Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-01-18 - Orange Coast Pilot·~ , .. ..... ~ .... • . • • • " THURSDAY AFTER NOON, JANUARY 18, 19,Ja""' VOL.. "-NO. la. I SICTIOMl. e ...011 • • or orm ' • West111inster Co11:ple . - JVin Sexy Fil111 Fight I • . ' ' • • •• • • • • • Kissinger, ·Tho Wrap Up • to Text Reagan Budget. . State E~plQyes Gi~en ;ib• ..--.. oost SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronald Reagan proposed a $9.3 b~ion budget to- day that would give state worken a record pay hike and still leave a $1.1- billion surplus for possible tax cuts. (See related stories, Pages 18, 19 and 32.) The state's 115,000 civil servants would Pa.ir Win Fig ht For Sexy Films In Westminster A Westminster couple will get back 22 500 reels of sexy motion pictures and 300,ooo photographs which have bee~ held for almost two years by Westnunster Police Chief \Valter Scott. The State S\lp~me Court has refused to conslde:r a motion to overturn a Superior Court contempt citation against the police chief. Westmlnster officers seized the material on May of 1971 when they raid- ed a warehouse owned by Frederick Loar, 34, and his wife Kay, 31. The I.oars were acquitted of charges of conspiring to distribute obscene material last May 17 in a jury trial. Superior Judge Robert . L. Corfman ordered the Wms and photos returned but Chief ScoU refused to comply, calling them "hard core pornography." ·' Scott is to1 appear before Judge Corfman• Feb. 9 lo certify lhal the material has I>een relumed. Peru Se izes ·.' .. 12 Tu1i ciboats . , SAN ~GO (AP) -Al least 12 United te!'"lunabOiti cmylng nearly crewmen have·been seiz- ed off 1he coast ol Peru in tbe largest seizure ever undertaken by 'the South American c<>Ootry <ln the so-called "tuna war,'"' says an American Tunaboat AaoclaUon spokesman. A spoteiman for the boat ownen' group said the shipa were aCCUJt6 of-vtolatlng. Peru'• seU- clalmed 201).mlle fi!hlng limit and forced lnlO the port of , Talara Wednetelay by gunboall and plones. Thero, they will be l1Ded OC· cording to weight and bt farced lo buy Peruvlan fisblng lloenses, he said. • get a pay increase averaglng-13 percent in the" Republican governor's spending plan £Or the fiscal year be'inning July 1. That was every cent they asked for and it was the major surprise In Reagan's new budget which is •t.6 billion, or 22 pe~t, larger than this year's. Ria1an bas feuded orten with state employes since taking office. But he said today be committed him.self to seeing that they got pa.Id on a par with the persons doing comparable work for other lev~ of government or private ~,. . The Governor alSo' granted the 74,000 state college and university employes - including facuJty members -the pay in- creases the3"'0ugbt. The entire pay raise package-totals $226 million.. Reagan's budget Is apparently the largest ever proposed by the governor of a state. The New York state budget has been bigger than california's the past several years. But Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller's new budget is $400 million below Reagan 's. Biggest increases In Reagan's spendiri.g plan were expected to be $5.58 million in new state aJd to loca1 schools and about ISOO millloo iii property tu relief. They weer part· of· the $1.1-billion tchool-tax program Reagan "'on from the Oen'Mr cratic-cootrolled Legislature in Decem- ber. I The Governor, planning to leave office in 1974 after e;ght years, already rovea~ _ ed the state will have ·u ,!jl million surplus at the end of .tbll flliCal year, June 30. Today, be .,lima1'd lhe surplus will grow by another $2'12 millllln In the 1973-74 fiscal year. • I The majqr reuon Is lhlt .11a1e lllCal experts. expect ·a 0 sparkling" 1ear for California's economy. Tblt mMDS more tax money eomirlg in. -• • ' • ·But a tempm-ary bonanza I! no excuse for spending money on sweepttw new progr;uns, Reagan said. ·in hi! bodget message to the lawmakers. ..r 0 Govemment should never take from the_people nloro 'lhln~'"'->luttly ~.''be ..... T!!us, he maintained a rolaU•ely IOOgh fist on the atate's purse strings l'Ven thOugh the new b<Jdgel Is twice as big as the first one he propooed to the Legislature seven yean ago. Reagan says he Is studying a mlmbet of options for retumlng the ~ l" taxpayers -including a comblnatlon.<>I a OO&tlme rebale or a permanent ta cut. One nri approprjatlon IOllllll ID the budget this year ts "50,111111 lo butld a new g~ernor'smaJJlfon. , Anothe< b II.I million to plan lo~ the replacement ·of san QuenUn Prlaon wttb two new maxtmum oecurity fllcillu ... ~-Mdget now goes tbfougb the \Qlli legisltitlve process, upecttd to return to ( .. 1BIJDGET,.Pap I) Fatal Cras·h • 'JD Irvine DAILT 'ILOT ltl lt "'"'- Body of 4l·Y,ear·old Jack Dean Miller or Tustin lies covered by blanket following crash about 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Jamboree Road and Michelson Drive. Police said Miller was killed when his station wagon slammed inro tbe rear• of truck driven by Davld E. Shrode, 2218 Delaware St., Huntington Beach. Police 'said both vehicles were northbound on Jamboree and tbat truck was slowing for sl<Jp light w6en Mill· er's auto bit it at bigb speed. Loory Hustled on Plane . ' . . . ' ·For Return to California • • ' ( . BY 'CANDACE PEARSON ""'' Of ... ~ ,. ....... ,... • Or .. Timothy Leary, fonner Harvard i prt>fesaor wanted ror California prison escape and in Orang/ County for tbe alleged masterminding -of-a drug-smug- 1ling ring, was e'ipected lo arrive on a Paa-American Oight to Los Angeles InternaliGnal Airport this afiernocio. U.S. Slate Departmeni offlclais ba•e llQUCht lhe return of Lcal"Y, who escaped In S<pt. of 1970 "from prboo In San Luis OblJpo, fr1>m Afghanistan, where he was IJTllCed~. . . Reporla Mid that !.<II')' was oent lo Loadob eor!J this 1botnln&. A Pan American ipQ[lesman in London llid the r.-advocai. of the uoe of i.so would lb' wlUI anood esoort to Loi' Angeles. wbere the onlk.,,I.oodoo Pan-Am Dight to-day touched at 4 p.m. Local law enforcement omclals denied u-?<!port& A l))Okeaman for the narcotics division ol Otanp-~·D!ltticL Attorney Cecil • Hicks' office sa)d early today that "the only people telling us he'll be here this afternoon are the press." The spokesman said be was told by the federal agent handling the case that It would be two Jo lour weeks before Leary's return could be arranged. ''That's all \\.'e know," the county of- nclal said, adding ·the last he heard, Leary was still in Kabul. Afghanistan. Asked U lhe two-to.four week story was only a nise by agents to keep a crowd - J)an.lcWarly WeaUtermen -away from lht airport, he onl1 said, "Does that IOWtd logical to JOU 1 ,, The Weathermen. a militant un- del"p'OVnd organization, claimed credit for helping L<ary escape frQOl the mlnimutn security facility where he was serving ·a, six months to lO-year term after being coovleled In Lagµna Beach for marijuana pos5e1Sion. • • .. It b presumed that Leary will be 1a"'ken to Loi Angcle1 County Jail while • !See•LEAJ\Y, Page ,lJ , • 100 Evacuated From Damaging Storm in N"or.th , SAN FRANCISCO IAP I -Some 50 to 100 persons were evacuated In Novato north of here toda y ai a storm packing howling winds and fierce rains smashed into Northern California for the second time llLlhree days, authorities said. Offur Kenneth Gnoff said the evacua· lions began this moming as the Novato Creek spllled over its banks in several places. He said those evacuated, many of whom Oed Wednesday from another fiood, were being taken to the Novato Community Center. Gnolf alat reported Ooodlng or local :;:: re':~· d~n~ear Novato but sald Elsewhere in battered ,._farln County, winds of gale force snapped power lines, knocking out electrlca l servtee In Novato, Forett Knolls and Ross. authorities shld. San Rafael police also reported minor, localized flooding but "no major prob- lems -yet." C"'' The C81ifomla Jlighw ay Patrol said a • (See STORM, ·Page li Completion Of Draft Scheduled By United Press International The White House announced today· that Dr. Henry A. Kissinger will meet Hanoi's Le Due Tho in Paris on Tuesday "for the purpose of completing the text" of a cease-fire agreement aimed at ending the war in Vie\{lam. A similar~ouncement was made simultaneously in Paris by the North Vietnamese who said the talks were "aimed at achieving an accord on the end of the war and re-establlshmet}t of peace in 'Vietnam." Saigon dispatches reported earlier that South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu approved the latest ceaae-fire agreement in principle, thus permitting the signing. He balked at an Oct. • agreement. A hint that a cease-fire agreement was near came earlier in Paris when It was announced the weekly semipublic peace talks were being suspended lndeflnltely after today 's 174th session. The talks would have been exactly four years old next Thursday. The announcement from Presidential Press Secretary Ronald A. Ziegler at the Florida White House in Key Blscayoe said: "We have a joint announcement between the United States and North Vietnam. Dr. Kl!Singer wUI resume private meetings with special adviser Le Due Tho and Minister Xuan Thuy on Jan. 23 for the purpose of completing the text of an agreement." Sooth Vietnamese g o v e r n m e n t political sources said that although Thieu agreed to the te.xt In principle he re- (See PEACE, Pase l) Orange Coast Weatller There's a 30 percent chance that we'll have more rain on Friday, the weatherlady iMists. Don't look for any change in the Rfrcury tearungs. which Y>'ill sUck in the middle to upper 50s. INSIDE TOD,\ Y Survivors of tlie Uruguayan plane crash in the Andes have tUcided to write a book about their t%J)frince1, fncl"'1ing ,,. .or~ng to cannibalism to 1tau alivt. Ste 1toru on Page P. L.M. kY• \1 MHI "' W\'kt >I ~ '........ ..,, Cltnlf!M ,...,, ..,._. ,.. • ~kt U Ha'*-'I ..... _., 7 Ctft•--' u 0...... c..., , .. ,. ON!' *fl«I II '"'11 lf.1t •t11..nt1 ,... • ·-..,.... .... ,IM_ .. JWI T.......... N ......... i.-, •-n '"-.... ,..., ""' .. -~ ... ,. ....... . ~ M __.. ..... ti~ " AMI UMr1 ti WWM Mews _., I ' • % D•IL Y PILOT s J~ry .Be ins 2nd ·week I . ~ Holdout R'f"llins in Corona .Mur~rs Case FAIRFIELD (APl -The jury 'trying day if lbal division cbanaed. • Juron wett leaning, but added tbat tbe Ju'n V. Corona on tbe biggest muss The case v.·ent to the JU?,1 ot 10 men · longer the jury dellberated the more llke- murd cr cha rge in U.S. blstory began lls aJid two women lut '11ltlf'lday afttt 14 ly 11' was thef'll would b.e 1 bun& jury. second week of deliberations today with 1t v.·ceks ol test~ony from . lll witnesses. Hawk aaSd he uf1'd tbt )4lae to keep looe holdout apparently iUll blocking a Nearly l,IXXI pieces of evidence aod 2.3 the jury delibtratlnc •)oar u then wu Wllnimous verdict. million words of testimony were any chance lhe:y eoukt reaCb a verdict. Jurors filed ln1o the Solano County pr~sented in the complex circumstantial Bailiffs said prosecutor 0 ., Dave Teja, Superior cow'troom shortly before 9 ev1denct case. who did not appear at the Solano County a.m., a(ter belng bllStd from the nearby Corona was charged -.;th slaying 2.5 courthouse WedneJda)', wu lD..toucb by motel where t.be,y have been sequestered transient .lat;M>ren whose backed and tt.lepbQJ'ie. every night since lbe judge handed lbe stabbed bodies Wett round burled tn eortdll;"liliOliii 1111!....S IWO lieut at· case to them orchard graves along the Feather River tacks ln j&ll IJnce bis &rnC early the The last w~rd lrom the jury, \11hich has north of Yuba City in May and June of mornln& of May 21, 1971, was f10t brwght maintained a grim. stony silence In 19n . . , to the courthouse Wednttday. Balllffs public, V.'as an inquiry Tuesday to Judge A~t~r t.he Jury's req~t Tuesday for said the SS.year-old farm labor con. Richard E. Patton over the defi nition of clarification of the anstrucUons on tractor wu re.sUna ln a medical wtac'of "reasonable doubt ." reasonable doubt . derense attorney the nr.arby state prison at Vacavllle. The jury also reported at that lime Richard Hawk said he was convinced Last Friday, 30 hours after jury that it \\'as divided 11-1, but did not s:iy ihat meant !he jury was leaning toward dt..liberations began, Col'OOI nported whf::ther the majority favored convirtiOO acquittal. · chest pains. A court ~ Monday ln or acquittal ou 25 counts of first-drg ree liawk said Wednesday he was still con-whkb tbe jury reported an •M division murder. The jurors gave no hint \\lednes-vlnced that 'WU the way the majority ol was held Jn tbe priloa boepatal. LEARY •.. authorities decide where him . lo prosecute Jn additjon to escape charges, Leary is \vanted by Orange County officials on a $5 million bench v.•arrant. The Orange County Grand Jury last ~er indicted Leary and 411 olber alleged members or the-"BroU>erlmd oI Love," supposedly an international drug smuggling club formed In Laguna Beach sil: years ago. Following his escape, Leary appartntly fled to Algeria, where he stayed with Black Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver for nine months. Leary then went to Switzerland, \\'here he was contiliually ordered to leave the~ country, fbr the last time Dec. 31. Earlier reports said Leary had been held under house arrest in the Afghan capital. There is no extradition treaty betv.'.een the United-Statu and Afghanistan but Foreign Ministry of- ficials ln Kabul said: "We )Vant Leary to leave Afgballistan because we do not "'ant to add to the country's bad name in drug trafficking." The Pan American World Airways jumbo jet carrying Leary to lA:>ndon from Kabul arri~ in midmorning. It was immediately boarded by Britisb lm- mi graUon officials, a U.S. Embassy of- ficiaJ and the two Narcotics Bureau agents. A few minutes later they walked down the &teps from the aircraft with Leary and Pt1iss Joanna Harcourt-Smith. Leary wore an open-necked yellow shirt , blue trousers and stlft white shoes and carried an overnight bag. His friend v.'Ore a fur coat and bad necklaces over her blouse. kl they made their way P yar~s to the immigration ball. Leary" and ?.lisis Harcourt-Smith \\"ere embrac ing all the way. Shortly before disappearing into the hall. Leary turned to reporters and said: ''I'm going to get a lawyer." Leary left Switzerland ror Vlennt at the end of December and lhen went on to Afghanistan. He arrived in Kabul on Sun- day. Arghan authori ties arrested him im- mediately and seized his U.S. passport. The passport was handed to the U.S. Embassy in Kabul, which provided Leary with an identification card to perm.it him to b'avel back to the United States. Leary. accompanied by Miss Harcourt-Smith was beld incommunlcado by British immigration authorities until bis Los · Angeles plane was ready to leave, Mjss Harcourt.smith left with him. School Blast Probed PASADENA (AP) -Authorltle• COit· tlnued thei r investigaUon today into an explosion which destroyed the offices ot the dean of men and the dean of women at Blair High School here. A police spokesman said that arson is !u.spected and that perhaps gasoline or othe r Dam· mable liquid \li'as used Tuesday night. DAllY PILOT 'TM~ C-.t °"ll.Y I'll.OT, wl" lfltl'dt i. comblnd Tiit H............. It pUbllilMd llJ t1t1 Ora.. CM1t l"uo!Wllnt ~. S-0. r•N •mm. •rt PllflllllMC. MINl•'r ~ f'riM"rt "' COStl Mfta, N.._. 9ftd'I. H11n11n11on lleKtll'"-tll,, v11s..,, L89Ulll IMCft, trolrlef$dll!ntdl Inf '"' C*"*"i.I S.11 J..,, C.pr.t,_, A 1"'8h rrtlonel fldltitll h puolisNd $elunl•'rl •nd "'""·~.' flle P!'lrtdPtl Piltllltlllnt Pll"I 11 11 DI 'l\'t$1 a.., str .. 1, COlll Ma., C.1tfwftf1, nut. lto~1rf N. W11d Pntldlnl llld htltl.,,. J1 ck R.. C11rl1y VJU l'mldtf11 11'111 0--11 MMIOw n.,.. •• k ..... 11 Edittt 11'101'1'11• A, M11rphln• Mallltlrll fdl• C~1rl11 H. L•ot-, Rlc~enl P. N.tll "'"i'1ftll ~.-. hliw. -O:rtt1 M$: ))I) WHI a.., l tt.! H..,_, ... etl: JUJ H-a-t ........,.,.. 'Lft'ftlll lwctl: m For"'.._._ Hlir!Jng1!111 l1.1C11: 1111S lloldl 10!.li.wl'll ~·Otmttllt: :IU Nortl\ Iii C:.mlllll btil T••11••• ITI4' MZ..flJI C._... .W.11ttsl I '41°1671 "~ c..... .,... .... ti ....... ·-4fJ-442t ~ ..... ~ (.l9ftfY c:··--J40.1llt = lm. Or .... COMt ........... .... -l)l(lit. lllwlf.1"""· -'*' ., "...-t....,.... ...... -...... ,.......... wl"-1 ~ ...... .,. *~-. Lady • ID Louvre The Real Mona Lisa Stands Out LONDON (AP) -Some ol the people who claim they own 1be 1<al Mona Lisa suffered a setback today v.•hen Lord Clark, Br1tain'a best known art his- l«ian, ca.st hi! -for the tady in the Loovre. OFFICLWI AT THE PAlllS museum ,,...,. doubted 11111 Ille orJgtnal m8'lerpieoe by Leonardo da-Vind is on disptay·tber<.-But-rflwTy d oom- peling claims last fall raiaed WIC<rtainty tn ,., ... clreleo. Clark , who as Kenneth Clark presented a blgh1y suocessful television series in Britain 'and ,America called "CiViliaatloo," clertded the rtval clalJm tn a lecture publishe4 today. "EVERY 31 YEARS OR SO colledon claim they own tbe Mona Lisa," Lord Clark said. "It is a sort of epidemic. ' •'1 hope I will not be taken to court if 1 say that the dart green object that hangs almost in visibly in the Lcuvre is the original picture painkd by Leonardo. It bas an Impeccable pedlgn!e." Clouston Mu rde r Trial, Cluinge Of Venue Nixed A change of venue to another county in the murder trial of Herman Lee Clouston was denied Wectneaclay bY Orlnp Coonly Superior Cow-I Judge Mark Soden. Judge Soden, after listening to . argllments b"y Defense Attorney George Shibata IOd Deputy Dbtrlct Attorney 0.-!eon, aald that -readhul newspaper account> ol llle case be coula ltnd no fl"l'llld! for change. ''There b no evidence shown ol an arouaed public ml the ·-do not portni1• Ille' 4<1jndant ¥ brutal," the ju~ge said. ''There u auo little atiomey participation In the stories by either side, which is good." CIOU!ton Ii scheduled to lace tr!aI Feb. 2& on cbarp& that be llbol and killed a Buena Part delecttve and fled sparking a nv..<lay manbunt tn Orange IOd IA! Angeles countlel 1tx months ago. Shlbal' bad contA!nded tbat Jlllbllclty stemming from the k1lllng of dttecUve Darrell "Bold" C.te IOd the loUowtng manhunt mafes it lmpoa!ble for Clous- ton to .... 1 .. ~ fair trial tn the county. The tndlctment charges tbat Clo1lllon shot and kllled Cate wblle the omcer wu quesllootng him about bis poMlble role In a 'repOrted sex offense. Kidllaetng charges Wett added to the mldti count when Clouston allegedly used 1 Ruena Park man u boltage dur- tng tbe tw<><:OUnly cbaae. Licenses Due For Masseuses SAN MATEO (AP) -Mu!<""'' operating in unincorporated area! of San l\lateo County soon wll1 need a license. At present, there are no massage parlon In the unincorporated parts of the county; but lhe Board d Supervlson adopted an ordinance Tuesday to control any that might be started. Starting next ITKlnth, masseuses will have to pay a $JS ree and prove they haven't any disease!, haven 't been con· victed or crimes involving lewd conduct or force and have iraduated lrom a "recognized'' massage school. Two lndicbn:ents Issued by Jury ' Two murder indictments were returned Wednesday bY the 0rup COUnty Grand Jury involving recent :.booting incidents in which police officers Wert killed. Carl A. ECbtrom, IS, d ,1111 Flight Drive, Midway City, waa tndlcted for the Jan. 4 slaying of two Lot Allgeles' County deputy sberilli at bia borne. Gary W. Joh!llon, :rl, d U. lllamood Head Drive, 'l'lllltn was dlaraicl ID Ille Dec. I sbootlng ol 'l'lllllD polkwnan Waldron G. Karp IOd Deputf ~ W, Stewart. Karp died ol bis --~0.1. • Both Ecblnm 'llld ,,..._.. ....... wounded by Police before betng tUmi II> to custody. They.are beld wl-.blll. Nixon Cab inet Nominees Get 01' WASHINGTON (AP) -Two mono ol Pmldent N-'a C.blnet eelectlom have won Senate commtuee aptr'OVa} but it WU wtCOrlaJn bow -e!Jher would be confirmed by the Senata ttlell. The Finance c-nlttee ..itd 11 to I Wectneaady to approve CUpor W. Watnberpr ol-Clllf<nta as oecr.tlrJ ol Health, Eductllon and Wellaro ... The Bankln1 panel apprvved J-T. Lynn, IJ to I to be oecr.tarJ ol l!Ollltng and Urban Dev~t. . Prevloully, ...,,..iary of Def- dtllpata Elliot L. Rlcllardaon, ...,,..iary of Commerce-<lelipte · Frederick B. Dent and 8eC1'elary of TramportatJon. desllnate Claude" s. Brtnegar woo com- mittee apporval. MINER KILLED ON BIRTHDAY CARLSBAD, N.M. (UPI) -Zane Gallaway, 28, of ~lsbad, a mlner, was struck on the ~ad and killed by a 60G- pound rock that fell from the celling of the PGtash Mioe WI Wedne!day, bi! birtllctay. • rrhey~re Fa1nily CAB Waives Rul,e fo r Nixon Cl.a n WASHINGTON (AP I -The Civil orianlzatloo mmb' to obtatn cheep·~ AeronauUcs Board waived Its rules th1s travel, and not for 1ttbdty rtas0ns1 are week to en1ble Braniff lntematloMI to not eonslde~ by the CAB to quallf:y for operate a round trip jet charter fl4!ht charter fllabt partlclpatkm. ·'-between Los Angeles and Washington for A letter from CAB Secmary narry relatives of Pre!ldent and Mn. Nllon at-Zink to BranUrs Jepl repraenU.Uves tending the Inauguration ciettmonles. hero, gninttng the waiver beca""' al Braniff Is open1Ung the serviee for a special and unueuaJ clrcumltancety was nonexistent organlutloo, "the families of made public =· the Orsi family." (Related story, page•> However, tbe '""" Loi Aaplea The 1\rl.l.ne assured the CAB, however. wu operated W , Braniff satd. tha t all the Jll"<fll!"' to be transported The l'elUm Dlgbt u ocheduled for Jan, ll. would be penons of bloo!I at marriage A Branll! opol<-aald be did not rttaUonsblp to the Ryan and-Nbon -bow-1111111"Ntx.11 IOd Ryan flmllJ lamllles. Mn . Nlxoo b the former memberl Wett aboml the I~ Patricia Ryan. Boting .,,,, Ill -with CAB Thus, Branlfr aald, Ibey would have a niguta...., lhll Information will bl Jll'O' bond of lfflnily ol more than •u months vlded rbr CAB DIM. • _ __,,.._.. r ... J PEACE ••• - q -about a dozen chances. These presumably wtt'fl worked out ln coo· venations wltb Gen. Alexander Haig, Nb:on'1 spocial envoy to Sataoo. · , 21le White t<ow. aald Wednaday tbit Haig bad betn tn communication vrltlr Pmldent Nixon and that Ntxan con· remct by telephone with Kissinger In Wubtnglon, Haiti lltw today lo Phnom Penh, Vlen- U11t1e and Jlanakok to brll\I the 1ovemmentt of Cambodia, Laos and ntalland on the agreemen t. Zieg1tr AMOW'lced that H~ will retunt to Saigon sat1,1rday to consult again with Thieu. _ 5eiler did nothing to drunpen specula· t1oo that a cwe-n .. might 11e dectared aoon tn South Vlelnam. Asked about ~rs of a cea:;e.fire, Ziegler sakl, "There bu been an awfUl · Joi of speculation atOllJI tha t line. I am not prepared to addreu tMt speculaUOn, even if It Is right or It Is wrong." Ziegler decllned to discuss any oontenl$ or the agreement. "As we have said,'' he told reporters, ••we'Ve made progress in the talks. We al.lo have an agreement not to comment until a final ..,..-b 1<adled." 'l'hts b lhe ant time !hit tbe preslden- Ual spokeoman bas ~ver used t~ term "agreement'' in dlscusslng the aebret peace negoltatlons tbat .Q 'beclt lo Aug. 4, lllU. Meanwhlle1 he8vy fighting flared ntar Saigon and on South Vietnam's far northern front, sparking · the heaviest raids by U.S. warplanes over the south in ~ than two monlhs, military spokesmen said today . South Vietnamese troops enoountered &tiff reslstanoe for the aecmd. ·COJl. seeuUve day today tn the Micbelln nliber plantatlOll, ·40...u., :16rtltwearot'Salgoll~ where a major Communist build!lp of 8,000 men with armor and artillery wu reported. The buildup poses a major threat to the South Vietnamese capital and its ouUying areas. U.S. warplane!, no longer in action over North Vietnam, struck heavily in tbe area around Saigon and also in northernmost Quang Tri province where fighting also continued in the government campaign to push North Vietnamese forces back into the Demilitarized Zone between the two Vietnam.s. Ill all, U.S. jet figbter-bomben bit South Vietnam with 335 air strikes • between dawn Wedne!d.•y and SODup to- day, the highest number or raids by .tao- ticaI fighters over South Vietnam smce Nov. 9. In addition, Air Foret! BSZ bomber.; new·30 fonnaUoos of three planeJ each in the heaviest Stratofortrtss raids over the aouth since November. U.S. Finn Hires _Witch Dc>ctor To Aid EmployeS . . SINGAPORE (UPI) -A U.S..owned factory hired a Malaysian witch doctqr to try to restore order among women employes aelzed with fits of byatetia. One aecUoo ol tbe firm's ieleviston 'and apt>llaDce wembly plant wu llhut down for the third time .in 1 weU because of ll)'!lerla aelzura UllOllf! 11111 women , empk>yea, company officiall Aid. A iocuril)' guard and aeveral ol tbe plant'• employer 111d a 50-year-old 1'1.tcb doctor trom nelgbbortng Mala)'lla and three aasilt&llll entered the plant and burned In~ In an attempt.to calm the emplo)'i!l abd cleanse the. premlsel or evU splrllx. "'!be -ent probably -~ belle•• tn bcxnoba (witch doc!tors) but they know the glrb do and. probably tbouch~ it WU a good W'1 to get things back to normal," one empktye Kid. MylterlouJ ootbttw ol llystoita are not tlllCQtllJllon tn SlnpJ>Oll. abd Malayatll. Tbey usually arttct Jll'OUPI of people, mostly women, and oCcur in chain reactions. . " Typl<ally, one per•oo will begin ICrUl1llng and sometimes faint, trig· gerlng similar behavior by those nearby. ' / -- . f',...aPa9t1J BUDGET ••. hll desk In JuM . .At that point, be can eliminate or reduce a.ny spending Ip. proved b~ lawmakers. But he can't •dd to the amount pall!ed by the LeflslAture. • The major deporture ll'om Rea1an'1 • "squteie-and-cut ... nd·irlm" ec o n o m y philosophy was In emptoye aalary In· ci'ea1es. TELLS BUGGING ROLE Former A,ent Baldwin T rial Stalls In Watergate Bugging Case WASHINGTON (AP) -The Watergate political espionage trial _was stajled today while oppostng iawyen In a peculiar mix· ture of alignments arg\ied over whether the content of wire.tapped phone con- versa\lons could be used as evidence. U.S. Dlstilct John J, Sirica signed an order ruling that the names o! persons whose telephone caUs at Democratic par- ty headquarters were said to have been bugged, ~ well as the contenl i of their conversations, could be aired In court. An immediate appe al was taken to the U.S. Court. of AP°J)eals by lawyers for Democrats seeking to have the con· versations kept confidential. The government lnsisls it must give at least some indication of what wu in the conversations to illu strate the moUves behind a break-in and alleged wireta~ ping at Democratic Natiooal Committee headquarters last summer. But some Democrats Listed as overheard on thf bugs complained that !h('y were the innocent victims or wiretap(!ing and shouldn't be further em- barrassed by having their private ~ versallons revealed. Defense attorney Gerald Aldi, wbo represents James W. McCord Jr., former security chief fol. PrtaideDt NiDln'1 re-' election campaign, ~ed with the Democrau in trytng tii have the wiretap materi al suppressed.' But Peter Maroulis, lawyer for former Nixon finance committee counsel G. Gordon Liddy, joined tbe government's request for permission to use the in- formation. Meanwhile, dereme lawyers were listening to tapes of a Los Angeles Times interview with Alfred G. Baldwin Ill about the role Baldwin said be played as monitor of the wiretapped phone! and what he heard over the bugged lines. The extensive legal ald(>J)lay brought the trial to a bait in the mldst of Baldwin's tesUmony .. Baldwin testified Wednesday that he was paid '225 a week as a member of NI.Jon's campaign staff to monitor the conversaUons from a telephone which had been tapped earlier in tbe offices ot the Democratic National Committee. Five others earlier pleaded gullty and are awa iting sentencing in connection with the alleged political-espionage con- spiracy against Democrats. The alleged plot came to light after rive of the seven were captured at gunpoint Wide the Demc:tcratlc offices ln Washington'• Watergate complex. Two years ago, when the state faced a big budgel deDclt, Reagon told state workers they would have to (0 without the pay raises lo wbloh tbey bad become accustomed. ""1.ry leaden ol tho Calllomio Stale Empfo)'ft Alloclatlon began talking about a postlb!e strlke and IOIDe workers tn the Water Resources Department did walk out last ytar. Reagan had angry words for the CSEA last fall when ,it ran 11 '2·mllllon cam- paign to take away the governor's veto • over state worker salary Increases. Tb, effort. a proposed constitutional amend- ment. was de(ea ted In lhe November election. ~ .. But today there wu •·warm response from CSEA President LeRoy A. Pem- berton 10.J\eagan. "I believe that aU state workers will be pleased with the Gqvemor's action and impressecl. with lhe ract that he. has kept his commitment!" Pemberton said. The Governor budgeted f160 mllllon for the 13 pel'OOlt pay .bike. Rather than ' going to all employes across the board, it will be used lo correct inequities in salaries at the state level and in privatr- industry. Some employes may get more than 13 percent while other! get less. But Firiance Director Verne Orr said. "I would assume that most employes will get a raise." Tbe-Callfornia-HigbWiiy Patror.Wllrget $1 million in federal funds to launch an intensified battle agalnat auto thdt. And Reagan propoaed spending $25 million in new pa'rk and iecreatlOn proj- eCls including $7.4 million at Perris Reservoir in Riverside County and $2.9 million at Bolsa Chica State Beach at Huntington 'Beach. For tbose interested in precision, tbt total budget figure ls $9.258,835,583. That many dollar bill.! laid end to end would stretch nearly 900,000 miles, or more than three times the distance between the earth and the moon. f'rot11P11fJe J STORM ... section of U.S. 101 near Corte Madera fiooded but remained passable. The Flood Control Center in Sacramen- to siid no rivers had risen near tbe warning stage, but a spokesman feared there could be rni:>re problems when a high tide of 9.0 feet -about three feet above nonnal -occurs in the san Joa- quin Delta area of the. Sacramento-River tale today. U accompanied bY'higb winds, lhe Ude could be even higher, lhreateofug Ute leVees in tbe ate11, spokesman CWf Gregory said. Sex Businesss Scored in Veg as LAS VEGAS (AP) ·-A four·prooged attack against sexually provocaUve businesses here has been launclled by Q. ty Ally. Earl Grlpentrog. Gripen trog presented ctty com· missioners with four new ordinances dealing with massage parlors, adult book stores, X-ratcd 'movie theaters, female escort serv:ices and "good cause" for revoki ng such llce~s. The measures were p,-esented Wednes-- day on the heels or t\.lo recent District Court rulings in which the city was ordered to Issue business Ucensea to several sexually oriented concerns. Under the rulings, the alre.ady-pro- liferating local smut industry was1 es· pand'!d by three X-rated movie houses. one idult book store and one female escort service. Another recent ruling also allowed the city's only massage parlor to rerilain in operation. FACTORY BUY·-OUT OF ALL REMAINING 1972 LITTON MINUTE MASTER II 90 DAY CASH '#ml APPIOftO CUDfT MICROWAVE ' OVENS with MICRO BROWNER only at SAVE •9000 HUGaY -WHILE THEY LAST ~3 29~5 ' ...... dlli,..-ttH MW fl C•l!t .... ~ "-""'"" Of CMl'lw SUI """""'"! "r Miii II.If """tfl!YI mll"11rt ~llMI .a:u.s ~. llanding, in accordan<!e with clvU air 'l'he 1311,817.7' -...,bl<I -et• regulatiom, :ind this alfinily or mem-tcuted wllb the lnlugural Commtttee -m .. -· .. bcrshlp would be unrtlated to the 1m. Braniff said It was aPP'OOcbed 10< purcab.ase MID UJC of •Ir transportation. M M!r"Ykw 'Ol'llJ a few clan before the: Persons who join a club-type chart~ contract was submitted . • 1815 NEWPORT Bl VD. nOWRtown CestJ Mesa Phorte 548-7708 ' • • .I . • . . • . ' I . . ' ' . ' • • - -------- Leary Cultists Sued State Seeks $76' Million .in Bcick T~ RIVERSIDE (APl -The state Franchloe Tax Boon! has flied a claim 10< f16 mllllon ln back taxes against the Brotherhood of Eternal Love, believed to be t~ world's 1.a.rgest dealer ln 1.50, bashl8h and hashish oil. Forty.six membera of lhe Brotherhood, lncludlng drug cultist Tinaothy Leary, have been iodlcted in Orange County on chargea of smuggling and conspiracy. The Tax Claim, filed Tuesday states that the brotherhood owes back taxes for unreported Income during the past five years. The claim was flied in Riverside County because the Brotherhood reportedly owns a mountain ranch there. Offlclals refused to say how they asses~ the lien, which Includes only back lazes and interest . Actual lnoome o( the group is believed to have been much Coast Sailor Wins Hawaii Hobie Prelim By ALMON LOOKABEY D•llY Piiot ... 111111 1411111' HONOLULU -John Ross-Duggan, 18- year-old Hobie Cat sailor from Newport Beach, topped a field Of 56 in last-minute qualifying races for the first Hobie Cat World Championship regatta here \Vednesday. Also qualifying from Orange County was Hobie Alter from caplstrano Beach, the designer and builder of the famed 14- foot sailing catamarans. Alter pl.aced sixth ln the four qualifying races he.Id off Diamond Head and risked northeast trade winds and choppy seas. Nine skippers who qualified Wendesday brought the total number of entries in the championship series to 44. Thirty-five were qualified before arriving In the Aloha state. Five of the late qualifiers were from Hawaii. They were Bob Anderson; Cappy Sheeley, 1971 national champion: Larry i1acArthur, Robbie Barrel a"'1 ' Karl Heyer. ~ of the top qualifiers, 27-year-old Derek Kershaw from South Africa is a paraplegic paralyzed from the waist down. He has been sailing competitively for ooly one year and finished in fifth place, one place ahead ol. veteran Hobie Alter. 'Ibe other qualifier wu Jack Sammans of Florida. :1 -ao.-nuaan ble-itbeea sailing Hobie Cats since he was 15. Hil qualification brings to four the number of cham- pionshlp contestants from Orange Coun- ty. 'nte others are Alter, Wayne SChaefer of San Clemente and Richard Loufek of Costa Mesa. Two races were scheduled to be sailed today. Reverse scoring Is being used with a quarter-point bonus being awarded to the first-place finisher in each race. M In IMSt regattas,, the low ICOrer at the end of the series will be the winner. Brisk northeast winds were antk:lpated again today for lhe inaugural of the world championship competition. Expert Wins Airing \YASHINGTON (AP) -A. Ernest Fitzgerald, an Air Fora! efficiency ex- Ptf't fired after revealing a $2-billion cost overrun on the C5 transport plane, has won a long-sought open hearing before lhe Civil ServiCi! Comriilsslon. Fitzgerald was dismissed from his $31,000-a-year job in 1970 shortly after testifying before a congressional committee investigating the C5 contract with the Lockheed Aerospace Corp. • f higher. Sources say several Brotherhood mem- bers ha~e perlODal fortunes ol motfl than $L million, The Brotherhood, gra.hted tax-exempt status as a Callfoml• corporation in 1966, ls believed to have smuggled tons of II· legal drugs into the United States. The tax lien it the first public lndlc8tion or , the extent of its alleged activities. Formed ln Lagwia Beach, in the mid· 1960s, the brotherhood ls said to bave ex- panded U\lo a loose organiiation of 200 pcrsoO. that spedaflied In the im- portation of marijuana, hashish, and aome cocaine. , 1bt group also is believed to haVe manufactured an especially !lll"Oflg fonn of LSD known as ''Orange Sunshlne." Authorities say samples of this drug have Nixon's Emcee Art Linkletter will again be the master of ceremonies for the main presidential inauguration ball Saturday night. (Related story, Page 4.) Cliinese Fantasy To Be Staged At Saddleback The Chinese fantasy "Land of the Dragoo" will be' presented especially for sc;bool age children by students at Sad· dJeba~k CommUn.ity College Friday through Sunday al the C"l'IPUS theater. The orieotal !able includes a beautiful princess a wicJc,ed aunt and, of course, a few dragons, all under the direction of student Renee Du Moucbel of L8guna Beach. The play is offered without charge, however, reservations are necessary because of limited seating. They may be made by calling 831·9700 or 495-4950, ex· tenaion 44. Curtain is at 8 p.m. Friday, 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Saturday ; and 3 p.m. Sunday. The theater is located in building R on the campus. Saddleback cast includes : Kim Bates of Irvine as Princess Jade Pure; Randall Lund of San Juan Capistrano as the hero Roodwander; Beverly Sparks of San Clemente as the wicked aunt; Andy Pugni ol Tustin as cohort of wicked aunt; Marie Armstrong of Dana Point, Marybelh Elder of Santa Ana and De,bbie Sheets of San Clemente as ~ohn ?tlilosh of San Juan Capistrano u Roadwander's friend; Paul Barber of Mission Viejo as Small One the dragon; and also Steve Bransom of Dana Point, Colette Buddrus of Laguna Beach, Terry Griffith of Mission Viejo and Lindsay Karg of Laguna Beach. MOO tt , llOYE 1 l Rt1sriaa Rover on Moon been fOWld as far away as Australia and Europe. The ,Indictments, handed down laal year, culminated a four • year In- vestigation of the group tbat eventually reached around the world. Leary, who escaped from the sLate prison at San Luis Obispo tn ll70 whil.e serving a drug possession sentence, "\f\s arrested last week In Afgllanistau for having a false paasport and was onlered deported. Leery reportedly 1 e f l Algl>anl!tan Wednesday and WU believed bound for the Unlted States. Federal ofllclals said arrangements were being made to have Leary returned dir<Ctly to the U.S., but since 'there are no direct Oights out ol. Afghanistalf to the U.S., It wa. feared he might seek asylum at a stopover ~lnt. Philatklphia 'Resurrects' W.'C. Fields PHILADELPHrA (UPI) -In honor of the man who publicly loathed Philadelphia the most, a group of civic boosters is sponsoring its second annual W. C. Fields memoriir'6irtbday paity. 1be event, scheduled for Jan. 29, will be oomplete with child-insulting and dog- kickitlg .contests. ! Both events commemorate the late comedian's often • apressed dialike for children and animals. Fields, born in Philadelphia in 1880, died in 1946. Robert I. Afotta, president of the Sha~kama:ron Society, a light-hearted civic organization which promotes Philadelphia, said his son, Peter, 11, would be available for insults, as he was last year. "Peter developed some sort of a reputation last year by putting down the entire slate 1of adult insulters and he's been practicing for the past year by in- sulting himself in a mirror," Alotta aaid. He al.so said fear ol the wrath of humane societies caused contest officials to substitute a stuffed toy dog for the real thing. Appropriately, Atotta said, Peter stole the dog from his sister, Amy, 6. Candidate Fights For 1Prostitution SAN JOSE (UPI) -Andrew Diaz, 29, has anounced that be will seek election to the City Council and fight to legalize prostitution in this city. Diaz was arrested last November on ,...a variety of sex charges, including one that he operated a house of ill repute. He is free on bail, and his trial starts Feb. H. "li prostitution were legalized, It would be a helluva good way to relieve the overburdened taxpayer," be said Wednesday in his campaign an- nouncement. Siamese Twins Okay in Hanoi TOKYO (AP ) -Doctors In Hanoi have successfully separated a pair of Siamese twins, the otticial Vietnam News Agency reported today. • It said the twins, identified as Huong and Lan, were 13 days old and together weighed 8.6 pounds at the time of the operation. • • A Breath of Air • Thuncl•Y. January 18, l 't/3 s DAIL V PILOT :J Ul"I T.....,. Warhol's r Film Sets Off Furor LONDON (AP) Underground movlefllaker Andy Warhol has become a cause celebre in Britain. ~·lovie technicians, televisit)n critics. .intellectuals and the man Jn the street raised a record nation-wide protesl after a dOC'Umentary on Warhol's strange life and freaky times was banned from TV sereens Tuesday night by a British court. And the man everyone was blaming was ··a 47-year-0Jd sports l'Ommentator and one-time track sprinter Ross tttcWhirter. He won a tW<rweek injunction in the Appe;d Court lhat lianned the movie only four hours before it was scheduled to be shown Tuesday night. Spring fever strikes the Coney Island Aquarium and this Atlantic Har· bor seal takes advantage of it as he puts his head above the water to enjoy the sun apd the Califoi'nia-like weather warming New York. Thousands of viewers, angry at being cheated of seeing the bare1 breasts and scenes laced with four-letter words in the one-hour movie, Wednesday jammed the switchOOards of the Independent Broad- casting Authority -IBA -which supervises the commercial network that was to.have shown the film. Critics yelled "censorship." The Association of Cinemdtograph, Television and Allied Technicians declared the ban was · a "frightening precedent for unin- County Sign Law Okayed; Business Areas Exempted _,/formed judicial lnterventio1. in broad· casting ln a democratic society." Although IBA officials declined to com- ment oo Uie 2·1 decision by the Appeal Court judges, they warned the network was ready !o take the case to the-House of Lords, the supreme appeal court in the land. The Warhol sensation, which began with a withering condemnation of the movie by Sunday newspaper critics, ap- peared to be leading to a national row, with Britain's growing anny of an-~ tipornography cam paigners lining up against millions of irate TV rans and the TV industry. Orange County's sign ordinance was approved Wednesday by tile Board of Supervisors after a six month delay over its application to industrial areas. The supervisors sent the ordinance back to · the Planning Commission last summer with orders to hold hearings on the elimlnation of highway industrial '8nd commercial areas froom the areas in which billboards ate banned. The commissioner came back with the same prohibition on all highways in the county and the board voted 3-2 to eliminate the 'industrial spots. . Attorney Loren Norton argued that billboards were popular with the general public. Supervisor Ralph Clark moved that billboards be excluded along all highways except in industrial zones. ''There the signs screen unsightly areas," he argued. He was backed by Supervisor David L. Baker who had orig1nally objected to lhe industrial area ban. The pair got the deciding vote of Supervisor Robert Bat· tln. Board Chainnan Ronald Casper! tr.ied to put through a motion that banned billboaids everywhen; but it failed by the same J.2 vote. Only new Supervisor Ralph Diedrich supported him . Another clause was added to the ordin ance calling for fees on appeals banning specific billboards. Thames Television, IBA 's London network, reported all 84 of Its lines were clogged for two hours by protesting viewers. The IBA headquarters switch- board was jammed for an hour and a hall. The battle over the hour-long movie, produced in New York by photographer David Bailey last year, apparently made Warhol a British household name - more than his undergrou nd mov ies and bizarre pop art posters had eve r done. .JJ.J. (}arrell JANUARY luxurious spring down and f ea th er sofas • . • ' Your choice 3 Styles • 20% SAVINGS on all Floor Sample GRANDFATHER CLOCKS Choose lrom • large •election ol lebrics. 15% to 25% OFF on several DREXEL • HERITAGE Bed'room Dining Room Occasional Collections • 15% to 25% OFF on Floor Saniple SOFAS and CHAIRS • 20% OFF on all BEDSPREADS • 20 % OFF on all Fl09r Sample LAMPS • SAVINGS UP TO 20% on all Floor Sample LEATHER CHAIRS and SOFASEt a ·~~ Your favorite inurlor _de1ig1t11 wiU be happu to <Utirt uou VTVl' ·H.J.GARREIT fURNITURE 1t 1 'l0FHSIONAL 6-46-0275 INTWOl OESIGNW Ope• Mo•., 2215 HARBOR BLVD . Thun. l Fr;. Evtt. COSTA MESA, CX•lF. Tho soviet Lunok hod·2 moon robot rests on the surface of.the moon, charging its solar batteries 112 miles from where Apollo 17 lande,d tart month . Pravda says It was the closest a SOvlet mooncralt has come to an Apollo landing site and hailed a 0 new era" of Soviet-American cooperation ln ex· • changing moOn mWion teruUs. -· .:>-[ _ _:~~===-~~~=~= ... ~-~.~.~.~~~ .. ~·~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~:;~~=-...... -.. I 4 OAJLV PILOT ThurMS.u, J~YM:t 18, 1913 .Just . "\'\: ;::.~~} wial ·•···. Tom " urphine -· ''':~· .. Can't Keep Freeway Down OLD GHOSTS DEPT.-Newpon Bead! ci\•ic leaders and plain citizens alike have spent the better part or !he last 20 yean in a pretty well unified fighl against the concept or having a coastal freeway routed through their 1own. They fmally killed it. That t~'O-decades long battle has to go into the record book of our region as one of the great uphill fights of all tlme. . Just consider the record. For those Newport parties who ~ the idea of a superhigh~·ay through lhe harbor com· munity, things started looking bad as early as lSIA. · ABOUT THAT TI~IE, the state hig h..-:ay people declared existing Pacific Coast Highway a potential frteway route. In those days. lhe state didn't have to ramble throujh public bearings and alt that stuff. They Just declar<d it. So be it. Newport folks arum.bled a lot about this but figured It would all go away. It didn't. In the early Sixties, the state started talking about _condemning some live bait shacks in West Newpor1 to "preserve the right • of -v.·ay" for the fu1ure freeway. Next, however. came some rule changes requiring the state to hold public hearings and take evidence before freeway routes were selected. And sure .w>Ugh, when tilt state proposed alignments for lbe coastal freew ay, one of those study lines was right in tbe cor- i-idor of existing Pacific Coast Highway. lt surprised nobody. THREE 011IER. POSSCBLE inland routings were also OD the Study maps. Newport supported the most-inland align- ment. 'Ml.is routing went through Costa Mesa. Costa Mesa supports the most· coastal line. nus followed some huge hearings and a lot of fine speeches. In May 0£ 196.1, the State Highway CommWion adopted the Coast Highway route smack through Nev.1J0rt. Nonnally in free~ay matters. you v."Ould figure the issue was now settled and Newport lost. Here comes the lrt€v;ay. A Well, the record shov.'s that the follov,r- ing 10 yean v.·ere spent with Newport continuing to fight to get the coastal route stopped. Newpor1 got an unex· pected ally when the ecology movement surfaced with a Jot of political clout. NEWPORT LOST VIRnJALLY: every round in the freeway fight. But like the boxer who doesn'~ know when he's licked. Nev.·port battled on and emerged the vic- tor by a knockout in the final round. That knockout came when the state gave up and the Legislature officially deleted Pacific Coast Freeway from the state freev.·ay system. Meanwhile. of course, traffic conditions along our roastal corridor have gotten a lot worse. And even Newport folks con· cede today that something has to be done to alle viate traffic congestion. SO ONLY LAST Tuesday, the Orange County Plalllling Commission abruptly suggested it wants a study toward creating a possible "Transportation C.or- ridor" along the old coastal freeway route from Newport to San Clemente. The tenn "Transportation Conidor" iJ a rather new plaMltig tt.rphem,ism . NeYr-port folks, hov.·e\'er. read it fref:way -or at the very least, superhighway. The county's corridor notion bas caus- ed some gnashing of teeth today among old freeway fighter! in Newport Beach. THEY HAO ) BURIED the coaatal ·rreeway and now it seems to them It just y,·on't stay dead. Somebody keeps digging it up. The ghosl or the thing keeps haunt . ing them and causing nightmares. The specter floats back, shaking musty o 1 d maps that contain red lines and green Jines and yellow lines. Clearl y it must seem to a lot of Newport folks that some things realty do die bard. Banker, Famify -1!ied to Trees, Slain Victim Says He W 0$ Wired . .. . ....., By Dynamite Before Death lly SAMUllL 0. HANOOCIC GRANDIN1 Mo. (UPI) -A bant J)l'tsl· dent, hl1 ... and lf.yeoM!d dluptu haw been fOwtd boUnd to u... and lbot • to death in the woodl, •ppuentl7 Y1<llma of ex-Sbonly belon, the lftll· dtnt had enttrtd his Banlt or Grlllldln, told • bookkeeper he wu wlt<d with dynamite, and rushed out with flJ,000. Early todlY •uthorjUea amsted and betlan quecUoolrli two men. Pollce would only uy the two were stnn&en who earlier bad aoughl lnlormalloo about Grandin -a town of. 25<1. found on Kltlerman's body, but he .. Id he .. _, know why he (Klttennan) would aay he wu wired with dynomllo lf he wun't.11_ Sherif! Lewl1 Dawes. said early today that "eveYJ thoueh no dynamite was found on Klttennan ," evtdence tndlcated be had apparently had something tied to hla body. Jackson said he thou&bl • the victlms had been dead about 45 minules when they were discovered near the CUrrenl River, part of the OWk National Sc<nic Rlverways in southeast ltflssourl. The farm is about 25 miles north of the Arkansas border. 0 WE DAVE SOME other suspect&,'' • pollce ~ Aid, "but we don' -boor pid thef uo. '' POIJCE BELil!;VE the bandits Riley Ccunty Cormer Howard Jacklon ordered Kitterman to drive with the said the bodies of Robert Klttermlni .U, money to the wooded location where his his wife, Berilla, II, and dlugbtu wile and daughter wt~ held and then llobtrta were found 1D wood.a near an bound and shot them. 8bald»ned fann·bouse in hilly. aecluded Kitterrnan's automobile and his country. daughter's sports car were found near Kitterman and his wile. had each been the bodies. shot tllrool)I the temple. Their claugbter, The banker's dfughter bad atlended who had announced her engagllllOllt classes W-y momlng at Carter Wednesday, was lbot In the back ol the Coonty High School wltere she was a head. straight "A'' student and then went home Mrs. Klttermm and ltoberla ,..... Ued for lunch. The banker and hla wife, who MISSOURI WOOOEO AREA SEARCHED FOR CLUES IN EXECUTION OF THREE Victims Pictured in Mset-Robtrt, Berth• .nd Robert• Kltt•rm•n t~ the aame tree, while Klttennu wu~. worked as an assistant cashitt at the tied to another tree. · r bank, also bad gone home for lunch. Hoopla Kicks Off Tonight 11IB TRAGIC EPISODE appuenUy bepn abortly after _, Wedi-1ay, wlMn Kitterman atumbled Into the bank and announced : "'Ibey bavo iey wile and daughter.'' Ralph Slanley, the bank'• bookkeeper, told authorities the bank wu cklled for the lunch hour when Kitterman et'ltered the bank, gathered money into a sack, and said he was wired with dynamite. He hurried out of the bank without saying anything else, Stanley. said. Ml II I Ag11ew Reception Starts lnauguration ,Festivities WASIDNGTON (AP) - A reception for Vice President and Mrs. Spiro T. Agnew this evening followed by a "salute to the states" signal the officials start of' Presi- dent Nixon's secoOO-term inaugur~tion festivities. Nixon, who is returning to the capital after six days at his Key Biscayile, ·Fla .• home, will arrive too late to attend two receptions sCheduled for tonight. His wife. Pat. is sched .. ~led to pincb-b.it for him at both events. The President and ?ifrs. Nixon will drop in oo three inaugural concerts Friday • Senator Moves To Tax Cigarets For Tar Content \VASHTNGTON (AUPl\ -Following the government's latest warning to cigaret smokers about possible health hatards, Sen. Frank E. Moss ([).Utah ), said he wou1d introduce a bill today to la1 cigarets according to tar content. .. Surely at this time, when we talk of imposing differential taxes on Jeaded and unleaded gasolines, we should be prepared to move in a similar manner on this peraooal health program," Moss said in a statement. "The heavy ,13moker of high tar and ni- cotine cigarettes is the ooe who demands hospitalization so a hlgber premium should be established for him ln finan. cing municipal services," the chairman of the Senate Consumer subcommittee said. , In a report to Congress, the Depart· ment of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) told cigarette smokers Wednes· day that the increasingly popular "lit· tie cigars" may be as dangerous to their health as cigarettes. "It is reasonable to conclude that smoking little clgan may result ln health effects similar to those a590Ciated with smoking cigarets if little cigars are smoked in amounts and wit h patterns of inhalation similar to those used by cigaret smokers," said Or. Merlin K. Ou Val. night They wU1 alsd make appearances at five inaugural balls followq-~il:on's taking of the oath of office al the noon- hour ceremoo.y Saturday at the Capitol. MEANTIME, BACKERS and foes of Nixon's war policies laid plans to parade In force S&turday. -- Tbe inaugural committee estimated that 50,000 out~f-towoers will come for the weekend's events, most of them for the swearing-in and inaugural parade. More than 180 of the estimated 300 ~rviving Medal of Honor recipient& from World War I on w!ll be.honored at the in- auguration. beginning with a luncheon to- day and at a banquet and the inaugural balls Saturday. 1be banquet will be hosted by one of Nixon's biggest donon, W. Clement Stone., aAd emceed by Bob Hope. /.rt Llnkle\tu again w1ll be Master or. Ceremonies for the main Pr..tdentlal iDauguratloo bell Saturday. MEANWllILE, EMBITTERE D ve terans from the war in Vietnam are arriving to participate in a protest marcb trorn the Washington Monument to the Lincoln Memorial at the same time the President parades from the Capitol to the White Hoose reviewing stand. Their. planned routes do oot cross. Tonight, Mrs. Nixon is expected to stay brieny at the AgneWs1• reception at the Smith3onian Museum of History and Technology, then appear-at the salute to the states and their governors. The salute will Cike place in the newest DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtliwry of the Daily Pilot is guaranlttd ~•r·ll"rW..,: U Y.., ,. ~•! ..... ywr ..... , .,. J:lt '·"'·• c•U 11M1 ~r <Ol'l' ••II .. trh9lt ,. pe, '"'' ••• lfl ... ""'ij 1:• '·"'· ttmoy ..., SVll!lrf: ff 'l'W • Ml renl.,. .,..,.. c,,, tv t ...... s1111<11,., •• , • "·"'· Sifn'ly, Clll IM I ct,, will to. .,...,,,., l<t ""· '"'" ••• , .......... u ...... Motl Or11191 Couritv .Ar"s .• ~42-4121 Korlhwesl Huntlng!Ofl 911<'.h • end Wntmlnsllr . .. . . 540·1220 Sin C..,_,11, C1pi$"1no llffch, Son J....,, C.plstr•no. 0.!>f ~lnr, Soulti l.a9UM, L-O-NIQl,l9I 492-4420 and grandest of the federal ·buildings. the John F. Kennedy Center for the Perrorming Arts. Authorities said a coonty aebool o[f1elal who saw Klttennan lu.ve the bank said Kitterman told hhn "my wlfe and daughter are being held hosbge by some extortionists. Call the highway patrol." 00 SEN. PHILIP HART and the Rev. Philip Berrigan head the speakers list for an antiwar rally which sponsors say is expected to draw tens of thousands. jf ~ -l Organizers say talk of a Vietnam C9se-flre and a haJt in the bombing of North Vietnam have not dampened. enthusiasm for a weekend of antiwar ac- tivity. which bas been endorsed by more than 30 memben of C.OOgress. Stanley told police Kitterman appeared very frightened and walked "stooped o'"r" when be entered the bank and told him not to turn on any lights or electrical switches. Re explained that be had dynamite wlred to bis chest JACKSON SAID no dynamite was .J1"c"' 'And how'$ the snooping trill/ goin,q?' 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER PH: 644·0991 8wJ; f,ah/qc',.'" \ s r £ CUt tiiS1~\. ~!'GE~iAt\;\Cl 102' 11i.TS ~-,,. ~~! 6ucll$Au, !"~f: , w." ~;o" 01st1 16' ~~'IEllE$l\£-f1'~ 111,M = ~~ '\/£ Ec1.-,, "•o. ~ILLION•' ...~ IALE£t'-,. CIC ~ 21Jt• 0 5ALAO ~Oltl' ' SOLVANG • NEWPORT BEACH January clearance SAVE 25 TO 30°/o ON THE FOLLOWING IMPORTED CUT aRYSTAL Conely Dl1hH Coast•r Sets Sugar & Creamers Butter Dishes Misc. Gift Item• . COMPUTE "EL CID" LINE II.Ck Wolnut It Loother Rains Soaking Far West ·~ ls ITAll ,._: i.!~~~ ~i~-, c.i.;;. .._ r11s ..... . . Lanterns, Candl11 L .. thlr tne41Md glasH1 & mUSI• Fi1mou1 ''Early American Lighter" f Bottlo Wino Rock Most of V.S. Baskin g in Spring-li~e Temperatures -' VARIOUS l'RE ·PACKAGED flood It Fl1h Poc11- fJJ!fbl1/iltfl;- sric'"'"' TM OolloPlng Gour,,,.I . l'llh HG,iteJ ntomollonol 25 TO 30% OFI' ' ' H0511SS GIFTS -LARGE VARlm U\.ll c-.MOY 10111.Ell I! ""'4 ..... ;-i '"'°l 11\. I W-Coo1tor S.11" Crystol Ice lluckot1 ... , "' .. •••• "" ;_ ..... , """"... oc>M""' '°"'' ·-p1MO'f c.V.ll-. 1'' ~ ...... 1""-· -t- D•nllh IU..J!!!!o.Llt N1pkln Holde" V. Lltor Doconton Coromlc Coold• Cn>Ck Oon"I' ChMM Kn lvH MINI HAIACHI " ... $4.'5 rs ...... ..,,,.. WINE 595 WALL ~ /IACK 11 •. WE ARE AS CLOSE AS YOUR PHONE OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY 11 A.M. TO f.Jt P.M. ) TUES., WED., THURS., SAT. 10 A.M TO 6 P,M. ~U N. NQl)H TO 5 P.M. VISIT OUR WINE TASTING ROOM ., ' ... I ' • I ,J 1 ' ~sherg: • Traitor, Patriot? LOS ANGELES A(API - Two faces of· Daniel Ellsberg -~e an (llleged crlmlnal conspirator 1ketched by the government, the other· a dedicated patriot portrayed by the defense ...., have been. CAIJORNIA presented to the Pentagon '--------" Papers jury which must decide which is true. In opening arguments to the jury, Ellsberg's chief attorney Leonard Boudin said Wednes· day the r 0 r m e r govern. ( BRIEFS I ) ment researcher "felt he was doing an important thing' for his country" ,.when he copied the top secret documents detailing origins of the Viet- nam war, The government prosecUtor, Asst. U.S. Atty. David Nissen portrayed. Ellsberg and Q>-defendant Mthony Russo as being "In panic" while copying .the documents because "they were aware they were doing something unlawful." e Wreekage Found PALM SPRINGS (AP) - Searchers found the bodies of three persons in . the wreckage of a private plane that cr¥1shed while on a flight from 'Phoenix, Ariz., Riverside County officials said. The bodies have not been identified but the Federal Aviation Administration has said that three Phoenix-area men were belieVed to be on the plane. Birch Ads Okay,,Says LA Council LOS ANGELES (AP) -The City Council says the Board ol Public Worts sOOuld sell bus bench adverlillng'to· lbe John Bi«:h Society which-want. to urge citizens to get'the United States out of ... the United Na- tions. The ~iety was turned down last October when it sub- mitted the bench ad: "Get us .out of the United Nations. For tnformalion call the John Birch Society, San Marino." The city attorney advised that the decision should be reconsidered -to 'allow the society to put out its ads. The council agreed Wednesday. Smoke Bill Proposed • No IHlstrlal SACRAMENTO (AP) SAN FRANCISCO (AP) California: school districts The judge in Ruchell Magee'1 could permit bigb school murder trtaJ denied WOOnes-students to smoke on campus day a mJstrial motion t h a t under a bill introduced claimed "irreversible error'\ Wednesday by state Sen. Arl~n because the trial ptoceeded Gregorio. with the blacki,.convlct held in . The San Mateo Democrat's a jail cell wbei'e be could not 'measure would delete present hear testimony.· law limiling s-..g to Magee's "~aming and stµdents 18 « okler. banging on the walls" o! his . .\'lbe measure leaves ii up to holding cell o!! the courtroom tne districta to decide -tiler Tuesday required his transfer to permit amoking by those to the seventh floor jail four under 18. floors above, Superior Court A similar bill was killed last Judge ~1orton R. Colvin year. declared. Gttgorio's bill ts.S8·71. Venefltngl ... nMIH 10"hlg~, ueortod coiorL • . ; • ' . Th" --''c.'':..' _:Jc.".c'"c_':_'.::_1'::_, _:l_c'7_:l ________ OAI l ( P ll.OT 5 Texas Man Arrest.ed 1~-~-~-~/~/ ~~~F•N~A~L .w~e~EK~s ;,,_of.=.~ •• ArrER THE arrest or John- nie Lee Harbert Ill in Dallas Wednesday on federal charges and a murder warrant issued In Imperial County, Imperial County Dist. Atty. James E-. Hamilton asked Busch to step into the case. Hamilton said be asked Busch tn intervene slnce'-the cm originated' in Los Angeles. Busch said his office would begin extradition proceedings. The body of Susan Elizabeth SchuJer, Zl, was found in the desert wrapped in a green sweater and towel art.er she vanished from her suburban Ladera Heights home on Dec. 3. Authorities said Miss Schuler, a seni9r studying at USC to be a teacher, had been I Tea11asters G.-ipe Girls Keep on Truckin' --Without Union Du es SAN FRANCISCO (UP I)' -RUDY THAM, the local Three shapely -mode.ls , fired president and one or the two from a Boat Show because men who approached the ex- they didn't belong tO the hibitors, denied Wednesday that any threats to close the Teamsters, have been rehired show had been made or that after the union d~ided it . he said the girls should be didn't want any part.of them. replaeed by Te ams t·e rs · models, including his ONE OF THE girls, Margot daughters. Law, has returned to work and "We reel a model shouTdn't P od the other two will be back at work a trade display show r uCer their displays during the because we have jur1sc11cuon," weekend. said 'Miam, who insisted the ' • The models, who filed unfai r models were doing work that Threatened tabor practices ch 8 r g es union clerical help should against Teamsters LocaJ 856, perform. were fired from the trade "We don 't want any part of B Call show last weekend after union those models," he added. "It . y er members picketed for two must be a publicity stunt." hours and a pair of Teamster SANTA MONICA (AP) leaders warned exhibitors THAM, 0WHO Is awaiting Ralph Riskin, producer of the against U§ing them. trial on federal extortlo television .. series ''Bridget Miss Law, Angela A1ay and charges in New York, said he l.<lves Bernie," was threaten-Yvonne McDaniel angrily de-doesn't expect much to come nounced the union, noting that from a National Labor Rela· ed over the telephone by a b •t built Jik tru k · Bo rd · r r r man who felt the· series was t ey weren e c lions a 1nves 1ga ion o drivers.· the model~' complaint. JANUARY DOUBLE KNIT oi-WOOL • SPORT COATS Reg. 85. to 95. NOW $41 Reg. 100. tQ 110. NOW $51 Sizes: 38 to 48 Regular or Long 1 Gro11p e lro•e11 lots SPORT COATS ·::· $33 S11D 1port coat1 Alpaca Tw~Ply Imported SWEATERS Reg. 32.5~All Colors ~ Double knit ·SLACKS Reg. to $26.50 Designer Double-knit SPORT 1/. SHIRTS i'2 ' PRICE ·Long Sleeve VELOUR Reg. i4.50 _SPORT $14 50 SHIRTS Washable Arnel ~ I POLO ~HIRTS 112 PRICE I' demeaning to the Jewish be.li~f1'jii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i~ against interfaith marriage, II -------------- police say. BOUTIQUE Robert S. Manning o! Santa Monica was taken inlo custody Wednesday and booked for Jn. • .,LEANE. RS vestigaUon o! m a k i n g '--· ' threatening calls to Riskin. ALTIU.TIONS & IDnLIN• Manning was released 00' $500 FOi PHTICULAI LA.DID ba,;\;. wevi.sion series Warner-Dale Center portrays the marriage of a Corner of warner & Springdale, Huntington Beach Catholic woman and ' a Jewish 842·2050 man . Mon Uy pod wood tray auortment 99¢ u . Soup and aandwich Ml 91¢ Ceramic CL!PS on Wood grain plastic tray. Little touches ·make the difference. .. HANKIES, HOSIERY, JIWELIY 20~'• OFF Doi loper, etc. P•r. Silk ' Polr .. Nr NECKWEAR 3.75 ~~ MENS' SHOP WEEKDAYS ' TO I 100°/o Cashmere PULL-OVER SWEATERS Rl!O, lfJ.Je NEWPORT IEACH 11 07 Jombo!'ff Id, -'ho,..: 644-0130 LOCATED AT THE NEWPORTH INN Ui.t Twr lonllAmerkorcl or .Miiier Clllrt• Am111e Por1tint - India brass aatortment 99t ea. ~. ·~ ' i\1 ii 1~ C11t Iron lrivet •uorlment 99¢ e1. Wood fork and spoon ••fa(f set m . E1rlhenw1re VIH a1tortment 99¢ e1. haftekarvld African Wood Nelpe stand. 1nlm11s th 11. with Ind•• c1rd11tti ' e TOllllKf s.J-•-e LAUWOOO ClrlOI St. IOI Pao-< ~~. e IUllA PAii llu<I ""illHlelilo<Jt · o, ........ ,.,,,.,.,1J01s.•,.1•t•1 e tUllAllA 1HLU llllOll-St e WOOl!Ll• MW 21SOll V1Ci11J ~.i. • llVIUIOl 3520 lyW e SAMTl HA So. Coast PlllJ ·---·~--.. -• • .... -- .. ·-----...:::. :">--.._....,.-. ~ -r. '··-·· ·-• .t ___ "f ... 'J)------~~------. - ·-. ' -. ~ .. I ,, I • • • J DA.RY , ILOT EDITO~ PAGE ~ . ' ,· City Budget Booster ,. (Ip and down the Orange Coas~ clly councilmen, city m:in~ers and fi nance direetors are u1resUlug with the unique probl em or deciding bow to spend the fat 1'"ederal revenue sharing checks that ba\•e tun1bled frorn city mailboxes ln recent weeks. The cities have re<-eived their first t\VO checks and the third is due around 1\pril, each _tepresenting sLx n1pnths' \\'Orth oC Federal n1oney to bo6st loc al budgets. \Vhile most citizens probably u·ould be Inclined to rerommend just divvyin g up the cash and distributing it to the al,vays hard-pressed taxpayers, it's not quite that simple. Revenue sharing \vas conceived to enable local governments to proceed v.'ith needed projects "'ilh- ot!t raisi ng taxes. . Allocation of the funds is determined by a formula lhal takes into account population and av erage income. along Y.i.lh the local "tax effod~ or.amount of revenue curTenUy raised through local taxes. ' Any reduction ln this "tax effort,." boWever. re- sults in an automatic reduction of revenue sharing funds the following year:. But by maintaining current tax levels and using the federal funds for specific projects. the maximum federal al location is assured during the !ive- year sharing program. The funds may be used for a wide vari~y o! local expenditures.. including public safety, envlronmenW protection, public transportation, health·, recreation antl social se rvices for the poor and aged. Orange Coast communities are taking ·a cautious approach tb spending the Federal windfall. Huntington Beach will decide how to spend Its $700,000 annual all ocation on completion of a six-year financial plan for the city. Fountain Valley. with about $166,000 a year, is considering investing the money in a long-planned city recreation center. Costa ~tesa, with an annual $661,000, lumped its money 'Nith a leieal surplus to create a $1.8 million fund which will :be spent according to a priority list dra\1/n up by the council. Ne1,1,-port Beach Y.i!l spend its annual Sl 70,000 on high priority capital improvements. probably incJ uding expanded Police and lire facllltles. San Clemente, collec'ung about $100,000 1 yeu from the fun~. and Laguna Beach, wllh $91,000, hive put the money in the bank pending determlnall<>n o! priority spend.in& goals.. • .. The brand new city of Irvine received on\y '46,000 !Qr its first yearly allocation, but expects $100,000 next year. pro baWy to be apent on needed capital lmprove- 1ne nts. To the extent that the windfall fedenl d-Ollars are put to 'vork by cities and the county on needed, sub-' stantial projects or prograru that could not be imple- 1nented without increased local taxes, the ho~s !or re,·enue sharing \\'ill be fulfilled . , Frivolous projects or simply finding devices to re- bate the money to local taxpayen could doom a prQm· . ising new era of n<>strlngs federal assistance to local government. Guide for the Gullible The list of currently populu fnuda in a new book- let put out by the State Department of Justice would seem to indica te the nation's sucker population is not diminishing. "On Guard: A Guide for the Consumer," makes in· triguing. reading and contains a quantity of useful in· formation for the Cltizen interested in reducing his gullibility factor. Assorted bunco schemes ' and various brands of medical quackery, inffilding a hearing aid racket·whlch has defrauded hundreds of senior citizens are outlined, along with steps that can be taken by victims. Also covered in the consumer guide are such items as installment contracts, warranties, credit cards and dance and health studio contracts, along with lips on haviifg cars repaired. bulldlrig" a swimming poot and dealing with door-t<Hioor salesmen. The bookJet is available lrom the State lnformation Services, Wells Fargo Bank Building, 500 Capitol Mall, Sacramento, Calif. 95814. -- I ' Europe Eyes U.S. Quiet Wit Often Most e Pag, More Staff, Less Work • Inflation Fight That new American economic game. "The Phases." is fast catching on in , Europe. London's ~Financial Times reports that. "Washington has been in- fested by teams of European go\'emmenl officials searching for the philosopher's stone." With consumer prices in the nine Common Market countries risi ng at an aMUa\ rate of more than a percent in the last quarter of um, Europeans "''an t to know how America has reduced its in- flation rate to 3.5 percent. A YEAR AGO, Britain's Conservative government was stU~ clinging to its policy of "'1_anding finn" agai nst in- flationary price increases. But v.·hen prices rose by an annual rate of nea rly 12 percent in the autumn of 1972. Prime Minister Edward Heath announce d a· wage-price freeze. 1-fe called it "A Programme for Controlling Inflation: The First Stage." Now, while the United States is em· barldng on Phase Ill, Bri tain 1s work- ing on Stage U. Heath would like to have his proposals ready before Parliament returns from its Christmas recess on Jan . 22. To everyone's surprise in England, the freeze has "'·on "''idespread acceptance. AT LEAST a dazen European countries imposed statutory price freezes or con· trols in 1970-71. For the most part. these measures were ineffective. France for exam~e. has had price controls of one kind or another since 1939. Britain tried a free ie in the mid·1960s with scant success. In 1965, the governing Labor Party established a National Board for Prices and In comes. Then , in .July 1966, it ordered a total freeze for 12 mon ths. Although retail prices increased by less than 1.4 percent in that period. the freeze ca used such a large decline in profit margins th at an investment recession followed. Western Europe's in nation problem mig ht not be so seve re if governmental EDITORIAL RESEARCH action had come earlier. For example, it .. was not until last October th.at the Com- mon Market temporarily ~uced tariffs on beef imports. if'rench industry is now asked to lilQlt prite increases to 4 per- cent and wage 'increases to 6 percent . And Dutch trade union leaders agreed .,.ith ~ irJvemmen\ in J:>e<;!mber that tl!ere ~'DO ~ativts to 'Umiting wage · i.s 'p.ftent Md priCe rises to 5. 75 t fn 11173. BRlTjjN'S National Institute has recommended that Parliament fashion Stage n a1ong the, Jines of America's economic controls program. Stage I is scheduled t.o eod on Feb. Tl but may be extended for 30 to 00 days. This would give lhe government time to get its legisla tion through Parliament. The Observer reports that there will be no attempt at rigid control of retail prices during Stage 11 and th.at there is no question of monitoring wages. The current thinking is that there will be a flat increase of 3 pounds sterling a week for the lowest-paid Y.-orkers. with a percentage ceiling on wage increases for those better off. Such a step would enable the government lo meet its pledge to , give the most help to those who most need it. Not everyone is enraptured with the American approach, however. Enoch Powell, an outspoken Tory member of Parliament, has stated, "A statutory prices and incomes policy is a forcing bed in which the weeds of tyranny spring up ove rnight." Its influence is "insidious and corrupting/', he contends. But Heath believes that, gi ven Britain's fragile economic position, it will not soon. be possible to allow prices an d wages to find their nat ural levels. Watergate Maneuvers \VASHI NGTON -We l'an no\\' :oihf'd more light on the backstage erforts to persuade the Watergate defe ndants to plea d guilty and save the While House the embarrassment of a publi c trial. On Dec. 26, we rePortcd th~t the Justice Department had discrce!ly sounded out SUTle of the defendant.s about entering guilty pleas. The proeer.u· tors "'ere cautious in their conver;sa- Uqis with defense la"yers. But more d I r e c l mes.sages w e re r e la ye d through E. Howard Hunt, the ronner White House alde tlnd CIA veteran. IN RETURN, the defendant s hinted they might make some\ embarrassing revelations If they were abandoned. Some indicated they .might write books aOOut their experiences, telling all. Hunt agret'CI to plead guilty, apparently "'ilh :i t11.cit understaJtdlng that he wouldn't have to spend too long In jail. IJe urged the other defendants privately to follo\v his c;ii;ample. (four of slx ha ve clone so. f:d.) Some or the de fendants. who had been involved with Hunt in the Bay of Pigs operation. also received prlv1te visits from some of their former CIA com- radet. TM: visitors brought expeme AT FIRST, the dd'endants held out for money and also offered to mnke ttgUlar n softening of the charges. The fivf who payments to the dtfendanls' families. A ~re caught Inside Democratic head-$1,@a·month figure was menUoned. quarters, I.or example, wanted the break· il1 charge redu~ to Illegal entry. This OUR SOURCES coutd not, or would "-'OUld tiave made their offense a simple not. identify the men behind the scenes. mildemuoor. We can report only that m0$t ot the Any cUUina: back of the charges, 1~y for tho d!fcndants was funneled l'klwever, would hive looked like a Ox. So tlllf"ugb Hunt. He delivered part or lhe instead, the mysteJY men behind the cash to Bernard Barter, who &l~yt~ ._. scenes used pressure and persuasion. • II lo lhe men M tlad rocruih.'<l fo?nfe They o.lso alternately slopped and rcsum-\Vnterg&te misadventure. 1-funt's wife Effective Thoughts at Large: A quiet man who em.its an occasional flaSh of wit earns more respect than a witty man who coruscates all the time and soon comes to be regarded as a mere entertainer. • • • The predOminant tendency of human beings is to confuse the package with the prcxluct , the map with the territory, the symbol with the substance; as long as such gullibility per- sists, the few will prosper and the many will COlltinue · to be victimized. • • • . In the craft of lit- erature, unlike the purnull of game, the surest way to miss the target is lo shoot point-blank. • • • Why do we call a dramatist a "playwright," when nobody calls a poet a "poem.wright'' or a novelist a ''novelwright''? • • • l\fOS? PEOPLE practict what they call morality for the sake o( personal ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ safety; but no morality is creditable until it becomes dangerous, uncomfortable, or uneconomic. • • • We shall never succeed in achieving "peace" tmlil we understand that it is a matter of law, lllld not a matter of mere sentiment : peoples who live under dif· ferent civil laws can never have peace - only war or an uneasy truce, depending upon lheir mutual feelings . • • • WHAT EVERY couple should be handed with the marriage license is an engraved wa·U-plaque bearing'. Elbert Hubbard's trenchant words : "Every qUarrel begins in nothing and ends in a struggle for supremacy." • • • People who say of troubles: "Why did this have to happen to.me?" never say of an unexpected boon: "Why did this have to happen to me?" -yet both are equally contingent and equally un- deserved. • • • For honest tact, without lying, surtly the award must go to W. S. Gilbert, who tlad to go backstage to see an actor friend who had given an especially bad performance: on entering the dresslngp room, Gilbert patted him enthusiastically on the shoulder and declared, "My dear fellow, good Isn't the word !" Dear Gloomy 'Gus I µnderstand Ridiaril Nixon iJ hAv- lnc ·111e .Philadelphia Orcbeslra to plll)' the 1812 Ovsture 11 hJJ In- auguration. Will be call in ~11 to aimulat. lbe c:arum fire! -D.J. -• .od-tlle caab-l'l!")lonta.tlJat.~• x I"""' cauytng 110.000 ln ... aslu •heiube _ mlsed to the defendants. ms kiUed In a Cbicago airliner crash ' , Oldtimer Views Lawmakers Capitol News Service P..1uch bas been written recently about the rap~ incf'.'!;ase in the cost of the Califo~a legislature over the past two decades or !O, as well as of additional in- creases expected. Some of the extra cost -and total costs have tripled in less than a decade -goes to increased salaries for the 120 lawmakers themselves. An even steeper increase, however, has been due to the proliferatioo of staff members fo'r the legislators, both in the offices of in· aividual leglslators and on various con- sult.ing staffs. SOME SACRAMENTO observers view this population boom as a greater thhat to eood state government than the boom -not end in algbt, either -in g~vermnental costs. A man who holds such a view ....... and a view from the very center of things, too -is fonner Assemblyman Charles cOnrad, a Republican fi-om the Hollywood-Hollywood Hllls-soutb San Fernando Valley sections of !As Angeles, wb> In November was retlred by the voters of the 57th district. · When Conrad, then a character actor in Hollywood, first came to the legislature in 1946 (as the 1972 session ended, he was in a tie for second ln lower house seniority, tied for third overall), a 90Jon'1 salary was jl,200 annually, He continued to act fo6il living until 1966, when voters okayed a full-time legislature. A CONSERVATIVE Republican in a (GUEST REPORT) once-safe distri ct. he was defeated by a well-financed and liberal Democrat. in a district that now has a 52 to 39 perttnt Democrat edge in registered voters . And he'd seen those salaries increased to $19.!00, plus fringe benefits th at, some legislators say. puts California's lawmakers in a class with other people making as much as $150,000 yearly. Over the years. Conrad has ~ a lot of changes\ and not all of them · have made him happy. , He's definitely unhappy about the vast increases in legislative staffers. "l think the staff is getting -Into decision-making now," Conrad observed shortJy before the end of the session. "In the old days, you could say the lobbyists wrote the bills in the back room , and there is no doubt that occasionally hap- pened . "Now; you h:ive staff writing bills in tpe back room that the legislator ipey work for doesn't know what Its all about. That never happened in the old days.'' CONRAD NOTED that in recent years he bas heard complaints from both con- stituents and lobbyists that "they ha.,·e to go through the staff aide lo see lhe legislators. I think .its gotten tq the point where !Orne of the staff are trying IQ be legislators themselves. ''And we are. seeing more 1taff members running for lhe legislature. A brilliant liberal once told me he felt the staff in many cues had a contempt for the legislators, because they think we are cheap .... we have to go out and cam- paign among the public." A result of all this, as Conrad sees it, Is lhat todaY's legislators just don't work as hard as did tbe lawmakers of a quar-ter- century and more ago -and be admits this applies to Charles Conrad just as It does to bis colleagues. As eviden~, he cites the decline in the number of scheduled committee bearings held at night. GENERAL ABILITY among the solons, be feels, has remained about the same over the years -overall, due to a leveling process. There are fewer "clowns," but also fewer "outstanding .. .. high caliber". people able to afford the salary losses they'd have to take as members of a full-time legislature. Now 63 years old, Conrad has said he would not have sought rH lection last year but for the opportunity to become chainnan of the national Council of State Government s. "a great opportunity Jo do something.'' At one time, Conrad hoped to become Secretary of State, but his political career has come to at least a temporary end v.·ith tha t ambition unrealized. l'low ifs back to Shennan Oaks with his "actor's tmion card stiU ln" his pocket. but , 'so far as future plans are concerned, "a great desire to be a bum for a while." Given Charles Conrad's record, that "whil e" may not be too long a one .... Don't Blow Yet, Gabriel! Scent: The Heavenly Real Estate Qf. ( J f,ice. The Land1ord is puttering about, moving ijlrs and bottles. His business ART HOPPE agent, Mr. Gabriel, enters with his golden trumpet in hand. . '------------' T1te Landlord: Now where -did I put the starshlfle? Was it behind the rain- bov.-s or next to lhe birdsong? How can I make a galuy with- oot stanhine? Gabriel (grimly "'°lding up his ln\D'- pel): Ezcuse me, Sir, but you really must authorize me to sound-the evictJon ootJce for that tiny little planet, Earth. Tbe Landlanh My little blu-jt""I? (sighing) Aren't you even gdng to read me the year.end rtport? Gabrltl (shrugg.ing): What's the use? It's been the same for millenia. The tenants are still sl•ughtering each other, gouging up the real estate and dlitbplng their garbage wherever thty plea.st. And it's getting worse.sir. Thty're btteding like rabbits. Tbe Uandlord: I like rabbits. ' Glbrid' I knaw, Sir. But by any 10und rule of property' man•gement, tbtSe tenants must 10. They ad as lf they own- ed the place. Tbe ~ (wearily): I suppose you're right, Gabriel. I had hoped they'd change. Help mo to work up the proper amount of rigbl~us wrath. Tell me again how they eat tacb other. I never could stomach that. given that up, ·too, but ... T'ae.)..andlord: They have? Perhaps if you recounted to me again how they burn each other at the stake In my name ... The very thought of such sacrilege gets my righleous wrath going! Gabriel: Actually, tbe've renounced that practice, Sir. But they still kill each other in myriad ways. Tbe Landlonl' Good, good. Describe them to me, Gabriel. That'll start mf wrath flow ing. Gabriel (eage fly ): Well, Sir, they stab, shoot, explcxle, crush and bum each other up with chemicals -mostly, of coune, in foolish wars. Tbe Landlonl (ll<Owlin&): Ah, yes. wars! So they still march happily of{ to kill each other iD wa rs for loot and plunder and rapine and glory, th? Gabriel (hesiUintly): Not exactly, Sir. They all say now that they bate wars and fight only for "national defense." But it's mflrely a teehn1callty. Tbe Landlanh And I don't auppose they've beaten sword!! into plowaharu, tho way I told them to' Gabriel: Not a one. Oh, they've started talk1ng about It. But that's an Ibey ever do iJ talk. Why, they're e\'ell talking •bout lim iting their breeding and clean- ' Quotes ing up the place. But things just get worse every year. They're slovenly, destructive ... Tbe Landlon! (thoughUully): Just a minute~ Gabriel. U they've ren<>W"lced cannibalism, salvery, witch-burning and plundering and if they're at least talkbtg about ·improving tho property, then they have deflnJtely changed for the better. Gabriel: Oh. but .50 slowly, Sir. And look at the results. They may be trying, but ... Tiie Landlord: You just sru'il the magic V.'Ord, Gabriel. Extend the lease another year. Gabriel: What magic word, Sir? Tbe LaMlonl: Trying, Gabriel, trying. (He smiles.}11Sometimes You remind me of them. Gabriel: How's that, Sir? Tbe Land&ord: You seem to think I'm in some kind of a hurry. (He trowns.) Now where in H!aven did I put that starshlnc? OltANOI COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Wrtd, Publbher Th omaJ Kcrvil, Edllor Barbara Krribich Editorial Pag e Editor Gob<1el (Frowning): Woll, thoy don't condone cannibalism any more, Sir. but Thct tdltnri&l l*Jl:Cl. nt tho 0.11)' Pilot tttkt to fn fonn find ttlmu· lltf! Tttdert by f>r~cntlng this newtpaptn-'1 opinion• and con1· mentfll") on tn1ilC"a of lntere~t li.nd tignlric.'ln<.T, by 11ruvldlnjt a forum ~frt. ;J. K. Ehiott, l.Amg Beach, on tor thP l'Xf>M"atlnn of our re"dl.'~· Womtn'1 Lib -"Chivalry b not dead, <1pinlon1. and by pr1>trntln11: 1 h1• though the 'llbben' are tJy1n1 their best dl\'f!l"lc vlcv.·11C"1lnt1 of lnforml'd ob- Tttt t..ndlord: Oh? Then tel1 me again lo kiU II ; and It won't dte as tone as men ~rvm and •pukr.nion "" tuplca how they enslave. each other. That 's an enjoy being men and womtn t'njoy btl:ng tif tht d!l.Y •bol1!!n@l]QnL.:_ -,.. . ~ r;>~Jll• !1!)_ QI d«i:e«I -jJµ.!.'-1-T!!b.~ursd~ ,~anu 18, 1973 Gabriel : I'm arrild' ·1hey"Vt a ttad; pleasure, ga ls.•• -· 1 • .. .. • • • .. • Brennan Foes Chart Attack B1iJl Fast Approval Expected · - Sniper-- No Drugs, Alcohol - Tl11irsday, January 18, 1973 ~.1 DAIL V PILOT 7 'China Connection' Cracked said 12 IUSpectS, tnOll -of them Chinese naUonalJ, were ar· rested last week.end on in- formaUon lrom an undercover middleman who brouahl buyer and seller togelher. 1 WASHINGTON (UP)) • -00-dl!Y "lrUOO" In Uio deap-. d~ectors accu~ In a £.ederaL The A m er 1 ca n 1 , for locked Long Island Rail Road suit of gross mismanagement NEW YORK (UPI) -Three top figures in a ring that allegedly smuggled at least $500,000 of boroln from Hong Kong and China In what authorities call 'the "''Chinese NEW ORllEANS (UPI) Connection" have been ar· "-rJ:·, ih"r'ei all~ged· ringleaders were Kwok' Lee, Danny o_r, ~ Rafael Colon, all of Manhattan. Lee and Or were described as wholesalers and C.Olon was said to be a The headquarters of the ring was Identified as the Kow Sing social club ln Chinatown. The club WaS iaided Monday' nlgbt. No narcotics were found, but 20 Chinese aliens were ar· rested and charged with ii-" legal entry. Democr1t1c. Action contended strike. " ,.. and flagrant violation of duUe.s 1 today Peter J. Brennan 11 un-e M "'I .. , · qualHied to be President Nix-ftr • .. -R••Dfl 1n a corporation he h;elped · Sniper Mark Essex was rested,._a__spedal D8i'cotics neither drunk nor drugged prosecutor dlacloeed Wecfnes. during his deadly gunbaltle day. 1 on's~labor secretary because W~SHtNGTON ·(UPI) found. he did nothing to prevent hir· America's unmanned Mariner The '2.1 million suit 'was fil- wltli police Jan. 7, a coroner's-Frank Rogers, special city· The heroin was smuggled in· to New York in.side broc ade Chinese smOking jackets and in food cans, Rogers said. ' report shows. wide prosecutor, told a news Dr~ Gari T. Rabin, Orleans conference, however, the ing discrtm\natlon and oor· spaceship .has . dest(Oyed the ed Wednesday against William ruptlon while ·he wu a hard myth that Mars is a long dead J. Casey, now cl14lrman·of the hat labor leader Jn New York. planet, scientists believe. Securities and Exchange com- Parbh eoN>ner, issued an leader of the ring was still Big, Deal! autopsy report Wednesday being sought. The ADA and other groups Instead Mars was wracked prepared today to speak out in -by.-volc~noe&-for-S-lillUon mlas~, and 13 other dlrei:tors_ years and Washed In the dis· of Mutttponlcs, Inc. Two com· tant past by rivers of water panies and a 15th lndlvldual ur• ,...,... .. (IN SHOR! ... ) that said there were no traces Rogers said the top man, RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) _ olalcob.oJ, heroin or mornbioe whose identity is known by The Police (!h1ef of a southern 1n Essex's body. authorities, Is a Chinese na-Brazilian beach town ruled Essex, 23, was abot to death tional who· visits tile United that women COuld strip a~ by police on the roof of lhe States frequently. propriately at the Topless downtown Howard Johnson's Rogers and Brooklyn Sandwich Stand, but only when , MACK'S DPln CAlPn & UPHOllTllT C\IANINCJ $10 liw!n4 Rooin. SS ltirooin. flowing over it! surface. . ~re also .named as defendants l11dutrles Bit SIS 7' Couch. $7 Chair. AfNI 4:JO .. 714 :152-tJl l This picture was given in the suit. Wednesday by scientistl' who • B k P h Sen. Edmund Mu•kie a Senate Labor committee analyzed data from Mariner 9, _ra e If# has blamed auto and oil hearing against Senate con· which was launched from WASHINGTON (AP) -The companies for' necessity Motel after a day.long sieg,e in ~Di~str~l~ct~A~t~lo~rn~e~y ;E~ug~e~ne~Go~ld~~there~~w~ere~no~me~n~aro~und~. =:)~~~~!I!'!~~~ which...siI other persons were.-: killed. !ir~tion of Brennan, who Cape Kennedy May 30, 1971, National Transportation Safe-of proposed gasoline ra· won the title of ··~1r. J1ard and began orbiting the "Red ty Board called today for tioning in Southern Cal· Three of the vietims were police officers, a'nd police said ballistics tests linked all their deaths \Yith the .44-magnum Hat " as a construction union Planet" 167 days later. stronger and more reliable ifornia. He plans to in· leader and war hawk. .t braking systems for trucks. trOduce legislation for Despite the opposition, the • A ide A ccused In .a special stud¥ 9f com· mass transit projects. Senate was expected to give NEW ORLEANS · (AP). !11erc1al motor veh.1cle br~k· --------- rug er 4 rifle Essex was car· rying. , :lVift approval to the nomina· Pre~nt Nixon's nominee as mg, t.he ~rd said the. longer . ·i lion of Brennan . undersecretary o! state for stopping d15tances required ~y • n:fferenCe Speculation continued over whether Essex had ac· complices in the snipi ng in- cident. An FBI spokesman confirmed that his agency was che<:king '8to "a number of out-of·state lead!," but declin- ed to comment further. •• T ' ... • economic affairs is one of 14 trucks, as contraste~ with ., automobiles, "pose a serious threat to passenger cars and their occupants." perceived SHE ASKS • ludge Picked PIN EA PPLE JU ICE FROM HA WAII AND OTHER REFRESHMENTS 'Free ' ' HAWAIIAN MUSIC, DANCERS AND FILMS ' 'Free • 'f POCKET SECRETARY, 1973 CALENDAR , BALLOONS FOR THE l<IDS 'Free , I O·DA Y TRIP FOR 2 TO HAW All ·----------· I Entry Form. Complete and deposit at Bank of I I Costa Mesa: I J I'd like to win a teh·day Hawaiian trip for two I I including ' transportation on w.stet~ Airlines. 1· Five day• at the lovely Outrigger Hotel on Wal· I kiki Beach, plus visits to Maui, and Hilo, Hawaii. I ;_. It sounds' like a momorablt trip. I I · I NA ME ., .................................................................... . I I ADD RESS ..................................................................... . I I I Ci_TY .... --·······:: .. .. . ...... TELEPHONE .................. I -·-----------· (714) 979-4200 _.,,otc DIRECTORS: Thaodor• Robl111, chal,.•11 tt th• boarfi ; Jack R. Curl•v .... J,a·ch1irl'fta11 of th• board r Chtrl•t Cri119lt: Roy E. J11na ; Pai9a V:. Simp10~ llil'f111fl I. Smith. OfflCE.ltS: '•19• Y. Sir11p1011. pralida11t •114 chief ••••11tl•• offlcer1 Johll W. Waltll, rico•,re1ld•1tt •"4 CMfll.,: l(e111tOth Fhl•t, ¥ice•,tet1'oftt~ Cl•r• Su•ew1k,, ottitf1111t •l•• prt1ld•11t, • ' ~. :.. "' ,. I l.1• and Fruit Tre• --,runing and 'Care Ltaft How From th. Pro ELGIN HALL Sat., Jan. 20 II a.m. thru 2 p.m. LI" Our G•rden S~op Don't Miu Ill I ., 2848 Harbor Blvd~ COSTA MESA "Q . . ' ~. ~'.vi, "!"<.J>; ~ )..* Plant OPEN DAILY 9 TO .5:30 SUNDAYS 9 TO 5 CITRUS now ••• ' i..Mofl, Unte, M•4•tht, IC•r11f11t•t, 8 50 Or .... ••If Gr•'9fr11lt •••••••• fro• · • "LI"*-'•·" H•11••111• Dw•rf ... -.. ~a4• 9 • 95 FRUIT TREES A,rlcet, A,plo, Fft, l't11M •"d Othel9., 7.95 .... 3, .. 22.50 Bare .. Root ROSES M••Y •f y•llf •ltl fo•orhl •114 t•M Mw for '7J Wirlatl- C•lttllrf Tw•, •t•M4•, llHtl'tll, A,.llo, CoMin•lf Perf.,IHllU, l•MMtt' S1101111-. 1 98 3 98 ••i •tHt ,..,.,.... -'''"" '""' . . • . . . . • .. • Redwood BASKETS ••kod boM 1.80 LILY OF THE ' .NILE Clnten of 1..,.1y M• fto...,. .1111.,... .,. ............ .., · ,AZALEAS -~, ......... ~ M•IY Co.Ion • ......... H_ I09ef9I tf ... ........ .... ·-~;:· SPECIAL 98• ti 8PEOIAL 98• GLADIOLUS IULIS Hor•'• o tow: A,,lcot hlftltt ·Lffio1t·LllM ....... ,.....,. c.- 11 .. "-'"" ' Tlloto 0114 M•"f More •• , , , , 1.29 Mi, TIN'f TOT MINIATUllS "Pl11klo" "10 .. 0 .. s ......... •· · 2.29 .io1. VIOLAS P1ot ..... ...., •'-' M ... u .... .....,. .. ..... , ....... . .n .. • ' Hallis}~~-:: 3 -::: 2.69 FLOWER SHOP '9.95 17.50 FERNS r' COfftl 01M1 laA$5 PLAt_fTERS H•Hc.NIJH 111 Holloll'I. S..... wlttl llM·hfft COffttk ........ .,..... ft4 o"9r ...... wltl4offtlit,. .. Boston· 1nc1 R00Mv1lt P1rn1 -_.,_, ___ .. ...., __ _ •-olftfw•-·-1 5.95 .., .•.••......................... ·"" Sp<cial Prlc<1 Good thru Wt<ln<idau, Jan..,Y 2fth PHONE 546-5525 Hulri~ • • DAILY PILOT TIMlrlclay, January 18, 1973" • 01'1 Ttle hol~ Westgate Rose Secretary Shelli Ness. '22, \V'On nickna1ne .. \\'estgate Rose" '"hen she took over radio operator's job at · \Vestgate Terminals in San Diego. She comn1uni- cates with 13 tuna seiners and t,,.o fish transport ''essels. -~~~~~~~~~~ , Chu1~cl1's W eddi11g 1 Rite s Disallowed RICHi\!O~D. \'a. (AP J - The Uni1·ersat Life Church, \l'ith headquarters in i\.!odesto. is neither a religiou s denomination nor a religious sociel~· and thus 11 Virg inia men can't continue to perform marriage ceremonies as ULC ministers. says Hustings Court Judge Randolph Tucker Jr. Judge Tucker. in upholding the ronstitutiooalit'' of a state law empowering State courts lo authorize ministers to perform marriages, made the ln Berkeley. Cambridge . ~1ass., and Chicago. • Centers for JesuH Pdt1'.'ation no"' are located at St. Lou is Divinity School :ind \\'()!lrl~t cwk College in r-ie\\' York City. St Louis D11·inity School an- nounced it \\·ill continue on a professional level for other seminarians. \Voodstock \\'ill be clbsed bv the enc! of th'-' academic yt!"ar. e.,10 Jaile d ( RELIGION ) PIQUA. Ohio t l'PI 1 -Ten , members of the Holv Spirit 1 Communitv Church frnm the tiny Hardin County tO\l'n of ' Alger are in trouble wilh thi: law again. ruling in what is believed to be its first court test Attorneys for the 11 local ministers said the ruling "'·ould be appealed to the Virginia Supren1e Court. The California-based church claims a membershi p of more than one million persons who share the church's central belief in "that which is right.'' e 1\'em Center s BERKELEY {AP ) -The best scholars of the American Jesufts order are expected to be COnc;,Jltrated in three n1a- jor theoTogical centers planned under a national reorganiza- tion. The centers will be designed to ··develop different areas of specialization and a healthy pluralism," said the Very Rev. Pedro Arrupe. superior general of lhe International Society of Jesus (Jesuits f. The centers \'.'ill be localed Sex Fil ms Irk To ivn KUALA LU~1PUR (AP) Residents in the southern ~1alaysian lo\l'n of Fohore Bahru com- plained to the government that 'theaters \Vere show- ing only sex movies, ap- parently to meet the de- mand by citizens of Singapore, just across the ::auseway. Skin flicks are banned in Singapore. They \\'ere picked up here after being caught peddlin'l their hornc-made b r e a d "''i thout a license. I n 1 December. thev \Vere ousted from Sidnev arir! Bellefontaine on the same charges. A ~lunicioa\ Co11rt judge fir- ed them $25 eacli ohis court ·costs. but suc;nenrlf'd the fine~ on the conr!i!i(ln thev Cre~k n,, citv laws for <'ne rear. Th<> sh; men and fqur v•nrren s'lCnt lhP ni°ght in j?il after twing tl'lah\~ to post S50 bond each. "According to thPI"'. r.,,.i talks dire!Ctlv to them.·· s"i" Piqua police Lt. James Huff- man. eF011r Ties VATICAN CITY IAP I - The Vatican est ab Ii ~ hf' ~I diplomatic relations 1vi1h four l countries, all of their .vtos!e:". last year. The countries -.\lgPria Bangl3desh. Sudan n n r1 Tuni si;i -\Vf"!'E' e'lterl'd i'' t~e new · issue of 1he \'a1ic.11· vcarhook. The \1$l(iran <"T 'rently has riptomat'c r~!.'.l!i•"lr' v.•i!h 73 ""'''""<:. The 1973 Vatican "Ann11;:irir' or ··Red Book." cov~ri!l~ l~f' period between Dec. '. 197' <'nd Nov. 3'1. 1972. lister ,,- living cardinals and 4. I 4" arch bishops a'Xl hi sho'1S The use of Latin . v.·hich h"'rl been droooed sevPral y~r:o; agp in Vatic;:in ~'earbooks, was reintroduced. H \\'as use,1 again alon~ with Italian in !hf' names of the Valic{ln nfficc~. I e Grnl1n ttl TtJt1r SEOUL t UPI) -EvariJ?elis! Billy Graham will visit South Korea for 16 days starting f\.1ay 20 to lead special pravt"r services in Seoul and pro- vincial citi"s. Kor ca n churchmen announced. ********************* * * MERCURY SAVING& * • IUW PAR Mercury sa-1ngs 81dQ., vine~ Vin at UllCOln "' * MUNTlttllTDN IE.AC" Mercury savings Bldg .. Edlngl( tt Beacll ..,. * TUrrtl Mtn:ury savings B[dg., lrw!ne Blvd. at Newport Ave. .., * \.A MAllU.·FULlfRTDN Me"rc\lfY Sav1nos Bltlg., lmperlal Hwy. at Harbor .. Conviction o¢Peyot-e O~verturned PllOE~IX, Ariz, ~API -A mlsdcn1t'anor "'l'Onviction of a Calllomia C01Jple' bas beep overturned by W Arizona Court of Appeals "'·hirh ruled the religious use of peyote is exe1np1 fron1 a state la~· ban- ning Hs posst'ssion .• Greg and Janicc \Vhit- Unghan1, both ~6. of Granada Rill s. admitted taking the peyote to ble-ss their 1narriage in a ceren1ony of the-Native American Church. THE CERE~10N\' was con- duc!ed in Ck'tober 1969 in a hogan near Parks in northern -- Arizona. The appeals court saki the use ol peyo_te by sincere partklpanls ln a bona fide religious ceremony is exempt from a sta\e law banning"its possession. , • The cou_ple said _thi;y op. pealed the misdemeaoor con - \'ictions on the ground they violated their constitutional guarantee of free exercise of freedom of religion. TllE APPEALS court said the right to the free exercise of a chosen religion cannot be lnterfl'red with by the state ......... _ "unless there Is a substantial Wrote the opinion. ~to publie--salety, order . "The federal ,a:ovemment ~ h&ls r~gnized peyolism as a "\Ve believe that the state Ie.giUmate reliaklu.s pr•cllce failed to.,'sustaln its burden of al'id has made an exemptldn proof on this Wue," the.court tot ~ use of peyote In said. """ _pe,yollst . ceremonie_s o n The.coorlheld that peyotism reservauons. ns practlced in the · Native An1erican Church is a long established religion .with a following of scVeral hundred thouSand believers. DONOFRIO SAID peyote Is an object o,f W-Orsh.ip .in the Native · AIMl'ican Church .and "'itbout it the church's sacraments 1..'0llld not be com· pleted. BeUevers cannot freely exercise the.fr rellgleius beliefs wilbot.lt the use of peyote, he said. Tho <OW1 said lhe Whit· tinghams were a I n c e r e parUclpanll in what lppe.&red, to be 1 meeting of the Native American Chun:h w h ~ n ,. .. 1ir.o11a Depatlment of,..Pub Salely ofllcers raided the ceremony 11nd arrested 41 persons. ''The peyote was being_ used in COlmecUon with a bona tide practice of a rellglo~ belief. it was an integral part of the ceremony and it was used In a manner not dangerous to the public health, safety -:::~:::::: morals," the court said. I "PEYOTISl\1 IS nol a 20th century cult nor a fad subject to extinction at a whim," said Judge Francis Donofrio. y,·ho. -~~--~-·---------~-----------~----------'''--~ ~~The Challenge '' • Winston tastes good, ,'Wh~n · a cigarette snould ,. ' • • Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That' Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to¥0uf.Healih. .. • 1 ' • ' . •••n 1,1,11,_\llM(d1,.. ·KING, 2\ m ."ta(', l4 mg. *•tine. BOX. 20 mg."tar", l3 mg. nicotine. av. per cigaratta, FTC AUG. 72l * CAll&olf Mercury Slvl~ Bldg .. Avalon Bl't'd. at San OifQO frWf. *I 1----...,,*,-m '*,. * * * * * * * * •· •• --~---•--'-L-~ ">'. • - ---------... -)l.ko- t .t I • I t S.Mf<vivors of Andes Crash ( By Phil lnterlandi Will Sell Story for Book MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay an agronomist, intended to be said, "The book, as I see it, (AP) Sl.Iteen young aboard the 'ill-fated, Oct. 13 will demonstrate to the public 1---~•u1n,.18'!'''"'ay~bo~ved=--charter~fllght-t.h.l~crashad in with many, many details bow near)y 2~ moi1ths in the the Andes. They decided at the we overcame the difficulties of frozen Andea afler a pline last mhwte not to make the the trem endous cold and, o! oraah haYe decided to h:ll the trip to Chile with other• course, the dl!ficultles of food 1toQ. of their elpertencea for members of the Old ChrtsUans . . . how a man, aufferlng, a book -and maybe 1 movie. Club rugby team. .1 adapts to this new harsh err I 'lbe .,.....,,·p-irtoorted •· , .... _ TWENTY.NINE and . vlronment ... bow we were .. ..,.. ""' ... ,.. men able to accept the blows of nlballlm to atay alive. women died ln the crash or ln frlenda dying during and after A <;oMMl'ITEE of five the. 7o.day q;dea!Jn lhe.moun-the crub •.. every aspecj._ol frtenda bu 'been fonned to talns before rescue came. the survival; this ls my in- ahteld the"'"l\l"lvors from in-Many were relatives and tenUOJl," tervlews which ' ' m i +:: h t friends or the team members. CANESSA ADDED that he diminish Interest in the book." Azambuja and Juan ex· wanted to dea l with the eating The committee also is plained lhai a "wellare fund" of the flesh of friends who died negotiating publication rights has been set up and all money in a "very eleva ted matter with._-1hree: New York earned from the book, the •.. it won't go into detaila, publishers. A committee . movie, or individual in-but it will explain what hap. member. Daniel Juan, 21, said terviews is to be deposited in pened psychologically." the publishers have shown the the fund. Its primary purpose When the survivors, who are greatest interest in assigning is to help families of those Roman Catholics, returned to writers to do the book. who died in the crash. Uruguay after their rescue, Juan, an engineering stu· One survivor, medic. 1tu-they likened the act to Holy dent, and Emilio ja, dent Roberto Canessa, 19, Communion. t • ;. • ' I ,. ........ , .. ' ,. .. ' r ; , :' ·' . I• .. - ·\ • . ,. .. -... .. . --... 1-18 ··~· "Well, don't~ 1tand there ... fetch or somethlngl" ' . ...,............ . • . . :. • ..t• ••.• ~· ... , ... ,.. . j ' Treasury Pampei:s • Pinless tape fastening are safe, secure, adjustable .••.••.•.•.•. , .. yes ...•••••••. yes • Pleasantly scented ....•.•.. , ..... yes ...•.•.• , •• no • Folded sides and bonded ends for better fit, keep clothes dryer ...••. yes • , ••.••• , •• yes •Stay dry lining ..... , .........•.•. yes .....•..... yes •Moisture resistant backsheet. no plastic pants needed ... , .......... yes . \ •......•. yes •Packaged in reusable plastic bag, tie closure .............•........ yes ........... no Save under the Squlggly' Roof, . 4 days only. Thursday illrough SUnday. Thursda~, January 18, iq13 Sex Research NEW YORK (UPI) -Tee!> age girls, a majority of them unmarried, accounted fOf 25 per'cent of the legal abortions performed from mid·l!f'ro to mld·1971 in the United-State.I, according to a report in Ladies Hon1c Journal. Citing statistics from a study by Population Council, a New York-based research 11?QUP the magazine said It wu "a fair 111eas that more than 100,000-unmarrted U.S. another 100,000 teenage girls underwent criminal abor- Uons." THE MAGAZINE also said a PopulaUon C4uncil study found "in a fairly repre.sen· tative natior1i1J sample of 73,000 legal abortions perform· eel between mid-1970 to mid· 1971, one-fourth involved teen· agen11, a great· majority of them unmarried." 1be article added: "For e.very 100 American girls bet~een the ages ol 15 and 19 · DAIL V PIL OT 9 Told an average of two gave l>trth to an illegitimale child last year. An estimat.ed--SS0,000 lo 400,000 illegitimate babies were born in the U.S. last year." . TllE MAGAZINE also said that acco.rding lo a st udy of unmarried tet'n.age girls ror th e U.S. Commission on Popul <ition growth, 1'1 4 per· cent of the IS.year-0\ds, and up to 46 per cent of the l ~·year­ olds reported having had sex- ual relations." ~ag~l'J. qnderwent legaJl-----~~.------c.... _____ _ abortions In 1971. Probably Woman Picked DAILY PILOT SACRAMENTO (AP! . . Gov. Ronald Reagan has a~ pointed a San Diego woman to the California Wo(llen's Board of Tem11 and Parole. M. JQ- anne Lees was named to fill the unexpired tenn of Kay Rid. die of San Francisco, who re- ,signed. THE HELPFUL GU IDE • , Pinless · ·Di5posable Diapers ,, ... _ . '· . You get a better deal on Treasury Brand pinless. Treasury daytime, 1 27 . pkg. of 30 Reg. 1.49 • . Treasury newborn, I 09 pkg. of 30 Ri!g. 1.29 • Treasury overnights, 6 7c pkg. of 12 Reg.~ .-· l' .,,., .. • - - . jf) DAILY PILOf Greyhound Requests 6% Boost SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Greyhound Lines· \\'est has asked to raise local com- 1nuter and other fares and ex- press rates in California by 6 percent. An application with the state Public Utilities Commis.tjon said the bus firm needed ad· ditional intrastate income of $2,547 ,000 annually to offset new labor costs since its· last general rate hike on Oct. 7. The company said an automatic employe wage in- crease of 3.3 percent. a cost· of-\i\'ing increase and various fringe benefits also are ef- . fective ?i.farch I. Under the proposal, the minimum fare would increase from SO cents to 55 cents. e No Deposit SAN FRANCISCO (AP) The California Supreme Court has ruled it is unconstituticnal to requi re . losers in small claims actions to file a bood or deposit equalling the amount of the judgment in order to appeal. The unanimous ruling by Justice Raymof¥1 Sullivan means an ~ppeal may now be taken upon payment . of the filing fee without having to make such a depOsit A plaintiff in a ll'Dll1 claims court may not ap\)eaJ if be loses. But if a def~ Joses. he has the right to 1'ppea1 and obtain a new trial in Superior Court · The case inVolves a small claims j~·~ed .!. against Maxine Brooks in· the · .Downey Judicial District of Los Aneeles cOOnty for rent totaling $142.50. e Repair Tab LOS ANGELES (AP) Property owners no longer will have to pic k up the tab for sidewalk, curb and gutter repairs, the City Council has decided. The counc il voted to throw out sections of a 1911 Improve- ment Act requiring the forma- tion of assessment districts in '':hich land owners were charged for sidewalk, curb and gutter repair work com- pleted by the Department cf Public Works' Bureau of Street Maintenance. · The ordinance went into ef- fect immediately. City officials estimated afterwards that damage from tree roots alone would tctal "about $4 million" the first year. e Fees Rapped LOS ANGELES (AP) - Prcperty owners in the suburban Kentwood area are attempting to reccver what they contend were illegal charges assess as a resqlt of a 1970 suit lo prevent jetliners from nying low over their homes. Kentwood Home Guardians, a n on p r or it organization representing about 16,500 persons, assessed members $8.40 each 'for legal expenses in bringing \be actiOI) to pre- vent the us'e•' of the con· troversial north runways at Los Angeles lntetnational Airport. Attorney John J. Schim· menti, a property owner who paid the assessment, argued in a suit fi led in Superior Court that such assessmenls were declared illegal in a case before a state Court-of ·Ap- peals last March. e Dog Raclf,ag SACRAMENTO (AP) Greyhound racing and betting would be permitted and the money would help support local schools, under a measure proposed by Auembtydian Walter W. Powers, (0- Sacramentc). The-bill would allow racing "if the· basis for wagering is dependent 1on Auch lactcra as lhe condillon, enduruce and speed of the partldpatl ·veyhound as detennlned by · the skill an~ Judgmeqt pf the bettor I JL 1etlft'dtng•-'-t anal/sis· ~f t!W bill • by ·Ille legislative counsel's office. • Thllnday, Jan""1 lB , 1973 • @?> .. in tenor Lfl'EX SEMJ-6/J}SS Ofl!t..ttrtMpaW •I.Coat, 4~0 sq. ft. (OY. er~e • Wa.shable •Spot re115Utlt • ~·year dur· ability •Colorful or fO\Jf moneJ b1ek. (When applied o•cr properly pr~ated fut· iaces.) CUT '1 Quart! Latex Semi-Glos• w .. $2.99 QL l?.~ • One coat covers·most colors • Ideal for haid-usc area.s #73004 . GUA14N'rEED .. l~:-4;10.~uw-. erage • W'5tlll:IV.'spo, reHUatlt • ~t"Cfll' au~ biliry • Colotfut or you ge1 n«nw.ry .ddirional pai111 or your money back. (When applied OY'Cf, properly ptepami surf1ets.) SAVE •3 Gallon! Interior .Latex Flat ReJZular $8.99 Gal. • Orie~ in as litde a.s 'h hour • In choice of white and colors #8700) Pain It and Teolt AlllO A•ailable at Sean Norwalk, Su Fernando and Santa Ana • ' CUT •15! . --. ~ CUT •31 " • Craft!m•n 7-in. Circular Saw ci-.tli1man %-in. EJectric Drill~ 2988 ; 677 •Motor develops l~ HP •Motor dev~lops l/)·HP-no load • Easy-view housing desi,Q:n • No load speed 5800 RPM 11 2778 speed 1100 PJlM • Sleeve bearinaf . • Built·in triggcr,lock #11211 f ALHAMUA CllRrTOS fl MONTE 576-4321 ·160-0511 .... 4•3·3~11 ' .. IUINA. P.M1C COMrTON-L'vNWOQP,;,. Glt}4DALE ·12.M<4i11M.tl:.4SIO . 1 ~'Jl·5741 . 24'\l.r:-244411 i:.<~ --. -eo"'i<A ... fflllrl'wooo · .• , ~1 " "6-061f · . ·c6t.S941 . . • l~lEWOOD ·672-0161 LONG llACH 415.0~21 NOITHtlDG.l 115-1272 ' ' ' . , Pr~~~~~f:lJOn S:Ql~~ -: ' ~: - 6:0~% .O.FFFahric l • • Wh·en Purchased With Gaies, ·Terminal Posts, Accessories, and In- E! Sears 260 Lb. ' Fiberglas® Roofing % OFF :All Materials Wlien · Imtallecl Qy Sean • Shingl<s ate reinforced wit4-nro layers of Fiberglas® mats • Resists wind and weather •Beautiful appearance that lasts ' • J Use Sean Revohing Ch,.-ge VALUE! ' sta!le<l by Sears All-Aluminum I.awn Building Delivered ~;.d Installed •Long lasting, l ow mainte nance protec· t1on • Free estimate, no obl igation to buy . Heavy-Duty Shock Absorbers 16995 • (5a7-f't.) ; •Comes with wood floor and two shell'et Also available in 6x8-ft., 5x10-ft., lOzlO. ft, 6x10-ft., 8xl0-ft. si zes #60611 Guaranteed rOr •• Iona a11 :rou own your car • 6.S0xl3 11 .. 6.oo.:tr, ' '·" • • /. I • i.~l " , ' 6.9S...l•. 19.99 .... LSbdJ lut'_ 1.15~ OLYMPIC: & OTO 261-5211 ORANGE •tT...it 00. ~. P.ASADINA . 3S1.C21 t, 611 ~3211 , • Help mcon the 1moodl rideJOYotlfC&r Eipert ln1 .. tlatloa . Available Hea\oy Daty Shock Ga•rantee t7,~clii.,\t.oc1: Abootl>tt r.ib '-'° r ... 1t, 111..,.i.i. ...t -~ or ~~1,q..i,_.__ tht <w, It will ... .,..oc..,4...,.. _. lift! "' ....... ot ito.-.-•Miu win l>o N(11~4tL If lll• M/,cti" .i..t• ~ -i.-ii..1 lif St.rt..., .m 1-.11 -·llotli---W'irtr. .......... f·ir tolw11\ 7.35al4 20.29 7.75Jil4 20.39 8.25!1.14 ..... 8.fu\4 23.9S ll.25Kts 23.46 8.SSalS ,.. .. 9;00slS 24.95 2.00 6.95sl4 ' 2.12 7.35U4 ... 7.7MI4 2."6 8.25sl• 2.37 »!IO"tS ' 2.5' 7.'{!i11lS 2.91 S:25al5 ~ 11.SS11IS ' PICO t31-t2•t SANTA MONtCA TOUANCi ,.._.111 r•2-1s11 J 16.99 uo \7.t+ I I.~ '·11.39 111 -lTA01 Ut l4.'9 1.11· .ltH .1.11 It.SI ... , , LW . ' -·· S.'1!fcc1sJJ' .. ...... . o.r-• POMONA .. .._. ... sourtt CQAST rt.UA VAWY ~ ' •• ,,,~ •• 763-14'1 ..... 2220 .... -.-,. ' ntOUIAtCt OAkS ,.. .. 4'7*'45", 512-11)1 • • --. _, • , r.'" •,i • ,. . . .,. .. ;\verted Cutback-, In Buses SAN DIEGO (AP) -The ci- ty pf San Diego lw pusbed a $5.J.mllllon grant for !ta: bus company through · the coun- • tywide Comprehel\Slve Plan- ning OrganluUOll, heading off a threatened cutback in bus lerviei!. ' The San Diego Transit Corp., which. recenUy ex- panded bus service and cut fares to ZS cents, threlteoed .( ECOLOGY J cutbacks unless It was given the' county's share of money from the new state sales tax on gasoline. 'Mle Comprehensive Plan- ning Organlution, comPoS<d of the 13 cities ln San Diego County, voted to allocate the tax money. SeV<ll clllet oppooecl the grant, saying they wanted to wait for the resultl of a regional transportation study to see whether the money would be better spent on cum- muter trains. e Helt Sought LOS ANGELES (AP ) -A sllit has been Wed in U.S. ~ District Court asking that con- atnlctlon of an uncompleted oegmcnt of the Loog Beach ,.,..,,..y be blocked pending detennlnatlon ol the project'• environmental lmpacl }.ttorneys for the Gen\e! f2 La" Jn the Pubic Intiiiil ',_' colilelid In !be Ill!'! that llaie ~f~filedhl~·· :ifonmenta , ltnpl(ll statements for · 'JIJ:-mile Loifg Beach FretW•Y portion . between Valley BOOlevard ond the.Foothill Freeway. The suit as filed on behalf of the city of South Puadena, the Sierra Cl~b. u.te BWnp out Smog organhaliiin ond the Pasadena Freeway Study: - Committee. e .Su..-,, Asked SACRAMENTO (AP) - A Los Angeles County senator bu propooed an Inventory of , all ungranled state Lldelands and that plana be made for their development. · Two bW. JntrodllCed by Sen. Ralph C. Dillt, (D-Gardena), would inatruct the State Lands C.Ommission to conduct the survey and prepare the plans. The measures require ~t local agencies e s t a b 11 1 b special trust fundl for revenues generatf(I by the Udetands, mostly oil royalties. The bills also spell out uses ol funds allocated Jo liie'litite and provides that 0 excess tidelands revenue1" be dirid between the eta~· and 'the local agency. j e Tiek•ts 1Wbtt!~ sAN FRA~SCO (AP) - .... Golden Gate 'llrldge directors have turned thumbs dqwri on, a prunoUonaJ, ~.to fatten • the dismal bOslMu'belng done • • by the ~ dlstr!cl'• • Sausalito-Saa Frando¢ tmy. • . No, thO ~ Clec~', to ~=~·~· tlckefe.worth $1 e.ach -Jn an effort'~ fo in*9 .commuters f""!! ,, lhelr cars. A more reausuc pion It ·needed, they said. P.•ltol\11• on the 57k0at ferry ,Golden Gate aver-e:ed under 20 peroenl of capocity, directon were Joki. f • ._....._ Cite~, MENLO PAlik (AP) -1W" - • ' -'-' .. pollu\lon ca-an esUmated f!akllU\on da-to plan\I and c:ommel'clal """" anuallJ' with citrus fruill ond planU In New Englond, Ille mld-AUantlc and tut North Central llatel hardell;Jllit, says a. lc1eidlllc --:-~111 ~ ~ -~ RMrth lnltltate sold !Is -.. .,. -liplflcant ..., .... tlloy .... the flnl to nod!\ from • Byl!em•Uc ltudy ol Clllp Jleld. -·-and "lffllher mnditlon! tn 161 otlhe plloo'1,aJJ4 coantlel." The report iOl>CIUded com· merc!al crope accounted for ~IN!JI·~~ .... ,.-.w plantr. Toil ftt, mllllon. · ....... u 2 .. •6 l'Ctt•,;r r.-.: ""2L"":!:""'t::::;r;;;" pc.,,,. ll-M .If.,. 17 Sears \ • Thursday, Janu;wy 18, 1973 DAIL V PILOT J J •Dresses •Coats • Sportswear • Pants Suits ' .. •Handbags . •Fashion Accessories Fantastic Clearance of Our Regular Stock of Fall and Holiday Fashions. Shop Early for Best Selection! Not All sizes in all styles and colors. SAVE '1.50 on 3 Magic X• Bras Regular 3 $6 $2.50 ' Each 1 or •Lifts and separaces; criss.cross elastic below and between cups; white •Natural Cup: 32-36A, 32-408, C '3 Natu ral C11p 0, 34-42 · 3for17 Con1our C•p 32-MA, 32-388, C _ S for 16 SALB .. , Rq•a..-tl.79 Tee•B,.. 2, ... •3 hfm.Pnstt'. · ~!'E .. /P•U. ... 1'1 1'11 RtJWlara.1 ~2 Thrff.wc11ot1 • • Whitt". Sizn )0..}6A. AA. <:oncout 1t)lt. (Up. Si1t1 }4-448. )l-46C, 14 0 C•p J:.4A_I! .. OlYMP"IC & SOTO .. co ,. LOW PRICED! ' · Misses' Gown I or Pajama -. -. . Your , Choice ·399 each • Long gown and pajama wich raglan Sleeves • Fancy lac~ tri mmed bod-· ice; scoop neckline • Ivo ry and pastel colors •Sizes 32 to 40 TOlllANQ S76-4nt NO.OSI I llMOHTl 44)-3911 INGLIW 672.0161 2 ... s211 ., .... ,,, J42-1Sl I MtWatM.111 Gu•ilc:tcal IUINA PAIK COMPT()H..LYNWOOO 121-4400, 521-4.s.10 CANOOA,MIC GUNDW 2'45·1004, 24'4-4611 HOU.YWOOO ... ,.,, .. , lONGHAot 435-0121 OllANGI 637-2100 l"ASADfHA 251-4111 ,611 ·3211 '6MOHA 62'·1161 SANT' N Sl'l:IHG& t44·f011 I YAUIY 163-1461,tl.f.21'9 VUONT ,.,..,,,, ) °''-.. ....,- • I • J ~ DAILY PllUI TtturW11, January 18, l97J , ~Caspers Raps Growth County's Plan . SANTA ANA -Orange County's developina: Overall Economic Development Plan stayed plive here Wednesday but for a time the progran\ ""'as in danger or 5udden death after almos t a year of study by a blue ribbon committee. OEDP Chairman Lucien Truhill sa id the federal government had indicated ap- proval of the program which ""·ould allow application fur federal funds. bot that $31,000 \.\-'SS necessary to stalMbe pro- ject for the lfalaoce of the fiscal year. The overall budget called for about $400.000 in 2¥1: years. The supervisor had already appropriated S59,000 last :'-l'ovember but the funds were held pending the federal ap- proval. Truhill said goals ol the committee were to create a stable industrial base in the' county of diversified industry. pro..,ide 15,000 new ~. aid small business enterprases and help largely those in low in- come minority areas. ~fanual ~lendet, Orange archit ect and civic leader, argued that the purPQSe of the project ""'as to eliminate the causes of unemployment, not just the symptoms. Chatrman Scor es lntl~x of P~opbi ORANGE COUNTY Mexican Scholarship Dance Set By JAqt BiolUClt Of .. OMlr .......... SojperVIOOr Ronald " • Caspers, In bb -"chaitman's review" of the state of Orange County \Vednnday, struck hard at continued growlh. ··Probably the blggm cause of the deterioration .of the 'tn- \•irorunent is the conu,.dn& fn.. nux of people," he ~ed. •• f do wish that all of• Wliuld dimf!ard pereentagtr. wjoen. referring to people who Me in whole bumbers, not. cleclmal points. "The danger here ls lhat it is grossly misleading tp say ANAHEIM -Tickets are we are growing at a lesser now on sale for a fund-raising percentage than in the 1)8st dinner~ at a::.> p.m. Jan. merely bec~use the base I• 27 at the Royal IM In now higher, ·leading ta the Anaheim sponsored by the false C011Clusi4n that ~the pro- Santa Ana. College Mexican-blems created by growth, are American scholarship t"Omo diminishing." mittee. The board ch airman , Proceeds.from the event go starting bis second term. con-. to scholarships administered tinued : "Quite the contrary is by the Santa Ana CoUege true with regard to one of my Foundation. main goals in life which is --•·•· ·-13 per person permanent preservation of and";;;°' be~ by calling °""" 'll3<'0 thnluib ~· .. Bob Barraza or Lee Ramirez CASPERS POINTED out at the college, 547-9561.. that Los Angeles County ex- Muslc .ior the dance wUI be perienced an exodus of 100,000 by Bobby Guajardo and his people last year while Orange orchestra. .. County grew another 76,000 • Retlte Groe.,e• with 64.000 being transplan.ts. "From a pure numerical Grooves will be cut in five standpoint Los Angeles' loss is miles ol Santa Ana Freeway our loss." he continued "The . ' Cl'!"i" llOfl oootioio •JI!!~ avOklallce. • I He )ftdlttld. a cmyovot OI 18 millJon at the end ol the fiscal year, indi~ating that some department heads were already cost COO.scious. Cas~ to\dling on a critical atb)ect .,.said, "H~ fully we will adopt eorly tbb year a ~-onl!nance pertaining ,t<>,tlie county ad- ministral!v;, """-•." He did not indJCate ~the revisions migllt be.·• sln!l>ger CAO as advocated by the 1!172 Grand Jury or a weaker office as proposed by some supervW>rs. HE PRAISED the new lnlerg~ Council o/ i:Jtl!>e. and .county govemmeot. ''Here potent.lat ls unlimited if we can cast aside pro- }'inclaliml,,and .. must, when one of five · iii California wort tar local and state govern. ment. Only by doing so can we ever have man rwming government instead of vice versa,!.! Caspers plugged for using federal revenue sharing funds on capital projects and to reduce loans on previous p~ jects. Listed as projects were the proposed $3 m t I I I o n Harbor Judiclal D I s t r i c t building in Newport Beach and the $4.S million Prima DescheclJa refuse disposal site in the San Juan Capistrano area. pavement between a point just reason I say thi5 goes Met tor;::::::::;;:::;;:::;:::.;-:;;;· :;;:;:; Ann• G. Bodm~~1~1 ttl O.vll. north d Euclid Avenue in the cause .for their leaving Im ' I 5:!1~~n~,..,~~~~u~ ~W.; Anaheim and just north of the Angeles -inereals!nndg '""'1 g, urs~ Bf rmnnu ·y ·a ........ 01~on. c 111,,,,,...; 'fid'n l<>s Anoeles County line to congestion, rising a va ues JA&nUL or1ndcldldr.n: lllM •ir11l-Mldefl ren. 'j.., d th l~l • -, -. crv;ih1c11 wrvit.,, s1turuv. n AM, reduce vehicle skidding in wet and to some egree e ;:u Hi rov "''"' Mem0tl11 P•"'· 111nr-her ............ uake." H you have new .nciKhbon B••Q''""' F-11 Home. COl!I IMY, weal . . ...,... .. "'I or know of anyone. moving o;..eciors. •u•• The 199,.,... contract has The supervbor said the pic-- [)Qroihv Eth~ Burr 111 C•l>rltlo T•rrKt. '°" I WI ::J1 ~d "The to out area, please tell UI ~flll'l!OrT 9.,..,n 011t d o;tMm. J1nU1rV "-~n aw--'-.1 to Cardinal ure 5 • ....,. .. ' ' 11 1913 sur;;+..iii bv t>rolhtl'. "''*" ucc A!"\n:\I ·...k,_ ty's .:i:.....a..t bas so that \\'e may ~extend a wi1-.. 0Servk•o. F•ktlv.j PM. a.i11-IDdustrles of Califuniia, a coun .._,. ... ~ · .. -.a -1 Beroe..a,, c .... -dtl Ml• NllM. ln!Wt'· • taken ... a rncitivt step with friendly \l"t"lcome ....,.. .. -,: P ..,..~,. Ptclfk 111ew """"°' Ptr11. 1t111· Santa Ana firm,,by Uie state ..--· them •-i....--e a~••lntl!d •••oeron ,,_,1 Hom<t. c-dfl Mfr, ....._ __ ..l..-f =.,, W ks modem new buses carryu~ "' """""'"" ..,.._. Ol•Kt<n. nHl!ll~~~ uqw~ment-~ rllUUC • or . steadily l.ncrea!ing nu~ Of. in tbe.lr rrw s~ • • ' ' ' • • • • ' . CAR WASH .. -, ____ .,._...... -- with fill up .15 GAL. MIN. ' Ref)ular Car Wash -$1.75 •• FILL UP SCHEDULE: WASH COST: 8·14.9 GAL. 15 and OYER 89' ' FREE '. Hot Wax-$1.11 Ad.ditional-Spray Wax 50c Additipnal . e -.WllKLY SPECIAL e Monday-Frao Wooll with 8 0.1. Tuosday-Spra y Wu and Waoil, $1.29 MONDAY· SATURDAY 8 o.m. • 6 p.m. -SUNDAY 8:30 a.m. -S:30 p.m. ' three waya to charge -···· EXXON CAR WASH FAIRVIEW AT BAKER COSTA MESA-557-4793 WATCH FOR OUR GRAND OPENING ' r'~11f~Ji=s~.'.'°r"'1~;~~ • Fire )'f tilJl:l&lf penengen. ~ • ' '$, •• f'M..1 -..w... f:!'~~~ff'..1~,...~~ , •-, I 0ButintheSID)ieflt:'ld;,,thef.e , . .W. \f9Al ~ 111 c ... 11 MM.I: 1-' • SANTA AN,\.;:_~~ ts the poor If not tm•Nr: .w ..._ -.. M&a r=-:;.;a ~=-~ tioo pnbl-·o1 8!-,.1:.oo 00-fir ~. · .......... ~ .,... Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers '''"-'· Ft. 1tGMl:l'•w ... " .en ~ ....., .,_ Wiii' be travel altboagb we• ~ a.• I• ,. _ ~· ' <;:;:"~";'.; .;.~~-clilc:lmil Mdop,lif .l<M-'S. plorlng ...., pooiible ""' •• '4N174 ..... . . . . . \. \l • ,1 • ' '. ' •/ • I 5 ' • I . ~ I I l • • R~ Edw-" H-. "° r. ..... s1 . DouClu. mttaliail cbllf o1 the &n and I'll be..-• tbe1~~~~~~~~~~:;,.,-=-..., ....... -~~----,.,;;..:;::-:a!-'~ .... ~·:.· ;'-...,..-~:rc11--·.;·'-!'~-..,.;;--'-=~·t·M. ·~· ~:r.i·ii. ~~~,.:.· ~r··\r-. f,311 ~~1~~ ~ -:..~~J~ Los ~ Fire Dti*~ ~ more thorobDlY _(Ill tl!ls1--· --... .. -·;,. .. · --,\ ,. ~:~~7~1"'~~ •. ~~~~;,: ~~.#:~ ~ ~~Jdearty~inimtb,--•-\• " ~-,f ~·\t {. rtniff, l)r(lllltr, WI~~· , -. t l . .,.. . ' , 1._ _ __.,,,_,_ i 'r,:'~rvoni"t. ~J1A1'."\11tz.alrW'On '°;'f~. ( ( ' ·}. . Bk AS&BD Tim DllllGlDg "'"" MIY C"-PWI. ltlllf'-1, Mfurlf1hl y...,. • ~ r 1-.-and ,.......,.ated ....... _ (, .... ~. P.l..imlllll. 11111 • .......,.. BRIE'D"d.i I u...-; _..... "" ......... Fun.,1! He>mt, s~~"'='' 01...eton. -r i:j' to UJet US and the Je Cities ~t.'?~d .J=.wo11~.,,"d,~1~1.2'J~~ s1 16'. _ ~ complete our genqal plans: so l\»'.I. Su.-v!v..i bV wilt, Pt•rl; bl'Cllle•. we CaR then P~ ·-eoier Hl!dl"" JoliniOll. cl $~. S..rvlcts will '.,._r ""II: ' f ~ 11e1d F•id•v· 2 PM, se11 l'•Qi>dw•v luncheon of tbe Orange County in an orderly de·"''om:· o Ch1Clfl wlm M~r Vltlt M11011lt LodQe T~!"' " . Ne. ,;o c!llcl•llne. 1nl1•1?1enl. H••OO<' Shrine Club at Moose Hall, 717 our oounty's r~·C .u s fltt! Mtmo!'lll Pl~. Befl ll~V . et M .... tu••v. 01rec:1w1 •• ,,, S. Lyon St. r e 1 o u r .c e 1 ev CMr<M Gnt>Ht M/~~\ M11n-1n. ...,,. 14; Shrine.rs Masons and their diminishing supply of land. ..,1d,nl ot Df-1 ~ Sorl""•· J..,..,.rlv ' • H --"1 • ...a that he would o~ c"'"' M ...... R•llrtd Nrwnort 11etc11 guests are invited. For e pr1111u.-.. ~ ~':ch e,x.'",g;,.e:''t.::ri ~ "-= reservations. call Art FO'Wler pursue the goal of .a ~ty · H••1>er Ell<S c1w. 0111 oi 0.1111. J1,,.,.rv at 551 •••• or Eldon Brandt at air force with lbt!' fb:ed Wing lf. l•n survi....i IW ...ii.. "'"'"'' ..,.,,, ·.rwo h · -··'" Geo<oe · 1nc1 Hffold M1111111n. a1 cos11 B2l-6l7l plane program e IS .,._.,1ng. :ii~~~U,'.;;:.' ~~~~d·S"~ 1~ :·.~': · He called the county's health t:~1:~n1:.·~l111"~wi~~o':::!"~~ e Vbltlng Bo•r• program "a continuing ii;i,,i;:.u~,er";,;:~ E~' c.'i:rv~-headache in our outmoded -••• ORANGE N-visit'"" med. I --•er " Johoi °""" Jr 1°"° M<lrnlno Glcrv •~.. -"'" ""1!I IC8 '"~ . · flll/f\11in v111•v. 0.11 ot 0t1m, J11111•rv hours at Saint Joseph H~ital He threw 1n a frank-ad· '~;~ 1!.f!:;,.,surv.!.s_, :~1t.b.~i at llOD Stewart Drive have mlasion that the county's SJlk ~;~;::~· lt{i •r,,.~~ J~.~ i!'.-i'. been instituted. po5ed tax rate decreases ~ ~~~ R i~~eg;,..,~~~100';:! .... ~:.'. Vtsitors may come from 2 to nine cer.ts last year was not c11•rl•• Fin!•~ ~,rv1ctt. s.1urt1.1v. 1 PM. 4 p.m. and 7 to 8 p.m. daily, really what lt seemed to be. ""~ F1mllv co1,,.,1~1 F•~•I Home. in'" 0 ,"1•1 M. p11~!.,':''~N!d•nt 01 Co•o~• except to see ~tients in the "We moved 7¥1: ~ts over w 11e1 M•" d•I• QI 11<111t.. J1nv1rv 11, 1t11. intensive care wiit or cardiac the new parb di strict for a Sun Iv"" b~ Witt, RY•~; lwo l>rn•n~ ... Mr, I \I ts e. H. P1111son. cf N1ple1. ,:i.,..111.: M,. unit. net decrease of on y 1 cen ~':;.'."1trJ.:.':°S;.1:r1 5~1'.nf 1~r~ Intensive care unit visitors at the mne time we increased ec1.uio&1 c11u•<h. coro111 1111 M•r. 1n!••· may come from 11 a.m. to _,. expenditures by 126 men!, Ptclllc Vltw Ml!!'I0!11! P1r~. .,.v , 1'1mllv •UOC!tS!J 111QH wl1nl'IQ to m1kf noon, from 1 tO 2 p.m. and million U memor!tl CO"lrhwllon1. pltA11 con1rlhute · 10 HOIQ Mem<>rl•I H~ll•I er •~ united from 7 to 8 pm a"er o• · Ht••t Func:I. Pttl!lt llltW Mll"lutrv, . • n Ir RFITING ON one of his pet 01~c1Qrs. Ro•E•Tso,. taining permission from the projects be said, "Since 1970 c~•r••• "· R<>0tr1>on ..i1 s1n11 •n• •v' . hospital staff. we've gone from 6,500 NtW!>Orl l••c~. D•lt or <1t11~. Jtnu1•v the rd. i1, 1tn. surv1vee1 bv w111. G1111v1: iwo Visitors to ca 1ac care employes to 9-, an Increase dtUClh!tro. Mr!. Wll1!1rn CrtaMll and M,._ · f t I ~~ 0on11c1 Poiitv. 111-p0r1 Bfft"'' '°"' unit must come rom noon o of •• percent in three short E111:1ent! """''''°"· ol L••1vtne, f 4 30 to 5 30 p ffi Or ~ c.ur.,..~11 : l!v• o••~!ld•UC1~1r1, two p.m., rom : : · · years. Now If this bad been ~r:_&~~:·"W.~~::'; c~~i~i.~"~~k~: from 7 to 8 p.m. after ob-done while assuming the ~;.d1v;1~1!J<M. v'1:!1t1~~~1=1. ::'~~~: taining permission. ronv1n•ibillties and tub allo wntclltt C~•l>tl MOrtuarv. ~•. Th• n•w schedule '-•• -~-clty D1rectttr1. ~ r-""6""' performed .' by IQl'Wlng Jan. 12. ·· staffs 111iJJgbt be j6olllled, but ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY 4%7 E. 17th St.. Costa ~tesa 146-4383 • BALTZ-BERGERON FUNERAL HO:\IE Corona del ft.tar · m-NSO Costa Me1a 84~%4%4 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa ft.fe11 LI 1-3413 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1785 Laguna Canyon Rd. -ti • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery r.tortaary Cbpd S50I Pactflc View Drive Newpcin ~ Callfoml1 -• PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL llC)AJE . '1811 lllillo Aw. WesUnl~ llWSl5 • SMITHS' MORTUAl\V e Nem President it wun't," he dlaJ10d. "'!bat's why SB 1111; the IP \ Sf ANTON -Dr. Harold rate Umltall<"! bill wu palRd Kopit, a pr act i c Ing whJch ii~ goiq to require veterinarian here ·and resident mana&erial' o:cellence on all of Anaheim, bas' been installed our part1:" as the 1973 preskient of the He called for ellmlnaUon of Southern California Veterinary Ineffective, low priority ac- Medical Association. tlvitles while brijJrovinll II· .. . ,. . ~ . D'laney .. Broj. • Fresh Totuna Fillet $2.29 lb. Broiled Fioil 2 a.. f1""1t. ti• Olltrt .,. ,,.,.,, Sill 11111 ,.,..., IT.~ flifkf , """"" tllltlty 1llcf111 J T. wi.'111'1M I (, Wllttlf ftllMf' 11111111 I T, llfw -. I T. wfllte "...~ W ""'· ................... ........... """ Pllrt tllll Ill .... ~ 1111 .. ,_,., ~ ... ..... "-.......... 'l•lctJ .,,.... .............. ...... lllrfl(f, °'' 1llfftt ltvtttrJ ""'' ..... """"'· ... ...,., llftl'" .. '""'· "'" •1111 """"' .,.,. .... ,... f,.....ftll, 11t1l11 nt11 lllllit• WHll ..,._ ltt!M.,.. M "' Mt ,....,: frtldlwft llCtllll llt .. ...,. """ 11'11•• 111111 ... ,,. ..... ••• t11v1 •llcn 1flf ...._ llrll11 ,.., w.. u._ ,.,... t. • . , • ion • -,- lbe Great Western feeling. · . I ' It all happens when you make the move to Great Western Savings. · · You get the strength of assets over $4 Billion. C<mtpl$ safety, sinre 1887. 'The highest rat.es of interest you .can find on insmed savings. And,oflice$ all •· ' over Californi3t more than . Bny; other savings asSocia~oP. '!he Great·Westan feeling is all theS0 tlrings. And so much . more. It's the feeiing that oornes from · knowing you've put your Savings in exactly the right place. · · ', , ·. . .... :1.. .. . 'i . , ... ? . . ' •• • ' ";t".,. l•,(. _ ~·EAT wEsTERN sAV,'N!a ·.,·\. Mwiofrt ~'••"'°" c.,..., I •eulN~ P.t.1nt I 'LAGUNA Htut1 L ... 1n Woltd I •1.t.HTA 4NA I •·n Al.·HA1CM1L.W.. ~ .. ,...._. .... rid 14fo.fnl 1t'o1 S11nton Marl1 Ptlm• • h1·1112 24'100 tl'Thl'o flllo1d • IS7·1ilt 1il11 Nortl'I M.in 111$ttl • "1«111'1 2H9W.11MIMt.~.,....._ MtlOr P. Moon. M.1n111er Wao/ne L.. S~i:I. M1nqtr J1tk Hoel, M•naatt J1y Elholt,-MMlbler Jo& A. HoWa, ~ , _........,. ..... p.... ... ·) ~ ..... ~ •· . ·o~ ... • . ,,_ . 9 A.M. to 4.Jb P.M. o,lfy I U~IH 6 r.M. ~ridays/FreiParklng . • ' • ' • • 1 • ' • • 117 Moll S&. lllllltfqloo BellCll ---•:M..1....,"tQ.o · ..... ---fl-I,_,_ .... wmt AOCOUflni , --.. ~ -r• ~ °"°9lt ilOW flt oMMs INiflt...,, n-...i.ra a.n. MOMY °'"'9, Notlrf ..,..., TNtt DeftfNotl ColikfloA, Al_~ Pm Ct!KM. ..... Pllfl&, ~-.:sm.Gli~•o1:0ll!Vill~l'OMllDtv."ltllERA . . . . . o'll:ICIATION"OF1fRrATWm0.1\"1!1XNCIA[imP(!R~,.m:;;------·--· • ' !YIRV ITEM1N OUR STORE~ CIATIF.110 av ou.. • . .....BU-V.INO l.AaoRATOR Buy the Best ' · VltlfL ACll'f UC ~ IS 1 PAINT FOR · BOlH INSIDE&our · 98 GAL • -!i'. m;~v DECOR •••• COMP. , RETAIL . 8.95 • ' .' • • • • I I • • • • I ·HOUR DR.YING •CAI' ~ISO BE o GOOD HIOING . •• . FGR AN . •GUAN-UP<' •. IXtlEMElY • WlTJ;f Yf ~ TER ""-•llE ,,, ~J!llll.!8!1,0R, R,OLL ,.C:.. '"' · '·BRl!S:HT'WHITE '"'tSNVn JOI · & COLORS '' " ~ \. • ~ < " -·---~-----.~~--· ~·----·--r-» • • " GAL • • • I / I • • ·DAILY PILOT . ' a ANTHONJ' SCH HARIOI CINTtf lJ9t H1r"r Ce!Otff Co111 Me.1, C1M .. i1J~ '""· (7141 t7t·2JfJ "1' '· '""""""' "· 41111Mim, C1I. t2iM Pti. i714) 7!6·5100 Outd_oor lighting you never thought you could afford! A quality system you in· stall yourself ••• 1n min· utes, with com~lete safety. No pennlts, conduit or dia1n1 necesaary ... just plu( ln l • UL 1p. proved U volt system 1bsoll.ltllty.. · Jhockproof, dlil<f'iafel • 'TIMM low YOlt.re Mtl •re eompl411 Wltft lwp $Ml-' bMm lia:hts, eolor i..... l•mber, crffii. eleat, Plnlt 1nc1· • blue), WMthtllITTIOf, llloclcproof •bla, tnlnsfofmtr With on.off switch or &irtonmic timtt, llO'lnd sttkes •nd wtll t>rK•m. u.,. tnls excltln11: nr« liihllns fl'om Little G~nt In dotens of wtyt thlVl.llhout tilt )Qr for 11eur1ty 11K1 wtdoot b&luty, Four HP11't9 Mtl to cilooM fnim. MONDAY . FRIDAY 9.9 SATURDAY 9·6 SUNDAY 10-4 .. Thlll1diY, January 18, 1973 ,..-- • ' CIIILDRE NS CLASSES . Ballet (Ce cchetti grade-a method), Tap, Qymau.. tics. Pre-school dance. ,.. j· TEENS anu ADULT CLASSES • ' Jazz, Hawaiian, Tap, Ballet, Keep-io·Trim, Belly dancing. • ~ ·• ' . Expert Instructor~ ... beginners through advanc{d-" ' • • I Reaistoer NoW ... btaiiiners throu1n 1ctwanced ' ' • ,• .. . ~ddlebac~Dance Center · . . · 25071 Front Street.El Toroe586-5422 · !'.-------------·~·-- • I 7 ' • -. UCI Prof --. ,. Receives ' Grant ,. ' -~ --~- 'Bible & Book 234 Broed~oy Ave. Downt9wfli loguno 494-5600 . +() . ,. 't ·' ' -~-'----. _]- -YlltYJ."ASIESJ_osJJLE~ EAIY tO INSTALL:, , • l~SY TO eARI FORJ Jvf!. ~ ·t#.·tllt Hiit~ b11c~l~11,.-!f'r!l.Prt11 In 11lts~!I fl_h . any · c~n, dry surface! No muss; no fuss -ewn for begjnn..ryl HandsQJ'Oe pearlsto~'e "pat[ern blindt--!Nllh any decor, actualry !'hides" spills! Durable ,vill)'I , asbestol r~sists grease, fire, alkali, moisture! ' • , FIRST Q'UALITY -.. . ' -!\I BIG 12x 12 INC:H ~ELF-STICK TILES VALUED AT 3Jc P'lM'I' QUAIJrri , CllAMIC TILi • . ' 'SHOP COLoR!Jil· FORW ....... No waiting .. tdlce It home with you! H~ge 1tpck1 'of , ·vinyls, flocks and prinfl ot·low discount prim. ; ... •' NOW INITOCKrOa UMllDIA!I PILMlft . ~ Sl:L~·STJQK CARPU<f°ILE ; 1 ·1t·'·S.FUti'AND EASY , 'TO DO IT YOURSELFI ./'.. ' J t .,• • -mnt.d inllructions.. . • nu ,loon oftools. - . • l'ULL .. ND, On le~r tile. • ' • • -1 . ' " ... ·"'---=--_____ ...._ ____ -----... '• l:Jllt-.----··.r~-.-~---.-. • \ r ' .. " ' 1 nor\day, January 18, 1~73 DAIL V PILOT J5 Pat ·Nixon ~s Gown S From Wire Servlce1 Mn. R!cbard M. Nixon wtll wear u V-necked turquoise.. arukitver l)oilgown with •ll· · • of"er tdtam'On·ct ·and {'lea'rl erri·' broldery to the celebrotlons ronowing her hll!band's in· 'auguratton. to a seCond term SatUrday. Montreal's Jlotel Dleu Hospital !ollowina a lengthy illness. She was 83. In what spokesman s may be an Army !lrst, t e_ Salt Lakll C1ty sisters e to be et~hed Ft. ~1c<;Jellan, Ala .. Tuesday for basic training and then go to Ft. Gordon, Ga. for a U). Mrs. Trudeau, the former sworn in Monday men1bars week course Ci;ace Elliott, ·hHd bet!n· in ill ol. Women's Arm . Corps , • • · · munioations. in COID· health s u f I er l n g from The sisters -'Vanda Lu, arteriosclerosis. She was 22, Paula ftfarle , 20, and txlspitaltied last May with ..,ramela Louise, 18 -are 'What doctors said was a daughters of Mr. and Mrs. kidney ailment. Norris Weimer. * Brig. Gen. Mildred C. * City Councilman Don LafU .. An attorney and television BallexL ~ director of the actor have been arrested In Women's Army . Corps, will ,.---------. Los Angeles on charges or come to Salt Lake City to ad-l ] shipping pornographic films minister the enlistment oath, The' rWhUe liouse rdtased sketches ana descriptions or the ballgown and of a teal te of Puadena, Tex. says that he had no plans .to seek any more political offices at the close of hi s present term because of "illness and fatigue." "The voters are sick and tired of us,., said LaFitte, who has served four two-year terms on the council of !hi~ Houston suburb. PEOPLE from Los Angeleno Memphis. the Army recruit ing office .. ----------~ Tenn., the FBI says. said. green coachman coat with a fluffy sable collar, wtllch Mrs. Nl1on will wear to the swear-- ing-in ceremony at the C3pj.tol. ~acob Louis Molinas, 40, an The sisters will report to attorney, and oane oavldr· ----~;:;;~2~~~;~;;-----;---1 Christian, 29, a .television 8C· • Adele Simpson de.signed the ballgown in a princess ' style of turquoise blue silk organza over turquoise and silver silk Jame. lt has long sleeves. Mrs. Nixon will wear a short white mink jacket dl'signed by Leo Ritter-over the go,vn. Jeremy \Vren ~f New York designed the teal double- brea!led coat for lhe inaugural ceremony. * Amid all the talk about peace, President Nguyen Van Thieu is getting ready for Saigon's social happening of the year: the marriage of his tor, were arrested after a M~mphls, Tenn. federal grand jury indicted them on charges of shipping the rums intentate on two occasions iri 1972. * . Nevada .Assembly Speaker Keith Ashworth announced that official' dress for the legislative sessioh would be "coats and ties or suits." Margit l Fool, (IJ.Sparks). asked, "Does that include ~?" referring to the female ''assemblymen.·· "You ladies are so charm- ing,'' Ashworth said, "you can come anyway you like.'.' only daughter. E U The 18-year-old bride. now xpenses p finished in a Swiss high school and headed for an American SACRAMENTO (AP) -The university, will be married California Legislature is ex- Friday to Nguyen Tan Trieu, pected to spend $35.4 million the son of Ah: Vietnam's to operate during fiscal 1973- director. ·who is described in 74, an . increase of about THERE ARE OVER 20 ACRES OF NEW ANO USED CARS FOR SALE ON COSTA MESA'S Harbor Boulevard of Cars LOOK FOi THE · IMILIM AT Johnson & Son I HAL GREEN'S -.lincoln-Mercury Miracle Mazda 2626 2150 HARBOR BLVD. HARBOR BLVD. ' OVERWEIGHT? T H ! 30 MINUTE MIRACLE Mike Turin wos 120 pounds overweight one! looked like on overfed walrus until he discovered the "Mirocle Pion". , .PloMed Optimetrks Program -(POP) NOW YOURS FREE ... Yes come to Oronge Coast YMCA ony time Friday, January 19th and receive one class FREE1 Coll Now to reserve your FREE introduc- tory lesson ... 642·9990 PRESENTEDBY,.. , ~ ORANGE COAST YMC PLANNED OPTIM RICS PROGRAM 2300 UNIVERSITY DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA I / the Vietnamese press as a1~$800~,llOO~;o;vec~t~h~is~y;ea;r~.r:;;:;~T;:~~~~;~;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;~;-~~:;:;,~;:;:;:r.;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;:-:-----~--~------multimiUionaire. She is Nguyen Thi Tuan Anh, described as cute, but not an outstanding beauty. Her marriage wlll take place in Saigon's cnthedral with a 642-9990 Mass ce l ebrate d by , Atthbiabop Nguyen Van Binh. . * U.S. District Court Judge Doward B. Turrentine of San Diego says IS expensive law books have been borrowed but never returned by attorneys asking for "a quick look" dur- ing trials. • "Never IOan a book from my library to a lawyer," Tur· rentine adivsed his clerk. * Dame Agatha Christie, queen of British mystery writers~ says it's not a good idea to write whodunits that might provide a criminal with a how-to-do-it. · Dame Agatha. 82, o(fere<} various items of literary acJ. vice in an exchange ·of leiters with an 18-year-old Miami girl, • noting. among other things: "Writing is all trial and error -·one needs both luck and persistence.'' The correspondence between Dame Agatha and Shirley Dawson began when the freshman English major at Miami-Dade Junior College wrote asking for biographical information for a term paper. Actor Lee Majors, 33,. says he may "surprise a few peo- ple," and marry'in June. Majors, in Yuma, Ariz. to film scenes for the motion pie· ture "Cyborg," says he is engaged .to F~ah Fawcett or Los Angeles,. a blonde fre- quently seen in toothpaste and cigar advertisements. * .d Mrs. Grace Trudeau, w1 ow- ed mother of Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau, died in REFLECTIONS by Reyn, Sheffer "T•k• tlm• to enjoY pr ... nt ••• " , Al•x•nd•r Reid M•rtln We h'ave no wish t o endol'SC lhe philosophy of thos.e wast- rt'ls whO aay "cat, dnnk and be.;nerry for tomorrow we dle .. There is too much ot thi~ attitude in the world al- ready. Our concern is for those dedicated and ha'l"d-wotklng people who have known grinding toll and prl· vation, who may b_ave for- gotten how to enjoy U1e blessings of today. Today has much that is truly l'.lnjoyable to offer everyone, no matter how humble hi s Jot may seem. Anyone will lead a fuller, richer Ille for having learf'led to relax a litUc and enjoy the blessings o{ today. You may call on us at any- time for the kind of eounsel and guidance you would ex- pect fi'om your cl<>lfft friends. Wo are well qua.lilied to advise you regarding benefits available trom the Veteren'~ Administration a.nd from Social Security ~HBFFBR ~ mot1TU.>.f.Y LA&VNA . llACH 976 SOUTH COAST Hl~HWAY 494·\111 ' SAN ClE:ME:NTE . .Wll!5Jll,tljfl{ ""N,._O "'RIA"'l-tt--~"1111 \ ' • NEW 1973 MODELS 6.00116 •)5•$ 7.S01l6 ••. •28".t. ~.70xlS s19•5 8.00x16.S .. ":J49.t. 7.00xlS "'229.1 8.7S11.l6.S •• "36":t 7.00116 •24i..1 10.00116.S. "44":t U .00al6.S 849°' A18/13 ' _ .... f••• •St "I f"(( l~ T,.. COSTA MISA , ---(_._. ..... , ...... ,, 1714) .,, ..... SAVE $6.47 ... Suy 2 lor $19.43 ... Choice of liiei FOBEIGN & DOMES'l'IC TOYOTA 9 5 TVBEl..ESS d TVBED' r:F.T. 7.7S.IS 2 hr 19" 1.f•~ s.oo.1s 2 w 19~ 1.40 s 4 3 ~ 81o<~wgJI~ PilW 1!7l MODELS S.20·1S 2 hr 19" 1.5.l S.20·14 1In19" 1.511 ,p 0 R fit•: (t:18/l-I) (t'78/l·I) F 0 R fil•: 8 .25.rJ.f. ((;71/JJ) 8 .2$.rl!i (fi71/l~) fif.•! B.G5:rl4 (ff78/J4) 8.55.rl5 (1178/15) 1~~1·~·! II :?.:?'J :?. I~ 2 ;299 5 2 f3395 2f39.~~.="-"l,OO·lu__.,l· =---i..=.:,:.~: 22"·J 25!1.l :!.JO 23" 26":1 :?.'.i·l 24'1 2711.1 .2 .. l:! 25" 28" 2.6'} 26" 29" 2. IJ:~ 25• .. • 28's 2.7H 26'l 29" :1.111 26•s 29" GARDEN GROVE 14041 ., ........ IC«Mf' l¥tlllllllllter & .._..,, 17141 IJW1tt • WIA' AROUND fllAO 15" 6.00·' .1 ,,,, •• ' :J) k••ll h G'.11'"}"\Tfl tt"l1'1' " '"'lo"' LA HABRA 2 ................ ,..., .. WlillitW • ._,., 614-J"' ' . ' _$11( • .... JJ , ... ,, Ul-14 n1-1• 071-14 .611-TJ 71·15 71·1S 71-JJ 17" I • Ill" 21•• 17" 19 , .. 24•.t -.. " ...... I• • .. lo.,.,~""' • • I Merk(. llHlflt Will Ntl 0. lt11 fll111 • S1ft.lr•k• Jti! REGULAR Drum Typ 1. hUl•ll lllW ltt111ftlf lh1Jl(1·•11111 4 .,,,htllt 2. ltlt11 14 111 4 wht •I t1li11iillr1 l . ltt•ck fr111t whttl liittrill'I 4, '""' '1111chi11t 111 4 ''"''" s .• , •• , ' 11111111 ''"'' ' cll1tk wh11h ftr ... , ... ,. I ' 88* All full Sire U.S. Coro ~.!Rt••< t 11-rskt r1h1r1t 11tft 11114 ft•• •tri1191 ' "'''' 1. Arc tri114 111 ltrtkt '"''' .. '"''''' '''"' ,, .... lttlt •. ,,,, •'i"''"''"" ,,, Ult ti !11tl11t Io. l111f lttl l1r 1ef1ty ' • . jf DAILY PILOT 111une1ay, Janu;vy us, i .,, ' . -· American Species Peril ~d ~ ·rax ~id; No Hoks • WASHINGTON · (AP ) portat.kn ot . enda ngered available market and are tbe Utah/prairie doe. the lnterlor Se<retary Rogers c. foreign species. discourage violation ol the Northern Rocl\l Mountain WASHlNGTON (AP) .-. Australian ban. woll, the EaJteni cougar, the AC\tPllDCIUre -t b • B. Monon b a s proposed MORTON SAID several Ont lJ.S. species propost'd tor Mississippi sandhill crane, the a deductible medlcal u- to designate e I g h t Amer· kangaroo species on h.i5 pro-Ji.sting. . the eutem coug•r, Puerto a~ wlU'?"poor·wiU, nenM, the Internal Rev- lcaJ\ ab Im a rs ~r\d r~ pOSed Ust att soogbt by iur -.·as belle\•ed ·airead.Y 'u:Unc.1 the. Salit.i.'...Bartliil\ong "'sp&r. ' ~;strVICe hu rUfect. foreign animals -including Qunters who sell their hides. until reported s i g 'ht l n gs row. tbe ~ &lender 'lbe IRS dllcki9ed its Australin 's national symbol, On Jan. 11. lbe Australian throughout -the Appalachian saJ&fft1'nder, and 'tith called, tallna.Jn its periodic in- lhe kMgaroo -as endangered government tia.nned the export Mountains raised hopes of its .._the Okiooea darter. temal Revenue service species. ol kanglll"OOhkles and mea' ef. survival. Of tl\l 18 forelgn species bulletin wUM.at making Such a listing "'00\d prohibit fective April J; ..a tl.S. Jll'<>--proposea for inclu.sJon oft the any h1rther comment. the killing or capt uring o( hibition on tlielr-importation THE EJGIIT native U .. S. en~ered list one _. the '----------'I nati ve species and the im-would belp reduce lhe species proposed Cor listing Aquatic box turile _ is found -;::=::::::::::::=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::;:::::::::;::::::::::::::=;~j · mMelico. -~ Savings to sing about whatever J!)Ur budget! • · ~~· stre1ch·s!itcl'I s-~w•no mdch•ne. Select straight. zig-zag and s11e1cn -s111cn patterns. Bl1ndst1tcn oauern. El(c!usive ~W lront .aroD·tn bObb•n ~400el 4 1 J. SALE 139°0 Reg.149M Ca1ry1ng case extra. F11Non Mite• sewing machine. A beautifully simple-10-use i;nachlne. Straight, zig-zag and reverse stitches. Exclusive front drop- in bobbin. Snap-on presser feet c1!ick on and off easily. Model 252: ease 1hctuded. SALE 97.~~ Reg.10991 case ex.tra. Tous<h & Sew• sewing machine. This truly superb z1g-i.ag sewing machine oHers a lulll range of st~tch and 1ash1on s111ches. Exclu· s1ve ~gn· push-b!Jtton, front drop-in bobbtn. Many 01ner features. Model 758 . $Al E 269°0 Reg.299" Carrying case ext1a. SIN.GER Sewing Centera and participat ing a pproved ct.ale r • THE '17 OTHERS, all found 1it Allstralia, ""' the )'tllow-fooled rock wallaby, red kangaroo. eastern g r a y kangaroo, western g r a y kangaroo, desert bandicoot, gaimards rat.kangaroo : Also, the qu·o kka , Queensland hairy-nosed wom- bat, eastern native-cat. num· bat. stict-nesl rat, Gould's lllOllOO' Also: the magpie goose, fteck)ed duck, plaint wan- de,.r, bustard and ground parrot. Morton allowed 60 days for public romment on the pro- posals. Debaters Place 2nd Mar ine s' Cere mort)' Ca ricel,ed SAN DIEGO (AP) -'l1te scheduled appearance of a Marine ceremonial unit at lhe presidential inauguration was cancelled by the U.S. Se<ret , Service to avoid a demonstra- tion, a Marine Co r p s spokesman said here. THE MARINES, who use replloa U.S. nags and period Leatherneck uniforms to tell the story of the stars arid stripes, erpected to perform Friday at the Smithsonian Insitution before Vice Presi-- dent Spiro T. Agnew and Saturday in front of the White House before the Inauguration , The Orange Coast College or President Nixon. debate team of Sam· Wida and After rC;(easing a tw~page J George Searcy captured sec-story with a photograph for ood place in the recent. Los ·use in newspapers, the Marine Angeles Valley Spee c b spokesman telephoned to . Tourney. cancel the story. Wida and Searcy, both or Westminster, went undefeated "THEY DIDN'T want a until the last round when they crowd to gather," be said of lost a 4-3 decision to Moorpark.. the order, ascribed to the Junior College. Secret Service. Wida was fl81Ped outstancf.;; There was no further ex- • N•111a U111lt • u...ii.d "° 011• pom11lt per ... bje<I. lwo ~o!h p•r faMUr • .t.dditionol p•h1n -nabl• ot '"'°"obi• pric•.• 0Satl1foctlM G11•1ont"lll a.fYe111~,hd1 ( Sears ii EARS. ROE8UCK AND C(). BIG , 8x10 COLOR PORTRAIT SEARS LOW l'tl lCES HOUIS, Da;ly 11 A.M. to I P.M. Satunlcry9,30 A.M. to 6 P.M. • Sunday 12 Noon to4,30P.M. FRIDAY, Jan. 12 thrv SUNDAY, Jan. 21 Inglewood , __ Bueno Port •A, TradtrnJrk of / 1 .. ( SING~i< cc•)PA.NV A C1ed1t Plan to lit )'QI.Ir bVdget is ava1!able al Singer Sewing Cente~. Many approved deale1s also offer anract1ve credil 1erms. ing debater in the tourney planatioo. and Searcy second out ol 75J-'-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiii~mmmmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiw-_: competitors. I Wida also won third in im· promptu. J For adaress of store or dealer nea1est you, see the yellow pages under SEWING MACHINES COSTA M£S.t. ORAMOIE \. Brl•iol & s~~110..., :u SNlnnon East S.Ouin (~II PIAla HUMTIMGTON •EACH "TIW Clly" Centar ~2ill E4!r>OV al SN<:ft ~5 COSTA MESA 2ll0 ""''""' Blvd. fitfbor Center Kl '·1\H Mo.mtington 8Nefl Centtr lf1·1Ml . OAll.D•M GROVE "31 Cllaflll'IM, Ol'Wlll9 County Pl.t.U ...... The debate squad will go next to the Governor's Cup in Sacramento in February. OCC bas won the tourney for the last two years. b ·alsam's Store Wide _Clearance_SALE · open Sunday 12·5 1 OO's of Yahles! ... ! 1 . " ..!' .. , entire inventory ' recluce4! !-. Orange County's Larges t Selection of Contemporary Furniture Reg. Sale sectional 1Ox1 0 L shape q_reen stripe ············-$795 $595 5 pcs. game sets ................ -···········-· 9reatly reduced 96" sofa wood trim, choose colors, herculon fabrics, loose cushions ........................ $429 $299 10'18' L shape sofa choose colors, hercul'on fabrics or velvet ................................ $749 $549 911:71/1' plush set;tional luxurious imported velvets ................ ~889 $595 9lass top coffee & chow tables •II,;,,. '"d •hop" ....... $129-$489 ·$59 •$28, brown & saltman bedroom set . ·-·ON SAU leatlttr ca.Ir •d ottoman black or brown I as pictured l Reg. 7 pc. broww &--dloiot Ht 6 upholst•red high beck _chairs, 66x40 dining table opens to 106" with 2 fils ,1489 2 pcs. .-looal 10 x 5 whit• lin•n tux.ado style ··-··-····---·---·-· $879 kewny, browll coffee tabla oiled walnut 18x60 ··········--·----········-$21 9 cloaln 2 ooly white with green velvet piping, down fill.cl r~~~:* !;;k ...................... : ............. each $279 loose cushions -orange and brown f~r strip• ··-······-·······---········--·-···-$399 ,._ loole cushions -bl ack, brown & white hercUk>n sfri~ -extra deep seat ...... $599 brown &: IOltrnaR 9leftn of c.alif. bedroom sets . _. ON SALE pecan coffee tables with cabinet 30x60',320 white indoor or 011tdoor CJGme set 48" roun d tables with 4 chairs m•d e by l•ndes . . ............ $449 $289 kopet1havet1 wall 11nits floor samples • .... greatly redMCec:I 8' sofa & 5' loveseat wood trim -plaid herculon .............. -$689 $429 original contemporary oil paintin gs 3'x4' -4'.-4' values up to $289 $79 and up pecan magatine .1.nd• ··-••9· $49 $16 daily 11 /9''saturday pecan commodes with doors 30x30 ___ ,252 pecan hexa9on tables with doors ........ $230 walnut corner tables w/smoke 9!.111 tops ,259 chain, 2 ooly tux. arms blue velvet down filled pillow back ··-····--·-······-·······-···-· each ,299 Sofa7' bl•ck/wh;te houndsloolh ·····--·····-······ •399 \ $288 Salo $829 $558 $99 $169 $239 $395 $199 $149 $139 $139 $189 $279 FREE TAX RETURN PREPARATION F r ·ee -simply deposit $3,000 to I new or existing S3Vings account at Paci fic Savings and reccn. FREE preparation of your personal Federal and State tax re turns. Some people will save $200 to SJOO °" IDOfe in accounting fees . (This offer doesn't apply to corporation1 paitocrihip, business or similar returm.) Professional ...... qualified tax coumeloriwm prepare your peno••h•tums ... make sure that you receive every possible benefit under the tax~w. Each return will then be tripJe..c.hccbd. for accuracy by Jtighlydra.ined.specialists.-All work-is done in the priftcy of Your Pacific Savings office uaiag the trained persotUlel of Tax Coipontion of America, formerly Skomen Tax Service, Inc. This firm. staited in. 1946, is the second l;µgest tax company in the United States. They currently employ over 4,SOO COUD1elon and have prepared more than 1,000,000 tu.rctums. Work Guaranteed -byTtxColjlOf8tionoCAm•rica. Guaranteed· Accuracy. . , - • 1 Returns are trip e-cbecked for accuracy of mathematics and reproductions. If the company makes an error in mathematics or reproduction ~ company will pay any penalty or interest associated with the extra tax assessed. ' · Guaranteed Pll"otection~u y.;.. return 1s questioned by the e;bt Ibey 0 ;M;r1n:.:. no charge iii coo!ormity with regulatory )l<OC<Odllre. g your deposit or your pMSbook for a savings account to be llans!erred to Pacific Savings. We will Immediately Set up a specific appointment for you to meet a tax cOunse.lor at a time most convenient.. to you. Also -you get a FREE Safi Deposit Box, .. rrice charge FREE Trmler's Cliecks, FREE Collection of Notes, FREE Notary Service and FREE Financial Counseling. And -your deposit earns 6% per annum in a two to fJYe year ($5,000 ~inimum) Certificate account -5*% per annum in a one to five year(Sl/XXJ:minimum) Certificate account or 5%per 'innum In a regular passbook account, all comj>oWlded daiiy. Rem ember -to qualify ror 1ltis r .... rrer you"'"' only to make yootdeposit m1 have your certificate validated. If yov hne an ACCOUNT ELSEWHERE, bring us your passbook and we wr& traosler your money to Paci.fie for you. Offer gOOd. until rnioked but not beyond April 5, 1973. --So Hurry --. .,_ depooit TODAY -.. c:a1 .. .iop by ---ror IllOlO infurmatj(ln •. Plus -- FREE Federal Tax Guide nus OEEICIAL GOVERNMENT PUBLICATION OFFERS . VITAL INFORMATION FOR EVERY TAXPA'\'ER J • Additional deductions for gn:ater ~tum QB Y!JIU.t tu imestments! , •'How to increase capital return on'in••tmmbforyou and.your f..a,f • Depreciation eJtplanatioo and l't'bat it_. to your return! PACIFIC SAVINGS AND WAN ASSOCIATION bas purdlUod a limited mpply of !heoe nluable ~ The booklet is available el1ewheie at retail ~ but is FREE ro AIL at your nearest office of PICiOI s..lnp ml Lou-Thia airer aood ooly while qpiy 1asta. - OPEN .NIGHTandDAY ,. Hours: Monday:Friday 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M . Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. SOUTII COAST PLAZA lrWI St 11 Sio Dioto F..:.,..Y, Codi .... P!IONE 540-4• ' ( ll!E MALL OF ORANG E T-AYl. It Moots"'"·· Dn1111 PHONE 137-4SIZ ' r- ' I • I / ' L. M:Boy_d _ In W ~·· t, Men Better Losers our LoVe and war man -cllecked out tbe u s Cenw Bureau'..(to get It! M.atisllcal judgment Qll what ie~ds to a succesful mal'Tiage. If both the husband and wife are col- lege graduates, that's good. And if together they eam at ' least $15,000 ~ year, that 's also good. Those computer bo)'1 sald lheu-studies indicate these two quaiificatlorui ha more than any others appear to make matrimonial mates ppy. 't MEN SEEM to be able to lose weight more swiftly than do women, althou&b I don't know why. Studies ot numerous heavy- weights indicate the male dieters find it far easier to drop off 2.0 pounds at will . IF YOU THINK tbe statlslical re- searchers never have any fun,· con- sider their recent finding tbat seven out of 10 wo'men are knock-)meed. O TRUE a mouse can fall a far greater dis- tance than can a cat without getting hurt. QUERIES -Q, "Will a water moccasin bife in the water!" A. Dellnllely. Q. "CANIYOU outrace a tOmado in a car?" A. Usual y; It's a rare tornado that romps along at more than 40 m.p.h. Q. "HOW OLD was Glen campbell when be took up the guitar?" A. Age 4, I'm told. An imaginative publicity man says he was a recognized prodigy at age ·6. , IF .ONE BU'IiON is missing from a man's shirt he's a bachelor. If two are ntissing, he's married to a ~ w_ho doesn 't love him. That's an old proverb of the Bel- gians. A ~IAN BUYS a new topcoat about once every eight years, a woman about once a year. Statistics showed these to be average. Is it fair? ALL OVER the world jive folk who are cojorblind to reds and greens, sure enough, but nowhere are they ao numerous, man for man, as In Czechoslovakia. Address mail to L. M. Boyd., P. 0. Bo;r 1875 New- port Beach, Calif. 92660. ' "My Advice For Staying Beautiful": By ~rlene Dahl Forth is week's cover feature, the glamorous celeb- rity and noted beiwty authority Arlene Dahl shares her personal philosophy for keeping fit-and beau• tiful. In an exclusive FAMILY WEEKLY interview, Miss Dahl suggests, "If keeping !ft is more of a problem than a pleasure, perhaps it's time to re- evaluate your life-style.'' Arlene Dahl's theory: Discover your basic ele- ment. (Each of the 12 Zod iac signs is ruled by·one of four elements -Fire, 'Air, Earth and Water.) Follow the signs of the Zodiac, And learn how to work with the 'special characteristics of your ele· ment. In the transcript of her lntdgulng cornrnen· tary, Miss Dahl reports the b,eauty routines adapted by several well-known and sucCessful women, each · • i'epresentatlve of one of the follr elements. Start the NewYearwith a new approach to phys· ica l fitness and grooming. Try the techniques that have worked for Aries Defjble Reynolds (Are), Librsn Angela L.ansllUry (Aii'), Virgo Raqliel Welch (Earth), Plsclan Elizabeth Taylor (Water), or one of the eight other beauties. Match your sign to a star's and experlll)ent with the routine she's found most successful and eornpatlble to her (and, per· haps, your) personality •. • $1 M[LLION AN HOUR....Startllng facts abQul, the imp__act of the Vietnam War on our economy come out in8rticle _by financial writer .Max Gunther who reports the' war's co$Ung from '22 '!'illion to $28 million a day. e MAN TO WATC~ter winning larg .. t plur· slil)i given any Democrat In Ca!Uomla thlJ ceD- tury, Riverside County.'s Sen. John Tunney 1' pegged as a 11man to watch" in national polltlct (Ted Kennedy's running mate!) /· All Coming Sunday With The I DAILY PILOT l i • • ' L • " l. ·. • . ' F.ull Range Control LIGHT DIMMER • Dial a glow.from candle light to full bright. • Positive on-off control. •Controls lamps up to 600 watts. • Simply replaces old ="""Q. 1witch, U.L. approved, HG, $3.99 SAVE $2.001 Big 12 Oz. VANISH BOWL CLEANER • Fomou1 Vonlsh• bowt cleaner disinfects, deodori1es and remove• stubborn 1toinsl • It's 011tomatic- cleon1 With every flush. REG. 95c 69.'- WOWI I VANIS!i !,.w_.,._ . . ~ RUSTPROOF CHROME Fil£ GRATE "' -All IN.TAKES Thursday, January 18, }q73 DAILY PILOT 17 CHAR-BROIL <19 "We're Closing Out Our '72 Model- Hurry, While They Lastl" •It's from Char-Broil®, so,you know it's the best-it's gotta be the best bar·b-que buy of this year! • Eliminates wood-carrying, li nhter fl ••ids. charcoal and messy ashes forever! • C:omplete ,;,ith post, no-tilt base &.permanent briquets. • We stock everything you need to install it yourself. • Don't wait for summer-get ready for those lazy days cook-outs now!!! -REG. $109.99 SAVE $50.001 WOW! • MOTOR & SPIT REG . $19.95 YOU'LL SAVE $10.001 WHIU THEY LAST! $995 Quilted Vinyl ... DIE·CAST AlUMINUM HOUSING BOOT BAG Dl,lMETER ( L----1 l USTPROOF POST )--.;i~ • The proper way to 1tore yovr bQob keeps the nf in t hap•I ·t.:::::\ • Attract ive florol quilted r:::I ba~et1 them off th e ground I 110, $1 .59 59' SAVE $1.001 Woven Plastic FRIEi NO·TllT .... CANE SWAGLITE •A handsome lamp to light your reading corner, den, bathroom, dining areo-its simplicity is classic. • Comes complete with its own hardware-in 3 decorator colors. WOWI 40111 .... Genuine 1'Churtft'' STEER MANURE TOILET SEAT -~ • Now'1 the time to fer1ilb:..,_ •High glols, baked-on meiamlne finish. start now & you'll have the •White only. greenest 1ummer lawn everl ~ REG. $3.99 $299 • Cotton seed fed-<omposted SAVI $1.001 and aged-weed-fr... ~ No. S•O 39'... ~CHURCH . "THE BEST 5U.T IN THE HOUSE" REG. 49c 110.$19.99 $JJ99 SAVE $8.001 ~-Tlgo~ ·wr~i' 3 Lb. Polyester Fiii SLEEPING BAG ''Ivy One for locft MemNr of Jlle family At flll1 Spedol low Prfcef'' . • 100'/. nylon outer1hell and llning-completely wcuhoblel • Heav.y-dufy zipper zip• 2 boft together. • 33" wldt x 77" long tfffping 1ize. ANTr;fREEZE CAR MUFFLER • Straight-th rough dftiQn assures minimum bcick II I • Fufl·•lrength permanent lype onli·freeze from Do~. • Y.ar-round protective tr.alinent for your car. 110. $1 .97 GAL SAVI 50<1 Roloullt SPARK PLUGS ·-• Rebuilt to •icocting stondords-10,000 mile guoronteel 110. I fw $1 .59 88' SAVI ovr• 10tl ht •f I RBI HOW·TO.DO·IT CusJ ''Mctcrome, Oold l.M a lfower PreMt'Yfn• ly HeHI , .. ,.,..,, • JtMJary 12-•rvt•SIDI, 7 PM tt I PM J1""'ry 2'--.AfllAHllM, 1 PM ft I PM Jl'l'*'Y 24-fOUNTAlfll VAWY, 7 PM TO t PM J1.utry 2S-MONTC&.All. 1 PM te I PM .... __...,. ~ ........ - 9t tM tt-....,..,, ,...._ Fltll DOOR ,llZESI Fltlf WIESHMOOSI pr•••ur• & l~r9Cl1ed honepowerl • Flow control for stability and ~nd tone • 110. $7.11 SAVI $2.001 s511 Genuine Deluxe CHAMOIS • flMtl. toftttt npturot 1hetp1ki,._.t 1quore feet of the best! • Perfect for all polish ing and cleanin9. RIO. $4.19 $247 SAVI OVfl $ 1.701 "· ( • I DAILY PILOT Thursday, January 18, 1'7l FURNITURE OUR DESIGN AWARD NEW CLASSIC RECLINER This is a recliner with everything you look: for in superb furniture, luxurious he~vy grained vin~ls in rich, rich colors, and a frame of smooth solid ash with walnut pegs-marvelous quality, striking design, and supreme comfort Matching sofa, loveseat, book- staCk and tables also available tor the total designer room look. NOW 43 GREAT RB FURNrTUAE SHOWROOM STORES n § i , • -1 Diln A WCDI: • WCD!DIP.TI 10 IN'ITll t • So\TUllDilf 10\Ml'll6 • SU-f 12:JtUJI Tll.6 I'll(.( -IHll • nt(( IKCOll~lOll sunlC( • """ IKUYtllY . COHVOtlfMJ MNK Tlllkli Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers ' SYUIANIA COLOR • llG PICTURE CONSOLE TV Gi1nt 15" dia9: color bright ssr~ p<cture in cont1rnporary 1ty11d cabinal. rich w1l11ut g••<n fini1h . Gibraltar 901t) ch111i1, AFC, Parm1 -lock\!!), lnilant color®. Mod1I Cl 22J2W. NOW. $51995 ONLY , Only $427 ltlillio11 Guzzlers Give State · "R~agan Asks Top fay ~e .. / Natural Resource ~ -SACRAMENTO (AP) -The and the auto unlv.nlty-eol· THE us.• oow compares Millions largest stale, emp1oye pay In· ~~ system. with 115,IOO ln 196MT. I ... -Whtn Reagan talks aboUt But the total number of Request Redµced . SAGRAMENTO (APl -The average CalifQrnian will dewn nearly 32 gallons of beer, crease n u~tory --h J s economy·ln·1ovemm nt state employes, Including Ute million -was propoied today program, he of~ notes that university and collea:ea. In- by Gov. Rooatd.Reapn In hl4 the state baa "'fewer civil •creased from 169.000 to more 19n-74 budget. servants workln1 for tt now than 192,(M)O In-that same Legislature. • mOrt 'lhan siJ: gallons of wine _ Reaaan budgeted the full than when he took offk:e. period. SACRAMENTO (AP) Gov. Ronald, Reagan today proposed spending $427 million durlng the next fiscal year in the field ef natural resources, The operations budgets of and nearly three gallons of sevrral departments are trim· whisky during the coming med by small amounts, In-year, state finance expertS eludi ng the Department of predict in the new state Conservation and the Depart- amount proposed by the Stateill~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Personnel Board for the state's 115,000 clvll servants and sought by the University of Califor:nla and the State University and Colleges for a decline of .about $5 million from the current ~r. The Republican governor pled&ed to "continue our ment q_f Navigation and Ocean ~et. Development. That may translate ,into The $3 billion State W1ter hangovers for some. But for ' Project will be completed dur-the fiscal experts it means tax ing the year and the budget of dollars -a total $140.6 million ( ) the State Department of CAPITOL Water Reso"""5 will be trim-for the state during the budget med by $2S million, to $185 year starling July 1. '---------millioo. strong efforts" to cope with air and ~·ater pollution. BUT THERE are cuts in the t~'O major departments bat- tling pollution: the California Air Resourtes Board and the State Wat~ Resources Control Board. } THE CONSUMPTION of REAGAN HAS budgeiC<l $78 alcoholic beverages h a s million in bond funds to help steadily increased, Co v . local government~b u 11 d Ronald Reagan's new budget sewage treatment facilities. notes, although there had been The funds, an increase of $13 a decline in sweet wines. million over thi s year, come their nearly · 75,000 faculty membel'tll and workers. CIVIL SERVICE workers are scheduled for an average 13 percent pay hike In the year start.i{lg July l, but there ls no provision for an across-the- board increase. InStead, the money, $160 million. will go to correct ln- equilies in the salary of state employes compared to the!r counterpart workers in private industry. But Finance Director Verne Orr said, "I would assume that m06t employes will get a raise." from the Clean Water Bond But now, the , budget says. Act of l!m>. But use of the "Novelty wines have ap- matching funds depends on the parently attracted n e w availability or federal money customer groups and arre~ted TIIE NmtBER of state civil for such' projects. serva nts would decline by • I See by Today's Want Ads e WALK TO THE BEACH from yow· new apartment -these are new 1 and 2 bedroom places with car-pets, drapes, dlshwashen and rtreplacn. e NEED A !.10TORCYCLE! T:cy thl,tl_ 1968 Kawasaki 90. It's In glltl(I condition. e SA VE YOUR HANDS and a•lot of· ti1nc with this new O'K£'t!fe &: Merritt dish- washer. The water beard is cut back by $1.6 million. The Reagan administration said this is because the OOard~mpleted a m a j -0 r pro)ect-developing water quality plans for the en- tire state. Reagan put $.500.000 in the budget to hire 28 additional staff members to enforce the state law ,against water polluters. Mote than $8.5 million will the decline in per capita con-more than ~ under the be available in the new budget sumptlon of sweet wine." budget, to 115,000. But the year for construction of boat The current year's take number -0f state employes I unching r ·lit. d t "d -~;;;;J~'.'r;J~~:_Jw;o~u~ld~in~.c~re~a~se~b[y~a~boU~t ~!,~OOOfil, ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ a act 1es an ° 81 from alcoholic beverage taxes I al t I · primarily because of increases oc governmen · n manna is estimated at $138 million. in the faculty and staffs at UC improvements. The biggest single item is a proposed $2.2.. million loan to Santa Barbara for im-Jr--------------provement of its small craft READ THIS AD THE AJR board budget is trimmed by $500.000, to $7.l harbor. million although its staff will ~--------­ be increased from 251 to 289. An increase is planned in the air board's program o{ assembly-line testing of autos to insure they meet antismog requirements. Funds for this are paid by the manufae- turers. The budget includes $25- mill ion in capital outlay for construction of park and recreation · fa cilities during 1973-74 including $7.4 milliion ·at Perris Reservoir in Riverside County and $2.9 million at Bolsa Chica State Beach in Orange County. TllERE IS $315,000 to finance opera1ions of the new Solid \V a s t e Management Board created by the last '"· ... Cigs Make Revenue SAC RA ME NTO (AP-Californians are ex- pected to buy 2.5 billion- packs of cigarettes during 1973, bringing an estimated $255 million into state coffers. That figures out to an average 125 packs for every man, woman and child in the state. The state collects a dime a package in cigaret- te taxes. STEREO CON~OLE-AM/FM/FM Mtdlt1rr•n••u1 1tvl• C•"ln•t of p•ca11 "'"''"· SO w•tt1 p••k mu1ic pow•r. Add-011 c1p1bility for optional l ·tr11ck or ca11•tl1 tap1. Mod•I SC42lP w •• $279.95 NOW s2399s ONLY Last 4 daysJhat your s1 will . still be worth up to S290.00 ( Thurs.-Fri.-S11t.-Sun.) SOUND INCREDIBLE? (INCREDIBLE YES .,. BUT DEFINITELY TRUE!) YOU JUST BUY ONE ITEM Of . VOUR CHOICE AT REGULAR PRICE Then We Will Give You Item Of Same Value for only INO MUMIO .IUMIOI • Every item will b9 sold on a first come first served basis, and of course our entire stock is included except for Fair Traded Merchandise. sum SPORT COATS SLACKS .1.1.c•m $Him PANTS LUTHll M»ODS COi DU ton nc. "WE ONLY SELL TOP GRADE MERCHANDISE BY FAMOUS. MAKERS" ' ' I mure than you'd l!llpett hlr lllSI .than yau'd lllpllt , • . . 25 Years of Integrity & Dep-4at.1Htf ' COSTA MESA e Harb°' Area EL TORO e Saddlebeck .Y .. ey '41 ' Ee st Seventeenth Street El Toro Rd . •t Free+tty I next .to Sev-On I :Doily: 9-91 s.1. 9·6 646-1684 D•ily: 10.9, Sot. 10.6 117-)830 Soatll. Coast ?tua SAN DIEGO ~REEWAY AT .BRISTOL • COSTA MESA, CALIF . • 140-lsOJ ltADIO DISPATCHED FACTORY AUTHORIZED TV & APPLIANCI SERVICE PNONE. 548°3437 WE 'LL ,REMAIN CLOSED WEDNESDAY, JAN. 10, TO PREPARE FOR THIS"EVENT ·~ ( ' I I I ' I • - ' I 1 i f 1.. ' \ ' . I I I • I -' I • T Th 11rsd.tiy, J1nu&ry 18, 1q73 * DAILY PILOT f 8 Maritin)e Academy ' Surviv~ Billion~dollar 1Schools ... SACRAMENTO (AP) -propo"' ralse3 a•eraatng 5.~ (.Jae would bring UC salaries Gov. Ronald Reagan today percent for UC faculJr f:'~lne with thole Institution!. propated. California's flnt Sl memben, 7.5 percen~~lor "In 1pile of all their com- bllllon b.udget for. blghu CSUC facul\y members.,.. 12 pt11nt1, It II obv1<xl.! we bav. education. wilh the biggest in-percent for n o n t e a cli I n a: kept up pretty well wilh crease proposed for the State employes. I faeulty raises around the na· [::;;;:: Budget Asked ... SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Callromla Maritime Academy, alated for extinction a few years ago, enjoys a prosperous new lease on Ure in Gov. Ronald Reagan's 1 9 7 3 -7 t ~udget propo,.I. The academy, at Vallejo, ls budgeted for $1.7 million in operating ·funds for the year beginning July 1, an increase of #7S,OOO over the current year. 'I'BE' BUDGtt is designed to provide (or education and training for 240 prospective merchant marinemen. The Reagan administration proposed pha!lng out the academy several years ago, partly because of limited jo.b opportunities for graduates and because the academy lacked academic accreditation as an institution of higher education. BUT THE Legislature pa!- sed a bUl last year which re- moftd the academy from the jurisdicUoo of tho State Department of Education and made it an independent ln- stitutioo. Bets Ove r Billion? SACRAMENTO (AP ) - Betting at California race tracks Is expected to top Sl billion for the first Ume during fiscal 1973-74, Gov. Ronald Reagan 's finance experts predict 1n the new budget. The state expect.! to col- lect 175.3 million as Ill share op:· ~utuel handle, ' lncniise of 13.3 million . er tbe current year. I ' BUDGET UNVEI LE D Gov. Ronald Ro1191n $1 Million Sclieduled On Mansion Unlverslty and Colleges, Stale Finance llireclor lion," Orr said. It includes proposed in-Verne Orr said a sufvey of creases of 16.9 percent far tbe eight of the nation'• most California State University prestigious u n l v e r s i t l e s and Colleges (CSUC), JU per-determined that a 5.4 percent cent for the · University of California and 4.6 percent for California 's 96 CQmmunlty col· leg es. TOTAL sTATE spending on education propased in the IWlgan budget Is $3.49 billion, including next year's greatly er.panded $2.45-blllion state support program for local elementary and high schoolll unveiled Tuesday. Other components of the proposed education budget for fiscal 1973-74 are $4;42.l million for the l!k:ampus CSUC fiystem, $429.6 million for the University of California, '219.3 THERE RAVE been angry salary disputes be t w e e n Reagan and UC oUlcials in million for the community col· SACRAMENTO (AP) ' -Jeges and $42.3 million fo~ Nearly $1 million is included in Gov. Ronald Rea gan's budget proposal for con· struction of a new executive mansion for Cal~fornia gQvernon. The total, 19541,000, ts money in the. Bagley Conservation Fund earmarked for general state construction, said State Finance Director Verne Orr. · 1be state appropriated $150,000 last year to start pla nning the new gubernatorial home on a 12- acre site overlooking the American River in suburban Sacramento .. Recently, the state hired the IA>s Angeles firm of Buff & Hensman to design the residence. Earlier, architect William Stephenson presented a working outline proposing a furn~ executive residence costini fl.3 million. Orr said Stephenson 's outline included some frill s, such as a proposed $9,000 ten- nls court, which might be left Qut of the :futitial construction ltthe $950,000 isn't enough. scholarships and other special higher education programs. That total s $1,233,339,000 for higher education. La st year's final budget fell just short of 1$1 billion for higher education. ON TOP OF lhe fl.13 biUJon are bond. funds for new oon- strucUon. The bond money wUl pump another $54 million into the community colleges and $36 mi Uion into the UC and CSUC systems. The budget niarks the first time the state university and colleges have been budgeted for a bigger share of the higher education dollar than UC. The IWlgao hldget would provide enough money to hire 369 new faculty members and 451 other employes in the state Wliversity and colleges !!lystem and 44 new professors at the nine UC campuses. UC Regents asked for funds to hire 144 new professors. THE REPUBLICAN governor's budget grants· the full salary increases requested by both the state univenity and colleges and the UC. II . N1W CLUl!l ITARTtNO NOW . 0 Cl-taught by-ltad Profnt0r of Dance for 0 All agn from o Beginners through lldvar)ced ICE CAPADES CHALET DANCE STUDIO Meaa Verde Shopping Centar 2701 Harbor Blvd. Cooll Mna Tel: W9-8a80 The ReliA.ride Deluxe J :~~,e~tte.d .Tire. " 1 A belted tire at a non-belted price And the Treasury backs it with a 1 strong 30 month guarantee • 2 ply polyester cord body plus 2 ply Dynacor" Rayon belt e Smooth cushioned ride of rayon with new strength • 78 series low profile styllng • 30 month guarantee with 9months100% allowance • 10to17 months 50% allowance e 18to30 months 25% allowance Bl•ck Wlllte Fad. Blick White F•d. wtll .... u ... Wiii will •• Slz• ,ii• lubel1h lubele11 l•• Sire Flt1 hJbeJe11 tubll••• l•• E78ll14 73Sx14 21.17 24.97 2.31 J H78lC15 B45/855x15 2117 28.17 2.9" F78x14 775x14 21 .17 24.97 2.50 H78x14 855x14 29.17 2.94 G78x1 4 825X14 21 .97 24.17 2.67 . F78x15 775x15 24.17 2.M G78x15 815 /825x1' 21.17 24.17 2.73 J78xt5 885x15 2U7 3.12 With th• pureh••• ol A•llArid .. ltlN YOU 11« 1. FAEE u,.1n1t1llatlon 2. ffl!'.I! tire ~111on 9v.ry 5000 mil•• Oii~ Rtl!ArlO.' O.lu•• S.H9d Md Rel1Ar1~ au,.,''' our_; MINI 11\d do nol ,..lltitl 1ny 1111Uonw10. tttndflrd of 111111Uy. ' • 7M•1SW.CkW'lllflfWM1 1.11,.,~ ... ·-b.l•••• ............... past years over faculty salaries. The university's request for an enra $53 mJWon for new programs was cut to $14 million. and a slate college re· quest for $45 million for new programs was cut to $29 mill ion. • • The community colleges budget, wh.ich supplements local property taxes for the two-year colleges, was in- creased just $9.6 million to . J , $219.3 million for tne im.i. fiscal year. THE com.1UNITY collef budget is part of the ~­bill.ion public schqols bu. unveiled Tuesday. ., The Silver Martini. For people who want a silver lin ing without the cloud Smirnoff Silver Ninery ~inr four proof. Smlmoff lcaves you breathless• fer 1moet .. rl•l111 c•Mf•r1 Milt •fttr mllt, tf1w 1il•ck1 will htl' ,.11 co1trol ,011r c•r .R'9rt i-reclstl,, .. l•t•la wllttl •lill'Mt•t ••4 r~ clue• tire Wttr. Sllff t. fit ...... AMtriC•• (IFS. · t.2s 1 •••• 11.tr .... ,.._ • e tyllADA IW 18000 Clo~wort!Sl e '!OODlAID ltW 215110 Y<t•y ~wl. e tltYllSIDl llllll!it< e SUTA •llA So.Coostl'llll e TOIHIKI SilOl""aol HIWI~ e tAKIWOOO Cl!son SI. and P1111P•I Bl•d, • lUIN,,AHBucl IOI°""""""'. otlAlll Galfo! c .... 1w1, lftll lbn<lesllt o, ..... k .. , •••• ••·•••• s .... ,. 10" , .. • ' ' ·- .1- " " . ' ,, . 1: " . I JO DAILY PILOT IJ .. tT..._119 Pain Killer Li ttle electronic b o x lhat jan1s pain signals has permitted her to live a normal life, free of excruciating b a c k-. pains, says Mrs. Kari Lundberg, lilinneapolis. The device probably \vorks like Chinese acu- puncture, offic ials say. Operatio1 1 Cautio11 Indicated WASHINGTON (AP) Results of experiments with .. immature male rats suggest greater caution in the use of the ntale vasectnn1y operation as a routine birth"{'(}ntrol pro- cedure. a team of New \'ork medical researchers has reporled. They said an estimated one million American men un- derwent such operations in 1972 alone. THE RAT TESTS suggest extensivl!' additkma1 studies need lo be done in man to determine ":bet~ s u c h operat ions might adversely af- Rat tell• suggest e.rtet1sive add i· tional studies 11eed to be dot1e i11 ma11. feet the reproductive system permanently and also have harmful effects elsewhere in the body. they said. Ho\l.·ever. in recent months, at least two prominent specialists in vasectomies have challenged a previously: reported concept of a Syracuse New York pathologist. Dr. John Bernard Henry. that vasectomies might cause per rn ane n t sterility and other health problems. such as arthritis and multiple sclerosis. IN THE NEW report on the rat studies, a tean1 of New· York ~ledica\ College and Long Island Unive r sity researchers said the ex· periments involved use of the vasectomy technique, or a closely-related one called "vasoligation," to close off the two tiny ducts that carry the male spermatozoa -the same methods used in humans. In such operations. since the spermatozoa cannot escape. the result is male slerilitv. But if a man changes his miild later on, a re-opening opera. lion is available. Howeve r. these operations are suc- cessful in restoring fe rtility in only one out of four cases. The New York researchers · reported that, after 28 weeks, th'e operations on the rats pro- duced damaging effects on the size "and perhaps function and hormonal activitv" of the animals' testicles and closely- relatcd structures . THEY ALSO said sn1a\\ gf'oW!hs. called "cysts," were observed in the reproductive organs and occasionally in the abdonY..µal c a v i t \' and elsewh"e're--suggeSting to them that adverse effects might be caused elsewhere in the system. Jn a· report In the technical journal Science, the in· vestigators said: "OUr sttidy ... suggests (hat pending extensive st udy of the endocrine · (hormonal) and somatic effects of vasectomy ln man greater aaution be observed in the U9e of Vas· b·;-.~~ ......... mies as a_ routine con- tractp.Jive proced ure." ,. Tllursd.ly, January 18, lfl7l '- S-onic -Booms, Threaten .]) .ath· ~all~·~ DEATH VALLEY (l!l'l) - Sonic booll)S may be damag· ing rock form ations in Death Valley Nalional 1i100wnent_, where Air Force bot.rodders tlke to S\l.'OOP their jets low ove r the desert floor to claiQl lhey have flown below-~ level. About 550 square miles of the mo1wment are below sea level. and apparently many • pilots find the ' urge to zoom replaceable clirf dwellings and near the desert floor ir--rock formations in nation.al resistible, s,ays George B. parks. Hartzog , whO r e s i g n e d -'Ibo Air Force agreCd late in recently as director of the Na. 1971 to avoid 11ny national tional Park Ser,•ice. · • monument or park that Assis· tant Interior S,e ~re t a r y -HARTZOG blew--the:.,whistle -Na1baniel Rood liSted as a on sonic booms a few yea rs •·fragile envirorunent". ago, when.the possibility arose that the Joud noists might be SINCE TflAT agreement, <'.auslng damage to some ir· the Park Service says, there Put ·the~ was ''a marked dimlnuUon } parently hasn't worked in the left the Part . . flights" over aucll lllec tale of 6'1Ut Va)loy. Jlet!lnnlng in 4une a Part areas as Mesa V , r ' Y().$tih1te, '-Ytllowstone, ~ . ''WZ---HAVE-A-partlcularty-Servlce..~n llld,today, yon .4e Ole)ly, Bryce dlftlcull, P«blenl Ill De•lh the soplc.. ~ over Death 'Rainbow Bridge, at uraJ.-:v auey-.ritli "-the"llOl-i'Oi!i!Ui -Valley ~lln to bloaom Bridge, Arches NaUo Park, In the Air j,' ' ._ J"-•• ag1ln. In J\lne \l>Ore were two Cbako Cln)'oo, Aatec Ruln8, "'"!.. w • ., ,.. ~ TOpOrted, tll(n'3T·In"ll1')y, 14 ln Gran Quivera and Wupatki ·make a JlflCtl~ of being able August, and about 10 a month and Nav~jo Indian national to tell tht1r Mends they-new a since then.... r monwnents and parks. utane below sea level," But , lhe agreement a~ Hartzog complain~ befo~ he The Park Service CQm>o LI: on High Prices / Sites ' ' ' plained to El ro,,,, Edwards and Peora• Air Force Bases, Wblc!>~a lo_lhepoo. :~ "They alw•ys ~ to chAnge · their filghta ' •nd dts'courage their pllots from getting into the---'Below, Sea Level Club'," the Park Service said, but -the ll'equeney of sonic .. booms in Death Valley, "ls still w\aceeptabfe". --- PRICES·EFFEC-TtV'E-THlltOUGN MONDAY; JANUARY 22 .-SO. COAST 'PWA , • B·AUE'R C1M SUPER 8 MOVIE CAMERA with DELUXE CARRYING CASE Less . . • Schhtlt.r CIM•lf f/1.1 Lff• with lltanu1I •• Wiii Th' an· as Powet" %0011, ~3S...,.Dl&111ttr of Lens 43111111 • Bthlnd-t•Uu CdS Mllt1l111 Srsh1111 wltll·ASA :~:::,::t~!'11owtt-hom5rt.l•l~'nit, Hall Prlcel .. • Throul) Ult Lins \41wl11 ¥ ., • • • Dullt· .. ~P' A f ilter • Dlapi.a,. Loclllq 0¥ttel-lo Ctvvtrldl Aulo1111Uc Mtlltl11 • StMhrd o..tt en~" ._.. • Alto l\™ttiq FU a C•lto& ARGUS 146X CAMERA OUT.FIT . • lattaryti•• ''"" • Dtlllllt Ea:'°*wt ""...UOI •Gtit~•L~IUIUP · AGFA- OPTIMA 500 SENSOR CAMERA Kit llClillH: . • Fully Auto•atlc Ea:pos .. ·l:telrtl Up to J/500 Ste. ltedacoW fllM,.llaalctbl 1• • CllS E1po1urt lllitr -· • t Rff:Gr ... SltMI ii lrl&M U• Vltwf.._ .. • Coita Mesa, Bristol at San DlttCJo Frwy. DAILY 10·9 ·PM SAT. 10·6 i19M . ' . ' PHONE 979!"3373 MIRANDA ~.ENSORMAT RE CAMERA with Fl.8 LENS AND DUUXE CASE. • lllultl·SloC, E11J Lold,TH•Up Spool • C111lolll'ld llndln& LIYlf • Enlatpr Sbulllt Sp11d Dl1I • Swl tcllln'1 Syst1111 Actlvatts the "ZW" llltt1rln& Syst1111 tht_ lllO ... l lbt Fii• Wlldlq Ltvtf 16 Advanced • IMIKUllpMl I Fl..,,. • lttpllClllltfll fOClllllll Scrttllt • front and Top S1Mrtt1r R•llH• ZOM Mll11lq Sy1t191 wllh S111f.Spet R11dl11Ct • nL CdS Mettr Cttl nd lllllt... "LockOlll" • Av1tl1bl• with fl.I or fl,4.Auto MlrHda Ut11t1 • Focal PllM ShLttter with 11 Shutttr S11tti11 I ·Rancll•r from 0111 Full Stco!MI to l/lOOOtlt of -•Second ·v: =" OLYMPUS 35 EC 2 FREE! 1M Aomll-lltctlrf-A~11t hcUt l'att-, _,_ ~ , l m ftlf,; ... ffl'illliJ Wiien You Leavt ~°'!: FllM Hfre for P'f~tllln&o 79 .95 , f I --------"'"'"""------~ .... ~ /G~'r.. ALUMINUM AGFAMATIC '100 . SENgOR CAMERA KIT . ATTACHE CASE • Custom F1tiln1 of C1mtr1 and AtClllOfllS ·Hint• Locll with K•J·~ C011pl1t1 with Sllou tdtr Stra; 37.83 . ,"~-._,.~,.,.~ 47-IA STROBE FOR KODAK POCKET CAMERAS INSTAMATIC • Powtrff bf Two l.SY Alklll111 Pin-Lii• Batttrlts • Recycllnt TIM Approx. I Sic • 150 Fl11h11 ptr Stt of 9'1ttrlt1 •Full 2 Y•• W•rMlty 1 . .., 95RE& PRICE .. , • 19.95 2011 "PRO" BAG • Acttpb All C11111r1s froi1 lmrii to 4a: S Pr•• 1 • / • HllYJ Co«luror Lllttd \ ' ft1movabtt ACClllOFY rt1tfOl'M 9.97 1. 17 . llMJT J.CTN 17.73 l(IT INCLUDES: • AGFAMAT IC 100 SENSOR Cam•r• • Fout· Flash Maclcubt • Metal. Saftty Strap • A1!11color CNS Color Prlnl Fltm 19.97 JG;'/iiff;;,.. 4 7 6 Mt:NI MITE STROBE REG PRICE 26 .95 ' -~y8i:one DUAl a ZOOM COLOR CAMERA OUTFIT , CT!l ti S.- 69¢ '• Aut~llc TllrciQb. nt-Leu £.I pot .. Ctt1trtl • F/l.I Zoo. LA11s t Top 1tou1tt MoYll Upt ;~ BELL.£.li!J!!!.ELL 357 ZOOM, MOVIE PROJECTOR l~~~c:~ 82 97 REG PRICE 99.95 ' .. ···-· • l' • .. . By AWSON 'DEERR - Ot .. Dllll'I', lliltt •lt" Leonlng back In the green ~llner1 the mlddle-aged woman concentrltes on the ahawl abe LI crochetll'lfl. t , She glances occasionally at •the Uny por.lable television betide~ ti.et or out through the picturi' windows lhot overlook a busy street. Becal15e her k.ldneys can no longer· fJlter the impurlUei· from her blood, she will spend six to fight hours In this chair, coooected' by• tubtng to an artificial kidney machine. t • , Without It she would cUe within a weei. · The chair 11 one of six ln a row ln a lonJ room at .the Artificial Kidney Foun- -4abon's lJMlted Care Center in Garden Grove. Three days per week, in morning and evening shifts, 12 kidney patients visit the center. Opened 'jtist' a year ago, it is the lint .oon-pront out .. f.bc)<pltal limited care center in the state. Cl1.l" COSTS Executivt director Clare Bacon, whb ' ' ' " ' . tare Center: A llvil in Fountain Valley, explained that .the; ceottr'& main objective ii to cUt the high CQll of dialysis, the blood-cleansing process. 'l'be C06ta are phenomenil. "In a bo11pltal or a profit limited care center, treatments average px> each," the dire<:Tor aafcl. "Our cogt ts $130 arxl we hope Jo lower It to •100." Annual cosUJ for a kidney patient run as high ., 1311,000 to '50,000, she added. The cost continues until a kJdney transplant Is po!Sl.ble. And not all victims of renal failure are candidates for a transplant, nor do, they all want to take the chance. For the p-tlenta, the selling Is a bit more cheerful than a hospital. They are all stablliied patients, no longer needing hospitalizaUon, but uhable for a variety of reaso~ to use a machine at home. ACl'IYITll!S "We try to keep t~m' doing son1ething ' as much as possible~" Mrs. Bacon said. "We teach them to knit or crochet or en- courage them to read. And~ we wlnt them to be a part of their treatment. ... The large airy ~ seems less clinic;al with ltl picture windows. Green recliner ~hairs, among lt'lany .donations , replace the usual hospital bed which the center did use at first. There is a television set by each chair and a large·aquariwn graces one wall. A Garden Grove art association provides .paintings for the walls which are rotated on a.regular basis. ••tt!s not at all like a hospital," com· mented a patient who lives In Costa Mesa. "J don't feel ill. I just have a prob- lem and this machine takes care of It." She sJiowed off an afghan which was bet flrs( lmittirig project. A patient who bad been having. home treatments, she now has. her tri.weekJy treatments at the Limited Care Center. TRAINING The center also offers a training pro- gram .tor. patient~ who are able to ha\le a 1Jli<;h1ne In the . home. ·The last. hortle- trained paUent, a Mission Vie.)o resident, was a young housewife. Her training took about ·Sil weeks in the center's home demOnstration center . Her artificial kidney machine cost $5,300 with all its spetlal attachment!. For the first year at home, Mrs. Bacon explained, costs can be $12,000 or $1S,QOO for equipment, supplies, treatment •anc1 training . Alter that, at $22 per session for aup- plies, t.'Osts run $3.000 to $5,000 per year. Mrs. Bacon feels that this fmanclal biirden is ·unbearable fOr the average in- come person whose insurance coverage averages only $20,000 FINANCES . "If we can lick the financial pro~ lems," she asserted, "we can licit the others." She explained th.It for the kidney pa- tlent there are many problems. Although some can work (the center has a female school teacher and a male patient back at ~~) many are foreed, (and their spi>uses aS well), not to work ID qualify for Medi-Cal coverage. "Families I~ what. they've spent a lifetime building," Mrs. Bacon said, "and this cau~s ma;nY. · problems. Patients have a lot of mari~al problems because BEA ANDERSON, Editor Tl!ur•r, .... ....,,. tt. 1'71 ..... ti ,, Patient Beulah Price gets tips on crochet from the center's executive d irector, Clare Bacon !·above). Below , nursing supervisor Pat Wilkinson makes check on kidney machine. ' . ' • l ·if·esaver the stress and the burden ls so great." The center Is trying to relieve some of the pressW'e, she said, but they Qepend on donations for their work. Of the slx machines In the center, fiy~ were contributed by service organiza- tions. Funding comes from donations by individuals, churches, schools, service organizations and several county United Fupd crusades. . FIJND.RAISER A celebrity tennis tournament, the center's first major fund-raiser, is .... scheduled tor SUnday, Feb. 25, from 1 to 7 p.m. in the Sunny Hills Racket Club in Fullerton. 'l1le Artificial Kidney Foundation, chartered in 1967, hopes to build its own facility for tbe center and thus expand services. ''With the same staff we could help three times as many patients,"· Mrs. Bacocf explained. There are enough machloes available in the county, she said, but the problem is for patients to fi~ the money to use them. An :advantage of the Limited care Happily Married? · Center. she noted, is that lmurance can be stretched a lot farther when cost or treatmenU ls less than hall that of a hospital:.,:__ SERVICES An added service ls leasing ot nve ad- ditiona l machines !or a nominal sum to home patients in the county. "Our patients' outlook la fant8'tlc," Mrs. Bacon said, "and our nursing staff is exceptional." Psychologists, psychiatrists and phys!. ciaos are on call, she said, and each pa- tient is seen by a doctor at least once each treatment day. "'Poople doo'f realize that kidney failure is the nation's number four crip- pler," she asserted. "People shoWd get regular checkups and urinalysis. In many ~ases, problems can He corrected if caught Wly." · Natioqal figures predict there will be 50 to 70 new kidney patients in the county next year. Of the ,,«» patients na· tioowide, she quoted, 1,500 are in California, probably because of Medl:Cil coverage. ' • It's Hard Work . DEAR ANN LANDERS : These days when you hear so much about cheating husbands, wivts slipping around to motel rooms in the middle or the day, divorces among close friends (people you were sure had a aolld marriage), it might be a relief·to get a letter from a .,, .. oman who is happily married to a wonderful man - and lt's been going on for 18 years .. My guy has t hanged diapers, stayed up nights with sick kids, helped me wttb the cooking, the m41keling and the dlsbe!. He took a part·91"ne job when thlngi we:re rough and never once have I had to wor- ry about where he was or what be wu doing. ' We've bad our ~nta. or COW'le, but we 'Ye neftr gone lo bedl(J'lad. I can't Imagine Ille with anyone but this man. I feel like the luckies$ womt\n In the world . -BIG G -LITl'LE 0 DEAR BIG G.: BCoudlll. J"'t bea.,tJ(ul. How sweet tblt >'" •Ider youneU 1 lucky 101. I ·~ 'yau, -tboqb, tU.t aiOn! tbn ~ II laftlved wben a inarrilge is u siod a ,,.... It takH paOence, ntalal'U)', "·"'•dpllne, gMu1 -and !or1Mq. GIV. m.y ~ to that lucky man. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I Un a bullneu woman. I believe In 1tat1111 the f.act.s and sUcklng tb reality. I wu a~ palled by your reckless e1aggeratiQn in a recent column. Yoo said you had U.veJ:. ed' at lent two mlUM>n passenger miles and that on occasion you sat on t.-~ane with two thousand letters In your lop~ Two mllUon ot anythlng Is 1 ttt - whether dollars or mu... 1' ls highly wtlikely ...,that }'OU have trtYeled one mUUon miles, much le!s two. Al for holding two thousand letters in your lap, your lap would not hold t-Wo thousaod let- tt11 -even lf you were a very large woman, which you 11'1 not. So let') have· a UtUe more re1pect for the facts, ma'anr. Keep It reali•Uc. Just 1lgn·me -'l'llANl<S A lflWON • DLUI TllANU: Aller 1HU1g ....... ' . ' with my dale book ud total\ag Ibo n11mber of mUet I have traveled la ltn I maltlplltd H by 11, uc1· came le dte toa.- tluslon that I have trave led MORE tUo two million mllea In my 1ueume. As for two tDaand letters ID my lip, I abould have bcea more e:1pllclt. Fre- q1ently when I traYel I 'carry tw• tboasand kttera wl~ me. Wiien I read, m0tt of tbe letten are In my lap, ud ~ balance la oftta la a briefcase or 01 t6e" Mat aei:t to me. 'llwliu -1 hndred. DEAR ANN LANDERS: 'lllat airline stewardess who ls having such a rough Job II 35,000 feet s00uld try bu hand af being a telephone directory assbtance operator if she wants a lesson bt pa~ tience. To begin with we are not 11Upposed 10 hang up on people no matter what thp say. We mll!t be courteous even tf'tbet shout obscenities, call us stupid and Ig- norant. We are auppo.sed to handle 100 calls an hour and are Urned by computers. True, some people art nice, but a great many art rude. When voe ask them how to spell a name, or tor an address, they e:et mad. The most lrritatlna part ol tbe job ls people wbo !<ave Ibo ~ wltboul let.- Ung you know. Alter you've looted up tbt number they aren't evtn on the line to· get It. , I feel better !0< hovin1 written this. Thlnka for your ti~. Ann. -S.W.A:, CffiCAGO , DEAR 8.W.A.: Tbab for,.,...'""' ..,, .. rn make a 1pedll elfon tt a.,t ~ ... -. to ... Dll_, ANlllMI. YM've sh'9 .. ...... W ,,,-~ • I . l. -J•J OAll Y PILOT .'-- ,•. ·. • • Sense Overpowers " '• •, . . " •• • Pat Richards, a former Rose Queen who resides in Laguna Beach , shows daughter M.elissa an artifact from Guam. By JO Ol.'iON .......... a. Eodl JIOUlr)' I -tht -"""'° -· aloOc fU PasMrna rout~ l b t ~ Cl( Amttb an for.atd m it. -a &vi os iov.ty as !ht ,_..--...... At tlq lime abo. "'"""' --... """"' !or ... 1mWs am · asbd to remember their on d&)"'S ln tht spotlight. an. --Is rtJuo. tam to do this because ber 1t- ti--tbe IOllnlamtDt bas -U1lllSlanntd by -and Ira.-.!. Patltidwds.a~ --· le< tht past i-..r. reigned ID ltll '""'1 she was 17 and • senior in high -Today sh< i! 45 and !he mother of six children. Her husband Cliarles is a career Air Force officer alllj, his •ssignmeot.s have taken them to homes in five different stales. 'Ibey have traveled lo Europe as well, and Mn. RldwU has visited. her hus- band ID Guam whore be ls l<mporarily U!lgned. FELT AKBIV AI.ENT During · the lint few years after her r.ign, sh< went back to Pasadena lo participate ID activities for former queem, bot more and more found herself with an ambivalent al- titude toward the events and i f'Germ , Warfare' Distasteful ' By ER~t.4. DOMBECK l .,.ould never have prtdjcted that ou r middle child would gro"· up to be a Genn Nut. · . ! A.s a tOOdler, Dirty Nick. as t e C?!led him, put everything his mouuth from public ~inking fountain faucets to ~,yieces of candy he found in t·C'hairs in the doctor's waiting ~m. ..... :: He consumed mxt, gravel. ~ .japer, rubber b&oda, plastic, : cigarette sfubs. goldfish and once devoured two cork coasters before he discovered they weren 't cookies. You can imagine the shock \1·hen he said at the table the , other morning. "I can't eat this roll. Someone has taken a bite out of it." The entire table froze into a tableau of amazement. This from a boy y,·bose hands looked like a ronunercial for dlrt -Ille dog licking his face. The fact is, Dirty Nick is an ioleresting study in con- tradictions. He will wear the same pair of >OCk.s until the toes map off. Yet, he refuses to use a spoon lbal has dropped on the floor uifil it -u. st.erilized.. He will drink Gatorade from a jug alter the entitt football team. He will mt drink fnm a glass !bat bas taoicbed bis brothtr's lips. He """' a fur c:oet of dog hairs. Yd, be ooc;_e !brew away a hairbrush that bad a .strand of his sister's hair in it. He has not seen the top of his desk · in three years. He faints when there is a dab of toothpaste on the washbowl. He refuses to drink Grandma's soft waler because it tastes '·icky." He eats icicles that have formed in the spooling. i-le is repulsed by dried egg on the stove burner. He once cooked an entire meal at camp on a set of bedsprings from a nearby dump. "I do DOt understand you at AT WIT'S END all," J said. "Wbfsl ya;J. wtre I baby l blew Oil yoor food and even toucbed my '°lll'le to it belore U wmt Into yoor mouth lo malle sure it_.., Wnl JOtL Today, you won •J even eat a breakfast roll after me ." ''That's grou," he said shivering . and sticking bis tongue out in distaste. "It's I -babies ....,, sick all the time." As be passed an ash tray, be rpolled a di1carded lump of dlewed gum and sllouled, "I got dibs on the gum,'' and popped it ID his mouth. I will De'Ver understand children. Harbesons Tell News I . Mr. and Mr3. James W. Harbeson o( Seal Beacli have announced the engagement of their daughter, D e b o r a h Louise Harbeson to Thomas Donald Koehler, son of Mr. Wastes Reduced and Mn. Donald N. Koehler of Menomooee Falls, Wis. -A June 9 wedding is being plann<d. The future bride is a graduate of Marina High School and now is a sophomore at the umversity of Southern California where she pledged Alpha Gamma Delta. Her fi.ance is a graduate of t\;tenomonee Fall! North High School and will graduate in June from USC where he af- filiated with Phi Sigma Kappa. t!w .-bolt lo!<. d bfflll)• -,·1~,.~n ~ -,, ...... ~ .. •said. ''I •·as "° · 111-. Poople s a l cl. '\'<*'No NI ex-&. qutm.' 8'x this -... lift· "1mlaruhlf ond l "'"ed ...._. •At !ht d<opolt """' I don~ f'W:'1 "" idea " royalt)' -Pt<>Pe bdllc el<valed ,. bl&b posltlom -" -lllld royalty. Adde\'ftDmt i.s a btt • I« buis for ftCCICJlitioCl. ,,,.... .,. .. ftW\Y people who ~~ so much •ho ltt not young and beautif\l.I_ "I doa'1 thint I'm an es:- ~ beauty and I ..... clid. And f dcm't lib the ide• of llSiDc ptOpie to sell things." MEMORABLE P.ln. Richards is careful to point out that she appreciated the T~ament of Roses and all it did for her whe.n she was queen, and tbal the experience was a memorable one for her. But Ume and travel have changed her pet1peet.Jve. Tboogb she does not de9cribe bene1f u a cruuder, sh< has stroog feelinp •boot her bellef1 and has put herself In a posllloo ol risk several limes lo back them up. She participated ID !he civil rights man:b from Selma to MOOliOIJ>erY In l b e 60s. perhaps one of the few white women to do so. ID the moments before the mardt bq:an Mn. Richards rtlleded oo her loneliness as a white woman in an \Dl- famlllar and unpopular role. "I began lo feel hostility • • Roses • c In.£ \'Ill'« '"' :11.-. ~-..... ~ to be clw<d a radi<'tl 0t - -Aft. (of u...t1ll """"""' ol '"""""""-~Slit~· ~·~ii:===·:-:::::;:'; ... ::'~·!;l!1415io~::iiii~ • """'"' ,.... .. al ... llNllj• ·~ """ btctu..iie • ~ .... ww """'4NnA. SI>< • -...Xtt NI<! lo\'t'S it ~ $::l,,'1'$ • guilt)' •00.t ...,. "" Jiit .. mudl. ' "" .,,.w t.. -d mm and ll'OlDltA .. ~ ~ .._. they~ .......... ~ !\In. --lllot tduc:ation. would. bt • tty this for n::.any ~. and that perhaps ._. -"' tht Rooo Parodo <Ollld btlw be spent 00 """""""'· 1'br<ougJt emc.lioo. >Ile ad- ded, the PP -tbe "ha\-ts.. and ''bavt-Mts" could be closed. And people could be taught 10 appreciate others for their character and achievements instead of skin color or beauty. America, she feels, has got· ten off the track and is emphasizing the wrong things. "l wish we rould get our priorities ehanged. What's frustrating is that there are a Jot of people who want change but the population is so large now It is harder to easily ac- complish change. P "''i"ant ..9d p,.,u,, , . . in our happy ginghofT1 two-some. Featuring scoop neck top with two fun patch · pockets, cuffed pants elasticized for easy growing. Navy & White Check or Red & White Check. s;zes 4-16 $29.99 ~ MATUNITY SHOPS "If we could just get back to what people are -their reall~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~g feelings . their achievements-I r :~.would help th• quality of Hau-~~ ..... "I v.1'Uld like to see people's ~~'9 energies, time and money J?l!l in~ things that would help o0r country grow." SIZES 14Yz to 26Yz Be nice to you! Chese winter blues with • peppy new print that goes lots of places .•• does lot.s of things and always looks great. Easy on the upkNp, too. Get yours •t . Half.Size Shop. ,from $21.00 Sunday Shopper? .. _. " .... """ .... 0,.. IZ t9 S Ella Nor'sHALF-SJZE SHOP COSTA MESA 1101 NIWPOO ILYD. INMll ef 1 ... SftMll HUNTINGTON .BEACH 14 HUNTING-TON CINTD (Nntt. ........ J WESTPORT, Conn. (UPI) - Authorities estimate that each person in the United states generates 5.~ pQUnds of solid waste per day. Some women, following a suggestion by Eco-logue, an ecology colwnn published by the Westport News in Westport, CoM., are reducing the waste problenl: when you have a major appliance delivered, Insist that the deliverer takes the cartons back with.him. Child's Pet Precautions EVANSl'ON, lll. (UPI) Golden Anniversary Marked Paul and Kathr yn JUUllTON-224 01 11felr Md, .. O.t 11 ...... & ttwMr tte.w: .. ,_,.n.n..frl .. 1 O.t e T .... ·WM • .s.t,. 1 M B-lc•llMtticard e Mastercltarge ' I, ' ' ' ' ' • Special Discounts On Already Discounted ,Merchandise Starts Thursday 1 /18/73 s~r SO°!o DRESSES si .. 5~16 Values to $50 ............. $15 V1lue1 to $b0 ................... $20 V1lue1 to $70 ................... $25 CAPRIS Yol1n to S21-S6.00 -------All WEATHER COATS Y1llft t• SSD-$25.00 ---Lil YETTE BRAS ..... S7.50-S5.tt Many Other tireat Values 10055 ADAMS AT BROOKHURST HUNTINGTON BEACH -9614181 hHy 10 f'9 &. M . 'tU f, kt. 10 tti 6. ~. ' • JODUOIJ diamond • mventory I.It C.r~I n1111d lflt-'550 l!IDlld, 1111111u.t n .... 1.U C.rtl r'IMld fMft dl111 ... d 1111-1. '750 2* <1111 Ledlt1• wllllt Of I'll! .. fOld 15 dl1111011~ ,,,,,,., n~.. $ l 300 • flnt 111ullty, brll1!1nt dl1,,,..,,d1. , 1.24 C.fll -· .i •. '1 800 """'· ~ .. ,. b1\lll1nl ... , bttlll!h1I. , ~ c.lfll l1dlt1' wli111 told '' dl-d ctu111< Lt"'" •Int. A loll! ,...lthf of •• !!~~I, btllllt"I dlttn· '1, 900 1.4'1 {trll """"' dll-_d, bttV!ifwl nlf l!ld ctlO<. I.Ji Ctr" ,_. •It· -d. b<llh ... I, trctlt.fll .... 1,1y, 1 . .U (1111 tount 11 .. "*'4, tlCtlti ... 11., llrll- hlllll ttfft ..,..111,. '2,900 '3,500 53,700 '·" (t!tl -· 9tf'I' e..111\Mtt ._. r."11e':!i'~t~ II $12,500 .. You keep medicine out or reach of small children? But what about medicine on hand for cat or dog? The pet prescriptions also can be potent poisoners of curious kiddies, cautions the American Academy of Pediatrics. What makes matters worse: the animal medication usually is packaged in envelosies or bottles that dl!play no warn- ing. Some of this medicine could he toxic to a chUd. Tate the same precautlona with pet medicines u you would with those for humans. 011.ICIOU~ Ill Al.l..MUT BOLOIU ofucci Byrne, Newport Beach residents, will celebrate their 50t.h wedding an- niversary with about 125 relatives a n d friends at a reception hosted by their son and daughter-in-law,' M r. and Mrs. Paul Byrne, Jr. and their children in their Huntington Har· bour home. .... "'Lt. i1e. n.• • JTA&.Wf .... •rnAullMh' 8AU•1'---.0Cl•Y ,..,._.. ... -'""" .... V!lnl Cllllllf 1/M>lJ 1911 Moma at M-41a, Hunllng!Gfl leach, °"'"" 1w ~ Dt1 ~ • c • ...,._ "' .. ..._ ""'n ,,...,.. NtW ....... ~ ._. , ...... Vtltlt', C .... Mott, H"""'1 & •I .. Of'lilt9 CMflfy IEW ·HOUU DAILT1M11i ~lll.1M llUllHY IM cl.oln MONDAY GIGANTIC 24th ANNIVERSARY JANUARY MEN & WOMEN'S CLOTHING -LINENS -GIRS NEW MARKDOWNS THIS WEEK! MAJOR CllotT CARDI ACCIPTIO SPORTSWEAR COORDINATES WARt.I SLEEPWEAR GOWNS, ROBES, PAJAt.IAS 33°/o·50°/o OFF FURTHIR HDUC:TIONS DRESSES : lon9 end St.Ht Lon9th FURTHEa HDUC:TIONS FAt.IOUS BRAND NAt.IE WOOL SEPARATES AND t.IATCHING SWEATERS, COATS AND JACKETS 1/J to 112 OFF WOOL CAP & GLOVES 40% Off t.IEN'S SPORTSHIRTS I DRESS SHIRTS UP TO 500/0 SLACKS : Poly end Re9. Febrie1 PAJAt.IAS AND ROBES, SWEATERS , S)l'Eil TSH IRTS -·--···-··· NOW ~··········-··············.J,ff VERA'S KITCHEN LINENS & PLACE t.IATS MARTEX BATH TOWELS. TABLE CLOTHS I GIFT ITEt.IS ' Dal'A,.TMaNT eTOlla 1116. NIWl'ORT BLVD. COSTA MISA. CALIF, SALE PRICED HOURS: t :JM ·DAILY t :JM 'RIDAY ••• CINflALLY LOCATID AT NIWPORT & HAboa , . ' I ( . , ' • I • • Ttiursda~ JanUl.'ry 18~1973 _ ·American Well ~ . . nown Behind Bamboo Curta}n UPIT ..... GERALD TANNEBAUMS NEW YORK ~-I) -United States and the first · seven Chinese movies -•·1 Gerald Tannebau who was citizen of the People's was loaned -qut to various se~t by ~ ArpJy pun, In ,!lepublic o( Cblna to im· °"anlzati..,..tevery li111t-t got 1145 a.nil stayed right on for 1 migrate here with a penna-ready lo come home. they'd quarter century of Good oent vlsa . ' suggest SQmethng else that E3rth-shUine history, ls back The Tannebaumll have been looked interesting . home with hia Chinese actreas traveling about, lecturing, and ~ Tanncbaums' Shanghai wife. as for American audience residence was a . 35-ye~r-0ld or what she calls their reaction, h.e says : 04)>resident ap.artment house in wh1~h a "widely publicized" 1962 Nixon really opened up China fair cross-section of Chinese Chinese marriage, Chen Yuan-as far· as people's minds ire people lived. chi has written : concerned. They want to know "There were sch o o I "My husband Gerry Is a all about how people Jive teachers, . factory , workers, legendary figure in Shanghai there " former private busmessmeo, · . and the fellow next door was a -an 'AD}erican citizen who T~nnebaum. a native ?f French horn player in a remained in China after 19d. !181Umore who was a cap.ta1n symphony _ unfortunately." This inevitably stirred up 1n charge of the Amencan was there resentment . or gossip in Shanghai." armed f?~es radio station in bitterness am 0 n g the That second sentence has Shanghru m 1945, was among bosinessmen done out of their got .to be a ringing un-the sold.iers who helped M~. private enterprises. derstatement. Ij was ln 1949 Sun raise money . to:. nh~f. "Well, oo. First or all, their that the Communists took ov· When he was demobilized m livelihood was insured and er. Marriage to an American--1946, he accepted ~er p~posal usually their children 'didn't although he had stayed on as a to stay as executive director want to inherit the business close associate to Mme. Sun of her China Welfare Institute. anyway. In China. the kids Vat-sen in ·her relief and Mme. Sun Sooog Chlng·llng don't want it. And the welfa~ work -was an eveet now: js one of China's two vice businessmen were still busy: of some moment. chairmen. , it qualified for a. job they got Th.is year, Chen Yuanchi, Tarmebaum ·founded the ii." former actress in the first Childr'en's Theater in In his apartment, could he Shanghai People's Art China in 1947, t a ught tell what people wert think-Th~ter, became the first American literaturP. in several ing? unoffi~ial Ctilnese to enter the universities, and acted in "In general, lhey all seemed to be pulli!Ji for one objective -to build a new, modern China. I feel the govl!rn1n<'nt has been effective In glvlng people. lhis national purpose.·• Is there any griping? "Sure. Nothing Is perfeet. Of course there are gripes.'' What are the main ont:s? "Sometimes the lcndershlp of a local unit, instead of con· suiting with the people on the lower levels, has a tendency to issue commands. This kind of thing arouses a great distaste . "Or when the leadership doesn't take enough care of welfare. If people can't get enough help, they wanl an ex- planation. "Of course, China is a poor country. But from the prog- ress I've seen in the last 23 years -there's oo great an- tagonism between the people and the system. "Here are a downtrodden themselves, lhc domii1:'lnt thinking is: Wt: 1nust all v.·ork together. "It's a battle to keep it that way . "'hen man has betn liv- ing 4,000 years by old custo1ns, it 's not so easy to change." The TannebaurM are lcc- lurlng in California in Jnnuary, and Tanncbaun1 meantime ls writing a book about his 26 years in China. Asked about the Cultural Revolution of the 1960s, Tan- nebaum said it was regaJ'lded as par£0f -"one big step'' - in the whole process. "True. there was a big upheaval and there ~'as chaos ;ind there was fight ing. But the main thing In the "Cultural Revolution" was that people were engaged in a nationwide debate, in. v.'hich litC'rally almost everybody look part :-about which way China was ~01ng yi go and how' it was going to tet there -in every organization and study gi·oup, farmers. houSt•wive.s. In factories and theaters. "Vou n1ust understand th;11 in China dl!bate goes on all the tirne." Tannebaun1 s;ud that pri ces 1n basic CQ1nmodities such as rice, cooking oil, sugar. cotton cloth and fuel had not gone up 1n 18 years and that medici nt pricttS had actually gone dowu. through mechanization. · As an example or the reversal in natior.al pro- duc1ivity, he said the Cbinfl. v.·hich before the change ac- tually had 10 import nails, no1.~1 was able 10 make the mo::t romplicated machinery such as 12,()()()..ton hydrauli c presses that only four ot!l('r countries can produce. people wbo in two · decades;1;::================:::=~ up by the bootstraps. They've ~ changed themselves. Instead have really lifted themselves DTER!·., of thinking just about <·'. Cooking, Prophecy Taking . the · Cl ·ub Spotlight . . BIG SALE NOW . ' • . , IN PROGRESS!" Cooking Class A program on Orierital cook- ing will be presented by the Southern California Edison Co. in six coast locatlors. 11le first begins at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 23, in the Costa Mesa city council chambers. Recipes ror Chinese l>roc- coli, sukiyaki a n d rortune cookies will be. pre!ented and deep fat frying teclutiques will be demonstrated. Tuesday Club CrisweII, described a 1 "America's foremost proph- et," will speak for the J an. 2.1 . meeting of the Tuesday Club of Newport Harbor, to take place at 11 a.m. in the Newporter IM. · The club also is planning a dinner dance Sunday, Jan. 28, in the Irvine Coast Country Club and a trip to Beverly ijills on Wedn<Sday. Jan. 3t, for a production of "Young Winston." • Children 's Show Inside the Orange Crate, a children's television show, will be"tieen on Ca~l~l~ion Chan~ net 3 at ·3 p.m. every Tuesday beginning Jan. 23. Presenting the show will be the Irvine Junior Woman's Club. According to Mrs. Donald Snyder, education chairman, each show· will Include an educational spot with a visit to a community member such as the dentist. The club · also will assist the March of Dimes during the Mothers' March Jan. 23-lf>. Eastern Star Six new mt!mbers will be in- itiated during the stated meeting of Harbor Star Chapter !ilS, Order of the Eastern Star,1at 8 p.m. Tues- day, Jan. 23, in th4! Masonic Temple, Newport Beach. Joining the group will be Thomas Ashby , Miss Janet Wilder and the Mmes. Ashby, Safari Ahead The safari look for men and women will turn up in casual suits for spring. The mark of the safari suit: leather trims, saddle stitching and welt seams. l\.fost have four pockets on the belted jacket. NOW OPEN B.A. Garrack, Milan Paka•ki and Raymond Mickelson. Altrusa Club Tom Knowlen, director of the Florence Crittenton Home in Santa Ana will describe ac- complishments and goab of the borne for tile Allrula Club of Lagµna ~during a 7:30 p.m. dinner meetjng Tuesday, Jan. 23, m the C.Oast Inn, Laguna, 'lbe club furnished ooe of the home's rooms a8 a philan- thropic project.· Youth Clinic A new ~enereaJ disease clinic for youth wi"1,.. be in· troduced durin~ a Community Il)lonnation Night planned by the Youth Problem Center, Costa Mesa, and the Junior Ebell Club of Newport Beach. Representatives oC 70 com- munity service organizationS have been invited fD the meeting at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 23, in M~iners School, Newport Beach. 1be clinic will operate in conjunction with the Youth Problem Center. Delta Gamma Mrs. Louis Guerra will present slides of New Zealand and Maori music for members of the Santa Ana-NeWPort Harbor Chapter of Delta Garn· ma Alumnae at 8 p.m. Tues- day, Jan. 23, in the Corona del Mar home of Mrs. George Spragins. Teachers Through the Eyes of a Tour Director will be the topic of Mrs. Mildred Browning, Wqrld Tours directors. when 1he speaks for the Central Division, Orange Co u n t y Retired Teachers, at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 231 in the Spurgeon United Methodist Church, Santa Ana. Hadassah New members. will be welcomed to the Mission Viejo Cha pter of Hadassah during its first membership luncheon at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, Jan. 24. l\.1rs. -Solomon Candiottl of Lake Forest will host the gathering, which will include a talk on fashion and hair ~esign. JOE FORRESTER LTD. HAIRDRESSERS Pet•r Alv•r•z. Stlyist SPECIALIIJNG IN HAIRCUTTING .... ....----FOR APPOINTMENT---...,, 645-5370 390 E. 17th St.,.Cast1 - ..... 1 ............. ....... , .......•• , .......... Festival Polahsky, Leah Reed and Keo· neth Page_ and Charles Howard , vice presidents; Raymond Guzln, N S h I John Siegal and Herman ursery c oo Lov(ce, secretaries, and Harry 225 E. 17th St. -COSTA MESA A3 a fund-raising project, Kamph, treasurer. 5 4 8 • 2 7 7 8 members of South Huntington I poet, will read his own works at noon Wedne:Sday, Jan. Z4. in the writing center. in the Humanities Building oo the ·UCI cami)us. 1be public is in. vited and there is no admjs. sioo fee. • lll>MAIMrl<•nl • • Mllttr Ch•l'9t e ,,. Beach Nursery School are sell-.-----------'--========------====~ ing oranges. 1· T Clipped Wings Le Petit 01.ateau restaurant, North Hollywood, will be the selttng for the Wedneaday, Jan. 24, meeting of Clipped Wings, United Air Lines Stewardess Alumnae, Inc. OCES Edwin C. Peck, MD, con· suiting psychiatrist with the Orange County Department of Mental Health and instructor at UCI, wUI speak ror the Wednesday, Jan. 24, meeti~ or the Orange County Epilepsy Society. The 7:30 p.m. gathering will take place in the society's Santa Ana office. Peck's topic wiU be The .Personal Side of Epilepsy. Poetry Reading Jack Hirschman, American Signing •• A charter srgnlng ceremony is planned by the Newport Chapter of Hadassah at noon Monday, Jan. 22, in the home of the Seymour Vigmans. Officers are the Mmes. Joe Kandle, president ; Vigman, Edythe Horowitz, Marvin Ross I T'S JlNllAIY Sd.- PAMl ~Ulb EflSIMllLll DllS~U leitll.£-"~·rt SPOITSWI COAT1 PANTS SWIA1US SHIR1l • LJP T ,O I l/'l. OFF AND MOit' HUNTINGTON IUCH ~·.,1:..,. .......... c ..... 893-5947 suNRt IUCH ,.OMI Hwy.""-M111a6flrl~ 21:1-592-2737 Windsor ' IN PROGRESS TERRIFIC I DRESSES e PANT SUITS e ROllS e BOOT$ e . PANTS e ·TOPS e YUTS e COMI IN AND SEE FOR YOURSILFI ' !!!!!!! USE A WINDSOR CHARGE ACCOUNT iiiil No Interest-No Ci1rrying Chi1 rge • This is Cha11dler's big once-a-year Clearance of fine home furnishings _ .• your opportunity to choose from· Henredon, Heritage, Drexel, M•r~e C•rson, Stone & Phillips, ,Silvereraft, Century, Basic Wih, American _ .. possibly the world's finest furniture .... at: -. Exciting Price Reductio11s Wide selections in fine · · furniture for Living Rooms • Family Rooms e Dens o Bedrooms • Dining Roo111 s • Cb ildrens Rooms e Accessories • ' • \ " .. " I ' ' • " • • i : • • • : Your Horoscope • Tomorrow I I . • • . Virgo: Help Due From Behind Scenes \ • SAi~E .hargains-SALE • MOVING to Fashion Island • . FRIDAY JANUARY 19 Uy SYO!"F.'' O~tAlllt Aquarinns arP no t nfrau:i 1i1 speak out ..:. these nat\vC'S do not mind IX•lng eontroversiril . or unorthodox . The first ques- tion an Aquai-ian mlf(ht ask i~. "What's your sign?·· ARIES It.l arch 21-Apr\1 19); Aret>nt is on crt·&ll\'lly. change. dynnn11r approach to current questions. Personal n1agneti sm soars. titember of opposite sex is intrigued and !lays 90. Exch.on11c viev.·s. Get thoughts. ideas on paper. Young person is in picture. TAURUS (April 20-tiiay 20l : llome. property. value5 de- mand attention Your fan1i\y aod security are spotlighted. Ttnte no\\' to reviey,· and €'va luate. Ir single. question of marriage could be paramount. If married, domestic ad- justment is featured. , f.E\1lNI (fl.lay 21-June 20): Strive to Sl'e in realistic Ught. A\'oid clouds of self-deception. Ideas nttd more development. Don t submit t"Oncept that h.as not been adequately. tested. One who is impatient really doesn't care about your \\elfare. CANCER (June 21 .Julv 221 : Accent is on money. valu.ables, pt>rsona\ possessions . Gain sho.,..·n. especially if you accept added responsibility. Promo- tion could be featured. You r desires are considered. You are given real chance to prove yotlr.ielf. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Lunar cycle high -fake ln- Salt Lake Setting Of Rites ~1r . and Mrs. Ralph J. Oram of Dana Point have announced the eogagement of_ their daughter, . Shirley JeaMe Oram to Carl R.· Templin of Salt Lake City. A May 4 ceremony is being planned at the Latter-0.ay Saints Tem ple, Salt Lake City. The future bride is a graduate of El Camino High School. Sacramento and took a business course at Brigham Yi.lung University . Her fl.a nee, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl A. Templin of Salt Lake City. is a graduate of Hillcrest High School. Mid· vale. Utah and currently Is a student at Brigham Young. Miss Oram fulfilled a two-- year mission for the Latter· day Saints Church in Peru and his mission was in Colombia and Venezuela. 11in1iw. Makr slart In new l'O\lld ht in piclure. Basic forefront. You ""' senoltln, roaant.. Opl)Oiite nx finds you j EV E R YT H I N G MU ST GO t ! 1l!rt!Ction. Arce n t in· change is due to occur. Don 't •\Vare. Persons who tty tu Intriguing. Clouds of confutlonl ..: (even out display sh.elves) depe_ndt>nc'C uf Lhoughl, oc1 lon. rlghl progrt'ss. decelye you are in for rude will be el'l.dlc1tcd tl\la year H A f C kt 'I Tabl Onglnal melhods now are AQUA~IUS (Jan. JIG.Ftb. awakening. Tru1t inner voice. and April should be your mosl ' Ome CCeSSOr eS -OC QI es """ likely •• succeed. We:ir 181. Deal wilh ''°"'"'"· im· Those who say they don't care productive moilth In 1173. You, Metal Wall s-u;tures-ChandeRers bright rolors. Come out uf pro\'e public relotlon!il, cht>ck are merely testing. You hold have unusual relaUonshlpsl ,. _ shell \\'elrome new con1arls. ·rourse or direction with one special card. with Leo pertonl. HOURS: 11 to 5: VhclnMC11y thru Sund1y· challenges. clo,. to you. Be receptive 10 IF TODAY IS YOUR ' MA R Y R 0 Y I R A I D -·' f f JI.->.! I aJn I L."111 "TM Tr11111 •DOU! Allr~y." \'IRGO I Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ): n~s o llTI 3 · "ant ow BIRTH senc1 blrthdlott 1M ,s ctftti lo °"1•rr . I • • • G I h I If DAY you are dynamic, r 1 \'ou =I "-ak d•~ lo one who profile. ans own on y you ••itt. ,,_. o•11.v l"ILD , 1111 n-o. it ''the f1ctory" a~ lH~ ..... original. independent and you 0•61111 c ... 1r11 s1111011. Ntw York. N.v . works in your behalf bl'hlnd are pati~t. diplomaOc. Be ioou. Yt111't1 -lkMll' '' t1ac:tna11r111 425 30fh SI N rf Be h ~·ent>S. Benefits indicated willing to change your mind. can, at times, appare ar-11\idy Int Mlf.ffvelttlOlll • ., ewpo ac • through club. group. fraternal PISCES {Feb. lt.~1arch 201: ---------------------J'=~:::::=:::::=:::::=:::::=;,,====================:::::=:::::=:::::=:::::=:::::=;,,i organiiation. \lisit ind ividual Intuitive Intellect romes to1. confined to home, hospital. Be -- discrtel. Don't !ell all. ~ LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 221: Some of your rondest hopes, w1~hes are fuUilled. But you OF 1t7l: will ha\'e to share with family CHRISTMAS COLLl.CTORI member. No one person now C'Bn take all of the .. credit. Knoy,· it and respond ac-- rordi ngly. Above all, know ""'h.at to ask for · when asked . Do liOfne soul.searching. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 1: Emphasis is on hoy,· you achieve basic goal , career and ambition. Broaden horizons. OpJX>rtunity now is greater th1:1n . mig ht be immediately apparenl. This is the time to enlarge. You need not be PLATES limited or intimidated. ' ONL Y-lll'O. HM SAGITrARIUS (Nov. ~ HUMMELi .'.... . ...... 7.SO Dec. 21): Good lunar upect 'o•°"u'Ey_._ICINHi-•IO. 17; now coincides with long-r•n"e ....... _. -.., t OfilLY-Pl•ST YIA•-aa•. lt.• prospects, journeys, educa-SNOOPY ········ ···-······ -··. S.00 lion, ability to communicate . 1 OML.Y~••· •·• You ran build on solid base. JUAN fERRANDIZ .... 15..00 You find practical application for spt>eial knowledge. Letter or rail could be featured . CAPRICORN (~. 22-Jan. 19): Money that is not your own may become your responsibility. Be wary ol signing for anbtber's------aebt, loan. Gemlal, Vlrlo per90DI satifna's e C1As e Git ... e ca.idlft .. A"-19 11 ~11.i ·--OP•N W••ll:DAYS 11 TO 6 ~ e ..__. Cllanl •••••••••• • FASHION • : clearance : • • • • .-• • • ·-• • ·t to 21 off • 3 . •• • • SAVlllQSI EVEllY DEPARTMEllTI • : \W~~,~.?L nfue: • • i '"i ""e "i "i • • SAVE • SAVE • SAVE• SAVE • SAVE • SAVE NOW ONLY 85 KING SIZE ORTHO GENIC Reg.$349.95 • Clearance SAVE • SAVE • SAVE • SAVE • SAVE •SAVE ORY .3DAYS ,/'i/tt-Y !F"': Ortho·Pa MILL END ·FABRIC SALE Fabulous luxury! Or1ho-Edge heavy-duty Tempered-Steel innerspring. Cover.Mulli- OulHed to¥.!" loam overlhick urethane padding . Superb craftsmanship In every detail! Comes complete wllh Mattress Foelderest No-Iron King or Queen sLz_e_'f.pp_Sllfft •Fieldcrest No-Iron King or OuHn sir e Fitt9d Bottom Sl'IMll • 2 Fieldcrest No-Iron King or Queen size Pillowcaset • 2 King FABRIFIC Prices .good Thursday thru Saturday DOUBLE KNITS 100 °/o Polyester. 60" wide. Full bolts. Machine Washable. Smooth stitches, ribs, twills, and many more - Save and rcive about bar9ains POLYESTER SINGLE ~NITTED CREPE STITCH Sprlnq Fashion Colors. 100°/o Polyester Bolts 60" wide Sl .99 yd. SLE!l'WEAR FLEECE 100°/o Nylon AM 45" wide. Deslqner letH)ths Soft Pcntels kleol for boby clothft ond blonkm 69' yd. ' .. ·.· ... ,. .. l • • .. s199 yd. PRINTED JERSEY T00°/o Acetate 45" wide bolts lrlCJht and bold prinh Re<J. 1.99 ' SPORTSWEAR VELVET On bolts 45" wlde. AHi. Sporty Colon FANTASTIC Hurry and Sawt $1 C)44 yd. LACE Cotton and bltftds FABULOUS 2'yd. FLANNEL o. bolts 100°/o Cottow Solt aod cuddly 59' yd. Now h• COlta MtN 841 W. lttlt at Plocltlll. c .... M-e ,._. 641-1111 Orfit" S~ff., 1 J 'tll I PLUS 2 Box SprlnQt PLUS Ortho-Pak PLUS Double Bonus! qom w lleg.'269" IAlf 'IO .lt18" I TWiii • F1ll Reg'159" 1.1n ~ -'""' or Qul!(!n sire Bolster Pillows • King Of Queen size Mattress Pad • Kirio or tllll«I size Melel Frame on E19y-Ro11 Casters. Wllh Ma111'9Ss, Box Spring. Complete with Mattress, Box Orttlo-Pak & Ooutff Bon'* Spring & Double ~l NOW 6995. POSTURE RES'fl R119-s1tl.H Complete with Mallraa, 2 Box Springs, Ortho-Pak & Double Boout! THE NATION'S LARGEST CHAIN Double Bonus KingorQueen:P1dded Vinyl HeadboarO AND Oullled Bed1pteed. Twin Of Full: Heactboard ANO Metil Frsme on Eaey-Roll Casters. No.188 ORTHO FLEX Reg. ttDM CoMpltite with Melt,._ BOii 8prfng, Or'lhf>Palt l DolMe Bom.111 • . . N0!58 ORTHO FLEX ... Rev. Mt.ts And it comes complele with Mattreu. Box ,Spring & COubl• Bonu1! . . -~ ~a'i~.fl\EE DELNfFN·use~~c~. OF MATTRESS SPECIALISTS ORANGE SANTA ANA .and ANAHEIM LAKEWOOD 50 Stores ·- to Sel'Ye You , 2«5 N. Tustin Ave. · FOUNTAIN VALLEY 16131 Har~ Blvd. l••rfl9t ef Mhit•rJ Newt .. ZH¥'• f'het1•1 llt-4170 1811 West Lincoln Ave. l1tw1111 Euc:lld 111d lroo~liunl Pt.011•~ 176.J StO • A¥1111i1t J11tl .... •f !•~ ~·''' ' 4"133 Candlewood Ave. Cendl•wood Shop• l•tron frotn L1k1.,.,-t•d C1111l1tl Pho1111 634·41)4 . LOI AN•ILll IAH ,.AHCllCO OAll:LANO SllH JOSI IAC•AMINTO ln>«TO• ' MOO IS TO ~•llNO SAl'I Dt•GO "HOINI)( • TUCtotl ATUlfTA· , , •• • ' • I I j 1 I , v ! \ . ..J ~· ;1 ·' - ' ( 1 , 1 • ' " " " " ·" " " 2:: 24 " " 'I 3! " 3! " ,, •• •A! " ., ~ J •' AMBLER TUMBLEWEl!DS INCIPfN'l:ALLYL.~ WflfRE IS 1 HE. L.ONf S!RANGER? IMVf!Jf. TMEY°RE CQWN<i IN FR::W\OUTOF STATE! WITH . A Bl6GE LIKE AMBL!~ IN 'IOI.fl JAIL 'IC(J c~o • Sill TICl<ETS. 1 I l • ~ I by Tom K. Ryan { i .--~'- MUn AND JEFF THE; BOSS WANTS US TO CUT DOWN EXPENSES! FIGMENTS . . ·! ,1 ii !,,......._ NANCY NANCY···I HAVE A LOT OF GOSSI P TO TELL YOU·-- -·6UT YOU MUST P ROMISE YOU WON'T TELL A SOUl. .,.......__, HOLD THE PHONE, IRMA TODAY'S CBDSSIDRD PUZZLI ACROSS 52 "I Could H1v• 1 F1bric -·····All Ye1t11d1y't Puizlt Solved: ' S Ar1bi1n Nigh!'' governor 54 "Too bad!" 9 "Nonsen11l" 56 Closest 14 A11b 59 Celt sutt1n1te 62 M;in'1 15 Emerge nlckn1m1 16 Glb1on ~ Adh1a!v1 ingredient 65 City of 17 Nabbing Scolland .19 Valuable 67 "Sit dowp": violin: J words tn!o1mel 70 A11onith 20 Have ····· ahou1one 21 Desiynntion 71 Symbol 72 Therelore 23 Consumes 73 R11101e 24 Fo1m ot 74 Kind ol quadrille investment 21 Anim11'1 din 75 Biltlsh 29 Subtract weapon 31 Produced a show JS Do 1om1 g1rd1ning 37 Indian• 39 Gema outcome 40 False god 42 "Exc1tlen1!" 44 Steel mill product 45 Underground condu11 47 Ridicule1: lnlormll DOWN 1 Kind of poti1ic1 2 Like In Braril J Gr1du11lon 01yg11b: 3 wo1d1 4 Lur1 5 Be incorrect 8 1002: Rom. 7 N1g1tiv1 contr1ction B Ol1 klng 12 Miik IOUfCI 13 Concludes 18 Hives 22 •U1oisrs purch111 25 Oit1101d fltll!Ufll 26 Remove bv 1crubblng . 28 Poneuive word 30 Not 10 hot 32 Allin w1111land : 2 words 33 Mlle1ton11 34 Skin 11v1r: Pr1fi• 49 St111of being : 9 C111!e genu1 35 T1bl1w1rt 10 Work one on Item Suffix 50 Clothe• closet device the other 36 Notion 11 Eu1op11n 38 Car coin 41 Mekelegit 43 N1m1 In · Paris 46 Electrical unit 48 -·--Flow 51 Knock SJ Deletes SS "Master" in 1n<1i1 57 Actors' milieu 58 ···•• Rang1: Idaho mountains 59 Ma chln1 p1r1 60 Egyptian 1inging girl: V1r. 81 Alaskan governor 63 Medc1n dis" 66 -·Brunswick 68 Girman nam1 prefix 69 Footballer ,.....,.,....,.......,..-rrnnrr-nrTin 0 " by Al Smith by Dale Hale by Ernie Bushmlller 1 PROMISE -- GO AHEA'q PEANUTS JUf.iT eE PLEASANT .•• DO t-IOT LOOK OISTUR&fP ™.\T SHE DOESN'T RECOGNIZE VOi.i, MR. SILVESTER! REMEM&ER, TO H!!R, YOU'LL &!: A $TR.ANGER! ·MISS PEACH i.ff'ftl! IS IN LOVI WITM A '""" WMQ ~o"'~ MIM? IRMA JOOLEY'S WORLD SALLY BANANAS GORDO ANIMAL CRACKERS by Charles M. Schulz ...------..; CT twl(r flOTHER Wi- by Harold Le Doux by Mell ''' J ~· , .. ,,_ ... . . -... r DAI L V PILOT 25 by Roger Bradfield I I I , ! . I l I J by Ferd Johnson YA l<NoW WHAT I ~11<1! ,ASot.JT )4:)UI> i;t.VllOll> i5Dl>Y··? ')t)<l t>eLIV5it ... '' .•• and It'• amuhll !tow mach my coane l9 potJ11vt Utlnkiag bl1 bttped me -let'1 aee, now, I doll'& bow wbetber t want to 10 straigllt home or go 1boppll(.,. DE~NIS THE MENACE . ·- 'SPW:IN' Of 6E1'111t' C()l.M W •.. 11\'E OOlf Ali I CAN FAQ\\ MY ENO ... ' ' • • l . • ., • •• ,. . " • -· ff DAILY PILOT Thursda), J1nuar1 18, 1973 T-ODAY'S TV ·HIGHiIGHTS . KTLA 0 7:30 -"By Love Possessed." Lana Turner and Efrem Zimbalist Jr. star in the movie version of the best-selling novel. Jason Robards, George Hamilton are featured . KHJ 0 7:30 -"Battleground.'' War-weary f.j soldiers defend the beseiged Bastogne iJ1 a crucial point of World War Il Van Johnson, JQlln Hodlak, James Whitmore, Ricardo Montalban, ~rge Mur· pl11<- .:\ CBS fJ 9:00 -"Vertigo."' James Stewart as ~ a private detective who falls for the woman he's , I following (Kim Novak) in an Alfred Hitchcock SUS- • pense thriller. ~ NBC B 9:00 -Jack Benny's First Firewall. ~ \>Vhen they hear the old violinist is giving his fare- .. n'ell performance. all his pals show up. Johnny '! Carson. Isaac Hayes, Joey Heatherton, Bob Hope, •. Dean Atartin, Lee Trevino and Flip \Vilson are guests. , ABC 0 10:00 -The Streets of San Fran-• r~ cisco. This police series moves into a new time slot T :.~ as Brenda Vaccaro guests as a policewoman acting as bait for a rapist-murderer. TVlAILY LOG Thursday Evening JANUARY 11 l:OOBBO!llmmm- IIJ®J•-0 lttllatl @'-tSalft 0 Wild WiW West _1DTlo f>- mst1rTNt: G 1111 .,.. b19n11 m ... ..-..... lfl--':JO@ Httn'•"'--0 llltorie: (C) (tO) ..... ... Pnct" f'lrt 11 (d!J) '56---Audrey Hepburn, Mel Fen1r. H111ry fon<j1. (})CBS Ntwt Wtlter Cronkite t1j llltl'f Crifftft Sllow m Andy Criff~ @l AstnltHIJ I "Ntw ind Rrwoh1· tion1ry Tllou(hts About Utt Ulll· verse, 2"' ~ m •11111 em. StlOll ai)llMl1 l'I)Dtt42,.. m Utlft 11se111 l:OO B OO B!ll-0 lowliftl lor Dtllln 00 Trvth 1tr Ctftstq11tntl:S 00 .... trica~ Am•llhlrt O Wlllrs Illy UM? m 1LM Liiey !fl-: J2IN) ........... (•") '41 -Arthur ic.Mtdy, l :lD m lllllYCritl11 sa..\ m-* Most Talked About New Series-KUNG FU P~rful•Unique •NEXT l:OOl!l (i)CIS nllndly Mewie: (C) tl'nllr) "Vtrtltt" (.mp) '58-!ames Geddts. A private dtltetiw. llirH tt tr1il th• wife of 1 ditnt, rtSCU'5 her 1fter • sulcidt 1ttunpt and then fflls ill low witll her. 0 RCA PRESENTS * JACK BENNY'S RRST FAREWELL SPECIAL 0 l1QJ 8' I IB<IAC I Jedi: ....,.. rint F•.....U ComedJ mlib wllH .IM:k Senll)"s ruests-.loh11111 Cir· son, lsa.e Hires. Joey Htlltltrton, Bob l+ofN, De1n Martin, let Trwino I~ Flip Wilson-Ill show up f1lf the P/UITlm with the mlit.IUn im· prusion th•I the 11eless 1ntut1in. t r Is rttirin1, D (]) (Il &> 111111 fl "Blood Brotller" Clint hils to loc1te • Ollt·timt fellow d"'isciple ind findS I.lit tr•il leads to death. His se1rth is blocltd by 1 croup who plot to drive l!im out of IOWll. Chi Gula(er 1/ld Btnsoa fon1 1uat. m Men lrffnl ... m-m Al AMlricall ,..., This weell's secment fku:slt ... tllt rtletiol>· ship behlilMt ....... •nd-oldd m '"""•., ,.1 .. ie fBJllMS~rtS m r11 a.1 a.·111~ sen. €D £1 AllDI T1111t Cini dt Mujlr l :JO IJ Tiit "'"' ...... ..., ~ ai) Ttf•·lilftista Musial Thursdty, the •t1lderlrt1 Blrurdl m SpMd bar will reeiort .. fMif owa fmlliar ) JO style lrom llittoti:al tnd pid:umque : IO TIHI Ill'. Kl!Mrt "A Perfectly silts In the Wtstn URiltd Sta!IS. Me11tbr Bo(' Klldart loses • JOun1 0""" patient ind lllffers trem"'°°"' EJ!) 1uilt until ht finds out whit ~used Lldll Likt !lit boy's de11f1. llkOCI 0 91 &'J ~ Mlrtil SMw (]) HopJl'I KerMS • tD ll!J .... B "' .,,,_ "To "' ~ 0 THE STREETS OF SAN Bidder" Competition !or 1 [UroflUll * FRANCISCO-NEW TIME hirhw1y eonlr1ct turns into I Oft 0 (})@ OJ StrMb tf Sii f,._ or dt1\h con!nt far tht Adventurtl diet •·Ad ol Duty" A poliC1WOm1n and 1kidn1pped1ir1. acts 1s bait for 1 rapist.murderer 0 MOYie: (C) (21tr) "'ly LM ,. 1nd 1!most bet:ames his next vic- stutd• (dr1) ·s1-t1na Tu1n1r, El-tim. Brinda YICClro ruats. rem ZimbaHst Jr .• Jtsofl" Roblufs, O llrill lllWI rm.ts Georre Hamilton. Everett Sloane, fB JIUCI l• ,.._,. (Il To Ttll the TnrUI G) thrW PYm CI) Pollcl Sllrpo1 fB lllldlldll ttllilll Q1ttm1on $ Mtwil (2ftr) "ltmt-to·JOIJT .. 11.a: v.und" (du) '4~Van Johnson, ' ID 1111 ~ Sllelll' John Hodi1k. fD J1111e "'"9 A VDUP fllCUSSlofl 301 Ltl's ~•l• •Dul of the appmsion of artlsb. m T1111c1r1 m11mis,.m Iii"'""' IDAcdCl11 Clriain• eoneert by 0 11:00eommm,.... Chiu no rack rrcup Cil ())a ""' . mRo11in> · eo....,..,..., GlPollctSur"°' OO lllmfrlll-.. ElJ AddlMs Faltlly 0 ..... .,_..,. {sd·fi) '62- Yoko T1ni, Ed'll1rd .IUdd. l:OG mtr.atr~- 0 THE WALTONS--A SHOW Iii""'"-* FOR All THE FAMILY IB''""'"-6 (j) Th1 W11ton1 Jenny Pern!le· fii) J1111kl ton. livinr with lier htl!er in the m ClltlCk WlllM SMlr city, 1e!urns to her former hGme In 11:15 g) CIM• 34 Walton's Mountain when l!t1 father 11:30 IO (J) News llke1·.1 new wife. Fri1httned ti be-0 llQ) m .llllllJ C.rM .. in1 llOl!t in a bil house, she 1l1dty O n..11,... accepts the Wattom' invitation to 0 (])@ EB W...W ti b'9rtllt- stty With them 1nd toOll 1h1 and •Mt ''lldy Killer" A "'' 111Cf lont-Jo~n-Boy are in low. Si1n 81rt11r1 ly Arntrican 1ir1 finds lltpplntU Allen 1unts. wl!tn sht mHb tnd mtrrlts a B ®l m Flip Wllllft SM How· l!•ndsome nlln an I VKllion in Ena- 1rd Coull, Sandy Duncan, Marty !ind. Thi low slOtY t1ka 1 tnt, ~ .. OOPS, SORRY -Jac~uie Mollett throws a bowl of soup at Don Hinson ~ and hits Walter Dudek -in this s<ene from the comedy "How the Other Hall Loves" at the Laguna MoultQn Playhouse. Tough Guy Spillane Laughs at Banning. By F.T. MACFEEl,Y JACKSONVU.LE. Fla. (AP) -"l was banned in'Boston in those early days," s a y s Mickey Spillaue, who has been spinlling tough-guy mystery yarns since "I The Jury" was Cirst published in 1947. "My Jl\lblisher fought that batUe and won it. But whoever heard of ·being banned in Jac~ville?" Spillane's latest book, :'The Erection Set", was taken out of ~circulation at the public library'f()(" evaluation when a self-appointed, anti-smut com- mittee complained. Warren E. Folks, a persi!r terit ..segregationist, told the City Cooncil the book was "poisoning the minds o r children". Council President Jake God- lxild referred the complaint to three committees for study. "WE WERE vacationing ln Florida when my agent called me and told me 1 was banned in Jacksooville," 'said the. 54- year-old Spillane. Spillane and his blonde wife, Sherri. stopped here but don't plan any action on the ban ~x­ cept "to sit baCk and laugh!' In the rapid-fife lingo of J\!ike_.Hammer. hero of many of his 26 books, Spillane declared: "I don't write pornography. In the ftrst place it doesn't sell. I'm a con- temporary writer. When I write. l use contemporary ex- pressions. "This fellow Warren E. something doesn't .understand the differenct between lusty , passages and pomograpby," Spillane said. "You can buy hardcore pornography in New York and you ~ buy it in Jacksonville, l think I'll buy a couple and send them to bim. •• DON'T CALL Spillane an author. "l'rn a writer," he said. "I am commertial and l ajm at the paperback market.." Asked ii he has any hope his writings will live on as remembered literature , Spillane smiled and said. "Shakespe.are is still around. You 'd be surprised how many colleges make my books re- quired reading. -"I often Iecturf' at colli!ges. And did yoo know l 'm the fifth most widely translated writer in the world? "The other four are Lenin. Tolstoy, Gorky and Jules Verne. They're all dead ." SPILLANE'S wile s a t quietly through the interview in their motel suite. A toy poo- dle named "Sheba" lay quietly at her side.· Sherri confirmed, u p o ·n prympting by Spillane; that she objected to the paperback publisher splashiJ:lg a line of type "First T ime Jn Paperback" on the co-Ver so that it hid the breasts of a woman, She posed nude for the cover. Long Beach Cast List-ed ' ' For 'Plaza' ., 'Hoev · Ot•er Ball Lover' Come3ic ·Coup • Ill . 81· TOM TITUS . °' ... De11Y,.. ••n - il may, be only Januory, but It's very likely that when all the retutn.s are in on 1973 In local <0mn)unlty theater, tho most ingen1ous comedy of th.e year will be tbe Lag\ll1a ritoulton Co mmnnlty Ployhoooe'• prOCIU<\llii of "How the Other Hall Loves.1• Here Is 90methlng we don't get· all that often here in the provinces -a genuinely new wrinkle in comic staging, something we haven 't seen since Peter Shaffer's "Black Comedy'' and ror ~illch we must credit English im· agination oo both ®Unts. The author of "Other Half" is a chap named Alan Ayckbo,urn, who's known as the Neil Simon of the British theater, and with some justJfieatloo. Laguna director Hap Graham bas lmpor:ted the play and its original set design (a masterpiece of inventlveneM, by tho way) and has fashioned the comedic coup of , '·the season thus far. Graham also pre-empts the leading role, turning in a performance rich in understated skill. IT WOULD BE vlrtualJy im- pcmible to detail the myriad mani~tioM of situation and character which run ram· pant Ut "How the Other Hcilf I..oves." Suf£ice it to say that the · play is staged in the homes of two couples simultaneously -not half on one side and half on the other. but intertwined throughout a single set. Here &itisb class humor comes frito play, for one cou- ple are qaite well to do, while the other liv~ roore simply, if not slo'lmly. Althoug)l the show ii AJnericanJzea for ma~mum enjoYiilent. lbe con-, trast in living styles remains hilariously· 1teen. ~ The play begins-Quite deceptively as a drawing room comedy of sorts, with few laughs in its initial scene, then shifts gears without warning into freewheeling farce as both couples find themsJev'es hosting the same third couple at dloner. Things rarelY. subside after*tbls--point, everi throughout a rather overlong denouement. Italian Stage Troupe To Perform at Irvine Two · e.rimental prcr-}.iftlice in Wonderland" and tluctions. will be staged by 'Through the Looking Qlass" Space Re(v)actioo of Rome's · with an insertion from Tealro La Fed'e at UC Irvine Tuesday and Wednesday, Jan. "Gargantua and Pantagruel" 23 and 24. by Rabelais. '' Spring's The Italian company wlij Awakening," drawn Crom the perfonn "A Is for Alice" the work of German playwriftt first nigqh and "Spring's Frank . Wedekind, combines Awakening" the second night. tragedy and lyricism as !! 11•1 Performances are at 8 o'clock treats of love and youth. in the Fine .Arts Village Both productions are 1in Theater. Italian but because of the exv In addition, company direc· tensive use of oon-verbal com- tor Giancarlo Nanni will con-_ munication they are u.n· duct a free workshop for derstandable even U the students in drama, art, d~ign viewers do not know llalian. HELD OVER THIRD WEEK "VANISHING WILDERNESS" and music Jan. 24 from 1 to 4 Tickets are $3 for each pro-•... •• ~aguri ITIOlt part lo lhe cast's Ill dlvidual tln1h1g, which fa only al inlrequt0t iqlqr>all klchard Audersen's setUn establlsbea an lmmedlo mood or ldenliflcailon with lta a~ernatin~ po<h and tacky bllckdfopo, ''ijow lhe Other Half Loves' Is 1he brlghlest <'Omedy to de& cood on Onms• Olunf.Y II\ mnny seasons. It continuet Tue,sdays through Frldaya u~ tll ~eb. 3 •l the Laguna' Moulton Commun,l ty. Playhouse, 606 Laguna Call)'Oll Road, Laguna Beach. HELD DYER "ILYllA MADIGAN."" .... °"t._, UMlt ··-~-........... SOUTH COAST PLAZA #J, Coil• Me11 -549.)352 . FOX TWIN •I Cavin• -332·1122 IL MONTI El Monie -448-8422 STATI ·Paseden• -792·71J9 l • TW SD BLOWS! p.m. in the Village Theater. ductlon. F.or infonnation call ············•·········· ~~liii Neil Sitnon'.s three-phase "A Is for Alice" is Nanni's the Fine Arts Box Office at w••T,..tN•T•" AT GOLD•N w5•T comedy "Plaza Suite" will be adaptation of Lewis Carroll's 833-6617. errwEEN:!:C:.,:.':."'~::1t2·l•tl ·the next .production at tbe\_'.~~~~-~,,..,'...:~~'__~~:'.:_------~~=~~~~~====~~~~;'.~==~~ WhalSWatch CruiSes BtiibldlJJ Jan. I J.eavjng From the MLlllM PNllbllll Wed:&.ck, 9 .am and-J pm Long Beach Community · P.Iayhouse's Studio 'Ill.eater. Directed by John Williams, who receoily staged the play in Bellflower, "Plaza Suite" opens Jan. 22 and will run Monday, !J'u e' d a Y. and Wednesday evenings through ·Feb. 7. Andrew Hawkes takes the male lead in all three segments, while Betty. Mots- inger, Barbara Crooker and -Aml -Leve,-ett po~Y Uie three women of the trilogy. · Curtain is 8 o'clock at the playhouse, 5021 E. Anaheim st., Long Beach. Reservations are being taken at (213) '30- 96ll afternoons and (213) 432- 7928 evtninga. ,_ 1...,ntfao , -UAU.1 T•IATJ:a ·111111""" JI*""' ft!lit1I to:lllt-llkl .... .... 1~11 • .....,ffnt."41 !•to:o .. -.Moll. I• <11 lloll 1111 IHI ....... 1111..__a.iru.N~ •-· ...-....-.. .. ._.. __ ... __ .......... ..._ ... .1...1..i. .. __ Feldm1n and T•i M1h1I trt Flip's llowewr. -'!tn aht 111Nm his ptnl Adults S3. Children S2 10uu:;, l'TI tr\ include murder. 81rbl11 F1ldoa 111d lMClllll Socred',Mllllc kHOMM tt.S W '.!!l 'OU Mod Squad "Child Roliert Powell stir. CALL 67'8:...$U5 O! I Clllld'' Tht squid dotsn'I be· mttT1nt1t1Trdl ,,._..._ .-IUJ llM. • s~pt11h1r's _s1a_ry ot c'hild 12:00 1Jl]}CIS Lltl ....,..: {C)...,. bethnJ ~th th.e r11h11!10t1 th•t 1111 lad Reber (wu) Joe "im•th tt•n. l!llllher IS 1111lty and dtsPlflltlJ m Alfrtd HitUcldl .... l'letds ht!p. M1rlyn Mason ind Mui-m Slflri Ill """""9 ny Md.tad 1uest. m Ho11w's lttfllS 11:30 0 N~ Ill hlllll Fflfl ltll O!JMpic m Mnit: (C) ~ C.. &) 1ttra1n1s Con it quest" (wts) ·s2-<:orne1 Wildt. £1!j Tiit Advlxltn I m CtnbJ lttvlic Ill !rfll'!Mr Mcwit t:OO (I) 0 D (I) Nns a!)rrtt111JS.cit1rit l:lO O Nm Friday DAmME MOVIES t:JO D .,,.. Wlln" <•ttl frtditc Mirth, Join Bennett. '31- (com) '41-Clrole L0111b1rd, Rof.lert Mont1omuy. l:JO O "lvnllt ~-(hot') '«- Otto K11111r, Vltky lint. 0 "lll•rt .. (mys) '44-Gtne 1"'" ntJ, Dtn1 Alld11wn, Cllfton W,.._ J:OO ()) (C) •KW .. 1111111'" (Miil) '62- IO:OI ()) .... CelW' (di1) '57-.llrlle [lvis P1uley, Loli Albrltlrt. ~ / ... .-...... ' ~.wo.-;o --••• ~ 1 ............. , •• ll•1t•• ........ \ , ............... V.011 ••• ·-' ••• ........ """-"""'"" __ ... ,...., .,..,.~_ ......... . SftYI IVh:QlJEEN ' . • sn11 ~1J F n ' r .. '" Mu111, Jock Mttlonry. 0 "llll Uwii1sp1•t" (lllYI) '44-f--------e;;,o,;-;;;""~ _,... Ctlllfltl4. Gt•~~· Rtlnt:::..;.:_-1----ll M1rx lrothera. 9 (C) "f111tt11 lllitlt AIM" (•!M PUIS • lU MA_.,!N r;tNf HACKMAN "P,IMICUT" • ,; '67-fl.oy Olbisofl, Jo111 fretmln, 4:00 B (C) "ha" tt 111111411111" (tlh1 '~tt M1ll1ris. 1:11IIJ .... 11 lllMI """ .. ~ • i>Wl'I· •S ' : •'I' I ! ! . . . . . ~ ... . ' . '. -- • I - ~ t I l I I I I f I ., I ' HllD OVER ~. ~ ·-I";., .... ~ ........ , "Pete'n'Tillie" ' • KC IT.,..MJ!!l)ftC Cl\M.12ATION ...... _,,. ... ..., ........ i "GllOONEWWILD UFE FllM FOR 1973" HElD OVER 3RD WEEK MEU.-COll& M•• •UtJ Vtll.A-Ot"~ .... eaOVE-0.,.,. Gl'We-.5#"6M •llOOkHU It IT-All&Mlm-"1"'446 ALM> l"U.YIHQ I WEIK ONLY TUST lH-T111lifl--444.Uff WliliKDAYl-+1-t SAT. & SUM.-1·).f.J.f SOltltY-HO PASSI.I _ .. ___ _ s.noi.1orwy. •! l<O(lll! .... t tSe.J 962°2411 Tryouts,lJpcomlng · Lineless Acwrs · Sought in Mesa Art you looklng for a chance Ron Thronson, ;.,ho to get on the stage but don't "Mother Earth" for South have the lime to le.am linet? Coast Reperlory, ls directing If so -aod U you're a man the production, which include& -the Costa Mesa Civic a cast-or 11 wo,meo, ~ men P\ayhowse js looking for you. . and a chUdren's chorus. Many A number of non'"8peaklng of lhe major roles are singing roles ttre still open in the parts. playhdllse's forthcQl'nlng p~ Tryouts will be held on ductian of "The Ander900Ville · Tuesday, Feb. 6, and Wed- Trlal." a Civil War-era drama neaday, Feb. 7, at 7 o'clock in ( CALLBOA.RD) being directed by Bill Fucik. Needed are judaes, clerts and guards who will be on stage throughout the show as background characters. "AndetlonvWe" opens Feb. 16 for three weekends at the Co.mmunity Center auditorium on the Orange ,. County Fairgrounds. U you'd like to help fill the cast, call the Costa Mesa R ecreatio n Department at 8*5300. the CTG lludio, 1240-M Logan St., Costa Meaa, as well as Saturday, Feb. 10, at 10 a.m. Audit.ions ror guitarists and· other musicians are schedul~ for Thursday, Feb. 8, at 7 p.m. The children's prQducUon will go on the boards March 31 for three weekends at the Lyceum Theater of Costa Mesa .. High School. Call 540-7459 ror . further in· rormarn. l 0AtLY P'ILOT ll•H !"lier. 'How About It?' ThurwlaJ, hnUNJ 18, llJ73 DAI LY PILOT 27 Bis : llth Inaugu~al Robert Troµt Old Ha1td in Washington By JAY Sl!ARBUJT NEW YORK (AP) -On March 4, 1"3, a · nervous young CBS radio cor- respondent named Robert Trout covered t h e in- auguration of Franklin D. Roosevelt. On Saturday, as .President Nixon 13 sworn in for four more years, Trout will be back bebind the microphone, cover· Ing Ws 11th consecutive presidential inauguration fOr the CBS Radio network. It's a broadcasting record. But Trout was an old band at lnaugW'ltioD-watching e v e n before he became a reporter. He grew up in Washington, D.C., and recalls that "every four years school was let out so we could watch the show. It was sort of like the circus coming to town. "WE WENT to see the parade. We were great con- noisseurs of parades. We were kind of upset at Harding's In- auguration because he rode in an automobile instead of a horse and carriage." Now 63 and semiretired, Trout remembers of the Washington of his youth as of their r'l'Spec:tive in- auguratlonJ. In President Woodrow Wilson's day. he said. the White House even held a public reception ~ach New Year 's Day. .. "If you Wanted to, you could Hoe up at the White House - and ll was a long, Jong line - and go1 in and shake the hand of President Wilson," he sald. "It [a." a totally different worl then," · TROUT BEGAN hil broad· casting career in 1931 aa an an- nouncer for WJSV, a Northern Virginia station. He joined CBS a year later. He took to the roof of the old anything. and everybody 5aid. 'f\1y God , maybe it's going to be all right after all.' " ~1assive antiwar demonstr~·· tions are scheduled to be held in \\'ashington during Nixon's inauguration Saturday. Were there any demonstralions dur - ing Roosevelt's inaugural Ce[emonies? '·Lord , oo." Trout said. "lt never v.•i;.uld have bee thought of. The country was reaTiy quite different then. Everyone would have been profoundly shocked at something like that." Viveca . Set Willard Hotel in \Vashington to HOLLYWOOD (UPI) report on the ceremonies at Viveca Lindfors has joined Roosevelt's first inauguration; Barbra Streisand and Robert his ground·level colleagues Redford in "The Way We were Ted Huslng and Norman Were.'' Brokeruihire. ';;;:~~~~~~~~~:I He recalled the da y as11 b\usi,ry "and cold as hell ." The mood ... of of ficial W•shlngton was grim . "Things were pretty rough with the Depression and some people were talking revolu- tion,"' he said. "It was pretty t~. TUE ClllLDREN'S Theater Guild of Newport Harbor has put out a call for actors, singers and musicians for a sho.w called "Due to Lack of Interest, Tomorrow Has Been Canceled." A PAIR OF workshops in the fundamentals of acllng are being offered by the Ana-Mod- jeska Players oJ Anaheim. Adult beginning classes meet on Tuesdays through March 20, while a d u I t intermediate groups meet Thursdays through March 15, both at Cherie Patch does her best to flirt with a disinter- Anaheim High. School, 811 w .... ested Don Tuche in a scene from the farcial "Play Lincoln Ave. Strindberg," on stage Friday through Sunday at completely unlike today's h i g h I y security-conscious model. It was a freer, far less · suspicious era. "But then Roosevelt made that speech in which he said '!he only thing we have to fear is fear itself.' And he rode down the avenue with this big smile and everybody was sort Instructing the workshops Costa Mesa's South Coast Repertory theater. will be Hal Hamilton, director -------------'---'--------- If you were up early, he said, you might have seen Herbert Hoover or Calvin Coolidge out for a stroll on the st reets of the cify the morning Japanese i Love Elvis TOKYO (AP) -American singer Elvis Presley drew one of the hlgbesl Japanese television audiences ever for a ·Bingle show, Nippon Tetevlslon reports. NTV said the Sunday s'bow, televised from Hooolulu and carried here via satellie, was watched by 37.8 percent of the Japanese who had their sets . on during the one-hour Presley telecast. The network, which bas 27 stations in Japan, said it was One of the highest ratings it bas had since It began operating 20 yeus ago. or the group's 1972 summer musicaJ, "Belli Are Ringing." RegistraUons are taken at the first class meeting, with in- formatioJI being dispensed at S33-5271. COMING UP late in January are auditions for the next productions of the Hun- tington Beach Playhouse al)d the Santa Ana Community Players. -= Santa Ana has scheduled tryouts on Sunday, J an. 28, for an original play called ''111e Boston Story." The cast is heavy on men -14 of them - with two women. Randy Keene has announced readings for his production of "Middle of the Night" at Hun- tington Beach. He'll be casting on l\fonday. Jan. 29. Details on cast breakdown and auditions times next week. '~lID the Sandbox is a joyJ • ·Barbra Streisand's sixth film is her sixth hit!"~'";.. '"Tl)e sharpest, gentlest, . runniest film o! e year-the "'-tooching, funny, mature, ~htlarating and·important ... ultima1e woman's picture!"' ---"Don~miss Barbra A Streisand's most mov- ovie. _£_ ... _ ':' "Barbra Streisand· gives the best performance of ;.... her career in . Up the Sand box, a story of a bouso- wif c who fan-- ta.sizes herself in all sorts of wonder- ful adventures. .. ing per-t formancei to•date." 1·: ~ .. -=--/ ~· .. _ .. -..-.--- "Lively anqfunny! Barbra Streisand is excellent! Four ca.mera eyes!"---.. "One of the ~s ten best! The m~ outspoken, outrageowi,imago-shatterinWmin years." :~-;;·-;;-~·;:;;;; -~-----::-------°'Jl.:.J:~~=.:.:.-=;.==· ·--OC!Um .......... !ilC---i ~ WALT DISNEYS HILARIOUS ALL.CARTOON FEATURE ~· 1~ff>-. . ...-<: St .. Bl.l PEii .• ~ .. ..,,. -' B11eif"' h bGoi< bi T. ~ Yl1fTE / TECHMQJUJR & ........... ., lliltlll 'l'istallklriilliM~ llC.111913 llllll oi..,,... IGl .!'!'_...I \ STARTS1 FRIDAY 19 T THESE fllll THEAYIU Fullerton Li ght Opera Reveals 'Kismet' Cast 283 Films Vie In Oscar Race of reassured. was really quite a _.., "IT SOUNDS silly. but it CIARKGABLE ;i:1 psychological thing. quite a lift Vl\1ENLEJGH - he gave the country in that LESLIE IIO\VARD I one afternoon. It WB! ama>-OLIVIA dellAVILIAND ing. "He seemed so confident, so ON '"""-O.ty 7:t0 Casting has been annoonc:.d by the Fullerton Civic Light Opera Company for its forthmming production or "Kismet," opening· in February for a three-weekend run . healthy and so vigorous and Coll T'-tw for ~: ~~ir~s;i.;:if~a~o: HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -A abso:l:ut~el:::y~u'..n'.'..:a.'._f.'._r:_a.'._l d:____:•::_f ~~~· .... -~ ...... ~ ... ~·le~~~ Yench will enact the poet total ot 283 feature-length - laureate Omar, while Larry films are in th~ running for Laraway, Bob Lewis and Gail 1972 Academy Award con· Con fone complete the prin-sideration to climax with th'e cipal characters. Oscar presentations March 'J:l, ''Kismet" will be directed the Academy of Motion Plc- by Doug Lance, who played ture Arts and Sciences hfl.S an· the looding role of John nounced. Adams in the Fullerton pro-To qualify, the films, in du c tion of ''.1776.'' English or with English sub- Performances will be given titles, must have had a week's Feb. 16-J.7, 24-25 and March 2-3 exhibition for paid admissions at 8:30 and March 4 at 2:30 in in the lA>s Angeles area during HOW TO CUT YOUR JAX TO A LEGAL MINIMUM Heading the cast as Hajj. the guileful ~t-beggar of the desert musical, will be Grif Duncan, co-founder a n d general mjnager or FCLO. His daughter 1ttarsinah will be played by Rhonda Treischel, a former Orange Coast eone;e actress. Fullerton High School's Plum-,-::':;;m=. ========-,! mer Auditorium, Chapman1,· and Lemon Streets, Fullerton. I Reservations are being taken at 879-1732. DAILY PILOT Kit Wilson will play the romantic lead of the young caliph, while Du&jl: Thomas AN A•SUAD LOOK AT MA••IAGI! "PLAY STRINDBERG" -, Ir D\lln!IMtt .NOW tin JANUARY 21 -I P.M. '\ IN •1,l!•TOAY-Wl!D., THU•S. "MOONC~ILDllN" Fer Chll4r..i of Atr At-511111d•r• 1111 J•n11arr 7:00 ,.M • 0'THli SUNDAY l'UNNl lS" ~1 Jbuth Coast Repertory ----Pacific Viblatio.v . 4 .. _,. .... ---li!iliii'liiiii a- ---CtNEOOME 10.1. .. -::"-·I J~:L... ---CtNEOOME lf' :, " .. ::c:-. .. ::':1..:r ::u:•= ---.. SrAD/UM I "~TL-:".._ --__ , ... , Sl40!UM•3 .. ... -L'!;C"~ ---.. St4UIUM 4 .. -.:...._.,._ ... _ lldfttff 0r...-C•ty • ... 1"111111 Seit '""""""'· '"'' O'T .... -lephl1 Lern 00/MN OJI' LA MA.HCHA .. li~clu11v• llllill•"""I Now Ht ._.,.. S•1ll Wlnn111r of ) Ac1 .. my Aw•nlt "FIDOLElt OH TMI •OOI'" ••n 01....,•1 "SMOWIALL IX,•llS" • ''THE BISCUIT IATE••• {0) "l.LVll Ofll Tou ... • "SICYJACKIO" f'GI "JUOGI •OY •IAN" ... "THE •IVINIE•S" ..,.llTI 'M TllLll" ... "'LAY IT AOAHt, IAM" UA C:ITY CINEMA e SAT & IUN • 111• I 11M ,.M. "llll:A IN THI KITCHIN" l•I COLOl NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES "BROTHER OF THE:WIND" (G) w......,.._.,u .. 1 .. 1•1 1z,a.i.iu .. 4.Jt•1.111:t \ GENE HACKMAN ERl+EST BORG NINE 1£0 WTTONS ""'' lYHIY Hftl UPSIDE DOWN SHOWING NOWI offers you ... Here .,. )1111•11w o1111o tax up. that w111 .... ·,.. ....., •t•..waa1 sll•flr 1f7Z "'" ... ••1111111 . ........... ... .............. ,. eblll.cart ... ••i••ll•t • tm IClll4lr4 dN.u. .Wp .. t • • TM TOP nit • tullld 1:M1m1 11 1m• .... ••1 .om. .... .,...,... Ulm Un ltlla llllnllltdl .... ti 'tab tlNi LU. tt Cllrt.f • Wbat to do If ,. "' ..,.... ·--t ·-·---IWl ........ l ._ .... , ... ,. .. ... , ............ ,, .... .... er.at ....... ,. ,.Uaeal OOltrllldal • low,_ dtdl&Clloa .... wtlll lllloraln --""''t • "' .......... 1 t stnltf .... ...,...,. ..... ,. --!""f ·-----·" MAIL THI~ HANDY ORDER PORM TODA'( Only $1.25 ~~":d~~;z:,pot,,,. ··-----------------------1 I JJtN Ptrt•r'• l1et•• T11:, Ill•• NO CA•H Ku.11 I I ,,_,tt M llcit»M.. ..,._Ill M1k1 tllKl ot MllM~ Otdlt I I ,..... .... to "Stlnrl'Otttr T• ...... I I ~-11111 I I I I !:><med b $1.50 ~1.25 ~" 25; for t>O•t'll Md _.,., for°"' I , : ""of SIM< ':'1"'' 1173 -'" Guldt. -..... -: 1 1s folltwsi I I N.., I I I I Mdr1u I t-City 1 --- 1 · I I ru~ ~~ I I HN·ll ·~ o,....C.-DAl~T "LOT I L--·····••••••••••••••••J , • • ' • I I eB111tk Sold WA L.NUT CREEK -Securi· ~ National Bani., founded about 10 years ago by ne\\·ly- eleeted Rep. Fortney H. "Pete" Stark, has been sold .to .. ,....,nl~ .... an internaUonal busu for Slt! million, the bank ncamced. -l1 An aide a id that 4tQl Calilomia Democrat has ad inside track on a House Bank; ing and Currency Committetf spot and sold bis maiorllf holdings \\'Orth abol.lt $5.5 nlillion to avoid any connld' ~ T1111f1daJ, Ja11iwy 18, 1973 interest. ' . On Pattel e A111tri,~. MCRAMENTO The ' UAW Presidetti j..eon· . Amtrak Coast Da y Jig h t ard Woodcock .'~~ 'lC- S!arlight may begin daily cepted membership on service betwee A Seattle and federal .lii-bor-1nanag.e- Los Angeles in April. the 1n~nt adv1~ry gro~~ 10 system's \\'eSlern regional spit~ of his OPP:061lion manager said. ~Nixon economic plan. Davi d Rosier said the train \\'Ould be com p I e.1 e I y refurbished, and would stop at Portland. Klamath Falls, Red· ding. Davis. Oakland, San Jose. San Luis Obispo. Santa Barbara and other cities. e JtfGU R eport CULVER CITY -1.tetro- Goldvtvn-Maver Inc. has anno- unced ·a deCline in ope.rating inrome for the first quarter ended !'\ov. 25. The Culver Cily-based film firm said operating income dipped from $?.55 milhon to $2 .1 59,000, or from 43 to 36 cents per share. Revenues 51.ipped do?.'?lward more than $2 million during the 12-week period. e Bank I ncome . LOS ANGLES -Security Pacifi c Corp's net income jwnped seven percent last year. totaling '55.71$,000. com· pany officials say. Frede ric k G. Larkin.' chai rman of the boa rd, said the increase boosted dividends from $2.55 to $2 .73 a share. The corporation, a holding company for Security Pacific Bank. ea rned $52.100,000 in 1971. e Bank• Profit LOS ANGELES -First· Western Bank's incom e jumped 20 percent during 1972, while United California Bank-- earnings climbed 12 percent, the Califirnia firms said. A subsidiary of Weste rn Bancorporatlon of Los Angeles. UCB reported it earned $32.S million before securit ies transactions, or $4.46 per share for the year ended Dec. 31. Similar ea rn- ings for 1971 totaled S29 million. e Litton Snle BEVERLY HILLS -Litton lndistries Inc .. has agreed in principle lo s~I\ more than half of its pov•er transmission diversion operating units as part of a program to "redefme" its business act- ivities. The Be\'erly Hills-based con· glomerate said that it would sell four po.,.,·er unit s to Jef· frey Galion Inc .. 'a Columbus , Ohio, firm. Ce rtron's Sales Rise Dltring '72 Certron Corp. of Anaheim sa\·s ii achieved a turnaround in 'fiscal I9Tl and expects con- linued growth. Edwin R. Gamson, president of the consumer magnetic tape manufacturer, reported net sales for the year ended Oct. ~l totaled $13,993.000, a 12 percent increase over a year earlier. The company earned $18.5.000 in fiscal 1972 alter a special credit of $182.080 resulting .from a tax loss car- ryforwartl . This compares to a loss in the prior year of $3.742.000 on sales from conti nuing opera- tions plus an additional loss of $6, 135.000 from discontinued ope rations. Gamson said the company is concentrating activities on the development, manufacture and marketing of magnetic record ing tape. cassettes and cight·lrack. cartridges for lhe consumer borne entertainment market. Steelcase Plant Opens Dedication ceremOnies have milrked the opening of Steelcase, I n c. 's 437 ,OCJ6. square-root plant in Tustin. The facility. employP.1g 375, is in the Irvine IrXlustrial Complex, and houses the \\'estern operation of the manufacturer of .offi ce furni- ture. Al bert C. ~1artin Associates of Los Angeles. planners. architects and engineers, ' designed t h e building, ronstructed of tilt-up concrete walls measuring 840 by 480 fee t. General oontractor was Robert E. McKee, Inc. of Glendale, and lft-nd s cape architect was POD. of Orange. Pay Highest Capitol News Service •/\'em Exec SA c RA M E N T O SEATILE Ross P. califomia's fann laborers are \Villiams Jr.. \Vashington among the highest paid in the Division manager for the Bank nation. accord ing to a study or California. has been named conducted by ~the St.ale executive vice president in Departm~nt of Agriculture charge of the bank's corporate last year. The state's fa~ banking group in San Fran· wor kers were getting an cisco. average per-hour rate or $2.44. Williams also will continue The highest average of $2.91 to supervise the bank's went to field workers doing \Vashington operations. of-. piece work , while th<R paid ficials said Tuesday. by the hour averaged $2.22. ~~~-1 THERE ARE OVER 100 WAYS TO FINANCE YOUR CAR ON COSTA MESA'S Harbor Boulevard of Cars LOOI POI THI IMILIM AT BAUER BUICK • / Drops· Oil Import Barri~r~ r WASHINGTON Pl) ttihtness ol diesel f\lel lor The While House)ias rtspond. transportation." od to a g~lng . Wrgy UN COLN W 'A R N E D • short•gc by a~lshlng au Im· ho '"·t d 1 · l •• le • N 1 ho wever. wa omt s 1c por Ulll'r ~ on o. mt _ fineries stW t tncrt heating oi and i~sed all ~ir producllon ":' 5 pert:: U.S. petroleum •mpocts by t t the d mand nearly a mtlllon barrels a day. 0 ;:"' led ~t the "•he 1 George S. Wncoln. dlrectoc 1 00 ... ..,f. ( I•· .Qlfice 1 Eine 1 estimate.of ·•vailabJe impa ns late wllb too Utile, and that dlstrlbulloo l)l'Oblem• In •!he nnd Wednesday's White House the oil 1ndustry le interested Midwes t, and the cold action follQws .-previous one only io pralits. ':I weather. ~lch su.spended the Western Fran!< N. Ikard, pruid<lll _ "I om rtuonably .<Oll(ideot emlsphere preference ror or the American Petroleum v.·e are IQinx to get on tbr lnstltute countered that the the heafing Season, ·wtth what these imports. nation n~ "comprehensive we did today," he said. Lincoln, the ret.irirla OEP and cahertnt energy pd]icle1." '· ... Tbe tuel sltualion h:is director "'ho is also chairman .f Improved somewhat this week of ~ Pretld~t·s oU policy o in: o r ency ls oly 350,000 barrels . d Preparedne<s, said Wednesday CO::,pared to the need ;., ?.i bc\&h'steps would "help ensure mWtoo barrels "on a cold an adq uate supply of heating day." U NCOLN BLA.rt1ED the fuel as 'a result of the wanner committee, reiterated that· the shortage. which. has pJagued weather through much of the AdmiolstraUon has u~ much of the natl on this winter. nat>on," Lincoln added. "final review" major UV is ions FINANCE 11 partly on low iuventories_last _to,_ the.-.. <ill import erogram, Jt .. · -· BERALI which are exJ)l!cted lo be part ,._ ______ ..,-'!!t fuel for homes and businesses Rep. Ray Madden, (D-lnd.), this ' winter a relieve the said tbe government acted too ran.' the ga5'.!llne bmge •nE U ZATIQN of of the President's energy 1 refiners went on which le~ the heating fuel imports will message to be delivered within heating oil supp~ low, some ~ In effect through April 30 four weeks. ! Olympic ProtectiYe Exterior Wood Stain =-OL!lmPlC ' . STAln .. ' . ' ---~~ • Solid color p•int •'•in e 66 9r••t colon • '••11tifi •1 .u ••t.rior wood1 Qt .•••••••• 2.35 New Mirro-Scene WaH Decor e A tot•lly n•w contt pt in w•ll ~tcor e Choott from 9 difftr•nt 1t '' e Et ch co!,,pri,,d of 6·1 mi rrortd titti • ]6" • 24'' 8/~k & Decker-7 'A" CIRCULAR SAW , _ _,.'!'\ e l H.P. Motor ' e Approvtd for 7'/•" or 6'/J" bl•d1t . e ll•vt l •11d dtpth .• dj111h ••1ily Mod•I 7l 01 • E11y to •t•c:t,_ n•ff• no toolt • 12"•i0"•60" hlth for ~oo~t, 1tor"9•; wotlt• thop, 1•••1• • G r1y t n•m•I fini1h • Sturdy "••i911 7,88 In .Honor of Robert E. Lee's Birthday . .. Advance To · The Rear For Savings! • e 111 ..flit• •nd p•1t•I color1 e Flow1 011 •••ily •nd CO¥•r1 .... ,nly e T 011c.h.up will not show 288 .... Big, T llllgll 9x12 Foot Plastk: Drop Cloth e Ptot.c+. furnitu r• •11cf flo or1 fr.Oii'> p•int 1pill1 • &r •• , w •• 111., • 1•v•r fOf' ptfio · fur11iturt, t tc. Strong, Durable 4-ln. Dryer Vent Hose e •Queli.fy made for strength and 1afety e Sturdy, long-l•sting mesh e Get"' much or •s little as you need. ) 19!. Prices good thru January 24th. ST AN LEY 1 DD FT. STEEL MEASURE SCOTTS' 'SUPER BONUS'. e Sprt•d now ... rt p••t in I wlt1. STANLEY • 100 , ••• lon1 for bi9g11t job1! e Pr1vtnh 1pur9• •nd c:r•bg r•u from 1proutin9 • • Gr••• for •lflt t.11r •11d prof111ion•I tliltt 4" 2&.lncb, 8.Point Hand Saw low pric.W • ll u.9gff • l•w with clur•bl• tpt c:i•I 1ft•I • Gr••t fot c:•ll'lp or holfl• con1ftvc:tio n Conv•nitnlly locottd ••. Eosy To R.och l e Ftrtili1t1 12'5 60 Fl llutdaoi Extension Cord e Ht •"Y Duty e AH wt •ffit r ••ftn1ion cord •. 60 ft. long, fits liio1t nttcl1 2666 HARBOR Bl VD. ·IN COST A MESA HOURS< WEEKDAYS 9 TO 9 SATURDAY AND SUNDAY9106'M -&.faot Lq Appliance Card · · • Witfi on~f 1witc:hl • [on1 i~ou9h1 ' for; ll'IOlt ifH:ftOr joll1 • Sturdy, lt119 l•1tfn; • S•f• to "'' 149 - 0 ·' \:.• --j Blaclr" °"""- : Drill Bit Sliarpener Rt1h•rptM I I drill bit 1i1•1 ftOfTI 1/1" to l /I" Doubl•' in1ultttd for l•f•ty E•1v t,; 111•. 1•ft M'od•I 7910 Scotts Super Dichondra Builder e For dithondrt or 9r•u e Promott1 thick, tfurdy 9ro•Jh e U1• •ny tim• of v••r 2500 Ml• ft. ,... 1.45 Tough, Durable Link Door Mat • • .. Thul"Sday, J1n11ary 18, 1973 DA.IL V PILOT 29 osenbl m . Leaves Prothro Status in Li ....... OOil ""GELE.1! A(AP) -The otalul of ·Loi All&flol Ramo lvOtball coach Tommy PfOll!n> -Jn -i.day but the ..,_ ol the NallQnal Football Loo club •YI, he !lopes to announce a cfeclalon wlll>fn the next two weeks. Carroll Rolenbloom sold that he bad met will\ Plothro end bad no decision to .......... ' "'lllounY end I met thlo '"°"'lnC end talked tor aeveral hOun," llld Rooenbloom w~. ''nle meeting - •i very emlcable 1nd. pleulnt. There 10<ne thlap propooed that Tommy wanted to ttfltct and we, too, wanted to lhlnt tutlber oo some subjects." 'The Ramx Onlsbed 6-M this put swon end Immediately the;• was talk that the f....,. Clregon Stale end UCLA held -woald be fittd. He hBll amt· pleted two yeara of a tlve-yeq.r contract calllng for a reported '90,000 a year. -Aid he and Prothro "qretd that we would come to a decllion t9geiher u 1 IOOI\• a.s possible, hopeflllly l>tfOre the drift.'' The llFL draft la,Jan. 30 and !I. Rwncin_around the country have nam- ed many pmlbte SUC<e880rs to Prothro. MO.I prominent bas been Don McCll· ferty, former Baltimore c o a c b . ao.e.bloom owned the Colla two yws ago. The Rams were W-1 In Prothro'• flrst ..... n •nd the disappointing 19'12 ...... palin was a result ot many facton, in. duding hmg and arm injuries to U'IT ....... quamtblck Roman Gabriel-'-" Tiie Jlami bove said they wild tab seK, J-., the LouJs1ana State q~. If they bod the first dlOlce In U.. c:oll<ge dralt. The Jlami have r.....e.llv bee n hoplnf" to "'inC a trade wt'th-liOU!ton for that \tatn'1 first pick. Prothro'• coachtnc philosophy la that ol the 11blg play.'' He doesh't ~Ueve in ball control and \0 make his theories work be needs a strong·anned passer with good range end accuracy f0< the loog lhrow. He didn't have that in Gabriel this year, llthou&b Glbrlel '"u an u..U.nt pl1y call<?" end , .. c1er of defenoes. Slllce Prothro .WI boa lbree years ten on lU' contrae1, on whkb the Ramo would have to pay about $270.IMI) II he were iired, IOme have said the Rams may offer bJm another job with the club If the decision la"1ade not to retain him as head COlldl. However, rumor• sipce the end or the season have aald Prothro may not be flred but that hls uslslant coaches may be .. p1aoec1. ' Sport,s in Brief _5 Are~ ~layers Nix Pro ·~acts Five area junior college baseball players, drafted last week, wUI not sign proteasi:onal contracts. Golden West's Gordon Blakeley, Steve Williams and Soott Wilsm, . Orange Cout's JJ.ai Postel and Sadcllebeck's steve Williams all have indicated they will play coilegia te ball this season. Blakeley, an infielder-ouUJelder from Westlnfuster and Golden West's Williams (a pltcber from Garden Grove) were both drafted by Oakland wbUe Wilson, the Rusllen' regular shortstop last season, was selecl.ed by Minnesota. Postel, a freshman pitcher from Estan- cia, was drafted by Cleveland and Sad- dleback's Williams, a freshman catcher from Tustin, was selected by San Diego. Game at UCI ' . -mart agallst the Kings which stretches back to January 1970. New York is now tied for second with Boston in the Eastern Dlvis1on. Nelli;on got tbe tying goal from 25 feet out as be fired to beat Kings goalie Rogie Vachon to climn: an uphill battle after tbe Kings ha~ a 3-0 lead. Asher 2nd LAS VEGAS -Gil Sliker, 22-year-O!d sophomore from 't'I ashlngton , N .J. , · averaged better than 217 pins per game W-y u he knocked down 2610 and took the lead after two rounds ii\ fue $'17,000 Showboat Invitational bowling tournament. Sliker opened with a 1299, then came back with a 1,311 to move to an eight-pin advantage over Barry Asher of Costa Mesa. . BOB GIBSON Gibson Richer .. . (By $160,000) • And Grumpier ST. LOUIS (AP) -Star righthander Bob Gibson of the St. Louis Cardinals had a baseball contract estimated at $160,cm Wednesday and warned op- ponents that advanced age is making him "grumpier." The 37-year-old Gibson, reached at his home in Omaha, Neb., said "I've been grumpier lately. UTAH'S ALTA SKI RESORT COVEREO WITH FRESH SNOW, POSSIBLE 76 OLYMPIC ALPINE SKI SITE. UC Santa Cruz and UC San Diego will play a challenge round baM:etball game tonight at 8 at UC Irvine to determine a foe for host UC Irvine in the AJU;al toumameot slated to begin Friday night. Santa Cruz wW bring a club team to UCI for the compet!Uoo. San . Diego is playing its final year as an inter-col· legiate competit.ior end will drop lo club level ball next year. Asher, wbo-OWll.!I six profeaionaJ bowlers auociatlon championships, was the leader after the first six game aession with a !_,~1 rtading for a 230 aver:,age. His pin production, bowevu,, iD the oecood block of games fell off drastically as be scored only J,221. Asher's 12-game total was 2,602. "The worSt thing is the time between starts," !!lid Gibson, who was again the wjrkborse of the Cardinals' staff with 34 'apPearances In 1972. baishoff vs Gould Southern Cal Ski Conditions "It's so boring," the fire-balling, quick .. ~ working pitcher added. "When 1 was young I U$ed to jump up and down all the time, taking Infield practice and all. I can't · jump up and down like that anymore." National Swim Classic The Border City Tritons are favored to win tonight's preliminary action and face UCI at 9 o'clock Friday following a game between UC Riverside and UC Davis (7) in Crawford Hall. Paige ~igned TULSA -Leroy "Salchei" Paige, the great Negro pitcher, was named We<ines· day to the coaching staff Of the Tulsa Oilers of the American Association. Gibson, who has twice been shelved by serious injury during his 14-stason major league career, hinted only slightly that his ·career may be approaching a finish. however. Given w Mission Viejo . OCC vs Navy SAN DIEGO -Rowing teams for the U.S. Naval Academy will make their first West Coas t apPearance and face some of the west's top crews in an interco1le3iate meet here April?', diredors aay. Paige wW work with the Oiler pitching otalf,' a club ipotesman said. King Injured He said his financial investments in an Omaha radio stai.lon and as a board member of a bank being built In his hometown will be a factor ln determining bow many mo,. seasooo he will pitch. Viejo's classy f.adlity at ""'1-... Rectoatloo Center bu beeo the 1'7> LA lnVt~ xwlm , •«;f'dlng_to Ma:v Scllubert of tbe ll>ctooori'lll !llaoion VlejO Netadores. The event Is ocbedulod Aog. 2-4 and the from the old Collaemn pool abould to be a sbot in . the arm - .Uy In the attendance department. . Recent LA lnvltaUonala In the dingy WHITE WASH Ricllanb, Doc Hanson, Max Balchowsky. V80'1 nat.IMel •I · fla• ~team HC ~ ..... ablgle 1M1H au.dance -. . pilllag 111,lfl for 11 r<g1liar <Ulpelp motdii and Ille Rose Bowt: Thal bnJke Ille 1'11 ICbeol marl< by 38, ... There'll be a jacVabbit hunt at Grizzly Island (near Fairfield, Cal.) the weekend of Jan. 27·28. The kill is open to a11 com- ers with a valid bunting license and there will be no limit on the number of rabbits you can take. It ought to be quite a scene. I hope there1l be corpsmen in attendance. Rules say hunters can use only sbotgwis: or bow and arrow but I'll bet rabbita won'"'t be tb& only casualties., ' A typograpWcal f!l'TOI' kl Saaday'1 Wlllte Wall (I -I ooald ase tbol u· eme lw my Super Bowl predictloa I bad a dory fnm. tile YabD Ten'Uory ~lb i-..n ago. WM 1Qf 1 red c. be a ym ago tW lie OUawa 8el'tll bellt O.noa City, IM, la _..,, Cllp lol Meley )llay. The IYPf mode tt read 11111 It bappeaed Its ,..,. aga. _Envy department -Earl Engman, Santa Ana Hlgb track coach, Is taking a 18-dat junket to Europe lhii' summer. The lnvitation1l lle)d for the San Dl~ Crew Classic abo lncludet WaslBncli>G. UCLA, Loog Beach State, Orange Cout Co!l<ge, LoYola of Los Angeleo, San Diego State and Uc.San Diego. Kings Tied LOS ANGELES (AP) -DefenoeJ!Ulll J1m NeilSOD scored with I :22 left Wednesday night, lifting the New Yott Rangers into a H National Hockey, League tie with the Los Angeles Kings. 1be Ranger& maintained their un- Mantle, D·iMaggio Differ On Pinch-h,itwr Rule SAN FRANCISCO -Billie Jeen King, disabled by an Inflamed joint In ber rlg)rt. -~~~be.; t::!'= i:i: ,Motors women·. tennis tournament wblch she won the lut two yean. Graebner Wins Bmi.uNGHAM; Ala. -Top-seeded aark Oraebner meets John Cooper of Australia today In the oe<OOd round ol the Blrmtncbllm Iniemattonal Indoor Teonla Toumament. Graebner, a five-time member of the U.S. lla'1I Olp team, advanced to the oecood round by booting Ham Kory ol Austria IMI, tH Wednel<fay as the clly'I fint intematlooal professional tourna- ment got under way. Cooper downed Peter Szoke of Hwigary ?'·5, M to move into today's round. False Snow NEW YORK -Skiers zipPed down a hill In Central Park Wednesday afternoon 1n SO degree weather, the warmest .., .. 1 reading for that date aince 1913. NEW YORK (AP) -Two New yortr· recordo. People alwa)'!I are talking about ai!pped Ice, 33,000 pounds ol It, wu Yankee blltlng Immortals found records. Babe Ruth's home nms. Win-poured ,...., the lower slopes ol Cedar tbem•lffll at odds 'l'llilday f1'ltr the ni'!C streaks. Pitching streaks.-Hill for • lkiln( clemooatratioo by 40 ... American League's new exjJerimelit perts. permitting a cte.ignated pillcbbltter Ito "Ellminate old records and the game There boa been no snowfall In New bat for the pitcher. .. loses a lot of its romance. Yet that'• York this winter. "I think It'• groat -ii'• • change, and ~~~:;; :'!t..!fe ano making Frazier , Ready U there's anything base¥.' needs it's , Allison Recor. ds change," xald Joe DiMqiio, whose 511> DiMaggio, COOBel'Vatively lttired In • KINGSTON, Jamolca _ Joe Jtnzier game bl ilillg streak Is ooe of the pme's buolneoa ouil, wblte shirt and tte end still PIODOWlCed ilbn,.11 ready Wedneactay · · proudest rtc0rds. a magesU.,.looldng fiiure at 190 pciuodl, !or bis flaht with ·George Foreman, end Swif•~ot. w , "I'm DOI sure the rule will do what It's inslsta rt<lOrds are made to be broken. tbe -kfliee.,,...lsht champion did ap-~ 8rD1Up inten<led to'do, end that ts produce more "People ask me about my 56-game bl~ pear to be tbe "old" Joe Frazier -at blla Ind nms," commeoted Mickey Man-ting llreok," he aid. "Sure, this rule least pbyllcllly. Gibson last season reeovered from an 0.$ start to post a 19-ll record whlch in-· eluded an 11-gilme wfMing streak. His earned run average of Z.t& wu his lowest since 1969. 1be two-time Cy Young Award winner, Whose 228 career vJctories top the ma- jors, was reportedly baseba!J'a h.ighest- pajd pitcher with a salary estimated at 1150,IMI) until Tuesday. Ex-teammate Steve Carlton signed a PhJJadelphla Phillies contract. for a reported $115,000, h>wever, to outrank the Cardlna~ ace: Glboon sald he signed his 1973 pact after talking five minutes on the phone and propMlng his pay to Cards' general manager Bing Devine. "When he called me back later in the day he said 'okay,' and that was it," Gibson aald. The Cardinal• also announced the sign- ing of five other players, including pitchers Wayne Granger, Ray Bare and Sdpio Splnks. Second baseman Ted Sizemore and right fielder Bernie Carbo were the otheni. Ex-UCI Aces Back in Area For Tourney RIVERS!Df; _ 'sobby Alllsoo, <lmfiii'" lie, the man who stepped Into DIMag's might mUe 11 pmlble for oomeooe to "He's reody,'' sold Eddie Futch. one or By ROWARD L. HANDY * ·a 1'73 Q)evelle, turned in the futest lap aboes In um. break my record. But It doesn't bother FruJer'• bandJers after the champion Of IM DtllY ...... ltMf t -IOUltlmilet pe<hour-u1lclrMrs "Pltcblng ts 90 percent of baxeball,'' me. I'm proud ol It becauoe every blt ~~ludedbls·rlnfwori<forhlascheduled It will .be a homecoming ol-.. !Dr Ills , a.to _. off·l'Old J1ldoi --"cod WednMdo1 for the lltlO,IMI) , usue<I Mantle, casual in an open-.,.,, a legitimate hit. ·But records doo't IS-n>Wld title<lefenoe Monday night. two members ol the UC Davis Aggies virl ani\:llped up for the Mlnt,d m;'"sf00 Western 500 stock car race at lhrolted shirt and Sport coat. uThJ1 ex· last. "Don't believe all those stories." bas ketball team Friday at 7 when they n:t&. M l in Las · Vegis. lncliaded Rlversidi International Raceway. perlmental rule of the American Leaeue "Pro football ls always on lhe ilert to 'l'bol9 °atorlel" have betn that Frazier face UC Riverside 1n first round acUon of ........ the quintet are Larry Whitaker, The to fastest cars will slarl the race Is Intended to open up the -· and keep Its game Interesting. ·Such u ..,.. bas DOI hem the ume fighter since be the "1J.Calilornia tournament at ·UC fid Ylooagon, A. C. Bakken, Dol1ald Sunday. The top 15 will be qualllied make It more !nter..tlng for the spec. Ing the huh marks In this yeor to pro-*t M~ AU almoet two yws I~ Fox, a member of the UCI team • 1 Thursday, weather permitting with rain tat.on,._ duce 1 better running game. Baseball three years ago, is captain of lhe Aggies Em fo~t. then 15 more on Friday and 10 "I think It could have jll!I the oppoolte must do the "'"0· Kenyan Wins and ts their leading ICOl'er with an 11.1 Ver, erson on Saturday. ' effect. U gives the pitcher more mt and "I'm for change. Qne change I average. Allloon, from Hueytown, Ala.. wu mlflll bim twice ~ lo<lgh. especiallf want Is competition between LAGOS, Niama -Ben Jlpcho ol Jl'ox, a bit di!iJ1111tied with his status loUOftd Wedoesclay by David Peanon, -.. _, .J cloo't think Ibey lbould be . the two leagues. I tblnlt it boa to come." Kenya, _, of the "°'Id record in as • reserve at UCI tranofmed to Davis feat Oppo' nen-(8 Spa!Unburg, S.C., ltltl.7711 Jn a tm !amt::" wl tb.J>Ueblll oo mudL Why DlllaQio and Maotle agreed Oil 'one the , S,000-meter steepleebw, edied for bii final two .. _,. of competiikln. Mercury, and Bobby Isaac, Catawba, not It u It ls? I'm '!tllfnll ralalnl point -the dellgnaled pinch-hitter rulo Mel'WI YUter of Ethiopia In the men's Afttr sitting out , year, be la compleUng N.C .. ltltl.451, In a 1'73 Ford Torino. · tbe IDNICI. abort<nlng the fences l!ld •1111 la bound to proJooi 1be baseball IUe of 5,000-meter ...., •I the AJl.Al\'ica Games his final .....,. with the Devil 1g. "1-\MI (AP) -Bob Lots, st_.i The ooly mishap ol the day was a that IOrt ol stuff. • aging lloggen such as Hank Aaroo and w-.,. 1regalion. ~iie0Di1>1e7"i1 ol A-. M, IM, .W. blown engine in the 1970 Dodge driven by "Alter an, what keeps baseball goln£ WUUe !lays, but lt wouldn't have dooe Jlpcho, loudly che<red by o crowd of Andy lll'"sen, 1 junior end the other -:: 1 In the Sag~ Boy tennis Ed Megro, Concord, N.C. What keeps It '° Inter.sling! It'• much I<>< either of them. aome 30,IMI), was clocked in 11:01.1 . atertJr>g guard played fn>lh boll at UC! here. , ,. severaf yea~ ago. He averares 8.2 per 'l'll!l eeedOd Rod Laver ol Oon>no del game. i~:.·Zi~e s. ullivan. Award to M,arathon (;_ ha11~p i~~~:::"!.ber..!:.i:f=ard,~~ Alrlco -llolMrl ..... GI Soulh • Platt lives In Westmlnlter and •t• wportw.:.i,·:..:.i~-~: GA!Nl:SVILLE, Fii. (AP) -Frank ~·ln the Amateur Atblet!c Uuim Mlchoel-.Gl8oor'amento,wttbl,OU wm the Piil American G111111 com-=F:!ta~':Ybel~=-"':'! iiilii-li!A. •1, W. Shorter 4'<1ded to take up IOl)i dlltence VOlinf. pointa•ond tnclc medalist Dave Wottle GI pet•in Davia. tjtls year as a Junior, . nllUllni . t"!'. years ogo lo an ellort to se..nd In tbe bal!otJng wu Ol)'1111)1c c..un, Ollie>, wltb 7fll poinla. '1t bocm!IO evident to me thal'• what lie boa participated In elfl!l of the to , , ~ ·~~· ' .. ~ make the 01,Jmplc team, and the decision ....., modll lreeotyle Wl'tll!<r Dao Glblt "~ two -•N ••o, I ran the Pan I'd be pd 1180 ! conceitraled oo that," AulH 111nes and ii -ot • U !!!. _ •-,_, ~ Alcl -.. wllo doeSl't believe In pac-IVl!rqe. ;;. "" ,.,. , "" •· ~ In blm being preeented the o1 W1terloo, Iowa, wltb l,1'71 points. Amerlcoo trtala mantbon kind of wltb illC bi-11 ln Jq ....,.., 11Jvmlde Is the in-tournament o. 1 c~ 11 • A,.ft,'f:i ' ~ Sullivan AW'ard Wtdnelday as tbt na· Swimmer Mltk Spitl., the 1971 Sulllnn Munlcb (Olvmnlcl) fn mind," n!'Cllled "N way I run 1t I run u fut as t can favorite with an 114 record, lncl•..f1 ..... an ., a<~ "m ~~'I~ . . ·•·•--' -·-,_ ·~ -~ ·-• '.~1("1,:i.., ~ti;.'.•,,:.°'"' ·' t ' Ollistand!!>fl 11111\el!(. alhltle A oLl! .....,~-.....uu..10ILSl>orioi',.J1,...Ylle graduate. ---~lllie way;"-.. plalne<l-the--M...--eat;ller-wm-overthe7iggi<1. •;..""l'J ".!!~....,,,...,. M ''"~ 1112 ~ In the 1112 Olympics, "'' In-"Ai thal point 1 "" ju.I ....... to loo -· who 1ave Amer1ca Its finl The lligillenders ano ~ by f.5 .,. '"1!~.o .. ......-.=:'("" •....r:::: sh.rt.r, 15, who -J>ll'ed for bis win-~~let "'forle. the eward because o1 • °"' make Illa•··-,, be Aid. "f ,..;;;;;:.;.. Ol)'mt>lc marathon victory since J""" J. senior Leo Mclloupl wbo It 1ver1gtng 11 ,, ~ • -~ -• ~ Haya did tt In llltltl. points • 1ame and IU -tda. ~~R "'r.l; ,., ~ nil'C effort In the lk>Ue Olymelc Gokl medal woman diver Micki Kine GI 10,000 metel:J 1t tbe Ume end I bad .. .,., "I p •• fut u f tblnl: I con IO ·•nd lit the other ball of the fb1I. Dilbt ..,. T • ~ :r'i~;. ~ -bYJW7'n\h.bia wue HcmMlla BellCb ..... tblrd wM.11...J.~ ~~.._ .. _ llnllb,'t bo-1114,A!W•""' ·~tcb Noiiotto'clock. boot UClrvlno-UO ~ " · ™-~)ltllliil--J;lll'illlnlrll!MN PolnG,"!ono...a'l;,; ici2mtall'iiiliiiiiiii-nDilll;leec:ond In the trtala, lben kind ol tbl111." San DieJIO or UC Santi en... ' ' I ' . DAIL.'t' PlLOl \, ' DAJLY tl'ILOT ....... "' LM tl'IY• ' Malane, Hill Pace FV, 5549 Saxoll'S Dini Vikes' ' • Title Dreams, 72-55 ' 87 CIWQ 8llEl'F By ROGER C.uu.soN .. .. """' ,.... ..... Of .. Dlltr , .... ••" Fountain Vall-H1·••1 Marina lllgll'1 drtaml ol ~ "'' ann<1ln& onother SUmel buketball team overcame a League basketball cbam· lethargic flrll quarter to post plonshlp loo¥ a ,...,.. lacln& a ~ Irvine Loque victory Wedneaday night as the bolt over· Magnolia Wednesday Loara Sa1one ripped the VI• nlghl king!, '11-M, be!,... •full houae ln Ute winner'• gyin. The win kept the Barons (IS-The loss dropa coach Jim I) ln a first plac-e ti! with Stephens' presea.son favorites r.orona del Mar 'frith the two two games off the pace while teams meeting Frida,y night Loara's outfit refualna lo 1 tie 00 the Sea Kings' court. ::~ placo wltll Hunilnrton Willi the Barons only hitting The latter plays host to !U pen:ent In the first Loara Friday ol&)lt In a quarter from the field 1i.11) crucial cir<Ult test. and 6-ll .,._Scott 8'ldtr In J,oara snapped a Ue at tight foul ·-·hie, r~-1a1n. Valley midway tllrough the flrat ·--period and never looked back. looked deatlned for troublt. Coach Tom Voigt'• &utans put But Tim Hill and Dao the pmlUl'll on the Vlke• Ml!lane tool: up the 11aok left from the outlet and the by Reider and started coft. defensive man-to-map.. tactiGI ' .lo • IODe midway throo"1 the oecond quarter . It WU •WI r<JaUvtly slose with 1,41 lo 10 (G-M) wb<n Ktvln Flynn upped the matgln again lo nine point! with a 12- fooi.r, then Morlna's Mark Fon! fouled out wttll 1'3$ loll. The &utons scored the final eight points after that with reserves from both. sides pla)'lnl the llnal-1:17.- Marbl• ahootera connected on 21 ol 14 11a1n1t Lolra'1 man-to-man prusure for 41.1 percent while Loara ll)ol at a IU clip (21 of ft). 1-• WU deadly at the free lhroW !Inc, canning lf of 21 attempta. Marina was hot In Iha! department, too, hlttiJ!i nine of 10. Barons Next · Sea Kings Top · Chargers,~67:58; took lhelr toll to the tune ol 21 trolllnC the boards -and the Marina turnovers. ' By DENNIS CAMPBELL the first bali and 10 In the stc- Baronl began to come alive in 1n· addition the Saxons °' -. Dtlt¥' •11tt ''"' ond. ~ the aeconcI quarter. unIWhed their S-9 guard VIJIUn& Corona del Mar Zlrllel, the 'Edlson 1Uard Trailing IW nt01' the end of Steve Peterson and the inappy Hlgli 1unlvtd a brief fourtll who haa been at 1-than full Ille lint quarter, Fountain senior trampled Marina'• quarter rally by Edlson strenath all -because of Valley hit a bu<:ket at the hopes witll a JS-pol n t Wedneeday night notching a an lllnesl, got .11 polntl from lmw, tllon outJCOrtd the perfonnanct. 17-61 Irvine Leape win that hi> odd-lootlnl, tW<>lianded Sentlnela, IH, lo grab a 20-15 The Vlke• nanwed tho 1tta up Friday nlght's contat jump shot, wblle Fon! hacl u lead. Loara advantage lo one point between the Sea Kings and and Jay WlllOn 11. Coach Dave Brown's Barons at !HS wltll 2:10 lei\ In the Foontaln Valley. · pjcted up even more steam in lhlrd period after havinl trail· By wllipplna: · the Qargen, " c.... • ~ C~ ,. ,, the thin! quarter, hitting eight ed by u many u Dine points Corona dtl Mar elevated Ill ,_ • • • " of 10 from the field !UWl_zoom· Bul \hell PeUncD, Jell seuon record \01M and 111 ~'::.,. : ~-~ 1~ ing to • 40-29 ldvaniage. Jooea and Dave Walk~ league mark to 4-0. F.diloft ls ·WlwfiM ' 1 2 1' w~nM~ !': = ed qulckJJ to 111.1 the verd.lct. now 3-11 overall and M in =• ~ : ~ ~ -uure more, the wtnnera About _tbe only tirigbt apot leap plat. "= J J 1! .~ .. -for the visitors was the classJ' The Sea Kings will put their -.. , bagged ll ol their 1$ jlOlnts sbooUng o1 super oopbomore 11oay mark on the line Friday ,.,.. !" ~ " ~ WESTMINSTER'S DALE PARKER KICKS HIGH IN TAKING TitE BALL AWAY FROM NEWPORT 'S JIM SWICK. -Iro~ "tin~':' points Bob Losner, who ICOl'«l lt nig~ OOsting a Fountain_..,,."' 1 1 : 1 for •-'-bonon ftir the poiDtl m teWD mocn 11bots Valley team. that b 15--1 on the =::_Mlt : 1: ! 1~ • " , • ....,__ from outside. aeason and U in league. ZJ"'91 • t 1 ,, ~2~ -~ C:U~e: But aside from LolDel' there Wednelday ulgbt's contest ::...., · ~ : ~ ! •'"-"' wasn't much firepower -nor was anything but easy for 1 Ptluet 1 1 1 1 10, includlne three long was there much ball handling Corona. Physically, F.dison Tot••• 1cwt ., ~' 12 » Lions Bag . jumpen in the thlrd quarter. as the winners simply took the was outmatched by Orange c~ o.1 Mir ' 25 i1 1....,.1 Reider, who played only nine ball away with their quick ·County's No. 1 rated team, but EdllOI\ 1• 11 11 JD.....Jt ' 5452 Win From Tars minutes of the first hall and defensive hands. the Chargers bustled and shot sat out the third quarter• Marlna opened with a man· their way to within five points scored nine points -fivefi in to-man defense, bul switched of the visitors half way the final eight minutes. _,._ -'-J-through Ille final quarter. Scores Fountain Valley futW>ed w w >< Behind the outside sltoottng with a 39.6 shoo{ing perctn-Mll'IM in> by Dtrk Zirbel .OO the board e!'i!,,~1 •e:= ~ tage (1M8) while Magnolia s11e1w ~ ~ ~ ~ work of Dan Wlncbell and Joe .t.1111111 fiJ: •=rn:11 w canned 19 ol 6& for 31.8 per· H•ITOl'I 1 0 1 2 Troxell, F.dis>n pulled to ~-~;~ ' IN nt Basketball these days may ctnL ~ ! ! ! '! within five, 59-$4:, after the Sea ~ Doti• A-i.• J J 11 v; .... had •·• I ds I to u1a11 ~ 11:k¥ '°'• _ belong to the bigger men but P•' ... v .... 1.. cud Fide • ~ ..... -&s loa:"'en ea o up eai·n _ By HOWARD L. HANDY Of IM o.llY f'llM Sl1ff \WO Of the 51T\aJler Stars look =\IN r ~ , ii ~-: : ~ 1! 13 points in the second half. ~~:L6Ca!11fornll ~ • over Wednesday night as the ~~ i ~ 1 ,: o;':::, J : i~ S: CIBut basketabo '·"'edby cmt: ~b ~:r.~~ tt. ~ "' Westminster lJons handed 1: m;Jo,.. 1 i • ' w.n 11u ark. w ..aw U po ta or ONY ... H~Ol•la 1~ 17 1l J p : ~ '! : the game, ancf free tbroWs by Flof1da ~ s.l~ter-41 Newport Harbor's Tars a 54-~.. ~11 'i' ~ ~ 1l ::_-. 1 2 2 1, Jeff Wharton and Casey Jones Amtr~'f' .. u .. M N•Y'I' u 5a Sunset Leacue defeat in ac-1 I 1 12 = ~ ; ~ ! kept the contest out of reach. ~~·c.'"""i:!."•, W:u "'"-' ao tion oa \be winners' UM.trt. ~1" t i ! 'i "'•1'9'1 J o • ' Wharton wu top man in the f:~: ¥~'::2 ., Dan A~ .. a 4Mrn.er rra: ...... ~ 1. I I J ~rttk ~ : l 1 : ICOrlDC column. bittinl ail ~ S.-.@.J~,"' .. ~-. -· -who directed the I.ms to the ol ' Tot.a. 27 11 \I n field ioala and te'ltft of eight ltloo' tt. l:.r:G ",. ClF football ___ 111~ .. l• ........._ Tot.ti SffN now!~' ... ri .. l coro W,, -,, '' a-•• free throwl for 19 points, t. 1'~71.-T..6 .ff.,. .. ~· .... ·~ '""''"r.v•"','• "·11 ,,_., --hi1 J addedl7 In """°'"""·"'"1 •-tinued his fioofo generalship1~= ..... ,,,,,:::...~~-'-'_::_::.,,_..:::.~_:Low=:•~~~·:._:'='_::"_:""i~~=W==8:..::ooea==:.===:..::=•="=V=en:.=c__~L~~~"'="="'"~'"~'=°'~""':=.;n'.!....~~- 8g&inSt the Tars. He started fast and before the game was hardly under way (in 1:12 of the opening stanza) he had stolen the ball twice and scor- ed a baaktt. On several other occaslons in the early 1oing, as the Llons l!'re establlshtna:" JU· premacy for the night with three exceptions, he passed deftly to mates under I h e basket for scores. ms counterpart f o r New· port, Brian O'F'laherty, a S.9 junior, kept the visitors ln the game in the early going with eight first quarter p<Knts. He w~ h1gh man for the two team! with 20. On the strength Of Aecom.an-. do's quick start, the Lions moved in front and held the lead with two exceptions when the Tars knotted t b e count briefly in Ille first half. !b.ris 14-14 with 13 seconds left ' in the lint period and 26-26 with 1:56 remaining in tbe haU. · The only time Newport held the lead was when Brian Ren- ner scored hb Jone basket of the nlght to get Ille lltOOlld half .under way and Newport took a 30-29 edge for 1:21 of play. ' Sears 'Prict1 Elltcllve Ju11r, lltb to !1st., Uae·Sear1 Revolvtoc Cllarce ~ JIM SWICK CONCENTRATES, WESTMINSTER'S GARY ANDREWS !341 DEFENDS. AccomaMo hit a !!Mooter from the baseline. Dave Walsh scored a free throw and Gary Andrews hit one underneath on a fast break to put the Lions back in front to stay.' • I CM Defense Shines Both tU:ms hit well from the floor with Westminite.r scoring 21 baskets in so at- tempts for 42 percent and Newport hitting 20 of 41 for 41.6 percent.. Jl1ust;angs Trip Estancia, 41 -35 Each team committed 21 turoovers. The Tan were C¥11ty of two technical foul calls against them, both ot which were COO· verted for points by Wa!Jll. ' - By DAN HAYES Ot "" 0.1" 1"1111 ll•lf . The Costa ~fess Mustangs put on a fine defensive show and ·came away with a 41-35 w\n over v'Sltlng Estancia in Irvine League basketball ac- tion Wednesday night. The Mustangs are now 3·1 in leaguf! play and, atthough it's, too SQOR to predict. they have an oul.Side chance of making the playoffs II1 late February. The Mustangs, however, have yet to contend with Corona del Mar and Fountain Valley. The Estancia Eagles were behind by only five points. ~ 24. as the. fourth quarler open· ed. The Mustangs, however, -1oUrsli1ilglifbaskeL1. gaining a comfortable 37·24. advantage. Mnrk Schrupp began the Mesana' burst With a 10-foot Jumper, followed by a 17· footer and a driving l4yup by Rlck '"Browning. Aft~ Jim Swain went inside for the fQurth col)SeCulive scor~ with 3:50 left. the Eagles coold only hope for an onslaught or baskets to lighten the score. The !\1uslangs displayed a mediocre offensive effort. hit· ling only 31 percent (19 of 50) rrom the field. nut COste ~1esa's defense played so well that the inefficiency at the other end of the court dldn't matter. The ~1ustangs opened with their customary man--0n-man defense. completely stopping the Ea gles. The Mesans stuck like_ glue and It wasn't until miaw·ay niught lie openrna period that the-Eoglg got off tbeir first shot. But a consequence of the ma.n-<in·man defcnse'was rool .trouble, so the. ti.1ustangs switched to a zone ln the sa> ond quorlcr. The ione, \eel by ball·slapplng Mikn Btrry in the middle, dld the' job the relt of the game.,.. · The Mustangs•· fou1 trouble didn't curtail, but Estancia failed to take advantage at the foot line, hitting only five ol 17 free throW attempts. The second such a~t came after a Newiiort D11lfer was driven to the &or follow- ing a shot attempt·and no per· sonal foul was called. Getting up off the floor, the Newport player protested to the nearest ollicjal and dmv Ille i.chri· cal. l:1l•11d1 C)f) W"lfnhft1of lMI ~·~.t· ........ . Coil!111 .,,_ M-0 G•11'111' ,_ --tl'h1IO Tot1l1 1 0 2 ti'~ • I 1 011,a....,....,. 72 4 16 ! l l: i.oniw""' 1 ... 1 ~·,•, ) t 0 7 ,t :: ,....,. : ~ • • 24!•~ ,,,., ,', ,2 1 ' Tottll ti 11 M a. ' )5 """"" .. .,..,. (PJ CMtl MOM 1411 tt ft " t, • ft .. , ~ O'l'llfll«ff ' t I • Swt\11 1 0 ' ltltl'llti' 1 0 t t • Cumrftttl6 0 0 , 0 """" ,, ' , ,, :;:=~nv ~ : ,:~ ~ :::-: ; ; ~ lttfY ' .. . S 0 ~-~ 'Jll'Nlrt I I 0 2 .klll'YllP 1 t t "1' ' $(11mldt t 0 I ~ S4i'ltf 0 0 2 0 WlllWff•nl I 2 I t Tot•l1 If 3 l• •I Tottlt 11 l! 16 b k""' Jty Olil•l'ttn '""' ., ~ l!!Htndt t 6 ' ll-U WRlll'll""°' 16 12 II 1~ <:ot!a MtMI 1l ' I U-41 N""°" HlfW 14 1f f 1'"""1 ' . ' Our Entire Inventory of Mens', Womens' and Children's Parkas Are On Sale On Sale lnatnoetor Leqtln, Short Lengtbl ud Cltafr Coats Replar fl ·" Yootb Parbt ••..• , , ••.. 14 Costa-Mesa 3333 Bristol St • Phone (714) 540-3333 - , • -- ' ~:.: IU 1 1 'WIS •• at e ard full of m eel Ill .. " ,. • " • ' ' " .. .. ' • " " • ' • ~ ' .. ... :""" ~ ' ' I I • • t i ,. " • 1 ' i I ~ ' J • ' ' l. ' • " ! ' • . • • \ ]hur!iday, January lB, 1973 DAILY PILDT :JI Huntington Weaver, Dicus Pace ... Victory Rues Still HGets ~;9 In Men's Golt Team · Action 'Basketball Standings Soccer Switch Fountain Valley H1gh'S soc- «r game v;·Jth Santa Ana High 00p Will By HANK WESCH ot llMI 0.lly '"" Sbtf ltuntlngton Beach High's basketball team silenced a taunting crowd with a ID-point outburst in the final two min- utes to grab a 63-49 victory over Santa Ana Wedn&aday on the losers' ®urt. The victory kept the Oilers' mark unblemishfd in Sunset League play, and se ts up a confrontation with Loara, the only other unbeaten league team Friday night at Hun- tington Beach. Coach· Elmer Combs' crew had a much tougher time than the score indicates with the Saints. The Oilers led by onJy four (53·49) with 1:47 left to f<"loyd Weaver ·and Dr. Don Dicus paced the Santa Ana COut1lry Club Thursday team to victory over visiting El Niguel CC, 29-19. The Weaver·Dicus duo Poste<t a better ball score-of 62 in winding all six po,inls of the match. Fred Werder and Bob Pohst alao won six points in the competition that features 16 golfers from, each clu&. To- day the two teams meet at El Niguel. Tom Scbauppner has moved up to being the number one assistant to Jerry Hall at San· ta ·Ana CC. Scbauppner is--a teaching professio.nal at SACC and studied under Johnny ReVolta and Phoenix Open champion Bruce Crampton of Australia. play. but started on a final l-fne Co-•t string which crushed Santa • .., - An,a'$-..chancei.---. ---P-lans-are-nearing-com- . Tbe outburst was a team ef-pletion for the annual Lady fort, with starters · Jim Weir, Pro-Am al Irvine Coast COUn- try Club Jan. 26 with 21 tour- ing pros already &et tq participate in the unique event. The men's club seniors group staged a monthly tournament Wednesmt,y wjth 150 players facing the noon shotgun start.. This group stages a monthly . toumament, usuaJly o n another course. Meadowlark Jim Rowland had a field day Saturday as he was a member of the tint four teams finishing in the weekly sweepstakes competition at Meadowlark Country Club in Huntington Beach. Rowland aided all four 'teams with a hole-in-one on the 11th hole where he used a rilne iron to cover Uie IlS=yafd--:- distance. He was playing with In First · IOUTK COAST CON•llllN(I!" SllfllllT L.•AOUC Friday has been resebedttled w L ,.,. •• w L ,.,, ,.,. for6 p.m. 0r-'°'" t 1 207 * H1t111t1W1ton l•1C11 s o 311 ,.., They 'll meet at Santa Anita .. ,,, ,.,., l I ?SI 7.Jll LOllfl ~ 0 :W 2'M ~, b~ Mft9 l l Jt. B: ,..r1,.. s t 211 2n Pttrk near the intersection o ... After ·Loss ~tu/rf'1111An10111o • 1 m ~B ::::.~.... : -~ :; ~:~"l""e,.o,.lsaiiianiiidiiHiiaiiriiboiiriiiBiilviidii.iii~ ~Y'9 IC-Ntiwporl Hatllor 1 l 31Z ~II ~rt."°tt:f'U1~'2llllt C0.$1 61 Sanll .. ,.. 1 167 t77 ~ · Joe MeDonnogh, Bill Gehrke Ml. S.n -t:=:r1V::.tn•1' A ... l'lllm WMMMllJ'l ~ M 3lS \' e""."" I '1' lllENl.SOKOP and Chris Christianson. SAN DIEGO -Orange 0••11 '°''' '' s.n11 A11• Huntrnu•on e.1t11 63. ""*• A,.. " f.Jll l/f> " 5111 1C1V Meu 'f cm;ltos Loar• n. ~r1111 JS His partners and the order 9t Coast College, despite a 7$-61 Mi. n ,~~f:l~ t.:ou'~ ::•,o;:~': ~;..::"';; ~o~~bOf 51 BIG-n-TALL their finish found Larry Subak setback to San Diego Mesa cor°"' d•I 'M~ w~ Lo ~:, ~1~ P:r111111·1 o.- h I · f0oun111n valley • O 114 161 L.oara 11 Hun11ng1on 9Mc:" on t e winning team ollowed here Wedriesaay rUgbt stiU en-co••• Mew 3 1 "' 111 """helm 11 Mar1111 BIG SALE b 0 Sh hard Do Sinl• An• Vtll•V l I 1"9 ?.ct Wt1Nrn 11 W11!mln1ler y ave epp • n ;oys the prosperity or being in e ... ric:la 1 l 11(1 ,,, 5.lnll ,.,,. al Newgort H1rbol" NOW IN Smith and Dick Camavele. 1:~ ta . ••-So th "·--t L•At.1mltoa 1 ) 211 20 G4'11Df.N 01tov• Ll!.Aoue: In I I <"' .. -.1 w::il p ce m U.R: u \A,HUI =·· g : ~ff li; 1>"..:?"1~1• I ~ fi~ fr, PROGRESS a s mi ar event .Ju..uuay, Conference basketbatl race. w.-....l' scom s.nl!!.'ii., t '" 2u Fran k Becker and George Foun••l1t V•ll•v • M.uno111 ., G•'''' •~ , , ffi '" BI · •• d f '•-'••th cor-dtlM•r 1Ed11ot1St , Trosk.1 copped first place with u ms..,.a o s ........ '6 e c11st1 MIJll ~il , 1..::1• u ~:C.,,tig.i:J:m11oa f • 2~ ll~ a 59. lead with just Santa Ana the SA villev,.~:t .... 6::!:' '2 &olu Gr•..oe c 4 194 u 1 flvnl•ln V•llt\r •I Ct)l'"Otlll 1111 ~r W1111n11d11"l kOrft Pirates have •---JO' tn' eel by COlll Mita at ~ .t.llml~ Loo Aml1101 51, 8011• Grinde "8 .. esa Verde ~ Edi.Ion., s• v.u.y ' u0u1 .. 11 11. s111111'll0 ... 11• Cerritos and Mesa. ,-~""~""'~'~·~·~• ~··~·-~·!...-----~·~·~~oo~·~"~m~'~'°'!..'!"·~G~•~·-~~o~":"~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Friends of Dusty Elford will That all came about when 227 r. 17'" St., CNto Mno lltiw..ft Slltw•Y & Thril!W OrU'Q 1-. Mno C..tirr LI 1-tJtJ !111111.Amerl~nl -N111t1r Cll1r1e be interested to knctw that he has relocated at Mesa Verde Santa Ana feU to ML San County Club in Costa Mesa. Antonio, Tl-76, and Cerritos Elford, a Jong-time assistant blitzed Fullerton, 97-73. pro at Santa Ana Country OCC visits s.mta Ana Satur- Club, moved to Mesa Verde as day night. ·Barry Sutherland's assjstant The Pirates trailed tht with the marriage departure Olympians all the way, but cut of Bonnie Millick . the margin f~m 14 points to !Our (5.H9) mid way through "1fs1lon-l'iejo--thuOconduh,.aJLif-,.-::-:-::::c:-·J-t . . . . Bu> Misa guard Ted Tibbs The M1~1on V1eJo CQuntry broke 1t open with some driv- PRE-INVENTORY BICYCLE MCE. Doug Rabe an·d Raul Con· treras and reserve Scott Rankin all taking part. Weir hit a free throw to start it and Rankin cashed a pair at the end. In between Rabe bit a free throw and a jumper, Weir canned a layup and Contreras ma® two free tosses. Alamitos Entries Club men :s '.J'hursday t~am igg ~ins and the Olympians defeated Mesa Verde at liome Tolled away to a comfortable last week. 29-.19. _The two lead. teams meet agam this week at occ was hurt considerably Mes~ Verd~. .. by the loss of sophomore Before that outburst the Oilers had outscored Santa Alia, 27·2il, In the tliiid periOd after faUing behind 24-23 at th< ball. Jim Teel, making the most of a rare starting appearance. took charge around the boards to score half of Hwitington's 20 1>0ints in the third period, and the Oilers' 6-3 senior recorded a personal high of 24 before fouling out. 1be Oilers had shooting prob.- Jeni,, in the f""t half, hitting only eight of 32 shots. santa Ana was susceptible{ to Hun- tington's pressure defense, however and turned the ball over 13 times to keep from getting a sizeable lead. Huntington Beach worked the ball better lo open tbe third quarter, repeatedly found Teel open inside, and went to the boards better than it had in the first half. 'Ille victory leaves Hun· tington with a 13-4 record for the season. HIMIQIM SNCll IU) ft ttpfi. 3 1 3 ' 1 c 1 4 con-•• """" Ns!H .,,,_, 0 3 0 3 c 1 c l • J 0 ll 0 l 2 3 5 I l 11 l'W Tonl1M l'IRST •Ac• -400 Yttds. 3 Y••r okl1 lo UP. Cl1mllng, l"Urte IUOO. Clalm!na 1>rktl $1400. T\lf'blne 111111) 117 FIN I klt111 Hom (81HO•H) llt WUlow Gold (l.Jpti1m) 117 V1ln Tonel.ct. ~•rclol•I llt ll1be Parr {Wr 111\ OU Oh o..tldy CV11111 n llf Truly M•l"ll• !'~!tivl 117 ll.11lcler Rocke {K l"hll 117 kk•DU Too (Adrl• tl1 Et Ant. (W1rd 119 AIM EHtlbll Ka-ati Otek fC..rdotal Jlt oa~ls J1ne CTrea~urtl i11 L-·• B•r L9t!v (Ad1!r) 117 SECOMD RACE -3SCI YlrdJ. 3 ye1r old malc:ttnf. Cl1lml1111. Purse $1«l0. Clalmlnq l>l"ICt SlSOO. Forlv Five Maonum (H1 rll llO Debtl Z.11 fWarcll · 115 c1sn C•t clt"Jhllrdtl JM Fane! P•nl1 Ad1lr! JS lrnan•ns_,. AIUsonl 11s Ihm 81obl!Y uri" (Orev1r) · 120 P1ulri llY fMll1ucl1l ~ ',',' llub¥ J1n {Mylfs) ~ ,u kllolofl CWrlohll 20 V!lldlc1tor 2 "ff~Ei~rbll 120 s.1111·1 w~ .. , fRoblnllllll 1,"' Ft1ml1111 l"'"I ~ Tom'1 8•r !Rob Mon 1~ Grff'ft ColaGne (C•rdCt.11 IS THIRD JiACE -110 Ylrdl. 3 Ytlr AM Elitlble Sls's Sllve<'" (Robinson) S!•r Dee11 IAlllsonJ Fffll And FlllCV {All•lr) ~ric:lll J•Y (Wlrdl Friday wtll be T11uana day· ~rd John Seymour who HS for the men's club or Mission missed the final.10 minutes of 11s Viejo. Clu~ professional Roger the opening half. Seymour ::; Belanger is hosting a trip to canned 10 points early, then the across-the-border country twisted an ankle and had to sit club for a day of golf and out the rest of the half. SCY•fllTH •ACE -3lO yards. 3 ve1r olds .L uo. All-11nc1. Pur$1 13500. Tiii E•~:n:Cluti o1 N•woort H1ra.or. " ·~ '""'\ "' Jtnny vw Or• r 111 Scooii'1 Al•l)jl (Lr;...m) 117 Jo9 lilr;ll INlcodemud 117 0111\M Rocket \Tre11Ure) 117 Clllllned Rocti:1 (&uf91SS) 117 ll:lld! On Miii (AClalrl rn EIGMTH RACE -«JO v•rd1. ! y,., ofd5 I. ug, AUO"*•llCe. Put11 USCIO. The Arn•rk.,. S1vfno1 &. Lot,, lnftlture. TM L°' Angele!J-Orlf'>Cle Counly Clll11tirr. R1stu1 Oun II (AClalr) 117 LN &tr Witch CTre11u•e) 122 Mvs1err Moon IMvln 122 A1111red C~ IWarCI) 122 Hjv ~ Ith) 117 M .,_y Tl Knloti!I 114 Flloht 1°' lLIPhlm) 122 festivities. With Seymour on the bench - Shorerliffs Mesa grabbed a 33-29 lead at The Shorecilffs .Country Club men's team defeated cross- town rival, San Clemente, in a team .inatch this week. 47-75. 19th Hole Keith A. Neal, golf course the intermission. Seymour finished ltjth 18 points wlu1e Tom Crunk hit 15 and Dean Bogdan had 10 for OCC'.' Tibbs paced Mesa with 21 while three other Olym· pian.s also hit in twin figures. superintendent of Fore-Par. or.._ CN1'.J'~'", ,. ~ In led La Be h MJ,11~.-., 2, O ', ,,> NINTH IU.CE -«111 v•rd1. 3 lear corpora , guna ac , ............... ~§: "'~ ~k• '=~1111• PurJ11 s 600• attended the .f1th "international ~:,:: ~ ~ 0 is Ml1tv Joe <Tr111U"'\ 112 turf·grass conference and &DDd•n s o ~ 18 11r• RQ("ket CRklllrdt 122 Wor1hy ' I ,,' ,•, Jo A1111'1 TrN1u,.. cG1rui1 111 show in Bosto.n last week. Tot11s 26 t On Ttw 9ffm fOrev..-J 122 S• oi. ,._,. (1') RO"v•I TOP B•r <P11111 111 Purpose of the five •ay " " ., tt ""'"-J:Ud~ 117 "I.I ~~ f ~ ~ ~ olds a. ""'· C!•lmlna. Puru SUDO. Clllfl'+lllll 11rlc1 SlilOO. f"Mlll Win (1(1,,~l Teco 01<1C1v ~Alt!loOlll Armlld rasti Llolloml HenN Tllll N nlll IM..-IH) T~ Vtrlfl !Ad1lrl =:."m cM~e':ihll l~ meeting was to updat~ JonH 6 0 0 12 1•1• Al•mrtos ear 11 <Rot11n1011l 122 superin'"ndents on the latest Roblrison t 1 ' It 7 SNrky Buckiwr (Vl!JOll!tl 117 """' Wilker J 2 • ! in A.11e e11g;1111 developments and inlonnation T1111d1um 1 o o 117 ~~1m~;:..!~""~7/F11""111l lM on the professional manage-~~1!t~! g g i g CUii 9,,., R-(Robinson) S!llle<lv se....., !Nicodemus) 111 Ambush c1~d~lktlbll ~•MY Willow (K,,lol>IJ •r~• w1n1 f1Cnio~11 ltt ~~~~~r1rH:i'.f)1 l~ ment of course maintenance. T"U:1;11m1: s.,,, 0~ M.!.. ~·:it'5 '"lp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;il E G•vften IOrever) B1rkti.llld (Smlftl) i\l SUNDAY AFTERNOON JAZZ •n JAM SESSION -2 P.M. -SUPER DUO FOU•TM RACE -~· Ylffll. l ye1r olds &. uo. Allow.nee. Puri.a U300. Go Isle Go !A~lr) i,n,1 Nlf1V Nott fRablMOn) W11Ch Rocket (jr9•surel 1,~ Good COPY (Sm fil l ., Senor P1nd1 !Rkh1rd1l llt 111m11n'1 Lt'O Two (Nkodemu1l •'•" Midway OtrdY IH1rl) 7 S•11l1nn1ti ICrottlYI 122 l'll'TM •AC"I! -3SO yMdt. 3 ~·r olds 1. UD. Finl•• & m•r9'. Cl1tmlna. Purw u.oo. Cl1lmln11 prltot $5000, TM 91_..tnglotl Wonu1n'1 Clutl. 11111 &ell• _IOr-v1rl 1,•,•, SUQW C•tt W1rdl n• 'Theo' As Anchor -Also Featured Tues. Thru Sun. MPflDAY -~:=c~~~::: = ~~~~R Unbeatable ~tmosphere "Under The Dome" With All The Peanuts You Can Eat! HAPPY HOUR -4 • 7 P.M. 'MON. Thru SAT. THE GALLEY PENl~~u~E. 810 E. BALBOA BLVD. -673-9980 . . .... 1'11111;111 w•' '"' Totllt ' • 5 22 73 17 ll 63 S•lll• AN tttl i,=:-~.::t,~ (H•rll 117 ~t L1klll r .. t.Ut•l 1,,n, Gol>htr 811 CWr!Qtll\ Delli S.ndl (Clrdol• I ',',',II..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Rubv 8-11 {Hkodltmin 'r ft ftJf lp ~·:-:~~·~ M•rtlMi 3 1 3 I FrederlckloOll 1, ~ S 7 1tobl111011 4 I Olld\nl1'" s 3 I 13 T0'11I• lO t 11 4t score Illy CkNlrten Hunfll!Ofot1 lluch lt 1l lO z..:63 Si n!• A,.. 12 12 U 11~9 SIXTH ltACE -3SCI Ytrds. J VT" olds. Claiming. Purse S1800. Cl1lm no orke UXIO. Non Sto!llr ISm!ftll us P•u Em By \Crootiy) •'ii" o-·• Niner 1'1•rll Pllddv 81rs (WrlQnl) 1 1'1ol1ty V•11 B•r CC•rdo11) ,'~,. Ro¥ cti.111 1Rk:llllrd1) TH C"'s Chore• (MylH) 110 Sh.vi> RocUt (Ad1lr) 1,u Peg!Km Moon {Pll)e) 20 Rlc~loy (Dr1yerJ 120 Alamitos Results ' ' w.-....Y. J1_..., 17, 1f7l Myrl'S CO!lY CSmltht J.40 CIN rt Jr1(11, ll'IUlllllY Time -2l.JS. wf .'.IT •• ' _ Ji: ,1,ds, l ve1r Aho ran -.lol'ln's Roc•tt, T ster UOO Br"ll AllChor Ctikk, C.rol's cir.am. olds&. 'f':• Cl1lml1111. rM 11 k · Final Re<1vesl, P11111v's Pride, !ff•• TDO AR':i:i~I s u, • J.'oo 20~ifJ 11.40 M\ld'I. jlott-AIHoonl , 4.60 .l.80 _ l'lFTII •ACE -'50 -vlfd1:.-J veer ~a~! lndlln (Rlch..-dll 6·80 olds. ClllmlnQ. Purill uooc 1 • Trme -11.TI. ftl EY•r111•1 Wh1 AllO rlll -H1U Of A Nolt, Ano fr (Tr'•wl '·00 3.lO 2.60 cvi. ll1r Ouster 81r llov. P1ml1nt Mldn t 911fkv \AllllOll) t.00 !"' eru. R~ Crokx'I, R•Old Fila hi, 011 HtvalleOOV liAdl r) .10 R;; t ... · 1·Aftllll Sure MIU & 1· l\:e r&n l _!'Sfndv's kr'ft, Prlno:eu Uttt-. •1111 U17.2t. z1re11. DUSI Dev!l1 , Codi: 3 81r1, Color s•c OMO RACE=""" 4DG Y•rds, 3 v-ar ~ Pink, FlltU Otck. old m11der\1. C11tl...tlrfl'. Cl1lmh>Q, SIXTH •ACE ~yards. 3 veor Ci!d &1~1 \1:~1 (C1rdolll 311.00 U.40 9.20 ti:lt ~111~~1 *j:fo 7.00 3.40 TIM SVndl(lll IA.lclllrd1J 4.60 3.80 SPGtt.d p.,. !Smith) 5.00 2.IO Llttll Cllu Chu 1.40 Hilo Blob (Aclllr) 2.60 Tim• -21.74. 1ms -21.10. Alw r•n -F11me Jt11.,-. Dkldy, 190 r1n -Mo!h!v Moo, W1r Ni1'11r11lf Luek.v. IC l"!I Dvmtn Rlll•ti. Prll!Cfll. L_,_Lllllt Miu Bux. OOrlt =:· Man, Extr• Coi:>v. AWIV 5.1111 Meir, Printtmffr. Mellow Moon. TMIRD MCI -=-110 v•rd•. l v1•r old1 &. up. c1.1m1ng. Purw snoo. F!Lll Moo" Ma II ITP'Niurtl 13.40 $.'° 3.20 A.0¥.-!. P•ni1W1rdl 6.60 j~ l 1r Fl!"M ml!til . T\IN -.4S. ' "--A so flln -Molsht1 Cl'"llY IV.• .,.,,.,. -nd J-rd, Ml p,., Offill Tortto . •ou•TM •ACE=""'°° yardl. , V"r .114 ,....~ ,..,,..,. si-.. 1011 r 1•on •1t 1• 1,_.;T1~40 6.00 ~="Norteft (Htrll \4.20 6 . ..0 Vanguards Fall, 7~-67 SEVENnt •AC~ $49 v1rd1. 3 yur olds I. up, Atlow9nc1. PutM S3500. AdnY Go (Aclllr) S.60 . 2.MI 2.10 BoCd Adw'rl~ 1Tr1•su.-.I 1..40 l.20 Ho RH!ralrit fl pNml 2.10 ,Tl,.,. -'Jl:ll. Al50 r1n -RouQh Slltlff, Tllrv T1lk· Ina. Sliver V!lll. No ic:r•tclll$. , l!IOHTfl •AC! -110 yMft. 3 y,_t old1 lo ur,· ~11ow'1nc:t. Purw SJSOO. Tiit ~~Yt•v •• R o(k 1t URot>lnsonl 13.80 s.c •.20 nc:r1 WIJ IWardl S.60 '-~ Par Olvld fTr-Urt!) 160 Time -b .2t. F "" T••o AllO ran -Countv I ~~J n Soufftt, Gtt>tw's Boy, $C.lrw l•n. Prosoe111111 Quest. MINTM •ACI: -l50 Y•rdl. J w1r olds lo uo. c11tmlna. 1.-u,,-5140G. 9 .. ·~~min Je36.60 lj.Oll tl.20 a7if3 1r.oo/ (CrOSOVJ .20 6.IO Olemoncl lloulllll" (C•rdoZI) 4.IO r.:-fi11 lt_:!7 OQ.B1r M• Jot,, Trye C•n Ftv, Mr. P1rr 9!1111f,Jtodl¥ kid, Southern (fali{or:nla College "'kr.~·1• ~kVB~~~:.::r.°'· RO'tlll J ~-M ~ a 75-67 Lldyt>ug, Mr. ll'llporl•nl, B 8lotl . ..,._ '""'9la esll UI~ OQ -Flnllhed flrll. dl1111J111 ed Ind dedlJon to visiting Lee cot-ocu1.~~-f.Olill'--!t J•t a 1-0.1111 Jege of Tennessee Wednesday "•"'· ,.i. 11•.1t. night afttt three Vanguards l-'====-----1 players fouled out or the ac- ti~ their fourth game in {l\ie nights. the Vanguards a~ peared tire<!. They also had one of their poorest shooting nlgbts ol the seasoo, hlttlng 28 ol 70 attempts. SoCal hoSts the University of San Diego Saturday. :' 1111 l'lf()'' 1 \\\'1 11\1~(, l ..., ~f 11\'J( l C'"'.J • GllMI e v.i.crn1 • Allll • MUllf9 $1o(t CIQflllet-!tlll111 Out lo l•rw Wl!ll TH• l llCI: t'SDOl.I• '""' I~ •ICJ"IM 17•11 91Kft 81\f'd,. HU!lfillgtoll htdl Ml-0741 SKI SALE M•n,•s•women't famous ski pa1k•1 ............ 1;,.1;J .off 12.Qp ·l.cfjei' wind shirts ·······-····-······ ................. l .ff L1n9e ski bo_ots, 71-72 ................................ 30°/1 off Al p.in•-O•lu.:9 ski package ·-····--········-·····-only 39.H 12.00 'f1,.rnou1 "'ake ski poles ···-··············· .. ···-··· 6.'9 s,,.utdi ng Spectral Ski Package; l-•lu•s up to 110.00 .. _ ............ -.-............................ llt.oo• Humenic ski boots, 7 1°72 ············-·-.. ·····JO~ off*' 21.00 womtn'1 Batts •fter-ski boots .......... ,_._ 16.95 ~Llmli.id Wll'lfltl111 not 111 lltdt •¥1lllO!w Ir! I ll tfOrft SPORTSMAN'S SHOP _Newport • • l F•shion 1,land • Newport C1nter • '44·2200 llon. & Fol. to,oo.tlO • s""· Noon.s ,oo • Other D•y• 10:00·5:00 ""'" CATALINA 10-SPEED A 17" 4tl.11111Htl with ).pit<• cr1m, ..,It deraill1111, 1lfftl 1hift1rs cellftt-pd fr .. n4 '"' c•I~ •roles with 4wl ,.sitiff ie'ml 5trtt<M4 leltllet rMMlg ~. Wlai11. ' ~ HUF" "DELUXE" 3-SPEED SPORTSMAN HUFFY 3-SPEED 3-WHEECER "omit 26,. •.. <...,tit• witti .. ,..,,, ~·"· ,, .. MWcll .. wtighl ... YMlt If Jtfvi<I Ml •• ,.11•••ility. $A.Vl'15.00 Me'(i .. ,.rts iMtd1 '"' ... tTigfl!I" sftih <Mfrtl • .-itht M .. 1 IM1i. J;" wMeli, ctlipef ._. ,, ... " hMt ...,..,,lo4itt'9'Mn'sMeL ' SAVl'7.00 HUFFY BOYS' FURJ BIKE lt14i1 '"''" hrelH, fr•llt r1lip11 h11••. •iltMctr; litff, ...-.IM lefli•ts wllh t•lly Jtti'". Q1iltff stillt. N~1 trffll/W.Cl. $AVl '7.00 HUFFY DRAGSTER SPECIAL BIKE ... ~ .... ..... , ... ,If., .... dw- fi.s, Ji..,f ffMHI wifli 1.ity shifts.,,. MUe. 1..,·, M ~T ydew; tirl01.J"""'''· SAVI 'S..00 STOii HOUIS.MON. THIU Ill. 10A.M.1TO t P.M. SAT. a SUN. 10 A.M. TO t P.M. LA Mt RADA ORANGE SHOP,.IHG Cf~ff. ''!>!> ,.,.._ ..... .,.,...._,(_! N 1\JS ll,. IP.,._! •21·11!.1 ""'-: ll1 l,IO TUSTIN Nt WPOAf .IV(, •• ,UllST Sfllll.1 Phoo .... 131 511!t8 NOW, 4 STORES IN ORANGE COUNTY ' SANTAANA ll!tl s l'lflH$f01 Sl, , M 1c:ARIHUJI p .. :bllol .1317 ... - II • • • ' • 32 DAILY PILOT s . , Hund.II . ""'-18. 197l Starplus? Sparkling Sp1·ing_ Seen SACRAMENTO (AP\ -The 1973 ~nomlc outlook for Cn\ifornia i§ "spa.rkhng," 3nd will boosl the surplus in state budger lo well over $1 billion, r.ov. Ronald Reagan prt!dlcled today. The rosey pro,ection i$ bas- rd on an anticipat~ $9.! bll· lion increase in the personal 1ncomt of Californians plus The s11rph1s Is s11 l>lt t••r r•e stare Is eountfng on $72 1111111011 b1eo111e 111 rite eo1Rh19 year from l>nnk l11rer. esr 01t rite f1111ds. strong galns in employment and an expected 11.8 percent increase in taxable sales. BARELY 11\'0 )'ears ago, the state faced a $200-millio.n deficit and bailed out or the financial crisis by a series of stringent economies which ranged from an across-the. board frttze on stale pay ra!ses to the denial or false teeth to elderly ~ledi-Ca\ pa· tients. Reagan's finance director. \'erm! Orr. said the budget surplus -est1n1ated at $851.8 million at the end of the cur· rent fisca l year -y,·ou\d be swelled by Mother S260.3 million during the 1973·74 fiscal year to an estimated $1.12 billion by Jurie 30. 1974. The surplus lS already the biggest in California's history , but the new estimates point to it doubling in the coming 17 months. THE SURPLUS is so big that the state is counting on $7'2 million income in the com- PRIVATE TRUST FUNDS AVAILABLE .FOft !IE.A!. Erf~TE LOANS 1.i ' tnd TRUST •0t:1::os $1,SOO To U!i0.000 UP TO IQ'llo LO.VCS ON TAVST DEED COLl.ATfAAt. dW1'09'T l001TI' FUllOll N-port C.ni.( 620 Newport Ceni... Ori• Newport Be.ell, Calit. (71•) ~ ACNE CAN SCAR •Y TERRY GRANT. R.Ph Amoni: adole~cents. 11cne is the mo~t oftl'n found skin problem. And. it is a mis- taken notion that acne need'> no trratmcnt because it ,,.,•ill cventuallr go away by itself. Neglecl1.>d acne can re- sult in skin pitting, blotch· ing, and other disfiguring scars. Emotionally lt can leave a devastatini'.!; !'cnr. Fortunatl'ly, lhr lis t of pogsibl~ treatm('nts fnr acne i.'I esprtially i::ood. Bcsid~ th<' common s!;'nse rules of a healthy dit•t ond good everyday skin hygienr, lhrrc are many sprcific medicinl':!I that a phy~iclan can p~ scr\bf: and v.•hlc.h we regtt- larly ~tock. Prornpt treat· ment i~ im1>0rtant so don't wait for acne to go away. YOU OR YOUR ~R CAN PHQNE us when you nttd a delivery. We wlll de· lf\ler prnmptly without ex• tra char!!e. A g\eRt many people rely on ti!'! for their heeHh n('('ds. \VI? i\'rlcome requests for df'Jh·f'ry M'l'Vice and charie accounta. PARK LI PHARMACY Ut Ho1 •I Road tkwport IN ch '42· 1 SIO • ; Fret O. very THERE IS A FACTORY AUTHORIZED DEALER FOR EVERY POPULAR MAKE CAR IN THE WORLD ON COSTA MESA'S Harbar Baulevard af Cara LOOll fOI THI lllllLIM AT THEODORE ,. COSTA MESA ROBINS FORD DATSUN -2060 2145 .. ARBOR BLVD. HARBOR BLVD. • . . ' I I 1COMPIEl'E NEW YORK STOCK IJST !1 / COUNTER OVER NASO Llatl~,;, ... Wodnnd1y, :.... ... " 11: 1m .... •• • • ' • • , Market Spurred _ By Peace Hopes . . NEW YORK (AP)-Stock market p1lce1 moVed hlsher Wednesday with good news from Vietnam ••l'Ylnt as a stimulant and concern over the econ· omy acting as a mlld depreasant "We will have an unsetUOd markilt" unlll4n-vestory uncertainty over the meaning of Phue 3 la cleared up, predicted lobn Smith of Fahneotock &Co. ' . . ~n thougb Allled oflicl111 In Salg011 were N-. ported working on a dratt peace agreement, the nows failed to have a atrong, 1>0$lllve Impact, and Smlbe th maintained an end to the wlr already had en discounted. • ·-• • • ' I ' - 1 ,l_4 DAJl'f fll\.OT TfturlsdQ, JanlWJ 18 1q73 Safa 1 nlsm Flourishes? Pope Stresses Devil's Work for First_ Time For the Record \rATlCAN CITY <Url1 -The devil's deepest \\'ile. according 10 French pt>el Charles B!lude.l.aire. is. 1.o persuade humanity he does not exist. Vat\can radio and special articles in lhe \':uican prHS. BOT 111AT IS &.XACTLY how port of -..-.~ I 4% llaly's ,..,u11r .. pm0 1r .. a1ed them. 1n: DUUtO U111a0ft8 , The pope said Satan truly exis~ as 11.n acti\'e forte in the world , Mid uSl'd these '-''Ords about him: ' elu ding a Commwiist newspopor which Of .. i ran a tongue-in-<:be<k "\nttrvlew with iraarr age Now. the Vatican has a can1paigri going to give UK' devil his due before he drops out or public si~hl altogt>tber. Po~ Paul \"I dedicAted an enfil"t' speech recently. for the first hme in his nine-yea r pootiflcatl', to the subject of Satan. "A dark and enemy agent . . . R lcr· rlbl\'. mysterious and fearii(Une realily .. tt live. Jplrltual, pervened and pen'erting being . . . the enemy No. I, the tempter par e.xcelltnce ..• the h.ld· dt'rt enemy \li'ho ~-·s errors lUld • m1sfortWlts in human history." Satan." The \'atican ·nev."Spaper L 'Oservato~ Roniano snapped back tbat such articles themselves showed the influence or Satan. L'()lservatore evm prepared a speclal page oo the devil. The Rev. Jobn Navone of Stattle, \Yash.. a pnlle-S30r of theology at Rome's Gregorian University, -who-a panel discussloo on Satan last year said 1he debat~ about Ill< devil brinp ~p he "'bole subject of spirits, incu g demons and angels -a subjf£t ch has largely lapsed into oblivion the past de<ad<. TIIIS WAS FOLLO\\'ED 8'' talks on The pope asked listeaer.s not to treat his 'ft'Ords as "supersliUous or Wl~al." B each Drops ~ Opposition , Joins Council Huntington Beach has somewhat rt'- luc1antly agrred to join the proposed lntergovemmental Coordinating Cbuocil {ICCJ or Orange Coun1y. Councilmen this. week reversed their previous op~ition 10· the ICC based on a report from Councilmen Don Shipley and Ted Bartlett Shipley aod Bartlett told their couneil mates the ICC already has U pill\>osed members and Hunlington Beach ought to be in on the formation ol it. "I doo't object so much if SAAtCO (SupervisOrs and Mayors Councill is abolished ." Councilman Jeny Matney interjected . "But \\'e'll still watch it care£ully.'' -"Kttp in mind we can always wilf'>. dra1v. 1t's voluntary, just another vehicle £or cooperatioo ." Councilman Jack Green added . "I recommend "'e try it for a year." Mayor Al Coen cast a reluctant yes vote, Mying he only did it to make the · city appear unanimous.· "f have a great ... deal or sk~pticism about this." City Administrator Da\id Rowlands said the first year's ~ ICC budget ls $3-1 .000. wilh Huntington Beach ~ tributing S2,7SO. As yet, there is no rormal structure to lhe ICC and no definte outline as to its goa1s and objectives. Councilman Doo Smith of Orange, the temporary ICC ch airman, says the main purpose is lo create more cooperation between all the cities and between the cities and county government. C.ounty supervisors b a v e already agreed to join the rec. ~Iuntington Beach councilmen agreed to the need for more cooperation. but ""ere skeptical of the need !or another laye'r of semi government. Volunteers Eyed For Environment The Environmental Council of Hun· tington Beach is looking for more members. especially persons with ex· pertise in air chemistry. oreanography, hydrology and water pollution. All members of the Environmental Council are volunteers. 1n:N"king-without pay. accord ing · 10 • ~trs. Margaret carlberg. council chairman. The council meets the second and fourth Tuesday night of each month. Council members help evaluate en- vironmental impact reports. establish ecology projects and advise the city on general matters affecting the en. vironment. For further information or application forms phone city hall at &36-5201 , or write to Environmental Council, P.O. Box 190, Huntington Beach, 92648. Bonds Supported In Seal Beach The Seal Beach elementary school board has announced its unanimous sup- port of the $27 million bond issue which goes before voters in the Huntington BeBch Union High School District Feb. 27. "This board supports the bonds 100 percent and will do everything in its power to see that this measure passes." said board president Lloyd J. Patterson. The high school bond election has been called to fund const ruction of two new high schools in the district. c NAVONE SAID l~'TEl\EST IN spirits is evidenced by such modern fads as cc-. cultism, mindbending drugs, astrology, psychic experiences and oriental religions in Western societies. Navone said men today tend to think of the devil -if they think of him at a11 - as a fun figure, a type of "Satanic Playmate," rather than the cruelly evil figure of Lbe scriptures and literature \\1lo uses men for his own purpose. .,J;..t-. 'Oops. S<Jrry Mr. President/' Dropout Target Of Huntingt~11's Evening Oa~ ~1arried teenagers, workers with full· time jobs during the day, and olck!r teens l''ho have dropped out to help · out at home are the targets of the H1a1tiogton Beacb Union High School District's pilot e\·ening school program. The district welcomes these I or any other kind of mature, independent person, according lo Woody Smith, fonner Hunti~ Beach Higlt ScbOOI principal and recently appointed'. de.an of the district's nedgJiDg evening_school. "We know there are young-people in the district wbo would jump at Qte chance to g~t a high school diploma through evening classes," he sa:ya. "But rtaehing them is another thing."' · Smith said that more· than one · hundred parents and students showed laitial in- terest in the program when surveyed earlier this ,month. Meetings with students are now going on to plan in- dividual programs. Smith warned, however, that, although many students currently enrolled in regular classes have shown inlecest, ooly those gaining parent approval end hav- ing ~ir own transportation can be enrolled. The classes will meet between 4 p.m. and IO p.m., Mondays through Thursdays at Wintersburg High School, rnoo Golden West St .• Huntington Beach. Students will be eligible for fall credit and will earn the diploma of the regular day school in their area . They can also earn limited work experience credit. For further information, call 847-1273. Two Elementary Schools Planned Two elementary schools will be built this summer in the Huntington Beach Ci- ty School District with money from the sale 'or $2.4 million worth of bomis by lhe district. The schools, which have not been nam- ed yet, will house kindergarten through filth grade students. One will be built in the Plll'k Hun· tington tract south of Ada nu A venue and between Bushard and Brookhur:Jt !Ire.els. The second school will be In the Signal Landmark development which. is also south ~f Adams t>e;tween Newland and Magnolia streets. The pope's approach to religious faith usually . bas stressed tbe positive and pragmaiic. bolh for ecumenical ~ and to keep the church credible to modem man.- L 'Osservatore Romano once went out ol its way to inf~rm its readers that the pontiff does believe in Hell, even though he never mentioned the subject. BUT FACED BY WHAT he reportedly sees as a worsening eris.is of faith and authority in the church. the pope has been getting ever more pessimistic. Last June. be-wggested -that Satan entered tbe church through some "fissure" to stifle the fruits of the Vatican Ecwnenical Council. Apart from that passing reference. however, he had never publicly dealt with tbe devil until recently. Talking aboul Satan meant delving back into language that bas been largely discarded by modem theologians. For even am,ong them. fiery Lucifer with his hems and tail bas descended to-the level of a vaudeville )eke. The pope did not say what the devil looks like. He was trying to explain what, in bis view, Satan is like. ACCORDING TO PAlfLt Satan is a being or vast malignity, sophistication and treachery who is seducing modem men with drugs, pornography, materialism and experiments in \be oc- cult. Whole nalioM. be said, have fallen- under Satan's grip, ahhough be left it to the audience ·to decide which ones. Vatican Radio said the pope did not mention Satan to inculcate fear. But it said he would be ignoring a fundamental reality of faith il be did not put people on their guard against the devil. "As in every battle. the greatest mistake is to lmderestimate or even ig- nore the eneillY," the r'adio said. IN mE POPE'S VIEW, modem trian relies too much on psychology, psychiatry and sociology to explain the phenomenon of evil, While losing his conception of a supematursl power of wickedness. L'Osservatore Romano said many CatM\ics had been surprised by the pope's speech because they had become •·accustomed to the idea that Satan was a metaphor,-an emblem, a spook for children and primitives." Yet , the newspaper said, symbols of Satanism are flourishing everywhere. It mentioned fonune tellers, dabblers in the occult, witches and witchdoctors. ''madmen and criminals who call themselves Satan and, like Satan, go in for the trade of murder," an apparent reference lo the Charles ~tanson ''fami· ly," demonic rites, sadism and sexual orgies "even in the most civilized cities." Huntingt-Ort Eyes Fiv.e -city Cable Television Link Huntington Beach has agreed to con- tinue the study of a possible five-city cable television network. The bonds were authorized in an elec- tion held in February 1969 In which district voters approved $4,750,000 worth of bonds. City councilmen authortzed the city adminis tr ator this week ·to pay $13.700 to continue the study for another. yeir. -·Logo Solieited One neighboring city, Costa Mesa, also has agreed lo chip fn Its !hare, but with the comment this would be the last year if nothing concrete is established. The cities of Huntington Beach, Costa Mesa, Fountain Valley, Westminster and Newport Beach 1lre considering the possiblliJy of a joint pcwers agreement to let one ~ble television contract to serve all five communities. Like to Draiv? Win $100 From Mesa 1be jolnt study is entering its third year, with the various cities attempting Got a flair for drawing? To enter, send one color and one blaCk· to outline exactly what they want to~ If you're good enoua:h. you might just and-white rendering along wilh you r quire of a cable company. "'in a $100 savings bond being given away name and 8.ddrt!M to the U.S. lncen· Some of the po6Sible ~ts lnalude by the Costa Meaa U.S. Bicentebnial teonial Committee, Cost.a Meu Civic use of the cables for broadcasUI of key committee. CC!nter, 77 Fair Drive. cqt1ncll or civic meetings and use of the The commit~. which Is planning the. J:Saume adds that color ftnderlngs 'network to Upand the classes ·of the 200th birthd.o.y celebration of the U.S. ln should reftrict themselves to two colors coast Community Colleee Distfkt. J978. wi!J award the bond to the winner or and that all the entries will be judged on Mayor Al Coe.n was reappointed fofl his Ill lo~tcst. __ _,o~ri,gln~llt a!mpll~!Y a"d_ J.a.st of --1.bird...yeu-u-lbe clty!t-niprllel\\aUv6--0ft -Alofo s an emblem Which appears on reprodudlon. the }oinJ study committee. of{lc.Ja docomenti a11d on letterheads Persons who wish to have their wor~ "Cable television will ·uUlmatcl.Y prove and envelopes. -returned should include a ae.tr-·addressed to be Aft invaluable asset to this .com· Contest director Thomas Blume says and stamped envelope aloni with thelr muntty," the mayor commented. .,1r1a will be a0«:pted unlll Feb. 12 entrle>. -. Hunlinstoo Co11neUm<0 mllile m other (lJocoln's Birthday) and the wlnn~r will The savlnQ:s bond is being dol)lled a! a comment on cable television and did not be anno111t<ed Feb. 19 (Washington's c:ooteill pri!e by tbe \J.S. f'tn( Natkmal thdlcete 1ny dlssallslactlort with the l!lrthday). Bank of Costa Me.Y. . ~ l!J1gth ol lhe 1tu41'.--- ' ' Pretty Pipe Puffer Anarita Fiascone. Chicago. argues the more mammoth the~ pipe, the more popu- lar it is. This one is 15 inches long and holds three ounces of tobacco. 1 • \\ ·10,000_ Trees Die -No Cure known cure, a National Forest Service estim3te disclosed. Dick Pine, public in· formation o£ficer for the Lake Valley Ranger District here, said the forest service studied test plots for two years lo detenn.i~ the extent ol the damage to pines in the forest. ABOUT j per cent of the pines in the forest died of el_ytroderma. a needle blight which he explained has no known cure. , "If the ~mortality rate is roughly the same over the en- tire infecied arta," Pine said, the forest service estimates that 10,000 trees have died. The area .or "severest in- rect!Qn." ~ added, ts the Pope Baldwin area, a prime recrea· tion area near Lake 'l'ahoe. DURING THE study, six test plots were established and 609 trees studied. By September 1972. 41 or the original trees died. Elytroderma is a disease which goes through cycles, Pine explained. "Ordinarily,'' he added. "it doesn't kill a lot of trees.'' What worries forest service personnel in this case is that the disease "seems to be get· ting ,v•orse instead of lighten- ing up as usual .'' Pine said. "Once Ill< forest Is infected you can't get rid of ii without sterilizing the entire area." PINE SA ID elytroderma makes trees unable lo produce food and many needles turn brown because of it. ' Magazine Told, Drop Exclusive NEW YORK (AP)> -A federal judge has ordered Coronet magazine to stop claiming Us article about Shirley ·Temple Btack'Sbfe!st cancer is "exclusive.'' Judge Marvin E. Frankel acted Wednesday on a request by 1ticCall's magazine, which says ii has the exc lusive story and sued Coronet for $500,000. ftlRS. BLACK, the rormer child movie star and former Legalized Marijuana Supported HONOLULU (AP) -The Honolulu star-Bulletin bas called !or Iegaliutlon of marl~ juana and dispensing of the drug through state-approved outlets. The newspaper, largest in the state, said 'Wednesday dispensing of marijuana in ap- U.S. repr,sentaUve to the United Nations, submitted an affidavit supporting McCall'a. She called the Coronel piece "an outrageous attempt to im- properly exploit my name." Frankel's order requires Coronet to stop further circulation of its February Issue unless the word "ex· elusive'' is deleted from the cover. TllE ORD ER however, does not require Coronet to recall copies or the Issue which came out Jan. 9, but hara it trom advertising or promoting the article as "exclusive." Pttrs. Yvonne Dunleavy, editor of Coronet. said she could not comment on the case, except to say she Is con- fident Coronet will be vill· dicated. C ORONET, PUBIJSllED. for 11 months in its present fonnat by' Warner Maguines, claims circulation of 250,000- 300,000. McCall's circulation 11 about 7.5 million. A hearing on the damage suit was set for Tuesday. proved outlets "would provide ..----------, sanitary , and quality pro- tectioo, reduce its availability to minors, and protect against lacing or the product with something stronger and ad- dictive, like heroin." TUE RECOMMENDATION was included in an editorial listing the newspaper's pro- posals for the 1973 session of the state legislature, whlcb began Wednesday. "We should recognize that we have a drug problem as bad as the booze problem and tha~· prohibition won't wipe it out any more tban it did booze," the newspaper said. Court Permanent Disability? • Cl!ICAGO (UPI) James Baer, 30, has a $250,000 damage suit on file in Cook CO.unty 'Circuit Court c'harging he was "P'nnanently disabled" when hit in the groin by a golf ball in 1970. Baer was in the neW'I this month when he wife gave birth to quintuplets. Ruling Disease Vnder Attack MIAMI (AP) -A Miami judge ba.s gtven a black man coovicted o( assaulUng a policeman a choice of. going to jail or recruiting blacks to be tested {or sickle !=ell anemia. "l helped you, now it's your tum to help your people," Criminal Coort Judge Allooso Sepe !old Joe Lools-WUeo11. "YOU WILL RECRUIT hlack married couples to be tested for sickle cell anemia. l want you to recruit them by the hundred.o." Wilcox, 40, pleaded guilty lo resisting arrest and ... sa.ulting MJami Officer Antonio Prteto while Prieto was try .. Ing to arrest Wilcox for disorderly conduct. The charge carries a maximum prim term of five years. The 6-loot-2, 29>-pounder bowed bis heed after he ad· milted the lelooy, theo begged Sepe for mercy. Both Prlelo and the prooecutor recommended pro- baUoo. ANNOUNCING HIS DECISION, S<pe pla<ed Wllco• on proballon la< two years Md tb<n appended the requ!N> mool tha'l' Wilcox aid in the search fer yoong blacks who have sickle cell anemia. - Jf Wilcox falls to CtlM'Y out the mlsskln, ht can eXl)f!d to go lo jail; s.pe cautiOlled. Sickle cell anemia Is a hereditary blood disease C°t In abotlt one out of rvery 500 newborn blac.ks. rt estlma~ as many a.t-'ont in 10 blacks *1ffe"t from the _ malady. TUE DISEASE CAUSEli an abnonnal lormallon ol blood pro!oln In body cells .. Und<r emotional 1!1'11, cells tben (orm ltregular,elong11'd ohapoo whkh clog &mAll veutls. form blood clots and deprive vltaJ body organs rl "';ji;;-.;~:f-J-.blood-and·Ol)'leJI. Tbtre-lt-no-lcnown-aitt-r...-the-di-;- "' oltoil lat.al. New lungle ltf an Don DleUein, former general curator 0(. th'-NaUoial Zoo In Washlngton, D.C., has been named zoological coordinator for Uon Country Sa!art. He wU[...11!! based at llleo"41dllfe·OO!llJ)OOl11finirv1n~:-~ I Sept has mode tt a praclloe· ol requltlnc defendants lo p<rronn a community tetvlce as part ol their p<OOl!lon "because ll's not only a>11ilructlvo !or the Individual, It's OX1structiv-e for s:iclety. • "II al.oo maltlo the'"--'• mllzo how ~ -c~-~':'!!I·» !'f!en t!)eLJ ·tnigeiltl!i·1n the ll!e around tbeln. ' • • e r • ll e ., . tlAILY PJL01' Gen1r1I RUSTIC RANCH PLUS PODL !! Fantastic eastslde location tree llnt-d street Rambllng 3 bedrootn, 2 bath ntnch style home. ~laA!ilve comer used brick firepl ace . separate, secludf'd private added lamily rm richly paneled. 15x36 Heated & 1''lllered poo&. v••lh beautiful added cabana, built-In kitchen co11venien1\y designOO with an abundance of c-upboanls. Thia jewel won't last Jong at $35.COO. Don't \\'Ill!. Call Rt>d Carpet Rl'altors at s.H>-8640. ' CUSTOM HACIENDA $29,500 And '. it's OC•nulifu!ly done, elegant ankle dt'<'p shag carpeting, c..'UStont spanish archways thro u g h o ut, receS!ll'd lighting in the quality remodeled built-In kitchen 4 spacious bedrooms and 2 beths -this home Is just recently back on the market, so don't miss it! Call Red Carpet Rclltora 11.t 546-8640. EYER STEAL A TRIPLEX?? You can this Ont"! For Oex- able asking price of $52,500 -income of S6,<ro per yr. 2 tv.v bt."<l.room, 2 bath units, one has fireplace, &. I thrre bcdnn, 2 bath OWl\l'l'S unit. Al! ha\·e built-Ins -never vacant -owner very rutx· ious, f'xcellent lnvestnlenl - tenn available Call Red Carpet Realtors al ~V). ICE CREAM PWR , . Cute Typical Ice cream parlor. Carnation l"ran· ch1se, 1parkllng !quipmenl, grou $60,000 yearly $16,325 net, out.standing family bllllneu -$25,CX» term& available -complete book available -Call Red Carpet Rcaltors 546--8640. BBQ All YEAR Built In BBQ In great family kitchen. Nl!W noon &:: new carpe\11. Llui;e 3 bdr., :I bath move in condition. Room for boat or trailer. l.a1"¥e patio In ~ar with fire pit. l block trom school. Md park, :l bk>cks from paro. chW ldlool, ~ $35,950. lfurry, Huny CilJ Red CU. pet Realtors ~- 3 emROOll 2 BA TH FURNISHm??? $26,900 R1£ht! All fumlhU'e included. Thia home hu b..tllt-ln kllchen, double praae, fenced yard, new carpet• • b In excellent condiUon )'OU mun lff all the &OOdiH that ao wtth tt. All ternu avallablel Call Now -Red Carpet Realtor1 546-86i:l. 3 BmRDOM llARGAlll $28,500 Th.II one needl a Uttle work, but it'a on a ~ lot with focest ot bta treH. Built-inl, double praae, Uttplaoe, :I baths 4 V.A. tenna available or n.e Total down to anyone. Call Red Carpet Realtors al ....-. SWING 'IN SPRING Ownen are anxious to sell thll 3 bedroom. :l btl.lh home, pre.ent re&JIOl:W.llle oner, It bu a fireplace, built-Ill kitchen, carpeta, dlahwuher, covered paUo 4 plenty ol yard a I I b.autH..U, lands:apod ....... "" ""'1y ll!l.<m -Call R.ecl ,CarJ>et a..iton ......,, GOllGEOUS CONDO IN lAGlllA $22,750 'Thi• 3 bedroom. 2 bttb townhouoe .... bor<lt -lived In. new condlOon now vacant • priced wtU btlow market ror tm~tate sale, low dovm -Call Red Carprt. Realton 5t6-8640. AWAY FROll IT AU. Oxmtr)' llvtr~. minutl'!I from town. 841 klit. Crtal tam.Uy home. 3 llC!droome outatM-- dinr valllf at only $25,5(1) -See It. Ca II Red Carpet R.eallors 546-8640. HOUSE HUNTING? BEST VALUE AT $28;D • .; .. . t ., .• .. .. ., " ,, :. •• ,, ·f ./ .. f ., ., "' ' '. .. • "' ... ·; I ' ., .. • •• .~ l ,, ., " .. - I ' , • . , ·11 •t • > . ' f '·. i • .. • • • , ' • • 8 OMlV PllOT Thund1y, J1llUll'J 18, 1973 1 ,------'---------------~~--__;,--..;...;... __ """" ............. ~~;;.;....;;..;~;;..;.....-;.;;......;~~~------------,11i ~ -. . . I Ever:yone Hes Som~thing That Someone Else Wonts DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS-You C4in S1ll 1t1 · Find •It, Trede With e Werrt ~4 * ·* * * * * TAYLOR CO. . · BIG CANYON -$117,500 An unu sual contemporary home on a pool- sized lot. Lge. rooms. 4 Bdrms., Camily rm. & formal dining rm. Ne\V & ready to move into. 3 Car garage. On qu iet street. ''Our 21th' Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San. Jooquin Hills Road NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 Gener ii General A RARE FIND A. real Cd~f charmer, on the ocean side of H\vy., yet walking distance to all shopping. Thi s 3 bdrm., l lh bath home has additional sleeping room in 2 car garage; we have the key -give us a call. Offered. at $64,500 NEW LISTING Eastside Costa Alesa 3 BR-$31,000 CORBIN· MARTIN REALTORS Gener•( l====I EASTSIDE $27,950. 644-7662 Gener•I JUST LISTED -Meso Verde- -AL RS • 3 Bdrm • Family 4 Bdrm • $30, 900 2 baths. Pl.Uo._ din.l.ng room. Bullt·lns. c.\aatmn dn.J)ea, ln- dlnct u..ii,.,., J'<lra ..... age space. Like-new home with wall-to-wall carpetina:. Brtt. 540-1720. 3 Baths + 4 8clrm LIDO LOCATION 'l'.hlJ four bedroom Unique Udo Isle home Is located right·in !he heart of !hlngs; a yodel from !he yachl clilb and ~ tipltle from !he tennis courts. Whattaspot! There's opportu- nity for some decorating, but !he price is a ·Unique .(for Udo) $69,500. UNl9UI HOlll$ OP MIWPOIT llACN. MMAI ....... .,.... ........ ' Uflllll()UI: liVMl:S REALTORS ------------~·-- In Foreclosure! $15,750 FULL PRICE! HURRY! FORCED SALE! $32 950 2 baths Patio dining m · GoMNl · 0onof'll -·"'°· Pool, patio. Dinlng1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Freshly painled inter ior. ' • . . · ' \rASHER llJld DRYER & rm., built·tns, dishwasher. 2 REFRIG. INCLU DED ! fireplaet's. Cheery home, Stainless steel kitchen with r-arpding, drapes. Nicely built·ln blender. Din i n g Iarubcaped. Brk. ~1720. room .. Private garden patio! · Slorage lockers. IMMACU· Rm., bullt·lns, di&hwuher. ~place in farn.IJy room. Rear living room. Contem· par.ary home with 110larlum. Brk. 540-1720. LATE to"·ll.house • PIX>L. loo! BUY THIS RARE BAR· GAIN TODAY! Call &LXl.103. i9ss HARBOR BLVD. I ORI\! I. 01 \0\ ' ~':: 4. 'c7R' BAYSHORES BAYSHORES COSTA MESA 540-1120 -General -·· ••••••••••••••••••• * * FOR SALE * * Mesa Verde · Lovely 3 bedroom ob cul-de-. aac. Cozy family room and ftl'eplace. Very deslrable ..... 645-1221 1133 Weatclltf Dr., N.B. BIG 5 The Ar••'• Top Prof9ulonals Since 1Mf BUY NOW -SAVE MONEY!! Collect reliable rent -take possession Sept. 1st on this attr. 4 BR. & family rm. home; this not only will give you a more favorable price, but will allow you more time in which to sell your present home. $64,500 BAY & BEACH REALTY 675-3000 . ' Elegance awaits ~· 1L . . in the Bluua CONDO -IN THE NEW SECTION -'!'tilJ beautifully decorated \completely upgraded) 3 bedroom, 1orma1· dining room, a fiieplace, 2Y.& baths, 2 patios plus a solarium, on the gorgeous greenbelt . . . . . . . . ...... $62,800 AUSTIN,SMITIJI, GO~N & A$soCIATIJ R~AL TORS ... \ . 644-1'7' Generol Genel'ol #2 HARBOR ISLAND Lovely 5 BR., lli baths, waterfront llame. Lge. Uving rm. &.family rm., just r..i.ilqr+ ated. Pier, float and sandy beach. fleaUtlfu1 yard w /lge. shade tree & swimmi.,.. pool. BILL GRUNDY; REALTOJl 341 B•yslde Dr., Sulle I, N.B. 675-6141 Gen,r•I Genorol TRANSFERRED Just when \ht owners had finllhid .. moc1eli{lg tb!ir loYefy Udo Ille' _ home .. Word came in they were tramterTed U )'OU're kJoklng fOl' an excellent buy ln a 3"""1oom Ll6o Ille home Call ua. !'11l.~ HAftl,Oft NEWPORT B&ACti Duplu . 3 mas. old. 3 Bd· rms., 2 baths; blt-N, fr. plcs., in" each. Block IO waler. ~000 3 UNlTS-FURll. With OcMn vll!'W. Nwi Pier, Good rentall! $62$) Gib W•lbr Ru.ltf, 3356-G Via Udo. N'pt Beach * '7S..S200 *' Y!>U knoW living al Walnut Square beats paying rent You'll enjoy a carefree lifestyle, end what-a wonderful difference when tax time rolls around. fIVE -2 bedroom homes, rtve..a:araaea. 5 aep.&.rate fen- ced· y a r d • , on 'big ..,,._tr.<t Jot . .Income $740., per month. Asking 169,!llt. >O}-llfil. • Check It out today. From $19.9§G 2&3 Bedroom Townllomes (714) 651-4041 ·~· ... ~ Open Evea.. , ._ HERITAGE Rfl\LTORS INCOME- COSTA MESA 9 Unlll, -""" $13.000 ,... Tly 101' _,,, °""" wlll CIU'T)I 2nd. Makt money on lhll one. Allt:1bg '96-.,500. linm i<U the Old llVll ~Ille,_ •lull. ass oc ia ted B~t'KEA:3 ->1 ~ l\L T,")-~ :,;,A 6ut , ••. t!' ---=-~ ---""--tHlou ftH A * •4 1UNITS *· . g ::u~ .:··~ n.'°~ N~~: 41. ~ t! C&euificetton .I O 1 c-Llfw DAILY PILOi'I' home In llUJ!':l;,.i"" Btoch. .....,., w/'f.J ~ 2-Br'L "--.... ntry ',![ta,.. °"" 1 I ~!~bt1l1.~ ';;,,~ · GE111M11--- jlcent to th1t bnmac. :s fam. r., 2 frplca. Mt. \'Sew, 1610 W. Cout HW)' .. NB. Oastifictttoft bdnn. home. Prlvtcy -WANT AD Mary Lou Marion REAL'roRS 642-Cll , .1 .... pool -'°"""" potlo -COLDWEU.., BANJ{ER EA$TSIDE ' ·-~---..:._-,_-lr.11..J VttW -on\y $38.m Muy Realton ~ lf"4700 Here'• a~ EMWde Cot-,, ...... _ Jla~ 142 ri71 "' 5:llJ Newport Centtt Dr. ta Mcta home 6 11'1 ~ I ';::;:-:-~=-:-:ii -~~~ •;,Q V--......,1 !tent rt,hL l .Bdrmt., 111 ho's.: C11.,ili~t1 .. 91 , ~ !151) N.,..... °'"'"' Dr. .. -· ..... ...,... ~to ......U.ln&. • """' I . l I Anf· d&Y to the BEST DAY to rn~., 1tc. lhru a l>all)I Pilot M,OR.OAN REA' LTV ' -..... h ·1 Need a "Pad"t Place an ad! ntn an Id! Don1 del11. . ClaaaHled Ad. Sell Mne Items . _ .., · Coll 64H618. .coll M2-r>m.. nowt C.U _.,.-I 61).6642 '7U4ff ~sillcotleo 960-tt0 J , . .. . • I ! " J I ,I . 1 .f . 'I I • /, .. DAILV PILOT l~..,:E-~· ~~~l ~I -~·-~J~iiiiiie~l ~I ;;;-;.;"';;;: .. ~l~~l~I._ ;;;;-;;;;"';;;; .. ~l~~e -_ .... _ ~ I , _ .. $19 I~ •[ . iiiiiiii"'o!'!..iiiiiiii"''' ~ :;;;;;! .-;;;;m;;;;;··-~·1~;;;1 I~ ;;CeNiwt;;;";;;;tlol;;;-;;;;;;;;:;1 c,_,~~t'::'il;'.'n-V;;a;;;ll~W'f~.,...-l:H~un::::;ll:;.:ntl?;10t::::;"l..:l=•=K::;h:,__ ~Nie', ', SonlO' Ano !>u@lo,as/Unlts 8 I Hou,.. Unlurn. 305 U " solo . 161 ""o portunl 200 NT &IN 0WNERs.crtflco.400dm••, Soiral $•-< WEST'• N'INE CON· BYOw 3BR 1o ·r I .., DW,N All 3 batha. °''..... /:':ti; ..J,, 11111'CG5e DOMINIUM 2 BR, 2 BA, N ~r. , pat! , .,?cl; By Ownar--Nwpt Bch . Corona dal Mar VAWY OCEAN VllW HOME bull1,_!;~ .~111.,..~hw•,,,,• .e.!; ~.~~:b)'I You' biebty! =torEv!i°~ ~i>: v.!u.~~~~~ Near Of~&n, 1~clous 2 A 3 AY~L AG~IE~ SPYGLASS ~ now ~pled·and ln Harbor View Hlll8t Lovet)' .... _. w uu ..,._....._.., FOUDl&JN i •(. Wkndl: Unlversitv Pork Dr uni!,$, !Jltni, frplc'1. Xlnt u Y app , n BreathWtina Vu ol Oceaa.. In 0 Condltk>n. 3 comer kit with tow de 111.c, brk S36 , 842--2561. the Sea'' 5 Bednn le family 496-2919. tenua $69 ~ llnn Ca Orange County. Havt> bet'll ·a: 1" BIUtt. ~l maintenance yard A hill BY Owrw:r 3 .sn.. 2~ ba nn .. a Ult bath&. Over no Lido Isle , • • _ • 5 BR home w.tcrpt.a .._ 499.zcis:. ' · :· !1ur~~eM 1~: ™'n. ~ b~. ~~~ 1Jl~:1sll!:'.. 6 :~: Ktl Wttb I>ilh-•""'i'. view alJo. See thtr 3 BR.., nice home'. bi~ yard. BJtint', ICI ft of INl)et' oomfort, up-1.:;;·;oi;;;;;;:;i;;i;;=:;;;~ ~ e. 1 1 d d I n t ... 3 1 ~-1 N ~-,...I• tam nn be I 11•900 1~1·, ·•-1, .. •oo.~. 17618 &nld~t. '-•"'•c pa.!lo. 1• ..... J,... au n a c 1> • nconte ...-roper y r.-ar gar, )'r • .. "' n1 t ng, • · IU y, .,, • ·r... ..u.. ... .. ~ prot !die ;;d; 1 U LIDO VALUES Greenbelt w/11wlmrulng_ i;arcleMI', &I0-17611, =Spri ·~t,ar ,{':~1f~ Tr~WErtt', BANKER~ ~LaCrillobal.S42-7W. apr\nk]eJ~ iow:uu1.inf. Continue T9 .. RfM· poola,.tennii & yotleybkll 4 TRIPLEX JONll'C' -Coit• Mew tor $S3, ~tori 64+--2430 ~ Price only $53,900 with Only h\Ve8t1"ttte the lJdo Wal' of couru. Nr UCI. $40,000. Three 2-bdnn. b In Lf'3 --------1 ' 6*-005.\. 8"-1 CaU MO Newport Center Of. H".ntlntton. B.ach 10?0 do\Vn. CAIL 962-8851. life, witb. prtv. beaches, ten: 552-~. ~new condltlon. Nice REA~~NC. Three bedroot;rts, 2 baths, • ;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I "" nla &: club. We have a line carpcUnK, blt-in range ,& fireplal-e, neW shag carpets * DUPLEX * WANT A POOL? it "loction of oxcl. H•""''· ,--------.Jl14iJ reb'lji. In each. Uppec unit I (1141073"6210 I & ""'"''•' lommt dinlJ>g ' r,.\··FHA ,\28,9511 Lal'P • bo<h.om. 2 bath homf~.!HI cul4le--u.c street P' ..... t + privacy. Formal dlrllill area, 1eparate utility ~ beautiful ~ 48 x 19. Adult oe- b«luWull,y main. , londlc:aped. '01\ly ~ .. -A.11 terms, v'A, ~ do~. To see call • Ori ;lllY.I ltart1ng at $11.500. Gene _... ..._ has view of .hills It night room, bui l-in kitchen. $2'l.i ~~ &i;r~: ~ w~~~!:re,· ~311=!~9 V3)~w., BANKER I ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~· :f~ :e:~• i!;; ~~ Newpar~s.!h~~:teeo ::-v1:onth. •rce rental tnoldo. vou'll be &lad....,., .,._, -w ..... e ec kit, w/w BAOK!RS Realtor 644-2dl 8.1.l-O'l9ln can beauumed. $49,900. PROFIT & FUN ,. .,..,.. crpt1 A cuatm drp1, 550 Newport Cent:i Dr I Mobile Homes , , cUd. OUettd for m,_500, aprlnlden: front I. f'e61', 2 4 ·SEASONS 9!!Jl!I , CA.LL~@ 4•·2 14 For people v.·ho Jove animals MORGAN REALTY car ..,: JUst Sl.100 tntal 3 BR. a. DE" 1-;,Fl!";;,...:Sa:.::l:.::• ___ ..;1;:;:25 .~. & •ni<>Y worl<ing with peo- 67U642 675-4459 ca.<. • down. no ... 11y, tb1a _ SPECIAL • a1 __ .... &llu*r. ,1 •. 1n1omationa1 oompony will not last t thil rice1 1 e r .... ~ home Motor U-.. Rentals l&ALTY ln booming pet care prod· SPYGLASS HILL ... New 4 a p 4 Bedrm., 4 Bath, 2 Slory· 45 Foot kt -$19,~ DUllni Ne•r New,•rl P••t Orfl~e uctll indusll'y has dislrlb-·:iJ ... ~-~ ~~~~ I' Family rm. w/fitepl. Very LOWEST PRICE • • • l SALES & LEASING INCOME UNITS : ~rorships avail for quali-,_...,._.~ formi.l dining nn., 2800 sq, Home en lJdo... .t.BR. +; 2 full RM facility 3-FOR S4'7,500. Deluxe units. f~ed people. Full _or part C wALl(fR & :u Realtors 64fr 77ll ID13 Westcllfl Drive Open 'till 9 PM e HURRY On This! Bae~ lor, fum., $!IO all utll. pd. ALA Rent1ls e 645-JtOO Prot 1ndlcpd. °'1JI, crpt'g. 162-4471 ( => 54M1~ ft. approx. Profea. lndscpd. =S:~ ~QI) of \he b-ce Good C.P.1. locaUon. , t~111e. No Ir_anch1~ fee. By OWl'Wi!'!'. &I0--1858 All~· Call~· LIDO REAL TY Damar "1atm"Jff01118$ . $75,tXK>. North C.1'11., t or personal mtervtew call e WON'T i..asl! 1 Br. Slvf C .. t. - , . is te1Tillc at $980. mo in-• "'":,;2·;c"'=o>;:c.,·=,.,,..-,...,,-..,--cpl/drp. Yard. Sml. pet ok. 5 7 3377 Via Udo, N'pt Beach 1.; NEE~CA H 67• 7300 , 5"1 6800 com•. SPORTSWEAR retail """'· $135 utii. pd. Assume 6•/o r ,. • 10.WITH $1660 mo income moo & womem. >Atabli•hod ALA Rantols e 64S.3900 VA Loan c:il!o.:is~:1;~~11 SJ.FOOT-LOT ' Sx4D-~ 28&Qj[>g_lor...A'T ''1"-'\~.000~,,_ -!-....---:??. Ballxla lsland. $:bO·BRAND NE\V"3 BR;;-2 '"-l avail on Lido b•th. 1~•0 "-•---c•• be -.......,,.......,. penc ...... out' •0~·~~c.· -,,..-=,.-=~ d bl your property or guarantee ......... •"" u......., ....... UIU... .... t 1:;;: Bath ou e g a r a&: f: ity before Ying $61,500 BR. New Cpts drps & beds grea · . . CONVAL. Hosp. 99 Lse/Sale. T nho C ll drpa bit 1~;:~~ ~: ~:. ~~ c~ tor immed~ppt. LAWSON REALTY thru out. Family park priv. How about 143 at 2 mtlhon? Dept. of Mental Hygiene !ic. in~~ Ki::e· &: rpfu:i1. Avail 1 bu only 968-4456 J---~-=.;...--675-4562 beach, boat docks avail. Ask CAU.. BKR ·• • · 64G-881l 30. Lorre Roulstone 645-7555 now. Days {:ll3) .531-4)88 r .::,.'$~i':'95o.:..., ,: .!:: · $23,50.0 Mei • Vordo ~,IXXJ. ,si;:hoo~$65. COSTA MESA 108:::"'::.·-------E,., tll41114H5'18. th.ii newly listed Costa Mesa 3 BR, 2 Ba, oversize dbl. ewpor ·• or 12 U "t ' $1 S6 500 SABOT-Prof Fiberglas! mold 3 IJR. crpts, drps, la property. Clo6e to all gar, lrg fenced lot, .onJy 8 ELEGANT 5S6-S652. U ~1 1 · ·'' · • ' Also l hull sails hardware ed )'a.rd, kids &: llChoQls and shopping. Has yn oJd, all elect kit, KIT-Trojan 20x50', LivRm, : U "!" · · · · · · · · :,: $225. 645-1584. $210. nlO. 1st autotnati~-.a garagetlo doorwith disposal, FA ht, clinin& rm., CUSTOM ,rn,n, Rm.tedKitc~. l2Jt.,t h2Ba&, nits .. , , ... , ' Money to Loan -240 W7-9361. . opener a.nu a pa •--t room crp•~ .1~ u Y crp • UlC ,..1 c MESA ve~c 3BR -Bar-b-q. Lovely wood burn-uvu ' "'• '"V"· Close to Mesa Verde Country bath 'rm, many bltins, '" _.... la Mio. S12llO dcwn. PaymeBts Cl b ' ·-. 4 1 t TD l '8R, "'w cupeting. $250 '""n""'n.P Cf!:, See it aoon. leu tben rent. A re"al good u -......... e executive Cl<>f't ~:s.i drawers~u._tilMnn & S oa ns :IBH.. 2Ba., Jrg, bk. yd . 225 646-"'""""""!!!!!'"""!!!!!!""'"""""[ starter borne. It's sharp , bedroom with 34' den, pool· enc ac..i porch. V»l• aster CENTURY 21 54&-9521 Cl'Elll"l.t•IT'IFUH101EMCEI PARK See it today. t.able, wet bar, retrig., etc. &. new insinkerator, 846-7464 6JS-4900 &~%INTEREST :~.TTHE REiil I ~TATERS Newly decorated with lux-1961 Ang 1 55 Ex do LOVELY 3 BR home -t'Ully I' urioug aha&' c arpet l n g. e es ' pan · * ENJOY CLEAN Affi * 2 d TD L-. crpt'd & drp'd. Beaut yard. HUNT1NGTON Sparlding peel and lov•iy Awn log. ,., .... o ... io poreh. Pano....ruc: view of Boach k n oa ns Call &ttT9'l3 ""' "" Catalln ?tiodel 4 d f il '-"I 'Ill 1-1 it• gr o u n d 1 . Ca.II 546-5880, 1 tBedrooLom. $3800. Set up on Cities &: Ocean from tltil ex-Barbara, Jerry or Dick. room ~lus la.rge~m:1~1J n•.i -.. 1·5111 HERITAGEREALTORS. ~)~Beach. Phone elusive new 3 unit Ex-LDw5est lratesMOrangCe Co. CLEAN, mU 1 Bt Duplex. .. iili&i ... _. ............ [ bonus room. Full)' Im-$23 900 · ecutive l!vin&: for owner. att er tg. o. Prlv. yard, stove &. retric. iii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiia proved. Quick poKSeS&lon. • $46,950-By Owner 1972, 21lx43. 2 Br. 1 Ba, 5 Stlll' Move In now & enjoy 642·2171 545-0611 $l25/mo. 543-.fi680 _ GREAT -Priced at only $52,950. Call * VACANT * Just off Multiple 4BR. 21,i Adult park, pet ok. Must gracious livlng. 112 callelSSe~cvl~n!!.g_.1:H~"~bor~~are!!a!.,!21~yn'!· l ~f.f."';i;p;;~~;;-rei~ 962-8851. 3BR Dollhouse, freshly Ba, den, fonn din nn. bl.I sell. 496--T!m. Patricia, San Clemente, 1:: 2BtR, drpe•.,'' Y~~ts·.,. ........ .,· .. family Home i decorated. Large reai yard shag crpts, lg lot. 2024 3 BR, 2 BA mobile home in 492-fl299, 64&-61:>5, 551Al50. Mortgages, s ove, ' "''" • -... · · 2 v ·iv 260 baby ok, 174 ?o.tonte Vista .. -"iJty Com Lovely 4 BR. 2 BA. lrg kitch jlllY.lor :'."~ttche•?,"0 v;.thP"!!"1all;~buillUU.t!···.'·, Balearic Dr. 557-5343 or ocean-front park, Laguna 8 lmmac twnhse-style adult Trust Deeds ' IA°LIOA IS~D & din, nlce ld&cpg. Close to ~ • ..._. ''"' ~v,::-...... ....-....., .._., leave message at 545-4577. Beach. $2'1,000. 494-S239. units, E-s lde CM. 2 BR. 11Ai 1-c.c.;;.;.;..;;_;c.;;;:;..._-"."-' LOVELY Vu b O mt', .. ___ .... _..i. everythin&. 3BR. 2BA. 3 yrs )'Ollllg, super 0wner ·transferred, 1972, 20x ba, patio. On cul~e-sac st. $17,500 2nd TD, on oom-4BR,2BA, e.l~l kitch, ~i'64 ..........,. ~-· ....,. I' ' ·~·-INC appl's. $l500. total to move roomy at below markeL 54. 'i...S::tar Adult Park. Com-$128.000. 543-9695. mereial property dwntwn drpli., $390. -8604, ~ M ;11:nab·lrvm~ ~........ r-. pla~ DR ~ • you in and only $230/per 'T San J C . t NBELIEVABLE' H .... ,~ ~ ..... , ·• all CALL $37,500. BKR 646-8811. plete.. 496-4886. BY Owner Tri-plex, 2 bdnrul uan a P 1 s ran o , e U .· ouse, latae patio, 3 BR's., l'il mo pays · , ~ th 1 Id 12U payable $175 per mQ_nth. stove, refrig. $35 per w~ll;. be.thl + atud1o w·tiftpt.ce 11843 AD~ "HB. for Family Fun now , n\Ove you in tonight. Newport Be•ch ea . ......,,.., an yr 0 · Jncld 9% all due in 3 years. ALA Rentals e 645-390G Ir u. bl.th.=• ptwn._1M-• ...,.. 2456 557 3403 1 BKR. 962-5511. -1 R "E England St ., Huntington Owner .,,_,.,.-.ntees con· ~ -~ -- 5 Bedroom•, ....... liv ng AUFWIEDER •• ...... e.ach. Call 5.11H>153. ·--· N f: W·lf . J>ll ed. $84,CXO. rm., blg family nn WARM home, tine neigbbonl, General s Ir u ct ion this year PDna. Chldteater ~ Eastsicle w/firel>J, ceramic bench, H.B. nr sch. bch. 4 +,,;., SEHEN ~~r Sale · 170 ;;~p>·rogisoo1:1~ dg:'~: e h.1DS & Pets welcome! 2 Br. hse., stv/'ref., CJD, e.ncL yrd. $175. ll01) ... • ... •-'> •--'--m showers. Sep. util. rm, $34.500. Owner, no . 714-493-1154 642!11» .....uw ~ 9WUJ"VV wateraoftener. Walk to 846-2322. This fine family will be Apertments 12) TWO vacant lot! 315 &l,'.'~~""=·=--.,.-,-7 ~ Family room, 2 bath, tow beach·, schls. $44,650. CALL ' s:a:Jing !othls ,..~n when dthey F.or S.le 152 319 Cana.I St, Lido Shores, $40.IMXI Isl TD, paid dwn to NICE 3 BR home, dbl car ALA Rentals • 64s.39GO : I main · yard Owne 968-4456. lrvlne depart r ......,rmany an .,.e Newport Beach, $25,(0). $20.DOO-covering vacant ~ need Pe , arOOous ~ready io m-0ve~ 1:;;:;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I say it's a "good buy" now. e OWNER (2) 4-PLEX.ES each lot. John E. Burkett, acre rommercial property garage, fc )'ard. 11 =--CK 1 .AY Just 12 yean old. Painted I• LIFE Abedroomang'"~~ntt lhco u ,r Tustin &n!a. 3 yrs old, blths, 7006 Corregidor Rd, Van-San Juan Capistrano, valued1 ok. $Zl5Pmol · 979-a.1! 9 . • lnside and out just a year m, •wv 5 ory-m encl gar's. 547-4827. couver, Wallh. 98664, phone at $45,000. 9% int nn Y Dant o nt • $31 F fUrtber ON A GREE .. BELT with lovely upg raded 1206)695-2957 quarterly, all due in 5 yrs.~;.:;;...:..:=-----! CUS10M ago. ,OOO. er ,. beautilul 3 features By appoinhTlent · 0% d" t B k OCEAN & harbor view, new M;•r.na b-lrvinei.. • . df:taill call 6*-'tVl-·~. 1U?,~:,8rd" model only. · Business Property 154 LDT in Boulder Cit)', Nev. h4-493-~: ro er· 4 llR, 3 BA, rm mt, $425./ with· beautiful POOL on OJ91X.t•U'SM'10~-2r . • · · Call675-7225 Lake Mead view im-~~='7c==--oo-----,-: mo, Executive home. q u l e t , t re e _ • h ad e d townhouse in University CLEAN income prop, l'ent provements in my equity & 20% DISC. lst T .0 . Seasoned cul-de-ac street. Excellent Patjt. From the ~led enn; ~ • C.M. By owner. $45.IXXI. E-Z assume loan. Easy Tenns. v.•ell secured. Pays $160. n10. GTh-7414· prest!ie home with a "1!!!""~~""""""'"~!'!\ to the latge µpstairs m~ Ii~ h trms. 64:r:ll3l or 642--e-i60. (TI4l 839--8514 10""1 due 1977. Box 3, Apple Fountain V•lley Newtiiirt Be a c b -.1 ~ suite with( fireplace ii'• Valley 242-3144 ~ 14 ....... FOR sale ~ owne~ -S&S really .~· Offered at *\ : Commerclel WATERFRONT, 30' boat allpl~~~·~~~~~~ "8,950. App't criy. ME&\ DEL MAR 5 Br, 3 Ba ~k 2~un~~d~ $56,500 r·ecll .. and. hdl . •kf:: Prope~-158 ~~~rri:.17 O>Wna lal·\r 1~ Dsl~w'r:.' 2~tir:: ~mo. lmmed. occUJiy. All new ~kitchen ea.~~ , .. r e su&Mou.1TOftt1tCQ\wa&.to. START YOUR R-3 CP, nr 17th St. CM\ ..._.,_.~ H Cal:968-3133S.:!pm.. ~ '' 11 • '~. · .. -.. ·~~""''!ffi~-.. !!!!:; .• !f_ ;e.,·,.:;~ ... ',,."-.....k"'i: b;.1c Ovenlred -HARBOR. VIEW" GoodB~_SINESS HE9R4,EN 8n1""" .~"':!~1•· .. '!'J...• :.:;;•;;;nl;;;nc::gto.;.;,;n;...;;,;;;.;;;;.._.I ~.:\Ir.,.,, ua-'"' -~· ~...,. ... "~"'° lot;• water .Ottener &: • ~ ... vestment at I 1 . ew-u tt . ..,,. .. ~ ....... .....,...__, Hou.e. Furnished 300 $2" 900 • I Ooon ' ~PM """"""' -eicttaa. purlfior. MU\Y uwoded REALTY ,PDRTOFINO r.i7 Bl•d., C.M. For inlo· I IR~N~I !E!!ll!!•!!l•!.!W~•n!!!ted!!l_,!!114!!,l;;;=:::'.:;.:.===....::c:; ,., WAllf T0'8UILD $45.900. ey......,, 54&-:ioi;. r,.tu!eL Fut ..,......,. A Com w ·th VI"°" 3 BdrinS., 211 ball>" lam. -I" Gonoral * VAeANT * ...... , .1 , .. al ..t... lor' ,..... custom BY DWN~R ' ......... $47""' °"'" pany I . . rm. & din. nn ...... "'""' FOR ALL * "'uick Cash *1~=.:;:... _____ 3 BR Dolt-. h'oth1y home~ l'ttstiDJul Balboa 3 BR, .. 1% BA, Fam Rm,. da4Jy. XKl.l1 i3li Bend t.n. Univ, P~.Ce~ter, Irv~ for bonus rm. Profe~. , .,.-$170-Util Pd. Nice Redec. l decorated. Large rear yud Penin.ot.. ·9'19--0&31 or w/w CJ'11ts, drps; swim 968--S061 Call Anytime, 552-1500 decor: & landsc11.ping. Ext. . • • • • AIUS Will buy your property. Alt Br w/i:-arage Laguna and private patio. 2 Vanity 644-4510 eves & weekends. pool, sprinklen, fnoed, . -• $".. -IONS Offi<:e bouts 8 AM to 6 PM ' ~ck 01' ~u::;,rs ~~ cash wit~ hrs. Call s1so'-Lrg 1 Br: CdM. i blk baths, L'Oey "farm-Ct)'le" $34,500. ,324 West JoAnn St., IEPO '7CS5 Raw.Sten ' · , beach. Garag:P.. kitchen with ttll builtin n.~244-3278. For irtformation and location 2500 SQUARE FEET cot.oWEu., BANKER i S250-2 Iir. Oceanfront. New· appl's. $1500. total to move · &.lbol Peninsula 1 LQ1' from bay, 2 Br., view, 153,t>lO. Duplex $19,5111 ¥ARSIWL Roalcy Gfo,4000 <:...n.c1o1 Mor l'M EVELYN IUY 'MY L1stinl on a lowly hnn)e in CaJnio • Shores that often tho llltnt .. ccutaJ ll ...... PrivaW beaches, an ~ocean rlew and great p(ivacy to use and en-lt>Y ·a i!\i<l,y peel Md garden areL Call-" OCEAN VIEW -New custom ot these FHA Ir VA homes, .. ol pure dram& &: pleuure Re a It ors 644-2430 833--0700 Clean, Level, Period jllly;I,.-port. Deck. Winter. you In and only $230/pcr home 4 Br. 2% Ba, tam 1: oonract. . can be yoW"B in University 550 Newport'Center Dr. 3 acres • C-1, ~ta Mey. ~ • NU·YIEW RENTALS mo. payi all. CALL now, den rm. cpts,_~d r a e 1 ._.~ 11 & •ABIAN Park, tor only $49,500. 4 1 On Baker oU Bnstol. Sl.50 673-4000 or 494.32411 move In tonight. BKR.. 1~ «') --v ~ 2 " f , per sq. ft. Commercial 11__.nK! INC. L a-· h ~U. .. _ -·UIN· . -962 ~~.... BR., ~ ba.. am. rm. Dept., 645-4040 Rtlr. ~ 19una -c BACK BAY'$29,"'1l RNI Estate ~ Prim<' .... nbelt toe. Tool NEWPORT SHORES FOR LEASE ' T,...1tory, 3 By -3 BR -1-1c Escobar WANTED. Unique character 2 BR, 1 BA, wa1k to beach, Br, 2~ ba, Formal dining, w-"·-.• ...... ., · BY Ownor, Franclacan cow-, a··~ Condomlnt'ums ttdl •·-· M'-1--•1 'with I -... ~-.:.. 1oov·• ... ~ "~ l'U'I~ Walk to beach I we 3 BR bu ng to putC1......,.;. ... Feb. 1 to June 15. -Jn-0, large ...... y room ~ .,_... w ..... .._ Fountains, 2 .,... old, ~ 4 "·alton "AA ... ~n ...,,...NJNI · -· · •-I 160 I ~--n-. ty -~·1 ~ "'-' ;·:;::::-";<'-~·,,··~ ~;=.:: -~== 3 "~ nc ~-a;>.TV•"" "Sty ~' oa••-Bit'"' "'r hi • 10,000 &q. t. ...,,..,06 .. '-""'n Wk---' 494-0589 or wkday lireptace. \..nu ce ""'"'auun a ~-'---~ Br, 2 BA, lamlly m •= N-~ n-nt•• ~. ~ · •?S ........ • • '---------Call Olk ~~ ' •· -~~ .... .,... •• u: .._.. ..... , MUST SELL! w 500 1 • area. Mr. • e 21.3: 360-62S3.. neighborhood near ICboo.., BY o.m.., '41•JIR,_,.-. w/cathednlclng&l'ani""'t..,...,.,.,;,,,..,,.,. ... .,.,I CAYWOOD REALTY LADIES TIHJ9..5521 beach Md lhopplog. Mesa Vf:l'dL Din. rm.. llv. Doon, shag crpt, prof. I"! don't wear him out doing \Vant to B .. ~ ~m Own .. • . Newport Beach AvaUable 1 Feb "11 rm. w/frplc. Newly painted landscaped. $41 ,500.. 10% Irvine Terr•ce --~*"--S_i41_1_1290 __ *~--I ·--' work • move into a ..,, "•v "" incl d1.... tc & in & out $34,cm. 833-1354. down. Open bou9e Sat & need OCEAN VIEW ~~ condominium and Home In N.E. Costa &tfep. VAC . 2 Br. $175, l'l~an. AJ90 $325/mo. u .... "6 wa r CO .. ~"E PARK. c:i........ sun. 842-a004. 3 BR., 2 BA, lrg: fe k hi t Total To $28,.0Cll. Principals only. Walk to Wtr 2 Br Hse CdM gardener& •• lat I .t ~-mo. i.w.c..u-...,_." yard, ~boat storage yrd, Modern Duplex 4 Bdrm.. up, e<ep mas a pe • ex-540-0456 or 546-4220 exl. 244. kids. -, ' rent epm: t. vwucf -~· 2~~ trp~: e PRESTIGE vwulk, mM~tboa-~and. -.-~~ 2..Bdrm., On. Very large, ~i~ttic ~-=~ah-_!~ R<1on~t.A~~~oulliso~_!979~.84~30~l i'iiAgjj'ii:"~'·~96Hl.18~i!Jt:°'"'i;;963-;"%B;26.13ft';>I 1 6f6..-0963 ..., M:U ~""'5 prime location. $65.000. resal 1 ~------~ DUPLEX. 3BR, or 2BR 6: $34,500: ow dwn. 4 BED1'00M, den, 3 baths, s,sg,500. ~7689. HORVA'm: REALTY Chol~A ....... es1 are4 ~_on I~ HOUMI Unfurn. 305 Den 3 BA, new, fenced yrd, TRANSFERREI>-4 BR, 2 ba, 3 car garage . carpets, AsJc for Dave the-,._......,.__ te> ~..-·•· A\lnelll • $250 mo. 536-2914, 54&-3446 fam nn, ~patio It Jots of dra~~.i..-. bullrtns. Large Jot. Lqun1 8Hch 675-1972 494-0015 Quldi popess;on._ VA/FHA, G.neral or 49HJ64 fruit ~L ~~ By BROi=<, 84Z-!418. UVE FOR LESS NEWPORT Heights 3 BR1 JC ""'iI."..'l~ .!!':;~ inc. i12>4 Be. 2 Ba FIR. CrpJa, owner. enns. · gar, pool, 2 BA, zreennse, {TI4l 9684405 Business drps, drpa. Patio. 5 mos old. Pool 4 br 2 ba. Ealcle, fplc, COME AND SEE ... ~ney ·per morith. ~ dshwsbr, fpl.,lot! of xtras. 3 Opportunity 200. Bushard/Ad8JM. 96t-72>2 Term&. $39,500, open dally. .. -2 um! income proper(y 18 Blks 16 &lJ schls. Le-lot. Pvt Duplexes/Units --FRESlILY Painted-~ h8e 337 ~lia, ownr 642-8310 this very sharp decorated 4 located ln de!irable .area of sale, principals on I y. s1le 162 NEWPORT BEACH wl w/w crpt, $175fmo. lat ~ Sho Bdrm., huge lot, next door Laguna Beach. Large lot 548-4.146 Co Fi &: Jaat mo'1 rent. 3(2....3418. , su~a1t•011 1o•c WLWlll co. """'er res to $40,COO. bomes, for provides loads of room for ""'='~,...,---,.,-.,.,.-,-Mesa· Verde Marine ntract1ng rm O~N DAILY 1. S $28,000. CALL 842-1-0.8, expansion. Great potential 4 BR Montego Model In Finest equipment &: r ... i... 4 Bclr1n., 2 Ba. Crpt, drps, ' • oovn SHORES cP;,;•;,;TT'!'ool!!W!!AlJCE .... R ... R~ ... E ..... 1 for owner(live--in. Nicely Harbor Vw Homes, $57,500. 4-Plex waterfront location. 35 Yr. -W.1tutCOITAMISA bit-Ins. $245/mo. 1st ·• lut · WAYNE RD. BEST BUY "'! landscaped. Must see 16 ap-Owner, Prine. 0 n 1 Y • old oompal1)'. Space. avail. These Are Just A~~· Ot • ma's + dcp. 84&-'9497. Custocii. 41m._ iaa. Fo,rmal OWNER must sell. 4 preciate ·fully. call Dick "83:1-:;=..o;3194=·--~--,-9rolrLboaL Gt talRU"N&DreYpoR"'L.TRs Our MANY RE*NTALS ..• Bike to Bead\ • Vac 3 Br, ~rm., family rm., brk· ~!~'l!~'n1y is cot:!°r:.1:., ~ bedroomJ, 3 batJi .f pool. John!On. $57,500. ~N near the oceaft gar, $1-35. KidJ/pets. 'In irf:a. Many .. ...-lea . ..,..,, J;.tio. Dining rm, &ullt-"IM. ...,16. La.non.. Realtor 675-4161 $95-JDEAL for student. Furn. R.ni'·A--HcMIM ~. ,-,.. ~· . ~. 3 II ba. Jam. rm. • ••-• -·•--r · la "' 'O/i'U.~ * """'6.1 • ures. din. rm. home. Exciting waiWCl.111""-· 1l:t oe, Ill' r _ Beauty Salon . Bachelor w/kltchen. Avl. Irvine view of back ~· $118,500. Uvtng rm, ·$.38,!IOJ, San C,llNneftt• Typewritf:l' Sales &: Serv Feb. 1 . * n40-PRIVATE Br. BunpJow Fee. Edie oi.oo 1142-2'61. REAL ESJATE 4 BR, • BA, lo down, Can Furnitun SIDre, """'°"' COWWELL. BANKER OWNER tn.nsftn!d. 4 • Gla.91 A: Screen business Realton 644-2.&30 833-0700 Bedrms + pool. 2 baths, ll90 Gtenneyre St take over SM.a"%, $250 HOLLAND 8us.S1le1 5rSO Newport Center Or. pat"1. Oln.ln& rm. builUn&. 494-9t73 549-0318 . mo. 1st owe. 2nd. Submit !!!! .... ~~;;,;,,;..., ....... ~I dlshwul!er. ftreptaco ltt PRICED' RIGHT! DP. Sbottclitt. Ownr. Drlw East Bluff family rm. Brk $35,901, Big ocean view! 3 Bdrm. by 2931 Via San Jaclnlo, 962-1373. 2 bath home Mill be-a~ Leave me~ 642-1113, ext. ·1 'WE CAN'T LOVELY 3BR, 28A, bar ad-view of ocean & hills, J.«e. '- BelltYe-aeUen ftduced 1be joittlne Uv RM, covered llvlng & family rm. w/frll_c. A good want ad b a ROOd in-1.lto••••-iii•• whole thln;c! $51,950 , For pat)() w/frplc, dark room, Attached 3 car prage. N~ Wll:menL LUSK the1' lmmac. 3 bdi'm. tam-romp. decorated, see to ap-patio areas. Easy.care land- : t ._.;: l -ut-Hill Uy nn. bOme. l.mmed.' occu-precl.atc~. No agents., acaping. A jewel al $49,950. ..u_ _').9J,., .-....., I paney $,\4,500. ~ or 847-MlO * 4S&-28» * "."""'1'111 BR, 3 ba. "°""'· Uninrsity RHlty BY owner • 4BR 3 "BA ... ·~ ~.11!:!. ~= :mt E. Cst. Hwy. li'1U5lD trl-lf:vel. i Fpl'1, 'lrg tam ~ ~ -....._..._'e •• r:Jt ' ~ rm w/wet. bar, fDnn. d1n ~.. . Fount1ln Villl!f; nn. M~ •tral cul-de-sac. «NN._U:::t;.11.6 0 • • N M · •--.._ ~, n~~.:·-1.arrol'IQ9 ltnert of th• tt Darierl r aru>a. a .:;. ~n-...... --.°"""' . four xrombt.d words be--cd~. BANKER• 4 BEDROOMS ture. "16.SOO. Ph: 84&--«l>I. , low to'·""' 1 .. 1 •mp~ wood>. W• Speda!be 111 • 11- alton ·114+-2430 833--0100 25,1115, FOR Sale .By Ownor, • br Baout!!!!! PocHic Vlow I DI p IT E I a.ach e O>ronade!....,• 'llifl 11<...,... Co-Dr. townho•"'· $23,49!1. S500 RM.ptdry •Pl>redaUOI 11-1 • ea.,.... Our Rmtat s.~ . . RUu .. 15 ROOM """"' FHA • ....,,.1. swim. tand • s ptus acm oeac I I I I I I v1ce '' FREE to You! ...,. MINE ,BUY _ rr,t..500! Near .,.,-v p001, tennis crt, buketball center of town, planted to Nu-View' i how, JjJe, luxudoill 3 BR, s Prl«d at s:ll.T>l. Tbto has 4 pari<. 96HOIO all~ •-Call fOr_tnto. R. NU-VIEW' RENTALS l>!! ... fim A din nns, rid! iOl to be a n:!al bu)!! Excell O'f.\'1'/Eft. anxlaua. 3 baths, f E. DeY. $295,axl. cafol I I 1 873-4030 or ~ n;: 'Jr't:r; beam ceU. nbl'bood QI' F.V. Hl,.;::, bitiins~I, pat"1. Diriln& Taci:f'1t..Dwtt.L. BANKER R A D I C i CO'ITAGE S35 mo. Abo 1 Br ' wner. ~ ~2SU: ~t= "':/~ conv. ~~~~--=Re-a-It-on '*-* &1.W700 12 j .I I t, ~ Sllvt'flldo. 2 Br-Mob. SLJl 3 Lrg. gar. Foot. for kids/ S@\\~~...:"r.trs· The l'urrfe with the Built-In Chuclcle , YES. We bave Refttals ~fA.Y we be of aervk'e in ...... ,...,,. -_.., 2 BR 114 0. ........... f"5 2 Bit. ti( ba. Alr ~ 1285 sa~2-. •...•.••.••• S315 REALn' A Company With Vbion Univ. Par1t Center, ln'lne Call AOYl!mo;-~'1!11111 OUlct houri I AM to C PM ~ s1cp1 ., 111r 0wom ... -· ., $46.JOO. _ li'1I Newport c.n1er °'· . . . .. . . 1. r BR., """" -"'°' "°"' JCorofti,. ConPdv tradt. Cali they aft anxioul '° tldl. OWNER ln.vtng. • bedrma, 2 * OCEAN VIEW * I f Ranch on acre.age mo. All millltr. If oatN. potto, dltttns nn. 2 BR. .r. dell or 3 SR. uiy.2 T, A ~ E A 1 ·· Thi•f1 confenK>no "I was,ln ~::;i.A-H..... f79.M30 L'!!'"'" - bullt..'1ns, d Is h w a• h et . Frplo: Hv "l'm. a: d1n. atta I I ll I a restaurant the other day that . ~~LI OR LEASI "'I·'-( ;::J UHlll ....,.,..,., t•mllY rm. Brfl, .,1..,.u view. Bltn ,.,...,, wo• "'aowded 1 was putting IMMAC 2BR dupho<. N"'ty sm.1 BR. "• r i"· -M.oAM DR., QlM. 4 BR.. N .-W $36,51Xl, 962-186!S. dbl oven, Mwwhr. t\alt. -· -rtdec,:orated. D 1 h I w • h , Ch1ld/pet ok. Walle to bch. t llL tamlly boine. 2 ~ OWNER sacrtfice. 4 bedrms. drapes, cup. lhrqout 2 I sllverware inlo.someone ,t11's patio, Le.undo $0-6823. $115' $225-UtU Pd. 2 Br. So. t s~~C!tliittp. B;::;.. o~,:~ 3 bat.... °""r..i patio, eolcow view decks. A ,..,. 1--nB,...D,"'K-,..,t..:E;,.;.;.N~--11 ~0 ~ .... tho ,,...;::-• a.pt"'1•~pooll1l'anc1 = ~~t Yard. Otdt. ' ~r '·to '·v --•• .FIR ··~ • bullt-ins. d Is h w a I her. find at $43.9$0. ,. I· 1· r I by till;,,Q In tha lnlillng word. -S3Z-4 + Fl.m Rm. I---· ~ ·, .... ~-ptt..,. tep • ex· tirtplace In family nn. MISSION REALTY. 49f.013l _ ~ • _ • _ ~ I· 1o.. 3 ---•~Hon ~ 833"-0'lOO ~~I ~!00-~r '!t~ ~. brk $36.500, cozy cottale near the 1ea. you ct-lop r01111t99 No. .b91o.t. 3F!R.,..!a:*·~~· ~~a;,l·v~· 811.na. Gar. ; . 55):.9500 ' ,, s:l,IJXI, Down. Sharp 3 8clow C!Olt -$37.500. Owner TH $e SQUARES m.-sm... 6']3-403tf or tM-3241 1 Chiii'* _ CdM OWNER '• 3• Nth bt!droom, new ctrape11 a -Loa Padrer Jteally. 627 s. ~ ED~~ Cent· r Dr. help fine. vacant. 833-UOl. 846-138.\. Small, clean and charming. $ PRINT NUMRR!O tEnERS IN ' t.eue "45 Incl utll Feb. iat:j NU-VIEW RENTALS Ajtt. -ist.!llO· , -n~. ~ _....... iia.rr.o. mm: c...1 u.,. 494-ss.11. . ""sctAMBl£ ~19vf'ttmu corona dol Mior -· Lt111una Hiiis nn, buDt-tns, dllhwull<t'. SU.1418 UNIQUE homo, Spanlm. 2 10 err ANSW!l RC~ -~ s tamU'· m wilb flrep]~. BY OWNER l Bt, 2 BA, new Br. )'a.rd trees, qu ltt atti' + WOW, new ~ t BR •• 3 LA "" exce.....,nally •I~; ' ..._1pCdlf. ~·!-~ br1t U8.,l u. ,,.!n~ cpi., d•-· 52Z1 '"JOo.tncomeun1tsmreor. SCR"u.•-ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800 11o .. nr.B1g°'"'""a..e"' BR,•11,\-.1-t.a . ~. j,J! ,::~:ll ~ C.llont!· $JS,9l0. 96H140. IG.'i!:!!,5111!!!·:.!.n.!!:!1!0&4.!-__ __ _t .-=.::::::""~'"::..:""=..:: 1.:_ •:.:::.:.::.:.,:,::.:.:_;:;__.=.=.;.=,::..:,:.;_:..:..;_:.;_:....:,.:.;,._i.J~=M:!!o.'.:.Af!"°"·.::;61W;l=:::O.:,__ .. tto. $291/nto. l90403&. ' ' ' / • • ,,. "" ,¥ , . ' ' • DAILY PILOT n.,,.,.,, ,_,,, 11. 1913 ·. I~ I ._.. ....... I~ I '!'' ......... l[l]I ............ _ _ ..,_ ' ·' • ll!l-·~I: ;;·-~1~;;.,-1;;1 -~-.... -~[j)ii•I • Housos Unfum, 305 Apll. Furn. UO Apt. Unfum. MS Af!. Unf•2!· 1' Unfurn. MS .,,.._, l\pls., · R•nl1l1 to ShlN 430 P1rson1to ~ · i;.;.;.;;.cc.;...;;...;c.;.;... __ Co-•• del ••·r ~--··el 1·7 Huntl.,......., IN<h l'•m. .. Uftfum. .m I'•"!· or Unfvm. '71 .......,. L11•11" "!lf..S •• --Gonon ;;;;;;;=;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;.l·~==~;,:7.;;;;:..;:~~:::...::::::::.::...::.: ROOMMATl!l nredecl.' COUPLES PARTI!$ l iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"~ii' iiiiiiiiiii•iiiii Huntlnllton a..ch Huntlneton •---h f~ma.lt, on bttch, yr round, C1.U Phil 3 Jo 9 PM EXCEPTIONAL ocean v'ew, \VEIJ,.F\lrn. bacll. w/pvt OVER 62 ttt =,;:;;=.; 1 J'7 ~ $lA mo. 14$-3538 btwn W 53t"3M4 New 3 bdnn. Exchulve gate t'ntran<."e .l fllUo. Mal\lte VIL' • u•RSll LIS RETIRIO ??t ew •uanled ,..,Ion or Sea T"' .,.,p1o,,.., 1dult. 673-l:lOI .., -SOCl·L·· SECURITY ?t ' ••s Soclol Cl•lll W Se I ho M th SPACIOUS I a t BIDROOM APT. ~ HllNTlllGTOIJ' llEACll'S FINEST o ...... for Roni ... nu.'f, para~ me. on Coste ~H _a.. PENSION ?!• · """'uD yo·~-·~ or lt-ue $500. 493-57m. 1---------'urnlthMI & Umvmllhecl i t ""'' "'~ THE sn oREs c ~-o Adult Ltvlne VILLA YORBA J<EW ,_,. ~· 3 1N SOMmNE ELSE 1 3 BDRM., 2 B,\Tll asa "'" ro Dishwasher color coordinated appliances . -"21 Spaiisll c.ntJy bQte llvhw ·=· ~ ·~ ·~· · DISCOVIR $400. MO. 4,._,,n .\Ll. lfl'ILITIES PAID Plush sha& c•-1 • mlrrure<I wardrobe doors-l •• • n-Mta15 6#-lllll . · ' -DISCOVERY-. Compar~ be-tore you no:nt _.,.... QoJl.. N 2 A ., ... , ' 114-~ 213-Slf.a.19S I Newport Bloch Custom ""iillled, featuring' Indirect UghtiJ!C In kitcbell • breakfast bar • 2 Bil • lit cres. Bta~~.i J)al'k·Ul<e 1urrount11n1s. OAllAGE for ftnt $25 .... l!!!~~!!!!~~I e """'""" kttehen with 1n. huge private fOncetl patio • plush landscap-3 Bit. • 6' Sunken Pool. Sparkllas ~h Fountains. month. Hunttnrton f1elch.I: EASTBLUFF din-ct Jl&hting Int brick llar-1LJ\uea larg heated poo"5 ALL UTUJTIES PAJD e "-••••ua Rooma e ~.•a•· Dt•••• Near Ooean. <213>-r lal Separate l'M:xi5C, unusual • Se-parate din'g atta .. ~ •' e .,..._.... r-141 ......,.. , Office R-111 ™ Ult•. !'-, Jarae. badrooJn 01' 3. den. I & anal. Air condttlonln&. * MOVE IN TODAY • • Walle In CIOMll •• ...... - t'ami1Y room plus large : ~~!;!,k:,::-ae 3101 S.. Brl1tol St., Sanle Ma SS7.f200 $139 A MO. • H~llke Kitcbena & Ceblneta OFFIC& _ 20'x40', panelitd, formal dining •C O m ' 0 c'°"" ....... w/storage COLDWELL, BANKEllt • co. Spac. 2 • 3 Br. In 4-plex. 1 BDRM. Untum. •1116, Furn. •tes. window frontage, W/W new found (freo Idol Complete pdvacy wl1h e Mru'ble pullman MANAGING AGENT Sewrll avail ALL EX· 2 BDRM. Untum. •1es: Furn. '21!. •111'11'~ alNond., both. encl~ rear and front e Klns-sz Bdnns TRAS. Pool. rec bkJa. Kida TOWNHOUSE 2 BR, l~Ba., 1400 11n. ft. plenl;)' ot parldna $175. e« 2 Dop: ehoc brown mak'; yard.a. Lovely garden. No • Pool . Ba.r~ues . sur-welcome. fionl $139. see Unf\lrniahed '200. .., mo. S'ttiwood Shopplna: blooollb brown female. New pets. $415 per month. rounded ""ith plush land-Apt. Unfum. US Apt, Unfum. • S65 Mar. 11311 Keebon "B" l Center, a:n So. BrookfWrirt, '¥wi< do& tlijp '71.'/2, Call 67l-&568 or 546-3688 seapins. blk w. ot Beacb Blvd. ott ALL UTILITllS PREI Suite a <Brookhurat 1: Ball> Owner: Koblwela; Eddie or $225-:.1 Br. Channelfront, gar, Adult living at Its best 2 & J BR Aptt. 0pca.1.c;°';:'';;M;;'°;;N;;;;;;;;;;; &aM .. a-.?510 OI' Uf-t29>. Walk to Huntinnt"" r........... Call Mr. McNamff, 962-+tn Frank. Vic. Brl1tol I: boat slip 'avall. ChUd ok. LARGE l BR S190 drapes, blt-lns. From $140 1, BONUS $40 off Jan •• rent •-"'9Uwa· or 546-8101.\• Newport Freeway. Plfue sm-2 Br, 2 Ba. Lido Isk-. .. No P.('ts 646-l7S6 or sq-<>700 tfJJ" l.nto. * * * wtth th.ls ad. 2 bdrm, ta.m. Adults, No peta CORONA DEL MAR call U YQU. have info. Frp.lc. Ne\\' crpts, drps. ;'"'i'.'<'"'"'T.'"'"=ilSoJ:i.n'T:-.-:"64'-'2;,·l;o97l'i' ·I =Bo::l;:boa::;:.;l::•l::•:.:nd:...,___ unita, Crpt1, drpt. bl.tns, LA QUINT Utllllnt-I Approx. l2X) aq. ft. otttce .~9,:1\l.Q64~=-· ,-,,,-,.--;;;--:: 1 G.,., •-.. ~ Unbeliovabl• Booutlful 2 BR. upper. Ideal~-·~. SPARKLING NEW patlor..~\~~ta. A llUBhlll space tailored to ,...., 'de· WE found Myslia. Bllt • $300-Ne,\· 2 Br. 1 °"' ~11 .. t·. 1 ..,.....,... ... ,llldfin We.u,n,..,. I Full ·-·~t bl'• &o'fhGe""""Sbo~~ Cd't \'AL O'lSER,E Garden ,\pis. 3 ~old. ~,.to r... IJ·-'--.,.__ a In· IM:<O"'' Y ,... , Over J C.'U' gar. i. \d It t F! J·~ ~'" .......-~~•Apt.I. 1'211 Parkalde LIM, H.B. withamplepa.rkins. 60 bl. Knows ~ NU-VIEW RENTALS ~:~·h;·r~ ~t ~.,a ~·e& ~1325.._,l~m_o_,...~1Y-· ~5'8-~7398.=--BAY SHADOWS 4SU Heil Ave., Hunt. Bch. Alk Jot Cbriltine Fnd: Vtc ot 19lb Ii ~ ~--•< 4'>1-.12'8 Wa,.rlaU,•S'poo!Rec.Rm~·Bolboa Ponln1Yl1 ---,.== ~~f-~=~n!!tL!!:!!f6,!!!!:-:!'ll05~·~-}lL· 84}-5441 BOYDREALTORS &Th-59.10 83<-5370or~ l BR.., N'pt Hghts. Pets, f'auna, Sgls. 1·2 Sdrn1., 3 BR. 2 BA Del -pa 2 BR. Luxurioua Aptl. Fum ,. WE'RE moving. We need 2 doO, Wb1te JemaJel;it'nttr children O.K. $275 Month, fo'w"n·Unfurn. fr 0 m $138 l Ul" incl. lrpl ux~ n! ~ Spacious, Light &: Cheery! . ;efu:,nrr,,i~. ':un!:. ~: (4 blks. So. ol san Dle~ F.rw, t· on Beach, more 1pace. Mu.at aub mix-beige 1pot1 -(youna:} avail. }~eb. J.st.: Lge. 2 BR. SEE IT: m>·Parsons :aiconl ·~·tobotbliay ADULT LIVING tuu l ,,~ W lea&e . payin& $12!1 wW blk male •LIJ:I m1x .. Vlc: 2 lia. apt. "'· CdM mgn, 6-12-'670. · Ooe ~ I BR'o FROM $157 J1cuui. ...,..a,tlon. -)°" Hott to I Par side Lane). ne,..tlate "'"'· ~ ·,. ti a.ookhllnt • llwlbard, J!.B. $265 month Hal Pinchtn, El Puerto Mesa • m-m 0, 1!7Hl48. 2 BR's FROM $177 '~["'if~ APrS.l'A!"_'!'","', -•l!•---·.~-"···.-"'"'"""Bllmml Newport Beach Joe . "62-'466alt S. Rltr. 675-4392. 16700 ,... ...,..,.. 645--3.166. • SML &Olden wavy ,...,~ i.m 4 BR F/R. o1R, 2 ba. 1 IR's-$130 & UP ~ ~y & Beac,b 2 Beautiful appointments in· ~=..~· HB. l'urn. or .Unfvm. J71 furn. or Unfum. 370 SPACE'NOW AVAILABLE 00¥: w1cnotte c1iain 'ii. Ou S~. 3 Br, D R, 2 ba. Unfurn. & Furn. Cail ~ elude Decorator Fireplaces. . WestclUt·-BuUdln&: tq:, Vtc: Redlandl I?f . .' A $390. Both tn Huber Vw All Utllltios Paid C "·I u. · Shp agtlo CPoollll'1l'lin&· Prt,.te -* FRESH AIR N-rl IN<h N-rl ...... . Oorne• Westclttt Drive & Mela. 1 -) <ill>'ll homes w/pool privl. Owner, Pool & Recreation oron• -,_.r a s. -JacuW ' • \Valk 3 bloclcl to Beach Irvine Blvd, Newport Beach M&-414 leves. 833-J894. I 1959 Maple Ave., CM Vollfyball courts • Gu L1'I' 3 BR. Apts. Newl)' decor-G Mr. Howard &e-6101 BLACK A Brown aboriba1t o c EA N FRONT·NEW 4 Also....,.... ""rent BBQ's. lled, w/w crpts, ttrpo, bl!nl, BEACH UYIN DESK ,..,,. available 1iJO dog w/lona tall. I blue .,,. bdrm. BelmS. wood, rock, *30 WEEK a UP ... exoept refri&. $240/mo. No (Now You Can Afford) mo. WW pnovlde Iumltutt & l wno~ eye. -.. gla&s. Spectacular & HUGE. • Studio l 1 BR Apt& ~ singles, no pets. 536-1711. BACHELO at» mo. Answering .avlce have ju.at had IJUJll. 5't"6t02 $500/mo. Yrly. Dave 8 TV & Maid Service Avail. _..._ 2 BDRM deluxe apt. pooWde . R (Furn) ............. From Sl95 avallable. m Fonat A~ .. or 83Hil0. 1 1.)• 67>191'2, 4M-0615 e Phone Service-Hid. Pool garden bunplow · wtfrplc. l Bettroom · • · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · From f180 Lquu Beach, Gt-Me. LARGE part Siamae tom·' $375. 3 BR's on Kings Rd. e Children &:: Pt>t Sectiab ON TEN ACRES Adults, $210. 846-<JZ9. 2 Bedroom ..................... From '230 HUNTING'roN BEAOI ~ cat,' blue e)'ff. 0ea collar. Bltns. crpts, dJlis. Call 2376 Newport Blvd., CM Apts. furn./unfurn. Lease Irvine FULL SECURITY SYSTEM & 900 IQ. ft., cpt'd, pvt. Gentle dr.lon M8-e6'1 Mr. Gerard 213: 63)..3549 548-9755 or 64,5..:t967 Firepl"e , priv. pat,... • HEATED POOL or the BEACH bath, Jllkl, utll J>!i., adj. alter 5 P • 1: 30 to 11 Ara.t wffkdays. · P o $904180 Mr Lang n4 SMALL black A NE\\''PORT SHOR&5 2 8 • l BR. Furn, 2 lrg. closets, Pools Tennis Contnt'l Bkfst. 2 BR. 1%. Ba. NEW. Blt•lns. ElevatorAdul Annual Lease Mo--Uot · · : curly. ~pyi!tG, -130 E. den, 2 BA, pool & clu~rivl. queen size bed, priv dress-900 Sea 11..an, C~~~-644-26ll Pool. 10 min. from UCI. ~ ts Only, Sorry No •Pets o~·-__ av·"·ble S50 20th St., 1 Coeta Ke 1 a. ing rm. xtra lrg monu, encl (l\lacArt 1ur nr UJW1t Hwyl $2.Ul/mo 642-2651 LAS BRISAS ~ ~--aua Nr. beach. $300. 646-· gar\\' storage. Adults only, L ·.. ' mo. Will provide fumlture 1 =t;<;.3939,,·~;c·=-..,..,..,7"".=::::-' 2 & 3 BR. • $2151$300 no pets. PREFERRED area • Priv., agun. •ch 5515 RIVER A VE., NEWPORT BEACH at S5 mo. Answtrtna: tenrlee 1RISH Setttt, temale =· Yearly. Walk to beach 2035 Fullerton, C.M. lovdy 2 Br., 2 Ba. Crptt, °'" 500 1111 ""' UNJQUE Laiuna Cuile (The New Place In Newport) avallabJ.!. 17375 Beach Blvd. vie downtown 'H.ntp Caywood Roalty 51&-1290 -bl-/pr! Apg, Wide -an vie-n •• M Dian & W Sb baugh ••• •~ llunttnrton IIMcb. 64Ul21. SWtday Jan 1'. (%13) CH ARMING 1 BR. -i-· ...-. W V. gar. 1H to lttt1ffl1 w!tll """" .... .nco gr e m ar v.r~ 597,.,2833 3 BR., 3 Ba., carp/drapt'll. DUPLEX. S:US. Lovely Avail now. $Zill. 675-4873, wattr11111 trratt a Acres of gardens. Cole lo ' ' • NEAR 0.C. Airport. hotel.1,.:::;:"=:0-~_,.--,...,- Frpl. Priv beach. UW. pd. garden s u rroundlnp. c6T.Hl937.:;:.c7"'-' --~~~-I rellllflt .wtt1111 for beach &: iohopping. 2 BR. 2 &..t Unfum. 36S .&-.. restaurant&. Dlx. IJ*OL', bn-LRG black abort haired $475 Month. Alf,. 645.-4400 Mature adults on I y. 2-bedrooms each. Bltins. ""'51*kmMW t· or ba., lge. rooma. custJ:xn ..,.... "f"'-V med. oceu~, Lowett female dog. Poutbl)' l )'for 3 BF.ACH bouRs, 3 & 4 BR. ~-carpets A drapes, cbD =~:sr:~.S:!~. ~~';f ab~~ ~ lwh Fum. or Unfum. 370 ~e;m_ n DuPont. =; S:st~att& - -tpl, parlo; $215-G) Yearly. NEW l BR's from $180-$2(6. location. Leue fJX) pr. ..i11t1r..111oeel100Mt:OO M .... ..H.11 ... turn Abo Cost• Mesi ABBEY REALTY &U-3850 Ai:!ult.s, Nr beach 1: shop'g. month. Call 673-8550 RLTR. to1:00.2J00ft1"11w10.. 0· .-.-,, · NEWPORT CENTER FND: 2 cocker spanitl 1 blk, 14 " 20th S C c'"'' '""· l'tlone: s.~2300. avail, aoon, other apts. $250 OCEAN --~ THE EX. Cl". ING Subleaae 1 or 2 dlx view l red. Vic: South eo.ta ** OCEANFRONT 2 Br. 1 r-t., .M. ROOMY 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, to $050 Month 494-4653 81ni1 ~"' .ll.r.Tf t.ftA!'r Furn or untum. S31Xllmo. 543--0137. groUnd floor. $350 pr. month . . PALM MESA A~S. offices, secretarial arta. Pllllll C.M. ~~ Yearly.Call61HOOS. SHARP! Bachelor, utll pd. nextto pari< & tonnls, call $150 & UP ~st•N,!:~~:,~ HARBOR VIEW MINUTESTONPT.BCH. Xerox •pari<ln&.6440023 5,30 ",;, $145 mo, S50 cleanlng tee. Balley 673-S550 Agt. GIGANTIC 2 BDRM'S $245 up. 494-J383. 494-23.39. ''Whtl'e-c.n..nNllty FU&~. OR UNFURN. · 1617 WESTCLIFF MALE SbePberd m1x. - N1wport Holghll l BR Lge yard. Oilldren & peta ok. Avail Feb. 6th. $21::>.' 615-31&. Tustin 4 BDRM.. 2 BA. water & softener pd. Kid! ok. s:DJ. mo. 544-8291; 494-161t>. Nr. OCC le UCI, 557-1168 2 BR. frplc, new c~ It drps. You Bet it's Wlderpriced! Pnvelra•' Unbelievably laree apts • ID> aq. ft. Cpt, air cond, wl/dtanV!c~~·Bl~ ·r;:: NICELY l ,_ 1 00 ~1 , _ N That's wh., ... :.. apt ... ~··t LUXURIOUS ocean apt, 2 D .......... ~ 1 huge poo~ Jacuri elect blt· Ample ...i. .. , utll, janltor. ~ ... :.~ .JI&'...,., , Llfl'l, .... .DI"-"""" • ...:aae . ear ~ <UQ .. .,.. Br, 2 Ba. $425. fJl" 'w/fum. .._ ..... apartments dealped ins Iha& crpta drPt sauna ~ ,,..,.....,.,., encl gar. QuieL Adultl, no evel')'thlna, 6'13-3850, last long. Cpts., drps., s!Dve """'!070. with a Master'• touch, 11> ,A' Adulg no',..... • Baumgardner •llM, 541-5032 , pets. 2452 Elden ~2768. * GREAT VIEW_ 2 BR. * & refrl&. Lot.sot green .lawn. u•.,.. perb hoUN teeurlty, o:clu· e""' ' r ... • AP 4 or 5 ofc INitel S3l5 Of. FOUND black cat. e:;. NICE 1 BR dplx. QuieL ::;epr, Frplc, bltna, IUDdecks, pool Cover'd ga.rages, Adults, no 2 BDRM. nea r beach, live VeriaUles Club and F~~-= ~ fice $70. Dnk .i>aoe '$40. Siam~ vlcinlty V by pra.ce1. 1 adult over n i:io up. ~3535. peBlkt" E:mJlFullN erton A81ved.., c: garagepeta ..;15 M:re ~~ No pool with· uni;ue Aquabar, 2 BEDR.M. From $180 w I k I t c b I bat h • CM. = 1..aauna Beach, No pets. 54.!-1021. 2 BR. Pool. 2 ........ , atallJ. · · 0 ewport v • • .,. • ' foontalftl and fbrmaS pr-Untum Apta: A·1aU .fYom $J.0 979--.._ · ~· I Blk. So. ol Bay, C.M.J Lido Ille detta. AU -Of tha Soutli to IU LESS. 2 . ADJOINING OFFICES, MALE dol, blade '" tan, 11c!:i !40~~. = $210 ~ ~wa:r. 642-8690. Cout!a dnett apartment You're fiibt, they're under· buy lntenection C.M. $90, mnall tmier, bind vie In-P•rk-Llko S•rround'"9 lJPSI'AIRS 2 BR, 2 BA. communl1>. priced! l.ISl IJesa Dr. Util's Inc. -dlanapotta A Newlalld, Jl.B, Housn Furn. or only. 1993 Church St. 54-9833 so. of Hwy·2 BR, 1 BA, QUlli'T D~l.J.)ti; crptl, d1ps. 1rplc, Adltl, DD 1 Bedroom/studios from $195 ($ bfl'a .trOm N~ Blvd.) PROFESSIONAL SuiU' ready .:;53&-~'1351.;,::'-,..-,-~==I Unfum. 310 IMMAC. Beaut. 2 BR.. Pool. frplc, Jae -patio, IUlldedt. 1. 2 " 3 BR APTS peta:, $275 leue. 673--lDt. 2 Bedroom from .. ~ to go. Hell at Bola auca. LJGHT colored cat W/~ !-..;...-------Quiet atmoopbere A bit.ins. lndl'y rm. S2!5/mo. -. Pvt Patios • Htd Pool Mo11 Vonlo ~~ I B<. unturn 1122.50, Furn. H.B. $%15/mo. ""'1323. rlnp on tall. Blk -on Newp0rt lffch $15.5. Adult. 646-6974 BRANO Nu 2BR. .Pt. ~ Nr. Sbop'g * AdWta only $132.50 mo. ~ .l older. Nr. DESK OR OFnCE SPACE face, !11~.,.,~· Vtc ;~ 1 Br. furn, c?11ti. drps, bllrul, furn. $250 dah/wsh. refri&, Alm 1''urn Bach. Apta DELUXE 2 le 3 Br, 2 Ba, Newport It 19th St., Near all In belt Nt'Wport Beech 1oc BclL ~...,. UDO &um, 3 Bd., 2 Ba, Pool. $.135. 126 Monte Vista, 'Al blb to belch. ~. Martiniaue APlltc. encl ear, $160 up, Rental lbop'e, 897--0l96 art 6 pm. Pl!rtect for ·broker: ~ SMAU. brn male. cbic:J1'"h"* . trplc, lrg yrd, nu Cflll.ll, Mgr No. 5. 646.Q53. Cosl1-•'.lr:;;~-. IT 1 .,ftn , ~.:;"' 2!~111340095 Mace Ave. 2 BR. -'Neu .i..-.. 1.... deli on Alida Pkwy, Milllon drpa, dshwash, $340 YrlY $1.l8. Lovely 1 BR. Furn. -1 .,....1.& Ana Ave., ..:.... .nv-• ON THE ILU,FS 1613 Santa ~~~ 8u1lnen Rent1t 44J . Viejo. 830-ilM lease. 5600 ruver Ave., NB., Near ltotta. Quk1: adults. I---------Mar Apt llJ 641).~ Newport BNch AT NEWPORT --' 1985 Po ....... CM 548-0728. DELUXE -New Duplex-H Call ~ '"n!E Factmy::wbu sltope ~ ~-:11:. .. F::i Condomlnl•m• 320 Dana Point ""c!~A~~NI~wim· • 3 lktrm,2"" ...... iis;. PARK NEWPORT ~~~"'l·i ~.,:~ """""°" =· Jiio~o. Ide~ G,...broolte .,.._ 9IJ.1.J9'l2 Unfum. ming Poola. Health Spa. ~'eenag" or 1nlant OK. APARTMENTS aboV<IPacll!cCoutHwy)to IRAND NEW book.-. 1pectalll!' CIM IRIS!! Sette•, vie. Allao . VIEW! Few steps to beach. LIVE in \ht' alf new Dana Tennb Courts • Game and e l Bdrm, l BA ...... $195. a&.-entrance. 900 Cacney Lane, QUO VADIS Ill ahop, etc. 425 ooth St. School, L&euna Beach. Spac. 2 BR. 2 BA, sep. din r?intllulHMarbor at . the Billiard Room. lieaut., apacioua · apta • Oft Til9' bav Newport B~c:b Ca. ~-LuXW')' Garden AptJ,. Newport Beach. S'f3..a, ,49&-=1::6:::":....--~.,.--I nn.: trplc., elevator. $485. -aut arina Inn Motel, l BR. From $180 1''enced ,yarda, palioa aDd Luxury apartment uvtiia: ov· Telephone: <714> 6'!5-0060 Bachelor .... : .. • ~ BJt•a. 500 Sq ft. on 17th St in O:J1ta POINTER -Identity A ~ 530 Cliff Or. Lai. Sch. 34902 Del Obispo St. 1 BR. & Den From $185 quiet ~nv~y. Adults, no erlookin& the water. Enjoy · FRum $1.U Meta. Busy lnbmtction, tor Vtl bW. HUnt1naton 6#-1615. !49&-2353). Kltcbe.,, ef. MEDITERRANEAN ... ~. ·""""'· 1750.000 health apa, 1 owfni. NEWLY decorated 7 Br Htd """·•=·Sauau ampl< -·Call S48-l43S Beacb ...._ 53&-IJ46. Irvine ~~le•poot ~d:!i ~u 1'ulierton St. (at Bay) ming pools, 7 ll1hted ten· beach cottage. Cloee to Re .• ~at.IM Room & Morel or 60-5l!i0. BLACK&: allver lhaCD'·pup. phones, tetevillkln, sauna VILLAGE PRThlE 2 BEDROOM n1a courts. ·plus mllea ot ocean It J;a.y Yrly $185 Mun .. JiJ ·. No Pell Industrial Rental 450 19th .t Tustin. Jan. lSth. NEW 2 Br. -A/Cahg. cpt. w/w. aun/dk. Utl. nn. Pool $23(). mon. Yrltl.8. 552-n33 2 BR, 1 %. BA. New. Blt-lna. Pool. ·$210 mo. Call 642--26.57 San Juan Capistrano bath' la .. ~-· •·-"•"'-• 2400 00 1 CM in excellent locale. B~tina, bicycle trails, putting, abut· ~Bkr.' • . IMM Dl"'TE ··-834-532J. __ , ~ ~-"" r B Yd.. · · ""P"~ & clra-W8lk tn fieboard, croquet. Junior l's "c RE'DY FEB-I I 1973 =="'-----=I n1ttlln2 room, close to San .._ (714/ 551-8020 theater and all &bopping. from Slt.f.5(1 monthly: al8a 1 EASTBLUFF • 1 BR. Upper. OCCUPAN Y "' • I ' Lost 555 Clemente and Laguna RENTAL OFFICE Adults only. $lJO mo. Call and 2-bedroom plana and All electrtc. 11*1. Call 18992 Fl0t1.a.a St. LAGUNA NIGUEL Beach. Come play in OW' OPEN 9:30 A.'1 to 5::1> P~l Mr. 'Black ~8424 OOUnt: 2-story town houwa. Elec-64!)..0349 ~· (% blk. W. oJ .iarfield M-1 · 14 Karat aold JdWDlal ~~g, .t!,~:I~ n~ NEW VILLA PAULA COAST REALTORS. trlc kltchtna, private pa.·1a Sen Cl~· and Beach Wvd.) 1600 SQ. IT. 1: UP. wrlltwatcb, gold meab.1band reataurants. ~ week and 2 Br., 2 Ba. From $180. BACH. 1, 2 3 BR or balcontea, carpctin&', dn.· HUNTINGTON Gard e,n a On San Diego ~ay W/dlamond1. Jan. .5. vie up. Bring this ad and FAMILIES WELOOME. Frpk: poou; securlcy guardl perles. Subtemmean park-WEG-~ a;&.~ ~~ Apts. Hell at soi.a Chica. Call 831-1600 Derby Helt. or ~olcano receive $5 oll on f1rat Super tor 2 work'g &als. ' N~ ts ' Ing with elevatnn. OpUonal ,__,ua ....... ,. au """"'' 846--1323. Compe.re • See FOR LEASE M-1 unttl UXI Houae. Reward. ~. 3 BR. 2 Ba, unfurn condo, week'• rent. Shag cpt/drps., patio, beam HARBOR~REENS maid aervlce. JU1t north of area with ocean vu, 2 BR, 2 what __ )'OU're millinl· Fr. &: 2800 rt San , Ana 979--5770, eve., 64tHf16. cptl, view, maintetnance, ceilings. G&raiea. Fashion llland at Jamboree BA co lor co -ord $lJO.fAiQ. ,.._ __ n'"4,-:..,M ta SMALL tan do& -""° pool, $250 mo. 213-5ll-2584, Huntington Beach 622 Hamilton, C.M. 54&-2062 546-0171 and San Joaquin HUit Road. cptl/drpl/dswlbr I: nnp. vwua" ,.....,.__. collar ·:s;Be7 213--351-9548,eves. ---=-----See Mar. Mt. le Mn. Hoban Telephone (n4) 644-1900 ~1_!ln atta, open beam DELUXE, Apt -priv. patio. IRVINE Induatrlal Arel, ~=toWn H.B. ~ DuplexM Unfurn. 350 $33 WEEKLY NEW l BR's from Sl'JG.$180 ~~~n 2de:~nd1~n:: tor rental lnlormallon ,_..,...,,..., prlv baloonf, rec&: Music, 6 pooh la~nnla 10,<XX> tq .rt.· dock bl,gb, Reward! Dl1I 5*1313, !·8'-'11:...c-.1-P-o-n-~-,-.-,.---nE7xy~~--$u81tu1.~ Nr beach le abop'g, Adulla, crpta, drpl, pool, bltna, Yeara..._•.utront ~~· ~~~ oo pell, ~MHJ59~ aprlnklen. S.16J). Eve1 ~. . -. -'" vn1._n TU, 114 E 20th S CM pnv. patiol. $155. l child ok. ,,._,, ...,1r_, v-'""9ft. REWARD-Wallet iolt at Beach Blvd. at York~·n ,._~"·-"137. t., ' · No pet.. .,..~0•, 3 Lovely nt'W unfum. apta. * QUIET new exclllllve l BR. Adults. 1 blk to beach. ~ --Mo.·-"'•M "'~L ~ 2 BR, den, 2 ba, % blk bch A: bay. 1325 mo. yriy. 1359 E. Balboa Blvd., Apt A !dwnstnJ. 536-3518 or 213/863-1008. Huntlngf<ln IN<h SJM4l1 ~ ' ·~ 3 & 2 BR., 2 lia. eaeh. Pie• unJg overtoOklna Ocean A Shag apt&., drpa, No peta. 1..,.. •••--.,;.;... -· STUDIOS I: l IR'o. $140 up 1pac. 2 br/3 hr 1~ be. $159.50 VERY N{CE. Sep. & slip. ManY extras. Immed. Oty. 2 BDRM, 2 BA., 112 $13$. JJl 14th St., 538-0362. ,.__.._ •• ~~: ~tal ~':: pool, cpt/drp, bltn, plyg:rnd. bouae, 2 Br, l Ba. ttptl, occupancy. Calle Patricia ~, 54&-9723, . e Full kitchen 2212 College, No. 5 •.. 646-4273 drps, adulta only, no pets. Call: 673-3663 673-8086 Eves. SM~. 646-6'155. • Heated pool 1996 Maple, No. l ••• 642-3813 Reta. 235t Santa Ana Ave, II •} AnnouncetMnh 500 LOST male Irtab Se~. no e Laundry f.acilltics BE~ cellinp, .all ntw 673--039$ NEAR beach Ii: town 2 BR, ..... . ,_, collar, Mon. l/lS, \fk. So. : ~ ~~ crpt, dri>tdul' d'''""n12 Br QPo ~VEL1 !_J .. ~·c1raw/w ~$1J~!n~~Mar~~~ OLD FURNITURE =· ~ ('lll~ per. A ti o y $140. ~ .. • ............ uuurs, pes, 493-1319. Don't throw It away yet. IJ 499-2856. ' IMMED. OCCUPANCY • T.V. le maid aerv. avail. &l2-4t62 or 6tlJ..2827. garage. No peta. Mature Rooma 400 it's stageworthy, the lrvine ."=':'-7--c-o=--,,,.--1 New 3 er aptJ $250. mo. • Bar-B-Que DELUXE 3 2 Adults. 2260 Placentia Ave. VACMIT Feb. 1 • 3 Br. 2 Ba. Community Theater will LOST female S 1 be r 't an Dbl 1anae. dlbwabr • Phone service "'-!.. ~: J!!:. C: .. ~E!· Reuonable. 646-3160 * 2 WEEKS PREE * CID1 2 pt:Ho, encl gar, PRIV. room It bath tor Wi:e It off your ha1:1di. we ~U..'tY• Oea wllar A,~~ 331 o .. .,.. H.B. • 1 MUe 10 OCW1 .. ~. -~· ~M•, EXTRA NICE 1 BR, I lia YI d·1 M lawn. Loe l240 54t-370t. KJ•-~ prJ·"-u-··~~~ SodJitlilile I. bltna. . $100 aecurlty , lta .... · · woman. ......,n .. ...,..,a. need couches, chain'--tablea. W ~....,-H.!l: ReWard 536 13'0 M -Sl&5 depoe. 64&-8811 Apnt. new paint, crpta, drpl. Pool, ADULT GARDEN HOMES Santa Ane Pool. Nriport are a. rugs, etc. Call Tom 11tus al e1 .,, ~ I I'!'!.,'""~!"'"'!'"""""" BA!rp~. Rprl•v.1 ~..;.!!,&e~ 1 BR. Apt w/pr. Wtr It Bar·li-Q & lndry rm. Nr. mVINE AVE. AT MESA 56-.1511 557.1291 after 5 o'c!ock. &14-l&ai. , Newport INd\ .----e--...a.. tum. Adultll abop'1 A: beach. Adulta only. Move In w/.t~la 0 .. ,.. 1 tm·p. So. S.A. Adult.I. ROOMS m wk up w/ kit. LOST male Doberman, blaclc -·~------01vided bath I lots ot ..... -ner • DD J129, 1141r2575 1 Br. $l60 --2 sr.'$J» New paint, carpets It. $32.50 wk up apta. Cbildren w/one flo~y ear, \ltc NEW Duplex. 3 br, 2 ba closetl. ft«, hall, pool A pet,. $UO/mo. 548.et alt EXTRA NICE 2 BR, 2 ~ n ••• N'~t •--~~. ~• -7 ~ 5'&-1351, 5 to ft pet section. 2376 Ne........... ---11•1 G?ftn V Home in From $285-$310 YriY. Walk pool tables, aauna baths. 3:~. -. ~ « .... .x\."W"h,,-.-uu., 7 PM. · Bl c 1tAo -"' fAi.liiir" ""°""" Fountain V 9fllH505 to heh. Encl pr. 841.3118 or See for )'OUl'le'll. 11301 2 Br. .eparate a Pt ~ ~ ~ dtps. Pool, Fountains. Rec. Bid&. vtl • . vd. M • ...,..ll'•w. ____: eves. ~'1914. KBe~l Lnblk. Nil blkSlaW,) o1 w/prqe. Beam oell'r. Baf"'~··· ~ch Adulf::. .. ~.r exorerclsaTV Elnn. •bpilllll'tla.t '"·-.a~· !.anton w~~lia· th~~ .. ·te k room.North I ~-.-----::.i~hr~EM~·-:coe100cikiia~poo;O,'lmriiiiii&YI a ... ., • of ter. $155 /mo. 842-4602 « , . ~· . . ,. ..... .._,. 2 .. BR. 2 BA 1n """-lex ,;)IMO.I"' • .-w • 11 . , YEARLY, nr ocean, 2 BR. 1 SU-7M8 642-'1940 evea. n 641r2575. ~eriio refrtadeelhq~ OlildNn 1:.~tl ok ... ~ C.M. 546-7285. Perl0nal1 ·530 beige ·color named . • ~·'d fp~c.Imml225.ed mo..:....,~Pl'fl LRG. 2 BR. Pool. Beam cell. &Side, un' mac. 2 BR, 1u lia $165-2 BR, 2 ba. encl pr, p pa ot k. decorated. $155 m.-1634. ROOM, ahare ldtcbfln.J!:: -.~HIN-DU SPDUTll' "-'• Y}~,.$~d.M., 6 7 S • O 99 • .~ .. · · ......... · mot ~111 1-n bltna Nr So Coast Plaza. _......,, "'---~· _.._ "' <9&-2138. eam::O. . '"'" adlt twnhse. 1110. 110 ~ J FOR LEASE Fum. or Unfvm. 370 ~-,_-~.: u.::'""...:: Let lh1I ad clwtae YoUl' LOSl'-1emal> lrllb 'Sette• I~~~~~~~~ Melody Ln. -or obn 515..919! a... -L ~"'-whole outloolt on lite tar the -.~.. Dint.. ~•• 1; Lide lslo 548-9695. · 2 A 3 BR.$1l0 A $165. '35 LwtUI>' Bay!ront Apts, ...... ,_ UPSTAIRS ftlrn, u, nn, BR better l'ro-..t ldvtco ;~:..-·.......... p,;;;o I II' J LOVELY I Br Apt, Near dep, Ntwly redec. Avail 1 A: 2 BRa:SJ50 to s;x;o (oronl tlel ~r & BA •. lfP tntry, no cook-on We. Uc. Readinp dally. ~ a..aJ55, ~ , ~•ltlllfltlfwllllllt FURN. l bdrm, utU pd, occ & UCL No pm. $135 2/i. 15.l Shalimar, 645-<19'13 Geo,.. .Wlltt.mson inc. SSS/"'°" •:ua 10 AM·10 PM. 49).9136, WI R&rimmed -... l:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;m:~ ,._. I adult No pei.. mo. Call 919 M" Huntlftaton_ 8Mch . RHltor 2. 2BR ·-. 1lntUm annual, co~"T '"' ~ room -· 312 No. D Cimino ~-...-1195. "'° .-i. .. ~ 'V"'"' ;.;Jr.:. • . * ••• "70 * .._ nuovn ~ • "•al •··Cl-..... tlon gluse1 lott vie Penaaaa AptL l'um. UO N..,9~ "'&;.h . 2 BR. Adults, no pets. BAY ~ mi north or Huntlniton ~ rum. Ub~~-15. ~v:n :i;, ~ ;~.;:,' .. ;:;;~ttl'.1" ::S.'°~ Ana. ~ ~t?:.~WS ~387 w. ·s.o.:i.. $140. 2· Bil Bltnl, YDll WE T.lKI: PE'lllll Cool• -Guosl u--415 Will the --ltad • '"'"'""-====-::-"'""'"' lalbN Ptn,mul1 ON OR. CLOSE TO OCEAN ......,-. CM. crptl, ~ ~1. play yard. 2 Weeki Free Rent too! .._.... , J&e. Henry MCKenna Ji&. tor LOST small blacl( It WhlW e '28Wlc&1JpOnOcean ~~t~~ I: 2ri:e1:~~~0= ~lft\J chll:::.~~ ~~OJJ81f'g:_sh;iM. sranc1~:1i!=umt1 =: .. ~:e::,:,.1/1~ ~k~~~~':°N't Lovely Bacil. 1 BR·Room• Lrg I Br~ l3!0 1140/mo. 968-1"5. peg. Call-. VISTA DEL ·MESA 54H8SS Rom now for YoUt' eon-* Prlvoto Room * pleur call S0-31119 bet 6'& 642-'/032.or 67).:n85. Maid Scrvke ·.Pool · Utll Pd Aaent 6 19'l2, rn-4073 LARGEEi: BR, "'Ptl..i'!'l•, WALK TD l~CH SEACLUT Mrum Apb. 1 atruct10n allowance of 1 -· for -.J 9 P.M. lPl1v. party wanla RALPHS,-ell; >rlqr lot Jan • call 67H740 • $29.50 per Wk It up. l BR, 2 nr. \~ HI ....,......,., New t It 2 br cpt/drp BJ\. $1U $0 Pool Crp mo'• tree rent l BR, 1 BA Ambulatmy Lad.Y or Man to bu,)') ' 5, Olarter W '?.~:.~ BE by Youraell. Beach & BR&Bacbelon.CoklrTV, 0 Jd.,pref'd.$)3;.67H14S. dwbt ., !rpl."315 16th: ...... blth&. ...... d\,pi.!1'fs A den. 2 BR'1 A 9 BR'1 GoOd nutritloul Fdo<I C pt I Co Corel -tlon 19SL :;:"'"""l' Bay arta. 2 Br. Sundeck & maid serv., pool. The Meaa NEW, quk!t 2 Br., cpt, dllJI,, 847•7. Placentia Ave. Alk about l'rob'l $15&. Dllhwuher, Nice. c'beertul •~· w !.:.:' u' lttei •. PO,&u 1774 Npt Bch. p'rqe. Call 673-533'l 415 N. Newport Blvd., NB. tncd rear )'rd, Kfll'. $115. 2 BR. tu a water pd. lehUd wr dllcwnt. $U--2682. ~ ~~ unlta!. * Call 548-475.l * ~tom A: chuu~~lt. W~ GEJ\MAN 8bepherd. oJcW STllDIO SUS. 2 Bil $175 ""'9681• 20!S-B GIU'den Ln. 5'8-m3. ok. No peg, From $!AO. EXCLUSIVE Westclflf 2 BR, 'BBQ' J:· L pool. pldt-up •· delivtr. P-doe. """1. blk A allvor, v'4 , ''°"""BR. 1325 I BU< 10 "''"'" Newpoft. ! BR. 2 BA. "'rg· $175 mo. 1m2 ~ St. or Ill lia condo. WMtttr/ ~ '\;g~taPl~·C.J\f. Ronllll hi ShoN 430 11$-3632 or Jle.1~ to. !roe Flower St. CM. Sttlo 1/14. MAR.SHAU.. Realty 675-4600 Klds-1195 peg ok.u lilBr ~~ 2 .. ~ $100 dep., 101 El Camlno S0-1152. , dryer, patio, pool. auna. Untlor -tatimate. . Rewardt 8t&-9271. Corono dot Mir • nt J.., D• SL CM. 557-4577 2 BDRM dllplelt. ~. o1rpi. ,.., nn, eltt aar, adlta . ~ SINGLE ~ Pi would PROBLEM -...,.. eon. L.OSr I.up beln cal vie. MH.155. • l Br., 2 lia apt, erpUc!rpa, & ,., .... tlJs>I, stove, ,....., Im. ,..,1231. "-' like to ...,.. nJ<e apt lo fldmt, a yin• 11 b , tt e Adams • Nt!Wlana, 'II.a: 1 Br. tum .. end pr. Adj. to 2 BR. on the be""/pitt, lrplc. ZilS ~. $1Xl. ClOlt tO ocean. '12S Owen. OCEANFRONT-NEW 4 CA VICTORIA CdM w/aame. 21 to IS. )In. ~ ~U,... Abof.. Need• medical a.itaJ mmpl abop'1 area. $115. 8)2 W/D. Yearly or winter $250 673-0053. H.8. $145. 536-191~. bdrm. Beams, wood. rock, l &2 Br. I Unfurn. $100. util. lnel. 673-4791. tlon A adootlonl ftL AP· 96~. • Hel~. 831-1300. mo., prk& &: gar" 536-5>06 * STUNNING 2 & 3 Br. 2 * N~ 1 BR, t!'ncl pr. 2 bib glw. Spectaucla.t l ltUGE. c:r-FOoi W:t~c!~W 8y 1: WANT lady to abart nk:e CARE. 84l-4436. BEAGLE fem. V1C '1'h ft 2 bUcl to Bia ())rona. Bach. Ocettnfront 2 BR, decorator Ba. Garden Apta. ~. Rae. to beach. i or 2 adults. '19. $500/mo. Yrly. D a v c: • Jnq~ about· our Move-in lluntington Be11.ch home, $85 ALCOHOUCS Ano~. Whittier, Ol,&48 Blk.~. pai, a $175'. Utll pd. Yrl)'. turn. AVllll on wtntv lte or rm. now. 18th St. C.M. ~-61S-1972, 49t-1l6l5 Allowance 525 Victoria St per rno. 5.16-1257, 5.164796 Phonfl 542-7211 or write 8JlK Pumeltfn. · aft l.. I.adult. no pet. '4s..1824 IM. .to ino. 2U/554--T69B. 2 Br, crpta1 drpa, bltna. Pool. 2 WEEKS FREE ltENT-1 3 BR, 2 BA, trple, blt.IM, 1 11.t HA.rbot: CM. 6'2.$970. . 3 BR. hou.M!, lhllrci w/l or 2 P.O. 8a>c 1223, Costa Mesa. REWARD, Whi~ ~ca~ Lo 2 BR apt. lnu'na,c..oond. $185 CANAL FROm'-1 BR. 2 $145. Av&il 1/31. 1'I MOl'lte •Br. ~f'rl>lei -lhll cr:eJi .$155. · yr ~Id, bUc · from be8c~ -EXTl\A· LAl\0£.t ·Bt. Ntvt mal~ ot. Jemal / SWINGING SlNOLES ~th ~-.1.---:1:·-... ~ · · Cooilt-loea:don. Call 615--2663 blks to .!t!~!.l dock. 3409 Villa, Mgr No. 5. &t&-635.1. S»-18Sti 9-6 PM. . !hop g. Call ,Lynn, 67S-29M crpl, paint, heated I. 6'2--019 afl"f"'PM: . CtlJ Jtm 3-9 PM '-1emcnte. ~iitE ·1 &fl ffm Finley . .,.....,.,, Quiet I BR. I BA. Olde< 2 BR. 2 BA. Dlx Pill! • aide. 10 CHOICE ~och •pt•, 2. 3, < F'lollt 1140. M•-.l.f... MAN, 11l1llaftt, to ..... 3 BR ~ OUHIJAl!UA. r..,~ DllllJ PUot Want Adi lia .. HOUSE Hunttnr. Wilch tho ""'1t'1 ..,_ only Ntar Sch. $1S5. CU be film BR. Sll5 to 11i!JO ""'1Y w.nt ok. No peb. 1887 dpb nr _,,. Bal -· !'Ht! & ••?H"t Pia« ID ttdt 11.e<, ··-.•I l!olplnl plort. OPEN HOUSE' column. Rffemnce ""I'd. 54H$13. 53tH1882. ml Florida. ABBEY REALTY -Moorovla, 116-2174. , $125 In Juftl IS. 8'l3-303tl Call 612-11611. • _,,._ __ !_ •• ~ --~~"'-'"=- ". • -' ·' • uAJLY PU.o r 38 ~ ~~-""';;;;;"'" ~~;;1 1--~-l~ I .. ...,..... l[l]I "'1 ' 10 -1[11] I ~! ;;;"'"';;;:""";;;;;;,;'[11];;1 ~[-.. ;;;;;;jj ....... _ •• ;;:;l[[JJ~ll ! I;',,_ mi lliil _ ... ~ .... _. ~1[11]~1 ~'-~ .. ~-.. ~·· ~l[[JJ~l l ~r::i':.!1ona sis Oenerel Servi ... -' -Holp Wo~fed, M,• P-71~ Help Wontod, M • F 710 Help Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M & F 7IO Help W"1tld, M & F 710 He lp Want~, M & F 7l0 1-------...;;;.; r1pt1I-C Corel -,_,... TCllEN J\lde.varlous hr11 H--'-' Relt'ef RECEPTIONIST "¥ ... 1r FULL time work in \1110\l....., & c!A.va. io\ill &. p/time. s~ -1 B~ O I \\londcrful large 00. llt'eka GRAPHOANAL YSIS We """ & wax com~cl•ly, ACCOUNTING ClERI( DAY """' n ... arch Ntu"lery-p,,, Lido Coov. H0>p., .,;s '"oo u a r vors •harp ~~iv. lo.-llK'ir tE~~ CJ~=a~n. ~:~?~~ '. dc~ve~ho': Call 838-8861. li'tagahjp, N.B. $3.J2 per hr. Ap~ly r.l·111,.n1 person~! dt'flt. Lots ot fun MG .. I •-·" .i.w •0"" or •••1-1 •--,__ TEMPORARY, FULL TIME BUSBO'vr ... Gal Friday to $150 LEGAL SEC'Y TRNE ,\i~ Uni fied .school 0..'ll· liml'5 lo look forward IO · . , n11 .. .,..1or '"'7.JV.M ~ ,,,. ~ "'~ r 1 1o--• 11 . ~-U'ful nct, Tnt.nsporlat1011 l>ept., ..... W 00 , .. 1 •-•, ~11 i'or into call, 400-3916 ntimate. Must be expe.rlenced In use of 10 key adding ro !"M .... nn in ....._ ... u \Newport Ce111cr1 . send , 1· Bak . St c i\l 55~.5.JlO '"I'('. 0 er u '""" • ...... hln d• t I Kn led I k IOCf4tlon .cocks sharp lrk:nd• rt"llwn~ to Otnu1fied ad no ~ a ea • ·• ·' · 1 • Traey !\llU'11n, 1133-2100, 00£8 )'QUI' dog llet'd llANDYMAN -aJl ldndl of mac e an ypewr ter. ow g• 0 ey· I ly lndlv. Super group & fun s.59 c/o Dally Pilot, P. o : Needed-Exp' l''oreign Car ~nnl~ & [)('nni11 _Prrsonncl tra.hatni . SrhOol tor P'JJ»I & work, s:maU J.J.• a 1peclall-punch helpful but not essential. 18 & Over llml's can be planned ht-re. &x 1560 Costa l\tl'liil Calif !\!&:hank" Ai,:<'nL-y of Jrv1r1('. Bl acllt ~artlncre&t Ken-1y. Y79-4639. ~9723. Ii.OURS 8 A.M .• 5 P.M. Call~· 83.1-2100, Dennis & 92626. · ' · e 557-2132 e l\llcht1son JJr. f'll'.la, • Haullnt Posltlon available ifumedlately and will be Denrwi Penon.nel Age"[?' or LEGAL &>cretary Exp'd N<'wspapcr Clll·riers RECEPT ION IST YAl\D, gn-•e "''"""-· neede4 afrroximately 2 to 3'montbs. "'S ApplyMolnn'Peth''r°"u F ri Irvine, 2{1112 Michetson Ur. bvine Industrial Conipiex~'. BOYS & GIRLS Pi•rsonable HE'<."1!"~1 JOnlst1. for lloltyolttlng WIJ.h "> care lor child tn my ,home, ltaell 2-5. Vt.ry reliable, rt.•1. P.fon·Fri. 91H856. BABYSmtNG In rny home. Weekly or hourly ral<..'l!l. Ji'enced yarQ. 645-2035. B•thtvb repair • reflnlahlng REnNISH In \\'hile or color ln your hon1e or business. 54.'J.~O Tre. Jnc. 8ulldtr1 ..... ... .......... w C 11 DA Y PILOT .. t G "" p .m . • • GELCOAT TOUCH P 833-362'.l 10 yrs and older. busy oons1t11r1ion inn. Rc1nOvo trees, dirt, ivy.. _• -m•rvere • _ rHnman N "-h 'f' pii•<> & r1 ~keeping Dtlvt!W".11, ., .... .1:-.~. 847-2666. 642-4321. E:xpertt'Tlel'd LVN, Relief Supervisor (or \V. ewporl """ac area. ~Y .., i <' • ' ··-• c. &l1-Q5.t2 Good profits. Con1art r.-tr. Gucxl !jlllary tor sharp ilAUiJl\/G & clean.up by exP l ~~~~~""'l'"~~~~ ' Equal (lppor. Employer :.1 ~,_4~~:a1~~ Setty, Daily Pilot, Ct.1. 11X'i:so~· If N i~., o"~ce<da i,n coUqe 1tudent, ige trtc: l----Help W1nted, M & F 710 OCO .tJ G Of . e 642-4321 e rvtnc. n ....... ''" y . 534-1846 ru·"SM-2164. lli+l en'I c Tra inee appe, Call ~tlsil Jones for appl. GEN. flaullng. Tree/•n ...... ·l • Jll)lml Auto 1S55 w. Adams Var!ely ts lhc spice of lif~! MACHINIST-E."(ccl. Op-Nurses Needed t1llcnwJ01L~ 557-T;,33. ,,____ _ SALESMAN Thi• pog1Uon aHers terrl!ic portW\ily. Precision parts·! 11-7 & Other Shifts RF:CEPTIONIST _ !'"'"~j' ~G~·~·~&~ydf:!de~an:'.up~, \~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimm;::;:;~\ Coste Mesa oppor. to learn all ~~sof cools le dies. Good shop Top pvt. duty pay. YACHT BROKERAGE :P't. 839-2303, 557-mf. BMC, l.olUI, Jensen & Ferra-Ofc procedurei;. Xln t co. blckiround ~·d, Cole hnrnl'<.I. puy Jur iloor duty. \\'EEKENDS ONLY SKIPLOADER &. dump trutk Job WinNd, female 702: rl, Good Working C.ondit.ions, DELIVERY o1 DA IL Y Call Kim Cla~. 833-2700, Instrument Corp, . 2Jl34 County-wide. N<'ed RN . Cn.'t't our custonll'rs, ans"'er 'A'Ork. Concrete, aaphalt Fre4!: Demo. Medi.ca.I Insur-PILOT, SUNDAY ONLY, lo Dt>nnla & Dcnn1S .Personll('I Placentia, C.M: 642-8080 L\'N . Aidf's. Inlcrvi~·s phone!L, lite typing. If you sawing, breaking. 846-7UO. LOCAL ~ SECN, ance. Ask for Mr. Bud newspaper carriers. Re-~ency of hvme, 2082 Equal 6pportlil"li1>' Employer Mon·fi·i, :1-J. L e s c 0 u 11 e a re R t t r a c t i v e , Hou1eclea11Jn9 dellirea clla.Qie In position. ~~WPORT IMPORTS qWtts the u.se of a StatKln M1chel~n Dr. . MAIDS WANTED-Nur~'s Registry, 351 Hos· well-groo1ned &_like people, Typing Is 80 wpni, 90-100 ~aaon &:"eiVan~~tact Jt:· G1rls·Women MatW'e, t:xper. Pl'ef'd. Fu ltd., N.B. !Lobby Park Call l\lr.s. Davis for appt. HOUSE OF CLE~ WJlln ahorthand. Composes 3100 W. Coast Hwy., Newporl 'SJ.a~ :r· es! Y ~~ull or p/llme do_ing pleas· Time. &.-e Personnel ri.llui-Lido --.ldg.J 642-!l'k5 or y,·eekdays ~:.. &42-1626. 111£ PROFESSIONAL own lettera:, desires JlOflilKln Beach, 642·9405. ·• sta esa. ant phone work in our of. ager, 5'K>-9954. RECEPTIONIST CLEAN INC SERVICE tetbp e ~~~ty.Re~ BABYSITTER : Older DELIVERY men w/car, tlce. Cuarn. salary + gen· Ba.lboa Bay Club NUH..SES Alde-Jmmed open-This fil1f' co. seek~ indiv, 10~ Dlacount w/this ad available, plwi 1ctU!rs of woman t.o come into bome over 18, p/time. Call Pizza erous bonus. Ai>P!Y, 7908 122'.1 Y.. Coast """'Y·, ~'B ing 7·3:30. & 3-U :lO. Iha! ""'ants a career no< ju.st 642-4124 or 646-2527 ndation W . ._ 8:15-5:15. Owntransp. Refs. Man, 642-9-152 aft 4pm Westmlnster. Sulle B. f/Ume. Park Lido Conv. a job \\"ill train to be escrow OFi"JCE CI...EANING, TOO! ~ ad N'o. 59[ 1c/~ req'd. Call aft. 6, 968-1793. DENTAL RECEPTIONIST Wcstm. Or call 897·530!!. MAINTENANCE MAN Hosp, 466 Flags.hip, N.B. offil'~r. Start $450. Call Jan F•ir Price Cleening Daily Pilot Newspaper, BABYsrITER, mature for lS M;!= ~lmanfron~/se= GIRL for olflce. Must ~ve Apa r 1 men t Complex. 01''1'~ICE Page-, ~. Coas1al Pcr- COMPLETE building & Compl.ele .Home Cleaning P.O. Box l!i60, Coirta Mesa. mo old boy. Wed & Fri 10 lbllity ·nc1d f.lna.n experience in dE"COt'a.t1ng. Thoroughly experienced in AAnlK'I Agenl'Y, 2790 liarbor repair, anything YoUr bome Float' W11.Xing _ Windo\\'S ~"""~:::·:,,,,~_,-,--,-.,~,.,,.-am-4pm. Own tramp. ~i!f'°~angeme~t & ·schedul: Knowledge of boats helpful. electrical &. plumbing. OtA·n l-"Il""'cod·c_•_,Fcc·•cc'-'----~~ needa. Re!as.~Gene, 547-1838 Rug ShamPQO -Wallll COLLEGE student 10.C.C.) ,~-~'"11"''-------ing. Pleasant environment. Apply Johansen 6& tools. Salary S600/month. Expericncl'd RECEPT/TYPIST r I )I 'd . .._.. . -k BABYSJ'M'ER t 1 . 1 Chrlstcnll(>n, 898 Wesl 1 th Phone 546-0371 M . 1 1. /th all 6. rPe eA ., . c .. 1nsw~ ~· part time OUJce wor , u rge n Y Good opporturuty or some-·St Newport Beach 10 Ke Touch , ust enJoy c <'a 1ng w e C bl k" 536-8884 ffl..0951 clerical, P.B.X. etc. needed. Matute & depend· one de&ring respons.ibility. ' · . Maintenance-Floors Y public. Lit<' typing. Exper. _!_!•Im• tng Available a.fterooons 1 pm . a ble, Mon:rn, own tran.!I. · Salary open. HB area. Full OIRL Friday, general off~ce Houseman exper. in rug Operators 1,.1 busy 4 line' phone. Co. STO LADY wants housecleaning on and Saturda)'s. Call Lln-1c-"=Bo,='"'==:"·,c842-:=,-='9'76=--,--time. TI4-962-667J. work for 3 mo, 219 r.tanne ~1..~"1poo'~• •floor--F/ benefits. Apply in pen;on, CU !\I woodwork , \\'Ork. Experienced, -own Upper, Balboa lsland "',...' Moe ...... "· cabtnet11, paneling, gen' I transportation. ~d=a°'54='"6-447'18;"''--:-;:=::::---;;;-BABYSmER, my home, DENTAL Rec e pt i p n i 1 t 673-59-;Q · ti1ne, day shllt. Sma.ll acute Needed tor inveiltary BPe 1 ""cy~ver, 1545 Nev.•port re~A 1-· lnce L.enhott, 841-3637 NEED he.Ip at home? We Own transportation, Costa Newport Beach Orthodontic care hotip. Pacifica H06p., Sho · H B ' .:::::":...::":::':__· -~--~~ ~· '-~~~~=-~-M 54• -1---------11 B rt lcnn assign. m .. 1· -·~1 after 6 '~-84""" • · LAve AJdes, Nu r I es, '~'~"'~'""'~"~· =~="-·--Offi-. Top 0~1n-•, Liberal 18792 De I aware, . . RESIDENT •tr.n .. .,.er • Re· v,.,.._,. ' ' .....,.... "' Dedic•ted Cleaning H .. ousekeepefl, Companions, ,..;,.:;;; bencut;'Pfuasant en. 842-06ll, ext. 246. VICTOR 1il'l'd c-le l;,-;.anoge 5 * WE 00 EVERYnilNG * BARMAID, Apply Knotty -"~ HOStESSES I ·-c I t CArpent•r Refs. F'ree eat. 646-2S39 Homemakers, Up john , Keg, 2125 Harbor Blvd, CM, virorunenL Dental exp req. MAINTENANCE work. ?-.fan TEMPORARIES apts n -n e 111 en e. Carpentry & Plumbing X1nt Housecleaning H~~ carefree vacation betwn IO & 6 daily. ~~~· No smoking. FRY COOKS & ~irv~.i m 4~· F= 1360 So. Anaheim Bl. 492·0646 or 337·3012· C.11 John Or Bill By Dity. Own 'I'ranspart.ation Confident loving care for in-BILLING CLERK wanted by DENTAL Sec'y-Bookkee ..... r. DELI MEN !•'--',NB Anaheim 63$.6031 RESIDENT nigr., ret. couple * ·~·• * motorcycle distributor. .,.. ....,..., to manage 5 apta/San 549-2683 e 557-6928 ~ fant-xlnt backgro u nd. Must be accur. & fast Exper. or college. call C 1 c n 1 e 4 9 2-0646 A·I Carpen1er , oo job too small. Prof C.r~t Cleenlnn 847-57M typl t O t t · 546-3000. Ex....,rienced. 1',ull Time * MANAGEMENT 01''FICE Hcdp, lite bkkpng _& 831: .. "1'2 . · r-• 8 · ppor. O apera e in ,.~ typin•. Mu.st have Calli. · · Also windows & noor care. COLLEGE Student need11 house computer after a few DENTAL Receplionist, ex-* OPPORTUNITY Call Dutch 537-1508 pftime Mon-Fri. Ge n'! ofc, months. Sa I a r y com. per. :fronl dL'tik. :r1timc. Apply ln Pel'son 11 y0u are cuITently licensed, drivers He. 9 ain·5 pm. 443 Restaurant keypunch & retail ex:per. mensurate w/exper. <714) Call 962-1343. either ""rmanent' or temp-W. Bay St, CM. 645-5940. A FUN PLACE CLEANfNG H°""'' · A""'t-••• "11 aft 1.2 ~ '"" L "--· · HOCHMAN'S ~ OFFICE" N .. --LVN or CaJI Gordon, 53()....345.1 • C•rpet ,Service JOHN'S Carpet & Upholstery Dri.shampoo free Scotch- guard (Soil Retardants). Degreuers & all color brigbtenen & 10 minute bleach for white carpc(JI;. Save )'Ollr money by savinK ments. Good Referenoeti. I ;~:;:;;;w~""-i=c-'=,,.-,== I '"=~;:::;·------DENT A """'"""ptiorust, • ora.ry to sell life and health ........ O Call after 6 PM. 642-2958. MEDICAL ahistanl trained, Bookkeeper !a1ature, E.'Xp'd. Salaty open. DELICATESSEN & insurance, il v.·ill pay you medical assiltanL Starting TO W RK DAY Work General Cleaning assist you In back office A UTO!\t OTJVE BOOK-546-2448: l::n.4:30 only. RESTA.URANT to aruwer this add. ~$500 nw. Moll-Fri. R I I b 1 lion patient care, some !ron1. KEEPER * LEADS ~='~· ==~~-~1 e a e transport& 492-6360. Wl!h R E Y N 0 L D S & Department Store 428 E. 171h Slrt!el No need 10 knock on doors. OPERATORS, single needle 543-7006 REYNOLDS experience. J. W. Robinson C::osta t-.1esa \re offer tree leads daily, overlock. Zipperacttei-. 1'op 'J/ie Reuben WINDOW CLEANING HelpWAnted,M&"F.710 Contact MARIAN PAR-Equal Oppor. Employer 1op commissions, vested re-pay, exper. onJy. RoU's Ask for Gle.n 24 hrs 494--0737 RISH. DUNTON FORD, newals and a chance to in-M1g., ~ Production Pl, G. ofee me txtra lt'ips. Will cl~an 1 _l_n_co_m=e_T_•_•=-==-Jlv!ng nn., dining m 1. & hall $15. Any rm. $7.50, couch $10. Chair $3. 15 yrs. eltP· la what counts, not method. I do '\'Ork myseU. Good ref. 531--0101. Cement, Concrete PATIOS-~LANTERS All Concrete work. Brick, slump.stone v.·k. 894-3533. Brick-Block-Stone "1:Hl'l66 : CUSTO M CEMENT WORK Drives, WALKS, patios. Pool ~b. 'Don. 642-8514. $4. min. Open 9 AM-8 PM 438 N. El Camino Real San Clemente, 492....6766 Janitorial • JEFF'S CLEANING SERVICE. RE..sIDENTIAL, COID.1ERClAL. 646--6384.. Mesonry REPAIRS, planters, brick. block, Slone. Quality "A'Ork. Ken, Ph. resld. 642-1710. Painting & Peperhonglng 'CUSTOM PAINTING ADVERTISING SALES 2240 S. Main, Santa Ana. • .. ~~wgi~~:a~~r HOSTESS c1'<'as<' your inco me immed-"N~Be:·--------1 Former Yellow Page or mag-Bookkeeper Apply In Person, morns iately. Advancement polen- azinc space exper. Male or Statistical Analysis PBX Alley West tial wtth all con1pany bene-PART TIME female. Comm. only. UlO-F/C Bookkeeper, math ori-2106 \V. o~anfront, NB lits, including retirement COUNTER GIRL S300 wkly avg. Call for appt. enled, lots of calculations, HOSTESS MATURE plan available. \Ve have a Over 2t. Apply In person f346.05.36 • complete life and accident only alter 2 pn1. Deli Shel, · stat lyping & ten key add. I/time. 644-2459 bef. noon and health kit, including deli"ate•••n R 0 •-t a urant. Pleasant office. Nice boss. Expcr. 552 ~tultiple 1 h' • -NB 675-355 P1time Including Sats ~l 0 USE KEEPER -dental and ranc lse group; Brookhut1'1. & Ada.ms, Hunl- . · l. i\lso Mon &: Fri Nites C.M. area, pa.11 time. P.1on. also l{uaranteed issued tile inglon Betl.ch near Sav-On BOYS & GIRLS thru Fri. No nights. Must policy, ages SO.Ill plull Druglll. Wanted for Newspaper routes Apply in person J(}..5 pm have b'Ood ref's. call healtl1 policies that cover p "-h 1 _._,. _ __. & in Corona del Mar Atta. #:.! Fasnion Isl., NB 549-0507 4 pm-8 pm. most pre-existing oonditions IJ..,,.e e P w;uvo•fli Call Daily Pilot 642-C21.. Eq 1 0 E I to all ages. lf you are dis-picking up care. Musi have . Keith Crofts , ua ppor. mp ayer HOUSEKEEPER, Lido Isle. salis!ied, dl1ll lusloned, eag. drivera lie. Apply 1643 (5) half days. Local re!s. er Ol' just cw·ious, please PlaccnUa, Ot F.qu.al oir BOY,.S. after school & Sats.. DISPLAY $50 wk. 673-9189. call 497.J:i45 fo r appoint-pOrtunlty employer. _ p/t1me. Hand bills. Pizza CABINET BUILDER Housekeeper, f /time nient. fen1ale agcn!s in-Personnel Man, 642-9452 aft 4 pm l\1io. 1 year exp. in display for Conv. Hasp. 549-3061 vited. Counsellor Trainff BOYS, after school & Sais., building. Able lO take job IMMED. Openings for 1(}-15 MANAGER, mature female U you're aggressive, <'tl-p/ll~. fland bills, Pizza !rotn start to lilililh. p -" _, w · lh"••·•ti" & want to make BOOKKEEPER (Part-Timrl ALSO HOSTESS & KITCHEN HELP Apply 3.5 daily PAnos. walk.II, drives. Saw. ' bri!ak, remove &. replace cono-ete. ~ lor est. """"' c.,.. lnter/Exler. Unfum. inter. spee. price. Free color con- IUl.ting It: est. Lie. Ins. Y.'on't be underbid. ~. • Opposite Orange County Airport HOSTESS·~ Man, 642-9452 aft 4 pm r, a ni \Ji a r with all ladies fuU or p/tim.e. """ want~. omens SWJmwear. ...... ....... ,,.. oodv.wkil"'" machinery. wkly. Earn xtra money or Apply 390 E. 17th St., CM . money, advance , an your ISi E. Coast Hwy. Bus Boy Needed Top w,.es~ Appointment stan a perm. career. For 548-ii601. merit, v.'Ork w/people 'A"e N rt •-ch Apply. In Penoo, moms n 4: 546-9601. lntervw call, 892-5333 or MAN wanted to leam 118• will train you for a position ewpo D9A Exper. prefd. 000 GROOMER -~-~7826. . . . ~iooery businl'llS. Plea¥J1t ~ ::;"'~=~ ~t~ Equal Oppor. Employer Chl,ld Care -. No WaAtlng * WALLPAPER * Alley West Restaurant perienced only need apply. INSPECI'OR-Pre c 1 . .1 ton ll(Ork, full time. Beach Sta-& evaluating potential RESTAURANT n06 W. Oceanfront, NB U3 Broadway CM No parts & rotary switches. tioOC'n Inc., 1807 Newport emplayeea !or local nat"l & BUS MEN Wanted. Prefer COSTA Mesa Pre--School \Vhen you call "Mac" comer 18th l Monrovia, CM 548-l444 646-lTil Open 6:30-6. Ages 2-6. Plan- ned program, He'd. 642-4050, PAINTING & PAPERING, Eves 833--5237. 20 yrs. In Harbor area. Lie Ir bonded. Ref's furn. LICENSED, good ref., hot 00-2:356 mealB, lots of attention. 1 ~~=~· ------968-0887. PROF. Painter, honest work, WANT. ED reas, lic'd / ins. Int I ext. 1ree est. Refs. 548-27"":'9. Baby&ltting. Tender Loving Care. My home nights. Re. , liable. lnlant • 2 yrs. S.A. 543-3691. PROF. Painting, also l"OOfs, acoou!. ceil. inter/exter. Lie/Ins. Free est. 64.i-5191. EXT SPECIAL $199 (Gourmet Dining Room) Apply In Person 1.8700 MacArthur Blvd. Irvine, Calif. Equal Oppor. Employer ANCIENT MARINER BUSY Medical 0 ff Ice , Insurance biller for in· temist. Exp. in Meda~ & Meda-Cal, private I Blue Cross. Back office helpful. Also receptionist. Exp. anly. Hadley System.. ( 2 l 3 ) 94J..Wl, CAFETERIA PERSONNEL Short order, cashiering & gen'! setup & service. Ex- per. only nttd apply. 833-8691. phone CB.list ' • • Cole In~trumenl Corp, :Ml4 Blvd, C.M. lnt'I companies. Call Pat over 21. See Mia McLeod PlacentIB, C.M. 642-8080 MAN wllh a u t o m o t i v e Bel'8.ll, 833-3700, Dc1mls & after 4. DRAFTSMAf'.f · Equal Opportu niry Employer knowledge to work part 0ennl.1 Penonnel Agency o! BEN BROWN'S Some exp Jle(eual'y. Cabinet tlm lla -4pm Irvin 2082 Mlchelaon D &8&Cmbiy drawings and ~ e3:;oo ~arbo; Blvd. e, r. RESTAURANT furniture drawings. Musi al MacArthur PET LOVERS lll06 S. C08.st Hwy. see portfolio and/or ID\m...tE DCDC'""""-n...IC1 South J,.aguna. t ••polntment (114) 1r-.v11...-rLJ\.}\Jl'fl'fLL ~tARKET resear c h in· :!:' "L" "I' c1:mnr5~.-.rc~V"'V terviewen nc'l!ded Na 1ell I need 5 people who love pell RESTAUR.\NT Bookkeeper ,,_... ~"-·~~ 1 Ing. Exp'd. Pie.Ille ca1i to h<'ll> me in my buainess. ~·anted, 5 days wk. ~Y In Exec. Sec'y P.1ktng Sec'y/Bookkeeper RecepuTypl.st Acctng CJ.rk1 Walnut General Office Exec. Sec'y, G. Mgr l'50 l'50 $500 $550 $450 Fee & .free Position! 213/55&='1234 lull or part lime. For pet· person all 2 pm, The Five Exec. Secretary lo $675 SS S 11>nal lntervieoN call 892-!!006 Crowns Restaurant, ~l E. Bkkpr/Girl .Friday to $650 MA EU E ' Coast HW)', CdM. No phOnl! Genii Ins. Clerk to SSSO \Viii Train · · · · · · · · • · 645-0860 PIZZA MAN wan~ full calls accepted. S.C'y, llil< ''" IO $500 MATURE LADY '""'· Apply at Tino" 30242 N'S ~pl/Typist to $500 Crown Vall:?,' Parkway, R DAY Care, infants to 3 yn, $18 p4!:r waik. cau 646-5788 or M>4302. , Contr•ctor 3 Br. Lie/Ins. 776-6788 PAPERHANGERS Reduced rates for the off SCll.!l(ln. 9-5, 646-2449. Now Hiring CARPENTER Foreman, W. F IC Bookkeeper Construction C.o. Do not Secretaries "oontact San Jose or Seattle Denial, Girl Fri to $700 $150 $550 to $700 $500 1425 Reoepl/10 k•y add'1' to $450 BOOKKEEPER Lag"'a NI""' ' OR-F/llme """'"''""--Jr. Dralt1man/Clrk $433 W d r II ch book PLUMBING t & heating Of\4-ll RN & 7-3 Tech. Bookkeper to $625 e nee a u ara:e · rc..ipalnnan. 0 n l y ex-ICU-3-ll &: ll-7 RN & LVN ROOM ADDITIONS EXPER. painter, Exter and DISHWASHERS office. (408) 722-5914. Recept , Garden G. -==-'c"'A"'s'--H"'1'--E"R"'s~-l,.c1erk. Typist lnvep1ory Contrl to $450 keeper ID work In our New-. pericnce need apply in per-(Full Time & Pill.me) 488 E. 17th (al lrvineJ CM port Center OH!ce. You will eon. R e ff! re n c es, 7793 lnMrvlce Director PATIOS Inter. Jreas. rates. Call l>ick, 968-4Cli5 eves. , Financing 894-3533 .C-,=-"'"°=-"c-7-'--=---c--p1es.t er, Petch, R9f'alr JAQ( Taulane -Repair Daytime. Age 18-21 642,..1470 '!ave to be fully~x~enced _w e s t.m l.n.a tu Ave., Pactftca lloapltal, 181'92 & ible lo take lull C!Wie W~tmin.ller. Delawlln!, H.B. ~ of our books. Pleasant work-POSITION open 1/20/73 !or Call 842-0611, ext 225 Ing cond!Uons & usual bcne-• han1c NEWP9RT Full/p/time P'JSitions. Gd Personnel" Ae•ncy pay. Growth co. 5 Loca· O N B remod., addlt. ~ yrs. exp. * PATCH PLAST'ERING Apply. In Person 3 pm-3 pm, Mon-Fri 2607 W. Coa..sl Hwy. uons. METRO CAR WASH, 133 Dover. r., •• 2950 Harbor Bfvd, CM. 642-3170 JANITORS fill. Salary $475/mo to atart. scrv. Ital.ion rnec · RN Supeiviaor for small Pl ly .. M, Must know brakes It. ~ ho1ne in beach ans. ease do not app · ..,uess alignment Have awn hand Cat <· .• ., -foe appl yoo are fl.Illy experienced. & -"'"-'"-'-'-'~"'-,~'":;-;;:;,;'!"':.I Please phone Joan at ~ pdToea~:~~~ply SALES CAREER Full Time 5 Aht·l:30 PM CLERK Pel'90nable Receptlonist tor EXP1Q MOLDERS We'd. My Way Co. 547~. AU type!. Free estimates ! AddlUons Remodeling call ~ Gerwick & Son, Llc'd Plumbing Newport Beach 646-0201 673-«141 • 5'19--2170 -==.:....=--- busy t'Onsti;uctklh firin. ~ W. 17th Street. 53.lfrOO) for appointment. Chevron Stat. rot So. Coaat Be )'Our own boss. S850 MATU'RE lady part time to 'Hwy, Lq:. Bch. gulll'llnleed lo slJu't. Free bathe Invalid &: do a Jew POWER Sewing Maclt. ()pD. training In multiple line ln- househo.ld chorl:'a, 54&-5580 Exper pref'd Good pay & sunlnce while you w'Otk cur· MODELS wanled, part time steady' work. l 7 3 3 . R rent job. Call Mr. Weuo.n. Drafting PUMBlNG REPAIR No job too small * • 642-3128 * A/Payeble $500 Typing & Ille bOOkka!ping. Costa Mesa. &12--0542. Good Salary for sharp Equal Opportunity Employer Apply Personnel 3rd Fir, Daily 2 PM-4 PM I PLANS-Houses, Re m o d , Room Additions. $50 up. Fee Paid penion. Nice allice in Locaf M nut k FIBERGLASS Hand a · see s Irvine. Hrs s-5 weekdays. S57..oo25 557-9695 personable Ind.Iv. for super Call Miu J ones for appt Lamlnators, piece work, DRAINS unclogged • $7.50 spot In acctng dept. Great attemoons 557_753.1 Helmet mlg. iwpty 1777 Sewer line to 100' . $15. benefits &: l e r r i f i c ;iiiiiiiiiii.iiioiiii'-iiii.., _P;;"'~"'~ntla~,;.CMii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;; evc.11. WU! train. Call Monrovia. CM. ~7447. or ~~I·1989Stu Booth, 542·2S:l'i Newport Beach or ,,.n- BROADWAY * 549-2502 • co-workers in lhis friendly ...-~ , PROFESSIONAL Gardener. Sewing/Alterati?n• ~~ ~bb~ee ~'. Coco's Gardening •.,N~o~, ~4~1 ~··~""'::K>~n ~1"""";:;:,..,\•ii5.19-<4•;;"0...,. ............ ,, PRESS OPERATORS SALES peo~le wanted tor TV • File Clerk Women to work for plastic Direct Sale1 work. Good JOBS * molding plants. SfG.3310. pay, 1'1exlble hra, NewpQrt URGENTLY NEEDED 1n PR~EN 1290W, Hamada or bl BellCh otOce. • Seerctarle1 700, 11ek. Manage small Teleprompter-An equal op. e Keypunch Operatort OOn llhop. 541H681. portunity employer. Call tree,. work, pruning, Alteratlons-642-5845 Dennis &: Dennil Personnel spdrik)ers, cleahup jobs, Neat, accur-dte. 20 years exp. Agency.,-n°L, Irvine, a:l82 . • Clerk Typist LAGUNA Kl L LS laMIC&plni. G e Or g e , I _:M~khe'='l'""'-"u~·===- 64&-5893. -Signs ARCHITECTURAL 1 GARDENING servlcr; co111-INCREASE business with 1. MODEL BUILDER plete clean.up work by ex· magnet. Magnetic Signs $10 M.!n. J year el{IJ. Must be Hes lmmtdiate Opening For 1 p er I enc e d, r e Ii ab 1 e to $25 11 pair. ~2449. lll'Bt In work. Will be dong gardener. F"ree estimate'! all types of scale model1, DAYTIME IUSBOY & DISHWASHER 963-1072 or 968-0832. Television Rep•lr plot plarul, graphics & 1 EXP. Hawaiian Gardener. KEY TV Service all prlcell. dlsplaya. Must &ee slimples. l Compl@te garden serv. N Appointment TI4: 546-960L Quott!d in advance. o 1 Kamalanl, 6 4 6 -4 6 7 6 , I ricks or gimmicks. Call for ASSEMBLER&Gmwth op- 642-133?. tst.imale 549-198), portunlty for person with "Weed It & Reap'' ===-=~~---1 strong mechanical aptitude. Apply In Penon 24001 Ave. De LaCa'rUota Laguna HJllR Frol't(, tre uura to trash ~T.::11.;ce=-=====-I Assembly & shop exp. re. turn them into cash CERAMIC TILE NEW &: quired. Cale Instrument 1 CALL DAILY P!LO'l' remodel. F"ree at. Small Corp. 2034 Placentia. C.M. CLASSJnED .•.•••. 6f2..5678 jobll welcome. 536-2426. Equal'42-80S00p._•nlty Em~--· (Al the El Toro Of( ramp, s.o. rreewayl Trader's Paradise lines times dollars r ...,..... .,...,.r .. • C,O.O. Messengers ASSEMBLY i. lnapecllon. Full or p/tlme. ~fake up to Small electronics parts. Will w ~· Must be neal. Must train. Good conds It. hive car. Am1ly '19M Weit· bene.tttJ. 642-l!TI. mlnater, Suite e. \\festm. Aaslst•nt Manaftr Or c1d1 897-5309. Womens 1.pp&.rel . Need tor COU..rertoNS i Assistant our So. Cout P18.ia store. Bookkeeper w/good AIR Ir; MU.It have solid aa1CI expu. coUecUon backuound. Min ! Pleue write \nfonMI f.5 yn exper. N.n. linancial reeume to Hubbub, 2241 No. orgMtuOon. x1n11 co. ol- Orana:e Mall, Orange. Ca. (ct1.11g oppor. for ad· 92665. Attn: Prealdent. vanct.ment. 644-4360. ASOOClATE or partner, full COOK ((ry}, exp'd only. All or p/Ume to manage small ahlfts. Start S 2 , 5 0 I h r . Real "Eat.ate otc In N.a Ola.nee for advancement. HVR. 979-525l. Tut Cott.qe Coffee Shop, ORANGE Co. Sii""""° ARROWHEAO Chat.i, AVON CALLING! "2W.l9thS/.,C.M. ranch • acrcaae. Ideal ayn-Hemet Unll1, S Dk!ro 1cn, To help wUh tboee after·the-OOOKS, Udme, 1 yr exper. kaUon, church &?I, ecol· Btv JUs vu k>t, for tae boat, holldays~U A 1plendld $4504525. Park Lido COftll. 00 ,,oup. eon.i'd exec hm, lnc, mtr hm or t Box 6341, ellmln& unity in )'Our HO!J! .. 466 naphip. N.S. ~. ~l or T. 83M651 . 58.n Dleeo 9210$1 22'2-2923. Own nclsb • COUNTER Girl , boon 10 to n 2 A-'"'lni:1 lots, In San ~ 1 T, s days per wk. Mr. BeRt n ... 30' • 5th wheel trlr. ' ...,., Cleaners 2939 E Caast ChC!'V. l ·T. !ruck. Powtt Jaclnto R· , -Clear, Valut VliC&DCltl COit money! Rent • · plant ,. dtluxe ~1~1 Jlkt! J.. $71XKJ. Want to trade far )'OU!' Mute apt,, 11cn Hwy, O>rol\I d4!:l M.ar. ::..!~~~~~for :-:x. ~Mesa. No ~\J~frS:U~~l=· ~~:1'Ptio\"~:!i l~, .. ~ .. v .............................. ,, now!CaU~Now! ~Ad.;:::.~60-"1L::;,,::::: ___ ~ ,, 1 ' • Sr. Typist • Tech. Typist • Repro Typist • Accnt Clerks • lookkHp.n & • Secretaries VOLT lnstent Personnel Temporary Service 3848 Camtu1 Or., Suite 106 Newport Beach 54647tl Equal Oppor. Employer • Solderers/wire wrap 642-~,,,,_. --=-~-~?nll~ing Clerk Typls~50 Rt Reel Ettete Sales SALES Cosmetics Industry. Anaheim !.3.).232'.l a 'er FREE Can you work with wnmeh. NEVER A FEE AT Tt::W'O h 1 C.ammluion aale1. Tralnl.ng Temp Temporary Help . posiUon11 avallabll'. For J LI M We •r• now eccephng LlcenH Tralnlnt pt'"nonal lntervlew call !\t r ~°f:r.~~ght ~>tin. ~ •pplicetlon1 for Ljmlted Tlme Only .. 1lng •I 544-..1000. hr. wk. Xlnt Cmnpany ~n-Fa.nJOWI l1c<!lllit! lwnle uow Sec'y Exec. tp $10,IOO elits. Paid fltedlcal, Ufe, Part-Time ii.v1ulao1c Ulru Tarbell Cotn· Right hand to busy exec, 1't Uniform!, Cred,lt Union, e1c. pau,y. AppUcant1 fUlty f\" M~ aomeon... v.1 ... 1-...i DAILY PILOT BUSBOYS iruburlil."1 ulll)l111uu.Uf~lion. ctw'ge altitude. Fabulous New 01· l!>;pcr1ei11.'<'d lall'IS bendltl off'r«I b)' thi.I Wot~ All< for l..&ny Miller people. Opcnlugs 11v11lla.We. derful ro. Call Kim Clatk, • &«2-4321 • U>niplete 1ralning progran1. !U,3-2700, Dennis & IXnnls JUNIOR $8.Jesmen: 10-15. Aho 1'~ulW't 1nW'IQM:ctne11t -Opl,IOr· ~tlOnnel J.aeocy ot kvlne, ..,...,...~~-~!-~!-~-~ .. -'.''!••I Earn $3).$40 per week aet· · lunlUe1. Call lrtr. S1o1:m nt 3)82 Mlcht.-'laon Dr. ' FI~:-exp Ung new customm for tiltt HOSTESS W-Molll. SECRETARIES General facttiry hdp. Apply DAILY PILOT. This ls not a TARBELL San I firm require• Fcnwtck Products, 14799 ncw9p8per route and does Over n xt~t" t:p'l:ts a;;ll 1' part t!fnt, CW?atm.11 st. Wt!Stminster. not lnclude colltct~ or REAL TORS leJC•I exp . mt ~- FOREMAN F1betglass. ex· delivering. Transport•! n l! Plt11.1e Apply ,,.,--,-,-.:,;c~::;,=.:.:::_--1 J\rrsr A 1 h o r 1 b • n d Gd Gd •---~· We W'Ork four Betwn g l. ll am A 2 l 5 pm fU:.AL J.:SrATE • <'--ln>ble. Pleue trnd ri:i. pay, iuiw~. fter __..._, and 8 on S L•-•"EN un... ~ "'"" t M nu! A~ I ,,,...,...,, A w,.. -"'"'" not w.,." ~•urne n,nd .Wary re-me a · · Y .............. ,\Ye have o'""'n•-·-~" u_........... In •-hot If Box .__...... n-.o. • .-.-W .,,.,..,ua,r ..-.. .,~ .uMM .1114lJU . .,,..., i..., ttst tlrt'S un· quln!mcntl 10 P. 0 . • ••-• r.,,........,..,, · · tor Vounlaln Valley 4 South IA-• •--0 C A-rt) I Bcnch!F l _,,,._ 18th St. Cl\1 llunttl'Jflton BePch areu on· ..... v ... uuu1 ~-· .. .,... I n ll lo n ow1 atn 1382 Sant& Ana :iw•-:;" FOSTER'S Freeze. woman ly. You must be out ol Newport ocach , Valley and let Ill In.In )'OU! sEcRF:r-ARY DOOkkttper ,_, by 3 PM t 0 Eqoal Oppor t----.i...;.tr Cllll Phil Mc N a m f! e , l "'·J 11-1 • 0 0 4• p/tlme. Apply, 89!J W. 19th. ICrQN • """"r".T VILLAGt:; REAL ESTATE ... o ce\ • Collta Mesa. • pru1Jclpo1e. ExperienceJ -~ ' soen!tarlal 1kll s, book· FRY COOK boy1_. lfiven pr lo r It .Y . ~-"ed tmm-"lnlt'-· 96l-4471. ketplnc thn1 P&l.., able to 9(;8..964L ,,o:o:u ..... , v R. E. TRAINEE v.""Ot'k •:lthoul 1uperv1sion, Over 21. Most be clMn A TDllNE£ n. t. Broker A· Oitveloper, aood lfl.lal')' to "ria:l'll" a~ neJt. Apply ln perton, &.irf KEYPUNCH IM will train It sporuJOr tor pllcant. ean 494-T&lJ • S/rlolo, '930 w. Cout OPERATOR lffEMBL£RS ""'"'"'Cati betwn 10 am A taruna Jlee<:h. ' H•~ .• N.B. CITY OF IW.J 3 pm, 545-ll24. e ~· variety tn ml rav COOK, EJCPER. NEWPORT BEACH RECEl'TlONtSr-Ofc Mar • Ct•X°~ta to $lllt e BLUE DOLPHIN e 2nd Shift t• pm·U:·30 am) LDnc Term AJtlJftments wanfed, cAl'ffr op fbr lha.tp, e St>c'y, Spanish $100 3355 Via Udo, N.8. S3.33 Per !lour HoUdJ)I tJLTlkln Pa.y ~:lee.~~ &In~~~ of~ * 1 QOO/o FREE * FIJLt. or J>Ar1 Ume work lor Temporary pi)sltion until mgmt ol olc, peioplt! i. Li:c R4indtt'1 Aaency .,'OOd worlwn, Fumllu~ June 30th, 197l. R.eq's 6 ln1tent Personnel money. Laguna NllOf!I, • .c.'IO) Campus Or. mUJ mth. Spr~ palnlera, mo'J1 upcr on mM 026. T.:mporary St:rvict ~. M641tl Newport BMch 11ndr.rt. ~11.tneH, Mal\I~ Contart Perw1nf'I Otflcl!, 38i8 Camp!.11 J)r., Suite 106 ntCfFnoNIST...L,\li = lt'• 11. l;fte1t, •ll .YOUt iftm1 ""'" A "°""" tlt.olnd. Afll' 13()0 No•pc"t--Blvd. Nrw· NIOWJIO!t •ll<>cll • l<f>4741 Typbtf ~---.. 'rlltll l!tile, bit Doll> Piiot no barrltt. Heir Wood, tm Pon 'ae11.ch. Calif. ~l. Equal Oppnr. E?mplo)'ir ·~ ,,.,.,,.___,. CWaUitd. f0.1111. PlaC4'!1tl• ~,.._ Col!1 M•aa .;!~m!!ii ... !!!!!!!!!!!!!l ...... _ .................. I .. • • • . ·~· , • 0 DAil Y PILOT l[Il]~I _Drolo_-__.lllll ~I ~....-~-·:;!~~-~=~~~-~1 ~1~·~ ... ~ .... ~,···~··=~l ........... l ~l ..__ llill. -. ..... , Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wenled. M & I' llO f..,mture. '110 111 ~ l!'f! 1S4 C°?,i.., • Vam ; SECRETARY . ....,,. .,,.,.. * TRAINEE * ~ AUC N * . OBEDIENC!l clUI IP ..... • ...... T-~•-~I'" tor ·~ Pt--•· 111 r< w~ , .. 1 30 I ' '61 CHIV. V =·~ v u~ ~ anufacturlnc Traln-FRIDA'/: :30 P.M. -· .... ~. : pm, • . llCYct1s-~· VI,·-( I /~ rla:hl lnd!v Uf.l. t alrl ,OI· ffS tor Lll.1UP .tr MoJdi.n.i. 4 ' tbt "~ Beach/lrvlne Dl .... -t-'.I tlco. Pl"5h w or kl n • day,. <O hr. •"'1< ....... JA ARY 19 Coii•1 bey ..,,, <.no unW ....._ Doe• lo all -°""' ~ Sbot> ...., out of ONL y; $· 695 beneftll. Individual _.., r--~· • Drlw QMttt. Dlvahll wtlcometOattmcttrt.,work COii .... _:""-•~u.,, .. mUlt to' V'ft' ....... racWtM!s A all com,pany pay A ..... .., in ..........,. Edler Jn Bedroom •ta. >Qt1t1 91 )'OU can Pl.lYI Noa-~ a mo. old. MH921. ~~ti '*' over H-wApooRO~L~urolel telt'l'ted MUsr ~ &.I.I = ~ -trol OoYf', & seat•, Ve1vet ..,.,.. J'ot tnforrnatSon DOG SdlaQl_ lMll'ucdon New l7'12 e.aCh Blvd HA Ne S.ach of the follovdrlJ{ noqulaHea. F\lmlture ln Ftve Chalni, Coif~ tabl~. OHn. Coo.tact:. Tom Dtetedcb 0..-•W'tllw Tu e• (ntar Sl&'er), " MacArtl'lurBIYd•Jamboree AU ractlvt, "'ell voon1ed, Typl1t/Proofrea•r Models for Sale, modta,.eolot1TV'a. f'renth 6Q.21S1 9:.,...l0:30ani, w~ 'i?:.' *'em IU-0555 good .secretarial akiUs. Part/tune. Gd. spCIUl.n,g ~n. Cash and Carry Prov. Ste~1 .. i,..amP1~~ Coeat Mut.k:: Service :.C =~~~Un-e ~~ :00 •n OODGE " TON VAN rdlable, age 2l-35. PO!illk»i Apply In pel'liOll, ~111iy· lutt!I, no::•1-.. 1, ~wn-, NfWJIOl't Blvd. •l Harbor H R~"61 l<AWASAKl 1!Jll DIRT V8, 1&utomtllc 1peclal paint. nvall. 1/29. Otttce1 locared .!ill.Vl'r, 15'5 NCWJ!Prt Blvd., F'Ntttrt. Wulten. J Of.flee Coata-14.esL .,... ·~ Bl.KE." WO. ._ (X:ST$>1) $2W9 DAYE ROSS ~,,f,."'::;;_N[.ti1i:.,';:;, '::;; ;i'ii'M;;.:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, / OIRECTIONS: Culver to Campus, East lo =-& lll1lCll +PIANOS.-oRGANS EXCE~LINT BUYI ......,. l'ON'tlAC. 3lllO _ lla<bor """''"' ,,,,,.1 •pply . URGENTLY TurUe Rock ; Follow signs to Broadmoor WINDfS AUCTION "GcitneOutForB"'lneol Cfntle 001 oplrlted Soml~Mol<lrH'OIMI ~11~~·~~11 11HJ>-IIOO. ll'.lodels. Be'1 QUtlllty -prlceo • ..... Cllt"l'l•r • ti'eon>b<ed ....... Sahl}ltem 940 'IT llODGE Van. V8/!1ll Sec'y Exec. $700 NEEDED ""!"""!'"'"' ___ '!!!!I ' • -~-.... T>clt 6 Siddle . btc:J-Fee Paid i!p!f mltvte . llO CO~fE BROWSE AROUND P1l.1a' ~ A Ro1b Ca'll -..nt «' ........ 27' TR.AVCO auto. W~, CUICD;m Fabulous ro. 5eeks 5Upcr ·~ P•ckqlng l[fi] " 201'$~ N~wport Blvd. • Rtntala • •• •••• We ~-sen BOAJU)Ef).Top location. $85. '~· Dl9COVERER int.a". Nw ,,......_ ~~ braket. shi!.rp inrliv. for fascinating e Lite lndustrl•I DUNCAN Phy& din •t. 111• &hind 'l'oft¥ I Bid&. Mat la. D&lb' lG-8 Sun 12-0 llln1 Acacia. Santa Ana Zl -22' CONTINENTALS Sim' fat w..::11. AWl. eood. spot. Must be good No exper. ~ Immed ·-~-~ii:\ t5qUe dln nn tixtutt ccmtr Colta M.. * ~ FIELD'S PlANOS Hatt. ""430'l orMHW.6 21' PRJDE A JOYS · 6&-123A orga.nittr & very attractlVf'. \l!'C)f'k avail. Irvinr. S.A. I ch1nl cabinet i.aae. deak. Fair Wutber Friends Colla Me.a (11C) S6-3ZO amJ)S H\mter Pro tn.iMd Vf.N <X>NVERSI::>NS Autos W1nted 968 Brautif\11 llX'. & oft'. Call C.M. Xln't hrly rate. Top · , 71 Vtctorian cb&bl, Span JO· Anybocl)i can ht fntndly KtMIWoLl. ESectrtmlc Orau VfltY pnU. A~ :&let • Strvtc. • Reotab Pru Prenllu, 833-2700. Also woric:ing condiOOM. Help Wanted, M a O Boy, maple BR et, cedar whto you are alYina them wtC ,-Deaon.6vt 11000 ~' * DalllDOr Inc. * FM" Jobe. Dennis & Dennis NO FEE EVER WHO \\'ANTS TO WOltKf chl-5t, 2 TV't, mllC bull'*'-But vol~ a com. Mediten ... an with tt.i 1380! Harbor Blvd. o G ~nncl Agent\)' of Ir.into, Con1f' In ! ft.tcjsCer NOIA· DRIVE A CAB! decorator pcs. 4.18 16th Pl. plaint • and t:haf1 t.nochtr Turquoise 11\&lld on both , ~ 531.QIOO ' ' ' REWARD 2082 Mlcht'lson {)r. r J OIOOSE )"OUr hours, "'11: CM. mat\tr. PoUt~ dlamlvtt aides. 2 full k/bda. 1 yr, I .. --](·JP) NeJCt 10 G.c. DtlRlll S.cret•ry $500fym =-~=~ r:u.~uOr~= ~ M.:tV~aotav&c~~ ~1 .. ~,to:::: :Ji 'ii~cor:· ~tt = ............ Y. mi E>ctcullve ... Pmcd WILL PA¥ ova Sh '°· '°"" '>'Ping. PR. _ _ be "'~'~ handkapped. ,.w.i playor. 'Misc. See oometlmet. At AL'S CAR· 531--ti!T al1u 5 and all day coodltlon. Redlal ~tires. KeUy II" look Lo...'al ....... Call Lorrrune V•• t •~ 21 lo ~ p •-t "-""·-All Extrul Better -" \\'t'sl<iiU ..... re I 6'6"' jy. bet. 10 AM • 5 PM Jan 19, ET, we like to be friendl --... ._.... ... ... Gener11 900 OJDdition m 500. 64fo.Uii For la ... medel, clNtt, P<'rsonl1('1 Aa:en\y \\'AITER or waitress (aize =ernent your tnoome. a>• 2L 4'25 Sandbw'& Wq with ou.r cwitomtrt,, tven *PIAMOS*6RGAN$* evw or fn..163s <l.Qa. low mll.... clomea- ,.;,1 1-:. Edinger. s.A. S-UJ. Lunch & dinnl'r, ex· 'tla.Y.>e a~&~ or;::: lrvine • In .... ~ weather." 11 Hammond! Wurilmr man,y 16 Ft. l.obettr aJdtt wl1972 R~ A U..-1t-.-u--~ tics Imports trucks or ~Mark Ill Ct>nter) per only. 23700 Oubboule YeUOw Cab ·eo., 186 E . i&b 56HJ54 M+-D ~thlr1' wron&:! Tell \ll! otben. .llnua.t)' clMnnce $5 MP Mft'CW')I. 1J V. e~ .,..,, ......,.. ~ ' ' S42-1836 Dr. Laguna Niguel. St., Costa 1'1esa. 6 Natural Teak Clptatn We II make tt J"laht. without on now! The beat deal.I are ~ Julltr. $ln> firm. for your Vec•t'°" . eamper1. , SECRE'l'ARY. f/lin\e, lln \VAJTRESS. exp req. Over Wonl&n to alt ln m,y home 4 cbalrl. Brand nerw lipeeial a llghAL•s CARPET aJwa.va .a,t , t 5 pm. * ""'4301 * can MY£uk RflirOS$B1t1er 8:3().5pm. sh, typing & 21, 1'11!5bll "?pl ... ~ .... ~ hn/dt)I, Mon-Fr\, l ·,9llkl =~ .. ~~ ..... ~ ... ·~-•-Ru'o WORKS w.Uichs Music City &o.ts/~rlne .. WINNEBAGO ... u contained phone, Salaty open. Contact n.>spon!!i "· "P Y '-"" .-a &£e 1. Co.ta Mea, mesa A Elden c:i1 Ms-00. ... .w ""~S.· Main' St ,___ Sooth C.out Plua M)..2830 !aul"' to4 lU¥UI')' unit ·tor rent by day TIA ~""• f'ox """ =~:i pin, Van De Kamps 3009 So Verde atta. References. · MN .. .., .... ..,., -• ~ -k or month ...... , ·-• PON C UI'"" . """"""'. Bristol, Costa Mesa After 6 pm MG-<l'm BED &. Stereo. comer .et 54:2-&tOO • 543-9909 HAMMOND M.~lll -wm t~ LATE nu>del ifi:BY marine ;;u ~ atter r2pmv.~-SE'.\tl wnbtllatory mKldle /•-•bn _ .. ,_ -,.._11 party that ..,,_based •L.1-. .....,.,_ ll80 I -age woman lll'eds helper. \\'AlTRDS, ex:per, over 21. WORK at home-phone sales. ":..~ •awu, ..... .,._. OWNER n1Ult ucrillce. Palr organ from R.-V~ ... pl u-e,..,.o<;, . • compete Trallen Tr•vel 945 l.ivl' in or out. s..MJ...-0779 Apply in person alter Hlam, Exper. p~f'd. eau ~ ~· etepnt aold tww~ lampt . ~ ease w/wlvet -drlvc tr&nam.1.:.:.:::.:;::.:::.• ..;.:,;,.;;::,.._..;.;:: 1\trs. f\Wool at r..1~ VA'de en•> m-3438. $1Z. Wb)~ upbolsteNd coo-~~ him Imme d. Xlnt cond. Nevv been 1n 14~. TRAVEL 1'TaileT s ER v t c E St at ion Country c 1 u b, 3000 • a.r.,. S.le 112 te~ cftalr $1». Palr ~or 642-3111. salt wawr. nCJ&Z4i$1'. Porta·Potti. stove icebox'. Salesman-Top pay -fringe Oubbouse Rd Oi: XLN T oppor. Worit )'(Mil' llgotd Ja.puieee coklr' prlntl WANTED: PRIVATE PAR-~Call !St6-686i' !x>nelits. ExpPr prefd. Full ' own hoW'I, name )'OU?' own ANTtQUE gum. coins. old 11" x 2>" m Sidney Yard TY TO BUY PIANO li'OR lo.ts,. Pewefo 906 ' ' & pt time a\'ail. Apply Shell \\'AITR~, exper. not under pay. Nol door lo door llell· scales il lanterns. Oak 1eucepe U" x JS" $96. CASt;i Avto S.rvla, Parts "9 Statlon, 17th Ii In'1ne, N.B. 21· P /timE' 5prn-9prn. No ing. Public Relations, but piano, ...U phone A pma· BruWa walnut double •221'8 31' CABIN CRUISER 1965 ;,:,;:;;;:,;;;.:;.:.;;:::!..;..;::_::..:,;o: 24Cll Harbor ll'tld, Coeta Me1a -1 Wi PAY TOP CASH SERVICE Sta. Attendant. ~:·s =·Kl= ~mt •"'u 1~-ttml.ndm.. phone. Englll5b doclts I dreuer $95. Tripi@ dttuer ANTIQUE c..., .. _ Grand w/Mlny E%lras. RecenJ .fORD PARTS temaJe. 40 Hr "'k. Apply, ,,.,,.,... • e "n • ..,.. • curio eablnct. Brass cash wltb J mimll'I $15Q. Call Piano x1n't ;"'ssoo haul I. survey. Xlot oood. 1967 Ford 352 eQaine, intake for med can • tnackl. Just )fission Vie)o MobilP. 26001 512 W. l9th St, CM. reg., cream seperator, lard 6t4 6631 Call 6'+-ot91 · ' Sip. 6. Priv. Pty. $7,500. manifold• carb., bea.dl w/ call UI kit lt'ef: eattmate1. La Pat Rd. ~fission Viejo. \~a~u::. N!"~y~o ~ 11n..1 ~ ~ 4& ~~ Range, Bike • Ski• ~ ...... °"""' 830 n~a':s Cal>ln ()llller ~~r ~ i!",.,bu:: GROTH CHEVROLET SERVlCE St&. Attend. full & !l't' Shop, 5019 \V. Edinger. [ •da 111 . "'V more. Fri-Sat·SUn. Calh 0 I-M Gu 2 oven, ""'J>ifr'tect . .t!a twin n.J: s:tnUabt axle. P/time. Apply ID4 So. Coast F.V. Only! 157'J lndw! St, behind ~· 1-Brff imm~~ls ~"';!· si<Js K-2 Compt. 210 C. M. are:! depth ~ (\I.Ji __.... M+-M.11 e Ask tor Salts Manaatr H .... y. Lag. Sch. WANTED bus boy, breakfast Sant& Ana Cou.atry Oub. tw~. m': s k I a 1.50: Salomood .! .. ~77U I &'OC>d galley: Miil)' xtru, .ieePI 6 CAI>Il.LAC PARTS • 19$ 18211 Beach Blvd. 5 F. \\' l NG l\.l ACHIN E & IUIK'h. Exper only, 2nOO Antlquet 800 RECUNING cbalt, RCA boots 4lAi bind I-polei like co · ., ... VU""" • in comfort. $81175. 115-8S'n. Model • RAVE GOOD HWllington Beach OPERATOR \11anted. Clubhouse Dr. Laguna B/W combo, typewriter, new all $2i, nw.nvtt 56 .. TV, Radio HIFI l9'i'U SKlPJACK 21 open TRANS 'MlSSJON; Affi 841.$)81 Kl 9-33ll Call ..,_ N;gUrt. SCRAM-LETS anohery oqulp., ........ ..., oled $15. 1500 Sorenade Storto ' • 136 """'· l'6 hp OMC, 2;., rad, CONDRADIOl'l'!~RADIAUTONR.I T , Cash For Clean e STUDENTS: P3.rt time, 20 WANTED attracti\-e young crib, misc boosebold itema terr, CdM, 673-7687. compass, xt:ru. xlnl oond. 1212 .,. '"'~ St •·-Ja Ana U·-,,. C & ~irtt:~veyard shirt, 6 =auf~ ~~ ANSWERS :.rvSa~SUn ;:a~ei~ * AUCTION * Jenu.ry Cl••rance $6400. 61WTl3 .,. ~O>IU• ..u ars dayii/.,..·k. co. paid life & Niguel. Waterbury LL H n t g n . F1ne Furniture ~ FM/~ya:~ Bolts_ Sall '°9 '69 VW 1600~ variant eni. Trucks nirdical insurnnC<'. \\'EE K EN 0 RE CEP· Pitied -Acrid -Abe.te -Beach. .l Appliances PHONO I 1 TRACK 2 Sabot·prOt. Flbtrglut mold. E\lel lnjecttd, $.'Jijl). Howard Chevrolet ,\pply ~MlOll. Jack-in-thl'· TIONIST -Rea! E5tate Of· Beckon -POCKET SUPER FACTORY Auct1ona Friday, 1:30 p.m. speakers list $330 85. Now Ai.o 1 huil aalll hardware, 64&-3814 Newport S.ach Box. Baker St., C.l\.t '!ice. 9AJ.\t~M Sat. & Sun. Thief's ronfeuk>n: "I wu GARAGE SALE Windy's Auction Barn $197.40. Under $8 °Monlhly. $225, 645-1584 4 m•t whHI• & tlrtil MacArthur Blvd A: Jamboree SE\V ING machine opr.1 need· S2.50 per hr. Age 25--3.:i, at· in a restaurant !he other day New & Wied ltem.Fa.ntastic 20'15% Newport. CM 646-.8686 USA ( stiiiO Fretaht lJ.. CORONADO 21, 1 yr old, de-* $150 .* 833-0555 ed. Some exper. pref'd. traci\>e. CALL l\.tr. Bartlett, that v.·aa &O crowded I was bargJL.ins. Fri. & Sat., Jan. Behind Tony'a Bid(. Mat'l ~~!er?~279 E . 17th St, tux" tn'tr., fl'!'IOO, aft 5 -49M747 or 49U457 'YE PAY TOP OOLLAR J\.!cKibbln Sails, 1811 846-1361. putlin& silverware into BOme-19 & », 9 am-2 pm, at 2 0 ES KS and BOOK· ~ _,...-u, 714/682-7339 (Rivenidel. R nolds SA .,._, ~•· ,•-··s POCKET." 1·18 11! Maid Co 1810 M FOR TOP USED CARS ey , .. .,....,-,;JUO'I. now~ call ..an: ...,.. erry ., on. SHELVES • SU IT ABLE l!m ZENITH I RCA'1 at SABOT. L ... __ _. II ls cl VERY ··-·-1 ... __ .. ___ ..... _..,; .. c 111 ~~ .. ,,.,_ .._ ___ .. _ .. A ,,i.,_ * * , ceni'CT oua.ro, 1 -1~ yolJl' car extra un, un ... U&IU ~ ~ • .,._, •• ~ FOR ClllLDREN -•'AA u""""'IUVU6 aa ... ~.. at 1·~1 d 'I -~ -~-.Q -... ·~. "Jiijjiijjjjiij 1 ·-~-~-· ""' rn:11 .... """' n.-..... "-·-~ 1,.__. "~",.126au, acron aa1 , ,,_. _. '"''" ........ . • ..,lnl""" e1""""1·C -•·-~GARAGE Sale, F\lmiture, wouJd" be "1de&I for extra d';~~':.... Y'.ii:il~--•-.J!:&t" .. ~~ .....,..,. . BA.VER BUICK 11th ce.ntwy engravings & appljancn. lawn tools, 1 ..,.,,. ......... ln _.-rnvag wa.<1 ,.., 2925 Harbor Blvd. other antique items at low vw, motorcycle. Jan. 19 a-~-P:Jcio fu'ti g~ d1acounten wtth 3 yr pie-• 16' HOBIE CAT · prices. Gul.igbt Gallery, 130 a>. ZMllCra.lmer Lane Hwt-MEi>lATE SALE. U12 S tutt tu~. l yr i-rts 11 yr $1100. 813-1387 Antiqu../Clusia,; 953 Cos=TS W~25l> ::ten!:~.~ l~~ = ~ ~~ ~St., Santa . ma: ~·to c;:" n!J:~,.:; Boeh, Slips/Docks 910 '55 CTASSIC T·Bird, gd ~ C.ounty'1 only. clothing, Couch $41l TC7J I. ' Color 1V, 90l1 Atlanta. DOCK :r:°' avail prime cond. Belt. otter. Ori&. TOP S B~ SMALJ... Mahopny aide ma.o:y items reaSOMhle HEIRLOCM Clua Boxt'I Hllntington Beach. 961-J:m. lot:. Sm boatll n.ii n lrg Owne:r. Call 60-$11 BllJ.. ~~ -rc:YOTA . """"""" """"""' SEWlNC"'CCJl6E FOR TttE GAL ON TME CO. board, $45. Butler tray col· priced. 1845 Anaheim Ave. ~ ~~~: :t boats up to 45: S2;50 It Rec~tional B v..:. · ~1:!leciian~~ Apt. lllC, CM. Wood Spedaltlea • .,_.1512. 1 lriiii' 551·1250 M/F · 8.30-5.~. V•h1clp1 956 :· ;:~.unked :·= China cabinet, walnut $110. Houeehokl Gooclo 114 MISCEI.LANEOUS °"" fNttoYoo~ '67 FORD autm. Foranad;nWom••'sWortd ~lllO!l.wood hw<. ltJ. KlMBALI-. ~--n1c~· =~~~3Llftoo,2Tl-.-oo I 11 I•"tllo 11•1 CA.MPER·Y'AN '9<-1003,"'t~24bn. Call Mary Both 642-5678, ext. 330 -~ --·~-•~ . ?" · A ~ I "--~ 9-1910 Simmons ftill ai%e biP with beDcb. 0rcorat1"1 .,.......,,.,1,6. binwraion ~ alnk u .. ,., mpo1-4~ N Sp . c I I st t c--L-1 'bGI*. bnm bed, perfect Mediterranean.. with ~aJ AUTO body work It custom LOVING Mint. Poodle, double ~ map. bi& • ew nng .. asua n an """""' cond W/°""""'1 ......... ~..._ inJold_ .Qll.. -motorcycle ~ done -s yrs old l'rdor C•mfl!rl• Salo/Rent 920 u..~ 929ASJ ALFA ROMEO 1 uoo firm. AJ90 Oak table. &idtL 2 full k/bds. 1 yr. well & reuooabte. 61s.Oil home Wtadult honi.e daya. .~ FORD FJ.00 ~ bover $1595 893-3421. old. Xlnt conL c.o.t $Dl0. eves. 646-ll66• · t ca • •n Alpha "Spyder, S IPlf, SOLID thlck 11! .. i..-.-. sell $lllOO or belt ottrr. Nbnmd ,..,..__ Hamilton convert reftla, poWer 11.e.:r· mrnr4· ~ AM/FM, Jo ml, .KOOd Wy, ... ,.. ... ..,. 537-4547 after 5 and all dQ .,........... LOVING il lf!Dtle Pomera· lng, extra coollr11 rad, 11r, 492--00ll atte'r 8 PM. Dlnifll' Roomf'Set, 3 pcs, 6 Sat. • Sun. ~ ~ ro~=· nian male ~. 6 yn old. new brakr1, ttrea, $1700. '65 :1.sJ..~ Barp1n at ~ewe1,:Y . 115 NB No. 275 -' ~ =~· ~ov-~~e~~':°,' 18 ~00)'. 9 ...:-=~ BMW PR Antique Marble Top INDIAN Jey.ieJry &µYer A 4 Oak Chain $6 each. 10 e:I to apt. can't keep. Pvt. Prty, both or alngle. Good selection of eo~ .. 115 3w'lllxl~ """""'"'· . , .... """"'" ga11oo ~ """' 53&-1035 • 53&-3115. *·Dune Buny * """BMW'• w/4 spla&h, IOme CUYl.ng. from re81?J'Vatloo. All · new ~'8 .lurfbrd $15. FREE G~UND TO 1969 VW Camper. Low for _Wld or dirt $125. G 536-8340 evt"S. jewelry, rinp. braceleta, u,..,,,..,, LOVING FAMILY. mileage. 1913 Uc. High ek?47 or ... 7 * ANTIQUF.S 2)% OIT bilbl, aquub bkiDxn1. Jn-TOW LE Ster I tna: 962-(891 roof, Lota Of '*°"'It'· Convt. Trucks 962 Antiquel fir Intaiors 35tS E dlan _jewelry n."Dllr'ed. (Craftarnan) 8 le'ttizWI. xtra couch bed. Elec butane Cot """' Cdll! 6$-2"15. Navojo · Tradin1'. -1 43 2 piocoo, 35% ott. J144.811116, FREE to aood home -111 yr ,.Jr;g. Sink A Stove. Aux. '71 DATSUN Appllan~ I02 Newport Blvd., C .M. USED BICYCLES ~"'.:!~: ~· ~~~tf.~ radio. 968-PICK-UP CREVIER BMW • 642-?.25.l. All types * ,Ml-1272 18 mo. old Queen ~Malthy Salel • Servicfl • Leulna OVER D Wubers. dr>'en, DIA. Sol. approx. 1 ct. .$3.50. VW Bus rack. 3 pr short female Dmde to at-borne ATTl!NTJON Radio, Foe Ugbta, new S. XII w. lit St., Santi Ana refrigerators fl'om l39.$. A qual; Sci. earrino 1 ct. drapes, crib &: mattrea. companion 64Ul61' IMPORT OWNERS plys, k> mllea. 415CAX, 83S-31n 545--011>. $293. Leisure Wand 979-5636 New custom &hells, $119. $1795 -""v""i."1t"'our-,--,,.,...=:-,,-ltom__.e.,.l - 1.ATE rookl auto. washer & l213J 431-urH H JID l GERMAN Sbepberda free, Overbead sleepers a: camp-~ii,;;;;:j;°li;;;=;;:;~ ~ = _,_ ,_, ~ ~ ·-·, p-., 5 x5', & poola, all lo• trmale. 64UT41. "' • """' "" ~-"· ..lltt't"" : l~ ~. deJ a: in-HOBART !i»Amp w1eder on :re=~ carpet llllc. .-u:~ «vS:i1 ':: 73 fu11 ~ '\r:'~ o:.-;;.~"1...---~ j ,•-. •--_ A-l -~ "·chi-116 WROUGHT, Iron lonce, 1 J>"'fer i.,.. yard. 1 male, 1 t v lo ~ HY=~ I .tall Late mod. all .,c1o • wheel ':i..i:·. From $2.85 ,.._ Can Install. I ll~I . .,... "°'" lll9. '"-~~;:;::;-;;::-~;:;;-~ K=noro wuber. 85-lTIS. Ill Reu. GtW'.643-'llOl•v•. ---893-<16'13 tiiu.MAN COO COMll!ER) ROY CAR IR, Inc. REFRIGERATOR, GOOD Miscellantius ROlllNG sro~ O>noert . * NEW 8' CAMPER. PANEL TRUCK EquiPPfd 234 E. 1112:1 st. ' .~NDmON, "-'1 o::~ STEREO, 1973 Garrard tklcet for .ale. Be.st otter. -~ ~'13 wtth Overhead Rack • Costa Mesa ......... ...., ...,.. ......,.,..,,,. model. Sytte:mbed a u t 0 673--0507 Peh, ·General 150 Interior l t n e d with 8 DISHWASHERS, waaben, dryen, reblt. guarn I dl:lv'd. 839-1~: M&-5218. NEW O'KEEFE A iifu: e~r. all watt amJbn A cable Utriabt Piano '64: . CAMPER Shell ~6' PiekUP SHELVES· PRlCED FOR '69 BMW 1600 Radio, Heater, receiver. Jen1e n air OJdlmobUe Good cond' GROOM I BOARD, U yrs tm. Lumber rack alllo-$20 QUICK SALE. 4 Spd, Approx 27 M.P.G. :~ i::r i:wtaru Ms.-0240 . ~~~; ~piclru~ ,::;9SUND1AL CAMPER 1212 S. ~~Santa Ana ~~lti~a~~. hllndllng box. Wu left unclaimed oo Newport Beach Tennll Oub avall. *H. Loaded w/extras '68 INT'L. pick-up. 4 WliL '69 BMW ~ wht w/blue RITl' DISHWASHER, 145. Call 640-1935 la.ya~. Now, $1S4.. 'Credit tam.lb' ~mbei'lhip for aale. (.ts 152 $1995. Call 963-2560 d~, ~.. H.D. intf;r. New Michelin dept. ('114) 89:HXiOl. ~ ~ Springs. Bltn. storage. Nr. tires 646-6800. l~& 1i8 ~n~~a= Attention "Swap-Meeten" m ~ J.uues, datlna: •FREE! Needed;desperate-C~k-925 mlnl cond. 1-0wner~ Low DATSUN Jake Nellfeld, 548-l050. Wtll th! ptl'llCID who bad a back to lill), take aD, SS). ly, good hom! fQr Leo, our ml. Many other «xtru. /oi. f"\n 1"} 0 lge. Helll')' McKenna ju& for 962-2811. gentle MarmaJade Tom Cat, ,64 Honda 50 trcet bike 6tt-04l2. I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,\ "'f t-flld. C .. lal OLDER G.E. ref.rige.rator, sale b' $3..50 at u.e ~o.ta ** WATER OONDmON· from Hawaii. 673-6732 auto. Clutch,' m. Schwlnri ·n Ford Plc*-up, noo, 4 9023 SIZES 8-18 ~..OO:r!:~ s.x"tion, ~ 't":e S~ :,..~ ~~ ER. Evenoft, new $700, PERSIAH kittms, CFA reg.. Cont'l lD 1pd boys bib, Pt mon old, 4,:m mi, P.s.. NEW lm· Tbo crocheted loo1< b tops ~ P.M. (Priv, _,,.. ,;.,ib asking $350. 64M3SS. abots, xlnt llnff. $15. Pb: Som. MHm aft 8 or P.B., Auto, 300 VS, Rod1o. DATSUN with the yoq lclmi. set. WASHER ~ Gas Dryer, Eat· to bu;)>) _....,. Holpolnt refri&., le.ft hand ... 2t70 e WlmdL 64&-«126. r, 11f e..i ... 1lfc..-r' ... INSTANT CROCHET vest ly Amencan braided rug ,.~.,....""""' door. C lf" tlre:a. 6424391 n.....1 154 NEW Schwinn Tricy~ 3 1969 FORD F250 Pickup, 390 and tank top .. lloth for girls. 9xU. 536-2158 aftu 6 PM _,~ Don't flt Into ......_ tpeed w/cart')'iz8 L engine, "-· T. P/S, P/B 1200 boys. Use big book and knit· REFRIGERATOR, 5 years ~~..:_ -Some -oo-MllCell8MOut MINIATURE Dachahund1, Ult'd 2 b2ockl! Colt $181. dilC, $155(1, Hodak.a 100 B, ting WOl'ited In 3 colors. old very clean ::".:O': ":°':~-.,.._ c•u'-) Won~ l20 AKC Golden bm., females. Sell 1140. 5JB...G47 aft 6. 197tl. C&ll 4961508, T·" h __ ,,_, ch Easy single, double emchel. 893-9060 ...... _,, ........,... .,_, " · '911 8 Wb Sbota. P•-ISO 65 ~-u T P/U } <&Ae t e c......-approa Pattern n19: Si.tel 4·14 in-AllO Kndle:I lkil. . .1110s CJoL•1it .._... . SALE .172. Honda 350 Lo ' ....... v. n on to sprtng -~ this )'Oked eluded. C1mer11 & boots I: poles Call aft s; WAN'I'li::D: U.S. CD1n CoUlc-.....,...,..._ mi., mll_')'_~ Mint w/eampl!l" shell. R/H. sldmm~r In polye&~r blend In 81!VElftY·"""'-' ~ Equipment IOI M5-1tSJ. • dona le ~mulatlonL NEED gentle depend. pn> cond. ~ aft 6 pm. Stereo. lmmac! S 9 9 5 · perhaps, aqUa, belle or llOft: ., .... r. vL•, .. 0 O'Keefe 1 M rrltt bWJt 1 Private out:or-town buyer. tectlon? Bey an AKC Great 557-4071. •oo pl~~!r:S:~~: NEW :nt!•=. ':~ i-tt:!4,: ~~ r:111~n.. 50wean: ultd dllbw~. Ciood ~~ Wrlteb.uy a.;':' p ~ ~ Dane. Blacks & blues. Xlnt y AMAMA 380 d1rl rwt.r. 1968 Cl;lEYY ~ ton pickup, 6 i\1\slcs' Slue 8, 10, l:J, 14, 16, Air Mall and SJM!elal Handt· light meter, flub, exten. tna eonditklR, Avocado . $35. ~ Costa M..!' cii. ·sa te~p. le qualit;y, 541Hl95T. new tlrt1, ~ ens., cyl, 8 bed. $995. 18. Size 12 (bull MJ taket 2% Ir!!; OlheMWe thil'd-clau tubca, tripod, waist-level POrtable Slnatt S 'e \V I n I ' ' . BEAUT AKC reg. pure~ GlrU~, more l 4 0 0 642--2921 or 6#-4719 yard• 54-inch fabric. de !Wry ·wiU take three vlQWfinder & h.eavy lather Machine with at&.cbments, ~~: t&ll ~ C~ ~M Shel)herd 11Ul1f, 7 9E0-4 , '68 Cbev. "P.U. Auk> tranl, OR NEW 1972 510 OR NEW 1m -PICKUP llW!:ln"f·nvt: CENTS ~Bo~:.""t'-SondDAIL carrying cue. $135, ~· PhoM 63S-t)M atttr reuona~Driced e.nd in ~4$75.SomeblM:k. 250ccB1JLTACO,reallOO(I. RAH1.-a!z'· Low mUeap • .,. "ch ........ -ndd " PILOT. 105, Needlecrafl 4. p.tn. 1IOOd ~· l're~--or MALAMUTE/She~M 125CJ, * 54• lTM * 64ca~~~T v • bl Immediato. 0.llvory cents for each patterh for De.pt., Box m, Old ~ltea ENT !!00 mm lits ALNUT crib " mattress, one Uiat I pa 1 'D tab l e • I 1 t"....... pup-.. -• rVl"U 7S ' "U1 (IUIO, re l AfrMall and Speclal H&ndl· StatiOn, New Y<d,. N.Y. 6x1 or 3S mm eameru, Youtl bed le m11.ttre11, lllce 51>-21'19 'alttr5p.m. Ees w~~ 3 ma!e1, ~ •n SUzuJd. TS-125, Sharp Lo engine. Clean. Cab high ~tbt~ r: lOOU. Print ?t'ame, AMreu, $275. Call GtG-3804 eves, :m=e rail m:~blldlntr~ OlfiCe '""'ttur9J ~~· Huntlniton mn~~ ~~· Best off«, &bell. $895. 86)-213C. ~-•-oc1 Zip,--M'-. Furnt"lu-810 ~· Eoult>. 124 . ~~ 1962 Ford F800, Oalbed --. or man!. -to N E ED L E CRAn' '12! '• ~. ~ exhault fu, .w v AKC regiltered \German •19 SUZUKI &l x1nt cond truck $400. !!11..!1 ~.~rttnp. the D!,ILY Qochell, tmtt, C!tc. F'l'ef! * 1-fER.CuLON tof• ·le cudroo-"J~ wall mlrTor J NS nu walnut -30 x Sh e-p he t' d Pup p It 1. ktta ot l!!'JrtrU. ' ' ' * 66-1517 * rUAJ~,TU, attem...etftt.· dl~50c. Joveseal,tablet,dlnnriset. :ltdO.~.. -42'', tarDik:atop.-.StlcltRtn-nn-Tin bloodllnt . *M&-3Ml* 'V1n1 963 EXEC. DRIVE 1972 . 510 rork We~ y l8th10if·· ~ lllllUt MICl'alne Beolt. kina: bed, •ho I~ lcatbl!r (2) 10 IPftda at WI prage Ollvettt elect typewriter 831.o&m. TWO ~ bo)'I ~ 1;,;:;;;;~ _ _, __ _.:.:;; w..0:, °.&Onaai with Buie. fancy knotJ, pat. aoti " lovestat. Mw;t ll!:IL .it. hmUt ~Wlc for Editor 2 pao. &«rlGT TOY FOX_ TER.RJ.ERS !.>::.t•t okl. Good coadltlon: '68 Ford 8 9.1per Van Camp-4 Dr., Auto. Trant., Air ~ and m terns. SLOO. Pvt p~. Ui-664L. Europe, e~ ln bcKllll nx:. chn $8:-S23. wood delkl ~ ;mAeach.13M9&$. r:r, E-300, rcft1&, Atovt, Cond. Radkl Fa =t by flr'oebetptc•·--t -t-PAIR IQ!d ehain, '-pie end : s;:e ~~!.=Sa~ ~ 1tor"cab SCI. 167 W. ..rtu U, 4Q2..414) 1970 Yamaha 250 OT, 1mmlc pop-«>5 .,_ p, tolleL 56-3215 a.ft ra.Jlt1: ' ctory War-. SEE MORE Q u I ck temo. l1lll. ·-< • • ta bl,., baby crib, hean baa Tl>'Jor, ll.B. l!th CM. Plft<o, llt-IQ. D I( SH C lf11 N1l • ~. w/helnif.t Lo m11eep •~ l'ul:lbll and ctwx. one eompae6e b:Maftl Gift Book cha.Ir, 1tereo, 1ewIn1 ,.._......._,._._ ? PNnel/ftreaM 126 ~turt. .AKC, lbotl ,..._ '71 OOOGE VAN-Xlot oand. s2199 ~ rrc.. fnlm our more Iha 100 gttt& machine. $U.l581 aft S. 4 NU ~ · && , ,;::..c,:;: _ aiahop..Q)'I red. 531:6771 S2700 or laid o vet' ';r.,e';7"~ CatlJol. All ii..oo. n -***Sota 1c IO\le11e1.t, never ~~u':t:!~~ for WD.J. r-1 u, to $J.1XK1. tor **~C •. SIUQt Tm-icn, ~.~1.'11~~ ~ta. 8JHU9. +tu• uc. • Jf'STZflt ~lllG BOOK (Jomploto Al .... -• "'-'d, botlt !or 1160, Wl\lally bit bltdt, 110 call 543-~ Steinway 0"'1d Piuo. molO•, 8 •ks. Eamte. 1111! Dodae AlOO, Von, 2251' , lod 11.11). !tom<, 961FI910. aft_~ (IL!) '74-3355. $JOO, -Std tnN, ntdlO, htr,, xlnl , l r ay, wear tomorTOw. 1• JlffJ R'q!J Boota • !ilJc. NA1JGAllYOE eofa 6', oUvt! COLLECi6R·$ -~n GULBflANSEN Spinet piano, •Purftlrtd 8'oodhou00 pup. 1t:\.J~°'J ~PAM eobd. 8ett otm, ~ rM'-....t llateutt~ INSTANT FASHION:"'!' .. ,, ...... _ .-n, LlKE NEW. Call pocketwatehftJledJ,10 XlntCOlld. ~ -l50 ead!. equlp.$100.-"Ill GMC V.,.Jun. ll ton~!- llJOK • Hu-o I ,qiiut - 1 • 16 oottent1. 644-0!32. carat, mint Coocl,' 1125: 12 -• lMI KAWASAICI to heevy duJ:y 3IO V.S, auto "::;>< --:r=, 'I ,lllhk».1am. P. 50c ~fAPl.E tJvtng Room pup dbl L. C. Smith 1894, Grand Plano -pAliot' 11ac, SF..AtrrIFVL Ba.K:er, 2 yrs Good cond. '100 64().1.935 tfanl., 546-5525. · Vac.ncW • mDnCJI 'Rent Mii-im QaUt 8ool 1 _ Furnltun! MAke offer, Xlnt "' m-c?8. E:kctllent Condllionl ot~. •Pl)'~ wants lo pi.y ONL ' · 19'IS VW Camper Van. Xtnt 1972 DallUn 1200 Cou;pe, XJnt I liai. -.. -50c. oond. _,3 CRIB a n\A~ '!h !111!1· 64<j!M w/cblldl'ell. $l0. 1188-8531. 1t71 H DA IL llO Cond. l\!any Extrul MaJoo oottd, ph attepm , ( · lln I Pllol . llllllb ... """""'' ~ • J,OVESEAT, 2 W.l•r back chair, 11· CHia<El!JNG 0oomt arand 4 AdolVle i>t!Jlo I> Cockor, GOC/d coftd. $325. IHll;°" ;;O:;;!lef::;:,· ;.Ph:::::.!f" -=~-:--c= 1llHl9S I "'-lJ ...... lillll. .. -!ot:; .... 1.,.. Reoi)n<T. Driltdao '"*· n. Alt '.-..A-I ~tlat> private will ·" .l!nlll. JIO, to-' J,Al)Jf;S l -...... tJtU ldlo ,_ POWI. Call "'s.."'11-:ui,,,,-o1t1""""'otu11.==-"1!!11:--"",_~1 ** 496-IU •• COlld· !51&-U!ICI. 'party, (2131-hotne, $41'19 tu ! l<O, 96HOOl · 64M618 Now! -ltuft. ' .. . , \, I • • I I , I t. IT r 7 r, g tr ... ' DAILY PILOT 4 J .1§1 .._I ___ ....... _,I'"'.-......,· 1 1§1 [;;. ·~ .......... Solo_.l~[S 990 Autos', OMCI 990 l§J I ---" 1_A_u_i.. .... _1m_•,_po_rt.;.ed;;.;,.._;:.970.;.';1A.;.utos=:;;•.;.l:,:m;,;po;:;rt;.:od::::.·_..:;'1:.;0 ~ Imported • 970 ~.;.';,..U;.llld;.;.;., __ _,,"°-Autos, Uood "10 Autos, Now 980 Autos, N--980 Autos, 1Jse<! DATSUN OPEL VOLKSWAGEN IUIGK l ~i~C~H~E;;.;~~~01;:;;'~f~l~~J~~~~~~=~ MERCURY --..---1-------1-----~-----1 -----------·- '69 D,ATSUN '70 OPEL GT ' '68 VW Bl,IG °1:,~ ~Tiion:'. 1W .. ~•=a.?,~1\~ BIG DADDY 5-DR. WAGON ... _. l""1 with black. &peed, radio, healer. A . -1 ""' ...... ...... oteerinr -1. A>l-F'M AND ALL HIS ~·-· · rodlo llh ln,.rlor, rodto, ··ndlat.. clWI &OOd •runnl"I cv C54DAEPJ ' 13S99 DAVE Stm!O radio, lua ... rock, "'RIENDS .,......., w !ape 099BNP (ZRT887) ROSS • PONTIAC, 1480 ,...1tna. Alkloa 12.11'. Hu r =44 root rock, new Jlr<o, -$1595 ONLY $695 -ljlvd., Collta M..,. 1973 Tap. Phone 50T-<j81. c., nt in lh1• spacious Colony • S119S hJq""'--:0. = a HOWARD Chevrolet 546-tOlt':'_Effective thtu 196S Chevy Belvedere 4 Dr. Park 1970 i;tation wagon, r'" 'llttttt= -•UW13, ... Low ml. A/C, PIS, PID, wuh a rack on the roof H7r le~ GOO~-~C~~':rar~ '!-::boree 1: ~tr.i::& ~~) ~~·· Well·mtlnl. b:~rt ~etT~~ j~~l~~Yo~,;~ -11u~wj1 . ~ -_:___ 133-0555 belted· ndlala. Very clean CHRYSLER THERE ARE OVER <«n!on. \2:\IANKI. 02389. ,_ "o!'::"~ J 1968 OPEL Sta W "'" 'Tl BeeUe . AM radio, 11.000 llOOd mile .... q. owner'. 2000. USED "'ARS . GUSTAFSON I '-:=~::::;::;=:;;~-:::=·:'.-I :.·J -· gn. -. milel. 24,000 miles war-'900~ .. UT1 -. "'' I · '71 DATSUN ''"'"'· • •t>e<'<l •lick, di"' "'"!>· li600. Owner Jeavl.. CADILLAC '68 Ch'Yale< New Yorl<" • 'FOR SA~E Lincoln·Merc11ry PLYMOUTH PLYMOUTH Great buy on low milea,jt 1968 Ply1noulh VIP 4-dr. 11.'J'. 1v\1h vinyl root. A1r 1..'Pnditionlng, radio, heatet Ex1.~Jlent condilion. Private par\)' ... price $999 837-4239 '65 PLY~IOUTll. V-8, auto. m llli1·, {lOIVl'l' steering, Duc- k~'' M.'11ls, good transporta.- tiQn. t154~vlNJ. $499. DAVE ROSS PONTIAC, 2480 liar- bor Blvd .. Costa ~eaa. 546- 8017. Effective thru 1-Zl·T.1. brakes, radlals. C1~an, ::fl country 962.-$455, -DrF HT. AlrExtraP SNIPceB wipth ON COSTA M"SA'S 16800 Beu.ch at \V&:mer 240.z ~--~nd. 1 owner . ..,_. '72. vw BUS actor)' ' · '1 • ·• · r Hw1!ington Beach 1-1>-',,_ YOUR ONLY Seat, P.w., n.clin<r s..;;:.t·r,.MIJ Harb B 1... d .,, ...... "'" 592.5541 1-------1 Orlgi&.I in.tde & Ou! air PORSCHE Radial" Am·Fm •t• ..... tow AM/FM Radio, erui.e Co ar au ... var "Home of. the Viking" '70 "°"EVlLLF. .. Dr. cond., radio, new n1ai:!l &: iul. Daya 645-2062, Eves FACOORY trol.. Pren\lwn Plltelli J .&'I.Ian. Pm1rr steering, PONTIAC tadil.ls 299CJ'V 673-m2. AUTHORIZED lal Tlrea, $1595. MUST SELL D car. 'N ('(}LON'' PARK \Vagon. pi.}11('1" 11•1ndl)"'S, air ('Ofid., ' $4195' . PORSCHES AT 1971 VW 411, auto, 4 Dr. CADILLAC --~-·--=~~-Lo ruitcagc. -Full PoW<?t, l'ln)·I toµ. t•.'l:1'cp11onall)' lo ·~ f I •-~·tlo CONTINENTAL LOOIC PO• THI IMlllM .6.f factory alt, roof rack, ex· ~ D>" •.• II ----:~·-BEACH IMPORTS _.., ue ~ n . ....,, ""'"'' .. l•<lA .) 0 •·" " Q 71~ wJblue int .. 29,200 miles. DEALER NABERS I UNIVERSITY Ct"llcnt conrl1tio11. 102:8.FSD1 !UK1;cslC1i t\.'la11 $2jtj. Sale JJ II '59 to '71, Coupes, 911, 914, Top cond., $1895-make ol· l...&rgett aelection ot Cadll· A VERY GOOD CADILLAC INC OLDSMOBILE S4699 .OAVE ROs.5 PON-price Sitll'J DAVE ROSS 000 w: Collll Hilt-. 5-ilpeed.I, -aome mags, IOme fer. 48rr'1399. lacs In Orange County, 2600 • ·2850 TIAC, 2-t!ll Harbor Blvd., PONTIAC, 2~ Harbor ~ii.ti W-MOI_; air, (WIJ1B9). from ,,. MUsr Sell! •69 Bug, rebuilt. Sales-Leasing. YEAR Costa t.fesa, 546-8017 Ef-Blvd .. Cos1a :O.lc~. 5-16-:-!017. $1895 .. only 9000 mi. Exllnt HARBOR BLVD. HARBOR BLVD." rec1ive 1hru 1121113. Eflci·tivt• thru 1 21 TJ. 1973 DATSUN ~= thnH>ut. chrome wheels. • Naben ~:, ~:r ~~~~ °!:s L~:~ 1 '1'65=· -,~,E=R~C~U~R~v·-~s-ta~tio-,. .-,.,-,.-m-EBIRD. Desert beige Mt .. h Jftttttrtr'tA· Bal ls. 673-<M39. 1 UU h \lagon, Pi S, P 13 , Lug. with n1alching interior, ALL MODELS '""''r .v .. .,..... .. _. 1968 VW Sqbk-Xlnt concl. . Caclillac factured. And t s as rack, xlnt concl. $495. <'conomy 6 cylinder, power JN STOCK 4lll -,..__ Whl /-" · 1....... many good years to go.I ,,~~==~;!;~~~;;~~~;,..=~'° 847-2191 ,.,.,,·,g. •"to111atlc . . llS1 _ -eU-MOI te w ·~ mt. ~ • 2flOO HARBOR BL. Co1nrortal>le luxury at only I '--" .. Immediate Delivery ~...,. -rack, !lit, AM/FM. $USO. COSTA MESA $2789. {503 CNS) Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 MUSTANG i061EKRl S32W DAVE 644-5465 540-9100 O Sund ROSS PONTIAC, 2480 1\f ... __ ii""._~-..j 1971PORSCllE911-S 11pecla1 pen lU' GUSTAFSON . Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. xv1111111rt watimn paint, loolher hit, ·air, '66 "Y' Squareback. <n-'1356 '68 COUPE DE VILLE. FORD LINCOLN '67 MUSTANG -Shelby GT >1Hll1 Eflectiw lhru )E.~w.Collll ..._. itereo ~aro Sport Seat• am Ill noon Monday thru Full power.-tactory air, Uncoln-Mercury 1---------!·----------500. 351 Cleveland. 390 1121173. ·~ ~...,. M4-6'0o low rl1ile11. showroom ne~ f'ri. power wiridows & seats, 16800 Beach at Warner FORD TORINO GT '68. CONTINENTAL Mark III, "Pistons. 428 lteads "''Ith 428 ='~'""'=-~=-,=o l cone:!. Priced $500. below '69 VW Camper Pop-Top AM/FM stereo radio. Hun tington Beach Auto, Pis. P/I>. '71 iull pwr, nir eond., Cobra klt. 4 Spd. Hurst. '70 GRAND PRIX. Green · FIAT Blue . Book. Call Joe, Xlnt oond, new tires. {WUp015) Kelley suggested 842-8844 1f (2131 592-5.544 $850. 644-2693 am/fm stereo. Vin top, tilt Mag. y,•heels. Rear air wilh black vinyl top. Power 64~ or 846-3445 $1995. &15-5124 reta\1 -salOO Sale price $2299 "Home of the Viking" '66 Ford Convertible. Auto, "'hi, l!hr Inter. 18.000 mi's. ~~~r~s. New paint. $1295 Or ~\;~~~~:·. f(&;~i'uo~·ir ~ • 1970 850 F'IAT SPIDER -'67 -912, 5 spd. Xlnt cond .. '70 vw Camper, rebuilt ~VEHa~Blv~NT~~ WHITE GOLD PIS. Clean. $6fJO, Runs ~n~a~~iD~;:. pty. 833-0144 Alt. 4 P.M. DAVE ROSS PONTAJC. Good cond. 35,500 n1I. $1000. AM-FM, radials, coco malli, encine. Xlnt oond. $26l'Xl or Mesa ·54&-8)11 Euecttve Good. 646-4941. •65 Conv V-8 auto Pis P/b, 24l!O Harbor Blvd., COfita 644-1564. f'E"blt eng, $3349 or. make of-best oHer. 673-863&. thrQ i/21JT3 You'll think this luxurious ,12 Torloo 2 dr PIS, P/disc 1967 Llncoln Cont. 2-dr. Ful-1 . ba $59j Mesa, 546-8017 EUcctlve JAGUAR fer,. days . 646-4181, nites .,...,., VW Bur-Camper, Mech -~c,....,.,,_.·=~--l9TI Marie III is gold when b"··. RIH'. mi.' 23,000, ,...,.75. ly loaded. Good rond. $1150. aPvtr. 11e"':~,pa~,!.; at tt, 6 . thru 1121/73 .. 642--5987 ,....... '70 ELOORAOO Coupe . 1 w ·th p nu .,., 541--0269 or &16-11»4. ply :>::i -1..,.,~ ter pn1. •---------I · good, new paint. Call Loaded. Miners gold with you see t. 1 ower, M.>2338 646-5632. '71 CATALI NA 4 . Door '70 JAGUAR 'TI PORSCHE 914, xlnt oond, .673--0851 or 543-3825. , black vinyl top, tllSBBKl ·~i-6n1yP0$5w:i:g_ (1Y89A842-'68 2 dr' GALAXY. fac. air, MERCURY ·~ew Jl.:i~~t1~~·-,:g: hardtop. Full powC'r. air ivi h extras. Jl.Iak~ oUer. '71 Super Bug, mags, radiala, $4799. DAVE ROs.5 PON· GUSTAFSON 390 eng., vinyl roof, P/S, MS-9729 eond., vinyl top. 1316EKS) XKE COUPE 6T.H!.500. AM/FM atoreo, $1800. TIAC, 2S80 Harbor Blvd., P/B, prt ply. ~339 SUPER SMOOTH --------12999 DAVE ROSS PON· . '10 Ponche 911 T, 5 opd, 6#-U168. Coota Mesa. 546-8011 Ef· L' I M JEEP OLDSMOBILE TiAC. 2'81l Harbo' Bl<;<!; Immaculate, air cond., 26,000 mi., Service reconis. '71 W ha!' cam Xl . fective thru 1/21/73. lnCO ft• ercury Comfort and styling is what Costa t.1esa 546-8017 £.,,,. pow et st I! f! t In g Mu ... ~-• •:::~ """" ~..,..o estp •a i>el\ n 1 1.~ "-h t w t1,i• l""" Jl.1arnuis 4 door fective ,lhni 1/21/73 M.I/n.f/S\V radio 406BNN '" ....... _,,,.,. ~· cond. Bed. sink, refrig. 1972 Cad. Coupe de Ville. uouu ocac 8 arncr ... .,,.. " • ·n Porsche 914, xln't con-$2500. 675-1821. Take OYer commitment of Huntington Beach 1956 Willya 4 whl drive "'-gn. "''ill do for you. 12267N614-'68 OLDS 98 '68 CATALINA 4Dr. H.T. ~::---:---::~---, d' lo 842-8&44 • (213) 592&4 W/1JJS Ford eng. O/drive, 933). I 'ftish we had more of Full power, faclOl')I air. ~~ 11 n. Call 642-8601 ~hi~~ Xl~ co~G-~~ !:i. 1 ':~::0~. ;~~~ 0"~H~om~o~of~th-'•'-V~lk=lng~" ~is17Wide tires. SlCMXI these for l4289. ~~~i~an~F~utoi::~ ~~Gl PO~~~C. D~~ ~ ~ ~ 914 Ponc_he '71 .. Low ml. $900. 96&-0419 move lmmedlately. 979-1252 ·s.s,. 4 dr, vinyl top, full pwr, BRONCO Front end com· GUSTAFSON =ws vinyl r:rftts;lec~~ &rbur Blvd., Costa Mesa. ~-;=:~-~=-~-~·~ ... ~--~;J~Ali;(i..:·Ame~~n~c~an~racrng~;:,:"""":;::· '65 VW Bus-Campero. Reblt * '6.5 CADilLAC * air, tpe dck, 1 owner, $1100. 1 with h bs & brakes Lincoln-Mercury mileage• clean. ~XEr.1078, 546-8017 Effective thru. 1-21,. all extras .. 642-3472. ena w"o ml'•· Gd mech. very good condition pr! pty. 644--44&1. Pete u • 73. 1 ,6 J 3 8 S 5 d ••& " $75-16800 Beach at Warner SAVE $ $ $ 1 •1u•r • • an '63 Por!che, 356, SC 1600. concl. $625. 673-5547. S800 * 54&--7834 '71 CONT Sedan. Perl cond. 645-1517 Hunlington Beach 'b1l Pontiac Grand Prix. Auto. Tran&., Power Steer-Runs perlecl, needs paint. 1960 vw CHEVROLET Loaded w/everything. Onlyl----""'-="'-----842-8844 * 1213) 5ll2-S544 HOWARD Chevrolet Loadt-tl! P/wndii'!I, P/S. Ing, Oirome \\rl re WhC'fls, $1750., 493-6676, aft 4. REBUILT ENGlNE ll,tXXI mi. $4750. &12-4100. LINCOLN "Home of the Viking" . ~ewporl Beach air, Am·Ffn radio, mat Extra Clean. 1964 356C 4\\·hl discs, reblt S300 ** 645--8237 --------1-~-:.=-::::=~:--· 1--_:::.:.:;::.::.::.;:__ MacArthur Blvd & Jamboree whls, vlnyl top.'$2295 or bed. $2995 eng & iram. !2600. m-3510 ·12 vw BUS-7 p.,,, HMI% Warranty COUGAR TIME STOOD ·~,~~;;'J:;'\l'8~ ~~;; ~;: 833-0555 '""· OJ 63[1582 ~fore >: NEWPORT IMPORTS or 494-7375 ask for Bob MAKE OFFER. 644-8855 '70 MONTE STILL dowa, alt cond .. vinyl top. '7'.! OLDS 98 Cpc. Loaded. G4o--0905 art or' I\' s. 3100 W. Coast Hwy .. Newport '68 Targa 9ll. 5 ~Call. vw 'Tl, "-·tie, Xlnt -nd. CARLO '69 COUGAR fl56COJ) MCn<> DAVE ROSS ,-II f · 'G9 GTO. 4 spel'd, r11dlo and Be ch .,A.,........., Am-Fm $3500 or oHer °"" ,_,,, . When they built this: 1968 PONTIAC'~':,_ H..-bo u power, ' actory air. heater. fZDY;,G2l $1'19$ a · <>'U • ........,, ' • Pr/Pty AM/FM ·stereo Air conc:t. AM/FM Stereo, Lincoln. This comfortable • V'Oou r (160DTL) l4199 DAVE DAVE ROSS PONTIAc; '69 JAGUAR XKE Silver, l-S25-~l5. $1289 ait 6 pm, call 962-2348'. ~dee~' !~'fs';a~eyj• :i: low miles, super clean, two door (993 CUWJ ia yolll'1 Blvd., Costa. Mesa. 54IHI017 ROSS PONTIAC, 2480 2480 Harbor Blvd.. Costa auto., \\ire wheels, alr cond. * '63 PORSCHE. Good cond. '63 VW "NOTCHBACK ,, <ZYK105) 230AGV. $2095 for Go~S$1T689A. FSON Effective thni l/ztm. Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa, Mesa, 54&-8017 Ellectlve l4l2EOt.1J $399!) DAVE Rum well. Sl400. 536-4CXXJ or Sl25 1 Good llll! -.ONLY 52695 'f6 Ml'l"Cury Monterey 4-dr. 54&-8011-,f;tfecti~ thtu tbru 1/21/1' ROSS PONTIAC, 2480 53&-8240 85 ~4 eng ' Xlnt body & interior. Runs. 1J21m. Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa, SAAB HOWARD Chevrolet fi'j Jlmport!li L' I M ury $250. 6'1&-8610 '66 OLDS Totonado Db: h.t. 1969 Pontiac Catalina. Air, °'" -1 .,.u _ _.,___ thru '67 VW BUG, sunroof, radio, ._1_ rt •· h lftCO ft• ere ·-~ XI PIS P/B _,_ -"62 low mUeage. Immaculate. ~... i:..uQ;uvo: he t ba:r $125 0 n.wpo .-ac .&.;JQ't t.fercury wagon -nt • , au-, .,.,....,. $1600. &W-8675. 1/21/7l. a er, sway · r .. ft_ .......... R Blvd J ~-e o:io w. o-t ...,_ 16800 ~ach at Warner tfansportation Sacrifice, 1600 cc Mark D MGA, $450. I 72 DEMO --~:Colle=r·c..'"-97;..·"1643= . ....,._,,. Ji;~...... & am~= -lllildl M1S-6101 Huntington ae.ch Both ·-ry clean. Must .. u. '69 CUSTOMS.Auto., P/siltt250 17 Jar "1 Sedan Oauc. NCE ,7. 833-0555 ruo. 536-3595 .. , AM/FM wire wbl.I 4-spd CLEARA S5 VW, new tires, must sell, 842-8844 * (213 ) $2-5544 495-4729 eVes. overhead cam, 6 new a. w/o'dri~. Must aacri.r. fbr' '1'2 99E. AM/F?l1 radio, vlnyt moving. ·n (GMC Sprint)~ Pvt. pty. 1969 COUGAR XR.-7 "Home of the Viking" GONE wnH 1966 OLDS $UOO .. Pvt. 492-fJOO& M~. 9.,H...,. top. #1400. * 536-3982 * Lll<• new. Used only for Ai,. radials, Xlnt eond. Call BLACK VELVET THE WIND T·BIRD __. $2995 .66 VW Bug Good cond local driving. l Owner, 1 644-0969. . NEEDS SOP..fE TRANS ~~!:'y J~d~~ Good tires. Radio, beater: driver. Less Fullthan 12,000 DODGE And just as smooth as this And that'• what you'U be SlOO. 494~~~~ 494-3457 .68 THUNDERBIRD. Fup cond. 613-6342/494-2011. CIC'an. 557-3688 mi's. 350 eng. pwr, hvy 1964 4 door Llnooln. lPFF-wHh 1hla 1970 Cougar Con-po..,..-er, fact9rY air oort- ,66;::::VW:::::, . .::X!::,.::nt"co"--nd.~Re~bl~t~OO~ I dt,y' susp. New canopy. By -.~--00-DG-E--V-an,--V-8/-318 688). Make your neighbor vertlble. My oh my, to he '6.S DELTA 88 Ollta, 1 owner, dttioninz. CU9ASEI SlS99 MAZDA appl. only, 979-6136 S.5 pm u• jealous for only $888. yoong again., (200 BQCI top COndilion. $1750. DAVE ROSS PONTIAC. ~ e~. J:i'"'~ Moo-Fr!. 631-1916 1 ... pm auto. W/radlo, hlr, custom GUSTAFSON Only $1989. 646-8148 240l Harbo' Blvd., Com * M zdo '73 Rot•ry * ' u · ·· S ~ve/~ 1 $3400. Pl'"' Into,. ~:;" :":i ;"':.';:'.:' I GUSTAFSON • '00 OLDS 88 ><Ir. H.T. M.... 5'HJl1 EUoctlw .$66 MONTH '70 vw BU don'tc;..,unprJ"''b:"'a"to ~~· ..... -· n • Lincon-Mercury L" I M Runagood,lookagood.$150. thru 1121/13. TOYOTA 8 ~·~-r ·~ -•to pay! a Pt"-"· Ur a nea... . 16800 Beach at Warner lftCO R• ercury 96H591. I '·=59-r=B=,~~~"-··----~-G=...,-. 36 MONTHS OPE.'N LEASE -. .......--·"&-' .... ' y new autlr ""' p. 1m DODGE Challenger 4 -u-u, sw.i.. . Will accept trade-ins l---"-·------1 =Rl Prl to • sell '68 CAMARO speed, ~ctory. stereo, iow 842~un~gton(2~:U:~-5S44 1~u:ii:W~at9~~cr PINTO tlre11$~00,. ~U)2 CALLH MIR. FBRY 842.-h TOYOTA'S ONLY $1595 Cpe VB, aulomallc, P•, alr, :l!Li.""i26oo""'."'.:.U"'U:.~ "Home of th• Viking" ~~'=• :i th~1{j1~~~ 'T2 Wag. Air, Pis, Plb, Thewt,..dcawfnlheW.,L Uft • eac HOWARD Chevrolet bucket scats, vinyl roof. before 4 p.m. Need a "Pad"? Place an Id.I • R/H. First $2,450 Takes! ,. .. a I?&_l!l. Pilot Cl,a!Wfled '73'S Ne~port Beach -~~ri;ues. very clean. '69 CHARGER, cream call 642-5678. ~ Quslficd Ads ... 642·S678 P.rl party 615...864t. Ad. 642-5618. MAZDA MacArthur Blvd Ir Jamboree SAVE $ $ $ w/whlte vinyl top AJC, Motor Homes Motor Homes Motor Homes MOtOr fiOnM, Now at '72 Prices! 83).0555 HOWARD c~vrol•t ' ~ =· .J:i~~ ~::_S~•-'"..:.l_R_on~t.,.,......,,,·,,.,,. .. _"°_.,...s_._i. ... 1 .. R_••..,.t...,._..,..."°-_..;,S,,;•.;.l•.:.f .;.R.;.on"'t-·..,., '"?,.,,.,_..MO_..__s_al_•l:..R,,;,•_nt ___ _.1 MANY MODELS NewPort llNch ' 96>-222!i. 11331 Beach Bl. W-666 & COLORS VOLVO _.,..Blvd,,.,.-. DODGE ·n DEMON-6 cyL MERCEDES IENZ Immediate VOLVO · 83).0555 ~:t,· 116511. ~"' 50 USED Delivery 1:...i.,'!""'~..J::t ooi ooDGE Coronet "'" AT '73'$ compt!felf ratortd. See to auto b"anl, P/S, air, lit MERCEDES See It • You'll Buy It approdate. Belt ollu. !IOO,tal<eo, 963-49114 ON DISPLAY HERE NOWI =··Grove. Steve FALCON Sha~ ~·~ Car fleoit Lewi& Come in test Drive '66 CORVETTE FASTBACK; a e-ms TOY 427. ·435 hp; 4 spd, posl. Coming Jn Ev••Y Day OTA TODAY! Cragar Mags, AM·FM, Ask About Our Unique noeda mimr work 11650. Und Mercedes Le•M L'li& Harbor, C.f\-f. 648-9303 See It . You'll Bu;y It 893-6460 Pl 4 Dr '65 El Camino, 427 eng, 4 •ns '70 TOYOTA Crown · " 1 ... ..!. spd. Heavyyduty susp. & House of Imports :atic~ alrc ~r!i~. dv~:yi -eo.A LUIRI brks. R/H. Wide ovals. 6862 Manche1ter, Buena Park top, lo mileage. (239B10) YQLVO Xlnt cond. Sac $1000/ofier. on the Santa Ana Frwy Kelley suggested relall ,f . ~591H588:::..::;:::::..· ~~--:-c 523-7250 $1980 Sale price $1499. 1966 Impala Super Sport '71 Mercedes Bent. DAVE ROSS PONTIAC. 1966 llarbor, C.M. 646-9303 conVL Elect top, 4-spd 280 SE 248:1 llarbor Blvd., Costa Autos Used 990 trans, full instrumentation. Mesa, 546-8017. Effective ' 644-5987 aft 6 pm. Both Topo, Aulo. Tcan•., thru. 1/21/13. IUICK ·-Che Ca · 2 ~ Power Steertna. AM/FM , . ..._ v. pnce. -w-, Radio oni 13 200 miles TOYOTA 68, 4 whect dttve Pis. air, P/wndws, Pih, ' 9•95 ' Landcru11et, recent Gate '67 RIVIERA. Air con-AMIFM stereo. Top cond. l :t tires, dual gu tankl, 283 diUonlng custom tntetlor owner. 545-3466 aft 5 NEWPORT IMPORTS Chevy eng., Borg Warner vinyl toP. <985FBM) $ISIS 1970 Caprice, S200 below blu 3100 W. Coast Hwy., Newport O'drive & Pac. Very good DAVE ROs.5 PON'I1AC, bk. At $1000. All pwr, Beach. 642-9«>5. cond. $2200 or best otter, 2480 Harbor BI v d • stereo. Must sell. 968-3371. '71 Mercedes 250. Full power, call m : ,376-6271. Costa Mesa: 546-8)17 El ** 'fAI Impala, 2 dt, hardtop &Jr oond.. $581X). Call ·w Toyota JI.nm: 4 Dr Sedan, fectlVI! thn1 1/21J73 rfh. pg. fact air, one owner. 644-'1706. eater, FactoBery Ai1,1clioghnd.1 '~lviebero,1M~ ~•-aowt1 flOO, 642-267'9 MG New nres. aull u .., .. , ~ 1 Oun. ~,..., s a ,66 CL-II SS 'tGI.. . green finish, excellent harp.in. 557...M69. ""'v• • '"l"' 1------~--.I mechanical condition, Below '63 BUICK Sped&l, many ex-1 $800 * !m-ilOO BRAND NEW Whol..ate Sim. 645-6644. tru, &OOd _....tion. A pd want ad ts a &OOd tn- '72 MG 1970 T0>0ta Corona Mark n ""'· -_ ... 2-<lr fastback. Beaut cond • .-Clool119 Out $1450. Call alt 5: 5U-6S88 or NOT DEMOS 531-5289. ,S•ve $600 ofl stlckcr prlce NOW ONLY · $3300 1969 Corolla sla wgn-Xlnt oond. New lires. R/H. Spper sharp! $995. 642-0879 ·13 TOYOTA et. ... .a, 24,CXXI ~r. yellow, !Unt oond.1 auto. $1,495. 494-4618. 1969 Corona lta wgn -Xlnt Cond. New Um, R/H. (286670) Super sharp!'Som. 64).-0819 · NEWPORT IMPORTS .70 Toyola Mart< 11 . .,..,., 3100 W. Coast 1-lwy., Newport auto, dlte btks, R/11. $1215. Beach, 642·94Ct:>. Eves: fm.3032 '67 MG'$ AT l'IUUMPH BEACH IMPORTS ,68 TR4A B R*lten:, e er. some with owrdrlw. .an wtth Standard. rad», brattr, wtre wtrw wheels. a nice car lli8tl£~ (:!~~ !~!t ~ MacArthur Blvd cl Jamborel . Newport Be.ch MGI VOLKSWAGEN ' , ' t '66 Falcon 4 door V-8 AulD, P/B, P/S, $400 96H781 FORD '68 Country Squire wgn. Air, PJS, lug rack, Pwr rear wind, Just tuned, Nu -brks, HI Ml but good shape. $750, 646-7445 ex 5.1 alt 6. '72 COUNTRY Squire, 3 seat, MUST SEU.! ll,000 ml, Uke nu. $3175/or best oiler. 546-9222 or 56-4354 •n Country Squire 10 Pua. w..,;n. Low mlle.... AD extru. $3,495. Call Eva • Weekends. 586-41169. '67 FORD truck % ton, camper 1pl!dal, Ranger Pa~, iood 1hape m-4843 '68 Torino, Excel oondlUon. f795, New tlrel, 1 owner. 494-'1113 '68 Torino, 390 eng, Sharp! 1895. 842-1909 alt. 5 ~6695 rLUS TlJ & U(. $669~50 DOWN 5107!! IGllESl TRADE-.!!!_S ...... on 'fl# car. W\ICk. won. lllOtOI' itoi dQt5n'I eat. '69 FORD • VAN CONVERSION $3395 :\:' HUNTINGTON BEACH . IHOllllCH BLVD. 11234 .... .., 1213) 579.2110 ' ' ONTARIO lOOOW. Noll 1714) 913-5'44 $995 ~r • f • • • t • -: -. :l . -' • •• it sure· .looks that way,._SQ. • •• HOWARD Ch·8vrolet -says ·e·uy . NOW and $AVE on t~ese new ·'73 Chevys discounted off the ·old prices! H·U·G·E Selectlon for lmlilff5de DeaGverj! NEW -'73 IMPALA STATION WAGON ~' With VI en9 ine , redio, tinted 9l1s1, power t•it~•te, white wills, power steering, 1uto. tr1ns., power brake, etc. No. 107322/1496 $ - ONLY 3,788 . MEW '73 LAGUNA C'OLDNNADE COUPE ~-- No. "421512 / 1704. With vinyl roof cov•r, consOle, spec. suspension, power brtltes, 350 CID VB, tilt steeing wheel, power steering, spec. instumentation, AM/FM r1dio': etc. ONLY $3,788 No. 116504/ 1640. With auto. trans., 350 CID, •ir cond., tii:ited gl1ss, extr• 'lide 9l1ss, au x. seat, HD springs, pow•r st•er- ing, radio, white w•lls, etc. ' '73 KAllMBACK STAJIOH WAGQH. N!W '73 NOYA HATCHBACK - No. 128040/2082. With tint•d 9las1, four-No. 133098/ J 653 . With pushbutton radio, speed trans., radit;i, HO radiator, GT equip. white walls, wheel trim rings, door edg9 ment, back-up lights, ate. guards, 250 CID engine, etc. • ~.688 '$ . ONLY 2,788 ONLY '· NEW '72 .LUY PICKUP No. 244215/2049. With pushbutton r11dio, white wills , oil filt•r, mirrori, synchro· mesh, tr1ns,,_ big 11 ~10 •ogio_•, br•k• booster, sp•N tire, etc. ONLY '2 -~ NEW '73 IMPALA SPORT COUPE No. 10845,6/1508. Witlt •~o. tr•n1:;-pow·--= er st••rin9 ind b1k•1, vinyt roof cov•r, VI engine, whe•I coven, r•dio, •ux, lighting, white w•!ls, etc. ONLY -S]a588 • NEW '73 IMPAIJ · SPORT SEDAN ..., FULL VALUE FOR YOUR TRADE~IN! • - No. 405958/ 1689. With air cond., power brake,s, steering and windowi, white wall raciial,, tilt steering wheel, map lamp~ AM}FM radlo, custom interior, etc. I 112 11 ----miei . ,ONLY $6.588 MEW '73 El CAMINO -No. 4073&J(1571. W".ih ';;. •'"' ·=-t1- 9l•11, pewer 1tfffi't ••d br•lres, 350 CID •ng_ine, tiff' Wh•el, •ft+o. tr•n1., wheel cov· •rs, radio, Whit• w•lls, •+c. ONLY SJ,788 NEW '73 l:APWICE SPORT COUPE ~ No. 149757/2036 .. With •ir cond., auto.· tr•ns., power ste•ring •nd brakes, white w1ll.s, pushbutton r•dio, power windows, ENTIRE '73 INVENTORY Comparably l'rlcecl to sell .' NEW '73 VEGA HATCHBACK No. 213730/2~09. Wah t;nteJ gl•n, •I• cond., spc:irt stripes, 1uto. trans., ,..~io, GT equipm•n+o .+c-. - 'O~LY ~11988 NEW '73 SUBURBAN -• No. II 0096/I 624. With VI, oulo. trans., power ste•ri_ng,.third 1•1t, powerg•t•, r•· dlo, HD r1dietor, •xtra chrome, •+c. ONLY $4 388 ;-I - No. 113458/2101. With tinted 9l•ss, •ir cond., console, pow•r ste•ring and br•kes, 350 CID engine, auto. trans., wheel cov· ers, white wi1/ls, r•dio, style option, etc •. \ , ONLY $311988 No. 42450912087. With 350 CID engine, tinted 9lass, pwr. steer. & wind., air cond., auto. trans., tilt steering wheel, st•reo t•p• & radio~ HD r1diator, rally wheels,· etc. , ONLY $4 488 . No. 111821 /1600. With VI •ngin•, push· button radio, g•ug•s, pad-cted inst. p•nel, HD rear springs, 1ynchromesh tr•ns., etc. ONLY ~ .• 788 vinyl roof cover, e.L. . ONLY $411288 4-WHfil DRIVE PICKUP - ONLY. $3,·888 , NEW '73 NOYA COUPE· ' No. 142424/1753: With exterior decor pkg., tintecl glass, air cond., \'8 et1cjine, auto. tr•ns., power steering, wheel covers, white w•lls, HD rad iator, etc. · ONLY $3,388 , .. --.. , • .. .. & ~ .. I l) " NEW '73 lfll'ALA CUSTOM COUPE ~- No. 136090/ 1670. With •ir cond., 350 CID en.gi9•, whe•I cov•rs, til'l t•d gl•ss, white wells, radio, r••r Jpe•ker, HD'r•di•· tor, 1uto. traris., pwr. stetting, custom b•lts, •tc. 988 '<-· . . ./ ' ,,. .... 'ONLY ' ' ), • NEW '73 LAGUNA SEDAll ~ ' No. 418058/ 1680. With •uto. trans., •ir cond., power sl•ering and _brak•s, tint•d glass, 350 CID •ngine, wh'ite walls, r••r spkr., HD r1diator, •ux. lighting, etc, ONLY I , No. 12721 I /204,4. With VI, 1ir cond., c•mper mirtor1, t int•d gl•ss, front wh••I locking hubs, •uto. trans., aux. f•nk, pow•r st•ering, r•dio,· moldings, 9:50.16.5/8 PR $4.888 I, NEW '73 MALIBU SPORT .COUPE No.420829/2086. W/auto. tr•ns., P.S., P.B., whe•I coven, c.ust. belts, buckets, t inted gl•ss, •ir concl., spdrt mirrors, con· sol•, VI, r•dio, •xt. decOf' pkg . .+c: - ~ ONLY-~3,888 l --·--- • ' I - .... . . . • . ' .. '. S•n .Clei11eni . . .. Capistrano EDITION Today's Fina N.Y. Stocks • • ' ' VOL. 66, NO . 18, l SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COU NTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY 18, 1973 TEN CENTS , ---~---· Edison Lawyer' .Blasted at Onofre Hearillg 17 By JOHN VALTERZA Of ,... Delly f'\ltt llltf Lawyers for th_e two .. utility firms seek- ing federal licenses to buUd twin nuclear reactors at San Onofre took some scathing criticism in San Diego Wednes- day from the head of the panel Wh.icb can grant those licenses. Michael Glaser, chainnan of the Atomic Energy CommissMO's Atomic Safety and Licensing Board, addressed the criticism ·primarily to SOuthem California Edison lawyir Charles R. Kocher over his scarcity of answers to issues posed by the public 'during the opening boon of the hearings. Glaser had ordered Kocher last Tues- day to draft replies to the jssues raised by ts persons making 'limited •!>' pearancek. But Kocher apparently appUed the strict rules of Jaw to the issues and on Wednesday told the board .he found new perltnent questions tha t' could be answered. • The lssue1 focused on fears about the safety of.the plants, their impact oo tbe envlroruner\t, the treatment of nuclear wr.stes and the reliability of a con- troversial emergency core cooling system. Kocher lnsi.sted that he could find few actual relevant "questions" in the testimony of the general publJc. That drew anger from Glaser, a trial eace ex 0 Woman,81, Hit, Killed By Auto 1 An 8l·)'CIH'-Old-woman-visiting San Cleme nte from Canada was struck and fatally injured Wednesday afternoon by a car which police allege was be'ing driven on the wrong side of the street. Mrs. Elsie Ward, who had been staying at 107 B Atanieda Lane, was struck by a car to. the 200 bhxk of Avenida Victoria. The \.ehlcle was being driven by Joan Lois Strand, 44, of 531 Vldorja, , REVENUE DDWRS ----1111 u .. , .. ,AJ TOTAL REVENUES llJJ-74 nstAL 'IW ---"'' .. • •£ II 111 u • lawyer from Washington; D.C. "It ls the applicant's (utilities') responsibility to make the public fully aware," Glaser said. "That responsibility is that of the a~ pllcant, not of the Atomic Energy Com· mission or any other enllty. -1'Ucensiog for ~rs ls a privilege and not a right. We're dealing with ~ pie who are unfamiliar with legal pro- ceedings," he said. Kocher meekly explained that he thought he was to have approached the testimony aeeording to the rules of law. Later, after Kocher read ttlrou gh the answers he bad prepared for certain in- dividuals, Glaser took a few more swipes. "It's still up to you to rc!p()nd fully . If you do that y,oo.'re going to find more · cooperation from the public," he said. ... The incident drew a response from Lompoc lawyer Bruce Sharpe, represen- ting the groups ~'ho are fighting the e ~Om. EXPENDITURE DOI.LARS llJJ-14 ~ YUi ...,. , ..... , ·~ . ~. Tile strand woman WU amlt<d 1l 1he ooene of tbe crash, policepkl, ~book­~ 011 initial .cllarau o1 lolonJ ~ drivl . _.. --WHERE THI ~TATi BUDGET MONlt COMIS FJtOM. •• -. -. •• .A~D WHERE iT GOES UNDER NIW ltEAGAN IUOO This morning the woman 1f11 trans!et· red to Orange County Jail ahd police said they wOuld seek a complaint from the of· flee of the District Attorney. Of!icers.said bail had not yet been set. The accident -the first fatal auto-- pedestrian accident on city slreets in many yean -took place at 2: 18 f.m. $9.3 Billion State Budget Aired Two officers on routine pelro came upon the accident scene before witnesses had a chance to call the station. State Employes Would Receive 13% Pay Hike Under Reagan's Proposal O!ficers noticed , the Strand Y(OITIBn leaning over Mrs. Ward, who was trying to get up from the pavement. The elderly woman suffered fractures of the arm and leg as well as internal in- juries. Offlc:ers said they found the woman's wristwatch embedded tmder the bumper ol the Strand car. Mrs. Ward died a few hours later at San Clemente General Hospital. SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. RollBld Reagan proposed a $9.3 billion budget to- day that would give state workers a record pay hike 8hd still· leave a ,l.l· billion surplus for possible tax cuts.· (See related stories, Pages 18, 19 and 32.) The state"'s 115,000 civil servants would get a pay increase averaging 13 percent in the Republican governor's spending plan for the fit<al yell' beginning July I. That was every cent they asked for and it was the major surprise ih Reagan's new budget which is •1.e billion, or 22· percent, larger than thi,s year..'i. 100 Evacuated From Damaging Storm in N'orth Reagan has feuded often with state employes since taking office. 'But he said today be committed himseH lo seeing that they got paid on a par with the persons doing comparable work for other · levels of go.emment or priva te businesses. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Some 50 to 100 persons were evacuated in Novato l;Klrth of here today as a iJtonn packing howling winds and fierce rains s,mashed into Northern CaUfomia for t~ second time 1n the~, days, ailthoritiet said. Officer Keimetb GnoU aald tbe evacua· Uom began this morning as tbe Novato Creek spilled over ita: banks ln several places. He-Jaid those evacuated, many of whom Ded Wednesday. from another flood, were being taken to the Novato Community Center. · Gnoff alst reported DOOliing 'bf local road.I aDd U.S. 101 near Novato but said lhey rematneil open. Elsewhere Jn battered Marin County, winds of gale force snapped power lines, ,knocking out eleetrical service in Novato, • Forest Knolls and Ross, authorities said. San Rafael police also reported minor, Iocalir.ed flooding but "no major pro!> lems '}et." • . Tile C.lilomla Highway Patrol said a section of U.S. 101 near Corte Madera • _ noo<te-t bui rematned.-bl·~·;,--- The Flood Control Center ln Sacramen- to said no rivers had risen near the warning stage, but a lpllkesman feared there could be mort problems when a high tide of U feel .,... aboUI Urie feel above normal -occun In tbe San Joo. qutn Delia area of the SacrameoiO RJvor !ale ioday. II accompanied by high wlnds, tbe lido could be. even . hliher~ thruteninl tbe levees in the area, spokesman CUtf Gregory said. . llowever, the National Weather Service pi'Odlcted-lhat the .-. wblch d....,...,_ more than a hall an tncb of raln on San francilco, would looe tmr<b of 111· strength by lhol Um< u It moved wt ward. I\ The Governor also granted the 74,000 state college and university employes - including facu1ty members -the pay in· creases they sought. . . The entirt pay raise package totals $226 million. Reagan's budget is apparently the largest ever proposed by the governor of 3 Councilmen Gone; Cwment;e Meet Canceled .. two San Clemente city Councilmen are out of town waiting to see ~t Nix· on lniugurated ;'another ~called away for ·family rea90DS Wedntlc'ly, and the result was the fint canc:ded meeting or lhe city Council In m1111 years. Only C<lweiimen Tbollla1 O'Keefe and Cllfloo M,fcn •I'::"-In cbambers Wednesday to the evening'• business. Earlier, Counclbnan Wade Lower had planned to 1ttend to make a quorum, but was cailed out of. town at the 1ut minute. City Clerk Mu·Borg lhen called fur a new meetin1 on Jan. 2S lo laclde the rather sl<eietai ageida. In tbe m<anllme, ~)'Gr Arthur Holmu, Council-.Paul "'"""1 and Oty Minqer it.....tb Cm wUI lake part In tbe tnaugunlion (estivlllet lo the nation'• capilll. ~·rd baft 11 1• way badl iDIO the ""' ords IO -·--..tllo lalt-lime-"'1. Iiad lo caned I meelinc," llefl llld. "It'• btien an awtuUy Jone time, J can say tba\i'' he 11ld. a state. 1be New York state budget has been blqer than Calilo.mia's the past several years. But Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller's uew budget is $400 million bel~w Reagan'.s. Biggest increases in Reagan's spending plan were elpecied lo be $S58 million In new state aid to local schools and about $500 million in property t.a:i relief. They weer part of the $i.14>illion scbool·tax program Reagan won from the J)emo.. cralic-controlled Legislature in Decem· ber. The Governor, planning to leave office in 1974. after eight years, already reveal· ed the state will have an $851 million surplus at the end of this fiscal year, ·June 30. Today, he estimatea the surplus will grow by another $272 million in the 1973-74 fiscal year. 1'he major reason is that state fiscal experts expect a "sparkling" year for Calilomia's economy. That means more tax money coming in. But a temporary bonanza is no excuse for spending money on sweeping new ·'Serious Deficiencies' programs, Reagan said In his budget rilessage to the lawmakers. "Government should never take from the people more than absolutely necessary," he said. . Thus, he maintained. a relatively tough (ist on the state's purse strin&a even though the new budget is twice as big is tbe firsl one be proposed to the Legislature seven years ago. Reagan says be is studying a number or optk>ns for returning the surplus to (See BUDGET, Page ll County Won't Push Coast l;orrUlnr By JACK BROBACK Of .. Dlltr '°"" Staff A serious transportation deficiency ex· ist:s in the whole coastal zone of Orange County but the County Road Department has, ·no plans to force a ·transportation corridor upon the affected conunWtllies. "Wltb tbe deletion of the Pa<Inc Coast Free:-ay by the Legislature, the whole bo!ancO ol the tranlporlalion -In tb! 1 coatal area n1 up1et," Murray Storm, assistant road cmnmluioner, said ioday. '1All our plaMing for feeder roadways had *n. bued on lbe propoted Lady • ID ~ --·-- freeway," he Added. ·•we do know that if devleopment along the coast takes place based on existing 7.0l'ling the circulation of traffic will not be adequate." 1be coastal traffic problem surfaced Wednesday when lbe County Planning Commission asked the Road Departme11\ to come up with interim standarda by Feb. 20 to allow tolutloo of problema of a Dana Point devtiopment. The questkln arose because of prob- lems f a c e d by the 1bunderblrd Capistrano development. Nine years ago the state earmarked • acrs of the ~ · aCl't tract for a Pacl[ic Coast Freeway Louvre LONDON (AP) -Some ol the poople who claim they own tbe r.ai Mona !Jsa auffered a aetback ioday when Loni Clark, Britain'• be.sl known art hi• iorlan, wt bia Volt for the lady In the Loovre. Ol'FICW.S AT THE PAlllS museum ..... doubled thal the original mUl«plece by ~ da Vind is oo dllplay there. Bui a flurry of COll>- petaig clalml last (ail ralled uncmalnly In -ctrcleL . . Clark, who as Kenottb Clart preeented a hlPIY OU<.Utslul televislOll aeriet In Britain and America called "Clvillsalloo," derided tbe rtvai cialms In a lecture .publlthed today. • "EVERY a YEA111 OK 10 collecion claim they own the Mona Lisa," Lord Oart aid, "I\!( I tori of eoldtmic. • '1 llilpo I wm' no1 be laien lo coort u I aay that lhe dart gn,;n object · lh•l hangs almot! Invisibly In lb; LolM'e ls the ort&inll Picture ~led by • . Leon..,. II bu an 11!>peccablo pec11sree,:: · · " I .. right~f-way. The developer wants a decision on fllture use of the swath tbrougb the property. Storm said any answer by Feb. 20 would necessarily be very broad. ·•we have tentative approval for a 1.·01111tY.Wlde traific corridor study." he said. ''The result of such a study would be a set of alternatives on how "best to JO!ve traffic problems." · He aaid social, economic and en- vironmental effecta on the communities ln the c»u.._tal10ne would be a top con- slderaUon. "Many modes are possible," Storm ad. ded. ''They might include a rapid transit system, bus lanes on arterlaJ highways or use of future transportation method! ·not yel developed." Stonn warned, however, that It was ob- vious lbat a 11imple arterial highway is not the answer to coastal traffic pro~ lems. ''Ten years ago we bad guidelines and could have moved ahead With J)lans," be added. "Now ail i. changed. J'eople may evefi say they are willing to put up with lnconvenlenee to preserve the ei; vlronment. 'ft1e county i::an't just produce (See CORRIDOR, Pq• !l Rllll80m Demanded? PAMPLONA, Spain (AP) -Police retused to comment today on reports lhal Balque nalionaiists have demanded I r_,, of 50 million pesetal -.fl93,IJOO .,. for lndutlrfallst Felipe Huarte. Four armed men·'liiot · ihe · lO-yeaN>ld 'con- structl6n man from ~Is 'cOlllltry estate near Pimploni wly 'l\iosday. reactor projects. ''The board tui.s stated our vieY.'S very well." Sharpe said. "\Ve . the interveners in this issue, do share a lot of the Ignorance of the people v•ho made limited appearances. "It is an extremely difficult thing to en I er into a proceeding such as tills," he sajd. · Soon after lhat nareup, the hearings 1 became S('Crtt to examine security {See ONOFRE, Page ll l\.iss iilger To Meet Tho. On Tues day By United Press lntematlonal The White House announced today that Dr. Henry A. Kissinger will meet Hanoi's Le Due Tho in Paris on Tuesday "for the ' purpose or completing the text" of a ce&se-fire agreement aimed at ending the war in Vietnam. A similar announcement was made simultaneously in Paris by the North Vietnamese who said the talks were "aimed at achieving an accord on the erul' of the w8r and re-establishmerit of peace ilJ Vietnam." &algcia dlspajches reported earlier that Soutb Vietnamese )'rcsidel!l Nguy!!!I Van Thieu approved the Jatest cease-fire agreement Jn principle, thus pennitting the signing. He balked at an Oct. 21 agreement. · A hint that a cease-fire agreement was nea r came earlier in Paris when it was announced the weekly semipublic peace talks were being suspended indefinitely after today's 1741h session. The talks would have been exactly four years old next Thursday. The announcement from President ial Press Secretary Ronald A. Ziegler at the Florida White Hoose in Key Biscayne said: "We liave a joint announcement between the United States and North Vietnam. Dr. Kissinger will resume private meetings with specia!-1dviltr be Due Tho and Minister Xuan Thuy OD Jan. 23 for the purpose of completing the text of an agreement." SoUth Vietnamese government political sources said that although. Thieu agreed to the text In principle be re- quested about a dozen changes. "nlese presumably were worked out in con- versations with Gen. Alexander Haig, Nixon's special envoy to Saigon. 'lbe White Hoose said Wednesday that Haig had been Jn commlllllcaOon with President Nixon and that Nixon con· ferred by telephone with Kissinger in Washington. Haig flew today to Pbnom Penh, Vien- tiane and Bangkok to brief the governments of Cambodia, Laos and Thailand on the agreement. Ziegler announced that llaig will ret urn to Saigon Saturd1y to consult again with Thieu. Ziegler did oothlng In dampen specula· lion that a cease-Dre might be declared soon in Sol\fA Vietnam. Oraage Cost We adoer There's a 30 perttnt chance that we'll have more rain on Friday. tbe weailierlady lnslllll. Don't look for any chqe In_ the mercury readings. wt\k:h will stick 1n the middle to upper 509. - ' I I I :l DAILY PILOT sc· Ref!r.~. Denied Leary in London, To Return Today By CANDACE PEARSON Of tM OlllY P'U.t Sl•tt Dr. 'timothy ·Leary, lormer Harvard professor wanted for Cailromia pri.5on escape and in Orange County for the alleged m3$1ermlodlng of a drug smug· gling ring, \\'as expected to arrive on a Pan·A.merican flight to Los Angeles International Airport this afternoon. U.S. Stale Department officials ha\'e sought the return of Leary. who escaped in Sept. of 1970 from prison in San Luis Obispo. from Afghanistan, where he was arrested Tuesday. Retx>rts sald that Leary was sent to London early this 1norning. A Pan Anlerican spokesma n in London said the famous advocate of lhe use of L.SD would rly with armed escort to Los Angeles, where the only London Pan-Am flight too. day touched down at 4 p.m. Interest In Her Girn 'Surprising' Bv JORN ZALLER 01 lht O.ib' P!llll Sraft Fountain Valley's girn ing grand- mother. Frances Sayers, continues to be impressed by the uniqueness of her face. "! had no idea there wou1d be so much iater.est in it," she said today. "It's been in newspapers all around and even oo television. "My stomach has been in knots \\'ilh all the publicity I'm getting," says the 71·year~ld woman. Since a DAILY PI.LOT story first drew wide attention to her face-making antics last week, J\.'Irs. Sayers has been on NBC television news three times, CBS twice, and ABC once. She also hls an. offer to appear on the Johnny ccir'SOll Show next week, and is still pondering the possibility of doing a routine on Rowan and Martin's Laugb·ln. In addition to this,.~ story bas been carried nationally and internationally by the Associated Press and United Press lntemaUoDal. Later this week she bas an appoinprient with a color photographer who wants to add yet another dimension to ~s coverage of her f3ce. . Mrs. Sayers has been Ip.king all the . publicity in stride, aside from her nervous stomach. "~ try to continue my nonnal routine. excePt.now I'm practicing my face a lot more than I used to. "I ihink I'm better than I was. My lip conies nearly haif-way up the bridge of my !}Ose." Mrs. Sayers, said, Mrs. Sayers' best face -which she calls a "gim," or contortion of the face -involves a feat ·few others can perform. • Sile extends her jaw for.ward as far as It will go, and then hooks her lower lip up over 'tbe bridge of her nose, thus giving the ·appe arance that her mouth is swaQowing her face: "My jaws used to a_cbe after 1 did just two or three funny faces," she said. "But my muscles are getting stronger now and don't tire so easily.''· Gary Owens, a disc jockey on radio station KMPC who. discovered Mrs. Sayers' talents on a glm contest laat month, has now become chairman of a campaign ~ promote the funny face of the FoW)tain Valley grandmother. Owens is goiqg to arrange for buttor11 featuriflg a giming Mrs. Sayen, and there also ls talk of.a song about ber. Any money she !bakes she will use for a trip to New Zealand where she·Mpes to girn for grandchildren she's never seen. But she also sard she would appear at any bona fide charity where her girning could raise money for the needy, "I .used to make my faces just for the fun of it," she says, "but if I can cash in on It, why not?" K DAILY PILOT 1"11e Ortnge C..t OA1LV PILOT, wtlll wl'lltfl 11 <ombll!fd Ille H ..... ·l"rtll, 11 Pltlbll!Md 1tf ltM Ortnte Cotti l"ubtl.tilrll ComNny, uP. t'll!t td!llotu 1r1 1111:111~, M....Uy !ti""l!ll l"{ldty, tor twit Mt11, HIWl»rl 8e-cl'I, Hunt!n;lon 91.tell/1"-111n V~lley, L1;u.,. tlMc~. lrYiM/$teldl.tll<k 1!'1d ·Sin Cltmtnt11 Jen Ju1n C1pi1tr1no. A 11"'11 rttlOMI ftlllon 11 p1,1blh.llllCI Stllll"O.yt 11'11d Sund1ys. TM prlnc ipal Wbllllllnt pt111I 11 ti JlO Wt\! ••r StrRet, Cnta Nin •, C.lltor111&, fM2'. llob1rt N. w.,d Pt1$Kle!ll tlld Pll()!bller J•ck R. Curl1y Viet PrnlOtnt tod Oft\er11 M•1110tr T~tlfl•• K•t •il l"dl'- Tholl'lll A. Murphin• Ml111tlrtt EcH1or Chttl11 H. Looi , ll.ith•r4 P. N•ll -A.ullllnl MIMll"'ll Elli!~ s.. c. ...... OfRff tl.05 t"orth E.I C1111l110 R1t.l1 92672 . .,,....,_ .. ..., ,Cttt• Mbt! Jlll w111 l•y Slrttt • '""""'" ltldl: 1m H"""*1 IOlllllVllO ~ tt.111~ htdl: nus tM<ll to.,o1,,..1n1 ·-~ l.llvM IMdli m ll'trttt Annw • : • '"-1714) '42-4111 ' •a--An..tltlooJ '4J.1171 ••• !<lit ci...... •• ._ ... , ·T...,•••• 4t2""'42t ' I ~I, ''"' °'•"" Ct•1l """'"*" ~!'tt ' -lltl'IM ltl11tlrll'-o ' ~ ' '""' ... ~iMINftla. -1'*"111 """ ... .. •1!111111 ..... "" llllUIClll capr,tifM ·-. 1~-.~~j!.~ .. _Id at a.t ,...;.. ~~~ __.~• w u"• ~u ,_ ......... U.11 _.. ... ~--: ~ fl'IOf!l1111Y-1'-'. "r'':-· . . I Local law enforcement officials denied those report s. A sf)Okesntan for the narcotics division of Orange County District Attorney Cecil Hicks' office said early today lhat "the only people telling us he'll be here this afternoon are the press." The spokesman silid be was told by the federal agent handling the case that it \rould ·be two to four weeks before Leary's return could be arranged. "That's all we know," the county of· ficial said, adding the last be beard, Leary was still in Kabul. Afghanistan. Asl.-ed if the twt>-to-four week story was only a ruse by agents t.o keep a crowd - particularly Weathermen -away from the airport, he only said. ''Does that sound logical to you?" The Weathermen, a militant un-- dergroUJJd organization. claimed credit . for helping Leary escape from the minimum security facility where he was serving a six months to 10-year term after being convicted In Laguna Beach for marijuana. possession. It is presumed that Leary will be .taken to Los Angeles County Jail while authorities decide where to prosecute him. In addition to escape charges. Leary is \\'anted by Orange County officials on a $5 million bench warrant. The Orange County Grand Jury last summer indicted Leary and 46 other alleged members of the "Brotherhood of Love," .. supposedly an international drug smli:ggling club formed in Laguna Beach six years ago. FollQwing his escape, Leary apparenUy fled to Algeria, wbere he stayed with Black Panther leader Eldridg for nine months.· Leary then went to Swi , e be was cont~ally ord to leave the country, for tQe last time Dec. 31. Earlier repOrts Said Leary bad beeri held under house arrest in the Afghan capital. There is no extradition treaty between the Uni ted State.i and Afghanistan but Foreign Ministry of. ficials in Kabul said: "We want Leary to leave Afghanistan because we do not . want to add to the country's bad name in drug trafficking." The Pan American World Airways jumbo jet_ carrying Leary to London from Kabul arrived in midmorning. It was immediately boarded by British im· migration officials, a U.S. Embassy of· 'icial and the two Narcotics· Bureau 1,&ents. -r..\..lew minutes later they walked down the steps from the aiEcraft with Leary and ~ Jenna Harcourt-Sntith. Leary · wOre an o~n-necke'.d yellOw ·shirt, blUe trousers arid soft White shoes and carried an overnight bag. His friend wore a fur Coat and had necklaces over her blouse. As they made their way 300 yards to the immigration hall. Leary and Miss Harcourt-8mith were embracing all the way. Coastal Group Changes Meeting To Monday Night The fJ-rst organizational meeUng of the South Coast Regional Coastal 1.one Conservation. Commlsslon was not held last night as originally scheduled but in· stead will convene Monday night in Long Beach. A spokesman for Los Angeles City Councilman Louis R. Nowell, a com- missioner wbo called the original meeting, said the group had too many conflicts Wednesday and had to set Mon- day as the date. The commission, which is responsible for reviewing all major construction proj-· ·ects under the terms of Propasltlon 20, officially begins actions Feb. I. But a large backlog or applications reportedly has already begun piling up and Nowell's spokesman said the com· mission bas to be ready to dig in right away. "The commission will probably select officers and esl@bllsb an o.f!Jcla1 milling address during the o rgal\iz.aJ.Lon meeting, 11 the spokesman said. The meeting, whtcb will be attended by all four Orange County commissioners, is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in the Long Beach Harbor Commission Office. Orange County's four representatives on -the panel include County Board of Supervisors Chairman Ronald CaSpers of Newport Btach, San Clementt Mayor Arthur Holmes, C81 State Fullerton biologist Donald · Bright and con- servationist Judy Rerener of Newport Beach. From Page J CORRIDOR·~. a plan and expect communiUe9 to buy it any more." He said demands from com munities ror action would dictate county moves. "We know that future transportation corridors will bal'e to provide buffers to rcstdenUal :ireas. •· Storm said. "We will alsb include bicycle ways and equestrian lralls." The eountywlde study is not even under way yet, the road commissioner disclos- ed. "We are asking ror :1t11te help and use of· their computer material but we are not asklni them. to Jind solutions. Perhaps • ··~"'e of tile many monlba needed for . an ov1?ralf county study, the coastal area may be given priority," he .conetuded. ' - OAIL Y P'll.OT lttH .....,. Fatal Crash in Irvine • Body of 41-year--0Jd Jack' Dean Miller of Tustin lies covered by blanket foll~wing crash about 1:80 p.m. 'Vednesday at Jamboree Road and. Michelson Drive. -' Police said Miller was killed when his statioit wagon slammed into the rear of truck driven by David E, _,, Shrode, 2218 Delaware St., l.luntington Beach. Police '!!>.> said both vehicles were lmrthbound on Jamboree r and that truck was slowlifg for stop light when Mill· er's auto bit it at hlgli' speed. Plan to Allo,v El Camino Real Parking Slated Clemente Group Tours -~.City's Spanish Homes Two· proposals to remove ihe red from curbing along North El Camino Real will come bef<ire the Sao Clemente Traf· fie and Parking C'.ommission at 7:30 o'clock tonight · in city council chambers at City Hall. At the same' meeting, the commission will reopen its discuss ion of a proposed extension of no parking zoaes along South El Citmlno Real in tbe vicinity of the El Rancho Motel. The red curbing along El Camino Real, while seen by some as a solution to crowded roadways, has been criticized by merchants. The commission tonight is being asked to remove the red :r8ne9 at North El Camino Real Md C8lle Valle ,and North El Camino and Los Molinos. Also on tonight's agenda are : -Discussion of the Orange County Transit District's busing nee'cli !tudf. ' -Discussion of a budget program for replacement-of obsolete meclJ!micartraf· fie signal equipment with m&e-Tnodern electronic versions. -Election of olf~ers of the advisory commission for the quarterly tenn. From Pagel ONOFRE ... aspects or the utility applications. Glaser excluded the public and the sessions continued for more than an bour, examining, be e1plained later, ma tters of "nationaJ security." He added that the public bad to be ex- cluded so that secret details of plant security would not be disseminated. The last public witness of the day was Edisoo Engineer Orlando Ortega, who is manager of the finn's generation engineering department. Responding to frequent claims by cri.tics that the plants should be built underground, Ortega insisted that such a move would cost an extra billion dollars and wouJd spark delays or 15 to 16 years. Those delays would mean that the en· tire San Onofre c<lncept would have to be scrapped because it could not be built in Lime to meet the crisis for power . predicted for late Uli! decade. Ortega further testified that the qulllity of rock in the Onofre area was ruled poor by conilultants and the finn has ruled out the possibility of underground siting in the vicinity. . Niguel Jay~es Back Bond Vote The Laguna Niguel JunJor Chamber of Commerce has endoned the S25 million Capistrano Unified School District bond election on Feb. 20. The need for more schools to ac. commodate t.be district's.growing student popula.l_iod.,convinced jul\ior Chamber of. ficials fOSupport the bonds, a spokesman said. , · · The campaign for pa,..ge of the bonds is headed by Rev. AllM Vernon tmder the logo AB.VY 's1 ~fee Resid~nt-Vote Yes) Friends. · -VO-ting Signup Deadline Nears Representatives of three San Clemente organizations -out to "preserve the good we've got" -took a tour this morn- il)g of old Spanish homes in the city to study their architec1uie. · About 15 members of the local American Association of University \Vomen (AA UWJ, a fledgling historical society and the Junior Women's Club took the trip organized by AAUW member Marion Moon. Goi:ng by car pool, ""ith maps in hand, they looked at about 36 houses with Spanish architecture, including Casa Rmlantica, the Rasmussen House, the Wright House and some Jess well-known buildings along Los Alamos and up Trafalagar Canygn. Hntttin tYtOn Girl • 0 Dies-Btametl .. · On Meningitis A 13-year~ld girl who was dead on ar· rival at Pacifica Hospital in Huntington Beach Wednesday died of meningitis. Orange County Coroner's deputies said today. Jim Beisner, spokesman far the cor· oner 's office said the death 'Of Nancy Denner, of 1015 England St., has been at- tributed to bacterial meningitis. He said tests are being run to determine it the straifi of bacteria which caused the disease is infectious. Results should tie availablewljlilii two to tbreo days._ · . Beisner pointed out the more infectious form of meningitis -the fonn that has caused the death of Army recruits at Fort Ord -is caused by a virus, but he had added that some forms of bacterial meningitis are also communicable. The girl's mother, Belly D<nn<r, told police her daughter bad been 111 for about two weeks, but because other famil y membmp had been sick with the Ou, tliey assumed that that was what was wrong with her. ' Phfll1s Rauch, -San Clemente librarian, went, hoping to get informaUM to add to the city memorabilia she's collecting for a san Clemente historica1 society. Also prime organizers Of the tour Were Blythe Welton and carol Gray, members of the Junior Women's Club, who are writing a histoey. or San Clemente for third and fourth graders. 1bey began their journey at Christel Marks' home at 142 Dolores and ended at Mrs. Moon's borne at 1209 Buena Vista with a round-table discussion of what they saw. The group also stopped at about five "points-of·btterest," spots on the bluffs or hills that have been or are planned for development. Mrs. Moon said the three organi~tions hope to "work on the history of the city together~ 1-...i 1th .<tit would be ntce to write it -dbwn,-r it was once· a unique town,11 Mrs. Moon said Wednesd~y before the tour, , Compiling a written hi,story of the San Clemente would help 'liOOSI community pride, he added. A project that Mrs. Moon "first en· visioned as a trip about town has "snowballed." San Clemente residents who ·want to help disfuver and record the city's history can contact Mrs. Moon. "I'm always willing to talk to anybody." . Or they can volunteer to help Mrs. Rauch's effort. "She's doing a whopping job with very little help/' Mrs. Moon said. ~ Deadline 'for Board Race Filing Feb. 16 ,... The final filing date to run for one of three trustee seats on the saddleback Community College District Board is Feb. 16, according to the Orange County Registrar of Voters. The election of trustees in areas two, four and five .is April 17. The filiitg deadline was rePorted earlier-by a spokes man at Saddleback College as Feb. 9. .FACTORY BUY-0.UT • • • ,/ ........... 1 -BU·DGET .-. • tupayers -lncll1dlng a comblnallon of 'a on&-Ume rebate or • permanent ta1 Ollt. °"" ..... ·-l•Uon IO\llhl. Jn Ille budl<t this year Ii ltlO,olili lo bullif a new govemor·s mansion. Another I• lt.t million lo plan for the replacement of San Quentin Prlaon with two new maximum security facllll!cs. Tbe budget now eoes through the long legislative process, expected to return to b.11 desk to June. At that polnt1 he can ellmlnatt or reduce ariy 1pendlns ap- proved by the lawmakers. But he can't add to the amount paned by the Legblature. 'Ibe major departure from Reagan's "squeeie-and-cut-and·irlm" econom y pbUosophy was in employe salary tn· creases. , Two.years ago, when the state faced a big bu<iget deflcll, Reagan told slit• worken they would have to go without the pay raises lo which they had become accustomed. AnarY leaders cf the California State EmpfoY.,s AssoclaUon began tanqng about a possible atrtke and aome workers in the Water Resources Oeparinlent did walk out last year. Reagan bad angrf words for the CSEA last fall when It ran a '2·mJlUon cam· paign to take away the governor's veto over state worker saJary increases. The effort, a p"'posed constitutiooal 1mepd- men~. was _defeated in the November election. · But today there was a warm response from CSEA President LeRoy A. Plom- berton lo Reagao. "I beUeve that all state work'ers w1n be pleased with the Governor's action and ir:npressed with. the fact that he has kept his commitment," Pemberton said. The Governor budgeted $160 million for the t.l percent pay hike. Rather than going to all employes across the b:>ard, it will be _used to correct inequities Jn salaries at the state level and in private industry. Some employes may get more than 13 percent while ~rs get l~. Coast Business Leaders Named In Stock Suit By The Anocfated Pr<u Tbe SecuriUes and EIChange Com· mission in Lo.!I Angel~ today bas on me a civil suit chargiDg a Newport Beach rum and five men, lncluding the Corona del Mat president and Fountain Valley vice pj'eS!den~ with stock manipulation. Jdenlllled In the civil action Is the ftnn Newport Securities Corporation ti Newport Beach. Principals Identified In the lawsull In- elude Abt.i>am Gunloo Wollson of Corona de! Mar, president and Roi<' Omar Danon1-0J. ~talo VaJJey, uecytive vice-presldeaf.--iliid treamrer~ The commlsslon's lawsuit alleges that the stock of DCS Financial Corporation of Rochester, N.Y. was manipulated .0 !hat the price of slock rose from II. n a share lo 139 a sbare In 10 wetks during 1971. Tbe suU also names DCS u a defen- dant and -., an .lnJuncUou lo bait "manipulaUon pf the market price." Besides DCS, , other defendants namedare: Martin Susson or Newport Beach, vice president of the callfornia firm; DCS President Isadore Dlatnond of Pittsford, N.Y. and former DCS Pres!· den~ Seymour Vigman of Newport Beach. Vigman was barred from working in the teeurilles .bulineU ~y lhe SEC In 1881. He pleaded no' contest In 1972 In Florida lo 15 counts of vlolaUng federal securiUea laws. He was found guilty and fined 1100,000. The lawsuit contends the defendants drove the price up artlficiallY and in. tended to sell their shares at 1 later date. The sult alleges the dele¢anli paid $900,<M» for their DCS stock, which reached a market value of ~;6 million ~urin& the alleged manipulation. The stock was suspended from trading by the SEC on Nov. 28, 1972. There .has beta no public trading of lhe slock alnce then. OF ·ALL REMAINING 1972 LITTON MINUTE MA$TER II MICROWAVE OVENS ' -MICRO BROWNER only at SAVE •90°~ Stmday Is the last day on which resident s or the C&pl.strano Uhlfled School District can rtglster to vote and sti ll be eligible lo casl thelr balloli In the district's bond election Feb. 20. 90 DAY CASH HUR2Y ...'. Wiii{! THEY lAST Qunpalgners for the di1lrlct'1 $2$ million bood issue ask that residents con· tact their local 1ehoo11 for in!ormaUon on U;te nearest deputy rea:istrar of voters. Information also can be obtained at U». Orange Coonly Reg!Strar ·of Yolers, al 83 .. 22R ' . - wmt ''"°"' CIUIT .,, r: •.. ---·· 1815 NEWPnRT BL YD. Dmrntm Cesb MfSa " s3299s ' ' 'I • I > .. . -Ph• 548-7788 · 1. . ' •• ! ( I I ' \ I ' I I I ) I I \ I I I ' I I I ·] I ' \ ' I i I \ \ I I \ .; I . I I " \ · l I l ' ·'I }' I I ' I I I \ t I I I I , ! ! • I ' l r ' I • I • l I • I $ • r .. • • ' ' . .... ... . .. • • .. . ..... " ....... • •• ' "' j' +. • •' .. ·' • .. . .· ... :.:Tl=wnd=a::Y•_:J::an:::"::".:...::'':cl•_:l:::':.:":__ _____ __c_OAILHILOT 3J tington W rover Dicus Pace Victory Buel Still ' /, . Basketball Standings ts 6349 I M , 8 G lf T A t. In FirSt Hoop Win Fl:w~er ~~non ~~at INm• ~a~~ Mc~~ ~~k• After Loss IOUTif COAST COlllPD•IKI SUNSIT LIAOUI! WlPP ll'A Wlll',ll'A ~ (Jl!Mf 1 I ~/ »f .......... """" h«n j t )II lt1 ~!ri.""-! '1 m Ill Lo.•1 5 0 25' 2-6 s.,, oi.. ,...... Manne J 2 2'7 tll M'f kfl A.ntonl.-2 111 Wftl9rn l 2 .. 311 By HANK WESCH Of IM D.IOy 11'110 lt.llf Dicus paced the Sapia Alla try Club Jan. 26 with 11 tour· and Cbrls Cbrlstial180n. Country Club Thursday team Ing pros already set tQ His partners and the order of to vlctQry over visiting El participate Jn the unique their finish found Larry SUbak Niguel CC, 29-19. event. -The Weaver-Dicwi-duo , The men's tlub· seniors on the winning team followed Posted il ~ler ball sCore of 62 group tJtaged a monthly by Dave Shepphard, Don ln winning all slx poJntt'of lhe tournament Wednesday with Smith and Dlck Camavele,_ match. Fred Werder and Bob 150 players fa cing the noon In a similar event Sunaay, FUlltrtOll I l tn W•••rnlnlf1r 2 3 tll ~n ........ Y"W k-. H-1 WlrDM 1 ~ 31l XIO SI.A DltoOO M9M JS. 0..~ CotH fl I.Miii Alll l f W t11 Cirlm. '1, F"""'1M1'2 Anaheim O 5 W DI Ml. San t:~ ~ An1•1f W.._,..y'I kwff SAN DIEGO -ora""e ()!'~Nil II Slfll• • H1111tl1111lon BllCll ~. S.nt1 Afl8 .., •-a Siii ~ •I Clf" IO• La••• n, Marina J5 Coast CoUege, despite a 75-il Mt. "lll~~i t~:~~E'1;111 w1.1m1,.,.,.,. s.i, N~ Hartior n W L ,., PA W"'tar" .o, Anahllm 51 \otJ setback to San Diego Mesa , __ "' M¥ 4 0 2~2 21, 11r1c11r1 01m11 Founl&ln v11i..y 4 0 21<1 H1 La••• II H ..... U1>11!on 8H tll here Wednesda,y night stlll en-e'· Mew J 1 194 Ill Anehtlrn ,, Marina • h f • o'.:O.,":,,~•lltY f, j' !~, ~~ Wtt !ern 11 Wfttmlnst.,. JOYS t e prosperity 0 being ID Au':':. -ID w-51n11 Ana I I Newport Ha•llOr fin! place In tbe South """st Edl10tt 0 ~ lN 7)6 GAllDl!N GROVE LEAGUE _, """" Mtlvnalla o 4 710 U3 LI ~r.11111 J 0 lOl lfi Soccer Switch Founta in Valley Hlgh 's aoc- cer game with Santa Ana IUch Friday has been rescheduled for 8 p.m. Tbey11 meet 11 Santa Anlla Park near the intersection of Bolsa and liarbor Blvd. · !l!e<JIJ'I/:) u:1~MOP BIG -n-TALL BIG SALE NOW IN PROGRESS! Huntington Beaeh l~lgb's basketball team silenced a taunting crowd with a 1()-polnt outburst in the final two mii. utet to grab a 63-19 victory over Santa Ana Wednesday on the losers' court. The victory kept the Oilers' mark unblemished in Sunset League play, and sets up a eonCrontatlon with Loara, the Q.nly other unbeaten league team Friday night at Hurr Pohst also won s.iJ: .points tn shotgun star.t. Frank Becker and George the competition that featw'el This group stages a monthly Troski copped tint place with 16 golfers from each club. To-tournament, usually o n a 59. Conference basketball race. ...,.....~, S<-. ~11.~ l I ?~ 2u F°""'llln \lalllv !i1:1noll• ., Gt ..,, Grow 1 1 w 2112 But instead of -L.--i"" the ~~ del Mir "Ed lllll y AtncflO Alam!los ! 2 251 224 227 I. 17 .. St., CHta M ... Olil:U"-t> ottl ~~41. 9111K lS • -·-·-· , •• •• ·-· • ,. -•·•>-All mltoll 4! .. _ _,,.._ •et•-_ _.y Tltr ., lead with j'ust Santa Ana the ., ~~ En Bolw Gren.de o 4 I~ 10 day lhe two teams meet another coune. at El Niguel. Tom Schauppner bu moved up to being the nwnber one assistant to Jerry Hall at San· ta Ana CC. Scbauppoer ls a teaching professlanal at SACC and studied under Johnny Revolta and Pboenlx Open champion Bruce Crampton of MeadOtlllark Mesa \lerde Friends of Dusty EUonl will be interested to !maw that he bas relocated at Meaa Verde County Club In Costa Mesa. l'tourite~Mi.v •I C114 Mtr WMMMl•n 5nrM I• MftG C...... LI 1·2l•J Pirates hav.e been io· ined by,.-~;;:~!!,"~ ••~~~m_"_" ____ ~ .... ~·~·~-~·~·~"'~w~o.:!•~'"'~·~~~~·~·"'~,-~,,..~.,~-~·~.,~·~~'~"~.,.~~ 11 \/'ill'-"' L.8 Qv(rtl8 '1, S.11lll90 • Cerritos and Mesa. i. 11 1t.r1ei. R1nel'IO Al1ml1M n. G1raen G<ova 53 That all came about when Santa Alla fell to Ml San Antonio, 77·76, and Cerritos blitzed FuUerton, 97-73. tingtoo Beach. Coach Elmer Co mbs' crew had a much tougher time than the score indicates with the Saints. The Oilers led by only four (53-49 ) with 1:47 left to play, but started on a final string which crushed Santa Ana's chances. Australia. Irvine Coast Plans are nearing com- pletion for~. the annual Lady Jim Rowland had a field day Saturday as he was 1 member of. the first fouc teams finishing in the weekly sweepstakes competition at Meadowlark Country Club in Huntington Beac b. Rowland aided all four teams wllh a hole-in~ne on the 11th hole where he used a nine Iron to cover the 145-yard distance. He was playing with The outburst was a team ef- fort , with starters Jim Weir, Doug Rabe and Raul Con-· treras and reserve Scott Rankin all taking part. Weir hit a free throw to start lt .and Rankin cashed a pair it the Alamitos Entries end. In between Rabe bit a PUllST •A:~~"'.:" YI.rd•. ' r." free throw and a jumper, Weir o1et a. 111t, Cl•'"''"" ll'Urw •«JO. canned a layup and Contreras ~~·.;r:ia(~~ st• 111 Ant lllellft SI•'• Sllwt' IROCll-) Stir Detil !Alll1«1 ) Fine AM Fanev !Adair) Dlneltl J•Y IWardl '" •11S "' "' made two free tosses. FIMt Klno Mol"ll {BurotMJ 11' Wiiiow Ookl (UpNmJ 117 ''"'"'" ••<• .• Before that outburst the v.1n T-i.a=•rdol•l nt J1! l UJI. A1iow.r1e; ~~73ss<J. ~ Bibo! Plrr (Wr hll II' ""-CklO ot Newo«T H bOr Oilers had outscored Santa Oh o.ddy tV• llf UOl>lft-La;r"'1~'!1 •r · 111 Ana, 27-20, In the third period ir:~/'1.:;::Jcf'~o 111 ~·o~~~m! ll~ after falling behind 24-23 at ~1 ~,:rw~~lr! H~ r::r°' 1r1:.C:~ \Traa.!l.., · lB I•• haJJ. Abe llh!IOI• Md ACKU (lhtf91U ) 117 uc: K•~•h Deck IClniol•I lit k On Man CAll.llrl 122 Jim Teel, making the most e::~. J:: ru~l1'd'l1r1 lH l lOHTH •ACI! -GI 'llfl:ll. l ._r of a rare slatting appearance, Dkls &-...... Atlow.lnc.1. Pur .. moo.•Tr.e SECOND UCI -no Vl f'OI. J 711r Am.rlc1n S.vlncis I. t.o.n ln!tlh.1!1. took charge around the boards Dkl <N~ c1.1m1no. PUfM s a . Tiii La A"lllln-Of"•noe °"""' to score half of Huntington's ~~1ilf .... ~-1H1111 tn ':%1:!:'0un 11 1A<Hff"1 -111 20 points in the third period. ~·c!r1J~1J·i lit h':.t!t.; 1J.&:.h cU:1:J1''1 lY Elford, a Jong-time auistant pro at Santa Ana Country Club, moved to Mesa Verde as Barry Sutherland's. assistant with the marriage departure of BoMie Millick. 1'11sdon l'lefo The Mission Viejo Co.Untry Club men's Thursday team defeated Mesa Verde at home last week, 29-19. The two teams meet again this week at Mesa Verde. Friday will be Tijuana day for the men's club Of Mission Viejo.•Club professional Roger Belanger is hosting a trip to the across-the-border country club for a day or golf and festivities. Shoreelltfs The Shorecilffs Country Club men's team defeated cross- town rival , San Clemente, in a team match this week, 47-75. 19th Hole OCC visits Santa Ana Satur· day night. The Pirates trailed the Olympians all the way, but cut the margin from 14 points to four (53-49 ) mid WEJY tbfOugh the second ball. But Mesa guard Ted TUli>~ broke Jt open with some driv- ing layins and the Olympians rolled-away to a comfortable lead. OCC was hurt considerably by the loss of sophomore guani John Seymour who missed the final 10 minutes of · the opening half. Seymour canned IO points early, then twisted an ankle and had to sit out the rest of the half. With Seymour on the bench Mesa grabbed a 38-29 le~d at the intermission. Seymour finished with lS points while Tom Crunk hit 15 and Dean Bogdan had 10 for OCC. Tibbs paced Mesa with 21 wblle three other Olym· piano also hit In twin figures. and the Oilers' 6-3 senior f~~= t~llt~1 :ls ~--1., :1.nc1rt:.iJ.ii•rill lll Keith A. Neal, golf course r-rded a personal high ol 24 Run BlobOY Run 101'1'1'91"1 uo M UY Tt l(nlahO l U • t--· t f F p °"""' CNlf ('1) ...... u Pnsltl I Y fM111ud1 l ns Flloht 1or (LICINoml , 122 supenn ~uuen o ore-ar, .. ", of • be' re fouling &ut '"'""' J•,. fM""*l 1," In led Lag Be h, Miiier t 2 s iO " Kiioton (Wrlol'tll 20 NINTH 11:.flCll -400 yards. 3 i••r corpora , una aC J, 'SolYmour I O I >'s' Tbe Oilers ha shooting~ Vlndlcltor 2 lf1~li1i.lble l20 rem~ ~ C=~llll· Pl.lrw S 600. attended the ffth international S~~ l ' l ,1 J-• In the first half, hitting .s.11n•1 Wer ct11n1 !Rob111IOl'll !ft Ml•tv Jot \T•H1u••\ 112 turf-gra'il'il conference and ~i , !, ,!' .. ,.... Ftamlno H-/Hartl • ntre lll:ag;et ll:lct.Md5 122 -c f only eight of 32 shots. San8 ta !~ ~~°'!~::':lozaJ s ~ "':''a!~W.~~1ru1 lY show in Bosto.n last week. ot• • '-• 0._. ~ 1J1 •1 Ana was susceptible to un-Rov•• T~•r <P-1 111 Purpose ol the fi'v• •·y 1t1 " !If ., d f THIRD llACE -170 yerdl J vur ADI'-W1rd) 117 ~ Hlllr'I' ' 1 0 > >"> tington 's pressure e ense, old• .. :;r c1~1m1nci PIH'sa 1uoo tioo11er ~~IQ/'" 111 meeting was to update J= : ~ o however and tfttned the ball ~~i:=1;1n <~:"~!t°°· Hl ~.~~f~o\n:.,c 11 ~Robln~I Jg superintendents on the latest ~~~"1«1 / ' 1 4 Ii PRE-INVENTORY BICYCLE CLEARANCE. S.vMip 11)ore ••• oM .ti h<Hs• wt ..ii Ma , ... IN "' MW ..... ......,......,.,. It.l's ... ,m.. •• ,. lvtry llillo• Hi stod1 rt41KH fw 1t11Kk solo • all t..... lltlker, -..Stk-' ~Htli:n. Mlury W over 13 times to keep from l~':'J. \t\='~1.s 'JJ s11arkw uck:f .. v~~f:;. 117 developments and information y:.C,f~ f i : j' getting a Sizeable lead. --~:,f:i"'fr.:!i/1,." > -lff ~ft::'~~~r) oc11mu1i jff oo the_professional manag~-~4i : : -f-- Huntington Beach worked ~:=.,~'1..!,~)~~t l1l ~:i~~"::r1r~m)1 l?t m-ent of cOOrse "'!aint-en-ance. r~:,t1ma: Sift 0~ Mt!.. J.:.,,75 the ball better to open the "' AmllWI tt~'dri;;;:: 117 lri;ii;;;;~i;;iiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiii~~iiiiioiiiiii;i;ii~il third quarter, .nsidr~peatedlandy ~~ Wi~~J~~~u ~1~ SUNDAY AFTERNOON JAZZ found Teel open I e, El G1wllan C~l 117 wenL to the boards better than t1arkt11•..t cStnit11i 122 JAM SESSION -2 P.M. -SUPER DUO it had in the first half. .J,0~~~J1~!ne-;. 5#'ur':'~·""' ·_'Theo' As Anchor -Also Futured Tues. Thru Sun. The victory leaves Hun-2f~'1~01{: ~~~1 · lg MONDAY -VINCe CHENTE; -DRUMS !'•"'~ w'•lb a 13--4 record for wa1c11 Aodi•1 1T...awr•J 1,1• JIM MAHONEY -GUITAR ~....... t:'r c~sm~rdll ,n the season. rmnenr. LIO~ fHlcodelnwl n• Unbeatable Atmosphere "Under The Dome" Mldwev [)lftllv {Hfrt) lll w;1h All The Peanuts You Can Eatt ...._........ ..ldl t'-'1 '8ntMWllh (CrctllbVJ .., .. ~ "! 1~ ''"" ucL-.. 350 v•m , ""' HAPPY HOUR -4-7 P.M. MON. Thru SAT. ~'::" : :. : : E:{'.i:..·=~;£1:l~\~ THE ' GALLE' y ON THE ___,.,, :::;_ : : : ,: t?.'-t.IDl~•.:n-J."' Ul . PENINSULA • • • Rebe O J 2 3 YOOJ (Ad1lr • ... ,. " ·-"" '"" l~ 101 E.-BALBOA BLVD. -673-9980 ;:r : ~ ~ ft ~F1lr L•ir.r {~~ "':II!'!'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~, :0 17 13 '3 S.ndl ,,.;;:.~~)-111 Total• !lillll AN 1.,1 Bto0nl1 OlkodtmUll 1't ""'ftp Z1r1ft s 3 l 13 a.as.on 0 010 M•rllMI: l 2 3 I F,..,lduon 3 1 s 7 RablftlOll •O ~I DI~ $3 1 13 Totel• 20 9 17 "' kere '°Y 8"f't1'1 H1111ttnoton BHdl 11 n 20 10-43 S8111• AM 12 11 I• 11-'9 SIXTH RACE -lSO verd .. J 'f'l•r old•-Cl&lmlno. Purw SlllOO. Cl•lmlllQ prlc& S.000. Non $1-{Smith) 1\i Peu em Bv \''~'' ,_ Dui>e't Nl1191" Harl .,. Pitddv ea,.. CWrloh l 1:10 ,..,1 Van B•r (C•rOOU) l~ Rov 1utn1 {RktlltdJl TM "'' cnoice (Mvlel) n o $1'1ero R~Jrel (Adalrl 1,H PtQl/WI Mooito (P19el 20 Rkktav (0,..'flrl 120 a Alamitos Results w~y, ~-rv 11. 1m CIM".!. ~ IMIW'f ,lll:ST ll:A(I! -s• y.,.ck, 3 vear cflb 1. \IP. Cll'!'l'llllQ. PurM 11..00. Ant_at• Sur• Mika fRobln-l 60.00 :IOA HA! Lett11C111 {AJl llOll ) 4.40 2.IO E1Jf lndl•n I Alclll,,,_I '·'° Tlrna -11.n . • -Alto r•n -Hall Of A Noll. no .. .., 51119 B•r Duller 11r aov. P•mtl111 lm. R.MI Craton, Aeo!d Flklhl, Dal Uy.:;:·'"'""" Sii"' Miki & 1· un...,. Mkl t.Jlf.H. ..!..•«NfD ll:ACll -..00 y1rdt. ~ ftlr p;. m!ldlft•. C•llf.-br'e<I. Cll mlno. ki"v.i 'il:'t1 !C•rdol•l 3'.00 U..0 f.10 l SYndk•lt (Rlct11rd1) '·'° l.IO Chu Ch\I l.«I T me -21.74. ~ 11,_, A M r1n -Flame !er, -~· Mttur•llY Luckv. Klno ymen 11l1h, J\lllY'• Man, Exlrl COO'I', AWIY $1\e ..... THlltD UC• -tl'O var'lb. l YHr old1 & Ill). Clllml,..,_ l"Urtl n:JOO. "tir'r!.-.roon tl.~"s..o J.:io Rl"l•I ,,u~Wfrdl '·" j·~ ,F-mlfl) ·'° me -..,, .. '"" -Molalll1.Cr•n> K1v. Horn· PMM J-rci. Ml P11, ~ Tonto. tlOURTM ll:At• -a v.,._ J veer ~ _.,..,.,, ........ 11400. ... ••n•nt• u~tf..io •.oo ~ fHlll'f) 1•.20 6.40 Vanguards Fan, 75-67 M1rt'1 COO'!' .limlth) U0 1 .... -21 . AIMI ran ->ofwt'I Rodltl. TWbler l rftM.t Arl(hOI' Cl>k~, C•ntl'I Oreem, Final 1,;l'QIUal, 11'1V11¥'1 Prtdt, He'I Toa M....::h. PIFTH ll:ACI'. =-ss.~nn. J -oldl. Cl•lmll'lll. I"-1, > • · Uvirr•tl 's W ,\, t•• Tr11sunl . 3.20 _... ldrl!Ofll •:r,i \Alllto!'<l t.00 •.OO Ht'lalilll3CI'/ Ad• rl s.ao Timi -I .7t. Also r1n -s.ncl'I'• Scf'I!.. _ Prlncns z.~•1• Dint o.vltl, Codi 3 MI'S. Color M8 II' nk, Flkk8 Deck • SIXTH aACll =4i00 var(h. I \INT Did &-uo Clelml1111 Purw Sltoo. 111ack Mood IRkNird1J 14.IO 7.00 3.olO SDDtted Pel• fSmUllJ S.00 j·~ "'l"o Blott (Adair) Ml rma -n .10. w Also .fin -MOl~ Moo, 1r Prlnees1, L!JOM, llllll H Bu._, Doris Mur, P rlnctmfff, Mel Moan • SfVIEMTM RAC-.= S.ff YlrdS. 3 \'Mr oldJ a. I/JI, Al:fri•n<:I , Puna S3fj8-IO ::r1 f'IJ:~: (Trt•Wf9¥° l. j:M,0 Ho ll:"tfaklf ll.lsifllml • . Tlma -21:11. AlfO r•n -ROUQ!l Stvff, Tllnl Tllk· Ina, Sliver \ltllt. No 1er•khn. l!'IOtfTM aACE='f70 l'tl"dl.""'J "',.' ma. Ill'· AIMwanc:1 .. Plll'.. •Th Of 11th'. c l lY) ll:oc ka11,• SAi 4.JCI f!'ottln;;_ fW~) SM •.OO ~'frtdel>ft:ld (Tr....,,ll SM ~'7.2' Abo ~en -0Collfltv 'attiom. Tllltlt S-11, 6-ttlw'I ikl't, SUted ... n. p,_,.,,. Qutsl. NINTH aACI -no .,.nh...,_ J yHr oldl I. ¥11• C111mlng, ,._ 11-. kil!n111m1n Jtl,.Mlj • .OOllJO °"t'~J !Crolb'l'l .to •AO ::r=''~der (C&rdoul 4.IO Tl""' -Jt,f7 c.~''J1r,'.''Mr: P~"l~:: c'l:ty \~ btherft C.lifomi& College M~r.~ar, !:_r.1ek'fl~~-11111'111 ol.,._,. M,.. d---' a 75-67 ~. Mr. Important, llob&V llaO. ~ 1"Yt""" DO -Flnl1111d fll'lt, dl..wtHH1!11 ericl decl!lon' to vlsltlng Lee Col-D1tf1.'!~t• JoOeiilllma11 '" a 1.o.14 tege of TeMessee Wednesday 1_,~...,~·~-=.:•::;••=:•::·-----I n;ght after lhree Vanguards ptayen footed -oot of the ac- Uon . Playing the;r fourth game m :;:;;.\&h,~tlte ~· :ci one ol their poorest shooting nighl.> ol the ,. .... , hitting II ol 70 auemp!J. SoCa1 host.I the un;..,.;iy o1 San Diego Saturday. ~ --f"l lj ~ JI J J Htl~rma: kCll ~ ID SPEEDS 5% OVER -COST - • 4NMoi • YtllCIM • Allll.,...... llort Clllllllf-Selllfll Ovt flJ ..... Walls TMI •11CI "004-1• , .... ,...,,... ..... 11•11 laedl '""'· HWlt_. l8Mfl 14'.074' TELEPHONE SKI · SALE· Men's.Women's f•mous slti p•rka1 ............ 11, .. 1;, off 12.00 l•dies1 win d shitf1 -····-······--·-···-·------···· J.H L..,..ge ski boots, 11.7:z ···-··-···--··-····-·····--·JO•/• off -.-Alpine O.lu •e s~il>tCk"J1"t""7::::-.. -----·-_,, H .H I 2.00 f-.ous make ski poles -----·----··-6.H Spaulding Spectral Ski PK-ka91; v1lue1 up lo 180.00 .... --.... -·-·--·-.... ·-·---.. ·-·-· .. nt.00* Hu1Nnic ski boots, 71-72 ····---.. ·--·--·-···-JO~ elf* :Zl .00 w0Mtn'1 Bates 1her-1~i boots ···~···---·-16..tS SPORTSMAN'S SHOP ··~-~------------~----------· N ~wport • •I F••~1on Ii and • Newpori Center • 6-44-2200 M,n. & Fri . 10:00.930 • Sun. Noon-5:00 • Other Doy• 10:00-6:00 ·-I I HUFFY ~-SPEED 3-WHEELER ~ 26" .•. c..,tett witlt 'tttl4er1, Msket. 26" ......._ wfitliit f9r ytets of strri<e ..i "'••••aitl . SAVI '1 S.00 HUFFY DRAGSTER SPECIAL BIKE 1.-1 <ontor ....... ctw ... r~, $hett ........ switllr.tr str~. rM MM&.. 1.,.·. ia ...,, yeltew; p.rs. '",..."· SAYl 15.00 • HUFn "DELUXE" 3-SPEED SPORTSMAN M.W. ,.,,, mid• rMr llolt, "itt« sMh cNllrel • 1i1p1itlitt ..... Mis. 26" w'-ls, coli"' ._. llrokK tr ... ..;,..,: .................. ...... SAYl'7.00 HUFFY BOYS' FURY BIKE ..... <oder W .. n, lroflt '"'"" kr•••. WUM.4 tirH, ....ftttl ft lNlefs witlt 111~ '"i'". 0.ittd ..... 'tilt ,, ... /Woe •. SAVl'7.00 STOii HOVIS. MON. THIU ... 10 A.M. TO t P.M. f.U, & SUN. 10 A.M. TO t P:M. lA MIRADA ORANGE S HOll',lflillO CI N,l ll 1 911~ ~ .. 1 .... •·-~1 H f U$flH ,. ...... •a1-•••1 ,....,... •11 1!110 TUSTIN N(WPOilllf A\l'f , ,, ftasr s t Rrrt "'-'e: Ol l ·&t'I NOW, 4 SJORES IN ORANGE COUNTY .\ SANTAANA 3JS1 S. I RISf OLll. •t M .ocAltfHUfl J'MN.&!11·3J t' I I . :JZ OAI~ V PILOT SC / ., 11M1y, Janiwy 18, 1'17J Surplu1 ACNE CAN SC:.U k TIRRY GIANT. R.Ph Amon1: adole~nt.s, acne ls the most often found skin problem. And, 1t ts a mis- taken notion that acne needs no treatment because It will eventually go away by Itself. Neglected acne can re-- suit 1n skin pitting, blotch· 1ng, and other disfiguring !.ct.tS. Emotionally it can leave a devastating scar Fortunately. the list of possible trf'atmcnL~ for acne Is especially good. Besid~ the common Sf'nse rull's of a healthy diet and good everyday skin hygiene, there are many specific medicines that a physician can pre- scribe and \\hlch we regu- !Mly s1ock. Prompt treat- ment is hnportant so don't walt for acne to go away. YOU OR \'OUR DOCl'OR CAN PHONE US when you need a delivery. We will de- liver promptly without ex- tra char~e. A peat many people rely on us ror their hea.lth needs. \Ve Wt'lcnme requests for delivery service and ch&?'ie account."l. PARK LIDO PHARMACY Ut Hotplt1l Ro1d Ntwport ... ch '4t·1SIO l'rM Dellvery THERE IS A FACTORY AUTHORIZED DEALER FOR EVERY POPULAR MAKE CAR IN THE WORLD ON COSTA MESA'S Harbar Bauleva'rd af Cars LOOK PO• THI IMlll.N AT THEODORE I COSTA MESA ROBINS FORD DATSUN 2060 214.5 HARBOR BLVD. HARBOR BLVD. OVER TOE COiJNTER \ ' OMPIEI'E-NEW:YORK STOEK UST ... f ) I I .• . r I ' ' I 'i I I \ ' r I I I I I .7 I ' \ I ' \ I \ I " J I I ' \ I ,\ . ' . . ... ... . ' ' . • • ,, •• . . I • ' • I ' -- I I -. • J4 D~llV PILOT Thursday, Janull'Y 18, 1973 • Satanism -Flourishes? For .the Pope Stresses Devil's Work for First Time Record -------VATl CAN CITY (UPJl -The de\'il's deepest "'lie. according to French poet Charl('s Baudelairt. is to persuade humanity he does not exist. Now, the Vetirnn has a campaign going to give the devil hi3 due before he drop:i ou1 of ,Public sight altogether. Pope Paul Vl ded icated an entire Spetch recenllv. for the first time in his nine-year pootifico.te, to the subject of Sa.tan. THIS \\'AS FOLLO\\'EO BY talks on Beach · Drops ·-~l>pposition, Joins Co~-· Hunting1on Beach has somev>hat re- luctantly agreed to join the proposed Intergovernmental Coordinating CQuncil (ICCJ of Orange County. Councilmen this "'eek reversed their previous opposition to the ICC based on a report from Counciln1en Don Shipley and Ted Barllett. Shipley and Bartlett told thfir council males the ICC already has 12 proposed members and Hunungton Beach ought lo be in on the forn1ation of it . "I don'l object so much if SAMCO (Supervisors and t.fayors Council) is aboliShed," Councilman Jerry· Matney Interjected. "But v.·e'll still watch It carefully." "Keep in mind we can al~-ays with- draw. It 's voluntary, just another vehick! for cooperation,'' Counciln1an Jack Green added. "I recommend we try it for a )'Eat." Mayor Al Coen cast a reluctant yes vote. saying he only did it to make the city appear unanimous. "1 have a great deal of skepticism about this ." City Administrator Da\id Rowlands said the first year's proposed ICC budget Is $34,000, with Huntingtoo, Beach con· tributing 12.750. As yet, there is no formal structure 10 the ICC and no definte outline as to its goa1s and objectives. Councilman Don Smith of Orange, the temporary ICC chairman, says the main purpo.se is tG create more cooperation between 11.l\ the cities and between the rities and county government. County supervisors h a v e alrearly agreed to join the ICC. Huntington Beach councilmen agn>ed to the net'd for more cooperation, but •-ere skeptical of the need for anotber layer of semi government y olunteer~ Eyed For Environment The Environmental Council of llun- lington Beach is looking for more members, especially persons with ex· oertise in air chemistry. oceanography, hydrology and water pollution. All membe.rs of the Environmental Council are volunteers. v.'Orking without pay. accord ing to Airs. f\.1argaret Carlberg, council cha irman. The council meets the secood and fourth Tuesday night of each month. Council members help evaluate en-- vironmenlal impact reports. establish ecology projects and advise the. city on general matters afrccting the en- vironment . For further informat ion or application forms phone city hall al 536-5201, or write to Environmental Council, P.O. Box 190. Huntington Beach . 92648. Bonds Supported In Seal Beach The Seal Beach elementary school board ha! aimounctd its unanimous sup- port of the $27 million bond iuue which goes before voters in the Huntington Beach Union Hilzb School District Feb. 27. ·• "'This board supports the bonds 100- pereenl and wlll do everything in its pcl\\'er to see that this measure passes,'' said board president Lloyd J. Patterson. The high school bond eleclion has been called to fund construction of two new hlgh schools in the district. \'atican radio and .special nrttcles in the \'a!lcan pre!S. The pope' said Satan truly e:1:is1s 11s an ~Ctt\'t' foret in tht> ~·orld, and used these "'Ords about him : "A dark and enemy agent ... ~ ter- rible, mysterious and fearsome reality .• 8 Jive. 1Pirit1o1al. pen'er1ed a n d perverting being ... the enemy No. 1. the te1npler par excellence ... !he hid- den enemy woo sov.·s e~rs and misfortunes in human history ." \ The pope asked \is1eners not lo treat his v.·ords as "supen;titious or unreal." c 'Oops. Sotrf Mr. President!' Dropout Target Of Huntington's Evening Oa~s Atarried teenagers, workers with full· time jobs during the day. and older teens ~·ho have dropped out to help out at home are the targets of the Huntington Beach Union High School Dist~ct's pilot evening school program. The district welcomes these or any other kind of mature. independent person, according to Woody Smith. former Huntington Beach High School principal and recently appointed dean of the district's fledgling evening school. "We know there are young people in the di.strict who would jump at the chance lo get a high school diploma through evening classe:!I," he says. "But reaching them is another thing." Smith said that more than one hundred parenU end students showed initial in- terest in the program when surveyed earlier this ,month. Meetings with students are now going on to· plan in· dividual programs. Smitb warned, hc>wever. that. although many students currently enrolled in regular classes have shown interest, only those gaining parent approval and hav- ing their own transportation can be enrolled. The classes will meet between 4 p.m. and 10 p.m .. ~iondays through Thursdays al Wintersburg High School, 17200 Golden \lt'est St., Huntington Beach. Students will be ~ligible for full credit and 'ft'ill earn the diploma of the regular day school in their area. They can also earn limited work experience credit. For further information, call 847-1273. Two Elementary Schools Planned Two elementary schools will be bu ill this summer in the Huntington Beach Ci· ty School District with money from the sale or $2.4 million wOrth of bonds by the district. The schools, which have not been nam- ed yzt, will house kindergarten through fifth grade students. One will be buill in the Park Hun· tington tract south of Adam,, Avenue and between Bushard and Brookhurst streets. The second school will be in the Signal Landmark development which Is also 50Uth of Adams between Newland and Magnolia streets. The bonds were authorized in an elec- tion held In February 1969 in which district voters approved $4,750,000 wor1h or bouds. Logo Soli~ited OUT 11~T !& EXACTLY how part ol lhtly's secular press treattd them. In- cluding a Communist newspaper which ran " tongue--ln~heek "interview with Satan ... Dissolations Of Marriage ....... J•-l"f• "l'he Vatict1n ne\i'Spani•I' L'Oservatore 0roico. Hiio. Met Jotll)h o. ,..... ·-.J-1,eM~J ... Romano snapped beck thet such articles ~· ~1~~."· ~ v-: •.i-.i11 the.mselve$ showed the IMJuence of c11e1ttr Sat l1w, C"-t'ln et'ld C1rol an. E~Mll. Wtfldoa (, 1rllll OOlll .. 1tYM 'L'Osservatere even prepartd a special ~v. T.~· J. '""' Mtr.n. ir. page on lhe devil ='.~ ~'!.:~ A~-1tt •· The Rev. John Navone of Seattle , tU:, ~~1!· ~"" ~"':.k'11:•v Wash., a prOlessor of theology at Rome's Hlf(•H, ClltOlvt\ o. '""' A:ooer r. G ' U ' • ho , ....i Fr~ft. Ptlylllt Mltle .,., ~ltt. ~ ... regonan ruversity, w orgaruzc..i a Whir., Et1Mi..t11 o. '""' Fl'9def'k k J•v panel discussion on Satan last year, said LN, 11-10 L &I'd c-1 o. Purllc:Mol .. -.... •lld LOw.11 IC. the debale about tbe deviJ brings up the c11rt1 ... Elli•Wffl .w n...1t1 J, hol b;~ r .. ts . d' lfllltll1. Fol'lll• "· ... J-"' e SU ........... 0 spin . 1ncu mg II-L .. tle II. -l--=· L. demons and angels -a subject \li'hich E•l'ol(. c.,.,1t111 A. '""' Eow1r11 A. I 1 1 ' obi ' be tlnttow; ..... M4.ry J1111 Md 1.IW!'tl\Ct p, has arge y apsed IDIO JVIOO t past AllM, o.OflM G. '""' Matlhl w. decade. ...,...., H•relo J. Jr. ~ JKCW11+1ne J, 8Kk ... , lttl'Y V, Ind H41""'W r• $1'1upe, EUW..ltl M. Md 11:1!.f . ---------·ourllUftoil-P9H¥ J eflCI ~ NAVONE SAID INTEREST IN spirits M11oni1, ai111C1 1111t. ,,., 1>e1 .... 11 · e_vjdenced by....sudpmodem~fad&-as-4C>--~~ C.raA___, co-e.- cultism, mindbending drugs, astrology. COCW!ty. M4.rv J. Ind 11*'1 ""· · psychic experiences and oriental ~~~~'::., 'l°!r.i.:~ :ic:.."':,/'r""' c. religions in Western societies. cros1. w11111m •llCI Oor• '"'°'NM . od d hlnk I SNtv, Biiiy Hun! -.Id Bonni• Loll! .. Navone said men t ay ten to t o Frltr, Jann w,.,."' •M A:_,.. s.... the devil -U they think of him at all -s.,...,_, J. Ml.:,.. .. •1111 J11111 Mtirl• , , A:lct. Cll11-Mt A1rot1 Ind Llflll• 811tCI as a fun figure, a type of 'Satanic L1w111011, Ml•I• 1C11111"" •flll M4.rc Praymate," rather than the cruelly evil 0out1ai •u J 11 figure of the scriptures and literature H•n-11.. ~~ T'!:'!na 11owm1..,. ho r hi r'll>1"1'V'il:I> \lllU'"' IC•tllletfl w uses men or s own r-~· La-1• G1or11 A1111 " W•.-.n Gtor..-1be pope's approach to religious faith wi1_., SM•ot1 01 • ..., IWll.JOlll 111C1 11 •--he .. d Euo•ne f"t&nl<Un •• usua y u;&."; strtSSed t pos1uve an Herrrnon11, Morton w. •""' Elelne s. gmotlC. both' !or ecumenical reasons 11-. A:Oftlld Eimer -.Id Lindt J"" pra • , Wlll141fnl.. Armin D. Jr , 1na Olan. Alk• and to keep the church credible to 11:.ir....1. v1~1 LM tnc1 o~ AnM- modem man lrown. RownM ''""" •llCI w11111m • P1t1on. Ooo-11111, EIMn 1/ICI S.rmlll L'~atore Romano once went out ol ••Wf . ,_ . r 'ts d Jhat the Mlrltno. lt.111 R. M. 11\d Dotf!ttlk its v.·ay ..., m orm 1 rea ers eo-ro J>Olltiff does believe in Hell even though "'""" Nt1111 N.wnl -OOmlllkk • •, Slkotllll, Mlf'"Ml"" E. Ancl G1c1ttffy W he never mentioned the SUbJect. Gotr, Jr .• Normt °""' MIG w111.;. ... BUT FACED BY WHAT he reportedly sees as a worsening crisis of faith and authority in the cburch, tbe pope has been getting ever more pessimistic. Last June, he suggested that Satan entered the church throogh some "fis,,ure" to stifle the fruits of the Vatican Ecumenical druncil. Apart from that passing reference, however, he had never publicly dealt \\'ilh the devil until recently. Talking about Satan meant delving back into \anguaie that has been largely discatded by modem theologians. For even among them, fiery Lucifer with his horns and tail has descended to the level of a vaudeville joke. 'lbe pope: did not say what the devil loolts like. He was trying lo explain what, in Ills viev.', Satan is like. ACCORDlNG TO PA~ is a being of vast malignity, sop · ic.ation and treachery wbo iS sedu · g modem men with drugs, pornography , materialism and experimenl.s in the oc- cult. Whole nations, he said, have fallen under Satan's grip, although he left it to the audience to decide which ones. Vatican Radio said tbe pope did not mention Satan to inculcate fear. But it · said he would be ignoring a fundamental reality of fait h if be did not put people on their guard against the devil. "As in every battle, the greatest mistake is to underestimate or even ig- nore the enemy," the radio said. IN THE POPE'S VIEW, modem man relies too much on psychology, psychiatry and sociology to expla,in the phenomenon of evil, while losing his conception of a supernatural power of wickedness. L'Osservatore Romano said many c.atholics had been· surprised by lhe pope's speech because they had become "accustomed to the idea that Satan was a metaphor, an emblem, a spook for children and primitives." Yet. the newspaper said, symbols of Satanism are flourishing everywhere. It mentioned fortune tellers, dabblers in the occult, witches and witchdoctors , "madmen and criminals who call themselves Satan and , like Satan, go in for the trade of murder,'' an apparent reference to the Charles fl.fanson "fami- ly," demonic rites, sadism and sexual orgies "even in lbe most civilized cities." Huntington, Eyes Five -city Cable T elevisio1i Link Huntington Beach has agreed to con- tinue the study of a possible five-city cable television network. City Councilmen aulhoriied the city administrator this week to pay $13.700 to continue the study for another year. One neighboring city, COsta Mesa, also has agreed t& chip in its share, but with the comment thls would be the last year if nothing concrete i!i established. The cities of 11untlngton Beach, Costa !".1esa, Fountain Villey, Westminster and Newport Beach are considering the possibility of a joint powers agreement to $oll1, MkMtl J, lllCI Vivion J . Lvncll. Milrlclr"ll E """ A:obert It •-· s-J-Mi u..;.en.:e A:ock.....,1 Hlcktot1, Mlro;or"'9 Mld>tlle Ind Con-ni• LH Tl'llCk ... , J-P, •riG G«I L M4.j11, tc:1r.,. l . 1114 E""'11 C"'°m...,.lln, Jill\ll L.lslt• tncl JCl'ndrkk No., Sllf>l\lnll E. 11\d Wlltl1m G. lro11, AM JC1rt111otn 1ne1 Vincent J1y ~. L-o H1rrl1 Incl 81r1Nor1 AM arl111V"n1nn, Miry Ablolll •M Ven>on ,OK1r 11.0drlo!JW, IG• illlCI An!Onlo NkhlllM A11t, Dorolllv Jo.n Ind Ge<1!111 Mlrtln AlllWllfltl, Otlo<•1 1nd D1nl•I Alvln Ztelonk11, D1rl1 MM •nd Frecllrlck Al~·· ~~ Cllilrl-Glv •nd ow1,n. "°"'· ·-rl LN Ind Etv• Lovr .. Hlckmtnl J1n.1 ii.Oii '"" A:Obln J-AltoP, E lwrt MM INld, CNrl .. Ev ... ett Womlck, Guin 8¥9'""1 Incl C•rroll 8. ~rll, Cllltlll W. 11\d Vlol1 M. L:.1.";ic Lynn JNl\Mll• Incl RkNtCI R•t ....... Judlttl A. Incl H..-bwl L.) '" Zlftlowllrt w11i,,,... lfld Pllvlll1 Dvlllven, 1t-1e1 W••111 •nd ~e .H N'i:i':lrk, MlrQlref L. Ind E-Ct r• C11n11~"'' Lorie11 v . .,,.. D•vld M. a--. c,.....1o1111 L 1n<1 C.•llOOrY ..._ N-1911. L«r1ln1 E. INI Oonlld C. Tllomls, Flottnn A. ill\CI JOlll>fl G. H•llllnrud, WHU1rn E. Incl -htnne " T"-""· Cat"llllnl NlflCY 1rid WIHlam ._ .. 'YI•, Thon\11 Altred Ind P1lrlcll Rufi! =111~.~;"1~.~ncl J~·~,,..J. Dllrlt -·· HWll ... , G ..... L.,..,. J>nd Johll IUOOl'I HwleY, P1trld1 •nd Alet>r1 w .. 1··· L•rrv LM ilncl Llncll AIVI wm .on AMO Otto 1ne1 Motl!Qul Louise M4.rl/\.li1. Otbotlh LN Ind D1vld Nlltl FOll"I'!", Phvltl1 fnd OOn•kl J1rnts Ht'fron, J111nll1 F. Ind GI...,, 0. Nll90f!, L-. E. 11\d JD/In S. ~~~:fl~~~~~ .. ·~ =1'.:::rtki~ •111<11 JHU1ry It Slm1, Dllft.I L. 11111 JollMY R. King, l•wrtflet D. Ind C1ro11·A. SlrOl!f\11, \11"911111 A. •lld A:1ymond H. 81ln. J1<-Mne "" •lld H1r....., JOl'ln H'891fCI, Slllolft E. Incl H1rrl1«1 Ii. Clnilll, IC1re11 Judltl'I Ind AluM>Cttr D1vld 1C1rllly, ClllrlH llltlllrd •lld LlllCI• "M Tllll"l~. C1rlllfne S1111i., 1nd Wlllll"' CNrle1 Jll:. 8reo:kenrldvf. Donne and llry1n WrlQlll, P11Tlcl• Ann 1nel Dennl1 ·-· l~lcl, 8rwnd1 JHfVlllll end Nalhln ... Grftn, C1rlllvn Matlt Ind JOhn Rk"-nl $1nelorl. Robin Dixie end J1ttk l(t'il!I TOlt!, J1ne L. 111C1 A:obert W. l lnd"Y, 81r!Nor1 LH -Wayrie Frlielrlct $1lctu11t, J-y ind Eckert JOllK, Tri.Id¥ Ann 1nd R-.-1~ Mel-I. He11rltlll $. Ind E<191r E Ui.stO", EOM Gin 1nd l!OW.t E1rt llr_,,, Llncll S. and 1Clftnt11'1 V, AC1r111111, 1..-N .. 111 1nd JllHilh Hym1n, lr!1 Murltl Ind M......ell Flt!>..-, l"!y L. Ind J•lfrey X. Solo, Frlfltltc11 Gon11111 end Gvilc:l1I~ L-1 s......i1 .... J ... ome A. 1n<1 LllllH A. M1cConntll, 81rblr1 J . •nd JofWI E. Hvn11k ... , Ool'Nn Et1l111 •nd le!IMt WIYftl Nebon, JC1lltl Le lthn •lllf J•M Emme L•nzo, G10t11111 Lwlu 1ne1 RlcNrG Thdm11 • Prettg. Pipe Puffer Anarita Fiascone, Chicago, argues the more mammoth the pipe, the more popu~ lar it is. This one is 15 inches long and holds three ounces of tobacco. 10,000 Trees Die -No Cure SO!ITH LAKE TAHOE (AP) -More than 10,000 pine trees died during 1971·72 in Eldorado National Forest . from a tree disease with no known cure. a National Forest Service eStimate disclosed . Dick Pine, public in- formation officer for the Lake Villley Ranger District here. said the forest service studied test plots for two years to determine the extent of the damage to pines in the forest. ABOtrr 7 per cent of the pines in the forest died of elytroderma, a needle bliV,Jt which he explained has no known cure. "If the mortality rate is roughly the same over the en-- tire infected area," Pine said, the forest service estli'nates that 10,000 trees have dl~ The area of "severest in- fection.'' he added. is the Pope Baldwin area. a prime rec.res· _tion area near Lake Tahoe. DURING THE study. six test plots were established and 609 trees studied . BY September 1972. 41 of the original trees died. Elytroderma is a disease which goes through cycles, Pine explained. "Ordinarily.'' he added. "it doesn't kill a lot of trees." What worries for est service personnel in this case i.s that the disease "seems lo be get- ting worse instead of lighten- ing up as usual." Pine said. "Once the forest is' infected you can't get rid of it with<i!Jt sterilizing the entire area." PINE SAID elytroderma makes trees unable to produce food and many needles turn brown because of It. .. .. , Magazine Told, Drop Exclusive NEW YORK (AP) -A federal judge has ordered Coronet magazine to stop claiming Its article about Shirley Temple Black's breast cancer is "exclusive." Judge Marvin E. Fr3nkel acted Wednesday' on a request by McCall's magazine, which says II has the exclusive story: and sued Coronet for $500,000. ft.1RS. BLACK, the former child movie star and former• Legalized Marijua1ia Supported HONOLULU (APl ·-The Honolulu Star-Bulletin has called fo r legalization of mari· juana and dispensing of the drug through state-approved outlets. The newspaper, largest in the state, said Wednesday dispensing of marijuana in ap- -U.S. representative to the United Nations, .submitted 11.n affidavit supporting McCall'a. She called the Coronet piece "an outrageous attempt to lm· properly exploit my name." Frankel's order ~uires Coronet to stop lurthe.r circulation of Its February issue unless the word "e1- clusive" ls deleted from the: cov..-. THE ORDER however, does not require Coronet to recall copies of lbe issue which came out Jan. 9, but bal'3 It from adverUsing or promoting the article as "exclusive." Mrs. Yvonne Dunleavy, editor of Coronet, said she could nol comment on tbe case, except to say she Is con- fident Coronet. will be. vm. dicat.ed. -C ORONET, PUBLISHED for I l months In its Jftstnt format by Warner Magazines, claims circulatiOn of 250,~ 300,000. McCall's circulaUori ls about 7 .5 million. A hearing on the damage suit was set !or Tuesday. proved outlets "would provide----------~ sanitary and quality pr<r tection, reduce its availability to minors, and protect against lacing of the product with something stronger and ad- dictive:, Like heroin." THE RECOMMENDATION was included in an editorial listing the newspaper's pro- posals for Ute 1973 session of the state legislature, which began Wedne.sday. "We should recogntr.e that we have a drug problem as bad as the boot.e problem and that prohi bition won't wipe it out any more than it dld Permane1it Disability? CHICAGO (UPI) James Baer, 30, bas a S250,00QJ1amaae _Slfil_J!fi_ file In Cook County Circuit Court charging he was ~permanently disabled" when hit in the groin by I golf ball in 1'10. Baer was in the newa this month when he: wife gave birth to quintuplets. booze," the newspaper said. L----------' (;ourt Ruling Disease V nder Attack MIAMI (AP) -A Miami judge has given a black man coovicted of a.aulting a pollceman a dJOice: ol going to jall ar recruiting blacks lo be tested fbr sickle cell~; "! helped you, now It's your tum lo help your people, Criminal Court Judge A1furuo Sepe tOOl Joe In.Iii. WilOOL "YOU WILL RECRUIT black married couples lo bo leoteci !or sickle cell anemia. I want you lo reault 1llem by ,the hundreds." Wilcox, 40. pleaded guilty lo resisting arrest and » .. ultlng Miami officer Antonio Prieto while Pneto Wit try- ing lo arrest Wilcox !or disorderly conduct. The dwi• carries a maximum pri.9on term of five years. The 1Hoot·2, llS-pounder bowed his head alter be 811- mllted the felony, tlien begged Sepe ror mercy. Both Prieto and the proseaitor recommended pr. balloo. • let one cable-television contract to serve Eike to -Draw? w i---Ll 00 -F-rBm M eSH-(t ~•II five communities '" ··rgr. The Joint study ~ entering its third ANNOUNCING HIS DECISION, Sepe placed Wllcoi <11 proballoo !or two years and then appended the r<qul~ meat that Wilcox aid In the search f« young blacks wb> have sickle cell anemia. ,,,._.I-If Wllco• falls -lo ....,__the ml-. he can expect lo go lo jail, Sepe cautioned. Got a flair for drawing? J[ you're 10!Jd enougb. you might just w\n a SlOO savings bond being given away by the Costa Me3a U.S. Bicentennial Committee. Tile committee, which ~ plMllling the 2CKkh birthday celebr•tlon of the U.S. In 19'18, will award th< bon<t lo lhe winner of Ill loco contest. A kMo 11 an tmblem which appears on offkl1f documtnta and on letterheads and envek>pc1. COnlelt director Thomas Baume ~s enttl.. wlU be occcpi.d unlll Feb. 12 lUneoln11 Blrtbday1·and the winner will be announced Feb. Ii (Washington's Blnbday ). To entt.r, send one color and one black- al>d-'White rendtrtng along with your name and address to the U.S. Blce:n· tcnnlal Committee, C.Osta Mea Civic Center, 77 Fair Ortve. liaume: adds that color renderings should restrict lhemtelvts to two colort and that all the entrlea will be judged on ori&Inallty, simpllcity and case of reproductJon. Person! who wish to have their works returned· should Include a ,.ir.addremd al)d SJ&mJl<d. envelope along wllh their entries. Tfie savingibond Is being donated as 1 contest prize by the U.S. First National Bank of Costa Ate.sa. .. year, with the v~ cities attempting to outline e11ctly'" "'hat they want lo re- quire ol a cabie company. Some d. the possible benefi!J include use of the cables for broadcasu of ~ey councll or civic meeting& and use of the network to tipand the classes of the eoa..t Community College District. Mayor Al Coen was reappointed for his third year a1 the city's representative on the Joint study committet'. "Cable television will ultimately prove to be an invalua.ble asset to this com- munity," the mayor commented. lluntlngton CotmeUmcq made no other comment on cable telev1s'lon and did not Indicate . any dJssatlsfacUon with the length or 1110 . udy • .. New lungle /Jlata Don l)letleln, former g9'neril cutator ot lhe N•Uonal ZOO in \V13hlngton . D.C., has been named zoolofical coordinator for Uon Country Salart. He wli be based at the wildlife compound in Irvine. Sickie cell anemlA lo a hereditary blood dil<me ~t In about one out of every SOO newborn blacb. Oodora estlinate u many .. one iii 10 blacks eufler rrom the malady. TBE DISEASE CAUSES an abnormal formalloo of blood ll'Ottln In body cells. Under emotional stma, celll lbon form imgular,ekqai.d llhopes which clog omaD ve...i., lonn blood clots and deprive vital body OrgMI ol blood and O"l'lell· There Is no known cure for the di..._ often rat.al. • . Sepe has made tt a practice ol r<qulrlng defendan!J 1o penorm a community oervice as pen ol thetr pnJbolion "~u .. It's PQI "lOb ~vo !~·.the lndlvidliol, 11'1 cmslnlctlvo ror llOCleft. ' "It ai10 maw U.... people r<al!Ze how lucliy they,orO when they ate the tragNles In the life around them." \, I I ( ' I I .? I \ • { I I I I .7 I \ I I I I "< • .. • ' Beat!h Today's Final • • EDl!LON N.Y. Stocks "' VOL. 66, NO.-18, 3 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY; CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY 18, 1973 ·TEN CENTS . Village Faire Roof .Height Exemption Denied ' By JACK CHAPPELL ot lllt OatlY •lilltl Stiff An appeal to the L.aguna Beach City Council by the architeCt of Village Faire, a $1.5 million shop complei:, to permit the sloping shingled roor of the develo~ ment to exceed the city height limit by 18 inchn. W&'I !l_enied Wednesday night by a 2·2 vote. -- "The project is going to go ahead. The roof will be lowered and that-is it," Ronald Goldman, project architect said toc:tey following the council t1ecision upbold.lllg an earlier Planning Com· m!ulon derUal. "lilt a shame that they can't listen to professionals. It's unfortunate. The proj- ect will go ahead and will look the worse for it," Goldman said. -At-lssue. was the pitched r·oor of one seetion or the tornplex, located in the 1100 block of South Coast Highway on the ---- old Allen Oldsmobile-Oullllac agency property. The height limit impos<d by !he 'com- merc,ial zoae there is 30 feet, from a point measured at the mlddJe of the slop- ing lot. The architect maintained that to retain a pleasing pitch to the roof, and to accommodate uoclerground parking, the variance was necessary. However, the ordinance requires that variances be allowed only if stric~ adherence works a special hardship on the property owner and deprives him of a substantial property right enjoyed by nearby properties. After much dl.scussion, the council voted. Cb.arlton Boyd, mayor, aod Carl Johnson approved the matter ani Phyllis Sweeney and Roy Holm upheld the original denial. c.ouncilman Peter Ostrander was absent. Goldman said tha.t the appeal ctuld be granted on a number of reasons that Kissinger Set to Button Up Peace Pact Tuesday Dr. Leary. To Arrive In State By CANDACE PEARSON Ot fM OflltY ,.., '"" -Dr. Timothy I.eat)<, forme< il>rV!lfd professor wanted for Cailfornia prison Esr..ape and in Oraoce c.owit1 for the alleged mastermlndinc of a ~.smug· gling ring, was expected to atrh'e on a Pan-AmeriCi:n flight to -toe-Angeles International Airport thls aflefnoon. , U.S. Stat& Department offlclals have sought the fttum of Leary, who escaped in Sept .. of 1970 from prison Jn San Luis Obispo, from Afghanistan, where be was arrested Tuesday. • ID Louvre Lady Tlie Real Mona Lisa Stands Out LONDON (AP) -some or the people who claim they own the real Mona Lisa suffered a setback today when Lord Clark, Britain's best known art his- torian, cast his vote for the lady in the lJJuvre . OFFICIAl.S AT THE PARIS museum never ·doubted. that the original • masterpiece by Leonardo da Vinci is on display there. But a flurry of com- peting claims last fall raised Wlcerlainty in some circles. Clark, who as Kenneth Clark presented a highly successful television seriel in Britain and America called "Civilisation," derided the rival claims in a leclure published todat. , . ... • .... ~. -.. v ... ; • ~·~!i~··it~s!~~n claim.they~ the Mona Lisa," "I hope I will Ml be " taken to court K qay \bat the ·dark g,.en object that jiangs allllOll lnvlllbly ln !he Louvre ii the original -picture painted by Leonardo.-11 has ,. impeccable pedigree," Coro1ra Jury Reques.ts Conference With Judge Reports said that Leary "was sent to London early this 1ooming. A Pan American spokesman in toodon said the famous advocate of the use of LSD would fly with armed escort to Los Angeles, whe.re the only London Pan-Am flight to- day touched down at 4 p.m. .... Local law enforcement officials denied FAIRFIELD (.AP) -The jury trying Juan Corona on the biggest mass murder the Solano County courtroom to begin their second week of 'Cleliberations, after being bused from the nearby motel where they have been sequestered every night since the judge handed the case over to them. those reports. charge in U.S. history asked to see the A spokesman for the narcotics division judge today, d~g the morning of its of Orange County District Attorney Cecil seventh day of deliberaUon. Hicks' office said early today that "t~he~~'l11e;.;:;~re was no Indication whether the only people telling us he 'll be here diis Jury m1pped-arri.1:t deadlodr1o reach afternoon are the press." an unanimous Verdict In the case. The spokesman sai.i he was told by the The judge ordered Corona brought to "' the courtroom from the California federal agent handling the case that it Medical Facillty at Vacaville eight miles would be two to four weeks before away where he has been a patient since Leary's return could be arranged. suffering chest pains Friday night. "That's all we know," the county of. At.just before 9 a.m., jurors filed into" ficfal said, adding the last he heard, Leary was still In Kabul, Afghanistan. Asked if the two-to-four week story was only a ruse by agents to keep a crowd - partlcularlt Wealbcrmen -away from .the airport, he only said, "Does that sound k>gical to you?" The Weathermen, a militant un· dfrgrouod. organization, claimed tft'edit for helping Leary escape from the minbnum security facility where be was serving a six months to 10..year term after being convicted In Laguna Beach for marijuana possession. · It is presumed that Leary will be taken to Los Angeles CoWlty Jail wbile authorities decide wllere to prosecute him. In addition to escape cbarg~ Leary ls wanted by Orange County officials oo a ts milliQn bench warrant. The Orange County Grand Jury last summer indicled (Se< LEARY, Page I) Hig1i Tide$ Sook Lagu1ta Beach Hi~ than oonnal tides in Laguna Beach today sent water cascading across portions of the Main Beach and flooded portions of Broadway at Coast Highway ' th.ii morning. Normal trouble spots at the El Morro Trailer Park were spared any damage, according to a spokesman there. At-Victoria Beach, however, a iiea wall was reportedly being battered . by the southw~t swell! a~ 1!88 giving way ln places. Lifeguards reported the tide reached 7.0 feet at l :U a.m. today with another · high lide •IJ"Cted Frld>y. The jury also reported at that time that it was divided 11·1. but did not say whether the majority favored conviction or acquittal on 25 counts of first-degree murder. The jurors gave no hint Wednes· day if that division changed. The case went to the jury of IO men a11d two women last Thursday after 14 weeks of testimony from 116 witnesses. Nearly 1,000 pieces of evidence and 2.3 million words of testimony were presented in the complex circumstantial evidence case. Corona was charged with slaying 25 transient laborers wbose backed and stabbed bodies were found buried in orchard graves along the Feather River north of Yuba City in May and June of 1971. Painting Class Slated A cl!S' in all-media painting tech- niques will beJU! at 9 a.m. Friday at the Laguna Beacli Recreation Department, 175 N. Coast Highway. The class is taught by Nellie Allan and includes instruction in drawing, pastels, water color, acrylics and oils. Fee 111 $8 for eight two-hour lessons. Will Meet Le Due Tl10 111 Paris By United Pre11 International The White House annoWlced today that Dr. Henry A. Kissinger will meet Hanoi 's Le Due Tho in Paiis on Tuesday "for the ~~ pl completjng !he text" , ~! a • "8cl91re ii;i'oement ail!Jelt'il?"eM!big ihe war in 'Vietnam. A •'lhnilar announcement was made simultaneously in Paris by the North Vietnaine!e who said the talk.s were ."aimed at achieving an accord on the ent! of the war and re-establishment or peace in Vietnam." Saigon dispatches reported earlier that Soutl: Vietnamese President Nguyen Vtfn Thieu ·approved the latest cease-fire agreement in principle, thus permitting the signing. He balked at an Oct. 26 agreement. ' A hint tbet a cease-fire agreement was near came earlier In Paris when it was announced the weekly semipublic peace talks were being suspended indefinitely (See PEACE, Page Z) Laguna Council Opposes E'.lood Zo1ie Overlay The Laguna Beach City CoWlcil authorized Councilman Roy Holm Wednesday night to represent the city in opposition of the proposed Flood Plain Zone overlay in the county territory of Laguna Canyon. .. The matter of Flood Plain Zoning will be considered .Wednesday by the Orange County Board of Supervisors during a regular meeting in Santa Ana. Friday, Ronald Caspers, fifth district supervisor, will hold a private meeting with Laguna Beach Mayor Charlton Boyd and canyon residents in Laguna, Beach City Hall and then walk the canyon areas. "I can't think of any physical problem that bangs over the bead of Lagl8la Beach more serious than I.be thrtat ot a serious flood," Holm said. • "Where we're sitting now would be under water," he added. The proPosed zoning would require that new development in areas wlthin the flood zone be raised above the highest IS.. FLOOD, Page I) CQunty Won't 'Force' Corridor By JACK BROBACK based on exlstlna ""1ing the circulation ot .. Dtltr ,.... 1tttt of traffic will l'IOl be adequate." A _..rlous trwporlallon deficiency ex-'l11e coastal traUlc problem llUl'faced Isl> in !he whole cnostal zone of Orange Wednesday when !he County Planning Commlaslon uked the &ad Department county but !he County Road Department 10 come up with Interim &tandmll by has no plans to forct • tran!portaUon Feb. 20 to allow llO!utlon of prvl>lemo of 1 corridor upon the allected coounw>itles. Dana Point developm<nl. "With the deletion ol tbe PO<:lfiC Coast The questioo ..... because ol pn>l>- rr.eway by the Leglalature, !he whole terns I a c c d by !he 'lbunderbfhl balance ol !he tl'1IJ\!()C)lial ly1llelll ln Capistrano develO(>lllent. Nine yem ago the coast81 area was upset," Murray the state earmarked ao acra of the 455--. Storm, assistant road commissioner, sakt acre tr•ct for a Pac111c Coast Freeway 1oday. ri&bt«-way. 111e developer wants a "All our plaMlng for feeder n>adways dectslon on Mure uae of tbe swalh had-been baled M the proposed tbroug)J !he property. f ... way ' ho-c4did. "We do know lllal U • storm .. Id any answer by Feb. IO J evleopment along l)ic coast takes~--~ ~Uy ho v!l'J brood. ' • ·"We have tentative approvlll for a countywide-traCfic corridor study,'' he said. ''The result of such a llludy would be a set of altemativtt on how best to solve traffic problems," He aald 90dal, economic and en- Ylroomental elfecll on the oommunJU.. ID the coastal zone would be 1 tot> .,... sidttatioo. ~ 1'Many modts are poeai1Jle,tl Storm ad- ded. ''Tiley mlgllt lncludo • l1IJlld transit aystem, bus lanes oa arlerfa! highways or use of future trans~UOn methods not yet developed. 11 storm -· -..... tbet It .... ol>-vioos that a simple arterl&l hil(bwat ·ls not the ..,._ 10 "'fstal trallic pn>l>-lcms. -._ ,--..--'J , ~ ..... "':"' • • ''Ten yean ago we had guidelines and could have moved ahead with plans," he added. "Now all Is changed. People may even say they are wllllng to put up with Inconvenience to preserve the e. vironment. The county can 't just product a plan and e.1.pect communities to buy lt IDY more." Ht saSd demand9 from communities ror act.ion would dictate county moves. "We kno• that future transportation mrrldort will have to provide bufren to residential ;areas," Stonn said. "We will abo include bk:ycle wa}'ll aod equestrian trails. '1 The countywide ltudy Is not eVen under 1s.. co~~Page 11 ) ·'· . would qualify the project under the ordinance. He said the size of the project and the consideration of underground p<.rking. with access from !he '1ecper side streets Imposed special hardships. Bill Leak and other speakers from the audience contended ·that if the main con· sideration for seeking the variance was because of esthetics. then it should be denied becau.se esthetic consideration • was ·not proper in varian ce matters. Councilman Johnson disagreed sayiDg that to force fl developer to build with a le~s pleasing design would be to deprive ~im of a propert y right, good design hav· • 1ng a customer appeal. lte said it was to the benefit of the hillside property owners that the best design be selected. "I've looked do~n on flat roofs and air conditioning equ.ipment for 10 years and I'm fed 'up v.•ith It," Johnson said. A successful appeal of a Planning Commission denial require s four of the five councilmen to vote positively. r REVENUE DOLLARS 1913-14 FlStAl YW •••••uttm:s II Dl•t " TOTAL REVENUES S:AllS 1u --~I "-' , ...... "ISllW. --tll ... MSl.W. ltlS u lllCllllY ISllS 1dlS IU • mnnm Yll. u .. ..... -~::It:::;::::: ua.m fllS l ... 1WS Mil fllS I.& u ..... Cftf'tbllll tu \\.\ WHER.E THE ~'!'ATE BUDGET MONEY COMES FROM .. EXPENDITURE DOUARS 1113-74 FISCAi. YW .. TOTAL EXPENDITURES 11. iciilOll!f Stitt trci IOl'lll flllllfl.J • ""'/ ·-~ SMM•WnN / '" """'°"' ....... "' _....... .... ,., .. '(, .. #"" 14.4( . u .. ,, ....... ,, ... AND WHERE IT GOES UNDEflo NEW REAGAN BUDGET State Workers Get Huge Boost in Reagan Budget SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. llonald Reagan proposed a $9.3 billion budget t~ day that would give state workers a record pay hike and still leave a $1.1· bilUon surplus for possible tax cuts. (See related stories, Pages l8, 19 and 32.) The state's l 15,000 civil servants would get a pay increase averaging 13 percent in tbt ~publican governor's spending plan for the fiscal year beginning' July 1.. That was every cent tbey asked for and it was the major surprise in Reagan's new budget which ii ,1.1 billion, or 22 pereent, larger than tbls year's. Reag!l" has feuded often with state • cmployes since taking ortice. But he said IO<lay he committed himseU IO seeing t_twt they got paid on a par with the perJOM doing comparable work for other levels of govemment . or private businesses. The Governor also granted the 74,000 stile coUege aod university employes - including faculty members -the pay in· creases they AOught. The entire. pay raise package total$ $226 mlllioo. Reagan's budget I! appattntly the largest ever proposed by the governor of a state. The New York state budget bas been . bigger than Callfom.ia's the past several years. But Gov. Nelton A. Rockeftller'1 new budget ls f'OO million below ReB&an '1. Bigelt inmue> in Reagan's spending plan were expected to be SS58 million in new stlte 1Jd to local IChoolJ and about $500 million In property tax rtlicf. They weer pe.n of ' lhe $1.l·bUlioo school-tax program Reagan WOtl from the Demo- craUc-controlJed Legislature in Deecm· ber. The Goveroor, plaMlng to le1ve offlct In 1974 after eight years, already reveal· ed the state will have an $851 million surplus at lhc end of this rtscal yur, t June 30. Today, he estimated the surplus will grow by another '272 million in the 1973-74 fiscal year. - The major reason ls that state fiscal experts expect a ;<sparkling" year for ca!ifornia's e<Xtnomy. That means more tax money coming in. . But a temporary bona.ma is no excuse tor spending money on sweeping new programs, Reagan sald in his budget message to the lawmakers. "Government should never take from the people more than absolutely IS.. BUDGET, Page II Orange Weather There's a 30 percent chance tha l we'll have more rain on Friday, the weatherlady inslm. Don't look for any change in the mercury readinp, which will stick in the middle to upper 508. INSIDE TODl\Y Survivora of the Uruguo~n plane crwh in tM Andts Mv., decidtd to iurite a book abov& thtir tzpeNmua, including rt- .sorllng 10 t:onnibclltmi. to st.a~ allvt. Seer 1toru on Pagt 9. L.M • ..,.. 1' ,_ I (11"1~ ,.....,,, ,_, ,_ n °""'"' fllttkft 11 l'Cltwllt ,_ ' ,.,._. .... ·~ "'" ,tf ""' ._. M. J4 -" Allll .....,..., II • .. • • I .. • I I ·- I 2 DAILY PILOT LB lhurwta~. J.1nu.vy 18, li7) . Sotne. f'loodi1ag -.fromP.,ei BUDGET ••• Another Storm ._....,,. be said. Tbus, he m>lntalned a relatlv<ly lou;h fist on the state'• pur1e strin&• even lbou&b lbe ..... l>uditt 11 IWlce .. blc u tile !lnl one be. propoeed lo Ibo lAC\lla'W'e .even yeatt qo. Strikes State Relgan says ho is studylng a number ot optlotls for retumln1 the surplus to taxPf')'en -lncludlnll a combination of a one-time rebate or a perm.anent tu cut SAN FR.Ar-.iCISCO (AP} -For the sec- ond ttme In three d • y s. dou.ns or ran1ilies ned their tiomes near Novato Crtek today as "-'ind and rain continued to pound Northern California, 11ulhorities said. Nvvato Police U. Richard C&urler said ttsidents of 6!J homes in the creek area were warned to leave or were taken to safety in fO\'.' bQats and high--riding trucks as \\Bier sloshed to dcpths.Qf 3' ~ feet in some streets. No injuries "'ere reported, Courier said. and many residents made ?'(!turn forays to homes 1n efforts to salvage belongings. "We're one of the fortunate ones -we took out flood insurance~ said Mrs. Alire Berglund. so. whose home is locattd on the banks of the creek. ·Mrs. Berglund s~id she 8nd btr hus· band ned in a ci\Y dump truck to an UPIT ........ ROUNO 'TRIP' ENDING Returning Fugitive LMry From Page 1 LEARY •.• • Leary and 46 other alleged members or the "Brotherhood of Lov:e,'l -supp05ed.ly-- an lnternational drug smuggling club fonned in Laguna Beach six years ago. I Following his escape, Leaey apparently fled to Algeria , where be stayed with Black Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver for nine months. Leary then went to Swhzerland, where he was continually ordered to leave the country. for the last time Dec. 31. Earlier reports said Leary had been held under house arrest in the Afghan capital. There is no extradition treaty betwet'Jl tbe United StateJ and Afghanistan but Foreign Ministry of. ficials in Kabul said: "We want Leary to leave Afghani stan because we do not want to add to the country's bad name in drug trafficking." The Pan American World Airways jumbo jl't carrying Leary to London from Kabul arrived in midmorning. It \\'BS immediately boarded by British im· migration officials. a U.S. Embassy of· fic ia.J and the t~o Narcotics Bureau agents, A few minutes later they walked down the steps from the ai rcraft with Leary and Miss Joanna Haroourt.Smlth. Leary wore an open-necked yellow shirt . blue trousers and soft white slx>es and carried an overnight bag. His friend wore a fur coat and had necklaces over her blouse. As they made their way 300 yards to the immigration hall Leary and Miss Harcourt·Smith were embracing all the way. OU.N51 COAST .. DAILY PILOT Tiit Orfll9t C:0.11 DAILY PILOT, will! WI\~ II. C"llllWIPlfd 11'19 N~rirs~ Is pWltiihcd trio 11!9 Oftil'lff eo.rt,Publlll!lng C~. Sf!*. r•te tCl111oM •re pubU1hid, MOl'ICMr llll'flll!lll Frkl•r. ror c.os11 Mn•, Newiiort eetdl, H<111tlnt1kln 8cK.ll/FO\IMl\ll V1tli!'f. Yfvn& 81!td\,, lr'Yln,IS1ikl!..Wdt tl\d $)n CltrMnlt/ SMt JIHln C.p .. tr1r10. A 11tiv11P l"llllkln•I ld!11on 11 publl~ ~11/t'de'(S •rid Surldl"t'I. The prlncT~I pubU1hlnt pl1nt h el 3XI W111t 8rf .srreet, Colt• M .. , c11uorn~. mi1. Rohrt N. W1M Pr1:11dent •rid l"!ilblllhlf" J 1c.k R.. Curl1y Vk:I ,.,.Id_ trld Glnenl MttilOW Tliolfl•• Kt,_.i1 ..... Tho"'" A. M11r~i11• Mtll'91119 Ell!!Or Ol•irln H. Loos R.lc.li1N '· Ntll "'9111a'lf M1""°"'9 £111W. · '--1-.._. Offlc. 222 ,,.,, •• ""''"'' M•ill11g Mldrt111 t .O. 101 666, '2652 --o:i.'9 Meli a Wnt lty StrlM N=ffdlt :WS WtwPOrt IOll~lnf "4•1 htdlt 1111$ ••di ~ 1M C i.; )U IMf1ll 61 Can1iN lttal -Tll•••••• C71 4J 641~)21 c ....... ·~ .. '42·1671 a,.,.. ~ AR h<fl ....... : .. T•..,•••• .,..,4" ~. ,,,,. Or... °"'' ................. . ~.. ,., -llOrlft, '"""'"' ...... tllliJllr"Wll ,,.... or ""''"~ ...,.," IN'f bl ... ~ wl!Mo.tl N*ltf P«" ""''*' til Clltl¥flllflt ,,........ ~ $11 ,........ Miki llt Colt• """"' c.1~ ~ ... "" ,_..., a..u ,, CIOlltfilrJ. a.,. l'Nll U.l!lo -llllYI MMitlrr . ( -~"""--""' ~. ' emergency Red Cross center sbortly before daybreak. She termed the 1;urrenl flooding "v.·orse" 1han .that which forced residents to leave TUesday. "II really came up fast t~ time," S&J.d ~trs. Bergl~nd. a 2().year resident of lbe area. "It n1ust have rome up in an hour or 11.•5$. In 1955 we had bad flooding, but nc1thing hke lhis.'1 She said residents tried 10 save what Ult!y could after the Tuesday flood but lhat many had carpets, drapes and fur- niture ruined. Jack Wallace. coordinator of the Red Cross shelter at the Novato Community Center. said about a dozen families registered al the facility. Others made private arrangements to stay with relatives and friends , '1e said. " DAILY l'ILOT SMilf PMtt ··1 see no panic, l see no one crying at 1his point." \Vallace said. ''Rlght now, people are concerned about their in- surance coverage and 1he safety of their E'atal Crash i11 Irvine families .'' , 1t1eanwhile, hurricane \'elocity winds reached a reported st miles per hour at 1t1t. Tamalpais in Atariri County and howled outside the Golden Gate at an estimated 40 knots. Body of 41-year-old Jack Dean Miller or Tustin lies covered by blanket following crash about 1:30 p.m. \Ved.nesday at Jamboree Road and Michelson Drive. Police said lliller was killed when his station wagon slam~to the rear of truck driven by David E. Shrode, 2218 Delaware st., Huntington Beach. Police said both vehicles were northbound on Jamboree and that truck was slowing for stop liJbt when MJll. er's auto hit it at high speed. The weather front passed over 1he San Francisco area early today, slowing thousands or commuting motorists with cloudbursts and high v .. inds. Mudslides were reported on lnterstate 280 near Palo Alto and on Hjgbway I in . the SUMon Beach and Bolinas areas but all major roadways remained open, the California Highway Patrol said. No serious traffic mishaps were reported. Drug Probe Charge Denied S8n Francisco International Airport recorded l".13 inches of rain during a 24" hour period ending at 4 a.m. Another .64 inches was recorded before daybreak, the National Weather Service said. Chief Says Warrants Not Used as Investigation Ruse · In Oaklal:id, a 24--hour reading of .88 Inches was recorded ; at Hamilton Air Force Base 1.58 inches; In Greenbrae 2 inches and in BerkeJey 1.10 inches. Heavy rains in the San Luis Obispo coastal area closed several roads today, including highway 41 from l\1orro Bay to Ata5cadero and from San Luis Obispo to Los Osos-Baywood Park. The dOwnfown streets Of San Luis Obispo were flooded , officials said. Tbe Cayucos Elementary School was closed after several classrooms flooded , added officials. ~ 'nle highway patrol reported that high winds blowing ahead of thi stonn whip. ped up dust along lnterstate 5 in the Wheeler Ridg~ arta of Kem County, cut.- ting visibility to near zero and forcing au~horities to close \he highway in b::>tb directions for a time. , The bloWing dust was respoos.fble for ·a three-car pileup In the area causing minor injuries. authorities saM:I. Fro'" Pflfle 1 FLOOD ... floods that could be anticipated to occur . , "The answer to the problem is iiot to put everythlng on stilts, but . . . to iJ1.. crease the capacity of the channel:' Holm sa id. He e:tplained that the present channel if It were deepened would have !he necessary increased c2pacity. _ Opposition to the Dood zone is gather· Ing wpport throughout Laguna Beach. First, only canyon property owners ware concerned. primarily because of direct personal involvement, and possible monetary loss. if the zone were applied. No w, however, the Laguna Buch Unified School District bas gooe on record as opposing the nood zone. ''Members of our board are coocemed about student transportation problems that may arise if appropriate flood con· trol procedures are not used. Secondly, they are concerned about tbe lost assess· ed valuations of the property in tbat area if the FP2 (flood zone) i!I approved," a letter from the district lo Caspers states. Laguna Greenbf!lt, Inc., also opposes application of the flood ione, recom- mending tha1 the zone be applied only to undeveloped lands, and that a chaMel be com pleted from the in tersection of El Toro Road and oonnected to current flood control wo rks. Service of warrants for misdemeanor crimes ls not being used as a ruse for narcotics investigations ana arrests, Joseph J. Kelly. Laguna Beach Police chief, told the City C.OUOCil Wednesday night. The chief. in response to some recent criticisms leveled by ~1ayor C~arlton Boyd and the Human Needs Advisory Board, among others, said impress.ions that.-warraAt Hrvice wu a best way-to cooduct narcotics investigations were wrong. "Warrant service is not being DSed as a means to an end : that is, to make narcotics arrests. Imtead, theae an,sts should be simply classified aa lncldental -to warrant service. M I said oo Dec. 6 (previous council meeUna: at which criticisms were made) \he aervica of t.he warrant is the true purpdse for being at the location specified on the warrant," Kelly said. ' However, the chief said tblt n..aucs officen will no lon&er be roUtinely auijpled !<>-work with the ma"1>als clur· ing wammt service. "Now, if anyone thinks that lhis will be the end of naccotics arrests in connection with the service of warrants, I predict that this will be disproved rell.llarly. "Furtftermore, lf anyone thinks that this will now let them do their thing in uninhibited fashion, let me caution that ·person that this new arrangement sbould certainly not be construed to provide a cover of' legality for any unlawful activity occurring in a private place. Th i.s notiori will also be dispelled in a hurry," Kell)'. said. Early critical evaluations of the role of narcotict officers in warrant service came after 21 persons were arrested in Laguna Beach not only on the wammts outstanding, but on narcotics offenses allegedly uncovered when peace officers went to serve warrants. Some of t b e crlUci!lm questioned the use of plain clothes offi cers in warrant service and the teaming of narcotics of- ficers with the Orange County manbals who serve the court orders. "I can appreciate the council'• concern for the rights of the individual in the criminal justice system, and I admire you for it. In fa ct, 1 join in that concern; but, nevertheless, many of us in the Police Department get an impression rror .. time to time that the council in its concern is more sympathetic lo the Jawbreaker than it is to those of us who are enfon:ing the Jaw as our duty ln a legal and proper manner. Laguna Council Action These are the major action! taken by the Laguna BMcb City ())uncil at Its regula r meeting Wednesday night. VILLAGE FAIRE -Denied an appeal by the arclutect ol the propooed $1.5 million specialty shop comple.i from a Planning Comm~ deci:lion deny· lng a variance whic h would bave allowed the project to exceed the 30-foot height limit of the commercial zone by 18 inches. The project i! planned fPr the 1100 block of South Coast Highway. DUJLOING BAN -1nstructed the city staff lhat pennits may DOW be issued for construction other than building o< new dwellinj units Jn Arch Bea.ch )!eights. A building moratorium placed on the ar~a llOM?iof"inadequate sewage disposaJ had befn held to exclude al l new tructi&ri', even that o( fences. New orders allow construction of home additi s1 garages, swjmmina pools as well as fences. PARKING PLANS -Approved spending $1,000 for a legal opinkln from O'~lelveny and Myers which c:ould clear the way for federal f1mding of a parking structure at thy lumber yard property 21djacent to City Hall. Legal snarls hobbled tho city's receipt of federal f\lrl(b, construed as a Joan and subject to state Constitution restrictions on cities' bot towing. BEACH BONUS -Approved rental ol the old camera store building on ~1ain Bt•ch Park property to the Jtilitoric.11 Soclt!ty, Laguna Greenbelt. and the Volunteer Post for 'f!lghl monlhs at $150 per month. The Lyric Opera A> BOCiaUon, now using tbt building. adjacent to Btnton'1 Coffee Shop, ill prep-- aratioo for upcoming performances. will leave by Feb. 28 and the new tenmlta tnke over. "We hope this imp'ression is unfounded, and that the council examines the actions of the Police Department in a totall y ob- jective fashion for lbe benefit of the citizens and the department as well . It will improve our morale tremendously to be assured of this," Kelly concluded. Kelly cited examples of recent un· covering of narcotics activities during the service of warrants by the marshals. A warrant is an order of the court ... commanding the arrest or a person. War· rants are directed generally to all peace officers in the state, and may be ex- ecuted by any peace officer to whom it is delivered. Peace ofncers include policemen, marshals or deputie!I. In the South Orange County judicial district, Orange County Manbal's oUice is assigned the processing and service of warrants which generally must be served between 7 a.m. and 10 p.m. Laguna Board: Philosophy Issue in Firing of Ullom A letter signed ~Y all l'.{l':mbers of the I..agunit •Beach Scllldlboar; releile<l'IO- day, states the reason for the firing of Dr. Will iam UlloQ'l, district superin- tendent, is due to difference in philosophy, not administrative shortcom- ings. The letter ls addrt".ued "To Whom It May Concern" and is part of an agree. ment reached between Dr. ID lorn and the board or trustees calling for the schools chief to depart his pos{ Tue!iday. '"Dr. Ullom '1 superintendency in the Laguna Beach Unifiec' School District has been characterized by an attitude which demonstrates concern for the dignity or the individual, the development of modern programs or education, ef· fective professional relationships with staff, students, parents, and citizens, high Integrity and ethical standards in dealing with the selection of personnel and the admlni!traUon of the personnel program, and consistent upgrading of the classified staff. During Dr. Ullom's ad· ministration, the atudent population of the district has increased 33 percent," the letter· states. "The effects of Dr. Ullom's leadership are reflected in student growth in both the cognitive and affective domalM, by consistent advancement in the studen~ achievement level in basic skills as demonstrated by standardized tests, by the development of nlo4em pragralns of education wlllch are nati.ooally ~· ed, by high ·student morale and coopera- tion with the administration at all levels even during the time when activism on high school campuses was common " throughout the country. by the develop- ment of innovative school programs v.·hich enjoy a high level of public sup- port, by the effective implementation and administration of a high qual ity transportation program. During Dr. Ullom's wperintendency, the number of school plants in the Laguna Beach Uni· fied School District has increased by 66 percent. "The non-renewal of Dr. Ullom'• con· tract is in no wa y based upon bis liability to implement and fulfill administrative functions, but ts based upon a difference in philosophy with the current board ma· jorlty coDCetning programs, commuriity activities, and the role of the superin· tendent," the letter concludes. The documenl b SIIIJJed by William Thomas 111. boanl president, G<rald Linke, board clerk; Patricia Gillette, member, Jane Boyd, member and Norman Browne, member. Thomas, Linke and Mrs. Gillette cvm- prisi> the "board majority" of which the letter speaks, and the trio ousted Ullom and bis two top adm.inistrattve aides in earlier actions. . FACTORY BUY-OUT . . 90,DAY CASH WfTH AIPIOftD CUDIT m One new approprlllion ""'Bht in the budget..thls year ll '950;000 to buUd a new governor's manJloo. Another ls $ t.1 million to plan for the replacement of San Quentin Prlloo with two new mulmum security faclll~. The· bucl&et now goes through the long legislative process, expected to n:tum to his desk in June. At that point , he can e11minate or reduce any spending ap- proved by the lawmak.en. But be can't add to Ille alllOWlt pused by the Legblature. The majordep&rture from Reagan's "squet:ze.and-<:ut...OO:·iz'im'' e q on om y phlloeopby wu In omploye salary ln- ettuts. Two years ago, when the state faced a big budget deficit, Reagan told .Ute worken they -Ud bava W-,. wltboot the pay raises to whlch they had become accwitomtd. • Angry leaders of the Callfomla State Employes Association began talking abou t a possible strike and some workers in the Water Resources Department did walk out last year. Reagan bed angry wonll for the CSEA last fall when it ran a $%-million Cllm· paten to ~e away the 1ovemor'1 veto over state worker salary increases. The effort, a proposed constitutional amend· ment, waa defeated in the November election. But todly there was a warm re~ from CSEA President LeRoy A. lftm· berton to Reagan. "I believe that all state workers will be pleased with the Governor's action and impressed with the fact that he has kept his comm.ibnent," Pemberton said. From Pagel PEACE ••• after today's 174.th session. The talks would have been eXacUy four years old ·next Thursday. The announcement from Presidential Press Secretary Ronald A. Ziegler at Ille Florida _lVhite H~ ln Key IDscayne said: · "We have a joint announcement belween the United Slateo and North Vietnam. Dr. Kissinger will resume private meetings with special adviaer Le Due Tbo and Mlnllter Xuan Thuy on Jan. 23 for the purpoae ol completing Ille tul of ID agreemtnL"_, SOuth Vietnamese gov er amen t polHl<Al -aald that altllougb TbJeu weed "' the lelt In principle be rt• ~abool a ciooen chlJl&t.t. Tbele presumably were worked out ln COi> vinatloni with Geo. A1euDder Halg. Nbao's llptdal envoy lo $1110n. The While Houae sald Wedneaday !bat llai& bad be<D In commun!catloll with President Nixon and that Nixon con· femd by lelepi-with Kllslncer in Wubingtm. Hali llew today lo Plmom Penh, Vlen· ti.an< and JlanPok lo brief the governments of Clmbodia, Laoa and Thailand on the agreemenl. Ziegler llllDOWlCOd that Hali will relom to Saigon· Saturday to consull again with Thieu. Ziegler did nothing to dampen specula• tlon that a cease-fire mlgbt be declared soon m south Vietnam. ~ Fl'OIKP_,.1 CORRIDOR. • • way yet, the road commisalooer dliclos- ed. "We are a.skin& for state help and use of their computer material but we are not a.skins them to find 1<>lutions. Perhaps because of·the many months needed for an overall county stl,Kly, the coutal area may be atven priority," be concluded. OF ALL REMAINING 1912 unoN MINUTE MASTIR II ·MICROWAVE OVENS with MICRO BROWlilER only at SAVE '9000 HURRY -WHILE THEY LAST AGRICULTURE 7.0NE -Oel1ytd until Feb. 11 a public hearing on an Agricultutt-Rl!Crealion zone because required public not.ice had noc. been fi\lb- llshed • 1815 NEWPORT BL YD. Downtowp Ctsta Mesa -Phone 548-7788 • , '"-~~~~------~--~~~~~~~~~~~~:---~~~~~~~~ ... r -·- • Sad di-' Today's Final EDITION N.Y. Stocks , VOL, ·66, NO, 18, 3 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE CQ!,!NTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY 18, 1973 ' TE N CENTS State Employes Get Brea1', in Reagan Budget SACRA~1ENTO \AP) -Gov. Ronald -MW budget which is.. $.1.6 .billion, or 22 Reagan proposed a $9.3 billion budget t1> percent, larger than this year's .. day tbat would give state workers a Reagan !18s feu~ed often with sta~e record pay hike arid still leave a $1 .1· employes smce taking oUice. But he said billion surplus for possible tu cub. (See today he commit.led himself to . seeing related stories, Pages 18, 19 and 32.) th..t they got paid on a par with the The. state's 115,000 civil servants would persons doing comparable work for ~ther get a pay increase averaging 13 percent levels of government or private in the Republican governor's spending businesses. plan for the fiscal year beginning July L The Governor al~ granted the 74.000 'fhat wa·s every cent they asked for and state college and university employes - it was the major surprise in Reagan's including faculty members -the pay in· creases .they sought. • The entire pay raise pack.age totals $226 million. Reagan's budget is appare.ntJy the largest ever proposed by the governor o( a state. Tbe New York state budget bas been bigger than Caillomia's the past several years. But Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller's new budget is $400 million below Reagan's. Biggest increases in Reagan's spending plan were expected to be $SM million in Completing Draft l(issinger, Tho Wrap Up Pe~e? By United Press International The White House announced today that Or. Henry A. Kissinger y,·ill meet Hanoi's Le Due Tho in Paris on Tuesday "for the pu~ of completing the text" of a cec:se-rire agreement aimed at ending the war in Vietnam. A similar announcement was made simultaneously in Paris by the North Vietnamese who said the talks were "aimed at achieving an accord on the en..: of the war and re-establishment of County Panel • Sees Coastal Traffic Jams By JACK BROBACK Of "" OtllY '""" lleff A serious transportation defi ciency ex· lsts in the whole coastal zone of Orange County but the County Road Departm"!'t has no plans to force a. transportation corridor upon the affected communities. "With the deletion of the Pacific Coast Freeway by the Legislature, the whole balance of the transportation system in the coastal area was upset," Murray Stonn, assistant road commissioner, said '!t today. "All our planning for feeder roadways had been based on lhe proposed freeway," he added. "We do know that if devleopment along the coast takes place based on existing zoning the circulation-- of traffic will not be adequate." • The coastal traffic problem surfaced Wednesday when the County Planning Commission asked the Road Department to come up with interim standards by Feb. 20 to allow solution of problems of a Dana Point development The question arose because of prob- lellll fa c e d by the Thunderbird Ca pistrano de· .. elopment. Nine years ago the state earmarked 80 acrs of the 455- acre traa&a for a Pacific Coast Freeway right-of.way. The developer wants a decision on future use of the swath through the property. Stcirm said any answer by Feb. 20 would necessarily be very broad. "We have tentative approval for a countywide lraflic corridor study/'. he said.-'1The result of such a study would be a se t of alternatives oo how best to solve traffic pr:oblems." He said social, economic and en· vironrnental effect! on the communities (Ste CORRIDOR, Page Z) * * * peace in Vietnam ." Saigon dispalches reported earlier that Soult. Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu approved the latest cease-fire agreement in principle, thus pennitting the signing. He balked at an Oct. 26 agreement. ........._ A hint that a cease-fire agreement was near came earlier in Paris when it was announced the weekly semipublic peace talks were being suspended indefinitely <ifter t,oday's 174tb session. The talks Viejo's Pool Gets Big Meet Mission Veijo's M ~ ~ it e Recreation Center pool has'\l>fen selected as the site for the star· studded Los Angeles Invitational Swimming meet, lt was learned to- day by DAILY PILOT Sports Editor Glenn White. The Los Angeles lnvitational meet is expected to attract some of the top swimming stars in the United Stiles. For details, see today's "White Wash" column in the sports section, Page 29. Zogg Supports Bonds, Council At Valley Fete Superintendent William Zogg of the Saddleback Valley Ul).ified School District Wednesday night asked for backing of his district's $46 million sChool. construction package by the Saddleback Area Coordinating Council (SACC). He then expressed his own support and enthusiasm for SACC's efforts in gainihg some control over planning in the valley. "I'll be just tickled to death if you in the coun~B can control~ the density at which we develop ," Zogg told members of SACC at a dinner meeting. SACC has been making recom· menda tions on planning matters to the county planning commission and has a study team developing a policy plan for the area. 7.ogg said the new school district, which becomes fully operational July I, could help with some of the SACC studies he praised. The superintendent. who once worked in the Garden Grove Unitied School District, also added a note of caution. (See BOND~ Page Zl \\'ould have been exactly four years old uext Thursda)l.- The announcement from Presidential Press Secretary Ronald A. Ziegler at the Florida White HOuse in Key Biscayne said : "We have a joint announcement between the United States and North Vietnam. Dr. Kissinger will resume. private meetings with special adviser Le Due Th-0 and Minister Xuan Thuy on Jan. (Ste PEACE, Page %) 'Last LauO'h' .~ For Rowan And Martin HOLLYWOQ)l. (Al>) :.._ "La'IJltln," tt)at brash, iruvereot show that chaoged the direction of televtston comedy, will not be back next year, Dick Martin said t0<b1y. "" . M!rtin said he and Dan Rowan ta ped the final show, the 142nd, at NBC Wednesday nigtit. "We finally put it to bed.'' he said as he prepared to fly to Las Vegas for a 1~ day stand with Rowan at the Sahara. Martin said "Laugh-In" probably wouJd run through September with reruns. He said he and his partner would be back on NBC next fall in a new show, "The Rowan and Martin Show." "Laugh-In had so many imitators," he said. "Even though we Coruiider this pasl season one of the best written. with superior talent, after nearly six years the form had just become predictable." Martin said he and Rowan wanted to · kill ''Laugh-In" this season, but NBC ask· ed them to stay on because the ad· vertising spots bad been sold in advance. When it premiered in January 1969, "Laugh-In" became one of the most talk· ed' about shows on television. Its brash humor. faSt pace and electronic tom· foolery sent it to the top of the ratings. It made overnight stars of Rowan· and Martin and such newcomers as Goldie Hawn, Arte Johnson. Ruth Buzzi, Judy Carne and JoAnne Worley. Virtually all of the original cast has left the show. but Miss Worley returned to the final taping for SP.veral cameo appearances. Two years ago, Rowen and Martin split with George Schlatter, Who bad been ex· ecullve producer, and Paul Keye!!, a close friend of President Nixon, took the helm. Most of the political jabs, often aimf(: at the Nixon administration. left with Schlatter. Irvine U11su1·e of Impact Martin said the fonnat of their new show had not been worked out, but doubted it would be as trend.setting as "Laugh-In." "It'll be dillerent from anything on television, I'll tell you lbat," he said. "but it will be bard to go back and top 01Jrselves. 0 Posed by Coa.st Corridor_ Martin said, "The one thing that Dan and I are most proud of ls.that we'll be in the history books. Instead of just mak- ing a lot of money and being suceessful we'll be in the history books for changing television." Irvine city ofOclals remained unsure tpday how county road department plans for a "transportation corridor" in the, defunct state coastal freewny right of way will affect the new city. The old route. deleted last year by the legislature from tAc state freewa.y syslem, doe.., not traverse any land presently ln the city. Rather the pro- posed route connects Newport Beach and San Clemente crossing the lrvine 'Ranch coastal iector - a 10,00l)..acre cicean view area the city might IOmeday ~Dile.I, "I'm not really wild about freeways," Councilman John Burton said today. "But, 1 don't \fant to Rfl us &et into the same position · Newport Beach II In. where It Is lmpoulb1e to get across town during peak traffk ptrlods." "Of course If lbe co\Dlty Is considering e route wUhln the present city llm.lt1 we would want to be lnvolv~." Burton add· ~ . " • Councilwoman Gabrielle Pryor •Po-• • plauded the county planning commission action which preserved a portion or the • right ol way near Dana Point. S W . D, That action Monday, brought to light late . r1ter JeS the commission11 views that the Pacllic REDLANDS (AP) -Louis Mertins. 87. Coast FreeM'ay rou~ should be studied author of more than a dozen boob and a for ~se as some kind of transportation founder of 1he C&lllomla Writers Guild. corr1do,r -a county-bull~ .rrceway, ~edoesday. Re w1t M....UPerl on superhighway or mass trllfll!1l lmk -lo -poel Rot>ert Frost meet traffic needs along the orange C.oast. Mrs. Pryor said, "I like the Ide.a or preserving as much right of way u possible. It could alweys be uRd as a grtenbelt." lrvlne clty staff, mu.nwhlle, were not made aware of lbe county road depart· ment study. City Manager William Woolett Jr. said that u Ioog as the only tmmedi•te tm- pact was on the southem portion of lhe route.. Irvine would have time to beome f~ In planiilor ol porUons nearu their city llmltJ. MINER KILLED ·ON BIRTHDAY CARl.5BAD, N.M. CUPll -Zane Gallaw•y, "8, of Clrlrbad, I miner, WU struck on the bead and iUlltd by a llOO- pound rock that !tll from the celling ol the Potash Mine on Wednesday, his • l!jrtllday. _ -. new stale aid to local schools and about $500 million in property tax relief. They ~'ter part of the fI1-blllion school·tax progr'Wl Reagan won from the Oemo- cratlc:&>ntrolled Legislature in Deci>m- ber. The Governor, p18.nning to leave ~ffice in 1974 after eight years, already reveal· ed the state will have an $851 million surplus at the end of this fiscal · year. June 30. Today. he estimated the surplus . will grow by another $27% million in the 1973·74 fiscal yt!ar. The major reason is that stale fiscal experts expect a "sparkling" year for California's economy. That means more tax money coming in. But a temporary bonanza is no excuse for spending money on sweeping new programs, Reagan said in his budget message to the lawmakers. "Government should neVer take from the people more than absolutely necessary." he said. "-~· (;ras, .· ~ Jrvi11~.i . Thus, he maintained a relatively tough fist on !he state's purse strings even though the new budge! is twi ce as big as lbe first one he proposed to the Legisla ture seven years ago. Reagan says he is st udying a number of options for returning the surplus to taxpayers -including a combination of a one-time re!:iate or a perman'ent tax cut.· One new appropriation sought in the budget this year is $950,000 to build a new \See BUDGET, Page ZI '''%"'' 'i DAILY "ILOT Sllff ...... llOdy o~ '4!:.vear-old J:u:ti Dean Miller o('Tustin hes covcred by b!anket"followlng crash about I :~O R.m. Wedn~ay a\ J•mll!>ree Road and Michelson Orive. P.olice said Miller-was killed when his station wagon slammed .into the rear of truck driven by David B. Shrode, 2218 Delaware St., Huntington Beach. Police said both vehicles were northbound on Jamboree an~ that truck was slowing !or stop lighLwhen Mill- er's auto hit It at bigh'speed. Irvine Official Sees Directi-i:e As 'No Pay Cut' Planners to Study Panel . , Of De sig~ Review Experts One or the four Irvine city councilmen An ordinance recummended by the city who recently voted to remove city council establishing a panel of design ex· department beads from ~ .across-~e-perts to review future developments in boartl,.foU: percent cost of. livmg pay m---Irvine v.·ill be considered tonight by crease, S&Jd today the actlon represents planning c·o m m is s ion er s . The no pay cut for city directors. commission meets at 7:30 in city hall, "I don't beLieve that was a pay cut at 4201 Campus Drive. all," Councihnan John Burton said. Planning director Broce Warren will •·Fpur of us decided to follow our pr~ent his views on the proposed design oriainal directive regarding department review body and how it will work with cl. -e ty planning staff and the c:ommisslon. head raises. That was to review depart~ Aiso set for public hearifig tonight is a nlcnt heads annually," Burton recalled . F'urlher consideration of the depart. one-acre ione change to allow provision mcnt hea" salaries wi ll be given al of a gasoline service station at Campus "" Drive and Zee Street, near Town Center. Tuesday's cou ncil meeting. The gas station would complement the ln December, the council voted a four · h · t r. percent cos t of living increase to apply to eig t-acre contmerc1a .... mpus Valley all city employes. Later, over the op. position of Mayor William Fischbach, the Council rescinded the increase for depart· ment heads. City Administrative Service.s Director James }larrington said this week, "It is imPortant to note that recognizing cost of living increases for most city ~mployes and ignoring such an increase for depatt· ment heads is in effect a proportional reduction in salary." Burton suggested !hat the council review of salaries of administrators on on annual basis might renect cost of liv· ing as well as llTerit increases. He noted that most department heads have been with the city Jess than six months. The four ·percent raise wouJd ~ve boosted City Manager William Woollett's !>alary from $30,000 a year to $31,200. Considering the raises which v.:Ould have gone to 1111 key administrators. ttic city saved $6,000. AH-year Sc hool Plan Meetin g Se t Toni ght Top oUJcJals from schools in southern San Dtqo County wlll · present tbelr vtew1 of the 45-15 all)fear school pro- gram tOl'\lgbt for parents in the Viejo .School attendltnct arta. The , special program called by Capistrano Unified School District trustees late last year, is an auempt 10 lnfonn parent.I before a district.wide poll is laten, ror a final sampling of opinion °" the controversial issue. Tonl&hl'a proaram sta~. al 7:30 Jn, Vlejo School's auditorium. ' ' I -. __ ., Corona Jury , Makes Request To See Judge . BULLETIN FAIRFlELD (AP) ...: A Jury today found JIMln Coro na p Uty or the biggest maN murder charge In U.S. history, the Yubu City slaylngs of %5 rarm workers and drifters. F'AIRFlELD !AP) -The jury trying • Juan Corona on the biggest mass murder charge In U.S: history asked to ~ the judge today during the morning o( Its seventh day of deltbcratlon. There was no Indication whether the jury snapped an 11·1 deadlock·to reach an unnnin1ous verdict in the case. · The Judge ordered epronn brought 10 the eouriroom fron1 lhe California h-1ed lcal Facility al Vaca ville @tght miles aw•y where ht has been a pattent since suffering chest pains Friday night . At just before 9 a.m., jurors filed into the Solano County courtroom to begin their RCOTid week of deliberaUons, after being buted from Che nearby motel where they have been sequestered every night since the judge handed the cue over to tllem . 1'he Jury alsO rcportt!d at that time tbi.t it wat divided ll·l. but did not say whether the majority fpvored conviction or ICJIUiltal on ts counts or first-degrt-e mU>'!l.ei: Tile Jll!Q(l&&ve !IQ l!int WedntS-aaflftlljf dlv!Jlon chanj,,f, --- ' ' -- center being urged by the city for development in the near future by the Irvine Company to serve UC Irvine and Turtle Rock residen1'. . other items to be taken up toniatit, are: -Reconsideration of the .commission's June ru.llng that a sidewalk P,rOPOSed 1n the S and S Construction Company's College Park development be built on a meandering versus straight line pathway. -Determination of the future right-or. way width of Walnut Avenue In con~ junction with the first devcloRment on the north side of the street city law sug- gests should be widened by seven feet. Widening would provide a 14-foot median and 12·foot park'Ways. -Consideration of a park modificaUon sought by the Irvine Company to com- plete iu obligations for providing park Sfi8ce in University Park. The company wants a guarantee the-15-acre com· munfty park near University Park Elementary School and an -3-acre park west of Culver Drive near Rancho San Joaquin Golf Course satisfy the elly park requirements for lhe completion of the planned community. Orange Weather • There's a 30 percent chance that y,·e'll have mOre rain on Friday. the weatherlady insistM. Don 't look for any c~ange 1n the m~ry readings. which will stJck Jn the middle to upper 50s. I NS lllE 'TODA'\' Survivors of the Urugw~n plane CfWh in the Ande-s have cUcided to wrilt a book obout their trptrltncu, irn:ludina re- sofflng eo ecnnibalbm to 1ta11 olive, See stcrv on Page 9. LM. a.t• IP ClllfwW I ClthlflMI )Ml C'Mlfn-It ,,_.... ts O..ftl Ntftl:tf lt ••i.rt.1 .. _ • l'l!llllCt .. ~ .""""*"""' V-1t :.::::...,., .. ~ """ ........ ll ' I --MlflMI "... Jt N ............ t.J On"" (fll)lllfy tt. .. ·-..... llM• AWPll"' pa T•'fh• M T""'"" ...., ..... . ·~·'"-~ ..... __.. t., 1:-Of.llY PI LOT -" Protest G·ro111• Saddlehack · Unit 'J ii.st Beginning' - l're•P ... J. BONDS •.. -• u t~tlao .m!!l!ll-~ developed to ~ I~ Ill AIJ, ''We could put 111 leut bit ~ Gl'OYU Ill the -v.u.,. ""''~·'!bat~ D0,000 "1ldlllb. ..;;:~ ~ ~:..::; with )'OW' help." . But Zog was maillJ II the mettblC to !Rik about the bond tlettioo, the dlstrlc:t 's The sadrlleback Ari''1 C'o1)rd1011ru1g '}™-' C(lunty Is s wart v•~ f~l lhat lh:it 1lr.;.~ questlo0s of the types of 9Choob the Council.I-"a prot~st i:roup hl•n· to \\'fi lch nus~ very well be lht' 1Y!X' of gO\'emmenl districl's residents want, fQa r,ipeated 1"~ wa.111 here ," sold Spt>ndlO\'t', 11·ho ad-; 1 •-~at--t "·t .. -. the de.\'elo1in1ent of lhls ~real 1·t1!k'y" ---lln car Y campa,. .. •n ""~' u'G , 11ic -dt;'d that the valley rts1dents ··oon't "·an t ~nd election bas nothing to do wilh whtit \\'ednesday night lookt'd at its past ~car to be fon.'t'd to incorporate." kind o{ scbooJs you have. {VI, Wbetbtr · with so1ne pride and llcl!vit1l'S upco1nln& A report on the govl•rnmcntal options you have Khools at all" in 1973 with anticipation. IJv the SACC governwice romn1iltee, Of lbe $48 million, $18 mllllCll fl~ bor- The ('OWlcll tSACCl has about 60 mcm· hltrraded bv \Varel ThompsOn. is due before rowing capacity for state aid, Combined twrs. so1nl' of thcn1 individuals and the SAct': govt'mlng board at the end o( 11•ilb the $28 million ln local bonds wtth a 01hers rt'prcscntins honll'o1,·ncrs groups. fcbrunry 30-yenr patback scheduJe, lha mon.lea Ire small bu:in1c.1iscs and <.i>mmun1ty SACC 1\itl 110\\' ha\'l' offl('C spa('C in lhc planned to bWkl ei,bt eltmtntary viganuauons. Saddlcback ·Y~IC'A service center at schools, l\\'O Intermediate.-IChooU and ••--i••en u ., ... ., TOtAI. RMNUES REVENUE DOUARS 11))..l• l1Sal.1UI •• \UIS 1u --n ...... , ... .... ttlNM1• 1U \\.1 hUll11( JU It NISelll-TU: . ... ... ... , ... ti ··\\'e arr inspired and, enthused.'' mem· 2313. Orange Al'e. 1n l'.:l 'l'Oro. lwo high scboob in the nut Ove yura. txor Bob Price said \\'cdnesday ... \\'e arc Spendlove antlOWK.'ed lhnt r.he county The district will open in: J.Uily with WHERE .THE STATE BUDGET MONEY COMES FROM. Just beginning." has funded for a part-time ~rt"l!lry, aboot 13,000 pupils, Estln)a'9d enrallment SACC has planning, advanced planning. Louise Gatterdan1 of ~1 1ssion Viejo, to live years later is. 20,000, 1'oll said and review commiuees that s1udy pro-staff the o(fil't' as a COWlty-Saddleback anything beyond lbat is "crystal ball- posed deve lopments or county plans in Valley liaison. Ing." the area . In the past yea r, SACC Saddleback School District tabs over representati\'es have appeared regularly the schools in the area f1'0ID, tbe SU Joa- hefore the Orange County Plann ing Com-Ji•tereSt quln and Tustin Union SclJool Distlicts. mission. Ii The unspent boods Voted in those sooo- EXPENDITURE DOI.LARS 1113-14 flSCAI. YUi Through a federal-state grant obtained to--be-defunct districts will be "tom up" at UC Irvine. SACC has a 32-meni ber come July, although Saddleback will in-· study team formulating a pol icy plan for Jn ·Her G ;1•11 herit a portion of the bonded in· the area and a goven1ance co1nn1Lttt'C 1-debtedness. studying the options available to 1hc Bond monies go only to comtruct valley. ' schools, acquire school sites, buy buses Although SACC ha s been listened 10 by 'Surprising and rehabilitate and equip schools. the "powers that be." Price said at the This bond election, 7.ogg told the SACC TOTAL SACC dinner meeting . ..,:'lf v;e're going to members, Isn't going to cost you or the be successful in the planning area, we're By JOHN ZALLER citizens of the area one dime u.nleM )'OU EXPENDITURES going to need more troops. \\le've got to Of "'' o.llY l>i1t1 s11tt . plaA to live here 30 years." ,,,......_ St1rt1H1 IOlld F~ get down to the grassroots." . Fou ntain Valley's giming grand· The bonded indebtedness of San Joa- Membenhip dlairman Mary Comehus. mother. Fran~s Sayers. continues tq be quin and Tustin now costs area / who termed SACC a "protest group." imp?essed by the uniquenes,s of her face. homeowners about 90 cents per $100 alD/ sal.d she hopes 10 add al least 75 to 80 a~ valuation. 7.agg said he's pro-l.9' / "I bad no idea there ~·ould be so much nd -• •-the district more members in 1973. jected bo paybai;a ra._ so SM11• 1tff'IM SACC President Ban Spendlove. \1·ho inte~sl in it ," she said today. ''It's been could "coDtinue to levy that 90-c:ent tax '" /'.:::::::JI::::::~"' ~·as later presented \\'ilh a plaque nam-in Dewspapers all around and even on rate for the next .20 ~. 25 years. I know . _ ing him the group's "hlan of the Year." television._ • that) hard~ believ~ . ... UC&twl de1alled va rious proposed developments "ttfy stomach has been .in knots with l\toney for-salaries and operations tUC - on ~·h1ch SACC's mput was taken. all the publictty I'm getting " says the m~ come out of ~~ill SB But be added th3t the major lhlng Jhe 71-year-old woman . , . recent sta~ the uis~ f five-year-old coordinallng council has ~c-Since a DAILY PILOT story first drew 90, madvert.ently t~~ !' c;implish~ in. the P~l. year is unprovmg wide attention to her face-makiilg antics the new unil~ed ~~:;id next year's ""' , ....... . .ANO WHERE IT GOES UNDER NEW REAGAN BUDGET W~Bl, Hit, Killed ByAuw An 81-year~ld "'Omfln visiting Sary Clemente fram Cnnndn. WBS struck and fatally injured \Yedncsday afternoon by" car which police illlege was ~l.ng driven on the wrong side of the 1trect. Mrs. Elsie Ward , who had been staying at lQl 8 Alameda Lan•. was struck by a ('flt 1n the 200 block of Avenlda Victoria . The vehicle was OOin& dri\'en by Joan Lois Strand, 44, of S.U Victoria. The strand woman was arrested at the scene or the crash, police said, and book· ed on initial charges or felony drunken driving. This morning. the woman was transfer· red to Orange County JaU and Police said they would seek a complaint from the of- fice of the District Attorney. Officers said bail bad not yet been ..i. The accident -the first fatal auto- pedestrian accident on city streets in many years -took place at 2: 16 p.m. Two officers on routine petrol came upon the accident scene before witnesses had a chance to call the station. Officers noticed the Strand woman leaning ovef Mrs. Ward, who was trying to get up from the pavement. The elderly woman suffered fractures of tbe arm and leg as well as internal in- juries. Officers said 4leY found the woman's wristwatch embedded under the bumper of the Strand car. Mrs. Ward died a few hours later at San--Oemettte General Hospital. Viejo Students, Teacliers Ready · For Tak1it Slio ·w · oommun1cal10Ds Wlthin the valley. last week Mrs Sayers has been on NBC As a res • .u.o~ ' • • "I personally feel." be sai~. "the mosl t televisioD , new; three times, CBS twice, genheertberal t~-roav~_!~-uncertain,will be ......... ~ . duEettetvoena m'ctsyste;:; srklaotgbioytafromchers"-nwtutlel significant thing we've done is get peop e d ABC w a wu. a-r~, Frotn Pqe-1 ., ""' to talk ~o ooe another. The rest o!. our anShe alsoo~:· an offer to appear on the in?~ .. fut:he hoped the district could Newport Beach ~neadturanneduaait _~~~ctloc!,!:'~ht ~s~~ goals wlll be a natural by-product. JohMy c8rson Show next week and is ....,N ~ • BUDGET --- The projects he mentioned that SACC still pondermg the possibility of 'doing a get by without an ovemde for one to two • • • • • Viejo High School. has .affected rncluded . thf: Canada routine on Rowan and ~tartin's Laugh-In. yearsdieba alo with the other two Driver 81 Dies . The show will be in .multi-purpose Foohe~-~l~nnt ed commtun1tyedm Endl Toanro In addition to this, her story has been neSawduru·n~;k.dlstriogcts ·~---~ Tustin ' ' gol'ernor·s mansion . rooms A and B. Admission ls $1.25 for w re u.:w.1 1es were ower a ed 11 d -t• 11 by .:u , .u 'filJC -• • • • , he the public and $1 for students with a stu-architectural review committee and carr1 nations y an intema iona y are currently v.·orking with the state ~o I F k Cr h Another is $1 1 m1,llion t~ pla~ for t. dent body card. • phasing of growth rate \\'ere added at the ~ated Press .and Ukmtheed hPress determine a tax rate and state aid )} rea -88 ~ replacement ~f San Quen.tm ~With The student talent will bC competing SACC's request Intemat1onal. ~~er th1sl wee ~t as:: fonnula. • two new llllllmwn security facilities. for first, second and third' place trophies. In upcoming ~eoths, SACC tin be in-!~po~:ent W1 dd aet C::u!r ~~Ion The ~ rate c:ou1d .be based on a pro-An 8l-yea r-0ld Ne"'J)Ort Beach man ~ ~dget now goe_s tprougb the long . ~me or the teachers', skit, or the volvtt.m county -diSCU11S1oos .o(. futuF& ... 1 ~--·-.':5_ ~ ~ _Yr he" 1--. -.. · ----·posal--m·tbe unillcatioa.--pln..-tbe~·---·-:--kfiled insl' 11-·weanesaay·arteRtoc.iD--·leg1Slat1ve proc41U, upec~_ to. return to 1dent1ty or the faculty , wont be revealed aviatm needs and ·~ a study of 0 news coverage 0 r ace.· bined tu rates o( the component ~as ~ Y . his desk in June. Al that polriC:1Se-can ··-untH--tomght's show. • . . . al d. . s Mrs. Sayers has been taking all the districts or the rate the state feels in a freak aectdent during which he lost eliminate or reduce aDy spending ap-Plau-1 ..... the Dute duet will be Sbelley munic1p a v1sory counc1 · publicity in stride aside from her ' ---*~ · f b d ~· · • .1"'6 ' h ' · nece«""' t0 support eDstlng Ba"vruc:m. control o is car an went ~~mg m proved by the lawmakers. Bu~ be can l Norris junior, and Penny Trump, nervous stomac . ~ J . would t "\b state o( · · N rt dd .-. t ssed b the sbm' From Poge 1 "I tr to continue mv normal routine, Zogg said be ~ W1 -revi;rse mto a large tree lD ewpo a . to we amoun pa Y fre ~· . . except yno\v l'm practic.ing my face a Jot ficials ln Sacramento apm ~. 'i"eesdiool~ to Ht!tgtU; police sald today. Leg1slatw-t;. , Four individual gwtarlsls will. perfo~. more than 1 used to. · d~~ss the problem. (All~ Charles F. Robertson of 465 Santa Ana "The ma)Or depart~~ ~m Reagan s ·They are Jan Hart and Deb~1e Ga~1n, CORRIDOR "I think I'm better than 1 was. My lip districts already know p.e.ll' fute;> A d1 d of . head. ip"..-ies ~anck:ut-aIJd.trµn ec;.o n o~.Y so~res; Nanette Re«e, Junior, 1Dd • • • ,__. comes nearly half-v,.ay up the bridge of because they are based on !8't"'' s v~.~ ~;1 e he hmass1veth . '. tol-'lt-he philosophy was in em.ploye ia1ary In· Kevmr Blr-tbeck; slniol'.. . . in the coastal zone would be a lop con- sideration. "Many modes are possible." Storm ad- ded. "They might include a rapid transit system, bus lanes on arterial hlghways or use of future lransportalion methods not yet developed." Storm warned, ho~ever, that it was ob· vious that a simple arterial highway is not the answer to roastal traffic prob- lems. "Ten yea rs ago we had guidelines and could have moved ahead wilh plans," he added . "Now all is changed. People may even say they are willin& to put up ~·ith inconvenience to preserve the en- vironment. The colUlty can't just produce a plan and expect conununities to buy ii any n1ore." • }fe said demands from communities for action would dictate county moves. "\Ve know that future trSn!pOrtation corridors will have to provide buffers to residential :ireas," Storm saii:I. "We will also include bicycle "-"ays and equestriaD trails." The countywi de stud y is not even under "'ay ye!, the road commissioner disclos- ed. "We are asking for state help and use of their computer material bul we are no't asklng them to find solutions. Perha ps because of the many months needed for an overall county study, the coastal area may be given priority," he concluded. OU.N~E COAST " DAILY PILOT "Ole Or1nt41 COll~I DAILY PILOT, wlll'I wh>c~ iJ COtrlblrtm """ M~rH,, 1, J!Wl>lll/l«I by n..... Ori~ COiii! Pvbljl~•"9 C~n'/'. ~ll>I· Ale ..Silion~ "'f D111!ll1....,, Mondi '/' ll'lnougll Fr\d1y, lor (b1l11 Me111, Ntwi:iorl llo1tn, k!ln!ln!!len Brat111F'ovru~in V11llt'1', l~u,.. B••ch, l••lnf1 S'!<ldltb~tlc .. r.d San Cte_.,.!el S.n Ju1n C•Pol1•1~D. A 1Jn9lt tt<1!or'llll tdilfon 11 P<1bll1lled ~•Tvr06'1"' 1fld Sund•Yl'· r~e l>'incip,ol P11bl .. M1111 111.,.,,t 11 "' JJ:I w ... 1 Bl f $!rt tl, Co.ti Mt•t. C•hlornr1, 92U6. Robtrf N. W11d Prt1kltot 11r'id PuDlo~~tf Jaclt-R:. Curley Vice Prt1.,11n1 11'td Gtnrr111 M~rie<pr:r Tho11111 K•t•il EOi!or Thaftltt A. Mvrphina Mon1Ql119 l:O•ICW Cli1rlt' H. loot Rickotrcl f'. N•ll As1!1t11~1 Mlnt9\nv Ed,1ot1 Offk.11 0.11 Meit: SJO Wttl 11•'1' Strtti NSWIJbrl 111<1'1: llU Newport ftovln110 \."""11 Btedl: m l"O<Ysl A- H\ll'llli'IQtor. le1ch: 1117J l!ltl(ll ISOlll,,.110 Sift Clt!Tlet'lt1: • .10s "'°'"' El Ctm"-RNI TM.,t..M 171Cl "41.CJZl ~ln.4 A4ffrtlll .. 6Cl·S,71 kl C'---. All P.1Mm.tJltll l•lephM C92.CC20 ~"' 1tn. 0.-11111 c-..1 ...,..1....,. ~""'· Mo ,.,.,., 1torlft, l!lll\!r1Hof11, "'*Ill rl\ITttf' or tchtrh~ll 1'11r11n f!WI'/' lit r.,.,.e\IC'td wllhaul •P«lll Plf· tlllt.* .. opyrlgftl o-r. S-.cl Cffte -1191 Miii •I Co1t1 ,.,...,., Cll!lornlt, lllblr.rl11111t1 by terrier" •tu ,_llll'f'/ W ftltll IJ.15 ....,Tl!lr1 mftlllfY , •t111t11-. a..s mtn•11 r... ,, · d levies.) • recciv~ w n e was rown m creases. , Sophomore Carol Attmger wdl give a my nose, M~. Saye7. sa~ wh·ch she Clmpiigners for BONDS (BuDd Our back window of the cpr. Two years ago, when the state faced a BOio dance performance. Four studeDts. ~rs. ~are~, :es:on~ocr~ion of ·t~e face New District Schools) are going *>or-to-William Craighill of 216 Tustin Ave., a big budget delicit, Reagan told state knoWfl as "Dancers in Black,'' also will ca ~ a lgirn, rf t few others can door this week with smile buttons saying friend of Robertson 's who witnessed the workers they would have to go without dance. -rfinvo ves a ea "Vote y~ Yes," seeking support for the the pay raises to which they had become They are Tania Knight, and Dorma pcSh~r~tends her jaw forward as far as election. crash, told police he and theifictim had accustomed. . . Urdiales, juniors, ~ Pam Holmes and it will go and then hooks her lower lip up been wo rking OD the car only moments Angry leaders ?f. the Cahfom1atalk!State Petra Ander &On, seniors. , ' · th · · before the accident. Craighi\l said the Employes ~1alion began ng Amanda Wingfield, sophomore,. and ~~=r ~~~:;~~~of 1~~ DOhS:; :iu'~vmi~ Fron& P .. e l tJ.o had decided to take the car kl a ~bout a possible strike and some work~ Tami Toon, freshman, will appear in a II . h f de·'er for e·•-;••11·on so Cra;•hill got in the Water Resources Department dramstic scene taken from Tennessee swa O\v1ng er ace. PEACE ru .. <Ulllil<I -e alk 1 last · . . , , la M -· " "tt·ly jaws used to ache after I did just out or the car and walked to his own w ou year. dJ f the CSEA Williams 'The G ss enager1e. . two or three funn y faces" she said. "But • • • Reagan had 8!18tY wor 0~ . Terry Newman, band instructor, will . · d vehicle while Robertson slid into the last fall when 1t ran a $2-million cam-direct a jm group with Dave Kuhner, ~y .mi:sctes are ~et~~ng stronger DOW an 23 for the purpose of aimpleting the text driver's seat. paign to take away the governor's veto drums· Jim Benson ba55· James Harris, 0~ 1 tireO: easi y.d. . k ad·o of an agreement." Robertsoa's car was parked next to the over state worker salary increases. Tbe piano.' Phil Maso'n ~pet· Robert stat~~ KM~ aw~sc dli~~~r: ~~. South Vietnamese i over nm en t curb on the south side of Clay Street near effort, .a proposed co~itullonal amend-Bigeldw, trombone; 'and Randy Bass, Sayers' talents on a gi m contest last political sources said that although Thieu CataUna Streel where the two men had ment,. was defeated m the ?.'Jovember tenor sax. . mor1tb has now become chainnan of a agreed to the text in principle be re-stopped to continue working on it, police election. • Newman also will head up a Dis:leland campa'ign to promote the funny face of . quested about a dozen changes. These w~~~~tn told us the next thing he f But ~X t~~~i;~st a,!'~!!'~~= group feat~ring G~g La~tc, trumN PE;t; the Fountain Valley grandmother. In he ro'!!_ --~ ~~ · Rob Jenkins, -clannet; v,..en ann1e, Ow~ is go~g . to arrange for buttons e~~~ly w~~reGe:~~CX:l:r H:;. =; ~an ca~ ';,~sd f~v:~ a:a err~ be.~~o~:~ v~~~~n~ll state workers will be tenor sax ; Ken ~II , trombone; April featu nng ~ gimmg Mrs. Sayers, and Nixon's special envoy to Saigon. backwards in his life," said police traffic pleased 1~ith the Governor 's action and Wade, bass and Mike Sena, drums. there also is talk of a song abo~l her· · The White Hoose said Wednesday tbal investigator Gary Lee. impressed with the fact that he has kept ~y money she makes she will use for Haig had been in commulli~tlon with Lee said the car was going between 50 his commltment," Pemberton said. a_ trip to New Ze~land wher,e she hopes 10 President Nixon and that N11on con· and 60 miles per hour ln reverse before The Governor budgeted $160 million for g1m for grandch.1ldren she s never seen. ferred by telephone with Kissinger tn hitting the tree. . the 13 percent pay hike. Rather than But she al:SO said .she would api>t;ar . al Washington . , Craighill said the speeding car shot going to all employes across the board, It any bon~ hde charity where her girning Haig new today to Phnom Penh, Vien· across Clay, lumbered across a oomer will be used to correct lnequltles in ·co~ld raise money for the ne~y. liane and Bangkok to brief · the Jot at Clay and Catalina, sped across salaries, at the state level and in private l ~~.to make "!? fa~es iust tor t~e governments of Cembodia, Laos and Ccitallna and impacted with the roadside industr)'.. Some employes may get more fun. of it, she ~ys. but if 1 can cash In Thailand on tbe agreement. tree at 501 Catalina St. th&n 13 l>ez'cent while others get less. on it, why not? ' Ziegler announced that Haig will return Deadline for Board Race Filin g Feb. 16 The final filing date to run for one of three 1rustee seats on the Saddleback Community College Dis trict Board is Feb. 16. acco rding to the Orange County Hegistrar or Voters. The election of trustees in areas '""'o, four and five is April 17. The filing deadline was reported earlier by a spokesman at Saddleback College as Feb. 9. Lady • ID to Saigon Saturday to consult again with Thieu. Ziegler did nothing to dampen specula- tion that a cease-fire might be declared soon in South Vietnam. Pickpocke~ Nabbed VINA DEL MAR, Chile (UPI) -Con- victed pickpocket Joee u~ reached in- to a pocket, police said, to pluck a billCold. Trouble was, the pQCket wu in the uniform of policeman Roberto Lopez. Lopez grabbed Urrea after a brief strug- gle. Louvre Th e Real Mona Lisa Stands Out LONDON CAP ) -Some of the poople who claim .they own tbc reaJ Atona Lisa suffered a setback today when Lord Cl;irk, Britain's best known art his- torian. cast his vote for tbe lady in the Louvre. OFFICIALS AT THE PARIS museum never doubted that the original maslerpieee by l..eonarda da Vinci Is on dlsplay there. But • flurry of oom- pctillg claims last fall ralsM uncertainty In 90 me circles. , . FACTORY BUY ~out 90 DAY CASH 'Franklin' Robbed PlllLADELPlllA (UPI) -While residents of this city were observing the 276tb birthday of Benjamin Franklin, a robber held up the Benjamin Franklin !fol<!I and escaped with $1,600. OF AU REMAINING .1972 LITTON MINUTE MASTER II MICROWAVE OVENS with MICRO BROWNER only at SAVE . '9000 HURRY -WHILE THEY LAST - Clark. who :ts Kenneth Clark pre!Cnted 1 highly SIX'CCSsful tele'ft!klrl aenea ln Britain and America called "CivlllsaUon,'' derided the rival clatms in I Itch.ft published today. "l~Vf.:RY 30 YEARS OR SO collectors claim they own the ~ton.a Lila," Lord Clark llaid. "It 1S !I. $Ort or epidemic. WrTH AP'PIOftD s3299s CIDIT m "I hope I will not he taken to court U f say that the dar~ l1'ell object that bang!I almosl invisibly In the Louvre is the orl&inll pk?tute paint«d by Leonardo. It h::111 an impeccable pt.'dlgree." --. '1815 NEWPORT lLYD. Dow!!town Costa Mesa -Pbone. 548-7788 • • r I \ ' , 17 Huntington Bea~h Fou"tain Valley VOL. 66, NO. 18, 3 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALlf'9RNIA • • ' THURSOA Y, JANUARY 18, 1973 -Today's }~lnal ' N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS ·or. Leary . Expected to Arrive • Ill-Southland By CANDACE PEARSON OI t1M 0.llY ,ill! Sit" Dr. Timothy Leary, Conner Harvard profeuor wanted for Caillornia priton eSC'ape and in Orange County for the alleged masterminding of a c1rug·smug- gting ring, was expected to arrive on a Pan-American Olgbt to Los Angeles International Airport this afternoon. U-.S. State Department officials have sought the return of Leary, wbo escaped in Sept. of 1970 from prison in San Luis Obispo, from Afghanistan, where he was arrested Tuesday. Reports saJd that Leary was sen{ to London . early this 1nomlng. A Pan American spokesman In London said lhe ramous advocate of ·the use of LSD would fly with anned escort. to Los Angeles, where the only London Pan-Am flight to- day touched down at f p.m. U:x:al law enforcement officials denied those reports. A spokesrilan for the narcotics division ,. of Orange County District Attorney Cecil only a ruse by agertts to keep a crO\\'d - Hicks' office said early today that "the __particularly Weathermen -ltWay from only people telling us he'U be here this t\e airport, he Ol}IY said,. '.'Does that afternoon are the press." ~· .. sound logical to you?" The spokesman said he was told by the The Weathermen, a militant un- federal agent handlin..& the case that it dergroood organization, claimed credit wouJd be two to fOur weeks before for helping Leary escape from the Leary's return could be arranged. minimum security facility where he was "That's all we know," the county of-serving a six months to lG-year term ficial said, adding the last he heard, after being convicted in Laguna Beach Leary was still ip Kabul, Afghanistan. for marijuana possession. Asked if the twp.to.four week story was It is presumed that Leary will be taken to Los Angeles County Jail whi le authorities decide where to prosecute him. In ad dition to escape charges, Leary is v.·anted by Orange County o(ficlals on a $5 million bench \varrant. The Orange Coutlty Grand Jury last summer indicted Leary and 46 other alle~ed members of the "Brotherhood of Love," supposedly an international drug smuggling club formed in Laguna Beach six years ago. Following his escape, Leary apparently eace ex 0 e ~·om • Gh·ning Grandma Racks UpPublicity DAILY· PILOT '$1111 "110!1 MRS. SAYERS GIRNS AGAIN Wiii F1ce l1unch Her Ship? !IY JOHN ZALLER Df ftl9 Dmltr P!Mf Stiff Fountain Valley's g1m1ng grand- mother, ,frances Sayers, continues to be impressed by the uniqueness of her face. "l bad-no idea there would be so much interest in it," she said· today. "It's been in newspapers all around and even on television. "My stomach has been in knots with all the publicity J'm getting," says the 71-year-<ild woman. Since a DAILY PILOT story first drew wide attention to her f~ce-making antics last week, lo'lfs. Sayers has been on NBC . television news three times, CBS twice, and ABC ooce. Sbe also bas an off~ to appear on lbe JOiirinj Canon Show ll<Xt -k, and is stJll ponderii>g tbe possibility of doin a routine on Rowan and Martin'I Laug~n. ·tn addition to this, ber story has been carried utionally and internationally by the ·Associated Press and United Press International. Later this week she has an appointment with a color photographer w~ wants to add yet another dimension to news coverage of her face . Mrs. Sayers has been taking all the publicity In stride, aside from her nervous stomach. Huntington Girl, "J try to continue my nonnal routine , except now I'm practicing my face a lot more than I used to . "I think I'm better than I was. My lip comes nearly half-waf"'"up the bridge of my nose," Mrs. Sayers. said. Mrs. Sayers' best face -which she calls a "girn," Or confortion of the face -involves a r feat few others can perform. ·she extends her jaw forward as far as it will go , and lben hooks her lower lip up over lhe bridge of her nose, thus giving the appearance that her mouth is swallowing her face. · "My jaws used to ache after I did just two or three fw;my laces," she said. "But D\Y lll1isC!e> art:kllilc· stronger l\'!W ~ don't Ure so eaSOy:.. ' Gary Ow<ns, .1 disc. jockey on. ndio statkln KMPC wbo discovered Mrs. Sayers' talents on ;a girn contest last mer.th, has ooW~become chalrman of a campaign to promote the fiinliY face of the Fountain Valley grandmother. Owens is going to arrange for buttons featuring a giming Mrs. Sayers, and there also is talk of a song about.her. Any money sbe makes ·she will use for a trip to New Zealand where she hopes to 'See GIRN, Page 21 13, Dies ' Cou1ity Coroner Attributes Deatli to Men.ingitis A 13-year-old girl who was dead on ar- rival at Pacifica Hospital in Huntington Beach Wednesday died of meningitis, Orange County Coroner's deputies said today. Jim Beisner, spokesman for the cor- oner's office said the death of Nancy Denner, of 1015 England St., has been at- tributed to bacterial meningitis. He said tests are being run to determine if the strain of bacteria which caUBed the disease is in£ectlous. Results should be available within two to three days. ~inted out the more infectious fonn of menlngltia -lhe form that has caused the death of Army recruits at Fort Ord -ls caused by a virus, but he bad added that some forms of bacterial meningitis are also C1:1mmunicable. The girl's mother, Betty Denner, told police her daughter had been ill for about two weeks, but because other family members had been sick with the nu, they assumed that that was what was wrong with her. Mrs. Denner said that Tuesday in ad- dition to .her Ou symptoms, Nancy developed a severe headache, a sliff neck and a rash. The woman told police she believed her daughter was coming down with chickenpox. On Wednesday mmrning, the woman said she got up at ·about 8:30 a.m. and found her · daughter had stopped breapung. Tbe child was rushed to the hospital where attempts to r!vive her fail_ed and she was declared dead. Dr. John Pbilp, director of lhe county health department explained that of the Ex-Marina High l'ictitn Dublin Court Finds Man Guilty in Tea~her Death ~ Fn»m Wire SerYlets A court In DubUn, Ireland sontenced a 25-year-<1ld Australian to four years in pmon Wednesday for the mamlaugbter death last April of • hllh ICbool teacher from HunUna:ton Beach. Wiiliam David Colvnan waa found in- noc<nt of )ho murder of Marina High School TeaCbtr Robert Munroe Nish, 36, laSI December lo a jury trial in the lriih capital. But tile JlllJ' ...,•lcted the Australlan of manslaughter after he tx- Ptalned that Nish'• death waJ accidental. According to Coleman, he and Nish. wbo · wu crlwled and walied with the aid of crutches, were drtnktng together In north Dublln sJloons on the nlght of April 28. 'nte Amerk:ln'9 body WIS feund 49 \I . --.. , • • miles north of the ca.iilal on a lonely rOia !lie next day; ' Coleman claimed that Nish had faUen out ot a car the two had rented, and that. be bad then backed over him by miltake. Ro &aid be accepted tbe charge of manslaughter. Coleman was first arre.s~ ' on Guernsey. a small Island In the Eqllsb cbanocl, oo rta!ldulMit use of traYelcr'~ .. checks. Irish JlOUce were call<d In to the cue when Coleman WAI found to poucu a wallet and traveler's chccQ belooglng to Nish. Nish was oo 1 sabbltlCll leave from ·Marina High school at the time of tbe ao- 'cident. He was-am!ld!rtod a popullll' Engllsh-tetocller. -' several forms of bacterial meningitis, the n1ost common is caused by the meningi>- coceus and is present in healthy carriers whi ch ma!l:e up about 25 percent of the population. "But the disease itself is rare -we have about 10 cases a year in the county and maybe one or two fatalities. It oc- curs in susceptible individuals, but we don 't know what it is about an in- dividual's general makeup that makes lhem susceptible," he said. Philip said there is no specific preven- tive for the disease and in cases such as riancy Dennet's members of .her family are sometimes given preventive an- tibiotics. "Other people who have had contact with her should be a1erted to look for the symptoms -high fever, an intense headache, nausea and vomiting, a stiff neck and a rash. If the symptoms occur, tt:ey should seek medical treatment im- mediately," be said. Philp emphasized that the meningitis organisms are always present and that instances of the disease occurring and causing death so rapidly are "rare.". Peru Seizes 12 Tunaboats l SAN DIEGO (AP) -At least 12 United States tunaboais carrying nearly 200 crewmen have been seiz. ed off the coast of Ptru In tbe largest seiiure evu undtttaken by tJwi South American country in 1he S<K:alled "tuna war," says an American Tunaboat Association IJ)Okesman. A spokesman for tbe boat owntr11 group said the ahlps were- accuted of TiolaUng Peru~, ltlf· claimed 200-mile fl$hlng llmlt and forced Into tbe port • of • Talara Wednelday by gunboats and planes. There, they will be Oneel 8C· cording to wtlgbt and hi lorced to buy Ptruvlan fishing licenses, he "Id. ,. ' 1 SVRF POUNDS SEA WALL AT HUNTINGTON'S BOLSA c°':t1°CA-BLOFFS Waves Riding High Tide Damage Road, Provide Watery Spectacular Sunset Channel Homes Flooded by High Tides High tides, combined with surf, smash· ed a beach service road this morning in Huntington Beach and fiooded several homes along the Sunset Channel in Sunset Beach. The broken service road runs along the Bolsa Chica bluffs. at the end or Golden West Street. Waves running three to five feet, combined with a seven-foot tide at 8 a.m,, smashed over lhe ~oncrete sea wall _ and crumbled a portion of the road. The heavy waves also knocked over a power )X>le which serves the Standard Oil Company oil wells on .. the bluffs. The service road provides access to the-oil well11. The crumbled service road bas been cl08ed . As the waves crasbed against the sea wall, they sent funnels of wate.r 30 to .0 feet in the air, attracting spectators alone lbe bluff. The Oondlnf In Slwel Beach af. fected a few Jow-lylng homes bet\lo1!tn Patiflc Colst Highway and the. Sunset Channel. Whenever the tides reach seven feet or more, the cbanne.l overnows some of the bulkheada and spUls as much as slx lnchea of •ater Into some of U:le homes. One old house, near Broadway and Plcffic Colsl Highway was llooded. Neighbors said the residents always put ~heir tndoor fumlture up on· bricks w~vor high, tides are exp«ted,. . Max &wman, aasilt.ant director of • harbors and beaches for Huntington Beach, said Udes of seven feet or more ft.it 10 Urges a y.ear -three times each in December, JU.ne and July, and once in January. The high tide Friday is expected to reach 6.8.feet at 8:55 a.m., Bowman said . Whtie the tides and surf didn't hurt the ci ty beach, observers did say the water ran clear across the wide beach and reached the service road at the rear. No damage was done. City officials said one or the biggest dangers from the high tide is the flooding or Pacific Coest Highway in Sunset Beach. Salt water runs across the street and stands in puddles, often t.'Overing hall the stree t. This morning the water covered one northbound Jane and motorists were hit- ting tbe puddles at high speed. No ac- crtlents were reported, however. JUAN CQRONA FOUND GUILTY . BULLETIN FAIRl'J.ELD IAP) -A Jury today found :J.au CGro111 pllly of the blgtsl mass murder Cliar1e In lJ,S. history, lbe Yab1 CHy lla>·ini• of !.I llU'm "1orker1 and drtfttn. . • • fled to Algeria, where he stayed with Black Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver ror nine mon ths. Leary then went to Swi tzerland, where he. was continually ordered to leave the country. for the last time Dec. 31. Earlier reports said Leary had been held under house arrest in the Afghan capital. There is no extradition treaty between the United State.; and Afghanistan but Foreign ~1inistry of- (See LEARY, Page %) IGssinger To Meet Tho · 011 Tuesday By United Pres1 Jnlematlonal The \Vhite House announced today that Dr. Henry A. Kissinger will meet Hanoi 's Le Due Tho in Paris on Tuesday "for the purpose of etiarploting the text" of a cec:se-fire agreement aimed at ending the war in Vietnam. . A similar announcement was made simuJtaneously in Paris by the North Vietnamese; who said the talks were "aimed at achiev ing an accord on the ... -'end of the \\'ar and rHStablishl11e'lt of peace in Vietnam." Saigon dispatches reported earlier that SouU-. Vietnamese President, Na;uyen Van Thieu approved the latest cease-fire agreement fn principle, thus pennHtlng the stining. lie ballred at an dcl. II agreement. A hint that a cease-fire agreement was near came earlier in Paris when it was announced the weekly semipublic peace talks were being suspended indefinitely after today's 174th session. The talks would have been exactly four years old next Thursday. The announcement from Presidential Press Secretary Ronald A. Ziegler at the Florida White House in Key Biscayne said: . "We have a joint announcement between the Uniled States and North , Vietnam. Dr. Kissinger will resume private meetings with special adviser Le Due Tho and Minister Xuan Thuy on Jan . 23 for the purpose of completing the text of an agreement." South Vietnamese g o vernment political sources aald that alt.hough TtUeu agreed to the text In principle be re- quested about a dozen changes. These presumably were worked out in con- versations with Gen. Alexander Haig, Nixon's special envoy to Saigon. The While House said Wednesday that Haig had been in communlcatkin with President Nixon and that Nixon con- ferred by telephone with Kissinger 1n Washington. . Haig flew today to Phnom P•h. Vien- tiane and Bangkok to brief the a:ovemments of Cambodia, Laos aod Thailand on the agreement. Ziegler announced that Haig will return to Saigon Saturday to consult agaln with Thieu. Ziegler did nothing to dampen specula- tion that a cease-fire might be declared soon in Soulh Vietnam. Asked about rumors of a ceue--fire, IS.. PEACE, Pare Z) Orange Cout Weather ·There's a.30 percent chance lhat we'll have more rain 00 Friday. the weatherlady insists. Don't look for any change in the mercury readings, which will stick ln the middle to upper 50$. INSIDE TODA. Y S•Mlil!Ort of thf U~flO• plane. crash in the Andt1 havt decided to ~re a book a~t their txperimct1, including rt- sorlinQ to cannlbolinn to stav tilive. See storw on Page 9. • • . . • . ' , ~ DAJLV PILOT H Tt111rSday, J111u.ary 18, 197} ---- Dr. Leary Cult --Croup I'n Lawsuit RIVERSIDE (AP\ -The i>lall' Franchlse Tax Boord has ril~ a claim ror $76 million in back taxes--ngalnst the Br()(berhood of Eternal 'Lovt. believed to be the world's largest dealer in LSD. hash ish and hashish oil. Forty-six members of the Brotherbood. including drug cult 1st T1n101hy Lear'y. have been indicted in Orange County oo charges of smuggling and conspiracy. 11le Tax Claim. filed Tuesday states that the brotherhood owes back taxes for unreparted income during the ~ ~\'e years. The claim was filed in R1vers1de Q:iunty because the Brolherhood reportedly owns a mountain ranch there. Officials refused to say · bow lhty assessed the lien, v;hich incl~des only back tu.es and interest . Actual income of the group is believed to have been much higher. Sources say several Brotherhood mem· hers ha ve personal fortunes of more 1han $1 millkln. The Brotherhood. granted lax -exempt status as a California corporation in I~. is believed to have smuggled tons of 11· legal drugs into the United States. The tax lien is the first public indication or the exteot of its alleged activities. . Formed in Laguna Beach. in the mtd· 1960s the brotherhood is said to have ex· pand~ into a loose organiz_ation of .200 persons that s~ialized 1n _the un· portation Qf manJuana, hashish, and some cocaine. The group also Is believed to ha\'e manufactured an especially strong form of LSD known as ··orange SUnshine." Authorities say samples of this drug have been found as far away as Australia and Europe. The indictments, han ded dov.'Jl l~st year, culminated a four • year ur vestigation of the group that eventually reached around the world. · Leary. \\'ho escaped from th e st~t~ prison at San Luis Obispo in 1!170 while se rving a drug possession sentence, v.'as arrested last . week in Afghanistan for having a false passport and was ordered deported. Leary ,.portedly I e f t Afghanistan Wednesday ~ was believed bound for . the United Slates. Federal officials said · arrangements were being made to have Leary returned directly to the U.S., but sin(:e there are no direct flights out of Afghanistan to the U.S., it was feared he might seek asylum at a stopover point. From Pagel LEARY ••. I ficials in Ka~ siid: "We want Leary to leave Afghanistan because we do not want to add to the country's bad name in drug trafficking." The Pan American World Airways jumbo jet carrying Leary to London from Kabul arrived in midmorning. It was immediately boarded by British im· migration offi cials. a U.S. Embassy ol· ficial and the two Narcotics Bureau agents. A few minutes later they walked down the steps from tbe aircraft with Leary and P.iiss Joanna Harcourt-Smith. Leary wore an open-necked yellow shirt bl.ue trousers and soft white shoes and ~ed an overnight bag. His friend wore a fur coat and had necklaces over her blouse. Al tbeY made their way 300 yards to the immigration hall Leary and Miss Harcourt-Smith v.·ere embracing all the way. Shortly before disappearing Into the hall Leary turned to reporters and said: "l'r:i going to get a lawyer." Leary left' Switzerland for Vienna at the el)d of December and then went on to Afghanistan. He arrived in Kabul on Sun· day. Afghan authorities arrested him im· mediately and seiied his U.S. passport. The passport was handed to the U.S. Embassy tn Kabul, which provided _Lea.ry with an identification card to permit him to travel back to the United State~. J -OIANel COAST .. DAILY PILOT ,,_or.,.. C...t °"11.Y I'll.AT 'Mfll ~tdl h ~ th9 H-"1 ..... l*blltlltd by flle Cpl"" Ce.it l'Ulllilfllftl c.mpeny, ~ rare 9dlli0fl,s .,. JlllMhllld. MonN1 ttltouQn ,rtit.y. fir Cotti M.... H~ 11~.c/I, Hun11neto11 8Nthffount11n v111ey, L1tou~~ 9eldl, 1rv1M1sadd1H.ct1 n s.n Ciemt~ttt S... J111n Ca1'IUr1no. A Sllltl!I ~lonat edition II pub!lllMd $1~ Ind SY/ld•y$. Tiii ~lnctp1I pub\Wlinf Pll1'11 'I• 11 UI w~~t l•Y $1rMI, Goll• M-., C1lll&1fl!l1, 92•16. Aeheri N. w.ed . Prw&'""" eftd Pullll1hff J-.:li: A,· Curl1y Ylct•"'-lfffll er.Ill Gener11 MIMQCI' ' 1'h•m•1 K•••il Editor Titolft•I A. Mur phi111 MINfln9 Editor ct..rt• H. l..01 ~ich1rcl '· N•rl Mi!1t111t MIMtlnil l!"dtl0'1 T 11ry Co ... 1111 West OriMlft c.ity l!d!tor ............. Offk. 17115 l11ch le11l1¥1rd M1ill11t Mldr•111 ,,0 . lo• 190, f2641 °""' Offk., ~ 6Hai· m l"-1 AWllllt (Mii ~I: 2Jt Wtt.:,.;;; Sh"H! M""'11or! lefdl: J;lJ3 N hvltVllrd ~" Clefnelllt: :!OJ Norfll I C..tnlroo llMI T••ll•M (7141 141-4121 Cl.alfW A4"'thhtt 142·1671 ,-,.,. Ntrftll Ot-1 ... C~ C:._H ... ..... 1Jlt ~. tm. Or•"" C.tt l'ublllllll!f COll\plfiy. 1'11 AIWI •tonft. lllut1r111ons • .. ,,.,.., flllt11'W w edYWf!Mmoll" lllftffl m•'I' Ill t~ Wl!hWf Nll(:iel PW• l'fllWoll of *1119111 _,,.,_ • llCll'd dttt Mlffftl ... "' ,., '"" ~ •• C.lllO!'nl&. 6uttluf~IOll "" "'"" tt.61 ~1111¥1 W -11 IJ.IJ "*""'l'l't mUltarf .......... liM"mMt!IW. , '· . 0 z • i -z • • • ~ • • • • •!••• • • •• •• •• •• O• • •• • •• :; ~. 0 •• z •• 0 O• • v. • • • • • •m ·······f••*** • • • • • WAftlllll . ~ oe ! :e x ~. g . ~. ElllS :; *":" **'**'"""***"'** ........ ***** •• o• ~· -· s. • • • • • GARFIELD , ** MILE SQUARE PARK- • • • • ILEGENDo eeeee -Ph11e 1 , Tent1tlve c:on1truction 111rt, June, 1173. ********-Ph••• 2 • Conslruc:tlon sl1rl date not 191 .. 1. • • • • : • ~ • • % • Flood in • • • i\nother -Storm S!rikes State $.IN !;RANCjSCO (AP) -For Jhe sec- ooct Um~ In Uiree d a y s, dozens of families 'ned their llun1es near Novato Creek today as wind and rain continut!d to pound Northern California, authorlUes said. Novato Police L.t. Richard Courier aaid residents of 63 ho1nes Jn the creek area were warned to leave or were taken to safety in row bools and high-riding truck.s as waler ah>$hed to depths of 3 ~ reet in smne streets. No injuries w~ reported, Courlrr said, and many residents made return forays to homts hf efforts to salvage belongings. . ''We're ontof the fortunate ones -we toojc. out flood Insurance,'' said Mrs. Allee Berglund, 50, whose home is located on the banks of the creek. Mrs. Berglund said she and her hus- band fled in a city dump truck to an'. emergency' Red Cross center shortly before daybreak. She termed the current flooding "worse" than that which forced residents to leave Tuesday. "It really came"UJI fast this time," said Mrl. Bergli.Jnd, a 20-year resident of the area. "It must have come up in an hour or Jes.. 16~955 we had bad noodlng, bul nothing like this." Mudslldta were reported an lntr:ratate 2Slt near Palo AJto and on Hlsbway 1 in lhO Slin>On Bea~h and Bollnu areas bill all •major roadways itmnlned oPeD. the C.~la lllghway Palrol 111\<1· No te s t(atftc mlshaps were rtpotted . Francisco lnlemallonal Airport recorded 1.13 inches of rain during a 24· hou r period ~ing at 4 a.m. Another .64 lncl\.es was recorded before. daybreak , Jhe NaUooal Wealher Service said. County . Panel Sees Coastal Traffic Jams By IACK BROBACX Of ... O.lty P'l .. I llllf She said residents lried to sa\•e what FE •• , ••• -Founl•ln Valley City bound1rie\ the'y could after the Tuesday nooct but L---~-----------..:...-----------~="""';~:;';;;';:';"!::=:':"--IMl-man)'-Md-<!ttrpet•;-drapes-ond f A serious transpcrtation deficiency eJ· lsts in the whole coastal zone of Orange . County but thetCounty Road Department has no plans tb force a transportaUon corridor upon the affected communities. "With the deletion of the P~ Freeway by the Legislature. the whole balance of the transportallon system in the coastal area was upset," Murray Stonn, assistant road ~mmissioner, said today. DA ILY P'ILOT Newlm•• ni!ure ruined. MAP OUTLINES PHASE I AND II OF PROPOSED FOUNTAIN VALLEY BIKEWAY SYSTEM Hearing Scheduled Before Planners Wednesd1y. One Problem: How to Fund It? Bicycle Plans Developed FolJ,ntain Valley Details System of 19.5 Miles Fountain Valley officials have devzloped plans for build ing I~.5 miles of bicycle trails over the next four years. The system would include about five miles of asphalt strip beside existing roads, and 14.5 miles of specially marked hiQ"Elf lanes on existing streets. A public hearing on the proposed bikeway system is scheduled before the city Planning Commission next .Yt'ednes- day. City officials estimate the trail system \\wld cost about $30,000 to build. The most expensive material is the asphalt stripping , which would cost about $15,700. The system, designed to be built in two phases, relies mainly on the city's more lighUy traveled streets. Fountain Valley 's two major arteriC$ -Magnolia and Brookhurst streets -have rr;it been assigned any bike trails at all. "One of the most seri>us threats to cyclists comes from cars pulling out of driveways," explained Herb Jobosoo, an administrative aide in the publjc-Works department. . ~ ~...,,, Coast Officials Named -. .r. ,.,., ,, • , ~I I In Stock Manip1tkitWn The Securities and Exchange Com- misfilon today bas on file at U.S. District Court in Los Angeles a civil suit charging a Newport Beach finn and five men, in· eluding company executives from Corona dcl Mir and Fountain Valley, with stock manipulation, Identified in the civil action is Newport Securities Corporatkin, 1617 Westcliff DriVe, Newport Beach. Principals named in the suit include Abraham Gurdon Wolfson, 1049 Granville Drivei Corona del Mar, president ; Roy Omar Dawson, of FoUDtain Valley, ex· ecutive vice R_n!:Sident; Martin Susson, JOSS Granville i)rlve, Corona del A1ar, vice president, and Seymour Vignan, Newport 8ea<IL The.Commission's suit alleges that !he stock of DCS Financial Corporation of Rochester, N.Y. was manipulated to raise the price or stock from $1 .75 a share to $39 a share in 10 weeks during 1!171. Contacted at his firm today. Susson said the court complaint "is not valid" but declined further comment until be has discussed the matter with the firm's attorney. The attorney. Thomas ~rmstrong of the Washington D.C. firm of Sullivan and Worcester, said he has not yet seen the complaint filed by the SEC on Wednes- day. He said that his clients have a defense hut that he would issue no s1atemenl Wl- til he has filed a response to the com· plaint with the cour( The lawsuit contends the defendants drove the prict• up arti!icially and in: tended to sell thur shares at a later date. Vigman was h:irred from working in the securities h11siness by the SEC in H!67. li e pleadtli no contl!st in 197? in Florida to 15 counts of violating federal securities l:i1~·s. He was found gullt'y and fined $100,000. The law s11it contends the defendants drove the price up artificially and In· From Page I GffiN ... ' Jlirn for grandch\ldre_n she's never seen. But she also said sh~ v.·ould appea r lll any bona fide charity whert her gimlng could raise money for !he needy. "I used lo make my faces just for the fun of ii," she says, "but if t can cash in on 1t, "'hy not?" 'Franklin' Robbed tended to sell their shares at a later date. The suit alleges the defendants p:aJd $900,000 for their OCS stock, which reached a market value of $28.8 million during the alleged manipulation. 1 The stock was suspended from trading by the SEC on Nov. 28, 1972. 1bere hu been no public trading of the stock since then. Pianists Earn Chicken Feed Pi~laying chickens at Knott's Ber· ry Farm in Buena Park are escaping the frying pan by keeping tourists en- tertained. For 10 cents a tune, the trained chickens peck ollt a rough melody at a tiny keyboard. Their re"ard is a handful of cliicken feed mix and an increased life expectancy. For the owners, it means up to $10 a day. The chickens are trained for about an hour a day for seven to nine weeks. The ave rage career of a feathered pianist Is about five years. Joe Green, a trainer's assistant at the amusement farm, notes that few roosters are ever wed. "They have to take time out to stnrt around and crow," said' Gteen. "Hens don 't." Daytime Adult Class Set for Huntington 'T'wo daytime adult e<J:uc~llon classes v.·iU be offered for the flrtt time in the Huntington Beach Union ·High School District beginning with the spring semes.ter. Oil painting wW be offered Wednesday and 1-lome Interior Decoration on Tues- day. Both will meet lrom t .a.m. to noon in the Fountain Va&y Community Center, directly behind city hall at ·10200 Slater Avenue. For further inlormatloo ·call 847.a503. Registration Slated For S11m111er Baseball The O.:.an View Pony-Coll Lt1gue wW hold stgnupo !or summer ba!ebaU from 10 a.m. lo l p.m .• Saturday, and I p.m. to 4 p.m .. Sunday, at the le1gue field, Bolsa Chica Street and Los Palol Avenue, Jlun- tlngton Beach. ' 1'1o staying out of commercial areas and using residential streets with walls, we can minimiz.e the danger from driveways," he said. Phase I of Jhe project coold get under way by July, Jobmon said. Phase II, which involves many problems as yet not worked out, might not be eomple:te<f for three or four years. Johnson said the trails system is designed to mesh with the Huntington Beach trails program, and also to lel'Ve both ,~oimlail> V~y lligh".'Scoooi. fnd Mlle Square Park. · · Perhaps the mo.st important single link is a proposed twa..mile ~ down ,. BUJhard street. ·i "''1 ' Bushafd ·comes within bneQ~ sec· tion of Mile Square Park, nios lb front of the high school, and ties lnto a Hun- tington Beach bike trail on lower Bushard. Thus Johnson expects Bushard Street tG be the main corridor to the sea lqr inland bicyclists. However, the proposed trails system still faces several pitfalls. The most immediate, Johnson says, is funding. Since the idea for bike trails is new, it I! not included for flmdint under the city's comprehensive 10-year ·budget program. Where the money will come from, Johnson ·doesn't koow, There is also a legal problem. Johnson is not sure whether or not someone who had an accident on a bike trail could sue the city for negllgenCe. "I think the trails would reduce ac- cidents by making motorists more aware of the bicyclists," he said. "But if the trail brought a false sense of security to bicyclists, it wouldn 't be good."" A third difficulty involves the two..mile trail planned for the Edison right-of·way. At each point where it crosses a street, Johnson fears there could be accident danger unless bicyclists went to the nearest regular intersection to cross. But that problem is at least two years off, he said, and shouldn't affect construction of Ph.ase I trails. Jack Wallace. coordinator of the Red Cross shelter at the 'Novato Community Center. said about a dot.en families registered at the facility. Others made private arrangements to stay with relatives and friends, be saJd. ''I see no panic, I see no one crying at this point," Wallace said. "Right now, people .are c:oneemed about their in· surance coverage and the safety of their families." Meanwhile, hurricane velocity winds • reached a reported 84 miles per how-at 1t1t. Tamalpais in Marin County and bowled outside the Golden Gate .at an estimated fO knots. The weather front passed over the San Francisco area early today, slowing thousands of commuting motorists with cloudbursts and hlgh winds. -'" Frono PG!te J PEACE ... Ziegler said. "There has 'been an awful lo! of spqculallon along !bat llne. l am not prepar.d to address lhat speculaUoo. even if It Is right or it is wrong." Ziegler declined tO discuss anr contents of the agreefriebt. .,,,. "As we hat!i said," he told reporters, "we've made pro·gress iD the talks. We also have an agreement not to comment until a final agreement is reached." Th.is is the first time lhat the presiden-- tlal spokesman has· ever used the term ''agreement" in discussing the secret peace negotiations that go back to Aug. 4, 1969. Meanwhile, heavy fighting flared near Saigon and on South Vietnam's far ntrthern front, sparking the heaviest raids by p.s. warplanes Over the south in more than two months, military spokesmen said today. South Vietnamese troops encountered stiff resistance for the second con- secutive day today in the Michelin rubber plantation, 40 miles JOrtbwe!t of Saigon, where a major Communist buUdup of 8,000 men with annor and artillery was reported. The buildup poses a major threat to the South Vietnamese capital and its outlying areas. U.S. warplanes, no longer ii) action over Nortli Vietnam, struck h4!avily in the area a:round Saigon and also in northernmost Quang Tri province where fighting also cOntinued in the government campaign to J)ush North Vietnamese lorces back Into the Demilitarized Zone between the two Vletnams. "All our planning for feeder roadways had been based on lhe proposed freeway," he ad~. "We do know that if devleopment along t"1e coast tnkes place based on aisling zoning the clrculalion of traffic will not be adequate." The coastal traffic problem surf•C<d Wedneoday when lhe County Pla-g Commission asked the Road Department to come up with interim standards by Feb. 20 to allow soluUon of problems of a Dana Point development. The question arose because of prof>.. Jems f a c e d by the Tbunderbird Capistrano de•elopment. Nibe years ago the state earmarked 80 acrs of the •M- acri tract for a Pacific Coast Freeway rlgbt4·way. The developer wants a decision on future use of the awath lbrougb lhe property. Stonn said any answer by Feb. 20 wouid necessarily be very broad. "We have tentative approval for a countywide. traffic corridor study," be said. "The result of such a .study would be a set of alternatives on bow best to solve traffic' problems." He said socjai.,( economic and en- vlronmenlal elfecu on lhe iommuoJUes in the coartal r.one would be a top con. s.ideratioo. "Many modes are possible," Storm ad- ded. "They might include a rapid tr&n.1lt ,system, bus laQes on arterial highways or use of future transportation methods not yet developed." Stonn warned, however, that it was of>.. vious that a simple arterial highway Is not the answer to coastal traffic prob- lems. "Ten years ago we had guidelines and could have moved ahead with .plans," he added. "Now all is changed. People may ·even say they are ~illing to put up with inconvenience lo preserve the en- vironment. The county can't just produce a plan and expect communities to buy It any more." He said demands from communities for action would dictate county moves. ."We know that future transportation conidors will have to provide buffen to residential Jreas," Storm said. "We will also include bicycle ways and equestrian trails." The countywide study is not even under way yet, the road commissioner disclos. ed. "We are asking for state help and use of their computer material but we are not asking them to find solutions. Perhaps because of the many mQ'ltbs needed for an overall county study, t'e coastal area may be given priority," he concluded. OF ALL REMAINING 1912 unoN MINUTE MASTER II MICROWAVE OVENS with MICRO BROWNER only at SAVE '9000 90 DAY CASH HURRY -WHILE THEY WT ... 1. WlTH AmOYID CllDIT $J29~5 . ' PHILADELPlllA IUPI) -While residents ef lhi$ city were oMc.n•lnf, tile 2761h hirthday of Benja"mln Frankl n. ti robber held up t!M! Benjamin Franklin llotel and escaped wtth $1 ,600. Boys 13 through 18 who live In llun- tlngton Beach or Seal Bench may joln. T~ere ts a $2( eotry ·(~,1lllcboys must have birth ctl'tllicales with them . 181~ NEWPORT BlYD. Downtown Cm Mesa -l'bane 54&.naa • i ' _, • • ; l \ \ ' Proposes AJl..tlme Big Bhliget Requested SACRAMENTO (AP! -Gov. Ronald Reaaan proposed 1 $9.3 billion budget to- day that would give state · '1ftlrken a record pay hlte and sUll leave a $1.1· blllloo J)lrp!us for posalble tu cuts. (See related atories, Pages 11, lt ind st) The atate's 115,IDI clYil tervants wou1d g~t a PIY increue averaging 13 pertent in the Repllbllcan 1ovemor'1 spending p1an tor the ~·year betl••'nc July 1. ' M -., TOTAL REVENUES -· ·~···· '"' "' ' •• ' . • Th.ur\da.y, J1nu.iry 18, 197) H DAILY PILOT :J Record Pay Hike CIMll.m Tll u ' ---nts u EXPENDITURE DOLLARS 111)..14 flSUl YIM -"°"' & SfaftCIS 1.,c llSMUS i.1e UP'I TtllilthOIOi That wu every cent they uked for and it was the major surprise in Reagan's new budget wbicb 11 $1.I bllllon, or 22 percent, larger than thla: year's. WHERE THE STATE BUDGET MONEY COMES FROM. •• • .• AND WHERE IT GOES UNDER NEW REAGAN BUDGET Reagan bu. feuded often wJth state employes since taking office. But be said u,, T...,.... today he com.mltted himself to seeing tlu.t they got paid -on a par with the persons doing comparable1)ft'Ork for other levels of government or private businwes. TELLS BUGGING ROLE Former Agent1 Baldwin " -T-ria-l-Sta-lls In Waoorgate Bugging Case The Governor also granted the 741000 -e and univ.e.J:lily_1;mploi..u-=-- lncluding faculty members -the pay In- creases they sought. The entire pay raise package totals $226 millioo. Reagan's budget i.s appamilly the largest ever proposed by the a:ovemor of a state. The New York state budget bas been bigger than Califomla'a the past sever.ti years. But Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller's new budget ls $400 mllllon WASHINGTON (AP) -The Wat.rgale belo>Y llea&an's. political espionage trial was stalled today Biggest increases in Reagan'1 spending while opposing lawyers in a peculiar miI-"plan were upected to be $551 millioo in ture of alignments argued over whether new ·state aid to local schools and about the content of wiretapped phone con-$500 million in property tax relief. They ve('satlons .could be used as evidence. ·weer part of lhe $1.l·billlon school-tax u.s. District John J. Slrica slgned an :ff8c!n::J!tan ~gtsl!~~ ~ J:::: order ruling that the names of per90ns whose telephone calls at·DemocraUc par· beThe Governor, planning to leave office ty headj:luarters were said to have been in 1974 after eight years, already reveal- bugged, as well as the content1 of their ed the state will have an $151 mllllon conversaUons, could be aired In court. surplm at the end of this fL9ca1 year, An immediate appeal was taken to lbe J I U.S. Court of Appeals by 13.wyers for une 30. Today, be estimated the surp us Democrats seekinri to have the con-will grow by another '2'1% millkm in the l!i 1973-74 fiscal year. versaUons kept confidential. The major .reason ts that state fi9ca1 The government ~t,, It must give at experts expect a "sparkling" year for least some indication of what was in the California's ect1oomy. That means more conversations to illustrate the motives tax mooey coming ln. ~ind a break-in and ~lleged wlr~tap-But a temporary bonanza ls 00 emise ping at Democratic !"ational Committee for spending. money on sweeping new headquarters last ~r: .. , . • 1 p~ograms, Reagan said in bis budget But some DemOcrats ~ted as ~. meMage to the IaWmakera. overheard on the ~gs complau~ that "Government should never take from they w~e the ~nt victims of the people mOrt than absolutely wl...tappmg and shouldn t be further em· """'""'l' " be said barras,sed by having their private .• con-Thu$, ~-main~ a relatively tough versat1ons revealed. fist oil the .tate's purse strings even Defense attorney Gerald Alcb, who though the new budget ls twice as big as represents James W. McCord Jr., f~rmer the first one be proposed to the secw:tty chief fo~ Presl~ent Ntron a re-Legislature seven years ago. election campa1~, sided with. the Reagan says be is studying a number Demcx;rals in trying to have the wiretap of options for returning the BUrplus to matenal suppre~. tupa}ers ..:... including a combination of a . But P~ter Maroulis, !awyer for former one-time rebate or a permanent tax cut. Nixon finance comnuttee counsel G. One new appropriation sought in the Gordon Liddy, joined the government's budget tbl5 year b $950,000 to build a new reques~ for pennisslon to use the ID· govetnor's mansion. formation. . Another is $1.l million to plan for the Meanwhile, defense la'\\yers were replacement of San Quentin Prison with listening to tapes of a Los Angela Times two new muimwli security facilities interview with Alfr~ q. Baldwin Ill Tbe'budget now goet through the !Ong about the rote Baldwm ·said be played as legislaUve process expected to return to monitor of the wiretapped p~s and bis desk in June. 'At that pofnt, be can what he hear~ over the t>_ugged lines. eliifi.inite-or ~uce any speodirig ap- The :exterwve legal . s1deplay ~rougbt proved by the lawmakers. But he can't the tnal to a halt 1n the midst of add to the amount passed by the Baldwin's testimony. Leitslature · Baldwin testified Wednesday that he The ma;;ir departure from Reagan's ~as paid $225 a week as a member of "squeeze.and-cut-anci-trim" economy Nixon's c.ampalgn staff to monitor ~ philosophy was in employe salary in· conversations from a . telephone which creases had been tapped earlier in the offices of Two fears ago when the state faced a the . Dem0<;ratic National Comml~tee. big budget defi~U, Reagan told atate Five others earlier pleaded guilty and workers they would have to go without are awaiting sentencing in connection the pay raises to which they bad become with the alleged polltl~spionage con-accustomed . spiracy against Democrats. Angry leaders of the California State Employes Association bepn talkinl MINER KILL~D ON BIRTHDA Y CARLSBAD, N.M. (UPI) -Zane Gallaway, 28, of Carlsbad, a miner, waa struck on the head and lllled by a ~ pound rock that fell from the celling of the Potash Mine on Wednesday, his birthday.' . about a possible strike and IODM! workers In the Water Resoun:es Def!ortmelll did walk' out last year. - !Wigan b>d anrry words 1or the CSEA la!\ fail when It ran a P.mllllon cam· p&cn tp take away the governor's veto °""' stall! "°"er salary lncroaaea. Tiie effort,. a propoied coll!lltutlonal amend· meiit, was defe'.ated in the November election. .:;::.. : But today there was a wann response from CSEA Pr:Pldent LeRoy ~· Pem- berton .to R'Jlgan. Woman, 81, Dies . In Clemente Auto Accident An 11-year-old woman visiUng San Clemente from C8nada wu 1truet and fatally Injured Wednesday aflemooll by a car wblch police ollege wu being driven .. tbe-Wl'Oll( ilde of the stnet. Mn. Elsie Ward, who bad be<ll stayln1 at 107 B Alameda Lane, was struck by a car in the 7DO block of Avenida Victoria. The vehicle was being driven by Joan Lois Strand, 44, of 533 Victoria. The atrand woman was anuted at the scene of the crash, police sold, and book· eel on Initial charges of felony drunken drivlna. 'Illb. QlOrning the woman wu transfer- red to Onuige County Jail and police said they would aeek a complaint from the of- fice of the District Attorney. Officers sald bail bad not yet been tel. The accident -the first fatal auto- pedestrian ·accident on city streets in many years -took place at 2:11 p.m. Two officers on routine patrol came upon the accident scene before witnesses bad • chance to coll the station. Officers noticed the Strand woman leaning over Mrs. Ward, who was tryina to 8'1 up}l'O!D the pavement. The elderl,y woman suffered fractures ol the arm and let aa well aa ln\ernal ln- jiirie1. Officers aaid they found the woman's wristwatch embedded under the bumper of the Sll'llld car. Mrs. Ward died a few hours later at San Clemente General Hospital. N.ewport Skipper ' Tops Qualifiers In Hobie Events By ALMON LOCKABEY Dflly """ aNi"'9 •fltw HONOLULU -Jobn Ross-Duggan, 18- year-old Hobie Cat sailor from Newport Beach, topped a field of Si In last·mlnule qualifying races for the fint Hobie Cat World Ownpionship regatta here Wedneaday. Also qualifying from Orange County was Hobie Alter from Capistrano Beach, the designer and builder of the famed 14-- foot aalling catamarans. Airer placed sixth In the four qualifying races held off Diamond Head and risked nortbeUt trade winds and choppy seaa. Nine skippers who qualified Wende>day brought tlle Iota! number of entries In the cbamplooablp series to 44. 1blrty·five were qualified before arrifing in the Aloha state. Five of the lale qu.aliflen w"" from Hawaii. They..,. Bob Andenoo ; Cappy Sbeeley, 1971 lllllooal champion; Larry MacArthur, Robbie Baml and Karl Heyer. , One of the top quallflen, Z'l·year-old Derek Kershaw from South Africa is 1 paraplegic peraiyzed from the walsl down. He baa be<ll sallli1i compe!ltlvely for ooly one year and finlsbed In fifth , place, one p¥e ahead of vtlel'aO Hobie ·Alter. • The other qu.alifler waa Jack Sammana The Last Laugh Coastal Group . Changes Meeting R-vwan,-Martin Show Going Off --- To Monday Nig ht HOLLYWOOD (AP) -"Laugh-In," that brash, Irreverent show that changed the direction of television comedy, will not be back next year, Dick Martin said today. Martin said be and. Dan Rowan taped the f111al show, the 1 Und, at ?\'BC Wednesday night. "We finally put it to bed," he said as he prepared to fly to Las Vegas for a 10- day stand with Rowan at the Sahara. Martin said "Laugh-In" probably would run through September \\·ith reruns. He said be and his partner would be back on NBC nert fall in a new show, "1be Rowan and Martin Show." ~ "Laugh-In bad so many imitators," he said. "Eveo though we consider this past aeason one of the best written, with superior talent, after nearly six years the fonn bad just become predictable." Martin said be and Rowan wanted to kill "Laugh-In" this season. but NB C ask- ed them to sta y on because the ad- vertising spots had been sold in advance. When it premiered in January 1969, "Laugh-In" became one of the most talk· e<l about shows on television. Its brash humor, fast pace and electronic tom- foolery sent it to the top of the ratings. It made overnight stars of Rowan and Martin and :;uch newcomers as Goldie Hawn, Arte Johnson, Ruth Buzzi, Judy Carne and Jo Anne Worley. Virtually all of the original cast has left the shuw, but Miss Worley returned to the final taping for SPVeral cameo appearances. Two years ago, Rowan and Martin split with George Schlatter, who had been ex- ecutive Qrodocer, and fauJ KeYes, a close friend of President Nixon , took the helm. Most of the political jabs, often aim": at the Nixon administration, left with Scblatter. The first organiU1tional meeting of the Soulh Coast Regional Coastal Zone Cc>nservation Com,mission was not held last night as originallY, scheduled but in- stead will convene Monday night in Long Beach. A spokesman for Los Angeles City Councilman Louis R. Nowell, a codl· missioner who called the original meeting, said the group had too many conflicts Wednesday and had to set Mon· da y as the date. The commission , which is responsible for reviewing all major construction proj- ects under the terms of Proposition 2{), officially begins actions Feb. 1. But a large backlog of applications reportedly has already begun piling up and Nowell's spokesman said the com- mission has to be ready to dig in right away. .JJ.J. (}ar,..ll JANUARY luxurious spring do:wn and feather sofas .... • ' Your choice 3 Styles Cho·ose from a large 'election of fabrics • 15% to 25% OFF on several DREXEL • HERITAGE Bedroom Dining Room Occasional Collections • 15% to 25% OFF on Floor So mple SOFAS and CHAIRS • 20% OFF on all BEDSf READS . County Sign Law Qkay~d; of Florida. 7 • 20% OFF on QI! Business Areas Ex~mpied R_Diia.. '1aa been sailll1i Hobie Cits lio<ihe WU !!. Hill qualifloatlon ln1DP. to ' fbUr the nlBllber of clwn- ploollilp C\11--Oran(• Cow>-.11. Tbe GlhaS are Alter, Wayne Scbaeler " Sa Qemeo';t and IUcbard Louftk 9f ·Costa-. Orange Ccunty's ~gn cmilnaDce wn approved Wedne><\I by ·the ·Board ol ~n after a six monll> delay ovtr Ill application to lndostrial anu. Tiie 111porvbol'I ... 1 the ord!oime back to the Planntnr Commllllao IHI sammtr wllh orders to hold be1rinp on the elimination of bl&hw11 IDduslrial 11¢ commercial •re•• lroom, the atus tn whicll billboards are balll<d. The comrnlllioner ca.me back wlth the same prohibition on all htpwaya tn the cowlly and the boon! voled S.t to ellminate the Industrial opob . Attorney Lorm Norton argued that blDboonla welt popular wttb tlle ,...,11 publi<. Supervloor Ralph Clark IDO'IOd tbal Two ..... ..,. lld>eduled to be Wied billboards be acluded.alq all bi,trnjs ~t = ~-==~ exctpt 1n Industrial .....,.., "Then the ~ flnl.,i.oe flnlsber In each raco. lfpl actte11 lllllf&hll1 orus," lie qued. Al ID -reg1ttu, the low "'°"' at He WH haded b)' Supeno\lor Dovld L. ' the ml af the -will be the Winner. • Bal< ... who bod orlfnall1 objected to tho --windl ...... antlclpatod Industrial ma bin. The pair rot the spin today for the lnaurural of the deciding vote of SUp<nlsor Roo.t Ba~ ~ chomplolllblp compe!ltloo. tfJI. Board CbalrmaD Ronald Calpen triad to put through a ~ that ......., bW&oal-dt everywben b<lllt failed bi Ille aame N ..c.. ~ ..., SUpemaor Ralph Dtedricb ~ him. -cll\lae -\ lldded to tlle -ulllnc for l*I on appeals liaMlng ~nc blllboli1lf. • ' ' ' State Writer Dies • 20% SAVINGS on all Floor Sample GRANDFATHER CLOCKS Floor Sample LAMPS ' • SAVINGS UP TO 20% · on all Floor Sample LEATHER CHAIRS and SOFAS o·--.·" Your fovorll< lntmcr detig"" !Dlll bt MPPll to GHlst flO U Vv\J1J H .. JGARl\ETT fURNflURE I~<~ PlOFWIONAI. 646.0275 fNTWOl DESl&NEU Opon Mon. 2215 HARBOR BLVD. Thun. l Fri. Ev~ COSTA MESA. CALIF. ~6"::... ( ' 4 DAIW PILOT Thursday, January 18, 1973 • Can't Keep Freeway Down OLD GHOSTS DEP1\-N,.1"'fl Beech civic leaders and plain ciUtens alike have spent the beuer part o( the last 20 years in a pretty well unified fight against the concept ot having a coastal freeway routed through their town. They finally ldlled It. That lv.~ecades long battle has to go into the record book of our region as one of the great uphiD fights of all time. J ust consider the re<'Ord. For thor.se Newport parties v:ho opposed the Idea of a superhighway through the harbor com· munity, things started looking bad as early as 1951. ABOUT nlAT IDIE. the state highway people declared existing Pacific Coast Highway a potential freeway route. In those days. the state didn't have to ramble through public bearings and all that stuff. They ju.st declared it. So be it. Newport fo lks grumbled a lot about tbis.J>ul figuredjt Y•OIJli:I a.II go.J!"'ill'· It dldn't. In the early Sixties. the stale started talking about condemning some live bait shacks in \Vest Newport to "preserve the right • of -"'ay" for the future freeway. Next, however. came some rule changes requiring the state to b:Jld public hearings and talce evidence before freeway routes "'ere selected. And sure enough, "'hen the state proposed aHgnments for the eo:astal freew ay , one of those study lines was right in the cor· ridot ol existing Pacific Coast Highway. It surprised nobody. T11REE 011IER POSSIBLE inland routings were also on the study maps. Newport supported the most-inland align· ment. This rou ting went through Costa l.tesa. Costa 11-1esa supports the most· coastal line. 'Ibus folJO\.\'ed some huge hearings and a lat-of-fine-speechts. In May of 1963, the ·State Highway Commission adopted the . Coast Highway route smack through Newport. Nonnally in freeway matters, you wou1 d figure the issue was now settled and Newport lost. Here comes the freeway. Well, the record shoY."S that the follow- ing 10 years were spent with NeW90rt continuing to fight to get the coastal route stopped. N~wport got an UJleX· pected ally when the ecology movement surfaced with a lot oC political clout. NEWPORT LOST. VJRnJAU. Y every round in the freeway fight. But like the boxer who doesp't know when he's licked. Newport battled on and emerged the vie· to r by a knockout in the final round. That knockout came when the state gave up and the Legislature officiall y deleted Pacific Coast Freeway from the state freeway system. Meanwhile, of course. traffic conditions aloog our coastal corridor have gotten a lot worse. And even Newport fo lks con· cede today that something has lo be done to alleviate traffic congestion. SO ONLY LAST Tuesday. the Orange County Plarming Commission abruptly suggested it wan ts a stud y toward creating a possi ble "Transportation cor- ridor" along the old coastal freeway route from Newport to San Clemente. 1be term "Ttamportation Corridor'' i! a rather n e w planning euphemism. Newport folks. however, read it freeway -or at the very least. superhighway. 1be county's corridor notion has caus· ed some gnasbilli Q.f teeth today among oldlreeway fighters in Newport Beach. THEY HAD BURIED the coastal freeway and now it seems to them it just won't stay dead. Somebody keeps digging it up. The gbo8t of the thing keeps haunt- ing them and causing nightmares. The specter floats back, shaking musty o I d maps that contain red lines and green Jines and yellow lines. Clearly it must seem to a lol or Newpwt folks that some ttlings really do die hard. Banker, .Family Tied to 'ff"re~s, Slain . ' ' • "'· ... · ..... "-'"' ·' . ... ---+--- Vidtiiin Say$ }le _Was Wir.ed_· _ . . By Dynamiu1 Betore Death -- ' . By SAMllEL O. HANCOCll found 00 Kltterman'a body, but be uld GRANDIN. l(o. (UPI) -A bank -1-be ''doeon~ !mow why be (Klllermln) dent, hll w1fo Ind lf.·-....id daughter woold PY be Wll wired with dynlmita have been lowld boond't;"b;.. •nd shot It~ wun1." to death In lhe woods, appmo!ly vlctimJ tirll! Lewll Dowoa uld early todoy of extorlloobll. Shortly befor<, lhe prttl· that "oven tllo<llb no dywn)ta was dent bad entered hla Bani< or Grandin, found on Kitterman," evidence Indicated told a -eopfr ho wu wltod wllb be hod appmnUy hod aome~ tled to dynamlta, and Mhed out with $13,000. his body. Early today llllhorlU.. amstod and JICl:son &aid be lbou&ht the vlctlnls bepn questlonlll(I two men. Polloe WOllid hod-' been dood •bout 45 mlnutoa whoo oaly aoy tho Ml wore strongers wbo they ,,... dlacovered noor tho Cllrrent wlier had ~ lnlomlOtloo •bout River, port of the Ollrt Nallciall Scenic Gnndtn -• town of ISO. Jllverwl!'I In -Ml-i. The ' rum la -S$ mllt• north of Ille "WE JIAVl180ME other IUlpOC!I," • ~border. • · polloo apokomn.. uld, "Ito\ ... don't • ..._ bow pd thO!' ore." POLICE BELIEVE the bindlts RileY County OoroDer Haward JocllSOll onlored Klttennu to .drive with Ibo said ·tho bocll«I of Robert Klttennan. 43, money to Ibo wooded location wbere bis his wile, &rtha, 31, · ud !laughter wile and dollibter .,._ bold Ind then Roberta were lowd In wooclJ near an boond and shol ~- abandoned !arm bouie In hilly, secluded Kllterman's automobile and 1111 country. daughter's sports car were found near Kitterman and his wHe had eacll been the bodies. shot throolb'lbo temple. 'lbelr daugbt<r, The banker's daughter had attended who h!l.d announced her engagement classes Wednesdly morning at Carter • ,# Wednesday, was shot in the back ot, the County Hlgb School where she was a ~·-_JJ<ld.-,=-..--=-:--:----:-:--;-slr.aight..!! " student an4Ulen,went hoalt MISSOURI WOODED AREA SEARCHED FOR 'CLUES IN EXECUTION OF THREE Victims Pictured in Jnset-Robert, Berth• •nd Roberta Kitterman ,,.... Mn. lDUadn and l!obtrta ~ tied for. lunch. The I/Inker incl his wile, wbo to lhe same lrte, whtle Kitterman was "·orked as an assbtant cashier at tbe tied to anot\>er \rte. bank, also had gone home for lunch. Hoopla: Kicks Off Tonig.ht THE TRAGIC EPISODE appu<nUy began ahorlfy after noon w-.y. when Klttmnlll -Into tho -and IJlllOUDCed: ''Ibey blvo my w1fe and daugb!er." Ralph Stanley, Ibo bank'• -...... told autborities the bank wu daiod tor tho lunch boor when KltUntwt entered lhe bank, gathered money Into I sack. and said be was wln<I with dywn)ta. He hurried out of the -wit!toul A11ni Agneiv Reception Stnrts Inauguration Festivities WASHI NG TON (AP) -A recept ion for Vice President and Mrs. Spiro T. Agnew this evening followed by a "salute to the states" .slgnal the officials start Qf Presi· dent Nixon's .secood-tenn inauguration festivities. -Nixon, who is ret\D"1ling" to the-capital • after six days at bis Key Biscayne, f,J.a:. home. will arrive loo late to attend tWo receptions scheduled for tonight. His wife, Pal, is scheduJed to pinch-hit for him at both events. The President and f\trs. Nixon will drop in on three inaugural concerts Friday Senator Moves To Tax Cigarets For Tar Content \\'ASHING TON (AUPI) -Following the government's latest warning to ciga ret smokers about possi ble health hazards, Sen. Frank E. ~toss (0.Utah), said he would introduce i bill today to tax cigarets according to tar content. "Surely at this time, when we talk of imposing differential taxes on leaded and unleaded gasolines, we should be prepared to move in a similar manner on this personal health program," Mosa said in a statement. "'The h<avy smolier of high tar and DI· cotine cigarettes is the one who demands: hospitalization so a higher RfVDfum should be estabUJbed for him hi fl.!lJln. cing municipal services," the chairman of the Senate Consumer subcommittee said. In a report lo Congress, the Depart· men~ of Heahh, Education and WeUare (HEW) told cigarette smokers Wednes- day that the increasingly popular "lit· tie cigars" may be as dangerous to their health as cigarettes. "II is reasonable to cooclude that smoking little cigars may result in health effects similar to those associated with smoking cigarets if little cigars are smoked in amounts and with patterns of inhalation similar to those used by cigaret smo kers." said Dr. Merlin K. Du Val. • night. They will also make appearances and grand..t of tho federal buildings, a_OYllJ!ng ~.J>W!leo said. • at nve inaugural balls following Nl%on's the John F. Kennedy Center for the Authorities aald a county ICbool official taking of the oath of office at the noon-Perfonning Arts. who saw Kitterman leave the bank aald hour ceremony Saturday at the Capitol. Kitterman told htm "my wife and SEN. PHILIP BART and the Rev. daughter are bdni beJd bostqe"by oome ~tEANTIME. BACKERS and foes of Philip Berrigan head the speakers list for extortionlstl. CaJI the highway patrol." Nixon's war policies laid plans to parade-an anUw~raUy-whk:b-aponsors uy..uls--St:<anley~told pollce-KiUtRnan-appeared in force Saturday. e~ted to draw tens of thousands. very frightened and walked "ttooped The inaugural committee estimated Organizers say talk of a Vietnam over" wben·be entered the bank and told that 50,000 out-of-townen will come for cease-fire and a halt in the bombing of him not to tum on any ligbta or electrical the weekend's events, most of them for North Vietnam have not dampened switches. He explained Quit he bad the swearin g-in and inaugural parade. enthusiasm for a weekend of antiwar ac-dynamite wired to his cbest. More than 1110 of the estimated 300 tivlty, whlcb bas been endorsed by mott """~· 'And how's rhe mooplng trill/ goliliJ r surviving Medal of Honor recipients from than 30 members of Congress. JACKSON SAID no dynapllle was World War I on will be-hooortd at the in-T;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iio;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;iiii;ii~,.;ii;iii;;;;i~~iiiiiiiiii.iii;ii;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;~ auguratiOn, beginning with a luncheon to-II day and at a banquet and" \he inallgural ball• Saturday. The banquet will be hosted by one of Nixon's biggest donors, W. Clement Stooe, ·-ceed by Bob HOP!'. Art Link!etler again will be Mas\(r of Ceremonie& for the main PresldenllaJ !nauguratloo ball Saturday. MEANWHILE, EMBITTERED veterans from the war in Vietnam are arriving to participate in a protest march from the Washington Moaument to the Lincoln Memorial at the 5llJJ1e time the President parades from the capitol to ... lbt White House reviewing stand. Their planned routes do not cross. Tonight, Mrs. Nixon la expected to stay brieOy at the· Agnews' reception at the Smithsonian Museum of History and Technology, then appear at the salute to the .si.tes and 'their governors. . Tlie Wute V{ill take place !" the newest DAIL 1' PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtftmy of tilt Dlily Piiot Is 9uaran tttd """""""""""'; U .,... H 1>01 II•~• "°" ~ .,. ,,,. •·""• u n -'""' ,..,. •111 ... ~ M .,.., Clllt 1•e 111"' ""''l 1=••.ra. S4""*Y -.i ~: If l""f • Mt net! ... ,..., ~ lrf t '·"'· Ulwllay, ff I 1,lft. s...Ny, tel l.W I U"" WIM l>e llrwttlt 19 .,.... CIM '"' ...... 11111•1 It 1.m. Tflrphonr\ • ••• ... ,; 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CINTER PH: 644:..0991 ~.' SOLVANG e NEWPOR'f BEACH January Clearance SAYE 25 TO 30°/o ON THE FOLLOWING IMPORTED Cut CRYSTAL ~...._.....,~ , Conely Dlahot Co.stw Sets Sugar & ,Crumer1 S..ttor Dllhoa Mlac. Gift 11.,,,, COMPt.ETE "EL CID" UNE _jlOclt Walnut l ~ . Rains .Soaking Far West , L•ntwms, C1nclt.1 LHthor OftCoaod gl••M• i. muga ''"'°"* ''E1rty Am.rlun LfPlter'' ·9 Bottle Wlno Rock Most of V.S. Basking • lll Spring-like Temperatures . . --· - -VARIOUS PRE· PACKAGED • Food l l'lah Poet- . Tho Galloping Gourmet Flah HouM lntorN1tion•I ·25 TO J0% Ol'F . HOSTESS &1m -LARGE VARlm -.;;, Wooden Cooater Sots 'i;. Cryotol lee Bup.ta • - Djllllah Nopltlnt l Naplclo Holden V• Ll .. r O.C.ntera Coromlc CMl<ie Crock Donlah Choo.., Knives ............ WALL .... WIN• 5'5 ltACK II.ff " WE ARlf AS CLOSE AS YOUR PHONE • . OPEN MONOAY AND l'RIDAY 10 A.M. TO 9 •• P.M. TUIS., WED., THURS., SAT. 10 A.M TO 6 P.M. SUN. NOON TO S P.M. ' 1 VISIT oUlt'lWIN• TAsTING ROOM t )· / • • • Orange-fJoast: EDITION · T oday's. Final ' N.Y. Stocks VOL. 66, NO. 18, 3 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNIA THURSOA Y, JANUARY 18, 1973 N TEN CENTS County Will Not Insist on Coastal Corridor By JACK BROBACK ot ... Dllil'f' ,11•1 ll•lf A serious transportation deficiency e.x.· lsts in the whole coastal ione of Orange County but the County Road Department has no plans to force a transportation corridor upon the affected communities. ''With the deletion of the• Pacific Coast Freeway by the Legislature, the whole b;Jance ol the transportation SY..Stem in t,he coastal area was upset," Murray T11esday in Pari.s Storm, assistant road comm.lssloner, said today. • "All our pl,anning for feeder roadways had been baaed on the proposed freeway," be added . "We do know that if devleopment a)s>ng the coast takes place based on existing zoning the oircuJ.ation of traffic will not be adequate." The coastal trB.Ulc problem surfaced Wednesday when the County Planning Commission asked the Road Department to come up with lnterim standards by Feb. 20 to allow solution of problemJ of a • Ill Kissinger, Tho To Finalize Pact By United Press International -TM \Vh!te· HoUse annonncea tOOay that Dr. Henry A. Kissinger v.·ill meet Hanoi's Le Due Tho in Paris on Tuesday "for the purpose of completing the text" of a ce.:se-fire agreement aimed at ending the \l'ar in Vietnam. ...._ A sifuila r announcement · was made simultaneously in Paris by the North Vietnamese who said the talks were "aimed at achieving an accord on the enr.: of the war and re-establishment of peace in Vietnam." Dana Point development. The question arose because of prob- lems f a c e d by the Thunderbird Capistrano def'elopment. Nine yea.rs ago. the state earmarked'-80 acrs of the 455- acre tract for a Pacific Coast Freeway right~f-way. Tbe developer wants a decisjon on future use ol the swath through the property. Storm said any answer by Feb. 20 would necessarily be very broad. "We hive tentative approval for a countywide traffic corridor study," he said. "'Ibe reSult of such a study would be a set of altemali,yes on how best to solve trarfic problems." . · He said social, economic and en- vironmental effects on the comm!Joities in the coastal zone would be a top con· sideration. "Many modes are J>05Sible," Stonn ad- ded . ''They might include a rapid transit system, bus lailes on arterial highways or use of future transportation methods not yet developed." Storm warned, however, that it was Ob· vious that a simple arterial highway is not the answer to coastal trafCic prob- lems. ""Ten years ago we had guidelines and could have moved ahead with plans,'' he added. "Now all is changed. People may even say they are willing to put up with inconveJ!ience to preserve the en· vironment. The~unty can't just produce a plan and expect communities to buy it .any more." He said demands irom coinmunities for action would dictate county moves. s ~orona '"\\'e kno1v 1ha1 future transportation corridors \1·ilt have to provide bufferS 10 rf'Siden1ia l Jreas," Storm said. '·\Ve \\'ill also include bicycle ways nnd equestrian trails." The countywide study is not even Under way yet. the road com1nissioncr discloi;:. ed. "We are asking for state hel p and usl' of their computer material but \\-'e arc not asking lhem to. find solutions. Pcrhap~ because of the many months needed for a:l overall county study, the coastal area ~­ may be given priority," he concluded. • Ul Mo st Mass Slayings Ever n1 U.S. BULLETIN FAIRFIELD (AP) -A jury today found Juan Corona guilty of lhe biggest mass murder charge in U.S. history, the Yuba City slayings of !5 farm '>'!'Orkers and drifters. FAlRFIELO .(AP\ -The jury trying Juan Corona on the biggest mass murdi!r charge in U.S. history asked to see the judge today during the morning of its Dr. Leary's Arrival Kept Under W 1·aps Saigon dispatches reported earlier that Soult Vietnamese Pres1dent Nguyen Van 11'!eu ·approvell the Jatos& cea<e-ftre agreement la Vrtftciple, thus permitting the signing. He balked at an Oct. 26 agreement~ +··-seventh day~cSf"ilelil>eration. A hint that a cease-fire agreement was near· came earlier In Parts when it was announce<l the week!}! semipublic peace talks were being suspended lndeflllitely after today's l 74th session. The talks By CANDACE PEARSON would have been exact1y' four years old ot 1t1t 0.11, ,.u .. '"" next Thursday. , DAILY P'ILDT St.rt ,,.., 1 The annoWJcement from Presidenlial Dr. Timothy Leary, fonner Harvard Press Secretary Ronald A. Ziegler at the professor wanted for Cailfornia prisOn Florida White House Jn Key Biscayne esrape and in Orange County for the said : POLICE CHECK WRECKAGE OF CAR IN WHICH NEWPORT BEACH MAN DIED Auto Sm11he1 liito Trff 8ackw1rd1 •t High SPffd in_.Newport Heights Accident alleged ' masterminding of a drug smug· "We have a joint announcement Coast .Officials Named gling ring, wa s expectetl to arrive on 3 between the United States and North Pan-American flight to Los Angeles Vietnam. Dr. Kissinger will resume Iptemational AirPQ_rt this afternoon: · 'th · t d · Le U.S. State Department offiei1ls have private meetm gs w1 specta a v1ser sought the return of Leary, who escaped Due Tho and Minister Xuan Thuy on Jan. in Sept. of 1970 from prison in San Luis 23 for the purpose of completing the text In Stock Manip1tlation Obispo, from Afghanistan, where he was of an agreement." arrested Tuesday. South Vietnamese go v e r n m e n t ReP.Orts said that Leary was sent to political sources said .that ~l~h Thieu LondOn early this 1nornlng. A Pan agreed to the text m pnnciple ~ American spokesman-in London-said the--quest.ed_about a dozen changes._ famous advocate of the use of LSD would PfeSW'!18bly ~ere worked out in . ~ Hy with armed escort to Los Angeles, v~rsat11ons '!Jth Gen. Ale~ander Haig, where the only London Pan-Am flight to-Nixon s ~al envoy .to Saigon. day touched do\vn at 4 p.m. ~ White Hou~ said We~e~y t~at Local Jaw enforcement officials denied Haig bad been in commun1cat10n with thOse reports. President Nixgn and ~hat ~!~on ~· , A. -spokesman for the narcotics division ferre~ by lfilephone with K1ssmger in of brange County District Attorney Cecil Was~gton. . Hicks' office said early today that "the Haig Hew today to Phnom Pe~h, Vien· only people telling us he'J: be here this tiane and Bangkok t? brief the afternoon are the press." gov~mmenls of Cambodia, Laos aQd The spokesman said he was told by the Thailand on the agreement. federal agent handling the case that It Zie~ler announced that Haig will, rel~rn would be two to four weeks before to ~gon Sa,turday to consult again with (See LEARY, Page Z) Thieu. ' The Securit~es and Exchange Com- ntissiorl today ~son file at U.S. District Court in Los Angeles a civil suit charging a Newport Beach finn and live men, in· eluding company executives from Corona dcl Mar and Fountain Valley. with stock manipulation. Identified in the civil action is Newport Securities Corporation, 1617 Westcliff Drive, Newport Beach. Principals named in the suit include Abraham Gurdon Wolfson, 1049 Granville Drive, CorOna del Mar, president ; Roy Omar Dawson, of Fountain Valley, ex· Girning for Grubst~ke Granny Facing Fame, Fortune i By JOHN ZALLER • to news coverage of her face. Of "" o.11r 'n.i ,,.,. Mn. Sayers has beef! taking all the Fountain · Valley's glmlng grand-publiCity in stride, aside from her mother, Frances Sayers. conti'nues .to be nervous stomach. impressed by the uniqueness Gf her face. "l try to continue my nornlal routine, "l had no Idea there would be 90 much except now I'm practicing my face a lot interest in it,'' she said today. "It's been ' more than l used lo. in newiij)8pers all around and even on· "I think J'm. better than I was. My lip television. corr.es nearly ball-way ~ the bridge of "?tty stomach has ~ in knots with my nose," Mrs. Sayers. said. all the publicity I'm 1ettlng, ,, says tho Mn. Saytta' best face -which she calls a "gim;" or cootortloo of the face 7l·yeaM1ld woman. -involves a feat few others can Sin« a DAILY PtLOT story lint drew perform. wide attentioo to her face-maklni antics She extends her jaw forward as far as last week, Mn. ~yen has been 00 NBC It will co, and then hooks her lower lip up television· Dews three times, CBS twice , ow the brJd&e of her nose, thus giving andShe ~ ~-an offer to •ppear on the the appearance that her mouth Is Johnny Canoo Show neit week, and is rwallowlng her fact. still poaderlnc the posslblllty of doiJ18 a "My Jaws used to ache after I did jU1t routine oo Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In. two or th lee funny faces," she Aid. "Bui In addition to lh1s, htr story baa been ·Jr.Y muscles are i~ttJ.na stronger now a'nd carried •tfooAlly and Internationally by don't tlJ'IY IQ wiii.• the Aaoc:laled !'ml and IJitlled !'ml Cacy Owens, a disc jockey oo radio International. Later this week she has an statkln KMPC wbG discoVcred Mrs. appointrnenL with a color photographer Sayers• talents ()n a girn contest last _ who~la.tudd.11't mother dlmetuiOI> , • ·-(See GlllH, Poce ZI DAILY 'ILOf '""' ....... MRS. SAYERS GIRNS AGAIN ..Wl'I F.,__.~aunc~ Slilet -· .. • \ ecutive vice president; Martin Susson, 1035 Granville Drive, Corona del Mar, vice president, and Seymour Vignan, Newport Beach. 'The commiss.ion's suit aUeges that the stock of ~ 1''lnanclal Corporation of Rochester, N.Y. was manipulated to raise the price or stock from $1.75 a share to $39 a shlire in 10 weeks during 1971. Contacted at his firm today. Susson said the court complaint ','is not valid" but declined further comment until he has discussed the matter with the firm's attorney. The attorney, Thomas Armstrong ot Ott Washington D.C. nnn of Sullivan and Worcester, said he ha! not yet seen the comJJfalnt filed by the SEC on Wednes· day: He said that his clients have a defense but that he would issue no Statement un-> til he has filed a response to the com· plaint with the court. The lawsuit contends the defendants !See LAWSUIT, Page Z) Peru Se izes 12 Tunaboats SAN DIEGO (AP) -Al le3'1 U United States tunaboats carrying nearly 200 crewmen have been seiz- ed ofr the coast or Peru in the largest seizure ever undertaken by the South American country in the so--called "tuna war," says an American Tunaboat Association spokesman. A spokesman for the boat. ownen' group said the ships were ICC'Uled of vk>latlng Peru's self- clalmed 200-mlle fishing limit and forced into the port of Talara Wednelday by gunboats and planes. There, they will be Dned ac- cording to weight and be fotetd to buy Peruvi.n fishi ng ticen8'1, he said. ... • Newport Beach Driver, 81, Dies In Freak Crasl1 An 8I·year-old Newport Beach man was killed insiantly Wednesday afternoon in a freak accident during which he lost control of his car and went speeding in reverse into a large tree in Newport Heights, police said today. Charles F. Robertson of 465 Santa Ana Ave., died of mas_sive head injuries received when he was thrown into the back window of the car. William Craig hiU of 216 Tustin Ave .. a friend of Robertson's who witnessed the crash, told police he and the victim had been working on the car oruy moments before the accident. Craighill said the two had decided to take the car to a dealer for examination so Craighlll got" out or the car and walked to his own vehicle while Robertson slid into 'the driver's seat. Robertson's car was parked next lo the curb on the south side of Clay Street near Catalina Street where the two n:ien had stopped to contiriue working on It, police were told. ·l. "Craighill told us the next thing he knew, the car Wf\S in revel'!e and going raster than he had ever seen a car go backwards in his life," said police traffic investigator Gary Lee. Ue said the car was going between 50 ond 80 miles per hour in reverse before hitting the tree. Craighill said the spetding car shot across Clay, lumbered across a comer Jot at Clay and Catalina; sped across C.tallna and Impacted with the roadside tree at 501 Catalina St. Lee said the coroner's report Indicated Robertson died or crash Injuries bu1 he said he thlnks the victim suffered a strl>ke of 90rnc kind that caused his foot to jam onto the accelerator. " ii doctors infonned us Robertson had'1 heart problem for 20 years.end our examination or the car showed no mecbanlcal nawf with the accelerator." Lie'sdld'. ~ l ' • There was no indicaJion whether the jury snapped an 11-1 deadlock to reach an unanimous verdict lif the case. The judge ordered Corona brought to lhe courtroom from the California Medical Facility at Vacaville eight mil es away where he has been a patient since sulTering chest pains Friday ni ght. At just before 9 a.m., jurors filed inlo the Solano Count y courtroom to begin their second week of deliberations, after being bused from the nearby motel where they have been sequestered every night 'since the judge handed the case over to them. . The jury also reported at that time that it was divided ll·l, but did not say whether the majority fa vored conviction or aequittal on 25 counts of first-degree murder. The jurors gave no hint W~s· day if that division changed. After the jury's request Tuesday for clariHcation of the instructions on reasonable doubt, defense attorney Richard Hawk said he was convinced that .meant the jury was leaning toward acquiUal. Hawk said Wednesday he was.'llill con· vinced that was the way the majority of jurors were leaning. but added that .the longer the jury deliberated the more. like· ly it was there would t?e-a hung jury. Hawk said he urged the judge to keep the jury deliberating so long as there was any chance they could reach a verdlcl . Bailiffs sa id prosecutor G. Dave l'eja, who did not appear at the Solano County courthouse Wednesday, was in, touch by telephone. Corona, who has suffered two heart at· tacks in jail since his arrest early the. rr.orning of May 26, 1971, was not b'rought to the coorlhouse Wednesday .• Bailiffs said the 38-year~ld farm labor con- tractor was resting in a medical !4ng of the nearby state prison at Vacaville. . . Orange Coast Weather There's a 30 percent chance that we'll have more ra in on ~'riday, the weatherlady insists. Don't look tor any change in the mercury readings. which will stick In lhc n1\ddle to upper 50s. I NS IHE 'f'olti\ \' S11rvioors o/ i.he Uruguayan pla11e cra.t"h in tht Andt.t llatlf decided to torltt a book about their t%J)f!ritnct1. including rt· sortinQ to ccnnibaltsm to s[(Jy aUve. See .SIOP'I/ Oil Ptl{Jt 9. L.M. ..,... " CeWiorfll1 l Clet.M!i.t 1Ml C-ltl tS ,_ n DMlll r..ttcft 11 1!11 .. rltl ..... • ..... _. .. l'41 l1119rt•i-t ,...,, ~"'""' It«.,.. It, )t -" Aini ._..,.,.. II I • • • I DAIL 'I" PILOT ltatf ....,_ Fatal Crasla ita J1•v i11e Bodv of 41-vear-old Jack Dean ~tiller of Tustin lies eovCred by ·blanket follo\ring t'tash abou t 1:30 p.ni. \Vednesday at Jan1bo ree Road and !\1ichelson Drive. Police said 1'1iller '''35 li:illed \\'hen his station wagon slamn1ed into the rear of truck dri ven by Da,·id !::. Sh rode. 2218 Delaware St., Huntirigton Beach. Police said both vehi cles \Vere northbound on Jamboree and that truck v.•as sJov.1.ng for stop light when Mill· er's auto hit it at high speed. . , F a1nilies Flee T 01~1~e11ts In Northe1~11 C3Iifornia SA:'\ FR,;.:'l'CISCO IAPI -For lhe ser- ood tiJne in three d ays, dozens of families fled their homes near Nova to Cree k today as wind and rain continued to pound Northern Califor nia, authorilies said. f\o\·ato Police Lt . Richard Courier said residents of 63 homes in the creek area \1·e.re warned to leave or were taken to safely in row boats and high-riding trucks as water sloshed to depths -0( 31-: feet in some streets. No injuries were repo rted, Courier said. and many residents made return forays to homes in efforts to salvage belongings. •·We're one of the fortunate ones -.,.re Harris Cottle Services Slated For Saturday Funeral. services are scheduled Sal· urday for Harris Cottle, a 47-year New- port Beach resident who died Wednesd ay from injuries suffered in a fire at his home Jan. 9. He was 81. ?i.1r. Cottle was a charter member of the Seafaring Masonic Temple F&A?i.1. A native of Coalinga, he moved to Newpo rt Beach in 19"l6 and opened the 20th Street Grocery store on the Balboa Peninsula in 1927 which he operated for 25 ·yea rs. During World War ll, Mr. CotUe was a volunteer reserve police officer for Newport Beach and served as civil sen:- ice rommissioner for the Newport Beach Police Department for four years. From 1947 to 1.950, Air. Cottle owned and opera ted two· surplus stores; one at the comer of Harbor and Newport boul- evards in Costa A1esa and the other next door to his grocery store. f\.tr. Cottle is survived by his wife. Regina, of the family home al 329 Santa Ana Ave.: a daughter, Dorothy Page of Newport mach, a son, Harris Cottle, Jr. of Garden Grove: fi ve grandchildren: and 13 great-grandchildren. Services will be at 10:30 a.m. Saturday at Westtlilf Chapel. Costa Mesa. Inter- ment will follow at Fairhaven Memorial Park, Santa Ana. O•ANGl COAST " DAILY PILOT Tiit Ori"" Cot1I DAI LY PILOT, wll!I wtlith 11 ('.OlflblMd 1111 Ntw1-,.r1t11, It publl"l>td by 'IM ~ O.ll P9bl!1lllfl0 COml>liny. S.pa.- rtt<t •llllon1 Cf. pUblllMd, Mond•Y ltll'Ol,lqll FrkSty, lor COlll Mn •, Newport 8eK h, ttun!lngton llt Kh/FOUtltilln 'lilllty, UoglMI Btadl, lrYlnt/Stdelleba~k I nd Slrt (~nle/ Stn Jvan Cepl1lril110 A 1!111111 rtg10MI edi!ion i1 pullllt.hed S•!urd1y1 and Sunday1. Tl>e prlnc1ptl publ1'111ng pltnl 11 •I lJO W~11 ll•Y S!ret l, Cosh1 Mtu, Cali!orniil, f:!t.26. Rob1rt N. We1d PrnkMnl '"" Pvblhhcr Jack R. Curlty Vite Pr111<19"11 tnd Gener11 Mtnigtt Thorri11 K11vll 11!.0l!or 11iom11 A. Mv,phin1 M-9'"9 fdllW L. Pet1r• Krie9 Hewpot1 .. K.11 Clly E'.dllor N..,.rt -..et. Offke llll Newport lo11l1•1rcl Ma;Unt Aclclre11: P.O. lo• 117S, 92661 Ott.11' OHien COtilt M1t11 : De WHI 8ty Strtel llO\lfll 8t Kll1 t2J l'""I A-Ill """l!olqlon 8tKfl: 1,.7! 8Mcll lou~1rd :..n -Cltm9nlt~ :lllS Notti! II Cimino Rul T.i.:,hoM 1714) 642..CJ21 Clcmlfl.d Adwrtl&1111t 642·5671 ,~.. 1'11, Of'•• (0111 '"llfllllllmt ComfMftY. N9 MWI ltotit1, fllvslttllenl, -'llWlll nlllltr or ldvHU1-11 'lt't!" '"'i' lie ~td w1Tlloul IM<ltl per. m MM1 of cop,•letit ownw. Sfl:IOnd d ... 110rt .. 1 Hid ti Cott• Mfow, Gttlfontt1. tvllteri.tloll 11¥ (.,.riff 11.'5 rfWl!lf!'llY1 llr nwn ».is mot11t1111 rn111t11r clulln.l ... 11-'J tl'IOfllftly, I took out flood insurance," said Mrs. Alice Berglund, 50, whose, home is located on the banks of the creek. Mrs. Berglund said she and her hus- band fled in a city dump truck to an emergency Red Cross center shortly before daybreak. She termed the current flooding "worse" than that which forced' residents to leave Tuesday. "It really came up fast this time ,'' said Mrs. Berglund, a 26-year resident of the area. "It must ha ve come up in an hour or less. In 1955 we had bad flooding, but ~ nothing like this." She said res idents tried to save what they coul~ after the Tuesday flood but that many had carpets, drapes and fur- niture ruined. Jack Wal lace, coordinator of the Red Cross shelter at the Novato Community Center. said about a dozen families ··registered at the facility. Others made private arrangem ents to stay with relatives and friends , he said. "I see no panic, I see no one crying at this point," Wallace said. "Right now, people. are concerned about, tbeir in- surande eoruage and the safety or their families." Meanwhile. hurricane velocity winds , reached a reported 84 miles per -hour at Mt. Tamalpa is ' in J\1arin County and howled outside the Golden Gate at an estimated 40 knots. The weather front passed over the San Francisco area early today, slowing thousands of commuting motorists with cloudbursts and high winds. Aludslides were reported on Interstate 280 near Palo Alto and on Highway I in the Stinson Beach and Bolinas areas but all major roadways remained open, the Californ ia Highway Patrol said. No serious traffic mishaps were reported. San Francisco International Airport recorded 1.13 inches of rain during a 24- hour puiod ending at 4 a.m. Another .64 inche s _was recorded before daybreak. the National Weather Service said. . In Oakland. a 24-hour reading of .88 inches wa s recorded: at Hamilton Air Force Base 1.58 inches· in Greenbrae 2 inches and in Berkeley i'.10 inches. Heavy rains in the San Luis "Obispo coastal area closed several roads today including highway 41 fro1n Morro Bay t~ Atascadero and from San Luis Obispo to Los Osos-Bay ,vood Park . T wo Indictmen ts Issued by Jury· Two murder indictments were returned \Vednesday by the Oran~e County Grand .fury involving recent-~ting incidents in which police offi cers were killed. Carl fl. Eckstrom, 23, of 8.151 Flight Drive. !1-tidway City. "'as indicted for the Jan. 4 slaying of '"'o Los Angeles County deputy sheriffs at hls home. Ga ry W. Johnson, 37, df 13362 Diamond ~lead Drive, Tustin was charged In the Dec: 6 shooting of Tusti n policeman Waldron G. Karp end Deputy Timothy W. Stewart. Karp died of his wounds Jan. 6. Both Eckstrom and Johnson \Vert "'ounded by police before being taken in- to custody. They !lfe held without ball. Talk on Versailles Deve.Lop1nen t Sla ted Newport Beach City ~1enager Robe rt I .. \Vynn is expected to outline the latest agrttmcnt between the city and develop.. crs of the Versailles on the Bluff1 apart· ments at thl' rtgular meeting of the West Ne....-port lmprovcmcnt A.s.wclatlon tG- nigh t at 7:30 p.m. The association meeting will be he ld at the headquarters of the Parks, Beaches ·~d.Jl~~"•l•hl'" w, "'I 608 "J\tvt ..... _.-:o..--'. f\ ~ Milior Eloodin g Noted a.S ·Hea vy Tides Hit C~ty . Newport · Beach was again 'visited by high tides this morning, but city olficials say nothing was damaged and flood coo- trOI systems reacted wen enough to han- dle the onrush of sea water.~ Tides over the seven-foot mart we~ reported at about 8:15 a.m. and.puddles formed in several low-lyjng st{'eet ends. "\Ve overhauled our Udal control valves in the stonn drain system after the, la.st tidal flooding," said General Services DireCtor Jake Myoderse. "This time we only had very minor flooding at variom trouble spots." _ Last month, parts of" the city were In- undated by tides recorded at nearly eight feet and water did some damage to . horn .. and blocked .U..ts. Orange County HarbOr. Patrol olfldab said the latest high tides have ·not been a problem, but they were· watcbine to be sure no boats break 1ooaie. "We '11 be especially interested "'hen the low tide com~ this aftemocn.'' said a harbor patrol spokesi;:nan; .. , ' Pall-wk ·Fight For Sexy Films In Westminster A W~stminster couple wilf get back 22,500 reels of sexy motion pictures and J00,00) photographs which have been held for almost two years by· ·Weltminstir' Police Chief Wa1ter ScotL The State Supreme Court has refused to consider a · motion to overturn a Superior CoW1 contempt ciN.tion against the police chief. Westminster officers · . seie.ed1 the material on May of 1971 when' they raid- ed a warehouse "'Owneck.by Frederick Loar, 34, and his wife Kay, 31. The I.oars wen: ~ultted of charges' of conspiring to d1str1bute obscene material last May 17 in a jury trial. 1 Superior Judge Robert L. COrfman · ordered the Cilms and phok>s returned but Chief Scott refused to comply, calling them "hard core pornography." Scott is to appear before Judge Corfman Feb. 9 to · certify that the material has been returned. From Pagel GIRN ..• ~ mor,th. bas now become chairman of a campaign to promote tbe etnmy face of the Fountain Valley grandmother. Owens is going to arrange for buttons fea turing a girning Mrs . Sayers and there also is talk of a song about ~r. Any mooey she makes she will use for a_trip to New Zealand where she hopes to g1 m for grandchildren she 's neve.r seen. But she also Said she would appeaf at any bo na fi de chatity where her girnlng cou ld raise moneY lor tbe needy. "I used to make my faces just for the fun •. C)f it,'' she says, "but If I can cash in on It, why not?" Hitler V ehicie ; For Sale Agai1i SCOTl'SDALE, Ari>. (AP) -Tom Barrett, ·a Scotlsdale l"eal estate ex· ecutlve, qys the man w~ purchased one of Hitter's cars for $93,000 at auction 10 days ago failed to come up with any money. Barrett said Wednesday Bill Tanner of Hartsell , Ala . was "a nlke with no mone)'." The ~ar, Barrett said, Is up for sale once more. However, 90\lrces told. the AJsoclatcd Press that a man who took _over an op- tion to buy the car may be.-backlng ou~ because or reports that another Hitler car sold by Barrett for a record $1U,OOO WAS never used by Der Fue:hrtr. ' • Leary Cultists-Sued· Sta te See ks $76 Million' in ·Back Taxes RIV£RSll)E CAP) -Tbe •talc FraDcblte Ta·x Board has filed a claim ror $"78 million in back tuxes against the Brotherhood of Eternal LOve. believed to be the world's largest dealer In l.SO, h~illh und hashish oil. Forty-six members of the Brotherhood. includlng drug cultist Ti1nothy Leary, have been Indicted in Orftnge County on characs of "1Ulfl&Ung and conspiracy. 'l1le Tax Clalm, filed Tuesday states that lbe brotherhood owes ~ck taxes for unreported income during the past Ci\'e years. 'lbe clahn was fUed in Riverside County because the Bro therhood _reportedly owns a mountain ran ch there. Offlclals refused to say bow they assessed the lien, wh ich include! onlv back tas:es and interest. Actual income Ot the croup is believed to have been much higher. ' Sources SI.)' severaJ Brotherhood mem- bers have personal fortunes of more than $1 millk>n .. The Bro\herbood, granted tax-exempt status as a California corporation in 1966, is believed to have smuggled tons of ii· legal drugs into the United States. The tu lien is the first public indication of the extent of its alleged activities. Formed In Laguna Beach, in the mid· 1960s.. the brotherhood is said to have ex- panded into a loose organization ol ~00 persor\s that specialized in the tm· porta.ljon of marijuana, hashish, and some cocaine. The group also is believed to have manufactured .an especially strong form of LSD kno\\1\ as "Orange Sunshine." Authorities say samples of this drug have been found as far away as Aus traJ ia and Europe. The indictments, handed. down last year, culminated. a four • year if!· f'roM Page 1 LEARY •.. Leary's return could be arranged. "That's all we know." the county of. ficial said , adding tbe last he heard , Leary was still in Kabul, Afghanisfan. Asked if the two-to-four week story was only a.ruse by agents to keep a crowd - particularly Weathermen -away from the airport, be only said, "Does that sound logical to you?" The Weathermen, a militant un· derground organization. claimed credit lo< .belping Leary escape from the minimum security facility where be was serving a six months to 10-year ter:m after being convicted in Laguna Beach for marijuana possession. • It is presumed that Leary will be taken to Los Angeles County Jail while authorities decide where to prosecute him. -· -~ In addition to escape char~. Leary ls "'"ni.d by Orange COum'y ollidall on a $5 mUlion bench -· -Tile orange County Grand Jury last summer indicted Leary and 46 other aile(ed members of the "Brotherhood of Love," supposedly an international drug smuggling club Jorrned in Laguna Beach six years ago. fol~ng-hi~ escape, Leary apparently fled to Algefi i ,W here ·he stayed with Black Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver for nine months. • - Leary then went to Switzerland, where he was continually ordered to leave the country, for the lastitime De<::. 31. Earlier reports sAid Leaf1 bad been held under house a'rrest in the Afghan capital . There is no extradition treaty between the United State.1 and Afghanistan but Foreign Ministry of· ficials in Kabul said: "We want Leary to leave Afghanistan beCause we do not want to add to the country 's bad name in drug trafficking." The Pan American Wor.ld Airways jumbo jet carrying Leary to London from Kabul arrived in midmorning. It was immediately boarded by British im- migration officials, a U.S. Embassy of- ficial and the two Narcotics Bureau agents. A few minutes later they walked down the steps from the aircraft with Leary and Miss Joanna Harcourt-Smith. vesUgation of Lba aroup 0111t ·eventually reached around the world. Ltary, who e~upcd from the state prison at San Luis OblsPo In 1970 wh1le serving a drug possession sentence. wa~ 1ui'est.l!d llW:it week 1'I Arghanistan for hnving a fnlsc passpor t nnd \\'US ordered deported. Tests R•••• Leory reportedl;o I e I t Alghanlst.iu Wednesday and was believed bound for the United States . .l''e<feral officials said arranttmeott wer• beinc made to havt' Leary 'Ntumed dlr<ctl;o to the U.S., but ilnct Jherei ttre no di~ flights out of A~&h~lstan to the U.S., it v.•as feared he might :seek a11ylum ot a stopover point. ...L Hm1tii1gto11 Beach Girl, 13, Die s of Meningitis A 13-year-old girl who was dead on ar· rival at "'Paclfica llospitel in Huntington Beach Wednesday died of 'meningitis, Orange County Coroner's deputies said loday. Jim Beisner, spakesman for the cor- oner's office aaid the death of Nancy Denner, of 1015 England St .. has been at- tributed to bacterial meningiti s. He said tests are being run to determine if the strain of bacteria which caused the d!sease is ~fectious. Results should be available within two to thrt>e days. Beisner pointed out the more infectious form of meningitis -the form that has caused the death of Army recruits at Fort Ord -is caused by a virus, but he had added that some forms of bacteria] meningitis are also communicable. The girl's mother, Betty Denner, told police her daughter had been ill for aboul two weeks, but because other family members had been sick wilh the flu, they assumed that that was what was wrong with her. Mrs. Denner said that Tuesday in ad- dition to her flu symptoms, Nancy developed a severe headache, a stiff neck and a rash. The woman told police she believed her daughter was coming down with chickenpox. On Wednesday mmrning, .the woman said sbe got up at about 6:30 a.m. and found her daughter bad stopped breathing: The child was rushed to the hospital v.·here attempts to revive her failed and she was declared dead. Dr. John Philp, director of the county health department explained that of tlte several forms of bacterlal pleningitiJ, the most common ls caused by tbe meningG- coccus and Is present ln healtby caTriers which ma!;e up about 25 percent of the population: "But the disease itself is rare -we have about 10 cases a year in the county . . From Pagel LAWSUIT ... drove the price up artificially and in- tended to sell their shares at a later date. Vigman was barred from working in the securities business by the SEC ·in 1967. He ~leaded oo contest tn 1972 in Florida to 15 counts or vWlating federal securities laws. He Was found guilty and fined $100,000. The lawsuit contends the defendants drove the price up artificially and in· tended to sell their shares at a later date. The suit alleges the defendants paid $900,000 for their OCS stock, which reached a market value or $26.6 million during the alleged manipulation. The stock wa s suspended from trading by the SEC on Nov , 28,-1972. There has been no public trading of the stock since then. 90 DAY CASH and maybe one or two fatallUes. It oc· curs in suscepUble lndlviduall, but we don't know what It is about an ln- dlvldual's general makeu~ that makes them suscepUble, "·he satd. Philip said there is no specific preven- tive for the disease and In cases such as l'lancy Denner's members or her family are sometimes given preventive an- tibiotics. • "Other people who have had contact with her should be alerted to look for the S)lrnptoms -high fever , an .i.rltense headache, nausea and vomiting, a stiff neck and a rash. If the symptoms~ur tt:ey should seek medical treatment im: mediately," Ile said. Philp emphasized that the meningitis organisms are always present and that instances of the disease occurring and causing death so rapidly are "rare." Planners W eigl1 Castaways · Plan At Meet Tonigl1t Newport Beach planning commission- ers tonight face a light agenda. but some discussion b expected on the Irvine Com· pany's request. to develop a p()rtion of the Old Castaways property along Dover Drive. The company is asking commissioners- to rezone a small parce1 of unclassified land to commere~a] to permit construc- tion of low-rise offices between Westclif{ Drive and 16th Street on Dover Drive. Commissioners have been hesitant in the past to approve the rerone because they claim It is only a small part of the oyerall plans for the Castawi.ys site and they want to see the whole .thing. Irvine Company plans call for con· struction of tO:wtJllouses, apartments and a hotel on the property. Tonight's meeting iffcheduled for 7:30 o'clock in city countjY chambers. "' ..---Dorothy Burr .. Services Friday . • Funeral services are scheduled Friday for Dorothy Ethel Burr, a 22-year resi- dent of Corona Highlands in Newport Beach who died Wednesday. She was 62. -Mrs. Burr was employed by Pacific Telephone for 42 years and retired in 1971. She began as an operator In Lo! -Angeles and served as a training supervisor and head supervisor since moving to the Harbor Area . She lived at 421 Cabrillo Terrace and i~ survived by a. brother, Robert Walker or San Fraocisco. Services will be at 2 p.m. at Baltz· Bergeron Corona de! Mar Chapel. Burial will follow at Pacific View Memorial Park. Corona de! Mar. OF ALL REMAINING 1912 unoN MlNtJTE MAST~ 11 MICROWAVE OVENS \ with MICRO BROWNER only at SAVE '90~ HURRY -WHILE THEY LAST WITH Mftono CU DJT • $329 95 1815 NEWpPRJ BLVD.. Downtown Costa Mesa -Phoae 548-7788 ' • • • • • Ora,tge Coast • • EDITION Toilay's Final N.Y. Stocks - I • . VOL. 66, NO. 18, 3 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY 18, 1973 e TEN CENTS .. 1Mesa, County Agree on ParK }:lurchase Pact .. 'By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI OI tM O.I" Pll9t l111t A 20-year purchase agreement for 257 acres of empty Costa Mesa property planned for conversion lnto a regional Oiange County park today stands ready for signing. The impending pact with the state General Services Administration, plus the surprise announcement of a second discount in the purchase price, was disclosed Wednesday by County Board of Supervisors Chairman Ronald C11.spers. ur San Luis Obispo Breaking off from hls "Chairman's Review of 1972" message, Caspers said that a final agreement for the sale of the acreage behind Fairview-State Hospital had been reached. The final purchase price, negotiated Tuesday night, will allow the county to acquire the territory for $3.65 million. That represents less than half of the value of the land en the open market. The land after being declared surplus originally was priced al S8 million. Bul since it was to be used for park purPQSes, • Ill slate officials cut the price to $4 milllon . Costa Alesa City Manager Fred Sorsabal said a further $350,IXM'.I reduction was achieved when the state was persuaded by local officials to reappraise about 90 acres lying within the Santa Ana River fiood plain. The flatland poition of the future Fairview Regional Park is considered of lower value since it does not provide a secure foWldation for construclion. During Wednesday's address,. caspers said county officials now w~U look into the posaibilily of securing matohln& funds from the federal government on the 11.6$ million. Both the sale and the final price ,,. subject-to the rma1 approval Ol c:ounfy supervlson and the atat.e Board ot Public Workl. Ratificatkrl ii CODlideted .routine and no difficulties are forecut. Inking of the qr«meal 'will cloot more than a year of neac>tlations between Costa Mesa, county and at.ate officials. The artve to acQui.re tbe land for a park began in Costa Mesa largely as the . result of interest by environmentalists and students from Estancia High School. Negotiations with state ofJkiab became aomewhat turbulent at one stage when Costa Mesa city councihpen were given an ultimatum to pure~ the land for a lul'flp $4: million or wl'fl'SS its auc-- ticn to the highest bldder. , At one point state offitjils considered trading about 38 acres of the property to the William Newsom Development Com- pany in ~change for the firm's holdings ,.. .S _.orona Peru Seizes . at the Squaw Valley ski resort near Lake Tahoe. When it was discovered by Costa Mesans that the firm intended to build apartments· on the 36 acres in question. the dr!ve to acquire the park was in- tensified , this lime with the hcrp of coun- ty officials. Plans are to lea ve the park in an essentially wild state and to preserve an archeological site along the banks of tht Santa Ana River . An Indian village once ~as located there. • Ul Most Mass Floods Emptying 12 Tunaboat;s SAN DIEGO (AP) -At least t% United States tunaboat.s carrying nearly 200 crewmen have been seiz- ed off the coast of Peru in the largest seizure ever undertaken by the South American country in the s<H:aJJed "tuna war," says ·an American Tunaboat Association spokesman. Dr. Leary To Arrive Slayings Ever i11 U.S. Schools, ' By The Aasociated Press ·Schools and businesses in San Luis Obispo were evacuated today as a heavy storm which dwnped more than four incbe! or rain since midnight threatened to inundate the downtown area, police said. County Panel Sees CqasbJ} Traffic Jams By JACK BROBACK Of tfM Dflll'I' l"lltt ll•ff A serious transportation deficiency ex- ists in the whole coastal zone of Orange r.ounty but the County Road Department has no plans to force a transportation c<irridor upon the affected communities. "With the deletion of the Pacific Coast Freeway by the Legislature, the whole balance of the transportation system in the coastal area was upset," Murray Storm, assistant road commissioner, said today . "All our planning for feeder roadways had been based on the proposed fre,e"ay," he-added. "We do know that if devleopment along the coast takes pl~ce based on existing zoning the circulation of traffic will not be adequate." Tbe coastal traffic problem surfaced Wednesd ay when the County Planning Commission asked tho Road Department to come up withi-lnterim standards by F.eb. ~ to allow solution of problems of a Dana Point development. The question arose because or prob- lems f a c e.d _ by the Thunderbird 0.pistrano ~pmenl. Nine years ago tlie state eannarked ·ao acrs of the 4~ acre tract for a Pacific Coast Freeway rlght.(lf-way. The developer wants a decision on future use of the JWath through the prqperty. Storm said any answer by Feb. 20 !See CORRIDOR, Page %) · Pair Win Figl1t For Sexy Films In W estminsler A Westminster couple will get back 22 500 reels of sexy motion pictures and 1 300 000 photQgraph.s which have been held for ' almost two yean by Westminster 'Police Chief Walter Scott. Tho. State Supreme court has ref~ to consfder a motion to . overturn a Superior Court contempt citation against the police chlet . Westminster officers seized the material on May 'of 1971 when they raJd. ld a warehoule owned by Frederick Loar, U, and his wife Kay, 31. The Loars were acquitted of charge1 ol conspiring to distribute ohocene material last May 17 in I fury trial. Superklr Judge Robert L. Corfman orOOed the mms and photos ntumed but Chief Scott refused to complr, calling them "hard core pornography,' · -Scott Is to appear before Judge · Corfman Feb.· 9 to certify • \ha! the material has .t>Cen returned. ' . . . •I t • • ' Stores A spokesman for the boat Officers said a hospital was nooded owner's' group said the ships were aild some patients might have to be accuSed or violating Pefu's self. evacuated if the waters continued to rise. claimed 200-mile ftshing limit and "U tbe rain doesn't stop, we're in trou-forced into the port of Talara ble," one officer said. Wednesday by gunboats and planes. Cars were reported covered with water There, they will be fmed. ac- in the downtown area and power lines cording to weigb't and h!e forced to v.·ere downed as people moved to higher buy Peruvian fishing licenses, he ground. said. Tv.ro cre:ets which Oow through.. ~n ·-L'-----"~.._. ___ .,...._., Luis Obispo overflowed their banks at about 10:30 a.m .. -and more Tain was ex- ·pected to-'!all-tbrougll-the-day, HeaTy rains in the San Utls Obispo coastal area closed several roads today, including hlgbWay U from Morro Bay -to Atascadero and from San Luis Oblspc to Los Osos-Baywood Park. · U .S.-Firm· Hires Witch D0ctor TQ Ai_d Employes The Cayucos Elementary School was closed after several classrooms flooded, added officials. The highway patrol reported that high SINGAPORE {UPI) -A U.S.~wne(I winds blowing abead of thl storm whip; factory hired a Malaysian witch doctor to ped up dust along Interstate 5 in the try to restore order among women Wheeler Ridge area 9f Kem County• cut-cmployes seized with fits of hysteria. ting vtsibility to near zero and forcing authorities to close the highway in both One section of the firm 's television and directions for a time. appliance assembly plant was shut down The blowing dust was responsible for a for the third time in a week because or three-<:ar pileup in the area causing hysteria seizures among 100 women minor injuriesJ authorities said. Meanwhile. in Northern California cmployes, com~ 9fficials said. . . dozens or families fied their homes near A ~ty g'lard. and several of the Novato Creek as wind and rain pcunded plant a employe~ satd ~ SG-year-0ld witch the ..area for the second time in t~ doctor ~m neigbbonng Malaysia and days . ~ three ass1stan~-entered the plant and Novato Police Lt. Richard Courier said burned incense 111 an attempt to c~lm the residents of 63 homes in the creek area e~ploy~ and cleanse the premises or were warned to leave or were taken to evil sprrits. safety ln row boats and high-riding "The management probably doesn't trucks as water sloshed to depths of 3'n believe in bomo~ (witch doctors) but feet in some streets. they know the . girls do and probably No injuries were reported, Courier thought it was ~. good way to g~t things said and many residents made return back to normal, one employe said. foraYs to homes in efforts to salvage Mysterious outbreaks of hysteria are belongings. _ . ngt uncommon in Singapore and "We're one or the fortunate ones -we Malaysia. They usually affect groups of took out fiood insurance,'' said Mrs. Alice people, mosUy women , and occur in Ber:glund 50 whose home is located on chain reactions. the b~ or' the creek. Typically, one person will begin Mrs. Berglund said she · 'and her hus-screaming and someUme.s f~t, trig- ( See FLOODS, Page Z) gering similar behavior by those nearby. In State By CA1'.1DACE PEARSON Of .... .,...., 1"119t ll9ff Or. Timothy Leary, former Harvard professor wanted for Cailfomia prison esrape and in Orarige r.ounty for the alleged mastennlndirl'g of a drug smug· gling ring, was expected to arrive on a Pan-American Oigbt to .Los· Angeles ~lb!·=. . u.s-:· ~·r.· 111!)'1~ ._ ""'l!ht the nturil cl ~, """ ..... in l!ept. cl Jtro :frOni ~ m '""~" dblapo, -AfJl!inliion, '1biii1ii -arreoted~. ' Rej)Orll Aitt that .......,. W• -Jo._ London early this morning. A Pan American spokesman in London said the famous advocate of the' Ule of LSD Md fly with armed .... rt to Loo Angeles, where the only Loodon Pa1>Am flight to- day touched down at 4 p.m. Looal law enforCement officials denied those reports. A spokesman for the narcotics division o! Orange Counly District Attorney Cecil Hicks' office said earty today that "the only people telling us he'll be here this afternoon are the press." The spokesman said be was told by the federal agent handling the case that it would be two to four •D'. before Leary's return '"cOUld be arraneed. ''That's all wd tnow," the com'lty of· ficial said, adding the last he heard, Leary-waHUll-in.JCabolcAlghanlstan~ Asked If the two.to-four week story was only a ruse by agents to keep a crowd - particularly Weathermen -away from the airport, be only said, "Does that sound logical to you?" The Weathermen , a militant un- dergroWld organization, ctalmed credit for h~lping Leary escape from 1 the minimum security facility where he was serviQg a six months to 10-year term after being convicted in Laguna Beach for marijuana possession. It is presumed that Leary will be taken to Los Angeles Coanty Jail while authorities decide .where to prosecute (See LEARY, Pqe II • FAIRFIELD (AP~ -A jury today fowid Juan Corona guilly or th~ biggest nlass murder in U.S. history , the slaying of 25 transient laborers whose bod ies were found in shallow graves near Yuba City in 1971. The jury or 10 men and lv10 \vomen found Corona guilty after more than 46 hours of deliberations which stretched over eight days. Corona's wife. Gloria, clasped •her hands together alter the verdict was ~ad Liut ·held back tears through most of the !OiliP....., o! reading the 1$ individual charges and verdicts. -..--€orona--!at beside his attorney, Rlcfiara Hawk, outwardly expressionless except lor tightly gripping the counsel table. He glanced oilly brieny at the jury during the 28 minutes it took to read the - verdicts. .. ,Ul"IT ....... GUil TY AS CHAROID Mtn Murderer Coroo• The jury notified the court it reached a verdict at 10 :50 a.m. but it was one hour and 48 minutes later that the final count .against the 38-year~ld farm labor con· tractor was recorded by the court. Kissinger, Tho . To Seek Peace --Pact on Tuesday Judge Richard E. Patton· read· e·atn count and each verdict separately and then asked the jury if that was Ill verdict. Jurors replied, "Yes," in unison 25 times. Hawk asked the jury be polled ln- d.IVU!uillya!ter each of the first three counts, but waived that request for the final 22. Hawk then requested a n,ew trial "on By United PrtH IDternatlonal statufory grounds" and Patton ordered a The White House announced today that hearing on that motion Jan. 29. Dr. Henry A. Klsainger will meet Hal)Oi'S The judge ordered Corona brought to Le Due Tho in Paris on Tuesday "fgr the the courtroom from the California purpose of completing the text" of a Medical Facility at Vacaville eight miles .. h away where he has been a patient since ce;ae.fire agreement aimed at ending t e suffering chest pains Friday night. war ln Vietnam.-Al just before 9 a.m., jurors filed into A alrnllar announcement was ma~ the Solano County courtroom to begin simultaneously in Paris by the North their second week of deliberations, after Vietnamese who aald the 'titlkl were being bused from lhe nearby motel ., where they have been sequestered ev ery ~ at achieving an accord on the night since the fudge handed the case enc! of. the war and re-establishment of over to them . Girning for Grubstake peace in Vietnam." The jury also reported at that time Saigon ,diaP-tches reportld earlier that that it was divided 11·1, but did not say whether the majority favored conviction Soutl: VletDamese President N&'O'en Van or acquittal on 25 counts of first-degree Thieu •llPrOved the lltest ~ue-fire murder. The jurors gave no hint Wednes- agr1!elDeDr ID, principle, ,lbm ·pennltUng day if that division changed. ~ DAILY l"ILOT'tl9H,..... MRS. SAYERS GIRNS AGAIN Wlll Foct t•UMh Her Ship? • • !he 1ignJni. lie bilk~ at an Oct. 26 agreement. ' · l_!ranny Facing Fam,e, Fortune By JOHN ZALLER Of ,... Dll,, l"lltt ..... FountalD Valley's giming grand· mother, Frances Sayers, continues to be impreMed by the uniquenesS of"her face . "I had no idea there would be 1JObsuch Interest in it," she said today. "It's been in newspapen all around and even on television. "My stomach bas been ln knots with all the publicity J'm getting," says the 71·year-old woman. ""---/ Since a DAILY PILOT story !Int drew wide attention to her face-making antics last week, Mn. Sayeri bas been oo NBC televiJion news three times, CBS twice, and ABC...,._ She also bas an offer to lp[)elr on the Jolmny Canon Show nut ...U, and 1' s\1ll pondering the possibility cl doing a rvutinO on Rowan and Martin'• Laugl>ln. In· addition to th!J, her st«y bas been carried natioaa!Jy and lntemationally by !he Asaodated Press and United PreSI lntematlooal. La~r this Mele &he hAa an appointment with a color photographer wl1o ..,..,to add yet llllOther '""-Ion to news coverage of her face. A hint that a. cease-fire agreement was Mrs. Saye.rs has been tlling all the oear came earlier In Paris when It was publicity In stride, aside from her announced the weekly 9fJP11public peace nervous stomach-_ talks were being su!jiended indfOnitely "I try to continue my normal routine, after today's 1741h se111on. Tbe talks excepl now l'm practicing my face a lol would have been e1actly four ye.an old more than I used to. , next '""1nday. "I think I'm better than 1 WaJ. My lip The announcement from Presidential ~ Se<retary Ronald A. Ziegler at !he corr.es nearly hall-way up lhe bridge of Florida White House in Key Biscayne my nose," Mri. Sayers. said. said; Mn.. S&.yen' bestJace -which she •twe havt a joint announcement calls a "girn," or· contortion of the face between lhe Unfti<I StltU-llfltf"'North- -involves a feat few otbera can Vietnam. Dr. Klsslnger will reswne private meetlnp with lpedal adviser Le perfonn. Due 'nlO and Mlnlster Xuan Thuy oo Jan. She utends her faw forward u far H :13 !Or the porpoot of "'mpletin, the text tt wlll go, and tben boob her lower lip up of an agreement,. over the: brklce of ber oose, thus aivtn1 South V~ I o v e r n m e ~ t the appearance that htr mouth ls polltk:al """"' .. Id that allhouP '.fhleu all ...... •-f •cmd to the tm 1n principle lie ,.. ..., o .... ~ .... ~ ..... -ct.lid. ,,,.,. "My faw1 used to ache alter I did Just prtsttmahly ...,. wotted out in """ two or ihtte funny 1-." allo lald. "But venations with Geo.. Al .. llldtr Haig. my mulCln an gettinl s1longer now and Nl'""1'1 opedal enyoy io SaJaon, don't tire ao eUUy." . Tbe White Houlre Mid Wednesday that Gary ~ a disc focl<ty .., rodio Halt! had blot1 to communlcatloii wilh . station . kMPC who -.. ! Mn. "'"-N!Jorl an4 that Nlsoo COil· Sayeri' talent••"" a gim @tell lut f.,,.., _, ~ wllh .KW!naer In jilee GUIN, Pip I)• Walhfalloo. I ; ,. ~· • • ' Oraage Cout Weather There's a 30 percent chance that we'll have more rain on Friday. the weatherlady insists. Don 't look for any change in the mercury readings, w~ich will stick 1n lhc middle to upper 50s. INSIDE TODi\V Surtrloors o/ tht Un1gtwuan plane crtuh fn fh• Andes have dtcidld to wite a book about their fzptrienccs, tt.cludina rt· tortina to cannibalirm to slay oli ve. S« slory on Page 9. I • • .. OAJLV PILOT c " • Fatal Crash i11 l1•v ine .. • -----~ -------' Leary Culti·sts Sued • ./> .State Se eks $76 Mil lio11 in Back Ta xes ..... RIVEllSIDE (AP) -The state ~Tu Boud bis filed a claim for $16 mUIJon ln back taxes against the .. Brotherhood ol Eternal Love, believed to be the world's largest dea1er. in 1.SD, hashish a~d hasblsll oil. • Furty-siJ: members of' the Br0therhood, including drug c..'Ultist Timothy Leary. have been indicted in Orang' County on . dl•11Jes ot.smuggllng ond conspi..,cy. The Tax ClaJm, flied Tuesd•y states tr * * fh.,n Page I LEARY ... him, In addJtlon to escape cbar(es, Leary is wanted by Orange County officials on a SS million bench warrarit. The Orange County Grand Jury last summer indicted Leary and 46 other alleged members of the "Brotherhood or Love," supposedly an international drug smuggling club formed in Laguna Beach six years ago. that the brothtrhood owes blick. 18.xes for unreported tncon1e during the past fiv.e years. The claim wns (iled In Riverside County because the Brotherhood reportedly owns a mountain mch there. OfficlaJs refu»ed to say how they assessed the lien, which Includes only back taxes and interest. Actual income of the grdui> ls beUeved to ha ve been much · higher. S®rces say several Brotherhood mem· be.rs have per50nal fortune. of more than $1 million. The Brotherhood, granted tax-exempt status 11$ a California corporation \n 1966, is belleved to have smuggled tons or II· legal drugs lnto the United States. The tax lien Is the first public indication or ·the eitent of Its aJleged acUYllies. Jo~ormed in Lasuna Beach, ln the mid- 1960s, the brotherhood ~ aaid to have ex· pa.oded lnto a loose organlution of 200 persons that specialized ln the im- portatlon of marijuana, bashl&h. and some cocaine. .J 'ftte group also Is believed to have manUfaCiured an e.5peclt1tly strong rorn1 of LSD known '1J ''Ontnge Sunshine." Authciritles say '8mpJes of thl• d(ug have been foond as tar aw~v as AuatraU:a and Europe. The indlctmeots, hrurdcd down lalit year, culmlnatod a four _~ar in· ve1Ugatlo0 ol the aroup that eVcntu1lly reached around the world. Leary, who elC8ped from lhe State prison at San Luis Oblspo In 197.0 whllt! serving a drug~ton sentence. y.•as arrest.eel last y,·cei in Argbanlitan-for -..... havin g a false passport and was ordered deported. Leary reportedly I e f t Afghanistan Wed.oesday and Wl!IS believed bound for lhe United States. F'tderal olficlals snld arrangement& were belnJ; made to have Leary returned direclly to the U.S., but since there ire no direct fll&hts out -or • Alghanlstrut lo the U.S., It wu feal<d he might seek asylum at a stopover point. Bod v of 41-vear-old Jack Dean J.liller of Tustin lies covfred by ·blanket follo\\'ing crash about I :30 p.rn. \Vednesday at Jamboree Road and 1''lichelson Drive. Police s?-td Mill er was killed \vhen his station wagon slammed into the rear of truck driven by David E. Shrode , 2218 Delaware St., Huntington Beach. Police said both vehicles were northbound on Jamboree and that truck was slowing for stop light :when ?ttill- er's auto bit it at high speed. · Following his escape, Leary apparently fled to Algeria. where he stayed wi1h Black Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver for nine months. Leary then ,.,.cnt to Switzerland, where he was continually ordered to leave the country, for the last time Dec. 31. Coast Officials Named In Stock Manip1tlation Harris Cottle Services Sla ted For Sanrrday Funeral servic:es are scheduled Sat- urday for Harris Cottle, a 47-year New- port Beach resident v.•ho died Wednesday from in juries suffered in a fire at his home Jan. 9. He was 8l. .~tr. Cottle was a charter member of the Seafaring Jl.1asonlc Temple F&AM. A native or Coalinga, he moved to Nev.•port Beach in 1926 and opened the 20th Street Grocer)' store on the Balboa Peninsula in 1927 whicb he cperated for 25 years. During World War Il, Mr. Cottle was a voluntee.r reserve police officer for Newport Beach and served as civil serv· ice c:ollUllWiooer for the Newport Beach Police Department for four yean. From 1947 to 1950., Mr. Cottle owned and operated two surplus StOres: one at the comer o( Harbor and Newport bouJ... evards in Costa Me§ aild the ttber next door to his grocery !tl'.lft. f\fr . Cottle is survived by1 his wife, Regina. of the family home at 329 Santa Ana Ave.: a daughter, Dorothy Page of Jlfewport Beach. a son, Harris Cottle, Jr. oC Garden Grove; five grandchildren : and 13 great-grandchlldr.en. Services will be at 10:30 a.m. Saturday at Westcliff Chapel, Costa Mesa. Inter· ment will £ollow at Fairhaven Afemorial Park, Santa Ana. Two . Indictments Issued by Jury Two murder indictments were returned ... Wednesday by the orange COunty Grand Jury involving recent :.hooting incidents in which police oUiws were killed. Carl A. Eckstrom, 23, of 1351 Flight Drive, Midway City, was indicted for the Jan. 4 slaying of two Los Angeles County deputy ~eriffs at his home. Gary W. John~n. 37, of 13362 Diamond Head Dri ve, Tustin was charged in the Dec. 6 shooting of Tustin policeman Waldron G. Karp and Deputy Timothy W. Stewart. Karp died of his wounds Jan. 6. Both Eckstrom and Johroon were wounded by police before being taken in· to custody. They are held without bail. OIANel COAST CM DAILY PILOT -TM Or-.. C-.f DAILY a-IL.OT, .... wflk:ft ho C'Dll'lllhlnl tr1e H-Pr'91&,. II ,_..., 1W "" Orlf!W9 CO.tt .... kl!'"' ~-..... ,...., lldltlens .... -~ Mml8ey ..,...... Frld1y, ror C..I• M••· H""DOl'f 8"4:1l. Huntington 9~1111 V•lltY, utun• Bueti, lrvlnels.ddltiMCk Md "'" '*-'"'' SMI JlolM Ctop!ll••"*· A. 1lntle Nl'°"'"I • «tlllon b pull1l1lltd Se!Unll'fl 111d Surld1y,. Trie P1'lnc:l1t11I pubnltl .... 11-1•"' II •t m West .. ,, Slrfff, C.!1 M.,., C•lllonlla, '~ ll:oli•rf N. W11d Prt11dtnl •nd P'uolithlr J•ck Jt. Cvrl1y Vlcti f'r"klMI Wiii °"*'111 M~ n.011111 .c ••• 11 ...... 'TI1011'111 A. Mv,pf\h11 M ... lrlll Edlttr a.rt .. H. Loo• JJch1"4 P'. Helt Aul .. MI MIMlllne Mtkn c ........ Oflce JJO Wt1t l 1y Sttt tt M1lll11t At1•r11u ,.0. loJI 11.0. '262• ...... _ NtwPW' a..ctu 2lU It.._, htlr'l,rl,.. ~ 11K111 m ,.._, •.+IM Hvrllil'll'Wll hWI: l1'1f alldl ...........,,.. Sall C'-"""lt : lOJ Htrtfl II ClllllM ltNI Ttl.,.._ (71 4f 64J ... JJ1 ci•lfft4 """"'"' .. HJ.1,11 =I lt't, OrMIOI C-t '"'*'~ • Ml MW\ 1!0rln, lfl!iltlNtllN. rWllr or HVVlll-lt '-"lfll !MY ... ,.....llCld •lll'IOut 11«111 ,.... 1111.-" tf9¥rlthl -· S-..d c• ....... ,.,,. ft ('M ii MfM, C1tlflll'fl'-. lubtcrl.tlclll bV (tmtf 11U lftOlifl"°I '-1 1!1'111 U.lS "*'UllYl ftlllltwy *'llllll!tN •M _..t11tv. TONIGHT UCI LECTURES -"Women's Legal Rights in California," 104 Phy~ Sciences. 8 p.m. "Colcmial American Family Forms •.. " part of series on Living Together in Famili'9. Social Science Hall, 7·9:45 p.m. Admission $4.75. "Face and ·Mind of Ireland,'' 101 Physical Sciences, 7·10 p.m. Admission $4.50. "Epidemiology : Incidence . Distribution and Control," part of series on Cancer-Etiology, Epidemiology, Therapy. Sophomore Lecture Hall; Medical SUrge f bldg. 7-10 p.m. Admission $4.50. ''MOONCHILDREN" -Sooth Coast Repertory Theater, a p.m. . FRIDAY, JAN. U SAN ·FRANCISCO OPERA -Touring subsidiary presents La Traviata, com- plete oi>era sung in English, OCC Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. Adults $2, Students $t occ FILM SERIES -•sweet ·&net· back's Song," Forum, 7 p.m. Admission . $!. UCI 041/CE CONCERT--Prosram presented by gradiiate students in dance.·( Studio Theater, Fine Arta Village, 8 p.m. Admission $1. WRESTLING -OCC vs. San Diego Mesa, OCC Gym, 7:30 p.m. BASKETBALL -Magnolia at Estan- cia, .8 p.m. Mesa at Loi Alamll.os, 8-p.m. Newport Harbor at Santa Ana, 8 p.m. ALUAL TOURNAMENT, UC! host, Crawfonl Hall, Tonight and Saturday, a p.m. - COST A MESA CIVIC PLAYHOUSE - "You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown," Friday through &Jnclay 8:30 p.m. Satur- day and Sunday 2:30 p.m. $2.50. Reserva- tions, 334-S,,OO. Fro• Page 1 CORRIDOR. •• would necessarily be very broad. "\Ve have tentative approval for a countyl:l'ide ti:affic coi;ridor study," he said. "The result of such a study would be a set of alternatives on how best to solve traffic problems." He said social. economic and en- vironmental effects on the communities in the coastal zone would be a top con-· sideratlon . - "1.1any modes are possible," Stonn ad- ded. "They might lnclude a rapid transit system, bus lanes on arterial highways or use or future transp611&Uon methods not yet developed." Storm warned, however, that it wu ob- vious that a simple arteriaJ hlahway is not the ans'ltfr to couta1 traffie pro~ lems. "Ten yean ago we had guidelines and could have moved ahead with plans," he added. "Now all is changed. People may even say they are willing to put up with inC1lnvenlence to prese.rvt . the. en- vironment. The county can't ju!t produce a plan and expect commanltles to buy It any more." He said demands from corrimunltles for action would dictate county moves. "We know that future transportaUon corridors will have to provide butters to rtsidential Jreas," Storm said. "We ltlll abo Include bicycle ways and equestrian trails.'' The countywide study Is not even under way yet tht road commissioner dllclos- ed. "We art asking for state help and use of their comJ>1,tter material but we are not asking tb<m to find >0lutions. l'<rhlJl.' because of the mlnY months needed for an overall county study, the COIJtll area· may be 1ivt.n i:riorlty.~· be ~luded. . Pickpocket Nabbed VINA DEL MAR , Chile (UPI) -Con- victed pickpocket Jose Urrea rea ched In· to a pocket, police said, to ptuck a blllfokf. Trouble wa's, the pocket waa ln the uniform of pollcemM Roberto Lopa 'LoptS grabbed Urre• after a brief strug- gla. Ne,vport Beach Dri¥er, 81, Dies In Freak Crash An 8l-year-0ld Newport Beach man was killed instantly Wednesday afternoon in a freak accident diiring which he lost control of his car and went speeding in reverse into a large tree in Newport Heights, police said today. Charles F. Robertson of t6S Santa"Ana Ave., died of massive bead injuries received when be was thrown into the back window of the car. William Craighill of 215 Tustin Ave., a friend of Robert900.'s who witnessed the crash, told police he Ind the victim bad been working on the car only moments before the accidenl Cn1ghill said the two bad decided tQ. take lbe car to a dealer {or examinatim !O Craiahil1 got out of the car and walked to Dis own vehicle while RoberbaD ·slid into the cfiver's seat. Roberls<ll'• car was~ DBI lo the curb on the south s.MWdf CliY1Stftft. oea.r Catalina Street wher< the two men bid stopped to continue workinc on it, pollce were told. '"{f -.-•, ~· "Craigbill told ,.11! the. ,next thiBg he knew, the ear wis in n1ime Bild going faster than be bad ever ·Setn-a car go backwards in bis life," said police traUJc investigator Gar,-~-~ said the car was going between 50 and so miles per hour in reverse before hitting the trtt. Cralghlll said the speeding car shot acroM Clay, lumbered across a comer lot at Clay and calallna, sped across Catalina and impacted with the roadside tree at 501 Catalina St. Lee said the COl'Oller's report indicated Robertson died of crasb lnjurles but he said be thinks the victim suffered a stroke of some kind that caused bis foot to jam onto the accelerator. "His doctors tnfonned us Robert.Ion had a beart problem for 20 yean and our ennilnation of the car showed no . mecbanlcal flaws with tbe accelerator," Lee said. F romPapl FLOODS •.. Earlier reports sa1d Leary bad been held under house arrest in the Afghan capital. There is no extradiHon treaty be1wee.n the United StateJ and Afghanistan bot Foreign ltlirustry of· ficials lD. Kabul said: "We want Leary to leave Afghanistan because we do not wanrto add to the cowltry's bad name in- drug trafficking." Tbe Pan American World .. Airways jumbo jet ·carrying Leary to London from Kabul arrived in midmorning. lt :was immediately boarded by British im- migration officials, a U.S. Dnbassy of- ficial and the two Narcotics Bureau agent.s. A few minutes later ~y walked down the steps from the aircraft with Leary and MW Joanna Harcourt.Smith. Leary wore an open-necked yellow shirt, blue trousers and soft white shoes and carried an overnight bag. His friend wore a fur coat and had necklaces over her blouse. As they made their way 300 yards lo ti>• immlgnlUon hall. Leary and Miss Harcourt-Smith were embracing all the way. Shortly be.fore disappearing into the hall, Leary turned to reporters and said: "I'm 1oin1 to get a lawyer." Leary left Switzerland for Vie'nna at the end of ~her and then went on to Afghanistan. He arrived in Kabul on Sun- day. Afihan authorities arrested him im· mediately and seized his U.S. passport. The paMpOrt was handed to the U.S. Embassy ln.Kabol...tllclrprovided Leary with an identificatioh card to pennit him to travel back to the United States. Leary, acconipanied by Miss Harcourt.Smith was held incommunicado by British immigration authorities until his Los Ange1es · plane was ready to leaVe. Miss Harcourt-Smith left with him. From Pagel GIRN ... . l • · The . Securities and Exchange Com· The attor11ey, Thomas Armstrong of mission loday has on file al U.S. District the Washington D.C. firrn of Sullivan and Coon in Los Angeles a civil suit charging Worcester, said ~ ·ha~t._yet seen the a Newport Beach flrm and five men, m-. oomplai.nHile4 6y ineS~-on Wednes· - cLudlp.g-company executives~ Corona ~Y·=---. ~ -~----. _ _ dcl Mar and Fountain Valley, w1th stock He saiif that hi! clients have a defense manipulation. but that he would Wue no statement un- identified in the civil action is Newport tiJ be bas filed a response to tbe com- Securities Corporation, 1617 Westcliff plaint with the court. Drive, Newport Beach. The lawsuit contends the defendants Principals named in the suit include druve lhe price up artificially and in-- Abraham Gu~n Wolfson, HM9 Granville tended to sell their shares at a later date. • Drive, Corona del Mar, P.resicllnt: Roy Vigman was barred from working in Om~r Dawson, of. Fountain ~alley, ex· the securities business by the SEC in ecutive vi~ presi.dent ; Mart1n Susson, 1967. He pleaded no contest in 1972 in 1~ Gran.ville Drive, Corona del Mar, Florida to 15 counts of violating federal y 1Ci! president, and Seymour Vignan, securities laws. He was found guUly and Newport Beach. fined $t00 000. The commission's suit alleges that the Tbe Ia~suit contendJ the defendants stock of' ~ f''inancial Corporation of drove the price up artificially and in- Rochester, N. Y. was manipulated to tended to sell their shares at a later date. raise the price of stock from $1.75 a The suit alleges the defendants paid share to $S9 a share in 10 weeks during $900,000 for their DCS stock, which 1971. . reached a mark!t value of '26.6 million Contacted at his fll'ln today, Busson during the alleged manipulation. said the court complaint "Js not valid" The stock was suspended from trading but declined further comment tmtil be by the SEC on Nov. 28, 1972. There hu has discussed the matter with the firm's been no public trading of the stock alnce auomey. then. Growth S~dr.GroQ_pSees County Problem hy.1990 \. Orange County will be facing a popula-the county's 26 cities include deteriora. lion problem by 1990 and the time to fig. tion of air, water, neighborhoods al)d. ure out an answer for it is right now. downtown areas. There ls also concern That was the conclusloo today of Dan over a projected doubling of. aulomobiles by 1990, preservauon of opeti space, edu- Appleton, a representative of the 19-cation, health and welfare In future years. member Citizens Dlrectlon Finding Com· "We can't escape that most of our mWion which ls currently studying pop-problems are man-made,'' said Appleton ulowo 'growth. who raised the hope that they can poo- mor,th , bas now become chairman of a Appleton outlned the county's popula-sibly also be solved by man .. campaign to promote the funny face of tion boom (or members of the Citizens The Citizens Direction Findlng COm- lhe FoWltain Valley grandmother. Harbor Area Research Team {CHART) mission, now enga1ed 1n research on the Owens is going to arrange .for buttons meeting in Costa Mesa. population question, has already publlsb- featuring a giming Mrs. Sayers, and He said that Orange County's current ed. some ol its llndings. Coples of ttl there also is talk of a song about ber, poulation d. mere than 1.6 million wa.s summary Report, Phase ll are available the result al unprecedented growth d&--tree of charge through the CoW\tf Plm- Any money she makes sht will use for ing the past 20 years which turned it . ning Department. a trip to New Zealand where she hopes to from a predominantly agricultural county Appleton, not a member of the commis- girn for grandchildren she's never seen. to an urbanlzed metropolitan county. '1jon llself but a speaker hired to .give But she also said She would appear at Since Orange County has only 782 talts in its behalf, said there are no "bar- any bona fide charity where her giming square miles of land the problem of pop-gain prices" or qulck solutions to our en. could raise money for the needy. ulation density will become acute in fu· vironmentol problem1. ture years. Thts has had the effect Or But he added that It was imper'ative tG "I used to make my races just for the ul .-... h ho trol1in the t bo •· b t•-' t • band 'oed 111· a ci'ty dump truck to an ·stim ating u"""'g ts a ul con g hink a ut ways w cur 1n::. coun y s fun of It," she says, "but if I can cash in t • wth Ap le'A · ted t phe I th te belo e It I too emergency Red Cross center ihortly coun Y s gro , P wn porn ou . nomena grow ra r s betore daybreak. She termed the current ;;;on;;;;;;ilii, iiwiihy-noiitii?'ii' ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;So;;;;;;miieiioiiriitiihiie;ipiiroiibiilems;;;;;;iiniioiiw;;;;;;botherin;;;;;;;;;;;;. iig;;;;;;iilaiiteii.;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiii flooding "worse" than that which forced \I residen\.a to leave Tuesday. "lt really came up fast this time/' said Mrs. Berghmd, a 20-year resident or the area. "It must have come up in an hour or Jess. Jn 1955 we bad bad flooding, but nothing like this." She said residenta-trie.d to save what they could alter the 1'lelday flOOd but that many bad carp<tl, drapes and lllr- niture ruined. Jaci Wallace, coordinator of the Red Cross shelter et the .Novato Community Center, said ·abOUt a dozen families registered at the facillty. Others made private arrangements to stay with rtlatives and friends, be said. "I see no panic, l aee no one crying at th.it polnt,'' -Wtilace said. "Right now, people are ~ . about their in· sure.nee. CO\le.rage aod .the safety of their famllles." Meanwhile, hurricane Velocity winds reached a re.ported ILm.ilf.s per hour at Mt. Tamalpall In Marin County and howled oulll<le the Golden Gate at •n estimated .0 knots. The weatbtt front passed OVtr the San Francisco .,.. urly today, slowing thousandl of commutin1 moior\au with cloudburill and blgb winds. Mudslides wtrt reported on Interstate 280 near Palo Alto and on Highway I In t1'e St!nJoo Beach Bild Bollnn are11 but all major rot1dw1Y1 remained open, the Cal~omi< HlghWIJ Patrol &81d. No Hrlout lrllfflc mlsblps Wtrt rtported. San Fnncil<o International Airport ~rded 1.13 incbet ot ntn durm.a a 24- •hour peMod ending at 4 a.m. Another .14 Inches was recorded before daybreak, the National Weather 5ervlct Jlkl, •In Oakland, a U.hour reodlnl of .88 Inches wu recorded:' at HamlftOft A1:r Fo1 ct Base 1.51 tnches ; ll'I Gl"Mlbrae 1 inches and In.Berkeley LIO lncbes. I :> • ' . ., 181 5 NEWPORT BLVD. .- 90 DAY CASH WRH APflOYID CllDfT • Downtown Costa Mesa OF ALL REMAINING 1972 LITION MINUTE MASTER II MICROWAVE OVENS with MICRO BROWNER only at SAVE . •9000 · HURRY -WHILE THEY LAST ~329 95 -Pllane 548-7788 • , I