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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-11-19 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa' MYSTERY · VOICE FROM PAST '°' I ' . .. Was It.:Fa1ned Aviatrix An1elia Earhart? 1· • • • • • • • ., • ' " 13 Nndie Dan~ers ' - Awaiting Verdi~t In Count CQort DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * THURSDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 19, 1970 - ' Lo~ky Mi~key " ' fl1arva Dickson. 22. Stanton .· busses Mickey Mouse lifter learning ~.£ · her selection as Disfleyland's 1971 ambassador to the world .. The Uni- . versity of Southern Ca!Jfornia graduate ~as been ~ tour guide. at the amusement park since 1969. In her new JOb, she _wtll tou~ f~re1gn na- tions on good will missions for Disneyland and w1ll~be off1c1al hostess at the park to foreign. 4'ignitaries. l 3 Nudi.e Dancers Await Verdicts in County Trial Thirteen may be a· lucky number for profiteers, performers and patrons of· the alleged art of nudie dancing , if an Orange County jurist returns lhat many innocent verdicts next Monday. Judge Lloyd E. Blanpied Jr1 wcund up the trial or 13 Sugar Shack sweeties . Wedne sday in West Orapge County Judicial District Court by laking the case lltlder submission. Oruge Coast Wea titer Till the clouds ro ll by, there 'II be hazy sun.shine over the Orange Coast Friday, r:aking lhe. merc- ury at a scant 65 locally and 72 further Inland. INSWE TODAY Studtnt.s going to cbllege have to live 1o~where and the crirical housing slwrtoge ii a mojor college prob~m. Page 9. ,; He will rule them innocent tr guilty Monday morning. The 8).rls were arrested at the Los AlamitoS nightclub in a series of raids, charged with nearly 30 counts of indecent expostife or lewd conduct and tried en mass,. A similar case is pending in Harbor Judicial District Court, where Judge Evqett Dickey beard pretrial arguments over-20 dancers from Cost.a 'Mesa's Firehouse bar, with Dec. 2 set for a rul- ing. The Firehouse heater-uppers -two placed under citizen 's arrest by a Marine corporal whose genteel iostine1s were -allegedly ofrended ·-have not actually gone to trial yet. Sp«lalizing in the rie\d and retained by county topless and bottomless bar owners, attorney Berrien Moore argues that the charges are unconstitutional. fie made a surprise argument In Judge Btanpled's courtroom Wednesday, however. that wasn't previowly used in testlmony. Moore quoted a U.S. Supreme Court decision on a gtatute on the lawboQks pf Georgia -that bastion of progressive morality -that made wealth a criterion for enjoying raw sex. Georaia Jeaislators ruled lhat a riCh man can legally purchase and use to his own sallsractlon In his own home various pornographic materials such as books, er films. They said the Flrtl Amendment ef the ConstituUon allows it. Attorney Moore argued before Ju~ge lllanpled that the Georgia coUrts held the logical e1:lension of this would bt to allow poor people·to enjey such sb9w1. --··. My Lai Case Defendant 'S hot No One' FT. HOOD, Tex. (UPI) -S. Sgt. David A1itchell, with tears streaming down bis cheeks onto a dOuble row of combat rib- bons f11stened tp his chest, told a seven- man court.martial panel today he killed no one at My Lai. Mitchell's attorney· called the 30-ye;i:r. old St. Francisville La., soldier to the stand for one question near the end of the defense case. "Did you shoot any Vietnamese poeple near the ditch in My Lai on March 16, 1968?" defense attorney Ossie Brown said. "NG sir , Mr. Brown , l did not," Mit- che ll said. "I am positive that I did not shoot anyone." On cross examiniation, Mitchell was questioned repeatedly about his position during the alleged massacre and the posl· tiGns of the men in his combat unit. At one point he stopped to wipe his eyes with a while handliirthlef. His Wife and mother, sitting in the court room, also cri~. Mitchell sai d he took a group of villagers to the ditch on an order from Lt. Calley, on trial at Ft. Benning. Ga., for alleged ,murder of 102 civilians that day. Mitchell said he left two men at the ditch to guard the group and then crossed the ditch to set up a perimeter cutside My Lal. "I've been thinking this over for •. year now and I'm still not 1ure what happened and who was in my squad that day," Mitchell said. "But I •m positive that I did not shoot anyone. I know what I did and what I did not do." Mitchell is charged with assault with intent to murder 30 South Vietnamese civilians at My L8t. Brown had hciped to bring Calley, MHchell's commanding of- ficer In Vietnam, to testify In tile trial to- day. Sandovaf Quits Post As Top U.S. Official EL PASO, Tex. (AP) -Hilary San- dova1 Jr., who hold! the highest govern- Altnl offl« ever att.ined by a Mexican.. American ls res igning as head of the Small Business Administration. Sandoval . who bas been undergoing an extensive medical checkup at a)I El Paao hospital, 1ald his physician advll<d him to resign. The resignatk>n is effecttve Jiii. 1. H@ WIS appointed to the post by --lllJOll 111 February of I• . ' . · ' ·Powerful Typ~oon Qips Philippines -' With Deav Loss . ~ ---------------------- Voi~e of Past Papers Show Contact With Amelia LOS ANGELES (UPI) -,Airlines com. miwications personnel in the South P•cific heard radio ilgnals and a woman's voice they believed was Amelia Ea.~rt after the alleged crash of her plane in 1937, according to documents made public here _wednesday. Joe Klaas and Joseph Gervais, authors of a. book contending the famed aviatrix was captured by the Japanese and now lives under an assumed identity on the East coast, showed the records to newsmen here. The docum ents indicated the radio signals of voices too weak to be clearly heard came from Hull Island, wher! Gerv ais and Klaas believe MiS! Earhart was captured. The carbon copies of ~hat the authors said were secret Pan American Airlines flight records were turned over to Gervais several week aago by Ellen Belotti, a Las Vegas receptionist, a fonner Pan American secretary. who .said she had saved the documents "for sentimental reasons. I knew Amelia Earhart. We. were frie ndl y." 'l1le 10 typed pages, bearing no Iden· ..tlfylhg marks whatsoever, purportedly are reports made by communications technicians on Wake and Midway islands and In Hono4ulu describing radio signals they picked up on Ju1y 2, 3 and 4, 1937. A report signal by a K. C. Ambler described how, at 6:30 a.m. on July 5. a message was broadcast on Miss Earhart's frequency , asking her to res- pond if she heard it. The report read : 0830-KGMB requests Earhart make four dashe s Jn acknowledgement or their bn»i~o:l!t. We covering KGMB and 3105 simultaneously and hear four distinct da1hes on 3105 lmm~diately following broadcast." Ambler also wrote, "Occuionally 11gnal stren&th rises sufficient1y to hear voice but still too weak to distinguish a 1ingl~ word. Once it teemed 15 though it was a woman's voice but only may have been our lm•gination." A report from a G. H. MiUer oo Midway stated be heard a rrian's voice "which was dlstincUy heard but not of sufficient modulation to bt understood or Identified." The report 1lgoed by C. W. Angus, superintendent or communications for the Pacific division of Pan American, awn- marlzed all the reports, saylng, "While it wouJd appear there may have been somt conne<::tion between Lhe dunes and the KGMB • broadcast, we could not state d!flnlt!l)' that the sianala were \from the Earhart plane." " •• Gervais said Miss BelotU told him she had kept the records aeeret all these years because two men in Navy uniforms had ordered her to destroy all copies and remain silent "under penalty of federal imprisonment" The authors contend Miss Earhart was On a spy mis5ion for the U.S. govern· ment, was captured as a result of a security leak , and lived for eight years in the Japanese Imperia l Palace. They cla im she is living in New Jersey under the name of Mrs. Irene Bolam . Mrs. Bo lam says she isn't Miss Earhart and that the book is "a poorly documented hoax." Most Powerful Typhoon Lashes City of Maniln MANILA (UPI) -The most powerful typhoon in Manila's recorded hi.story Jashed the city with 120 mile an hour winds for three hours today causing ex· tensi ve damage and widespread flooding. The government declared a state of calamity. The government diaster agency put the death toll at nine as of 10 :30 p.m. (10:30 a.m. EST). Another 17 persons were reported missing and 77 were injured. However there were no reports yet from oOUylng. areas where prf.viowi typhoons have caused heavy Joss of life. Government officials said 2 3 , O o.o persons were homeless In Manila when late season Typhoon Patsy roared In, uprooting trees and power lines and destroying homes ahd churches. Manila was blacked out for houri tonight when the government cut off electric power because of downed high voltage wires. The govemment put the atrtngth of the typoon as 120 miles per hotir and said the wonit one in recorded history was in 1882 when Minila was hit by wlnda of 118 miles an hour. This time the eye of the typhoon passed directly over Manila. Some residents said the typhoon brought hailstones "•s big as baseb•ll•" which also did extensive damage. · The presidential palac6 declared a 11tate of calamity existed In Manila and a spokesman said It probably would be. er· tended to other areas when reports are in .(See TYPHOON, ·pall II Krenwinkle Girl Offers To TestifY, By JACK V. FOX LOS ANGELES (UPI ) -The defense announced today at the Tate murder trial that it wished to rest its case for Charlea: Manson and three young female codefen· dants without calling a single witness to the stand on their behalf. In a startling and dramatic episode, Defense Attorney Paul Fitzgerald rose u the defense was expttted to begin its case in the 23·week trial and announced: "The defense rests." The other three defense lawyers also stood and announced that they wished to rest their case on behalf or their clients. Patricia Krenw inkel, one of the thret young women charged with the seven murders, rlMle to her feet and announced that she wished to testify in the presence of the jury. Charles Manson said nothing but sat solidly in his chair. Fitzge~ald added that the provision that the defense wished to rest subject to being able to "introduce certaip ex- hibits." It was not made clear what be wa5 rererring to. Superior Court Judge Charles H. Older summoned the defense and pro.sec:uUon attorneys to his bench for a conference and then the trial was recessed brieny. There was pandemonium in the courtroom when Fitzgerald let loose the bombshell that the defense would call not witnesses at all . Fitzgerald had aaid previously that be had subpoenaed between 15 arid 30 wi~ and that Manaon would pr~ bably be one of the last to testify.· The totall y unexpected defense tactic came arter Older had rejected defeme motions for a directed verdict of ac· quittal .tor Manson, Miss Krenwi.n.k:el, Susa.n Atk'.U:ts and Lealie Van Houten on grounds tUt the state had not presented 1ufliclent evidence to convict them. Israeli-made Plane Crashes; Three Die TEL AVIV, l&rael CAP) -An laraell- made turboprop jet crashed durln1 a ttst flight today and three ~rsons wve kUI· ed. Including the chief lesl pilOI of the company malclng lhe plane. A fowth flier was injured when the t~ln-enalnc Arava crashed near NablUI ~ In the oooupied weat bank ot .Jordan, 1 ... ao.....-i eommunlque aid. • • ' I 1 -------~ -·----------------------------------------~-~------~ s .JordaniaJi . r , _, '. ,,.. \· , Foes ·Oash .bi:Gl]Jiial . • • • •• , b1llld ,_ -.iloal . . Palll!lt>lati, auerrlllU ud JordanllJI ~'tioilpa bOttltlf iW 11 boon In Am- q>ln today with n\ortars, machlnefIUns and .,........ W... aa uneasy peace was ~ at JtlabUall. Once agaltl lhect •aa llle lbreat Ol<:IvP war In JorUi. · There 'Wini .liaJat -111ollda1 'In th J,,...,,_,. ... llaM..C... Rad!• reported clafti Wednesday -near t:bt B;rlan border. They were reported as Jordanian cuerrillas held a nries· of IDeetings to try U> conso)idafe tbeir )roup• agJiMI King Husoeln'a f~ • ~An_ Ara~Jr!!c.t .. le!Jll..J!'!!)' ... 1m~­~• to em~ the ceast·dre ,after the nine-day civil war.in September. · A member said he thought today's Otll- br .. k was procokecfhV the Mlfl'l•fl'op. _ l!Jar Front for the Liberation M::P;ie.-' tin•' -the group whlcb ·-notortllY· by hijacking four ~ alrUneR on · Labor Day weekend. . • • .,.. The number ol caiuoltlea 1n ~·1· fighting was not immediate)y ]Qwiwn. A government spokesman said the guerrillas provoked the fighting bf at· tacking a government pOlite stat.iiin Dear an electric power staUon at 4usk<Wedftes. day in the f~sl Of oeveral taida illout the city'. ''nle IOYernmtttl f!as noiilied ail Arab foll6W Up C0-:.1--.ciliit'~Ja-__ tiona :$>1 the Anuiiln ~... he· '! aald. . ;. . '!'bi! ,o .. nunen1 ..... -. aid Iha ./ -a'ttack nod ;:;u; . liand . llebtl 111rnwn~1 the poll~ ~~ • .,.,l' °"ng Warrior ,. ..County . Board Sued . . ' New$paperCnargesBt&wn Act Violations _ A -iawauit cbarglq the Orange Counly . publlc outay apinlt the pay raise anif. Board of Superviiors with violatio111 or ha.s 1e(t a movement to retail three of lh1 tpe ,Brown Act.and enactmf?t ol Ill It· 1 supervisors .involved jn the: fracu - legal 18.lary ordinance is on file today in Da'vld L. Baker; Robert W. 'Battin and Suporlor Court. William Phillips. ' ' ' ' . -" I ' In its complaint., the Santa Ana The Brown Act, named affer former Register asb for a court ruling that the senator Ralph M. Brown, requires that ltve supervisors were in violation of the all meetings of local public commisSlons. Brown Act when they met Nov. 4 in what boards and councils be held openly and in they described as an executive session. public with certain permitted tlctptions. At that cloted<loors meeting the The!e Include certain personnel ma~ l supervisors asaertedly agreed to increase ters. their salaries from an annual $15,000 to Also sought ln the complaint Is a court $29,268 on the strength of voter ac-ruling that the board oI supervisors cept.ance of a measure which would allow should be ordered to refrain from holding county boards of supervisors to set their any further secret meetings until ·the own salaries. · issues set out in the lawiuit are ruled The Santa Alla newspapor,hfaJ>eaded a UJ>OO by the court. ----·-·-· The complilnt dalma supervlaon also; aclod unlawfully >I the su~uen\• meetinl of Nov. 10 when they enaCted an ·ordJnance wlUch'" J!Utl their alarie1~ta UM\ with t.ho.!e of California legislators. · That or4Jtianc< would have gone Into ' effect Dec. 10 and-would have jm..,'1 mediately raised board members salaries • to $16,000 with a hike to $19,200 on Jan. 1: Legla!ator• in the past have refuse.d to in-• crease the board's salary. ·;. Supenlbors based that ordinance on tbe" acceP~e by vi>tera ·of Propositioa .. 12, the complaint states. .. But that proposition, tbe lawsuit points; ~ will not become a lawful con··~ 1Utu~l amendment until the results pf ~· the NoV.13 election have been certified bY.·i the HCl'Ury of state. -~r---· ~ ": Sheep Slain By Auto, Gun Mter Escape Fire Rescue Figure F oun·d .~ . ~, Two European llbeep were shot~ ~ death and a third hit by a San Dleg~ Freeway motorist after they escaped from Lion Country Safari 1early Wee!· esaay -monung. Game preserve workul wei;e lo~ tlie three mouOon sheep and four rare African aoudad sheep onto a truck to transfer them to another part of t be •, Drowned at Laguna Beach . A drowning vlclim WhOI< body wuhed asb:Qre in a rocky Laguna Beach CGV6 early Tuesday has been identified is a Laguna woman who, just ever a year· ago, was the central figure in a heroic fire rescue. 1wanled lb< La Crolf su• mada1 and ll;Glll!,bY General Telephone comPllU'lot saving, Mrs. Bangs and two blind wcimen fr6m a fire .in an. apArtment buildiJia,eo. Glenneyre Street in J,..aguna Aug. 21, ·1• Clllrilhl broie Into Mrs. Bangs' aparl'- ment through a wind!>W when he ])eard her screamsLi.[" belp, ICOH'dlnc~tO tM citation, le.cl""! to·oafely and re-i.: resclie two blind wolhen io•tbe ~· · bunts of ma¢1llnelW! file. a.rrwo ... . traveling in ~lian 1an also fired A 14-year-old Cambodian mercenarY. soldier is dwarfed by his. U.S.- roctets at government t;oops , he said. made M-1 carbine as he rests while his unit awaits battle orders park . Something spooked the sheep. a spokesman for the park said, and they fled over hill toward Laguna Canyon Road. The workers gave chase but the animals eJCaped into the fog. The thrte mouflon were later apotted heading for Robert Neil Binks, 26, 475 Tbalia St., early today identifiM the body as that of his mother. Sarib Emily Bqs, 11; of 2180 Catalina St., also known ~ Bangs. 'lbe identification was made after Bangs, a waiter at El Adobe ~ant in San Juan Capistrano, called Laguna police to say he was concerned about his mother who had not contacted him Tue&· day and appeared to be away from her home. He was not aware of th~ Wewllina: mystery at the time, police said. Mn. Banp' loa•iold polj.ce hi.s .~t who bad lived ·In Laguna .for aboaj 'faur years., bad not worked as a nurse for some time. Originally from Philadelphia, she had been widowed 15 years. '!'bi! clashes later .pr.ad to othei parts _.::•.::ea.::r_W::.::.•t:_T::h::•.::i•:_C::•::m::b::od=i•::.· ---------------of the city and guerrillas dreiled in He said sbe. had sulfered from some iJ. uniforms or civili.a' Clothes tttacke.d 101=·~o~ii!~~-Abba Eban San c 1 ~mente Engi·neer met with U.S. Secretary ol' Sllite Wllllam W P. J\alel'l In WOlblng(Gn _Jf-.iay ID the freew1iy. The spokesman aald that two of them were killed with a shotgun before reaching the freeway, but one sheep got onto the busy road and wu struck by an Bangs said he normally was in daily contact with his mother, a widowed nurse, and had last talked to her on lbe phone Monday evening. Ines! in recent years and had occasional periQdl gf Qeprr.1sion, accordin( to police, but seemed at~rful when she visited him' Sunday. • ~-JnO!l)llal o1 ~'.u.s..m1u1ary . :id~.COtlnterac1 tbe-.-m1a11a ··Under Renewed Attack 2 Homosexuals Can't M~ .. 1 ~S , CAil) -A ,..qlldl t; two ••O'!'il ,..,._.. , lhat il!'T' lie illued' • mani ......... w-. ileaied W~ in Hemi<plii.Cl>om\J'1lli!ilCI Court b)' Jud&• Slanl*l' D. ¥one. • - Jaek Baar, a Un1von11J of~ law ltudenl; IUld Jiniis VcCoruitn 'Wiie' ' , was refURd a job as unfftflity ltrlli111 , after the two applied !Or the license luf May: had asked the judge to order tllt court clert to l""e the !lee .... The two cont.nded that Minn-law dou not forbid marriage between persons or the same sex and that, if it did. it would be unconstitutional. J~e Kane nkl that marrta1e laws aboaJil nM be read "In isolation from other laws governing the milrriage rele- tionshJp" in divorce, probate and tax matter1. She Took It, With Interest A IGu«l>lookina old doll mltcl*! up to the Walllcb't Mmlc ·City sales counter Wednfeday and Rt a eorMwbat-used portaille teleYiolon clown atop a fancier, CootUOr model. "Take that off of thtre," said the clerk. GI' words to lhat effect. Don Koch, who called police to the oound center at llOO s. llrlltol St.. Coota Meu,1 aakl the clerk found a $300 -tor TV mlalog later. He tlloqbt· it belonpd to the woman and WU bi<ulht It In for repaln. DAILY PILOT • • automobile . • ·"' ' . ' A tranquilizer gun wa1 not used oo the animal! became the drug would not have By coincidence, the report of the !f!YStery drowning off Laguna appeared in the same newspaper editions carrying the story of a )'OWlg san Clemente'• man's recognition for bis heroic rescue of Mrs. Ba11gs from a Laguna apartmtnt fire lalJ: year . Man Convicted In Disneyland Assault Case v. A San Clemente 'civil engineer re11umed Jjis attack on alleged moonlighUrig by Ci..- ty Engineer Phil Pet.er before city coun~ ~n Wednesday nilht. but members.of t)\e ~I decided to wait oo any flirtber aet!oi\ oa the mailer'. • E~· Ayer, Peter'11 ~, at Iha '<!ll'°tpost, renewed hil ci~· that =-obtai-· ··• ~ .,..,. .. to · ce iieelaiica 'Oilne"1nl'ii0.n 111$ is \IDfair -1ilion ud ~ CO@flid· of'lntorell. • . . ~-~ ...... livo 'ae11I0'1\' already have curbed any eogineerin& by Pet.er for clients who would possibly do Airport L-Ocatio~ Hearings Set By Commission Public hearings on proposed new airporll In Oran!!' County will be held by the Airport Comn\i1111ion on Nov. 30 and Dec. 7. The sessions were ordered Wednesday by the Board of Supervisors to offer the public in various areas of the county an opporitunlty to express themselves on airport sit.es proposed in the $140,000 Parsons Company report. · The Nov. 30 hearing is tentatively set for the Los Alamitos City Hall and will explore the recommendaUons for a general aviation facility at Los Alamitos Naval ir Station . Citizens and civic officials of the area are reported to be in delermined op- pMition to any such use of the naval facility ·when it is closed down as a Navy jet training center next year. ~ The Dec. 7 hearing is planned for somewhere in Laguna Hills Leisure WOrld and will be for discussion of the proposed joint use of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. the new Bell Canyon jetport and the O'Neill Park small air park. Superviaors Wednesday sel Dee. 16 for their next public hearing on the Parsons report. The airport commission will hold Its regular meeting Tuesday at the Pardo building at the airport. Mental Tests Delay Sentence Sentencing of 1 Coota Meaa man who killed his buddy in a drunken quarrel was delayed 'Wednesday, to allow authoriUes to det.ennlne the mental•condlUon of the defendant. Dennis Ltroy Jefferson . Superior Court Judge Claude M. Owens crdertd Jefferson, 36, tomlerly of 2132 Harbor Boulevard, to spend the nf!Xl 90 days at the state's diaanoetic facility at Chino. He eet sentencing for Feb. II. --Jefferaop waa convicted o! involuntary manslauahter Oct. 30 by a Jury which found him fIUllly of the shooting last June 15 of GtraJd Hess, 45. He facet a possible 1taterprilon term of one to 10 years. ' The l!uaJcy carpel!!" shot Hess wUb aJJ antique ltallln muskd oulslde his home after the two men, both of whom had betn drinking hea.lly all night, llffIUed In a neJahborhoed bar. It wu alleged that Jefferaoo beat the omaller Hess to the &round and then went into the house. brooillt out lbt musut and shot hi• belpleaa victim. business for the city. stopped them before they got to the freeway, the spokesman said. But Ayer Wednesday demanded that Two of the escaped aoudad sheep wire " councilmen yank the business license just captured through the use of a "stun gun'' . the :-than a "thank your• by Mayor and the other two returned to··the loading area on their own. · . W~r Evans,. the only ~. resJionse The mouflon, described as being allgbt-. A New Jersey man identlfied by peUce: to the renewed charges. wu a promise · I d · that the requeit on tht uea.t 1:ie. handled ly larger than the American sheep. ate as a rmg ea er m riots wbicb cloetd Telephone maintenance man Dale R. Cutright, 1:16 Santa Margarita Ave., wu in another executive aea10n. ; , . capable of jumping from ~to 30 ~~ the lfi h S B Dianeyland was sentenced Wednesday tq ."Neoe· occurred at We:' d n et d a y , s spokesman aald. They had llWe, difficulty . . .• g chool oy aix mont.Jll: to.ten years in state prison. meeting, and counctlmen gavt no in-jumping the eiabt-foot fence aunaundin8 Jay Harrison Priest, 22. also known u dicatton on the ilate of atich a meeting. the loading area and eec;aplli& tbe part. R Anlhor'.IY Costa and WUllam'DiLido pltad- P_el<!', who holds the ctty•s second The actual 1ama pruerv~. where,U.. evived·, Had .. ed guilty to cbar1ea of felony battery oft hltbest-paf~ position, 6u made no of. animals were beiflg taken 11 IW'rounded •police officer.'lnlUal dlilrges ol uaault ficial comm'ent on the charges. by a 14-loot fence, a ditch and another ' with a dtadlf·w.,,on Were dismlaed by Ayer charged that the operation of the fence to Wiure against such escapes. Heart · .Seizure Judge H. WaJter Steiner. · home occupation, plus a professional of. The long·haired Prielt, who identified lice at city hall is a breach-of the rules himself before and during trial as "just a governing engineers and that it imposes M ' t M k A. San Clemente youth remained in freedom loving Yippie," was alleged to "unfair competition" on fellow members usic 0 ar critical condition thi! morning after hlv· have been prominent in the wave or ' of the profe!!ion who opera&e out of ex· ing been brought back to life by firemen youths who practically took over the pensive professional offices~· S ' 0 • and' ambulance attendants Wednesday at amusement park Aug. 6. "A few years ago one-month's rental tore S peni11g San Clemente mgh School. He was arrested by officers who aatd '..' from a business property paid the tixes, Jeffery Lynn Miller' 16, 1506 Estrella, Priest threw a pair o( heavy bolt cutters 1 but today It takes three months. These A weekend of concerts and shows is San Clemente, remained under interui ive into the police line, felling a helmeted of·:.; people who work in their homea are planned to celebrate today's opening of care at South-Coast Community Hoapita.I titer who wu trying to hold. the in. .i we lching and freeloading," Ayer said. Angels Home Improvement Center, 12662 suffering from a major heart attack. surgenls back. . -4 Ayer also said he would not pay taxes for Chapman Ave .. Garden Grove. The y9uth, a junior at the high school, Police said Priest and a woman defen-t Peter's salary if the practice continued. A free rock concert by the Other Side suffered the near.fatal aeiiure ehorUy dant identified JI Carole Martin, 18. of ; The engineer, who said the battle was of Time will be staged in the store's before noon near the school id· Los Angeles, were in the forefront of tht.: "professional. riot personal," also at-parking lot tonight from 6 to 9 o'clock. A ministration building. demonstration apd urted their com·~. tacked the city for awarding public con-concen of Latin music by Cha lo Campo Fire Chief Merton Hackett said that pan ions to "take on the Pigs." -._· tracts to professional people who work Ye Su Con Junto will be held at the same rescuers found no pulse or heartbeat in Priest. and Miss Martin directed 1 con-~. out of th eir homes -specifically Building time on Friday night. the youth when they arrived to give aid. slant flow of obscenities at police of· . Designer Eri: Boucher, who has designed A country music show will be held Closed-heart massage and oxygen ad-ficers throughout the riot, witnesses slld ... the new .lifeguard headquarters and now hourly Saturday beginning at 1 p.m. and ministered by firemen , and La Paz am: Miss Martin was found guilty in ... is designing a new community clubhouse. running to 4 p.m. A gymnastic team from bulance personnel restored the pulse anti Fullerton Municipal Court of disturbing :· "You're paytng these people the same Long Beach will perform SUnday at 10 heartbeat within 10 minutes, Hackett the peace and is currently serving a five-:. fee as you would have paid someone a.m. said. day tenn in Or_ ange County jail. working from an office. yet they have 1-----------------------------;i;;;;m;;;;;;;;;;oi;;;;;ii;;;;,;o;;~~----almost no overhead." he added. 11 City staff members already have ruled :: that Boucher's businel!lfl -aside from a professional sign which has been taken down -is pennlssible under existing zoning codes. Counciln1e n made no comment on the Boucher matter Wednesday. From Pa9e l TYPHOON ..• from the surrounding provinces. Houses were flattened, trees uprooted , motor vehlcles tumbled and streets flood· ed. Government and private relief agencies said damage from Typhoon Patsy was spread to areas 'at least 100 miles from Manila but the extent was unknown ·at this stage. The late.season typhoon r o a red westward from the Pacific ocean lo cut directly ac ross the heavily populated cen· tral Luzon Province. Savage winds knocked down powerllnes, uprooted trees hurled metal signs about and destroyed hundreds of nimsy squatters hut!:. Patsy is the third powerful typhoon to hit the Philippines within the past monlh. Typhoon Joan struck the BI cot Penlnsula in southern Luzon a n d sideswiped the Manlla area Nov. 12 to 14. Although It caused little damage in the metropolitan area, It killed more than 600 persons in the Bicol area and left heavy losses to crops and proptrty. Parts of Blcol were also in Typhoon Patay's path today. On Nov. 19 itnd 20, Typhoon Kate whip- ped across Mindanao Island in the southern Philippines, causiflg extensive flooding and washing eway homes along the coastal areas. The twln typhoon disasters left a com· bined toll of 1,21» dead, 4.17 missing, 842,049 refugees and damage estimated at $73 million In what Red Cross officials called the · worst dlJaster In the Phlllp- pines since World War 11. 7 STY\.15 TO CHOOSE FROM n. ... ere very comforteble •of• be41 for Sittiru;i •nd SlffPlft9. A wide 1electi0fl of F•bric1 •nd Colon to choose froPn . SOFA BED SALE! .... -00 Now 299 .00 Your Jaoorite interior dtitgnn tofU be hoppv to a.stilt uou , , • . . H.J.GARREfT fURNrpJRE "lOFISSJONAI. INYElllOR DfSICNllllS tz'' H.t.llOl 11.vo. COSY.t. ~IS.t.. CALIF. M6-&171 M .. 0176 ... .. .. .. .. :· ' '• .. ' ' .. " .. .. .. -.. .. -.. .. -.. .. -.. .. . -.. . .. -. --• . ·' . .. -- -.. . , .. . . • .._ __________________________________________ __,: " " ! ' I' I ~ I 1· I ·Huntington Beaeh E Today's Fina) •• ' voe. 63, NO. 277, 3 SECTIONS, ~2 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFOR NIA THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1970 TEN CENTS .. ' Co·st of S~hool Threatens Valley Annex Bid lly ·TEllJIY COVILLE 0t ..... o.&IY Plllt Ili ff The coet of Los Amigos High School migtit throw a mOnk:ey wre.ncli lnto Uie bopea; of several §i,indred Fountain Valley families who . wint to drop out of the Garden Grove Unified School District. "I'm 119t. aure."we could affort to buy tt ." Matthe~ Wfyuker, chairman c( the Board of .'1'rusf.ees of the Huntington 8eAch Unioii ·High School District, &aid l<>day. ' ' Families In the northeast section of Jouritaln Valley are tryi ng to transfer Qidr area U,m. lhe Garden Grove disltict .to Huntington Beach and Foun· lain Valley school systems. One of the difficulties they face is that Los Amigos High School and two eltmen· tary schools also have to be shifted. The elementary schools would ioin the Fountain Valley School Dis trict wh.ich has indicated it can pay for them. ... Los Amigos , however, would be bought by Huntln,ton Beach Union'lligb School District, "We're in economic problems right now. Any proposal that would require a laree exPend.iture of money would need 5erious study," Weyuker explained. -"I'm in sympathy with the people up there," he added. "The whole shame of the situation is that school bound•rie.s were drawii long before cities existed.'' Jim Bennet,. a leader in the petition drive Jo force the school switch, is more· confident. "We don 't see any problem to their assuming Garden Grove 's bonded indebtedness." No one, however, knows just what' It would cost for the transfer. While the.re bas been a lot of tali." about the shift, n8 petitiona have been submitted and no formal action has been taken by anyone. "We have pearly BOO signatures now,•• Bennet said.' 1'And we hope to tum the peUtlons in to the county schools of flee by the end of .tht month." Bennet said about 2,000 reBistered vat.era llve ln the affected area, which, generally, Is bounded by Eu'Jid Street, .Talbert Avenue , the Santa Aha Rl'(«, Harbor Bot,tJev.,rd a~ ·~r _Avenue, pJus a 1ma1l aector west 9f Mlle Square Park. Petitioners need only 2$~percen~of the registered voters to force consl<ltratlon oC the transfer, after whlch .several steps must be, followed with ~Y educat.ion officials before such a move ls possible. "The earliest date for a transfer I could see Is July 1, 1972, U everything went smoothly," Robert Matthew, ad· ministrative services director of the Orange CoWity Department of Educalian, said today. A new state Jaw takes effect Monday which. will determine the money Hun- tington Beach and Fou.ntaln Valley dlstrictl waU!d pay Garden Grove if a traRSfer Is succfssful. · The acquiring districts could end up paying Garden Grove the total cost of the high school, two elementary schools and three school aites, or they might pay a percentage of Garden Grove's bonded in- debtedness deemed equal to the assessed valuation lost in the transfer. The hlghest figure of the two formulu Is what must be paid, according to the new California law. Any amount .won't necessarily be paid ln cash. but might mean lht new districts would assume some indebtednes.!. Weyuker, in commenting on possible costs to his district, ;idded, ''Of COW'5e we don't have any of U>e figures ylit. If it does come up we'll atudy the ·m~tter thoroughl y and try to do the best thin' for the entire district." Manson -Bombshell Defense Rests; No Witnesses Called By JACK V. FOX LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The defen,. announced tuday at the Tate murder trial that it wished to rest its case for Charle.s Manson and three young female codefen· dant.s without calling a single witness to the stand on their behalf. In a startling and dramatic episode, Defense Attorney Paul Fitzgerald rose as the defense was e1pected to begin its case in the 23-week trial and announced: "The defen3e rests." The other three defense lawyers . also llood and aMounced that they wished ta ;est their case on behalf of their clients. Patricia Krenwinkel , oqe of the three yowig women charged with the seven murders, rose ta her feet and announced that she wished to testify in the presence or the jury, Charles Manson said nolhlng but sat solidly in his chair. Fitzgerald added that the provision that the defense wished to rest subject to being able to "introduce certain ex· hi bits." It was not made clear what he was referring to. : Superior Court Judge Charles H. Older summoned the defense and proseculion attqrneys to his bench for a conference and then the trial was recessed briefly. Edison Elltpanslon f • I . State: H µntingwn Can't Bar Highway Vse The California Division of Highways claimed today that the City of Huntington Beach cannot block erpans.ion of the Southern California Edison plant by de· eying a perm it for construction invol ving Pacific Coast Hlghway. This week the city council -in a ~-2 vote -denied the company permit to en· ~roach on the highway right of way to lay two pipes under the road. The pipes would be 14 feet in diamete r and discharge hot water from the facility into tM ocean. "If Edison come.<1 to us for the permit, wt will write one ," A. L. Hime\hoch, deputy di strict engineer, said in Los Angeles today. "We would have no 1Jtemative. We could not deny it to a utility company." Although Public Works Director James Wheeler of Huntington Beach said there wes no reason not to issue the permit from an engineering standpoint he refer· red the matter to the city council . Himelhoch said that the permit had been submitted to the city only for pro- cedural review. "Thia comes from our delegating authority for permits to c i t i e s , ' ' Himelhoch explained. "But with certain types of permits, such as this one, we on- ly delegate the authority to process the permit. We must approve the work. "Jn this case Edi.son went to the city for .11pp roval and the city sent it to us. We approved the work and sent the ap- plication back to the city. That's when the problem arose." • In applying to the council for the permit, Richard Campbell, g e n e r a I manager for Edison operations in Hun· tington Beach, said the work would not be startell until the state Supreme Court has ruled on a county move to block the $180 million expansion of the plant. The county's Air Pollution Control District is claiming tha t the P u b 11 c Utilities Commission, which "directed'' the company to inst.all two new 750,000 kilowatt units does not have jurisdiction over the construction of utilities fa cilities which miliht cont.ribute to air pollution. Second Thoug hts On 'Playground' The suggested slogan for Huntington Beach "Playground of the Pacific," has not bo~led over city officials. Tile catch phrase was the winner in a Chamber of Commerce-sponsored con- test for an official slogan for the city. This week it was recommended that the city C1:1undl adopt it, but City Admin· istrator Doyle Miller allowed that he was "not pa rticularly enchanted wit b it." Jt was also noted that the slogan was ance used by Hawaii. On the recommen- dation of William Reed, public inform•· tion offittr, ttie maUer was referred to the start for study. Irvine Leagtie <:hampions Edison Hi~h School's undefeated Chargers enter CIF AAA football plaYOff action Friday night at Westminster High School when coach Bilf Vail'• Irvine Leogue champions meet Sunny Hilla Lancers, run· , nersup Jn lb1 Freeway League. Edison awept to nln1 atralgbt win• \ " There. was pandemonium in the courtroom when Fitzgerald let loose the bombshell that the defense would call not witnesses at all . Fitzgerald had said previously that he had subpoenaed between 15 and 30 witnesses and that Manson would pro- bably be one of the last to testify. The tot.ally unexpected defense tactic came arler Older had rejected defense motions for a directed verdict of ac- quittal for Manson, Miss Krenwinkel, Susan Atkins and Leslie Van Houten on grounds that the state had not presented sufficient evidence to convict them. Free Pr~~ Distributor May Appeal By ALAN DIRKIN Of 1!11 Dlllt ,1111 Sllff William Linehan II, 2&-year-old In· dependent distributor for the Los Angeles Free Press, may appeal this week's decision of the Huntington Beach City Council to deny him a business license to place vending machines in the city. LAWYER JOE BYRNIS LEADS AUTHORITf ES TO HIS BR IEFCASE IN VACANT LOT In ]"his .C•r1t, A Bomb Thtrt W•1 Not ; Court Scire. Ends H•pplly -•nd •'Bit Shnpl1hly ''I spoke to the Free Press' attorneys in Los Angeles and they advised me to get in touch with the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)," Linehan .said today. "J'll call them." Atta~he Atta~k Owner Solves Satchel Bomb Scare David Mancini, assistant circulation manager for the Free Press in Los Angeles, said that he knows of no other city or county where the publication's racks had been banned. "We ha ve sometimes moved them as 1 public relations gesture after complaint.s, even though we are under no legal obUga· tion to do so, especially if they are next to the stands of other papers," he added. Linehan, who lives In Surfside, said there are Free Press machines in Cost& Mesa, Newport Beach, Garden Grove, Anaheim, Fullerton, Orange, Buena Park and Westminster. There used to be Free Press stands in Huntington Beach until they become a point of controversy. Two years ago, there was a rack In front of the Post Office on Main Street and another at Main Stretl and Pacific Coast Highway. C.Ouncilman Ted Bartlett asked al a council meeting if anything could be done aOOut them, but then City Att orney K. Dale Bush advised that the district attorney would not prosecute cases against the Free Press. Shortly after that the controversial (See FREE PRESS, Page 21 An unfounded bomb scare at West Orange County Judicial District Q:lurt. Wednesday afternoon brought out sC1:1res of police men, a Navy explosives squad and an evacuation order for hundreds. of persons. But the man who solved the whole pro- blem was HuntinilOR Beach attorney Joe Byrnes \\'7l0 calmly carried off the "fearsome device" with his bare hands. The suspected item was actually Byrnes' brown attache case which had been removed to a vacant lot after it had been discovered .11t the feet of a iru.spicious looking man In Division 1 of the court. Apparentl y Incoherent, the man refused to answer questions about the briefcase Sandoval Qui ts Post EL PASO, Tex. (AP I -Hilary San- doval Jr., who holds the hlgh6st govern· ment office. ever attained by a Mexican· American is resigning as. head of the Small Business Administration. In regular season play and ha s won 12 in ·a row o~er two years, cur· renUy Ute lonfost victory strina in Orange County. c:Mr4ero are •ix·polnt lavoritoa to make Sunny Hills 'their 13th 1tr1i&bt vicilm. Seo sports. · ' and only babbled "Yes, your honor. Yes, your honor." ' -• When police discovered that shaking man had a history of mental disorders, the attache case was carried out of the court room on the end of a long pole. Just ag men from the Seal Beach Naval Weapons Depot arrived with f.11ce masks and armored vests to carry off the at- tache case, Byrnes found his satchel missing, "That's my briefcase," he smiled and wa1ked across the plowed field to pick It up. "J guess it was pretty heavy so they thought it could have been a bomb." He later explained that he had fn. ad vertently pushed the case near the suspicious man with his feet. Fluoridation Petition Group Shows Optimism Volunteers are still circulating petitions calling for a public vote on whether the Huntington Beach wa ter 1upply should be fluoridated despite a new city move toward OuoridaUon. Jerry Bogart, chairman of Huntington Beach C.it.ilens for Pure Water, said to- day that the volunteers had collected 1,500 of the 7,200 signatures needed to force a referendum. "We bad prOblems at lint getUng organized for this, but we att gellin& a good response now," he uld. "We have set early March u the target for col· lecting all the 1\gnaturts. '' nus week the city council instructtd lbe staff lo apply, lo lhe C.IUornlo HHlth Board for a permit to add Ouoride1-to. the water l)'ltem. 'The declslon to nuorldate the water w·as taken In July .rter lhe council beld 1 pi.lbtic bearing; Councilmen Ted Bartlett and George McCracken w1nted the ques- tion put •n the election blllol bul lbil move lailedi Ai ·iecond motioo to 1utborlzt nuorldatlon then p 111 e d Wlanlmoualy. • Airport Location: Hearings Set By Commission Public hearings on proposed new airports in Qrange County will be held by the Airport Commission on Nov. 30 and Dec. 7. The sessions were ordered Wednesday by the Board of Supervisors to offer the public in various areas of the County an opportunity to e.xpress themselves qn airport sites proposed in the $14o,ooo Parsons Company report. The Nov. 30 hearing is tentatively set for the Los Alamitos City Hall and will explore the recommendations for a general av iation facility at Los Alamitos Nava l ir Station. Citizens and civic officials of the area are reported ta be in determined op- position to any such use of the naval facility when It is closed down as a Navy, jet training center next year. The Dec. 7 hearing ls Planned for somewhere In Laguna Hilts Leisure World and will be for discussion of the proposed joint use of El Toro Marine Corps Alr Station, the new Bell Canyon jetport and the O'Neill Park small air park. Oruge Wea titer TUI the clouds roll by, there 'II be hazy sunshine over the Orange Co.est Friday, peaking the mere· ury at a scant 65 looally afid 72 further Inland. INSW E TODA\' Students going to colltgt havt to livt somcwlt-ert and till!' critical h.ousing shorta ge f ii e1 major colltge problem. Page 9. •lrll!t 1• C1ll"9r11l1 r C~1t:kl119 U• I CllHlllM ,.. .. (llftlct u '"'....,.. u OMlll Hlllcff II Offtr(_lt 1• ••lt9rl1l ••" I ·•ntertllft~ tt ,llllMI »ti HWOK... 11 .... L.tMm ,, Merri ... \.kllltff 11 Mlvlft 2l MUlllll ,uflft • H•ti.n1t Htwti t4 Or..,._ C•MY 11 Sri.it J'w1'r • ._. .... 1'9dl Mlrkth JWI ,_ .. -.... .. Wtl!Mf 4, ~II• W1tll U Wlllllfl'' Htwl 11-tt Wm. H-M • • \j I I DAILY PILOT H Epic Ascent Testament :.· . To Rare Spirit of Man 87 WD.LIAM SCB~R Of ... °'* '*' ...,, lt wasn't aa earth shattering as mari's first step on the moon~ even u momentous as the day men stood on top of the world's highest peat for the tint time. · · · Bbt it wu man -or men -doina something_ on earth that had never btfore been done in all the tboulands of yeara. tun hu held sway over tllll planet. . · Warren Harding and Dean Caldwell captured lhe .Jmaglnalions of mil· lions of people Ws week when they completed a never before attemp~ climb of a sto~ face on Yosemite's El CApitan riionollth. . . BARDING~ AT 4', aeellll to a ·empWy a-now rare spirit in mu. It~ a r.ul, a delermiDIUon that knows no age llmlt and a deatiny to do what may ....,. lm-11>11.J<J most. -' : ' .. , · ~ His daunUe11s enthusiasm to teat. U\e IJ.mjt.s ol. human tnduranoe and patience is prcven in the bultdredi oi climbs he b111 made ,of atone cWfa that would ~ Ole average man shudder. Only once al.nee he fir.It ~tlend the clllls of El Capitan II yean ago haa he been brought down by a rescue team. That came only after be was nearlY dead from· the icy cold and suffering from several · broken bones. He typifies most a man with singleness fl purpose. 1• • He hu keyed his.uh to the rock ,walls. He pNjJarea him- \ self..-for El-Capitan climbl ·by daily running tbe. Jl)..mile mmcJ trip up lhe z!g•zag tourill 'trail Iha! wlndl up )\le Jeu.verllCal aide of El C&pitan. The run takes him about two hours. • CALDWELL TYPIF~ in a young mu much the same ieal and forU· tude as his older counterpart. He Is not one to shrink from hll innermost drives into the unknown. His adventuroua•nature could BefVe 11 1 model for Ill young people wilh high aspirations. · • If one we .. to ask lhe men Wby they did ii, they would pro!>Bbly nply with the time-worn cUmber's cllche, -·beca1.11e it wu JM:re." Jt 11 tbe onl,y truthful explenaUon Ibey could pooolhly give. · , Whal IS Jmporlanl about lhe wault on lhe'Wall <I Early MornJnc IJihl ls not tbat two men spent a month living In a web of rope. canvas and steel doing ~I lhal had never been done before. Whal iJ lmporllnl ii Iha!' , the lmaglnaliona of people ' were sporktd. · . · , ' EVERY PERSON Interviewed by lhe lar.est,preu·.corpo ev~ .to. vial! Yoeerpite during the climb mirrored UU. •n1e of aw.e and wonder, Of ~te­ mtnl and arousal. Evtn if they said the ~ wer• tnAne Jor allempllnJ IUCh an idlollc lhing, Ibey were looking up, .wo~•woMerl!li, praying -ewu wilblng ,tJiey could be -there, too. -,.,-; . A woi:ld wracked in pi.in and fnlltraUOn 'tends to forget the IOI.ring· human spirit and bury ii In lhe morul\iild dtcay;ol humlllity. The Neil Armstrong&, Edmund ~. Wmen Hardings and Dean ColdweliJ of the world are desperately ~ to drlg lhal llrnlahed spirit up lime and time again In lhe hope Iha! II will support illell, . Perhaps some day they wW aucCeed. · ,, .. Fl"Ollt P .. e J FREE P:REss:::-.-:--=...: . . ' --ppeared. Tbe matter came >up qain aeveral monp. ~· '!!len llmDlr r•<\' '!-' put oul They aloo clillppetr'ed. Linehan bas held lwo'JQJness U- toi-the machines in th& past, but. u be· said 1n a letter to City Clerk Paul Jones, he permitted the license to expire be<:ause of the lack of sales. · "H wu not profitable because of lunatic vandalism," Linehan said today. This week. the council based its decision to deny the license on a new stale law which City Attorney Don Bonfa outlined. He said that a new provision was fn.. serted in the penal code setting different fitandards for minors. "lt gives the cities a means whereby they can control 11\Y kind of literature that contains harmful matter to children," he explained. At the council meeting Bon f a distributed a recent copy of the F·r e e Press to councilmen and said that they had to determine whether it contained harmful matter and whether its distribu· tion through machines on the street meant it would be available to minors. The council made sucb a finding although Councilman Al Coen said that he could not find it habitually harmful as the law required since he bad seen only one copy. Either through comments at the coun.- DAILY PILOT 0"AHC't~ C~T PlllLllHIHO COM,AfCY •o~trt N, Weff l'rnldlnt fllf l"lilblbhtt . ..Jtck lt..Curley Viti P'rttldtnt tr.d a.wt•I fMntetr T1!011111 Ketvil £0llOI' lho1t1~1 A. M1i1r,Jil111 .,~-a.I: ... Al111 Dirkin. cn -u.a « In qu-1n1 today Ill tbe . ~=~led¥ lho;J,,.. ~ *!I Ille tloi btfcn. , I "What pd II I~ all lhll dirly, .... :;.- 1llllve odnrlialn(?" Bartlett as!Rd. "We jull don't want ii on lhe streets. I! it ·u in a store or something, okeY. I'm not jnya.~. '°yone'a: privacy." . Linehan did not appear at the council hearing on hil petition for a permit after lhe city derk had formally denied his re- quest for 1 business license. The council has instruettd the clerk to deny all busineM applications in the downtOYln di.!trict to insure that they are brought Linehan said he did not appear at the council hearing because be was unaware that his application fot a license was coming up this week. His letter to the ci· ty clerk asked for notification of the date. Jones explained that when he denied the license he informed Linehan's. representative that it would be discussed at the·earliest meeting it could be put on the agenda. No written notification of the hearing date was given. In a related development, the city at- torney recently sent councilmen a ~ p-ge proposed ordinance called a com· prehensive police permit ordinance. This law would list the kinds of establishments that would require a police permit and aet standards. Bonfa explained that he favored elitninatlng all regulatory ·provisions from the business license ordinance. "A business license iJ not a lictn1e but a tax," be said. "My recommendation is that a person should obtain a pdlice permit first. This should precede the issuance of the business license." The city attorney recommended that a study session be held on the proposed ordinance but no action has been taken yet. ::.--..,.=.,,,,,.... •..• ----"":"-·.-:---=-------------. . -_ _,~~=====· Jordanian _ ' ' . -. ,. Foes Clash · ~ ,.,. • • In Capital •I = a-:,. By Ualtad Pr'" htanalioul , • 'Palestinian guerrillas and Jordanliri -Anny troops battled for· 13 boun In Am- man today with mortan, machineguns and grenades before an WJeasy pep.wa1 reStored at nightfall. Once agaio tbelj was the threat of-~ war ln"Ofdan. ., There were majOr clubel Monday fj' the· Jerash area-and . .D8dwcus Radii reported clashes We4nesday near tht: Syrian border. They were reported s$ Jordanian gue~ held . .a. series of meetings to try to consoqdate theit. groups against. Klng Hu_isein's f.orces. Ir An Arab truce team hu been· f r 1 ;: Ing to enforced the -lire Im~ after the nine-day cJvil war in· Septem; Am.ember said he thought 'today'&,ou break was pfocoked by the Mamat P ular Front fpr the Liberation of Patfilf. lioe -: the group which gained nototiett by hiiac.klng f9ur western alrllilen OI' Labor Day ~eekend.· , ' ' :I The num~r of, casualtie• in todly'f fighting was not imniedia\eJy known. ~ A government spokeSmaft said' the \ OAlt.Y l'IL6l Stlft ....... HUNTINGTON BEACH FIREMEN SURROUND FIRE IN HOUSE ON FRASER LANE Moth•r Pulls Tot From Blazing Room, But Interior of Hom• H•avily Damaged guerrillas provoked ·the ftghtlng ·by atJ tacking a government police station near an electric power station at dusk Wedne5-- d~y in the first~f several raids ~bout tbl city. _ , , · ; Huntington Brownie Girls · dlerui Talbert Lake Trash o.t.n. Y ll!ILOT Slaff ~llfM' Tin cans, glass.bottles, scattered bits of paper an_d other trash took a beating from .a bunch of Brownies Wednesday at Talbert Lake. The girls pitched in to clean up the lake's shore. From 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. they sifted through the underbrush, used nets to scoop debris from the water's edge and dragged bags full of trash to large barrels. Oh yes, they did take time <lUt to cook a quick meal, discover a broken buckboard buried under the leav~ and stumble across what they thought was a pool of oil. The oil adventure excited the young girls of Troop 708, Arevalos School, Hun- tington Beach, but wifortunately turned out to be a simple mud bog. "Once a month we plan to clean up the lake shore." Mrs. Diana Peel, troop leader, explained Wednesday. A week ago she told the city parks and recreation commission that Troop 70I would adopt the lake to keep it clean UD· til the city's central park is built around it. They had their hands full Wednesday. One barrel was stuffed with aluminum can and glass bottles. "We're keep_ing those .separate to pay our way to Disneyland in March," Mrs. Peel said. Mayor Donald Shipley and Councilman Al Coen popped out for a short visit with the girls. • Flames Engulf $30,000 House In Huntington Mrs. Kenaeth Holmes opened the bedroom door Wednesday to peek in at her two-year-old son. She found his room choked with smoke and flames. The Huntington Beach mother quickly grabbed her boy and dashed out the door. She found a nearby paperboy to watch her son, Paul, then ran to a neighbor's house to call the fire department. By the time fiiemen arriv:e{f at 4:10 p.m. the blaze had climbed the inside stairway and spread throughout the house. "Damage was about $14 ,000 on a $30,000 home," Fire .capt. Carl Duncan reported today. The Holmes' home was at 17122 Fraser Lane. The structure still stands, but with a large black scar on the front. "We're still investigating the caust of the fire," Duncan uid. "But we think it may have been eaused by the boy piaytft, with matches." It only took firemen about 10-IS minutes to control the blaze, but the flames had already scorched much of the interior and what flames didn't touch, the smoke did. "The fire spread out the bedroom door and raced up an adjacent stairway into the seeond floor," Duncan explained. He sai~, however, the home was not totally destroyed. "Just the interior." "The governrrfnl has notified t~ 1Aralf ,follow up coomdttee of these clear.'vlo~ tio~s af the A.pun.an agrtemtnl!," be Mid. • (• -, · • ' The government spokesman said th~ first attack opened with a' band grenadt: being thrown at the police, followed by bul'lll of machinegun fire. Guerrillas traveling in civilian cars also .fired rockets at government troops, be said. Boating Victim's Body Returned; Services Slated The body of a Cypress man drowned Sunday night at Ventura when 1wtll1 capsized a cabin cruiser carryin1 five Orange County men in from a fishing trip has been returned home. Funeral services for John Hinsley, &7, Of 5592 Camp St., were scheduled today and Friday, with burial following at Cal· vacy Cemetery, Los Angeles. Rosary for Mr. Hinsley wilt be at 8 o'clock tonight in Backs & Kaulbers U: Palma Chapel, Anaheim, with 'Ma!s Frj.. day at 10 a.m. in St. lrenaeua Church, Cypres. 1 Mr. Hinsley, a non-swimmer,' haif· declined-to wear a Iifejacket while aboard the 27·foot boat owned and piloteil by Garden Grove physician Dr. Ira Pomeroy. He and three other men , including Mr. Hinsley's son-In-law, survived the tragedy' at lhe mouth of Ventura Marina. -.. Nudie Play Hotter-' Theater Heat Upped:: BROWNIE NITS TRASH Ecologist Heetfter Smith, I Big Brothers Available to Tutor LONDON (UPI) -The heat'1 on 110bl' Calcutta!" today. Goodbye goosepimples. The cast of the nude review shed ·thtir clothes as usual Wednesday night 'after' Royalty Theater increased its heating. . Edison Students 'Adopt' Indians At Thanksgiving When students at Edison High School are talking about sending an SOS, it does not necessarily mean that they're in trou· ble. More than likely, they will be referring to a new organization formed by Ron Hodgins, a junior student, which is called "Serve Our Society." As its first project. SOS has singled out lndian boys and girls at the Sherman Institute of Riverside, whom they have adopted for a year. Tbb Thanksgiving, Indian children wi11 be sharing dinners with the parents of 11 Edison High School students. Not only will they be treated to turkey with all the trimmings but there will also be a party for them at a local ice cream parlor Nov. 27. Need a little help with chemistry or sentence diagramming? There are big brothers frOm local high school campuses standing by who are willing to tutor any Huntington Beach area elementary or intermediate school student In any subject. JJ. J. 7 STYLES TO CHOOSE FROM The tutors are all .part of a Huntington Beach Union High School District Work Experience program and are interested in becoming future teachers . Parents interested in the tutor~g services of these trained students are urged to call Mrs. Dorothy Francesconi, 530.251~ The IO-member cast threatened Tues. day to wear clothes during the nudi scenes unless the stage was warmed up.:· They complained they had all caught colds. "Now this really is the hottest show in London," a theater spokesmaa.. said. So/a BeJ Promo/ion f ~I O!'l'!Ot COIW!ty Mltw A!Dttl W. l1t11 Alaot_1'11 f.41lor Hntl ..... IMd Office Feed a Marine · 1717S •••ch a.11ltvtt4 M1llhtt Addr111a P.O. In ltO, t2Mt --IAIUM ••di: it1 ....... AVWl\lt co.-. MtH: -... ~ '""' H""°"' ... CJ'll nu w.1 .. "'°. itou~ lln '*'-tN: IU HOrlft &I '°""" hll ·-' Turkey Day Operation Announced The Interfaith Servictman•s Center in San Clemente is again sponsoring .. Operalion Thanbgivlng0 to provide Thanksgiving Day dinners and family warmth for 3,000 young Marines. Host families are being ~t from throughout SOuthem California to take two ar more of the reaults into their home for the turkey feast. The Center ls &lso sollcltlng donations af money or food to provide a turkey dinner for about 1,000 Marines at the center. Families wishing to participate may call any of the following phone numbers · to make a reservation: from Costa Mtsa, Sant& Alla end Newport Beach. ~IO'IO; from Laguna Beach and SOuth Laguna, 49$,1128; from Sm Clemente. 4112-lltf; from Laguna Niguel, •95-5755 and from Dona, Point. fM-3?11. FamJlles who would like to oontribute to the project but are unable to Invite a young serviceman to the.lr home . m17 send donations to Operation Tbanbclv· Ing, P.O. Box 284. San Clemente. Ca!U. Those families wllo do Invite gueo111J>. to lhe~ home for 'Ibank)giving will pick !hem up al lhe parking Joi of San Clemente High School on Thanbtivlng morning. Motorists may take tht Avenlda Pico exit from the San Dltgo--Freeway 1n San Oemtnte and signs will be pointed to dlrecl them to the high school. At lhe parking lo~ signs will be poaled designating the various 1tatel of the U.S. and the young marines will gatbef. around the si&n of their home state. A family wllllfi"en be able to choose the 1tate where their guesLs will be from. The bu.! taking the young men back to Camp Pendleton will depart from the high school at 10 p.m. that evening and families are asked to have the man back in time to catch tht bus. 'A wide 111Ktion choos• from. ~ SOFA BED SALll 1of1 1*11 fot Now 299.00 of Nt,ric:t end Colors to Ri-vt"iblt lacks tnd s •• + Cu1hion1 Yov /llt>Ofite illUrlor d<,;g... 10lU ho ham to ..mt we>• • • • H.J.GAl\l\tff. fURNfJURE 'lt.()FESSfONAL tNTi.IOA DlSls.HfltS Hl6 HAllOI It.YD, COSfA MUA. CALIF. "4Mt71 646-0216 ' ' I > 11 I • I I I ii· I . -··-··· -·-·· __ __;.;Tllu""1;::.:;;::;.•~N ... ~om~~b.r----1t~,-J9_ro_,H.;_ __ oM_t_v_·"_L_OT~J; Earhart~s Voi~e Beard:? 1 ----·--' Communication Crew Documents Reports Hearing A melia ' I ¥ oung Warrior A 14-year-old Cambodian mercenary soldier is dwarfed by his U.S.· made M·l carbine as he rests while his unit awaits battle orders near Wat Tbei, Cambodia. 'Didn't Shoot Any Viets' ~ays Sobbing Sergeant . ' Fl'. HOOD, Tex. (UPI) -S. Sgt. David Mitchell, with tears streaming down his cheeks onto a double row of combat rib- bons fastened to his chest . told a seven· man court-martial panel today he killed no one at My Lai. ·Mitchell's attoriley called .the JO-year· old St. Francisville La., soldier to the st'and for one question near the end of the defense case. · . ~"Old you shoot any Vietnamese PQj:lplt near the ditch in My Lai on March ,16, iJMiB?" defense attorney Ossie Browo iilid. "No sir, Mr. Brown, I did not," Mit· chell said. "I am positive that 1 ·did not r;hoot anyone." On cross examiniation, Mitchell was questioned repeatedly about his position during the alleged massacre and the posl· tions of the men in bi! comba~ unit. At one point he stopped to wipe his eyes with a white handkerchief. His wife and mother, sitting in the court room, also cried. Mitchell said he took a group of villagers to the ditch <ln an <lrder from Lt. Calley, on trial at Ft. Benning, Ga ., f<lr alleged murder of 102 civilians that day. Mitchell said be left two men at the ditch to guard the group and then crossed the ditch to set up a perimeter out.side My Lai. "I've been thinJdng this over for a year now and I'm still not sure what happened and who was in my squad that day,'' Mitchell said. "But I am -positive that I <Gd not shoot anyone. I know what I did $d what I did not do." ! Mitchell is charged with assault with Intent to murder 30 South Vietnamese ~vilians at My Lei. Brown had hoped to J:ting Calley, Mitchell's commanding of· ftcer in Vietnam, to testify in the trial to- q.y. VPITtt ..... '9 DENI ES SHOOTING ANYONE My Lai Defendant Mitchell LOS ANGELES (UPI) ,-AlrUnet com- munications persoMel in lhe South Pacific heard radio 1ip.als and a woman's voice they believed wu: Amelia Earhart alter the alleged crash of her plane in 1937, according to document& made public here Wednesday. Joe Klaas and Joseph Gervais, 1ulhor1 of a book contending the famed aviatrix was captured by the Japanese and DOW liv~s under an assumed idenUty on the East Coast, showed the records to ne'wsmen here. The documents irtdlcated the radiD signals of voices too weak to be clearly heard came from Hull Island, where Gervais and Klaas believe Miss Earhart was captured. The carbon copies of what the authors flaid were secret Pan American Airlines flight records were turned over to Gervais several week: sago by Ellen Belotti, a Las Vegas receptionist, a former Pan American secretary, who said she had saved the documents "for sentimental reasons. I knew Amelia Earhart. We were friendly." The Ht typed pages, bearing DO iden- tifying marks what.soever, purportedly ere reports made by communications tochnicians on Wake and Midway islands and in Honolulu describing radio signals they picked up on Jul y 2, 3 and 4, 1937. A report signal by a K. C. Ambler described how, at 6:30 a.m. on July 5, a mes s age was broadcast on Mi ss Earhart's rrequency, asking her to res- pond if she heard it. Hanoi Rejects U.S. Warning Over Flights PARIS (UPI) -The United Stales in- formed Hanoi today it would continue ita: reconnaissance flights over North Viet- nam and would take "whatever measures are necessary'' to protect the planes and pilots . The statement by Ambassador David K. E. Bruce followed last week's incident in which North Vietnamese gunners shot down an unarmed reconnaissance Phan· tom jet 100 miles north of the demilitariz.. ed zone and presumably killed the two pilots. ~hEi session ended at 2:30 p.m: With no progress having been achie ved. The 93rd session will be held next Wednesday because Thursday is the Americao. Thanksgiving holiday. Before today 's session began, North Vietnamese peace negotiator Xuan Thuy told reporters North Vietnam will not allow tf1e United States to carry out re. connaissance flights over its territory. In doing so he rejected a statement by U.S. Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird that the United Slates halted its bombing raids on North Vietnam under a 1968 tacit .agreement allowing the reconnaissance fl ights. Bruce remarked that on Nov. 13 the Communists shot down an unarmed reconnaissance aircraft with two crew members, and that Hanoi had denounced such flights "in an attempt to justify this attac k." He said: "We have always made it clear that the United States would con· tinue aerial reconnaissance <lver North Vietnam following the cessation or born· bing on Nov. 1, 1968. Aerial recon-- naissance is not an act involving the use (If force. Reconnaissance flights are essential to the safety and security of our ' forces in South Vietnam." "We have also made clear that we would take whatever mea sures are necessary to protect our reconnaissance aircraft and their pilots. our poUcy with respect to reconnaissance flight s and to related measures of protective reaction remains unchanged." I . Christmas Seal Sugar Sweeties ' Week ProcJairned ;one of the best advertisements for dtri.stmas ·Seals doesn't appear in a n1:wspaper or come through the malls. ::it bangs in the sky over Los Angeles, (tange, and sometimes Riverside, San ~mardino and San Diego countfts. •Smog is the name of this ad. barely kfiown 63 years ago w~en Christm~s S,.als originated to benefit tuberculosis and olher lung disease research, becom· iiig a yuletide tradition. ;Costa Mesa .Mayor Robert M. Wilson h&s joined mayors in dozens ol other SOuthland cities in proclaim ing Dec. I t~ough Dec. 12 1s Chr1stmas Seal Week, t4 emphasize support of the 1970 cam· !>filn· • • • Musi c to Mark I ~~· ~~~~ 8 ,r ?.:.:~::!. I• ; to celebrate. today's opening or gels Home Improvement Center, 12862 O.apman Ave., Garden Grove. -~A free rock concert .b)' lbe other Side o( 11'1.me will be staged in the· 1tore'1 ptrking Jot tonight from 6 to 9 o'clock. A ~. ctrt of Latin music by Olalo campo SU Con Junto w!!I be held at tbe aai;e ti • on Friday nll!ht. country music &bow w!!I be bold bdurty saturday beglnni111 111 p.m. and ninning tot p.m. A omnastlc team from Lo111 B<lcb will perform Sunday •l 10 Im\ Nude Dancer Verdict Set Monday Thirteen may be a lucky number for profiteers, performers and patrons of tbe alleged art of nudie dancing, if an Orange County jurist returns that many innocent verdicts next Monday. Judge Lloyd E. Blanpied Jr. wound up th e trial of 13 Sugar Shack sweeties Wednesday in West Orange County Judicial District Court by taking the case under submission. He will rule them innocent or guilty Monday morning. The girls were arrested at the Los Alamitos nightclub in a series of raids, charged with nearly 30 counts of indecent exposure or lewd conduct and tried en masse. A similar case is pending in Harbor Judicial District Court, where Judge Everett Dickey heard pretrial argumfnts over 20 dancer& h'om Costa Mesa's Firehouse bar, with Dec. 2 set for a rul· ing. The Firehouse beater-uppers -two placed under citizen'!i arrest by a Marine corporal whose genteel instincts were allegedly offended -have not actually cone to trial yet, Specializing in the field and retained by . county topless and bottomiess bar owners, attorney Berrien Moore argues that the charges are unconsUtutlonal.- He made a surprise argument in Judge Blanptep's courtroom We d n e s d 1 y , ; however, that wasn't prtvio11sty used in • tesllmooy. . t,~Moore quoted a U.S. Supreme Court ' . decision on a statute on the lawbooks cf Georgia -that bastion of progressive morality -that made wealth a criterion for enjoying raw sex. Georgia legislators ruled that a rich man can legally purchase and use to his own satisfaction in his own home various pornographic materials such as books, or films. They sa id lhc First Amendment of the Constitution allows it. Attorney Moore argued before Judge Blanpied that the Georgia courts held the logical extension of this would be to allow poor people to enjoy such shows. The Founding Fathers, they contend. provided for citizens to view nude or lewd shows inside establishments as long as they are limited to adults only. . "I suggest a proper interpretation of the law as it exists today," said Moore, who strongly maintains that nudie bars are frequented by people who know what's inside and waM-to see it. Testimony in the west county case featured two psycb.iatrlsts called by the defense, who said nude dancing and other more precise allegations about the defen· danta don't appea l to the prurient in. terest.s of the average adult. sex and nudity aren't pru rient per ae, they testified, u Jeng aa they are tn. a bet~rosexua1 format. Prurient interests wouJd be considertd aroused -for prooecullon purposes - they addtd, U homosexual, sadistic. masochistic or Cl1her more blzarn ac· Uvlties ~ onst1ge. The report read: ''0630-KGMB requ,.t.s Earhart mll<e low' duhes tn acknOwl~gemenl of their broadcul We covering KGMB and 3105 simultaneously and hear four distinct dashes on 3105 Immediately lollowtng broadcast." Ambler also wrote, 110ccasionally •linal streogt\\ rliea sulflclently to bear voice, but still too weak to distinguish a aifl4le word. Once it seemed as though it was a woman's voice but only may have been our imagination." A report from a G. H. Miller on Midway stated be beard a man's voice "which wu dJJtlncllJI heard but not <i ytm becaUJe two men In Navy Wlllonnl llUlllclent modulaUon lo be und•ntood or bad ordertd her to deatroy all <oples Ind' identified." The report signed by C. W. AJllUS, superintendent of communications for the Pacific division o'f Pan American, SUJtr mariud all tbe report&, saying, "Whlle tt would appear there may have been some connection between the duhea and the KGMB broadcut, we could not at.ate deflrutely that the signals were from the Earhart plane." Gervais aald MIJS Belottl told him she bad kept the records secret all tbue remain :silent "under· penalty of federal, impriaonment." The authora contend Mill Earhart waa ~ ~ spy mlS1lon for the U.S. IO'tem-1 ment, was captured as a result of a security leak,.and lived for eight years ln the Japanese Imperial Palace. They clalm she ts livitlg in New Jeney 1 under the name of Mrs. Irene Bolam.· Mrs. Bolam says she isn't Mias: Earhart: and that the book Is "• poorly document.ed bou." Celebrating 2 new stores ••• co111plete with Garden Shops. Riverside and Fashion Valley. , Tomlinson Ash Tree. s• to 10• high for quick, attractive shade. 5 gal. size. 349 Kellogg 's Gromutch. Excellent for retaining moisture, keeping roots cool. 1 cu. It. tog, 1211 2 cu. It. big, 1 ss Plant evergreens now: your choice of Italian Cypress. Tam Juniper or Japanese Black Pine for carefree beauty, 1 gal.size 69Q 5 gallon size, 2.99 Sequoia Decorative bark. Attractive and beneficial giound cover for all planttng areas. In medium, coarse or pathway. 1 aa 3 cu. It. beg. Avalllbla at these Penney Garden Center.: SPECIAU C.mellu In bud and in bloom fo r flawless, delicate beauty In your flower garden. 1 gal. 1111, 119 s gallon size, 3.99 ~otied flowerllig plants. ai-e from: M.iffllc l'lnly, Iceland Poppy or C.lendulL Hardy and colorful In 4• pots. 33Q-h Bedding plant speclall Jumbo flowered mixed pansies for a bright lace on your fall flower garden. • Planted hanging baskets. Choose from lush green Ivy, plectranthus or begonia plants growing In 7' baskets. Hang several. 186 HCh , Bonul Juniper ar.owt111 In a ceramic planter malcea an •!lractive addition to any aurro undinga. Terr111c gltt:- 1 QSO FASH ION ISLAN D • NEWPORT CENTER NEWPORT BEACH S~op 12 to 5, Suiiilij, too. r l . " 4 D.\ILY PILOT •' ' n-y..=."1: "1l~ ·'Whicli Ch ina is it I 'J ' aon t recognize even i·f I 1ee il?' ::Sack Time U~I T11tfilllte V .N. Dogl:fglJ.t , Taiwan Chinese Squeaker Seen UNITED NATIONS (UPI) -Na· tionalist China appeared beaded today for majority support in the United N1Uons by the narrowest marein in years after a General Assembly dogfight about seating lhe Chinese Communist&. The showdown vote was scheduled In lhe U.N. Friday moml.ng and ob5erVers predicted !he Nationalist> would win by three or four votes. In the event that pre-vote cllculations were wrong, Chiang Kai·sbek's delegation ls protected by the perennial "insuran~". resolution backed by the United States that wouJd require a lw~thirds vote. of the General Assembly to effect a change. Both Peking, and Taiwan h 1 v e repeatedly rejected the two China formula, with the Comrcunists sayina earlier this week th.at such a solution "will never be tolerated by the Chinese people." 15 Marines Die in Crash Of Helicopte1· By DICK WEST AFTER EPIC MONTH-LONG EL CAP ITAN CLIMB, CHICKEN ANO BUBBLY NICE REWARD Deen Caldw1ll, left, •nd W•rr1n H•rding Eat F irst 'R••I' Food Since Asc1n t Began No even the most enthusiastic sup- porters of Mao Tse.tung's Peking regime believed the Chinese Communists could muster a tw~thirds vote. 1be best Pe- king achieved in 19 previous votes was 47-47 tie in 1965. The 1969 vote was 56-48 against admisSion, with 21 abstentions. SAIGON (AP) -A \l.S. Marino helicopter returqing to Da Nang with a crippled patrol crash~d into a mountain side in the fog Wednesday, killing all 15 Marines aboard. The admission effort was given new Impetus this year by the recognition or It was the worst crash in \'.itlnam Peking by Canada and llaly, and by hints since Aug. 26, when a big CH4S Chinook I always had difficulty getting ahead in ..:.111e world.-wtucb seemed passing.strange ,. ,or iomeone with my towering intellect, ~ QU"passing abilities, boyish ,&ood looks Bear Bothered By Vandals , Kills Her Cubs Mag Confront Andes to . Wes~rn diplomats ~at Mainland _ helicopter was shot down southeast of Da China might accept a seat if offe~ on~. N d 31 U.S Army .meit were killed. Jn the past, Peking showed IJtUe 1n. ang an . · . · , lertst in membership and s p 0 k e Among the dead 1n Wednesdays crash • and all·around charisma . But when I looked at myseU in the light or • stud'y by a group 01 · Boston ~ psydllatr~t... 1 coold ,.. what baa be<n ~ holding me back. I sleep too much. 2 'Heroes of El Capitan' scornfully of the United Nations. was Lt. Col. William _ Leftwich (I[ The United States softened its stand P.1emphis, Tenn., Tennessee's Man of the against Communist China !his year, con-Year in 1965. tenting itsell with defending Nationalist The helicopter. a medium-size CH46. China's right to the seat rather than al· crashed in the Que Son rSJlle about 22 ~ According to a news release from the ~ Sprliig Air Mattress Co., the study ohowa •• DETROIT (UPI) -The 1lgna were clear a~ polite. "'Our female bears are ·having babies. They murt not be disturbed. Please 'bear' with HuntNewPeaktoClimb tacking Peking's qualifications. miles southwest of Da Nang. Peking.'s chances of admission received The U.S. Command said the cause of a blow Wednesday when tiny Mauritius the crash ·was unknown, but other sources :: that men who habitually sleep more Ulan : nine hours a night teDd to be "in- :: troverted, passive and mildly depressed." ~ •• ,• • But those 'who get along with six hours ~or sleep or less are generally "efficient. ~;hatd·\\o1>rking and achievement oriented." ~ Hypothesis : if I cut three hours off my :·customary sack time, J would soon be out ~ in fr9ot with the achievers. ,. : Question: should l stay up three hours : later or gel up three hours earlier? : TBA T w AS NOT l" decision to be made l hastily. O,Chled 19.deep on tt. : It might appear' bere that I wSJ ~ ~irresolute. Not·•: l was .merely actint in ; accordance with another news release : from the self-sa me maltreu company. : When a man dealing with a problem ielectJ to "sleep on lt,'' it says, "!here's l. ever/ possibility. that> he may literally dream up a solution.·· Cites the case of • Inventor Elias Ho\\'e. : Howe got the idea for a sewing 4 m1chine needle while dreaming he was • "about t0 be killed by a tribe of savages ; wielding spears with eye.shaped holes in : their lips.'' • Went to bed at usual hour and dreamed 0 1 was about to be killed by members of 'my ~life's sewing club. • A WOKE. THE NEXT morni6'; after less ~than six hours sleep. Felt effJcM!nt, hard· ··working and achievement oriented. Great " . ... feeling ! :· Us'°-the extra time Inventing lhincs. ·:Invented a spear with hole in tip. Then ·invented cotton gin and steamboat. Was ..:just getting fnto swing 'Of achievement "v.·hen wife woke up. : Said to wife, "do you notice anylhing :different about me this morning?" ., "Yeah. You look more bleary-eyed lhan 'usual." Began feeling introverted, passive and : mildly dep~ed again. : Took short, three-hour nap. Still f P.lt in- ::trovuted, passive and mildly depressed, · but eyes no longer bloodshot. . -UPI us." If Polar bears are frightened when they have cubs. Detroit Zoo officials explained today , one of their first reactions at the first sign of danger is to kiU the cubs. But a group of youths ignored the signs sometime Saturday. They tore down the feoct separating them from Bertha, the Polar bear who had just given birth to two cubs, and five other bears still waiting to give birth. Frightened by the intruders, Bertha immediately killed her cubs. wo officials said. Although zookeepers · chased the youths away, it was too late. "Sometimes, •you just cani understand people," said n r • Robert F. )l'il1"'ri/ director ol the zoo. "lt'a a'perfect example oC man r ddtroying environment" But Willson cheered up a little Wednetday. One ol the other preg· nant bears gave birth to a cub. And four bears are still expecting. Russian Robot Takes Long Trip MOSCOW (UPI) -Lunokhod I, the Soviet moonwalking robot, ventured forth today on its longest exploratory trip yet reported and had a f>«:k at what lay just beyond the next hill -"a not very high lunar ridge ." In a progress report on the moonwalker that landed aboard Luna 17 Tuesday, the Tass News Agency said the self-propelled vehicle covered a distance <lf 300 feet during about four and one half hours of exploring that began late Wednesday 1'1oscow time and ended at 3:40 a.m. · The longest previous journey reported by the Soviets was a 65-foot j;iunt wbich the eight-wheeled remote~ontrol vehicle took on its first day. "The route passed through C<lm· paratively even terrain with depressions and elevations with an angle or in· clination up to 10 de~," Tass said. ''The self-propelled vehicle encountered rocks and comparatively small craters and a not very high lunar ridge was ovef'C1)me." YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK !AP) -1be Heroes of El Capitan celebrated their 27-day climb up the sheer ' side.~of the 3,000-foot granite monolith and began casting glances today at new peakl to ctmquer. Warren Harding and Dean Caldwell sipped. champagne and munched fried chicken -their first hot food :-;Ince Oct. 23 -and declared their fint ascent rJ_ El Capitan's "Wall of the Morning Light'' would be their last "I feel great." said Harding, 46, <if West Sacramento, Calif., as he arrived on tbt El Capitan crest just before noon Wednesday, smiling broadly through a heavy black and grey beard. But when a reporter asked Harding. the dean of Yosemite climbers, whether he 'd repeat the ascent he said, "No way, man!;' 1 Caldwell, '17, of PorUand. Ore., e<1m- ment.td, "I don't think I want to do the wne one again. But I'll do others like it." They have their sights on a climbing e.xpedition to South America. The cllmbeni said they hoped to form an expedition next June. to attempt a new a""'t route on a 20,000-foot ice peak in the Peruvian Andes called Jlrishanca. Then they want to try the unclimbed rock wall along the Angel Falls in Venezuela . Their first reaction on reaching El Capitan's mmmit was astonishment at Ule size 'of tbe welcoming, crowd, about 75 fellow climbers and news reporters who got to the top the easy way -by a trail on the opposite side. Mountaineers To Pay Rescue T eam Costs? YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK IAP) -A pair of mountaineers. still nushed with their conquest of the sheer 3.000.foot face of El Capitan. have been told they will have to pay at least some of the cost of an aborted rescue attempt. That word came from Ranger ·Larry Quist , assistant to the Y o s e m i t e supervisor. Climbing ace Warren Harding, who conquered El Capitan wilh Dean Caldwell. said "I'll discuss it" with Quist. No estimate of the cost of t.be would-be rescue was available. • . ! ' t Much of Nation Cloudy ,: • • • ·; But Florida , Tex as Bask in Warmth • " : Cellfot'ttl• • • ~ I ll l.IHITSO ,111111 lfrfT•lllMATIOHAL 't "•Ir llll!s ...,. .... kit! fOr ioi:s. .. fl •!Id 'F'ldtl' for $0!fttlt.., C1lllor11l1 ·.,r.,, 1 "" '"'""''"' ., -coe111t cloudln.u •I'll fH dlurllll !!It IJIWl'llttt -.. Mol!Hlt1ln ,,.., ...ii »no ...;11 VO· ~· _,,,..11 ... ly wfndl " • " .. "'"-•• ,.,.,.,.. llUI ••• "°' ""'"''" to "Mell tht ffl!Mlll'I' .. 9Clldtd H rli.t. TPlit 1M ......... C,.,lc Cfl!ltt' 1'1KfM'cl- M I llltll of JO M WNMM11' wit!\ 111 ~ .t flll'M 1119rtn ••~IN • t. NI'. TPlit _,iltM ""' w1i U. ._... W11"t '""111' dOUlll' Ill h .. ·~·I' ~ wl"' llf'1' -~ .. '" ... 1'IM .....,._. n. .,Mi(Nd Mtlfl "'" .... ~ MMtrit.11'1 lllfllt '",.. .. Pld ltd 1fl "" t.."': ...0 '°' t i rtlOrt ie..ll. 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"'"'' Monk• ft ..... , •111'9ri .,. t '" Ml, WllMPI .,..,., "•lmlltll 11-0. •""'•""' n.n. "''"' '"'lolf• to-11. ... .nlilld IH', 5.wl Dlttt u.tr, lol1tl1 ............ 111111 ""'~'· """ ..... I THUltSOAY n ·n • m. •' t·n•m. •• $Grt1t .,.... ~II In "'' .l( .. IM ,aftd -"1tr11 ~,;,.., Mf141 """""l"'OWt•' occurtwd bfltflv In Grtl'ld hl9/ld, Hell .• 11111 Nlll'le!ll', V11. 'NttlMMlif¥ --Ill tn. tc111f1WH9, Tt•lt t nd lllol'lclf" "'-....,cu" llJl'l'IMd 11119 "" 1tt i ncl .... ' $ti! I,•~• Cltv S.nO!- lln l'r1ncl.u s..1111 --''''"'" W1t11tM1&11 . " " .. " . •! ~1 .. " • • .. ~ " . • • .. "God , J don 't believe It!" 11aid Caldwell as he arrived on top first at 11 :34 a.m. Wednesday. He turned away and calmly resumed the chore of hauling up the 400 pounds of gear the men had carried announred it was switching its position said fog and poor visibility apparenUy and would vote against Communist were responsible. China. Mauritius praised Peking but said The wreckage was found on the side of it did not want to exclude Taiwan and in-the mountain and all of the bodies were stead favored membership for both -the recovered today by a Marine &round ~ailed "Two China Policy." team landed by helicopters. • av1ngs • • • • • • • AND LOAN ASSOCIATION for maintaining a $ 500 22 balance in any of our high rate accounts-take your choice. ANNUAL YIELD ANNUAL RATE MIN. BALANCE MIN. YEARS l79\ l50\ $100,000!!!! ONE 6.18\ 6.00\ 5000!!!! ' . TWO 5.92\ 5.75\ 1,000!!!! ONE 5.39\ 5.25\ 500!!!! %th 5.13\ 5.00\ 1!!! ONE DAY AN IMPORTANT EX I RA Your money earns interest from the day you deposit. till the day you withdraw even if it's just one day • ASK HOWVOU CAN RECEIVE, SERVICE CHARGE !. FREE .; ';I 11 1. TraV91er's Checks 3. Tickets to Sports and 7 · • ~ ~ 2. Collection of Notes Theatre Attractions (Ticketron) ~~~,,_ 11 4. Many other FREE Services OPEN NIGHTand DAY Hours: Monday-Friday 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M. Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. SOUTH COAST PLAZA -llllSTOL ITIIHT • COSTA llHA. CAUl'ORlllA • PHONE 54MOll I /I ,I I I I ' I I I ) 11 • FOlll1ia.i11 _V·aJley Today's Fl••' • \'OC. 63, NO. 277, l SECTIONS, 42 PAGES . ' ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, NOV EMB ER 19, 1970 TEN CENTS C~·st of Scho·ol Threat~ns Valley Annex Bid By TERRY Cl>VILLE 01 ,,.. IMllY l'llM l t1" 'llie cost of Los Amigos High School ml.gbt thr.ow a monkey wrench into the hopes of several hundred Fountain Valley families who want to drop out of the Garden Grove Unified School District "f'm not sure we could affon to .buy It," Matthew Weyuker, chairman cf the Board of Trustees of the Huntinglon Beach UnioTI ·High School District, said today. Families in the northeast section of Foontain Valley are trying to transfer ~r area from the Garden Grove district to Huntington Beach and Foun- tai n Valley school systems. One of I.he difficul.t.ies they face Is that Los Amigos High Sc:bool and two elemen• tary schools also have to be shifted. The elementary schoola: would join th e Fountain Valley School District which has indicated it can pay for them. Los Amigos, however. would be bought by Huntington Beach Uni on Hlgh School District. ';We're in economic problems 'fight now, Any proposal that would require 1 large expenditure of money would need &erious study," Weyuker explained. "I'm ln sympathy with the people up there." he added. "Tbe whale shame of the situation is that school boundarl~ were drawn long before cities existed." Jim Bennet. a leader in the pet!Uon drive to force the school switch, ll! more confidt.nt. "We don't Stt any problem to their auwning Garden Grove 's bonded indebtedness." No one, however, knows just :Nhat It would cost for the transfer. While there tw been a lot of. talk aboul the shifl, no petitions have bee.n submitted and no foi'mal action. hns been taken by anyone. "We have nearly 800 signatures now," Bennet said. "And we hope to turn the petltiona in to the county schools office by the emJ. of ~ month." Bennet said about 2.000· registered voten live in the 1ffected area , which, \generally, is bounded by Euclid Sfreet, •Talbert Avenue, the Sarita Ana R)ver, Harbor Boulevard 1rid Edinpr Avenue, ~~r\.a small sec~r west of M~l~; ~uare Petitioners need only 25 percent of the reglst~red voters ttl force consideration of the transier. after )Nhlch several steps must be fC1\lowed with county education of~icials before such a move 'is possible. "The earliest date for a transfer l could see is July I. 1972, ·lf everything went smoothly,·• Robert P,fatthew, ad· ministratlve services director of the Oringe County Department ·of Education, said today. A new state law takes effect Monday which will determine the money Hun- tington Beach and Fountain Valley districts would pay Ga rden Grove if a transfer is SUCCf:sSful. ' The acquiring districts could end up paying Garden Grove the totil cOst of the high school. two elementar>' schools and three school site.s, or they Might 'pay a ' . percentage of Garden Grove's bonded.in- debtedness deemed equal to the aueased valuation lost in the transfer. The highest figure of the two formula! Is what must be paid , according to the new California law. Any amount won't necessa rily be pajd in cash. but might mean the new district.! would assume some indebtedness. Weyuker, in commenting on possible costs to his district. added, "Of course we don't ha ve any of I.he rtgures yet. tf it does come up we'll study I.ht matter thoroughly and try to do the best thing for the entire district." Manson Bombshell Defense Rests; No Witnesses Called By JACK V. FOX LOS ANGELES (U PI ) -The defense announced today at the Tate murder trial that it wi shed to rest its case for Charles Mansoo and three young female codefen· danl.! without calling a single witness to the slahd on their behalf. In a. startling 11nd dramatic episode, Defense Attorney Paul Fitzgerald rose as the defense was ezpected to begin ils case in the 23·week trial and announced: "The defen.se · rest!." The other three defense lawyers also stood and announced that they wished to rest their case on· behaU of their clients. Patricia Krenwinkel. one of the lhrtt young women charged with the seven murders, rose to her fttt and announced that she wished to testify in the presence Of the jury. Charles Manson said nothing but sat solidly in his chair. Fitzgerald added that the provision that the defense wished to rest subject to being able to "introd uce certa in ex· hibits." It wa.s not made clear what he wa s referring to. Superior Court Judge Char\1?5 H. Older summoned the. defense and prosecution attorneys to his bench for 11 conference and then the trial was recessed briefly, . I Edison Expansion . S f,ate: ff untingtQri Can't Bar Highway Vse The California Division of Highways claimed today that I.ht City of Huntington Beach cannot block e1pansion of the Southern California Edison plan t by de- .,.S'fng a permit for construction involv ing P.cific Coast Highway. This week the city council -in a S..2 vote -denied lhe oompany permit tt1 en· croach on the highway right of way to lay two pipes under the road. The pipes would be J4 feet in diametel""""and discharge hot water from the facility into the ocean. "If Edison comes to us for the permit, we will write one," A. L. Himelhoch, deput:v. district engineer, said in Los ARge\es today. "We would have no alternative. We could not deny it to a utility company ." Although Public Works Directnr James Wheeler of Hunti ngton Beach sa id there was no reason not tn issue the pennit from an engineering standpoint he refer· red the matter to the city council. Himelhoch said that the permit had been iiubmitted t.o the city only for pro- cedural review, ''Th is comes from our delegating 1uthority ror permits ·to c i1 'i es.' ' Himelhoch explained. "But with ctrtain types of permits, such as this one, we on- ly delegate the authcrlty to process the permit. We must approve the work: . ''ln this case Edison went t.o lhe city for approval and the city sent it to us . We ,approved the work and sent ~e ·ap- plication back to \he city, That s when the pmb~m arose." In applying to the council ror the permit, Richard Campbell , ge n era I manager for Edison ope.ratton.1 in Hun· tington Beach, sai4 the work would not be star1ed until the state Supreme Court has ruled on a C<lunty move to block the S180 million expansion of the. plant. The county's Air Pollution Control District is claiming that tht P u b 11 c Utilities C.Ommission, which "directed'' the company t.o install two new 750.000 ki lowatt units doe.s not have jurisdicbon over the construdk>n of utilities facilities which might contribute to air pollution. Second Thoug hts On 'Pla yground' The suggested slogan for Huntington Beach, "Playground of the Pacific ,'' has not bowled over city officiA ls. The catch phrase was the winner in 11 Chamber of Commerce-sponsored con- test for an official slogan for the city. This week it was recommend ed that the city council adopt It, but City Admin· islrator ' Doyle Miller allowed that he wall "not particula rly enchanted w 1 th it." It was also noted that the slogan was on« used by Hawaii. On the recommen· dation of William Reed, public inform&· lion officer, the matter was referred to I.he staff for study. Irvine League C,...napions . Edison HJl!h School's undefeated Ch~rgers e~ter CIF AM football pl•yofl acilon Friday night al Weslminster High ·School when coach ' Bill Vail's Irv~• League champions meet Sunny Hills Lan~ers, "!"· ·nenup in the Freeway League. Edison awept lo nine at.raJght w1na ·1 There was pandemonilim ln .. the courtroom when Fitzgerald let loose the bombshell that the defense would call Rot witnesses at all. Fitzgerald had said previously tha t he had subpoenaed between JS and 30 witnesses and that Manson would pro- bably be one or the last t.o testify. The totally unexpected defense tactic came after Older had rejected defense motion.s for a directed verdict of ac· quittal for Manson, Miss Krenwinkel, Susan Atkin.II and l.Mlie Van Houten on grounds that the state had not presented a:;ufficient evidence to convict them. Free Press Distributer ~ay Appeal By ALAN DIJtKIN Of ,.,. o.t!f' Pfltt $left ' DAILY l"ILOT Pllft• ~ RINll Nllllldtl1*1 Wi lliam Linehan n, 26-year.old in- dependent distributor for the Loi! Angeles Free Press. may appeJI this week 's dect,,ion of the Huntington Beach City C.Ouncil to deny him a bustnesi license to pla~ vending machines in the city. " ' . • ' l • ' , .LAWYER JOE BYRNES · LEADS ~UtHORITI ES TO ·,HIS· B'f!IEFCASE IN .VACANT .LOT In Th l1•C•r1e, A Bemb Ther.1 Wai Not ; C~ rt .Scare !l:!'d• Happilv, -and• Bit ShHpi1hly "I spoke t.o the Fret Press' attorneys in Los Angeles and they advised me lt get in touch with the Amf!'iCan Civil Llberties Union (ACLO),'' Linehan aald today. "I'll call them." A·tta~he Atta~k Owner Solves Satchel Bomb Scare David Mancini, assistant circulation manager for the Free Pres.s in Los Angeles, said that he knows of no ~ther city or county where the publication's racks bad been banned. "We have sometimes moved them as a public relations g<!sture after complainu, even though we are under no legal obligll· lion to do so, especially iC they are next to the stands of other papers," he added. Linehan, who Jives in Surfside, said there are Free Press machines in C0st.a Mesa. Newport Beach, Garden Grove. Anaheim, Fullerton, Orange, Buena Park and Westminster. There used to be Free Press stands in Huntingt.Cln Beach until they become a point of controversy. Two years ago, there was a rack in front of the Post Office on Main Street and another at Main Street and Pacific Coast Highway. Councilman Ted Bartlett asked at a cou ncil mttting if anything could be done about them. but then City Attorney K. Dale BUJh advised that the district attorney would not prosecute case11 against the Free Press. Shortly after that the controversi al (See FREE PRESS, P11e !) An unfounded bomb scare at West Orange County Judicial District. Gourt Wednetday afternoon brought out scores o( (lOllcemen , a Navy eXploaives squad and an evacuation order for hundre.ds. of persons. But Lht! man whn solved the whole pro- blem was Huntingto111 .Beach attorney Joe Byrnes l\1lCI calmly carried ofr the "fearsome device" with his bare hands. The suspected item · was actually Byrnes' brown attache ca.s~ which had been removed to a vacant lot after it had been ·discovered at the fee t of a suspicious looking man In Division 7 of. the court. AppareriUy inC<lherent, the man refused to answer questions about the briefcase Spndoval Quits Post EL l'A..50.' Tex. (AP ) -Hilary San. ' doval Jr .. who holds the highest govern- ment office ever attained by 1 Mexican- American is resigning a~ ~ad of the Small Business Administration. I '·• in reaular season play and has won 12 ln a 'roW over: two years, cur-' renUy the lon$est victory string in Orange Coun ty: 'Chargers are sb:·point favottt .. to make Sunny Hills thei r 13th straight -vicµm . See SllOl'll. · and only babbled "Ye8. your honor. Yes, your honor.'' When pollet. d'lscovered th1t shaking man had a history flf ·mental disorders. the au.ache case was carried out of the court room on the end of a long pole. ,Just as men froU'I the Se.al Stach Naval. Weaponll DepOl arrived with face masks and armored vest!: to carry off the at: tache case, Byrnes found his .satchel mi ssing. "That's my briefcase." he smiled and walked across the _plflwed field to pick it, up. "I guess It was pretty heavy so they. thought" it could 'have beeri a bomb." He later explained that he half ln-1 ad vertenUy pushed the case near the suspicious man with his feet. Fluoridation Petition Group · Shows Optimism Volunteers are still circulatin1 r)etition.'J calling for a public vote on wbether the Huntington Beach water supply 1hould be nuoridated despite 1 new city move toward nuoridatlon. Jerry Boiart, chairman of Huntington Beach Cillzens for PUre Wat.er, said to- day that the volunteers had collected l,500 of the 7.200 sl111aturn needed to force 1 referendum. ''We had problems at first getting orcanized for this. bl.It we are getting 1, good response now,·• he uid. ''We have set early March as the: t1r1et for ctil· lectin1 aD the slgnaturu." Thi.1 week the city council inslrUcted the staff to apply lo' the C.flfomla Hel1th Board for I permlt'to add Quor~ei to lhe , water syitem. . . "Tbe decision to fluoridate .tl'»c w1ter "'" ll~en )n Jwy •lt« the .<ouncJI held a publ ic he.aring.' CowtCtlmt~ Ttd Blrtlell'. apd Geora,e McCracken wa ltd th'e A~es­ llon put on Ille ele<:lion lilllot but tllla move failed, A lecond tnotloil to aut horize ·nuorldaUon lhen pa s,~, d, unanimously. Airport Location Hearings Set By Conunission ' Public hearings on proposed new airports ln Orange County will be held by the Airport Commission on NOv . 30 and Dec. 7, The sessions were ori:fered Wednesday by the Board of Supervisors to offer the public in various areas of the county an opportunity to express themselves on airport sites proposed In the $t40,000 Parsons Company report. The Nov. 30 hearing is tenlatively set fOr the Los Alamitos City Hall and will explore . the recommendations foi' a general aviation facility at Les Alamitos Naval ifstation . Citizens and civic: officials of the area are reported to be in determined op- position t.o any auch use of the naval facility when it ls closed down a.s a Navy jet training center nex t year. The Dec. 7 hearing is planned for tomewhere in Laguna Hills Leisure World and will be for discussion of the propooed joint use of. El Toro Marine C.Orps Air Sta.lion, the new Bell Canyon jetport and lbe O'Neill Park small air pa rk. Oruge Cea1t WeatJaer Till the ciOOds roll by, lhere'U be buy !WlShine over the Orange Coast Friday, pea; king the merc- ury 1t a scant 6S locally and 72 further inland. INSmE TODA. Y . StudtnU going to colUgt hout to Jiut som.ewhert and the critical housing shortage ii a ma;or colLtge problem. PaQt 9. ,, -" M•lvaf JllM• • .............. "' °'-c.... .. Jy"r• ,.,._, • ,_ ..... Jtedl M•f'111f• Ml TeMIMM a ,,.....,. . Wtlltl9r " wtlltt Wetfl 11 .~. ,. __ l1•l1 W.n. H""' W ·- I DAil Y PILOT " ' . Epic Ascent Testament To Rare Spirit of Man By WILLIAM llCllREDIER Of .... °"" ""' •ett It wasn't as earth ihatterlng as man's first step on the moon or even u momentous as the day men stood on top of the world's highest ptak for the first time. • Bu\ it wu man -or men -doinc IOIDlthi.ng on earth that bad never before been done in all the thouaanda oI y~• man bu held ••IY over 1hll planet. Warren Hardin& and Dean Caldwell captilred lhe lmqinalions of mil- llou of people th.is week when they completed a never before au.empted climb ot a stone face on Yosemite's El Capitan monolith. BARDING, AT 41, seema to exempWy ~now rare spirit in men. It la a aat. a detenninaUon that knows DO age limit and a deatlny to do what may 11tm ~ble to moot. • t • His dauntless enUwslum to test tbe limita of human endurance and Pauence is proven in the bundredl ol. climhe he h" made of otooe clill1 lhet would malce the average man ahudder. Only once IJnce be lint conquered the cliffs ol El Capitan 12 yean ago bu he been broulht down by a reJCUe team. That came only after he waa oearly dead from the · lcy cold and suffering from several broken bones. He typifies m.Qllt a man with 1~1eness of purpoee. He bu lce,ed bis life to the roc:t wallJ. He prepue.·hlm- "11 !or El Capitan climbl by dolly running the 10-mlle round trip up the 111 .... IOurill trail that windl up the Jess.vertlcal lllde of El Clpltan. The run takes him about two boura. CALDWl:LL 11P1tlll In a young man much the ume llU1 and fof'tl. ludo ... hll older COld«put. He II not one to llllrliit from hll lnnennDli drives into the unknown. m. adveriturowi Dltt1re cciuld .erve u a model for all young people with biCh asplratlona. If one were to ult the meo wby 'they did It, they would probably reply with the time-worn climber's ctk:he. "became lt wu there." It ii the ooJy truthful .,.pianatlon they ceuld peaibly glv•. What II !mporlant aboul the usault oo the Wall of Early Morning Liglit is not that two DMD apeat • month living in a web ol rope. CIDVU and steel doin& "'""'thing tbat bad DIYtr beet dooe before. Wbai II !mporlant II that lhe !maginatlona ol people ....... tp<l'bd. EVERY PERION ill-eel I>!' the Jaraesl prea CGrPI ever to visit Yooemlte during the c1im1> mJrrond lhla oenae ol awe and wonder, of t%Clte- meat and arousal. Even I( they Nld the men were Inane for attempt!J11 IUCb aa ld.lotlc thing, they were Jookln& up, \watchins, wronderln&. prayinJ -even wllhlng they could be Ibero, too. -- A world wracbd ill pa"1 and lruatration tenda to fcraet the IOUln( human spirit and bur}' It .. tlli -and decay of hwnanlty. 1be Nall ~ 1'c!mm!d lllllarp, Wan<n lfardillp and Dean Caidwells of the ..,..id ore deopiratelJ -to drag that llrDilhed spirit up time a,nd time agam ill lhe bape that It wlll .. ~ ltaell. Perhapo aome day they w!D IUC<eed. F ... P .. el FREE PRESS · .. . -dlaappeared. The matltr came up again sev•ll months late when almllar racb wert put out. They a1IO dlaa~. Lillehan has held two bUlillm llc:omel for the machlnes in the pall, but, as be said in a letter to City Clerk Paul Jones, he permitted the llctnse to exptre because of the lack of sales. "'U WU not profitable becauae of lunatic vandalism," Linehan said today. This week, the council based its decision to deny the license an a new &tale law which City Attorney Don Bonfa outlined. He said that a new pravi.sion was ln- &erted in the penal code setting different standards for minon. "It gives the cities a mean,, wbertby they can control any kind of literature that contains harmful matter to children," he esplained. At the council meeling B o n f a distnbuted a recent copy of the F r e e Press to councilmen and said that they had to determine whether it contained harmful matter and wbelber its distribu-· tion through machines on the street meant it would be available to minors. The councll made such a finding although Councilman Al Coto said that he ceuld not !ind it habitually barmlul as the law required 1lnct be bad seen on1y one . copy. Either through comments at the coun- " DAILY PILOT 0AAMG£.COAST PUal..IMONO COMPANY Robort N. W-1 ,,elM!t .... ~ J •cli It. Cwl1y Vk• llmldonf or.d a-.11 N.4Nttr Thotrt•• k•••il l!tlllM TlioMtt A. M"r,fil111 Mtl'I09lfll ait1;er Alo11 Dirki!l W•I Or•IWI Ctlalty blllr AID.•rt W. l•tti Auocille E\llllor cil -· or In questjonln& today all tho otblr councilmen illdk:ated Iba\ they had .... the pabllcatlon before. "Wliat ..... la It, all lhla dirty. ..,. lf:ltive advmllmc!" Bartlett ubd. "We just don't want it on the streets. U it is in a store or something, okay. I'm not ,invading anyone's privacy." Lilleban. did not appear at the council hearing an his petition for a permit after the city clerk had formally denied hill re- quest for a business license. 'Ibe council has instructed the clerk to deny all business appUcaUom in the dOwntown dilltrict to inaure that they are brought Linehan said he did not appear at tbe council bearing becaUle be was unaware that his application for a license was coming up this week. His letter to the ci· ty clerk aaked for ftOtificaUon of the date. Jones erplained that when he denied the llcen1e he informed Linehan"s representaUve lhel, It wwld bl dlscwsed at the earliest meeting It could be put on the atencl•. No written notlficaUoii. of the bearing date was (iven. In • related development, the city st- torney recently aent councilmen a 3Q..40 page propoH<f ordinance called a com- pre})tnsive police permit ordinance. This liw Would list the tindl ol estabiishmenis that would require a police pormtt and .. tstandanll. Bonfa expllined that he favored eliminating all recuJatory provisions from the busintsa license ordinance. "A bwiiness licenee ii not a lloenae but a tax," he said. "My recommendation is that a person should obtain a police permit firaL This should precede the lauance ol the business license." The city attorney recommended that a study atsslon be held on the proposed ordinance but no action has been taken yel Feed a ·-----·-- ' . .. DAILY PILOT Stiff ....... HUNTINGTON BEACH FIREMEN SURROUND FIRE IN HOUSE ON FRASER LANE Mother Pulls Tot From Bl•zing Room, But Interior of Home Heavily Damaged HmJ#ngton Brownie Girls Oean Taihert Lake Trash " I . ·- Tin cans, glass bottles, scattered bits of paper and other trash took a beating from a bun ch of Brownies Wednesday at Talbert Lake. The girls pitched in to clean up the lake's short. From 11 a.qi . to I p.m. they. sifted throug~ the underbrush, used nets to !!COOP debris from the water's edge and draged bags full of trub to large barr<b. . Oh yes, they did take time out lo cook a quick meal, discover a broken buckboard burled under the leaves and stumble acroa wbat they thought was a pool of oil. The oil adventure excited the young girls of Troop 708, Areva1os School. Hun- tington Beach, but unfortunately turned out to be a simple mud bog. "'Once a month we plan to clean up the lake shore," Mrs. Diana Peel , troop leader, explained Wednesday. A week ago she told the city parks and recreation commission that Troop 708 would adopt the lake to keep it clean un- til the city's central park is built arOund it. They had their hands full Wednesday. One barrel waa stuffed with aluminum can and glass botUes. "We're keeping those separate to pay our way to Disne)liand in March,'' Mrs. Peel said. Mayor Donald Shipley and Councilman Al Coen popped out for a short visit with the girls. Flames Engulf $30,000 House In Huntington Mrs. Kenneth Holmes opened the bedroom door Wednesday to peek In at her two-year~ld son. She found hJs room choked with smoke and Rames. The Huntington Beach mother quickly grabbed htr boy and dashed out the door. She found a nearby paperboy t.o watch he r son. Paul, then ran to a neighbor's house to call the fire department. By the time firemen arrived at 4: 10 p.m. the blare had climbed the inside stairway and spread • throughout the house. "Damage was about $14,000 on a $30,000 home," Fire Capt. Carl Duncan reixirted today. The Holmes ' home wa.s at 17122 Fraser Lane. The structure still .stands, but with a large black scar on the front. "We're still in~stlgating lhe cause of the fi re," Duncan gald. 1'But we thlni It may have been caused by the boy playing with matches.'' It only 'took firemen aboiil 10-15 mlnutN to control the blaze, but 'the flames had already scorched much of the interior and wb,11:t flames dkln 't touch, the smoke did. "The fire spread out the bedroom doot and raced up an adjacent stairway into the second floor," Duncan explained. He said, however, the home was not totally destroyed. "Just the interior." Big Brothers A vailahle ·to Tutor Edison Students ' 'Adopt' Indians '.At Thanksgiving Need a JitUe help with chemistry or sentence diagramming? There are big brothers from local bJgh school campuses standing by who are willing to tutor any Huntington Beach area elementary or lntermedlate school 1tudent in any subjed. The tutors are all part or a Huntington Beach Union Hilb School DI.strict Work Experience program and are interested in becoming future teachers. Parent& inltre.sted in the tutoring services of the.st traihed students are urged to call Mrs . Dorothy Francesconi, SJ6.25lt. J~rdani~l},. ~ Foes Oash . • . . . ~·Capital By Vallee! Pron WU.tioul • PllesUnJan guerrillas and Jetdanlan Army troops battled for ts hours Jn Alfi· man today wJth mortars, macb.inegwl# and grenades before an uneasy puce was nstored at nightflll. ~ agatn lhlte was the threat of dvil war in Jordan. Tllire were major cl~ Mond!Y }11 the Jtrash area and OamaetuJ l\8Clio reported clas~ Wednesday near tM Syrian border. They were reported as Jordanian guerrJltas held , a i;eries of meetings to tz:y to coMOlidat.e thUr 1roup$ against 'JC.ini Hussein's forces. An Arab tn.:ce team has been t r J ;: lng to enforced the cease-Hre impoetcf after the nine-day clvtl war la 8eptembert A membel !aid ' he lhougllt today'a "'11· break was proCoked by lhe Mariist PQP; ular Front for the Liberallnn of 'J>a1es: tJne -tht group which gained notorif# by bljactmc four western airllnera iD Labor Day weekend. The number of casualties in tcdaj\~ fighting wu not immediately knawn. A government spokesman said the guerrillas proV'oked the figh ting by at· tacking a government police station near an electric i:xiwer station at dusk Wednea- day in the first of several raids about Ute city. "Tht government.has notified the Ar1b follow up committee of these clear viola· tion1 of the Amman agre-ements, 0 be aald. • The governmeot spokesman said the first attack opened with a band grenade being thrown st the police, followed by bunts of macbinetun fire. Guerrilla!'! traveling in civilian <:ars also fired rockets at government troops, he u:id. Boating Victim's Body Returned; Services Slated ne body Of a Cypress man drowned Sunday night at Ventura when awelft capsized a ~abin cruiser carrying five Orange County men in from a fi.sbinf trip has been returned home. Funeral services for John Hinsley, 57, Of S.S92 Camp St., were scheduled tod1y and Friday. with burial following at C.J~ vary Cemetery, Los Ange.Jes. • Rosary for Mr. Hinsley will be at t o'clock tonight In Backs & Kaulbers La Palma Chapel, Anaheim, with Mass Fri- day at 10 a.m. in St. lren1eus Church. eypr._.,., Mr. Hinsley, a non-swimmer, had declined to wear a lifejacket while aboard the 27·foot boat owned and PUot.ed by Garden Grove phy&ic.ian Dr.' Ira Pomeroy. He and three other men, including Mr. Hinsley 's son-in-law . survivff the tragedy at the mouth of Ventura Marini. Nudie Play Hotter..: Theater Heat Upped LONDON (UPI) -The heat'o on "Ohf Calcutta!" today. Goodbye goosepimples. The cast of the nude review &bed theJ i- clothes as usu111 Wedne!day flight after Royalty Theater Increased Its huUng. · The 10-member cast threatened 1\Jel'o day to wear clothes durin« the nude scenes unless the stage was warmed up, They complained they had all caught ct>lds. "Now this really Is the hottest show in London," a theater spakesrnan said. When students at Edison High School are talkln& aboUt sending an SOS, it does not necessarily mean that they're in trou· ble. .JJ. J. BeJ Promotion f More than l.ikely, they wlll be referring to a new organl.iation formed by Ron Hodgins, a junior student, which is called "Serve Our Society." As its first project, SOS has singled out Ind.tan boya and girls at the Sherman Institute of Riverside, whom thty have adopted for a year. Thia Thanbglving, Indian children wllt be sharing dinners with the parents of 11 Ed.iloo Hlch Scbool 1tudent1. Not only wiU the)( be trutld to turkey with all the trlrnpililgs but there will also be • party'for. them at a local Ice crtam parlor Nov. 27. · Marine 7 STYLES TO CHOOSE FIOM -. " Hntl"l'H ..... Offke 17175 htch .. ule•tt4 Mtlli111 A4cfre•1t P.O .... 790, 12MI -·-~urkey Day 0-peration Announced SOFA BID IALll I """" hldli m Fe.rert A-C.0.fl "'911 .ia w..1 ~ s~ ~ a..ctii nn Wn1 .., .... ~ ltll ~: • HONfl lt CMW lltll ... -~a._~ • Cot.I\.., Pll,.OT, ... _. • _..,.. #it ,,._...,_, .. ~ •'l,.:;.• .._ .., IJI ......... --.., 9Mdl, ..._, a..oi. <..-Mm&. ....... .... e..Cll .... ,,__.,. Vl*"t ..... ._.,.., tire ,......i -~ Or-.. c-r "*•Ml ~ •lMllll """" .,.. " no .,... ...... ftWI .. ,._,.,, .--. ....... .., ,., ... , C'Mll ,___ f., .... 11141 &4J...tJn ,,_ w .. ,,,._. c. 141-1• Cl : lfld A•:ufl I U MloNJI OllYrllht, 1'11,, ~ °""' ,........ ::=?·,,.!'.~":" ~:... _,.IN,.,....,.--... ...... ,_ ~Ml .. """"""' --· llcond dttt ,_._ .,.., •t H.....,. 9""' ... c... ........ ~ ....... ,,.. .. ., a,,Jer SJJI 1!11111111\'1 In" _ti a .1s ......,, fPlllfttry •llMllOM, lfjf --211)'. ) The Interfaith Serviceman's Center In San Clemente ii again apomorlnc "Operatloo TllalltqivillC" to provide Thanksgiving Day dm-t and famlly warmth for 3,000 YOWlC Marines. Host families are bein&. aought from throughout Southern Calllomla oo take two or more of. the tta"Uita tnto their home for the turkey leu\. The Center 11 also soUclUni doolUonl of money or food to provide a turkey dinner for about 1,000 Matinea at the centu. FlmUles wllhi.n& to participate may call an1 of the following phone numbers t4 make a raervaUon: from Colta Mesa, santa Ana aod Newport ll<acb, m.IO'IO; Crom Lquna l!eacb aod SOUlh Lacuna, 499-1128; rrorn san Clem<nte, m.m1; Crom Laguna Niluel, l!Wnl and from Dana Point, .fte.3746 . Famiiiet who wou1a llI<e to contribulO to tht pro)tct but are unable to invite 1 young serviceman to their home may -dooatlool to Operation Tbubglv· Ing, P.O. Box 114, 5an Cltmeole, ~ • 'l'hol< lamUi• wbo do Invite l'lilll Jn. to their home for Tbanacivinl Wiil pick them up at the par~ lot of san Clemente Hllh lkhool ,.., Tbanbglvlnc montiJl&. M-may taill tllo A-Pico ult lrwn the Ian ~ ,...'1111 lo s.lii Clemente and zlllll wiU be Pointed fl direct them to the blgll 1cbooi. At the partlq lot, ai,n. .. w be pooled dellgnaUlllf the varlc!ul stat.. of the U.S. aod the young rnartnM wW gather aroond the 1ign ol their homo state. A l1mtly wW theo be able to .-the stale where their gue1t:.s will bt from . The bus taking the yOW'lg men back to Camp Pendleton will depart from tbt high school at 10 p.m. that •venllllf and fafflllltt are obd to have· the man back in time: to catch the bus. n" •• ,. •try. comfort•W. sof• 1Nd1 fot $1ttlnt .~ s1 .. ,m,. 'A ,..ide ••1.ction of F•bric1 end Color• to t.hMtt from. ~ ... 400... Now 299 .oo H.J.GAi\REfT fURNll11RE PIOFISSJOHAL INllAtOi• DlSt&NOS , 211• HA•IOl ft.VD. COSTA MlSA. CAL lf. M•·Ol7.S Mi-alt6 I> \I I I• I I l \, I I : Ne rt Deaeh Today'• Final :N.Y. Stoekl· · VOL 63, NO. 277, 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE CQUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1970 TEN CENTS Council to Consider Beach Survey Adoption 'Mle' Newport Beach City Councll Mon- day will consider adoption of at least pan of Newport Tomorrow, the 18-~n!~ old planning survey, as a formal, if in- . ter\fl\r master plan. A1though currently wrestling with the creation or a plan Of deveklpment, there is no formal general plan· of city devekl~ ment to guide the planning process. ~ council has also instructed City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt to prepare recioDunendat.iOOJ on how the city can get a geoerat plan ln 1 hurry and a pro. POU! for a major reorganiuUoo ol. the Planning Department. The City Council and Planning Com- mission came to grips with these and a numbU of other majOr problenu during a joint meeting Tuesday night. The council will ·review the myriad Newport Tomorrow propo.sals ln rtudy session, lntending ta select applicable sections as at least interim policy. The city in recent · months has been bWeged by devel-t r<questa, pr!. marily akH'lg the shoreline, and admitted- ly his been unable to deJl with them with a tnow1edgeable _penpective. At one Point 11'0' mon!hs ago ~iJ., man Cary Kymla proposed creation · or- a -civic di!ltrict encompassing the entire shoreline 'below Upper Newport Bay. In the meantime, the joint Ae!il!lion did produce a four-man committee, to be headed by Kymla , to discuss the concept of a separate Lower Newport Bay Civic District. It wu strtued, however, U\at this is just one of the planning problem, con- fronting the dty. A key problem ral>ed by Hurlburt and Planning Dlrectot LIW'1!nce Wilson is an alleged serious manpower shortage irl the department. H19'lburt said be Is otudyina the prob- ltm with the possibility of recommend- ing the establishment ~ separate Plan· nlng lnd Zoning Departments, which, M . ' anson s Defense Rests 23-week Trial Brought to Dramatic Climax From Wire Services LOS ANGELES -Dramatically and unexpectedly, the defense rested its case today in the multiple.murder trial of shaggy Charlie Manson and three sisters in his nomadic family. The jury was clearly stunoed by the decision not to call a single. witness to speak in behaU of Manson and his ccr defendants. Defense Attorney Paul Fitzgerald, rep- resenting the 36-year-old alleged master- mind of the Sharon Tate-Leno LaBianca gJaughters brought the 23-week trial to a climax in late morning. "The defense rests,'' he said. He said they will present exhibits for the jury to view, but n~ ~111e will .take the ·witness stand, a decision which goes against the wishes of two of the women. "I would' like lhe defendants to ap- proach the bench," countered Susan At- kins, 22, charged with murder and con· spiracy. "It's my trial," she declared . "Your Honor, I wish to speak ," said 22-year-old Patricia Krenwinkel. They and Linda Kasabian sta rted to ap- proach the bench, but were restrained by bailiffs and seated. Manson -inEuriated by Superior Court Judge Charles Older's final refu sal to al- low him to act as his own attorney -sat sullen and silent, without expression . Judge Older refused a defense motion for acquittal Wednesday. He retired to his chambers this morni11g with defense attorneys FiUgerald, Irving Kanarek, Dave Shinn and Ronald Hughes to discuss Miss Atkins' and Mlss Kren· winkel's request to testify. The prosecution Which rested Its case last week has argued the evidence proves beyond a doubt that Manson and his rodefendants were involved in the shocking series of seven slayings. Defense attorney contends no sub&tan. tial evidence has been presented. "Almost unbeliveable .•. embarrass- ing," snapped Deputy District Attorney Vincent Bugliosi, who has led the prose- cution. One defense attorney, Kanarek , said there was no evidence to back up the charge that Manson was the leader of a conspiracy to commit the slayings. "There was no evidence of putting of heads together." Kanarek said, "When· ever the district attorney's office doesn't have a real case they throw in a consplr· acy charge.•• Kanarek pointed out that the prose- cution did not contend that Man!On was at the Tale home the night of the slay· ings and their testimony was that he spent only four minutes in the La.Bianca residence. Hughes contended that Leslie Van Hou· ten, who is charged only with conspiracy in the two LaBianca murders, should also be acquitted on grounds that evidence against her was insufficient. Hughes said that Mrs. Kasabian had testified only that she saw Miss Van Hou- ten standina: outside a house next to the LaBianca residence. Shin11 asked for exoneration for Miu Atkins mainly on the grounds that Mrt. Kasabian 's testlmony Alone'. waa: not IUf. fident. Newport-Mesa Enmllment Up""'.'By Four! 400.room Hotel Radioman Says Planners' Decision D~ Moolna ·Kmea -. --' Enrollment in Newport-Mesa Unified School District has increased by only four 1tudents over last year, the board of education was told Tuesday night. On Commercial Zonin~ D~ w~~:1an Because of the slowing growth of enrollments expansion plans for COsta Mesa and Estancia High schools may be reconsidered Jn favor of building an elementary school to meet needs of lhe Corona de\ Mar portions of the district which are still growing. Trustees discussed the slackening pace cf }rowth that is being experienced by several districts in California noting that the "bulge" o! students now appears to be centered in the middle schools and high schools. Demand for elementary classroom space generally is lessening. Jn other actions, trustees approved ap- plication for federal funds to proVide "model libraries" at Newport Harbor High and Killybrooke elementary school. The 100 percent federal funding, if ap- proved. would amount to $86,000 for the hlgh school project and $37 ,300 for the elementary library. The money would be 1pent purchasing books. films, recordin~s, !!ides, maps and programmed learning units. The multi-media complex w fl u 1 d "gather material.5 to increase cultural and intergroup understandings" and col· lect materials related to nine projects developed at Newport Harbor High. Among projects to be served by the media cneler would be: basic skills, in· dividualized instruction, environmental education, staff development, vocational· consumer education, · counseling. '"The Newport Plan'', surival education and the (Set ENROLLMENT, Pa1e %) ' The Newport Beach Planning Com· mission is scheduled to act tonight on an application to create a 200-acre bl•siness· commercial zone on the Lockhefd prcr Arraignment Set In, Policemen Shooting Case Arraignment of Albert Lambert. ac- cused in the shooting of two Newport Beach policemen. Wednesday was con· tinued to Nov. 25 in the Harbor Judicial District Municipal Court. Municipal Court Judge Cal vin Schmidt continued the arraignment for a week to allow Lambert to confer with his at· torney, Joe Borges, Jr. Borges, who practices in Pomona, said he was retained by Lambert Tuesday night and needed time to discuss the case before entering a plea for his client. Lambert, 61 , is being held in Orange County Jail in lieu of $125,000 bail. He is the suspect in the shooting of Of. ficers James Gardiner and John Ell· ingham Saturday night at the Dunes Trailer Park. Both men are in Hoag Memorial Hospital recovering from w o u n d s • Gardiner, 'A'ho was shot in the stomach and had a kidney and part of his liver removed during surgery, was released trom the intensive care un it Wednesday. Sun•et Leagtle Claamp• Newport Harbor High School's varsity·foolball agfregallon won the school's first football league tiUe in 28 years with an 8-1 record this year. Coach Ernie Johnson 's Sailors meet Redlands Hlfh Friday nJgbt at the Unlvenlty-of -Redlands -in-the finl round of the C!F perty southeast of Orange County Airport. - Emkay DeveJopm.ent Company has fit· ed the application, which seeks to establb:h a planned commun ity zone Lo allow mort than 100 acres of commercial use, including a 400-room hotel, and aboUt 50 acres of industrial use. The Irvine Company Tueaday .declared It would seek similar torung for a 188- acre tract it owns jll!lt to the south, between MacArthui'' Boulevard and Jam· boree. Road. EmkaY bas asked speedy consideration of ils request , explaining its agreement to acquire the property will be voiced if zone change approvals are not cleared in time to close the sale by Dec. 31. The public hearing on the Emkay ap- plication, continued from the Nov. 5 meeting of the commission, will precede any action, and is scheduled for 8 p.m. in City Hall. Commission members two weeks ago had expressed concern over the imposed "deadline " for their action on the plan, but had indicated they likely would ac· cede to the request for a prompt decision. Reaction Lo the Irvine COmj'.iany action is uncertain, however. Jn a Jetter to commission members Wednesday, Richard A. Reese , Irvine Company vice president for planning, asked for similar timing on the handing of his firm 's proposal. but suggested that timing be extended over a longer period to allow "thorough analysis" of both pro- posals "to determiJle the impact upon the city." FT. BENNING -John PauJ, a radioman for Capt.· Ernest. Medina, w~o commanded Charlie C.Ompany at My Lai, testified today that he saw Medina fire two bullets Into a Vietnlmese woman because ,Medina thoUMbl ahe had a grenade. Paul, the fifth witness in the court· martial of Lt. William L. Calley ,Jr., Aid he was with · Medina whilt tbeY were checking out five Vietnamese civilians lying in a smoke-filled rice paddy, in· eluding the woman. "We approac hed to see if she bad a weapon. We assumed she was dead. Soon as we had started tlll'ning away, she flinched, she moved. Capt. Medina said. Oh, my God, .•• she's got a grenade. I believe he pumped two bullets into her." Defense attorney Maj. KeMeth Rab)'. a9ked : . Q. Did ·capt. Medina shoot her or not? A. Yes, he did . Later, under direct quea:tloning from Capt. Aubrey Daniel the Army · p~ secutor, Paul said he had not checked Lo see.if the woman had a grenade. He said 11he was not armed, "that I was aware of." Medina has said In past news con· ferences that he shot the woman becau&e he thought she had a grenade. Raby asked Paul if he had seen between 50 and 75 bodies on the north· south trail in the hamlet which~veral other witnesses had described. "I don't remember seeing such a large group of bodies an ywhere," Paul replied. Calley ls charged with t b e premeditated murder of 102 civilians. . . ' . t . ~. . -· AMA !>layoffs. Undefeated Redlaml11'0lled ID tho' Gltrus Belt Lelll"' champlon1hlp this year. Newport shtte1 Ibo SUnoet.WllM·liUf·Wilh Anaheim, a tum tha Sailors ..,1e4;.o. · : · •-. ~ . along w I th the Building Department, would be placed under the direction of a c.ommunity development coordina tor. ijurlburt had outlined four possibiUtier he is studying to reUeve the · workloads . They include hiring individual planning consultant! or pnall consulting: firms to handle studies of minor projects and hiring a m1,jpr plaMlng consultant firm to prepare a general plan. · He cautioned the latter could cost as much as fl00,000 Or more. Diplomatic Kis• The r.organizaUon of the PJanninl ~ partment was the thlrd alternative. In considering the master plan as num. btr one in priority, the councilmen and commissioners voiced various reoom- endations to complete the project. They included hiring two top calibre plMning experts at $31.000 each lot a year to work on the master plan e:xclu.. !lvely or adding two lesser pennanent staff members to relieve the present (See TOMORROW, Page l) D.t.11.V 'IL.OT lflfl ,,.._ Marva Dickson, 22, Stanton, busses Mickey Mouse att'er·tearning of her selection as Disneyland's 1971 ambassador to the world. The Uni- versity of Southern California graduate has been a tour guide at the amusement park ~in~e 1869_.~ her new job, she will tour forei&n l\• Uona on 1ood will 1itl11IOl\o'.,.,. DIJ&tylaad·and will ba official hi>lt.!11 at the park to foreiin di&ni\.arle1. Counsel's Ruling Casts Cloud Over Board Salary By JACK BROBACK Of "" Dalh' '11•1 '''" Orange County superv~rs will get a short paycheck Friday and no pay at aJJ two weela from Friday, county Auditor· Controller Vic Heim announced today. Th6 salary payment probltm stems from the passage of Proposition . 12 on Nov. 3 and a subsequent ruling by County * * * Supervisors Hit In Suit Filed By Newspaper A lawsuit charging the Orange County Board of Su~rvlsors wilh violations of the Brown Act and enactment of an il· legal salary ord~ance is on. file today in Supei'lor CoUrt. . In Its complaint, the Santa Ana Register asks for a court ruling that the live supervisors were in violation of the Bro·wn Act when they met Nov. 4 in what they described as an executive session. At that closed-doors meeting the supervb:ors assertedly agreed to increase their salaries from an annual fl5,000 to $29.268 on the strength of voter ac- ceptan~ of a. measure which would alloW county boards of supervisors to set their own salaries. The Santa Ana newspaper has headed a public outcry against the pay raise and has led a movement to recall three of the supervisors involved in the fracas - David L. Baker, Robert W. ~Battin and .William Phillips. Tbe Brown Act, named after former senator Ralph M. Brown. requires ·that allimeetlngs of local public cornmiBlorui. boards and councils be held openly and ln public with certain permltled except)ons. These include certain personnel mat. ters. Al9o sought In the complaint is a court ruling that the boanl of supervlsora should be ordered to refrain from holding any further 1ecrel meetings until the Issues set out in the lawsuit are ruled upon by the court. The complaint clalm.s supervisors also acted unlawfully at the subsequtnl meeting of Nov. 10 when they enacted an ordinance which pull their salaries ln lltte liith those of CalifornJ.a legislators. That ordinanct. would have gone lnLo ef(ect l>flc. 10 and' would ·have im· mediately raised boar.cl members aa.l1rlts to tlt,000 with a hike.to $19,200 on Jan. I. Le1l11laton ln the l)ast have refused to Jn. crease the bo&rd'• 1alary. t Counsel Adrian K~yper. Kuyper ru1ed that since Propos.itlon 12 Is a constitutional amecdm•t, It 1upersedes all previous laws concernig 1alaries of the supervisors. The salary scale was pr.viously set by lhe legislature at $15,000 a year. He im said this morning that Kuyper 's ruling casts a cloud over the legality of paying the supervisors at this time and that as "a matter of public trust" be can· not pay them. The board members will get a check for $206.0S Friday ralher than the normal two wee.Its pay of $576.92, Heim sai d. The $206.0S covers a period from Oct. 30 through Nov. 3 when Proposition 12 became law. The first time the supervisors will be eligible for pay under Kuyper'! ruling Is after Dec. 10 when the ordlnance passed by the board setting the. pay scale at $Ui,000 for the balance of this year and $19,200 after the first of the year becomes effective. currently that ordinance adopted Nov. 10 and effective in 30 days ·ts the Jaw, Kuypier has ruled. Jn the meantime I.he' continuing battle over the supervisors' pay has been tern· porarily sidetracked. The supervisors Tue.sday referred the question to the Orange County Grand. Jury for recom· mendation. 1 Jury foreman George Honold said the recommendation should be ready by ne.r.t Wednesday or Thursday. Coa1& ' Till the clouds roll by, thtr.'11 be hazy sunshine over the Orange Coast Friday, peaking the mere· ury at a scant ~ locally and 72 further inland. INSIDE TODAY Students going to coUegt have to live 1omewhere and the crttical hoU.tlno .shortage ii a mojor colltge problem. Page 9. .. ....... ~ ....... ' --.. . . 1! DAil Y PILOT N TliunOlJ, •-19, 1970 • r. '- Epic Ascent Testament . ' .To Rare Spirit of Man ' . By WJLUAM'SC11111:1BER Of .. DllllY l'i..t S .. ft ·· 'It wa~·c ~s earth shattering as man's first step on the moon or even es momentous as the day men stood on tbp of tbe world 's highest. peak for the first time. But it was man -or men -·doing somethint on earth that bad never before been done in all the thousands ·of ytars man bU held sway over t.hla planet. Warren Harding and Dean C.ldwell coptured the lmaginalions of mil· liOlll of people this week When they completed a never before attempted climb 'ot a stone face en Yosemite's El Capitan monolith. BARDING, AT a, seems 'tO eiempllfy a qow rm spirit in men. It ls a r,eaJ, a detenninatfon that knows nO age lim!t and a desUny to do what may teem impossible to most. • . . , . • .. His dauntless enthUsium to test the funds of human ' '~ ~ endurance -atld patience ii proven in the hundreds of .. climbs ht has made of stone cliffs that would make the · average man shudder. Only once since he first conquered the cliffs of El 't'.:apitan 12 years ago has he been brought down by a rescue team. That came only after he was nearly dead from !}le icy cold ~ lllfferillg from aeve:aJ broken bones. He typifies most a ~ with aingleness of purpo1e. , Ila bu keyed bis life to the iock walla. He prepares llim- . · Id! I<>< .El capilan climbi 1!Y daily runnln( the 10.mile -n>md-lrlp-up-lhe,.., • ..,_l\Fisl trail-tllal-wlndi up-tl>e 1-vertlcal llide <i El C&pitao. The !'Ill Illa hlm about two boon. . CALDWEIJ. T\'flPIES In a yoong man much lhe same ...i ml fort!· 1114e as hll .-.c:oaal<rpat't. He la nol one to llbrlnl: from bla inoermolt Alri-Into Ibo ..-n. Ria lidvenlun>Us -. could oerve u a model · for all -"""" ~ ~ blgb aipiraUooa. ' If me ...... to ·u1; the .... wllY they did it, they would probably roply with u.e· tb:Jie:wara climber'• ~. "became it wu there." Jt 11 the oqi1 ltulhlul en!AnaU.O'U,., could ~ give. · . WbaC la-lm)lirlanl about tlie asuult on the Wall <i Early Morning lJght 'la ftot that two ~ 11JtDt a mOnth livina in a web ol rope.. canvu and steel ,doing something !J>ot 1i8d never been done before. What la Important Is !hat the imaginaUona qf people were sparked. · EVEllY PERSON Interviewed by the largest Jll'"' corps ever to visit Yoeemite during tbe ,cllmb mirrored this tense of awe and woodet, of-eicJte-- ment and arousal. Even if they aaid the men were insane for attempting such u idiotic thing, they were looking up, walcblng, wonderfq, prayq -even "lsllinl ·!hey could· be there, too. . . , A world wracked in pain and frustration tends to for1et the socing .human spirit and bury it in the morass and decay of, humarUty. The Neil Armsb'Ongs, Edmund Hillarys, Warren Hardings and Dean C&ldwella ol the '"'°'Id are de1peralely nteded to drag !hat larnlsbOd spirit up lime and time again.Jn lhe hope that it will oupport It.ell. Perhaps oome day !hey Will suoceed. Edison Expansion 8-iiite: Huntingwn Can't ,Bar ~Highway ·Use The California Division of Highways claimed today that the City of Huntington Beach cannot block expansion of the Southern California Edison plant by de- nying a permit for construction involving Pacific Coast Highway. This week the city council -in a S..2 vote -Oenied the company permit to en· croPOn the highway right of way to lay two pipes under the road. The pipes would be 14 feet in' diameter and discharge hot water from the facility into the ocean. "If Edison comes to us for the permit, we will write one," A. L. Himelhoch, deputy district engineer, said in Los Angeles today. "We would have no altematift. We could not deny it to a utility company." Although Public Works Director James Wheeler of Huntington Beach said there was no reason not to issue the permit from an engineering standpoint he refer· re:I the matter to the city council. Himelhoch said that the permit bad been submitted to the city only for p~ cedural review. DAILY PILOT OllANGe COAST PU8Ll$MING COM,ANY Rob.rt N. Wed Prnld1t1! 11'1d P1,1bll1ller Jeck It Cu,tey Tho'"'' K11vil Editor Tho'"'' A. M111phine M111t11lrw Editor l. Pe+.r Krie1 NewPOrl !lff!;fl City EdllOI' H_,.,, INcll Offlw "This comet from our delegating authority for pennits to c I t i e s • ' • Hinl>lhoch explained. "But wllh oertaln types of permits, such as this one, wt on- ly dele,ate the authority to process the permit. Wti must approve the work. "In this ·case Edi.son ,.ent to the city for approval and the city sent it to us. we approved . the work and sent tJie ap- -plication back to the city. '!bat's when 1he problem arose." In applying to the council for the permit, Richard Campbell, & e n e r a 1 manager for EdiJon operations in Hun. tington Beach, said the work would not be started witil the state Supreme Court has ruled on a county move to blOck the $180 million expansion of the plant. The cowity's Air Pollution Control District is claiming that-the P u b I i c Utilities Commission, which "directed" the company to install two new 750.000 kilowatt units does not have jurisdiction over the construction of utiJities facilities which might contribute to air pollution. Cahbie Pleads Guilty New YORK (AP} -A cab driver has pleaded guilty to aUempied assault on Godfrey CambrJdge' during an incident arising from refusal to accept the Negro comedian as a fare. Cambridge said be clung to the cab as the drlVer started up and was dragged IO blocks. William Schreiber, 66, the driver, was continued on parole until sentencing se't for Jan. 15. He could get up to 90 days In jail. Feed a ---------·------~ -- D41LY PILOT Sllff PlllM West Newport Scooped Muck 11 dredged from nearly a mile of channel be· hind homes in West Newport Beach. Silt had vir· tually fjl)ed tbe channel. Newport Shores Ccmmuni· ty Association assessed members $30,000 for the project. Tbey bope to recover $10,000 in tbe form of a federal grant. Planners. to Hear Parking Restriction W aiv:er. Pleas • Public be.orfqs cm 'ilppllcatitlnl to waive the city's parkin'a: rutrictjona for th:fee different restaurants will ht con- ducted tooilht by .lhe NeWporl Beach Plaooini Commiuioo. Orange County Education TV Grant Urged The possibility Orange County may have its own educational tele,vilion qian. nel was advanced oee step today with recommendation" for a $IOIJ.SD federal grao~ Tho 'Biiie) lo:ducaUooal Televlsioo, Ad· vi!ory Commlltee' , ... toP prkrlty'to a grant -by the 'Onnae Coast Com-m.unity Oolleg~ District to operate UHF -11111.--Four o~~ll In r-fomla',m aeot1n · · ii: -' . ' I . ' 'Ille ·.o.S. Deparinient ol ijeallh, Edu. cation and Welfare ,hq made avaq,able funds totaling $9.1S,OOO which Channel 50 will share if· tbe 1tate recommendation Is apl"'oved by HEW, Mott <if the money '°ill to for trans- mitting facili~~ ii> Ibo La Puente Hills, oorth of Bre~•· If ·al! olhtr steps In l)\e lengthy a p. Jl'OVll··Procea. are completed~rtbe: chan- nel could begin procrammlnJ la 1m. It wot,dd beam educaUOnat Counes; local governme:nt lc,Uviti;ea and cultur&l pro- grams to lhe entire county. 2 Homosexuals . ' ' Can't Marry Isadore's Restaurant. 341 Bayside Drive,' is aeelting a variance to allow an increase in its occupancy load without providing additional parking. A request "tor a variance to allow a ~ seat reataurant in an existing building at 'Ill East Balboa Boulevard without pro-- v:lding any o!f·street parking will be the subject of a separate bearing. Alfred L. Beltran of Corona del Mar, in the third request, is seeking a variance to permit the establishment of an ice cream parlor wilh a aeatin& capacity of 25 at 3309 East Coast Highway without pro- viding required parking facilities. The commission will also conduct a public hearing during its 8 p.m. meeting on a Jl"&-ZOnin( application for a ~acre tract Wdjacent'to HOlig-Hoopltel. - Ttie-· potenUal developer, the George Scholz CoDl.pany of Toledo, Ohio, has di.5cloaed plans for a multl·million-dollar apartment and condominiurh project on the prqperty, which overlooks Paclllc Coast Highway. Two publlc hearings are scheduled on requests to build gasoline stations, one at the northwest comer of San Joaquin Hills and Jamboree Roads and the second at the southU!t comer of the same in· tersection. Still another hearing is slated on a re- qu~st by the Sail Inn Motel. 2627 Newport Boulevard, tO add two units to Uie 12-unit complex in exi!tence now. Sandoval Quits Post EL PASO, Tex. !AP) -Hilary San· doval Jr., who holds .the highest govern- ment office ever attained by a Mexican· American is~ ,r.~igning as head of the Small Business Admioistration. Fro.,. Page I ENROLLMENT r;ocial science service center. The expanded library center is hoped to improve the "quality of educational endeavor" and to aid "creation of a true union, a viable American society." The district would pay for a librarian and three instructional aides, costs not included in the fundjng proposal. The elementary center would offer varied learning resources including books, films , slides, television tapes, records and reference materials to as many as 60 students at a time. U the federal applic~tion is approved, the present library space at Killybrooke would be doubled by remo\'ing a wall into an adjoining classroom. Carpets, shelving, furniture a n d personnel costs or the project would be born by the dislricl and the $37,000 would go to purchasing learning materials. Approval of final plans for additions to TeWinkle Scho(il was graated by the board. • Cost of the project to expand TeWinkle by 400, to. house 1,250 to 1.300 students, is esti_mated at $850,QPJ , J!oY Attdersen1 assistant superiDtendWit, flcillties, said. Plans are expected to be approved by the state within the next few days and the project will go tG bid "as soon as possible" with bids to be opened Dec. 18, he said. The combination renovation and ex- pansion is hoped to be completed by opening or school in the fall or 1971, Andersen said. In other action the board· approved a recommendation cbangbig the district's guide on handling bomb threats. The revised statement adopted by the board advises teachers to remain with their class and reserves responSibility tOr searches for bombs to police or Ii.rt of· ficials. The former guide -adopted rrom the CiJunty Civil Defense and Disaster Preparedness Guide -had suggested teachers participate in the search for bombs, if not involved in classroom duty. Jordanian ... . ~ ~ .... .~ ' r j Foes Clash ·-~ ·; •• -. • Jty United Preti lnteraatlonal · P~~sUitian _gµerrlllas apd Jer~ A!r!Jy troops batued for 13 hours in Am· -mah todi y With mortars, micbinlguris and grenades before an uneasy peace w.u · reetored at nightlaU. Once again u.e 1was the threat pf,cjvll war in Jordan. -: There were major clasbes Monda~ the Jefuh area and Damaactil R..., reported CtaShes Wettnesday liear .. ~ Syrian border. They were reported ¢D Jordanian guerrillas held a geries of met!llil• ·to Ir)' ·to co,,.olldate lbejr groups against King-Hussein'• forces. :l: An Arab 'truce team bu been t rf;- lng to enforced !be ..,._..lire Im~ after the nlne;day civil war in .8ept_emW. A member· said he tbougbt toclay'e ciul· break WU proc:oked by lhe Marxist l'lf- ular Front. tor the Liberation of Palfi.. tine ..:... the group which gained notofitt}i by hijacking four , western airline(I ,ti Labor Day weekend. :: The ouint>er .of .casua!Ues In tocfaf? fighlfng was not immediately known, ~ A governm~t spokesman said ~ guerrillas provoked the fi,ghting by at- ta<;king a government police slatioD near an electric power station at dusk Wednes- day in the first of several raids about U>e city. · "The government bas notified the Arab follow up committee of these clear violi:- tions of the Amman agreements," be sajd. · The government spokesman said t{ie fU'St attack opened with a hand grenaU being thrown at the police, followed 6J bursts of machinegun fire. Guerrillas traveling in civilian cars also firi.d rockets at government troops, be said. • The clashes later spread to other parlJ of the city and guerrillas dressed in uniforms or civilian clothes attacked government positions, be said. From Page I TOMORROW ••• Councilman Donald MclMis first ral&- ed the issue of the, needed general plan, suggesting • ''perimetric study" to serve in the interim pending complelion of the more comprehensive plan. "We will have continual brush fires until completion of a general plan, -Ii general plan that ls mandatory," he said, He said the city has not been proeess:; Ing satisfactorily toward creation at such a plan and called the Jack of a develoP- ment study "the most serious prnblem we fa ce in this city today." ' I'\ He suggested creation of a eivic dis- trict along the waterfront is needed as a mlnjmum stop&ap. · ,Pl4M)ng Commissioner Curt Dosh i!t1 ltiallY ·cilled. for the implementation Of the Newport Tomorrow study Jn the ab- sence of th~ master plan, pointing out the report, JtseU, suggests it be used al a foundation for a formal plan of deve-lopment. The. usefulness of such ;-document was ouest1oned by commissioner Dr. George W. B~own; who suggested the city CODo cern itself more with "the planning pro- cess" than a written document. , Ma,vor Ed Hirth noted. "The first th.iAC you. do to. a master plan ls amend it. ... D~scussions among the members bf bGth bod~es ran~ed a~ross a variety of specifie sub1ects, !nclud1~g the proposed Upper. Harbor View Hills Annexation and t1M; site of the former Rendezvous Ballrooin on Balboa Peninsula. " Philosophies of high·rise densities an4 the like were also touched on, but were markedly overshadowed by the need foi- incorporation of this kind of information in a general plan. MINNEAPQIJS (AP).-A request by . two avowed homosexuals that they be issued a marriage licepse was denied Wednesday in HeMepin County District Court by Judge Stanley D. Kane. Jack Baker, a University of MUmeaota Jaw student, and Jatne!i McConnell, who was refused a job as university librarian alter the two applied for the license last May, had asked the judge to order the cour.t cluk to issue the license. m. J. So/a /JeJ Promolion f The two contended that Minoeeota law does not forbid ·marriqe between persons or the same sex ai:nd that, if it did, it would be unconstitutional. Judge Kane saJd that marriage laws should not be read "in isolation from other laws eoverning the marriage rela· tionshlp" in divorce.. probate aod .taJ: matters. Marine 7 STYLES TO CHOOSE FROM ' 2211 Weit lelboe lowle verd Melling Ad4re•1 1 P.O. &ox 1171, 9266) ...... -.. Turkey Day Operation Announced SOFA BED SALE! (G1$11 M•: 2ao W•t .. , Slr911t L..1111111 a.di: !tt ~I Avenue Hunll"9IOl'I llMCll: 1181J IN<h llrv1tv1..,, 5-n Cltll'lfftMI: SIS Nortfl El C1mlrlo ll11I OAll Y PILOT, Wllll Wl'lfdl "comolMd ff'll Ntw1-Prt'l1, It PVDlhhtd M lly t•<IPf ~ MY ln M:S111'11N ed!llOnt for l.qUM IMHll. N~ 8Udl, Golll M .. , N""lll!llffll'I ... !;fl ,,.,. Foun11111 v111ty, •lont wUh ~ rtOklNI tdUIO!lt. Oflf'IOI CO.If l"lle!llll1"9 COtnPllllY IW'il'ITl"ll "41111s ,,. If 2211 Wd ltnio. 91Yd .. Newport 911th, ft UI Wtll .. , $1rllt, Golll .\WM, Tel•••• C714l '42-4JJ1 Cl....,._ "'""111., '41-1671 OlipyfllM. 1t71, O"H'lllt Cotit •P,l.CllltflllW (.olNtil'IY. No ,.... •for'", 11111ttrllior.. t1111.,..r mttter "' tc1vertl11me11i. henlln INI .. ...,.Uhced wUllOoit ._ .. , ..,. 1"1-llon "' ..,.,.. -· $fCOlld er.. .... ,.._ 11111111 ti HftlllOff ~ "" COtt1 Mae, C.llfOrlllt, $\llll(r!tllot'I W urrltr a.n -"'IY1 w 1ntn u.n mt111ff'll:Y1 "lllfllry ........ ,...., CUI moflfftly, • The Jnterfaltb Servlctman'1 Center In San Clemente ii again sponsoring "Operallon Tbanbglvq" to -provide Thanb1lving ,Pey dlnnen and fllll\liy warmth for 3,000 young M1rlnes. Host families are being aoughf from throughout SOulhem cauromla to i.ke two or more of tbe reanits into thtir home for the turke.y feast. The Center is also soliciting donations of money ot food to provide a turkey dinner for about 1,000, Marines at lhe center. Families wishing to participate m1Y call any of the following phone numbert: to make a ruervaHon: from Costa Mtsa. sani. Ana ml NewpOrt Btadl, _, from Laguna Beach ml Soulh Laguna, 4119-2128; from San Clemente. 41~111•; fl-om LalUJll Niguel, 41W7SI and from Dana Poln~ 49W74'. • • Families who would lib to conlribute to the project but art unable to Invite a young --to lhtlr homo may ...., donaliooa to OperaUon 'l'bukqlv- lng, P.o. 11or '184. san Cltmeiito, caur. Those !Omllles,wbo .do Jimia .-In- to !heir holpe for 'lbanbgMng will p\CI< them up at lbe pirtlnc lot ol San Clemente High SCbool on Than~ nwmJng. Motoriate may lake ibo Avenlda Ptco exll,from the San Dielo Free..,ay ln San Clemen!• and sign, will be polnlld to direct them lo the high llChool. Al the parking lot, sipl will be posted deslgnatlni the Variowl llalel of the U.S . and lhe young marlnet will aalber .- lhe llgn of lhelr bQme ai.te. A laml)f wlll then be able lo chooae Iha llate where their guests will be from, The bus taking the young men baCk to Camp Pendleton will .depart from Ute high school ai 10 p.m. lhaf ev<n!n1 'ml familie1 m asked to have the man back In lime ln.qtcll lhe bu.s. • I • of ft};,;1:1 11nd ColOl"I to ... -Now 299 ~00 Reversible Itek• tnd Seti Cu1hion1 Yoar favorite lnUrior d<rigon toiU P,. lloppf/ to ..,,;,i llO• • , • H.J.GAl\l\EfT fURNf]URE 'lOFISSIONAl INTHlot DlSl&Mfl$ \ 111• KARIOl ILVD. COSTA MUA. CALIF. ••6-0271 6'4•·027• 1_ . I I I ' I 7 I ' /_ ' 7 VOL. 63, NO. 277, 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES om s e !.oard Dis pute Ruling Clouds Raise Le~g_ali ~y By JACK BROBACK Of tM OeltJ ,lltt Mitt Orange County supervlaors will get 1 abQrt .Paycheck Friday and no pay at all two weeks from Friday, CoUnty Auditor· Controller Vic Heim announced today. The .salary payment problem stems frhm the pass~e of Proposlti&n 12 .en Nov. 3 and a subsequent ruling by County * * * County Paper Files Suit In ·Pa y Issue A lawsuit charging the Orange County Board of Supervisors with violations o{ the Brown Act and enactment of an ii· legal salary ordinance is on file today in Superior Court. · • In . its . complaint, the Santa Ana Register, asks for a court rultna; that the fJ Ye 11upervlsort were in violation or th• Brown Act when they met. No\. 4 in what they described a.s an exeeut.ive session. Al lhal clooed-doort meeting lha iUPervtsors asstttedl y agreed to lnerease their salaries from an aMual 115.000 to $%9,268 on the strength of voter AC· ce~tance of a measure which would allow- cbunty boards of supervisors to set their own salaries. ·The Sant& Ana newspaper has headed a public outcry against the pay raise and hJis led a movement to recall three of the sUpervisOrs involved in the fracas - Da vid L. Baker, Robert W. Battin and Wiilia m Phillips. "The Brown Act.. named after former 1~ator Ralph M. Brown. requifes that all meetinga of local public commWiou, bpards and councils be held openJy and in public with certain permitted exceptions. These include certain personnel mat· ters. Also sought in the complaint is a court iuling lhat lhe board of supervisors should bt ordered to refrain fropt.ibolding ahy further secret meetings until the IUtfes set out in the lawsult are ruled upon by the court. • The complaint claims supervisors also acted unlawfully at the subsequent meeting of Nov. IO when they eQacted an otdinance which puts their salaries in line 1'ith those of Galifornia legislators. That ordinance would have gone into effect Dec. 10 and would have· Im- mediately raised board members salaries to $16.000 with a hike to $19,200 on Jan. 1. b!gislators in the past have refused to in· crease the board's salary. · Supervisors based that ordinance on tAe acceptance by voters of Propru:ition 12. the complaint slates. ·But that proposition, the la wsuit points &Ut, will not become a lawful ron- 11Ututional amendment until the results of tbe Nov. 3 election have been certified by the 1ec:ret.ary of st.ate. Garbage Crews . I Get Day Off • On Th anksgiving Don't plan t• set out th1t turkey Carcau and the cranberry cans nert Thursday. because Thanksfiving will ht a holiday for Costa Mesa garbage men. • ;rrash will be hauled lnste11d on Wednesday and Friday, according to the Costa Mesa Sanitary District. Any trash set out too late on either atternate day will stay there until the 11m w~kly pickup, district spoke~men emphasize. Wednesday, these areas will be served: College Park, Clearbrook Lant east of Fairview Road, the alley belwttn Ptp- pertree Lane and Harbor Boulevard, plus fhe area east of Fairview-Rold aM ntrth of Baker Strett. ' Friday, the entire Mes• Verde 1re1 1«1tb of Gisler Avenue win be covered, uc:iept the sin,Je alley between Pep- pertret Laot alld Harbor Boulevard. Counsel Adrian Kuyper. Kuyper ruled that since Propesition lZ is a constitutional amendment, it supersedes all previous Jaw~ concemig salaries or the supervison. Tbe salary scale was previously set by the legislature at $1S,OOO a year. Heim said this morning that Kuyper 's ruling casts a cloud over the legality of paying the supervisors at this time and that as ha matter of public trust'' be can- not pay them . The board membert wiU..Ut a check for $206.05 Friday rather ttMilthe normal two weeks pay of $576.92, Heim said. The $206.05 covers a period from Oct. 30 through Nov. 3 when Proposition 12 became law . The first time the supervisors will be eligible for pay under Kuyper's ruling is after Dec. 10 when the ordinance passed by the board setting the pay scale at $16,000 for the balance of this year and $19,200 after the first of the year becomes effective. currently that ordinance adopted Nov. 10 and effective in 30 days iJ the law, Kuyper has ruled. In the me·antime the continuing batUa over the 1upervisors' pay his been tern· Pora,rily sidetracked. The 1uPervisora Tuesday referred the question to the Orana:e County Grand Jury for recom- mendation. Jury foreman George Hooold said the recommtndl.Uon •hould be ready by next Wednesday &r Thursday. Trus iees Told Pupil I ncreqs~ Small This Year F;nrollment In Newporl·M~ Unified School District has increased by Only four students over last year, tht board of education was told Tuesday night Because of the slowing growth of enrollments expansion plaM for Costa Mesa and Estancia High sc;bools may be reconsidered in favor of.. 'building an elementary school to ntM needs of the Corona del Mar portions of the district which are 1till growing. Trustees discussed the slackening pace of growth that is being experienced by several districts Jn California noting that the "bulge" cf students now appears to be centered in the middle schools and high schools. Demand for elementary classroom spa ce generally is lessfning. In other actions, trustees approved ap- plic'aUon for . federal funds to provide "mQdel libraries" at Newport Harbor High and Killybrooke elementary school. The 100 percent federal funding , U ap- proved, would amount to $86,000 for the high school project and $37,300 for the elementary library. The money would be spent purchasing books, films, recordings, slides, maps and programmed learning units. The multi-media complex w 1 u 1 d 1'gather materials to increase cultural and intergroup understandings" and col- lect materials related to nine projects developed 1t Newport Hal'bor High. Among projects to be' served by the media cneter would be : basic skills, in· dlvidualized instrnclion. environmental e.dUcation, staff development, vocational· consumer education, counseling, "The Newport Plan", surival education and the social science aervlce center. The expanded library ceoter is hoped to improve the "quality of educational endeavor" and to aid "creation of a true union, a viable American society." The district would pay !or a librarian and three instructional aides, t'Osla not included in the fund.inc proposal. The elementary center would cffer varied learning resources including book3,, fil ms, slides. television tapes, teoord~ and refer~ materials to as many as 80 1t~dents at a tlmt . If the. federal appllcaUon ls approved, I.he pruent library space at Killybrooke would be doubled by removlng a wall Into an adjolnin& claasroom. Carpets, ahelylng. furniture ·a n d pu90Tlnel cosll of the project would be born by th< dlllrlct and llle '37.llOll wOlll<I go to purchasing learning m1teri1ls. Approval ol final plans for 1ddition1 to (Ste ENJIOLIMENT, P1 .. 1) ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNIA ~URSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1970 at a -ns.on . . . , -, DAILY .. II.OT ll•lf , ... ,. Estancia'• Playoff Entry Backed by an enthusiastic pep squ'ad and. fans, Coach Phil Brown's Estancia High School· football team rolled up eight wins against only one lo~& this season. gaining se'cond place in the Irvine Leaglle and a berth in the CIF AAA playoff1, The E,agle• are in ,the eliminations for the first lime in their six-y~r history. They battle Crestvitiw League· .Cb~)'ion Orange Friday night at El Modena High in Orange. '' Man, 31 ArreSte~~ Pos·· .:fl. Mesa .~arp~~ter . ' .• l,' •. '1;1 ""• ·(, _. ., ~ ' T B'·· s· ...::1..!J. ~ d . • · ' . ' ( ' 'I ' (j e -e1~Wn'C€ ~Missing GirJ ;KJ~ai\er LOS ANGELES !UPI) -A man who allegedly claimed he had k!dnaped Robin Graham, 18, from the Hollywood Fi-eeway early last Sunday was arrested Wednesday on. suspicion of posing as 1 kidnaper, Police said Richard M. Benson, 31 , was arrested in Santa Monica after he allegedly demanded $1 ,600 for the safe return of the girl . Howeve r. they said there was no evidence that Benson hid any connection with the girl'• di.slp- pearance. Miss Graham. an attraotive Pierce College coed, disappeared from the freeway shortly after 2 a.m. Sunday after using an emergency freeway telephone to call her parents after her car ran out of gasoline. Police said two California Highway Patrolmen stopped and talked with the girl ahortly before 2 a.m. IJld directed her to the emergency call box. While patrolling their strip of freeway, they passed the stranded girl sever1l times to check on her. The last time they saw Miss Graham she was sitting in her car, a former Highway Patrol Dodge, and a blond· haired man was looking under the hood. A light blue or green Corvette was parked nearby, but officers did not take down the license number, saying they thought the man probably was a member of her family assisting in starUng her car. When Misg Graham 's parent.. arrived at the scene at about 2:30, only the locked Dodge remained. Miss Graham, the blond . . .... , .. )J,,,......_ MISSING SINCE SUNDAY . c omm,ner Graham, 11 . m~ .~ th~ Corvette were gone. Marvih Graham drove a r o u n d Hallywood the .rest of the night Jookin c for his .ds ughter. Finally, abou{ 9 a.m. Stlnday, he 1 went to the. HoUywood di\rision of the Los Angeles Police Department to re.port what had hap- pened. 4-day Work Week· Set For Some Mesa .Police New Year's Day will bem a new year, and allo a new work week, for about 50 co.ta Mesa Policemen 11 the city el• perlmuta with a four-day .ICbedule ·for uniformed officers . ' . The innovation set for a to-day trial period could event~lly tM! applied to all city hall departmenta, to better serve b~ citliena. "We're just going to try It at first," emphasizes City Manager F'red 69~ebal. "A person will work a JO-boor shift In· 11tead of eight houn," SOna bal adds, e.x- plalnlng no changCJ wlll occur Involving current salaries or overtime pay. The Idea -already Ln use elsewhere. - Is to provide iddiUonal manpower at peak houri, when police are customarily the busiest. · • , Sorsabal added lhal the polrol dlvlllon of the police departm•nl b 1lso probably the earlell branch In wlilch to test the four-day concept' for posslb~ use lhro\lghoul municipal ranka. Huntington Bt1cl1 police currendy 111 oper1tJna on • the IA~~ basil. ' ·"I think ll'1 lolnJ lo be a very leulble p...,am." sald .Cal>t.'Roberf Moiidy, 1if>o hea~• the 7G-man uniformed (lltrol division. · · "We'll _be able tc Put a lot of men ln the fitld, " .. ftre ·adds. Thl prolJ'am will not apply to Clpt. Moody as administrative. head. nor to tlle six heiiCopter ptfou and observers and patrOlmen parinei:a aMlgned to the felony unit. cr'he latter prowl ca r team !lptCialit't!S In tnore' serlout crimes or unusual sltua- tiohs. rether than traffic accident inves- tigation or routlpe theft reports. Tht: system could be used tor-ctty halt hours lattt if 11.1cce.sst\ll , saJd Sorsabal, notin1 ·lh•l expan1io1no( tht I 1.m. to I p.m. ciJly woolj benefit -ldl)I ckize111 with.munk:Jpil buslnes.1. · He uld Br" city o(flcl1l1 Ila.. ln- •uiural<d a schedUle lhal keeps lllelr d· ly hall open un UI 7 or 1. p.m. on Wed- naday nlgh!J. F oUowing Chi~o Sentencing of a Co!ta Meu ma.n wbo killed hi.! buddy in a drunken quarrtl was delayed WedneJda y, to allow authOrlUes to determine the mental cond!Uon of the defendant , Dennis Leroy Jefferson. · SuPerior Court Judge Claude M. Owens ordered Jefferson, 38, formerly of 2132 Harbor BOulevard, to spend lhe next 90 days at the state's diagnostic facili ty at Chino. He set sentencing for Feb. 16. Jefferson was convicted of involuntary manslaughter Oct. 30 by a jury which found him guilty of the shooting last June 15 of Gerald Hess, 45. He faces a )>Ollsible state prison term of one to 10 years. The husky carpenter shot Hess wllh an antique Italian musket outside hl.s home after the two men. both of whom h1d been drinking heavily all night. argUed In a neighborhood bar. It was alleged that Jefferson beat the. smaller Hess to the. ground and then went ioto the house. brought out the musket and shot his helpless victim. Airport Location Hearings Set By Colnmission Public hearings on proposed new airports In Orange County will be held by the Airport Commission on Nov. 30 and Dee. 7. The sessions were ordered Wednesday by the Board of Supervisors to offer the public in various areas of the county an opportunity to expresa themselves on airport sites proposed In the 1140,00ll Parsons Company report. The Nov. ·30 bearin& jg tentatively set for the lo! Alamitos City Hall and will e1plore tJ}' recommendations-for a gtneral aviation facility at Loi Alamitos Naval· Ir StaUon. Cltiz.eM and civic .officials of the ere.a ai:e reported to bt .in determined op- po1ition to any suCh use of the naval f&<:ility wheil it is cloSed downJU a Navy jet training center next year. The Dec. 7 hearing is planned ror somewhere In Laguna Hills, LeJsure World and will be [or discussion Of the propoaed Joint use of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station, the new-Bell Canyoo jetport and llle O'Neill Park amall oJr park. Cabbie PleSds Guilty ' New YORK (AP) -A ca.b driver has pleaded guUty to, atttmpted 1111ult on Godfrey C.mb(idge durina an Jncldent 1r1.tln1 rrom rdtlaol to 1ccepl llle Nqro comedian 11 a fare. Ctmbridge aaJd be clunc to the cab u the driver &tarted up and was· drtqed 10 blocks. William SCh.reiber, IS, the driver, v.111 continued oa parole unW eentenctna ttt for Jan. 1$.. T oday'• .Fl••I iEN CENTS • r1a Judge Tells Defense To Continue . BUILETIN LOS MGELES !AP) -In 1 IUrprl.to move, defense attorneys rested ~ case today In the Sharon Tate murder trial wjthput calllna: any witneua. The judge, however, later ordered them to reopen the case so the lhree women de- fendanb can take the stand. They were to. begin testifying Jater today and at- torneys estimated they would be on the stand a total or five da ys. . From Wire Se.rvfeet LOS ANGELES -Dramatically and unexpectedly, the defense ruted Its cue today in the multiple-murder trial of shaggy Charlie Manson and Uµ-ee aisters in hi! nomad.le family. ' The jury was cfearly stunned by the decision not to call a Mgle witneag to speak in behalf or Man.Mn lld his co- defendants. ' Del~e At torney Paul Fitzgirald, rep. re~nting the 36-year~ld alleged muter· mmd of· the Sharon Tatt-Leno UBianca slaughters brought the 23-weet trial ta a climu In late morning. "The defense rests." he said. He said they will present exhibits for the jury to view, but no 011e will take the witness stand , a deci sion which goes a1ainst the wishes <if two of the wc.nen. "I would lile ·lh•. d~elljlani.. to •Po proacl) the bench," counftred Sunn •t· klrts, Zl, chargecl with inurder and con- apiracy. "lt's my trial," she declared. "Your Honor, I wish to speak," Wd tt..}tlr<lld Patricia Ktenwlnk~l. T!tey and Linda Kasablaft st1ttld tO a~ proich tbe bench, but were reslra.intd by ba.ililts and seated. Manson -infuriated by Superior Court Judge Charles Older '.9 final refusal to al- low him to act as his own attorney -ut sullen·and 9ilen!. without expression. Judge Older refused a de!enJe motioo for acquitta l Wednesday. He retired lo his chambers this momiJ.1 with defense attorneys Fltz,erakl, Irving Kanarek, Dave Shinn .arxi Ronald Hughes to discuss Miss AUl:lns' and Miss JCren. winkel's request to lelltify. The pr<>!ecutlon which rested it! case !Sst week has argued the evidence proves; beyond a doubt that Manson and his codefendants were Involved 111 the shocking series of seven slaylngs. Defense attorney contends no substan- tial evldence has been presented. "Al1T!06t unbeliveable ... embauass- ing," snapped Deputy District Attorney Vincent Bugliosi, who has led the prose- cution. One defense attorney, Kanarek, said there was no evidence to back up the charge that Manson was the leader of a conspiracy to commit the slayings. "There wa_s no evidence Of putting ol. beads together/' Kanarek said. "Wbm- (Stt MANSON, P11e I) . Mesa Police Study Trailer Arson Try Investigation Is under way today Into an abortive arson attempt in which some- one spla shed Inflammable liquid along- side a Costa Mesa man's trailer and ignited It. Scorching and other damage at Gus Breen's mobile home in a park at 903 W. 17lh St., was limited to '50, fire in· ve1tigators said. • ,. Orufe «:.••. I ' I ) .. ... ... . . ~ ...... --. .. :! OAILY PILOT c Thursdu, ,.......... 19, 1970 ~Epic Ascent Testament ---··~ . ·:ro Rare Spirit of Man I _,, By WlLtiAM SCHllEllER Of "" ...,, Plltt Sltff . It w1sn't 81 Urth shattering as lftin'a first !tep on the moon flt ev~ u _,.-u tbe d1y man ·lllotld on· top of the world'• hl1helt peu for tbe lliil -· • But it was man -·or men -dOlng something on earth tbat had never t>More been done ·in all the thousanda ·of years man bia held sway over this planet. , Warren Harding and Dean Caldwell captured the JmaginaUons of mJI· lions of people ~ week when Otey completed a never befDre attempted climb of a stoM face on Yosemite'• El capllan monolith. ' '· BAltDING, AT .. , seema to.e¥~PJify a®" rare 1pj.tit· in men .. Jt lg a u11; a deteimirurtion that knows no aje umlt GI I .dUtlny to do what miY seem imPoSSlble to most. ~ ~aunUw onlbullam to teat Ille limits ol human : 7 endUi'anoe 'll\d patience , is ~ In the buridreds of tllmbs he baa made of llODI clUfa that would mate the average man shud~r. Only once ·aiDoe fte ftnt cCnquered · -the cliffs of El Capt tan D )'tan·• has he been brought down by a reklle team. nat. came only after be was ,ntarly dead from the icy cold and 1uflerlng lrOm aevutl ... brOken bones. • He typifies most a min ,with 1b1gleneq of purpose. He -bas keyed bis life to the rock walll, lie prepem him- self for El Cepilen cllnibl by dtlly numllll the IG-mile """"' trip up the zig.zag tourilt .trail that wjndl·up f!ie..Jpt-vertlcal side o1 El Capitan. Tho nm tsk• him about two houn. · • • CALDWELL TYPJnES:.tn t young 111111 much the llllM! lul and lor11- tude aa hll oldor·coanterp"1. He is not one tO ibrlnlt 1,.,,. hll lmlemlolt drtvea IDlo the .unmown. Hts' ac1v«11uroo1 natuil could cerve u a UIOdOJ.fcr tll young people with hllh ~-· : • . . If one ........ U); the men wby they dloflf; 11'"1 WOo!d probably reply with the llOIO-WOril cllniber't et\!!>e. "heca-" war there." II Ia the only . lrulhful expJanltloa they coold l'Ofllb!Y.give. : _ -. ., • What-11.k!iPo!tant·a-Ille -•It oo the .Wtll G( Etr!Y Momlng LIPI· Is not that tWo ~ .. SQeQt a month living in 1 web of rope, canvu and Mee1 doing sOmeQiing tfja~ ti&d never been done before. What ii impertant U: that the imagfnatiOfll of people were sparked. . • EVERY PEllSON-intervlewed by Ibo laJlell pr;eA .corpa ever to visit Yoeemite during tbe~c:lltnb mirrored jhis aen• Of 1we•and wonder, of excite- 1'lelll and 11l'OU111. Even il 1hef llid the men m iDaano for attempting sue)! an ldlolie thlllf, they were IOol<Jng up, walCblllf, ~. prtyilll -oven wlsl!ing Ibey could be~. too. A wtll'ld wracked· in pain and frulitrltion tends to forget the &Oaring buman lptrlt aQd bury it ln the morasa and decay of humanity. The'·Neil Armatronp, F.c:fmund Hlllarys, Warren Hardings and Dean Ctldwella of Ibo w0<ld are detptf&toty needed to dreg that lernilbOd spirit up time and time qalll Ill the hope that " will mp)Mll't lt5elf, t Petbap1 oome. day Ibey wU1 IUOCIOd· . Fl'Ollt Pilfe l ' '' BigTyphoo~- Hits €ity OfM~·\; MANILA (UPI) -The moot powerful typboo4 in Mai\lla's recorded hlltorY lashed the city with 1~ mile an hour wind& for three bouts t.Oday causin& U· tensive damage and widUpread OOodirti. The government declart4 a state of cilamity. Tllo govelnmoat dlutor ......, put Ille death toll ol lllno u •llf 10:111 p.m. (10:111 ·a.m. EST). -17 _. were "'porlad milslJ\c and .,, ..... lliJw<d. However there were no repOrta yet fi'om ouUying areas where prevlOQs tyJlboom have caued heavy ION of life. Government othcials aaid 2 J , o o o pet'IOOI, were bcime!Ou In ManiJi wllta !tie aouOo 'l)'plJ6on PtltJ nutd In, up...U., -ud ..-linet and destloJIOI boma uil -· llUlla wu blacUd out for -tdllabt wben the aovenimo;t cut o11 eiectric power bocauae of down6d hlah volta1• wlroi. The gov~mment put tbe olrenltb. el tbe typoon .. llO mu.t per baur and Uld the wont 0 .. 111 ~ 1111tory wu ID 1111 when Mantla \iii bll. by wind. of 111 ' I ' • mil .. an hour->'l)llt -llie eyt Glitbt typbooo puHd dlrtctly oWr ManllL i -ntidents llid the ~ lftupt· .............. bil ,., bpllblll•" wbldl tllo did-......._ ' 'Ille ~ pi1aCo docllnd • llate of, oalmftJ uliled ""·~ ud. spokaman llid It~·-Mex- tooded jo other.areu-~an ID from the oumundlni ~· · HOUlll 'rire llattea.d, liiit upfooted mblor vehlclet tumbled and -w ed. · Government ud prlvtte rellof qenci" llid damaa• lrom 'l}pbOOll Pttsy "" spread to areaa at leatt too mu.. !r6m Manila but the utent waa unDen at this st.age. The late-season typhoon r o a re d westward from the Pacific ocean to cut directly acrou the heavily poluJ.lte4 cen· tral Lulon Province. Stvqo wind! lmocked down powerlllles, uprooted tnot, burled m«t1 """ tbool and deatroytd hundred& of !limly oqualtm buts. Patsy Is Ibo third powerlu1 typhoon 10 bifthe Phillppllles wllltln mt put mouth. Marine Jordanian ,Feed a .. , .. ~ Tur~y Day O~ration An~~· iFoos Clasli .~ · Tbt Inlerfallh _,..., Center ID Yi>Ulll .,..Iceman to tbtlr homo may ~ .... ~ Ia ... .,...._ - -.. ~ Tlllalllll>-. "!Jporti& 'ftltUllMDt' lo ~ 1111.P.O.BOilfl.Bala""rtra,cllif, ~-Dot ...... and faml!Y Those !tDlillel, wbci ~ -,_u·tn- ·--·-JOU11i llarlnts, to their home for 'lllallllivillf will pick ~ lacUJot an btlng 110Ught from them up al the ~ lot of Sin 1hrouchoul Soulhem California •to lake Clemente High Schi>OI i>o Thankleivillf two or more of the recruits into their morninl. Motorists may Lake the Avtrtida home for tbe turkey feast. Tb& Center is Pico exit from the San Diego Free:wa1:1n· a110 solid~ donaUona of money or food san Clemente and • :will be pointed to .to Provide a tutkey diMer for abOut 1,000 direct theln to the hllh school. · Mirines at the center. At the parking lot, signs will be posted FamUJe.s,. wlsbing to participate may designating the var-io&al states bf the U.S. call any ol'the following phone number• and the young marines Will gather arou.l tO rftake·a riservation: from Colt.a Mesa. the sign of their home sta&e. A lam.Uy Sanle Ana ind Nl•Plkt Beacb, 6714070; will 1be1I be ahlo lo -the !lets . ft:OOt La-Be6ch ud South Ltpna,. where their sts wUI be fnQ, 49f.l!21; mm Sin c;:tominto, tti.1111: Tho b\11 ~ tile yOunl -bid< lo 1n -Qipital By' Unlte4 PrtSI lateraatlo1al • ., Pal_ottjnlan au•rnuas all<! JordU!iJ' /.rmy ln>ops·batlled for L1 hours ln..Am- D\ao today with mortars, machlntguns and grenades before an uneasy pe:1;ce ~ reslottd It ru,b.tfill. Once 1&ain from 1-Nlpol, 4t6-1755 and from Camp Pendleton will de;ioll Inion tbi Dana Point ~II. hi&h .IChoo! at 10 p.m. lhit .V..ii!i and wu tbe t.hri:at oi Ciyil war Jn'Jordan. "'": 'lbuo '-;n>tJor <lub,<8 M-1 ~ the Jtraah· .,... and Dam""'' R"'llt report~-cloibei• Wednild•r ••er _ u;o · ·Syrian -bonlei; 'They -were reported u: Jordanian guerrillas held a series ,f meftin1s to try to consolidate ~ groupj !ialllsllliO(_U.,..ID'slorcos. ;;i Famllles who -1d lib to contribute familia are lisked to htve the mil bick to tho projoc:t but are unable to IDvito a ID lim• to cilch the boi. ~~D Exp8!8IOD State: Huntington Can't Bar Highway Use '!!le· Ctlllorala -el llilbwaya dalaieil todiy !bat tlit City of BunliDllO• e.Oeb cannot-block o.,...ion ol the Seutben1 Ct111om1a Ediaoo plant ·by de- "1'1111 t )lOl1!lll for -lnwMtiC Pidlle Cotil mpway, , 'l1lla -the dty --In • 1-2 Vol4 -dialed the oompuy permit ..... -OI) the hl&f>:tflY riibl iJI • ., to 1iy two pjpa under the rood. ·The pljla wOuJd ,. be 14 feet in diameter andr ~· hot wttlf from !lie fatllily 11110 the O<fu. - "U Edl!on cemee to us for the permit wt ""1 write one," A. L. HJJxMibocb, $1,176 Approved . For Costa Mesa Pumper Test Pit deputy district engineer. said Jn I.bl Angeles today. "We would havi no alternative. We cOuld not deny it to 1 utility company." Although PQ:blic WorU Director James Whooler of HtmtinglOI! Boacb uld Uiero · WU DO r~ n01-to issue the pmnit from an engineerinC standpoint be refer· red the matter to tile cJty council. Jllmolhoch said tbal Ibo permit htd been submitted to the city only for ~ cedural review. "Thia comes from our dele1atin& authority for pennits to c it i e s , ' ' Himelhoch erplained. "But with drtain types of pennits, such as this One, we on- ly delegate the authority to process the permit. We must approve the work. "In this case Edison went to the city for approval and I.he city sent it tow·. We approved the work and sent the ap- plic1Uon back to the city. That's "hen the problem arose." In applyin& to the council for the permit, Richard Campbell, g e n e r a 1 manager for Edison operations in Hun- In cue yoo should wonder. that hole tington Beach, said the work would not be that will soon be dug and lined with con· started until the stite Supreme Court bas crete at Costa Mesa'• Fire Station Num-ruled on a county move to block the •180 blr Four is not a awimmln1 plOJ for elf· million upansion of the Jllant. d,ey fnllics. An Arab truce team bas been t r ... ~ J•' Ing to. enfotced the cease-fire im~ . alter 1he niDMiy'CMI war ID~~ A member sa1a he thought t0day'1 ou~ break was procoked by ·tbe Ma~ Po~ ular F....,1 for 1he Uberttlcio of Pil~ tine -:-~ group which gtlllod DOtorit!Ji by h1,fickfng, four west.em airliners oil: Labor Day weekend. . ~ number of casualties in todly's fightma: was not £-. tely known. .-._ A government ' teSmaa II.id tht. gueiritW provok the fighting by ai:.f tacki~g: ~ govern pt police 1tatlon neai an eltctrte eower lill!on at d,uat Wednet;; day in 1he finl of ltlltral ralda tboul lhi (i{y, I 1 · , . t~ ' '• ~ 'The government baa 1IOlifitd the Arilf follow up cOmmittee of these clear viola- tim or the Amman •--ement.s " ~ said. ...... ' ..,. . The 1ovemment spokesman said the f~t attack opened with a hand grenade being thrawo at the police, followed by bursts. of machin.egun fire. Guerrillas tr,aveling in civiliaq cars also fired r~ets at gqvernm.ent troops, he said. The clashes later spread to other parts.· of . the city and, guerrillas dressed inM uniforms or civilian clothes attacked government positioltS, he said. l9rl~li Foreign Minister Abba Ebart met with U.S .. Secretary of State·WilliaD): P. Rogen ID •WllSllin«ton Wednoiday If' ~k J}romiae't of continued u.s: muttary .. ~.counteract the !:gyptjan miaail• From PGBe J ,,. ENROLLMENT MANSON._ .. I ever the district attorney's office doet&'t have a real case they throw in .a conspir· aey dW'p. .. i<.!Wek ~l!P! !WI 1hiWt! c~ i!lil :Doi'~ :f!lii Maniaii 'lrli al Iba Tate home tlMI 1~ of tltl ollyl ings and tbe,ir testimonj was that he- •JIOlll on!Y Joor m1nu1 .. ID the LaBlaoco relidellce. -<J_ran_15e County Earroati8n TY. • Typhoon Joan struck the Bi co I PtninsUla hi southtm Lw:oa a n d liduwlptd. Ille Manilt .,.. Nov, U to 11, ~, It caused , Utile. dimqe ID Grq.JAt, Urged Tht '~billt7 0rln&o I~~ ~ ,, tk~op!jllal om, It klJJod mere than aiO pon<ai ID the Blcol .,., and left heavy 1 ..... to. C"'PO an4."""61Y. Ptrts of Bi<DI :r ~ ,I• TypllOon P~tsy·1 . "'~and 20)~ Kats ,;bip- ·Ada a diving board and .a filter, how· The cowity's Air PolluUon Control ever; and you'd iY.ve ooe . Diltrict is claimiD( dilt Ult Pub Ji c T~Wi.Qile Schqol was sranted by thtr Tbe Costa Me,a Cify Cowtcil .has ap-Utilities Comm.Wi<ri, which ''directed" board. prbv~ a ,1,171 coot!•ct to ~ngineer lbt the company to install two new 7li0,. Cost of the-projtct to upand TeW-mkl~: new ;..,...J.r·tMt ~t Wltlt Ji!'. '. Pebn ki\owau units does nbt have jurildidkm br 400, to house 11250 to t,300 student! JS •nd A;;clalA!1, 1916 lllt<h .. si::' Nnijort ovar the ~ ol u1l!JliM !f:ilitltl eillln•ts:t, ; •I siio,Ollf R<iy AndorM.n, _ Hughes contendld lbal Lesli• Vu Hou-ten, who is.ehargell only with conspinlcy tn the twci taBia1tea murders, should 1159 ho acquitted on grounds that ·-•gal¢ her WU IDsufllclent. Hushos llid that Mn. Kua~ian had testified only that she 11w Mill Ve ff<aJ. ten sta~ outil<le a boule,nexl to the La8iinci' 'residence. Shina asked for exoneratiOn for Miss Alkins mainly on the grounds that Mrs. KaS1bian's testimony aJone wu not auf. ficienL ·· Nudie Play Hotter- LONDON~rUPt} -The heat's on "Oh! Calcutta!" today. Goodbye goosepimple1. The cast ol the nude review shed their clothes .. usual Wedne!day aight after R<>yalty Thuter incnued its hoatma. The 10-member cut threatened Tut> day to wear · -duriOI the nude scenes unlea the stage wu warmed up.. They co"'plained. the>'. had all caught . colds. "Now this really is the hottest DAILY PILOT OkAM•I COMT •UfLllHING CIOM"ANV ~oMrt N. W•N PNIM .. t •Piii 1"111114-W Jtcli: a. o.m.., Vk9 l'ttl~ _,.. Gt.-•I MIMllt 1"M•• ICMYil ·-~tt ·Af·M.,,.;TM • M*W9111f • ...,, --a....-... 't10 Wwt 1rt SttNt ~ Ai4,. .. : ,;0, In 1160. tt•t• _....,. ......,.._..i ~I_,,....,~ Lflfll!ll ........ ,......., ,.,, ........... , -ae.a. ·~ .. ~ ...... c.ifta .... have lleWn'Odueallotltl ,.Ievlllon chan- nel was advanced oae step today wtth r~ for a !D,332 I-al granl · Tbt Stale EdueiUOnal Tai~ Ad- viSOiy Ce1imUUee cave toP priority to a grant ~ by the 0r..,. CONt Com- munity C!>lleae Diltrict to opera,. UHF channel 'st, Four olllre c:hunola in Cali- fornia are ~ approval. Tbt U.S. Department ol Health, Edu- cation ud Welfare bas rude avlilable funds 10lallng '915.000 which Channel IO will share if 1lle state recommendation is approved by HEW. · ' Moil ei the money will JO for trans- mitting facillUea in the i. Puente Hilla, north of Brea. If all ~lher Jteps in the lengthy ap- provi.J process are completed, the chan- nel could begin _,.mmlllg ill 1m. It woold b(am educaU'"'8l c<>U11<S. Ioctl government activities and cultural p~ grams to Ole elltire county. 2 Homosexuals Can't Marry . MJNNE.\POUS (Al') -A request by two avowed homosexuals that they be issued a maniige license. wts denied Wednesday-ID Hennepin County Diltricl Court by Judge Stanley D. Kane. Jack Baker, a University of MiMe.ota law student, and Jatnes McConnell. wbo was refUsed a jo& as university librarian after the two applied for the license last May. had asked the Judie to Order the court clerk to issue the license. 1be two c:Ontended that MtnnelOta l1w does aot forbid mutiqe between persons of the same RX and tblt. U lt did, It would be UllCOllstitutloliaL Judge Kane A.id tb't mmrtqe laws sbould DO\ be rtad "t:D isolation from other 11ws governing the tn.arr1*19 ril•· ticmsblp" ID dIYOl<O, probale and tax milters. She Took It, With Interest A tougll·looking old doll marclled up to the Wallicb's Mwlc City sales cOwiter Wed:fteedl1 and Mt a tomewbat-used J>Ottable television down atop a fancier, costlier model. "Tab that off of the,.," oald the elork, or -to 1hlt <fleet. Don Koch, w!lo called poUco to the sound center at MOO S. Bristol St .. Costa Meta. aaid the clerk found a .- d.-tor TV mflslng IatM. He ~I It belooaed to the women and WU bRuChi It In for rtpaln. pOd ....., ·Mlndauo' »land in lh• -·PliDlPPIDit. ....... -fllllldlill 'illld'. wtiblnl oway -a10ec tbecoutal -. ,,,. -~ -.ltfl ·...,,. blnod toU •ii !JOI -..r.·~•17 '""""""'· 10,IMI N11CM and. dimalt tiltinatad at '!J'IDDJ!on ID wbtf.Md 6'A Clftletal1 calltd tbt -dfaulAr In •tht Plll!p-· piDMlillctWC!d•WirU. ' Themes · for 19'11 B .. cb. whicb mllht c:Onlrllll!t".lo 11t pollilllon. Wislanl superintendonl, faclUUoi. said;, So what's a pumper test pit? Plans art expected to be approved by•: Ont: II. the oc:ca&ional Flrt Department ~e stat~ withµl the next few days and tnb 11 drilnlnr owlmmlng pools aid a pa rents' Forum the pro)ed "'.DI go to bid "as soon as·, teot model wiU ho botlt at SJaUon F..,., pos&lble" with bldi to ho opened Dec I"· near Eltancl• Hilb School. h• said. · "' · Pumper lnlckl mull ho airtight to SI l d l M The b' " drain pools -a method sometime! uled 8 e a esa · . com tna1.1on renovation and U··• whla water ia tearee for firefllhlinl _ pansion is hopfd to be completed by·· •-ouoe· the N•m-wbicb spny wa"· Th Ed . ti opetling of schobl in the fall of trrr,.-uwr.o ,,_.,,.. wu e ucabon Development Council Andersen said aren't strong enouah to pump it back up. of Costa Mw Hia:b SCIM:lo1 bu 1et UA ae.-In other action the board appro·~ .··~~ If the tank is airlit!lt. however, a hoao · -• · ·~ ~ be plac:ed into the pool and air cond parent forum fort p.m. Tutlday ln recommendation changing the dfttrict'i.: p.'.'tuure m the surface of the water will the Ly~um. guide on handJinc bomb thrtats. ... · f~ It dOwn and up into the container. Chairmen af the m,thematJcs, science The revised statement adopted by the .. B1ttallori Chief Dave Teter -In ei:· and English departments will ftrm • board •dvises teachers to remain witlt . Orangi. e· Co~, ty.'., •· plilnin& the pumper test pit fUncUon -I their clus Ind ,.....,,., responsibility for.-, said the question arbes occ1sio1ally pane to answer parents' quest.lofts abeut s~s for bombs to police or fire of'-. . •. . about why pool water isn't used in filht-school programs. ficlals. .-., F o · A d ing blues such as brush fln!s. Parent forum ii ·&Jf',,.ttempt by studtnta The former guide -adcrpt~ from the~. air On gen a ''Thll it tbe' resm, •• he explained. add-to provide • communications link county Civil Defense and Disaster' r , lrthat either a pumper truck isn't air· Preparedness Guide -had sugg~ted· ' Tbemu for tbe lm Oraac• Count, ti t, or more likely the poOI is fenced between the cOmmunJfy and faculty, ad· teachers participate in the search for Filr and Euol1tlon. plDI J)Ol!libly J'ltiift& ll~o;;;;;lndi;;;i;;ica;;n;;'l;;;;;bei;ri;ea;;iebed;ii;ii;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;minls;;iiii' ii;iitr;ii1toi;iri;i1~andii;ii~'~tui;ide~oi;its~.;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;bom:iiii~b~s,;il~f hot~~in~v~ol~ve~d~ln~cl~a~osr~ooi:;m~du~ty .. calh pnml..., an'~ lteiu on the agenda for 'the Und-lliilrlct Alrleulturtl Assodatjo1f loolPL 'Ibe Fair Board will meet .at 7:30 p.m. In admillistr1t.ive ollioel on the Oruae County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa. Board President 11m0thy L. Strader hu also resened time for a report on tM recent Fresno COunty Fair. "ll's ,one 'ot. the ,fint$t in tbe sttte," llid newly Usirn<d Fairllowlds Gtaeral M.,;ager J_. Porterfield. ~ader's,rtport wUJ also cover bOrie- racing, a feature of the Fresno flit which has been dls.-d ID tM ptst ior pbiii· ble 1dapU6n tb'lh• Oranr~ COUftty Fair. OCC Forensics • Team Victorious New honors htve ~ accord.id. UM steadily wiMJoa Cf.... Coait Couep forensics team, which acOred highly in natlona1 compeUUon earlier t1liJ )'tar. Tho group won 33 · ce/ttJlcata in a proview Wl1oG ti El Clllllno Colltfo, then b""'ll>t -top -. 1ut --ti the LoYolt Untven11¥-ulc Debate Toumamenl. · A third ploc:e Win in the ~ featuring both JC and four-yMr tDUtal parliclpanti WU the hisI*t ta0a l>y 1111 iUJ11ot' colles• team. Bill Ltndtn, of Coole N ... , ud MIR . Mll<Jtua, of Hunlin&ton !leach, took thet trophy. while Dorothy MilcMillan. ot Costt N ... ud Cathy 8'110tt. of Corona de! Mar, acOl1ld hlehly in urly- Sandoval Quits Poat EL PASO, TU. (AP) -Htlt1'7 SI• dovtl Jr., wl1o holdl the hip.st ....,,.. mtDt oHlce ever ttltlntd by a MutcjlD- Amttlcan II mlplO( aa bud Gt the 5mall BullDeu Admlnlstrttloa. 7STYl.BTO CHOOSE FtlOM SOFA IED SALE! 'TMle •N "'Y cOMMrt.W. Mf1 Meis f« Sitth•9 eM Sl••pift9. A wld• ••lecfloti of Felwies •Ml C61ot• te" ... -Now 299.00 theo•• lroM. ' Rtv•nl\,,11 ltatks 1nJ Seat Cu1hi1n1 Yo11;r f4'>0ritt il\tmof dcrif"M .CIJ bt MpPv te o.1.tUt yOv , •• H.J.GAl\l\Eff fURNll1JRE ~SIONAL ' INTfll-."' _ _._ 2116 H.AllOl ILVD. ...,. ~ 0,.. ....._ n...... t M. "'"-COSTA M~ c:.Ad..lf. MMJ71 ...._.,,, ' . . " " " • . •' I 1. , I I r '1 • .. ' Saddletiaek 4 . • • YOC. 63, NO. 277, l SECTIONS, 42 PA~ES A San Clemente civil engineer resumed his attack on alleged moonlighting by Ci- ty Engineer Phil Peter before city coun· cilmen Wednesday night, but members of the panel decided to wait on any further action on the matter. Eugene Ayer, Peter's predecessor at the city post, renewed his claims that Peter's obtaining a business lictnse tG praclict freelance engineerin& from bis 0 Down the Mission Trail Santiago Road Bid Awarded EL TORO -A slate contract has been awarded for construction of about two miles of Santiago Canyon Road, eight miles northeast of here. The tw~lane road will be constructed on a new alignment. It will be between points 3.5 miles north of Live Oak Canyon Road and ,4 mile south oC SiJverado Can· yon Road. A bridge will be constructed across Williams Canyon. Mark Construction C:Ompany, In~. o( Garden Grove won the $423,108 contract. There are 120 working days alloted for completion. e Properly Talk MISSION VIEJO -Orange County Assessor Andrew Hinshaw will address the real estate practice course at Sad· dleback C:Ollege Monday at 6 p.m. Hinshaw will disCUSl!I the functions of bis office and its role in evaluating real property ·in Orange County, according to Arthur Croisette. chairman of the business science division . The class is one of the courses now being offered at Saddleback College Ul)der the two-year Real Estate career program. e New Board Metnber SANTA ANA -Gilbert Aguirre has been named to the board of the San Juan Capistrano Soil Conservation District. County supervisors named the Mission Viejo Company vice president for opera· tions to the post. to succeed Frank L. Fehse, engine_ering vice president of the aame firm. fehse said press of business dictated his resignation. Israeli-made Plane Crashes; Three Die • TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) -An Isrliell· '.ruade turboprop jet crashed during a test ·flight today and three persons were kill· 'ed. including the chief test pilot or the ·company making the plane. -A fourth flier was injured when the ·twin-engine Arava crashed near Na blus ln the occupied west bank of Jordan, a government communique said. Oruge Ceast \ Weather Till the. clouds roll by, there'l1 be hazy sunshine over the Orange C:O.Jl Friday, peaking the merc- ury al a scant 65 locally and n further inland. INSIDE TODAY su.utenl.$ going to .college hovt to llvt somtwh.tre mtd tht critical howtng .•hortoQf i.t o major colleoe probltm.. Page 9. ' home is unfair competition and a confllct- of-interest. Councilmen in executive 1 e 1 s i o n already have curbed any engineering by Peter for clients who would possibly do business for the city. But Ayer Wednesday demanded that councilmen yank the business license just !,he same. Other than a "thank )'OU" by Mayor 'Dead' Boy Stricken, Revived A San Clemente youth remained tn criticaJ condition this morning after hav· ing been brought back to life by firemen and ambulance attendants Wednesday at San Clemente High School. Jeffery Lynn Miller, 16, 1506 Estrella, San Clemente, remained under Intensive care at South C.oast Community H05pital suffering from a major heart attack. The youth, a junior at the high school. suffered the near-fatal seizure Shortly before noon near the school ad· ministration building. Fire Chief Merton Hackett aaid that rescuers found no pulse or heartbeat in the youth when they arrived to give aid. Closed-heart massage and oxygen ad· ministered by firemen and La Paz am- bulance personnel restored the pulse and heartbeat within 10 minutes, Hackett said. Capistrano Beach Offers Trophies For Yule Displays Four trophies and three major prizes will be awarded this year by the Capistrano Beach Chamber of Commerce for outstanding commercial a r e a Christmas decorations. The area prizes are an innovalion this year initiated by contest chairman Louise Leyden to stimulate participation by meichants of the Estrella commercial area and busi nesses al ong the oceanfront. The oceanfront decoralions will be in· creased this year to add a colorful note to the 40 Miles of Christmas Smiles Orange County coastline competition. Trophies will be given for the best Christmas theme, the most spectacular decorated tree, the most beautiful win· dow and a grand prize 'for the merchant whose total decoratiri.g effort is "most ex· cept.ional." Mrs. Leyden said members or her judg- ing committee will be Anne Potter, Vi· vian Baird, Mary Kester, Pat Chaney and Mary Betterton. The judging date has not yet been an- nounced. bul the trophies wUI be presented al the January chamber meellng, Me said. Hearing Sought By San Clemente On Jetport Site San Clemente councilmen afficlally entered the fr ay over proposals to UM! Bell Canyon as a jetport site with a mo- tion to county airport commissioners that they hold public hearings on the con- lroversial plan "somewhere in the South C.oast area.'' Acting unanimously on a motion by Cooncilm8n Thomas 01\eefe, councilmen agreed to demilnd 1 n.lghtllme public heiring poaibly at San Clemenle High School where accomml)\lalion8 a r e available for SOO persona. <A'>uncitmen recently had Teglst.ered in· IUal dismay at the Bell Canyon proposals in consultant's report LO the county on solutions to I.he airport pl'obJem. While Indications of Wednesday's mo- tion were that councilmen opposed the pl11n, no formal action has yet come on a formal clljl opinion oo Iba plans. I ,. . Today's ·Ffnal • ORANGE COUNT)', CAL1FORNIA TH!JRSDA Yi NOVEMBER 19, 1970. TEN .CEN'TS on San Clemente Engineer Walter Evans, lhe onJy cowx:il, response to the renewed charges was a promise that the request on the license be handled in another executive session. None occurred at Wednesday 's meeting, and councilmen gave no in· dication on the date or such a meeting. Peter, who holds the city's second" highest-paid position, has made no of· ficial comment on the charges. 'Ayer charged that the OpeCflion of lht home oo:::upalion, plus a profusional of. flee at city hall is a breach Of the rules governing engineers and that it imposes "unfair competition" on fellow members of t.he profession who operate out of ex· pensive pl"Ofe,sslona l offices. ' "A few years ago one-month's rental from a business property paid the taxes, but today it takes three months. These people who work in their homes are welchin& and freeloading.'' Ayir u.id. Ayer also said he would not pay taxes for Peter's salary if the practice continued. The engineer, who said the battle was "professional, i:iot personal." also 4\· tacked the city for awarding public con - tr1cls to professional people wh9.. wOrk out or their hOmes -specifically Building Designer Eric Boucher, Who has designed the QeW lifeguard headquarters and now is designing a new cofnmunity clubhouse. "You're piying these people I.he 1ame ree as you would have paid someone working from an office, yet they have almost no overhead ," he added. City staff members already have ruled that Boucher's bus'iness -aside from a professional sign which has been taken down -is permissible under existing toning codes. Councilmen made no commen~ on lbe Boucher matter Wedneaday. or ans on , DA1Lv 11ILOlrilt.~ft """-• CAN YOU SQUASH THl:S,? IT'S ·TH~· GflEA.T BRIDGE-IUILOING CO]'lt°EST Builder• ·Steve P.hilfips, Su1aMe McClute Survey ExP,trirri9ntal Model .. Bustin' Those Bridges .. San Clement.e Studeiits Test Balsa Wood Skills .Qy JOHN VALTERZA 01 11'11 D1llt ,Uot 11111 Scores of San Clemente High School atudenta have strip"ped local hobby shops dry of balsa wood this week in an annual bridge construction contest which already bas set some awesome records in its three years of li fe . . · Last year's winning bridge -weighing more th8n one ounce -bore 404 pounds before collasping. That's almost a quarter-ton. The weeks of painstaking construction with only two basic materials -tiny balsa wood strips and airplane cement - will wind up with a Dec. 15 competition during which an expert on bridge design will systematically try W squash each en· try. . The one tha( squash'es last wins. Trying' for~ hia third top prize in a row will be senior JUn KeUy;whose tiny entry bore ijie 'wtight beat last year . An estimated 200 Triton students have signed up and forked over t.heir Slkent entry fee to challenge Kelly's throne under the program jointly sponsofed by math instructor Alan Pierce and Physics teacher Don Schwenn, So keen is the competition for the top priies (cash, divvied up from the entry fee ) that the remnants or last year's win· ning spjl.ns are kept hidden. '1We do it to ke.ep people from copying the design," said one earnest student tbls week,. , The rules Include provisions that the entry must have a minim.um span of 10 inches, a five-inch clearance. maiimum height of 10 inches and 16 inches max· imum length. Balsa wood strips measuring .ln the cross section three-thirty.seconds of an inch are~au that ls used. State Pushing , Purchase ~ ·of Capo !Jeach Shoreline The State of California : has formally begun procedures to buy nine acres of prime shoreline in Capistrano Beach and g~rl development of 'tbe new sari Onofre atalt beach which 'w1tl gr~T its first viailqrs nex~ year. The Parks and Reereation <A'>mmission rectntly adopted a massive, $10.5-mlllion beach purchase program which includes the ·absorption of the old Capistrano l)e8ch Club property into Doheny State Park.. • , lt also Includes the lease arrangements fdr 25 years involving more than 18,000 reet:. oi beach footage d5wncoast of the San Onofre Nuclear GeneraUng Station. "Some facilities there wlll be re11-dy for public use In · lhe 1971 · /l.tfson," a state spokes man said today. • •. .• . A full spectrum of recreatfm'lal Um I!' pl•nned for lbe park: Among lhe lni~•I ptoJedl oo tbe IOI! a"" of prime Marloe Corps shoreline will be providing art4J for parking an4. access to I.he b-..ach whiCh lies below t,all'bluffs, At Neny, the new be'ach, covering the area once occupied by the poah cipistrano BUCh Club , will be developed for Parking, pihlckina and ge'nt.r&l beach. activit_ies. The site once· had betn proposed for ust ff1f' hiah-tiae apartmtnts by private, developer"!, but subsequently ' w a s earmarked for !lite use. The new land' would ,ccommodate 71 ,000 guests a ye11r. The : project.! will ollicially be sul>- mllted In lht 1971-72 llscal f.<AI' budg•la for the state recreation and parb agen- cy. . No dolltr amounts were given on either acqul&IUon project. but aides ~aid the fiJ!lob 11.111 .ci>me ·from money tw<>•ed by tis.It VOWI In I 1914 bond "8ue and from lbe atall'a lllait of lundl. ' Glue is used to keep the soft, light."brit· tle ma'\efial tQgether . .' , ' I No spec'ific ilistructions are gi".en to the compet itors , Schewnn said this week. . "We keep it that way' on purpOse. because it encourages the student! l.o 'do their own research," he said. ~ On Dec. 15 Schwenn and · Pierce will round 'up the entries and cart them to the school's Little Theater, where the · ritual will begin ~t about 7 p.m. ~ An expert on bridges will .bring specially 'designed "testing• equipment, compliments of TRW Systems. "Then we start to squash them ," Schwenn explained. A loading block is placed on the top of the span aifd weight is applied everily. lfhe • baee Of the span ~ · !(ept from ipreadJng with two other blOcks. , An auOOmatic calculator displaYs up the pounds to the cheering audience. When the first brace break&, the ttst is ov'°" 'lbe' range-&etween suc~e3 a1'd failures is vast. , Some of last year's entries which loqk· td to the· untrained' eye 11.s strong as the Galden Gate collapsed wider· 10. of » pounds. . ' . ' . . .. Bot few obServeni or lasf year's contest remember what the 404-pound ·whopper looked like. • ' • "It' expl~ed aU over when It weiit - Juat like a real one should do when:it's overloaded," SchWenn said. ' Space-age Elk D~a~ But Replacement Set MOOSE .. Wyo. (UPI! - A ·1paCN(e elk named Monique 11 la·dead: but icltn· tiN aln:ady have •J!t&rf.ed m.applnc plw for 1 new Monique whose wanderlnp wW i1•in o. iiatcfitd· tiy .. ienlto'. 1MoruqeR was shot by a hunter· Iii •northern Wyom· Ing Saturday, bringing t<> an end a wllque experiment begun tarUer Jn the year. A is.pound , bright red collar ~ pacied with S~.OOl worth of electronics gear - had enabled the Nimbus tu. weather 1atelltte to keep track of Monique as W wandered lhrough WyomJni wU-. l(renwinkle Girl Offers To Testify By JACK V. FOX LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The def..,. announced today at the Tate murder trial that it wished to rest iU case for Charlea Manson and three young female codefen• danl.8 without calling a aing\e witnesa to the stand on their behalf. ,In a 1t.artling and dramatic episode, Defeme Attorney Paul Fitzgerald roae u II\< def~s< WU expecl<d lo beJin Ila c°' in the Z3-week trial and announced: 1'J'he defense rests." . The ·Other three defenS;e lawyers alto ltood and announced tbat they wished to rest their case on behall of their clients. ·Pitricia Kren~inkel, one of the thrtt young women charged with yie •ven murders, rose to her feet and ptnnwad that she wished to testify In the -presence of the jury. Charles Manson 18.id nothing but aat. 50lldly in his chair. F;tzgerald added that the provision that the defense wished to rm subject to beina able to "introduce certain ex· hibits." It was not made clear what he was referring to. Superior Court Judge Charles H. Older summoned the defense and prosecution attorney• to his bench for a conference and·then the trial was recessed briefly. There was pandemonium in th! courtroom when Fitzgerald let loose the bombshell thit the defense would call not witnesses at all. Fitzgerald had said previously that he had subpoenaed' between IS Md ;r, witnesses and that Manson woU:ld pr~ bably be one of the last to testify. The totally unexpected defense tactic came after Older had rejected defenae motions for a directed verdict of ac-- quittal for Manson, Miss Krenwlnket, Susan Atkins and Leslie Van Houten 'on grounds that the If.ate had not presented sufficient evidence to convict them. · Airpor~ Location ~earings Set By Commission Public hearings on propoaed new airports in Orange County will be held by the Airport Commiulon on Nov. 30 and Dec. 7. The 1essions were ordered Wednesday by the Board of Supervisors to offer the public in various arf!!u or the county an opportunity to express themselves en a~rt ·•ites proposed in the $140,00J Pa:rson1 Company report. The Nev, 30 hearing is tentatively set for the Lo5 Alamitos City Hall and will explore 1he recOmmendations for a general aviation facility at Los AlamitOI Naval Ir Station. C!Uuns and clvk oUicials of the area . are, reported to be In dettirmlned op- position to any such use o( the naval facility when tt Is cloaed down as a Navy jet training center nert year. The o... 7 heiring Is planned · ror somewhere in Laguna Hills I:.eisure World and will be !or discussion or the proposed joint use of El Toro Martne Corps '.Air Station. the.-new Bell Canyoa jelport and lbe O'Ne!U Park small •lr park. Suptr1llors Wednesday i;et Dec. 16 for their ntlt public bearing on the Par10na: report. · 1'fle airport commission will hold U1 replar meeUnc Tutoday al lbl.Pard• bltlldln& al the alrpo~ • t DAIL V PILDT SC • • • i. • ·~ ~1:""' .:,,. ·~ '"' I. t '*"' ·1 Now No'·Pay for Boa.ta· ~ . . . . .... ' . . .. Counsel Hulin~ Casts C~ud Over. Llfgt1;l~y · By JACK BROBACK lalillatw'I at 111,000 a .,..f. . .~ iilt lloitt "'!IJ6i tfil pef,1cp1a 'h °'IM Dlllf ''w 11'11 'Helm said thla morning that Kufper'1 111,000 for the Wili.nce Of tbfl•yeer and Orange County supervisors will get a ruling casts a cloud over the legaUty of $19,200 after the first of the year becomea -· ............. Friday 'and no pa" at all . "'·-I t thl ti-.... , elfecUve . .....,~ ,, paymg .~ auper.v SOl'I a 1 ~·"" aild Currently. that ordinance adopted 'Nov. twp _weeka from Friday, COunty Auditor· that aa a matter ol publ.lc trust be cu-10 and effective in ae daya ii· the Jaw, COnttoller Vic Heim announced today. not pay them. Kuyper has ruled. The salary payment problem stems The board members will get a check Jn the meantime the continuina battle from the puuae of Proposition 12 on for $JOI.OS Friday rather than the nonnal over the superylsora' pay hls been lel'tl.· Noll. J aod a sublequent ruling by Cowlty two.week! pay o/ 1571.12, Heim aaid. The porarlly sidetracked. The .,pervlson , O!uaoll Adrian Kuyper. 1l111·°' covers • period from Oct. 30 Tuelday riferred tile question to the l\ll)'J>et 111led that since Pn>position 12 thr'"'lll Nov; S whall ProposiUcm U Orange CowJ!J Gr .. d Jury .f,,. -la a constitutional amendment. it became law. mendation. s\iperSedes all previeus Jaws concemig ~ first time I.ht supervisors will be Jury foreman George Honold sald the 1alariri of the supervisors. The salary ebg1bJe for pay under Kuyper's rulin& is l'i!commendation should W rtady by J\ext ~ wu prevlolialy get by the a/1er Dee. 10 -the Grdfilance pasaad Wadoeaday or 1bunday. * * * County Paper Formal Drafting Remains Fil.es Suit In T ii p k·-Fi In Pay Issue A laWllllt chaiging the Oran1e Cowlty Boltd cf Superviion with vtolatJoni of the B1vwn Act and e!IOctment of '° 11-lecal salary Ol'dlnance Js C111 Ille todiy In 6uj>lrtor Court. DI Its complaint, the Santa Ana Register uka for a court ruling thlt the five iupervisors were in vlolatkm of the Brown Act when they met Nov. 4 ID wtiat they described 11 an euclltive session. .At that c:looed-doorl , ..-n& the IUpenlilon Ulertedly ..-to lnemle their salaries ftom an riaual $15,000 io $29,268 on the stren&th of v~r ac· cept.ance of a measure ·whk:tl· womd ,allow coWll)' boards o1 lupenlaon to RI tbelr own aalarlet. The Santa Ana newspaper has headed a public outcry against the pay raise and has led a movement to Acall. three of the 1upervll0rs involved in the fracas - David L. Baker, Robert ·W. Battin and .William Phillips. The Brown Act, named after former senator Ralph 'M. Brown. requires that all meetlnp of local public -. boarda and coonei!s be beld openly 11114 ID publle with certain permllted uctptm. nie.. illelude eerWn pellOllMl ma~ tera. AllO """'1t In the complaint ls a court flllini that the board of 111pervliorll lhould be ardmd to refrAln from holdlJIC any fw1ber aecret meetinp until the luUM aet out in the lawsuit are nil6d upon by the court. The complAlnt clalma supervilora allO acted unlawfully at the sublf.quent metttna of Nov. 10 when they enacted '" ordlnanoe wbleh puta their salaries ID lino with lhooe ol caJilornia ltgtalatora. '!bat ordinance would have gooe Into effect Dec. 10 and wouJd have i.Jn.. mediately raised board members saltrtes to 111.000 with a hike to 119,200 on Jan. !. Legitlators in the put have rtfllled to in- crease the board's salary. Supervlaon based that ordinance on the acceptance by voters of PrOpoallion 12, the complaint stale!. But that proposition, the lawsuit points out. will not becOme a lawful con· 1UtuUonal amendment until the results of the Nov. 3 election have been certified by the secretary of state. Laguna Woman's Services Held ra er ar reeze Formal draftln( Into -..,. and resolution form ii au that rlma.ins before two ltiff meaSW'el retulaUng mobile ~ parka come up for almost cf:rtaln ,\approval by San Clemente City COO.· I Cilnien. The panel agreed Wednesday that the two measures -one a freeze on the number of coach spaces; the other a stiff list of development rules -shou1d be formally drafted and set for action at the fjrst "*'111( In Docember. lf'1>M'ed, the freeie would set al Ove pin;ent the limit of mobile lm>e ·~ ~ to permanent, alqle-famlly dwtllinfls In San Clemeni.. lncladin( lbe .-it approval al • """ pooed perk for Sbor<Cliff~ the tive per· coat is alrtady uaed up. The '™"· 1mpooed by lormal molu· ti.on, would mun that 4,000 new con. venUooil dwetllnss would have to be llWll In the city btlore a new coach perk c0uld be approved. Undl!r that policy 1uboeqoeat p- wou!llliave to have at I-:11111 - Tbe Jlot al dmlopmelll standtrdl will lakt llie•form of a formal onllnance c~ ewry dealp and atbttic .. S1µ1 Clemente .J?J~ges Reactor Ev~)Mltio~ ~Ian Tbe •• al s.. Clerneai.-la .. -~' ' ¢Ilea of the propooed ... of SU Onofreouctear-- wW copleo ol a city ev•euaUOa plan fGr publleilfoo In Iha -· 'Ille promisa caiae from Cooncltmen ~ alter lbeY beard cr!Ucs of tlie el]>lll!liO plana by two major uWlllea. 'f1)e f~ claimed that a civil de£enst plan covering citizens of the city in cue of an ''incident" at the met.or complex either did no! ullt or Is not being uplain<d to the citizens. But City Managu Ken Carr aaid the plan, iniUally adopted in lt6I u a &tntral civil defenae: procedure, ii beloi rev:ised by the city staff th11 week attd would be ready soon fol' disseminition. Mrs. June Fleriilng, wbote two-page Jetter on the Issue was eel for, council response Wednesday, explained that the responsibility for civilian proteclion had been shuffled frlim the uUliUes, to the hfarine Corps, then· to the ctty of san Clemente. · aspect of the park! enforceable by the ci· ty -even lo the placemement of television antennas and m1llbo1.es. 'Jbat lill of r:uies already bas been. scanned at least Jwict by planning corD· miuionen and COWJC.ilmea meeUq: 1tl .study tessions. The ptoposed ordinance bu awaited approval since last spring. . But It already bas been added to the list of development conditions ·to the recently approved Lincoln' Savings and Loan Park project near Slloreclilf1 Goll Caune. That --divtlopnleot likely will become Iha laal part to be llW!t In the city 10< the nm flri ,.an or more U the flw ls •J>l'IOYed. Mission Viejo Schedu'les Yule Activities ACUvJUes for Mission Vitjo'a "Five Nl&bJs of Chrlslmu" have been scbeduJ. ed eootlnllins a community tradition datinC from 1117. On five December ..,..;np proar..,. . wW be pruented to In"""' all a,. crnups and marl: lho Yule .-. The Olrlslmu teria •l>eu 7 p.m. Sun- diy Dec. • on Cbfi11n1a I>rt.fe near La Pu alloppluc .,._ willl a· Illa 11P1in1 .._ and <!Mini proironl. Tbe SIDI Qi!, Amlpa --Mlialoi" Vlijo will join comn11ml11 cbo/n ID a prtoel>- lalloa of hol1da)' -· 'Illa ·-.n11111tt "lift boa:" for contributi-of ctinid &ocidl and llftl !or Mody tamOia •W bo 1111 6ut. ' Sapia Clu....., lo~ Vlojo In a "spectacular · arrival" set for ' p.m. Dec. 13. · SL Nick will 'take Up qoarttn Ill San- ta's Hut -• temporary renovation ot. the Community Bulletin Board Building - and dispeMe Christm.a.s joy and candy to children. Music and caroiJnl' follows the H .. ho-ho leslMtloS .. , A .. ml-rOrmal iitilher dance It slated for Friday Dec. 11 with di,nner frOm 8:30 to 8:31) p.m. at tbe ·Mission Viejo IM and danclni In U.. . MonlanOIO Recrutlon tenter at 8 p.m. Tickets may be reserved by calling m.-. The fourth nitbt ol aC1iv1U01 Is 7 p.m. DESPITE DANA POINT OPPONENTS, SUPERVISORS APPROVED RESTAURANT Construction To a.gin S-on $30D,~ ProJect Overlooking Horbor ~~~~~~~~~~~ , Supervisors Approve ·Dana Restaurant Bid Permission to build a $ 3 o o, o o o restaurant in Dana Point was granted by the Board of Supervisors Tuesday over the objecUona of local residents. Rtstaurant0Adventure.s Inc., beaded by David Perrin of Loo& Beach, plans to begin coattrucUm:i llOOn on the two story, 1,500-square foot structure between the Streeta of the Blue and Green Lanterns and Santa Clara Avenue. A Ille variantt to allow lbe restaurant had been approved by the county Plan· nlng COmmission and was appealed to the supervisors. Auistant Planning Director Stuart Balley W d the property was within the area dealgnated for tourist.<omtnerclal use in the 1eneral plan. In approving the variance, tbe com· mluiontrs t a g g e d on condilioos hl· cludlnl • limited sill! Identifying the structure. ObjectinS were Dr. Roser Sandersoo of Dana Point who said not enough parking wu provided and I.hat the variance might lead to further commercial development In the bluff area overlooking the new Dana Poiot Harbor. Jolng the protest was Ale1. Lake of Dana Point who argued thAt there was enough commercial development in Dana Point now and plenty of land zoned for future development. Dr. Arthur C. Elliott of Saota Ana who owns an apartment complex near the restaurant site objected on parking and noise grounds. Also objecting was Joseph Cole of Dana Point who owns property oo Del Prado on which a restaurant is being built. Supervisor David Baker noted that there was no residential development near the site. In rebuttal to the argummts again.st the project. Perrin said the site was the only one acceptable for the restaurant with its ettellent view of the harbor. Huge Penalty Fee Tacked To El Toro School Pact An unprecedented penalty has been at· tacbed to tbe San Joaquin Elementary School Diitrict's .latut construction con· lt•cL Besieged for time extensions on con- 1truction proj kts (while new students enter the district at the rate of 30 per month ) the Board of Trustees voted to attach a $250-a-day penalty for all unauthorized e1tensions on their latest con1ract, an addition to Gates Elemen- tary School in El Toro. "We were curious to know if we'd have any b!dders," said Superintendent Ralph Gates. The ordinary late penally ls $50 a day, a sum suggested by the county counsel's offict as "collectable." There has been the usual amount of bidders, according lo G1tes and the low bid was from the A and B Construction Co. of Costa Mesa whlch suggested $42.000 for a kitchen, teachers dining room, &torage area and site development. During past meetings, the board has lamented that school districts have charged so little. while private industry can charge thousands of dollars a day for unauthorized delays. The county Board of Supervisors recenUy attached a $1,000-a- day late penalty for the construction of the Trabuco Bridge in San Juan Capistrano. Trustees said they hope th1t the new penalty will encourage contractors to speed up their projects, and avoid another Aliso School mishap. That school opened one year later than scheduled. Worst Typhoon In History Hits Manila MANILA (UPI) -The most powerful typhoon in Manila's recorded history lashed the city with 120 mile an hour winds fOr three hours today causing e.1.· ten sive damage and widespread floodUll. The government declared a state of calamity. The government diaster agency put the death toll at nine as of 10:30 p.m. (10:30 a.m. EST). Another 17 persons wer, reported missing and n were injured. However there were no reports yet from ouUying areas where previous typhoons have caused heavy loss of life. · Government ofricials sa id 2 3, 0 O 0 persons were homeless ip Manila when late season Typhoon Patsy roared in, uprooting trees and power lines and destroying homes and churches. Manila was blacked QUt for hours tonight when the government cut off electric power because of downed high voltage wires. The government put the strength of 11- typoon as 120 miles per hour and said ~ worst one in recorded history was in 1882 when Manila was hit by winds of 118 miles an hour. This time the eye of the typhoon passed directly over Manila. Some residents said the typhoon brought hails too es "as big as baseballs" which also did e1.tensive damage. 1be presidential palace declared I state of calamity existed in Manila and a spokesman said it probably would be ex· tended to other areas when reports are in from the surrounding provinces. Louise, G. Powel'S; Services Friday • • • . ' Funeral services will be held Friday for Louise G. Powe.rs, an elderly Laguna; Beach resident who died Tuesday, She: was 95. • Dr. Charles Diercnfield will officia te the:: 2 p.m. services for Mrs. Powers at St.: Andrew's Presbyterian Church i o.· Newport Beach. She will be buried in'. Hartsdale, N.Y. : Mrs. Powers. who lived at 330 Cliff Dr.: Apt. 201, is survived by a niece . Helen: Powers of Laguna Beach and a nephew,: William Powers of Hawaii. • Funeral aervices were conducted ln Westlnioller todaJ foe Mn. Ruth Emma •Marie Von Helmolt. a Lquna. llaCb womao who died Tueoday at South Cout Community Hoopltal. Sbe was 79. She and fellow memben of GUAltD, a local group oppoAlng !be half·billlon- dollar eipa111iot1. by Southern C&lifornia Edison and San Diego Gas and Eleclrk:, have urged· that definitive evacuation procedures be IMOUnc:ed at once. Dee. 1' at Iha community bulletin board buiJdin& where Santa ind helpers will again visit with childten, C Ta rd y listmakers may wbJ.ai>er ln h1J ear on Dee. 11 and 22, .. well), ,.------------------------;;;;;--------;;;;i;;;;;;i Mra. Von Helmol~ who hid lived In IA&una Beach for 18 years at 530 Moun- tain RMd, 11 survived by two IOlll, Erwln tod Wendell, and four daugh!era, Mrs. Irma Gnde, l\lrs. Ruth. Blake, Mrs. Margmt Wqooer and Mrs. Adelaide Noonan. DAILY PILOT """"' lndi " ......... ... L9t-N ·-~· ........ ,....,. C..tti Mn• S. ca. ..... OAAHGI CC.UT P1JIL\5HtNO COlllU'Atrf Rt\r.trt N. WtM ,,....,,. MA JIUli.1111'. Jtclc R. ~:!'J· Vlct 1'fll?illlll ft ......... n..,,., K...,11 Et!JIM' 7\oll'l•t A. Ml',,e.iH M-sitow E•lw l ichtr4 P. tto• Mlrtll or."" ~-rr '""'" -£Nit MtN: »t .,. .. ..., '"" ,...,.,, ••ell: im W.t ........ ltwlf • ~ •ttC11: m ,_, ,,.....,. ............ •fKll: "'" lhtcJI .......... ... CllfWIM; aw Htttfl ll l;tl!llN 11111 , t, Included in the council action Wed- rielday wu the rule tbat each ye.al tht plan wo..ild be reviewed and UPlfaded when .,,._.,,.. Councllmen woWd evaluate At'ld act on any cbaqea to Ille plan Wider the lnlNal revitw. Topping the season feativllies Is a candlelight parade beslnlllng 7 p.m. Dec. 23 at the top of La Pu Road . hill at Pradera and moviq eaat to Marperite Parkway at Le Pu road. Santa'• presence aa;aiil will be felt, carob: wlU be auna an'd a drawing of 1ifts for children wW be made. Winners of the home dtcoratin& contest will be liven lr<>phlea. Judllq tatea plaea Dec. 20, 21 and 22. Laguna Chamber Group Gets. Russia Photo Trip Mamber1 of the Lqlllaa Beacb Chamber of Commertt !Oolc a SUidM tour of Russia Wodnesdl)' when wor:ld traftler Harry Lawrence aave a alicle prioenlalion of bis moat rocent .jaW>L Lawrenct. a Lag\ma bualneUman, tra¥eled to lht Soviet Un.kin lut w.mmer. He 1ave bis ~latlon al Iha cbamber b<ealdalt at Iha Hotel Lafuna '-'Ins the •omen'• clothiers of Laguna Buch. Entering the country by way of A1ask1, 11e·1tavtled ...-Siberia to Moscow, winl to Lenlnsnd and relumed to lj!berla throu&h southern Rusoia, 1•inl tJlrouch 'l'ulllleol. He said that, wherea1 peopl~ were on« 1tnt to the. far reaches of Slbtria u punlahmtot, the 1overmnent now poy• the -• -salary to ·-there. He11U -by lho -aod -beaU\Y .. I Iha COWlll)'. wllieh .. .-Ii> llmtl tarser than Iha U.S., be said. 11111 Iha ltlp WU not all pttf9cl, he nolH. Wlll!a llO)'lng at the Hotol llualfa iD MOICOW, the world'• Jargtlt wlth 1.000 -he told the audlfn<e Mw tha etemora did not always wort< and Iha ' plumbing often clogaed. He said there were few traffic pro- blema ln lhe Sovlet Union. because there were hardly any cars and that the police were very strict in enforcing the laws. He cited one incident where 1 Ruasian visitor to Moacow wu arrested rw cllrnbinl on· to a wall. "Not everyone ·tnows the tulea," Lawrtnct ltid. "but they .,. ln"Mted anyway." Lawrence said that oae thin& that struck him about Russi a was that everythtnc ,..l! so quiet, hOw there ttem· ed to be "just a murmur" of aound. Tht 1lldes depicted the m a n y e1thedrala of the country, ~w of which art now ln use, Lawrence noted. He 11kl ho WU lllJ'l)rised to find Iha! Within the Walla al the Knmlin In M-. Ibero ,.... many old clwrches lhot bad been bull! In the !Ima o/ !he c.ar.. Ill the lltll etnlury. He uid !be country has many tons ,... .. planl, parllcularty for tho -of Slharla. Ha showed a slide of a llydro- electrlc plant al • dam and said tlltt It WU only the llrst of Iii auch in1tallaUon.1 planned alon1 lhllt parlitlllar river. 7 STYLES TO CHOOSE FltOM n ... arti ... ry c.:omforiabl• tofa Meli for Siffif'lt 11'Mf Sl•epit19. A •id• 1alac.:tio111 of Ftbr!cc ancl Col•" to choo•• froft'I, SOFA BED SALEI ... 400•00 Now 299 .00 R1v•r1ibl• l1c.:k1 arwl S••t Cu1hion1 H.J.GAl\l\flT fURNrJllRE 'flOFISStoNAL 1Nfl1'10l nlS19"lltS )116 HAll:IOI ILVD. COSfA t.!lSA. CALIF. 64•·011' 64l·OIJ6 . l . . . . . • . . 17 ,17 " I -- " ' . _.g1111,a _ Be~eh I • ·' • ' ' . Teday''-...i . . ' YO(. 63, No: 177, l SECTIONS, 41 PAGES . . . "' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' THU RSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1970 TEN CEN.TS Councilman to Silence l(rish·na -sect 1'It appears to be an impasse." Charlton Boyd told fellow Laguna Beach councilmen Wednesday nigh~ after re- counting his efforts to persuade members of tbe Krishna'. Consciousness sect to tone down their chanting. In the wake of complainls from dO\flltown merchants about the chanting and drumbf.ating of saffron· robed Krishna youth, Boyd bad been asked by the council to appeal to their leader for cooperation. "1 met with.• gentleman I will call Das (temple president Durlabh Das Adhikary)," said Boyd, "Md explaioed that -as a downtown businessman mysell now -the complaints were about the loudness of their singing and chan· ting. I told him the bu!inessmen are not trying to get rid of a religious eroup but • _·rown1n No Witnesses Manson Defense Rests Its Case By JAOK V. FOX LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The defense announced tt.day at the Tate murder trial tbat it wished to rest its case for Charles Manson and three young female codefen· dant.s without calling a single witness to the st.and on their behalf. In a 1tariling a.¢ dr~aUc ~pisode, Defense Attorney Paul Fitzgerald rose u the defense was expected to begin its case in the 23--week trial aM announ~: "The ~efenae reats." The other three defense lawyers also 1tood aiid announced ·that they wished to rest the1r cue on behalf o( their clients. PatriCia Krenwinkel , one of the three young women charged with the seven murder~. rose to her feet and announced that she wished to testify in the presence of the jury. Charles Manson said nothing but sat aolidly in his chair. Fitzgerald added that the provision that the defense wished to rest subject to being able to "introduce cert.a.in ex~ hibit.s." It was not made clear what he was referring to. Superior Court Judge Cbarles H. Older summoned the defense and prosecution attorneys to his bench for a conference and then~ trial was recessed briefly. There was: pandftnoniUm in the courtroom when Fitzgerald let loose the bombshell that the defense would call not witnesses at all .. Fitzgerald had said prevW.U.ly that be bad subpoenaed between II and 30 witnesses and that Manson would pro- bably be one of the la~t to tea:t.ify. The totally unexpected defense tactie came after Older had rejttted defenae motions for a directed verdict of ac· quittal for Manson, Miss Krecwinkel, Susan Alkins and Leslie Van Houten on grounds that the state had not presented sufficient evidence to convict them. Supervisors Deny Bid For Apartment Project An apartment project in South Laguna was shot down Wednesday when the Board of Supervisors denied an appeal by the proponents. The county Planning Commission had denied a request for a use variance by M. Zanella of Fontana to build a five-°;".it ipartment building bet"'.'ee~ . Pac1hc Coast Highway and Virginia Way 10utheast of 11th Avenue. Opposing the project were many residents of the area and the garbage col· lector. . Tbe commssion deilied the request because the area is zoned for single fami· ly residential and because of the narrow etreets and dangerous acctss to Coa'st Highway. Representlng Zanella was attorney Fred Howser of Laguna. who was at· torney general of Calif?mia f~om 1946 to 1950 when retired Chief Jwit1ce Earl Warren was governor. Also arguing for the developer was Mary Hartman who· said Qtere ''!ere rrumy other properties in the area given over to apartmenls despite the single family ioning. Library Closed· For Two Weeks In La guna Beach The Laguna BeaCh library will be clos· ed from Monday, Nov. 23 through .satur· day. Dee. 5 while 1 team ()f nine library employu inventories the estimated 29,<m Volume~ In the branch. . Tht cl01iing Js part of a co~ntywid~ pr~ sram to check titles avadables 1r1 all branch libradcs against a computerized llst for prepar.1tion of a master directory of books throughout the eounty system . All books that would have been due during the two-week closing period have been checked out for four wttks, 1c .. Cllrding to librarian Clifford Cave. Library service will bt available •t thfl 3oulh Llll\Ul• branch, which WH ~ooed lor·tbt hlventorJ Nov. f.11. She backed up bt:r arguments with pic- tures and addresses. Replying was Walter Drake of the Three Arch Bay Association,. nearby e1· elusive residential area. who said there \.\'ere not that many apartmenls nearby. R. B. Stiger, of 32122 Virginia Way said the narrow streets in th,e area were 11lready too crowded and that most of the apartments Miss Hartman referred to were many block! away. ' ' Mrs. Errol Ireland. 32146 Coast Highway, admitted that there were "three places in the area with apartments but no big apartment projects." Some of the appeals were emotional and caused Supervisor Robert Battin to say he was about to reverse his vote. It was well after noon when Supervisor Alton Allen moved that the commission's ruling be upheld and the appeal denied. Lag una Council Uphol.ds Ruling On Ambulances The Laguna Beach City Council Wednesday night upheld Planning Com· mission denial of a conditional use permlt to allow Gold Ambulance Service to operate out of 2.SSB Thalia St. Representatives of the firm were nat present at the council meeting. but neighboring properly owners were out in force to regilter their protests. A number of written protests, citing noise and traf· flc hat.ards, also were presented to the council. After a unanimous council vote to deny the aj>peal of the ambulance flrm and uphold the plannera' act.ton, councilman Edward Lorr suggested, "Since they ire looking fot a suitable location, I would ... suggest the aband<ined gas ~:tation next to !be Husky Boy burger otand on· North Coast Highway, where thtre 11 plenty of parking. 'lllis probably would be mote ac- ceJ>lable il \hey could gel UH O( \he pr .. perty.·· • only to carry on their bus'ineu, which already is difficult with the noise of trucks, aeropla~es and ao' forth." Boyd said he appealed to Das to abate the sound at least in areas where the noise problem is severe. He said the temple president explained the religious background of lh~ chanting and said It is a p'art of the prescribed religious practice of the sect. "I talked to him day before yesterday,'' Boyd concluded. "The sound level ap- pears to me to be just about the aame. It doe1 appear to be an impaue." Councilman Edward Lorr quoted from an OJ'lini6n given by the dl1tricl. attorney in response to a police department at· tempt to prosecute the group for disturb- ing the peace. "After looking over all these court cases the district attorney cites," said Lorr, "it appears there is not much. we can do legally. The courts have ruled that their chanting does oot constitute disturb- ing the peace." Mayor Richard Goldberg suggested J'one more appeal to their conscience to cooperate in this matter." "l would hope they would be c;on- siderate," said the mayor. Realtor Vern Taschner said lhe chan· ting annoYs South Coast Highway Library Mo.de,l Unveiled· Plans Prompt Proposm fo~ _Closure of Avenue ' ' promptly iru;pired proposals · fitr clO!:ure and Coa1t Highway be closed to traffic: By BARBARA I REIBICH Of flllf DlllJ ~1191 Stefl .Architect Fred. B'rtags' model of the new LagfJna Beach librafy was -unvelled before an admiring audience at We(t... nesday's City Council meeliAJ ~ of all of Park Avtflue to enhaace its set· and d!Veloped as • Pedestriah mall were -Ung. presented by both the Friends of •the Resoluilons requestiJ'lg tha.t W! portion Laguna Beach Library and ·the Citizens' . . of Park Avenue between the new library ToWn Plahriing Association., Laguna Businessme~ Ask Earlier. Festival Opening Laguna·s business community has sug. gested it would help the local economy if the Festi".al and PagMnt could open a week earlier in summer. But the ~uggestion ls'not as simple as It sounds, Festival director Stuart Durkee said this week. Mayor Richard Goldberg, sitting as e1. offiCio member of the Festival board, said it was his understanding the business community feels the 1ummer ~·ould get off to a better start if the Festival could open earlier. "August it, always the big summer month for ,business," said Goldberg. "And the feeling is that when the Festival does not open until mJr'.July, as it now does,· the summer gets off to a &low start." Durkee said it might be possible for the grounds to open earlier, but the Pageant is •'different story. "With the six.week run we now have," said Durkee, "plus the fact tqAt the present Pageant has many refinements that did not exist in the past, when the runs were shorter, it takes ma~y more rehearsals to prepare for the opening." He cited technical· rehearsa l s , orchestra rehearsals and cast rehearsals both with and without the orchestra. "This · all adds up to trying to keep a volunteer cast together for almost· eight weeks, which is not easy ," said Durkee. ''If we start our rehearsals before the Fourth of July. then break for Uie long holiday, it would make it f:ven worse . We'd have to start back in June , then try to keep the cast together till the end or August." Business manager Robert Leppert said the 1971 dates, July 115 through Aug. 29, already have been given out to persons planning to attend in groups. * * * * * * Tribute Set Be ck Memorial Studied Laguna The late Verner Beck, longtime direc· Martin said, the long delay in deciding tor of Laguna 's Festival of Art.I. left on a memorial for the late director "most of his asse'-" to "-"~""' for · WI u.: ~ "inlght make it seem we don 't want to do ICholarships at Laguna Beach High School, Festival board chairman WiJ\iam anything, which is not the case at all." D. Martin told fellow directors this week. He said it also bad been suggested to bim Martin's comment came during tbat memorials be considered for others discussion of an appropriate memorial· to who had made major contribut1on1 to the Bede, when it was suggested a memorial Festival, amoni them the late Clarence 1Cholarshk> might be one suitable tribute. Upson Young. Mrs. Helen Keeley again urged that a o. E. Bud Schroeder said tMt U lilt panel, depicting the history of art as grounda lmprovementl aucb u a faun- • "tree of life" be moved from the office ta.in, bandst.and or other structure• were paUo to A more prominent place on the to be made , he would prt(er to set one Of grounds, a suggestion Beck himself had them built 1pecificiUy u a memorial to made. Bick, r•t.ber .J,han ~e-naming the Forum Director Paul Griem said be1queslloned or, t0me othu existln&1sttucture. . whether the . panel was "a work of art Griem~ that • oommltlet be iuftable (Oi' lbi groUi1al'1 ind :'ll'Opoeed ~~ L! ltlQetf. iuitable memorlJilJ., DQt 1eeking ari uperl qeliil__on. Thi'~--only IC!f ,ll<cl<, bu1 !or· ~eta_J'l!o ,~ wu relemd.tatlla$iiiill ..,iritllii. ~ lliil_,,eillval. ' ' ' I ' ,City Pla~lir AJ ~utry aJso. noted. that mall development of this pcirtiOn of Park · Avenue had been among proi)osa,ls in the general plan study. H.itl~ o! the block between · Glenneyre Street and 1 ~st HighWay afr~ady has' been v8cated by the city and wiJl·become part of the library sHe. I During the discussion it was note.Cl ·that seven of Park Avehue's existing 14 park· ' irtg spaces will be eliminated by the library itruc;ture, which, however, is designed to proVide · 34 on-site spa~. Oosure of the balance of the Parle Avenue block .would dimlnate. the other sev'en spaces, according to Terry Meehl· Ing. project designer. . Downtown Business Association presl· dent Bill Marriner referred to his group's desire, expreMed in an earlier letter. to preeei-ve u much on.street parking aa. possible. Parking structures, Marriner said, Berve .mainly long. term parking nee<fs, but ·merchant.s need more convenient, Bhort • term parking space for their' cuatomers. "The library design Is beautiful," said Marriner. "and it'wlll be a great asset to the community, but I would urge more study before you move to tllmin1te l.llY parking." · Former c::ity councilman J o s e p b O'Sullivan, now president of the Friends Of the Library. praised the library mOdel which, he said, "Shows vividly the posslbllity for redevelopment <if Park Avenue to tie the facility Into the town." O'Sullivan read a resolution from the Friends urging thal the portion of Park bt cloaed to 1talllc "to provide 1 landscaped court and • fitting approach to the new library," The CJ'PA rt90IUUon • hailed "Ule bold 'nd imagtnitlve design 'of, tbe library" and aJ90 · endQrsed closure. of Park AVenue to provJde a library court ind park, but alao tl'rled tllmin1tion of the on·site library parking in vtew of..f.be pro- pol<d parldn1 '1ruc1urt nearby on Glen- neyre Street. J:.ibrartan Clifford Cave described the dtslgn, which was based on 1P,tttflc1tlon1 drliwn up. ~Y H6r1tjJftll 111 l'lcfetl from t/le ltt""1'0'n1 ol llbrlfl' Ol'"fa&o, a,nd IP oddlt~. to tbt b!t•tt ar ,llJI ,df<!llto•a ..... b11Siness people ag weU as those in thl downtown basin. Only supporter of the Krishna youth was Mrs. Evelyn Munro, who told tbe council, "You should be aware that BOmt people, myself among them, do not obiect at all to the chanting." She said the Krishna group might be regarded as a colorful addition to the community's tourist attractions • Woman,53, :Was Saved From Fire A drowning victim whose body wubed ashore in a rocky Laguna Beach cove early Tuesday has been identified as a Laguna woman who, just over a ye.at ago, was .the central figure in a beroic fire rescue. Robert Neil Banks, 26, 47S Thalia St., early today identified the body 11 th•' of Jiu moU..r. Sarah Ell\i!Y Baoa1, u, of Z,1!0,-CaWina St., 11.!a· kniwii u silJ1 ~ ' Tbi-~ldentification wa._ mlde after Banp, a waiwr at EJ Adobe :Restaurant in S:an ·Juan c.epiitrino, cl.lied t.pna Police to aay hi was concerned about· bis rhother who bad not coritaded bbn Tue. day and appep.red to be away from her home. He was not aware of the drown.in& D'lysttty at the time. police said. Bangs said he norrrially was In dally eontact with bis mother. a widowed nurse, and had last talked to her on the phone Monday evening. By coincidence, the report of the mystery drowning off Laguna appeared in the game newspape r editions CIJ'f'YN, the story ef a young ~n Clemei6t!t' man'a recognition for his heroic rescue ol Mrs. Bangs from a Laguna apartmerit fire last year . Telephone maintenance man Dele R. CUtrlght, 156 Santa Margarlf.I Ave., was awarded the La Croix Silver medal and $1,000 by General Telephone company for saving Mrs. Bangs and two blind womtn from a fire in an apartment building on Glenneyre Street in Laguna Aug, 21, 1969. CUtright broke into Mrs. ~angs' apart- ment through a window when he heard her screams for help, according to tbe citation, led her to .safety and returned ti rescue two blind women in the &uilding. ·Mrs. Bangs' son told police his mother, who had lived in 4guna for aboul four years, had not worked as a nurse for &{>me lime. Originally from Philadtlpbia. she had bee·n widowed 15 years. He said she had suffered from some ll· lness in recent years and had occasional periods of depr~IO?J, according to police, but seemed cbeerlUI when she visited bJm Sunday. Sandoval Quits Post EL PASO, Tu.• (·AP) -Hilary San- doval Jr., who holds the highest govem- ment office evei attaihed by a MeXican- Ameriean Is resi@lng as head of tbe Small BusinesS Administration. Coalt Weat•er Till the clouds roll by, there'll be hazy sunshine over the Orange Coast Friday, puking the mere- ury at, a scant · 15 locally and 72 further inland. JNSmE TODA 'l' Students going to coUcgc Mvt' io live. aomcwhcrt and the criticct housing shortag~ i.t a major c0Ueg1 problem. Paoc 9. . " l. I D~IL y l'ILOT SC ' ' ' I • •• Now No Pay ·fOf Board ' Counsel Ruling C~ts· ,~loUd( Over Legality. I By JACK BROBAClt lttllla-II f!l,IOo a ,._, 1ir 1111 ..... ~ !lit .. , ..... at Of ,.. Plltr l"Htt ,,.., Reim Mid this morntnc ht ~'I '1•.• for tbi WllnCl;.;of ltdl 1'111' ad , Orange County supervisors will g~t a ruling cuts 1 cloud over the legality of · St9,~ alter the first of tbe year becomu abOrt paycheck Friday and no pay at all payina: UIC aupervilOrl at this time and ef~~~-tly that ordinance idopted NOi' fte.ftekl from Friday, County Auditor· that U'"a matter or public trust" be caD-10 and effective in 30 dl)'1 is tbe law· ControUer Vic Heim announced today. not p~y them. Kuyper bas ruled .· • The ul1ry payment problem stems 1bt board members wUJ get 1 check In the meantime the continuJnc battle from the passage of Proposition 12 on for QOLOI Friday rather than the !'Ormal over the 1upervlsort:' pay bu beea ttm· No¥. 3 and a subsequent ruling by County two weeb pay of $576.92, Helm 111d. The porarily sidetracked. The mpervilen COUNel Adrian Kuyper. '20e.05 ~ a parlod from Oct. 30 Tuoad1y ·rerirred the quoetlon 1o Ille Kuyper noled ll!•t •lac• Propositlao 12 l1"°"1b• Nov. S whell "'-KIOll 12 Oranae Couaty Grand Jiry for recom-11 a conatitutioul amendment. it umcame law. meftdation. 1upenede1 all prevleus laws concemig The first Ume the supervllon will be Jury foreman George Honold said the salaries of the supervlsor:s. The salary eligible for pay under Kuyper's ruling l:s recommendation should be rtady by next scale was previously . set by tbt alter Dec. 10 wben the ordinance passed Wedneaday o: Tburlday. * * * County Paper Formal .Drafting Remains Files Suit In Trailer Park Freeze In Pay Issue A lawsuit char1ing tbe Or-Cooalty !loam of SUpervlaors with v~ttonl of the Brown Acl one! enadmenl ". .. il· lepl Sllaty onllnance ii· 0. IJ!e' today in Supirlor Court. ' "' its -plilnt. the santa Ana Regtmr ukl for • court ruling lhlt the five supervisors were in violaUon of the Brown Act when they mtt Nov. 4 in what they described as an executive JeSSion. At that cJosed-doon meeting the supervlson wertedly ..,....i to lnc....,. their Sllarles from o an11111l 115.l!llO. to $29,268 on the strength of voter ac· ceptance of a measure which would allow county boards of 1upervil0l"s to set their own salaries. The Santa Ana neW1pljler bu be1dod a public outcry against the pay raise and bas led a movement to recall three ol the supervisors Involved in the frae&I - David L. Baker, Robert W. Ballln Ind William PhiWpa. The Brown Act. named after former uruitor Ralph M. Brown, requires that all meetlnp of local public c:ommbllona, boardl and connc!h be held openly and in public with ....wn permitted esceptlonl. · These include certain personnel mat,. !<rs. Ailo 80Ugbt in the complaint Is a court ruling tbat the board of IUpervisorl lboU!d be orderod to refrain lrOm holding any• furlber -meettnp unlil Ille 1uuel set. out in the lawsuit are rultd upon by the court. Tbe oompJaint claiml supervilOrS alJO acled unlawll1lly al the aubo<queot meellnC d Nov. 10 wben they enacted an ~ "hicl! pu11111e1r aalarlaa in line with -al COlilomla Je&illalon. 'l1li1 ord-,woald bave a-lllto effect Dec. 10 and would have Im- mediately ralaed bolid m0mber1 sa1arie1 lo 116,000 with 1 bi& to 119,:1111 on Jin. I. Legislatoro in the put have reflllld to In- er .... the board's oalllry. SUpervllora baled that ordinance Oii the aoi:eptance by votero ol Proposltloo 12, the complaint statbl. But that proposition, the lawsuit pointa out. will DOI. become a lawful con- 1tituUonal amendment Ufttil the rel\J.lt.s of .,.the Nov. s electlon hive been certified by .. f1 •'--: • -""'1elaty ol atate. Laguna Woman's Services Held F\meral terVlc.es were conducted ln We&tminster today for Mrs. Ruth Emma Marie Von Helmolt, a Laguna Bead>'""""' who dlad 1'11"'111 at South Coul Community llolpltal. She WU 79. Mrs. Von Helmol~ who had lived. in ~ Beach for 18 yean at 530 Moun· taln ROid, ls survived by two IOM, Erwin and Wendell, and four daughters, Mrs. Irma Grode, Mrs. Roth Wake, Mrs. Marg1rtt Wqoner and Mrs. Adel1lde Noo;nn. I • DAILY PILOT H.wpM'tleM\ HWllwfl• ... LllpM .... .. ...... ...., Celtti ..... s.. Cl1 .... OAANG£ Co.t.rr PUIL1$HIHC> COMl>AMY Rt\l•rt N. WM rr.INM •A ,......_ J1M I.~.",'~ ¥kt ,,.kNni...... 14-..r Tliom•• ICtnll ·-Jltomtt A. M...,iirlM MM1tlr4 l:lllltol" Rtchtr4 P. Hel IOUll1 Ol'"tnfl C91111tr 141'1r -C:..i. Mftl: • ..., hf 1.-N..,.,-t ttWll· .. 1 WW .............. .._._, ... __ ..... 1.41111 Wdl: 11111 ............... &.II Cll"*"lt Ill !Mr111 II C-IM llttal Formal drafting into onllnaoce and resolution form is all that remlinl before ~ Iliff measures regulatinl mobile · home perb come up for almost certain ilpprovol by 5an Cle.,..te City c;c.w,. cilmen. ' The pantl •greed Wednesday that the two measures -one a freeze on the number of coach spaces ; the other a stiff li:st cf development rules -should be formally drafted and set for action at the first meeting in December. U paued, lbe Ueeie would tel at five percelll the limit of mobile home 1pocu compand to permanen~ ailJllt-family dwellinp in Son Clemente. lncludinl the recent approval of a pro- posed part tor Sboreclllll, the fh>e per-celll ii llr<ady "!'ad up. . Tbe freeze, t.._i )y fonoal -tlon, would mMa«tblt -4,oot new con. venUooll d•el!lnli woa1d lono to be built in-the city balln ·--park could be :;o'ed.~• . u ~ tllal Jli!llcy IUboequent parb w«lld -to baW It -200 -· 1be ust of cttvelopment slaJldardl wm liU Jbe !Mn al a forml! ordloance 1°"'111111 ...,,, 4'llp ud athetic· " San Clemeq.te Pledges Reacior ,, . Evacuation Plan The dly ol Son a..,.,j._tn ~ 'Jlk to .... .,, crttlcs Of the prop<lled u- pamion cf San Onofre nuclearireacton - will releue c:oples of a city evacuataon plan f<r publication in the press. The promile came from COuncillnen Wednesday alter they beard eriUcs Of Ille . erpansion plans by two major utilities. The foes claimed that a civil defense plan covering cltiuna of the city in cue of au "incident" at the rtactor c:omplex either did not exist or ls not bein& explained .to the citizens. But City Manager Ken Carr uid the plan, initially adopted in 19111 u a general civil defense procedure, ls befnl reviled by the city staff this week and would be ready soon for dlssemlnatJon. · Mn. June Fleming, whole two-page letter on the isaue wu aet for council response Wednesday, explalned that the reapoosibillty for civilian protecUon bad Men 1hutned from the utllltiU, to the Marine Corps, then to the City of San Clemente. She ind fellow membert Of GUAJID, • local group opposlng the balf.billion- dollar expansion by Southern CalUornla Edison and San Diego Gaa and Electric, have urged that definJtive evacuation procedures be armouneed at once. Included in the councll 1ctlon Wed- nuday waa the rule that each year tbe plan would be reviewed aad uPtraded when necessary. Councilmen would evaluate and act on aity changes to the plan under tbe annual review. ospect ol the parb enforceable by the cl· ty -even to tbe placemement of ttlevision antenna:s Qd ma!Um:es. Thal list of rules lirady bu boen scanned at -twice by•plannlni com· missioners ud cOancilmla meetin& tn study sessions:. The proposed ordinance bu awatted approval :since last spring. , But. tt already bas been added to the list of development conditions to the recenUy approved Lincoln Savi11111 and Loan Park project ne1t Shorecliffs Golf COorse. 1iiat conln>verlial deft!opment likely • wW bacome the lut park lo be built in tbO city for the _, !ivo )etn or moro tt the -ii 1ppmld. Mission rwJo '.: Scheduks Yuk. Activities ActMtiea: for Miaalon Viejo'• ''Five NlclU f!I Cllrillmu" have been ICbedul· ad -ilnuln& I comUlunlly tr1dlUOa dlUDc from 1911. Ca ~ .. December evulnp prosrlml will ba·-preMnted to in-all ... """"" .... m..t iba'Yiile ....0..-.~ '!10o·~-.p..,1p:m. - •. oa., ... an.nta Drive .... J.a Pu ~i."J plaza,~ a tm li81>t!nl .t""""1 lllii 'chori PrJaram. The sl!ii Out, Anilp ~ JrOm Milsloa Viejo will join community chotn ln a pmen- ta~ of hoUdiy m~. The i:ommwiJty "gift box" for cootrlbuUillll al canned goods and lifta for neM)' famllles will be tel out. ! Santa Claus comes to MluiOn Viejo in a "s~tacular atrivaJ" set f6r 7 p.m. Dec: 13. SL Nick wW talc< up quarten in Sa .. ta's Hut - a temporary renovaUon of the C:Ommunily Bulletin Boord Buildlni - and diapense Chriltmu joy and candy to children. Music and carolJ.n& follows the Ho-ho-ho f~l!ltivities. A semJ.tormll dinner dance ts slated for Friday Dec. 11 with dinner from 1:30 to 8:30 p.m. at the Mill.'ion Viejo Inn and dancing in the Montanoso Recreation Center at a p.m. Tkketl may be reserved by calling 137-. The fourth nil'it of activities is 7 p.m. Dec. 16 at the community bulletin board building where Slnla and htlpers will again vilit with children, ( Tar d y listmaken may whisper in his ear on Dec. 19 and 22, as wtll). Toppinc the season festivities i:s a Gandlelight parade be&iMing 7 p.m. Dec. 23 at the top of La Paz Road hill at Pradera and moving east to Marguerite Parkway al La Paz road. Santa's presence again will be felt, carola will be aq and a drawing of gifts for children will be made. Winnen of the home decorating contest will be given :r:· Judilni takea pilce Dec. 20, ll Laguna Chamber Group Gets Russia Photo Trip Membero of Ille Lqinia Beach Chamber of Commerce teolr. a guided tour of RuSl!lia Wedneaday when world traveler Rury Lawrence 1ave a 1Ude presentation of his most recent jaunt Lawrence, a Laguna businessman, traveled to the ,Soviet Union tut summer. He gave li1I praentaUoo at the chamber brtaldut 1t the llotal Lqun• honoring Utt women'• clothiers of Laguna Beach. Enterlni the country by W"f Of Alall;1, he traveled acroll Slberia to Moecow, weot to Leningrad llld ,.!urned ID Slblrla lhrouib IOUthtm Rullll, Coina tJlnlulh Tubkenl He said that, whtrt&a people were once .., to Ille r1r reachu al Slberil u punillunent, Ille aovernment -PIY• the '"'""" • doubll aalary to -· there. He was awed by the cleanlineu and n1turl! llilUIY of Ille country, which 11 almolt Iii times tarter thin Ille U.S.. lie Ilic!. Bul the trip wn nol 1U perfld, he noted. While 1taylng 1l the Hottl Ruula in MOICCnV, the world'• lariat wJlh ~,000 ....,., lie told tho 1udltnce how Ille elevlloCI did nol l!w1y1 work and the I plumbing often clogged. He S;*id there were few traffic pr~ blems in the Soviet Union because there were hardly any cars and that the police were very strict In enforcing the laws. He cited one incident where a Ruui1n visitor to Moscow wu arrtsted for climbinc on- to a wall. · "Not everyone know a the rules," Lawrence 11ld, "but they 111 arrested anyway." Law,.... aaid thal one thing that sUuct him about Rulala waa that everything \":".11 IO quiet, how tMre teenr ed to be "Just a munnur'' of IOUftd. 1be 1Uda depleted the ma n y cllbedr11t of the counlt)'. few of which are now In ute, Lewrence aoted. He 111d be WU Surprised to find thal Within the walls of the Krtmlln tn MOICOW, there wtrt many old churches that hid been built in the dme of the Czan in Ille !Ith century. He 11 Id the COW1lry lw mlll)' lonf r1111e plans, partlcu11rly for the Itel Of Siberia. He showed a iJlde of a hydro- electric plant at a dam and 11ld that It WU only the firll Of llX &U<:h inltl!laUOOI pl1r11ad •lont lhll particular rtvu. • • DESPITE DANA POINT OPPONENTS, SUPERVISORS APPROVED RESTAURANT · Construction To Begin 5oo.:i on $300,000 Project Ov1rtoolc:_l_ng:;_H_•_r_bo_r _______ _,.~· Supervisors Approve Dana Restaurant Bi<J, Permission to build a S 3 0 0 , O O O restaurant in Dana Point was granted by the Board of Supervisors Tuesday over the object ions of local residents. Restaurant Adventures Inc., beaded by David Perrin of Loog Beach, plans ·to begin construcUon soon on the two story, &,111)().tquare foot 1tru~ between the Streets of the l!lue and Green Lanterns and .Santa Clara Avenue. A me variance to allo" the restaurant had been 1pprovad by the county Plan- •lni Commilalon Ind WU appealed to the oupervilora: , Alalatant Planning Director · Stuart 1la!!ey uid the properly WU within the .,., deslenated for touriM»mroerclal ""' in the 1eneral plan. Ia •appravlnt the variance, the: com· ~rs t • I I e d on conditions in· ~ • limited sign ldenUfying the lttucture. Objecting were Dr. Roger SlndeCJOO of Dana Point who said not enough parking was provided and that the variance might lead to further commercial development in the bluff area overlooking the new Dana Point Harbor. , Joing the protest was Alex Lake of Dana Point who argued that there was enough commercial development in Dana Point now and plenty of land zoned for future development. Dr. Arthur C. EllioU of Santa Ana wbo owns an apartment complex near the restaurant site objected on parking and noise grounds. Also objecting was Joseph Cole of Dana Point who owns property on Del Prado on which a restaurant is being built. Supervisor David Baker noted that there was no rel!lidl!:ntial development near the site. In rebuttal to the arguments against the project, Perrin said the site was the only one acceptable for t.ht restaurant with its excellent view of the harbor. 'H~ge' Penalty Fee Tacked Ta El Toro School Pact An unprecedented penalty has been at· tached to-the .San Jotqllin Elementary School Dillrict's· latest qonstructlon. con· tract. Besieged for ·time extensions on con- struction projects (while new studenll!I enter the district at the rate of 30 per month) the Board of Trustees voted to attach a $2»a-day penalty for all unauthorized extensions on their latest contract, an addition to Gates Elemen· tary School in El Toro. "We were curious to know if we'd have any bidders," said Superintendent Ralph Gates. The ordinary late penalty l:s $50 a day, a sum suggested by the county counsel's office as "collectable." There ha:s been the usua1 amount of 7 STYUS TO CHOOSE FttOM bidders, accordlna to Gates and the low bid was tram the A and B Construction Co. of Costa Mesa which suggested $42,000 for a kitchen, teachers dining room, storage area and site development During past meetings , the board has lamented that school districts have charged so little, while private industry can charge thousands of doUar:s a day tot. unauthorized delays. The county Board of Supervisors recently attached a $1,000·a· day late penalty for the construction or the Trabuco Bridge in San Juan Capistraoo. Trustees said they hope that the new penalty will encourage contractors to speed up their projects, and avoid another Aliso School mishap. That school opened one year later than scheduled. Worst Typ9~1f· .. In History. Hits Manila MANILA (UPI) -The most powerful typhoon in Manila's recorded history' lashed the city with 120 mile an hou; winds for three hours today causing eJ:•' ten sive damage and widespread floodin«: The government declared a state Of calamity. The government diaster ageDcy put the · death toll at nioe as of 10:30 p.m. (10:30;. a.m. EST}. Another 17 persons were reported missing and 11 were injured. However there were no reporb yet from outlying-areas where previous typhoons" have caused heavy.Joss of life. Government officials said 2 3 , 0 0 /J' persons were homeless in Manila wheo . late season Typhoon Patsy roared in.~ uprooting trees and power lines and · destroying homes and churches. Manila was blacked out for hours tonighl whelk. the government cut off electric powei" becaU!e of downed high voltage wires. The government put the stren~ of the,. typoon as l2D miles per hour and said ~ worst one in recorded history was'in 1.-2 when Manila was hit by winds of 111 miles an hour. This time the eye af the , typhoon passed directly over Manila. -. Some re:sidtnts said the typhoon brought hailstones ''as big as basebll!I",, which also did extensive damage. · 'lbe presidential palace declared •. ·. st.ate of calamity existed in Manila and I spokesman said it probably would bt ~· • tended to other areas when reporta 11e in'' , from the surrounding provincu. ' ... . . Louise G. Powers .. . , Services Friday . ·. . F~al servlce:s will be held Friday :; for Louise G. Powers, an elOerly Laguna : Be.a.ch resident who died Tuesday. She ·~ was 95. = Dr. Charles Dierenfield will officiate the ·: 2 p.m. services for Mrs. Powers at St. : Andrew's Preabyterlan Chutch in. ·: Newport Beach. She will be buried in •' Hartsdale. N.Y. ; Mrs. Powers, who lived at 330 Cliff I>r. ·: Apt 201, is survived by a niece, Helen ; Powers of Laguna Beach and a nephew, :. William Powers ol Hawaii. ;~ • .. ·. t .. ' • -; . " . -. ,: ' i ,. ' I ; ' • ,. j ( • ' . , SOFA BED SALE! ' ' n. ... •r• ••ry c;omforlab~ sofa b.ds for Sittl"9 ind Sloep"'9- A wid• s.i.c+4o. ol fitbrin arwl Colon +o cheos• from. .. 't.OFISS IONAL IN'Tf:R.IO• DUl&Hft.S .... 400.00 Now 299 .00 ,116 HAR.IOI ILYD. COSTA MlSA. CALIF, 64 .. 02 71 M6-0J 76 • .. . , . " ' .. , .· , " . ' , . • . ' .. . . . · I ' • hi IJ cl th •• th P• pl • • ' • 1 I\ m m Oil pc R Y• ac ' G' Tl co • ~ di hi pr A1 bt "' ur "' • I ~E Cl VI tk F< •• hi ') ( m fl: " tc • -~~-~-----------------~· ----"'l'"""r ----·--.-~--- I I I I San-Cle111ente Capi·~tr~no voe 63, NO. 277, 3 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ' A San Clemente civil engineer resumed hla attack on alleged moonUghting by Ci- ty Engineer Phil Peter be!ore city coun- tjlmen Wednesday night, bu t members of the Panel decided to wait on any further actlo'n on the matter. Eugene Ayer, Peter's predecesso r at the city post, renewed his claims that Peter's obtaining a business license lo practice freelance engineering from his 0 Down t he Mission Trail Santiago Road Bid Awarded EL TORO - A st.ate contract bas been iwarded for construction of aboiil wo miles of Santiago Canyon Road, eight m11ea' nOrtheast of here. The t~lane road will be constructed on a new alienment. It wUI be between points 3.5 mile! north of Live Oak Canyon Road and .4 mile south of Silverado Can· yon Road. A bridge will be constructed across Williams Canyon . Mark Construction· Company, Inc. of home is unfair competition and a conllict- of-interest. Councilmen in executive 1 e s s I o n already have curbed any engineering· by Peter for clients who wouJd possibly do business for the city. But Ayer Wednesday demanded that t'<lUncilmen yank the bu.sinesa lic.ense just the same. Other than a "thank you" by Mayor 'Dead' Boy Stricken, Revived, A San Clemente youth remained In critical condition this morning after hav- ing been brought back to life by firemen and ambulance attendants Wednesday at San Clemente High School. Jeffery Lynn Miller, 16, 1506 Estrella . San Clemente, remained under intensive care at South C.Oast Community Hospital suffering from a major heart attack. The youth , a junior at the high school, suffered the near-fatal aeizure shortly before noon near the school ad· ministration building. 1 Gvden Grove won the $423,108 contract. Fire Chief Merton Rackett said that rescuers found no pulse or heartbeat in the youth when they arrived to give aid. Closed-heart massage and oxygen ad· ministered by firemen amt La Paz am· bulance personnel restored the pulse and heartbeat wlthin 10 minutes, Hackett said. There are 120 working days alloted for completi1>11. e Property Talk MISSION VIEJO -Orange County ,fi.sse!!Or Andrew Hinshaw will address the real estate practice course at Sad· dleback C.Ollege Monday at g p.m. Hinshaw will discuss the functions of his office and its role in evaluating real property in Orange County, according to Arthur Croisette, chairman of the business science division. The class is one of the courses now being offered at Saddieback College under the twcryear Real Est.ate Career program. e Nem Board Member SANTA ANA -Gilbert Aguirre has tleen named to the board of the San Juan Capistrano Soil Conservation District. County supervisors named the Mi ssion Viejo Company vice president for opera- tions to the post to succeed Frank L. Fehse. engineering vice president of the aame firm . Fehse said press <>f business dictated his resignation. Israeli·1nade P lane Crashes; Three Die TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) -An Israeli: made turboprop jet crashed during a test fl ight today and three persons were kill- ed . Including the chief test pilot of the ~mpany making the plane. A fourth flier was injured when the tWi~ngine Arava crashed near Nablus Jn the occupied west bank of Jordan, a joVernment communique said., . ' : Oraage Coan 1''ea tber Till the clouds roll by, the:re '11 be hazy sunshine over the Orange CoaJlt Friday, peaking the mere· ury at a scant 6S locally and 72 further inland . INSIDE TODAY St.uden ts go ing to college hove to /ivt somewhe rtr 0'7ld the eritictll hou..rlng &hortoge is a major college prob lem. Page 9. •1r1111 ,, Cltfllwlll• r ~-111• u, • Cltnll... ,. ... C-ICt II c,... .. ,. n DMfll Nwllfts It Dlt'lt'CM 11 ~ lfltwU.I ~ltf • 111Nt"111111rrit11t n """'"'' •n """'--It 41111 L ...... n 11 IN"I ... LIC"''" lf I -u Mvi.11 11...S. a N•lltll•I ...... +$ Ot•-C-1\' If 11'1vtt ~.,..... a '""' """ 11ldl Mttlr.th JWI Tt......... D -u ......... ~ Wlllll W1lll U ....._,, ,..., ,,.,, W•rMI Jhwt 44 Capistrano Beach Offers Trophies For Yule Displays Four trophies and three major prize! will be awarded this year by the Capistrano Beach Chamber of Commerce ror outstanding commercial a r e a Christmas deco rations. 'The area prizes are an inn ovation this year Initiated by contest chairman Louise Leyden to stimulate · participation by merchants of the Estrella commercial area and businesses along the oceanfront. The oceanfront decorations will be in· creased this year to add a colorful n<>te to the 40 Miles of Christmas Smiles Orange County coastline competition. Trophies wil l be given for the best Christmas theme , the mosl spectacular decorated tree, the most beautiful win· dow and a grand prize for the. merchant whose tctal decorating effort is "mo!t es· ceptiona l." Mrs. Leyden said members of her judg· ing committee will be Anne Potter, Vi- vian Baird, Ma ry Kester, Pat Chaney and Mary Betterton. The judging date bas not. yet been an- nounced, but the trophies wi ll be presented at the January chamber meeting, !he said. Hea rin g Sough t By San Clemente On J etport Site San Clemente councilmen officially entered the fr ay over· proposals to use Bell Canyon as a jetport site with a mer lion to count)' airport commissioners that they hold public hearings on the con- troversial plan "aomewhere in the South Coast arta." Acting unanimously on a motion by Councilman Thomas O'Keefe, councilmen agreed to demand a nlghttime public hearing possibly at San Clemente High School where accomm9<1ations a r t available for 500 per&OM. Courrilmen recently Md rtgistered in- itial dismay at the Bell Canyon prnpouls in consultant's report to the ,county on 11olutions to the airport problem . While lndl cal.ioru of Wednesd1y'1 mo- tion were tl\at councilmen oppc>led the plan. no formal action has yet come on a formal city opinion oo lbe plaoi. I - Today's F ina) ' EDllT ION ' N.Y. St.eeks ORANGE COU NTY, "CALIFO RNIA THU RSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1970 • I TEN CENTS on San Clemente Engineer Witter Evans, the Qnly coum:il, response to the renewed charges wu a promise that the request on the llctnse be handled in another executive session. None occurred at Wedne s da y 's meeting, and counCilmen gave no in· dication on the date of such a meeting. Peter, who holds th= city 's serond highest-paid position, made no of. ficial comment on the arges. Ayer charged that lhe operation of the home occupation. plus a pl'tlfessional of. fice at city hall is a breach of the rules governing engineuS and that it imposes "unfair competition'' on fellow members of the profession who operate out of ex- pensive professional offices . "A few years ago 'one-month's ttntal from a business property paid the taxes, but today it takes three months. These people who work in their homes are welching and frteloadin1," Ayer aald. Ayer also said he would not pay lfxes !pr Peter's salary if the practice continued. The engineer, who said the battle was "professionaJ, 11ot personal," also 11t- tacked the city fo r awarding public con- tracts to· professional people who work out of their homes -specincally Building Designer Erk: Boucher, who has designed the new lifeguard headquarters and OC!W is deSigning a MW community. clubhouse. "You're payit}g these people the same fee as you would have paid someoae working from an office. yet they have almost nn overhead,'' he added. City staff members already have ruled that Bouch~'s business . ...: aside from 1 a professional sign which has b,en taken down -is permissible under. existing zonirtg codes. Councilmen ritade no comment on the Boucher matter Wedne!day. or an son. I - D'AtL Y _.";LDT 11.llPtJ.:-. CAN YOU SQUASH TH IS? IT'S THE GREAT BRIDGE-BUILDING CO,NTE ST Builders Steve Phil lips, Suzenne McClure· Svrvey ExP;e riment•I. ~odtl .. Bustin!' Those .Bridges Sa n Clemente Students Tes t Bals a W ood Skills By JOHN VAL TERZA 01 t111 DflOY 'lie! sttfl Scores of San Clemente High Sc.'lool !tudents ha ve stripped local hobby shops dry of balsa wood this week in an annual bridge construction contest which already has set some awesome records in its three yea rs of life. Last year's winning bridge -weighing more than one ounce -bore 404 pounds before coliasping. That's almost a quarter-ton. The weeks of painstaking construction with only two basic materials -tiny balsa wood strips and airplane cement - will wind up with a De~. 15 competition during which an expert on bridge design will systematically try to squash each en· try. The one that squashes last wins. Trying for bis thll'd top priu in a row will be senior Jim Kelly, whose tiny entry bore the weight'best last year. An eitimated 200 Triton students have eigned up and forked over their 50-cent entry fee to challenge Kelly's throne under the program jOintly sponsored by math instructor Alan Pierce and Physics teacher Don Schwenn. So keen is the competition for the top prizes (cash, divvied up from the entry fee ) that the remnants of last year's win· ning spans are kept hidden. "We do it to keep people from copying the design," said one earnest student this week. The rules include provisions that the entry must have a minimum span of 10 inches, a five-inch clearance, maximum height of 10 inches and 16 inches max- imum leng th. Balsa wood strips measuring in th e cross section three-thirty-1econd8 of an Inch are all that is used. State Pushing , Purchase Of Capo Beach Shoreline The State of California has formally btgUn procedures to buy nine acres of prime shoreline in Capistrano Beach and st.art development of the new San Onofre st.ate beach which will greet Its first vlsttors next year. The Park11 and Recreation O>mmisslon recently adopted a massive, $10.>mlllion beach purchase program which include~ the abS<lrptlon or the old Capistrano Beach Club property into Doheny State Park. It also includes the lease arrangements ror 25' years Jnvolvlng more •. than 18,000 feet 'of beach footage downcoast of the San Or'lofre Nuclear Generating Station. "Some facilities there will be ready fOT pub lie use In the 1971 seuon." a state spokesman uld toda.y. , A full spectrum or recreational uses Is pl~ruied for the Jl3r\I:. Among the initial projecil on tile t06 acr., ol prim< ldariu . , Corps 11boreline will be providing areas for parking and access to the t>-..acb which lie! below tall blllffs. At Doheny, the new beach. covering the area once occupied by the posh Capistrano Beach Cl ub, will' be developed for parking, picnicking and general beach activitiei. The aitt once · had been proposed for use for hlgh·rlst apartment1 by prlv&te- developerri, but llUl58equtnUy w a a ~armarked ,(or1ttate UR, the llCW hind' wollld accommodate 71,0DO tueSta" • yeir." The . pr0iecll • wlll offlCtaUy be ••l>- mlti;., in the f1171.72 filcal" yeat:bU<lft11' for the state recreation and Plf~.._ai;eft-' . ' ' \ cy. No dollar amount.. wtr& 1lven on either' a~uislti6n project. but aides iutld the· fund! wllJ come 'lr•m 01Mll<J' apj>roved t;y ft.ate \!Ole:rs ln a 19&4 bonO issue e4 lr<>m W• !llta!1 lhart.ol lwidl. • Glu'e is used to keep the soft, light, brit- Ue material tog~tl)er. No specific instructions are given to the competitors, Schewnn 1aid this week. ' "We keep it that way on purPose; because It encourages the students 'to do their own research," he said . On Dec. 15 Schwenn' and Pierce will round up the. entries and cart them to the school's Little Theater. where the ritual will begin at about 7 p.m. An expert on bridges will bring specially designed 'testing equipment, compliments of TRW Systems. "Then we start to squash them," Schwenn explained. A loading block is placed on "the top or the span and weight Is applied evei4i· The base of the span is kept . from 11preadlng with two other blocks. An automatic calculator displays up the pounds to the cheering audience. . When the first brace breaks, the test.ls over. The range between successes and failures is vast. Some of last yeat's entries which look- ed to the untrained eye as, strong as the Golden Gate , C<>hapsed under 10 or. 20 pounds. , But few observers of last year's conttst remember what the 404-pound whopper loo~ed like .. "It eiptoded all over when It went - just llke a real one !hould do when it's overloaded," Schwenn ta id. Space-age Elk Dead But Replacement S'et MOOSE, Wyo. (UPI) -A space-age elk nalned Monique 11 ia dead , but scien. tists~atrea~ haVe"started·mapplng j>l!ns for 1 new.Monique .who¥ wanderings Will agijli be watcf>M by i4Jelllte. M9olq•• II we:i •hot by a· blltlter in 'northern Wyom- lng 1Saidrday, bringing to 11n end a un ique e~fiment ~~un earlier In ~ Yfar. A 25-pound, tir lght red collar -packed with $~.000 \!Orth or electronics gear - had enabled the Nlmbo1 lU weather aatelltte: to !Cetp track of MooJqu·e •s she Wandered throucb Wyomin1 wildemtas. 1' ' l{renwinkle Girl Offers To Testif,y By JACK V. F OX LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The defwe 1Mounced today at the Tate murder trial that it wished to rest it! case fol· Charlea Manson and tlu'ee young female codefen- dant.s without calling a si.nile witness lo lhe stand on their behaU. In . a 1tartling and dramatic episode, ·DefeD1t •Attorney Paul Fitzgerald rose u the defense was expected to begin its caee in !ti, %3-wetk trial and announced: ·"'J1!e defenH reltal " ' 1 ; ,:n. O~· tJ\M,deJ'll!O l;l!l(..ei:• a1., ltood and announced that they wished t.o rut their case oo behalf of their client.I. ' Ptfricia Kren~inkel, one of the three Young women charged w!Ui the seven :murder!, i-oiiie to her feet and announced that Bile wished to testify hl the presence of the jury. Charles Manson said nothing but sat iolidly in his chair. Filz1erald added that the provisi<>n that the i dettme wished to rest subject to being able to "Introduce certain ex· hibUI." Jt was not made clear what be was referring to. Superior Court Judge Charles H. Older summoned the defense-and prosecution attorneys to his bench for a conference a.nd then the trial was recessed briefly. There was pandemonium in the courtroom when Fitzgerald let loose the bombshell that the defense would call not witnelllies at all . Fitzgerald had said previously that he had subpoenaed between 15 and 30 witnesses and that Manson would pre> bably be one of the last to testify. The totally unexpected defense tactic came after Older had rejected defense motions for a directed verdict of ac- quittal for Manson, Miss Krenwinket. Susan Atkins and Leslie Van Houten on grounds that the 11tate had not presented sufficient evidence io convict them. Airport Location Hearings Set. B y Commission Public hearings On proposed new airport& in OrlUll' County will bo htld by the Airport Commission on Nov. 30 and Dec. 7. The sessions were ordered Wednesday by the Board of Supervisors to offer the public in vviom areas of the county an opportunity to express themselves on airport altes proposed in the $140,000 P8.rsons Company report. Tht Nov. 30 hearing is tentatively set for the Los Alamitos City Hall and will explore the reCommendations for a general aviation facility at Los Alamitos Naval ir Station. Citizens and civic officials of the area are reported to ~ in determined 09- posltion to any such use of I.he naval facility when It Is closed down as a Navy jet training center nett year, The Dec. 7 hearing_ is pl&Med for aothewhtte in Laguna ~lls Leisure . World and will ¥ for discussion' of Uit proposed joi9t use o( El Toro Martne ' Corps, Air Stat.ion, the new Bell Ca.nyoa jetport and the. O'Neill , Pa rt small afr · park. • Supervlsora Wednesday set Dec. 16 fOf tbe'.ir .next publlc hearlnc on the Par'°"' reP.Ort. The airport commission will bold Ill re1t1l•r meeting Tuelday at t1ie Pardi buildln& at th• alrp>rl. I I I i I • ·1i ••• . ., ., ·.· J DAILY PILOT SC Thlll'...,, He:1• lJ~ 1970 • Now No,Pajr 'fOr :doard • • j • , ~ ~ ,1 .. BUi~g~~.ewUd Over Legal~t,y : ~ .... ~ ' ' • • ' { ·~ ... , ' ,J> Counsel .. By JACK BROBACK ~-el '11,,00D a yMr. , ' by 'the bolrd. teltlq Ille pay '.ploi,11 ot lllf Da!IJ' ltllll Stiff Jlebn' uJd tim: mornlftc that kuyper•s .11,800 fot tbl ballftol. of tt\lt Jear mf Ora.ns:e Count)' supervisors will Cet I N)lflg cuts a cloud OYer the legality of $19,200 afler the first of tbe year becomes lbot't pl.ycbeck Friday and no pay at all payln& tbe auper9iaon at Ulla time and ef~~Uy that ordinance adopted Nov two week& ftom FrMlay, C4uaty Audit«· lhlt IS "a matter of public trust" be can-IG and effective in 30 days ls the law' Controller Vic Helm announctd tod•Y· not pay them. , Kuyper has ru1ed. • The salary J>l.fment prob~em stems , ~ board :members wtll get a check Jn the mtf.lllime the continuing batUe from the pau1ge "' Propoe1tlon 12 on !or, U0&.06 Friday rather than the nonnal over the supenison' pay hu been tem· Nov. I md a oubleqilent rullJll by CounlY twp -ks pay of IS7U2, Helm said. The pararlly sidetracked. The sujlervilorl CounleJ Adrian Kuyper. , ...._ " **·• covers e period from. Oct. 39 Tuesday· referred Use question to tht Kuyper ruled that •inoe ProlXltiUt!Gi 2 tbrouab. Nov. 3 whee Proposilion 12 Orange County Grand Jury for recom· Is a constitutional amendment, it betlme law. mendation. supersedes all previous Jaws concemi& The first time the supervisors will be Jury foreman George Honold said the salaries of ~ supervisors. Tbe salary eu,ible for pay ~der Kuyper's ruling Is recommendation shoWd be ready by next sclle w., prevlooaly Mt by the olltr Dec. JO wben tbe ordlnonce pusacl Weclnaday or 'lbutsday. * * * Co~nty Paper Files .Suit Formal Drafting Remains In Trailer Park Freeze DESPITE DANA POINT OPPONENTS, SUPERVISORS APPROVED RESTAURANT Con1truc:tion To Begin Soon on $300,000 p·roiect Overlooking Herbor ~~~~~~~~~~- In Pay Issue A lawsuit charging the Orange County Board of 8upenlaol 1 witlt• vlolatioil ·of the BIWD Act and ... ctment of Ill· il· ICaJ •lla£~ance ~ 0o We lodiJ in &dpenor i.;.uu:-i.. _.. ... In Iii clomplalnt, the Santa Ana Register asks for a court rullng that the five supervisors were in violation of the Brown Act when they met No\!. 4 in what tbey described 11 ~n executive seaton: At tba1 -meetllll the supervllorl ..,.ioclly agreed to·- their salaries from an IMUal $15,000 to $29,268 on the strength of voter ~· ceptance of a 'meawre whiCb would aJklw county bo.r'ds: of 1uperviaorl to set their own salaries. The Santa Ana newspaper has headed a public outcry against tlie pay raise and has led a movement tq ttc.U three of the superviaors involved in the fracu - David L. .Balr:er, Robert W. Battin and .William· Phillips. The Brown Act. named after former ....,tor Ralph M. Brown, requir., that Ill meetinp of local public comriltsalonr, boards and COIJllCll• be beld open1, and In public witlt cerlaln permitted exceptilos Tbele include certain pel'IQllllM mat- ters. Also sought In the ci>mplalnt II a COW'\ ruling tltat the boari! of supem..rs ehould be ordered to refrain from boldtnC any further aecret meetlnli until lbe issues set out in the lawsuit are ruled upon by the court. , The complaint claims tupervlloJ1,. a)a0 acted unlawfully at Utt sublequent meeUn& of Nov. 10 ~en they enacted an ordinance which pull their sllariee in UM wHh tltoee of caJllomla legillalon. That ordinance w<>llld have ,...,. into effect Dec. 10 and would have Im· mediately raised board mtmben salarlu to 118,000 wltlt a htl<• to 119,ll!O on Ju. 1. Legtelaton in the put have refuRd to Jn. crease the board's salary. Superv!Jora based that ordinance on the acc::eptance by voter. of PropotJUon 12. the c»mplaint states. But that proposition, the lawsuit points e1ut, will not become a lawful con- atitutional amendment unUJ the result& of the Nov. I election have been certUied by the aecretary of state. Laguna Woman~s Services Held Funeral ltl'Vices were conducted in We!tminster today for Mra. Ruth Emma Marie Von Helmolt, a IAguna Beach woman who died Tuesday at South Co8Jt COmmwlity Hospital. She was 79. Mrs. Von Helmolt. wbG had lived in Laguna Beach for 18 yean at 5."JO Mowr tlln Road, ls 5Ul'Vived by two 10ns, Erwin. and Wendell, and four daughters, Mrs. Irma Grede, Mrs. Rutlt Bllke, Mn. M.arieret Wagoner and Mn. Adelaide Noonan. DAILY PILOT H.., ..... H ......... ... ....... ... ,. .. ..... ,.., ~ ..... s. Cl••••• 0AAHCO• COAST P'Ut\.llHIMO C0M'ANY Aob•rt N. w,,, ''"Jdtlll •r.4 ,.,......,., J.,lt •. c.rl.., Viet ,,..,., .,.. GeMrtl ~ ThtMu K...O ldll'lr 711•"'" A. Murplii11• M.,.,..lf!S Ullw •lc.ht r4 P.1f11f """' °'""' ~ 1111• -et.It M .. : ia .. a11 ltrwt ,....,.,, ••w.: :tl'll Wiit ............. . L..-l•Ull '211 LI-I A._,. """"._,... hlel'li 1'11S a... .....-.i ltl C:~ ~ """' I J CtM1nt lMI f Formal draftlQi into trdb1ance and resolution·form ii aJl that nm&ins before t.Wo .UU measures repbUng mobile bome '*'ti comi up fOr aJmost certain amV!al by San Clemente City coun-cuW. · · The pane) agreed Wednesday that the two measures '";"" one a freeze oo the number of coach spaces; the other a stiff list or development rules -should be formally drafted and set for action at the &'st meettn1 th December. ., . If paued, the freae WW!d set at five perunt the limit of mobile borne ._ compar<d to permanent, · 11q1e-1amJJy dwtlUJ'Jp in San ctemente. JnclucllJiJ ~ recent approvll of a )ri- poeecl park for ShoreclUfs, the five per· ~Ill II llrud,y uoed up. 'lllO·freae, tmpoeed by (annal reeolu-tlo!'I. wooili! mean tltat 4,CIOO new con· .......idwellinp would have to be built "1-ltie ~ty before a new c0acb park could ~ policy sublequent parks to have at 1eut JOO ~. ,development llaadards will tab "'-form of a formal ordinance 1~ every cletip and atbellc ' I > J .. ~~ San Clemente ' Pledges Reactor ' . ~"acpation Plan ,, ~~ti~~ Clemiota-ln .. . to,-• m.... of ti. JirGpoled .. . plllliikll of San Ollnfre nudur riactAin - Will relfue ooplae of a city evacuauoa plan fw publlcalloa in lbe praa. The pri>mlee came from COuncilmen Wid!Jeiday alter they beard crtUa of the txp1111lon plane by two major utllitla. The, foa:claimed that a civil defenie plan covering cititens of the city in case ol. an "incident" at the reactor complex either did not exitt or is not being explained to the citizens. But City Manager Ken Carr said the plan, initially adopted in 1951 •s a aeneral civil defense procedure, ia being revised by the city staff th.iJ week and wolild be ready soon for dissernit)atlon. Mrs. June Fleming, whose two-page Jetter on the issue was set for council response Wednesday, explained that the r~ponsibility for civilian proleCUon had been shuffled from ·the utilities. to the Marine Corpo, then to the City of San Clemente. She and fellow members of GUARD, a local group opposing the half-bllllon- dollar expansion by SoulJiem califomia Edison and San Diego Gaa and Electric, have urged that definitive evacuation procedures be atu11ouneed at once. Included in the council action Wed- oesday was the ruJe that each year the plan would be . reviewed, and upgraded when necessary. Councilmen wou1d evaluate and act on any changes to the plan under the annual review. aspect of the parks enforceable by the ci· ty -eve n to the placemement of televiaion antennas and~mallboxes. That list of rules alrtady bas been 5Canned at Jeast twice by planning com- missioners and councilmen meetin& iD study sessions. Supervisors Approve Dana Restaurant Biil The proposed ordinance has awaited approval since last spring. But it already has been added to the ·lilt of development conditions-trr the recently approved Lincoln Savings and Loan P1rk project near Bllorecllffl Goll Co<irre. ' That controverslll deve]Wment likely Will become lbe lilt paril> to' be buUt Ill tbe city for the coli five )'Un or more U tbe ""2e II appmtd. Mission Viej~ Schedules Yule Activities Activities for Mlaeion Viejo's "Five Nlahll of Chrlllniu" have been ecbedul· ed continuing a community tradiUoa ' dating from 19e7. On five December eveninp programs Permission to build ~ $ 3 0 0 , 0 O 0 restaurant in Dana Point was granted by the Board of Supervisors Tuesday over the objectionl of local residents. n.stauran/ Adventuree Inc .• beaded by David Perrin of Long Beach, plans to begin construction BOOn on the two story, S,500-square· foot structure between tne streets of the Blue and Grten Lantens and Santa Clara Avenue. A use variance to allow the restaurant had been apprOved-.by the county Plan· ning Commission and wu appealed to the 1Upervisor11. • Asliltant Planning Director Stuart Balley aaid the property was within the area designated for tourisk:ommereiaJ use in the general plan. In 1pprovlng the variance, the com· missioners t a g I e d on conditions in· cludlng a llmltecl lip Identifying the 1tructure • Objecting were Dr. Roger Sanderson.of Dana Point who sa id not enough par king was provided and that the vsrianct misht lead to further commercial development in the bluff area overlooking the new Dana Poin~_Haibor. Joing the protest was Alex Lake of Dana Point who argued that' there was enough cOmmercial development in Dana Point now and plenty of land zoned for future development. Dr. Arthur C. Elliott of Santa Ana who owns an apartment complex near the restaurant site objected on parking and noise grounds. ~ Also objecting was J~eph Cole of Dana Point who owns property on Del Prado on which a restaurant is being built. Supervisor David Baker noted that there was no residential development near the site. In rebuttal to the argument.I against the project, Perrin said the site was the (Inly one acceptable for the restaurant with its excellent view of the harbor. :!;f£~~:;;:;i;:: Huge Penalty Fee Tacked day Dee. I on Ouiaanta Drive n.pr La . Pu •hopping plua witlt a ~ lflbtlng T El oerimol1l' and cliorll p-. ·:rbe Sine 0 · \~> • •-"'"". ' ~ Jiilisto 'Vte'" • """ ....,.._ lfOUP .. _ n .,_ Toro School Pact will join communlt)i cliolil In a _. ta~'of bollday mud:. The ~Y .••st1 ·tiox" for contribUUom of Cl:ftned .AA unprecedented penalty bas been al· sOods and glltl for needy lamlllU Will be· '!ached to tile San Joaquin Elementary aet OUl . ,J • School District's latest conttruction con- s.., ta ctaus1 comil lo fl!laalon Vtel~ In ltact. a • spectaeu ar arrival" stt• for 7 p.m. Dec. 13. Besieged for time e1tensions on con· SL Nlcli: wfll take up q11at\en. in San. struction projects (while new students la's Hut ..-·a tempe)tary renovation of the enter the district at the rate of 30 per Community Bulletin Board Building -month) the Board of Trustees voted to and dispense Christmas: joy and candy to children. Music and caroling follows lhe attach a $250-a-day penalty for all Ho-h~ho feativltiea. unauthorized extensions on their latest A semi-fonnal dimer dance ts slated contract, an addition to Gates Elemen· for Friday Dec. 11 with dinner from 6:30 tary School in El Toro. ' to 8:30 p.m. at tb1 Mission Viejo Inn and "We were curious to know if we'd have dancing in ~ Montanoao Recrtation Center at 8 p.m. Tickets may be reserved any bidders," said Superintendent Ralph by calling 837-4084. Gates. The fourth nilbt of actlvitiea is 'T p.m. The ordinary late penalty is SSO a day, Dec.' 16 at the community bulletin board a sum suggested by the county counsel's building where S111ta and helpers will office as "collectable." atain visit with children, ( Ta r d y Ustmakers may whisper in his ear on Dec. 19.and 22, as well). Thtre has been the usual amount of Topping the sea.son · festivities is a bidders, according to Gates and the tow bid was from the A and B Construction Co. of Costa Mesa which suggested $42,000 for a kltchen, teachers dining room, storage area and site development. During past meetings, the board bu lamented that school districts: have charged so little. while private industry can charge thousands of dollars a day for unauthorized del ays. The county Board of Supervisors recently attached a $1 ,000·a· da y late penalty for the construction of the Trabuco Bridge in San Juan Capistrano. Trustees said they hope that the new penal ty will encourage contract<lrs t~ speed up their projects, and avoid an(lther Aliso School mishap. That school opened one year later than schedu1ed. Worst Typhoon In History Hits Manila MANILA (UPI) -The most pclwerfut typhoon in Manila's recorded history lashed the city with 120 mile an hour winds for three hours today causing ex· tensive damage and widespread flooding: The governmen t declared a state of calamity. The government diaster agency put the death toll at niile as of 10 :30 p.m. (f0 ;30 a.m. EST). Another 17 persons were reported missing and 77 were injured'. However there were no reports yet from outlying areas where previous typhoon! have caused heavy loss of life. Government officials said 2 3 , 0 0 0 persons were homeless in Manila whS'° late season Typhoon Patsy roared tn, uprooting trees and power lines and destroying homes and churches. Manila was blacked out for hours tonight wbeh the government cut off electric power because of downed high voltage wires. The' government put the str:ength of the typoqn as 120 miles per hour and si!id the' worst one in recorded history was in 1882 when Manila was hit by winds of 118 miles an hour. This time the eye of the typhoon passed direcUy over Manila. · Some residents said the typhoon brought hailstones "as big as baseballs" which alSo d'id extensive damage. The presidential palace declared ,a state of calamity existed in Manila and.a spokesman safd It probably would ~ ex· tended to other areas when reports are in from the sur rounding provinces. Louise, G. Powers· Services Friday ! · Funeral services will be held Frida): for Louise G. Powers, an elderly UguM, Beach resident who died Tuesday. si. was 95 . Dr. Charles Dierenfield wlll officiate tlfe· 2 p.m. services for Mrs. Powers at st.. Andrew 's Presbyterian Church i D Newport Beach. She will be buried iJt Hartsdale, N.Y. • Mrs. Powers, who lived at 330 Cliff DI;:. Apt. 201, i! survived by a niece. Heltp Powers of Laguna Beach and a nephew, William Power! of Hawa ii. . ' ) , candlelight parade beginning 7 p.m. Dec . 23 at the top of La Paz Road hill at Pradera and moving east to Mar1uerite Parkway at La Pu road . Santa's presence again will be felt, carob will be sung and a drawing of gifts for children will be made. Winners of the <Jarrell Repea/J So/a /JeJ Promoliott f home deeorating contest will be given trophies. Judging takes place Dec. 20, 21 and 22. Laguna Chamber Group Gets Russia Photo Trip 7 stYW TO CHOOSE FtlOM Members of the Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce took a ruldtd tour of Russia Wednesday when world traveler Harry Lawrence give a slide preatntat.ion of his most recent jaunt _ Lawrence. a Laguri1 buslneslman, traveled to the ,Soyiet Union tut awnmer. He gave his preeentaUon at the chamber breakfast at the Hotel ·i.a,wia llonorln& the women 's clothiers of Lacuna Beach. Entering the country by way of Alaska, he traveled a""" Siberia to Moacow,. went to Leningrad and . returned to Siberia through southern Russia, going lllrough Tuhkent. He said that, whereas people were once NDt to the far riaches of Siberia as punlabment. lhe eovernment now pay1 tlte worker• a double uJary to HUI• lbere. He wu 1wed by the cleanlineu and natural boauty of tbe country, which II , .-imOll Ill< llmel larfet titan tlte U.S., he "Id. Bui the trip WU not Ill perfect, he noted. While ~inl at the Role! Rustia in Moscow, the world'• largeat with e,ooo .....,., be told the audlence ho# the elevaton did not alwaya work and the plumbing often clogged. He said there were few traffic pr~ blema in the Soviet Union because there were hardly any cars and that the 'J)Ollct were very strict in enforcin1 the l1ws. He cited one incident where a Russian visitor to Moscow was arrested for cllmblnl on-to 1 wall. "Not everyone knows the rules," Lawrence said, "but they are arrtlled anyway." Lawrence •aid that one thing that ttruck him about Rulli• was that everything l"ll 10 quiet. how there tte:m· ed to be "just a murmur" of sound. 'nle slides depicted Ute ma n y catHedrall ol the country, few of which are now in use, Lawrence noted. He ukt he wu aurprlaed to find that wlthln the w11l1 or· the Krtmlln 1n Moecow, there wen many old cburthes that bad been built In the time ol the Clara In the 11th century. He said the country h11 many Jons '""" plana, particul1rly fw the area ol Slbeill. He ahowecl a llide ol a llydre- electric plan! at a .dam and said that It · waa only the lint of si. auch inelallatlou plAMed •Iona that particular river. Tli••• ere .,·•ry comfort•~• 1ofe Nd• for Sltti"t end Sle•pl119. A wid1 1•lection of Febrie• end Colol'I to ehoot• from . - SOFA BED SALll .... 400.DO Now · 299 .00 H.J.GAl\REJT fURNfflJRE • ,lOFIS$lONAl INTll!OR D£Sl9NElS 221• MAlfOl ILVD. COSfA MESA, CALI,, .4 .. 0211 •4•·021• ( . • . . I I • I I • I ! ~ ' l JI "I " l • l· lf .. JO •• j, 11 " 0 .. ~ la .. " .. 1e· 12 18 1e Jn , .. '" • •· In !· I': •• • ie· ~ n n .. ~ r, ~ • ' ; .. • I i Th""4<1, ........ 1', 1910 DAILY PU.OT • Jr. Golf Champ Abbey In Meadowlark Finals Racing Entries LEGAL N001C!: LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL N001C!: U• 1Af ClllTU'ICATI 0111 •UllNlll IUPl•to• COUllT 011' THI ,ICTITIO• NAMI • l'tOTICI OP T•UITl l .. JALI ITATI 0111 CALllllOllllA TQ TMI fMo ""'°'"ltnw 008 urt!ty Ill I•'*"° TaUIT MO. UV COU .. TY' 0111 OIA~I Wdlrle 1 IM1-'1 I", O. '°'" •U. 0.. ~ 4 lt1t. •I •lewl •'clod! .... A"'JHI lrvl1111,o C•llforrllll tHIU. 1111(111 lfll lk · AM. THf ftll:ST AMIJllCAH llllNAH-NGTIC'I 0111 HIAJllNO ON l"ITITIOH lltlw. tlrM llllmt l't MfADOYt'LAKE ciAL COlll'OIATION, lot_,.1¥ Fifi! 11101 lllJIOtAT• 0111 WILL AMO lllOll l"ltOl"fltTlfl No. S Md tlle! itld II"" Amll'lcin Jlti. l-'tln« t. Tn,.I c- Lln.IJ TltTAM•NTAJIY It ~ et Wle IOllowlftt fffitft&, Mn't', 11 lrllllff, w Iii«._ lr\ltfM « LOS At.AMITOmNTJlll) E1!1" Ill U.llAH lllltANCES JOHNSON, ..,._ fl•nw1 111 11111 lllCI !Ill-ti t-1-tubl!llllltd lrv1!t1, " t111 ct111lfl D"'1 (JI Meadowlark Country Club junior golf chRmplon Bob Ab- bey advanced to the rlnals of the men'11 club championships with a l ·up victory over Don Nichols this week. Abbey will race Ray Brett In the 36-hole championship com· petition Sunday for the club ti· tie. Brett gained the finals with a l·up win in 20 holes over Jeff Evan s. Brett is the El Dorado (Long Beach) Country Club men's club champion. Santa A11a ln a member-guest jack and JOI tournament at Santa Ana Country Club. John and Billie * * "" Sigrist joined John and Betty Clark of Rivera to PoSl a in score to 1aln Ont place. A three-wJy tie resulted for second plact between teams c:.'Onyiosed of Bill and Wanda Baker with Mt. and Mrs. Guy Spence of Gillman H o t Springs; Dick and Doris McCoy wllh Mr. and Mrs. Neal Garey of Irvine; and Don Kenntdy and Virginia Coffing with Mr. and Mrs. Tom Bouse of Mesa Verde. All three teams had a 137 scort. Jn the men's club higb·Jow tournament, Gene Faison and John Knox advanced to the semifinals against Dr. Emle Ainsley and Jerry Martin. LeW Clem and Ev. Morris * * Whoddyo Wont? Whoddya Got? SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS Special R•t• 5 Lines -5 times -S bucks llULIS -AD MUST INCLUDI! 1-Wllit p~ ,...,, " trMa. I-Mist .,.. WMI 11 1 ...... '-YOUll "9lff 1111/lr Hllreu. "-S ·-• .n.rtif4 ~OTHING ,Oil SALi -TllADIS ONLTI To Place Your Trader's P•r•diM Ad PHONE 642·5671 Trade $3,(lr(I ~uily, :1 hr. 2 ha Lake Ila vasu h.:ime for !'roperty or '! CALI.. Eves, 673-4712 Trade llke-new 17' Coldspol lop-freezer refrigerator for !imilar modi!! wilh left hand door. 8.184904 Have ocean fro n I acre, c::lcar, heart (If &llmon tiah· in~ ctry. Want A·!rame cab- in, Lake Arro.,..•bNtd. P)'ra· mid E xchangors 675-6000. ~ IT. Ce.bin Crui5"r; tip top cond.; tv.·in screw; load. f'CI \\ith t'Xfras. FOR house, units or T.0.'s. O\VNER 675-6259 8.-3 Bedroom, 2 bath units. 7 yrs old. Costa i\.1e&a • $125,00'.> value. Want land, home or up tn 4 units local- ly. Quintard R.ealty-642-2991. Have: I.in TD's (4) $6,000, l6} $20,(XXJ, t6' $25,000, Ril or pan lor Ne1vport, O. Cnty prop. boat tSJO.-Sfm.11 or ??, 5.57-9700 or 4994206, Laguna NlgUel Goll Course 101. Secluded canyQn vu of 6 fairways, lak(' &: clbhse. Tnt for comm, TD's, mllplx ln Hb!: area. Owner 6'1.>1021 Luscomb airplane. 2 seater, full y equ ip'd .. 400 hrs., val . $3500. Tl"Bde for late model "''· O\VNER 67!").2866 HIGH DESERT for Health, \VANT Calif.Nev, 2-3 M elev HAVE Cl cor. 90xll7 2 bldgs ~.CXXI . eq . $42 . inc. $445 mo. O\VNER. cri.t 6'1f3..8558 * * *r 34 Ft, Cabin Cru~r.: tip top cond.; twin scn-w; loaded -..i v.'i th extras, FOR house, unils or T.D.'s. O\VNER GT.'l-6259 170 ac-hwy 79 nr Seoul Camp-Wamer Hot Sprinp, free &: clr. all/part-S6Th ac val. For CLEAR prop, boat or ?!. 557-9700 or 499-<006. 1970 ~1olor Home 27', Load- ed ~ Like new! Trade !or ReaJ Estate, t"tc. Call 64,'>.200,; or Write Box 4196, Pe.Im Spdngs, Cal. 92262. Have vacant & improved All income \VANT: Rl lot ·or home, OOastai area, Nt'w. port Beach thMl Dana Point, 673-6809, W' HOUSEBOAT. Xlnt , Llvt!' aboard, slip avail. Will take car smaller boat in trade for equity. * 548-2-434 * TRADE new 8 track earl. ridge home :stereo tape player, ($1l0, val1.1e w/ spcakersl lor guns, cam· ~ras, coins t'lC. 536-30Z1 CAPISTRANO C ZONED, 4+ acres, Free & Clear, $130,COO. TRADE for income 01 ? REALTOR '48-7711 REC • South Lak" TahCMO, ;:;: aC., all imprvmts incl sev.>er, ~ ~ •• 7% loan. Trd. for local RE or '! Jack Hammond, Bkr 540-1151. Pride of o\\7lership 4-plex in Tustin. Corner k>t, pool & rec. nn. Exchangt' for land, units, T.D. 's or ? MOOT!! Realty 673-3101 * * * Duck Feet Fins-$8.95 pr. Snor1des-79c to $3.25 Masks-95c to $7.95 Kickboards-$4.50 Skim Boanls-$4.95 to $12.95 Skate Boanls-$5.95 & $7.95 Table Tennis Sets-$4.95 to $13.00 Table Tennis Padd1es-95c to $7.95 Paddle Tennis Paddles-$2.50 & $3.95 Handball Gloves-$3.95-$4.50-$5.95-$6.50 Handballs--Outdoor 95c-lndoor $1.10 Volleyballs Rubber-$3.95 to $11.95 Volleyballs·Leatller $10.95 to $17.95 Basketballs-$4.95-$5.95-$7.95-$9.95-$12.95 Footlialls-$5.95-$6.95-$7 .95-$9.95-$14.95 OPEN 9 to 6 have also 1dv1nced to the "mis bot their Of'ponents haven't been determli:led. The women's club ls con· ducting Its aMual turkey shoot which began last week and runs through Friday. Colla Meaa Lyle Graham won 1 men'3 club $Weepstakes low tross ti· tie al Co.5!1 ~1esa .Coif and Coonlry Club over t b e weekend. Fred Gammon had a 67 to 11ain low nel honors with Hamid Bey second at 71 and Norm Popkin third at n. A turkey shoot will be stag· ed this weekend with a $1 en- try fee. El Niguel John McNamara and Roger Conant captured a partners best ball tourname,. at El Niguel Country aub i n I..aguna Niguel recently with a low net score of 63. Jn a mixed ball event, Mr. and Mrs. Tim ~lackey were the winners with a net 65. Mesdames Kenneth Teel, Fred Willard, Harry Caves and Philip Keep captured a ladies day tournament at El Niguel with 137 points. The 8 flight title was won by Mmes. Robert \\l'ilbur, Charles Crov.'. Lewis Hofmann and John Franci! With 141 po in ls, 19th Bole Stormy Van Brunt •f Irvine rormerly associated; w i t h Green River and Rartcho San Joaquin Country CI u b s recently scored a hole-Jn-one at Willowick Golf Course in Santa Ana . Van Brunt used a three· wood on the 213-yard eighth hole to score the aCf: after returning from a trip to Puerto Rico. He was playing with Nick Adams of Corona de! Mar. Bill Calvert ol Irvine and~Angelo Chatterton of Tustin. • l'Oa f'•IDAY • M.,l,t1 ~itd. ~ ,,.. 01 follo-M! T1Y1I "~ " t.I! 111.0'1' W. $MITH, Ct.••• .... -... ,. Ill -'os.; 1 .. ~ NOTICE LS HfltlE9'1' GIV!N 11\tol All• 0.tw Nowm'*" JG, 1tl0. MAJITIN .... lflOlt.t. tnlll ltOIE MAl'I' ~2af/JLY' DOU LI ON 1$ & 0 \., S~ 1111 llled ... r1l11 I "'"'°" lot IG-11 1>11,,,...l l!IOELL. l l'lll flCOPdM JlllW tt, lfU In 5' lbCTA C)tt 'TN • fTH lllACll.. l'robl" rA Wiii Ind tor IHIUll'ICAI rA Ltt-AlMrt W. "ncMl'll!I, P, O. l ox .. 12,. aook 1S&f, ..... JJ Ill otlklll llKW* .. __ '*'' T•Ttll'llllt1ry '' 11'.tLt~. At«~ lrvlne, C1tllorl'lla ttW Or1M1 C....n!Y. Ctlli.t1111 ltld 11111n111fll to llllJllT IACls. -llO ~•rd1. J.y_~[" Ill wllldl II ITllM fw fl.lrlhlf' Nrtlcu11ra. LLMITIEO l"All:TNEltt ltlll Urflln NOfk• .. 0..0111t and El.c- oldf. 11'14 1111. ,,;llltnl1111. F~ ... P»D. ""' 11111 !two llrn. and II.Cl OI llffrlM T ..... llCI Joflfl ••ttr, '2(1] W•ntfOOll !Ion .. Mii ""'....,...., l'tciOI' .... J~l'f "· Clllml"111 llllll'M llliOll. lllt ....... '--' bMn Ml fvr O•tmtltr I. lo.td, L•UWOOll, C.Uton\11 tOlll UIS• 1970 In 10D11 N1 l'I" ft rit Oftlclll COVrlt• W1r O.lc f$tr11n1) 110 1'70, 11 t ;)O 1.m., In 11'11 C'0.1<1,0Cl"I'! rA ~I L• Carl IPtlll, l lO T111!111, llKordl o1 Or.nH COVl'll'r. wl11 u""' •ncl LI Taotl1 ICll'OllUll 117 °""'"""' tlo. l ol 11141 court, 11 JOG N9WPOrl lffdl, C1ll!ornl1 12661 1n•) ~rtlHnl to .. hi OtH rit Tr11tl NII 11 O\lftt -(Kinlil 11 Cl'llc C•nl..-Orlv1 Wnt, In fflt CllY rA ~101 Frt<!etlell Joh" lllf1rrt•". .OZ "~llllC •uctlon lot '"'"'' 11wtv1 -r of ~= L~:"?.~1(e~1 Jll .. nt1 Ant. C11J1orni.. tlllMlne1i. Av1,, Fount•ln \11111'!', tf1t u..11111S11t..11f AIMrlu, 11 ltlt1111ln J1tio3 81111\EJt 15'""1 1f1 Ditta N1v...,btr 13. 1'1'11 , C1lllornl1 '1711 cn•I t'2 .. HJ1 Joan P. We1l 111lr1na to 1111 Finl Amtrlc•n Tiii• •••lombt ' !1") 117 w. I!'. St JOHN. WllU111'111 '°' Morfll ... C111ron, Coront lllturllll;t ComPlflr bu!ldlnt Ml:lltd tt ~-,_ \'~""I In Coun1r c1wk d-4 /Mr, c111rornl• f'U45 171•1 '7M7W1 "'' _11,..,,1 corllll' If f llftl .,.. M•ln ll1M V1Jor P-) COOICl•'I', ICHUMACltlll, COLIMAN, A11111tlll LH Jol1PMn1on, .,XI 01bl1 SlrMll In ll'lt city o1 111111 Ant. ielo (B1nl<d I MIN YAllO & HOWARO Drlvt. El\Cl111, C11llor11l1 fl31' Ulll c 111tor11t1 i ll fllll rlohl !)tit •114 Jn"'"' llCONO aAC:I U0 ~lrcl• )y r IU Ttw• & C.u11try R.... :M2411J C1ll-II. $tWtHt, n7f.C \111 tOflVl'l'ld t. Ind -h~ ul'ldfr C... rA (lldl 1114 110. t l1),.;ffio, Pvrio ~: OrM11, C1U1otrlllo ,,... P11t111, LUUM Hlll1, C11Hornlt '1.sJ TtuJI 111 1111 .,_,,... 1l111tt.d In tflt • .. Ct11m11111 PVrM 11600. T....,._, .MJ..Jlll f71•) AW72t1 Morl1 J. Urfbl, 172'1 CwnlY 1111 11111 HicrlbH 11: LEGAL NOTICE J1t 01.,.. !Slltdl ljl °'""'"''' "" h!lllNll' Norwood P11c., !u1ll11, C1ll10rnl1 '2MO Loi 11 et TrlCI No. )nl, Ln t11t Clt'Y ofJ--------------C1ll40 ·~ II•• tH11'1 1 l"utlll11\ed Orl llt'I (Ollt 01lly Pltol {714) 0411•1 Vlft(ttlt L. H-ton. C:otll -· 11 lllown on ..... , rec.or• 1'4nU • O.r11bll P-~ 117 N&Wmblr II, 1t, 'JS. 1'19 )IU.1' :nn ~llnd, V•ntur1. c111~1 tJOO.I eel lfl book ,., "'" "' •rid ., M•d•.,. ,.,.. HIOll) 117 UUI ..O.UI01 Rld\11'11 I! Rlut u:m MISC.II -""-' rf(Ol'dl " Of•"" Cll:TlllllCATI! GI' SUJIN•N· '•'-• ~llU Chu Boll c mltl'll no LEGAL NIYrlCE Notr• 0 .,..,. 51,...1 • "'"~""* c: ty • c u:trnJ •• lll1CT1T1ou1 t1AM1 • • • l'~~.,!1~1111tt~~~ IM _ C1llfor11l1 mu f71~) .;4-J.ftt ' s.°i'dn ~It !m 11t ~ wlTllOut COVOlllM TM undff'tltf'*I does nrllty M 111 al• Tiny T11Jll CAO.Ir) IU NOTIC• TO CllOITOlll STATE 0111 CALIFOllNlA, or w1fF1,.ty, tX•r41Nd Ill' lrn ... 1111, •• 10 llh.octl11 '£.I buJll'ltU •I Q Cl ,.,.. .. ,,.,. Mtft: II Now CC1rdu:1l HI SUllllltlOR COUJIT ~ Tltl ORANGE C:OUNTY: !hi Hitt -•lift or t~Drinus to " ........ ,, (lllforn!i , \lf'llNI' "'t _.. Ki'll Ooublt (CoUl,.11 !IS STATE Of' CALllllO•NIA lllOll °" November 10. lt19, t111 .... ""' 1 itllll'r if.. rm11lnlnl •rln<IHI wm d\11! Ylllout. lirm 111"" of A .. I OllAIPEJttl( THllO l:Ac.-. -400 .,.,a. :t-YMf• THI COIJNT'I' 0111 OU.NOi Noll,.,. .~llllllC In.., •::::-'f w .. ~·"'· °"' tflt""' llC\l .. d b\' itld °""'" TNll ~1ow1"::: ::::.,,, flt:.::. =~N'ri·:: o1<11. At....,.11e1i.. PvrH anoo: """ ""'"" HtlOlll •PPll• • 1'1011 lo wit: S7,ft1.B w]I~ 1111tr"t llllr-lfll'l'I •It< "',~ 111 ,.1._.. Clllr"*lrl !$mJlh) llt Erl1!9 tit 011"' Mtrlt ii.-. llM k-le mt lo lie lt>t NrlOl'I ~ DKffl'lbtf' ,. IN& 11 .,..,., ...... Ill 111d l'IOtl t -11 . r "-~. 81fttrt'a Doll 1111 l 114 k..wn 11 Oll~t M. JI_.,, t lso i.MW,. •• 111"" 11 wMcrL~ to 1111 wlllll11 111-toftllltr w1111 ttts, dlt '"' •Ill ,.,..,.... l R°':'1 ~~,.,... llll*I G ~ Pro.Dtnlu• aw1trcol!lMI lfl 0. M. ·~· 1l10 ·-•1 Ml'1. Lt0111'11 11,,,_I tflCI 1ckriowJW..ed "" l llK\llld "' "" Tt\lllH ''"' JUCll otl'llr wm• IS 0:1.., H:.v 11 tt,. ' ,. I No Bull• llOUI II (Aa ... ,, ll! ·-· lhD ·-•• Mtrle IC. ll:OM'I' lllCI !ht Mme. IMY ........ """' td'l•l'ICllll b'I' "" -· Jlabl'rt i. llellr-~ Who <B•nkll , •• M11i. 1:-. O.C.1Md. Chnlfl' F1rr1!1 Sllllbiln', ll •"" PlolcM:t ol llld MM, wllll llll•r•I, u I Ill lf&m . '.· 'IL-Bid! IMtlwclll l t NOTICE IS HEii.EB'/' GIVEN Ill 1111 Notary i-Vbllc • C.1!1«nl1 irovlffa In H id Dftd flf Trvit, ltl• Cll I•. Or-• Cli'Uflt'J . 1 Co.mlc !Wi iii) lp c,ldlton ol 1111 1bov1 fllll'lllill ~tdltll Ptll'IC-IHI Ofllc1 In 0.ttcl: Novlf'llblr ,, Jt'l'O. On ~ 1!, lt,., lleftll ~:a l'OUITH ••Cl. 110 'llfdl. )-vHr• llltl 111H•IKlrll111'1! .... ci.1m1101lnll IM Orll'llt County THE l'llln AMElltCAN =.-:::.ur~i;.·n:~ ~kl'.:.:~ 01(11 l<ICI u~. Cl1imll'ljl, lllUfH "'°°· 111a otQtd111t ... l'ICIUI""' lo Hit lt'ltnl. M'I tommlulflll f)ctllf,.. FINANCIAL COR~Oll:ATION. II-...... to ... "" ...,.;..... ....... Clllmll>j1 Ill° f UUlO wllll 1111 11«11itrv voucl'leri, In 1111 olll<f Oclobtr l. lfll lll"f'llJ11' l'lltST AMElllCAN flt-1 tubtc:rlbld • 111t wllhlfl .... ~r~~ • .:.f'l'w~._1 lll ol ltW Clerk ol tflt 1bova 1n1mtc1 -.rt, or lllu&lbhed O"*nll COii! 01!11' 111110! TITLE INSURANCE .. TRU'T strvmiJ l fll ~ "" llleCllt• B'~ll AOC-I jLlollt ml HI to ''lle!!I fllt'fl'I, Wllll !ht nt«nl,.,. MO¥embtr It, 26 1114 Dtctmblr ). 10. COMll'AN'I' :Tiit llmt W11c~ ~ Tr1v1 Cll1nk1) Ut llllkll.,1, to lht unoer11lt...cf 11 thl otfl<.1 1'10 21"-1'11 9r 9ttt. Httltnbtck !CIFFICl..it. SEAL) W1r Oii l'l'lertr CK1nl•I Hf ol lltr Atlol'111y1 l'tltt TOl'111Y 111d Jlobt" Aulat1nt Sec:r•ltry MAll:V a1TH MO•TOl'f Henry Tl!t 9111 fAlll"°"J jl• L. Humphr1Y1 !SOI Ac11m1, Su\111 Numlllr lllulll!1hld Or1nt1 C111at Dlllv lllUot, Noi.rv l"ullllc.Ct lllorlll• Bt1rl"" H1rrv fAdllrl If 20', C111I• Me11. C1!110tnl1 mu. wflldl 11 LEGAL N011CE NO'ltmlll• It. lt, M. It'll *l.:1'11 Pr!nd•I OtnA lfl ... ,.TH JIACI -400 'll r<ll ~·Ytlr· Ill• PIK• ol 001!nt11rA1111 unc!trtl11\td In o ....... Cevtl!Y olcls ind up. Allow1111;11. Pllrtl 11400. 111 m1ttora 1>er11lnlne 11111\t "lilt tit 1t!a LEGAL NOTICE My COft'lml•lon E1i.lrt• • • '• 11~1 Ch1rlll CAd1lrl 'U clettOtftl, within four m111111tt 11ter lllfl ClllTlllllCATI ~ •UltNlSI Ap•ll ,, lt71 , Bob I B1r Eflll IC1,clouo) 11 l!rll Pvbllc1tton of lhl1 nollo:t. l'IC:TITIOUI NA.Ml l"ub1hi.ed Orlfttl Cotrt Dilly "l'lt.t Llr 81bol !A~1d5) 11 Dllld NOY•l"bt• U, lt10 1'M 11f1111ultntd doff Ctf'lllY hf. It COii-Na'ltm'*" It. If H t1M1 Dtctn\*ltr,.\ a~'s;.::, 1bri:~11h,.1 lH L•'"'" ,•,1111•,·, ••• ,,, • duel!"' I bu1lfl1W ,, "· 0. Box '6U. ,..,,,. 1f19 • . 211~ Stlety Deoos I Iii.on! IU ~tell r X c ''" lrvlfll, C1tllornl• tut.I, 111141• IM II~· ClllTlllllCATI 0111 IUllNISI Moo11h Girl• •nlif JU Tiit 1t>ovt 111mtd dtetdtl'!I ttllcut firm l\lmt ot MEADOWLAICE llllCTITIOL!I NAMI LEG N-CE ,· , ,· Ltftle Conttsit IP111• 1U '°"'., T-r .... llllitn L. M_,,..,.,., Pll.OPERTU!:I No, '1fld tt11I ••Id tlrm 1$ The vncl1r.ltntd dG Ctrlll'I lllty 1rt AL v•• · '" Senor Plfllll 1Cr0$!)l' 117 '* Aflft\1, °'""'"' iwl" N"""" 204 comomtd of,,,. lolk>wl"' ..,IClll. wllolt concl111:ll"' 1 but!,... .. It 1414 A New..,,. ,. SIXTH •AC! -350 y~rdf;. 1•YN " Tc~ .... n ..... , w.c:~ft/· t111Jf fll"" 111 NII I nd plKt OI rMldtl'ICt 11 •• lllvd .. (Mii Mnt. C1lltornl1, under lllt ,..,.,. Id tld c 1 ilna •• -fellows: nct1tlou1 nrm nm11 ol EASTLANO C•llTl,ICAT• 0, 1Ullllfl'f. ~•, i1aimtr1g~Ul>kt silc:.' no. 11,,,. $Z'OP. Atllf'Ml'I ftr l•tcvlr1• Dlltcf NovHnbtr 10, lf10 ELEC:TJ11C CO ..... 1'1111 11114 llrm Is llltCTITtoUI .. AMI • P .. ier B ISmhlll llt Pllblllhlcl Dr1,,.. COi'! 0.llY l'llol, (Gi,,..11 ll'ir1nllf"I comooMd o1 1111 flllloWlllt ""°"'' wl!Ot• Tiit llfldlralt,.... ..... urtlt'Y 111 ... t.Jo J1tf1tt er111r ) \It Nav1mbtr 19. H Incl December ]. IO, Albert W. AflClll'Mn, P.O. llo.. "11. nlf'llll 111 f\111 1111 llllCI of .. 11(1111(1 l fl dUC!lnt 1 tllnlMU •I SOI E, K1MM& 11:<fi.' lteP!d Mlrlt !Collini) llj lt10 21'1·10-1 .... 1111. Ci lllOO'lll 11"' •• folloWI: Drt nte. C1llfotnl1, uncltt' tlHI fl('('lt~ r!rt. ~~s:m\H~~r111> H1 LIMITED l"ARTNEllS Albtl1 J. GI~ .,.., Mn. 8f'tly !Inn 1111M of T. J .'5 JANITOllAt. Dlit llr•r.ctv Ci •Gou\ 1\t LEGAL NOTICE ltotiert M11rp11y, M2 MIUnt HUia IA!bll1 J.l GI.,_. 5001 an.<t C:reKll\t, sE•VICE 1flCI "'91 $11tl flrtn 11 ot.....,... PllQ•lm ll1r1 fLlphlm 11'1 lll!1ce, El C1lon, C1tUOl'ftl1 t20H oi.1 N--1 l1ld'I, C1lll. "' 11'11 1'{1ow1nt Olrlllltl. Miott Mfl'll Ill LI Y:"'kl ll1r L~ (f.fni1J 11' NOTICE TO Clll!DITOllS "2·'907; Horboirt E. lrr111, UOI LI Cl1ttd Nowmllt, 4. 1919, full lrld llll CI 9f r1Sldlnc:I .. ,1 '°"]-: ~!!lk.,J'ci;;~'tt!'f' r lH SUllllJllOI COUll:f 0111 TKlf Ci""' Drl'lt, llrt•• C1llfomL1 '1t11 Mn. Albert J, Glbsotl Tf'lomll J. HYflllm•n, Mil ~ IUttllt. STATE 0111 <ALllllOllNIA FOi: 12111 6'1·55'•; w. J. w1i.v. J!4! Soleclld Mr, A, J. Glbltn ll·D. Clt1111e. C1!1fot'11t1. .. ",· Sli\lliltTH RACE -110 ., •• ch. ,. TKtE COUNTY 0111 OllAllOI Min. Jld .. Ltfl DllVll. Ct1110Nl11 ft\119 Sl•I• el C1lltol'nt1. Ol'•llll• C-ty; Olt.d Odobl~ •• 1'1'0. VNr.Oldl •rid "'" ci.1m1ne • ~ ••••• • .... ,,,........ TOOGEOSON. 171•1 17'·1 ... : l"llrlll1 '· Gold, N1lllln °" November " 1f10, btfort ml. • Tllom11 J. ""'fldmtfl .... ~ S21t10 Cl1ltrll11C1 price ll:IDO, H1l1 OrlYt, Sllnlonl, Conn.; L1wrtnet Mo11,.,. P~k 111 1nd for &lld Stilt. st1t1 ol' C1llf0ml1, Orantt Coun,.,1 • ,i-sliif1 Gu!"""'' (P1lllal 11S ~t1Md, A. l'tc;llil, 51'1 Vldllt Orl"M". Sin OlftG. HfWtlllly l•Plll'M Alllt11 J, Gll!IOn .,,. Ofl OC1obtr 29, 1'10, MtOl'9 .... •.<f Our Dlcl1lon IH1r1l 111 NOTICE IS HEREllV CJVEN to -C1llf001!1 t'tlot (11•) 27l"'4J1; Fiord E. Mrt. lell'f 1Allltr1 J,J Glbt.on kl'IOWll fo Nol.., l'ilbllc 111 il'ld ffW' $114•;.a Donl1 fll Good ((rmby) 120 UM!Uoo al Ille lbovt tllmtcl dtcecl'"I Dlwhlfll, IOSM W. lllkt ll lYd., W. LO. 1M to bl 1t!t Pl,_, wl'lcl1 lllll'fllS lrt Pllf'IOlllllY •-rt4 Tl'lfolftll J. M)I' ~lr.aLlo~d1i~'~I :~ ~! ~-~.':.'!"" h1vl1111',.,.ltl"'!_11,1lf'lll ll'lt Allt'llH, Clllfornll '°°"' !1tJJ ,,.._.,, tulllcrlbtd to 11\t wllflln INl'r\Hlllllt •nd kMWn to IM 11:1 M 11\t •ttton Ptclft 111, Htralrool ""' ..........,,, 1r1 rMll ·~ 111 """"· J. Ot'lof!lnt M.O., !5'0 N. Sl1rr1 Vl1l1 .a.-11c1.,.. 11'1•¥ 1xecultd 1!'11 lllft'le. """" 11 1\llllcrtbld ,. 11'11 wl~f' lfl· Hip HU!!oO., CC••do••I H~ wllfl lfll nKt, .. ,.,. V011dltr1. 111 tlll olflct 0r1,,., LI Ktobr•, C:1fllornl1 tOiJI (2UJ (SEAL) 1tr.....,tl'!t •114 tdlftowl.....,. "' ..._,..,. G1L1 Go Min CWlllOll! 111 Ill the cletk ol 1111 •bow• tnlllltd ctl.lrt, or ffl.6'U Mt•Y lltlfl Morloill lllt ...... ,,., • I oo IO •r-111 11'1111'1, wllll IN l'letlllll,., STATE 0111 CALIFOllNIA, Nof1.., lllllbllc . Ctlllor11\1 !SEAL) ' • ' _.. --l'Olldler.. lo Ille uilder1t.M111 111111 of!Lct Oii.ANGE COUNTY: l'rlnclHI OU1c• I,. ..... r'I' l lfll MOf1ol'I l'IOKTH •ACE -350 v1rM. 3·~---of 1111 AllorMJI. Calwn. Oller I nd 0.. Navtmbtr 10. lt10, before mt. I o ....... c_,., MOTi ,.,. l'ullllc • CIUfltmlt ~~:11 ·~.u~ ... ~:r:::~'! l lJO'lllll'l(f'l, Mllllril. BY! Robtrt M. 011..-..... W"I NOii.., P11blk r~ lflCI for ••Id Sll lt, My Comm!ulOtl !x1!rt1 l"rl11d ... I Offlc• In ~. ;;. Moo!lll Ol'"mond IWl llOll) 11, Tt11lh Str"t, Slnl1 A111, C:1!llar,.lt '2701, ""'IOllll11' 111H1red A1btrl W, Andtrton AMI f, 1t71 Or1nt• C111nty Kart11 llock1t (H1rtl 11l wlllch It ft.a 1111<• ol bw1lne11 cf 1111 known t1 mt fO Ile II•• ""°" w!\olll 1'11lllllMd °''"" Co111 D1llY Pllol, M1 tomml11I011 !»Im Gr1ncl ~di: ($tr1u11) 117 ufllllflll•ntd Ill 111 """'"' "'l1!nl .... to 111mt 15 1uD1crl1M<1 lo tM wllllln In-NoYHnbtr J. 1,, It. 2,, 1t70 20&t-10 Aor11 t, 1'71 ltO'lal Tippet OConh l 114 Ill.-t1t1l• of 11k:I dtc-nl, wllhl" lour 1lrum•nl i ncl Kkn-lldtlld ht •MK'1llll l'ut>llll'led Or1n91 COl•I O.llr Cuol<I In Red fDrtYtr) 11• month1 •htr lh• tlr11 Publlc•tlon ot 11111 !tie 111T11. LEGAL N-CE Oc!olltr 2t ind Novtmbw f, MY Kenlce (Ptn1«I llt !Wiik ·-· ' ' .. •1 u .. Dalldr Bir 0 1111w11son1 11• I . "'IC I I 1tl0 Cht!'flf ltl!Yll l tdoJll 117 011111 Ko..1mblr '· 1t111 (h~~r F1rrell S1!11111J,..,, II lll·'IH.P Slle'1 it.. Gott \Sm!ttH 111 Lllll1n M. Tor•trton No11ry lllubllc · C1llfarnl1 ClllTllllCATI 0111 SUllltllS l_.EGAL NO'rJ_ ~~°'==-···~"·'-'"' Flvt Bir F!nt t tLllll\lml tit E•tculrh~ ol 1111 WUI IJl Ptll'l(IDll Oflltt In lll lCTITIOUI KAM• :: 1111 1t>ove ntmtd lkaldenl OrlMI (au11ty T~I UNl•ralgntd llOn (fl'ttly M 1, cen-NOTIC• TO CJllOITOll ~·" •, 01:.•N:i: ~:."c•olm~~ •. ~:rd,,! ... ~· c ...... , 0.1 .... ,... MIM.nl. Ml' CommlHlon E~•lr"' ducll11• • MlntH II 512 l'torlh N-1'!. 1UllllJltO• COURT 0111 Tit• .• C!lll I .._ ,,. .........,, I YI I-.,, M. o.t.r, Odablr S, 1'11 N1WPOrl IStlCh Ci llfOl'llll Undlr !!It ITATI 0, CALllllottlltAllOllll. , "'ftO Pl'ltl Ml!I !Pi ttltl *6 W"I Ttnt~ Strwt. Putllhhed Or111111 Cotti D11ty l"llol, tlc:llllCUI lorm '1llmt 111'1 WHITE GLO THI CGU:.!"'...::n ........ ~ ... :~ S1111artown l!tr1M.111) I~ llnll A1ll, Cil ......... nrtt NoYembtl° lt. M IM D«emDlr J, IO, MAINTENANCE IUl"lllt.'I' CO 1nd 11111 <111te of OONALD DEWl:'I' I EYMOUlt. ffl1illond (W1rclJ T-4: OHi M,_1447 lt10 !llJ·l'O &1ld llrm 11 c;om-td of 1~ foll-ln1 t411! CIOwn IPernerl 1, A""'lll'l'I fW lw1evlrill '' "' ,. Dtce1iec1. T0p llruc:t (WllMnl 1t l'11blltlllcf Orlnot Cot ll Dill~ l'llot, Hrton, whlllo fllll't In Ill I P ... tt NOTICE IS HEIEllY' GIVl!tl 1" ~ MK A llob fKtnhl lli Novtmlltr It 2• l lld Dtc.mti.f' l 10. ol r11lffnc:1 II I• flllklwt: tttdllou of Ille 1bovt lllmtd ~ S1m'1 Night Ovl <ll1n~I) 117 1'10 ' 21.,, JG LEGAL NO'l'lCE t"tl\11p J, Mty1r, ,,, l uckl\t11 Id., thll 111 H t-h1Ylfll tlolm1 "WISC• 110~11 ,Aloi fWt LISJ Un • tosl• Mlsl. C1Ulornl1 Jlld dececltftl •r• tMUl•N ,. !Ht ..... Mr. Mon• tD..,..rl 128 LEGAL NOTICE 0.1111 Holl. 4, lt10 wllh tM l'IK"llr'I' 'IOUd'ltrs, In rM OfM l"JtMI Phi!!• J. M1Yer ol 1111cllrlr.ti!!It 111o\111nl1tled mtiil1~lllf tlOTICI TO CllOITOllS Cl!a TlllllCAT• 0111 C:Oll"OIATION lllOll S!llt vi C1llfot,.l1, Or111 .. Count\!: to Drt1t11f lhtm, wllfl 1111 MC"WN' . : ·:. ILH'E•IOll COURT Of' THI TIUNSACTIOtill 0111 •USINISS UNOll On N11¥1mbllf' 4. 1t10, btfOA 11'11, I 'lllldler1, Ill rM l/fldtftlt ned 11 41t Eet STATI! 0111 CALllllOllNtA l'OJI -llllCTITIOUI NAMI No!1ry lllubllc lft 1114 for 111lt $11re, 11th $tr1tl, CllSll MUI, C1lllorllld' ,,.77, THI COUNTY Olll OllANOI THE UNOEJISIGHIEO COllllOtlt:ATION .......-11y ...... ..s lllhlll• J. Mtt1r Wllldl II ..... •llCI of llvlLMH " "" "'· ""rot clots fltf'lb\' <lnltr 1'1111 It 11 urldw<ll,.. • t-11 m1 to bl 1111 Pllf'IOtl WllOM undtrti.ne.i In 111 mtlfet1 1111M1fnfll9 lo Elltli of llAYMOND J SCHIJIM, bll1IM1J loc:lltd . II 1!01 E111 Ulll, fll lTll b •uflterlbtd It 1111 within Ill-1111 ISlllt it1 itld tsclcltfll, wllr.lfi ....,, Los Alamitos Results ~std · NtwPDrt lltKfl, C1lllornl1 uncllr 1111 If<. """"'"' 1nc1 Ktlnewltdlld II• ueaned "''"'"'' tft.,. 1f11 11r11 1111blk1tl.n • l\'tlf. Wtclnew.t U It,. NOTICE tS HEllEll'I' G E llllou1 firm llllM ol WESTCt.tFll' COM· 1111 um1. ntllct • • c::;, N-;~tl ' u.;r~r~ iii~I J.lO crtdltar11 Gf "-alllrff ,...:.:., Nd:td:; V"-LESCINT HOll'tTAL lfllll ltm Mid tOl'FtCtAL SEAL) o11t., Oe!obtr 21. lt11 •.:· AtlO R.,. _ C•tch Dttl. Eoress 11111 1n Oll'ltnl ,..,1111 clllmi 191.,_1 1111 nnn 11 comoo1ec1 rA 1111 loUowl111 ~ .v..rr ••Ill Morton a eult M. $t'lfl'llllr f'IJIST JIACI. -Yl r'lh. 1-Wtfl'.Oi<k. M111, l"1rllcl011tr lhrN C1n1. Trlll llld dtc-1 .... r111ulrtd lo Fllt lt>tm P011111on. WflOle ,,lncl••I lllllCI ... Not1rv P11bllt.C:•laornllo ecl111llllrtr1trl• 1r1•\::rFcl~\.m!':,Jj Tiii t.1lch. wllll 1111> MCtllM"I' .......v>trs In lhl Gf!IC~ bll1Jne11 II II lotfowl: 1"rl11CINI Dfllc• In o1 1111 Elllte of 11• •bovt , .•·,, G: Mi..:'1M1\,..:i.ICl!ll H.to u:: ,;:~ Scr1tchtcl -Tit& O.IMIY, Aft If Me, ol IM I k ol tflt bo'lt ~!ltd N.l".H.S .. Inc,, lt'01 l lrd'! SI .. N_.111'1 Dr111111 Counl1 Ntml'd dlc:llMnl Jf'lf'' Que•I Sl•P•I 6.to Tiie Blci Min, Crun •1r11, le c fl' I t!I court. flt 9e1dl, C1ll+omi.. M~ Commlnllll E•11!re1 PAUL A HANNA. ::.,. Tlmt lMJ)O --Prt..,I lflM'I, wllll IN fllCHll.., WITNESS 111 hlflCI lM' IDlll d11 ti Al'l"ll f ltll Alt.PM¥, at LIW -' ci!l~T.:.";.~~!· s~"lrdt. , . .,..r>Ofcli. voucll4tr1. 111 11'11 urldlfl"tltned II lhe olf'ce Navffl\bv, lt10 Puttl!ll'ltcl 0.1nt1 C011I 01llr l'llol, NI,...,. L1W l •llrHnt R~-. 11\i".I" -.911:,r•r:d.,f'.i ••••on Bia tPtr.,.,., · 1,.., 1.60 s.ao °' hi• At1or11tv, H•rrv "· cir1ton. sao 1coR1tORATE sEALI Nl'l•rnber s, 12, "· ''· 1m 1010.10 ,1, '"' '"" ll'rtll ·-' . Bt1nkt1, F lloh Pl1n, H1I, 0u1:l ll1m-Em's AoKM BllJt (COi i,_ I .OD 7~0 NtWP«t C:t11llr Drfvt, Sullt Numbtr "60, N.l'.H,$., INC. CMll Miii, Cilfftl"llfl tMtf ton•. ti...1 lllt Yet 11>-1 J.:IO Ntwoort hid!. C:1llfornl1, w~lc~ 11 tht Jolln Y. Chv T.r, <n•I ,...1,.1 _ .., ... 74, Sc11!cl'lld -Dlrecl 111,. Jlllf aomo. Tim• -lW/lO. •l•c• ol bu1l11111 ol th1 undtraltnecl 111 111 AHlilu•t SlcrtllrY LEGAL NQ11CE Atltr ,..,. Ad 111111 fll'I• '.,".,;.' K1tle'1 0..11, Tt<Kklt'' Sltr, Also ffl1n -Cl\1rlw1rl, $Uraln'1 Mii&. m1tllr1 11trt1lrllnt1 1o lhe 11t1t1 of 11ld $TATE OF C.ALIFOltNIA l p :fled O m 'c01il OtHf', l"lkll SIC:ONO RACI. 150 vi•di. J.n.r· True, IClllt, 81ra'1, $!11111, Tin~ Tod!:, dteecl'"t, wllllln lour montll1 llltr' '"' 1 Ill. Oci:W: ,. .~"'~tmbtr J. u. ll lids Incl uo. C111m!1H1. "Ul'll 12tOO. klplv I Don, Tok"' I Chic\. fir.I allbltc1tlon 111'1 !hi• llollct. C:OUNTY OF OfflANGE I lll·tn-17 '''' --PO!tfd PJI• Pcr111r,) •-j ... ,tit 5cr1tcllla -W•ldl Cyr Go. 8rlahl 011«1November 1• ,,111 C:IOT•o•C•TI o• '"''"''' " •1r NBDD /Adi rl '"" :oo i2o J1ck, Oii D1dcl1, Mllntlc Moon. Riymoncl J. kt.1rm On th11 IOlll d11 of NO~ffl'lbtr, A.ti. llllCTITIOUI NAME H•ll lown !Co ll11tl 5.70 U l••ort• J & t Nld llSl.M. Eaecu!M ol lht Wiii ol lfl'll, btlort ml I Not1,.,. 1'11bUc In Incl Tht unde~lontd don ctrllf• ••-"'" ___ ..;:LEc:o.Gc;..AL~~N01Yr1,.__CE ___ .,. Tlmt -ll·J/10. --tfl ba mlCI cit< /or s1kf Counl'I 1nd $t11t, r11ldln1 ""T , AJ111 lt111 -Slf•lv 81r. I'll'! ••rlo. SEVENTH I ACll. MIO Yl <d1. Heir •• VI 111 Iden! llltr•ln. au!Y com11tl11lontd Ind '""'"'' cond<1Cll119 • 11Y1!r1111 ., 11f1 OTintt •• ,,,u ~1t1Y M•c. lllo G•i ndcl•CHl'f, llt· DIOs 1flll uo, Allow111CU, P11r11 NJ09· Mlfl"Y ll, C1rfllll!, ft ed Joi! 'I' Chi/ k 11.vt .. Colli Meu, C1lllor11l1, vrldt r 1111 C:llTlllllCATI 0, IUllNI• ,a:, ""'"'"' Tom. Too 8r11at, Jfll 0 Jll. w•3.""Ju Ip I H.«t 1::10 ~·tt "' MIW"'1 Ctftl .. Drlv.. ~o ybt ·::-;.s111111rn $tc'r111rv olr!IJ::: 11<1111111i1 ll•m llllTll or HAND I nd lh1t llllCTITIOUI NAMI Scretcflt(I -Su 511 Mu. Uft(lt Edolr R:a.s 'ton 0 frirdO.l:I) ' :·; Svlll Nvm...,. "' conoori tlln thtl t•tcUltd 1111 wllllln If>. 11/d firm la comPotfd of m1 IOI-I"' Thi under1ltned a... Cll'lll'v 111 It -ChJc,•,<IOOll,,.._~,•,,s.m,•,"· '''"' '"' TllTll _ :lo.2110. ' II~ ...,c~. <•llf'lt~I• llt\rmtl'll 11111 btllllf of IM coroori tlon Dlr1C1111, ~ ntmf'l In lull •nd •l1u1 cl111:ttr111 1 tlUllMll 11 4500 C1m'""' q~ I I ILY F;tlJI Id S.I di At.SO littn -Lid'/' ait.'' Lft Ttl. 1114) .,.._.iq lfllrt!ll flll!lld, I nd l dlnowlldofil IO mt 9f r11la.M1l•t11 lollowl: Nirwoorl BtKh. C1lllornl1, urldw 11111 6-llClllM It... f'I,... B1r ,..llY Llroe P1111r, nl C)1r1n, AltwMJ' lw I XH.11111' It ludl c:or-illon akecll!td 1111 Al-L11111flt ICIY Ztitcll1k, 1747 Ortntot llctlllovl firm nltl'll llf Nl!WflOIT·lllVIHf THIJIO RACll. 150 .'l.!JJ" T-ve•r Miss Tu!lo', Alm to Min, l;lmb· Putllllhetl Drlftlll: COit! DIJIJ' l'UOI Ill Wlln"' Wlllrtof. I llovt l'ltrtullla •• i ........ COiii MIN. C1llfornl1 JET ,lllNT Ind Tiit ! ,.kl' firm 11 • rod$, Mlldlm. Purs1 .. ,j" Sc:r1t~no<:1 -Tlcl'v Go. 1' 11' Min, MO\'l!llbtr 19. M l f'ICI Otctmbtr l . 10, "'' h.tflll tll4 i tttxed ml' olncti l lftl lhl C1rl 0. Zolclllko 11'1 Ortllfl An,. ....... (JI f11t flllowl .... ",_• ...._ N-H;~~~U 1"1Ji~1~lt!lni) 1 .oo li8 t~ . E!OKTM uci:""""ilo vird1, J.ve1r 1910 2lst.1'11 a.,. •rid ,,., In this c1rtflk 111 ""' t tlovt ~':,~ ~=~~~'fr."\m 111 ~M 1nd t11ltc.t ot ntkllncl 11 ai IOl- 11.KI Atltr Jr. ($ fflll ' J:.0 olds 1rld ~p. AJl-•r!CH . l'ur" IUIO. wrl!lt11. LYnttl'll IC Zolcllik lowl. Timi -IM/10. IDrtvttl 11.00 S.olCI J.MI LEGAL NOTICE {OFFICIAL SEALI Ci rl D zOtc11at LM O. Klrtlv, Ml It MlriMor Or .. Alto R1n -P1llM'1 1toc:k1I. ThrH Han.Ill <Afflr) •.60 J.00 JVOEE D. ALLISON STAT E OF CALIF01tNtA Fulletton, C1lll. ~y'.·,~~1,',',"u·o~. In llob. 5uroln Swett Plt1111re fC1rdo11J J.llO NOTICI TO llDO!"ll No11.., l'llbllc · C1IUOf'nl1 DJIANGE COUNTY• 01!1d Oct. H, ltlO ........ ..... •.• Tim. -11.f/10. Prll'IC-1,•l Offlc• In • LIO Cl. IClm • ., ... '.~','. '!""•• ,,::: G~••'.' ,•.,•J!• wl:e~1nn1h AllO 11,111 _ Oonll flt Good, 111rl10 Nll'lle• 11 Mrttlw t l"'" lll1t lllt 8111a of <>rint• Ceunty On No.....,,lltr IO, 1t10, lllfore ""'· 1 51111 el Ct lffornli, Otlf'lfl C_ty, ,... " ltock1!, 0"" OKlslon, 111'111 TICIOft. EdUClllDn of !!It O«tn Vltw Sc-' M Commlsllon E •lrn NOllN ll'ubtlc In Ind tor Mid St1!9, °" Oct :z1 1'71, llllforl -. 1 ......,., lllOUllTK llACIE .at v1r0t. J..vefl'· NO Scr1tdla, Dltldd will .-«I .... l>ldl to DUrChlH for Oc1f u nn ~ Pt•tonltlY ·-••Id LJ'fllllt K1w lofdllk l"!Jl)lle 111' • .Mi for Mkl 11111. ---i •'m:;"~, "'" I m no. ~.·... •. . ..... NINTH •AC!. "°° Yl rdl. J..velr.Oldl. IUrnlfurt •••• la:• Which hll ......., ll'ullUWCI Or•"'• C011I 01nv l"HOI ""' lll!'IKlrll Wlla .. n1mf'l •• , •.. ~ •• 1 .. -~ I PMl•tcl LIO • rtrl' -,, ,,,. ~ Cl I I p S2'18 -c11h lo ll'le hl11'1t1! ~. OtlM!lllt lt!\001 • ' ind C1rl 0, Zofeh1k known to m. lo IJt O Kl ' _, ' --81..i Ill C11!!, Clllmtno. Purte 11100. • .. N~r n, 19, '4 lf'ICI CIKtmlle• 1. -........ bl "'-perlOtl whall "'"" b WIMtllllft '2~ orn,,11 '!"°°,., ,1::Z.:f) J.00 J:gg tMitiud•l J 'lO.olCI t.to S.)O dtltrmlntd Ill 1111 IPnttr Medici tor 1,11 !lot-7Ct '•IN within INlrumtnl Ind Kknowllcl9· to 1111 wlthlfl lt11tnlmenl ll'MI .a-lid• 'fi~I _ Ef0-4/IO. Burkl'I Pl1lol (M1lwcl1 20.«I t.to .S.20 ICl'IOOI Pv•POffl. Ill 1111'1' llle<Uled ltlt $11'>1, Id llt llllCUltd !Ill·-, it..lia Rin _ Roc:ktl Mvslc. /l'lk:lw-•v Scott Maci.tn !Ptttlal •.to 1·• 11111re1tld tlldclftJ o;'" lnU>eet lflt LEGAL N-CE U>f'FICIAL SEAL) <OPFICIAL S~At.I · .•.·,.. Mllllt , Tloair lllr. Tht Count !Pirner) .IO 1bov1 11 .... 1 II 1111 H n VI-Mllll-v•• Mary •1th Morlolln ..... .., IC ""'"' •. • 0 No Scritcf\ls. T!mt -20-2110. lfllll'l(f F1cll!ty. 11'1 W1r111r Avtfl\lt, NottN lllubl!c • Ci lltornli Nall,., ioublJc.ii Utonill At10 J11n -A1111llt Lulu, Sll•nl Hun!lneton 8t1ch, flld form1 1flCI lllrlnclpel Oltl(t In p t~TM RAC:I. 11G"vtrfl. l.v11,.otcb Scene. B•"Iln', Tri_. PolM. Finl To •111Cltlcitlofli lndlc•llft'll t•td 1oc:1llan l"·JflH 0 C'.oun!Y Prlncl111 Offlct In • 1nc1 uci. c111m11111. Pv•11 into. G~ct!~~~'t~\~tr.~«-11• 11\d Hffl'l1 m1v 111 001111\td from tht c11T1llllCATI 0111 eut1NllS i::'1!....miu1an E••lrf'l f:,~c!n~T."' .. """" -, ,• • j Str1unl ll.00 I.OD 4,00 U ~(II 1 & J ,.IC' Pff.•. ll'urcf111lnt Aotnl, 7'n 'N1mtr 11,vtnue, llll(TITIOUS NA.Ml it..prll 9 ltl'I N-T' ,,_ p•"'•' • on Min CH1rl\ U.60 1.00 iiiiiiiiiiiiiii Hunllntlon llt•ch. Th• undtr1l9Md dOll j•rllty 1M 11 C'Ofto 0 ''" 0• C Do ' ' 1 v•· ., " • 1111PKllD11 hour•.,, 11 lollOWt: ductlne • buall\IH I I I ~, lltlCll a 1vd.. ull I ... ,..,.. 1111 II "'1111. l"lltll ll'lld Or•n• CMll Dlllr .,. .. , Milnlfni11ce ll ulldlnt f;OO 1.m .• •:OO Wtilmlnolt,, C1l110rnl1. ufld9r !Ill lie· Nl!Ytmbtr 12, It, 2' l rHI 01ambtr '' Ocrobtt 2' •114 tlovembtr ... It, 'l!o • Tennis Rackets-$4.95 to $50.00 Wilson T2080 Steel Rackets Strung Nylon-S32.9Hut $38.95 Dunlop Fort Frames-$15.95 Wilson Kramer Autograph Frames-$16.95 Pennsylvania Tennis Balls-White-$7.50 Doz. Yellow-$7.95 Doz. Wilson Tennis Balls-White·$8.35 Doz. Bill Tilden Tennis Balls-can of 3-95c Converse Tennis Shoes -Ladies $7.50 Men's $7.95 lack Purcell Tennis Shoes-$8.95 Converse BasketbaU Shoes-$8.95 Converse Leatller BasketbaD Shoes-$18.95 Men1s Tennis Shorts & Shirts Tennis dresses-~12.95 to $26.95 Bikes-l'arts-T1res-TubeHccessories 'CLOSED SUNDAYS 1.m. MoncltY lhf"Ol/9h Frld1y, l•<IPI ltllous nrM 111me of MI NI MAXI COIF• lt10 211 .. 10 1t10 ..,,,..,. holllllva, l'UltES incl lh1! 11ld 11rm 11 comoo1tc1 of OTC LEG.AL N-CE .•. llld• m1111 Ile tnt10M<I In 1 1e1llld 1'111 tollowlnt p1r10~. wf1011 n1Mt ln luU LEGAL N l E v•• env1IDP•. i ddreu1o;1 10 "'' Botra of i ncl DllCt of '"fdenCI la 11 tollowi: 1-------------------------~··~•-, Educillon, 1nd llltd with t11t l"Yrth11l.... it..nn Lucido, 74'1 COl>CllrGl1 1111., NOTICl·Olll SAL• A•tnt, 1tn w1rn1r Avenut. Hunllntton W11lmtn11tr, Cit!!. SNlld blcl1 wm bt rt<tlvld tty 1111 City Cl1rk. c11y 91' Ntw11111rt •tlt'llt. IMO llHcfl. c1111ornl1, on or t11for1 J:OO p.m.. 0•1111 OC!ober 21, lt10 NtwpOrl llOUltvlrd, Nl'l'DOfl Blflch, C1ll!Ornll untll JO;OO A.M. 1111 No"'~ Mcfllllf, Navembl!r 311, 1970, II which Arin Lut!clo lflO, 11 whlell Hmt th1)1 w!ll De PVbllcly OPlllld Ind reed for II• -<!Ifft ;I 111'1'11 •ncl PllCI 1111 tllll• Wiii bl -Md. STATE OF Cit..LIFOltNIA, P<OPllt!Y ., ••Id (ll'y 01 HtWJIOrl ... "' IOultd In NtwpOrt llNdl, c1u,.,-,,1f." T~t llotrd of Edve1llorl re.1,..,,1 lhe OltANGt COUNTY: l:llM'lll Mllllnw1111 ......... , rlth! la acc.,,! or rtlKI 1ny or 1n Didi. On OClabl!r 21, lt70, ii.tart '"'· I ...,..r111 TyJI ot l"'lllffv-O.lt ii. M otfolril• oite(I Novemlllr 11, lt70. No11rv l'Yllllc In 1116 for s•la S11!9, )U Urld St, '·•!Cir! tlUCCO ll11p11x, •,-,• Slil\tO Gtoret G. LOIA atr1on1lty toMl rtd it..nn LucldD kn-11 lo 11)70 IQ. Fl.l11t11! J1n111ry t, "71 UGO "· •• C:lerk o1 1111 m1 to be Ille "'-whoJe n.m• 11 :ICIJ 32nd SI. 2•1torr 11111:co 11ngil9 ~otnl of Trutlft• wbicrlbld la the within lni1tument •ncl llflll h0u11. • OcHn Vltw khool Olstrkt 1dl..-""8td IM IXKllltd 11!1 llmt. •10 Sq, 1111. J1-ry I, lfJI U00 u.ie• •: Putllltlltll or1no1 COt1t Dill• lllllot !Ottlcl1I k-•11 No bid 1lloll DI rKllVld unlu• mid• Ul*I • ~i.nk Pf'Olllltll l'Wl'll fuf11l1hed Navembtr 1t, 1f, tf!'O 2111-10 Je1n t,, .lobtt tor lntt 1111•PD1~ OY 11\t Ctl)' of NIWOl)l't lllffn, G L NcmcE NallN l"unHc<1lflor1111 l'Ullll•hed O••noc Clltl Diiiy l'llltJ. NO'ltlTllJtr 17, It, Jt, •· lflt LE A lllrll'l(IOl l OlflCI 1,. Dr1not COUl'llY Cl•TtllltCATI OP I USINlll M~ COft'lml1tlon EKplr•i llllCTITtOUI NAMI ,,.,.,(II 2. Jtr.t Tiie Ufldlullftfll dot• uttlt'Y hi 11 ,.,.. 1 ,,_ •.~,, •• , ""'roe•• 11 1111 f>rlt'ICftl Cl,,_ ll'ubl i\lllcl Or1nt1 C011t 0 1 Ir 111 ..,,, ...... .... " Oclotier Jt .no NovemMr 1. n. n. ci., HvntlnelOn lletc!'I, Ollllornl1, """"' XIU.70 "'" flctllloul ll•m n•me of SOUTH IN· J----occ=-cc-7'°"°"=--== J VE!TMENT GROUI" !1 L1mlled l'1rt· LEGAL NOTJCE T111 I011d •f LEGAL N011CE LEGAL N011CE ... 111tlfll1l I nd lhll .. Id firm II c.om-fOlloW1 : poHd o1 !ht lollaw1110 11trJ011, wl'IOl1 NOTICI 0111 INll1J,•1 IAl.i SECTION I. '•Ulon IJ.011 11 llt,_r _..... "" lllt Codlflllf Onflntnct1 If ... 111ml 111 11111 Ind •IKI ol •ttldtnc.e II LAUlllTS MATHIE,EN, lllL1lnlHf YS. County (If 0••"111•. C1lltomi., to rtMI II lll1fowt; • "folla.n: •ETTV LOUISE aATES. tit .. o.f9.nhf'!I Sic. 11.011. ComponAltlln fOr BMN If Sl.lllOJl"llMn, 01ttd Oclobtr 30, n10 ~.1. No. 1um Ne IMmbtr ot !I'll htnl ot s~Jwr. .ii.ti .....i.,. lftT <»m~· cGt ... r11 1111r111trl 8'1 \llrtut of 111 necvtlon llllJtjf 1111 U lion. In tddltlon to 11111 .,....ldld tor by 1111• •Klien, fol' ..,....l«e •tndtc•· ,' O•vltl A. K,. •• PI,, 1111 l'rlnc11$ Cl•· Q(lobtr. 1tp0 b'I' "" Munlc .. tl Court, II I mtmbtr ., '1111 '°'"'· Sud\ l't'llftllltl' 111111 r.ut ... ctflll*!Mllon "' Cl•. H1111tlnolon 8t1d!. t1llloml1 '1646 t.-11ue11· Juclltlll Dl•lrl('I, COUflfy ol "" .... vfcft II l ud'I mem!Jtr I 1111try wtllch Wll " "" NIM •• 1'11111 .. LIMITl!O PAltTNEll.$ LOI Aneeln, St1t1 tit C1lllol'"l1, UPO!I I l'IOW or,..,. .. ,. ... prncrlbld or ttw fw . ITltlTlbtt'" 11'11 llli. LfOllfll~ ... Ttr,., 8, k111ppt1, n.1 Lt Mlfldll Jucl911111M lnttrft In l1vor• If LAU•rTI .i t 1nrornr1. -• C:lrt11. Huntl119ton •••ch, c111tarnl1 MATHIESEN 'II l11C11rnenl crtc1tlor(1I Sloleh rntmbtt " ""' hlrct 1~!1 •lto " .,,-.Wld9d "" ""' If Ill 1ui. t)'6ol' ""I '41-MM. Sff._,...IS61 J•mes •rid 19111111 lll!TTY' LOUISE llATI!!, l'fll)l)llt I nd '""' Of'Ollp llHllll Ind llf1 1t1111r111e1 lltntllll ,.,., ,.ii,...,,.,.,.. N••I it111Cll•I, l<M $tr1rld. M1n!'lall1n •II• llETTY LDU llE lllCHAltDM>N, •kl Hnlflll I I provkllcl Co\1111)' dt91t!ITll!!I hltda. ." • lltlch, CaUlornll '°"' UUl Jl...-0, llETTV LOUISE MAlHIESEH. trw:I V1C· Thl1 COITll)ll'l"llon WU not DI In 11111 et l "Y OOl'r'tPlllllllOn ,..,. I"'"'": $'2...0..'24; llkh1rd c. Gtrtwn. 41' TOil BATES •• ludt!Mfll dtb!Orl(•I, ..... le• In •n1 O!Mr UMCll)' Of' on 1ny Olhl• llMrd or COITllltlNlon. • • Eldtr Avtnve, Seil lle1,h, Celllornl1 &flowlnt 1 nel llllllKI DI M.700.fl IC. SECTION 2. hll Ontln1nc1 •hllt ltkl ol'IKI 1rld bl 111 lull forct lt!ll'f'/' .... fOlolO 1Jl3l .1'1'•1279, SU.»,,«h OD!lltd tua11r dll9 on MIO l11d1111'1tfll on Ill• cltll '•Y. lrom 11}11 111'1' ltl PllMttt, Incl bt!Or1 "-u,Jr•tlon of Im-OSl•H p "•trick Lt•~· 11tn Lo11tden s1r111, ., 1111 1uu1Mt of .. 1d 111tc11tlon, 1 111va 1tttf 11'1• .,.,., .. m.,lol 111111 "-M 11'111d onct 11'1 tllt Or1119, C••' ~Ur Gtrdln G•O'll. C:1llfCN"nl• 116'1 1114) l..,!fd -.. , 11'11 •llhl, 11111 Incl In· 1111101. I II_,.,., llUOlltllld lfl "" COIJnty of °"""' 111111 .. Clllltfftl .. ......- lt1·t!IS, '''"'°'"°' WHll1rn w. "•"' "''" ., 1tld lvcllmtnt fftllol'fll !fl '"" wllll Ill• 11111111 "' .... -blra Of "'' IMN., luptr'llMB ft!ffll ...,..,.,.. ..... , druN .. toO 5tl L•lll· A~I. 46, Coron• cltl P•-r11' In 1111 Ccunt'Y ol' or ....... 11111 m• """· ' •• ..... ,. C•llf(lmll .,.,, (110 ~ JJ1-of C.Utornl•. descrlllld •• fl)Jttwe; ALTON I!. At.Leif • ,~ ... 1ll0J KtMtlll E. UflCl1ron, 6011 I, P1rul Na.• I" IM city ol Huflll,..ioii (SEALI Qllllrft911 ot !tit aotnl ol' lwJI _., Hl'llll lld AVl!Nf, Whltlffr, Ci11fomlt hod>, CtunlY ol Or1f1We, Sl11t tf of 0r6nft C~, C:.UfW!lll to601 UI)) .... 10t4, UMl-11611 J-c.ntcmi.. II...,. --f'k.,..... In hok ATTEIT: • ,;o. l"tecock. Jr .. m• 8nlllort Wtllt.-L-'· .... 10 of l'll'C:l l Mt,.. lft 1111 Dlflt• w. E. ST JOHN l ff<ll, C1U1ot11r1 12111 "3f-S17J, UM1-., !!'It (Ill.Inly-~ " .. i. C8Uflt'Y. Counl'I' Cltrlt tlMI u 41'fklll C"'!t ,.., Oordon It. l!1l'tloklt. "°' •tcHorcl TIHll'ltf wllll I ll 11111 1""11111" "" "' 1111 •o.trd If koptt'llMB .. A•-· Lot AnttlM, C1Ur0fl'lf1 fOOS6 ftlllmlnlL Mrldll-lt tl'ICI till-Or"ll!Ot (:ounty, conronii. n1i1 716-l"24 W.14.f2HI JoPWI H, Grt.. -'-l'll!lt ~ .. Mlontlllf or '" •r M•btl L. c.a.111111 bani, 1Jt15 So. llrkthlwlll A..-, 1f'l'l'Wlll •-rt1!nl,..., O.PlllY 111..-1mou11t, C1t1tornll t0m Ull) U. NOTICI IS HEll:Ell'I' CIVEN ftlll tn ITATE 01" CALllllOllNI.. I nit, Sl1..o).'1U: Wl"ll!TI 14Qwtrcl GI• Frldl1. 4 Dec.,,.._,, 1t7', 11 lfl:OO I "· '*"" 1un Sltlol t.-No, ,, H,,,.,. 9'ctodl A.M. II Mllfl t.llbtl't CIM'lllll!.rW. COUNTY 0(1' OltANGf I '""""" B11cll. C1llforftlt ""° 171•) '°" 1'00 Ct'YIC Coni.t or1 .... W••'· City .. ltflo '· w. !, ST JOHN, c-tf Cltrtr •nd ••kit (111111 of .... aotnl If ~-Ulll. u.wf.J1.. It Atll, COUnty of Of'tllft, 11119 .. 'llllo, dGI 11.,ttir C'lf'llY 11111 •I I •1011l1r l'l'llllt .. tot !tit ... ,.. .. aw.mMn ITATf OF CALtFOJINIA. c1111er111 ... W\11 .... II .ubllc luctloll,. .. 0!11'1111 c~. C:.11f9nlll. held .... !flt ''"' dly Ill ~. ,,,., "'9,,..... Olol.NOE C:OUNTY: !I'll lllfhul ltlclcllr, '°' Cllll .,. 11wflll """ Ortlllllnu cen"'"""' hW Ct) Mclktl'll. "'" UlllllltrN HIC!i.i "' t«lllrl. O!\• Delobtt° lO, ttl'll, btfor• mt. 1 _,IA lfle Uni!"" ll•tli, Ill 11'11' r)lllt, llrlll !hit !I'll 11i. Ordlntf'l(t wt• lflln ,.., .... 111!f ...,_ 11 • Wlltlt .,., .. NoU,.., ll'vbllc 111 Ind fol' Mkf Sl1!9. !lilt tl'ld ln!fl'lhl el llld lllClfl'l'llfll _. IOllOwlllt "'H! Pllf'-llJ' -red Dlvld A. K,,._r IOllO 111 Ille tbD¥t dtKJ'lblll ,,_,i.,, AVIS! IUl"lllVtlOIU 'WILLIAM J. lllHILLll"I, WM, KlltSTlllN, 10.l'llT' ~ to mt to bl ll'lt ..,_ w11ott tt i.o mud! lfllrtol" m.., llf' llKM-11,.., W, IATllN:, DAVtt> L •AKfll AHO AlTGJlrt ,L ,,.,,... It Wbt<rtlltd to It'll wU,,ln In-to -.1l1ty Mid f-ltfarilan. wltll 1an1M At.LEN _, 1ITVPIM!ll •nd tckl'IOWlldtld ti. UKUl9d lf'lltral lftf COit.. NOi$; $Ullll!JIVl$0JIS NONE -. Ille ...... O•lld II ltlnte Mii. C.!tflrnlo, Oclobtr AaSENT~ IUl"lllVISOlll NONf -\ •• fOffi:i.1 51111 'li. lt10. IN WITNESS WH~ill.10,. I flf¥f Pll-lt 111 ""'I' Mncl tnf •rtlocl IN ~ltl • c:"''''r lllfrr•I! SlthbU"I' II JIMtt A, M..Skk. ""'"' ... t ol ""' ...... " lllflfl'li.trl ti Ill• CO\ltlty 6f 0r ... lllft If C.1!'!"111 .. NOllr'I' l'utlllc • C.l!ftrlll• (-1\' of er-....1: C.1U1ort1!1 thl• IOlll INY " N ........... 1m, lllrlnclHt omc1 In 11~ c, A. 1t1nc1111. DtPvlY Or1nt1 CounlY "'""' a 'l'wfll Mr C-l•tlon b1"l~1 • J, OllM 11., S~lll flM ($fALI OtlOMr 1, 1tn I.ti Aflll""-!.CIHI. ,.It Pllllllll>td Orlll'lf" COlll 011lv ,11111'1 r F1F11ll'1'• A"trlM . H.-"""' 11, 21 I nf OICtmbtr 3, 10.. ,IJl)ll1'*' Hlol"it!Nlon htd! Diiiy 1111'1111, 1'11 • 114'•10 ,..O'VllT!e.r t, I\, It, 1'70 ftlfo.JI l'l.ltllhll L . ' "-o.lll V PILOT SC ~ N""M It, 1970 .· Mollefl'• Wortla OVER THE COUNTER ~mplete-New Y:or" Stock List ·'.::. Worker Struggles in Slump .......................... ,... .. ~ ... ..., ..... -u.tO. ,,. ......... """ ... """"" _ .. , . NASD Lfltl1191 for Wodnood1y, Novombor 11, 1'71 NlW YOftll IAl'f.~b.~tW ~ .... '-C-.:: "" .... ~'Ill:. -,. ' .. .... " .l!l i JI' -..... J = ~ !Ill= ti '>,..'-'*'CM.•&~"1 , ~tJN , ¥"!~ ~1,,U»o.t~t! ........... ·1" II t. Ill-· .,'!".. a •m 'f~ ·m -· . ' .. .. . " • JIY SYLVIA PORTER ·· ·u you ani a typical ~ warl'.r In the U.S. ~' )'OU hive bttn in ID -1c alump for ....., *1n than any "'rker ·-~World War D. Thal'• a lvliOlo Uon. . . ....... -;. Yw bave beto .... dily )llillhc back clown the living •landanf -alnee the atart ~ the: Vietnam war eacal1Uoa )It 1165, more than Ove yean !'P-y ~ u r b r •a d-ud·butlu .. . • • . 'WHAT"I IN A ICAMl1 . . ' . . . ' • • .., tun eMNl, ..,. whenever y Du consider Mlf'I a product and it bu •: naqle that you rttojpl]ze, tt:;.lt made by a company ~ l.t'e famlliar with. tt will jt.1WQ• give you a ttrtaln ~nfklence tbat what you are aettlnK ii of aood qual-ity: It is the same when you fOlid. 1 pharmacy to .. , )'t>ar medfd~ and health· .fitedl from. or a family pit)'- ·~ u r doctor and your M.unaclst feel the game- WiY 'about companies who make phanna~tical prod. ucts. Although aome drug• may be-made by many firms, your ptiysJclan wual- ly spectnes the exact brand. name he feelt .. 111 be-the aaht tor you. Because. we ~lt• only med lclnet ma~ by {pputable finn&. we too ffe confident that we are llfW>l'8 fupeMln• drup Iha! ~dependable. -;,.rou OR YOUR DOCTOR CAN· PHONE US whm you Deed a dcliVtt)'. We will de-11.v6 promptlY without ex-Wl chara:e. A pat many P!oPte ft)y on us fat tbetr heaJth needs. We welC<:tne ....,.,.. tor deli..,,. .me. tM ~ accounte. , -' ., PAii UDO PHAlMACT J"'"'--•;sP*• .._. 64J.1Mt . --J •. .. , " -.. lqutete balj.,beea far more off, fired or, u lheJ say these = ?.r. J m:l!S11 . u .. ·ii: llt .. 1.~· :...·itt .&1ru1',1,~r.. 11~ .Ill t\: ~~~ ~-t.~ 4 'ii3tt lrt \h ... ~:~ lhanaooe-jevpheoomeDDO, deya, "...,,iu.ed." This !!.r.t~l~~1::.-~· fl:j':::I-.:~ l"'""t~ i;~r,~g'j " " i; • 'l i; -" .. ~ " fer more than • -of jobl•N man ... woman Is Jn .. r=-. -=· .. -~ ~· T~ ;: I ~ E:.l'.11 .!C :i~ ~'1~ 11.11~ =~ "'31 ,H, 1• 1·· i l!Sa'· -_t ... ~. -~.'.,J!i ' .l! !:.!::~ lw.:5'.~.:t!. . ."l! ~~ ' f :" 1rro•1 nlg'btmare comblmlUoa out-&IMkut depreulon _ and ~ ·~l.~1ri. ~·o \':: 2~ YI ~ ~ JI" j! ., .. ~ :w il ,,. Ml i. i:G. 1a ~ .. ,,. f.1 ':'il ~ .~ .... tt ~ It , .. 1% f' ~ \W ~~or~ssne~t11i in th1J 1-.10 ncw1oa, u.e Wl~""11~~·n:S:~faril f! 1 ~ ~n~i:r rw. ut: stZ lt':1Ufa~~J.~t ~i · •.~a· ~:r,:;~·· .. ii ta mt i= ... ~ ~ D h ll" ~ =11 ~. ·-·· of ... I yod ,_ ,....:,,~rri lnltr· Fst Iott JI Pnolon tt ·~ "~' ~ ~\llrrt & . • m ... -G 1.ii " »h w =-"" ltc 1'. ,.,, ii" .,,,_ t ~ ·-ml•t pr!--It has l..IR:D a r.,..,.. U111 ..... mp o .ur .... 1 ... ., -1 111 oi F•tG ••• ~ AYi ,., •• .,, ,. ~ I!• w • 1-1-1 " ff JO F "' '' !.!! iw. "" -~ ;;;1on&"'ect ,;;t.t which can elude 1roups r~ from the ~1r~Uh 11 ... ! ~r~1,. 1ti.i 11~ ~7·G~~ 2~ 'J:F ~ 1 :C ~~f,7a~ ,~1 'I 'I ~.~:u_ ~1"1f,' 1"! ~~ 1 ~ \·= ~.: "''i.12'° m4 '"4 f,.... ! ~ n.. longer be shrugged ott and unakilled blact teenqer to lbe :;rv~r1i ... t-c:~ ~=:, ti 1114 1; ~ ~~ i14 J:"'.:n~, 1'111a 11~ ~ ,~'£~ ~ -(.ii 1j;,'t: 1 I i'.,; .q ~ •rwt, ~ 1' ••· ~~ ~.,:., no:ri=~~ ~fi;~~~ 111 e d w b 1 t e ~ (~~:.;~ ~~~~; ~ ·,~~ ~~=rc 1:11 'i: !F:& i ~ ·~ r.~t·Ji .3 n: :i fil; ~a if.;,;. 'j ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ·~\~ 1 ·l: ~ ! g u well as· an ever more Whit does it mean? Outside :;:: 11 ,.llOfd•Y. 1~1~ F~ n j"• 1 t,-' '~:"11,, l,"" 1: l~ntCP;f ,1 1:t 1~ ~~~ff. 1r = ;ff: ..... ~~ '~1:. " ; "" 1t = 4i .,., ·• ,d ~·u urgent pclllical challenge '° of tbt indJvldual --...... 1 rtl~~ • ..'!II'~~-~ "" ;;o.;o 3._ ~ fmcnt iS ...... ~II,,.~ g = ... i4 TI i.: • a = ti llblo:vl"A Ull ,. I .-.--i • -· olll' ~ ~ ~" m." 1-°'' '"'" ....,.,,. ' -= • ll \ 1.." ,.U ll ~· l:.. +~ ' ""'" " . ~ +"·~ our society. tr11ed.le. lnberent ln every • ·111 1 '" G.1~1"'" nit 1 14 TI"'s~.~ ~~ 'I :1~,.: ~"" ,,..,. ~~t:::lc. y t :t "' ~ aiit1'> r» ... 10 tt J 1 20 '' _.. ~ ••••• "-1·1 •·, In of""'al line of this ........ r1, 1·1 means 1 ~ Colp 1\& •1' Gft SY(' '!YI 1m •11c1 D'f'n 11 1 ,ir,,, N >\Ii A.Jifil fj~ i In-> 11V1 R~ +?: ,.-,. ~,, l!l! ""'• ",,~-·-~ ~1,.,,".J ~ ~ .... 1, .-,VUI su:J'c 1.11 u... ·~..-• :riAPrs 1'"~~a ,lti::e.1111q{: 1sn~T\'Mlll fd '"'11.A»H,.... ,,1;;20 ~~ .1:1•-"r111 1n "' ... Dept. Of Labor figures show'-tblnk, that We wilJ DOW Bee: ~1fs 1~ :: ~ LtlMW :m jYI a:O'ci ! lllli ~ 8:'19.~ 2* 2~ :/~'i: ld 1"-tn. Jllo .:.:.··· t :.";,& l!f ~ ~ !f.~ = ~ T'jE ~JO or.I ···.-!"" •'"-...... ___ _. _ .... A:~ "'·jor -moves by u •• ~!Si' 11111 •"' •, ",,eu w; 14 Ito-' I! I'" ~· '' ""• • ......... I~ '" " jj"~ 27Y) -" "~-st ._ ,. ~"' ~ Z'l +" Til .t1n.>0 ;-•-e Wiil -I" a!N -...u-. i•IQ '""" ~ ,....,. pt ~ 1111 "" \Ii i" I tknet it; ~ A\i;""pJ ' IJ n,,~ ii"+ .. '... I , ,II .J !J.» Jl\'li i\.~-·I~ Tlrtl ~ l. ! i +·l4 dtttine in the. "rtaJ" lpeD-Admintstralioo and the ~"\. "1 It: r. ~It Jh 7f" !Av • .: "" ~ -~ 1,1410'.lo AllltdSrr ' ~ ioit 2t 2:'(t-tt AA 1J1 ml "1'I ~ ~ I u ·~ 1 -.. dlble mUngs of Amttic•'• ~=~~~: ~ :r:1~: t.~ .~ ~tn~~ :i: :im" =~ ~ if:~" llr~~~ r~ 1$ i~,..·~ ti ,; '~ ,1~ t = iit)l .~ fi111 !~tt ~ ~f~ ,~~r.:. rit YI ~·· i ! i milllons of workers. £ F 1 in LS flt R-'lon ll '" UIU lnll 2•\.'I :r t...l5v9~1.. l~ = it\i m: + tt 11 Jt ffo ti u y:-e I~~ .., -+ 1' (I) At latest COW\t, the gross week the FederaJ Reserve cut : H ,..1 .... ~ ••llfl c~ .... Allf C.1.i ,. .. 21!'1 V•I LO m AMBAC .. 2l "' '"" "' + ~ '"1 .. "'•" •11' n• ,,. ~. ~I. " ~ ' .. l'"' -···· min ol ~.~~-b '· In ,.. k ''"" 1 ltu• SIOY ,.,, lt v-. s. 1•14 t AAltr E• 1. !../, 11 IN Im -"...... ti• im-.. ....... li :ttt" ' .~ ·~Y ea p p'""""'"'"""° the most aalc .1ending rate ~,-,•, •m'l'I lr"M•• ~14 11 11:,.., H9 "' .... 1v. v1e1ran PoO '" Am HN 1111 .a ''"' .a I ... "' " •-nd ..,... .. ,_..,u,,, __.__ · ... _ na"·-... _ ..tt ..... _I l ;;:1J:' t::' 2'41 ,....,. Mt 1'1111 17 lltr 2111i "" Wedi It.It 201' 21\lo AmeH ll3 ·YI 11 lfl.61 I 1~ 1 1 -.w JOIJ ~ a .. ., ....... ,...... ~-..ry Wu~ 1D r.o1: uuu -IUlll llllK.vuu ra. e "!'Itel Et '" G tntt ltE 1w, l!Yi 1n1n E ,.,., Wt11.1w P llYJo 11v. AAlrFI , 31 Il 1f,. ~ 2.., 5 °" 1f~ m: 25l!!!"" m :;1~ f"""I•'•" ,, '.,' •, /1 v. .:.:;~ Ule U.S. were $111.31 -an -and the money cnuee:ze will A'" o... '* ~• Pr '"" ' t" •1-. 4.,., wa1tt ad 111 ,.,. ""'A1r11~ 1t1 11'4 11\lil l~ v. Ill d'! ,_.. 16 :u JN 141 lmllt I o1 I" ., A.mack 11'1 rwtl'I In .,.. ... J Coll-1 ,, w It-• ,,,., 3 Am Bak 115'1 541 11 1•"" 11 ""· •'!:.r.1:: !:!' • :!!: 1(1 +" l:';!J'IC '°., ~IN. "t~.I\ ..... ~ undenlably impraslve total be further eased; credit will Am 811111 12 1 111rd c" :n\ "' d Incl ,?,,. 71':: ::~~G 1~ 1~~ " Brno!'• 2.11 1s. '2 41" •2 ~ 81 , ,,, n 23..., 23'41 ••. ,, i.Mld~.3 3 llNlt ..iv. ;:: which dwarfs weekly pay be pumped intho bousingd lod ~EIE~ 73~ '! ga="'s ,!\? J: llil ~~ 1g..., I~ ::rT~E = m ~~2~JO :: ~ mt ~ +·ij ::::1so1"v ~ ~ UV. rt.. M +; ~I .a...~ .J ~ ~ 1= l! scales around the globe. spur a muc nee e A"o~"~~ ~Ml\ ,.,. n•n 1 ~ ,••,~, '•'" '•~ ~fbb.., .. ," 10114 12,. ~mcr.,:1,! ,i ~ 2Jtt "ttt :_ v. °""'!EJ..-, IM 1~h 1r..; 11" !: tt l:C' v11 .a ,. i~ 12i., 2~ •.•.• (2) B I ........... b'· . this . d try A Mtd l•YI 'I Nitti In m ~,... '"' ~ W1t11M M 1$ \J\lo A CF!t!n lM •• ",, .. ~ •!!lil" t l: ::::e "'1,:::, ,: .. '·'"• '~ ! .. '" --· 11· :",, 1_., l1tt ·~·" l~'\1 ;v, +·v. u UM: .. .,... ....... IC earn~ resurgence lD In us : ""' T• v l~ 1 \lo M~ F )~~ '~" ~''G~p SW .s.\lo W•llF 81 194 ' Ati~S1111 1 .. .. -omw 01 ,., ..... .24 "' IN ~ t .... s ot. a worker ge«lng this interest rates are still headln1 '""!'.!" ,•, ",..• """aff~' ~~' ~ , '" up s1 ·~ sjv. w1ia1 ,. •~ ~.., •"wt 1.u 1u ~ "" omoot sd 'll ~ jfft N + d ,iv• 1..-~ +·~ ..'6 Anlcwi 7'\i EP 'l Cl 1ndoh SVI V. W11n NA Hli 41.!0 A S!Ttl ..q Jt ~ 2'1lo ~ 'h °"'"'' .$0 41 °"' + ~ ·w 21¥1 -t't .....n.•andhavingade-dent lower · Ar« lno J~ Siio orn ... , rn1111 M 1v. 16 WstnM11 st1o '°""..,.., o ... iv., 10 1i. 1 · -,--, .• ,, Mll111 1 1 ! 1!11)-r1 1.:0 ' 9 •+• e·--I'"" ' Am=. iM '"-o m" )4 Solid SI S H• I~ Wtin Pob 10\4 11 "4 AmEIPw 1,1' 4l2 ;ts 2J'lt .2Sh +,,. nMlo Me 11• ~ I fJ -1 n ' m .U ~ +"' wifeandtwochildrenwereon-A calculated risk by the_.,, ... :,In,, fo''f'!!i '"P.11 Wftt 13'h l1 w1n11 ~ ...., SI\~~.·~ .. ''" ffl mi+" rrc M 4 ~~ jji."'': r1nltC $11 11 m -'4 I I •• •· •-WhJ'· ff J lb I "'L E Tel JSll<ill" Wse Pl lt'"""OV. "'" 1111 ~ •• ll l ~ ..... {ils 1.tt 144 1111 -.~ ,, ,,,,. ' f 1 l'lti 1"11-t. Y 106.11. Thi.> lo> 1ivw much ..., . ouse tha e ~,;,t;:, H 2f" ~ ... owr11 in 11 1f"' w G1C P J:\11 1~ wro1w e ~ ·~ "• ~1,'i:t.so_. -1a + ~ on 11 ot I 1 75 M U.. .. rin!W 1.w 7t • ~ .u111o +1 $121.SS shrinU after deduc· sUmulatlng tteps will n_ol •.C· ~.c .a_ot, "•~ ~ .. ~•,Mr ..t,, J,,., i:.C~vc 1~v. 1'"",.: 'qfJ~,' ,w ",!1 ~. ~~~.•,1..: r, .... :u ' •·•·· on 11 1": 10 .stl4 ~ m; ... ~ 1.~o,. 110 l! 1!.~ l!"' r.o-!4 ..... .... ,. .... ,,. ,, ... '8lf .. .. 4 ........ ,. ... ,u ,Ji: .:.. .m :!. ii : ~·..iit. 11 ~ n~ " = 111 ~:!!~ 1i:• , m. ™' ti.. -. .,. lions for Social Security and c:elente the pace ol pnee m· 1:1r:,. "' 1Jv. 1~ t!:gGV ~ •:v. :mH~.J .J 11» "!? G-h .,. Le11•11111_ 1,tt ,1v. Ai. ~ -U GtHoHtt ~ ,. ~ m:; .,. 11~ Federal income taxes. Jn crtalel a1ain. Many rapeeted =~r P1l01t ' '"" a'•,tt ft~ 11 Am l11vu.. 1» 2ili 2: .... ~ = .. -;.~'\ . .Q: ''"' w-!1 + ~ g• Wfft FW '311 lfti lift. 1fW. + "' short. '108.IJ u this worker's econlh1 omts1_" ts:_ in lnra1et.81 ~eve ::~~1.~11 j?l j ~,a." .. r, ,, .. ,,.iU MUTUAL ~ ~ ll H~ lo~ lftl ! ~ 1:::rt,r"J: "ff '::: lj.., ".,, ='tt g~:~1~ :ll 'l 'h: :ill ~ + 1t basic take.home pay, a rise of s r ~ i.> 1,?.! .. 1.~ m ~ ~ 1i:2 J: \~ ~~' ,.~ u ~zi., n ,J, tH J! 't'.j! ~ !1~" ~~~~lit •lri 1kt t ~ ~.~ g~~:f ~ f~ f~. ffu : ~ :S,$ ptrct:nt OVer fall Of J96f. todaOCOftOyffiY IS I .......... aJ Ollrl L!I B•tl•m II~ 11> IJ~ 1:W-t!.t ~ ~ Amp •• la M m ~ _ ICoo ll'll'.JJ J.100 ,, 1• 1• _ >,t, ~rol!el'" ·'° ll201 me ~ 1~ + \Ii (3) Much, mucb wont, -tM . ::,.,, Mi; 11 l 7" tntrm 111 31-; " :11:11~111itn.1 IN "llt "' + ontl C«11 2 • 11~ 31tt 3t.\'o -~• ~tvniml'IC11 1 10 YI 1~ 1 v. +··· ,, __ ,,, spendable ea-•·-· of A groaler a I l ho u I b a..r11 H• ~ .., Int ewsn " .tlh FUNDS .~ Sltlo..., I !j!}) lJ1-; m't +\II I co olA2.JO " ,.11, ~ itlt t"' G:rd&.1111-:g: 't ~ :II) Ev. i.l' •= ....... -m-LI~ 3'™ •'Ioli lnl t.Wltlf 11\1, 1•l6 A'"SIY>ell !.IG l~ Ji = fj''" + ~ r!1P1.r:.a82_~ ~ ft; 1~ ~ + ~ ~II OH f.JO "' Jht> 21 )71.4. + Y, thil worker with his· three possibly not so Identified -,,,' .... w .~ •• ;'!l!•itl~ /," .. 1l,~l't,v. '~SOA.!'..:11. to ... .fl 41\11-~ Olll~ 1.511 2oll 1m i"' 2m-'4 ult ltttrtft J:) '"' m II\+\~ .. -.. ...,,$Af, ,...,... 1 4 Wi D\4 d'\6 . .. . I of t ' ~ ~ -\Ii tttltt pl,» 1 lll't 11 11\li -114 dependents were down to reliance by the White House 111rtc"' ~ 1"'"' , ,.._ "'" s1e1 l ,, 2'4i ~ ~ +·u: °"' .111 1u 2•l4o 14o 2•1t + •;, 11R" f'·• s 1~ " 1..._ + .,, l~-· 816<:k HI 2~ ft Ionic• Utt~" A SICI pf 7$ 12 ll2 ~ Miii -~ t Cal• 352 .. V, l7'lo .. +114 GltSfUI 1.IM .i ,~ 2J :Hilt .... $77.68. Thi!: ts how much spe:n-on.volun~., wage.pr Ice ,"!!'",.. 'c' 1,1~ ,ji... J~::''U "°"' •n ,.,,, SIN• M " 1~ i1"' 1tlli + 111 onWOOd 1.to 1 ll" lli ~ -111 Gvt!Wffld .w 1u s-. u 1~ + !4 db inks he ad-dall The While H --., I c •• .. ATa.T ""' "' • N na ... .otUnlf .» ,, ii ••g:llW pl]'.$11 6 1114 .... -m a le pay shr " n "''l nes. ... ..... 11-AH 1m 1J1" j-'w , ,.. , ..._.... 11 u1c F<111 •.n. '·" •• ''' , " .., " n " o• ~ , , I • .. • ,--•• , • n , ~:. Ull .,......Bo.cu ~m•m • " NEWYOll:KfAl")lllCk!>ncl J~S.7iAmWWk.51 1.inw.11rr 12 -+a ·~11:·r' 1 14"1"" ="' HWPis"Ji ''lll---· .:.:·•.: "'··ted to reOect the rise in mu I to test the power ot ...... ""' 7'4 llfln F l!"'~ •,Yi -Tht 1o11ow1,. -1,~.~......... 1-~, •.ll AW 11re11.is ... " It 1 ""'""' " ~..., 8 1111a I lA4l1111<J1mtbY l tlon 11..:1 .3 1t1 11000 ISYI li • .0:11!~ 1f ... ~lo~+ '"' Ind. 21 7VI 7" ••. ,. prices since the base 1957~ jt.s own voice in this vital area. B~ $c~ 1t u IE."' '•'•' m ~ N'iri:.'f AJ.t«.,_ Inv CllA 11.JI 12'3'""' Zinc I ~ 1~ R ... • 1""' 2No +"' -ff.I-........ bri . I wrll'•• . • •• ,rwn Ar 114 1111 2,.·~ ll f' Of ~tKurHln 1~ .... !·°' I.IN Aml'l"on •• I It I~ m., .60 ' 114 1119 114 ••••. Hi(Wl1t 2.21 4 Jl'll 1111) I Hlo ... \.lo ,.... ....... In destsummary, 1t am ..,. econorrucs, U1A ,w. •• l• 14~ tl• '' 10 f,.... •IH'$. 111e.. !'' " tncllc ·" l-" """''ft . .a.I ,. IJ* 119 1111hi .a. ii! 21v. 2'14 ~ ,, .• H1J1Pn 1..a. , :nv. 1'"' :n~ _..,' -•·•es•tM.ll''·••r•·· llll he ~• f uctty • 'ICillSIPI' n 2'i" 1>rk"1tWhe11n""l•l0.7ll .7JAN.F111e -.fO llSn ~'•·,.·ia orGIW2.SO. ,'Mm'l!ii' "'•"E11bwt1.os '5o11¥1#1M141¥1+'11l ...,.. ..... • UV ,... al~ ........ po CS, re, .uu~ 0 COUfSe, unn Cl! 1 J k•lv•r 2'11 ,... I ncu,lllH ln~lors Gr~: AlllflC .to II ._ _.In .22 21, -. ,.. tmWll .tit 2 •l't ~Vi •YI ,. .. • pay (O buy What only '77.81 they are entwined. HOW could ~t! ""21n'? ~=~Gni 2\.\ 2t't coulll hlwt bwn IOS tldl ~:JO 3.17 AMP l"S, .ti 'll jS\'J P. deft°'::=!! ff I 17'4 I -ti: Htlnr::r.~ !! 1:~ 1•\'J Ito t," could bu .. __ A.IA 't be lhe-i--1 II w '" ,,.., 2lh ICN• T 1,v. ~ =~,ld~:n~~I ft'::!:,.:, ,!:.1 t:tt =:r·l:o' ~ ~m l"C Intl '·"' ,, 31 >tt4io Im ..... Htnolmn "' f41 2t"' ~ 2ftl .-.. ya uo;\;-ago. I 0 '1'1'£Alll: mlld1 N 10'4 11 -ktli.tf -'"' •1• Atll tock 6.IJ 11..1' AIMii £;" 1!1 •1 ~ "1 -· , .... ,.,.-, 1 .. , 21'4 27 14 +'Mo H•fld Iii• .71 1• ii .. 11-···"·· (4) This real -~·ble pay -M " " kltllwd ~-· ,,, AMnin 1 11 1 '' 1.a 1.11 •.~ Amst1r ·" 1\41 ~ " du "r" 10 ~ 1m + " H1net Cll .JO 20 si. 1 "Y""'""" ::::: • ~"'·~'Ml ~IC~ F~b 1~U' 1,t; Adm1r1111 Fi.rids,' 1 v1r1: ~ '·~ '-11 All!Sfed • ~ •~ 21~ +·y; ~ ,;t lJ i~ Jm 1r,:-~ H•NMM I.JO ,1 ~"" ,~ ~ -,.. Is 2 percent below the I .. ••••••••••• .. Ml" l1\latJ'Mo •Y• cus 1!1"" 1!'" •r= ~:ll j6:::I~" 1 11'.4 11f,~~~ I.to 1JJ ' 614 .,m ... " ':::lol .J 'tt I!"' ,tl: lo +ttHtrrlf ~I\ J! 4n., •I~ "No:t:.~ H'luivalent ,; ... ,_ of a yur I.. Sow 114 ,... ..... , PC •• "" n'ut 7 (U 41 "' ... 6.lO Alldl Heidi 1 20,6 W? ira -row 1.10 ' -l YI lru 1tV, + ~:~,/.to ~ ~~ M """ -y,, ;&o.ItisZ17Pe~tbe1owtbe ::T~~IA ~ ~ ::::.''t'1 ~~ ~ .... u.,~1.::'',.d ::tt f~toh~~ 1i:U1~~~rt,sv,tJ I ' 1"' 17 ;J;; '~:11cr.L I ~u. m; r::.~~::i1:1 t: JI~ 1•tt rm=?: . al l 1· of l Fm" ance =~· °:;' r~ ~ ~!.'."r. V'o1 2~·1 f/14 A lftl1td •. 71 I.to 7;!-F"Sflds: Apac .Cp :ts Ai ll\: tJ:m ~ +,« rJ.~i:·.Mf 11~ lf!L llm.! 1~1! + ~ .".",,H,,, l. ' ,t 1f!! f:\; i.~ + ·v. equiv en ~ WO years •rtr Gi> 201.rt 11 k•e sir ,, .. ?~ A u•r• •.M ,.$.! i '"11 11'.fi 1J-M :j'ioOcJ.lll It If + dh P1t2s li« 'Ill ~ ~ 6 ._.r .r. I'll "" ago (and no Politician needs •ac: NG ~ 1014 LMC 011 ,.11e ,~ ~,111~1~,,. ,.y ,.= ~ i 11.u ,;;; ,.,.I: .,, fi/!: 1: l?~ I :;t .:;:t.. ~11i:1n :n 1.w. w. ::::: ~ 1 .10. J '\• ·~ 411) = \\ m. lo --ind him of fl.. !!',,' ,c11• .!~ ,,1r.1::~· R~~ 2\'I J A P!lt Fd t:o 1o:n ~ •, ,'·!t ,•ij, .APL P.!,_ .. 11,.:• ,,•, .• 'ii• -~ :=u0~ ,. ,"' ~ \.\ :.::"'-Htl,:MH'., ·vr :M~ mt = ~ -It. •o;aaa uM: iii VPS ~ IW. LIM Wd •'~ S\'o Ame.IP 5.11 s.u ii: Kl .-ff in A ~Is~~,_. i7 111" .,.. ~ -R ll H li" li!>ii YI Hltl-Cort " t l \'J ••··-apecial significance of P•Y B • f ..,, L•b 6 '" ...,.,'°" 114 '"" ""' !us 2,. 3.n s1 16· 1158 ,.•c11 1°'11 1 :1 !t1-~"" = :m!:l.w'1.1f' 2 •% \~ •l'I = '1' •"'.,u" \£'!_ .60 ..,, 2no ~ ~= ~ I .•• ne s 111•"1• , .... ' f-!~ CM "• •,m ~D~=.r:i!~ IO.ll ~~: I! t:n .:., .. ~fl PSY 1.oe 2.1 lN v. -t loa I.to , loll '~ "' -,.. me ...... I ' ""-l •lli 1-N -~ ev~ in fall 1968 to fall lrlJ). . 1~'1 l~• ~: :tt ~to.r 1~ '"' Cl1ptl 6 .• :i 1,51 = a 1'·:1 ~·r1 ~~!::Bi :1: il' I: ..... rur.M l.6t ~ ..... ~~~ c!°p 1: 1~: 'f"' 'r" = (: lt is also below the pay level ,,... .•no ~ .i11i Lellor G 1s 15\.-\ ncm• 1.u '':J Ol•r ·,5 l 'll ANns os .10 'l 1:i. ~ ..... Hemll11e -'2• 6 '* 6•4 61/o + ~ Of 19S7 and ol 19M aod of JNS ,.,.. Viii 13•1< 14\lt l.wll Ill' 12'' l."4 s""'1' ~·~ •. KnlckD 1:" 6:13 Arrl\COS 1.60 1', '""' I !!, -.... @~I"~ f.'A ~!I "n'~··· 'u..I",. '•!::µz ~ n ~=:;'~11is 'i~ 1:: fi~ !~~ !~ .! VENTURA Calif (UPI) Ill lr&I StYI" l ine Mii ~. ·,. sl':k ,. .... ·~ !';.:ldi Gt ·11 •.01 .vmc, ... , .... 10 "" -?. ' ;I"! " --., ., --' ' - ''''' > 1•• 107 LotJi.w A ~ .•v ,-. G•• > OI• rrnou.t '~ ~ ~ • +u II.. 2t ~"' 4 ~i· • ' • "lorr'• Oil Co h .....,. .... Chtlll pf fi 102 loft (oy 1111 •"' QfY 4.2'l •.U ~A:i(lt Ii.I 1.i:,, Armt of4,JS 1 = I 3 "' Pld: .20 1tJ g.,,_ 2.« ~ \'J Of II.I. --'--" ... • a& re....,...,.,.. Cl!adel ' 1 l09 Etr" 12 13 "' ''" l.Jf s." t ' n s Ml Amul Q • IJO w ~ [ + • l"rtKHI lf "' "" ti~ -\t Hllfl VDlllte 11 ' .~ • course, IUl.J Ww1U1:r ls il d'• .~ '· M UJ Cl!l1 Ml9 l atr. 11~ LYMll C l• l .V. Am Inv 4.111 ol.l'CI If• 11( ,· .. i• Arm Ru 1:.0 2J »¥. lY -1" vctC!.,,IJ.C "'' ''·--'"' ·-~ -2111 !f~!'Hotel 1 5' ) 3'l4 JJ a: Iu•'yfn ' wJtbhts newo ~COV1;.1ies1.u Orr CltliU A 2l'Vo24it.MldGEI 131.i.14°"'~.,MGut 7.1't.JI LH•lnv $'.111:ll· AroCOOl .to JU I ~-\41 YCO,..-.n .,. -,L .._r!J.20 •W.M ;u \:B, comparison Co I N b nd ~-!HI u 8 j>'lil ''"' Mil A:ll"f sv. m "'"'" th 7 SJ 2 n u..c NII • I "'"''" Ind 1 7 l' !lfi .. + ~ ytnHud .so 2• 21 ,,.,., 'II + n Hoernw11 ·'° II 22i'I 22"" 21-........ ··-art bo ••• ~-laid un y, e . a .. l'Cflf\llllt 11l1n Ml s 1$11o M1llkrT 10\'r n A..0-GrD<JD· . tint l '.i l n All'lld 011 1.10 11 ~ ~-2.f14 + DIYlllPL I ... n ~ 211' fl~ ... Hott Eltdrn 2 .,. "* •i.t. coun ..... ,. w u.111 lolll:'C'U Count W -· N br k iitk Ml 20,~ 21 M.,.,, A1 1 111i C1Plt 1.06 1,1• own11 SIY!is· · A1h10 ott.&O J .,.,., , """'-2 °"~"' i.1$ 111111 "'"" "' "'"' + ""Ho1ktto1nn .22 ., :14"' :u :u'4 ·i··;·· y, yo. ,,.., e 81 I 1411'1on 11-1\'rM.,>ln M !l''r J'.~ Gtwlll f.,,10.'9 C•ntd Jl.filJl.'IOAud Br-1 7a;, l\ 1\\-\,\01" 1.M JIO 41\li ....... -l'lliolldA. !)Vb '.!J~ .52\.\ Ill! l ell · · -'· O lln1 "'" 01'\l lROIMllOI'" c f'MI 6~ '"""" ·1.u 1.12 C1J11 fJO t»Aucl DG1.10 2' :u•o S.\'r l4'h .. o..... •2 '' SMO >4 ""'+Y.i.ou~s""·1.20 2 11"' *'~ , W ts tn LUC e D V e r • Union 0 ~ ~ Mlf Mlt 11\1. 11'-' Fd lnV .61 l.M Mut 11:S, liff Auel SPll 1.10 • 2!~ ~ llV. + "i,ii !>ef.,..rl" l.lJ 1J 1... I~ IA ... •• $1ilkt A1J 111 21\11 j1 .. 21'(, ~ Juluber1 are.a Flow resultsl iow CP 1• l~Ml""Gr '"' n,,.,~~. "·•, ~,-·!!Lut~ ere 10 ... 111:•A$d••-Tr111 1.os. 1 11'1 tl'l Jf!l DtrMn111.10"' 2w. :uv." ..... 110 '" n '* n ~ • oevr o 6 6\'rM a,_,-21 71 .ocl• -l.11 ·-MM111 II\ 1.t1 1.1'0 1111 '2 13"' .,.,. 1 \ +·v;o.t11A!f .JO 12 2'\li 27'11 ti +lloHoov ! t'.20 11 ~\lo 2• 141\ were not revealed 'Ibe Wyom· otir c11 '" u Mlul LP •·~ N Alt•1111 1.u '·"Miu Fd ,.t110.ll "':8:,E' 1;3' " 11 '°" ..... ~tc 1111 " s~ s J1'11 + 1t Hott '" 1 .l& 1 ,~, ,.s• ,..,_ +·~ • &ll'tft SY l~ 316.oMv« 0 11'1&11\'rAll• liou9h1on: Miii Inc 1J.1M1.S:I A! £1 .,, I!~, .... , ;m"" im• ... ,... M1,•,·,", a,.·.~,','·· ,1,>:1-.~~ '•"'•.~ ~. 'n'~ .n;. mi"'· t"'1o" in& well Js in an extens.ion of ,,.1111$ F t .... McOuY 100Ai 21 Fund A '..U !,2$ """"" '"" lOA 1 IA:i All Aidtfld 2 ... Ill ' ... .. .. ......... ~ ..,.. olon Sit t'1.~ 21 Mtoflc H S'I< 5' Fund a 6.6' t .2 .v..111 Tr ll.11 l•.CI AU"Cll ~75 1110 ~ -'A ll1t .Ool U W. 1'4 7\1< -licluf Miff A 60 • 1• 14 ,_ the Pllot Butte field ~ pro-u :;c'[,, ..% .m =::,,!;"1• Y"" RU f~c. ~:: ~i! =::., 1~·~ ,1:n :11R~ICll ptz•,, ~ :it.... = :ti'.'! 1~ 'lt'c~1"l~~ 2~ 20'Moe r..u mt= "' 9::"1PFirrl°lf )J1' 11: I~ 1m?: = ~ duced 30 degree gravity .o ~ G,•,• •,•, .. .,11~ ~!:! c'". lffl. '""'• ~ t= :r. ~ ........ MW,, ,•,-..11:r.. , :;i:o..re3 1 1l: 2~ -... 1~ w. rte6 .. , ".., : 10m ,.J~ -\t .. ~F, P11.J11 ,, ..., ,q -.,.. fro lh ........ ..._. f ti "'" 't ,. ,. """"' .... 6l'a 1 .._T .-SI At!S(;t; UO W'lli ,5" 1$-~" IEd,t'"iAO SS tl'I ii1' lfllo ::'.'.'. H;;1Ll'i:U ~? iiat~1o .0 ~)!!: + ~ .. m e l"""""I'"''"'' orma on om Hllll tt: 1?lt Mldto T 1~19 1J"" .,., ICnt ~:~! 1~:tt r.1 F'4 1l111.w ATO 111(. ll 1".11 1 n.. i Ed ~J.JO 10 7J '""• 7"41 -~ HouslH"-.... ;;: :f1 1t... ...... , at about 6,fOO feet. l~. "1.Y l .i }_., ~; ~It 29'4 2N ltrlt Glh 4,iJ 5.l2 MIF Giii •.JJ 4" Auror1 l"l'Cd )4 4 ,m 6 ltwl S ll'li ll'lt. IJ\I; -\Ii '*>Gs ~j(j j 4' .... 4 -'1= i;:. ~ : ::.!'1 •':: 1~ .... !Sm.,.,.,., ~ • .:d j:gg ~::: =~~ 1:~H 1~'.M :=1n°T::. 1U ~ ~ "m :t '1ft..~' .... 1: Jil'I lt~ 11" :'.'.~ =~.,i' I~ rm n ~ ~.: SAN ANTONIO (UPI) _ ~ TIC s,·~ >,• ...... "'• ... r:IGlll SI .GI J.7• M~ Omlit t, 10.02 AYmCp fi. 15 ~ tW. ,,... _ "° tMinTI 1.IO 21 ,..,,. ).]fti ~ -"Hutlbrd \-'" 1' 'iii Im .. -_,,...., .... Mollwk 1•1'r 17 •I Fin t ,St 10-41' MUI Shr1 11.0 't'' Avc.o plJP 11 >•14 31· )1 ms~ .... I u 11¥1 11'iti ,,.,,. "'Hue181Y 20 ' l•I -h on Rock 2'\IJ 21,,., Mon! r 01 61'1 '"° auon ,...,~ 1.n Ml.If Trll .JS .ff ,......., .20 Iii 3t )l~ :n +·w, •/':JfC 1 ' 26\/o 26 1' ='Iii Huc18y lni.20 j I j1'4 + i.· Tesoro Petroleum Corp. as conttfd ,,,.. f" M°""' -'"II: 1im 11" ll'Oid st lj.J• 11." NEA Mut j .10 .• AvMt Jn .!OP "I ™' , ,... + \ti 01.20 • 1•'9 '"" ·~ ••. H1 untc11m .11 1Vt m .:.:.·.· d di · Contt1n 1v; 'II. MOor• p ' '"" rwn Fd .ll 3.ff Htt Ind .If !·" AWWI 1112.SO Jf\.\ ltlt 311111 )tft 37 hi! t l\.'o + " dllloPw J 60 1 '"9 2t knift from nDttin9~em, •n9l1nd r eporte B £IL! SCOVery In 1-L lN 16\/o Moort s t'IA 10"' lullol:k C1lvln : Ntl lnv1t '•~ .21 Avntt lll'j l'~ I~ 1611< U'4 ~:::: d Jib 11 """ .. 141 U\lo + V. l"''el1t ·.H "2 12fll IN I.,,.+ Vi Vrmllll P 'h La Th orpS ~J'Mi Mtt"tTrA ll=ll<ll'loli 8u1Jek U.12U.27N1t Stcur ,...,: Av1111 P1f .lO -..7' 71'41t ~u.g f.llO 1 10\/o \OY.lOl\-"de1I llf•.7J l~U 'J •··. e on aris , • e <Hrn vr ,,,.. l MioTr wt 31t 3" ~'nd" 11.60 1t.n !111" t.s.110.a Atlt'I; 011 .nt 21 13 12\8 tJ'4 _'"' 1u1111~m M :u 11'111 1~ 11~ ..... u Ctnt 1 14 2 25...., 21" .... . II fl d I f ·u· l'Wfrd l' l Mokfl M 41,lo s IYICI l.2• !·$' BOOCI A.ff $.U -8--01 Ion Co .t.<I ' "~ lt\'J l•l'r + 14 Ill Ctn Pn.50 1, ' w,· "5 .... . we owe a our nu ion ru1 Mlt 1·~ 1~ Mot cioo 1111. n 1tw s t.31 1 .it 01v1d 3.67 •.01 8 _ '11""" Xiii 12t n:n'o 130ro 1>21' t' 111 Po.....r t.20 1 II) jr\t ~n-. .. .,~ ble f l da Ith Ill bar roi1 Co 31~ ~ M 11 r 7\li 1 N'I' Vnt 12.911 I• '1 Grwtn 7.U !·" •-'ff • ..50 ?_? 20,,, 1'~ 1~ -~ ~ ,,,_.,· 1.to 1t$ 4> "~ ~-, 1111 Pw llf1.ll 1100 )I I ~ -.,~ CU et a Y W • ~tth ll '"" m 111~1:f e:1 2 2,,., ~111M Fd s.n •.71 r,1 Stk •.I• .71 !1k~\l ,6S •• J ... 21 2Jv. ..... lvtrslfld ,:Ii l9 1 7~ N _ v. H Pw p11 r:20 '1\'.t ru _ rel! of condensate: per million ~"1..ifs ~v. ~ :ttt' 1~E 2~~ 2~ ~GJ~r ~:M 1~ s=' ~:~ ~::t ti: ,1 .J:U ., 2~~ 21-. H'll t"' •vMH 1.ue 11t ~ 20\'J 20\'o-» 111 Pw Dn.o. ~ fgtt la"" + w > ' ' ' !· . •• TAX DEDUCTION VIA LAND INVESTMENT 1970 DEDUCTIONS . . • • • • • • $21,000 1971 ·74 DEDUCTIONS • • • • • $23,000 . 1; :-. . ~.' .· .. . . ,. .. .. •i .-. ...... ·60 Aero ProClucing Alf1lf1 Ranch in l1nc11ter, C1liforni1. 7.5 milas north of tho Approved PALM· DALE INTERCONTINENTAL AIR· PORT, Wo~ds Largset Upon Com· plot ion. Pre Paid Interest - lnternt Only 5 Years - Depreciation-Income Excellent P"'flt Potential PLEASE CONTACT 1.L.D. INC. CHARLES SMITH '97·1450 feet of gas from one tone aDd nly M t•~ I~ N C tl 1gV. 1011 Inv 2.M .11 Nel GrT~ 7.76 t .4 BlflllPnl ,151> un ~ ':~ ':lt 2\.11 e'P:'.:.' ·~ ff ll1" ~ 21 t ll 1~£ ~Lt~ ,Sj f:: = ~ ····• at 3.2 mllllon cubic feet and 60 ~:·,:,I?:'." 2~.~."',~ =~~r c~ ;\~ 12v. ~11 lt: ~3~ 1o:ll :1::: )': ::~ ::~ ::":k.r 1~u ~ ~ ~~ ~:; =t "=~··~ J ,~~ ~~~ ::: ++'•,. ,~ZP1.. ;~ .1 2•11o ,;t Aw.+·" e n N t E 1 7?: 2:1\.'I 1nnlnt Funds: Ntw Wiii 11i 1J." Blllk of H'I' 2 I 41"1; 41~ •I'-+ °" le Cp .12 2 JS\.ii JS" 1.fh •• 1lldlir H1t .Jo 2 111' 11 ~ ~ 'v: barrela of condensate: per t wl• Fd ,.,.. t 1o1:1 Gf'o li•.li 1s B•l•n 10.11 11.11 Ntw1on 12. 1•.02 B1"trTr''·" 73 J6~ ~ s.i;. Dorr ou " ~ --.. !'Ille'"'"° 2 'i >Wt,. :a. " mlllio f llr secnd •Y Mlr l•\4o l$V.~lll!b 21 n Com SI l.•Sl~~hSlrt' f.J6B1'1>CIJ.3ll ,•""">'l'l,U.W,'.'°:'.~Otwellm""'f~'° W'lv.J"'J111 _:;·w,i''"•'~ ... ~.'5I ~'1""'4U.Utt=~· n ee Om a 0 or In 5 W. itl 1N<J 2lll> 2''h C.""111 .i.M •. 111t l•. l•.09 8trd CA: ,75 1 .Ill ,, ,, -2 "''' .00 > Ir.: il'' '°" + ""·•, " U ;ra-l> • Otll.ID ... ,,... .. ~"' •!~ 5\'o lllCom •. a 7..., ~Ph '·" •• ,. B11lc lllC .IO 1 ICMt VJ I ... -II 1" zone.. Tesoro has a 25 percent 0.1111 Int tY. flt ~:i f:irt. •"• '"" 5(!ecl ,_ .. 1.62 , •, 1s.u s.11 B•tlc Sift.JO $ ri ~ L~ ·· · · · ''"' :1 ·"° 411 ' 21"' -nmont ..,.._ 11ao l' !ltt ·· · · · . . 1e~ . ••· II o.1uw c11 s. SJ ., , ··-,, ,,~ c11_. .. ar h • ao 1.n 11.11 Bites M'8 ,, ,,.. ,,.. '"' ... ,... '"•'• ~" ", ~.. "" Im + lrlllkll .70b n • im-•~ m I c•n in UM: we . Ott C•nT 1•11) IS N'11 f;iv';' •• : $~ C•olt J.6S 6.U Ill Fd f.)f t.117 ,.~. Mf pf ' .• -:"l. 2 .,. m.i. v. -111111e lliAl.li I 17',I, -'Mi • Dtt lllr ,,,~,.,;, n GE 1sv.1s,,., Fund 1n1n WmS1l.j!12.6.5!11111rtd :! l~ ~::I'"-"' TJ Y t "~ j -Iii 111P1rC1'1'i. 21 '' 1 I .... . Otwt'i' E .. NJ N IG ·~•11\0 "'"' t•.•1 11:11 'Ntll 10.110.tl a.111111 prJ.JO 11 .014 6"1rt\\Dvit.' :.n . 21'1io -Iii intern .10 lj ""II , ....... . NEW YORK (UPI) _ The gl!~ ,SI ls,~ 1•, !'.'!tgi•n'," u 21 lhtM •JS 10.n •.n '"'' lltu.d'llb .IQ 1• _.. 43 .Olio 14 ' · lt2'0 102 lntrlkrnc I It 1 22,,., n>to -~ ... ·-•• ....... 1''4:?1V, Si>«.l 1 ~S 11' AIM l .N ··~!•WI lib la· :NJ mr,. 1'~ ::=~Dute Pl6.15 I l 90.,.,,~~1f:¥1+1~l~t"'a.''°•·:... 'Jl'!!,,_2'0 "* .+'t1i Textile Workers Union has !:?!!!" .... c, M '•" "'.,. •"lf~,11 37"' ;...., c,11emer Is.• u:s:i ~1 ~ I~ 1~· .! Birk c11 ·.w• 1 "9 ,"Ir ,... Oilnllrd 1 -. 63 4+11 •IA ~ " ...... -·· UIMI S " """"v"• A esc ]Yt 111 olonl1I: ·•• ....... 8e1rlnv1 1 2 lS'h J.S\'J 1.Sl'I +·" Oulll1n 6't l" U f• U \'o -jnl';J:l'r .SOb 10 lm f! I -~ asked the Federal Tariff Com· mld:sn~ 1t~ ~\Ii ~~·r ~ft ;~ If~ i~i:.i" ~.~ Jtt ~~~ ~ 1:~ I·tt i:~,,,",.~· ~ l~I jj.,, //~ re=~ duf.P::I !i. JO ll i11n. lJV. 1111.'t = 1~1,1.d: ,,,, l r,~ ~ t" mission for special help for Ill s~ ';" ,~~ ~c..~'NGM l~~ 1~ ~= i tt 1:~ ~riu~1 11f4 dfi :~.rnr ~ ~ tr"' ~= m~ -tlti t~~. :: ~ lr' #"" t Inf 1nei--~.11 71 17 •.;~II) "'"~ l ,000 workers recenUy laid oll 1~ o l~ 1~ NW p=s ... 1o111 *' Vtnt 3.n .'.10 ~111r1T, :·J :·~Belco '°"' ~ 101 11i.t. 11'.-\ 11"" = ~ &:P •.1Jotto1 'l'IO \ u,,.. ~ t 1:11J;;M1_,..,'i:,• "• ~\ 11'11 n _It. lht mill beea f In ·~· Nuc:I RIC ..... s Coms Ad 4,11 ~u ,.i: En! s:.. •22 !•lkn 1.60 ~ tlU. fl'.'i :HYI <rt.t .... 2 y»o ,,_ 25\lli ,,,,,_ ... ·-... .a , ' at ee . es use 0 • z ,?•1.,nl Jv. ;,,. Ohio Arl II~ 7 Cwm, Al 1.16 1 ?6 l"lon Flld 10.2s 11 ·20 eldn!IH ~ l 1j; 4"' lill't + ·~ ...!mo Ind I "" t '"' = ~ to", •• ~ ';i: .!! !!~ M\,\ I ~ = .... d f Ra ...... Cllllo W•I ,, ,s,... ~Ill c I " I 52 ' . . Bltlll .... 60 5' 2P4 M't 2t.... .. ~~111Am ..30P 11L .Siio s 5\s " ,....... . '"4 ......... s creue imports o yon E111 thb ,7' 2'1,., OPt Seil\ 1, 11v, om• "' t JS , u 141n rnY t.OJ t.11 B•I *"t•<on 16 '"" ~ 61 .. = 1; -~-f:--!~Ii "::Cil "l §I.Ji~ 3, i.; 1 = Staple Fiber. The mills are ~=.•,,:., ,"',.. ,',li ~0·~~P 1}~ 1~ =:e'ad lti: tn Pr~~ ..... ~,1'1·3 :::i?:i 'ti4'4 •• no.t 11~ 13""-"" l"1"1c to 21 ~ 1n1 T&T 1.1s .., ~1 1; + !-•led l Nitro and E ~ , ,.11r NA • ...,,111 omc.fdt.11100N~or 21·11:"!"""1'"'' 'lll-~~+i" •scoc":'° 1111 ~n~=~l~lltfP~• 11 1t:z 1 =ttt ........, a ~111 sr; Wt •!Jt •y(it ,1,,.,12,,., om11~ 31••11ProFunc1 t 1:.,.illllfllftC11 !.60 .i1 ""445 .cs -"6 ••1Altlln ltou 1~111n·o + TTfl~.90' 71! !! 1 """ P••ker•burB w Va 8 n d El 1._ l'l'ii 11, Pl!c 11t1 1114 111.i. C<>ne:ord JO.st'!"' Pro POrTf 1. 1 6 ,. B_.I ll'fl . .so • t»\'I 1" 1!!::-.J •s GF .rtt 1u :u :D'l'I :u + I'~! I" '!' ,.. + ,. ..:::. l R 1' v' Th .. union F. UC 15\/o , P1b1t !r A,1v. 'r' €:::r1Jr 2 n 1,:ff J:roYdf\I : $ .i:n :=: =~i 110, ~~ w.,.i ,• _-~ :.;;.~ ......... 111t Jl !'"' ~·m ~141'. -... ",' "'=1~:. 21 ~·~ ~· ~: =.',G : riuD oya • a. e . ed ifi1'~ .~ la ~:c ~tl .,....., :n"" c°"' c111 1 ... r p~11~" Hi IH •ftlf1 Jo12.so "" WI"" \l h'll:v• ·u 211o INL .s 11o wants the worken retrain F.lrc 5.,. 1'1' ,116P•~<oCo .;" 31~1or• Ld 11i11•• Putntm Fuflclt · · aq..,.t 1s,1, l" Jill'~ .,5.,.,,!.····"· g~rJ"''.J ,f 1 2 ... :E1v.,. ·~",''J'•,•,','•'° 1'',i J ,, 116 =141 ' and relocated al government ~ ~ui 5; ~~==~~to~ 11li ilt ~~ J~r., 1j ~ 'l ~l ~~~ 1\~ 1l.o.11 ='1f1 I':. 297 7<M\ • ~ -"' ~ .10 Jl '"' j M-~ n JI, o1i n 1:. "" ~I; \ti .... . E~ 011 1.\ 1.\\lo Pttkw ll '"" tn WO..I f.!D •. 61 ~"" .:s. ' '" Tllr9t .tO 11 .il~) 4"-+1 !~If .tlt ' ' m ' -.... ft i j .... . Upenle. fMrwv c 71'~ , ..... P1u1ttr, p ~" 516 dtVlh M S7.tl 11,tS 1ncoo-n 'If 1 11.m Olt... ! $1~ fm Jl c: ~* r ~-.. • m-a nl9fll(t Of s 11 .... . •.:c•-:::::•c::;••:...~··c....•~ .. ~·~·"='"c...~"-•-•_7l'r °'8F:t• Jp"j1 ~ v'r.r!' ::n I~ B1r:rJ~J· ', u~ J.~ If%=~ ~~ r1 '1i 1~ 'U ht+\; a:•r•rtd 1'!', m 141 ta l"~ WORCESTER, Maas. (UPI) oel:':' \·JI l2:a .~C:.:' i1, ,-,f l~rJ, i1o 1ft ll?: .c16 ~ 7.... :!:~.2' Jl J.,. l~ J!--+"·u: " ~ ~ J !~ 1fit J~ ::.~ _ Jame•bury Corp. a ball 81:0 co11 l .;! / ·n 1:1n1re1 ,, ,q u:Js 111111111 ·,..,,JS m. ii ru'I \,P ,tJ A-th :11· S.1' llObtlll lr~1 valve maker, has s ued c ' B .... , Fd 10 :io 11,?t s..11m Fd •· "·" llotkltl Co ... ant are °'"'LY 11.lf111' Sd'1111tr IJ, 1 "·2• BolsC•s .lSb ,., WA. 4.5YI 4jll + 111 ""''" 1.-IJ ... -v l.J6 ·n ,~ ll .. Kltamura Va J v e Manuf11:c· E1!(1n&Kow1,.,,: Sc.Ullder F ,. 11onc1 11111 ·'' 1 "'° 1v. ~ ,., " -:u ~ \II '"-8~~ itj:ftlT:U ~,1nw ,,.~;~~~"'1.1on ,~ ,r,'111 ~ }..,.+""' =t.1:~ ni !fM mt _=z ~M ,1 1~ n...,:~ turlng Co. of Tokyo and its l~'?l fl Im 811 1,.,.1,,u g;;w.. i.u ,. •• ,. + ! ,.. M 111o1.n 1 11m 1arn 1 _, _ , American sublidiary Kim This Work ilOdt n:.:,1:n~ltwsrf~~;·~::T"~2i l: :d" ~ m:=u ~11111 ;J1 ~f: ': ... ,._ =tt td.IM" ,, --;:·.-1\'t I Industries, Inc., in federal Etltl'11 11.1' .11 e .. u1, 2.7' l·'j 8-11t inc: 2f ·~ , 1 = l 18 nc 1• 0r 17' IUt + ~ .aAn '°tif.'.io 1 !" t. ~ ::.··~ coort at Houston on cbargeii or. E~'r. sc '~:;i 1l:Jt L~r~!' I·~ .:~ tr::Sr~.«tt ~ ~ ~ k. t t -1111 ¥:. ;; ll: 1• :.;·4' l:,. ~ l 1.,. 1lt\ 1 "'.:!. tt · frtn f J b 1-n 11·" '!·~ '"o;~ !· ' !·" ""IM' "' "' "~ " "'4 • 1 ,.;; " "' ,. n. +"· ""'''..ii j ~ 1:1 -1' m gement o ames ury co RON A (UPI) -e"'""s• H ·U sei,,t'Gis 1 . 1 ·" 11111 Ml' ., 2 ,,", •, II) 42.lt .,"" +"' lllYI t. --:M ,, it 1 ,_ 11" ... ~ JNJJ' ~ ~"' !~ .:.:·" · valve patenta. I I r-uf . i 1!::::1vGlll ~-~I· ~I ,!:' 1.Bl:Ji 8rlt P~.4311 ,, ,...o ~ .!..~ ..... lllYI ~... I' 11111 JOt;, '"" ... \Ii an \II JI• .•.• Unemp oymenl n \A orn1a s 1=-l"ro 1:· !:Ii ":. ,.. ,1:,, .11 =t-N1'':t~ 1 --..... uroflld .... 0 rm , .. 1r--J L t"f" so Sit .:.:.I 3}iahUymorethan7percent,... 1 .nlJM DHn U.ffl llrllwyGf.60 1r.n~\\~:+'ii, w~';f~fl} J ...,f, I .:.:;14 jJ1mwc:.;1:: ~· ~-m'"'!~~~~=::: HOUSTON (UPI) -Brown -e • :r;t,,' '" 'I:~ 1,r, Fllfrd~·~ • Bk1Y1tVG 1.n '' D m.. 'll!-v; F.Htr" . .a 6t ~~ 11"' 11 .. _.,., lmW' '"·" ~ "'_ ~ •~ •-~. Inc., h•• formed a but the owner of Glen Eden """"" Bo t.S4 !·5' ... , 1.11 ,_., :~1 -1 ...., ~ •1 + 14 ,'~•or• ·'°" ,, m lSl'r '"-'*"'"' ~"' 11 "' ' 121, "' .,: "'-"'\ ..., . h . Ft"d Grlll 1J.W. I '9 lnvnl t .7110." ·~· ... -, -1$ Hl ~ • -~ t Ch C1"1 466 1"' lt\lll 11\!li --\$ 1.1t l!._; .:.: U, venture with Nus 'Corp. of Sun Club near bere: lS avtng ~I: s~ 10.00 10:tJ ! Tr:rt I 1·H tu 11.._..-10 ,: m: ?:111 ~ + ~ ~: :J.!:1 ·is. ~ lm 111"' 1~ .:.:"· J~ :U ,, .. W" ,it:,.~ Rockville, Md., lO design and dilliculty fmding someone to Fld Tnld i-tr: ~::= =.1 Inv :t1 : lt:5d ectj:n. 11153 ~ 'J!t 1~ = "' .. f~r:f;1?r., l~ 1r" 1 1:t' ::!: ~ =" .& ~' •.!:i. dfl\ •""-:..."' bu Id I I F 111nc111 Pre.: wlmi GI ·n . 111 .... tn 40 lf '"' -~ ~-"" Inc: 21 no. N. .ier....... T-" l ••• JO 10 l nuc ear power pants. />J run a snack bar which grosses f~, ~:tt ll:1: lfjmi 1 :a 1lft t'C:W 'J.11 o ""' ifi: ,;'iJ; =~I'' wn1 l'ln 11 11'"' u:it n"' f 'U •••·• part of the dea1, Brown & Root ~ lncom 5,11 .6$ rm f<I 4.KI 10 llirf*r ltimo lJ 1:~ r.! •:~ ~ • i11,' .>':/' .I ~,,. '!!! 'Jlt :i; 11 Ill bu loo 000 •• 1 N .,.....,000 a year. V!n' ~-" •.01 •"' sf ,,.J0.111.» llU.-:lt mi so io -,.. \4 .., ,.o if' fl'~ , •. w Y • ."'ares o us FH §' ·~ 'f~ ~" '(V,'1~ , , '""1 '4 SI ;,., ~ u:: • ,,_ .r 1-... 1, Wi n· ... :::·1,· common at '8 a share. R11y COnnett said, ll1,1,·e have ~:1 1 i= •,: .)\ Ind :J i'.tt 1:1 No 1~· , 111 ,.~ 21.,.., ~:. ~ . .a • \Ii + .... r•·-t be f I · · 11.i 1" ·07 s1t1n ae di· ur1Nor .u n • ,,_. """+ 'Ai It' .ff 111.i ~ .u +t Jr.: ~ had any num r o nqu1nes Fit J,,W /-.I ,~ a1 1'-H ·11.s.s !lmld'l':re, • ., 11 14 u j•Yi _\II " Mt•,., '* · 1~ u 1-1.16+742 " "' .... o. ,;.. ... 8• • 2&1 10'!\.'1101 , I -~ .aioec~1 l' 1!" I' II -• BEnl.PAGE, N.Y. (UPI) -and two or three men came ~~t si''• ~·;:..·~ S!\ 11MuM aui.11 .,v··"' .!C1"' 111' 1 \II ••••• ,~PSJ·'t ~ 1 v. l'IMI "".:.:·« 'Gn1mman Corp. h8S obtained out who knew the restaurant ~l:f r:.: J·.,, .: .. ~'.i" lnvi·!'' , .• o -r.:lf1~~s .to ! ~~ l= ia '"" s-L-•-a f41.! million Navy contract bu.siness. "They appeared in· ~.:, 'bW.. i1i S°.71 •~" :1} ~~ ~=~"1..:: J J~~ 'a! 'Hi=~ ~tsJt1 n ,!~ J~::"' nr•••VV&a to provide EA-iB eleci.ronlc terested and were going to Founcl••• G•Dup:•.n1M"i' f.' l:flJ·s1•~:l11n~ne:..., rJ 1~J ~·· Jfil11:!tt ~;EBJ1&'1i 11 ft' ~· 1Jtt-:.::1.4 'fbey never SboWed Up again.'' Sotc11 u"ev~ 1 ....... J~ 1':iJ i O~ ;~'1.-: r; ~ ~ "+·iii l!l'O~ l.Cll!ft 11 ~ 1 II; nu_!~ fll tM tl9di: ~ _,.. warfare airtralt. go back to get their wives. te'O:::: lt:U l!;l; :~::t t! : l:~rf,. ffl ?.! U !! = ~ ~1' i~ sl · ~ 1~ i" ::.~ • ......._ " •"'".,,..... .... he said. ~~~'i'l1n Gr~,. IJ'l ::'~ C111 ::n '~ .:..'\\'fl," I rm r: ~ r:nt,:itr,. ft "I~ .. -~ ••• • ..... ""''" ire Ullllftclel. I rc "-ff 1 ,,.,.. et 1 1:fi ilft. ; E •14 ::·« 11 c11i1 I... l•p ~ 3~ s~ -14 ........,. .,,. • -.tne. """""'-',... Now Is THE TIME.I.I Thedublsanudistcoony ri:'"' s:!J s:=Tuc1or~~,o~r12:n ~:-.:so 'J, .:tt , :i:~ :t~M!r,i'· J '1'n\,mc .:.:·".._.,..~i..co-t111...._..-~ and snack bar CU!tOmtrs art, r~ ,~ tJ' T~ Inc l.n .:n . :.Z'lori"°a ...J ~ ~141 ll"' =I"' N ·;;~I. .: !}t !1._ ..... ..ote ........ .., ..... mt , .. Ci' of course, bare. f•NClrl\ 1:r, 11J~~Mut =·~1 :·;; PLtl.• ,,, \I 9' -\Ii • It ".. -tt--...... _..... 111t ........ • -w.... I orc:le Until rectntly the conceulon ,e,J·~ c.'r..t ·~ ~1~~~1 .:,, c ... ,ie:ci, 1;: l: 1~ ,.,., U: !. :: ~1 1t ""' "'+ h ,.,, ..... • ,.. ..,,... ,,,. "'"...,.. 1"1. • • • to get your tax f"I' .. ,...... II r. . .... b ·"'·built ho ~·... • 2 •· MCI\ , 11 •.n c1rrG 1.1ae 1 ~ iS" ,, + \t •''" t + •. ~ """ .,. _........., • .,.~ ,. wa.soperalC\I y;uu.u w 1~..,;, ,, . ..,re' ,_ ll'.'°'j)' •!1)91 .'4• lj J!~ ~· ~-~ '~ -.., -·-• . ef -"--Ill fh ..,. didn't mind loo"1"" at Olhtr ~1111 r '.# 11'~~ ~ten qj·· ·.!I 1lj,fr 1:~ l'r ~ :f :ft ... 4.i. ..-ICllNH • .... • W v .. n. T• I.,_ Act ef 19'9 Mt .... ••••• ...-,n ta. tr .. .1i~ts ""'6 l'ullll .am 1,l! . u,.~' 1jl Cart 117 .,.'! , 4 _:·~ "' .. :, 1 "' l~ =ti 111• ""'"· ~ "' .. ., ""' 1-."/ ..... ~ ...... --....... n~ • g!!-1_ 11j •j V•lut d• Cp f>l1.2J J16 1 1 -11 ,Ml I .._ ....... W --. ~ _,....--.,_.... Connell said be W&nlf:d lo g~1r:;' ul :.: VII sa" 1.1 ~ .to ewe .... •Wtetl-.,lyef1t70CAPfTAL5AINSAMDLOSSIS.nhMoll1• hire a marrltd couple. but e.;.'r'i·otn..,,S~,'!i twj:• ,,/.A 1 :£1 l".!!f:' • tt~ J: ,. +~~.~~,:..~-.::...": .. t I f f I -...... .t ... 1f10 apfMI ............... WhfW -... lhere ls Tl() requlremtnt that #.;11 F~ 1?~Sf I -! ~=.,,_, t~ m: ~~/I"'~ ~:: 11 11s"' I\ -;'fit j\, t~ ~ t" ~+I ..,.,... w •..._..._II tlll ....... cw.. -............................................... ,., ... , they "dress'' Jlke the Ir ,. A ti 11 V1r lrtd, '°"' .. ,.. $ ... r~ ,:, ~ ij -... -""" ~II,.. ...... ._ "" .... .. .. ' ..... f'd1nc1 J'Ml ... vi.in. s,1, s, 1 r 1 · H ,..... ~ + • ~"'" ·.•" ,.. ~::;.: llflKtr ....._ ~-• tlldt Cl'lll'li'll w u.. customers.. H;,1.r..: '· 11 A :::U?' J: ,::~ lt:A ~ l.'J/ li ""14 ~!'!: .c(; ~ ~" '" :. t: """ ..._ -...... • .._"'"' For Y•ur C.mpfhnent•ry Copy C.11 or Wrtt• T ocley: ~r..i 3·f. •11 w111""'"' 0~~: ;if 10¥1 1 · ll Im 1Jll ~ ... 1. "2·"' • 7•v. '~"' ~II)+-. w ·~ ...._ ...,..1111 111 "-~·!',f;'1~' !·~·~ !: r~I' 1~:nlt~ ~·-1r: i :: ~ M kt~ 'ft .. W, ~ iia= ... •..Q• .... •·I!• ..... ~ G t Merhab & Co. Inc. 1,IOt'oOfOllPAIHT!NH ~· ,,. ti: 1 .. g ~,~.•,',• 't·.·n,',~ 1 ,•,,..,i. Jl1•j i..-•i5\:it>A• , t ~--5--•••"'--us I WHOLWU WAllHOUSI ~ "' .lf , l~ \, ~ ::.-: •• ,,: if J ' lf' Iv;= .. bllllel\ llf"-b ,.., ft-W"'*1! '""' O,.N TO THI PUIUC ~. 1 :~ : ::!Jt! 1t':f: J~J~ .t'"l6 't flt .-rllflkil!,'1 -! fl \"I \ l'r l~ -_, ..,.., .....Witt WVfllll'I. ..._.._ ,-''" No. Mai'• Strre=+, "=t• Alla, eant. $5 -~IJ,1;~, . "•:g w~1:"r.. -~ t':i ·~· .,. ~ f . ~·~ :::l:cr. 1.'li " "~ ,:. "" ••• -----........ I .n . ...-.an ... ., I~ !Cini f, ~ltt\11 I . 1 , '1• I It ~ +tt """'lllA 'ti MJll I~ _._14 _ _,_,,_~lll""'lllwlC:tll'recel'fo 25__...156 ,.,, .. •DtNa••· ""'" ""'" Ir Giii • W11t• ... , 1M _ .? -G -0--.,..... ., ..... ,.......1111111 \ll'IOfr""' (71 .a) 131-43•• (714) 6 ..,. '"°"'..._. /s ~P.,1 :,~•-'':Z:l"~• ,;~?-.jj ,:,-:to' ~ .. 'J .. ::~ ~~l·.1.~ 1lt 1;\! 'I~ '""::~~Aet." -'""'""° 1,!I,;;._;::_;:_•:,:~:.;:.;:_ ___ .....,,._:;_ ___ _;;_ __ .;, ___ ..;.· ------..111:.==~"'="='~·~•~w~·~·~'~••:...:==~ ::i: a--.: tii 11' ~::, l:rr i:n :::fl~ti. 14 U~ IJ1" :.:.t" •t ~"f.,. !J ~ l '• lf111 ~·w =':.':::'':.""" "*'"' " I • • ' I I I I ' I Thursd«f Novtmbtr 19 1970 SC .. Thursday's Dosing Pri~Complete New Ynrli St~li Exchange List - Stocks Fii1isl1 On Mixed Note .... ... , .......... "" a. <at .... ... l .... ) ........ a.a.. .... .. lit& I Mftlll Lew c-. Ott I •> 1 6•1 1 f Vt UnNat Cp wt l • 6 6 -hUnNal•f10 3'2 6 S i !'i + \lo UllPDv• A0e s,1 #'1 •l'I ·~ Un R•f n lJ I I I u1 1'11111r It I• 1>• 11)i-~UH-tOIY 1 ' '' •i -\.i,US N1 R.l t I l• ,, 2• + 14 USR..irn 20t 11 16 1~ 1Mi --. US 1111 n i <I) ~ 0l,~ 1 o l" -\I ul Redllun 10 ... 1~ 1>' U RIJblt .'°9 l ,., .. 1•4 1•\) u Smelt WI • li • unn~ Co 1 SI~ S • St!. -\.Ii Univ Cit• I S>:. ''' S•t Un Con! 1111 ll 1•1!. U 1• -\\ UnvMI • lO., JI ltl• ll 11~-1.,._ Ur t &ld; WI .. l 1 S.16 1 , I UltS SVll..,.., 201l1'1>-4l l-16 U1MdS11 IO 16 t O tVi-l\Vl t~St.:H 2 • \• •lV. •1 , E va !Iv ""'' 1 ... •lo ·~ VI J'4\N d Int '14 Uh 2l , l l'• _ v. V• a Inc 5• Ho 11<. I> VffCO ln~lru l ( •II '"" •YI_ \lo Venk•ln 10. 20 11 , 11 '! _ .,,., V~nh•Oll J'l lfl.o U o 1\41 -"'V ... h• Co Jl •"i •:U (>lo Vl'l<.IJ Ohl'I e 20 2"' P\ ""' -\\ Vi.wit• 4 •-\Ii '\• '"° -h Vft;~ hw; 1 '" ~ .. 4o-\lo Vlnl•9e En! Jl :N\o U:? 2S\'o VLN COl'O XI 1 li.:. 7i.;, 7'IO VolMer<h 10 1 1•~ UV. lf'4 + \lo Voe>le•CD .611 4' a\1 I I t + ,,. Yule C0t• 10 2 1t 11i.11 llJM-._,Vvk ...: llO 6t 1114 I '-1llo + 1.~ WltrlhM 100 o " IN 1N WKllr!l'lut 21 'IJ 1'4 Jl~-\~W•t Eouo 1 1H• 11 ' ll\ii W•koNI 15'!' 4 211<11 ~ ~ -4l WI tro.m Ind 4' 1" 1\.i 1\<t -h W•"' L11>$ l2 l \11 l \'1 Jt• -1'o W•rd Fdo wt :io JV. J 514 _,,.w1ro1Co olCI Jt t tq t + \6 WlllCO OfD 11' 21 4 7l\/o )l\li +a;, WPll Mcl 50 f fli l f\lo t \lo Wt"'"' S71 J Jt. J t J... 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" 21'< -"'WTC.Alr 011 ZJO 1S lJ 25 + 't Wy1NJ 11111 6 S 1 St; N-.... WY• Lll>I t? 1n e 1 ~ 71~11 £ WYn'I o 20 11»'1 10... 1~ h Wyomb 1 060 11 17,o t.l\a n't \lo V1 ft nd t 4 1, l o Vonll;lltc IO •11 10'0 10 • \Oll z.,.., Mii OS 11 'r' 1'\1 20\.'t :t: \.t llmrH""' 14 ,, 11 f~: -~lion F~ ' -. ~ ,~,J 1~~ 1M~ + n ll 11\t 11 • _.,. s I'll>& 10 4 20>.G 'IJ41StlS ~+ Ju~ u ~ 1•>;,+~• 11J'olJV,13 • 114~•\11 40 n '°.,.. 1t1t. ..,,, +1 ... u t u,. u 1a 1s1•-~ Secretaries Will Serve;:: lS .... l lo ~ + O ; l~ Ji: ~-~ ' ~· ''• '"' -~· l • ' • s llllo ll ., --S lh Jl'o JO rso 16 , 16'" 164 41 ]I\ JI.') l" + 'o 11 1• 1A '1 f4\ii 4" " «'o •l• •·+. '!'"' ,, .. 11"11-... l ... , , •• 1•'4-'t l~W~;+u. ' '"~ lj \ 171.4 " ,, 'l'o • -.... 1 '1.\tf -l '' '" ..,, ,,,_v. tJ•l •J • ~ j . ' '"" 3~ l1'+• 3l ,. ' • ,, .. ' ··-.. fO ,,"' l1" ,, ... -u. s 11\l '1~ 1114 + \i l, '114 '1\.l ""' -"' t Sl S o Sl'l-'t 10lf 1G-t 1' lU l • J'~ ·:. lf• 'l~ 11~ + ~ J•• , .. )~-1,:,, 16 1l \ '!:'\ 'nlllo -... f 11.! ,7.... .r..: On Flights ' LONIXJN !AP) -A British a1rhne Is putting mm1skirted secretaries -called Jet-secs aboard its tong·<hstance nights ror businessmen ~ho would rather work m the ai r then watch movies I British Un ited Airways In lroduced its f1n;t two Jet-secs at Gatwick Airport Wednes day The girl s, Pamela Taylor >' ,, 16\lo W4 lJ.,... -~ l f ' '" j•\-l't 1'1t lSll 11\'I M~ +> \ J14 14 IJ 14 + It -T·Z- ~f 1!~ 1'~ 1fg:: il 1. !" ,,,._,.. '"' ~ )\Iii ~1•\• l l• ,.,,,_\\ 26 and Jacqueline GeJser, 25 will ny on a jetliner betwttn London and Nairobi Kenya Special ornce!I have been rig ged up for them aboard the aircraft ao they can take~ talion and l y p e aflio" '\' 't ,, ~. 1n J, Jig ~:f~. 5 ,E ,b ,1~ r "• 411. ''- '' "'"" 1614 '''-+ \t 4 ~-:p , ;,.. 10 11 11• 1~--JJ "' lo \t.-\· a"'''-""-' • j"• ,,.. ,..., -,, 1 ft J,."!_ '1~i: r,~ + \a ,. ,.. n. 1m + , 15 f\ • , . .+llf • ,,~ ltt. 'l" • '" 10 "' 1 -w. \\ tr.t I~ 1'f-=. ':. 11 1\l f\ll• .. • J .. ' ' " •~ ~11 s•--.. ll Pe \t J\o '"" l I.ii lt'I• + i:' "'iii'.._)-. ,, ... ,.-. ... respondenoe for passen1en Pamela and Jacqueline - selected from <1vtr l 000 hopefuls -designed lhe.lr own tri m blue un1ronn!I They 1n- !llsted on m1nlsk1rts ' be~ businessmen prtler us lbat way ' Their serv1ees •ill cllenta $7.20 ao hour ' ... 1 If the ldt_a Is I 5Ucct'U the airline which has routes to Soutb America will ut~ lheu-Jet.Sec network .. l f\t ~ .f\'1-\li ri it• ~~ l-."! ~:IF=============;::; 141\ ,,__ l"'. " , '!Ol li 10 • _.,. FAIR "'"" ... ---· ll ,f\1 ~ .t 11 •II t•t tl' -lo 11 tit.,,.,,, .. ,...._," , ' 4 ' 1:V )1oo1 •.t•-11 f•tf fa r fa ct111I Thet• IJir1a word1 IUlll Ill' f1,1e1' lt1 oper1tlan 011 th1 DAit Y PU,: edltar ti ptfl ,.,.,., 4.ay \" 'l' ,,, "•-" I ,._. ) + • 1 •• , ' ' •'t -..... ____________ _, I ~ I I I · ~ • 1C SZ DAILY PILOT , bee lly JOANNE REYNOLDS •1.. Ot "" °""' , .... '"" :/i,;•i~e Coast College, and '!r.»t"'l' Soto, In particular, 1/k~ done it again. i \;.A.~ again they've proven .~;.'l'llabUlty to lake a 900-year· >. T HU R ~DAT r ;-I D /, 'f DAYTIME .-8 ( \ old comedy and tum It Into an entertaining and even a fUMy evening. Last spring they cut their teeth on English Restoration Mollere's "TartuUe." While most of the Tartuffe cast was excellent, good or downright Miss Soto WI! comedy with "Sbe Stoops to ---------- Soto. Wbelhe!' strong arming the quarreling Jovers Marlane, and Valere, played by Barbara Belndorf and Paul Doremll3, or berating her f~o l l1h master, Orgon, played by Stan Tudor, she commands the' Conquer." This season it's scene. A c.oinHr ~ Moll.,1, dlt«ltd bV Wiiii•"• 1'11rkl11, tit dtlltn onCI !!Kor .. t lon b)" Jchn F1riac:c1, t!tMlrw br lllCI Coalt, COllllmH bY 01n Mc:W11! 1"11 Tudor is another of the cast Lorri 1 .. 111'" 11r111n!tot tonl9ht standout1t. He is the THI: (A.IT T1rtult. ................ .-,1e1 Gollllll Orton ........ , , ............. 5t1n Tl.ldOr fll'llt1 ., .................... Pim Hill Corine ..................... Donn1 SOio Mlrl1ne .. , ........... 11rtwir1 &1lnd0rf V1lere ••••••••••••••••• P1ul Ooretnul M..,. Pttnelll ........... Cll•lllV Ow\11r O.m!1 ... ., .....••••...•.. Scott <r•ne c 111nte ................. ~ c~-· M. LO't'll ............. K1wln Oor....u1 Ro¥•1 ml'l-r ••..• , ., 01n McWtlt l'HIPOtl .....•••.... ,, .•• Judy (flldllo"oo Pollumeft ...••••.• , .••... Pllll a.rllY C•rY 511lnblchlr ·THE GOLDEN BEAR PRESENTS BILL MEDLEY AND LEE HOLLAND 306 Ocean Ave. (Pacific Cocnt Hwy.J Huntln9ton 1eoc11 FOf' Rnerv1tlon1 C.11 S»-9'00 PORT THEATRE PHONE 673-6260 CORONA DEL MAI ACADIMY AWARD WINNER IEST FOREIGN FILM Year's Best Motion Picture ' The only picture 10· honoree! by ' The National Catholic Office of Motion Pictures The National Council of Churches St•rl1 Wednesd•y "NO BLADE OF GRASS" • ... Uodlr II , 1 ~• '":· 't P1r1111 .... fi1111111t1 e CllW "!· C. & (0.u IRI '4• W•STl:RN e Clllf' "MACMO CALLAHAN" IRl All Cl .. , 5llow Gr""" hdl e T'""'1 Wtlll "I WAL.It TMli LINE" IQI') .... I Aftrtllny QUIM '"1t.l'.M."(RJ E•clvll• Dl'"l¥•l1 llllWl"I A Mflkal Tl ._.... "$(11.000E" IQ) "" • S•wt McOHM e cOltr "THI REtVllllS" IOl'J All C..llf sritw • ......, P"k I T"MllY Wtlll "I WAIJC TH5 LIHI" (Ql'J '"11 • Anlhllly' Qvlnn "R.l',M." (RI e NOW SHOWING e DCLUSIYI HAllOl AHA INeAetMIHT e INDl.1VI$., NAY. M • ~=El~ CANDICE BERGEN llll• COLOR ALSO -A U•A OF HltiH AMlNTU~ NATIONAL GENERAL THEATERS NOW PLAYING COUGAR COUNTRY IN COLOR All ........ Nltory ••t e yept Cl ... filled wftll lowl)hter ..,... .-d"uctt..Mt. A tU• for tile .,. ...... , 2nd Feature "ALASKAN SAFARI" l'ARICIH• @liij lt >t STIRS· ll:lm • !la1lllXl i< ·······················~············ CHILDREN$ WEEKEND MATINEE SAT. 12:311-2:30 SUN. 12:30 lt-BENEFIT PREVIEW ir: :+ >IOVEM8EAZ4 •1:3DP.I&. ir: -$..) Excl!illl.ft 01"1¥•111 Sllowl .. r l'ran•.1 Slnllr.i. e ·c..1or "'0111.TY tilNQl!S MCQl!I:" IQI') plUI • alnl lilltWMCI • COIN" "ICl:Lt.'l''S HEllll!OS" (01') Exclltl,.. Drt .... il! Si.wfllt ~Dl'"•...,.eC•ler ""TH• ITUDINT NUllSIS" Ill) lfn • •• C.lor "'L ..... OOCTOllS" IR) JOHN WAYNE'S· _... "' "RIO LOBO" ~ * -DI~ • f1IERIOtolSfOOtlOo\TOI ~ ... ,\lVM.l.EYFOflGE ~ "'*****·***"" ······················4············· Kms I.IKE UNCLE LEN lft MARVIN 1H .,.AlllttOllW• ... _! .... ,,.._ .. "T1111111r All C.. .. r Sllllw lrvc. D1¥I-e Kim D1r11y "ITllAWNRRY STATl!Ml:NT" IRJ Pli!I e Ml<hltl GrHn "MAGIC QAROIN STANLliY IWEETHl:AT" (RI COSTA Ml:SA. SOUTH COAST ' Triplt EM ..... • All Clltr 10'1 NATIONAL P\.AZA GENERAL THUTll "TH• 0000, tAD a TH li UGLY" '1"11.NO •rM HIQH .. "'JSTJIUL OF DOLL.1.11.S" ~••mu San 0~ F...,. 1 n~ II lrlltol ... ,,,, "'ONI Of THI YU.I'S fUNHllST COMIDllS." Rich1rd H1nn1i-L.A. Fr11 p;•u "'**** IT'S ALL SO FUNNY!" (-MTllO( IOVBll AflDOllBllW.Gas Roted "Ill" A110 -Cllnf E1,twood. 0011 RicU11 . Don1ld Sulh•rl1nd in "KILLY'S HEROES '" EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT ' ' W U S A ' 1!p1 PAUL NEWMAN 1nd JOANNE WOOWARD ANTHONY PERKINS .... TOP HIT-Gff ... ·-"ZIG ZAG" Ell W.elec:ll & ...... J~-le tePJ Elliott Gould Dono Id Suth•rl1nd ... . ,. . . . ~1 ·1\S·ll .. •• •SACH -,.T •U.•• •• ALSO JACQUILINI,,,. ·-llci~ .,. ..... c_.,. """""· • .... 1111•-""'· 11ssn ... •S&--AJI• -r7·9"9 • HUNTIHOTON •-...CM RATED "G" -IT'S FOR EVERYONE -~Excluslvt Wolk·in Run AIRPCJFIT -It"& w..............n BURT LANCASTER • DUN MARTIN ...... , • .,..., .. 1111 ~ .. .,,.,. HELEN HAYES ;f I' 2nd Fealure: ''THE WALKING STICK" ROD TAYLOR KARL MALDEN CATHERINE SPAAK Somebody F.ignh Beck I Who fl9ht1 cll.1 luill1 Tht OAJLY PtlOT dots. Thll's wfllL Atld Wfltrt t/St WI J'OU flnd cogent commfntlry on )'Our community? ChKk the tc11tokas page of YOUR communll)"t dailly ntwspal)fr, the DAILY PILOT, of course. ( s , y II I· h • I< ~ c I< s fl ,, 11 I ~ I I• • u Ii 1 ii n c ti n p II I I r • • I l ct ., K or ., ch el I l I Feed a Marine Turkey Day Operation ·4 nnounced The lnlerfailh Serviceman's Center in San Clemente is again IPoMOrlng "Operation Thanksgivlng" to provide Thanksgiving Day dlnner1 and familY. wannth for 3~..ypung Marines. Host famllies are being sought from throughout Southern California to take two or more or the recruits into lhelr home for the turkey feasl Tbe Center is also soliciting donationl of money or food to provide a turkey dinner for about 1,000 Marines at the center. • Families wishing to participate may call any of the following phone numbers to make a reservation: from Costa Mesa, Santa Ana and Newport Beach, 673-5070; from Laguna Beach and South Laguna, 499--2128 ; from San Clemente, 492·1114; from Laguna Niguel, 49:>-5755 and from Dana Point, 496-3746. ' Families who would like to contribute to the project but are unable to invite a young aervlcoman lo thlelr borne may send dmailons to OperaUon Thanils&lv· Ing, P.O. Box 2M, San Clemente, CalK. 'l1lOle famllte• who do Invite guetll In· lo !heir home foe Thanbglvlng will pick them up at the parking )ot of San Clemente High School on ThanUglving momJne. Motoriltl may take the Avenlda Pico u.it from tbe San Diego Freeway ln San Clemente and ligN wW be pointed to dlted them to tile high IChool. At the porklng lot, slgna will be posted designating the various states of the U.S. and I.he young marines will gather around the 1ign of their bome 1tate. A family will then be able to choose the 1tate wile« their guests will be from. '11te bus taking the young men back to Camp Pendleton will depart from the hil)l llCbool at 10 p.m: that evening and families are asked to have tbe man back Jn time lo calcb the bus. Painting Exhibit Carded To Aid Handicapped Kids Paintings to delight children will be featured in an U11usual art contest to solicit paintings for walls of a school for the mentally handicapped. Construction of the Park I..a.ne Residen- tial School of Orange County, at~ El Toro Road in El Toro, will be completed in January and cheerful paintings are needed to cover its bare walls. The juried compeliton is open to an California artists willing to donate a pain- ting to the school and prizes totalling more than $500 are planned.' The com· petition will be juried by students from the Laguna Beach Unified School District, the San Joaquin Unified School District and the Tustin Union High School District. The entries will be judged on the basis of beauty, color and possibly humor. Deadline for the contest is Jan. I, lf71 and winners will be annouriced on Jan. 15, 1971. Following the completion of the new Saddleback.Gets Honor Society A new chapter of a national honor society -Alpha Gamma Sigma -hQ been organized at Saddleback College. Approval was granted for the new chapter al a recent meeting 0£ the organization at Pierce College. Clifford Kelly of Dana Point and Barbara Kutsta of Sanla Ana helped develop the policiea and standard.a for membership to the new chapter. Students who excel academically are eligible for the honor group. .cbool, the palnlinp will be hung on the walls of the bedrooms, aervict r<KHlll and administraUve offices. Entries will be acnpted either framed or unframed and interested artilU may write to R. B. Qaallls, P.O. Box 1356, Laguna Beach 92652. ParenU fond of saying, "My six year old kid could paint better than that," will hive an opportunity to find out what )'oun&sters consider "1ood art." Last Rites Held For Clementean Francis Willcox Funeral services ftre held today in San Clemente for Francis J . Willcox, 68, active for many years in San Clemente Masonic acUvllies. Mr. Willcox died Sun- day after a long illness. Mr. Willcox leaves bh: widow, Ruby R. Willcox: of the home at 125 E. Avenida San Juan ; a daughter, Jean Gally of Arvada, Colo.; a brother, Charles, of Altadena, and two granddaughters. Mr. WUJeex wu a put muter of Altadena Lodge m F. and A.M. He alao was a put muter of several other Masonic IJ'OUPll. South Coul act~IUes in-- duded prel1dency of the South Coast Shrine Club, .. Dad" Rttual Adviser to the san Clemente DtMolay chapter and preoident of the San Clemente Square and Compau Club. Friends may donate to the American Cancer Soclety. Epic Ascent Testament : To Rare Spirit of Man By WU.LIAM SCHREIBER 01 fM DelfY l'n.1 Sl1ff Tt wasn't as earth shattering as man's first step on the moon or even as mnmentous as the day men stood on top of the wor)d's highest peak for the : first time. had But it was man -or men -doing somethiQJ on earth that never : before been done in aU the ,thobsands rA. year1 man has held away over tl\lJ •a the" -ofmll ; Warren Harding and Dean Caldwell captured 1magina ..... ,. • ' lions of people this week when they completed a never before attempted climb • ol a stone face on Yosemite's El Capitan monolith . . HARDING, AT 41, 1eems to exemplify a now rare spirit ln men. lt Is a ieat, a determlnaUon that knows no age limit Abd a destiny to do whal may · seem impossible to most. His d-1eu tlllhuallam to test the llmlt.s of human . endurance and paUence ill proven In lhe hundreds of climbs he has made of stone cliffs that would make the average man shudder. Only once since he first conquered the cliffs of El Capitan U ye1n ago bu be been brought down by ·a rescut team. 'Jbat came only after he was nearly dead from the icy cokl and JUffering from several broken bones. • He typifies mOlt a man with afnglene11 of ~· He bas ieyed his life to the rock walls. He prepares him· I oelf for'El Clpltan dembl by dally nmnlni the 10.mlle round trip up the :r;lg.iag tourist ll'IU thlt wind• up the Jeu-vutk:al 11ide of El Capitan. The run takes him aboUl two houra. CALDWEil. TYPIFlES in 1 youn1 man much. lhe same zeal _and rortf.. lude as his older counterpart. He is not. ~ to 1hr1nk from hi1 mnennott drives Into the unknown. His adventurous nature coukl lftl'Vt as a modal for all young people with high aspirations. U ooe were to ask the men why the)' did It. they would probably reply wit hthe time-worn climber'• cllcbe, "becliuae it was there." It is the only truthful explanaUon they could possibly &Iv~ What is Important abcfut the aauul1 on the Wall ol Early Mornlnc Ucht la not that two men spent a monh living In 1 web of rope, canvu and it.eel doing something that had never been done before. What 1a important li that the tmaginat.lons of people were sparked. · EVERY PERSON interviewed by the largest preu corps ever to vlsit YO!lf!mlte durln1 the climb mlmred lhlt len1e d awt and wonder, of excite- ment and arousal. Even if &he7 llld the men were tnlane fer attemptlna such tn Idiotic thing. they wtrt JoOt;ina up, watcbln,g, wondtrln1, prayl.na -even w~hing they could be there, too. A world wracked In pain and f1111trati.., tend• lo forget the ooorinf human spirit and bur)' tl In the morus and decay of humanJty. n>e Nell ArmltronCJ, Edmund Hillll)'t, Warren Hardinp and Dun CaldwelJJ of the world att ~ataly .-.i lo dnl tbat Wnlabod spirit up time and time qaln hi the hope that It wUl tuPl>Oft lloalf. . Perhaps ..... da1 they d Ml'*'L ' Hil{e Set On Nov. 28 Up to 100 optimistic biken are n.· peeled to set out in the pre-dawn hours Nov. a, on Laguna's eighth aMual 51).. mile bike. Regl!:tration will be held from 5 a.m. to 9 a.m. oa tbe day of the hike at the atarting point, Andrus Plumbing and Heating, SSS Glenneyre St. Entry fet is 11. 'Ille event, sparked by the physical fitness drive launched during the Ken- nedy administration, annually takes hikers, ranging in age from pre-teens to senior citizens, over a route that loops from Laguna to Laguna Niguel and baCk via Laguna Canyon. Two laps of the route make up the prescribed 50 miles and all who make the distance in 20 hours or less are honored at an award! luncheon later in the year. Explorer Scouts from Search and Rescue Post 717, which sponsor!t':..'le hike. patrol Ole route with radios, water and band-aids, remaining on duty until the last hiker iJ safely home. Record for the hike was set in 1968 with a time of seven hours flat. Last year almost 100 hikers started out and ~ com· pleted the 50 miles. Further information on the 1970 5(). miler may be obtained from Bruce E, Bailey, 302 Harold Drive, Laguna Beach 494-3833. Micliael Colli.is Named Director Of New Hospital Michael T. Collins, Santa Ana attorney and resident of Laguna Hills' Capistrano Highlands, has been named a director of the Saddleback Community Hospital along with George Baird. general manager of Burroughs Inc. t.tission Viejo plant. Collins, who also siU on the Saddleback Community College board of trustees, joined the hospital board last week. Lutheran Hospital Society plans lo start construction of the five·story , $10 million hospital to serve the Saddleback Valley, in spring, 1971. Other members of the hospital board of dlrtctors are Ray Prothero Jr., of El Toro ; Phillip Reilly, vice president Mission Viejo Co. and Clinton Scott of Ltlaure World, a retired archlted. Capistrano, Bay Basketball Loop Tryouts Slated Registration and tryouts will be held Saturday morning for Capistrano Bay area youths interested in a winter basket· ball league during weekends at the San Clemente High School gym. The 8:30-to-noon signups will be held In the gymnasium, open soon for winter league and informal play. Registration fee is $6 per boy, cc ver- lng the entire program of activities, in- i;urance and a team photograph. The activity is open to boys 11 to IS years old. A parent or guardian must accompany the registrant lo the gym Saturday and a birth certificate must be shown. Last year's activity attracted 100 youths: who engaged in league play. Because of forecasts of an even greater amount this year more coaches are being sought. Volunteers can contact Gene O'Brien at 492·5719 or Lou Poncino at 492- 2055. Slide Films Set On Antarctica An evening of slides depicting life In Antarctica will be presented at Crown Valley Elementary School on Friday at 8 p.m., sponsored by the Crolvn Valley Covenant Church. Jim Phillips, a member of the church, made the trip to AnlarcUca from October, 1969 to January, 1970 as a member of a research team from the bi~ chemistry department at UC Davi s. The project was sponsored by the Na- tional Science Foundation to provide aamples of life in a near·freez.ir.g en· vironmenl Many of the alides were taken around Ji.1cMurdo Station on Ross Islar.~ the largest American installation i n Antarctica. The slides show many or thr natural wonders of the area as well aa the work being done by various resear.i.h teams in AntarcUca. Cahhie Pleads Guilty To Co1nic's Charge . New YORK (AP) -A cab dr!vtr has pltadtd gu.Dty to attempted assault on Godfrey Cambridge during. an lneldf:nt arlslng from refusal to accept the Negro comedJan as a fare. Cambridge uld he clung to the cab u tht driver ltarted up and was i:lraggai IO blockr. Willlsm Schreiber, 66. lb< driver, wu conUnued on parole untll sentencing oel ror Jan. 15. He could 1et up lo IO da In Jail. • . OlllV Pilaf f Silenter F ·lees Ne~ Directory ' In Saddlehack Berlin Guard Attacker Escapes Saddleback Valley Chamber of C..... merce will publish lls lfll - Dl..ctary for ctrculatlon lo 15,111 - and buslne,..., and Ibo deldllne for !111- lnlt I.I Nov. ltl. BERUM (AP) -Pollce onnounced that 1 2l·year-old West Berliner be:in& held on ausplcion of shooting a SOvltt sen- try Nov. 1 tseaped today. A pol~ spc;ikesman aaid the escape •P- parenuy. tooJf place as the 9U1P«l, Ek· kehard Well, 21 , w., being token from one place to another. A JuaUce Department spokesman ..,id. "All. J know Ls be ls taken for questlonlng every day from jail and then brought back. He Is not back yet." Police said a. citywide search had been begun. The ucape came as British authorities were preparing to have Well appear ber ... a Brllt.sh ma11s1ra1e. The Sovlet sentry wu shot and wound· ed u he stood guard at the Soviet w~ m~mcrial Jn the Brltiab sector of Berlin. Police reported two days after WeU'1 ......,t !bat he admllted the obootlng. But eUorts lo rind the telescopic rifle belltvtd uaed have been UD1Ucceastul. When Well WU a.rreated, police aafd._ literature and ll)'D1boil found Jn Wall'• apartment lndlcated rigb~wlng ten- dencies--:-Tti'i statement adm!Ulng the' obooUog cited by police l&ld Wall acttd out of political moUves In Urine at the "'1lry on the 5!rd llDlllvenary of tho Bolsbevik Rtvolutlon. Owl!ber mansger Albert lllaiJ ltl'(ed anyone wllhlnc to list in the "Wbo'• Who"" of Sadilleback V~•llty -and prolelJIOllal aervleel lo CQlllect tbe cn- ber offlco hi Downey Savings and Lolll Blllldlnf, 11171 Mulrl111ds Blvd., Mblioa Viejo or call 11'1~753, for 1nronnat1on. The book Jncludn It.stings of ar.1 bus~ ........ maps , guides lo point.I of hlstor· t.,.J interest and general lnhlnnatb>. It ls the ~1...Uled dlr<clory ·-Jn the back Valloy, Blais-· Celebrating 2 new stores ••• complete with Garden Shops. Riverside and Fashion Valley. Tomlinson Ash '· Tree. 8' to 10' high for qu ick, attractive ahade. 5 gal. size. 349 Kellogg's Gromuloh. Excellent for retaining moisture, keeping roots cool. 1 cu. 11. beg, 12e 2 cu. It. bag, 198 Plant eveivreens now: . yOUI' choice ol ltallan '· Cyp19U. Tam Juniper or Japanese Bleck Pine for ca111free beauty, 1 gal.size 69 9 S gallon size, 2.99 8PECIAU 1 c:am.itaa In bud'ltld In bloom fer ' ti.-, dellc• bNuty In your ' flower atrden. Sequoia Deco111tlve bark. Attractive and beneficial ground cover for all planting areu. In medium, coarse or pathway. 188 3cu.tt.ba0. 1 gal, .... 11 e S gallon.._, 3.99 ' PGlllii tioWlrtn9 '*""" 0-flom: M.ieatlo 'l; Paney, Iceland Poppy or ' Calendul& Hardy and colorful In 4• pota. 339 -h Bedding pllnt 1PeGllU Jumbo flowered mbced llmlllel for a bright lace on your 1111 flower garden. Planted hinging bakel8. Choen from lush green to/y, plectranth111 or begonia planta Dl'OWlno In 1• buktlt. Hang l8'NIL 19 -h a-i Junr.,. "~"'° 1n ~ceramic planter -an -Ive addition lo ltrY aurrcundlng9, T an1flo gift. 1050 • • Avallable at these PennlY Garden Cen1911: , FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT CENTER NEWPORT BEACH I '] I . .;: ..... . ,,_• : " ....... .,_ ,;; .. -~ ' .. --. -;;;-, •. •· ~-.,.'°""~~r-~\ • .,, ..,.,,-_ .::-,-::,-.. -.,•:-,.:-.-:--,.,,-:.'1>".+". ·'"·'°• -. '"'•"'"'".---.-. ·"'·"'-:"''·""'°'"=' 71 .-: • .,-, "• ,:-:,-:, -.~·~;:",;•.-."',-,_:":\C:,"":,.,.• ,;:.,;: ... ::::,.;;:,'°'' :<;,':". ·z;-;,T, =~= . ...,.,....,,,,...,, --·,.· ~-.-. "'' ~ -._.,..,, ": ---;;;. ' .._, -~ • j , 'ltVhich China ia it / ~on 't recognize etlen if I aee it?' •. ,~-------------~ ~- ~:Too Mu.Ch· ,, ~'.Sack Time '· V .N. Dogfi,~t . Taiwan Chinese Squeaker Seen I U)'IITED NATIONS (UPI) -Na· tionalist China appeared beaded today for majority support ip the United Nations by the narroWest margin in years after a General Assembl~ dogfight about seating the Chinese Communists. The showdown 1 vOte was scheduled in the U.N. Friday morrling and observers predicted· the N8t,ionalists would win by three or four votes. In the event that pre-vote calculations \\'ere wrong, Chiang Kai·shek's delegation is protected by the perennial "insurance" resolution backed by the United Slates that would require a two-thirds vote of the General Assembly to effect a change. Both Peking and Taiwan h a v e repeatedly rejected the two China formula, with the Corrur.unists saying earlier this week that such a solution "will never be tolerated by the Chinese people.'' 15 Marines Diein Crash Of Helicopte1· '' UPI T-1"""- No even the most 'enthu.siastJc' sup- porters of Mao Tse-tung's Peking regime believed the Chinese Communists could muster a two-thirds vote. 11le best Pe- king achieved in 19 previous votes was 47-47 tie in 1965, The 1969 vote was 56-48 against admission, with 21 abstentions. SAI GON (AP) -A U.S. Marine helicopter returning to Oa Nang with a crippled patrol crashed into a mountain side in the fog \Vednesday, killing all 15 Marines aboard. By DICK WEsT .r; l always had difficulty getting ahead in :!ihe world, which seemed passing strange :l>rfor someone with my towering intellect, ;::surpMsing abilities, boyish &ood looks '. •nd all.around charisma. AFTER EPIC MONTH·LONG EL CAl!ITAN CLIMB, CHICKEN AND BUBBLY NICE REWARD Dean Caldwell, left, and Warren ~arding Eat First 'Real' Food Since Ascent Began The admission effort was given new lmpeh,is this year by the recognition of Peking by Canada and Italy, and by hints to Western diplomats that Mai nland China might accept a seat if offered one. It was the worst crash in Vietnam since Aug. 26, when a big CH45 Chinook helicopte r was shot down southeast of Da Nang and 31 U.S. Army men were killed. Bear Bothered By Vandals , Kills Her Cubs , May Confront Andes In the past. Peking showed little in· lerest io membership and s p o k e scornfully of the United Nations. Among the dead in Wednesday's crash was Lt. Col. William Leflwich or Memphis. Tenn., Tennessee's Man of the Year in 1965. ~" But when I looked at myself In the light of a , study by a group of Boston ·(:psychiatrists, I.could see what bu been holding me back. I aleep too much. 2 '~eroes of El Capitan' The United Slates softened its stand against Communist China this year, con· tenting itself with defending Nationalist China's right to the seat ralher than at· tacking Peking's qualificatioos . The helicopter, a medium-size CH46. crashed in the Que Son range about 22 miles southwest of Da Nang. According to a Dews release from the Spring Air Mattress Co., ~ 1tudy shows that men who habitually aleep more than nine hours a night Wnd to be ."in- DETROlT (UPI) -The signs were Clear and polite. "OUr female bears Ire h3.vlng b<ibies. They must. not be :disturbed. Please 'bear' with us." Hunt New Peak to Climb Peking.'s chances of admission received a blow Wednesday when tiny Mauritius announced it was switching its position and would vote against Communist China . Mauritius praised Peki ng but said it did not want to exclude Taiwan and in· stead favored membership for both -the so-called "Two China Policy." The U.S. Command said the cause of the crash was unknown. but other sources said fog and poor visibility apparently were responsible. f. troverted, ~assive and mildly depressed." I , ~ i •. :- i· . " But those who ge't along with six hours :. of sleep or less are generally "efficient. : bard-working and achievement ori~ted." : Hypothesis: if I cut three hours o[f my : cus:tomary sack lim~ I woUld SQOn be out j in front with the achievers. .. Question : should I stay up three hours i later or get up three hours earlier~ : . THAT WAS NOT a decls1on to be made ! &astily~ Decided to iileep on it. . : It might appear here that 1 was ~1ng ! ... resolute. Not so. ·I was mertly acting in i :.ccordance with 3nother ne\\'S release •from the self.same mattress company. : When a man dealing with a problem : 'elects to "sleep on lt," it says, "•here's : tvery possibility that he may literally : dream up a solution." Cites the case of : Inventor Elias Howe. : Howe got the idea for a sewing I. machine needle while dreaming he was "about to be killed by a tribe of savages l ,411ielding spears with eye-shaped l:ioles in : their tips.·• ~ Wenrto bed at usual hour and dreamed ::: t was about to be killed by members of : my wife's sewing club. :: A. WOKE THE NEXT mOming after less .. than slx hours sleep. Felt efficient, hard· ! working and achievement oriented. Great ._feeling! l Used the extra time inventing ttiinr;s. ~ l nvented a spear with hole in tip. Then r Invented cotton gin and steamboat. Was i just getting into swing of achievement t when wife woke up. t Said to wife, "do you notice anything .. different about me this morning?" : "Yeah. You look more bleary-eyed tha·n C usual." ;-Began feeijng introverted, passive and ~mildly depressed again. • Took abort, three-hour nap. Still felt in· ~ troverted, passive and mildly depressed, ; but eyes no longer bloodshot. : -UPI If Polar bears are frighte ned when they ha ve cubs, Detroit Zoo officials explained today, one of their first reactions at the first sign of danger is to kill the cubs. But a group of youths ignored the signs sometime Saturday. They tore down the fence separating them from Bertha, the Polar bear who had just given 6iJ1b to two cubs, and five other bears still ·waiting to give birth. Frightened by 'the intruders, Bertha immediately killed her cubs. ioo officials said. Although zookeepers chased the youths away, it was too late. ''Sometimes, you just can't understand people:" said D r • Robert F. Willson, director of the '. zoo. "lt'i a perfect example of man des troying environment." But Willson cheered up a little Wednesday. One of the other preg· nant bears gave birth to a cub'. And four bean are sUll expecting. Russian Robot Takes Long Trip . MOSCOW (UP1) -Lunokhod 1. the Soviet moonwalking robot, ventured forth today on its longest exploratory trip yet reported and had a peek at what lay just beyond the next hill -"a not very high lunar ridge." Jn a progress report on the moonwalker that landed aboard Luna 17 Tuesday, the Tass News Agen.cy said the self-propelled vehicle covered a distance of 300 feet during about four and one haU hours or exploring that began late Wednesday Moscow time and ended at 3:40 a.m. The longest previous journey reported by the Soviets was a 65-foot jaunt which the eight-wheeled remote-co ntrol vehicle took on its first day. , "The route passed through com· paratively even terrain with depressions and elevatio11is with an angle of in· cllnat!Qn up to 10 degrees," Tass said. "The self-propelled vehicle encountered rocks and comparatively small craters and a not very high lunar ridge was overcome." YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK (APl -The Heroes of El Capitan celebrated thelr 27-day climb up the sheer side· of the 3,0CJO..foot granite monolith and began casting glances today at new peaks to conquer. Warren llarding and Dean Caldwell sipped champagne and mun ched · fried chicken -their first hot food since Oct. 23 -and declared their first ascent of El Capitan·s "Wall of the 1t1orning Light'' would be their last. "I feel great," said Harding, 46, of West Sacramento, Calif .. as he arrived on the El Ca pitan crest just before noon Wednesda y, smiling broadly through a heavy black and grey beard . . But when a reporter asked Harding, the dean of Yosemite climbers. whether he 'd repeat the ascent he said, "No way, man!" Cal<fwel1, Z'l, of Portland. Ore., com- mented, "I don 't think I want to do the same one again. But I'll do others like it." They have their sights on a climbing expedition to South America. The climbers said they hoped to form an .expedition next June to attempt a new ascent route on a 20,~foot ice peak in the Peruvian Andes called Jirishanca. Then they want to try the unclimbed roc k wall along the Angel Falls in Venezuela . Their first reaction tln reaching El Capitan's summit was astonishment at the size of th e welcoming crowd. aboul 75 fellow climbers and news reporters whtl got to the top the easy way -by a trail tn the opposite side. Mountaineers To Pay Rescue Tea111 Cost8? YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK (AP) -A pair tif mountaineers, slill flushed with their conquest of th e sheer 3.000-foot face of El Capitan, have been told they will have to pay at least some of the cost (If an aborted rescue attempt. That word came from Ranger Larry Quist, assistant to the Y o s e m i t e supervisor. Climbin g ace W a r r e n Harding. who conquered El Capit<1n with Dean Caldwell. sai d "I'll discuss it" with Quist. No estimate of the cost of the would-be rescue was available. . · • • . : . • . Much of Nation Cloudy But Florida, Texas Bask in Warmtli Callfort15- . §: :l ~ ;::, "'.:~":::~.~= =~ .. 1 I!~ •f 11 Ofl Wed-IY wltll '"' ..,_ .. lftri'fl Clttr"' ••Ht lld 10- ''"' Tflr\ ... lf'"lllfl'lt low •II U. • ...(Nil .Wl'S ll'!OftlY <llMt'I" ltt tl'llt -~ ••••• "*"""' wlftl ll•tv su"tl'llM WI ~ ..... 1tlwftlooo'I, Thi IH'JMllklld 1!1tfl Wit '" MOllll .. lfl II~ _. tJIN(led In mt rn .... .,.., '°9 11 ,,_, ~t. TM { ....,... llil"*ffd.,. chlolr •*-wllll wlNI ( """ I. te 25 l'f'lllM I ll llwr. Thi _,. .. ,_,. .. ......-I'll~ hi ........ wtlll• "; ......, """"" ..... ~ 11'\P"""""' Ir! • .._. rni.-111. •• TN I~ f!ot'tQtl ~lkM ~ ,_· '~ ''" _..,.. ... """"""' c-11111 c~lnnl wlf!I ttw -IMt!I' ti w1r,,... .. ... ....,.,...,., .... "'""*" ................. ~ Ti. Ah' ""h1fl"' Coow.I Dl1trk1 ,.. ~ lltH .. 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" H911!V " " k.1nu1 CilV " .. L11 Vt91• n .. l.f>I ... nttlf'• • " Ml ...... D1111, " " New Orl1~nt • " New York • .. .u N<oftli Pllllt • " Olklll'ld " • ~11tiotn1 CllY " " Om11!1 " " Ptlm SFl,..ot ~ .. Ptse llotiln " " f'tlotOll• " " "lt!tb\1••11 " " Por!Mllll " " lt1ltld (llY " " llld llh•ll .. ,, .. ~ • ,, $1(r1,....,nto " .. S1t1 L1kt (llv " • Join 01..o " " s.tn f•1!\Cl1<• .. " klll!ll A .. ' -·~ ,, » The,_! n .. W1J/lln1..,., .. .. "God, 1 don't believe it?" said Caldwell as he arrived on top first at 11:34 a.m. Wedne sday. He turned away and calmly resumed the chore of hauling up the 400 pounds of gear the men had carried acific •••••• .__. e • The wreckage was found on the side of the mou ntain and all of the bodies were recovered today by a Marine ground team landed by helicopters. • av1ngs AND LOAN ASSOCIATION for maintaining a SSQ022 balance in any of our high rate accounts -take your choice. ANNUAL YIELD ANNUAL RATE MIN. BALANCE MIN. YEARS l79°1o 7.50°1o $100,000!!! ONE 6.18°1o 6.00°lo 5,000!!! TWO 5.92°1o 5.75°~ 1000!!! ' . ONE 5.39°1o 5.25°1o 500!!! ~th 5.13\ 5.00°lo 1!!! ONE DAY ANIMPORTANTEXTRA Your money earns interest from the day you deposit. till the day you withdraw even if it's just one day • ASK HOW YOU CAN RECEIVE, SERVICE CHARGE ~~ FREE ~ ~ 1. Traveler's Checks 3. Tickets ·to Sports and ~Ill..... 2. Collection of Notes Theatre Attractions (Ticketron) IY 4. Many other FREE Services . . OPEN NIGHTand DAY Hours: Monday-Friday 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M . Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. ' SOUTH COAST PLAZA 3333 BRISTOL STREET • COSTA MESA, CAUl'ORNIA • PHONE 54MOM --------------------------------------------------------·---------- Thursday, Novembtr 19, 1970 DAILY l'tlrl IS ' IRS Offers " To Figure Your Tax · ·----·1 Hickel, 2 O.the,rs Face Ax Sreelworkers R'eady -1971 ~. Demands, Threaren Strike WASIUNGTON (AP) -The Internal Revenue Service, a stickler for accuracy, is or. fering to figure income taxes free for 30 million Americans, 3.6 milllon or whom fouled up their returns last year. The IRS said Wednesday a taxpayer could qualify if he earns no more than $20,000 a year, takes tbe standard 10 percent deduction rather than itemized deductions, and has income only from salaries, wages, dividends, interest, pensions and annuities. In another move aimed a\ easing the pain of separating citizens from taxes the ms unveiled a revamped standard ' tax return form -form 1040. This year the instruction on how to fill blanks are in a . v,1 T....,... separate bookie~ not on the BLACK PANTHER SPOKESMAN SAYS, 'WE WON'T NEGOTIATE WITH PIGS' back of the sheet where last Harold Holmes (C) Delivers Ultlmetum in Front of Housing Project year's aggravated form·fillers were forced to keep peeking. Taxooyers who qualify for free figuring can simply fill out vital information about themselves, list their income, and send ~ the return, along with w.2 forms. The government does the rest. U a taxpayer 's withholding doesn't cover the amount owed, he will get a bill. If he's due a refund, that will be sent along. I Juror Picked NEW HAVEN, Conn . (UPI) -A 42-year~ld w h i t e .mailman, who said he would be "too good a juror," was seated today as the first juror in the kidnap-murder trial of Black Panther Chairman Bob- by G. Seal~. Blank Panther Squatters Won't Move; Clash Looms NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Black militants who clashed with police in a shootout two months ago and later com· mandeered a ci ty-own e d apartment building ror their new headquarters stood pat today against orders to vacate the premises. The Housing Authority of New Orleans, after working three weeks for a peaceful eviction, asked police to "take every step necessary'' to remove the squatters. Police officials had privately expressed reluctance to risk an armed confom.tation over violation of a state trespassing law which has a maximum penalty of a $50 fine. They said they had been trying to persuade the squat· ters to move through "every available means." A spokesman for t h e miltants, however, asserted: "We don 't negotiate with pigs." The militants are members of the National Committee to Combat Fascism (NCCF), a recruiting arm for the Black Panthers. They took over the vacant two-story building in low·rent Desire Street Housing Project on Oct. 25 after they were evicted from their old headquarters around the cor4 ner. 42 SQ. "" Pel'9Clfl8l Portable ••• loaded .ith quality features •• , a special holiday value! ModelWM.012 I llfllJf YOUR OWN DEAL! Choose yoUr size, decor, atyle, and price ••• )'OlJr GE Dealer has one that'• Just right for you. Ask him about GE quality tee111n11 1uch as INSTA·VIEW ••• gives you almost immediate picture and sound , •• GE "SILVER TOUCH" 2 SPEED TUNING tor pretlae. slmplllled tunlng .. Get the facts on GE'a SOLID STATE-TUNI~ SY.STEM, •nd apace age preclalon . ETQHEO CQPPER CIRCUJTRV for bull! In rel111bi1Jty. H•'D 1h0w you Why GE Black Ind White TV ii your beat ll<>llday buy. See 8/IY one of the General Electric Dealers listed below ... Z-~/ ..nNIMUM RCTAIL PRICE PITl'SBURGH (AP) NEW YORK (AP) -The United Steelworkers President N YA ... 11'11.:...~ ~A.a •--I. W. Abel baa taken the wraps evl ui• .1.~ rtPoi-wu ....,.. off major 1971 contract clay that Presldtnt Nixon demands 'lllid left Utue doubt plans a major f't11hn~lng of bis 1.2 million·member union . bJs Cabinet by the time the ,._ would strike if necmary In cond ,ball of bJs le(m. beglos In back them up. JanU&ry.. Allhoilkb a "Sllbstantlal Sect'et.ary of , the Interior wa(lle increase" will be a ma4 Jor Issue 1n the bargaining, Wal\Rl.J!ickel, Secrttary of Abel atd, priority ioes lo a 'the 'Treasliry Divtd M. Ktzt. coet-of·living escalator. oe<lf ond Secrttary o I "We waived this In 11159, ond .Aariculture Cliflonl M. Hardin u a result the membersltlp .are expected to leave, tbe .~d.luffered ever since," he . . newipwer said. . - our wage policy commtttee these last two days indicate they ""°Id strike lo gain the equity they feel they have loot these pa.st three yeara. "There is no question ln !11Y mind that my men will strll<e • • • lf necessary. "However," be added. ''we hope to ••old a strike." But Abel said the Union will not puab .. lo eliminate Its present no-strike agreement with the Industry while notlnf there was constderabl• pressure: in some u n i o n qUarters to .have it stricken from the 11171 contract. Americans Shelling Out $114 Billion for Food Accor••·• to the re-M Abel spake Wednesday at a -. ,..., nl he , WASHINGTON (AP) pounds per ~~n thls year, , KenDedy,and Hardin are ready news co erence w re a 1¥ ,....- to depart, amicably in faVor' of page list of union demands Meat-hungry Americans · will up -214 pounds from 1969, the new faces. But it 4a)d Hickel, was unveiled, ·spend ~ a reCord $llt.8 billion report estimates. wbo crlUcized t be, ad-9 o st 4 of· I Iv Jn g wage for food this year t be Pork eaters will ClOnsmne ministration's atUtude toward escalators usually provide for AgrtcultW'e D e p a r t m e n t 65.t pow:uts, only 'l'..ftaction ot young people, might not ba t automatic wage flllc:es 1 f estimated today · 8 pound more tbaD in 1969;· willing to leave without p~ government surveys Indicate 'lbe lghl · 1 jum veal will be •-and lamb test. price increases. e percen p, ...,..q Gabriel Haugeif president of.' other ~emands disclosed by · Abarpest 1n 20 yean, ~ be will bold even. Cb i ck~ D • Manufacturers anover 'frust.. Abel include cutting the five-laid mainly to an estimated 5.5· benefiting competlUveJy from Co., was mentioned~ a liketJ day,. eighl·hour work' weelt to percent rise in food pr!W. higher -meat 'prices, is pat at possibility for the Tre~ury four. days and i m? roved But papulation increases and 1 41.7 pounds, up from 39 last post. Tbe Republican national penslon·heaJth benefits, · year. · chairman, Rep . Rogers C. B. The major demands were rising appetite among con-'nle report wu the second In Morton of Maryland, was said hammered out during a two-sumers for more meat also a recent aeties rtlattng con-- to be interested in succeeding day session of the wage pallcy are factors, the department sumer food colts to what Hickel. cornmJttee, made up of 163 said. farmers are paid. Earlier the The Times story also said elected local union represen-High meat prices don't dull department said retail prices the White House staff wou1d tatives. the appetjte, the report in-are expected to continue rising take on a new look with the Asked the mood of the dicates. ConsumpUon of beef, next year but that the likely departures of presiden-steelworkers, Abel sald· ''The which bas 1been setting price farmer's share of the con. tial counselors Danit! P. attitude and frame of ~d of records this year, will 'be 113 sumef food dollar will not. • Moynihan and Bryce Harlow,p.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-• and a change in jobs for John D. Ehrlicbman, now a Nixon assistant. Atty. Gen. John N, Mitcbell, who has been rumored to be leaving to prepare Nixon's 1 9 7 2 re-elecUon campaign, would not do so for another year if at all, tbe Times ac- count said. STEPPENWOLF 7 Includes: Snowbllnd Friend, Who Needl Ya. Foggy Mental Breakdown, 40 De.ya and 40 Nights, Eanipllt4 Un Louden Boomer, Renegade, lDppo Stomp, Fat Jack, Ball Crusher. SUPER ROCK 12 RECORD snJ Includes: Stagolee, Spanish Key, Jingo, Drop Down Mama. You Never Know Who Your Friends Are, Rocket Number ~ JaJlhouse Rock. Plcldn' Up 1be Pieces, Do You Helieve In Love.!t__Try, Time and Love, You can Make It U You 1-ry, 1 can't Turn You Loose, You're Gonna Neeti Sombody On Your Bond, Questions 67 and 68, Jesus Is JUJ1t Alright, Tired of Waiting, Johnny B. Goode, Smiling Phases. Bombay Calling. Now thru SUNDAY NOV. 22nd EACH UST $5.H SPICIALL Y PRICED LAYLA 12 lllCOID SITI DIRll • THI DOMINOU llllC CLA_PTON) NO DICE IADFIN•lt USA UNION JOHN MA.YAU * * * ACK CARTRIDGE OR CASSETTE CHOOSE Fi!oM OUR COMPLETE SELECTION OF TOP HITS! * UST St.ti LIST 14.tl s5,44 .$2.66 un $4,ft s2.66 ' . ' Eacli Umited to quantity on hand. * Choose From Our Complete $tock of ''TOP 30'' SINGLES ••••••••••••••••• ONLY 68~ QuaHt11 Sertllce For Otier 23 Years ~ QUWTY Phone 541·7788 ~=~ NOW TWO GIANT CITY'S TO SERVE YOU YDUUYlf .· 1815 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA ' I ·•· ' EHi An•helm C-r LI.COin •I St•t. Coll°'" ANAHEIM ' .. ( I 1 ------------~------------------------------------ .1 ' . . . ~ .. • DARY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Airport If Orange County rffidents, especially the new.er ones, are confused by the con,Unuing controversy·over location of commercial. and general ,aviatjon alrpq~s, It's und erstandable. Contusion lias permeated th~ sub- ject for a number of years .... First, the Orange County.Board of Supervisors .com- missioned William Pereira and Associates to develop a master plan for Orange County Transf>ortation. In 1968, ,Phase I of the Pereira report named five potential sites: Military installations at Los Alamitos, Santa Ana and E l Toro ; a peninsula in to the sea off Bo!Ja Chica State Park, and a San Joaquin Hills site be- tween Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. The report also called for development of five pri .. vate airports for general aviation within 15 years. The existing Capistrano Airport at San Juan Capistrano, Meadowlark Airport in Huntington Beach, and Fuller- too Airport were recommended for expansion: Two new priv~te aj.rports would be developed "not too far out in the hinterlands from those who will use them." Public outcz:y was tmmediate. -Citizen groups,. es-- peci8lly 1 hoineOWners near the· sitea mentioned, orgall'" iZed' to protest with all the vigor they could command. 1 .The &upervtsors then hi.red the 'Ralph M. Parsons Co. of Los · Angeles and San Francisco. To be included in the Par.sons &'tudy for Phase II were a new master plaa fqr Orange Cotinty Airport, site locations for a pro-- posed metroport, a general aviation facility, an air patk and 1,"ecommendations on possible joint use of the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. C·ontrover·sy tablbh a Jel!'ort in Bell canyon, 11 miles lrom San . Jµan Capi•llano and San C111111ente. Bitter oppo1itlon to 'this came imm<dlately. from reslaents of those two i,e:oaununiU~s, plw Mission Viejo. - This and other Parsons recommeitdaUOlll have fared JV> lietter than the Pereira Phaie I rl!port, . with the pqss!J)le .exception of actln~ tbrOugh zoning ordinances 19· protect one of the ensung military facDJUes !tom tltroaching development. . • Camp Pendleton has been frequenUy mentioned tbniughout the debate as a potentially excellent location for ·a large commercial airport. But the U.S. Marines have ruled that out for the foreseeable future. . . . The longer the controversy continues. the more It appears that Orange County I! destined to do without much major direct airline service. Perhaps the best that the county can hope for I! a sopbl!Ucated system of air commuter fllghta c<iordin- ated '!l<ith equally sophlJUcated grQUlld rapid transit service to large new commercial airports located in Los Angeles and San Diego counties. But even this calls for development of more airport! to meet this need and to serve the county's general aviation needs. Sharing Thanksgiving A program whereby Orange Coast families Invite Camp Pendleton Marines into their homes for Thanks· giving dinner is in its fifth year. Last year, 2,500 service-- men were given family warmth on Thanksgiving Day. Thls year, the goal is 3,000. •• A preliminary report by the Parsons group in !ale June said long term demand for short haul (wilhln a 400-mUe radius) ·air. transportation will within 10 years be seven times today's level of about 1 million passen· gers yearly, and 12 times by 1985. The completed study ran to 400 pages. It included such new ''hot potatoes" as a reccuunendation to es· To extend an invitation, contact Interfaith Service- men's Center, P. 0 . Box 284, San Clemente 92672, or phone 492-1814. The center will send a letter of instruc· lions. But act quickly. Thanksgiving I! only a week away. 'No, I'm 1llJl from lb' iNlu city. I go full time ri&hl Mn.' Profits Alaead of Anti-PoDtltion Buckley and Conservation WASIUNGTON -Lucky Jim Buckley ran as Mr. Conservation in New York. exploited a liberal spilt and won a Senate seat. Next "day, looking every 1ncb 'tbe bandaome forest ranger. be volunteered to 5'TYe on the Senate Interior Com· mittee. This 11 the commiU.. that deals with o:::mervatlon. But lucky Jim failed to mentiOQ that, in his boot, conservation end& at tbf·ban·k .vault Where the only greepery ii found on the cutTf!tlCY. F o r .Jim's ·family com- pany, tor profit's Pke, tried lo rip the bottom out ti. beau- tiful Lake Okeecho- bee. THE FACT THAT dredging out the valuable limestone bottom would ruin Florida drinking water, kW off wild life and turn a unique Vacation 1:pot into a sravel pit appareoUy didn't bother Buckley. M vice president of the Catawba Corporation, be bas put profits ahead of anti·pollutlon, His holdings include gas, oil and mineral interest. in Nevada, Canada, the Philippines, the Sahara, Australia and Venezuela. It may be only a cginc:idence that be is seeking membership on a Senate committee which hu a powerful voice on oil and mineral matters af. fecting Jim'• companies. BUCKLEY'S lllAlN lnttt..t ls the famlly .. wned Catawl>a Qrporatloo. He and bis family and a few other Catawba fat cats also control such firms U Pantepee Oil, Pancoastal Pelroleom, Canada Southern Petroleum, United Camo Oil a. Gu, San J,.. OH, MapDan Petroleum uil COoslat ~ 00. and 1'flnerals. If the conservation recml ol Coastal Caribbean ii wbat Buddey bu In mind for the nation, to dte me eumple, then America bad better get a tight grip on Ill wild ,..,..and virgin forest& • COASTAL CARIBBEAN owns Coastal Petroleum which bu oil, gu and mineral ~rights in 4.5 million submerged acres aJong Florida's coast and beneath 15 Florida riven: and lt!Veral lakes, in. eluding Okeechobee. Coastal Petroleum bu made the millions worth of limestone beneath Okeechobee its special targel Greedily, the company tried to dredge tt out in the face of outraged protest.II from lbe Army Engineers. and F1orida officials. "Removal of large portiom of the limestone floor cf the lake," warned an official state document, '"will weaken the barrier which separates the pure fresh water in the lake from impure &a.line water Jytng under -beneath the rock, thereby daogeroasly jeopardizing lhe fresh wai... supply cl the entire Cen- tral aad South Florida area." THE FRIENDS OF EARTH, a '°"' aervatton group, alJo ...,plained that dredging of the ""' billion emtc yardl of limestDlle will endanger "IM ecology of the EvergladOs NaUonal Park." Less daunU... proflWeeiers would have yielded to this unusual unity of of. ficfaldom and respected yie water clrlDRn .ol Florido. But not Buckley's -CoullJ-... -in fedonl court to -the .....,,, and the sl!to to let them !oar up the lake bot· tom, Come bell or ballde water. Federal Jadge Ceyde A-, wlllle con- ceding that Coastal Petrolemn bao aome right 1o claim the limestone. sai4, other legal and natural considerations \come flnl CosstaJ could not "balance the public Interest wjth prolit," he ruled. "A LAKE IS M,ANY things to many people," said the judge. "It serves as a playground, wildlife preserve, a link in navigation • • • and most Importantly water sourct for the people." Note: Jlm Buckley claims be Is not "perscnally involved." He also in.sistJ Catawba does not "control" Coastal Caribbean. Company documents in thJs column's possession, however, show Coastal has five voting trustees. Four, in- cluding Buckley's brother, John, are directors of. Catawba Corp., er its af- filiates. John and Martha and UPI Good morning, housewives and other 1hut·lns. It's time for another tee.vee chapter of "John's Only Wife" -the heartwarming story which asks the ques.. tion: "Can a kindly, old, pipe-pulling A~ tomey General allow -unlimited free opeech and silfl pr .. eerve Jaw and or· der? And his mar- riage? A,wejoin John and M.-. John Is puffing h I a kindly old pipe and rudlng hisunklndlyokl .newspaper. Martha ls pacintl the Door, trying to conceal her growina agitation. It ls late al nlghL MARTHA (with false nonchalance): Well. I think I'll go upstairs and dial a nice shower ••• I mean, have a nice shower. Jolin (without looking up from his paper): You needn't bother. Martha. I found IL ---W- Thunday, November 19, 1970 The editorial pagr of the Daifv Pilot 1eekf &o inform on4 1tim· ulaU tead<rt flt/ prcsendno thu MIDIJ>Clper'I opinkml and COl'l\o TMntary on fopb o/ intere1e and rignificonu, flt/ providing a fOM<m for the ""'''"°" of our readers' opfnionl1 ond bt1 pre1enu11y the '1ioenc vie~ point.s o informed oblerv1r1 and apoMimen Of! ~" o/ the day. • Robert k Wied, Publliher Martha (innocently): Found what, dear? John: The i.Jephone you hid under the lid of the commode. Martha: Oh, John, you'rt horrkl! You don't trust me. Jobn: Now, now, Martha, you know you promised to quit. Martba~ But not cold turkey, John. I'm having withdrawal symptomL Loot at my dialing finger tre.mble. John (sternly): Martha, if you won't do it for me you must do it for our Presldenl He's so happy. He hasn't 9el!D your name in the paper for 48 hours. Martha: I will, John, I will! But I think I ought to taper off gradually. My system can't stand the shock. Pleue, John, Just Qne little call ? As a nightcap? John (frowni ng): This Admlnlatratlon stands four sq uare .a1aln st pennissiveness. You are ruining our hn· age. Marilla (falling lo her -): Just one Hty·bltty local call? I knowl I could dial the time and tall< to the recordl!1&. Joba: Now, Martha, you know how that first little call leadt to anotheT. First thing you know, you'll be off on on all· night binge calllng newspapm acrou the countJi. For the good of the Nation and the Pltly, ')'OU mull .-mce calllnc forever. MariU Cpullil( benelf togetheT): You're rlgb~ John. Newr again, 1 ..... r IL (She .....,,.. her ~. wrfnC!nl hot handa. Allor a long silence, ohe "fl cheerll¥) : Well, I thlnt I'll go out on the balcoey and ring up ••• Look at the view. Jobt l found that one, too. And Che one YIN hid ln your 1111ttress. Arri the oot )'OU bid Iii the aspldlltr1. And the "" .•. -(desp<roto\y): Jobn, 11 you don'l let me have one little: call, I'm going to talk! John (smiling confidenUy): What could you say about me? Martha (cleverly): I won't talk ABOUT you, I'll talk TO you. You know how I can go on for houn about Senator Hallbright and those dingy professors and those liberal Communists and thOse .•• John (blanching): Doesn't our marriqe mean anything? Martlla (grimly): ll's one or the other, John. I mean it! (John, defeated man, rises sJowly, remcves a Walter Keene painting, opens a wall safe and hands Martha a telephone , Tremblingly, ahe dials and with a satisfied sigh, Ufl.!I the receiver to her lips.) Martha: Hello, is this that nlct UPI reporter? Now here are my vlem on Pablo Casals, Golda Meir and the Washington Senat.ora, an 100 of them ..• Joba (conlontedly .Jlghting his pipe): Be• ter hl.m titan me. Well, tune in to "John's OnJ;y Wife" again next time, folk!. And meanUme, be happy that John has. but one wife to give to hls country. Dear Gloomv • Gus: Tr1ffi< • controll<d Bignall are greaL Why can't 611\all cora and motorcycles actJvate them when maklna left lurnl! -F. C. hit """'"' ......... ,...,.. ...... - -'8¥ flilotM " .. ···-· .... .,_. ............ ........, .... °""' ....... Nixon and His Neglect Of the Press 18th Century Had Wild Fashions ~ ;T,, "'t . , Filiaoriil. ' ,. .lfeeearch I · 1 J President Nixon has been aeeing the press less and appareoUy liking il more. Complaint& are mounting that the Presi- . dent la fal1lng to live up to bis campaign promiMI of an open administralioo by neglecting to bold press conleroncea often enough. . In hlJ .-1y %1 monlhs In the Wbito House, Nixon hu called only 13 general press conferences. The last one was held on July 30, 1970, in Los Angeles. In con· trast. President Truman held 322 press conferences in his seven years in office. President Eisenhower held 193 in eight years. President Kennedy met the press 65 timea in Jess than three years and President Johnson called 158 conferences in five years. THE FREEDCN OF Information Com· mittee of Sigma Delta Chi, the pro- fessional Journalism society, recenUy issued a report censuring the ad- mlnl5traUon for the manner in which it has 'coTMluriealed with the public. It cont.ends the presidential press con- ference bas been reduced "essentially to a one--way propoeltion, convened when the President believes he has something to communicate." Leafing through a delighUul new book, the illustrated "English Llfe in the El~ teenth Century," by Roger Hart, I WllJ especially taken with the section on ••Macaronis and Beaux," dealiDg with the wild fashions of that century. U anyone imagines that the outrageous coollllning of Ille hi!>' pie movement is scrnethiar new, even In Anglo-Saxon llOd· ety, he should leam a b o u t England's "Gallants, bloods, bucks, beaux, frJ~ b l e s , macaronis, fops, monstrosities, corinthians, dandies, exquisites and swells." The Macaronis toot Lendon by atorm, Hart tells us. They began as a small club called the ''Macaroni Club," because they always ate a dish of macaroni, then litUe known in England. SOON THE Macaroni fashion swept through the whole younger geoeraUon, and extended even to the middle-aged: "Even the clergy began to have their wigs combed a la maC#Onl, their clothes cut a la macaroni; lbere were turf or r acing macaronis, clerical macaron~ military macaronis, college macaronis, and many ether varieties." (Incidentally, this may clear up th·e mystery of "Yankee Dooclle" for many who have wondered why he "stuck a feather in his hat and called it macaroni." The song was first chanted by the English to irritate the American rustics prior to the Revolutionary War.) MANY PEOPLE strongly disapproved of this flamboyant manner of dress. Ac- cording U> Hart, one said: "No hand9oml fellow will belong to them, because their dress is calculated to make the handscmo ugfy. and the ufiy ridlcuious." The Macarooj wwe a tiny bat, had an abundant quantity of hair, and wore ahoes like slippen:, wllh a small circular lilver buckle. Ws bll ensemble included coats of cut velvet, trimmed. wtth gold or silver lace: brocade waistcoats; white and black silk stockings; hal5 laced with gold or silver; ruffled shirta and neckcloths; and jeweled buckles, swords, pistols, canes and snuff.boxes. HAIR WAS EVEN more Important to the young bloods of that day than it is among our own youth. Wigs were the rage, among the old and middlwged •• well: "Barbers and their apprentices an day long were engaged in making w:lgs, dressing and curling wigs, powdertog wigs." This is when the "toupee" also came in -an array of curls over the fcrehead and the side of the face, which has recently returned in men's tonsorial fashions. What is different today is that, while in the lath Century only the afnuent could afford the Macaroni. style and other popular affectations, such rages now spread throoghodt the whole culture and cost very little to adopt. That is the only "new" thing about lhem. A favorite analogy of Washington new smen is that the White House news conference is the counterpart of Question Time in the British House of Commons. But Hedrick Smith of the New York Times contends that the analogy is false. Question Time in Commons ''is a much more rigorous and risky affair," he wrote. "The exchange, often bristling with barbs, takes place between t\vo groups of equa1s • • . An American presidential news conference is an Un· equal contest ... for no newsman can stand toe-~toe with the President. •• " Mink Coat Loses Status THE cdNFERENCES began when President 'l\eodore Roosevelt would call in five or sti: reporters at the end of the day and hear their questions whil e he was being given • pre-dinner 5have. Woodrow Wilson initiated the first mass- attendance conference. held twice a week. He. cut the sessions off after the sinking of the Lusitania in 191~, to end leaks tc variouS embusies. Franklin D. Roosevelt abandoned the -written quesUon format originated by Warren G. Harding and later followed by Not too long ago, word had it the sure- fire way to get rich was to buy a 'pair of chinchillas, stick 'em in the same cage and sit back and wail Assuming, of course, that one of the chinchillas was a boy and the ether of the opposite per. suasion. People all over California, a n d elsewhere I guess, lalked about this cinch money.maker. How else could you grow your own fur coat, for fWl and profit? Some people, I hear tell, even tried Jt. And there are reports noatlng around that a few women mdtd up with full- lenglh chinchilla coats. Or maybe jac- kets. .. · Calvin Coolidge and Herbert Hoover. But "BE THE nRST lady on your block neither RooleveJt ·no'r Truman could be with a home--grown chinchilla stole," quoted directly, Eisenhower held the first became, for a short time, a rallying cry conferences taped for radic and filmed of· sorts. Milady'• fur threatened to for television while Kennedy inaugurated become a greater topic of conversation at the live televbioo meeUngs. ' the supermarket than JactJe Onassis, nee Kennedy, net Bouvier. A POLL OF LEADING Washington All that apparenUy Is gone. Slatus oo reporters taken by the C o 1 u m b I a Io 1 b Joumaltsm Review cited the h.1_,., ... ncy nger s measured y the chindlilla, the ....... ~-mink, the ermine, sa ble, beaver or and irregularity of press conferences as whatever. the moot lmf)Oriant shoricoming of the T •-tt .-. thori f syttem. 1be lact of follow.up queslloning lac on u11t: au lY o Htrbert was the ll<COlld most cited problem. Some Benard, a San Francisco furrier: r<!pOndents also blamed the press for the decline of the lnstltuUon. Martin F. Nolan of the lloston Globe slated: "The Whtie Houee press corps asks polite and easy questions:." 11ie Nixon administraUon his often complained that its views are distorted by the Washington prets. So ii ad0pted an end-run strategy. Top-level briefings for news execuUves by the President nnd bl.! •Idea have been glvtn in various pam of the country. Spe<lal mailings and regional press conferences have al.lo been ldopted. "WOMEN DON'T care about having a mink coat any more," the candid Mr. Benard said. "They uoed to dream about owning a mink coat. Now, tr they don't have ooe, they don't W'1ff1 about It." The ressoning behind this b not just loday·'s concern with the tnVltonment, although that cortalnly bu lo be a factor. Rtmcmber atna Lollobrtgld1 and ber leopard coals? Mort, lt'a a growing pragmat1sm among women, which may not be evident In all artas but app1rently Is whtn It COl11H to fun. Sao Francbco lllronfcle fashion editor Joan Qatfleld-Tay1or spells it out: "A WOMAN ·aow expectl more from fUr than a walking price-tag. She t:xpec:U it to make her fed attracttve and romantic. She has practiCal wishes, too. She wants a coat that will look .u well with a pair o( tweed slacks a.s with an evening dress." Miss ChaUieJd--Taylor even questions the wisdom of carrying an expensive fur en a trip. She advbed a woman lnquirlnf if she should take ber fur to Mexico: "You'll just have lo decide whether the times you can wear it ••• will warrant lugging It around for the whole trip. Some women find that a valuable fur coait ii a burden, both physical ll1d poychologlcal." Just what I've been telllng my wife for years • ' ' ,__ •11 Gfff'9e -......, cGeorie I today contlmlet ht1 Giant Tall!Clearance ol AdvlCO t A bonua INWtr -two answers for every problem I No other advkt: columnist wW make t b a t statem«lt!) Dear Georle: How tau-an 1ou? CURIOUS Dear tiurlous: Sis f<ot. lllal•ri• la cmfed bJ the female Anopheles mooqulto. • ----------- Big Force CJqsing In OnIDferno SAN llERNARDINO (UPI} ~ A. rotce ot s,Us firemen atttOg~ Jlnes eoclrcl\"& an 11-squue.mJJe ~ and U1¢er fire In the l'llQed sU 11<rnant1no Mountains today as SO.ml.le-an-hour d es er t w!ndii and decmsing humidi- fy baMpered fUl1 conlrol. The bJaie WIS contained I SWin Girl 'Family' Defense Will Start Today LOS ANGELES (AP) -The derense in the Sharon Tate murder trial gets under '"'&Y today with arguments for dismissal of charges against Ch4rles Manspn and three women ro<lefendants. ·'These defendants think that the prosecuuoD. has failed to even raise suspicion of their guilt," says attorney Paul the four defendents. "I'd rather -not · n')rfntlon specific names," said a df"enae attorney, 4'btlt we wilt Jttempt to show that others bad motives to klll lbe vlo-tims.1' · Tbe trial ii In Its %Srd week. The stat. rest.d Ila ca1e Mon- dly. Tuesday l>tr .. llgbters "'" 7th Victim kept on,~ lineO tie<ause of .. verai ..,. •P<>b In the bum-- Flageraid, spokesman for the' BofA Blaze foUr-lawyer defense t e a m , "They feeJ that the pro. secuUon case ~ totally absurd!-S • • =.r~~ ....... niey •• .,..._ usp1cious, ecl<Ju1 .... of 55)40 ..,.... Of Rapists A SJIOWman for lbe U.S. Fores! ~ lald the bot SAN DIEGO (AP' ~ 'Ille Under California I a w • C Chi f dismissal is pqosible on1y . /1 "'~ys e there is n o "substaiillil Santa Ana ~ cquld blow a , spark lronl bol; 9pot up to rape-strll!'g\llal~ OI a young three mJJ., · to ao unburned woman "'lllng encyclopedias area. 't · -door to door -the seventh evidence'' of possible guil~J SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - 1be four attorneys can,, I Fire OlW WW1am Murray late nlcbt strategy R~ll ._,1 be ii ''-....icioUs" ..-...1 Wednefday with the ff0ur -......,.. """"' aection of ea.at San Diego since defenclapl.! in ~ g u a r e d a ft.re that broke out on tht March -lef.t residents fearful courtroqm OD °' 13th fi of· 35tb floor o( the Bank Of ~t 15 niiTes to the west, ' umolved attack in the· same 413 .lltem"( Cflnglog to safety ropes liltnllaled lo contain a 3,125-acre fire , in the Cucam op g.a ·Canyo n Wildern.., Alee. .the terr.itn ~Was to rugged ll)at fireflgbten -. Jlnked tor-by safety Jlnes. Only hand . -coold be used to . hew oal .a llrfbreak. Winds there alto ""'recmfed up to ~ 50 miles an hour and firemen . attempted to fully encircle the ; blaze, which had a four-mile ' fnml burning out of conlroL the Hall of Justice. America's w or Id head-Wednesday, "Ma~on ii furious,' 111 woUJdn't open my door if Fitigerald. "He real! quarters, tallest bullC!lng on it was God bhnsel!,'' a college that he's the only one tbe Pacific Coast. coed told police before finally adeqaately put on ! h I 1 'Ibt blue broke out Mar a defeo!le." I coffee machine tn t b e admitting a homJcide detec-Superior Court Jj ll d g e live invesllgaUng the death of Owles H. Older Cl 1 n I e d employes' lounge at Sbeanon Dia.De Bristol, 21. Manson's latest requeit Mon-=~Co., Inc., stock Miss Bri!tol was slain in the day lo take over as bis•own at-"We're Uwa)'ll IUlplclotir ol murky fog Tuesday nighl Her torney. Fitzgerald arPed then thls kind ol. fir!," the chief body was foUod !lprawled in a in M~'s behalf, saying declared. ''!here really w .a 1 that many witlJessfj: from ..,.....1....,. around there to start a driveway. Mansoo's bipple-tYP!; c 11 n ,..,....... lt was uactly a mile .away would not testify unless they firt. and a year after Mary Scott, bad hil "blessing." The fitt, he added, might 21, a red-balred ~go dlncer, Identity of lbe flral delenoe bave been oet "by one of the .,,... L.--radical" groups that have was strangled by a mill\ who witness has ~ kept 1ttrel. been llart1ng fires and pl» forced his way into her apan. Fitzgerald said none of the tint bombs ebewbere. ment. . . four attorneys plinned to There were DO injuries, Terry 'Mlompson. a rricnd of make an opening slltement. Miss Bristol, called her "the "You tip your hand ta the alt.bough the chief estimated • Sewup a color (With a little help from One 100ch Sewing) Thia-'< only! Buy the newest Golden Touch & Sew• . sewing rfiachlne by Singer~get a portable color TV for just $99 m6re: Ifs a great double-take! The TV set regularly sells far $199.95. Save aver $100 an this SINGER• partablO:colar TV. With 11" diagonal screen, "Instant On" picture In true-to-life color • The·Go1den·toueh & sew• zig-zag machine brings you the new ease of One Tciuch Sewing. With 9 stretch $tltches, extlusive Push-Button Bobbin, built; in buttonholer and lots more. sew upyourcolar-TV-far-$99 deal. But hurry-this specia l offer ends Saturday. t for • For -of Slrww sewing center nearos! )OU,• while pages under SINGER COMPANY COSTA MIU. COSTA MISA ,,.. .... ,_. ....... HUNTIN•TOH IUCH lidllltff .. •Mell n7·1MI OIAN•I 11 "'-.... .. .,,... •••DIN ••on ffJ1 Cfla,_ _,, DAILY l'ILll!' f ·-Power Fails After Blast In Bay City SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - A fire and explosion in a manhole knocked olit a 12,000. volt power line Wednesday, leaving 1,800 persons without electricity In San Francloco'• North Beach area. • ,... • kltfll>Wff .... .., - SWtll c..t1 PIUa Kt ,.nts ~ M1r"9r CMtlr H1111tl,,.._ IMdl C111tw ...... c-rr ..... """(lty" c... ti " k damage as "considerable on most beautiful person I've proseeu on " you ma e an 1.Jt~be~Mth~~and;~35th;floor;:•~of~tbj•~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ever known." opening statement," be said. A nalive of Dearborn, rttich., "You .allow them, with their '17Moot-higb buUdinc· she took t)\e job W i t h massil·e police iivesttgatary ·It -dinner by cmllellght In many nl&httlubo, · and no ctlf abow. Power was out in the 36- bloct •re bounded by Broadway, Grant Ave n ue , Batt.ry Street and Bush Street. · 'Both the Dre deparbuent and lbe Padllc Gas & Elleclric Cl>. said they believe tAe fire .... .--1.' . "It could have been a rat chewing tlrougb · the power ·line, it could have been m:iything," a fire c:aptain 1ald. 2 JU Collegiate Encyclopedias 10 sources, ta get to your wlt- days ago. Her roommate, Jean nesses.'' Caldwell, said~ "~.tried to tallc One part of the defense plan her out of it but ot&Q! bad ts to try to introduce a con- just returned from visiting her .:;;;fe;;;;s;;;;si;;;;oo;;;;b;;;;1;;;;10;;;;m;;;;eooe;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;tbe;;;;;;;;r ;;;;lban'"i! famDy and friends i n11 Dearborn and Detroit and said she needed money.'' Another young woman was selling boots with Miss Bristal 1n the same neighborhood of moderate.priced homes and apartments. In eacll of tbe • attaw this year, the rapist st.opped a woman and isked. for the lime, theo ~ · ber Into unconscioumeS:s and dragged her off the ·street Jlito aD alley or yard. Miss Bristol w8s the only victim killed. Pre Christmas SAlE 1000 OIL PAINTINGS With YllUM to $400. NOW ONLY s500 '° s7500 0,..11 .... ...., , 540 W,. 19th SlrHI Costa Mesa 642-71MO . . I •• I I BO BU·RGERS: 59¢p and this 0 -• 1~ b;:~.-: 0-· ,~ pon 1/4 pouild of . , with cheese· makes this th• beit hamburger 1n town at the regular price of 59,. • GET 2 JUMBO BURGERS FOR 60~ THIS WEEK ONLY FE~ EXPIRES NOVEMBER 26 Sears int a la110 ces Now you can get clean clothes and do something about water pollution too. wr.t'a., dlll'mm a11oat mi.t alJoal 111e c!raninc ~ datJ claininl poam •llh• Nn Seus Plaphate-Fne "'. pbosphat...C-deterplit? humlnc -the --+HcMw ,LomMlr/.Da1tr.wl1 W"ithSearanewPboophat&-Free ~ID hot er calcl 1Nlllllr. Moot modem laundry deter-Laundry Detergent, phoopbateo Evm m the bardeot Wiiia'. '1W ...,111 contain phosphates. New . aren't needed (or cleaning. Our _means clean wula for Jllllo .Seam Phosphate-Free Laundry newly developed formula ia de-•--fllr • ..,_ Detergent containa no pboe-signed to ltill deliver DY)'• phateo to contribute to wata- =ii~ :: w te. . Do .waimu ..... aD ....... te pollntlon? No. Det8rgent pboaphateo ron- otitoitem. major-Hwnan wute producta and agricultural run-oil me hro othen. But the deta-ient Problem ia the only ..-that can be dealt with im- mediately. An;! eliminating de- tergent phosphateo will have a aipif1C&Dt effect, cutting pbo&- phate pollution in many -h7 llp to 503 1 w. ""' liapp;y *' ial:rodift ,.,. dell!rgtftt at ·a 11ri« ,., •WW. Wm tM ,.,,II»'""°' of -,,,. ~ ridrtfint. ' Clean wash for you. Cleaner water fur t:M)Olle. ' , I if:S~ears~i·~~ll·-;.; .. ;;:~':":_:--~-:i;:; ... ;u~ .. :""~-1=~·~-::-;_~ .. r-;:.;·;.::;.[·= ... =·~.;-;:::~:::.;·~ .. ;:;:~-:::~=--- 1 -.~-~ ......u "*!' llAOll • ...._.. tMra...., -. COMr Ma YMYY ·----.;. -r--------___ ................ _ ..... _ .. _ .... .& ....................... , •• -.... ,............... -- ' r l ) ' " ., .. •• 'l ·: " ,. •. .. f ·I .; ' , l . I \ \ I ' J ~~··,-··. . .... __ ·-·•-<••· .. ~ ..•. ' i' •. ~. Th~rsday, Na'l!mber 19, 1970 CHECKING . , • UP • Women-in Prinie At 38, It Says ' • --•. -----:--::;i::::.,.cc.-,.,,1,,.,,-r; .,~~-.'~.,,,...,.-, "'··""".-.-· -:-;-.,1~·-.-;--.. --.-«~.-,-,,-.-: :--,-.·.-,•:· -.... -.·~1 -,,-.--.,~",.-."-~-,~· .:-.--~ ~ ,.... ~ .. . -.... - Co~st...:Man Consider ed Civil .Wa~\~S.obered • By PIDL NEWSOM usually are called by their as sanctuaries and the govern· wear unlfonns .. and carry · Within the various com- Williarn McFarland of A!ad· pl arms in public in Lebanon. m"'"~ organiiat.ions there din Brive,.Hunljngton Beach, The Jordanian civil wv and Arab sympathizers, fPlJl ain ment has 'demanded that the ~...,..b&ve been calls for a bas .....,n nomiDated for the Its aflennatb -·· •• have Uuiy constantly are bein$ pfo-commandos cease f i r l n g It . abo was decided to f ... le ts" ~ --'"" · redUCf: the number of com-purge o moompe n 1970 lisilng of Qutstanding had a·&Obertng effect upon the voked, by Hussein's desert roCkets· into Jsrliel from mando olfices maintained in among the leadership. !fu:!i.¥:!~:C~fY :J:ij PalesUrUan commandos vvhose forces. Lebanese soil. LetSanon's 15 refugee camps, A ranking spokesman for Al Sta~ LolWlgeles. leaders bad come to ' regard Possibly by coinci(lence and ' The result has been a move the main sour:ees of com-Fatah, which is the strongest .McPar~ ~ •f 5 i x. themselves above individual not directly related \I ' ev_ents 'among guerrilla leaders to maOOo recruits, and to of the guerrilla groups and is nomineesjls vice president of Arab govmµnflr,.ta. · in 'Jordan, the ~ndos sh~e· up their .organi;atlon eliminate tuna raising by the headed by .Arafat in addition business ,.. #velopment f 0 r The war proved cosUy to the also have been comlnl 'under aod to attempt to improve individual T groups a g a i n s t to his duties with the libera. Sproul ~ion division of commandos in m'en and new pressures from· 'Uet;ianon their rel8tions with t be ~ there have been t.ion organization, has been National Eitvironm.ent Corp., material and it ~ ttie Wh":h' fanks next ~O: Jo¥ln in Lepanese iovernment. ' charges of st:rongann tactics. dismissed ~ause he stayed Orange,aid~ai967graduate 'confidence-Of Klng Hussein's the~e.0J1ts·~.us-At a meeting in Beirut ·n.e over-alt erect, it wa s behind in Beirut during the ~ I ha •• fao is ac ho Le of Cal ~te. '" Bedouin troops who woulft .like 1 ~,by the command?! ~}nsl .pr~ded over by'Yasir.Arafat, hoped; would be to tighten fighting in Jordan. · The liSt:Moors men between to take the commaudqs ·on · -Israel: · he&d ·or the Palestine Libera-di9Cipline and to reestablish Action also is expected to be By~ M. BOYD Why are strangers referred to the ages.~o1 ~~1 to 35 for ag.ain should the opportunjty Lebanese border 'viii ~rs tion Organization, coordinating the .c;ommando imagf! as taken against Arafat's No. 2 · ... as perfect!. 2_. What 's the outst.a~~ ~trlbutions to ,arISe. In the. $aky tnice have staged pro eat body or the' 10 main guerrilla iclealisUc action f I g ht~ rs mao in Al Fat.ah because he pa sa qu P' of AT Wll!T AGE is a woman their conimunities, professiOns between .the two aides the demQnstrations against ID· groups, the ' leaders decided 3gainst Israel and not against surrendered aod offered to ja ber 11riJpe? By prime, l origin of the peace• symbol and ~ .. Feday~ 111..Jbe ~mJnWwr, · ~ 'f!hq:;use $ \jll ~. tlieir .. men ,no longer would other Arabs. . help im~. a truce. '" mean most ...i{jdent, most -by ..... now as tbe,·1-__:_· ;_· ;_· .;..· ..;·~~"c...:::....:..· _..:.· ~...:·'---"=-"':::_...:,.,--l--'....--'.--'-.::_-"--'-..::.:._::..:...:.:....::__.[e~_...::.::_:::.:.:.L,:_~::..:.....:_:.:::::...:_:::.::...:.::=.:.....---'----_...::-'-.:.__;_.c._...:_ ___ _ capeble, • lll"O's-f attractive. track of the chicken? 3.' What ~~ .1'ho put ~i.s i~ do you call a lady chef? quiry to numerous ladies na~ N~ of four st a t e tioowide said the majority ~ capitals include~ word city. far ~ted age 38. A man1S OWJ'! . oi>fnioo of his prime What, you can't identily them ~on ~t.he does for 8 in a.trice? All right, Salt t,.ake, living.~~"'.~ say ~ge so, Carson, J e ff er son and al -u · 1 bo e . Oklahoma .• , • AS TO THAT k-~ _•__!' ~;·_a. rers ag MATTER of which tree is first in the season to shed its IP YOUR-GRANDMOTHER leaves, a New Englander says was averip when in her the . wal(lut, a Can;iliruan says twentja, p _ ~ghed 116 the aspen • • • JA)NGEST pounds. If you're average in MANE of a horse was about 12 that age :bracket, young lady, feet, longest tail about 10 feet. you Weilb 128 pounds , • • A schoolteacher told me that, so I know it's true. MEDICAL MEN say the. .bkmdea who get skin ca~r CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q. efutPi.unber I.tie brunettes who ''Do you c~ a briefc~. old do,;so by about nine to one., . boy ?" A. Not. anymore. Used to. But I'v~ -given up packing 'J'HE FOCUSING . RANGE of my lunch except oo fishing )'ol.P' eyes at !:he age of 411 is trips .. -· Q. "Quick, what five onty aboui one-fourth of what states have more Senators it was when you were 10 years t h a n representatives in o.ld.. Congress?" A. A 1 ask a, .HISTORY -Was proposed Delaware, Nevada, Vennont in Congress once that there and Wymoning •.. Q •. "Are olight io be three U.S. cats color blind ?" A. So it's Presidents. One each . for the said. 'Easl:, the MidweSt and the Far LOVE AND WAR -He West. It was also· proposed married 400 girls. And never ooCe that inasmuCh as the once saw the face of any bride ~idency is a· 24-hour·a-day before the wedding. That's the job, there ought to be three story of old King Jbn Sau~ of inenlo handle Jt. "One on days, Saudi Arabia. Sounds like .ooe. on swing and one on the something out of the ancient J.raveyard 'shift. What's YOtlr Arabian Nights, doesn't it? 'Stand on this matt.er? Do you But it wasn't so long ago, at have a nominee for the that He has only been.dead 17 graveyard shilt at the other years. Jµst imagine, 400 end of the· Country? Never ~-.1 d k 1· mind,· this is nOt a poliUcal wivest ... l\.l ·P,:>uUC every . tme. Romantic 11'Ulette, what? Our pillor, and I oug)lt not. Love and W;ir man is studyipg OPEN QUFSTJONS -t. the case, intensely. Your questfO'ns and com· ment8 art welcomed and · MOM FINDS ' ,will be m ed in CHECKING · . UP whnevtr · posribk. MISSING TOT--Please -.... your letters tG L. M. BoVd. P.O. Bo• 1875, Newp<>rt Beach, Calif. ROUEN, Frilnce (UPJ) - Pollce·aaid a 15inootl>JJ1!1 kidl naped child was lo u D·d.1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;91 unbanned in the r stairway of au apartment ~ Wed- nesday alter the--paid a ransom of $27,000. Police said the child, a son of Mrs. Danise Veiuard of Paris, was kidnaped Monday by a maid who began working at the home the previous day. 7 c-amt· "3 Orc ....... f '' 4 c.H11ehlfll J W.1111! slarllng SATUll:DAY, MO'llMlllt 21, 1'71 •:• ,.m. LOS ANGELES PHILHAl MONIC ORCHEST-RA Zubh1 Mehta-Mu1ic Dir1ctor Instructions for payment of the ransom, which was left in an attacbe case in a Paris street, were . given to Mrs. Veillard by telephone. ORANGE COUNTY PHILHARMO_NIC soc1m 2f1 W. Caul H'WJ., N..,.,, ...... ...... ·' PRESCRIPTION FOR .CHRISTMAS PANIC Here's a dolicious sur&-CUre for Christmas panic.. Guaranteed to cure t hose "whlt .. m:1110ing·)011ive-and;how-will·I· pay-for.it.fleidaChos;• 0ur ·special H.A.P. (HidMWay Plan) can help make it the meniest Chrfatmas yet. Shop now while selectibns are best. Use One of our c:onWnient payment plans to defer your peymenta. ArTange for payments at the time you i.ko your gift out of our Hide.-A-Way . You'll have everything all taken care of in advlnce-PRllY strong medicine, isn't it. SIA.VICK'S Clllrtt A~ lftvlllf A_,IC,ft lb,,..11 a...U.-klN _, Mldlf (1111111, fM. Jewtlert Slnce 1917 11 FASHION 'ISLAND NiWl'OltT IEACH-64'4-1380 o,....lil..., 1114 Fridrf ••111 f:lO THOI SHA 100% ·nylon.pile. Thick cut velyet texture, MEAVYlll-DENSI.T.Y FOAM BACK-NO PAD NHDID. 'CUT & CARRY. llMIIlD QUANTITIES! MPAAABLE ~ETAIL ,$6,99 · FINES'fi QUAUTY--MAM£ BRANPS . . . . ' . IDEAL ORffAMILY ROOMS, .PLAY OOMS,' DENS. . SQ. YD. LJVING ROOM, DINING ROOM, HALLWAY AND ~O BEDROOMS BLE RETAIL ........... $4,99 ~=~!~!~~Cll $ • CO-ERCIAL TWEED . e HllCULON NAME 8 NDs-FINEST QUALITY Greet fo~ 'tch ens, patios, ca rs, boots and mony oth~ ses, New decorator colors ond, designs. ., ·' . CARPET YOUR .ENTIRE BRAI RU S . LIVING ROOM, DINING .$ ROOM, & HALLWAY YOUR CHOICE! . . ' ., DU PONT NYLON '• COMMERCIAL TWEED • JIERCULOM I •OVll EXISTING PADDING BASED ON 32.SCI. YDt. SPECIAL SAU -CUSTOM DRAPERIES . 1!J}; Professionally mode· cusl~m draperies, Y"'I' choice of fabric. SPECIALS $3.50-$4.50 fallrfcs JB! DUPON't NYLON 100'4 continuous filomtnt f'lylon ploiiu, ond tweeds. IOWSALE ~ AT ••••••••• 99 SQ, YD. SAVI •2 C AIAILI llTAIL .............. $4.99 llEICULON 100% Htf'tulon oltfin pile f'ltW miracle fiber. Stoin ond weor resistant. •WSALE 99 SQ, YD. SAVI PllCll Al....... •2 C-AIAIµ llTAIL ............. .$4 ... 9x12 •••••••••••••• •2495 COMPARAILEjRETAIL ......... .$60 9x12 •••••••••••••• $3995 1 00~ Ccintimious Filament Nylon Extra Heavy COMeARAI •WSALE PllCD.AI ........ . t-Aiuu llTAIL.,, .......... .$1.!f ACRYLK SH; CANDY STlllPE 100% Acrylic fiber:Deto. rich durable shag. Btouti· · II ful ntw Color$. SQ.f n. •W SALE SAVI PllCll AT.-........ 91 1 00" ~lye1ter Rile. Beor;rtif heavy shag . New c.' s to seleCI """ IOWSAU PllC8 Al •• ~···· C-AIAIU llTAtL ............. .$7 ... FREE SHOP-AT-HOME , CARPET SERVla II eB . 3D-60-90 DAYS North Hollywood Canoga Parle w.los Angeles awthorne Anahein ' _._ HO INTEREST 10011m11 c11r• •ht' Zllll snr•11 ••1 11&1wu'""11• 1 111w111 .. , 11!f. Ml M. lrcli1 st • 512-220 llJ.2334 . 477-112$ • llJ.1121 135-7111 .• Ventura Freev.'Oy to Co· Son pi1go .freeway to Son Diego Freeway to 2 blocks N,_or1i tf Son· COtmlflEMTCHllT PlM$ & UNKTtlMS AVAIWLI ~~Uywood freewoy lo noga Ave., North to Wils~rtWest. Tu~fl ll oundo Turn·off. fo Ano freewq '00 f~ Call At The Store Nearest You • YISIT DUR CUSTOM DW£RY l [PainlENT L ermcon Woy, Eoit lo s.herman Woy then 6 ~t-ks Wesl on•WD:: Ea. ro· Howthorne clid. Ac7oss.f n C~l11. J , • aurel onyan Blvd. right 2 blocks. sh1r • Bl Fed. 1 . . . . . . .. . . . J ~ I S~~ent Housing Problems By PATRICK BOYLE Of Pll ~Ir 'll•t S!11! Studenis J;,ing to college have to live tsomewbere and one of the biggest problems facing ~any ¥iversiUes today ls a cr1tical ~g shortage, according to f rank Bowman, housing director at CalState Long Be:ach. ' Bowman, a . member of a panel. at UC lrvine recently, said that there\ls usually ade- quate housing· around cam- puses, but ~ the cost if often p~i-~ve for a student's ·~ig~t udget. "Apartments with tents of from $*K1 to $400 a month are being built right next to : the campus at CalState tool Beach," Bowman said, "They are being built fo r the upper income brackets, not for students~" · "There is not really a l~ck or housing but a lack of viable alternatives in housing for the . students," be added . Bowman was a men1ber of a panel discussing the student bousiilg crisis and bow it relates to the C{)mmunity. The panel was one of 10 such workshOps held at UCI as part of the California College Personnel AssociaUon'1 con- ference Saturday lD study campus-community confllcts. The two other p a n e I members were Jim Pbllllps, UCI housing director, and Gary Little, a residence hall manager at Ca!State Long Beach. The members listed the four major problems facing student housing today as a lack of low· cost housing near campm; separate regulations f o r Woµian students; 11 t r i c t • regu]alions in residence balls versus no regulations in off- campm apartments and stu- dent apartment-dwellers being treated differenUy than other apartmeot-d~ellers their age. Phillips suggested t b a t perhaps one IOluUon to an of the problerm would be in building a completely different type of student housing. "1bere is a need for other types of boumlg," Phillips told the audience, "perhaps a cooperative type fraternity house. The ultimate solution may be in tbe kind of living no ... bu ...ny built yet." Pblllip1 said that UCI was, like CalState Long Beach, llU~ ject to being sumJllllded by high-cost Jiving. He. cited as an example tbe Park West Apart- ment In University Parle where price• begin at 1195 for a small apartment. A member ot the audience menUoned that Paik West a1ao discriminated between men and women. He said that whereas on1y two m a I e students were allowed to share an apaitment, the aparlmtnt management permitted three CEUBRATING THE N COSTA -MES STORE · OUR WAREHOUS IS OV.ER ·LOADE MUST MOVE NO MORE ARRIVING T N~LON , 100% contin~o s filament nylon pile. , Many· new d orator .colors, plain · and tweeds, Completely • . Installed · NOW SALE:P.RI D AT •••••••••••••••••••••••••• DUPO 5 01 'X ..•... ·.· . ..-.. , .• 100% (Ontinuous ilament nylon pile certified with Du nt 501 Blue "N" Label for we ight -a d quality. NOW S~LE PRICE CONTRACTORS! H APARTMENT OWN SI • NYLON . YOUR c OICE 100% coiltinuous filomen lylon, tight loop wecrve, • HE RCU LON l 00% Herculon olefin fibe tight loop weave. SPECIAL SHA ' SALE . YOUR CHOIC I NYLOllSHAG 99 100"""""""' fil<pnlnl Nylon,.- ACRYLIC SHA• 100" Aayllc .... 1000s OF RE IAITS LARGE 6 I LL SAVINGS %.~YINGS·ao% UP TO... . PTO ,,, living Room, Dining Room, Bedrooms. Hallways, Baths, Cars, Etc. BRING YOUR ROOM' MEASUREMENTS . . f . ~: CARPET. ~ILES ••• SA YE $$ if ;DO-IT·YOURS E ~ ! DACRON SHjG : 3¥2'' 99 ~. ~FEELS LIKE VELVET -OUTW RS OTHER CARPET l -EASY TO INSTALL. , NO W . : ! • lnd11r-01ldoor • Slain Rl ist"t SALE : • 10-!r. Wur Tnttl •I Doctrlor Colm PRICED • • WaterprDDI • 1001'. "''" Pila SAVE 59c ~••it;~!'. ... ~-·""'"•~ SHAG THE TESnD M&MI II ns 100% Fortrel Poly!s1 er 99 Pile. .Lush, deep, long-wear-SQ Tl ing ond hord-ro-soil. Stays • • ~utiful with o minimum of core. MW SAU PIKD AT • JOO% Kodel® Polvest1!' I pilt. Rich deep, luxuriously ttrick pile. Exciting ntw decorotorcok>~· .. SAU • •WSALI · i. PikD At ••••..• PllCll AT ...... . Wtst Cowi11t1 m1 tw.n .. 1111. llM41i . . . beno Nollywoo4 1111 M. Y.-t 111. 111-7411 2 Blks. north of Holly. wood Blvd. on Ver- mont. • • Long Beach !lll ltllllmrlllt m -1114 San Diego Freeway Bellflower Blvd. turn- off nonh on llellllowor. 100% Dacron Polyester Pi lei.Beautiful new deep shag with a full 3Y2" pie. Many new decorator tri-colors to choose fro m. SQ. YD. SAVI NOW SALE PRICED AT $1.00 COMPARABLE RETAJL .................... •13,99 LN..·~SHAG 1111 TISTID l&MI • fllllS 100% Fortre4 Pol yester 99 Pile. Beautiful tri-Wors. A rough and rumble· shag with maximum durobility ond luxury. llOW SALE PRICED AT ...,..., ............... ............... 1001' Kodt!OI Pol,.,ier pilt, Trwly one of the thicr.At, heaviest. shogs awiloblt, A drcimotic car· pet with o fuM .t.;nch pilt . Btoutiful ntW tOlors. ... Al ••••••• •• .. SAU ••W-• I.I ••••••• COMPAU Ill 1nA1L •••••••••••• st." C-AUIU l n AM. .......... .$U.tt S.1 Fnniclsc Torn11ce GRAND Vtntvra Pa1ad111a OPENING 2111 L Cl!°"" 11.t lllllrlatllh!I. 2111 L M1l1 St lll·l• MIUllAI Ml-COSTA MESA Ml-5141 LColOl'odo Blvd.at Ill !I Cltol• lul 1 9lor.k East of 3 lfocb West of • Sen Gobritl Blvd. m-1111 1'°""1tlorN BML a11. Aw Points on Moln. Artt1ia . • • . • • . . Thul'1dq , NMmbtf 19, 1970 DAILY I ••. ·i '· . QUEENIE -ly Phll lnterfcindl "He wants to know whicll one la the ~?" .. Methadone Use Aid In Low Crime Rate NEW YORK (UPI) -methadone .!>!.,. ''mojoc Methadone use in drug ad· improvements"· . .i .ll WaJb. diet.ion treatment centers may ington's court syatem and be playing a role in helping police force contributed to the cut the naUon's crime rate, reduction of as much as 19 accordlng to some scientists. percent of tbe d ty'1 crime It has helped in the nation's . rate. But the trutment of capital, aCCil rdlng to Robert L. ·2.000 heroin addicts -almost DuPont, director o( th e 10 percent of thole estimated N a r c o t I c s T r e a bnent in tbe distrlct -undoubtedly Admlnistratlon for the District "was I major coatributor to of Columbia. the dramatically red u c e d He told the third annual na-crime rate." "•···-•·• ••-• --'""mlc tlonal c onfer e n ce on of he~'O ~..-tn Rlt!ll'' to IJ.97/ Washington was lbe mal'!" cause of the sharp crne rue ~om 1981 throu&h 1919." DuPont sald, "then It b ob- vious that. large-scale heroin addiction treatment w a 1 necessary !or the drop In crime In the last year." Melh&done, when liven in large . doles, 'Jocks the ad- dict'a craving for heroin. 'Ille medication ls addldlve itself and nt\IJI be taken dolly or weekly, But the addict can lunctiou normally and b hit without the euphoric feeling associated with heroin. Its woe Ind' IM illai>emoll<xl lw pro- ved Conliovonlal.·liowewr. Girl's · Ladies' Casuals -~ ...... -llrf•M911flMMI• ---· P•in fol.;_ Girl's 4·8;ij·3 · ladies' 4l • 10 ••••••••• 2221 HARBOR ILV., COSTA'MESA STORI· HOUllS: Dally 11·'' SUn. 12.S ·'· I l r I { \ I I I I / . I j I - .. J• O~L.V l-u.01 Th11rsdaJ, Nowmbtt 19, 1970 ' Bad Bibbing Reporter Loses Record BJ TOM BARLEY CM .. Dllltr PllM ttetf SANTA ANA -Orange County SUperior caurt re- porter Ledl J. Slaback ls pretty'°"' today from Ille IUl'gery he Underwent ln St. Joseph Hospital, Orange, Tuesday but that, he grins, isn't what hurts. lie lsn1 much concerned aboul lhe looa of Ille rib hmoved to c:onOct • clreuletorJ disorder. Wbat really -.. the veteran reporior ls !he Joa of a IO'Oud reoord -. M ,.... of SUpertor COurt ..mce wllhoul a day oil for...__ • TD ~)'el:l'-Wd Santa Ana man started wort as a court ftporier In I ... He ha.I never bod a day oil for mo ... In that tlme. "We've never had anytblng like It," aaid C'OUrt act.. ministrator 1'ealle McCarti\ey. "We uy even have to dig out the records of Lecll11 father to get anytb1nc comparable to this.'" Lestor Slaback, M, retired In ISM af1er 53 YWI of service as a Superior Court reporter. · THE ELDER Slaback, still a !amlliar figure on !he caurt scene, was asked Wednesday U be could top his son's sickness-free record of 3f years. "WelJ," be mused, "I can remember trapping my finger one day in 1918 but I don 't know if I had any time ol.f for it. But it seems to me," he grinned, "that that happened on a Saturday and J didn't have to work anyway." LESTER SI.ABACK has been throughout his Ille as an accompllsbed tennis player and he still puts Jn a dally game on tbe Santa Ana tennis court&. "I keep tellibi LeciT that that's what be lhould be doing," be said. "He wouldn't be having all this sick- ness if he'd get out with me and play a couple of sets ~day ••• " For the Record Births ARBUCKLE A SON Westcll!f Morllwy a1 E. 17th. St., Cotta Men -• BALTZ MORTUARIES Corina del Mar •••. OR MUI COtia Mesa •....••. ml 1-UU • BEIL BROADWAY MORTUARY llt Brudway, Costa Ma.a LI Hl3I • llcCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY lM Lapaa Canyon Rod. Ol-HU • PACIFIC VIEW MEMOBW. PAU Cemetery M..taary lltt Plldflc ~Drift Newport -. CaUlonbl ...,. • PIBlt FAMILY COLONIAL FUNBllAL HOMS 'llll lloU Aft. w-.1er .... anm • 811EFf ER MORTUAllY Lapn1 B<ac• ....... 4K-IAI Su Cleme1te ••••... 41W1M • IMITll8' MORTUAllY 11'1 Mala St. u .. 11o,... Bead - Marriage Licenses ~ ,; ' . ; .... . . ,,. • . ,.. •.--< .............. . " ·-. .... . . . . . . . . ' . . 'Tempo' Publisher • ·1 . Coun tmg System .Studied Stlldy Shows Qld Follis Don't Dwell on Death In Lawsuit SAHl'A: ANA -Former "Tempo" iubliaher William Rober\ Rime~ has been sued for more tbao ...,,000 by a ~s Anple.s Clounfy publlsber who charges !he lilll4oY Mall con- '1'01ler with nc.\.p.yment of two promlslory nolel. Tri.county lnv11tment corporation president George E. Moffat names R&laell and his wife, Jeanne, u defen- dants In the Or~e County Superior Court tawsulL He claims they have refmed to pay debts totalllng 154,!00. Earlier this month Russell was arrested on 14 counts ol grand theft and 15 CQl.llts of corporate security violations. The arrests followed &COM of complaints that his Su11day Mail weekly had discontinued JKJblication after the pro- testers had bought dealerships in the organlzaUon. Premarital Seminar Set IRVINE -A one•day workshop on the law requ~ mandatory premarital counseling for minors will be held Saturday (Nov. 21) at.the Faculty Club, UC Irvine. Engineers Meeting Set For Tonight ANAHEIM -The proble1111 of unemployment a m o n g engineers in Orange County will be considered Thursday at a joint meeting of the county chapters of the American SOciety of Mechanical Engineers and tbe ID3tltute of Electrical a n d Electronic Engineers. The meeting will be held at t p.m. at the Anaheim Bowl, 1925 W. Lincoln Ave ., Anaheim, and is open to all In- terested engineers. Speakers who will discuss measures to lessen unemploy· me.at include S. G. Carlson, vice president.. 0 r o u n d Systems Group, H u I be a i\lfcralt; .Lou Bl'?'!, guest lec- turer far the Department of Defense's Management ~bool, and John M. Malloy, deputy uslstaot Secretary. ol Ditlenae for Procurement. COMMUNITY EVENTS SANTA ANA -Two . new proposals to Improve Orange County's vote countJng ~ cedures .,. being sludled by Registrar of Voters David Hltchoock. ' The propoeals came to Ibo county Boaro of SupervtsOrs frolJl Cubic Coporatloo of San Diego and Varo, Inc. of Santa Barbara, new ownen of the Coleman vote COUJllln( equlp- ment. CUbic, which supplied ~ macblnes to the county for ~ Nov. 3 general election, of. fered to sell the cowity 60 of its machines and thrte data systems for $1.i million. The 'original Coleman machines were purchaaed in 1966 for 11.7 millioa. .. Forum Slated On Land Swap SANTA ANA -The Upper Newport Bay land exchange will be tbe subject of a fOllllll scheduled for • p.m. t<rtlght at the First Amer1acn Tille Insurance Co. bere. Dr. Charle5 P. Greening, chairman of the Friends of Newport Bay, will be the featured speaker at the forum, sponsored by the Saddleback Lodge B'nal B'rlth. LOS ANGELES -A llll!'Yey of 183 Le1swo World, Lquoa Hilll, mideato by a Uolvenl· ly of Southern California researcber indicates o I d e r people are "well adjusted to, thou&h not preoccupied wllll dying and death." James T. Mathleu, doctoral candidate at use, repom ••nearly 63 percent are 'uoworied' at the prospect of their own deaths, 2:8 percent aren't fearful, Uve percent are larily fearful and only four percent answered very fearful." Tbe fmdll!gs ol !he social P "f cbologls t' 'up 1 et c ommonly-held concepUons, and are most reveallrig In terms of society's 'taboo' Im- age of dying and death," Mathieu said. -Other !lndlop of the study conducted by USC's geron· tology center show: .r About two-thirds favor ""'trltbdrawal of treatments ex· ctpt those designed to mafn.. lain comfort and reduce pain'1 for persons with Incurable di!f!ase ·facing · death. Uttle more than 30 percent ad- v o cat e d ''continalng r e asonable life-maintaining treatment, but a v o I d t n g 'heroic' methods." Only four percent wanted ''use of every medical treatment and device available to keep the person alive," Mathieu said. ..... Nearly 80 percent wanted a doctor to tell them U death A REASON FOR GENEROSrrY Now ii the one time of year the United Fund ub you to give a gift to help thoae leSI fo~ate people whose need ii so mUch gr~r than yours. .,-Cliff Wesdorf ARTIJT 01' TM• MONTH STITCH•RllS, MACRAMIS, WEAVIHGS •• OeMt l'rll~ '"' Chfl M•• R•rNllM D9pl, 1.1 ....... r. Orl;IMI, (",..!I ... wan hll'l91nvt Irr ttw locll Oa~-Cr1flllnl11 11!11 Mr 111lc11nl1 wlU M ellflltlt!M th""'911 N<'vemller. M'1. l'rleberblllia« M1 ... tWW•h•"" 9d Mid ntlltlli.d • v••le!Y Of erlhs lrKluCllllll ptpltr" ~ Miik. WM K U1plvn, corTI ltulli; Ct"M!lons, II~ .,y, mecr11n9 •nd -vlnp. Slit lllt .._, $"'""""°' f/I TM ltoll- tllft D1v111c1n "' 1119 ortnte C-f'f r:11r fc!r"lht PMt 1. ...-~ • NOW! 4WAYSTO EARN HIGHER INTEREST AT CALIFORNIA FEDERAL! Slit b 1 rnMlbet" el t1Mo Costa Mela 'Art lMOut, T""N Al1 lNIJut, H1111t- lnt1!0n S-::lt Ari Aun. •11111 ... 'f'1n9rltan C~•rbl!Wl'I Couritn. were·tmmlDenL -I.I given a choice, 61 per- cent aatd tbey wanted to die at home, !l percenl chose death in a hospital and fewer than two. percent prefemd dying in a nelgbborbood nursing borne. Mathle\l characterized the Lei!urt World sample as being ''.ationally, 1 o c i al I y , p~ychologlcally and eC/lnOmlcally ol the middle ~ upper-middle class. All surveyed are In average and a~•eawrq:egoodh~thfor tliir ages which ranged from 50 to 86," be said, "Even though the study wople fl Um1ted, ·11 fl com- pOsed of a cosmopoUtan group of people, from many varied backgrounds and g-apbical }9t1tiom,'1 MatbJeu said. Sears Funds Md College ·oRANGE -Chapman College has received $28,000 In &rants from the Se a r 1 - Roebuck FoundaUon and from the United States Steel Foun- datton. Chipman Prasldent Jam L. Davis said 12,500 ol !he $6,900 received from Sears-Roebuck will be ueed to augmtnt the -purdwlog budget o! the library and the btJance will go to the general fund. The 121,000 donation from USS will go lo capital projects. r•• CAUFORNIA FEDERAL SAVINGS --- 5 2 5 3 gu1r1nleed 0 annuli • ral• 5 75 3 guaranleed " · annual • 0 rot• 90 Day Certificate Accounts* 5.39% Annual Yield 1f ell savings and Interest remain a year. No minim um deposit. Cally comPoundlng. Eam from date of deposit. 63 gu1r1nlltd 0 annual n le 2to10 Year Certificate Accounta• 8.18% Annual Yield If all aavlngs and Interest remain a year. $5,000 snlnlmum deposit. Calty compounding. . Earn from date of deposit. \ .. ·, \ ~ ' • I 1to10 Year Certificate Accounta• 5.92% Annual Ylald If ell savings and Intere st remain a year. $1,000 minimum deposit. Caily compouncnng. Earn from date of deposit. 7. 5 3 guaranlHCI 0 onnttal • n le 1 Year Certificate Accounts• (Adju1t1bfe rotu for 1hortar 1111111) 7.79 % Annual Yle ld If all saving~ and .Interest remain a year. $100,000 minimum deposit. Cally compounding~ Earn from dale of depool~ ~fftdrew•I• befora mtfurityo pemilt+.d ~ wllltct to 10111• 1011 of fnltreit. 6% Panbook Account. Current Annual Rate. No minimum deposit Dal~ com~oundlng. lnlerest day-In to cla)'cut. COSTA MESA OFF~ • 2700 Harbor Blvd. ft9'r Adams • 546·2300 CLIFFORD M. WESDORF, 'llCE PRESIDENT & MANAGER GOODWILL Indus tries GOOD WILLY SEZ: ''H1v• you tver made 1 Goodwill tour? Thousands do each yHr, and art u- tonl1t..d at IN 1COJN1 of Goodwill lnd uttr1" opo t ratlon. Comt any week- day for a guided tour of Gaodwlll'• train!:'! c .... tor. Call 547-6301 . 590 W1 19th St. Cos'1' Mesa . ap.n Mon, thru Fri. 9-9 Sat. 9 till J::JG--446-2479 You ~ Dollar Bu~ More· '/JI; Tlte G DWILL ORE SPECIALS THIS WEEK!. BOJ SPRINGS & MATIRESS ' s3590 I' ltc•nclitioned SRPINGS ATIRESS s3990 Christmas Decorations . ~ : WOMEN'S DRESSES ·79~ .. BABY ;MATIRESS 59'5 MEN'S PANTS 55'•77C AND UP . MEN'S SHOES s1.ss., . . OYS & MENS SKI BOOTS TOYS & GAMES · Please Use These • Booths In Your Neighbotflaad ---~ ------------------------------------------------------- Thlll'sday, NOYtmbtr l~. 1970 DAILY PILOT Jj FAMILY CIRCIJS Smog Solution BIBLE THOUGHTS Vietnam Cut Rates Plan Told --~---~-=-=:--=-~~--:;----~----,,------~~---ll~J Small Cars the Answer --aNlOOMIJHliltfl1-, pr•~'~-----1--1 to k11owl..f9• •'"* opportllfllty. J•Ult te1', WASHINGTON (AP ) -:rbe Pentagon is trying to arrange cut-rate fares fOr American •~-­ servicemen traveling from Vietnam to_ the United States under a new liberalized leave policy. In addition to saving them money, this would help U.S. :servicemen get around a scarcity in leave travel space available on military aircraft. As it now stands, the 5pace problem could severely limit the number of men taking ad· vantage of the 14-day-at;_home ]eave pr o g r a m announced earlier this month and ef· fective this week. 'Ibe two-week leave would "Why did you have ta pay the lady lo get atr coats boCk ? • • be in addition to Uie five to--------------------seven days of rest and recuperation -R&R -which are granted to all men during their one-year duty tour in the war zone. However, the 14-day home leave is not automatic. Under the regulations, no more than 10 wcent of the men assigned to a given major unit or base can Jle absent on leave at any one lime. Also, whether a man may go on leave when he Chooses to do so could hinge on such military considerations a s .,.,.belber bis unit is engaged in liome important op6ration. When a serviceman goes on R&R from Vietnam, h i s transportation· to and from such places as Hong Kong, Bangkok and Hawaii i s furnished by the Defense Department : But when he goes on what is called "ordinary leave," as unde r the new po l icy, he normally bas to makl bis own arrangements. However, I eav e · boun d servicemen are eligible to travel on military aircraft when space is available. Such space is at a premium everywhere, but particularly to and from Vietnam. This' means that, even if a serviceman is successful in getting a space-available seat on a military plane bound from Vietnam tO the U.S. mainland, the Pentagon notes "there i_s no guarantee that be will be able to return to Viet4 nam on a space-av~ble basis." , Thus, the Pentagon.1ays4 the serviceman must have enough space to get back to Vietnam by commereial airline when absent on ordinary leave. Shpnld Get Job Retired Brass Graduati1ig TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -When planning a career in consumer 1 Sam Huey pounds the pave-relations with a bank or cor· ment job hunting with other JX>tation. "But I haven't started looking around yet." 1971 college graduates this He finds it tough cracking spring, he'll have an edge. the books after being away so Huey, 50, is a retired long. But his wife Ilona has brigadier general who holds helped make the transition two Distinguished Se r • i c e smoother by setting off a Awards from the Air Foree study area. and has commanded com· "When I get home first munications forces in Europe, thing my children want to the Middle East and Vietnam. know is how are mf grades," During 30 years in the he says. "lf fathr demands • se!"Vlce he worked his way up he says. "lf father demands from private, retired in father be No. 1. l 'll 1tell you, it I February as director or elec4 puts a strap on fa ther." ' tronie communications f or Father is doing all right - Strike Command at MacDill he's carrying A! and Bs. Air Force Base, and enrolled In dark suit, starched shirt at the University of Tampa in and tie. Huey is a striking con· search of a bachelor's degree, trast to some of his long· 1 majoring in business and haired classmates in their blue history. jeans. Huey got into the swing 0£ , ''I go ~ut ol my way lo·be campus life quickly -sitting unobtrusive," Huey says. through the rain with his wife .Although h~ doesn't agree amf three children to cheer the with the antiwar movement Tampa football squad and and wonden what youth .will working up a good game of protest about when Amtriean table tennis to qualify for the troops . are _evacuated from intramurals. Southeast Asia, Huey says be The sheepskin he'll get next l~~ a great deal from May fulfills a 31-year goal. •lis-te;;run;;g;i;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.-.I Huey joined the military in,1 1939 after attending a jlinior college in Tyler, Tex., and vowed then he 'd finish college some day. "I want to try SGmething new now,'' says Huey, who is H,.. .. w ... A ...... s.ntce, Y• .. W ......... .. ,. ........ TILIPHONI ANSWlllNa IUIU.U 935.7777 Come clean up! Save 17.95 on pur gas dryer. ,... ....... ll'ltlt PtnMY 910*: ~ gas giyesyou a better deal .......... , ... --- Sale •152 _1 ......... 17 ........ ICf .... 911 dfJW. Four tamP.ra!Uno Mltinga for all fabrics Including fluff dry far special arllcleo. Adl!Jll- signal sentry. Wh tte, coppertone, ft avocado or harvast gold ••• color costs no more at Pen,_. enne1f1 the_,,,_ FASHION ISLAND HUNTINGTON CENTER HUNTI NGTON BEACH NEWPORT CENTER e NEWPORT BEACH IUJM Oll _TlN,__ SAN DIEGO (AP) -'Ille answer to smog is simple, says aviation pioneer Waldo Waterman : smaller can. The United States needs to llmit the weight of new cars to 2,200 pounds and horsepower to 20, believes the man who claims to have, been licensed before any othe.,r still-living pilot. In 1909, be flew a glider in what is now SBil Diego. He's still flying and building planes. In 1922 be patented a machine to preveat frost in citrus groves. "nle machine replaced a n air-polluting smudge pot. So Waterman, now 'II, harmful emissions far be1ow believes be knows a Utile that QOW coatemplated by tbe about motors and smog. 1975 J1gulation." ''Tbe bigger the cars are, ~ides, a 2,200-pound car the more horsepower they need to drive them and the that seats four persons com- more exhausted pollution they fortably "could probably be put out," be said in an in· -sold profit.ably for far less terview Tuesday. than any foQr-.passenger auto "Auto maoufacturen say on the market to d ay .•• they can't possibly meet the Waterman aaid. 1976 emission requirementa, Waterman figures drivers and this is probably true. would lose up to II minutes a "If the 30 horsepo:wer, 2,200 day in getting places but says pound formu la were adopted, "this' is li1Ue to give~up to pro- our present known method of tect tbe environment." smog control and fuel regular Ob, yes; he drives a com- Uon could cut down the total i-cl car. Complete witli • Treetop "·•th•t ••rv•11t whlclt KNEW hlt Ur4't will -ll•lth•r did -hit will, 1h•ll ... b••t•11 with MANY 1trlc:•· lut h• tfiet KNEW NOT -1holl be •t•11 with fEW 1trip••·" Ilk-, 12:4'1-'41), A tt l•itt.4 Jnt11 i11 i•il for lift, h torfur-4 by th• tho..,htt of lo1t opporfu11ltl•1 oncl w•1tecl ~11owl•clt•· NOTH ING c1111 be clo11• to rt1t1ov• tho1• p1111id1!119 thou9hh. A11 i911ortll'lu•, lit l•ll fot ' llf•, 111ty t 11Joy th • ft•• 111••11 t"4 ltb urt : hit p1111ilh111tnt It llj"· 2 Pet. 2:20°21 concltmt11 Chrl1tt•111 who h•v• hop:'ll••ily ft ltll Into hi •!Id 1t•tt1, "••tho l•ttor tllcl It wort• with th'•m th111 +ho bt9innl119, for it h•cl bo•n b•ttor for thom 11of, to litvt k11ow1t tho wty of ri9ht1ou111•••··", Th••• '"''' Ht tY•ll t 11cl 1ufftr r.,. mo"' tncl r•9r1t •ter111lly, h•vi111 KNOWINGLY t•i•ct..f •P· porfuniti11. NOTHING ct11 b1 clo111 or 1ticl to •••• th1lr rt9rt ts. The l lbl1 clot t 11ot ftach LITERAL tlretfl of 9olcl i11 Hoovt nt thl1 Is • FIGURATIVE w•v to clttcribo tht bt tutiful, Nt lthor: clot1 it ttoch LITERAL fir• In Htll: thi1 FIGURATIVELY clo1crlbt s tho hrrible. RE MORSE t ncl REGRET of tho10 111 Htll lwho lfth1tcl Httvt lil will for•vtr tort11r• tht m •1 .flr .. Rttcl Jn. 12z'47""'"- Rtv. 20:11-15, 2 Cor. 5:1 0, R•"· 2Hl-5. Yo11 h•v• ICNOWL.- EOGE of Chri1t. Do you ttko ,.,,rv O PPORTUNITY to ob1y Hlmf VISIT Church of Chri1t, 217 W, Wil1on St .. Coif• Mt••· STUDY th1 liblo with us. - • PANSIES BEAT ALL They'll not fail to pro· duce heavy blooms from now till I a t e Spring. We'll 1how you how. • Ornaments SPECIAL 3 PACKAGES • Tinsel I • Lights Packaged .•. Ready to Mail Ideal for Servicemen, Kid1 Ho1pital1, Shut-ln1 , Office COMPLETE ..•• Attractive care-fr•• ground cover. Plants love it - keeps the soil cool. Oi1cour1g11 w11cls. All grades. LARGE 3 CUBIC FUT BAGS SPECIAL OR · CoD at stop W'I today and send the FTD Thanksgjver almost anywhere. To th«.e you can't be with. Or lo 1yotK Thanksgiving halts.. Special thanks. Onf~ {tom your FTD Flor is!. ,_19" ' • - WHILE ITS COOL PLANT A • CABBAGE • BROCCOLI • CAUi FLOWER • PARSLEY • ONIONS Dozen BHutlful ) Pl.nt. •..••..• Reg. 79c He•vtl y budded -some with fruit. Really very nice plant1. Perfect 1111 for potting. Ask our nursery men how to plant and care fo r them. • Special RetJ. $2.50 LANDSCAPE WITH FRAGRANCE BEAUTIFUL. BUDDED We 'll 1how you how to plant and care for them for complete 1ucceu. Real Husky Plants ..... _ . I Grow your own Christ- mos Tree. This end all kids get a • FREE. tree . bring your folks . • IT'S NOW! Hundreds ·of beautiful plants to choose from ••• Some in full bloom. Be sure ta see tho hHvy blooming S.sanquH used for up right growth, vine growth or g r o u n d covers. Select a shady garden an<! let us show you how ta plant. !'riced From to 2641 Harbor Blvd. -· ~"'" .. rL' N' "Qu1lity end Strvict Since .1946'' COSTA ME$A CALL 546-5525 '"'· ,. "" .. ""' .......... , .... . _} .. ~=-----~----..... ··· ---:!._ -.. _'!____,....__.=----~-~--·-.· --..... . .. --' 1 I \ I •, DAILY l'!LOT Thi.<da)', N....,b<r 19, 1970 IJl'I T.-htle End of an Era Tljis .four photo sequence shows the dynamite end lo the 10-story, 80-year-old Denver landni.ark the Interstate Trust Building. The old building was demol· isbed to make waf for Denver's Uurban Renewal Authority's "Skyline" project. '11ie dynamite blast reduced the building to a rubble in matter of minutes. Irish Banks Open--Bleak Event for Check Writers · ~·· .... DUBLIN, Ireland (AP) - On this Emera1d Isle, where · the banks didn't handle money for six mor.ths, they're sorting out the bad guys from the good guys. The baddies are those who wrote bad dlecks during the ZS.Week bank strike a n d lockout that ended Oct. 19. The g\'.)Odies are those who didn't cash more than they had on deposit. tle purchases at fairs and markets in the pa.St slx months. Unofficial reports in- dicate checks totaling almost ;1 million were involved. While banks remained cl• ed, supennarkets mxt aaloons were the principal check· cashers. Customers who ran out of checks used scrap paper to draw on banks. · The 6,000 bank clerkS have come close to ·p1.itting the checks in the good or bad categories, but they y;oo't be ready lot business as usual until well into 1971, officials reporL 11le banb say they loo! only 2 percent of their work force. \VU'lters demanded 25 percent Increases on pey ranging from $30 to $86.fO a week. They set· tled for 37 percent on lower pay scales and up to 22 per- cent on the higher. Judgment day was to come this week when the shutdown banks plan to reopen. •****************** For four weeks, behind lock· ed d<:lcrs, clerks have been &tamping "good" or "bad", trying to rope with a flood of paper that reached them in letters and night depositories. No one knows yet how much the bad guys got away with. Estimates run from a million to three million pouOOs. 'n!at b a range up lO $7.2 million. , Experts say professional writers ol rubber checks were et work during the bank sloJ>- page. Police are investigating cal· Open Mon .. Thcn. 91.m.-4 p.m.; Fri. 9 IJll.-6 p.Jll. BUENll PARK ,~UNTINDTDN BEACH Mercury Savings Bldg. ..._ ,Merell')' Savings Bldg. Valley 'View at Lincoln ~ \' . Edinger at Beacb ********* ******* BUYING AN . ORGAN? .r PRl~ES INCREASE ON DECEMBER 1 Sth YOU CAN SAVE 10.%1.015% ON YOUR HAMMOND ORG'AN I BUY NOW . BEFORE PRICES GO UP! YOUR OPPORTUNITY IS NOW! USE OUR LAYAWAY-FIRST PAYMENT RB. 15, 1971 WI HAVI JUST '81U:KASID 60 , .WURLITZER fill YILlE CLARK . SPINET· PIANOS 1.IGULAil.:Y $19S.ot ~~~·$595 1 .,.. ,. .. ,.- NEW SHIPMENT llCllVIDI REBUILT GRANDS Tremendous Vlllut?&-St"lnway, Knabe, Ollckering Bros., Ft.cht>r and S1trs:ent by BaJdwin. Also 2 "Do It Yoursetr• Grandi! You do tM outside -Wt' did the Inside . Walich91\iti;i<!~ C:OSTA MESA PHONI 540-l!H SOUTH C:OAST PLAZA '· ' . .. I ' ' ' • ' ski shop I clearance at may co south coast plaza • colM stock up• ,_..s -•fashions and sit 1qulp1111nt. , .lilt p,..s111H savings skis with step.In •lndin1s · Famous name wood tkis with step-in b lnding1. In· stollotton ;ncluded. Save $24.96. 39 99 Wire 64.95 • La Dolo111it1 •uckl1 boots Famous boots mode Jn Italy. Chromed spring buc- kles, smooth leather uppers, mold ed soles. Wtre 50.00 34, 99 Koflach Racer buckle boots Grained leather boots with favorite Martin buckles. At unusual $10 savings nowl were 40.00 30.00 m1n's and women's parkas Great atylesl limited assortment 10 come in early for Christmas gifts and sovel w1r125.00to40.00 14.99 to 30.00 men's and women's ski pants famous name atretch pants in broken colors and slzes. You might be lucky .• .come eorlyl ; w1re22.00to33.00 15.00 to 28.00 ladies' famous ski suits Famous lungberg ••• Scandonovian favorite Ski 1uitJ in limited sizes and colors. Save $20.00. were 70.00 49. 99 ladies' ski sweaters Great t1electionl Colors, sizes, styles! All wool and washable Orlon® acrylic for 10vely gifts. were16.00to36.50 9.99 to 28.50 mta'11ki sweat1rs All wool sweaters in rugged and warm styling. The skier on you r list will love onel were20.00to34.50 9.99 to 28.00 ladits' turtleneck sweaters Stripe ski tu rtlenecks in long~wearing nylon. Broken sizes assortment: save $5.00. ' wen 8.00 2.99 t1rtl1ntcks for skier• Cotton and nylon in assorted styles and sizes. Come in and buy several at savings. w1re4.00ta 7.00 2.99 to 4.99 may co ski shop 114 • co513...,. only may co south coast plaza, san diego fwy at bristol, cosla meoa; 546-9321 diop monday thru saturd.ay 10 am to 9:30 pm, sunday noon 'Iii s pm MAVCO ------------------------ Hardened Arteries Studied ATLANTIC CITY, N . J . (UPJ ) -Allergy plus a diet rich in fats yet low in cholesterol added up t o hardened arteries in the rab- bits of Drs. C. Richard Minick and George_ E. Murphy of Cornell University. These contaminate<! rabbit arteries closely resembled hardened human arteries, tbey told the American Heart Association C o u n c i I on Arteriosclerosis , which loday struggles with the chemistry of this notorious roadblock to any extension of the humao life span. Their scientific proof was that allergic injury to artery linings , greatly speeds the depositing of fatty substances from fat-rich diets wh ich hardens arteries. They asswn- ed that what happened in rab- bits happens in people. People have countles s chemical eccentricities that are classified as allergies. How many rabbits h3ve no one knows. The scientists were positive they had produced allergic reactions in these arteries, however. They in· jected a blood protein foreign to rabbits. They also made a repeat demonstration of what scien~ already knows -that fatty substances o l her than cholesterol are involved in the m ys terious chemistry which arteries. ab b erant hardens Two research teams in- dependently made an im· portant discovery about that chemistry, they reported to the council. Each identified the same two blood proteins as prime' activators of t h e enzyme liproprotein lipase (LL). LL &tarts up the chemical reactions which break down fats circulating in the blood so they can be accumulated in the body's fatty tissues rather than being deposited in artery linings. The newl y identified activating proteins belong to a complex or small proteins. It is assumed that when arteries harden, they 're not doing what they should with LL. One research term was made up -0f Dr. John C. Laros of George Wa s h ington University, Wa shinglofi, D.C., and Ors. Robert 1. Levy , Peter Herbert, Samuel E. Lux and Donald S. Frederickson of the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md. The other team was Ors. Richard Havel anct ·Dennis Bier of the University of California in San Francisco and Ors. Virgie Shore and Bernard Shore of t h e Lawrence Radiation Labora - tory, Livermore, Calif. Policeman Knew It Was Something PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -Police Sgt. John Flemining sense<t'S<Jmethlng was wrong when he WQ approached-by his friend , Sgt .. .Edward Fossler. "I could tell by his face," Flemming said. Fossler told him his daughter, Joan Marie, 19, had just been killed, in an auto accident. Fourteen years ago, Flemming's :tOn , John D., 7, was drowned in Wlssahickon Creek. Fos'sler also broke the news then. Vetoes Station Britai1i Nixes Red Attenipt LONDON (AP ) -Britain has vetoed a Soviet attempt to set up a whaling station in the bleak Soutii Atlantic island "of South Georgia , a British crown colony. Government o fficials disclosed the Foreign Office refused permission for the transfer of a lease at present held by an Argentine businessman, Alfredo Ryan, to the Russian.<;. lnfonnants said the British suspected the Russians sought facililies in South Georgia as part of Moscow's policy of ex- tending its worldwide network of ocean bases. Only recently the Russians concluded a fishery agreement with t h e commonwealth government of Mauritius, in the Indian Oci!an, giving the Russians port, shore and com- munications facilities . South Georgia i s ad- ministere6 by the British governor of the Falkland Islands. It has a population of 24. Sir Ernes'. Shackleton, the Antarctic explorer, lies buried on the lonely island , 1,300 miles to the east of Cape Horn and 3,000 miles southwest of Cape Town. primarily because they semed to substantiate the Fase of Prime Mini.Iler E d VI a r d Heath's' gove,rnment that a serious threat.ts ~uUding up to allied sblpping In , lhe· Indian · Ocean and the South AUantic. Heath and Foreign Secretary Sir Alec Douglas-Home sought to justify their plans fl)!' the sale ol arms to the apartheid republic of SOUtb Africa by citing the devtloplng menace or Soviet navaf P!l~: around vital Western 9e8lanes. British officials · said the Russians tirst moved in with their offer to take over the whaling stations in 1967 after hearing that Ryan was trying to get rid of them. They repcrled that Ryan's disposi- tion to reach a deal with the Russians first was stymied by the intervention or the Argen- tine government. They claim- ed Ryan persisted in his ef- forts to.sell, however. Two months ago, British of ficials said. Ryan appealed directly lei the British govern- ment for permission to ccme to tenns with the Russians. But last week he was said to have been told finally by British Ambassador Michael Hadow in Buenos Aires that Britain· was standing firm on its veto. As' the British tell the story, the Russians over the past three years offered up to $12 million in cash for the right to1----------- the island's two whaling sta- tions of Grytviken and Husvik. These are owned by Ryan. According to the British, there are few if any whales still around in the waters of the region , therefore .govern- ment officials here formed the view that the underlying Soviet aim was to obtain ex- tra facilities for their ever- spreading network of naval activities. British authorities talked freely of the developments, USC Chooses County Man Fountain Valley resident Dr.1 Fred L. Meister. 18834 Santa / Barbara St., has accepted an appointment as an instructor in the use School 0 f Pharmacy. Bealore joining the faculty at the School of Pharmacy, Dr. Meister was an instructor and pharmicist at the Los Angeles County.USC Medical Center. IC\(111"" COSTA MFSA JE\\EL!\Y l LOAN 2 Cl. 10111 ,..,;,~t A4"ttlsef .tMwW• fM Mii.ti ouo $300 IVll.YDAY ..ICJ q ... try .._ ........ hN Jewelry ... ,...... ,,.... Aristocrat Coloray, no-fade draperies. Ra yon and acetate antique satins guaranteed color-fast for fabti c's life or return . May Co will rep lace.'White, gold, ban ana, champagne, flax , 01oss avocado, sapphire. wedgewpod, cherry, kell y. . IP.f'~th 1w t48"1 l Yiwt7 2··1 .... .... 1'1<· ,.1. ""5" a.oo S.99 ~IJ.00 11.,, 5'' •. no 6.'J'J J7.00 l l.'J'J 6'\" 10.00 1.79 18.00 14,99 84'" 11.00 l .'J'J :.io.oo 15 ... 9 q;•· 1.1.00 10.79 :.!).00 18.49 11-t"'one \vi1v p.aneb • 4flxf.3" pair reg. 10.00 7, 7 'J draperies., 11 !w!96") 2hwll !O"l 3Wll44 .. ) 4wtl92'"1 ''~· .. ~ .... ul• .... .... .... 21.00 1&.t!J 27.00 l 1.4S 2 ~.00 17.'f'J J0.00 13.9' !4.00 l'J.'.l'J J:?.00 ·l&.•" :!7.00 !!~49 ]5.00 11.7'f 40.00 l :!.4' 55.00 4J.,, 31.00 '2.~ . .,, 40.fl() :tJ.4'f 48,00 ll.4' 6".00 .... ,, \1),00 24.9' 18.110 l1.9'J •·. .-... . • I -------------------.-------~--------------. ---• • . - T c"::.:"::.:".::"'::.'':...c.N"'c.....m:..w_1_•:..· _19:..7::.:o ______ ::.:DA::.:t::.:L Y....;PJLOT 1J3 2 BIG DAYS· STARTS FRtDAY an·nua -.. • ••• In • • . ·., · ,Ftiday, Saturday only. Over S,000 twin "'· or,:~-!!" milttr-· and box springs from .. "··Sealy, Simmons, fngl1nder, regul.trly $9.99 to 79.99. • qui lted firm • luxury firm • super firm • ioam-'Or innerspring • extra firm •.hote l firm May Co's.annual·fa mous name bedding sale. Have you been Ihin~ing about buy- ing a new mattress? Now is the time ... at S"at savings. You're sure to find just what you need ... everything from luxu- ry twin sizes to super firm full sizes. Print or floral covers. Please allow two weeks for delivery. Sale ends Saturday nig ht. $ 1w'in or full, ea . reg. s·9.99 to 79.99 o queen sets, reg. 179.95 to 219.95 $139 to $169 0 ki ng sets, reg . 239 .9S to 319.95 $179 to $249 sleep shop 145 u~ our conventent credit m1y co touth co11t plu1, sin dl990 fwy 1t hr1•to1, cost• m.11, M6-9321 allop mond1y thru wturd1y to 1m to 9:30 pm, 1und1y noon '111 .S pm MAVCO . . . ,• • .. I \ I I DAil Y PILOT -. .....-.. • Fish Groups Are Good Neighbors LOO ANGELES IAP) - Perhaps one of the least known and least organized na- tioowide do-good groups is ihe modest Fish. It really isn't one._group at all, but 100 -maybe 200, nobody knows. Independent Fish ,groups only a few miles aPart may not know about each other. ''The only things we have in common are our na~ and purpose," says a Los Angeles Fish vohmteer. For each ,gr®p the inspir- aUon v.·as the first F I s h groop. formed in England in 1961 by an Anglican minister and a layman. The Fish -an ancient Christian symbol - signified the goal of ex- pressing concern for neighbors through small acts o f kindness. The idea spread largely by word or mouth. Today in many communities:, you can call lhe Fish telephone number and ask for help lhat perhaps no Cit.her agency can give. Who calls? An elderly, carless couple who n e e d some<1ne to dr ive them on a shopping trip. A pair of pen-- nlless hippies just thrown out of their h<iel room. A famil~ where there's illness and need ol a housecleaning cc a hot meal. A volunteer recalls : ''We called an epileptic mother with a baby every hour for several months to make sure they were all right." Volun-- teers in eoutheast Los Angeles drove a woman to a hospital for treatment 40 consecutive days. People who need help may find out about Fish ·from posters in store windows, or through olller agencies they've tried. Fish Sp«ializes in ooe- shot problems and, with an all- volunteer force and usually no budget, usually p r o v I d e 1 seems to get increasingly services rather than money. depersonaJJz.ed .'' •1'hofie ot us who are in-Most groups spring up in In- volved believe that Fish fills a dlvldual C h r i s t i a n con- real gap in meeting the day-gregations. As they grow and by-day human problems that take in more geographical ter- are outside the province o( ritory, they usually becc.ne professional social workers ecumenical. One So u t he r n and charitable lnstitutions," C8llfornia group comprises says Mary E. Millen of a volunteers from 13 churches of suburban Lo.1 Angeles group. many denominations. "It seems to me Fish can===''=======; t>ecome a kind of revival ol the Qd.fashloned, small-town Christian oriented neighborliness that we could surely use mor-e or in a modern urban society that The Scene From kings to commoners, all· kinds of kooks make Peo- ple Scene. Hadn't you n~ Uced? Seal Kick-off Catch us ' President Nixon helped kick off the .annual Christrna~ Seal Drive by acc~J)ting a sheet of seals from Mrs. Gail Patrick Jackson, national honor ary chairman of the Christmas Seal 1970 campaign against respiratory diseases (right) and Mrs. Walter Washington (left) wife oft he District o! Columbia mayor. Blind Girl Plays Flute In Scl1ool CAMPBELL fAP) -Susan Bailey, a 14-year-(lld flutist, can't see but no one would ever know it >A'hen she perfonns with her h i g h school's marching band. Sue, blind since birth. 11ays it takes great concentration on the sounds of the 106 other members or the Westmont High School band to keep in stride during football games, She adds , "It's a lot of run ." Gary Kenyon. head of \Vestmont's music depart- ment, agreed several years a)!:O to let Sue join the band when she started hiRh school as a freshman . That happened last month. She ha s already played at several high school football games and is looking fo~·ard to the band's big show Nov. 21 at the San Jose State-Fresno State College game. "She does a beautiful job.'' Kenyon said Wednesday. "She has concentration that I wish the other 106 had. "She does her job and the others help her but it's not as if we have to walk her to everything that has to be done." Sue, who Jives in 1tearby Los Gatos, also is a talented guitar player and aa accomplished horseback rider. She says other pupils are quick to help if she needs it "'hile marching but she has to show them how: "If they've never knO>A'n blindness, they want to help but don't know what to do so they're a little cautious.'' Every v.·eek, Sue is J?iven a (older of new music. Kenyon said "she takes it home and it"s recorded off a piano for her on a tape recorder. General\v, in about 48 hours she has ·all the week's music memorized." As for marching drills. Ken- yon said, "it's ju st a matter of repetition with the class• during SS.minute classes we have daily." He said he usually assigns t1vo pupils to help her through the paces and learn to adjust to soacing. "She does this by a sel\Se of sounds from all sides. Her hearing is taking over where she isn't seeing. When we make a mistake in mathematics, does it make sense to say that the principle of mathematics doesn 't work? Similarly, when people don'! turn understandingly to God lor help, does it make sense to say He can't help us? The provable fact that God Is our ever·present help will be diSC1Jssed In 1 one· hour talk by Hoel D. Bryan- Jones, C.S., 1 member of The Christian Science Board of Lectureship. The tille: "God °""' .......... Trhlmpl>IA" ~lil:lion is fret wol ...,_ is welawt. amm !U:oce ~ure .... , ...... .......,.. .......... 11. ''"' aculi'cN GI" CHltlT, KllNTIST Sen. Bentsen Says He 's No GOP Ally WASHINGTON (AP) Democratic Sen.-elect Lloyd Bentsen of Texas s a y s Republicans should count him out as an ideological ally, but the White House is kttping its fingers crossed. ·'I am coming here as a member of the loyal op- position, not to be part ol the Nixon forces," he to Id newsmen. Bentsen said he told the President the same thing dur- ing a 30-minute courtesy call this week. Through the day Nixon greeted senators-elect from New York , 0 h i o. Maryland, Connecticut, Ten-- nessee and Delaware. as well as Hubert H. Humphrey ol Minnesota, his 19611 presiden· tial opponent. After Bentsen u n s ea t e d liberal Democrat Ralph W. Yarborough in the M a y primary and went on to win tn~ Nov. 3 general election, Nixon indicated it wu an ideological victory for himself, increasing his backini on foreign policy and defense. that assessment hasn't chang- ed despite Bent~n's stated disagreement with Nixon on economic matters, the supersonic transport plane and "'eirare refonn, as well as skepticism on the antiballistic missile system. Bentsen said Monday he reacted "with amazement and arhusemerit" to an assessment by Vice President Spiro T. Agnew lhat he probably wou1d ~ vote with the Nlxoo ad- ministration much of the time. He said last week the White House would be "stretching it too far" to count him in the President's claimed "working ma}ority" in the Senate. Despite Bentsen's loyal~ position disclaimer he is coo- slderably more conservative than Yarborough. Bentsen supports Nixon's V i et n a m policy, opposes t h e ad:: ministration's proposal t o establWl an income floor for families , says he would vote for a constitutional amend· ment to allow prayer in public schoola. and tllinu federal gun controls 10 too far. White House press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said Monday l.:=========::;I Wesley Added As Professor Dr. Robert Weiley, of 16330 Rosewood St., F o u n t a I n Valley, has been apPoint«I to a position as visiting assistant. professor for the 197 0-71 academic year at t h e USC School of Dentistry. Dr. Wesley. a graduate of the Un iversity of Louisville School of Dentistry, was previously in private practiei!. LET'S BE FRIENDLY If you have new neighbors or know ol •nyone moving to our area, please tcU us so that v.·e may extend a frie ndly welcome and help them to become acquainted In their new surroundings. So. Coast Visitor 4M-057t 4'4-,361 Harbor Visitor ~174 PRICE. BREAK NEW LOW PRICES -~~ ON FAMOUS -._'.~ <m> · ~ ~ Whirlpool -Dishwasher THESE LOW PRICES INCLUDE: e I Ylt. FREE SEll;'t'/CE e FREE DELl't'Ell;Y e Ol'llONAL FRONTS IN e DECORATOR COLORS Al SLIGHT EXT RA COST NOlMAL 2500 INSTALLATION f •mily ti1e C•p•city, ~11.lget priced! No need to P••·ri111•, lull tion• 1•tf·cl••11in9 filt•r con· ~l•nl1¥ cl••111 t~• w•l•r. Po•C•"11in •n•,.,1l1d tub. MOdtl SVU-60 SALE $179'5 PRICE e 4 p111li b1i1tto11 cyc•t e S•11ic 11\l,ld for 1111i•I op•1•lio11. e 111 th• door 1il••••1r1 b•1k1f. Mocltl SVU ,111 NOW 23995 ONLY CERTIFIED .. APPLIANCE Your Bette r Ctr• Def er 333 E. 17th St. Phone 642-0240 COSTA MESA a.hind the P1nc1ke House while you can ... an g your Holiday hat on this fabulous ~ KING SIZE ·VALUE ~) H;'ft:Z HMrry,,.,ny1..--upwNlelheylMl!Ortl1o'sexdaive ""'33 .... p .... wtth lilUrdyanddur*" temperedllool ~ ~ i"'"'61ape t.g units. eprtngy ... M Id au, OOC110n fett f« ,.._ _ ---Ind loioped bJ • 1'9f>,-.,,., ,,..,,,117_ sc:rolf design quilted COlllfllf". ~ ..,,,, '. ll:::tads ....._.2._ .... ..,0lk Mloo.Mt8- Many More King Size Values. • TheC..U.Klngwl1hOrtho'sown Fiber LodcSUI tneutator $154 $193 • The Aeg91,..Y King .. Ureth81?9 cushioning tor maximum support • The Coronation King wilh Or\ho'a special ftanged coostruction $241 $276 PfUothoO-Pot•--;-----"' • The Crown Twln or FuU 11. telT!f)l!red steel lnne111pring unit • TheC.sllaTwinorFutlwlthfull 11me, no-ug canter support • Th9 Maje.ty Twin or Full with specl•I slul comfort lealunts $79 $86 """ ............................ ~ ... MARVESg OLEFIN $198FlJLLSIZE S Includes D«mleBonus FIBER BV ~PHl~UPS&~;·-------------- THE NATION'S LARGEST CHAIN QF MATIRESS SPECIALISTS LAKEWOOD 443 3 C1 ndl1 wood A venue C1ndlewood Shops (across lrom L.11kewood Center) ·Phone: 63oi~l34 SANTA ANA ·and FOUNTAIN VALLEY 16131 Harbor Blvd. (corner of Edinger) N ex t to Zody'a Phone : 839-4570 Queen Size Savers -~ e ThtCl'ownQueen 'WhhOrtho's~ 1ulMlme center support feature Tll9 Catfe Queen special, ulra • apringy' lllsal lnaulaUon $133' $177 ll'rloll ._....._, loalp; .. C11ho Ni: ADlllWI a- ANAHEIM 1811 West l:.lncoln Avenue Between Euclld alld Brookhurat Avenues J ust Etsl of Fed Mart Phone: 776-2590 ------·-. -. ·---------------,---------:.--------"':'"'---..,.-~":""-----"":'-":""~~,..,.....,,.,,,,-;;---::;:-"""C:""l~· U.S.· .Slates Cra~kdown on Tire Barket . ' . Fir~t: ~~s. Pay ~.v: · Geis Gr~en Light .. CH.ICAOO ~· Pll -The w~y optration by 1972, . scurcts has . ."P.M!'ln been oleared ,.19. for~1~ <;hJc~&oottiie Under the sys t e m nation 4 ·Jiiit reg u I a r I y Slibscribers insert a computir aulhoridf" jly television sta. card, renewable monthly, in a tlon. ' device attached to a television 'lllt 1111lh. WH !11!"•1<1 whon otl In ti\• h!>m• .to View qroad-tht trues.go Fedor&_Uon of casts of such thktfs u ftnt. Labor, operators i;il lifoadcast run qiavlt .. y'Pli'ya, Ind st1t!011 WCFL, VOied to iporllnt "events h!ack"!l.out "I' transfer J t·1 eori'1iiucit1ttn · ft!M~•Jlrl•l .channels. pennJt fOr a UHF channel to · The wti.F construction Z.niili1i4~1f Gorp. · permjt ca~ ror a station of f.enith Pl.-. lo' use the ch an· Ii Ye ..-mllUoh watts, twl~ i.s nil for Its 1fh'one vis'I ' J19wtrful u inY cur'rent sllbocrlptian. 1e1e.illon 1 e!JI; Cli\--. !JllF channel. The t11t first "llli· ill .for Pl)'· ~ -.Jd probably be TV system to be · royod ~· r115_"1)'0d b~ over 2\1 million the Fede raj .c;.mm~~ r.' ·le~. liOts ~ ""tbh! . Cammission Ol!l:li; afiou! BO ·mlleii 'of ~ ' ' • Assumi,.(details of thtt'\on. -Chll:qo. '/:::;t;¥ ··" · _ " · ~ ' 9lruct\91" permit transfer are ". The Zen•! I) l~pl!Qll work}d cut and the FCC •it Television Sf*"1 1'11 teit.- proves Pay-TV for Chicago, 11 for 81h years ,iJI Hartford. it is expected to do , the chan· Conn., prior to •pprov•l ay lhe nel couJ4 probably bl! in FCC. Doctors. Investigating Mys teri es ~Qf . ~ancer l NEW YOIUC !)1Pn . -,lilllUllcal Joumol ol th e Among ea rt c 1 r I ftllftJ AJntHcan cancer Society. mysteriq 11 tit• otl'IOll'· ~hlo:h • 1ft 10me lnltanefl the p&rtnt never gm lat,. ""'""" ·1r• · ot'' "prim•~" conc<r re. , detect or, ptrhllll, dll•"81 -· · -' ''' on its c>wfl whtlo lllU 1 lilllll>o in.uted too omall tb be defie; ner yet prodlloe1 pl'O..., llblt by X-ray and otlier which kill 1 -• ~ d•ttction tec!hnlquem or by ~ Drs. Frederick F. Hdilirlei autopsy • U r g e C n • . ~.ey and Terry L. Fouts cnnfronted ~peculated. Another poa11lility cancer s c i e n ti s t s with 1s that th~ orl,tnal cancer wu . atlUstical proof that such unrecogmzed u suib and wu ca6cers occur more often lh¥ removed or d,estroyed .''ii!•A science now think!. Their oope y~an btfoN the . 1~aranct was to stimulate lruitflll in-of. ineta!tlUc lesions. They were thinking of cancen qulry. "'11ch begin as blue-blacll: They operate a t u m o r moles. regis try at the Unive rsity of. "It would seem that any Kansas Medical Center in surface of the body in contact Kansas .City, Kan. Since 1944 it with the environment, .fn. has record ed cancers in 21,000 eluding the gutrointesUnal persons. Up ·to last year 681 tract, might slou&h a primary were progeny cancers alone. tumor • to the environment In many instances e v e n leaving no trace, but aecon- autopl;ts_ies could not turn up ~-dai-y tumors elsewhere.'' they paren · , said. Most of the patienti ·.were .Ta them "the most in- dead l"illlln two yoor1 altt( trl1UIJ11 po11lblllty" wu that disco~ of their r,01ony tht bo«Y ,llld ,u_.iuny can'""-::11u1 17 l\ll'V Yl\I or d4!IOndid ~t the primary are ~vlJlg ::Jive years. or tumor but w11 ·lanable to ez. lo•llrP. :!'lio1 ~age ;,..rwal tend aW '1dJry to secondary tuno 11(1-1 '1"'1"• F~een of , lines . .,~ _...ion the 111 .. -1!""<1 ""' Cl!llf ot ·~ tlllqb certainly two died ol·anler._;•i 1 •• ~. ~known ,to oc· _ ·u ~be idiiiidl jhatr.~,.,~ .. ~thlfi~1 iEed~. ~~I the d einma di the-' paur.t ' vilih .1o cancer ti · . un);no'1' jli;nm "'*'t• no,l ,, , • lilraffiti an ~·~" ~ ',Bf Jt•1ry and ~.ln.~i ...... "\•••" "" . t~~~~~~Yml Doctor-&' Jetfs I.ti :Niting Nervous Tiiliinileadaches NoW .Made Pilblic • .Non-Narcotic Tablet (that ne~d$ no prescription) Proves Just As Effective As The Expensive, '.eadlng Pain-Relief.Prescription Of Doctors. JI ) ... .,,,re one of the pl&oy who iet' te'nM:, nervous headac~,; lhcs, ,lat(;St tests by doCton 1hoU1a be o! lhe arcatcst im· port.an~. .J Ji\ ricent medical tcst1 doc· ton proved a famous tablet that f!ICCds no pfescription JiYel lhC 1a111t complett htatkwh• rtlit/ JS the expensive, leadinJ pre. 1cription of doctors. l "hcse doctors' tests provtd, beyond a doubt, that Anaci n is just as tQtc1i1•t \o relieve tcn- 1ion headaches, yct Anacin accdt no prc~ption and is ftr more ~nom1cal . With Aitacin, headache pain anl;\ its net"(~ tenaion '\!a.nlsb ·n minul~ Delpite its slrenath, Anacin i1 not nuc.otic. You can take it without pttina dizzy or an us-t 1tomach. Next tiMe take powerful, fut- •ctins Anad~. Anacin Tableti .. give the 1amc complcle head· ache l'ain relief as the Jcadina presc:riptiO!'l product for which doctors wro1e 21 million pre- 1criptions lut year. , ' "I;, . . ~. '\;. ..... . .-. • Super Chr'ome· Wbiels •• , ·------~ -" --·------~~~-'--------·-·---~~~· .. 7.00x13 l .2lx14 l .25x15 7.35xl4 (G78/14) (G78/15) .9.5. .95 ~Tltll Ult • lu•lin ••• •· ·' ' ' Road Test .. ;Magazine, ·Ntv.~1 1970 , !!."'o-i .... __,........_~ 6.5011) 1111111) ... l 5.6h1S .... '1 •ll!lhi1 7.31114 1171114). 7.7$11 4 lf71f14) 7.1S11 S (f71/1 Sl . I 1.2 •1•(o11n•1 , IM11•1•1 i 82. za· ..... ,. T.0111J· 1.2511 ~ ~ • 1.1111 1 1(1,1/13) t011fl I) . • ~IM 111 SI •• MOST vws l r-~~~~~~~~~ 'fRll Rl,LACIMINT G~UANTIE a A RS 'f]fil MPS.T CARS ,., $29.95 of LINING ff it Wurs Out lllorolD.DOI Ml ~s ,111 Sorvlco Char11 • --\ 3005 HARBOR BLVD. . . ' COSTA MESA · NEWPORT BEACH AREA \..OR tlER OF BAKER & HARBOR .. ' • ' ' . GARDIN 9.lt~VI 14040 lltOO ICHUltlT, \-' 53N2CID , ANAHEIM · BUENA PARK 6962 LINCOLN BLVP. 826-5550 22': Dilly · 8130-j Nitta 'Tll t ' ·. .. .. ·. : ' ·'. •'. " •, •. :· ' ' ' . ' • , ' , • ' " • ' I + • I I I I I l 'I • ~ • • l t • • l .. • .. -- • p~,2~ze~AN •HIGH GLOSS ·• FAST DRYING •EXTREMELY TOUGH AND DURABLE FINISH I• PERFECT FOR FURN ITURE. TOYS.MACltll~flY, ~TC. , ·~ 1 ) <.,() ~.lf1IN SANTA ANA l B,,,. " '"' o! './J.l''\I" ( (')(''111 I I I ' • 'H '<Ill N •. 1Nr-"f l ANAHEIM 1 1!'1 <~ F r' l!'n"~" .,, I I ! ~ f 1 ~ / t ' · Fashion Focus Favorable for February . . A sure-fire prediction bas been made by ~emberr, .9f the 16 I (Uilds of Children's Hospital of Orange County: that' ah ev.en more spectacular extravaganza than last year's J. W. Robtnso'n fashion show is planned for next FebTuary. Guild members have cilcled ~he date.of Tuesd41, Fe\~16, oil the calendar and have begun preparations for the even~. thtir biggest fund·raising function of ,the·year. ·' '· The Anaheim Convention Center again ·will be the fashion show ·setting, accortitng· to the ·chairman., Mrs . Geerge· Cc;>kas .of the Ginder· ella yuild, Newport Beach. · The newest and .most exciting spring styles•will be 'Presented by J . W. Robinson for the· ninth.year and tpe sho~· again promises to be , an unusual and outstanding production. 1·• Assisting withLprelimina!)r plans are the "imes. William Kelly, Peter Pan Guil4, 'Ana:Jjeim, Pu blicity; Leo Baroldi, Rocking Horse, Los Alamitos{"p_ahpasj ' \Villiam Bech, Queen of Hearts, ~guna Beach, decor, and Ruben ~cker, Peter Pan, Apaheim, co-chairman. . Others are thi· Mmes . Richard Voelzke. Littlest An~el,. Yorba wtJdf, program ; .John 'Y.eiser, Tres Osos. Mission Viejo, tickets and reservations; E. E. '.(od,er, Mother Goose, FuJlerton, door prizes; William Rarick, Jack and Jill, Santa Arra-Tustin, coordinator. and Le Roy Gotham, Lamp Lighter, Garden Grove, hostess. The fashion show will raise funds for the outpatient clinic of ·children's Hospital, a nonprofit, nonsectarian specialized ~iatric center. Devoted exclusively to the medical and surgicaJ care of cllildren from birth to 17 years of age, it accepts patie.nts with no con~id~ra­ tion of race, religion or economic level and is the only specialized pediatric center between Los Angeles and -San Diego . . . Amorig specialized c,linics are those f~r the treatment of birth. defects, diabetes; orthopedics and Collagen disease. · , , Ti~kets for the fashi9n show may be "obtained from any guild. member. . .. • I BEA ANDERSON, Edltw. .. .. TllurM111, HOY"""'" "· 1m , ... " SUCCESS FOR ETOLD -Gaziiig into th e crystal ball for a glimpse of Feb .. 16. 1971 are {lef~ to rig_ht) the ~mes. ,Mi cha~l Brick Donald C. Frame and Edwin l-1. Finster, Children s Hospi- tal p~tronesses who will be among those attending the ninth an- nual J. W. Robin son fa shion show . Sponsored by the 16 guilds of the hospital, the fund-raising event will offer a preview of the ne west and most unusual spring styles. ' .. ·' . • United Effort GeaFs • Auto Show Premiere Combined efforts of Orange County Chapters of the Assistance League created a spa rkling send off for the Orange County Interna· tional Auto fihow la st evening. Assistance Lea gue members. their husbands and guests gath· ered in Anilheim Convention Center to toast Premiere Night with dining, dancing, door prizes and viewing of new' ~d speci!1lty cars. Preceding lhe ga la event. Newport Beach. a'nd La2una Beach members hosted a number of cocktail parti.es. Guests of the Lawtence . Bro\vns of Newport Beach 'vere the Messrs. and Mmes. A. V. Jorgen· . 1en , Kenneth Hartfuan, Norman Car.pe ntfr andiWilliam Huds.on. Gat~ering In the home of Ne\vport tvlayor and Mrs. Edgar Hirth were lhe ~1essrs. and ~1mes. Donald Duncan, John Malcomson, J ohn Keeler, Willard \\lade, and Cou ncilman and Mrs, Milan Dostal and Councilman and Mr s. Richard Croul. Guests of the Robert C.'ro\vncrs of Newport were the Messrs. and Mmes. Raymond 1-letzel, John Park, Eldon Kiebler. Edwin Finster, John O'Mallcy, John McCormick, Maurice Stewart and \Villiam Dona- van. Rounding out Harbor Arca parties was a cocktail hour hosted by Mr. and Jlrlrs,~helps Meric kel for the Messrs. and Mmes. Robert · 1'1eserve, Edward Warmington, Richara Marsellus and Horace Wilson. , In viting guests to join them at dinner, !\fr. and Mrs. Charles Coffyn of the LagUna Beach host league entertained the Messrs . and J\~es. Otho Loverin g, Robert Keef'i. and Daniel , Schryver and Mrs. Keith Otterbein and Mrs . Donald Con~lin . , • Scaled with the"Stuart Weberl were the Messrs. a nd Mmes. Jdhn Downec: dtlbb Yerget, Robert Burnside· and Paul Griem. ' . .. . ' . ~ . .. . Guests of the Richard Kronmans \Vere Mr. and Mrs. Fred \Vil· lard . \l.r.hiJ.e ·t~e Will iam Phillips hosted Capt. and Mrs. John Schwartz and Mrs. John. Ha,1n~ard . · Mr. and 'Mrs. John Solomon welcomed their guests, Mr. and Mrs. Frtlnk Biriney. When N~ture. Lets Her Dqwn, She :Finds . Vacati6'n Upli"ftin·g DEAR ANN LANDERS : A frierid of · Jnine returned from ..a three-week vaca- tiM. She looked woaderfully well rested 1 -in fact, downright youthful. t jokingly asked if she had her face lifted. Her answer stunned me. "Yes,'' she replied, "I had my face litted and that's not all. I hod EVERY'i'HING lined." J had never heard of the surgery she described and would like to know if 1 you've ever heard of il and If It is safe. IL 'teemJ lht had her breasts raised. the in- atde Oabby part of her upper arms .. tighWJed up 1urgically" and the1at por- tions of her lhighs slit and "narrowed down." 1be four opera lions, including the f1c:e--llft., were done wlUUn a week. The llitchea were removed after five days. The woman looks Lhinner and younaer ' ANN LANDERS ~ and she'1 thrilled with the results. She wasn't ezactly fat but she did sag where most \\'Omen ug when they hit middle ~ge. I must admit she doesn't look a day over 45. Her actual age is 56. I am dying to hear what you have to say. Is this type of surgery dangerous? 111 it ezpenl!ve? Gan anythirli: go Wrong ~ How long wlll the results last? Would you recommend it? -TOYING WITH AN !DEA DEAR TOY: Your list quuUou llrH. I am In JIO po1tion to recommend lurgery of uy klad 1loce 1 am not a pby1lclan. Ca.a anyt)il11 g:o wrong? Yes. No 1argicaJ proctdure 111 100 percent ule. Tlte removal of a •liver can result In ctmpl'<attou. I• It expensive? It depends 01 th 1urgeon and the relative flnanclal st•has of the lndlvktual Involved. To a mllUonatre, $5.000 11 cblcken feed. To ·• 11.tnograplter ft can be a fortune. How Inns wlll t.br resulla last'! It de· peadl oa Llae pertoL Seme women art ble11ed with 1kin ltl•l bold1 up well. (Staying away from bOaze ind out of I.he 1un can be helpful.I At this point 1 would like to dl111buse you of lbe notion that ph11tic 1ur1ery trill delay the aging pro- cess. It trill not. Time marches on and it walt1 for no man -or woman. ~ty advice to anyone conslderlng cos· metlc 1urgery 11 to make l.11 appointment "'Ith a reputable plastic surge<in tone wlw1e work yeu have seen, If possible). I.earn as mucb as you can abnut tbe proetdurc. Then decide with the doc· lor's guidance whether ,_,, oot It makes sense for you. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Thank you for 1aylni1 "Not everyone belongs ln col· lcge." Too man y par ents have the idea that vocatior1al education is OK for somebody else's children, but they want their kids In college-a prestigious one, U possi ble. It is this kind of thinking that has produced serious problems in filling positions of a highly skilled nature. Eighty five percent of the jobs available t.oday do not require a C1Jllege degree. In most cities, public school systems are equipped wilh the necessa ry resources lo lrain sludents for vocational training but they have trouble getting the students lo enroll In such coorsc.s as lhe building t.rades, graphic arts, and service trades 11uch as bar bering, cosmetology, auto mechanics. etc. 1£ more people such aa you, Ann, who are in a position to innue.nce the public, would stress the importance of vocatlonal education and lhe dignity of work. il would help to straighten out the thinking of some very mixed up folks. -J. F. S. DADE COUNTY DEAR J.F.S.:' "The dignity ol work." A beautiful phrase -one that has the ring of days gone by. Thanb for remhwlln& us. Are you llsttnlrig. 1ludern1! How will you know whc.n the real thing comes along? Ask Ann Landers. Send for lier booklet, "Love or Sex and How to Tell the Difference." Send 35 cents In coin and a long, self-addressed, stamped envelope with your request in care of Uie DAILY PILOT. l ) I '1 \ ! --~----------.--~-~-·-~----· ----------------·-------~--..... ....,,...-. .II DAllY PILOT Thu.sdu , N ... mbtr 19, 1970 AAUW Fello wships Booklearning Gets a Boost · Eight women were honored and Mrs. Roy E. June. Corne 11 Univenity; Mrs. Blanch Deight, law student at UCLA and MW Matpret Ann Naeser, doing po,tdoctoral research in linguistics at UCLA. Th03e receiving A A U W Proceeds from the event will be used to assist the research of kidney disease, according to Mrs .• Harvey Pease, president by the American ASIOciatJon of University Women during a luncheon in the Costa Mesa home cl Mrs. Ronald -K. Arnold. 1 n t e r na4Rflal FeUowshi~ were Dr. Clrole Gatz who is studying physical chemistry at the California Institute of •, They were rtciplents o( the group's 1 t7 o -7 1 fellowsrup aw1nh1 for sc holar s h ip. Originating in 11111-89, the awards are made for the writing ol a doctora1 disserta· tion or f o r post-doctoral research because at that stage it is difficult for women to find financial assistance. Technology while on leave \. Receiving AAUW American awards were Mn. Emily, Ahem of UC! a doctoral can- didate in anlhropology at from Portland Slatt UniversJ.. ty ; Miss Dolores Garcia of the Philippines, studying elemen- tary school education a t UCLA; Ml5S Graciela De Lara of Mexico, a student of marine bioloi:Y at the University ol • Southern California; MI s s Rhoda Jal Vania of Pakistan, stUdylng American literature al Claremont Graduate School and Miss Sunin Yi of Korea. 1 psychology major at UCLA. Christmas Is LOve • ~ GIFT WUPS CHBISTW.S C!BDS MEMORY LANE HARIOR CENTIR e COSTA MESA "have you dJsC(lvf.'red WI yet" All Aboard for 'Plane' 'n Fancy At home in the air are members of the Newport Beach Kiw i Cl ub, former American Airlines stewardesses. They ha ve selected a McDonnell-Douglas DC· JO mock-up as the setting for their cha rity fashion show, Plane 'n Fancy on Saturday, Nov. 21. Follow ing dlnner served at 7 p.m. at the Long Beach plant, guests will board the mock-up. Practicing for take off are (left to r ight) Mrs. Hugh Phillips, Miss Virginia Richter, com1nentator from the May Co. and Mrs. J oseph Manville. Horoscope Gemini: Don't Travel Operation Tha nksgiving Fam .ili·es Can Share Thanksgiving Spirit The mouth.watering aroma of turkey roasting in. the. o~en~ w:rm pumpkin and mince Pies cooling on the sideboard ~nd fnends gatb t!_(o- getber for a special day -it all spells a day for 1iv1ng !banks. But what really males it special is Thanksgiving with those who care. To this end, the dedi· cated workers who launch Operation Thanksgiving each year are now taking reservations from families who would like to make a young serviceman's holiday a family Thanskgiving. Mrs. William D. Plow .. den Ill of Laguna Niguel, cbainnanofO per at ion Thanksgiving, takes pride in ihe fact · many families are Participating for the fourth and fifth time. · I Many correspond with former dinner guests and some will we come former guests to their homes as they arrive from•overseas tours. Hosts travel to the San Clemente Interfaith Servicemen'~ C~nter from as far away as Woodland Hills and Palmdale to extend hosp1tahty to Young men averaging 18 years of age -many away from home for the first time. ServiceR'len arrive at San Clemente High School at 8, 10 a .m. and noon. H05ls Weating an ISC name tag may find their guests near placards designating their home state...:... ideally that of the host also. Buses will depart for the Pendleton base al 10 p.m . after servicemen have been returned to the hlJth $Chool. · Arrangements to reserve guest space for not less than two or donate food or money to help feed l ,000 Marines in the center may be made by calling Mrs. Plowden or the center. Contributions may be sent to Operation Thanksgiving, P. 0 . Box 284, San Clemente. Winter In View A preview of winter fashions will be offered during Hun· tington Center's Great Christmas Seal Put-on takinc: place a noon tomorrow in the mall. lf4D of ·YIAR SALE! ThouMHs of orltlool oil ,.htthttl 50% off W•rett.we •,en te IM'Mlc-1"' at ....... ,,1c ... Cut""' fr•mH •w•ll•t ... '"'' Mrly "fer Cflrlttm•I. L•y-Away " M•tter CM,,. •NI l•nkAmerlur4. ' FRI DAY NOVEM BER 20 By SYDNEY OMARR Scorpio becomes Involved with c1u1e1. ~fi.ny who think they know their S c o r p I o frie nds and relalives could be mista}cea. Natives of thi s zodlacle sip react Intensely, but do not tften wear their hurts on their sleeves. These people are a pt to b e ultrasensltive. They can also be shrewd bargalner1. A toug h exterior often bides a delicate, fine sense ot justice. or rushed. Other fellow may have ace in hole. GE~IIM (May 21-June 20): Put oil travel. Take care wilh what you put in writing. Review promises made to relatives. Some of them may have to be revised. Clarify meanings contained -in messages. Modeling for the show, You may be working against which is open to the public your own interests. Review without · charie. will be four procedures. Take time to Mis! Christmas Seals ud follow through on past com-girls from the ·Miss Prim mitments. modeling tchool. Uterature "An oil pa.lntlng Is a lasting gift"' H•un-t a.M ... ' 1t-nt.-M9n. thru S•t. ORIGINAL OIU, LTD. MAVCO sale: the Dutch-look wig with its very own bangs Juliana. Th e yo un g, bouncy wig . Now yours at savi ngs. It 's soft, it 's swingy. It even has its own bangs. Of n1odacrylic , so it 's easy to care for. Brush-and:go styling included. was 34.SO 16. 99 Also, Kanekalon® moda crylic wi gs and falls, were 25 .00 11.00 fa shion wig bnr 748 m1y JO 50Uth coast pl•z•, wn diqo fwy 1t bristol, cost• rntU 546-932 1 m1y co butn1 pirk. l.11 pilm1 ''ct.le; 827·4000 SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22· and Chrislm1a aealJ will be Dec. 21): All cards are not on available for those wiahing 1'1tL 14111t•, s.t.A• ...... IJS-4601 table. Some factors are hidden _ _'th~em~. ______ ...:__!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ from view. Be versatile. Don't depend on just one evenl or person. Study Llbra message. Time is on your side. ARIES (March 21 -April 19): Avoid ta kin g unnecessary chances. Gambling instinct may be strong. But tendency is to choose on impu l se. Logical decision now would be to hold tight to financia l reins. TAURUS I April 20-May 20): Caution should be keynote - applies especially where sav· lngs, property are concerned. Seek additi onal information. Refuse to be cajoled, pushed the beauty of it all · by m•rv rob••on .lir•clor of b••11ly I f11hio1t holid1y m•9ic, inc. LOCAL RIPRI SINTATIYI 54,·ISI S CANCER (June 21-Jlily 22): Some who want you to put mpney on line would sing dif· fcrent tune if their own assets "'ere involved. Know this - respond accordingly. LEO {July 23-Aug. 22l : ·Your goals arc in sight. But some delay is indic ated. Adhere to rules, regulations. Atlempting to skip essentials could be cost- ly. Hold off on snap judge- ments. VIRGO (Aug. 23.Sept. 22): You could be tempted to brag, make unrealistic c I aims. Know this and apply sclf- restraint. Some around you are resentful. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 22): Friends may be \\·ell-meaning bu! misinformed. Rely on your O\\'fl judgment. New view may be necessary. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): On the Move Orange Ccunty Philhannon- ic Society's Eastbluff As· sociates and their husband'i will progress to four homes CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19); Financial dealings favor opposition if you jump at first offer. Study fine print; read between lhe lines. S ome delays are for your own benefit. There is not need to rush. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): C<Hlperate with one born under Scorpio. Benefits will be mutual. Accent now on con- tracts. binding agreements. Logjam can be removed. But you require legal assistance. PISCES {Feb. 19-March 20): Slow pace. Trying to be everywhere at once merely defeats basic purpose. Best to slick close lo home base. IF TODAY JS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are a percep- tive person. subject to moods. Important for yo u to have pro- per exercise and diet. Once you become Jax in Uiose areas, you also get careless in work habits, personal relationships . "M-"·~Up 1-1·os Wllll for a four.course menu Satur-To llnd out '*"°'' •11e•1 tor "°" In ....... ..., ..,_... •nd love, or,,_,. SV1'nel' an,1rr•1 IOI.Hon•" day. Nov. 21. =::-· "~"bir7~~,. ":nc1~ ,:.!:': Hosting the first social af-111 o~rr "''"''"Y Sic••••· ttie DAILY Corili•ny invites you' to oltend Knit, dressts, p•nt suits •nd suits, in fashions. ' on inform•I showing of Amalli the ir nl!w Spring •nd Summer SHOWING ' ' . Fridoy ond Soturday Novtmbtr 20th ond 21 sl 9:30 to 5:30 l et us help you mo~e your seloctions of styles ond colors. Eac~ selection will be personally t1ilotacl to yaur txect si~•· A I 0 % discount will be ollowed on ord•rs token of this showing, '{j~ ~ 2515 .E. Coast Hlghw1y -toron1 dot Mor -673·2990 The purpo~r or this rrim"r fair of the season will be the ~i!!i?~..,..1o~or3i:'°N.~~~':11~1111'•1 511· cOAt of make-up (cre&m, liquid. 111essrs. and i\tmes. John ..:::::..::::...:.::::.:::.:.:.=:::_ __ ..,;::============== ii:el-\\·hatrvf.'r your ptf.'fert'nCC' Losee, Joseph Feibig, Rodney and· ,;kin type I Is lo f.'\'f.'n your Jones and John Arens. ovt>ra~ skin tonf.'. Ir you'vf.' se·1-.:..:.:.::::..::::.::..::.....::....::.:::::::_ __ IC'CtC'd the ri~hl shad<". your complf.'11ion \\•ill ap~ar natural and almost flR\\·Jrs11. lt will look like you--0nly bt'll<'r. lfO\\' do you flnd this ri~ht shad<"! First. think ln terms "of th1-ec ~hadt'S no\v that you'r<' cnjoyini;:: lots or !!.un time. One for your tannC'd compll'xion, one for the \\"['('ks ""ht'n thC" sun's ('ffl'ets 11.rC' f11.din~. Yt'l an- ol hf.'r ror your o"·n na tural col- o•. 11 \C'l'ITS COSTA MESA JEWELRY e LOAN IMPORTED TOYS ' & GIFTS "SHAC KMAN" Doll House Furniture DOLL HOUSES DOLLS ' IMPORTED A\1 b&Jf.'tonf.'s art' t'ithcr 1'0$1' or ix'i.Ke tonf.'1, dt>(X'ndini;:: on the 1ht1df.' of your fncr. If you have lots of natural color, slick to beiges. lf you nl'C'd color- try a plnkl rr tonr. And l'C'mem. --------.l....-------------lt>t>r, you !<'lit bftsctont' on your 10 cl. Oi1monch MINIATURES FOR ADVERTISING IN THE WEEKENDER PHONE 642-4321 face, oot on tht' back of your hand or iml<ko of wrlsL B&setonf.' is not madr lo CO\'C'r a problem, althoU.Kh il n1ay dn so to · a certain extf.'nt. It you have troubltd skin. follow the skin care routine for )'()U r problcm, tte It cl('1tr u~l hen your basetOne look• Its bi'st. Tilt! effect you'n> Almlni;: for ls a natural one. Your bast'tone is your fint •l~P In achlt'vtna --------------------'Ill ' I lwll ~I. Gen11i01• S•phir• Ad••rtiied dNWNr• "f•r S,08,00 OUR s400 IVIERYOAY PRICI! 9tc1•llty Di-'"' .. Gehl J-elry .. ~ble 'rk" 18J8 NEWPORT BLVD "'"'" El•~od ... o, l)ownlown ( o~f,, MC''>.J Phon(' 646 7741 -.~·~ ~~ ... . ' . • .;.''"~: I ....... • CUNNINGLEIGH SLIGH 209 MA RI NE-BALllOA ISLAND '7.W~ NIXT TO PO•T Pt~OU~CICY " ·: .· : . • I -·---.... ,.._,,..,,,.- Camarillo Rites 'Betrothal News Told Willard Carroll Thompson of Camarillo re v ea 1 e d the engagement of hls daughter, Barbara' Jane Thomp!lOn of ManhaUan Beach to Thomas Michael Brewer of Ft. Campbell, Ky. during a family gathering. The bride-elect also is the daughter of the late Mrs. Thompson. Parents of the benedlct-el~ are Mr. and l\1rs. Paul Edward Brewer <;( Costa Mesa . MiS3 Thompson is a graduate of. John Muir High School, Pasadena and Northwestern University. IARBARA THOMPSON Sets Date Her fiance holds a BA deiree from caUfornia State O>llege at Long Beach and graduated from We6tchester High School, Los Angeles. He is now se rving in the Army. A v.•edding is being planned on April 3 in Camarillo. Showing Arranged Both men's and women's {a.shlons will be modeled by members or Balboa Yacht Cl:Ub during a cocktail and din- ner show Saturday, Nov. 21, in the clubhouse. ensembles from Lorr a In e Sutherland and The Nu·U, and ?\-trs. Edward Lethen will pro-- vide musical accompaniment. Modeling will be the Messrs. and Mmes. Gared Smilb. Rictiard Lawrence. Dr. and blrs. Donald McGilllil and Tom . Mrs. Leonard South will coordinale and commentate on Kellogg. CUSTOM-MADE DRAPERIES , USI OUR CONYINllNT SHOP AT HOME SllYICI HHri .. to11 c..ter I . ltl-6611 A W•rd1 d•cor•tor '#ill c•ll •• your hom• with • 1triki~9 teltclio ri of hi91! qu•lity low cost f1bric1 for ~ou to chool• from. No obli9•iio11! Cornpl1l• d•cor•lor 11n • ice ·-uphol1l1ry -tlipcowert. 1111 H111t. c .... I 7777 1111..., H•"'· ,._. HOHi' Piao lrittol at 17tlt Sa11to A110 . :- :~ ·: : j. •• ,. ~Is Year! Put some atmosphere· in your gifts! lJ S.1ect our internallonaUy famous ollves in the very place where they have been processed and canned since 1894. You 'll find them packed with other gourm·et delights In our Casa del Olivo and La Casita gift shops. Open Mon. ttiru Sal 8:30 to 5:30; Sun. 10 to 5:30. From the San Bemarpino Freeway take the Euclid Avenue offramp \o Fourth Street, then eaat one block. GrDberOfiVe.House ONTARIO, CM.If. Adorned with garters. ruffles and derbies will be members and hU sbands of the Clipped Wings of Orange County, United Air Lines Stewardess Alumnae, lnc., when they gather for a ti.1is sissippi Riverboat party on Saturday, Nov. 21. Ready for the wheel of fortune to begin spinning at 8 p.m. in the Dana Point Beach and Tennis Club are (left to right) Mr. and Mrs. Paul Salata and Mrs. :fiarold Madsen. Marriage Announced Harborites Wed Rites Read • Laguna 10 Mr. and Mrs. Donald N. Montgomery of N e w p o r t Beach. ' DAILY PILOT J9 Tidbits Titillating Captain's a Marvel By ERMA DOMBECK Like many wive1, I have a horror of not a:rtwlng ''professionally" wllb my bus· band. I have a recurring dream where he ls feting a roomful of associates at a dinner party in celebration of his rise to the top of the organizat:iQn, and I am in the utility room popping gum, reading Captain Marvel Comic books and asking what year it is. My feelings of inadequacy are not without some grounds. Ob..ldon't mean to intimate I lau,gb with my mouth full of -<boat. It's just that there is so much news in the world today, I find it Im- possible to keep abreast of all of it "Why don 't you come rl&ht out and say it," J accosted my husband, "1 am a source of embarraument to you at social functions." "That's not true," he said softly. "'You were. angry at me when Ted and Jeff were talk- ing about eliminati ng the two- party system the other night.'• "l only wished you hadn't interrupted with, 'Good Lord, take away the one on New Year's Eve and I'll have no reason to get my cocldalJ dress cleaned.' Here," he 1ald "I bought you a new Clplal~ Marve l." Business Replaced With Play A theater party will rtplace the reeular business mtttlng of the Expreaso Club or tbe Harbor Area Saturday, Nov. SOmtbow, I couldn't con- centrate on Captain M•rvel. 1 remembered an ad I had rtad recently in the National Observer. It 1howed a woman at a party suneunded by men • . . and she wasn't even playln& tbe piano. All sbe was AT WIT'S END doing was carryinJ on brilliant conversation which ahe had picked up reading the National Observer. All I bad to do was bone up on some provocative topics before: the next party. "Did you notla all the men clustered about me?" I Rogers on C&Jvin Coolldat." "You sure were a rtp lar Eric Sevareld in • Martha Mitchell bocly," he 11ghed. "Gosh, I didn't even.. ,et a chance to tell them about the moDster rats that organized in the sewers and planned to take over Paterson, N. J.'' "'You read THAT in the Na· tiona1 Observer?~' he asked. "No. Captain Marvel!" JC....ml JO·.....,_I 'c_.. .. ,.1 J WMta! 11trll"" SATVIOAY, NOVI Ml l l .. 1f11 ... , ..... LOI ANelLU PHILHAIMOHIC OICHUTIA Z.W. ,...._ _ Mw1ic Dir•cf.,. $MIOft TICkth -'" OIAN•I COUNn PHILHA•MONIC socrm »1 W. CM• Mwy., "'..,,.,. IMd ........ boested to my husband on the I~~= way home 1asl week from a I: 5athering. DOWH TOWll "You certainly had them •mmlll:a=limlll!IJll!I~ mesmerized with your story 91 co I TA MI I A about hog processing coming lo a halt In Chicago I a s t year." "And wasn't it curious no one had read the National Observer story about the garbage problem being solved by sending it parcel post to friends in the country? Let'~ see. I told them about the ba n on long-haired tourists in Viel· nam, the cobra found by the SI. Louis too, the beetles in Alaska being equipped wilh antifreeu and a quote by WW ... TUltlN AYI. ~ aledl Nf. CMtt Nltllw•'f ·r . Mr. and t.1rs. H. Paul Brehm of Irvine have an· nounced the marriage or their daughter. Kathleen A n n Brehm to Eddie Johnson of Riverside. Pamela Ann Lacock and Robert B I a i r Montgomery were linked in marrlage durin1 double ring rites read in St. Francis by-the-sea Church, Laguna Beach by the Rev. David Crump. Given in marriage by her father. the bride was attended by Mrs. Gayle Cotton, matron of honor and Miss Janice Montgomery, sister of the bridegroom. 21. OPIN TUISDAY ...,_ U.lUIDAY-10 ..... ·Sp.•. Members and gue1ts wm l~================~===:! gather in the community 1 · Tbe nuptials were perform- ed in the Calvary PresbyteriBil Church, Riverside. The bride is a graduate of the University of California, Santa Barbara. and her hus- band just completed a tour of duty in Vietnam. Th e newlyweds will reside in Riverside. ~~~ '{~t~l9} ~···-.:• ~ jewels hv 1oseµh APPRAISALS DIAMONDS GEMSTONES ESTATE JEWELRY Soulli Co•1+ Pl•1• B1i1tol •t Sen Oit90 fwv. 540·9061> Parents of the bridal couple are Henry r.t Lacock of Newport Be.ad?. Mrs. Frances Lacock of C.orona del Mar and Self-image Developed Counselor and author Mrs. Hertha Tun tland will speak on the development of a positive sell·image for members of the Laguna Beach Business iand Professional Wo~en·s Club tonight in the Laguna Beach home of Mrs . Robert Gilt Mrs. Tuntland has con· du cted a lecture ~ries on suc· cessful living in toda y 's challe nging world and is a member of the International Platform Association. Assisting Mrs. Gill with ar· rangements will be the Mmei. Maur ice Van Dyke, Emily Stricker and Peg Bumbera. 01 . .lJ #ORLD 1 liJ:JN W!lll 9/IELVES TllATATJrJUST 70 DISFl'.AY OR &r:!Re _._,_ >t:Xfi"B~ OR COLLEC!TlOVS. /-11$11-Wt'DE ,dJID f/Af./DJCME ! F/~77MEAr 7'1/~PRICE/ John W. Kistler served as best man and Mike 1bompson seated guests. The newlyweds both are graduates o[ Newport Harbor High School. She attended UCf and the University o f Gatifornia. Santa Barbara and he js a graduate of UCJ. They wUI reside at Fort Bliss, Tex:. Center Offers Bridge Lesson Reservations are be i n g taken by r..lission Viejo Recrea tion Cenler directors for a duplicate br idge lesson to be given by Nick r..1inardi on Tuesday, Nov. 24. If the 7:30 to 10 :30 p.m. session p r o v e s successful monthly tourna~ents will be. scheduled with master points offered through the American Contrac t Bridge League. recreation anter at l b e Orange County Fairground! to see the comedy "Everybody Loves Opal." Following the play, wl:U~ starts at 1:30 p.m., an af. lerglow will take plaa in tht Mesa del Mar borne of Mr. and Mrs. Roy E. June. Eastern Star Salutes Pair A farewell party in honor of Worthy Patron and Matron Mr. an d Mra. Nor man Christensen will begin at I p.m. tomorrow in the Laiuna Beach Muonlc Temple. Members of Oiapter 521, Order of the Eastern Star, are invited to attend the party er· range by Mrs. Arnold Kobis. CM Auxiliary The lhird Thursday a( the month members of th e American Lq:ion Auidllary, C.osta Mesa Unit 455 gather In the American Legion Hall, et 8 p.m. ---. ~~;;;::12.i~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii f11ll1rto11 o,_,. S11t1., 12·5 P·"'· Large Sizes s .... ,,.._ 111 Mfet pl•• ••••· nn. llard-te.fllNI l9ffe .1 .... 111 """"" rq•M e111I 11rlon. "'"'Sf.ff -!. f-' I~ ~ Effa SI Nor'sf\ALF· ZE SHOP / J~!~ MU~~.0!T N.~~~.1 •· .. 84 HUNTINGTON CENTER 1 HUNTIM6TON HACH IN1~t to 1.,.,, 1,01. F11,,1ihi11•l Alw1 2'4 OflAN011'All MAl.L •t1LL•1ttON , •••Y<C&I'• ectlve wttr ... """ IM ..,. we evt n hev• 1ize s ix in boys heng-ten shirts ll4l1~--1••~ e 111•1ht ch•• \... 7 f..W .. ltf•IMI, •tWp•rt ilt•di ~7f ~ 3 DAYS ONLY! THURS. -FRI.-SAT., NOV. 19 -20 • 21 WOMEN'S & CHILDREN'S FOOTWEAR .. '-" CHILDREN'S SHOES Dltcontlnued Styles ·e IDWARDS e ALEXIS Regular to 13.50 NOW $'19° DTERT 225 I. 17th St. MISA CENTER COSTA MISA 541 ·2771 HOURl1 f:)O te 6:0I .. ~ Fri • ..,.... "ttl t !\ I I '! ... ~ --"';~;-. ""·"'"·~·= ... ::.:-:---. -.~.~.---. -:-·.~. -.. --------- DAILY PILOT Th11rsd11, Nowmbfr 19, 1970 Recruiting on Campuses Coeds Become Big Sisters to Big Brothers REVI EWING LITERATUR E -Mrs. Jerald Van· nier (right) and Mrs. Peter Gannon. San Diego State College graduate students, review recruitment literature they are distributing for the Big Brothers of Orange County during visits to college campuses. White Hou se Wat ched Women's Score Kept by BPW WASHINGTON °(AP) -Out of 3,000 possible While }louse aPPQlllt,ment.s. 250 have gone to women so far. says the Na- tional Federation of Business a • d Professiona l Women's Club.!. BPW's scorekeeping Is part of its effort to get more wcwnen into policy making covernment positk>ns. From a pool. BPW submits namtfi of qualified women to the White House as top civil NEW LEADER Gordon Wheatley Director Selected For Choi r Gordon Wheatley. v.· e 11 known Soulhem California musical director, baa been ap- pointed leader of the Voices of Fountain Valley, according to Don Sauter. president of the Fountain Valley Arts Associa- tion. WheaUey, who has been a professionaJ mlWclan since the age of 17. did post· graduate work at UCLA and is • member of Phi ,.tu Alpha Simphonia music honorary. He has been involved in the television field and is in his fourth season as s p e c I a I events director for the Na - tionaJ Orange Show in San Bernardino. Tite choir meelS WP.dnesday evenings al 7:30 in Fountain Valley High School. Wrists Watched The Jewelry Industry Coun· cil reports that a fashion favorite that bqan in the six· ties bas IOartd into the leftn· ties wtth great popularUy - the bracelet watch. Some . are bl•r.a . of oolor. afire 'ffltb the lights of diamonds . sapphires, tsMralds and nibles while oUWra •rt 1leek gold In one conUnuota: unbroken round, but worked In a Rlorlous cbctice of 1urf1ce textured pat· terna, or linked or enera\!ed, ' l service and rommissio11 force jobs open up. So far BPW has had only one direct succt!ss, an ap- pointment to the School Finan- ce Committee. but it feels it has had some impact -the White Hoose now calls for sug. gestions. "We don't care if the White Hoose doesn't appoint our recommendation as long as a v.·oman gets appointed," Mrs. Lucille Shriver. BPW's ex- ecutive director. said in an in· terview. "The big problem is finding out in time when appointments will become vacaAL" Dr. Phyllis O'Callaghan, legisla- tion director at BPW, sa'id. Waiting for the White House to call means often that g o v e r nment departments already have put in strong plugs for several male can- didates. Dr. O'Callaghan said. As a stopgap measure. BPW staffers hope to find agency contacts who will call them when high ranking jobs are openil!.g up. Dr. O'Callaghan said. A mort pennanent. measure would be the appointment cf a presidential special assistant "Who understands the gross discriminations and inequities suffered by the Ration's 'A'Omen." Mrs. Shriver said. One of the s pe c ial assistant's duties. she said. would be to urge the top-level appointment of v.•omen. Dr. Dorothy McFord. the nominee to the school finance committee. said the BPW talent bank was her onl y chan- nel to the appointment. "I'm a Republican Row Jiv. ing in Whittier (President Nix- on's hometown). but the Presi· dent doesn 't kno'"' me." said Dr. Ford, former member of President Lyndon B. Johnson's advisorv council on extension and coi-itinuing Education. "(was national president or BPW during the Johnson ad- ministration and did many things with the White House then. but this appoint'ment v.•oo ld be froot the Talent Ban,k.'' Mesons Marry Shirley · An11 Skinner became the bride of Michael Ou\Vayne Smith during double ring ceremonies performed by the ·Rev. Richard Dunlap in the Costa Mesa Firsl United Methodist Church. Parents of the bridal couple ' are Mr. and Mrs. Frank 1 \Valter SkiPloer and h-tr. and 111rs. Gerald Dea11 Smith. all of Costa fi.1esa. Given In marriage by her father. the bride asked Mis.. Carol Hillyard to be her ma id or honor . P.1iss Becky Ci ch was . the bridesmaid and Karen Parker. flower p;irl. Attending as best rra an was Chris Elzen. and ushers were Norman Sufficool and Terry l\nox. The bride Is a Jrraduate nf F.stancla Hl.lh School and Orange Coast College. llt:r husband alllO ii; an alumnui; nr F.HS and OCC and now attends C•llfornl11 State ·College at Long Beach. The newlyweds will reside In Co1ta Mell. Becoming involved is essen-genera.Uy for men of all ages, tial toJauli G.QflijOO aod~wt-_;•~ mittu!sizing recrujk_ Cheryl Vannier. ment of college men to work. Students themselves, they as a team," exp!ained Cheryl, can be fOUnd on Orange Coon-the wife of Jerald Vannier of ly collea:e campuses recruiting Newport Beach. for 8n innovaUve "Big Brother Blg Brothers of Orange Project." CoWlty provides an adult male The two San Diego State friend for a boy / who is College graduate students in fatherless through divorce, social welfare are doing field desertion or death. The p~ work for the Big Brothers of gram attempts to fulfill a vital Orange County in partial com-iieed for male association and pletion ?f t~ir masters ·leadership for bo~s ages 6-18. degrees m soetal welfare. "We art hopi.rll; lo · assign "While Big Brothers Is two or three big brothers of 2666 HARBOR BLVD. 546·7080 COSTA MESA WEEKDAYS 9 to 9 SATURDAY SUNDAY 9 to 6 MAGNAVOX !8 ~~~;-:in= ~ G E -C IPlfi"LECTRIC KNiFE .With FREE cun1NG BOARD 11 88 ALL-PURPOSE TIMER Thi1 "''~'' bit hit with vour ·~"'"' ""d with comp•nv t h1t 1t.in91 1in9in9 wirt . 0 Fini lo• poh tho! run on oleclric, plu9 ll1tu time r m190c. 698 BASKET SWAG LITE ' 0 Vtry prelly, if vou clon'I c1rt for the light you can ltk1 the in1id11 out and 1111 it for 1l.opin9 b19. [j Or "'lkt1 t lint li9htw•i9hl bowling bill lo• peoplt who hilt high 1CC>ttl, 1088 0 A 1uper b1r9t!11. ! I bo119ht 2 11hl, 0 You <"n throw 1 lew 2••1 cul to tite '"" "'•k• I l•whorit o• IC•lfoldi119 111'/ 1i11 '/OU J;~ •. 88C PR. TOOL·MATE C A wor~1hop ti vour f.11g1 rtip1. l ' difft rlfll tool holdil'g doh . Fou• du1I lre1 drewtfl lo• 11r,ell perh . Hi9~ irnp•ct, M•vv dutv 1fyrene. Reg, l".fl (we 1101• '•""I 2•• ., -----~---~--------------- college age lo a multiboy family, a family with two or more fatherleu boys.'' said Paula, a graduate ct f CaUfornla State College at Los Angeles. The goal is no! to pair up one-to-one but to assign a group to a family. "Tben, if a student decides to drop out of the program, one child alone may not feel re- jection or any loss," she ad· ded. The project bas received support from the colleges with child development courses giv· ing credit for participation and the psyclJo!ogy_~js promoting the experience of interacting with a dµld, noted Paula, the wile of Peter Gan- non, a medical student at UCI. Although the project itself ends in May, along 'ft'ith the two women's field work of 20 hours a week, it is hoped that · ihe established relaticinships will continue between the coJ.- lege student.I and the boys. Both women indicated they chose Big Brothers of Orange County for iltelr field work . because of the diversified ex- perience lhey would gain iri social work, Ch e r y I em- phasized the opportllnity to do "case work -individually C<lunseling with the mother and the big and little brothers, community recruitment. a n d group counseling." Paula chooe Big Brothers because of her interest in Gestalt therapy -group en- counters which are part of the agency's program for the adult brothers. ''It is a thenlpy developed to Improve sell·awareness and o n.el,I perspective of himself,"' llid Paula. Followin& completion of her field wOrlt, Pa1lla· hopea to work in .chlld welfare, perhaps a . private adoption agency, while Cheryl plans to enter lhl mental health field. "Wt realized we could need our masters degrees to do worth- while thinp in social weifll), to be involved." · · COOK'EM U .. P TEFLON ROASTER RACK •••Y fo ti•, •••Y •11 yow, 1•• 16 PC. DINNERWARE r....,-: , SET I ~ D Wh•n maoy •*"•' trib1 come, no moro with the P•P•• pit!• that 1pill 011 lap 1od c1111e 1ll lo1v1 your l1tpoe. 0 Got whole 1el 111d if 90 on w1rp1tk, c111 h1vt h1 lloY• f.110 fitht for little money. 499 8 PC. GLASSWARE .. SET D Your choict: 9 01 .. 12 O .. or 16 01. rrt1lch1d ''''· 0 A91in, if li9hl1n9 i1 !ht tpod tro und your l.01110 you can •••P tho coll down wi+h the11, THE "DISHMASTER" Nont 91nui11; without thit ti911•tu••· Thi1 ;, th• on• !ht! wor~1. 0 Th, olh•• On• hut !01f1 ••ou11d iht hou••· 0 And "'' 1111 1ll th1 p1rtt too. fGood. I'll fir up th, old 1l'MI 11w1 rno111v.I 3411 HARCRAFT FAUCET .• Q With tho11 till c.t•••d lucite h1l'Mlle1 the thing look1 likt ' lot of monev. 0 Flewleu chrome O•t• "''"· 0 Come In 1...I let our 11le1men h'fp11oli11 vow to b..,., one. 11 88 With The New ofeoni:J BAR-B-Q Now 'fOU c.111 cook ' co"'plete lfl11I in luff I minufe1 u1in9 ye1lerd•y'1 D•ily Pilot •• fuel. Si ... pl1 in1'ruclion1 lo c.ook with no men, •• flvi119 11h, •11d no ch•rco1I t• buy or lu9 ••ou11d, Gre•t for th• c•mP••, hunt•r, or lo h1v• 1 cook-out in the .,1rd. Rug91d htt V'I' g1u9e 1leel, not • lightweight. In 1 choic• of colors. OEMONSTkATION SATURDAY ANO SUNDAY lif you 1till do11 't b1Ji1v1 mil 95 NO CHARCOAL TO BUY NYLON TOIKEY BASTER No chence of 1pil1. lust 1quoo1h the buH•r ot tu1k1'1' juic11 011 the boid ind hive • tender thi119 to munc~. Throw ii i11 the di1hwa1h•r, it can fi b It. I 1101 ·tJ,, bird, 1illv l _59c TURKEY LACERS 0 Four 1t1inl111 1le1I l1c•ri. 0 If '1'0U0r1 h1vi'ti9 him f OI ca11 1111 it to m1k• 1 1rn1ll bow 1~d 1rrow 111d 1hool ffl.i butcher for 1uch high pric11. FINISHED PULLMAN 0 An ominou1 1011ndin9 title. C111 it be th1t it is fini1hed1 H1vin9 1••n it, I think ii i1 j111f b19innin9. D Pr1tty m1rble lop. nice h•rdw1r1, iu1t put it in pl''' ind 1njo~. 4988 BIG DEMO AT CHIEF RIMA'S LODGE (!fo~-ir· ''Etuy Does IC" RefinUhing Systema TUESDAY, NOV. 24 7 • 8 l'.M. LIMIT 40 ~.* IN THE CLAS$ ~ 0 M1rjori• Ne•I will be hote t•'"'"'on1lr1te the w•y to tot Jlf•f•nio111I ""'It' with .,our 11tti11111/119, Sh• 11 Ill IR,ert '"'It pl•••-' to ... ,, \'111 with 'fOUt •nti~•iflf ,roble"''· ' ---.- ' .. ·~~· . . . .. "0""::1C-::;T,,,..,.,-=··,-....,-,., .... ==,,__~ .... "'~',.,..--,,=,·'"""~~ .. .-:=--.,--~.c::-·· ,..-~-------·------··------~·--~.":~-~,..,.-,,-: .. ,-~,---~----....,~~~...,....,.,,_....,.,....,~!'"":--;--;.;· ·,-............ , • D~ll Y Pl~jt JJ New Perspect 'ive of /' America Seen From Peak of L~e By JO OLSON Of '"-D1ll1 l"llot $1tft It's great to be Jiving life at its peak in the White House, but it's not-bad to "move-)'our ... PQker game away where the stakes are not so high." LOVING MeMORIES Lb:'"CArf)9nter Llz Carpenter, press secre- tary for Mrs. Lyndon .Johnson for five years, so de.scribed her ex:periences as a White House ''insider" for members and guests of Chapman Co!· 1ege Town and Gown in tJie S.addleback Inn, Santa_Ant,. A T~xas-bom, petite woman with white hair, Mrs. carpen. • 2666 HARBOR ' BLVD. 546·7080 COSTA ME-SA WEEKDAYS 9 to 9 SATURDAY SUNDAY 9 to 6 247 GLIPSTRIP PAINT & VARNISH REMOVER Under thote 12 co•h of peint m•Y Iii •n e11tiq111, vie thi1 lo 11e. 198 9 T. PLASTIC TRAY LINERS r·~-,-·~"t-. .,.....,J'-; ···~···~-····"·-··· ........ , ' ' -, HE.V ! f '°"';({\. WMENC.01'\fiS f DISPCl$ABl.t'.. . OWl,.AAL~i~ O Trv th111 .. nd yov'll nevtr peint witl!ovl S•""tl cl1•n vp lime and · p•int r1mov1r. )'-.::::::::;:O--~ 0 f ih I ' inch roll1r, 12' PLASTIC DROP CLOTH Yov c111 u.e th1m to cow11 a11v other 1urfac1 you'd r1lh1r not spot, If you'ra n11t yo11 do11'! 1111d tl!111 'out wloo i1 "'''· Merit i1 111p1r 11111. 9' 9112 3fii" MASKING TAPE O Gr11t to ma1lt off yovr pony when yo11 w1nt to' me•• kiO'I into old p1int. O Nol !ht 1/1 i11ch tlulf the other 911y1 p1ddl1. 29' 60 YDS. ter served for ~ years in Washington's press corps with her hu sband, Leslie, before being tapped for her White House spot. She has eornpleted a book on her years with the First Family, tlUed "Ruffles and Flotlrishes," and ·plans to write a book of humor when her ~aking engagements are completed. . Mrs. Carpenter's years in the White HoUse were spent "helping her help hlm" and encompassed 'everything from ClndelabrltO Carpet Sweep.. ers, which she titled ·her talk. "When seeina: the White }Jou.se from a staff member's position, in contrast to seeing it as a reporter, you become aware of how many kinds of croles the house plays," Mrs. Carpenter related . First, it is the house of the executive, she said. Second, it is the number one sight-see- ing SPot in the nation. Next, it is the '"revolving door or the free world," where 200 heads of state are entertained. "You realize how much we live in the time or jet age diplo- macy." Last, it is the home of a family. "The Johnson years reminded us of this very human sid e to it'' Constantly walking the tight- rope of what is public and what is private, the former press secretary had to remem- ber that the "president's wHe and daughte rs are elected by the president." She had to deal with 85 women reporters covering the family side ()f the White Hou se. Mrs. Carpenter com- pared her responsibility with Eleanor Roosevelt's years when only 35 women covered the beat with pad and pencil. "Today you have Nancy Dickerson, cameramen and !500 pounds or equipment," she exclaimed. FffiST WEDDINGS -With ~Johnson daughters' wedding, the first in 50 years in the White House, she had to cope with 500 reporters , in· eluding a sports report.er who came because he considered romanCe was a SJX>rt. They wanted to know such things as the recipe for Linda's wedding cake l.ihich was a J)Ollnd cake with. a bride's cake on top featuring raisins soaked in brandy. P·ENTY GOOD GLIDDEN SPRED SATIR 0 Soft. m1He-fl1I fin;1h. Smooth1r, cle1n1 e11ily. 0 Ori1t i11 jv1t 20 mi11ut11, no fvm11. M•k• the w1Ut of your wigw1"1 like 111w. • 699 FREE 9. INCH ROLLER. & TRAY 0 Ivy one t•I. or more of Spr1d S1tin and 'WI throw i11 • 9" roller ind itay tit. •Thn• t.p1el1ls .,.. ..... tit! Cvtlfl' ft'lllt• ~11 Muilir 'or N1vtmbtr 21., °"' dly t11klr1 t~t trtet1 mtet Ill Ml. GLIDDEN DRIPLESS LATEX 0 Thi1 tluff i1 10 thic~ you h'"' to pry ii out of the (Ill, 0 Not r11lly, bvt greet 1tvff e1p1ci1!1y for older hom11 and r1nl•I properti11. ..... 2 88 GAL. GLIDDEN WEATHER· SHIELD 0 l atex houll p1i11I giwe1 I \01lvel fini1h for wood, tlvcco or the hide1 on vour ieepe1. Fvll r•11g1 ef colot1. 495 GAL. Acoustical CEILING PAINT ' O Specially formul1t1d to go i11to 111 tho11 little hol1t, 111 yov h1v1 lo do i1 give • g1ntl1 pu1h with ih1 roller. Whit• or Pa1ielt. 2 98 GAL. 3 or 4 INCH NYLON PAINT BRUSH 1f yo11'r1 fre1h ovf of old 1:. ..... , teil1 to P•i11t with yov'lf need 10111• of the11. 75' IA. 7 PC~ SANDPAPER PAK 0 Th111 were in\Oented ;;"'""',,,;""',.-" when 1om1 y11111-yg111 dropptd the fly P•Ptr i11 the tlttd. Some one ovght.+o 11nd hilfl a l11!1r of thtnltt. Swell. "De•r Yuft'l•Yum" PAK. GLIDDEN SUPER CRAFTSMAN 0 Great interior p1inl, white and pa1t1l1, l1t1x be11. 0 In wh ite end pe1t1h. For b1tt1r or Wot1•, for rich1r for poo11r, til yov ind the kov11 P•rl. ' 4 47 GA HEAPO CHE4PO PAINT GOOFS A lol of great p•int her1, bvt our 911y didn't hit th• 1had1 on the h1•d, 10 the c.111lom1r hit him i111+11d, 0 Our 1011 it your g1in, 9T. GAL. 59c Hl·QUALITY THINNER FREE 0 Thi 1ow1tl prict for good qu11ity pti11t thinn1r. Wt got our own 1011rc1. IA hole in th1 Sl1nd1rd pip1li111 from 1111 r1finery.) 0 You belt1r not bii11g a g1•11 jug or !ht fire d1pertm111t wl!I lakt yovr 1ocitl 11c.urity flvmb1r down. 21' TN YOUa METAL CO NTAINER GALLON OF GLIDDEN ENDURANCE TRIM WITH 5 GAL. SPRED HOUSE PAINT O Spl'ld lttex, c11r11 to kid1 lik1 • rhino. !And wt'rt 11f1, b1ce1111 nobody h•1 '"''got elo11 to • Rhino and li .. 1d.I 0 Color1, pl1nty, • 7 99 GA • One reporter wiilted to know bow many raisins there wert, so Mrs. Carpenter ask- ed the. baker to measure out J 'I• pounds and then made the nporter who asked the ques- tion count them. Alter two0 days of counting, Mrs. Carpenter drawled hum- orously. she found thilt there were 1,511 raisins in t~• pounds. When the recipe appeared in print, many irate housewives called to say lhal the cake had fallen. "How big is the 'fal - len cake' vote," Mrs. Carpen- ter asked herself, knowing that President Johnson would face re-election . The error, sbe found, was that the reci pe was misprinted with. the wrong type of sugar. CALORIE-CONSCIOUS In contrast to many former chief exocutives and their families. the Johnsons were calorie-conscious, Mrs. Car- penter related. In tbe kitchen, Mrs. Johnson posteil a hand- written notice stating "Please do not offer the PreSident a second helping If h.e does not demand it." Mrs. Johnson al so was very exercise<onscious, Mrs. Car- penter added. She used the 'bowling C1:1ley and swlrnmina pool at the White ·House and many times Mrs. <;arpenter would follow her up, and down the pool, the fi1'$t lady swim- ming a.nd her press se<.Tetary walking poo~ide, discussing business. "One feels a strong_ seJ)se of continuity when living in the White House and as you cross this great country, 'durable' is the word that stands out. "The crises we read aOOUt ... the pessimism ... there Is much more that unites us than divides us. "Despite our doubts, Amer- ica is working. I found it In Akron where a bright group or women are working hard to make t~e library the place to be, in Birmingham, where there is a month-long festival of arts; in Houston, where the citi zens have organized. an soap bpx and invite peQple to come and ~ their' opin- ions, and here where· women are · trying to give Chapman College a litUe extra. 1o ' Mrs. Carpenter quoted the lines of a fersian poet which included the words "Sell a loa£ . . • buy a hyaclnt~, to feed the soul." America is, she feels. "tryin to buy a hyacinth to feed the great struggling democracy." Volunteers are needed to tutor individual students, work in classrooms as teacher assistant and serve as library and clei:ical assistants at the Carl Harvey School for the Orthopedically Handicapped, Santa Ana. eXfAND KNOWLEDGe Public libraries in Costa Mesa, NewP.ort Beach' and Santa Ana appreciate volunteers who will assist Jibrar· ians, display art work, tell stories to children. shelve and cover books and update periodicals. Those with in- teresting hobbie s to display also are needed. ' HOPE BEGINS , A Costa Mesa preschool for mentally retarded chil· dren, Hope Haven needs volunteers to assist teachers, Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to ,1 p.m. VIP VOLUNTEERS Volunteers in Probation, Orange County Probation Departn::ient, needs volunteers to work one-to-one with probationers or members of the family. Also. people are needed to provide transportation and work in group activities. Call the Volunteer Bureau at 642-0963 for further information. Making History Sally Prit!sand, 24. of Cleveland, is on her \Vay to becoming the first woman rabbi in the United States. She attends Hebrew Union College, a r3b- binical school, in Cincinnati. The Tee IEdttor• Nott: A column of_..,., tOP ;olf 1<ort1 will IP~•• eat~ -It I" trle DAILY PILOT. To r1POrl sccrn IM tM -"'• P!e.tte ~ll li'>em lo I'. 0. 8ot 1$60, '°''• 1.W11. T~tr muu bl r«tl\Ofd tw Morld1r.1 LAGUNA •EACH PAll:TNBll:S aEST 9AlL -Tht Mmes. ld•Mtv Scho1011k1tr, ll:1r111011G SIY•, lfl t<1rla Allen, Hllfmln lloewtr, 601 Oon•ld H11rlblll, Ike Wtst..,.,.eland, • 611 Cornell111 T~er, ev111911tne Agenc ies ' Toured A tour of four community volunteer agencies was given the American Association of Retired Persons, N e w po r t Beach Qapter 121. · Spomored by the Volunteer Bureau of Southern Orange County, the toui included the United Cerebral Pa 1 s y Association, Boy5 and Girls Clubs and the Goodw i ll Industries • Tattler Chrl1ll1n1tn. "' • P11J.1 W•lerm"" Jot~ c ,...t1y, "· •IST OOU"lll 011 MONTH -Low Grou, A Fllont, Mrs. W1t•rmen, ni a l'fJ11M1 • .Mrt, Sly,, t7. • ACI! ., MONTH' -Low, Net, A Fnvnr, Mrt. L-l'd Ol'•••llut, Sf; a Ftltnt. Mrs. Stys. '1. PUTTlll: OP MONTH -A FUO~f. Mr1. OrtxeU111, 281 Mrs. Chrl1llUIMll. n , LOW Nil TOUll:Nol.MINT -A Fllt~t. !lit MfnQ, Ktnnelli Wnftritv, Allf!I, 611 W•ltet-O•vl1an, ": o~­ell111, 4'1 II Flkl~t, lllfl Mini•. Cl'OIDr, (IYdt Jon•·· 6A 1 ll:Oe\Otf, Wt1trnortl1nd;'U1 Edllli Maritt. f'· ~IL NIOUBL CllllSS Cll:OSS -A Flltht, tti. M..,,., 1't0l>trl Sdt1.11'1rn1n11, !121 8t11c:1 Win'°"' J'l'll Im Clnl.-tll Fred WHI•"· Lowell Hff«l(k. ~\'JI 9 l<~I, tM .Mmw. H1rrr_,.n C1rrrc11;, J-h Maut, ~; Colvln W~!ftlntlM, :U\'11 F t 1 ~It L-vtlrl, Ak;ll...Golllft, UVll C "'""'· tht Mme1, £....rt Pel•l'WI'• 32\'JJ Ed-mund Ho.kif», E. E. Wner, ~; WJltlur lt'l'J', :Wl'll Aly M11tet, U. Demos..Gat.her Orange County DemocraUc Women will gather at I p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 24, in I.he Great Western Savings and Loan buildJng, Santa Ana. Headinl ihe agenda wll\ be the election ol a nominating committee. I I r I .. -----------~ ------. -. --------· -·---·----::::-:--:-::-:-:-=:-:--:-~-::--::-:::-:--:-:-:-:--:--:--:""::-:--:-::--::-:-:::======-:":'=:-:-,....,-==-=~---~ .. ._ .................................. 1 ••• •' ........... , .................... •' •••• -.. • • • • .... "'. .... •• • -••••••••• " ............... ' ' • ...... -.... .-...... --~~ .. -,._, -• ...,,....._ zJ DAILY PILOT Thursday, November 19, 1970 , < STAR-STUDDED PROGRAM · OPENS ''ORIGINAL'' ANGELS THURSDA.Y -. WORLD'S LARGEST ''DO-IT-YOURSELF'' 'CENTER HOLDS GRAND OPENING AT 10 A.M. Music u the finest Western nightclub · out of five Western states. KFOX personalities Dick Haynes and Chulie Wil· Jiams will act u Masters of Ceremony for the big Angels' show. Handsome Charlie began his radio career almost 20 ''i!dl·.ll"~yean ago in his home state ofMiWuippi, followed by "!'!" 1V and radio stints in Tennessee and Texu. He hu - won the BM.I. award rive times for the .. Top Coun- try Song" in the nation, • . In addition to bei!lg a majordi,c-jock.ey personality m the Southern California area for the part 15 yeari Charlie is also noted as TV and nightclub singer~c:ee: Dick Haynes is one of the wittiest pertonalilies in show business and is legendary in the Los Angeles area u a radio DJ. His daily KFOX show "Haynes at the Reins" is enjoyed by all ages, and crowds gather any time Dick makes a personal· appearance. A versatile showman, Haynes 11 equally adept in 1V and movie coles and will be remembered as the bartender in the recent James Gamer film, "Siipport Your Local Sheriff," · Dick Haynes was honored earlier this year at a star· studded Hollywood dinner, where he won the title "Top Country Muslc OJ. of the Year," a national award. One thowand gift items, at give-away prices, in· aloflg wi th Radio Station KFO~ pe!5?nalities Dick As usuaJ, Dick will bring Gumdrop Gus and the eluding 150 wrist watches at twenty-five cents each Haxnes! Gumdrop.Gus, and Charlte Williams. . re't of his troupe of madcap characters along to allilt will be available to the fust 1000 adults visiting the Cap1t~I rec~rd!ng stars John and Paul ~paml him as Master of Ceremonies at Angels' Grand 0pen. giant new Angels Home Improvement Center on have achieved &1gn1ficance as excellent talents who ein ing celebration; Thursday, Nov. I 9th, at 12662 Chapman Avenue in sing a variety of son gs in a variety of styles and enter· F·rst sho ls d ' 1 1 Sat ds Garden Grove, announced President Sidney Kline, who tain as reli ably u a Glen Campbell or a Buck Owens. '>1st' wi·th wddg•,. ""a1 sherway 1be . p.mb · d ".' •• Y1• N2"'3• · al · ·d ID r I t fi f th Th Ch · I e h tert · d x • -• a 1 ion ows mg roa c.u.. a ~ IOVl~-predsi ~nt o ally ":.•.,nc.,paren ian o e a_ eF apamd D. rosl. dav~ end"t 'ain~ that . nolt s and 4 p.m .• directly from the slage at the new An;eh 1ut-growmg o-1t-yowse Cn&.1n . ~rry arm an isney an • tn a ~ ion to elJ many Home Improvement Center, 12662 Cha an Avenue G_ar~e~ G!'O~ ~ayor. R~ece Ballard, and a ~ost of ~tght~lub and stage appearances tn the Southern Cal· jwt east of Harbor Boulevard in Garden~rove. • other m1c digrutanes will be on hand for the nbbon· tfo rrua area. A special autograph session at 2 .m Th rsd · cut~g ceremonie~ Thursd~y morning a! 10 a.m. lm· The Chaparrals have bee~ ~eatured o~ the KFOX also on the agenda with memben :f n~tio~all:v~ mediately followrng openmg ceremonie s, !he new Top-50 .and are currently _riding a soanng wave of claimed Sweetwater grou p appearing in person to in· 100,000 tq. ft. building department store will be of-success 1n the Cou ntry P..1uSJc fie ld . trodllce .. Just F y ... th · 1 ·ted foll flcially opened to the public. Lyn Har~r is a risi ng -star in ~ountry Mus.ic who of the·r fist .sm:h.hltu~b ell ong·awai ow-up Each of the fint 1000 visiton will receive a num-has had a widely va ried background in the entertain· Hi~-~t f th t tivi':f°• S d · ill be bercdletterfromKline,entitlingthemtomakeoneof mentindustry, , the 1 0 e es es un ay.~orrungw . the special purchases ranging in cost from 25 cents She has appeared in "Stars Are Singing." a Para-111\l"mna;;:annce ~f fun~ ?1fdthS; 1lead1mg 4a5cro~atio-SIDNEY KLINE -PRESIDENT OF ANGELS down to 5 cents mount motion picture ••• and in "'Make It Move," an e.>..... c ~oups 10 • e ru e a es or a -nunute Over $15,00C)in merchandise will be distributed at Independent release. demons~ation starting at 10 a.m •. The L~kewood Sidney .~· ~;,, ~7-year-olll foiinder me! ~t of A.,..U Home lmpromnent c.i,;... who ~mtfd. the fmt 'Save Younelf" lumber and buiJdina tupply center in El Monte. The ... Anttla Do-lt·YouneJr center Ji Oranae County is the tuaat store of· ita type .m tJw mttM stocking OTel' 100,000 items. • the• nominal prices as rewards for the "earlxbirds." TV cred its include: Mr. Novack; the Steve Allen r.imnastic group.bu appeared ~t maJor televised foo t· A full weekend of special events has been arranged Show;.Hallmark Hall of Fame. Elizabeth the Que.en; bo~ and baske~ball gan:ies dunng the past year, and ror the openina days, Kline said. a Julie London Special ; Melody Ran ch; and othen. ·c sts five lea~ng candidates for the 1972 U.S. Olym. A Pop· Rock concert featuring the ''Other Side of Miss Harper has had too many stage appearances to Pt team. Their ~ctacular .pcrfonnances have drawn Time" recording group is set for Thursday evening enumerate, but .. Hullal:taloo" and .. Jt's A Mod ••• ~Ives f!om leading college coaches and follows the from 6:00 to 9:00 pm.,.JCline announced. The con· World" are two of her favorites. ympic ~~es. fonnat. NEW ORANGE COUNTY. "DO IT YOURSELF" CENTERS OFFER 100,000 ITEMS cert will be staged on the center's giant parking area, She appears on two Los Angeles ndio programs as Free kiddie ndes for the children v.;11 be available and admission is free. a "'regular," and has done numerous conunercials. from .?, t~ 5 p.m. on Sat~rday 11!1-d Sunday. F~ee A second musical concert, :dated for Friday evening Gene Davis has probably the most popular Coun· ~psi and free baloons will be distributed lt.utin& from 6:~9:00, is also expected to attract thousands try Music band to grace the Southern California night· Thwsdav through Sunday. . of listenen. club scene in recent history. Full pa_ge newspaper adverll~ments and a Thousands of do-il·yourself homeowners, faced Free refreshments and gifts for the children wm alto Highlight of the 4-day celebration will be a giant In September, fans selected Gene as Band.leader of 12-page rucular supplement will carry a mas· with pyramiding costs of labor and home repairs, are be distributed. Country Music show on Saturday afternoon, Nov. 21. the Month, in 1 write-in contest sponsored by Cali· sive array of sale merchandise for the grand expected . t~ throng 9range County's newesl and Thousands of items purchased by Anaels import Top stars in the Country Music fitld who will be per· fomia Country Pictorial News. opening to most Orange County home1. larpst building mpply departmen1 store, the 100,000 division from all ' over the world will go on sale on tht' fonning include the popuJar, attraclive Chaparral Gene Davis' band, the Stlr Routen, are regular Grand opening prices will be in effect at all squan foot Angels Hom~ lmprovt ment Ctnter at opening weektnd at drastically reduced priceL "'Our Brothen; lovely recording artist Lyn Harper; well· headliners at the Nuhville West Club in FJ Monte, Angels stores, Kline announced. Sale prices 1266~ 0iapman Avenue. J~t .cast of H1rbo~ Boule· ~ogan , 'Angel~ Sells for ~ss,' .. will _ be drama1tcally known nightclub entertainer Gene Davis and his band; nominated by the Academy of Countty and Western will extend for seven full days. Yll'd. U\ Or1n~ County during 1ls grand opening cele· illu,1trated during the opening'. Kline pointed out. bratiOn Startinl at lO a.m. ~ursday, November 19th. 'Many Orange County residents re1uJ1rly driw '\. Hailed u the f11te1t-growing do-i l·your9elf ch1in long distances to our other Angels store," Kline• T I i i R di S M k P I & I in the West, the new Angels center will incorporate phuizcd, "and our new location will brin& nwy I If S 01, I 0 flrS I I trSOll APPllJll(IS the"""" 111d mou modem m"ch.ndio"g di'Pl•y• O""&' Cou"'y "ode"' withfo euy dmin&wige ... and tedmiquet: in the nation, according to J7.year-0ld offer them the opportunity to take ldw.n• o( ow KFOX'S CHARLIE WILLIAMS LYNN HARPER GENE DAVIS CHAPARRAL BROS. president and founder, Sidney Kline. Visiting digni· greatest sales values in history." taries from all over the nation have made reservations The gala opening ceremonies will include lltn:h~ to be praent durin1 the optnina of the new "space lights, lremendous values, free gifts, refreahments and ap" department store. a Rock music concertThursdaj" ewnina from six 'til An Angels home improvement center is aclualty 9:00 p.m. tht equivalent of a complete lumber y1rd, coplplete "A nae ls can tell (or less," Kline 11xpl~in1d, "becawe hardware store, complele plumbing store , complete or our tremendous volume purchasing powtr, control electrical supply headquarters, complete sporting of our own mill 1nd lumber sources, and direct impart pd.1 store; complete paint 1tore, and 1 complete P~.uch1sing through our own import division." ,merll merc:handise departmen t store, all convenient· "Wilh these us.els, unmatched by any other.do-it." ly uranged in one &iant one-stop shopping center. yourself retailing org1nization , we can naturaUy op- Each of thelC departments carry merchandise in er1te on the lowest profit mugin in the indwtry" 'depth,? without the usual stock limitations of the or-Kline decl1red. • thodox specialized store, X.Jine said. ''We pride our-"We also operate in a more efficient man.ntr," he •Ms on stocking every conceivable item in the build· explained, pointing out that Angels was the first in in& supply field," stressed the dynamic 37-year-Old the industry to introduce 'serve-you.rselr 1echniqun businea ·leader. "We are the only comple1e do.ii· in the lumber retail industry, centraliztd chedt-oVt rourtel! center where you can actually find eve ry facilit ies for all departments, and hundreds of molu. llcm necemryto build 1 ~J!lcle building or homt ." tionary mass display sell ing techniques." The Anph _Company Of"!su:'ated the modern con· "The opening of Angels Downey-Norwalk location ccpt of the do-tt·yowxlf bu.ilding supply center, open last November was hailed by area newspapen u the ~n days ~ week inclu~i~g evenings and Sundays, largest and most spectacular opening in the history a( Kime explamed. The ong1nal Angel s tenter in El Los Angeles County," Kline commented. "We expect Monte ii the prototype unit for all the preaent home Angels Orange County opening to be even more speo- improftment i;:enters springing up throughout the tacular ,"he added . nation. . . . . :· All Angels stores arc open regularly from 9 a.m. Mayors. and c1V>C dign1tanes from all over Orange until 10 p.m. weekdays, and from 8 a.m. on Satu rdays Cou~ty will be honored guests at the 10 a.m. ribbon and Sundays. The new Angels Orange County centllt cut~ng ceremo!'ies, Kline_ ann?unccd: .All visitors will. be open until 9 p.m. Saturday, November 21st .dunng the opening celebrat1on will be eh11ble to rtgh· during the opening celebration. ter for hundreds of va!uable pr izes to be given away. I DICK HAYNES SWEETWATER GROUP -JUST FOR YOU Hin THURSDAY ROCK C:ONCE RT CROUP AT ANGELS -A Pop-Rock concert featuring the '"Other Side of Timi" recordinc group will be among the unusual features of A?gels Home Improvement Center's Grand Openina mMbration Thursd1.y, Nov. 19 at 12662 Chapman Avenue .Just east of H1rbor Boulevard. Grand Openina ceremoniet aart at ~ 0 a.m. with the popul1r recording group scheduled from 6-9 p.m. Thursd1y tvenini, at the world's larfest do-11-yourself center . Members of the Rock group are Steve Papr, Pete Annenta Norm Sanchez and Otarley Torres, s~n lo be featured by a ~1jor record ing. studio. The aroup was recently a~itioned for a USO owneu tour lo Vietnam, and has played 1n Lu Veps, Disneyland, Cinnamon Cider, i nd many local cotleps. ANGELS HOME IMPROVEMENT CENTER GRAND OPENING SCHEDULE OF EVENTS THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19 SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21 10 1.m. Ribbon Cutting Ceremoni., and Official Store Opening 101.m.-10 p.m. Free Gift Registrltion • Hourly Awards · 2 p.m. Autogroph Session, S-tw111r R• cord int Group, P•sonat AppurlnC8 8 p.m. Pop-Rock i:oncort; Penonol Ap- purance, "Other Sidi of Time" R•· cording Group ALL DAY -FrM Pep~ Ii Balloons FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20 9 1.m.-10 p.m. Store Opens; Registration .&: Hourly Awards 8 p.m. Pop Mutic Concort ILivt) ALL DAY -Frw Ptlpti FrM 111110001 8 1.m.-10 p.m. Store Opens; Regi1tr1tion . • Hou~y Awards 1 p.m. KFOX Remol8 Broadcost (Livi.,.. ttrtainmont, n.s) 4 Shows It 1 2 land 4 p.m. . ' ' ALL DAY - F,_ Kiddil Ridts F,_ P!'P'i Froo 81110001 SUNDAY. NOVEMBEQ 22 8 1.m.-6 p.m. s-Opens; Rlfillrltlon •HourlyA-.... 10 un. Group Gymnanic ,and Tumbllnt Pwfonntnc1 -The L.1kewood Kips Frw Kiddlt Rldol and B1llOCM11 All Day . -~--·--~-~--------------- DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS • MUTI AND JEFF BOYOBOY! I HAD A BANGUP TIME AT CHARLIE' WEO DIN' RECEPTIO~ •• OH,MY!--,-,r;;;i JUDGF; PARKER , I WANT YOU TO TELL TilE WEW WIDOW SOMETMING ELSE.ELMO! YES, SAM Dl21VE~ 15 NEW TO THE Ml2. !! OR:GAN IZ AT!ON! TELL 1-!EI!: NOT Wl-IAT IF SHE DECIPES TO 60 TO THE D. A . .WD CLA.!M THAT LAll:RY ROCJ:.ET's OE ... Tl-I W,1,5 NOT AN TO START T.l.LKI N6 HYSTE~l4 -'CCI DENT? (ALLY! llNDER:STAND? PLAIN JANE I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by R A POWER I ACROSS l Tenni s' Rod ···-ti Sco tsman's name 11 Funn y fellow 14 In forc e 15 Smallest In del)ree lti Brewery produc t 17 One who forces prices up 01 down 19 Narrow inlet 20 Jab 21 Musical symb ol 22 Tool 24 Eliminate , w!lh "out" 21i American pla ins animals 27 Is not • able JO Sold bttting Informat ion 32 Stand ing 3J-lnvestment lor111 34 "Jones' partner 371.iela ···· out or 38 Ente rta ins sumptuously 39 SmoGth· b1eath in9 CO Tit for ••• 41 Bestows 42 Opera .. 43 Person that 1 tribe Is named after 4S Very funny Jok e 4b Robin Hood's girl friend 48 Millta1y establish· ment 4'1 A lier 50 Music al potpourrl 52 Epre's compan ion Sb Man s nic kname 57 Italian island : ] words bO Write bl Kren bl Entert~lner 63 Self &4 Tur f &5 Sierra •···• DO WN 1 Bicyc le accessory 2 Win9l lte J Ita lian bevrr•ge 4 Grand Jury 's QDneern 5 Co1d ed ·1~bric b Paree! out 7 "G1oovy!" 8 Movable barrier 'l Servic e· ma n's haven Yr\tr1day s P11 lzle Solved: t< It ~ II [ ~ 1 U I 0 ([ l •U~• [ ~ PT A B SO N R.1 1 ~C &T C ~[ 10 Diff icu lt positions 11 Enyo, in Gr. mylholog~· 2 word s 12 FGreigner 13 Auto parts lB Single \hing 23 Put into servlct 25 Tin.y amount 2& lmmatu1e flowers 27 Sure tiling: Slang 28 Solo 29 Hockey's Er le----- 30 Kind of pol' 31 Individuals J J Flock of birds 35 For merly Jti Tear's pa1tner 38 Hrls in~I t iti:en .. l l/l'l/70 39 Wa s humll!a\ed: 2w Grd5 41 Treats: Slang 42 Athabasca ·-Sa nds 44 Go lfer's target CS Error : Slan1 4b Saul Ste. ·- 47 In assoc iat ion with 48 Deep inlet; Var. 50 Girl's name 51 Unpleasant look 53 Vision : Comb . Form 54 Pilching wedge 55 Italian co ins SB Cutting tool 59 State: Abbr 11 12 I By Chester Gould &UT. SIR, IT~ A. NOTl~Y Tl-IE R.ENTAL 5MOP PROPA:ll!TOR TO ~~MEIN MIS~ STAN OARD PftACTICE t l'LL. MAVI! TO CMARGE 'IOU S 5 FOR TME M15SING MITT. • PERKINS By Toll! K. Ryan I SEE1HE. EMERGENCY l'AAKE: IS WORKING- By Al Smith ? By Harold Le · Douz Tlo!ERE'S JUST ONE 1l-llNG Sl-!E'S 60(" TWO A&OLIT IREME', Mlt. T.! WHEN KIPS: Tell. )ojER ~E GETS UPSET, SHE CAN TO 5TA.V IN LINE SA.V SOME THINGS TH.\T Olt TMOSE KIPS C.OULD 8E VERV (DlillO HAVE AN EM&A~ASSING! ACC.IC7ENT TOO! By Frank Baginski ~ • ( i r 11,lih! "' 1! 1111 h\olthl, Iii• I !ul 1111o•I•111I11/0 1111</1/• 11I11/1l11111 lo I 1 I ,/11 11 ... "' ... "' '" "' MISS PEACH ~Oit'i Ti.ff GIRLt'' c:ooJctA&G C'-Arr Witi. S'l .. 1/£: t.#Ct4 'Tl TME h'tl f M&:N!.! M EAT Po'fA-rotr ~ STl1N~•rANt l GVPtAJ.ff I lCf Cllflil\ I • STEVE ROPER '" .. "' ... ... "' "' "' " ... "' ... '" "' "' ... "' '" ... '" "' . .. '" '" "' "' "' "' "' "' ... '" WHAT IS THI$ IMSS '! ' Ll'L ABNER SALLY BANANAS GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS "By John Miles • i' ~ ;! E: IJ I . -iii c ·lo•''\\ 1~, hlo/11 II' I,,',, I IJ I• I• 1/1I1/11J,1l. \1,10 Uhl", 111/ol /II 1/1' I II•',, 111 hi '" ' 11' Ill '~p?j \I/ \ti \II \t \Tl 01 \II Ill Ill Ill ,'1/ I!/ Ill \I/ \\I Ill \I/ •!! \II '" \I/ I" II/ By Men By Saunders and Overgard ~PEELED"?···Al-I .'··· YES/···MY COUNTRY Will BE MOST , A llAJ.l'·N:il/P lAla\ A 11/FLCIJM! 96# GREETS THE n£-wEARY RIDERS/ PEANUTS THERE SHE IS, TJ6ER!···AN'GOOO ROAD FOR A CHAMGE/ By Charin M. Schulz thursdl!, Nowmber 19, 1970 MR.MUM DAILY "LOT :ZiJ By Al Capp By Charles 8-ttl By Gus Arriola By Roger Bolen . i 00, PADDY •• · ).IAM,l/5 Ar . . A l1BEl<'/>.T161J MEETllJGo I, ... DENNIS THE MENACE ----------......-----------·------...----·-----------·-------·---------------------·--- ' ) · JI · DAILY PILOT CAMERA LAND 4 DAYS ONLY Thur., Fri., Sat., Sun. '· Nov. 19-20-21-22 . •' I·. 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GRANT PLAZA BROOKHURST AT ADAMS HUNTINGTON BEACH l " . • · . ....--, . . Traai ~en Sfafe 8! tWp'.'"pa pa~t Slr :one., I ~~ t• lt•orn Iv wbile U z;i: I ·lnclu1 was ah or Min N'o;lhw UIJI ye 'Mich eft'Nor :ci.ar - ·uo ... , Jn :Golu ·Man . . . a:btiu; :.Botb they {I hi citing wilhoul Then Rose E the hiµ: Thee look p: time ft Stanlm i L: • l S( WEI> Mar's Gim en to el.I Embl!: annour: ln'ternt · giierar prize~ foi''dtc ! LOS tapereo ·~lot~ Saturd enci>w1 l\fe.nlo: Tl\< ror· tt centra· hOur,,1 'IX>K Amer!~ Los A1 Coast play ! \Vhalei t>aseb11 Wer~ ' - , TllurM111, Ncmmbff 19, 1~70 DAIL y Pl• nr ,.., .. Hard· Punch B1erid 's ·s-of t Heart·, .. . . ' raz1er . ' -' • HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMP JOE FRAZIER LANDS KNOCKOUT BLOW •••. 1950·51 Big Years Traditio1ial Grid J)uels . . . - :~ Recpll Bigg~s of Past Traaitional iOotball· g_ames billed this weekt!nd between-~nford ·and Cal, Ohio Sla:Ce 8nd :fi.1.ichlgan bring recolll!ctiohs of t"9-Particularly vital · a'nd memorable pa;~t struggles matching those foes. ~one, took place in 1950 with powerful OhtO ~tale meeting a decided underdo,g ficrii 'Michigan. The Buckeyes were &2 wlrile the in't&ders from Michigan were 4- $i; I I ·Included among Ohio State conquests was ah 8.1-21 blasting of Iowa, a 48--0 blitz of· Minnesoli! and a 32-0 clubbing of ~lhwestern (which had a &3 season ' Uyit year.) . ·Michigan had tied Minnesota and beat· eft Northwestern by 11. ;cfearly, the Buckeyes were favored. -=·------WHITE WASH ----------· l :uo...-ever. It snowed that November day in :Columbus. :Mali, did it ever snow. In fact, they had a. b!iziard. :Botb teams punted almost as much as they 'i:iid anything else -occasionally kiCking on first down. Michigan won, 9-3, without making a first ddwn. Then the Wolverines staggered to the Rose Bowl for an ex.peeled thrashiug at the h~ds or caJ, only to win, 14-6. The other half of the memory lJrogram tcok place the next season -19SI. This time i was uniteleate4, nationally_ ranked Stanl6rd tuning Up for Its Rose Bowl date ! with Illinois by hosting Cal's Golden Bears.. .• The Bears (6-2) had lost lo USC (21-l:i\ and UCLA (21-7) while Stanford ' had handled those adversaries. Zl-20 and 2!-7. However, cal was to set the trend of what was to transpire in Pasadena come New Years Day as the Bears chewed up the Tribe, ID-7. Then· Stanford hobbled to the Rose Bowl, led Illinois at halftime. 7-fi. then went on to absorb a 40-7 bombardmenl. In ieSs than 48 hours these two great football rivalries will again resµme. Ohio State is favored over Michigan in a TV battle of unbeaten goliaths and Stanford seeks to wrap up its first un· beaten conference campaign since 1941> against those unpredictable b u t dangerous Bears. * * * It'll be a big family reunion keyed around the NewJl)rt Harbor High· Redlands football game Friday night. Grandpappy Larry Bergeron \viii be watching grandson Ron Tripp perform at guard for Newport. Ron's older brother Bob is flying home from the University Qf Utah to see the game. He is a former Newport lineman, now playing for Utah, The boys' dad. Jerry, was a :-Je\';port guard in the late 1940s and his brother Don (now deceased) was a guard on Newport's only other Sunset League varsity championship eleven (1942). Also coming is Carl Bergeron, one or Larry's sons and a guard on the 19$8 .Newport team. He's journeying from New York lo see the game. You wonder what Newport I1arbor would have done for linemen over lhe yeitrs if the Bergerons and Tripps hadn 't gotten together. L~ver Wins, Drops Out; . . SC Ends Heavy Practice • WEMBLEY, England -Corona del t.far'~ Rod Laver rallied to defeat Andres Gimeno of Spain 6-1, 4-6, M Wednesday to cirn a quarter-final berth in the Embiwy indoor tennis tournament but announced he was dropping out of the lntern:ltional Tennis Grand Prix, all but , gu'arantecing Cliff Richey the $24,980 top pfize ... Laver cited Injuries as his i:*ason foi"·-diopping out. ' ' • 1964 to 1966 had had been with the Islanders since 1969 after playing the 1967 and 1968 season for the California Angels. • • ATLANTA -Alabama, which has played in bowl games 12 slraight years, will accept an invitation for a return trip to the Liberty Bowl in fl.lemphls on Dec. 12, The Atlanta ;Journal reported Weclnes· day. •• ·Bruins Begin To Rebound In Practices LOS ANGELES (AP) -Coach Tommy Prothro of the UCLA Bruins says his team is starting to bounce back from Saturday's 61-20 defeat to Washingto n but Jacks the usual fire before a game with Southern California. ''The players are missing some of the tip you might expect before a game with USC," Prothro said Wednesday after practice for Saturday's big crosslown clash at Memorial Coliseum. l<Jt's a quieter team this year," he said, "but usually they're a little noisier and bouncier before a use game. "But they've been this way before other games and we've won." Prothro said his team would work on defenses toda,y after drilling on passinc: Wednesday, Reggie Echols, a 9.6 sprinter, was the only healthy Oankerback. Terry Vernoy was still limping with a dislocated big toe suffered last week and Brad Lyman wasn't expected to play against Troy because of the knee injury that has pla~lled him mOJt of the season. Foster l(nocked Out in 2nd· Round DETROIT (AP) -A brutal fighting machine with compassion -that's Joe Frazier. But the heavyweight boxing champion nf the world doesn't Jet his soft heart in· terfere with his hard punch. The only things that intcrfer~d with his punch in their heavyweight championship fight Wednesday night were Bob Foster's body and head. • It took Frazier just 49 seconds of the second round to knock out the light heavyweight king before 6,300 persons in Cobo Arena, plus a closed-<:ircuit television hookup in the United States and rr forelgn countries. Frazier sent bis lanky challenger lo the canvas t"{lce wi(h vicious left hooks to the body and head. ,The first time Foster took a nine _count but F'razier moved in quickJy to fiJlish it wben Fosler wobbl~d to his feel. "I don'fthink the referee (Torn Brisco~ should haVe let Bob come out that second lime," Frazier said, his brown eyes look· Ing compassionately at n e w s m c n gathered in an iritervie\v room af- terwards. : "He was down for .eight or nine and when he got up he was tilting toward lhe referee:· added the chunky fighter . "When the referee saKi oome on out I had to or I'd be less than a champion. My job }li'8S to fight." Moments afler the fight Frazier spo ke to the television audience while c;till in the ring and said much the same thing : ''Bob should never ha ve come back. I saw him wavering after •that first knockdown and he had no oUsiness .com- ing back." The first round was fairly even ~and when Frazier asked bis manager Yank Durham how he was doing, "He said I won that round but to get a 'litUe closer and move a little faster." ··1 like to move around as much as possible," Frazier added, speaking sollly and with no sign or braggadocio. Foster said he didn't hear either the first or second count. He also said he didn't e\·en know he was down a second .lime. After the ~Cond knockdown he lay 9n the canvas on his back for about five minutes. '. "I didn't realize I was in trouble until ile caught mt with a good left hook,'' 11aid Foster, still clad in his blue velvet bOxing trunks and blue robt. "I say one thing. He 's. got a good left hook.'' Frazier insisted the bout was no· ••tuneup~' for a clash with Cassius Clay. "I get my tuneups in the gym and when 1 get in the ring I want to get it over with." MeanY.'hile one closed circuit television theater had problems. A disturbance broke out at Bo!f.on Arena with many fans throwing bottles and chairs at the screen, when the closed circuit television picture went dead dur- ing the second and fina l round of the heavyweight litle fight. The C2'0Wd of 4,000 rans bad watched a live boxing program, the televised George Foreman-Boon ·Kirkman -fight. .and the first,r.ound of the Frazier-Fosler bnut when the picture went out · Fans became unruly as they U'liMed seeing Frazier knock out ,Foster in the se- cond round, and extra police were sum· mnned to the Arena as it appeared the trouble might get out of hand. The picture came back on, howevtri arid the crowd quieted down as th' knockout was replayed on the screen. · ·. ··: Clay Spews Contemp~ Rips Frazier, Foster ATLANTA (AP) -NJ the images of Joe Frazier and Bob Foster flashed across the giant closecl circuit television screen, Muhammad Ali, ballooning his lips like a fighter wearing a mouthpiece, rnQved· forward in his seat and threw • volley.of swift punchesinto the air, "Look at those chumps," he said undei- hls breath, between punches. "Look at 'em punch away at each othet'. Got no style. Got no footwork . Got nothing ex- cept muscle. A scientific bolter tear 'em up. Just tear 'em to pieces." "Nothing," hissed Ali. throwing: • roundhouse right in the dark and nearly striking the leather-jacketed man be.side tiim. "They is nothing. ••Jt's a disgrace Uiat I got to C91Tie watch something like this fight tonight," said AU before joining the 700 other persons who had gathered in the old a uditorium to watch lhe fight. / "Couple of chumps." "Foster is faster tban Frazier bul ain 'l either one of 'em got anything to match my speed," srud Ali. "Frazier goin' take this man In 3ix," said ,Ali, stamping his feet in Uieir red and black shoes beneath his plaslic- covered seat. "It's a disgrace to even hear hl.'1 name. His behind -it be mine· in nine." Foster landed a punch and Ali shook his head, saying. "That ain't nothing." "They trying to dance like me," laugh- ed All. "But I got the speed and the moves." , •• SO REFEREE JIMMY DRI SCOE ADMINISTERS LASt RITES. LOS ANGELES -The USC Trojans tapered off to a light workout in sweat ·~IOthes today in preparation for Sawrday's naUonally televised crosstown e~n~er ~with the UCLA Bruins in 1'femor1al _Coliseum. The froilns concluded heavy practice fOf " the big game Wednesday , con- c~atJng on pass defense duri,ug a one- hom', )5-mlnute drill. LOS,,....ANGELES -Dave Balon and Jean Ratelle struck for two goals apiece and Rod Gilbert added another to spark the New York Rangers to an uphlll S..3 victory over the Los Angeles Kings Wednesday night in a National Hockey League game. Fore111an Shows Hil11 Who"s Boss • TOKYO _ -John Werhas. 32, an American third baseman formerly with Los Angeles, California and the Pacilic Coast League 's Hawaii Islanders will play for the Central League's Tliyo \Vhales in 1971 , the Japanese professional bi'ieball club announced today. Werhas played for the Oodgerll from • ATLANTA -The Atlanta Constitution reported Wednesday that Auburn will play in the Gator Bowl Jan. 2 with Mississippi expected lo be the opponent. ln Birmingham, the Birmingham Post Herald reported ill its Wednesday morn· .ing editions that Auburn's 11ce signa l , caller, Pat SullJvan and fl.tisslssippl11 Jleisman Trophy candidate, Archie Man· ning, would collide in the Gator Dowl. NEW YORK (AP) -George Foreman knew exacUy what he W'SS doing when he rushea atTOSs the ring at the opening bell of his fight egaiinst. Boone Kirkman Wednesday night and pushed the Seattle heavyweight fl at on the seat of• his pants. "I wanted to establish myself," said the Oly~pic champion, wbo established himself more (()ncretely with a second rounli technical knbekoat of Kirkman. "I wanted to show him wbo was boss." ------------------ The Foreman-Kirkman show was one-. ' sided righL ftom the start. Foreman, the unbeaten Olympic champion fr o m Hayward, Calif., battered Kirkman at wlll in the opening round , dropping )ljm with a left-right combination. Kirkman was up at three but then nbsorbed another barrage of punches which ended with 1'~oreman tugging him to the canvas again moments before the b<ll. Referee Art Mercante, who had warned Foreman about his shoving at the 1tart of the ro'l'nd. spqke lo him again at the bell fnd ·then took the round away from him ~ause of what ho called "Illegal tac-- tics." Foreman charged aner Kirkman again In the second round, landing a barrage of right! that stagg~d the ex·AAU champ. A stream or 11 consecutive punches Ctropped Klrkman flot on hl.s face and Mercante Jumped In to end the flghl The lime was 41 seConds of the second.round. "He's a good ,fighter," said Fortman, "I WU lucfl' lo get o!I ,fut .• "f Just aoo•t b<lievo It bappei\ed to me." s~ld K~kman. · "It happened so quick. He •urprlstd me, tle'a a lot faster than I thought'' . It was f'.orel)l8n 's 21st knockout kl ~ pro fights. Kiriman, who wu m•~ liis first appearance in the East, is U.2. ._ I I l ' I I .. 28 DAILY "LOT TtnwlQy, Nowmbtt 19, 1970 Newport Trio Heads ·All-county Teams Tar Tackle Lineman Of Year fr fr fr * fr * A ll-Oran ge Co unty Flrat Team Ofre.nse POI. Player E -Karl Killer er, Corona del Mar E -Rob Conrad, Katella • Newport Harbor High's Big T -Bob Eukovich. Loara Three o( Gtant Gelkt.r, Ron T -Craig Mortensen, .Ediloo Tripp and Bill Whitford led G -Ron Tripp, Newport Harbor G -Tim Reynolds, Orange Orange Coast area with lhrff c -Charlie Alvarez, Kennedy first team berths on ~e of· B -Mike Churchwarrl, Orange ficial All-Orange County prep B -,,_like Hixson, Los AlanUtos football team for 1970 as B -Jim Moxley, Edison B -Randy Cobb, Pacifica selected by the <mange County First Team Def ease Sport.rwrlters Aaloclation. E -FA JIQydey, Anaheim Gelker, a 2:36-Jlounder, a E -Tony Wright, Sanliqo standout offmsively and T -Wayne · Bootow, Sunny Hills T -Grant Gcilr.er, Newport Harbor defensively , was named MG-Art Fry, Loara lineman cl the year. LB-Marc Padbury, Tustin Whitford was a deftnSive LB-Bill Zimmerman, Servile secondary winner while Tripp LB-Rod Dreier, Kennedy was placed on the offensive B -Steve Monahan, Marina unit. B - Bill Whitford, Newport Harbor Edison High's Irvine League B -Mick Thissen, Kennedy champions garnered a pair ot Second Team Offeue first team berths .and two E -Norm Andersen, Anaheim more on the .second uni t. E -Tim Roberts, La Habra Thi? Chargers' Jim Alo1ley, T -Steve Kemper, Mater Del 1 second team choice last T -Pat Pryne, Saddleback year. captured .a backfiefd G -Bill Kristinat, Fountain Valley position along with tackle G -Richard Bohn, Bolsa Grande Craig Morten.sen. C -Terry Terrell, Anabelm Other firsl te11.m berth! for B -Kim Carlson, El ~toden..a 1 B -Frank Mazon, SavaMa Orange Coast area p ayers B -Garth Wlse, Huntington Beach were garnered by Kar I B _ Jerry HinoJ'osa, Edison Klllefer of Corona del Mar and Secoad Team Deftase Marina's Steve Monahan. E _ Paul Sandford. Orange Killefer waS" t)amed at end E -Pat Sweetland, Colla Meu while Monahan, the Sunsel T -Mike Sumpter, Kennedy League's back of the year, T -Charlie Pfeiffer, PacifJCa was placed in the secondary. MG-Mark DeHuff, Edison Edison 's ·second 1 e am LB-Jack Fielding, Sonora choices were quarterback Jtr· LB-Mau Kalati, Los Amigos !')' Hinojoea and linebacker LB-Scott ProkupchucJc. Fullerton Marie DeHuff. B -Bob Haupert, Maler Del Yt't. Cius 185 Sr. 185 Sr. 215 Sr. 218 Sr. 175 Sr. 185 Sr. JM Sr. 180 Sr. 143 Sr. 185 Sr. 175 Sr. 113 Sr. 226 Sr. 220 Sr. 220 Sr. 205 Sr. 175 Sr. 190 Sr. lllO Sr. 110 Sr. 185 Sr. 140 Sr. 161 Sr. 150 Sr. 205 Sr. 190 Jr. 190 Sr. 240 Jr. 201 Sr. 150 Sr. l!O Sr. 170 Sr. 170 Sr. 160 . Sr. 215 Sr. 185 Sr. 185 Sr. 180 Sr. 175 Jr. 190 Jr. 175 Sr. 170 Sr. 185 Sr. 170 Sr. Maler Del's tandem ol Bob B -Mark &cers, Rancho Alamitos Haupert and tack1e S~ve B -Curt 'l'bomu, Eltancia Kempa"gamtred l«Ond twn ----'---'-=====-----__::::__::.:.._ berth9 while. four other area playen: wtre accorded OOnora. E9tancla Higb's C u r t Thomas wat selected in the i. secondary, Costa Atesa's Pat :· SweeUand at defensive end, " Fountain V a 11 e y ' s Bill Kristinat at guard and Han- lingttu Beach's Garth Wise in the offensive backfield. Bact of the year laurels went to Orange High's M.lka Churchward w b 11 e Art Michalil<, who led Pacllica High out of the. depthg ..Pf depression to the ·Ga~ Grove League championship, iarnertd coach of the year ac· coltde!. Riverside Worries Hartman By CRAIG SHEFF. Of 1M DlllJ Pl"' lltff Saddleback College figares to 1et its stiffest de£ensiv1 challenge of the season Satur- day night wben the Gaucbo9 engage Riverside C1ty College (P.f .. the Ml!!islon Conference foOtball championship at Mlaslon Viejo High. That's the way Saddleback coach George Hartman sum- marizes lbe conference titanic. QB MIKE CHURCHWARD HANDS OFF. "Tbty (Riverside) have a very outstanding offense and their defense is better than any we've faced all season long. They beat Citrus (21-16) so we know they're good," aays Hartman. "'Ibey always seem to get real good f1eld position in most ol their a:ames. They've won • lot of games oa good punt and JUck returns. They do an out.tandinl job in the kicking 1ame department." Hartman readl.ly 1 g r e e s with Riverside coach Bob Dohr in saying that the team that make! the least amount of mistakes wUI win. 1be Gaucho coach says about eo percent of Riverside's offense Is keyed 1round its running game. "But they PliSS Ra I well also,'' he 1dds. Soddltback .... been •tress- ing Its offensive llile play In practice sessions lh1I week efte.r the Gaucho r;unnlng aamc ran Into a brick wall It Citrus last Saturday. Hartman was noticeably unhappy with lhe play of the o(fensive lint. Tbat wu the major reason why Gaucho tallback Toby l Whipple "'11.S held l.O only 49 .P't yarda J"Un-- ning as the two teama tied, 7· 7. It WU the flnt Ume this aeason Whipple bad failfd to reach the 106-yard pl1ttall. Whipple bu rushed for 1,111 yardl lbls year ln 211 carrtta. He's alto sc ored 10 touchdownl. 1tis two -y e 1 r MJ1hln1 total is 2,73' -thus he need& 2$1 yards to bit !l,000. .. I . Orange Signal-caller Does It All-and Well By PHIL ROSS Of ... DlllJ' Pllfl Sleff Quarterb ack Mike Churcbward has put the sprint into the sprintout. The Orange Panthers' signal caller, who leads his 8-0-1 team against Estancla's Eagles in the first round of the CIF AAA playoffs Friday night at El Modena High, is 11 legitimate JO.O swiftie who finished fourth and fifth ln the Crestview League 220 and 100- yard dash finals last sprinit"' However, lately the ~9. 160- Pound senior has been more renowned u a tormentor ol unbeaten orange's Crestview opponent!, all of whom were vlcUmlzed throughout t h e se1900 b)' coach VI n c e Dev~ney's Panthers. When Churchward has been ~t the controls tht Panthers have provtn virtually unstop- pable. To wit: the caly black m.11rk on the Oranae slate thil Iall is a 1~14 lie against an upstar1 La Habra eleven In a pre1taspn tilt tnd Churthward missed that entire contest. The mild mant>Prtd senior (Deveney claims he's nf\•er heard Churchward use a 11ngle profane word in three year1 on the Panther varsity) hl.3 piled up over 1,SOO yards total offense and is making a shambles or posl s easo n honors. Earlier this week he was tabbed as the Crestview 's back ol the year and today Cburchward ls being honored as back ol the year on the official All-Orange County se. Iections. Deveney describes him as perhaps the easltst player he"s had to coach and pro- bably the best runne.r who 's ever called signals for the Panthers. Past Orange quarterbltking greats like PauJ Lemotac and Gary Wann were more famoua for thelr passJng skUls. Deveney has no qualms when he rtfers to the one single individual who puts the most pep into the Panthers' I set offense. "~like is definitely the cog \\ilich makes U3 go. There's no question about that," says the Panthers' head ntentor v.·ho alao speclallzes In tutoring tht OrMge bacJcflcld and especially h is ata.r quarterbt:ck. "He has such ar e.at knowledge i nd IUCh I good feel of lhe game 1h11t J permit ~like to call most or hi1 pl11ys In the huddle .. But he's alwaya \\'illing lo take advicl! from me though," adds Deveney. . Defense Key Asset To Sailors The potent defensive CCl'J>S of Newport Harbor High School's football team, which has shu t out five foes and limited nine opponents to an aggregate total of 40 points, has been primarily respoasible for the SaJlors' annexation of the Sunset League title and a berth in the CJF AAAA playoffs. Coach Ernie Johnson's Blue Wave meets Citrus Be 1 t League champion Redlands Friday night at Redlands University in the first rolltld of the eliminations and Johnson Diredlons Go aortb OD Newport .. Rlvenkle FrMway to Su Bernard.lno Freeway. Proceed cast oe Su Beraard l•• Freeway to Ualvenlty Street turnoff in Redlands. 'J'Urn left on University Street, 10 north. Redlands Unlvenlty Is located on rlgbt Jriand tide at aecondl stop tip. says his team will win or lose en the strenrth of his team'• overall defensive prowess. "We don't have any 1upet weinies running around for U! and that's fortunate becaUJe sometimes that can cause you problems "Ron Tripp probably sum· med it up as good as anyone when he called our defense, 'eleven desperate dudes'," says JohnSfA'l . The defensive stalwarts ror Newport inclUde tackles Grant Gel Jeer (Orange Co u n t y' t lineman of the: year) and Ter-- ry Albritton, ends Jim Swick and Randy Hamilton and mid· dleguard Eric Stricker. The linebackers are Ron. .J Tripp and: Scott Schaefer along with roverbacJc Taras Young, The backs are Mike Mot!, Phil Metzger and' Bill WbiUonl and Grif Amles. ''Taru has really done the job for us defensively at roverback. But none: of them are tuper players. They just operate well a~ a cohesive unit," says John90n. "I'm pleased and proud of our team, it's been a good ex· perience"'for them to work as bard as they have and to 1et the rtwards. "I preach llOOlld here that the answer to most of our prir blems isn't a case of ronning a committee and running down everything. "You have to work to im- prove things and I'm really thrilled for our players - they've hacked it oot. Good defense has kept us alive." Several key playel'3 have been hampered with minor in- juries and could see limited duty against Redlands. Defi.nitety out for the Blue. jackets Friday night is guard Dennis Durgan with a knee in· jury. Slated to replace him is trther Stricker or John Har· rison on offense. The defensive system is a S.- 2 with a rover and regardless of the opposition'' attack. Johnson's forces stay in it along with individual varia· lions. Kona Hex Still Ali ve The 300-game hex at Kona Lanes is still alive. Pat Heisler of Costa fl.lesa was the latest to feel the jinx. 1'1rs. Heisler, bowling in the daytime Kona KiUens league. rolled nine strike! before feel· ing the jinx in the lotb frame. Sbe settled for a 277. A 206 opening game topped her previous best. She also had a 183 for a 666 total. She came into the series with a 136 average. Jt has been early 35 months since 1 300 game has been recorded at Kona Lanes. . Nothing Bowl Tilt = For GWC ::. . Fearjng a mental Iet4owti, coach Joe Goldin ii preparing bi> East Los Angeles City , College Huskies for a "oothbte ·- bowl" showdown witb tht· Golden West Rustlers Saldi". , day night at Orange Coi~ · College. .. 1be Huski.es, like t h.o Rustlers, are f-4 for O.C season and the winner SatUr· .. day will be able to boast af .i · winning season. That's a!L ·~ . 1''Jbis is the first week 'ffe .. • haven't been playing wiLb :;i . chance at the Sou t be riJ· California Conference cbam· pionship," Goldin says. "I'm afraid our kids lmiy· have a mental letdown Pit they st.ill remember last yeir when we Jost to Golden West. We're fearful ol them tnd ~t boy (CharUe) Bucklalll8 is pi-0.. bably the best running backirr· the conference." In comparing the two team~ further, Goldin feels both rely . on a running game more than , an aerial attack. "When you have a grt<ilt back like Buckland, there is .a tendency to rely on the run- ning game more. Golden West is like us, more of a runnini team." . • .. · The Huskies boast a 226--· pound fullback in HarveJ" Powell and a 205-poua·d · tailback in John Brasfield. • • Both are lettermen from last · year's squad. Powell is tbt leading rusher for the HuskiM this season \\'ilh Brasfield close behind. Brasfield played behind UCLA's Jimmy Jonfs in the Huskie backfield las\; season. · .,_ · Goldin feels the Huskies were a young ball club '.'at• season's outset and that tbty made qllite a few mistakes. . SUNNY HILLS' JUNIOR QB WHIZ, GARY CARTER. "At this point in the seaso~ however, nobody has a YoVi-if club anymore. We lost soWi.t close ones but still had a shot at the liUe until Rio HonPo beat us l.ast week. •. Edison Test s Strong Arm "I thought Golden West W.s the team to beat in the ciin- ference before it started. They are a solid team and we will have to play our best ia.mt;' te beat them.'' '· ·· · Lancer Quarterback T1irows Bullets John Schnebeck, ··a freshman, has taken over U.. By ROGER CARLSON Of t111 ~Ir, Plllt Sti ff Sutny Hills High provides: the opposition In .Edison's CIF AAA football opener a t Westminster High F r i d a y nigh t and the Lancers possess a classy aerial attack behind the strong arm of junior quarterback Gary Carter. Carter, a 6-2, 190-pounder, throws with unerring accuracy and his passes are extremely hard to intercept because or the velocity he puts on them. And if one instance during the year is an indication or just how fast he is, Edison might be well advised tG defense the Lancer whiz with shields, rocks and bottles or whatever else the Chargers can get their hands 011. Here's how Sunny 1-fills coach Bob Schoner describes his triple threat ace: "His passes are quick and fast. l--le put one of our ends out of a game with ·a pass. Split erid Cone Chamberlain lS-7, 134-pound junit;N") caught the ball but they had to carry h.lm off the field. He took about two steps after catching it and fell do"'"· "Carter just about cut him in hair on a look in pattern. And he can change pace. ffe can lob it over the linebacker as \\'tll." says Schoner. 'l'he Lancers' ace has com· pleted 79 of 1•1 attempts for 56 percent, 1,160 yards and 10 touchdowns. He's also tallied seve11 TDs running while toti ng the ball 429 yards tn 94 carries. He"s a first team All Free\vay selection after mak· ;ng seoond team as a Carter operates In a sprint. quarterback position but isn't. the passer his predecess.oi' sophomore. out lYJ>e of attack from the Chris Jaramillo was for tll!' Too, the Sunny Hills flash La , I r t' Huskies. · • beats the opposition with hisf-="::"'::"::·....:.po::.w::.•::r__:_·::•::.rm::::•::•0::"::.·----------- foot. He has a pair of field goals to his credit, kicks PATs with accuracy and is the team punter with a 4-4-yard average. The Lancers ~·ere put do\\'n only once during the season . losing the Freeway title to Kennedy, 13-7. Sunny Hiiis dis· dained its passing game in the first half of that one and could not recoup against t h e Fighting Irish's tough defense. Poll Drops .. Gaucho s Saddleback College's foot· ball team has been dropped to the No. 14. position in the latest Jist of top 2Q teams in the na- tion compiled by JC Grid· Wire. Saddleback was raled ninth last \\'eek. Bakersfield remained atop the standings. although lhe Renegades drew a bye lnst ~·eek. Reedlev moved from fifth to second and Fullerton fell from third to fourth. Pol. Cellttt I. Blkorsfltkl t. RH<ltev l. Fl, Scott, ''""· '· Fulle"'°" s.. Mt•1. Arlr. 1, Cll1bot 7. NE Olc!alloml I. Wttl VlllfY '· N1v1rro, Tt r, 10, Rt'ltwood3 11. Ar!~ Wtlltr" 1'. St:Quola~ lJ. GrtYI H1rb0r, W11h. I(. Stddlebltll U. G1vl!1n lle<I<• Ph ..Ml JU ''°"° 1S4 lo+t 713 1.0.0 7ll t.0.0 }jl) 1-0.1 7d 1·1·0 7f0 ·~ 71' •·t.O rn 1.0-0 rn 7·1·0 ,,. 1-1-0 n1 •. ,..., ni ,_., n• t.0.0 71• -. !. • .. -· • ,,. j i e ,J .. I · i i &. Mesans Get Jump Today CIF Polo Playoffs Begin Costa A1esa High got a jump on the baJance of the neld in the second round of the ClF water polo playoffs, having met Whittier at Oran1e Coast College th.is afternoon. The rest e1f the entrants In the eliminations get under \\'&Y Friday with· Corona de1 Afar and Newport llarbor, the top two seeds in the playofl1, 1e1- Ung their first '"" of 1970 playoff action. Corona del !.far'a No. I Sffd· td Sta Kings, undefea{ed ln 19 tries this year and possessors of 42 In a row over two years, wlll be startina their bid for a second str:aight. CJF cbam- pionsblp against Crestview League champ Foothill ln UC Irvine's pool al 3 p.m. Newport Harbor's Sunset League titlists meet Cal lligh al La Serna 1-ligh. Opening sprint is at 3. Corona de! ?>.I a r ' s cen· frontalion '''ith Foothill ~ a rematch with the Knights. Tbe Irvine League powers ripptd the Kn ights In non-league bat· tie, 7·1, ond have allowed only -40 goals to 19 defeated foes. Newport bas also bad prior competition with Ila second· round fat, slapping the San Gabriel V11;lley League Con· dors around in the first non· league game of the season, II· 3. Whittier"s only prior taste or Orange Coa:st area com· petition \\'as against Corona del ~far. losing 14...t. Semifinal matchei; v.·ill be held al f\fillikan and Lakewood Highs 1\1esd<1y arten)()On. J'rllt '" Ctl!ltt Foott!lll "' (0<'61• ltf'I ~tr •I UC INIM (tff(ftlll V11lt• ti Mlrt C01t1 I!-•t DllWMY Oll'W" OllWI II S~ Hlllt Ntwll0'1 H1rbor YI (ti H!tltf 1! ~ h•M El klUllOO 11 ll~.wood LI Pvtl'llt I t U•1flld , ... ,..,... sc- ''°'!1111 1. Fulltrroio S Crp,.;111111 v111.., 11. "'" M1rlne , Bvtn• Jl, C•f)flllo ! Otrft,. OrO'I• I, At14"'rl"' I Cl! Hii i! 11. ill.ctl11'11h 10 ,.1 St<jiUndo 16, PINK Vtrdtl I LI P~fl!• U, Vt1fl'Cll 1 Wllllllt r ._ s.,..11, t " $5~ USHER'S GREEN Sl'RIPE Since 1853, lhc !W1lllll liglu Scoleh Glf•·wr•pped at no urra co1c. • .. ' j It v never loot bl ...... The whiel'I Mesa, ates.1 N,. lhe .S AA/Ji And are se Co" cllJuul No. J Mesa' No.'3 Meo Mat:i the th ~ - Ing ·I>' wi ns< Coron1 the fir Coac B-1 ·ru ...;.,, round. F.dis in the. Frida) ~IMI here heir Ur perenn tAslo · M< LeagUt And . pion.s~~ Mari ever ; lhrOUll ( A !ju Gart dil'id 0r.n playt clu'Si1 ball Th< tallb' on J~ • Mari was : an f. Coo Sani1 yard COl11I T,j MOil! total• Ing ~ Se< Edi st pass( 380 ,, Ma Haur scori by~ cia, • -1 .... • •• • 4 I •• " r " .. .. "' .. iii :1 • l .. .... ;, I. ?i ,.,., I 11nct11 J. MD• G. SJI! H•:r.~ ,.,., n. ··-'"""' ...... ...... Ftr,;z " '"' . Ml•, ·~-·-Nllne ·-·~· P. NO' W# """" 'nloll mom Colin' °" ' CllOf, San-I Coast . Area Preps Enjoy Fanrostic Success ¥ear Jt would appear the Orange Coast area has: never had it so good as the present with football, water polo and cross country SUC• ceSSes across the area. Tfle Newport.Mesa Unified SChool District, which encompasses Newport Harbor. Costa Mesa, Corona del Mar and Estancia, domin-- ates-. the agenda. Newport's football team is co-champion ot the .~~ League and faces Red1arids in AAAA play, , And, the Sailors' water po!O champion.! i re seeded second in lhe playoffs. Corona de! Mar's 1969 water polo CIF thampio~. meanwhile, are undefeated and No. J seeded in the playoffs while Cost.a Mesa's Mustangs are two notches back at No. '3 seed. Me~ 's ci;-ew ~as runnerup to Corona del Mat. .m Irvine Circles, yet is still considered the ~d best threat to annex the CIF ·tiUe. A~d Estancia H.igh's football team, show~ 4.----- :ROGER ~ARI.SON --=.= ---- ing .poise and savvy tn come-from-behind wins -over Costa Mesa, Fountain Valley and Corona del Mar, is in the AAA playoffs for I.he first time ever. Coach Phil Brown's talented crew finished S.I, ·nmnerup to champion Edison in the Ir· vihe:beague. It plays Orange in tt.<:? first round •. Edison's Chargers (9'-0) are the No. 2 seed In the.AAA playoffs and will host Sunny Hills Friday night. t11Mina holds the balance of cha'mpionships here coach Jack Rowan's Vik_ings became heir· to the cross country championship from perennia l Sunset litlist Westminster, and at 'Cos'8.Mesa. Mesa came through with another Irvine League cross country title. And,success didn't stop just with the cham· pions: Marina's football team posted its first,.. eve::.f"inning season; Westminster came thr~ with four straight to avert a disas· trout sea'Sk; UntvenHy High posted a wlft. ning (5-3) seaaon in tts first year of fO<tball; Fountain Valley chalk~ up five straight wins and a winnipg season; and Corona del Mar, despite an unlnspiring 3-6 overall.mark, gave everyone lits.. , Mater Del, with a 7·2 slate. had ils best season since 1966:-And San Clemente came through with a winning year, copping five ol nine decisions. * * * Look for Editoa Hlglt. to contintt to be a dominating tactor la football ~or some time to come. Tile CQra:en• mailman team was u11.beaie11 and blanked efglit of nine foes. And their aopllomore. team compiled a 7·! mark. * * * Corona del Aiar's sophomore football team posted a.even straight to capture the Irvine Litle. * * * How about ViUa Park Higb's rootball ae ... '°" for closies? Tbe Spartans dropped decl· 11ion by scorts of ZJ-18 and 17-15 while win- ning, 1>13, 16-13 and 16-15. * * * SL Joachim School or Costa Mesa s~'epl to a 10.0 regular season in flag football under coach Rick Janisse. His team enters playoff action Sunday (4 p.m.) at St. Justins School. lt outscored 10 opponents, 277·62. His wife, Judy, tutored the girls volleyball team to a league title to keep pace. * * * Clartnce H. Schutte, the man who guided Santa Barbara lfigb to gridiron pronilnence fnlm 1921 to 1951, died at age 69 recnUy. ms leams made the CIF football finals eigbt times in that span, winning the '35, '38 and '40 dUts. His two most famous playel'fl were Eddie Mathews (IMS) and Al Geiberger (pro golle.r). The Dons played a free lance schedule during that era almost ei:clusively a& bome. * * * Costa Mesa High football coach Max hfiller Is recovering satisfactorily after a two.day hospitalization for removal of a small tumor in his arm. Oil City's Wise Captur~s __ Area Prep Rushing Title ?'°2.112 4 4 LO 0 Pl PC Pl Y4t 1(1. 116 a.. 10 1,252 .4n ' ' ' 4 .150 W'letbow~kl Andrt --. Fl!e!Tt 1Ce .. 1er Tibor " 111 '·' 11 'lfll4 3.00 SO 41 C.I 6 6 !'Cl 3.l !! l1J.SO Pl PC II Yllt PCI. Jj"untington Beach Hlgh's Garth Wise captured the in· di-Wdual rushing title for Or8ge Coast area p re p playtrs following the ron- cru'~on of regular season foot· ball play. Ottltl' scor1n1: l<UIMr 30. llict1 le, Flynn '· Fln,ue 105 21 I lit .:JU Tibor I O o 000 .000 The 0 i I e r quarterback· tailback chalked up 893 yards on 1'4 carries for 5.1 average. Marina High's Joe Ventimiglia was.second with 811 yards and an ~.o average. ~ona de! Mar's Keith Samuels led in total passing yardage with 1,252 yards on 84 completions. Toltal offense leader is Steve Mon_ahan of Marina, who totaled 1,5 15 yards (1,040 pass- ing Md 475 running). SeCond in that category is EdiSi:ln's Jerry Hinojosa, who passed for 1,120 and ran for 380 to hit the 1,500 mark. Mater Dei Hlgh's Bob Haupert was the individual scoring leader with 62 followed by Monahan's 59 and Estan- cia'\.Lee Friedersdorf at S2. TO P I• ltUSftlJllG f'hl ... •pllltf' ltb llTI IYf 1,,, , Hunlinolllll .-';;· llCll 114 1, 1m10'1i9, Marl1111 101 l'I) !.1 111 1.0 ICl'l 5.S 680 4.l '05 6.0 51' 3.1 51J 4.J 505 $.t $31 5.4 ,,J •.t :s. • Mhslon v11111 lu ... ,,COl!l1• ~.. 143 S. t I.IS, Wetlmlnlt~r 101 I , EdltOM 152 .. ·~ .. • !U. E~1Mll 117 Caron• de1 M•r 92 · , Maler Del 9' n, 'MllrlN 112 TOP S P'ASStNO Pl IC .i Ylll Pd~ 116 M 10 l ,2St ,471 119 6t 5 1,120 ,$21 ' 110 51 11 1,0(I .527 .. t1111tla 1 tt &l 1 1,M ,n1 '· ~ .. :)teitmfn. lJl 6' 111 t3' .49 • 4 sco•1NG t. t4iu111rt !Ml'ler Dell 62, 1. ,,,...... to•n 4,..,.•lnal \9, 3. Fl'led,rlodoi"I ce .. t1nelt1 n, 4. TllOmes 1e,11nc:111 so. $. MO::lltllY (E!lltonl, Hlnolosa IEdl1an), G. ll:Jldl (Edl,on), Scflulll !EJl111(.l1), H•rbfltld (Fou~lf!n V1UtYI 1nd wtae Olll(!nnoion BePCto) '43 ffdl, 11. WM!e INfWll(lrf H1rbor) 41, U, Sl'ltl4on !Ml"'° Dell 1n!I Ctll (UrM~!l'I'! AO Mdi-1'-Mllff (CO,_ cltl Mir) Ind Mdf(Mt (MIMlon Via-fol 3t t.cfo. 16. Feuf"9 (CCl!'l)n& ~1 M11l. Htrnln!let fl''°"'"'"'" Valley), W1\k1r (Unlv«s!IY) 11111 MHdocks tW11tmll'llllrl .U eldl. C.,_ •t Mw 4HI •111~1 ... k!J 111'1 IYt 1'-,, sos 5.4 31 IOI 47t 4.3 36 ,.,11.2 • 11 '3 J.I 0 55 ,, 0.1 12 4 23$..111 P4'e Wees Play N~rt-Mesa's Junior Pee Wef Chargers, underealed and Dnl!Cored upon, will battle the Tusttn Antelopes ~turday ~ng at 11 ror the Orange CotiPb' cb11mpionshlp. c,ich Bob Gilbert's ~gers will meet T\Jstin at Saa-?Jemente lligb School. """ Schoellttr ... 111 """' l<•lam1 H11111erford lomboy Kul!Hlr.1 Mfl"1" .. .. , ,_, .... Rk1rdo 01me11 Artllur P'llllnt lcl1> nYI IYI Pll 143 "° 4.7 lO 26 1M 6.3 6 2' I'll 3.1 ' n 72 J.I 12 12Sl4.l6 15•7.70 '' 32 1,6 6 I 2 2.0 0 l 1 1.0 ' J I 0 3 0 I ./t ./t.O 0 • ·10 ·1.1 0 l ·IS ·lS.0 21 10 ... , ·'·' 0 14 .., ·1.1 ' ... l'C pl ,,, ,.Cl. 01r~ll SI 72 10 27t .'31 Artllur 37 15 t lll •.OS Senlk n 6 2 7' .•62 Wall 52 1 U.4()(1 Oiiier $COrlnt: KttlY 12. Tetm 2. Mo•ley Hlnolos• T. McNIY Wllon M. l91lcll Funkt , Smllll Timmer~~ Kl-r G. Bl'lcll 8-•d Guile S. McN1y H1nnon Efh.,. f'-4) R1n111111 P'•111111 lcb llYI IVI pl~ J52Sn3.14 93 J.eO 4.0 " 12 lit ,_, 24 12177.20 f6S7.S O 13 60 '·' 32 13423.20 4184.50 I 9 9.0 6 177.0 oll 113.SO 362.00 I 5 5.0 o s ·10 ·2.0 ' N l'C pl y" Kl. Hlnol0!4 lit '2 J l,120 .521 Harmo" H ' t 117 .u.. T, McNl"f 2 2 O 13 I.ODO 80t1rd I 1 o t I.GOO Otlltr IC'Or!nt: Fliher 36. Team 1. Sth11!lt Tllom1s Ol•on Killer ""'" Ttrr!n 'l:obertlO~ ..,. e.,,nen W•o~r JOYct Conlo;rvn LDO•cloll .. ..,. lell E1tt111;ll ! .. 1) . ltvllllflt P'111Jnt kll 11r1 •v1 ,,_ 121 J7l 1.5 .. lOl JlJ l.D SO ~ 150 5.1 11 2' n t 1.S 1' 32 ISO 4.1 0 ' "' 4.t 0 1l J3 2.t 0 216 4.00 4 16 •.O l 1115.56 ) 10 3.l 11 I 10 J0.0 0 4 I 2.0 I ' ' 1,0 6 , ., •1.0 0 pt IC pl Yllt Kl, Tl\cWlas IU 62 11,0olO .$5.1 Moort ' 2 1 " .olOO Loo>CIO~ 4 1 O 14 .'50 Oll>er 1uorf"'' Frl.atrsoorf 52, C1rpenrer 7, l •o-6, v.n Vl•l'Wfl 6, SllOrts ,, Ttam 2. l"lllMtln Vltlty {J.-4) .,.,., ... Mc:tte"rre H1rbflfld S. Mohu11kl StPlllVHI sntbt11 -~ $(111sf """ ""' MOllUl1kl l(rl1trna1 V1rMY Mt1.mltl' , ....... tel ""'' •¥• 111 66 lll 5,1 I " 360 5.1 • •5 ~ 5.51'1 65 H3 1.l 11 41 lot t.6 • 11 1''·'' 10 "° 6.0 ' 3'1'90,76 1141.40 I t t.t 0 4 1 1.1 ' 1 5 s.o 0 Oll>er ltOl'lM: Johnson J, Moorman I. KatsfYl•nl 1 Venllmioli• Monan.n Mtrrl!t Hirai• ClmoO!ll H•rn1ndt<1 Ha~perl Simpson Wolklt,.lct '"' SMl-0 . N1rv M••llndtl! Clou1111 Mtrlftl 15-41 •u.t11111 ,111ln1 ICb ftY• IYt Ifs 101 Ill 1.0 lll IU 415 4.2 St ;, 211 3.S • 74!!.16 1 -1 -1.0 (I 2-'·2.04 Pl IC Pl Yfl PU. 110 5' 11 1,0tO .i21 Miier 0.1 O·J R111111no P'IHln• tell ftYt IYI Ill 9' 531 S.• !' 9& ,.o ,_5 ' s, 415 7.6 J2 n !'l 1.1 2• 31 :19 6.4 ,0 2 ... ·2.0 0 2 ·10 .s.o ' 12 ~ .... , 0 Pl f< II Y•t Kl • Wll\1! 11, JO ' "" .410 Oll>tr seorlM: Whl!fora 12. Amin • $cNrier 6. Swl~k 6. Sin c;llmeiite (J..t) Rullllnt C1""°"'1 McN1mar1 Jerrttt ~~ Uribe. llov~r Sor1nama11 "•1!11 M11!den ""' Sh1rk1 le~"'' 1¥• 111 101 .ell ~.2 24 67 HJ 4.l 12 3S 1Vl 5.1 20 4J 111 ,_, 11 Mo 101 J.6 11 " 'l 4,0 u 5 1 l,0 0 l''·5 B l l1':80 ' :l ' 2 ·1 ·l 0 Thursday, No~mbff 19, 1970 DAILY PILOT 27'. Pro <;_~ge Standings SD . Big, Tough~-Tucker ... .......... (.,.,_ Allllltk Ol't'lti.11 Wt11 l•t ,Cl, Ot Nl'W Yori< " • .llC fl'lllllcitlPllll " ' ·"' •• '""" • • ·'" ' aun•lo ' " <:fl!lrlf oi·v11h111 ,Jll '" Btlllmor1 " • ·'" Clncln,,,.!I ' " .29• ' Allanlt • " . >W ,, . (lfvtlltl'ld ' " .C.!O 1Cb Wtl19r~ C""lw1tn<1 Ml~nl OIYli.ioll Mltwaul<H " ' ·"' Slx weeks ago Orange Coast College football coach Dick Tucker didn't give his team much of a chance at winning more than two games ln the entire 1970 season. "After we lost to LA Harbor I was just hoping we'd be able to win twQ. No way did I think we'd win as many as we have.'' like we have you tiave to feel better. When you start slow and finish fast it shows that the guys have character • "We're twice as good as [ thought we 'd be when the season started. When we started we just bad too many new faces. But the way it's working out, we're probably as good as anybody. 29-12 and alter watching tbe films of that one l'm not so sure tbe wrong team won. And Cerritos Just bung on to beat them in tbe final (\uarter. They're a bell of a.lot better than they were last year." Tucker has a lot of praise for a couple of individuals on Ute San Diego te am. "This Molina (Bob) kid is a fin~ receiver. He reminds you a lot of Vataha (Randy). He's quick and he can really run . , when he gets the ball." MolJna bas a big edge In the conference 'p 111 receMng category. He's caught SO this season for &48 yanh and five touchdowns. "And that Jones (Robert) kid is one of the better running backs in the conference," adds the OCC coach. Tucker 11ays he plans no lineup changes for the season finale. 0.!r1)/I " ' cn1c11111 " • Pll0tnllc " • .. ,, ' . m '" ..~ .. Since that Joss to Harbor, the Pirates have rebounded to win five of six games -and they are solid choices to make it six out of seven Friday night against. winless San D~go City College at LeBard Stadium. But Tllcker isn't about to take San Diego lightly. He figures the Knights will be sky high for Friday night's gamei--------------------- -undoubtedly trying to get ,.---------------------. ,.inc 01~11r.r. Loi A111,111 " • ,71' Sa" Fr1nclKO " • . ... Sttlll1 ' • ... San OIMo • " .•W Portltnd ' " .>» w111..u-,•1 Rtwlls PMladtlplllt 113, New York 104 S111 Francisco l'O, Boston H Oile190 12L Clr>ctn111tl 101 Porlllnd 1"6, Alltnlt 131 Miiwaukee 111, San or.vo lll Balllmore 111, c11vtl1nd M ,Only ''""" acllt!lultd. TodlT'I Otmll Phott1hf ti Oell"Ofl Cl'l(:ln!'Wll( 11 New Yr-<11 Los An9tltl I I Seal!I• On!Y 11mn scheduled. ... ' ' ' • l(tnlUCk1 V1r9lnl1 New York Ftorldl•m P1!ti.DUf'911 C1rollN Et H 01¥!1!on Wo~ Lill " ' " . . ' . " . " 4• 12 P'c!. Ga .n1 - .6J1 I"• .533 l"' .4H 5 'W11I Ohl1len ·"' , ~-. 11 3 .l()(t U1ah lndlaOA MM>plllS Oenvtr l•••s U 6 .667 I'• ' • .600 l 11 .161 I 2 II ,1~ t WedftHflY'I •nults M..nl'l\11 IU. Pl!!l.tlurth 111 Florl!ll1ns Ill, Vlrgl"la 11} ICe"luckY 121, C1ralln1 111 lncllana 119, Oenver lU Onlr 11m~• 5CheGvl.ct. Taclly'1 G•rntt Ffor!Olll'IS It MM>PMs ,. ••• ~ It Uta~ Only ffll'I" Kllodu1ed. Frl4tY'l Glntlf New YOl'li; II O...vtr 1(1<1111di;Y n. C1rol1!11 1t Grte!l>lborO. H.C. Vlrglnl1 at l'Utsburell lndlll'UI al T!llls "We're not going to pat ourselves on the back until it's all over with. If we win this week it'll be a most gratifying season," says Tucker. "Anytime a team improves their first victory of the season. I "They are a darned good football team and rm not kid· ding. They've got some big, tough guys, "Santa Ana only beat them 14·7, and they lost to Fullerton Rustler Runners Bid For Trip to State Meet Golden \Vest College's cross country team bids for a berth in the state JC meet Friday \vhen it runs in the Southern California championship at Moorpark College. Coach Tom Noon's Golden \Vest Rustlers must place in the top five to earn a trip to the state meet the following 111eek (Nov. 27), also at h-1oorpark. The Rustlers' Terry McKeon, undefea ted t h i s season, figures to get his stif- fest test of the campaign. Top individuals in the meet include Moorpark's Ken Gerry i and Dave Brown of LA Valley. El Camino won t h e 1 ~1etropolitan conference title,! but second place LA Valley 1 (two-time state champ) is a slight choice to go all the way this year, Other members of Golden West team include St.eve Varga, Jack McQuown, Steve Lassegard. Ken Hurst, Dick Priest and Dave Hen· derson. PRICED LOW AT ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS HONORED w ith t l'Ht·in. plui fed.,.•I ellCIM tt:x of It.to per th •• 40,000 MILE GUARANTEE BRAKE RELINE save$2~~ R(Al ~IPPIN' Wlfl!KlV ,~t IN~OAUDN~ J,Pf(JAU UMllED 01'Ell •• ,,,., )Mo(' •IJ21fl • Rugged 4-ply nylon cord • Good traction and skid resistance • Good mileage at a low price Sizes Whitewall Blackwall F.E.T. 7.00-13" $16.60 $10.95 $1.90 7.75-14 18.25 15.45 2.17 8.25-14 20.55 17.75 2.33 5.60-15' 17.15 14.45 1.58 7.75-15 18.25 15.45 2.19 8.25-15 20.55 17.75 2.36 8.55-14 22.20 -2.53 8.55-15 22.20 -2.57 ., ply-4ply ...... USE OU R RAIN CHECK PROGRAM , B.F.Goodrich wlD 11et vou the tire you W3"t. Should we run out of vour m. Cfurlnti thi~ offer. we will be h•ppy to is5ue you• rain chec:tand order your tite et tile advertiled prict 101 future delfvery. JONES TIRE SERVICE XJOtlt b11;-r,m, ···:-·~ M 24-26 2049 HARBOR BLVD. lat Bayl COSTA MESA 646·4421 PH NU 1100 N. TUSTIN AVE. ORANGE 532·3383 ' BFG d . MA~Ull M UFllAftll llA.DIAL TillU ..,,OC#J '"' •NOC..O •i lflO,,,. 01t Tl#M .. ALT. ,•. .•·. ·' ... ' .. . ' .. . . . : . .•. • .... I f l::""''i"':=" ~-:;-.·.:--. -/;If',,. -· r· .. .--. rr -..,.,...,.---~ . ·---. -.-----~ --.-~--... • • • ,_e~p CAILY PILOT I J:•4 Start ,., ... ••• . •• Your . ' .. . •' . ... , . .. . --. ·Engines! ' . • .. , . -. . ,, ·-. ' ' . . .. by Deke Houlgate . ' .. " - " " ... ... .: ~ : Darbir a meel al U..1 Dn1 SUip la Ille Loo AqeJq Bal' . • bar area Ille alller nip~ Sno" bll a top speed of Ill.ff m.p.b., • "''·' 1a readiJ& dlat wu unbtard of a year qo. Fut elapiled lime at Oranl(e Couty Raceway for a big hnny car meet two weells ago wu t:7t sec., a time that feW drag1ter1 can equi1 even .; ...... Coday. • • ' · Snow enjoys the race to be fint wlllt tbe lat.en •• a f4HUle · ~:· GI die brain.I." " .... ' "We've all come to the ultimate," lie ..W. ''Fauy can Uve drapter bodies, drH so great )'Gii cu't lml&tae, eng:lna u bil nd stroq · u you need. To win, yoa bave &o do tome eap. aeerin1." One lwullcap la dn& nclDg iJ tbe Jatt of qaaHfted ltelp, , be aald. Soow'• only crewman recently left him to IOlve Ids on . ·' domesUc crlala created by the uni venal rac1D1 dlltmma -too macb Umt any from bome. Snow, a blcbelor, 1ympaWzed ud 11tat tbe meelaulc en :bis ••1 wt .. Ids bloulag. • · "lt'1 almod tmpouflJle lo find IO!Qebody w1to11 pt u ID- • .• · leral ..... 1otai lo lllay," -nlleeted. "0.llle-job lraJn. • • • . l.n1 II om. U 1" lll:ve Co tr'lln a mu. u IOOll aa lie pU 1eod · ·~-.·be II 1otn1 to leave you. I've &oUea over tbe yean IO tlslt l do • ':.~--· all die ttcludcal stv.tf myself." , .... ~ ' .... ' ~· . . . Good lneome From Drag Raclllff ' . :: • ;:··. Snow upects lo gross at leul fl!S,000 thb year from drag • •" • racing, an activity that started out e.Jght yeara ago as an ad· • ·:· : junct "' hlJ used car buslnelS In Ft. Worth, Tex. "l've always k>ved can," be said. 1"Wben I COJ. lnto the car buslneu. 1 used IO alle a car oil lhe back of my lot, tun. ll up .and take It out 10 lhe drag strip. I usually woo, and when I did I wouJd sell it wilhin a week. "This give my bus1DeSI a hlgb performance Image, until today people come from out ,of town to buy cars from my lot." Incidentally, Snow admits to having a preference about which side of tre track to race on. .• "I feel more comfortable on the right side," he said, "It Is ".:~.'.'.the same with a lot of racers. You drive on the right aide of the street, and you naturally prefer the rlgbt side of the track." -~ That's what Gary Gabelich said after 1etting hia land speed 'record in the "Blue Flame" rocket car. Instead of driving dowl'I -~· · the middle of the black line that marks the course at Bonne--• t. viii, Utah, Gabelich dro"' IO lhe r1ibl of il .. !' •• .. Omlnou Note fOf' RRlllfl .. At the 1adoul preu preview of tbt Colt ta San Franclsco, "l Dodge general manager Robert B. Mc:Carry MaDded a no&e that may be ominous for r.cing, and a company 1poke1maa cot:1· Hrmed reporta tut Dodge wW cat back drastically oa Its auto :-.:,., racing part!clpatlon la 11'71. .-~· , McCur:ry apla(ned his compaay's clecbloa to Jump lllto the ·minl~r market with tlrie Colt in tbelfl tenm: "We note that many more YOWll people are more interest- ed in wbethtr tbe car bu an FM rldlo than Ill wbat size lbe enlfne Is. ~ note tbat more people are inluelttd in what the guolhte mileage 11, and that Ute car caa ue refQlar htel, tbu in bow fut tbe car accelerates fro1P 1ero to M m.p.b." • • Rtadlng betwttn lbe lines, that means, "Ei:pect a de-tm- ••. pUJl1 on raciog by ibe auto compulea nei:t year." Detroit manufacturers heavily tavolvtd In racing (Ford, Dodge, Plymouth and American Moton) bave r1Honalized their "'. • • expenditures on a bid to capture the youth marktL McCurry • • speculated that young car bayen are more conscious of economy ,, . and ecology these daya. That la, ecoaOlll)' of parcbulllg and OP- ,, er11Uag dtelr new car, and ecology, baving to do widl smog- prodaclns exhaust eml11loru:. Large Enghte• Dl•liked ' .. ~.. The Dodge boss didn't mention It, but currently large en- gines are looked upon, with disfavor by the ecology crowd. Fore- seeing an era of unpopularity for the so-called muscle cars a year ago, Carroll Shelby and Ford Motor Co. jointly agreed to discontinue making the Shelby Musli!lng Une of hot cars. Dodge has already slashed Its auto racing support program to the bone for next season . . •. , A public relation man closely aligned with stock car racing confirmed reports published In racing journals that there will be • only a single "factory" car in 1971, prepared by Plymouth's • ' Richard Petty and driven by an unaMounced Dodge driver • ., Plymouth will support only a single Petty car, and preswn· ' ably the Dodge driver will be 1970 NASCA& champion Bobby . •• Isaac. U it is, scratch any hdpe of factory support for t.op men lite Buddy Baker, Charlie Glotzbach or Bobby Allison. '· 1be factory PR man also said there will be no Trans-Am '" -program nei:t y~ther for the Chsllenger or for the new ; ~:-Colt, which qualifies W run In lhe tw~liter class of the same .~.'"'::' lerles. Neither. McCuny nor his ~R men would rule out the possibility of private Trana-Am entries but all sald they doubted ... there would be any. Marine Bowlers in Mesa Rustlers ·Scrimn1age • 78 Serles 1ize with low prblile for 1teady tide, ateering WI '"" ,,..,. -vtl ,·~·~, • Broader f ootprln! !racl!Oll contact thm comparabl e conventional size tires. Two Polyester cord body plies, non-flat spotting, two fiberglass belts suppress tread·squirming wea r 11nd m:ii ritain traction effectiveness NO TRADE NEEDED HURRY I SALE ENDS SATURDAY NIGHT Ull OUlt ltAIN CHICK NOllAlll hctUM DI 111 m!Pl'tt9d.,......,. ~for GN dVt 3r , •I ...... m1~ NII out of 9Gnte .i-durtns Wt oftotr, but M w111 ~ h.111PV to trdt r your 1ini tlN et ttle •~Md,... .-nd luue you • 11in cht cif for lulure dt !lftfy af th.I ~1wndltol. 700-13 C78-14 E78-14 F7S-14 G78-14· H78-14 J78-14 F18·15 678-15 H78-15 J78-15 900-15 GOOD/YEAR ••• ""' $39.!0 $21.70 $1.90 $39.75 $21.IO $2.15 $41.30 $3D.IS $2.35 $4175 $32.IO $2.55 $47.85 $35.15 $2.67 $52.50 $3l35 $2.93 $59.!0 $«.70 $2.88 $4175 $32.ID $2.61 $47.&5 $l5.15 $2.77 $52.50 SJl.35 $2.98 $59.!0 $44.70 $3.08 $1.90 PRICED .. LOW~1:_0 MOVE ~AST 4-PLY NYLON CORD "All-WeatherW"Tires •Clean sidewa!I de11ign., radial darts on 1houlder •Your best tire buy In ils price range! ..... _ 7 lamtlla•-.75115 7.75r14 IJSrl.f $17 i'"'"·"" l.38 fed. E•. ONE •• 1Gtpe~Gl~1 LOW Ill I 1') ·~~ "" tlrt PRICE llAtlWALL JUllllll BUY NOW AT ·EVERYDAV LOW PRICES GOODYEAR -THE ONLY MAKER OF POLYGLAS"TIRES < Callfornle, Oregon , •••••-"••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Wa1h1ngton1 Utah, Nevada, LEGAL NOTICE NOTICI! 0 .. tNTSNTION TO SIMAel! IN TM• SAL• O" ALCOltOUC a11Ve1tAGl!I N-W ll. lDI To Wflclm II M•Y eonetrn: Sublect to luuence ol fM nc-- 'l!td tor, l\OI~ 11 "'""°' t lvm that .. undtrllt ntd prOPOSed to It'll •~lie be'<lt't9'1 1t th<t prtmli.n. dncr1lliN • klllowl: um aoi.• ctite9, Huntl""*' 9-" ,.unu•nl lo 1ueh 1111.nlloft. IN .,. dfnlOMd It •PPIYlnt '* IM ~I of Alcoflo\lc 11-r1911 COfltrol fw -.Mt "" trtNlilr of m t lc cf'lollc: ~ tlcenw for llQnHI} kit ti-""'""" 11 foll(lwl: ON SAL!: IEl!lt AnYtlnt dinlrl111 to protest tllil ..._,, 111 wc:I\ Uctns•(tl "''" nit 1 Wffftld -tell ti 1ny offlct ol ll'te EM~mr-el Alcoftollc lltwr1g1 COn!rol, « lw 1'11111 kt the O.Ot rrment ot' Alcoholic ..__ Control, UIJ 0 SlrHt. St~e. CalllMnlt t!tlU, io I • lot b9 nntwo wllhln JO d•V• of 11\t d1lt TM P~ p<1ml1e1 wert Hrtt JIOlled. tltllnv pround• lor denltl " •~Idell "" llw. Tht pnml-1r1 now r~ fW ,... 1t!t of t lcohollc btvtrH"" Tht lwm of w rlrlc1tl<>11 ml1' bl! obl1lnt111 ""'" MY fl· tlct ol !ht o.-~~t. NEWTON, Mldllrf H, .. ubll1hlld Or1nH ("II Dtll'f Pllcrl, Nowmbtr lt, 19100 tlJ0.11 LEGAL NOTICB Cll!'llltl'ICATI! 01' •usu1•ts l'ICTITIOllS NAME" Th• 1111d•t1l!lllfll dM! urtlfy ~t It all'< d11ctl"11 • t11nlnes1 al 'HIO Brea llv~ . AP\. c, Fulle-rton, C1ll10n1Ja, u"""' "'' llc11tlous Tinn nam1 OI MEADOWlAKr PAOP ll!'RTIES NO,." 1nd th.at .. rd firm 11 C<>mPC~d cf '"' followl"!I "'~· wllo'ie fllmt '" lull Incl pfeu el re1•-dence b 11 lollcw1. Dlltd Nov-btr 10. 1t70 !Gmlt'al p'"""" Aldl•rd M. W1l1y, 2'10 1,.a Bo11ln1rd. API. c. F111tl'rtl:ln. c.momi. LIMITED "ARTNERS C. II. D1ll t I. Jll7J Cltf'loll Wl1'. llUe!ll P1rk, C0Uloml1 tOO'O. (710 S'21.f11Jt \ Lindo J. w u,.,, 2110 B,.1 e r...,. A~ c. F11ll1rton, C1llll)tnl• "2fJl 17141 ..,. 13'1; C~1rtes E. Col1Jn1, :l'2"1 "'"''• WDOdl•nd Hiiis. C.llf«nl• tlUI 12n1 34·5907: Aobtrt J. flrown, lief Alchmofl k"Oll, Fullerton. C1tlfe;r1111 1714) JJJ.JI 19; H. 01111,,.. Godfr..,., l'/S Me<rlmtc WIY No, Al02, Co.la M ... , CJllfcrnl• f16'6 OU) !:5)"459; Fl~ E, Otwl!lnl, l~ w. Pico lllvd., let An11tl11. Cllllornla toOM (JI'! 111)."'21 R11mond M. MtYt•. 122> Sc. Btltrtt~ Drl~t, Whllllff, C•lllornl• totOI f11l'I "J·1f11 : lrvl~ Berke, "JO M8ntw1 Stretl, L-8e1ch, C11ntornl1 '°"1J CJlJI Sff.fl)I; Jamin H. Dlrwll!rsf, 1$G N. Slerr1 VIII• Orl w , L1 Hlbfl, c1111orn1a '°6JI nn> MIMl64 STATE OF CALlt<OANIA ORANGE COUNTY: On NOYtmber IO, ltJD, lltfort -· I Ncltrv PubUc "' Ind for Hid Ifft., ""°"•llv 111pe1rtd Alch1rd M. Wll11' kl\OWll lo mt "' be 11\t Hf"IOlt ...._. n&mt I• sulncrlbtd to 17\e within m-s!rumenr 1nd 1ckn1>Wlt<fll9(1 ht tlllC\llld !he 11me. !Olllc!1I Stell Cht tllt' Ft!TT!I Stlltbur'V, II No!erv P11bllc -C11llornl1 PrlnclNI Ofllte In O•tnvt Countv M1 Commlu lon Explrts October l. Hn P11blllhtd Or•1>11t COiis! D•llY f'lfol, NOYtmbtr lt, 26 I nd DKIHTlllW !, 10. lt111 114.J.1' LEGAL NOTICE PUT CASH IN ' More than 240 participants .,. ... ,. are expected to compete 1n the ,;, . Dllilh arim1i1 Mllrlne COrpa Alt Station tnvltation1l ln- ,. " lmlel'Vlcebowtlnltouruamenl at Meaa Lanes ID COiia Meaa tbb ....teod. ... ,, ••• All branchet of lhe mUlllry ,.,.. • aervke wttl compete ln the Colorado, Arizona and New •• - - - - - - - - -.. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -• • ~~~~~~y~; YOUNG & , LANE TIRE CO. INC. : ::;=.:::t 5an D1e1o barber areu bavel LAGUNA BEACH COSTA MESA ' YOUR POCKfT't ••• event with Edwarda Air Force. ,... Bue the defending champion. "' ' FOUMnan teama will be '" 1 '"'1JclpaUng f-e I g h I ~ ... l'f Wlltem itata lncludlnt 1 -----· al.lo bttn Invited t.o I rHONI t participate. 482 OCEAN AVE. • Phone 494·6666 1596 NEWPORT BLVD. • Phone 548·9383 642-5678 o:'~.~;~: cii'rp~~u~ I Also: THEODORE ROBINS f,ORD -2060 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 642.0010 :11 ~====~ (Helicopten) in Santi Ana. • •'1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -• ., ,_ .- .. .. ,• . .. , ' ' ' . .•. • • •• • . ' ~ - ' • .. • • • • .. •• • • • .. • • • ~ • • • • • • • •• .. • • • "' •• " ~ .. " • " • •• • • ... M M ~ .. " • ·- "· " ·-•• ,, " .• ... ,. " • M •. ' '· ,,. •• '" •• "' "' •• ,_ .. "' •• "' .. •• .. ... • •• w ~ •• .. •• "· • -•• •• .. • ~ ~ '" w. ,. "' h. NO ... ., "' "' .. " "' •• .. "' " •• "' ... '" • •• M -.. .. .. .. • ,. ... • • . . I· ., ... .. . .. '• .. ···.~·~ .... - ~' . " . ' . .~.· . . -•' . _. . " ... , .. . ' ' ' • • . ' . ' .. ' . .. ' . . ' i l • I I < ... •' r -• .. •~~"""'"'"-~"""'~"'•114Ct••r""''"'.*'"''""'''"""~e~>>•-•'°""' __ ...,,, __ ,...,...,,.,,, __ ...,w_•o--•• ••·•-••---·-·-·--·--------.0.,0--•-•••--•· ------------------------·---. , Jr. Golf ·champ Abbey Racing Entries In Meadowlark Final,s Meadowlark Country Club Junior. golf champion Bob Ab-. bey advanced lo lbe !lnals of the rmn's club championships with 1 I-up victory over Don Nichols this week. Abbey will face Ray Brett in the Sf.hole chamPlonshlp com- petJUon Sunday for lhe club ti· Ue. Brett gained the finals with • I-up win in 2:0 holes over Jeff Evans. Brttl is the El Dorado (Long Beach) Country Club men's club champion. S•Nt• An• Jn a member-guest jack and Jnl tournament at Santa Ana Country Club, John and Billie * * """ Sigrist joined John and Betty Oark of Rivera to post a 132 score lo gain fint place. A three-way tie resulted for second place between teams composed of BiU and Wanda Baker with Mr. and Mrs. Guy Spence of Gillman H o t Springs ; Dick and Doris AicCoy with Mr. and Mrs. Neal Garey o( Irvirie: and Don KeMedy and Virginia Coffing with Mr. and Mrs. Tom Bouse of A1esa Verde. AU three teams had a 137 score. In the men's club high-low 1ournament, Gene Faison and John Knox advanced to the :semifinals against Dr. Em!e Ainsley and Jerry 1'.lartin . Lew Cle~ and Ev. Morrill * * Whaddya Want? Whaddya Got? SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS Special Rate 5 lines -S times -S bucka •UlSS -110 MUST IM(l.UO~ 1-Wll.-)"1411 ..,.v, ,. trH•. 1-Mlal ~ wallt flo ......._ a-'r'OVlt ........ ••l•r , .. ,_, .._. 11.,.. el ""'"" ....... ~OTHINO •O. Sid.I -TRACI«$ OMlVI To Place Your Trader's Par•cliae Ad PHONE 642-.1671 Trade SJ,000 NJUi1y, 3 br. 2 ha Lake Havuu t.om~ for property or ? CALL Eves, 673-4TI2 Trade like-new 17' Coldspot top-freezer refrigerator for !imilar model with left hand door. 83&-4904 Have ocean fro n I Ac1-e, clear, heart of Salmon fish· ing cb'y. Want A·frame cab- in. Lake Arrowhead. Pyra· mkl Exchangors 675-6060. 34 rl'. Cabin Cruiser: tip lop cond.: t\\'in screw: toad- M with extru. FOR house, unita or T.D.'s. O\YND\ 6'56259 l..J Bedroom, 2 bath unlls. '1 yn old, O::l&ta Mesa .. $125,<0J value. Want land, home or up to 4 un.ils local· ly. Quintard Realty-642·2991. Have: lit TD's 14) $6,000, (6) $20.lnl, (6) $25,000, all or part' for Ncwporl, O. Cnty prop, boftl ($J0.$501'.II or ?? , 557-9700 or 499-4206. L.1guna Niguel Golf Course lot. Secluded canyon vu of 6 fairways, lake & clbh!ie . Trd for comm, TD's, mltplx ln Hhl: area. Owner 645-1021 Lusoon1b airplane, 2 sealer, fully ~lp'd., 400 hrs .• val. $3500, Trade for late model ""· OWNER 6Ta-2866 HIGH DESERT for Health. \VANT CaJif.Nev. 2--3 r.1 elev HAVE Cl cor. 90xl17 2 bldg1 168.000 • ~ • $42 -inc. S445 mo.OWNER. Oil &16-8358 * * * 34 Ft. Cabin CnJjU'r: lip top cone!.; lwin i;cre\\'; loaded 111ilh extra11.. FOR house, unit!! or T.D.'s. 0\VNER 675-6259 170 &e·hwy 79 nr Scout Camp-Wa1iier Hot Springll', free & cir, aU /parl·$675 ac ynJ. For CLEAR prop, boat or ?? . 557·9700 or 499-4W6. 1970 Motor Home 27'. Load· ed! Like new~ Trade for Real Estate, etc. Call Sl5-200,j or Wtite Bo:< 4196, Palm Springs. Cat. 922G2 . Jlave vacant & improved Ml income. 'VANT: Rt Jot or home, coa:ital area, New. port Bea.eh thru Dana Poinl, 6~. '4' HOUSEBOAT, Xlnt, Llve aboard, slip avail. Will take car smaller boat in trade for equity. * 548-2434 • TRADE new 8 track cart. ridge home stereo tape player, 1$1.JO, value w/ i;peakers) fol' gun.1. cam· ~ras, coin~ etc. 53&-3021 CAPISI'R.ANO C ZONED, 4+ acres, Free & Clear. $130,000. TRADE for income or ? REALTOR REC .• South Lake TahCK". 1,4 ac., all in1prvmls incl se"'er. $2000 l'Q., 77,, loan. Trd. for local RE or ~ Jack Hammond. Bkr 541).1151. Pride or o\\T1ership 4·plex in Tustin. Corner lot. pool "'- rec. rm. Exchange (Of land, units. T.D.'s or ~ r.too1e Realty 673-3101 • * * * Duck feet fins-$8.95 pr. Snorkles-79c to $3.25 Masks-95c to $7.95 Kickboards-$4.50 · Skim Boanls-$4.95 to $12.95 Skate Boards-$5.95 & $7.95 Table Tennis Sets-$4.95 to $13.00 Table Tennis Paddles-95c to $7.95 Paddle Tennis Paddles-$2.50 & $3.95 Halllball Gloves-$3.95-$4.50-$5.95-$6.50 Handballs-Outdoor 95c-lndoor Sl.10 Volleyballs Rubber-$3.95 to $11.95 YoAeybaOs-Leather $10.95 to $17.95 Basketballs-$4.95-$5.95-$7.95-$9.95-$12.95 Footballs-$5.95-$6.95· $7 .95-$9.95-$14.95 OPEN 9 to 6 havt also advanced lo the semis but their dpponents ha ven't been determined. The women's club is con· dueling Its annual turkey shoot which began last week and runs through Friday. Co•ta ltlesa Lyle Graham won a men's club sweepstakes low gross Ii· tie at Costa 1t1esa Golf and Country Club over t h t weekend. Fred Gammon bad a 67 to gain low net honors with l lamid Bey :second st 71 and Norm Popkin third at 72. A turkey shoot will be stag· ed lhl!! weekend with a $1 en· try fee . El Niguel John McNamara and Roger Conant captured a partners best ball tournament at El Niguel Country Club in Laguna Niguel recently with a low net score of 63. In a mixed ball event, ~fr. and Mrs. Tim Mackey were the winner:s with a net 65. Mesdames Kenneth Teel, Fred Willard, llarry Caves and Philip Keep captured a ladies day tournament at El Niguel with 137 points. The B flight title was won by Mmes. Robert Wilbur, Charles Crow, Lewis Hofmann and John Francis with 141 points. 19th Bole Stormy Van Brunt of Irvine formerly associated w i t h Green River and Rancho San Joaquin Country CI u b s recently scored a hole·in-one at Willowick Golf Course in Santa Ana. Van Brunt used a three· wood on the 213·yard eighth hole to score the ace aJter returning from a lrip to Puerto Rico. He was playing with Nick Adams of Corona de! Mar, Bill Calvert of Irvine and Angelo Chatterton of Tustin. Los Alamitos Results • Tennis Rackets-$4.95 to $50.00 Wilson T2000 Steel Rackets Strung Nylon-$32.95-Gut $38.95 Dunlop fort frames-$15.95 Wilson Kramer Autograph frames-$16.95 Pennsylvania Tennis Balls-Whlte-$7.50 Doz . Yellow-$7.95 Doz . Wilson Tennis Balls-White-$8.35 Doz. Bill Tiiden Tennis Balls-tan of 3-95c Converse Tennis Shoes -Ladies $7.50 Men's $7.95 Jack Purcell Tennis Shoes-$8.95 Converse BasketbaO Shoes-$8.95 Converse Leather Basketball Shoes-$18.95 Men's Tennis Shorts & Shirts Tennis dresses-$12.95 to $26.95 Bikes-Parts-Tires-Tubes-Accessories C:LOSED SUNDAYS .__ __________ ........... __________ _ LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Thwsdar, Novtmbtf' 19, 1970 • LEGAL NOTICE DAILY l'!l.01' .If . .... CIRTll'IUTW GI' DlllCOtnUllUAJlfC• Of' VI• AN&MMI ASll.OOllMaWY OI' 'tc:TlTtoUI IWllll TH! VNDl•MONaD e.n twWf e.rll,., lfl•t, ltftKtl.,. HtwmW flfl.. tf1' flt cNMd tt to Ml-""*f Hit flOo •'•lo<K llrlft ~ .... el N~lni1ne Jlt •RtNT, al ._ C-Orlw. HfWNl'f lffd\. C1U""1'111. Wllldl llu•IMM WM "'""'"' ~ ol !!It ltllllwill9 -""" .,.,,.. -hi 11111 aftf •llu .. A t'4Wlcl It •t fol,....,, ..... II; OWllM H11ffttd 1111111i.,., Jllft ,.,_ h ll'I Vltw St., U.llM 8ftcll. C•I. '2611. C.rlllkel1 tor tra11Ntnon ot t\ltlMU llMtf' lllt ,.,..,_ flctl!I-1111m1, '1ld "" fl~'flt of ..ullllmlton """'"'' l rt CHI flit 111 tl\9 ottkt fll lht Ctu1>t't' cttrlr el Ort .... COUl'llY. ull!Mr 11\t '""'~""-tf SK!lon 14'1 el tM Ch•lt Cod9. W1THllSJ my ~tflll flll• 11111 lft't flt Odober. 1910 0w11M H. l ull( .. , •ullll""91f 0r9,., CHsl Ot!lv •11.t OC•~ " ,,. Hf\ltmlMPr s. n. ''· 1"' ,.16.lt 11,,,.lt LEGAL NOTICE ORDIHANC• HO. MJ:t AH o•OINllNC• llOOINO llCTIOW 11.tlT TI) THI coo1 .. 1•0 OROINANCll O' OUNOS COVlllT'I', Ulll•ORMIA Su_...ltort ti ... ~ tf Or1111', C.llfotfllt. .. •l'Hln •• I I I I I I I \ • t • i • • • • • ' ' ' f .,. ... ~ -•; .. "'(. • OAll.V PllOT s ,, .. i· • . ' • .. .. .. Wortla lrnit1 from nottin9h1m1 engl1nd • ................... , .. ... ,, ............ _ i..... • ..... l't TAX DEDUCTION VIA LAND INVESTMENT : 1970 DEDUCTIONS .. .. • • . • $21,000 :1971-74 DEDUCTIONS • • • • • $23,000 , . ~ .. \ 60 Aero ProClucin9 All•ll• ll•nch in Lancaster 1 California. 7 .5 miles north of tho Approved PALM· DALE INTER CONTINENT AL AIR· PORT, Worlds L•r91et Upon Com- pletion. Pre Paid l11t1rest - l111ere1t Only 5 Yean- 1Mpreclatlo11 -Income Excellent l'rotlt l'otentlal 'LIASI CONTACT l.L.D. INC!. CHAllLIS SMITH ·-----,-7 ~ .. ~ .. ---T~ . ., . • . ' _ ........ Complete-New York Stock List • Wednesday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List I t .... ... ... ., ................................... """' ......... .,, ...... ,, CJ&• ... .._ a.. Clll r Nowmbe.r 1910 O~ll V !'!LOT _:i r Complete Closing Prices ' -American Stock Exchange List • Paper Offerin Voting Bo'1U8 MANCHESTER; N 11 The Manch'3ter 'tlli Let<ler, Ille largest newspo 1n the state, said TuH<tay would award $1 000 to the N Hampshire city or town In ne:st electlon which bu highest pette>l>p !Urnoul PubU.her William Lodi the at.ate and national tur"""t Jn last week's elections shamelul and he hoped cash priie for communi with more Jhan 200 v would help 1p11r b I 11 turnout&. About 46 percent o! tile e tora1.e voted' naUon1JtJ J week+ Jn New H11nitio11114 nearly ISO percent balloted • ! • r I -· thundat, Novtmber 19, 1970 CC Players Shine in ''Tartuffe' C~medy l'. JH'.,JOANNE REYNOLDS ae·· CM l'M O.Hr ,Itel Sl1H ·~:' ange Coast College, and ,1 , Soto, in particular, ~· clooe II again. Olee again they've proven "\heir ability to take a 300-year· old comedy and tum Jt Into an entertaining and even a funny evening. Last spring they cut their teeth on English Restoration l!!oliere 's ''Tartuffe." While most cf the Tartuffe cast was excellent, good or downright Miss Soto was comedy with "She Stoops to ---------- Conquer." nus season it 's "'° 0 @ ID 11! ""'"' (C) <60> "The M111 Oft tilt lnsldt." Iron· sid• ls lrmrned for blln1 • lipoff min within tht Polle• Department. rtpltltdly lnro~mlnt n11cotlcs push· ers af pl1nlltd lnv1Stl11tion1. G11tst stirs art Gerald S. O'lourfllln, SI· mon Scott 1nd Roitr PmJ, "1'AltTUl'l'I:'" A ~¥ bY Moll1n, dlrt~l«I by w11111m Putll:lu, Mt cie11vn i nd 0eeor .. tlon Ill' Johll F~c1, lltlMlllll b'I' Bud Co'*. COlll.lmfl by 01n Mt.Wt" Ind Loni 81111", 11rU1nltd toro!tM th,._11 511urd1r 11 Or1nee '°''' Collette, Co1l1 MIJM, THI CAST T1rlllfft ••••· , ........... Altx Gollon Otton ....................... s11n Tudor Elmlrt ...................... Pi m H1ll Dor!l!9 ..................... Dorona Solo Marline .... , •••••••.. l 1rblr1 l~nGarl Y1l1'9 ................. P1u1 Ooremu• Mm.9 P1rntll1 ........... c11rl1ty Dwyer D1ml1 .,, ................. Scort Cr1ne c111nt1 ............ ~ ..... Sim Cl1uOer M. LDl'll ....... , , , ••. , .Ktv!n Dor1t1TUll RDl'l l mt1st"9tr ••··••· .. 0111 McWe1t FlllPDlf ................. J udY Crltchkr# POlltlmen .......... , .... ,Phll Ott'llV Cln' !telnblcllcr ~.!th~ Wt a:«~ .. (~~~ ----------. a~ lie "'" (t) (60) tile rejecb tht 1~1nces of 1 for· i Sh h th J f fl ~ BMK N....mtt (C) (60) mtr w1rtock boylrl1nd who t\lm1 super or. e as e roe 0 hlm•ll Into 1 do1. Ed'w1rd An· the mald Dorine, a pert, ;t, ~ li.!"'IC Nlwlt!Vice CC> (60) drtw:1 ind Noam Pltllk suest smart-mouthed mernber of the ; ~t\I Alln ._(CJ (90) T111t1· m TIM CONWAY household. t~f ly tcfteduled 111estt Include Cor· * MEETS FROST All French Restoration com-•1~ : Wildt, Htltn O'Connell, Dr. edy was written in couplets, ;j. ~ultlle Sct!oenleld, Sh1dCM1 Stt'I'· 8J hvld F111St Shft (C) (90) Tert-1(}.~ ¥t., and 1nmu11C1r S1lm1 DI•· 11tl'lety scheduled 1utsta lndude which tends to put a bit of a :_ti; ~Qpa. Tim Conway, Lome Green, GodfrtY burden on the players. It's not Z..l~THE BROTHERS =~· Biii M1dle7 and Buck always easy to make the au· ~«ARAMAZOV"-PART I G)Olytlpk IWI (C) (2 ht) Ru· dience listen to what you're ": Mn N1V1rro \'J. Mar YUlOll (lllht· saying when they tend to wait · :ifars YUL BRYNNER, wtlihbl; and Jimmy Roberboft vs. for the second rhyming word . :::l.URIA SCHELL.COLOR! "" ~"" llllhtwollhbl. lo fall. -tlD •n ,,.,.._ IC> 190) ""'" e11 1 th· r1 .-a? O'Cloct Mavhi: (C) .,... Yolk Tell'tbion Thuter: 'Th• S.Dd And with com Yo 1s so •: ~ llrlllUDI" Part I (dra· castle' 1nd 'The Tape Rec:ordet.'" there's the added burden of :t "'f':SS -Yul Brynner, Maril Ii) httlll I• Ullq: (30) the mannerisms of the period. :ti , Clair• Bloom, Le ' J, Cobb The bowing, the excessively • Rldi1rd Basehart. In Czanst Russia, l:llO h all tlf :t • f1tlllr plots to h•vt his son m1r11 11 ELIZABETH TAYLOR passionate speec es -IS :•, • wullt!J wom1n. * MONTGOMERY CLIFT is difficult to bring to a 1970 audience so that the comic :: 0 W s..rt CC) (30) "'A Pl.ACE IN THE 'SUN" aspects aren't lost. Soto. \Vhether slrong arming the bailiff who gleefU11y serves the quarreling lovers Marlane, evictiQn papers on Orgon, and Valere, played by Barbara turns in a gem of a Beindorf and Paul Doremus, performance with his brlef ap. or berating her f o o 1 i s h 'pearance on slage. One wishes master, Orgon, played by Stan M. Loyal had a bigger part, so Tud~r, she CQmmands the ~e coul<t be given more Ume scene. ~n stage. Tudor is another of the cast Our only quarrel with the s t a n d o u ts . He is the production Is ii& slow start. personi fication of a dupe and The opening speech deiivered some of his scenes V>'ilh the ·by brgon;s : mother, Mme. hypocritical crook Tartuffe· Pernelle, played by Christy Dwyer,.jU!lt doesn't .Jl4ve the are truJy beautiful. "zip and sparkle the rest of the precede all other scenes in the production. _ But these are trifilng com- . plaint.s and we heartily recom- . mend ... TartuUe" for the view· .tng pleasure of all Orange Coast residents. The production will run lhrough Saturday al lhe OCC auditorium. Admission is free lo lhe play which runs less than two hours. Alex Golson in the title role play does and It tends to get also deserves recognition for the audience off on the wrong his flne wor k. As a phony foot. hertm c. Scott religious zealot, he does a. We also don't unde rstand ''PATION" (.GP) good job, but as a lecher, his what the purpose is of playtng characterization is marvelous. jazz before the opening scene, Well: N•~7 ...i 1 O p.-. Elmire,· Orgon's wife, and , ..'w'.'.be~n_..'.:fu~gu:':':es~~an~d~p~re~lu~des~~~~~~-~~-~~·~·~·~·.,~·~~~11 the object of Tartuffe's lust, Ls r played by the attractive Pam Hall. She dpes a good job with the part, but really shows her talent in th e made scene in which sbe pretends to sur- render to Tartuffe while her husband listens in. Kevin Doremus as M. Loyal, HELO OVElt! Hlh SMASH WEEKI "AIRl"OltT" e 1G) CIW ... ~., G•1VllYI a111iOld • C1lilr "'ANNE 01' A loot OAYS" CO,) Pr9ml1,. E1191,_l UIMl91' 11 Miii! II With ,,,...., OIAIY 01' A M.1.0 HOUll:Wll'I" plus Cllnl liHIWMll e C.llr "l(l:LL Y'S Hl!"ROES" CGl"I •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Ul'llllr 11 _, .• • P11W1I IM M11n1lll e C1l9r "C. C. & CO." (IU ph!1 • Wl:STEltN e C.IOr "MACHO CALLAHAN" Ill •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Ali Ct~ SMw !~ ·'\fil~ Aintstffa (C) (30) CBS THURSDAY MOVIE Obviously the OCC cast suc- 1 'mn Tabs a Thief <C> (60) tJ IS CIJ CIS nund., llovit::, ~ceeds~~be~a~u~li~fu~ll~y,~l~ed~b~y ~M~is~s~~~==~~~~~:.J ~ @(j)S1ar TrH. (C) (60) "A"*" II t1M Sllft" (dr1m1) 'Sl!i H _ I -EUubtllt T1ylor, Sllel!ery Winters, lS) G••rr PKI< • Tfftdlr Wtlll "I WALK TNE LINE" (GP') '4111 • An,_y 0•1M "R.P.M." (It) ! ~.:~p locl11 IC) (30) Montrornt/Y Clift. StOIJ of I pool tt but ambillous yoana: min whost :J IS{[) CIS ,._. (C) (30) I Xltlll sttlus ii ele¥1ted br I pro. I. f rm f1tMr faally (30) I motion. When on tilt wr11 of btint- • ., -· ...... •• (C) (60) m1rrled, 1 atartUn1 dlldosure ~ uor ,..._ brlnp about 1 aimptete th1n11 In I,: a;, Tt1M AdvMt:RI (C) (30) hi1 Hf1. > D ll1J CD Ill'"''"' • "' ;~ QfU 11111 f••illlr eon htritia 1Mt; l C) (30) "Corie's Rut Win· '$ 4 J11ws bl tM llonl (C) (30) dow." Corie btlimt Shi saw I r -. murder commltt1d In 1n •P1rtmlllt If~ s-s' Cl911'1 (30) tcrou the 1lley. Guats are ~ n.. n..i 30 Schreiber and Richard l: Slltttry, !i ·...-~ .. • ,,,n1 Jl_Ull (C) ( ) ll":.) Clltllnp (C) (30) I~. ,/(ll Cil MIC Nla!1IY "'"' (C). (30) IE lot•lp (30) I ~~ f-"°' (C) (30) (ft) Iii)""""' (60) i . t a {[).., f.....itl M.du (30) l:lO 0 @ 00 m Jf11cy (C) (30) "Go-1 II:)~ SeClfttJ CC) lnL Goln1, Gone!" N1ney ind Adam •, . -lTI.t Dtllft •-,;... (30) h1n secrtt represent•li'l'H blddln1 I I ..Jll# ......,, '"1 on tilt Swtnson firm . a;) UC &1111111 Nm (C) (30) 0 @(l) Cf) 1'111 Odd ~ (CJ M. •llkele (30) "Th• Bil Brothen."' F1lix •nd , Osur l•U car1 of • 1111111 bor in 8.J.IS [•iq Ntws (Cl (30) lht Bl1 Brottltrs 11ro1ram. Cfint Howl rd 1nd Jan ita C.rroll 111m. • ~ lllC ffl&fltt, hn (C) (30) 0 Ntws (C) (30) B1xt1r W11d. 'fjehlt'a "'' Line? (C) (~ fl!) Muilcall !!l t!7J CD I "" lo<y (IO) ' W -T.,.U.. (30) I Jjjliut tM Clodr (C)'(io) "45 !!;) ,....., ... !Cl : ·~~Dnpot !Cl <JOi IO;OOO@ ID ll!,_, ""'' (C) , .. '9int.ni Wlldo• •II lledenl (60) Gunb are Vikki C1fT, Charin : ~ (30) (R) "Recollection." Nel1Dn Rellly and th• T1mpt1Uons. "~If)TnUI ., Cla11q111Ca (C) The Go1ddluers ar1 ftaturtd. ::tm aut11 thl Llrill1 W«d (C) (30) I~~ ~ n: :;:::.,' ~~ f,~ (30) Ridllirds Is forced to woril Oft I ~ ; ·si .. p1 .. 1nte Maria (55) mato u nch with bractros. Jacque-t line Scott. Don Knflhl 1nd Mlctlatl • EE Thlt Clrl (C) (30) Conrad 1uest. : 9 (1)Fa .. ilr Affair CC) (30) On• Stint (C) (60) t m lelfll PvlnaM Nm (Cl (60) ;t Jody, l111nled bJ . In eurmlvt fl!)~ (C) (60) "The Best ., lthoolm1te, Tom R1th1tds, 111111 laid .Pl•nt. #1." DlsM-Sion. of :I ·haul Untie Bill's kflClwled1.--whethtr man can deslan an 111- ; o pit his uncle 111inst tht boy's vironlhenl for h!inse!I. , • f11h1r In I fist li1ht. . IE la r111Hil (90) •• • ;t . 9 @ mflip Wll•• Sllow !HjQ*°"' eon ti P'ref. Ho,.11-:t (60) Arlt Johnson, Moms M•b· p ( ) THE .GOLDEN BEAR PRESENTS BILL MEDLEY ANO LEE HOLLAND 306 Ocean Ave. (Pacific Cocnt Hwy.) Huntlltffon leach For Rfffrv•tlon• C•ll 536-9600 PORT THEATRE PHONE 673·6260 CORONA DEL MAR ACADEMY AWARD WINNIR IEST FOREIGN FILM Year's Best Motion Picture "Th• only picture so honored by The National Catholic Office Exflu1Jv1 Orlv•\11 Slllwln1 A M111lul Tt lttmemMr "SCltOOOE" fGI pls1 • Sllvt MfQ-• ttklr "1'Hli 1t•IV1lltS" (GPI •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• All Cellr Slltw G,..,.ry Petll; e TUISdlf Wtld "I WALK TH• LINli" (GI") 111\11 e AntMny 0.IJlfO "lt.P'.M." Cltl •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• IA .. 111 A .. A HARBOR BLVO ORl\IE IN -----Ul•l271 Ellclvtlft Drlv•lll SMWll!tl P"r1nk s1 ... 1r1 • Celor '"DtltTY OINOES McGEE" (GP) ..... • Clint E••twotd • Ctllr "KELL Y'S HEltEOS" fGPJ ...................................... E•ckltlv• OrlV•ill Showlnt Mfol..., Dr11111 • C•IM' "THE ITUDENT NUltSliS" (Ill llkr$ e In Ctlfr "LOVE DOCTOIS" (It) E•chrslv• Orl'l•ln Sh••lnt "" 1'111t1r • Ctllr "MOY•L" l'llfl • l"IUI NIWl!llll • ulw "HAIPllt"' .................................... -E•clnlVI Drlff-ln Slllwlnt M"'ffft Dr1m1 e Collr "THE STUO•HT HUASES" (It) 111111 e 111 C.111'" ''LOV• DOCTOltS" Cit) ....................................... 12.00 PIHi: CARLOAD Alt C:tlfr Shor# •rvc1 Dlvl-e Xlm OlrllJ "Sl'ltAWIEltltf S1'ATEMEH1' .. (It) l'IWI • Mldlltl GrHn "MAGIC GAltOEN STANLEY SWlilTHEAT" f IJ Trlpkl E1ttwood • AH Ctltr (01'1 -•• --"THE 0000, IAO & THE UGLY" "HANG 'liM HIGH" w .. m .. ,ISTFUL 01' OOLLAltS" ·w10A 673~8 OPUI .... 71tLla-.. ,._,..,...._ e NOW SHOWING e IXCLUSIY( HAllOl ,t.llA 1t1•A6IMlllt • INDS rua .. MAY. 24 • GE7'71J(i_ Ei.~ ~·~CANDICE ~·~· BERGEN COLOR NATIONAL THEATERS GENERAL NOW PLAYING COUGAR ·COUNTRY IN COLOR A1 ctehfft1r• 1tery ..... , .... c .... fillld wiftl lo111llter ,.,.,_.. 11114 e1clteme11t. A fflm f•r the •tire feMlly 2nd Feature "ALASKAN SAFARI '' ..... CHILDRENS WEEKEND MATINEE SAT. 12 :3().2:30 SUN. 12:30 OPENS NOV. 25 IN COSTA MESA ,"IT'S A MAD, MAD, MAD, ,MAD WORLD" * Sl!IS. [gjJS. EXll1llllllf -IC * BENEFrr PREVIEW -tc * NOVEMWl 24•73:1P.M. ok ..._ JOHN WAYNE'S· ~ ~ "RIO LOBO" ~ * ~.., .. .._ f11EEDOMS fOUND.ltiTCllf ~ or ATY.o.u.EYF~ -,. ******·***"' fr ALL SEATS 75¢ 111-' 1Ul1LDmlRATUIES -tr COSTA M•IA SOUTH COAST NATIONAL PUZA \..;;;iiiiiiii\ GENERAL THU.Tit: THEATRES s.n,,o=..:-..,· ... .,,, zl 17, Ca jun sin1er Oou1 Kttsh1w 10:15 0 Latin Wrap.U, (C) of Motion Pictures KIDS LIKE UNCLE LEN "ONE Of THI YIAl'S FUNNIEST COMEDJIS." Aich1rd H1rm1 i-L.A. Free Pren i• ~ famous p1ntomimist Mucel 10:lG 0111 5 Nn1 (C) (60) Ktvio I' arcuu wll! bt 1uests. S1ndef1, Hal flshm1n , Tom Reddin . : 11M Jerry Wiit Show (C) m 1111 John• Nm (C) (30) ! @ (])a) Matt Uneall1 (C) m lhvlstl Mml~I (30) Z ~ 60) '"An1ll." hhtt te1ms with his ml) Aqil Tm htiHt (30) The National Cauncil of Churches • : •lh•r •• A'liltd mtdical aped11lst. ll:OD D QJ @ m ..... (C) Ii~~~~~~~~:~ flJ to U VI an un!dtntllild di•· 0 m N ... (C) '' """'"' ""'"· 0"" ,... 0 ,.,.., '' .,,., ..... _ !{(ll:DL I DIQJI£ r ind Lindi Morand 1uN1. hen O.lttl~ (mystery) '~sll R1thbone, N11el Brute. ..... llllllllM)'~ hie: (C)6 '°11111 I OJ llofte• "'hflk ill the str.b• ·--•T IC•C• , O ....... ,.. (dr1m1) ' 9--louis ·~ . ~ .. ~ .. outdan, Miry Trier Moora. School· (dr1m1) .. •rd W~dm•rk. NChtr Is piun11d Into • whirlpool CD Movie: '-rt of Hell (mystery) lntrl1111 and m11rder when 111 '54-o1n1 Clerk, Caroli M1then. Mms of 1 plot to menloul1t1 tt11 @(}) PlrrJ MllOft nlern1tiGn1l told $t1ndard. f1ll DI Mvoc1t11 (C) (R) 1"" " --(C) (lO) ll:JO IJ QI Cll -(C} DMill lollll (C) (60) O @ (J)m Job•llJ c.,. (C) Duh lllt (C) (30) ''Mother Pro111m ori1in1tes lrom BurbanL ur11e," b7 Bertolt Brtthl Rowan l Martin. Geor11 Gobel, Yvonn1 De Carlo, Judy C1rne, Midi· lennltlllt fll11 (C) (30) ael COnst1ntin1. · • en. 11 tes Hombm (30) D c.1 '"' Ttp nr.? (C) ~~·W:en W...U, (t) 0 l!E Die* Clvttt (C) flortnct ~ lr.nderson 1uut.. f~.CUll'klll 41 S.lldn (55) lZ:OO&QllmM_.. l rttfl11 (C) M11J LW98 t)} JIM ..... ra (C) (60) Cost1, liide~ Mtntl1, P1t1r Hu- Col'llldllll Don Rickles, 1110 kllOWn kill, Alu Drtlar, J1ckle G1rJe. 11 '1111 Merdian! of Venom," lllfS 0 Merit: ~ 19 DH• • ratllfll ¥Wt 19 "*"' •~I With 4'1" (comedy) '67-<;eorie Aldis-• .on. Moat frank. ,..,.. llllllf. "-"" W)wn. l1?I CD M · Cnltt (C) 0""" -<111 (2\1~) LaUn "" Stlttlt Sonica it Se1t11t. lZ:lO tD Al·~ Slier. "HlstilJ Dlln- IDT• Tel Ille Tmlt (C') (30) C';. C:,,:' St. I.II&," Ind ·--1o -(C) (30) 1:t0 O D -(C) ENOS TONIGHT ' tiool' Kmdy· Alrt Jackson '"ZIG 1-zAG" St1rt1 Wednesday "NO BLADE OF GRASS" Dc..tlll ~ (C) (30) l:JO 1J Mo.It: "0... Cititu1'" (dr1m1) l~jj~~~~~~~: .. II,...._.. (C) (60) '58--+:titll Al'IOu, Gtne Ev1na. Ii -•llllUl,DtaOJMm,Ul9Wflmll, .IGD.191,lalm,•llMIT.llflllll'IMmli NIAfllllllt llllTllSlft •m11' MSON'fltUES Ullll1 DlWl'ITllllllY MON · 111 1,00 1 •,U IBE"_.3 ~ 100,l·I!, s..J0.1,4s, 10.00 W.., 1.00. 4..JO, 1.-00. "II .. ~.,. ~ FUNNY. REAL AND TOUCHING! LCMRSAND OTHER STRAN GERS' MARlO THOMAS IN "J NNY" -· -• ._., .... "**** IT'S ALL SO FUNNY!" lllGltUTMTillQI IOVBU AnD Olla $1Wi!Gal • .,... "II'" Al10 -Clint £11twood . Do" Ricld1i • Don1ld Suth11l111d i11 '"ICILLT'S HEROIS" CALL 546-3102 EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT ' ' w u s A ' 1!Pl PAUL NEWMAN and JOANNE WOOWARD ANTHONY PERKINS hd TOI" HIT-Gmor1• Ke11Mdy ''ZIG ZAG"i••l Iii Wttlloc• l A.ti .. Jocboll I• Elliott Gould Donald Sutherland RATED "G" -IT'S FOR EVERYONE -Exclu1ivo Wolk·in Run AIRPORT CALL 892-4493 -BURT LANCASTER • DEAN MARTIN HELEN HAYES ROD TAYLOR KARL MALDEN CATHERIN.E SPAAK •l•o pl•yin9-l11b1• Slr1l11nd-"ON A CLE.All DAY YOU CAN SEE FOREVER" Somebody Fight. Back Who flghU ctty Miit The OAILY PILOT does. Thlt's WhO. And wMrt tfSt can tau find t09Ht commtntary on your community? Chttk the tdttorlal ~9t of VOUR comm11nltt'• dally ntWSpaptr, the DAILY PILOT, of course • • ..... ..... I I Boeing Test Falls Flat The Boeing Airplane Company tried out its "new and improved" anti-skid system for the 7478 re- cently in Seattle and blew all but two of the super· . . . GLD Tl&~ RRlaM wosu~~'?>EA!l!RLla Pictured model 15" long -Two smaller models (inset) also available. A "'"" ide1 for 11rvi1t<J w1rm1d bre 1di, I h1nd-wo¥1n b111k1t m1d1 in 111 old V1rmont Mill ond 1 l1rg1 piece of lovely Ver- mont M1rbl1. H11t 011 M11bl1 i11 tli1 Oven, whil1 yo11r br11d w1rm1, then pop the lo1f into the b111k1t ••• sl1y1 werm for the 1nti11 ...... 1. SOUTH LAGUNA HARDWARE OPEN SUNDAY 'TIL 1 At MONARCH BAY PLAZA SOUTH LAGUNA 499 -1572 jet's 18 tires in the process. There \Vere no injuries, • and a small fire that ignited was quickly extinguish- ed. Europe Leaders Map ' Drug Battle Lines BRUSS ELS, Belgium (AP) - Joint action is being con· sidered in the Europen Com· mon Market against illegal importation of heroin and other drugs. The executive commission has announced it is studying what concrete action could be taken in the near future. It pointed out that j u s tic e ministers from the members of the Council of Europe, a broader organization than the Common Market. had recom· mended a joint European penal policy against the drug traffic. Turkey, a chief source of opiates in the Western world . is an associate member of the Common Market and a nle1nber of the Council of Europe. The commission q u o t e d Turkish statistics to show that the production of poppy seeds had declined from 30,000 tons in 1953 to 7,800 tons in 1963, and opium production from 460 tons to 125. But the statistics also showed a rise from 1967 to 1968 -the last year cited. Poppy seed pro- duction went up from 7,000 to 7,800 tons and opium from 90 to 125 tons. The CT1 mm1ss1on a 1 s o reported that beginning next spring only four of the 67 Turkish provinces will be permitted to grow opium, compared with 42 provinces in 196<). Turkish export statistics showed a decrease for opium from 1967 to 1968 from 151 to 112 tons. But poppy seed ex· ports were up from 1,662 to 1,950 tons. This also was greater than the 1965 fi gure of 1.219 tons. though down from a 1966 peak of 2,268 tons. The commission said it had no statistics on the production either of substances extracted from poppies to serve as a basis for other drugs, on the drugs themselves or on the quantities declared as used for medical purposes. The commissio n's statements were made in re- ply to a written question from \Valier Behrendt, a Social Democratic member of the West Gern1an Bundestag. who also belongs to the European Parliament. . . . \ ... . ... -~-~· -. -- DAILY ,!LDT P Students Look at SF Ba~·· Oceanograp li y Ship Boasts Latest Research Gear - PALO ALTO (UPI) -A unique marine science pro- gram is giving the new ecology-minded generation in the San Francisco Bay area an tntim::ite kno11·Icdge of that celebrated body of water. The lnla.'ld Seas is an 85-foot converted rescue vcs~cl, now tne of the best:equipped researeb ships on the Pacific Coast. The ship is now devoted full - time to taking junior high school through college level scicn..:c a n d oceanography classes out on the bay to study first hand the chemistry, biology, currents and water life of that fragile natural resource. Bonds Urged For Ecology WASHINGTON (UPI) - Jnlerior Secretary Walter J . Hickel has suggested that the government sell environment bonds to finance antipollution measures the way it issued defense bonds to finance wars. "This .would be <>ne way every citizen and school child could participate in the batt1e to save the environment,'' Hickel told the convention of the National Association of Educational Broadcasters. Hickel also said the en· vironmental emergen,cy facing the entire world also might be used to bridge differences ol philosophy and p o I i t i c s between nations and help create a "significant base of 1 untierstanding," p o s s i b I y through the United Nations. SCHOOL OK's HAIR PERiltITI RESEDA (UPI) -Jn ortler 1 (or male sludenls at Reseda 11igh School to 'vear :sl:oulder- lcngth hair they must carry a I special card issued by the ad· ministration. To obtain a card the student must bring a release signed by his parents saying they approve of Jong hair. Principal John D. Falxa said the regulations erve to givi parents help in "exercisin parental authority." About 4 students at the school carry cards. The Inland Seas, flpetated by the Marine Ecological Institute of Palo Alio, carried rore than 4,000 stud e n.t passengers lasl year and has already had almost 1,000 Joung scientists aboard so (ar this year. Aniong groups on the \lessel this week were classes from Orinda and a group of teachers from the Urban Studies Center in Oak.Jani!. characteristics. Teachers as well as the !ltudents find it a "very excit- ing experience," aaid Ruther· fcrd. "One teacher pointed to a boy avidly studying water chemistry Jn the s b i p ' s laboratory and told me he had been trying for six months. without success to overcome that student's apathy In the school lab. cover some of the ~,1)t hopeJ to receive • 1"111{ '-'!ID tbe Natlooal Science-~ daUon next year, but :11 dependent e>n glftl to most of the openlllf.1)1<- pe...., of $$15 I day, • '''\'E-; "We are trying to gera ecology-minded I and corporations to keep going," Rutherfi '.'I ha:ve a $2,d .~ premium to pay tbll "The difference was that Stan Ostling, a "This isn't an outing on the here he had taken the water State Edueation , bay," said Robert E. took Itri 'tbl Rut.herford, said of the in-sample himself and was doing aevera ps WI c it all himself," said which include · 11tltute. "It is a scientific Rutherford. youngsters who had: marine field trip." been 00 a boat before,;_. The institute has its own I As 1lhe clean and com· staff of marine scientists who "I have never seen !&-, · ortab e Inland Seas pulls guide the shipboard research learnings packed into so. •1W•Y11 lromtspotort itt hdrof:!11 andits of the students. Pre-trip and a period for so ,1 ' rawt tng n~ t clanktoc i.:w post-trip materials are pro-youngsters,'' be o b s 4 d a ne 0 co ec P a n. vided the teacher to make the afterwards. • The fish are taken into the outing a significant part of the The institute, af ~ it ship's aquarium where the regular curriculum. CaUfonUa Ave., Palo Attl bu students identify, measure and "Requests on hand indicate d f 1 tte t , m classifl, them. The plankton is ozens 0 e rs • t.~o we will take 12,000 to 15,000 teachers in the scboots:Pt rt taken .o the shipboard biology students out this year if we districts around the tsat;1tbo laboratory for study b Y can ket:ip operaling," said have put their students' i"i.Oard another group. Rutherford. a businessman the Inland Seas. All of 1tbem In the ship·s chemistry andeducatordevotlnghistime attest lhat the e:1perient.'fwtll laboratory a group of sludents to the non-profit institute. give the students a **c take samples of the bay water The institute charges a $150 sense of what Is meiht ;'frY'l\I and bottom mlr, measure its fee for a high school class to thetalkaboutsavm,~iia} .. temperature, study chemical·ll~;;;~~~~~~l~~~~~~~§~~~~ content and other qualities. In the navigation roon1 they plot the loca tion n( their research ;, relation to the ot:e S MONARCH BAY. bay's geography. se\ver out· falls and other environmental VISIT WESTBROOK YARDAGE 278 . FOREST AYE. LAGUNA BLJl.C!I BARGAIN BALCONY SAVE .. STIYE, DAN • l'f'ION PINLEY W1 w1r1 qu1t1 f11clMled by 1'he r .. cent slat1"""'1 by Ille hlld OI • .,,..ICM' ti•• ll•m 1n11 a lire capabll ol l'{llllnQ 100,000 mllH 1$ "no pipe ctr11m." T!1c <;1en111m1n ~I on I'll 11y that nil!Mr 1Clen11111 1r1 work· nl<;t on tM PfOl•d 1nd hlv• whipped up I ntw brand ol 1yn1h1!1c ru~ whlcn w!ll <;tre•!ly outwt•r tM pf'Dd.- uct you ••• no\¥ sc1Jff1n<;t btld on 1111 clty ,,,._,. 1nd lllghw1y1. l'&r1t1n1\lv we hope lh•I anott"r crew ol 1c!enll1ll IS bt.n!ly e1111•Ded In <ltve\ofllno • car 1~11 will 1111 11 IOnQ ai th• MW tuper ll•H. Alter •II, befor• lh• 1verag1 g,., bunv D•tl wl!llln rni>e<!1blt! range ol 100,000 mlle1 IT 11.1H"1 lrom (l,lllpUal· lnQ pi1ton1 Incl v1rlc0t1 v&IVH tlld Is only 1 "''"' py1n from th1 lvnk- yard. And, 11.0 on Ille •tltnllllc 11de 1r1 sltllsUcs which show tNI lni.urtnct II • gOO<I buy IDlloy. To UYI mof!IV 1nd bl Oii lhl 1111 11d1 Ill till llCt ol In tmtrgtncy, come to BVROH FENLEY INSU RANCE, 90f M1l11, HuntlovlOll Blolch, Piton• 536-7527. We lll vt Qfntrtl lnsur1nc1 lot' ff>I lndf~ldu1I and for tilt commtrclat or lndu1lrltl bu•lneu. Set ua on Work· m1n'I Com1>11n111Htlr! gener•I lllbllny, -" Wheelchair _; Rent el Service.' 7: onarch ay laza ~ .J J, .-. •! ·' . ·' UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK Tl!• b•tl t•lltr. in town or Your monty b1d1. SAFEWAY SUPERMARKET w.teh for or.ir 1r.1p1r ••v•rt NIGUEL MOTION PICTURE THEATRE "T WALK THE LINE" # Gr•IJOry P•ek I Tu•1d1y Wild OPEN NIGHTLY 6:<t5 P.M. MONARCH BAY BARBERS Ft•furi11t M•11'1 h1ir •tvli119 A eolorin!J MONARCH BAY PLAZA • EL ECO SHOP OF DECORATIVE ACCESSORIES Unu1u1I gifh from 1round th1 \filorld NIGUEL SHOP FOR GIRLS B•ek to 1chool f11h ion1 NIGUEL HAIR FASHIONS Compl1t• D11 uty c•r• MICHEL'S CLEANERS Whtr1 qv1lily covnt1 • • • • IN LAGUNA NIGUEL PLENTY OF FREE PARKINli APERTURE CAMERA AND I HI Fl LAGUNA TRAVEL SERVICE Air • S11 • R1il • Tourt MONARCH BAY DRUGS \ MURIELS FASHIONS FOR M'LADY "Wt 90 to •II l111gtlu to pl1111" NIP 'N TUCK INFANTS & CHILOREN'S WEAR for th1 littlt pl111urt1 in your lif1. FABRIQUE & BOUTIQUE M1xi?. Midi?. Mini ?. M1lr1 it!! SOUTH LAGUNA HAROWARE Mor• thi n iu1! an ordin1ry h1rdw1re 1tor1 H. GLADSTONE SHOP FOR MEN Ovitt tl191nc:t· in trffitlen1I t•od t1tft. LAGUNA FEDERAL SAVINGS & LOAN l11911t, firit incl tlron911t 111 Or1119t Countr • • • • • • SOUTH COAST HIGHWAY AT CROWN VALLEY PARKWAY C stereo103FM the sounds of the harbon , I I • music • . ;.~ ,• " ' . "! ~ • " . ·' .. ;, .. .... , ·~ " ~---'· • . ·, :!" ... • ·; •' ' l ~-•, ., . . . .... ::..:-! .. ~, ~~~· f '~ .... ; ' •• ,1 • . . . .. I ' L ------= . . ·~ •v •••• •• llwfsday, No~embtr 19, iq10 DAIL v PILOf A:I 3 ABC Chief Declares • ., Vi-ewers Seeking Escapism ". ·. Bistt•iotaics .Bat•vey' .. HOUSTON (UPI ) -ABC television Network President James E. Duffy, quoting Lhe gospel according to Neilsen , says viewers are more likely lo watch escapilm than pro- grams concerned with social jssues. Duffy said the Nielsen ratings prove viewers are nol watching the network's new fall programming that deals wllh "relevant" issues. · "While we are addrt!ssing ourselves to the very real con- cerns" of our times -pollu- tion, drug ad di cit ion. in- creasing crime, the generation I rige Dram.a Operis at Saddle back "Pi cnic." William Inge's Pulitzer Prize-winning drama of midwestem romantic en· tanglements, will be presented this weekend by the Sad· dleback College drama depart- Hafriet Brazier McCon nell is near hysteria as she tells Robert J. Hastings ment. a nd J.1ickic Claxton of her confinement in an insane asylum in this .scene from Bonnie Cogbill, Saddleback "Harvey," closinu a {our-\veek engagement at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse drama instructor, ls directing ,.. the play, which depic~ the tonight throug .. h,:S:::•::l::u;,rd:::a;cyc:.=--::-::-::-:;--;;;--;;:-;;;-;;-;;-;;-;l·----------1 anxieties and confiicts in a ---.-• • ·~ smal l Kansas town . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Performances will be given •. NUTVll\E •. Tryouts Set Friday and satunJay only in ~ the campus theater. :... a s 1P.lb.. • Comprising the cast are • -...... ..-a • For Co dy Renee Dutiiouchel , Kit • 373 S. Coast Hwy.-L"'Juno-497-1350 • me McDonough, Mark Monroe, •• $ p E ( I A L : Mike Stoddanl, Belt• Killion, Auditions will be held next Judy Wiley, Ben Crawford, week for "Everybody's Girl," Christine Delgatto, Jean Sam- • SHELLED PECANS • the ""'!' production or tho san pieri and Carol Sassoon. • .. -----"'I Clemente Community Theater. TickelS are av a i Jab 1 e • fANCT PllCES l'eca111 For Fr•it WHOll -HAlfS • Tryouts for the John Patriclc through the college's student • • • $ Cokn AH Holldo1 R $1,1 • comedy will be held Monday affairs audience. curtain time :;~·, 192 lakl11t • · • K .. p s~s. • and Tuesday at 8 p.m. in ttl?-is 3 p.m. both evenings at the So~• 41r LI. l11d•f;~:=r~11 "'-s... 41¢ LI-• Cabrillo Playhouse, 2 O 2 college, just off the San Diego • , . • • • DOWNTOWN LAGUNA • ·················' Avenida Cab r i 11 o . San Freeway at Avery Parkway in Clemente. Joanne Applegett D Mission Viejo. directing. l-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;.-~;;;;-.;~9~1 A cast of two women -one 11 in her middle forties , the other in her early twenties -and eight men. most of them in their twenties. is required The show will bt staged in January. Coiffure NEW MANAGEMENT SPECIALS MONDAY THROUGH THURSDAY ONLY Cut Rates At Laguna 1t2 I. OLA \llSTA San Clemente 492·8000 \Ut "· C. HWY. Laguna 494-9519 111 ••Oo\DW,t,Y An;Me Cl!flllf Laguna 494-4139 A 10 percent dise-0unt o(f regular ticket price! for the Pulitzer prize-winning comedy "Harvey" at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse is being of· fered theater parties and groups of 20 or more persons. Large groups may reserve the theater for s p e c i a performances. Clubs and other organizations as well as small social groups may USe theater parties as fund-raising events. Information about group sales may be obtained by call· ing 494-7288. ...... ~. -... .. j'-, . \ ,, \ MARINE HARDWARE YACHTING ACCESSORIES SONY e ELECTRONICS l'IERCE-SIMSOPf e COMPASSES IENDIX HAND BEAIUNG & MOUHTl!O MODELS M'CHIE DANFOURTH AIR fiUIDE A9UA-M£!U. SEA e EPIGINES GULL AERO e HOllE CATS FINANCING AVAl\.Alll'. MERIDIAN SAIOTS , 1Htf AlMllODIN Sf .. O' H11•nHto111 tu.c" Cl!JI ''~t1t I ' 0 OUTH CORS'f -' . ' -' . ' . ' Ol"l!N NIQHTlY 614S l".M. M1tth1H 5,114.., et 1 :45 ,,M. SCIENCE FICTION COLOSSUS! "THE FORBIN PROJECT' COLOl-IATID GI' o,.. HltlttfY. ,:45 P·•· Matlft• Suntlay at 1:45 p.m. CDlDll ..0 PA:Ol.,'(,.;Dll ·1 WALK THE ~ LINE";; ............. ~ -r•~.w~~ EYES RIGHT •• DL LOUIS J. HASllfllD Opt•,.•ttrlll l'ou "'•'I' wond1r why, ;,. our modern world, folk remedi•\ 1t11n•g• lo 1wr•i~•• W•ll! th11 lOlnelim11 c:ont1 in • 9••;n of 1t11th, An old, old c:wr• for ni9h1 blind · •tn, for intl•nc:•, c:on1itl•d of "'ting lh• victim·1 119 lo • clog ' •ting him o,. th• thre1hold of hi1 houl•, col - l1c:fing 11v•n pitt•I of M•tl from 1•ven hom11. i nd 1.1. 11119 hi"' ••• th. ~ m••f , • , while wyin9 "l lincln111, le•v• min• wf. •no:I b• bru1h1d i!llo th• •T• of th• do9", And it wo•~•d l Th1 , .. Jon: Som• of lh• ln•tl w•1 .,+ to h•v• Vittmin A, lh• n1t- urel curt fo1 ,.;9ht blincln•u, w. thin~ ..... ,. mwc:h tmt1l11 in lhtt• moJ.,,. lim11, •Mil 1•t too m1.-, ptopl• n19l•c.I ffl•lr •Y•• tltht, 1em•tim11 u11til ••• 1110. s1., i11 •••11 for your • .,. •••m· l11•ti•11 ;,. OYI offlc1 ill th• fiv• ,ofjit, Sh•pp;ng C111t•'· 011 M1l!1 "''' lt•th l lvcl, 'htn1 14~·1171 ft• •n •Ppoi,.lm•nl, ii .,.~ , •• 1 ••• gap -many viewers are tun- ing these problems out," Duf· fy said. He s a I d programming for television is not an easy task because the televisioft au- dience is not one mass of peo- ple. but a fragmented Jot with different tastes. "There very well should be. fragmentation. and o u r philosophy , our machinery, must in this new decade be geared to accommodale it." he said. He said a really first rate special or television series takes as l011g as two years to create. He said ''Television cannot be all things to all people, either in ilS programming or its promotion. Today's audl-1 ences are much too volatile for long range philosophy, Whatever guideposts we dis- cover, we must make sure they are that and thal only -guideposts. "This is not an easy task, not in the dizzying decade ahead: not wilh so many new ooUets -cable television, pay TV, casettes -to name but a few. about to give commercial television a real ru11 for its money," he said. He said the ABC network, which annually places third in the three-way race r o r Squirn A1111outtce1 Its New Service. EXPERT TAILORING & ALTERATIONS by Master T1llor SquireJ MEN'S SHOP 110 S. El Camino Real SAN CLEMENTE 492-5711 ''Multiply this by literally hundreds of programs needed to fiU such a gargantuan ap- petit.e ... and add to this the herculean task of predictable timing in unpredictable times .. viewers, would spic~:i~ts~pr~ .. ~~~~· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ gramming for the majority ~ .... s . ......-,:,.. "with a bold leap now and then." tvrkey platter T rodi1ion >1pheld! A proud bird v!\derlined by o proud bird! 1 S·in<h ,,ji•, Deoutilully fitho- g•gphed in tr~ c°'°"- 12s ·~· Tl>o"\14'..;,,. ..eecl1 ... ol ~,1o ... diKoo.i..e pii<n. roasting pans smollovof 99~ 1orge ovol 2 21 op•n rec,01191• 1 oa foir freotme nt for foul! GiYe your bird !lie 1oostil'lg it deserves (ii browns foster ol'ld bettet ii'! dork blue el'IOfM!wore; try it ond $oe!) onion chopper 87~ Weep no more, my lody! SpHds o tedious to~k, won'1 cul your pretty fingers or krave o tell-tole odor, A»oned decorator colors. minitnry party servers 3..pc.fft'OCfldoor9old . chip 'n dip set slicic 'n sassy 26..pc.. punch bowl set 29~ Person·lo-perwtt 591"\'ice; itKJivi~ chrome h'oys with wolncrt-fini5h hondlri.. hostess gown 511 Relox ••• you Jock beautiful! Silkftl·leJrtured oi:do1e double· kttit go<Jrn folh in 5-0h, llottwing lin~ , .. )wirl~ groc:efully a s you moveobol.it. Adreomlo'Wfflr when you re4ax •• , or for informal ent~oining. Choose from ouoned co&on. 5'z:es 5-M~. pannejean toe* whof's happened lo your 'favorite loom! lhey've gone ,;i1omorOU5 In lush pWsh ponne! 87 4 Still !eon ol bip ond widely fiored lor firw-figuting flattery; new <olon. 5-ilfl 6-16. striped boucle sweater The "In" thing for cawol weDI' ••• rnocl hWKenedc. big indu5triol :tipper ol the NCk. Woslioble 4 77 collon, 5easo.H'igh! color1. 3' 10 40. damask dinner set 561. 76.,..;tt, 6 DUp\ins, ......... -... 2~ 60 l 90 .... ,i. 8 "°pk;...s--····· .... 3 97 60 l 90 ovoi .,.;11. a no!)\ins ...... ~···397 70;... l'Oftd wllti 6 M~oltl ,.,., ••••• 3 97 60 l 102 with l:2 "°'*""·-··--·4 97 Cleoming dol'D05k dinner sets in ~zes lo lit every holiday table and give it the troditiooal ~k of "9otK:e it~ Wid1 Mlpkins. bosf•s• holiday aprons as~ st. m.rys Aho .•. .,....,.. got J'O" c0"'9f.d, and the ~·5 o. you! Goyc:otton dMtt ~ wfth ~s.oried prim.d -~. 72x64790x9s 90 101 ••sorr•J 8 SI ·--.. -· Mochi11e·w0\hoble lu!!U'l"' blend; nylon bindin!J with schillli •mbroiOery. ~.>:~3.-~~s:_,_ ........ 4 79 :~~~~:. ................... 659 ti.~~'!:~ ................... 229 12s Our ver5-01ile heovyweighls s.hine up lo mony o holiday to1k! No kifclMn should be wilhoul tliem, ~peciolly ot thi\ time of the year! muns•'f corn popper 348 Ge1s "het up" ond pops off like n'IOd! Use it lo worm st•ws, buns, baby foods. et<. too. J.qt. !>ire, eledric base. gloss lid. Cord is included. -· 681 ther"'°'"9tet--.. ·· Yittyl lac• tablecloth A charming deception! The beauty ol Loc.e ••• 197 · the durability of v;nyl! Spills wtpe cleon like mogK! A great gih. i;... 691 col•Nlor to ........ lih••r 4-pak stemware _.,di•$' '"'· f-4wi_, .. N _._., 10<k,.il 516 Wild colors lo perk up your party "spirit1!" IO·ql. bowt, 12 mugs, 12 hooks, lodle. plosfic cookie cutters The ~pe of 1hio1.; lo come! for sugor-n·spice versions of clo11ic Christmas figures, lo delight tlie oppetile. ...... 691 square roaster....... · poster mugs 44~ Coffee break! Mug it 1J? obit with colorful "pop" poster ort cho::.en from our smo1hing new collection. "fun"-giliobl• for .. Mod" -minded friend!>. o;p,J.oof 581 nylon baster ........ .. place mats 68~ A corking ideo! Colorful p!oce mo!~ wilh prolf!f;live cork bockt. hsorted phoiogrophfc de~igns. .,,,,, d11tignr a 8l iv tray.-t•bles .. --·· " • • •• ,, • ' \""; ·~ A clear cow ol good tostf'; ' . tlifl• iono-,lel'T!rned beouti«tS gs]. I ,_,.. · ore;.. proper shape lo dcrol ) ) with ony 1001tworthy ~nl ' tlie \iolidoy s-asoo preseots. _ r 1, ~~.) 44~ ~•'re hol'ldil'IQ you c r;,..., but it ca11191 a k>t of weight .•• aftd you «in't bteok it down! l'his <ould be j.,~I rhe lead )'Otl l'lei:d! h could clorily !he pi<:ture for you •• , Ol"ICe ond for oll. Try 11 ol'!d ~! f .ff. •HIM,,c• ...... loft .... , ...... 841 -..-- . . . ----------~----------. . . • 041LY PI LOT 33 G ''Artistry in l\fovi ng'' for the BEST MOVE of YOUR LIFE Call: fortresses I Courthouses Armed Over U.S. I 1926 494-1025 580 Broadway l\Y CLIFFORD P. CHENEY UlllM l',_H 111,.,,.llltlll l Some of Ca lt forn l a 's •-curthouses, Lrad.itionally open renters of community life. bo.ye become virtual armed fortresses as a res ult of recent ' btimbings an d other violent at· t~t$-s against the judicial sy~em. only be allowed to enter through the fron t door. where he must sho1v identification, sign a register and submit to a search. Once inside, he may not be allo1\·ed to °"'ander out of "authorized" areas. Even inside the courtrooni he may be scrutinized by armed b<lillffs. throughout the slate. They are being reques1ed or demanded by judges-some or wh om are packing g u n s underneath their b I a c k robes-in the wake of a wave of violence and threats of violence which began Aug . 7 'in San Raf~el. pied for life. On Oct. 8, a ter- rorist bom b In the building destroyed the courtroom of Superior Court Judge Joseph Wilson . It's Lea ry fo r The Weary Don 'l get 11ear v l\t'.'.U! Leary. ~ill Leary's one-tine comments on the world around us can be habi l·forn11ng. Check today's Graffiti by Leary. The interested citizen can 1mn · walk into his eounty c · ouse to watch the legal s~ em at work. But he may Such security measures, and others not perceptible to the courthouse visitor. arc in ef- fect or under CQnslderation On that day, a daring courtroom kidnap-e scape at- tempt left Superior Court Judge l!;lrold Haley and three of his alxluctors dead and a deputy dislrict attorney crip- As a result, the Marin Coun· ty Civic Center-designed by Frank Lloyd Wright with large arched windows and open balconies as an open part or the comn1unily-has instituted perhaps the most drasitc security measures In the stale. STAND ING P.IB ROAST LARCt END lUCkY TOP (!UAlllf 60 NO!O lll lF 781t FRESH TURKEYS NOl!Bl:Sf "POP UP" USDA GRADE A 1aVl.IU'4I ri10a' I T 1100111 • TOMS .. ,,Qc HErlS 4 5c 18-23 l PS. 'fiJ/ 'il lb.1 l -14 LBS. lb. • CJJ.~f![D FOOOS PIE FILLING f')!.'!IO(K ~fPU 37' O""' 21 01 ca11 ........ . UOl. V.B APPLESAUC E"' .......... 18' MI DI I tOM Cl.Lii~ I Nii i •1 It I 11'"' HUNT'S PEACHES ~~~~.c•~ MINCE hiEAT ~~~~.1~:: ........... .. 28 ' SS' ~P I N EAP PLr: M~~YUTOll C•UJllfO 32' <.r • \,; Mi ni.CAM ........ , CRA BAP PLES 1!~~~1ftJ~~N ............ 33' ,,-. CRANBERRY SAUCE ..... 2S' Oe!AN IPJlT, l• Ol. (Ali MA NDAR IN ORANGE S 1~.\','.~';, 2S ' ~ MARSH~'ALLOW ~~1~:l.~.1 23' Q" LE SUEUR PEAS \~·~~.c•M .,. 29 ' o-< llRB Y'S PU MPK IN :;:' .... 22' ASPARAGUS SP EARS ....... S9' llA•'IUT Oll, 11 111 ot.c.i1 ,,-. PRINC EL LA YA MS ';,'; ..• 28' GREE N BEANS ~!~~~~,~~.~~ ...... 29' ,,-.ANDERSrN SO UP S I I l)l (~M "., 21 ' Guards stationed st the four unlocked doors of the quarter· . · wi 1 th Thanksgiving just a week away ... , LET'S TALK iuRKEY! I -, J.1.and everything else 'you'll need at ' I • I Prices ore Discounted Except on Fair-Traded a nd Government Control e Ct YOUNG TURKEYS x2M.~ 34c ~N~~~3ac FARMS · FARMS l llto2:tlbs. lb. lO·lllbs. _ Ill. ;~t~TI.~.RBALhEt~~K~YS FULLY COOKED HAM"'"':~·.·;:!:':.!::''"'58' ................... I~ STANDING RIB ROAST .... ''.'.'.'.'.'.'.~ ..... 98~ CROSS RIB ROAST ....... '.~.~~'. ........ 87,~ ROUND STEAK .......... '.'.'.'.'.'..'.'.'. ........... BJ,: GROUND BEEF ........ '.'.'.'.'..'.~'.'.'. .......... 53,:. SWlfT PREMIUM 48 lb SWIFT Plt~IUM J 52 Ii Yovng USDA Gn1d• A • Yovn1 USDA Gr14 A · PORTERHOUSE ........ !!:!~~~ ........... $J 3,~ CHUCK ROAST ........... '.'.'.'.'.'.~.· ............ 47,: FRYER SIZE TURKEYS ROASTING CHICKENS . ' ...... ' ... ' ... ' " ........ ' .... . 49 ,, T-BONE STEAK ...... '.'.'.~.'.~.... . $J2,~ fll\I! U!D& 1•4Dl • 4tt6 ,0V.S ................................. 58 1• PDRK SAUSAGE .. ~~:r::!·:::~·~!!, ..... 57 ' CANNED FOODS ,..., .... t<a;lkt! \J ""~'ORSELS 49 c 1EMI SWllT 11·0UNCI IAG ,,-. BREAD CRUMBS ~.' •. ··-· 2S' •IOlil DlO llC~ILIVOllO O""' BEEF STEW ;:~1;.';~1t .......... 6J t TAMALES 'llHAIDT'I 38 ' O"°" 11DI C•M •. , .••• ,,,,. ~ONI ONS ::~~-',0::1.' ............. 30l o-ri PRESERVES ~:~·;_1l.':'"'.'.~f.·.~~ .. 65• ~GRAPE JELLY ~~~~~·~,~~~.·.'~. 59' LINK SAUSAGE ........ ~::::~.~°:.:!! ....... 29' SLICED BACON .~'.''.'.~.~~~:'.::t.'.~'.~ ...... 59 ' I P/tKAGED GOODS PA"DERS OIAPUJO'illll"lll 85' ~ 11\f'" lt (flOI ••.•....•..• flDDLE FADDLE :~~';., .......... 3S' Ir CRA~KER SNACK ~~~!:\, . 23' ~ONEY RAHAMS ~~'::~~· •.... 69' iY'STU IN MIX ~:;r~~~~tsO_~ .... 48< $TUFFIN BREAD ~::~~~!:t~ ...... 27r '.orl DATE BAR MIX~~,:;~::'~~~. 43c P""STIClS ~,n::,~·,oc~.1•1.~'.1.~~~~~ .... 21 ' ~OLLS ~~~'.:"0~~~-·.~~~-~:'.1•1.".~ ....... 33' ... FROSTING MIXES \~;~~ .... 37' "lUIUll CDOlllU DUT(ll, (ILi.MY UMOI, JUH i, Mii • (llOCOLATI. V411tlL.U WALNUTS Ol•MOMDSlllLUI 79 ' IM LIAG ............... . ()P~~!~!~t.&t/ 47c ' i1.ou11CtCAN b---LASAGNE ~:~':.~··~'.~ ......... 43' f RUIT CAKE ':.1:t1!;~·~~.1.~ ••••••• '21' ~MJB RICE MIX ~~l:,., ...... 59' r MARSHMALLOWS :::"~.'.'. 21 ' t lll'J'fll l Mll!inlU: crWHEATENA ~::i~~~ ....... 43' PiOTATO CHIPS ~~~~·.~c:0.~1•1 ...... 49t r•MAYPO DAT CEREAL :::~ .. 41 ' ~PIOCA PUDDING ~~~·;:, ... 35' BABY RUTH NUO,lnClllt'S 41 < er" t OllOI ••••• ,. .. , FROZEN FOOOS JOHNSTON PIES ::,": ............ 69' ~rr11. rllllllllll.MlllCI BIRDSEYE VEGETABLES ::: .. 41' fl lllCll cur. 111• 111•1 W(TOAl fJO AlMCMIDI, 011 IOMJ W/t t l&M IAllCI SWEET POTATOES :::'. ......... 41' l llDJlfl W/ltOWll Slll ll ILA11 WAFFLES :~~~~~?.~~~~-· ........... 16' VEGETABLES ::: ............ ! ..... 37' Cllllll ,IAMf (11111(11 HUit, llllH W/IWTT. IAUCI, PIAS I 01110111 w11 un 11. OIHl)ld W/(ILUI UUCI( FISHSTICKS ~~·~i~~~·········t .. ·· 51° 1 SIRLOIN TIPS !~:,'.~' ............ 451 COOL WHIP :1::~~· ............... 59' DAIRY PRODUC LADY LEE BUTTER ::',~~~~ ...... 82c SOUR CREAM ~~,z.~~ ......... ~ 49' CREAM TOPPING :'::r~ '. .... 48' ,... ' .... f<a;&f! VswEET PICKLES L Dn MOWTI ..,., w11ou.12.oz.JAI U.S.D.A. FOOD STAMP COUPONS GLADLY ACCEPTED LUCKY BACON 49' SLICED BACON .~'~"~~:!'.'. .. 75 ' SlKtD l·POU llD P KG, ·····••••••··•• THIN BACON .... T~~'r.\'.'. .... 79' OYSTERS ..... '.'..\'.:.~~::.'.'. ..... 79 ' Wl f lATUll A COM•llfl ltLl(TIOM Of MOllDAT POUL TIT, DUCKS, OIUl,OAM( MIMS Al lOW PllCU Our LOW Ever)day Price! CANNED HAMS DUBUQUE ROYAL BUFFET 71b.can 4 $379 $6.39 , ... <•II FRANKS lU(I T 58' l·ll . I l l , AUMU.f {U.OlllktJle. tkJ ......... , LUNCH MEAT :·:~W.~"36' tolHIA.OUVl, 1111,1.( I OlllH,rlP 10.U CHEESE ~o:.:·~ .... 69c Mli.IWIKOtUllCMIDOAI , •• 110L r11. DRESSINQ ::::::::~ 69' CtooUlfOI T IM?. JAt tk) 1' DZ.Ml ROD'S DIPS !!~~~'ftou" 49c llllllAI,, llOf Ofl lllllOI OllOll I tL C11f ~~'~'I!"P.!ra~a•1mu .. 10Lc" 37c ;~ •. llA}~~.~R~as!~!~E CHUB CHUB CHUB 98' $)49 $203 HOUSEHOLD ITEM~ • I KLEENEX IArlllll OIMllll 22' oA M Ct lGI ............ .. SALVO PELLETS :!~,·:!~' ........ 74' CY" HEAVY DUTY FOIL ~~~~~ 44c IVORY SOAP FLAKES "'" 82' tol ..... . o-"" ZEE ::;:~:,''.'.~~.~~~'. .'.~~~~. ... ... 11 ' CHEER DETERGENT :;:' ......... 82' cr1LBAG REFILLS ':~,'.~:·:. ...... 43' DRIFT DETERGENT :::' ......... 62 ' .,.... AJAX DETERGENT :::' ..... 'l" BOLD DETERGENT :;:' .......... 'l" ~JERGENS SOAP ::~lJU:::·~. 25' COMET CLEANSER ~:~~'.: ....... 26 ' .,.... ELECTRA SOL ~:': ........... 47' Oll llWAllKI OITHl lllJ ZEST TOILET SOAP "'"" .. 21 ' IVORY SOAP l•UllDIT 12' . ., .............. .. PEANUT BUTTER ~:~:.~:: ....... 66' ~C H B JAM ~~·1~::·~ ........... 49' Q&H SUGAR '1~~~·:;:0.~~~~-~~ ...... 19c ~CURTISS CHIPS !~~':r.1"'.'.1~. 41 e Ou r LOW Ever)llay Price! EGGNOG 47c, · -1£VERACI : SPIRITS · SEAGRAMS V.O. WHISKY CANADIAN 16.I PROOF STH BOTJll $695 , , , •• •, l~t ft• iltMI li1"4 111 thh ••II rt11l!ltlt lu•t 1 u111ll 11111rll11 •f 1h1 thM111141 11 l1w, 4i .. ''"''' ''"'"' iR lltrt !tr, •• II l•tkf. lAOY l(I J2.00#CI CTJI, I BEEFEATER GIN ............... · 94 PROOF, STH IOTTIE $639 F,..-•, ,q lDW :DISCOUNT.PRICES ON HOUSEWARES & BEAUTY AIDS 1 ~.PEffOQD.S :_......, ··l ' · · BACARDI RUM •••··•• ............. · • · ·• · ~. IOPIOOF,5tfolOTTll $499 SILK 'N SATIN ' ......... , .. , ... ,. ,,,,. ..... 77 ' t lO•• t~• ,1:0 l•t• ... , •• t .. , If.I fl,"" lllU VlllJ It < 011 STORE HOURS llflltwolPf ........ ... ,, ..... ""''' ' ...... , .... ,,.1. ' ..... ,.i...i.t-•· .... 11 ... 1t..ILOVAI. 58' SIU ...... .. 2S·ll. Slll ••• 6tc TURKEY RACK 1.rt., .......... 111 ... ... '". u.,·. """" H '""r'•• "' •11•••~ t1 '"•11 , .. tlr ••• 1.1 .. .. ~~~:·;::~· ............... 57c TURKEY LACERS Tio 1t ''·,, .10 1111lr t t , ••• , ltlt .,. l~tt. l tl t i n •11tWt .a. .. trt 1114 1"9+ '•"'•· 24' GLASS BASTER • 4•11 •• ,;.,, •• 1., •••• "' ""' '• , ... ~;.-., •••• , ....... 111 tlot fl•-• 18-PC. CRYSTAL PUNCH BOWL SET .,.,. TABBY TREAT ~,:;:::,, •.••• 13' KiN .. L RATION ;::~;.r;. ......... s1s• ""' O"" FRISKIES MEAL :::.': ..... 63' D i5tfJ1111J Pritt!d Prod11cc , 1 .~ BANANAS '<'f.1 t I ' 100% 9 ( CHIQUITA '<\ · \ IRAND lb . \'J U.S. NO. 1 RUSSET POTATOES ...... ft"" I 0 'c'::::' 39c 1fJl11t ... ,,,1..,;111 ttlt •••1.,.'1 fiottll CIU..,.11 f•trtt A•11t•••• ... t•i• 1ki•1H CHtlri•ll• V1U1r 6rtpd,.lt. ll1ll•tf .... Jn "9il•~ .. • .. llllW ,,., Nh 1114 •11n t i l•tkfltw01Kfflll ,rkn. r.:""i SMIRNOFF VODKA ·······• ............. . f. 10 PROOF, STH IOTTll $489 -. I SEAGRAMS 7 CROWN ········· .. ······· ~ · lllNOlDWHISICIYl6PROOF,STHIOffil $539 JIM BEAM BOURBON . . . . .. .. · . 16 PROOF, STH IOTTlE $ 539 -CUTT SARK SCOTCi( ........... . 16PROOF,5THIOTTU $J60 CHRISTIAN BRo·s:·iiRANDY········"• $539 10 PIOOF, STN aom1 LUCKY VODKA ....•...••...•..•..•. · · · · • • 10 PROOF, STH IOTTU $2 99 LUCKY BOURB0° N .•••.•••....•.•...•.•.••.• l•'l \IJ,... $411 ~. -~. EIDINETUNCICYRSOTRCAIGHT. YIAR OlD, 16 PROOF, STH IOTTlf CHAMPAGNE $ .. llOUlAR, PINI, COlD DU(I, STH IOTTll 249 ALMADt ........... . 110, WHITI, R~.M9N~tif~IN WINES $ J 39 SAVl10%11ryelellcoseof12Sth 12Q···················· •a odtlltlowal 10%. Choose fro~ thl i1 ~•rts ''1 61/2 gallows anti sowt fro"' 011r h•tt stoc•s. ~ 1 1 or 1• tct JOUr own faYoritt mile-long civic eenttr fnspec:l women 's handbag s and all packages and selectively paL men's pocket!. For some trials, ell spec;. tators n1usl enter l h e courtroom through ii tnctnl detection device resembling an isolated door fra me. Whereas bailiffs were rarely armed before Aug. 7, h)(!ay half the judges lei hnil iff~ wear revolvers in t b c courtroom. One superior court judge and his clerk y.·ear handguns at all times; scvcrnl olhcr judges an d men l.n the di~tnt'L attorney's office \VC:ir lhern when they feel it prudent. . ' ' Other securi ty me::isur<'~ have been taken, but Sh('riff Louis t.1ountanos declines to discuss them for fea r of tip· ping off anarchists a n ti crin1inals. • • ·' • The Marin Coun ty board of superv isors has a p p r o v e d spending up lo S300,000 !hi:1 fiscal year for added sc<'nrHr. Some $250,000 of th is is ex· peeled to be spent to hire a 17· man "interna l security forcr'' to guard doors and roan1 1hG huge buil ding equipped \~Ith \\"Ca pons and t\\'O-\\'aY radios. to:! e a n·w hilc. titountanu"' patrol and jail deputies hava been \vor king 12-hour shifts ta compe nsate for the manpO\VCr diverted to interim c1v1c center sccurity measures. tilari n County is not lhc nnlv place \\·here unpreredcn!ed court house security measure s have been put in cHect. SAN FRANCISCO Jn San Francisco, names of judi es and d e p ar t me nt numbers have been removed from chamber doors. All ma ll slots intn lhe ch a n1 be rs ' antcrnon1s arc lorkc d. Superior Courl !fudges h;ivc demanded parking spares "10 a ,\•ell-lighted area .. on th!) first. f\oo!' or the civic ce11!r r ga rage and the assignment of unHormed guards to patrol the corridors. SACRA.J.\IE:'\'TO The Sacramento C o u n t y supervisors have n':idc an in· ilial apprupr1atio n or SJt:: ':) for ne\v security n1eai:.ure::. Deputies, oµc rat111g nul (If a rlew courthou."C SC'<'urily coin· mand post, st•arc h i.on1~ persons entering courlr<JOn's for 11·eapons ;ind pa!rul th'· park ing lot f11r "11n.1 u!hvrU<· ~ people." Corridon; U e h I n •J judges' chan1bers arc se,1!rd off. f BESf\O .. -. ' ;3 ' . , l . t. • • t - • • • • .. • • • • , • • ' • ~ Frcsnrr County SUfJl"r1·i~rir~ arc studyi ng recorn mcndul1on.- ror security mC'as urcs costing $22,6!i6, includin '! :I r ;i rm syste rns. a scnlcd·off corridor bcl\1·cen the prisoner:i.' ho!d1 ris; cell and the courlroon1 :ird electrically control ed lnc~i; on strategically locatccl doors. LOS ANGE LE~ , ... f o\lo,ving a bombing outside the offi ces of Di~lricl 1\ttornl'y Evelle J. Younger, Lo :s An geles county su pr.rvi.,,ors apprn\'ed 22 <iddit ion<tl s.:uurd~ to bolster security in 1hr 111111 of Justice. Und 1i:clo:.td t>Ll:uri· ly 1neasures have bl·1·n ai1- prove d for other c o u n l ~· buildings. SAN DIEGO An electronic :ilcrl s~·~t~m has been lnst(lllc d in !he Snn Diego county co u r l h n ll s c which allows <i b:iiliff ro press ;in alarm bulto11 in thr courtrooin to alcrl sheriff's de puties. Persons e n t er ing the courthouse ;ift er hours mU'"' provide ident ific:ition nod si~n <i J!uard 's logbooh, Recently. Chief J u s 11 r (' Donald R. Wright of the Slt1tc Supreme Co u r t called n :;pecial meeting of prcsidin~ judges of superior courts in 18 mclropolltan counties . The jud(lcs D"rccd H1<1t public safety <ind frl'C'dnm from fear musl he nrov\dctl for court trials and o!hrr lc~:tl proceedings. T h l' y rccon1· mended thrse nleasurcs: -Audio systems, emergency lighting system<; and :silent alarm swilC'hcs lo ::i!crt police .-. in case (If cour t room disturbariccs. -Ml!tal drlcctor:.;, rc~ul::ir search procedure~. uniformed patrols and plainclt1thc5mcn tn prevent the entrance 0 r y,·capons or bo mhs. -Adm ission of lh<' public only upon sati.c;factor)' Iden· liricalion and Lile signing oC u register. -L o c k s on unu s e d courtrooms :i n d corrldnri:, special lrninin~ for b:iili!f!> and a thorough search cf prl!Oncs before they enter a courtroom. But while jud~cll h:i\'c en· C(lurngcd the ~ccuritv buildU)l1 others bnvc crlticiL<'d it. Tho DA ILY PILOT- The Ono Thal Cares I , I ' ' i ' " l , • . • ' ' ,,., .... " ~ . -· --. ., -. . .. . ' --..,,, .. ---,, •• ·.r .. • ._,_,.. DAILY PILOT HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSE$ FOR SALE Gef:Mr•I 1000 General 1000 Genera l 1000 General $ CASH TALKS $ 11TH HOUR .BEFORE FORECLOSURE Submit your c•sh offer on prime 11 corner. F1lrview & Sunflower. FAR OUT BEACH HOUSE Luxury & comfort by the sea. 4 bedrooms- 5 baths. Entertain in 1paneted family room atmosphere or formal living room, both have massive fireplaces. Watch the Spinakers sail by from the glassed patio on the roof. There's a special income feature, too! A rare value at $69,500. POOL HOME-$27,SOO 1000 -·--' - HOUSES FOR SALE 1000 ASSUME 6% LOAN! HOUSES FOR SALE Newport Be•ch 1200 MUST SELL BY OWNR Brand new, lee simple, 1 blk beach, 3 br, 2 ba, 2 frpl c, This gorgeous 3 bedroom beam ceil'g, 1v/w crpt, huge Rancho Mesa home hrui a dbl. gar. 642-7523. formal dining room, GREAT I ~B::Y;O;W;'N:;E,;R:;:._:;.w:::,::.,,,.cl~il~J-are-.. LANDSCAPING & a big 20x 4 hr. Only $38,500. 25 covered patio. 'lbe VA 642-1611 or 642-9996 loan at 6% in1erest reqUires I-:========== no loan fees, also never any Newport Shores 1120 penalty for future pay off. Newport at Fairview lt sparkles from the new roof and paint job to the pool. Can't affoi'd a pool -Try this on for size ... 3 Bedrooms, covered patio, Solar heated pool. New carpets in living room, dining & hall. SAVE $SOOO Owner just reduced this Mesa Verde 4 bed- room, family room, dining room, tri·level home to $41,950. lt's in excellent condition and sho ws beautifully but owner says "SELL". Best of all, it can always be NEWPORT Shores 2 Br. & transferred to another per. conv, den, 2 ba, frplc, all son, il you ever resell. To bltns. Club facil. 642-!J.i63 secure your future, be sure 10 eall us, and see what Bayshore1 1225 $33,500 will buy! BY O\VNER: CU!e 3 BR, 2 646-8811 !anytime) EASTBLUFF-S BEDROOM with sparkling pool completely fenced from huge back yard. 3 luxury baths,•formal din· ing room, elem. & high School in walking dis- tance -$52,000. CO&ATS BA, fam. rm, w/w crpt, huge patio. $54,500 642-9194, WALLACE I ="'='=C=fr=cl=•=D=ri="=====- Call tod1y for 1 REALTOR$ Westcliff 1230 I·G_•_n_._"_' _____ 1000_ 1 Generel 1000 PHONE 646-7171 -546-4141- (0p~n Evenin91) THERE ARE NO RANCH STYLE Impeccable cond.! Spacious 3 Br, home, 2 ba. Used brick frJ>l. Fo1mal entry hall. Bllns. 2 Patios, Good financ. 1.1ay 11,•e show you this? INV~~~ v!souR FANCY GIMMICKS In the price 01· lh'e financing of this exquisite four bed- room and den home, but 1he kitchen is loaded with them . It's as mOdern as to. morrow. Transferred and MUST SELL NOW! A steal al $44,000 and assume 676 ~'o insurance' Joan, MbRGAN REAL TY 67U642 675-6459 FUTURE This beautiful deluxe duplex is PRICED TO SELL at just •$33,000 .. .It will do the fol- lowing things for you ... put 2 children thru college. . . · sace you $800 to $1.(Xk) tn actual cash on your income ta>. .• ,pay for dinner f· r two 1 ilt a fine restaurant seve.ral : limes a week ... cloth your &ehool agers for years. . , etc. etc. GET THE PIC- TURE??? Call us now and GET THE DETAILS, Let us show you how you can pro- vide your family's future NOW. . .anyone can. , • EVERYONE SHOULD 546-8640 2629 Harbor, C.M. EASTBLUFF WITH FOtlEVER VIEW Immaculate upgraded 3 bed- room home with 180' un- restricted view of Sarldle- ·back hills. UCJ & Fashion Island. Very privale loca- tion on Cu1 De Sac. f'ro.. fessiona1ly landscaped gar- den. TRY and tind another home in this area for this price. $39,800. Colesworthy & Co. REALTOR Nev.·port Beach Office 1028 Bayside Drive 675-4930 $39,SOO 4 BR+ FR +POOL Newpot1 BeaC'h lovers look at this • 4 big bclnns -fam. ii.~-room • sparkling pool • plus Harbor Hi2h School - :\Vestcliff Shopping -All this 'and only minutes to the beach • Priced under mar- ke1 for quick sale. Better hWTY. DIAL 645--0303 FOREST E. OLSON REALTOR Located near Mesa Verde 1.Ge;;;;n;;•:;r;•;;;l;:;:;:;:;;l;;OOO;;;;;;;G;;e;;n;;;•;;ra;;l;:;:;:;:;:l;;OOO;;;;I area, delux~ 3 bedrm, 2 bath I• + three 2 bedrm, 2 bath uniu. $6B,OOO (with terms) 7 BEDROOM -OR ? OPEN SUN. 1.5 2420 E. 22nd ST. KIDS ? IN·LAWS? HOME STUDIO? WHAT Newport DO YOU NEED? This home has it! Newport 1t Beach custom built home. 3 Baths. Up to 7 Fiirvlew BR, depending on your needs. Flexible floor plan. Extensive use of glass brings outdoors 64U811 inside. Beaut. lndscpd., oversized lot with privacy. Desperate owner will help fi nance; will consider lease/option or lease $500 Mo., (1nytime) or WILL EXCHANGE. 675·8800 PRESTIGE WATERFRQNT HOMES I Newly listed -Lot #60; P.er!ect for the fam- ily \vho wants a spacious waterfront home. 4 E'xtra l_ge BR .. 4 Ba .. pwdr. rm. Lg-e . liv. rm. & den; 3 car garage. Beaut. patio/garden w/rm. for pool; deck & dock. By App't. For complete Information on a ll homes & lots, please call : BILL G RUNDY, REALTOR 833 Dover Dr •• Suite 3, N.B. 6424620 ''*•• PYRAMIO EXCHANGOR5 5y,o;. General 1000 General 1000 Gener1I 1000 General 3 BIG, BIG BED-* TAYLOR l--0-N_L_Y_l_O_o;._0 _ $2950 Down/No Second $24,300 RFEONOCEMO$, YNAERADT . DOWN E>cell'"l 3 b<drm ;, Norlh V.A, LOAN ' Costa M('sa localion, handy END OF CUL DE '"bi"rct lo 7•;·~ annual TV>l'-• • \\'ilJ buy 1his roon1y 1900 sq. !o schools, markets, e1c. , .. SAC LOCATION DOLL HOUSE cenrag(' rat(' \\'ith total pay. ri. 3 bedroon1 3 bath home Take over one loan only • PAUL•WBtl'B CARNAHAN •S.&LTT CO .• 10!l3 Baker, C.M. 546-5440 CORONA OEL MAR NEW LISTING South of Highway Nice :? bedroom house on front of 40 foot lot Room for 2nd unit Only $43,500 Realtors ''Our 25th Year In The Harbor Aree'' 673-4400 AND 5"•"' LOAN N•wport •lei .. hts 2 hr!rm ment ol $21 1 prr n1onth. 1• 10 <> Y.'ith large separate family at Jo,v int. with total pymn! WITH SUBSTAN home ideal for c:ouple. Lge. }luge 3 bedroom, 2 bath I!~~~~~~~~~ • room and formal din ing. less than rent! Unusually TIAL 0 0 W N rooms w/bean1ed ceilings. home-close to schools and · $""·'"" You'll ]OV{' lhe near new nice rear yard! PRICED AT $29 500 ".J ,,., shopping, Gorgeo11s FJRE-• S ANISHI Sii shag carpet and the 40 x liO Bar Harbor Beauty f'ILA CE.:''G listcning J-lard- p ,...-en Jandseaped rt'ar yard. Lush new !isling of 4 & tam-wood Floo,n>." Subihit a rea- Costa Mesa 1100 ')llcsii\cr~c~caftr 546-5990 $1850 DOWN 3 Bdrm. DR home. Court-Priced fo1• quick sale al ily rm on large corner lot. sonable d61,,n paY11ient, sell-~1,e;ssures privacy,$~~~ ~;;~7~~~-easy lcrms -~;~~~~11!~::~~~-!1r:i~~~~: w" wa"1' Ltoperra&l<. Lee Save Thousands ''Our 25th Year'' leases kf! Out of tov.•n owner. dcsper- WESLEY N. * 2 BR, $18.\ EASTSIDE I ate!! 5 BR, fam rm, shake FIXER UPPER ~rsity Park 1237 BASK IN LUXURY With the lush shag cp!g., beaut. wallpapers, dbl_ drap- eries & added. pool table sfl.e fam. rm., of.fered with this 3 BR. 2 Ba. townhouse, Joe. nr. pools, school & shop- ping, Owner has purchased another home & anxious to sell. Priced at $35.000. i red hill REALTY Univ. Park Center, Irvine CllU Anytime 833-0820 Corona del Mar 1250 CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX Spaeious and modern. Ideal for the owner 0t•tupant. A spectacular 3 Bedroom 21,,f! bath owners unit and 2 Bed· room 2 bath secondary Unit. Tori quality construction <'.nd finishing tlu"Oughout. P1-esently under construe· lion, to he finished in mid- December, CALL 613-8550 TAYLOR option to huy $2j,000 Realtors roof, dbl garage, harcl~·ood * 4/F'R, $260 ~IESA VERDE 2790 Harbor Blvd. ~t Adan1s floors , frplc. No down pay. ----===ce==~- Sharp 4 bedroom, l* bath Realtors -=H=7A07L'=F""P"°R""IC'="EO':Do='"I including gard{'ner 51;)-9-191 Open '!il 9:00 P:\1 nicnt GI • or submit any SCARCE ITEM! Glen Mar home. Great Hunt-NEWPORT CENTER * 5/FR, DR, $325 BACK BAY C "'"115! H · Zlll s 1 · ll'H n d READY TO GO tern1s. an "'"'" , e1·1-A real Cru"·n of lhc Sea! ington Beach location. \Valk · an' oaquin 1 s oa LIVING opt $34.150 or you name 11! • • R al o le. shops & schools. Vacant 644-4910 3 BR• $21,SOO tagc e tors. pen eves. Shorecliffs; beaut, home, and ready foe 11" hoHday" OVERLOOK ~ · O ~c -~---1 BEACH AREA ~ "6 588 1700 ,q, it.• of Jiving '"°"'· (--,..,.· ....,, Yes it's read)' to :::o -f'as! *TRIPLEX * Access to beach. For de-No Down to a VETERAN, NEWPORT HARBOR Live in one and rent one Du· '""'' ~ 500 I lh h · I OLLEGE REALTY posse~sion -,\pprais<'rl $5,950 Down. Owner will help tails, Call: ....... . En"'y the vie\v and 1v<ltth pe-:.:, e c eapest \Vay 0 1uvr.L1~.i-'" $21 ,500 -FHA·V•I OK. 3 f' 3 2BR l \" b CORBIN • COATS IL~v .. ,,ilboali> ...... colorful o~·n property in a beach ......,....,,,. ,.,. inance. · ·• l a. ea. • '"" ..... "" · 1 large bdrms, Cop()('r kel!lc Bltns, w/w cpt_ & drapes_ 3 & NEWPORT BAY. Custom area. Thu; one ncludes Car. Newport He'oghts Ar ea kitchen and dinmg area. -1 Ora-, Stov """ R• Car gar, \V/al\ey ent. Walk MARTIN WALLACE Built Three bdrn1s. :?.~~ balh ··~ ~. .." · e · frlgerator with purchase. Enjoy one or "CO s TA LargC' lot. Close 10 cvery. to shops, churches, schools REALTORS home, with large living ONLY S2S.IJOO VA/FHA OK. MESA'S f1NEST"' Ioca1ed thing, Better hlrrry, ""on'l & O.C.C. Price $34.950! e 962-4454 e room. f'('{'rention rm, for-DIAL 645-0303 near WESTCJ~IIT Sl!OP-last. Call: Patrick \\'ood 545-2300 REALTORS 644-7662 Open Ev. 'n I ma! dining roon1, "·el bar, OREST E LS PING CENTER Amp I e DIAL 64:rfJ"ll3 e B'll H Rlt ni 9 and beautiful built in kit-F . 0 ON room for ."""~ Jar"<' furni-FOREST E, OLSON 1 aven, r. HARDWOOD FLOORS •-p • d 1. E LTO _,._,..., "' 2.111 E. Coast, CdM 673-3211 3 BR. & eonv. den·, w/>" "a-. cno:n. rotei.:,e pa 10, over-R A R lure. Three GIGANTIC REAL TOP. •" .,. 5 BEDROOMS sized Dbl. i::arage Plus ad-2299 HARBOR, C.M. BEDROOl\IS, ne\v golden OR $23. 995 Near oc:ean. \VeU built. Open $77,900 • BAYCREST ditional boat or trai!rr s!or-·-"":="c,;:Hc,:A~P.B=,.:,~C::·:c":c·~ beam ceilings. Buill-in kitc!L TRl•PLEX FOR ha l"\lest shag rarpct, Double -S The n1ost appealing, immacu. Xlnt value. Formal dining age from nllt'y. Exl'c~lent LOG SIZE fireplace in 1he IN FORECLO URE \a!e 2 bedroom hon1e in this l'n. S5l.500 plus family rm., brkfst. Ne>1-port Bench loc11 tion <lt 336.50J -North Costa Mesa family room. FJ'C'Sh spark· 2 Story mansion, ·1 bedn11. 3 price range, EastsidC', C.M. Delancy Real Estate area, 3~ Baths. Beaut. cov. only $$.},(XX). Submi1-Terrm. Area -UN HEARD OF! J' hil d . 'd d hath, 2 years llf'IV, 4 blln G-•l •tarte.. OT retired 2828 E. Coast H1vy., CdM M M L B d Rlt Show, 12',t return wilh mi"-tng iv e ecor 11151 e an r1..~ k't 1 ·~ ' 644-7270 patio. Room for })O'JI . Im-· · a or e, r · " , H · hi h""oi"l k·l,.h"" ovens, range, 1"'" 1 c icn, "O••Pl" l>"ffi", Call M•. Jtar· -.,-==;.;:~~c-c== ' 'n>U"> d•"-· £»0 h U"O.l ha• OU . rig 'C '' 1'" ~" b. ( ·1 lk ' '" ' u '" ' maculate thruout. Owner 64t).{).'.(X) Eves. 5"18--326.'i " "'" ....... " · h ·" · • S'MVVI · ig ami Y rootn, \Va -in .. ,· ... Soulh Co••l Real Es. *PANORAMIC VIEW 2299 HARBOR, C.M. HOME + VIEW "· "-"o'OOm•. \Veil -"-" lo'" wit gan1Cn Vl!'\V. LCJUV. in-b 1 d k 1. , ., ..., transferred. '."'" . "' '"""'' ' \Ual F''!-IA Inwstment. OUR \\'et ar, coo "c pa io, late, 545-8424. Luxury Ocean Blvd. Duplex. u. nits. Assume a1 low 8.:'1% BES'f VALUE'. Al ~tly forn1al separate •lining rm, ...:::::::~:..:::=-~~~ ~ l k. J 10 & H bo v• 2216 11EYER PLACE . v "er oo tng e Y • ar r. BEAUTIFUL ~ + BOAT SPANISH ColdWeR,Banker JUST .REDUCED 4 Spacious bedrooms • interior ~"ID OClll!M"l't' Beautiful view. Shp for 30 ft. r.1editen'anean details. huge boat. ldt'al for 1he comfort Roman step down bath • of l'elirement or as a sum- quit't cul-dt'-sac sl. pie-833-0700 644-2430 mer home. Spend your spare turesque red tilt' root • 3 ..,,,.,,~~~!'l!'!~~""•I time fi shing and enjoying years new . only $33,000. Try -JUST LISTEDI 1--the s mog f-rt'e air, Just re. JO'/r. do~'n • very anxious. duced to $18,!iOO '"i1h flex. 646-7171 V.' t Ne wport d"plex 3 BR ible ter1ns. B<!lter 11urry! es : . · DIAL 64~0.103 2 ba. "· """· 5"""0'" hv. FOREST E OLSON nn. \11/frplc. N!Ct:'ly C'arpet. • ed. Close to beach. REALTOR 673-3663 642-2253 Eves. 2299 HARBOR, C.~f. associated BROKERS-REALTORS ZOZS W fio1boa 673·]66] Custom 2 Bedroom $17,7SO & Guest Hou5e FU L PRICE Excellent E-slde location, L compt redecol'ated. heavy 3 huge bedrooms \l'ilh mod- interest. call .. ~~ .. =. large Jiving 1m with Of'>C'n B 0"'""'"' 673 8866 • W lk & L ..,,.., ·"-"-' Cathedral ceilinr. massive 3 br, 1 ~) ba, lge fenced yard. Y ,,,,,_,; .-a er ee 6M,,,:,~· LaBoErvdo~-~. R6,161~;,79 mn.o.;ter txodroonl. upi::-raderl Newly decorated. Vacant. OPEN I-louse Jo~ri thru Sun, '-'"""''''" '" ~ ""'" crpts & drps & !ixhu"<'s, 3 i..::S'::':.:·900=·,::5'::9-c.2::36.:-7~o_w_"'..c_'·--12 to 6. 2 br w/1 br rental Realtors NEEDS WORK, r111• garage. Sltrifjce at 2 1-IOUSES on 1 lot. apt over unit. $39.500. 423 Poinsettia. 2i90 llnrbor Blvd. at Adams ~,l0,000. garage. Also building on Jot "8='''="='"='='·='="=~=66.1=2=== 54;)-9l91 ()pf-11 'Iii 9:00 P711 BUT WHO good for rental. 54S-2420 ~ DOESN'T l' COLLEGE PRK" $25,900 Balboa Peninsula 1300 4 BR. 3 Ba. den. Nr. boat ramp & bay. $55,000. LIDO WATERFRONT APTS.·320 LIDO NORD 1800 "1· ft. Cai>' Cod. 4 ""1- $150,{)('A) Price wilh 7% 1st rooms, Eastside Costa f\-1 esa. T.D, 6 Beaut turn, units; 3 baths, 2 brick FIREPLAC- 6 t·ar garages & util. room. ES, breakfast nook, breeze· RO Ft. on swin1ming beach. way & patio. Paneled den. w;.: consider trade for boat Se1lllrnte Workshop. 6Sx3C5 or 1na.xim11m $8.'i,OCXl lge. 4 R-2 lot. Price reduced to BR. hoUS!!, S36.950! CALL Bm G'undy, R1tr. Walker & Lee 83.1 Dover Dr., N.B. 6424620 Reali ors 962-4471 (::::)546-8101 FHA 7 ~'/o -Lo D11·n.e * By Owner: 645-0927 * Macnab-llVine , Really Com1apy NEWLY COMPLETED Newport Beach 1200 OCEANFRONT Beach & Ocean view at you r door. 2 BR. home over triple gllr. R·3 Lot with space to expand or add rental units. Aski ng $59.500. i\1arshall, ReaHor 67~4600 Lido Isle 1351 REDUCED Jmmac. 5 BR., family rm. 45 f , lot street to street. By app't. only. $93,750 Huntington Beach 1408 CRANKY? Swim and relax In your awn hee.ted pool, combine fabul· , ous entertainment' and ha~ ~· family living, 3 huge bedrms, 2 baths, man-&ze den, cozy fireplace, dream kitchen 1vith custom "BBQ" <:enter. Separate laundry room includes wuher & dry. er, \Vall to ""aU carpets, , drps, inter-com, covered pa. : tio + much more. Lwcuf. iou.s landscaping on a cor- ner Jot, underpriced (very) at $27,00l for immediate sale!! REAL ESTATE , HUNTINGTON BEACH OFC. · 894-5311 . Open 7 days • 8: 30 to I: :0 ; SACRIFICE SALE BEACH SELLER LOSING $3,000 Beautiful Calif. classic. Only : 1~2 years old. Modern 3Bed-: room. Large family room : with cozy fireplace. Brighi : cheery all elec. kitchen. · Prime comer Jot with boat '. access. Shake roof. Many : extras. low, low down. Take : advantage arxl reap the im· ; mediate profits. Hurry •nd · call {TI4l 962-5685. FOREST E. OLSON Inc. Realtors 19131 Brookhllnlt Av•. Huntington Beach NOT BRAND NEW! BEACH-$17,500 Not nc"''• but only 3 yrs. young_ 3 large bedroom~. 2 full baths. Family J'Obm. Gourmet kitchen with latest elec. built-ins. Enclosed pa. Uo. Just take OV('r with pay. n1ents cheaper than rent. Call today (TI4) 962-~. FOREST E. OLSON Inc, Realtors 19131 Brookhurst Ave. tluntington Beach OPEN SUNDAY 1·5 10032 Birchwood Av•. "MEREDITII GARDENS" elegant tri-level 4 bedrin. 3 bath with large den, Separ- ate breakfa.~t rm, formal dining rm, prof landscaped & decorated, Asking $45.500 but submit!! Anxious, fa.It possession!! Larwin Realty, Inc. 962-6988 Anytime BUI LOE RS CLOSEOUT Credit rejections place 7 hom. es on choice lots on the mar- ket again!! 3-7 Bednns, 3 & 4 baths, bltns, crptg, shake root etc. from $33.940. RANCHO LA CUESTA Brookhurst & AUanta, H.B. 968-1338 Open 10 am--6 pm SELLING Your Home? e WE BUY EQUITIES e FREE APPRAISALS e 2j YEARS EXP. 847-8507 Eves: 642-0427, 4n-3769 fO;t+Mlif.V OWNER MUST SE~L 5 B0-2 STORY has bought new &0 must sac. rificc I.his huge home with SEPARATE 20 x 31) bonus room on tree-shaded streel. \Viii pay your costs and paint. $30,000 ALL TERMS! Walker & Lee s.hake roof, many bltn fea. IOiiiiiiiiii..,iiiiiiiiiiiiOii""'I ern gorgeous bath. It needs tures, refrig/washer incl., some cleaning but you reap 1deal home for the adult EASTSIDE, C.M. the harv~t. \Vil! S(']I "i lh family & in-laws. Vacant & 3 Bednn, 2 baths plus 2 bed-Fl-IA and No Dcrwn Terms ready for immediate occu-rm, I bath. near 17th St. GI terms. \VHY RENT! $1SO o month 45 Ft. Pool 2790 llarbor Blvd. a! Adt1111s 54.5-9~91 Open 'Iii !!:00 P:'ll BALBOA POINT Oceanfront! 3 vie• Qedroon1s, high ceilings, '1 stm'Y. S.,••cer>- ing \\"hite \Valer .tnd coast- line vic1v. A Qllf"·Of-n-kind re-al vnlue at $1511000. 642·8235 675-3210 CALL (!) , .. ,.l ,24 Rcalton: ""'4tAdlll. 1 Huntington Beach 1400 84~ ~i=140 LIDO REALTY INC, 3377 Via Lido 673-7300 ... ncy. 642.1111 Shopp'"" '"''" '" "'h· Walk·er & Lee pERRON bltns in apt, 4 garages, re- Assume finR ncing on !Kime & pay just $150 a n1onth_ Entry hall, 4 Bdm1, dining rm, mahogany bar + silver C'ablnets. ~1720 TARBELL 2955 Harbor • Eastside Triplex • $57,SOO $2S,SOO As1ume 6'1'4 o/. ;\PR bn, and have pay. ments of just $15.1 a monlh, Natural wood cabinets in kttehen. fireplace, I ll r g e J'(IOmll thruout $o10-l'120 TARBELL 2955 Harbor AC I lmmac S br + fam ·rm t blk trom tn-lne AW!. 2 'brl~k· 1rplcs, hardwd !loon:, )>llNI, park-like yard. ~·d patkl trees • beaut. quahty strffi. $33,000, Klrt&aard R.E. Mt :i..m2 e BEACH BARGA N BR, J'A be. Xlnl cond . Walk to Mst beach 1n Newport! S26.l00. CAYWOOO REALTY 6306 W. ():la.sl 1-IW)' •• NB • 541290. DA:LY 1-'fl.DJ' \VANT ADS! cently redecorated. RCoaltors Lachenmyer Rlty 2790 l larbor Blvd . "' Adams Call 646-392.8 Evci>: 548-6769 545-9~91 Open 'Iii !l:OO P:\1 LINDA ISLE 347 E. Woodland Pl. Costa Mes• 642-4905 IMPRESSIVE--$26, 950 Exquisite & immaeulal(o Bay. rront, just vacated. Immedi.1.,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,...,,.1 Pool, Pal\o, Vlt>w + 4 Bed· Huge fan1i ly rootn, 3 Bedrms, ~ ii roonl!, 3 bit.th~ se>p powd plus ovt'1"Sizcd rnaster bed-air oeeupant;"y . ._ e by Appt. REPOSSESSIONS rm., 11-et b&r, 1i din rm, lg rw111, nt1tural brick finl· PETE BARRm Sparkling clean homes, some kH 1.'"'P brkfsl nook, panel-platt. No down terms, Re111ty * 642-5200 newly pain!ed &: cnrpeted. 2, led am rm., ln this exclu. ~~112o .!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!..,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•I · ' & 5 bdrms. Some \vlth sive Dover Shores home. TARBELL 2955 Herbor I $24,650 pools. F1lA-VA conv. term~. Roy J. Ward Rltr., 1033 Mar. Own•r D•sperate from $17.(Q) to $40,000. iners Dr. 646-1550 open dn.ily. 3 BR + den, 2 BA, hrdwd Collins & \Vatt1 Jl'IC, n d dbl 3 OOQroom & den, entry hall. KING SIZE LOT nr, crpts, l'P!I. gar-dining rn1, ctntral floor 8843 Adams Ave. 962-5S23 a(!:t', fteq'!SS to rear yard for Close to ~an, Build la.rge boats tilrs etc E-side CM. plan, dream kitchen;, built· $27 500 duplex With four Ctn.gel, $2S iio ' " Ins M0-1720 1 o~r w/tlnllnc .• $29,500. w.·11,:Mc Cardle, Rltr.s. _TA_R_B~_l:L~955 Harbor Il~g~':ioit. ~~!~~:rer. Geor9t Williamson 1s10 N~wport Blvd. c.M. TRUST DEEDS red, s btith.,, 4 rniin sized R .. ltor u•n29 ' 67J..4lSO 64S..IS'4 Eves .,..... I buy lr;:I, 2nd. or 3rd Truitt bedroom.,, family room ~1th ~:;;~;,.,,;;~~~~:I ~'"""!'"!'"'""".'"""""""" I Dr«ls for e::ish. Phone for lti own flrtplace. built-Ins. µt .5oo. ~rtut 2 br £-side \'ou don 't nttd ll gun 10 [N'(' nppmiStll. &12-4-12'2 540-t'ral C.M. hOme. lldwd tloon, lg Draw J.~allt when )IOU plllCf! Anytime: ~Ir. Gt'neo. Bkr. TARBELL 2955 He rbor fencedyd,A.gt.646-1456. an1tdtntheDAJLYPILOT ffiE"SUNNEVERSETSonMONEY IN y OiJR OIAtl:;..-A-LUfES. eG-5671 Dial &12-5673 &: chan:c 1t. Pilot C11lss1Ued POCKET! Cameo Shores :VieW 4 Bdrm. 3 ha.th bl!:iucy, Q11·n- er very anxious. i57g,500 67S-3000 fB II,\\ ,\ tii; U'll. llli.\1:1\' 1\1'. Lf~: 1~~9 !I" }OGO I 2407 E. Coost H~it., Cd~f ';"1REALTY l 7;:;:;~"°'~~--C.:.:~ Near Ntwp•rl , ••• orrlee BUY OR RENT ASSUME 5%. FHA mortgage 7 1/4 °/o-4 BR-POOL Owner's divorce sacrifice in Bayttest near schools & ~tores. Fee title. New car- pets & drape~. ramily·.wi, xlnl cond, game 1 n1. Save about Sl0.000? 548-8211 • of $24,000. Cash out for $15.900. Heated pool, t w o Thi: ln1n111.culate ~ bedrm story, 3 bedrooms 2% baths condominium 2 balh dbl~ fonnaJ dining ~m. lamuY . garage. fireplace, all elec room w/fireplace. Carpets & with a dish\l'asher and en-dtaJ>ell. Vicinity Brookhunt : joy all the carefree fun of k Indianapolis_ By owner : Condo livini:. Rent or as-afl<!r 6:00 Pill 962--7635. ~umc lhis lo1v 5\~r;;, loan to. ,..,;;;--::::0:-=C..:.-F"--1· tal monthly payn1ents ~nly 4 BR, crpts, bltns, 2 car pr • fenced in rear, patio, GI Re: ' $169, full price, $2S.OOO, sale By Owner, * !16U04? Conte see this now!!! Newport Heights -O ceanfront Dupl« Nc1v & chan11ing, b.-111 pritt FOR SALE BY Fountai'! V1ll•v 1410 tor 4 bedrm, 3 c:at garage, OWNER Nk .. ly l'"d"apcd, • a' y . Owner Says "Sell!" 11pkttp, . e 3 + 2 Bdrnui·firepl. REAL &STATE JEAN SMITH. fll TR. e fi504 Oceanfront llUNTlNGTON BEACH OFC. Wow I Reductd $2000 400 E. lilh St.,,C.A1. G46-3255 1.•_00ll_-SS52_____ 894-Slll Quick possession! Sharp lg s WESTCLIFF PLAZA-Open 7 day3 • 8:30 to 11:30 Bl't. 3 BA! Many extras! * WANT * QUALITY I Dup lex or 2 Homes o~ Lot Good c11h down. AGENT 146\1153 Anyone can assume this k>w Good terni:rr. inlcrtal loan. Quiet lrtc-I s BR. 2 Bath CON-HAFFDAL REAL TY Uni!<! cul~e-sac, chtuining 2 OOMINTUli-f, eon1e.r lot. 842-4405 bedrm + homf!, Needs 110n1e ~an. Near OC'ean, 64' %. ;,oo; .~;;;o ,;;-i;-;-,i''-c-- plllnt, liy n._ppt. only, call $27,000. Call 962--0891 ~, ..... "'~l\IE1 5~"'3·•8Rloan, by ~Ir. lfoegcc 54>841.4 Sot.Ith ;;i;iii-"7--7:C:::::..:::;.--,.-,.., mmac , 2 hn , nu Coa5t R"altors. IT'S A breeze .. seu }'Our c-pts .\ drps, 11.·i/I t11ke 2nd Items wlth ease, use Da.ily $28.;,oQ. 96S-800t aft 6 i, Salurda.y • DIME:-A~LlNES! Piliit ChwUled. 6u.-.:i671 wknd.,. . .. n •, ' ' " y ·- :, ' ._ ·- ) • r: . I • •• y . L: n ' ti : 1.: " . ,: .: '· 2 . " ,, • '· t. ' r· " • ~ rt ' I. n I h ' ' • • ' r ' ' .. I : .. " Th'"""· NM-19, 1970 DAILY PILOT H RENTALS RflNTALS RENTALS RINTAU RiNTA[S -, · ~OUSES FOR SALE RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS HOUMO Fumlthod -llflluml.... Hou UnfwNohod ·~· '""''...... '-lpts.=;_;.,'•m .. ;::ltl::;'iod;;:_=·..,..rfftt.=::...:F.;:;•mlohod:.:::=~,,.,1·'.'.-'""""""i::....:U;.::rtfv:=ml="'::; .... :=~7".'.~Apts.=~u:'""'"""'"":..:o.:="':::::·r.I • .,,..c .... ~ 1100 ~~;~;ti!!!~·:::;·~lo;...,.;;;'~;;.-~"-~;;;l'~-~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~l.~_.,....:;!~~·~·;•ch~;~200~~!:;!~~1o~o~ch;;;;~•~111~f --._,.,-...... -Hunt!"""' -WO _.,,..., !!!!e'f WE """' ~ U.tlnp ,.. Rontolt le ShoN W ,._ .. och 320I O-ol -. =:' s!v!° s:i ~.,: 0: Newport Shona: Qqtn1al Gener1I JOOO C BR. J Ba., ~ t&mll¥ J st f on ... .., pay....... mOleorremai.lMO"'"'"" * $165 * :::7,u~· :\.~b!~":. I or ~' BR, '*' BA Stardust • hr rum ChaMC!l borne, Pool SHARP 2 Br home, Lovdy m.8992 ~ mms. PRESTIGE LOCATION ,.., . !Sl.soo cl"bholtae. $87.so_ 646-3108 ,,,,.,.., yard• paUo. Gar-S1"n.gle Adults Casual estata nvtng. Enter La Quinta He,.. * 3 BR + R. nn Westmont YOl/'NG CathOllc lady woi.&ld aae. Tots .t. pet ok. WON'T University Parle 3U1 mosa's lwb ireen atmosphere & stroll tree- $.12,000 like to share a.pt w/Al'l'll! ln LAST! soUtb Bay Qub la a Whole lined walk ways to your apt. MARINER SQUARE APARTMENTS immediotely odjocent Westcliff shop- ping center -hes e Townhouse avail- able featuring private residenti al at- mosphere. 2 Bedroom. Woler, gos & coblo TV included in ren t . Kitc hen built-ins include d ishwosher & disposal, woll to woll corpets, full length linen dropes. Also ovoiloble 1-2 & 3 Bed- room, •$185 to $255. Coll Bob Buckley ot '645-0252 or come by MARINER SQ UARE Aportments. 12# Irvine Ave., N.B. ' . '• r Oonttngencles OK nnrtb Hit. Bcb. Aak '°' * BLUE BEACON 1( new _, ol W. -ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED 'CALL FOR DETAILS Miu Boub, 89<-131J'1. * 64S-el11 * DON'T DELAY I lust for ....... people, It'• l lllL Unf, $150 _ Furn. $110 -&:orwln RHlty, Inc. ltOOMMATE Needed, 2 f<m * $lO * CALL US TODAYf fun living "1th warm, ~ 2 llR. Unf, $1 75 _ Fum. $210 962-6911 .,.ytlme teecherl Sttk'I same to 5 5 BR. 3 ba, Eutbhrtt •• $S7S nam1c ne.Jghbcn. It'• a ahare 3 BR hie in CdM. COZY 't Br, duplex. Bl!n .c Bdrm. 3 bath Lake '1'0,000 CJ.ubhoUM: wttb 31Spac. 'fir. ptllans, ttind.ecor. furnLshlnprl! live 1705 675-4918 RIO, Garage. Euts'dt Cocta Forest 1:1mn9 .......... $365 bealtb club •unu, .w*.m-w thin roman c se g w/fun or p ,Yacy. 1:;:,..;:;;:;.:;;=;;_-_.;.;... MATURE FEMALE to Share Mesa. AVAIL NOW! 4 BR. .2!oti bMt. •••••.•• S3!'iO mini pool. P-iv room. bll· Terraced pool , prl. sunken gas BBQ. W/ POOL CM TOWNHOUSE. cau a11 * BLUE BEACON * s BR., mo. to mo ....... IS50 lJardl. lodoor ao1f drivlqo seculded sealing compL w/Ramada & Foun- Protossionally Jand!<aped '' 546-7274 * 64S-e111 * S BR. 211 bolhs "''"" $300 ~. tennlt -I"" . tain. , _ • . with wide if"l!en lawns, WORKING Girl wishes to 3 BR. 2 Ba.. a1hOUa .... $340 abopand ril}dent tamMi pro, * Color CO•ord. kit wl Indirect l1ght1n9. spacious brick patio&: gas share Bal tsle home Cott• Met• 3100 Si.Ade. 1 .ti 2 Bedroom tux-* Deh1•• r•nge & ov•ns * Plush shag crptg. BBQ for grack>us ent~ w/wne, bil-2383 anytime, SPARKUNG le Spacious, 4 • red h•11 W)' ~ts with all tbt * Bonus storeg• sp•c• Jt Cov. c1rport nig, Man.v interior decorator FEMALE room-mate, yrty. BR, 2 Bath, family room, I modtm convenl.eDCa •vtil· * Sculptured m1rble pu Iman & tile baths etatom features. 3 Bed. o c eanview apUS@asbore custom. crpts, drps. dbl pr, able. Furnlabed and unfum. * El._91nt recreation room. • racms, 2 baths, built • in Dr. N.B. 615-71St &ft 5 p.m. fenced yard in desirable REALTY labed, FURNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY :echepl~~~yd::i~~ ~ PROF Man 40-50 Sb.are lux College Prk. ~r., LtaR Univ. Park Ce:ott:r, li'Vine MODELS OPEN DAILY Blk from Huntington Center, San Diego ...,,/Otan REAL ESTATE 18 NB apt. v.•/att. woman $275/mo. ~4 Call Anytime~ 9 P.M. Frwy .• Goldenwest ColleJ?e. 155 wk 54S-2"J6. MOVING TO HONG 10 UL' San Diego Frwy. to Beach Blvd., So. on KONG!• • DM Beach S blks. to Holt; W. on Holt to •• , Cosio M•H :NDO t:.t the _,, Manqe-~ ~. :'aR., :l>bab,;""l: RENTS FR L1Quint1 Hermosa 714: 847-5441 ment Division of South BR" · ·•' bo •••· . $l50 to $350 rnJDIO-Gas & water paid. Coast Realton IOlve :your 3 • + huce nua: room, Call after 6:00 pm. 646-4205, bl F ppolntment month to month ••••••• $35(1 5100 Cotto Moto "R~E~NT~~A~L~S~~~ .... ~"=''=='==""'~~~~.=1;N~EW;;w-;,~BruDrnRM;:;;.-Beam;;;::;:;--~ceill.u. 5100 1975 PIJ"$(lns, CM. ::i ~or a WE HAVE O'I11ERS! 1.:::='----== l~~~;:.;;~-~===2200= SUPER clean ~ •ba'P 2 EXECUTIVE'S :;;N;.:o.;.:w!:po;..rt:.;_clleo.;..;-~---I story, 3 BR, 2 BA+ 20x30 BAYSIDE Village, private tin bonus rm, all bllns, avail r!L.\ i i1i1. NEWPORT BEACH 880 Irvine Ave. Irvine & 16th Bolboo ltlond a55 lnr•, wood ..,,.Ung. All rec Apts. Furnished ----------i !ea...... $165. AdwlO, no DELUXE --------soo-cozy Bach, Plate, pets. Call now M6-00'13 TOWNHOUSES .~ refrlg, patio, uW. Yrty.1...,=387~~W"'. Bay~,,sa..~"'t=-ION NEWPORT' BACK. BAY Cotto MolO Home for sale -EMERALD BAY 3 Bl', 3 ba, ~. play/rm, w/fp I.:. opens to bkyrd. Pvt. Ocean View, Beach, Tennis Ii: P~. $25,000 EQUITY To an existing loan. Tenns Avail. Call: 494-2600 ( 714) 645-0550 4100 community. 2 Br. 2 Bath. 12·1. $275. Heritage RE Acapulco Apta: attractive, nicely furn. Privnte patio, I ~54=0-=ll5~;J~=~~--SOUTH BAY CLUB 'Pool, Utll pa.id, Garden Huntington Beach ._ 2 BR, 1~' Ba, & 2 BR, Crptg, Resp. adult. 116-A Agtte. NEW TOWNHOUSE ---I: 1'11ll11 r heated pool. $225, 834-5'157 ATI'RAC. 4 Br. + bonus rm. lat Westem Bank Bldg. , . . 1 livi~t .. ~dulta:, no pets.1..., · drps, self cleanlna Pt ov- or 673-170& Just remodeled. Close to UnlveQ!ky Parle APARTMENTS' BR -..-It up, 2 BR, S: '" Free Service to Tenants en, encl gar, Patios, 54&.3605 300' to beach. 3 br, l ba, $170. scllool.1 It all sbopg need!. Days 13J.f101 Nights . • • • 18'.lO :Wallace Ave, C.M. * 1 BR, adults only1 $135 per 377 W. Wilton. 2 br gar apt $160. Til July L $235 mo. 336 Cab r 11 lo, $30 Wk. l per, w/kit 1$35. mo. incl util. * 1 BR, 2 hicks * * NEW 2 1 3 BR. Shag 642-383'1 645-3639 after 5 pm. 3 BR, 2% BA, townblr, cpt 4: Live wher• tM fun Isl Maki Rr, Jlnem. TV, .l tele. to ace~, $130, adults only. crt>U. dwhhr, gar, Only 3 NWPT Hgbta atta. Sparld· drpc. Avail Dec 1. option tol=...,,,.-,.-=---====" Seal.ark Motel 23(1], Npt Tradewinds Rlty, 847-BSU neighbors in ;oor Bldg. ing, cheery, 2 BR, crpts, pUn:hase If de.sired. By $91.50 1 Br. NEAR OCEAN =B~lvd=CM~~--'-44~5~-,--.,, NEW 1 BRrVlew of Ocean. Child ok. Nr. S. Cout drps, stove, retrlg. Adult!!, 1-:ownr==833-=2955='=al=t=6=p=m=·==I $10 BACHELOR DUPLEX FURN. 2 Br. apt. Close to all Qulet/aoundproo! declc/pl-Plaza. BAYSHORE Cott.a&e, adults, No pets. Avail irnmed. $"i'35. 1• Broker. SM-6980 slDppin(, Adults only. No tio, 200.-A 14th a 536-1319. 541)..1973 or MS.mt Bayshores 2225 3 &: 4 BR.3 Ba. Frplc, tam room, double prage, Be&UC lounge, Pool. Bllllartl1, Adult & Childrens area $250/mo, &G43XI, 54Q.514'1 • MARTINl9UE • Pork·Llko SurnMlndlnp DELUXE 1·2 i 3 BR APTs. 2 BR, furn Immaculate. 64S-2423 642-53X1 East Bluff !242 pets, Inq. 179~i Roehester, 673-1184, WILSON GARDENS A.PJ'S ; , 1,EME RALD BAY ~n mo~!~~~ 1o;j =,~BR~~ho-... -. ~,~1>"-=BA,~1rp1<~-.1 3 BR, 2i,s bl! &Plit levtl. l-C_ot_lo_Mo_ .. ____ 4_100_ ~C-;'"'1·,...,.=--=-;::= DLX Apts, 1-freih paint. 2 BR Unturn. Ne~·ty dee. JuSt listed! Attr. traditional 821_1545 for appt. drpll, feooed yard. n.95. lse. Bayview. $450 mo least. REMARKABLY l BR Adulta, oo pets. Stove Pool, Lg 2 Br studio. At New crpts &: drps. Spe.c Alao FURN. BACHELOR Prv patios * Htd Pools Nr 1hop'g • Adults only lm Santa Ana Aw, CM Mar. Apt ll3 e 646-SM2 ·.~ BR. 3 Ba., sep. llv. rm., Avail. about Dec, 11 t . 613-2222, REALTOR. UNBELIEVABLY II' retrig. $125 mo util paid. ocean. Sl5()-.fl75. 219 lSth St. grounds. Adults, ::;.,. pets. DUPLEX • .2 BR. Clean and din. nn. & !am.. rm. Balboa 2300 646-ll46 or 6t6-6961 EXTRAORDINARILY Inquire at 1951 Tustin Ave, 846-3977. ~iJO mo. :;:;83 Foun w Way Quiet! New w/w cpts, drps, 'llS Emerald Bay ;75,000 ---------3 Bdrm, 2 Bath, heated pool, Corona del Mar 3150 BEAUTIFUL CM. 548-5034 BACHELOR Apt, Util pd. ·. (Har r, tum · on blt·in own & range, Shown by app't. PENINSULA Pt. 4 br, 2 ba, xtra lrg pla)'n>om, w/w Val D'lser• Garden Apts 1 BR $125 incl util. No gar. NEAR OCEAN! l"'W'°'il.,.'°=n)_.""°-=-=,-,-,.-g~ ~. Gardener Biii Grundy, Realtor ocean view. Beach. $22.S. crpts & drps. <bllege Park. 2 BR. + fa.m. rm. 2 Blks. to Adults, m pets Adults, no pets, 532 Center LJNDBORG CO. 536-2579 BRAND NPW 2 BR duplex, &: water paid. p re t e r 833 Dovtr Dr., NB r.42-4620 Avail 12/15. 61>5660 $295/mo, IM. 545-St38. ocean, on ~ur. $2S5 Putting green "'&tufall Ii; St. 540::00p. * 1 le 2 BR. Crptl drpa $1&5 mo, I~ rooms, at-mature C(>Uple, No chlldnn 3 BDRAt tarn. f W/W Mo uW included ""-···.....'...... BACHELOR Apt-furn, crpts, bltm '133 Lak ~· tach. pr, patio, fully cpt'd or pell, $145 mo piUI acurl-NE\V 3BR,11..-BA. bo lltins, Lido Isle 1151 ' nn, p, See 'i P . rties 675-5726 stream """'_.neverywbere, . e. ' &: dfll'd, garden at-cp~, deck, vltw, quiet By carpet and drps, near n c rope 45' pool', rec, room, bllliardl, ct:rpe, utu. $1.aJ.per mo. 536-0275. ~here, No· 'Pt't5 or ty deposit. 548-3036 aft 5. All owner. Zl.1:83.3-1175 or in-5 BR., 4~S bL waterfront schoolJ, $215/mo. Shown by 2 BR. Elec/raogt, Gardner. BBQ'1 Sauna_ fum.-unfum, ~1405 or 646-6762. SMALL apt, H.B. 1 adult on-children. 548-6920. od=ay"°'Sa~t~.sun.~=--,--,,~-1 quire at ll60 Noria home w/dock, on Lido apPOintment. 642-2273 ADULTS, $225/mo. 518 Single~, 1 BR., l BR + den, NOW Renting-2 Br turn, gd I~:. Furn. Utl11ties pd. $75 & 2 BR. l BA. Gvden Unlit. LRG l &: 2 BR apta, 10 min. Nord, $1500 month l BR duplex. Nice! Stow & J asmine, CdM. 2 BR. From $135, See lt! Joe, ftc rm, hid pool. No $55/mo, 642-8520 Shag trptl, drps, dshwhr, from ccl.lere, ocean le could San Juan -Capistrano UJXURY cottage• in Rancho Santa Fe, San Diego, ex- change tor Orange Co. lux- " bome. 714/7f8..6100 ·condominium 1950 3 BR. 3 Ba, off.water home refrig. Gas &: water paid. *644-8603 aft 5:30 * nlO Parsons ltd., &f2.8570. children. $140/mo, 646-5824. 25 LG drn BR bch walk to lhop'&'· Hu laundry lh 199.50, 1-TJi.-0142 IMMACULATE 2 br, den, Between Harbor le: Newport SI m 1 nr patio, beam celling1 frplc, fae., C811JOrl &c pool. Rent fur~ .•. $450 mon · 536-4261, $145 2 BR Mid~ pr. 2650 Elden. 5l7..llos2 &ft from $13G-1l45. Allk about Bill Grundy, Rltr. 642-4620 SMAIL 3 BR nr O>untry dln'g rm, frple, drpl, crpts. • 2 Bllc N, 19th. Newport Beach ~200 City 892--5334, 847-6169 1 pm Ir. Sun. $165/mo. our dl.soount 1846 Placentia. Oub. Gas I: water pd, $155 $2SO. No pets. 67J..6914 Sat, • .. • ••• · • • • I COUNTRY CLUB e AT OCEAN -Adult Uvlnt. * TOWNHOUSE * M A H M&-8564 Balboa Island 2355 mo. Ph: 837-1789 Sun&: eve.1. $6 n1te up $27.51) wk up LIVING gr. pt · -----PR1V house -l Br. newly m.m10 I: 1 BR Apts 1 BR SlfD, 2 BR. $1?5. PoOl. 2 BR, l'Ai BA. crptg, drp9', GOLD MEDALLION 1010 so. Baytront; 4 br. 31Ai 3 BR, Fam/rm, fenced yd. dee. Yearly. 9:> of hwy. • Cblor TV, phone 811!l'V. pool LUXUJ')I p.rden apta, ottering Rec rm. %.ll llth St, H.B. patM>. Adults, $165 134 E. Modem 2 Br. 1119 Ba., patio, ha. waterfront home & 2 br, 2103 Federal, $200 mo. Avail Adlts, no pets. $1.50. G73-l95.l e Linens, maid ierv avail., comp!. privacy, beaut. BACHELOR apt, 1 mile from Melody Ln. 548-1768 crpta d GE k·r Encl 1 ba. Garage apt. Dock. now. 675--0764, eves. •Children&: pct section lndaepg & unparalleled Ma.eh, $90 per mo. Gas & ATTRAC 2 br 1% ba atudlo gar. 0 M::· luxury1 Vttrui FOUNTAIN VAIJ..EY Prime Bill Grundy Rltr 64Z-4620 * 3 BR on cul • de • sac. Balboa 3300 * SUNNY ACRES 1i ~~l bfaci~t"S ::' a water pd. Ph. 2U:592-2977. apt, Crpt., ' drpa, bltns, Nr. bus. $158: Adu1ta. 120 E. location 4 bedrm l% bath 3 BR turn. hse avail for Crpt&-fenced yrd -w/r;a.r.1---------2316Newport:Blvd. 54&-S'J5.5 coonF U 1"Moda ,_05P er1•0· S 4620 refr\c, pool. No pets. 20th. ' ' family onl.y until June 15. _1~175~. '°'548-5750°""===---,..--I '325/MO Peninrula: 3 Br/2 CLIP ntIS AD, • . um or n · e~ open anta Ana ~10. '°"""==-===~I oba!l>. roomy, IOwnhou>O ·~ ln•! utiL 209 Opal 2 BR ·~ B Chari Ba-Ynl-0 t•-1rp1c. Blk •· good for M on •'•hi'• &m·Spm. Rents "'>m 1145 to HARBOR GREENS only $23,500. Use your GI _,.,. .. ' · =<>•· e. . .... ..,.. ...., ,.. • .,. $310 STANDARD MANOR $130/MO. 2 BR. Huted. loan here for Ideal retire-_CaJ_l_6'll-4 __ 554_. -~-= $135/mo. 1 child ok. Bay. 673-1431 rent or $5 on week's rent OAKWOOD GAROEN lg lovely l BR nu turn drps Pool. Crpts, drps, dswhr, GARDEN I: sruo1• APTS ment. Pool, club~ & BAYFRONT 3 Br. $350, No pets. * 642-2259 ••••••••• I APARTMENTS & pnt. Util P<J. Adutls, no adults · no pet.. 2295 PacUlc Bach. I, 2. 3 BR's, from $110, planned recreational. Fint winier. 3 Bdrm., yrly., $325. HunllT!" 8Hch 3400 CASA VICTORIA 1700 16th St., NB peb, $130, Come ,.. the'IUjA~";jj";;iCMfi' 'j.......,.t'j\f;iQ;':opoi I ,::m.~~Pe-tenoa==W-ay=, ~CM.~ time offered, hurry, it won't Island Realty 673-13)() Newport Jtiach 3200 3 BR-2 BA: i' r p l c-t e n-642-8170 best. 1009 Standard, 541·9494.jD~UXE 2 Br, 1% B&.'cptr, last!!! Vacation Rentals 2900 HOME without yard 'M>rk! ced/yrd .. bltins -dbl/gar. NEW LUXURY APTS. *SCENIC OCEANFRONT* drpc, atudidapt. :Adults. Htd 2VILLA MESA APTS. Larwln Realty, Inc. Channing Eaatbluff condo. l 700/mo, Padfic Sanda. 1, 2 & J BR' .. From $145 Lowly 2 Br. sa>D/mo. Le9una BHch 4705 pool. $180, 5 48-9!41, BR, Priv patio. Hitt pool. 962-"911 Anytime SKIERS! Rent Mammoth Nearl y new, prof. ~6 Furn & Uni. Adults, no pet;. *Call 6t2-l265 * ,,,,640-='8<'=8.==,-,--,--="'=-2 car encl'd pr, Chil~ 5 lrpl • deC"Orated 3 br 2~ ba 6~ ~ V CM LAGUNA BEACH •·NEW. "~'RY 1 "' 2 Br. welcome-, no pets please! Condo. Sips : C • • • FOR Rent or assume ,_'lo 525 ictorla, LRG l BR, Garden a...t~ on DELUXE RENTALS ~~v $165 19 ,lpertments for kitchen. Call 13().«)69 aft 6 beaut greenbeltt. Close to loan. 4 br 3 b&, crplt drp1 Phone 541 4651 ~ DshWhr shae cpt, prages mo. 7 W. Wu.on. •-10 JM• pm. pool. 644-6349 21141 B,.." bampton Circle-' Bay, Furn $195. Unfurn AT VICTORIA BEACll Pool A Rec. n .. •et adult liv: _646-~125..,...:l~~~~--I • ~ 7-' e $30 WEEK & UP $185, Incl Util. 67J.6741, 1 2 Bd & d 2 bath .., ... °'R°'E"'N~T=A=L~S-----l 3 BDRM, elose to achools on 96&-5230. · nn. en, ' ing! 642--4470 Quiet Adult Living WATERFRONT-Thrte 1 br nfu I hod El Modena Ave Very l ·,=BR~~_,b°"U..,-.,,2 ---11 BR, or STUDIOS turn w/ FOR 1lflilt!, I BR apt, furn. unit. Lge. balcony 2 BR l l,i b t Im , N l &: 2 BR. Shag eptl, bllml, 'units w/dock. $63,00J. Prln-Houns U rn s clean full ·-""" children le f • ..'....""in~' • t1o"'i~' comp!, kitchm, Fn!e linens, Beacon Bay, $173 mo. w/ocean viet:.· 120 )TS to • . a ap • mac. t be 1n~-~ ci"""'s only, Owner 673-2662 • _, ...... , e ...... -.ou rear,1 pa u.1 ht ed air TV •. 673-8785 Sll-4000 lh sand ' ' shopping center. Adults on-aut wicpd . ...,.50 & $170 _.... General 3000 pets ok. $200 per mo. Avail. * 962-8047. ' , at ~I, ~nd; • or • YEAcRLY LEA. SE -MO. ly. See at Zl-A Ogle St, Incl all util. Adult.I only no '1.'al;:;.l::.6_,pm=. ~-----'--'---------1 Dee, l!lt. For appt call maid service avail. 1 BR. Deluxe Pool-1idt Apt. ,..,., cr-.1 pets . RENTALS lANOLORD$11 se-8622 3 LG Br, 2 Ba, J'l(!W cpAtl, Dal.ly & Monthly tale• Newly decorated. WestclW. 2. 2 Bdnn., furn. unit. Ocean1,-,"'°'· ,..,,--.,"='---,-241 Avocado St. 646-0979 Houses Fum1shed •• 3 BR CLIFF HAVEN quiet drps:, no pets, chl~"'okal. 5vl DJ() Newport Blvd., at n.t. $185. 675--8230 view Live on the beach LRG 2 Br, 2 Ba, new crpts, neighborhood, close 'to Ill tmmed. SI65. scs.,_, t . • 642-261.l • 3 BR, 2% BA, ram nn, fpl, In O~ ~~only, i~1 =· ~-;1'bil~o o~~ s;~~ !;t. 1~ I=~ G __ ono_r_o_l ____ 2_000_ Vacancy ~blems Ended sehls. Gardener Incl 4 BR, 2 ba. 2 story, Frplc, B/Amerieard e M/Charge bit-ins pool 1250 MISSION REALTY ~·-pet•. 54~ ,_ti d--t patio •ru 13001 •~ Kl Rd For crpts drps patios. Adult.. ' .,A;,""""· ~,.,.. _,,. ' .,..., ,.. · * $150 * FREE ••PPIY ol qoallllod mo.~ ,,.. . • • QUIET EASTSIDE ~~ $30 WK LUXURY LUXURY-SpaciouA 3 Br, 2 Ro•ponolble adwlO only, no tenants at no OO!it to you. appt call Daya 646-2481 or $300. 9fi8...6320 • WATERFRONT 2 Br, l Ba, Ba, Adulta/teenqers ok. pets. 1391 Baker, Apr., C. NICELY furnished 3 Br tri· A&k for LEE or OLA 67l-l234 eves/wknds 4 BR, 2 ~A, new crpts, drpl, Lg Furn 1 BR $J60 w / dock, winter / yearly, 1:: up. Bachelors. singles, 1 $165/mo. Reta. 541)..0lM. Ml Ca.II MG-1244 to au . • pi.ex. Frplc. Near every. 832-6600 BEAtrrIFUL 3 bednn & bltns, S235 per mo, Private patio. Frplc, Locked 714: 833--llM or 673-8349 Bdrm, steps to bch, all utll, 6-6922, or 548-9457. thing, Family or singles ok. ~~--=----,,,, 1 family rm, 3 baths, full din· Tradewlnds Really 847-8Sll. garage. Adults only, no pell • .,,.,..,.. 1 ..... BR. Utl htd poof, linens, rec nn, SPACIOUS 2 BR. ,.._ 0 ~. Miu Verde 5110 YACANT! 1 BR tot/pet OK , ·••••·• $15 ing rm, sv.·eeplng view $395 2035 Fullerton ....--.LEAN ""'IS" l k U d -•~ -~ =""-.;..;.;.;;;;__-";.;.:~I * BLUE BEACON * 2 BR kids/pets OK •••• SloO a month. Brk. ~17:!0. Fountain Valley 3410 ~ Manager at: pd. Balboa Area, No Petal restaurant, coc ta a, anc-carport. Child ok, $135 + 2 BR/Dnrt:aln. Crpt1/dJt11, 64.S.0111 * 4G?>.flod L ( nd ) 542-5595 ing. dep 2214 College Ave. No. bltinr. Avail 11/23. * l BR fncd for kids •··• Sl40 N'PT, Shol"!1; 1 Br. & oonv. FOR Lie, Jmmac 3 BR, 2 ba, l e y n arou car * OCEANFRONT l BR. Vlllaa:e Inn Hotel Apts 2. 646--0617. $135/mo. Lease, Ad ul f1 2' 'BEDROOM cabin at 3 BR kids/pets OK .... $165 den, 2 Ba., bltn!. Walk to in Talbert VW•-Nu shag y art J"llC 494-9436 NEW EASTSIDE only• •---lree 1200 -..~. e ASSUME 7% LOAN e e y S ,.,/mo. • . ~_," '•Stoneman Lake ln northern 3 BR, one mo rent bt>ach. $200 mo, (1 ) cpts &: drps trplc & bltns 6 __ 9 6 ~ ·AiiZona near Flagstaff . 3BRiwimpoolkids/peta $175 828-1163 ' knd.s ·Costa Mesa: 2 BR Hou...e •.>-_,,, lo pm D p I 1 4740 ""l"<'n for Jnspectlon 10 to 4, .r.......:.. 968-8004 au 6 & w + (4) l BR aplO, Room 2 4 BR, 2 Bath, F-lc. l blk ana 0 n 1 & 2 Br, all faclUties. 324 E. Newport Beach ., .. Completely furnished except 3 BR horse ranch······ $225 e BAYCRESI' .,. for l.iiiena $75.00 per week STAR*LET 77~7330 Beaut. 2 story pool. home Gardin Grove 3475 more. $56,CnJ, Gro&1 $6,500. from beach. Yearly. Furn SINGLE, 1V, pool, pell ok. 20th St. 64&9'190 PARK NEWPORT _ ~ plus cleaning deposit. For * $l 40 * a vail. Dee. lst. 4 BR., 3 548-4059 or Unlurn. 673.-2455 DANA Marina Inn, 3411l LRG 2 BR. Crpt, drp1, 1 or 2 free livg o"'1'ilqi the water. further details call 646-3130 BA., $650/per mo. 64.>0283 CLEAN Comfortable 3 BR, (2) BAOIELOR apt1 -mt1n PLUSH Secluded Bachelor Col.at Hwy, Dana pt. kids ok. $135 A $140 + dep. 'l pools, j tennis ell after 5 pm. SEPARATE 2 BR Bungalow. TiiE BLUFFS! 3 Br. 2% b&. 1% ba, range II' avtn, trplc, only, no pets. flS • $85. Furn apt at the beach. No pets. RENTALS 1998 Maple Aw. No. L $750,IXXI Spa. From Sl'l5 to RENT e A e HOME Conv. locatk>n. Kid& & pell Pool. Frpl. Sp! 1 t-level, ll85 mo. 968-6396. 154~1,.,.'!,til· 532 Center St. Sll9/mo. Yearly. 67~2256 Apts. Unfumlshed 642-6344. $450. Bacb, 1or2 Br. Al!IO 2 , welcome MOVE TODAY! View. Lease -$400 Month ~ * DELUXE l &: 2 BR. sty 'l'\:)WJlhouses. Elec. kt: $95.DO & UP * BLUE BEACON * Bond Really 499-'238 Duploxot Unfurn, 3975 BRAND NEW DELUXE Newport Httt. 4210 Gonorol 5000 Garden Apll. Blt-lnl, prlv. prl, pat or bOI SUbtrn prkt, ALL SIZES -ALL AREAS * 64$.0111 * 117-BR,._ NEW dlx 2 b Bach Unit new turn All ft'C patio, Me.led Pool. frplc. opt maid ser epti:, drps .: JVRN. OR lJNFlJRN. e HO"E 'IllE BLUFFS a ,,_..,..., r . • . EMPLOYED adulta, beaut. Adulti $145 mo. 546-5163 Jutt N. o1 Fashion Id at ~ , ASK FOR JODI RENT • A m 3 BR, 1% ba, pool.1, nr 5Chols tr!pl~ apt., Prlv patio&, facilltiel. $13S. 387 W, Ba)', lge 1 BR, frplc., patio, pool, 1 B 1 JlSOI Pool Jamboree & San Joaqu\n "',"'" 132.7900 $95. &. UP & shp'g, $28.5. 644-2432. aha&' ~ta. gar. 356 E. CM. * 646-00?l nr park. SI75. ~ RENTAL FINDERS EI~· ,,_unvrlr pd, °Zu11, ~ Hilll Rd. 644-1900 for leu- ALL ARE•• NEW 3 B 2 bath 1 il 20th St., C.M. &U-4905 TINY 1 BR. to responsible L ndl rd I•• ln'o $18)-NEAR OCEAN. 2 BR. ALL SIZES • ~ r., • am Y Bachelor only, over 40, Coron• del Mar FrH To a O S peU. MESA MANOR. 241 ;;-;·~;--." ,,· =-c=-c---,..--I $135-Uttl Pd. 2 Br. Fam ok FURN. OR UNFURN. rm, crpts, drps, clubh&e, Rl£NTALS $90/mo. Call Fri or Sun; MS.0111 Wilton Ave., CM. SD.7405. 2 Br. Unturn. Crpta, dl'p$, Broker, 534-6980 ASK FOR JODI pooJ. $325 mo. ~17 Apta. Fuml1hed 646-2652 LOVELY, pvt entra~. ltv'g 411 W'.'ttft.C..,. .... 1 . BR/Upper: Pore h' patio, pool, bltn•. $160. t>ld you ever think ol &WRJI" 832-7800 BLUFFS 2 Br split lev Condo 0.-raf 4000 $1'5 I MO. 2 BR, Heated rm, B<lnn, Bath, No c:ook'g, d~. Alty &: Sl.mny • ~~~HLM~~ts. ;~ : 1ng tbat Whila Elephant in VERY CLEAN 3 bedrm I ;=~~di..,..~~i~jnm~""'~s~~~li:t ~db§l~gar:1 ~=f::=::f.:ff.~;;I Pool. Crpt.s, drpe, dshwhr, ~.~ •. nT~ng•t' mo""''re'gn•pef'llOlllnO.· APARTMENT ~0!~ 913 W. 19th St., about out discount plan. the attic for aomelhing )'OU home with large fenced I: adults only • no pets. 2295 ~ _...,. .. v,.,...,,.,. can .,.., 1"' the 'lnden ynnl, blw & lrplc, month 2 BR. 2 Ba., •plil level. Now PALM MESA APJS, Pacific Ave, CM. 5'8-<878 ;;-"-;;;'~,.....,·==,,_,.--,-.,,-RENTAL a BR, 2 Bath lo .... Patio, * IAYFRONT *' ParadUe column In the OU. to month at izo. Agtnt ~i~:oo'~ar pr. $225. BEAUTIFULLY FURN. 2 -BR, fully crptd, pool, So. bltna, pool. No pets. ,$17a. Furnlahed & unfurnlah- ly Pilot W_ant Ads. 546-4141. l BR FURN. $149.50 2 BR Atd pool adult. no ol Hwy. Cose to &hops. $70 OO & UP ~1882. 1048-A Mll:lion, H t rtl ...,.5 • ~ral -.General 1 1 r ... ""''""S;;..,U""'L=..-4 1 ~ .1'111_• I ~....;.H:..:;o'""'r ._A .::..L -11 J. 11 I I I !i A hippie mode a suit of on 1 ' old owning, bot owry time It I•-------~ ra ined, his pants --. I D E L R E G I c-.... tho "'""I I!;;!!. ~I I' I I I' !~1~~~::.t:?=. e m~:.l"::"'~ ... r . r r 1· r r I' r 1 o ~~~'oel I I I I I .... I I - SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 9000 Bachtlor1 Furnls~ pets.' $1$/mo. 6'2-9520' . Adults $185, lse. 673-8213. • CM. , a a ng ... ,. • · fro $140 J ALL SIZES -ALL AllEAll 642-2202 2 BR m 75. BONUS ARRANGEMENT 1 BR -W view. ($190 I mo.), }'URN OR lJNFURN LGR 2 Br, crpt1, drpl, bltM, l BR 2 BA, aps $1 mo. fURN Bachelor & 1 Br. Fre&h & New. No Chldrn. ASK 'roa "BoNNJE. 1-2 chlld~n ok. Nr. schll le , delx 4 plex apt, •moPOO,/mLo. OK Exceptl01tally nlc.I 2530 Stavlew: 673.-2823 att-7800 1hop'g. $150. 98).J.5t5 trpH le, Hbltm, ~· drps,I,.. 2110 Ni--.. BIYcl, CM BACHELOR APT-Mt nu1 3 BR, 2 ba, z.car pr, crpta, Oil&' Olp. ,._, mo, nq. • SAUNA -r"' • kitchen. Nicely ~gd. Joe. "--blloul;e 4150 Patrice Rd, 6rJ..4.1l7 e JACUZZI STUDIO apt, furn. incl gas i $90-lncld utl'1 673-2823 COit• Mne 5100 new ... ...,. Pool I: du M2-lm. • 1561 Meaa Dr. Costa Mesa lights, mo/mo. Mldd1e-q-2 BR le Bath ps trplc &: avail. S210. 5f0.-09l2 PRICE REDUCED! Dix t Phone 546-9860 ed per.on. 21B1 Harbor rehl~. $200/~. TU 111111. * * * * 3 BR, 2 Ba, mod, Opt, drpl, Br 2 Ba C/O bltns end l.!!~!'!!~!'m~~~"'"l-Bl~vd~,~CM~.=~=~,-ceJ.'Ms-252.1. El Puerto Mesa Apts. bltna $175. Nr. everyttitnc. 1a~. ne.;,. pa.int. i11 s~ i RENT FURNITURE * WINTER RATES* * * * * Children ok. 540-4165 54._.-roe : 1 BR. furn $123. Bachelor's 1 BR. Ga.rage Apt, bUJ\I, new 1 Bedroom Apts. (lJ 2 Bdrm apt Unfum. 2 BR, gar, patio, drt,pes, * DJRl:CT 'rO ~ANT $115. Adult•, no pell, See dpts, drps, gar. Ntar -. AduJts, No pets. stove, private St., adula 2'offr. Dellyay Msr. 2W Elden. No. fi CM. Pina:. 615-3594 _.,_ '!~ upPoolnc 1 1 •. '!.~'tto SPAltKLINC&liG64U848 2 b Encl only, no pets, Sl45. Back a.,. too" Pa:rcblte Option DUPLEX-1 br turnlabed. Balboa ,._ ~ .i111·11, '""'"'a n r, 2 ba. &19&, 6U-2267. Complete 1 BR Apt 81 QuJet, hO dop. area. Quie t Envlninme11t yard A rv. Oilldren ok, no 2 BR. 2 BA bltns crptr Low u $22/mo. * 548-7m * e $25 WK-OCEANFRONT OU street Pt'rklnK. No pell. pc.fl. Call M7·91rl d?J»s, $110 :00. N~ HoQ 30-Day Minimum $165, 1 BR hie. Den, pool, Lovely Blchelon:, lrBdrm. t BR Duplex, Dean. Crptl, Hosp. tnq. (150 Patrice Rd. * WIDE VAJUETY patio, rat· Multi. No pelt. Maid Hr, POol, utl. 1959-1961 Maple Ave. drpa, bltns. Wuher/dt)ltr. 642-t387, 642.lTTI. ., CUSTOM FURNITURE QWet, 6*-3l6' • 6754740 • 0osto M.,. 543-0844 EXTRA nice !p <1p1x. 2 hr, RINTAL e BEAUT. Bach A 1 Br. e TOR leue -Iznmac 1 br. * 11iE SEVllLE 2 Br, Apll. bltnl, Cf1)tl, drpt, 1 blk 110 b1¥ A 110rt1. 517 W. 19th SL. CM, 5434f1 apt, $29.50 wkJy • up. Responsible adufb, $145 mo. New 2 Br, l 'il Ba wt pr. clean. lnqu~ 1552 A Matun couple, no pell. $210 APARTMENT Fum., Incl utll. !54$.-0451. 67HJ27 ot m.-46!D Adib, cpll, """'· fn<d yd Oortandor. -· yrly, + ,w_ ~n aft 6 4 1 Br. $JZ;l0ol, 1pac. Multi, 2 BR. $155 mo. Adults, w I pat. Wtr / Grdnr pd, 2 br I.Pt, nnce, refrig, drps, 2 BR. 1 BA. frple. untum, RENT AL ldeOI for Bocbolor, l9ll:l SUndeclt, Utll paid. 63Ml.1l ""'· au ult Adwt1, no peta. ""'"· """'· blk "' oc.u. $70.00 & UP Church. 548-9631 * 67:1·9749 * 261J..L Santa Ana Ave. $15S $150, 64$.8464 _ Yeuly '115/mo. 67l-8088 ALL SIZES -ALL AREAS e A.TI'RAC. epl. for 1 BACHELOR apt, UtiUtin 867.-K Vlctoria St. $W LG 2 BR. Unf\&m. Crptr, NICE Jae 2 BR. eJec ldtcbt' FURN. OR tJNF'URN. pert0n, over 35. Pool Utll paid, '90 mo, 310 E. Balboa * $170 + drpo, bltna. no pets, $1111 ""1c, patio, Cpc'd. .... d. ASK FOR BONNIE pd. llOS. e ~-Blvd, Balboa. 3 BR; 1% BA, .. tlo .. blt-lm, 1048-A lllallon. 56-IJD )'rly 1195 mo. <73-7'52 t32-7100 mJDIO • C>pu, """'· util Lhlo I I as1 """· """· Mk about -• BR .... W>ll<·ln elooeta, 111 s Br, • Ba. Unl\trn, Blllla, HOlJDAY PLAZA paJd. Quiet penon oftl1, Nr I e dlloount pian. llllO Cl'lltt!'r st bl., redfc.w, w/1twr, A au crptl, drps. S22Stmo. CID DELUXE SpociouA l BR W,,. A 17th. 1100. 6G<M8 D£LUXE B"dl Apia. Fum. .....,.. dlt-'· ~1632 !14Q.75'1S DI' alt 5 - fum apt $135, 1-lcated pool.• BACHELOR. Sefl8.f'lte. Stove, r e fri g , 1 ar . THE Fu tesl ttr.w In the 1 LG Br, 2 Ba, new cptt,I 2 BEDROOMS Ample:~na.No ch0dr"Mo pvt & qUiet. J 1dult only. ~/ml). ~ Nord. We•t.. ,1. Da!IY Pilot drpl,nop!l~chldmok.Avl 4too Stuhore Dr, Apt A no pcts.1965 Pomon&, CM. $90, utll pe.ld. &M4100 6().«)97 or 5,15.4i696, ClulUltd Ad, 6C-S671 lmmed. $165. 54.>™5 att 5 637-0292 ' --- - -. - i I - I to 0 • o • .·1,~ DAILY PILOT ·~~ RENTALS Thursda1, Hovembtr 19, 1970 RENTALS RENTALS • RENTALS REAL ESTATE IUSINISS and ANNOUNCl!MINTS SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRICTOltY ---· AM.. Unlurnl&hod Apll. Unlurnl"'od H'f1t11!flon BHch SCOll Huntington BHch SCOll :.~l Location* Location** Location*** 1 & 2 Bedroom-1 & 2 Bath Furnished/Un furnishe d "' ,... - ' ' ..... ·- -' FROM $140 ADULTS ONLY • Healed Pool • Gas Bar-B-Q's • Recreation Area • Patios/Balconies • Lush Landscaping ALI Electric-Self Cleaning Ovens Dishwasher (2 BR's) -Shag Carpels Spacious Rooms & Closets ~al !p~~@(\l\_ 1 Yll22 Brookhurst I at Adams l Huntln9ton Beach 1714) 962-2981 • 5 minutes to the Beach! •• 5 minutes to San Diego Frwy?! ••• ~ block to S shopping centers!!! _-;.. Huntl~ kach $COO Huntington Beach SCI» ~---rol l'INAHCIAL ------.. -90-1--------1 Aph. Unlurnl1hod Apia. Unfvrnl1hetl -:--------and NOTICES Corpentorlnt ---------------------------i a .. r-a --------1.:::==="'---=ioanarol S.rvlcaa Huntlntton Beach 5400 ON BEACH! • 2 BR unf. From $225 e 2 BR F'um. From l28S CArpetklrapes-dW\\\'Uher heilh!d poot-saun.as.tenn i1 rec" room-ocean views pati01-ample parking:, Security guards. HUNTINGTON PACIFIC 711 OCEAN AVE., 11.B. ITI41 ~1487 Ofc. open 10 am~ pm Daily Manaaed by \\'JU.JAM \VALTERS CO. Huntington Granada Loguno BHch 5705 lluslnoH Rontol 6060 Opporlunltloo 6300 Parsonolt 6405 CARPENTRY I ------.----MINOR REPAIRS. No Job JOlN "The Group.. learn OCEAN VIEW • Lf'l i an. lSx.50 OFFICE or afore on TV And appu.:nce stott . .,._FULLY lJCENSE~.-~-Too Small. CabWt In gar-uclting new t~lques tn apta. Unfum, O'pts, d1tplJ, Beach Blvd a.ir-cond parti-Good l'l'putation and Ionr Adn.o:~~ned a!Hlnd1 u Spiri ...... i.t age• &. 0 t b e r cabl.N!ts. doth aculptu.re Pap 1 • r bU·lr-., pat.ioll, walk nr dooed JUS:imo ~ sta.ndlncnamt.NoaoodwUJ v-.....,.on matt.en. scs-8175 u no &rul"'er leave rnacheiimore.iUtwlwtc dlttance to town. 100 Otrf M5-41i3 · • or blue sky. $30,000, Jor Love, Marriage, Businen msg at 646-2372.. H. o. New dus now .D;;r;.,,;IA~fU~na;;;B<;:::•;:<h;·.;<94-St::..;=": I ;;;;;;"'"'"°'o;;;;;;;";:--;;;:;-1 trucks, equipment, •irm. Rtadina:•o r iven 7 days a Anderson couronn"'I~• ~" Mar I• = OFFICE, STORE, nr. N'pt. \\'fflr, 1 am • 10 pm. .... ......, ~~y: ~~ ~:: Bch. Post Ofc. & Greyhound =~~d:!!d :; 312 N, FJ ca.mino Real, ROOFING Etchilon, 642-13 30 or <19'l-l056 or 494-SSlO depot. 13ll'22. f15 mo . .l.se. Ji.arty. Call G«qe Taber, San Clemenle ~E~me lmprove~~i.,:."':::"-..o"'"""""=-~-~~ ========"' Gnham Rea1ty 646-2414 &46-2316, Eves. ~!J..1$17. 492.-9136. '92-0076 I CARPENTRY. Cabe., Pain-o.". Po'·t 5740 The Real Eatafers, Invest-MASSAGE SPECIAL -ting, n>nnica, Plbe reyatt, '" Cement, Concrete 6600 concrete, appliance' A: OC .... Vl•w. ,_ 2 br, 2.ba, Office Rental 6070 ment divillon. * * 6 Dollar's * * ,,_.... .... WORKING PARTNER He & She Health Club CONCREI'E, All~~ ~·ate~ heater ttplact_mentll. llv, rm, dln. rm. kitchen. SUPER-DELUXE QUALITY Fut rp'O\Vi"J'. company, pc>. Separate walk in Sauna'• for est. Sawing, ~a.king. haul-~11 Mon thru Sat. T to Ocean view balcony, c.rpts, J.2-J room, up to 3,000 sq. entiaJ unllm.ired, Manage-Ladles&: Gf'nUemen Ml-7879 Ing & Sklploadlng. Service •i=·==--~~--,-..,--1 d1p1, bltna. $185 per mo. ft, office auiteA, Immed, oc. l7"' •-Bl d ( a11~ "'° ~o Bob THINGS _,. h--~~ -merit ability and public re. ~ ocach v . corner qu v· ~ . .JV-.._.,... 831-3927 cupancy. Orange C n t y, Jatlom. No 8tlling, Salary Ol Slalerl H.B. CEMENT \YORK, no job too not have ~ to .do! San Clem.nte 5711 =ex. Irv:. =-:; $250 per wetk, Pro\'en earn-YOGA FOR MODERNS small, rell!(lnable. Free ~-tt!*1r. Aeythinc. ----"-----Hotel &: Restaurant, bank.s, ing potential. Cash lnvHt-Sta.rt Sat. at lD AM or Mon. Estim. H. StuDick, 548-8615 · * 1 Br-Palisades. l child ok. San Diego&: N'pt. Fwys, ment requiftd 115.000.00, Ap.. at 8 P?ot'. F'ree ClQa this MORE Omcrete patio for ~-sECRE'J.'ARY w~m typ.. No pel!I. Pool. Avail. now pointment ooly. Phone ?.1 N 23 d y Ce l Arti ti ttinc 1ng. Spec• a specia.lb'. G • $165. 496-3802. 557-8400. UN~= i&~G 673-2510 ext. 1. te~~· 44~v. E.r ·l?t~ C.l\~ ~.~liax at1~~ · per• ref's. M9--0l92 D•n• Point 5740 Owner/mgr.2172DuPontDr., DtSTRIBUTORSHIPS SiG-8281. CEMENT Y.'ork. Reas. City Haullne 6730 1 BR. From $135 ---------Rh. 8, N~rt. Beach. U $1000/$2500/xtra mo. Inc, * MASSAGE * i: 1tate lic'd. Side walks,l---''--------1 2 BR. 2 BA, From $155 DELUXE Duplex, new in 833-3221 Courtesy to Brokers lstlyr, dbJ /in 2 yrs + re· SAUNA * WHIRLPOOt drives, pe.tio1. &12-8514. MOVING, G~ ~p Ir Sep FAMILY SF.CTION for April, nr Doheny State Park PRESTIGE OFFICE tirement of $1500 in S )TS, Lovely Glrls. PlUBb facilities. CUSI'Oi\I CONCRETE lite haulinc. Reuonl.ble. children under 5. & N:W harbor. 2 br, l~~ ba. "OJ'' THE BAY" doesn 't send )'OU calling for Open 6 day.11, noon-midnight. PATIO-DRIVES-ETC. Flft enimatn. ~1602 Just South of Wllml'r Fen e e d yard, newly At Lido yacht anchoragt an appt, Now! Then this i:il 2930 w. COB.flt Hwy, Nev."POt"t Fret efltirnate. 575-5516 y ARD I G ar. c leanup. on Golden \Vest. H.B. landscaped, Garage w/n.-1 room • Ground noor not for you. Beach. S48-J6M Remove trffs. tvy, trull. (714) 147~1055 k";"lch:~~-B"ilt-~:~~~ Air eond., opts, drps_ __..;Cal;;;;;cl.,;(.,;71_<;..I _~ __ ""'.".":'.:!MALE bachelor wanted for Contr•ctors. '620 Grade, backhoe. 962-8745. Free Service to Tenants dishwasher .. &: .. ;arba~-: E-Z parking, UW. paid Mon1Y to Loan 6320 temporary marriage to 27 MY \Vay quality home TRASH & Gange cltaJl...up. * 2 BR, w/w cr,>ts, drl-, disposaJ, Carpeting thru-out $1.25 per month =;;:;;:.._;.:._.:;.;;------·I yr old European girl: t.teet repajr. W~lll. ceiling, floors 7 da,yg. $10 a load. n-e. e.t bllns, refrig. s150 per mo 2 stories. S200 mo. Avail to 111 Lido Park Drive 1st TD Loan at Howards Rest 1.11 NB etc. No :iob too small. Anytime, 548-50n. incl. ulil. Adulls only. * l show, renting Dec. lst. No Ne\l'J)Ort Beach 673-1060 Tue1. 7:30 P?.f 543-1494 e :r.tOVING-CLEAN-UP I: / J IJ J BR Studio, l~J Ba. cpts, pet1, Drive by 33901 Copper 1741 WESTCLIFF DR. 1%% INTEREST LONELY? Meet . desi~Ne GEN'L remodeling&; maint. HAULING. VERY JtEASI, .fi«nlinalon VUla drps, bltns, refrlg, l child Lantern, [)Ma Pt. or call Prim loc., store or offices 2nd TD Loan partners by mall. Wnte: No job too 1 mall. **ROY: M6-fi629 * * (/ OK, 2 hicks to beach. $145 4~2328 days, 4M--4791 e~s 3(Q) sq Jt @ .20e, emd noor Adelalde Suzanne Box 103· Llc'd/imured 675-8183 HAULING have t•• Van. Custom Ga de Apartments pe-r mo. Tradewinds Rlt:y. or 4~1397 Lingo Real Lots of pkg, \Val/pan'I., cpts, u, Lakewood, Calif. S0714 • . . . Services for Cssh or tangt. r n 847-8511 Estate Investment.I. dl"(l8, air-eond. Owner 548-9586 TenM based on equib'. TAHITIAN DANCING GN~ L ;:mod:,mg ~ ::tJ~ ble items. 543-8913. attns I< -, ........ I, 2 & 3 BEDROOM * HAEV~AJLABR~l~T~AGLE=eN-A0~1Pv~T~S-======== DESK SPACE '42-2171 -11 LESSONS uc'd/in"'""'· G75-8l83 '"''· --, FAMILY UNIT NOW OPEN Condominium 5950 Se<vlntr llirbor .,... 21 yrs. Pri""" or Group. 551~540 R>mod•ling * Addition. Houaocloanll)ll ... • -· 17401 Apt C Keel.son Ln, H.B. BEAUTIFUL Co -· CJ b 305 No. El Camino Real Sattlor Mort11a111e Co. -"·-, r:USTOM FEATURES: un .. ,,. u • • Al.L'OHOLICS Anonymous. KARL E. KENDALL. -Ltg Attrac 2 Br From $135 v·11a c M 2 b 1'1 ba t San Cl•m•nte 336 E. 17th Street • , C•ntral R•cr••+ion Ar••-Swimming Pools 1 • " · r, 1 • pv Phone 542-7217 or write to Ll~·Bonded ~1537 FOR >Ont Work -Call Dutch ,; ' W•ding Pools & S•un•1-Pvt G•rd•n Patios Klds ok. Ail extras. Pool Pvt patio, cr,>ts, drps, bltns, etc. 492-4420 $9000 ~P~-g0;,;· Box~~=~~Coo~ta~>~l"'-~·=1i-';i,~~,-~"if·•~·~-~~~l~J·;&•I P.'Ialnt. for windows ftn I:. patio area. Re c bldg, $260 mo Call J e • n n e DESK SPACE ht or 2nd '"' nc ... cl IAl · ~ ·-Color Coordin•ted Or•pe1 & Carpeting-841.8335 or 968-7510 '...,0 ,_..,., For thort. tum Announcamonts Gerwick & Son, Lie. crpt eaning. Before M S d I II Edwards, ~3 TD Vaco"t OK Call Mr ,.10 ~ '"" * °""2170 •• att 3P'I, ·--1508. --oun proo V.'• s & Floorintt-Blt-in Reng• 222 Forest Avenue · " · · -,,................ "'""'" ..... ·~ ~· .C:. ... 1-' & O ven-Oishwash•r-Cer•mic Til• B•ths * FRESH AIR 2 BR, l% BA, <bndo, bltns. Adams, Bkr. n414~130· WINDOWS & walla washed. -r. Op•n Be•m & V•ult•d C•ilings-•/2 Mil• Walk 3 blks to Beach! new crptg, encl patio, extra Loguna .Beoch Mort,.•nes, GRAND OPENING I C•rpet Cle•nlng 6625 Firs. stripped, ~aled & •:' To The Bee<h. Beaut. big 2 &: 3 BR ap~. :c=loo:an=. ;f1=7o"'."'6>-=="0:1:'== 49t-9486 • • ..:•_.5 Oriental Swedish I< F'1'!ncb waxed rua: cleaning F'ree .. ; Trust Deede _.. ' · F I< M Cleaning Service rat. ~/nite 6'13-3090. 5 21551 1Brookhurst StrHt ;:,7 ~ti.: ~s& b~-~~ Rent•ls W•ntecl 59'0 * DELUXE 1-room office. CASH for your lst, 2nd. or MASSAGE Holida~ S~al. Certi·Foam-HOUSE OF CLEAN , • ... ~ ( • of Haml ton) Huntington Beach Adjacent to Airporter Inn & ~_, TRUSI' DEED. 642-4422 er, dnes 1.n 2 hrs, 536-3508, }I-PHONE· 962-4458 pets_ 536-lnl NEWPORT BEACH Or&n&e Cnty, A i rport . ..... All ntw young & attractive 536-2241. Oxnplete H009e c::leanirw . f~~~~~~~~~·~.........._~~ I='======== AREA • EXECUTIVE Carp., drapes, music, air-anytime; Genco, Broker. female technicians to serve CRPTS/Windo\va _ 3 rma &. '42·6824 • ~ Fountain Valley S410 REQUIRES 3 OR 4 BR cond., etc. $125 ?.fonth Money Wanted 6350 &: ~tisty our cwtomtts. hall foam shampooed + Mesa Cleanine Serviol Newport Haiqhts 5210 Corona def Mar 5250 ALL NE\V HOUSE W/LIVING 83J.OlOl OR 833-0l« PRIV. party wants 2nd T.D. Private: rooms.• Sauna compl window washing both Carpeb windows floon etc. New DUPLEX VALLEY PARK RM, OIN'G RM ETC. * NEWPORT BEACH Civic o• Mesa Verde home. Have Hrs. 12 'til 12. h>r $37.50. 811-3182 art 4:30. Res A_ Commc1 54Mil1 * NICE 2 Br. Pool. Bltns, crpts, drps. Adults. no pets. $145. 642-8001. 642-$)()6 . I====== ~rvlne 5238 : .,.1;:;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; .';. ,; NOW LEASING! 714/541.2211 ext 232 Center. 300 ft to 1000 ft. " . 1113 Newport Blvd. Di Ca Cl · ' Priv. 1>atlo Enclosed garage. For FAMILIES with pre-An.11wering &: Secretarial. lge. equi!)I. Pay 10% int. C t Me amend rpet earung 2 \VOMEN efficient. wkly Carpeted ·& draped. Comp. school children only. • LANDLORDS e g7~160l :>46-l38a 642-7000 OI • t• Pre-Holiday·Spec.ial preferred, 'c.M. atta. Call bu ilt-ins. Imma~. Jandsc:ap. 2 &: 3 BR and 2 BR Studio FREE RENTAL SERVICE ;;;~;;.,====,-,o=-f'A'i;;Ni;,:;;Ni;O~UiiNiiii'C'iE'iMiiE<iNTSN'i'S-642-0450 F'l'ee minor repairs $20 over Eve.11, MS--122'1 • ing! 3 BR. 3 ba . Price re-$160 to $215 Broker. 5.14-6982 3700 N~~~ ~~-N.B. and NOTICES Licensed ?.OIJ tt $18. Ft:ee est. 645-13171==========1 duced to $300 per month. 172j6 Soul!'! Euclid, FV RESPONSIBLE woman with. 615-24&4, 541•5032 STEAM Jet carpet cleaning. L•nd•c•plng 6110 · ; : 675·6050 0 (Just South .ol Warner) es large studio or l BR apt 1---.===-:::--...--1 Found (Frn Ads) 6400 I '!!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!~~!!'!!!!'!!!!!~I By ClarKare, natio~wide . .:;; , (714) 54()...4715 494-3562 8 am-12. 3(IO.&J().120() 9P. fl. 1· service. Free nt. 64.2-4()5.j., LAWN Ma1nt &: Cleararp. ·' N.w family and ad--"-un1i. ==========II >;'.;:;;:;,,.,,--v.n.:;:;:--:;;;;J -omcr.s, ~. FOUND Siarn.eSf' cat n!ar L-•I Notices 6454 Dependable, re:liable & ttas -·... w'""' IW IM'""Rl a..-. $620 ?tIATURE Reliabl~ couple -• with total recreation club Santo An• Costa Mesa. &16-2130 Paularino Sc::hOol. Vet ad-1 W" , _1 •-,..,po-'bl• Carn.t Layinn & rates. 847~ •• nd P--·boo!. l , 2, & 3 ----------;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; need unturn. hou8e w/dble ==~--~---· t ~1 to n-t u-u ,..., "" ...... r-.. .., ·~ 3 BR, 2 Ba, crpls, d ...... , OFFICE apace for lease on vtses me cs ""ongs =-· for any debts other than my Ra.,.ir 6626 GARDENER -mo. mall\-., LA--from ••"". Nr, ,~ .,,~ gar. Max $150 mo. 6'12--0238. San o· t-. ~ -ty Jo Cornt'tt Unable to t cl ~ ....... .,.,, .,........ ,...,,,. stove, refrig, dsh\\·hr. garb. CANl BE BEAT Lego r •\'Y nr ....... g1..1na • 1 own as of 11/16/70. Paul A. . , enance -ean up -u= ~. ,ping, golf, schools. Jusl displ, $250/mo. 6/;i--2ti98 Rooms for Rent 5995 Niguel. Delta EI e ctr i c, ~~lta~~~3908\Vlll she p ease Rangitsch, 280 Myrtlti Ave, CSARh PETtLal Y•tr "u·as ~~~o.:, est., alter 6 p.m. !9T-7T35 ~ touthotSanDiegoFwy.on 831-1400 ca.i,.,,..,,.... _ Tuetln ea. ags a an:is cs 1 'EUROPEAN Lal1daca. ... --;Culver Dr., Irvine, 833-3733, Balboa Island 5355 Single Sto'"" NICE rm ,,,., priv bath, priv. * DOWNTOWN H B C. SHEPHERD lound Ocean SERV,ICE DIRECTORY l''ree t:11t, will PI ease . own dl'sign I workmans:1'p -PARK WEST ., I ' • Bl••d 0 Dahlia, CdM . 871-9!l:>S. call 4~ ••o• --s. ' ~ .-.• . bale. Magnificent v e w . Remodeled ofc or shop, blk to • "" ~ "'" •:-::. , APARTMENTS ROO?.IY 2 BR. 2 ba, /o\\'er ~ou1.h Sra Atmosphel'e $1Z5/mo. Or Wkly, 2500 ocean. Lindberg Co. 536-2S7'9 Intelligent. obedient & Accounting 4500 CARPET Layer Ha.11 Carpet. , • , Owned and ?.lanaged by duplex. Bltns, new paint, nu 2 Brdroom • 2 Baths Sea.view, Cd~t friendly, want &ood hOme. Polyestel'!'I, 50l's, Hi-Io's, MAID SERVICE 6125 • The Irvine Company whag cpte. 2nd hse from SJ. •Sl5 pl!r week-up w/kit-CORONA DEL. MAR 673-T104 Sm business-need dependable, shap. SeU for J abor .1----------I ••• • 1'!!!~~~~!':!~~ Bay, $210 mo. Avail yrly. Caiiiets '1 Drapes chena. $27.SO per week-up 5 RMS llOO 11'1 ft. grnd Or, 2 ~FOU~~ND=--o~T=orm-o-~.,.-"°=1or=-c=at accurate & reas bookeeplng ~3223. LOCAL Girls \\'ant to clean 'l 6Ta-.520'1 A'" Cond, . ., ___ .. Apts. ?.tOTEL. 548-97&i. BA, CID, Pkg. 673-6757 w/white ~st & feet vie done! Wlll piclr: up 968-2078 e EXPERT e apts & priv. homn. Gd rers ! E•1t Bluff 5242 ========= .. uv"cu • XI.NT Ottict Space Now Port Loc.ksleigh rt, Harbor carpet lnstallation.s I: reas. ntts! 642-1224. .• Huntington Beach 5400 FURNISHED room for rent, Avail. LIDO BLDG. 335.5 View Homes. 644-4815 BaL..-tttl-..:RR• * -=~" .......,. .,. Private PaliOl Costa ?.fesa. $18 week. Call UY• ... ~ ~· :~ f-IEWPORT BEACH CASA d SOL ~llm Vla Lido. NB. 6'13-450L SM. Poodle type dog found ln NEWLY LICENSED EXPERT M•1onry, Brick 6l30 , 'VIII• Gr•n•d• Apts. el Healed Pool YNG college or workiflg girl. 1670 SANTA ANA AVE, CM Mesa Woods tract nr So. COSTA MESA PRESCHOOL CARPET INSfALLATJON COMPLETE Cement & i'urniabed. Five bedroom11 & Plcnly or lawn Bal, Jal. Kit & TV rm, tele. 3x sq. ft. Co8Jlt Shop'r C t n ter • 18th &: Mo11r0via. ~ day + &: REPAIR. 646-U9L P.fRSOnry. n yrs exper. Fret " Ch.!irmlng, casuaJ, bCW apts 6'52464 or 5-11-5032 546-4271 .:~ .~en. with balconies abovr! '· al the beach. $80-mo. 675-3613 =,....,=-,,~""7.,-;,---,,-'°'""~;-:::;:--,:;:;--..;:;:;;--;;;;:I Full day sessions. Plan-El • I 6640 est. Anytime, I 4 6-4 91 T, ., patio below. Gracious living 1 BR. From $13S C11rport !: Storage -8-A-CH_E_L07R--room--.-"-ud7•~n\ 1-12 LGE off:ices 13x27 avail. FOUND 6 wk old black kit-ned program, hot Junche&~ ectr1ca 842-2483. & qulet surroundings for 2 BR. From $220 HIDDEN VILLJ\CE pref. $5.5/mo. Furnished. Pleasant location. Modern ten w/Oea collar on Balboa Ages U, hrs 6:30 am-6 pm, ELECTRICIAN. Small jobs,l===========I • family with children. Near 21661 Brookhurst St, HB GARDEN APTS Ufil pd. C.M. 642-8520 bldg. 64G-Tl&5days. l !land on Merine Ave. l l8 '-''k. Compare! 642-4050 maintenance & r epairs. Painting, ' Corona del Mar High School. (714) 962-6653 2.500 South Salta NICE Room, priv. home, De:luxe Suite-Westdiff Dr. 673-7659 or 838-52.17. Lic'd & Bonded. 548-5203 Paperhantint "50 •Fireplace, ~·et bar &: bu ilt· -*-~B~E~A-C~H~B7L7U~F~F~-Santa Ana e 546-1:'125 kltch. privil .+ Near shop'g Grnd flr. 450 sq ft. l.175 FOUND: Gn'y &: \\"hi!e BABYSITTING wanted . • * FXTER.JOH.-INTERIOR '* _ !n kitchen appliances. \Viii &. transp. C.M. S49-l06l mo. inc util 53-9586 female cat \\'/sutu~ vie Exp'd, Rela. Day or nite, by Furniture Restoring Won't be und rbkl! Custom J • ct<ns!der unfurnished or furn. APTS. NE\V Pftatlge office &pace, C644-ine,,,~a,; Ne\vport Center. the_ "'-eek. Nr \Varner I. & Refinishing 6675 \\"O""'-, lully 'moo•, ~--~ -· . lture purchase. 2 & 3 Br, 2 ba, dishivaslwrs, VILLA MARSEILLES Misc. Rentals 59" Newport Center ~ Br~tol.. 549-4237. F1JRNITURE -mPING pai';,';s. Frte edJco10: = i3S At.tIGOS WAY 644-2991 pool, patio. 8231 Ellis. BRAND NEW * 6#-1860 * FOUND gorgeous Persian y lT I ho Cd ~•rur 1. _; .. Colci\\-eU, Banker &: Co. ~42../Wn or 847-3957. SPACIOUS GARAGE for stora ge, cat, Owner plea~ call BAB S n my me M. GRAND OPENING SPEC su llng. Local refs. Uc. Managin"' agent 833--0700 MORA KAI -2 BR. Patio. over.11lted single. Nr Harbor Commercial 60l5 4-~79 & ., u·1y Fenced/yrd. 2 yr old IAL! Any average chair or Bond, Ins. 49l-5338, 549-08ll ... 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apts. Shop'g Center; $23 mo.1----------==-==-7-:'c-',-"--;;;-:':o--;::;::-pl~ymale, LOTS of toys. rocker stripped $5_ 642-3445. HOLIDAY Special Inter Ii: -, e NEW DELUXE e • C~ 3 BR, 2 BA Apt for lcaae. jhd apa.c, m&&ter suite, din ·~~ 'Rn & dbl gara~. auto door 1, ;opener avail Pool &: Rrc. .: ~ v-ea. e FROM $265 e 86S An1Jgos Way, NB Managed by WILLIAM WALTERS t'C>. 2 BR·DUPLEX W /CAR. Children & Pets 01\! North Bay Area, 20215 Birch SI. Ph: 675-2177 Pool. Washer &: dryt>r Adult Living :•o ""-LACUNA BEACH STORE FOUND 1-Red 11}.spd bike. 67>-3903 Exler Painling. ~-"'· hook-up. 8181 Garfield. 1; F Uni ~~ c · u '°= blk E. of Beach Blvd <oU urn. & urn. STORAGE Garages 25 ft ii: 47 fl on Forest Ave . nr all to •dent y. TLC your· child by hr/day. Gardening 6680 l.ocal ref'1. Lic'd 6 lna. Garfieldl. 962-89M. Dl"h"'·asher. color coordinal· Coast H"'Y· Ideal for 646-9073 ?olesa Verde area. Reas. Free window wuhlnc inside cd appliances • plush lihiq:: Pho"" .,~:'~ .... pel r mu:;"! pm. specialty. SUbmit lease ot-=,-=El"M"A'"LE"""""-caJ""k,.,-o-ca-1;--,•:::.;o;:th rates. 54:,...7495, AL'S GARDENING &: out. Call Chuck, M5--0lll9 2 BR. Avail Now! Children & 2 I ,.._ .,........,,. ""' r Pho ••-G bl · Dr I G-~ · land carpet • choi~ ot co or er. ne .. u.. a e flea collar. Vic Bayside . BABYSTTIER 24 hrs, an or .... uen~ k small -sPECIAL !all prices: Int, I: };mall pet ok. $140. schen1es • 2 baths • stall Oven;ized double garage, 714-325-7225. 67:>-409'.2 aft :i ages. Gd warm meals. Big 11eap1.ng Benncts call 540-5198 ext., acoustic ceillnp tu. 842-836.5 sho\vcrs • l'lirro!'ed ward-alley attess. $45.00 mo. l;co=M>=1ER=cr=AL-;-;IN=o=u=sm=1A=Li'%,FG;,R;;O;:;WN""'"'•"'=Y-"::;-t<1ou.::::n<1:;; back yard. 642-159'l Serving Newport, CdM, C~ Average room Slo. +pa.int. I k 2 BR New apts. Frplc's. robe. doors • indirect light-* 646-9239 * Rental• ~ ~ fl to "°"".... ·"c \VII••• • Placentia" . CHJW CARE hom ta At'esa, Dover Sborea, """ """"or ~-7'"" Nel\r Ocean• Patio Ad ults 'M ·-kit h b ~--· • GARAGE -t ...... ..... . UJW ..... ... ""'' .. . my e, ~y West llU _,.,.,...,,...., ...... -· · · ... g .. , c en • rea......,. •vr s orage on-f!. lk to lOC'. -4~1840 SC. &12--8967 age. Near Fairvie?w i. c · PAINTING &: paperbartJirc. LIND~ORC CO. 536-2579 bar _ huge private fenced ly, East side C.1\1. I========== l •sM~ALL;.--,10::...,:::--;h::a'.:;rC", ;;ligh:;;;t-;.,.,,;;:;:; Adams, C.M. 5'19--0752 LAWN Catt. cleanups, trash 25 yrs exper, Only quality AT Beach--4 beaut dlx apts. patio • plush landscaping • $1.0 mo. 642-2657 lncfustrlaf Rental 6090 female cat, pink nea collar, CHlLD or infant care depen. hauling. F.V.. H.B., & v.wk. Mix any col or . ~J:~5St~:Ll~.l51h SI. :~l~~~B~~~i.large heat-a '="'"A=n~AG'=E~f~"'-,..-n'"t,"'!IXl""°"bl""oc"k'I *SMALL UNITS* Stardust tract F.V., 962-4109 dable & expcr. Cle~ home, w;stmstr. area. Frff est.1=540-~1=91'=3=-~----I Oceanfront, Laguna Bch. $115 &: $95 CM dy POODLE • grey miniature lrg yd. 64&-5537 84. ~ PAINTING -Ext-Int, 18 2 BR, l Ba. Crpts. drps, (~~~~.lN~:; :_r;;:~ ;~) 1.,,11=;,,mo,.,...·-.'00-5.18-=oc:im;=·,....--1 tor occupa::.· Mi.148s rea wide: jeweled collar. For in-BABYSITTING, day or nite, 10 YRS exp. Harb. area. Av yrs. exper. Ins. Lie. Fnee bltns, near beach! $145/mo. Santa Ana REAL ESTATE to. call: 557-68JO lg lncd bk yd, infant law n S8 : $10 mo. C&M est. Accoust. Ctil in11 . ,• 5.~1336. 842-4085 General FOR :eue: T:iO 1q ft apace I===~~-~--.-,. -1_ &12--"'""" Lawn Ma1nt. 147-5969. 968-9126 , f!!!"• d•I Mar S2SO N -.,.E\7V_!_N7,-,-.,-L-;-,.'",~.1~,-, 7,..,.~3 PHONE: 557-8200 -,---p--------1 !o~-~ge:lfi~ 4;::,rage, F~~:N~~i: C:.y fnup~~: ~~'; ~::. C.P.7.":· any age, 64&-7215 1---N=o-=w~ .. -tl~ng----1 -1============= .. it;iiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii BDR~1S. Nr. Beach !!!!!!!!!!!"A~LL!!!!N!!!E\~V'!'"!!!!!!!! ncomt roperty '--6"na ac . 846-SID day or nite. Hot food, fenced NCLEANf UP& SPE~Msr * WALLPAPER * ' * Agt . &l~l070 * EXCEPTIONAL l&-2 BR ~'EW Bldg, 1368. to. 2300 ft. yard. 646-3738 aft 3:30 .ew ence .repal1'_ ow-When you call "Mae" : .. ~~ PVT-newlydec2Brupper. PARK PLAZA UNTTS.Studiotype,Only1 rr.Ba:~."F~lyr Lost 6401 NEWPORT Heights ~a .~. edgina:. Reas.54g.1444 646-lTlt .., •-• w/w cpl, tttove, displ, gar. Separale Family Set:tion yrs old. l 'ii BA each. E-side ease. Jvan, • 1 .... yd/--~~ Bal --••-;,:;,,:=;:'-:,;:-c=-:--..,,-:-:-:1"'-.=-.=----·=-•:---,b,--,--I • •• $1~ 714 °~5065 1 BR 1131 • 2 BR 1167 LOST . Dinner Ring . green .... ,. .....,...,.....,,., a,.._~1~Al.'S • --• · T n.vull'«S, uui.:_, o ats, .n. ; .,..,.,... · Ot. Lots & ,vhile stones with lots of lunch. Ex. can?. 64~2154. ....., .... scaping. r ee flagpoles , anyth t n1 _ 1 ON TEN ACRES 2 BR -NEW! Crpts/drps, 3824 South Flower St, SA TRIPLEX, Clilfhaven area, 6100 -====-.==..--1 removal, Yard remodeling. everythlng reaione bl l-A 2 BR. Furn il Unfunl s1ovr. J>lll.io, gar. $165/mo. 2 blk11: E, Bristol & r.1ac· NB. (3) 2 BR units, fee LO\VER'lliREEARCHBAY lapeoi1band.INotel'IOUgb). BABYSIT.64$-3276 Tra1h hauling lot cleanup. painted Frtte.11t fi46...9752y 'PO.b.(rirepla<:e. I priv. pallc! I 536-6021 Arthur, nr S. Coast Plaza land. Call Ken Harris, South Sentimental value. Lost on =~D~•~Y'~/~n~•~·~··~C~M~·=Ex~po~r·:-11~R>pa~~;r~'l'~rn~k~l•~..,~-~sn-~~U~66~-~1;tJ~~-..-i'f.i'cfiji'j";I ~-~-r1B~~ (7141 SCS-14 540••24 Lewi s.:;· x llO', Private \\'ll!Dn SI, between Harbor a ./INT. or EX T E RI O R a:·._._£-=."".::, • ." """'CdM'"' 644_:;:~ 2 BR duplex near the beach. ~..: Coast ReaJ Estate -""'O"O • ~ach. Ch\-ner says, sell Complete Yard Care PAINTING. Loe. ""-f. IM-1111 -L4.ui: ~".u 00 118""" &: Myer Pl. Re\\'al'd!., •. Brick, Mesonry, no:: ,;•"; acArt11 ' O..&t H. Crpts, drp:it & stove. No SUNNY BR K ..:-• ,..w. 642.-5769. etc 6560 By job or mo. 494-1652 ~D. Se rv Ic e. Free •' ur nr ~I pet.,, $140 mo. 536-3507 Lovely, very Jg l BR, new Business Rent•l -ANN OITSMAN REALTY estimates 646--0210 ~1341, 49S-nt9 LOST: Fl"m, Bluepo i nl ---------:--LAWN malntena.TK'r, by tM · · i .. ;: R Rent C.orona del r.tar, e $130 . 2 BR. crptll, drps, dee. In &: ou., SUS. No pl!ts. si'ORE 23 x 40 for ™" Siame!f': Cat. Front feet BU~LD, Remodel, repair. monlh Flft estimate. Call EXPER. Painter. Inter It • .;, 'l%iQ per mo. 3 bedroom-:l bltns, dsh\\'Shr, garage. Aft Nicest Jn area, 1227 Brook presently Fath lon .Acreage 6200 decla~<ed, Vic: Bttda Ln, Brick, block, co ncrete att s~·54~2619• EJcter. work by hr. Xln't bath. Spaciow; dplx. no 4 pm, 847-3777 St .. 8J5..i013 Hide-A-Way dress shop. ltB. "\Ve Miss J-l e r ! • • carpentry, no job too small re.rs Dick Field!~ Hun- tmalJ children, no pe111, !\gt. ="-"'"·=======-==========I Some fixture!. Av11.\I Dec t. SAC! ... 6,000, 3 plus leVf'l ... .,,134 Lie. Contr. 962-6945 •EXP Japane9e Glll"dener, tingt~n Belilch 96S--4IJ65 F ' V 11 SCIO F t ' V 11 SCIO c •• ~ . · ?.falntenanct &:: Clean-Up. ' nf>-4930 or evts GT:>-4847. ount•1n • •Y oun a1n • ey 33..1 E. 17th St, .~!. Acn , Lake ~ta t hews =REl=v"•°"RD"'"°. °'M'°,-x~k-an~o"'iym=p"'ie BRICE. Block, 1tone. Patios, JU pm-826-29lO p A 1NT1 NG : H 0 n~ st {.Br, 2% bll Studio apt. 646-3661. !Estates. l~ mi/Rlwrsi.de. 25 peso min. Part. or key entr8TICr! \\'ll ys, No )>b too Cuarantttd 'Lli'Ork Lic'd , £learn. n4 Goldenrod . ARTISTg...c,.,fts.men -AJ1 Unirnd/111 !, Gorg view ring 105, 1119 Octantrnt small. 646-78:l5. Rel furn. • GARDENING aervic:e & locU ref'• Call si;N?40 aft p_1Sl mo . yr lse. 5-ID-1573, Cenh!:r now forming. Studio 010Unt &. lakes. 548-6419 alt, beach, btwn ?th l 9th St. • Cle.anup. Free ~stlmate. 5 ' ~ s B-8658. ~~ &:: 1allery spaces avaUabl~. 5. 675-0191 IB~u~1~fn!!!a~1'!1:_S~o!!rv~lc~o~•!.,_!656~2~1;~~ijJ~atpa~"'~,.;·~54~8-8255~~·~1i;';6lli'.A.:iN'iii'i;c;:il;;pe;i;i;;;(t;;;cl ' New concept in a r l GOV'T Land, 15 at'. \Vrite ~=~-~---=--EXPER Ha\\·aiian Gardener PAINTING I: Paperhangtng; . . ., 'COROLlolD'?i!:!S ~ t1 merchtndislng, T93 Laguna Land Package ll85 Ar--LOST in vicinity or the Ter-EXPE~E~CfD .~.~die•~ Comp.l ete Gardeni ng ~ &. r~ ~~· ~ '8R Stud. . C•""""R.oftd,494-9!90. r ow h•ad •· •• , Sen n c.T, S.J.C. Blat'k. female tnnscr p n111a .. ..,eve1 SU'vice.6"4~Gatt 6 pnl. es 1mae. ·""'' •lee, dlhwhr. dbl ctf'P(ll't .t ·vv.. " • cat wlth clear collar. Child 's \\'!f'kend1. 646-1098 alter 6 INTERIOR &; EXrER.IOR ., ~pool, $190 It up, 613-3378 :J sroRE for lease, 200l sq. It.. Bf':rnardlno, Ca. pet. Call 49l-3624 -EXPER. Japanese Garde~. Jerry'• Paintlnr Service ~ p View. Waiki..... We1tfllde N'A'Pt Blvd. at DACHSHUND ~ f C•binetm•kl-'5IO cornl)lete yd ~ce. Reha. e .f.9f'rt"'"'• • -~ t • Harbor. Avail 900n. Agent Mountain & Desert 6110 • sm. •= em. --;:;;;m;;-;w;"'~";;;;;;;-i,k~"'~'~';,· ,_~~"~t~ . ..._.~~"':=;:dlP.:ii<miGi"Tni<-~i"Jexilt '."' ranee: to beach, 2 br I oun airu l..ron Vibert. 543-058S. '.Evf':I! Lost at dump nr UO Sun CUSTOM \VOODWORK GEN Oeanup ~ I: gpmklr PAINTING: Jntu. 1: ~~r. • t bll. $26.i. &i&-2523. 6?3-6534 GOOD homt + 3 ren1al 11.ft'n. 548-3289 Fumlture & Cabinets lt!N-Rototill. H&ndyman, Very rt:uonab.le. &I~ GE, View 3 Br, 2 Ba, MediterronMn Sryf.a Lusury llARBOR BLVD. Ir on t _ units. Gd looation tn Oetert * * LOsr • brown mall! MS-4235 or MS-0044 odd jobs. Reas. 646-U48 •ft 6 Pil.1' L~c. bltn,, C"pl1. & d""', 2110 llot Sprg1. For info write E. poodlll! vit' Santa Ana A~. -;~;:;:~~~;;;;~:=•1-~~~~~~~~-ll~*:'p;j.~riiER:lfiA~GlilNNGGil I!.'!~ • r-19 x 37' w I n!&troom. -G. Thomas, 66·563 Acoma '" GARDENING , .. , area . SJOO. Gfl.-600.I. 1 & % Bed.roorM _ ! BatbJ llarbcr Blvd. C~t. n>0 mo. A\'l', DelM!rt Hot Sprgs. C.M. Reward. 646-2628 C•rpenterlng 6590 By Expet1e~ Jipe.nese & PAINTING. * 961.2425 -~· i1--EARl.Y • Raomy 2 Br & Adult Uvtna yea1''11eaae. 54M7!3. ======'=''=='[LOST: Passport from lhf' RE?otODEUNG A: Repair * $48-02'28 * Pr.OFESSIONAL,30yntxp, 'J..;:: •Bi. New crp11, frpl c, g<ar. P» p l:!(X) r R E W ed 6240 Rrpublic of Chil'IL No. perhangt ,, Utll •• , •. Adu!•-. 67' ~, ~-~·~ • u-a..-r.L.-11 tr mo.. llq. L • • •nt ••783 Call -· -1• speclallat. Comm'!, resk:len-Complota Y•rd Carol pa ng ., Jlllintina:, ,.. ,..-.. ..., ~0 .,..__ • lllunu.7-office or rtlail 11tore. 213 ---------"" ' ~ t!Al. Panelinst. cabinets, Jll'.l 540-CS3? from ~land. 968-7461 I 1-1°. '.ln!':ia~.Ba. w/ prage " : = ••• ~thcsir.~~~:e Manager r;.:1=~."'!i~uc:.i:~~ ~r:i~RPt, Jos~.M. v i~ ~~!;; formic&. Cat i NE\V lawns IOd strippin& * PAPERH.ANGING ~ ~ C.U 673-9183 \ &Th-JSil REWARD. U $-1653 aft S • · _ rototllllni 'renoval i n1 , Ir PAINTING. * 968-24~ ~ • -t==:-c~o-,--,--:--c-e .U.. C-,.... -OORO..~A ~I l\tar. 660 Sq. ====--:---GEN L ~nter: Cllbulttt, <:Inn-up haullnc. !li&-l69l S & H PAJNTING FOR lf':nior dtlztn lldy • t • ,,..,... r-.. t ~ 5 Ft. E-Z Parking, prime loc. BUSINESS •nd JMUltlln&. Cu•tom work . • * Oom le } ~ tr duplex w/pn.ge. Pt! •a.... C..... lo ·~ Realonomlea Corp. 61'.J-6700 FINANCIAL Pe~t 6405 "Every joh a muterpltct '• . p te RemodellnaSft'v, ' -bk n--hn-.,,., ......... • ____ , Cetll... ------------------~·-,. -~n. ••D -. Gener•• Services "'2 $35.2ll? or M2.1403. 1 '._.._,vs---.--LOCATION \\'ANTED for 11-SWINGERS! New Orange Vil"' ''"" "'""1""' nTTRAC. I BR. Apt. Lrg !iv 1565 8la&lr Ann•• I qoor alort', l!Xi.!ltilljl or bulld. Butfnest 6300 Co. Gulde. Free Wtt OCSG, R E p AIRS-ALTER.ATJONS-RAIN Gut t ers Installed. Plastarlnt p tch -J. dlnlt\I n:n, $100. 517~ CU!.1-£ Prefer apt al't'a. 52$.-3051 OpportunltlH P.O. Rox 2Jll. Anaheim -CABINETS. Any &tr.e Job. Quality \\'Ut'k. Rea...nnable, Ra~lr • • • 6llO , • ,,.,,. uon •M ... 90 ~·:e-··. _ -m93 ~-I -o -o ._ma · ...,.. _ • NO m11Her •'Ml tt 11, )'OU S~I. lf'Ocel')' 1tore for IAle. =~=·~='00·,---.,.---,,,= %>)TS expe.r. 548-filU. _;";;~::,;";_· ::~~~··c.,,==·I~~;;';;:;;;;;-;:;-::::;;:::::::'[ IT'S A brfttt: •• tell )Wt ~ ,. ~ I can lf':ll It -1th a DAILY Incl all 11qulpmenl &: 'bt'er 1.: DRIVING 10 Texu, -'Ot1ld S~fAU. JOB l&\f Typing. Photo Copyil'lll:, * PATClf PLASTEJUNG -.Hema wtth Ull", UN Daib' ~ DAILY PILOT WANT AD. "l\·lne Uetrue. SAerlflce like \\'Oman eompanlttn. Call .!'PECIALIS'I' N01-!ory & ~falling Se:rvk'e1. All types. Free est:itnlw Pllt Oaulliro. ~ 0.11 SU«rt '=. cha f'lllt It_ SICQI. 535--4281 or 847-61n 1sfter 6:00 pm 49'l-1l42. Cell~· St6-U45 968-71i2 • Call ~ • -------------------------------------------~ ~---~ -·-------- DAILY PILOT ~7 SERVICE DIRICTORY JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOIS & EMPLOYMINT JOIS & IMPLOYMINT JOIS & IMPLOYMINT MIRCHANDlll POR MIRCHANDISI POR MERCHAN.,,.I POR TRAnlrult · ~ • ;:-:· Jolio --· Wam. 7100 ~bo Mor. Wom. 7100 . SALi· AND TRADE SALi AND TltA~I SALi AND TRAiii S•llbooto , tflt f'lumblnt -CARRIER J•bs Mon, Wam. 7100 schMl .. lnotructlon 7600 Ml1call-o l600 -" ,' --------S.C:rot "'25 Goro90 Solo IOU Ml II -Rl!NIGAD DMINS Pl ...... , nraw,,. MALE M<>del-l'uldoo ....... .,., .. IEOINNF.RS OR ADV. ••• ...... * AUCnON * of . alow! -cleaned 19. BOYS Ing, IUllll worll well 1 Gi.t Offloo: s.tt •tarter. ~--~ G S •-NIWl'O• 25 hr strV. ~ w/women. $10 ptt hr, H•vy tnlna-90 w.p.m. SH Instruction in ~n. Piano, nwimrTIVTn •r• a .. GORHAM "Rondo," 5 pc 11rt. ,RIDAY, 7l:IO P.M. , ~ i WANTED p/Ume tvet. l.A.C. Inc. 91)..lW, Dlwn.Wca.tkm. \1otln or Accord!on ill YoUf Stove, Uke new portable die tlfll, allo ahrlmp ll plclde NOVIMllR 20th P'amoU1 25 'Ibpslt cuUtr, PLUMBING REPAIR SS5-350l borne. LoRayne Jawaton, 1o1.•ubu, holpltaJ bed, radioe, fork $65. Frl.iidaint rctrii., RIPOSSISSION di4!:sel, A.P., t hlllfOl sallt. No job too •mall far tbs · S.CNtary $45G. 6f6.6101. came11&1, electrical appl.1-12· cw. lt. harvut eold $UIO., RepoutlH<I color bln every poed ble equtph,ent to • 64~128 • DAILY PILOT MANAGER TRAINEES '51 ExtrtmalY 111........., ...,_ PLYING LESSONS .,,..,, Army wtlfonns, ... R«Una "'w· Y•llow 165· tion ...,_ .,,...:; ...:: "° aeywhe•• In tM """Id. \\'anted by Symbra'ette, Ine, don tor a lh&rp younc l&cly "' ...... _ -• .,.. h , tan fllmJturt, TV, scut>. Marble top C!nd table , TV bed _. __ ,_ Aaking: $9500. 646-191f Eve. Romodellnt& R.,..lr '"' PANELI NG, fonnica. remodeling, ftpa.lr. 531-&86.l~m Roollnt "" Dona Point, San JQaJI Ot-u>d Caolltram Boach. O:iatact Mi'. Seay 11.t DAILY PILOT San 0emente offloe ltli N. El CamJno !teal -~ ~~~ ~:e~:~. I -C~O~A~S~T~A~L,.-'A.,;G;;.E=N~C~Y~ VI"' A member ol repr&.qs, root coatinfs, Lie I.: Snell;., .. It Sne111 .... Ine. bonded •lnoe 19t7. 642-7222, H.. .... .. BEFORE You buy, call T. Guy Rootinc Co. Recover •PtC I all1 t , tf 5-21&0, 5'&-9090. The World'a·La,...st Profe11lon1t Emp'9ymont $orvleo 279'.I Harbor Bl, CM 540-6053 Harbor Blvd. at Ada.ms l ntv'a w/be 1lam-6pm Fri. 1-•~ an.-~ .... o .... an our tank A maey other Uems ;old/wtrl~ · $40. Ovf:rhead '· 1'00rn •ts, QCllQ,,l..;;o;~;;;;;--;;i-;.;;-t,.---t Nov. 1'tb, .Hyatt Lodge, w t:YPfna A: Sit 80. di.LI.I. Lowut n.tet! Call S.t le Sun oniy· 4ns Cort: light office or aara.ge tn chef!ts, divans, JOWIM!ab, PRICED RI~~! Lag, Hills. IU!te 1111. For MISS IXIC AOENCY 8»<1'10 altor C pm and land In eam.o' HlcJolandl bcacke.._ 135 Highboy chaln, ma_ cllne ... , FOR QUICK~- appt: 833.-2357. 410 W, Cout Hwy, NB Wtektndt, CdM • French ln!atd' wood ·WtmV. ooUee tabln, lampe. e.lect:rlc fl' F/GlaJA Keth:~ r.IARRIED? Too muy bills? · 6'6-3939 ' · MIRCHANDISI fOR o.UV:oE Sale bJe tiop, needs cart'!, abo oirp.ns, cariietinc. s.ewinl' ~ectronics, A-~u+t. 7 Perm., part time SALE ~MD TRADI · • Good ma.tchinctwinbeds, bestol· ma c blne1,fttrlpraton. Sails, etc. Sharp.()~ employment. Apply: Sun SECRETARY: SH 80 ·aceur. ,.. tum!~. Hotpolnt ft1ri&., fer. Carrltt air conditioner, atovtw, washtn, drye.rg and buyt11g new boat. l•cific k ~-IBM exec., io k.., Furnlt~-._,., Zenith 23" COMO!e colo.r 'IV, window ....... , •°". Sat " much more! Yacht s.Jes. 673-'1570 lhru wod ..... ,,m. .. 10. d ., ••• -rm "•ms " miac. 1518 ~~ --uy AU manastr, P AULO !1~teE!::''1.~ BEAtrl'IFUL Frultw~od Cornwall t.n. (WestcUJf) Sun,lM,SEsther,C.?if. n1n 'S CJION 12' SEA Swinger, N~w .. ln oNru=, .. -™ Tl!EBlvdATER.C '!"', But!Dtu, '75-1111. N.B. 8«fttar)', !inbhtd be.ck. NB. 646-N BARG, .~~~ .. ~--all!,.• Kladna orlzlnaonlyt <"!!'~·s.:f....., rlta1"'1' .. ,.... • • • " • U9e u ftlOm div1der, bar, vt ve ~ 9Jft • COME BROWSE AROUND no.w ~· 1 '~ NO-fJhone ealls pleaat. ~:!tVICE ~be Pump Jal. at-deck or bookca•, 5;x3'g", Appllanen: 1100 axu ah&( area Nf, 2 host 2075% ~ewpon BJ~ i,;;''"''m'ii'; . .,.,..=,-,=r.:::::;:t • Metall"z1"ng -·~d ~--::"""cdupM. WU l300 .. w. mo. M•M ""'"'ORE ··-w ·-........ blue medallion-· Behind Tony" Bid& M~t'll LIDO"' 2'64, Glua -•~,.~ .. : •. yna-..,, • dretlf1' /lnlaid w.lnut .u:..i,,,., ..... Uncr, beige IOf:a, utOI'. chain, Costa M"e--. .. "8-3686 ~t bath, cover.' North .-....u doors SU:. Bumt oranp rood1 . _co_nd $45, Frl.rfda1re head bo&nh, bedtpiuida, OPEN DAILY 1 to 4 11ailt. trot>. ~ S • SERVICE STATION AT-knubby -~ top _,,.,11h , e ec .. ., .. r, late model, xlnt lamJll, p1Uoww, wallpapen, 22 T\'~ RE-ROOFING, shillgles &: rock. Repaq-. " 1no-coa.tlng. No job too small. 897-4223 Prayer TENDANT-allahiftaopen.. ... """:'°' "......,...,, eond fiS. D•l i v . a: Dowen Ii: ~. Gay1'"0R ale: llied 4' fluon!s·* CO~MBlA · t • '11 Apply bl perwn, 4611 Cam-~lb~ :: ruar&ntefld, 54 6-1672, Interiors, 2850 Mesa Verde ttnt !l.xturet, $5 et.eh, u is. electrie start outbrd, Lots o1 c:;:!'r~. ~~n br:i~ EXPERIENCED IN USE pus Dr. N.S. sa>. striped studio 8474115 Dr, CM. 546--3665 ~~:·v1:n';Yr:t~ extra:ido~O ~ 645--1062 eve &: wk end OF M ETC O EQllIP· SERVICE. Station Attndnt. couqm: er It bolsters $15. DELUX fros t-free cop. STOP ..... ~ ~S~AI' 'Vest Bay, Colt.a Mesa ' $9'15. Slip avail. Ca.Ji 551..m: •-C 1'1Ei'-'T Sales ability nee. · Hrty. \\'hite qUflted bedsp~ad pertone Frigl.daire $U>; .,_....,,..,,. j -wing, ff60 ~~~EWSAipErSJd :cU:: • wap plus eornm. Apply in w/purple design. full, like Kenmore dryer $120: Din'r ?073 Newport Blvd CM . or54&-47i1 Qu .,_ Y-··ve alw·-pen;on 990 w. Cea.st Hu·"'· new ... c. '5' hi-ti console table wt2 leave i: s chairs (next to T ...... v·· 'll1A'! M~t .. ) M isc. Wantecl 1610 Hobie c.t.14: -Trlr .._..~,. .,.. ""J" Guarant eed cli enteJ. e Apply inperson e ~J -f""' TO .. ~.... -v-... ··tt wanted. Dressmaking • N.B. Shtll· without components, All S · 96U""IW.) Used turn ; Stoves; Refri&'1; SMALL paint 1pny outtit $995, * Call · - altera&na. Key Say, 1'163 '~"6-3904==~· ~~~~~ Eld Ind i 1 SEWING machine alncle mU&t ao! Sacrifice for beat 36" GAS ~: Bronze, A Mile. wanted. Reuonable! SUN FISH New ~.sum. ~ Ave., Q.t. MS-1292 COUNTER GIRL for Dry •r ... 01 "o'o'v'.'s'i'. nc. needle operators .. w--•d. on. bids. l4S--322'J Like New! Lie. own wtdbl "U •"e don't have what you * 642-5776 ** mer. S3r~ Over new. Cleaning Plant, ov 25. 2200 ~' "'""I" "--ll ~so ·u 1 ~ EU,ROPEAN dressmU<lng Harbor, C.M. Unlt A-2. Newpon Beach ly. Steady WOl'k, hia'Mst i.rusr SEU.! Will Sac! •v er • .,. • want, M set t --you" PITS and LIVESTOCK 673--1066. all C\lltom titted, Veryl,..=~-'-~i---='~-1----'-------I pay.a!F,BirchSt.N.B. S/RMS of quality call Aft iU-5m 1·150,IXXIB.T.U.DQAN!aht ;; j · excllinl ckntal praet!Oe can persiinnelnewpDl't ~· SMAU. parts 1n TV Com· bdnn .et, 10' Cut·Velvtt da1re elec ranp· yellow· $100 Contact Mr Laney or i reasonable, 6'13-1$49 DENTAL aaslat • See how il nr OC airport. Medit/tum. Jnclds: King.a SUPER ·1970 dlx. 30'' f'rila· tumace, extftior mountlrll Pl'h, GtMral llOO Power Crul .. rS ~ 9020 •D~~o -.. :::t,era 0 "ti··ons be'. Mutt IO'Ve' people. Exp merclali. Up to SlJJ per eota, Din'&' nn furn, Den Ull!d 2 m~. s.crtfice $125, Mn: Green~ at the CHINOlIU.AS: Eme•aaiCY '61 ESS &: ~~) Cabin •'""" "" req'd. ?tia.ture. H.B. 968-!1782 day, No workin& expu. tum. Pictures ~ lamps. All 496-:m& or 493-4191i. DAILY Pll.OT l30 W Bay lllneu ~ Acr1f1ce . of Cn.ilser, $2700, ~ ah1pe, Call Jo * 646-6446 anytime 1nanl"V ..,.,•4 1 AG 1 o~" ....,.1 Leu tha-: 3 mo'• old. Pvt . ""'~-M • • • 29' prime aJUmala I: eqwpt. sis t&dk>, D.F .. , ~P DRESS MAKING· but· DENTAL Ass i s ta nt, .-... , -~ ....... •. ne . ...........,.,. Pty ~ Please Call ·~IGERATORS e .....,.,"' esa. Ca.11536-nfl ChJ'yslerV-drivr.ln~.balt tonholes, zippen etc. Exper, chairside, age l!J.-30, ex· Profe11ion•I Service TEL, Answenng· Stnr. Exp. 213/691-2532, LaHabra. All 11US-All col.on-All GERT'S a cay &hi -ready FOR. Sale: Baby otten 10 tank. Newport Harbor Guaranteed WOT'k, 962-4351 pe r'd. Laguna Beaeh. Ca.II for the employer preld. n .o~ p~ time. DINING Room t· Reasonable. for a whirl after deanln1 wk!. Domestic railed' by SLIP. Terms. 67~ Al .. ~1 642 .,.,.., 494-3596 for applieatlon. •nd the •r,llcant w/traln qualified Cll'I over .,{.,.; ..... 1 ,.bl ' .con-2 ** '46--7820 ** carpets with Blu• Lustre. owner 548-l.Z4 r., ons --~ 30. Phone: S40-20il _ ... ,. 0 rnund ta e with Rirnt dectrie s~pooer · Spo1d-S•I Boat.l 9030 Neat, 'accurate, 20 yea.rs exp. DENTAL Receptionist, 25-3.i 133 Dover r., N.B. THE DAI extra leaves, 4 Captains Antiqun 1111 Sl ABC Lumber 140 E _ , .. ! Tile, Cer•mic 6974 Exp, "<I. Beaoh area. Fo• 642-3170 LY ' PILOT chalra 16-'. Fr<och Plovln-J1ii. CM ' · !!!@• 1125 14' BOAT"'°"" IEllO ~· applie. send name. address: 'N_U_R_S_E_S_REG __ I_STE_RE_D hl.9 an open1J1t fol' an experi-clal cofffe table $15. antique GOLD Leaf con.ote It IJ'lil'. ' · • ed to $450 firm. Tnkv only 17706 Alh Tree Lane, Irvtnt, netded. C;uifomia lice~ encdd, Joumalllt in its wo. pine drop let.It.able $45. 611 ror, lSth ttnt. Sp&nish oak '62 Corvalr complete interior PUP p Y S 1 must pay W::es! ' ~=k.~~ ~'::~-. **DISHWASHERS -Exp'd. req'd. Call: G&-5702. men'1depvtment. Applicant Kinrs Pl., Newport Helrhts, cbeat, ~ Gothic oak =A b:!~~b, near Black and white apotted pup. • No job •-_, ~:, Must be clean. neat & overNlJRSE "~-.-RN--for--h-0••.-,-e must be able to report. KING az htdH..·bed $175. chest, al. 1ee'y, Cloeks, • 11)'9. I weeks old, % Shellie, Boat Tr1llers ! 902 wu auu. riu"" IS A I in nl write cleari,)', undtntand Walnut dresser SSO, pair Silver A etc. BACK DOOR l'M#. ,iw...,.._11 II ~Cocker. $15. 2XJ21 Marina ~ · patching. Leaking shower · PP Y person ° y, auperviaor in mn. nuraine c.Utntiala: of ~b1 le WlildlOf' ehaln '60, stereo IMPORTS. 1196 Harbor, AJ<ll .. _... • Lane, Hunttniton Beach. BOAT Trailer 1~. New titta: ~pair, 847-1957/846-0206. ~t ~wy~~~. 5930 W. !;:1t.ni)~4~f:· Fw appt. l~t. Top company btJ1e. speakers $50, tables, lamp. ~M, 60-7: B of A 4 MJtr 2100 Harbor Blvd 6G06tilli (Between BUIChard and :e.budd~ ~ F, W CER.Ai.'\t:JC Tile .... 'tlrk. FtteFEM =""'~ALE=°"eooC--Ck-'w-.. --,,od-:-; -.-p-N fits, sood salary, attracttve 6'r~ I a~p · OIEST of dnwe~ $IO 6 sz Mqnolla, ott of Adams.) t 0 · ..: est. No • job too am.all. ply In person. ME S A ~VIOOR, t to 11:30 new quarters, Apply~ writ. OlERRY. tr.Ok, 60" round, 191S EUX:l'RtC STOVE Macnavmr: Hl-FI, AM·FM, ~ WEIMARANER • German M•rlM Equip. Mu 536-2426. LANES, 1703 Superior, Of. Sunday Ol'lly, ftliel ing only, cttinc ~nee, w/I ehain, eupboard bt.se. Collector's Item. S50 &pd, COlm)1e $%). 21" RCA Shep. puppies SlO. Beaut., ~ t FDlALE HELP WANTED b&cklround 4 education to 2 cherry _lamp tables. 3 • Call: 675-2166 'IV table $25. Color RCA lnteltl1ent . biendly. ATTENTIM Television, Repairs, Etc. 6915 HOLIDAY Spec:W. No service charge! W o r k guaranteed Chlor &: Bf\V. 5:>"7·7456 Upholstery '9IO __ ,__ ___ _ Czy k 01 k I' a (f:gy·kos-key) Cintom Upholstery, 1831 Newport Blvd, CM SU..I454. Full or Part Time. Counter Ai!e°rfd!!ce!f or t:iu ~~. Ex· Margaret Cttenman. Per. Danish ch&ll'll "2 ottomans, ANTlQUE Pine: drop leaf maple TV, f'Xctilf'-nt $'150. Wei!'l'laJ'l)el'da parents AKC FISHERM&Nl sales. Good penona.llty, Park Lido Convalescent sonnel bfanqu, Box 1560, 673-1561 table $45. very old. GU Kini 117 E. 18th, C.l\I . !'fl', champ. &toek. Copies of Cadet depth ~ \v/new some photo knowledg e Center. 642"80tof COit:'! Mesa. Cali.l, ~. MEDIT. Couch, love &eat, Pl, Newport He ights. GE Stereo RCA TV Coeeo papers tumi5hed. To homes transducer records 1~ '15fa.. helpful, not nte. Apply in PART time· u..-. Waitreuet THE RS HERMAN chair, coffee b;ble, end PiaYt>en, 'Rotobroil' .. 400.. wtyard. nn &: children only. thorns, ~. ' : person. Daves Camera Ex· a ..... ..., tables. 2 lamps, priced to Mu1lol rotisll!tie, da<:n>n kn l t 5'3o518.i, 4j) HP Evirlrude '67.: l $300. change, 474 E. 17th, Costa A Bartenders. Mature col· ' is now !"t.:rviewin& •ll! &12-1397 lnstrumenh 11U rMterial. children's clothes, SHERRY'S POODLES 25 HP Evlnrude" ~69. ~. Mesa I* students fine. NOW' Ir JT e Cockt.a1I Waltrett MUST SEU.I _ Mode 847_Tlll 9 .,,... e--' .. noe (both DWtUal ""'•) around Cateftr. fi'15..1002 Attractive penonab!e Ex-m S'.>NOLA Oa'd arsan $t0. J·· "t""~"" -1161 FL. Time MGRs. car wax perlencetf. Unltorms Provid-couch w/f!Dd table ext., Rossi new eledrlc KU!tar I: GIRLS bednn set, 0 d d All breed aroommc. Int Call 675--7949 aftal :00 bus. New tech. Earn as PART time help M/F, need· e4. Apply in penon only alt ~r. occuional chr., cue $50. 499-3t64. t.ablea, redU.r, 'Nl'O\lrht plek, up Ir dellvfl')', Christ· 16 HP elect. $50, 40 1 elect much .as,$3.05 hr. 644-5.192. ed for food preparation 4" 5 pm. 311 PaeWc Cout oofJe.e table, 968-4990 wkday CONN CORONEi' vt iron dinette tet, desk, rnaa pups in alt colors, $75. New 7% hp ' ~. 9' Fibenr(a55 lay-Up =~be~U~~te t • · Hwy., Hunt. Bcb. GOevLDeiorall~~al-·~· nd mnd.Appn.ttedfs.~~ ~:!~~· baby items. Me-2848 elec!v....,boat motw , poo. 'ft E ltel:IJUll : ""' rou takes 6'5--2415 ~..... * 2 AFGHAN HOUNDS 642-W'"° , p:;:,:~e~:odSe~!~~ WAIT~~SES :~ rott ta~: ;1" FENDER 1.lu~ie Muter &: DANISH Teakw<xld table, 4 ARC. Xlnt pedi~s. Blk FOR SALE Pl.25A,S.::t a.ma. J b W _ _i Sand ing & Detailing Exp. ..i..t. needed to k loeaJ "•SHIER HOSTESSES arnavox . op gd cond 175 bes ehlJrs xlnt cond 9 x 12 }il a ak ~Crcam1. 10 ha Outboard Motor need!i o 1nt.u, Mtn 7000 APPLY IN PERSON .... ...:: wcr """ • q1.lal. all perl cond. 173.--1077 :i;:• SIS..201.8 • or t area 'rui. like Mw, goU mo's/ma.I", 3 yralm!1e. some adjusting askii . $100. JOBS & EMPLOYMENT NEED A WRITER•. Edler Industries Inc. tea room ahOv."S. $10 per hr. hlust be neat appearing PAIR Of Jov~ab quiltf!d r. . clubs, 4 woods S irons. 245.> Reu ! Tarms a v a • l ! 2513 S 011\'e s t' S/A 5-5184 2101 Dove St., N.B. 1.A.G. Inc. 835--3501. and ot good charaeter. Doral, never UllCd, i'Js ei.c:h. • FENDER amplifier in Bamboo, NB 644-2'255. 962--7&57. · · S~niorP•R'Iark~tinhg"Engineer· HAIRSQilistntedcd.Town.& e e PRODUCE MAN NO EXPERIENCE &l atc h inr sofa SU5. xlntcond. e POODLES e · . ••--Jn _., mg, •• , tee n1eaJ writer Coon Plua H B call wanh!d by ftlatively small NECESSARY S30-l337 $150 ~ LANE Maple ct<!ar c~t It ! Bo.tt Slip ~ "'-needs f'll_ll, P&rt·time ~work Jim !>' Du.ane ~ •lii W n1 · poltable sewing mac h. Stna.11 toy d\ampape roe.le, by the JOb, on fftmltes: or , ~===""="'~~-.,..-,-food store • not a IUpttm&I'· -e n )'OU WANTED; Qu111 SC:an; Bdnn. Pl & ,.._ Make (lffer. 516 -91f1 biuk female toy. Both AKC 1S TO 30 lt. •lll* a\ • for ~at liome. Bmch.,_; a I""!'· i ff AIR.DRESSER, licensed, for ket. A one-man job, 90 t!X• ~Free Mal set, D.R. nn. tum, ltf!'ftO lnM _...ans 1130 eves/wknds. Rqi!rttred. &tS-0142 333 E . power boa.ti, Ai, . di')' ........ .... perienee is necessary, No -Vacalion 1-4 weeks b •-• ~ lbl 111h St C •• av-a-for boats A• ~~·I iality, l'U handle printing, desk work A assistant. obJeciion W o\4lr man it -Health in.wrance ::i.a:sTps c ...,.... · .e PIANOS e Ix 10 HO Tralnboard. Lionel " ""'· -,&~ VlJJa~ ·.:: E . 'II you have• story book or 497.148.f 'l:J0.10:30 ~ can bandlt tht wart, Mt -8ick leave Rec'd a shipment of beaut enOnts. nrs. aeceaories, AKC SILVER. POODLES Cout H...., N'pt ~. autobiography th~t nctdis HOUSEWIFE, .. a,.. 0 ;::;;;;, .. 1... ..-·-:::.M~ ~ f' DINETI'E 9ft.oval walnut transtmners 121o Conway Sm/Mlniatures. '""""';":"":':''"-''::"~""::-I .,_. ..,. .. t er .... ......,. -aeullMfOU.s pro it .~.,Joo ~"-. Yellow aplnel!I ~ conlOles just in .,.,,1-• HE"~Y. -"~". 'SLIP for am/boat, 1 Lido. t writing, eall me at 638-5876 'll:eekdays, whU. cMWten 1 .1 L i:;n•• -~ ._.,..., ...i.... ,.,~ .. gn:: -a....,......,__ ..-Vll• ""''" ,DCJl..,.,,,.,M I ·t 9801 o t G rd In •-• A I I c.... -' :"'"."""':'"'? -· vin·.1 1wl.wl chairs. Like .wi-.... , .. ..., .... living. ' --** lf6..5650 ** O/B ETC. Finest' d b In or>wne: ass, a en are st111,11w. ppy l'I tM1 •t DIDO ~ _.. • .,,.....,.k ~.tor day, ,._I!••., ... ,, 111e9e a.re speciaJ pri ced CODE - A -phone a.nswer Npt' Ki"""'e"' fjf't·_ 1 ... ,tiD , 1 Grove, pt_!nofl Batiu.Mb'l\I It 'l'tON leiot."4 tft Nie ot I f new., ..... _....._.... tor the hoUd&y untt 440. 20 min. capacity IRISH Mtter puppies, dwn· · .... y ,. """'· """'' • ., r YOUNG ?tfALE iTUOfNT. l'l4vwi. D01 W ltth It., the ~ WWld Store in the WE BUY wed furniture, kn-CONSO~ w/remote eontrol $ 335, pltvt blood line, grand lO p.m. • .. ~EEDS P41\T / TIMI: C:O.i. Mt ... JOJI, ~ IDu.th ()Jpt Plaza SN>ppins "HOME or -~·G BOY" tiques. bric-a-brae, oriental Rec $199 •••••••••• Now SS99 6"-8891. 1 eha.mpion •ired, pet priced. ~ ,\VANT BOAT Sf.II FOR WORKi ArI'ERNOONS • thnl Friday. C..t.1r1 3333 Bristol St., I' ·GR•-n•-I ·rugs, oil paintiJt&g. Call SPINETS RUMMAGE u.Je • Girls ~l5'l .. s PO\\IER BOAT N.B. EVENINGS. CALL CREG.1 ·.~11,;,0~U"Sl:JW=='"D'=J;R,="""1'";,.-.,..f" Olllta M•, Calif, IM Vl'E:~:an 1 6'"445. Reg, $195 ........ Now $595 Club, 1Sl5 Anaheim, C.M. MINIATURE Sehnauzen tor ~t405 ' 642-00al K\Qltltlltilft ~. t Ortl\ lii!!iJ!i!!!!i!I·~~~!"'· e WALNUT ~---·-I•, GOULD MUSIC CO 64$.,11!1Fri1: Sat, Nov 20 6 Chrlttmu. AKC cti..mplon *PVT dock ·for up 1U 28' tlmt~ .... TV. -• ........ .. RICll'TIONIST , TO 4 DAILY long-ho-· ~~·;;:b~-':.'-. ···--l9U . 21. lo .. 3 •tock. E-·•M-3313; dy1 ..-, beet .. •"~'"4 PART wctk evenlnp Ar: qeak J!rlllilh, klant UIO oor:, 17th Santa Ana ··-"" , '"'" ""'"'-e ' 547 9561. Bol 61 ~-v.ttkend1. J\emnnslbl~. Age 10 HM mo""• Ph· ..... ,.,_ $146.67 111--·cl'd An·'--· CHEAP!! 8f2.-il4.f.. 2045 N'. Ma.ln, S.A. 8SKI Wnilles rete?Ve now! --ton 3-3562 alt 6 n: 31, family man-:-'44-8891 or~ Y -Beautiful new Irvine Com-M E~'...J Opportun~;un MOVJNQ AWAY. Have * 547.o681 * Cabin at Mammoth Mnt. SILkY terrltt, maJe. AKC, 5 BOAT Sllpi N.B. lf..32' plex ott!ees. Pleasant work-Employer tx:Jme..lull ot tumltutt, all COAST MUSIC ANNEX Sips T. Fiftpl, ete. 531-3314 mo. Shots. $100 or belt of. power boats. From1 ii-15 " Job Wanttd, HOUSEKEEPER -Hours: 2 ing cond, Good benefits, Call wry iood cond! 6.f.6.:!J39S OPEN HOUSE days; Sto-0611 eves. fer. 6"-4172 $1.95 per fl. W 7020 to 7 daily 9 to 3 Sat 0\\-n """T -~ Ab' U WO~fAN \Vantfd, gen hswk, ..:..::<...==.,::::;:::...:;::.,;:"'-omon______ • ' h1iss l.a.ura,...,.,.u .;, 1ga Tues & Fri 9-4 pm. Newpt Cll .. &' COUOI ~ $140. 10' Saturday, Nov. 21at, l~ COLOR. TV, at•reo, ST. Bmw'd, ~e, ll mo., 3 WELL locatf'd DI ,..,. U SECRETARY, gal in 30.1 ~~~;r~e~on.ho!';:ke:p:,~: Abbot P~rsonnel S ~re~, area $2 50 hr Refs Reply• Couch • $200. Both Custom RICHARD ,RODGERS d lahw asher, typn.Titv, AKC, ~gh coat. Needs tun. 1lips. 4 Way tie. tlOO, 120 A desirts full time \1/0rk in Xlnt salary. 846-1666; alt 7, 230 \V, \\arner, u1te ' Box .Jl,f.ioss Dally Puot 1,,0 Built. &(2....2113. Organ represent. for lhe fllnrlture, book.I, baby crib. Uy w, .,,. yd, $150. 4f!S.23M $13.$ mo. 673-QSO Newport or Jl.ftsa. area. Ex· Ms.oc& Santa Ana. W. Bay, C.1.1. LOVE SEAT, perfect c:on-Conn Or9an Corp 6'2--2'J'f3 BASSET AKC--Male, 3 ~ I t R ., .. , -.. -• pcr!enced, •l1At'P, depe.n· ~H:;llKP~Ri~~Em~~--!:J',-~!40-. "Would You Believe"' dltion, ytllow aotd brocade. WW play for your pleasure 113 CARAT • la Jllll, total mo's, All Shots & Wormed. D• tnr-S ~· ~ dable. can~ Re staurant $85, m.'633. le answer questions. \.\'eddlng: set. Never 1*n us-'145 ... 842-3n4 R A Sail '="=--"~='7=,,~~= 0.-AUon I A.... BOB'S MY GIRL FRIDAY IS 7' SOFA eou.. aervad. ed. Coot 1315, Sell 1115. * BEAGLE PUPS • 7 wko. 9llt . llKPR r\rl Frl, Air AIR ey 100-B m. 16th, S.A. GETTING MARRIED ~ s d U-' 544-0611 Cal 25 ol 4 1u~ · PIR C06t GIL thur TB full 547~ AND LEAVING ON Very atutdy aqUa blue $20. ..,~n un ayi AKC FEM-Shots. $60 &. $30. ' t!ePt • J.<Y JllU1P-or pt time Exe ref. 6'7541S2 IIN=ciJ=ME='""'tax-oo-nsuJ"""t-an"'t.--"HOME OF THE BIG BOY" THURSDAY Costa Mesa 845-2633 alt 8. DaUy di 6 -Fri tll 9 LIKE NEW! 1' Cold IOf.a Sd-3211 ped, $29 Pl!T dl.Y, wt.Cl~; S34 EXP •-/"'*" ace /ro e. co-n1l11ton . Classes family R11taurent1 .,__h ·•· I . MUST SELL b If I COAST MUSIC $100. 1.ltdlt Coftee tbl $25, * SCHNAUZER PUP S ~ ifay wknda; ~ns L-~ .._ ,., .,.., as a ....,as ng tt>I. voice, ea u t u NEWPORT I:. HARBOR 1925 Vlnt:ace Tappan ~. 1.tal! at atud. Groomlnr ' incl, 968-48'0. • paYf'GU Gen. ottlot HCt 1tM'tlnr 100n. 545-4378 Trainee Cooks enjoys meettna-the public Spanish dttsler w/mil'Tor a:.ta i.teaa * 6'1.-2851 642--0337 * 8'6-0839 * · dutie1 fulltpt time fTl...6.Wl. [ ••ml•ii&iii.,.iiiiiii' Must be ntat appearing and and ktePs our C\lslomen 1; nltt atands. 67":>50'28 lo•t Ch•rter :M3t AIDE! • for conval~IQtnct. of aood chancter, able \0 wry happy, Hu pel'9:1nal NOW IN ONE LOCATION CARPET layers, hn.ve 9hq t-- ald••ly ••-or 1~ --. devote • 'appe~ la ~nt. She Rret.INER, 2 beds, baby Conn * Yamaha crpts deal direct, exp in-H1r1tt 1130 32• ~screw Chris tra.rt Homema~ ... ••7 , ~ l'U1J, TIME .,__,,, at leut 50 -m ac. ....,,. -II rnant 8 • can in. ~" Slpe 6 * Dclux t " ...,..~ ....... m«.ttreu, roll-away bed, * Thom 0 tall 1· "'• "-~ '"' . \n " ...,, ..,....,.. -r stereo eoneole . ..--'""' Al pl f tl 827-8140 I MO old Chettnut col t. , , 22 ..... _ .• To a caf'tn' pe.ttlon ln the curtl'ely plUll f!Ung I.: llt• ao1 ~ ....... e~ te ec on ParenU.,.. % Qtr k ~-Ap-* 548--243'1. ;!'_.... Jobt-Men Wom. 7100 _, Re1tauNM Buslne1· hkkpg. If you meet the above Offlct ,umfture M11 0 I" ......... Ol'f&nS ,lrewooel l'er Sele ~ ' · • 4. NO EXPERIENCE quallfieation1, please phone-Optn SUnd•Yt Jl..5 90-9181 ~5~~:;rnid. Bit Moblle .._,," .~· '200 ACCOUNTANT NICESSARY Add,.,_Print Otnt.r and !Wln'd 3Uf(I wood dttks. D•Ut UI I -Fri til ' FOR Sale • Xlnt condition ~~~~~--.,...-F::-=:77.::'7~ B.S. Degree, Pre.!er vel')! re-\\'• ~•·rapidly expandinr uk Becky tor an appoint-$69.50 e ReJln'd wood arm COAST MUSIC dOu OU1'iare. ?"oeke r , H~ ~tor rent ~=::eta:~ ""'grad""''· Local. Mfg. l"''INE PERSONNEL ...,.,,1u"lonp,..,.,..,iv,and ment. Ph: 540-ll57, roW'Y chalra, 129.50 •We NEWPORT~ HARBOR blackboard. 512-3120 .'si>~"'!," B·~-~-e•u ...... , •-• m W cl '" bl t ott --ha .. the larpst 1eleetlon Costa Mesa * 642-2851 ...... ,. .... n n•-.ora ~1 An", 64~ ,o, "' Ill SERVICES -:4G£NCY • • 0 " many o,~-I ORl"NTAL c•-t IO'xlS' BR! LE · Flam! e Ge ·• ...-, &hoel1·ln1truot'·-7..__ -.. a a.1 6--... _ In • .,. Id L -..-• D • twisted anaffle ngo ncr""'l Pergonnel Age n e y, 2043 tunltles. Starting &I a eitelt l------'-~c..;.. __ '-' -_.. ...._.._ ...... u... Be win red k blue. Best oUtr over bit braided Nin It dropped Broe,dmoor e Star ; w .. tclitt Drive, N.B. traloee with ad-•t TRAIN TO BE A ..... Ill'. """"' Daok PIANOS & . ORGANS 1200. 31345 E. Horne, SJC. OOHbaM l30 67&-1596 llJllcren • Cambrid .. AN OHIO OIL CO. o~-op. 0 .. fl' Dti1k into mallalfWllnt. New &: Ultd BICYCLES 1 ' 10 S "-~ ~ : CHAPMA" =·· -Good YI-HtayY Enilp-nt llOO no.,...r. Blvd. WARD'S BALDWIN STUDIO -~ '· ~TRANSPORTATION '' • portunity for high income iYn,,...nt .. per.'500-$600. _ ........ ,.a .. •• , ,,_. lfUC50 • cond. Reu . Mini-Blke4HP MOBILE H~ PLUS regW&r cash, car and ·~ --op••"TOR IJ19 NoPEN ....... SUN. c .•ot.A642-MMY 1110,'Xlnc 642-1272. llHto I Y•d!lo -lJiltl N. Harboi-,. vacation bonuses, abundant MTIT /TWX -Aut:on\ltie rat.. •""" r. * n•/531 M-l to • -·--··"-Office l•ul-1 IOll • -"OONS APT 8'. eo•d'J'OI ,.~ •. ~'-• -~.-~ fringe benetl!s to mature ?tlin. 1 yr, 1xper, both ma· -" ...... -"'"'' A,...vM l'er Yeti , r···-·· ~ •JWY• <6'6 SCRAM LETS man In Beuh Cities a.rea. chines. S4.»U60. -II.ck liNve IAVn .. epn"ate ~rt. THERMA·FAX copy 1.iERRY Chrtttrnul Baby =~~;:~· $33. Pvt • TH~~~-WeklFlame C t( Regardless of e:qierlenet, -Profit •haritw flan dftC ltnu ..--. 1 23 al ll'&hd 5'f" Letta' sse:-~t ~ air mail A.F. Read . TRISH HOllKINI JNTP!RVJIJWJNQ 1-mw, ·~:--Tt;: =~'tie! A ~le 0wnr'~1 1,i ~ 005t~· -I :rirusr SeU 1~ Toyot&. ANSWERS Paramount• ., Pres., Arneriean Lubricants 488 E. 17th (at ltvlat) c.r.t. 2 TO 4 DAft.Y Home lt\l4y pnp&ra1 you $2$ 5'&-3665 • • IT'~ I Wig for 1&1", like new. Barrtnaton 8 B Co., Box '96, Dayton, Ohio 642-1470 154 Eut 17th Costa Ml'!A tor naldeat tralntnc at our lB~ Selectrfe 11 .. carr1qe BEAUTIFUL Wurlitaer Call 557-au . Penury -Plush-Loath -Conttnaital • i -61()1. lll South Euclid Anaheim ...... ~t;lta In, """1i. like riew, ~-call 6'2-3870 Spinet pi.am, 2 yra old. $SM. COLOR TV, 25" Zenith; pie-Ledpr -ROLLED UP General e HWcre.,4 APT. Clean1J11: \Vo rn an LIVE-iN our kwtl.Y home. Bt Ni llf\&al optllWtU.nitJ l'lo~ la.NJ .... carter betwn 9am 4 $pm. 6'4-m:l,3 aft & pm. turt tube under wananty, A hippie: mad~ a IU!t or an CHAPMAN:! needed, e.xper. Own transp. re1ponsible for 1 yr old all1. eme,r la optft ~men un;. . . $239. &t&-1525 old a wint but every tltne MOllLE HOM t Personal rer1. 642-1224. Want grandmother type or J(fJ'fkfb ~ fur Xpt. WfMl ffM"J ~ction entERMOtAX P.tODEL-17 l(MfMOND .Model At 3 .WE Loan-81.u'&U anyth!na It rained ·tJs p&nta ROLL!D 12331 Beaeh Blvd. ;t. ADVERTISJNG-Jmmed op-un\ved mother, run home u conipltx, ltut trtt, apt + l_eboell Dept. 12Xt SOl N, $25 COPY.!IAOIIN~ ~M-t~nf67=5 ln '¥.l~t Coast Pa""' Ii: Auction. 2426 UP. ' * 11f!530-2930',,j j portunlty for ladles & g\rl1, :your w:ry own. lnQuire:, utU. Far mainte nanet, GoNen Cir:! suite 206, S.A., ' ' · ' Nev.-port Blvd. &C2-l400 ~70 BOAT-MOTOR-'69 GIN9::1· .+--1 U-S3.50 per hour + 67$--0390, S'J'5..37M clean·g: 6 lawns. 998 El £-;!:,..9270S or (art&) Tit/ Store l~ullmlnt 8012 Taltvlslort l20S FOR Sale: SOfa w/2 ~Hp TltAILIR :?b:'3'. Dilhwaahtr ~1 .... generous bonu.&es I: C'Om· *MAID WANTED * cam1no Dt1 No. l CM. or .,.,.,_, --c0ven. 1 BathroOm a:ink 15' Silvtrline !50 hp Mere aklrtinr Stt . 'H• vitht~' mls.sions, Pl~uanttelephone Part time. 646-7445 MIHKSl rrs YOui MOYE HOWA!lD tmprlntln1 21" ZENJ111 "mote control W/flxNtt8. s.J7...al.U V&l\IOn tra.U.r -tlec.,~ ton lly .The.: Ul , •• ~·1 'A'Oric. Call It appty now! MACHINisr -N•wport lit'i'AILM&Mllf,coimetka machll'll!, w/ au.ch. Park ~:new plctutt bl.be,.->. BAIY GRAND PIANO •tart. (GU171>' ' · $9250Call11 •. a. ~1. 1169 Newpou, Beachsmoll1-m•C'_ lnduatry.4°""""',Noa· ~Y CAREERS Ave A Golhle la.,.,. aeb. U ~nit!! UHF/VH F Walnu• onl•~IO !14U39'1 Sllff . OllY, • Suite F Chi ,........ .. .... 11 Prtntt C'MU:tmu cards, pwt.ab.,.. $45. ~. .. L "" • • · · totype, ll()me produc • •-=not lW\i "11 '""' ,,.~ •. ,, , ••• , .~ -· .... _.. N.B, T~nnts Club mom· THIODOAE BEAUTY advi501"s • Col· small la.the a. mill work tor tralzt. 6.f.:)...&Ul ..., ... , "' .LalW ....... '--1 11.0llNS ,ORD metlcs industry. 400 open. e 1 ectro-magnetie devicts. e e e SA''ES S.f.!!O. WW •ll tor $230. Hl-,1 I Sftf'tO n1t bmhlp. UlO + traii11eT t.. . 3 NEW 1ttOD~ • AIBllll[ & TRAVEL &&Z--4381 or 60--0.."9& ' or be1t ofr. SU-Otl& 3>60 Harbor Blvd. 12XEiO 2.f.XS2 1• 'lX6 iOi•. 40% oonuni..ion " mu 64"'584 Full and part time, Experl. Ill.In AL.\fOST new ROBERTS W ,._,0 •-· p ,_ Coota Meaa · Ojl-0010 in clcor cl""; <;! oth er benefit,, N"o exp S-R ENGU..'EERING, c·-'. ~-,--.,~. ---•· n•x -rder "·"• -... ""'.c. : ~m41z e:rt .. n · c ' M ' < '""""' AU• _._J .....,. .... .._ 0 S I I022 r •..v. • !u.r.A ., ... _ .. , ... ""' thro., , .. _..... 1&' KENN!:DY tt.t..p ~.,·.._ -Oita taa · rwttssary. will train, Full Solenoid Research •ion &. bene.tilf. can for ap. 1r•r 1 • O\l.'ft 1-tratlca & play thtm ·-" ........ "'"'' s;, ,,. 1730 Whl ti A 350 or Nlt't llme. 6.f.U2-ll MALE/FemaJt: 1.lust be polnbnenr 5fO.M50 Ext. 30, : =n~:GENT 9' WALNUT Stereo Cabinet back. Jteeorda on reeJ aJao. (:(Ind. ~. 4~'531'2 ru?e. trlr, n,h &t 11kl extras, 1 er ve. BOOKKEEPER ..., l8 CASlllER, USHER. JOSEPH MAONIN e RESERVATIONS RCA Del"'"' prtbl Dtw. e• Colt ITS; l300 tam all CliAJN •aw McCulloch 211 l75tl. &13-4610, 615-3!97 &x!O SllASTA wno s; Call Lorainr., ~2770, West· ETTES. DOORMAN. Appl) Equal oppcit"tUnlty empl°"l' e AIR. FRE:JGftt.CARGO BI u e ~ 1ie en brocade lnel, ext. A mk. 546-6306 Jlonepowtrr. $50. ...,,..... tll cabana llv'a rm, nloe '1u'd. cliff Pcnonnel AatnC)I. 2043 'llfE 'I11EATER (F 0 X), SALESMAN With foUowfnc. e OOMMUNICATIONS hkle-+bed «*. Gtrl'a 16" 7D AMP Bopn ampUCler mal7 , I ':· Adlt Pk.. $45 rut,} 993. Westdil! Dr., N.B. South Cout Pim., C.M. Mech. incllntd. Ho >ona • TRAVEL AGENT bike. 5i6--1m AMl1'M •tetf'O w It, •• bECORATlVE WTOUtht tron * HJ;W S>UNG .. ~ u .. $46..3102 t\'fl. a cou.z:GESTUDENTS • 546-2712• hair. 11tr, St. Jame• l£6fAiS. ~. otrJe• Unlwrtlty1peabn.Walelrt maU11oJc.cnptdtstal,MW. ed. Prfi:td to .Ut D)'l1 1 -~1"o"'X"H"""'Mon.,.--:tc'°'l:-o..-l(;--r Sell candy In 5patt time .••• bf.AN to drive A 496-3512. Afrflne Scheol1 P.clflc fum!Nrt,l:mltelWmt.&at finl1lt. 8acrU!ce $225 . O.t $1t.~f.f,·.~' 51M'ltl,~~llt. 2BR,Xlnt O>lta Ml!M" m . ?ilakc good money and help asrlst owner of adw:rttflne SE.cRETA'R\~ • Jtc.ceplionltt 610 E. 17th, S.nta Ana 4 !h:ln {rear) 702 Htlkstrope, MM31'7 fJI' 84).0598 S1tm-M&ster ~·!'UdiiT, kEWPOJl'f 3>, actihct. ffn. t~ rant SQO Ptr mo, ~ ntedy AChool. M2.0S03 9 to 5 arent"y. Pl-I. for appt. wanted. 3 to s yn ex· 54J.6SM Cdbf 1_.. 0 ... UM Llkl rK!"'" JU.00 1'lac. Sm& ortt coat. Sl.U ~r or bttt Ofler. (~ VACANCIES Coat money~ &lS.3806 t.ft 1 p.m. ~rlence. 'hfU1t ~tut 4 ao-PlAf;o LcslOlU )'OU1' home 1 0.,;E;;:.;1!68~-,-""'-,-...,,-.-,~145,,..,1~,' ~===1".'l;s..~=•;.._...o= '-;;1oT;;oi*;;l30-0n:;i';;°':,;;;•c-.;;;;;:li'::28:;9;l;,·;;2U~12';;Fl-::;1Mi:1\i:.:;--::-;;l;;;;;;i-*miDI;::•~· ;:;";::.824:;:;~2-!':i.·d Rent your houN, e.,pt.. a-tort DlAL direct MJ..5111. 0mp curate f,ytltst . Ultruystema, Ctrtifltd teachen . ~futle dryer $40., 19'i Admiral 19" XtAO STANDARD SIQS I HOTPOINT Elettric Stove I' 'V00Dr;N Sa'6t, ~l NEW 1970 Lanoer, 57 t " In bldg .. ete. thN a Dally Pilot your ad, then 6lt back and lne., 500 Newport Ce.nt!r sys~nu. :.tr. Hathcock, blk le v.ilt k stand S40 mite W 't, 'llr1lhout blndi.np • .fh: ~ ma.'t letboud tW~r f lW i ~1tar puk $lSOO r c awfled ad. Usttn to tht phcnt NCf .. Dr, ,Suite too, N.B. """100. MWJ68. houMhOld u~,. c9f.43ro · 11"">3)2! -C.U: m.• or offft'. ~ ' . 6t&.Mt2 ' ~ J. , lhursela,y, No~tn1ber l'f, l'7Q TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION •DAILY PILOT TRANSPORTATION SPOR ATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION li:iij,11ll; ~~~;-;-MP;00 Trucks 9500Trvcks ~l --------·1--------·1--------- l'.l::m:?:po::rttd:=:.;A:u:;to:;•:__ffOO::::i:l::.:m:!po::rt:.:ecl=::=A:=:utos:=::.-:.:9600::.: lmporttd Autos G. M. C. TRUCK CENT,ER· Al.FA ROMEO FIAT . JAGUAR '62 Alfa. Romero S(>ider 2tl00, 5 1peed, rebuilt e~, $600. Call 646--9523 evtl. IVU"IAl'I "THINK" JAGUAR 'HOO Imported Autos MERCEDES BENZ PORSCHE '66 PORSCHE i -;fl.Wl.CLEAR COMMUNITIES 1 -UIET e LAGUNA HILLS CALL S46·6750 AUmNAMERICA Jaub•B HEADQUARTERS The oal,y autborbtd JAGUAR dealer 1n tbt entire Harbor ..... Ur.I•")" CJc,r''y L.'''.l':·.,t s .. 1._.,11o ri ~l · ,., j, LI • d eoUPe 912, 5 speed, brown with black interior. Brand new Petttlll tln:a. XYJt74 ¢ountry Club I l • • MOBILE l. :;:LIVING • 'l t SURROUNDED BY ~UTIFUL IRVINE r ORANGE GROVES i ·JI. ACE REN'r ALS I _, FROM $81.50 ~INDUSTRY­Hf. COMMERCIAL '.ldtlts, All Ages! NO 'SrnPS TO CLIMB PET ALLOWED ~ $300,000 ' . : RECREATIONAL ; -CENTER . ENJOY LIFE •' i ~OW! ' ' (I $ft.eh • new way of fifixed living .with : r',eal neighbors! La,YQ:-bo~·ling, pool tables, ~l'. shuffieboard under rod!; cardrooms, dances, pri. vate <lining room & patio, wlfr\;PtOl bath kitchen + snack. bar. laundry facilities, sp.i.cious fenced patio around Jaige heated Pool, organized sodial activities, ar!s & cr(it,: it MODELS ' ' ; ·~O RNISHED­ !·.eN DISPLAY ~ina.Jes, Doubles & • Triples : FOR EXAMPLE Doufle wide, with carpet, drars & appliances, deliv· enfi and set up, with awn· i~ skirting, tax & license. i $9999 • FJIJANCING AV All.ABLE $ Wf: SELL YOUR HOME & r~ YOU MONEY $ 14851 JEFFREY RD. . "• V~Mi LE SOUTH OF S+m'A ANA FRWY. r ·a32-&535 •• Rtji:CED $1000, now $9,950. M~, mus t sell; 2 Br. 2 &:.Bayside Village. Xlnl . Owner 61::>-1642 F1JLJ.. price, furn 2 BR • pool, golf course, B. Owner 546-3496 23301 JUDGE. ROUTt; Dlt 24 hr. Phone '.\.-· ( ,. '1 CALL 83Q.J900 Prestige adult community, SA L E S e S E RV I C E adjacent to L eis ur e AUSTIN HEALEY NEW 12~~l;;· DEMO ~t&;' Jim Siemens Im ps . Wo•ld. Beautiful ""' UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE roundlngs, all luxury ap.. s.. SERVICE '"fRIEDlA~ PARTS AUSTIN AMERICA .,,, ·" r1('' & 1'.\,1 ,r1 .;;,_ San'.1 A"1 5 4~ 41 14 poJntments, putting green, 28~ H•rbor Blvd.., Coste Meu hobby shop, m uch more. I :::;::::;::::;::::;::=====-=========:I IWMl ' BAUER e SANTA ANA Moto.cyclH 93llO , 4080 w. FIRST ST .. $.A. 1---'------Trucks ""' HACH ...... BUICK MG I Hwy. ltl 893-7566 • 5.37-6824 JN,.. NEW-USEO.SERV. COSTA MESA: ~ '50G CAIL 839-3880 FA?>ULY community, abun· dance of re<:rcatlon for children, nr. gd. schoo.ls, shopping, priv. club house. Bey th~ !"l'lobilc home o ( your choice. move in to any one of our "OPEN" parks. NOW RENTING!! Want To Live In COSTA MESA Local spaces available now! II you are serious about huy- lllf a mobile borne .•• Now'i; tbe time to see BAY HARBOR MO&ILE HOMES 1425 Baker St. (at Harbor)' Costa Mes& 540.9470 l'U"Ll'V'-.n THINI HONDA Ill · "FRIEDi.ANDER"' FALL CAMPER ~ 234 E.sJ.'.g'ss,_. • ?.MG~' CLEARANCE '66 912 Coupe ·e1 JAGUAR Mark n '·' 3.100 W. ChutHtr)' •• N.B. Sedan. $500. Rung QK. But - Over a dozen brand new 8 612-8«15 540-1714 RGW 568 needs motor work & at· It. to ll fl campers now '60 Austin He•ley Local, 1 $3695 tention. Terms « trade. \'fRlfDLAHDER,., .t1 ctupot t JI 1 ll p LI rt•; slashed to BUgeye Spri~ •. good body, in-6'15--8913 1Dst ••ACK IHWY. "' s49 OVll ' teno•, "'"" good. $450 or DON BURNS JAG Mk V, "'"' body, ..... 893-"'6 • 537.6824 :.~"oA.1~ otter. 892--2970 Porsche Audi, L TO ~~; 7:..~. otter. NEW·USEO.SERV. INVOICE BMW 13631 Harbor mvd. 636-2333 I.,,=='===;== llY'lrftrllWl'li Positi"IY oo added d•aler Jost S. of Garden Gnw• Fwy, KARMANN GHIA charges! Every unit ready A thorized Dlr .. for Immediate installation on Sal : Se . e Parts m . your truck or a new 1971!. All :odels 11;'1~ From ~ '62 Ghia THEODORE Service Monday 'till 7:00 PM Mldnlght blue with white. ROBINS FORD Sat 'till Noon 'auto sport ltd vinyl int•rior. Eoonomy m HARBOR BLVD. COAST IMPORTS Authorized Sales • Service ::i:;t8c~~~f~~e sports COSTA MESA 64UIOIO O! Orange Coomty !no, DEMO SALE $875 MG Sa1cs. Service, Parts Immediate Delivery, All Models , J?rluport $Ut9 CHICK IVERSON vw 549-3031 Ext. fi6 or 6T 1970 HARBOR BJ.VD. COSTA MESA '66 912 Coupe Silver metallic new 'J>&biti One owner. CT A Y 289). $3895 DON BURNS Porsche Audi, LTD. 13631 Harbor Blvd. 636-2333 Just S. of Gai:den G~·f'w)'. '65 PORSCHE 356 SC Coupe, with sunroot Earth green with I~ 'rack & tape' deck,. Ycc.525 $3099 CHICK IVERSON vw ~9-3031 Ext, 66 or 61 1910 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA Mini Bikes 9275 MINI Bike • Cat Slingshot. IN·ea:rly n e w. 3~ TECUMSEH engine. $915 firm. 54>-7395 New '71 Datsun ~ w. Pacific Coast Hwy mo . Fiat 124 Sports ep.. 1600 OHC P ickup with camp. 642-0406 e 54&4529 :di~, ~eatefrl ~pe~cli:i 3100 W, Coa:st Hwy., N.B. '68 911 '65 HONDA 160 er. Sal; price $2099 dlr 1968 BMW-1600 Sunroof. . us •. pm ~ ping. MZ.9405 540-1764 5 speed. Blue. <WPZ 564~ 31111 po rt ~; MOTORCYCLE I# 459454) Will take car i~ $1950 t.Jres, .ow miles. $4 5 Low milrs. trade, Will finance private * Call 675-3312 * $2795 l87ll BEACH BL. 8424435 '53 MG·TO $950 79 Fine shape. (5Y721J) rty Call 54&4052 '69 BMW ](i{X) Good Cond 9625 Garden Grove mvd. HUNTINGTON SEACH 5"4&-0308 DON BURNS Motorcyclls 9300 $295 ,"::, '~11 ' 0 ' White, N•w'tires ""300. · 537.1177 Call Collect ' .,..,......., .,... KARMANN Ghia '69. Xlnt MGB SALE! SALE! SALE I THEODORE '70 TOYWA Hf LUX PICK. 67>6•18" 53>-2286 '69 850 Spyder cond. Lo mL Bla<k w/wht Porsche Audi, LTD ROBINS FORD · t ~·-~ 83 98 13631 Harbor Blvd. 636-2333 ·~.".~90c. c Enduro Yama· 206o Harbor Blvd. g:n~l7c~ 1~~o~:a;:.:ty~ DATSUN s'Y1CTs9'795) ' In. ·-~h.;cu to seU! 144 '67 M.G.B. Just s. of Garden Grove Fwy. ~" Costa M•sa 642-0010 ----------1 l!IGO KARMANN GHIA, new '61 PORSCHE "D" AWARD MOTORS new one. Priced to r.cll. $1899 rings, valves & clutch. Xlnt A real nice car. (XSP S.13) 1680 Newport Blvd, CM Lie. 275VIV. Chick Iverson '69 Datsun DON BUR.NS cond. $375., ~. 492-8915. Canacy yellow. Conv. near new everything. &12-4343 Inc., 445 E. Coast Hwy,. N.B. . . $1795 t.1ust sell! Make offer. The 673-0900 ext. -53 or 54., 4 Door &;<Ian. Radio, heater, Porsche Audi, L TO MERCEDES BENZ cleanest '61 in town! 646-1914 ·~u~:::.Klnc~~· m~~~ '41 CHEVY Pick.up, Cad. automat1c.$(X99JS 274) 13631 Harbor Blvd, 636-2333 DON BURNS Evening!. clutch work. Dirt and semi· eng., Isky cam, B&M hydro Justs. or Garden Grove Fwy, '68 Mercedes 220 '61 • 1600 COUPE: No mi's. h d N ·i __ _, Porsche Aud i, LTD. bl / Id/ k street equipped.~ ea ers. o m1 cage, •r=us DOWN + T. & L. '69 124 Sport Cpe. 4 Doo Sedan A . . on new re t eng, s ra.c , b<Xly work. Best offer. Must r · utomatic, lo\V 13631 Harbor Blvd. 6J6.2333 radials, Al\t I FM. MUST '68 SPORTSTER, fully chop-sell 64;.,.1400 $46 mileage, showroom condi. Just S. of Garden Grove Fwy. Se 11 ! s 16 o o. pcd, 12.. springer, 21/16 4 speed. New paint. A beau. tion. CXEX 0341 B..c 54S.9602/675---8086 ,..,his. Super-Out of Sight. eTRADE-WANTEDe '61 FORD p ick-u p PER MONTH 1.Y! <XLW 235) $3395 e ·67 MG T. Ch ro me, 64:>-3286 '69 l-larh.•y Davidson 74 Chor-wtcamper. Model FIDO. A·l ( 4 OS 0 Cl $2395 "'ire wheels, radio. MUST SELLI cond. $600 or best oller. 2 M • A DON S187J. 534-1709 '58 p I l'-s r ... "70 MOTO GUZZI 7~IO CC per. Afust see to apprecia1c. I t t c.. t d 10~ BUR.NS "'========= orsc le ......, uper ..........,~. W·11 I d f I od I 496-4870 n eres t.v mpu e on ·10 DON BURNS -Lots of xtras. '"')Q<:. Of' best 60 hp. 4,000 Miles. \Vixom 1 ra e or ate m e automotive discount rate OPEL •--la.iring. Bates bags. $1400 spol1scar. Call GJa.8116 after '64 CHEV 1tl ton truck. New . 1 8 Porsche Audi, LTD oiler. 962-6902 GT";Hi060 675-4422 -'='·=m=·======= I tires, r&h, plumbers frame. =:.i1~~~:;.;;~~e~: 1 Porsche Audi, LTD. 13631 Harbor Blvd. 636-2333 ,69 OPEL G.T. 'j9 PORSCHE 1600 Coupe. '57 Triumph 650 : Clean & ~ PPe.ulfec~-~nd. $/;iOH. "1k for ferred payment price is 3631 Harbor Blvd. 636-2333 Just S, of Garden Grove Fwy. STRONG. New Radials • fast. All ne\~1/elec & seat. Auto Service a , ....,,.ta Mesa ote $1861.79 including all inter. Just S. of Garden Grove Fwy, '68 250SL. Dark green, 2 tops. Silver metallic Coupe. Chrome whls, $1350 * Plus xtra/prts. Must sell & Parts 9400 '61 CHEVY P.U. est, all taxes and 1970 Uc· TIME FOR Air cond. AM/FM radio, <YSY 445) 5-15-4579 s:;1:.. 54&-1775 STYLESIDE. Lge. back win. ensc or if you prefer to pay ski rack. Xlnt cond. $5795. 52795 '70 PORSCHE 911-T Wht HODAKA Ace JOO, Vantack 6 CYL dow, 8' Bed. Reblt/Chrysler cash the full price is only QUICK CASH Days 673-4411 ext 3; eves \Y/blk int, AM / FM, 9700 frame, xlnt con<l. Xtras. FORD v.s. &Ply tires. 549-0674 $1471.95 including tax and THROUGH A 213/379-9030. DON BURNS mi. Comft/Gp-Sbow cond. $300. Ph: 548--5283 r·actory rebuilt wi1h 1hree '56 DODGE M37 % ton 4 whl lie. and not one penny mort'. DAILY PILOT Turn your "Surplus" into $6500 or bst otr. 644-7799 196.~ TRIUMPH Daytona 500. ~peed tran~. 2,000 miles, ~~ ,:n~~~~~;k "v/l2,000 BILL YATES ~C:S~~edwi:i.• ~ailyt!:: 1~~r~~~~~~. L~233J ~~EA.~~ds~;r5i~ All original, like fif'"'-bt>st offer. 54S.~ VOLKSWAGEN! WANT AD 6(2...5678 Just. S, of G-~,, G--Fwy. 4"' ·~• 8<12·3028 alter 5 e "69 FORD CLUB WAGON t.,,========,,.:.-========= cuu •u•" ,...-,o.,... -1 952 CHEV P ick Up, 2S3 V N V ti l ~ i' ========='--'=========! '66 Suzuki 8() Runs gOOd! Sl2~ r nginc $125. Also sc1 1114 A • 8· automa c. S,..-. 32852 Valle Road New C•rs 9800 New Cars 9800 New Cars 9800 New C1r1 1 9800 or Best OUcr f>.ls.s646 aft.er Hrcs for $j(J pr (w/tubes) • .::'".::;:., ::.64:;;2-ll..::.97::'-----1 San Juan Capistrano 3PM . 5~1960 '6.'i FORD F·IOO P ick Up. 837-4800/493-45U/499-2261 • '68 BSA 441 Victor, Xlnt V\V Clutch job. $2i), Labor Make olfer . cond, $415. Call after 4pm: p I u s par 1 s. ~1 . D . '-===*="='=·""°='=-*===I DOT DATSUN OPEN DAILY AND 675-4683. Automotive. 642-3625 or 1- TRADE Kite w/trlr: For '69 548--81)67 ('Vf', or '70. Yamaha-175cc WANTED: Rochestcrluelin- Eoduro. 644--1008 jection for 327 c.i. Chevy HONDA mW tr.ail 50, bored c-n~ine. Call 842-1451. out twice, slraight pipe. CHEVY V-8 motor with 495-5377 Mu ncie 4 speed trans. S225. e '68 HO NDA 350 or trade. 64~1609 aft' 6 pm . SUNDAYS ---------! i 181135 Beach Blvd. '68 JEEP C·J5, xlnt cond. ' HuntiQgton Beach Low mileage. $2100. Call 142-7781 or ~ 968-3082 aft & pm. r.,.,~='=",;;,~~::,,.~ Jeeps 9510 ~.64~J=E=EP~P""1c=K""·u=p-1 '68 DATSUN PICKUP Scrambler. Very good cond. V\V PARTS Xlnt cond. * 675-0161 =========I Radio, heater, dlr., 4 speed, Chassis, Transmissiont & Campers 9520 {WPP 762) Will take car in Lo miles $47~). 6~57 Body parts. 642--0443 trade or finance private pat. '70 Triumph 2;,0cc, 1400 actual mi 's, Make offer, * 962-5757• HONDA 1970 CB 450, like new. $695 8.11-2117 or 499-2366 Trailer, Travel 9415 TENT trailer Apacbe Mesa '67, dining &.. tee box, Used one trip. &tz..m3 '65 vw Camper Fully equipped, Ready vacation. fNQX 699) ty, 54&4052 or 494-6811, '71 DATSUN PICKUP f Used • Radio, heater, sttp or bumper, dlr. Pin stripping. BRAND NEW '71 PINTO Autos 96001mported Autos 960G Imported Auios 9600 $1695 Will take car in trade or will finance private party. 540-4052 or 494-6811. Order now. 2 door. 1600 cc. en9ine, 4 speed transmission, heeter. I 0 BLUE CHIP With The Purch•se Of Any New Ft.ti ALL CARS SALE PRICED!! · l • llGISTEl NEW : 1970 FIAT 850 ' PORT COUPE A l\•dio, R•di•I Tlr••· All Fl htr•• At No btr• 9 0 DEMONSTRATOR '124' SPORT COUPE AM/FM R1dio, R•ditl Tirtt, All fi1! E.qui prn•nl. .:ot 27· ,.. IEGISTElt NIW 1970 FIAT 124 "S" SERJES ·t. ¥297711. low mi14'J, ory w1rr1nty. Rtdio, R1di~I Tlr••· All f i•I Equipm111I, ;7l0tl2 SALi PllCI SALi PllCI SALE PllCE • 51895 $2695 $1795 YW IU• u...5 4 eM, r•ctie, h••t•r. CWVWll41 77 YW IU• trtibl• fJUMJ 1tr '295 .... , wht•I•. f PlNI 161 ... , 12• '1995 rt Coupe, lmm•<:i1l•ft, told . Ii. 4•tPffd, tticli r•dio, , r•dltl tii:-:t.o IXEPllll '49 FIAT 124 SP01t1' COUPE Wllil• with bl1,lt int4'r!Or 4 ·ip@td, rtdio, ll•1t1" r1di1I tir11. (YRC4i6J1 ''O MERCEDES llNZ 220 4 doet 11dio, h11t1r. !ZXFISSI ''' YW CAMPEI Fu lly •quipp•d . poptop, 4 • IP••d. hl0i6l9) I '2195 '1895 ill Jones' F ' I 'A , T ~ J. SPORTCAR CENTER ' ' 2833 HARBOR, COSTA MESA 540-4491 Visit Our Hut• New Perts & Ssrvlct Dept. 1' Stills S.r11icl"9 All Sports & Fo,.l9n Cers ' Harbour V.W. '68 DATSUN WAGON 18711 BEAOI BL. 842-4435 4 speed, dlr., radio, heater, HUJ';iTINGTON BEAOI excellent condition, l owner, e 1!! • R • L • I • • (WQP 143) Will t8"' trad• 70 OPEN-ROAD or finance pnvate party. Avalon Deluxe, 9 ft.~ mono. 54().4(k\2 or -iM-Mll. matio, buta"' stove & oven, ,67 DATSUN WAGON b'Jmper ext., bounce-aways, elec & hand water pun1p, outside connections. Automatic, dlr. Ra.dio, heat. ** Make Offer ** er, special whee1s. (VOE. 213: 645-5864 951) Will trade or finance • • • • • • • a • • private party, 54G-«Q2 or '66 vw 1 ~'"'94-68""=ll,'=-~=~ Camper '70 2000 ROADSTER Fully ractory equipped. Sun. Like new, Must sell, (WPJ. dial interior Vacation 104) dlr, \Vill take car in ready! (SZN. 821 f trade or finance privatt par. $17,5 ty ""'4052 O• 4 .... 11. 1969 4-DR station wagon. Harbour V.W. Auto., r&h. Red w/black int. 14,000 mi, 1 owner. $1595. 646--7849. 1311 Oill 187U BEAOI BL. 842--4435 Dr, N.B. HUNTINGTON BEACH '68 1600 ROADSTER '47 CHEVY step van. Reblt, aluminum, 1nany . extras. Ready to go! dlr, CWEZ nOl $1500. 4M-91117 Cchna rm \Viii take trade or finance 112. private party, 546-4052 or '70 CHEVY p~kup vs1,'~"~"'::;;l;t·""';c;--:;,C"-:"-c""'I Camt'!'r. 2500 mi. $800 & '67 DATSUN Wag. Auto TOP or trade for car. 8-5, trnns. 96 hp engine, fmt 492-8915. disc brks, lug rack, Pirelli ECONOLINE CAMPER Van, Cinturato tires, Very gd Must sacrifice! Comp l cond. $975. 962--8695 aft 3. equiPped for trouble .ff'el' 1970 DATSUN 2402, air & camping. Michelin X hre~. mags. 2,000 mi., new con- new short. block. Only $895, dltion $5 000 Firm 5J6..9620 Brr 6. 673-0064. or alt 6 · ' • 646Jloo. FERRARI 1970 VW Camper Westphalia -·------- Excellent Condition -8.500 FERRARI milt's AM.-FM Radio $3200 -Newport Jmport3 Ltd Of. after 4 p.m. 646-0076 a.nge County's only a~thor. D B lzed dealer. ;;;..;u;cne;;_;;.u;;,9.,9:;.it;.;s;..._.;.95:.:25:: I SALES-SERVICE-PARTS MEYERS Man.x, Ponehe 3100 w. Coost llwy. 1600 eng. Super d e 1 u x Newport Beach show--<:Hr, pcrfeel> ln every 6(2.9fOS 540-1764 detail, to mi's. COf;t $0000, Authorfzed Ferrari Dealer $.1000 fir1n , 646-4455 d,ys, TIRED of tbat old furnitun>7 64&.7G40 eves. Jt'1 really not that hard '69 GR EE N r-.letal·.f'.lak~ to ttplace. Jusl watch the Dune Buggy, 65 H.P. eng, furniture &. mt*Cellaneous Stala ~'lat. XIJU Buy! columns in th• Cu5ifitd A•7-792:1 Section. 1971 MAVERICK 4 DR. 2 dr. H.T., full pow•r. 1lr, lo.,.. milt1, IVGJ-4611 '66 GALAXIE 500 2 d,. H.T .. V.1, 1ir, pc.,..•r 1t••ri119 I br•li•s. ISVFI II ) $1295 E BUYS FROM THE GOOD GUYS ' ALL PRICES PLUS TAX & LIC. ·South FORD-MERCURY 494-8515 303 Broadway, Laguna Beach 549-3851 • I ' I ------------- DAJlY PILOT TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION _I m_,po_rt.;.odo..;..A-'"utoo-"'---'-"°°"" lmportod A-9600 Imported Autos 9600 9700 u ... Coro -UoM eon 9900 UMd Co~ "90 Used Coro ftOO SAAi VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN CHEVROLET ·FORD MUSTANG OLDSMOBILE PLYMOUTtf~'~ Large S.t.dla WE PAY CASH 1_7_0_M_alib_u-'-S-S 1--111-P.:...::OOl:=UJ_Q __ l--:-,66:-:-M:-:-u-s-:-ta_n_CJ_1 -~-..,,-~,1.-~-1·-~:.-.·-~-:t!~ '69 Plyrnou .. Authorlud Dtalrr Sales e Servlce e Parts Sonet Coupes In Stock Orange County'• Newest Dlr, '68 VW Sedan Radio, hcattt~ speed. Of YW Cainpeu. fQI YOUR CAI VI, llMlded + aft cond., pow. VI, automatic power t!ttr. JMT, $1550. 675-3312. 6 cylind!I". Standard tra.._ (VXR-y K .... er -WI, (8'12 AGO! . ... Illa, "'""'· dn 098) (ZDS 1211) -....... COAST IMPORTS ol Orange Coon~ 1llc. 1200 \V. Pacific Coast Hwy. 6'12-CM06 • 546-4.529 $99 ans, --' $2995 CLEAN USED CARS $99 PONTIAC lu1e1, New & Und CONNEU s.. Andy s...., $99 .:,;,; · DOWN + T. I. L. lmrnodlot. O.llvery CHEVROLET llLL JONES' THIODORE DOWN + T. I. L. '70 GTO DOWN + T. I. t,)•,J i $50 CHICK IVERSON 2828 llariQo-. BJ. Sportu Center IOllNS FORD $41 67 <55 cu. 1n. Ram Air, $SO 56 · PER MONTH VW Costo -$111.UOO 1833 Harbor, C.lll. 5<10M91 -~.=vd. PER M•ONTH cloce r.iio "'"""'· PER M•ONTH,.ll (24 MOS. OAC) hoo<1 tath, Ride & 1-Iandl'g Intertst computed on lO~~ 549-3031 Exl, ti or 67 Auto lea1fng 9111 e '65 atEVY IMPALA: 2 sc.ootO (24 MOS. OAC) pkg, PIS, P/D/B, Raitio (24 MOS. OAC J automotive i;&count r o. te 1970 HAlUIOR BLVD. -----'-----Dr/HrdllDp, Vl/283, pG'1ltr '67 GALAXlE XL, 6tereo Intereat computed on 10% le heater, New Firestone Interest coinpu~ 011 ·10-;o TOYOTA (TIQIYJC>IT!AJ which is equivalent to 18.00 COSTA MESA LEASE 1l~, PIS. '895. tape, air-cone!., vinyl roof, automotive dlleount r a f e Wide ovals. "ALL BLACK" auloniotive di11coont r a 1 e annual percentage rate. De. '63 VW Sedan A NEW 1911 * * M0-5027 * * new tire1. $157S. 1 owner. whlch Is equivalent to l8.00 11-lake oUer or trade for which ls equivalent to 18.00 '71 's HERE NOWI SEE & DRIVE THEM · PINTO 1961 atEYY 111 ...... n, --' 837-6417 annual pe~ntage rate, DI!. late model Ford truck. I , ~ ferTed payment pl'ice l!I •1--..~ •"""l;ii~°"'==-::-=,..,--fened payment prtee 15 annua percen age n11c . ._,... ~.9Zi including all Inter. Radio, heater. A p~n car! $50.QQ mo. condl~ V~. R/H, $2SJ, 1965 FORD Falcon Ranchero 646-4665 ferret! payment prica·'.H A FEW REMAINING ?O's AT CLOSEOUT PRICES! est. all taxes and 1970 lie-Ready to go! fASL 634) ('6 mo.} * 646-n"n 289 cu. in, 4 speetl very $1«>7.0S includtna au inter. !!!'!!!!!~!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!~!!I S1997.tl Including all intg. -•-$795 lion cl $750 ... ·" est, all taxes and 1970 uc. looking for a c•r? 11 d 197 11, ense or if you P•.:.u;r to P.'.l.Y open ~ •57 CHEV. Sta Wqon. ean. or ui:-st w..1er. ente or it you prefer to pay est, a taxes an o -,,.!!· cash the full price is only RENT Xlnt cond. Low mlleqe Call alttt 5:00 3'793 EASY ense or if you p~fer to pay d ••• [or..:, $1366 including tax and A NEW 197J 64&1400 alter 6 PM BY Oi.rtner '69 Ford Falcon =.:e ~cet! ~ Call Auto Referral free of cash the full price is ori\y WR t.WIO lie. and not one penny more. PINTO '61 CHEVY Iinpela: Gd. run-Sta. Wag, v.a. PIS, P/B, Uc. and not one penny more. charge, We have sellf'rs ¢1576.95 including tax 11.nd IM PORTS BILL YATES $4 DAY nl-cond a •• ·•---• -•'· XJnt -~ wailing. AU •-, & pn=. lie and notono p<nny ~ tsm BEAOI BL. 842-4'35 ~· ;,.!-54&-3911 ;;gg.~;·,,,;~: 963-S16'~. BILL YATES "'"'"""°;;;,;,om<. BILL YATES.:: 1966 H""'°'· C.M. 64&9303 VOLKSWAGEN HUNTINGTON BEACH 4¢ANMDILE '68 MAUBU w..-. Powor, 1962 Fon! ototlon •-agon. R& VOLKSWAGEN &124431 • • 1968 TOYOTA Aoto R•to-1 S<rncc VOLKSWAGEU ' 1969 VW auto, xlnt rond. Gd tires. H, automatic. :r.techanics ''" 1._::,: 32852 Valle Road ,.._,., Vall •--d '64 PONTIAC Le '1•"'· PUT A LI'M'LE $1650. Call 968-4838. Speclal, Phone 968-5214 after ..-..... e n.<Jd u .,"°~" V U d Sedan. Radio, heater, au~ San Juan Capisirano Autom-"c lltlc"-"'... .,. __ Juan Capis•-~ . . . ~ a c Roa · i _,_ 1 83",.•~14•,,m1•~ ~1 ..... ...,....,~ KIQ{ IN YOUR ,67 CHEV M-"b 2 d 6 P lif __., .. ..,..., \Vhitc v.-/ turquoise inter10r, San Ju Capo·,._ .... · • matic lrans.m s ...... n, 1 ,000 W<N :JJ""S,J.u .,"""""" Excel.lent condition. · ...... u, r·1.,=·=· ======I 8-37-t800/493-451V499-.2261 bucket seats, auto .. power ' an "'"'"' · actua.l mile11, Lie. \\.'AR052 l -,,,,6...,6~VW=.,....s=-u-n-ro-of~-I UFE! htdtp, V-3 auto. r/h., xlnt.1' strg. xlnt mechanical con· 837-480d/493-45ll/49!}.22SI $139' $14~01157 THEODORE cond. 61>-2359 MERCURY MACH I, 1970, 3'1 ........ d't' v d . kl & Immo11culate condition, Yellow l-=-=-P"°="'=-,....=-:-::::-I ROBINS FORD 1 ..-;;~ooi'Viilimli:A-;i;:l·-..:.::::::.::.::::.::..:__. I Must sell, lo mi's, xlnt. 1 JOn. ery ean ins e RAMBLER _ C HICK IVERSON •1964 CHEVY rnPALA. ..... cond 5 y 67 .... 28 ooU $750. """" Edg .. ·ater . wilhpinstripping,newtire11 '67 VW BUG 2060 ltARBOR BLVD., cond. p/s, p/b. 1970 Mercury . r. warr. La ne, Huntington H.arbour,1 --------'-.f."!-I vw ....... """""""' for 90 COS1'A MESA Cali 536-<21< .v .. or wlmd.. c I .......,.. '63 Rambler.' 't"3031 Ext. 66 o• 67 days. Lie. YPJ'905. Black beauty. Radial tlre11. 642-0010 '""' CORVAIR ~bi ye one OLDSMOBILE ===~--o==c-I :; iJ"' , :±======= .,,, conw1u e LEAVING Town • 1965 Pon. $1099 Sacrifice! (VOE 310) Take ComP'tilion orang, wilh .,, .. 1---------1 2 Door Sedan, Automalit', rn. 1970 HARBO'l ~LVD. U turbochuged ltfa.ke offer 66 liac Gran Pri:<, full po\ver. 4 CHICK IVERSON smal! down \Vlll finance Md Cars '900 "'~"' ........ · · truting black Interior, only 1 Cutlass . ._= T 0 p dio, llratcr, perfect scco114 COSTA fi1ESA Cal s"d dlr "'" ~-~:;;...:;::;;_ ___ :.;.:.::; ~~•• dri 7 ne1v tires. $.......,-or . . • (IQY 4401 , VW pvt, pty. I 1 . ......,........ =""',----..,,,.,--,,-1 ven 000 miles, still in 673-4072 car, ..1 or 494-7506 alt 10 am. BUICK 19'\9 Chevy convertible. En-tactory wamtnty, Full fac-Autom atic, poY."r slcerina".1 .0:;;,,,:,:c=~-~=~ $395 ;, ~ BILL MAXEY 549-3031 E:<t, 66 ' or 67 • •65 V\V • Red, Good Kine runs ~. $100. c.uI tory equipped including 4 radio, bucket aea1$. CSLV· '66 TE~!PEST Sprint o~rc 6, • 1970 llARBOR BLVD. transportation. '69 BUICK Electra-225, .t eves 968-7880 speed tr.:'l!;. Lie. 128ASJ, 5241. 3 speed, VERY CLEAN. ITIOIYIOITIAI COSTA MESA $575. 549-0812 DR/Hrdtp. Fae/air, ..0.000 ~.,.~. -=CHEVY==~v .. -. -ao"'to~6.-c-,.~t.I $2399 $99 Best offer. 4M-2386 -, -------ml, ""i radial """ $3500. '""°· co,,..tte ..,1., lo CHICK IVERSON •. ., GTO, RIH, A IR llUI llEACH BLVD. 64 vw Sedan ·~~v ~~llb~to;::~~;'.; ...... ,, mi ..... ....,,. DOWN + T. & L. COND. $650. Al'T • p;i, Hunt, &.•ch 147455S Silver with black leatherette 10 am preferably. '69 BUICK Electra 225, '65 CHEVY Impala, air-mnd, VW $37 50 l -"...,_"-'5,C:m~~~--~ I ml H. ofQIUt Hwy_ on Bdt interior, ?>lust see to apprec. ==""=======I Desert Gold, 4 way aeata, bltn ster@O, 4 lpd, 327, 2 new 549-3031 Del 66 or 67 • 19&1 PONTIAC Temp., club '69 CROWN wagon • 6 cyl, auto. Like new. Sacrifice $1895. Pvt pty. S4o-5866 TRIUMPH '66 TR-4A iate. Radio, heater. CJ KF. VOLVO full PY.T, air, sharp cond. tirtl. $!AX!, 968-9164 19iO HARBOR BLVD. PER MONTH roupe, 4 speed, vt'ry clean, 402) $3250. Pri Pty. ~ '57 OfEV wxn. $W, Rum COSTA MESA 1 t (24 MOS. OACJ ~ orig. owner, $800, 53&-9620 $844 ---------1'61 BUICK Electra 4-dr HT. great, needs paint. n t'rest compu~ on 10.o ~ Good "'""· Fully......... * 5<~1369 * MUSTANG aotomotivc d"""'nt rat e PLYMOUTH $300. 5i8-4828 wh ich bi equivalent to 18.00 1--'-'"'------ THINI *'62 OfEV 6 eyl, 2-dr annual percentage rate. De. '63 Plym th W 'YOlmVO: ~n~x~CK ~ ":!0;~ &!Air. A::.=· '""· '67 Mustang ,,127,,.d paymont price i• OU agon 894-5591: eves 645-1415 Hard-._ Owned by little old S 6.95 including all inter. ' Harbour V.W. 187ll BEACH BL, 842-4435 ...... I -•1 I d 197 li V8, radio. automatic, 'J)O\VCr Roadster. Brlti11h r acin g HUNTlNGTON BEAOI '67 Rivien. Excellent con-CHRYS• em school teacher, 29,000 actual es ' "" axt's an 0 C· steering, air. fHAX 874) "fRl£01 lN0£R'' ~ miles, (U0F612) htust sell! ense or if you prefer to pay green. CYRD006J '69 VW bug, clean, good Lil dltion. Vinyl top & extras Can s·d di 5-10-3100 cash the full prlct' Is onl y $99 $ 1395 cone!, 39,000 mi's, $1495. J\tr. '''" a1Ac1t cMWY. Jtl 1,;;$24;.:::50;;,· "'5'40-o2oo""':::0'==-:-.: IT~~•Ele• «JUN•~~'!>Ortor ~ s!~l 1rr'69. '494-?~ aft 1~ am. or $1051.95 Including tax and Cejka or Mr . Berg, btwn 893-7566 • 537~ '70 BUICK Skylark 4-dr .......... • .. ....... l!c. and not one penny more. DOWN + T. & L. DON BURNS Sam• Spm, "'""""· NEW·USED-SERV. :;i1~1:'c,~· ~~f;';'"'° eau .... 7300 &11er• p.m. '67 Mustang BILL YATES $31.00 Porscho Aud i, LTD. '66 V\V ho" n•w motor, -=-:---~1 ,;:~======•I COMET VB, aulomatic, radio. dlt. VOLKSWAGEN PER MONTH 13631 Harbor Blvd. 63&2333 clutch & muUler. $1050. .....--------CADILLAC __ .....;:,..:....; ____ , new tires. (QTY 124) Muzt JustS.ofGa.rdenGrove F\vy, _00_2-5_7_57_._~----1 VOLVO •---------11962 COM-, oxtra clean &ell by Su .. .t ..... Will take 32852 Valle Road (24 MOS. OAC) N • C 1 • c..i. ·~ Int~st computed on 10 1g De1perate-Mu1t Sell 64 vw amper '71'• HERE NOWI CADIUACS 70'f' auto. 1962 Fairlane V-8. tradeorflnanceprivatepar. San Juan Capistrano automotive discount rat e l.958 TR • 3 Complete overhaUl on engine. SEE &: DRIVE THE?i'I • PS/PB. M8-3'l3S ty. 5464052 or 494-68U. 83?4800/493-4ru/49!)..226l which is equivalent to 18.00 &st offer takes Lie. OTK-330. AFEWREMAINJNG70'.iAT l=========I Mustang Sports Roof WORK Or tranllportatilln car annUa.1 percentage rate. De. 842.-3565 after 6:30 pm CHICK IVERSON CLOS EOUT PRICES Largest Stock ef Qualfty CORY All 1970 loaded, 6,000 mi's. Beau. • 1959 Olds. Clean, runs fert"ed payment price is Cadillacs In Orenge tifl.Ll, Like new. Also, Im. good, rood rubber. $175 or $880.95 including all inter. VOLKSWAGEN VW €411. [ n1n!a County '63 COl"Vl.ir 1'1onza, auto, Xlnt pe.la Sprt Coupe, Leaving best offer. J\tust sell this e111, all taxes and 1970 lic- :>19-3031 Exl. li6 or 67 t.WIO rond, good transporta.tlon for Orient, Sacrifice, 49!)..3702 y.·eek. 842-2392. ense or if you prefer to pay 1960 VW BUG 1970 HARBOR BLVD. iHPORTS CPe DeVille9, Sed. DeVillei car, UXI. 5.l&-4174. '65 Conv. R/H, p/ll/b, V-8, 1965 442 Old11 Sports Coupe. cash the full priee is only ~.with mag wheellf, wide ___ CO_ST_A~N_ES_A-~1 1966 HarboT. C.hf. 646-9303 ~ ~~O COIVLJJL auto., 29,001 mi_, clean! Power steering, air, ne w $736.95 including ta'( and --• •-g now ngi .... ..,,,,r ·s..~ V\V, good mnd, orig Pl·->~a-• ""·--'l:"l .. -,..,..._ .. .. 6f6....88Tl day, 5'8-~ ~. tires and newly painted. lie. and not one penny more, ....... UIC ' e ..... b~-'68 Volvo 1800 ·s· ~ ......... vuon ..... ..., ~ Clean, $850, 495-5696 after BILL YATES anto<d for 90 ...... 1IT114 ow"",*$!30064..=.* ALL SALE PRICED 1962CORVETTE327fudlnJ. '66 Mu.tang, radio, bea,.r, 5,., or week•""'· . $799 Low m"""'· ' """"'· NABERS CADIL1 •c • spd, ..,1-1nc. ...,.. ''"""""· now """· ~-~-~~~ Harbour V.W. lS7U BEAOI BL. 8424135 HUNTINGTON BEAOI~ .! T·BIRD 1971 Thunderbird, Le a' f. can ce ll a t ion. Loaded. l.fedium green, 64 2-«>l! (1443067) temp tag ' e '55 T-BIRD: 61,000 Aefual ' mi's , 3-S pd, XlSt ' Orig/Cond . tl550. " ~ ~ * 962-l't,.'>8 • '56 T·BIRD. Xl nt <.'tlnd. Jl't:Jl ... P\\'I", ne1v paint. Jl()rtholes, cont') kit. Orig ownr · 673-3178 • \VILL SACRIFICE 1965 • Bird. New reblt motor •. ~. C2U ) 5!J2.2945 ~ I '56 T-Blrd HT/oonvertlsf;;, Auto., new paint. Very~ eond. $1375. 968-3025. • ,.. NOW'S THE .. TIME FOR 9UICK CASH ;. THROUGH A' DAILY PILOT CHICK IVERSON vw CEASING <XEM 9161 Lii Cali w.1191 suoo. -· .,. cun.<SS, Air XInt VOLKSWAGEN ... Tax &Lic,Down $2795 *'69MUSTANGMacbl.351, Cood. A•king 1 1300 . 32852 ValleRood .WANT AD YW • $50.87 per month 2600 HARBOR BLVD., '57 CORVETI'E a1r Wpd full pwr stereo M5-0039, 13.'J.1133. San Juan Capistrano • '11 . .. -' . 54~3031 E•t. 66 or 67 . • :l6 mon lh open .od 1,.,. DON BURNS CXlSTA MESA ==GOO~D~CO:;;N.;D~*;;~~;,.l;::"'=;..=·:"='"=,2886.===·===-· ;a;.,..,-=:.:llled;::=·"',;;=•"'ct1o;;;n;;;;Po~=""-;:-'· ~=:";;7:400::=/=:<93-4:=5lll=:•;00.:=226;:1::'..==6'=4=2=·=5=6'=7=8=:::;';~~,. 0 m VW B 5'o.9100 OPEN SUNDAY * Alt 6: 5'1).2531 •. l970 c~~~ ri~E~VD. 1 ug Porsche Audi, L TO 1959 CADIUAC PARTS New Cars 9IOO New Cars N•w C•rs 9800New C1r1 ATVERSON 13631 Harbor Blvd. 636-2333 (SEDAN DE VILLE) COUGAR 9IOO '68 Squareb'k 4 Speed, fuel injecUon, radio, heater, IXEV 457J $1629 Harbour V.W. CHICK I Ju.t S. of G""•n Grove Fwy, Trammiulon VW e '60 VOLV0-122 S. Air Ct>ndltloner :liJ67 MERCURY 2« 7 uno~~r:J!°VD. S350. * * 642-7008 ::~~tor ~~~Bel~=: {f IAUll ~ V~W...,...Co~m-pl~.t-,-w"'to_ut,_,bod-.,.-y. ~utos Wanted 9700 Hub caps 847-8EM7 B-mCK Runs, + trans axle & 36 HP ; Brakea .. . ~: ~llB~t~!rc srs~m6 WCEAPASY THOP "'l!~Pri='cod=~~~qu~""~"'·k=..U=·=!!·l;;;;;;-;;;:~D;;O;-;D;;G:;;:E:-;:::::11 . .IN pm. '6>FLEE:J'WOOD8rouglwn e '6>DODGE VAN-Campcr COS~i\. ME. _SA_.-:, .. 187ll BEACH BL. 842-4435 '6S V\V BUS, radio, \v/w Blk w / blk cloth It leather equip, V-8 ltick, Air-l HUNTINGTON BEACH Id I t A/c r "I/FM Owner. ,..,_,• 666--7.SS, Ev" l-==+=c.c:==-l 'ires t l n t ed windshie , for used can• truclcs full n. , powe , """' , ..,, '6"8 ,VW 42.ooO mi, $Zl00. 519-28ro. Cllll Ut for free estimate. tilt, tele, etc. 675-1564 $1600 I =f9<.=18S=l=====::;ll .. e '63 vw 1500 campcc b"'. GROJH CHEVROLET '70 CAD Coopo do Ville · FORD Sc(llareback Mcchanic.,iy xlnt. Sl295 or 1500 mi. Lil« now. White Y.'i th red interior, new 1.0'1=":.:r:... •.:,',=..;..J()I~-· ~,-...,...,,-$6000. &M-Ol28 -,-6-4_F_O_R_D_W_A_G_O_N_ 11 tiret, 500 miles on new tac-* *'68 BUG. Ul miles, radio, Aak ~ :'~ ~£ 163 CAO COUPE tory engine. VUR819 radial tires. Like ne\v, 1 Huntinaton Beach Nu tires, real clean. 644-5500 $1699 "'•'-"""'' Idnl leCOlld car, Automatic, owner. oN>J"""---~~--847~ KI 9-3331 'liO Cadillac. \V e 11 maln-CHICK IVERSON radio. Must be seen, CORT. '68 vw Sedan LATE MODEL '"""'· S•m i lmmacula"'. 1145) VW CADILLACS Mklog 1350· 53&-UJJ. $795 Radlo, heatrr, vinyl top & WANTED ~Cadillac. make ()ffer. 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 raci ng stripes. CUtes t car Prospective antique in good ''DON BURNS 1970 HARBOR BLVD. on Jot. (VSA 360) &: ANY OTHER condition. 642-4449. COSTA MF.sA $1475 LATE MODEL p he Audi LTD GENERAL MOTORS CAR '64 Fleetwood sedan, Jmmac, OrK , • '61 V\V w/sunroof & 1uned SEE CHUO< TRAPP OR oriJC wht, local family car, 13631 Harbor Blvd. 636-2333 exha.ual Good cond. BILL MAC CR.ACKEN $9S5. 675--0521, Juat S, of Garden Grove Fwy • .... 9'" Nabers Cadillac '67 EL DORADO '62 FORD. 2 Door -.. 1968 V\V Bug, Radio, rear * 64&-?605 * Rm., auto., IOOl'.I tires; seat 1peakers. $1375. pri. ply. 187U BEACH BL. 842-4435 2600 HARBOR BLVD., CLEAN. $3S), ~ 644-4687 after -s pm. ' HUNTINGTON BEACH Costa lofesa co 10 · S-(i).9100 Op<o Suoday CAMARO ''7 • Squltt, pou. '66 YW B wagon, a/c, good cond. Ug WE PAY TOP DOLLAR As .... 1]975. Coli 492-1643 'J>riccd lo sell. <X.E\V 493) FOR TOP USED CARS •;:sng~~ '!!1v350 ~: 1967 FAIRLANE GTA, P/S, '68 VW Bus 7 passenger , stalion y,•agon. This ear close lo nc1v _ Has had lender lovini::: care. Nrw c a r financing available. (VZT 244) $1049 US:: f~ b extra clean, 1,,-•c:;'/"pb:c·..:!1600=::·..:673-68,..c.cc_u_. ~.,.1 Pi a, air • cond, la ml'•· DON BURNS BAUER BUICK 1969 C•maro-<; cyl, •tick' "°M"'•",,.:,,:°'O''"'="· 5f&.'-71-569.....,.,,..._ 2M E. 17th St. shift. Xlnt cond $1699. Call '67 FORD Galuie, ~ 0011- $2295 Porsche Audi, l TD Costa Mesa 548.7763 an 4, 96&-3448. dSHon_ $1200 or best otter, 13631 Harbor Bl\-'d, 636-2333 IMPORTS WANTED ·~eamaro~. 3SOeng.,l _Ca11 __ &11u __ 5"':_645-364~=·~~11 Just S. ol Garden Grove Fwy. Orange CounUe1 4 spd. priv party, $1495 e '67 FORD aJSI'OM:. Xlnt TOP $ BUYER 543-5551, eves: 6'il-5000 cond $M5. Harbour V.W. 1969 VW hug, dark blue, Im-' marulatc, new tires &: ex· Bll..L MAXEY TOYOTA '68 CAMARO 395. 1 owner.1--Cali==--==:c·..:-"'-=- 18711 BEACH BL, 8424(3j tras $159:1. 846--7057 aft 5P1'-t 18881 Beach Blvd. x:lnt cond. PIS, r&h. PW an .cl to Mil around HUNTINGTON BEACH '62 V\V -Xlnt o::>nd. Sunroof.11t;·:::"';•;chi,.==Ph:i.:M:7:.s;ss=.!.$=1600;;;.=====l=-639-=l00.=.!.::°"0.:c=loc=c:k,==d=l&l=-===::ll WANTED Lo mi, r&h, orig oy.·ner, $695. G?S-0781 or 548-7756 ru pay top dolla~ for YoUr e '67 V\V Bus. Xlnt rond. VOLKSWAGEN today. Call Chrome \\•his. Best offer · and ask for Ron. P lnchot. Must sell. 5-19-4035 549-3031 Ext, 66-6'.'. 673-0900. ~0-=c=~=o--:c--1 ''" vw. auro 10ck shm, to '66 VW Sedan mi's, 1 onr, like.-nu. t300r.c 50 HP engine. RadiO, 54&-ll08, 3244 M lc ht1an, heater. (RUF 081) CM. . $997 'fiO VW Bua. clean, rcblt t!nglne:, &ood clutch, trans & brakes. 4 new ttres. $650. 403 Newport Bvd No. 1-Harbour V.W. e '70 V\V Bull. Red &: Y.·hlle. 18711 BEACH BL. 84244.15 CAll 54.9-1314 11.f1er 5 & HUNTINGTON BEAO I be:IOtT 9 pm . '60 V\V Bug w/mag whl~. '61 SQUAREBACK \\ide o .. '8.1 tin.o5_ Rcblt '65 Musi sell, 673-1503 1.500 e~. f!Xtractor a. ·70 vw 5(-(h1n, beirc. Pirelli haust. wired for stuco. Litts, chnn rims, cocoa Very gd cond . $SQ. ~ mats. R&ll. Firm $1900. II.It 3. Call 54s--IZ31 ~10VING l.1wit !tell '67 V\V '69 VW BUC.\V/Sunroof A Bug. New Plr..Ul titts, auto/1tlck. l.llnt C.o'hd. Porscht chrome wnetls. Xlnt 1119l. Call: 644-4632 ~-="'' ..,"..,°"°.,,·,,."...,6-11612==~ '68 VW • Au to 1tlck 11hlft , VW \\lestpha.lia camper, fact. 2f,50Q' ml. l:xtr.11. $JJ.ri0/0f· reblt, 1500 eng. new pnt, fer. Alt 6, 673-%m Ures, brkl. Tent. Xlnt cord. Buslneu Oooonunlttes $l lOO firm. ot94-6227 1n Today'll \Vant Ad11. Call 642-5678 A <:ham lt.. ·-..:;:..=::.....-"---' ,, --~-~--- "SPECIALIZIN,G IN QUALITY" -- THE MOST EXCITING AUTOMOBILE ' THIS YEAR 1971 OPEL ' .. , ... , ··: HERE NOW FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! .. ·' • ALL IH1alnln1 1 970 OPEU llil STOCK Now DRASTICALLY REDUCED .. FOR IMMEDIATE CLEARANCE : •I UICK_1N COSTA • 234 E. 17th St. MESA 548-7765 . . . - • . • , ~ • .. •• • ' •DAILY PILOT Thunday, No~mber 19, 1970 , -. •• . . I: ' • ·~ . ' · . • r . ' ' ' Joe Belotti~ ~ T & M MOTORS AVTBORIZED e St\LES e SERVICE e PARTS WE HAVE THE BEST SELECTION OF BMW's IN ORANGE COUNTY • 1600's • 2002 • 2500 • 2800 • 2800 cs •AR Colon • All Models • Immediate Delivery REPEAT PERFORMANCE . BMWs are built for Germeny's no-speed-limit autobahn1. The four will cruise all day at 100 mph. The six will do the aame at 120 r'nph. If that kind of durability is your speed, see us for thti fr49 booklet, ''33 RHsons Why BMW Is lotter.• Or ask for the kay. You'll got the ..... _. PERFORMANCE SPECIAL 1~ .. ~~~! 8So Spider Sftftft H-t.r, IWIC.21J) 777 '68 YW Fastback ' .~io, heeter, 4 1p•ed, fectory equipp.d. CWIC-1671 ~8 MERCEDES -2000. Air co11ditio11lrtf. Complet1ly rebuilt •11gi11•. Radio, h11t1r, 4-1p11d, fi111 rn1ch111ic1I co11d. fYXU-915) '68 TRIUMPH Spitfire Mk Ill with 1 remo¥1bl1 herdfop, wir1 wh11l1, overdrive. IZNJ·294l 51399 :~~ .~~~! .... ~~~~,!! .. $1095 low low mileege encl reel cleenl (WYQ.45JI ~;, J;~~!~;,. ,~·.~;;~. $169 5 1tron9 t:nd reedy for enythit19! lRLZ·l IJ) . Plus A LARGE SE~ECTtON OF VW BUSES, All COLORS OOMESTIC TRADES AT WHOLESALE PRICES We hive 1 fin1ncing pl1n to flt your tivdget Jncluding 100°/e financing (0 .A.C.) Wiii t1ke your car In trade paid for or notl Come In •nd t1lk with one of our experienced cOUftoo cllors • '· -; ~VTBORIZED , e SALES ·%· le SERVICE •• PARTS ~ 1 " Joe · &Jolt;~ '. T. & M" MOTORS · '01 EN tSUND~"YS 8081 Garden G,_ve loa.leYard 112 Ilk. E. of ieach llvd. 534-2'214 192-5551 • 0 -0 Q. • E Cl w u E > . . "' ~ ~ ~· .. • • z ' * T.HINK * ®)llBBII -,,zr v' ,Best Deal v' All Models O ., v' Best . v' Best "' Selection Service z I\': ~ 2 · ~ ; .JJ.erb :J.rieJ/ander Ut-0 ~ -13750 BEACH BLVD. (HWY. 39) ~u .,o Ill Ill () ~ 893°7566 G!d~:~"!'.:~:.·* 537-6824 .,, .., ·"' ~ ~ > t;.., z ffi :g ~ • :5 0. .. > ~ 0 ~ ~. :5 ::!': ~. • 0 g I ~ u 0 z ; ... • I z -Ill > -Ill 1:11 I .. ~he 71 * FIAT'S ARE HER·E!! * ALL REMAINING 70's MUST GO!! Offering Fantastic SAVINGS ' FIAT 850 SPORT RACER Fiet celebret•1"'"th• •ge of motion: Th• ISO Sport Recer, l ody by Berton•, Powe red wilh e new 90] cc engin.e. Pecked with lu.-ury feetures end dir1ct-re1din9 i111trumenti lik• th• d1uh mouni•d f•~homet1r, F1ont wheel di1c br•kes, r•di1I lire1. See ii now. It's the moving fo1col F I A T THE 850 SPORT COUPE BEATS 'EM ALL * * 12• JPOIT courr $2795 ·4.,.,,,d AM/FM rtdio, •part m•9 wheello fierb :J.rieJ/ander 13750 BEACH BLVD. (HWY. 39) 893-7566 .!.!.'i".!~~:.·* 537-6824 arcu3 ofor3 2100 HARBOR BLVD. 645°0466 NOTHING DOWN! 0 .A.C. ALL CARS + TAX & LIC. '70 YW Compelely 11ew n•"er re9 i~l•r1d. Dun• l u99y. R•dio, h••t•r. t,-;94JSI R••dv for the ro•d. '67 YW a.dio, hetl1r, runs , •• 1 good! lBDT.1991 '67 Triumph GT-6. 4 1p•ed, r•dio, he•fer, wire wh••l1 wood cl•sh •nd •tc•1sori••• l UQN-695) DUNE BUGGY 0'ff:tliled fitf:I, R•el nitf: •nd r••dy for Hi, ro•d. '67TOYOTA R1dio, h•1fer, 1ir conditioning. A reel clo•l'I c•r. !UDN-4411 '67 Mustang F•clory w1rr1nty •till r1m•inin9. R•dio, h•1t1r 1utom•fic tr•n1. CVFW-7171 '63 Jaguar XKE Roodstor, 4 1pe•d, wir• wheels, new p•int, int•rior •nd tires. (KH\l-l\71 '65 Chevy II Nova R•dio, he•t1r, n•w point, •utom•lic tr1n1. IYIH-6311 '62 Sunbeam Ro1dst•r. R1dio h•1ter, 4 speed, n- r•built •n9ine. IMSW-5101 '62 Chevy II St1tion W•9011. R•dio, he1t•r. ti· Luilt •119iri•, llf:W ,,int. A r1•I j1we11 fKFX·44fl arcu3 ofor3 '64 YW Bug Runs 9r••tl H11 r1dio, he•l•r, -4 tp•ed •nd new p1int. l YQS-9211 :~~ .. ,~~?.!.i~~ .. '"'"· ,.. $395 tir11. f ine mech•nic•I condition. lPLH-6241 :~. !.~~~.:.~.~!~~ 500 $695 full power. IRSS-956) '61 Comet 2 dr. R1clio, he1i•r, ''cellenl tr1ns· porh1lion C•r. ( QYB-9011 '63 Chevy lmp•l•. R1d io, "'''''•VI, 1utom•lic lr•ns. IAZX-3161 '65 Ford Wa9on. Autom•tic lt•n1min ion, r•dio, h•ahr. 1769-3411 '62 Corvair 4 dr. R1dio, he1f•r. Good little c•r. ! IEM .990) '63 Cadillac o.var •. What. buy 011 th i1 b.•11tiful c•rl Col'l'lpl,t.ly f•ctery equipp•d, CNNY-60tl llf'CU3 ofor3 2100 HARBOR BLVD. ~45-0466