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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-12-02 - Newport Harbor Ensign1 P.P The Orange Couoty Boord · of Supervl.ors I&JDI'OVed a Z- potnt PlOIJ'&m Tuesciay aimed at proteeUnr theecoJoclealbal- uce of Upper Newport Bay. A mutmum of $10,000 was &lloeated to IDYest1pte a PfO.. poet.l deslped to reduce the am)uat of silt flowtnc Into the bay, S•rYIIOI'I at.J IIJPI'Ot'ed a 4-potnt plan dealiq witb wat- er quality 100n1tor1Dr aDd en- Ylroomental protecUoo of tbe .,. ECT tbl« tbe plan amanced ~ StCle"liOrs Ronald Caspers IJid Do•ld Baker, tbe bolrd wlH bite ao e.Uurtoe eoosulb.ot to make a "abort-term" JladY of eartroDrMotal problems. e- nlua.te carreat moaltorlDg practices &Dd reeommeod a • ·~1 tDfl.tODmeotal prosrarn tor all of Newport Bay aDd lts reilted waterlbed areas." The plan allo calli tor sup- ervisors to Dameapro)ectteam to oversee and review the • monitoring program, hnple- ment the coosulta.Dt's recom- mendations and submit quar- terly progress reports. SIC)ervlsors also authorlud the lm1;)1ementatton of u en- vironmental water qua.Uty mon- Itoring concept recently out- Uned by the county belath de- partment and county flood con- trol district. Under the siltation proposal, suggeSted by H. G. Osborne, chief engineer of the flood con- trol district, sllt-earrylngwat- ers of San Diego Creek would be diverted lnto tow.tytnga.reu oorth of the San Joaquin Marsh wUdllfe area near UCl Irvlne. There the stlt would settle out before the Yt-ater was al- lowed to re-enter the normal • • - sttea.m course emptying lnto Newport Bay. Tbe slltaUonpoodsalsowould provide additional foraging areas for wUdUfe, Mr.Osboroe 5alr1. San Diego Creek orlgloates east or El Toro and carries waters dralning trom the south side of the santa Ana Mouotaln foottlllls past UC I and san Joa- quin Marsh Into the bray. 'Tbe county Is seeldng a million federal gr&nt to nna.oce a series of small ~~~·110. aDd debris-r etention dams mountain canyons and creeks feeding into San Diego Creek. Mr. Osborne said, hoWever, that these dams woukl ri!'duce bay siltation by only 25 per cent. • CO!It;RETE 9Y THE BUCKET arrives b'; belleopter to prepare tho s!te for th-a Braden Floch mt!m·)rial on th~J r ·JCkCJ lo front or lnsplrauon P:..t'lt, Co::ona !Ml M;;.~. Members or the crew ;J1 Charles Wuren ' SoosJ: Costa M t.>Sa e em~nt contractors are assisting below. lEnslel plw:>to.) MISDEMEANOR NOTICES ARE SENT TO LANDLORDS BACK FROM HONEY'MI)'):'i--Col. and Mrs . Hor ace S. Mu.et (prooouoced Ma-zat) ba.ve just r Pturned trom a hooeymoon ln A.f:\ea . Co!.. Mnet, an auttlor.photographer, and tus wlte, Unda, were married llist July 8, and for thel.r hcmeymoon they weot on a Los Angeles Zoo Assocla- tton-spouored tour or the wll<l couriry. Col. Matet has been oo several A!rleolO safaris and has written a new book, ''Wild Ivory," pubUshed by Nautilus Books of Nt>w Jer sey. He oow Is looking for a movie producer. The took Is a true story of his s.lfari partner, woo was !alsel} accused of breating gaine laws, and whO wen! "into the blue" to make his fortune ..with illegal ivoq·. Col. <~.nd Mrs . Mazet Uve at 125 N, Bay F t., Balboa Island. (Ensi1!11 pboto.) Copter places About 40 apartment and com-H for all these years th.at some mercl.al landlords have re. k.ind of legal prE"Cedence has celved notices of misdemeanor been established. ZERO CITY TAX Finch memorial oo their falii.U'e to pay a bust-Mr . Hirschber g said that oess Ucense tax of S50 Jor their m'.gtlt be the case if ·· althOUgh rental untts of 3 or more. he doubts it because U is a tax Ooe commer clal landlord a.od ther eby to the public beDe-sEEN FOR IRVINE An BQO.pound model of a seal am pup was ll.fted by hell- copter at the Corona del Mar beach yesterday and placed on a rock offshore to serve as a memorial for the late Braden FIDe h. The site 1s just belo-.· I.n- aptratloo Point, which wa.spre- arttcl u a pubUc Ytn put bJ commiiAltJ effort IP'U'bead.· ad "' -I t ,.., • ..,, Tbe seal aDd P'4) bad been molded JUt year by Kay Finch, Bndeo's widow, in the Finch bome oa Huel Orin. After the mold had been east In bronze, wet(hlag about 350 pounds, cooerete was poured lnaide to brlng the weight to 800 pounds aDd to provide for rreater strength and rests. tanc:e to the surge of the waves that roll onto the Corona del Mu beach. T. Duncan Stewart of Shore CUtts, ODe of many local resi- dents wbo be)ped Braden In tbe f1(bt to save lnsplra.- tloo Point, was i.D. charge of the project at the beach yes- terday a.tterooon. He arranged for Briles Hel- Icopter Service or Santa Mont. ca to un the heavy model and place it on the rocks. First the helicopter transported buckets of concrete to form a bed 1n the rocks. Then a-metal mesb was placed over tlle coo~ erete and more COiliCrete was poured on. . A s Un& was placed under the ~• and P'C), and the copter made tbe fioal utt, settlllg the model on the wet concrete. called the notices to pay the tit ·-the Law had oot been en- f our 12-inch bronze rods tied tees ''ha sty, higtl-handedaetion forced at all. "But about 400 the model flrmly to the rocks. OD. the part of the ctty." to 600 have been paying this Warren & Sons, Costa Mea Stan Hlr sehbert, city UcPnse tal tor many, ma.n}' years," he cement contractors, were oa dlreetor, said that about 40 Slld. "It has been enforced but hUd to complete this part of DOtlees of mlsdemeas:aor ha.v e oot to the tulleS1." the pro)ect. been sent to landlords artected The misdemeanor notices A formal dedication cere. PilEPARUfG the 'x'OMJt sa.lu1 ~ ~tbe beUeopter carry wbo have oot complied with the gives landlords 7 days to com- money wUl be held later, af. to the Puunorlal lite 1t tbe Cot:ma del lUI' ma1n beach original notice sent about one ply, before lepl action is taken ter a plaque tal beta placed ut T. 0\r.tet.D Sl:twUt, Ia cb&r .. of tbl pro)tct; hll be.,.r, week ago orderlDi payment of to enfor ce payment. on taspir&Uon Potnt, tiPIIJJl-Muuel SlaMs. am :JI tbt toucroUDd, T"lm Wuren or tbt $50 l:a.Ji. About 200 of those liC 1111 -IlL Tilt-. "W..-Oblso!CoAIIaL(Irllllp.pbal~) IIOII<.n ••ot--.... ,. "'t.RY t.QTO IUCCUIOII$ ject ls belnc earrtld out b1 tbt _ ..-; otbers are sUD be1nc pre· Muy Actto, 51, of 111 Vta CorOhl del War Cblmber of pared. E~-.>U, Lido Isle, died .'(o'f . U Commerce, whJcb Bradeobe_,. FAIRVIEW PARK fAVORED Ur. Hirschberg said the Law a~ HNg Hosplta\. c;~ '*il '»:-o td to touod aDd whJch htaerved requ1r1nr such paym .. nt has J U 't~ ~. 1 9~0, 10 .:t'yton, Ohlo, as president. . beeo ou t ht! books at least slncP a.rl ::.ami! 1 l O;a 1ge COilllty Bradeo was a member of the A desire to denlop tbe 300. He satd that the State Fisb 1949, He sald about 400 to 600 23 years aeo. Newport Beach City CouncU acre pucel of IIII'PlUI land & Gam-! Dept, alsotsloterestecl la.ndlor11S have bet'D payi ng the S•.arvlvor s in :luck' her bui- when the Inspiration PoiDt cam. west of F~trvtew State Hotpital 1n the laod and wants to par. taJ for man}' years, but that b:l.n-J, Ralph ; and .t s ~ster, AllJ· palp was broueftt to its sue-into a seml.aatun.l a.od tor mal ticlpate 1D tts development aDd because of a lack of help the-rey K:-ts~r of La Jolla. cesstul conclusion. Mr. a.od park area was exprested by perhaps esta.bllsh a bird sa.nc. ordinance has DOt been applied F·.lll•!r:l l strvlces will be Mld Mrs. Charles C. AdamsofRf'd-Costa Mesa residents T~~esday tuary, to all s uch rentals. at 10 1.m. t)l:hy, Ike. 2, a: lands and Corona del Mar were night duriDg an informal pub. Among the gro141s repre. Some landlords receiving the St JJ.:n .. .; Epls.·op."!' :ht~t·.~_il. tbe owners of the 4 bluff lots lie hearLDg LD a packed coun. sented at the meeting was the notices have m:lint:ained that lntermf•,l' w~!l be 1~ ?;.. : that form the spectacular vtew ell chambers. Estancia. High School Ecology stoce they have not had to pay v:~·" :~·, n ,,.• ': ?: .. :\ sUe at the foot or Narcissus Ecology minded costa Me-ct.-,, who asked that the land Ave. They )lined ln tbe cam-sans said they would rather see "be left io its completely na.- p.l.lgn to save lnsplraUoo PoiDt the 300-acre slte left "pretty tural state." by giving a purchase option to mueb in Its 111tural state." Mr. Chtpman said that a the Corooa del Mar ClYte Assn. Jack Chapman. chairman of siDgle plan will now be de- and offering to donate $27,500 the volunteer Pro )eel 80 Com-veioped and would incorporate of the cost. The C bluff lots mlttee spearbeadloc pla..rudng the ideas ezpressed by Ulepub- were then appraised atS62,500, for the area, presented 2 plans lie. leavlng $35,000 to be raised for tor the property at the hearlog. "We will try to come up with the purchase. The plans, whJcb M:. Chap. a plan 1Dcorporattng formal de- A surplus ln state matchlng m~•. said were merely oft'ered velopment Uld utlllzatlon of the fuods for waterrroat park pur-as starting po1ots tor com-oa.tunl environment to accom- cha.se provided about $17,000, m·.tnity dlscllSSioa, tncladedODe modate all segm~nts of tbe with the cooperaUonoftheNew-plan which t.ocluded a com-community," he saJd. port Beach City Couocll. Tbe munlty center Udampbitheater He suggested that perhapl: U voters approve the ineor-sources: sales and use tu, poratioo of tbe City of irvtne, cigarette tax, property transfer there .ould be oo oeed to levy tax, tra.nchist! tax, room t...x, property taxes for the nrst ooe motor vehicle license fees, aod ooe-half years ot opera-A.B.C. Uce-ose fees (1972-73 ), tlon, accordlnc to a report by trailer license tees (197Z. 73 ), OUHU Dalton. a. municipal ft. business license fees, building oaace COGSUlta.at hired b)' the permlt feea, 1nterest on s ur- IrvlDe Co. plus (for 1972~ 73), planninca.OO lllJ ftodiOp ... -.. -·· , .... ...-.~oc -revenue aDd eJPHd.lture uti-(1972-'73), plan chE'ck fees aod matn for the ftrlll z yeiu-s of sales or maps and pubUcat1oD8. operaUoo of tbe prCQOSed city. Other revenue sources wou ld M:. Dalton said thai most of loclllde vehicle code tines, gas the services tor the city from tax, ps ta x engineer ing and Jan, 1,1972, toJliJWS0,1972, AHfP funds (1972-73), and would be performed by the other agencies. county ud the Rlg1lway Patrol, Ezpend.itur es would include: because of lep.l requirements. reoeral government, S319,400; He said that r Pnnue tor the pubUc safety, S381,000; public 1971-72 year wiU be about woiks, !327,000; parks, $42,800, with e2pelld1tures a. $1 0,000; and capital tmprove- mountlnr to only $155,600 leav-me-ots (streets ) $350,000, tog a surplus of$287,200. Reve-Mr . Da lton said h(' ttises his nue lor tbe 1972-'73 year wlU fi gurE's on several assumptions: be $1,157,000, 1n addition 10 that the lev el of servlcP rt>- tbe $28 7,200, s lll'plus, provtd-quired br rPsldenls Ooes not 1D& a tota.l fund ava.llabl.lity of increase; that the population $1,444,200. E,;penditures for does oot Increase ovf'r projec- tbe same year wt U amount to tions; ttlat building projections $1,291,800, leaYing a surplus do oot increast'andlh<ollperson- of $152,400. nel tor I he nev.: city is s~. Mr. Dalton said r evenue for plemeoted b )' contractural ser- tbe city for the first 2 rears vtc-es. 'WOUld come from the following Mayor Wilson hits SCAG Ctvlc Assoc.tatioa ra.l.sed the plus a reereatto.l take. tile btufl' area could be de- bala.Dce or $18,000 to complete The otber pla..n ...Ututed a veklped into a more tormalpart Costa. Mesa Mayor Robe rt the purchase. stadium ad)lcmt to E&tulda a.rea, andthektwerareartmn.I..DC -··• M , Wilson. I.D a letter 10 Or- regional planning program:; in- volving (ederal or state Cu'Wis. lllgh school aDd more plcnl.c to the Santa A,. RiYer left .:. ~-·= .._County may«s anti super - area a.od simple open space. pretty m•ach .. tura.l except tor :,....;.-~. ri801'S, has UTc-d Utem to for . L• hi" " d • D 17 The land ls now owned by som"! "eeoloJtcal _,Ufting," ::; 1-:' ::1~1 Cf'l about the Southern Calif- • I In l Ju glng ec the state, but is .9000 to be w!Uch would lnciOOe the plant-\~ .. ~~~. \ ornla Association ot Govern- • declared surplus after ort~--log or trees IJid deve•-meot ~-.~_..~,:~ ments (SCAG) and Instead solve s·:-~G's upanded activities w.;,'Jkl be f'ina.nced br about S4 mllllon tt"o:n . 50 per cent in- crease In the state t:~r~rty transfer tax a.nd other reve:~:.~e derived from a 10 per cent tn- creJ.se in state vehicle r egis- tratloo fe-es , tideland oil reve. nues, pubUe utility taxes, and fees paid by m-=m .. er "localgov. ernments, The Corona delMar Chamber ot Commerce UDOUDCed this woe!< lbal ... plglng tor ... 1oea1 Cb.rlstmas UlfKlD.Icoatest wtU be beld Friday .,.tainc, Dee. 17. Wtnners in re&Sden. till IJid bullless doeontlll( wtu eompete ln the amual ''40 ml... of Christmas smUes" eoatest. P"' """ • -· -· • :"1 coaDt)' pta.nniog problems at the lop to make CofOIII !MI Mar ally be1Dracqulledtor Fairview of a lake. laD MRS. MARION MacFAR LAS'E, at left. scholarsh.lpchairman locallrt"eL a "bouleYU"d of U(bts." S~!;,hlHoSI>al~}~e:':r~~· th wo~~ ~na:= ,:idp:::.:a_ 6lr tbe Womeo's Council or the N'!•)Oft Harbor-Costa Mesa Mr, WUsoa proposed that Y----ers (aDd parmls too) s c-....._ e • ... ovr. m.uttts iDYo-.... morethanone are ~Dded that the Corooa land anllable b' acquls.ltloa Uoo to about 60 days after Board of Realtors, is presenttnc a ~ Cheek to Josepll local -lsdict~ be handled by tbe city -or other wblcb tbe public Will ap1n pt Kroll, dean of student acU.-tUes at Ora.nct Coast Coll•l'!· _. del Mar Cblmber's "call • r w tbroa--\&1 dlstrtetauthor-p.buc •-J .. Mr c~-mao a presentatJoo At rt.w is Mrs. Hope Gerrie, president o the omeo•s .., ~ Santa" nt-t la tcbeduled for ·--• 0 -• am tty wtth .. -.~ .... ,... ... to dissolve ..-. said. ••u the lud Is DOt ac-"Tbe neJ:t step wtU be to Ca.cll. ....v.__.,._ ~~J, ~· !!da~:u;t! quired for public ue,tt wtll go fornrd It to tne state aDd sc OLARSHIPS SET UP sucb authorities wMD 5J)eellic to Ck~·:1n be &15-5010. ~~gbe~ ~~~nb.!,':~ .. to the ::'.!!e::~=~~!:~~~ H ~t!':a~0:7 ~r::e:!; tne Bob Astoo, .,.clal eYtDts Tbe soo . acre area Uea df.,. he sald. Natioaal Leape of Cities' 7 ehiJrmu for the c•mber, bU r tctlY south ol Mtta Verde, ''Thea 1f tbe state gins pre· Tbe womea's COWlCtl of the annual scholarsh.ll> fUad ralstnc member eDYtroomental quaUty Tbe Cbt.mblr 1D'jleS mer-Mt Ju. lf u tbe datt tlr Ute tbe city's bl&'bnt-IDcome rKI-llm.IM.ry approval we will start N.-port Harbor-Costa M!!sa party l.n July, All of tbe monies stHriDc com -ll~ttee, aid tbat cblnlsudbuliDessmeatoUcbt ad memberllllp hmebeoa deolial Ue& ud adjo&As tbe dt.Kaastoaoo.hoWtofloaocetbe Board of Realtors has pre. raised at any of these special the oa.Iy pi'Odactln r.euoaot up tbe ezterJor ot tbelr baUd. meftiac at tbe Vllla SWedeD. muD1c.Jpe.ll1~ M-boM colt aeqalsttioa aad denq,meat." seated tbe fltst annual educa-e•ents wtU go towards educ:a-tbe &-yar~ldSCAG hasbealto tso.· t.s to JQ81C)h R. Kroll, Uo ll.l programs aod sebolar-act as a "deutAc boat" ora Pastor gets new PiUIP"It co:r~~~::-~kl tbep~ TRAIMIM(; EXERCISE ~ c~c::~~esT~ sh~~~;;· members or tbe == ciZr uct,.,_.~:; were drawn bJ'aYOI__.corn u. Joetpb J . CUIMUe, sea Co.D:ll pn $400, 'Wtth $300 chl{lter are: TberesaAUea.Ju erma. mlttee ol arcb.ltec:tl: from AlA of Mr. ud Mrs. IOeht.el J. alated tor the school's revoiY· Bertha, Jaot Boyd, Vlrcl* He crlttcl.led rf'COmmeDCia- Putor wtUJam Eller fa'-"-IU'}J aut,_,.,.., tMrelore A~t'!;.. ~ty ~ c..,...ue ot MO E. 1st' st., iDe k)aD tuDd and two $50 real Cleek, Dorothy Cordortl, Helea tto. of a SCAG committee lac tbt IAtblnD c•eb ol tbt bad \lelelded to ....U a letter e....,.er, c P • •c CMCa Mesa. puUe~ lA a Htate scbO..i-sb1PS. o-.e scbo· B. Oowd, Mable Fttlmorrls, Pf'OPO'dnl to mate mtmber- .U:utM", Harbor VIeW HUll, to ol r ..,_tlaD at tbe a..l *:,tb 1a 1 ludltd tptelt.J t.n.i&WIC eaerc.tee lA-lartblp wtU be presented at the Amy Glstoa, Rope Gerrie, ._, 111 tbe & COUDty bodJ mao- auwr a caU to tlllt lAtbenD • .._lal.-ry. nH came P 1°5 DC u :_e· ftllftac more t11u 1,000 mft _, ol the preseot semester, florella Harris, LeR .. H-.rJ, dttiDt'J, eq,ald Its powws aid Cbweb ol tbe Crou iD IAiaare tM taYltiatlla lloa U. l...etAn bleoloelca miiMWil, a " at Fort SWn.rt, Gl. He Ll &lid tbe other ls to be pre. Joyce Hill, Chris HoiJper, Ht:l-tD.ft. &D~ fl~~aee tt u.ro.p WOI'Id, ~ RIO.. Ho will World -a. ud Dr. Ellor dlallll .,._ lor artlllo!'ll oul.,.. "' 111o---durlAc ... latter part aoe Joy,MaryKeollbu,--Ud -u.-1• taD • bll .... dltiM wttll tbe ~ to . C el' II Ia •lA-ud a modellldU. rillaft. TM DM1;1oe bUtd at MariMCOCJIII o1 abJ 19'71. U.acfarla.De, Dokwts M<!. S.:llll .,... 1ft •••UyCOD .. llo,.,_..oflllo _,_,. ~---~pork!!!!.~-= IIUo,ea.,. Lo,_., N.C. no ~lJ IOrmed eboptO< at ~ Lols Millo<, Vlrpat& 1rVJ IOllloonpalllalemoat Dr. Ellor-pular o! 1'0 ylo---111o w ..... , C"""'ll of tbe Morrl-Velda-.., l<ay of-"of9CAG,wtlleb ... 111o L!1111orU C.....,b of lllo T LUCit LUMOI no--ofC-Mo-lt.Dt.l GIIADUt.TI ...-t "'-lliiOO of R•l steo>.rt,andJqs.at. 10 bo ..,,_,., IIIII __, ......r •Dte.l,l ..... fllOrt.b' 'nit A.-.• ... •r ~llttoeel .... att:e.IAC tM~WU Ccut(ieu'dS.•uWJ.W.U. 1:111111 Baudl bU orpalled _.,,Mr. WU...ud. -·~~~e.--..---,_, .. llo_l_ 1111,.,."' lollllllqllli .\. P1p1u. ... of lit. 1111--ntllllct><OII'&ml Sltl Q.UI TO Dt.MCI Doell lllolldiiM41ofl10 C-Clll liar 10 .. --c_.. llo.lll, 1111111-oollnJ *'"-1 lalof-._ llro. C A. ~of llh ~-to ---111o .-Tllo 0ruto C-sal Clli> -ll lllo 1111..-, ICAG ·-ryliiJiutloir.,...,Jillla. trliiOpol-111 I I,...._ l --lloloollor---t"'*l Pllco, Co*-. llu Mil 111o -llnlolpo lilt lllo WUl )Old l --·-(Iori D1 C.. -> D1o111 ldo -*J lllo :...-·II, ot .. llo:c•t--loo---wlld-=lad -Radar an loll ...... of 19'11. Wllll t111o Wodllllll11f hL Doc,'"'-.... 110 ··-................... OW.~,._ c...:-~:. 'ben= ;'~ .. en: at tM Cou1 o.td ,_.111 .. aa.1 tM _... .. " tM COlli:& M .. Ca t J C ... ••• tnt•• .. ICA.G'-'· c:,s:.-::;r .• 'Z.:r..:: ......... ._~&Un· r'~i.a_,tr.._.:;.: ~Yc-:r~c:"t:'.:! f:l.~~==~ !.:=:.=:a':ii!': ::' ,~• ... :Jk. ..... n:-: ._...: ... ,.... ._. __ ....,_._...,.,, ... c •*"' .. • .. •! .... _ .. -.. ,-,..~ ... 11 i · & ._ ..-.. -•..;ttn.CnhJC...._ .0,. Protulll wdl ID • ........ , £ .... .._ ... . llr ....... IIIIo ... Ill-~ .. , -,. '" " _.a 1 .... -.. lfOOW. o Yt--II party Ia Aloorl.sH* t--ll Mil lilt .. - -.. .......... --... ~-~ .. "' ............ ,,. ty ... Wooii-Colhp. r•&'J lo oi5Wiolllo~· -II II-.-............. '-1 ..... u, .. , •· --. - M1yor WilS')Tl satd, "These powers sought are yet another layer of ~vernment w:-.ich wou ki only tend to supplement bure~ueracy in an even more unreacha ble level. "We must :~ccept our re. s,wnstbUltles as ele<:ted of- ttclals and stq> n mnlnc away from controYerslal Issues. Let's show teadershlp at the local ~el. Let's do It our. se!Yes ratber than uotd mak- lnJ decistoo.s by pashlng them .., to a.oother layer ot pern. meot. "Go.ernment must cet dote to tbt people, n3t farther ltra)'; probl.tms are oalJ' IOlVed wiMII fOil Dow aDd aet to lblvt thoee pr-. ..,..._.. 11 t10 Pf'OI"''m Hilt e.-bo -"' lllo IIllo, .,_, .. ~--If ____ , __ tllletln]J. '' It aiiiO ........... till& -.9 00111tf1M_,...,.. .. eatu .. lttr· "':UTE"-.. -·-... < 1'8 W£201'! .,. ... ~~~ .. _ ...... ~...::_.• .... "' n 1 a. ... c .. , ..... paft ... c r __. .... 1 ..... waq.,u8•*-••••*' 1_-~= _...PAllA ..tty, • n....,.. s...e.M c-, ..... 01 C.... ....... Calif. • o4Jo ..... o4 Ta H&lfWT IWI-E~N ... .,_.,r • .,.... ... ., .... ._ It, IJ51, I• ,....__ Co.t ,for 1M Co•t of .,_.._ ..11 h ....... -.or i• ...,ul8111 to -loee ...... "' ... . <II. ~tlf " ~ ARVO e. H~APA, owner Mid publisher of the Ensltn "LET~ STANO UP FOR AMERICA!" ITIIAHIHT TAUC TOM ANDERSON UMIOICIZID AGIICUL1UII IQUALS HIGH POOD PIICIS -............ ---¥ r& ...., .., Illllll_.llla,.,.Parlt'll, 101111 ............... -~~~~~ • .....,. llllltofodlllll•wlllba- -ollllt--111 .. -10 pr-Iorio I 1111 AIMI'icu ~ It rw, u wU u _.a •II llatt b1H ._. 111e1r ••-. ··Nt OOIDiblduatiDr.Me· ~::::-=~~~:.::=,~~=:::~~~~: .. ----··.....,.to...., -.. 1 --•• lakr ,... -· 1111 plua, oa t11o Amwtcu 1101 ot Ullt -. oa ~ =~:; -· .a ..,,... far, rar abof.e tar.. dUtut 1't.tPll. ._. COD· befare· tMy ••• ... to take 1Dtin: Be ActUolly, .. Ot)'body -In • lftd -· ---tile,.-ooltlcam. llatloo II 1be !root-· Ptr· lilt lllud ol r..-. ttrib. AU .. in Ute worttt1 the uUona wllklt ••port term ,._.. ol tbe Jtu, llleodo&Dt:bt blpl tbt7 ltSd iot recWa"aUYe. waned ~l.l bor;' tbtu:=t tMY ~et il uaWiy iott befoN producta to ut. ...._f'Ol'td to eeu.t tbe -.on Tbe thoucht comes u.t 11 tbt uwe batt come a.ct it's made. Someti.mea ttrit.. For la .. nct. lll• aa. .. z ollda radio adeece to ra.itlt aaUOD ehooaes to 11oeor tH bOar lD Amertcaa hi*lr1· mean that the consumer PIYf contrlel wkb lbe eapltuJetJna tht tam of $1 mtiUoa to tate ''lhiii:Dowo Soldier," Wboet We C.W. ll tbt alt place ta ~ more ror aoock and th• Inter ttan.t Co . cabs for a care ot blmdrta ol orphau 1D wu tJI)fDded oo b'llp eoU. wor)d tbl.t Pre81dtat H aovernment coU•ctJ leu in pieco-wolll nt• or ~~obout 40 (llatut 1aDdl u well q fMirt that aleo It 11 PfOIItl' U.t we should YlaJt." IIOd boOl1tt tuea. cenll per cartoa of .. ltuce, at bomt. H11 pii.J.IUitbrcplepro-should take care ot tbt or-He offend to a tbt Strlbs by public employca Won that, th•solna rat• wu cram at.o IDclueles ~lor pbaDI ot the "aakDowall.tber.t" wtdcb ec.talnl thtblM.ol'yol and striltu lnvoiYina perilhlble 31 cents. The ,.._... wMt't boepHaUutioft Ia leper eol-wbo eoa.summatld the lastrltu CtllDtte Red Guard, aid ftk.ll crops are par licularly PlY for pktcn at 31 cenu is oalts aDd oo cSoet Will IAI:Iude 11 order to perpetuate tiM race. ln a aeries of 85 pea '~":!t inexcuable. arowad 1176. The ••••ae rate PlOriikiD tot Ute ehlpii.J.u tn Tbt CoasenaUYe Coroer prtlftll .. • =~:olaHoa." Americans who are weary of retr•t am defeat and humi lla- Uoo l)r our oatlon can get encourapmeot and lospiratton from read.lD.g the lead article to the December Issue of American OplDJoo magazine. Here are u cerpts from tllata.rtlcle, written by George C. Wallace, goveroor of Alabama, wbo was the Amerlcao Independent Party candidate for president to 1968: • • • • "WHAT f BELIEVE" MARINE PVT. Robert J. Ed· wards, soa of Mr. ~od Mrs. Robert EdWards Jr. of212 36th St., West Newport, has gradu. ated from recruit trllinlng at the Marine Corps Recr uU De- pot, San Diego. He attended Orange Coast College. Wore beina: unionized and per how-is 14.10. tbt Kor•a Army, J•ta a10 becaa to proride tor CbJDeN ea lbtiUoM 110 Manized, Calif omit w11 Exotbltaat ..,.. are only Tbe &DOU&I IIIPMI ._, been oae orpbaa. a yeu. Tbe oumber to all no Hod eoalt peyina the hiah«t .... in part or the l)ktun. Thee are pared to tbe problem of maiD-waa lDcreued ~ U rtacbed tbe 20th ~~~~~{= qricullure. If Marxill Chl.ez union blrlna bells wbere ta1niDc orpba•cn: 1D Korea, 1 total of f. shJlllii\ tbto, the Hour, Cot.....,.. .......... , · • • succeeds in "orp.nizina;" aU of workeu Jet their work ud tllewllere to lbe Fq Eut, yearly coM bal rlaea. to $15 a In bls broadc:Ut TIIUtJ. American apiculture as he did alllpmentl. The worker may • c:h 181 mornlor. be spott from California , tbouundl of beforcedtomowabout,afew L H to Ed tor ID orpbiDapbelowtheD.M.Z. farmers will to broke and food days bere and I few dayslhere. e e rs I •w bl. btea ~ .... .,. n, not tbo omployH, Uoe, aDd related:' e 't'e prices will triple. The preaent uoc: .. IAI.... -~...... ud •--... ;.. full oont-l A worker U o111 be ....._.. Ylt--.., compro .. ..._. Califof!'ia wqe ICIOA, taJtes, .. ... ..... •·ACCOUNTABJLlTY tor pub c ce, cu. ...,...... retrealklg for a loCII time. U In our nearly two hundred years as a nation, we Americans ban wtthstood many crises. But at oo time in the past bas the Ullited States been so decisively challenged both at borne and abroad. 11 has becom e Increasingly obvtousdurlngthepast three years that our national leaders have let us down. Their f:atlure to resist effectively th e Communist onslaught from abroad, aDd thelr wholesale promotion ot socialism at home, have heralded a retreat from greatness of which all Americans should be truly ashamed, Yet at precisely the time when good citizens should be r ising angry, many appear to be In a state of narcosis. The primar y reason for this Is that the Incumbent President brought to otfice with him a reputation as an arch foe of Communism abr oad and of the Welfare State at home ... The prob lem Is tha t millions of Am!ricans Who would be highly agitated U Mr , Humphr ey ... ·ere doing what Mr. Nixon is doing are telling each other tlla t noth ing can be very wrong bec2use the "Liberals'' aren't ho lding the reins of state. Ir you t hink that I've got news for you: Richard Nizon ran on my platfor m ~nd Is runnin~ the country on Hubert Humphrey 's ... It seems to me that th~ ·•LJber als" of the media need a bath l n lye soap. They not onl~· concoct every possible alibi to tustif)· Mr, Nixon's ko.,.,·towlog to the Maoist thugs whO have murder ed nearly 64 mllllon Chlnt>se, but they trumpet that enry crook, punk, :s.nd thug in the streets her e at home Is a victim of an oppressive society In general and of the police to particular. What society to all the 'A'Orld Is less "oppressive" than ours'' Not one. And because we are so fr ee, America's policemen are the thJn blue line be t.,reen anarchy and the survival of our Christian civilization. Our local po lice deserve our tota l s upport. No law -abiding cit izen has anything to fear from our pollee officers. But If }'ou are a law violator you not only hav e something to tear, you should have! ... A basic purpose or government is to protect the Ufe and property or Its citizens. No nation can lon g endure il, for any r eason the go vernment ceases to serve the purpose for which it wa s' created. Certain!)· the S141reme Court Is the wor st oUender in substituting sociology for justice. Because of this, millions of Amer icans, trapped in our urban centers and unable to escape to the suburbs aDd countryside, are regularly made victims of the thugs, punks, and crtmina.ls who are allowed to roam free ... "-W!'rl·ftt he EstlbHshm•?nt's pointy -head@'<~ pseudo-Intellectuals aDd'lta.rvard half-bakes promote the coddling of criminals, they also prescribe an ever -larger dole for able persons unwilling to get off their t:.t and go to work. Any taxi driver can tell you that It you pay people not to work, more and mor e people are going to decide not to wor k ... Contrar )' to his campaign prom ises, our President is mean- while trying to put 24 mlllion people on a permanent dole through a guaranteed annual income program. He postponed the plot when It became obvious that Congress was for the moment unw illing to swaUow II, but he sa.}'s he means to get those extra 24 m1\llon on the wel!ar e rolls one \\'aY or another . And you koow he'll try! ... I am oot against providing charily to the truly needy ; the aged, widows, the blind, and the handicapped. But the amount of money going to people In these categories Is a miniscule part of total we lfare spending, r believe In help for the needy, not for the laZ)' and the greedy ... But, frankly, I do oot belleve llla l the federal government should be in the welfare business. When !t is, It must Inevitably turn elections Into vote-buyln~ cont ests . U charity and relief are llandled at the local level, citizens can better keep their eyes peeled for cor ruption, and po liticians who engage in vote- buying schemes will get their comeuppance whe n buslness locates in other ar eas. A federal welfare system only puts the heat on the producers, the business and working people, to provide gravy for loafers .. , U we are to solve tht> nation's tremendous welfare problem, we must unwind the mess from the lop down, keeping the federal government from tur nin g we lfare Into the biggest boondoggle in history, and turning it back to the stales and private charities. The gover nment must, ho11·ever, ma ke good on Its Social Security pens ions .. , Those who have paid Into the system must DOt be made to su!fer. In my view, howe ver,ltls lime that '·U berals" demagogues stopped usinG' Socla!Securttyasapolltlcalfootball. rr poUIIcians sincer ely want to help the elder ly they will stop deficit spenr:ltng, the cause of the Inflation which llas deprived our elder ly citizens of the purcha sing power of their small savings, r esu lted In the taxing away of their homes, and thrown so many of them on the unmercifu l hooks of government On Nov. 8 the House of Rep- resentil.tlves at long last had an opportunity to vote on a con- stitutiona l amendme nt to legal- Ize prayer tn pubUc schools-- an Issue which had been kept from them for seven long year s primarily by the oppostt ton of the chairman of the Judiclary (.qmmtttee. Br ought lO the House noor by the ver y unusual m~thod of a "dischar ge peti- tion" removing It from the Judiciar y Committee, the amelldment r eceived a majority ')f vo tes, but rell 28 short of obtaining the required two- thirds. The executioners of school praye r ~~o·ere men who claim to speak for the churches of America --a fa ct thai may seem lncr(I(Jib le to most Americans, but which Is llldlsputabl)' true . They put on what \\'aS, in the words of one of my colleague", ··one of the best orchestrated lobby jobs I'H• evt>r seen" ·- il..g-.. inst prayer In schools. I am descr ibing what hap. pened at -some length to an article to be published In a nationally circulated pub Uca. tlon; wlthtn the confines of this oewslelter , thert> is space only br iefly to summarize the points needed to cut thr ough the swirl- Ing fog of specious ar guments put up by opponents of this measur e: (1 ) Vohmtar y prayer in schoo ls Is out -lawed under present court decisions (for example, State Boa rd of Ed uca- tion v. tlle Boord of Education of Nt>t cong, 270 A Zd. 41 2, by the Supreme Court of the state of New Jer sey, which the U.S. Supreme Cour t r efused to hear on aweal, thereby In effect il.ftirming It ·-also a parallel cast> in Massachusetts). (2)The word "oondenomtnational'' in the amendment, describing the kind of prayer that It would <~llo.-, to which many had ob - jected as undeftna ble, was elim- inated on the House F'loor and "Voluntary" substituted --y~t two fewer Congressmen voted for the amendment aft er tne cllange than before; obvious ly tnls was not their real objec- tion to the measure. (3) If to say a prayer in school violates charity. . . The death knell of I he la st so-Industrialists Uke our attitude towar d local government and called coastline protection bills toward the Free Enterprise system. Thlsattltude towardscom-to the Legis latur e was sounded peUti ve private enterprise could bring prosperity and tuu em- r ecently, n would have clamped ployment to all Am•!rlca II the man In the White House wou ld state aod regkmal con trols over practice wha t he pr eaches. Private enterprise is the only real most of tM state's l,100-m1Je war on poverty which has ever been fought wtth any success .•• As a result of the growin g power of Washington, we have c~~· tbe environmentaUsts already become a &Overnmenl-ffoll'inl people Instead of a God-who pn birth to the measure fearing people. For decades now, poUUclans h:u e encouraged and slCIP()rted It whole-heart- us to look to government for strength instead of to OW' God . It edly during the sessloa say they Is no accident that where the state becomes all-powerful, faith may take It to the people vla to Ct\rlst ts no longer carried Uke a banner by Chrl.sUan the lnJUatlYe processes. This, .tOidiers, workers, mothers, aDd busloessmen. I han accepted of course, Js thelr right. Christ as my personal SaYlor, and tbatlsooe Important reason This btu wtll protlably end -· wily 1 have pledged my llfe to opposlng tyranny Where•er I until aut sesl1on ... apuadeof f1nd u. So long as God gives me the strength, I shall continue such lepslation that prOYidtd to do 10. · • the Leetsblturt wtth tbe brlttle-1 haYe fought for this country, and I am still ftghtlng for U. cround for the proteeUoa of I han travelled America from Aurusta to San Diego, and from ptlnte property Ml&mt to Seattle. I have met Americus trom nery seclloo, certainty, there aredemaad8 from all wrIts ofllfe, from allstrataof!loclety. lloYe the real, tor more ~rkl, more rtcrea- dtceot, patriotic, and haJ'd-worklag peop'-1t'b0 are Amer ica, uoo ueu, more pd>Uc l)e&cb - 1 am 1n lon wltn this couatry. I loYt Ill traditions and Us es. Such DHdl art pr..-tiJ bttltaat. AAd J mean to labor topreMt'•ethtm from tho11 no beiDc tatta can of thr~ w0111d destroy the t'.ibrle or trHdom tither by dHlp or from boDd MODIY f'Ottd b1 tbe people liiDOctat er.ror. • • to 1964. And DOW mat tbMI CONOIIDIM*N JOHN G. SCHMITZ Col;lomio 35th Dillricd may be shifted from ofte crop Editor ot tbe Enalp, u suftlcleot effort Is made to Is wicked to rliD off and ... ,. to another, one area to Tbe behaviorists and some ftod them. Perhaps the most tbe Uttle Dl.lioDB to face the another, one crew to snocher, ou•~~lng official aeUoa n~- educators theorlz.e that"aome-~ communists. LetUituaver&au-s whelher he like~ it or not. Pre~denl Nl'"'""' has tate thus :7 Urnes II ls necessary to create M --aod meeUnp, aod sUr the PlO-W h • t h a P P e n • t o a prOblem In order to cure a tar 1D bls admlntJtraUoo is bJs pte ..... If Geoeral MacArtlnar •r ower-provided family Hlee"-o of coostrucUve sin--Problem " uu • had been permitted to carry housino? It aoa to pot. • cere and honorable oomloees You bave probably ootlced,lo out his plana, we could ban What happens to the union the news media, the present and potential oomlnees to be-delooled the enem", aad we contract if tlte farm owner sells co e S~reme Court members 1 hil land? The contract aoes furor coocernJnc the I.Q. aDd m th k1Dd 1 w~ would not bt tacinc the sllua.. wilh the land. The buyer m~a~t reading test scores of CalU-!:: :!ttoS: their 0CC:1eniJDder Uo.a that confronts us toclly. accepl the union contract. ornia school ch.tldren. These llr · from special interest We should ha.ve been able to par 1 0 f mana,emen 1 statistics have not changed ap-e 5 Who exert pressure 011 baYe nlted off tbe battle ne~ the separation of church and (foumen) are also placed preelably for several? years. ~:'f.uctaJ branch of pero-asthegreatestoatlononeartb. s tate, as many have charged, undt:r the union contract. Wby tbe biC hassle now . I han meat It Is reasoaable to be-Another bi'Oideuter added then did we ban a union of Growen -iote the riaht to DOt heard any of the educators lleve' that construetlooiats hlel to the COilllapUoa tbat church and state with all Its determine which pesticides ue 1t1rrtnr to defendanyooe.Could would make their decisions on the natloo today faces Kathryn heralded abuses, through all used , and the spray schedule be they are waJUog for parents constitutional Issues according KIDlmaa, wbo spoke over the those years up to 1962 wheo uxd. Who iotes if the crop is to scream for tbat little pub-to the uS onsUtutloa Tbeir television on SUDday motnlae, school children said a prayer lost because or failuu to treat Uciled, state mandated, na. d lsio ' ' c 1 11 Ignis mat described the prtseat as beiDc every morning •• us~ally the the crop properly~ The power, tJonalsyslem, namely Account-.::s w:!1cf" ~ v be rdetermtned "before the groat trlbtllaUoo," Lord's Prayer --wUh almost naturally ! abtllty or P.P.B.S. (Planning b tn lal doctrl em-· btu added these comlortlbr no one objecllng, until the Su-Conpess may ~u a !arm PrOJfiJllmlor Budr«Jac Sys-~led e 10SO.:, An Amert:O dl-words: ''God Is ant wiiUng that preme Court stopped them? , labor law this year. What kind tern) --''a bureaucratically Ut by the anyooe should perish." The case against tlle prayer of law~ It's no lonpr jure a administered assembly Une in-lemma," a book wr en In a leading editorial, the amendment collapses so com-pro blem of arapu and tended to produce a standard-Swedish soc iologist, G~ santa Ana Register described pletely under any reasonable California . lt 'a now your 1sed product ftom Wldlfferenti-Myrdal. A ruse of Ib is k1 15 "Tynnny's timetable,•· which II '"·tIll h dloescana problem. It's now a question ated materials." beoeath the dlgnttyaodintegrlty would bring about •·great trl-:;:u c~~c i:Ston st~ many ';,1 whether American apiculture Tbls fascist system Is the ot such a select body of men, bulaUon.'' It stated: "A time those In national church orft ces is put into a atraitjacket by the big educational cure-all, re-Tht> pr~std,ent ~~:e~ves hi a table for the complete replace. who claim to speak in the name unionisu . plete with computer data banks. great dea 0 cr or s meat of American freedom by of the faithful have simply de-California , before the Fiscal accountability ls anafter perseverance, roo :gm:~ "' dictatorship, can be dla· clded that they do not want to unioniution, had the hichest thought. Everyone's privacy and forest~t ntta~la ~f f ~trammed with reasooable ac- take up the cause of allowing waae• and mort benefit• of any w111 be Invaded via the school selections. egre Y, s e-curacy, We do not muo a children In pubU c schOols to state. Chavez first spent most room. All sorts of tests and forts have been met with ~· camouflaged dictatorship, but pray together. Tht>ir recent or tUs time intlmidatinJ farm questionnaires tor your child. assmeot and !lave been ham-an open brue.a establishment record, statements and actions wo rk en i nto joinina the ren. Teachers are attendJng ~~r:r:roo~c~ u~::r'::,~n :!~ of rule by supreme edict. indicate tha t by and large they Chavez OrpnitinJ Committee. work shops 1n operant coodi-tlves ch and petty poUt!-'·Mr. Nixon alreadyhasfeu-h~ve become so concerned with But the autsy farm worlr.eu tlontng, love, learning lnter-ctaM in e::e Senate who are lessly shown tbat the Amerle&.D secular a.nc1 poUtlcal goals as to were not ea sily bluffed. Eiaht veoUon aDd behavior modiftca-interested ln pint.og tbe votes president may dlsrep..rd the forget, or even to be emb&r-hundred or lhem ran a paJe ad tlo!; ... ., U Y1our ~~hl1 ld doelss ':! of uoqual1tled, semi-llUtera.te tradiUoos of hls party, aod hl.l rassed by, tbe purpose for wblel iD detaance or Chavez, and co..._ m o -=-e P a and indtfterent poUHcal zorn-country. He may r4!P'dale b1a they are supposed to edst: to siped their names. school per.soone1objectlves, his bles who teep the quacks in promt~s. and by neclltiYt or- acknowledp: aDd sern God'...-w b a t c a u s e d 1 h e attitudes aDd beba.Ylor '1"111 be m det replace the fretdoln b1 Even an apostle or atheist, capitutat1on? The same thin& cbang!d, The new chaore tools 0 ce. Arthur McQuern cootrol boards wboae rMIDberl wno Is also an booest man, which has liven uniona a wtU be tbe old much used sen-240 Magoolia St. received DOl a s1ngle nM:e from mfgtlt well be disturbed by this stranatebold on most or sltlvlty tralnJ.ne, pschodrama, Costa Mesa Amerlcao ta.Jpayers,Andhehl.s spectacle of churches Untng up America's laf'le corporations. role playing, etc. AU children proved that It can be doDt wltlll aga inst prayer. Bia bu.•in,.ssmen lack JUtl . And SJstematlcally will exhibit the IRVINE co. IS HOHO~ED scarcely a whimper from the Bot th e t:lct Is that rew · if as you miaht upect, 10me same behavior and have the For the first time In Us 40 _ people. any churches nave a system bankl aot panicky about their same moral values. They wtu year history, the Orange County "There you have Jt. Thetlmt wher eby the memb.:!rs ar e collateral and wheedled some become managed or controlled Historical Society has hOoored. in this schedule ta appro'd- polled or consulted 1n aoy way of their shaky borrowers into members of society --at ta.x-a commercial organi1.ation __ mate If 12 years. The date wtU befor e church bureaucrats ca pituhtina. The workers payers• eJ:Pe.Dse and without be 1984 ,, 1 d • tn led the Irvine Company. · speaking lo their name lake weren't evt:n consu te . parents ow gt!. The Soctety's top commerci.J.l In the campalp oi197Z, the stands on pu blic Issues such as Jack Pickett, edit or of Th~ Do you want your child to award was presented to Irvine Conservative Coroet hopefUlly this a mendment. Moresurprts-Ct~lifornkl Fttrmer , who does become a programmed robot or for marldng nistorlcal land-wtu add 1 "whimper" or two, ing to many the usual practice baY e JUt s, reported th.at be a FREE-thinking INDIVID-marks on th e ranch, opening the and by formulatinc ''The }urll- is not to co~sult the whOle body , 'Trained crews in 42 UAL? Ask about P.P.B.S. Write ranch forpubllc toursandmain-prudence tor survival " will or priests or minister s either' important Eastern markets set yoor legislators. I have and talnlng an IntormaUon Center, outllDe a pro1fam for r~storiDr or all the bishops in those up a phone bombardment of am still sllaklng wtth tear and which gives blstorlcallnlorma-constitutional pernment Ia churches which have them. food brokers, so no ot~er anger· ttoo 00 the area to tbe publlc. America. phone a lb could come an . Mrs. Wm , J. Miller Inlne has also engaged Arc-Kathryn Kuhlman concluded Many peoplt> lull their con- scit'llees on th.ls Issue by saying that a class prayer lo seDool means llUle one way or the other, Tbey are wro.ag. Tttere Is a tuodamental difference be- tween a sc.hool system whi ch acknowledges God and one whi ch forbids aU mention of Him . Schools where prayer Is pro- hibited han lD effect estab- Ushed secular humanism or agnosticism, lf not atheism, as their reUgfon. They told them. over and over Santa Ana heolopcal Research In-:. to co-her messace Suodl.y morntoc t~ handle n.othtna but papcs • SALARY INITIATIVE ordinate e:q.'llotatiOD acti"ritles with the words: "The respon- With lhe un ,on label ~n the~. Editor of the Ensign, of persons wanting to d? seten-slblllty is yours.'' lodeed It ta. Food waa destroyed m chain Do -u tell your employer tlllc r esearcll on Us property. yours and mi.De. stores , and produce manr.p:rs J" we re penonaUy threatened bow much money he bas to pay with veiled threats by aoon you? Did you tell him early squads. this Jelll' that you were takJ.nr "Governor Ronald Reapn a 201 sala.ty lncr-.se or thU PARENT REPLACEMENT showeCt both couraae and you were going to raise your By Special Correspondent DOmteal amouats ol the tax- .- .. account to a tax tree The AmerlcanLe"""'n,Post2, payers• money, thus tnereut.or statesmanship by otrerinJ to • __.. set up a syrcem whereby the 7 d.iy a week $30? In Tacoma, Wash., has written the oatlonal ecooomlc problem worktn and the u.niom could This 1s what your employees, a resolution against the pro-a.Dd causing cfeater intlaUo~ hold rree election• tupervisc:d our Jecislators,havedooe. They· posed federal legislation coo-and by the State Conci.J..ia;tion uk you to tighten your belts cerning the chtkt development "5. Whereas, there Is an in- Service. Bu.t Chavez backed wbllt they loosen their's ootcb programs. There are over 100 sutftclent oumber or q .. Wled away rrom that Gne in 1 buny. by ootchl bills coming 14> on this topic, aDd tra1ned periODhel totmpJe., He haa Jiven up all hope or Auembl)'man Floyd Wate-and IP'~S of service orp.alu. meot the prorrams. aod seUinJ hi!l packaae to the farm tle)d bas lf't'eD ua the oppor-tloa.s are urcSor Clthelll to ''8, WMreu, theM pro- private property ·• the rlgflt of worker. He mates fatter tu.atty to do somethlDC about write Prestdeat NUOII to Yeto crams are lD fact experlmtDta.l private property owners to use . h tbla tta.craot .spending of our a.U chUd den)opmet btU. and use childrtrl 1n part, or ta their land as they see ftt. proan• by inlimidatma 1 c m.-.-w, His tnltlaUve, to-~ ao wlllch may be tortbcom1ng. ·total (lllroup pilot Proc:nma). lfOWer, broker, banter, chain --r 1 ...... In some couotries, the state amaadmeDt oo tM ballot next Tbe contronrsy Is P'O'Jtar as bumao 1'11611. pip, aad takes a man's la.Dd, U the. state sto~;.e~~~ett wrote : "TMre 11 J8U, wtU aUow you to vote oa at a rapid pace. Rep, Joba. '• 7, Wbereu, tbeet pro- wants lt. But we think and do kJislation that ooukl have wMtber our lelf.,alltors• sal-AAbroot (R-Ob.lo) bas breeD crama will "CCPI&.at all otW tblngs differently in this coun-•'t'ed us, but lhtre wasn't &ritl sbould be coatrolled tty a Quoted u sa)'lor: "School bus-alltbtw'lty, (tbt putata, tbt try. People are ct•en the right eoOUJh political auts in 'f'Ote ot Ute people. 1111 didD'I pt tb1s much ac-eb~rcb, tchool, a.ad tbt law till• to own property, a..Dd to have Washinaton to buct I be uniont U we doa.'t pt th1a: oo tbe tloo. CoaHJ'YaUtes are IIDI.Unr toreemeot ateDCIH) alld exclusl•e possessloo lad the in an deetion year. Goftt'DOr 11a11ot Ddt Jtll' beealllt of tbe OD tbia 11 Drftr before." "I. Wbtreu, thtllt pro- right to dispose of it. This ls Ronald Re.apn trW, on the laet ot. tbe reqalred DOmbtt ot Kot OQly tbeAmft'lcao Ltcioa cn..m• wUJ destroy tbt ra•IIJ the lDeeoUn tor productivUy. stale lnel, ror 1 condliation .......... our leclalatorl wW 11 urpd to joiltowtthar_,q_ aU aod PI'OmOtt a 'DtW .,.. Tbe coocept of prtnteproperty bill but wu politically be able to J,octclliJ ucl tnt~-lkHl. bat U1 orpi!IJatloD tMt cJety• tblt 11 chtrlmtllt&l &1111 Is the bulwark or tbe capital-smothered. Senltor o.orp flll7 ay tbat tbt people doll t fHls the rlpta ol tbeiJU'tDtl eoatnry to c. A..-&eu tstJe system, aDd it worta. Murphy tried, oa tlle natioMI C4ft W'betbet tb1J n..IM tttetr ._.., thtU cbUdrta lhoUI be Clltl'tiiUa.a.JUOeo cc.etpta .- A Jaw,er~eo~ of m1Dt, kftl' bu.l co.cr-. treebU.a Oft alariHI proted•d &II1Ait tbt PfGPOIId wldeb W. auo. wu ~: -.. tr,polaledoatmycoocl!ll In ioor of--labor, 0. ONE ud~ll'LAST !ar-r-blocltclalatloo. "Wtllltrtlort-: 1.1 DOt &beolultt. He ay1 the c.uiiOd the bUI to be' tnaried. Clllaet 1.1: bert ltOWl An yoa FotJowllc Ia t:ht tHOiutioa '"&. All .... aauo. Ud g .. slate hu lilt rlpt to rtniOYa n.. admbllotntlo• pn-1 trllllac lo llh't •111111-ol "-' Ltlloo Poet t!: - .10mt or au ol. tbt tt&tU we bill that _,..t ... .,.. b8d a ._ 110 pat til .. 01 tbt bllkM "1. ftereu, tilt bUll lor PHdlla"U bt ._.. o. •n to Ja..Dd. Tld.s It oct. ~ha.nu, but they tad::-' th• MJI ,.,. by ptUar «<pttlrH tbe ..,._ npileemeat JII'O-~.:.'I:'::..--.~':,: doDe by tbt It&t. to &cqlirt, coun.. to try .. d put it • a ,.Utto.? TbtD wrte1 to cw IJ"UD, • mai.DIJ tilt oompre•-.a c,.rmtalft). ._....,. lllldtrlorctdaltUMCtllll'f, thro..P." • ea11 ,_. CD111tJ c•tlldut •• eb&W dtttlapmeat, dt.y .. .::·~1 t"'IIIIC•triU.: tht lud to balld a lalctrnY, or eo,yr~p1 Tbt AIMrian W•y IDr ..... ol tbt ,...... cue, ud cld.ld a.dtoc:aq, -.p ol tad&J, (t.r. .a 1 t •uo., la tbe caM of a ~. a Feehlfta t'97t ~ fcw ~ "Walle6eld tbt &IU'tiU' God-c:tt• r1CIU 11 "1tit)' ~ .....,. e..,.t -or """"" lot. 1111r7 Ill<·--ra. ud 1111 -· -117 1o ) Bit -on IIIIo ud 1111· -·" T01 DO-~-· -~ _.,uddlrot;jlllttr -.Me, '-.. ,4, tn1C...UtltlaMbaftrtltrk--.... -.a.~COIIIIO. C ...... MdUtllll··--··c. n. D 5 ..... ., tloM oa ada, 'l'lley •1 a.t • ... _--.... Mra. M YOWl c ,.,_,, 111., Ud a--. ldll ea. ud ....,.. pmato ,._11 cu bo IUoo wldcll" ~-:: ,_ ~ IU h t I ~ ''1. --. -... -!':OJ_..,... D t1 ,.., It tarl*ble .. ...,._.JIIICOia· wn. llld ..,..._ .... uato-....._a.ar-._. ........ 1 an •• .. --Jr•rm.w-...... p•nr"cs world.. ri&Miol .. t1I&M ,..__ .,._ ... IIIII £II 1121" AIIPIII...,,.,.oiiMt.... na.. ...W 6ly .so hinl, • CCWIRIX:n:ll8Ji 1111 .... o1 1i11t 101011 ..... ,......._ 11 ltUIIII.._ol- r btllefe tbtt peromenl IO'f'trDI best wtdcb IO"H.I ••• IIIDda bi.Yt ..... -~ ud U.t -tOTer tile -lo Will have tbttr poramoot do 11 opoa1 LDOibtr --Ill< bttt cloDe at tblt ltytl eloetlt to tbe people. I meu to delead $no 'mnllo. mort wW bt COD· "'1 -1 ..,01001 hor _,.loo • .,._ ol wtllcJ>IItlle -od 00 -yoar•o llollot. -~ C•me~~t C-ey.l m-to tabor at boiDJ TIILIIJPO ot n-~~e 11w1111 lilt -c-., ud tile -cl-. IIIII I CU bo. Alld I we r-to II lilt "AalorlcU ... lolrJ to lln't myeoulllrywtlll:u --.....ct P*'laC:I.am. •*1·'' U _., ot• dotaal ·II-ot•-~ For Amtrlea • 11o1 00 will> lqlllalloa llal- we eu-. A...See .. nlrlll: fJtom t1etDrf.. . IU eo UN ca~•IM prataeU• e.N JINirtd IPit ....... lord .... _,~. tWI laaJrtf .. I"'Sit .. d'lllfMIIJT. ¢1 ..... 11ee., udiOIIIIJtelftllll..-e-. ....... ~ 1.-llild aMo ... ~srtaiP!w-..olaud ,,..., t11•1'1a. M 1 ,.._ Jib* £11CIMIJ, Jill:· a I IE .... f-......... o/1111: Ill#&. I I I 0 taa II .. "I, .......... -en-~ 1111 .. tsul p lllllllt -.,. ..... Wt -~~~~~If ' • fall,~ II --1110 -· 'ft -aU ....... ..._ ..._ Ull .. l:lr a •a td ,.,. .. end 'red c1w111 IMI: IIJJIR. A--llollll-olhlrot...,. ..... uMIIIIIt ~IHIIIo* .. ••-.... ., .. -...~-.llnft ........... 'le'llt• we•,... •• ''* ... .... ._, ......... , ~ ..... Mil -to ••IL 11o ~ ._. 10 .. -=·~-~ -Ill,'"':..-UJJ ' n, 1 It ..... ~ .!.£!•• .. If-..,....,. ... =.. _.1111 ._.......c ,_.._ .._._.. ......... ¢71 ~··••r'ssa... ,. r•r ..... ,_ •·::;. ,._;_ -. :-'·IMII! ":. •:..: .,_.._,.,. C ••': .,.,._ -~-JI'CI&tr•••ll •-..., :.c•..__ ,.._ .... ,._. .......... ,.,un1stMI JIJIIIIWD. (IJ.Jalla6:3NJ.) ,_...., ___ tllol• n •If-r tn,...~ I NEWPORT HARBOR BISIQI 1\IURSOAY, DEC. 1, 1971 CXl lll!IA DEL liAR, CAUF. Think about Gifts" l ~hink . ' WESTCLIFF PLAZA NEWPORTERlNN JANA GRANZELLA and her escort, Robert Honrd Crofts, ar e pictured at the Nov. 26 dinner party that preceded the NaHor:~al Charity League's debutante ball. ONE DEC. MEETING LAGUNA ART SHOWN "fhe ~CI.l of educ.IUoa ofrf:be The Nu~ Belich etty a'rts Newport-Mesa unitled school commtH.ee is pnst11tinc an ex- district wnt hold onlyoneregu-hibll of pa1ntlngs by '3't.atuna lar roo~ling this month --at artists. The show may be seen 1;30 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 14, In during regular business hours the Costa Mesa High School In the City Hall Gallery w:1 L)·ceum. The r egular Dec. 7and will remain until Jan. 3. The 21 meetlngs have been cancel-•rUsts are Vincent Farrell, R•Y J .. cob and Maq· Ella War- ren. _fl~una.7~cff~ Promises To Pay You A Guaranteed In come On Certificate Accounts At Their Highest Interest Rates In 36 Years! Right now, while current high inten!St r11tes prevail, select the certificate account that best suits your needs! S tart making the most of your money at Orange County's largest, first and strongest independent Federal ... where your personal welcome is warm, your financial security is sure. and your earning growth is g uarnnteed for the fuJI tenn of your account. $500 minimum ,_,...., .... 11000 minimum •••o,_,.. JNT,EREST ON ALL AC(X)UNTS IS CO MPOUNDED DAILY. PAID QUARTERLY • 90 day int.ernl forfeiture tor e~~rly withdrt~wal AND LOAN AS IOCIATION lA• CUMWll ··~IICM --~~~­.... ,. I 'J, .tan ,...,._.: ·IMI MOM OffiCI ---..__, __ _ ., ........ : ... 7MI AMONG THE DEBtrrANTES •Do made tbelr boW to society at tbe Nov. 21 taU spoll80red by the Newport Chapter of the NaUooal C harlty League were these Harbor Area young ladles: s eated, left to right, Pamela Ptmiwal CoOO'Ier, Joyce Louise Caldwell and Patric ia Ann Tucker; standing, ADDe Aileen Lawrence, Jamie Lou Styli, C:uol Chapman COIUlally, Jana. Granzella, Deborah Elaine Meany and Mary Loraloe Steen. (Turvtlle Studio photo.) ENJOYING the pre·ball dinoer party, held <lt the Dover ShOres hOme of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Linden Caldwell u e Muy Loraine Steen aOO Joseph Patr1ck Ragt>rw Order of Rose ritual Members of Xi Mu Lambda Chapter, Beta Slgm.l Pl1l, ser. ved <~.s hoste~ses for the Otd<!r ot the Rose Ritual tor the New. po:-t Harbor Are~ Couocll on Nov, 30, w ~.eo 10 members of the sor or ity in the New,ort Beach area were hooored for their active partic ipation to the sorority lor the past 15 years aDd who have fulfilled the Ideals of Beta S!g:rn1 P,J.i, Tbe Gabrie ls, composed of past presidents of the San Ga- briel Area Council, confer ed the ritual 0:1 Mr s. Sherman Wi cker and Mrs. James Batty of Pre- ceptor Delta Nu; Mrs. Stanley Nelson and Mrs. Ralph Aftor of Pn•ceptor Delta Kappa; Mrs. Cui Sipes and Mrs. Marian Bushllog of Xi Kawa Lambda; Mrs. Kenneth lngm.'ln, Mrs. Donald Crooker, Mrs . Clary Staat ao:t Mrs. John Miller of XI Mu Lam'lda. A ~urtet dinner preceded the cerem)oy at the Ma riner 's clubhouse. Chai.rm<:.o of the event was Mrs . Palm:-r .-\nder- son, X1 Mu Lambda Chapter, Corona del M:tr. HEALTH NEWS : 9 Of 10 Headaches lot In Y• Head! COU TURE MISALIGNMENT. This fi gure Headaches ~em to constantly is well In accord with our be In the oews. study. In a receat issue of Parade, "I thlo1r: the proof of thE' puc!. the SW'Iday Newspaper map-dJb(." continues Dr. Couture, lloe. Dr. Mu Murray Bnll'. D.C., "comes when you see thE' M.D., director of New Yor k•s dramatic results that can be Stuynsant Polytechnic Head. otltllDed to treating a person ache Clinic, cballenpdthecon. •lttl a beadache problern. rr a cept tbat most headaches are peuoa's beldacbe were due to emotlooallo orlcto. say, emotional stress, it would ln Ms article descrlbiD( a ofJirtouslJ tu.e months, II not study ol S,OOO paUeots OYer a ,.us, to correct the cause of period of l8 years. Dr. Braff the dltllculy. r eported that In oYer 90 per "Bill, as I'Ve Indicated," says ceat of eases be found that Dr. Couture, D.C., "HE.-\0 . headache WI.S "& referred ACHE SUFFERERS CAN EX - syJIII)lom caused by mechuical PERIENCE tu.MEDIATE RE . derucemeot of the cervical LIEF '-d1oc to permanent cor · sp1De wbleh Ia tun. proc:tucea recttoe. from Modern Cbiro- ll'rltatloo of one or more of the pnctle care." cen1.cal ae"t roots ud/or tua Ut.S"W't.r to the I'Mw.d&cbe tabtrmttt• oompreuloa. of tiM problem 1s that mechln.lcal nn.tn.l artery."' probllttaa eu bt eorrected •Uh Dr. GarJ L. eo-tar.. P.C •• ot III'GI*' treatmeoc atld care •.. tbe COIItwe C ........ ctk. C•-it's u llmp\e a.s that. tw ta Newport Beacb, nfwsto Dr. Coatwe, D.C., i.Jicludesa Or. Bn.trt cue lhd1 u a 'ftl1lllaC sbollt beldaebe sof- •IM -lloo IW IllS non -· -niJ '"' plUs &lid oo 111o -•. JIOia-lllllon. "A -lit lab· "4.1 ..., o1 JOI Dow," ... rean• oatJ temponrUJ. ..,. Dr. c-., D.C., "''" -,.. -rllllli -1o ....,. w••t.tlaatklo . ..., ._...,..,.a poor-,....., t:w '•**•• an ...-.1 ae u ftlltlilt,.._W'ltlla~ie r 1 n W 1 ,.,_ .,. lllrliiL • ll naJ1J aa..: AI ..tl 110 tbe n n .. ......._ '•tl::• .c. u~ ... &DI .. "'f--or. Bnll or. COli-o.c., -•• 11 .,.., 11,.... .,,..,.., Ia -It iOO Wootcllll Drm .. IIIII M Till BAD-II llo-1 e.c11, ,_ MS- .lCBa Alii DUE TO IPIICAL 1M0. DEBS MAKE THEIR BOW Ia a setttacofsparkliogehan- dtUers, filekerLnc eandleUCbt. red roses aDd pink earoaUona. oueuta ud frteod.s pthertd Salladay enning at tbe New- porter tDn to booor tt\e 1971 debutantes of tbe Natlona I C bar- lty Leacue, Newport C!lapter . At this traditional flll mily party, the debutantes and their white gowns carried s.1Un muffs trimmed wUh pink a.od white cJamellas. Each wore, for the fir st time, her gold and pearl madallton which signifi ed the completion or 6 year s of com- mllldty service, and cultural Ud social endeavor In the TICk, k»cker program. At a cue from John Hallam Hiestand, presentor, the white auo drapery was drawn and tach clrl came lorw-.u d to exe- eate her St. James Bov.·. On tbe pm of h,er father she rt .... seeMed to the ballroom '1oor accompanied by the strains or her favorite mus ical selection. Then, circ ling the noor alone, she returned to her father, bowed to him and they began tbe father .daughter wo~ltz. Es- corts claimed their debutantes, a toast was proposed, and everyone daneed to th~ musk of Ray Moshay 01.nd his or - cllestra. Those intrOdu('ed be(Or P tlte pr esentation were Mrs. RKhar r! Lans ing l..;l.wrence, n tapter president; Mrs . Mel vw n;w!~>l K•lmer ni, ball dir~>ctor, .~nd Mrs. Arthur Rictw rrJ Kim . brough, flllfion:s l boa rri presi· dent. The fesUvLUes can. to J close at l post ball LrPdk!ost, hosted by Mr . _.[)(! ~lrs. Ed ~~>'in F rench Steen Jr. 1n tll"'l r b.£\- side hom~ for .ill of We dE<Ou - tantes, their escorts anrl st .. gs. De-butanl~s. their ~rents J.nd escorts ere: Miss Jo~·c e Lollis~ Caldv.•t-11, Mr. and Mrs. Jack LindenCa \d- well, Wi\tiam Stewa rt Jacobsen. Mi ss C<t r ol Chaprn.::o n Con· naUy, Mr. and Mr s. Re~qron Paul Connall y J r .. John Karl Long. Miss P<~.mel.:!. Puniw.1i Con. over, Dr . <1.nd Mr s. William Arthur Conover , Terrene(' James M Jan. W ss Jan<~. Gnnzella, Dr .and Mrs. John Da.Pi.tto Gr.urt ell.t, Robert Ho,.·a.rd Croft s. Miss Karen lr;one !lodges, Mr. and Mrs. Rulon Kimball Hod~s. D-avid Pn mr o'iE' . Miss Ka thleea M.lrle Langen-Wfsa: Jamie f..Oil SitJU, .. ,. bed, Or. and Mrs, RusseU aDd Mrs. MarlbiU J .... SC;JU. Reed Langenbeclc, Michael Ter-Richard stewartKredtl. eoce Ber g. Miss Patricia AM: ,..., Miss Annt> Aileen Lawreace, Or_ and Mrs. Rot'a1 DluriT~­ Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lansing Iter, Stepbeo Crail t...,. Lawrence, Clyde WU11ams. Arteftdlac II .tap were Mtss Jolie Janene ~ Bouef, Charles Lawrtoee B11L BrlU Mr. and Mr s, Richlird Blanton Payne Cbase, JohD P~ Cot- Nc>wcom, Brandon Edmond ton, JohD Michael CtaaeUa. Beatty. Donald wuuam Ktlllao m, ste .. Miss Chloe Mcintyre, Mr . ven Ernst Amltac. Carl Heorr .tnd Mrs. William Charles M ~. T urve and Jack Keith Samuela Intyre, Michael Jam.~s Jesch. III. Miss Deborah Ela lfiE' Meany, A. pre-ball dinner party wu M• .. aod Mrs. Her bert John held Friday at the [)oyer Shorn Meany, Rlc h<t rd Holderness. hom'! of Mr. aDd Mrs. Jack Miss Candace Penelope Llnden Cddwell. Moses, Mr . and Mr s. W!lllam Ao autheotie VeDetlanCCJDdollll \r mstrong Moses n, Rir.har d was tied to the CaktweU dock. Mark M:Ltirs. ltallan music ftlled the air u Miss Tria Newcom, Mr. and the debutantes il1W1 their es- Mrs. Richar ri Bla n!on ~ew•·om, corts sampled a~sto, ate Danie l Tfi(H1US Rosst .. r . flavored pasta, and tatt.:l ol Mtss M<~.n Lot dln .. St+-en the debutante bill. Oetlataotes Mr. an(! Mr.s. Ef1,..tn r rt-nc h .tnd thetr escorts practiced tbe S!eo-.n Jr., Jos<-ph P:Hn• k Ro-waltz and recetvt'd last mlnl&e l!en . balllnstroctlons. What do you mea n, "armamentarium?n Sometime s physicians forset and talk therr own lanauaac. Greek to most people. Now, about th~ mouthful abo\l e., ~'a hear somethmg hk~ thrs from your doctor? dr.iY.tng on our p~nt arma ~ntarium to tr..:..Lt ~uu,-:··A\.\uall)l;'armamentanum·· is justa (L .... ror·s word (,tr tht-array of tre:nments and meJo.:Jt1ons a1 l11s drsposal. When il comes 10 druj,'<o. th•s armamenta ri um is som~lhirrr. Thou· s....nJ~ and thousands. ltter;,Jiy. All are rt:adily 3\;.,dable rn !hLS pha rm:1cy to hdp presen·~ your h<.1hh '-'oh<n n<.-cJcd-a publtc s.er\lict wh1ch we ar~ rk:1sed to render. 'Christensen -1 E. COAST IIWY .. ~ADa. 11M OJUOL& 1·- .\llt/1 (h/ (;/ltf.l Orr11~ 1-rtr l~• Ht•rt/;1 R 11 hurd' 1/,,rf.., 1 1-f,,ht·r , I-\ \lr•rn l•lrf•a•nol llurdll'cJrt · 1/o wurd\ \11trtfU •11 ( 711/drt'l/ l "II/III/I{('J ( ·'"" • • ( 7,-,,,r,·n Tile \/oi,CI• IIJrr11r '-111./r 11'1/t-(;/If\ ( ,,{,J" dl ( .mdlt"l \t 'l\flo ll ( .\toJ/1"1/i'fl \1,,, II<Jh /f!ll/1' R t'tlll\ St~ut hr•r11 ( uiJ)u rtuu 1-lf"i:l \utrwwl H(wl.. I HilMI Viow ' I .j S. Je141• it H ilh hM ~ • h cific CNSI llill!w" 1 HEAD CO ACH AL DIES, In back, ten, salutes his champion- ship Midget team . Also In back row, team manager Jim Henderson and assistant coach Bill Schmidt hold the Orange County trophy. On the right in the back row is defens ive coach Dick McGann, and in rrontor him at the edge or the picture is coach Caesar de Lancetlottl. At the ten are coaches J im Green and dapper Jack Knight, inthe trontrow. Just in front or coach AI Dies is the happy team mother Julia HaiL (VIc Opalek phOto.) 26 TO 22 THRILLER ENDS OCC STATE TITLE HOPES Orangt! Coast College's state OCC r ecorded a safety mid- football d wmpLOnship hOpes wa}" through the second quarter died in the mud of Santa Rosa's when a Bearcub snap S:liled Bailey field Friday night .1s the over punter Larr y SteE>le's head Santa Rosa Bea rcubs edl,!t'd the and rolled out of the Santa Pirates 26-22 in a thr iller. Rosa end~one. The loss knocked the Pirates Santa Rosa got on the boa rds out of further pla}·o(f ii.Ction with less than a minute re- and ended their season at 7 -2-l_ mainlng in the hall on a 33 yard The Bucs tossed 6 in ter-.1erlal. ceptions and lost a fumble, Ear ly in the 3rd per iod Santa Santa Rosa recovered the bob-Rosa picked off an OCC pass ble at the Pirate 10 and quickly alld ran it back to the 10. scored. One of the inter ccp-Halfback Joe SteOOe r carried tions was r eturned 50 yards to ov£>r from the 2, malting it the OCC 10 and r('sulted in 13-9. They quick!~· stretched another ~arcub touchdown. that margin to 19-9, 111 hen ha li- OCC AU-American defensive back Ken Alton went 8ya.rds for safety Craig Zaltosky had an the score following a Pirate outstanding evening for the fumble at the 10. - ' COLTS AND CABALLOS WIN COUNTY CROWNS ,... .. ~.-C:. .. UII Till Cotto olroct Grot aftor Tllo~d--loo-tdrtiJ, ... CMolloo-..,........., a .-rttva wiMa Rick 111111« ltd-... bJ-IAiliDIUlbo will -Ia 1bo OruiO lOolr a -ll'om KlrtLucd&le Caballos llold ... Dooow-a c.-,. llMll ..._. ... , at Or-ud 11111atot IWiwa, to lbo ? .., a first -· IMIUI llle l!llbo'" up COUI CoJlllt, piiJ ccweriDc zs JUda, Terry quarter. Saata A• talUed oa a TlloColloruc••U-14wto Poter-scored hltllrtt oiS G-YVd rua totteHatG..ewttt> O'IU' tbe Mtuioo Viejo Oi&biOII toucbdons wr.en he blasted bi.J 3:15 remalninc to tbe JrdQUU'· to UMZ tbt Orup Co.tyPee way ewer trom the 4 wttb 4:21 ter. Tbe Dou ICOI'ed oa a e5 WH DtYlatoa ~. left ill tbe quarter. Dan Dudd-)'Ud bomb Jn tbeop•tlDCPiaJof Tbe Caballos ...-ked by tbe rldR-booted the 2-polnl coo-the 4th quarter aRI1 'ftlll a~ Saota Aoa Drool lS-lZ in a verslol'l. Peteraoa scored again 12-6. brulllq battle that pve tbtm on a twisting 52 JUd rtm at the Caballo quarterback Kevtn the Mldpt crown. 1:18 mark. Ouddridp booted the Hopeywell took eharp and al· Coaeb Roa Starkman aDd bls PAT to make u 16-0, ternated Humaran. Pat SIII..P· staff of Mite Metrtk, Maury Dafe Mollica cumu:eda sus-nessy and Moe Flemlnetodrln Lanidale and Robert YOUEll talned drive whea be powered to the Don 3, Sbaucf:latUY wett pided tbelr Newporl.Mell oYer from the one yard line over trom the ooe to Ue It at Colts throogh a tougfl sehedule with 8:20 left lnthe3rdquarter. 12-12 with 5:56lett1ntbepme. to eapture the American league Duddrldge boomed tbe PAT to Moe Fleming powered over for title. The Colts cllmued tbelr make It 24-0 at halftime. For-the game wlnniDg PAT aDd tbe UDdef•ted season wlth the con-rest Metcalf aDd Bobble Bra Ddt Orange Co unty cbamploubJp. vlncl.ag w1n over the Dlablos for com biDed to stop a Diablo drive The touchdown by Shau&fmes~Y tbe County Title. on the Colt 39 yard line with a was the Z3rd of the season for The Colts galloped off to a smashing tackle and rumble r e-the bard running back and lt 16-0 rlrst QlllJ'ter lead, then covery. broke Bruce Sharp's record of added 8 more points 1n tbe 2Dd In the3rdquarter,KirkLang-22 set last year. period to take a 24-0 halftime dale combined with Dave Mol-The hard hitting pme fea- Jead. Mission VIejo raiUed for Uca on a pass from the Olabk:l lured the defensive aUgnment 8 1n the 3rd quarter and. 16 1n 32 that ended IC> on the 5. Rick of both teams arxl the Caballos the tlnal period while the Colts Mlller bulled his way over at got tremendous etrorts from racked -c> 14 additional points 6:20 and Duddridge's kick made Rob Schmidt, Matt Browning, in the 3rd and 4th quarters to it 32.0. TheDlablosintercapted Moe Fleming, PatShaugtlnesQ, salt aW'.lY the win. a Colt pitch-out and scored. Bryant Hum.1M, Larry Hall, ____ ,..;._ The cooversion made u 32-8. Paul DeLa!)ce llottl, and Ed Peterson scored tor'the Colts Crawford in a real team ettort. on a 62 yard run that saw him Santa Ana did not register a break at least 4 tackles at the first down until only 1:45 re- 9:16 mark in the final period. mained In the 3rd quarter. Tbe PAT kick was blocked. Coach AI Dies and his staff T~e Dlablos scored on a headed by Rich McGann have couple long passes to pull !C) consistently fielded some Une 38·16 and then r egistered their rootbatl squads and this year's final touchdown as the gun team culm:nated their hard sounded. The conversion was work with anotherlt>ague cham. booted to make It a D.nal or pionship and tr.e Orange County 38-24. crown. So It Is off to Phoenix The Colts quarterbacks Kirk and the Cactus Bowl for the Langdale and Bill Halford mtxed talented group of grldders who their oaensive attack with Dan will be performing Cor Costa Ouddridge, Art Olswan g, Rick Mesa, Corona del Mar, Mater Miller, Ben Rhyan, Dave Mol-Dei, Harbor and the Estancla Uca and Terry Peterson rack-frosh teams next year. lng -c> consistent gatos all sea. Huntington Beach Cobras won son. The tough linemen featured the Jr. Midget crown by edging Matt Clark, Bobble Brandt, Tustin 6-0 to complete <40 un- Mark GauthJer, Steve CunUf, defeated andunscoreduponsea- Dana Wolr, RussChessler, Mike son. The Huntington Beach ltv in. and Forrest Met calf on Bucks won the Jr. Pee Wee offense and derense. championship with a 13-1 win over the Orange Packers. Bucs. He intercepted 2 passes, The Hues narrowed the gap giving him \7 the ft s In his OCC to 19-1 5 ear ly in the final career . He also had a halll1 in penod when White hit split end cOWltless tickles. Doug Young with a 54-yud Fres hman quarter ba ck Alvin touchdo\lo·n pass, but Santa Rosa White, who took over the OCC scored again going 32 yards in signal calllng chores at mid 9 plays fo llowing another Bear - season when Gary Valbuena wot s cub inter ception. ror a big gain for the Newport OPALEK REPORTS SPORTS SCENE RICK MILLER, No. 19,romps NEWPORT-MESA Me"' Colts In the Pee Wee For Coach Ron Starkman and his gallant grldders, it was a long successful season. Both the Caballos :u.t Colts havp been utended Invitations to the Cac- tus Bowl g"J.me in Phoenix wJth confirmation of the bowl bid expected by the Newport-Mesa board of directors( The g"d me date is tentaUvely set ror Dec. II In PHOeii&. • 0 ~ Tbe Clballoe. ~ to 'SCratCh out a 13.12 «!!mf -from behlad wln over a ngbtlng Santa Ana Don team. The Caballos threat- ened during the D.rst quarter but the Don derense halted sev- eral thrusts. Aner driving to the Don 2 yard llne the Caballos were halted by the Santa Ana stubbor n derenslve team. It wasn't until only 1:04 remained in the first halt when Brynat HumaM scored rrom 2 yards out to give tht! Newport-Muans a 6-0 lead. T he TO was set up by Matt Browning blocking a Santa Ana punt on the Don 6. TbePAT :..ttempt was blocked. Jeff John- son deflected a Don pass to ha It a Santa Ana threat in the first quarter. injured, passed ror 2n ya rds In OCC got on the boards tht> the contest .1nd fini shed voith !ina! time with less than 5 m)t e passing yards i.n a singiP minutes left when White round season thll.n any quarterback in llalfu.lck Steve Mohuls ki open at OCC histor y. He tossedl2TD's the one. yard line and !ired a during the season, an occ 22-}ard scor ing pass. single season mark. The Pirates had the baU again The Pirates opened the scor. with less than 2 minutes r e- lng on a 64-yard pass fmm m.li~ing_ White had his mates Whtte to flanker Steve Mona-mo~·tng but aoother intercep- han. ~nny Ricardo split the lion, this time at the Be.a rcub uprights to make it 7.0. 15, ended the dr ive . Grid fans are still buzzing about the magnificent pertorm- mance of the Corona del Mar rootballers against Westmin. stet last week when tht> come- back kids nearly pulled another game out of the fire. Except ror a questionable in- terfer ence call against deren- sive back Larry tk>nner late in the game it could have been just the other wa}' around. The oaiclal couk1 have had a bad angle as Denner seemed to have defend ed legitimately, so instead of Corona taking over tha t Matt Cox gathered in at the charilpionship game. other on downs, the lnb'action gave 20 and raced in the end zone on c·otts In action are Forrest the Lio ns J. first down on the a play covering over 40 yards. Metcalf, No, 88; John Garcia, COM 14. Three pta~·s tater Reed Johnson couldn't get oU No. 78, both In th e foreground, Westminster taWed to make it the 2.potnt conversion pass and Dan Doddridge, No. 20. 28-14 "'ith less than 3 mi nutes though John Miles was open, as Tne. Colts defeated Mlssion r£>maining in the ball game. Gar~ Jennin gs tackled Johnson Vie)O 38 to 24 for the Oran~ The Sea Kin gs rallied as to preserve the 28-26 win for County Pee Wee title. (V1c John Mites roared over trom the the Lions . Opa lek phOto.) 9 but a Lion derender partially The last ditch voinsbyCorona ----------- deflected Bob Ferraro's con· over Costa Mesa and Estancia version and CDM trailed 28-20 plus the last secor¥1 rtnale ""'lth 1:48 left ln the game. ag-.1lnst Westminster certainly An onslde ki ck was recovered r ate as nne an exhibtHon ot by Bob Preiter and Reed John-c lutch football as one cnulo1 ask son threw a bomb at th e Lions (Continued on page 5) NEWPORT HAROOR ENg ()j FIRST SEC:ilON --Page 4 TliU RSDAY, DEC. 1, 1971 CORONA DEL MAR. CALIF. TERRY ALBRITTON or the Newport Harbor Sa ilors has been named aU -county defen- sive lin eman and Sunset le<~.gue lineman of the year. Make Your Choice From Our "Family of Fine Cars" From Capri Economy to Mark IV Luxury MARQUIS In all the world of medium-priced cars, Marquis stands alone for Its blend of dramatically elegant styling and a ride with the smoothness and steadiness of mo- tion you'd expect In cars costing four times as much. 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Like a sports car, but better, Like a luxury car, but better. Cougar the most magnificent cat In North America • . . CAPRI Our sexy European Import. The low priced trport coupe with styling and road manners tuplred by the world' • moet delltrabl.e sports care. Room for foqr adults. Full carpetq. Front ):Juckets ot soft vinyl, Small wonder Capri bu talt:en America by lltorm ••• • ' C.M . POSTAL EMPLOYEE JOIHS AIR R!S!RV!S Marlae Reserve Sergeant The 2S.year -okt Ryan. a Dennis L. Ryan, 1815 Placentia postal employee at the Adams Ave., Costa Mesa, became a st&Uoa ln Cotta Mtu., com- member of the El Tor o Mu ille pleted llJs active dutyobUptlon Air Reserves Nov, Uonaprlor in November after more tlwl 6 terviee eoUsCment. He Ia Ute years ~ervtee. He '*IS cradu~ .:m or Wr. a.M Mrs. Jerry a ted from Coroaa clel War high Dee Ryu, Jasmhw Ave., Co-school in J.me, 1965, and at- rona del War, tended Golden West Collep. NEWPORT IIARmR fllllll FIRST SECliOII --""" 5 TIIURSOAY, DEC.l. 1171 COIIOIA O£l.IIA .. CAUF. Sgt. Ryan, wbo served at the Amtrlca.a embul)' 1D SaJeoa dttrlnc part of tds aclfve duty, ha.s beeo asslped to Mtrlne Air Base Squadron-46.,.· LAST MIIIITI'E ACTIOif at ltiO C.... cltl IW-11'-Ia-plar-otl pme Jut Frldly: JohD Mllel, No. 80, takes otf oa a 9 ya.rCI JCQrlng ..,_ u Matt Cox, No. 2!, bloeU b" him. ANOTHER VALLELY FOR COAST? ••• A fRACTION A SECO!(I) LATER, Jeff Siemens makes the tackle, but not before John Miles goes OYer for the touchdown to make I be score 28 to 20 with only 1:48 ieft ln the game. other. Corona players a.re Pil.t Walt, No. 46; Mike DeMille, No. 54; Howar d Royster, No. '72, and Bob Ferraro, N?. 42. (VIe Opalek photo,) By JlmCaraen Seymour bepn pl&ytcg or- Jobo Seymour bas DOt yet pol* basketball at the age of played hls first basketball game 9 at the Harbor Area Boys tor the Orange Coast College Club and denloped his deadlY Pirates, but already he's belng jump shot after thousands of compared to the greatest play. hours on the court. er ever to don a Pirate jersey. Here he differs a blt trom Seymour, the freshman flash Vallely. trom ServJte Hlgll, has been '·I've beard stories of how likened in many corners to a John used to pracllee for hours tallow who played his first game shOOting at the basket over his tor the Sues ftve years ago .• garr.tge when he was a kid," John Vallely. Seymour said. "I never like to "It's an honor being com-shoot much by myself. I spent pared to John, but I'm noJ try-most of my lim ~ down at the log to fool myself.'' says Sey-Boys Club playing in ptck-up mour. "I'm not out to match games." his accompUshments. I'm just In the type of offense the roing to try to play the best Pirates wUl be running this kind of bas ketball 1 can for year, Seymour's primary func. Coast." tlon wUI be to score. But the Va llely-Seymour Livsey has had him adjust comparison is not just wis hful his style of play a bit stnce thinking by Pirate tans who are m!lvlng Into the junJor college hungry for a winner. The re-ranks. semblance between the two is ''Coach Livsey has really striklng. • been stressing defense with Both came to OCC after be· me," Seymour said. "ln high l.Dg nam!d first team Ali-Cif at thelr r especttvehlgll schools. Vallely avercged 26 JJOints a p.me his senior year oi l Corona del Mar, whJte Sey mourpum~ Jn 24 a game at ServUe. Both we re 6-1/2 in<·hes taU wben they entered Coast. Va l. lely weighed 169, while Seymour Ls 4 pounds lighter at 165. school I was a bl.g scorer but I used ro stand around a Jot on defense. You can't get away with. that in college baiL I think. I'vd really done a lot to Improve my defense and I've become a better player because of II." What does the sUm freshman th.lnk of Livsey as a coach?, "I think he's great. A lot of people have knocked him ror oot produc ing a winner the past couple or years, but It hasn't been hls t.ault. He just h.asn't been blessed with ta tented play- ers. This year he should have one of th.e best OCC teams ever." Does he think the Pirates wm have a s uccessful season? '·Well, I think it wut tak.e us a little Um e to get used to playing together," he said. ··YoU have to r emember tha t nOne or our tlve starter s have ever played on the same team. I think otfter .,.,e get some games under ourbeltwe couldbepretty tougb.," NEWPORT -MESA SPORTS SCENE WITH VIC O'AL II ON THE NE XTSERrESof plays, Pat W·.t lt , No. 46, makes a key reception for Co rona as quar- rer back Reed Johnson dr ove the Sea Ki ngs to anot her touchdown fo r rhe final 28.26 tally. Jeft Siemei\s, :o.;o. 17, Is ther e a gal.D on defense for Westminster , as Rackets 6'S TO 48'S 9S The difference: The tow- headed Vallely was a forward, the brown haired Seymour Is ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;are Charles Carlson, No. 37, (Cootl.nued from Page 4) The ~· will ~ ROing tC) against and Kevin La mh, No. 51. (Vic its 1295 " a guard. Both are fantastic shooters. OCC coach Herb Livsey ca lls Seymour "the best pure shooter I've ever coached." TexWtnter, coach of the Houston Roc kets who just recently obtained Val~ lely 1n a trade from the At lanta Hawks, calls the OCC car~r scoring leader '·one of the pure.a .sbooters in the NBA." Seymodr is fully aware of · 'Ya!JIIJ'o. talnto. · ••r used' to come out and 1rtteh OCC play all the time wben Vallely was oo the team:• the talented freshman said. "While I've never really pat. terned my style after his, be dkt have a big lntlueoce on me. He's a fantastic shooter and even though he scored a k>t of points for the Ptrates he was always an unseUlSh team play. er ." Seymour has played ap.tnst Vallely oc a number of oc - casions in pick-~ games . -"I can personally testll}' to the fact that John is a great player," Seymour sa.Jd wtth a smne. "He looks good enougtl - when you watch hlm, but he's devasta.Ung when you go one. oo-one ap.lnst him." JO HN SEYMOUR 1 Tl -2 Ti~Na Z ....., • ., len .............. 1.50 2..,U 21 ........ liD ...... .. .... 1 00 s.oo 31 w.4a te oil -· ..... 3.00 oi.OO Eod\ --.., -··· .05 . 10 3 ·Ti1Ma 3.00 oi.OO 5.00 .IS for. This was the firSI playoff their Ar izona counter~rts in Opa lek photo.) fJ\at the Sea Kings ha.ve been In their contest next w~k that but you can rest assured that should be quit e a display of coach D'.ive Holland and blsstaff •·pre .prep•· football. of opportunists wtll be In the Sharing some honors at the ~ thick of things from now on. Orange Count y finals ... :ere Carlo Tosti IU S unable to s uit coa<'h Doug Dreyer and h.ls up for the fi.nal3 games of the Corona tea m and coo.<'h Rollie season and .,,, .. s on the side-Pulaski and !tis CO\II·boys . Both lines lending a lot of mur.o.l teams won their league cham. support forthe te~m.Al soonthe pJonsblps alld were lntrodlK'ed sideline was the fa miliar Dr . at 1\a lftime for their trophy DOOley A. Ptlff, who was fll ll.ng and emblem ~~~~·ar d pr ese nta . in for the replar SEQ King tions. Both teams were in the physician, Dr. Pfalf has been Pee Wee semis. Coach Ron the team doc tor for Estancia. Bauer and his Cardinals also and bad a couple of his tamll)' r K e ived their · a111'ards and participating on the Corona league ch.t.mpionshlp pLaque ln frosh and var s ity teams this the Jr. P~ Wee division cer e- year . monies at the Orange Coast The Newport.Mesa J r . All Coll ege fie ld. Ame ricans have been fortunate Ttw Commandos, coach Bob to have the ever busy do<' tor Martin 's J r. Pt e Nee te.t.m, attentllnga co~leofthelrteams wound up the lr footba.ll season and his ser vices were very lll'lth their annuallamlly picnic . much In evidence at the Or-Harbor coach Don Lent and a.nge County finals when the some of his grid stars, incltJd- Caballos won the Mldget cham-lng Tony Hororo~.th, Mike Thomp- plonshlp and the Colts ran off s on, Duane DeKalb, Ru ss Tuc~ with the Pee Wee crown. The ker , and EstanclJ. flash Dan Newport-Mesa sl4)er coaches Pr!nceotto, were some of the AI Dies and Roo Starkman will guests . The father's touthfoot. be ta.ktng their Jr. grldders to ball game high lighted the day as the cactus Bowl in Phoenix the heft y dads r eally slugged It Dec. 11 so the youngsters wUl out. Frank Venc lik's '·Terrible be getting a we U deserved trip. Turks " outlasted Bob Martin's ''T hir sty Th ugs•· in a grue!Ung affair. The Jr . Pe-e w~ Cardinals awa rded their trophies to their league champions last Week also. J r . All Ame rican presi- dent Phil Irvin and Estan<'ia a ce LeE> Joyce, wUh his coach Phil Bro111·n, were among the guests. Mos t valuable player award "''ent to Jerry Wyatt. Steve Mitchell and Br ian Ya- mamP were named as the de- fens ive players of the year while the top offensive a ward lui~~=;;;;;;;--;;;;--;;;;-:j went to back Dave Jeranco. ~~~~~~:i~l Nam~ to the aU.county high OD 1oal' DIW school team were Bob Ferraro tbMrl wttb Bl• from C DM on offense, Jim tleetrk: •"'"'*'• Swic;k, Terry Albrlttoo aodGr if Cr~ Harftare, 110'7 Amles from Harbor all on the HOLIDAY GIFT NOW AVAILABLE -~Retired coUt llwJ,, CCII1* del defensive first team. Jon Mar- SUGGESTIONS doctor's otrlce In Pace Pro-J ;~~~;;;-;:;;~;;;;:;;! ch.lob.ttl of Cost2 Mesa made Kobler 6 Campbell beautiful fessiool.l Bulld.tnc. opposite h bicycle repairtnc the zoo te-am on offense. Bill maboslnJ sploet plano, $445. Haag Hospital, 404 West~ all makes. Tlres, and aU Whitfor d from Ha.rbor was also Yamatll JP(Det orpn 1flth JPI~ minster, tfB. $150 mo. JotlD placement parts. Beach named to the 200 team on de- elous .awad II rhythm, $825. Voret. 646·1675. cycles, 806 E. Balbol """"' tense. Two Beeuteln lfaad ptaoos-1----------Balboa. Pbooe 6 75-7282, -.-tul old-world q~aUty ~ 1----------1 --...,=':-f-===---· from $1495. NEW iarp mouotaln ltOmt. UGAL MOTICI fllmrnoad S-6 ChOrd orp..a.. North shore, Lake Arrow-~ !G•UI.•Gio/I>S'I:A1rE SALE . ooe ODIJ, $295, head. For relit weeteodl or p.m., ' Sun. 416 Hello-NOTICE OF PUBUC HEARING SU&tJtlJ Uld IPI.Det SUDo. ;~""~e~ti;J~,5-4~9-;H~;ll~lltd~:5~30;-_~jtrjope~~·~;d;e~I;M;ar;·~~~ Notice Is hereby gifen that tull1 quarutHd, excel•t buy 62'15, the Planning Commission of the at $415. City of Newport Beach will hold New Lowrey Sl.tewtt orp.a, S ALE a pubUc heuinr oa tbeapplica-niDut C&H, $595. Al10 see our I Af'tl£0 Uoc of Shetter Iodustrles, Inc, Bell ' Howell catlettt tape Carpets, 4 patntlngs, for a Use Permit 1571 oaprop. recorder I a.Dd otbtr ml.lcet-SICRIT AlliAL ~ .,..._ llltlque copper "cra.Dd plano. erty located at S300 Vla Lido, ... ...,.. ctft natltioas. pqtMc, ....,, ud .all S39~Sll2 after 6 p.m. N~wport Beach, to permit the SCHMIDT MUSIC CO. tJoe+' lllllll.&=matJ, caq coostr~~etioo of four 3 story LoWrey -Stt!lrWaJ -Yamalll. .,_.,., .._. FIVE acres, $990 full price. condominium units and 5 boat 1901 M. Mala st., SUta All. $50 dcnro., $10 per month. sUps In a C~l -H D:strtct. Ell. 1114 N-.r Ar .. eltr A lake. ROI.ds, NoUc t Is bertb)' fUrther lf•ea "IIOW YOU CAli FIIOil TU COIIIIIG VALUA110tf," bJ -lo Rt.tr-c ... IJ 1ty su Ber-Ulat said pu~>Ue I>Oart•c wtu be IU'dlllo fr""*Y. O.o.r: btld oo tht lith daY of Decem. ('IU) 147-"". ber, It'll, at tilt hour or 1:00 ltiO N_.-t Boaeb City Hall, at r~~~~~~~~a P.M.IaltiOCoooetiCIIantbtUo! ;;~~~=====~ ~~~~~~j :•~IOictt~~thM aid placnaJudiU __ .... ,_ Mud--.::.:.:==...:...----JIUit --. Socr_, I • N-lloaeb C_, .-..co.--.... , Doo. I, 1111, Ia lltt N-lllrbo<Eaolp. NYLON Jackets 7'5" 1 Peo~e with plans save at Imperial. Ml'lybe vour oi<JI'IS r ctudf' ru!ll o::lo rn9 wnar eQtJfiiiV gOO<I St!t'IS£' to SBIIE' wl'lttre-your money comes naruranv L•lo e a casuar war~ rnar trrids earrts the hogt'lest rates lhe raw allows on on vou at 11 ntooghbQO'IOO::l arl tart wolh ,.. r'IO!!dlg r<' sured savrn gs. oarntrng A tour or An ltr'll rQuP snoo 110\.l 11e beet'! tmperral Sl!lllll'l9S rs rust suc.n a prace Its a meanono to ,_ Or rust S('lme tome •o cat('h vp subsid rery ol the 1 i boltoon doltar tmperolll Co•· on vour •e8d r1'19 ooraho n ol Amerrca And aiOI'IQ with nrgnest Whatever vour 011~ to aay ac•r• •t•e!: •"Ctl.lde. rates. you'll get lrrefldtv. eHictarot lu tl·lamoly sav· we 1/'lon' vou tt agree rn"'t even. now and 6 %rngs and loa" $8f'VtCe tnen some orans w•t• reourre s oe nd ort g So So wl'lv not otltn on mallmg saving ot malo.es good se,.se to 5-a~e To havf! a w oth u1 11 reg ular hab rt., Jotn the buolt-orr 'f'SONE' ot rel'!dV cash j\,nd ot !'I'IBket. peopl« w rtl'l otans who save at lmperral "' --.. ttoOC H IMI"'Ia -· __ ..... _..., ___ .,.IlL __ ...,.._, __ ..,._ V• 7V f'UCVII"" Ofnc• 'Qrlljl Vol L•<KI ,.........., .....,.,. ort•r 11J .)1'10 ""'" Oll'lcl II 8ool"' u u _,_ "'~ '''.Jt ,_....,., " --· ,.....,_, C..O Otl1te MoO Ne.OO<t Cf"'\1 .. Drow "1-11011 .._.1'1 !114) at ... It$! [MI "'-"'-Oft-3110 I'B ! 'OOtfi•H fkNII!W>d ~ 1,131 ?ft .... 1 QWodllrl Qtlln· ,,.. ,..,., ~· ---o,...., .. tt~31 .....,.., W\:ilcJdiCMt Hilla ~ ~ v ......... ltk<d WIII()CMoOCI Hot!~, Cllli4 f2'M M.-o A 'MIOU Y 0WN10 ~Of' 1.1 -l.K»N OOU.M .. ......_ 'CORPOMTICJIII ~ P Ill¥- natJ ,..,. -_ ... _ _,. ol u. -.car•• diQ a lol-,-a _ _,_ ............. , , • AJid back by popular request • • • • HJ(best ntlDe • • • Tbe tuo.nlest fUm Ill years! ALSO-Ill . r .. ,, s-'" "CLAY PIGEON" SERVICE AT CM HOSPITAL TliiJ RSOA y, O£C. l, IJII Co* -~~--A r'llolored -Ia allou-ATYII·--Mt ... ). :=~!!~!!!~== --:-:::;::;-:::;;;ft;:;'--IJu roeoollJ -U IIP,Od lo lllo -~:.: llr, c.-, PIS 11 I lad-LI&Q. .,.... Lll& JIOYICI tmerPDCJ •tloi Ud IIU'tiDtllt oa aM llaiw ........,..... _,., tiU ,.u, _,. ........, o1 a ....._ &.~Spteilll.led ~lid J:-wu ....... ,.., a ••N fll 0110111 ._..,.....,. 1 ,,. ---.. -clar ny por-IWUibtoodiiJ IM-paoalo-... IM ... -~---aiuoooor-• ., 15q1o H. cut-, lloo!>llat or oo oau. wa1 -..... ..,.. ..,. .. 1 dl-emu 011orlll!.~ ~ .,.J-orlorooA.::'irooo B&y--"'"nlor. Tbo If-.,.......,.--rua of Botwty 1..,._, ~• ~• no --1 u aiiFIIolodwlth viCe at CooCa M-·· --A .......... of .._,. 1111-AIIDDIIIG IIICTW 11.-DriH lo Eul C-Hlct>waJ. ( uo~ty ~11a1 11 t11t lotl lf.D'III .um IIM.OIO or Eullollllf 0r1" &om ""'" B-1-A-1 llolpllal E1Mr10DCY m •-. -•orlll)', be _,.,. U • NaY)' -IIIW-T -·~MU-s-~ -··-~ 1o Jamboree -·• Radio) &all bas many roo-• from lllo poi>Jk, pllol Ia lllo Paellle, ........ lot •n• -" Y-_,., -Ullpod oaU -btr 117-me<lleal olall, pollee doporl-reeolnd 111o ~ 111-RICIPAL COOl: ULATIIIG Road, .... Tbt emeri'ID¢)' room mt~Gt and tlre dcartmeat, ae.. iD& eroe.. Ht at:taiDid tbt rut TO n.au rA.CtE SPIID W&rperUe AYeaue from •at••" faeJ.Win tor out-cordlDC to Wr. Cutlttoa. Otber ot 1......,. tom nuder 1a tiM LDim . Ftftb lweaue to Sao Joaqllin paUeat Mrvlces aDd ~~a phy-departments at tbe ·~acute Nanl Ruerve. Tbt Ctty Co.ell ot tiM C1tJ' Hllll Road. aletu oa U.. premi.As for care" 99 bed hOII)ltallDclwJe: He was bora La. 1918 IDM&Jad of Nnport S.Cb doel ordlla WHtclllf Drive from Dover em.ercucy care 2~ boursada.y. cobl.lt therapy, CCU, lCU, I.a .. City, ,JdabO. He 11 married ud. u toe~ 1'- 11 .-a 010 Dr~~ ~;!:ueA~!::WestcUft •-------::-:-::---halaUon ·therapy, lac.tope, PhY-baa .f cblldrea. The JOCilltll, SE uvn • .-. w ..... L.-'LMOTICI steal therapy, blood tut and 17 yean old Js 1 ..tor IAoftbtNnportBea.cbM!Iblctpal D:lve to a polot824feetnorth ...., b.t&fl school. ~ her end•-CD W amtDISid liD rted: or Martnen Dr ln. M~E%!:~~NO~~IN'G LEGAL MOTICI tloo, the Caltletou 9lan to "11.24.010 Prtma Facie lrYtne Aveoue from SutlaeG -PUBLIC HE'"ING m-e~ tbelr c•-eot bo01e ~ Limit .... ,..-. Mn .. Drive lo tbe oortherly City Notice ls bertby pveo that NOTICE OF .an .,. u .... u -· ___. "HI U 1 tbe Plaaalnr Commtulon of the Notice Is bereby ctvea ttlat ln Los Aaples and establt.b Ptr Hoar. Tbe prima facie m t. £'A 1 C - ,Ill resl•-·e 1o the u--bor Area, -Umlt OD the to•-·· Newport Htlls Drive ~s ••• City ot Newport Beach will hold the Planning omml no e M~. Cast!-.-~ ...._00 ac--JtrHts or _.,.1 ;;; Nnport Hills Drive West. a publlc bearlng oo. tbeawUea~ Ctty ol Newport Beacb wWboJd .._. ·-~ ~· SECTION z Thi rdinanee tloo of Patrick O'Coonor tor an a publlc hearlne on.theaJ)IlUea-Un In the Lions Club, Boy abaU be Jorty miles per bour: • s 0 h Bo S<:outs ot America United Flmd Palla&• Road from Jam-shall be published once In t e Amendment No. 309oaproperty Uon of H. Robert lfY and and tlle M•>rmon 'church. Hls boree Road to MacArthur oftlclal newspaper of the CUy, 1ocated at 209 aDd !11 Walnut Company (Gary P. a.nd Rita J. other loterests !Del·~-toaals Boul--d, and the same shall be effective Street aDd 208 and 210 Lu ...... nia Wilder) for a U.;e Permit 1572 ...., , ••-n th da! f Its •· 1oe 1~ ttt• M -u, scuba dlvlog ·~ ~-•--. ~er Orin b'omWtostCoast 30 days a er e eo Street, Newport Beacb, CaiU-on property a v., a ., c-r." .....,. u.1.... uon doptlo • dd A ue N -rt 0 -ch Ht-· to Wutcwr Orin. a n. I orrda. (Lol5 7, 8, 9 and 10 of a en ven • e-,... ..._ • ~;bluff OriYe from Billa This ordinance was lntro- B!oek 5, SeaShore Colony CA., to permit the serving of Street oortherty to Jamboree dlJced at a regular meeting of Tract.) alcoholic beverages tacoojunc-Road the Clly Council of the CUy of .. This amendment pr.......,ses to tion \lo'Uh a restaurant located • N "· h h ld th 8th .......... f t dw W Saa Joaquin HUls Road be-ewport ~ac t' on e reclasslty a portionofotstrlct-wUhin 200 ~t 0 a e DC tweea. Marguerite Avenue and day of November, 1971, and FAST STEPPING Howard McMillan o!Newport Heights tries a IJttle bamboo pole dancing In tlleSubl c Say area, P'l!Upp~ne Islands while taking a break from his navigation dlviston 1utles 'aboard the nuclear attack atrcra.ft carrier U.S.S, EPterprise. Ho reports he did not get his ankles clo~red. ing Map No. 1 from C-1-H district. Further request re-MacArthur Boul-•d. was adopted on thE' 2Znd da)' of District to an R-Z otstrlct io ductloo in required oU-street "'"-1 tt I• Ford · Road ~een Mac-November, 1971, b)' the o ow-allow realdentt.al development parking from 50 spaces to " in t It of the sub'-'t lots. Sl>aces. Art~ur Boulevard andotwMac-g vote, 0, w : ~ I Arthur Boulevard. AYES, COUNCILMEN: Mcinnis, Notice Is hereby further given Notice Is hereby urther given New MacArthur Boulevard Kymla, Rogers, lllrth, Cr ou l, that said public hearing will be that said public hearing will be p 6th da I ~ .. ~... Ford Road ud San arsons. held on the 16th day of· Decem .. held on the 1 Yo ut:"Cem-,. s COUNCILMEN N NAVY DUTY ENDS AAER 4 YEARS ON ENTERPRISE ber, 1971, at the bour of 8:00 ber, 1971 , at thP bour of 8:00 ,Joaquin H111s Rold." NOE , : one. P,M, lntheCouoeiiChambersof P.M. lntheCounciiChambersof SECTION 2.Secttoa 12,!4.080 ASSENT COUNCILMEN: Dos- the Newport Beach City Hall, at the Newport Beach City Hatl,at of the Newport Beach M·.m.tctpal tal. Ia d U hi h 11 nd 1a. eanuaod all Code 11 ameDdN to re<~d : whlch time and p cE>anyan a w c me a P c 1 ,12•24.080 Prim<~ Facie Ma)·or persons Interested may appear persons inter ested may appear ~ Llm:t __ Thirty-lin ATTEST: . and be hear d thereon. J.lxf be heard thereon. ~ L Lit Jackie He-ather. Secretary Jackie Heather Secretary Miles Per Hour. The prima a~a · gtos E. F. Hirth "Join the Navy and sea the world" ..-or ked out to bt' the right slo~n for Howard Mc- Millan, 2:i, of 526 Westminster Ave., Newport Heights, who was discharged Nov. 22 from the u.s. N<~.vv a fter 4 years aboard th e nuclear altack alrcratt car- rler, u.s.s. Enterprise. Howard m.tde 2 trips around Cape Horn in the ··Big E." His great-grandfather, John Mc- Millan, made 7 trlps around Cape !lorn In square-rigged saltin g s hips befor e leaving the sea In Newport Beach in the 1880's. for a time Uoward ~A-anted to transfer to a ttn-can de- stroyer, be<:ause the ' Big E'' wasn't salty enough for him, but proved different after thou- sands of miles of crulslngfrom near the Aleutians on the gTeat circle route from the Or ient to California to sighting lctber&S In Drake's Passage near the S·nth Pole. HP llev.-aboard the <'arrler Jn the Tonkin Gulf otr North Viet- nam aner finishln~: tJoot camp in San Diego, the first of 3 such tours with the Sevent h Fleet '"Tonkin GuliYachtCiub' In the foUowlng .J year s. Subl c Bl}', P.I., was their home away from hom·~. Howard tlew tack 2 ..,·eeks ago to Coilifornla for Navy dis- charge, leaving the ··nuke" car. N B h City ta.cte speed Umtt oo the follow-CUy Clerk _ . rler tn Singapore. He left at Newport Beach City e'A-por t eac JDg oamed streets or parts Publish: Dec. 2, 19•1, m the 11 a.m. aod arrived in CaUl-Planning Commlssloo Planning Com mission . th-~ shatl ~ thirty-ti.Ye Newport Harhor EolSil!:n. ornia at 3 p.m. the same daY. Publish: Dec, 2, 1971, In the Publish: Dec. 2, 1971, In the RALPH H. CASTLETOn .., • ....,. th e last trip due to the con .. ~ewport Harbor Ensign. Newport Harbor Ensign. LEGAL 1'40TtCE fu sing date Uoe crossing, al-TICI NOTICE Of PUBLIC IIEA RlNG most getting state-side befor-e __ .,;L:..!:..G_A_L;:..:,MO...:...T;,;IC;,:..:I___ LIGAL MOTICI LIG4L MOTIC:I LIGAL M0 Notkt> Is hereb)" given that he ten the .. PearloftheOrlent" 93. Boat, Skitr, 8', Green. the Planning Commission of the city. Cln OF NEWPORT BEACH POLICE DEPARTMENT 94. Boat, Sldff, 8', White/Blue. City of Newport Be-o~ch will hold He achieved the goal he set November 29, 1971 95. B?at, SkUI, 8', Blue/Wblte. "pubUc hearlnJ!" on the applic.!.- for himself in the Navy to bt> at Notice Is hereby given that pursuant to Section 2080.3 of 96, Boat, Row, 13', White. uon of Swensen's lee-Cre.1m the wheel of the big carrier the California Civil Code, the Newport Beach Pollee 97, Boat, SWf, a•. Shoppe for " Use Perr111t 1573 coming In under the Golden Gate Department has in Us possession the following lost or 9a. Boat, Sail, 8', White/Blue. on property located<~t2333 East Bridge to San Francisco. He unclaimed property. 99. Boat, Dory, 18', Orange. Coast Hl gh\lo'ay ,Corona deJM o.~r, set the goal upon his return LOT • ARTICLE 100, Boat, 8', White to permit an lncreast• In the the rtrst trip to the Fu East. ---r:-lflcycle, boys, 20", Huffy, Bed. 101. Boat, 8', White. o:-cupancy lo.ad of an lt'e C"reo~.m He also had thP pleasure of · 2. Tricycle parts 102. Boat, 8', White. po~rlor fr om 'H pt'rsons to 30 being at the wheel clearing 3, Bicycle, girls, 26", Schwinn, Blue, 5-.speed. 103. Boat, 8', W!J!te. persons without prO\'\dln g the Point Lorna , San Diego. They .f. Bicycle, boys, 20", SUngn.y, Purple. 104. Boat, 8', White. r equired 10 off-str£<f>l parking had stowed there on a run from 5. Bicycle, boys, 26", Sears, Brown, 10-spef!d. 105. Boat, a•, White. sp;..ces. Rio de Janeiro, via Cape Horn, 6. Bicycle, girls, 26'', Royce Union, Black, 3-speed. 106. Surfboard, 9', Green. Notice is hereby furthe r given on a voyage starting o~.tNorfolk, 7, Bicycle, boys, 20", Royce Union, Orange. 107. Surfboa.rd, 12', Whlte. that said pubti(' heartn~ will be v•.rginla. 8. Bicycle, boy s, 27", HuffY, Green stand. 108. Surfboard, 9', Orange. held on the 16th day of D?tem- Navlgatlon division chores 9, Bicycle, girls, 20", Flreblrd, Purple. 111. Surfboard, 10', White. ber, 1971, at the hour of 8:00 were relieved by a hobby of 10. Bicycle, boys , 26", Sears, Gold, 10-speed. 112. Sid, Snow. 5', Brown wood. P.M. lltheCounriiChamhers of using sextant aod chronometer 11. Bicycle, boys, 20", Stingray, Purple. 113. Rod, Fishing "Signature" w/reeL the Newport Be<~ch City Hall, at to deter mine latitude a.ndlongi-12. Bicycle, boys, ZO", s;tnrrinn, blue. 114, a..&, Black. Whl<'h tlml• and.pia('eaftyandall tude. He would see how close 13. Bicycle, girls, 26", Huffy, green, 3-speed. 115. Suitcase, plaid. persons Intereste-d mar .tiJJ)E'ar he cou ld come to the ship's 14, Bicycle, boys, ZO", Schwinn, Red. 116. Suitcases {2), plaid-belt. and be heard ther(!On, position determinedby th emlfly 15. Bicycle, boys, 27", Styer, Blue, 5-speed. 117. Bags&! purses, Misc. Jac ~ie Heather, Se-rr etary modern navlg-.ttlooal aids a-16. Bicycle, boys, 20", Stingray, red. 118. Sleeping Bag, Green. Ne'<'-port B~arh City bO'lfd. lie would have to resort 17. Bicycle, bo)'S, 20". Panther, Purple. 119. Bags &! purses, Misc. Planning Commission to th e old shipmaster's dead 18. Bicycle, girls, 26", Schwinn, Green, 3-speed. 120. Wet Suit, Black. Publish: Dec. 1971, In the reckoning when he couldn 't get 19. Bicycle, girls, 26", Styer, Blue, 3-speed. 121. Lantern, Red. Har bor a sighting due to inc leml•nt 20. Bicycle, boys, 26'', Staodard, Gray. 122. Fenders, Bike&! Whee120". weather . 21. Bicycle, girls, 26", Schwinn, White. 123. Net, crab. Pollywog to shellback status 22. Bicycle, girls, 20'', Schwinn , Purple. 124. Socks, Size 9~11, 12 palr, Brown. first came to Howard when the 23. Bicycle, boys, 26", Standard, Silver. 125. Socks, Sl:r.e 9-11, 12 pair, Blue. carrier went tack to Newport 24, Bicycle, boys, 24", Sch11•inn, Black, 126. Socks, St:r.e 9-11, 16 :talf. Gr een. Ne~A·s, Virginia, tor refuellng. 25. Bicycle, girls, 24", Standard, Blue. 127. Socks, St:r.e 9.11, 20pat.r, Black. It'S too big to get through the 26. Blcycle, girls, 20", Styer, Green 128, Socks, Size 9-11, 12 pair, assorted colors. Panama Cana l. He crossed the 27. Bicycle, boys, 26", Schwinn, Red, 3-spe{'(l, 129. Typewriter, Sears CheYTon Portable. equator and came back three 28. Bicycle, girls, 26", Hufty, Blue, 3-speed. 130. camera, GAF Cadet IDstamaUc, times, the last time in a run 29. Bicycle, boys, 20", Schwinn, Blue. 131. Speakers (3). from Singapore around the Is-30. Bicyc le, boys, 26", Skyway, Red, 3-speed. 132, Speakers (2). land of Sum:lotra, adding the 31. Bicycle, boys, 20", Spyder, Purple. 133. Ladder, Boarding, Fiberglass, White. Indian Ocean and Java Sea to 32. Bicycle, gi rls, 26", Monarch, blue. 134. Rudder & Tiller, wood. the north and south PaeUic, 33. Bicycle, boys, 26 ", Schwinn, brown, 10-.speed. 136, Recorder, Tape, casette, Bell' Howell. nort11 and south Atlantic, South 34. Bicycle, boys, 26", Schwinn, Blue, 10-speed, 137. Radio, pocket. RCA portable. China Sea, Yellow Sea and Sea 35. Bicycle, boys, 26", Schwinn, black, 3-speed. 138, Radio, portable, Paulklfttc. of Jap.1n, to his record of sea 36. Bicycle, boys, 20", Schwinn, blue . 139. Radio, portable, Zenith RopL travel. 37. Bicycle, boys, 26", Western Flyer, green, 3-speed. 1.W. TtmLog Licht "Karcheck". A graduate of Newport Har-38. Bicycle; boys, 26'; Schwinn, blue, lO~speed. 141. Stereo Tapes, (7) assorted. bor high school, Howard plans 39, Bicycle, boys, 20", Schwinn, Red. 142. Stereo Tapes, (6) assorted. on following In the fo:>tsteps of 40. Bicycle, boys, 26", Schwinn, Green, 10 -speed. 143. Stereo Tapes, (7) auorted. his great-grandfather and leav-41. Bicycle, girls, 26", Murray, blue, stand. 145. Case, black w/15 tapes. lng the sea for Newport Beach. 42. Bicycle, girls, 26", J.C. Higgins, Bronze, 3-speed. 147. W<tteh, Elgin. Gold, man's. He will resume his studies at 43, Bicycle, boys, 26", Rollfast, Green. 148. Watch, Timon: Elec., ctlrome, man's. Orange Coast College, Inter-44. Bicycle, boys, 26", Standard, Blue, 3~speed. 149. W.ttch, Timex Elec., cbrome, man's. rupted by his 4-year hitch In 45, Bicycle, boys, 20", Stlnp-ay, Green. 150. watch, Manson, Gold, ladles. the "Sea the World Navy." 46. Bicycle, boys, 20", Stlnp-ay, Gold. 151, WatCh, Caravelle, chrome, ladies. LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE TO CREDITORS SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOH THE COUNTY OF ORANGE No, A-71060 Estate of ALEXANDER G. WR IGHT, also !mown as A. G. WRIGHT, Deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to the creditors of the above named decedent that all persons having cla.lms against the said decedent are requlred to ft1e them, with the necessary •ouch- ers, In the oftlce of the c lerkot the abo•e entitled court, or to present them, with the neces- sary Youchers, to the uOOer- slgned at c/o Thomas E. Retter- nan, A.ttomey at Law, 350 East S-tvente8lth Street, Suite 11!,, Costa M•!sa, Calllornla 92427. which Is the place of buslnesa of the UDderslped ln all mat~ ters 6erta.lniD& to the tstate of said dectdeat, wltblta four m(!Gthl after tht lint pllbUea- uoa of th11 aoUc.. Dltld Ncwtmbtr !9, un. £LOISE W, STEWAilT, Et- o11t VI, stn&rt, AdmlAlJtn.- lrU, ofl>o£-ottaoal>oft KIMel cStcldHt. Tllomu E. H~ •-- 111 II Low, 150 Eul - -Slrtot -111, e-x-. ca. iHi7, A_, ... Mlllllllolnlrlll. 47, Bicycle, ctrts, 24", Sc hwinn, Blue. 152. Stereo, Auto, Crate Plooeer. 48, Bicycle, girls , 20", Schwtnn, Blue, 153. Stereo, Auto, Muntz w/tape. 49. Bicycle, girls, 24", Sears, Black, 3-s:peed. 154. Stereo, Auto, Japan. 50, Bicycle, boys, 26", Schwinn, Red, 155. Stereo. Allto, Muot:r. w/tracU (4). 51. Bicycle, boys, 26", Valiant, Black, 3.speed. 156. Stereo, Auto, Audio Stereo. 52. Bicycle, (Iris, Z4", Standard, Red. 157, Stereo, Auto , P•uM'IIltc w/tape. 53, Bicycle, boys, 20'', Stingray, Green. 158. Stereo, Auto, CraJr SUS. 54. Bicycle, girls, 26", Standard, 3-speed. 161. oars (2) 6', wood •I:JIIIlDted, 55. Bicycle, boys, 26'', Motobecalne, Black, 10-speed, 162. Fuel Tut, Red (boat) 1-1/2 pl. 56. Bicycle, boys, 26", Standard, Launder, tO-speed. 163, Fuel Tank, Red (boat) !-1/2 p.l. 57, Bicycle, girls, 26", Rowll, Blue, 3-speed. 164. Up.t Meter, Wntoa Matttr. 58. Blctcle, boys, 26", De raJier. Purple, 10·speed. 1155, Radio, SllnrtoM (tableh 59. Bicycle, boys, 20", Murray, Red. 168. Ruor, Electr1c, SebJck. 60. Bicycle, boys, 26", Majestic, Red frame, 1&7. Suitcue, Bl .. w/eoMDme jtwelrJ, &1, Bicycle, boys, 20", Royce Un1oo, Orange. 1&8. Stahdeu Tabi...Ut (1 Mt) Kay-. SZ. BJcycle, liTis. 16", Schwinn, Purple. 1&9. Grlader, Y•t (Mad). &4, Bicycle, boys, 26'', Girardeago, Blact, 10-speed. 170. GIIUH, dri.U:Ia& (Itt of 1). 65, Bicycle, ,Ull, 20", SchwtDn. PtD"Pie, S-speed, 17S. Collte Wumu, PJrn. 66. Bicycle, boys, 26", J. C. Htatnt. Red. t7S. Ruor, El41ctrtc S..,..• w/cue, 6'1. Bicycle, ctrls, 26", Hn1h0r~. Blue, 1?1. Camera, 8abJ' Bronte w/tum. 68, Bicycle, boys, !0", SchYIDD, GrHn, 5-speed. 1'17. RICOI'd Albuml, LP, (5 ta). &9. Blcycl•, b0y1, 26'', SchwiDD, Blue, 10-II)Md. 178. TJpenUer, Roral. 11". '10. Blcye1e, boy•, 24", SclnriAD, Red. 171. Typtwrtt.r, Smltb Coroa 15". 71 . Blcyclt, boys, 26", American Eacte, Blaa, tO-speed. 110, TJptwrU., Rtm....,_ll". 12. Bicycle, boy1, 2'7", Scbwtao, Bllit, lO.tpHd, 111. TJpnrtter, Smltlll tor-u••. '73. Btcyclt, Jirls, 26", American Flyer, Blue, ua. 1'Jpewr1Mr,·L C, SID!tl II", 74. Bicycle, bOys, zen , Sau, Rtd,10-ll)eld, liS. AddlJc MaciWM, YldK Bud. ?$, BICJClto, bO)'I, !0", St1DcfaJ, GrHll. 1M. Tlpe Recordlr w/llud, -·· ?1. Bicycle, boys, 20", SdnriDO, Black. 111. or.,. Recordllr Aalpla toO. '1'1. 8tCJCit1 boJI, 28", Sclnrt., Blue, 'flloel ......... tocll.la..-Jt'ltllltloltlile ...... -. 78. Bicycle, boys, IT', Sc:tnrtu. Gr"' 10-...S.. .., .,.,.,.aa 11 ... ,.,.t a.c1t ,.._ u.u-t- 79. BICJCit, bo711 !?", P .... , Wbtte.lO-tPI'Id. m• wUida ..,. ....... .,, .... Meelllllll eo. Bicycle, boyl, 10",--. Grtoo. -.. UldprOd~~~~~~s 81. 8&e)'ell, bo71, It", A...._cu £acle, AM. 81.. fMc)'clt, boJ•, 10", s.lar, B.... JI)I'EI OP 1A1.1 11. BtqcJe, bop. •, M.-rqo, r.,a.. lfotielia...., ..,_ .. ,.m ..... ,...,. • t1 M. llk7<11, boyo, II",--, lila«. C ...... 1.10. 'ntw l.JO.OI of .. It I ' I C... of .. II, lllqelo, lllrlo, II", C.ftllor, Pwtllo, 1-.-. CIJ of llo.;... -. I WID ooll II~~ It-.:: ... lkfeii,~DJ~t»',8olnrla.Goltl. ' ....,._..,......,..., ••. ..,,DirJ .u.~n~, 17. IIIC)'eto, l!lrll.lll'', --ftto. 10:00 A.ll. IIIMC.,.=T-of .. CIIro(Jio rut 11. IIIC)'elo, boyo,l4", w-. F)Jor. -.-&1 .. .,.__ ·---I I II PllbUA: Dec. J, 9, 11, J:l, am, a. u.. 1119011 IIUtlllr EMip. "· O.llall-·~ -~ .... .... • to. 11011, 10' ._. • F.-- tl, CO.. Ollr!a , 11', 111111o. Cltlol of-F I -· -., II. Boa1, Ill~ II', -/Rod. ,_, Doe. I, I, tm, lo Ia! Gil .. • ,, I ~EWPOR1HARBO_R ENll(l'j TljURSOAY1 DEC.l,,lt71 IIWpcNf l11ch ..... !:!'AR~ST.!..!.!SEo!<Cll~()lj!:!..:-:..:-C!:P.!IW!..7~----"CO!!'fll'="IIA""--'D"'El"-'IIAR=,..,CA,U"'r"'-• ..... Island Coste Mite Lido Isle c-del Mar • '00••-••••••• JO.OOOUUOOOOOOU0$1$4M ofwk!J~ THE FLAVOR OF CRRIJTIIAS ts putty lithe decorattoDI, accordtnr to Mu, CbarlM Kelley (left) or Ute ~r Bay aDd Mrs. wuuam J'enkl of Harbor View Rills, co-chairmen of "Las Luces de NaYtdad" dinner party abel daoce to be held at the Stuft Sblrt r eataura.at oo Moada)', Dec. 13. "The Uchta of Christmas" throughout the harbor lfUI torm a backdrop for the blaek-Ue affair, whlcb Is a be·neftt party rtna by the Alta Ba.hJa. Committee of On ace COUDty Phil- harmonic Society beoefttU:Dr the youth coocerta for schOol chUdren throughout the area, A gourmet but!et will be fol- }owed by danc:lng.,.th music 1\D'.a.ished by the Toay Lobo Trio, according to Mrs, David Chambers, chl.!rman of Alta Bahia. Reservations may be obtalned from Mrs. Kelley, 546-3332, or Mrs. Jenks, 644-0648. (Ensign photo.) way Tile Harbor Area U.a.ited FUD.1 vlsioo to completing Jts goaL bas received almost 50 percent Fred Sorsabat. city manacer of of its goal for the 1971-72 Costa Mesa and cha.Jrman for campaign, the dlvlstoa, saJd that almost Dr. Robert B, Moore, pres!-· 88 per ceot of the goal bas dent of Orange Coast College been reacbed. Honored queen and cflalrman of this year's Mr, Sorsabal reports tbat b1s drive, reported that $223,410 dlvlslon bas been successtul llas already been collected. The because employees of tbe City campaign goal is $451,107. of Costa Mesa have l.ocreued d The City of lrvlne Is leadlng their dooatkmstblsyearbyover name the eomm•mtty campaign dl~ 100 per cent a.od the Oranpo vision with more tban 58 per Coast College teachers and stu- Miss Gayle Hiles wUI be iD· cent of Us goal already col-dents have given more tban stalled at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, lected. Newport Beach has $13,000, a better than 100 per Dec . 4, as OOoored queen of achieved 56 per cent of Its goal cent J.ncrease over last year's Bethel 313 of the Internatlooal and Costa Mesa has collected 16 campaign. Order of Job's Daughters, Ne.-.. per cent. The Costa Mesa cam-The agencies division port Beach. palgn was laWJched several completed 44 per cent of other orttcers are UaDDe weeks after the Newport and goal, the special gttts dlvlsk., Botts, senior prtocess; MarJ lrvlne drives. Is wlth!n 35 percent of Us Slade, junior princess; Merle The government and educa-and the corporate andl •••r_Ic;y,., I P;,~,rrlsh, guide; Debbie Hebert, tlon division is the closest dl-division has completed mushal. cenl ot its ~roal. AR~Qlnttve otncers Include H ,. d ' ty I d LoriBotts,cllaplaln;C•thyHel-0 I ay par sate ton, treasurer ; Connie Ashby, recorder; Karen Graves, libra-"Christmas Is for everyooe" rlan; Heldt Shellenbarger, JuUe ts the theme for the 4th annual WaHoo, Kiren Bedford, JuUe Chrlstm:.ts holiday hmcheon, Plhl, Gall McKinley, messeng. co-sponsored by the Women's er s; AUce Parrish and lUreD Divisions of the Costa Mesa Ashby, custodians; Karen CM.. and Newport Harbor Chambers steasen and Sydnee Wenrick, of Commer ce. It will be held guards. lD the m1in banquet room of the Mrs. Shirley Common, dep-Balboa Bay Club at noon Wed- uty grand guardian of the state nesday, Dec. 8. of Ca llfornta, w1U be mistress The luncheon will be preceded of ceremonies. Ml SS CAYL E HILES at 11 a.m. by a soclalllour and Others assisting In the cere-M:a.rsball. Leslie Allen, Karen viewing of Christmas t:able cen- m·XlY as lnstalllng officers tn. RobtDette Sandy French Diana terpleces whi ch have been en- elude M~·s, La Royce Allen Howard a~theretirlng honored tered in compeUUoo by lndl- Klncald, Mrs. Sherr I Common queen, Lloda French. Miss Mel-vlduals , community groiC)s, so- White, Mrs. Kalhy McKinley odie Keller w1U be soloisl. cia! clubs and business firms . I d Proceeds from the lunrhMn nsurance prexy name ~! ~~o:,~ed-~~~.~:::.~~ 'Sored by the two Women's Dlv. Paclflc Mutual Ufe Insw.:ance s. Liggett, 55, who was namad Com,any .ba& anoouoced tM, senior vice president, special elecUoa of w·~uer B. Ger~oas services-. is tons. sl.l]ervlsor of handcrafts the Orange County Fair and Costa Mesa city rtcreatlOI'l pa.rtmen.t, and current presi-:J dent of the Costa L:O;l!f.J~ M1 -;. Vel'l live m~mlle r o! Society of interior The public Is tend the lun cheon and pie.:e display, Christmas tainm !:':~t will be pre,se,,ted the M.1drigal Singers Costa Mesa high scoot. TLckets are S6 each. MICHAEL FULL DIES Michael H. Full, 79, of Alleghany, Costa M~sa. Nov, 26 at Orange County leal Center. He was born 6, 1892, in UUools, and came Orange County 10 years He wa.s a macbinest for stel Metallurgical Corp. for years, Survivors include his president. Mr. Gerken, 49, sue. Paul w. Colflesh , senior vice ceeds Stanton G. Hale, 61, Who president, indivlduallnsura.nce, will become chairman of the 'IUS gtven new r esponslbllitles board and continue as chief for coordlaatlng the marketing executive otncer. The changes of the com")any's various pro- are effective Jan. 1. duct lines. · "Paclllc Mutual has been Judges tor the cootest are~ M1·s. Hury Macr es, a profes- sional Oorlst who Is ln char~ of floral displays for the Or- IUlge County and Los Angeles County Fairs, and the Aaahetm Etta; a daughter, Convention Ce nter norai ex-son ot thefam1lyh0m•?;2 htblts· Donaa F'r.lebertshauser children and ' ' dren. re:!~~:=·z::.,u~.:~.; CE OR CE TOLIH DIE S ED SEDELMEIER DIES noanclal services including Geor~ W. ToUn, 63, of 271 muttal fund's and Investment· kose Ln., Costa Mesa, died grandchUdren and 2 manarement," Mr. Hale sa.ld. Nov. 25 at Hoag Hospital. Be Edward S@delmeter, 81, of grandchildren. "Wa.Her Gerken's background was born Sept. 27, 1908, in 4-41 El Mndena, Newport Funeral services ._;i!J be Is especially strong ln these Washington, and came to Or-Heights, pioneer real estate at 11 a m today Dec 2 areas. ange County 18 years ago. He broker in tile Harbor Area, Pa.cU1c V1e.w C ha~l . ' "The action ns planned oow was an electrician for AEC died Nov. 28 at Hoa.g HospitaL will be in San Beraa;dino. in aotlclpation of the company's Orange Co., Garden Grove. He was born July 1, 1890, In mo'fe to Newport Beach later Survivors include his wife, Missouri, and cam ? to Orange ABOA RD CO RA L SEA 1912." Tbe company's eorpor-Jeanne; and a daughter, Pat-County 15 years agt He was a Navy Seam.ln Bi ll W. Mo,rrl,;,j ate otnces wUJ remain 1n Los rtcla Hagen of Jonesboro, Ark. past president of the Newport son of Mr . and Mrs. Angeles with all operating di-Mass was celebrated Nov. 29 Harbor-Costa Mesa Board of Jackson or 921 W, Bay vlstons moving tothenewbulld· at Our La.dy Queen of Angels Realtors. Balboa, Is servtng with Flo~terl tnc I.D Newport Center . Catholic Church. interment was Survivors Include nts wUe Squadron 51 aboard the Harry G. Bubb, bec.oml!s at PacUic ViewMemorlalPa.rk. Anna; a daugtlter, Helen Me: craft carrier U.S.S. Coral senior vlce~-;;;~~;~B~a~IU~~M~o~rtuar:!~'~· ~c~o~sta=:M:e~sa~,•R~a~e=oi~C~o~sta::~M~e:sa:·~a~br~ot~h:er::..w~t:th:::the~~u.~s!. ~se~v~e~oth:F~I:••:•: i! was in cbarge ohrrangements. of ' an1 :i the Western PacU1 c. . , I IT'> Hill ... -' II<,"''\\, .. MUSIC CO. is tiD as -LOWIIIY ........ 0 •••••••••••• ........ ········· ..... ........, • .n...r ....... . ~ Kt••a•• M-tOO •••••••••••••• KtM."DI• t,..tOOw~ ..••• :. 1595 •7so •795 '995 '995 .,,nat•..,.. • '1510 .... $1110 ••• HOW PIANOS I.OWfST PRICfS ANYWHfRf -C•••••• $695 ,._.. •••••••• PIOM -~~-$495 1A1Y _,. •••••••• IIUIWAT IA50 -L-... So\ VI! -'7 :::. ... : ......... '395 PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES _,. IY API'OI NTMI NT 3 Linda hie Drive -0,.. Sund.y LoveJr_, new 5 BR.. 4¥.!: Ba. home w /water- fnmt llv. rm. & din. rm. Oak paneled family f!ll· w/frplc. Master BR. w/sitting area 1r fireplace. Bay &:: Mt. views ......... $17t,500 Juat Completed 5 BR., 4 ba. home w/50ft. dock. Marble mstr. ba .. crystal chandeliers. Fine carp .. drapes & wallpaper. Bit-in vacuum, dumt>-waiter & more. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . _ ......... $285,000. 92 Lind• l1le Drivt~ Beaut. _s BR . 4 ba . home w/formal din. rm. &: ~Bf!llly rm. 3 Frplcs. Outside stairway. Built-m gun cabinet & bookshelves. $155,000. 106 Linda fsle Drive Custom_ Sin~le story 3 Bdrm., 3 bath waler- fr,ont w1lh p1er _ar:td slip: Large master bdnn. With sauna. Dtnmg. Ji:itchen & living room have water view. :,2• lot . . . . . . . . $135,000. Waterfront Lots !'lo. i6: 3 Car garage. Faces South .. S80,000. No. 56: North Lagoon expo5ure . . . . . $80.000. 403 Bayside, 70ft. sandy beacb ..... $43,950. fOf' Complete lnform~tion On All Homet ~ Lots, PI••M C•ll: BILL GRUNDY, Rea ltor l~lenders Bldt. et Linde hie J.ll BA YSIDE DR .. SUITE I, N.B. 67S.I61 ••••••••o:ooo••• u$117 ,000!!!" DON'T GIVE THE RASPBERRY TO THIS ELEGAST 2-~EDROOM CONOOMINIL'M WITH GREATHTAKI NG VIEW OF ENT IR E HARBOR .-'.XD COASTAL AREA. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT, Tremendous b.:n i~)' rollm "'~th fireplace, In a -=oz.-· cotta~ ln Newport Helgflls. 3 bedrooms, dullnl room 2 1ears old, priced at $39,950. in the PRESTIGIOUS WESTC LI FF AREA OF NEWPORT BEACH 1nnounces the avoilobility of two ond throe bedroom units lor odults. From $2U . For information, telephone Mn . Gwen Lorenzo at 64~0252 Dosia II'IIPtal. 11495, _ .... -.. wnsas• '--5 ua...~. ·····.····· ... .., .. ,_ 1495 .... It 'I ••. 0 •••••• ........... 1595 .~~~ .... '! .. 1445 ALL PRICES INCLUDE BENCH AND DELIVERY ft.AL TOII .u-..n ...... n-•• lnt W. COAl. lift. .... ~!!!"!'--~-1 .. _ ...... AliA ... , ..... • ' I • ---Nice Things Happen IN CORONA DEL MAR Upper front level has 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, dining room, fireplace and bilt-ins. Downstairs has its own PRIVATE ENTRANCE, fireplace and bath. Back unit is adorable. Nice at $61,500. i Panoramic View OF NEWPORT HARBOR .•.. in this SEA UTIFUL CUSTOM DECORATED home. Three bedrooms, 3 baths, fireplace, kitchen with bilt- ins.~BUILT-IN WINE CELLAR and WET BAR. Patio, auto-time lights. For the discriminating buyer --- $125,000. 644-mo ~114tUt--S.td ~IATES REALTORS . . 11211AST COAST !MY. tORONA DilL MAll. CALl,, (0 a 0 a a 0 t a eo 0 a eo a o o o of HARBOR & OCEAN VIEW • • 5 BDRMS .Your Choice of 3 Custom built home by Smith Canst. Co. in Broadmoor I. Five bedrooms, II 2 fireplaces, panelled family room. E First time off ered. Price of $72,000 A includes beautiful view. L T 0 R 8 home, • ALSO • built ,mces, family the tarn- \e';n''t need a view. • ALSO • For the discriminating ... A Har- bor VIew Hom e with 5 bedrooms, 3 bathS •• , just $71,500. CoRBIN-MARTINjl t.====:=:644 -766 2====~:!J •••••••••••••••••• MLS SALES REPORT Sales throogh the Multiple Listing Service of the Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa Board of Realtors totalled $88.7 mllllm for the first 10 mooth.a of 1971 -an average of almost $9 mUllan a mootb I }'HIS IS A 1001 INCREASE OVER THE SAME PER- IOD OF LAST YEAR! In October, 161 sales were made tor $7 .s 11111- Uon, 2e6 new Uatinc• ,.re pro- ee-d, 54% were sold, 81% ot •I• were cooperathe. u.t your propertJ wf.tha • Me WlhM lh"' • ... •tll•l Otu ut.,. ,, .. ,. • .. Slwlol._:r • Ptrt.cl .... """" • Wotor St1lol 1•-• • fll-"Mfbtt • lrt,.ry Mtr4· ..... .......... ' •• ,.lt94. 2~-OFF •o• CASH V71t • (AU T I 702 NIWI'oRT BLVD., COST A MIS A at I 7th ~ Jaul'• ~Iofiin• Al!!!l.f ~FOR CHRISTMA.S.::.,... entertaining and g1vmg WE SP ECI ALIZ F. IN P ARTI ES AND WEDDINGS FREII!: I!!:STIMATES -WIRE AND DELIVERY SE RVI CE '"~ OPEH DAYS COAST HWY ., DEL MARINERS CHURCH ..,.. SALE-.... .r TAGS AHD CH RIS TIUS C ARDS ~ PRICE REG. $3.60 ONLY $2.89 del I \ . • ) WILLIAM COli DIES NEIPO«TMAMOR-111 FliiST SEcta --..... I lltUIIIOAY, DEC. 7, lt71 CODA DEL ilA ... CAll F. ·KARL DAVIS DIES .._ ON CHRISTMAS GIPT VALUES IIU DFTHE MONTH :;:! NOW 7.99 IELIIE 2·1UART FIIIIE EISEMILE For holiday enterta•ning or a Supt"rb aitt' l·q~rt fondue pot ts poreet1in 1midf! arK! out lor nsy clunup, w•lh st1inteu 11m, cOOl wood handle and cover knob Includes buroer , dome slitnd, lrly, St• COIO(oCod~ fondue lor~s. !endue rwpe boo~let Choice cl colors. Shop earl y! Quantities limrted, subject to prior sale. "Super Buffet Cooker/ Sonl{,r ... the complete do..,.rything mellmlker u ...... ,., dl t, ..... ~ ··~· .... .., _ .. 10.11 lOr CIIH IOIU , t l"h. IO,dli40 , 10\101 .... lll ll b ll l , ·~"···· dll· M rtl , ~ot fHo .. riQI I , I>OCICOtn S.lt . '"-"1'101lll ocall~ CI>,.HOIII d ...... 25-LAMP OUTDOOR LIGHT SEl .. • fl.' • I No .cdrc~i"'. no b~'"'"ll no oor .. etcllino 2\lt-ql IIIU i r P'" 11 Tt llon U Uned Pct«:t ll ln-c li d ''""'j"""' Weatherproof. ~ Factory protested. ,,,,, .. S•lu 0.1111" ,..,,...II Gold A-.oc::tdo "''"'' If Oftl 1011 o.t tho r11t stoy on . 4" Twinkling Lights ..........____. 35 · LIGHT SET S211 WHIL.II: THI:V L.A8TI YULET IDE TWINKLING LIGHT S ETS i WII:ATHII:"~"OOI' IND00ft8 OR OUTOOO .. a .. II:P'LACKAaL.II: ~U aH-1 N a U L.88 ADD-O N ~L.UG UL. L.taTt:o 20 LIGHT aii:T .50 L IG HT aii:T "y-" .................. ·-.. 3107 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAl, CALIF. 673-2800 • ::t'JE' • NEWPORT BEACH J()( . ....,. ........ ...,., ... ft.aJI B M 4fiWIIIID J()( COSTA MESA DIL Juniot EbeH award given Mrs. Llrry Mttcr.tU, federa- tion chairman for the Julor Ebell Club of Newport Bell.cb, ba.s won ao award tor tbe beat oYerall work cSooe during fed-.rauoo month. O:JrblC October, tbe 21JunJ.or W'o)mea's Clubs that make ~ 1 Orange Dtstrlctspreadtheword of their elub'sserric.eandded.J- eatioo to the eommtml.ty and to tbelr sister clubs. It W':tS a time for membership drives, pro- mot!n( friendships aod t:Jt(:om- lnr; better ac~oted with Dis- trict and State officers and cbairmen. DmT FROM THE EXCAVATIO:-i for the Olympic pool at Newport Harbor high school has been dumped on the site of the proposed biological nature center adjlcent to the school campus to create atlcslmtleotamOUDtatnforest area. Pictured here from left are Mrs Jerry Leland, head of the conservation committee of the co-spon~rtng NewPort Beach JuaJ.or Ebell; Rot)ert House, head of the sct .. ce department at Harbor High who first proposed the project, aDd Steve Plumb, president of a.o ecology club at Harbor.' (Photo by Karen Kovach.) Mrs. Mitchell mel the chal- lenges of Junior ln•olYement m.>Oth. She taped a 28 mlntrte fUm for Community Cablevtstoo explaJntng the workings ot Ju- nJor Ebell. She had 2000 fiyers printed, entitled "Koow your community through Junior Ebell," aod cir culated them lt a local shopping mall. Th~y wm cootlnue to be sL\)plJed to new residents. A m~mbershJp champagne lea was given, where Mrs. Mitchell explained theworldngsotJunlor Ebell to 30 prospective mem- bers. · FUNDS SOUGHT FOR NATURE CENTER A m.ljor tuOO raJsing cam-be provided through the High palgn wlU be UDder way shortly School's student work ex- to help finance the developm~nt pcrtence program. ol tbe biological nature ctntP.r The pr oject ns ftrst lntro- on a parcel of land adjacent to duced 10 years ago by Robert Newport HarbOr lligh school. House, head of the science de- It Is planned to develop ap-partment of Newport Harbor proximately 3 acres 'lf unused hlgll school. Because of a lack land and gullies Into an outdoor of fUnds, It never progressed laboratory and esthetic natural past the lnltlal pl.a.Dnlng stages. scene. Mrs. Jerry LelaDd aDd her The center would be an area conservation committee of the of unspoiled laOO with the addi-Junior Ebell Club of Newport Uon of native plants, ponds, Beach becam>? aw:.u"e of the walklDg trails aoo wlld lite. oature center project when they It would provide a Ubrary o{ approached tbe school district UVID(, cha.nging, and develop-with tbelr own plan for a simi- log natural We. 1a.r center proposed tor an area recently toured the site to acquaint themselves with the layout, as designed by larxl- seape architects Lang and Wood, and to determine the various stages of development. At this point, the area is fen- ced, and the dirt dug from the Olympic swimming pool was moved onto a plot to cr eate a. tlcslmJie or a mountain or for- est area. The Installation of a water system will be the next step. A letter and brochure are being prepared by the Juniors, sollcUlng the support of ser- vice clubs, compan.l.es, corpor- ations and the community. A large portion of the proceed!: trom the club's hlghlysuccess- tul boutiqlle will be donated to tbe pro)ect. The Newport Beach erat..~, abng with the Costa Mesa Ju- niors. purchased the seal ottbe CaUfornl.a Federation of Wo- m~n·s Clubs to be h.ung on a standard on Newport Blvd. Also. to her cr edit, was the booth she set 14> and statredatSol.lthCoast Plata ror the Co-ordinating Council's "Show 'n Tell." FlnaUy, Mrs. Mitchell staged a "come as you are" brunch, Involving both the Costa Mesa. and Newport Beach Juniors. A m m was m1.de or the event to show what the "well-dressed" Junior wears at 8 a.m. Satur- day, Mrs. Mitchell was asked to show .tnd narrate the ftlm tor the r1ist rlrr m-?eting, at whi ch time she was presented w!th the federation month a. ward. HATIOHED IN ALASKA Start Ser geant Jotm E. Mid- dleton, son of Mr. aod Mrs. R. P. Crane of 134 W, James, Costa Mesa, has arrived tor duty at Elmendorf AFB, Alas- ka. He is a medical laboratory technician, assigned to the USAF Hospita t. He previously served at Andrews AFB, Md. A TRADITIONAL WASSAIL BOWL, hors d'oeUYl'es, and stroiUng musicta.ns during a compUmenta.ry social hOUr · music by Les Brown; Christmas carols presented by Soanf Burke and the Voices of Christmas; spontaneous entertain- ment by Harry Babbitt, Andy ~vine, Buddy Ebsen, Roberta Linn, John Wa yne and many other Holly'rJOd persooa.!Uies have made the annua I '' Volees of Christmas'' ball the most celebrated holiday gala of the Harbor Area, Sponsored by the "552" Club, a men's support group of Hoag Hospital the black-tie dinner dance wlll be held at the Balboa oaf Club on Tuesday, Dec. 7, Th~ SO<'i.al hour w:tll be at 7 p.m., dinner at 8 and entertainment and dancing will begin at 9 ).m. In the above phOto, Ben C. o.~ne asks the "Voices" c hor~le to sing "that part one more time" in a practtce sesston, whJ ie Sonn)· Bl1tke (left ) and Les Brown (seated righ t) make last mtnu te changes in the score. (D.wld Ross phOto.) MARRIAGE PROILDIS? FREE CHRISTIAN RE- FERRAL SERVICE--Mar· rlage CounsekN's. Law- yers, Psycbolollsls, PSJ- chiatrlsts, Phystct.a.ns. 548-!837 Anytime -. ,·r The project would s1,ftlle-elem~ntary school. The com- meat many areas of tea.chlng, mlttee members elected to such a.s biology, botany, forest adapt thel..r pla.n to the eJ:Isttng eODMnatlon, sootoo, eotom .. ooe, &Dd wert tMa lfYtn per. oloO, chemlltry a.Dd earth sci-m!Salon by the school cn.trlet nee. Social .stucHes, art, Eng-aod the pri.Detpal « Ratbor Usb, a.Dd man)' other claues High to as•ist 1n the denlop- eould also beMtlt. The con-ment. Unulng care of the area would Led byMr.House,tlleJIIDiors 1'be recent Calltornla State S-te BUI No. 1 mandates the teaching ot conservation, pro- tection of resources and man's critical role In the environ- ment. The biological nature center would SlClPiement this btll and provide the only area ot Its kind In Orange County, tor au schools from ~lementary level through collegt!: as well as all ecologically minded erote>s or individuals, She's one we nuclear power plants. ........ (!)liE CLEANERS COllOM DEL MAll 2939 E. COMT HIGHWAY AT IIIII 675-3305 CALL. .....0171 ,-ON AN •x~&NT CAN~KT CONIOLTANT WHO 'MLI... C:OMil TO YOUN HOME WITH IAM .. L.I wtTMOUT ANY Oa.IOA,OM TO YOUt H..l GMffiT fU~qtlf: :1211 ~avo. _ . .._,_aM· COifA -, CAUP. PETER S. HUM"'!ER of Costa Mesa has joined First W~stern Bank as assistant vice presi- dent lo the international bank- ing dtvtston, located in the tank's Los Angeles Home Of- flee. He Is the Bank's Latin America specialist. He Is a lfldt*e ot Texas A &! M aDd boldJ a master's degree In IDlerDitlol:al business trom Teaa UQI.verslty. Born In Fort BeaalDc, Geor;ta, Mr. Humber Is a Yel.traD ot the llnited states MarlDt Corps. lACK TO SAil Dl EGO Eulp Jerrokl M. Leitch, soo of Mr. ud Mrs. George M. Ltilc:h ol 701 Cameo Highlands Orin, Cameo Hlefllands, re- tvoed to San Diego oo Nov . 19 loUOWlae llD 8 mooth depk)J • meat to Vlet:DI.m aboard the ampblblou carro shiP u.s.s. D~rw.m. He had the opportunity to •talt Japan., the Pblllpplnes, Otll&'ft, HoD1 Koog,Singi&IOI't. TUwu Ud Autralla. Ht is a lt'IO ..... of OCLA. OPIM DAILY ....... Plllll I P.M. 10 IMDII .. T eCOCITAK.S• Penelope started using electricity the moment she was born in the hospital. She'll need approximately 445,000 kilowatt-hours during her stay on the planet Earth. That's a lot of electricity. And Penelope is just one of the 200,000 babies arriving this year in the 14-county area we serve. To meet the needs of our growing population, new power plants must be built now. And the transmission lines to deliver that power. Otherwise, there simply won't be enough electricity to go around. Nuclear power plants are one of the ways to provide additional electricity. Nuclear power plants are a clean source of low- cost energy. And they are smog-free. In the future, we plan to rely more and more on nuclear power. Someday we're sure Penelope will be glad we did . ._,,,..,. f-DICISIOM M ... •l11~ IJOO N••-,.1•~:-. .,..,., .... II•, 1111 .. ,._ • Anoelate Evangellsl Ralph S. S.H ll&r been with tM Graham Team since 1963, holdlnQ ftVIInf18/lstic Crusades IIIOtmd /he WOIId. With his wile and two sons he mall:es his home In Bellvu., Colorado. This message was or/gl- nalty Pfeached at Mess/1h Lutheran Church In Fargo, Nof/h Dalt.ola. on January 17, 1971 , The surgeon peen inaide man and marvels at hia aymmetry and eomplex workin• mechaniama. The psychologist aeeka to analyu man's behavior and to foUow the varied paths that hi a emotion!! travel. The Paalmist too lifta up his eyes In incredulous wonder that an infi- nite God could ahow concern for finite man. And he sings, "When I consider thy heavens, the work of thy ftncers, the moon and the stare, whieh thou hast ordained ; what ia man, that thou art mindful of him?'' The Bible answers the Psalmist's age...old query and declares that man ia God's crowning act of creation. This is our ftret glimpse of God's creature: man in the garden. The Bible declares that God created the tint man and woman for fellowship with himself ; that God and man were friends and in tune with each othe r , and the channels of commun ica- tion were open and clear . It was a relationship of dignity and peace; of serenity. love and companionship. The Creator and ma n were going to build a wonderful world together. in which there would be no hate or sutfering, no bigotry o r rac ism , no war or pain, no greed or lust or selfishness. It was purposed to be a beautiful world in which man could walk with God in the cool of the evening, in which he could have a perfect and divine kind of fellow- ship. The first man knew true freedom ; the Bible indicates that God gave a gift to man that he gave to none of his other creature!'!. It was the gift of choice, of free will. Our first parents wer e free to obey God and live with h im, o r to disobey him a nd go their own way. They were not robots. Man was created in the image of God: he had an intellect like God, emotions like God, a will like God, and he was free to obey · God. Adam and Eve had a capacity for God and a unique relationship with him, and it was in this har- monious relationship that man dis- ~vered what abundant life was all about. Man in the garden had fel- lowship and freedom. But the Scriptures teach us t h at there came into man's experience a fall when he exercised his free will and chose to go his own way. Adam sought to build h is own world without God. Of hie own volition he turned his back upon the clear com- mands of God. Consequently Para- d ise was lost and Adam's one act of rebellion plunged the human race into a state of awayneM from God. Man became a rebel c reation. Today modem man looks back over h is should er and with pride of face he pointe to the tremendou! progres.s he has made since his AP- pearance on the scene of history. He is now no lo nger man in the garden but man in the galaxie!. F or many individual men science has now become God. One scientist as- serted that the world picture of the nuclear age does not include God. Man today does not flnd God in hi! reactor, nor does he find him through his telescope. God does not seem to be hidden among the rushing e lec- trons and he is certainly not visible in outer s pace. Dr. Robert B. Fische r, an a nalyti- cal che m ist, is widely known for the pioneering studies he made with the electron mic roscope while at Indiana University. This microscope makes m or e disti nct the X -ray pictures o~ tained after the intake o f barium sulfate into the body ; a nd it hae also helped us in our understanding of rainmaking. Today the largest elec- tron microscope is being used to probe the inner recesses of moon- rock. examining material at 1/10000 of an inch. The laser beam is now being uaed to mend the tiMues of the eyes, and to freeze nerves to help penoM suffering from Parkineon'a dlaeue. But I auppoee the mOf!lt spectacu- lar acientilk achievement in the hi.tory of the human race wu the placln.. of a man on the moon. Think of it-man whirling about in apace on another utral body, amid tiM plalcy of stan. One oclentlst a... lAid that It .... tit• createet OftDt of all time, with that one lltatemeDt ~WMPinl' under the 1111' tile cleooth_,_ burial aDd reeurnetion of J ..... ,;nrilll.. But thoup ""l!la¥ -" of man In the plaxleo, he Ia .tiD ....,. lnolplbnt b7 plactlc •rz••-11. A.o Walter Burka1 ... .,,.,. .. ,_al_or ProJaa x-,. .... Gomlnl, baa oaloi,"JJa..W __ _ -n that Ia true, why doea man uee techni- cal altlll to oave the wounded In battle, and at the aame time to de· otroy the Uvea of othenT Why doeo he eeek a cure for cancer, and per- fect the nuclear bomb? Why doea he produce excess wheat and then dump it into the ocean while men go hun&TY! Why doea he break the eound barrier but not the racial barrier? Man waa made for love, yet left alone he ia not loving. He wu made for comp&Mion. but left alone he pulls the winp off' fties. He unlocka the eecreta of outer apace but ia unable to solve the problems of inner tpace--of his own heart. Omar Bradley wu right in saying, "Ours is an age of nuclear giants and ethical infants." Man may be in the galaxies but he is out of touch with God. He is a cosmic orphan floating about in space. out of contact with the Infi- nite. He is away from his C reator and ia lost. However, the Good News of the Gospel does not center in man's lostnese, it lies in the fact that he can be found. This is where we view our third g limpse o f man. He is man in the Creator. C hrist entered the stream of hu- man h istory for one purpose. and that was to bring us back to God. to give us life, to place us in a full new dimension of living. He walked this planet of ours with the gentle touch of a healer, the broken heart of a lover, and the dying grief of a Savior. He wrote the story of those g lor ious 33 years in his own blood. H e came to bring man in the gal- axies back to God that he might again become man in the C reator . Each of us has a capacity for God and an ability to re late to him in a personal way. When we do, he brings to us pardon for· the pa$1t, peace fo r the pre$ent, and a promise for the future. But we have to do 80mething about it. W e have to act upon the facts. What if Alexand e r Graham Bell h ad known the fact~ about the telephone but had done noth ing about t hem? I may know that the formula for water i~ H~O. but that doesn't Mti~fy my th i r~t. I have to drink water in o rder to assuage my thirst; I mu~t take it into my body. J ohn w rote of Jesus, "As many as received him. to them gave h e power to become the !Wns of God." We find a whole new experience we allow Jesus Christ to take over the eontrol center of our lives and make him our Lord. Only in C hrist has our real manhood been expreued. Only through him do we become truly human. He came to teach us how to live. and to give U8 a purpose for living. D o you know him ? <::>c: GIVING OUABI!LVEB ... uncondltlon•lly No man. having put his hand to the plough, and looking back, is fit lor the kingdom of God. -tuK£ <J:6l Clay ship idling on its launching pad vapor leaking from its valves power to soar cancelled by the gravitation of self. BeSin the coun tdown, lord t Order all systems go. Free this tethered c raft fill each fuel cell ignite it with Your life then lift it off give it fu ll thrust -BEVERLY CAV!Nf51) Greenfield, low~ execute the burns maneuver it into orb1t stabilize the gyrations accompl is h Your mission. The defect in the man who wdnted to be a dtsciple but fus t had to bury his lather [Luke 9:57 -62] tS that he wanted to do it frrst. He made 11 .1 condi!ion. and if the conditton were not granted he would not surrender. He ought to have yielded unconditionally by saying to Jesu~. 'If,,,, d(•manded of m<:' that I ~hould give up that which I so eagerly wanted lo do (namely, tu bury my father ) then I give it up. I give my.H~If uncondittonJIIy. Tht• matter of the buryin~ of my father I make d matter o f prayer to You after I h.we surrendered nw,~elf, askinf: humhly whNher it may be granted' · Whether: it be something treml:'ndcw!>ly important in our eyes or the greatest triviJfity, nothing, nothing mdy be so put between ourselves and Christ that '' becomes a condition. For in such a casf' W E' .:annat surrender ourselves to him The surrender must be unconditional; then-and this is a diHerent thing from making prior conditions -we can pray for ourselves that our burden mav not be tOO heavy. -SiPREN KI£RK£GAARD •. The · Universal BJE.P • ._Izoe 'ROM "CHRUJIAN MIWl," MIW MA¥1M, MO. (COMTIMUIO PROM LAST WI lit) Con•laUve to tbt u&a~ btp.cbet or IAJ&Dd .-.. 'ftldl ate oow dlmiAI&Hd or drJ art the eltvattd terrae:•• or atr.amt wbtcla OQC:t c:arrltd a mud1 CTMter volume or water tbaD IM)W, 1'bt.&t tor tamplt In ud about WubJnrton, o.c .. there are borla.orual terracet 1Ddic:au.nc that the Potomac Rhtr once Oowed 05 , 160, 115 and 285 feet above ita present level. 81mt~ tar terraces eaiat above the ~ River In the atate of Wuhtfll'(on and above the Thamea ill Encland. ...,.. After the Deluce, buried VtftU.Uon bepn to make the c:oal we have. Entombed marine lift probably created the otl. Either orpntc remains or thermal action tn the b9wels of the earth at the Umt of tht Flood contributed natural ras. Thua the Deluce broucht the lnealcubble benefits of eoal, oU and pa to a world wtltcb was to be climattcally leu COftl'ental than the antedJiuvtan and which would use these pro- ducts for dev•loplng the technological c:lvll tzauon that we have tocby . Arnone the plethora of uth•r advantaces that could tw cited, the el...:trlc Iicht by which I wrue Is made from ooal: the gasoline that runs my car comes from petroleum; and tht> natural cas that heats my home was lUtely entoU(h born in the underground composts or the subterranean turnaces of the Flood. Indeed, almost all our wnlth of material blesstncs Is a pro- duct of the Dfoluce. Concluatoa Much of what 1 have reported In thiS artlcl~ Is, of course, merely plausible tbeory, but 11 Is theort based on the stupendous Incontrovertible tact of a sudden catastrophe which overwhelmed the nrth, "whereby the world that then was, belnr overnowed with water, perished" (II Pet. 3:&). We are now living In a world which bears very little resemblance to the ea rth tbat was before the Flood. Rehwtnkel aptly remarks: "In all recorded histOry there is no otll er event exceot the Fall which had such a revolutionary effect upon the topography and condition of this ea rth and which has so profoundly a fleeted human history and every phase of life as it now exists ." BIBUOGRAPHY Bernard Acwortll , "'Evolution, thf' Mammoth and the Flood," abridged by C. E. A. Turner In Evolution Pro- test Movement, Santhia Stoke, Hayling Island, Hants , Encland , no date. Captain Acworth cot hts facts from E. w. Pfit:r.enmayer, ''Man and Mammoth.'' Phtzen- mayer was a taxidermist on an expedition Ln 1901 by thfo Academy of Science or St. Petersburg to rP - cover thf' fam ous Beresovka Mammoth . Gleason L. Archer, Jr., "A S_urvey of Old Testa- mt>nt ln troduclion," MoodY Prt>ss. Chi cago, 1964 . Awake~. June 8, 19'10. nt>ws item on coral reef rf'mnants at a depth of 2'1 ,500 feet an tht-PuPrto Rl · can trPnch Theodore L. Handnt:h, "Everyday Seaport> fur lhP Christian," Concordia, St. Louis, 194'1 Theodore L . Handrich , "TheGrt>ation," Moody PrPSS, Chicago, 1953 . C. F. Kell and F. Deliusch, "Biblical Commttntary on the Old Testament," vo lume I, the Pentateuch , T. and T. Clark, Edinburgh , 188 1. Henry M. Morris, "Biblical Catastrophi sm and Geology ,'' Presbyterian and Reformed Pubhshmg Com- pany , Philadelphia. 1963. Dr. Morns heaas •hf' De- partment or Ctvil EnglneerinR at V1rgmta Polytechnic Institute , Blacksburg , Vlrgmia. As a hydraulic eng aneer, he is pecultarly wE'll tiltPd to write about the Flood Charles P. Morse, "Source of the Wat er and Drtvmg Enern an the Genesis .Flood,·· Bible-Science Nt>ws· letter, July-August, 1971. Byron C. Nelson, "The Deluge Sto r y In Stone." Augs - burg Pubhshang House , MmnPapohs, 1931 Oi l Week, Apnl 5, 1971 , qooted tn Bille-SctencP Newsletter, July-August, 1971 , on the formation ot na.tural g:..s from tnorgamc m•tter as a result or a geoiO(ical catastrophe "such as intrusion of mollen rock.'' • ,, The Conquest of Ai JOU.aa 8:1, 2, 1().22, 28, 29 --·- Ey'.deiiCI DoMid W. h.._, "Tbt Biblical rlOOd a,Jid tlill lee &Doe'. • • Pactfte Mutdl.a.a P\abllat. ... eom ... ,, ._toe, . .... O.Or .. lltCHMY Prkt, "'I'M PIIDdam.-talaorGto· 100', .. Pacttk: ...... hbl1Jbl.fti4.110C:lalkMtt, ltriWDt&UI VlW, CI.Won&a, ltU. AltrM M. RtbwtUel, "Tbe rlood," Concord11, St. Loult, lt51. J<*l H. Rl.lebe, "Tbe Blblleal Dtlt~~•. ParaboUeal or Hlatorteal, Local or Uatveraal," CbrlfUan Hews, A'*l\lft 11, lt'JI . A. G. Till'ley, review of Whlteomb and Morrta, "Tbt Geneala Flood," In Evolution Protest Movem.nt, S&nthta Stoke, HayUnc lalud. Kant a, Entl&nd, October, 1H2. Guatav 5eyffarth, ''Die Allaemel.nhtUdtrau.Ddflutta.'' Wartburc Orph&nare Puss, Mt . Vernon, N.Y .• 1111 . John C. Whl\(::omb, Jr. and Henry M. Morrta, "The c:;en.,ata Flood," The Presbyterian and Reformed Pub- llshlnc Company, PhUadelpttla , 19&4. John c . Whitcomb, aub Flood, Deluge, ln the Zon- dervan PtctortaiBtble DtcUonary, Zondervan Publlabtnc House, Grand RapJda , 19&3. Robert Whitelaw, "Fifteen Thousand Radiocarbon Dates," Blble-Sctence Newsletter, JunP 15 , 1970, from a ndlo presentation over Statton CKBB, S,rne, On - tario, Canada, December 7, 1060. CORRElATIVE READING For related matertal on the Flood, .see E. P. Schulu , "Th• UniVf'rsal Deluce: its Historical Evidence," Cl'ltlsuan Sewa, Ja11uary 12, li70; "Stowing Noah's Carco," The Confessional Lutheran, July, 19&1; and "The Quest for the Ark," Christian News, Aupst 31 , 1970. BIBUCAL REFERENCES Reference-s to the Oelure, bestdes those in Gene- sis, are found tn Job 22 :15-16; Psalm 104:&-0; 1•. 54:0; Matt. 24:37-39: I Pet. 3:20; and II Pet. 3: 5-&. God's Words In Language of M• I" ROM .. CHRISTIAN NEWS. "MI!W HAVEN, MO, 87 Araold H. Gebloardt I. Getl. 1: 11, It "And he said, Who told thee that thou wast n.ak· ed? Hast thou eaten of the tree whereof I com- manded thee that thou shouldest not eat? And the man said, The woman whom thou eavest to be with me, she eave me ~ the tree, and I dkt eat.'' When the Dtvlne Judie ipealu to the trans- greuor to ronvict b1m of hll atn, His words are like a hammer that breakl a roclr. to pieces (Jer. 23:29). . Adam found this out. There was no mtsunder- st.andfn&: the words of the Dlvtne Interr"Oiator; for they are simple words d. the laDgW~.~e which Adam was ramWar with, and the worda, tbou&h simple, were JO sk1lllully used by the Dtvt.ne Prosecutor that they led to a confeuton. Here, however, we aee the utter corruption which the fall Into aln bf'O\llht upon the human race. Adam did not stand up like a man wtll· lng to take the blame for hll tony In lettlne him· self be lured away from the holiness at God tnto the stinking mire of Satan's shame and vtce. ThJa cowardice has not decreased tn intensity; It 11 still as dlsgraceful today as It ever was: ~ ple today woukl atlll rather boast of their rood· ness than admit their slnt\llneu. When His Juc:t,e spoke to hlm Adam thouabt up a lame excuse: he blamed his wUe; yes, wone, he implied that God waa to blame tor etvtna h1m this woman, through whom be feU lnto the sln of dlsobedleDce. Today. too, tnstead of humbly accept!Da: God's verdk:t of aullty, mea and wamea the world aver lllr.e to th1nk up lame n:cu.aes tor thet.r Jbul_ Tbe Savior says, "Repeat ye, and. believe the Gospel! •• (Mt. 1: 15). (Reprh.,eo:l from CHJUSTIAH 8EACOH, 7S6 Hoo:lo:l.., A ~•. CoH!ng•wooo:l, N.J.) Golden Text: "Ftw if WI 'WOtlld j .dg# ourult,rJ , tl't wt~ufd 'IQI br iudgtd" (I Cor. II :31). '~ ~0~ =~:r;d~~o;;. O'fU ltTong oppotltJOn II often a very d~rous thing aad may lead to very eviJ and terrible results. So it happt:ned to the lsraelitrs. o~.bout 3.0Xl men went up on the "ex- cursion'' to Ai (0.. ?: .. ). Even Joshua forgot that at J~richo the pbn5 were mad~ by the Captain of God's host, aad he also forgot to ask that Captain what to do about Ai. A!J far as the record 5hows , no Israelites were lriDed in the battle of ] ericho, •nd 1 imacine that non~ of these J,CXX> men expected to ie: killed or ddeated; thrrdore, I refer to it as an "t:xtursion" rather than a military"attack. To them ~r know, this wu the 6nt offenee of Athan, but his terribLe punishment shows tbe awfulneu of sin in the siJht of God, and the absolute necessity of strict and faith- ful obedientt. Achan's sin had slain 36 men and jeot-rdiz.ed the: lives of all the Israelites by a!ienatinc their God and encoun.(in1 their enemiet. This llhows al.o that there is nothinc prink about theoe p<aple. the 1..-..111<~ lha• W t11oy would obey Him, He wou&d let thE ..., godly nations remain tmtporanly • tht earth to keep it c:uJtint:td, aod, whee ... laDditu wen: rsdy to ~ d-.! llad. He would Jmd the ''hornet ._..... thl unrodJy and datroy than, --...., wen not Hit _,..anta and witlteua aM would not acknow~ Him u their God or obey Him (DNI:. 7 ~12, 216). Jericho and Ai wen two ol thftt ua- pdly dries. After Canaan had t... wtUed by the tribes of~• I, JOih~a. ill his lut cha~ to his , redtttd 10 them the: promi~ of and their a.e-o compi;olunmt. opecifially ooleutd 10 lllo fact tM.t God had wnt Hit hornet before then and lw.d driven out the Caounila (}oth. 2-HI-13). 8) H [,N\ J. li~ \ U I . rh .U . I" ROM '"THE CHOSI!)I PCOPLf:" -:l:U W. J :h .. l St., H•• Y•..t. City Qu.:s110n (ml ''''' 1,.// ,,. ,.flrrr I ..-ill {inti thr l't'f\1', ·',\lim "1fl ,.,,,, hn flrrod loy thr lllrllf nJ /,, h,.,.,··· G.-nrJi.f J IIJ fill' ·In tlu· ''"''" ••/ '"·'' {on• ... " AIISwo: MUlti lf.JOSI3tlom n:.ld ·'' the Authorized Vcrsu.m nf 16 11 hut the Berkeley Ve rsion ha~. "In the sweat of your hrow .. " I t we .... ere goin1 To be quite litenl '" our trans· lation, we would have to render th e phrase as George Ricker Berry does in his lnterlinur Litcrnl Translation hy "In the swe:JI of th )' nostril\ ... Thc regular Hebrew wor;J for fa ce '" nur u!led. Instead it is the worJ '11ph w!Hch i~ propcily nou or nmtril and hence came to signify foa. It ~~ tran~ha teJ noslriiJ in Genesis 2:7 and 7:22 . 10 give ju.st two examples: forehead in Ezekiel 16: 12. and ('OIIIIft'llf/11( r rn Pulm 10 :4. Most of the timl', htrw - cver, it ll> tran.sla ted unJ?rr or wroth from the •dea of rapid hrcathm11 re- sulting from pa.s~ion. When we thmk of the sweat resuilina from \In, let l" contemplate the agony of the Lor;J JesU5 in Luke 22 :44 when Hi~ JroWt.at. u it were great drnps of blooU. fell to the ground. However, let us re- member that it was not lhe blood of Geth.semane nor the blood of the crown of thorns and the sc:ouraina that wrouJhl our redemption, but the hlood or Hi.• crms (Colosaian!l I :20). QueSiion : IJ it true that Stllan cnn· nQt h~ dt:trroy~d h«DUJe he i1 11 tpirlr7 Answer: PI you mean by "destroy" thai be can never be annihilated, then I~ statement i• c:orrec:t. That the de. struc:tion of hell is not annibllalion is cvideat from Rev. 20:10, w.,.,.. when the devil it C:Ut inlo lhe late of 1ft .. ftad that the beut and lbc falte propbet ate adD tbere where they hlrve been f« a tttou.nd years! J"hey captu~ and destroyed Jericho in a mo~t spectacular manner, simply by being olx-dient to the orders givt:n to them by God through Joshua. The news of this tremendous event must hav~ brought terror to all o! the cities of Ca11.1.an that h«rd it. It ai!M> had the effect of puffing up some of the Israel· ite5 who began to be convinced that they did it by themselves, and .so f"t~Qt to give God the credit. THE CURSE Of SIN God had aid to than through Joem.a, •· And ye, in any wisr keep )'Octndu::s from the accursed thing, lrst ye make yourselv~s accursed, when y~ take of th~ <rccu rsW thing, and make dw ~ of hrad a curse, and troublt it" (Ch. 6 :18). All, except the hMd of one family, obeyed, but Achan, l('('retly took "a coodlY gar- nw:nt [imported ~) hun- dred shekels o f stlver, of rotd of fifty shekels ·hid them in the dirt in his tent, and 10 was under that At han in hi. tent he wu ;~,i;;(. ~!. allthlnc> Hu people. THf Joallaa ceedod of ·ca;..o. AJ, f oct lh"'c'" knew that apparea~y a ... r wtth God know• the ·~ of all was a foreco~ -fort -"""' ........ IIUI It .--:• • lhe men of them and six men : they.:~~~,~~~:~:~;~~< before the pte, When the 2,964 defeated rt:tumed to camp bearing their 36 dead, "the heartl of the jlr.o pk m~lted, and became a~ watu" for fear. THE SHAME Of SIH "Joshua rent his clothes, and fell to the t:.1rth upon hi s fat:to beforeihc ark of the Lord until thto evtontide, he and the elders of Israel, and put dust upon their heads." They were O'¥CTc:omt with sha.me and humiliation. Joshua uked God how this defut ever haPC)ft)td and ICCII1Itd to put some of the 6iame upon God for brmcinc them over Jordan and then lettinr-them bt ddet.ted in battle by a ama1'. people who b.d killed somt laraeliter . k e · uktd God, "What wilt thou do unto thy creat raame ?"' Bat God waa w::ry biUDt aad refaed to bt re. buked or blamed and aid, "Get thee up : whtrdore lietc thou ttnu upon thy fact ? brad hatb aiaaed. and thay haft also t.......,...ed wlDdlr I c:ou••rdeo4 tt.n: t"f'ttl the -.... }-.... tho ........... bot .. - c.-forward udl •II •I II I W. ...... So~ .... ~--.. liad a.....,._ .......... ..,.~. .......... IDd .. ~ ..... ~ lu a sin. GOO'S PlAN fOI VICTOIY VICTOIY 1Y OlfDifNCl This time the people 111 obeyed and the plan sucneded. Whm tJ:w army of Ai saw their c:ity bumin1 behind thnn, Joshua and his army stopped ftednc t.Dd turned aplnst the men 01 AI, who dn:as were cauKftt between th-o two forces, and none escaped ali.-~. jOihta, at God's command, Jtrdc:hod out hit aptat toward the city, nen u Motet Met held up hia hand. whea the Amalekjta Wft't de- f .. ted .. tho-.. ,_ .... not hit hand bMk. wht:retrith be ••ctchecl out lhe _.., until lie hod ttileoly de- otfoyod aD the -cil Ai." This time God IOid joaltao that tho -le aad tpOil ol the dty ....... be -.......... by them, ...... they dMI. The lriai ol AI --""' and lnmc, and ...., today the aad trite of Ai it aot oertainly -· • -.. llo iiiijili!i _.. ..... _ ... wll ... Ria llolt,~ ..... --lloeJ ..... ~ ......... The late B~ G. a.......,. Ox-, who apparently d1d not unckntand tM.e <<OclUnco ol tho Old T.-_ .. rro¥ed the statemtnt that the God of thl Okl Testament is a "Dirty BuDy." A study of this kuon woukl l.ne ''"'"'" him how w~ he wu. God it a "bully"-but God ia ;-. of the sin apinst God, C'm"J'~ some aoontr and aonw Jatw. flesh aJI die. 1'ht people • were spirihaU~clad be- we re separated clilobedi~ who 11 Life. , by Hit that tl!ey ...... He...--:=..t;,~•nd ~ tllelr '"' of their lthnl the-!! ltated, to !! ms"'"" ro. ~:~r.~He.,. He ..... .a..., 1-Cd IIJ II U. ..... ?U to tbe rzznc llarl H,... Mel......., ftc r"• • .. h=lt adllloe ~ ~ ..... tloo u.. of Cllrlot't ... .c. ;zw ~ -..... 177'• . ' . ... = Dletrldl Jloo.o Nlae Ortck w«da are ualllleted .. daeroJ" in tiM KJa1 JlftMI Vlltlioo, hoi aoot ot ..._.. .... 110 aa.lhllate. l1loy _, -_.,.. u to rula, 10 .......,, 10 k»ootn, 10 CCJm.!Pf:, to n.v- .,., -.. and dnM are. traMaated ...... I'OJ'."' .-~. hlo ......,, ...... ~ "!'--..... c ,hilly 1 ,...,... .. lloeJ---·-..... 111 ..._ 1111110 dds day •.•• Wlw4cc .. -oltllot ,_-eolad. Tloo ..,. ol Adlor, -tlllo tloy." A. far • .. ;;:,s;: t: ~ 'ft<:~ of Goil't ..... .. . ... -...... .... _ ...... 0..:1111--........ ~-... ---.-.... -• a :1 !'"'!L.' ~ ~ 'i: !: -:-= ... -.,. lit JS 1 I Newcomers at Hoag ~EWPORT I!AROOR t~~ Gil SECOifO SECTION --Pose 3 lliURSOAY, DEC. 2, 1911 CORONA DEL ~AR, CALl F. • ..oAT, NOV. I .., •• lfr, lll4 llrs. lloory Boy .. IIJ. ud llro. E.-IOOSTERETTES RAISE FUNDS FO R DARK ROOM ....... 1111 CUyoo DriY"t, Co-K, WerDtt, %llt·B PaeUJ.e * .,_, AM,, Cotta w... Tbe OCt Boosterettes are-wrltlog IM't)st and a white • TUISDAY, NOV. 9 • SUNDAY, NOV, 14 or&ILftlzlnc a "dark room" ,., elephant booth will ntthemood Qrl--llr. aDd wu. Joha Glri--Mr. andMra.LoWJJ, bOlt coeldall party, to raise torthee .. tllioc. 1'1*11. .111 K.tap Place, Clift Mo~tttiOil, '129 St. Jame~ Rd., mooty to equip a dark room tor Mrs. AI Irwto &Dd Tom Cub, laNL Cutr Haven. tbe OCI athletic dcattmeat recreaUoo director ot ocr are GU'I--Wr, aiMS Mrs. Jeremy Boy--Mr • aDd Mtl, Oaalel 1be party wUI be heJd lr'o~-co .. ebairmeo of the "eat: as. IUD, 40C tria, Coroaa del Ma.r. S. Gooz.alts, 2950 Wa11&et St., ~:SO to 8 p.m. saturday, D3C. 4, slsted by Mmes. Robert MaUn- GJ.rl--Mr . and Mn. RooaJd Costa Mea . lo ttwl spa activity room at on, Mel Farmer, Robert Bern- Bolder, 1553-B Wlntercreen, Boy--Mr. aod Mrs. Case K. Park Newport apartments. ard, Ken Wassma.o, William COita Mesa. Okubo, 1777 TustiDAYtooe,Co-Gypsy fortune tellers, cigar KI.Ddel, Duld Waldeo, and wn. • -DNESOAY NOV 10 sta Mesa. and c1prette Jirls, a b.a.Dd-llam Stupy, "'L , • Glrl--Mr. and Wr1. Robert Boy--Mr. aDd Mrs. Edward C. Brlmer,1525 PlaeeiiUa AYe., Ueker, Z033 Swan Drive, Costa West Newport Heights. M-.. Boy •• a,r. and Mrs. George Boy .. -Mr. ud Mrs. Patrick Hiner, 278 VLrgtnta Plaee Co- B. O'I>JnoeU, 1278 W·ltson, Co-sta Mesa. ' G Mea. • MO~IDAY, NOV. 15 Boy--Mr. and Mrs. Craig W. Boy--Mr. aDd Mrs. Robert Holmes, 721 Wee to, Costa A. Patterson, 419-1/2 East Bay SPACE FOR RENT in lho Enli ., Bull41nt 2Ul I , Cellf IIIJ,, C..l N1 •• SEE OWN ER AT Til E ENSIGN TII ..... IIQHII1 m Mesa. Avenue Balboa • T • • HtntSOAY, NOV, 11 Boy--Mr, aDd Mrs. 03oald BoJ--Mr. aDd Mrs. Jesus Westt.i.U, 18171 Mayapple Way, for the best in service ?~~;;:;~:~ ~~:!!!~!:=:===!<Office Equipment SUdoYal, 2563 Elden,tF,Costa Irvine. Mo!a. Boy--Mr. aDd Mrs. Jeltrey Glrl--Mr. aDd Mrs. Denver Shour, 607-1/2 Marigold, Co- A. Drlnk'wioe, 1303 Baker, fA, rom del Mar. Costa Mu31l. , • SATURDAY NOV 13 TUESDAY, NOV. 16 Boy--Mr. ~ Mr~. GeraldJ. Twin glrls--Mr. and Mrs. Burke, 2942 Pemba Drive, Co-Peter Thorneloe, 900 Sea Lane, MRS . DOUGLAS KIRCHM !R. (Bemie Allie,. photo) sta Mesa. -A;>t. n , Corona del hhr. C lle K . • b .d GLrl--Mr. and Mrs. Gary M. Gl:l--Mr. and Mrs. Terry R, 0 en •ng IS rl e Goemer,2616WeslmlnsterPI., Daom,l718Aoti ... W•y,Oover Costa Mesa. Shores . f D I K • h Boy--Mr. and Mrs. Harold Glrl--l.tr. and Mrs. Carl D. 0 0Ug Q $ frC ner ~~:':.-e!.~ocaworruastr .. r, ~::"!'':.<e'.:.~ w ,st 18th Street, The Rev. Doo Kribs united Her slater, Kathleen Steven-Boy--Mr. aDd Mrs. l«<ger E. • WEDNESDAY, NOV. 17 Miss Colleen AM King and son served as maid of honor Baker, 2700 Peterson, •42-B, Boy--Mr. a.nd Mrs . Albert D. Douglas Lee K\rctmer lD mar-s oo'wore a eheekedyellowging~ Costa MP.sa. Browrw:ll, 1207 Key West, Harp rlage at a hJgtl noon ceremony h.am gown made in cOtJOtry style Boy--Mr · and Mrs. John A. bor View Hills. held at St. Joachims Catholic wlth eyelet apron. A similar Gay, 837 Amlgos Way, the Church 1D Costa MesaonSatur-dr ess was woro by the brides-Bluffs. • TH URSDA Y, NOV. 18 Girl--Mr. and Mrs. Edward day, Nov , 6. ma.ids, Miss Joanne Rawell and --.,-:~--:==- The bride ts the daughter of Mlss Df!borah Klinger. The at-LIGAL MOTICW A. Ramsey, 990 U nden Place, Mr. and Mrs. Jack King of tendants wore yellow bows In Costa Mesa, The groom, wllo their hair wtth sm.tJI flowers now lives in Sedonla, ArlzoOOl, and carried l».skets of yellow Is the son of Mr . and Mrs. daisies. The attendants dresses Charles Kl..rchner of West New-were designed by the bride and port. made by the attendants. Costa Mesa. NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Boy--Mr. a nd Mrs. JamesR, NOTICE L.:; HEREBY GIVEN Walen, 711 Shallmar, Apt. A, that the City Council of the City Costa Mesa. of Newport Beach will hold a Boy--Mr. aDd Mrs. Robert pubUc hearing regarding Ordi-G. Blse, 1983 Port Sea bourne na.oce No. 1411, being, AN OR-Way, Harbor VIew Homes . • Be1uty S1lon1 BEAUTY NOOK 2732 E. Coast Hw y Corona del Mar Phone 644· 7 336 420 E. 17TH ST . C0$TA MES-A The br ide wore a white lace Michael Charles Kirchner gown on taffeta which was inset was his brother's best rTLlD. with pear ls. It W'J.S made by her Ushers were Spanky Foutch and au.nt, Ju.ne Vance. It was com. Jim Wallace, Organ music at plemented with her mother's the church was rendered by DINANCE OF THE CITY OF Boy--Mr. and Mrs. Law-MA-LCOLM (8UD)CliTU:R NEWPORT BEACH ADD£NG r enee J. Roseno\11, 3262 Wash-l~~~~c~~~~~ 646-no6 -644-6855 Yell and 25-year-old mother-Jean AmbUrgey. ot.pea.rl crown fashioned into Baskets or white gladiolas orange blossoms. decorated the c hurch and the home of the bride's parents at 445 E. 20th St., where the r eception wa s held. Assisting with the party was Mrs. Rita Ar~ort. The young co14Jie are both graduates of Newport Harbor high school. The groom also attended Colorado State Uni- versity for 3-1/2 years. The uw~~ ~re maki.Dgthelr new bome 1D Arizooa. MODEL Of MONTI! SECTIONS 20,02.032 AND 20.-ington, Costa Mesa, 02,225, AND ADDlNG CHAP-Glrl--Mr, and Mrs. Stephen TER 20.43 TO TITLE 20 OF K. Wol!f, 235 Ll.Jilan Place, THE NEWPORT BEACH MU-Costa Mesa. NICIPAL CODE ENTITLED • "AUTOMOBILE S ERVICE FRIDAY, NOV, 19 STATIONS," Planning Com-Boy --Mr. and Mrs. James mission Amendment No. 299, Bruba ker, 1632 Mar guerite, adding standards for the de-Harbor View Hills. veklpment of automobUe ser -Boy--Mr, and Mr s. Sidney vice stations, outllnlng useper-Tem~leton, 2188 Canyon, Costa mit procedures and providing Mesa. . tor the Improvement of existing Bny --Mr. and Mr s. Loman stations whlch. would become Miller, 400 Merrimac W·Jy, Co- noocontorming, as amended by s t2 Mesa. tbe Ctty Councll on Novem'ler • SAT URDAY NOV 20 zz, 1971. Boy--Mr. ~nd M.r s. Robert ~Copies of ameoded ordi-L. W·l\lace, 2100Peter sonWay, naoce, a re available In City Apt. 50-A, costa Mesa. Clerks oftlce.) Boy--Mr. and Mr s. James C. DISCOUNT PRICES ON CARPET CU AH IN G Tustin Carpel CleM eJS 544·548 1 ,. .. , -. '-•• •• •Me•.,. ,_ .. t'"c- For lnfor~tion Coli Chr;otophor IJ6 4067 or 527-6506 \405 L A.MA. The Newport Beach Fashion NOTICE 1S HEREBY FUR-Mut h 1943Por tProveoce Har Guild elected Sblrley Lynsty as THER GIVE N that the satdpub-bor Ytew Homes. ' ~ D IMMITT ber . She hans from 0~1o and '13th day of ~ember, 1971, at Bankhead, 17991 Butler str~t ~ FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS Delrf11rl Tosh FLORISTS PHONI: _,. 2UIN&fiiM ....... c:.ooo- • Food to Go FR IE D CH ICKEN 645-5990 1h00 A.M,tt 9o00 ~.M. OAILY CLOSf"O TUfSOAY 291 E. 17TH STREET (AT SAMTA AMA AYE.) COSTA MESA • Hearing Aids HAL AEBISCHER I Pr oper F •H ong Auured 3409 E Coast Hwv Corona del Ma• 675-3833 • Kennels K -9 KENNELS -0915 S.A. •Marine Hardware model of the month for Nonm-Uc bearing wtll be he ld on the Boy--Mr. and Mrs. Harold w {)P!.INN.IU spent 5 year s In Yugoslavia with t he hour of 7:30 P.M. In the Irvlne ' her husband, who was a doctor Council Chambers of the City Giri--Mr, and Mrs. John "1?.5. with the U.S. State Department, Hall of the City of Newport McC ray 212 Via Lorca Lido Finest qu.aliiJ' dry ckani.n• M RICHARD D. JONES of New-She has beeo associated with Beach, Callfornla, at whtchttme Isle. ' ' "' ... t&. port Beach 1$ president of the the Mary Webb Davis Studio or and place any and all persons on rl\c prcomlsa •. J Nortllrtdge Fashion Center ~ewport Beach for the past interested may appear and be "'SUNDAY, NOV. 21 • Clothing _ Nautieat Girt s CorporaUon, which celebrated 1-1/2 years. She Is a home-heard thereon. Boy--Mr. l nd Mrs. Richard Sclf·IICO"icc laundry Mann(' Hardware the gruel opening of Jts $60 maker and busy mother of 5 Laura Laglos M. King. Z1 90 Co llege Avenue, All new _ laleM mock! Open Sevt>-n Days, WeE-k mlllloo doUa-r centerlnthe West children and has served as City Clerk Apt , 9, C1>sta Mesa. Fripd.Ue wuhen to Ser ve You Better I I I '-tti. • ....... 't~U r'':p .. · IN Nt:WPOftT" &E.ACM O[frct FI.U"7I.iturt DESKS • CHAIRS I FllES·SAFU OFFICE SUPPLIES' ~::.. ~~r~o!:!! s ..... lu ~ Typ ••• i1!!l' 173-la20 .fMr OfftCE S._..l Y 1-. :1011 N~t Slwd N •wpo<t 8...:h • Nurseries Shrub., lnlerior Planu T ropiclll A T rus lr.elicidn and Fntiliur ...... , c...,.. • --~ric:&ld FREE DELIVERY Corona del Mar N uBery :!144 E Coast Hw y 61~1 60 •P1int W1llp1per HARBOR PAINT •w ALLPAPER PITTSBURGH P AlHTS Complete Line 13.000 PATTERNS Of WALLPAPER 2919 E. Cout Hwy. Corona del Mar (NCXT TO PORT TH&ATk~) Pbooe: 673-2033 •Piumbin&H .. tlnt A . R . MARSA C PLUMBER -:'00 CartldUOn Ave. Corona del ~ar • Plurn!Julg Rt!pa.J t ... DAY & ~IGHT WATER HEATERS 673· ·U 30 • Printing CALL Ul IJOI: UT,MAT II 671· ouo It Y". Tete! I•Htf•cti .. l ..... I .....,..;i .U ~~-­SIHCIRI SIWING MACHINI· 1111--,.c.-. 646-9742 AIITHONY'S SHOE SERVICE CO•PLITISMOI. LUGG 4GI AND MA .. D8AQ IIP4111 340 1 E. Co a at Hi p .waJ Corona .del Mar Pbono: 8711·4640 Oth er Loc•tlo•s: • UJl VIA 1..1000 N(W,.OitT •14 I"ASHIOM ISLAMD •1101 IRVUt l , NIW,01tT .ltOai MSO M"S DI"T· STORI f A5H IOM ISL AMO • Newspaper FOR LOCAL HEWS SU 8SC RIB E TO T HE Tbr 0/fici.J Nrw•P•Prr of lhrr City of Nr wporl Br«i Hll f , COAST HWY .•I7M S50 COitOHA Dl!l M.t.l: • ONLY 11.00 A YEAR CALL 671 ·0,0 J& J INlSTEIY C adilla c s C ost WHY7 142-5175 & 141-a CZIIYOSKI'S I Csy-ltos-k•y I Custlli Uphlstlry San Feroaodo ValleY on Nov. 3• membership cbalrman for ttle City of Newport Beach Girl--Mr . and Mr s. Howard 3200 £. Coe~t Hwy., COM 1700 w. CCMst H..., .. N 8 When completed, the center wilt 1~N~·~.wpo~r~I:_Be_a_c_h _F_a_s-hl_on_G_ul_ld~P~ub~U:sh~'~D~e~c~.:'~·~1~9~71~,~~-n-l-he-S~.~G~I~ll-e,_17-9-92-G-JI-Ima_n_S_Ir_•_ei_,!::::~1'11;-;;~'~6~7~J.~960~~S::::::~~~~~~~~""'""'""'~EN:;SI:;;GN;:,;PU:I;;;;L~ISHI:H:G~C~O~.;,g;:;;:~';";';;"'~•~,..~"~~~;~ have 4 major department stores for 1971, Newport Harbor Ensign. trvlne. US-1111 C•ta MeN and 140 oU'Ier shops for a total of 1,500,000 square feet of re-.6 of the taU space. It wHI be the la.tgest ....... :.o.ntv r egional enclosed mall cPnler in Clll-'I Soolhern California. West's h~~BACt life KEN HILES TO EMCEE -5- TROPHY AWARD OIHN E COfti~IN. Ken Niles, fa med radio and 4111 r-• 1• TV personality and known equally wen in the Newport Our handsome new home office, now going up in Newporl Harbor area as well as in his West Los Angeles neighbor-Center, is on uncommon building. hOod, will again be master of ceremonies at the annual lis largesl floor is near the top. The smollesl floor is on the bottom. Weatherby big game trophy award dl110er Dec. 2 at the And il s garden is in lhe middle. ce~~s.'::~· Bam M. This is portly because we hove a lol of gloss oll lhe way around =tt!' .::!:e ~~~~e.:;~~: (lo keep the view; in view) and it prevents lhe su n shrnong in our eyes. aatiooally known sportsm~ re-o tl be d h h 1 h k 1 th celns the 1971 weatherby Tro-rar Y cause we groupe togel er t e peop e w o war oge er. PIIY· There ore five main floors because we hove five main oclivities. CARL PHELPS DIES Carl n. Pbe_,s, T.J, of 2003 Investing our premiums (on the 5th floor). Efficienl service for our ::.'"21 51;;1 ~~e~:!;/1:.: clients and ogenls (on the 41h floor). Paying insurance dooms (3rd floor) . ..,.. boro. March 1, 1898, la PenDIJtnm& &Dd came to Or. up Coaaty 9 years aco. He wu a juDk dealer. S11n'1'f0fl tncblde his wtfe, Dorottty; 3 1001, Dulel, Ralph lDCI car~ 4 daac~Kers. llrs • llluot Griea, Mn. llDfce Bu'ber, Mn. V\ota Brown IJid l[ln. Allee Fruc• MIDDty.aU ir001 lilt --u.s.; z bro-llloro lll4 U .......,blldron IUid .-....--·Serfleto _. blloiN.,,,.,>ati Balla C-11- eSAVE HOWl OH ~HOTO CHIItiSTMAS C AftDS nHilOOI:.......... ....... ... .. ...... -.....: ....... -.,... ........... ...... .mt I'WOI~ ... 't .. ,...... .. .. ......... ~-...-~ -·-.... ...... -l'lOOal ...... .. J n j $ $$ ..... a , ... .....,._ .. , .. , ....... ... ...... -.... . ------·-...-. .............. ,,.._._...., __ _ ~ .... F--pu 'al;..-.c_, .. -c..-- •. 1:•'1·-.. -~ ... ..., .................. .... rrsr aalftlaf"' ...... -~.._ Serv1ng our group •n,urc:nce cloenls 2nd floo r And lookonc c t·".' " ' .. ,,ployees and 1nd1v1duo l chenb 1,: lloor. The Newporl Ce-1k1 Peck Agency wdl also be located on the t,.st floor. They're hiring life insurance representot oves r1ght now II youre on terested 1n a soles career, call Ro lph Peck at 714 675 0344 W hen our new home ofke opens we'll need lc ·,II hundreds of olher 1ob o penings. To d1scuss a career w 1th us. call 213 625 1211 . Or wnte to Personnel Deparlment, P 0 Box 54040, Lm Angele, CA. 90054. The draw ing shows 1n more deto1l what w e'll !-,., 001ng 1n our new home. lis the anal amy of the Wesls largest muiuull,\e 'n''" nnce company. Over a hundred years old. Bul chongong w 1th the ''mes. -.GrPIIIIUC.AIIIIG P-1- IDIICC ...... GIYIII fLJJII>IIJ B1MNIM lfAMI 1"'le coMIIad b1ar1J1c 00 a --CIIJCs Uaf .. CIIJ ftATIKDI' pr......., Ill 0111 M01ot eltl- • ••••II' 11M' wlllllDIIIla ,.........._,.... .. .., UIUrHidelltlalbotti..,.Hoac ... '-rill_.. a..-to 1 rr u : 11_, P.t~ Hoe>llat wut be held w a zn•-~Ko. 1414, IMizC. All.-. 1111 "· ...-81M., ~~z-. 1nr. o.e. z, 111 c·lty Hall by :-:";~~~ or Till ern OF Calf.: DIIOa Du. lilt W.llzl· tM Newport Botch Plaootar JIWJ!OaT BIACR A.ODDtG boa RIM.. Bald. CAW. Commission, Tbt meeUnc wtU ~TIOII JO,S4,0£0 TO THE T1lla bulloa II bolol COD· bepn at 1:30 p.m. lfiWPORT BEACH MtJNlCI~ doettd bJ aD 1Ddl'tt<MI. Tbe contlniJI.tlon had been l!.U. CODE TO PROVIDE FOil St-: llollls Du. CITY COUNVIL REVIEW OF Ttda llllemODI ftted with the ------..----PLAH~IHG COIIIIISSION ZON. ,_, clerk or Oruge Couoty LIGAL MOTICI IIIG AIIENOMENT DENIALS, 011: NO¥. II, 1911, by BovtriY F PJuDtnc Commlasion AmiDd-J. Maddox, depllty county clerk. -14361 mtlll: No. 30!, providiDI fbr tbt PubUsf'l: No¥. l8, !S, Dee. 2, FlCT1TIOUS BUSINESS NAME Couacll'l rltftl to revfew pro. ~. 1~'11, lAthe Newport Harbor STATEMEN'!' po.ed amendmeots to Tille ZO Eoslp. The following per sons are of tbt Newport BeaehMUDiclpal doing business as: Deseret Food Code wltbln 21 days from the LEGAL NOTICE Storage Program, 1593 Baker date of Plaoning Commls1loa F -14468 St., Costa Mesa, Ca!Uornia: disapproval. FICTITIOUS BIBINESS NAME Mr. li Mrs. Edward James NOTICE IS HEREBY FUR-STATEMENT Edwards Jr., 1593 Baker St., THER GlVEN that the satdpub-Tbe following person Is doing Costa Mesa, California. ltc hearing wtll be held 00 the busl.Dess as: Great Pacific En· This business Is being con- 13th day of December, 1971, at gioeerlng Co., 1716 Orange ducted by an individual. the bour of 7:SO. P.M. 1o the AYe., Costa Mesa, CaUl,: An-Signed: Edward James Ed· CQ~mcil Cham'Jers of the City drew E. Price. war ds Jr- Hall of the City of Newport This business Is being con-Th.is statement filed with the Beach, CaUfornLa,at whtcb tJme ducted by ao todh1dual Gov-county clerk of Oran~ County aDd place any and all persons eroment Cootraclual Service. on: Nov. 17, 1971, by Beverly loterested may appear and be stped: Andrew E. Price. J . Maddox, deputy cou.1tyclerk. heard thereon. This statemeot filed with tbe PLJblish: Nov. 25, Dec. 2, 9, Laura l..agtos couoty clerk of Orange Co unty 16, ~971 , in the Newport Harbor City Clerk on: Nov. Z3, 1971, by Beverly Ens1gn. City of Newport Beach J. Maddox, deputy coiUityclt>rk. Publish: Dec . 2, 1971, In tbe Publish: Dec. 2, 9, 16, 23, Newport Harbor Ensign, 1971, in the Newport Harbor Eosign. UGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING LEGAL NOnCE LIGAL NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE OF PlJBLIC HEARIN G that the City Counc il of the City SUP£R.IOR CO URT OF THE NOTICE 1S HEREBY GIVEN of Newpor t Beach will hold a STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOR ttlat the City Council of theCity public hearing regarding Plan. THE COUNTY OF ORANGE of Newport Beach will hold a lling Commission Amendment No. A. 70947 pubUc hearlng regarding Ordt-No. 305, approved by Pbnniog Estate of Jerome C. Hum. naoce No, 1415, being, AN OR. Commission R'eslllution No, phrey, Deceased. DINANCE OF THE CITY OF 743, amending the Planned NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN NEWPORT BEACH AMENDIN G Communi!}' Land Use Pian and to the creditors ot the above SECTIONS 2o.o8.250, 20,08 __ O:!velopmenf Standards for , , named decedt>nt that all per-Z70, 20.48.050, 20,48,060, 20 .• ··Newport Place," portion of sons bavlng claim'i against the 51.070, 20,54•040 AND 20_54 __ Block 50, Irvine's Sulxllvision, said decedent are required to 010 or THE NEWPORT BEACH located no rtherly ot Bristol file them, wUh the necessary MUNICIPAL CODE RELATING Street betv.·ee-n MacA rthur •ouchers, in the office of the TO APPEALS FROM THE Boulevard and Blrch Street, as clerk oftheaboveentltled court, P LANNING CO MMI SSION requested by Emkay Develop- or to present Ulem, with the Amendmeot No . 304, changing m~nt Co., Inc.; pursuant to necessary voucher s, to the the fappeal period fr om 15 to Municipal Code Section 20,5 1.- undt>Uigned at the offices ot 21 days. 070, Harwood, Soden & Adkinson, NOTICE IS HEREBY FUR-NOTICE IS HEHEBY Fl'R . 550 Newport Center Drive, THER GIVEN that the said pub-TIIEH GIVEI'i that the said pub . Suite 434, Newport Beach, Cal-Uc hearing will be held 00 the lk hea ring will be held on the Uornta, which is the place of 13th day of D~ember , 1971, at 13th d:.t) of lJecember, 1!:171, at business or the under signed In the hour of 7:30 P.M. In the the hour ol 7:30 P.M. In the all matters pertaining to the Council Cham':lers of the CJty Council C t~<Jmbers of lhe City estate of said decedent, within Hall of the City of Newport •tali of the City or Ne\\-port Iolli' _months after the flrstpub. Beach, California, at which time Deach, Ca lifornia, at wh ich time licat1on of this notice. and place any and all persons and place any awl all persons IJ.I.ted November 24, 1971. interested may appear and be lnter esterl m.1.r lppear :tnd be Hazel M. Humphrey, Execu-heard thereon. hear ll ther eon. trlx of the Will of the above Laura Lagios I...aur:. Lagios nam'!d decedent. City Clerk City Clerk Ha.rwood, Soden &r Adkinson, City of Newport Beach City of Newport Beach Post Office Box 1907, Newport Publish: Dec. 2, 1971, in the Publish: Dec. 2, 1971, in the B8'oi.c h, CA 92663, Attorneys for Newport Harbor Ensign. ~ewpJrt Harbor Ensign, E xeeugob, ..;c..:;..':':::;;::.::::...::::;:.:;::... __ PJbUsho De<. 2, •. 16, 23, Lw..tol HOnC! LEGAL MOnC! PIJIIIEIS • rflllll*lled bf dtt'tlllllrlllrblll't ~~--ol HoU,-Ioalloor htm ~ , ..... a dltl.l'-1 park .. tar plla ,..., with tiM ate deftlopmtftt ptau. Rtrt Is tM eoq)iete aceada lor 1011111!1'1 mHtliiC: 1~ Use permit appUca.tloe. ol Restauraot Adnnhll'tl, Lcac Beach, for servioc beer a.ai wine at a restaurant al 511 E. Ba.lboa BlYd,, B&lbOI.. The ap- pUeant further requests per- rtai.Ssjon to provide therequlred ott-street parldna In tbe city parking lot and that a cre4211 lor parking spaces based on previous use be allowed. 2. Use permit appUcatlon of Herbert Manasse for a z story, 111 unit senior citizens resi- dential bbtel at 333 Placentia Ave., W"'st Newport Heights, between Hospital Rd. and S"'- erior Ave. 3, Request of Deane Devel- opment Co. to cha11ge tte .arne ot Rue de la Verdure 1 Di. Canyon to Rue Verte. ~ 4, Request of D.!Qne Delel- m~nt Co. to realign klt lines between Lots 6 and 7 and Lots 8 .tOO 9 In Big Can)'On, on the norther!)' side of Rue Grand Vallee, easterly of Big Canyon Dr ive. 5. Use pt>rmlt appticallon of Mariner Yacht s to use a r e. lociJtable building as a yacht sales offi ce at 2312 Newport Blvd., Ceotral Nev.-port , 6. Request of William Stine to r ealign lot lines to create 2 lots where 3 lots now exist, .tt 2007.09 Court St., Central ~ewport. 7. Ust> permit application of W1Uiam Stine to constructtrl- ptexes on t~e 2 lots . 8. Request or William Stine to rezone the lots at 2001-09 Court St. from r:.t to R-4 and to establish J 4 foot front ya rd setbac k. 9. Request or the Irvine Co. to -:-ezone a portion of Maps 32, 50 alld 53 , north or H01.rbor View Drive, eastofCrown Drive North, south or San Jo:tquin Hills Road, and west of Mn- gu ~rite Ave. in Harbor Vi ew Hills, from 1:-3-B and R.4- B-UL to a planned co m,nunil)' classifi cation. This Is the pro. posed Jasmine Creek develop- m•mt. 10. Request of Frank M.u-- shall to rezone LQts 18 and 19, Block 32, at the south west corner of 32nd St. and W. Bal- boa ftl vd., WeSt Newport, fr om R.2 to A.P classification. LEGAL HOnC! A RARE COMBINATION of creative talent ln the hulbi.Dd-wlte team of Clyde Zulch and Judtlh Bland in the field of art aDd sculpture wtll be exhibited In the Newport Center offi ce of Glendale Federal Savings Dec. 1 through 31. Portrait sculpture and marine and la.n1scape paintings w111 be featured, Including portrait busts of President Nixon; watt Disney and the late James Irvine I and James Irvine D. An accomplished violoncellist, Judith Bland teaches music a t the Ga llery or Fine Arts in Corona del Mar . which she CO·O\\'ns with her husband. Clyde Zulch will Includ e In his exhibit 15 paintings he was commissioned to do from collectors throughout Ca lifornia, He spent much of his career as a concert pianist and was RIJdy Vallee's personal accompanist and musical arranger for sever al years. In the past 2 years he has devoted his skills to classical music and oU painting cl.4sst>s In his gallery, LEGAL NOTICE F .14386 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS !"'AME STATEMENT The following person Is doing business as: Maharajah Inter- national, 126 Verano Place, Jr. vine, Cal. 92664: Ram Prasad Singhwla, 126 Verano Place Irvine, Cal. 92 664. ' This business is being c-on. ductetl b}' Jn Individual. 1 Signf'(j: Hdm Prasad Sing. hania. This statement fil ed with I he c ounty c-lerk of Orange Coun ty on Nov . 18, 1971, by Bever ly J. Maddox, deputy county clerk. Publish: Nov, 25, Dec , 2, 9, 16, 1971, in the Newport Harbor Ensign, LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE . F -14462 FICTtTJOUS BUSINESS NAM E STATEMENT ,. ' The following person Is doing business as: Interior Re~ sources, 2532 Dupont Drive Irvine, CaUfornia 92664: De- sign Wes t Incorporated, 2532 Dupont Drive, Irvine, CaJU. ornia 92664. . This business Is be.lng con- ducted by a CaUl. corporation Signed: Robert K. F ujioka, This statement ftled with the county clerk of Orange County on: Nov. 22, 1971, by Beverly J . Maddox, deputy county clerk. Publish: Nov. 25, Dec. 2, 9, 16, 1971, in the Newport Harbor Ensign. LEGAL NOTICE DR. JAMES 0 . COMBS TBAC.BS AND I'IIIIAC•BS r•e !118L 8 .U GOD'S •oiiD ADULT IIlLI Q.AU AT''"' A.M. EVANGELISTIC SlltVItll, 11 A.M. l7 P.ll. First Baptist Church AND DAY SCHOOL,·K -8T H GRADE SANTA AHA AVE. etMAGHOLIA, CO"ITA MESA IHD BI'BH DBNT, PUN DAM BNT AL, MISSIONARY Nol A.ftlll•tctl wilA fll•lioa•l co .. cll of Chrdu ' FIIIST OIUilOI OF LUTHERAN CHURCH OIIUST, SOBNTIST OF THE MASTER »>J Vi. LWo ....... OHN;Ih in ....... Ne wpcw1 had --VIewDr. SUNDAY SOIOOL c..-del-· Cll". 9 .... ••4 lOt iO .... DR. WILLIAM R. ELLER SUNOA Y SERVICES 9 ....... lOti) .... Phone: 644·2664 ftDNI!.SDA Y EVENING I. 9:()() A.M. Family Wonllip MEETING 8 A.M.-Churdt tchool READING R<>OM I :00 A.M.· Festiw Worship Week ~•: 9 •.m. -! p.m. NURSERY PROVIDED WcciM y: 9 a.m.-7:-4S Tund.y and Friday: 1~.:.. 9 •.m. -5 p.m.: 7·9 p.m. Sunday: 1 p.m .• -4 p.m. SI!COND OIURCH OF OIRJST, SOENTIST Newport &e•ch a1 Coron. Clcl Mar ·Jtoo Pacirk vn Dr. ~Ho!Ftz SUNOA Y sotOOL 10Lm. A Fru .,.a 11fdcpcNde"t SUNDAY SERVICE l'O•.m. WEDNESDAY EVENING Co "lret" I io11•l b•clina Room: 8 , .•. · CltrfJii41f CltNrch · ~D E. Coaat Bwy, REV. NORM~ BROWN Eac:raac• •• N•rd•••• MINIS R Mon .• fri.: 10 •. m. to S p.m. SUNDAY SE RVICE 1\Ctnday nenin1•: 7 10 9 AND CHURCH SCHOOL Sat.: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. AT 10:00 A.M. You arc cordially in¥ircd to NurJcry c•r~ proviikd attend ~!r~~: Sn.itt:f and PHONE: to uae che .-D. Central Bible Olurcb URD IT. •• OltANGI, COSTA IIESA -541-5303 ._.., loltool • llorlltlp .•• t:OO sad lO:ICi L•. .. .., li-1•1 llorMip ••.••••••• ,:00 •.•. .,_..., Bl"• ... ., • Praror ..••• 7:00 •·•· All .......... , .... wt&llllltlt ....... ......, FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH -. .... IlL. awuon IMCM A HEW CHURCH WELCOMES YOU THE R£11, DON L. I NGLE:, PASTOR .IUMPAY SCHOOL •••• , "41 ..._ lle&.IITUPY WPIIIHIP •••• 11 .... ~ 7 P.M. 7'1JO p.ji, WID. t .,J ... - LEGAL MOneE I,.IG.U, IIOTIC! 1971, In the Newport Harbor Ensign. LEGAL NOTICE CITY OF NEWPORT BEACH 8ALANCf SHf[fS -ALL Furms JuNE 30, 1971 CITf OF NEWPORT BEACH BALAHCt ~[[fS . ALL FONDS JUNE 30 I 1971 F .14480 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following persons are doin~ business :.s: Moore As- sociates, 165 RO"hester, H, Costa Mesa, C'l llf. 92627: P:111l C. Moore Jr., 165 Rochester, •A, Costa Mesa, CaHr. 92627; P;IUI C. Moore fJI, 165 Ro- chester, •A, Costa Mesa, Calif. 92627. This business Is being con- ducted by a general partnership, Signed: Paul C. Moore Jr. This slatement flied with the count y clerk or Orange County on: :.1m·. 24, l97l, b~ Beverly J. Mdddox, deputy county clerk... Publi sh: Dec. 2, 9. 16, 23, 1 !171, in the Newport Harbor Ensign. BE A GOOD NEIGHBOR If you are a newcomer, or know of a newcomer to the Harbor Area who has not been welcomed, do her a favor by callinq Harbor V1:ritor between and 10 a.m . and she will call on your friend with valuable information and qifts from friendly busi- ness firms which ready to help her become II ;:',~~::~~~,'with her new THE HARBOR VISITOR PHONE: CM-9388 ..... _ ... ....... .\SSE TS Cash-limE' 4nd Demand Oepo~1t~ \F'd!JC! C-l) lnvestmE>nt tn Marketable Securrues . Accounts RecetH ble .. Oue from Other Funds Deposit wit~ Redernpt1 on Agent Inventory of Ma teriah anti Suopllf'\ 1~t ~o\q Fhed Assets (Pa ge (·21 J . . . , . . . Alnount to be Provtded for Re tlrt!t'l('nt of Elon\l~ dl'ld loterl!"st U'd\J; C-22) LIA81 LlllfS, ENCUMBRANCES, ANO FU~U HALA~LlS UABI LITIES Accouot s and Contract s Paydb le Note Paydble . Accrued Payro l l Deposi t~ . Due t o Otner Funds . . . Mdtured Int erest Collpons Pdjdble . . Bonds Payable in Future Yedn [Pd!}E' C-22) lntt>rest Payable on Bonds tn F1.1tu r e tears [Pa9e C-22) Amount Payable tO H01de"S of 1~1 1 Act Bornl• ENCUHBRANCES FUND BALANCE S In ~estment in f~oed Auets Appropr iated for Ba lbod Improv12'1Tlef1t', Appropri ated for (1v 1c Center Site Approorldted for Pdr~ 1mpro~emen ts Appropriated fo.-Surfboard Acqu,~i tton Appropriated for Tt-nn l~ Court Cons truc:tton Approor 1ated for Of f -S t reet Par~i ng Fdc:ll1 t ll?". ApprOp"ldted for Bund Reti r ement ~nd 1ntereH Appropr iated for Future Wa ter Sources Unappropnated (From Pdqes C-6 aM C-7) See dccomodnyfng oote~. C I TV OF 11EWPORT BEACH I s . I Special Revenue Funds 498 ,006 s 200.000 J7 ,236 27 .958 .o. 54' 158 .o. ·0-81 7,358 s (Paqe C-5) 814 .14f ·0· 84,430 ·0· .o. ·0· .Q. -0· 898 571 11 4,775 5 168,334 -0· 51,172 297 ,686 35.786 18 ,139 17 ,00/ -0· 2l . 95fl -0--0· -0· .o. -0-·0· -~...;·;:;0· T~~·~O· r 4lo .aoo s J02.257 21 7 ,084 286,841 ·0· ·0· 1. 794 .o. 2 ,255 ·0· ·0· '" ·0· "' .o. 2,913 ·0-121 ,on ·0· ·0· ·0--0· ! 1651425 817 358 s 184160) 898 ,571 Bond Interest 1 Redemption Fund I ! ' s s ·0· ·0· ·0· ·0· 3,9ll ·0- ·0· -0- 391J -0· ·0- ·0· ·0· .o. 3,913 ·0-.o. ·0· J ,91 J ·0- ·0· ·0· .Q. .o. ·0-.o. ·0· .o. ·0· ·0· J 913 T ru~t Fllnd for 1911 Act Bonds ' s ' s I 3,464 ·0- ·0· -0· ·0--o. .o. ·0· 3 464 ·0· .o. ·0- ·0· ·0- ·0· -0· -0- 3,464 3,464 ·0· ·0- ·0· ·0· ·0- -0- ·0- ·0· ·0· ·0· ·0 ] 464 IN UNA~PR0PR1Af t0 FUNO BALANCES -ALL FUNOS FISCAL vtAR tNotb JUNE JO, 1971 Balance, J w1e JO , 1970 ; Additions : Revenues (P age C-11 ) ..••. Adjus~nts of Prior fear Erpt>ndltures dnd Encllmbra nct's Yr1nsfers fr'OIII! Fllnd Balances Appropr1at~d for ; Surfboard Acquisition Future Wa t~r Sourc:t>s . , .. Bond Retirement 1nd Interest . General Fund •....... Park and Re,reatlon Fund __ l1brtry Fund , .. Retlr~nt Fund . Contributions Fund Wtter Fund •.. Mari naparll Fund Dltducttons: • h.Piftdhuru 1nd £n"Mnbr•nces (P•ve C~16) ••••• Ad,JustMitftt to lnventort.s of "'tertah and Supplies Transfers to: Fllnd S.hn,•• Approprhtad for : Tennis Court Constl'\lctlon .. Off-Stre.t P•rttng Faclltttas Future W.ter Sourus , , , , . Gener•l fund ..••...... Ar~rl•l Hfghw~ Ffn•n~lng Fund C•ptUl IIIIPr'OW.-erlt Fund ...• l¥fldfft9 £~cfse T•• Fund , ..• 80M J"itrtst •nd RecM~~ptton Fund Tot.J Dtcluc:tfons • • • • • . . • • • . ' • • lt1t~~et, JUftt 30, 11i1 (P19f C·2 Inc! C·l) •• , • , , • , , , •• , , • , , , , , , ••.• , GenE-ral Fund ' 169 ,175 I 502 ,&08 s 6 ,746,086 s J,l01,JS6 IS ,253 12.410 ·0-"' -0--0· .o -0-·0· 21),924 39.621 -0-17,444 ... 4,116 ·0--0-4,158 -0-137 ,no 641186 -o- s 6,886.706 S: 3,469,730 s 6,672,555 s 1,682,741 1,977 -0- ·0· Z,91l -0-36,142 -0--o- -0-61,111 -0-4.158 213,924 ·0· -0-. .. -0--0- s §.890.456 I l,lf7,J» I lft,125 I lM .fOl ' s ' I s 190,740 .o. 34 ,334 ·0- ·0- ·0- ·0· ·0- 225,074 -0· -0-.o. ·0· ·0· ·0- -0- -0--o. -0- 312 ,350 -0- ·0- -0- -0- -0· -0· ·0- ·0· -0· ~87 1276) 25,074 Bond Interest l R~d!d'tlon Fun I -0· I ·0· .Q. -0- -0- -0- -0- -0- -0- -0- -0- 105,198 -0- I 105.1H I 105,198 -0- ·0- -<>- -0--o" -0- -0-.... + I IO!.IH I • =g- Wa ter fllnd ' 1,374 ,875 ·0· 37 ,230 ·0· ·0- 42 ,J8C 10,724,680 ·0- $111179.165 ' I 95 ,316 -0- 12,706 15,091 ·0· -0- ·0· ·0- ·0-12J,IIJ 56,646 10 ,724,680 -0· -0· ·0· -0· -0· ·0· 102,57) )11 ,790 860 363 111 .119:161 I 38,202 ' 186,872 -<>· -<>- -0--o- -0- -0- -0--0- -0- .0--0- I , ••• 72 I 112,150 -o- -0- -<>- .0- -0--o-.... .... * I 111.110 I ,,.,, ' I ' I I Gt'neral Fhed 8ondE"d Oebt Harinasark Xss~ts & Interest Fun ( tiliTETt r ) (t.hlbit G) 1,688 I -0· ' -0--0-·0· ·0- -0· -0-.o. -0· -0--0· ·0· .o. ·0--0· ·0· .o. 109 ,097 12 ,383,2)0 ·0· -0· -0· 1 :"':'" lio 785 112 .383.?30 ! l 079 Btl 191 I -0-' ·0- .Q. ·0-·0· 1,4)1 ·0-·0--0· .o. -0--0--0· -0· ·0· -0-·0· ·0· ·0· 870,000 ·0· .Q. ?09 ,813 ·0· ·0--0-1,623 s .o. I 1,079,813 " -0· -0· 109,097 1l,J83,230 ·0· -0· -0--0· -0· ·0--0--0· -0· ·0· -0· -0-.o. .o. ·0· ·0--0--0-·0-·0--0-·0· ·0· -0--0· -0--0-·0-11o l7as $12 .383 1230 I 1,071J,81J W.tar ~ I 204,&07 I -0- s 2,186,861 I 10!1,074 "' .(). -0-... ll7 ,710 -0-2 ,625 ·0--0--0· ·0· -0--Q. -0--0-... -o--0-·0· -0--0-·!!: s 21l27,964 I ~~.074 s 1,328.174 I ..... <H .... .0-... -0-·0-1~.000 ·0--0-M.IM -0--0-·0-·0-137,710 -0-105.1!1 ~- J J.tn,w I U!.m I w,w I ;a- 1770 MIWPOU COSTA MilA From the Police Blotter • MOMDAY, MO'/, 1 a dilrllt of poiiii .. Clllolm&rl-of PGIIIIIIo' ol-.rl,._ • .. lack Manti Yona, 41, ol ,.._ ••• Jamu LeWis WOOd-Roaakt tAe cu..., JZ, ol 105 Mtb St., w.. Newport. ward, U, aM JobD Rlebarcl 4114 Rlnr, •• Mnport, wu wu an•td at ll:to a.•. Ia Bate~. u, botb of as SOOt St., arrelted at li:JO a.m. &I lttll tM aUtJ at tM reu ol IUs WMtlftw'JI«t, ftrnrrutedat st. aad w. Balbo& BWd,, Will rut4eaee OD a cblrp ol clrlv-11:50 p.m. at tMU retldtace N.-port, oe a ebarp orl bwl· iDe wblll _,... the uan.ace OD cMrpt of poueuloo of larJ ••• GrtpJ KiDI KeAry, or &.k:obol , •• AA tttlmated marlJuaal .•• JaUu Stanlelp u, ot 504 Weltm!Mter, Mew- $150 lD eaab ftl bllrlllrtMIS Brewer 41, or US S...pU LA., po:t Htlptl, waa antlltd at from the £.utbbd'ti:.Colftalru, lf~ Htllfttl, '"'arrested &:4!1 p.m. at 3Zad,St. aad 811· !548 Eutbluff Dr,, £ut Bluff, at 2:45 a.m. in the 100 b1od: boa BIYd,, W-Newport, OD a Mtwtea Oct. SO ud NO't. l •••• of MeFaddem. oa a ehlr p of ebl.rp of pouesaloD or mart- A box Ml o1 loola Yahlocl at bolnc driMik 1D pobUe • • • ,.... ••• Aa uumuod $50t $350 wu stoleo rrom a car AbOut 3 trash eana btJoactnc In cash was takta from the 'kloDJllll to Rletard Wand-to tbt City of Newport Bead\ euh repster at tbe Balbo& roellt 455 Catallaa. Dr., New-aM n.lutd at $SO were stoleD Llquour,-zo.t E. Balboa B!Yd., .~~~~~~~~~!port tiel&htl, wbUtlt wupuk-from the lOUth eDd ot the Bat-Balbol, wblle tbe clerk wu COAST CUARDSeamanapprea.-ed at bla relideDee between 2 boa Pier dutlnc the nl&bt of to the baek room betwHD 10:45 ttee Keith B. Doyle, son of a.m. &ad 8 a.m. Oet. Sl .•. Oct. 29 .•• Foretp eolns and 10:55 p.m. Mr. a.od Mrs. Harry L. Ras- A all n.lued at $t 1S was burr-were used tostealabott$1 ?0.40 chta. of 2482 Falrway Dr., Costa Btf LTZ MOR TUA RIES 1U1 WPERIOR AYE. COST A MES.t., Wfdway b-2424 :l5lD E. COAST HIWAT COROtiA DEL loiAR ORiole 3-'1450 SU.c. 1942 Sar lltd from the James Mtlll-worth of stamps and change • THllRSDAY, NOV. 4 Mesa, bas graduated from re- roe residence, 1400 S. Bay ft., fro!ll a self-service postal sta-Robert F'rankUn Kllopn-crult tralnl ngattheCoast Guard · Balbolllland, during the lllght. tlon at F:~.shloo Island between smith of 824 W. 15th St., W~st Tralnlng and S~WIY Center, • TUESDAY, NOV. 2 Oct. SO and N'lV. \. Newport Hellbts, was arrested Alameda. He atteMed Orange at 9:45 p.m. at 2Z4 Newport Coast college. • WEDNESDAY, NOV, 3 Blvd., on a charge ot being Jobn Howud Uvtnp:ton, 39, drUDk to publlc ,,. Raymood 'STAM P OUT STUPIDITY' of ZO? 29th St., West Newport, Wayne House, 21, ot 106 E, Scott ElUot W .chman, 23, of 4336 E. Coast Hwy ., Corooa Hlc;blaaSs, was arrested 11 8 p.m. at U Fashion llland, oo a cha.rce or petty theft ••• Yarco AntoDlo Angel Saluar Heru.n- de&, 26, of 124-1/2 40th St., West Newport, wu arrested at ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~11 :45 p.m. at his resldeoce oo was arrested at 8:45p.m. at Bay Ave., Apt.lf, Balboa, was HO W HAS 90" SUPPO RT 116-1/2 22od St., Ceatral New-arrested at 2:05 p.m. at hls Abraham Lincoln middle port, on a charge of felony wlfe resldenee 'on a charge of pos-school now has 90% student baatlng ... lra Woodford Mar-session of marijuana ... A mP.mber shtp · in the S. 0. S, tln, 60, of 488 Prospect, New-radio and other .uems valued: (Stamp Out Stupidity) program port Shores, wu arrested at at $419.50 were burglarized aplnst drug use. 11 :15 p.m. at Prospect and New-from the Balboa hOme of Louts Miss Carolyn Crockett, lac- port Shores, on l char ge of M.le Malr, 1'74'7 P6aza del Sur, ulty advisor for these "Smar-d~lving while under the In-between ?:30 a.m. and 5 p.m .. teens," as t liey call them:>elves, fluence o~ alcohol ... Nell ... A number of electrical says, "The re will not be one WHlla.m Ross HoW'•rd,2 l ,of309 Ugbts and plants valued at $'743 student wllo wHl not, at some Lugon.la, Newport Shores, and were stolen trom the tables tn-lim~ during his schooling her e, Joseph Wt111am Rovan, 36, of side Berkshlres on the Bay, be approached to try drugs, 201 Paularlno, Costa Mesa, 3450 Via Oporto Lld? s~ps and have to make his or her were arro!sted at 11:45 p.m. Ar ea, during th~ nJgtlt •.. decision for or a.pinst." RAISE on Any '72 Models IN OUR STOCK AS OF NOV. 16TH WHILE THEY LAST UNBEATABLE DISCOUNTS ON NEW 'n's AND IMMACULATE '71 DEMO AND EXEC CARS STILL A BIG SELECTION TO CHOOSE FROM! at 124-1/Z 40th St., on charges Clothing valued at $12?,50 was Throu gh hart1 and continuous burglarized trom the Newport effort~ wi111 the backing of their LIGAL MOTtcl Hetgtlts oom,.. ''Russell Bruce Prtn..:LJlal, William Rltter, and Alexander, 880 Irvine Blvd., teacher advisor, Miss Croc- F .14461 during the night of O:t. 2? ... kelt, these youn g jtmlor high F'ICTITIOl.S Bl5INESS NAME students have 'tl'orked lo help STATEMENT HAV't'MAH GRADUATES their student-body wlnthls ree - The following person Is doing Navy Fireman Cbrt.stopher ord for HEA LTH versus business as: Orange Coast Real L. Jlldln, son of Mr. and Mrs. DRUGS. In a few short da}·s, Estate 2600 E. coast Highway James P. JtJdlnof 1723 Terra-when S.O.S. was launched, the at Dahlia Corona del Mu: pln Way, Baycrest, graduated s!udents ~oota.c t£'d htmdreds of Raymood 'M. Brummett, 436 from ba.slc tralnlng at the Na-t ltizens In lhP area and earned seawa..rd Rd., Corona del Mar. val Tral.nlnr Center 1n SanDi· over S2,000 to payfor adverlis - Thls business Is being con-He Is a 1970 of · Jflf1 fur thering thelr cam- dueled by an Individual. ~~~~~M~ar~.!'!J~~~:...!'~'C._ ___ _:_ ___ _ Signed: Ray mood M. Brum- mett. This statement filed wl.th the county clerk of Orange County on: Nov. 22, 19?1, by Beverl)' J . Maddox, deputy county clerk. Publish: Nov. 25, Dee. z. 9, 16, 19'71, In the Newport Harbor Ensign. FAMOU S AU T:i O R 0 F YOUTH HOVELS DIE S Edith H. Blackburn, 82, 1 ?31-A Bedford Lane, West- cUff, died N~v* ZO. Mrs. Blackburn was a resi- dent of Newport Beach for the past 10 years. She was born Ln Deover, Colo., lltld moved to CteDda le In 1930 and becam~ a recognlzed author of juvenile oovels. Ooe of her 4 sons, Thomas, aLso of Newport Beach, follow- ed her literary uample and wrote '·Da vy Crockett" and several motlon pictures. She ••s also tiiP mother of Newport real estate deve loper Cap 8lacltburn, She was a member of the Amer ican Pen-Women's Club and St. Andrews Presbyterl.a.D Church In Newport Beach. Survivors Include ber hus- band, Howard; 4 sons, Cap and Thomas of Newport Beach, Howard of La Veroe and Elmer of WHhington, D.C.; a daugter , Lois Mansfield of Inglewood, 20 graDdchlldren and 10 great grandcbUdren. FLORA HUGH SU CCUMBS Mrs. Flora Hugo, 8?, of 23-40 Santa Aoa Avenue, Costa M•!sa, died Nov. 18 at Collltry Club Convalescent Hosplta.l, Sa.nta Aoa Heights . She was born June 11, 1884, ln Kentuclcy,andca me to Orange County 26 years ago. She is survived by 3 sons, Gleoo ot Glendale; Victor of Boulder Creek, a.nd Cllfford of Pasadena; Z daughters, Mr s. SoreDia Huffman, Costa Mesa, &Dd Mrs. Vtvtu Burns, Or- u .. ; 1& arud<:hlldren; 16 great p-a.ndc:hlldreo, and ooe rreat- ,u•t-lfaodchlld. Sentces were bekl NOt'. ZS at Bell Br<>adnJ c -~ c - .. .., wllb IDttrment at Harbor R..C Memorial Part.. F•11'1lt W a..· II ......... COWUII MPlL A.-I~ c•lia =:;:,;1~: ....... ,_..., ••orlal "L•,dr., " 0.. 8r s¥-f,.,.. .................. = I 'II I ....... ,,·: ....,... .. -1'~ ... • "' I : :'Z. :.r. ....... 6%at How do you measure a smile? At THE BIG M , although we're atmoat a half billion dollars big, we believe per· 10na1 MrVice Is as important as size. Our tellers take a personal Interest In our c ustomer&. Atter an. some savers h&Ye been with Mutual for a quarter century. In fact we are now MIP'ng tome third generation savers . Won't you join our family of happy severs? Paintilg & Glth of specta.Uty foods, •IMI.. cbeeles ud canclles, are always welcomed . Choose rro. ..,. ciCJrio. array of food Pacta -· to send to trleDdt aar, or to taM a.loog as hostess p!la. Old you know you can wire gUll of food IUld Uquor s almost anywhere? lnqulre about our Te~Sen1ee --ud 501'e your cUt g1v1Dg dilemmas. "£~---marKets LIDOCEHTER )4)1 V\A liDO. HfWPORT llACK. (AUf. W...O •7klfi) HARBOR VIEW CENTER 1660MA( ARTHUR. NfWP'CMT lEACH, CAUl . 92tl6oti1l-21 5'l Look for Savi ... l .... _OQS Gat the highest Interest on ...._,eel uvlnga et THE BIG M. Guaranteed ratesot&'%·-...~~.··Atsobonus certiflcltes end regular peubookeccounts. Plus ~p­ lul ''" Mf'Yicn (some requlrw a minimum balance): Tra-rs Chequea. Trust Deed ana Note Collectlona. Notary Mf'Vice, poetaoe paid save-by·mail envetopn and many mora . ::~~ •• -=:.= ... ,.. ... ·-====~~~~~ ............. Mutuel Sevlnge Corone del Mer: 2117 Eeet Coeet Hlghwey /171-1010 Other otno. In COY1ne, w..t Arcadia. P•aLtena, G~ Met Cenoga Partc/Ct 7 Dl'tft lllotfH tt0,.L Pill PIDII MliPOIYMAa .. a AaiA) UT ••• That the people who live on Irvine land have a better environment because of them . Take the sandstone caves, for instance. There are thirty of them . Older than man . Carved by wind and rain in the walls of a canyon , back in the Irvine foothills. These caves happen to be in the deep- est, narrowest part of the canyon . Which happens to be the perfect spot for a dam, for a much -needed water reservoir. Perfect, the engineers told us. Except that a dam there would put a million years ' worth of caves under 250 feet of water. So we 've found another spot for the dam . Not so good for the engi - neers. But it will save the sandstone caves. For the deer and the quail who live there now . And, someday, for people who will come to study the caves. And marvel at them. The ladybugs? We encourage them to eat other, less ladylike bugs ... ones that harm our citrus trees. In Irvine agriculture, we use biological methods of pest control whenever we can. Because a bug-eat-bug world is easy on the environment. As well as the operating budget. Curves in the road? Look at a street map of the Irvine area . Hardly a straight line on it. Because we don 't believe in checker· board communities . They 're hard on the landscape. And hard on the eyes. At Irvine, curving roads and rounded corners add beauty to our villages. (Drive through the winding streets of our University Park development and imagine what it would have looked like, laid out in square city blocks.) Curves add grace and grandeur to our downtown, Newport Center. (Drive the avenue that encircles Fashion Island. Is there any other "Main Street" in the country that provides such a beautiful environment for people?) Of course , it would be easier and cheaper to build in straight lines. But if there's something you don't need more of in your environment, it's straight streets. And square city blocks. And strip commercial development. Because environment, after all , is everything around you . Not just air and water and wildlife. But also the streets you drive, the places you shop and work. What are we doing to create a better total environ- ment at Irvine? Besides preserving sandstone caves, using ladybugs for pest control, and curving our roads? Just NE.-of!T HAAIOR EliiiJI SECOIID SEC'DDN --l'lel ••• lltURSDAY, DEC. 2, lt71 OO!!O!!A DEL MAl!, ~U f. ' • ask us . (Write to: Irvine Environment, Suite 700, 550 New- port Center Drive, Newport Beach , California 92660.) Ask about the time we scrapped plans for a big lake- side residential development. So the University of Cali - fornia could acquire that marshland area for a wildlife preserve. Ask about our tough regulations that allow only non -polluting industry at Irvine. Ask why we 've banned tv antennas and utility poles wherever possible from Irvine developments. Why you 'll never see billboards , ugly neon signs and run -down hot dog stands along Irvine streets . And ask why there are thou - sands more trees on Irvine land now than there were ten years ago. Water conservation Ask us why we use reclaimed waste water for irrigation of crops, greenbelts, landscaping, golf courses . I Ask how that cuts down the amount of water Orange County has to import. How it reduces the amount of waste water being sent into the ocean . (So much so . that the Irvine Ranch Water District recently was able to cancel plans for a sewer outfall between Newport and Laguna Beach .) And , while you 're at it , ask us what Irvine is doing about flood control. Harbor pollution. Soil conservation . Preservation of open space . Exploration of archaeological sites. For 100 years Ask , and we think you'll be surprised to find how much we have been doing all these years . (More than 100 years, in fact.) We plan to do still more in the next 100 years. (That's why we have a department in charge of environmental plan- ning.) And you have every right to ask us to keep working at it. · All we ask is that you ask the same of every other land developer, of every other businessman, and of your- self. Meanwhile, ... if you see a ladybug, ask her to fly away home to Irvine. It's dinner time in the orange groves. Irvine . Build1f1ofTo1101row'sCitin ... Toclly CREATING A BETtER ENVIRONMENT FOR YOU •