frple. 2 car gar.; Home Ul80 Beach Blvd, Stanton 16 UNrTS t1'-l430 AOINT C. F. COLESWQRJHY length! N.ew carpeting, din-Sell at apprall. 540-8316. KASABIAN cnuld be made btlO duplox. ** 7U/893-13U ** Near Fas-Island. 10% dllttibutoro. Btlboa Ponln1ula ing rm., brk.., $31.&D. Call Eeit Bfvff Aho • cute 2 BR. cottage. !!!~~~~~!"""!!!!!!!! Return on down payml Will &~co. oollect! 64&--0604. Both only $7~900. Open CONTEMPO-take 6 units or R-3 land tor NO SELLING BAYFRONT • choke 5 S.ck B•y CUSI'M 2 Bk', epacioe.a liVing REAL ESTATE we.:kends 1-5. LAGUNA HILLS part down. Go fishing or spend more bdrm, 4 ba, sumqter or yr. &-master nns, Pr i n e GREAT family rome--ForCAY\VOOOREALTY548-1290 Prostlge adult community THE IRWIN CO. time with yOUr faYOriite ly. Furn or WlfUin. Owner, SPACIOUS KIDS, PETS & BOATS ONLY. $52,500. alt 5,30 Sale by Owner. •BR, 3BA. FANTASTIC water view. adjacent to 1.e;..,.. World. RHltoro 644-6111 hobby and let the machine ~6'13-_2039 ______ _ WATERFRONT WIU Jove tltl1 big fenced 644-5510. 2500 sq. ft. New shag cpt'g, Enc, Condo on the bay, Beaut IUJ'l'OUDdlngs. all lux· 610 N.,.._ Center Dr. ... earn you money. CASH Dano Point HOM. E yard, cul-de-sac, ~ Br, 2 ba, Fount•fn V•lltY p&lnt & pa~r. CJo.e to 16x50 TelT8Ce. First of_. ury appointments. Thera· Suite 445 Newport Be&ch REQUIRED $2498. Secured. ___ ..,.._...,... __ formal dlnln& room home in sch.ls &: 1 mi from bch. ferinc. Priced rfeht, A mutt ~~.~:_.pool, HU1l&I, R:Ym, 4 * OCEANFRONT * 2 BR, frplc, bttns.' pa.Ho -A SECLUDED 5 bedroom•, 3\1 prestige area. Only $37,950. GI $1.00 $3.!,000'Prl..,. only, 96U983. aee! ~Q'RE, table& MUCH 6 l«e. imlts, new, clooe to LIMITED charmlna "DoH" -· b<ths; family room a formal lil% Down. TOTAL DOWN NEAR BEAOI. 2 yn old 3 WICKRAM REALTY 6446489 See th; "Award winnbtg'' all actlvll>; cm Nowport'1 OPPORTUNITY $250. mo, 496--. dinlng n:iom plus recreation rt . Br, 2 Ba. fam. rm. iold BY Owner: No down -VA, 1 1um1ahed model .lmnes ON beaut btach. Fint user L•tUftl h•ch area. Two patios & an ele-Newpo Clean I: vacant 4 BR 2 BA. shag. $33,900. s 3 6-7 2 3 9 yr old, 3 Br, 2 ba, 2 trplc's, SALE THIS WEEK. depr. Ready. for mmmer! Write now for more in-_;......;...c.;.;..;;; __ _ vator to make thingt ea.sy. it Lrg'lot, elect kitch, big rms, Owner. crpll/drps, dbl gar, 1 blk 830-3900 or 831).79m OPEN DAILY 1-4 forma.Hon, include phone RAR& 1 IR. !!..~~ =~.~: Fairview ~~=t~':S.~;rmocos. ~~ 1'tEREDITH G~. ens: 3 br, !3!:!1_·1523$4.7~ !~.Simple. CONTEMPO. ~rbt~~ ~= number. Cottageonrearoflotw/nlce .. .,..... rw.• ..,.... ~ ---• din\ t O'M ,.,...., ~·.. 1001 Howard Ave. earden. Entlrtly ftdecan.t· ment for in-laws or tax re-.1..1 .1. •111 Magnolia & Slater. $31,500. 3 ba, furnuu ng, mmac. ' · GR.EEN RIVER 6 U It E bl\iff lid for a· total ot almost ~ ii the VA appraised price. $43,00:>. ~r. !J68..3529. BY OWNER Great Family Parle: n s l&t i Sa.n ~1ateo, CL !W.01 ed Ii fuml.shed. Oilld ok. 6,00> 9e1. ft, Alktng $150,000. (anytime) If LA CUesta Hm. Shq crpt, 2t~·J BbeR, Ab-framlJke. Steps MONTm..Y SPACE RENTAL 2o~R.FJiyba!,,~: dra~ R EDI-BRE\VCORPORATION. ~d:ea::.-Wlcter $1~ 64l>Om 615-4930 ~!'."!!~!""!"""!"!!!!!!!!! water ooltnr. 3 br, 2 ba, 0 ~•• f' · e new. rnoM $69.511! Oovered -· Belt toca-NU-VIEW RENTALS $40,950 Balboa Ponln1ulo 531·5111 I;;;:) 531·5110 lorm din. 137.!00. 968-m4. =~ ~ 2 BR "wit:"~lly& ':°.:""lZ tion. $150,000. • THIS IS A 6'Jl.I030 or ..w~ Luxurious 5 bedroom ·2 !tr.t' BALBOA Penlmula home. Huntlntton BeHh Irvine +den~ Ba,eood view. everyone. Located 10 min. >' ,75-IOJO 0 VENDING NtiWPOrt Beach in prime location. Sparkling Quiet, near bay, nice area.1 ---------A,t. 675-7225 lU.R. east ot Anaheim on new --OPPORTUNITY cond btsldo & nut G,..,,d Call 538-<ll69, 545-3543. CALIF CLASSIC LOWEST PRICED.... BY Owner $3.! 000 3 & ta,.i. Riverside Fwy. Take G,... -p•j·-11.a BlIT. • . fASJBLUfF p1IU'IO me llvlng room, I~~-~-'.,....---4 Bdrm., family rm. town-• ' · RJ1Jer ott-ramp adjacent to It is different from any country slu kltch It pool C;.;0_11;.;, .. ;:..._P_•_rk ____ 3 BR 2 BA. bonus rm -house in Unlvf!l'lity Park. ly, ~ xtru, !3-ck Bay Green RtVl!t Golt c.omv. 12 DELUXE C.M. units. 2 yoo've evtr beard or. slie yard. Won't lut Jong. colllcl be 2 BR Ir lra: tamUy 2% Bath& Cloa:ets plore. 2 area, &45-0082. Prin. only. 49lll Green RJver Dr. BR. l~ Ba. 2 yr1. old, Price ''DOLL HOUSE'' Submit all tt'rms! ~~!.ta 11~nn_2 !ftt; rm. Best crpts, drps. Priced Frplcs. (one in instr. bd-Ntwporf Heights Coram ** ?Jtl'131-'1374 reduced to sell by bwner. Your lnvesbnent ot sm.oo ci..ll 545-8424 (Open eves.) -·~-m !'-place " I u , 1or quick sale. Vets no down, rm.) Over 2;000 sq, ft. Of ..__..7 FLAMINGO 2 ~ $160M, 15% ~ dn. Prine. puts you in bu.sine• and \outh . (. oast . - CLOSE TO BEACH Larr• 3 DR. 2 ba. duplex with 3 tu.place& $5.1.000 • TE!lMS George Wllll1m1on Realtor 54US70 MS-1564 ...... w ""' " or 5% to new loan. Call GOOD. f .. -11 •• 11.n .... , Ofter-ATI'RACTIVE 3 BR. R-2, ~ • .....u-iu., 548-6731. tonnaJ din Inc. Cpts oA" ~~,.,. ..... .....,. ·-.. for unlh 123 500 _.,,... one is Jdn&-1ize. 2 bl.th, --==="""'-.,.,-= eamin& income in IDUr or everyw~ &: s up e r O'U1'tO'U ed at S32,SOO. cau WI to •ee 64~ · ' ~W4. w a ab"' r i: dry e r, 2 TRIPLEXES in xlnt N.B. five days, You approvtc1 and atorage. $33,500. 245 Tulane It today!! dishwasher, & new shag Joe, Great opp, tor begtnner. accept all Jocatio111 belan! Rd . S•nf• Ana carpet. new dra.pes, eet-up No vacancies, Grou inc. we accept payment. This Corona del Mar VERY nke '§ BR, 2 car in family park, pet ok. $5700 &: $6,IXXI. Owner spare time income can eui- --------13 BDRM-$19,900 garage. Sb«g cpta. Covered 53l-729t _MS-_9695._,·,..==-~--r !m':'::1;:'.,.';:;t' in- * DUPLEX * A real boy. ltOOOdD; ..,..... patio, le"f'd yard. By 10X20' MobD• home, endosed 21.UNIT Now finished & ready to of $186 per D'lO'. 2BA, I& Owner who will pay closing cabana. F'Urn., In Adult 2 A 3 Br, 2 Ba. Nr shop's. mlM! into -sharp 2 bdrm. fenced lot, all elect Jdtch, tocta. run ptice $22, 750. Park downtown c . M • 82Il Ellis Ave., HB. $Q> M. home plu1 brand new own-dln rm. 7 yn old W/bltin with min. dwn., total 548-5919. 347-3957. WELMMtER PRODUCTS, ~r'11:;1H1;, wt;hb2 :rr:,1" B-B-Q in the bade yard. University Park monthlli pym'~ of $184. lCbQO' 1959 Paramount, xlrt't 4-Plex, all 2 Br. 1 Ba. Inc. INC 3 Bdnna., 2 ba'a.; WttDy uea, l·ltory, ReeenUy n- decorated 4 shows It -a Jowly home for the right party. Avail. 3115 &I $400 pe:r m>nth, incl. everything! ******* THE BLUFFS 3 BR. plfil dttl. 2 ba'1., 2· sty, Dbl. p&Uo, Plan ''K," cul de uc locatlon, nr. pool. Ava.il. now at $42.S Pu month Fam. hrm,., hltnsll ; .':: See today, Doy1 W-0101 Night• 8J6..56,~ • cotwl at San Jacinto. ssromo.NodnVA.$52,500. . . ea ; , earpe... If N OCC. ••7 ~~ For • down p•yment A terrtf.ic property for )IOU -s.n Clemente 64$.-0l.81 aft 4 pm. r ON '"V.W&. • 2626 Weit }.Jockintblrd Ln. 1 ... than one month• MORGAN REAL TY -VIEW SHORr::;;:F.S' By....... • Loh !Or Solo 170 SUltt 228 ~:'~' )' con4o":"_your 673-6642 675-6459 531-5111 ( ,_J 531·5111 Rlghly uwaded 3 bdrm .. br, ba, exp.!!>llve •be";? I . ~~i,to, I 1.1 R/l LOT _ $lO,SOO Dallao, Texas 75235 t-:S( •},·'· §!{' or uwvrm. Sean Evoryfhlnt? TROPICAL PARADISE 211 ba. home ,.;th VIEW paper, '":J>'• '"'· Pvt '" . -· ~ IDEAL FOR INCOME! 'I-=-======-LJf. ~· homo. Agtnt-540-8555 Oh no, Just lilted, beot loc. 3 BR + 2 BR + POOL of h!U• end night llghta. oce4n view. $42,000. PriD-Fac!Uti" "oewera In! CO-DISTRIBUTORS { ''), reu ly OWNER ..rung; 3 bedroom• I BR. 2 ba. homo. Beamo, $24 900 Outstanding Jandocaptng clplJ. only, By appt. evf$. HAFFDAL REAL TY (NEEDED) ' &: den, 2 bathl., entry ball &: trpl. + neat studio apt. . • • and ioc&tion. Pliced at 644-3138 or 493-0lS8. l>eJ.'s Ctmttery · l42..WOS E 541 446 JoJn a 7-plu.s billion dollar 2414 Vista Del Oro spa cl o us living rm, oozy $46,500. App'l please Beil value m atta. w/w ear-$41,000. 833-16J.l ext. 283&. L«t/Crypfl JU vet: ·l lndu.try. Become a dl04bu-Newport Beach tftplace, bullt-Ua range & 3001U;l~r•~ Re•~ =:n.t~a~!t:e ~~~ i eel h.11 San Juan C1pl1tr•M 2 CRYP'l's-Paci.fte V i ew Z::1tu~I ~ =:_-$29~: :~°d:r r:in,~~ 2 mu~~ BR,AN= Near oo~rk~!2:'~:1: BEA~ wylocation ~ :rr~YM~~!Sub-r I Mll.St ~~3 bed· ~~7~ .. r.t. SAVE! ~~ ten:na. Rltr. need dept.ndahle me Of. bay,BalboaPeninaula. 3 BA, form din, auume In, story. 5 br, 4 ba, 3 frplc. SEYMOUR R£ALTY, 2 bath home Lush C I l :b:,:, ~:'!= Winter $Zl5. Bn..$167. $39,950. Prine only 557·1823. A&ont 67>-7225 lllR 111'1BeacbBlvd.,RuntBch. REALTY room, • ommtrc • 1 .. Mobile Homt/ beabletostart81o10hourl Hou1H \Jnfurio. 305 l:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;;;;;:;:::;;:::;;:.:..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;:.:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;j Univ. Park Center, lrvlno :'.i =-~L y!1:; Prep1rly .. Trtllor Porks 172 per woek. Many ndJlionl of Genor,,......;.._ 01 ..k...,..;_...;....,.....;....;.1 Call Anytime, m-082> tor -COMMfL bid&' on Newport DESERT CRE!11" dollln ipfllt Heb Yf&r ID l_..,......;, __ ...,;;,_ __ S©ll~lA-~t.~s· The Punle wifh the Built-In Chuclle ' I SACRIFJCE by owner, nr. ONLY $31,<m Blvd at Harbor. «XX> sq It. Own your own lot advertise products uted. S90 pvt hme kldJ/'ittl I Income $9WI. yr, ~% dn. 'Goll CLUBHOUSE, Natuftl LIMITEO OFFE:n 195 2BR, irui.1..u -• br, ba. lam rm, HOMESITE bel 1 % per mo al S%. Leon Hot 1'>oll. ll,990 to 1'1210 CA S H REQUIRED TO_ $125 2BR bltn !di Idell/ II fonnal din rm. $42.!IOO. 1-Acre in good, run.I are1. Vibert Rn!tor. ~ or ~ Brochu.rt. START Sl,796.00. For more Sll5 kkbf ts ff.a; pe &'U-8864 Nearby $$'.},000 homes. Zon· 6'n-6534. £LDRibGE REALTY CO. informaticm wrtle: Dfstrlbu· $I40 nr .,: kids ot Laguno Buclt 2ed~E-3. Coold ~~dch.e Into CDM High-~. C-1 P. o. Box 666.o ::J-;;..•~w~~~ 1145 ziR. iddl, C.M. ·"'·· I -·~ •a land " blllp. Deaert Rot -Callt ., u-.... ~. $150 2BR anrlo. !( 'bn CM LOCATION + ruu.CAPPRIISTCERAS30NO'ooo Aio•L ~7225 H.J.R. cnu 32UM4 _,_ Give -l>llllbar. nio 2BR--idda OK Sbtnglet. gla... privacy I> DEADWNE .,,, SJl,\KLEE Pvt June. woll< to bch CdM value.,. only a few wordl VALLEY REAL TY Condomlnhim1 Mountoln, Donrt, DlSTRIBUTORSllIPS wilh IJI> S BR.._ Yiow C.M. that deacrlbe tb1a 1 bedroom 315111 Camino Cap!ltrano IM IOlt 1'0 RHorl 174 NO INVESna:NT to Feb. J BR. anrto ok, H.B. wilh corwtttlble den, 2 bath 493-1124 ALL slzn prlcu *+ NO$$ DOWN** 291h. Wt will -A $16112BR 1Wim pooj N.D. home overlookbig WOOds Realtors Since 1"5 payments ' ~nd ~wn • J.}o Prtce ovttt $500 A train )'OU. FREE! Be tn-$185 hn. rnch l Am, 2 stblt Cove ffuae Jll&lttt bed-AL per c. dependent. Have Y 0 UR $260 hn rnch !BR, corl, atll room' lO' livin& room, built· Wo1tmlnsttr paym•nls. C L • • Lona ''"""Low Mo. pmt'1 OWN .. !Ural prbducll 91'-1430 AGENT In kit.ch-·-•-le·• of••· WHY PAY RENT? 1poclall1tl 5"-5411. e .c> AC ioq Lasoen Count> oo~---Full ,.. ••• •-· manya;;;..-;;;;v;'1,;tutt11"; Anytime• LARWIN • • Gooduce•HuntandFloh Call"'";;:~·-~· 2 RENTALS CODlllU't' at !C.IOO. U-7) \Vhm you can °'"' your own BY Owner. 3BR. 2 BA. e 30 mil .. of ...... snta I" UQUOR uce... ann,. 4 Std, lttshly palotod, new home for only 1116. per mo. Frplc cota. drpl, pelio. 2 ~~ ~'westclifl County, 011 --. No c:rp<s a d!I-. I BA. IZIO '()t.a'./1; We bav. a 3 BR .vftb luob, car Pr Gd Io ca II on SUlte 1118-N--1Je1ch llxtu ... rr bluo ~ 11111 mo. ,,_ gold Iba& Cll>I& you'll love. 548-8310 ' . • • -• 'I ~·~ 1' Uv"" w/Swedi<b n...,p1 • 54&J&'l61-..... t>IJ0< over Sll.IOO plus ..,, 3 Bed. •tl'J cl-2 DA. dbl RE~L ESTATE gives u fhlt warm, family Dupl•xff/Ulllto **BIG BEAR LAKE ama11 bu1c tt1ock. 537-gar $22$ mo q1. 1190 (ll•llll<)ft SL leelbtg. . .. i. 162 eFiSR . Hant . Sid .~ Al1 7 ... -. 45-3991, CENTURY /21 l'M-94'13 54!1-03!6 Century 21 ALBWsr-dupla .. ""·3 ::-:~NiY~,llOO.h~ 1·o:::n ... ~ ... 546.fJii IMMAC. S BR A lam. br, FR A I br, 1rpica, FAU, " -• ,_,. - 2 Bl. CJ>ta. r1rpo. bl::; REAL ESTATI 142.+47 .. pvt Pr1ats. patlol. R .. 11 o'f""~ ~~t:::;, J'b"" EXC!IANG&9, in>'tstmellll L , .. i'(!4EEll panoramic caJt)'Olt ~. From "ctaillmu Ntcktlt:1" $450., $46,950, w / f 2 • O 0 O u tor t8 159 A tu ahtltera, Home A r • ..OWneri 138,500. 3000 Mounlaln vw ., oullrown Levis. you Ct>t cm.. Ownrr/bulld<r )Jr. iJ~ cm> ·5.16-1738 or r • ...,.,,..,. Really. 67>~ \\~ ;:.::ani. t~ Dr., Top ot Worid. -· -"'tnlll ID cull" ill • Grey 5lO-ll33 write: -lltal F.ltata. hr that ttftn ondtr '50, ~ -.ti •.;. ..,,. 5 .......... I -&Ns~s IN c• &SSIFIC anoN 100 rut iauill are just a pilot» DAII.Y PIJ.OT d1ul!IM ad -l!Ubti!WT Watcb Jhe P.O. s.. 2121; Bia' s..r ""tbt """"' -waltJnr 1111. 1_,.;::,..: ...... ~...;..-...;.._1_•_ .. __ . ...;..""="-...;.....;....:"";,;.:~;,;.::..";,;.:.:...;;..:.:..,.;::,:..:.._.::caU:::.:•:::wa.v::::.,:·..:NMml::;::::=.__ -call &0-i!m OP!l< HOUSE <0l11mn. Lalct. Calllornla. Wllll• Ellptiant Dlm..A·Llne ALA Ronlals e MS-3"' ; 1 \ I D.lll Y ,llClf 11 w .. ......,. ,...,, 23, 1'172 w .. ...,.,. ''"""" 23, 1972 G -"'-I~ -·-~ I --l~ ~---rtJ [ ··-... -lrt ! ~--lrtJ ~I ... ~.-~1or~.,..~l!tJ~[ --~ lltl PILOT ·AOVUllSE• Ap1rt1n1n1t t••tnt [tl ~~..;.;~1~;;;;;;;;;;;;1 1 --~~- Ho_u_ ... __ u_._ru_m_. __ 30;;;;;5 Houses Unfu rl': ~5 HouM1 Unfurn. 305 Apt1. Furn, , 360 Apt&. Fum. 360 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unlurn. 3'5 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. Co1t1 Mt1• _L_"ll_U_n_e_B_N_c_lt ____ B•lbo. Penlntula tftwpart Buch Cost1 Me.11 Huntl"'lon Beech Senta An• _..;......;...._~~--· Cost• M. .. .. 2 BDRM ...... w/w .,,.... NORTH END • 125 WK" u;>-0.. ac.an • BRAND NEW fe/"lffif yd., privat~ ilrft&I". 2 Br duplex privacy • nice Lovety Ba.c:h-l~Rooms A ll Utllltlea P 1id R ENT'AL FIND ER S Adultt only. No pei.,, $115. view, New ttjll I: paint. Maid llUVice-~Util pd 20102 Birch St. lnr o.c. air-""YI! 1M. COSTA MBA mo. 2:'08 Eldea Av.' • Wubtr I: dcyer, alngle ....... • call 675-1740 • po11, s. of PaJ!slde• Rdl House1 * Apts. 64&-0762. •1e. Good itoraa:e. S200. Be•con Bay 2 BR. 2 BA w/ priv. Ptlln. * '4>0111 * 3 BR, 2 ba, carp, dra~. NU·VIEW RENTALS Bllllard rm, jatut&J. Nr. UC 1,91~~ bllns: frpl. Jo'enced yd, dbt 673--tOJO or 494-3248 V~:RY Private, roomy 1 Irvine. Rent Reaa'.>nable! .fre. 1" Lruidlnr.U gar., It walk to tchoolf1 4 LACUNA NIGUEL 3 BR. 2 Bdrm. apl $190 yearly. Mgr. 557-4246, , S80 I: $90 STUDENTS! J<'um. 1il:lppine. $200 Mo. 642.--0177 BA, liv A din area, frpl. "hll· 673-3914 after 6 ,,n. -'N~EW~.c2=.=8~1~,~2~8~1~ Bachelors near the beach. 3 BDRM houae. No pet&. ins, cpts, dr»I:, 2-car pr, Cost• MeM 11 I ~U,tll pd. Avall Now! $\85. mo. S75. cleanffW tee. ~ view, pr.ved .mr-1..;.;;.;,;;.;...;.;;;.. ___ _ 1940 -A N ., ..... "" .,..,.......... c d I 0 20l32 Slnll Anl AV• ,_ I * w. l r Immac. ,18$ mo lit lut OIG I ro b:orn Santa Ana Go I f '1~PRIVATE 1 Br. par!ly achoola • market. ~ dep. 495-424(. -' ALL \n'ILlTIES PAID Coun.e). Bn.nd New t\rmJ. 'fui-n. Ne 11. r everything, 3 Br, l Ba. chotce lnc. 'Bit N n-h Compare beiore you rent . turt. Ht>alM Pool. ReMOZI· l Child/pel ok. fncd yrtl. CJean & •Vacant. ewport -•c CUstom designed, katu1'in1: able Rent! Mgr. 979-1268. : * $225/mo. Mo lo Mo. or l&e. e Spaciou1 kitchen wilh, it\" ' $185-~fARD to Jo'tnd-3 BR, 83l-ll03, home 962-mo. TH£ BLUFFS direct lighting 2 or 3 Br deluxe duplex apt. spacious on ~ ar, Kida/ ** 3 BR, 2 BA, bllns, crptll, e Separate din'g atta i,; b!k to bch le bay. All nu ""''· ok. Car, tncd ynl. kid• & ""' OK. NEW & NEAR NEW • Hom .. lik, •Ion&• '"'"''""'· 673-05>;. J\1<;&11 M'! I*. 646-l.f3' a Private patb: ON WATER·Beautif'lll 2 BR "JP • Cl<>aed garqe w/ll'torafe furn apL $230 per mo. $)CS.CUTE 2 Br Cottage w/ 2 BR. 1987-C Oarle SL S Bdrm&., 2% ba'1., Z.lty. e Full len&th m&rble pull. w/lrple. '73-:186l. , 1 • vacant Fenced for tot. n<IS/mo. No dog1. 642-2259. 1-Walled H:tio: 2 car pr. man ----• * .-'""-~1_0_11~. ~-~~~ ttos. by ..,. " obopPiltl. • 1<1.,..11 Bdrm• Newport Hel1nn NEW Wf'U l.Dcatf'd Carden apu1mf'nt1 }~re.sh & ~w lol'llh pool, <-"UUee room & many extra feature• Enclollt"d aarq:fl Carpeta &: drapet All ""11\ ..... 1 &: 2 Bf'droom• From $155 Pn Month Drive by 2111 f;ldfm A Ve. Or call &t.5-5780 Ri:ALTORS SINCE 19« 673-4400 AN & Vacant. 3 BR. 2 Br, cpt/drp, quitt, adltl ~ Month • Poot • Barbequ.tt • sur-' CLEAN 1 or 2 BR Adltl, nn ati..-cpl. Kids/pe-l, only, no pets. $170. 231-F ha' rounded with plU&h land-~ta. l.,g. lot. $125-$150. 2421 Forced air hf'ating pk.· Avocado. 548-8251, 548-1405. 4ne~beA.,au2ti~ul. ~ic~r:n~ A""dapin1~ ! be E. 16th SI., N.B. 646-1801. 1 children ~come , . * ... ult 1vlng at l~ st II •·-, -$235. year lease Wf'st Aide, unit. Lovely area. $425 Large 1 BR Sl'T5 Apt. Unfur n. 365 ot &: cold watf'r 1w·n S'AlO-SPACfOUS 4 Br. 2 Ba, 683 Sena!P. 4 br, 2ba, bltns, Month. lJI'ILlTIES FREE 3 Bdrm. 1 Bath. $150 dbt gar. Nr-w crpts, children crpbl, drps. 548--0710. 3S5 w. Wilson 6-42-lm Back Ba y C&rpf'ts and dral'f'S LARGE 2 BR Condo. e CllEZ ORO AJ>rS e 11'1 Ba.th. Sl!IO. Cttport 123-4 AUanta. 1-i.3 Br'a. I Call 637-2tU POOL. .Private cloled iu. 2 BDRM, 1unkfn livll'll W~/dryer. 536-033fi. I r<>om, fTple, crpts, ct,,.. $90. 1"UnUimed STU 0 I 0 , Garage. $175. 673-5629. Ntar be&,th. pool. Call : " ~'1&..•Trl /536-7828 1 !l.16-136G. LR-G 2 BR. New tfltl dn.Jl"~ $130/mo., LARGE' 2 BR, J BA. epla., • • ~iD ** dept, end. patio & pr. *l BR. 2 BA STUDIO. NO pru. S155. ~157S Crp~. d<pa, patio. POOL. 1 ln1lne ctilld ok. MMN91. _..,..;... _____ _ 2 BR .. 1 ~ ba., pool N<1 pets. Viii. pa. Nr •t«es Fortin, Rtaltar 64i.5000 SHARP 1 BR S115. W /W ahag, bl.tins. rtftil, lndry. 548--UBR AdWta EHt Bluff 2 BR. 2 BATHS PARK WEST APARTMENTS 1 Bdrm. l'rom $160 2 IWrm., 2 B•. l'rom $1t5 3383 Parkview Une Irvine. (Juat <1f1 San Dleao F'Wy al CUlver Rd) l''ully carpeted • draped, up. 7L-.-.-... -~N~l,...g-ue"l,--- 1tairR view apt. .J eovtte<t ;:.;;;::;;;;;;..o.~;.;;;--- park'r stalls. Gu 1: water LAGUNA NIGUEL pd. $250 mo .. yqrty. 816 Ap•rtment• Amigos Way, N.B. Call About Our New fi Mn. .. .. Now. 1 BR $154, 2 BR. I & >, 171 &Iii 0 llaM Program Av8ilabll!' -•nlr •La sin. z BR, 2 Ba, St96 per & pet welcome. H B h Deluxe 3 Bdrm., 21.t bl.. split ----'------Built-In atove * untlngton · e•c level "Goldtn Home," wat .. r EXECUTIVE SUITES 2 RR., elect bltns., diaposaJ. Carport-stall shower NEWPORT BEACH ROOMMATE SERVIC E· SINGLES OK view. Comp. u~dod • "10TEL APTS. ''"· "'1>•, laud. hook-up, Laundry room. VIiie Grenede Apt1• month. 29Mt. A\orrt8 Ave. 4!'15-4772 Rentals to shll?'f', male or tuteluUy appointed. A 2080 NewpOrt Blvd. heated pool, ehlldrf'n OK. Fenced yard. No pel.s Four bedrooms with baloon- fenalf', from $60, e BEACH area -t BR, pttatige home at $S50 Month Co1t1 Mesi f16ii. mo. 613-623.t. MESA VILLAGE Apt1. tes .above & below. Graciou. BEACON * 645-0111 cpti. drps, kids/pets. Sl50. .s.. 642·2611 Balbo. Peninsula 1046 II Cimino Dr. •A llving & quln sunoundin&: LANDLORDSI • SPACIOUS -3 B•, 2 Ba, ;'i~1/.... STUDIOS FROM $35 546-7331 lor family with cbild,..n. , W I • dbl gar, lrg fncd yrd, kids/ [a -~.&ff' 1 BEDROOMS AVAILABLE 2 BR, 1 Ba., newly red~. Near C.orona del Mar High e Specla i:ze Jn Newport pell!. $250. /1" • f £;, \· II • Full kitchen $225. Nr. ocean & bay, No School. Fi.replace, wet bar & l!each • Coron11. del Ma~• ALA Rent•I• e '4S.3900 "'~ 5~ • Heatf'd pool children or pe!!!. 673-!15gJ. DELUXE built-In kitchen appliances. La&11na e & Dana Po1nt.1~----~~-~-.i.i~. really e l..aundry facilities < APARTMENTS 835 AMIGOS WAY 644-2991 Our Rental Servicf' i1 FREE 15 VACANT HOMES e BR. Z Ba, rl w 5 hr , Air Cone!. Frplc::'s -3 Swim· ColdWf'U, Banker A Co. ~~ Free utilities slv/re!rig, <pl /drrw, gn. ml."" ~1, . H•alth Spa · Mana~--•-nt to You! Rent While You Buy 2414 y,·,18 ~1 Oro e f'r-1· , .,a ... ..-.,., ... ,. .AA"' Nu V E RENTA S '-"'" •"" inen i,t blk ocean&. bay, S.300 mo · ,...__ •-ii Lido Isle * 3 fDRMS. * Some View, Adu1ts only, yea.rb'. UJO monlh. CaU; 673-3663 968·2505 Evf'5. associated • I W L 3 & 4 BR homes, some Newport Beach • T.V. "maid ~rv. avail. !·• A' !t I 67~ ""'"~ T11·~~1sRoocnm' ....... .-ue a B . BRAND NEW -IJO Amigos 673403() nr 494-3248 w/pools, ls! mo. plus $100 644-1133 ANYTIME .:.•~P~ho~"~'~".:."'c,,.ic.:.•~=~-"""' uu s, nopes. ,, . ....,,_,.., "'u 1 BEDROOM Way, 2 Twnhles, 2 Br, 21,t Mesi Verd• VERY CLEAN&. VACANT 4 dep. ' 'TH=E-B.cL.:.U...:FF.:.:..~:...c.3.:.B...:R.=_2-.-. * $30 WK. & UP * Coron• del M•r FROM II"" Ba. 1 Duplf'x, 2 Br, 2 Ba. llROKl W '>-R ~Al fClRS l Ol\ W /lalbC>o 6.7 l-J66J BR. 2 St.-homo ,·n pr•'....... MOVE IN NOW! . ' ....... "" ! d bt DELUX 2 & 3 B 2 Ba " "" frpt 13"" 3 BR 2\' b• va e StudlO' • 1 BR Apt, "EDITERRANEAN Frp e's, crpll, rps, lm, E -r., ·· ~-. nr. ••hoo!,. Famil•'•s From Sl95 to $225 per mo. . ""'· ' s " . "" M ncl "= al ~ ~ R c. •ant n = 3 BR 2" ._ • Room n• WK •~ Up, pool, 2 car tp&Cf! eL $300 e . g&l'. -up. Rent O"'Y at 1~· mo. Ag•nt ou.rts & Co. 962-5511 .... . <N>N. • ~ Ull. ...., ""' ,..., MJ.J Super ddux:e, view, $500. • TV & Maid Service Avail ~-VIL LAG~ ea. 675-1380. Ofc. 3095 Mace A ve . 5464.ltJ, SPAru:tLlNG, aunny, walk to Bnlkt;r 6"-1133 Anytime e Phone Servict. Util Pd ~ 2'00 Harbor Blvd .. C.M. Huntintf'en 8e1cft 546-lOM. • ~ollege P•rk beach & thoppg. 3 Br, bllnl:, * BLUFFS, 4 Br, fam, 3 ba e Alt maJor credit cards (TI4l 557·8020 Ml11ion Vi•lo Rcluded patio, close<d dblf' 237& Newport Blvd. 548·9755 RENTAL OFFICE RENT/LEASE 3 BR, fam gar, pool & maint. Many frplc, beaut encl patio, pool, Thb1 Ad Worth $5 on Rent ON TEN ~ OPEN 10 AM TO .6 PM ON BEACH•. • BRANO NEW! 3 br, J~2 rm. Z BA. bl!in RIO. brkfst xtra·. $240 mo. 8.18·'79So4. teOJU, 8Chla $31:t. 6+1-2'1JO. Children.& Pet Section l I: 2 BR. Fun, I: Unlum. bA., 2 1tory condo. Shag, b1r. 2 bltin df'sk1 & huge 3 BR. 2 BA, elect bldn R/O; LEASE/option. 1 br A: den, Unbelievably Be•utlful FlttPl.aoes I prtv. patloa. HARBOR 2 BR Unfum Fr. $230/mo. hltns, patio, pool, encl. booksht-lf, lirepl. dbl gar, FA HT., crpts, new 1 y 2~ ba, some view. Anxious. VAL 0 • ISERE Garden Apti. PooJa TennU ~ntnt'I. Bkht. Furniture Available g&raif'. S250. mo. 830-01171. huge bk yd & patio-fenced. paintf'd, 60'xl00' fencd lot, ""'°-""~·•~67>-~~"~""~IR---AdvJts -no pets. Flowers 900 See 4ne. ~ 6"-E.1 Carpe~wuhu Newport Beach By appt only, $250. mo. dbl iar., ld sc pd , 3 BR a: .C Br home1, ~ everywttett. ~am a: (MacArtbur nr~Hwy) TOWNHOUSE beated~ ... unu-tennia ~7-8113 vacant . ml'IVt In today. $215. beach. Yearly lease. s:ua Watert.a.11, 4.5' pool Rec. Rm, l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!I! rec room-ocean view1 PARK NEWPORT Coronl del Mir per mo. Village Real Eslalf' mo. each. Agent 548-1290. Sauna, Sgls 1-2 Bdrm, Furn-3 Br, 1 ba, new crpl/drpe & pati<>1-ample ))al'kinc APARTMENTS ~· t ...l. 2217 Harbor, near Wilson Se ri """'4411 No ee 546-8103 Condominiums Unfum. from n 38. SEE IT: paint, Range/retrig, Gar, 2 BR, ll}.i BA STUDIO cu ty guards. •WE have a large selection Unfurn. 320 2000 Parson!', 6tl·8670. sundk. frplc, beamf'd cell-TOWNHOUSE. S140/mo. HUNTINGTON on the bay Your own private home. Best of 3 and .C bedroom homest----------$125/MO. itob. home ings. Ocean side of hwy. e Heated Poo~Nr. Shop'& PACIFIC Luxur/ apartment living ov· location. 705 Orchid. Fully that can be moved into Costa Me•• w/cabane, comp!. turn., Adulta $285. 642-55.U. Adults only, no pets. erlooking the water. Enjoy ~led & draped. Beauti-almost immedlatf'Jy on our hid. pool , Adtts, no pell, 4 CLOSE to beach, lrr. 2 Br, 2 7U OCEAN AVE., H.B. $750,000 health. spa, 7 swlm- fuUy laiic!Sl'aped. Enck>sed Rent.Opt 1 on p I 11. n, OJNOO. 3 BR, 2 BA. com.pl Seuon's MOO. Est. 2.'59 Ba. open beams, trplc, (Tl-4) 536-1481 ming pools, 7 Hghtf'd tf'n- patio, $325 mo. Yrly. SHERWOOD RE ALT y, bit-ins. t.1r, Queen, ofc. Npt. Blvd. 548-6332. bltrul. priv, porch, priv. gar. BEAUTIFUL ore open 10 am-6 pm Dally nis courts. plus miles of '7• u•o 0 540.1555 540-1151, home 539--2132. HOLIDAY PLAZA 330-A Marguerite. 673-0937. NewGIR~ODU0NcoDrS1t-.J WILLIAM WALTERS 00. bicycle trails, putting, shul· """" d 9111 ft Pboard, croquPL Junior l'!t t' 2 BR. elt'Ct blt:in RIO. FA 3 BR, 2 Ba, cpts, f'P!l, DELUXE Spacioua l BR. 1 BR., Bltns. Walle to e SPA ISH DECOR DEL•= BR 2 lro hi - .,...; a.~ bll •-d h h 2 pools -1L "'Ll-L 3 , Ba., m $170 mont y: also 1 * 1 ..., ht., crpts. newly painted, ..... "'' 11 w r, •all, furn apt. $135. Heatai pool. beach. $190, Ora~ Coast ' ,..__ fl •· t d •nd oc.droom pla"' and "°"" 1235 546--3710 Air, co nd. Gu, wtr. pd, ......-rep .. ce, cp , rapes, built-..,...,., REDECORATED 2 BR.. dbl gar:, 60'x100' fenced lot. ' -. Ample parking. Adults -no Real Estate. Call: M4-4848 age. Pool, Rec. .rm., laun-ina, dahwasher; near school. 2-1tory town ho'1ses. Elec- in separalf' 4 plv. bltN Movf' in today. Sl8S. per Huntington Be•ch pell. lS65 Polnflna Ave. CM * GREAT VIEW 2 BR. * ~dry, 1 BR'•, $140. 2 BR'1 .$235/mo. 963-0140. Irie kitcbena, private patios ' ' mo. Village Real Esbtlf' $100 _MOVE IN Allowance ~A., bllnl, suodocka, pool. $160-$165-$115. or balconies, carpeting, dra-crpts, drps, gar. Small ~t 962-4471 N f 546-8103 1 BR I td .-.... r •I"'-1 considerf'd. Singlf'S ok. $175. 0 ee • c ean, crp • u•V"• Shady Elms -Lawn -Pool $200 u p, 644--6344, 675-5204. H1ci1nd• de M•s• DELUXE 2 BR, 2 Ba., cpt, perie1. Subten-anean park· NU-VIEW RENTALS VACANT ZBR. $225 MO. tl~. month. Children'1 Section 2 Bl' + sepr guest rm A: ba. Ap1rtment1 d rap P.' 1, but It-in 1 , ing with elevaton. Optional .. $73-4030 or 4.94-3248 Children, pets OK. Swim * 963--6002 * Furn. '1: Unfum l &: 2 Br. . P·• ti , Nr Shopa No 160 w. WiOOn, Mgr. #1. dlahwaaber. Near !Chool. maid service. Just north ot k Fro 'f11C/ u w• pa O, ga . . Fa1hkln Island At Jambor· , LUXURY 4 Bdrm & den pool, termi!t EcRts~:~.71 10',M_•_•_•_V_•_rd_• _____ 177 E. ~ ~ r:· 64:...,~s. child/pets. 67l-U08. BAY MEADOW APTS. Sl70lmo. 968--0I40. ee and San Joaquin Hllls d. · v· B. ~ KElTII SNID ""'_.. or 1 • "'" 2 Br, bf'am ceillng1, prlv pa· LRG. 2 BR. $140 tn, rm. lf'w. roa 842-3287 BRANO New! 2 BDRM. e REAL Value! Crpl.I, d"'•, ~7S 2 Br, no gar. Jtefl:. Road. , Harbor View J.lills. $625 Mo., ____ .------_,_.._. El t pl & .,.... .~ tto, rtt. fadl., elated Pl" Under New Management Telf'phone <n4) 644-1900 Orange Coast ReaJ Estate BROOKHURST & Hamilton crpt., un•r--... ec · ~ · dshwhl", pool, J BR. $145. · 673--4171 aft 6pm q:f'. Gu heat, cooking & Alk about Olll" discount plan for rental inlormatlon 644-4848 6T.>-3255 Eves srea, 4 bdrm, 2 batb, dr&Jlf'I dsh/wshr. Swim pool. Priv. Mature adults, no Pflls. ~~-~~~~~-water Alt pd. AU adulm, no ,. move.in allow. Children A TCH nset . h" & carpeting, near schools, $1~ mo. Leue des. 54>2158 Quiet. 2295 Patitlc Ave. 2 IR· Pool. $225/mo. pell. Prom f16.5. lll"l'lall pets 'Nf'lcome. Newly SEAC'Llh' Ma.not. 1 BR, l\.I ~~ecutivethe3 s~m-ll~>c!.:~ fenc."ed yard, S300 mo. Call aft. 4:00. 548-61178 or 642-4429. 642-8400; aft 6, 548--0797 387 W. Bf..)' SL, C.M. ~-l)q. Mr Apll. Ba Studio . .2 BR, 1~ Ba. Bf.vd. '·plcx. Adull• onty. 543--2081 aft s pm. Townhou•• Unfurn. 335 LGE 1 br apt, part. furn Cost• Mes• -~~-Cal=f~6<6-0073~=~'--l l blk N'~of AdAma (oUBeac::h) P100L. Cp5ts, drps, bltns. = ---...;..· -----N VIII RI I '129 .&Pt 6' tJtJca · 536-2796 S 50 to S17 Imo. Ask about $450 Mo. Agent 675-4930, 3 BR Homf', fenced yard. Newport Be1ch $125, furn $13.'i Adults. SPRING HAS SPRUNG ew a Y era *., ' 5.16--7078 our dl1count. 1525 Placentia 640--0020. firepl. Nr frwy. Covd patio. Lndry, gar. Qultt. N r . . 2 Br. 2 Full Ba Ave. 548-3)82 S250 lease. 5J6-3m or mrlrta. 1922 WaJlaa!' No, B and YoW' housecleaning IS l>"amllies Welcome UNIQUE cj\alf'3.U on Bayside *ADULTS PREFERRED* 548-6.518 done! Enjoy your garden Shag cpt/drpr, patio, beam Whit do you W•nf WANTED RE L IABL E Dr. 2 bdnn. & den • dining 536-llOO. 3 BR, 211.a ba., bl!M. w/w · apal'tme.rit without worlr.! c::e.11 in •n •partment. COUPLE to yeu1y Jeue a room. Adull!! only. $375 Mo. -4 BR townhse, S'2'Z> mo. crpt; dbl. gar, pool. S215 SHARP BEAUT. 2 BR. Stroll the prden1, play &0lf. '~::;illon, CM Hua:e w~ In closet! Dish-LARGE 2 BR, Df'n, Hlde-a- Agent 6'1>4930, 640--0020. Oay call ~1226. REALTOR 543-6966 Pool. Adults, no pebl (l teen sun at the pool. See M&r Mr. & Mrs, Hoban wUhen! Separate dining Way. Nr. ocean. REWARD BEAUT ocean vie'W, 3 br, 2 Eves call 645-4573 Duplexes Furn. 345 or infant ok) Sl55. 642-9521). * 1500 aqull?'f' feel, S200 548-2062 areMt Pool1? Beautiful en-A 11leal S250! Appl. 673-1909. ha, frplc. pool incl main!., 2 Br C.ondo, cpt/drps, frpl, SEE & GET BONUS monthlf . * * $170 * * vlronmentt For all thiA and OCEANFRONT yr I y wshr/dl')'(!r. $350. Ad.Its. patio, dbl gar, nr bch, pool Co1t1 Met• 1 BR apt, all util. Older * G~c~s f'ntf'rtainin.g .Uf'& 3 Br 1~ Ba newly painted more, spaciOU.1 1 br apt, best pel't 673-fi035. privl. s:n>. 645-1857. adults, no peti <lr children. witll firf'place:, .p.atKI Bl ' vdtp encl tkJ. IM l•hi• Puerto <1f beach. Adultt only, avail 1 BR., ff'nced y&J'd area. t ll5. mo.. $l5 i;ecurity * 2 lxtdrooms, den, 2 baths tns, c:p • pa · 2SIO .17th Slreet at Delaware. LGE. 3 BR, 2 ba. house. ~10. LOVELY 4 BR. 2 BA, frpl., Older pref's. Quiel street. 646--8464 Nr 1Chl1 &: ahop'J. Cb.U<irfn 4/1. $2"r.I. 64$-0068. to mo. Close to park. cpt/drps, bltns, gar, fncd $125, per mo. 642-82'27 . .:..:c:..:.c:..:.-~-=~~.-IJust a few al OK, 00 pets. 880 Cf'nter St., ll.8'. All rf!:mainfng OM bd· 1 ·2~B=R~T~wn~.....,-."'1"1>~Ba~.~d~hwh~r, Robin Boyd Agt. 67>5930 yrd. Xlnt Joe. u;o. 64Z-S029. 646-ST:iof. • 1 BR deluxe $139. Priv The Venclom• CM. 64.Z-8340 or 6'8·36&··· nnt:,unltl, $140. Phone wth/dTy hook up, enel l{ar. C < M ~ OJNOO 2 Br., ctpL,. drps, I 350 patio, tropical pool. Quiet. 1345Anahelm Avenue, .. Mc.::KE;LOR . PA·D · 1 5.)g.509S, Nr. Hoag hosp. Sl95 . os,a es• Duplex•• Un u rn. 145 E. 181h St, Apt JO. ..~2.-•• F 1 .__ ___ .. ..... .. 1 · :. .I.. · w1•·/dry, poot, 847-7976, ••·-"-. ~. -rp c ~1u. ... ~ar _.,.'g; '""-361l6 e BUWET Boo.,," -1 Br, ,.;~9937. (213) 430-2866. Coron• del Mor ~~~., cpiiid;p;, · 'pri· 'P.t1o. 1150. 1 ·MO FREE RENT .cc.Y:.r:.:ly...:D..,. 1~.~2~B~,--~B.-.-,~h- stovf', refrig, all util incl Irvin• SHARP l BR. ground floor ', AVAIL ,NOW! 1 &: !. r" HARBOR ~.~·,, .. 11' No J)et. DJ'E~ 2)tb. 3 BR •• 3 IA., $175 Ba., bltru., d ls p I .' I'"" • • um., poo • rtt rm., 5" oc. -...-· • POO d·"wshr., lod~ h o o k u p , ~. Bt-~, • patio t L -Kids ii: pata ok. •• ., ALARentals e64S..3900 ""'"reui .a: No childrtn or pe 1 · 2BEDROOM,ca.rpetl n 1 UNIVERSITY PARK sm Month A1ent 6T:>-5726 64&-5124. • TOWNHOUSE I CJl)ts/drps, bltnll', patio, gar. 213: 387-22.57. l:l2S 1 .,:;::,.:::~~~..,--.,.'°"'"' drapes, built· NI, prqe, 2614-D Del H B • EXTRA Nice -2 Br. new :1 BR. ZIA ha, tam ' Huntington Be•c:h STUNNING l br, tum'd SHiO. exceUf'nt Meu Ver d a aware, · ' LOVELY 3 BR. trpl, Walk 10 cpts drps fncd yrd for 2 BR. 2 baths S26S 2 br unfurn $165. $30 dollars 2217 Harbor, Nr. Wileen location, $150 per monlht .Mar. 536-$7J8,.646-SGM bnch. Lease. kids: $I65.' 4 BR, 2'i\ ha, la.J!I rm. S.'\40 JMMAC. 2 BR, Crpt, Drps, w/ad 641).5.530 2 BR on 1 nr. Xlnt cond. 962-9S94 2' Wks FrH Rent ABBEY REALTY 64~ ALA R1nt1ls • 64S..3900 3 BR, ru' BRaTLE., atr1RuOCKm $335 Bltns, Patio. Lovely fenced I =B~EA.;;.UT=:IF~U~L='::-=,=0"10"'·=-. ' -closets-carport. Sl25. . Sen Clemente ground• Pvt dbl ...,...,.f:e, ~1 u rv-1 ...,.5 3 BR, 2 BA, + den, $n;:-3 Wi!Jc to beaeh, new luxurious ~;:;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;; ~ •-" 'I --' e Heated Pool-Nr Shor:i'g 1-1 Bn ci...-1 Bfl e """R RENT e -4 BR. 2~ b8., furn S400 $160. RE'Sponsible married Frplc., beam oe1 " .,. .v. kids, no Ptlt. Blt-in&, CID, .... • ""'-"-crp, na, .TV 4 BR . 2 ba., tam nn $l60 COll\Uf'. 842--3276 patio. Adultt, no -pet. S138. ~Ad!!!!!!u!!!lt!!!s!!!!!!on!!!l!i!y!!!, !!!no!!!!!!!i!pe!!!t!!!•!!!·!L~w~10~~h~ku~p;,0pa~llo~,~1=ar. drps, patio, lanai area, bbq. SAN CLEMENTE'S IMMACULATE 3 BED· WE HAVE OTHERS 1 -'==e-,-~....,.......,"'"' 11'.E. 2>1tN 64~1311. l8l~H Delmar. 548-8278. 1Ubternne•n park'g, gar FINEST ROOM. 2 bath home, 3 BR, 1% ba, xtn. lge fncd avail. Bl.lco...tea, frplc'1, OCEAN VIEW -~ dbl &hr/"-"' l Bt $UO A 2 Br $160. Pool &: NEW 1 &: 2 Br dlx apt1 A: fir~p!Ace, dbl. gar., patio, y ....... , e ga:r., w ... ,,., b h •--_...~...... lnttry facll. 53 9-1661 , LUXURIOUSNew2BRApll M h cpts '"""' ,......, '""''' telT&et. ldeal for ac elUl•, ~....,..,, townhou1es, Pool, dwhr. ,..,., '"09 536-50IS red.-r•ted. 1 .. ew 1 a g • • ,.g, J.J<r"w~ ,,,,,,,..,u Bf tt M ·1· ,. · ....... " no children, 1993 Church, FY'Om USS 324 E ~th . --;-'''--,'==="'· -:=-on u . agru ice Vl'w crplS A rlrpa. No pals. -21-' · ' * FRESH AIR of °""'" " b"''· 3 BR. 3 BATHS FAMILIES WELCOME! S INGLE STORY South Su Atmosphere 2 8DRM·2 BATH St'75/mo. Carpeta and Dn.PQ Air Conditioned Private Panos HEATED POOL Carpnrt & Sloract Nr. Sch0ol1 Nr. ~. C~st Plau. HIDDEN VILLAGE -2500 Sooth Salta' {enter 2 blka W. of Brlltol. of[ Warntt on Llnda Way, south to W. Cf'ntral) Santa Ana e 54&.1'25 Wos tcllff WES1'CLIFF area, 2 BR, 2 BA . Cozy frplc, Garden pat i o, Si n gle story, Soundproof, BJtns, 1' I A heal, Lr& dln rm. WaUc to We&lclltt Plaza. across hOm cOC()·s. 1965 lrvine, $195. Adlt!, 64Z-0239. Apt1., Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Back Bey I a: 2 Bft Apts, Furn or un- furn. Startin& at Sl35/!M, Pool. no pet!, re l '1 • ~. Cost• Me .. **NEW** LA COSTA APT.S. I & 2 Bedroem e Bu.ilt·ina e Sh-c carptb: e Drape1 e Walk in cloaetl • Swtmmln1 Pool e Bar-b-Queii • Encl<>Hd Garage All Utilities Paid Adlllt•, no pet.a Wal.kine distance tD lhopplnr center. 354 Avocedo St., C.M. 64l-970I BRAND NEW From. 1145, Dishwasher, •ha.a carpetln&', walk·ln dolett. Forcf'd alr heat, qtn larll rooma. Beautiful 1ame room. heated pool. BBQ'•, encloto ed P~1. quiet IUft'(IUD(I. tng, " close to ..... pine. Adult Uvlna no ))eta. EL CORDOVA APTS. t :am Cllule St MUl11 Near Harbor " Hamllb:lft St. PALM MESA APTS. MINUTES TO NPT. BCH. FURN. OR UNFURN. Unbelievably large •pta. huae pooJ, Jacuzzi elect bl~ ins, ihac crpi., dtp!, aawi. etc. Adult., no pell. SINGLES , • • • • From 1135 1 BED RM .••••• F"rom 1140 Z BED RM. • ••• From $1&0 You 're riahl, they're u.ncter.. priced! 1561 Meaa Dr. (5 b1Jca fl'om Newport Blvd.) -* 2 BEDROOM * l;i Ba TownhouM concepL ...... ___ Ira bedrmt. tlld i ·.tio, --i tion rm, 11101a bodot, ..... Mull&. Our Sunday -noon B-B·Q'1 ,. Frie. An i...son. ....... ,,. ..... HARBOR GREENS 546-5025 e SPACIOUS e Well-Desi&ned Apls 1 Ir: 2 BR. w/ Terrace,. • ..,,.,. n40 . $2'15/mo Shag .,,,,, drJ)t, taunaa, pool, Jacuzil, end 1ar. Quiet Adult IJvin,ir MERRIMAC WOODS <f25 Merrimac Way, CM HACIENDA HARBOR Av"!. March lat. $27S par I I~ 5IH633. APARTMENTS 645-476.1. I 11.1 .... F'ireplaces, cl<Mf'd 1ange1, mo. East Broadway, C.M. HouNe:for llt«lt l"l:J L RG 1 br upper . 3 BR, 2 BA .......... $%6. S95 1 Br. w/1ug. 1 adult. Walk 3 Blkl: to Beach! privacy, near stairway to "SINCE •au" . . C 1' pt I b t tns/dishw&Wr. 2 BR. 1~ 'BA •••.•••• $180. N<>n-amoker. Stovf'. refrlg. tee 2 BR, apl, Mwly deror. 241 AVOCADO STllEET Multi oncy · No P.., Deluxe 1 4 2 BR. Poltl c....,.. DWtwahr. Paid utQ. FROM JUO, 648-U)I ~ du! -alt 6 . WI ~-d bl beach. Adults. A ts, no pe.,,. , (ALSO AV.All.. F1JRN,) Dnlpe8. No pt.11, deJ>051I w .... .,..., rps. tns, f'X· .,..,,.. •vot1. ls! We1tem Bank Bldg 360 7 R7 t fool .. 1150 N •-Unlveraity Park, lnrlnf' A':!::pl::•::·.:F:.u::r:.:n:.:· ___ ..:= I! _::6<~~?iiiii;;:ri';;-;o;:;n;c,r;:-New 1dult 11rclen Apts. rel. 954 w. 1 th 645-37 cep re...... • 0 sna1a. 14ffi Buena VlatR 1 Br. $UO Up. UM!m or Days, 133-0101 Nights GeMrll *WINTER RATES * ISi E. 21st. 6468666 1 BR, StCIVf', Relr ig .. 1 "'00='"-"~~·,,...:.5.16-~l7~U~~-49J..9848or544-9688 Flim.UtUinc!d.NewJ,ydee. Lachenmyer Re.i ltor ~1 d C M ljiiiijiiijiiijiiijiiijiiijiiijiiij lAttrac turn S111dios Sll5, 1 * LOWER * Di1'bwashtt, dpts, Drp1. 2 BR. SlfiO. frplc., d!lhwW, Bf'.au.t. prden, PoOI, *· 1860 New]lOl'l 0 v ·• · • I I BR'a U2S. Adults. no pets. GOLD Medallion, front 2 Br n7 James. S135. 540-6133. bltns, nearly ntw ahag anti ONE of a kind. Speetacultr Adult1, no peta, 19et Maple Call 646-3928 Evu. fi73..4577 2 BR. ~ ha. ••• ·• •• ·• ••• $300 I 2135 Elden, Mir. Apt 6. patio, encl iar. laundromat. 2 BR, apt .. crpl'll Ir: drp~. drp. Very elea.n, nr, JM!lrk Ir: view. Next to Pier, beach. Ave, CM. Msr No. 5. At., e HEAR Thi• -2 Br, stoV'f', ; =~·. ~t_~t!!e· :: ·u.,~ lold New Concept BACHELOR apt, utilities Adults, no pets. $15S/mo. lltove, refriJ. ~. Lndr)' «hll.. children welcome, Lrg new 2 BR ai:it-1. 3 only. .ranee. for rtnt retrig. fncd ~. encl gar. 3 BR., 12~ ha. , , •••••• $350 'J)&Jd, 337-D E. 2111 St. CM. 6'>3S15 or &&u.99. ftcll:--°'ldnl llk. MMJ~1. 968:-8633. ~~~ ~ d:: nJRN l BR'1, al.lo wlfUm 2 Kich/P'tl. I Jsfi. 3 BR, ·m Aug, .. Furn, $400 FURNITURE RENTAL 1140. P"" mo. -5. "THE CABLES" 1 BR. New •hal .,.,,,, '"' BRAND new frlp!"" •·~3 hr <ln-'151'1. BR Sludlo •PC Cp11, drpt, ALA R•ntals e 64.S..3900 FURNISHED l Br. t.pt, utit 2 Br. w/pr, Adults, cptt, claeets, _. ahops. A41s. UtU !.':~1ke!~1 B•....iwprk l~lk•. 1P1!.".: aar. Swim 'r pool. No , i . eel h•11 pd. $170/ma. 22'17-B Maplf' drpa,· blblt, t.ncd ~yr d , od.1'M-M<1nrovil. ~. ·v .;JIOJt "' w San Jwtn Cepllfrano ehildren, no petl. Quiet • NEED more Roomt ,• Br. r I * Month to M<1nth St. 541-59ll. w/paUo, WIT pd. $3MU) • 2 WE£KS FRE!i! * $180.·$115. C.JI alt 3:30. Ml.ghborhood. MJ-80(2. l Ba., FRPL.C. Kids pets. • 100!% PurehaR Optim D p Int 243&-C Orange Ave. fl S& 1 Bit. $12!5 "" • 2 BR Sl~O up 847-70&4 N!,",;,!~~~~~n. Di na Point $22S. ... nna, L'.J.....v.-an1 o "'SIDE X 1 ,_ 2 "'T'" 2 BDRM. 1tudk> 1partmen1. ~--------ALA R1ntal1 • 645-3900 ·REALTY ...-"IQ ~ u-• tra •rte. qun::I, POOL+* 6'~mt All ~ * ~2162 * ExcEPTIONAL lln'6r 3 AV.llLABIZ March •I b . u:u Partr-~~ * X HcNr 0.Uftt'J 2:!a1:.:·::;, ~u~ ~k 11~ e~~~IA=t~ * 2 A 3 BR-F'rplt. BJt.'t\I. bltne.~~· ir;'~710f .1 's.n,...-"'ta'""'Ane;_,o:.:......:.;..___ BR. 11,i BA, yd., dw., trom ~ • BR bom• le ....... • -i ...... \Oeollon, ...... pool. Smail ""' >;L Ogle St.. a...d ....... 11 .. r Sollh -11. $195. '391l A OUndo; 2 BR, ' .,., 'F':!1~ ~~l~edni..1", u~v Put!: Jtue I Bdr.m·t J ro ,.m -~ See at Xlll Sant• aua or Apt. c . 642-1439 •ft fi. Cout Plaza. 545-232J. I J BR, c:rptl, drpa, frnt yrd., Wit-~!::::~ 8BQ ~:li . .,• 24691 c Oltdow,, ~. ~~ ,;:;k, bllh, atri1m nr, 3Chooll. ~ ~-~ ph 493-3009. SPAC. z &: 3 Br. Apt, Sl40 up SJ1ARP l 'BR. OOM to 0CC children ok. no peta. $135. Chlht Cue C-enttr ::r i -4-· i;;te . ?no. ~4 ; W.t\07. l19un1 B•ach Pool. Cfll /drp., bltni, Kkb ok & UCJ. $135 mo. _mo_._M_7_-7064 __ . ----GNat newt ta: l Bdrma Hunti"1ton IMch ,_ Call..;~(..._ 1..--. 51'1 W -. -. .,.. ...... 1996 Ma.pit No. 1 642-3813 ** M7·'176S "** 1·BDR.M. 1pl., CIJ"P, drapes, f'tam $149 e MOVE IN TODAY! .,.",mo. .,..,,...,,.... ..,....,.., ---• ......,, ----~ EXTRA Larae modern l BR m Collcge No. 5 642-10.15 2 BR UJ>pf'r, crpts. drpa, gu &: walf'r paid. $130 includes fl'eP, ht at A air cond. Kktt 1 pell Wftcome. J Br. Evts.l SOUTH C 0 A.ST LAGUNA HtGUEL . bdrm, 2 mt N .. ll&ln SA 5t7.o31• Apt, mountain I: OC'f;an vltoW. BEAUTIFUL l le 2 BR n.Mi'-. ovtn, refttt. No ptts. \fonth. C:all 536-6887. 5J6.3112 SOUTH COAST ttom fll9. All extru ~ REAL ESTATE. "'---, 11" rm • dl•'-• ·-·. SI> Glenoeyrf: ar phone ** · fl'H ...... -,, .... 543--7729 VILLAS -• • -~ --a.Ibo I I nd ~ ·-Con"m~nry '"'""'"AP"· ••~. -~. ' l!EACHBLUFF APTS. ..,. patio. t'1mlture 1Ylil. HARD TO nND, -4 BR 2 BA famUy mo, ·-1• built-ins. a 1 a 'U.J°'"""' ,_, · c ·~--·s e U01 MacArthur Blvd. 1-2 K I u• 1.«;L. ,..,,. • Patio ~. frpl c, po<1l. • WJLSON 1UOUr.1• Sriw::2A3Br.2ba.Pnol,P•· •.:iu·A etson Ln. no. home. Oornfr t<,,_.. «llY ~ta, dn.pett, te:Jeed ' * WOMEN-elnaJe rooma, Newport Buch Sl50-$165. Call 54&-516.1. 2 BR, l~ BA. crpt/drpa, me.I t'° D/W, 8231 Ellis M?-3957. 1--=.:~:;;;=:::-o,---I 847-3669 or -.1s10. lh~pl .. dbl,d tpr., ftncid )prfnldel"I. 2.-cir ~ k l lcben 1/TV room . Un $140 6'U811 TIME FOR yd A refrle. !ncluded. t.e... lmmoc. 1310 \,,0. jj4 !Ut D 1 _ W k. M 0 , $&> Up. CO TT AC E T" I! or NEW 2 BR '''" Bn>n>.t pa ' ' 2 !DRiil. cpll, drps, bl.... ! BR condo b!fnt, wuho• 1225 mo. Coll -l()ptn and dlpoalt. -• .....~.. w/cabano, prlv. b<a<h, I M<dall1nn. 120 Albttt Pl. ' BDRM, ·-• re!ri.. Louldry focll!tl•& ms mo. DAIL y PILOT drytr, patio, pool, J child .E l 8olrnf' COAST "'~ blchek>r prtf'd. $80/mo, 1• Children OK. no p e I s , Clf'an. Adults -no peta. n7 3!M-W « 39'1~. OK, no ~. 111 .f p.m • ..._' lroa1w1>1IMlllhttiloe6 8'ol11N Penln1ule w t !!th SL 1125 mo CLASSIFIED ADS -· 1165 !Un> or ttu REA~ !:STATE. olWQ& tilt -plue tt " Jul. 54&-34Sl. Mz.<l.i6.1. •• •· · BEilCHWOOD APTS. un!Um. - OllR "°""' ""11111 lamU~ l )VO want llESULTll CID JIOllE Ukt 2 Br dup!u, OCEANFRONT apartment. 2 BR, uni., Cl<ln. Cpt" EXTRA 1,.. new I 8', Bltnr. Brood ..,. 1-2-l Br. Walk FOR ACTION". • • ~~~~~~--1 pe!. l BR, fnof "'"'' 1221 64>.lll?I A ,i.., llttl Id Q\lltl rt id•ntlaJ .,.. ,,.., l80 or l10 por ·monlh. °""'New point. 1111 mo. Sha• <'J!tl, drp1, encfj •• btotlt. ~/ifrpe. b!IM, CALL 64.,•5678 Ntod • "P•rl"! i'Ulct .... , ""!·Coll a6-Jl!f, 1 todl)/! beach.121~ win! ... 6?11-78!5. 6?11-1241 or 67~. TJO Shalimar, ~"'414!. io"t". Prlv patio. !411-lSOI. !rpl. ~ ltllll St. MHflf!T. •Co ~;:;11:..;ICWI;::..::.;:"--.._-- • . ' r ' . I• ' Looking For Someone To ·Take An Order? We're ood At It We'll even pay the postage to git you to give us an ortler. Get " reacly for some quick profits lly mailing in your orcler toclay. Put a harcl•worklng DAILY PILOT classlflecl want acl to work for you. USE THIS ORDER FORM USE THIS HANDY ORDER BLANK. WE PAY POSTAGE! 5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE-NO AD LESS THAN 3 LINES .. . . , TIMIS - $4.50 SS.IO $6.10 PAYME NT ENC LO ~ED 0 SEND BILL 0 OR USE YOUR • CHARGE CARD Publi1h for , •••••••• ,, , d1y1, b19:n,11in9 ,,, •• •••••••••• ••••••••••••• Cl111ilic1lion , ,, ,,,, ,, ,, , ,, •• • •• ,, • , •••• •• •• ,. •• • •. • •, •• •• ,, , • • N'"'' •.'.' • • •' • • • • '• • • • • • • • •. • • • •. • • • • • • '• • • • .. • • .... • • • '• .. •' • , Add111J ••, ,, ,, ,, ,, ,, •• ,,,,,,,. ,, ••••• , • , ••••••• • •••••• ,. •• •••• , Cit., •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• l"ho~• •••••••••••••••••••••••• M11t1r Chert• Number • , , , , , , ,, ••,,,,,,, E:icpiretio" D1t1 , , • , , , • • l111kAm1ric.1rd Numl.er , , , , , , , , , , , ,, ,, • , • E11ip1 1ih111 D1t1 , ••• , , • , • 1 1J TI MIS --TIMIS TIMIS --- $7.40 $11 .70 $1 7.70 $1.21 $14.50 $22.SO $10.76 $17.30 $27.20 10 FIGU•f COST 'ut enl., en• werllll i" ••d1 'Ptte ••••r. lncJulllle veur 1di1111e•l •• p~o11e llU"'~''• llit <:<H! ef \IOur 1J i1 1t the end tf th e l:ne en whid1 fht l11t werllll ef ve11r ed i1 '"''"· 1111. Allllll SJ.OD ,lus l lin11 •~lr.o if "eu J,,;,. lll• •f OA!LY l'ILOT le~ 11rvict with 1111i!1i ,.,,n.s. -·-----CUT HIRI-PASTE ON YOUa INYILOflr------ ' · · · BUSINESS REPLY MAIL Oran\!• Cout DAILY PILOT IP. 0 . Bot 1560 Costa Mesa, Calif. q2626 ,n Order by Phone . • ' Or Give Us At 642-5678, he Direct Line to DAILY PILOT Classlfleel Want Acl RESULTS ' I I .. • I ( I 1 I ,I • . ~ ----.. .. ·~ ---r--____ .,, ' . -~ PILOT ·ADVUTISU Wtdnadq, Ftbrulry 23, 1972. Wo!~, Fobnwy 2', 1912 OAILYPllOT Buy a Borde,r 1 to Bargai Every classified wont od in th o DAILY PILOT •ppears in every edition ev1ry day. Th.t mean• your od will be seen in pipers delivered to homes ond sold from newsrocks from border to border oll along tho Orange Coast ••• oH tho way from Seal Beach to San Clemente You Get It All ••• Huntington Beach Fountain Valley Costa Mesa Newport Beach Laguna Beach Irvine Saddlehack San Clemente Capistrano (Plus the dally newsrack edition) For One Price With A I ---.·--I~ I .,'"_,,,_ l~ I ....... :DfflC9:::::;R":tnl:•"'.l:-::-:"'.440:'J:F~-;:;;_;;lf::;-::;:.U;:.:l~,:550:; BabytlHllll GaNenl°" Palnlllll A 371 --Paporh .... 1111 Apt•.. Apta., Fum. or Unfum, 370 •Fum. or Unfum. • DELUXE 360 aq. ft. I rm. YOUNG tam. Calleo cat. wbt amJ) cttt, u~ a AL'S GARDENING · · · · · , , , , , · Hvntl""°" ilMch Nowport ... .,, IUite, 48c tq. ft. Co1'\ll& de1 lM 1-lep. Fousxl tn m\ddle ftpenttable ~-~ b' prdenina I: 1 ma 11 YOU aupply the pa S • t l\1'ar nr •. post offtce, Snack ot Newpart Blvd., Dd $t., tant to 5 yn. Luncbts • landtcapinc llftV~, c&IJ Room. p&iDttd itO n.. Aleo Shop. Ptiv. pk&. AlMood. CM. -"""""· F-,_,,i, Ol! '40-&ll. -Newport, -· Call :if>.'IOIS. j e OCEAN V1EW • >'rom $135. 1 BR. Fum Ol' unfurn, Dltcoupt tor ltudentl. CASA PLAYA, 14th .l Walnut, H.B. Call 536-8367. BUNTJNCTON Cardena Apts. Ht!\! at Bola Odea. SIS 1:121. ~ -,,;,., io¥'ltJ~ I cu.>~ ., biaeb " ohoppq,' 1 BR 'tltrn' '"' Alnturn. 3l9 Mompbi5 st., -No. 2, 01' call 536-4484. APT; Poolekie. •pa c I o u 1 bu.nplow, pvt patio. $150 mo to rlgtl.t adltll. M&.1323. the DAl'LY PILOT OMNGE COAST'S leading Marketplace RESORT LIVING fteialono&nkl, Bkr. 615-6roO FOUND woman'• pencrtp. San Ditto 1'w7 ur SD. <:out ont., eo.ta Mesa. Dove PROF PalntiQr ind. rootl,, DESK II*" available ~ U>n Miii ,....,. vlclnll> San Plaza, 546-7'37. si-t, w .. tclill. acco.;.t ed. Lie 4 in& mo. WW provide Maltu:ft Aiwelo St., H u n t I n I to n EXPERIENCED child care YARD l\IAINTENANCE Free tit. 64S-Sl91. FROM $135 at IS mo. --Beach, S!&-oSS05. in my homo. All q••. it Lawno, Prunlna. clelll>llp 6 PAIN11NG pML All - \ availl.blee.:!.!'::.Aw, ~ Hound, youna bourcare.Hotmeab. Fmc-truh haullQI. No job too lu&nl. coio, •p•clalt•t ll'a Oan'OOd G den l.quna male vie. 8:'br I: Harbor, ed yard. Excd rt-1'. P> wnaU. Our pricta tailored to MMSM. 5'1-1441.. ·-'· • •· lt'a Al\(IDl'ECT, -· etc. M-Vmlo.·~-'11!10. wkJ>. 96MB3S. >OW: blldpt ,.,..., E"-1=-..,.--:-.,.-:-:~-.-·I A ~ See ....... L.( DAY Care Home_ '·k:. rwn-67)..1-Pl•1ter, P•tch, R•lr tu 1111 ' .:.,,bbQn &lid ~"' ll1 .. ~-e, FEMALE ~!lo"' •ml. col· --·~·-1 " ~ m "-' -• E>1m-. •nb'ance, 185 lll<l· u.. V!c. ·Joi ... 'l'!loatt.. diqr, ......,.._ ~lop. COST1' M,E SA 5-21 *PATCH PLASTEIW<Q pMtlat JJ""'r ll1 OM• IW<\11'· 5'S-6300, OPEN. 444 Old I-. MMaso. m•nt, vu1"t1 • ~f-Ji~·~ Nlautl AU types, Free est!.-S ~ package: There's $1 Newport Blvd, FND. Sable A white male Venie arw. Lawtt Mowln&: I: Call ~ rnilUon 1n recreadon • • • m 9Q ft plus. 17th st, Costa coWr. Vic F"Ulkrton &: 19th llloTAN'I'S ~ ial lQYirlC co~ Servlce I bl ""1mmlnr, -.. blllluds, Mesa. St., C.M. ~ cere. II) Dl)'"lovely c.M. * l:ANDS'-'PING * P_u_m_111 ____ _ Mallh club11, aauna9, pro. * 646.9631 * IND. FmJ, ~ with home. Dqp; 6*-5637. . tiew..laWbs.. $ihlcin., deckJ, PLUMBING REPAIR ahop, 1ndoo1' aolf drivin.i Bu1lne11 Rent•I 445 QreiOh tap vie. H.B. C•rlPet SWvlict del!rulf;-clettn1,p. Si.le lic'd, No job too am-.11 5.16-7993. """ • bonded.' 11.16-lltSi * 642-"128 * ranee, dullboJIR. etc. MANUFACTURINC, Salts, JOHN1k . A thihobtery decorat.d .,....._ o11k:e ""''"' Good tquna MALE Snauzer • Vic. Co•ta Oeanen. Drl-sl>am-GEN. yard dein up. New COLE PLUMBING BR.~ 11:-U~ locl.tion. $100. to $390. mo. Me• (Meu. Verde) Call poo flu (Soll la"."'s, sprinkien, Roto-~hr. Hnice. &e-00 . No Jelle re ~ ~-2311 aft 5. Retardants). ':J>ferellH?'B & :·~~·.shrubs remov. Roofing Modela ~ Dall 1~ "n!E FACTORY" ll1 CaJ>. LOlt SS5 all color b~teners._4 lQJ ,:_AP::::_:AN:::,E;SE;:::.:...arde ____ I--..:..-----· I ..,.,.... Y to · nery Villag~. a new concept minute blr l<W white I nt:r, com-l,.EE Rootlnl: Co. Rootu. all in retail artisan shops. Set B[J{ Ebony Cane w/1U\.'er earpeta. Sa )'OUP ~~ plete yard serv. })'ee • nt. t;ypet. Reeowr. l't'pdrt, OAKWOOD GARDEN to appreciate. $70/mo UP. handle, lost near comer ()f by uvtna e)rtra trips. c 1 ea n • u P • 5e2661, thermo 1'001 aiattnp. "'1dte 425 30th St. NB. 67l-9500. ~lac.Arthur Blvd. I: Pacific WW clean tlftn, rm., m!rln& MS-51~ I: color. Lie/bonded. lince --..,==..,-..,--.,,.-7.:"-I CsL H"-'Y• litonclay approx. rm. Ir. h&ll $15. Any rm. GREEN MANsiON l!M7. 60-"1221. S'roRE for lease 20x4.2 10 u•-• ard a.m. Ul"JlU ftW • $7.50, couch $10, chair $5. 15 Cardenln&: &: Yard ?.fain-e T. Guy Rol)!\na. Deal 826 \V. 19th St., C.M. 675-<G08. yn .. up ii what counta, not tenance. Joe Elmer, 642-1137 Direct. I do ID)' own v.wlt. SUS mo. 54.M900 SILvibiJCrey fem. t&bby method. 1 do work mysel1. EXP. lla.wailan Gardener 66-271). 50 9590, lndu1trl•I RW•I 450 kitty ' • ,. mo. okL $5 Good ref. 531~0L Complete prdenlng service Sewi,,./Altar•tioM .;::::;:::;:::;:::;:::;::;:::;::;1 REWARD.'2-15 Vic, 18th C•rpentlr _:Ka~m~alanl~~·~""""~~76':_·~--1 ~~.....;:;_-::--::-:::::~ 4 000 5""' FT st., .. ,,. .. n ~ " EXP. Japane" Gan!enor European Dreumaldnc S ~ ....,_!°• t-..~ Fullerton Ave. ~. CUSTOM WoodWOl'k Pane!-Complitte Yan! Servlc. All c:uatan tined. Pc--.l APARTMENTS CP.esort Llvina tor tAdlllts only.! ' WORT BEACH ,16th··~-6'5«ir50 01' • 642-1110 P ed • ........,.. ..,.... REWARD for retum of 4 mo. inc. F 0 rm i ca· Gen'I Free eat. 5'8-M59 evtL Fuhiob advice. 673-.1149. ~~~"!'!'!'"'!'l~i"!"~ I $450. per month. old male -·~· te~-r blk Repaln. Aft 5, Ph: Duke I --~-,-~-~-1..;,==.==~;-=,.-I VISTA DEL MESA 5 000 $""' FT ·~ rr~' ' *Bob'• Lawn Suvic< * A~ratlol\I -6G.sM5 1 T• • bm, gray w/blk In.ther DaDurka, 675-7!13. ,,., Ap1rtment1 $650. per month braided collar. 49W892 ~• LARGE OR SMA_LL Comp. Lawn Maintenance Neat. llCC\ll'&te. 20 )oeG'I exp. 1 A: 2 BR. Furn. 4 Unf. Dish-Roy McC•rdle R11ltor &: wktnds. AU Typea Wark: ·Cut doon, }tome or· Com.m'l MJ-20&5 Tel1vl1lon Repair ;;::;,,;,.::::.. ":,~: 1!10 N_, Blvd., c.M. wsr, J4redlrlabSetterlo panel, r$ocl<I. linlab, * .. iJit~2015 * RENT atarts S15S 541-7729 1mlr German p 0 i D t fl r tr.me, l'@ptrwjl!tc. 962-1961. n yrs, exp. Free Eat. ~J ~ Irvine & Mtt• Drive wtbead&. Male " feml. Vie ALL typer oC carpentry by J Gard .. 1 .... ._. ___ • .-....~ v .. -.. Edlnger·S•nt• An• Adazm" Beach, H.B. Sinall local man, apanese e ...... ,;ioa-vJoe Auu---=v. ·-·-WIS * Sls-4155 * 2500 ,., It. unit, lrg. front Heward. 536-'3533. 536-1648 Oean-up. Trlmmin& """""for-SIMllJ ~~~~~~~~~ otfice, near Newport Frwy. ..1___ • 64&-6469 • Tiie r ~ in So. Santa Ana. $250. per FEMALE o3<1U.1..:se cat, no MlNOR home' repa)n, Plwn-PROFESSlOtiAL c.rdmer, I -· I"" mo. leue..• mo.·tD mo. dawa on ~t feet._ V_":i bins· carpentry· paiAUQC· tree woric,· ~. •JJCink· CERAKIC tiW _,, A . _ Walnolth Real Estate "Victoria 4 Maple, C.M • .roofllle. c.n 54()-.5(Je0, len, clean-up jobl, landsca mDDCkt J"tee est. srull 639-4210 646-1130. Cement, Concrete lna'. George. 646-5893. Jobi weleocne, ~ Rooms FOR aentleman, room in Irr. attrac. priv, home w/oo ehildftrt or peta, Beaut view lot lin pleasant nelghborhoOd, k 1 t c h e n m> to 9600 Sq. Ft. MALE cat, Cro11-eyed AL'S l.&nd~ Tree 4001 Birch, NWJJt ~ w/blue· 'eyt.!I, ',Butt color, ,CONCRETE WORK. Fair mow.I Yard mnodellnc lllJ Mr. Baumprdner 541-5032 a~wn atta. 548-2!Mf. :C,"r:!i ~11 .. ~st L I~. ~h ~ultne, lot cleanu~ I ........ 11 • RENT :r.t-11.US Sq. Ft. LADIES diamond, wtrlte gold 642-t.00. .. ....... .,,. WO r • Rep&lr sprinkJen. 613-1166. . . " l'1'11t.1mo.. ~~"'.: ,_ .. CM bracelet. Reward. ~Co~;;pl.;,;t~LandG;~;;;~<(;;;-d.~iiiiiiiiiiiii~iim •~ ..... ~~'.' ' • ** fiTl-9041 ·** FREE J(leu, ~ and *' m e e qpe ..-..av. -~~ --- ~ """'11• estimates. All I .,,.,.. for 5"ri!ni all Oranae Co. al> Wanted, P-11 Jiil .a.1:,. LOST .a monthl Malamute ,_ .. _ tilul job 1 Formal • natural pruntna:. -female. Reward. Feb, 2l. a a ._.u a a reu. AlllO, tree aerv. ~7-9.179. NEED MIP at bamet Wfl ~-~~----~ privil., it desired. Garqe. Rent•l1 W•nted 831).J.034. NICE room fDr r. D t • employed man only, $ll'ivate ·-$12.50. wli. 1719 Cft,aqnont C.M, dr pb. sg.'.gug, ' ROOMS • Jl5 Wk. up wlkit. Ul \Vk up AptJ, 2376 ?Jewport Blvd.. C . :r.1. 5'.<-9'15,;. --------1 price, MHm. •-ve ·~ e N..-e WANT to rent two-..... , to 968-51111 or 536-ll14. G I •-I --·--... CEMENT WORK, no Job too •n•r• -"' cea HOUllre r-• com. store can. One car aeven ~ LOST: Male Collle vie. 15th ..--hlab in . ~ Alt!'• • , &: lrvloe Blvd., N , B , lmllJl. reuonable. Fr e e EX PERT P a I n t I n g-paniom H<memllDUa • Up. Newport..So. Sallf:a Ana or RNud. Call 645-6591., '. Ee:Urn. H. Stufllck, 548-8615. sldin&/f.a.ci& il29, 2 11tory johza. SIT~ Colona del Mer. t44-5946. SIAMESE c&t wired collar, PAtios, walks, drive, install im. Exter. only. Plumbing PRACTICAL Ntll'le, died- WANTED to lease by May l. vie, Neptune &: SOtb. N.B. new lawn1, uw, break, l8 lv'. 642-1755 or &tl.-1403. tiol'I, lite~ vtfY 3 Br., 2 Ba., unfurn., prel. Reward. fi42..9485, ttmove. 543-M'i6S tor est. THINGS by MOOle, Lt. venatlle. ~Kem AreL watmnxit. Resp. bu!. cpl. WINTER Rates! Concrete el~t.. plumb, fence, tiUe, =,--::,-;-=7.,,,_,-,=::cl Consider leue/Opt./Pur· O~, patio., d r Ive a, He, l.n.rtln!, carpentry, paint F/C Bkkpr delirel Pam. chase. 675-8866, 1 · I(~} 1!dewalka. Don, 642-&514. etc. s.~. Pt/1'1me work. 1/2 ~ LARGE room ias. mo. Sharet---------t lnttructio" 15 Exp.'. uW. Huntiniton Be&di area. REFINED lady ~ Jum. . Contr•ctor CARPENTRY, ~. ce-?'1 ""':_k. )'ti M.1--95i88. b&chelor apt ReUonable. nnnU' ...... a.:--..:"~ ... , men!, etc. amaD jobs OJC. ~-=~---..,--.,..,.·! NRCM area. "5--0255, no ~ _.... ..... .,, '"""'""'-e11, Bob ~ COOK. Jed.y experitnoed In Guest Homo 1 415 drinks. Schools & plono A i.,.ou~ ...,,. or 2 around -lei-. - *PRIVATE.ROOM* WANTED .. leue 3 BR Instruction• 575 ~";'.:iru.L.T. 0>"""'1ctton. 0:-'?s:-ne:::: bytlleda>'--4. l-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; .. 1 wambulatorypenon.Good l1ouse cm IJdo hie by LEARNTOWRITE E.HUTbon,Ph.-. HolpWontw,M&l'710 II food, nice cheerful IUJTOUJld. respon.slble> family. S"ra-1764. FILM· & TV JACK T • ula ne-Repa.ir, - •·-• ·-•· lo al ,..mod., add!~ "' yn exp. Heull"' --A-le-1t11tlful lcloa CLASSIFIED HOURS S:OO LM, to 5 p.m. Monday thru Frida9 9 to nootl Sattll'dQ' MvmJstts moy 1>1- tbcjr-ads by tek'pbOOe . COS'J'.A MESA oma: 3.10 w. Bay . 642·5678 NEWPORT BEACH 3333 Newport mvd. 642-5678 HUNTINGTON BEACB 17875 ~ch Blvd. 541).1220 LAGUNA BEACK 222 Forest Aw. 49'-9466 SAN CLEMENTE 305 N. El Camino Reel 4924420 • NO!ml COUNTY dial -541).1221) CLASSIFIED DEADLINES :Deadline for copy It kills Is 5:30 p.m. th< day be· fore ~bUcation, exttpt for Monday tdltion ""'" deodline la S&lut· day, 12 noon. CLASSIFIED REGULATIONS ERRORS: AdV'ft'tisers 1hould check their ads dally & report errors Jmmediately. THE DAD..Y PILOT a.~mes lillblllty for t~ tint In· corttet hllt'rtlon only, CANCELLA110NS: WheD ktlllng an ad ~ 1ure to make a record or the KILL NUMBER elven you by your •d taleer u tte!lpt oC .)'O\lr '*'1CellaUon. nti,, Idll number ID\llt ~ ·~ Rb.led by the •dvtttlstt tn cue ot a dl"PUte. CANCELLATION 0 II CORRECnON or NEW AD BSFORE RUNNING: £\tery eUOrt 11 made to ktn '1f' ~ a MW Id U.t ll&Sl bten onteM, ..... ...,-....... ..,.-...,. tM to do art unW thl ad hu oppMl'td In lbe poo 1111'· DIMg.,f..d:NE ADS: -nan.. ad.• 8ftli 1tr1ctl• C!Uh ltt ~nee by mall •at any one of our of .. 11..._ NO pl>oo>o Older&. TR& DAILY 1'llm ,..,. lie.,.. .... ..-ht 10 cl ... lily, ..SI~ -or ,.._ il8't ..., adverllaetnent. 11111 to dlonao Ila ,.,.. :..~without , CWSIFIED MAILING ADDRESS P. O. Box 1580, C.Ol&V11& 112626 ......... • .... ~ From top *"' ...... as c. s. Uc'd. ?ily Way Co. 547.(1()36. 'ft .Call 0K011S1 + ~ Classes begSn March 15 in •COMPLETE c I ea n • u p • Div of Gea'l J'oodl needl V•c•tion R..U1l1 425 I ~· I ~ N.B. For tnlo call. 675-1874 Additions * Remode.lin& Remove asphalt, dirt, trtes, yoa. 1.-m Is teach lftf . . •• or 673-9119. Gerwick I: Son, Lie. concrete t'tc. Free eat. Lic'd mUeap tecbt. ExflCt P. LIRE AITowbead, .' Br., 2 PIANO teacher bu ltmtted STJ...Q'.Ml * ~2170 &: tne. 5«)4J097, avail. SC.at. Ba., furn, exetpt'hnerw. $75 -i-.. .... ---'--tio Drlv-•y• Jmd $150 k Announcerrttnta 500 ope ....... .wr coi~• Ill Yard, pna:e, c I ea nu p 1 . AcctlS Qertt1'Qmatr SM ~. per .,,. • 2nd or 3rd yev studerit. -A_.SPHAL...,..,...T~P~A"VIN="G". _,,Comm,--. Remove treel, dirt, tv)'. AIR Bo*beper Mil ~ Wllb to ext~ .wr most Mn. ~ton 548-849f. I: Reik!. RMUrl, patchina. s kt p )oad e r , backhoe. er. aettc/Conltr $515 R:ent•lt to Sh•re 430 lllUJ't-apprecl&hon tor , ~ting. Fl'ff est. CaH 847·2666. Bkkpr/OOnatruction $800 SHAREJo\iin&'Chrl1tian ;~~~"asso:~1-..,-1~ ~J~:!..,'-·~-~-·----HAULING Oean-up k>cal.Ina.Sec:rttarles to$9 SclenCe hPme. 1'1ale/Fema1e U:~. A. . E~irlc•I movts, ~'d. coUeie •hi· F/C Bkk1f/Sec'y-t.acuna ~ SlOO. Oean. on:lerl,y, chettr-'----------dent. tzc. truck. Jt.eu. !jp<:,Z~Conltr to~ fuL No smokinl'., no drink-E LE CTR IC A L, raid.. ~1146. NEWPORT ...-. inc. vea:etarian. Write Janice I 11 , 1 AftplJ•nce Rep•lr coinm1, Indus. A l i o, C&lwrt, 311 Alabama, Apt. l'manals & P•rt1 remodel, repain, lnltall. ME5n :e~· r=:un: Personnel Agency · 6, Hll11Hngton Bch, Tele-. BJa:/small. Uc'd/lnt. Free ~.~:per hr •. +: In Dover Dr., N.IL phOnt: 5.36-ms wkdya before ALL retlinl repaired. Km-flflt. 5t6-o2n. Odd Jobs. S4&-5863. 60-3170 7 A.M. or aft 6 P.M. Per1on•l1 530 ~· Whirlpool wuben, EL E CritICIAN, Hoelilie:Ct ROOMAIATE wanted t o di'ye:ra repaired. 53M561. bonded Small jobs ma1nt. lYi T TRUCK. Haulinc A: Account"'9 uJ lhare • br bou,. w/h<ated FUU.Y UCENSED DllOOWlt Appliance Ropalr • ' asaoctated WkL Coul· S I •1 " ,..pa1n, ~ Vall H .,,. __ ·~ _ uperv oor • ~. Interview re.q' d, Renowned H~ Spiritu&liat Wuher, Dryer, Dilbwa1hft'. ey a ........ ~10. Prn\Oal supt1'9iJor,I ~ Stud~ta c onsidered. Spiritual Readini 1tven GUARANTEED*~ G•~dtnfng TRASH 6 Garap clean-up. anploymentlrcclleaetnil\' 531-llJ~ sn-un. -· 1DAM-10PM. A4vlce Tito lutest draw ll1 the w .. 1 Ja-~ Service dayo. FMe m _.. ll1a will Wld,.. tl>la can« GIRL, 2Z-28 to man our 3 on all matten Ot life. 312 N. , , , a Dail)' Pnot Ourified Al90 Clean-up. Flft EaL 548-603L oppr. O:lmpany paid bme- bdnn apartment 1% block! El Camim Real. San Ad. 642-fi67S e 5t8-6029 aft s PIM e HousectMnll'lfl tita. Call Pat KennedY1 ~ beach. Call Donna, Clemente. 492-9136 or 83!-2700, Dennl1 Ir ~ s;i-191.J or aftet g pm, 492-0034. Ml!aa CleanJna Service Per10nnel Aifncy, DJ 6'>2952. GIRLS! I <an fit you in a * * *' * * * Cerpei., Wlndowl. Floer etc. Mich•-Dr., Irvine. BACHELOR to abare 3 bdrm tabulowi: Kathy AJls Bra Reaid. A Comm'L 548-4111. * Adm. S.Cref•ty 2 ba turn home in MlasM>n that will supporl, firm "1,.--.,...-------------..... 1 Dedfc.tecf CINnlng Require• a Belt starter •/ Vifdo. A.le ~ $1Z per tone whbout strap atrain or 1 * WE DO EVERY'mING * xln't altllll I: exper. at \:If mo. eaµ 83()..1074 early am 1ncreue )00 1-3 cupi In 7-10 -rr, d y Pa d • ,. 1tR. PHONE m-t072 ma:mt level. Salu7 Cl!llft!. nr late O..n11ip. cloyo. 14• "'"· 1 yr. llW'· I ra er $ ra ISe Income Tax me...,.te w/bac"""1Wlll. •=SHAR="'>J,-,.,..=.,--:-... =utttu1= I JW. l3!).8008. Senko Center - apt. en 'ocean ttde w/iltl Dt.!l))VER btscovmf CLARK · le Toner Tax G62 Campus Dr., N.B.-.1 ll Find YOURSELF ll1 Someone 11• nes Serva. 24 YEARS exp, ;,, SU!te 11-4 557.,.., only, ca 67>-'1697. n--·naJ I •• ·-u--• -Call now -No obHgation area. ..-~.... &av ce .... IV' ... -·· -·~ ma G~~~·~jfor Rent ~5 (TI4) 135-6885 (213) 387"'3393 ti"mes your home. Call 101' appt. or Rm)...fttlred c ouplf GARAGE lbr rent tw au"fu Or NATIONALLY MG-7735, Howard Clarlc Ii capab&e ot compl. ~ C RECOGNIZED John Toner. ment. lnddc· It nMiint atoragt, 1w I Side .M. -'-" I: ........ ..1 •• ..._ H w1mo ""44%1, 646-1730. PROBLEM -·-. ea... dollars Jan1tor111 .. _ -· ~-· • 0 •·•-~ --------1 lawn wwk. Apt 4 -ta GARAGE,' ~. for ~.,...!~~~ .. ~~~ APTdtaninr-carpetftm-rlahf pany, -.wr. s....,., $2S mo. r-•·--, -~ poolnr, lloOI' llrlppln( an111aiai~iitj;;~~-·1 ••MZ-:llST** tion '°Adoption rol. waxlnr,!reeeatlG.1996. ASSEMBLIRS Office Rent•I 440 AP-CARE. 642-443&. 71,~ Ac. hi deae:rt, nr pines, * Lake Tahoe tot, M>Uth M•&e>nry --'-------ALCOHOLICS Anonymoui. n:r Pearbloaom. Eq tor car, aide, level. cleared. Strett --:::""""°""'""'~,--1.\aealble tkctrle .. ~ DESK apace avaOable $50 Pbl:me SC.1211 or write wqon, van or 1 WLU deal Ir all bnprovemni.tl ln. A~ BRICK, BLOCK.. cal dn1c9 4 .tM•uJ :rK ~ ~"'-~ ,P,O,.f!of.»13, l;<>ota '4-. Sl6o8!U, UP)!., ""°" $e<iO eq IOI' boat, ur, Sl'ONE WORK blleo. Int-·~ av:ilable. um-~ Blvd. 15'8-,~2429~_Sun_,·-....,.,-.,,--TD or plane or TT m-66.15 5t0-0929 , or &l&-0945 draw In 11, ll*:lbtlo!I HUnU0rtoo 8tath. ~ [ Jal 7.T ~ Dice cebin 11!.,, 2 BR hm A .. pltx .. 2:: Palnllnt1 & ~I=~ sum: otO!floes, 1300 Ill· fJ. loot ..r -...,Uy~; filhln(, hunt· ll1 Full.non. $7IO. mo P....-...lnf ..,..., _.. ~ , ' inr. nr. Univ. Alont&M; lOI' Trd $3,000. Ill tor C.M.1.,._._,....__ ... ...._ ___ 1,_,~ or lea.. Lease W Rent. .1763 >' ' So. Callt~"Wnta. lll'OP. 1tl'• or w.bmlt. OwD-PA fN'J'mG: !Mer!Exter. ~- Oranao Ave, oomer ol Found (fne ado) 550 Fortin, Real!M 842.SOIJO er/Broker -· Woll• "'aahed A minor Rocht11ter, CM, S4Mlll. WANTED: 2X) .at• Rtvenlde County ~at pticf1 >'OU can &f· B•y V11w. lcn FND. sman ferzJlle poodle, Unit&, Harber uu. an« )lo.rt tor bbuae or hi· ·,ford. nte est R.t ts· t>tlu:U, ah tkmed vtc. Ma~le C&Jlendert•, HA.VE: eome. Valtled at $&XI. an tla-UM • Udo arta •· 1q.•tt. North of s; Coe.st.Plaza. on 4 br, 3 ba. &Cft. Brit 'Mott RI tr.1---"No-,,W'°am-'"nw __ _ Rtolooomkt, Illa. m<11iO Brla1Dl St., ~-3111. Aa<nt 11>-7225 HIR 5'8-11611, r.57-1244. + WALLPAPER * TOT.. ba "When-· _,. ~·· -ol 1880 oq, IL w!ll LABRADOR puppy, 6 mo•. HAVE lOOI< 5 br. 5 , pool MULTIPLE zoned land A •-- TELONIC INDUSTRll!S INC. F,qual Oppor. ~"' tot alt Cll' hilt, k>olted near flea collar. V1c m A home, LaCanada, equity t.eeuna dtvtlopmtnt acre-154Sol444 -.1't11 ~ A F.dlncff, air cond. · Tu 1t1 n, Costa Mea '8k It.lat lBk Arrowhead lot q:e. S88M A S1!3M equ!tlq, 30 DAY $pedal. IJ>teTfE)(. ASSEMBI.ER/coll wl n d er 4 crptd. OJI IG-81.. fC...MU tor Nn-port area 4 or 5; Trade 1 or both for horM, trr. ~ Lot.al rm. 1J needed for lt'Mll ;;REAL;;o,C--:.,..::::;:le:-;:bro::;:ker::-=,..=n::ta: I ,WHITE;;;:,;;::·:.,r~---=~-..._~....,,'d br home. Agtnt m. 7225 HIR. apCa., or comm. 49t-4653. yn. Q,. Frte tit. Call tro-mlchankal d t •I e • • • -..... rman ........ ,, ' LAKE 'RRO""'~•n N Cb ""' ... .: -Holl u-ua.1 U"tL Dtx. small oruc. apace about INU ·'~ 1 old u... ,.. "'n.r:.n.v , l"IU. --de • -. 2 .,..... u-. -.-... • ...... ., m~. approx yr. . ·~ SHORE I al 112 -" • "' ' o• ,__ krlty vlllon ln111ortanL 14· tt. In downtmm LQi,lna collar Bkck Star Can)'on ot, v ue ,VIN""' olcl home in Sandpolnte -P A J N' T 1 NG -H 0 NE sr ' Beach. 49:hru0. Call m ally, &<Ul!O. . =rty ~RT.beach 19.500 equity -for home CLE AN. GUARANTEED = !:""~<d. atu A e O!TICES e WHITE i.maJe Terrior, pink ~ or l'IS-Jm A aereqe "'" Sonora. ..... k. UC.-4 lnourod. Wl'ttA!, Clulllkd ad No ... JOO A 11111 oq. It. COSTA collar W/WJ ,_ Fowxl ••• ACRES~ ~M A. Call 55HW. &15-6140. llally Pilot, P. 0 ..... lMI, MESA. Call &46-21311. v;c, °"'11e"-Parl<, --· per ROOMS !20. Aclxtua. CeD!nsl Colla M••• Cal 1:16S. EXECIJT1VE SUITES Analtelm ffl.106l. South...,, • (Coot coun· What do )'OU ht. .. tn tndef ...,..i $12, ..... IJXI •l•ASSJ'°'""sr"ANT;;;;:;c:::=::=""""'.::J ' try). Want lnoom•, TD, Ult It htn -in ~ Good paint. 847 U51. man&ltt - Newport Cna-Rod<lt<r Bidf. FND. Larie black dos. yaoh~ A.lent ~ l9U La O>unty'o 1atgfft ,.ad ttad-up, , -...,h. WDI train. &..>lllelllj Strrian tnd'd &tt 80&0. friendly 6-obfd~nl U Vmtana. Sin Otmente.. ina port. &12-.S67l PAINTlNC I PAPERING, futuft. Pita.ant ~ •• llf Diily Ad.'4Ulll ~ic. ~ff'i~il•• .. &6'1lllh1111il<lrl:J;::-->-"'"C: ~---*--., .. .,. :r --·-* U.ynbt-KuW--.U.:6 •lr~aJttft•e H.B. UI-'Jiii' bondod. Rd"sltmi. "1-2llt. -------' .. • . . -- -' ' ••• « ··..:"~ .. ' .. ' PILOT·ADVERTISER ,,If) "' .,-\l(t<j•ltM-. """""u.1m • • ' • -...... ~"·" C.,..,•~t liJPoj11•1t -[ l[Il] I • ][ll) I J[Il] ~~=1 !!Jlp w .... ...i. M 1. F 7TO 'Holp W•nlod1 M.I. I' TIO, Hol p W1ntod, MI. F 71 0 A'M'E?irlON 1 C&rtoer-mlnd· DRESS A: Spmtswea.r Mt.tr. I 1.-_ .. _ ..... _,_ ... _ .. __,]l l•][. ,,.,,._ llDJ I , .... , .. ](ii)[-,., L r .. J;J_s• jl!!J -•·.ra• l!§J I J[§j '--[ --· I~ Holp_~•.ntff, M I. F 710 Holp W.o~lld, M,I. f flD Holp Wo~ MI. 11 711 F yrnlture • 111 1.M::.;;:l•:;;«;;:l:;;l•;;..,_,.;;;,;..;.;.. __ 1_11 Pl•noi/Orgon• 126 ~ ·edo-;,a11;. ce wpJ,-1 , ~~··.~tjf'rl.Exge.r.opn., J .C. PENNEY CO, housewives, seetttar'8'-. Swg •. ~· .OVttl<M?k, but-·Fo11hion Island .~lb)o Alli Corp. ""fd• peo. ton!'O'e· bu_llOnst'w, pieaur. N•wport Beach 1• ·ttewlth-ambltlon•nddrive, RoJel lnc.l 1.608 Babeock, Tum Idle hr1. ln!O 1$ hn. C.A1 , 646-1443. ~ · , Require• · \ '!'!-~· EX!iCUTIVE · AU'!O' ifO,L IS\l~~.G J, ,•for-nel Aftoncy CARPET»DEPT, SE LLING SPECIALIST ogr All, POSITIONS. 'f>r. -• ,. : pe~ ~n,fiM c~&ninc .it paint • · lM,l.ft{n£. . Sal'll' o 1 ' n • •'ott>wtff eo.·· ~elrO · Ol.f t . Waals. 2950 Harbor Blvd_._ . C'oi:IA M eS:.. .., .., • . . . Pu1.;up Artlit { -IAIYSITTEll llYE-IN COLLEGE GIRL PREF'D ' ....... """"""""' .. llll crf!attvt. Good lklll1. 410 W:-. C.out H~.; NB iltile H_ • . · 6&2716 E>g:cUn~ s.cr.Mry - Bookketper. FIC: tbru Trial Bal. $fiOO up. Send -re:11ume, P.-Oi ~ 2700., Newport Ekacll, <if, ~· FUR"11TURE DEPT. SELLING, SPECIALIST PORTRAIT STUDIO ,.ASSISTANT ~Utnt v.•ot1drn; COlldS .. Oulat-.dlnc ~tit• Wit.nt rltl 11.•ho needs Mme Exper. diahwa~IM'r wt1nfl"(I Apply In f'r~n lOAM-4PP..f (. w)tile aolng to OQ~ee. Care by r ~I a t i v ' I y small foi= g y..~ old bof, 1·2 hrs ln rertauranl. Ii day wk in. aftemxm Mon·f'(f~ (Wffk. quding 3 nllff until 8:3() 24 Fashion Island end• &: ,.~~i )'Olir Own). N'o p.m·. No Sun. v.'l)rk. To!al Equal. Oppor. F.mployl'r hou a. JtoOm . W,...., pay Incl. ov~ftime aboutj ~~~~~~~~~ Hav 1:w;r YJJ.il time: 1~~~ $IOO !or 52'hnur wttk. Apply ,. l EASING AGENT tor child In Swn~. S."A. Untlbtrg Nutri!ion, localed Ci ll 5·~7533 •• ~ · · nn lirn·rr I-eve! in hack nr Evenings 1. Wef'~encl~ Toy World 111m-r in So. Coast .Afier 6':3l>PM , Pla1,11. Shopping Ctr. Costa Personnel Ag(>ncy -d(;' · Mesa. 2043 Wei;tcllH Dr .. NB Top Co. Good Benefits Call LntTainr \\IE:STCLIFF' BABYSIT"i'ER. ~ :,rom' l ::tO ~E~XP~ .. ~Y-tora"""r"· d7,-,~,..,-,-,-w-M""t· ~=~-:;";;"',;277;.;;0=== trm· Westminster area. 4 ed;tull timt . Call 492-7l2.1, LE GAL SECRETARY , School age c h 11 d re: n • · Safi Clemrnte. Fee PR.id. Short on houn. ~5 89'1-9658 or 962-0013'-Sh'hiey. EXPER. Servitf! St 1 1 ion Ir long nn henelif.,. C&llf. BARBJ:R: Men'• Haimylist help. (2) Men p/timl". Ray exptor. heJpful but Mt wanted Newporter tnn lfotel Carey Chevron, rot So. nN'f'~•-I~ Ufese Jr. USOC· ~.i 'SOOp. · F'OllO'tll\ng" ·Coar;! Hwy., l..a.g'ul)& Beach. !ates. GreAI pay. CaJI Pat ( .jftf'I. . Call for appl., Apply in .pl!.l"fOn• . KPnnedy, !'t3·2700, Allltl Fee 64.4-2SllO, Tuu. thru Sat., 9-5. Geneni.l'. Oiflct ,. _ · . Job!!, Dennis .\ Ofonnig PPr· ".l,im." Golden Opportun jtyl -aoonel Agency, 2082 Michel-~ fi:iB~'srPrER." for' 2 girl•, Varied duties &··unlimited 17"=""';°''.'.::"7 1:;"":.:':::"':::·_,..,, __ ~· 91.t & 7~. tmiti 9 llld~rnent · awall:' vlva-LJVE-in hskpr ·for 1 'A/Oman pm,..!i;ll Mo~Fri. Nr Ward ckrus M"H s1arler, ~ltrf~ 111 must own car. :.{.Tafut.rt. F.V.·968-91n, aft S500. Call Ann F'ox , !m-1700. 673-\N).13 s:ao. Dennie & DenniR Pe~nnel PLASTIC FABRICATOR* SolH Pro"lollen * HIGH· QUALITY PLASTIC . M•nogor Sl2K FABRlCA'TlON -S1iOULO &cksrovnd divtnilied.-bl.It HAVE P~IOUS EXPER. •t ·ctmwmer produda l~vl"I. IN A ER 0 SP ACF. IN· Know'l 'of dlia ald1; ~t:k· DUSTRY. 40 HR, WK-DAY artnK t\ 1Taphlcs.' A:bWty -LOST LEASE MOVING! Old., Tol1lt pn.c. TYPISTS * . 7, PC. VI.I. VI T I. oprljthl plooo w / b '" ch , S"ANtSH OAK Coast Pawnbrokers ma....., Sl95. GE l"f:~-.. ~~ ..... ,... ' -~. . .. • ...,.... L'IVINO RM.-GROUP ia clearing out. Our mis· misc. Prvt Prty, 673-6267. a i ltflUIOl'&f'Y job ~ ot t' velvet :10ta, lortune ls your iOOl'i lorttW. • • 121 today contraltil\a: velvet a~t Unredttmed item• of 11.ll Sewing 1 .• achlnes Jntervw1: t.12 c•-•-2 Spanl h -·" .-.. kinda will SI) at a tr11c11on . . We.Need All ....... s ,,_ nu ot their value. Watches, BUY dlrect. Ell'll a&.le only !'HlFT. APPLY IN 1o 11.•rlle COp)(.. .. PERSON. EDLER IN· Servlt:e C'!nler A.a:e.nry DUS11UES l!"fC., 2 l 0 I · 4262 Campu1" Dr., N.&. Ottiee S<illt t~le1, Spanl&b oak cotftt jewdty, typewrlter1, dia-$269. White.Elna, '822 Para. Equal Opgor. Employer tabte ., 2 SpaoJah lamp&. mondl, muslul Instrument•. mount Blvd ., L&ktv.'OOd. ; • lo,lal.' .. Y~ale AL&. f.OR S1H c&nu!·ru, playen;, etc, etc. 2J3/4:z3...6'm. r W .. torn Girl Inc. TlllMS-!.ALSO ' ' ' L.•"-·w· •y PL·N It""' .... ,.. .... '"'" Sporllnt Good• 130 SALl:S Girt to·werk i;. Ila· s46i7'MacArt>1ur·ltlvd. ""T.., "" "" .2d1 N~ Blvd. (~I lo ;,:;;_____:;_ _____ ,I DqVE ST: .. N.B. !Localed ~te ' IM S51·2'7U acr'05! from 0 .C. Alrportl. "---10,.. p nn job Newport•Bet.ch TRADE"$ Antique Rowl C.M. 548-6.1111 RELOADING e q u I p men t PL •STI CS e '""'"'ry • ' " . . S40-«125 ; •URNITURE • "" · Willing to lr:&rn 1t1tion@ry ~~--' r-Im STEREO, 1 o u n d He:r1f'rs Press. RCBS. Die1 i P\l!Jilne!is, Irv~ Qttlt( Sup. Vl ~~TNAM .io2 ·N •. l roadway, S.A. dd.ia:n. GaITard, mo 5 1 for 270, JOO wby, M-1 lnjection molding ol)('ra~~ pJi•a, 1807 Newport Blvd.r . , .VETEUN 135-1305 Open 7 days brands, component ayslrm · carbine, ~43 v.'in, '4 mq. or trainees. GritveylUU C.M. {)net ,iri a li(lt~ime oppo(. to MOV'G, Qu.11.ty g pc. maple AM/FM/FM/MPX, slereo 8 Case trimmer. RC 8 S M~ he neal and depend-1,.,:;:.:.________ itart a ~anqeJJ'~~ bdnn:,•lJC, Barlter'• flaneh track complrte turnlabll", Po1111dPr measure. mall)' able. remale. pre.ferttd. SEAMSTRESS tn ·a loc'al ~ Of one of bdrm., ~ cottee 1: 2 bus renex. 1peakr:ni sold bullet.s, bcul, Pr Im er•. h1uat . be able to work Sat fol' .allendon& • wcelvina COW1by'1 bt11e1t com-~epMd 'tat>~,wa.shft'. pa separately for $409.84, pay murh equlprnt'nf. $116. I« or Sun. mf'f'cl\aodlse '1qr men. A: ... a .. 1-,,,,. __ .., ' trami .. .:.· h' 97~1319 Apply 8:JG.ll :~ AM Cosfa Meaa. Calif. 850 Wfft J8th St. • Ot-1111ge Coast Pluttca * l ......,...,.. .,....u ..... dryu. Unpt, mile. Thun. ott layaw-.y balal'l('e $J99.R7 PVE'r"YI 111g . wome111 boutique, Cirat po-Pl'Oll'&m letl , you learn Fri.Jo.sat~ 10 to -Sonly. 308 ~ or, pymts ol $8.50 monrt1.ly. LEFT Hand 11 h 0 ote r 1 . sitlon .tor rioht lady lcdrins" w"-ile ~· earn. Start $5700. Ni "W• H a U S.A Sh~reo Equip W•re-w h b ~i fpr J lastiri[laJ,·; to 4 days ~ ~-~n!ion ~ 1 ~,;;c.·c:..·::.',:.:.·::·____ . , . ea! er Y .w ma.& nu m a Week~ Experiepced' PfO;Ple' · 'COA!taJ :Ag~n;.., : LtKE .Mw.Vel\itt. UY rm set hot.tu, l79 E. 17th SI., Cmta Leapold 3x9 variable Buelt1r · 1...: ~J --'a . kwe ,..1 ~:-.. .a hi-Mesa, M.>2442. mounts, br11nd ne;w $320.00, can ror e:ppolntmemL 2190, ' ~.aroo.·r Bl &t'Adatn, I -............ _ ._ 'THE LOOK · ·blck~.pe~&.Span. STEREO, 1972 Garra rd ,W!'athfrby YXI ma •. num PR.ESS OPERATORS ,_. 64-4..ssoo W A·l TR E S.S JN.anted oU ttblea. Will aeparate. model, full stereo chan,zer, Leapbld 3x9 variable Buel.er Womt'it "to work for 11la1tic l~~~-""-=:....--..,.-P.t/timr. over , ·2l-cau Aleo lttrculM' 1· 10 1 a air cusperuion 1peakers, mnunta $280.00. 97&-1319. molding plant. 546-3370 AMS'TftE~S wanted to 962-7112 or 968--0385. Im t hl"I 1ov HAI ~, AM/FM stereo radio + . :;.1•70<1 •, '"' • ta,.... deck. Still brand new & GUN Collectlon Remmrton PROFESSIONAL. Phone do piece work 1111 ho~e. No •• WAITRESS EXPER. .,._. ... :;:ranteed. War; I' f I pump. 270 win SUO. Chartl ' r;olieitor • Dana Point, San exp. 'neceS!lary 51 ~)lame • ILUE DOLPHIN • KJNCSIZE wat,rb@d: In-~I~ on lay~way. Dilly Vf'nturR Grade 2 ra. Clem,nre, CapistranO area. M!Wl!r. CA:JJ ,646-1910· · Mature. · 'J35SVW L.ido, NB cludeJ tnattrfa, f Io or Sold·· fur' • $325, pay off 26" ban-els $JXl. fthac~ Work \n your ~wn homa. SE'c!REnRY 'f.RNE WAN'tED.' 'Door · to door fr,a.Jnf', llnir.1foiam pad. 5 balanCe 'ot '.$$1or take over Mod"! 37 pump 12 IJ. 30 Best ~eaJ In area. Phone Yoo'cait i'litdwe:r ·the lfUcin· ~tn, J10ilnve11in.e,L )1'. 11\firullet. · Prl. party small pymnt!. Collection barrt1 $1311. 979-1319. 8~1465 between 9:00 .L.m. ating eJamoroo•' ~rid of }64.Z..2814; ~ ' "2i. 96&.<&.1.' Debt,, •'71(/«93.(lj01. GOLf' Cuba. Pro· 11 n e , 1t.n noon. ~bu!iinsea;-Co.-will 'trarn :gal, _ll'_P_rfAN'--F~4'1\~iliu-.~,.,"-.-.th-. ~-,.-.-~. LA'RbE GU "desk. ·'ll"X~" SI'ATION Equip. ctprette Spaulding. MV-2. Tull 11et. R•al E1tate ClrHr Ne:ov or e;xperienct'd. Jqin America'll'. lPAding resident· la! sales leader. Full tnin- inR: program includes clan. room + individual guid ance. \Ve trah1 you ·to. ~a. Eam while )?.I ler.m. Mnre adver1.isini' !tian any other tealtor. Our full page: Ads make: ttie Phones ring with buyers. Call V\rgi.nia Jones, w/ple:11.J&11i lJ\,&llDtt I: aood in& ta Contact local D1fr-top fi draftrs. $15. ". mach-coke ,rnach, Coifs Bag, pufler &. wood covua appe:aranee.·$400. . chants.. chlirt:h t,I: civic f'rl...4191 l(l..Ul, tire changf!r, !150 .• Cont&ct Dave, , Call-JHn .Ol'&wn ~ 'lrouPA-· Ex.eelltnt compen-'lf-'.;.,'-..i...-. -"Id~· :.,Chotl,..i.' -.-.~.~14 Allenscope, ~I blllancer., .:c'1&-::_7.:c258::c· ____ ~- . Coa1irt1.I '..<te:nc~· sat.ion· pi:oscain. Call Mr. -"''"""'."'1-Bl ir.....11 •-144 W 19th i -Poo T b'· "-· 2t9l1 Uail:icif nr at Adims acn'?~ IU'-"'o . • F1JLL size I a .... ~\/)' Rief!~ at 558-&373. BROADLOOM e&J1)1!'m,. It CM S48-Di4. sllllr. lop. complete wlballs, SEC~ETARY WOMAN .FOR pad, lfl!lyda ·+·Med.·bt'WJ,. COMMERCIAL Mangle . nt<'k & cues. Xlnt ,cond. m<'31J, .. Typ;.'OJ APT •. CLIEANiNG 'l''"•corid.fll0"-.rn5.j si-i· Quttn. s:1mpl " l60IJ, 673-9176. • Cal~ I...arraihe LA.ft.GE 'COM'PLE·X Jewllry I JS model No rx;56. &1r otter. GOLF clubs: Wi190ll X 31 pi,~~afnCE Mu.st ' ~-thorotJghfy ex'peri-Ca1I ·~·Mt 98.m,' or Pm line U'OIV, 5 liop.n erittd ·m conunan:ia.I cletn--.• ·'f.IFF'ANY SEmNG I lea~ miuaCe~ ~9Ul7. v.·oodi. value S386 like nf\4.' 3'.K3 ~e~.'111~·· ~.·~· ·inf. · .. ,.-_ · ~eu;..t... 1Ca,r ...... c.a•rl .. er $1S. $225. 540-5-1&4 Jtt J. Call 54,6.502$ . · · Dlamono! llu\r· • ,.,. • &ECR·ETAl!Y ' y ··cHT'S•LE·····N ".546->no E-1-~·" • 541).221!1 . TV. Radio.,HIFI, . \ BA.~STITER. re:Ha ble. my flttlrMiniiblf!. & versatile for l "' "" ~ Mltcelllineout Stereo 136 ·fiO~e~· 2 r.hild~ni.:'.7 ~~5:~. · Must be exper.--brbatll Pow· Machinery IJa Agency, 2982 ¥ictiel59n Dr., }l':viDer !.. , • 114}5581. TARBELL REALTORS MANAGER wanted for 1ml. family · recreat\on ·club, no age 'limit. 536-8091 10-4 pm. C.M. at'!£"1\eti. M~8 . H£t~F?r'JAhittil-;· n'n.l!t be MEMORIAL RE'CEP110Nfst ·Trainee for ~lrl ofc . ."ne•," ~~~~I . er; •.salt ,'. , .· . *,~FOR Sole -.· Ton ur.:.. W•ntetl 120 19n ZENITH It B.CA t & gteady workec. Pref doctors Ole. Musf 1.-, neat 1ng, some 1 • ua.i-.:•..., 11«, Ro"--y St 11, •--~ ·~ ~~ '. ''tilo•I, Co•-•I••• '1l'!l · ' , 3 "'" · • ·Abllily 1 um• · a.a ;me. Televi.~ions. Lower in prlet: " ,a .,......,, mltldle aged to older man. 11'ppearance. 548-0076. gen'\ ()fc. mgmt, 0 lOOl w· ,..,.,. u. ... ; NB ' Pi"'.•. Wffh hydraulic P,Ower * w•NTED * ~rlenced. jourllt!)llllen for S2.40 Per hr. + ~xiht iring,. rom~e Jettel'!I &: accuracy . · :Ms:m; .. ·1• unit. 546-l049 "" than lhe discoun1en. 3 yr ... Y.~ch! work. Min, of 5 yr1 benefits, Call .for appl: COUNS£LJNG 'ct Salary .,, ~ Used patio fu.miture. Prder picture tubt, 1yrparl1,1 yr t :.,_~ txpqlg~ ,Prem· throug~1, ThUN;. Feb. 24, RECEPTIONIST req . . . 60 Ton H)"dn.u\ic pnja redwood or. wrought Iron. Rrvice warranty. Every set flUJI. wagei & f!xcellent bf'n·:: fW6..'17Jt ..... ~ • .' , . Start lhe new Yef.l' in a pro-With accurate typing. . Sw~5RE1hT•A'"'RVrl. meetll ~· L....;. __ ._ .. ~ _ _,_,'~""' .. · : "'o·~-u1'!t9, drill pttfi'. ~~t be finre~nablPc·?JK ~ ul,. price- 1 d thruTVFe~ 29th. etlt1, Only qualified nttd AP-fe:1siont1.l .career. A rlelij:!:htful company! u•:l'I! : ....... V """'"'··~ '" · 1i=ut! re 1'31,1ng, a.1. 1.u ABC Co or . vrariie :_.plY; '.$!"" fe1WJ11!,or c11.l,I: , OSTESS A/P. GIRL FRIDAY lurl~ G~&I 1pot for iincere Ml~l-..US . l fl fi pm, 837-500.1. O:iunty's I 11. r g f! 1 t ,ln- Mi• Ritjft: , , , · .~-821.l , , 1 . .,Ji1 , , · , · Top 1;arnin11, frln&:e be:nt;fits Interesting activity person ~l.ghl 'ha~~lto ~ ••••••Iii•• '!!!!O!!O!!O!!O!!O!!O!!O!!!!!< I dePE'ndenl dealer. 9 O 2 1 · fctttenbUri: Marine, 1 lnc:· · .,... OOPM and a prtstige a>mpany. ,Without rre~"ure PFroxes. H~:noo ~ .... ,., ._ n --Antu. .. , IOO * AUC'ft"ON . * W 5 ANTEd 1o h •Ro· buy 1 19 0 68 Atlan11. Huntinrton &acb. " " 1 P.O. Box 6448 , · tl:.,,,,-J: INS. GIRL FRIDAY ·""""' ,....., .... •~,. --·';,;.;..._· ____ ._ • ·we 1 ors tan s 963-3329 . -s.ti' Diego, Calµ. :UtOl '' .$un<f4;:'t_h(u ·~~~. Prefer JO yeR.1'1 or older. Manage small attractive ni~ P~J'l<¥lil~l A~~~.-2CB2 SC.RA' M' .. L, ETS . fFlt~~:~f~~ ~t~· Christmu Plate, 644-tW. 1.CU_Rc.Tccl_S_M_A_Til_E_S_co_lo-r-con-- Equa1 opptiftldiil'S'" etfiP~er ot6ce:. Agcy exp. prefd Micbt spn, .... r.~ ryine.. ..'. . '' · Mu1lc<1l ln1trumW1 m s 0 1 t, 2 I · • T 1/, Bookk",-r F~ eeNt. APPLY JN P ERSON For M in!erview 'f'rtt & Ftt Positions SERVICE Sta.Hon Atte.ndllnt. From Jnsvrance C.Ompany: r-.,._ t .1..1..1.02 2 Office deck, File cabinet., A.1d/F'M/MLTLX. plx>no. It an adds UP,J 'at loca· V"t"t-1 P NEWPI OART ~ft\me evesfwkncl1. N_~at .. ANSWER' . Ottlee cbaJra. Coiored TV's, FENDER ~rQu"""il rb •Dump. S299. 979-0810 at1 6. tio..,.,..Jull\ oJfices, liJct bou 'TH.£ RIG.GER MATURE Gill W/Sl'nse of ersonne gency in apJJ:eara.nce, t.'Xpe:r. On•Y· .J St Qi Perfect co...... ter ck ,... • .. ' .-~ ---~ .. C ... r. Dr NB ).p· ply' ~ Newpbrt Bl er~. Bdrm sets, elllll. Be t fftr 833-0936 & clia11ci! ... for-Ati'111.ftltnfent. humor wllo likes people & -amt"'s ., · · • . . ., ~I~ :-9-alt ;-Tarry _ C.OtJee l&bleA. Bunk beds, amp, s o • · Dor)'t, :fllblf,tct W time. NO.' i& ·FASHION , ISLAND "''anlll interl!sting work lo fBranch Office I C.!'tf. : . ParOOn _'PAID FOR . Dinettes, Late: model aide-TROMBONE -big bore, [ ftH 10 You J!' Call Lynn Todd, &\.1-2700. ' rp;wf'9RT BEACH &ssillt & train in portrait Nona W. Hoffman 540-0fi.l5 SERVICE St.tUon help, P.art The hoi .)'Oil biry on credit by-11~ retrl.g'a, Stoves, w/tnuer to r . xtras. $135 Orenriia tl'' Deiinii ·Personnel ..,,.,;.,;,""'~!!"'!!!!!!!!!!~~I lil1ur1io. Opri>r. fotc'-advancE'. tim~ •. lfWing shift. Expe.r. Wi11 grupj un til. U'• PAID Wachl!rs Ir: MUCH ~fORE! or be!!. 548-9642 3 Lines, 2 Times, Sl.OO Ag.,cy. 208'l ><i<hel"'" °'" Hq4SE!iEF.PERS & Com-Ph' 67;...t648 •II 5. RECEP~l~ISJ $4S~ ~ . ,BoU• Er>i<>, 'o o' FOR... , W_ .fNDY'S. AUCTION Office Furnlturo/ • . lt'viM. panlOnii, Practical Nursei; . Mature Hostesses Fee Re-im u · hy watt,. N!!wpart, Blvd'. al Bf,ker SI. OAK........:--caLJ:':ll, ,~.~. . E . 124 Live-in or oot. Good Paying TO rNTERVtEW An excitin~ co. ha~ a fronl . . '"'""'16 DfJll!:\. •.n,..~ quip. * * Black La hr ad 0 r ·BOYS Jobs. E,mp(pyer Pa.yii Fee NEW .flESIDENTS de,;k position for ' venatlle 5eP/r;1ce-Stat~; . . & ,36" wide: :r.12" bi, xlnt eond. COME BROWSE AROUND E~'T!VE • -h ped d k Rerrieve;r, maJe:, 15 mo1. Age UJ.14· to · deliver papeni H alth ~ F ·1 c .& )•ivacious individual "''t¥1 .. !•me: ~~)'.ttl. • 8~." $85, M'J-98&6;. ~ ,Monte ~% Ne~rt Blvd. .IUA.,.ou VII a n . ..._ ~~o-e "'I amiy are: -Part Timei-k-" E Iv A~y y · OM ' SlfiO Bl ck ~· Sl• JJ-...: 10 you._.. · in tht Dant Point, San Cle-· 1805 "'1 Broad 11eeks varied duties &: 11»1ds . w !II.JI!· . ~Pf!'!· o,n,.,. _w• · ,.ista ~ ~ -_· Behind Tany'1 Bide Mat'lll . a exec, c .. ,..1r, . ~ • / Ag~, ~·0•. way, CAR&: TYPEWRITER NEC. ' pe"'°n Xl'nt ·etrnin"' ""-· 2 blk ,: .... _ ..i.Ao .. ,, "5 ''·All ADORABLE. amall poppie1, men .~1 11,o.,!'l LDT s .A.· •ii · . ..:::-1540·t>EEd. ··s'A· nLpubliccontact.Gr~atlo-'n .. : , .. '°WANTEO,•to ·bu,y,.-1 9Sl.....,...t&Me11a * 646-8686 """"""'" .... ""IL Y ·'.&47~1 Cati M7~;:;· ' · cale, paid vac . .\ ho!ida~1 potential,. . Gerry l'~, Swe d i, h _R~r 'l t~ a 11 d e .OPEN DAJLY 9 ta. j S300. Us!'d 2 mo's. 67S-5116. 6 w~ka. lrtt lo good home. .. 4!11'~20 . oueoEPER ow---Insurance: Call LYnn Todd: MeM. Va-M Shell : Sf!rvice. .~,.,~te. ~· . DINE'M'E, 8 chrt., ·dlnme * * F o R s a J e 0 ff i c, * 646-4964 * II' T v. . t ifOl:ffl"':ru:. · r.-u .. nll. MATIJRE rf111.il & -Wife to 833:2700 "Also Tee Joi:-'Den· 3131 Harbor, C!;M: . ' t bl tu ·1 rk •· h k CUTE Silky T•rrl•r adult ll~A.. ~U!-~...,...~.!J f:l:lvM-.-·home ProfeUKln11l ' ·~ · · Appll•nce.· 1 .• -.. iii • e a: ctn. Complete m1 ure, wo U'l:nc. wor -(Ull.f1lntl!ed + comm1ss10n. '":'' • H:B maMge 7 unit!'; in lhoa, nis · & Denni11 Personn~l SHARP GALS ~place .ICJ'ffn .ff't •. Fjne tables, lights. 546--1049 l'll>ll.Yed femalf' all shotl, s>n l BUllY H.B. 1.1.kln. Mall! or family. Salary · open. · · \\'rilf" or call Scott; 309 N. Ag~ncy, 2082 Michelson Dr., Lookin~ for permAnf'nl po-DEUJ?'E matchi~ wuhf!I' $1'1 from is. Lamp11, •II!'() Pl<1noa/Org<1ns &26 &llt'rgic. 54~7648 female. Full oc part time:. arf'a. 968·7&96. •. Eu c Ii d · U p..l and· hvine. .. llltK>n tn one Of Orfnge It.dryer, harvast aok!, $250. tables, antique hall -tree, SMALL mix bret'd male doi. ! ~.Eves: ~3440. HSKPRS Emplyr pays fee:. 7l'1 :982-l:l85. ftEx:EP'I'IONIST: Work with C.Ounty'.1 tlnest h)utiques,. ~than 1 yr old&-: oWned pcnw,r mowe;r -ed,fe:r. *TAX CLEARANCE* 1i., yn old. Loves children? : CASHIER TR AINEE Gc<rlge ).Uen Bytlnd Ail: MEO-fANIC: Bicyde w/ex· pilots & ·a.inTatt ownen in Mu11rbe 6pe-rlenCed. If jlou by a little old-lady fr;om s.&-XK7. *SALE * Call 642-3793 t Sincere & sparkling individ· ~1--0.:-B E. 16th S.A. Jlf'I'. f\Jll-!ime employment. an exciting aviation ro. Lite qualify, call for · appoint· P1sadena. fi'lS..4447. LARGE brown sofa $45. Our inventory of ptanos 1 1·1.D~Y~A-'L"'-p"i.:.:.,C~o~U;~,,-,.,..~~ .. -~-. -• ho ·11 joy -1· · Mi11sifln Schwinn J 0 0 0 1 typm' g, Front office an. ment. y llo ~-1 '--_.. -"' '--u ... w WI en m""" ing .. HE LOOK RECOND. Appliances Ir: .. e . w swivel rocker $25. "''5•'"' mu1 ~•~UC•:.,~ ma.I~ dog. Shot•. LOVES J)@OPll! in thiA exciting front HOUSEKEEPER-Cook, PX· Cro\\•n Valley P a.r k.J¥ • Y • pe:arance. Stu! $400. T TV's, guar. I. de 1 v • d ... Arcu• II 35 nun camera, 3 tore the March 1st tax dead· childrt"n. S44-0l39. desk spot. SI.arts at $400. per. live-in, Pvt rm A-: ha. La.inina Ni~ueJ, ~---Call Reten-H11yeg, S40-fi006 6+t-&500 Dunlap'•. 1315 Newp o r .t letlSel, 2 tri-pods, J lte line. caU Lynn Todd, 8.lJ-2700, Beautiful home, &tZ-9606. MEDlCAL Transcriber, ex· Coastal Agency ~ STOP_~C the e:uy way Blvd., C.M .. S4&-T180. meter. cUTylng case $25. * SAVE UP TO $250 ADORABLE black male kit- Oenni1 &: Deonnis PerllOnnel FULL, P/'fi.we, -m f1t'l"f. per., .1wt'ng llhlft. Pemonnd 2790 Harbor Bi. at Ade.ml--A fAbt·'tiro-tlJOlj/mo, w/o Mile. item.. 546--9196 . ON PIANOS IPn. Shots, box trained. ! Agency, 2082 Michelson Dr., lrne., no eixe. ~·{I e c . Def}!. HOila: Hospital, N.B. e R.'•E . SA.LES bJterltriric . w I p re• en I W~HER17_ .N DRHYER. .-!~ RU.,,....., ,,_ • .., ...__1 . * SAVE UP TO nooo ON 1 ,.:64~4--0,.:.:l.19:::_ _____ _ ·-'-""""--· ------Salary/Co'ro.m."Fquer MANAGER TRAINEE empJoymenf. Smaken pro-"''· vu-e:w , am.,.. ... .., ..,, ... ~ LlltCU -moonng SELECTED CONSOLE FREE Dog. Pllrl basset. 6 •· ....,...,nA16 Need E xtra Money? d _,,213 Dr. ~fes,. Verde Nomi. chain, }I'.' matmial, each ORGANS -UPTOS500 0N mos.old. Save from-·""'· ! Cil A LLENGING position. Bnisl( "°-1'1 · Man)' Avon aa\e1 tepre~nta· Man ot Wtltn&JI needed wt.th uct_...,..,..:.. ;-Costa Mesa. lihk 2%" Jong, 1%" wide. SMALLER ORGANS 84~27. vu ....... l-better than avi earnings. FULL Ti m:e_. bobkkttper· ative,•.,•arnor m"or.." '.'ti~~~~,!..~ managerial potential. Our TELEPHONE aolicitora tm· M•..tag Wisber $4S 50c per ti. Ml.rint Surp]UJ Don't Del•y-Buy Now -',,=--------.! •• Electrolux. Dlv. Consol. qualified. Call "bt=twtt-n 9-10 ' <;;<Un ....... expansion plan teqUitec two med. e mploy. FfPt. time ....,. .,,..._ .. 1_ · .. , M-~ s • SlLVER·-ay Schnauzer/ Xlnt cond. 2210 Rut-, '-Al., ,),)\ff 13' a.in, ·"'· At Tremendous •· ~ Foods. By e.ppt o n I Y • am for a p p o i n l·m .e..n l, cash,_ &. have fun, ·too! For "_cun-ent licensees. saleSmen tor mthusiastlc pertlOl1l! to ·~·-545-fiSfil poodle female. We.II ttalnetf • 4~2383. 642-2050. . Dehli\11 Olli, or brokenr;, to be: groomed prom()te the Nevada resort Apt A, CM· * 'fi.42-0449 . . Discounts to good h()Jne. 548-131'- 00 540-1041 for otfice manager in H.B. aTe8.lll Wary ·A: generous e•WHfRLPOOL-KENMORi. KING~ZE wa~: ~ Yarn.aha-Chickerlna-fischer WV G " C K GENERAL Foods Ccrp. is o.' A".aheim. Planned Of>l!fl· bonus~11. 962-661.5:'"~ rpr man hu Waahen/dfy. dudes tna~u, f Io or Kohler t\ Campbtll pianos IN cockapoo mut tt:ee • Breakfast/Exp. only. 6 AM-2 ·expanding 11g11in we need NOW CA ST ING ings in March & May. De· ~ &els. StS-W· 8.39-7620. fram'e, · uner, fdam JNld. 5 _ , lo _ Rood homf"'. Good with ~ PM. No Sun-Holidays. Good tr\e.n. ~-11'9f11Cfl .. cosmetic . MEN . & WOME N . sire mir1imum of ~ ~ears ' • ' yr. iuan.rcltt. Pri. p&rty Thomu-Conn-Yamaha organs children. 84Z-2906. pay. Parkway CON~ 1e 1t di~.t1:itJ~i-or~·;~· .~ ~?"s~~ts (All ·Age11, All Tyr>e,,;l experience but will consider , T£SJ . CaEme~oll' &nt IOI $25. 968-M33. NEW & USED VERY small mix breed my. S h 0 PI Lai LI n a igue • ~1~·:.:~~:Mf14. ·nr 963·~.-. Fnr immecliate.assiin.ment in othen_ based on f.blli_ty, E:x· quiprM cusr. bit itereo ip'ICl'I S75. COAST MUS IC poly puppies, black, ma.lei. 83l-2211. INVEST IN non-union mOtion pix. TV cellent benefits. ·Call Mr. T£CHNI' 'Cl· 'A'N MAMIY.A C2; 2"-'1t.R 'Nitti 'Guitar a:_ cue $5o r..pe SERVICE 54&73M. COOK D ·-~·t · 1 • °' · Graves to t ronfidmtial -L-1 """ N rt Bt d c M ---------·• ' e:xper, ay1, ..,.,.,..., V,...lllt FUTURE ctlmm(>rcta s"" .~pr1ng mag· 135 mm l 250 rn.m lent1t re<.'01de1 S20 Cuaette N'" .lOo);7 ewpo v .. . . FREE male puppy, tan ln h(" C.Onv. Hospiffll, 661 Ce:nler __ ..IM.llft.. . _ . azine layouJ~. Not a ~hool interview appointment. pha t'X~ 6*-7582. $10 Girt'i blkt m: Antique ** 642-2851 * • c ()I 0 r. Schnauzer/poodle. I lit, C.M. 548-5585. , or Jtgenry. No F'cr!O;. ~::1~ 69~~~ ~~~ Expft'ience tequJ!'.ed In de-HASSEL8LAD 500C 'filo..· atobe $10, Mr>-4608: Open Sunday U to 5 pm 968-5119. I• * COOKS',:: , BE!.YOt,IR OWN BO~S I , ~~~~.';,,~~',~;;,:;;; """• Gru-d"' Grnvo, Call!. vo~pm"'t &-It~ ttu bick. ~,..,make ·SPINET piano. MahoglJty PRE-TAX SALE FREE"""· al"'ady <Uf, You 11 "'-si'"• .. tial ,,... __ FAclllties Mtn or Womtn ' ol -~1 ...... 1 ... ,_..,. with of! ·~ •m ~1 '"--.:...___, -"ind'--t roll, you h-·J. ~ u " ,,,_.,, f2l3J 161"'1> . SHIPPING / WAREJIOUSE L'IOHU• ...... ,..-...... er. ~ · uu e ·~.,.,...u .. , ~ All Pl•nos & Ornens "" .' •·MS-JOU ·•-· --. · (Cood)cno:wledif of pipini I. Fuml!ure Ill ·l~tirW. 2 attached nite 1-, 1.-1 OFF"t 839-<;1!6 !1! COMMUNAL dental office · · '-l iAse ".~~ 'Yillow"'\-N~~~~ to1:::: ~~!P.'h~i W~c~nef!MTiqu':,11;:· :~ related te1t setup proced· _ tables, bax •pri• l mattr. AU'-~~;US MAKES l ~~~~~~~~~~I 11 needs young person wilh To1 xi Cab ) Irvine will train cleancut urea, worldna' from en-HI-back. vtfvet ~ f7S. M&--7802. · P,E ... NY OwSLEY CO. I ~ [H I dental office ppmenee1 .·: ·· 'C3ll f~..Appt CU•R"'SE"R 5 Y'· c.~~:4~-man. stut $2.50. ri~, .~ddnw~ wk Lovely .crushed velvet IOf:l, LIDO Isle:: .Kenmbte db:. ll3S2 Be&ch'81: Nr KateOa L ........ _ j <L. I front and back. 'M@!f'l11f1V"e; -·-• N _, sefl{Jl'JI , .. a ... T'l'C'l, Call Bob Wilmn, s~ ......... -11>'•""' newt ~ S140. Mat~na washer ._dryu, ma"rble'tJ;il. M';.F 10-!, sat 10.S, Sun 12-6 _ . r\ creat111!, wgetaria~ ~i~ . .548-1311 expPrirn~ or St .. 1, Coutal Ag!ncy Protit ahar:inl lov!'9ttl $9fl. • C a rved ft)lr4way bed, b:U ~tal ~s.W~QU~,L[D-6-Y~DU~c_:~il;;mmmmmm~:.~1 :~~;;':~~=··for~ : ·A·sf< for Hcmtari o~~:;;;;;· !e~~ingle ml HS~~SB~~,P~d'"" THE p}~~bleo ·"°··I.am~ :::..i::'r;.,,,. J1nl ,•lct • REE ~~~~V~s Dogs 154 je:wPlry atcrf~' ;r{I hr, ,;.-e(k, JMPORJ' ·expM'iencf £\imlt• nrf'dlo • awlmv.iear. 37m B~t tertitoi-y in A'tate for CHJI.J:l\S~'-Cftlfferobf', 1~. boota, 1 yr.1.okl. Nt"lr' M" aa long u ·:you like:! Noter· GERMAN SH EPHERD medical plf..r\,~,p_avl li'._11.Cllf~n. . edJ 1lc ~ r elf!ntiVe, me1n01')'. C<tmlJUS . Dr .. N.B. soft water. EvPry homf! J C CARTER CO Ml~ .boo~·• tot a ( e ·mund• '(M!eall ~dinlnc tabl• latration. No obUpl:ion, Juel Sliver tip w/blk muk, tMJe, Must apply in ~· KU"li: M®-F~. PtfT'r\llnalt : W9rk, * O rder Dept. nreds it. S75. J>Pr Wttk ' ' • wt! e \ v e •Id iv kier •• ~. $10,. ~1149 Come Monda;. 1:30 pm. 3 mOI. old,~. 646-4671 evec Jl'!welers, 2300 Harbor Blvd. comp.'lny benefits. 540..3236. Supervisor to $l2K guarantee plu~ bonus. Good 567-1607 · BRUNSWJCK I~, Slate bed COAST MUSIC l ='•:O-w~kn=:::d::•·~----- c .r.1 . • Rf'l!ponsibltity for 88,lrs order ck1Aer1 will eR.rn over $250. 6n W, J71h SI., COiia Mt,. CONTEMPORAR:Y1 ~ r g,8 h Poot'T&ble .. Ball ~hurl· A75. 647·2851 SC H NA u z ER pup 1 , I':. DEADLINE lor SHAKl.EE dept . Ir: custome.r sen>. 111 a per wtek. No night work. 541-3421·' . velwt cooc.h, pld, ... a•. £:4-4 CU~ ·~.ek~ hrldce A b&llt PIAfr40S **ORGANS housebroken, ahot•. Stud ~STRIBUTORSHIPS with n11t'l level. Consumer pro-Look inlo !his. You'll be Equal Opportunity Employer celient. )225 or 'bnt otru. S40.·m.J3l9. Kr-c'ai,. S~inwa,y, Lowre)", ~. Groominr, tenm. NO JNVESTM'ENT I• Feb. ductt k1'0\vledge eSM>ntial .. slad YoU did. •93--4535. Call Aft & pn\, $1:-a ' GJµ:'A1 Buy! F • 11 let .Allen, Bald'Win. ek. From 846--0&39. I I I !. I • I I ' I • Dh. We wiU 11ponll0f' & St>rv!re Cenfc_r Agl'ncy S.le' TRANSCRIBER, aper, ,in ~ rail Mu.t&nf .cutw. sean 1l150 $215 u.p, RENTAU. 'w';-A,..:R:;M;:...-,~~1-0-,-.-.-b~l~,I ·:;1.;..:::.~~~~w1~. Suli~a~""' or .. ~782111 ·MONTGOMERY WARD ::,_a;;.!,...':-l,;"':i.~ =-=~~ ·:·~~:;~~~~ ~1'~'S 'PIAN~i:6~' :\~~/"'~~-... ~ OWN n,tural pr,du·c11 OV E RSEAS f wpfn, fuU time, da·f11 . 'IJ0-33&4', • , WEB"" -~-.toh~, OoilaU&3.Jllewpon Blvd, 0.lU...W..7l2f huJine1111. full or part tim,t. . Hat openf1¥JJ or p·--___, l'\ffrl-South r.-~ ............ r. :...,__ -~u.u11:_~•l===-.:,...c;:.,::;;_. __ _ Ca.II nov.·: M&-.\25!. • • • • MORE JOBSrnAN PEOPLE Fencing S~Jesm•n Cl_U..,. U"'N'•-. MUST ·sen! rJQ,. m I bax IDA' ~w/Pilntiac ••. ·.-... ,....,........._ 1'ARM I: cuddlt ininJ&~ DENTAL ti~iic Lab ~ PERSONNEr. • A:1 •• ~'!'· ..!.!'°';"';;:.. Muot .. uperlfnced '" {:,::,,..~~iu."l'."'~ ~.: ... _ l -msnll!Jct. 116'7'12; ~s:"°Allttt ORG= Sdtrtouur ' """"'"" AKC 'h"alntt. m~ k:no'f ~nt11T .~~~ ~ e Tax bent.tit• commision sales. W• are opportu!}\t)' Jmp\Oyn. • . ri~~ 30Tf ~pt.one ~' .Hln.,oftd ,..W\itfjbe,, lie: ~~~~ =1t.fttr 1mrunolQVJ' &: lm'.>cM."".•· ··--·. B"·•·!EDP . ._ •Hll • Ff'ff TranSPOrtAtton ~ for an t.are.ui ·.,••WA.._ .u l ':"'"'r • ·' nt fClr lniNrul'e · t .4111 Harp 1 f'ebotdt{.I: • ' ' Non lm<>ffr. Some chaimde ;;, n:=,~kee...... "" -· CALL 541..4345 ma.n, who it dependable, ,,.,._, l:!J """"T ... ~ll'V!ji ftlH, ·FT• n el.I , p::ovbtdal A·l mnd. Jou. 56:-ntl l'lllllt. "'.:' 1 khnauztt, ruJet. '1 le clerical. 644--0611 . Ai'PY~~;-°=: 5'rviee GUJ.rtnleed steady and wants an OPJIO'" 1-"'~ l.ll\l"Vll J e&nOW ..... bed 1rames, Ex. JS" -cu.tom WbetlJ, 1ft !'(rd ~ ¥tJSIC co. , b11clt. 1 salt A pep. OE1"TAL A111. o,.i """'" ~l/M'"utacJu"'I $500 ll"tll ,m,Joym'"' cccept..t -,,,:'>',.~,:p:~• above •wr· lllllLml ~~ <Otld l;!O-tD-l9ll «' ~~~l loV'f'. »IS No. v,i... SA. ~KC rq. Cl!, sllrclt. I -~ OVERSEAS $ERVICES _ .... ~ ~~ .. M~""I•._... ~•n ~· · $<0. lw 4, "'"""""' 517411 •• Slnoo ltll• :;;;,:::::::,_· -----1 ,axnyexper. ni.,..,..,oipen. TYtii•t. 70 \V.p.m. to S500 , .. Adv~ent opp:irtuntt, -•np ·--• ~ ii.av it,11 fnr 25 >'" or ovtr. Cltrk'I'}'J?iat s.435 16J7 E. l'ftll SIS.A. SUite 3 lei an cood and wt oher T .. , ...... ,_... DAN'f.SH DlllVll 'Mt, 1 G· Rlll"JUGERATO.Jt. :•&1'1 P.L4NO lnlil*itton.-in J'OUt • ABl.EBJac:kPoodlepup. MS-0373. f'rtt!E'H Positiol\I -PASTF.-.UP Artist, mllllt bt ti:ceuent· erimpa,,Y beheftti N•feetv.r. '210DI,_. ~tion.$50. bi""i b«\a < W"/ailttNIM. ~ NlJut' Utt. V"ry rH.lonablit. t Mtkl DENTAL RF.cEPTIONIST 488 E, nth Cal ln1l>o) CM up'd, N .. t & ""· 61:1-9262 thal Jnch.te f"l'IP iJ1!tao. Drift,....... W.1211 , ~ alltr 5 din tw,m!a<-113-1411.. Pr\vlte •prol""'1ooal ~· old. 114Ml4S. Ch.ttdr.:n't Mittat • .o~ tlp. 6Ct-147~-· " as!(' for Jerry. IZK.'t, profit lharir\t:, rttt."" TEt.EPHONE Salea. Top 2 1tudio COQCbH A 1Ct table, 10 SPEED 8c:bwWa iJla S"NNI ~a 1" ~· ~n~ pupp1tl, AKO. , "'·1:Re JOB JANITOR, l!XPl!i S,P.filt ·u:~~ :~~! T~~ " . =~ :~~d1Jcount tn(f :;~·s~ ~::e:=· ~ :,~~ iOOd.G>Odidon-~ . • -:!:'-.. ~~~:~~ 3 .~ -~\Cfle:al ~ ~ We need lO womm to traln Conv. H<1Spit1J, Mt Cdter big hieDdly 1mlle to win Al)f)ly In pmon oob' 11nd ll·(l() noon 11 8381 Bola R.E0JNER ct.it, bl & c; Jc FOR · s.Jt, tlellf alftr. Olb ANTJQUE BEETHOVEN BOXER PuPI:, AKC. peta. u proftMiional m1ktup ln-St, C.)t. 548-•• 1 over the l,l~tn 11' thhi .Mon thru Sal, IM Avenii~. Mktwa,y CltJ. MUCah)'ik1 like rifw, $tO. .mattreu .a JM ,...,.,..., upttlbt pflnD. $'%«),. ' MUI .wtJkl:. --Eamlna ..... KEEP hltportanJ JOl) .. •amsl .. m, SiZ. CaU 7771 Edi ..... H.I . Call 51WUO ..... -.u11. ' --:-.... 11~ •• 161JO. to IStXJ, ...-mo. Ex· """'''"!!• • motlt<r. ~ ·Marlon MOM, 833-77VC), .,..._ An equal opportunity WAITRESSES, expu. Appl,y .._ .,. PRIVATll PAllTY WANTS DAllUNG • --.00. eqn1,.. pooltlc!N 1vaU. FOi' In ,..,.. u.,... Min, qe :JO. nls l O.nnls ""'°""'' emi)lo)'ff In ...-. botwn l:!O l 4 ~N1=k ;~.::: lllJ BASii 4 "''"-...-10 llUJ'. PIANO FOR blood $15, IG~IU, - • .,.. "111141-1'35. s...It C..tnlly J• .. "7· AJ<llt:)', :tlMI Mlclrfl.,. D", SAU;SM!:N -W"""" - P.M, 2633 W. Coul Hwy., atll lor *ill •aeft. ..,._ ::~ond!IW lladWto llL CAii!. llWIJ'. •tt 6. ~t do,.... ha to "'"1et 5AIHJSH, -1rv1.... -Gm ""ctptlono.ljy hlalt i.. NS.. e WREELCHAill $11. SILVLNIOHE .i.cttlo -I WK OLD CMmoo llttpbm! L1f ff Ital -In o.a. Tbl lut"1 h• In t!1i '4''"1-PET!TION dn>t!Ol<ot -m oame w\tbotll I 11<rfflrlrc Doo>'t fl.. up °"' dtlp! WlllTE A pjd tllnttto, ott Mtlll' M .acJl.D BY NOCll _., -.....S. U1oo l'IWJ'• $$ . .._ llolbtt hi, ....i ' • , , ·a Dalli' Pilot ai!Ot!Jad up, o... ,,. .. o... hDtln. • / pre!.nt ~nt. "List " II In dua!ll<d. Slllp w/I cht'I,. .. i. ti. w.. ~. -· -llMa!. 1 --DOll1f Pio. 551-1141: '$Jnoldtc i*ud,-le _.., llfMtl I .fl&~.fll; .SINlillr ·~ - w.......,,f.~µ.1972 Wtd""4.,, Februi17 2', tm OAltV PIU'r JI s;g Autot. lmjllfftd .• _f70Autot. JmiiiiW fir· z I ~ :l'ILO'f~l)l'ERTIS£R [ ........ _ -.__ .• _ .. _._.,,,._ .. _ _,!!·1=1 11 ..... ,,,. .. l~Djjogjjjj•jjjjii.ii_ii.iiii~;854~ ~!ner_•I ._ ., ~900 ~11• Sill,.,, ;,., .tot ~.:;:ll!,'.,: .~. Antlquo•/Cl1nlcs 953 Au!G• Woni.il Ml A._u_to._W_1_n_t..i _ _.. Ml SPECIALS IYANTED: Rod mini t•ml.I• 16' Boat, 2 35 bJ> 'Evwud• lf t.~. ~y w/Nll *Marvin iw-.* '53 HENRY J WE PAY TOP DOl.L.\R AKC dotje puppy . mo!ort&:iraper.Ue'd,'72. i'\lli ,~"l:l~t~otter .. '•"" $1M,_,. • 49C-2«>5 J'PRTOP1JSEI>CARS l.MPORTSWANTED •• .. ff Guaran1...i '!'LC. G7l-3369.. s\'95. 847-1816 ...... trart< 1or. Im.II dirt bu... Motor H""' ou .. BU911ot . 956 u """" .., ta ,extra d-Oran&• 0>un11oo '71 Squareback ............. ... AKC BEAGLE PUPS Boats/Marino cilf•ltu 8. Ml-23)0 . 111111$ -.. u. tint. · TOP S BUY£1t <•pd. Radio, lleo.ttr, etc. e11t1. · l 8 'wka old. 8.13-1'26 . Equip, . . -• UDO\;< NJ. 9f!.'2 1'<11 -· DUNE Buu:Y, not llnlol>ed. BAUER BUICK BILL MAXEY TOYOTA '70 VW I s•4ff Hors11 156 . ""' rtoo. Sab\'I • $2!111. T,, : Salts • Rentals Cod ll•PP<• bocl)<, vw 2M E. lTtb SI. 18811 Beach Blvd. ug . . . . . . • . . • • • • • • I • , MERC M~. 20, O,B. m~; 63t..JQQ<'. , • 'gs• ..... 22 h'am•, S<C>-1530. 'O>ola Mooe 5"-Tl6S II. Beacll. P1i. MT-IS!l5 1597 ATY. f+ 3 Welch ponies, Ribboti never used in u.lt wate'r' ' " '' · ' ~..Ji£' Sports 'R•C• Rodi 959 '69 VW St_.. ~'inners. we 11. tr a 1 n e d v.c." cond. $1:5Q .'.or beat ~.t'fr'~.Hp:T~k~· 910 tm. s. Ylll.aie •Way.~ S.A. ' • ' .. Motor Hom•• MO Motor Homes MO •••••••• , •••• , • • • • •Y'7 a:entle, s.57-™· 548-9642 , . , ~ Plte du llY to 50' l2 •n APOLiO· tnofOr HotM DJtAGSt'EI\. ll5 wheel Auto. 'n'anl., Jtadlo. Heattr'XWY a . , SUSAN Smilh1tab1.,, Board· Boats, Power· ·•"' 906 pq1'1'-~ ~1'.tora01• ~~;.:~~,J=~pn. :;-,::, w=nls"'=~t'; 1972 INTRODUCTION '69 VW Ghia ....•....• , ..• $tiff inc training .l lea90n1. Costa 14' GLASS bo8' w/ au.iw:..,.. f up to 21'. ~. . .. ,,,,.,, bJ6cb. ·303· cu ln . $150 (We hav• t other '69's to chOOle ftom). YNN '1Tt. MeARM9-t96.1. Evinrude eltt,. r;·!;~~ S23an'·~;.r"1 Njljwport yr•ll•r1,Tr•nl MS bntoffer.~: or -OPEN ROAD w/~il ... Xlnt cood. lit M ·~· • , . .,..,,.., • Trych !N2 '68 vw Convertible ....•••. $tJff I • '~ ~.557-2158 after'SJ,m., ~.IDr powt.rboat, UP. to .W.. ' ' (9other'l58'1tochooletrom. )126CQQ. 11 Mw!:°~ • ;Je • 32'. $1.!0 r.. Jt up. -·" . . ic. Boats, Rent/Chort'r 90I ,..,,,.... 11>.Ch m-212' •• '67 VW IAHA lug ........ , Slit' CATALIN.\'."21"s\:ooii B~, s.....i i. Sk~·'11 ·. ' . . UJGll38. Goher•I 900 Brand new boat. Aux, ppw•r. .. ' ' . ·<' ·' . . " .. . " ' lntmatlon&l ._ '66 VW p "°" $11 ff ''~"' lix, SIS radio. J!DF. '70 GLASSTRO~ 16' ~ hp . luy,: S.H, Tnrrde u. ,..e ••••.••.••• · EL ....... "°'· '' drydockod • 6'2' headropm. conventeot Evin .. V•nooP trlr A equip. _._ . Rlt!JCREAOY ~TIAORVH CEN'IERER, Inc. Special SSS 108. I dt]!Olale, She despe:rately Newport slip w/plenty Of $1150. 'R. T~ evea, . • : w.tnt1 to g~t out and catch parking, Club rate,, F.or info 673-6973. Goodyear .Pob'aJ,ua 81ema. J... _· 2925 Harbor' Blvd., 60flle fish, or just cnilse, call. 557-9046.. a{t ~:30. • lB' Lavey, SK Chevy pwred All al.iel:, low~ L60x1S UlllU. Mesa ~ Sh.e's ·a 16' tlberglass w/00 Boats Sill . 909 nilnt comt' W;custOm tan·,• J211.£1i\ +, fet $3.16.• l5xl0 •n PATSUN Pickup, 4-spd, hp Mere. mo1or. \Von'I aom~ ' , ' ' . 'deJ'!l .trailie~. $3,.~. ~9478 .. ~II~ rn.•P $29.fJQ. Hi A/C, FM/AM radio, Heavy Qne reio.cue her by calling O\TALINA 22. &. 'trailer. JacRt:rs $34..50 pr. Brld&~ duty atep bumper, 11,000 ~2279 att S pm. Price tag Fully equip. OB motor', xlht · stone .Rae~· 'I'.lr's, Racina rnl'a. Like new • .By owner. • IS ·onJy 18.'XI. cond. $3950. 83~ !'!Vet. . I ' I : 1 ) Sl.lekl, a: Jndya. JUst over wholna.le. Call alt SU~~MER JN NEWPORT-30' SN~WBI~D .. .good ~pe t Tr~tatk>n , , 111 195!)1 ~~~ CM ' ~a.'>M .~',.,',,84T=..JJ63~~,.,-~-= ya\\'l. on Ne11.-port Harhor with trailer, Z 1tt11 111Ui, one ~ ''10. Kt.nlkill . 21, S C WANTED .00 thru 1968 m o o r i n g ,' 543-Ml 1/Eves. ne11o'. Best oUer,. 400.-3590. T~m, hit~h, mll·up ~.,wn: Chevy or Ford Piek Up 9M.:6'767. · Clill 642-S673 '1: Save! ~lrci-fft · t15 i,_ · :P.r_Jr, $287S. rvt.. Pty. 'Wfauto tn.fll. Mu.t bt' j~~~~~~~;1~T.ij~~~J.~;;"" --..~ clean l: ,re a 1ona b1 e , ~~~~~~~~ Taildrauer ·or Trleycle 8.U---..q. • ~ W-1863· ' Jr:;:;-, I . ' ' • ' •\r;:;l YOI!' diolce at 1=' ~:/Ji.WO#& '68, ;.:;,61,--'°':R:anchoro==--"'SSlO= ..___""_•._•_""_"_'_'__,~ . '"°''°'""' !~ DIAMi!,N8i.,~ION.' -~t~.·· ~t .beds, «Ile.to~~ ••••••••I !::~~~~;;~L-~s~~~-~t~.fi,,~';;,..,~Avall='*~•~'!'~.'~·1 Tr•llin,·Trr1al:· +es A~ l.Mslog Autos, tmported 970 :u1o1 lmpol'ted · ·. 970 e 'RIS QC8 ''TS ---...-..-------''-"---.· ---·-·;..1¢1~r1; Sole/Rontt20 ~ ~TS ·' . '.F~NAL CLEAR·ANCE NEW 1971'5! · NEW 1972 TOYOTA CARINA 52314 . . ' . 1nelud11 PO'"''' breke1, t int•d 91e11 , <I tpttd trtn1., wfi!ft ,...,11 tir11 , Yinvl Infe rior, :r39570 • , Gll!Al SfLICTION . ' IMMIDIATI DILIYllY . ' . 1972 VOLVO • . . .. . $97 DOWN : $97 ... MONTH . OAC . '. . IMMIDIATI DILIYllY 1'1 i. "'''' 11a-llo'vmenl. m 11 fllltl memti,., .-v,,_1 jnc.Jucl{no lilt & '72 II(. & 'ti~ flfltMt cftl'9fl II" ~Ytd crtdlf tor 60 mot1lh1. Otlt/ftd Olrmtnt O>rlct Is 1.$917 lo- d&llllllg 111 f11111nc1 <~••~, t1•ri & '72 lie. or II )'OU pr.i"•r 10 Pi~ c1111, lull c••ll orkt Is-UlJO.U Incl. t1x & '72 lie:. A!'l'lutt rier(1n!1~ rt11 u.~l. LET US ARRANGE YOUR OVERSEAS DELIVERY! . ' ' • e AIJTO.MATES ~ Al8o, ~ used $395 A up . Wtmsa.Uf'l'RA:ILER'~ Try our leue expert. far ... '21tl9 w. lTlh . s-, Savinr•· SatiW.ct!oo • s.... Chovrolot, 'DodlO, llaniaAna· . •<n<J '3MS9S ~LEASE ALL POl'ULAR Ford. & \lolk1w1gon '69 l'IJ1o!ROP Crown . Dix,. :tm MAKES AT COMPETI- . . . alps 5. z:lp1ort nn·,·aink, stove 11VE liTES. We."atock all the makt:a.wl.th "" •bl • .Gd 'ODftd.' $195. · Call.Malcolm Reid for .van convelillofll: • , ·842-70« aft 3. ' · ............. .&..o..i1. ~ ..... .,....,r ,....,,........ •• . . . l>y ~Tl!(.IPO Auto Service, ·Porf>'M9· tHEODORE in our br'1Ml new ~•tion· ~T 'bad V-3 M~. needt1 ROBINS FORD a1 v_.ehlcle ~~ent build' , '"'·-•· i 2060 Harbor Blvd. ' COMMONWEALTH " "''" · ·~ n ex· .Coot> Meaa .642-0010 cellent ahape. 1'tVlt¢ ~I -,.-,----,,,,..-..,-,---:-,.,, 1>m-od $.15.' 19!0 F<ml ..,.. .Au!Gs Wont.d . Ml MOTORS; LTD: ~:!,~1,t'f;";;i~. ,,';~ . w• PA'\'.. To,. 211'4 ~ Fint. Sf. brakes $25. a:J&.5672. . CASH . Sanla ... l3S-6Sll I cu.&lm ~ -fit 1,'<m! . · ' ··or Olryaler or '41Pt to VW. ' · · JJD ..... . ~-. *" -·-• ·truC:Q;"'"' CAMPER'· 11' foot hall .cab; • ' · oaI1 u. for froo Htlmatoa. ·------·- 0""' °'""''Rood ca,,;..,. "ROTH' CHEVROLET. SI~~ 4, H~ fwo 1one paint, I .. , 2 >• j_ ·~ · )~ • a stove and ayen, lee bo;rc. "'· ........ ~ • • .. · ' 1CTttn· dOor AM cirpeL ~ Ask fir W. Ma.nqw 'Large ~closet ~ell &nd Ol!'n-' • ' s · · 1IZll Be&ch Blvd. · ter "dfrietfe ' Weii:hs 815 lbs. · /Cl I 953 H11J11irJa!<a BNch 'Mint OOMfdon. Cost $1 ,250., Antlqut1 ·~· CS 111.aT ' ' 'KI N3s1 ien !or ~ i:•sh. ~ Mt. U4o Font 2 dr ~ .. Black, wtt.L B!JY your ear pakl far M.att~l'tiorn, fopnta!n Val· chrome wheel.Ii, eood tires, or . .noJ. ~ RaJph Gordon It)..; after .fi P.M. Weekdays, 3Ji:.V8 ~-body ~tn . emtlent &TJ.-0900 -5f9..3031.,-1970 9•-.·starlirJe',IQv erhtac"I coOOition $9CXt 'or ht•t HarborBlvd.,·C.ostaMka .. eti.?flper; But&M 11tOVe &: i~ 'ittldl'ible ·4'fff:r:'~72. Ujc,; to. tri.d!J Our trader'I . bx:. ·.Gd CMC!,. $995. 5f5io719 HOWie Huntinct~ .:w~ tbt P~diae column la fer )'Ou! ' 91.'es. ' . . ; :OPEN HO~ l:iOJWiui. . . .5 llnes, 5 days' for 5 b.utjts . '66. on! P . witfl J¥1min &.~ .. ' U*-' ' . '90 Au!Gs Usod 990 camper. ' • X1nt coricnl:ion! "'~' ' · '"t-' • .~ · ' ~ ·~184+· .... libDCE ,llltl 'van. '""box ..... '""'' .hllt. v., 12.m: . ~ .. 5t8-~ : .. r. . Cycl•1, Bikes, $~ootori . '15 '61 BULTACQ Loaito 100 cl: .. ~ ·'c:Kaniber ntNi '' . tire.I.· 'Rris perte'c~ ' $275. 9'1'!'-1.11t. 1969';tAi,IAllA m cc Twla Street Bike. $270. er offer . 557-4605. ·' ·~ . ' . 25' CENTER BATH , BRAND NEW 25' MOT!OR HOME ONLY $10,999 OlDll YOUU TODAY • 1 YU.l FINANCING A.YAU.AILI ·o~ o~ h1tHys ,....,. . 13631 HARBOR BLVD .. GARDEN GROVE 1 11.0CI SO. OF II.II. FlWY, 6J6·2JJJ , 990 AutM, Uud "° e BUSES AND CA~PERS e (3) 1970 MODELS , . j <2> ·:1969 MODELS· <1> 19., Moon : . . I .. ee 1965' PORSCHE Sunroof .. C COU,P• (Ycciaa&l ' •. $25'99 , · .. ' ' • i '•I·, ' I' .. ·' e VW TRADI" 'INS. e '70 Toyota ................... St lff l.Dw miles 456'JSW. ' '69 Flat ............•••••• s1.m Recentfl\lfne•overhaul•YPS 24.7. '68 Flat .. . " . . . . . . . . . . . ~ . . . . . . s1.•!f x:rr 125. .,.. . • . . . • . J . . . II. '68 ~pel Station Watlfn . . . . . . Slt7 Radio, Heater, lu1p1e ~k, .Jow.ndltl)XUK. '6 7 Opel Kadett . . . . • • • • • . . . Sitt VHY716. '65 Cadillac ......... • .1 ... St Ht Convert. Loaded. HOG 922. • • '67 Toypta ........ , ... -. .... $.1~ • Dr. Au-~c troilll., l!odlo, xtro dean ZXlr' t38. I '67 Tciwn & ·co•nm· ........ s1 . Station Waeon. Quoya!er'a bn.t XTO 1 8". CHICK IVERSON ·· 1970 Horbor Blvd. Co1t1Me .. 54t·3021 . Ext. '""''7...'61 • • • 441 I . CMS! Hwy. 'N1wiiort .... h :s4'.JOa\ • j . . ' ' ' " • • SPECIALS ON FINE IMPORT TRADE-INS 'n,'\'jO HQNDA, r....i,. .... , . k . back-re,t. Low mile!, rou~.t ~11. SU-1802. . · 1971 MARK ID 1j,4 Vw Bug • _ E•ctt!enr. ONll:·~4 $688 ' '66 VW Fastback £u1t1 ... 1 Cclldl!lor1 I IVTM 61t) $899 . '67. TOYOTA Coron• Air C01>111!10nl1111, lltedkl. Slk. f4JMA. $899 ' '69 FORD Cortina ·$999 . ~ st1rlon W•OO". Autom11tc0Tr1mm"511W1. R!fl Economwl {ZVC 61•) '67 VOLVO 121 J r.r· llldlO. Htlltr, nk1 COl'ld, %:VP20 • ' .$899 'bl vo~vo . Ptsoo Looll1 & nl!ll Ilk•,...,., Hl<Xot $1077 '60 JAGUAR XKl50S R1111d1ter. A Tr11t ci.11fcJ $1:299 . • 1-\~ '70 TOYOTA Merk II Sldtn, Siie• Siii!!. (T47IOAJ $1599 '70 TOYOTA -Mark II , $2199 Sl1tl11n WIOCll'I, lltldlo, MH!tf, 111 .. 1 lh•rpt !011 ILIC I '69 vw f!.u• AN.l,M tlNlo, mint c.rodlllol\. , Al! ILt' $,2395'. '70 TOYOTA PICKUP $1695 '. HI Llllf, A.,...., rldle, Mollef. . • • Ill!• l'lfW, ' , VISIT OUR ULTRA MODERN · SERVICE OEPARTMINT 'pAINT SHOPS e BODY SHOP'S • " . ' . ''• 197D Harley XLCll custom chopper thaw: ·blke.· '3,000 540-:9022~ ~ for Jim. : : '71 SUZUKI 50CI a:, &m mi. Xlnl conct : M\lST ·SELL. Bt'sl offer. f!M-3193 : '65 y ·AMAHA IOcc , Traihnuter, Onlf 450 mi'a, Kint cond, ~ 54g.,.1223 'Tl ·yAMAHA 361 Ebdtll'9. Rw'is rob(I. • 1575: · Alk far Dennis . .fi9f..3004. '71' 'Yamaha 125 Enduro I> 'mi's. Like MW. '$475. CaU . 646-91~ 111. Som.: . 1963 Honda l!iJcc. Excel. 'c0nd1tioh. ; . i • 5'6--03.10 1s • Yr. dJ?r . ="'driver' .. · permit '65 3 Whl. mall tnK:k .... It .... Jl'15. 11'15<i!183. ~T¢tttSS. !&i"~""' or dlri. Prlc<d.ot 122;1. !MB-4362 . ' .E~.. ·. ' t"lt '89 HONDA 125 ** Lo ml. Xlnt cooct, s:m. Cali !M-,\IJ1 alt 5 pm '69 l.50 Su1uld , En~uro ~-• &.,.. 'ni62 Mollllo Homu t~ 20"51 tr.AMINGO, 2 bdrm., ....... 1c1.-.. 11e; . J balti, ~ ~~ 'dryer, new 'dJl&bwalber. •111h9d;• Ht-up in · iomllY , porll. Pot o k. 1111-mi. . ' . EXCEPTIONALLY CLEAN. Beautiful pewter •tlver mist flnlah with tobacco leather Interior and matching landau roof. Fully I uxury equipped Including fUIJ power, climate · control air conditioning, AM/FM stereo, till 1teerint wheel, Cl')lile control and much· ·more. Tlri• attractive car i• a must to see and drive today. (63218 ). ... 'AU THESE IEAUTIFUL LUXURY AUTOMOllLES ARE IMMACULATE, INSIPE AND OUT, ••• . ' . . YOU'LL NEVER· AND · A lmER SELECTION OF PRESTIGE CARS THAN RIGHT NOW! ... .. . 1969 CHRYSLER . · · Nlw Ytrkti' 4 Dr. H.T. • Beautlflll lime frolt finish with black 1!nt'erior and landau root. Luxury equip- ped, full power, automatlc tranamlnlon, . &Ir co{Miltlontne, • piOwtt & • way seat. . ,JQ.11FJi1 ndlo, et<. (YQW 626) .. . $2175 • ' .. . ., . . . 1970: MAJ{K ; I'll : ..... IMMACULATI ' ' ' . Beautiful nledlum lfft:n mist metallic with dark 1'7 loatl>or wtth·IAnd&u roof, rully Luxury oqulppod, fill! ...... ,. ~·: . mate control air -eOndltioninL tQQMO~ 'u&I 6 way P,>Wer Mata, .radio wtth a· trtcll ,..,. aild much man. Cl2AKIJ) . I , Sale Priced . . . .. • • I , ~ , . ' .. . . . < -----·--- 1970 ~CADIILAC Cw,. DIVlll• One ovmer. lmmaculat.e. Beautiful !ra~ z1llan mopn dt11f .ftJfiJb with belie ltath· er and landau f'Oo!. · Luxury equipped throuahout, full power, climate control air, tll~telt wheel. AM·FM stereo, super clean. C964AUV) $4475 MANY, MANY MQRE FROM WHICH TO CHOOSE :sEE THEM ·ALL TODAY "Orange (;'ount11'1 FamU11 of rtne Cori"' 1971 MARQUIS 1t 'PIMI llf W .. 111 •audful brown motalllC .llalsh with matchlni ylnyl In-. J'ull powe!t factor)" air amcuUonfnc, ~ft" WI P,te window,' lUtpp rack. Low mll9-aao· altd In top condltlon. <781 DtA) $4275 ... . ' • • 1970 OONTINENTA!t '' . • • C0UPL QtloilL!T'I' PLUs Dark ,,.....,. llamour met&ulc _.,. with honoy "'''" .lnttr!or . a '.,.~. Londau root. 1uD7 1Wlllr7 equipped; dl- mat.t control ait, full power. I _..,,. power aeat, etc. (80679t) · $4475 ohnson & son:. . '' . ... .. 1 2825 HARBOR BLVD~ COSTA MESA • MQ.830 . . -.l. I t I ' , . I .1 • •• . .-. ' • • • • -. ~. . ' . DAILV PIUIT PILOT·ADVEk1l5ER J% ·-....... §J I· --I~ I ---l§J I ·~...... l§J I ........ l§J I ~..... l§J I -~ I~ I ~--I~ I ......... l§J ·- 3100 \ • Cout Hwy., Newport Beach +4~-~ '61 .-,1mpor1od '70 Autoo. Import,. 970 Autos, Imported 910 Autoo, lmpomd 970 Auteo. '"""'Id POISCHE '70 A"'"°' 1,,.1r1.. f70 Autot, Ul4'il HO Aut.o.Ul4'il MERCURY DATSUN '71 DATSUN 240-Z, 4-Bpd., Sll\lf!I" w/blk inter., chrome mac: wbed.J, Radial ti.rei;, Always prqed. Xlhl cund. $3900. :IS7"4908. '67 DATSUN 4-dr aeda.n, Good oond, 1600. '•6f5....4505 evee: MAZDA • NOW OPEN lmmodlolo Delivery HUNTINGTON BEACH 11 ., • I • ~ 17331 BEACH BLVD. HUNTINGTON BEACH . ... ' ' t.,.' MG MEOIANIC'S SpecW, ·~ MG 1100 aede.n. minor repairs, fix yourse1l 4 A\.'e, 846-9004 afte!' 5 pm. '68 MG Mic:lret, • spet<I, l!X· cellfnt condition. 540--0213 DLR. OPEL OVER 25 CIHn, Rocondltlonod, & Gu1r1ntood. roRSCHES 911'• .. 911r• .. 914'1 1'57 to 1971 YOLICSWA(j,IN CtfEVROLET MUSI' .. ui 'IQ Camper. !>OP ,·66 1 pala '68 COUGAR top, AMIFM, xlnt cond, m 24 000 loc:ll mil.._ Auto trans, 17,000 ml. l30'l5. fU..1536 ' Dr u.~-~ 1low I Blk air cond., "'1..,. .... rlni. pm. • ..... """to01 .1. • w burrandy wilh black vinyl Vinyl .Roof, Auto Trans. top Ab80lutely bc&utifUI.! VOLVO Pow.r St<erll!i, Air Oond, (XCz!09) Ntw Palllt, Must See to ap-Mofo -"'• c•BJ,J7> · Marquis rs $1199 Toyota A Jquar Dealer , Autoo. lmpon.d 970 '67 DatlUD Wagon. Xlnt cond. $735 or belt oUer. 54U12I '' 8~2·6666 BAUER BUICK NEWPORT IMPORTS GET OUR VOLVO DEAL BEFORE YOU IUY! SAVE ON EUROPEAN DELIVERY CREVIER MOTORS u.:.. Se.<;;,~" ·Hl&b~IOO '69 COUGAR ; ALFA .ROMEO SEE US ABOUT OverM•t O.Uvery CREVIER MOTORS DI W. Jst st .. Santa Ana ·n1;,, 240 z. air, white, 1',300 mJ. Take V\Y trade. $4300 ... ~ The Harbor Areu Only Authoriud S100 W, 0:ut Hwy. OPEl,.J>EALER Newpon Bucio ~ W. lst"st., Santa Ana ~- 13• •111 ~arp! Local l owner. "'"'" J :=,-,::--'=,.~=;.__..,..,,.... J tory air. Buckets, Vhzyl TOOi. - '41\., .... a 1.-... !.. 'fi6 Olev Impala station PS, PB. (XYT270) $2195. ~ • • ' • I . • • • r r • • Alfa Romeo FIAT 135-3171 980 Autos, New Always has an excellent sc-~=~6Q.'405;::.:.~=~-1 ~ ... t'ollx>thNew•Uced WE WANT "Speclailzlnr In Quallt>" BAUER POR·SCHES llulck..()pol-Jaguor me=-0. FFER 234 E. 17th St. ~i Costa Mesa 548-'ntiS AVAU..ABLE '69 Opel GT, new battery, DON BURNS new tires, red w /b1k lthr Int. Xlnt cond. $18J)O. 645-~. PORSCHE ASK roR GLEN 63 .. 1133 TOYOTA YOU'RE WASTING MONEY!! tllalll LfAllU """'· Radio. " ··'er· Tommy Ayres Chew VftlYO aullOmatic tranl, pow e r • J . IU~ -rlni. .;,. conmtionin&. ll66 Harbor, C.M. "6-9.103 ~Pl>oolo<~~MO-Ml=-.o::.4;_Do_LR::.;_. __ !M6 ti!~~wy., '69 Vohm, 142 Air eond. Ra-'63 Olev. Nova Sta. wan. 494-7?'4JM6.!967 dlo, Pvt. party, $1850. Good trans. Car. Runs but --------1 •• !157-1093 • • needs ..... work. 11%i. MUSTANG 847-3115. ---,,,-===--Auto1, Used 9tO ==~------J HG ',70 EL CAf.fINO, &ir cond, '6 MUSJA e HOT WHEELS e ~is AM/FM, tarp, new '67 PLYMOUTH Michelin tires, family car, Auto Trarui, Power Steerlnt, ModW.ed 1or hiah by owner. $3400. 646-2l<B Air Cond, Stereo Radio, perfonnanCe and '64 Impala A/C, radio, PIS, Musl atf! this IDie car to appearance! Of'ia, owner. IM lif A C. appreciate its tine value MUST SEU.! l30-(l;;55 eves, 545-3754 day. {UER731) s<S-7881/l!95 '6! MALIBU V-8, 2 dt. H.T., $1099 ·~:.~ ::.-:.. : ... :~! ::i~i:",;:o. $00), or CREVIER MOTORS w/283 °""Y ,.tup, Best of. fer. 644-7421. AMERICAN CHRYSLD 2CW \V. 1st St;, s..nti Ana 135-ll71 . 910 1968 Onyaler CGn\'~ble, '69 l\IUSI'ANG IF YOU DON'T A rl M one owne;, 26,000 mu ... V-8, 4 Bpd, powv. heavy dut,. "SHOP" US me can oton Loaded. Still under warran-...... -. inw mlleaie • 910 Autos, New ,,,. Little Deller ...,Gramllno ...,Harnoh ''" 64;-7464. v.,,. aharp. $1900. Call Who'• Big on Servic. ...,M,:::&::.:~:::llnt CONTINENT AL Sl6-9l64· ••. ,m.~ H ... -., '71'• .. '12'• ~=,,,...----"·~=-"" .. ~u=ST-AN-'G-V-8,~ .. -,-.,,". I ~ w Ii Bl Savi ·n CONT. ?if&rk 111. Full auto trans., A·l cond. Sharp. Wll'""-S 9• 9 . 1191 JIOll"' equip., AM IT M One owner, 58M m l. w"911 Harbor American ....... -.. eto. lQl<lO "<it_s..m<-'"'=·-~~-- Toyota I: Jaguar Dealer Home ot Convenient Priv. pty 675-6000 673-UlU. '69 MUSI'ANG 4211 c.obra. Jel · .. •72 ·NOVA FITS EASILY - . . ' . INTO YOUR POCKET ••• • ·MOTOR .TRENDS ''COMPACT CAR OF THE YEAR'' BRAND NEW 1972 . NOT STRIPPED NOVA 2 D~. 250 cu. in. 110 horse powir 6 cylinder engine, AM ~Ud\button radio, white •14• w1D tires, deluxe wheel covers. · ORDER YOURS TODAY! $2449°0 ' ________ ....... ;;;.,_ ____________________ __ BRAND NEW '72 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY llY7712U212215) CIOll -----------------~-----------------D.EMONST.RATOR· CLEARANCE 2-1971 IMPALA1 CUSTOM COUPES 1971 MONTE CARLO 2828 HARBOR -Bl VD. Autom•tic:, power 1tt•M11f, pow• •t br•ket, fi11ftd 9le11, •it co11• ditio11i119, radio e..d h•efet, wh ite well fire, efc.. Y 011r cltolca, 2 f• choote fr•m. • Au+ometic tre1umi•1i•n, t•di•, he•t•r, power 1teeri119, alt COii• ditionin9, v/ltyl roef, whit• 1Jcle well fire1, iilelv1e wi,.el c•"•"· • $ $ . Chevro let r j COSTA MESA NEW CAIS-S46· 1200 USED CAH-546-1203 Aulhori%ed Salea • Service Paymeni. CORVAIR 'l'op cond. ~ m .... 1 ol • 900 s. Cout lll&b"" 1"' Harber Blvd. kind. Must .., It ..,..... Laguna Beach 540-3100 Costa M11• 646-0261 FOR Sale 1960 Ccrvair, and ~. SANT A ANA IUICK --· Make otter. ·•"'66'°'MU=sr=AN=c""A,_u_,.......,L-.. "'"1111 TOYOTA Call~ !157-1275 ~ ru .. good. 1595. .AUER .UICK '6l CORVAIR xlnt cond. ** <49fKi330 ** Servic. dtpt. open 7:30 am 'ti! 9 pm MODdly thru Frl- clay. PHONE 540-2,511 417 W. Warier, Santa Ano GET OUR TOYOTA DEAL BEFORE YOU IUY! Tilt-Harbor Areas On\Y Aull>orued Low.-~.' l250. '66 MUSTANG, 6 cYI '°""""· ~ New top, tires. Xhrt concl. Lo milttt. &16-f729 aft .. BUICK DEALER DODGE Alw~ hu an ex~llent ae--,....,....,.,....._____ 1968 Mustane, air, heata, lection of both New A Used •'5 Oodft 2 dr ht, AM/F?tt, new tires, low mileqt. Bulcks. floor comole, buckets, air, ="~600-'c· 846-4324~-'-''-M&-33-'-"-1'5.~~1 "Sped.a.li.zinc in Quality" much rtcent work. $525 at Oean '66 Mustang, 2+2, IAUER beat of!u. Must .. 11 . air, power, .ulO, treew.y Buick..()pel..Jaguar 673--2-462. miles. 6-16-7461, <4M--18fi7 ft L 23-f, E. 11th SL '69 OIARGER., ps/pb, rh, - t41l-ftN Costa Afesa MS-7765 landau, lo rni, top cond. Toyot'I '69 RMERA, fully Jooded 1]1;20/otter. 5 4 0-5 40 0; '60 Olds. PIS. P/B. Radio, OLDSMOllLE ft A.At/FM radio, po we; ;oc4i-'9<--:i33~1'=4 ~"~'"::::"=--"°'""'~-heater. Good tire&. rung bn.kes,powerateerln1, '59 CUSTO)f Royal Dod~ ifffl. Good corxl, in and 1966 Har.bar, C.M. 646-9303 power windowa, new tires, tdn., tested, gd, \\-orkhorae out. $300. S57-930$. •1969 TOYOTA OJROlJ.A. •72 tap. $2,6.iO or best oUer, '160. lst come l!t serve. -1966~~oLD=s-Del~ta~A-4-Dr-. Xlnt cond. OOI anytime, 968 -1350 af t f!r 4 :30 ~7. ldn. Very cla.n. local, 84&-:l897. , ~~"~kda>s,..:_;_· _____ : '·"°'s7~D~AR=r.-new--u...-,-, -bra~..,-. original car. Air, etc. $895. 1 ;63 Bukk Skyf•lc. Vinyl top, battery, bent fender. isoo. "F=-inn=M>-=208.1.~=--~-.., TRIUMPH air cond. Bucket seats. 540-1357. '67 OLDS Sta wp.'i auto, air l ..,...,...._'t'""..,.. ___ , P/S, P/B, PW. 13'5 .1...;;:.:...:=FO~-R-D___ cond., R&H, !>O"'" ·- 567-9305. $UX). 561-6493. ,.. '61 TRIUMPH TR-151 $1500 * * 537-7l)(t; VOLKSWAGEN SllARP '68 VIV Bug R&H, auto, completely reblt t"tlC· Owner going over se a•. $1345. 831-13.14. ** '69 Le Sabre, air, ps/pb, '65 FAUX>N 4 dr, V-3, auto, 1968 442 Olds 400 cu. Pf:S, tinted dau. lood tires, air. $595. posi-trac. Sharpt $ill(). 1 $2295. 963-Ull 548-4371 owner. 675-5ll6 . 1S70 BUICK Riviera, low '63 FORD Co"nby Sqw" PL YMOllft.I mfleap, full power. $3,650. Good bcb buuy. Bst otter. ¥ '" 66-3964, 66-lQ), (714) 842-2931 --------1 '65 Buie~ Slc>lu< -tt ''° FALCON tt e HOT WHEl!LS e Wqon. Pert. cond, Low l125. ~ all 5 '67 PLYMOUTH """'· 546-1655. Mndlfied for l>Jah '71> RANCH wagon, A/C, performa.nct'"and CADILLAC pl•, auto, like new. $2,175 appearance! or offer. $7-8192. lrfUS'I' SEW LARGEST '66 Fonl Counby SquJn 10 ___ s<S-_78111$185_'-""'' --1 SELECTION OF ..... Ate. P/B, PIS. Xlnt PONTIAC CADILLACS IN cond. 199>iotter . ....-. ORANGE COUNTY '62 FAlRLANE, P/S, PJB, MUST Suri!ice 'rl Fllebml, SALES.LEASING "'" ti=. RUNS GREAT. 3>6 V-8, aoto, PS, - AUTHORJZ!D Q.EAN, $225. 494-9534. make oiler. TI4: ~791. '6'.4 VW. Like ne\\1• 4 ~al N .. SERVICE-19&1 FORD Country Sedan. '67 GTO hrdtp, ~. 2 dr., :!:;, ":"ne~":;.:-1~ ~~~~!Dae Fair cond. Mak• otter. big en1tne. $1400. I 963-7281 -~ .,.., &13-9!99; .... 494-2403. ~~=540-:.::,:ll::;n.:::..""=- ... vw ~ Good coodit1ion COSl'.l MDI '69 Fonl LTD, 2 dr., vin top. '65 PONTIAC $TO ug 51).9100 Oprn 8un4Q ~ 1: air, like new. 1 ==c._n_non:.;;.,_.,•!ilii-~WS~- l!OO Call atter 6 durlni '10 Cadlllac El Di>rado owner.11195. 540-®!9. 1965 Pontiac'&'*"" 2 Dr., ~ anytime wk n d • stel'l!O, let.ther, tun, loaded: '&C FORD Cdaxie 5IXl XL Hard top, UOD. ~·billt offer, Xlnt cond. lDw price! $4995. 31,cm miles, air, AM/FM, 638-S570 ~ ·n V\V Bur, Lite blue, Xlnt l6U AntiJua Wy.. N.B. loaded. $695. 837-2447. ----'----- cond, Xtras, SHOO. 643--99(!0, * * 833-3986 * * l-~.~'68,;,-,EL~DORAD0---.- '71 VW BUS Full pwr, v1ey1 .... Must sell~ No reu. offer re--brown, $3700. &13.-0Vf fulOd. Call At! I pm, .. all For sale by private part)', ...,. Son, 646-9l08. 1965 Coupe de Vllle, xllll '66 \VJUTE vw &qual'l!back, cond, 833-utS &ft 1 pm 1600' 4 Bpd. Exceptionally CHEVROLET clean k good cond. 1996. Call alt 3 p.m. 1168-3878. \---------=~-'--.,~, ~-,--I '63 °""1 II SS VW Squarebe.ck 70, autom., VttY dean • Pvt prt;y JEEP '63 JEEP Sta. Wqon. Chev. enr. Extru. lOnt cond, 543-'1690 MERCURY '10 MERC Montero MX. Air, p/a, p/b, v/t, new brakes, tiftl. D:ttl cond. $1,9'Zi. 5fl-43i9 9-6; 557-3608 eve. fuel, e~ Very nice car, ** 644--89(1. ** · driven m Europe. 30802 S. '70~ Coucar XR-'l, Coast Hwy, (D.15) Lal Belo °""1 Nov& \Vp. GNen/bll<, company car. '66 VW FASl'BACK XLNT Good nimltv .. body cond. Many xhJ. COND, 1900. 96i-i9w alt $345. e "'"'624 Lo mll<qe. Spm. '63 VW Bug. R&H, stereo, &OOd cond. $525. 1987 A, Maple Ave., Coda Mesa. U70 VW, pick up model. Loaded w/extru. Must tell. m-119.! '65 VW Bue. Radio, beam-, aood obape. 540-W.0 DLR. ··a; vw Squoreback l100. .. best otter. 1725 Gisler, CM. !157-1607. '70 SQBCK &lnrf., AM/FM, -= ~·-'~VW -'61molllrUV cyatem, radial tittt, lie. paint, dean. $115. 6'2-4619. '68 VW CIUllper ready to to $2195, • Phone ~O.IJLR. '64 VIV Blu Bur. xlat cood. Mull ..U. $.195/bot o!ltt. 817-7411 ''6 VW CONVERT! BLE ~··-MUST ,.u -'1IJ Bur. , .. u.w w/bllt tnltt. !Wt, ciwl. l1JI0.546-0lt5. I l I •1968 THUNDERlllRb, 4-dr- Landa.u. lmmac.. taad. thru- out. Full pwr .•• E .. AM • FM 1tereo, w/blk, top, BJu. 1*.._ ate Ply. !151-94'9 '63 T·BlRI> Landau, $300. 20U JValla.ce Ave., Apt. E .• c~~ TEMPE ti' '69 Tempest W11 •• ~. fb.. tilillt, di.. brks1 •Ir. trlr hitch, bfft otter ~. ' I •• 23 PILOT ·ADVERTISER Wtdntiday, F<i>nla.'1 23, 1972 • • I ! WE APPRECIATE YOUR 'BUSINESS s199DOWN - BRAND NEW '72CHARGER llllllllcl with my! t.dl MOit, heo!IJ, [71114 • ....,, .... lllilld W0""'5. dil'tclion llgnoll. lvll ¥illyl inm'iDr, admlHiln COlll!tl 1rit1111'• 11111Ch 11111<h 1110r1. • ORD•l TODAY! TAKE YOUR CHOICE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY '70 PLYMOUTH 51388!P PRICE FUIY Ill H.T. 5199DOWN $43 MONTH :fo1ti~~s '70 FORD 500 VI, IU!OtN!IC, redlo, IMaltr, power 11eerlr19, l~IOry 1lr, wllffl coven IWABl). '70 CHEVROLET SIDAI V-8, Ol.lto. tuns. b:tory air cond. power 1te1rmg, r1dio, hNtlf, much much more. 225 CGX I I BARGAIN CORNER. CLEANEST TRANSPORTATION CARS IN TOWN '65 vw IU5 6 'fl\Md, 1tlclt ttiltt, rMlo, hutw, -"llew.11 tlr•. wl!HI cover•, reel. ,AHl7'. $488 FULL PllCI '65 vw . IU• • 1 • • 4 ... lloek ll'llft, tldlo, llM!tf, Whli'\Wlll 11,.... wtlffl cownt, µA, ,AH11'. FULL PllCI '70 DATSUN SIDAN Auto. tf1M., radio, hui.r, "'9dY to go. 1207- AHMI, $788 FULL PllCI $688 FULL . PllCI l , ' --. . • 1972COLT Coupe. 4 1p11d ft1n1mi11ion, big 4 cyl. 1119ln1, h11t1r, dir1ction1I 1i9nal1, wincl1hl1ld w11h1r1, vin yl bucli:1t 111ft, interior, dl1c br1k11. PRICES START s 1 AS LOW AS OlDl!I YOUI TODAY 799 '71 FORD 500 $ J 99 DOWN $60 MONTH FOR 36 MONTHS ···~··· ""'· $1888 hffter, power ''""· In;, t.c:tory tlr, Wlrd- t.111.td ..wrs, VlnYI mi.rtor, etc.· (IMCTC1 S1't It IOfll dn. pyml. S60 It lolll mo. pymt. Inc l. 01x, lie. •rid 111 urrylnq ci'l.9r;es on 1ppr, crlldlt for 3' monlflt. Dtterr.d pymt, prim Ul5f lrlCI, t1x, lie-. ANNUAL PERCENTAGI RAT E 11.U"-. llANDllEW '72DART l...W with wiMsHlld ""'" 1r1, hl1h He• 11111, h1111r, ....,. .... out.we l!litrtr. . C.,5114 lht. °*"inion cO!ltAI 1r11t111, ltlfh 1,..oc1 ,,i111 ' ~ Ill.Ith llllft. Ll.29121192S91 $2088~ • PRICE 5199DOWN "" ................. ~ ., .... , 56 6 MONTH FOR 35 to•.IC•MW .. c;;;+..illtc'-1••111_...u.,.11 . llO"THS 1w 36 """ Otfwr.cl pynit.,,;t1 $2S7S ild, IO• a. " lit-. ANNUM ~Mil U.Ttt,tJ" c.uaTOI VII ltCOUITll SEE AND DRIVE THE FAMOUS "COFFIN" VAN '71 PINTO RUNABOUT s19g DOWN •38 1om ~i:.r... '71 PL YM. 2 DR. H. TOP $199 DOWN 553MONTH ~~~l:s Y·I, 11t1 t,.111., ntli1, hHf.·$1688 .a·::=:*~:1= 1r, whit1w1ll tint, •h1yl hat• u1~1 lor 36 mot. Dtttrr1~ rltr, 473 DI,... 'y11tt.,rlc1 $2107 l1td. 111 t. lk-. NMW. PllCIHTAGl UTl11M'llo '69 PONTIAC FIR·EBIRD '69 DODGE MONACO '69DODGEVAN VI, ''°l~lk, '""' hNI.,, s999 WSW, POWet' 1Mrli"f, t1ctorv 1lr, blic:klt ... tt. CUJBTO). '68 BUICK Wagon ....... ~ ...... ·--... $788 dii2. hllfftr, vilyl iittrior, ••ial d.. Ml lwu M.»40 PltCI v.1. nj~, '"'"· whiltwoll $1 088 1ir1s, full wh•lt covtrs. bl•clc. Ml .ZUSS13 PltCI '69 VW DELUXE ~~l:".::;;;:,-:.~~·"" $888 M1 rtKI Autamlllc, rldlo, ,_..,., (tKC. Cl7). - •or Whoo/""' •-•. """" ""'''" $988 walint.S9036A ·= '69 FORD Galaxie !OOHT.V-& .......... i.t,ooc4"1 $988 llOW" ........ powtl' linlku. radif. "" heottt. lBJ 673 NCI 292 ..... ..... (480079~ ' • I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I t l l ! • • ~ ~ • • ~ • " ; • ; f i l' • • • • • • j' • • ~ • ., • • •• • SI DAIL v PILOT ' ' I ' .. .... # Wednt!daJ, Ft"""'1 23, 1972' BRAND NEW . PLYttiOUTH DUSTE·R I . ' '72 ·:SATELLITE ...,, ...,, ... ..,,,. Atlas Service Department welcomes and honors all Chrysler Corporation vehicles requiring service and warranty work, regardleis of where car was purchased, We honor Master Charge, BankAmericard, Ci1rte Blanche,· Americi1n Express and Diners Club. t i-: .... -• . • • l • ........ FtbrUll"J "· 1972 PILOT-AOVERTISE~ t..i WHAT A TIME TO PURCHASE! During this month we have re· duced prices to great savings on 200,000 of new '72 Chrysler· Plymouths and used cars to bring our invent~ry down to its normal level. ASK ABOUT OUR FREE TRIAL EXCHANGE OH USED CARS '69 CHEVR-OLET KINGSWOOD ESTATE WAG. VI •u+om•fic, r•dio, he•+er, powtr 1tetr· in~. power breli11, eir conditioning, wh1rt• well tirt1. (XSSJ92l $1795 '69 PLYMOUTH VALIANT ' "" Auto. trent., redio, h••ttr, pow•r 1fttr• ing. tYIA751d '65 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER ' ·•y.1 °•uto. trtM., rtdio, heeler, P.S., P.!., p0.,:.,, Wii1dow1, Power Sttft, Air Cond. IPCl(l7'41 '69 '.· FORD GAL. 500 l BOO~HAROTOP VI, 111tom1tic, r1dio, heifer, paw~r 1ft•~· inlJ, power brik•1, whlt1 will t 1r.1, 11r • .,,a;.,;,51495" '66 PROWLER CAMP TRAILER I ' '69 VOLKSWAGEN BUG R•dlo end h••f•r, 4 1p••d tr•n1mi11io11, riic• cer. IXIZllll '67 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER 4 DR. H.T. VI, eufomttic, power 1fttring l br1lie1, r•dio, ht•fer, 111ir co11ditio11i119, .,;nyl top, power ,,..;ndow1 I door loek1, tilt wh1el, '''· IUJ!l$1195 '70 MERCURY MARQUIS COLONY PARK W•gon. VI, 11ulotJ1alic, rtdio, hitter, pow• tr lt1eri119 l bralt,, WSW, eir corn:I., roof reek. 113250£) '69 OLDS CUTLASS l DOOR HARDTOP VI t 11fom1fic, rtdio. heettr, powtr 1ftt r· in.j, tir conditioning, b111ktf •••h, Yinyl top. WSW ttc. l!NH191 I $1795 '70 DODGE CHARGER VI, 111tom1tic,\r1clio, httftr, )ower 1t11r• i'!9• white 1td• well tire1. t 5'4llRll ASK ABOUT OUR · FRE£ USED CAR· WARRANTY 6 wio11tli t ••raRt ... 25% 'tilhcnflt '" ,.m.. 25% dkco•Rt °" l•IMr. Wert te N tllle .. tit 'l Atlas Chrytler l'lplNttl, IH, •l r • • ' I ' • 1_$ fllaT-ADVERTlSER Woln"d<ll, Fel>r>ary 23, 1972 DAILY PILOT ~ ' ' ' TIME e Tl• Mogad .. 9••1fty DKlff AWCll'tl for 1971 . AMERICAN MADE · IS ALSO PRICED UNDER $2000 I EVIRY NEW '72 IN OUR HUGE STOCK NOW DISCOUNTED . TO SAVE YOU HUNDREDS OF $$$! NEW '72 LTD's N.EW '72 T·llRDS PRICI IUSTIR DISCOUNTS UP TO PRIC! IUSTIR DISCOUNTS UP TO 51101 FIOM 51402 PIOM WINDOW WINDOW STICIU STICUI S•r. # 12J61SIJ60261 11051 12Jl7Nl40l90) 11751 NEW '72 GALAXIES NEW '72 TORINOS PRICE BUSTIR DISCOUNTS UP TO PRICE IUSTIR DISCOUNTS UP TO 5901 FlOM 588 .. 0 .. WINDOW WINDOW STICKEi mc111 Ser.# f2J51H144041) ( 10151 Ser.:: !2A31NllJ561) 110441 NEW '72 MUSTANGS NEW ·ti MAVERICKS PRICE IUSTIR DISCOUNTS UP TO PRICE IUSTIR DISCOUNTS UP TO 5500 FlOM 5325 FIOM WINDOW WINDOW STICQI STICUI S•r. • f2K>2HI 117361 1~50) Ser.# 12K91Tll ll211 11161' ··eu1 PINTO'S PRICE INCLUOES SPECIAL DEMO CLEARANCE LEASING? ~: ~~1v~~wM~~:ts~1 ----TEST DRIVE PINTO ALL FREIGHT AND PREPARATION CHARGES SHOWROOM FRESH 71 's-72's Tremendous Discounts on Low Mileage Staff and Exec:. Cars that include Pinto, Maverick, Torino and Station Wagon Models! 72 LTD HD TP, .. $1 02"Mo. 400 VS. .A/T, plvr. steer. &: d1sC3, .24 MO. air cond., rad.lo, tint glas5. OPEN END '72 GRAN TORINO HD TP 302 VS. A/T, pWr, 1tffr. and discs, air cond., radio, tint. s:Jass. '72 PINTO RUNABOUT 24 MO OPEN END 20CXJ CC Eng., A/T, disc brk:s., 24 MO. W/W, accent group. . OPEN END 15 PRE·DRIVIN MODILS AT SAVINGS LIKE THISI 673~10. . AND COMPARE! WE FEATURE ONE OF SO. CALIF.'S LARGEST PINTO SELECTIONS Save While They Last! WE LEASE ALL POPULAR MAKU AT COMPETITIVE RATU. GS ON 21/2 ACRES OF NEW CAR TRADE-INS L. T .D. -Galaxie -T-Bird -Ford Sale! Many ta choose !tom. '65 thru '71 Models, Spat! raafs, larma:S, 2 d-a. 4 door hardtops & sedans. Full power, air condit1onin1J. Warranties avaUable. EXAMPLE: 1970 FORD CUSTOM '4 door. Vt, •vforn•tic, ~w•t 1t••rln9, good mll11, ll57VW[ OUR PRICE $1396 oi I ' • ' MAVERICK-PINTO SALE! INCOME TAX REFUND DUE? 4 1p11ch, l 1pe1d1, 1970 to 1972'• l evtotnetic mocl11s. WHY WAIT EXAMPLES: Some with vinyl roofs. BUY NOW PAY LATER . '7l PIN'(O ~·1196 4 speed, "4fo. heat!r, .., dee.or il'OUP. vinyl roor, low ~i\ti f~tJ1c1 '22IL ,70-MAVlllCK· ________ --l ____ ~ '6cyL.R•H.auto.. ~.....-.---~m.lle1! <62.JfGC> '6' 9 TOYOTA CORONA 51196' .. .. . 2 Dr,,Jlard~ Radio, heater, 41 s~.alr aoodmll~ .... __ ..... _______________________________ _ CYDD720) · , -· · '71 MERCURY CAPRI $1996 '69 FIAT 124 COUPE $189& '71 FORD 10 PASS. $3896 f '69 V.W. CAMPER $2396 ILUE IDDK PRICE $1440 Fully equlpped.JWf, aood Lowmlles, ~·speed Cntcy. Squil'e.Full pwr., afr, Sundial. 4 speed, redlo, '65 PLYMOUTH FURY 111 $650 miles. C218BNP) transmbslon. (185CPK) roof rack. (285CFN) heater, recond. en~ine. T •u p 5 · ILU! IOOK Pll:ICI 12111 ILUE BOOK PRICE $4115 Good mlles. (YEW848) 2 Dr. R • R ..... ., auto.. . 'I air . cond. Good mlln. (ffl484) __ ._._.__.__._._...,._.__._ _________ ; -------,,.---=----------I '66 CHEY. MAUIU s:s. 5796 HARD TO FIND USED-'72 PINTO RUNABOUTS HARD TO FIND USED--ONLY I, I 00 MILES! V8, 4 --mlle1. · 2000 Engin.s -Automatics -Radio -Heater with or without Vinyl Roof _ 1000 (XWY940) Miles. ' '72 VEGA G.T. MAKE OFFER 4 spud, r•d;o, hHter. 1720961 , 71 IUICK SKYLARK cusT. $ 309 6 3 TO CHOOSE FROM-MAKE OFFER '68 v.w. IUG '69 FORD GALAXIE $1396 --·-~-~-&~-~~-p:_o"'mn_:~~ .. _-,;_cfc_P<_· ~-~_r_____ ~~c:~ '=~... $179t ~~ ~~~lT~~.:.GR~.$2296 ~d~,?""" miles. s1096 ~;,s::;~ •. ~~~~.t-. '69 CORTINA DELUXE $99"6 ' ~~~~Tr3) . I U' ms ~c\':) Vinyl Rool. er, Vinyl roof, V-8. (ZDX781l ~ :::t~. ~)auto., l&,;UI IOOK PRICI $1975 ILUI IOOK PRICE $2760 -----LA--$._1._50._,I . • 'U ,CADllUC H.T. $1596 '67 '4 TON FLAT IED '70 CHEVY IMPA 2 '65 SKYLARK GRAN SPORT $896 ·DeVllle. Full power, fact. Chevy .. V8, 1U11y !act. ~~'Y1· !tt~.s., Buick 2 Or. H.T. RA:H, ~~)w/vinyl roof. equip~ Good mUcs. mlies. (4.ffAFJc1 (~~~1) cond., good miles. ILUI IOOK PRICI 11170 (Q9542l) ILUE IOOK PRICI $2520 '71 COUGAR H.T. $2996 R&H, auto., P.S., air cond., Low miles. (95(BSX) Vinyl root. • ILUE 1001'.( PRICE $3610 TRUCK SALE! '65 MUSTANG H.T. VB, RA:H, automatic, P.S., air cond., good miles. (NBB895J -5 896· ' MUSTANG SALE! • Many ta chaast from. 'h tan and ¥• tons, Flat bod. '64 thru '71 models. ALL OFFERS CONSIDERED TRADES ACCEPTED PAID FOR OR NOT M""J to chosa from. 'H ,.,. '71 models. Colfl!ll, hcntops. convlltlblt and EXAMPLE: '64 FORD 1/2-TON PICKUP VI, 1utom1tic, ••rYlc• body, 9ood 111il11. 150121 ) OUR PRICE $896 SALES DEPT. HOURS I AM TO t PM MON-fal I AM TO 6 PM SAT 10 AM TO 6 PM SUN ' • I PARTS-SERVICE HOURS 2+2 ~tbocb. So!!t• wl .. 4 lpffds,"aha oltCGftdltlanl"9 OISdautotiiatlcmodlk. ' EXAMP.LE: '67 MUSTANG HARDTOP R111li•1 ff•f•r, •vto1T11tic, •Ir condltio11i119, 9ood mil••· IU6SOt71 I • · O~R PRICE $996 > --- 2060 Harbor 7 AM To 9 PM MON 7 AM To 6· PM TUE-FRI • I . PARTS DEPT. ONLY 8 AM to I PM SATURDAYS· .. J \ • ' ' . • • If DAILY PILOT Wo<!nHday, Feb<uary 23, 1972 • BRAND NEW , ELDORADO 11' AZTEC $ E•l•petl wit~ stove, 1f1k, le• ••Ji:, llra,11, ple•ty of cleset .,_., tlec. 01tl1t1, woff Jl••l- 1.,, 71 #011437 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ' . FULL PRICE BRAND-NEW 1972 FORD F-250 3/4 TON PICKUP $ FULL PRICE ORDER YOURS TODAY BRAND NEW 1972 RANCHERO ~50CID, oototrns, front disc $ ltrakts, 1mf11J11 cCNttNI, direct ltr ...tllatio1, all 11w Torino dul10.#2A47Ll91417 FULL PRICE '69 Ford Custom $1088. :: =--~ f/fh#, Nill-, •enw, •II eritl- $1388 ~, 6-:-="9-~~-!!-~!-~:!!.-~!-~. -1388 '71 r~r! ----M BRAND NEW TRUCK & CAMPER KING 0' THE ROAD CABOVER 1 fqpt. with stove, stnk., icebox, etc.# 2509RV ON A NEW '72 FORD PICKUP CUSTOM ITTLESIDE COMPLETE CAMPER PACKAGE • WednHday, Febnwy 23, 1972 PILOT-ADVERTISER f8 BRANDNIW FORD MOTOR HO.ME '71 Ford E-300 with gas/elec. refrlg., monomatic toilet, oven, range, w/power hood, stereo tape system, shag carpets, drapes, plenty of clos- ets & storage area. 6 sleeper.#E34GHL03859 FULL PRICE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY BRAND NEW KING ·or THE ROAD CAMPER '72 CABOVER E11uipp1d with stove, sink, Icebox., drapes, etc, #17021 RV BRAND NEW ELDORADO 11' SHAWNEE.CABOYER $3188 ~~~~· 1---------....-...;..;TO;.;;DA"-'Y-------I Camper, fully se lf contafnecl, 1leep1 170 $688 6, stove, sink, gas/el1c. r1frig, 1ha1 $ -carpet, drap11, ple1ty of closet HONDA MOTORCYCLE space,woodpaneling.71 #120247 ...... u ... -.... -........ ~,,.,J) $ A V E '69 ~~!~~11PICKUP $1488 $1788 $'1788 '67 !'!!~!~~~-"''"'''"AM/FMldlo, $688 .. ITHW9lJ) . '69 ~~~~ .. E;.1~ ................ , .. .. l1166J seas $1888 s12ss '68 ~~!P..!!~~.!!~.~~! ......... . 1116251) '70 FORD · $2188 .. GAi.AXii sot fOIMAI. v.a, ••I• tnnn, f.ct. •Ir, mi ...... ,.,, wJiiltwtll ... ,,,, .... w/c•fff'I. ... 4ftt.,,1UACll '70 !~.~~. !: .~~ .... "" ........ . J7UttQ '70 Ford Galaxie 500 $2188. Spwf l .. f, N, Hte trlU. f.ct, •Ir Ct.,,, N41 .. a-tw, wllttew.lla, tft19n, wM..,.. 1,..,., .... . •irrll1t,ttl1MI , • I I • I I 7 7 . . . • • • San 'Clemente • • Ca 1strano E D,IT 10 N ' .. voe. "65, NO. 40, 5 SECTIONS, 66 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, c:i.LIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1972 Councilmen Resurrect Fluoridation By P0AMELA BALLAN 01 ltll Dlll'f PUtl 11111 Two smiling San Clemente city coun- cilmen this morning r e s u r r e c t e d arguments for and against adding fluoride to the city's water and often amused hundreds of students at San Clemente High School in the process. Councilman Stanley Northrup, an o~ ponent of fluoridation who labels the substa11ce "rat pobon," said "what's the use of having a mouth full of good teeth ~Birch Tactics' after you're dead?" The voters of Sin Clemente will decide the Issue at the April elecUon. Northrup said he based hit arguments on testimony ,of "various upert.s" who claim that not enough Is known about fluoride and what la known inUcates It coold be harmful. He said he originally becam1 an op- ponent of nuoridaUo6 because he didn't like to see some1;hing "forced on people" Tustin Trustee Blasts Fellows By JACK BROBAClt Of th1 01lty ,llol St1U Earl H. Carraway, a new member of the Board of Trustees of the Tustin Union High School District, Tuesday condenmed the president and vice president of the board for "using the district board to further John Birch Party (society) tac- tics.'' Carraway sent along a motion he pro- poses to present at the nen board meeting Monday ·nla:ht cemorlng Board President Paul C&lhoun ,.M Vice Presi-- dent Robert Bartholmew for "int-rod\!c· ing a bi-partisan reS!)lution to a legally r_i~tute.. d . -P.'!i~ . governing &IUllrd. · • without bringing out an opposing vlew- polnl. Dr. Wade Lower, a retired oral surgeon, countered that in tils 30 years' experience in the profession he found fluoride to be beneficial. 11(t is a poison, we know that. But too much sunshine, water and fresh air could kill you, too. The point is It has to be con- trolled." Lower said chlorine, added without anyone's consent, is also a poison as are numerous metallic substances that are already ln city water. He related a tale about watching water intended for home use through the Metropolitan Water District coming down a chamtel. At one point a dead coyote floated by. Then came a dead skunk. "That's why certain chem I c a I substances are added which are con; sidered poisons~ Two.thirds of our water ls Metropolitan and tt hss to be purified," he said. ' Lower said fluoride is a decay preven- tative. Once a hole is In a too,h, fluoride won't help it. But he zaid the American Dental Association has documented evidence that flltoride can reduce cavities by 65 percent in children . Northrup questioned the statistics. He said studies in underde veloed oouD- tries, such as 'India, prove that people have better teeth when they have less sugar and artificial foods In their diet. ~oday's Flnal .TEN CENTS Issue The students questioned that 1ta~ menl Phil Grignon, high school IClence teacher, told Northrup that aaylng that people should npt be forced to drlnl< fluoridated water is like saying ttudenLI i;hould not be vaccinated for polio. "Vaccinations are mandatory. Nobody asks a person if he wants them," said. Grignon. He also challenged a statement by !See FLUORIDE, P11e I) • air White House Area Check Nets Aliens By JOHN VALTERZA Of ttt1 Diiiy Ptllt lllft A suspected alien smuggler believed armed with a pistol and hls companJoa rema ined at large early today after fleeing on foot from Border Patrolmen who had stopped them within sight of the Western~White House bifore dawn. 2 S. COast Men Held on Drugs; Caught by CHP The ~ ·an '.tJ TorO lllOrtp(e bl,qker,Jurll!er moves ll!at lbe lllOlljlil ol tlw ,,Rwliiaiil ""'. .. ..-..... lllrlcleo fruit thl ....... l\r.fll llme.'' The pair's bumJD car,O, however, WU1 be lf!lpped irack'to Meijilc!. · , .Five MµJca~ naUooalt WV1 ~ Jn tile .trunk of lbt car a11ar tht pair • °' I lp>l'U}trl llod, ' ' I . Patrol Capt. Gene llmis Hid Ibo 11>- cldent began when thfi '"° ~n drove up to the·Checft point IOllth ol ~ Clomeoti and offlcer1 asked, the men to open Ibo tnmk or thefr car. Two South Coast men j>ursued by California highway patrolmen Tuesday night for what the officers believed to be their di'unken driving ended up ln Orange County Jail on much more serious charges. Orange County sheriff's deputies took over when CHP officers reported the presence of marijuana in the car occu- pied by Gary James Burnette, 19. of 2S266 Brigantine, Dana Point and Gary Roy Beavers, 25, of 546 Temple Hills Drive, Laguna Beach. Patrolmen said they halted the vehicle at Pacific C.Qast Highway and Nig11el Road in South Laguna, after watching it being· driven in an erratic manner. A patrolman said his suspicions were aroused wtien several objects were thrown from ·the car window as he and a colleague approached the vehicle. Patrolmen called in deputies after a search of the vehicle allegedly produced a green, leafy substance believed to be marijuana. Both men were booked on suspicion of possession of marijuana. Patriotic Songs Hi ghlight Two School P1·o grams Patriotic music and song by students in the Capistrano Unified School Di.strict will highlight two separate musical pro- grams-the first of 'Vhich will be held tonight at the San Clemente High School gym. The district hOnor orchestra and choir• from several schools will. perform at 8 p.m. in honor of the birthdays of Presidents Washington and LincOln. The students will represent Richard Henry Dana, Ole Hanson, ConcordJa and Palisades elementary schools, plus San Clemente High School. On Feb. 29, ne1t Tuesday night, also at B o'clock another program Is scheduled at Marco Forster Junior High auditorium, featuring musicians and singers from that campus as well as Crown Valley, Viejo, San Juan Capistrano elementary schools. Admission is !ree to the general public at both musical events. Garage Theft Told Thieves sma.htd a ~ndow to a locked garage at 1 San Clemente residence. tt was dlscovtttd late Tuesday, and made off with l300 worth of loot. Alfred Eugene OJ'°"' who Jives at Ill! Avenlda de la Eatnlla, told police the Joas amounted to a portable television set, a loaded tool bo1, 1 sulfcase and 1 fishlnc .rod. , ' Carraway'i It.I~ takes iuue ·with a TusUn . board reiblullon (that was defeated) dinde~ the orange County Grand Jury report rfCOmmendlng aboll· tion of the Orange Coiulty Department of EducaUoo. Carraway, in a release to the press, enclosed a copy of the re.solutk>n whJch WiLS voted: down 3-2 at the last TUHSD board.meetlng.,Feb. i;i. The irate tnlstee slit.ea: "For too long now, the John Birch Party bas used this office and others as -pla tform for their own brand of p6liUcs .. They have insulted the U.S. Pre!l.dent, they have degraded the constitutional office of ·the.President, and In that Rnse, the J"ohn Birch Party ls undermining the Con!Ututioo of the United States. "The said party is eating away al our established American traditions and In- stitutions the same way our enemies do." · Carraway conUnues bis charge: "I am a conservative, I believe in !ndlvidual righls, free enterprise, states righls, prop' erty rights aDd tbe Republican form of government.'' The trustee concludes with, "I, for one hsve hsd enough of the John Birch Party tactics." The resolution defeated Feb. 14 which has raised Carraway's ire states: The Orange County Grand Jury (1971 l has surreptitiously and without complete investigation or information recom- mended. reduction of expenditures and &tall ol the Department of Education (county) and the Grand Jury has recom- mended that the County Board of Supervilon withhold county funds from tha department. 11And the unfair, biased and in- consequential study ol the Department of Education allegedly conducted by the Grand. Jury I.a, in cutain respects, without )>asls In fact, totally Incomplete and therefore of no real value •.. " The defeated resolution states that the duUes ai1d services ol the Depsrtment of EducaUon abould belt be evaluated by the schqol dlstrtcls ol the county. The punchline reada, "the Board of Truste.. of lbe Toltln Union llfih School Dls1rlct hereby ccmdemna the Grand Jury for lls precipltowi and Irresponsible action and rapoctlQlly "'""I• a prop-erly constftuted study Of the services of the department before recommending aoy changes ot dlacontinuance of aervlcel." carraway' and trustees Chesler Briner, of Mission Viejo, and Dlckran Boranian of Tustin, voted 1g11nst the propooed rt.a0luUon. Calhoun and Bartholmew both live In the Tustin aru. or th< five Tustin trustees, only Bartholen!ew admfta to membetlhlp In the John' Birch Society a I t h o· u g h olllerverli note Calhbun,' the ~· praident, frtquentfy Joins, In stands talren by Bartholomew. The re10lution substantially aarees with tlttemen!s by County Superinten- dent ol School.a Dr. Rollttt Peteraon ind the County Board ol Education C<81emJ>o Jn1 the Grand Jury report. PREs1oi!Nl' ~1xoN lf~LPs PRE!i\JER cHou EN·LA f OFF wlTH ..iiS".coA-T .cs;TALJts RnuME · · Continued COrdlallty M>rk1 T~Jrd ·Doy of FOr!nol Dl!<utllonl;llet-· T-Powotl · .. Nixon, Chou Ac:cords·-See:n·. E xchang e of Students, Newsmen Believed Reaclie4 By HELEN TIIOMAS PEKING (UPI) -Preoident Ni1on and Premier Chou En-IS.i were believed today to have agreed upon a broad e1change of students, scholars and newsmen between their countries and were discussing a far. reaching declaration of peaceful coe1- lstence. This was reported by nsident western diplomats in Peking following a meeting of more than four hour! between the leader! at Nixon's luxurious lakeside guest house, dubbed temporarily uthe Peking White House. n Another conference is set for Thursday. The meeting started with a hint from Chou that American newsmen ac- companying Nixon may be invited to stay behind when the President leaves in five days. UPI DiplomaUc Q>rrespondent Stewart Hensley also said an agreement on some form of diplomatic contact -· sOort of 'fonnal diplomatic recognition -was believed to have been nailed down at the meeting. The Chou-Nixon talks, by prear- rangement of the two governments, are kept In ulmoflt secrecy. No official an- nouncements on what has been discussed will be made untll the talks end'. . But Hensley said the indications· are strong that the meetings ultimately· would end with a landmark declaration of peaceful coexistence which coul~ have 1i. major effect on Asia and the world . And It was assumed that Secr<lary of State William P. Roger> In hlttalkt-wlth Chinese Foreign Minister · Chi Peng-fei might be working out the specific details of Sino.American exchange agreements and the manner of establishing continulng Prowler Suspects Caught .Near Councilman's Home San Clemente Clty Councilman Wade Lower squared olf in a debate this morn- ing on nuoridaUon, but the talk came after a rough night's altep interrupted by a pair of prowlers. And one of the two MarlneJ muted oullide an 1psrtment building occup1ed by Dt. Lower suffered an 1pparent blek ln)aly alter wunc perbapo two ltoriel to . the -beio.t. 'M>e councnman -wu ·~ the callers •lier lhldniChl wbo reported the IOllndl of men lhoutlnl and ""'nlal· up and down stairway, it the Panor .... Apartments, 420 Monterey Lant. Offlctn arrived and found Herbert Eugene Aleunder, lO, ol C 1 m p Pendletoo lyJnc oo lhe povtmenl ....,.. • Ing. Aleiandcr said he Injured his hsck In the fall. . He then shouted out to a friend. hid ing, ' police aald, near the swimming pool. · Bob R. Caldwell, also 20 and allo from Pendleton, merged ind w11 1ttested. Al,xander was taken for trtatment to Mllslon community Hospital. Hls Injuries were not belleV'4 aerlous. Both men face charges of prowling. llaldents ol the "bulldinc then finally got some sleep. The uc:lteme.nt, however, apparently did not affect the c:ouncllm1n '1 perfonntnce early todoy when be cham· ploned fluoridation In a 1plrlled debate with fellow councllmon Stan Nnrthrllp, a •tern oppooent of the Idea. J' contact.1 short of dlp1omatlc relations. , Officials warned against assuming eaob country would estabJlsh a trade mission In the other. They said it Was more likely that the continuing contacts would be set up in Canada, or some other third coun- try. Both parties appeared In high 1plrils (See NIXON, Page Z) School Vandals Hit in Capo, La gm:la Hills A mounting wave or vandalism In Orange County .schools continued over the Weekend with schools· ln San Juan ~P~lrano and Laguna Hills belnc the target of hoollgsns who Jnfl!Cted hesvy damage. . 1 • Principal David B. Whltcher of Valen-- eta Elmentary School, 2566l Paaeo de Valencia, Laguna Hills, has announced plans to appeal to his students over the loud speaker system for lnfonnatlon on vandals! who destroyed ten trees during the weekend. O,range County She.riff's officers said the persons involved drove 1 car over the yaung lrees, uprooting them and ln- illctin1 damage eatlmated at '300. De!>uUes n ld the prlndpal la alao send- ing notea to parents In a bid lo determine the ldenllty of the weekend Jn, trudera. Damage e11lmaled at more Ulan 14(1) was lnOicted ar Marco F. Fora~ lnlermedlate School, 2!60t camlno de Avlon, S•n' Juan Capistrano where va dais smashed three flagpole halyardJ valued at more tllll1 $110. Qlstodan Harold Moore said windows were smashed, three lockers kicked lll and 1 hetvy gate removed In !he weekend wave of vandalllm. f lnste•d, the pajr fled northbound w)th patrolmen In puriutt. · Officers finally managed to ,)lliU Iha speedJng car ovU' into the meil!an \trJp within sight of the Preildentlal <0mplex. At that point, Harrll salt, the, drlver flashed a star-sha~ badge zlmllar to those available on man order. . ·He aaid he · wu a "private tn-- vestigator" and theh made officers aware of a 1nub-noied r.volver he w11 c~ rylng. .But before the officers could take the pair Into custody the two men darted into nearby brush after running acroas aev!ral freeway Janes. "We looked IWfully hard, but they (ol away," Harris aald. Patrolmen then looked lhto the· tnint ot the car and found five men crammed 1Jt.. side like· sardines in 1 tJn. The aliens will be deport'e4 to their native country. Presumably the lees they paid to be smuggled north ore 11111 with the rrmug. glers. Security offlciall at th> Westem'Whlte' House, Camp P~eton and local poUce •II. were alerted after the escape, reporta said. ' The tuspect with the badge and gun was wearing a wbJte shirt and dark pants. The only description available On hia partner Wll that he wort his brOWD h1lr tong. . ~ pursuit wu the1 aecond chate by patrolmen at the checftpolnt In 1 week. Early last. week IQ Orange man used a aeries of compllcaied l'Ulfl, to eventually •teal a Border P1trol car theo 1ped nortlt. at 1peed1 exc~ 100 miles per hour. Oraaie Cout • Weadter YO. probably woo·1.e. much ol the sun .on '"'"l*Y· eltl!er, ac. cordlnc to the wutherlady. Low cloudl and log wtJJ ·take up moll of the day. Hi(ha ol 113 to 75 are predicted. Low1 In the mid-411'1. INSmE TODAY For a 1111 o/ Ille wcclund'I llt>e 1hca1er ottroclfonr and a look at ~ht top 01car 1Wfnlneu, HI todaY• f'nrtrCoinmcnt J>QQI -27. l. ~..... 1 =:.. ': Cantr C.,_. lS Clltllfllll U ... ,_ . ,_ . Dttfll NiMtm t ..,,.,... ,... ' .... , ..... al If ·-.... ~ .. tM ...,.. " " -" -.__ ~ -I ~ \.ktfftt ,. -.. D --.. __ .. PT~ , • 1tMI ,..,,., U .....,. l,.ft Dr. Ii.I•""" 14 ll9dl ........... ·-. -..., --. .__.. ,.._,.... ............... , :t DAILY PILOT >C w.i .. ...,., f...., 23, 1912 Quake Tip • 'Be iri One-story House' \.. LOS ANGELES (UPI) -JI an earth- : quake lfJIW, try lo be In a oowtory ' lralne boule. Try DOI lo be to a bulldlng made of reinforced brick and mortar. Thal WU the advfco 'l\JeJdoy fnlm L. • Le11oJ ~. head of a c:oosuiting eDllDeerlnc firm and the Los Angeles COUnty "Enc:tneer of the Year," who lludled --to the kllltr San Fernando eartllquaU of February, 19'11. Tha lludy made II "dw that con- :· vent:iOD11 onHtory wood . f r a m e : residences are one of the aatest places to be In an urlhqual<e," be told the IDIUlute for the Adnnoonent of EnlineUlnC: . "Even •here subject lo evtrol feel of damqlnc · .....,.i ddormatloo, thee otnicturea reluled lo collapee and no Uva were Joel In opllo of the large number of people in tl\elr bomt1," be Proxmire Get.s Crop of Hair WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sell. Wllltam Pl'olmire (0.Wla.). la ge~ Ung a balr transplant. Prolmire showed up at a Jolnl Economic Commlllee bearing to- day with gauu bandages covering his bald head and !asued a press release dlaclosini that he began the treabnenll 'l\Jeaday night. Prom>lre two weelia ago, turned up bl a cominlttee bea.rinl '!11th two black eyea. He relUaed to say bow he got them. The N.,. York Dally N"" sold they wen caued by a face lift. f'rotn Page J FLUORIDE .•. Northrup that many people are )lllSblng Cuorlde became they lland to make money mm IL "Yet lbooe who are puablng the bard..t art denU,ta, and if cavities are t,educed. by Ill percent they're advocaUng reducing their o"" bu.slnesa. Why would they do that II they didn't feel H WU beneflctsl?" tOwer sold be bowl bow San Clemente'• number-<lne voter, President Nlzon. will vote on thla tasue. 0 He poetn't tell me everything, m1pd. you, 'bat IODle things," be aaid. l!e ~ lhal the President would be •otlnJ yea becauae a While llouae conle{ence on Heollh and Nulrlllon rectnUy came Oil\ In favor of fluoridation. "Fluoride u a nulrlenl if.I now. llelnc added to things like cookies, 11 tald Uwef~ "My wile bought some with Ourlde at the local Alpba Bela. Nowhere does ti say 'poi.son'." Northrup said fluoride addition lo the wa!rr will "poiJon ii over a long period of time and no one knows bow upemlve lt will be." ••Mn. Leon Riley has three children and ber doctor told ber one chlld de- finllely could DOI ue fluoride. The lwo who uaed fluoride bad woroe teeth than the one who didn't," said Northrup. Northrup, who ii up for re-election, said II people want Cuorldated water they aboUld l!uy IL Lower, not up for l'Hlection, suggested lhal San Clemente Cuorldate the water, •1a.nc1 those wbo don't want Jt cab. buy ~ tomethln& else." ; '~l'I oalJ IOlnl to coal UI 10 cents per ; perlOO per yur. Wbat ~ can we buy : fer a •dimet" :• . Best Time to Close • • . • LONDON (UPI) -NoUce displayed at mlcklay outside a central London restaurant: "Closed far bmcb." --DAILY PILOT • cat!!SS CDiUT ....... ClllPMT . • • • • a-11.w ... ---J ... a.c.t., ................ _ n..1 ... -ni;n +, 11.:i- Qloloo II. '-ll•k" P, Ntl ------12l,._.A,.... ..... -. •• O. ... IU,'2111 .. -••-11c::..a.....,n1n --°"' -... -':':' :r ... .:::, ..... -;.,. ... = uld. However, "eb.l.mneJ construc&o ntedl lo be Improved, u do split levtl residences with integral garage!," he said. . Al the olber end of the spectrum, he uld, are bulldins• of unreinforced brick and inortar. which "will almost cerlalnly collapoe when they are subjeded to •lzooi llhaklng." Thele buildini• lhould be slr<nglhened or demolished, Crandall said. "It ts abloluttly unthlnkable lhal such structures should be allowed to exist, particularly in our school system." Modem higb-rlle buildings stand up wall, he uld. 0 Although structural damage may oc- car during a major earthquake of long duratloo, modem high ri!e buildings Jbould withstand severe sbakl.ng without collapslng1 '' he said. Air Guard Brass Held On Fund Rap WASHINGTON (AP) -A federal grand jury has Indicted the conlmander of the Alabama Air National Guard on a charge of conspirjng to illegally solicit $3,200 in political contributions lrom Air Guard offi~s for candidates in the 1970 Alabama election, the Justice Depart· ment announced today. One of the campaill"" Involved, the department said, was that of George C. Wallace, the governor of Alabama. Atty. Gen. John N. Mllchell 1ald the •inile count Indictment 1¥11 returned to- day bl U.S. Dillrict Court In Montgomery, Ala., agolnst Maj. Gen. George Rted llo81er. 'I'hrff ol Doster's subordinates also were indicted and were identified as Cols. Henry Fllllnglm Jr. and James E. Hardwick and LI. Col. Allred B. Gurley. Named u unlndlcted co-conspirators were Afr Guard Cols. Lawrence A. Doyle, WWiam P. Baker, Wiiiie L. Whilman Jr., Edward D. Gilmer and Maj. Lonnie J. SlaUJOn Jr. The lndicbnent cbarged that the defen- danll conspired, beginning In March 1970, to coerce other Air Guard officers to con- tribute fl,'/00 to Wollace's campaign; •1,000 to former governor Albert Brewer, a Cllldfdalo for IO"erDOr bl 11711; flOO lo Hugh Morrow ID, a candidate for lieutenant governor, and $100 to State Sen. Leland Childs, who was not running for re-electinn. The Indictment iold Iha~ as a pert of . the conspiracy. the defendants used government facilities to solicit the pollUcol coctrlbutlona and threatened to downirade certain AJr Guard officers if they !ailed to contribute. The lnd1dment quoted Doster u telling an Air Guard major, Wiiiiam H. Beddow Jr., the\ II be waa Interviewed by the FBI Beddow could chose one of three courses of action: 11blow your brains out; tum state's evidence or lie if interviewed." The lndicbnenl oaid Doster ouggested Beddow follow the third alternative. The indictment also alleged that Doster directed Gurley to undertake th e systematic solicitation of political con- tributions. San Juan Lake Being Created San Juan Capistrano's f1rst man-made recreational lake is now under con- struction ln Village San Juan, a develop- ment off the San Diego Freeway near Trabuco Creek Road. The lake will contain two million gallons of water and will cover three and half acres. Although the lakt will be privately owned and maintained as a place to fish and sail small boats, it will be visible from the freeway, marking the entrance to the development. • • Attentive Listener . Alabama Governor George Wallace pulls on a cigar while listening lo Vice President S.Piro Agnew address the opening plenary sess10~ ~f the winter meeting of the National Governors' Conference. This lS the second day of a three day meeting in Washington. Two Charges Dismissed Against Talent Agency An Orange County Superior Court judge bas dism.i.ased grand theft and conspiracy cbarge1 filed against lour principals of the now defwict "Take One" talent agen- cy and ordered the four men to face trial March 22 on the remaining charges of viol.aUons of the state's corporations code. Judge William Murray set the trial date for Orange attorney Richard Mur- phy, 41, brotben Jerry, 42, of Santa Ana, Phone Company Seeks Increase In County Rates Rate Increases affecting the lit,344 telephones In Orange County provided by the General Telephone Company are beinl sought by that firm that erves all or part of aeven communltle3 along the Orange Coast. The Public Utilities comml..S9lon has yet to set a date for a bearing on the $21.6 million overall rate increase sought by General Telephone "to offset increased labor costs." The increases would affect General Telephone subscribers in Huntington Harbour, parts of Huntington Beach, Westminster, Laguna Beach, Monarch Bay, South Laguna, Surfside and parts of Laguna Niguel. Telephones in homes wou1d be billed an extra 10 cents a month, Ln businesses the sought increase is 35 cents a month and switchboard trunk line rates wou1d be hiked 50 cents each per month. General Telephone is asking the PUC to approve a so-cent per month charge for unlisted telephones, $10 to change a home telephone number and $15 to change a business phone number. Message unit calls wou1d go up from 4.7 cents per unit to 4.8 cents. Service connection charges to install phones would jump from $12 to $18 for residential subscribers and from $1B to $25 for business customers. "We. desperately need the proposed increase to offset our latest wage set- tlement, especially in view of the fact that the PUC granted us only about 66 percent of our needed relief in our last rate request," said Richard L. Oblaon, vice president of General Telephone. All told , the firm Is seeking a total rate increase of 8.3 percent noting, 11afte.r all wage increases have been granted, without offsetting rate reve.nues the com- pany would reallze only a 7.39 percent rate of return." BJ Phil lnterlandl . and Don Hegg, 40, of Garden Grove and Robert McGinnis, 38, of Santa Ana. All four were indicted by the Orange County Grand Jury following allegatlohs that they sold an estimated $11,000 worth of stock in 11Take One" to agency employees without first regi!:tering the stock with the state's corporations com- missioner. They had earlier been named in a civll action brought by the state and the district attorney's office in which It was alleged by Depuly District Attorney W a I fer Matthews that they toot thou.sands of dollan from parents.seeking what he claimed were nonexistent movie and television Jobs for their cblldre1. Champion Nudie Fails Big Test Of Obscenity OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) -Miss Nude Universe of lm-72, stripped for patrons of the Playgirl Club, reporters and vice squad detectives here in a test of the statil obscenity laws. Susanne Haines, 24, of Sacrame.nto, Calif., was taken into custody, along with club operators Mr. and Mrs. Don Ludington, shortly after she appeared nude in a dancing act, Tuesday night. Oklahoma Jaw requires topless dancers to wear "pasties" and forbids bottom1ess acts. A television camera crew followed Miss Haines to her dressing room and waited outside with police as she dressed ud posed fo< photographs. A detective said Miss Haines, who won her tiUe last summer in San Beinardino, Calif., would be charged with indecent exposure . Several patrons of the nightclub, ob- viously puzz.led by the proceedings, air plauded as Miss Haines left in the escort of the police. "I'll be back," she said as she was led out the dO\f'. GEM TALK TODAY by J, C. HUMPHRIU BEFORE YOU BUY A DIAMOND The purchase of a diamond as an engagement ring or a special gilt of love Is U!UBIJy a on .. Ume occasion in every man's life. Because this purchase involves deep meaning as IVeil as a slgnlfi· cant investment, you will want to buy wisely and with a pride of pur- chase IVhicb will last a llleUme. There are definite ,tanda)'ds for lhe pricing ol diamonds, and four definite !actors in determlnatton of value. Cutting, color, clarity and carat weight are the four measures nf a dlamond'a value. Each of these fa~tors requlra complete .1111der- standlng by the buyer before an intelligent purt.~··· can be made. #Shay,., Can You Follow• Ploy 'Malancholy Biby', •• - We would appreciate an oppor· tuntly to uplain each of !best lao- tors to ynu personally. So when you have lhe time, come on in and see us. No matter whal or where you eventually buy, we always have the time to help you make lhe right choice. 'J'o Aid Onofre Carlsbad Plant Hearings · Slated Public hwtnss will be conducted urly nut month In Carlabad on the en- vironmental impact of a new fossU.Cuel electi'lcol generslor ooulh of the city -a pl~ additlon propo...t becauso of lhe expensive delays wblch have hlt the San Onofl:e Nuclear Generating StaUon. The hearings are specifically geared to obtaining cltlun commentary on the ecological effects of adding one more generator to the Enclh1•gerieratlng com- plex which alrudy hes lour oil-burning units. San Diego Gas and Electric officials announced late last year that because of From Page J NIXON ••• ~ and satl!fied with their progre,. when Chou drove through a snowfall -the first foul weather since Nixon's arrival Mon- day -to call on the Presidenl Previous meetings bad betn held at a lite selected by Chou -the ornate Great Hall of the People. No aignificance was attached to the change In lite. Mrs. N.iJ:on, meanwhile, was assuming th e role of her husband's ambassador to China's 800 million people. Ignoring the snow and the cold, she gamely trotted along dusty yellow dirt roads on a tour of a commune west of Peking where 41 ,000 peasants live and farm. The First Lady, wrapped in a fur-lined coat, visited a pig fann, a primary school, the meWcal clinic, a hot .hoo.se and a general store. On Thursday, the Nlxom probably will make their long anticipated trip north of Peking to visit the Great Wall of China, a 1 ,~mile barricade built about the 4th Century B.C. to keep foreign invaders out. Today's talks brought to nine hours the time spent by Nixon and Chou in formal business sessions. In addition, Nixon held a rart hour-long session with Chairman Mao Tse-tung, the aging philosopher of the f\.farxist move- ment who leans heavily on Chou to make most decisions. • Western diplomats in Peking· are con· vlnced that this unusual dlaplay of good feeling between countries which have been antagonists for two decades ls bound to be followed by some form of declaration. It could pledge them, despite their pro- found differences In Ideologies, aocial systems and political positlOttJ, to wort togelhtr lo ellmlnate polnta ol conflict In Asia. * * * TV Coverage Of China Set NEW YORK (UPI) -The major networks have announced their scheduled. coverage for today and Thursday mom- inl of President Nixon's trip to China. The schedules are subject to change. All Umes shown are PST. CBS -Tonight, cover1ge on the CBS ~vening News, 7-7:30 p.m.; Thursday, Coverage on the CBS Morning News, 7-1 a.m. NBC -Tonight, coverage on the NBC Nightly News, 7-7 :30 p.m. evening speclal program ll:30 p.m.·mldnlght. Tburoday, coverage included ln the 0 Today" show, 7-9 a.m. ABC -Tonight, coverage on the E ... ninl News 7-7 :30 p.m.; lll><Ciol program prior to the Dick Cavett Show, ll:lG-11:50 p.m.; Thursday, !peclal program 7:30-a a.m. f.49.so• delays ID obtaining llcenstns for two new Onofre reactpra, a new conventional unit would have to be added at Endna to cope with anticipated power sbortages In oom· Ing year1. On March 3, and I two volunteer bell'-lni officers will bear Iha positive-and negaUve Points of view ln the plans to ex- paDd the fossil-fuel complex. The aes~lons wUl last from 10 a.{J'I. to 5 p.m. each dsy and wW be conducted In lhe council chambers of tlie. Carl!bad Civic Center. Murray Schwartz. dean of the UCI..\ law school, and RlclJard o. Muwell, praldent of the Amerlcln .woofetlon of Law Sobool!, wW aerva 11 hearing ol· flcers. Utilily spokesmen ny the beartnsr will probably yield lnfonnation Which will be Included In enviromnenW llnpact lludles which are nquired as part of Iha govern- ml!!nt licensing procedure. Utility a.ides added that the hearings are the first of their kind in the western United States. The Bechtel Corporation has been hired by SDG and E to prepare the impact report and one .initial step, a population survey in several San Diego county cities, already has been completed. · The results of that poll, saJd utility ai~, showed that air and water poUu- tlo9"were viewed as grave problems by the sampled citizens. The majority of those persons said they would be willing to commit $120 each a year to fig ht the blighl. \Vhlle SDG and E is divlng into the en· virorunental Issue with the Encina pro- posals, the same utility and its parlner in the Onofre project recently completed another environment impact report which bas been sent to the Atomic Energy Com· mission. The federal nuclear agency next will send copies of the 750-page, two-volume document to other agencies for study and recommendations. Only after the AEC rules on that study will it consider setting formal he"rings on the Ono£re proposal. On more than 60 acres of blufftop and ocean front, SDG and E and Southern California Edison plan to add twin reac- tors which will cost about a half-billion dollars. Plans for those reactors now are about two years behind schedule because of confusion on the role of the AEC in evaluating envlrorunental matters, utility. spokesmen have reported. Fish Won't Bite? Tliey Could Ha1:e Sexual Proble1ns AUBURN, Ala. (AP ) -LIU people, fish have their sex problems, says Dr. Wayne Shell, and sometimes that's the reason t.bey won't bite. They'll atop eating, maybe tw.o or three weelu at a lime. And they're grouchy. "Sex problems worry them," say1 Shell, a professor in the fisheries depart.. ment at Auburn University. As a mattrr of fact, he said in an in- terview, 0 they do a lot of things like peo- ple. They change their feeding hablls. They get angry. They worry a lot about their enemies; bass do, particularly. And they run for cover when a storm hlts." Take salmon, for in.stance. They feed voracioU!ly at sea, Shell says, but when they start lhek sex migration upriver In the spawning season, they stop eating. Other species, such as bass, do the same. When they're "on the bed'' guarding the eggs, they'll go without food until the new arrivals are hatched. A speclal remembr•nco from every member of tha famllY with from I to 9 GENUINE Slrthstonas iracetully sit lo 14 Kt. white or yelloW 1old from $29.511• 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., 'COSTA MESA COHVIHllNT TIAMI IANKAMlRICAl:D-MASTEJ CHARGE I. , 24 YU.IS IN $AMI LOCATION rHONl 141·J401 ( I. ' l • .,, L • ' It Isn't easy . Our account executives, for example , have to measure up to professional standards that are unusual for any business. Could DI! make it at Merrill Lynch? Scan these 18 questions. If you can answer "yes" to 14 or more, we'd like to hear from you. 1. Aie yo u bullish on America? We are. We see A1nerica's economy growing in 1nany different ways, and we want our customers to share in that growth. If you takeadin1 view of America's future, you'..d find us insufferably optimistic. D 2. Can_ you stand up under pressure that would have most ordinary mortals climbing the walls? D 3 .. Aie·you discreet? Our clients trust us with a lot ·of personal information. This is no busi- ness for blabber-mouths. D 4. Aie you intrigued by all hinds of invest· ·ments? If you can't see beyond "stocks and bonds" -youl' vision· wouldn't-pass muster at . Merrill Lynch. 0 5. Can you ride out a storm and come back stronger than ever? 0 6. Aie you an instinctive teach.er? For many people, investing is fraught with mumbo· jumbo. We like people who cari unmud\)y the waters. 0 7. Could you survive a tough seven-month training program? One part of it: 11 rigorous weeks in New York City, where you'll study and be tested on everything· from corporation.ii· nance to the Federal Reserve System. 0 8. Do you have a well-stocked vocabulary? Fuzzy talkers make wretched brokers. 0 9. Do you follow up? "Loose ends" in any busi- ness can drive you crazy. In our business, they can paralyze you. 0 10. Aie you willing to ·make· less while you're training to' be a Meciill Lynch Account Execu- tive than you are probably making right now? 0 11.Doyou mind luggi ng home a full briefcase? · We're not wild about it either. But no matter how well 'you manage your daylight hours, you'll have to lay on a fair amount of midnight oil. Our Research Department b very fertile. They publish about 60,000 words a day. D 12.lJo you have the guts to say, "l don't know, l'IJ just have to call you back when I've got the facts."? We don't deal in calculated guesses. 0 13. Do yo u have good nianners? Boors arc bad news in any business. When you're in a business _that revolves around other people's money, you 111ust be sensitive lo the feelin gs or those who trust you. 0 14. Do you have a proven record of success in a variety of activities? Quite frankly, we look for people who have a habit of winning. 0 . 15. Do you really study the newspapers you read? Our business moves with the news, often anticipates the news. Good acco unt executives are much like good news analysts. They dig into things te uncover clues lo the future. 0 16. Are you looking !or a job with exceptional advancement possibilities? Virtually all the· people who run our offices were account exec- utives. So was our president-Ned B. Ball. So was our Chairman of the Board-Donald T.Regan. 0 17.Do you welcome responsibility? You'll have all the facilities of Merrill Lynch behind you- rescarch, private newswire, instant quote ma- chine--: but, when you pick up that phone, you are Merrill Lynch. 0 18.Can you help other people handle their money as carefully and conscientiously as you handle your own? If you cannot say yes to this question,. you can forget the rest. 0 Hciw did you do ? If you answered "yes" four- teen or more limes, and would like to try for a place in our Account Executive Training Pro· gram. send us your resum~. Make sure it in· . eludes your apdress, telephone number and salary history. Here's the address: Mr. Stephen E. Franz Employment Department Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc 1901 Avenue of the Stars, Suite 1235 Los Angeles, Calil'ornia 90067 M •AAILL &:.YNCH, 111•111c•. F•NN•lll a •MITH INC: An equal opportunity employer. • • .. r . • • • • .. • jjt4 DAJlY PU.01 SC ------Money's 1Vorth Uninsured Losses OVER (ftHE COUNTER • • Tax Deductible? By SYLVIA PORTER &..,.ltflllljyt j11~1i1r Ufltfflllt II ~-ltl1 t •·•• .,... JllAJD ""'" .... lkMle "''" ., llll l'llW.. _...... ., ~ NASO Ll1llng1 for Tuo1d•y, Fobruory 22, 1972 Hg V~I( IAri1 Ct• Tte i;' • Pol »t:f..l ' .,. 'l N•tloNI k""r1ti.1 lrll It -:· With burglary now among • lbt moat pervaaive and rapid· ' DH1tr1 .\Mn,, -=~ 9.(f Ike-touflt1r ,.,., ,i:; I Treasury said he was tntitled l~~''•:;t,' r,.,,.. !.'iCT ,. to nothing, the Tax Court 1,~\~ ,•iii .,rll'"'!L r.oc,L• 1dlowed """'· ~,t,:: .. 'l ,. ~ r..•1 on -1,ti"k( " »11o 11m 1.r• • ly rising of all crimes in America, you easily may be -among the huge numbers burglarized or robbed in 1971. lf so, this column i s enormously important lo you. You know If you deduct any 1971 theft .,1 1111 .1 •114 ~!•:: Ji . •·1~nu"'' losses for which you cannot "•"~ ~ ~~ ti~ ~ ~i.JllQ provide all the proof that ls ,.1d u 1!Tr'~'l. lllii f'1~v1 ... ~~~~~~'Y;,~~ir;!ua~~~~t~ :r9 ~s'1'rit\ if"' ~i~\~'.i take heed : the Tax COurt's A~~i:f 1r'J ~ low C• record underltne1 that it will ~' 3)1" l" :r,r: "' be sympathetic to you. ~11i w i~~ 1,;: =.. ~~ that you can . .w ... n. 1\1 fV. )om .. ~. take an Item. or the three po1nl3 for pro· -.1, '"" l"' )\lo 1rrMI ,c•, I th I . •1DN Ho ''" •'fl)~ n1 I·-• t•• de-v ng a eft oss. the most 1m-.1,1ti.,11 13.,. i.1. ):omr~ ~ ..... rt t f be I A..!coi.c 11'< 11"" !°" Pu• doction for po an or you may o Alllen El 3 J\lo an Rock y 0 u r unln-prove the value or the item at :11r'\e~h" ~~ 7l1~ ~!~\~ sured 10 8 ! the time il was stolen . 1'~or in· ~1fl= ~~. 'i:Z '.!: :~ Yr1 ( I es 8 $100 stance, you may have paid : •n c~~ 'fY. 1J,tt ~:.~ ~: non-deducll . $700 for a color TV shortly zW~1110~ ,!tt 2!_.. ~';l, •,,•:, hie) but ln before the set was stolen from :!• e~'-b ,.\~i.J~ ~~.f.°b" • r d e r to you. Even if an examining Am ,1n1 ''" Jl\lo '"'• M t bel ' ,_Finl LS f l/• "' ou f:: make rour deduction stand up agen 1eve1 your set was ""' FUl'n 1s~ 1Sh O:l' IC challl!nged by the Treasury. stolen, he may allow you to ~1.F.J '~"" ~~ ~,: :j ?. you mu.st technically be able deduct only $200 an the ~ wV: ~ 1Mi ~~l~ ~'" to prove three points: (I) that grounds that thll ls all It was:=~· 1 Jlt.j!~i· ,~ .., you were In fact robbed or bur· worth as a second-hand item :r,\"'1~ ~1 .t •n,ieo1t' glarized of the particular Items when Jt wu stolen. :::w-rcr• {~ Ir; /Mt!,,r • that are missing, (2) what But last year, the Tax C-Ourt :~~ U' lt~ lf~ f~e~"'I) these Items originally cost you. came up with a new way to :~~~· sv 'I~ 1~ g 1:1;1 ':..; and (3) what they were worth decide t'1e value or household ::~c,1 s~: f.it'.: f:~1 ol:~1'?~t • y,•hen taken fram you. gooW: For purposes of figur-Re c rid 11, '"' 01.n cru al tt . " 81lrd At •'·I 5\i Ooc11!1I As a praclic ma er, you 1ng the amount cf casualty I'" Pr1•c 10 1~ 8:':;1 ~J simply may be unable to prove I f • k t t • 't '"" H~ ,..,. 17"' ~,. OhSS, 8U'I rnar e va ue IS~tl f:t~ "k' '%: j:: Ooylt J'b; any of these points -which Is t e UIUa JJTIOUnt th11-t • WI • ru~~ F m"'.I .fk !r1 0 why es:amining agents SO often fng buyer would pay I wllllng a=~r."ka 1!:! 1~ ,/~; disallow theft loss deduct Lons seller. 1t ts the original cost ,:if 1•b •i ~· ::~ 1C when they audit a return. leu depreciation. l/•d 5!, 10~"'°106 ~ L.~ But the Tax Court in '71 con-Here ls what this meant to 1•~c11~1111 ,~ ~ 1b! 1 s~1 linued to help taxpayers one · horiieowner -and could ::: f~t 121v. ,ti.':. ~ Ni:r ~ caught in this squeeie. lt mean to you • 'I' he 1~e!H 11~ ,w; i::I:''~ virtually overlooked the re-homeowner's furnllure which ,fn1i;, 90,U ,f"" i*'! In • QUtred proof Of COS\ ()f gtolen rll.I $Ca l n"" 11'\P OI ~ originally cast $56,000 was ~,.,,w!t~ ~~~ ~~ :;:~: i " items. probably because most totally destroyed. (The pro-auc-b M 1J.11> 1 ..... n1w11n h II be . . l11cke•• Hiio 14_.. p~ •~ euc items genera y come blem of determining the eunnotn 11J1 •v. 0111'1' on ' rth I Iha their· --st t f I h furn 51,., 3'~ 3l "• Tee .. wo ess n L>V • amoun o oss was t e same ,.1iws~ 21Vt u "" co Instead, it allowed a deduction as if it had been stolen). The !!~brM~I ~~ J,a ~:b ~~: !or the estj.mated value when Treasury said that as used ;:~:~ J ',"" ·~ ;~~ E stolen. And as to whether the furniture it wasn't worth more !::: ~~:,• 2l\lo 21)1 ;:~.~·· " cash and property were in fa ct than $15,000 just before the ~•Pt" .Air '"' j Fit 1os1 .,. stolen as claimed, the court fire (or theft ). The Tax Court, !. used Its own judgment. though, ruled that the correct ? CONSIDER TH ESE cases. valuation standard was that 1: ln one, an lndividual claimed A used by insurance campanies: Joss of $2,385 ro r 14 items cost less depreciation in value. ~. itolen from his home. The Under this test. the value or Treasury &1gent disallowed the the furniture when destroyed .r entire deduction apparently was the original $56,000 cost because the taxpayer couldn't less 20-25 percent, or about ~ prove they were stolen or their $43,000 vs. the IRS's $15,000. t cost or value. But the Tax This break ls available to • Caurt used Its own judgment you only if yau know your or- • and gave the individual a iginal coSI. If you don't have deduction for hall of what he the oi'iginal cost figure, how- claimed. ever, the court may accept an In another case. a taxpayer estimated cost -as insurance ! 'Claimed $1,388, the Treasury adjusters po in determining ~ allowed nothing and then the value . ..court permitted a deduction of Tomorrow: 1-fore v it a 1 11,108. ln still another situa--;:c=l=ar=lf=ic=a=ti=o=n=o=n=c=a=su=a=lt=ie=s=. =. tion, a fisherman claimed a ,. ;. $229 loss for a stolen ·'. aluminum canoe plus equip- m e n t and tackle. The COMPLETE STOCKS EVERY DAY INTHE DAILY PILOT ' Mo.wW r t4l!.tb MOTOR HOMES r • . SALES • RENTALS 11 It .•• 28 It. UTE LINER IALIOA-PACE ARROW • LOCATID ON THI HIWPOlT ,lllWAY, JUST SOUTH OF 11;;;::;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 'i: THI SANTA ANA lllllWAY.11 • • fAll THI McfADDIN TURN 01111. TUIN LEFT ON YILLAGI. WAT. 0 N > ~ lDINGI" C CHECK OUR FIRST SALE ON MICHELIN RADIAL TIRES IN SPORTS SECTION OF THIS PAPIR Would you pay an extra $5.21 per month for Full New Car Maintenance? That's all the txrra it coat "''Ith a Johnson &: Son Full MaJntenance l~RJie on any or our br~nd new 1972 Mtrcurys. Ju~t thlnk of it ... no more annoyin~ reri-1r probltfl)I .• , no more unexpected t')f:f.len~s end best of all ••• " bc1tutiful new full i;,lze Mercury Y..{a.t:qu\1 or Monterey 10 drh11! ln eblolutely perfect condition al A-II times. F1nd out !or youn1clf all the bencflU and pleuurrt thll fantastic lea~e riroiram pro ... Jd,1 on all our Llncoln- Ml'"l"CUJ"l' Product1. cau BUD BO\VEN at 5'().5630 •••• TODAY! Firm Sets Ecolog y Guidelines i Complete-New York Stock List \V......,01, ,,_, 2', 1972 SC DAlLY "LOT •JS Wednesday's Closing Pric~Compleie-New York StOck Exeliange List I ' fl DAILY PILOT WofntldQ , Ftbtulr1 U, 1972 -4 'Tribute' 52-footer In Debut Southland yachtsmen are eyeing with more that a little interest a new 52-foot sloop which was launched a few days prior to the Midwinter Regatta. The yacht Is the new Colum- bia-52 Tribute which placed second in the Class A division of the Midwinter ha\idicap racing fleet. · TONIGHT'S TV IIlGHJ,JGHTS ABC (7) 1:30 -"The Kopykats:" Comedy· variety hour with Rich Litue, Frank Gorshin, George Kirby. Raymond Burr hosts. CBS (2) 8:00 -"The Carol Burnell Show:• Miss Burnett's guest is Nanette Fabray. NBC (4) 8:00 -"Adam-12:" Four people con· tradict Officer Malloy's account and contend a policeman wa.s driving recklessly when he struck a J pedestrian. I ' KCET (28) 9:00 -''Vibrations:" Victor Borge. becomes a serious conduCtor with a performance l of Liszt's ''Rhapsodie Espagnole. '' Tribute is the first or the .... ..,.-----............... fC ........ ci1 class and will be campaigned by Balboa Yacht Club syn- dicate composed of Dick Blal· terman, Bill Lawhorn, Herb Riley and Fred MacDonald. This is the same group that campaigned the prototype of the Columbia-43 so suc- ressfully during the last two years. TV DAILY LOG , SAfLING BRAIN TRUST -Mapping strategy for campaigning lhe new Colum· bia-52 are from left: Richard Valdes, president of Columbia Yachts; Fred Mac- Donald, NHYC; Bill Lawhorn, BYC, co-skippers; Don Vaughn, ace foredeck man and winch grinder, and Kenneth Watts, sailmaker. The "52" was designed by the late Bill Tripp and built by Columbia Yachts of Costa Mesa. .J Sails for the Tribute were built by Kenneth E. Watts of Torrance. Wednesday Evening FEBRUARY 23 l:OOfJ D Cll®>OJm•m 0 t..•m lnkrtblll LA. llkers vs. HoUllon Rockeb 11 W1co, Tu. o rn m•m 1J Mtwlts: (t) (21/i:hr) "C.ailla'I Rtrtn&I" (hGrfOf) 071-Ktn.il SI· WITI, M•chikct f11k1. "Rodin" (hor· TOI) '57-Kenji S1w1r1. 0 (]) (jJ (;E AIC Comiiity H 1 ~ t ''Tht Kopykat1" R1ymond Burr 11 host. m Movlt: (90) "Vor•I' ti tht P11n1t of "•hlrlJi,c Wom1n .. (sci· ti) '66-Mtmlt Van Ooi'tn. Midwinter Regatta EI) (1J) T~ls WHk 0 CIJ Wlld Wiid West m Tiit Ftlnbt.011ts 9:00 IJ Cl) Mtdical Center Crlll StlYlllS Q) I Df1111 ol Junnlt plays 1 doctor who 1w1kens 1tl1r @ Zoo11! three y11rs in 1 cam1 i ncl l1us 1111 Lightning Paces Yachts She is equipped with Barlent sheet and halyard winches for which Don Vaughn of Newport Beach is the sales represen- tative. The "52" features a uniquely designed rudder w h i c h stretches the effective waterline a full two feet W 40 feet 4 inches. fli) Hodppodp Ltdp critical probl1ms ol !ht time ltpst. 9 M1Jbtn7 Rfl Hii ulran1ed wilt Is port1ayt11 bJ Ell) D Allo Barbara Rush. . J:JO fD (lj) Vibrltlon1 Victor Bo111 bt· The Los Angeles Yacht Club wound up Its section of the Southern California Yachting Association Midwinter Regatta Monday in light winds after the threatened fog failed to blank out the race as It did on Sunday, Winner in the Class A division of handicap ocean rac· ing was Theo Stephens's 57· foot sloop Lightning from St. Francis Yacht Club which is in Southern California to defend Its title in the Whitney Serles whi ch .gel5 under way next Saturday. Because of the fog which canceled Sunday's race, the LA YC portion or t h e Midwinters was &ettled on a two-race basis, with a number of ties resulting. Final results: OCEAN RACING A -(I) Lightning, Theo Stephens, St. FYC. (2) Tribute, Blattennan, Riley, Lawhorn, MacDonald and Holleran, BYC; ( 3 ) NewsBoy, Jack. Baillie, BYC. (3) Restless, Bob Young, LAYC; (4) Vivant, Mort Haskell, LBYC; (5) Duello, White & Rastello, LBYC. CAL-36 -(I) Whimsey JI, Hugh Rogers, LA YC; (2J Caguama, Murphy & Cabot, BYC: (3) Pleiades, R.K. Smyth, CBYC. ERJCSON-35 -(I) Aquarius, John H o 11 d a y , LB YC: (2) Donlee, D o n McFarland, SBYC; (3) Easy Rider; Paul Miller, LBYC. COLUMBIA-36 ( I ) Liebchen, Bob Helfer, HHYC; (2) Lumaran, Bill Rohrs, VYC; (3) Sjoy II , Scott Rice, WYC. RHODES-33 -(I I Mistress, Bill Taylor, BYC: (2) tie between Therapy, Gayle Post, BYC, and Fiction, BI a i r Barnett, BYC. SHIELDS -(I) Tornina, Howard Wright Jr., LAYC; (2) Dainty, Rick Evans, VYC ; (3) Katherine, Andy Marcus, Orange Coast College. KL 36--40 - ( l l Papoose, Cliff Tucker, LBYC; (2) Tortola, James Cowie, LA YC; (3) Ophelia, Rob Johns, LAYC. The yacht's driving power Us built into an extremely high- aspect ratio sailplan with a "I" measurement 63.5 feet. Boat Show 'Exhibits' Enter Race Two sleek racing powerboats directly off th e showroom floor of the recent SCM A Boat Show and three sister ships of the di.splayed speedster will be in the starting fleet Saturday for the four th annual Long Beach- Catalina Island race cruise. 0 "I'll TAKE SWEDEN" comes 1 xrioos canduclor with 1 performtnce of Liszt's "Rt11psodi1 * BOB HOPE, TUESDAY "'"""''·" WELD & DINA MERRILL !?I u C•• 0 MwM: {C) (90) "l'U Ttkt SWt-@ Tht Yi,,tnil11 tltn" (r.omtdy) '65--Bob Hope, ai.) Natacha Tuesdty Weld, Frankil Avalon, Oin1 Merrill. A wtaltby oil ttecutivt ta kn 9:30 0 CIJ@ aJ 11lt Pt I I''· d tr I his d1ughler to Sweden In order to "Nuis1nct V1lue" Dinny Wildt Is break up her romuice with a jobltsS 1ccused ol kldn1pin1 • we11!hy yoon1 man. young tlrl wllo 11 st1yln1 11 the @ m News same hotel In Spain. ®J Mavle: (C) "Btllad el Josie" 0 Ntwt Witch John rullm1r (Wostt1n) '68-Dorls Day, Pet11 tE Bill CosbJ Sllow ~v:s.dJ' Criflltll Sh 10:00 O C1J M111111x When •police officer ti) N~n ind UN P~lllllK kills I man 111lnst wllom ht wtl nri ny U known to hold I 1rud1e, !ht dep1rt• ~ n."fo "~te View ment suspends him dnpil• ilis In· m Wtndt:Jt Sis!UICI th1t !ht klllfnl WIS ftllt ~ C••n Acri• pl1nned. SIM lhn•t guests. di) Afidonldll ff II Co•unld.14 0 ~ m Nldrt Callery H In r Y .lones, Slwtlll Dirden, Brodtflck 1:00 EJ {}) B m Nnn C1awtord, Cloris Le1chm111, Lina @ Truth or to1111q11tnca Wood, Richard Thomas, Gtrtildlnt Cl) Onptt P11t. Michie! Dunn and 81iti111 O Whit's MJ Untl Steel• star in two dr~m1s •bout ro-m I LM ltcy bots m111uf1durtd to order and sin· @ I Drta• ti Junn11 11\ers hlrtd to lltlp purify !ht dtad ED History tf Art of th1l1 sins. (JThtC1NC11&1 el P'lllntl di Amor m Ntw1 Ptll Miiier, Kl:n Jona QI Fll11: (C) "Tiit M11 WM lffftl ti) Ntn CLASS B - (I) Red Rooster. John Calley, CYC; (2) Diabetical III, Marcia Campbell, CYC; (3) Altamar, Jay Jones, LAYC; (4) Blue Norther, Sullivan & Allen, LAYC; (5) Cygnus, Ernie Chipman, LBYC. Lloyd Bridges in Water Again for New Program The show room starters will be the 24-foot Pont Galore II and the 21-foot Pumper, A u t o c o a s t Marauder-built boats to be driven in the Sport and Pacific classes, respec- tively, by Autocoast President Ernie Kanzler of Costa Mesa and John Drake, Santa Ana . Drake, member of a well- known engine-building family, will be making an ocean rac- ing debut in a boat propelled by a new jet dri ve built by Drake Engineering. Wu" !ill SHI! 7:JO 6 DDctor I~ tht Hone "MIJ' the ED Muttrpltet T1111tn "Th• Mir· Bast Man ... " Diitnr Hooley end ri11e G•m•" Is tonight's 1pl!Ode cf th• 0'Elinblth R" sulu. Mlchatl Upton bKome ri'llls fol the 1fltttlons ol 1n 1ttrldivt lib tech· €D Nodlt:s T111•U:1s niciui. ail lor lnterwatlolllf CJ Thi MOltlt ftcloly Don Knotts IO:JO (I) Tiit liolddlgtrs ind resident Dlsnty d11rad11J t1k1 00 Doctor in tht HOlllt OCEAN RACING C -(I) Star, Dave Crockett, ABYC; Bettina IV, Tom Schock, NHYC; (3) Trend, J i m Linderman, BYC; (4) Quick.silver, Pa Im i er I & Gussian, WYC & PMVC; (5) Lucky Puff, Richard Fo1:1, BYC. OCEAN RACING D -(I) tnvictus, Hugh L a m s o n , LBYC; (2) Primera, Phil Morgan, NHYC; (3) Courr- terpoiot, Bill Headdon, BYC; (4) Tomahawk II, John Arens, BYC; (5) Whitecap, William Eisenberg, LA YC. -(l) Viva, Gorham WYC; (2) Flam- Barney Flam, LBYC; Lloyd Bridges is the star of a new television series devoted exclusively to boating which gets under way Saturday, March II on KHJ-TV. The series, entitled 0 LJoyd Bridges' Water World" will be shown on Saturdays from 5:30 to 6 p.m. The I 3 -w e e k non-fiction series was produced with the endorsement or the U.S. Coast Guard and the Coast Guard Auxiliary. Mercury Marine is one of the sponsors. The 13th program in the series will be one hour Jong and will consist of a film test on boating presented i n cooperation with the Coast A~apul~o List Following is the corrected time order or finish for the 11th San Diego to AcapuJco yacht race: min~M:!~ (Ericson-39) Tom Tobin, SDYC, 8d:l0hr :23 17,0:TORRANTE (Cal-12) Burke Sawyer, Nl!YC, 8:IO:. DOROTHY 0 (Columbia-57) Bob Beauchamp NHYC 8:1Ul9:1-0 ' ' NALU IV (18 ft. sloop) Peter Grant, NHYC, 8:14:00:59. ALEGRE (PJ-13) Jobn McAllister Labaina YC 8·15·· 08:03 ' ' ' . BLl'\'ZEN (Morgan.J3) Bill Corbett, SDYC, 8:17:47:46 SIGAME (Cal-36) Sid Renkow, DRYC, 8:17 :55:19 WINDWARD PASSAGE (73 fl. ketch) Mark Johnson LYC. 8: 18:4-0:00 VIXEN (Ericson·39) Frank Hope Jr .. SDYC, 8:19:22:16 TZCHAK JI (Ericson-39) Manuel Senderos AYC 8·-19:56:07 ' • . TATEI (Ericson-39) Carlos Cardenas, AYC, 8:23:27:33 SIRIUS D \83 ft . cutter) Bob Lynch, NHYC, 9:00:08 :34 BLACKFJN (76 ft. ketch) Ken DeMeuse St FYC 9:01 :15:08 • ' MELTEMJ (Santana..J'l) Bill Jonas Corinthian YC 9:01 ·36:53 ' • 2G:lf ERICUS IEri rson-11) Jobn WilUamsoo, LYC, 1:02 :· WINDST AR -(C.manch-12) Waller East, SDYC, 1:03:39:53 SA YULA (Cal-40 ) Ramon Carlin, SDYC, 9:04;.15:49 VICTOR II INZ-47) Herb Johnson, SDYC, 9:04:24:43 THEM (Redllne-IJ) James O'Hem, SDYC, 9: 10:04:58 THALIA IV (Cal-13) John Barbey, SOYC, 9:05 :47:04 IJ:JARCO DE ORO (Cal-41) Enrique Braun, AYC, 9:14 :· SALACIA (Cal-41) Joe DeMeter Richmond YC 9·14·· 31 :40 ' ' . . IEMANJA (Cal-40) Jorge Escalante AYC. 9:15:14:26 SANGRITA II (Cai.:IOI Jobn McGee SI BYC not r .. ~roed ' I ~!NY DAY (37 fl sloop) Robert Levt S.SSC, not ~RT (6:1 ft. ketch) Dorolby Radcliffe, SDYC, not STARLING Jn (51 fi. yawl) Norm R .. m. SDYC, llnlshodllllderpo-, , ' I Guard Auxiliary. The test will encompass 25 or the most fre- quently asked questions about boating· Viewers will be able to participate on test forms pro-- vided by the Coast Guard Aux- iliary and available through Mercury and Mer Cruise r dea lerships. Viewers who complete the test forms cor- rectly and send them to the CGA office for grading will reci!ive a certificate of com- petence from the auxiliary. Gold Cup Races Set The Newport Harbor Yacht Club has issued invitations for its Spring Gold CUp Regatta March 11-12. Eleven classes are listed for inside the bay star:ts and 16 on outside courses. The latter in- cludes an IOR level class. Inside starters i n c I u d e Snipe, 505, Ud0-14 A and B, Kite A and B, Adult Sabol, Flipper, Sabot A, Band C. Outside classes are IOR Level Class, ORF, Soling, Star, Rhodes-33, PC, Shfelds, Finn, PHRF, MORF, Luders- 16, Thistle, Jnternational-14, p. Cat, Flying Jr. and Endeavor. At least three S pectra :Pt1arine OOats will also race. including the 21-foot Spectra Marine Special in which Gll Gilbert of ·Beverly Hills cap- tured the 1971 L.B.-Catalina event enroute to the West Coast championship or the sponsoring Pacific Offshore Power Boat Racing Associa- tion . Some 25 boats in five classes are expected to line up for the 10: is a.m. start off Belmont Shore Pier in Long Beach Harbor. The boats will race 60 miles from Long B e a c h around Catalina Island and in- to Avalon Ha rbor Saturday for an overnight stay. A final 44-mile leg begins at 10 a.m. Sunday off Avalon with Belmont Shore the fini.!h line. 20 Million Hit Beaches LOS ANGELES (UPI) There were more than 2lJ million visits to the Los Angeles city beaches last year, according to the Depart- ment of Parks and Recreation. 1 z1nr look al physical fitnea. O Thlf Is Ttur lift Rich1rd Crenn1 (I) Tt Tell th• Trvtll is !ht s~rprisecl 1u1sl (])I DfH• ef Junnle 0 Ctndld Ct!Mll m Saltri 11 Mvlfttufl 0 Mlllloft $ Movll: (t) (2hr) "Tiit II) atorMitbd1 H•U Flftrtm'" (dr1m1) '6~John 9 Fll•: (C) "hwdtr Rim" W1y n1, Klth1rint Ross, Jim Hutton. EE TM MMe ,11111 Reuni1f1! with his daulf'ilef 1ftu many y1111, I SIJCCIU!ul oil wtll fi 11:00 IJ De (1)0 IE m """ lilftler Is distruud to ltarn 11111 00 MtfSh.11 Dilltl ah• has l11l1n Ill IM 'lritll 1notlle1 O Cil EE Nnn firt ti1h11r. 0 MM: (C) "A M111 c.llM C... m Mopn't HttHl llOll" (wtsflm) 16~TOtlJ Frtndau. ID Cil Drtrnrt • ID Tt Ttll tttt Tl1Ut !IJl S.1 Dilfl 1t ltfp CD ruhlou II Sewinr fli) TM f11nch Chtl lfi) Tiii Count If Cklr n.u fEL•ha llbn m It It Writtn Cll ""' 11:10 aJ MO"rit: "'T1lt lh1t C1nl1•1t• (1!1J$lt1Y) '5J--,t,11n1 B•J:ter. 11:15 II) f1stinl FH111k:9 1:00 8 Cl) C.rol l11mttt Burt Reynolds . and Nanette Fabrty ruesl 11:30 fJ ()) CIS Utl Ml'lll: (C) ''51111- 0 m Ad1111·l:t "Back·UJt L·20" post to Murdtl" (mJsll/Y) '64-- Four w!tnei!ts colltridlct Offiur Joanne Woodward, St~art Whitman, MartO)"s eyewitness account ind IC-£dwud Mulhe.11. Thntr~r 1bout 1 cus1 Srt. MKDona!d (William Soy-young ~ousfWtfl who ftnds h11J1lf otl) ol recklw drivin . he ld pnsoner In her own homt by 1 nr"I f2'\ 1 min wllo tias tsa1ped from t mental 0 l.ll.I l.V fiD Tiit Courtship of [d· llospitil. llllt'J fl!htf "Time IOI I Ch1nr1" ... gin:-"" ,._ I( D. Tom dead11 [ddl1 nttds more room ,... 18 ~ ntlY -11111 io ht· pltns lo buy "a fix•r·upper" Reiner ind Florence Hendern llotJu. JUl$l m...,,__ O <IJCil al•t•• ..,.. uw. m renct Wilk Is a schldultd pest Tiii Ylr(lnln m MM: "Ctutwtt fr111 ht fD QI) A Public Affalr/Dtd:ltl 72 Hllrl'ltH S.1" (xl-fi) '61--Alltholl)' El!) Nint Carborlt, Bttsy Jones M111l111d. 1:15 O u•111 w,..,.u, 12.-00 O MoM: "'TM Jllnll•" (scl·fll '5Z l!lO D gm NIC ..,.,, Tlttattt--Rod Cameron, Mtrlt Windsor. McCSaud "Glwi My Re1rets to Brotd· 1:00 (J) CJ 0 Cl)Qj Nm w1y'' A ltllow oflictr Is 'IU1d wltlle m All·Nipt Sbow: "Murder i1t th ltkll'll M•rsllll MeCloud's pltce on • .,. lirt," "'Nlpt led " DubHll" duty 11 I flWH'. Dennis We1v1r, who ind (t) "l'flt Wllltl T ... f" 1t111 as McCloud, pll)'I 1ui11r and slnp In this •rment. Miiion Btr1t 1:30 fJ Mnit: "fht lM'tt" (dr1m1) (Utsts. '46--L111in1 Day, Robert Mitchum. Clubs List Results Pttrida Morlsoil, Robtrt Lowery. ·of Valentine Race Thursday ~mME MOVIES 1:00 Cl "'limit" ( 4 r • m 1) '57-Jeff Ch•ndler. Jo•Mt DN, Julie l.otld!HI. · m '' T • I M1plfblit .... ,...... (dr1m1) '42-Jostpll Cotttn, AsJlll Results or the Valentine Regatta, co-sponsored by Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club and Lido Isle Yacht Club: L1Jl0.14A (Ill -(I) Av~ de Vant, T Mulvaney, VYC: (l l Lltlle Twitch. Ch ad Twichell. LIYC; (3) Upset, Al Perez, BYC.; (4) Karat, Ed Gold, VYC. LIOO.llB ( 17) - ( I I Swallow, tlank Wagner, NHYC; (21 No. 3587, Don Palmquist, LIYC; (3) Julie n; Fred Toepel, BYC; (4) El Cin- co, John Holcomb, BYC; (S) Fanny Soaker. Bnice Orsborn, CBYC. KITE A (!) -(I) Vortex, Bruce Twichell, VYC. KITE B (5) -(I) No . 125, . ' t:OO Gl-rM I iutor" (drl ) 'U-Mootttiuel, Annt luttr, Dalora Bill Leith, NHYC. ht O'Brlt: Robert RJ•"-mt Cost.tllo, Tim Kott. FL!fPER (4) -(I) Hullo l:JOOCCJ -.. ,.. Donl" J:GO CIJ "lt"" '°""-(4nma) ''3 Blu, Brian Carter, BCYC. (COllltlty) '50--Cllft0ll we~. Miwe ~Ill Ntwll'l111, ,.,tldt HNI, lr111- SABOT A (15) -(1) Racing Cr1h1, Mrm• l.8t'. Birt.rt BltlS. doll d1Wlld1. Mt~ DDllPL Macine Mark Gaudio NHYC · l:OOIJ_(_dl)'I.! OJ-" v .... "'"I (I ) N~. 7162, 0.vld Sigler°, -11"1 M•"'· Die> -H . .,.... ldr~!"Oi '!7--H-. SidM! BYC ; (3) Rip Up, Kurt 11 .. -(-"') 47-Mar. Schmidt. LIYC; No. 1424, Bill Bilsbrough, BCYC; (5) No. --------------------11 722%. Mark Allione, LIYC. SABOT B (8) -(I) No. 124-0, Regina Parker, NHYC; (21 Cyclone, Bruce Crary, NRYC. SABOT C (21 - (I) Little One, Donna Palmqulat, LIYC ; (2) Nova, Laura She!Jon. LIYC; (31 No. 7288, Devon Palmqulsl uYC; (4) No. 5225, Margaret Dent her, LIYC; (5) No.4317 , G1y Koll, LIYC. For Advertising in Out 'N' About Phone Norm Stanley 642-4321 NATlONAL GENERAL THEATRES FIND OUT YOURSELF WHY EVERYONE'S TALKING ABOUT· ~' G .. rte C. kttl "H05PITAL!' IG .. I At10 Ptltr 5tll<lrl hi '0THE PARTY" ••MAD• flDI EACH OTH•I" ... "OH A CLEAi OAT" "SVHO..t.Y, ILOOOT SUHOAY" tiff G•rt• s.,11 0'WMEIE'S .. O .. PA" "'1'111 fl~ll C.nn«l1911" CIJ ... "\11n1W11111 r1111r 111 --"-=r• SIAUIUM •I ,',',: GtlOrft 5111111 -111 ... rt lecUtnl "MOT llOCK0' (GP') "" ·~ ''THE THOMAS CROWN Al"FAll" £i,do NEWPORT BEACH-at tlic entrance to the fabulous lido Isle OR J·SJSO - -- --....................................... WINNER OF l GOLDEN GLOBE AW ARDS BEST FILM BEST ACTOR BEST DIRECTOR ·~c.. • .;, .. TBE FRENCH CONNECTION IN THt f!JRtAT TffADm~ CCUll 8Y DEL~ O~lltltl~.!.'!lfl~~ 5fCOND llG THlllllEI: STEVE MC9UfEN "THE THOMAS CROWN AFFAIR" ~ ..... ~ . THEATER '----..J -290S. IAST COAST HIGHWAY --~'Colt.ONA Dfl. MAil 67J·62JO ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATION GLENDA JACKSON · BEST ACTRESS I s ·MT w T F S ALSO "Where's Poppa?" H COIOR ·,,· ,. lli11!f'd ~1·11·,1· Continuous Running Show Sunday Staffing at 2:00 • KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN ( ! i ( . I • • voe. 65, NO. 46, 5 SECTIONS, 66 PAGES . • 1xon, Lagunan Held Sabotage Hinted In Arsenal Raid By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 fllt n.Hy Pllef Iliff Sabotage of public buildings entered •liiegatlons today as federal agents joined San Bernardino County Sherif['s deputies piecing together a jigsaw puzzle involving live persons and seizure of 130 pounds of stolen military eiplosives. A Huntington Beach man surrendered 2 S. Coast Men Held on Drugs; Caught by CHP Two South Coast men pursued by California highway patrolmen Tuesday night for what the officers believed to be their drunkeD driving ended up In Orange County Jail on much more serious charges. · Orange.. CA)Unty sberilra deputies took over when .CHP 0Wcer1 reported the JrtBence of marijuana .ln the cir occu. pied· by Galy James Burnette; ~ ol 2.1291 • l!ri&lflllne, Dana Poi.t ll1d ul!fY Roy Beavers, 25, of 548 Temple Hllll Drlvt, Laguna Beach. Patrolmen said they hal~ the vehicle at Paclllc CoHt Hlghway and Niguel Road In South Laguna after watching It being • driven in an erratic manner. A patrolman aaid his suspicions were arouM.d when several objects were thrown from the car Window as be and a colleague approached the vehicle. Patrobnen called in deputies after a search of the vehicle allegedly produced • areeo. leafy substance believed to be marijuana. Both men were booked on wspicion of possession of marijuana. Demolition Set Of Old Buildings On Main Beach Bids for demolition of old buildings on Laguna Beach's Main Beach will be opened Thursday, coordinator Skip Con- nor said Tuesday,' and should be ready for council approval by the March 1 council session. Demolition then would procted im- mediately, he said. Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce directors agreed Tuesday to recommend that the city install some sort of an ad- visory sign on the beachlront this sum- mer to explain the wide open spaces to visitors. "Since the park won't be developed un- til after summer, bOt the buildings will be gone," said Mirmafd! president Shirley Rowe, "there should be some ex- planation for 'il1ltor1. People Who doft't know about the 1park might think all the businesses are leaving Laguna." Tuesday, joining a Laguna Bf:ach girl ar- re.sted with three other men Monday afternoon in Fontana. &nnie D. Pender, 21; of 318 Eighth St., Huntington Beach, and Dianne Bayless, 18, of . 695 Temple Hills Drive, Laguna Beach, are among those booked into county jail on suspicion of reckless and malicious possession of explosives. San Bernardino County Sheriff's bomb squad investigators claim they •re Im. plicated in a plot to obliterate the countY civic center, sheriff's station and Font&na Police Department. Questioning of at least one among the five suspect5 led to this disclosure, ac- cqrding to Deputy Mark Winger, of the bomb squad. The FBI has entered the case, since the possibility of anti.establishment aabotage was raised and the cache of explosives dug up behind a Fontana home ls stoltn military material. .. Yea we·~. but we're no\ saying until federal agents flhlah tbtlr investigation," Deputy Winger wa. when aRed ii the · bue of Origin ts kiiown. · . ' ' 'Crlmlol •.-ulfill!l,.,dllorM J>orilei', Miss B1\r~, plnl )lobert ·G.' Christ\.Y, 20, !111'!' G. WbatlaJ, Po and Robert A. J.Nili)o, 20, aD of F ........ ,... 'to be IOllPI lhla al- San Bematdlno County Dilfrid Al· tomey Lowell E. Lathrop's ofllee was not dlCe 'to rec~ve comprebensJYe .reporta un· lil tata today and ... dectlned·comment. Tough new U:S. laws imPosed to crack down after a wave of terror.lam and boDib- b1gs peaked in 1969 could also lead to further prosecution and federal prison terms upon conviction. Ball lor de(enclanl Asemlco Is set 1t $12,500 -making · hiili the obvious key suspect -while only fl,250 bond was sit for the others. · The eJ:ploslves cache was one of the largest ever: ~i.zed ih. California, experts noted. A total of 85 pounds of powerful C4 plastic explosives u 1 e d commonly in Vietnam combat was seized, along with 15 pounds of TNT, five pounds of a sophisticated, coiled blasting compound called Data Sheet and 100 feet of detonating cord. One element investigators are probing is the relationship among the five suspect:I. "All h a d knowledge of t h e a . plosives," Deputy Winger alleged, after noting just one defendant has mentioned a sabotage plot. Miss Bayless' mother contacted the DAILY PILOT today lo declare she understood ber daughter had only brought some Roman candle fireworks back from a trip to Mexico with a boy~lend. She added that the boyfriend was ac· qualnted with ooe Of tile other defendants involved. San Bernardloo aulhortues denied that Miss Bayless, a former Laguna Beach High School otuden~ wu charged only (See llABOrAGE, P1ge Z) - ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, FEBRUA1tY 23, 1972 -' U'I Tti.MM ' . I I ' P.RESIDENT·NtXON HELPS.PREMIER CHOU·EN·LAI OFF WITH HIS CO:t.T.AS TALKS RESUME Contln'ued Cordl1flty Mllrk1 Third-Dey of Fo rm1I Dl.Cu11lon1 BtlwHo Two Powers . ' ·' • ' ' ' • • l I .' ·s3l1aptpe~.B~:~~ym.r.f·\ F }( L. E · · · · · t • or 1v,e · ,ntertammen · 'Speclel eventi at the Laguna Bea£h . Winter , Festival, for . thl> ; .•:vfll\ing and·Thursdiy'include: , . Laguna Beach plaMing comrnisaionera . Monday night agreed lo permit · tho Sanclolper Bar, l!83 s. Coast Highway1 to . provide live entertainmf;llt three day1 a . lreek,...from 9 pim. to 1 a.m .. on ·a aix- month trlal basts. . 1 , Two . property owners prof:.ested the ,change from jukeboJ: music to live com· bos, but owner Jeah Harrell presented a petition from othen supportiJ1& the ~npit, ' Commissioners decided a six.month permit would provide 'an opportunity to test the noise factor during most of the busy rummer season, after w,hicb the case will be reviewed. In the absence of chairman Carl Jobn9on and , ·commissioner Ro g e r Lanphear, no major action was taken by the commsision Monday. A varlBnce application to replace a nonconfonning seawall at a higher eleva- tion and build a deck over sand between the seawall and a dwelling at 2859-61 Ward's Terrace was continued to permit the commissioners to inspect the area. Ex-State Senator Dies MAXWELL (UPI) -Masonic services were to be held today at Maxwell ~etery for former state Sen. Louis George Sutton.· Sutton died Sunday Jn a Colusa hospital. He was 88. A former Colusa'County supervisor, be served in the Senate from 1944 tq 19Sll, ' . '/ Other properties, tlley were tot(, mlaht · aeek, simU8r v~lanc.e.s. to ~pe ,with a l!l!lghbot'hood problem wllh ildeSI · . After . lengthy dlsctl&sion: J. a m e 1 · Baldwin fan.a to pe/sua~o the com· · misSion to author lie wider uses for ' a bililding l\e plan's to construct· at 100 Cah- yon Acres Drive ln the Ml·A zone. The ct>mmission approved lils 'sitt plan review but coqlJ)lied wit~ the advlCe;Of the cfty attorney to adhere to the pre~nt zone use restrictions. · Propooed discussion of the sign pro- gram at the Standard OU service' station 604 S. Coast Highway, was , continued to March 6 when the applicant failed to a~ pear. Alao continued to the MarCh mfeUng was the commission'• second public hearing on amendments to the zon· ing ordinance to provide for citywide design review . Ex·I.:aguna Aide ~Gets LompQC Job .8:30 ,o'clocl< ,ton~t -·we~· t tatlon of1 "Teahpuse of the Au~l · Moon" at the · Laguna Moulton · · Ptayhouae. The play \,111 be · perfof111ed again Thursday nl&hl. ' 1;3o p.m. ThUrsdiy -travelogue with •1lldes or MexlcO narfated by travelers Henry and Flora Bass, In the Festival Forum Theater at the ·Festival Grpunds. 3 p.m. -travelogue with illdes showing the evolution of Laguna Beach over the past decade1 ; nar-- rated by Robert Turner. Tustin Trustee Blasts 'Birch' Stance of Pair By JACK BROBACK Of Ille n.lly ~Ii.I Stiff Earl H. carraway, a new member of the Board of Trustees of the Tustin Union ~·onner Laguna Beach associate plan. HJgh School District, Tuesday condemned ner AJ Autry, who left the.cltf aUjrf Feb. the president and vice presideni of the 1 to accept a planning posltlon·with the · board for "ualng the dl!trld' board to city of Costa Mess, is moving on ·to further John Birch Party (society) tac. become director of community develop-tics." ment for the city of Lompoc, 50 miles carraway sent along a motion' he ~ north of Santa Barbara. r· - Autry, who Is In Laguna Beach this poses to pre.sent at t!le · ne1t board week to help finalize some or the govern. meeting Monday night censoring Board Vice Mayor Charlton Boyd noted that owners of the beacbfront Standard OU L F • al A k Station not ontr had removed the In:,.< · aguna est1v ·rtwor· 1tallatlon at their own expense, but also , , ment grant projects he was working on Preaident Paul Cllhoun and Vk:e Preai· for the city, said Tuesday he was m. dent Robert Bartholmew for u1ntroduc· tervlewed some time ago for the top Ing a bl·partisan resolution to a legaUy I.om-plannina 1V\St but did not receive cof1S1,ituted non-partisan governing will replace curbs and gutters at no cost to the city. 11ThiJ is cooperation beyond need," Boyd commented. Laguna's Goal I ·stop Service "One-stop service" for lbe public ls the goal of a major moving operation now under way at Laguna's city ball. The front pirt of the building,.says City Manager Larry Rose, wlll become 1 Public Services Operations Center, set up to strtamllne all requests from the public for city ~l~s and make aure that ·~ plkanta at!""channeled to all the right departmenta. The city clerk'• ornc. will be, moved forward to a more acct11lble loc1t1Qn, he uld, and ~Is own office already haa been moved to quarters formerly used "1 the Public Works Department. Abo Jn the offing, ll apace permit•, ls oUico space e1pectally clt1fgn1ted for use of lbe mayor incl city <OUncllman, who formerlJ 1blrtd lht city maoqe•a of· flcu. • I r-0 ,... board." · word of his acceptance until after he had · started working in Costa Me1a. The tniatte, an El Toro ·mortgage The cl banker, Curther moves that the motion of :n.year-ol planner will move to the nre.sident and. vice presld•nt ''be Lompoc March I to head the combined •· ' 1 planning and bulldina departments In the · ·stricken from tile record for'aU time.' city of 25,500. Carrawa7's stat~e11t takts latue with Cf urying Slated March 11 Artists and craftsmen who have been r<aiclents of Laguns Beach for the past ye.ar and are Interested In elhibltlng In the 1m Fesllval or Aris may oubmlt three of their -kl for jurying 1( Irvine Bowl on Saiurda,y, Mm:h 11, between 7 a.m. and 10 a.m. T A.KE AN 'AX' TO YOUR TAX 'Thia II the Uflle of y .. r DAILY P1L01' fin1nclal columnist Syl•la Porter puta tbe · 1111" in lnCI.' First of a aeries of nine column• on ho* lo find the lqal comers to cul when flllng yOUr -tu appeared In '.l'ueecl1y'1 edlUon1. Tbe HCODcl column la Jnslcle IOday on P11e 13. It couJd AVI you ..... , lo clip Incl Ave all nine column•. Jury)ng will taJce place between IO a.m. • 'l'llslJn board relOlutlon (that was and 3. p.m. and all worka submitted must defeated ) condemning the Orange County be picked up by 5 p.m~ on the same day. M' d p Grand JW')' report recommending aboU· Grounds manager Mo~ens Abel stales the 'JXe rogram !Ion of the Orange County ·~trntnt of Festival will not be responsible for any Education. art works left •t the Bowl after that For Men's Quh Cmaway, In • release lo the pr ... , lime. encloeed. a copy of the re10lutlor, which Artllio who may 1pply for jurying are WH voted down :i.i at the last TuHSO 1'-who did not apply last year, thoae ' 1'he. pl'Olfam at:~ LaSUJ1• Beach board mieltng, Feb. H. , " · · who 1pplled but were ,,.i accepted and M•n'•· Olub meetlni Mohclay wllV lncllide The lr1te tM~ otates. For loo long thole who were groun<fs exhibitors but 1 weir knoWn mualtlan llnglng Jrloh . no,., the·John Birch Porty 11¥,uaed~s were uked to re.aubmit. for the 1972 ballact,s ind a Sipu\her.n californla Edi¥>n ·o~!ice and ,olhera as a platform for~ thtlr seuon. . , Complny oUJcilJ taWna iliqul t&e year · own br~ of pollU'i"• They1hav• lniul(ed Only lrtilta wbo have resided In . 2000 , • . lhe U.S: J'resldtn!, ll)ey have clearaded Lqune Beach for.a full y•ar prior lo Iha • • · 11'1 cooslitlltlonel offlee of the Pralden~ opentnc date of tho Festlv1I, Jiily 14, 1ro Tbe mteUfll will be beld 1l l :30 p.n\., at a;;! lflth1f senle, tlie ~ohn Birch Party ii eligible to 1pply. tbe WotqaJ>'t Club Hou!!, i6I St· Ann'• undm\ilning the ColisitiuUon of lht Arllsla wbo wlah lo 1pply In more than Drive. · United Stales. -medium sbouJd 111bmlt thr'" woru In Singer Pitrlct Sulll•1n Burke wut be ''Tiie aid party 11 eettnc 1w1y 1t our each, Atiel uld, foll01led by John M. Kennedy, Who Will tabllabed American tr1ditlohs and ln- Jlll'Ql'I !or the 1'12 IJ))Oncls e1hiblt m predld. the chanae1 In llvtnc pattern& llltutlolll lbe Ame way our enemies do.•· Armen Gtspartao. WWlam Motta, Joyco Amorlcani wlll make Jn, tho next thr,. Cm1w1y continues his charge: "I am Clark, Leslie DeMflle, Dix! Hall, Jacquie detacles becal!se ol !ld\>encinl lechnol"ll'. a conserv1Uve. l beU.ve In lncllyldull Mollett 1nd Mia Krants. Alternlles 1rt Rtlrllhmtnta will be served followln& rlpta, flu ente.,,rue. otates rlabla prop. Romeo Reyoa and llar)lalla ll'llTOll. llie prognm. (Seo CENSOR, P•&• f) ' t I N.Y. Stoekll •• ml CENTS e? Agreements Reported In Talk s By HELEN TllOMAB PEKING (UPI) -Preslderlt Nixon and Premier Chou En.lat were belleved today to have agreed upon 1 broad exchange...of students, scholars and newsmen bet<f"een their countries end were discussing a far- reaching declaratlon ol peaceful coex· tstence, Thb was reported by resident weatem cllplomall In Peking follo)lljng 1 meeUnc of more than four hours between tho leaders at NIIon11 luJ:urious lakea:lde guest house, dubbed temporarily i•the Peking White House.'' Another conference ll sel for Thursday. The meeting started with a hint from Chou that American newsmen ac· companying Nixon may be tnvlf.td to stay behind when the Presldent leaves ln five days. UPf DlplomaUc Corr~spondent Stewart l{cnsley also said an agreement on some form of diplomatic ' contact -abort of formal diplomatic recognition -wa1 belleved to have been nailed down at the meeUng, The Chou-Nlxpn talks , by prea .. rangement of the two governm~n~t are kept ln utmo1t secrecy. No ofliCltl an.- nouncementl on what hu been cilscuue4 will be 11\lcl• untU tl>e talks end. • But Honalq llld lht lodlcMlim 1rt -lhll Ille ll10lllJlll! 111Umli.11 WOUid' end with I Ianclmart declaration ot peaceful --wldcb eoukl hive 1 major effect on Mll'lnd the world. ' And It waa asau med that Secrel1ry ol State William P. Roln In hla talks with Chinese Foreign Mlnillter Chi Peng-tel might be working out the specific detalls of ' Sino-American e1change agreements and the manner o! establl!htng continuing contact> short of diplomatic relations • Ofllclals warned a1!ln1t wumlng each country would e1ta bli8h a trade mluion in the other. They aald It wu more llkely that the continuing contacts would be ael up in Ctnada, or aome other third coun-- try. Both parties appeared In high splrlll and satlafled with lhtlr progrw when Chou drove through 1 1nowfall -lhe lint foul weather 11nce Nb:on't arrival Moo-- day -to call on the President. Prevlou• meeting• had been held al a alte selected by Chou -the ornate Great Hall of tile People. No llgnlllcance wu altached lo the changa In site. Mrs. NIIon, meaawhlle, was assuming the rote of her husband's 1mf)u11dor to China's 8\)0 mllllon people. Ignoring the snow and the cold, !he gamely trotted along dusty yellow dirt roads on a tour of a coinmune west of Peking where 41,000 peasanta Uve and farin, The First Lady, wt1pped In· 1 far-llntd coal, visited a pig farm, 1 primary"-. the medical cUnJc, a hot hOUJe and a general store. On Thursday, the NIXOlll Pl'Obably will make their long llllllc:lpated trip norih of Peking to viii! the Great Wall of China, a l,!00-ntlle barrieade' built about the 411) Century B.C. lo keep foreign lnv1dtra out. Today '• talks brollght to nine hours tile time spent by Nixon and Chou In formal CS.. NIXON, l'11e I) Weatller You probably woa't ,.. much ol the sun on Thun(lay, tither, ac. cording lo the -therlsdy, Low' cloudJ and fog will take up moot of the day. Highs of 13 to 7S ire predicted. Lows Jn the mld-40'1. INSmE TODAY . For • flsl of the wccklfl<l'1 livt thcottr attracclon.r o,.d a: look at &ht' top 01car nomlMt•, ••• todau'• tnllrtalnmtnl l"'O• -Z7. LB Air Guard Head Faces :Fund Rap WASilDIG'l'ON (AP) -A federal ll'IDd jury hu lndJcted the commander ol lhe Alabama Air National Guard on a ~ ol conspiring to Illegally oollcll a:ioo 'ID poUUcal contributlona from Air , Guin! olllcen for ca"<lldltu In the 11'10 l Alabam1 election, the Jllltlce Deparlo • • ment aJlJlOllDCOd lodly. on. of the umpolcna Involved, the deparlmeol aald, wu thlt ol George C. Walllce, the governor ol Alabama. Ally. Gen. Jolln N. Mllchell sald the •lnile count lndlctmeot waa returned fo. cla1 lo U.S. Dl.oltlcl Court In Moolgomery, Ala., again51 M1j. Gen. George Reed Doster. 'lbree of Doster'• subordinate.a also were Indicted ind were ldenutled a.s Olla. Hwy Fllllnglm Jr, and JllllOI E. ,Hordwlck and Lt. COi. Allred B, Gurley. Named u un1ndicted co-consplrators were Air Guard Coll. Lawrence >.. Doyle, William P. Baker, Wlllle L. Whitman Jr., Edword D. Gilmer and Maj. Lonnie J. SlaU10n Jr. Tho lndlctmmt chlr&ed that the de!en· dantl complred, beginning In lllarcb 11'10, to coerce other Air Guord olllcen to ...,. trUJute fl,'100 lo Walllce'a campa!Ju; •t,000 to former eovernor Albert Brewer, a candldl:te for aovernor .In 19'10i f400 to Hugh Morrow m, a candld1te for lieutenant governor, and 1100 lo Slate Sm. Leland Cbilda, who waa not running forrwlectkn. Tho Indictment llld that, u a part of the conspiracy, the defendanll uaed government faclllUH to aollclt the poUUcal conlrtbuUIJ!ll and threatened to doWllll'Ode cerWn Air Guard ol!Jcera 1f tlley fa1led lo contrtbute. The tndlclment quoted Doller u telling an Air Guin! mojor, William I!. Beddow Jr., that If he w11 Interviewed by the FBI Beddow could chose one of three counes of action: 11blow your bra1m out; turn state'• ,evidence or lie if interviewed." Tho .fodlctment oak! Doeter auggested Beddow foIIDw the third alternaUve. The lndldment also alleged !hit Doeter directed Gurley lo undertake I he- l)'slemaUc aollcltaUon of pollllcal c:oo- lrlbotlool. Intemational Dinner Planned At Victor Hugo The lnlA!maUonal gourmet dinner, an event thlt bu become a tr1dlUOn of the Loguna Buch Winter Feotlval, will be held beginning at 7 p.m. Tueaday. Tho evening ol fine food , will be launched with hors d'oeuvrea from aeven different rutauranta, mual.c and wine at a recepllon at the Llguna Beach Art Gallery, ll1I Clll! Drive. The consu1a general from several foreign countries ' will be pruent at the r<e<ption. Al I p.m. a dinner of 20 Hema will be oerved at the Victor Hugo Inn nm door to the art gallery. The meal will Include CUlaomme Capri, dam• de uumon Man- tua, Fleuran, aalade de Florlde, aupreme de Yolaille, upergea, sauce bollandai!ie • aud·coupo Monl!Jl<>roncy. ~ The m..i w!U. ho prep11ed under the · direction of 8wtu cheH Einle Spinier. : ReaeivaUoM are neotuary for the ( ~ eve11t aa II!ace will be limited lo the '• : capoclty of 'the reatauran\. Tlckell are • •• i · fU per penon aJld moy be obtained from .; . • lhe Lquna Beach Chamber ol Com- ' · Dlfrce al 205 N. Coa.l\lll&hway or at the ! · travel aiency In the lobby of the Hotel I J:.oiuna, 425 S. Coa.11 Highway, . ; ' . ' .. OMfflco.\IT DAILY PILOT -----•• ,..,. "· w ... ---J••• a. c.rt., --~-......... n-:i:•l'fll """"'' A. ... ,.,.., ... MarlltirW ldl191' Qoil• H. '-,,,\,,. r. Holl 1a111111 ...._ ~non L1191--ZIZ ,_... An1vt Mllllt -"'"'1 r.o. 1 .. '"· t26St S. Cl111111 Office 111-II c:..!11 lo.S. tZln -----~-=._,., ...,..,., ~& ... Wt ,_., ~!!..~ ==-'tr;f§ ~,. ......... .., ,:=. ~ "':::. ._., :...=.~--­··--"R'=L .... • POETRY, MUSIC AND PICNIC SUPPER AT ONE SESSION Slnger.gultorill Alicia Cory Wiii Be Futurod on Progrom Poetry Bash Festival Set in Laguna Church Twenty-four Laguna Beach poets will read selectlon1 from thelr recent wrlUngs at a poetry fesllval Thursday evening from 8 o'clock lo midnight at St, Mary's Episcopal Church, 428 Park Ave. Singer- guitarist Alicia Cory also will be featured. Presented by the Llguna Beach Free Cllnlc and the Volunteer Post, the pro- gram ls a benefit for the Free Clinlc's drug abuse program, the Volunteer Post and the newly founded Llguna Beach Free Poets, according to producer Pblllp Hackett. A picnic supper will be served by S.th Leeds and a one-dollar donaUon will be accepted. Tickets are available at tbe Volunteer Pos~ the Free Clinic, the high school activities office and atores throughout the community. Hackett said the new poets' group now metts regularly on Sundays from 4 to e p.m. at the Volunteer Po1t, 334 Forest Ave. and the public ls invlttd to attend the impromptu readings. Alien Smuggling Suspects EscapeN ear Nixon's Home By JOHN VALTEil:!A Of #M Dall)' '"''-' fl ... A suspected alien smuggler believed enned with a pistol and his oompanion ·remained at large early to4ay. after fleeing on foot from ·Border Patrolmen who had olopped them within olght of the Western White House before dawn. The pair's human cargo, however, will be shipped back to Mexico. Five Mexican nationals were found in the trunk of the car after the pair of smugglers flee!. Advanced Paint Class Offered By Art School A new advanced painting Class entitled 11Paintlng Now .. will be offered by the Laguna Beach School or Art when ~he spring quarter commences on March 27. Instructor Ray Jacob will present stu4 dent projects providing practical ex4 perience in handling mi:r:ed media, ad4 vanced problems in composition, color and variation in painting techniques. Jacob. who last year conducted a color and design class at the Laguna school, is a graduate of Choulnard Art Institute and bas been an architectural graphic designer and muralist for the past 18 y,ears. The Laguna Beach School of Alt, now in it.s 10th year, is a non-profit organiia- llon, approved by the CalUomJa Deport· ment of Education and the Veterans' AdmlnJstraUon. Classes are llmJted to small groups for lndlvldual Instruction and registration now ls open for the 11prlng quarter. Further information and brochure Jbtlng all courses may be obtained at the schoOI, 830 Laguna Canyon Road, or by calling 494-1520. Patrol CApL Gene Harris 1a!d the Jn. cldent began when t!le two men drove up to the check point soµth of San Clemente and officers asked the men to ..open the trunk of their car. Instead, the pair fled northbound with patrolmen in pursuit. Officers finally manag.ed to pull the speeding car over into the median strip wlthln sight of the Presidential compleL At that point, Harris said, the driver flashed a star.ghaped badge aimllar to those available on mail order. He said he was a "private ln-- ve.stigator" and then made of!icera aware of a snub-nosed revolver he wu car· rying. But before the olficen could take the pair inlo custody the two men darted Into nearby brush after tunning across several freeway lanes. • "We looked awlully hard, hUt they got away," Harris said. Patrolmen then looked lnlo the trunk ol ' the car alid found five men crammed in· Side like sardines in a tin. The alien! will be de)lotted lo their native country. ' , · Presumably the lee5 they paid tq be smuggled north are Still with the smug· glers. · Security officials at the Western White House, Camp Pendleton and local police all w1re alerted after the·eacape, reports said. The suspect with the badge and eun was wearing a white shirt and dark pant.. The only description avallable on his partner was that be wore hi! brown hair long. .. The pursuit was the second cha,. by patrolmen at the checkpoint In a week. Early laJt week ao Orange man used a series or compUcated ruses to 'eventually steal a Border Patrol car then Jped north al speeds exceeding 100 miles per hour. At almost • the same location u this morning 11· incident, tbe man/lowed the car into a bridge abutment an was killed lnstantjy, -HlghWaY patrol lnvestlgator1 have 11,ld they a t 111 have not detennined the reasons for that bl!arre incident. Two Charges Dismissed Against Talent Agency misaloner. • ... ''"'*"' m4J MJ.4m amtw Mtatkl 1 MM&ll leC' IFPsAllQt I a ''"'' ••• 4,;....,. ~ ........ ,.,,,n I tstet•.,...,... 5 - - -..... ,, .. ,, ... .......................... An Orange COunjy Superior Court judge bu dismissed grand theft and conspiracy <har&t• filed against lour prlnclpala ol the now defunct 11Take One'' talent agen- cy and ordered the four men to lace trial March 21 on the rtmalnlng ch1r1es of vlolaUona Of the state'• corporations code. Judge WUl!am Murray "t the trial dale for Orange attorney Richard Mur. pby, 41, brothers Jerry, 12, of Santa Ana, . 'and Don Heu, 40, of Garden Grove. and &bert McGlrinb 18, of Santa Ana. , All four wer* Indicted by the Orange They had wlter ~ named In 1 civil acUon brought· by the •tale and the dlllrlcl 1ttomey'i office In which II was alleged by Deputy Dblrlcl Attorney W a It e r Matthews that they t o o t thouHnd1 of dolS.rl from pareota 1eeldhg what be claimed were nonezlsteot movie and lelevlsloo jobs for their cl!lldrea. M.atthew1, who 1utborlud the clvU ao-' tlon against lhe four defendanll, 11ld lhe ......, trlll• .. ll XI• MNllt -··==--... ...... .... Ul:":!f.S.~ Coont1 Grand Jury following a11es1Uon1 that they aold on estimated 111 ,000 worth of •tock In "Take One" to agenq · · mployees wllbwt lirsL realsterlnl the •tock with tho 1tale'1 corporallonJ com· I "Take One" ~oup sold, "public rol1Uons contracfs'' to parent. lntereated In plao- lng their children !or JDOYle and 'FV liott. He said adults seekfii( th( 11J11e work were charged 1985. ( Psych40 A 'Must' At School Pl)'cbology 40 11 mony thlnp io many 1tudenta at S.dcneback Community College. ·For some the course oilers study metboda. othera learn hbw lo uae the library. Many ,recei~e guidance In . determining their 1cademlc and oc- cupaUonal interests. 'I11e course II required of all Incoming Saddleback lreJJuneii and Is taught by the college counseJora twice weekly for one quarter. Wllllam Kelly, coordinator of couMel- lng and student affair&, sald !hit Jn. coming students need lhll "5lll'Vlval Jn. formation" so they can be more l\IC'o cessful whlle in school. For instance, sald Kelly, mony lludents don't reallze the ·Importance ol their grade point average (GPA) and bow It can affect acceptance at higher learning ln>Ututlon>. other studenta, he added, are ad- mlnl!tered reading lull lo determine strengtha ond sbortcomlnp and moy be recommended to take 1 apecla1 reading course. Testa to determine academic and oc- cupaUonal anas of interest are alao ad· mlnbtered and the llludeol encouraged lo pursue hll leanlngs, said Kelly. llealdes m .. tlng with the counselors In the Psych 40 course, students are en- couraged to 11ee them at Jeut one time per quarter on a one-to-one ba!is, From Pqe l NIXON ••. busine11 aesslou. In addlUon, NS.On held a rare hour-long senlon with Chairman Mio Tae-lun(, the aging philosopher ol the Manlll mcve- mtnt who Jeana heavily on Chou to mU:e mDll declalona. · Western dlplomots In Peking are con- vinced that lhla unuaual display of good feeling between countrtea which have been aotagolliata for two decadea II bound to be followed by oome fonn of declaration. It could pledge them, despite their pro- found dtfferences In ldeologlea, social ayatema and political poalllons, -to work together lo ellmlnate points of conllicl In A>la. Laguna Chamber Okays f.o~itee ) The Llguna Beach Chamber of Com- merce board of directors Tuesday ap. proved a five-member nominating com4 mittee to present a slate of new directors (or the forthcoming Chamber election. Six vacancies on the board will be filled In balloUng In approximately si. weeks. Membera of the nominating committee, who later will present a tlatli of new of. flcers u well, are current pre!ldent Roy Marcom, Lloyd Sellaet, MlH Lorna Mills, Lorry Campbell and William McCre1dy. New chamber officers are instilled at an annual dinner preceding the preview presentaUon ol the Pageant of tbe Masten 1D July. Songster Dies at 33 SAN DIEGO (AP) -Mlllord Delbert Woods Jr., 33, a 10J11Wrlter and former member of the New Chrllty Mlnstrela, was buried at Mount Hope Cemetery Tueaday lo the tune of one of hll own compositions -11Peace of Mind." Woods died Thursday at the hi>me of a frtend In Los Angelea. GEM TALK , TODAY by • BEFORE YOU BUY A DIAMOND The purchase of a diamond as an engagement riDI or a •peclal gift of love ii 111ually a on•Um• occasion in every man's life. Because thlJ purchase Involves deep meaning u wall u a 1lgn1!1· cant Investment, you will want 14 buy wisely and with a pride of pur- chase which wlll last a lifetime. There are definite ltandardt for the prlclng of diamonds, and · four definite factors In determination of value. Cutting, color clarity and carat weight are the lour measures of a diamond'• value. Each of these factors require complete under- stendfng by the buyer before an lntelllgant purc:1ase cill !>t made. We would appreciate an oppor- tunity to explain each of these lac- 14n 14 you pers011ally, So when you have the ,Ume, come on Iii and see 111. No matter wnat or where you eventually buy, we ,al:~• hi.ve the time 14 help you • the rlaht c:holce. l\'ete Crop Due Sen. Willlalll Proxmire (D- Wis.), who recently appeared with two black eyes -later alleged to be caused by a face- lift -appeared at a commit· tee meetlllg toda;r swathed in bandages. Proxnure said he is in the process of getting a hair transplant. Supervisors Eye Hiring Standard For Ex-convicts Orange County supervisors are stud- ying a proposal lo soften county hking standards for ex-convicts. William !fort, ccunty personnel direc- tor 1 told board members Tueaday that he would lllce lo ellmlnate restrictions In hlr· ing practices. He said complaints bad been received from men with records who aald they had been turned down for county jobs, supervisor David L. Baker ol Garden Grove asked for a t\fo..week delay to study the propoaed changes. "Some things in th.La plan I can't sup- port and others are good," Baker said. "I think we abould take more time lo study it." Boord _ members voted to delay the decision unw lllarcb 7. "Arrest records remain in a person's file even though be may not have hem convicted/' said Board Chairman Ronald ea.pen o! Newport Beach. "Disposition of chlr&eo II oot ahowo and I think this ahould be changed ... Three complaint& have been recently filed with the county Human Belau ... COmmlaaloo, Hart oak!, by ex-convicts who aald they had been turned do!'! Jor employment because of pa.t recorda: one aald he had offered to wort iJi the probation department without pay hut was told that record check! are run on volunteers as well as paid employes and that persona with 11Teot records are not eligible for employment. Light Quake Hits Southland TORRANCE .(UPI) -A Ught earthquake was felt in communiUea south of santa Monica Bay today at 6:43 a.m. The tremor regl1tered 2.0 on the Richter scale, accordlnf to a spokesman at the Call ornla lnstitute of Technolo1y seismological laboratory. No damage w11 reported, Numeroua resldenll phcned poUce to report the tremor which seemed to be centered on the Inglewood fault. • Frotn p_,e l CENSOR ••• erty rights and the BepubllWI form ol government." TM~ coocludol with, "t for one ha" had lllOUih ol tho Jolm Birch Party tactics." · The resolution 4ef11ted Feb. II whicb bas raised CarrawaY'a Ire states: Thi Orange County (\rand Jury (!I'll) has 1urreptltlo111ly aod with<iut complete inve.sUgaUon or Information recom- mended reducUon of expenditures and staff of the Department ol Education (county) and the Grand Jury bas recom· ~eel that the County Board ol SUpervllort withhold county f\lnd1 from th• departmeot. "And the unfair, bla'!ld and ,Jn. consequential study ol the Department ol Education allegedly conducted by lh• Grand Jury l5, in certain respects, without basis in fact, totally Incomplete and therefore of no real value ••• " The defeated reJoluUon states that the duties and services or the Department of EducaUon should best be evaluatad bY. the school dlltrtcts of the county. The punchline reads, "the Board ol Tl'll>teeJ of the Tustin Union lllgh llchool District hereby condemns the Grand Jury for Its preclpltous and lrresPCillSible action and respectfully 11uggest1 a prop- erly constituted study Of the services of the department berore ncomm.tnding any changes or discootinuance or 1ervices." Carraway and trustees Chester Brlner, of Mission Viejo, and Dickran Borenlan of Tustin, voUd against the proposed resolutlon. Calhoun and Bartholmew bo"l Uve In the Tustin area. · Of the five Tustin trusteea, Dilly Bartholomew admits to membenhlp in the John Birch Society 1 I tho u g h observers note Cllboun. the trustees' president, frequently joins in 1taods: taken by Bartholomew. The resolution substantially agrees with statements by CCIWltY Superinten- dent of Schools Dr. Robert Peterson and the County Board of Education condemn. ing the Grand Jury report From Pqe l SABOTAGE. •• with misdemeanor possession or illegal fireworks. She and all suspects except Ponder were arruted near the bowe where deputies dug up the underground et· plosives cache Monday. Disappearance of military uplosivu in the San Bernardlno County area baa been under lnvesUgatlon for m months, AulhorlUea aald. The current c.ase was broken when depoUea miking a routine traffic .. p apotted what appeared lo be explosives In the rear or the veb1cle code vlolator11 car. Trailing it on to Ill deltlnatlon, a "erch warrant wu oblelned to check the premises1 leading to discovery of the cache. Fontana Police Chief Joseph Uhalley said today his department had no know! .. edge of the alleged e:r:ploslves plot prior .to the caae broken by aherllf'• dfll\IUes. He described the alleged clvtc cooler target as rather a large buUdlq:, a one- atory complea Including the clly hall atall and the 40-member police faclllty. "The she.riff's station ls located at the rear, facing on another block/' he et· plained. Chle! Uhaliey estimated 1 maximum of 100 employea start the three-ageticy faclllly serving the 1uburban lndualrlll community eo mDes southeast ol Loi Angeles. Rocks Halt Traffic MALIBU (UPI) -A mountain rocltillde forced the cloalnf early loday ol Encinal Road north o the Pacific Coaot Highway near Malibu, olflclal1 aald. The 1llde cau1ed no reported m.. jurlos or property damoge. A sp•clel remembrance from every member ot the f1mlly wijh from 114 9 GENUINE Birthston11 . 1raceluliy set In 14 Kt. white or yellow 1okl from $29.50" I 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVINllN1 lllMS IANKAMlllCAID-MASTU CHAl&I 14 llAIU IH IAMI l.OCATIOH PHONt t044GI • ...... ------..------- Saddlehae.k VOL 65, NO. ~. 5 SECTIONS, 66 PAGES Trustees Give By JAN EDWARDS Of ""• Dally l"lltf Slaff The , controversial Planning Program Budget System (PPBS) got poor marks at a Tustin Union High School District board ·meeting Tuesday night. Trustees called a special meeting to learn more about it and some members of the board and audience concluded by expressing fear that the system whi ch tl'le state is pushing ' actually means greater state control. "I am not meaning to be deviouJ," aaid board President Paul F. Calhoun about Lagunan Held the system's control, 1'J'd like to think It is Joca1, but It lm't." · Calhoun and board Vice President Robert C. Bartboloinew several times had to postpone discussion on .audience objections 8.nd questions for subsequent board meetings where the system will be discussed. · . Representatives of the state's coo.suit· ing firm, Peale, Marwick and Mitchell of Santa Ana. explain«! PPBS. And Robe.rt Thomas, an adminiatrator from the Fallbrook School Dbtr!ct which Sabotage Hinted In Arsenal· Raid By ARTHUll R. VINSEL Of tll• O.llJ ...... , ll•ff Sabotage of public buildings entered allegations today as federal agents joined San Bernardino County Sheriff'• deputies piecing together a jipaw ""'* lnvolvtng five persorni and seizqre or bl) pounds of at.oleo military eiplOliv-. A Huntington Beach man surrendered Tutsday, joining a Lacuna Beach girl ar- rested with three other men Monday afternoon in Fontana. Ronnie D. Ponder, 21, of 318 Eighth St., Huntington Beach, and Dianne Bayless, 18, of 695 Temple Hills Drive, Laguna Beach, are among those booked into county jail on suspicion of reckles! and malicious possession of explosives. San Bernardino County Sheriff's bomb squad investigators claim they are im- plicated in a ,Plot to obliterate the county civic center, Sherrff's station and Fontana Pollet Department. Questioning of at least one among the five suspects Jed to this disclosure, ac- cording to Deputy Mark Winger, of the bomb squad. The FBI has entered the case, since the possibility of anti-establishment sabotage was raised and the cache of explosives dug up behind a Fontana home is stolen military material. "Yes we do, but we're not saying until federal agents finish their investigation," Deputy Winger said when asked if the base of origin is known. Crimin! co mplaints charging Ponder, Miss Bayless, plus Robert G. Christley, Church Loses • $100 to Thief A thief who used the hymn-singing of a Lutheran churc)l congregation a s background music for bis safe breaking exploits is being bunted today by Orange County sheriff's officen. Deputies said the Intruder forced his way into the rear office of the Mount of Olive Lutheran Olurch, 24712 Chrlsanta, Mission Viejo during the SUnday morning service, broke open the sale and left with $100 In small bills. "lt was a lousy thing to do," com. mented an investigator. "If we find him we'll throw the book at hhp." Drapery Talk Slated "Drapery Fabrics, Their SelecUon and Care" is the topic for a meeting of the Irvine Division of the COnsi;mer Panel of America at 12:30 p.m. Monday in University community A s so c l a t I o n clubhouse, 4530 Sandburg Way, Irvine. The public Is Invited. TA.KE AN 'AX' TO YOUR TAX Tllls Is the tlml of year DW. Y PILOT financial columnist Sylvia Porter puts the "ax,. In taxea. First of a series of nine columns (In how to find the legal com..-• to cut when filing your Income taix~ appeared In Tue.sday's editions. The s<cond column Is lnslile tod~ m Page 23. , lt could save you money to clip and save all nine columns. ' ' 20, Gary G. WhJUey, 23, and Robert A. Asemko, 20, all of Fontana, were to be sought this afternoon: San BernardlDo COunlJ Dislrlct At· toniey !Awell.11:; ~·1 ofllce wu IOI duf to recetyo_ .... ,.""""'" f"9rla ..... til late today and ., declined commeril. , Tough ,,.....U.S. la" lmpt11~, lo cr~k aown after a wave ol ~ ljr>! borilb- 1!11> peakecl In -'cauld • .... lead to lurthtr prolecutlan Ind ·ltdull prlaon terms upon convlciloe. · . Bail lor <lefendanl Astmko ts set al (S.. SABOTAGll:, P1 .. %) School Vandals Hit in Capo, Laguna Hills A mounting wave of vandalism in Orange County schools continued over the weekend with schools in San Juan Capistraoo and Laguna Hills being the target of hoo1igans who inflicted heavy damage. Principal David B. Whitcher of Valen- cia Elmentary School, 2Sfi61 Paseo de Va1e_ncia..,Laguna Hills, has announced plant"nr'" appeal to hia students over the loud speaker system for. infonnaUon on vandals who destroyed ten trees durlne the ~ekend. Ora County Sherill's officers sala the per involved drove a·car over the young trees, uprooting them Ind In- flicting damage esUmated at $3(!0. Deputies sald the principal Is also send. Ing notes to parents In a bid to determine the Identity of the weekend In- truders. Damage estimated at more than $400 was inflicted a& Marco F • ., ~orater Intermediate School, 111111 Camino del Avion, san Juan Capistrano where van- dals smasbed three flagpole halyards valued at more than $210. CUstodan Harold Moore tald windows were smashed, three lockers kicked in and a heivy gate removed In the weekend wave of vandalism. Supervisors . OK Buildipg Site Land Increase Property to be condemned for the per· maneiit Jlarbor Judicial Dlalrlcta Courts building bas been increued to Ill.I acres by the Orange County Board of Su!!J'"laort Tuaday. Tbe orlifnal 1.2-ocre site. to be purchased trom Collins Radio Company, ls being enl1tged to lncludo additional street right of way for access to the site. The property .11 located north of Com- Jllll Drife and aooth of DuPQlll Drtve and west of 'amborte llou!Cvarc!1m !IO acra held by Collini OD a If.yell leue with the Irvine Company. 'J'be conclemnalloo suit and eventual purcbalo price, estlmoted at $100,000, in. cludlnf severance Pl)'ment to the Irvine Cootpany for n!llnqulsh)ng the leasehold, Is apoc1ed to be .... pteted within 11 lllOllthl and actual court <Ollltructloo In two 1nd one half yearo. I ORANGE COUNTY, C::ALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1972 ' Critical Eye to New hu llllCCels(ully u...i ·the system, a ave bis ,evaluations of the system. , · ll is1 anUclp,ated that budget reporting will be required of all California acbool districts before 1974, and the stfte 1pg· gests PPBS. · · PPBS was presented· by Richard Berg and Dr. James Waters with alldes. show· log pbsalble subdivisions of the school ClistrlC:l structure. Tbe system is supposed to help a district board, administrators, staff and studenta be more aware of. what ia: UCk· J ng, be able to create goal& and prlorltlu, -. set soOculc ob)ecUvei aiid then design bow fo. ac,tiieve them. : · And this process is apPllcable' to cur· rictilum as Well ·as~ tiudgetillg. · The blldgetlng. portion o( the . system wouJd set up • .new accounting procedure of asslg~4' moqey .for eBoh dep~rtment needed to 8chleve Its specific objectives, W\ead·of assignb;1g a ~etntage. of the Qudget for ·~ach category, gµch as a cer-. tain perc~nt set a§ide for tea ching, or boob or sqpplles. Once objectives are created, all putlclpant.s In the. school' district will • ' , . aupposedly be able to evaluate their ac- compllabments. If objectives are difficult to measure, such as a' student 's attaining music ap- preciation, the district may create its own method of evaluation or change Its objectives tO more t a n g i b I e ac- complishments . When PPBS is applied lo a school district, It will conform to its charac· teristlc needs and requirements, and therefore will differ greatly. from its use in another .district. Said Berg, .. when it works, you've done lt right" ' . ··Nixon, Cho·u Accords See·ii I • T • • • Exchange of Students,. ·Newsmen Believed . ~eached . -··'-. :\ . By HELEN THOMAS believed to have been nailed down at the contacts short of diplomatlc.retstlons. PEKIMHl}PI) -President Naon Ind meeting. Ofllciala warned agaln..t UIWlllng.each Premier cU Eb-Jal were believed today The Chou.Nixon talks, by prear· country would establish ai trade mission to have agreed upon a broad e:icbange of rangementi of the· two governments are students scholars Ind MWsmen betwe<b k t In .. •-·st . No' fflc·ial' In the other. Tlley sald It wu more likely • ep """" secrecy, 0 an-that th t· · ta"'· fd their ~es •'¥!-were diaqltling a far-nounCein•iP on what his been dlacussed e ?JD IDUIJll con . l,;!05 "ou , be a.el ruchfrig declanUon of peact!UI coex· \,Uf· be made '111>UI tbi'tallis encl. · · ·, up In Canada, or oome, other thlhl 'c:Oun- tstence. ' ' Bui u [' · 1atc1 th · ,..,~ I' . · VY• ' ' Tllls was re--'~ by resident western '· · ~~ •Y: ' • ·~c::'.l" tons. 1~ ' Both parties· appeared 1h 'blgh spirits .,.. -•trong mat. the inee~,.s \iltlliiatel, and ..satisfied with their ~ Wh•n diplomats ln Peking following a meeting would encl with a laoidmark declaration o! Chou drove through a snowfall the1irst of more than four hours between the peaceful ~listence w~1ch could have a foul weather since Nixon's arrival Mon- Jeaders at NiJ:on'S" JuxurioU5~lakeslde 1majbr ef(!Ct on Asia anti 'the world. day _ to Call on the President. ~:C ~ ~':!:.!· tempcirarUy "the Ancl' lt was wwned that Secretary of Previous meetings bad been held lit 1 State William P. ·Roger• In his talks with site stlected by Chou -the ornate Great Another conferenc< ts set lor Tbllr!day. ·Cblne!e Foreign Minister .Cbl Peng-let Hall of the People. No 1ignfflcance was T!ie .meeting .iarted . with a . b1nt from JJllght he working out the. specific detalls attached to the change In site. Chou that American newsmen ac--_of Sino-American exchange agreement.a Mn. Nixon, meii..while, was a&suming oompanylng Nlaon may be Invited to stay and the manntt of establlahlng oontlnulng (S.. NIXON, Pip I) behind •hen the President leaves in flve daj>. UPI DlplomaUc eorre..pondent Stewart · Hemley.also said an ·agreement on aome form . of dipiomaUc contact -allort of formal dlplomaUc recognition -wu Cinco de Mayo Celebration Set Cinco de M1yo Is back. Saddlebllck Valley organization. are again ~ Invited to participate In the fifth amiual ·Cinco de Mayo celebration at Miiiion Vltjo .lllah Scbool. This 1ear'1 e•ent will be held Oii M'I° 7 1iicl will 1galn feature l\fe1lcan fciod, music, dancing, 11me l>ootlis, an art &bow, and 1 beauty pige1nL • Tbe d•adllne for 1pplyme for s boollrl• Mar<h t. Perioci1 intereated may call Harley Taylor at -. Tbe celebration 111,_l)IOOIOTed annoally by the Mllllon Viejo li!Cb S<hool p- Teachen Orilllhation. • 1f omeowners ~o Discuss • San Jo~quin \Enro~pients A terle1' <1f eeting1 have ·bten ar. ranged for prtlidentl of bomeowner• assoc!Jtlona and other co m m u n I ~y leaden to ~ proJect,i enroµments In the d !an Jo111uld Elementary ~I District. ' • The 'meet~ hosted by the distrlcl, wUI hive two lrustet1 J!<JUnt In addition to staff membela· and "1Jf be held this week an<! next. "The purpo,. of the meettn,1 Is to dilc:ma 1ttendance areu for nat year,'' said Km Lewis, llllstant to Supertn- tenclent llalph Gates. •we want to &Ir• the homeowner pruldentl the same 1"' formation we bav• .rqltdlof pr11jected , mrol!ments. • I Lewla aatd there have been several rumors circulated recently about whi<:b .• - lracts ".lit go to which schools. 'J'be meetings wW provide the most up.l<Hlate inf.'onn1llon on school a t t en d a r. C e boundaries and •~possible changes, The first ga~ wW take place on Feb. IS 1t 4:30 p.m. the adin1ni 1traUve annex on Sand canyon Avenue ln E11\ Irvine with homeowner presidents from the llancho San Joaquin attendsnce are11 Community 1 .. <1er1 from the La Pu lntttmediate School attendance area wW meet at the ume time end place on Feb. 29 and repruentaUves from the Los Ali.>a Intennedlste School area wW meet al the 11m1 time and•place on March I. Today'& l'lnal N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS System Board member Clester G. Briner re-- quested some negative aspects of PPBS from ·Berg and Walen. Berg reported that 90 percent of the 14 pilot school districts accepted the system. but mentioned some problems they en- countered. According to Bert and Waters, the.re had been some resistance to change. some staffs at first distrusted the entire system. a too-complex PPBS was causing one district problems, and staffs bad shown fear of how the teaching and budget evaluatlorui: would be used. ers 'Politics' Involved -Carraway By JACK BROBAClt Of 11'1• O.lty Piiot Stan Earl H. Carraway, a new member of the Board ol Trustees of the Tustin Union High School District\ Tu~y condemned the president and.I 'Y{ct i;rtatdtnt of tb6 board lor "Wlin& tbe district board to furtlier John Birch Party (ICICillY) tac- C¥raway· Nill alOl11 ~ mollea !lo ,,.,. -to present al the nat board -Ing Mooday nlll>t cemurlnC lloanl Prealdent Paul Calhoun and Vice Preli- dent Robert .Bartholmew, .'for 41Introduc. Ing a bl-partisan resoluUon to a Jeaally constituted non-partisan governinl board." The trustee, an El Toro mortgage banker, further JDQ,Vea that the moUon of the president and . vice pr.esil\ent "be ltrlcken from the record for au time." CaITaway's sta~~ takes lasue Witli a Tustin board reooluUon (that .,... defeated ) condemning the Orange County Grand Jury report recommending aboll· don of the Orange County llepartm .. 1 ol Education. cariaway, In a ·release to the presr, enclosed a copy of tbe molirtlon which was voted down ~ at the lut TUHSD board meeting·, Feb. 14. The Irate trustee state1: "For too Jone· now, the John Birch Party bu llled this ofllte and othera u a plaUorm !qr their own brand of polltlct. They have losulJecl the U.S. Preslden\, they bave degraded the constitutional oitlca of the Preatdent, and In that,...., the John Birch Party ta undermining the CoosUtutlon ol the United Stites. 11:rtie 1a(d party I( eating away at our· established American tl'aclltioll! and in. .Ututions the same way our enemies 4jo. •• Carraway conUnues bis charge: "[ am a conservaUve, I belltve in individual rights, free en!erPrtaeL statea rights, prop. erty rights aJid the J<tpubllcan form of government." The trustee concludee ~ "I, for one have bad enough of the John Birch Part)\ tactics." The resolution defeated Feb. 14 wblcb has ·raised' carraway'1 ire llatel: The Orange County Grind Jury (1971) (See CENSURE, Pa .. II • Oruge , Weadter You probably won't ,.. much ol the aun on Tbundly, eltber, ac.. cording to the weathetlady. LOw clood1 an~ log wlU take up moot of the day. Highs of 113 to 75 are predicted. Lows In the ml~'s. J,NSWE TODAY For • llsl of th< 'to<1knod'1 live theater altroellom and a look at the top 01car nomince1, 1c1 toda~'s rntertofrtment J>GO• -27. 1 ' z DAILY PILOT sa =Psych 40 :A 'Must' . :At Sclwol PIJl'holoSY 40 II m111y things lo many : stuclenll 1t 51ddleblck Community .College. ' For ...,. the cqurae oiler• slUdy melhodl. Olhen lt1t11 how lo .UM the librOry. Mlll1 ........ 8Uldlllce In :.i.~ lllelr ICldemlc aod ... :..Upalloaal lnlutall. The 001111e .. r<qUlred of •ll Incoming Sa~ lruhmen aod II taughl by the eoll•ge COUNdon t....,. weelly for onequart<r. Wllllam Kell;y, ooordloltor of counael- lng IJld lludenl 11ro1r1, 11ld lhlt .... oomlng rludenll need tlm "llUJ'Ylval JD. formailon" '° they can be more suc- «>s!ul whllo In achool. For·lnlllnce, 11ld Kelly, meny otudenll don1· rullze the Importance of lh<lr grldo point 1verago (GPA) and bow It Clll 1flecl occeptance 1t higher learning bistllullono. other 1tudenll, he added, are ado mlnllttred reodlng ttall lo deltrmlne atreJl8lhs and shortcomings and may be recommended to take a speclal reading course. Teall lo determine academic and oc- cupational area of interest are alao ad- ministered aod the sl'udent encourqed lo pursue bll leantnp, said Kelly . llelldea meellnc with the counaelora In the Psych 40 C01111e, studenll ore ..,_ courqed to aee them 1t lea.st one time per quarter on a ooe-to-one bu1J. Phone Company Seeks Increase In County Rates Ralt Increases al!ectlng the 171,S« telephones In Or1111e County proylded by 'the General Tttepbone Company ore being IOUghl by that firm that servea all or part of seven communities along the '0r111go O>ut. • Tho Public UW!Ues c:omnillslon bu yet to set I dlte for I belrlng on the ~I.I mUUon ..,..a11 rite tncre11e BOUght by General Telephone "lo olf.sel Increased labor costs." Tho 1ncru1a would IUect General Telephoao 11Jblcrlber• In Huntington, H..-', plrll of Jiunllngloo ~ Weotmlnaler, !.lguna Beacll, Monarcll Bay, South 4guns, Surfside IJld psrll of Llgq!ll NJauel .. Tei.~ In liomes wl)ll)d be hilled an estra 10 cents a month, in ·bUJinessea the sought increase is 35 cents a month and swtldlboard lnJnk lino ralts would be 'hil«d 50 cents eacll per month. General TtleP-ii uklng the PUC lo approve a 50-«nt per month charge for unlisted Wepboaos, 110 lo cllange a homo ·telephone number and 115 lo cllsnge a bus!nal pboDo number. Meaago unit calll would go up from ·c.7 conll per unit lo u cents. • SerYlco connection •!\Ml" lo Install phones wonld jump !rum 112 lo Ill for . residential suboeriben and from 118 lo $2.1 for business cuslomers. "We desperately need tho proposed lncrealo lo olfsel our latest wage oet-.Uemen~ ospeclally In view of tho !act •that ·!Ill PIJC ll'mlted 111 only about 66· :pemml if ·our noedfd rtllef In our lut ~ate reqllilt," uld Richard L. Oblson, 'Vice president of General Telephone. ; AU loll!, the !Inn II •aeoklng 1 lolal rate . :mease of 8.3 percent noting, "after all ·:wage Increases haYO boon granted, ~ ottaeUlng rate0ftvenues the com-;'pany would realize only 1 7.39 percent "rate of return." - ' . . • . . .. ' . :< •• ;, :. OllMMI COAST DAILY PILOT ........ ------" ........... ........ ...., s-Cl re OIMOI COAIT PUILISHlHO f;IJIUNfY l•lt•rt N. W•N ,,. .................. Jttlt R. Cvrlt"f "" ,,.ill .... ..,. o.wra1 ........ n .. ::ii!!•.a ,. ...... A. ".,,w .. _ ... ., Q1rfff H. L... aw.m '· N1Q ................. Utwt °'"'"' Clllil .. I -W9f llY .... _ ....... lhtdll i;m .. .....,.,. ... ....,_. htdlt ti! ,_, •1.-:,.,. """""""'· 1Md11 1nn ·~ ....... .. ~ ..... ., ""'*" - N_, Crop Due Sen. William Proxmire (!>- Wis.), who recenUy appeared with two black eyes -later alleged to 'be caused by a face- lift -aepeared at a commit- tee meetmg today swathed in baJ!dages. Proxmire ~aid he !' in the process of getting a hm transplant ... • 15,000 A~. • Gymnasts Stage • • Show for Nixons PEKING (UPI) -Cbilla paraded lb talented men and women gymnasts ln two houri or spectacular, o~baUc performances loday for a lllgbly ap- preclaUve Prestdenl and Mra. Nixon and 15,000 constsnlly applauding Cblnoso. The Nixon.s aecompan}ed by Premier Chou En-la!, shook tbelr hosdJ in wonder- ment as the lithe, athletic gymnasU performed. Tho President, Mra. Nixon and Chou sat in front row seats ln the tmmenae Capllal Gymnasium -ltlpoll In front of them, kept filled by waltrwa -aod joined thousands or Peking ocllool chlldren In rbylbmlc applause. PsrUculorly outslandlng was Ibo work of the wbite-u.nifonned men on the .till rinis snd the blgb bar. The women, strong and muscular but very feminine in red shlrls and Uihl blue shorts, performed best on the balance beam and turned tn spectacular moves on the uneven parallel bars. The Chinese do not parUclpate In Ibo 1ummor Olylnplcs, where the gymnuUc chlmplonablpo are held, largely !or .pol!Ucai rellOlll. Bui judging from Ibo ohow they put on !or the Nlxool, they would ~ conleodora lor the gold medal. Al oao polo~ ,alter the men's blgb bar . performances, the Proeldenl tllmr bil bandJ Into the air, ..... his -In amazement, and looked lo hll rtghl lo Secretary of stale William P. llogen. Tho Cblnoso are 1n athletic people. Workers gel two ~minute br<W dilly for mandatory aerciles. Ono o I Qia1rman Mao Tao-lung's quotallons 11 "Promote pbyslcal culture. bulld up the peoples' health." Niloa, a aometlme bowler, a now-and- agaln golfer bu! ID 1vld foolboll fan, talked animatedly wtlh Chou, .romartln& about the performance. Tho gymnasts were followed by Cblnoso badmlnlon players, one of lbern Ibo women's nallonai cbampfon. Tbo.glrU showed oacollent form, aJugglng Ibo ihul· tlecock so the eye could barely follow it. It was a far cry from American backyard badmlnlon. Two Charges Dismissed Against Talent Agency Badminton gave way to the: table tennis players, the world's finest. 11 ,..., Ibo Clllnese invllatlon lo Ibo American table tennis team last year that split the Bamboo Curtain and led lo Nixon's &UJDIDll trip lo Peking. Tbrou(bout the loog program piano music set the tempo. An Orange County Superior Court judge ha! dismissed grand theft and conspiracy charges llled 1gslnst lour principals of the now defunct ''Take One" talent agen- cy and ordered the four men to face trial March 2Z oo the remalnlng charges of violaUons Of the state's corporations code. Judge Wllllsm Murray set Ibo lrlal date for Orange attorney Richard Mur- phy, fl, brolbora Jerry, 42, of Santa Ana, and Don Hegg, 40, of Garden Grove and Robert MCG!nnls 38, of Santa Ana. All lour were lndlcltd by the Orange O>unty Grand Jury following ollegaUons that Ibey sold sn esUmaltd 111,000 worth of stock in "Take One'' to agency employees without first registering the •lock with Ibo state's corporations com- From Page J . CENSURE ••. bu IWTf~and without complete investfgatro'zi ""or,,. irifonnaUon recom- mended reducllon Of ezpendltures and stall of the Deparlmenl of EducaUon (county) and the Grand Jury has recom- mended tl!llt tile . County Board of Supervisors withhold county funds from • tho department. "And Ibo unfair, biased and JD. nsequentlal otudy of Ibo Departinont of cation allegedly conducltd by the and Jury II, In certain respects, !bout basis In fact, lotally incomplete missioner. They had earlier been named in a civil acUon brought by the stalt and the dislrlct attorney's office in whlcll lt was olleged by De'pUty Dislrlct Attorney W a It er Matthews that they took lboulllldJ of dollars from parents seeking what be clatmed were nonexistent movie and televlsloo jobs for lholr children. Matlbows, who autbcrlzed tho civil ao- \lon against Ibo lour defendanta, said the .. Take One" group sold "public relations contracts" to parents interested in plac- llig their cllildren for movie and TV work. He said adult! seeking th.6 same work were charged •· Frem Page I SABOTAGE. • • From Page I NIXON ... the role of her bU1band'1 1mhla1dor to China's 800 mllllon people. Ignoring the anow aod Ibo cold, abo gamely trolled along dusty yellow dirt roadJ on 1 lour of a commune wtst of Pekinl where fl,000 pwanti live and farm. Tho Flnt Lldy, wrapped In 1 lur-llnod COS~ visited a pig farm, I primary school, tho medical cllnlc, a bot house and a general llloro. On Tbunday, Ibo -probably w!II make lllelr long anticlpated trip oorlh or Peking lo vlsll Ibo Groll Wall ol China, a 1,500-mlle barricade built lboul the 4lh Centney B.C. lo keep lcnlgn lnYldera out. Today's !alb brought lo nino'boun the IU,500 -making him tho obvlow key time spent by Nixon aod C10U In lormlf suspect -whllo only $1,250 bond .Wll set i.un..., -ions. !0<. Ibo others. •. In oddltlon, Nixon held ' nre ~ !!'be e:rplooJYOI cadlo l'U -of the ....ion wit1J Q.lrmln Moo TaMunl, the Jargeit ever s!)zed In. C~omla, OIP"ll qtng phlloaopbor of the Minis&' ,..,... noted. . . ' · men! who loans heavily oo Chou lo make A Iola! of 85 pounds of powerful C4 moot docJsloDJ. plMllc explosives u s e d commonly 1'l Western diplomats In Peking are oon- Vielnam oombat was seized. alo»J wltli vtnced that lbll unusual display of good 15 pounds of TNT, fiYO poundJ of a foellng between oounlrles whlcll have aopblsUcstei!, colled blullng compound boon antagonists for two decades ls called Dala Sheet and 100 loot of bound lo be followed by aomo form of delonattng cord. decllratlon. One element tnvestlgalora are probing II could pledge lbom. despite their pro- 11 Ibo relallonsblp among Ibo five found dllferences In lileologles, IOCla1 therd'ore of no real value .•. " e defeated reBOluUon stales that Ibo dullts and &erYlcoa of the Deparlmonl of EducaUon should best be OYalualtd by Ibo achoo! dlstrlcll of Ibo county. suspecll. systema and poutlcal .poolUom. lo work • "All h ad knowledge Of the u-togelbor lo ellminste points ol cmlllct In plosives," Deputy Winger alleged, Iller Aats. The punchline reads, "the Board of Trustees o! ll(e TusUn Union High School District hereby condemns the Grand Jury for its precipitous and irresponsible action and respectfully ~uggests a prop- erly constituted s~~ Of the services, of the department re recommending any changes or discontinuance of services." Calraway and ·trustees Chester Briner, of Mission Viejo, and Dickran Boranian of Tustin, voted against the proposed resolution . callioun and Bsrlbolmew both live In the Tustin area. Of the five Tustin trustees, only Bartholomew admits to membership in the John Blrcb Society a It h o u g h ob3erVm note Calhoun, the trustees' presiden~ frequenUy joins in stands taken by Bartholomew. Thi resolution subslanlllUy agrees with ststtments by County Superlnttn- dont ol Schools Dr. Robert Peterson and Ibo County Board ol Education condenur Ing Ibo Grand Jury report. COASTWISE . ,_ -::r:,wr~~ noting just one defendant bu menlloned Looming .... their !alb la Ibo a ssbobge plot. brooding ahadow o( tho Soviet Union, Miis Bayless' mother contacted the wblcli came close to goJng lo war with DAIL y PILOT today lo declore she China during lholr border dispute ol 1969. understood her daughltr bad op]y Moscow, wblcli Nixon wto visit ii> May, brought some Roman candle fireworks Jw shown great 1D5Plcion about the Pe- back from a frlp to Mexico with 1 king summitry. boyfriend. In addition, an uneasy Japan wonders She added that the boyfriend was ac· how Ibo lalb here will affect its future qualnted with one or the other defendant1 relations with China and Tokyo'• role in Involved. . . · Alla. San Benw'dlno aulbor!Ue1 denlod that AU the small nations or Alla, Com- Miss Bayless, a former. Laguna Beach munlst and non-Communist alike, have High School student, was charged Dnly shown similar uneasiness about what with misdemeanor possession of illegal transpires here. Each ls worried it may jireworks. · -: be sacrificed as a pawn by one side or She and all suspocll except Ponder tho other In a reaJisnmen! ~ Ibo balance were arrested near the bowse wbeff of power to A.Ila. deputies dug up tbe underground ez.. l"i;iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii plosives cache Monday. I Disappearance of military explosives in the San Bemsrdlno O>unty ares has boon under investigation for 1lx month.I, AutborltieJ said. The current case was bro~ when deputies making a routine lrilfllc stop spotted whit apj)eared lo be uploslves In Ibo rear of the vehicle coda violator'• car. Bv Phil lnterlamH • TODAY by J, C. HUMl'HltU BEFORE YOU BUY A DIAMOND Thi purch.ue ol a diamond u an engagement ring or a speclal gilt of love ii mually a on.time occasion in every man's life. Because thls purch.aso involves deer meaning •• well as a 1lgnlfi- can investment, you wlll want to buy wisely and with a pride of pur- chaso which wJIJ lut a lifetime. There are definite standards for the pricing of diamobd.1, and four definite factors in determination of value. Colling, color, Clarity and carat weight are the four measlll'OS of a diamond's value. Each of the11 factors require complete and.,.. ,standing by the buyer before an intelllgent pure:1asa can be made. #Shty ••• C1n You Foltoin Ploy 'Mtl1ncholy 811>( • , .~ We would appreciate an oppor- tunity to explaln each of these fac. tors to you personally. So when )'OU have the time, come on in and see UJ. No maltat what or where yon eventually buy, we a1,:r. have the time to help )'OU • the rlpt cbotct. -. . . Hubby Admits Sl.a.ying Wife Smuggler G~tsAway POll'l'l.AND, On. (UP!) -A» . ,ur-o1dmanbupleld0dpillyt• •. ·On Coast 1 char&• Of· llllllllaugbter In Ibo· fatal ahootJni ol 'hll ~ wbo wu dying of canctt. · Roger WUllam Powell told 1 circuit court judge Tuesdsy lbll l\l• wlfe, Beryl, 35, wu paralyzfld from the w a 1 1 t down, con£lned to a wheelcllalr and, 1ccordlna lo doc- tors, hlld 1boUI !WI> lllOl>tbs lo live. Powall told Judge Alan P. Da•il be WU 41eFused Ind bid boon drintlng al Ibo Umo of Ibo fall! lhoottng MIJ"cll 11; lS'll, at Ibo couple'• Por.tland home. Air Guard Brass Held • • On,Fund Rap WASHINGTON (AP) -A federal grand jury bu lndlcltd the commander of the Alabama Air National Guard on a charge of conspiring to illegally solicit !i.200 In polillcal contributions from Air Guard officers for candidates in the 1970 Alabama clocUon, the JU!llco Depart- ment announced today. One of the campaigns Involved, Ibo deparlment said, was that of George C. Wallace, the governor of Alabama. Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell said the single count Indictment wu {Olurned to- day in U.S. District Court in Montgomery, Ala., against Maj. Gen. George Reed Doster. TbJ'ff of Doster's subordinates also were indicted and were idenUBed as Cols. Henry Fllllnglm Jr. and James E. Hardwick 1nd Lt. Col Alfred B. Gurley. Named as unindict.ed co-consptraton were Air Guard Cols. Lawrence A. Doyle, Willlam P. Baker, Willie L. \Vhltman Jr., Edward D. Gilmer and lt1aj. L<>nnie J. Slauson Jr. The Indictment charged that the defen .. dant.s conspired, beginning in March 1970, to coerce other Air Guard officers to coo- lrlbult 11,700 lo Wallace'• campaign; $1,000 to fonner gbvernor AibUt Brewer, a candidate for 1ovemor hi 1170; $400 to Hugh Mormw ID, 1 candidalt for lieutenant governor, and $100 to State Sen. Lelaiid ChlldJ, who wis'not running for l"Hlectlon. Thi lndlclmenl 11id tl!llt, U I par\ or the conspiracy, Ibo defendants used government faclllUea to solicit the political conlrlbullOM IJld threatened to downgrade certain Air Guard officers if they failed to contribute. The indictment quoted Doster as telling an Air Guard major, Wllllsm IL Beddow Jr., that if be was interviewed by the FBl Beddow cou1d chose one of three courses .of action : ''blow your bralm out; turn state's evidence or Ue if interviewed." The Indictment ISid Doster suggested Beddow lollaw Ibo lhlrd altemstive. Tho indictment also alleged that Dosier dlrocled Gurley lo undertake \ h e syslemlUc solicilltioo of political con- lrlbutions. Songster Dies at 33 SAN DIEGO (AP) -Millard Delbert Woods Jr., 53, a aongwriter and former member of Ibo New Chrllty Mlnslrell, was burled al Mount Hope Cemottry Tueoday lo Ibo tune ·of one of his own- compoaltlons -"Peace of Mind." Woods died Tburadly 1t tho homo of a friend in Los Angelea. BJ JOllN VALTEMA Of ... 0.111 ,., .. '"" A Mpected aUen smuggler btllevod armed with a plstol and fils com~lon remained al large early today Iller Ooelng on loot from Border Patrolmen who lla4 'lloPl>ed them wltl)ln sight of Ibo Western Wlilie House before dawn. Tbe pair's human cargo, bOwt!vel, will be shipped back lo Mexloo. Five .Mexican nationals were found 1n the trunk of the car Iller Ibo pair of amugglers fled. Patrol Capl Gooo Hurls lald the in- cident began when the two rntn drove up lo the cllock point IOUlb of San Clemente and oUlctra uked Ibo men lo open the trunk of their w. Instead, the pair fled northbound with patrolmen in purault.' omcers finally manqed lo pull· the speeding w over lnlo lbo "medl1n 'llrlp within sight of Ibo Proddeiltllll compl01. Al that point, Hmll said,· tlio ·~lver flashed a star-shaped badge sllnllilr to those avallable on mall order. He said be w11 a "private In- vestigator" and then made oUicers aware Of a snub-nosed revolver he wu car- rying. But before the officers could take the pair into custody the two men darted Into nearby brush after running across several freeway lanes. "We looked 1wfully bard, but Ibey got away,'' Harris aald. Patrolmen then Jool:ed into the trunk of the car and found five men crammed ln· side like sardines ln a tin. The aliens will be deported to their native country. Presumably the fees they paid to be smuggled north are still with the smug- glers. Security officials at the Western White House, Camp Pendleton and local police all were alerted after the escape, report. said. The suspect with the badge and gun wrut1 wearing a white shirt and dark panls. The only description available on his partner was that he w<te bis brown hair long. The p!l'sult was the second chase by patrolmen at the checkpoint in a w~. Early last week an Orange man used a serifs of complicated ruses to eventually steal a Border Patrol car then sped north at speeds exceeding 100 miles per hour. Advanced Paint Class Offered By Art School A new advanced painting class enUUed "Painting Now" will be offered by tht Laguna Beach School of Art when lhe spring quarter commences on Marth 27. Instructor Ray Ja oob will present at~ dent projects providing practical u. .. perlenco In handling mixed media, ad- vanced problems ln composition, color and vsrlallon In painting lechnlques. Jacob, who Jest year conducted a color and design class at tho Laguna school, ls a gradualt of Choulnard Art lnsutute and bas been an architectural graphic designer and muralist for the past 11 years. The Laguna Beach School o! Art, now In it1 lotb year, ls a non-profit organlza. \ion, 1pproved by lho Califomll Depart- ment of Educatlon and the Veterans' Administration, Classes are limited to small groups for Individual instruction and reglstr1Uon now Is open for the spring quarter. Further information and brochure listing all courses may be obtained at the school. 630 Laguna Canyon Road, or by calling 494-1520. A 1p1clal remembronco from every member of the hlm)ly with 1rom 1 to 9 GENUINE Birthstones gracefully set In 14 Kt. whitO" or yellow sold from '2t.so• ~ ' . ' J. C. .J.l.ump~rieiJ Jetuetr~ 1821 NEWPORT BLVD,., COSTA MESA CON'ltHllNT !llMS IAHIWIUICAlD-llASTU CHAISI • l4 YEARS IN SAMI t.OCAllON PHONI 141·J•OI t 7 PRESIDENT NIXON CHATS WITH WIFE Of0MAo(iu Interpreter Aidt Conver11tion 1t Cultur1I Show 'Revisionist' Ranking Professor Admits Past Errors. PEKING I UPI I -Chou Pei-yuan, one o( China's best known profeuors, sipped tea with American newsmen today at Peking University and con- fused be once harbored revi!lonlat and b o u r g e o l s thoughts. "After I studied the works of Chalnnan Mao, I realized that I had made mistakes," Chou said. "I now follow the correct theoretical line." Chou would ~ a credit . to any college faculty. A pr~~ lessor of theoretical phy!ics since 1929. he graduated from the University of Chicago in 1928 and holds degrees from universities in China and Europe. He, was dean of Tslnghua University before moving to Peking in 19S2. A man in bia . 70s -he declined to give e1- act age -he wears a hearing aid. Hill hair ii gray. Allhough Hang chow On Nixon • Itinerary he spew perfect English ind chatted informally w I t h newsmen, he. Used an in- terpreter f011.hiJ more formal talks, correcting t h e in- terpreter at times when he disagreed wlth the translaUon. A Chinese new1man ex- plained that Chinese pro- fessors speak Chinese when they are talking formally . "You are in China," he 1aid. Chou is head of the phy1Jcs department at Pe~ and is v Ice chairman ol t h 1 u n i versity's RevoluUonary Committee. Some. _newsmen in China covering President N1Xon'1 visit were invited to tour China's • mo 1 t prestigious university, Peking, 10mething of a· shrine· now becau.Je the May 4th movement which spawned the Chinese Com- munist party began the.re in 1919. Repo~rs ·ga}.hered in a facuJty room at' the Russian language ' building. Drinking tea frOm flower..de<:orated cupa, they 'Interviewed Chou and Chiang Chun-yu, 36, a former 'printer who now 111 described as "a I ea d Ing member. of the Revolutionary Committee and a leadin« membel' of the university braach of tbe Communist par· ty.'' . • 1 Visit Gets Top Play In China Pat Goes Visiting First Lady Views Acup.u11cture By FRANK CORMIER dozen needles prolrudin& from Peking Classware Factory, PEKING (AP) -Bare-her right arm and leg. Mrs. Nixon spoke to at least io headed as usual, Pat Nixon The woman uld those limbs k ti lrl bo braved a Norlh C h I n a had been ao numb before ehe wor e.rs -:-mos Y I 1• w snowstorm today to visit an began a week-long nrl~ of · we.re working on a wide range agricultural commune where acupuncture tre111tments that of glauware. s he ming I e d with she could hardly walk around Mrs. Nixon was'" asked to schoolcl\jldren, o b s er v e d her small homt. No• &be can vi.sit the factory again. "In the winter c u I t I v a t I o n or cook, she reported. meantime." the First Lady vegetables and saw a 68-year-"We wish you well/' Mrs. replied, ''I hope you will rome old woman getting a n Nixon told her. and see us." acupuncture treatment. "It didn't look painfuJ." she The pig ~1rs. Nixon tried to The First Lady walked remarked a,s she le.ft the entice within petting distance through intermittently heavy clinic. was corralled outside a tiny, snow that glistened in her hair. spotlessly clean cottage During a one-hour visit to a · • moving down alleys 'a n d Warned by a reporter that across furrowed fields at the ----------the pig might bile, Mrs. Nixon 6,000-acre Evergreen People's said she lived on a farm as a Commune west of Peking. MRS NIXON · I d 'I Mrs. Nixon was capti'lted • g~ an . once raised • by the schoolchildren sbe saw. prize~·inner -second prize." marveled at the growing of RA.PS HEAD But the pig ignored her en· out-of-season vegetables under treaties, and finally she leaned glass and e.ve.n tried futilely to into the. sty to throw him a make friends with a rather PEKING (UPI) -Pat Nix-chunk of cabbage. ori bl.Imped her head on 1 dirty hog in a sty. warm air blower while touring In. anoth1der schoolroom. two She seemed most sur prised, h p k. lG-ye.ar-o boys were playing however, t.o observe in the 1 e e ing Glass Factory to-table tennis with rather unim· da y, but she. apparently was commune clinic the. ancient not hurt. pressive results. Pointing to Chinese medical treatment the table, the 1',irst Lady said : While she watched a young h based on the insertion of long girl fashioning tiny intricate "We ave one in Florida, and needles into the fle sh. animals from colored glass we do play Ping Pong." The two you ng women who cylinders, Mrs. Nixon rapped To the 8-year-olds learning give the treatment told Mrs. her head on the blower. multiplication -several of DAIL V PILOT f ·woRLD SAVINGS ISNOWOPEN SATURDAYS Commenci ng February 19, our Regional Office in Laguna Beach, 292 South Coast Highway at Forest Ave- nue, 494-9481, will be open Saturdays from 10:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M. These added service hours are for our cu,. 1omers who work Monday through Friday and who would Dke to conduct their flnencial business In the leisurely atmQIPhere ol the weekend. Resources owr 1300.000.000 WOBLDSA ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION HOME OFFICE: L YPM'OOO. c:ALFOflNA Regional OftlcM: Blentwood IFotnaln V.11ey /Llglll'll BNchl NottlwldQt/ Ontl1ia/San Bernardino/San Dltgo/WutAn:ad~/ ~landHllll Nixon that they alte.nd to Afterwards , &he k e p t them gave wrong answers about a dozen patients a day. touching her blonde hair. but while she was the.re -Mrs. They showed her a gray-haired she insisted that she was not Nl:r.on said she. brought woman lying on her side on a hurl. greetings from all the children PEKING (UPI) _ The _co_t_w_ith_mo_r_e_tll::_•::_n _:ha.=ll......::• ___________ ooif~A~m~e~r~ic~a~. ~~=-==1====================J Chinese government continued . - to give major publicity today to President Nixon'S visit. The official "Peoples Daily'' published four photographs showing Tuesday's activities and meetings of the President. One photograph showed Nix- on and Premier Chou En-lai sealed on opposite. sides of a long conference table duririg their meeting Tuesday at the Great Hall of the People. Each was flanked by a num- ber of aides, the. most con- s p I cu o u 1 among the American! being presidential adviser Henry A. Kissinger. ' Among the three advisers with Chou in the picture., the. rank- ing man was the. high member of the protocol department. The "Peoples Daily" printed 1 second photograph of the meeting which Secretary of State William P. Rogers held Tuesday with his counterpart In the ChlrteJe government Chi Peng-fe.l. Rogerii and-CJii· alao were flanked by a number of advisers, the most prom- inent in the picture on t h e American side being Marshall Green, assistant secretary of state for East Asian affairs and presidential consultani John Scall. The other two photos 1n today's edlllon were taken at tht performance T u e s d a y night of the revolutionary ballet and during Pat Nil:on's visit Tuesday to the Peking Hotel's kitchen. The photo 1t tbe ball•~ laken at the end of the pe'rformance, ahowed n I n e Chjnese and Ame.rkan1, in- cluding Chou and Ntxon, 1tand- lng ·and opplauding the per. formera . · I • West Germans Favor Visit TUEBINGE!I, Germany (AP) -Ninety percent of West. Germans queried In a pliblie opi11lon po11 w fr e , folloWing Pre!Jdent Nixon's 'I !rip to China with Interest 1nd 1 70 percent viewed it )JoSltifeJy, I tile wicker! Publle Oplolon t lnsitute sakl. · \I 4· DAY SALE THURSDAY, FRIDAY 9 to 9; . £1 • SAT. 9 to 6; SUN. 10 to S ~ft / GUALITY ROOM SIZE REMNANTS ''GO. WORTH $79.80 TO $125.00 IF PURCHASED ~ BY THE SGUARE YARD. Choose from a select group of nylons aiid poJ.yesJers · in smgs, pi • lo patt~, •ltwel I loops• cmd• tweeds. · 1 Hurry in j for ~ best selections .. r · ' sq •. Jd. ........... , lltYtOll PILE • " •. , " .. • ,. \ ' ,- '· ·' ' ·, I . ' '(l)KYO ((AP) -The east China lake city of Hangchow, where Pretident Nixon will 1tf:Y. overni'Jht Saturday, w11 described today as one that ha1 .retalned Its beau.ty and charm while expanding lnto I tllrlvlng . Socllllst lnd\lstrtal metropolis. The New China News Agen-' ey, Pe.king's official news agency, said that 2,00>-year- old H1ngchow was noted In the p11t 10( Its thdltional stlk and cot~ textllo lndu!trles. Panda Clamor Zoos Covet China Gift Today, the agency. said , Hangchow •l!"ll '!'lted for jts. Jnduatry -iron, s t t e I , machln~ bulldtng end chemical1 ~ 1caused bY the • ·' S oci1llst tr1nsfOrin1tion'' cm1od out by tile wdrkinf people 1ince the Communlsta· took over 'the mainland in 1941. "No longer a 1e111lcolonilti consumer city, Hangchow is now a: prosptl'OWI Sodalllt in· dustrlal center," the agency reported. Prof Predicts 'No Mira·cies' SAN DIEGO (AP) -Pres!· dent Nlxon11 visit to China ii a "great otep forward" but Isn't llkely to aolve any major prob- lems bttwee.n the two coun- trle11 1ay1 1 Chinese profutor 1t San Diego State College. "l don't tlllnk tile visit will create mlraclu or change ,oclal 1tructures, but It may re.Jax tenalona between the two countries and Improve corn- chanies." By A1110Cllted :Pres• WhUe U.S. and Chinese leaders maneuver th r o u 1 h high level talks, American zoo directors have begun diplcmailc maneuvering of their oWn •imed at getting the two. rare gUnt pandas atven to the United State. by Premier Chou En-lai. 1IThere isn't a zoo in thl1 country tha:t wouldn't 1ell It.I soul for thole pandas/' alfl Jack SI mm on•, naturalist guide at &!attle11 Woodland Park Zoo. _ There art only four pandas In captivity outside of China - including 1 mal• In MOICO'll' and a ltmlle In London. Ef· fortl to. m 1 t • the bw:-tfke anlmala have lolled. The olher two pandu are in North Korea. But SlmmoN 1nd . moot other zoo officials contacted lffm realgned to the ldeo tlltL tho two IUny, block ind white gift.I from the Chlnue aovern· ment wUI • wind up 1 t Washington'• Notional Zoo. "The Notlooal Zoo hll been tho repository for tnort lhan Ill yem of aucb 111t1 ~ • otller nations to tho United Statea," aald . Dir«tor Dr. Theodore Ried. ·"I would asaume• we might be called uponi oDC~ again in this CIH," he added. But Reed 1tr..,ed lhat there baa been no official .word !tom the White HOUie on where the anlm.als would bt kept. ·The anlmaia were &iv en to NlxO!I. who l.t vlaiUng Peking. In retum for two North American muskoxen Nixon is presenting to the Chinese. A Chicago "'° l.t making It.I bid f0< the panclao through pollUcol cho nneil. Dr. Lester E. Filher of Lincoln Park Zoo bu conllcted an Ollno~ con- gressman and was rtpQrtedly trying to rt1cb Sens. Adlai StevenlOD m and Olarles Percy for their help ao well. Acquiring 1 panda. 11y1 Denver. Zoo Director Clayton Frelhtlt, "would be a zooman'1 dream .•. lt'1 the klnd of animal you make room for ." '!'ht ""' In Sin Diego. '111 bttn !rylna to get 1 pair of pand11 alnce the early 19401 . Oeep, •PJingy pllt yarns of 100% nylon. Sr1.Hdy' end •o~y to cleon. Gives a bright lu11urlou1 Joo'c. to ~ny room 'l!ttting, yet it'• pracficol Ot)d car .. fr••· Many btovtlft.11 colors to choo•• from. --· ---...... 98 sq.Jt POLYJSTEI SHAG 100% Polyostot t!oog. Polyottv pile tolnf.....S j wfth hard twist yarn• for better perforrnonm. Eoty to· cor• for t.xt1.1rt wttl -Mthatond ocM fomify usage.. Wide 11l1ction of 111cltlng colors. . SHO[itJ-~OMr If yeu COR't c•"'e ~n, JMtf , ..... •nll •vr repre1eftt•tl•• .irtll teN with • full 1•111,I• ••lectlff .. Ne •~ll11tlen. :- CALL TODAY S1rvln9 Tht L•t1•t •etall C•rpet l•I• Art1 In Callt.,nla 546-8548 3040 Bristol Ave., Costa Mesa (JUST 0,, THI SAN 01100 'HIWAY) OPEN OAILY 9 A .M .·9 P.M. SATURDAY 9 A .M .-6 P .M . SUNDAY 10 A.M.·S P .M . Ull OUI CONVINllNT CllDIT TUMl-ALL LAIOI CAlllll A L"ITIMI GUAUNTll • • DAD,y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Yes Vote Is • Ill Order· SAY, W.., WE'RE ~AVI~ A ~ PP.Im' SATOOAY N~T ..• • CAN VOU M/ll<.';,;E l:i i'/,,,.,,..-;;;;;: \'OU OOJ.Y~ po 1 LOOK Llt<f. ~ , PllU6 FREAK? I'M NOf G~trlN M~G UP Ctl 1HAT SCENE AND A/IV· ONE WWO A?ES OUCilrr 1'0 !JI' 'W-bEP Vote11 in the Capistrano Unified School District will be asked Man:h 7 to continue a 50-cent tax override for the next three years. H the override fail!, drastic budget cuts that will seriously impair the educaUonal program will have to be made -cut. the Supl Truman Benedict says "will &et back the educational program 20 years." There should be no question in the voters' minds that perpetuating the current 50-cent override is not only desirable but necessary. The DAILY PILOT ell· courages a "yes" vote. Some question persists about trustees' wisdom in asking for so litUe at a time when the district is facing potentially explosive growth. There is little doubt that unless assessed valuation figures rise beyond expectaUons, the district will be faced with financial difficulties before three years have elapsed. Voters should realize that trustees are asking for a minimum amount. A yes vote is very much in order. View Grows Brighter Laguna's long·dreamed of "window to the sea" will become a reality in the rather immediate future. The ancient beachfront buildings that have blocked the prized Main Beach view from Coast Highway for many years will be gone when summer comes in 1972. While it may take some time to develop the park that will re~lace them. the sweeping vista of beach and ocean will be there for all to enjoy. Two factors are speeding the demolition project. By evacuating the commercial buildings it acquired in the beachfront purchase, the city was able to get them Best Reason • To Support Women's Lib Tbougbll at Large: The best reason -psychologically and eocially -for supporting Women'• Liberation ii that, lf it ii successful, women would no lcq:er have to compete by imitating male aggressivenea, but could remain feminine in temperament while sha.riDI duties, 1unctioni and rewarda with their male C0W1terpart1. (Aa thlnp 1tand now, only the women who act most like men get ahead, which makes the whole situation 'abrasive.) • • It Is absurd to ape a k of govern· ments being "friendly" with each other. for at the most they can only be allies; a frlend ii someone who likes tht same thinp you do, while an ally is &0meone who dislikes the same people you do. • • • A prophet is without honor in his own country (and his own time) chiefly because he summons the people to live up t.o themselves, when they are intent upon dying down to themolves. • • • Most men are terri/red by tbe thought Dear Gloomy Gus Laguna needs Leeds. A. R. V. lllll ... ,_ ,..,... ,........ ....,,. ... WUMtlt)t ~., lfle; ......... ,. Se"' ..... Hf .-W ti 0"91ftY ... "Dtiltf ''"'' of extra "leisure" than they are troubled by the threat o! extra toil; for leisure must be aeatfve in order not to become a bore, whereas work is most often a retreat into rote, and an escape from the .earth for identity. • • • A "mob" is simply a "group of aroused citizens" we have not yet seen fit to join. • • • Why do we speak of the "mind's eye,'' but never of the "mind'• ear," when we can bear music in the mind just as well u we can see pictures there? (Indeed, that's where Beethoven "heard" most of bis greate3t music.) • • • A preponderant majority of men of genius -whether activists or in- tellectual& -have been &.horter than average, which may be naturt'1 form cf compensation. • • • The main discomfort in being a middle- of-tbe-roader ls that you get aide-swiped by partisanl going in both dir<ctions . Angela and Free Speech An assistant to state Attorney General Younger wrote to the television dation (CBS) which carried tbe Angela O.vis in- terview emphatically denying censorship intent. but looking with disfavor on the one-hour program, 113 content and pur- poee. In part. the letter a.aid, "The broad· casting of this dis· t cussion makes clear ~ the patent falsehood A ~ of the charge that ·'' .. ~ ""'II •. <~ there Is, or has been, · ~ " any effort to prevent Miss Davis from erpresstng her views," (but) "it is for you to decide whether the nature of the discussion ... "(results in) "a form of 'special pleading' for Miss Davis that ts consistent wJlh the right or both lhe d"rendant ind the people to a fair trial." Beyond doubt Miss Davis's broadcast was e1 pane pleading. since she and her interviewer explicitly made it so, but there are other element! in this a · traordinary communic:.ations event which merit e.umin1t1on. AS THE WORLD KNOWS. ~fas Dovis. • black, ts in custody charged with tnurdflt'.i... under allegaUon lihe provided the gus U30Cf In tho fatal shootou.t in Marin County SUperior Court in Augus~ 19711. Al she told I~ Mias Davis's 1tory was ln Jw key. She was ba?TM from discussion of her pending c:ase, but not from advanclrut her racial and Com- munlll phllosopny, primarily related to tbe adminlltulioo of j"'ijce in the United St1tea. Tbtte Wtte m IUl"priles. )flss Davis ls c:o --her race and U.O.. of her po ~cal belief are ••opsreued., ,,.. u she u i 111<1 that lbe only ucape lit1 in m -tlonary IClloa wllkh w o u I d "'de. :oy'' tbe0A_merlcan IOdal ...... Htr •• . -Royce Brier j ) intefviewer was the Rev. Cecil Williams, who fed her questions whic:h would not embarrass her position. Her responses were Wonned with an unremltting flow over a wide spectnun of her rigid cre- dence. CONCOMITANT wrm her credence, Is one that her people cannot get a hearing before the general citizenry, or the establishment, »t:alled, but as the letter to the television 11tation foresaw, her un· trammeled presence on the screen refuted that corivictlon. and in an. Im· portant way. It would be dealing in cllche l<> 1ay her revolutionary faith would be publicly tolerated In few nations today, none of them dominated by doctrlnalr< com- munism. or of a fascist or mllltary stamp. The whole question. or course, was not bruthed to her by her fn.. ttrviewer. Yet convinced Americans caMOl rest on 1Uch easy Jaur~s. Their position must be. and has been aince the Constitutional Omvention in the 1780s, that a ftte 'socie- ty must make room for dlssent, and that dissenters have a constitutional rlght to their beliefs, and to exiireaston of them. The only qualification Is that dissenters may not commit overt acts qalnst the Cree society involving vjolence. In this llah~ Mil! Davis"• broadcast w1.s an affirmation of, not 1 men11ce to, our Cree society. It clear~ some alr which needed clearlnt aince Miss Davis is 1 foremost uponent of black radicalism. !'or wt. tho m.JoritY. must lllten to minority grievance1, whetbet or not "'->" are valid. and those wllo wW not have olttn filled .. Ille put. and haYt a q- tlonable fulure of ibeJr own. • off the tax rolls before the March l assessment deadline. Also. the vacant structures threatened to become an "attractive nuisance," r.;i:using pol ice and fire prob- lems. so their removal became a priority issue. Because much of the park development is funded by a government grant. a formal bid advertising pro- cedure was required for the demolition assignment, but It should be under way within the week. One landmark, the Standard station. al.rudy has been removed by the former owners. The view out the window is getting brighter. Soon a Safer Freewa)· Time and again neYlSpapers -and the DAILY PILOT is no exception -are assailed for presenting graphic accounts of death and injury on Orange Coast roadways. And among those stories ia recent years have been many describing the carnage on the San Diego Freeway in the South County where unguarded center strips have created a new Sla~hter Alley. Se.veraJ editorials have appeared in this newspaper appealing for center protection. Similar appeals have come from traffic enforcement agencies. Someone in Sacramento must have listened. · Recently it was an nounced that $750,000 has been committed to installation of full center protection along the freeway. And the completion date won 't be the original one scheduJed for the late 1970's, but before the end ot this year. Those fences could save scores of lives. The state Division of Highways is to be highly commended for committing the fund& to make the free· way safer. s IN J'AIL! Oii! 15 iUAT ALLf SURE,FitEI>, M'LL ~ fH~R'E! \'IOULPNT Mlf.5 11'! Code Does Not Prohibit Flying Old Glory at Night Can Display Flag Around Clock Ta the Editor: You published a Jetter l started sending out about a year ago trying to inspire a new interest in Old Glory as a symbol of our rededication lo our ideals and prln· ciples. Our flag has been considered a living thing: so I maintained that It should be treated like a truly living <thing and not folded away during the dark hours or during stormy weather. ' A LETTER just reciived from the . American Legion 's national headquarters in Indianapolis informs us that the Flag Code is being changed tet fit into our present way ·of:JHe -a :world ot tight. It follows in part: ' ' ·• ... the revision of Public Law 929 (the Flag Code) is yet in tlie legislative mill in Washington. There has been a bill introduced into thill Congress, asking for the Presidential appointment of a nag commission to study and revise Public Law 829, but passage appears doubtful for this congressional session. .. THE AMERICAN Legion National Americanism Commission w ii s in- strumental in the adoption af a resolution at the 53rd nalianal convention in Houston, whic:h would permit display of an all-weather flag 24 hours per day. pro- vided that it is lighted. Extensive research confirmed that Public Law 829 does not prohibit the display af the United States flag 24 hours per day as long u a patriotic effect is desired ." KATllRYN FISHBACK Mrs. Fishbac.k hes been. nominated /~ a Freedoms Foundation award. -Editor Special Interests To the Editor : The removal of Edward Lorr from the Laguna Beach City Council is Jong overdue. No one interested in the well being of our community can accept a public serv,ant who has conaistenUy nouted the opinion and the most legitimate interests of those who ~tcied him . Mr. Lorr's actual constitueocy 't'dnsists of out-of·town hotel interesti. land speculators, aod those elements of the «al busine5s community whic:h equate progress with the roaring crescendo of bulldozers. more tourists , traffic con- gestion. and further eeo\ogic damage. Mr. Lorr has served these lnteresl5 faithfully, but nett with much political flair; chances are that his own sup- porters find him at times embarrassing. and will not be Wo unhappy to see him return to his beauty parlor. llOW,EVER. MORE lmportanl than ftfr. Lorr'• controver1ial aims. his verbal excesses, and his alleged mlsu1e o( city funds is the ~lion : who will take his place? It would be foolhardy to believe that Mr. Lorr 's removal from public: of· flee, desirable as It Is for a self·respe<:· ting community, would lessen the in· fiuenct of those hf' represents. Already new ct1ndidstes p r e s e n t them.selves·.'. for lhe city council, can· Dear Georae: What Is the. name of 1 person who collect. rocbl P. T. Dear P. T.: Arthur WUlinJIM, 823 M a p I ' A\'e.nue., Bark. Ark. He's already got Z3. Dear Georae: Do YoU bellevo In oldofuhloned home remeditt, or ahould a doctor be ••lied! r.. .,..,, haYlnc an MaillM".x Letters 1rom readns ore welcomt. Norma.ll11 torittrs should convey their tMssaaes in 300 word.r or less. TM riaht to condeme letttrs to fit spact OT eliminate libel is reserved. AU let· ters mtL.!t incluck signature and mail- ing addreu. but ~• may be toith- het.d on reqtu!t if rtifficU"nt rea.son is apparent. Poet'l"JI f.OiU not be pul> li.sMd. didate5 who cOmmand certainly more respect than Mr. Lorr but whose goals for the community cannot possibly differ very much from his. I must admit that I vielf with considerable apprehension the recent announcement that Harry Lawren· ce will run for office in the forthcoming elections for the city council. I RESPECT Mr. Lawrence as a businessman ol stature and of personal integrity, but I also vividly recall a discussion [ had with him an the high-rise issue in which he dismissed the anti· high-rise initiative as "mob rule.'' preferring presumably "Chamber of Commerce rule" or "business rule"! This is precisely what must be avoided in the forthcoming election for the c:ity council. As on past occasions, candidates like Mr. Lawrence Identify themselves with "realistic alternatives to current ap- proaches," concern for the ''welfare of a community he has served for two decades," "more efrective control of drugs and hippies," and other non· committal euphemisms. BUT WHAT WE really want to know is whether these candidates will continue to support developments overwhelnting\y and unequivocally disapproved by the electorate, whether they will revive the absurd notion that high-rise hotels at our beach would make our city more "viable," and whether the immediate i.n- tereata of a few businessmen shouJd take precedence over the physical and mental weUare of tht entire community. Jn terms of city planning and com· munity developmenls, Messrs. Lorr and Lawrence are two different represe~ taUves or the same interest groups. and caMot possibly be supported by those whet regard Laguna Beach as a place for relaxation. contemplative pursuits. rais· Ing of families, and an island of peace and atability ln a rapidly industrializing county. FREDERIC C. LUDWIG M.D., D.Sc. Professor of Pathology and Radiology UCI Coll•ge of Medicin• Recall All Three To the Editor: In a puhllc show of protest al a council seuion last Sept. l, Civic League Pre&!· dent JCtD Brand. featured vocalist for the local organlz.ationa and groups, de- argument with my husband. LOlflSE J see ebsoluttly no reason to can a doctor because you've been bava Ing an argument with yetur hus- band. Sheesh! No wonder doc!M• won't make hoUse calls. r tblnlr I'll make tome ausalru lu and 10 De down. • (Send your problema to Geer~. He burned hll library card by rnls!ake and has nolblng to ""d). nounced the abortive recall of Lorr, Ostrander and Goldberg, branding it. "unmerited and unwarranted." stating, "Inasmuch as the three councilmen mentioned ha ve backed placement or the 36-foot height limit in the zoning. and inasmuch as they have actively backed the rapid development of Main Beach Park. long and cherished objec- live of the Civic: League, etc .. the Civic League directors are against the recall action." Brand admitted ''areas of basic disagreement between the Civic: League philosophy and the three c:ounc:ilmen" but added. "These disagreements concerning the future of Laguna are cause for discussion, hard work and coopera· lion-not recall." IN A 180 DEG REE turn defying human logic, Councilman Lorr, member of the unpopular voting bloc. was targeted sc:apegoal for a recall by Brand despite all that was forgiven . Brand again demonstrates his talent for understanding little of what he has done and much less about what he is doing now . Tt is folly to believe the ouster af Lorr will create a Utopia . The political stakes are high in the Laguna eleclions. The high money interests of the Irvine com- plex and the professional bureaucrats or the Stale Highway Commission are well represenled by our Chamber of Com· merce whose bullpen is stocked with blue ribbon challengers ready to charge the political arena with as impreMive backgrounds as those now confronting Boyd and Holm s. TO THOSE WHO are truly dedicated citizens for good government, I urge In fairness for those who also seek the recall of Goldberg and Ostrander to abandon the present movement in the best interest of the community and join I.he recall of Lorr, Ostrander and Goldberg whic:h will be initiated &00n. Our goal is common, that of a responsible city council where we may all exercige our right!. SPERO JANISE Keep School Programs To th• Editor: We have Uved in th! Laguna Beach School District since 1956. We have _two sons. OUr oldtlt son, now attending Sad· dleback .. atarted his education al Aliso Elementary, transferred to El Morro when we moved, attended Thurston and graduated from Laguna Beac:h High School la!l't June. Our youngest son started his education the first year Top of the World School opened, attended kindergarten, then transferred to El Morro for the first grade, then back to Top of the World for the second gr1de and has continued t.bt.re and Is presenUy tn the fourth grade. WHEN AN opportunity was offered to me to become a hostess-guide at Top o( the World School (1 volunteer projecO. t decided to accept the cbaJJenge because I would really have to know what WllS going on at the school In order to he able to tell vtsiton what I.he educttiorW pro. gr11m wu all about. J hive been a guide for two years aad the educators and parents that have come from all over the United StAtes have been so lm'pressed that t0me of thtm have returned 1eve.ral times to team more '° they can try lo Implement some of our programs in their own llchool1. BECAUSE 01' TllE ag• span of our two boys and the fact they bavt au.oded all of the achoob In the dlstrlcl, "" haoe been able to 1V1luate the dlfrertnce In their educaUon. Our youngest """ baa been moliv•ted from the d1y be mtmd kinderpmn, enjoyt acbool and ii en- lhusiastic about learning. We are pleased with the progrell! that has betn made in recent years In the Laguna Beach schools and hope that drastic: C'hanges will not be made in the existing programll'.. MRS . DEAN WHITAKER itlake Your1elf Reard To the Editor: The actions and lack of actions OW' city leaden; are getting away with art astonishing! But the really appallinQ thi ng is what our "three dedicated schoo1 board members" are doing to our scbool1 and wi th so little opposition from the community. I GUESS I WAS very wrong thinking it could never happen here . People don't even bother lo express an opinion, let alone fight for an outslanding system which has taken years to build. It will shock even the unconcerned to ~ how quickly Thomas , Gillette and Linke will destroy it, as pl.11.nned long before "elected," and long before they have studied the situation . Please take a minute o( your time to make yourself heard . M. S. CROWE 'Eddie, I• Thia True:'' To the Editor: 11.frs. John Q. Public is working in her kitchen. Sounds of quarreling kids are heard from the back yard where the council kids have been playing with somt of Mrs. Public's kids. Mrs . Public hurries out. ''Here, here. what Is going on?" "Eddie Council was steall ng cookies from the cookie jar," says Bea Public. indignantly . "MY GOOON~SS." say.s Mother Public. "is this true. Eddie?" Eddie's older brnlher, Richie, shouts, "All the kids knew he was going to and they didn"t say an)'1hing." Mother Public smiles. '"Bul. Richie . J asked only if il were true or not." Bea PubUc. almost In tears. "And he's sneaky, Mother. You told us not to play with those tall building toy1, and he ha1 been telling us we c:an, lf you don't see us." "NOW THIS IS a serious charge," 11y1 Mc.ther. ''Eddie, h1 this true?" Eddie: "She's only telllng hall the truth. I'll tell you the whole truth tomor· row." RIChle interrupts, "Why didn't Bea tell on Eddie before, huh?" Mother Public slalu. "'All rlg bl children, let's wait unUI tomorrow when FMle reels Ilk• llllklna. Mtanwhllt, try to get along, huh?" MRS. C. H. PUTNAM ORA.NOi COAIT DAILY PILOT Roberl N. Weed, l'ubU.hr Thomd.s Kcc.U, Editor Alberl w1 ~1<1 Editorial P•o< E<Utor The editorial pl.JC' of the Daf11 l'Uett set.ks to lntonn and •timU· late tt!l.&!rs by prtttntlnr ~· ne~"rl.Jw'• ftpinl1uW a.nd com- Jnt'ntary on toptca or 1nt"1!1t •nd •f.an111':anet, by prOYldlni • farU"' fOf' lht! uvre•lon of 'our ~ oplnl(ln._ and bf p~nUJ\I tht dlvnwtt ~i*ntl of Informed ob-~~"ttl and tpoktsrotn on tq,im of thli da,y. WednOJday, F•b. l3, 1972 '· • ... -. \ Boniington Bea~eh Fountain Valley ... . . . ~. i s, NO. '40, 5 SECTI ONS, 66 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Today'• Fl.Dal N.Y. Stoek.s • ' WEDNESDAY, FEBRUAllY 23, 1972 TEN CENTS et Shop Owner . Wins Second Chance By TERRY COVILLE °' tlHi o.11r l'lltt St•lf Sigfried Janich might be called methlng of a snake chatmer. At least he cast enough of a spell on the ntington Beach City Council Tuesday ght to get a second chance at obtaining a wild animal permit for his pet shop at 1 Warner Ave. Janlch wants to sell large snakes -boa ri.striclors -and other reptiles. He was originally denied a wild animal term.it when police investigators reported that he kept "scorpions, tarantula11, cop- • per heads and rattlesnakes." "They are all gone now," Hanich reported Tuesday night. 1'J just sell what people want for pets." He said lizards and boas are very popular. "I killed the polsonowi animals," Janich said ... I was more scared than anyone. l only like fish ." He told C(lUncllmen he kept the wild menagerie to draw atte ntion to his shop which he said ls 1n a poor location. "I'm the biggest make dealer In Orange County," he said proudly. "But 1xon, Disgust Told Teachers Split In Huntington Teachers In the Huntington Beach City (elementary) School District have split their rapka; over the attempt of some teachers to seek criminal charges against 1ehool board members. "Teachers in my organization are totally disgusted by this tactic," Gary Reboin told trusteea at their regular meeting Tuesday night. "We don't agree with this approach at all." Reboin said that most of the "8 teachers in the Huntington Beach Professional Educators AuociaUon. of Phone Company Seeks Increase In County Rates Rate increases affecting the 171,344 telephones in Orange County provided by the General Telephone Company are .being sought by that firm that serves all or part of seven communities along the Orange Coast. The Public Utilities commission has yet to set a date for a hearing on the '21.6 million overall rate increase sought by General Telephone "to oUset increased labor costs." The increases would affect General Telliphone subscribers in Huntington Harbour, parl5 of Huntington Beach, Westminster , Laguna Beach, Monarch Bay, South Laguna, Surfside and parts of Laguna Niguel. Telephones In homes would be billed an extra 10 cenl5 a month, In businesses_ the sought increase ts 35 cents a month and switchboard trunk line rates would be hiked 50 cents each per month. General Telephone Is asking the PUC to approve a 50-cent per month charge for unlisted telephones, $10 to change a home telephone number and $15 to change· a business phone number. ..... Message unit calls would go up from 4. 7 cent& per unit to 4.8 cents. Service connection charges to Install phones would jump from $12 to $18 for residential subscribers and from $18 to $25 for business customers. which he is president, had been con- tacted , and that they were "In shock" at the thought of putting members of the school board in jail. There are 275 teachers In the Hun- tington Beach city schools, 'and an organization representing 164 of them ls seeking criminal charges against the achoo! board for alleged violation of tile Brown Act. California'• Ralph M. Brown Act U: an anti-secrecy statute whJcb reqWret public governing bodies to meet and act in J>Jbll<: on virtually all matters. Besides Reboln'1 presentation, the tluatees disclosed a letter of suppart sent them from "all or most all' of the teachen at LeBard .School. The letter, read by Board President Jack Clapp, quoted teachers as saying that they were "embarrassed" by the re- quest for crimlnaJ charges and that they "resent this type of tactic." The letter was also signed by LeBard Principal Bob Landi. Trustees would not comment on the case because they said It was a legal matter. "It's something that the legal beagles are going to have decide," said Superintendent S. A. Moffett. "We don 't feel we should Comment." If C(lnvicted of violating the Brown act, board members could be sentenced to up to six months in jail. "Our Intent Is not to put anyone In jail," said Dorothy McC1ure, president of the Huntington Beach Teachers Associa- tion, the group that Is pressing the action. "We feel that the board has acted il- legally, and the only legal recourse we have is to pursue a criminal charge. We wish the law weren't written this way, but it ls," said Mrs. McClure. The possible prosecution centers on a Jan. 11 meeting of trustees at which pay raises for administrators were discussed, although the item was not listed on the agenda. Board President Clapp admitted emr and said it has been accidental. "You could tell by the tone of his voice that he was pretty much apologizing," Reboln said. However Mrs. McClure said she believes it may have been done in- tentionally. · "We've been fighting them on matters like this for a long time," she said ... All we want ls a clarification on this matter, and this iJ the only way we can get it, 1c- cording to our attorney." the Humane Society told me something about boas killing babies." "Not on this planet," said Councilman Donald Shipley, a biology professor 't'Cal State, Long Beach. "Seven-foot boas don't sell Very well," Hanlch admitted. "Your officers gave me two weeks to ge t rid of them , so they are at home now." "Where is home?" asked CoJJn- cilwoman Norma Gibbs. "Tustin," replied Janich. Several councilmen sighed in relief. . Pollca Chlel Earl Robltallle llid bis men found Janlcb'I pet •tore In poor'°"' diUon Ind that wu another reason the application wu denied. "At the time my investigator was In the store," Robitaille said, ·~they dropped a glass cage with crocodiles and It w.all 90 dark they had to search for them with llashllghto.'' ' "I think it's a rretty good setup.11 snapped Janicb. " t took 1 lot of nails ancl a .Jot o( work tG set up." Janlch a~mltt~ that he is in- ._1enced In lhe pet shop bualne8', Che wu a tool and dye maker), but promised there would be no more dangerous animals or reptiles. He did bring in an expert zoologist from the Orange County Herpetology Society who said boas are In fact good pets and not dangerous. Councilmen Shipley and Jerry Matney agreed. The expert said constrictors get their title because they squeeze their victims tG death, but would ne,ver attack a Uflll T...;..:.,. PRESIDENT NIXON HELPS PREMIER CHOµ EN·LAI OF~ WITH His COAT"°$ TALKS .RESUME . Cqntlnuod Cordlallly Marki Third Doy of Form1l'Dlic\lulon1 lle'-it Two P~ro ' '. TV Coverage Of China Set NEW YORK (UPI) -Tbe major networks have announced their scheduled. coverage for today and Thursday morn- ing of President Nixon's trip to China. The schedules are subject to change. All times shown are PST. CBS -Tonight, coverage on tbe CBS Evening News, 7·7 :30 p.m.; Thursday, coverage on the CBS Morning News, 7-8 a.m. NBC -Tonight, coverage on the NBC Nightfy News, 7-7 : 30 p.m: evening special program 11:30 p.m.-midnlght. Thursday, ,eoverage included in the "Today!' show, tl-9 a.m. ABC -Tonight, coverage on the Eve- ning News 7-7 :30 p.m.; special program prior to the Dick Cavett Show, 11:30-11 :50 p.m.; Thursday, special program 7:30-8 a.m. Easter Seal Feted Fountain Valley Mayor Ed Just has proclaimed Feb. 28 lhrouih April 2 .as Easter Seal Month in the city of Fountain Valley. . ' ... RFK's S·on ·Passeng.e:rs ' • ,, ~, I ' ' . ' l!Feed; Air Crew Held ~ . By United Pre11 !Aternalfolllf A special Lufthansa plane carrying 129 hijack vlctlins irlctudlhg J'oSepll ·P. Ken-. nedy III left Southern Yemen's Aden airport today for ' Athens and Fianklurt, Aden airport officiali reported. Another planeload or victims left earll~r but 14 crewmen remalried behind as hostages. Tbe first group of SO -Including 1fl women, 12 children and one man -ar- rived In Frankfurt today· from . Beirut where they told of beirig terroriud by Arab commandos who threatened con- 1tanlly Jo blow up the hijacked Lullhansa 747 In Dlght. A 1pokffman he tboUgbl the IJl.yeir-old Kennedy, son of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, would cateh a direct Dlght fro m Alhenl to·lhe United Slates.' ·Tbe comlDlndos hljaclied. tbe jumbo Jct over l19mbay .Monday night on a night from New J.¥1lhJ to Atherui ,OO for.Ced It fo land at Aderi at the soulheno lip ol lhe Arabian Peninsula. It sat there today in a blazlNI sun with the five or ·si.z: ·co~ndos. refusing even to neg<>,tlate1 ltJ release;. Mahmoud Arazl, the Southern Yemen director of civil aviation. said the hi~ jackers refused to negotiate with two Gerrrian officials who arrived In Aden to-- day lo try Jo bargain ror the releoae of lhe crewmen and the 12.1 mllllon plane. He identified the Germana 11 Kurt Muller and a Mr. Ernest and 1ald the guerrillai ·aboard the plane refusecrto Bee them or even to negotiate with the Yemeni authorities. '"Tbe guerrillas say they wlll only negotiate after dlaculslng . matters .with their leadership In the occupied ~aelt territory," Arazl said. ' "We desperately need the proposed Increase to offset our latest wage set- tlement, especially In view of the fact that the PUC granted ., only about 66 percent of our lleded •relief in our la~ rate request," said Richard' L. Ohlson, vice president of General Telephone. Sacramento Junket Slated He said the guerri!las Jold hlmibey had their own means of cmmmunlc1UOn with their Arab allle1. Atked 1bout lh• crew·hotlll"; be 1ald ''They are fine, t saw them todly." All told, the firm is seeking a total rate Increase of 8.3 percent noting, 0 after all wage increases have been granted. without offsetting rate revenues the corn· pany would realize only a 7 .39 percent rate of return." • T AKE AN 'AX' TO YOUR TAX This Is the Urne ol year DAILY P!lnr nnancial columnist Sylvia Porter put1 the ••ai" in ta1e1. Flrit of a series of nin e columns on how Jo rind the legal comers Jo cut when Hllng your income tax appetred ln Tuellday'1 editions. Tbe RCOnd column Is ln~ct. today on Page 23. It could save 'YOU money to clip and save 111 nine columns. B.oard, County Aides to Christen Lobb y ist Office A junket Jo Sacramenlo Is tentatively 1et for March 30 Jo formally christen the new Orange County lobbylll'• office In Sacramento. Flflh District SUpervllOr and Board Chairman Ronald W. Caspers, of Newport Beach, wbo Jul week got broad approval of the new olflce, Tuetday pro- pol<d the man journey Jo the 1tlte capital. Ca1pers propoo<d and )he board ap. JXVVed a trip to hoclude board members, tbtir wives or lady !rlcnds and all county departmtnt beada. He suggested that they checl< out the ne.w office whlcb will "open quietly" on March I, vlJlt the county's legislative . loam and ata1e a luncheon for all con- ctmed, Including "hopefully, Gov. Ronald Reagan." Carpers suggested establishment of full time offlce1 in Sacramento and In WasblnglOn D.C. Jo "further the county's Interests In the two capitols. Tbrougb tile County Administrative Of. flee, olllct apoct was tecured '' a building acrou the street from tno capllol building. Co1ta: of keeping Ted Cral1, a form er 1peabr of lhe wembly and longllme cowity representaUve and John Anderson oi the County Counltl'1 ofllct on the job fullllme were estimated at lt,000 • month for olflci space and f7llJ a monlh for a permanent omce teerellry. Tbe secretary will be chosen IJom' lho , County SUpervllOl'I AaooctaUon o I California (CSAC) pool and paid by Orange Cowity. I Paul Balch ol 'l\IJtln, 1n IMounctd' Clndldat. for the !Ira! district 1upervll- oral post now held by Robert Balllnt 1Ug· gested Tuellday that the secretary lbOUld be select..i from the unemployed In the county. Cupera said hll request would be oon- 1ldered. · The cost of the trip will 'be reduetd con11dcrably U Air Colllomll asr-to tranaport the crowd to 1nd ltono the cap. ital free. • · "f understand Ibey baye offered Jo do tbat,I' Cupel'I 111d later. "If lhey do not, only the board members all>uld IO·• But he said explosives placed aboard lhe plane by the guerrillu stlll ar• there and that Ibey stlll lhreaten Jo blqw It up. The ruerrlllu have DOI made public their demJnd• and Arau uld "Ibey will only negotlat• after colllUlt\111 their leader1hlp.'' The first i'OuP lo leave Aden Wll mobbed by more than 150 photorraphers and newsmen u Jt arrived ln Frankfort. The ocene was so chaotic Lufthanll offl· ctall llld1hey would keep thel>rtu 1way fro111 t1ie mep .poue111ea when lhoy ar- rlv. al Franklurl on the RCOnd relief flight. • Best Time to Close LONDON (UPI) -NoUce dlaplayed,at mid-<111 out.id• a centr1l London rutaurant: 'Coled for luncll." human, even a baby. "With all this squee&lna, I'd preftr 1n object sboul six feet tall," chipped in Mrs. Gibbs. Matney said that perhaps the city nor the SPCA Is an expert on reptiles and had made a mistake on the boas. Councilmen ordered the city staff tn work wllh Ja11ich to establish hill pet iitore In an acc~plable.manner to obtain the wlld anlml\l llctnse. Janich Ored cne last question u he left : "How Jong Will I hive to keep the snakes In my home?" e? Ag1·e e:inents Reported In Talks By HELEN THOMAS PEKING ( UPl) -President Nixon and Premier Chou En-lat were believed today to have agreed upon a broad exchange of student11, scholars and newsmen between their cquntrles and Were dlscuss lnf a far- reaching declaraUon of peace{u c::bel• istence. This was reported by resident wt1tern dlplomato In Peking follow)111 a·meetl\11 of more than four hours between the Jeader1 at Nixon'• luturlous lakestde guest house, dubbed temporarJly 11tbe Pnldo&-ll'llUo'"liouaa. ~ • • ..... -. ..... ,,, ... .,....,., Tb• meetlnf atarled wJtlJ a llfnl from Chou that AmerJcan new1men •c- companylng Nixon may be Invited Jo etly behind when the Pre1Jdent leave.1 In flve days. UPI DlplomaUc Corre1pondent Stewarl Hensley also said an 1greement on some form of dJplomatic contact -1hort of formal diplomatic recognition -w11 believed to have been nailed down at the meeting. The Chou-Nixon talks, by prur- rangement of the two governments, are kept in utmost secrecy. No o!flclal an- nouncements on what hat been dllcusaed will be made un!U lhe talkl end. But Hensley 1aid the indlcatlona are strong that the meetings ultimately would end with a landmark declaration of peacelul coexlltence which could have a ~ajor eltect on Asia and the world. And tt WU Wumed lhat secretary of State WOiiam P. Rogers Jn bis talks wllh Chinese Foreign Mlnlster Chi Pong-lei might be working out lhe speclllc detail• of Sino-American exchange agreements and the maMer of establishing contlnulnr contacto 1horl ol diplomatic relations. Ofllcials warned agalnst IBlltmlng each country would establlih a trade minion In the other. They said lt was more likely that the conttnulns contacla would be set up In Canada, or aome other thlrd coun- try. Both portle1 appeared In Mgh spltlto and satlsrled wllh their progr.., when Chou drove through a snowfall -the nr.et fool· weather 1lnce Nixon's arrival Mon- day -to call on the President. Previous meetlnp had been held at a site 1elected by Chou -the ornate Great Hall of the People. No algnlflcanco WU attached Jo the change In slta. Mrs. Nixon, meanwhile, was auumlna 18ee NIXON, Page I) Cout Weather You probably won't lie mucll of the IUD on Thu.rtdty, tither, IC.- cording to the weathertady. Low clouds and fog will take up mOll of lhe day. RlgbJ of 83 lo 71 are predicted. Lows In the mld..a'a. INSmE TODAY For a U1t of th• weektnd'1 Uut theollr attracUom and • look ot the top 01~r nomfneer. ret toda~'• ntlrtoin1'1tnt pog1 -27. L, M. ~ 7 ....... .. C./lfw* • c.,..., ~ 11 CltMllftlll ., ... c .... rc. • ·-. ---' ... t.NI ,.... • •""'1•1fHMM 11 ·-.... p;tf lllt It_. t, II MINIClt" JI ............ -. ' • •' % DAILY PILOT H ' , Air Guard Head Faces Fund Rap WASHINGTON (AP) -A federal . lfllld lW'Y bu lndlcled the commander 'or tile Alabama Air NaUoruil Guard on a ~harge ol COOllplrlng to lllegaUy &0llcll $3,200 Jn political cootrtbuttom from Air ·'Guard omcen for candldat.. 1n Ille 1m Alabama election, tile Justice Depart· • ment announced today. . , One ol Ille eampalgm Involved, the ~epartment aald, wu that of George C. • Wallace, the governor ol Alabama. ' Atty. Gen. John N. Mllchell aald the alngle counl lndlclment wu retwned to- flay In U.S. Diltric:t Court 1 o Moolgomtey, Ala., agalnat Maj. Gen. Goorge Reed Doller. • Three of Doster'• subordinates also were lndlc:led and were ldenUfled u Cob. •Henry Fillingim Jr. and JameJ E. :Hardwkk and Lt. Col. Allred B. Gurley. Named as unlndlcted co.conspirators were Air Guard Cols. Lawrence A. Doyle, · Willlam P. Baker, Willie L Whitman Jr., 'Edward D. Gilmer and Maj. J,.onnlt J. ~Slauson Jr. The ¥•bnent charged that the defen- -;dants ctmpl.Nd, beginning in March 1970, ~ coeree other AJr Guard olflcen to con. tribute fl,100 to Wallace'• campaign; $1,000 to former governor Albert Brewer, 'a candidate for governor in 1970; f400 to 'Hugh Morrow ID, a candidate for 'lieutenant governor, and •11111 to. State Sen. Leland Cbllds, Wbo WU not nmnlng ·for re-election. The Indictment aid Iha~ u a part of •the oonsplrlcy, the defendants used government !ac:lllUet to aollcll the pollUeal oootrlbuUona and threatened to :downgrade certain Air Guard off1cei-1 if 'they failed to oontrlbute. • Tbe lndlelment quoted Do!ler u teUlng an Alt Guard major, Wllllam H. Beddow Jr., that U he was Interviewed by the FBI Beddow could chose one of three courses ·cf action: "blow your brains out; tum 'itate11 evidence or lie U interviewed." ' Tbe lndlctmenl aald Do!ler lllggeated 'Beddow follow the third altemaUve. ,~elmenl aJao alleged that Doater Gurley to imdertake I h e .•Y eollcltalion of pollUeal .... trlbuUons; :Council Orders iCounty to Open 1 i . . !Brookhurst St} ; HunUngton Beac:ll Clounellmen ordered ·the lromedlale reopening o! Brookburll :street to through tramc 1n both dlrto- ·Uons, Tuesday night. : Several oouncllmen were enragef;t when they learned that Brookburllt wu closed 'Monday and Tueeday to northbound Ira!· !k between Bushard Street and Hammon Avenue. : The street wu partially closed for con- :1tructlon work on the Orange C.ounty :S.OltsUon Dlslrlc:l's sewage pipellne :Whlc:ll w1ll eventually oontac:t the :Separate sewage treatment plants 1n 'Fountain Valley and Huntington Beac:ll. "There w1ll be no rerouUng of! of Brookhurst," demanded. en angey Jeny- Matney. "That1s what we WeJ;'e promlsed. We made no o~ agreement" I ;City stall members aald this morning that Bi:ookburst was lclleduled to be reopened lod11 anyway. :· ·The aanltat1<>n dbtrlc:t had promlled lhe city_ that It would keep rout.. open .both north and south through the several ~onths of constructkm along Brookhurst. OIANIJI COAST Ht DAILY PILOT -· -•Ult.llHlll~ -,p>Jrt loL•rt N. Weed ,,_.,.,. ft P'l•U1I#' ~ .. t 1t. e.~,., Vice PntJdtll ""' O..al MllllM' 1ti11rt1• Keml ..... 'It.emu Ai Mvryi\111 Mmlllirll· Ed!IOf 'r1rry Covill• "'91 a.e COun11 .,,.. """--Office 17175 .. adl' l•wlevard M<ttn1 Add""' r.o, rox no, tli41 --...... "'411 ID f..t A.,.,,. C:O.ft Ma1: D W.t 81'f I"'"' .. tlflnort lllldl.: 11» Newpart lou!M ... SID Qlmlrl!a: as NOftb El ClMfUlil ·. Nixons See GyID Show. Lithe Chinese Athletes Give Display UPI Tt~ "4 PEKING (UPI) -Cb1na paraded Its talented men and women gymnasts in two holll'I of spectacular, acrobaUc performancts today for 1 blgbly •P' * * * From Page J NIXON ... the role of her busband'a ambassador to <Jblna'• 800 mllllon people. Ignoring the snow and the oold, lhe gamely trotted along dusty yeUow dirt roada on a tour Ot a commune west of Peking where 41,000 peasanll live and fmn. Tbe Finl Lady, wrapped In a fur-lined coat, visited a pig farm, a primary school, the med1cal clinJc, a hot hcwe and a general store. ·preclatlve President 1nd Mrs. Nixon and 15,000 conatanUy applauding Chinese. The Nlxoru accompanied by Premier Chou En-lal, shook their heads in wonder· ment as the Utbe, athletic gymnasts performed. The Presldent, Mra:. Nixon and Chou aat Jn front row seats in the immense Capital Gymna.lum -leapob In front of them, kept !Wed by waitress., -and joined thousanda of Peking ecl>ool cblldren In rh1thmlc applause. Particularly qul!tanding was the work of the white-Onilormed men on the .still rings and tho l)lg)i bar • ·The women, Btrong and muscular but very r.minlne In red •blrta and Ugbt blue shorts, performed best on the balance beam and turned In spectacular moves on the uneven parallel bars. Tbe Cblnese do not participate In the summer Olympics, where the gymnastic championships are held , largely for pollUeal reuons. Bui judging from the show they put on for the Nlxons, they would be contenders for the gold medal. At one. point, after the men'1:hlgh bar performances, the President threw hil bands lnlQ the air, sbook bis bead In . a"'Y'ment, and • looked to his right to Secretary of State WIUlam P •. Roger1. Tbe cbln... are an athletic people. WorkF! gel two !5'mtnule b,,.u dally t<'r mandatory exercises. One o f ~halnnan Mao T•tung's quot11tlons is "Promote physical culture, build up the peoJ>:les' health." ~IX<$! a sometime bowler, a now-and- again goUer but an avid football fan, talked Jlnimatedly wUh' Chon, remarking about the performance. The gymnuta were followed by Chinese badminton plax._ers, one of them the women's national cbamp1on. The girls showed ei:cellent fonn, slugging ~·Shut• Ueeoek so lb& eye could harely !olldw It. ll was a far cry from Amerlean backyard badminton. . Badminton gave way te the table tennis players, the world'a finest. It was the Chinese lnvlt.,.Uon to the American table tennis team last year that split the Bamboo Curtain an<! led to Nl>on'a summit trip lo Peking. Throughout the long program piano music set tbe tempo. FIRST LADY HUGS YOUNG CHINESE STUDENT IN PEKING Visiting Chinese Commune School Whll• President Works On Thursday, the Nl>ons probably w1ll make their Jong anticlpited trip north of Peking to visit the Great Wall of China, a -1,500-mlle barricade built about the 4th Century B.C. to keep foreign Invaders out. Today's talks brought to nine hours the !Imo epenl by Nllon and Chou ln formal Beach School Trustees business sessions. Church Project Okayed, Given Start Deadline lo addlUon, Nixon held a rare hour-long session with Chairman Mao Tse-tung, the aging philosopher of the Marxist move- ment who leans heavily QD Chou to make Consider Overcrowding Tbe First· Cbrlsliao Cbureh of Hun- tingtolr Beacl> bas three da)'ll to l5lart 00111truc:lloo on a If mllllon, 17·story retirement .tower. And U stUI may he •lopped by a lawslfit. Cburcll members fin.Uy won their ba~ tle with aome city councilmen Tuesday Connell Moves To Place Reins On Plans Agency City couocllmen moved awlftly '.l'Uesday nlgbt to bait .., further ac:llon! by the planning department stemming from the Huntington Beac:ll Town Lot atndy. Tbe c:ouncll ordered planneia to delay any ac:llon on loWll !<it study propoeal5 until the ~.!Ju!!¥ Iias been before the .._i[;,r. ]11161» !IMrlor, ,. Clounclllneii reaeled to oomplalnts fr9ni aeveral-bomeowners about the planting ol trees on 13tb Slreet to create parking spaees for nearby apartments. "I'm appalled at your lack of knowledge ol Ille 1tudy," Mrs. Eleanor Borltenhag~ a homeowner, complained. "These trees are juat ·a drOp In tho buci:et.'1 other home owners said the real issue ts the increued density ( mo r e apartments) ealled for by the town lot study. The trees, planted to create a cul de sac on 13th Street, are mentioned as one method ·to ease the parking situation for apartments in the town lot area The study wu developed by the plan- ning department 1n 1971. It covers old Huntington Beaeh ·from Sixth Street to Golden West Slreel and Paclllc Cout Highway to Palm Avenue. It was once an oil field . Councilmen admitted they have not reviewed the town lot study and it has not yet been adopted by the city. most decisions. Western diplomats in Peking are con. By ~nCBAEL GOODRICH vinctd that this unusual display of good °' ffl• 0111y tt11or s1.n feeling between countries which have Overcrowded school! again domJnated night, as the council voted ~2 to halt the been antagonists for two decades Is discussion by trustees of the Huntington First CbrlsUan Towers projeel. bound to be followed by eome form ol The favorable council vote was taken declaration. Beach Union High School District Tues· after City Attorney Don Donia ruled that It eould pledge them, despite their pro. day. Again, 1rus1 ... failed to reaeb any one year ago the city granted an Illegal fouitd differences in ideologies, IOclal defmltive conclusions. f f llJISWDs and pollUeal posltiona, to work condlUoruil e>eepUon or construellon o together to ellmlnate points of conillel In lostead, they: the tower. Asia. --Ordered more study of possible night CounclJmen Jack Green and Jerry Mat· Looming over their talks ls the classes ror high school students. ney !ailed In their bid to atop the project brooding shadow Of the Soviet Union, -Tabled a proposal to change at· with the attorney's ruling. whtch came close to going to war with tendance boundaries for Fountain Valley Green, Matney and Coundlnian Al Cblna during their border dispute ol 1969. High Sehool. Coen (absent Tuesday night) have op-Moscow, which Nixon will v.1&11 in May, -Said they will hear a new reP9rt on posed the retirement tower because o( lts bat shown great suspicion about the Pe-alternatives to attendance botmdary location in a residential area near Main killg summitry. alterations at their next meeting. Street and Adams Avenue. In addiUon, an uneasy Japan wonders -Decided that current overcrowding "It would be a good project In another bow the talks bore w1ll affect Its future problems •hould he studied by a new loeaUon," Green aid. "But rm· opposed relations with Cblna and Tokyo's role In committee separate from the uioting to a 17-story tower In one of tho c:tty•a Asia. group set up to 1ludy the feasibility of nicest re.sidential areu." year·aroand schools ln the district. Donia ruled the oondlllonal ~ception Westminster High Sebool Principal Dlegal beeause no grounds bad been Council Okays Ferreo Cbriotenseo reported that a sbown for bardahlp-a neeeaslty by city suevey al his sebool lbowed l,200 ordlnanee. · studenll with a definite Interest In late Dale Bush, a former Huntington Beacl> ~DDeXatiOn att.rnoon and night · classes. Most ol City Attorney• now representing the tl -lbose Interested 1n tho night c:lasaea ... church, replied that what is important pressed a desire to work in the day, be JIJIJVrJ1thecurrentJtatu.softbeproject. Of 'Ho·""eV Pot' said . .i • '"':II,,.._.,."'""-I ...aid -Ille :u J.·•· Tbere were 1,700 1tudents wbo did aot church to file an Immediate laW' IUft," • ·', ·I•.. want night, cl•sses. They cited Bush '•aid. Ho ·said boney alrtady Jn. Tbe ,lut veJUge •f 1be ·"Honey Pot" transportation problems and the d"lre to Ve!ted In the projeel by the ebureh -feud was removed Tuesday nl8bt when be home al night, the prlndpal reported., about '200.000 ~ was epent dn the bul1 Huntington Beacl> agreed to ·annex on Trustee Dennis Mangen, ealled for of the mndlUonal excepUon. • aere of land that once housed the trea~ more study to obtain the feelings of Bush argued that beeailie the clnudl ment plant of the Sunset Beacl> Sanitary pareots, teaeher• and other .tudents relied on city pennlsslon, a judge would throughout the dlstrlel Other trustees allow the tower to be buU!. Dillrict. agreed. Donia said that would be pou.lble, but Councilmen were told they needed no Robert Gordon, a computer lnslrucior, he was not prepared to give a legal opia-public bearing to approve annenUon criticized the board. 11U we wait we w1ll ton oo that at this time. beeause the property wu already owned nol be able to do anything about c:rowdlng Bush also said that even if councilmen by the city. !or this fall semester,'' Gordon said. assume they took an illegal action one It became city property Wlder an Acconµng to Gordon the suggestion to year ago, it 1s not illegal until a court agreement made last yur with the investigate the night classes was first rules lt -lllegal, which means there must sanitary dhtrlct to hook Sunset Beach presented on Nov. 13, 1969. be an individual suit against the city to pipeline! into the HunUnglon Beaeh Speaking In favor of boundary allera- stop the tower project. sewage system and transport it for treat.. tlons at Fountain Valley High, Mrs. The ebureb plans to buUd ,a 17-etory ment to the Orange County SanitaUon Joseph Diiie aald Ille 1cllool u 1rDWlng tower with 287 apartmen~ for pereon1 82 Dist.riot. by 500 students per year and, al that d 'th FHA tun•· and hel from The Sunset treatment aeility. wu b ball f lb an over WI ~ p labeled tho "Honey Pot" by outraged rate, would aboor one-0 e the Depattnient of Housing and Urban bo who district'• growtlL Development. The Tower is valued al resldenU of Huntington Har ur A student representative from Fountain more than If million. dalmed U ereated a bad odor throughout Valley Higb, JoDeen Urban, descrlbed Cburc:ll plans als6' c:'1I !Or OOllSlrueUon tbe water oriented .netgbborbood. the erowded condlllone, eddlng "We don't -drl Tbe Sunael Beac:ll Sanitary Dlstrlc:t WU of a 950-seat ·sanctuary and a ve-~ finally forced to give up its independent need more portable clusroom1, we need sanctuary structure. ~ operation by the California water Quality less atudenta." Couneilmen . w'1<J . oppqs¢ the projeel Control Board (Santa Ana Region) whlcl> Mangera aald be believes juggling have objected to the td1ftt. not the other tuled tt was indeed 1 nuiaaDce. to area boundarlu would cauae d.luenslon in the 11I th.ink "Y.'e should study other alternatives and leave the Issue tabled," he said. Other board members agreed. The board moved to hear a new report on alternatives to tl)e boundary alter&· tions at it3 nerl meeting. Concerning the matter of an all year schoo~ Trustee George Logan lllOl'ed thal the oommlttee autdylng that proposal ba relieved of the. responstbllity of in- vestigating overcrowding and that a new committee be formed to submit a parallel report on that problem. "The all-year achoo! needs the aolt at· tention or the committee if "'e are going to get ·ii off the ground by tbe 1973-74 achool year," he said. The motion was approved. Orange County's Cost of Living Takes New J'umP. Despite federal economic controls, reaidenla "I Orange County today found that the cost Gf. living went up again last month. The increase, reported by the Bureau of Labor S{atlsUcs, Is 0.1 pen:enl Higher costs for food, health and tramportation were held to blame for the ri!e. At the same time, the bureau noted that price.! for housing, apparel and transportation ac:lually dedined. The consumer price index stood at 120.2, whleh means that the Orange eoun. ty houuwife b88 to spend 112.02 for food, goods and serviees that cost 110 In 1967. During January, !ood prices rose 0.8 percent and health and recreation cost! 0.3 percent. Housing costs dropped 0.1 per~ apparel 0.7 percent and transportation 0.3 percent. Tbe bureau also announced that average overall weekly eamlnga dropped. Jn January to $129.20, a decrease of $1.SS from December, call.!ied by a decllne of seven-tenths of an hour of an average work week. However, the spendable earning! of a married worker with three dependents rote by 62 cents In· January to f115.ll because or federal tax relief provisions whlc:ll took effeel In January, the bureau The s\udy JJ:redlcts a changeover in land use in the~ town tot area Crom single famUy and duplex horn.., to multi-unit apartment3. It !Uggests methods by which this changeover can be advanced by the dty. plans. noses. di.strict. Church officials were in a hurry to ob-1..::~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiJF~iiiiiiiiiiliiiiilmiiiiiiil•iiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;e­tain ttieir building pOnnit -whic:ll they I did this morning -because the con.. ditional e.i:ception e.i:pirea Sunday. ~ keep II alive !bare must be some evidence of actual comtruction on the aid: Homeowneni o b l e e t e cl to the ~eover helng forced on already developed areu. property. Pornography Sale Suspect Identified by Distributor A Hollywood iJim laboratory manager Judge Corfman relec:led more than 10 today pleked out aeeused pornography obj..Uons by the defense before MeCJure could obtain an answer to his questions. peddler Fr~erlck Loar as the mao lo • Loir and Ills wife, Kay, 31, are aeeuaed whom be delivered movies 1cheduled !or of conspiracy to sell obscene materialJ. It display to an Orange County Superior is alleged that they ran a ,11,000 a day Court Jw7. • pornography business at the modest Hollywood Valley Film Lab manager Wesbninster premises. Vernon Frith named Loar, 34, of 4062 Police valued tbe films and Humboldt Ave., Huntington Beaeh, as photograplis !elied al the warebouae at "Pele Voss," the client who reeelved a about $lOO ooo Jn terms of wbat they said number of films and prlnta from his was the payment reeelved by the Loar• laboratory In late 1970. from clients wbo IUblcribed to wbal waa Deputy Dlltrlc:t Attomq Geo r g e • mainly a mall ordet ~. McClure clalms the material dbpatched McClure said be lbld1ds lo call ezperta to Pete Voas Sbowease, 15144 Golden on communlll slalldards · 111 the Oeld of West Clr<le, Wulmlnaler wu lewd and sexua"1 oriented ~ef and literature lo Ob~ and fonm part of 20,500 alleged· testify dlll'lni the trtaL · ly pom0gra;blc movie! and '1,000 lewd photographs 1elud hy Wesbnlnsler pollee. Frith, arant.d lmmunlly from pros- eeutloo Ibis nfornlng by Judge Robert L. Corfman, hesitated and answered, "I'm not sure" when aaktd U be C{)Uld Identify the client who ordered the fllml. He 'beoltateol acaln when a&Ud by McClure lo Identify the person to wbom the films -· dellvete4 betor• nlllOll<l· ~~· ., ,bellne .... pod pofn~lng VFW Post to Meet Tbe Fountain Valley poll o! the Veterans of Foreign Wm will bold Ill 111'11 organballccal llletlillg at T:JO p.m, 'l'bunclay al the Fountain Valley Eta Lodie, 10480 ~.~ve,___ ~. Veterana of ... l\l1lenColl ,._,. w- aervad · °'"""u are la'1tecl to Ibo orpbbatJOoal meetln( ; TODAY by J. C. HUMPllRIU BEFORE YOU BUY A DIAMOND The purchase ol a diamond as an engagement ring or a special gilt of love Is usually a on•lime occasion in every man'a life. Because this purchase involves deep meaning as well as a slgnifl· cant investment, you will want to buy wisely and with a prida of pur- chase wbfch will la1t a llfetlme. There are definite standard! for the pricing of diamonds, and four dellnlte·!acton In determlnatiOll ol value. Cuttlng, color1_ cllrlty and carat • weight are the 10ur mearuru of a diamond's value. Each ol !hue factors require complete under- standing by the bizyer before an Intelligent purc.iaso can be made. We would . appreciate all oppor- tunity to eirplaln each of these fac- tor& to you penonally, So . when you have th• lime, com.• on In and see w. No matter wbat or where you· evenlulll.Y buy, we a1,:r. have the Ume lo help you • the right choice. • f.19.50* A spactal remembrance from every member of the family with from 1 to 9 GENUINE Birthstones gracefully set In 14 KL wt>tte or yellow aold from $29.50• 182J NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA COHVIHllNT TllMS IAlllCAMlllCAllll-MASTll CHA!l4t r 14 YEARS IN UMI LOCATION PHONI M.J~f • • 'Birch Tactics' Tustin Trustee • Blasts Fellows Crop Due , William Proxmire (D- .), who recenUy · appeared two black eyes -later eged to be caused by a face- t -a\>peared at a commit· e meeting today swathed in dages. Proxmire said h~ is the r,roce55 of getting a hair ansp ant. 'enator Reports · xpenses Waived uring Absence e of the 19 state senators missing last Friday's abortive attempt at a · ate session explained today that he away on excused personal lelve and waived his $SO per day expense wance. State Senator James Whetmore (R-La bra) said he had been gran\_c!d a rsonal leave for last Wednesday to Fri- y. By law, the state senate may not take f for more than 72.-bours at a stretch ithout losing senators' per diem e1- nses for the time they are off. With 19 members' absent Friday, and 21 needed to be present to conduct business, it appeared for a time the Senate wouJd be taking a four-dat__week.end instead of the three allowed by-law. After 10 hours and 14 minutes, however, Senite floor leaders feund the one senator needed to vote adjournment. However, Wbetmore explained, the rules committee detennined that the missing senators should be docked not <lnly for Friday but the full Washington Birthday weekend they Jenfthened by a day. That amounta to eome 11,700 1n per diem pay. But, added Whetmore, •1t doesn't af. feet me, 1ince I already had waived my pu diem." Champion Nutlie F ail.s Big Test Of Obscenity OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) -· Mlsa Nude Universe of 1971-72, stripped for patrons of the Playgirl Club, reporters and vice 1quad de~cttves here 1n a test of the 1tate'1 obscenity laws. Sus•nne Haines, 24, of Sacramento, Cali!., was taken Info CW1tody, along with club operators Mr. and Mrs. Don Ludington, shortly after she appeared nude 1n a dancing act. Tuesday nlgbt. Oklahoma law requires topless dancen to wear "pasties" and forbjds bottomless acts. A t.e!evialon camera crew followed Miss Haines to her dressing room and' waited outside with police u llie dressed ud posed 10< pho!oirapru. t A detective said Miss ~a. who. won her UUe Jut summer 1n Sm Bf.mlrdlno, Calll., would be charged with lndedDI upo1111n. By JACK BROBACI!: Of flle D.llltr '"'' ""' Earl H. Carraway, a· new member of llte Boan! of Truatees of the Tustin Union HJgh sChool Dlstrlc~ Tuei!day cond<mned the pruldtnt and v lce president or the board !or "usinl llte district board to further Jobn Birch Party (society) lac· lies." Garraway a:ent along a moUon be pro-"°'"' to present at the non board meeting Monday night censuring Board President Paul Calhoun and Vice Presf.. dent Robert Bartbotmew for "introduc- ing a bi-partisan resolution to a leg~lly constituted non-partisan goverrung board." Some Things Worth Death, Says Reagan DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) -America's youth, says California Gov. Ronald Reagan, "should learn there are things worth dying for ." , Speaking at the Iowa Republican's an- nual Lincoln Day $50-a-plate fund ral.sing dinner Tuesday night, Reagan made the statement as he attempted to reveal why Americans are still in Southeast Asia. Some 2,380 Iowa .Republicans filled Veterans Memorial Auditorium here, and their financial supPort raised more than ,100,000 for the state GOP coffer. Reagan, a former Des M o I n e t sportscaster, told the partisan gathering that today's youth "should understand Ulat our generation loves peace with all the fervor they have. "No generation could have gone through the holocaust of World War II and not have a deeply entrenched desire for peace. "But I think they should also learn that there are things worth dying for. ''And one of those things, one of the most important that will make it evident whether we even have a right to call ourselves a nat ion, ls that even if there is one young American left as a pri!Joner of war in soutbe~ia, it is the duty of 200 million Amerfc8.ns to go ovtr and get that young man back,'' he said. Reagan said President NiJ:on has been the innocent target oI youthful mi.fun.. dentandlng. He said young people today are dlsaatlsfied with the failure to ftsolve the problems of poverty, misery and in- ternational strife. Reagan apknowledged that many of the problems aren't being 80lved1 but eald the younger generation's pol it 1 ca I awareness la "of recent origin, so it's understandable that in just thtse few years, in the transit on from the playground to the political arena, that so many young people look around ••• and they see Richard Nl.z:on, a Republican , as president, and they believe he must be to blame.". But be added, "the truth 1', and we must see that these young people learn it -the Democrats have actually been determining national policy of thl5 coun· try for 38 of the last 40 years." Reagan said there have been four wars ln hit lifeUme, "all under Democratic ad~ ministrations," but acknowledged the causea of those wan couldn't 1peclfically be laid at the Democrats' doorstep. However, he said, "It ls unbecoming of their presidential candidates to believe Nixon caused thl! one." Songster Dies at 33 SAN DIEGO (AP) -Millard Delbert Woods Jr., 33, 1 songwriter and fonner member of the New Christy Minstrels, was burled at Mount Hope Cemetery Tuesday to the tune of one of his own compositions :_ "Peace of Mind." Woods died 'lbursday at llte home or 1 friend In Los Angtlea. Two Charges Di,smissed ' . Against Taknt Agency An Orange Coolnty Superior ·COurt Judie bu dlsmtased grand tht!I and conspiracy char(<• riled agatost !OW' principals or the now ~elunct "Take Ooe" talent agen- cy aotl o'nlered the four mtn to.lace trio! March :tr on the remaining cbargts o! vlolaUons or the llate'1 corporations code. Jadge Wllllam M~ let the trlal elate !or Orange 1ttor>ey llJchard M\lr· fi>1, 41, brotheft Jerrr, c. or Santa Ana1 and Don Heu, ~. or Garden Gnwe aaa -MtGlMil A, or Santa Ana. All lour were Indicted by the Crance nty Gnnd Jury following allegattons tllat they lfold an e1Um11l!d Sll,<lllO worth or stock tn "Take Ooe" to ai•D<1 employeea wltl>out !trst registering the •tock with the state's corporations com-- mt11\oner. • 'and ltlevlslon jOOI for their chlldrell. Matthewl, who authorlud the clvll 10- llon against the lour dtlendanll, 1ald llte -rate One" p-oup sold 11publlc rd.1Uon1 contracts" to parenta Int.rested In plao-IDg their children !or DM>vta and TV wort. He said adult.I seetlnjJ the 11111• wort ,..,.. charged ... llopulJI Dlllrlcl Altornfy Jay Moaeley, who now beada \he office'• ltaucl oquad, bid Tloelday tbafthe ''Take Ooe" •per• 1Joo has DOW been lbol down "w!tJ> the fum under•tandJnc ·on both aides lhal n will nol be opened asatn." Muflllly w11 recently convicted by 1 Superior COUrt jury on charget of cor· jlOtlte code vlolatlont tlemmlni from hta role In tbe operation o! the Calllornla Caduceus Compony and the Casualty Insurance Company. He will be aenltnced AprU 6. The lnlSlte, an El Toro mortgage banker, further moves th.al the moUon of the president and vice president "be stricken from the record for all time." Carraway's statement likes lssue with a ~tln board resotuUon (that was defeated) condemning the Orange County Grand Jury report recommending abotl· tion of the Orange County Dtpartroent ol EducaUon. Carraway, in a release to the prus, enclosed a copy of the reso1uUon whlch was voted down 3-2 at the last TUHSD board nreetlng. Feb. 14. The irate trustee states: "For loo long now, the John Birch Party has used this ofiice and others as a platform for their own brand of poUUCI. They have insulted the U.S. President, they have degraded. the constitutional office of the President, and in that sense, the John Birch Party is undermining the Constitution ol the United States. "The said party is eating away at our established American traditlona atid in- atitutlons the same way our enemies do .'' Carraway continues his charge: "I arn a conservative, I believe in 1n41v1dual rights, free enterprise, states rights, prop- erty righ!i' and the Republican form of government." The trustee concludes with, "I, for one ha ve had enough of the John Birch Party tactics." The resolution defeated Feb. 14 which has raised Carraway's lre states : The Orange County Grand Jury (1971) has surreptitiously and without complete investigaUon or Information recom- mended reduction of expenditures and staff of the Department of Education (county) and the Grand Jury baa rte0m~ mended that the County Board of Supervisors withhold county funds from the department. "And the unfair, biased and in- consequential study of the Department of Education allegedly conducted by the Grand Jury ls, in certain respects, without basis in fact, totally incomplete and therefore of no real value .•. " The defeated resolution states that the duties and services of the Department of Education should best be evaluated by the school districU of the county. The punchline reads, "the Board of Trust ... o! the Tustin Union High School District hereby condemns the Grand Jury for its preclpitoo.s and irresponsible action and respectfully ~ggesta a prop- erly COllstituted study Of the services of the department belore recommending any changes or discontinuance 1 of services." Carraway al1lt trultea Oelter Briner. of MJ.aslon Viejo, and Dtctran Borartlan of Tustin, voted aialnst the proposed resolution. Calhoun and Bartholmew both live In the Tustin area. or the !Ive Tustin trustee•, only Bartholomew admits to membenhlp in the John BirCb Society a I t h o u g h observers note Calhoun, the trustees' president, frequ¥11Uy joins in stands taken by Bartholomew. The resolution substantially agree. with statements by County Superinten- dent ol Schools Dr. Robert Peltrson and the Comtty Board ol Education condemn- inl the Grand Jury report. Supervisors OK Building Site Land Increase Property to be condemned !or the per· manent Harbor Judicial Districts Courts building bas betn Increased to lo.I acrea by the Orqe County Board ol Supervlsora Tue!day. The original a.i.acre alte, to be purchased from COlllns Radio Compony, ls being enlarged to lnclude additional street right of way for access to the 11te. The ptOperty ts located n«th of Cam- pus Drive and IOUth of Dupont Drive and west of Jamboree Boulevard on 160 acres held by Collins on a W.year lease with the Irvine Company. The condemnation ault and eventual purchase price, estimated at $700,000, in- cluding aeverance poyment to the lrvlne Company for r<tlnqulshlng the leasehold, Is ·expected to be completed within 11 months and actual court conllrUctlon In two and one hall yeare. Homosexual Wins Joh Back BELLEFONTE, Pa. (UPI ) -Jooepli Acan!ora, i1, has been ordered r<lnatated u a student teacher at a local Junior high ochool by 1 Jud&< who Mid the student ahould not be pi!nallud becaUM of bl.I memWshtp in I homooel111) O<fanlza• lion. Judga R. Paul Campbell ol centre County COUrt aald !he ochool board arbllrarlly dllCrlmlnated ogatnst Acal> fora becauae or his membership la llomophiles of Penn State (HOPS) when It IUSpended him from hi• practice - teaching 1Algrunent. • WtdntsdaJ, '•bnwJ ll, 1972 H OAILV '11$1 :J COASl'WISB » ::r::,wr~-A: "'Shay ••• Can You Fellows Play 'Melancholy Baby' ••• " Billionaire Authorizes From Wtre Scrvleu LOS ANGE LES -There will bf an authorized biography of How1rd Huahe! after all, but 1 spokesman for the billlonaire advises against holding your breath waiting for Jt. As investlgatk>ns continued 1n New York and elsewhere into the purµorted autobiography of Hughes written by Clif- ford Irving, a Hughts Tool Co . !pokesmAn disclosed Tuesday l hat l-lughes' most trusted aklea wtl1 help prepare sn offlclal blograpny. "This doesn't mean the biography will be: published ton\orrow o~ the day after ." sa id the sp0kesman, .Dick llannah. lie said an author hasn't hf:en chosen and gave no estimate of when the book would appear. Two From Coast Arrested Hannah said the 66-year-old Hughe!! sold the rights to hi• life atory "and ariy commercial ex:ploltatlon of his name or llkenes!'' about seven years ago to Rose- mont Enterprises, a Nevada corporation. "Rosemont Is not a Hughes Tool subsidiary," he a1ld1 although some Rosemont executives a.ls() work for Hu p:hes companies. As Police Eye Explosives •·Whenever the biography Is published. It will be done entirely by Rosemont," he said, and noted that the. company has been collecting information on lluahes' life for several years. By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of th o.ny Pl61t Sllff Sabotage of public buildings entered allegations today as federal agents joined San Bernardino County Sheriff.'s deputies piecing together a jigsaw puu.le involving five persons and eeizure of 13Q pounds of stolen military explosives. A Huntington Beach man surrendered Tuei!day, Joining a Laguna Buch girl ar· rested with three other men Monday afternoon in Fontana . Ronnie D. Ponder, 21, of 318 Eighth St., . Huntington Beach, and Dianne Bayless, 18, of 695 Temple Hills Drive, Laguna Beach, are among those booked into county jail on suspicion of reckless and ma licious possession of explosives. San Bernardino County Sheriff's bomb squad investigators claim they are Im- plicated in a plot to obliterate the county civic center, sheriffs station and Fontana Police Department. Questioning of at least one among the five suspects led to this disclosure, ac- cording to Dtputy Mark Winger, of the bomb squad. The FBlhas entered the caae, line• the poulb!IJty.of·-.. -.. wu raised and the ·cache' ot erpJo.ftvea dug up behind a Fontana home ls atolen military material. - "Yes we do, but we're,not saying until federal agent. finish their lnveatlgatlon," Dtputy Winger said when asked U the base of origin b koown. • Criminl complaints charging Ponder, Miss Bayless, plus Robert G. Christley, 20, Gary 0. Whatley, 23, and Robert A. A!emi.o, 2t>, all of Fontana, were to be sought thl5 afternoon. San Bernardino County D~trlct At· torney Lowell E. Lathrop's office was not due to rece.ive comprehensive reports un- til late today and eo declined comment. Teugb new U.S. laws imposed to crack down after a wave of terroriam and bomb- ings peaked In 1969 could also lead to further prosecutlon and federal prison terms upon convictk>n. Ball for defendant A!ernko is set at $12.500 -making him the obvious key suspect -while only $1 ,250 bond was set for the others. The explosives cache was one or the largest ever se ized in California, expert, noted. A total or 85 potlnds of powerful C4 . plastic explosives used commonly in Vietnam combat was seized, along with 15 pounds of TNT, five pounds of a !IOphlsticated, coiled blasting compound called Data Sheet and 100 feet o! detonating cord. One element ln vestig aiors are probing is the relationship ·among the five suspects. ''All had knowledge or the ex- plosives," Deputy Winger alleged, after notlng just one defendant .bas mentioned a sabotage plot. - Miss Bayless' mother contacted. the DAn. Y PILOT tQday to declare she understood her daughter had only brought some Roman candle !lrework5 ba ck from a trlp to Mexico with a boyfriend. She added lhll the boylrftnd WU ..,. q-With -"' iblt lidltr Mend.Int. Involved. San BernardlllQ authorttlea dented that Miss Bayleu, a 1 former Laguna Beach Hlgh School student, was charged only with misdemeanor possession of illegal fireworks . She and all suspect. except Ponder were arrested near the house where deputies dug up the underJ?OUDd, u - ploslves cache Monday. Disappearance of military explo1lvt1 ln the San Bernardino County area bu been uoder investigation for six months, Authorities said. The current case was broken when deputlea malting a routine tral!lc llop spoiled what appeared to he explosives In the rear of the vehicle code violator's car. Meanwhile, federal authorltl~1 prtsatd their investigation into lrVlng's book and a Swiss prosecutor said there would be no deal involving lrving'I wlfe, Edith. Zurich Dist. Atty. Peter Velell Hid In Switzerland tl>at Swlsa autl>oMU" are determined to see that Mn. lrvinl ii punlohed !or hor alleged role In tbe bl' trigue. "We reprtsent juatlce. we don't do deals,'' he snapped when asked abou.t the possibility that Swlis charges against Mrs. Irving would be dropped If her·hu.s- band cooperated with U.S. authorities. She ls charged with forgery, em- bezzlement and theft In connection with the handling of $850,000 that McGraw-Hiil Publishing Co. Intended as payment to Hughes for his a11erted cooperatiotl ln the Irving book. " The Jrvlnga: and their lawyers met with federal prosecutors 1n New York Tuesday but there was no C<lmment on the out- come of the meetlng. iiglaQ~ Hits Southland TORRANCE (UPI) -A lilJht earthquake '1fll felt In communttlt1 south of Santa Monica Bay today at 8:43 1.m. The tremor rtslatered 2.0 on the RJchter acale, accordlnf to 1 spokesman at the Call ornla lnaUtute ol Tech n oi •IJ seismological laboratory. No damage was report1d . Numerous ruldents phoned pollct to report the tremor which seemed to be centered on the J1111lewood fault. SA l'E f1f.00 ON 'rBIS 5 Pc. T AILE SET • TAMPICO :z~::·~H::isl 69 ~~~. $247 . MllnfMlt CHAISI LOUNGI '69 $103 ,.II DILIYllY IN OU.M•I COUNTY CHAR-IRO/l 0 GAS COOKERS '"'"" k ..... -... -.. -.. pt wlftl .,.., CMr-ateH ._ ...... ..... ... ....,, ............. , ... ,._ _ .. ,. MOBILE BASE Allowt yo11 te roll your trill 0111t of tho w•y who11 1Mt I" w••• '8913 POST .MOUNT '7274 ITAINl.lll lnll iUINll l 5 YIM GUAUNJll . PATIO MOUNT Ood1119' ,., ••t•n .. ti•" •11 •ll11fl111 po+JM. 11,.,....1. They bad tariler betn named In • ciyil action brought by the state and lbe dtatrlct attorney's o!llce In whlch ti was alleged by Dtp11ty District Attorney W a l t er Mattbew1 lhat they to o t 11tooaaods or dolian 1rom pueot1 teeklnl wha t be claimed were DODeJtatent -" Iii was clwed In the same trial of grand theft and a1111p~acy chatge1 relattng to lbe allegedly illegal tran1fer cl ll!0,000 la lovnton' ltmcla Wm one Insurance group to the other. Campbell ordered Acanfora , ol Brlok Town, N.J.1 reinstated and the Penn State Univeralty senior be given full credit toward c0mpletlon ol the Hsignment. The judge also ruled that Acanlora • muat dllllloctai.. his HOPS lnvolvtment from Ille ctuoroom and d<at only with the ou~i..ta ol "biology and earth lcienct. ,,--- ' ( I • I DA!l.Y PtlOT \ I ~ps •• 87 THOMAS MUllPHINE °' lflt DlllY ,, .... ,.., SACRAMENTO CALLING: Great snuhlnl of teeth bu been heard In the hallowed halls of the Lqlslature over the alle1at1ona of booky-pla)'lnJ by It of our llate aenaton on Friday of the . Wuhlqton'a Birthday weekencl. What happened wu that aomebod,r called the Friday seaslon and only 20 aenaton abowed up -lacking one of hiv· Ing a quorum to allow an official business -'Ibey 1111 oround like that, twiddlinc their thumb1 all day. Senator Cllrk L. Bradley, the San Jose tupeHOl'lStrvaUve, flnall,y stumbled In about 7:15 o'clock that night. allowing a qulck call to order and then lmmedlJle recw of the "official R!lion." AMONG THE HOOKY piayen were the Oranie Coasl'a Senafll( Dennll E. Clrpentor (It-Newport Beach) 1 n d Oranie Coonty'a Senator Jam .. E. Whet· more (JI.Gorden Grove). Now, !<>IU, before yoo start gathering lo ~ up the rail for aolona carpenter and Wllllmo\"• maybe you ought to heir the other aide. ol the. atory. Jliist. o1 all,. the State Senate doem't crdlnlrlly bQld Friday aessio111. ~ allowa the boya lo 1et an eorly jump back Into ·tlielr dJ.idcta, mhicie with the bomo !Oil: ''ml may1>o 1et i om e problems lmled out. Imlde word bu H, however, that just bef<n the loog Washlngton'a Birthday bollday, ..... of the boys were h8111ing llllWld the Senate Lounge acrosa the Btreel from the IOOd hall, or aomeplace like that, and they decided, "Hey, wouldn~ It be neat ti we could have a lit. Ile -Friday and pick up aome pay for the 'three-day holiday1" Columnist Says Nixon Lied to U.S. ... WASHINGTON (UPO -Columnist Jack AJ)deri•>n 111d Tuesday the United States riaked nuclear war with the Soviet Union during the lndla·Pakiltan war last December while President Nixon "lied to congress" and the American people about it "The only subsUtute for truth is a lie," Anderson told the NaUonal Prtu Club." ''That iBn't a pretty word to use with the President, but It's true." He used the term numerous times in his opeech in reference to Nixon . Andenon said a task force of the U.S. 7th Flett was sent into the Bay of Bengal on a war footing, facing a superior Soviet fleet, while Nixon was telling the American people that the United Stalos was neutral in the connict and that the task force was there only ii needed to evacuate Americans. The task force wa's given secret orders to "be on the lookout for possible action," he said. (A.{Klerson's colwnn appears regularly on the editorial page of the DAILY PILOT.) . The columalst, who published what he said were secret White House documents on U.S. poUcy in the war, said a war izl.. volving the United States, Russia and China waa closer than many SU!J>eCled at the time. Anderson said the U.S. task !orce had asked and received permi.sson . to un- dertake "wartime surveillance" of the Soviej fleet and bad pmnission to land troops in lnd.Ja. Andenon said be did not know ii ii w~s the United States' intention actually lo Jane! lroopa. Judiciary Unit Predicts 'Nod For Kleindienst WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Senate Judiciary Committee will give its unanimous endorsement to Richard G. Kleindienst as the nation's next attorney general, committee chairman Sen. James 0 . Eastland (D-Miss.), has announced . He said it could come before the week's TRIS WAS considered a deUgbtlul no- tion. So the 1esslon was called for 9 a.m. Friday. over. Now nally, folks, you have to alk EuUand made the prediction after yoorRlf just how many momentous Kleindienst's initial appe~ before dedslonl yoo think they woold have the JliU.'d. Tbe (8.yeat-old Arl70nan, wbo l?Ound out up there In the hallowed halli wen! Qii. record against legalizing mari- when they met on Friday? j~ana ':rir1 ~ favor of wiretaps for na- Why I'll biet that would have been• a tional secunty, was called back for a ,.., --. ....,.d -ol teUimorly today. Y ..... a.t111q werea bclal to Even .....,._.. ~hi, wbi> treet.d a Rwrite Of the .Cllifonda COmtltutlQ(t( ,. ·tbe nomin~ With a volley of quesUons NoboclY wu gofni 'to optil clebalo on thd • f!tao hostile lo hi•· more conservaUve death penalty. ; ·~ws, conceded . Ji)a.Uand's prediction . . ' .... likely lo be right. NO SOONER would the gavel ~ave "I probably will vote for him myself," fallen than oome wag in the back row shrugged Sen. Birch D. Bayh (D-lnd.), woilld have moved for abrupt a<f. "even though I disagree with hlm joumment. vigorously on his ideas about civil rigbta All the while making ctr1a1n, of coune, and civil·llberUes. U that' a the kind of a~ that tbe aes.slon quallfied for a Utile add~' tomey general the President want!, I'm ed cUh on the senalorlal paychecb. inclined lo give ii to him." As It developed, the •llllY payday didn't turn ool ao easy. Falling abort that one senitor needed for an official session~ the 20 aolOlls waiting in the hall had lo ocrwnge llllWld all over the state lo find a colleague who would make the paycbeck official. 1bey found their way to San Jose. But n toot au c1ay. MEANWHILE, WHERE were our · geoileman, Senators Whetmore and Carpentor? Well, Wbetmore'1 whereabouts was uncertain. But as for carpenter 1 our in- !onnanll Indicate he wu right here on tbl Orange Coast. He w11, in fact, work.. Ing on the overcrowding problems within the san Joaquin Elementory School District which faces a crisJs in at.. tempting lo serve the growth boom in the dty of Irvine and the Saddleback Valley. Maybe that was just a little more im· portant than llllOOting on the aenate floor, waiting for the 20th man lo guarantee yoor paycheck. So if you're going to grease up a rail beca\111 of Sacramento'• Friday Follies, llOlld n up north where they should use i~ Wick• • ·-\0\"" 'Arxl this is one of me hiding behind II tnHI!' Gls Left Holding Bag SAIGON (UPI) -SOOth Vietnamese police today barred rebel Gen, /ilUY"1 Chang Thi from reentering Vietnam and sent blm back alone on a Pan American 747 jumbo jet, stranding lit Gls who had booked seats on the plane for leave, U.S. spokesmen said. Thi arrived aboard the big jeUiner from Wuhlnglon, where be had 11id aeveral days ago he bad received an in- vitation lo come back lo Vlel!Wn after nearly ai% years in exile to take a position in a new government here. Would .. plain 'Olfldall1 Wll;r tho Jt\ WIS forced to IUo oil 111111 G111J Tiil aboard, but Vletnamae -•II It WU done lo "punish" tho aJrllne r. brlalfni II unauthorlaed pu-llllo tho <Ounfry. In !lie meanllmo, tbou&b. lllat 1111 llf Gia and U other pauqera . wbo had boolod ... u an the jet, llnDdad at the gatel ·of Tan Son Nlwl, apokeamen 1ald. Moat of the Gia wue bound for leave In Hawall or the continental Unlt.d Stalol, they said -and moat of them wue boj>' Lead-free Ga pin& mad about what happened. The airline managed to find aea!J f0£ 51 of them on other alrllnera bound from llooi xoni. where they """'d have to book other plan•• onward to th• atate•. The re1t were atuclc here at lust unUl the next 747 arrived on Thuroday. The le<\ll'lty cordoo aroOllCI the airport WU SO ll&hl that clowJI of cor- ruponden!J were slopped a mile from the terminal, and at leul one wbo 1ot lhrouih wu briefly arruted. Ul'I T1llllhth ' U. S. RISKED WAR Jack Anderson Police Hold IRA Leader Bui as the big J•t winged In from l!J previous atop In Guam, Saigon police chief Trang Si Tan, who was at the airport himself, had the control tower ask whether Thi was aboard. The pUot said be wasn't, but added that there was a "Nguyen C." on Ple plane - the only Vietnamese passenger. Tan and other police olflclals boarded Ille craft as soon as it was on the ground, and located Thi, who once commanded government forces in Vietnam's five northern prov· inces. Serv~ce Station Pump Seen as Smog Weapon Afrer Blast Tan advised Thi that the government had barred him from landing bere. Then he ordend the plane lo shut Its doors, power up and talce off with the general as the only passenger. Neither Thi nor police .spokesmen WASlllNGTON (UPI) -Propoaed government ngulatlona lo curb air pollu· tion envision a new kind of service station wbere the gasoline that powers old cars could poison new ones. The station would have three pumpo; One would dispenae regular gas and the Sve tlana Has second "premium," just .. today. Bui the third would pump lead-free gasolino LONDON (AP) -I; leader of the through a smaller norpe designed for a ouUawed Irish Republican Army was ar· Fam;ly W oes smaller fuel tank opening on new cm rested hr.Dublin early today as police in " starUng with 19'15 models. -NouJes on the "regular" a n d Britain lnmt.d an IRA revenge squad PHOENIX, • •·. ( • n) _ Ii ""'u. ~ "premium" pumps would not 't new that bombed-an army base near Loo.don. SveUana Peters, daughter of Soviet cars. M an utra precaution against The blast at the Aldersbot heed· dictator Josef Stalin, said today 1he pumping leaded gasoline Into a new car, quarters ol • Britain's 16th Parachute baa mt left her hwband and bopes the lead-free gasoline would he cl.., Brigade killed aeven persons -five he is not contemplating divorce. while the leaded gasoline would be co~ "My God , I can't think_ of ·it," lo could •· fined •10 000 waltr..,.., i. g. ardener and a Roman ored. A stat n ~ • , a Sveilana said wben told that her day for pumptng leaded fuel Into a new C8tholic chaplain recently decorated for husband said divcrce seemed car. bravery In North em Ireland. "Inevitable." The regulaUona, proposed by the An estimated Ill pounds of gelignite "I haven't left my husband, we're Environment.al Protectkm Agency (EPA) Lead has bean added lo g850line since 19'13 lo increase octane, or pow"' Carl are now bulll lo run on l<l-oct- lead·free fuel, but most models prior lo 19'11 require higher octane, usually mean- ing leaded gasoline, Since many older cars will still be on the roed, tl>e EPA decided ii could nilt ban lead, from all ga.!IOline, Leaded gasoline costs about~.6 cents a gallon extra, acconling lo th~ EPA. The catalysts and other eibaUJI cleanup devjce.1 will.hike the price ol 1975 m<>dets by $2111 lo . !600, depending :On vmjlng estimates. And the devices would reduce gaa mileage, burning S percent more fuel ac<:ordlng lo EPA estlm1tes. 4 Bodies RecovereJ-- ln Crash Off Hawaii blew them to pieces. Seventeen persons not separated," she said. "I never Tuesday, were designed to make gasoline were injured. bad any intention to separate from accommodate to the u:haust cleanup HONOLULU (UPI) _ Four bodies him. I am fond of him and I respect devices planned for lV/5 model can. were recovered from the shark-Wested The IRA'a leftist official wing assumed the wort he 's doing. I disagree with Most stations woold have to offer lead-waters 70 miles from Honolulu where a responsi})lnty. ~d the bombing wu in his way of life." free gasoline, effective in mkl-1974. twin-engine aircraft crashed Tuesday retaliation for the deaths of 13 catholics Mrs. Peters, ~. revealed earlier Auto makers aay their best hope for with eight persons a})oard. In clashes with paratroopers of the !!th this week that she and ber family meeting the emission controls demanded The Coast Guard bad no plans to con- Brigade during Londonderry's "Bloody had moved out ol the Frank Lloyd by laws for 1975 models is an untested . Unue the search today. Sunday" on Jan. 30. Wright Foundation's communal device called a catalytic eonverter. It The plaoe was en route frmn Honohtlu As British police sealed hlghway1 and headquarters, Taliesen West. reduces emts.lona but can be ruined by a on the Jaland of Oahu to Lina! when ir checked planes and ships leaving the -============:....:.:..:....dooe:.:.:.: ... ol:.:.:.:leaded=.:.:paollne:::...=-· _____ :..:.._craihed.:..:....-,---------.,-country, Irish detectives arreated cathal .· GouldiJ\g, Manis\ chlel of stall of the ffiA O!ficials. 1, Goulding, a &yeor-old ~painter, wu one of lour men ie.tr.ed Jn a aeriel l1I. 1 post midnight raids in Dublin and Its • subw'bs. " - The other three men were members of Sinn Fein, the IRA's political section, iq- i:ludlng general aecretary Tony He!· fernan. All were beJ'.d tmder the Offenses Against the State Act, which permits authorities lo detain any peraoa for 48 boors without charge. · The arrests set off speculation that Prime Minister Jack Lynch of Ireland has IB!IJiched a promised crackdown on the lllA, which Is waging guerrilla warfare lo oust the British from Protestant.dominated Norlbem Jreland. D. • . . ISCnm1nation Bill Get& Okay WA~INGTOk CAP) ..:.·Tbe~lehas passed a bHI providing enforctll)ent authority for the federal-~ on lf>b discrimin&tioD based Oil pee,, rtligion, I sex or national origin. ,.,.,\ In an unusual proceifure m ·a d e necessary by the dle-llanl resistance of two Southern opponen!J, the· Senate aQ:: tually pasaed the identlcil bill twice Tuesday by votes cl 73 lo 16 and 72 lo 17. · The effect of the double vote, forced bJ Sena, Sam J , Ervin Jr. (1/-N.C.), and James B. Allen (D-Ala.), may be lo oom- plicate further action on the legiala~ in the House, which P8S'ed a companloli bill las\ September. ' I • Bush mills. The whiskey .that spans the generations gap. Cold· Nu ·mhs Northeast New England, Upstat,e New York Below Zero • HA.TIONAl WfA1Ktt Sll:VtCt fOllCASt I• 7AM IST !I• 2+-7J :I! "' ·1' . ' .fl tJ:ltf'ICltd tol.lltl'W1nl Into ttlt mid All• fk C..11 tleltt W ICt-tilt MJdwttt .. tlll .,.., ....... 1t.i11o *"-.,,. ~ ftln ~· eut """° IWdl flf tl'lt MldWQI, Trl'l'll .. ,lllMI .. "' ,.,.,. ,... ...... ..... ,,_ """"*" llllntll ,... WllCOMlft ... ..._. S1111, Moon, Tlcles WIOltllOAY ...... Mitt ............ 7:14-,... 1.1 t.cene ................ 11121,. .... u --· f'lrtt M9h .............. J: .. ._ 1J "m i.w .............. 11:• "'~ u s-..""" ............ 1:0•m. "'' For 300 years, a whiskey from Bushmills has been with us. Charming us. Beguiling us in a smooth, poli1hed and altogelher lighthearted fashion . 15 generations have refined it.15 generations have sipped i 1. Theverdict: Near perf eel ion, B u1h mil Is. Fu 11 of cha1'cter. Bul nol heavy-handed about it. Flavor· ful. But never over·powering. Bushmills. It reflect! the pa.st wilh •light and lively flavor 1haliull today. Compare ii to your present whiskey. You needn't purchase• bottle. One sip at your favorite pub wlU tell you why Bu'shmills has intrigued so many gen· era lions. It Is, simply, out of sight. lMPOlllD BUSHMII .. I S -llli WO.WS OIDOTDIS11Wll'I: '-tell • Ml,...,1, fN Nol ... .... ~ ....... lfllll ""' ., °"'""' kill .... ,:.,-.Mo .... ~."'"""'--------------------------------:-----------IM9'! ...... 1t:t1"""" .... 1:0-..n. '• ' • • \1,1 T ....... IH PRESIDENT NIXON CHATS WITH WIFE OF MAO (R) Inter preter Aids Conl/9r11t ion at Cultural Show 'Revisionist' R anking Professor Admits Past Errors PEKING (UPf) -Chou Pei-yuan, one of China's best known professors, sipped tea with American newsmen today at Peking University and con- rtsled he once harbored revWonistand bourgeois thou1ht.s. "Afler I 11tudied tbe worlu of Chairman Mao, I realized that I had made ml1taket1," Chou uld. "I now follow the correct theoretical line." Chou would be a credit to any college faculty. A ph>- ftssor or theoreUcal phys1cs 1lnce 1929, he graduated from the University or Chicago in 1926 and holds degree! from universities in China and Europe. He was dean of 'tsinghua Universlty before moving · to · Peldn1 in 1952. A man in his ' 70. -he declined to give ex- act age -be wears a hearing aid. His hair ii gray. Although Hang chow On Nixon Itinerary he speaks perfect English and chatted informally w i t h newsmen, he used an in- terpreter for his more formal talks, correcting t h e in- terpreter at limes when be disagreed with the tramlation. A Chinese qewaman ex- plained that Chinese 1 }>l;:l>- fessors ·~~ Chinese ·when they are talking formanr. "You are ih China, ''-he Wd. Chou is head of the physics department at Peking and is vice chairman of th e u n I verslty•s' Revolutto'nary Committet. • Some newsmen in China covering President Nixon't visJt were invited to tour 01tna's mo 1 t prestlgioua university, Ming, something ol a slirine now becau.se the May 4th movement which spawned the Chinese Com- munist party began there in J.llt. ·"'Reporters gathered in a faculty room at the Russian language building. Drinking te• from flower-detorated cups, t~y Interviewed Chou and Chiang Chun-yu, 38, a for)'>er printer who now ls described ~as "a I e a d I n g member of the Revolutionary Commlttff. and a leading member of the university branch of the C.Omm6nist par- ty. •1 " Visit Gets Top Play In China PEKING (UPI) -The Chinese government continued to give major publicity today to President Nixon 's visit. The official "Peoples Daily" published four pholographs showing Tuesday's acUvities and meetings of the President. One photograph showed Nix- on and Premier Chou En-la! aeated on opposite aides of a long conference table during their meeting Tuesday at the Great Hall or the People. Each was flanked by a num- ber of aides, the most con- e pl cu o u a among the Americans being presidential adviser Henry A. Kissinger. Among the three advisers with Chou in the picture, the rank· ing man was the high member of the protocol department. The "Peoples Daily" printed a second photograph of the meeting which Secretary of State William P. Rogers held · Tuesday with his counterpart In the Chinese government, Chi Peng-fel. Rogers and Chi also were flanked by a number of advlsen:, the mMl prom· inent in the pJcture on t b e American aid• being Marshall Green, assistant aecretary of atate for Eut Asian affaln, and presidential consultant John Scali. The other two photo.! tn today's edition were taken at the performance T u e s d a y night of the revolutlonary ballet and during Pit Nixon's visit Tuesday to the Peking Hotel's .kitchen. The photo at the ballet, taken at the end of the · performance, 1bowed n t n e Chinese · and Amerlcana, in- cluding Chou and Nixon, ll•nd· In( and applauding the per-. fonnen. West Germans Favor Visit TUEBINGEN, G er many (AP) -Ninety percent of West {;µmans queried Jn a public . opinion poll w er e following Prea.ident Nixon's trip.Jo China with Interest and 70 percent viewed it positively, the Wickert Public Opioion lnlltuto Ill<!. TOKYO ((AP) -The east China Jake city of Hang chow, where President Nixon will atay overnight Saturday, was described today as one that bu retained lt1 beauty and charm while expanding into a thriving Socialist industrial metropolis. The New Cl!ina Ne"' AJe1!1 cy, Peki111'1 1,9ffldal Mw1 a(!ncy, llld UJat 2,000.y!.u· ·• old Hsngchow wu noted In the past for II. tradltlon1l silk and .. anda Clamor 'oos Co vet Chin:a Gift cotton textile industries. By Araociated Preti ·Toda)', the ageocy u.ld, ,. . , H1ngchow alao Lt noted for ita · While U.S. and Cltl- indu1tty -Iron, 1 tee I , leaders1fl\aneuver th r /ju I h machine bu 1 l d I n g and high level WU, Amerlcln 200 chemicals -caused .by the d.lrector1 have .btcun • 1 S oclalist trll\lformatit>n" dJplomaUc maneuvering of Carried °"t by the working .their oWD,:aimed at 1etUn1 tho. peopie 1lnce the Coinmunllts ·two rare giant pandu·glven to toot over 'the mainland in the United. States by Premier !J49. Cbou En-Ill. "'No longer a semicolonial '"llltre isn't a zoo in Wa consumer city, Hangchow is country lhtt wouldn't sell · llJ now 1 frosperous Socialist tn· soul for ~ pandu," 11y1 dustrla ctnttr," the acency Jack S 1 ip m o n 1 , naturalist reported. 1 · guide at Seattle's Woodland Prof Predict8 'No Miracles' SAN DIEGO (AP) -Prl!!i· dent Nixon's v!Jlt to China 11 a "1111t atep forward" but lan't llkA!ly to IOive 1ny m1jor prob- letn1 bttwet.n the two coun- trie1, llYI I Chintst profe.uor at San l!iego Stale College. "I don't think the villt w!U crute mlr1cles or chana:e aoclal structures, but it may relai tensions betwttn the two eountrlu and Improve com· changtt." Park Zoo. There m only '""' panc(u In c1ptlvtty oulllde of China - Including a niale In Moscow ard ;a !epl• In llondon. Er- forta to 11 a l< Ibo 'Dtar-llk• anlma!J ltlve filled. 'lbe other two pandu are In North Korea. • • llut Simmons and most otber ioo offldals conlacttd ...,,, rulgned to the idea thal the two fuuy, bllldt and whlta stfta from the ~ 1ov.,,,. mtnt W\lf 1'ifld Up a t 11'~'1 Nallonal 1.oo. "The National 1.oo ba1 been the r-ltory for more lbu Ill JWI of ouch &ffll from other nations to the United Statts1" .qld. Director Dr. Tljeodo~ !teed.· "f would asaurne we might be called upon once 111tn 1D thla caae," he added.' . But Reed 1trwed lhll tlltre haa been no oitk:Jal word from lbe White !!oul. on whart tilt animals would ~ kejlt. 1be1 anlmall were elven to Nixon, who ll vil!Ung Peking, in return for two North American muskoxen Nixon 11 pr..,ntlng to tilt CbU-. A Chicago ioo Ix making Iii bid for the pandu throug)l polltlcol channell. Dr. Lester E. Filher of Llocoln Put 1.oo bu conlacted an UDnoil con- areum1t1 and wu reportedly trying to ruch Setll. Adlai ~-m and Charla Percy for their help u well. AC'llllrlng a panda. 11y1 Denver 1.oo Director Clayton Frelhtlt, 0 wouJd be. a 1.00m1n11 dream .•• it'• the kind of animal you make room for.'1 Tbt "'° In S.. llicg .. ha• been tryln( to 1•l a ~Ir of pancl11 since the early 114111. . . . WtdMiday, f...., 23, 1972 Pat ~~es Visiting DAILY ,ILO'l " First Laay Views Acupunct1.4re lly FRANt< COMO.El\ d-.n needlu protruding from PEKING (AP) .,_ Bart-ber rilht arm and leg. headed as usual, Pat Nixon The woman uld tbGse llmbl braved 1 North c h I n a had been IO numb before ahe snowstorm tod1.y to visit an began a week·lon& ierles of agricultural co"'mune where 1cupunctW't trut.menta that a h e m I n 1 I e d w I t h abt could hardly walk around acboolchildren, o b 1 e r v e d htt small home. Now she can wlnter c u I t 1 v a t l o n or cook, ahe 1'ported. vegetables and saw a 6&-year-"We wish you well," Mrt. old woman 1ettll1g an Nixon told her. acupuncture treatment. "It dJdn't loot pa)ntul," she The First Lady walked remarked aa 1fte left the through lntermlttenUy heavy clinic. .. snow that glistened in her hair. Dur1 ..... 1 on•bour vlslt to a moving down alleys 1 n d "'6, ,. across furrowed fields at lhe ---....:."'------- 8,0l)()..acre Evergreen People's Commune. west of Peking. Mrs. Nixon was captivated by the schoolchildren she saw. marvel~ at the growing o! out-of-season vegetables Under glass and even tried futilely to make friend3 with a rather dirty hog in a sly . She seemed most surprlsed, however, to observe in the commune clinic the ancient Chinese medical treatment based on the insertion of long needles into the flesh. The two younr women who give the treatment told Mrs. Nixon that they attend to about a dozen patients a day . They showed her a gray-haired woman lying on her side on a cot with more than. half a MRS. NIX.ON R4 PS H EA D PEK1NG (UFI) -Pat Nix· on INmped her head on a warm alr blower while touring the Pek1ng GJ1.ss Factory to- day. but ahe apparently was not hurt. While she watched a young girl fashlonin& tiny Intricate animals from colored glass cylinders, Mrs. Ni.Jon rapped her head on the blower. Afterwards, ahe k e pl touching her blonde hair, but she Wisted that she waa not hurl. Peklns Glauware l''actory, Mrs. Ni.Jon spoke lo at least 20 workers -mostly glrla, who were working on a wtde rarlie of &lauware. Mrs. Nixon was uked to vlllt the factory again. "ln the meantime ," the First Lady replied, "I hope you will come and see us." The pla: Mrs. Nixon tried to entice within pettlnJ distance was corralled outside a tiny, spotlessly clean cottage. Warned by a reporter that . the pig might bite, ~fr1. Nixon 1ald she li ved on a farm 11 1 girl and "l once ralstd a prizewinner -second prize." But the pig ignored htr en· treaties, and finally she leaned into the sty to throw hlm a chunk of cabbage. In another schoolroom. two 10-year-old boys were playing table teMis with rather unim- pressive results. Polnting to the table, the Flrst Lady said: "We have one ln Fkirida, and we do play Ping Pon a." To the &-year-olds learnlng multiplication -several of them gave wrong answers while she was there -Mrs. Nl:r:on •sald she brought greetlrigs rrom all the children of America. WORLD SAVINGS ISNOWOPEN SATURDAYS Commencing February 19, our Regional Office In Laguna Beach,292 South Coasl Highway at Forest Ave- nue, 494-9481, will be open Saturdays from 10;00 AM. to 4:00 P.M. Thu• added servloe hours are for our cu ... tomera wno work Monday through Fridq and who would llWe to conduct their tinanclal buttneu In the lllsurely atmosphere cf the weekend. •• A•IOUl'e• Oltltl' SI00.000.000 WOBLDSA ANO LONI ASSOCiATIOH HOME Off1C£: LYNWOOO.CAUFOfMA Aeglonel Offtcw. ~/F«ritlln v.n..,.t1.Agur111Md1/Nor1h."idgef Ontlrlo/Sfin Bemu:tlnOJSan DltQO/Wtlt Atcadl•/'Mllh~/ W:iodland Hllll E.Y 4-DA y SALE ~:~.~D!Y6:~~:~1: ~: ~ {)1 ' I QUALITY-ROOM SIZE REMNANTS ''GO. WORTH $79.0010 $125.00 IF PURCHASED ;> BY THE SQUARE YARD. Choose from a select gro.up of nylons and polyes~ in siiogs, hi lo patterns, level • loops ondt-tweeds. • : Horry in for t best selectiom. . Medured; ........... bfa.a """'" Jn.SOil .... . pk Altrodiw In°"'~ modano orlradl-. .-1.• Sturdily conslnldwd. ·Motrt cloop"'"4I 4lec::orator colors to choote from. 98 I q.Ji. I Deep, springy ptl. yorn1 of 100% nylon. Stufdy ond eosy to cl.on. GN.1 o btf9ht l1.1Xuri9io11 look to ony room ·1•tting, yet it'1 proc1kol ond car• fr• .. Mafty ~outiful colors to c:hoole from. POLYESTER SIAG · · 1 OD% Po ...... tlt lllog. Polyetttr pile rolnf.....i. 'Nlth hord twl1t yDn'l1 for bett.,. J)9rformonce. £ctty to cor• f0t t•xture 'Will wfth1tond octf¥e fa!Nly V109f'• Wld• selection of exciting colorl. • SHor1ffifiOME" ltnl"I Th• LartHt letell Ca,,.t &If• .,... lft CafJfemle 11 yew ce1t1t c•"'• '"' l••t ~het1• •1tfl "' N pr•••nt•tl•• wt.II ce N with • f•ll •••pie Hlecthte. ... .~u,.11 .... CALL TODAY 546·8548 3040 lrlstol Ave., Costa Mesa (JUST 0,, THI SAN DllllO 'l llWATI OPEN DAILY 9 A .M .·9 P .M . SATURDAY 9 A .M .·6 P .M . SUNDAY 10 A .M.·S P .M . Ull OUI COHVI NllNT Cll OIT TllMl-ALL LAiOI CAlllU A L1'1TIMI OUAIANTll , • • • • I " I ) ' I • DARY PILOT EDITORIAi;-PAGE ,, Out of Tall{ing Stage SAY, Ct>.!, W~'RE MAVINCt A WU<i Pfi.RTV SWPAY N® ... · CAN YOU MAlCE IT~ ll has been In the talklng stage for a long time, but Huntington Beach's civic center is now on the way toward reality. Ground breaking ceremonies for the •ti.I million project we~ beld Tuesday. It is expected to be open about October, 1973. The civic center -on Main Street, across from Huntington Beach Hi~h School -includes a live-story administra- tive buildlng, a three-story police headquarters •. ~ ~epar· ate city council chamber, and other minor fa cil1t1es. It should serve the city's need through I 995, say city of· ficials. 1\vo fortunate breaks -a good bond market and healthy blddln~ by contract.ors -have saved the city nearly $3 millton on the original cost estimates. Huntington Beach councilmen also picke~ . an architect, Kurt Meyer, who has done a fast and eff1c1ent job for the city. Now that construction crews ar~ really on the job, it looks as if Huntington Beach will soon have a civic center ol which it can be proud, and one which shou1d contribute greatly to increased efficiency and effectiveness of government in this rapidly grow· Ing community. We ll -paid Teachers It is not unusual to see a pay squabble between teachers and their board of trustees, but it does draw a second look when the teachers involved are among the best paid in the county. Teachers in the Ocean View District declared an impasse in salary negotiations last week after school officials refused to budge on a request for a 3.8 per- cent pay increase over this school year and the next. The teachers• action places school trustees in a di!· ficult position. The board has consistently taken the position that although teacher requests are reasonable the district simply can't afford them. "In another year, under different circumstances, 1 Best Reason To Support Women's Lib / Tbovght1 al Large: The best reason -psychologically and toclally -for 1upporting Women's Liberation ia that, U it is successful. women would no longer have to compete by tmitaling male aggressiveness, 'but cou1d remain feminine in temperament while sharing duties, functions and -rib lbeJr ma cozd ~· (As things 1tand now, only the women who ad most like men get a head. which makes the whole s i t u atio n abrasive.) • • It is absurd lo a p e a k of govern· ments being "friendly" with each other, for at the most they can only be allies; a friend is someone who likes the same things you do, while an ally is someone who dislikes the same people you do. • • • A prophet is without honor in bis own country (and his own time) chiefly because he summons the people to live up to themselves, when they are intent upon dying down to them.selves. • • • Most men are terrified by the thought I read the story about the gas stations. We should all boycott them, if we only cou1d. until they give the boys who work in them a decent wage and chance. -R. M. F. Tiii• tuhll'I l'lftleb ,. .. ,.,. \lffta, ,., MtllNrllY fl!-11 tM 111W1••1ttr. Slfllll "-"' """' 11 OIM""' Ous. Dll1f ,1111, of extra "leisure" than they are troubled by the threat of extra toil ; for leisure muit be creative in order not to become • bol'e, wberea work tr mo.fl often a retreat into rote, and an escape from the search for identity. • • • A ''mob'' ls simply a :'group of aroused citizens" we have not yet seen fit to join. • • • Why do we speak of the "mind's eye," but never of the "mind's ear," when we can hear music in the mind just as well as we can see pictures there? (Indeed, that's where Beethoven "heard" most of his greatest music.) • • • A preponderant majority of men of genius -whether activists or in· tellectuals -have been shorter than average, which may be nature's form of compensation. • • • The main discomfort in being a middle. of~the-roader is that you get sid~swiped by partisanl going ln both directions. Angela and Free Speech An assistant to state Attorney ~neral Younger wrote to the television station (CBS) which carried the Angela Davis in· terview emphatically denying censorship intent, but looking with disfavor on the one-hour program, jts content and pur- pose. In part, the letter said, "The broad· casting of this dis- cussion makes clear t.he ~t t falsehood A.1 !\. of t charge that /' ;:!.,,__, "'I there , or bas been, ·~ · any effort to prevent h1iss Davis from expressing her views," (but) "it is for you to decide whether the nature of the discussion ... " (results in) "a fonn of 'speciaJ pleading' for Miss Davis that is consisten t with the right of both the defendant and the people to a fair trial." Beyond doubt Miss Davis's broadcast was ex parte pleading, since she and her interviewer explicitly made it so. but lbere are other elements in this ex- traordinary communications event which ml!rit examination. AS THE WORLD KNOWS, Miss Davis, a black. is in eu&tody charged with murder, under allegation she provided the guns used in the fatal shootout in Marin County Superior Court in August. 1170. Al she &old it. Atiss Davis's &tory was In low key. She was barred from discussion of her pending case. but ool frcm advancing her racial •nd Com- munist philosophy. primarily related to the admiolstration of justice in the United Stale•. There wtre no surprises. Miss Davis is coovfnced her race aod lbose of her poUUcaJ bl!.Uef are. "oppressed," a:s sho nld, and lhol lbe only ••cape lits in ~utlonary action which w o u I d "dalnl7'' lhe American aocfaf order. Her • ~--· -- Royce Brier ' interviewer was the Rev. Cecil Williams, who fed her questions which would not embarrass her position. Her responses were informed with an unremitting flow over a wide IJ)l!Ctrum of her rigid cre- dence. CONCOMITANT wrrH her credence. is one that her people cannot get a hearing before the genera] citizenry, or the establishment. so-called, but as the letter to the television station fore.saw, her un· trammeled presence on the screen refuted that conviction, and in an im· portant way. lt would be dealing in cliche to say her revolutionary faith would be publicly tolerated in few nations today, none of them dominated by doctrinaire com· munism. or or a fascist or military stamp. The whole question , of course. was not breathed to her by her . in· tervlewer. Yet convinced-Americans cannot resl on such easy laurels. Their position must be, and has been since the Constitutional Convention in the 1780s, lbat a free socie· ty must make room for dissent. and that dissenters have a consUluUonal right to their beliefs, aod lo eaprmlon or tbem. The cnty qualification Is that disstnters may not commit overt ·~ acatnst the free society involving violence. In this liabt, Miss Davll'• broadca!t was an affirmation of, not a menace to, our fret society. Jt cleared some air which Meded clearing since Mlss ~vls la 8 foremost u:ponent or black radkt llsm. For we, tbe majority, must lilltn lo mlnorUy &rievanw, wbd.ber or not they are valid, •nd tbose who ~ill no~ have or\en failed in the put, and have I QUe5' tlonable future of tbelr own. would look very fav orably on this request." said George Logan, president of the board of trustees. "But Ibis year J don't see how we can do it." Statistics published by the California Teachers' Association support this view. Ocean View teachers were the best paid among all elementary school district U!achers in Orange County in 197().71. Comparable statistics for this school year are not yet available, but it is unlikely that Ocean View teach· ers have fallen so far that they cannot consider the over· all problem !aced by their employers. Drive-in ·Theater Decision Members of the Fountain Valiey City Council last week took it on the chin when they approved plans for a secon,d drive·in theater over the objections of some residents. l'M l<IPPJNli ... \'IS A COCKTA IL Oil! 15 II/AT ALL~ SURE,F~El>, WO'LL ~ IH~R£! WOULDN'T Ml5.5 Ill The four·screen complex on Warner Avenue and Euclid Street was blamed as lhe future source of traffic congestion, pollution and disturbance to nearby home- owners. . Though theirs was an unpopular decision . if one is to Judge by the complaints of the theater's detractors, the council had litUe alternative. Coun cilmen specified that the land may only be used as a theater for a period of 15 years, after which the land reverts to the industrial purpose it was origin· ally zoned for. It appears a neat trick of reserving in· dustrial land for future years. A denial .of the use permit would have had the effect of leaving the land unproductive. Indeed, its ow~er has found it impossible to build anything else on it. As was adequately pointed out by Councilman John Harper., an existing drive-in theater has proved no problem in terms of traffic and pollution. Why lihould the new one? PARTY.I H Code Does Not Prohibit Flying Old Glory at Night Can Display Flag Around Clock To the Editor : You published a letter I started sending out about a year ago trying to inspire a new·interest in Old Glory as a symbol of our rededication to our ideals and prin· ciples. Our flag bas been considered a living thing; so I maintained that it should be treated like a truly living thing and not fold~d away du ring the dark hours, or during stormy weather. A LEITER just received from the American Legion's national headquarters in Indianapolis informs us that the Flag Code is being changed to fit into our present way rif life -a world of light. It follows in part : • " ... the revision of PUbJ('c Law $29 (the FJag Code) is yet in thi legislative mill in Washington. There has been a bill introduced into this Congress, asking fo r the PresidentiaJ appointment or a flag commission to study and revise Public Law 829, but passage appears doubtful for this congressionaJ session. "THE AMERICAN Legion National Americanism Commission w a s in- strumentaJ in the adoption of a resolution at lhe 53rd national convention in Ho'uston, which would permit display of an all.weather nag 24 hours per day, pro- vi4ed that it is lighted . Extensive research confirmed that Public Law 829 does not prohibit the display of the United States flag 24 hours per day as Jong as a patriotic effect is desired." KATHRYN FISHBACK Mrs. Fis hback has been nomU\ated for a Freedoms Foundation award. -Editor Flag Is a Synabol To the Editor: From our weekly St. John's Mass Bulletin came this reminder: "American Heritage Month -The Pastor sayg, 'This Mailliox I Letters 7rom reader1 are welcome. Normally writers should convey their messages tn 300 wordi or less. TM right to condense lettef's to fit space or eliminate libel is resef'tled. All let- ttrs must include signature and mail· ing address. but names mat1 be with- held on reque~ if suffide·nt reason is apparent. Poetry wiU not be pub- lish:d. month we 'celebrate tM bltthdays. or Abraham Lincoln and G e o r g e Washington. February has been pro- claimed by Mayor Wilson of Costa Mesa to be )fmerican Heritage Month . We are encouraged to observe these holidays enthusiastically. and ·to evidence in our way of 1ife a true spirit of patriotism.' " t consider that sound advice. We should never stop working for the good of our country, nor should our leaders and the American people rest on the laurels o( the Great Americans who have gone be- fore us. AND SO l'M grateful for this Little reminder that has inspired in me a stronger desire to work more diligenUy for the things that will truly make our country great-like justice for the Mex- ican American farm workers, justice for the minorities, the blacks and the Welfare musts, open housing, equal job opportunity. etc. Patriotism is a deep sense or con<:i!rn and love for the people as well as the land. Land is only as good as the people, together. make it. A thou:iiand flags wav. ing simultaneously will not make one a good American, if he is not ; it is not a "magic wand" that will bring about in· stant Americanism, but rather, a symbol of all the beautiful attributes that made America a great nation. And. most im· portant, It belongs to ALL Americans . BERNICE WELSH Yag Dlunao11ds To the Editor: We are living in a world of such In· credible phenomena that our forbears must at times move uneasily in their resting places. To cite but one example, the lustrou9 diamond which the earth yielded reluc- tantly to man only after major physical and financial efforts, Those were the days when diamonds were widely pre> claimed to be woman's best friend -and with reason. These pr~ious stones emitted dazzling hue.s amt colors of such ethereal beauty as to captivate the heart and mind of the beholder. Men fought and died to provide their lady loves with this exotic crystalline carbon . SHAKESPEA RE of undying literary fame , in one of his few careless moments, exclaimed, "What's in a name?" Had the illustrious bard been able to foresee the future he would never have uttered the fatal quote which is causing no end of confusion among the public. A diamond had been a diamond since its inceptio11. So far, so good. Now we have simulated diamonds made from "yag." .Of course, there is always the ''real McCoy" if one is fussy. You pays your money and takes your choice. B~S THAT GOOD old free en. terprise system. But yag it all, what's a person to do when faced with the problem· of choice. There is no cause for the ladles to worry. The stone which adorns her person. being a thing of beauty, It follows that it will be a joy forever. There is always room in this vast and colortuJ land for honest competition. There is no intention in these brier comments to impugn the integrity or anyone concerned. RAYMOND SIMARD , Cornlva l•Rork Concert To the Editor : The date has been set for the first com· bined ''Carnival·Rock Concert" ever te> take place at Los, Amigos High Schgol, Saturday. March 11. Beginning at 12 noon Saturday and run· ning through till S p.m. will be the greatest carnival ever planned for the elementary and junior 'high gchool students in and around the Garden Grove Unified" School Di strict. There will be games . booths. and movies for everyone . Admission to the movi es will be 50 cents. Tickets for the various games will be 10 for a dollar. Food stands will be sell ing all types of food for those ~·ho may get hungry. There is no admission charge to the carnival. That's not all! From 5:30 till 8 will be the time set aside for the adults to relax and enjoy themselves. THE HEAVY sounds of three top name area bands can be heard for three con· tinuous hours. from 8:30 p.m. till 11 :30 p.m. for only $2. This will take place in the gymnasium where all school rules will be in effect. Tickets go on sale Feb. 28 at Los Amigos. High School ideir tilication Is needed . Located at 16.566 Newhope, on the cor· ner of Newhope and Hell In Fountain Valley, Los Amigos offers the perfect set· ting for this ''carnival-Rock Concert." DTCK RECOR Los Amigos Publicity 71HJl-1933 (after 2 p.m.) Latest Clothing Craze: Mao Jacket The Nehru jacket was one of the great fashion Oops of the 1960!1. But now we are in a new decade and the latest clothing craze is .... the Mao jacket. Drab. Joose- fltting aqd equaJly unbecoming to both seX"es. the Mao look seems made to order for the sloppy American fashion scene. It may be more than a fad, however. Since President Nixon announced his visit to China last summer. interest in Oriental art and culture has been growing. A Washington, D.C .. department store opened a shop specializing in Imports from Mainland China on Feb. 21 -the day President Nixon began his visit to Peking. A similar shop was opened last autumn by a New York department store. It sells wicker baskets, tra ps, hats, brooms and other handicrafts. The most popular item, however, is the coarse blue cotton Mao suit al $25. FOR THOSE WHO wanl to be aiyilsh Ooar George: What ls the name of a person who cofiecta rocb? P. T. Dear P. T.: Arthur Willington. 323 M I p i t Avenue, Bark, Ark. He's already got 231 Dear Georg•: Co you believe In old-fuhioaed home remedies. or thoold a doctor be called! l'vt been having an r - Editol'ial Research , _____ ........ but not proletarian, there are tailori!d satin versions of the Mao suit that retail for '450. Cirrlage-trad~ jewelers report heavy demand for intricately carved jade rings, brooches and bracelets . And Max Factor has set up an Anna May Wong comer at Bloomingdale's in New York wh~re a cosmeticlan will attempt to duplicate the doll..Jlke face of the Chinese movie •tar or the 1920s. The exotic culture of the Orient has fascinated Westerners ever since Marco Polo journeyed lo China in the 13th cen- tury. The artists of Italy were the first In argument with my husband. LOUISE Dear Louise: J see abaolutely no rea.sol) to call a doctor because you've bun hav- ing an argument with your bu .. band. Sbeesh l No wonder doctors woo't make boUJe call•. I think l 'U make tome sassafras tea and go Ue down. (S<nd your problem• IA> George. H• burnEd his library card by mi&takrind bu nothing to rtlld ), the West 'IA> rellect this interest by in· corporating Chinese motifs into their in· terior decoration and furniture design . Nearly all of the few surviving pieces of J7th-century Venetian lacquer furniture are decorated with raised gilt chinoiserle figures. THE TASTE FOR chinoiserie quickly spread to other . European counlries. ln France, the fashion reached its height during tile Louis XIV perk>d and re- mained popular during· the 18th century, when It became an integral part of the Louis XV, or rococo, style. Fanciful Chinese figures, often combined with landscapes , were applied as ornamen- tation to furniture and other decorative art forms. Chinese porcelain found a wide market In the West and was especiaJly prized by American colonists. In Englond, from .~ut 1800 IA> 1830, thare was a revival or chinoiserle. In the Regency siyle. 'l'he remodeling of th< Royal Pavilion al Brighton (begun In lll7) slimulaltd a craie for OrlenW art and furniture as wen as English-made decorations In the Cbineae maMer. The taste £or chlnolserle contlnul!d, Lhough on a much-dlmlnlshed scale. through the re- mainder of tbe llth and inlD the 20th cen· huy. THE CURRENT RAGE !or Orlenillla appean more broad-baoed than iho<e of the put. In addition lo clothing ond fuml1hing1 , the East wind bean oeedo of Oritniai religious and phil0<0phlcal lhouah~ BuddhlPll, Wndui•m and mru:• exotic secta have found numerous adherents in the West. Art collectors are beginning to move beyond Chinese jade sculptures and scroll ' paintings to wood carvings and bronzes from India and T'bet. Amer I can observers Jn New OOhl report that New York department-stote buyers regularly sweep through bazaars, buying up han· dlcrafts. An increasing number ot American art galleries stock Indian and Tibetan art. which Is sHll relnttvely in· expensive. So Kipling wa.s only partially rt,ht: East and West can meet, eveo if understanding does not always result. ORANOI COAST DAILY PILOT Rob<rl N, Wttd, Pul>U.hlr Thomu ICetoll, Edl!qr Albert W. Bat.1 Editoriol Page Edi!or 'l11e edltort.i Pftfe of the Dail1 Pilot aooka to inionn and 1ttmu .. Ja.te ret.dtrs. bY J)rtaentl~ thf1 ne'Wlflllptr'• op!nlor11 and com• rnentary on lop.lea of fntl'lttet aDcl 11!1ml!1ctnc.-.:, by providlnr • forvm for the txpr~lon ot'our TO(lets' opinions, and by ~Uni lha dJ\'erse \'i~pofntt ot Informed ob. •~n:'t!f'I and •poketmtn on toplea or the 41.y. Wednesday, F•b. 23, 1973 • • • ... ... 1 -~ ... - ~ Orange (;oast Today's Flna l N.Y. Stoeks voe. ~s. NO. 46, 5 SECTIONS, 66 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNJA WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, '1972 N TEN CENTS ' ost Ne ·wport Crime . Shows Dramatic· Decline Crilil,e In "au but one category of major ense dropped dramatically in Newport ch during 1971, breaking a general, ttem of increase over the past decade, ice Chiel B. James Glavas reported y. statistics in seven felony ofiense! in- ving crJmes against persons and prop- 1y show a 9.5 percent overall drop. Based on a per capita comparison with e U.S. average -on a steady upward iral over the years -Newport Beach's • ime rate reduction is even better, down percent, Glava.s said. The city bas 52,175 citizens and Jogged 336 crimes. • Heaviest cuts occurred ln five types of theft or burglary, which are traditionally deterred by greater police surveillance. Boat burglary, for example, ls• down a phenomenal 57 percent. · ~ During 1971, reported boat burglary cases reached only 46, compared to 108 the prior year. "I feel that significant a red~n reflects ' the success of the police helicopter program," Glavas said in reviewing the overall crime rate drop. The only upswing occurred In ag- gravated assault, usually reflected by nuctuating emotions, and the mood of society. 1xon, eet Slated G~·orip to Seek Height Limits • 'Newport Reside11ts United, 1 citizens' group 4i&bttni( for building height and populaUon-density controls in Newport Bel!Cb, tonight will aak an ad hoc City c.ouncil commi~ to endorle a charter omendmenl lo get•them a 30-foot building !>eight llmiullon. NRU officials · said they will present their proposed amendment to the ad hoc high rb:e commJttee at a meeting 1t 1:30 o'clock in the new fire bead- quartm on Jamboree Road. Allan Beek, NRU presiaent, uld his group will ask for a »-loot height limit "everywhere except Hoag Hospital, Newport Center. !be Emkay property and the frvlne Industrial property north of the Philco-Ford Aeronutronlc facility ." He said the proposal will also call for a density limit ol. "approximately" ll liv- ing units per acre. He said etisting R·l and R-2 (single- family and duplex) zones should be ex- -eluded from any charter provisions On density. Beek said the cequ'5i1 are conclusions of studies undertakeo'by NRU last fall. During that time , he said. the group "has been evaluating alternatives such as initiative and referendum , ordinances and charter amendments , and ways of defining optimum density and height." Beek did not explain how his group wants the ad hoc committee to carry its request to the City Council. The council panel consists of Coun- cilmen Donah~ Mclnnls and Milan Dostal, Planning Commissioner Gordon Glass, along with representatives of NRU, the Balboa Bay Club, the Irvine Company, Newport Tomorrow and the Lower Newport Bay Civic District study com- mittee. Silent Scree n Director Buried ~ HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Fune r a I services have been held for Charles B. Diltz, a silent screen director and writer who began bis career with Macie Sennett comedies. lt was formed by the council to deal specifically wllb .lbe -controverslal ilsue of high rise in Newport Beach . in con- junctipn with the development of a new general plan. ~ • Newport Sleef,er ; Fined-$15; Set For Third Round Convicted on two counts of illegally aJeeping In a vehicle, William F. "Mattson the Martyr" Mattson was sentenced Tuesday to pay a $15 fine for his crimes against the people of Newport Beach. He still iacea jury trial March S in Harbor Judicial District Oourl on a third such Count, to wblcb he has also pleaded Innocent. Newport Beach police arrested the lanky, long-haired camper enthusiast three times durlng January in the Balboa Parking Lot, where they say he has llVed since last April. Mattson admits occupying bis rustic 1948 Dodge mounted with a homemade dwelling featuring shingle., Dutch doors and cherub's heads, but be denies sleep- ing lbere. Mattson, 'l7, is ·CUl'l'elltly attending Orange Coast College on the GI Bill, because no teaching jobs are available despite the fact be bas a BA degree in hi.jlory from Cal Slate, Dominguez HIJls. Cash is short, ao he acted. as his own attorney l.n two IS-minute courtriall he lost Friday by arguing against pollce- gatbered. circumstantial evidence that no one actually saw him sleeping. Investigating olfiairs countered by saying he had sleepy eyes, his sleeping bag was warm, be wore underwear and had a suspicious crease in hi5 cheek as though from lying on II. "I like to watch the sun rise and set, so they're likely to fina me here at odd hours," be bas said in interviews. Mattson Is expected lo field a similar strategy March 3 when he argues his case before a jury of hls peen. Aggravated assaults went up from S4 in 1970 io 69 last year. "CfeneraJly, you can expect offenaea against pe'rsons to be ,affected very little by police action," Chief Clavas noted. One example wol.lld be 19119, when they wont up lo 71 locally ~ to 36 In 1968, a year: when a wavt of unrest and militancy swept America. "[think that we can note nationwide aD increase in violera in all communities,'' Chief Glavas added. "Fluctuation in ag-. gravated assault is fairly insignificant." Chief Glavas theorizes N e w p o r t· Beach's per capita crime rate remained fairly stable on a statewide comparative basis -U wu much below In tome categories -while nationwide, per capita crlm.e more than doubled. A complete breakdown ol the city's 1171 crime stall.sllcs llhows lhla pattern: -Marder: zero down from one tbe prior year. -Forcible Ripe: 10, down from 14 the prior, year. · ~ -Rol>IJery: 19, down from 28 the prior year. -'A1gravated ·.Assault: 69, up from M the priOr year. · -Grand Theft: 299, down from 397 the prior year. -COm.merdal ind residential burglary: 1,151, down from 1,330 the prior year. -Auto 1belt: 186, down from 193 the prior year. -Car burglary: 274, down from 402 the prior year. -Tlleft from cars (accessories, etc.) '601.dOwn from 524 the prior year. -Bo1t barglery: 48, down Crom 108 the prior year. -Theft from boats (life rings, deck chairs, etc.} 42, down from M tbe prior year. Chief Glavas credits citizen cooperation with police ln reducing the crime rite 11 well as helicopter patrol, citing two re.. cent incidents. One involved a Westclifl woman who wrote down a suspicious car's license number, leading to three arresta and recovery of three stolen motorcycles. One other party a83isted in capture of a residential burglary suspect based om similar circumstances. ' "Our citizens trust in and rely on lheir policemen," the chl"ef remarked. 4'AU this contributes to a safer com- munity with a higher rate of auspect 1r· rest and crime solution." be concludet. • .an e? • ) tj I f • I f ' I 1 , ... ' ! I:. o ~ •f • ;R.es1oeN~-NixoN HE~PS.:PReM!eR. cHdu e~L'.~1 -~Wir~ li1si~oA~1s ~~~.cs·~,~;;·~~: • ,ContJnuecl Cordl11ity Mar)<S il'hird"~;ef·f~~!:~~~·~~··~wo'P'~:i ', . ', • . · .. , • 1 ' • ~ , •· '>{ i. · t I : 1 : • i r ~, 1 • .,,. I r TV · Coverage · · ' · Of . China S~t .. ' . ' . · N ewp~r-i :Lqwye r~$·~Rurt For Cong·ress -: ~.put·ters NEW YORK (UPI). -The msjor networks have announced their scheduled coverage fbr today 'anc;I Thursday morn- ing of PresideDt 'Nixon's trip to China. . .By L. PET~ KlµEG ~dozen key campalJn workers were on The schedules are subject to change. All °' ttt. Dettr ~1"' 11•"' ,hand · for , ~e event late Tye~y af- Umes shown are PST. Newport Beach lawyer John w: Black iernoon. As they waited for media Is baving an awful Ume trying to gel his CBS -Tonight, coverage on the CBS, campaign against ·U.S. J\eP. John G. representatives to arrive, they painstak- Evening News, 7-7:30 p.m.; Thursday~ Schmitz (R·Tustln) off \he.gr.und. Jt1gly 'tried .to come up with a''regular coverage on the CBS Morning News, 74 Ftrlt, the·contend.er for.the Democratic mee.Ur:ii night for the campaign staff. a.m. nomination lllllOUDCed hiS candidacy by Black, undaunted by the Inauspicious NBC -Tonight, coverage on the NBC saying the Job ahead Ls "impoasible." , kickorf, talked with a reporter 1n a Nightly News, 7-7:30 p.m. evening special . Ttien, be called a· Presi ·eonterence. to . hallway, oU:tUnlni the wiy' be thinks a program 11 :30 p.m.-mlclnighl 1bunday, eiplaln .. ~ really dldi>'t 1i1<ln "Jin-Democrat can unuat sciunltz' deiiplfe the coverage Included in the UToday" ahow •. Jll?U~le only to have ju.rt one overwh...I..,.;..... Republican ·re1iltratii>n • newspaper, cover It. .. ~ .. uuug 7-9 a.m. No doubt the JoW tumourhlid oothlng to ' majority In llie 39th· District! , · · : ABC-Tonight, c.ovtrage on the Eve-~do With the fact Black ca'Uecl'ttie gather.. ''lie ctttalnly doesO•t'repfelent any 1of ning News 7-7:)1) p.m.; special program !nil •!'the BalboO Bay Club; whii:h ii In the Democrats" Black lnalsfed · "1iid prior to the fllci< cavett sbow, 11:11H1:50 11\e ne'!IY created 42nd Coqrwlooat the · 1' bout thlr' d 'or ••-p.m.; 1bunday, special program 7:30-3 District, not Jn the 31th Dlilrlcfwhich he Y represen a one · ·~ a,.m. seeks to repruent', · ' · 1 • voter1•· . · , "And 00\f . that he (Scbmllz) hH Agreements Reported In Talks • By HELEN THOMAS PEKING (UPI) -President Nixon and Premier Chou En-lal were believed today to have agreed upon a broad exchange t/f atudenta, acliolars ind newsmen be&w¥n their coontrtes and w.ere discuaalng a far. reaching declaration ~l psaceful ·~•· lslence. This WU reported by nioldont """'"' 'd!plqmats In Ptklnc lolloJrln& a ,.,..l"I ~-~-==.:mi .. i:. .... ·-. --~ "tllo .Pttinl Whit• ff-." - Anol)ler con/.,..... It At .fbr Tbundoy. The meeting llarted with 'I bin! from Ch:>u that AIDUican newsmen aC- comp&nytng Nixbn msy be Invited lo atay behind when the Praldent leavesln flvt days. UPI Dlp)omalJc Correspondent stewart Hensley also said lh as;eement on soino form of dlplop>atle contact -short of formal diplomatic recognition -was believed to have been nailed down. at the meeUng. The Chou-Nixon talks, by pre&!' rangement of the two governments, are -kept In utmost aecrecy. No official an- nouncements on what bu been discussed 'l'lll ,be·made untU Iba ta19 end. Bot Hensley Aid the Indications ara strong that the ~ ulUm:alely would end with a landmirlr deelsrollon of • peaceful coexlltence which <OUld hf•• a major effect on Asia and the -Id. And II WU usullled lbat 5'cretary of St.lo Wllllam P. Rorer• In ,his talb with Chinese Forelp Minister Cbl Peng-lei might be wor~ out the specWc' details of Sino-American exchange qreements and the ~of establishing conllnllfnl contact. ahoij of dJplomatJc rela'tlons. Officials w6rnecl l(alnst usumtng each country """1d aublllb a tndt mission in the olhq'. They said It wu more likely lbat the amllnulng cont.els would be Id up in Canada, or 10me ..other third ~ try. ll!>th partla 1ppeared In high spirit. and satisfied Wllh their prosress when Chou drove lhrou1h a ll!lOlffall -the llrsl fouJ weather 11lnce Nlion11 arrlv1I MOn- dsy -lo µII OQ the President. Previous meetings had been htld al 1 site selected by Chou -the ornate Great (See NIXON, P11t II ' Diltz, wbo died Sunday in Sunland al 76, • was buried Tuesday In Valhall, a memorial park in North Hollywood. .A resident of Burbank, Diltz wrote tum scripts that starred such comedians as Harry Langdon, Charley Chase, Laurel and Hardy and Snub Pollard. Sacramento Junket · .Slated "declared he won't support Presldent Nil- on'• bid !or re-<!lectlon, I ·don't think he represents •. J!lajortty of the Repiibllcsns in Or~e County, elt..'Jer.11 Black fiiw'ei he'll get the voles of all the D¢mocrals and tfte modtralo Republleans beclluse of Schmlb' ultra· conservaUve voting record In the Hodse of Rtp..-nuUves. lt'eadaer You probably won't see much of the aun on ThUJ'lday, either, ae. cording lo the weslhedady. Low clouds and 101 will lake up most • of the dsy. Highs of 13 to 75 are predicted, Lows in the ml~'&. Later aa a film editor, Dilt1 worked on movie3 including i•Gr Joe" and "Casablanca." TAKE AN 'AX' T O YOUR TAX This Is the time of yesr DAILY PILOT financial columnilt Sylvll Porter puts Ille "ax" in taxes. First ol a series ol nlnt rolwnns on ~ow to find the legal comers to cut when fillng your income tax appeared tn Tuesd1y'1 edlUons. The· second colmnn Is Jnsldt today oo P11e 23. ft could uve you money to clip and 11ve an nine columns. ' Board, Count y Aides to Christen Lobbyist Office A Junket to sacramenlo !s tentatively set for March 30 lo formally christen Iba new Orange County lobbyiJl'a office In ,.sacnmento. FUlh Dlstrlcl Sopervisor and Board Chairman Ronald w. caspers, of Newport Beach, who last week 101 broad approval of tbt new office, Tuelday pro- posed the mass journey to the stole ClpitaL Clspers propoeed and lhe board ap. provtd • trip to ioclude board members, their wi•es or lid)' friends and all -y departmeii! heads. I lie auggested lbal they check out Ibo new office which will 0open quJeUy'' on MMCb I, vlall the county's lqlafaUvt · team and &Iii• • luncbton for all ...,. . cerned, Including "hopefully, Gov. Ronald County Suptl"llsors Association o l Reagan." C811!9111la (CSAC) pool •nd paid .by Caspers '""''led eslllblisbmtnl of f\111 Orange.County. · . · • time offices In sacramento and In P1ul Balch · of Tustin, an IMOUllO<d Wasblnston D.C. lo "!llrlher Ille county's candJd•le for the lint c!lslrlct superyjl. Interests In the two caplbl\. oral poet now held byJlobertBillin,,sug-. Tbrouah ~ County Administrative Of· rested Tuelday that Ille secretary should , nc., office spsce "" secured Jn a be oelectl4 from Iba )lllemploftd In Ille building, acrou tho atreel from the county. , • • , ·• , capitol building. • , , CUpera 1&1d his .requell would he con- Cosls of keeping Ted Craig, a 1ort:11r · aldortd. · . ipe4ker •of lht assembly ancf longlims The coat of the trip Will be I i-tcfuced ""8llJ iqnota~tl•e and ~Anderadn · conslderabiJ U•Alr Cllllomlo ilrees to of the CoantJ Caunsd'• o!~lhe job traftl~ the crowd to 1nd f?ol1I the cap. luUllme were estimated at II, a monlll ltAI lret. for oflict 1poet and 17311 a lot a "! understand they have ollered lo do permsnent ofllct secretary. that," CUpen uld Isler. "lf lhe7 do not, ~ secretary will be dlootft from tho only the. board 111t111bers abould.ao." ' He 1111d he also Is confident of setting the Dembcratle nomlnstlon, pointing out lbal the only other announced ~!dale ii Tbomu L<nhlrl, wbo bu run severll times 1nd loll, tlcb Ume . · "Besides, Dick O'Nlillf 1lrne4 ' my nomination ~Utk>n," Black nofedJ O'Neil! ii Oran&• County Democnlllc chatnnsn and member of the Democratic state Centr1t Committee. "! lffl O'Neftl'1 suppclrl wQI .help." Blacklu!d. • ' • , I ' Best Time to Close LONDON (UPf) -Nollet dlaplayed at rold-day • outside • ctnlrol Landon rtstaurant: "CloHd for 1uncb." INSWE TODA 'f For a lilt of the !Dfckclld'• live thtotcr attraction.a and a loot ai the top Orear nomin1e1, "' toda~'• ntcrto"""'111 pogo -Tl. • ( ·" PAIL Y PILOI H Air Guard Head Faces Fund Rap WASlllNGTON (AP) -A fedentl srllld Jury bu Indicted the commander of the Alabama Air NaUonal Guan! oo a elwi• of cmspftlng lo lllegally aollclt $3,lllO In political oootrlbotlooa from Air Guard olllotr1 for candidates In the 1970 Alabama elecllon, the JUJtlce Depart.. ment announced today. Ooe , o! the campaigns Involved, the department aald, was that of George C. Walllce, the governor of Alabama. Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell said tho llncJe count Indictment was r<tumecl to- d>l' In U.S. District Court In Mont&omery, AIL, agalnat Maj. Cm. ~e lleod Dost.r. Tbne of Doster'• subordinates lllo were indicted and were ktenWled. aa Cots. Henry Fillingim Jr. and James E. Hard"lct and IA. Col Allte<I B. Gurley. Named u unlndtcted t»COD1plralor1 wm Air Guard Col& Lawrence A. Doyle, Willllm. P. Baker, Wlllle L Whitman Jr., Edward D. Gilmer and Maj. Lonnie J. SlalllOll Jr. Tbe Indictment elwJed that the defen- danta cansplred, beginning in March 1970, to coerce other Air Guard 9fllcera to cm. tribute fl,700 to Wallace'• campaign; $1,000 to former governor Albert' Brewer, a candidate for governor 1D 1970; $400 to Hugh Morrow III, a candidate for lleut..ant governor, and f!OO lo state Sen. ):.el.and Childs, who was not running far...iectlon. • 'Ille lndfdmenl said Iha~ U I part of the conspiracy, . the defendants used government facilities to soliclt the poUUcal contrtbutlona and threatened to downgrade certain Air Guan! olllcera U they lal1ed to cootrtbute. The Indictment quoted Dosi.r as telling an Air Guan! major, Wllllam H. Beddow Jr,, that U be wu Interview~ by the FBI Beddow could cbole one of three courses of 1ctJon: "blow your brains .out; - 1tate'1 evidence or lie if interviewed." Jets Evacuate Hijack Victims From Desert 11y \u111ec1 Prea iinermt1o1111 .t .,ml LdlNrw ,._••>tac Ut lllJ.<ICt ridlmt lnclud!JW Jooeph P Ken- nedy m fell Souihern Yemen'• I.Aden aJrport . today for Athens and Frant!urt, Aden llrporl. officials repOrted. Ano)br,r planeload of •ictlms left earlier but 14 crewmen remained behind u 00,lages. Tho first group of 50 -Including S7 women, U cblldr<n and one man -ar- rived In Framturt today from Beirut where they told o! being terrorized by Arab commandos who threatened con- .tantly to blow up the bljacked Lufthansa 70 In tllghl A spokesman he lhougbt the a.year .. ld Kennedy, aon o! the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, would catch a direct lllgbt from Alhena to the United States. '!'be corrnnarm hijaclted the jumbo jet over Bombay Monday nigbt on a IUKht from New Ptlbl to Atbem and forced lt to land at Aden at the aouthtl'I Up of the Al'lblao .penlDsula, \ II ut a.ere today ia a bluing sun with the five Or its oommmxlos refusing even to -uai. lta rileaae!'-.. Mahmoud Aral, the 60U1Derll Yemen clln!dor of civil 1'Vlatlo~, said the hl- jacl<era r<fuaed to negotiate with two German olflctals who .arrivld In Aden to- day to try to bargain for the r<leaae of the c:nwmen and the 126' million plane. WJlll.COAR DAILY PILOT __ ., ., ... ........ w ... ,._ ...... J1<\Le.M ........ OM*_. ,. ... I( .... -.. .:.:. .. =--· I. ...... icn .. ...,. .... Qr .... .... ,... ... ..... IJJI ........ '"'""" ll ... -PA'-111',ftW --Pr 11:1 .. • w.e...:rA": ........ (.AJ ........... -'--~ .. ~- =,. ""°'• -............... _.,, .... ...,......, __ ... ., ....... ..-. ... "'-._... =-=s"=-== _ .... ---... ..... -............... -~--· ·-----°"" ..... ••ct n mu ...... a 8 f Al,.d I U &4M'N R =" 0.-.. 0. P ?RPI t ...,-:.::::-,, = ·-·==--.. .... ...... UPI Ttlltlllt!eo FIRST LADY HUGS YOUNG CHINESE STUDENT IN PEKING Visiting Chin•,. Commune School While President Works Harbor Teachers Seeking Open Impasse Negotiating The Newport-Mesa Education Arr aoctatlon (N-MEA) lw called for open negotlallona between Ila r<pr....taUvea and dlatrlct lrUJtees to aolve the current teacher salary lmpuae. About 60 membera of the 725-member N-MEA met with trustees Tuesday night to bear the report of a three-member fact-finding panel appointed last fall. The report filed Tuesday blamed a 11breakdown ln communications" by the board and the CertilJcated Employea Councll (CEC), rep,...nUng N-MEA, for the imp;l!le. The original Impasse action wu taken In July wben the board adopted a 2.2 per- cent salary raise, below the five percent cost of living ,!ncreue requested by teachers. That brought to a bait further dlacuaslons o! 1971'.72 salaries. FormaUon of the panel ls spelled out by the Winton Act, Calllomla'a law govern- ing teachel'board .. gotlatloos. During the closed meet and confer meetlnga, the board was represented by Ray Schnlerer, dlstrlct business manager aJld Ille looclleo by the flv .. member C?:C eouncll. • · Al one-point In the dlacuaslona, the report say1, .. there 'may have been an ovef'ortllance on ln!Ormal methods of commtlDlcatlo!I by' the board's represen- tative at a time when key representatives of the CEC were away for the summer." lt suggested that more written coor munlcatlons, formal Inquiries by CEC and more prompt replies by the hoard could help unprove conditions. The board said It would study the report, but set no date for further action. It Is not bound by any findings o! the panel, comprised of Dr. John H. Bright, California Teachers' Association (CTA) official, appointed by CEC; Alfred W. Newman. Vallejo attorney appointed by the board; and Edward Peters of 1oJ Angeles, appointed by the panel. Only Ill vptlng meml!era of the 77-mem· her N·MEA representaUve council were present following the b o a r d ' a ad- journment, but Kingery Whlteneck, N· MEA president, took three votes on the "feellnga" of those present. They were: -llnolllclal authorization to CEC President Al Walters to take 11whatever legal action necessary" to make sure proper negotiation procedures are Jol· lowed In determining a raise In tbe dis- trict administrator's salary. -Tabling (If a motion to seek sanctions by the CTA against the district for refus- ing to make a "conscientious effort" to reach agreement -Approv~ one teacher's suggestion that N-MEA 'take a atrike vote amongst it.. members0 in.stead of seeking aano- tiom, wtilch only give the district a bad name In hiring practice.. Whlteneck wd be had been told open meeUngs between the board and CEC would be possible and other teachers present ·urged that future contect be made wltb the hoard. directly and nol with a represt.ntaUve. The next special meet and confer session ls March 20. • • 'Fish W on!t llite? They Could Hai·e Sexual, Problems AtJBURN, Ala. (AP) -Like people, fish have their sex problems, aays Dr. Wayne Shell, and sometimu that'• the reason Utey won't bite. They'll stop eating, maybe two or three weeks at a time. 4Jtd they're grouchy. "Sel: problems worry them/' says Shell, a professor In the tisherlea depart- ment at Auburn University. As a matter of fact, he said in an fn.. terview, "they do a lot of things like peo- ple. They change their feeding bablls, They get angry, They wony a lot about their enemies; l>lw do, particularly. And they nm !or cover when a storm bita." Pending Staff Report Newport Council OKs . Revised Policy Pinn Newport Beach city councilmen Tues- day night tentalvely adopted the pro- posed city policy plan with a number of revisions, pending a city staff report and additional public Input at the final bear· Ing next Monday, At that time, it Is expected the plan will be officially adopted as a guideline to city planning, pending completion of the general plan In late 1973. Councilmen ,adopted a suggestion by the Newport Harbor Chamber of Com- meroi that plµnlni and cost-benefit analy1t1 of anneutlon be n;tlde for all unlncorporateil lands -no!-4'1st the downcoast area. Also at the Chamber's suggestion, councilmen aoftened a oectlon wblch re- quired tlial anneaed Janda alnady be In the Newport-Mesa UnUled SCbool District to read that the bow>darlet .,,.Wd be common where pracllcabla. But Ille council reluled lo aolten It• Oi" position to expanll'"' or the Orange Coun- 11 ~ .. ~ Chamber requeoted. Additional atall study wu requested folJowlnc 1 suggestion by city council candidate Paul Rycltoff that the city ,.qllfre envlroomeotal Impact ll&temenls llom all developers who,. projects "could baVf algnlllcAnt ell.ct on ~ pbyllcal envlrollment of tbe city." 1\)'tOff poil\ted 001 ~ ~ Oran«• Ooanty l'lcuilna CommBsloo :ncenily ,_mOnded r<qU11111( lllci> llatemeota. Cimmunlt:rr Development D It e c I 0 r lllch...t Hocan 1114 evalutlloll of ll\l<h' ll&tementa would roquira ~d<lltlonal • peraonnel. The counoU asked the staff to report back on possible costs of the action at the next meeting. A report from a specially appointed ad hoc blgf,-rlse committee studying refine- ment of the plan's policies on high rise ls also due before formal adoption can take place . Tuesday tbe council added aectioJla asking for mntrols of waste discharges from boats and for cooperation with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers In barbor dredging, A relmnce to bloycle trllla along the West Newport ocean front, ·requested by the Parts, Beaches mid Recreation Com- mlsslbh, was deleted at the request of Margot Skilling of 6610 W, °"1!an FrO!lt. "Tho;e o! us In West Newport are not really gung ho about bicycles comlJlg within 10 feet of our windows back and forth all day Jong," she said. Frank Robinson. Orange Co u n t y Harbor commlsltorler, urged that coaf... benellt analyae.s ~ taken for 111 areu developed in the city, not JUI! for possible annexations. • The cllcbe that 111cb developmenta will "1 •• brotden the tax base' la very misleading," be aaldl He cited a study tn Palo Allo which reportedly showed that acquisition of park lands was cheaper for the taxpayer than dovelopmenl Councllm•• Carl Kymla agreed that Itch analysis could be clone tJuou&hout th• city. , : lien Mo¢oy'• me.ting, the flllll scheduled h<arlng, la at'''° p.m. bl tlty Hall. ' t Nixons See Gym Show Lithe Chinese Athletes Give Display ~ PEKING (UPI) -China paraded Ila talented men and women gymnuts in two hours of 1pectacular, acrobatic performancet today for a highly •I" preciative President and Mrs. Nixon and 15,000 constanUy applauding Chinese. N Nilons accompanied by Premier Chou En-la!, shoot their heads In wonder- ment as the lithe, athletlc gymnasts performed. The President, Mra. Nixon and Chou sat ln front row seats in the Immense Capital Gymnasiwn --; teapots in front of them, kept filled by waitresses -and joined thou.sands of Peking achoo! children in rhythmic applause. ParUcularly outstanding was the work of the whit&wllfonned men on the atlll rings Ind the blgh bar. The women, strong and muscular but From Page I NIXON •.. Hall of the People, No algnlllcanco wu attached to the change In site. Mrs. Nixon, meanwhile, wa.. assuming the role of her husband's ambassador to China's 800 million people. Ignoring the snow and the cold, she gamely trotted along dusty yellow dJrt roads on a tOW' of a commune west of Peking where il,000 peasants live and farm. The First Lady, wrapped in a fur-lined coat, visited a pig farm, a prJma.ry school, the medical clinic, a hot house and a general store. On Thursday, the Nlxons probably will make, their long anticipated trip north of Peking to visit jbe Gr<at Wall o! China, a l,SOO.mlle barricade bull! about the 4th Century B.C. to teep for<lgn Invaders out. Today's talks brought to nine bouia the tlm• spent by Nixon and Chou In formal business sessions. In addiUon, Nli:on held a rare ho\Jr.long session with Chairman Mao Tse-tung, the aging pbllosopher o! the Marxlat move- ment who Jeans heavily on Chou to mate most decisions. Western diplomats In Peking ar< con- vinced that lhla unusual display of good feeling between countrtea wblch bave been antagonists for two decades Is bound to be followed by aome form o! declaraUon. Fake Pregnancy Gimmick Offered By2 Desi~rs NEW YORK (AP). -A "pregoant" woman arrivea at a party. MezJ ,fetcb her canapes. Women whisper about bow ra· dlant sbe looks. But auddenly she an- nounces she's not pregnant at all. She's only playing pregnant -with a small, aaUn, egg-<baped pillow, tied around her waist with pink rtbhom and trimmed with ariUque lace and l03ettes. It's called a Hpuff" or PWF, Pregnancy Without Fear • Two New York women, costume designers Linda Sampson and writer K. T. Maclay, are trying to aeU the Idea to stores. They hope to produce It for 115 to $20. Why would anybody want one? The makers think it could get a woman a seat on a crowded bus or auure a woman protection in a protest man:h. On the other band, they hope this pretend-pregnancy rOuUne would force people to re-examine their preconceptions about pregnant women. "If you don't know who's really preg· nant, you are forced to relate to a preg. nant woman as a person, not as a mother-to-be," 1111 K. T. GEM TALK TODAY by BEFORE YOU BUY A DIAMOND Tbs purchase of a diamond as an engagement ring or a specllll gift of love 'Is usually a one-time occasion in every man's life. Beca11Se this purchase Involves deep meaning as well as a algnifi· cant inyestmen~ you wlll want to buy wisely and with a pride of pur· chase which will last a IHettme. There are definite standards for the pricing of diamonds, and lou• definite factors ln detemrlnatlnn of value, CutUng, color, clarity and carat weight are the lour measuru of a diamond's value. Each of these factors require .complete under- standing by the buyer be!ore an intelllgent purc:iase ca,n be made. We would appreciate an oppor- tunity to explall\ each of these lao- tors to you poraonally. So when y<>u have the time, come on ln and see us. No malttr what or whrre you eventually buy, we alll'tyt have the Ume to help you make the rl&ht choice. • very feminine bfrtd ahlrU and tight bllM aborts, performed best on the balance beam and -.d In apectacular moves oo the uneven parallel bars. The Chine~ do not participate In the 11WM1U Olympics, where the gymnasUc championships are held, largely for political ..uons. But Judging from the show they put on for the Nlxona, they would be contenders for the gold medal At one poin~ alter the men'a blgh bar performances, the i'!<aldent ~ hla bands Into the air, shook hla head In amazement, and looked to h1s rlgbt to Secretary o! State William P. Rogers. The Chinese are an atbleUc people. Worker• get two IS.minute breaks dally fC1r mandatory exercises. One o f Chairman Mao Tse-lung's quotatlona la "Promote physical culture, build up the New~t ~ontest peqple11 health/" . Ntion, a IQJnelJme' .bowler, 1 now-and· again golfer but an avid football fan, ~ed Jnlmatedl' with Qiou, remarking about the perlonruuice. The omnuta were followed by Chinese badminton playera, one of them the women'• national champion. Tbe sirll shi>wed oxeellent form . alugging the .shut- ilecoct oo the eye could barely follow ll II wu a far cry from American back;ard ba<fjninton.. · . .,,_c,. Badminton gave way.to the table ww~ players, the w-orld'a finest. . It was the Chinese lnvlta~ to the American table tennla team 1ut year that '-"' the Bamboo Curtalil and ltd to Nixon a summit trip to Peking. Throughout the long program planll music aet the tempo. . Candidates Woo CofC In Pre-election Session Mayor Ed Hirth asked tbe people to listen to the candidates and one of his o~ ponenu asked the candidates to ~n to the people aa the Newport Beach City Councll race was infonnally launched at a breakfast meeting of the Corona del Mar Chamber o! Commerce this morn- ing. "Listen, before you make up your minds," urged Hirth. One o! his two Fifth District opponenls, Paul B. Ryckoff, suggested pubDc "ad· visory" votes on key issues before council action. The other challenger for Hlrth'a seat, Harvey D. Pease, didn't show up. He was represented by retired attorney Max B. Sturges who lamented the riilng costs of city legal services during his sh:-mlnute talk , The three candidates !or the on1y other contested seat In the April II election, P. D. "Dee" Coot, James A. Crane and Jonas "John" Store, all were present. They are after lhe Seventh District seat to be vacated by Lindsley Parsons. Cook, a veteran councilman who fonnerly represented the Fifth District, refernd to recent allegations that be ls a •1tramp'1 because be has lived in IO many areas of the city.· He said that ii a good reason to vote for him. "I think it's a grtat advantage to be a tramp," he told the 60 cbalJlber membert and guesta, "I've learned the problema of all sections of the city.0 Coot <aald be wu proud o! the !act he has lived In all but the Fourth D1str1<1. .- Crane pledged an ''open.book" cam- pa1gn1 vowing the people would always kOOw bow be stand& on the various Issues. He said be would consider the needs o! all the residents of the city, not just any pressure group that bappened to attead 1 parUcular council moeUng. store, alluding to the fact both hla Oi" ponent.. are retired businessmen and vowed to bave plenty o! time to serve, sald "I'm a busy man but I'll make the tlmt to represent you." Store. a consultant, said he now spends at least ball hla lime In hla Corona del Mar office. His other office is 1D Arcadia. Slor< said be wants to atop the lrteway, put high rise In appropriate ar<as, place tougli controla on Baek Bay development and look carefully at any proposed amiexailons. , -COuncllman Donald Mclnnla, Second D~trlct Incumbent who ta running unop- posed, clted past accompllahmerlts of the council and Usted what be feels are the crucial upcoming issues, t n c I u d I n I Orange County Airport, the new general plan, the need for parks and the need for '4t.10• blgb rise and density cootrols. All o! the calidldates talted about their concern for tbe envlronment. Cook summed up the general feellog, saying, 'jNewport Beach should be saved for. N ewportera.11 Hirth agreed with a suggestion by Ryckoff that If the people want to bind future clty counclls to certain sections ot the new master plan that they should, In fact. put them In tbe charter. "I! sections are so vital to maintain ihl character of Newport Beach and have to be so rigid, then the people can put them in the charter," Hirth said. Earlier, however, be noted that a general plan should be a docwnent that can be changed as conditions and "desires of the people" change. Ryckoff said charter changes may be necessary In order to put a complete stop to growth In aome areas of the city. Orange County's Cost of living Takes New Jump, Despite federal economic conlrola, residents o! Orange Cotmty today found that the cost o! living went up again 1ut month. The Increase, reported by the Bureau of Labor Statlatlci, Is 0.1 percent. Higher costs for food, health and tranaportatlon were held to blame for the rise. At the ume time, the bureau noted that prices for housing, apparel and transportation actually declined. The consumer price index stood at 120.2, wblob means that the Orange Coun- ty housewife hu to spend IU.02 for food, goods and services that cost 110 In ltl!'I. During January, !oocj prices ro.e 0.8 percent and health and recreition costs 0.3 percent. Housing costa dropped O, l percent, apparel o. 7 percent a n d transportation .O.S percent. '!'be bureau a1ao announced that average overall weekly earnings drol'PO!I In January to $129.211, a decrease of ILl5 from Deeember, eauaed by a decline of aevett4enths of an hour of an average work week. Howevtr, the spendable earnings of a married worker wltb three dep<nde• rose by 62 cents IA January to 1115,lt because of federal tax ..Utl provisions wblcb took eflect In January, tbe bureau aald. A apecl1I romembronc1 ' from every member of the family with from 1 to · • • 9 GENUINE Birthstones 1racefully set In 14 Kt. wlltt1 or ytliow &old'""" $19.10• ., 1823 NEWPORT BtVD., CO~A MESA • CONVINllNl 11 .. 11 IANKAMIAICAlll-MASTll CHAl81 14 YI.OS IN IAMt LOCATION rHONl Ml.J~OI ' I I I j • f: • (: • I Visit Gets Top Play In China Pat Goes Visiting First Lady ' Views .Acupuncture By FRANK COR!-UER. dozen needles protruding Crom Peklng Glassware Factory, PEKING (AP) -Bare-her ria:bt arm and lee. Mr1. Nixon spoke to al least ztl headed as u.sual. Pit. Nixon The woman said those Umbl workers -moatly girls, who b _. N th c h i had been .0 numb before she raviru. i or n a ·were working on a wide range snowstorm today to visit an began I week-long ltries of of .,laasware. lg · It I -mmuno where a.cununcture treatments ttult e r1cu ura "v ,.-Mrs. Nixon was 1sked to she mingled wt th shecouldhar~lywalka~nd schoolchildren, 0 b 1 er v e d her small home. Now she can visit the factory again. "In the winter c u 1 t 1 v a t 1 0 n of cook, she r'ported. meanUmt:," the Flr1t Lady vei:retables and saw a 48-ytar-"We wish you well," Mrs. replied, "I hope you will come o and see us." old woman gettlng an Niion told her. acupuncture treatment. ·:1t .d.ldn't look painful," she The plg Mrs. Nixon tried to The First Lady walked remarked 13 afle left the entice within petting dist.Ince through intermittently heavy clinic. was corralled outside a tiny, snow that glistened In her hair, spotlessly clean cottage. During l one-hour vilit to a moving down alleys a n d Warned by a reparter that across furrowed fields 1t the ---.,..-------the pig might blte, Mrs. Nixon S,000.acre Evergretn People's . uid she lived on a farm as 11 Commune west of Peking. MD~ NIXON tlrl and "( once raised a Mrs. Nixon •as captivated •t.4;-J • prizewinner-second prize." by the schoolchildren she saw. PS HEA. D But . the pig Jg no red her en- marveled at tho growing ol RA. troati.,, and Iinally she loaned oot-ot-sea.son vegetables under Jnto the aly to throw him a glass and even tried futile ly to . PEKING (UPI) -Pat Nix· chunk of ca..bbage. make friends with a rather on bufnped her head on a dirty hog l·n a s••. . bl h'I lo . In another schoolroom, two ~ warm air ower w 1 e ur1ng l" Id bo I · She seemed most surprised, . GI F to to \ryear-o ys were p aymg however. to Observe l·n the the Pekin~ ass I C ry · table tenn is with rather unim -day, but 1he apparently was · I 1•-p · u t commune clinic the ancient not hurt. press ve resu ~. o1n ng o Chinese medical treatment While she watched a young the table, the First Lady said : ba--• on tho i""erlion of long . "We have one In Florida, and IK\.L .. 0 glrl fashioning tiny inlr1cate d I p· p g" n·-•ies 1·n10 tho flesh. f 1 -• 1 we o Pay ing on . ~ anlm1!11 rom co oreu g ass The two young women w.ho cylinders , Mrs. Nil:on rapped To the 8-year-olds learning give the treatment told Mrs. her head on the.blower. multiplication -several of Nixon that they attend to Afterwards, she k e p t them gave wrong answers about a dozen pa tie nt! a day. touching her blonde halt, but while she was there -Mrs. They showed her a gray-haired she !Misted that she was not Nixon said she b r o u g h t Wot~, Ftbnwy V , lt72 DAILY 'ILilf I WORLD SAVINGS ISNOWOPEN SATURDAYS Commencing February 19, our Regional Office In Laguna Beach,292 South Coast Highway at Forest Av&- nue, 494-9481, will be open Saiurdaya from 10:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M. These llbdtd service hours are for our ctJ&a tomera who work Monday th rough Friday and who would 111'9 to conduct their flnanclaJ business In th• llL&urely atmosphdt1 of the weekand. •• Atl0Ul'C9t CIYltl!I00.000.000 WOBLDSA ANO LOAN ASSOCIATIOH HOME OFFICE: L 'nM'OOO, C,t,LllOfNA fltolOnal omew. BrRwood/F<uitaln V.!ley/LaoLN 8-ohl~f Ontario/ San Bemardlno/!an Olegorw.tl; Aroaclll/Wllln~/ Woodland Hltlt ; woman lying on her aide on a hurt. gr~~oe~ti~ng~s~f~ro=m=a=ll~th=e=c=h=lldr=••}==================== cot with more than half a of America. PEKJNG (UPI) -The -''-='--'--'----------- Uf'I Ttle'M .. 1 PRESIDENT NIXON CHATS WITH WIFE OF MAO (R) Interpreter Alda Converution at Cultur1I Show 'Revisionist' Ranking Professor Adm~ts Past Errors PEKING (UPI ) -Chou Pei.yuan , one of China's best known profes80r5, sipped tea with American newsm~ today at Peking University and co~ fwed he once harborkl reviaJonllt and b o u r a: e o I 1 though la. ''After I studied the works o( Chairman Mao, I realized that I had made mistakes," Chou said. "I now follow the correct theoretical lint." Chou would be a credit to any college faculty. A pr<r fe&8or of theoretical physics alnct 1929, he eraduated from the UnlversJty of Chicago in ll'2S and holds degrees from univusltlea in China and Europe. r He w11 dean of Tsinabua Unlvenlty befora moving to Pekin& Jn 1952. A man in bis '10I -be decllned to give et- act age -he we.art: a hearing aid. llJa hllr iJ gray. Although Hangchow On Nixon Itinerary he speaks perfect English and chatted informally w I t h newsmen, be used 1n in- terpreter for his more formal talks, correctinr t b e in- terpreter 1t timu when be disagreed with the translation. A Chineae new1man u:- plained that Chine• ~ fusors 1peak Chine!e when they are talking formally. "'(ou are in chtna,'' he nid, Chou is head of the ph)'llcs departmen~ 1t Pekin& and is vice chairman of t h e u n ilversity'I Revolutionary C.ommittee. Saine newsmen in China covering President Nl1011'1 visit were invited to tour Chifta's most prestiglout 1Dlivenltf, Peking, aomtlhln1 of 1 ahrme now because the May· 4th movement which •pawned Iha C>J.... Com- munist party began there in 1111. . Reporter• g1thered in a faculty toom 1t. the Ruui1n Iansuage building. Drlnklnr tea from flower.decor1ted cups, thty interviewed Chou and Chiang Chun-yu, 38, a former printer who now la described u Ha le1dlng member of the Revolutidnary Committet and a leading member of the university branch of the Qnnmunlst par- ty." Chinese government continued to give major publicity today to President Nii on's visit.·· The offici1I "Peoplea Daily" published four photographs showing Tuesd1y's activltiea and meeting• of the Prealdent. One photograph showed Nix- on Ind Premier Chou En·Iai 1e1ted on opposite sides of a Jong conference table during their meetinf Tuesday at the Great Hall o the People. . Each w11 flanked by a num- ber ot 1ides, the most co~ 1plcuou1 amonc th e ~meric1na being presidential adviser Henry A. Kluinger. Among the three 1dvi.sera with Chou Jn the picture, the rant~ ing man w1s tht high member of the protocol department. The "Peoples Dail y" printed a second photograph of the meeting which Secretary of state William P. Roser• held Tuesday with his countere-rt in the Chinese government, Chi Peng·fel. Rogers and Chi alao w•re flanked by a number ol advi1er1, the most prom~ lnent in the picture on t h e American aide beinc Marshall Green, aalltlnt aecretary of ltate, for Eatt Asian affairs, and preaidential con.ultant John Sc1ll. The other two photol ln today '• edition were taken at the perform1nce T u t 1 d a y Jti&ht of the revolutionary ballet ind during Pit Nixon's visit Tuelday to tlle Peking Hotel'• kitchen. Tho photo at tho ballot, liken at the end ol the performance, lho"ed n I n e Chinese and Americans , in- cluding Choo ond Nixon. 1tand-lns ond applauding tho per- fonnen. West Germans Favor Visit TUEBINGEN, Germa ny (AP) -Ninety percont of Wut Germana queried in a publJc opinion Poll w ere following President Nixon's 1 trip to China with interest and 70 percent viewed it positively, the Wickert Public Oploion lnlltute ukl. TOKYO ((AP) -Tho "'t China lake city or Hangchow, where Pre1ldent Nixon will atly overnight Saturday, was d~scrtbed today 11 one th1t has retained it! beauty and charm wbUe expanding Jnto a thriving Socialist incl11strlal metropoll1. Panda Clamor The New China New1 Agen- cy, Peking'• official · news aaoney, aa!d 11 2,000.yoar- 014 H1ngchoio ,.., noted I• the past for Ila tr.aq/tional 11lk ond cotton texUI• ~u1trlos. T6day, the 1geney 11Jd, Hqchow 111<> 11 noled for Ila indualr)' -ir6fi, 1 l o • I , machine building and chtmJcala -c1uaed by the • • S oclalist tranaformatlon'' carried out by tNO .. orklha 0f!OOpil 1l11<t tho COmmunlata t0ok over the m1lnl1nd in 1949. "No longer a aemlcoJonial consumer city, HMccbow Is now a prMperOUI SoclaJbt in- dustrial center.'' the 11ency reported. Prof Predicl.8 'No Miracles' SAN DIEGO (AP) -Pros!· deft! Nl1on'1 viJlt to China II a "11""1 llep forward" but isn't likely to oolve any maj<>r prob- lmn.1 between the two coun· trtea, uy1 a Chinese profeuor al San Dlo;o State C.ll•t•· "I don't lhlnt the v!Jlt will create mlr1clu or chance aaclal atructum, but n may rolu ltnalon1 between tht two oounttiet and Improve corn- chaniea." ·Zoos Covet China Gift By A1sociated Pre11 While U.S. and Chine., lttders ma neuter t h ·r o u 1 b high l•vol talka, AmOTlcan "'° directors have bqun diplomatic maneuverlna of tholi-0wn aimed at 1eiu111 tho two rare giant pandai ctven to tho United Stat" by Premier Chou E1>lal. "jl'here iln't I ZOO in thlt country lhat wouldn't .. n Ila ooul for llJoH pandaa," 11y1 Jack s I mm on 1, Nturalilt guide at S.1!00'1 Woodland Port Zoo. Thttt .,e only four pandu In captivity oulalda al China - inclb<llng a mala In Moocow and ~ female In Lo~. Ef- forta to m a t • tho bffr-llka 1nimall have filled. The oth• two pandu are ln North Xotta. But Simmo111 ond moat olhor too ofOclalJ eontectod """ rosl,.ed lo tho kit• that tho two luuy, bl1~k Ind white &Illa from Ille Chlnae IO•tn>- mtat ltiU .. illd • up 1 t 11'11hinJ!oa'1 N11looal Zoo. ''The Nltlaftal Zoo hu been !ho ropoallory for more tllao II ywa of IUCh llfb Imm other nations to the United States," nld Director Dr. Theodore llffd. "I would au11me we might be called upon once qain Jn thl• Cite," JM added. But Reed llr-...d that there h1a been no official word from the White Hou1t on where the 1nii;nal1 would' be kept. 11JCI 1nlm1ls Were liYin to Nixon, who ii visltiac Poking, In return for two · North American muskoxen Nixon II pruent1n1 to tho c:iw-. A Chicago 100 iJ lnaltlng Ila bid for tho pandlS thrO<JJh poUtlcal channels. J)r. Luter E. Flaher of Lfncoli! Park Zoo lw contacted 1n 1Jlinot1 con- sraarmn and wu reportedly tryinl to rucb S.111. Adlai St.evenaon m ltld Charla Perey for their hel~s well . Acqutrlne • pa 1, 11y1 t>envt:r Zoo Dtrec Clayton Frtlhelt1 °would a JOOman'a dream .•• It'• I.he kind of animal yoo make room for." Tiie IOO \n San Diej!O. hH beon tryq to eel a polr ol pand11 sl11<t tho wly 19409. ~ 4-DAY SALE ~~.~D!Y6:~::~1::~ (fl . I QUALITY ROOM SIZE REMNANTS II GO. WORTH $79.H 10 $12s.oo IF nRCllASED ;» BY THE SQUARE YARD. Choose from a select group of nylons aild polyesters in shags, hi lo pattems, IM. •loops· Oldw.:1eeds. Hurry in for i best selectioM. r Deep, 1prii1gy ptle ycwns of I 00% ny\on.. Sf\.Wctv a~ •o•y lo ci.on: Gfttta o bright knnfriovl look to C!"Y rl!'O"' -,.tting, yet if'• proc:rical and (Of' .. fr ... MoffY i.ovtiful colora to Choote from. $4. yd. .~"""" 501 •tOll PIU 98 q.Ji NLYEml ·· SHAG 100% ~oliag. Polyo11~r p;i. Nlof.....i j .tth hord Mf1t yams for better perfo111i.1ca. fmy to" care for textvf• will wfthatond om.. fol'Nty utOQI. Wtd• Mltction of exdting c:oloflo SHOP-AT-HOME SERVICE r-·-• .... .. Servln1 Th• Llrtttt Rtt1ll C.rpet l•I• Art1 In Callf«nl1 " .,.. ..... , .... '"' .... ,.... ••ti ••r HllN•••t•tl•• wUI ••II with •1fill s••"• HIMl&H. • ........ , ... CALL TODAY 546·8548 3040 lrlatol Ave., Costa Mesa (JUST O_, THI IAN DtlGO •UIWAY) . OPEN DAILY 9 A .M -9 P .M . Sl\TURDAY 9 A .M .-6 P .M . SUNDAY 10 l\.M .-' P .M . UH OUR CONVINllNT CUDIT TUMl-AL~ LAIDR CAUlll A ~"UIMI CIUARANTll-, .\ ) • ' • • • DAH.Y PU..OT EDITORIAL PAGE Moving Towa r d ( A loophole in Newport Beach's otherwl!e touah zonlog re1triction1 has been found by a number of de- velopers In the Old Newport area. The area is almost excluslvely zoned for lndµstry <M·l) and speculaton have learned they can create com· merclal uses in thls zone in many cases without a use permit. And since there are no requirements for ou .. street parking in these M·l areas. the developers can put in shops without providing any place for customers to park. The ultimate chaos is obvious. Planning commissioners two weeks ago learned or the problem and asked city councilmen for an emer- gency action to control the situation while the regu· lations were properly rewritten. Councilmen declined to act last week when devel· opers attended their meeting and argued against the lilop-gap measure. With no pltnning comm.iasioners handy, the council simply ignored their plea. Commissioner William Agee, at a subsequent meet· Ing of his board, blamed· his own panel tor a "lack of communication" of the urgency of the matter, and com· missioners instructed their chairman to convey the im· plications person~y to Mayor Ed Hirth. We hOpe the mayor and the other six councilmen get the message. The Old Newport area needs new stimulus, to be sure, but uncontrolled commercial development in an area already hampered by inadequate parking is not the right kind of injection to solve the problem . Directors Ducked Reform Orange County sanitation directors have ducked the task of reforming their organization. After 13 months of study, the directors balked at Best Reason To Support Women's Lib Thoaghtl 11 Large: 'lbe best reason -psychologically and IOcially -for mpp:irtlng Women's Liberation ia that, lf it ls succtssful, women would no longer have to compete by imitating male aggressiveness, but could remain feminine in temperament while sharing duties, functiOM and rewards with their male counterparts. (AJ thlnss tla•d now, onJy the women who ad most like men get ah.~ad. which makes the whole situatio n abrasive.) • • It is abs~ to speak of 1119em-menta being -..rtendly" with each other. for at the most they can only be allies; a friend is someone who likes the aame things you do, while an ally is someone who dislike.a the same people you do. • • • A prophet i! without honor In b.ls own country (and his own time) chiefly because be summons the people to live up to themaelve.s, when they are intent upon dying down to themselves. • • • Most men are terrified by the thought Dear Gloomy Gus I read the story about the gas statlon&. We ahould all boycott them, if we only could, unW they give the b:ly1 who work in them a decent wage and chance. -R. M. F. Tllb IUf\ln Nfllttt """"' ¥llwl. •I _......., ..... ., the --· ..... -,.., ,....,_ ft 0...,,., 0... IMllJ PUM, .. of extra "leisure" than they are troubled by the threat oI extra toil ; for leisure must be creative in order not to become a bore, whereas work is most often a retreat into rote, and an acape from the search for identity. • • • A "mob'' is1simply a "group of aroused citizens'' we have not yet seen fit to join: . " . Why do we speak of the "mind's eye," but never of the "mind's ear," when we can hear inusic in the mind just as well as we can see pictures there? (Indeed. that1s where Beethoven "heard" most of hiJ great.est music.) • • • A preponderant majoMty or men of genius -whet.bu activists or in- tellectuab -have been shorter than average, which may be nat~'s form of compensation. • • • The main discomfort in being a midd1e- of-theoroader is that you get aidwwiped bypartiwi.s going la both dlrectloM . Angela and Free Speech An usi!tant to state Attorney General Younger wrote to the television station (CBS) which carried the Angela Davis fn. terview emphatically denying censorship intent, but looking with disfavor on the Doe-hour program, ttJ content and pur- pose. In part. the Jetter said. "The broad- casting of Uds dis- cussion makes clear the patent falsehood h ·1 of the charge that ,,l • • there is, or bas been, any effort to prevent Miss Davis from expresstng her views ," (but I "it is for you to .decide whet.her the nature of the discussion ... " (result..s in) "a form or '&peclal pleading' for Miss Davis that ts consistent with the right of both the dclendant and the people to a fair trial ." Beyond doubt Miss Davis's broadcast waa er parte pleading, since she and her interviewer erpllcilly made it so, but thtre are other elements in thls ex· traordinary communications event which merit exam.inallon. AS THE WORLD KNOWS, Miu Davi!. a blac:k, la iu Custody charged with murder, under lltogation she provided the guns used In the fatol sbootoot In Marin County Supmor Oiurt In August. 1970. ....,...-..---,~,.... .. -. • • Royce Brier Interviewer was lbe Rev. Cecil Williams. who fed her questions which would not embarrass her p:isilion. Her responses were informed with an unremitting flow aver a wide spectrum of her rigid cre- dence. CONCOMITANT WJrB her credence, is one that her people cannot get a hearing before the general citizenry, or the establishment. so-called, but as the lelte.r lo the television 5tltion foresaw, her UM· trammeled presence on the screen refu~ that conviction. and in an lm- p:irtant way. Il would be dealing In cllche to say her revolutionary faith would be pt.1blicly tolerated in few nations today. none of them dominated by doctrinaire com· munism. or of a fMclat or military stamp. The whole questlGb: of course, waa not breathed to her by her In· terviewe.r. Aa she "'1d ll Miss Davh's llory "" In low key. She was barttd from dlJcusslon of her Jllmling cU<. bat not from advaJldni her rlClaJ and Com- mUlllll phllosopey, primarily rel1led w the admiaistnllon of justice in the lJtlfl<d Si.lei. Yet convinced Americans cannot rest on such eaisy laurtls. Their position mUJt be. and has been since the ConsUtutlon1J Convention in lbe 17110s, that a free aocie. ty must make room for dissent, and that dissenters have a consututlonal right to thtir beliefs, 1'nd to aprwim of them. The only qualification Is tbat dissenters may not commit overt lctl aplnsl the !ret socjety involvlna violence. tn tlti.s light, Miu llovls's lnldcast was an affirmation of, Mt a menace to, our ftte t.odety. It cle.ll'ed JOme a.Ir which needed clwlnc llnce Miss O.vls ii 1 foremost upone.nt ol black radlclllsm. The.re wen oo wrpriles. Mias Davia b: eonviocod her roce •nd Iha,. or her paliUcal bollel 1R "opprtaaed," IS she Aid, and tbal the oaly escapo 11•• In reWJlutbiu)' -Whlclt w o u 11 "d<.<ll'oJ" the An>«kan IOClal """'·Hu Far "'· the mljarity, must tlot .. to minority lrieV1111Ca. whelhor or 11111 tboy are valid, and thoH wbo will not hive often uUed in the put. and hive I q- tlonable lulure ol Ill.tr """· a committee-recommended proposal that would have merged seven districts into one and cut the number of $1irectors from 37 to 2~. The old zon., would have been retained as advisory groups. Tho intent was to simplily"'the pollcy·making process and to avoid duplication in directors' fees. The duplication occurs because :;everal directors si t on more than one board and under state Jaw receive JSO a meeting Jrom each district they represent even though the meetings are held concurrently. Instead of adopting the recommended change, the directors, claiming a loss of local control. decided to seek a change in the state law that would allow, but not require, individual district! to limit fees to •so "'itb no dup1ications. This move may get bogged down in the Legislature. l'M ~IWJNG ... \'T'S f\ COCKTAIL Oil! IS Ill.AT AU.~ 5URE,F~EP, WC'LL ~ IHtRE.' WOULDN'T MISS If! The proposal also does nothing to cut the number of directorships -expected to grow to 44 it certain an· nexations occur. In short the directors voted for the status quo, not reform. Misplac_ed Miss Newport Residents of Newport Beach who might have al· tended the recent Miss Orange County Pageant certain· ly could have been expected to applaud loudest as their own '1Miss Newport Beach" walked down the runway. Their hometown spirit would have been in vain. Be· cause the real Miss Newport fairly decided she didn't have enough, time to enter, uncaring rageant officials chose their own "Miss Newport"-a gir from Anaheim. Who knows? Maybe the next Miss America will really be an import from Canada. And maybe the next Mi!s Anaheim will come from Newport Beach. PARTY.I N Code Does Not Prolaifrit Flying Old Glory at Night Can · Display Flag Around Clock To the Editor: You published a Jetter I started Bending out ·about a year ago trying to inspire a new interest in Old Glory u a symbol of Dur rededication to our ideals and prin- ciples. Our flag ha.s been considered a living thing ; so I maintained that it &hould be treated like a truly living thing and not folded away during the dark hours, or during stonny weather. A LE.Tl'ER jUlll received from the American Legion's national headquarters in Indianapolis informs us that the Flag Code is being changed to fit into our present way of life - a world of light. It follows in part: " ... the revision ol Public .Law 929 (the Flag Code) is yet in the J'gisJative mill in Washington. There has been a bill introduced into th.is Congress. asking for the .Presidential appointment of a flag commission to study and revise Public Law 829, but pas.sage appears doubtful · for this congressional session. "THE AMER,ICAN Legion National Americanism Commission w a s in- strumental in the adoption of a resolution at the 53rd national convention in Houston. which would permit display of an all-weather nag 2-4 hours per day, pro- vided that it is lighted. Extensive research confinned that Public Law 829 does not prohibit the display of the United States flag 24 hours per day as long as a patriotic effect is desired." KATHRYN FISHBACK Mr.Y. Fishback hru been nominated for a Freedoms Foundation award. -Editor Fl ag ls a S111nbol To the Editor : From aur weekJy St. John"s Malls Bulletin came thi.!I reminder; "American Mailbox -- Utters from readtt1 are totlcomt. NormaU11 writers 1hould COTIVtV thtfr ~ssages tn 800 words or less . TM right to cmidtn&e ltttn1 to fit space or eliminate libel ii restrt>t"d. AU let~ ttrs mwt include Jignature and mail· ing addreu. but name.s may b• toith- htid on requezt if 1ujficU"nt rea.fon L1 apparent Pott'i/ tDiU not be pub- li.rMd. Heritage Month -The Pastor says. 'This month we celebrate the birthdays af Abraham Lincoln and G e o r g e Wuhington. February has been pro- claiined by M~or Wilson af Costa Mesa lo be American HeMtage Month. We are encouraged to observe these holidays enthusiastically, and to evidence in our way of Ure a true spirit or patriotism .• " I cansider that sound adviCf:. We should never rt.op working for the good of our country, nor should our leaders and the American people rest on the laurels ol the Gre.at Americans who have gone be- fore us. AND SO l"M grateful for this litUe reminder that has inspired in me a stronger desire to work more diligently for the things that will truly make our country great-like justice for the Mex· ican American farm workers, justice for the ·minorities, the blacks and the Welfare musts, open housing , equal job opportunity, etc. Patrioti.!lm is a deep sense of concern and love for the people as well as the land. Land is onJy as good as the people, together, make it. A thousand fl ags wav- ing almultaneously will not make one a good American , if he Is not : it is not a •·magic wand" that will bring about in· slant Americanism, but rather, a symbol or all the 'beautiful attribute.!! that made America a great nation. And, most im· portant, it belongs to ALL Americans. BERNICE WELSH Y a11 Dl arnoHds To the Ed ilar: We are living ln a world of such in· credible phenomena that oor forbears must at time.!! move uneasily in their resting places. To cite but one example. the luslrou., diamond which the earth yielded reluc- tantly to man only after major physical and finan cial efforts. Those were the days when diamond.!! we~ widely pr~ claimed to be woman's best friend -and with reason. These precious stones emitted dazzling hues and colors of such ethere11l beauty as to captivate the heart and mind or the beholder. Men fought and died to provide their lady loves with this exotic crystalline carbon . SHAKESPEAR~ of undying literary fame , in one of his few careless moments, exclaimed. "What's Jn a name?" Had the illustrious bard been 1ble to foresee the future he would never have uttered the fatal quote which is causing no end of confusion among the public. A diamond had been a diamond since its inceptiOfl. So far . .!IO good. NDW we have simulated diamonds made from "yag." or course, there is alwa ys the "real McCoy'' if one is fuMy. You pays your money and take s your choice. DLF.SS TRA T GOOD old fl'et en· terprise 1ystem. But yag it all. what's a person to do when faced with the problem of choice. There ls no cause for the lad ies to worry . The stone which adorns her person. being a thing af beauty, it follows that it will be a joy forever. There is always room In this vast and colorful land for honesl competition . There is no intention in these brief commenl.!I to impugn the integrity of anyone concerned. RA YMOND SIMARD Pampered P ets • Press Co)nmen ts Vlncenots. Ind., Va lley Advanct: "A person loaded with money is said to be 1 'fat i:at.' Maybe there's more to the saying than we realize. A nutrition expert rram the University of California tells us lhe nation's household pets are better fed than the member.!! of the family -the huma n members. that is. Come to think of it, not man y Of us two-legged cri1t.er11 have our choice of nine deliciOU! flavors when we sit down to eat. Whatever our shortc()lllings. never lei It be said that Americana are beastly to their pets." Spirit Lake, Jo"•· Bncon: "~ems \Ike our nation is faced with one crisis after another. One problem is solved and siX more crop up. Grain ports being closed by strike create serious problem,, for our tanners and those in related businesses, like elevators. railroads, trucker.!!, etc. President Nixon is blamed for everything bad that happens. while he gel, no credit fnr any good development. When yo u think about the huge headaches involved you can't help but wonder why anyo;.t would want to be President." Latest Clothing Craze: Mao Jacket The Nehru jacket wu one of the great fashion Oops of the 1960s. But now we are in a new decade and the latest clothing crate i.!I .... the Mao jacket. Drab, loose· fitting and equally unbecoming to both sexes, the Mao look seems made to order for the sloppy American fashion scene. It may be more than 1 fad. however. Since President Nixon announced his visit to China last mmmer. Interest in Orh!ntal art and culture has been growing. A Washington, D.C., department store opened a shop specializing in imports from Mainland China on Feb. 21 -the day President Nl1on began his visit tn Peking. A simflar shop was apened last autumn by 1 New York department Btore. It sell1 wick.er bask.eta, traps, ha~. brooms and other handicra!Ls. The. mo~t popular item. however, ls the coarse blue cotton ltfJO 1uit at CS. FOR THOSE WHO want to be stylish I I ' Editorial Research the West to reflect th~ lnlerest by In. corporating Oi.lnese motifs into their In· terior decoraUon and furniture design. Nearl y all of lhe rew slU'vivlng pieces of 17th-eentury Venetian laequer furniture are decorated with raised gilt chinoi1erie ~ figures . but not proletarian, there are tailored sat.in versions of the Mao suit that retail )or $450. Carriage-trade jewelers report he11vy demand for intricately carved j1tde rings, brooches and bracelets. And Max Factor bas set up an Anna M1y Wong corner at Bloomlngda1e'1 in New York where 8 cosmeticlan will attempt to duplicate the doll-11.ke face of the Chinese movie star of the 1920s. The exotic cuJture of the Oritnt has fascinated Westerners ever since Marco Polo journeyed to Chin.I In the 13th cen- tury. The artJstl of Italy were tbt first in THE TASTE FOR chinoi1erle quickly 1pread to nther European cauntries. In France, the fashion reached itii height during the Loul~ XIV ~riod 11.nd r~ mained popular during the 18th century, when it became an Integral part or the ·Louis XV, or rococo, style. Fanciful Chinese figures, often combintd with landscapes, we.re applied as ornamen· lation to furniture and other decorative art rorms. Chlnese portclaln found a wide market in the West and was especially prlz.ed by American calonl1tr. .....--------B11 George---------, In En1land, rrom about 1800 tn 1m. there was • revival of chlnolSttle. In the Regency style. The remodeling or the Roy1I PAVIiion at Brigh ton (begun in 1'117) 1tlmulated a crau for Oriental art and furniture as well 111 Engllslt-made decorat~s in the Chin~ manner. The 1.J1le for chlnoi1ttie continued, though on a much-dim inis hed scale. through the re- ma inder or the 19th and Into the ZOth cen- tury. Dear George: What ls the n&me af 1 who collects rocb! Dear P. T.: person P. T. Arthur Willingtan, 813 M 1 p l e AYOnu•, Bark, Ark. He'J already JOI 23. Dear George : Do you bell••• In old-fashloned home mnedies. or &bould 1 dodor be called! I~~ been h1vln1 an arruml!llt with my hUJband. LOUISE Dear Louise: I ... 1baolutefy no reason to call a doctor beclll!e you've been bav· Ing an arrument with your hus- band. Sheesh ! No wonder doctors woo'I make hotue calls, f think I'll ma~e 10me sassarru tu aod io lie down. (Send your pmblema 14 ci-p. Re burned hit library card bl' mist1ke ind baa nothing to re1d). . • THE CURRENT RAG~ for Orlenlall1 ~pJINrl more broad·ba.std than those of \be pa.sl. IJt 1ddltlon 14 clolhlnl and fumlohlngs, the E.11t wlnd bearl fff<f1 of Oriental r<llRiOU• and philosophlcll thougbL Buddhlnn~ Hllldulam and mo"' exotic &eets have fGUnd numerous · .11dherents in the West. Art colleclor1 are beginning to mo"e beyond Chinese jade sculptures Md !!lrrotl paintings lo wood carvings and bronze s from India ind Tibet. A m e r I c a n observers in New Delhi report that New York department.store buyers regul arly sweep through baza•rs, buying up han- dicrafUI. An lnt:rta.!ling number of American art galleille.!1 1toek Indian and Tibetan art. which lA still relatively in• expensive. So KlpllnR'. W8.!1 only .partially right· F,.ut 3nd West an meet, even If under'Stiitding d0ts not always result. DAILY PILOT Rob<rl N, W<ed, PubU.ii<r Tllom4' IC.nil, Editor Albm W. Bak1 Editorial l'aQt Editor 3 PILOT-ADVERTISER WtdntSdq, FtbnlllJ 23, 1972 Wtt"1 '"· rtbnalty n, 1m »AIL V l'ILOT J § Saddleback Tabs 269 f 01· Honors Orange· Coa~t Area Men in Service CAl"llTRAl+O l lACH MldlMt Ir~, lyftll Brvm1 .. , l tth flurton, Oor:n1 0Yk1, Keith G!bten, Dtbr1 Hunt, Hlctiol•• ko1t1r, L1ut1 llf'lbtf'9, 1llcm11 ltwls. Gorden McC•ll111n. Jl(l'f MclurMV, Aln1lle M1llm. Thom1s Htlton, Gi ll Pl rktr, Mld!Ht POtltl', J1m.. l11ulll,.c1, Thnotlly Thorn1non, JOI'! Trott1r, •-Id WN!n Ind Lox lnda Wint. DANA l"OI NT Lori Alldlorton, Vtrl\& c.~. TrOY C1rtff, K""ntltl Co!Jln, $Id F1rtuto11. IC1thlttn OlatlOn, Ctitrvl Gr t y , WllllMn H"'"*· Carol Hll1'1'1nl, Ann H-., Tr1vl1 Jol\nMn, o.bor911 Ket11, M.lrtlt Lock, J1mt1 McN1lr Jr., Nom11n Rock, lrldl.., St11111.1rd, Mld\111 T1t1!tr I nd Jttnllfttt Wt lkt<, •L TOJIO Jon AtMIO!lo MldlMI BI ck I t , L1wrtnc1 llledo:, Mt~ltll llot'lon, Jotln Broad, G1rv 0tnvtel1, Yvonne DtlolehtrtY, ll:OMm1rle Etchfl)tnl1, NIOIN Htnrv, C.ttty llollYtl. Pl)('f Jut1t1, Rldl1rd k.111, C1m ... 1nt M«- rllOll. Ht/ICY N"l1y, ltYHll Sdlmld't, Ptul Sctir11t11t, L1ur1 SI-rt, o.tlln TM'nPlt, Lt19'1 Z•h11 Incl C1rol1 Zinck. , . .,, .... Jotllllf AutMri. Kiin 81!", Shlrrlf Sfflwftllfe, StlPtltn 0. La,,, Larry Gould, Dtvld Hiii. CHl!tYt Haw.t, Mllf· lnt 1(11!"1. Ptltr K9'1dr1ck, Wllllam l l'Wl1, Jol\11 LGnf, PltllllJI Ntw'hotlst, Eric Pfl.,_, Jot\11 ..... and V1lerll Smoll. U.tUNA allACH Sh1r011 And1r1011, Clllrt 8 1 r t , (hrl1IOJlfltr s-rri111, lld'l1rd 8unlr.all, JOMl>h C111tel11. llltlbtllt Crom!tl!ll'I, Jl'ffrnr Doocy, It..,.. Dll .~L. Bnxt Heyer, 0-111 HlYelY, Fr111Cl1 Hunt, llrl111 Jacob .. L1sllt Jtnltor1 alld Alina Jtn•r. AIM Chrl.nt n Kltlblcktr, CalhtrlM KU111m111, Wllll1m l(ysor, Randell L-11111, ltabtrt McKown, Ywllt Morris, J•Mt Mutntol'f, Pat Mul'Plty, Lvnd1 Peden, Debbi• Plumi.v, H1rold """""' Monlc1 IUd'l•rft. TllTl ll '!toot, Sltpl\trl sctoott. Jotll'I Sdlwartl, Mldla•I Sl•el, ._IY Slte\0¥1, Carl Sko¥, OonNI SPtd11f, Tr4a Stlct, Mkh••I Sl'Odd•rcf. Ktnnlth stollt atld Msllltlw su1ru. UOl{NA NIL.LI Don llall.-,, Dentld lla1t. lt•lllfl Bond, Ht11her Colt. D1nlll Curtl1, MU.. H1111on. Cl1udl1 Lll'dtrwti. K•Jtllffn Lodtt. Jll'hn O'Nttn, Kt thlH (I Wood al'lfl 8Ntldl Z~ll\. LAGUNA NIGU EL Erle 8tnto11, 81rbar1 C1rnp!MH, Mary CatlM>tl, P1tr1cl1 Dena, C1tlty Elff1, °'°'1111 Hlckl, It-Id Ma'fft, TlmottrY My~ 11'111 ltobtrt ltMM. MISllON Vl llJO GeMt Arrnent1, Clt1r'" 81ktf'. Jud'f 81nl'llm, P•ul 81rbtf", GtOl"I• 811t11, Patrlcl• Bevffl'IY, Mary 8lrmln1111rn, Patricia llladlburl!. Slt1ron .lllkt. G1rv BUM, Dol'ol1'ry t urns, Donn• C1v11, Gf'I' Chllho/rr!, Judy Clark. lll:IWrd c ontm Ind EdWtrd Couch. Alto L1ur1 D1nl111. IC""ntll! t>a¥11, "''"" Dodtln, JHnM Dubb«ly, Htlll ~n. Rlctlt"' E1lltf1, Jd'ln Elll'Y, LtUr• l'lllmort. Robtrt Flemln41, Clltrlft 00at1nfloftr, Dllnt Grant 11'111 ~ry Htlmt. Alto MkMlt Hlcllt'f, ll'ltrOll 1Cu11I, C1rol't'TI LArk. Oi.nt Ltlournttv. Gr_,, u~.., Do111kl Mlrkew:n , Glstll Mlflllllft, IClrstlnt MIXIOl'I, Rhond• McGowtn, D~r Mt'ftr, Dll¥1d Mttfrff, 0 1rol4I MYtn. l rvct PaJM , ll:Ofltld P•Ut, Laurin P-11, lffftry R11nhtt i ncl O.bblt ltff\'H. AIM Donlld 11:.id, GrtHrY Slnt.tot. African Art Show Under Way. The Orange Coast College Ari Gallery opened a 1peclal African art show this Tuesday. The uhlblt will be on display thr«lgb Marth 10. Galleey bOW'I are t a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday tbroUlh Fridiy. There is no admission charge. ObJeds In \be 1 h ow repruent all sections of the African continent. "'11iese are not present day pieces," said David Jobns1 galleiy d!rect<r. "They are all collectors It.ms. African wood rota quilt easily and anything over IO'lears old II conslder<d very of . All of our objecll are at Jqst that age." The uhibil Includes a Senulo helme~ uaecl •• • headdress during d a n c e rltuall: 8 large band carved Baute door, obtained from the Jyory Ooaat; a Bo Bo buffalo mul<, tnm the Ivory Coast aru· and 1 Bamburl cb!el- tatn '~ chair from t h e 11<1..,ou nglon ol Afrle1. ContrfbutOl'I to the occ eholf Include the UCLA Ethnic Art Gallery and lll1IDOl'OUI f>rivate c o J l-e c t o r 1 and gallerl ... Prlvata coDoctora who have dona1'd obJtcla for the lho'lr Include Gene !JaadOll of Hun- llJl8foll Buch. KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN BOSTON ROCKING CHAIR Old time comfort at an old time price. Solid hardwood construction. Ready to stain or paint. See our complete line of unfinished furniture. HIRSH MODERN SHELF UNITS 24" HIGH 2.99 36" HIGH 3.99 ' 41" HIGH 4.99 Sturdy, ,oll•ptHI conalrVction with walnut wood-groin finish. ' Shelve~ are adjustable at 1 V2H Intervals and can be raised, lowered or removed wit hout disa1sembling. 24"X24"HX10"D THREE SHELVES 3··· POULTRY NETTING 12" HIGH SO' roll s, 2" mesh, 20-gauge not. 2 39 ROLL #24. ~P readlnc, comblt tactics, mllllary courleJy, mllltary Juatlct, llnt aid, and Army history and trad!Uons. ·Navy Petty Ofllcer Third Class Louts P. Castellana Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs .. Louis P. Castellana Sr. of S085 Taylor -Way, Costa Mesa, completed the baalc Electrlclan'a Mate School at San Diego. Eleclrlclan'1 mates lnst~U. malnt1ln and repair ahlpboard 1ener1tora, electric moron and light and power distribu- tion eystems. He iJ a graduate of Costa M"a Hlab ;;c11oo1, Coata Meaa. Navy Petly Officer Third Class Mark W •. Foster, of 968 Mission, Costa Mesa, •\lOard the guided m1 .. ue crulser VSS Alban~ I! battling the wlnttr, the sea and the "enemy" in exercise "Snowy Beach" being conduc1'd off the Main cout. Afr!nan First Cius Larry II. Crbdall, oon ol Mr. and Mrt. Wl)'!IO E. C...ndall of 71Q A Natal Drive, WestmlnsW, has arrived for duty at Tyndall AFB, Fla. Airman Crandall, a com· munlcatloDJ apeclallst, I 1 wlaned to • unit of the Air Force CommunJc1tk>ns Service which provides global commun1catlona and a l r traUJc control for the USAF. Ha previously aarved at Udorn Royal Thal AFB, Thailand. Alnnan John C. Goodman, 800 or Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Goodman. &151 Augusta Drive, Huntington B e a c h , has graduated' with honors at Sheppard AFB, Tei:., from the technical training course ror U.S. Air Foree accounting and finance specialists. Airman Goodman, "'·ho.se training included s p e c l a I emphasis on travel a n d military pay, Is being assigned to Vandenberg AFB. He will be In a 'unit of the Strategic Alt Command, Arne r I c a s nuclear deterrent force of long range bomben a n d ln- lercontlnental b.a 111 a t 1 c milslleL Larry Wayne Dodd, 1<111 of Mr. and Afrs. Charle• A. Dodd Jr., of 93S2 Firulde Drive, Hw>tlllllfon Beach, enllated In the U.S: Navy. He ls at recruit been 1J1lanecf to Keuler AFB, Ml11., for lr•lnlna In the com- municatlona field. Airman Robtrl R. MOtltr Jr., son of Mr. and Mra. Robert R. Moettr ol SU{ Uni St .. Newport Be•ch, baa """' pleted ht• U. S. Air Force b3slc training at the Alt training In the Naval Training Training Comniand's Lackland Center with the hospital corps Al>'B, Tex. Jte has been utan• program.. · td to Keesler AFB, Miss., 1or 1'farlne Cpl. Steven L. training ln commwUcaUons- HaJbert, aon ot Mr. and Mrs. t'lectronlcs l)'ltlms. Atrman Howard L. Halbert of 2~ 1 t Mosler ls a graduate ot Via Lara Road, l\.11sslon Viejo, Corona del Mar High School. Js in Puerto Rico with elements of the Second l\.1arln Division. undergoing training in artillery tactfcs on Vleques Island. Airman P.11cbae,I D. SaW\'tl, 90n of Mrs. Roy W. Bettis of 7762 Ronald Rood, lluntlngton Beach, has completed his U. S. Air Force basic training at the Air Training Co mm a nd ' 1 Lackland AFB, Tex. He has Tlmoihy W. Boyes, 20, son of f.1r. and Mrs. Paul E. \\'ellrnn n. 10182 Larson Ave., Garden Cirove, reccnlly was promoted to ~rmy Specialist lour in Germany, where be ls serving wlth the 3cf Armored Dlvh'llon. Spec. 4 Boyes is a driver ln headquarters Company, 2d Battalion, 48th Infantry of the division near GelnhaU!en. SUNPOWIR AUTO BATTERY IUPIRLICTRIC ELECTRIC ROOM HEAJIR 2.C·m~nth guarantee. Big savings on thi1 model. Fit1 most cars to 1971 (except Ford, Mercury and L\ncoln) 12'' WITH IXCHANGI SLEEPING BAG Scout bag. 2V2 pound poly11tor filling. Rugged waterproof vinyl ~ttom grQund cloth. Quality cotton lining. .o:.... Cut 1lze ~6"x72". 4'' SUPIR TOOL • Automatic thermostat control • lnsta ~t deluxe fan-forced hoat • Safely tlpover 1wltch •chrome 1afety guard •Hide-away handle. 9'' ROOF COATING • Fqrrria a tough, fibrou1, elottlc, waterproof 1urfaco. R11ilfant to cracking, P'Jellng and extreme weather changes. Bonds to compo1ltlon or metal roofing . Contoln1 Canadian 01be1101 fiber• for additional Insulation and strength. ••=~ SO.TARD ROLL 0 WIBBING 4-WAT MDAL AND WOOD SHAPIR Reversi ble blade for use on metafs, plastic, fibergla11, wood and plaster. Can be used a1 a file or plane. 2'' Summer l1 Ju1t a round the corner. Make that aid chair or chal10 look like now. Your chalet of 1trong, colorful webbing. -. •INCH DRYIR VINT HOOD KWIKKOVIR ADHESIVE PLASTIC Heavy gauge galvanized 1teeL Po1itive action,...-----. flapper. Choo1•' from a wide aeloctlon of patterna. AdhHlvo Complete with flange. •INCHDRYIR VINT DUCTING Heavy duty vinyl covering with pla.tic IUpport wiroa. Will not tear or llrotch. ' 29~. ....... _____ , MAKE ANY AR-A OF YOUR HOMI SPAlllL! WITH SELF-ADHISIVE ICWlll llDVlll :lQl2 flJOC K,.IELD 1rw1n•••T1• 115'WHTMINITlRAVI, a TORO AT lf.. TOftO ftO. AT COL.DEN wt IT IT. ..... ""·""'"· LA HA•RA m1 W. LA HAIAA ILYD, COITA AT IANTA ANA AVE. AT IEACH eLVO, . --• ' • • ••• ..... ~ • 1 ..... , ...... .0 • &.. .. ll"A e t.A.1,,.,Q.l .. C!l.TA LA ..... A1 pla1tic to cover walls, 1helv11, and many other household usea. .i •-A PARll: llOO VAL LtY Vl£W I T, AT LlfrfCO\.frf AVi. fULUaTOll 24H f , CHAl'MAN AYI, AT ST All COLlfCl IL.YD, • TH4.Jlll ,_, .. !.. . • , LI.. .. Al\.,cLtl RYI GR'll UM.8L Give your lawn a fresh 1tort ' lhla 1prlng. Havo a groon lawn In a matter of 10 doya. 10 Iba. cover1 1000 1q. ft. Cl••r•ncel Whlle t1u•nlltl11 l•1t. ,.,.,. 1212 •••••• awo. ONl I LOCK I . 0' NIM'OAT AYE ORA•81 1243 I, KATlLL.A AVl, 41 TUITI N AVI, .. , .. ,, . -· • Ci:ATIWOl':TH • T'P.lANA • AEIEOA • W LAND • IAUOtn • GOLITA • YICTCnYIL.L.l • GRANADA HIL.LI •u.H 11 .. HrJ ...... o ·.COflONA e CAMAfULLO e IAKI ASlll LD t HAC1tNDAHllGHTS t llCONOIOO • Sf'"IHGVAL.LIV • IAHfACLAl\A -• • ' • I ' I ] J l'ILOT -AOVERTISER N ~~r: Anacin-. -. TABLETS ••• for fast Pain Relief. SAY-ON £YEHIAY$2.11 1.9B LDWPllCE 4LB.BAGOF Little Friskies . CAT FOOD In Delicious Flavors 53c 11i• ltro • , • Reiofo~ol Ny~n Hlgb' Pressure Hose witn 10 Year Gll!fantee. SAY-ON 4• 69 lYERYDAf 5.31 LDWPRICE • · rmlllEUll JELLY . 111.nc 4nc ltL .,- SIGNATURE 60' GARDEN HOSE 1/1 .. ••r• ~, • , &ro•n pf••· tic with h •• .,., full flow . br••• toupllng1. ID 'fl'• g11•r· •nt.o. REG. 3.69 ~;98 Alarm Clock ROOM-MATE Attr-active . l#lml ~~:/;~. 21 '"a· lla 9 · Antique whtte · color. • Check File .l.aige argh ro" hOld '"· staodant size cl<Cks u1 .to IBM size. loc~des 12 moothly ,ind11 .cards 2 .7 7 and separator. I . 11(.3.21 • ' .a~ "Cassette" TAPE llCORDR 'PIElltEI.". With built-it mtrJnallc level colltrol for perfeot ia:ordag · everytime. <;ompfete with rnimt. control ••c,21.95 earphone and 5 OL ICING SIZE Bromo-Seltzer Ftr Stomach Upset l Headache SPRIG AUTO "Air Freshener" Gives Your Car The FiQest Garden ODOR. For Use Also in Closets, Lockers, Cabinets, etc. Ref.27c SAY·ON lYERYDAf $Ul 79c LOW PRICE l7x20 Utility Mat Made of beautiful ribbed solid rubb<r i1 assorted colors for any us~ Ref. 99c 26 OL PAlMOLIYE Crystal Clear DISllWASHING POWDER SAY~N 2, BBC EYEIYDAY lie : LDWPIJCE ·~~!~~:~-~ig~!~~~e ~· !!~~~~~~ .. ~v~~~~n .• gloves with foam padded palm overwraps Ct>ver tor 1 19 .::'r11 jnse(t. One size 2 49 1 sports car look. === fits all. Ref.2.91 Ref.1 .59 • i DUPONT Boosts lhe horsepower and actively reduces 4gc polllllants. .Gas Can • .• ~~~~·CJ!~,~er39 ~oJ · "R1flect1r" -With 99c , waterless, non-ammon--C disappearing ipout -:-ialed. Re1.59cllu. · ,- . SR•r-1.39.1 G111on ~· Yiindow Shield... ~-:~~~::}:Otb<r.6qu9iete~. 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' l ( h I ,\. 11' I \ ' • • • Orange Coast , VOL 65, NO. 46, 6 SECTIONS, 70 PAGES • 1xon, Lengthy Coma Diahetic's Car Injures . Boy, 16 Getting up for work , diabetes victim Robert W. Leytham took insulin at 6:10 a.m., today had breaklast, left his home in Nofco and headed for work in Garden . ' Grove. He drove hi.!I pickup-camper truck onto the Riverside Freeway, norm a 11 y sw1tchlng to the busy Garden Grove Freeway. He apparently drove straight for 33 miles in a diabetic coma. Leytham told police from his hospital bed after being revived with glucose m. jecUons that he remembered nothing more from that point in the tragic se- ~uence of events. Surgeons in an operating room nearby were just beginning a five-hour team ef~ fort to save the life of a l6-year--0ld boy who happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. Tolufale Lealofi, of 167 E. 23rd SI., WU walking southbound along N e w p o r t Boulevard en route to Costa Mesa High School about 7:30 a.m., when the wob- bling truck approached. ·veering into the curb, Leytham's vehl-- cle hit i\,. swerved back; jumped the center median divider, mowed down. a couple of reflector posls and tore out 50 feet of cbain link fence. sakl doctors at Costa Mesa Memorial Hoopltal quickly eonllrmed that the 43- year-old motorist wasn't merely in shock from the accident. "They brought him right around," be added. , "Just u I left, they.were taking hlm in- In surgery," Olfkor Duvali said of Leafoll, who aullered a skull fracture, Jn. terna1 injuries, a broken mn an~ lacera .. lions. No report could be upec:ltd on bill (See DIABETIC, Pap I) Mesa Reje~ts Low Income Housing Bid_ By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of .. Diiiy ,.. JQff The city of Costa Mesa will not parllcipate In a cowrtywlde plan to pro- vide low income housing:. Memben: of the city council rejected the Idea of joining the county Hou1Jng Adlll>r11)' with · f split' H vote at tll<ir 'ndtay night - ORANGE COUNfY, CA(IFORNIA: WEDNEsDA Y; FEIRUA·RY 23, 19'71 U'I Telt!IM,_ PRESIDENT NIXON HELPS PREMIER CHOU EN·LAI OFF .WITH HIS COATsAS .TALKS RESUME Continued Cordlallty ~r~a Third D1y ,of.Formal Dl1cu11lon1 --Two Powora · ~~~~~~~~~~~....:....~-'--~~~'-'-·~~~·~·~~ . r I• ' • New.po.lit "f:Jaw~er' $ .RuD. · ~ ' I , 1 I t , • . . rv.. ~\)V~~age_ -. 0£'· · .. ·&·: Set ,., ... I' :'''" -. - Today's Final N.Y. Stocks ' c TEN CENTS ? e. Agreements Reported In Talks By HELEN THOMAS PEKING (UPI) -President Nixon and Premler Chou En-lal were believed today to have agreed upon a broad exchange of atudents, scholars and newsmen between thelr countries and were dl5cusaing a far- reachlng declaration ol peaceful coe1· istence. This was reported by resident western diplomats In Peking following a meetlnl of mort than ·four hours between the leaders at Nlxon's luxurioua 1Uealdit gu..t house, dubbed tem~rarlly "the Peking White HOUJe." Another confereoce la set for ThW'Sday. The meeting started with a hint from Chou that American newsmen ac .. companying Nixon may be Invited to stay behind when the Prtsldent leaves In five days. UPf Diplomatic correspondent Stewart HeMley also said an agreement on aome form of diplomatic contact -ahort of formal diplomatic recognition -w11 belleved to have been nalled down at the meeting. The Chou-Nixon talks, by prear- rangement o( the two governments , are kept In utmost ltCfeCY. No offlclal an- nouncements on what has bun discuased. will be made until the ta1k1 end. But Hensley laid· the lndtca~Tll are strong that the ~ln&I ultimately would end with a landmark ~laratlon of peaceful coexlmnce wh!ch could have a . , ·major ellecl on Alfa and the -id. Mzd ·fl -• w4 .. ~ ol Th< teenage victim was malliled IJ! the midst of the wreckage -without a chance lo -~ -liben H came to rest just ...th of Z3rd 8tretl. • _ The authority, now in Its formative llafol, lnleadl to ...., ~ <AmiY'• ~. --a ijz'Sfle .W ~ -Ir loW-lncome For ~dtigress··'$putte~~._ ' NEii' . YORK ( TM nlaJOr" Stata WIJUam P. = 611 lllo irltll C!stn..o Forellll asJ l'lili-lel CroWda .gathered, as pauersby -in-- eluding Newport Beach Polfceman Gary t'hung who waa headed for work - 1topped to help. "We had to pry his lingers oil the steering wheel," Chung said of Leytbam's diabetic condition. Costa Mesa Patrolman Chuck Duvall Mesa Designer Falls to Floor At Council Meet Well-known Costa Mesa structural designer Roy Watkins is hospitalized to- day, after being suddenly stricken at Tuesday night's city council meeting. He was to speak next on a zone ex- ception permit application by Town and Country Patio Shops, 1706 Newport Blvd .• Costa Mesa, when he rose, took a few steps toward an exit door and began tot- tering. City Manager Fnd Sorsabal and other aides rushed to help Watkins from the chambers into the rear conference room, saying no Jl"lse could be felt and liJal be was clammy and white. Collapsing to the Door, Watkins •P- peared to revive u a result of the fall and said be was all right, wt City Coun- cilman Jack Hammett, who is Bristol Park Medical Center administrator, in- sisted on ordering an ambulance. Watkins was being held today for observation at nearby c.osta Mesa Memorial Hospital, where several factors ln his medical history were being checked to determine what made him ill. City councilmen approved the mne ex- cepUon for Watkins' client, under certain specific conditions, saying they would reopen the hearing upon his recovery if be objected to any of them. Best Time to Oose LONDON (UPI) -Notice dlsplayed at mld<tay ou!Jlde a central London restaurant: "Closed for huich~'' • TAKE AN 'AX' TO YOUR TAX This II the Ume of year DAILY PILOT flnanclal columnist Sylvia Pomr Jl"ll the "11" in taxes •• Fin:t or a series of ntne eolumnt on how to find the legal corners to cut when filing yoor Income tu appeared fn. Tuelday'1 <dillons. The ll<OOOd column II Inside today on Pqe 13. It could .... you -to clip ood save all nine columns. ' r • AlthouMI> the councll IUPllOried the con- etpl of a housing aulborlly In the unin- OJrpOrated areas of Orange C.ounty, COWldlrnen asked not to be included In the project -a~ least !or the lime being. They said the city bu ool yet con- ducted an exhaustive study of housing needs within the boundaries of Costa Mesa. Councilman William st. Clair, the lone council member to favor·the county plan, criticized his colleagues for Ytbat he said wu .. taking the coward1s·way oul" "To iay we don't need it when we haven't studied it is a shame," SL Clair fulminat..I. 14ayor Robert M. Wilson, pointed out that :costa Mesa's decision would not im· pede progrw: toward such an authority elsewhere In the counly. "All we are saying ls, 1Go ahead, Orange County, do what you want. We're not ready','' the mayor said. At the suggestion of Councilman Jack Hammett a study of the city's housing needs will be ~ded In Costa Mesa with the help of otif.en groups. Hammett origin.ally withheld his vote oo the issue, bill later joined the majority in vetoing the plan when agreement was reached to look into the city's housing needs.· • The deadline for jobllng the housing authority iJ March 10, To date, only the city or Huntington Beach, bu agreed to participate. The city of Jtrine bu vot..I against IL Costa Mesa mldenta Frank Horvath and Mn. Helen Hollingsworth, a repreSen!ative of the Orange County League of Women Voters, argued that the city should join the housing authority. Both said Costa Mesa woold be In an advantag..., position il It joined the authority In the early atages or develop- ment and had a voice In Its organiutlnn and selectlon of permanent men~rs. > ! ' ' • I I l ' ' , ' , ' By L. PETEil 0IDllEG i:listr(cl, not In the 3tlb ~lc.l '.l'hlclt h.· e 04' ,.. Detty ,..., .,.., seeks to represent. , 1 , Newport Beach lawyer John ,W. Black A dor.tn key campaign workers were on is having an awful time trying to get bill hand 1 campaign agairm . U.S. Rep. John G. or the event late ·Tuesday af- Schmitz (R·Tustin) off the ground. ternoon. loJ they waited '/or media First, the contender for the 0etTioo!at1c reprfSentatives to arrive,· they paih!tak- ~nomlnatlon announced his candidacy by ihgly tried to cchie up wJth a 'regular aaying the job ahead i! "impossible." m!eting night lor the camp~ign staff. Then, he called a press conference to Black, undaunted by the 'to.auspicious explain be really didrft mµn "im-~ckoU, ·talked .1 with a reporter in a possible" op]y to· have just one hallway, outlining the Way be •tm-•-a newspaper cover it. UAOll 'No dcSut>l the.low turnout hadnothin_g to Deniocrcit Can unstat'ScQfiutz despJle ·the· do with the fact BI8ct·called ~ gather· · overw~elming Republican fegll£ration Ing at the Balboa Bay Cl¥b, whi~ ii .In majority In the 39lb Diatrlct. the nt:wly created 42nd Congressiona! "He .certainly doesn't represent .any of She's Teed Off Over Golf Balls Golfers who have been booklilg and slicing their shots outside the Costa Mesa Municipal Goll Course have raised the Ire of a woman who complained to the city coilncll Tuesday night that she ls getting , tired of having her house bombarded. Miss Marie Wenner ~of 570 Joam St. told councilmen." tllat errant goll balls have scored six direct hits on her w~ dows al~ 1966. Miss Wenner wants the city in· pay !or four of them at $15 a shot. The absence of a IUf'Ocient ba:rrler at the back of the coune causes poorly play_od goll 1hota to bounce oll the lfde of her house or ricocbel · oil 1eigbbon' hOUJeS, Miss Wenner lamented,· Councilmen received and filed her claim without comment. ihe Democrats," Black lnslsted, "and they represent about one third of the voters. "And now that be (Schmitz) has declared he won't support President Nix· on'• bid for r&<ledion, I don't lhhik lie represenls a majorily or the ReJl"bllcana in Orange C.OWty, either." . Black ·ngu,.. h,e'll get the votes of all the Democrats and the modtrate Republicana because or SchmltZ' ultra- conservauve voting record in the House of Representatives. . . He said ·lzo lilo·iJ confide!IL ol· getting the Democrallc nonnlnatiOn, poillting· Ol7t tllal the oofy other announced i:indtdaf<t ta Thoma~ Lenhart, who. has run .several til71<S-and iolt.-eabh time. ' -"Beal4ea, t Dlck O!Neill signed my 110mination petition," Biack·mled. · O'Ni!lil ii Orance County Democratic chairman and member of the Democrallc Stole' Ceislral 'CoinsnlUee. "I feel O'Neill'• aupPort will help," Black laid. ~wort' have·anno ·lh01r achecfuled coverage !cir today and ThUradliy morn-, . log of President NIJcm'1 trip to China. The· schedules are aubject ·to change. AU Umes 'showii are PSI'. CBS -Tonight. coveraae on the CBS Evening News, 7r7:30 p.m.; Thursday, coverage on the CBS Momlng News, 7-8 a.m. NBC ~ Tonight, coverage an the ·NBC Nlghtiy New1, 7-7:30 p.m. evening opeclal program 11:30 p.m.·midnlgbt. Thureday, coverage liicluded 1n tbt 0 Todai" abOw, 7·9 a.m. ' · ' ·ABC -·Tonight., coverage· on the Eve. n1n,New1 7-7:30 p.m.:·1peclal program prior to the.Dick Cavett Show, 11:16'11 :50 p.m.: Thuradliy, special program 7'3H a.m. Mesa · Council Won't Support Aid Unit Oust~r . A $<>UP of ' Costa Meu hom~WIM!rl protesting an old age welf~e office Jn .their nelgl)bQrbpod bu been uqaizcceufuJ Ip ,o~talnlng the hacking of the City t;ow,. ell. . WUh a > to l vote, the couricU Tuepy niglit aald "no:• to a req11e1cl by the Meu ·Del Mar Homeowners ~l•tio• to ,..k a · court lnjunc;tlon against· the ollii:e on 1065 El Camiqo Iirlve. . City Attorney Roy E. June advlied col!DCll· mesnbera Iha! 1belr chances of obtaining a court ordeT against the l~Ui­ .ty,would be slim, In view of legal oplniofll be Ml researched. Sacramento Ju;nket ·Slated · The office la to be located In a small ' &hopping center, owned In part by 1tat<t .Sen. DeMil Carpenter ( R -N e w p o r I Beach). CUrrentiy ioued by tie county, tt was orlgfllally to have beai lhe 111• of a counly probation oroce. . . Board, County Aides to · ~hristen Lobbyist Office Even lboUgh counly ofOcal1 have cbailged th•tr plana, the~ llill obfect to ""' of the propertrlor welfare -. A junket to Sacramento la tentatively Ml for Marcin 171 lo fonnaliy christen the now Oraop County lobbylsl'• of/ice in Sacramento. Fifth District Sopervllor and Board Onafrman Ronald w. Caapers, of Newport B<acll, Who Jut ....U gol -.I aJ>PNV&l ol the now olfx:e, Tueoday proo poeed the mus Journey to the allde capltaL Cllpen propooed and the board ap. proved a !rip co bsclude board members, their whe1 « lady lriendl and all COW>ly deporlmrnt beadl. ' He wgaled that they died< out the now ollial wbldn wm "open,qu!etiy" on -1, vlllt the county'• Jeclllltiv• team and 1711&e • hmcboozs for all ...,.. corned, ln<ludlni "hopefully, Gov. Ronald Reagan." Caapers auggested utahllshment. or fUll Ume offices in Sac;ramentQ and In Washington D.C. to "lurtber the countY'• lnteresla In the two capitals. Through the Counly AdmlnlstraUve Qt. Dee, offlce space WU MCUred in a bUllding ICl'Oll the alreel from the copltol building. Costa or t.epln( Ted Craig, a former 1peaker of the wembly and. longllmo county ,.preantative and John Andenon of the County Counoel'• plllce .., the lob fullt!Jne were estlmajed at lt,llllO a month for ofllce lpaCt and l7lt a rnorftl' lor a permanent office 7IO<:rttarf• Tho -etary w!ll bfdloi!lnrlrGID .. ' I • ' · eouncllinan Alvin Pinkley, who· along County ' SUpervtaon Alloclatlon ' o I with Mayor Robert M. wu.on favored caurorma !CSACJ pool and paid by · backln( tho oomeOwneni 111d 11nce <>ranee County. several thi>ullrid people Uvt In the Mesa Pwt Sa)cil ·Of' Tustin, an anhouneed · Del M'\f area, Iha CO<tncU owt1 11 It! u1 candidale for the f~st ·dJl1r1ct 1Upervlf-• cltize111 to appal the cuo. oral post J10'f' 0beld by llobett Ballin, 1111-· '1 don't belleve lbe county lhould come g01t..I Tueiif~ that the -ry lhould Into the city and jual do Whalever tt bo odected from the unemployed In the wanll, • ho 111d. • • county, • ·His ci>lltllgue. CouncUman Wllllrd T. Caapm aald hll requ.st would bo con-Jordan, wu or tho opinion that the a at 1id11td. U people using Iha of/Joe each day would The -of the trip will be reduced not lower anyoile'1 property valllff. cqDllderably U Air Catlfornla 1groe1 to "There II qullo 1 atZtalilt beer bar In lranlpori. the .,...d to and from the cap. that ljloppln( center and I would be Jtal 'frte. t much more conctmed 1bout tbtl." aakt "I undenllnd lhiy !>&v• offered lo do Jon!an, addlnc that a 111tt would only Iha\,"~ 111'1 later. "II tbey do not. , create addltiooal problema betw..., tho onfttlio booid anesnllerl abouJa So·" cwnty aad Iha c1t1. ' . mlgbt bo worldnr out ~ deiaflt of SJno.Amertcan acha71J• ..,...,_ and the manner ol Ollablflhfnfr conllnutnc contacta abort of dlplomot!c relationa. Officials warned against asaurnlng each country woold estabiiah a trade miJllon ln'lhe"other. They laid II WU more likely that the continuing contacta would be set up in Canada, or tome other third COW\o ti;-. . Both partles appeared In high aplrlis . ·and aatlafled with their progreu when Chou drove through a 1nowfalf -the first foul weather since Nixon'• arrival Mon- diy -to call ori the President. Previous meeting& had been held at 1 site aelected by Chou -the ornata Great Hall of the People. No lfgnlflcance wu ittached to the cbana• 1n 1111. 1 Mn. Nixon, meanwhile. was 1.UUmlnl •the role of her lnjlband.'1 ~IT'bHlldor to China'• 800 million people. lgnorfnc tho snow and the co1d, she gamely trotted along duity yellow dirt roads on a tour of a oommune, west of Pektnr where 41,000 peaaanll Hye and farm. The Finl Lady1 wrapped In a fur.lined coat, vb:lted a pig fann , a,prlmary achool, the m<dical clinic, a hot holsae and a general store. On Thursday, the NIJona probably wlll make their long anticlpat..I trip north of Peking to vlslt the Great Wall of China, a 1,500-mlle barricade will about the 4111 Century B.C. to ta.R !cnJan lnvaclen out. Today'a talQ brouibl to nine houri tho time spent by NIJcm and Chou In formal JWlneu .... 1ons. In addition, Nixon btld a rare hour-long H88lon with Chairman Mao T•lung, the aging pbfioaopher of the Marxist mov• (Set NIXON, Pa .. I) 0r .. ,. Weailler You probably won't ... much of the tun on Thunday, elthtr, ac. cording to the weatherlady. Low cloudl and log will take up ml>st ol the day, lli&ha of I.I to 75 are predicted. Lows In the mi!M0'1. INSWE TODA l! For o Eflt of the we1ktnd'1 live theater attractlom and a look at the top 01cor nomin111, ''' toda~'' ntcriai11m'"t page -27. ......... Lic-1t -..... ,....., ,..... ,. . ............... f"Ti' • lr1¥1e ,.._ SI ..... ,,.,. Dr ......... ,. . .......... .... TiMIWI.. • --.... -. ---,,.,... """ ... .... • - • j - Nixons See Gyiµ Show Litlw Chinese A'thletes Give Display , DAILY '!LOT lllH Pllfi. TRAGIC SEQUENCE INCLUDES A BOY WALK ING TO SCHOOL AND A DIABETIC DRIVER Co1t1 Me11 THn191r Mlngltd In Wreckage by Out-of-control Camper; Ru1hed to Surgery From Pagel DIABETIC ... chancel for survival unW al least allet five hour• of aurgery waa completed thll , altemooa, medtcal peraonnel leld police. Young Lealoll bad been walldng with b1' bock le uie approacblni veblcle wben the rl( went out of control "He might not have even lten Jt com· 1ng, "' aomeone remarked. "You hope he didn't," said Officer Duvall. llkgal Solicit Charges Name Air Guard Brass WASHINGTON (AP) -A federal grand Jury bu lndlcted the commander of lhe Alabama Air NaUonal Guard 111 a charge of complrlllg le Wegally aoliclt '3,200 In political contributions from Air · Guard offlcera for candjdates In the tm Alabama election, the Juatice Depari. ment aruiounced loday. One of the cam,.r,m fnWtlved', tie ldepartm~I ~d, wu, ~t ~f ~e C. WaJflc:e, Ille governor Of ;.Jabaziia. - Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell aald the ·alng!e count Indictment wao relumld to. 'day In U.S. District Court In ·Montgomery, Ala., egalnsl Maj. Gen. Gcora• Reed Doster. Three of Doster'1 aubordlnates al!O were Indicted and were Identified aa Col!. Henry FWlnglm Jr. end James E. Hanlwick and Lt. Col. Alfred B. Gurley. Named u unlndlcled ce><onsplrators were Air Guard C:Ola. LIW1'1!nce A. Doyle, William P. Baker, Wlllle L Whitman Jr., Edward D. Gtimer and Maj. Lonnie J. Slauson Jr. The lndlclment charged that the defen- danll COD.l]Jlml, beglnnlnJ In March 19'19, le coerce other Air Guard officm lo cm- tribute fl,700 to Wallace's campatgnr $1,000 to former governor Albert Brewer, a candidate for governor 1n 1970; MOO to Hugh Morrow m, a candidate for lieutenant governor, and $100 to State Sen. Leland Cbllds, wbo was not running for re-election. Snag in Talks Letter Carriers File Complaint With NLRB A anag over negoUallons between Coela Mesa letlet camera and po 1 la J authorities bas resulted In • formal com-plaint le the National Labor Relatio111 Board •. Members of the Local 4218 of the Na- tional Aaaoclatlon of Letter Carriers have cl)arged the Postal Service with faUure le f!el!Otiate Jn good faith. The controversy lleDUJ from dl!agroe- ment mainly over dl!cipllnary pro- cedures. Management olflclala say these cannot be negotiated alnce they have been covered ln a natiQnaI agreement. Unloo official! claim they can. Specifically, the union bas 1Uggested • that only corrective, but not punitive measures be taken against misconduct. It I! ~ pushing for a procedure whereby employes can appeal disciplinary actkln they believe ls unjual. other aspects of the deadlocked negotiaUons include the 1 o I 1 o w 1 n g demands by J.i\lter carriers: NI cari'Joi't be allow<d to ~ de- livery U attacked by dogs or expoeed le olbu•hazardous ·a11uattoos. -Development ol health and safely standard.! conc<mJng vehicle equipment and Inspection. -Orientation procedures for new ernployes and advanced ootlficaUon of Council Vetoes Alcohol Permit At Nightspot Rock music lovers patronlzlng Costa Mesa'• popular n~ 11Earth" soon may be given the cbolcelof lrlpplllg out on either C.Ola or carbonated eoft drinks. The change on the libations card Crom the usual beer and wine was recom· mended unanimously by the Costa Mesa City Council Tuesday night. new menegement policies that will affect working conditions. -Definitions ·and Umlla on boura of work required, overtime, holiday pay and work ecbedules. --Seniority conslderaUon In assignment of routes and adequate posting of reaMlgrunenta. Of major concern le Martin Roberts, spokesman for the letter carriers, 11 that the rules, as they stand, !Ubject carrl.en le insubordinallon for refusing le deliver mall under dangerous conditions. It bas al!o been alleged by the carriers that they have on occasion been required to work more than aix days in a row 1n apparent vlolaUon of the national co1> tract. John Klugiewicz, postmaster of the two Costa Mesa post offices, .i& of the opinion that the main difference -dlsdpllne - cannot he negotiated because it t! a na- tionally-defined area. 41We can't have empl~being P'ea\ed dtlterentbj. in one area in a.pother," he aald. Al, for the CDD1Plilnt le the Na- Uonal Labor Re!alloos Board, the postmaster said, "that's a common thing." ''I don1t think I know of one postal area operatln2 without a complalot ol unfair practices against It," Klugiewlcs added. The Nallonal Labor Re!aUons Board meanwhile has set no hearing date for the complaints. Union officials say they will file two additional complaints if a breakthrough Jn negotiations I! not forthcoming. If the San Francisco-based board does not resolve the dispute wllhln lllO days, the case will be refl!!Ted le binding arbilratiCll on Ille naUooal level In Washingloo, D.C. Couple Facing Return to Area In Death Case PEXING (UPI) -China paraded HI talented men ...i women gymnasia In two hours of spectacular, acrobatic: performances today for a hlMbly IP. preclative President and Mrs. Nixon and 15,000 constantly applauding Cblnese. The Nil:ons accompanied by Premier Chou En-lal, shook their beads in wonder- ment u the Uthe, athletic gymnastl performed. The Pr..,lden~. Mrs. NIJ:on and Chou sat in front row seats in the immense Capilal Gymnasium -teapots In front of them, kept filled by waitresses -and joined thousands of Peking school cbtidron Jn rhythmic applause. Particularly outstanding waa the wort of the wblle-unllormed men on the atill rlnp end the blgb bar. The women, strong end muacular but very femlruM Jn red ablrta and Ughl blue lhortl, performed best oo the balance beam and turned Jn apectacular moves on tbe uneven parallel bars. The Cblnese do not participate Jn the IUllllller Olympics, where the gymnastic championships are held, largely for political reasons. But judging from the show they put on for the Nlxons, they would be contenders for the gold medal. At ooe polll~ alter the men's blgh bill' performences, the President throw bla bends lnle the air, shook bis bead In amazement, and looked le b1' right le Secretary of Stole William P. Rogers. The Chinese are an athletic people. Workers gel two lf>.mlnute br<aks dally for mandatory exerclaes. One o f Qalrman Mao TsHlng's quotations ls "Promote pbyslcal cul-, buUd up the Superior Court Adoption Case Postponed Again Orange County Superior Court action on a Costa Mesa couple's bid to adopt the infant they have cared for as a foster cbtid for the past two years waa delayed again today when crowded c o u r t acbedules ruled out the predicted day Jong bearing. Presiding Judge Bruce Sumner set March 1 as the day on which lawyers for Robert and Jeannette Hayes, llllO Bismarck Way, will take on the county In their bid le become the legally rocogniud parents of the Z.year-<>ld cbtid they know as Cheri L)'llll Hayes. The coople IUed tbeJr petilioo for adop. tion of the little girl allet wbal was Jn. iUally apected to be an eight-week stay by the cbtid Jn the Hayes bo~ developed lnle a -year..........._ . · . They $hn ~v;-w-the target · of repeated tbroala by county social workers who are determined to take the cbtid from them and possibly allow Ila adoption by a couple who would be strangers to the infant •. Wells.re-· Director Granville Peoples to- day confirmed that there is "oo change" In his department's attitude le the Hayes petition. "We still oppose the adoption and we wlll IO argue when the hearing geb under way," be said. Man Holds Off Police Using Mom as Shield WlllTl'lEI\ (AP) -A 20-year-o!d man was wounded and captured today after laking bla mother hostage end fighting off 27 police for three ~. authorities say. peoples' beallh." Nii.on, a sometime bowler 1 now-and. again goUer but en avid !ootball f1111, Wked animatedly with Chou, remarking about the perfonnance. The gymnasia were followed by Chinese badminton playera, one of them Ute women'• naUonal champion. The girls showed excellent form , slugging the shut. Uecock so the eye could barely follow ll It wu a far cry Amer!cen bacl<)'ard .badmlnlen. ll§dm!Dtou 1ave way le Jba table teanlt playera, the wor1d'1 flnest. , , · It was Ille OW-lllvllallon to tba Amerlcen table tennl! team la)! year that s~lt the Bamboo Curtain and lad to Nixon 1 summit trip to Peking: Throughout the long program piano music set tbt tempo. Harbor Teachers Seeking Open hnpasse Negotiating The Newport-Mou Education M- aoclallon (N-MEA) baa called for open negotlatiorui ·between Jts representaUves and di.strict tru.steea to t0lve the current teacher salary impasse. About 60 members of the 725-member N·MEA met with truateea Tuesday nlgbl to hear the report of a three-member fact-finding panel appointed last fall. The report filed Tuesday blamed a "breakdown in communications" by the board and the Certificated Emp!oyea Council (CEC), representing N-MEA, for the Impasse. The original Impasse action was taken In July when the board adopted a U per- cent salary raise, below the five pe.rctnt cost of living lncreue requested by teachers. That brought le a ball further cli!cusa1orui of 1971-72 salaries. FonnaUon ol the panel ls spelled out by the Winton. Act, Call!ornia's law govern- ing teacher-board negotiations. During the closed meet and conler meetings, the board was represented by Ray Scbnlerer, district business 'manager and the teachers by the five-member CEC council. At one point in the discussions, the report says, "there may have been an over-reliance on informal methods of communication by the board's represen- tative at a Ume when key representatives of the CEC were away for the summer." It suggested that more written com- munications, formal inquiries by CEC and more prompt replies by the board could help hnprove conditions. The board said It would study the report, but set no date for further action. It I! not bound by eny findings of the panel, comprised of Dr. John H. Bright, California Teachers' Association (CfA) official, appointed by CEC; Allred W. Newman, Vallejo attorney appointed by the bo:anf; and Edward Petera 1of,.'Lo.!1 Angelesi •ppolll\ed by the panel. I only 19 voting niembera of t11e·77-mem- ber N-MEA representative councU were present following the b o a rd ' 1 a~ joumment, but Kingery Wblleneck. N- MEA presJdent, took three: votes on the From Pagel NIXON ... '4feellngs" of those present. They were: -Unolliclal authorization le CEC President Al Walters to tab •1whaltver legal aet1on necessaey" to make aure proper negotiation procedures are fol· lowed in determining a raise in the di.!- trict administrator's salary. -Tabling of a motion to seek sancUons by the CTA against the district for refus- ing to make a "consclentlou.s effort" to reach agreement. -Approvinf one teacher's ru1gestlon that N·MEA. 'take a strike vote amongst its members" instead of seeking sanc- tions, which only &Ive the dl!trict a bad name in hiring practices. Wblteoeck said be bad been !old open meetings between the board and CEC would be possible and other teachers present urged that future contact bo made with the board directly and not with a representative. The next special meet and cooler session· Ls March 20. Newport Skeper Fined $15; Set For Third Round Convicted on two counts of WegallY. sleeping in a vehicle, William F. "Mattson the Martyr" Mattson was sentenced Tuesday to pay a $15 flne for his crimes against the people of Newport Beach. He still faces jury trial March J In Harbor Judicial District Court on a third such count, to which be bas al!o pleaded lnnoc<nt. . Newport,!lBeach police arrested the lanky, lOng-baired camper entbusiaat three times during January tn the Balboa Parking Lot, w~ere they say be has lived aince last April. Mattson admJts occupying bis, ruatlc 1948 Dodge mounted with a homemade dwelling featuring shingles, Dutch doors and cherub's heads, but he denies sleep- ing there. P.1attson, 27, is cumnUy attending Orange Coast College on the GI BUI, because no teaching jobs are available despite the fact he has a BA degree in ment who Jeans heavily 00 Cbou to makt history from Cal State, Dominguez Hills. most declslons. Cash I! short, ao be acted as his own Western diplomata tn Peklng are con-attorney in two 15-minute courtrials be vlnced that tbl! unusual display of good Jost Friday by arguing agalnal poJlce. feeling between countries wblch have gathered clrcwnstantlal evidence that no been antegonlsla for two decades I! one actually saw blm sleeping. bound to be followed by some farm of Investigating officer! countered by declaration. saying be bad sleepy eyea, his sleeping It could pledge them, despite their pro-bag was warm, he wore underwear and found differences in ideologies, social had a suspicious crease in hia cheek aa systems and poUtlcal positions, to work though from lying on it. together to eliminate polnta 0( conflict in "I like to watch the sun rise and set, so Asia. they're likely to find me llere at odd · Loornlng over their talk! is the hours," he has said in interviews. brooding shadGw of the Soviet Union, Mattson is expected to field a similar which came close to 1oing to war with strategy March 3 when he argues hla The Indictment said Iba~ as a part of the conspiracy, the defendants used government facilities to sollclt lhe political contributions and threatened to downgrade certain Air Guard olflcers if they laUed to cootrtbute. , Councilmen recommended against the application or a person·to-person alcoholic beverage license transfer from Donald T. Bull and William R. Shambley to Dion E. Marsh. China during tbeJr border dl!pute of Ulli. case before a jury of blo peers. ~~ iiiiiiiiiliii:=:iiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiliiiiiiiiiiiilm;iiiii Walter Lee Treadwell' Jr. was arrested and booked for investigation of assault with a deadly weapon. He was llsted in serious condlUon at County-USC Medical Center with a chest wound. From Wire ServlCH ljiiiiii;;;~iii;ii~~;;;;;;;;;;Oiiiiiiiii VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. -A former Ii Long Beach couple who authorlUes claim have been !leadily on the move for 28 months are beld bere loday, charged with a Santa Ana dJvorcee'a 1919 beating DAILY PILOT WMa CDMT MUIHINO c:muwn' l ...... N.Woo4 ---Jee~ a. c.r1.,. .,.,...., ........... n..11 ICtt..U """' 11te"'• A. Miff?liS.e ~Eflllf' Cl1rl11 H. lff• J.ltli1rf P. Hin ,_.. ..... Ed ... e ....... OMa 1JI W•t lty Str..t llolliot AM_, P.O. .. IMO, '112' -- The official reason, according to a pro-test IUed by Planning Director William L. Dunn, was "insufficient parking." Wblle a final decision on the license transfer rests with the A 1c0 b 0 II c Beverage Control Bureau, councilmen made no booes about the fact that they would lllte le see the 19th Street bar oat of business. ''This bar has been nothing but trouble for our police department wblcb bas been coollnually harassed there, fllmed Couocllman Wlllard T. Jordan. "I am . absolutely against having this place 11 a beer bar." C.OUncUman Wllllam st. Clair went so far as le declare the bar, formerly known as 0 Tbe Happening" and ' • Th e Honeybucket" a ''public nulsance.u SI. Clair said beer bars 'have changed since "'Mle Honeybucktt" leJ"ftd up beer, nula and D!Deland jui a lew yean ago. Now lbe music la loo loud. "Tbe music I! ao loud Jn tbm you JI.c- gle," the councilmen aald. Roel< aounda coming from the atghllpot now drlll IDie a nearby resldentlal aru end have dl.sturbM neJabbora to Ille poiD1 of Ir- ritation, acain!lng to st. Oalr. The license laue la the aIJl)lmlt ouqro..tb ol • ~ "'" vestigatJoa ol. "Etrth" ad two otlMr Coota Mesa clancl clubs Jut Auiuat. At tbal tlme,_Oouncllman Alvin Plnklay suagated tbal the poJlco cblef loot lnle the poaibUlty af closing uEarth," 11f10- ne:gan'I Ratnbow" and t•Pler 11" lepU,. Councllmen later agreed le ease off Pier U but le taep an eyo on II U trouble ahnold develop. All .._ ol the clubl aem rode fare and poUce officera bava made oeveral lllnlOlicl •ITlltl 11 ,them. apedallJ at 11nne&u'a. Ajlpattnl!Y -'In& I Je&al <llal!eo(e on the *'Bo:rtb11 lJceml M*JW Robert ¥. Wllloe lunle4 lo a17 A11an11 !IQ JllOll alter tlle -... ud aid, ''llr. cll1 ollOnle)', I wlall you 1NIL" death. Bert Lee Jr., 41, and blo wife Tbema, Jn her mld~. waived extnd!Uon end will be returned to Garden Grove to faoe murder cbatges. Virginia Beach police and Gardeo Grove detectives captured the Lees fin- ally after tracing their movement.! since J!nkln~ them to !he Dec. 13, llM·alaylng . Police clabn evidence was uncovered that coooected them le the •laying of Mrs. Janet L. Summerlin, 26, an attrac- tive secretary. Her body was found by two newsboys, dumped near Garden Grove Community Church. The victim-whose car was abandoned a b•~·mile away -was IJrat tbougbt le be a drug ovordoae vlcllm but actually strangled oo her own gastric Oul<ls due to a severe beating. Veteran Actor Succurnl>s at 59 BOU.YWOOD (Al')·-Veteran cbar1ICler -Sbelwood ll:e!tb, best Down for blo &ell1l-n8Ular role II I town "'"'""""'M Jn the old ArwtJ Gl'lllllh teJevlsloa oerles bu dMd at II aft« a brief llJnt.ss. I The actor, W-real nama WU SllenJood Keith LaOlun~ died Mond•l" ill addition le the Qrlfllth ebow, be IP. • poarod In such oilier te!evlalon -.r Pmy "--!nm Ulla.!, Get 5mat1. Gunsmote ...i Adam-U. Bia moUoo picture credJU lncludld feature -In '"lhe -Kall,. "Door llrlcllte," ''Fw>Dy Gltl" IJlll "1'11>-dulum." • TODAY by BEFORE YOU BUY A DIAMOND The purchase of a diamond as an engagement ring or a special gilt of love is usually a one-time occasion in every man's life. Because tli1s purchase involvu deep meaning as well as a signifi- cant Investment, you will want to buy wisely and with a pride of plll' cllase which will last a lifetime. There are definite slaDdards for the prldng of dlamoDds, llllCI foar definite factors In detmnln•llon of value. C\IWnf, color, clarity and carat wei,ht are the tour meaaurea of a dlalil<md'a value. Each of these factors nqW. c:omplet. Ulldel" standing by the buyer before an Intelligent purcllase can be made. We would ,:ffnclate an oppol' tnnlty to exp each of these fac- tors to you penonally. So when you have the llme, come on In and see ui. No matter what or where eventually Do.y, we 1lway1 ve the time to help you make the right choice. A special rememb111nce from every member of Ille fllmily wtth from 1 to 9 GENUINE Birthstones sracefufly HI In 14 l<L white or yellow gold from $29.so• ............... IM IP 1821 NEWPORT BLVD,. COSTA MESA CONVU<llHT TUMS 14 YE.OS IN SAME LOCATION IAHKAMlllc.w>-MASTtl CW.KE PHONl 1414~1 • ! I I I ! I I I MRS. NIXON TR IES TO BECKON PIG AT COMMUNE NEAii PEKING First Lady Braved Snowstorm In Her Visits to Peoplt of Chin• PRI UPI Tti.MIM SIDENT NIXON CHATS WITH WIFE OF MAO (R) lnl!Wtlor Alda Convermlon 11 Cultural Show 'Revisionist' Ranking Professor Admits Past Errors PEKING (UPI) -Chou Pei.yuan, one Of China's best known professors, sipped tea with Ameri can newsmen today at Peking University and con- fessed he once harbored revialonlat and b o u r g e o I 1 thoughts. "After I studied the workl fl Chairman Mao, I realized that I had made mi!takes, 11 Chou 11id. "I now follow the correct theoretical line." Chou wouJd be a credit to any college !acuity. A pro- feasor of theoretical physics since 1929, he graduated from the UnJver1lty of Chlcago in tm and hold! degrees from unlvtrsltles in China and Europe. He was dean of Tslogbua Unlvenlly before moving to Pe.king in 1952. A man in his 708 -he declined to give e1· act age -he WW'I a hwing aid. HiJ hair ii groy. Althoogh Hangchow ()n Nixon Itinerary he speaks perfect English and chatted informally w 1 t b newsmen, he used an in- terpreter for his more formal talks, correcting t h e in· terpreter 1t timet when he disagreed with the tranal11Jon. A Chlnae 'i:""llllWI U · platoed ·Iba! 'thlntte pro- fessors apeU Chinese when they are talking formally. !'Yoa' art . tli Chim," he 1aid. Chou ii be1a of the phy1lcs deportment. ~I Peking and ii vice cha1!1f1an of t h e u n 1 versity'r Revolutionary Committee. Some newsmen 1n China coveting· President Nixon'• visit were invited to tour China's mos t prestigious wtivenitY, Pfting, somethin1 of a •brine now because the May. 4th movement which apawned the Chlnete Com- munist party ~gin there tn lilt. Reporfu1 gathered in 1 faCulty room at the Russian languagt bulldlng. Drinking tea from 1 flower'..dkorated cups, they 11ntervie-wed Chou and ~ni Chu~yu, 38, a former prjpter who now ls describe'I ~ "1 le a d i n I membtr of the Revo1utlonary Committee and a leading member of the university branch ol the Communlsl par· ty:' ... Vi sit Gets Top Play In China PEKING (UPI) -The · Chinese government continued to give major publicity today to President Nixon's visit. The official "Peoples Dally" published four photographa showing Tuesday's activities and meeUn11 of the President. One photograph showed Nix- on and Premier Chou En-Jal 1e1ted on opposite 1ldes of 1 long conference table during their meeting Tuesday at the Great Hall of the People. Each was flanked by a nu m- ber of aides, the most con- 1pIcuou1 among th e Americans btlng presidential adviser Henry A. Kissinger. Among the three advisers with Chou in the picture, the rank- ing man was the high member of the protocol department. The "Peoples Daily" printed a second photograph of the meeting which Secretary of State William P. Rogen held Tuesday with his counterpart in the Chiotae government Chi Peng-fei. Roger11 and chi al!o were flanked by a number of advlsen, the most prom- inent in the picture on t h e America,, aide belns Marahall 0,reeo, ualstant ~ry of at.ate for Ealt Milan affairs, and presidential consultant John Scali. 1be other two photot In today'• edJtion were taken at the performance Tu e 1 d a y night of the revolutionary ballet and during Pat Nixon's visit Tueaday to the Peldog Hotel'• kitchen. The photo II tbe ballet. taken at · the end ol. the performance, ahowed n l n e Chinese and Americ1r11, fn. cludlnc Chou and Nixon, slllllh . Inc and 1ppl1udlng the per. formen. West Germans Favor Visit TUEBINGEN, Germany (AP). -Ninety percent of West Germ1r11 queried In a public opinion poll w e r e followlnr President Naon's trip to Cl!lna with lntereat and 70 percent viewed it positively, the Wickert Publlc Opioioo lnlltute llld. TOKYO ((AP) -The east China lake city of Hangchow, where President Ni:s:on will alay overnlgbt S.turday, was deacrlbed today u ... that hu retained It• belaty and charm wbila eapandinc into a thriving SocWisl lndU51rtal Dl"tropolil. • Tbe New Chlno N1w1 Ag.,.. ey, Peklni!1 olllcla1 hewa agehey, lllll !bat l.OIJO.yur· • old i!Jnlchow wu not.cl In the put for Ill tradilional sllk1 and cotton ltxtile indusbiet. Panda Clamor .. Zoos Covet China Gift Tod1y1 the 1gency 11id, lhngchow alJo II noted for Its ~Uatry -. iron, .steel, .m1cblne· building and chemicals -cauaed by the • ' S oclalist tr1naronn1tion" carried out tiy the workina people since the communilts iaol; ..... the mainland In 1941. "No looger 1 semicolonlaJ CIOnlUJ1)tt city, Hangchow ii -I _..... Socloillt ln-..ulaJ center," the •leDCJ ,_,..i. Prof Predicta 'No 'Miracles' SAN DIEGO (AP) -Preal· dent 'Nhoa'I vlsit to ChJno II I "IP'Ut step forward" but Isn't llktlJ to oolve 1ny major prob- lems bttwttn the two ooun- trta, flYI I ChJneae pn>fwor at Son DlqO ~te eon .... "I don't think the vlllt will create mtroclel or thane• ooct1I llrudures, but It may rolu tenslolll belw,.. the two --and hnpme ...,.. cbanr., By A110Cli:te11 Prt11 While U.S. and Chi .... leaders maneuyer t b·r o u I b Mgh level talks, American r.oo d Jrector1 have be&Un diplomatic maneuvering • ef tbelr own aimed at getting the two rare' giant paodu given to tho Unit.cl Slates by Pr<mler Chou En-la!. 0 'I'bere isD 't a zoo In thJI country that wouldn't aell Ill IOU! for -........ " . , ............ ,. JICt S 1 m m o n 1 , naturt.iit cuide 11 Seatlle'1 Woodland Part Zoo. Tbm in only lour PIDdu lo captfvlty olillldo cl diina - locludloc a Diiie In -Ind I !•Diiie Ill Laodon. If· forte to mate tho --animals hive fallal. The otlitr two paodu on In North Korea. Bui Simmoos Ind moot otbe!' ..,. offlcWI contacted ....., ... 1gnec1 to the idt.I that the two fuZ>Y. btecl; and white gifll from the atinflO govern- ment WW wiod up 11 Wuhl.,ton'1 N11loool 1.oo. "The Natlonol Zoo bu hem the rtpooltorJ !Gr moro thoa • 7WI .,, tuClt 11!11 - other natlona to the Unit.cl stat.el," 11kl Director Dr. Tbeodore Reed. ·"I would anume we might be called Upon once aaaln tn thia: Cllei" he added. But Reed strWed'that tbe!'t ha1 been no oUidal word from the White H~ on where the aolmala would be l<tpt. The animals were 1fveo to N1IOlt, who ii vislUog Peldn1. In return for two North American munoxen Nilan la ....-iinc to the O!IOOR A Cblcago IOO 11 maklos Its bid for the pandas lhnlugh pollllcaf channela. Dr. Leiter I!:. Plaiter of Llocobt Port Zoo hu contactal an Ullnoit ooo-sr-man and WU rtportedly trylof to reach Sent. Adl1l Steve-Ill and Oiarlea Percy for thtlr help u well. Acquirlnl I panda, llJI Denver Zoo Dlre<tor Clayton Frti.heit, 11would be a zooman•1 drum .•. It'• tht kind al ontmol you make room !Gr." The ... In Son Ill .... bu been lrJi1C to 1•t • pair .,, pondu alnco lbe early IMOI. Pat Goes Visiting First Lady Views Acupuncture By f'l\ANK CORMIER dootn needlts protruding from Peking Olasswlre •·actory, PEKfNG (AP) -B.,... her rl&ht arm and ltg. Mrs. Nixon spoke to at least 20 headed u usual, Pat Nb.on Th6 woman 11id thole llmba workers _ mostly 1rtrJs, w1'> bravtd a North C h I n a had been ao numb before abt e snowstorm today to visit an began a wetk-Jong 1ulu of wm workin& on a wide r1111e agricultural commune where acupuncture treatments that o( 1lusware. 1 h e m I n a J e d w I t h a.he could hardly "alk around Mn. Nixon WllS asked to schoolchildren, ob 1 er v e d her 1m1ll home. Now ahe can vii.It the factory 1g1in. ,;In the winter cultivation of cook, she reported. meanUme," the First Lady vegetables and saw 1 IS-year· 0 We wish you •ell," Mn. replied,"[ hope you will come old woman getting an Nlxori. told Mr. and see us." acupuncture treatment. "It didn't look painful." she The pig Mrs. Nixon tried to The First Lady walked remarked as she left the entloe within petting distance through intermittently heavy clinic. w11 corralled outside 1 tiny, snow that gllstened In her hair, During a one,-h!>ur visit to a spotlwly clean cott1ge. moving down alleys a n d Warned by 1 reporter that across furrowed fields at the ----------the pig might bite, Mrs. Nixon 6,000-acre Evergreen People's said ihe lived on a farm as a commune wes\ of Peking, M{l.s, NIXON girl and "I once ralud 1 Mrs. Nixon was captivated prizewinner -second pr lzt." by the schoolchildren she saw. 1 marveled at the growing of RA.PS HEA D But the pig igoored here .. out-of-season vegetables under treaUes, and lina11y she leaned glau and even tried futilely to lntc> the sty to throw him a make friends with a rather PEKJNG (UPI ) -Pat Nix· chunk or cabbage. on bumped her head on a dirty hog In a sty. warm air blower whlle touring I~ another schoolroom, two She seemed most surprised, h p k" GI r IO.year-old boys were playing however, to observe in the t 1 e ing ass actory to-table tennis with rather unlm- commune clinic the ancient day, but she appirently was presslve reaults. Pointing to not hur\. Chinese medical treatment Whlle she watched 1 young the table, the First Lady sa id: based on the Insertion of Jong girl fashioning tiny intricate "We have one In Florida, and needles into the flesh. animals from colored glass we do play Ping Pong." The two young women who cylinders, Mrs. Nixon rapped To the 8-year-olds learning give the treatment told Mrs. her head on the blower. multlpllcation -several of Nixon that they attend to Afterwards, she kept them ga ve wrong answers about a dozen patie nts a day. touching her blonde hair, but while she was there -Mrs. They showed her a rray-halred she insisted that she was not Nixon said she brought woman lying Dn her side on a hurt. areetings from 111 the children cot with more than halt 1 of America. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- DAILY '1lO't f WORLD L, SAVINGS IS NOW OPEN SATURDAYS Commencing February 19, our Regional Office In Laguna Beach,292 South Coast Highway et Forest Ave- nue, 494-9481. will be open Salurdaya from 10:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M. Th111 added aervloe hours are for our cu,_. 1omera who work Monday through Friday and who would Ille to conduct tnelr ftnanclal business In the leisurely atmosphtl'I of the weekend. •• flelOU!'Cet cwr S300.000.000 WOBLDSA'~ >.NO LOAN AalOCIAnoN HOME OFFICE: LYHWOOD. CALFOJNA Aeglanl1 OfflcM: B~/Fountaln Vtllly/llguna 8Mcft/~f Onttrio/ Sin Bernardino/San OltQO/WMl Arctdl1/Wlltl'llr.-Alvarad0/ Woodland Hiiie r_v 4 DAY SALE · THURSDAY, FRIDAY 9 to 9; . ,C.1 • SAT. 9 to 6; SUN.10 to 5 (fl . I QUALRY ROOM SIZE REMNANTS II GO. WORTH $79.H 10 $J25.00 IF PURCHASED ;J BY THE SQIAIE YAID. Choose from a select group of nylons aiid polyesjers in shags, hi , lo patterns, level • loops .Ol'ldt'hVeeds. ·Hurry in for t hest selections. " ' sq. yd. hPOllT581 11¥lON PILE 191 sq. Ji POLYESTER SHAG IO!Wo l'c~-oloog. Polyostor pile Nlnloi ... Miio ~ord IW!tt,..,.. fOf bolt ... por1 .. _ loo, ....... 1 .. -wltl -·""" -I...,_. WHlo 11lectlon of txdtlng- " SH~ifft-llOME If ye• c•a't c••• IR, lllii1t ,._. ... 4 •• , ,., ........ .,1 ......... . with • fwll ••M,I• ••lectl ... Ne SerYlnt TM u,,wt-• .;.11 car,.t ,--;,. ArN '" c..11tent11 .~l~··t ... CALL TODAY 3040 lrlatol Avo., Costa Moaa (JUIT 0,, THI IAN 01100.raUWAY) 546·8548 OPCN DAILY 'I A .M .·'I P .M. SATURDAY 'I A .M .·b P .M SUNDAY 10 A .M -5 P .M . Ull ou• CONVIHllNT UIDIT TUMl-ALL L.UO• CAA•tu A LlrlTtMI OUIWUITll ,, • • . • DAD,Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE They Ducl{ed Reform • VOO <JJil.Y~ PO i LOOI: LIKE A Piil.i& FREAK? I'M NO! GEfflN ' HVNG UP Ctl 1\IAT SUNE AND Aft· OHt WHO ~ OU~lff 10 l1li 'TW>EP Orange County aanltation directors have ducked the laak of reforming their organization. Alter 13· months of study, the directors balked at a committee-recommended proposal that would have merged &even district< Into one and cut the number of directors from 37 to 2~. The old zones would have been retained as advisory groups. The intent was to simplify the pollcr,·making process and to avoid duplication in directors' ees. The duplication occurs because several directors sit on more than one board and under state law receive $50 a meeting from each district they represent even though the meetings are held co ncurrently. Instead of adopting the recommended change, the dittctors, claiming a Joss of local control, decided to seek a change in the state !aw that would allow, but not require, Individual district< to limit fees to $50 with no duplications. This move may get bogged down in the Legislature. The proposal also does nothing to cut the number ot dlreclonhlps -expected to grow to 44 if certain an· nexations occur. In •)lort the directors voted for the status quo, not reform. · Flashing Red Lights? Stop Cracking down in the wake of one lady bus dr iver's plea, Costa Mesa police are going after motorists who don't stop behind SCbOOI bu ses with rear red lights blinking. DrJvers who fail to see them in bright sunlight, or -worse -are in too much of a hurry, will be paying stiff fines for indifference to school pupils' safety. State law requires that bus drivers debark, too, and Best Rt:.ason To Support Women's Lib TllGaJbll at Larse: The best reason -psychologically and 110Clally -for suppontna Women'• Llber1Uon 11 that, if it Is successful, women would no longer have to co.nipete by Imitating mile aggres1lvene11, but could remain feminine in temperament while sharlnc duties, luncUont and rewards with their male counterparu. (Al till .... ia. d now, only the women who act m01t like men ret ahead. wblcb m a k ., Ille whole 1ltu1tton abrasive.] • • rt la absurd to 1 p e a k of govern--men!< btlnc '1rlendly" with each other. for at the moe:t they can only be allies; a friend ls someone who likes the same thlnp you do, while an ally la someone wbo dlsllltes the same people you do. • • • A prophet la without honor In his own c:ountry (and his own time) chleny because be summons the people to live up to themeelves, when they are intent upon dying down to them,.lves. • • • Moat men are terrified by the thought Dear Gloomy Gus It's strange that every reaJtor ln Costa Mesa must adhere to a stringent For Sale sign ordinance while council candidates seem to have a free uln In cluttering the city with their campaign ey .. eore.s. -D. P. 111tt fMtun rtft«b ,......,.. ¥ftwl. "'' llMMMlilY thOlfl tt lht l\IWIMHf'. ltnd -"' ,...... .. a ...... , eu .. Dlllr "''°'· ' •I of extra "leisure" than they are troubled by the threat of extra toil ; for leisure must be creative In order not to become a bore, wbereu work is m08t often a retreat Into rote. and an escape from the iieircb for identity. • • • A "mob" ls simply a "group of aroused citizens" we have not yet seen fit to join. • • • Wl:ly.,do we speak or the "mind's eye," but never of the "mind's ear," when we can hear music in the mind just as weH •~ we can see pictures there~ (Indeed, that's where Beethoven "heard" most of his greatest music.) • • • ·A prepon.derant majority of men of aentus -whether activists or in· tellectuala -have been shorter than average, which may be nature's form of compensation. • • • '11te main discomfort in being a middle- of-~roader Is that you gel side-swiped by partJsans going in both directions. Angela and Free Speech An IS!lslant lo stste Attorney General Younger wrote to the television ataUon (CBS) wblcb carried the Angela Davis In- terview emphatically denying cmsorship intent, but looking with disfavor on the one-hour program, it.a content and pur· -· In part. the Jetter said. "The b™d· -Ing of this dia-n. n mates clear . tent falsehood ~ / ~ · charge thOI ,/ : ~ . ' '\ there Is. or his been. · any effort to prtvtnt Miss Davis from erpr~ss\ng her views.'' (but) "It is for you to dccldt whether the naturt of the discussion ... ·· (results ln) "• form of 'special pleading' for ~tiss Davis that Is consistent with the right of both the defendant and the people to a fair tr ial." Btyond doubt ~llss Da\•is's bro.adcast ,... ex parte pl .. dlng. since she and her lnttrvlt~'tt uplicilly made it so. but t.bere •re othtr t.lements in this v:· tr1ordinary communic1Hons tvtnt which mtrit tn.m.lnation. AS TRE WORLD 1(1\'QWS. Miss Davi•. a bllCt, Is In """"'1 charged with murder. Wldtt alle{atlon she provided the auns """' In the fatal -In Marin County Superior Court In A"""~ 1111. M &lie told il Miss Dlvi.s's slory wu In low key. She wu barnd from dU<:ussloo ol her pead1111 c-. but not ll'om advancing bu racial and c.m. ....,ist phi~. ;rlmaril)' related to the admlnlstratloo ol justice In the Umi.d Sbtlo. non """' no ""JIN<s. Mlss Davis Is ........... "" -.... Ulost "' brr polltkM bellel -·--.. u "'" aal4, and tltat Ibo tlllJ -u.. ti ~ -•bicll .... 1. ,, .. ...,.,Ille Amertcao IOdal Cll'ler. Htr • ,--·-.... ------..,, Royce Brier ' -- interviewer was the Rev. Cecil Williams. who fed her questions which would not emban1ss her posiUon. Her responses were informed with an unremitting now over a \vide spectrum of her rigid cre- dence. CONCOMITANT WJTR her credence. is one lb.at her pt'Ople cannot get a hearing · before the generaJ clUzenry. or the estJblishment. so-called, but as the Jetttr to the. television statlon forts1w, her un· trammeled preStllce on the scrttn refuted lbal convltUon. and in an im· portanl WI)'. It would be dealing in cliche to say her re\•olutionary faith would be publlcly tolerated In few nations today, none <1f thtm dominated by dodrinaira com· munism. or <If a fascist cc mllilary stamp. The •hole question, of cours~. wu not breathed to her by her In- terviewer. Yttt convineed Americans caMOt rtst on such easy Ja\U'tls. Their position miist be. and has been oln<:o the OoosUtutionll Olnvention In the lllOs. that a me aoci .. ty m113t mate room f1Jr disstol and that dissenters ba•'e a COllllitullooll rl&bt to their beliefs. and to er;reaian of them. The MlJ qllallllcatloo ia that dWenltn mil.J DOI conunil own Ida qtlnsl Ille rr .. socltty lnwltlnc .tolence. to this Uabl Miss Davis'• broadcast Wl.S u affumllioD ol. not a menace t.o. our free aodtty. It cleared some alr wblcb needed dearinc alnct Mia Daris b a foremost ap.men ol blad: rodlcallsm. For .... tlta ...Jorit1. mast lilt"' to minorU lrit•--er DOI tll01 an Ya!ld. lltd !MM wllo '!ill aot -on .. failed 1n 1111 put, and "''" a _. tlonable Mun ol tlltll' own. ·-assist youngsters across the street. But even this is haz· ardous on busy routes such as Victoria Street which is where the complaint originated. Stationing a patrol car there, police have been issu· ing one to three citations daUy for this law violation, in a spot where the bus is stopped only a minute or two. Traffic Bureau Sgt. Bob Ballinger notes one child barely missed being hit, despite the police car's pres· ence and the bus's clearly lettered warning: Stop For Flashing llild Light<, Some motorists maintain they never fully under· &tood the law designed to safeguard lives and limbs of Newport-Mesa Unifie d School District pupils and all others in the state. They can expect no sympathy from th e judge. IN J'All ! The ignorant drJver is a public menace second only to the drunk or drugged. Upcoming: Action '72 l'M KIPl7/NG ... 11'5 A COCKfAIL · PA~TYJ Oil! /$Ill.AT At.L~ SU&E,F~EP, Wo'LL !1E '!ilf.R£! WOULPN"T Mi~ 11! "Action '72" will be this year's Orange County Fair theme, combining a contemporary upbeat in en· tertalnment and community lift wit h a nostalgic hold on our agricultural past. Going over program plans, the 32nd District Agri~ cultural Association Board of Directors recently a~ proved inclusion of a rock band for the festivities. Formidable Fair Board member Millie Goldthorp, however, made it clear Action '72 shouldn't include too much upbeat action . ''Sc reen them carefully ... we have a lot of kooks in this area," she scribbled on a memo pad for the program coordinator. There's the order of the day -screening the kooks out of the rock band business. c Code Does Not Prohibit Flying Old Glory at Night Can Display Flag Around ;Clock To the Editor: You published a letter I started sending out about a year ago trying to inspire a new interest in Old Glory as a symbol of our rededication to our ideals and prin- ciples. Our flag has been considered a living thing ; so I maintai ned that it should be treated like a truly living thing and not folded away during the dark hours, or during stormy weather. A LEITER just received from the Amer ican Legion's national headquarters in lndian.fipolis informs us that the Flag Code h1 being changed to fit Into our present way of •life -a world of light. It follow3 in part; " ... the revision of l'Ublie Law 929 (the Flag Code) is yet in the legislative mill in Washington. There has been a biU introduced int<1 this Congress, asking for the Presidential appointment of a nag commission to study and revise Public Law 829. but passage appears doubtful for this congressional session. "THE AMERICAN Legion National Americanism Commission was in- strumental in the adoption of a resolution at the 53rd national Cflnvention in Houston. which would permit display of an all-weather nag 24 hours per day, pre>- vided that it is lighted. Extensive research confirmed that Public Law 829 does not prohibit the display of the United States flag 2-4 hours per day as long as a patr!fic effect is desired." KATHRYli FISHBACK Mrs. Fishback has been -nominate.:t for a Freedoms Foundation award. -Editor Flag Is a S11111bol To the Editor : From our \\•eekly St. John's Mass Bulletin came this reminder; "America.ti Mailbox I Letters 1rom reader! are welcome. Normally writers 1hould convey their messages tn 300 words or less. The right to condense letter1 to fi t s-pace or eliminate libel ii resenied. All let· ters must incl1.u.f1 lignattire and mail- ing addrt11. but names may bt with-- held on reqm!t if tufficit'nt rea.son i.s apparent. Pottr11 will not bt pul>- lislud. good American, if he is not ; it is not a "magic wand" that will bring about in- stant Americanism, but rather, a symbol of all the beautiful attributes that made America a great nation. And, most im· portant, it belongs to ALL Amer icans. BERNICE WELSH Yag Dlanionds To the Editor: We are living in a world of such in· credible phenomena that our fo rbears must at times move uneasily in their resting places. To cite but one example, the lustrous diamond which the earth yielded reluc- tantly to man only after major physical Herltafe Montlt-The Pastor says, 'This and financial efforts. Those were the month we celebrate the birthdays of days when diamonds were widely pro- Abraham Lincoln and George claimed to be woman's best friend -and Wasliington. February has been pro. with reason. claimed by Mayor Wilson <If Costa Mesa These precious st<1nes emitted dazzling to be American Heritage Month. We are •. hues and colors <1f such ethereal beauty encouraged to <1bsen'e these h<llidays as to captivate the heart and mind of the enthusiastically, and to evidence in our beholder. Men fought and died to provide way of life a true spirit of patriotism.' " their lady loves with this exotic I consider that sound advice. We should crystalline carbon . never stop working for the good <1f <1ur country, nor should our leaders and the American people rest on the laurels of the Great Americans who have gone be- fore us. AND SO I'M grateful for this litue reminder that has inspired in me a stronger desire to work more diligently for the things that will truly make our country great-like justice for the tl.tex- ican American farm workers, justice for the minorities, the blacks and the Welfare musts, open housing, equal job opportunity, etc. Patriotism is a deep sense or concern and Jove for the people as well as the land. Land is only as good as U,e people, together, make it. A thou.sand nags wav- ing simultaneously will not make one a SHAKESPEARE of undying literary fame, in one <1f bis rew careless moments, exclaimed, HWhat's in a name ?" Had tile illustrious bard been able to foresee the future he would never have uttered the fatal quote which is ca using no end of confusion among the public. A diamond had been 'a diamond since its incepliOfl. So far, so good . Now we have simulated diamonds made from "yag." or course, there is always the "real McCoy" if <1ne is fussy. You pays your money and takes your chojce. BLESS THAT GOOD old free en- terprise system. But yag it all. what's a person to do when faced with the problem of choice. There is no cause for the ladies to worry . The stone which adorns her person. being a thing of beauty, it follows that it will be a joy forever. There is always room in this vast and colorful land fo r honest competition. There is no intention in these brief comments to impugn the integrity of anyone concerned. RAYMOND SIMARD· Need Cable TV? To the Editor : Could you induce someone to explain in simple language to the citizens of Costa Mesa the need for Cable TV? We are able to receive clearly 12 TV stations now, very few of them worth spending time watching. Is it to have part ownership in a small local channel, purchased .wit h our tax money. so that we will have the pleasure of listening to our local politi- cians al a small fee for every home? I TRJNK WE taxpayers should have more say In how our money is spent. Also, it would be nice ir the city council agenda would be listed in your new Swr day edition so we would know a fevr minutes in advance. MJtS, FRANCES MACDONALO, Quotes ' Alex HaJry. S.F .. Negro all'.hor, lec- turer. opposing black 1tparatlsm - "Black. white. brown, yellow, polka~ot ... either we all leam to live together in America or we'll all go out together.'' Mary E. Clark, San Diego. on campus problems - ''Trust, sympathy and rap- prochement result in mutual reapect, which is surely the only atmosphere in which reaJ education can flourish." Latest Clothing Craze: Mao Jacket The Nehru jacket was one of the great fashion flops of the 1960s. But now we are in a ntw decade and the latest clothing craze is .... the Mso jacket Drab, loose-. fitting and equally unbecoming to both sex es, the l\tao look seems ro ade. to order for the sloppy American fashion scene. It ma y be more than a fad , bo\\•ever. Since President Nixon announced his visit to China last summer. interest in Oriental arl and C'ullure has been growing. A \\'ashln gton, D.C., department store npened a shop specializing in lmports from ).falnland China on Feb. 11 -the day President Nixon began his visit to Peking. A similar shop was opened Jut 11uturnn by a New Yark department store. It sells wk.leer Mskels, traps. hats, brooms and other handicraft&. The most popular Item. however, Is tile coane blue ootton Mao suit at $2$. FOil TIKlSE WHO •ant lo '!" 1tylllb I Editorial Research but not proletarian, there ar~ tailored saUn versions of the Mao suit that retail for $450. Carriage-trade jewelers report heavy demand for Intricately carved jade rings. brooclt<s and brocelets. And Mu Factor has set up an Anna May Wong oornu al Bk>om~dale's in New Y<1rk where a cosmtticWI wilJ attempt to dupUcate the «loll.file face of the Chinese movie star of the ll'llls. The txotic cultu.. of the Orient has fuclnated Wesltrnen ever since Ma.rco Polo joantey<d to C>ina In the I.1th oeo- tury. Tbe arti>l.I of Italy were tht first In ..--------•• c .. ,..e --------. Dur G<orae: What Is tho name ol a ...,... W'bo coUeds rocb? P. T, Dur P. T.: Anbur WBJlnlton. m M a p I e A\'tDU<, Batk, An:. He's alrUdJ aolll llw' C..,..: Do ,... -... In old-1..-d hamt ....,-. ·-a -ho called! r.. been ha..,, an • I lrJlllll .. t with lllf bwblllll. LOUIS& Dear Louho: I -aboola1dy .., ......., to caD 8 dodor beclUR JOO"ft been blV· iO( .. """"""t with yoor - --si-11! No -dorton -·1 mate bcuse calls. I tblnk I'D make -..... rru tea and ,. U.&nm. (Stncl ,.... probltms to ~ u. -his blnry card by misUke and hu lllllhina lo re.ad ). • the West to reflect this interest by In- corporating Qiinese motifs into their in- ttriCR' decoration and furniture design. Nearly all of the few surviving pieces of 17th-century Venetian lacquer furniture are decorated with raised gilt chinoiserie figures. TOE T ~E FOR chinoiserie quickly 5pread to other European countries. In France. the fash ion reached its height during lbe Louis XlV period and re- mained popular during the 18th century. when il becaJl\I! an iJltegr•l part of the Louis XV, ~ rococo, st.yle. Faoc~ul Chintse figures. titen combined with landscapes. were 1pptied as orname• talion to furniture and otbtr decoraUve art forms. Chinese porcelain found a wide market In the West and was especWly prized by American c<>loniall. In El!iland, !rom about 111111 to tll30. there WIS a ret"iWal o( dtlnoiJerie, in the Regency sty!<. The remodeling of tht Royal Pavlllon at Blilblon (bqun in 1117) stimul>ted a O'IZI for Oriental art and !umlture as well as EoaHM>made decoratioos In the Oblntae -· The wte for cbinolserie coolinuecL thouah oo a mucl><limlnhbfd scale, lllnlugb Ille re- mainder ol the ttlb and into them - twy. THE WIUIEl\'T llAGK llO' Ori•otalia appears mo<t broaol-biad than thole ol tht put. to addition to c1a1J1in1 and hlmbtu.,.t, the ~ wind ban -ol Orlmtal religioo5 aad pbiloqlDcaf ~ l.lil!!dltlom, HlodulJm aad mort ' - exotic ~ls have found numerous adherents in the West. Art collectors are beginning to move beyond Chinese jade sculptures and .scroll ·paintings to wood carvings and bronzes from India and Tibet. A m e r I c a n observers in New I>ethi report that New York department-store buyers regularly sweep through bazaars. buying up ban. dicrafts. An increasing number <If American art galleries stock Indian ind Tibetan art, which is still reJativt.ly in· expensive. So Kipling wu ooly partially right : Ea.st and West C'U meet, even iI understanding does not always result 01.ANOI COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Wucl, MU.lier ' T11oma1 K•fil. Edllor AlbmW:Bolu EdUoriol POii• Edllor .,,,. e.titarial """' ol ... o.nr Pilot M:'Cks -to bdonn am •tbu· Lale rn.dtm. by preHnbflC W. M'I'~• oplnlors and c:am-mental)' Oft losib of tnterftt Md olgnla......, ... ~. ,...,.,, fot' lbe-~ o1 -ciw .....,~ ........................ tine ... dl\'ft11c \~ts of tAtOftl'lflf oti. tenWI and t pokelft'lCQ 00 toplca ol U.d<r. Wednesday, Feb. 23, llli2 '