HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-11-09 - Orange Coast Pilot7
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• am1 -ees ,
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Nixon Pl~ns Visit
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To San Clemente
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.Over Thanksgiving
DAILY PILOT
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TUESDAY AFTERNOON , NOVEMBER 9, ·1971
\IOL. ,4, NO, 241. I SECTIONS, 11 !"AGES
UPI TtltPhG!e
Gi•oeers Protest
A demonstrator frorµ. a group of Chinalo\rn grocers in San Francisco
carried a sig11 at the funeral of John Eng, shot do,vn in a $150 holdup
Oct. 27. The comrnunity is aroused by a rash or robberies and as·
saults on Chinese grocery stores. In the past year, five Ch.inese groc-
ers have been murdered.·
Yachts in Race to La Paz
Struggle in Light Winds
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By ALi\10N LOCKABEY
DAILY l"ILOT kallllf E•iier
Lead yachts in the Long Beach to La
Paz race today mo\'ed past Cedros lsland I ' . ...
Nixon--<to Visit
corist : R.~fi.~at • •
off the Baja California coast as light
winds cOnlinued to slow the progress of
the 970 mile race.
Fighting for the elapsed lime lead were
Ragtime~ the.62-fool scratch bo~t own~
by a t;ong ·Be&ch Yadlt .Glub syndica._te,
anqtbess-r~Yawl.J.fin ~tte, skippered
by Joe Pollock"<of Rose City Oregon.
Winds· havi bOOn from , tPe .right ditec·
·lion during 1he past two· days· but the 8 to
10 knot nor-wester has carried no
. authority. • ·
0 Tl k .. CJ' The entire fl.eel is bunched within a 4G-ll, ~an s.g1:vino _ mile radius with \he small ,botas begi~·
~ 'd' t N1,. •• 1 • to be'. · nlng to move up on·lhe Class A leaders in r11:SI en 1xon 1s p ann1ng g.in a ·ihe li ht· 0· · ;rorking vacation .in• Spn · ClemMt'e. oo... ... 8,,, g 1ll8\ , .~. . • , · TJ:_~nksgi!'.in&-Day, it was learned lhis Stro'ng ',"Orlherly,~!~s oon;,.usuel)y 1>t
••eek --expected 1n the vlc1n1ly-of-Cedr01 Island
• · . ond may start the fleet moving. Sources in .was12_lng1;0n ~1nted that the Ragtime repOrted l\'fonday that she had
Chlt?f Executive and his wij~-l Pl.t, would . covered 26 miles in the lirst 48 hours fOr
fttl'nd :'t n'a'jor tootb'nll ga~e somewhere an' avirage of 4.7 knots. ..
[n the 1.:-:ist on Tlu1nksH,lv1ng then board • Jlerb Johnson repOtted from the tse0r1.
Air Fort'e One for the trip west. and communications vessel Crabby Too
No con!irmalion has yet been offitiftlly that the ,v.1eather was ideal for cruising
made by l.h!! "'hite House. under power but not very conducive to
Th e length nf the possible visit to La sallboat racinR .
Casa Pacifica hns not yeL been lea med. The ·weather pattern has been in sharp
The lrtp would be! the first to San contrast to !ht 1969 rl{e •·hen a gale-
Clen1Cnl'e since the President's long force soolheaster dlsmasted lhree yacht!
work:lng vACal ion which l!Dded SepL 3. in the first 24 hours and continued lo but·
, That visit, which lasted nearly three fet the neet for two more days.
weeks, was marred by a massive oil slick After rounding cape San Lucas et the
from a Navy tanker. (See LA PAZ. Page ti
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.Cdl\_I Family
Flees Fi1~e;
Loss Higl1
The son of a Harbor Area builder and
his family fled \vith their lives early to-
day , \\'hen an $18.000 blaze roared
through their Harbor View H I 1 l s
-residence.
One fire captain suffered minor in·
juries battling the blaze, from v.'hich the
victim s' pet dog v.•as rescued safely :irter
being trapped.
Investigators bla111ed a spark from a
fireplace for seHing the blaze at the
Echvard G. "Bud" \Varmington Jr.,
home. 3607 Sausalito Drive,
The street v.·as formerly named
Seafoam Drive.
Firen1en resonding lo the 1 :24 a.m,
alarm found \Varmington, his wife and I·
year-old daughter safely outside.
Crackling names awakened them anCI
~·!rs. \Varmington scooped up the infant,
firemen said at the scene.
A spark apparently sputtering out of
dying embers in a den fireplace was
blamed for starting the blaze.
By the time se veral firetruck s
dispatched to the ~ne arrived. the
(See FIRE, Page 2)
Manson Coho1'l
Grogan Must Die
For Shea Deatl1
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Steve Grogan.
a member o( Charles l\lanson's hippie-
style clan , \\'as sentenced l\1onclay to
death for the murder of Donald "Shorty"
Shea. a movie stuntman \vhose body
hasn't befn round ..
A Su,,erior Couct jury delibE!raled for
16 hours after receiving the penalty casC
Friday. The same jury had convicted hiM
earlier.
Grogan , to, smlfcd sfijhtly al flit
jurors.as they annow1ccd lheir verdict.
Man son, already conde1nned for the
sevtn ·~te·.La: Blallfa muriters in, l!lfif!.
was convicted )ast. week in aifother tr141
in the dealhs or Shea and JJf Gary 1-lirt;-
man, a musician.
Prosecutors said Shea \\'as kil led Aug\
27. 1969, at the Spahn Ranch. hea<J.
quarters for ~1anson's nomadic band . !
Grogan is the seventh member or lhf
ch1.n to receive a deadt pt!rtaicr.
Robert Beaqso}eil was convicled of Hin·
man's death, and Robert "Tex" \Vatson
and lhree women were convicted of Ui,e
Tete-LaBianca killll'Jg.S .
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... eac aze •
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Dearth of Winds -
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Slowing. Ya~hts .
In La P ·az Raee ··-. ' .
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OAIL Y PILOT Slaff PllfN
Portrait of Ram Fan
Mike Loos. 2, Newport Beach, expresses leeLings of Joyal Ram fans
follo wing "1onday night's game in BaJtimore. For post-mortem on
Ra~s' 24-17 loss to the Colts, see story on Page 16 in .today's sports
section. . ,
Arraignment Postponed
In Postmaster Sl~ing
5.5 Percent
Hik-e-Hmit
Unde1~ Fire
r.-ttAMI BEACH (AP\ -A major AF1'
CIO uniOn urged today a nationwide
general strike if necessary to reverse pay
regulations imposed by President Nixon's
Pay Board.
"\Ve are shocked and .disappointed that
the first vote taken by the Nfxon
Administration's Pay oBard constituted
an attack on the economic standards and
the general welfare of the working people
of our country," said the executive board
of the 500,000-member Amalgamated
Meat Cutters Union.
The un ion's board , conducting one of a
series or AFlrCIO meetings here, said it
will introduce a resolution beCore the
main AFL-CIO convention next week to
urge a nn'lional work stoppage.
"The Pay Board has robbed scores of
thousands of our members of fairly
negotiated and non-Inflationary wage in-
creases which were due to be paid in
September under agreements worked out
more than a year ago,"· said the Meat
Cutters' state1nent.
The Pay Board !\.1onday announced a
general 5.S percent wage hike limitation
and ruled out relroactivlty in most cases
for pa y hikes frozen since Aug. 15. The
five industry and five public ~embers of
the board <1utvoted the five labOr
(See PAY BOARD, Page%)
...
Orange
1''ealher
Don 't look for any lifting or the
fog on Wednesday, the weather
lady warns. It'll be the !Jame kind
or day wllh temperatures ranging
from 63 on the beaches to ·73
further inland. ·
INSWE TODA\'
Diplomatic sources 1iave re-
-ported Mao Tse-tunp's designlit·
The arraignment.of Phillip B. Alleman. a revenge killing. They diSQlosed that ed heir Lill Piao wa.i iiivolved
accused trlggerman . in the slaying of • Allem-n had ~n r~prir:nan~ed for his in a.plot, ousted from ~is office \Ve;>t,m,~~ :Po~~-~st~r PaulJ.Burt1ner, frequent ·ta~d~ffess '1 J~Sl ' ~.ior to1 the and perhaps kilted iit a plafte hlls1*t~·jiosfpomt ~'Novi\111> · "~··~·->·llll~>r,· , . .,~'~A1-i.>.'-4'f'.f"~ 1' c""8h, wllile-.-.s'capi11g. '.Slol'fl ~ 1~:11de1~~· ~~~~a~ir-a~~ c'1~~ne~it:~ :~~'h i(:k bfilm \\fu ~e · ·· PQ.JJc 4· • ~·
orange County Judicial District Court so' chest 8nd in the head . Gaulden, who sur-C•llltf•I• I IM¥l11 "
( ed II h (l!Hkhlt U' 1 MYIUll PUMll M he may seek an allorncy. er a bu et wound In the stomac , is c11111nN u .11 Niti...-1 N••J .,1 A former clerk at the \Vestminsler post reported in "improving" oondillon · al ~:0~~~11 is Or•n•• cou111,
·off ice, Alleman Is charged with the Westminster Memorial Hospital. 0.1111 Ntll(u '! ~~.~ ,..,.,., ".:
murder or Burtner and lbe attempted PoUce claim to ha ve uncovered in ~= ,.,. : ~=..:_m•ta "·?;
murder of Ernest Gaulden, 4 6 • automatic pistol of the same caliber they E111tr111-111 1• 1t1••t•n. 10
liupcrintendent of mails, last Thursday. s~y was left on the postal counter by =~ •:: =~::~. N ... 1,.1:
1 The alleged shooting has b e e n , Alleman immediately after the alleged An11 L~n. 11 wiw.. """ +.J
ch::iraclerized by investigating officers as murder. /
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O.lllV PILOT s
'lnquisitio11'
~Court Ro'f
' Escalated
By TO~t BARL.EV
01 "'° O•UY ~1191 '""
A row that erupted last "·eek "htn
murder susprc1 Gig Peters' lav.;er ac·
cused Orange County sheriffs offittn: of
• •·deathbed inqui.sitlon" of his seriously
wounded client took on new dimension5
"tonday "'hen the prose(utor asked
Su~rior Court Judge Kenne~h \\.ilhams
• \0 find Los Angeles lav.·yer Barry Tar\Q w
in 'contempt of court.
Judge \\'illiams refused to immediately
rule on the demand after both Deputy
District Auornev Pat Brian and Tarlow
tangled in ·Uie courtrqom in a n
astonishing shouting match. •
Their argument folov;ed the lengthy
grilling by Tarlow of Los Angeles Time!!
reporter Robert Gettemy in an apparent
bid to pro,·e lhat Brian and other
members of the District Attorney·s Office
told newsmen verbally and through press
release that Peters was trying to escape
when he was shot in the back outside the
courtroom .
Tarlow countered that alleged action
last week by is.suing a three.page release
to the press in which he condemned what
he said were "highly questionable and
unethical"' tactics by B:'ian and his in·
vestigalors.
He told Judge \Villiams that Peters wa"
in lhe intensi\•e care unit in a critical
condition "·hen Sheriff's Sgt. Be11 Ox·
andaboure and other lawmen \'isiled him.
"I was outraged to think that they could
even think or questioning a man in that
condition without his attorney present ,·•
Tarlow said. Brian · argued that no questioning .or
Peters had ever taken place and he asked
Judge Williams to order a "strong jail
term or a stiff fine" fOr Tarlow. "This
was an insult to the rourt and the people
have been denied the right of a fair
trial ." Brian said.
Gettemy, "·ho offered no objection lo
being used as a \\'ilness, anS\\'ered ques·
lions posed by both Jav.·yers before .Judge
Williams closed the torrid debate. A Dai·
ly Pilot reporter had earlier refused to
testify under any circumstances.
Peters, ·recovering rapidly from his
wounds today in an Orange County
Medical Center bed , learned late Mo nday
that he will. hi s conditio n permitting, go
back to Judge Williams' rourtroom Dec.
I. The Huntington Beach man \\'as last
seen in that courtroom Nov. I. shortly
before he was cut down by a jail deput y's
bullet as he allegedly attempted to
escape during the noon lunch break.
It seems likely that he will use a
stretcher for the balance of the trial. Hi!f
physician tesli fied Monday that the use of
a gllrney will allow the 21.year-0ld dcfcn·
dant more freedom and also permit him
to relax in r. manner not permitted by a
wheelchair.
Peters is accused of stabbing his
father, Charles Peters. 55, and strangling
his mother, Flora, 54, last April 21 at the
rouple's Huntington Beach· home. Tarlow
ronlends he is instne bul Brian wants the
death penalty fnr the former lifeguard
and Huntington Beach High School honor
student.
f'ro111 Pnge l
LA PAZ. • •
tip or Ba ja California, the Oeet wilt be
battling light to moderate northerly
\\•inds on the 100-mile beat to La Paz.
Tidal currents in the Gulf of California
are also known to affect the race.
Capturing the overall and Class C han·
dicap lead on i\londay "'as Lloyd Powell's
Ericson·39 Star from the host Long Beach
Yacht Club. In second place "·as the
Class A yacht Sandpiper. a 50·fnot sloop
sailed by Dean Bro~n of Santa Barbara
YC.
091.lNGI COAST
DAILY PILOT
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Rasla of CluJnges
' ' .
New · J)elay Hits
.
Coastline Bill
A rash or last·minute amendments to
the coastline control bUl authored by
Assemblyman Alan Sieroty (O.Beverl y
Hills) hat; resulted In a further one.week
delay of the measure in the California
Senate.
! spokesman for Senator Dennis
Carpenter /ff.Newport Beach! sald Mon·
day the bill is being reprinted for a se·
cond hearing next Monday before the
Natural Resources and Wildli fe Com·
mittee.
A spokesman for A~emblyman·Robert
tti;idham (R·Newport Beach) said the
more than SO new amendment! to the bill
included one that "·ould pro hi b it
homeowners Jiving within 1,000 feel of the
mean high tide line from palntlng their
houses without approval or the regional
<igencies the bill v.·ould·establish.
The Sieroty bill . pockmarked with
amendments, is the last remaining
roastline preservation bill given a chance
to pass the state legislature.
Another preservation bill. sponsored by
Asiemblym3n Edwin Z'Berg ( D ..
Sacramento ~. was killed Monday by !hi
Senate Governmental Organization Com·
mitlce on a 3 to 6 vote.
Z'Berg's bill would have created 1
super agency to control air. water s..nd
land pollution. fl had been passed by the
Assemblyman . but was not even debated
by the Serrate commUtee.
His measure was ·backed by • the
cnnservationist Sierra Club . but opposed
Qy local governmenl Officials who claim·
ed it would take away local control.
• • OAIL Y 'ILOT l'llOll h •1t1>1r• kotlll""
FIREMAN SPLASHES WATER ON SMOLDERING ROOF OF CORONA DEL MAR HOME
Door Thi t Was Closed Probably Saved Lives, According to Fire lnvtsti91tors
Police Study Other amendments ·lo the Sieroty PUI
Indicated it-would eiclude from tht
statewide roastal control porijons of the
California shoreline lying w i t b In
municipal boundaries.
Pair Face Court Date
In Fatal Valle y Holdup
The couple "'ho are cha rged as ac·
complices of lhe bandit \\'ho was shot to
death dur ing a lhree-hour gun bat tle with
police this weekend "·ere sc heduled to 6e
arraigned this afternoon in \\'est Orange.
County Judicial..Qistrict Court.
The couple, Nickolas Camara, 13, or
13562 Springdale St.. \\'estm inster and
Sharon A. Jenkins, 20, of 2700 Peterson
\\lay, Costa i\1esa. have been charged
with armed robbery.
Their alleged companion, Timoth.v E.
Dodson, 26, an escapee from Patton Slate
Hospital. v.·as shot to death in an office
building in the Golden Triangle Shopping
Capitalist Party
Forms in Count y;
Needs Support
A new political party is being formed in
Orange County based on LibertarianiS'm.
The Capitalist Pa,rty, as it is called.
will be on the ballot neri year If tbe
organizers can round up 67,000 voters.
Heading the effort is \\'ayne C.
Grantham of Orange who admits, "\Ve
have a long way lo go but we are en-
rouraged by the early response.
"The one and only purpo!'!e of a govern-
ment," sa id Grantham. a county
surveyor, "i.~ to protect each man 's in·
dividual ri ghts. The only weapon the
government ha s to accomplish this is the
forceable restraint of men .
"The government cannot go beyond
this limited purpose without destroyi ng
itself. If it uses its force to violate a
man's rights. lt becomes his enemy not
his protector ." '
Grantham said the ·Capitalist Parlv
"'BS founded by John D. Daniels, a 26-
year-old Los Angeles businessman.
''He decided to organize the new party
because he saw no significant difference
between Republicans and Democr~ts with
respect to their stand on S<K:ialism. one
of the great dangers to our society,"
Grantham said.
A counly surveyor for nrarly 1wn
years, the local organizer is studving ci\'il
engineering at Fullerton Junior College.
Center by two Westminster patrolmen.
~tiss Jenkins and camara were sitting
in a car parked behind the Golden Bottle
Liquor Store when they were spotted by
Fountain Valley Officer Leon Pepka at
11 :30 p.m. Salurday.
While Pepka talked to the couple ,
Dodson o,1·as inside th~ liquor store,
holding up the two attence:nts foe $150.
He told the clerk he needed the money
for a fix. Dodson had a history of rob-
bery. burglary and narcotics conviclions
and had been comm~·u d to ih e state
hospital prior to stand· g trial for rob-
bery and assault with deadly weapon.
\Vhen he left the liquor store, he was
confronted by Pepka and a serond of·
ficer, Dave Brokaw.
In the shootout that folloo,1•ed, Dodson
took cover in an office building in the
center where he held about 50 lawmen
from five cities al bay for three hours.
LL 1'1arv Fortin. commander of I he
Fountairl Valley detective di vision, said
Dodson was armed with a 9mm
automatic 'and had used two full cli ps of
llfl1munil.l~n -about 20 rounds. A third
h1U cljp ~·as reported found in the car·
with Miss Jenkins and camara.
Officer Grant Varner of Westminster
v.·as wounded in the shooting when a
bullet fragment or a ricochetin.i! bullet
struck his badge. He is in satisfactory
condition today at Fountain Valley Com·
munity Hosp_ltal and has been moved out
of the intensive care unit.
Marine Stricken
By Meningitis
A young Marine private fr om
Oklahoma was reported in "very serious"
condition at the Camp Pendleton ba se
hospital today after being stricken with a
noncontagious form of memingitis early
last weekend.
Pfc. Donald R. Loflie. 17, of the ba se
schools battalion was hospitalized late
Friday, base spokesmen said.
Loftie was the third victim reported
this year of menigococcemia meningitis.
POW Tells Tale
Ne·wsnian Gets Hospital Interview
AURORA, Co!o (AP) -StSgt. John C.
~xton, released Oct. 8 by the Viet Cong
is quoted as saying he is uncertain why
he was freed after 26 months as a
prisoner of war.
"'You've got n1e thc~r ." Sexton s:iid in
a copyright interview in tod11}''s edition of
the Rocky 1'1ountain NCOA'S.
Sexton, 13, who is recuperating 11t
Fitzsimmons General Hos ita! here, \\'as
intcr\•iewed by reporter Jeff Rosen, who
di sguised hlmttlf as a patient , to a\'Old a
ban on inter,·1ews "'ith the sergeant.
Hosen said he spent 4$ minutes talking
wi!h Sexton in hill hospi(a l roo m ~lond:iy.
Sexton wl'ls rcluct11nt to disc:uss unof·
ficial report!'! that he had hrought out a
note from the Viet Cong abou t f~ure
prisoner exchanges. Rosen said. lie :il!\O
v.·as reluctant lo say how man~· olher
American soldiers 1o1·ere held cap\1\·e ~n
the cam p where he .!pent hi.9 intern1nent.
"l"d rather not talk JbrM.1t II." Sclffon
v.·as quoted n.s saying. "We ha ve some
things going on In Laos, and it would be
better if J didn't say.''
Sexton, of \Varren, ~1ich., 1,1•as psle and
complaintd of frequent headaches, ac·
cording to Rosen, but otherwise looked
v.·ell and rtloxed.
The nl!\\'Spaper gave this account of the
interview:
Asked about his lrtatmc.nL·as n PO\V,
Sexton said: "1ht!y ktpt me ali'1e.
!iQmetlmes JUSl bartly. but they kept nu!
ah ve.''
\Younds sufrtrcd in af'I ambush that led
· lo lJJs caplure were often dirly and un·
treat<?d, he s&ld. "Once my arm wa.9
eovtred wllh m11ggots." he said. but
it finally was treated with penicillin.
"I had to pick a lot of grenade
fragments out of the wounds myself." he
said. "I picked 10 piece.s out of mt.head
and face."
Sexton said he had made two attempts
to escape from the Viet Cong -the first
lime shortly after his capture while he
\\'as surferlng badly from v.·ounds. He
said he was retaken afler one night out.
The second time, last·f\.1a y, he managed
to sta y out a rouple of days. he said. But
he said the jungle was criss-crossed 1,1·ith
trails and he couldn't find his "'a}'. He
\1•as recaptured when he blundered into a
\'ict Cong patrol.
Sexlon said he kept his mind occ up ied
by working out mathematical sums and
cheS!! problems.
"I gue~ for someone "'ho doesn't mind
sitUng sllll a lot and thinking. it would
.ha\'C: been easier~" he said. "But 1 al~s
want to he doing_ something.
"l"d work out how many sccond5 there
3re in a day. I'd try to flhd a way to
figure It quicker. Otherwise my mind
would play tricks on me.''
Se:tton had been quoted In a copyright
,:;\ory In the Detroit Free Press during
thr 1,1•cekend as saying in a telephone In·
tcr vlcw that he was more closely guardtd
al Fil1,simmons tha n during his captivity
Jn Indochina.
About the possibillty or repercussions:
for the interview with lhe Detroit paptr,
Rosen reporttd that Sexton uid: ''Wh:it
are they going IQ do? Gourt·martial me?"
Sexton sold he may be allowed to hold
a news conference later this week.
~.
' From p,., l
FIRE ...
flames had gnawed into the roof struc·
lure.
One veteran fireman credited the Jact
that a door between the den and living
room was closed with containing smoke
and names initially and preventing
deaths.
Damage estimates Included $10,000 to
the residenc e itself and an additional
$8,000 to contents, although some
valuables such as a gun collection were
sa ved. ·
Fire Capt. Jack \V. Jones suffered a
hand cut. but \\'as not seriously injured,
investigators said.
The \\larmington family is known in !he
Harbor Area for building and investment
activities. The famil9 owns the Wann·
ington Construction Cmmpany, 300 ri.
Nev.•port Blvd., Neo,1·port Beach.
Students Pedal
To County Meet
Ninety Corona de! ~1ar High School
students made a dual purpose bicycle
ride ·10 a meeling of the Orange Cou nty
Board of Supervisors in Santa Ana this
mo ming.
"They are members of urban affairs
and government classes." explained
social studies instructor r-.1ike rrlang. "\\1e
want them to sec local go\·ernment in ac·
tion and "''e are promoting bicycle
trails ." Aidin~ ?l!ang in supervi sing the trek
1,1•as Jeff Elston. English instructor.
The group of boys and girls left Corona
dcl l.!ar High School at 7:30 a.m. and ar·
rived at the county administration
buildin~ al 6th and Sycamore streets in
Santa Ana about 8:30 a.m. They avoided
· the freeways. riding up f\.lac.Arthur
Boulevard to r.lain Street in Santa Ana
and then on lo thei r destination.
They plan to spend about one and a half
hours at the supervisors' session. eat bag
lunches and then start back for sc hool.
Ac tress Recovering
LOS ANGELES IAP\-Sandv Duncan,
star of the "Funny Face" tcleVision com·
edy series. is recovering well from
surgery lo remove a benign tumor from
behind her left eye. a spokesman says.
. Costly ·Thefts
In Newport
A series of burglaries that netted well
over $10,000 in stereo sound equipment,
jewelry, furs, sterling silver and other
goods Is being probed today by Newport
Beach police.
Largest loss suffered was bv Charles
D. Foss. or 2915 Ebbtide R0ad. who
returned from a weekend trip to find
$5.16~ in belongings missing.
Officer David Ion said someone slipped
the lock on a front door to gain entry to
lhe Foss residence.
The missing items include a variety of
sterling silver tableware, a stereo outfit,
mink stole. television set, movie pro-
jector and currency.
Billie L. Gabriel. a management ex-
{\CUtive at the Anchorage Aprtments,
2'888 Bayshore Drive. reported loss of
$3.610 in valuables there Sunday.
Someone who tried repeatedly to pry
the front door finally succeeded. carrying
away jewelry and other items, including
one $1.500 diamond bracelet.
Following the loss by Mrs. Gabriel,
another tenant. Matthew Re a g a n,
reported someone. pried the front door
and ransacked his unit in the same
apartments.
No immediate determination of any
toss was established. police said, but the
method of entry was the same.
A really brazen burglar entered the
Balboa Island apartment of John
Caparone, 319 Diamond Ave., sometime
. after the victim dozed off while listening
to steroo music.
Caparone told Officer Vince Antista he
awoke 1'1onday morning to find a cat
burglar who broke in by unknown means
had swiped tbe source of the sound ef·
f~ts.
The victim listing the. missing loot as
his $2,100 stereophonic sound system,
plus a portable television set.
Big Truck Flips,
Blocks Free\vay
A big diesel truck-trailer overturned in
the northbound lanE!s of the Santa Ana
Freeway in Santa Ana at 6:30 a.m. today
and lied up traffic for two hours. There
\\'ere no injuries.
Highway patrolmen said the accident
look place at the 171h Street interchange
and gummy diesel oil was spilled ac:ross
the rr eeway and dripped down onto 17th
Street.
f\.lorning rush hour traffic was slov.·ed
as high\vay patrol units guided motorist!'!
past lhe "Teckage.
Howe ver, the exemption would not
spare Upper Newport Bay from the
purview of c..the superagency. Another
amendment indicates developments along
shoreline thal is less than 30 percent
developed ~·ould be subject to agency
review.
Should the bill be reported, oub of the
Natural Resources committee ne1.t Moil·
day , it would still face approva11lf the
Senate Finance Committee, S en.
Carpenter has sa id.
f'ro•n Pnge l
PAY BOARD •••
inembers, including AFL-CIO President
George ~1eany.
"The Pay Board majority has taken
money out of the pockets of hard·working
and hardpressed food workers and put it
into the treasuries of immensely wealthy
corporations," said the ~1eat Cutters.
Meanwhile. AFL-CIO leaders were split
over whether to quit the Pay Board or
stay on it and fight its ruling on Phase 2
wage increases and deferred pay boosts.
While most of the labor lead ers are
awaiting off!ci;,1 word from AFL-CIO
President George Meany on wha.t course
to take, some advocate an immediate
walkout of the five labor members from 1
the IS.member Pay Board established ,by
President Nixon.
''If President 1'ieany waitts to resign
from t~t1 P.ay Board, he has my support ,"
Edward J. Carlough, President .o[ the
Sheet Meta] Workers, said Monday night.
Bu t President Maurice Hutcheson oT-
the Carp4?nters union said, ''If you waJ k
off the board , how can you argue with its
decisions?"
The Pay Board ruled Monday that after
the current wage·price freeze terminates
Sunday the general limjl of pay raises
will be S.5 percent.
It also ruled that payment of ra ises lost
because of the current freeze will be
allowei:I only in a limited numbe r or
specifically approved cases.
In both rulings. the five business and
five public members of the Pay Board
outvoted the labor members of the
Board. including Meany.
Labor's key demand has been ror run
paymell&. of raises lost because of the
wage·p~ce freeze.
.. It is a stacked board." complained
President S. frank Raftery of the
Painters union.
But Raftery and two other membe rs or
the AFL--CIO's 35-man policy-making ex-
ecutive committee were more cautiou s
about advocat ing that labor quit the Pay
Board. '!'he other t~'o were Hutcheson
and President Peter Fosco of the
Laborers union.
THANI( YOU, ERASTUS!
, __
It occurred to us the other day that we owe a lot to an innovator in our
carpet industry who operated about 150 years 090.
Here are some facts about ERASTUS BRIGHAM BIGELOW:
• Born 1814, W. Boylston, Mass.• Poor family, required to work at t qe
10 as farm hand and clerk. • Gen ius at math an d mechanics. • At 23
years old, invented loom for lace. • Invented revolutionary power loom
for BRUSSELS and WILTON carpets. This created a domestic carpet in·
dustry, and virtu..,lly elimin&ted foreign com petition. • Foun~ed BIGE-
LOW CARPET MILLS in Clinton, Ma ss. • Great economist , one of small
group founding MASSACHUS ETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY at
601ton in I 86 I. • Died I 879.
ERASTUS :
MY GRANDFATHER THANKS YOU! MY FATHER THANKS YOU! I THANK YOU! MY
CHI LDREN THANK YOU!
!Four 91n•ration ' in th1 c•rpet bus ines s sine.• 1894. thenlcs to th• inYentions of
Mr. Big•low.) • P.S. Ama1in9ly, without Erastus, Bi9elaw Carpets have remained an industry
leader. Please stop in and see their sparillin9 carpet line .
ALDEN'S
CARPETS 8 D.RAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS : Moo. t1inl Tllun.. 9 11> S:JO -Fri., 9 lo 9 -Sot. 9:JD lo 1
'7
•·
'7
.. \
I _ _)
Huntington-.Bea~h
Valley Today's Fl••I Fountain
N.Y. Stoeks
·* VOL. 64, NO. ~68, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ~ ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 197f TEN CENTS . .
Valley Parents I Want Out of Grove District
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of lt'ttl Oatty P'lllf lllH
Parents or 100 school children who Jive
in l-'ountnln Valley, but a~ pan of the
Garden Grove Unified School District
\Vant out.
Ip a petiti-On sent 'to the county
superintendent or educ&.tioo. uxrregister.
ed voters \Yho live in the area bounded by
\Varner Avenue, Euclid Street, Talbert
Avenue and the Santa Ana River asked
that they be transferred into the Fountain
Valley School District.
It is the second such request since
school opened in September·. In October,
tbe two owners of 12.75. acres east or
Eoclid aod _oorth of Warner petitioned for
a similar move.
The property \11hich was the subject or
the first pet.Ilion is under construction
and will have ~ homes. The petitioners
noted that "community Identity is para·
mount in this request. Fountain Valley
residents belong to Fountain Valley
school.s. goverened by people elected by
rountain Valley residents.''
l\1rs. Vicki Stangle, one of the leaders
of the latest petition drive. said signers of
the second petition have motives similar
to those of ~ir ~ighbors. She cited
community pride. and identity, alleged
overcrowding in Garden Grove schools
and the failure of .the district to approve
conitNction bonds.
Mrs. $tangle pointed out that,children
living1in the neighborhood attend ll-tonroe
Elementary School. Fitz Intermediate
School and Los Amigos High School. l<ls
Amigos Is in Fountain Valley, but both
111onroe and Fitz are in Santa Ana.
The peU9on will be forwarded to the
Foontain Valley and Garden Grove
districts for actlon by their.boards.
lf the peUtion is d1mied by the Foo11tain
Valley trustees·, then u-;e matter will die.
tlo\\;ever, trustees approved the previom
petition and assistant superintendent Bob
Sanchls indicated tJ1e new transfer "''Ould
pose few problems for the district.
_,
The·Garden Gi:ove school board denied
the first petJtion on the ground! that the
transfer wOll.ld upset the ethnic balances
of Los Amigos High School.
The actioR of both boards b now beJng
studied by the county superintendent Who
will forwifd the petition and reports to
the county Committee on School. District
Organization.
Court Row Flares
Peiers -Lawyer in Contempt Says DA
I ~
By 1'0~1 BARLEY
Of IM DtilY ,.1191 St.it
A row that erupted last week when
murder suspect Gig Peters•·Ja~er ac·
cused Orange County sherJfrs officers of
a "deathbed inquisipon" of his seriously
wounded client took on ne1v dimensions
f\1onday when the prosecutor asked
Superior Court Judge Kenneth \Villiams
to· find Los Angeles lawyer Barry Tarlow
in contempt of court.. 1 Judge Williams refused to immediately
rule on the demand after both Deputy
District Attorney Pat Brian and Tarlo\v
tangled in the courtroom in a-•
astonishing shouting match.
Royal Th1·ees0111e.
Their argun1ent folowed the lengthy
grilling by Tarlo'v of Los Angeles Times
reporter Robert Gettemy in an apparent
bid to prove that Brian and otl~er
members of the District Attorney·s Office
told newsmen verbally and througti press
release that Peters was trying to escape
when he was shot in the back outside the
These three t:oeds "'ere homecoming queens at their
respective schools this past weekend. From left are
Jenny Nakano, 19. Ne\vport Beach, homecoming
(1ueco at Golden \\1est College; 1'1arty Fujita, 17.
homeco1ning queen at l\Iarina High School , and
Cory Shaffer. 17, homecoming queen at Huntington
Beach High School.
Yaclits Qf-f Baja
In Lit Paz Raee;
Winds Slow Pace
By ALl\10N LOCKABEY
r DAIL y f'l\.OT 9 .. flftl l!-.i.r
Lead yacllts in the Long Beach to La
Paz race today moved past CedrOs Island
off the Baja California coast as light
winds continued to slow the progre11S of
the 970 mile race.
f'ighling for the elapsed tin1e lead were
lblgtime, the G2·foot scratch boat owned
by a Long Beach Yacht Club syndicate.
and the 58-fbot yawl l\lin Sette , skippered
by Joe Pollock of Rose City Oregon.
\\.inds ha~e been from the right d.irec·
lion during the past tv.·o days bul the 8 to
10 knot nor·~·ester has carried no
authority.
The entire fleet is bunched within a 4-0-
mile radius with the small bolas begin·
nlng to mo'~ up on the Class A leaders in
the light going .
Strong northerly v•inds can usually be
,expected in the vicinity of Cedros I!land
o.nd may start the fleet movlng.
R11gtime reported Monday that she had
covered 26 mlles in the first 48 hours for
an average of 4.7 knot s.
lierb Johnson reported from the escort
and co1nmunications vessel Crabby 'foo
that the \l'eather was ideal for cruising
under power but not ver'),'._ conduc\,·e to
sailboat raring, )
The weather pattern has been in. sharp
contrast to the 1969 race when a gale-
rorce southeaster dismasted three yachts:
in the first 2• hours and contintied to buf·
fet the neet for t"·o more days.
•After rounding Cape San Lucas 1t the
tip or Baja California, the fleef, will be
(See LA PAZ, Page J)
Orange Coast
Weather
· Don't look tor any lifting of the
fog on \Ved nesday. the weather
lady warns. Ifll be the same kind,
or day with temperatures ranging
from 6.1 on the beaches to 73
further inlind.
INSIDE TODAY
DiPlo1natic sources llt'lvt re•
ported Mao Tst·tung'i designat-
ed lttir 1.t1' Piao was involved
in 4 plot , outted from l1it ofllce
and pcrlia.os killed in. a plcue
crash whll t: escaping. Story
Page 4.
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,t,1111 l.llltltn " Wt rl• fttWI ••
courtroon1. ' ...
Duo Facing Court Hearing
After Fatal Valley Holdup
Tarlow countered that alleged action
last week by ifsuing a three·page release
to the press in which he condemned what
he said weni "highly questionable and
unethlcaJ" ta by-Bria• and• l'lis-tn·
vestigators.
lie told.Judge Willi.ams that Feters was
In the intensive care unit in a critical
condition when Sheriff's Sgt. Ben Ox·
andaboure and other lawmen visited him.
•·1. was outraged to think that the~ could
even think of questioning . a man 1n that
conditlon without his attornef present."
Tarlow said.
The couple '"ho are charged as ac:
complices of the bandil who was shot lo
death during a three-hour gun batlle with
police this weekend 'vere scheduled to be
arraigned this afternoon in \Yest Orange
County Judicial District Court.
The couple, Nickolas Camara. 23, of
13562 Springdale St.. Weslminster and
Sharon A. Jenkins, 20. of 2700 Peterson
\Vay. Costa ?>.1esa. have heen charged
with armed robbery .
Their alleged con1panion. Ti1nothy I!:.
Dodson, 26, an escapee from Patton State
Jiospital, wa s shot to death in an office
building in the Golden Triangle Shopping
Center by two \Vestminster patrohnen.
l\fiss Jenkins and Camara were si tting
in a car parked behind the Golden Bou le
Liquor Store when they were spotted by
Fountain Valley Officer Leon Pepka at
11 :30 p.m. Saturday.
\Yhlle Pepka talked lo the couple.
Dodson was inside the liquor store,
holdingJ.lp the two attendc.nts ror $150.
He told the clerk he needed the money
for a fix. Dodson had a history of rob-
bery. burglary and nareotics conviction s
and had been committed to the state
hospital prior tO standing trial for rob-
bery and assault v:ith a deadly weapon .
\Vhen he left tbe liquor store, he. 1va!!
confronted by Pepka and a second of-
ficer. Dave Brokaw.
In the shootout' that followed. Dod!ion
took cover in an office building in the
t·enter where he held about SO iawmen
from five cities at bay for three hours .
Ll. fllarv Fortin. commander of t h e
Fountain Valley detective division, said
IJodson "'as armed with a 9mm
automatic and had used two full clips or
a1nmunition -about 20 rounds. A ihin:I
full clip was reported found in the car
v.'ith Miss Jenkins and Camara.
Officer Grant Varner of \Vestminster
\l'a s wounded in the shooting when a
bullet fragment or a ri::xhetinJ?" bullc!
struck his badge. •1e is in satisfactory
condition today at Fountain Valley Coin·
munily Hospital and hafi been moved out
of the intensive care unit~ "' /
'
Brian argued that no questioning or
Peters "'had ever taken place and he asked
Judge Williams to order a "strong jail
term or a stiff fine" for Tarlow. "This
was an insult to the court and the people
have been denied the right of a fair
trial ... Brian said.
Geltemy. who offered no objection to
being used as <t witness. answered ques·
tions posed by both lav.'Yers before Judge
\Villiams closed the torrid debate. A Dai-
ly Pilot reporter had earlier refused to
testify under any circwnstances.
Peters, recovering rapidly from his
111ounds today in an Orange County
~1edical Ce nter bed, learned late Monday
that he will, his condition permitting, go
back to Judge Williams' courtroom Dee.
I.
The Huntington Beach man was la st
seen in that courtroom Nov. I, shorlly
before he was cut dowri by a jail deputy's
bullet as he allegedly attempted tC>
POW Tells Tale Hearing Delayed
Ne ,wsnian Gets Hospital lntervieiv l n P ost1naster
Slayi1ig Count AURORA, Colo (AP) -SISgt. John C.
Sexton, released Oct. 8 by the Viet Cong
is quoted as saying he · is un<:i!rlain \vhy
he was freed after 26 months a!! a
prisoner of war.
.. You've got me there," Sexton said in
a copyright interview in today's edition of
the Rocky Mountain News.
Sexton, 23. ~·ho is recuperating at
Fitisimmons General Hosital here. 11•as
_ interviewed by reporter Jeff Rosen, \\'Im
disguised himself as a patient. to avoid a
ha"n_ on interviews with the sergeant.
Rosen said he spent 45 1ninutes talking
wi!h Sexton in his hospital roon1 ~tonday,
Sexton "'as reluctant to discu~ unof.
ficial reports that he had brought out a
note from ,the Viel Cong about future
prisoner exchanges. Rosen said. He 31so
W.il> reluctant to say how many other
American soldiers were held ca ptive in
the camp where he spent his internmenL
"I'd rather not talk about ii." Sexton
was quoted as saying . "\Ve have ~me
things going on in Laos, and it would be
better if l didn't say."'
Sexton, of Warren. f\.11ch., was pale and
complained of frequen t headaches. ac-
cording to Rosen, but otherwtsc looked
well 'and relaxed.
The newspaper gave this account or the
interview :
Asked about his treatment as a POW.
Sexton said: "They kept me alive,
10metimes just bairelr. but they kept mt
&.live."
·'
\Vounds suffered in a11 ambush that led
to his capture were often dirty and un· treated, he said. ''Once my arm was The arraignment of Phillip B. Alleman.
coveted with maggots," he said. but accused triggerman in the slaying of
it rinally was treated with penicillin. \Vestminster Postmaster Paul Burtner,
..I had to pick a lot of-·grenade has been postponed to Nov. 19 .
fragments out of the wounds myself." he Allemi:..n, 2•. of Santa 'Ana, was granted the delay Monday morning in West :3~d.1~~e~!cked 10 pieces out of my he11d Orange County Judicial District Court so
h be may seek an attorney. 1 Sexton said he ad made two attempts A former clerk at the Westminster post
to escape from the Viet Cong -the first office, Alleman is charged with the
time shortly after his cap\ure while he murder of Burtner and the attempted1
w~s suffering badly from ~unds. He murder of Ernest Gaulden, 4 6 , _
said he was re~aken after one night out. superintendent of mails, last Thursday. Th~ second time. last J\.1ay, he m~naged ·/ The alleged shooting has be-e n-
lo !ita.y out ~ couple of da rs. he said. ~ut characterized by Investigating officers as
he ~a1d the 1ungle "'~s c!·1ss-c!'°ssed with a revenge killing. They di sclosed \hat
trails and he couldn t find his way. He Alleman had been reprimanded for hi s
was reca ptured when he blundered into a frequent tardiness just prior to the
Viet Cong ~trol. . . . gunplay.
Sexton. saJd he kept his ~ind occupied Burtner, SI, was killed by two .45
by working out mathematical sums and caliber bullets which struck bim in the
chess problems. , , chest and In the ttead. Gaulden, who suf-
·:1 guess for someone who docsn L mind ft.red a bullet wound in the stomach is sitling~still a lot and thinking, it would reported in ''improving" condltion 1 at
have been tasier," he said. "But I always Westminster Memorial Hospital.
y,·ant to be doing something. Police claim to have uncovered an
"I'd work out hOw many seconds there automatic pistol of the s:ame caliber they
are in a day.· I'd try to find a way. lo say wU' left on the postal counter by
figure It quicker. Otherwise my muld Alleman immed\Ately after the alleged
woulH play tricks on me." murder.
Sexton had been quoted In a copyright Alleman. lVle tnam war veteran
story in the Detroit Free PreS! dui.ing discharged f the Army for medical
the \\'etkend as saying in a telephone in-reasons. 11 be held at Orange County
tervit\V that he was more closely guarded . Jail without ball.
at FJ..tz.simmons than during hl.5 captivity Burtner was buried at WestmJnster
In Indochina. Memorial Park Monday mornl~.
1 ,
escape dur1~g' the noon lunch break.
It seems likely that he will use a
stretcher 'for lhe·balance of the trial. His
physician tesUUed Monday that the use of
a gurney will allow the 21.year.old defen.
dant more freedom and also permit him
to relax in a· manner not permitted by a wheelchair.
Peters is aceused of slabbing his
father, Charles Peters, 55 and strangling
his mother, Flora, 54, las£ April 21 at the
couple's Huntington Beach home. Tarlow
contends he is insane but Brian wantJ1the
death penalty for the former lif'eguard
and lluntington Beach High School honor
student.
Assemblyman l(en Cory
Linked to Remap Pact
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A Southern
California firm. whose officer! include
former Assembly employes and a
relative or lhe Assembly Democratic
Caucus chairman, is the holder of a near·
ly $200,000 computer contract. for rea~
portionment, the San Jose Mercury
reported today.
'Ille contract was awarded without
bids. the newapaper·said. ~
Chairman o{ the board of American
Computer ResOurces (ACR) L!: William
Butcher, b r o t h e r In li:.w Of Assembly ...
man Kennelh Cory ({)..Garden Grovel.
and a member of Cory's legislative staff
jn 1967, the newspaper reported. Butcher
is married to Cory's Wife's sister.
Cory says there is no conllict of in-
terest involved In the contract with ACR.
") have no financia l Interest in ACR. If
there was anything at all unhealthy, and
I don't personally think so, it is that we
all grew up in the business togelher."
ACR was awarded the contract Feb. 3
to develop reapportionment data for the
Assembly elections and reapportionment
commiltee, whose c h airman is
Assemblyman Henry Waxman (0.Los
Angeles).
Bids are not required for contracts
Grocers. Protest
awarded by the Legislature and paid•for
with Assembly contingency funds.
The newspaper said ACR President
William Below is "a close personal
friend" of Cory and they both worktd
together on the Assembly staff in 1965.
Also employed by ACR is Gary
Bamberg who worked for the Assembly
f1om 1965 to 1968, the Mercury said.
Although Butcher is no longer acUvely
engaged in the company, he still holds
stock as well as ttis nonsaJaried title as
chairman of the board. He Je Ct ACR late
last year while negotiations were still in
progress ·with !fie Assembly, From
March I to Oct. 31, he worked for the
Senate Elections and Reapportionment
Committeee,
The Mercury reported that ACR receiv ..
ed. the Assembly contract at a time when
the firm's financial problems endangered
its survival.
Below said. "I didn't know iC we could
stay open. \Ve were hoping the contract
could make a difference."
According to Phil Schott, the man who
wrote the contract, ACR \vas awarded Jt
because it was the only firm with an ex·
(See CONTRACT, Page!)
A demon strator from a group of Chi.natown groccrs_in San Francisco
carried a •ign al lhe runeral of John Eng, shol down in· a $15-0 holdup
Oct. 27. The community Is aroused by a rash of robberies and a~
saults on Ch1nese grocery stores. lo the past year, five Cl\inese eroo-
ers have been murdered1
( •
•
-
•
..
•
. 2 DAILY PILOT
Earl11 1l'ar11i11g
Sewage Qutf all
Moni 1ior Sought
PALO ALTO (UPll -1'he placel1Jient
of ''time.lapse" movie cameras near
sewage outfall points in coastal waters
could P..rovlde early warnings of possible
d1mgc to marine life, Lockheed Corpora·
lion &eicntists said today,
Or. Let Tepley, a senior staff scientist
at Lockheed Missiles & Space Co. in
nearby Sunnyvale, desc ribed develop-
ment of a system which operates unat·
tended for long periods in water as deep
as 200 feet.
He addressed a three-day joint con-
feren ce · on sensing of environmental
pollutants, v;hith concludes Wednesday.
It was sponsored by a half dozen scien·
tific and environmental groups .
Tepley said undersea cameras U!ling
the "time-lapse" tehcnique -in which a
single frame is taken every few seconds
nr minutes -can provide more in·
formation than divers making visual
Newsman Brands
Cow·t Nominee
As John Bircher
NEW YORK (AP) _:. Sidney Zion, the
former newspaperman who first t:iublicly
linked Daniel El!Sberg to the disclosure
()f the Pentagon papers, claims Supreme
Court nominee William Rehnquist was a
'member of the John Birch Society in the
early 1960s.
Rehnquist, an assistant attorney
general. has been nomin3.ted by Presi·
dent Nixon lo fill one of two high cour t
vacancies. He was not immediately
available for comment.
In Washington, a Justice Department
11pokesman said Rehnquist "is not now
nor has he ever been a member 9f the
John Birch Society."
Zion, in an interview Monday night on
WMCA radio, claimed that Rehnquist
joined the ultraconservalive Birch society
while he was '3. Jawyer in Phoenix:, Ariz..
in 1961 and 1962.
Zion, a one-lime reporter for The New
York Times and later a magazine
publisher. refused to disclose the sources
of his information but said "they were
quite the opposite· sources than I would
usually get information from."
He said he was making his informa tion
public because Rehnquist's nomination is
now before a Senate Ct'.lmmittee for Ct'.ln·
firmation.
Later today Black leader Cla rence
Mitchell said the nomination of Rehnq1,1ist
-is "ah insult to Americans who support
civil rights.·•
"Through that nofl\lnation the foot of
racism-ls placed in th!!: door of the temple
of justice.'' Mit chell told the Senate
Judiciary Committel!: as the panel began
taking testimony for and against Presi·
dent Nixon's nominees to fill two Su·
preme Court vacancies.
Mitchell, director of the Washington
burl!:au of the National Association for it
and also for the Leadership Conference of
Civil Rights.
He wai; accompanied by Joseph L.
Raugh Jr., counsel for the leaderi;hip
conference, and also appearing a.s a
witness for Americans for Democratic
Action in opposition tG Rchnquist's
nomination.
Mitchell said they were oot taking an)'
position on Lewis F. Powell Jr., a Rich-
mond, Va., attorney who has been
nominated for the second vacancy on the
court.
With respect to Rehnqui st, Mitchell
said, "there ls a consistent pattern of op-
position to the rights of black Americans
in areaii of puq}ic accommodations,
freedom of exp ression, education and
voting."
DAILY PILOT
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obstrvations.
"U.Vdersea photo--documentatlon can
point out slow changes in the underwater
environmenl before they reach
catastrophic proportions, and thereby
lead to corrective action before It Is loo
late." he said.
He said the automatic. battery-powered
syslem, which can take 32,000 frames
Gver a span of several days wlth
floodlights coming on automatically to
provide light, Ct'.luld provide data on
harm~ul changes i.n marinl!: l!:Cology,
especially at sewage outfall points.
He showed Ct'.lnference delegates a film
demonstrating the destruction of coral
reefs In Kanoehe Bay, HawE.ii, by algae
whose growlh was spurred by nutrients in
se wage flowing into the bay ,
"Unfortunately, the rondition was not
ttC'Ognized until g re a l damage wa s
done," Tepley said. "The Important thing
here is that if systematic, long-term
photographic monitoring -including
time-lapse photography -had b een
started abou t five years ago, the algae
i:rowth would have been discovered at an
early date and preventive action could
have been taken."
Union Threatens
To Strike Over
Pay Hike Limit
Pt11AMI BEACH (AP) -A major AFV
CIO union urged today a nalionwlde
general strike if necessary to reverse pay
regula.tions imposed by President Nixon's
Pay Board.
"We are shocked and disaRJ!Ointed that
the first vote takiil by the Nixon ·
Administration's Pa.y oBard constituted
an attack on the economic standa.rds and
the general welfare of !he working people
of our country,'' sald the executive board
ot t,he 500,IJOO.-mcmber Amalgamated
Meat Cutters Union.
The union's board, conducting ()fie of a
series of AFL-CIO meetings here. said it
v;i\I introduce a resolution before the
main AFlrCIO convention next week to
urge a no.Uonal work sloppage.
"The Pay Board has robbed scores of
thou sands of our members of fa irly
. negotiated and non-innalionary wage in.
creases which werl!: due lo be paid in
Seple91ber under agreements worked out
more than a year ago ," said the ht eat
Cutters' statement.
·The Pay Board 'Pt1onday announced a
eneral 5.:> pcfCcnt w.11ge hike limitation
and ruled Out retroactlVily In mbsl case!'i
fnr pay hikes fr ozen since Aug. l!'i. The
five industry and five public member5 or
the board outvoted the live labor
members. including AFL·CIO President
Geor~e Meany.
"The Pay Board majority has taken
money out of the pockets of hard-working
and hardpressed food workerii and pu! it
into the treasuries of immensely weallhy
corpo rations," said the ?\-teat Cutters.
Meanwhile, AFL-CIO leaders were split
over whether to quit the Pay Board or
stay on it and fight its ruling on Phase 2
wage increai;es and deferrl!:d pav boosts.
\Vhile most or the labor leaders iire
awaiting oflici;.I ..... ord from AFL-C10
President George i\1eany on what cou rse
to take, some advocate an imn1ediale
walkout of the fivt labor members from
the 15'member Pay Board established by
President Nixon.
"If President Meany wants to resign
from the Pay Board, he has my support.·•
Edward J . Carlough, President. of the
Sheet Mela! \Vorker s, said Monday nigh!.
But President Maurice Hutcheson ot
the Carpenters union said, "Ir you wiilk
off the board. how can you argue with its
decisions?" . ·
The Pay Board ruled Monday that after
the current wage-price freeze terminates
Sunday the general limit of pay raises
will be 5.5 percent.
lt also ruled that payment of raises lost
bf-cause of the current frecu will ~
allowed· only in a limited number of
specifically approved cases.
In bolh rulings, the five business and
flvt public members of the Pay Boii rd
outvoted the labor members of the
Board. including flfeany.
Labor's key demand has been for full
payment or raises , lost because or lhe
wa~e--pri~ freeic.
"It iJ a stacked board ." complained
President S. Frank Raftery of the
Painters union.
But Raftery and two other members of
tht AFlrCIO's 35--man pollcy.makln~ ex-
ecutl\!e Cbmmittee were morl!: cautious
about advocating that labor quit the Pay
Board . The other two were Hutcheson
and President Peter f>'osco of lhe
Laborers union.
Big Truck . Flips,
Blocks Free,va y
A big diesel truck·lrallcr ovtrlurned in
the northbound lanu of the Santa Anll
FrttW•Y in Sant.A Ana al 5:30 a.m. today
and !ltd up trafflt for two hour!. There
v.·cre no injuries.
Highway patrolmen said !he accident
look plACt at the J71h Slreet intcrchani;:c
Jlnd gummy diesel oil was spill~ 11cm~$
the frttwa)' and dr ipped down onto J 7lh
St.re-et.
Morning ru11h hour tralfic w1s slowrd
11is hi-~way patrol uniU guided motC1risls
pas:t the "'rctka£lt!
' DAIL'!' f'ILDT •~u1.11v 1tlc~1rd KotM•r
J'rottt Page I
LA PAZ ...
battling Hgbt to moderate northerly
windS·on the 100-mlle beat to La Pal.
Tidal ourrenls in the Gui! of California
are also known to affect the ra~~
Capturing the overall and Class C han-
dicap lead on Monday wss~loyd Powell's
Ericson-39 Star from the h t Long Beach
Yacht Club. Jn second pace was the
Class A yacht Sandpiper, a 5().foot sloop
llailed by Dean Brown of Santa Barbara
YC.
Handicap standings are :
OVEnALL -II) Star: (2l Sand.Riper, •
Dean Brown, SBYC; (3) Warrior, Al
Cassel, BCYC: (4) Quicksilver ··Fred
Palmieri, WYC; (S) Count er Po Jn l
Deaver & Headden, BYC. '
CLASS A. -{I J Sandpiper ; 121 Con-
certo, .Irving Lnube, R)'.C; (3) Warrior ;
(fi Aries, Russ Ward, LYC. (5/ Ragtime.
CLASS B -{l ! Dorothy 0 Alan O~tborn, CBYC; (2). Quasar, 'Arthur
Biehl. St. FYC; (3/ Alice. Pau l
Loveridge, NHYC: f4J Robon Ill, Bob
Grant, NH.r.C: \5) Alpha, Louis Riggs
SF'YC. '
CLA~ ~ -~I) Star: 12) Quicksilver:
(31 Ch1qu1ta, William Clute, St. F'YC; /4)
Sanderling, Bob Poole BCYC· (SJ
Pericus , John Williamson, LYC. '
FIREMAN SPLASHES WATER ON SMOLDERING ROOF OF CORONA DEL MAR HOME
Door That W11 Closed Probably S1ved Lives, According to Fire lnvestig1tors
CLA.SS D -(I) Counterpoint; (2\
Aquarius, John Holiday. LBYC: (3)
L'Allegro, Roderick Park, Richmond VC;
(4 ) Bushwacker, Harry Smith PMYC·
15) Centurion, Larry Folsom, si BYC. '
NewpGrt Family
Flees Inf er110
Consuming Hom e
The son of a Harbor Area builder and
his family fled with their lives early to-
day, when an $18,000 blaze roared
through their Harbor View H i 11 s
residence.
~One fire captain suffered minor in-
juries battling the blaze, from which the
victims' pet dog was rescued safely after
being trapped.
Investigators blamed a spark from a
fireplace for . set~ing the blaze at the
Edward G. "Bud" Warmington Jr.,
home, 3607 Sausalito Drive.
The street v.•as formerly named
Seafoam Drive.
Firemen resonding to the I :24 a.m.
alarm found Warmington, his wife and l·
year-old daughter safely outside.
Crackling flames awakened them and
Mrs. Warmington scooped up the infant,
firemen said at the scene.
A spark apparently sputtering out of
dying embers in a den fireplacl!: was
blamed for-starting the blaz.e.
By the lime several f ire trucks
dispatched to the scent!: arrived, the
flames had gnawed into the roof struc·
lure.
One veteran fireman credited the fact
that a door between the den and living
room was closed with containing amoke
and flames initially and _p rev en ti n g
deaths.
Damage estimates Included $10.000 lo
the residence itself and an additional
$8.000 t6 contenls, although some
valuables such as a gun collection were
saved.
fire Capt. Jack W. Jones suffered a
hand cut, but was not seriously injured,
investigators said. -
The Warmington family is known in lhe
liarbor Area for building and investment
activities. The family owns the Warm -
ington Construction Company, 300 N.
Newport Blvd., Newport Beach.
Fraternity Draft
Plan Proposed
To UCI Senate
6y GEORGE LEIDAL
01 lhl 0111, "'"' "'"
A lut!Cry system to draft member~ for
fraternities and sororities is being pro-
posed to the UC Irvine Academic Senate
as .~ wa y of overc:oming historic oir
pos1t1011 al UC! lo the collegiate social in·
stitulions.
The faculty committee on university
\1·e1Fare is recommending that 1he
Academic Senate approve a measure that
bans "rushing " and would alfow fraternal
organizations lo recruit members only by
•·the printing and dislrlbution o( descrip-
tive literature."
Secondly, the commillee. chaired bv
Charles A. Lave , assistant professor Qr
economics, suggests a f o u r . point
guideline for the lottery selection of
members :
-lnlerested students would place their
student body numbers in a lottery drum.
-F'raternities and sororities would tell
1he dean of students how many new
members they can accept.
-Only the pre\1Jously set number Qf
student body numbers would be djwn
fron1 lhe drun1. \
-Ont!: lollery each for fraternities and
sororities would be held.
In 1968 the Academic Senate oppoged
fraternities for the UCI can1pu5. After a
two year moralorium, Chancellor Danlel
c;. Aldrich Jr. has ~en asked to permit
the Meia/ groups on campus.
Advisory action by the ac.itdemic
iicnate, is due Thursday.
"\Ile memberii pcri;onally are not
eplhusia5Uc about fraternities: 1 n d
sororities.'' the ~·elf are com m It I e e
reports.
•·Such organizations ha''I!: a long history
ot discriminatory practices , .. and tend
lo promote v11lues lhfll are 8ntithetica1 to
lhc goals of an bitelleclua\ community.
''\Ve 11re s:ym1>31hellc lo the l'econd
par! of lhe argument .. but rctognlzlng In
It ~trong etcmcnls of thought control. we
reject It," the committee recom·
menda\ion said.
Douglas Zoning Action
Goes Back to County
. The proposed McDonnell Douglas ~ McDonnell Douglas officials argue !hat
airport property rezone goes before. the-it is the best use for the property and
Orange County -Board of Supervisors that to oppose the development is to sup-
Wednesday after a week's ~elay be.cau.se port a poli<'-y of "gloom and doom" as far
of th~ absence or Fifth D1str1ct as future economic improvement of the
Supervisor Ronald W. Caspers of central Orange County area is concerned.
Newport Beach. Newport Beach officials opposed the
Lasl week Supervisor David L. Baker change because, they say, it "wou!d far
of Garden Grove proposed that the outstrip projected demand of the area."
rezone he~ring should be de layed r.or 90 Newport Beach recently approved a
da~s pe~ding the .outcome .or the city of hotel-office building development on a
lrvtnl!: incorporation election. He was 200-acre si te a short di stance from the
overruled by other supervisors. Mcl)()nne!I Douglas property.
McDonnell Douglas has requested that Clouding the issue to be debated
the 50 acres on the northeast corner of \Vednesday is the adoption of a land use
MacArthur Boure.vard a~d Campus Dri.ve plan for the area by the Orange County
be rezoned from industrial to commercial Airport Land Use Commission. This bodv
use. has designated industrial use for the 5o
In lwo heated hearings before the coun-acres under discussion.
ly Planning Commission, the aerospace ff county super\'isors · appro\'e the
firm's representatives revealed plans lor rezone, squeaked by planners twice by a
a ZW-room hole! and 500,000 square feel 3-2 vote. the land use commission would
of office spacl!: on the site. simply ha\'e In reaffirm its designation
Opposition to the zone change comes for the properly and it ~·ould , hy state
from the, Irvine Company , the Irvine Jaw. require a four·ftflhs vote of the
Industrial Complex, UC Irvine and the supervisors to override the com mission .
City of N~wport Beach.
Irvine interests oppose the change
because. they say, it "violates the in·
tegrit y of the seven·year-<1ld general plan
ol the area."
Coonty Road Dtparlntent officials said
roadways in the area could not possiblv
support the increased traffic which v.·ould
be generated by the commercial develop-
ment.
Fii·e Engulfs {:enter
' Fire destroyed A 5i.r store shopping
eenter in r.arden Grove Monday morning.
Dan1age was estimated at $2.50.000.
A fire official said flames had spreiid
th roughout the complex by the time the
fir~t units arrived. Cause of the fire is
undetermined.
Three of lhl!: six slore!'i were completely
gulled and three others heavily damaged.
.J
Ac tress R ec ov ering
LOS ANGELES (AP )-Sandy Dunca n,
star of the "Funn y F'ace" television com·
edy series. is recovering well from
surgery l'K remove ll benign lumor from
behind her left rye. a spokesman says.
f'rBlll J>119e f
CONTRACT
isting computer program
porlionn1ent.
• • •
for reap-
Michael Berrniin . a Waxman staff
member . said, "Clearly, !here was no
other company that had any notion of
how to do it."
. Meanwhile tod ay, Assembly leaders in·
s1sted there was no connict of interest in
the award of a $200.000 reapportionment
contract without bids .
"How can you put something like 'reap-
portionment 0111 lo bid ? It's not
something like building a highway . This
1s a pnlitieal thing. and you have to have
ex:pericnced pe-0ple you can have con·
fidence in." said Ass('mhlyman John L.
Burton 1 f).San Francisco1. who awarded
the con1rAct as chairman -0f the Rules
Committee.
"They v.•err. the only group available
and 1,1·e're .~alisri<'d ~·ith the work lhcy 've
done," said Assemblyman Henry \Vax·
man !O.Los Ange!es 1. chairman nf the
Elections and ncapportioninent Com·
mittee.
THANK YOU, ERASTUS!
Coastline Bill
Amended Again,
Vote .Postponed ·
A rash of last-minute amendments to
the coastline control bill authorl!:d by
Assemblyman Alan Sieroty (l;)-Beverly
Hills) has resulted in a further one-week
delay of the measure in the California
Senate.
A spokesman for Senator Denni~
Carpenter (R-Newport Beach) said Mon·
day the bill is being reprinted for a se·
cond hearing next Monday before tbl!:
Natura! Resources and Wildlife C-Om·
mittee.
A spokesman for Assemblyman Rober t
Badham (R-Newport Beach ) said the
more than 30 new amendments to the bill
included one that would p r o h i b i t
homeowners living \\'ithin 1,000 feet of the
mean high tide line from painting thei r
houses ~·ithout approval of the regional
agencies the bill 1,1·ould establish.
The Sieroly bill, pockmarked with
amendments, is the last remaining
coaslline preservation bill given a chance
to pass the state legislature.
Another preservation bill. sponsored by
Assemblyman Edwin Z'Berg ( D-
Sacramento). was killed 1t1onday by the
Senate Governmental Organization C-Om·
mittee on a 3 to 6 vote. ·
Z'Berg's bill \\'ould have created 11
super ageney to control air. Water r.nd
land pollution. It had been passed by the
Assemblyman. but wa s not even debated
by the Senate committee.
His measure was backed by the
cnnservationist Sierra Club, but opposed
by local government officials who claim·
eel it v.·ould take av•ay local control.
, Other amendments to the Sieroty bill
indicated it would exclude from the
statewide coastal control portions of the
California shoreline-lying w i ! h i n
municipal boundaries.
!lowever, the exemption would not
spare Upper Ne~·port Bay from th!!:
purview of the superagency. Another
amendment indicates developments along
shoreline that is less lhan llO percent
de veloped \VOU!d be subject lo agent)'
review.
Should the bi!l be repor!ed , out of the
Natural Resources commiltee next Mon·
da y, it would still face approval of the
Senate finance Committee. Se n ,
Carpenter has said .
It occ&rrTed to us the other day that we owe a lot to an innovator in our
carpet industry who operated about 150 years aqo.
Here are some facts about ERASTUS BRIGHAM BIGELOW :
• Born 1814, W. Boylston, Mass.• Poor f~mily, required to work at age
10 as ferm hand and clerk. • Genius at math and mechanics. • At 23
years old , invented loom for lace. • Invented revolu~ionary power loom
for BRU SSELS and WILTON carpets. This created a domestic carpet in~
d ustry, and virtually eliminated foreign competition. • Founded BIGE.
LOW CARPET MILLS in Clinton, Mass. •Great economi,t1 one of small
group founding MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY at
Boston in 186 1. • Died 1879.
ERASTUS:
MY GRANDFATHER THANKS YOO! MY FATHER THANK~ YO U! I THANK YOU I MY
CHILDREN THANK YOU!
(Four 9•n•rt tion1 in the c:•rpet bu1in e11 1inc:• 189-4, +h•nk1 to tht in11 tntionl of
Mr. Bi91low.)
P.S. Amcnin9ly, without Erastus, Bi9elow Carpets have remained an industry
leader. Please stop in and see their sparldin9 carpet line. _
ALDEN'S
CARPETS • DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOU•S: Mon. "'"' Th•"·· t to 5:10 -Ftl., t to t -Sat., t :30 to J
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UPI Ntwl Me•
MAP SHOWS WHERE ROYAL AIR FORCE TRANSPORT CRASHEO
Pline Went Down With 46 lt1li1n Paratroopers Abo1rd
Air, Ocean l)isasters
[(ill Scores in Europe
By THE ASSOCIAT ED PRESS
Disaster stru ck at sea and in the air
over It aly today.
A British air force plane carrying 46
Italian paratroopers and six British
crewmen plunged into the sea off Italy.
To the northwest. a French freig hter ap-
parently broke up and sank in the Allan·
Uc.
And off the coast of South Africa .a
British tanker caught fire . Her crewWas
forced to abandon ship. but the captain
lelephon~ his headquarters in London
later that all Y.'ere picked up safely by
rescue vessels.
The British plane crashed into the
Ligurian Sea. There \Vere no reports of
:survivors and officials caned the crash
Italy's worst peacetime military air
disaster.
\\1recka ge [ro1n the four·engine C!31)
llercules transport plane was spotted by
.searching helicopters and ships off
ll'Ieloria. an island a few miles from the
port city of Leghorn.
The RAF craft was partici pating in
joint British·ltalian military exercises.
The French freighter in the Atlantic.
the ~laori, had 39 crewmen aboard .
Search planes reported sighting soine of
th~ sailors battling to stay alive and
French ai r force rescue teams dropped
an emergency raft.
A broadcast by Radio Brest in Brittany
said 13 bodies \\'ere sighted noating in
lifebelts but bad \vealhei prevented
rescue craft from picking them up.
Officials .said the 9.400-ton ri1aori car·
rying nickel fron1 Ne1v Caledonia to
France. sent out a distress call fron1
about 580 miles \Vest of La Rochelle. At
least four ships steamed tov.·ard the
scene to aid in rescue efforts.
The British tanker Heythrop. a 43.33(}..
ton craft built four years ago in Japan,
y,·as about JOO miles southeast of Durban
\vhen she messaged that fire had broken
out in one of her tanks. Capt. Alec l\1at-
thews calling from the rescue ship Showa
\1entura. told his superiors at P. a1\(LO.
Steam Navigation Co. that all aboard -
56 crewmen and fi\•e \Vi ves -had been
rescued after quitting the burning ship.
Fears of another acc id~nt \\'ere ra ised
at Shannon. Ireland. A Texas pilot had
radioed his wings y,•ere iced up, one of his
engines was sputtering and he \l'a:s run-
ning out of gas over the Allantic.
But Capt. A. B. Byrd. Pasadena, Tex ..
landed safely at Shannon Airport. His
Grununan SBR crop-sprayer was guided ,
by radar for the last 90 miles. Byrd was
traveling from Iceland. delivering the
plane from Altiany, Ga .. to Johannesburg,
South Africa. He planned to fl y on to
Africa tonight.
D1·af t Dodger Status L~f t
As Man Without Country
\VASHINGTON tUPl l -The Supreme
Court let stand today a decision that
'fhomas G. Jolley. 27·year·old draft
dodger v.•ho renounced his American
citizenshi p four years ago. now is a man
y,·ithout a country.
The court in a brief orde r rejected
Jo\ley's appeal from a decision by !he 5th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. That court .
sustaining the immigrat ion and
Manson Cohort
Grogan Must Die
For Shea Death
LOS ANGE LES i AP t -Steve Grogan,
11 member of Charles l\Ianson's hippie~
style clan. \vas sent enced r-.·londa y to
death for the murder of Donald "Shorty''
Shea, a n1ovie stuntman whose body
hasn't been found .
A Superior Court jury deliberated for
16 hours after receiving the penalty case
Friday. The same jury had convicted him
earlier.
Grogan. 20, smiled slightly at the
jurors as they announced their verdict.
l\lanson. already condemned for the
seven Tale·La Bianca murders in 1969.
v.•as conv icted last y,·eek in another trial
in the deaths of Shea and of Gary Hin·
man, a musician.
naturaliza tion servict, held that Jolley
\\•hile in . Canada had renounced his
citizenship. and said his action \\'as volun·
tary. meaningful, and binding ...
Jolley. a nath•e oi Geeensboro. N.C.,
registered for the draft .at Bremen, Ga ..
when he \\'as 18 years old in 1962. and
\\'SS given a student's deferment because
he v.•as attending the Unh1ersity of
Georgia. But early in 1967. he ltft school
and \\'ent to Canada.
From there. ht \\'rote his local board .
informing it of his change in statu s and
residence and asking that he be classified
as a conscientious objector. Instead he
\vas classed 's available fo r induction.
The following t.tay 16, he \\'ent before
the U.S. Consul in Toronto and formally
executed an oath of renunciation of
citizenship. saying . "1 do not \Vish to
.break the la\\'S of the lJ.S. These 1darft 1
lay,·s conflict v.·ith my beliefs."
lie returned his selectivt service
papers to his local drall board.
Jolley returned to the United State~
\\'ithout a visa in early 1968. He resisted
deportation after v.·hat an appeal s court
described as an "unannounced. unherald-
ed . and surreptit ious re-entry to lhis
country."
The court affirmed th~ immigration
board's order that he leave the country
Y.'ithin 90 days or be deported to Canada.
Jolley admitted sv.·earing the une-
quivocal renunciation of his citizenship,
but said this was done under duress -
his desirt to avoid breaking the selecth·e
service la1v.
Ben Blows It
Farned London Clock Stops
LONDON (UPI~ -Passersby stared in
amazeme11!, 0 r f i cc workers uninten-
tionally v.·orked overtime. Caliers jam·
med the switchboards at Parliament, the
?-.'11nistry of Works and newspapers.
The cause of the commotion ~londay
,,·as that Big Ben had stopped.
The 112·year-<ild clock above thg House
()f Parliament, one of the \\'orld's most
accurate timepieces, stopped st 4.:53 p.m.
for S7 minutes.
As a hurried call \C'ent to Thwaites and
Reed Ltd., caretaker of Big Ben, crowds
stopped In Parliament Square and stared
at the 23·fool clock faces.
John Vernon. one of the firm 's
engineers. rushed up the 336 steps to the
J2G-foot clock toy,•er and by 6 p.m. had
fixed ,Ult trouble.
A n1lnlstry of publlc \1·orks spoke~man
sald post office v.·orkn1cn had been in the
'to'.''Cr fixing a telephont link to ensure
that the clock striking 11 11 .m. Remem· •
• brance Sunda y coincided with a gun
salute.
"Unfortunately they left a cable hang·
ing on one of the counter·balance arms of
the clock hands," said Geoffrey Bugg ins,
managing director or Thwaites and Reed.
"'As the minutes ticked away, the cable
got itself entwined with the gearing al the
back of the clock face."
There did not appear fo be any damage
to the works. he said. "It's impossible lo
put a value on them -lhty are still Jn
beautifol condition. A llttle bit of
carelessness could have caused untold
damage.'' he said.
lt was not the first time BiJ B~n has
stopped because of a cartles9 workman.
The last time wa s in July, 1969, when a
balance weight got caught in Y..'Orkmen·s
scaffolding beh ind the clock' face.
Then there was tilt time In 1963 v.·hen a
\vorkman T!ft a sinall hand 11weeping
brush on the transmission sh.&fl. The
voice of Great Britain fell silent for 13
n1lnutes.
Tum41, "l)Ytll'lber •. 1971
Youths' Radif> Sea. ExploJ·er Heye1·dal1l
Turned Off; Cites Grave Ocean Peril No License \VASHINGTON (UPIJ -Ocean ex·
LOS ANG.EL~ {UPI )_ Four-day-old plorer Thor Heyerdahl reparted in tone!
radio statkln KPOT. a youlh"<lrlented FJ\I of despair Monday that he sailed through
station housed in a two-bedroon1 .apart· 'floating globs of oil for 4.3 of the \7 day!
ment with the aMow1cer's booth in a ft took to cross the Atlantic in his ~pyru;
closet was shut down ?-.1onday night by boat Ra 11 last year. Soch pollution wa!
the F e d e r a l Cumtl\unications Com-inisslon. not seen in his first famous voyage
aboard Kon 'fik..i in 1947. "Jt just shoCked us that the govern· ·1 ment would want to shut something like Some of the asphalt-like 01 ·globs were
this do"'"· I thought we were J'ust as legal the size of• sandwich. he said, and so1ne y,·ere lingef•shaped. Some had been afloat
-H DAILY PILO;" tJ
Nixon Plans
Coast Visit
For Holiday
President Nixon is planning to begin a !
working vacation in San Clemente on
Thanksgiving Day. It \\'as learned this
week. ••
Sources in Washington hinted that the
Chief Executive and his wi fe, PAt, would
attend a major football game somewhere
in the East on Thanksgiving then board
Air Force One for the trip west. as apple pie," said station manager Brad 50 long that barnacles had attached to
Sobel, 19. h . No confirmation has yet been officially: •
The SO.watt station, \\'hich has a tG-milc t em. range using Army surplus equipment . Al some points in the ocean. he sai d, ''a bucket could not be filled wi thout broadcast 58 hours or classical and rock some noatnng clots being caugllt at the
music without a government·assigned .same time.''
frequencv'before two FCC officers knock· From this evidence. he said, he con·
ed at Sobel's 'apartment door . They said eluded that man is killing the oceans -
they had monitored the station's broad· and endangering himself -just as he
cast and then ordered him to shut down. has killed Le.kc Erie.
"So right in the mid~le or the music.!' ··\Ve are not talking about aesthetics."
Sobel · said. "I walked over to !ht he said. "\\'e are talking about human
·transmitter -asked then1 if they really sur\•ival. ··
liked their jobs -then flipped the equip· !lis thinning blond hair brushing his
ment off. \Ve were all in tears," he sil.id. Shoulders and his accent reflecting his
"We played anything and everythin~ Nor.1•egia11 birth, Heyerdahl. 57. di scuss·
from Beatles to Bach," said the bearded cd pollution at a heliring of the Senate
young announcer, "and de spite our call Oceans and Atm osphere Subcomrt\ittee
lelte?"S:\(ll!-didn 't push"drugs:'' ----or"I'he-Destruct ion 1>f the Oceans.''
Sobel said he and his friends dicj not ap-1-feyerdahl's 1970 voyage in Ra 11. fron1
ply for a license because of the expense the Atlantic coast of Morocco in North
involved and an FCC requireine nt thiit Africa to the Barbados Islands off the
each station hiive a licensed engineer. coast of South America, proved that pre·
UP'I Ttltplltho
CITES POLLUTION
Seamen Heyerdahl
Columbus vessles. 1nade of a paper-like
substance, could have reac hed tropic
Ameri ca. . t
made by the \Vhile tlouse. •
The length of the possible visit to La
Casa Pacifica has not ye t been learned.
The trip \\'OU!d be the first to San
Clemente since the President's long
working vacation wh ich ended Sept. 3.
That visit, which lasted nearly thrtt
weeks, \\'BS marred by a massive oU slick
from a Navy tanker.
The mishap gained international at-
tention after traces of the thick fuel oil
stained the President's private beach in
San Clemente.
Principal Shot Dead
GROVE, Okla. (UPI) -T. J. ~felton,
Mi, principal or Grove Elementary School,
v.·as shot to death holonday in a janitor'•
storeroom at the school.
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f OAIL-V PILOT Tutsday, Novtmblt 9, 1971
•
B52s Pound Red
\
\ •• I ~ps
Buildup at DMZ
It's a Bird-
Naw, A Plane
By THOMAS MURPRINE
Of tllit Dloll'I' l'li.t SMff
WINGS OVER OUR COAST: By
golly, it wasn't too many years ago he.re
aklna £be seubore when you heard the
throaty roar of an aircraft overhead, you
looked up. I mean, it was an OCOJrTence.
ln the early years, it could have been
one of those intrepid birdmen airborne in
8ri old.Jenny or other wtri-ind-cloth co·n-
traplion from Eddie Martln'a Airport just
off Newport BouleYard near the village of
Co1ll. Mesa . " Or 1ater, the skyward roar might have
been George ••Peanuts" Larson in an old
red Waco doing stunts over San
Clemente. Times later-, the nier might
have been rormer Dally Pilot 1taffer and
aviatrix Evelyn Sherwood in her second.
hand •ingle-engine Army trainer winging
it from the old airstrip above the West
Newport bluffs.
YESSlR, IN :YESTERYEAR along the
Orange Coast, aviation was fun ex·
citement and adventure. Today 1it it
business. Big business.
You've got Orahee County Airport; for
example, where even today debate
ri.ges on whether or not Air California
will get a new )ease to fly out of the
place. And if Air Cal does will It 1et
more flights, fewer fli1hts ~r the same
number as present? '
Some days the airstrip at Orange Coun-
ty Airport is so buay It looks like an
airborne Chinese fire drill. But the county
air:drome doesn't ha ve a Jock on the skies.
The. United States Marine Corps flies a
bit in ou.r ter~itory_ out -0f the old lighter· tha~·airba~ 1n Santa Ana and· the big
&lat1on at El Toro. And Che police
departments In Hunfington B e a c h
Newport and Costa Mesa have gotten int~
the act pretty well too with their o"n
helicopter air forces.
. ~EEO', lT'S gotten these days .so the
k1dd1es don l turn the ir faces skyward in
eager anticipation when they hear the
roar. of the intrepid birdman bravely
~1ng aloft. They w i a c e and hug
Ch1nadoll to protect her from the aonic boom.
Flying airplane's today is bi(. You want
s~me idea how big, take a look at Hu1hes
A1rwest, who some 1might bill 11s one of
those "little regional 11irlines."
Well., the olher day I mused in this
space on howcome Airwest would ny one
plane out. or ·Orange County Airport to
Seattle wrthout a return flight. Do they
Ehip the thing back here by boil~
. PIT".' NO, replies Lee Pitt, public rela·
lions director for Airwest. As a matter of
fact, alt~ .the Orange County jet gels to Se~ttle, 1t IS then routed on to Por1!1nd
Boise, Salt Lake Ci(y and then terminate;
back in Los Angeles.
So they snea k it down from LA to ~a,nfe County for the next Seattle Oight,
r.ight · Wrong .. The next Seattle flight
likely , comes into Orange County from
Phoen1J" or Las Vegas.
"U'!°1:LE" AIRWEST, you see, flew
892 J?lilhon passenger miles last year in
&erv1n' more than 100 cities in three c~untr1es .and eight Western stales. Air~est. flies between 29 airports in Cah!om1a alone.
In 19fi:8, the airline used to be Air West,
Inc., being si merger or Pacifi c Air Lines
Bonania ' and West Coast Air!iues'.
Howard Hughes ~ught it in 1970 and
renamed it Hughes Airwest. Hughes Tool
Company owns 73 percent of it. Howard
holds the other 22 percent persona\lv
wherever he is. -'
Anyway, :rou get the notion that if
Orange County Airport is part of all this
It is indeed big busineu. '
With Howard Hughu Involved, you
guspect we may never return to the era
of the Flying JeMy.
Ul'l TtltllM!t
SAIGON (UPI) -Waves or Air Force
852 bombers swept in to 1muh Com-
munist antiaiccraft positions and supply
bunkers just seven miles ~ south of the
main headquarters for the demilitarized
zone (DMZ) defense line at Quana: Tri Ci·
ty today.
It was the first time in at least one
MAO, lEFT. AND CHOU EN-LA I, RIGHT, ALLEGEDLY ENDED PLOT
Heir App1rent Lin Pito, Center, Said Ousted, M•y 6e Dead
• year th.e eight-engine bombers had flown
strikes in the rolling, sparsely jungled
foothills .of the Annamile Mountains
overlooking the northern coastaf plain
and highway 1, the main north·south traf-
fic artery belpw the DMZ.
Mao·'s 'Heir'-.May Be Dead
Spokesmen said two waves of B~2s -
at least siJ1: warplanes -dropped about
180 tons o!~bombs on the guerrilla posi·
lions, about one mile apart an·d roughly
live· miles east of the· highway.
The targets were listed initially as
"about 10 supply bunkers in each loca-
lion," but spokesmen-later said allied-
helicopters had reported taking an-
tiaircraft fire from the area in the past
several days.
·r-~
Lin Piao Linked to Plot; Said Killed i1i Escape
WASHINGTON (UPI) -. Foreign
diplomats here report that Lin Piao, who
once was groomed as the successor ' to
Mao Tse-tung , has been oosted from
power in Mainland China and may be
dead.
Lin, China's defense minister since
1959, was purged this year when Mao and
Pfemier Chou En-Jal rooted out the last
vestiges of • military plot to overthrow
them, the diplomats said.
They added , however, there were in-
dications that the purge was a post-
mortem formality th a. t followed Lin's
death in a plane Cra sh in Mongolia.
The report made · by the diplomats
Monday night coincided in some respects
with rumori that surfaced in September
in Hong Kong and elsewhere. At that
Main Delegates
Of Cliina Leave
Peking for .U.N.
UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. tAP ) -
Three members of Red China'1 advance
party visited U.N. headquarters for the
first time today. The main delegation left
Peking for New York to cheers and
chants of thousands.
The group, headed by Kao Liang, was
greeted by a U.N. protocol official who
escorted the three Utrough a main cor·
ridor to the protoCol office. ,
.At the delegates' entrance th'ey made
their way through cameramen and
reporters, ignoring questions. They wore
dark Mao jackets and each carried a
briefcase ..
The Yugoslav news agency ';I'anjug
reported from the Chinese capital that
1everal thousand persons shouted slogans,
sang songs and danced as Chia o Kuan·
hua and his staff of about SO boarded a
Chinese airliner for Shangha i where they
will pick up a foreign commercial plane
for the trip lo the United States. They are
due here Wednesday.
Tanjug, which has B correspondent in
Peking. said the main slogan for the
departure ceremony was: "Long live the
victory or h-lsio Tse-lung 's proletarian
fore ign policy line !''
Consumer Protection
Approved in Senate
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -A strong
consumer protection bill that would crack
down on deceptive advertising nnd sale!
practices and make product warranties
more honest was pa ssed by the Senate
J\londa y.
The Senate approved the bill 76 to 2
after defeating by 57 to 24 a Repubtican-
led attempt to amend the lc~islation to
remove a provision tha t would allow the
Ftidcral Trade Commission ( Fi'CJ to get
quick injunctions to stop deceptive ads or
sales scheme while a case in decided in
court. ' ·
time, the Peking government prohibited
all aircraft operations over China. The
ban lasted -with 11 few exceptions -for
seven weeks.
American orficials declined comment
upon the latest reports by foreign
diplomats other than to say it was ob·
vious something had happened to Lin
Piao.
U.S. officiall said they knew nothing of
Lin's fate or any details of the reported
Chinese struggle for power.
However, the_.d\plomatic sources said
Lin's fellow COR!pirators included the
army and air force chiefs of staff.
The sources did-not know the names of
the chiefs but assumed they were Wu Fa-
hsien, the air forct member of the
Chinese Politburo, and Huang Yuang-
sheng, the army member. The site was seven miles south of I~in, Wu, Huang, and Li Tso.peng, the ·Quang Tri combat base which overlooks
navy Politboro member, were absent the major land connection between Qual}f
from the Ocl. I ceremony in Peking Tri. headquarters of the South Vief-
1narking the anniversary of the Com-namese 1st Div isio n, and major supply
munist regime, lhe sources pointed out. bases to the south. When the plot was exposed and failed, h the diplomatic sources said, Lin and T ere was heavy fighting for rontrol of
some of the higher-ranking military con-two allied fire support bases overlooking
spiralors tried to esca ... to lhe Soviet the Quan~ Tri Valley, Nui Boa Ho r.nd ·
r-Base Camp Sarge in a Communist of-Unifln on an air force plane, which crash-fensive last summer. So uth Vietnamese
ed in Mongolia. forces withdrew from both bases but
The Mongolian Press Agency reported l_~ter reoccupied Nui Ba Ho.
Sept. 30 that a Chinese air forc-epfane -lntelligeri.ce orficers said later the Com-
had gone off course and crashed deep in· munists might later try to cut off
side Mongolia .near: tht Soviet border the , ~northern Qua~g Tri Province and dri ~
night of Sept. 12·13 with nine persons kill-the South Vietnamese out after American
ed. lt identified none of the dead and troops withdrew.
there was no indication of survivors. It was the first time in more than a
yea r that B52s had flown rsiids in the
Cutoff of P~{istan Arms
Political Boo~ for Nixon
area south Of Quang Tri. a ma ior forword
headquarters below the DMZ, military
spokesmen sald.
Action was a!So reported along !he rim
of the A Shau Valley, a heavlly-used
Communist infiltration route along the
Laotian border. B52s flew one raid
'
WASHINGTON (AP) -The cancella-
tion ol U.S. anns shipment! to . Pakistan
tias taken a weapon from. tbe ha11ds of
one of the Nixon .Administration's most
vocal critics while mt.king important
diplomatic gains.
Administration officials acknowledged
domestic political benefits will be one of
the major results ot Monday's arms·
cutoff anncwnc~ment_,_ ~
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, -t be
High Court OKs
Women's Rights
In Two Rulings
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme
Court refused today to interfere with a
lower cnurt ruling that f)e11.5iOR p I a n s
compelling women workers to relire at
an ea rlier age than men is 11 civil rights
\'iolalion.
In another action, the court let stand a
circuit court decision that airlines cannot
impose a "women only" qualification for
the job of night attendant without
violating the civil rights law against sex-
ual disorimination. ·
The pension order came in the form of
a brief order without comment. It left
standing sn appeals court decision which
is technically binding only in the states of
Indiana. Illinois and Wisconsin which that
circuit conta ins.
Bul it could have widespread im-
plications if nnd when suits on behalf nf
v.·omen's rights are decided in other
areas of the country.
The ruling on behalf of an Indiana
woman brewery employe came from the
7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals which
said that forcing women to retire earlier
than men "is tantamount to dlscha rj!e.''
on the basis of sex and thus violates the
1964. Civil Rights Law.
Massachusetts Democrat who had Jed the
constant cirilicism of the arms aid, .said
the cutoff "is a welcpme first . step in
what I hope will be-a redirecting of our
policy in South Asia ."
But other sources on Capitol Hill and in
the administrii,tion said the arms can-
cellation removed one of Kennedy 's most
polen~ ·issues while , relieving con-
gressional pressure on both the White
House-and the mi.titary regiml in._
Pakistan.
Both sides apparenl\y had this' in mind
in agreeing to the cancellation. Acc-0rding
to State Department ,spokesman Charles
W. Bray, "neither we nor the govrrnment
o( Pakistan v•ere unaware of the con·
troversy" this subject has generated in
the United States.
Another and perhaps 'even more im·
portant result is an impro vement in U.S.-
lndian relations.
The Indians never were really con-
cerned with the amount of the shipment,
mostly spare parts and small pieces of
equipment worth less than $S million
since last Afarch.
The real problem in the eyes of the
New Delhi government was what it saw
as the impl ied approval of Pakistani ac-
tions, particularly in the rebell ious East
Bengal province, that lhe shipments
represented.
So, the end of American mil itary sales l? the Pakistani military regime at a
time when !he two subcontinent nation s
appear on the \'erge of a general wsir is
bting read in New Delhi as 11 sy mbolic
victory.
Amchitka Cave-in
Registers Five
Richter Points
-tr -tr
H eaviest Rains
In Centur y S~ow
Hanoi Supplies
SAIGON (AP ) -Torrenlial ra ins, by
some accounts the heaviest in JOO 'years,
appear-to-have delayed-North-Vietnam's
annual dry season push of war materials
southward. ~
Informed sources said today that the
main supplf network , the Ho Chi Minh
trail running through eastern Laos, is
now beginning to dry up and truck traffic
has increased slightly.
"But there is no big push yet," said one
source. "Typhoon Hester seems to have
delayed .a~y significant enemy activity . It
was anticipated the push would begin lhe
last half of October and things would be
well under wa y by now."
Typhoon Hester caused catastrophic
damage in the northern quarter of South
Vietnam two weeks ago and dissipated
over eastern Laos. Rains spawned by the
storm caused landslides and interrupted
road construction along the ~mile trail
network.
-
Cold Weather. Marks Fall
A~1CHITKA, Alaska (UPI) -The land
lrnmediatety above lhe site of the most
powerful U.S. underground nuclear test in
history collapsed Monday into a h u Jt' e
crater. The collapse was caused by shift
of earth that registered 5 on the Richter
liCSlle.
From New York to Carolin.as, It's Freezing
«:.rlfontl•
€outal
Hin• _,,,.,. tldly. L+tf'lt ¥••1•111e
""""" """' ..... "*"""" i'leuft flfo C'Ofttlllt w.,1.,-ty I llfl 11 tlll'h Ir> 1•·
,........,.. foclfy t M W..,....t1. HJM
fO(lt¥ 7f,
(MtNI 1--'ll•H -I~ • le .i lftlllllf "'""'"9fllrw ,,_ t~
I.II M n. w.1.., ~fur• u . V.S. Summary
I Y U!11lt4 111,..., •-•t llfftl
Ato1nlc Energy Commission (AEC~
!ipokesman Dave Jackson said the ground
movement, which occurred 38 hours after
Saturday's blast 5,975 feet below, ha d
been expected . The five-megaton ex-
-plosion formed an ftOO.foot diameter cavi-
ty more~ITian one mile beloW the ground·r
surface.
••No radi ation escaped." Johnson said.
''But when the cavity cooled and pressure
\ni;ide it decreased, the earth above it
collapse<! and filled the ciivity ." .~ There wa s some sc.fmic activity at th e
.oe sit e until the rollapse. then it cea&ed, he
said . . M Two dead seals and two dead sea otlt'rt
were found Mond11y, Jackson s1id. adding
01 that all the Rnimals had. 1ustained in·
.11 lt'rnal injurle5.
Thirteen dchd birds of var}ous :iipecitll
"'ere found. he said, but none were of .S: species C'OnSldered endangertd.
against a Communist trucic route In tht
northern end of the valley today and a
U.S. AHl Cobra helicopter was shot down
nearby on Mond11y. Both crewmen
escape'd lnjury. ·
Heath Figh_ts
New Pressure
Over Ireland
LONDON (AP ) -Pressure is buildlng
on Prime Minister Edward Heath to pull
out the 14-,000 British troops ln Northern
lreland,_buJ both Jleatb _and opi&sillo11
leader Harold Wilson are opposed to such
a drastic step.
Foremost, they fear a pullout would
touch off a bloody civil war that could
engulf the south as well as the north of Ireland. •
At the same time, such an admission of
British inability to preserve order in the
Irish province could tempt Scottish and
Welsh nationalisU to try to quit the
United Kingdom.
There is another unspoken reason.
Some British authorities are convinced a
military withdrawal would expose a
united Ireland to 11 Communist takeover,
creating conditions for aJI "Irish C\lba'•
on Britain's doorstep.
Nevertheless Heath's Conservatives
and Wilson'.s.-Labori!es are aware that
the existing deadlock, with iU endless
shootings and bombings, must be broken
if Northern lrrland is not to bleed to
death.
. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D·M~ss. l.
introduced a resolution in the U.S. Senate
Oct. 20 calling for British troops to quit
Northern Ireland . and he warned that the
province could become Britain's Viet·
nam. He was met by angry criticism
from Heath and most Br it i 1 h
newspapers. but surveys of British public
opinion since then disclose widespread
approval of Kennedy's demand.
In the latest Gallup Poll. -4-4 perctnt or
those questioned ~·ant the troops to 1tay
in Northern Ireland, but 39 percent favor
their withdra11.•al. And the National Opi·
nion Poll found 59 percent in fa vor of a
pullout.
Marcos' Party
Losing -Election
MANILA (AP) -With u no ff i c I a I
returns in from more than 40 pfrcent of
the country. candidates from the op-
position Liberal party were leading for
seven of the eight senatorial seals at
stake. Pre sident Ferdinand E. Marco!I
appeared in for a major rebuff. •
In the 15,085 races for municipal and
provincial ofrices, a strong m11jority of
the candidates from Marcos ' Nacionalista
party appeared to be winning, but many
contests were not decided.
The senatorial race was the only na·
lionwide contest in the voting Monday
and the Liberals campaigned hard on the
contention that the election midw1y in
Marcos' second term was a referendum
on his performance.
,.
Sun, llloou. Tldu
TUIJOAY
... (_.. f'l\tll •• '111. .... • 4
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(flt!IM to 11\t C•rt!u'oat lO(l1y, !" tM'
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sntw ti ft1.t tr•-·
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•"0111t• ltctrt •11 It~ t t Wll~tt ltr•
•• "'"" •• mt r11••cu•v 11!~ to '1 a! k•entofl ,\1111orl
It, htM ,,_ llO<m Ind ..,.., l•ttllllt
Clf<t71f IUf~<lt"ll 1111'1!'11r., l\!lllOlt """ t a\tt r" lo•• M"°"'a\I l'll!ftf. Olloc!1!t 11
'"'t•oe·1 0'""•'" ''""""' rt lll)rtHI • 11..,t, "'11 mt11urMoJ1 lh1rrY t t It ,,,..,
.. ll(IO h•O l"Ch•I of •"OW WfJ rl'(ll'd""
•• Dtt M0•11t1. low• 111 • tl•-l\9ur M• ..
'10ne peregrine falcon nett and five
csigle nests were destroyed, but of course
the birds are not nesting 1t this time of
y~ar,'' Jarkson said.
'He said SC\'Cral hund,red rock grecnling
fish, which live In kelp bed!i along
Amchllka's shorelll'le. were found dead as
London Jtlodestt' -· ·-WIONllOAY ,lrtl flle!I
l'l,ll l9of
i «OIMI i'llt!!
'""'! .. IUlll , fl:lltl t ~ I "' ...._! lllt• II •• .,,
r
. J:llt1 ..... '" It :• t m, t.1 ,, .. ,,.. '·' It )t • ''" 0,1 5tll • }f ......
'"' 11 :11 '·"'·
, -•
llflrll' '""Ill'" lt,..,,.,tlu•t• •INN 11110 1!'141 1ff"l ot _.,,.,,.,.y, N,Y,
tlMtlltritd • ••<oro llflw •••ft•11t1 °' t i ti l ufltlto t nd :ro .i 1:6tl'>ttltr, Ny ,
i
~! -were a l11r~c number of three ··~inne
sti cklrback fl~h. <t non-gsmc fi~h Jiving In ... IBkcs on Amchltka .
\Vearing a considerably more subdued costume.than the slit dress she
wure to a White ltou!le Slate Dinner, ?l-1rs. \Villiam M c~1ahon is flank·
ed by Britis h Pri me f\-Iinister Edward l·feath JLl and her husband. tht
prime minister of Australia prio r to dinner at lO Do\1rning Street.
7
. . • • •
New~pora · B-:aeh
• ' EDITION
r • ' . • •
Today's Fln~I
VOL 64, NO. 268. 2 SECTIONS; 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA .. • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, '1971 TEN CENTS
,
·~ t' ' .. • •
' >fl \· ~ • • •
DAILY "lL0T-Ph•lt by IUch1rd l<Mhllll'"
FIREMAN SPLASHES WATER ON SMOLDERING ROOF OF CORONA DEL MAR HOME
Door Th1t Was Closed Probably Saved Lives, According to Fire Investigators
Rezo11e Hearing
On McDonnell
Property Sl~ted
11JC proposed McDonnell Douglas
airport property rezone gf}eS before the
Orange County Board or Supervisors
'\'ednesday ::ifter a \\'eek's delay because
·of the absence of Filth Di.strict
Supervisor Ronald W. Caspers ~
Newport Beach.
Last week Supervisor Da.\'id L. Baker
of Garden· Grove proposed that tlw!
rezone hearing should be ·delayed Jar 00
days pending the outcome of the city of
Irvine incorporation election. He was
overruled by other supervisors.
l\1cDonneO-DOuglas has requested that
the 50 acre~ on the_ northeast. corner of
MacArthur Boulevard and Campus OrivC
be rezoned from industrial to commercial
use.
In h\10 heated hearings before the coun·
ty ·Planning Commission, the aerospace
firm 's representallves revealed plans for
a 250-room hotel and 500.000 squarl! feet
of office space on the site.
Opposition to the zone change comes
fro1n the Irvine Company, the Irvine
lndustri41l Comple:o<, UC Irvine and the
City of Newport Beach.
Irvine inlerest!'l oppose the change
because. they sny. it "violates the in-
tegrity or the seven-year-illd general plan
of !he area."
County Road Departn1ent officials !'laid
roadways in the area could not possibly
11upport the increased traffic "':hich would
be generated by lhe ron1mercial develop-
ment.
~1cDonne11 Douglas officials argue that
it is the best use for the property and
!hat lo oppose !he development is to sup-
port a policy of "gloom and doom•· as far
as future economic improVelilent of the
central Orange County area is concerned.
Newport Beach officials opposed the
change because, they say. it ""·ould far
oulstrip projected de1nand of the area."
Newport Beach recently approved a
holei{)Hice building de\'elopment on a
200.acre site a shorl distance from the
1-fcDonnell Douglas property.
Clouding lht issue to be debated
\\'ednesday is the adoption of a land use
plan for the are"a by the Orange County
Airport Lr.nd Use Commission. This bodv
has designated industrial use roi the So
acres under discussion.
Mari11e Stricken
By Meningitis
Family Flees $·18,000
Blaze in Harbor Hills
'l'he son of a llarbor Area builder and
hi!! family fled with their lives early to-
day, when an $18.000 blaze roared
through their Harbor View •1 i I l s
residence.
One fire captain suffered mioor tn-
. juries batlling the blaze .• from which the
!ii'ctlms' pet dog was rescued safely after
btlng trapped. ·
Jn0y·estigators blamed a spark frotn I
fireplace for setting the blaze at the
Edward G. "Bud'' Warmington Jr., ,
home, 8607 Sausalito Drive.
The street was formerly nam~
Sea foam Drive. . --
Firemen resonding to the 1:24 a.m.
alarm found Warmington. his wile and 1-
year-illd daughter safely outside.
Crac kling flames awakened then1 and
~trs. Warmington scooped up the infant,
firemen said at the scene.
A sp1M;k apparently sputtering out of
dying einbers in a den fireplace y,•as
blamed for starting the blaze.
By the time several firetrucks
dispatched to the scene arrived. the
flames had gnawed Into the roof struc-
ture.
One veteran-fireman crtdited the faCt
that a door between the den and living
room was closed with containing smoke
and Daines initially and pre v t n ti n g
deaths.
Damage ~mates included $10,000 lo
!he residence itself and an additional
S8.000 lo contents, although some
\'aluables such as~ a gun collection were
-saved.
fire Capt. Jack W. Jonts suffered a
hand cul. but "'as not seriously injured,
investigators said.
The Warmington family is known in the
Harbor Area for building and in vestment
activities. The family owns the \Varm-
ington Constructio:it Company, 300 N.
Newport Blvd., Newport Beach.
Newport Council Meeting
Brief, But Active Mo11day
Newport Beach councilmen l\.1onday
night "'hisked through the affairs of the
city in near-record time, adopting a dog
ban, a garbage ordinance and ad-
ministering a handful of other city affairs
at a meeting that lasted only 12 minutes.
Dogs are now prohibited on the ocean-
front beaches and sidewalks behveen 9
a.m. and 5 p.m.
Garbage is not prohibited, but there are
rules now that cans must be kept out of
sight of city streets ·and side\valks must
be ·kept reasonably clean.
In other action . the council :
-Ordered staff to prepare a resolution
of intent to form a special alley assess~
ment district in Newport ffeighl!'l and
Balboa.
-Authoriled construction of a swim·
nling float at the loth Street Bay beach.
-Rejected a request by the Symphony
Association of Orange County £or a $1.000
donation.
-Ne.med Councilmen Carl Kymla and
Howard Rogers and Planning Com-
missioner Curt Dosh to an ad hoc com-
mittee to select a consultant to do An
economic study as part or master plan
updating project
-Sent to the Planning Conlmission pro-
posed mobile ho1ne park developmenl
standards that would be used to guide
construction of such a park on the cily-
vwned dump property on 191h Street,
presuming the buyer will want to build a
mobile home park there.
-Scheduled a public htaring for Nov.
22 on a proposal to eslabli!'lh a 35 mile-
per-hour speed limit on Newport I-fills
Drive East and \I/est. and a 40 mile-per
hour limit on Ford Road behveen
J\.1acArt.hur Boulevard and n e \V
J\.1acArthur Boulevard and on ne1v
J\.1acArthur Boulevard bet"·een Ford
Road and San Joaquin Hills Road .
lJC lr·vi1ie Proposal
Air Cal Pact Ol('d
I
County Approv~s Five-year L~ase, 4-1
By JACK BROBACK
Of flle Dllltr PIW.t Slaff
Orange County supervisor!'! today ap-
['lroved .a new five-year contract with.
Air Caliromia-for use of the county a.ir4
port.
The vote was 4 to 1. \vith Supervisor
David Baker casting the dissenting bal-
lot. Baker said he wanted more time to
study the proposal.
The vote clime on a motion by Fifth
District Supervisor Ronald Caspers of
r•.ie11•port Beach.
~pro\•?J of the contract v.1as based on
these stipulations :
-The tenn oI the contract is fi\'e
years. \Vilh review al one.year intervals
.:ind \vith the county retaining the right
to te!'minate with 30 days notice. -
-The average number of flights per
diiy limited to 24.6. Takeoffs v.i \J be
litnil.td to the hours of 7 a.m. to 10 p.m.
l.andings \viii be limited to 7 2~m. to 11
p.m. No planes louder than OC9s and 737s
currenll.v in use. All engines shall be
smokeless prior to si~ning of lease.
Prior to today's action. more than 500
Industrial and business firms, organiza·
lions and individuals had supported Air
Califo rnia on the theory that ai r
transport is importanl lo the county's
economy and a great convenience to up
to one ~illlo county re sidents a year
who use t rlines.
In op sition '"as the vocal Ne\vport
Beach Noise Abatement Committee head-
ed by Dan Emory and Newport Beach
councilmen "·ho are caught between the
opposing forces.
Air California, through its ?.resident
Robert Clifford. wanted a 5-year renewal
of the lease.
Newport wanted the new • I e a s e
restricted lo a montb-to-monlh..or ):.early
basis and Clifford emphatically rejected .
thi!'l as a highly uneconomical basis upon
which a multi-million dollar company is
being asked lo do business. ,
He driw support from the Huntington
Beach, Costa Me!'la and Anaheim city
coonclls on the time period question.
Newport also requested that tM
Pact Reportedly
Goes to Finn
Linked to Solon
SACRAMENTO <UPI\ -A Southern
Califo rnia firm, whose officers include
former ASSt'mbly t'mployes and a
re.laUve of the Assembly Democratic
Caucus chairman. is the holder or a near-
ly' $200,000 computer contract for reap-
portionment. tht San Jost 1-iercury
reported today.
The· contract was awarded without
bids. lhe newspaper said.
Chairman of the board of American
Co mputer Resources (ACRI is \Villiam
Butcher. broth e r in lr.w of Assembly-
1nan Kenneth Cory (D-Garden Grovel.
and a member of Cory's legislative staff
in 1967, the newspaper reported. Butcher
is married to Cory's wife's sisttr.
Cory says there is no conOict of in-
terest involved in the contract with ACR.
"l have no financial interest in ACR. If
there was anything at all unheallhy . and
I don't personally think so, it is that we
all grew up in the business together."
ACR wa s awarded the contract Feb. 3
to develop reapportionment data for the
Assembly elections and reapportionment
committee. whose c h a i r m a n i!'l
Assemblyman Henry \Vaxman (D-Los
Angeles ),
Bids arc not required for contracts
awarded by the Legislature and paid for
with Assembly contingency funds.
The new!'lpaper said ACR President
\\'illiam Below is "a close persona l
(See CONTRACT, Page Z)
.•·
number of flighl!'l be held to existing
·Jevels -about 21 a day. CliUord said a
projection of~ a day ha!! been made for
1972 which he cailed "realistic" in view
of the growing passenger and air freight
demand .
Clifford has not beeO passive in his
company's drive to renew its lease. He
has canvassed industrial and business
leaders as ~ell as organizations.
~ "We reel it is important for airline
users lo express themselves, so the
supervisors will recognize the com·
mercial value of the airport the money It
has brought into the county," he argued.
It has been pointed out that $700,000 a
year in business would leave the county
and property taxes totaling $1S7,000
"'OU!d be eliminated if the airlines are
forced out of the airport.
' The old lease between Air Californla
and the county only covers ticket office
space in the terminal" building, plus
tiedovm and passenger loading privileges.
DAILY ,ILOT 1'9ff ,,.._
HE DOESN 'T LIKE BEING ACCUSED OF SWIPING TRASH CAN
Swamper GarnHy Takes Lie Detector Test to Clear Name
Newport Ru~ktis
Lie Test Taken on Garbage Can
If Mrs. Ann Peterson of Eastbluff
thought she was upset because her
garbage can was stolen. she should have
seen the refuse crewmen she accused of
stealing it.
"They were fit to be tied,'' said City
~1anager Robert Wynn.
''They demanded that they be given a
polygraph examination," said Jake
Mynderse, general services director.
Last week ~1rs. Peterso n filed an $8.49
claim against the city for the trash can
she said was missing one day when she
came home from her teaching chores at
Eastbluft School.
1Ylyoderse said in fairness to the crew,
driver Neil Worthen and swamper John
Garnsey, 1''ho had worked that block in
Eastbluff on that IU·fated day, he told
them they could have the opportunity to
clear themselves.
Garnsey, who as swamper actually
handles the loading of trash, went to the
Huntington Beach Police Department and
took a lie detector test.
The examination, administered at no
charge to the city -although Mynderse D
had vowed to pay for it personally if lhere
was -exonerated Garnsey, Wynn told
the city council Monday night.
Councilmen routinely rejected the $8.49
claim as · a consent calendar item,
although later Mayor Ed Hirth had some
kind words to say about Worthen and
Garnsey.
"\Ye art very proud of the staff of this
city, even the people who pick up trash,"
Hirth said.
Vice Mayor }loward Rogers wondered
if councilmen might take up a collection
for '-1rs. Peterson.
"Are you going to pay for the ones I've
lost too," asked Councilman Richard
Croul. The matter was then dropped.
Orange Coast
Weat•er A young !\1arine private fr o n1
Oklahoma "'as reported in ''v_ery serious"
cond!Uon al the Can1p Pendleton base
hospital today after being stricken ~·ith a
noncontagious form of memingilis early
last \veeltend.
Fraternity 'Draft' Eyed
Students Pedal
ToCounty Meet
Ninety Corona de! ~1ar High School
students made a du'al purpose bicycle
ride to a meeting or the Orange County
Board of Supervisors in Santa Ana this
morning. •
Don't look for any lifting of the
fog on Wednesday, the weather
lady warns. 1t;11 ~· the same kind
of da,y with temperatures ranging
from 63 on the beaches to 73
further inland. Pfc. Dpnald R Loflie. 17. of the base
1chools battalion Was hospitaliud late
Frlday •. base spokesmen said.
Loftie Was the third 'vietlin reported
thi.:s year of menlgococcemla mentngltiS.
.
Newpo1·r--tu Honor
' Pol ice a t Luncl1e0n
Newport Beach's nrsl Ji)Tice a""ards
luncheon will take pla ce Wednesday at
noon at the &alboa Bey Club.
Awards for valor aod merit will be: 9re.
sented to ri\'t: city policemen. -
Tickets for the event are $10 a per-
son and ca n be obtained at the Newport
Ha.rbor Ch•mber of Coinmerce, span.sor
or the evenL
•
By GEORGE LEID.U.
Of llMI Deli. ,UM Sl•lf
A lottery system to draft members for
rratemities and sororities is being pro-
posed \o the UC Irvine Academic Stnate
as a way of overcoming historic op-
posit1on at UCI to the colleglate social in·
10hitlonl.
The_ facu]y committee on university
.,elfare is recommending that lhe
Academic Senate approve 'a measure that
bans "rushing" and would a!Jow rraternol
organiialions to recruit members only by
•:the printing and distribution of descrip-
tive literature."
Secondly, the committee, chaired by
Charles A. Lave, a!'lsi11tant professor of
economics, suggests a "four ··po Int
guideline for lbe lottery selection of
member1:
-Intere!'lted students would place their
student body numbers in a lottery drum.
-Fraternities and sororities would tell ..
the dean of students how many new
members they can accept.
-Only the prevklusly set number of
student body numbers 'A'Ould be drnwn
from the di\im. -
-One lottery each for fraternities •nd
sororities would be held.
In 1968 the Academic Senate oppoged
rratemlUes for the. UCf campus. After a
two year moratorium, Chancellor Daniel
G. Aldrich Jr. has been asked to permit
the social groups on campus.
Advisory action by the academic
senate, is due Thursday.
"We me1nbers personally are not
enthusiastic abouL fraternUles • n d
Sororities,'' lhe 'A'elfare comm It tee
repotU. ·
"Such organizations have a long history
of dlst:riminatory practices ••• and tend
to promote values that are antithetical to
the goals of an intellectual community.
"We are sympallietic t o ilie!eeond
part of the argument ... but recogniiing in
it ·strong elements of lboughT con'friif.:w!
reject it ," the committee recom-
m'endation !'laid.
"Either our intellectual values art good
enough to compete with conflicting values
or they are not. ..
The proposed lottery is designed to
keep fratemities or sororities [tom
discriminating "against Individuals at
lrvl!1'1" the welfare committee con·
cluac<1.
''They are members of urban affairs
and government .classes," explained
social studi~ instruct.Dr Mike l\1ang. "'Ve
want them to see local government in ac-
tion and we are promoting bicycle
trail!!."
Aiding ~ang in supervising · lhe trek
wa!'l Jen Elston, Engllih instructor.
Ttie group or boys and girls left Corona
del P.1ar High School et 7:30 a.m. and ar-
rived at the county administration
building at 6th and Sycamore streets In
Santa Ana about 8:30 a.m. They av'oldtd
the freeways, riding up !\1acArlhur
Boulevard to !\lain Street in Santa Ana
and then on to their destination.
They plan .to spend about one and a half
hours at the supervisors' sessl-On, eat bag
lwicbes and then 1tart. back for school •
. -
INSIDE TODAV
Diplomatic sources have rt·
porU!d Afoo Tst-tung's designat·
td heir Lin Pioo 10Q8 ltrv0h>td
in a plot, oiutect from It.is-office
and ptr11ap1 kilttd ht a plant
crash i.uhile escaping. SlOfM
Page 4.
C1llr.rnl1 t Clltcklllt V, 1
Cllulfl.. U·llt
C.l'l'llCI 1$ c ... uwen1 n Dtll~ Mille•• t
Ofw.rcn t
1•11tr111 ''" • llll•"llftlMflt It
,lfllftff U.11 .,.._,. 14
Ann Llllffra IJ
=~, ..... : MlllHtl '""9 4·1
Or-C-ty t s,1v11 ,.IM"f., 21
S•h 1f.ll
Slldt Mtr1111h »ti T11rfhllll lt
'"'""'' '' W•llMr 4
Wtmtn't lrtlWt 1).14
WHI• Newt ...
~·
•
' •
• z DAiLV PILOT
• •
"
-Union U1·ges -
Big Strike
Over Rule s
MIAMI BEACH (AP) - A major AFJ,,.
CIO union urged today a n11tionwlde
general litrike if necessary to reverse pay
re.gulations imposed by President Nixon's
Pay Board .
"We are shocked an~ disappoint ed !hat
the fir st vote. taken by the Nixo n
Administration's Pay Board consliluted
11n attack on the economic standards and
the general welfare of !he working people
'of our country.'' said the executive board ot the 500,000.mcmber Amalgamated
Me"t Cutters Union.
The union's board, conducting one of a
series of AFLrCIO meetings here, said it
will introduce a rt.,Wlution before lhl!:
main AFl.rCIO convention next week to
urge a nation.al work stoppage."
"The: Pay Board has robbed scores of
thousands of our members of fairly
negotiated and non-inflationary wage in·
creases which were due to be paid in
-September under agreement5 worked out
more than a year ago," said the Meat
· Cutters' statement.
The Pay Board Monday announced a
~eneral 5.5 percent wage hike limitation
and ruled our retroactlvity in most cases
f"r pay hikes rrozcn since Aug. 15. 1'he
fi~ industry and five public mell}bers of
lhl!! board outvoted the fi ve labor
members. including AFL-CIO. President
Gecint;e Meany.
"The Pay Board majority has Uiken
money out of the pockets of hard-working
and hardpressed food workers and put it
into the treasuries of immensely wealthy
corporations," said the Meat Cutters.
Meanwhile., AFL-CJO leaders were split
t1ver whether to quit the Pay Board or
ft 11ay on it and fight its ruling on Phase 2
wage Increa.es and deferred pay boosts.
While most of the labor leaders are
awaiting officirJ word Ir<im AFL-CIO
President George Meany on what course
to take, some advocate an lmmedlate
walkout of the five labor members from
the ts.member Pay Board established bX
President Nixon.
"If President Meany wants to rcsim
from the Pay Board, he has my support,"
Edward J . Carlough, President of the
Sheet Metal Workers, said Monday night.
But President Maurice Hutcheson of
the Carpenters union said, "If you walk
off the board, how can you argue with Its
decisions?"
The Pay Board ruled Monday that arter
the current wage-price freeze terminates
Sunday the general Jimit of pay raises
will be 5.S percent.
It also ruled that payment of raises lost
because of the current freeu: will be
allowed only in a limited number of
1pecifically approved cases.
From Page J
CONTRACT. ••
• fiieriif" or COry-anif they both worked
together on the Assembly staff in 1965.
Also employed by ACR is Gary
Bamberg who worked for the Assembly
from 1965 to 1968, the Mercury said.
Although Butcher is no longer actively
engaged in the company. he slil\ holds
stock as well as his nonsalaried title as
chairman of the board. He left ACR late
last year while negotiations were still in
progress with the Assembly. From
March I to Oct. 31 , he worked for the
Senate Ele(tions a n d Reapportionment
Committeet.
The l\lercury reported !ha t ACR recciv·
ed the Assembly contract at a time when
the firm's financial problems endangered
its survival.
Below said. ''l didn't know if we could
stay open. We were hoping the contract
could make a difference."
DAll.Y I'll.OT 11tlt 1'114111
Portt•uit of 110111. Fntt
Mike Loos, 2, Newport Beach, expresses feelini;::!i of loyal Ram fans
following Monday night's game in Baltimore. For post·mortem on
Rams' 24·17 Joss to the Col ts, see story on Page 16 in today's sports
section.
Yachts in Race to La Paz
Struggle in Light Winds
B.v AtMON J.OCKABEY
DAILY l'!LOT li•tlln1 t•1tor
Lead yachts in the Long Beach lo L11
Paz race toda y moved past Cedros Island
off the Baja California coast as light
winds continued to slow the progress of
the 970 mile race.
Fighting for the elapsed time lead were
Ragtinie, the 62·foot 6cratch boat owned
by a Long Beach Yacht Club syndicate,
and the 58-foot ya wl Min Sette. skippered
by Joe Pollock of Rose City Oregon.
Winds ha ve been (rom the right direc-
tion during the past two days but the 8 to
JO tpot nor-wester carried no
authatlty.
The entire fleet ls bunctied wilhin a ~0-
mile radius with the small bolas begin·
ning to move ~p on the Class A leaders in
the light going.
Strong northerly winds can· usually be
expected in the vicinity of Cedros Island
ond may start !he fleet moving .
Ragtime reported Monday that sh e hAd
covered 26 mil es in Lhe first 48 hours for
an average of 4.7 knots.
Herb Johnson reported from the escort
and communicalions vessel Crabby Too
that the weather was ideal for cruising
under power but not very conducive to
sailboat racing.
The v.·eather pAltern has been in sharp
contrast to the 1969 race v.·hen a gAlc·
force southeaster dismasted three yachts
in the first 24 hours and continued lo buf·
lei the fleet for two more days.
After rounding Cape San Lucas at lhe
tip of Baja Cali rornia. the fleet v.·i\1 be
battling light to moderate northerly
winds on the '100.mi!e beat lo La Paz.
Tidal currents in t.he Gulf of California
are also kno11:n to affect the t·ace.
Capturing the overall and C!Ass C han-
dicap lead on Monday was Lloyd Powell's
Ericson·39 Star from the host .Long Beach
Yacht Club. In secon d place was the
Class A yacht Sandpiper, a SO-foot sloop
sailed by Dean Brown of Santa Barbara
YC.
Handi cap standings are:
OVERALL -''' Slar: (2) Sandpiper,
Dean Bro1-1·n, SBVC; (3} Warrior, Al
Cassel, BCYC; (4l Quicksilver, Fred
Palmieri. WY C: (S)Co unterpoinl,
Deaver & lleadden, BYC.
Cl.~SS A -~II Sandpiper: !2) Con·
certo, "Irving t--oube. RYC; (3) Warrior;
(4 1 Aries, Russ Ward, LYC. (5) Ragtime.
CLASS 8 -( 1) Dorothy 0, Alan
Orsborn, CBVC: (21· Quasar, Arthur
Biehl, St. F'YC ; (3) Alice, Paul
Loveridge, NHYC: (41 Robon Ill, Bob
Grant, NHYC; 15! Alpha, Louis Riggs,
SFYC.
CLASS C -(l) Star; (2) Quicksilver:
(31 Chiqu ita, William Clute, St. FYC; (~)
Sanderling, Bob Poole BCYC; (5)
Pericus, John Wi!liamson. LYC.
CLASS D -(I) Counterpoint; (2)
Aquarius, John Holiday. f~BYC: (J)
!.'Allegro, Roderick Park, Richmond YC:
(4l Bushwacker, Harry Smith, PMYC;
(5/ Cenlurion, Larry Folsom, SI BYC.
Movie Mo1utors
Of Se,ver Dun1ps
Seen by Experts
Ra•h of Changes
New Delay Hits
Freeway Link
Talk Slated
Bill Hashimoto, a top state • ' CoastI·ine ·Bi.II · highway engineer from Lo s
Angeles, will dilcuu the eom·
pleUon or the Newport Freew1y
during a luncheon of Costa :J\.1esa
Tomorrow at 11 :45 a.m., Wed·
nesday at the Costa Mesa Golf
Club.
A rash ot last:minute amendments to
the coastline control bill authored by
Assemblyman Alan Sieroty· ( D-Beverly
Hill!) has resulted in a further one-week
delay. of the measure in the Callfornia
Senate. ,
A spokesman for Senator Den9is
Carpenter IR-Newport Beach) said Mon-
day the bill is being reprinted for a se-
cond hearing next Monday before the
Natural Resources and Wildlife Com-
mittee.
A spokesman for Assemblyman Robert
Badham (Jl-Newport Beadl) said the
Polic.e Study
Costly Thefts
In Newport
A serie!I of burglaries lhat netted well
ove:r $10,000 In stereo sound equipment,
jewelry. fu rs. sterling silver and other
goods is being probed today by Ne"'port
Beach police.
Largest loss suffered was by Charles
D. Foss , of 2915 Ebblide Road. who
returned fron1 a weekend trip to find
$5. 165 in belongings missing.
Officer David Ion said somoone slipped
the Jock on a front door to gain entry to
the Foss residence.
The missing items include a variety or
sterling silver tableware. a slereo ouUil.
mink stole, television set, movie pro-
jector and currency.
Billie L. Gabriel , a management e:t"·
ecutive al the Anchorage Aprtment s',
28tl8 Bayshore Drive, reported Joss of
$3.610 in valuables there Sunday.
Some.onl' y.•ho tried repeatedly to pry
lhe front door rinallv succeeded. ca rrying
away jewelry und Other items, including
orv• 81 ,500 diamond bracelet .
Foll!iwing the loss by ~1rs. Gabrie l,
anolh~r tcnan!. Mal/he"' R ea g ::i n.
repcrted someone pried th e front door
and ransacked his unit in the same
apartnients.
No in1mediate determihation or a n y
los!I was established. police said, but the
melhod of entry was the same.
A really brazen burglor entered the
Balboa Island· apartm!'nt of John
Caparone, 319 Diamond Ave., sometime
after the victim dozed off while listening
to sterec mu!lic.
Caparone told Officer Vince Antista he
awoke P.londay morning to rind a ca t
burglar who broke in by unknown means
had !wiped the source of the sound ef·
feels.
The victim listing the missing loot as
his $2,100 stereophonic sound system,
plus a portable television set.
Economic Study
Set in Newport
more than 30 new amendments to the bill
included one that would pro hi b It
homeov.•ners living within 1.000·feet or th~
mean high tide line from painting their
houses without approval of the regional
agencies the bill would establish.
The Sieroty bill, pockmarked with
amendments, Is the last remaining
coastline preserva'tion bill given a chance
to pa" the state legislature.
·Another preservation bill , sponsored by
AsS"emblyman Edwin Z'Berg ( D.
Sacramento), was killed Ji.tonday by the
Senate. Governmenfal Organization Com·
mittee on a 3 to 6 vote.
Z'Berg's bill would have created a
super agency lo control air. water ond
land pollution. lt had been passed by the
Assemblyman, but was not even debated •
by the Senate i;ommittee.
His measure was backed by lhe
CM!lervationist Sierra Club. but opposed
by local government officials who claim·
ed It would take away local oontrol.
Other amendments .to the Sieroty bill
Indicated it would exclude from the
statewide coastal control portions of the
California sho reline lying w i t h in
municipal boundaries.
However, the exemption would not
spare Upper Newport Bay from the
purview or the superagency. Another
amendment indicates developmenl!I along
shoreline that is Jess than 80 percent
developed would be subject to aaency
review.
Should the bill be reported, out of the
Natural Resources c.ommillee next Mon-
day , it would still face approval or the
Senate Finance Committee, Sen.
Carpenter has said.
._
Interpol Asked
To Find Mesan
Bookie Suspect
Orange Couniy District Att orney's in-
vestigalor'~ !oday asked for the help of
Interpol in tracing a Costa ~lesa man
they believe to be the brain! behind I
Newport Beach bookmaking ring.
He is identified as Albert (iaret. 44, of
837 St. Clair Ave. The search for the al·
leged chief of the bookmaking operation
"broken la st week has now extended be-•
yond U.S. borders.
\\'llile Garel's desc ription was bein.11:
circulated th is morninr his five alle.Red
conspirators in the hor~ raci nR: opera.
lion were arraigned b P. f o.r e Superior
Court Judge Byron K. A1c;\fi1Jan.
All were accused of conspi racy lo com·
Hashimol'o p I 1 n s lo expJoln
vai-ious plans ·for off-ramps for the.
section or the Newport Freeway
that rt1ns through downtown Cost.a
Mesa.
Spokesmen for Costa M e s a
Tomorrow, a downtown property
owners association, said Hashimcto
is not proposing any route ehange.
of the freewa y, but is offering
alternate· aceess ramp designs~
The meeting is open to the public
and luncheon tickets. at $3.50 each,
will be available at the door.
Panel Gives
Sign Measure
Top Priority
Newport Beach P I an n I n R Com·
missioners have given top priority to a
new city-wide sign ordinance in their
revisions of planning codes. despite a
staff report indicating the city will have
little time lo work on anything but its general plan .
Community Development D I re c t o r
Richard Hogan urged the commissioners
to ''select only those items with most im·
portance" to update or revise because the
staff would be swamped with general
plan work.
Commissioners named 1 new sign
ordinance as most important. saying
stc'icter sign laws written into a proposed
gas station ordinance had been called
discriminatory for ignoring ct her·
businesses.
Despite a city council directive that the
commission work on a noise ordinance ,
commissioners sa id they v.·ould rather
\\'ait to fullv dls'cuss the problem at !he
joint.commission·council meeting Dec. 6.
Other topics mentioned as being high
on the commission 's work li st were
residenhal height and story regul~Uons,
clarification of Planned Community zone
procedures, medical pa r k In g re·
quiretnerits and preservatlon of an·
tiquities.
State Education
Unit Receives
Scho~I Bond Bid
mit bookmaking and boo"kma~ing io an T11e bill to raise the ceiling or school
indictment is~ued last week by the Or-bond sales has now gone to the itate an~e County Grand J ury. A!lsembly Education Committee.
Judge McMilla n nored the absence of The measure, introduced by State
Caret and set Nov . 23 a~ the next ap. Senator Dennis Carpente r (R·Newport
pearancP. date ror Dieter Wolton. 26, and Beach) to help ease San Joaquin Elemen·
ShAron Gugliotti. 25, of 714 Fernlear Ave .. tary School Dist rict's construction crisis,
and Burton Wagone r. 30, or 51 15 River has passed the Senate and has been in-
Ave., all of Newpo rt Beach; Roger traduced in the Assembly.
Meenls, 29, of 1008 Huntington St .. Hunt. Richard Rohrbach , administrative
Survey teams from the Newport Beach ington Beach and Harvey D. Kag.o.soff, assistant to Senator Carpenter. said the
Community Deyelopment Department 34. of Garden Grove. Assembly Education Committee ha! of·
"'ill be \•isiling all city businesses and Undercover offit\!rs from the Newport ficially adjourned for the year. Bu t ef-
industries in the next few v.•eeks to gath· Beach Police Depa rtment and the dis· forts are being made to get it to er up 10 date economic information. trict attorney's office cracked the betting
inc city hopes that the ans1vcrs lo its operation last week. All fi11e defendants re~nv~ne. t h . 1 riuestions "'ill aid general plan economics v.·ho appea red today are free on bail. nor er o pass. t e bil would have lo sludies. be approved by lllt-Assembly Educalion
Information sough t includes the floor Committee. the Assembly Finance ·Com·
'
''' ol structures. area of individual lots A I R • mittee. and Assembly. C rcss ccove1·111 g Th b·11 · d 1 d 1 ::ind full and part·time employment fig. e 1 1s es gne to al ow no more
url."'s. than five school districts to raise their
Oatn from the sur1'eys 1vil1 !hen be LOS ANGELES ( AP)-Sandy Duncan. bond ce\iing from five to seven percent of
used 10 make projections of the cil.~'·s star of the ''Funny Face" television com-its assessed va~uation up to 1975.
Accord ing to Ph il Schott. the man who
wrote the contract, ACR was awarded lt
because it was the only firm with an ex·
istipg computer program for reap·
portionment.
Query Ordered
Over Irvine's
Action on Fence
future economy. said officials. who add· edy series, is recovering well from If approved this year. $4.6 million
PALO ALTO (UPI) _ The placement ed that the city teams would not disturb surp;ery lo remove a benian lumor from would be aval\able for San Joaquin
nf "tlnle·lapse" movie cameras near normal business operations. behind her left eye, a spokesman says, enough to build three schools.
OU.N61 C:OAJT
DAllY PILOT
OUHGI COAST PUtLUMINO COM,AH'f'
••\•rt N. Wool ,,..,iNnt .... ,111>11"""
Ila~ J1c\ •· Cwlhf "-~ p,.1i1n .... Ci-11 MllWSltf
n.lfllt 11:tt•iJ
'""' n1""111 A. M''°'J.;~,
"'-' .... •llO l•••
l. ''''' kri•t ,........, ·~ Cil')' IElllOt
,.,..,.,. ..... OHk:•
1JJJ N1w,•1t l111lt"'"'
Mt'illfll A4i1•H: P.O. lix 1111, •l66J ..... .,... ..
C.. ~: -W"I • .., """"' I.ti-... ,~: ttt P.or•I ·~........... ktc"' 1'1/J ''"" 1111111-~
... ~ -lilnl Rl ~""'°" •..s
OATl.V PILOT, ""'"' ""kt\ 1l ~·lflt4 N fll...,.~~1. II ,.,..,.,~ .. •tnr '"'"' s-.. , ifl ..,..,. ..... 11;.w .... L.,...1 ·-t.I._, .._... (ttl• -·· "'"""l"fl'IOI ~ 1'-teill v1n", Sift CIOl-!t/
c..iltr-.... --1-tll, lltr'lt .. 1111 -............. ltlM. l'•oMiN1 rtl\tl ...... fll ..
.. -W11111 • ..., ,,,_., C-te MfU,
,.,.... t7141 &4t=4JJ1 --
e1....W A'"'9h1Jit 641·1&11
~ ttnr-0r.,... <Nit '""")Mjrof ~r. ,.. -. ., .. i.. n1.,.w1111r1~, .. _... -"" .. -~"'''""'"" ,.. .... ·-1 M ~-•·"'WI tf'Kltl ,.... ....... .,,..,., -··
._..., cl•• ....... ,_loll 11 N1wiiert tk<\
.... '"'• ""-· Ct!ltfrn••. .""''"" ... "' teOTlt!' st IS -lfl1'1 t1 ll'll H U Fl ,,..,...,,, INll,.rr •••iMHti111, JJ,ll tMr111111.
N~wport Beach cuuncllme n Monday
night ordered City ~1anager Robert \Vynn
to get the lowdoy.·n on the Irvine Com-
pany's Back Bay fen ce!: after one coun·
ci!man proclaimed he doesn't feel ''our
citv nttds barbed w\re enclosures ..
Councilman 1>lilan Dostal asked for the
staff re(Xlf't alt hough his rem a r k
prompted Councilmc.n.Dirk Croul to ob·
St';rve. "\Ve've been surrounded ~·ith
barbed wire for vears "
Dostal said lieverlhelcss he wants
Wynn to get the background and the
reason why the fe ncing 1vas appro1·ed by
the Community Derelopmcnt Dtparl·
ment.
~ "Isn't there any olher alternative (or
barbed wire fence in N~wporl Beach,"
Dostal queri'ed .
rrvine Company workers beg a n in·
stalling the fence last week and con1p11ny
cfflcials at the lime iruiisted they had no
other choice.
They cited recent prescriptive rights
rulings hy the stale courts !hat h:t\'C
given privaie propcr1v to the pub!lc .. by
implied dedication" if the O"'ner did not
restrain free public acceSJi lo it.
An lr\•ine .spOkesman .!laid barbed wire
fence w1s st:lttted because il Allows a
better view 1hro11gh it th<in chain link
fence.
The kind of rcncini; brought a bArb or
two from Vice ~layor Howard Rogers
).JonCay night.
''Jf they'rt trying lo preserl'e the view.
UitY could hare used smooth ~lre," he
said.
"ft'' another great mistake in !ht Jr.
vlnl' Company's handling of the publlc-
as•in." Rogcr1 S8ld .
11e pointed out Ille firm put up Ilic
fences at the same time It WAS pultlng up
Christmas dccorati-01'1! 8l Fashion Island.
sc1vagc outfall points in coastal waters '--------'-------------------------'------------
could provide early warnings of possible
damgc lo marine life. llickheed Corpora·
tion Sl'ientists said today.
Dr. Lee Tepley, a senior staff scientist
at Lockheed l\fissilcs & Space Co . in
nearby Sunnyval e. described develop..
1nent or a sys tem which ope rates unat·
tended for long periods in water as deep
as 200 feet.
He addressed a three-day joint con·
ferenct• on sensing of environmental
pollutants, y.·hich concludes \Vednesday.
It wa s sponsored by a half dozen scien-
tific And environmental groups.
Tepley saiG-undrrsca camrras usin~
the "time-lapse" tehcnique -in which 11
single frame. is taken e\•ery few seconds
nr minutes -<'an providr more ili-
format1on than divers making \"isual
ob.~f'rvations.
''Undersea photo-documentation tan
point out $low changes in the underwater
environment before they re ft c h
ca!a11trophic proportion s, and thereby
l<!ad to corrective a11ion before It ls too
late.'' he sllid. tr""
He .~ald !he automatic. battery-powered
svstc1n. \1·hi rh ran take 32.000 frames o~•cr ;:i span of several days v.·lth
floodlighl!l coming on automalically lo
provide light. could provide data on
harmful change!\ In marine ecology.
especially at sewage outfall poin!S.
He sho·~ conference delegates 11 rilm
demon~ratlng the destruction of coral
reel! in Kanoohe Bay. Hawaii. by al,'!'.ee '
v.·hosc grov.•th w~s spurred by nutrients In
sewage. flowing Into the bay,
"Unfortunately. fht' condition was not
rttt1gn1zed until gr c 11 t damage w as
done," T~plcy said."Tt}e Important thing
here i~ that Jf systematic. long·lcrm
photo.itraphic monitoring -Including
tirnc·liipse photography -had b c en
s1::irled abclut five rca,rs ago. tht 1Jgae
J?:rowth would hBvc betn dlsco1·cred at an
early date and preventive actio n collld
htive been t<iken.''
THANK YOU, ERASTUS!
It occurred to us Itta other day that we owe a lot ta an innovator in our
carpet industry who operated about 150 years aga.
Here are some facts about ERASTUS IRIGHAM BIGELOW:
• Born 1814, W . Boylston, Mass.• Poor family, required to work at 1ge
I 0 as farm· hand and cler~. • Genius ·at math ind mechanics. • At 23
years old, invented loom for lace. • Invented revolutionary power loom
for BRUSSELS and WILTON carpets. This created a domestic carpet in·
dustry, and virtually e li minated foreign competition. • Founded BIGE-
LOW CARPET MILLS in Clinton, Mass. • Great economist, one of small
qroup found inq MASSACHUSETIS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY ot
Bo1ton in 186 1. • Died 1879.
ERAS'l'US:
MY GRANDFATHER THANKS YOU! MY FATHER THANKS YOU! I THANK YOU I MY
CHILDREN THANK YOU!
{Four 9en•r•tion1 in the ctrpef bu1i ne11 1ince 1894, th•nk1 to the invent ion1 of Mr. 8i_g elow.)
P.5. Amazingly, without Erastus, Bigelow Carpets have rentelilled an industry
leader. Please stop in and see t~elr 1pll1klln9 carpet line.
•
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e ·DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave. .
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS: M ... 111,. "'1on., 9 I<> 5:JG -Fri .. 9 I<> 9 -Sot .. 9:10 ho I
I
Drive Fails
For Prayer
In Scl1ools ,
WASHINGTON ( A P I Th•
consressional fight !or s~ific con-
stitutional approval of prayer in public
schools has been lost for this year but
may become an issue in the 1972 elec·
lions.
The battle offset 8 1962 Supreme
Court decis· n that the 1st Amendment
bars states from composing prayers for
use in sch ls was lost in the House ~1on·
da y.
It got a ma rity. 240 to 162, of the total
votes cast t needed .two-thirds for ap-
proval. Had it won in the House in its in·
itiat test in that body, it .would have need·
ed a two-thirds clearance by the Sen11te
and ratification by 38 states before
·bf.coming a part of the Constitution.
Supporters of the amendment were
unhappy but not surprised by the result.
They blamed their defeat on absenteei~m
-29 memBers didn't vote -and on
organized opposition from religious and
legal groups.
Rep. John Buchanan (R-Ala l. a
clergyman, said he hopes the Supreme
Court, "'ith its complexion changed since
1962. will take another look and "restore
the free exercise or religious freedom."
Rep. Chalmers P. \Vylie tR-Ohiol. "'ho
led the fight for n· House sho1·:down after
the Judiciary Committee Dott!ed up the
resolution. s a id abScenteeism hurt his
cause. But he prtdicted lha~ublic de-
mand \lo'O uld revive the amendment and
the result would be different the next
time.
A national oq~anization called Cilizens
for Public Prayer predicted the prayer
issue would be rai sed "repeatedly and in·
sistently" in the 1972 elections.
The resolution fell 28 votes short of the
two-thirds need'ed . Supporting it were 102
Democrats and 138 Republicans . Aga inst
it "'ere 136 Democrats and 2 6
Republicans.
Voters Trying Again
In Independence, !Ho.
INDEPENDENCE. ~10. (UPI) -S~ix
days ago, voters approved spending $2
million for a police bulldilig. The same
day the schools closed because voters
would not approve tile money to keep
them in opc::ration.
Voters have been asked twice lo a~
prove a school tax increase to keep the
schools running and twice they refused.
Between 12,000 and JS.000 persons -in~
eluding fonner President Harry S Tru-
man-were expected to vote today on the
pro posal to open the city's 25 public
1.Chools for the third time.
Abridged
Pay Check
In Store
TueM111, November C1, 1C171 * DAILY PILOT U,
Henderson Charge .Dropped: ,,
FT. MEADE, ~1d. <AP\ -fa iled to prove Henderson lied Wondolowskl . deni!d moliorui: !
Col. Oran K. Henderson 's under oath to a Pentagon for dismissal of the other 1.
lawyers begin a defense in his pa n e I' investigating t he charges which carry a com· ,
f\1y La\-coverup trial today -• slaughler of Viet n a mes e blned penalty of three years ,
a task lightened by the civilians by U.S. soldiers at and three monlhS in prison as
dismissal of the most damag• My Lai on A1arch 16. 1968. well as forfeiture of pay and l
\VASHINGTON (AP) ing charge facing the berlb--"This.was their main con· dismissal from the service. · 1·
Millions of individuAl tax-boned combat ofricer. lenlion, branding him a liar The jury of two generals and .
payers will find their take-The first · of ~o defense and perjurer," Rothblatt said. five colonels will be in the •·
home pay dropping in January wit~sses will testify after an "This is really where they at· court room today for the first
despite income tax cuts it a opening statement by Henry tempted to prove the ir case. time since· ()ct. 20 when the 1
~$16-bllltoo-?HX-l'eduction bill B. Rothbh,!1. Henderson's ci-Now we don't have to concern prosefulion re~ted. •
approved by the Senate Fl-vilian lawyer. ourselves with that problem Rimalning to be tried are
nc.nce Committee be c 0 mes "This v.·as the heart of the anymore." charges that Henderson was ~,
Ja'A'. prosecution 's case; from here The dismissed charge car· derelict in his duty by f1iling 1"
In rr.:1ny cases a new on it's easy sailing," said ried a maximum penalty of to investigate "reports of ex-"'
withholding plan adopted by Rothblalt after !he judge ruled three years in prison. cessive · killing 0 f non.
the panel will !11ke away more 1'.1onday that the government The judge, Col. Peter S. combatants," at /\1y Lai ...
than the tax cuts \viii yield,1--------'--------'--"-'~---'--...::....::....::.:::__::_:::....:::::__
even though everyone will get
1ome tax reduction.
The withholdlng p I a n ,
recommended by the Treasury
Department. is designed la
eliminate underwithholding for
many individuHls.
The principal groups 'Alhich
now must pay when filing
retu rns are persons earning
$15,0QO or more a year. work·
ing married couples and in·
dividuals with l"'O or more
jobs.
\Vhat the l)ew schedule will
Louis R oth • Sege\ryck • 1'Ii chaels/Stern
Hart Schaffner& 11arx •Eagle • Gino 841vaggi
/
Po1arferit1g Preside1icy mean is that a taxpayer now
in t he underwithholding
category will not have to fork
over a large sum when he files
his return for t:iat year.
&i!J.,E: :jyant., $ll!Ji'l(!Jr!i'L $ uif§
• .\labama Gov. George \Vallace announced at the Southern Governors
Conference in A~lanta that he may enter five presidential primaries
next _J\1a~. He s.a1d he would enter as a Democrat and is considering
running in Flor1da, North Carolina, Tennessee, J\1aryland and Indiana.
It is e s ti m a t e d un-
derwithholding now totals at
least $800 m!..!lion a year .
E nviron1nent Director
The House, in passing the
tax bill. voted to put the new
plan lo correct this into effect ·
in t"·o stl!'ps -in 1972 end
1973.
Denies Ou,ster Rumors Mariner's
Cameras
Activated
\VASHJ NGTON (U PI) -\Villiam D.
Ruckelshaus. administrator of I h e
Environmental Protection A gen c y
(EPA ), has become the second high ad·
ministration official in recent' months to
be reported on the "·ay nut b::cause of
\\'hite House opposition to a tough
regulatory stance lo\lo·ard business.
in an interviel'1 late Monda y.
Ruckelshaus drnicd the rumors and said
he was mystifiC'1I as lo lhcir source . He
said President Nixon told· him last "'eek
to "keep plugging" on his drive to forte
cleanup of the air and "'ate r.
In August, Federal Trade Con11nis..~ion
(FTC) Chairman ~1ilcs W. Kirkpatrick
\\'as_...simi'lariµum ored to have angered
the \Vhile House with the FTC"s
crackdown on allegedly deceptive ad-
vertising and sales 'Jlractices. Like
Ruckelshaus, Kirkpatrick denied any hint
of 8dminlstration displeasure and any in-
tention of leaving.
Rucklelshau;;: and Kirkpatrick both
acknowleriged, ho"·ever, they tra ve
angered some business leaders. including
potential contributors to the I 9 7 2 PASADENA IUPI l -Scien-tists successfully tested the Republican campaign. Both contend this cameras aboard America·s
is inevitable for any conscientious ~l ariner 9 Mond11y night as the
regulator of Federal en\'iro nmental and 2.200-pour111 spacecraft entered
consumer programs. lhe homestretch of Its six-
11oth n1en "'ere appointed by Nixon. month voyage lo M11rs.
Under !he FTC law . Kirkpatrick wa s ap-T"·enty-seven pictures of the
pointed lo a f1l'e-ycar term and cannotpe red planet were snapped by
fired. The run1or was thal he would be can1eras aboard the $64 mil-
"promoted out" with a federal judgeship. lion space-explorer and radio-
He finally squelched il by sc.yinir he ed back to lhe Jet Propulsiori
would refuse a. judgeship if offered . Laboratory I JPLJ here, from
Ruckelshaus serves at the President's where the flight is controlled.
plea sure and could be fired. The New "We had a little trouble at
York Times Monday reported "persi&lent fir st while we unscrambled
rumors., that Rucke\shaus wrote a letter the computer system at the
of resignation la Nixon two week1 ago ground station," a. JP L
because the White House had diluted his • spokesman said. "But they
air and water cleanup programs. came in fine."
Coll°lrs f o please every t aste ••• whether
trnrlitional or conten1porary. Superbly
cl('siinerl for the n1an \\·ho demands the best
in Yrtluc nnd all in comforl.:'1bly fitting suits
••• \Yitl1 that extra pair cf trousers f or
lo11ge1· lasting \rear ••• Reg. priced at $140.
Charge accounts available
"'dHle
they
lut
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
3333 South Bristol Street
Costa lllesa • 54G-461 l
TWO
LOCATIONS
LAKEWOOD PLAZ A
6412 East Spring Street
Long Beach • 461-4611
.·
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)
· .
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you can dial direct
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-collect, credit card,
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•
During the daytime,
Monday through Friday
from 8 a.m. tg 6 Jl.m. it
costs $1 .20 to dial a call
yourself.
A station-to-station call
placed through th·e
Operator for this same
period of time (Monday
through Friday from
8 a.m. to 6 Jl.m.) costs
$1 .50. -
•Holiday rates for long dlstanoM calls witl'lln Callforr\la 1pply au day on Washington's Birthday, lndepetldenca Cay, llbor Day, ThanksgMng, Cttitltmaa and NewYtar't Oty.
AU rates are for tt1r11-minutt calla from Santa Ana to San Francisco, plus iax.
Dia l direct. It's faster and cheaper.
r
,
. if you do need to make
a person-to-person call,
it costs $2.25, no matter
when you call.
@Pacific Telephone
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\ • -Suppo,rt .Oce·a~n· Oi Bills
All Californians who would have reasona~e pro-
tecUon of the state's coasUine against future 011 dam· age should respond promptly to Sen. Alan Cranston's
(l).calil.) call for •upport or his package of seven oil
sanctuary bills (SB 1446-1452). • '
· The bills would esrablish six oU·free areas in fed·
eral waters seaward from !ix eiisting state oil-free zones
- a prOte.ction for 250 m~e~ of c?Utlin~. T.he measures
were revised to meet adm1ntstration ob1ect1ons. Explor•
afion but not drilling would be allowed. Area~ of present.
oil production are excluded. And the Pres1dent could
grar;i.t oil leases in a national emer~~nc~.
Despite these aqd other modif1cat1ons to meet ob-
jections from· the Department of lnterior, that depart·
ment remains stubbornly opposed to· ~e ·bill s. ~t ~P~1 puenUy will not honor the fact that, 1n establishing
the state sanctuaries, the people have voluntarily given ur, the economic benefits of oil because. they place a·
h gber value on the coastal environment. as Cranston
bas put iL
.,
panies to establish reserve fl!J1dS to repay polic~holders
for any windfall profits obtained through the first-year
success of the no-fault plan for bodily injury insurance ..
U no-fault insurance bas worked ta the benefit of
both motorists and aut(> insurance companies (but pot
Decessarily lawyers) in Massachusetts, the pla~ certain·
ly deserves more consideration than it has received from
C3.lifomia legislators.
It seems quite obvious why the last survivin$. no-
fauJt insurance bill was killed by the Senate Jud1c1ary
Committee fast Sept. 28. All of the members of that
committee are lawyers.
The Amchitka Trauma
The Amchitka nuclear test so far has measured up
to the best hopes of the Atomic Energy Com mission and
bas produced none of the catastrophic .rossibililie_s so
strongly forecast by the various ecolog1ca1 or anti-De·
fense Department spokesmen. Letters to federal officials often get results. The
DAILY PILOT suggests letters in support be addre ssed
to Hollis M. Dole·, Assistant 'Secretary of the Inter.1or,
with copies to President 'Nixon, White_ House, Washing-
ton, D.C. 20000. ·
Confli ct of Interest
Those lawyers in the C;tlifornia Legislatur~ who
killed the no-fault insurance bill likely would find 1t hard
Jt is easy to fear the unknown and. for most of us.
·atomic energy -particularly bomb warb~ads -nec-
essarily represents a great unknown. Obviously those
of us outside government cannot have acces_s to all_ the
facts needed for such judgment -and this handicap
extends to some very great scientists as well as to tl;le
layman. And perhaps this is where the fe~eral govern·
ment made a serious mistake and caused itself and the
to face up to this question: . .
Why did Massachusetts, which established no-fault
insurance list year for bodily injury automobile cover·
age, act last week to extend the concept to compulsory
property damage and collision coverage?
The obviOU.s answer is that the no-fault idea proved
sound as established in Massachusetts .
Motorists iO that state now have the option of
choosing one of three different plans for property dam·
age and collision auto insurance. And insurance com·
panies must pay claims within,1~ days or .pay double.-
In addition, a new Jaw reqwres auto insurance com-
/
citizenry needless anxiety. -
Undoubtedly the Russians know · at least as much
as we do about hydrogen bomb blasts, having set off a
huge one of their own fairly recently. So perhaps we have
another case of over-zealous secrecy in government
which might easily have resulted in abandonment of the
Amchitka test.
On the other side of the coin, the cause of the
5erious environmentalists has lfeen damaged by their
own hyper-emotional approach. The're is still _the ~s
sibility of after effects of the test blast but as 1t stantls
now. the Atomic Energy Commission has clearly scored
a credibility victory over its critics.
Money Rolls· in for Gardner's Lobby Supervisors
Should Phase Riches of 'Common Cau·se~
WASHINGTON -When it comes to
being in the chips, Common Cause. ril.iH·
tant liberal lobbying and pressure
organlr.ation, is in a class by itself.
As of Oct.. 15, it had a cash reserve of
'3.~82,406 -and the money is continuing
to roll in.
Headed by Jobn Gardner, 1965-68
Secn<acy ol the De-penment ol Heoltlt,
Education and Wei-
f.a.rt and previously
presidtnl ol I h e
Carnegie Corpora·
lion, Common C.auae
.. the best-heeled
lobbying ooltil in
Washington -ou.t..
shlninc ht that re-
gard even COPE, the welJ.finonced po..
~tical arm of Ille AFlrCIO. ' tnnsistenUy anti-Nixon adriiinistratio!!.
and stridently dovish on one hand, end
markedly pro-Democratic on the other,
Common Cause bas a balance sheet that
reads like a promoter's dream.
FOLLOWING ARE the highlights as of
OCt. IS :
Receipts comprise two items -dues
and gifts. In the first half of this year,
they produced a combined Ulla! of
$2.204.200. In the third quarter. dues
amounted to $667,427; gifts, $16.5,133.
Dues are $15 a year, and Common
Cause claims a membership of"between
205,000 and 240.000.
DUJUNG THE third quarter, there
were 2ti gifts to Common Cause ranging
from $1,000 to $10,000.
Most singular of these gifts waS $1,000
from Allied ChemicaJ Corporation -
which gave: ®Other $1.CKXI e.arller in the
year. Not known is whether the company
informed its stockholders about these
grants.
eisr:o, chairman of Levi Strauss & Co,.
$5,000. plus $5,000 earlier this year ; H. L.
Karp, New York City, $2.500.
Also R. E. Larson, New York City,
vice-chairman Time, Inc., $2,000: ~lrs. F.
Worden, Weston, Mass., $2,000, plus
$2,000 in 1970: P. S. Bing, Los Angeles,
$2.000; American Federation of State,
C.Ounty and ~funicipaJ E m p 1 o ye e s ,
Wa shington, D. C .. $2,000; J. C. Wilso~,
Rochester, N.Y .. Sl,250, plus $1.000 m
1970: C. R. Smith, former C.Ommerce
Secretary. $1 ,000: V. H. Palmieri, Los
Angeles. Conner president ;Janss Invest·
ment Co,, $1,000; D. C. Burnham,
Pittsburgh, president Westinghouse Elec·
tric. $1,000, and a similar· amount last
year; S. C. Johnson, Racine, Wisc .• presi·
dent. Johnson Wax CO., '$1,000, plus $2,500
in 1970.
WHILE COMMON CAUSE has a SG-
membe.r board of directors. policies are
made and operations conducted soleJy by
Gardner and a small hand-picked staff of
assistants.
Out the Jets
Ma ilbox
To the Editor :
. _,
In a recent newspaper (October 29
issue), I read an article which stated that
Robert Clifford, pres_ident of A i r
California, is asking Orange County
businessmen for support to enable ex-
pansion of their service from Orange
County Airport.
Members of the Boara of Supervisors
have a d~uty to represent the people of
Orange County, basing their votes on any
motion, as far as possible, on the views of
the majority, and not based on the finan-
'cial status of that majority.
Receipts: $3,Cl.16,760. Expenditures:
$73l,574. cash reserve carried over from
~ 1970: $1 ,070,220. Total cash reserve:
$3 .3'.l2,406.
Another gift that raises legal questions
is $1 ,000 from the tax-exempt l\1r. and
l\1rs. Elliot Handler Foundation. He is
head CJf Mattel Toys. While Common
Cause professes not to be a political
organizalion. there can be no argument it
is deeply embroiled in political affairs.
OTHER BIG contributors during this
t>erlod were :
Thls autocratic rule is defended by
Jack Conway, leading Gardner
lieutenant, as necessary to obtain the
best results. He argues. "The citizens or
the country have to have someone th ey
can trust who is involved in the
mechanics of government. \Ve can't call
our several hundred thousand members
and ask what we should do on a
particular issue. They have to have con-
fidence in the leadership to judge situa-
tions and decide what to do."
I have attended many of the meetings
on the airport question and find absolute-
ly no evidence of any substantial minori-'
ty, far Jess majority, which supports ex·.
pansion of Orange Counly Airport. The
majority of Orange County residenls, in
my opinion, either have no opinion, or are•
strongly_ opposed to airport expansion, Jn
a normal democratic system, this would
result in a vote from their represen-
talives aga inst this expansion. 1n addition, there was a $40,000 grant
from the ta1-exepipt Stern Fund to
finance a "voter rights" suit. This money
is listed as in a speciaJ account and will
)l~t be used in federal lobbying opera•
lions.
J, W. Drown, Bel Air, Ca!U., $10,000,
and $10.000 in 1970; 1. P. Crowe,
Woodstock. Vt., $5,000; C. S. Robertson.
New York City, $5,000 and another $5,000
last year ; W. A. Haas, Jr., San Fran-
. • Masculine Scent Mystery
Several years ago a story circulated.
• about a mysterious ma scu1ine scent
! which could be detected only by women.
' Certain men who emitted this aroma
~ ~am.e irresistibly attractive to females
who cooldn't understand what was hap.
pening to them, it wu claimed.
The tale must have been somewhat ex-
1 1ggerated, else the scent surely wouJd
have been patented by a manufacturer of
afier-shave JoUon. But recent scientHic
discoveries indicate the sU:lry may have
h1d considerable basis in f a ct • ·
~ Pheromones. defined as "substances
: 1ecreted to the outside by an individual.
and received by a second individual of
the wne species, releasing a specific
reaction of behavior." have long been
,j known to influence. animal behavior. New ~ tvidence suggests they ma,y bf: operant
, among humans, as well.
t
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PHEROMONES USED to be caUed
"eet.ohormooes." whicb was a more
graphic name since they actually are ex-
ternal, airborne bonnones. Scientists
,..,
OAANGI COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robm N. Weed, Publilhcr
T,_;,,,, K~tt>il, Editor
Albm W. Batts
Editorial Page Editor
ne edloorlal pa~ (lf the t'>tti!y
PDot~b to intorm and st.imu•
'la\t rcedm by presnnlJn; lhi•
nawipaper's ofl[nions •nd ~m·
mcntary on topics of fnterc'l and ilgnllJc.n~by P:!'O\ll~lng a forum tor the eXf)tet.&lon or our rcadtrs' oplnionJ. and by ~ntlrur th~ divetw vltwpo!nu of ln!~rmrd ob--•~ and spokesm~n <1n topics
of thed<y.
Tuesday, November 9, 1971
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Ed itorial
Research
I
have identified two types: "releasers."
which act directly on a recipient's central
nervous system, .and "primers." which
trigger a chain of physiological events
Jn the recip ient.
In the past, pheromone research has
concentrated on lower fonns of Ille.'
Articles with isuch titles as: "Pheromone
Transport and Reception in an
Amphipod." "Sex Attractant of the Gra ss
Grub BeeUe." and "Persuasive Scent~ in
,,_toth Sex Life'' frf"quented the science
journals. put lately .... knowledge of
pheromones has moved up the evolu-
tionary ladder.
which increased the ardor of their mates.
l\1ales wearing nose plugs did not res-
pond.
DO HUMAN PHERO~IONES exist?
There is ample evidence that the nose
and the sex organs are linked. Nasal
membranes show erectile properties dur·
ing times of sexual excitement. For
years, many perfumes have contained in·
gredlents derived from animal sex
glands, such as ambergris, civet and
musk.
Sexually mature wome n. especially
during ovulation. can sense certain odors
whose chemical structures are similar to
that of testosterone, the male sex
hormone. Men and young girls can't
smell them -unless they are given
estrogen.
But the real importance of pheromones
may be in the realm of communication,
not Fex. As zoologist Edward O. \Vllson
wrote : "Tl is conceivable that on other
THE flRST RESEARCH breakthrough '·worlds rlvlllzations exJst that com·
C'ame about a decade ago \\'hen stlent1sls municale entirely by the exchange of
--discovered lh'at male mtce can emit a chemfcal substances that are smelled ~r
pheromone powerful enough II> induce tasted .•. It is becoming increasingly
l'lbortion in a fem ale mouse in the early clear that chemical systems '()ro vide l~e
&lag!$ of pregnancy. This occurs when a dominant means of communication ~n
new male movtl'I into another's territory many animal species, perhaps evtn m
and wants to mate with the lOC'al females. most·•
Fish also commttnicate through their
chemical .senses. "Some fishes ha ve been
found to possess almost incredible
chemosensoi'y acuity," wrote .John H.
Todd in the ri·ray. 1971 Sci('ntitic
American. Jn experimtnts with
bullheads, Tndd found that pheromones
carry lntonnatlon about "species-. status.
sex. age or $ize, reproductive state. in-
dividual characterislics.and perhaps tven
larnily identification ·•
At the Primllte Behavinur Rts"itr<'h
Laboratories in Kenl. Englan9. Kientisl6
l~amed t.hR{ olfactory mechantnns play a
mle in interse-xulll communication among
rhesus monkeys. When small do~es of
Dear
Gloo1ny
Gus
A pox on all thd" jttks V.'M w;iit
until the last minute, Ulen dart
across four lflne.'I on tbe frtew8y
in order to ca1ch I.heir ofl-ramp
-Driving Stared
e5lrngen -the female stt hormone -Ttlh '••hi,.. nlltth r••ftl't' v-•· ,., were .administered intravagJnally to ct_r-ftK•n••o, lft091 ., 1ft• ft•.,••Hr. s.Mi
tain fema les. substances were producea-,__-_._"_' _"'_w_~_ .. _•_m_• _._,._••_••_'_'"_'·_.
1 AM SURE THERE are some sni.aH
minority. special-purpo:;,e interest groups
who v.•ant airport expansion, including
airline and hotel chains. but local
businessmen are not that small minority.
I am a local businessman, in\'olved with
ma ny of my counterparts and v.·e use
Orange County Airport because it is con-
venient. However, any inconvenience. 1n
using a feeder airline service once or
even twice a 'veek is small. and none of
my business acquaintances would oppose
that kind of service.
Newport Beach and the surrounding
beach areas are some of the most at-
tractive residential and holida y places on
the whole coast. Today \\1hen pollut ion
and population expansion are gradually
elim inating many beautiful area s it is in-
conceivable to me that the su pervisors
have any choice but to gradually start
phasing out jet operations at Orange
County Airport. The·needs of special in-
terest groups. no matter how financially
powerful. should have no effect on I.heir
votes whatsoever .
· J . OOBBIE
Letters rrom reade rs are welcome.
Normally 1vrrters shorild convey their
messages in 300 tvot~s or less. The
right th conrli:nse /etre1s to fit space
or c/1m1nate ltbel i.~ reserved. All let·
ters must include signnture and mnil-
ing addre.~s. but ?lames may be with.-
held on request if sujficien.t reason
is apparent. f'oetry will not be pub·
lfshed.
Quot es
Albert Camus. French author and
playwright, winner of 195'7 Nobel Priie In
Uterature -"A free press can, of
course, be good or bad: but most cer-
tainly without ffcNfom It will never be
anythin8 but bad."
Daml\ia l..0upy. USF, undergrad -
"Love is a process of growth ln which a
person decides to i;zive of himself to other
people in an unselfish way al'ld tries ~
J~~-e, .up to thl! In every moment of his
hfe.,
Job.a Dostt, Vt.alee, Viet \'ti -''The
quesllon one should ask is not \\'helher we
~111 survive what critlcs crusade against
as an immoral l\'ar, but whether we will
1urv1v~ the moral commllmentJ of
ideali&ts. ''
I '
• •
Latin -Knowledge
Is Essential Tool
A high school student in West Virginia
has written to ask me if I think he should
~tinue Y.'ith his Latin studies. "Has
Latin done you any good?" he inquires,
"and is it useful in your work ?"
The answer is "yes" to both these
questions. Nobody
can speak, write,
or understand Eng-
lish properly unless
he has some rudi·
mentary knowledge
of Latin. For Eng-
lish is a hybrid
language -fewer
than half our words
are native, and the .
rest borrowed from foreign tongues,
mostly La tin.
In no other language, for instance. do
"'e find so many native nouns taking
Latin adjectives. The ad jective fnr
"mouth" is not "mouthy" but "oral"
which is straight from the Latin.
LIKEWISE, "NOSE" gives us "nasal."
''eye" gives us "ocular," "mind " gives
us ''mental," "son" gives us "filial."
''house" gives us "domestic," "sun" and
"moon" give us "solar" and "lunar."
There are hundreds or similar cases.
We don't even have native English ad-
jectives for the four seasons: fall is
"autumnal," winter is "hibernal." spring
is "vernal,'' and summer is "estivaJ." the
first words a child learns, "mama" and
"daddy," take Latin adjectives
"maternal" and "paternal ."
ENGLISH IS PRIMARILY a "loan
language ." 1f you want to know ho-..
much, read any of the books by Otte>
Jesperson, the great Danish philologist,
and you may be surprised at the
enormou s debt we owe not only to Latin
and Greek but also to the Scandinavian
languag~s, to French, and eyen to the
Germanic influenc'es upon Old English.
A foreigner learning English would find
it insuperably di!ficult if he did not have
a solid base in Latin.
This explains why educated foreigners
are able to pick up our tongue so rapidly,
and why some uneducated foreigners can
live here 30 years without really g"rasping
the language.
AS AN IMPORTANT parenthesis. I
' found my own Latin (shaky as it is l of
great use while traveling through Europe.
I was able to get along handily in Italian
after only six weeks of living in Florence,
and my French is at least passable, us ing
the glue of Latin to stick together French
and English v.•ords .
Studying the classic languages is
neither a wasle of time nor a form of in·
teuectual snobbishness: it is. ra ther. the
qu.ickest and most permanent way to
master one's own tongue and to become a
genuine citizen in the community of man.
past and present.
Born: A New Barbaris1n
from tbe \Vasbington Po5t
\Ve were minding our own business -
at lea st lo the extent that we ever do -
reading along in a Senate Armed Services
Commiltee report the other day, when we
came across a new barbar ism -new to
us. anyway.
It is not a '>''eapons system , mind you,
but a verbal barbarism, a new turn ln
linguistics. v.·hich stands in relation to the
av.ful word "definitized"' more or less as
the anti-missile stands in reJation to the
missile. It is "undefinitized" -as in;
"The committee desires also to give
due recognition overall to the posi ti ve ef-
forts of the service agencies lo'>''ard pro-
curemenl improvements through .• , the
reded uct!ons in undtfinitiud contract
change orders ... "
UNDEflNITlZEO? Well, yes. And the'·
bloorl-chilllng aspect of this particular in-
vention is the certa in knov.·ledge, \\'hlch
comes ~·llh It-!hat, as these things tend to
develop. this will be the-last we shall ever
hear of poor old ''deflnitized." For dread.
Jul as that locution may be (which i.s
pretty dreadful), It Is surely preferable
lo V.'haf is now bound to become the o~
posite of "undefinilized."
Of this much we are certain: the op-
posite of undefinitized will no longer be
definilized. It will be "non-undefinltized. ·•
From which it follows that by the mid-
70!. as they say in the military planning
circles, when you wish to describe
something that is not nonundefinitized, it
will not be a simple matter of referring
back to it as something undefinltized. lt
will be. -precedent strongly suggests -
at the very least, something that 11).s
been denonundefinitized.
WE AREN'T VER \' optLmistic either
about the prospects for survival of the
"ize'' suffix -a barbarism of its ov.11
designed to change an adjective or noun
into o verb merely by, so to speak,
verbizing it. From verbizlng of course it
has only been a short step to.nounizing the
verb form -as In. nounization.
But these lhings have a half life, if
anythi ng. shorter than that of the denon-,
un. process. On the basis of which we
predict the ultimate outcome of all th is:
Denonundefinitizationilled -meaning
"uncertain" or •·unclear."
Dear George:
B11 George--------
think my readers try! \Vhy don·t you write more about
sex! You're supposed lo be doing a
lovelorn column. You don't have
very sexy problems.
WONQ.E~!NG
Otar Wondering~ --
It's my readers who don 't have
sex problems -and. frankly. I
resent il. too. tr my readers had
the consideration to gtt in the
troubles that happen ln other ad·
Vic:e. columns, J would be ln HUN~
DREDS Ii p.>per1. I doo'I even
Dtar George:
Where can 1 find an attractive
and v.-e althy young "''"man to sup.
port me while t rinish l\'titing a
novel~ PAUL
1 Dear Paul '.
I don't know -I've bee n looking
for one of those. k>r J8 year!'. which
js when I first ~tarttd my n9ve.I. So
far J haven't gotten but halfway
through the title.-l keep having to
go to work.
7
7
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CosiO. Mesa Today's Final ..
EDITION
VOL. 64. NO. 268, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES . . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMB~R 9, 197 ( TEN CENTS
Fairvie Park ."Natural State' Gets Support
By T~RltV COVILLE
Of IM Olill1 l"lllH .Staff
The proposed 300-acre Fairview Park
will apparently go "natural" -if it goes
at all.
Early response to the Costa Mesa Pro-
!ecl 80 Committee's. request for park
ideas sbo\\'S everyone, from children to
adults, urging a natural slate for a large
portion of the land. ·
. Some additional suggeslions include a
high school football stadiu.m. an am-
Cor y's /(in
Ho/,ds Pact
In Remap
SACRA~lENTO fUPI) -A Southern
California firm. whose officers inclu<le
Conner Assembly employes and .a
rel.alive of lh"e Assembly Democratic
Caucus chairman. is the holdtr of a near-
ly $200,000 computer contract for reap-
portionment. the San J~ Mercury
reported today.
The contract was awarded without
bids. the ne1~:spaper said.
Chairman of the board of American
Computer Resources (ACR) is William
Butcher, b r o·t her in lr..w of Assembly-
man Kenneth Cory (D-Garden Grove),
and a member of Cory's legislative Ktaff
in 1967, the newspaper reported. Butcher
is married to Cory's wife's sister.
Cory says there is no conflict of ifl...
terest involved in the contract with ACR.
"I have no financial interest in ACR. If
there was anything at all unheaJ.tby, and
J don't personally think so, it is that we
all grew up in the business together."
ACR \Vas awarded the amtrAC\, Feb. 3
lo dev!?lop reapportionment d•ta· for the
Assembly eltctlons and 'reapportionment
coinmittee, whose c h a i r m 1 n ls
Assemblyman Henry Waxman (D-Los-
Angeles J. /
Bids are not required {or contract..
awarded by the Legislature and paid lor
with Assembly contingency funds.
The newspaper said ACR President
\Villiam Below is "a close personal
friend " or Cory and they both worked
together on the Assembly staff in 1965.
Al.so employed by ACR is Gary
Bamberg who worked for the Assembly
from 1965 to 1968. the Mercury !aid.
Although Butcher ~ no longer actively
engaged in the company, he still holds
stock as "'ell a! his nonsalaried title as
chairman of the board. He left ACR late
last year while negotiations were 1tlll in
progress v.·ith the Assembly. From
l\farch I to Oct. 31. he worked for the
Sena te Eleclions and Reapportionment
Committeee.
The ft1ercury reported !hat ACR recei\-.
ed the Assembly contract at a time "'hen
the rirm's financial problems endangered
lls survival.
Belo\V said. ''I didn't know if we could
stay open. \\'e were hoping the contract
could make a difference.''
According to Phil Schou. the man who
wrote the contract. ACR was a\11arded it
because it was the only firm with an ex·
isling computer program for reap·
portionment . •
Michael Berman. a \Vaxman staff
member. said, "Clearly, there was no
other company lhat had any notion of
how to do it. u-
~1eanwhile today, Assembly leaders in·
sisted there was no conflict of interest in
the award of a $200,000 reapportionment
t.'Ontract without bids.
"How can )'OU put something like rtaJ>-
portionment out to bid? It's not
something like building a highway. This
is a political thing. and you have to ha'!e
experienced people you can bave con-
fidence in," said Assemblyman John L.
Burton fD·Snn Francisco), who awarded
the contract as chairman or the Rllles
Committee.
"They y,•ere the only group available
and \\'e 're satisfied with the work the}l've
done," said Assemblyman Henry Wa:t·
man (0-Los Angeles). chainnan or the
Elec.tions and Reapportionment Com·
millet.
Driver IJurtles
I n to Pl1annacy
A Costa ~lesa woman who told police
ghe thought her car was in J'C\'trst
stepped on lhe accelerator at a small
neighborhood shopping center Monday
afternoon.
Rub}' J, Simonelli. or 2864 La SaUt
A\'t... wa& idtntlfled by polica-II the
driver.
Officers are preacriblng a few hunltred
dollars worth of repairs for the vacant
pbAnnacy building. into whkh her 1970
nan crashed at 1033 El Camino Drive.
A plate glass window and .several
square feet of brickwork were shattered
b)' the tmpact.
' •
' .
phith at.er, a small community c e n t e r
and a useum.
But even with those ideas, people want
most of the park to be developed with
grass. trees and nowers. and crii!!ls·cross-
ed with equestrian. hiking and biking
trails.
· Nearly everyone fttk the 91).acr~
arChaeological site should also remain in·
tad.
The plans developed by Cal Stale, Long
Beach archaeologist Keith Dixon received
wide suppart froih those who wrote LO the
Project 80 Col'l\mittee.
Dixon suggests develo~nt or the
park along .an archaeological-historical
theme. returning the area to Its natural
state of several hundred years ago.
The Project 80 Committee has' received
16 separate suggestions from individuals,
including five elementary sch o o I
youngsters. and persons representing
organizations.
Robert Duggan, assistant city manager
and member of Project 80, said the com-
miUee still hopes to receive more written
suggestions.
He explained the purpose of developing
.a park plan: "We hope to make it a
public rallying" point, something we can
show the state to obtain the state's help."
CurrentJy, the land which is west of
Fairview Stale Hospital and next lo the
Santa Ana River, ii; owned by the slate.
City officials.· however. expeet the land
to be declared surplus in the near future .
'The appraised value of it is $12 million.
There Is a law proposed in the state
legislature which would allow sale of the
land at half its value to a public agency.
But eveq a $6 million price tag casts a
shadow over •the park's ruture-"=-no
single agency In the area has that much
mon~y a\rallable how.
Duggan feels that ari estensive plan
developed by Costa ~1esa m i g h t
demonstrate the ci ty 's sincerity in wan-
ting the land for a park, and might spur
aid from other sources.
A memo Crom city recreatibn director
Keith Van Holt to Jack Chapman.
chairman of Project a> (long range plan-
ning committee), lnccrpocates most ol
the ideas suggested by letter writers. Van
Holt suggests : ·
-Construction of a.30-35 acre lake with
provisions for boating, fishin11 aod
casting ..
-A small community center on the
(See NATURAL, P11e !)
Air Cal Pact Ol('d
Cou_nty Approve s Fi ve-year Lease, 4-1
CAIL Y "llOT' Stefl ,,...,_
Portrmt of Ra111 F111•
!\like Loos. 2. Ne\vport Beach. expres,ses feelings of loyal Rant fans
foUowing Monday night's game in Baltimore. For post.mortem on
Rams' 24-1 7 loss to the Colts, see story on Page 16 in today's sports
section.
l{id~ Looking for Tu1·key;
They're Extinct in County
\Vanted : one live turkey for educational
puflX>Ses.
lt·sounds like a simple request. but IS
kindergarten youngsters al Ch r i·s t
l..utheran Church in Costa ft1csa still
haven't seen a turkey.
lt seems the fowl has virtually disa 1>-
peared from Orange County.
A room mother at the church school
made several calls in a futile attempt to
locate a turkey for the youngsters to
view.
Several phone calls by the DAILY
PILOT revea1ed enough information lo
label the turkey a vanishing breed in
these parts.
For insta.nce :
-There"are. apparently oo commercial
turke}t farms lefl in Orange County.
~The drange C"ounty Fair offers no
prizes rot turkeys, and must import the
few feathered friends it has from l,011
Angeles ColUlty ..
-Jim Bailey, an agricultural advisor at
Sunny I~ill•• High School in Fullerton and
a county agricultui,al expert. knows c.f no
turkey in the county. He does :!idmit.
however, that there must "be a few ln
somebody's backyard.·• •.
-A Santa Ana chicken hatchery
likewise draws a blank when it comes to
turkey!, though it abounds in chicklets.
After ~ !Ong search. turkeys were
discovered al Old ~lacDonald's Fann in
Mission Viejo -three to be exact. but
none native to Orange County.
T\\'O of Old ~1acDonald's turkeys \\'ere
snuck into Orange County from lhe San
Diego area .
The ·th ird turkey. according lo an Old
~tac.Donald's spokesman. was donated by
a father and son who belong to the YMCA
Indian Guides .
"'T'hey said they won ii in ·an Ind ian
l:uidC' contest. It was crated and marked
'one 1ndian headdress kit'.'' the farm
spokesman explained.
He didn 't know if the turkey was a
native.
The Christ Lutheran.children . however,
are still up a creek without a turkey.
The}' need one that can be brought to the
classroom, or one that is at least close to
the school.
Does anyone have an old turkey hang·
Ing around the yard?
If so. phone l\.tiss Lena Danner. the
class teacher al 548-54°'4.
i\famie Heads West
SAN ANTONIO. Tex. (UPIJ -!\!rs.
l\.iamie Eisenhower, discharged rrom
Brooke. Army Hospital in good condition
~1onday night. left San Antonio by train
today for the Pacific Coast.
By JACK BROBACK
01 ffl9 D•llY 'ilot S11fl
Orange County super\'isors today ap-
proved a new five-year contract with
Air California for use of the county air-
port.
Tht' vote y,•as 4 to I, u:ith Supervisor
David Baker casting the dissenting bal-
lot. Baker said he wanted more time to
.study the propo.5al.
The vote came on a motion l1:r' i''iflh
Birch Ch arge
Hotl y Denied
By Rehnquist
\VASHlNGTON iAP)-Supreme Court
nominee William H. Rehnquist submitted
a sworn affidavit to the Senate Judiciary
Committee today saying he is not and has
not beefl at any lime a member of the
ultra-conservative John Birch Society.
"There goes that bunch or stuff,·• Sen.
James O. F.astland, (0-1\.liss. ). lhe com -
mittee chairman, said after reading the
affidavit in a com n1illec session. The
allegation that Rehnquist is a former
John Bircher came in a New Yor:k radio
statement by Sidney Zion. the former
newspapern1an who first publicly linked
Daniel Ellsberg to the disclosure of the
Pentagon papers.
Rehnquist is an assistant attorney
general.
Civil rights leaders Joseph L. Raugh
Jr. and Clarence Mitchell said they were
dissatisfied with Rehnquist's affidavit
and urged the cOmmittee to inve stigate
further.
Rauh called it "thc·weakrst denial I've
ever heard."
''What of all the possible relationships
'short of membership." said Rauh . "1'111
flabbergasted .''
Sen. Edward l\1. Kenned y ~ D·i\1ass. f, a
rom1nittee member. told Rauh that
"your suggt:stiun is completely uny,·ar·
ranted and uncalled for ."
Kennedy said that as one who has
reservations about Rehnquist's nomina-
lion, he did not feel that statements .mad.e
by Rauh and l\.1it chell about the aff1dav1t
were serving the cause of those who
might vote against confirmation.
"You've left an atmosphere thal I think
is rather µoi~nous." Kennedy told the
witnesses.
Kennedf said he had talked to Rehn·
.. quist person3lly about the Birch allega·
lion and declared, "I am con1pletely
satisfied." Sen. Birch Bayh (D·lnd. I. another com-
mittee member who has expres.sed
misgivings about Rehnquist's nom1nallon,
said he had investigated-rumors ~hat
.Rehnquist had belonged to the B1rc~
society and "I have'"hot found any evi-
dence to substantiate this.''
Mitchell said that •·J am no character
assassin." but he said the a\legatio~ of
Rehnquist's membership in the B1rc.h
sOcicty had been reported in a TV
network and In a newspaper In Arizona
and that he felt the committee ought to
look into it.
. -
Three Ti1nes and o.ut~
Beauty Salon, P e rrnit A gain Rejected iii Mesa
F6r Gilda Mae Sanderson the third
time was not a charm.
The COsta ~sa howewife failed to
convince planning cornmisslonert Mon·
day night that she should be allowed to
operate a ~mall beauty salon in her three.
car garage.
Planner• denied her request for a home
occup9tion permit 4-1.
It ~·as the third time ~1rs. Sanderson
had aought a pe.rmit for her home at 635
Plumer St. She had trfed before at the
commission level and then at the city
council level.
Each Ume she changed lhe design of
the shop to make it smaller ... butstlll faih
ed to convince planners It belongs in a
residential area.
In otbu Monday nlght decisions the
commission:
-Approved constnaction or a 20-unit
ap&rfment complex at 1831)..1838 Placentia
Ave.
-Delayed 1 decision unlit Nov, 22 on a
' request for medium density (R-3, CP)
apartment zoning on property located at
the southetist ce>rntr of Bay Street and
fullerfiii Avenue. -delay was grMted
because the r.ddress or the proposed
apartmenlB was listed fncorrectly on
public hearing noticel stnt..-to area
r<sld<nt&.
, -Deni<d pormlnlon for • r ... !landing
' sign to aciV~.WJ 'tbe ~slit Mesa Chrll·
tian School 1t 740 W. Wilson St .
I
District Supervisor Ronald Caspers of
Ne\vport Beach.
:\pro\'2J oJ th& contract \Vas based on
these stipulations :
-The term of the contract is five
year!!, with review at one-year intervals
and \1•ith the county retaining the right
lo terminate Y.i lh 30 days notice.
-The average number of flights per
day limited to 24,6, Takeoffs will be
limited to the hours of 7 a.m. to 10 p.m .
Landings will be lin1ited to 7 z.m. to 11
Freeway Link
Talk Slated
Bill Hashimoto, a lop slate
highway engineer from L o s
Angeles. will discuss Ult com-
pletion or the Newport Freeway
during a luncheon 0£ Costa Me!a
Tomorrow at 11:4~ a.m., Wed·
nesday al the Costa Mesa Golt
Club.
Hashimoto p I a n 11 to e.rpl:;.in
various plans for off-ramps for the
.section of the Newport Freeway
that runs through downtown Costa
Mesa .
Spokesmen for· Costa l\1 e s a
Tomorrow. a downtown property
oy,•ncrs association, said Hashimoto
is not proposing any route cha nge
or the freeway, but is offering
alternate access ramp desig ns.
The meeting is open' to the public
and luncheon tickets. at $3.50 each.
\viii be available at the door.
Water District
Services Kidney
U11i ts i11 Area
E:ngineers fro1n the Costa l'desa County
Water District are currently installing,
free of charg'e, backOow prevention
devices on all hemo dialysis units used by
kidney disease patients in the district
boundaries.
Directors of the water district ap-
proved the installation service as an ad·
ded prevention fO l<eej) the norma l water
free or infection in case of a water
breakdown .
The hemo dialy.sjs units (artificial
kidney machines) have their own pro-
tective controls, but water district of·
official!! said they want an extra precau-
tiOn. •
The district also feels if It knows the
location of all such patients, it can be.of
help during an emergency to make sure
the fres h water !Upply is not cut orr to
the kidney machine.
Kidney machiiies o p e r a l e by
recirculaling and cleansing the patient's
blood in place of the normal function of
the kidney.
Sorsabal · Leaves
Fo r Meet, Tri p
Co~ta Mesa City 1\.-lanager Fred
Sorsabal will be out o( town for the rest
of November. combining a vacation wtth
a bllslness meeting.
Sorsabal left Friday with his ·wile,
l\.1erlene, for Hollywood, Fla., tor the
International City Management Assoc.la·
lion'! annual conference.
From Plorlda. the Sorsabals plan to
travel to the Virgin lslnnd foi-two weeks,
then back to Tampa, Fla ., where Fred
wUI vlslt his brothtr, Andrew.
OuMng SOrsabal's absence. Asll1lant
t'ity Minager Robert Duggan ls running
city hall operations. Sorsabal Is due back
ll«. :.
I
p.m. No planes louder than DC9I and 7371
currently in ust. AU e?l&infll ahall M
smokeless prior to signing ol. lease.
Prior to today's action, more than 500
industrial and business firms, orgatlii>
tions and individuals had supported Air
California on the theory that air
transport is important to the COURty't
econo~y and a great convenitnce to up
to one million county residenta a }'ear
ISee AIR CAL, Pa1e Z)
Interpol Asked
To Help Hunt
Mesa Suspect
Orange County District Atlorney'1 in-
vesUgator'• toda.Y asked for the help of
Interpol in tra~ a Costa Mesa man
lhey believe to be the brain! behind a
Newport Beach bookmaking ring.
He is ide111ified as Albert Caret, 44, ot
837 St. Clair Ave. The search for jhe al·
leged chief of the bookmaking operation
broken last week has now extended be-
yond U.S. borders.
While Garet's description was bein&
circulo.1ed this momin,e: his five alleged
conspirators in the horse racing opera·
lion were arraigned be f o r e Superior
Court Judge Byro• K. Mcft1illan.
All were accused of conspiracy to c6m-
mlt bookmaking ond bookmaking in an
indictment issued last week by the Or-
ange County Grand Jury.
Judge McMilla11 noted the absence ol
Caret and set Nov . .23 as the next a~
pearance date for Dieter Wr..·lton, :ZS, and
Sharon Gugliotti, 25, of 714 Femleaf Ave ..
"'nd Burton Wagoner, 30 , of 5115 Ri~r
Ave .• all of Newport Beach; Roger
Meents, 29, of 1008 Huntington St., Hunt.
i11gton Beach and Harvey D. Kag•soff,
34. of Garden Grove .
Undercover offiCl.!rs from the Newport
Beach Police Department and the dis·
trict attorney's office cracked the betting
operation last week. AJI five defendants
who ippeared today are free on bail.
Nevad ans Get Holiday
CARSON CITY, Nev. (UPI) -Gov.
Mike O'Callaghan has declared Nov. 26,
the day after Thanksgiving, a legal holi~
day in Nevada, giving state workers a
four-day weekend.
"It is my hope that Nevadans will
gather as families during the long
weekend, and take time to do things
together," the governor said Monllay.
The 1971 legislature gave the governor
discretionary power to declare two day1
Orange
1''e•t•er
Don't look for any lilting of the
fog on Wednesday. the weather
lady warns. It'll be the aame kind
of day with temperatures ranging
from 63 on the beaches to 73
further in land.
INSIDE TODA V
Diplomatic 1ourcts havt rt·
ported Mao Tst-&ung'.t <iesfgnat.-
td lteir lin. Piao wa.t i11voitlfd-
in a plot, ouattd from h'is office
and perhaps killtd m a plant
crash whilt escaping. &to111
Page 4. ·
C:•ll"'••• • (llfc-lllt u, ,
CU.nHlM t2•2t c~ u
Crfttwn 11
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01 ... n:" ' .~ .. -' ·~·"'"' l t ,.._ 1'-11
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I
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'
f OAILV PILOT C
CdM Fa1nily
Fle~s Fii·e;
Loss High
' •
'M1e son or a Harbor Area builder and
his family fled with their lives early to-
d1y, when an $18,000 blazt roared
through their Harbor View H 11 ls
residence.
One fire captain suffered minor 1~
juries battling the b\au. from wHich the
victims ' pet dog v.·as rescued safely after
being trapped.
lnve1tigators blamed a spark from a
fireplace for setting the b!az:e at the
Edward G. "Bud" Warm ington Jr.,
home, 3607 Sausalito Drive.
Tbe street was · formerly named
Seafoam Drive.
Firemen re~nding to the 1:24 a.m.
alarm found Warmington, his wife and l·
year-old daughter safely outside.
Crackling names awakened them and
Mrs. Warmi ngton scooped up the infant,
firemen said at the scene.
A spark apparently sputtering out of
dying embers in a den fireplace was
blamed for starting the blaze. ·
By the time several fire Ir u ck s
dispatched to the scene arrived , the
flames had gnawed into the roof struc-
ture.
One veteran rireman credited the fact
that a door. between the den and living
room was closed with containing smoke
and flames initially and p r e v e n 11 n g
deaths.
Damage estimate! included $10.000 to
the residence itself and an additional
$8,000 to contents, although some
valuables such as a gun collection were
u.ved.
Fire Ca pt. Jack W. Jones suffered a
hand cut, but was not seriously injured,
investigators said.
The Warmington family is known in the
Harbor Area for building and investment
activities. The family owns the Warm·
ington ConstructiC>n Company, 300 N.
Newport Blvd,, Ne wport Beach.
Manson Shouts
Orders; Leslie
Silent on Stand
From Wlre Strvices
LOS ANGELES -Leslie Van Houten,
one of three women followers condemned
lo death along with Charles Manson for
the Sharon Tate murders. refused fo
testify today at the penalty phase of the
clan leader's current tria{.
As she took the stand, llfanson called
out fro m the ~djacent hci lding cell to
which he "'as banished for his frequent
outbursts:
"Leslie, this is not my defense. They
get nothing to do with me out there ."
Miss Van Houten, 22, the youngest of
three women defendants in ihe Tate lrial.
was brought to the downtown Hall of
Justice fro m her death row cell at the
California Women's Institution a t
Frontera.
Manson's attorney, Irving Kanarek,
had called her to testify.
But when Miss Van Houten took the
stand, she announced.
"Mr. Kanarek, I've decided I don't
want to testify."
Then. Miss Van Houten consulted v.·ith
.her attorney, Maxwell Keith. and said
.she would claim her privilege against
self·incriminalion under the fifth amend·
ment.
Manson. 36, v.·as convicted last week of
two additional murders -those of a
.stuntman, Donald ''Shorty " Shea, and a
musician. Gary Hinman.
The jury is hearing testimony in the
penalty phase before deciding . whC'ther
the penalty should be life imprisonment
or death in the gas chamber.
OIAMll COAST
DAILY PILOT
OMHOI COAST PUl lllHlltG COMPAA't
••~•rt N. w,,4
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T I ;' FF 1714) 64J ... JJ1
o..MM ~I '41·U71
CtwrlllM. ''"· ~ <•tt PWil ........ ~'· ... ,..... ...... tll\ltttt!*"o
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-..t,1 t11ollll9t'Y lll•!iloft..,., ,VJl -•IT·
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• '
' Pay Curb Protest 1
B'ig Union V o·ws
National .Strike
MIAMI BEACH (AP) -A major 'AFt;.
CIO union urged today a nationwide
genr.ral strike if necessary to reverse pay
regulations imposed by President Ni1on's
Pay Board.
"We are shocked and disappointed thal -
1he first vote taken by lhe Nixon
Administration·s Pay Board constituted
an attack on the economic standards and
!he general welfare of the working people
of our country ," said the executive board
of the 500,000-member , Amalgamated
Meat cutters Union.
It also ruled that payment of raises lo.st
because of the current freeze will be
. allowed only m a limited number o!
specifically approved cases.
Coastal Bill
Changes Snag
Senate Move
f. OAILY l'IL()T l'M lt bY illlt:ll1rlll Kfflll•r
The union's board. conducting one of a
series of AFL-CJO meetings here, said It
will introduce a resolution before: the
main AFL-CIO convention next week to
urge a national work stoppage.
"The Pay Board has robbed scores ?f
thousands of our members of falrly
negotiated and non-Inflationary wage in-
creases which were due to be paid in
September under agreements worked out
more than a year ago," said the Meat
Cutters' statement.
A rash of lasl·minute amendments to
the coastline control bill authored by
Assemblyman Alan Sieroty (D-Beverly
Hills) has resulted in a further one-week
delay of the measur~in the California
Senate. FIREMAN SPLASHES WATER ON SMOLDERING ROOF OF CORONA DEL MAR HOME
Door Tha,t Wai Closed Probably Saved Lives, According to Fire Investigators
VC l1•vi11e P1•oposal
A spokesman fof' Senator Dennis
Carpenter (R-Newpott Beach) said Mon-
day the bill is being' reprinted for a se-
cond hearing next ll1onday before the
Nalural Resources and \\'i!dlife Com·
miltee.
Fraternity 'Draft' Eyed
The Pay Board Monday announced a
~eneral 5.5 percent wage hike limitation
and ruled out retroactivity in most cases
f11r pay hikes frozen since Aug. 15. The
fiv e industry and five publir members of
the board outvoted the five labor
members. including AFlrCIO President
Geor~e Meany.
A spokesman for Assemblyman Robert
Badham (R-Ne11·port Beach ) said the
more than 30 new amendments lo the bil l
included one that ,1·ould pro hi bi t
homeowners Jiving within l,000 feet of the
mean high tide line from painting their
houses without approval of the regional
agencies the bill would establish.
By GEQRGE LE IDAL
ot Ille DlllJ l'lltl $1111 -
A lottery system to draft members for
fraternities and sororities is being pro-
posed to the UC Irvine Academic Senate
as a way of overcoming historic op-
position at UCI to lbe collegiate social in·
stitutions.
The faculty committee on university
\\•elfare is recommending that the
Academic Senate approve a meai;ure thal
bans "rushi ng" and would at'low fraternal
organizations to recruit members only by
"the printing and distribution of de scrip-
tive literature."
secondly, the committee, chai red by
Charles A. Lave. assistant professor (lf
economics, suggests a f o u r · p o i n t
guideline for the lottery selection of
members :
From Page 1
NATURAL. • • •
east side Qf Estancia Drive.
-Horse !tlbles and eci.uestrian trails.
-An outdoor concert area .
-A centrally located 25-acre picnic
area including shelters. a spray wading
pool and a "tiny tot" lot.
-A scenic two-way roadway windin,i:
from Estancia Drive to Victoria Street
with historical markers off the road .
-Bicycle and foot trails throughout the
park.
-Two concession facilities.
-Six tennis courts near community
center.
-Two softball fields near community
center.
-Preserve the archaeological site and
build a museum near it.
-F'our regulation outdoor handball
courts next to tennis courts.
Nearly e\'eryone agrees that buildings
and •·standard " park d e '' e Io pm en t
lrecreation areas) should be kept on the
east side of Estancia Drive, n·hile the
west side (toward the river' should be
natural and filled "'ilh trails.
The proposal for a high school rootba!I
stadium came from the Estancia High
School Football Boost('rs.
Booster spokesmen suggesled a 15-aerc
sltc could be used for a small stadium to
accommodate both local high schools. It
could also be used for the outdoor am·
phitheater suggestions.
A number of writC'rs emphasized the
need for gardens -especit1lly R garden
exhibiting the natural flora of California.
Some of the organizations responding
included the Estancia High School
ecology committee. the League of Women
Voters. school children and individual
re.c;idents.
Nearly everyone said don't allow
apartments.
One woman. Shirley Price. sug~ested a
name contest to give the area an identity.
~he recommended a name like "Indian
Bluffs ." "\Vildemess Park." or "Indian
J\·lcsa."
One you!h, Jill Applega!e, said "it
"'OUld sure be nice to have a park to fly
our kites in."
Dtu~gan said the Projec t 80 Committee
will hold a public hearing on park pro·
posals at 7:30 p.m., Nov. 30, in city coun·
cil chambers.
All citizens will have a chanct lo tX·
press their views at the public hearing.
Some preliminary sketches of a park
proposal dev<'loped by v o I u n t e r r
associates of lhe Oranite County
American Institute of Architects chapter
\\'ill also be reviewed .
One youngster sum1nariud the park
5entiment.
Bill Hobbman wrote: "ll would be very
nlct Ir we could leave It as It Is. The. kid~
around ht.re w1nt it that way. If we put
in • bike trail It would be even better, I
th ink it's: neat to watch jark rabbits."
Tots to Ge t Sc hool ?
HOUSTON (UPJ l -Or. Geor1t Oser.
president of the Houston Sch()()! Board,
has recommrnde:d admitting J-year'"()lds
lo publir schools by the year 1973.
He uld tht plan. which 1would stArt
next year with the admission Qr children
aged 4'r), would cos! S3 million and could
bt financtti by the federal go\'ernment.
I •
-Interested students would place their
student body numbers in a lottery drum.
-Fraternities and sororities would tell
~ the dean of students how many new
members they can accept
-Only the previously set number-of
student body numbers would be drawn
from the drum.
-One lottery each for fralernities and
sororities would be held.
In 1968 the Academic "Senate opposed
fraternities for the UCJ campus. Arter a
two year moratorium, Chancellor Dan iel
(;, Aldrich ,Jr. has been asked to permit
the !\Ociiil groups on ca1npus.
Advi.sory action by the academic
senate, is due Thursday.
··we members personally are not
·enthusiastic about fraternities a n d
sororities," the welfare c o m m i t t e e
reports.
'·Such organizations have a long history
of discriminatory practices , .. and tend
to promote values that are antithetical to
the goals of an intellectual community.
"We are sympathetic to the second
part of the argument, but recognizing in
il strong elements of thought control, we
reject it," the committee recom-
mendation said.
''Either our intellectual values are good
enough to compete with conflicting values
or they are not."
The proposed lottery is designed to
keep fraternities or sororities from
discriminating "against ind ividuals at
Irvi ne," the welfare committee con·
eluded.
"The Pay Board majority has taken
money out o{ the pocke ts of hard-working
and hardpressed food workers and put it
into the treasuries of immensely wealthy ·
corporations," said the Meat Cutters.
Meanwhile, AFL-CIO leaders were split
over whether lo quit the Pay Board or
stay"on it and fight its ruling on Phase 2
wage increases and deferred pay boosts.
While most of the labor leaders are
awaiting officio[ word from AFL-CIO
President George Meany on what course
lo take. some adv ocate an immediate
""alkout of the live labor members from
the IS-member Pay Board established by
President Nixon.
''If President Meany wants to resign
from the Pay Board, he has my support,"
Edward J. Carlough, President of tht1
Sheet llfetal Workers, said A1onday night.
The Sieroty bill, pockmarked with
amendments, is the last remaining
coastline preservation bill given a chance:
to pass. the state legislature.
Another preservation bill, sponsored by
Assemblyman Edwin Z'Bcrg ( D.
Sacramento), was killed Monday by the
Senate Governmental Organization Com-
mittee on a 3 to 6 vote.
Z'Berg's bill would have created a
super agency to control air. waler r..nd
l11nd pollution . It had been passed by the
Assemblyman , but was not even debated
by the Senate committee.
!Jouglas Zoning Action
But President Maurice Hutcheson of
the Carpenters union said, ''If you walk
off the board, how can you argue with its
decisions?''
His measure was backed By the
cnnse rvalionist Siena Club, but opposed
by local government officials who claim-
ed it would take away local control.
other amendments to the Sieroly bill
indicated it would e.xclude from the
statewide coastal control portionsl of the
California shoreline lying w 1 th i n
municipal boundaries.
Goes Back to County
The Pay Board ruled Monda)' that after
!he current wa,ie·price freeze te rminates
Sunday the general limit of pay raises
will be 5.5 percent.
However, the exemption would not
spare Upper Newport Bay from the
purview of tbe superagency. •Another
amendment indicates developments along
shoreline that is less than 80 percent
developed would be subject to agency
review.
The proposed McDonnell Douglas
airport property rezone goes before the
Orange County Board of Supervisors
\Vednesday after a week's delay because
or the absence of Fifth District
Supervisor Ronald· W. Caspers of
Newport Beach.
Last week Supervisor David L. Baker
of Garden Grove proposed that the
retcne hearing should be delayed for 90
days pending the outcome of the city of
Irvine incorporation election. He was
overruled by other :;upervisors.
McDonnell Douglas has requested that
the 50 acres on the north east corner of
r..1acArthur Boule\'ard and Campus Dri\·e
be rezoned from industrial to commercial
use .
In hvo heated hearings before the coun·
ty Planning Commission, the aerospa ce
firm's represenlativcs revealed plans for
a 250-room hotel and 500,000 square feet
of office space on the site.
Opposition to the zone change co1nes
from the Irvine Company, the Irvine
Industrial Complex, UC Irvine and the
City of Newport Beach.
0 f"ro1n Page 1
AIR CAL • • •
\\'ho use the airline:!i.
In opposition ·was the \'ocat Newport
Beach Noise Abatement Con1mittee head-
ed by Dan Emory and Ne\\·port Beach
councilmen who are caught bet\\·een the
opposing forces.
Air California. through its President
Robert Clifford, wanted a 5-year renewal
of the lease.
Ne"·port "·anted the new 1 e a s e
restricted to a month·lo-month or yearly
basis and Clifford emphatically rejected
this as a highly uneconomical basis upon
which a multi-million dollar ~ompany is
being asked· to do business.
. He drew support from the t1untington
Beach, Costa Mesa and Anahe1 m city
councils on the time-period question .
Newport also requested that the
number of flights he held to existin,1:
levels -about 21 a day. Clifford said a
projection of 28 a day has been made for
1972 which he called "realistic'' in \'il'w
of the growing passenger and air freight
demand.
Clifford has not been passive in his
company's drive to renew its lease. He
has canvassed industrial and business
leaders l'IS well as nrganiz.ations .
"We fHI it is important for airline
users to e1press themsel ves. ao the
supervisors will recognize the com-
mercial value of the airport the money Jl
has brought into the county," he argued.
It has been pointed out fhal f700,exxl, a
year in bu~lness woula leave the county
Bnd property ll'lxes totaling $1~7.000
would •be eliminated if the airlines arc
forced out of the airport.
I
Trvine interests oppose the ch'ange
because, they say, it "violates the in-
tegrity of the seven·year·old genera l plan
of the area ."
County Road Deparln,('nf officials said
roadways in the area coul d not possibly
support !he increased traffic which would
be generated by the commercial develop-
ment.
~1cDonnell Douglas officials argue that
it is !he best use for the property and
that to oppose""the development is to sup-
port .a policy of "gloom and doom'' as far
as future economic improvement of the
central Orange County area is concerned.
Ne11·porl Beach officials opposed the
change because. they say, it ··woulri far
outstrip projected demand of the area ."
Newport BeaC'h rectntl ~ appro\·ed a
hotel-office building de\·e!opment on a
200-acre sile a short distance from !he
Jl.1cDonnelt Douglas properl y.
Clouding the issue to be debated
\Vednesda.v is the adoption of a land use
plan for the area by the Orange County
Ait)')Orl L&nd U!!C Comn1 ission. Thi:os body
has designated industrial use for the 50
acres under discussion.
Lindsay Closer
To Tossing Hat
Into '72 Ring
NEW YORK (UPI) -11ayor John V.
Lindsay look today what he ca 11 e d
''clearly a slep" toward becoming an ;:~
live contender for the Democratic pre,sj.
dential nomination.
He announet'd that deputy mayor Rich-
ard Aurelio, 41. his campaign manager
in 1969 and his top po~itical ;.dviser.
\rould lea\'e cily service Dec. 6 lo inake
an active assessment of't.lndsay's presi-
dential chances.
Lindsa1· said he still ha.'1 not drcided
11·he1her "10 mnke a run for the \VhHe
Hou sC'. but '•J will make my final de·
c_·l$ion ear!v next vear."
"J'1n going to t"ry In assess the grass·
root support his candidacy would gener·
ate," Aurelio said.
Aurelio said Lindsay would have lo de-
C'ide by January because of filinl!'. dead-
lines for various state primaries.
Should the bill be reported, out of the
Natural Resources committee next Mon·
day, it would still !ace approval of the
Senate Finance Committee, Se n .
Carpenter has said.
Big Truck Flips,
Blocks Freeway
A big diesel truck-trailer overturned in
the nort hbound lanes of the Santa Ana
Freev.·ay in Santa Ana at 6:30 a.m. today
and tied up traffic for t"·o hours. There
\\'ere no injuries.
Highway patrolmen said the accident
look place at the 17th Streel interchange
and gummy diesel oil was spilled across
the freeway and dripped down onlo 17th
Slreet.
Morning rush hour trafhc was slowed
as highway patrol units guided motorists
past the wreckage.
THANK YOU, ERASTUS!
It occurred to us the other day that we owe a lot · \ n Innovator in our
corpet industry who operated about 150 yea~
Here are some facts about ERASTUS BRIGHAM BIGELOW:
• Bo rn 18 14, W. Boylston, Mass.• Poor family, req ui red to work at a'ge
10 as farm hand and clerk. • Genius at math and mechanics. • At 23
ye ars old, invent ed' loom for fac e. • Invented revolutionary power loom
for BRU SSELS and WI LTON carpels. This crea ted a dome stic carpet in ..
dustry, and virtually eli minated fo reign co mpetition. • Founded BIGE ..
LOW CARP ET MIL LS in Clinton, Moss. • Grut economist, one of small
group fou nding MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY at
Boston in 1861 . • Died 18 79.
ERASTUS:
MY GRANDFATH ER THANKS YOU! MY FATHER THANKS YOU ! I THANK YOU ! MY
CH ILDR EN THANK YOU !
!Four 9eneration5 in fh111 c•rpet busin e5t 5inc• 1894 , thi nk' fo the inventions of
Mr. Bigelow.I
P.S . Amazingly, without Erastus, Bigelow Carpets have remained an industry
leader. Please stop in and see their sparkling carpet line.
./
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 l!lacentla Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS: Mon. l~ni Tflun., 9 lo 5:30 -Fri., f lo 9 -Sal., 9:30 to 5 1
I I . '
1
•
•
S.addlehaek Today's Flnal
N.Y. Stooks EDITION
VOL. 64, NO. 268, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 197 ( TEN CENTS
• lllOll tri reeze e
lforl~i11g Holiday
Nixon Will Visit
On Thanksgiving
President i'\ixon is planning to begin a
v.·orking \"acation in San Clemente on
Thanksgi\"ing Day. it \l.'as learned this
\.\'eek.
Sources in \\'ashington hinted that lhe
Chiel Executive and his V.'ife, Pt.I, wouki
attend a major l"ootball game some.,.,·here
in the East on Thanksgiving then board
Air Force One for !he trip west.
No confirmation has yet been officially
made by ttw \\'hite !louse.
The length of the possible visit to La
Casa Pacifica has not . e en learned.
The trip u·ould be the t to San
Clemente since the Presiden 's long
\\"Orking \iacalion which ended Sept. 3.
That \'isil, 11·hlch lasted nearly three
1vecks, \\'as 1narred by a 111assive oil slick
Mari11e Cleared
Of Attempted
Murder Charges
An Orange County Superior Court jury
look less than two.hours ~londay to clear
a Sctn Clemenle iltarinc of attempted
murder charges filed a[ter he pumped
five shots into his mistress' husband.
The panel agreed wittt defense attorney
Frank Hester that William Archer Reid.
22. of 119 Coronado Lane. 1vas acting in
self defense la st Aug. 4 \\'hen he emptied
his gu1l" at !\larine Sgt. 1-lem1an Viernes,
26.
Hester argued in the \\'Cck·long tr ial
I.hat Viernes, of 243 .\\'. Palizada. was
believc<.I by Reid and the defendant's
rnalc companions to be a karate expert -
a belief that was reinforced \Vhen the
angry Viernes kicked a male \\'ilness
twil'e in the sroin during the aparlment
t.'\lnfrontation.
\iierues. a veteran of t\110 Vietnam
trips, said he ,,·enl to Reid"s apartment to
discuss divo rce papers filed against him
by his '''ife. Connie, 26. He admitted taht
he burst into lhc apartment anQ. told Rllid
he intended to "ram that gun do11•n your
throat and make you cat it."
Reid testiflt<d that he shot in self
defense and felt he had no other recourse
after "'alching \1icrnes deliver ·what he
felt 1vas a very effective karate kick to
one of his guests.
l\lrs. Viernes testified that she had suf·
fercd many beatings at the hands of her
hu sba nd nnd that she told him on the eve·
ning of the ~hooting that she "'anted
nothing fu rther to d<1"\vi!h him. She \\'as
living \\"Ith he r three children at Rcid"s
apartment .
~lrs. Vierne s al so testified that her
hu sband often bragged of beinl!. a "third
degree black belt " karate expert and that
he had delivered "'hnt she believed to be
i.;aratc bl611·s on her hOOy.
Viernes argued that he kne11· nothing
about karate. The Honolulu-born
sergeant. 11·ho is still receiving hospital
treatment for \.\"Ounds in the chest and
arn1 s. testified that he only made the
statements•to impress his "'ife.
St. Ca.tlierine
"Pctrents Meet
A spcci,al meeting lo explore the
possibility of keeping Laguna's St.
Catherine of Slenn llchool open
after June. 1972, \\·Ill be. held at 8
p.n1. todny In the auditorium al Top
of the \\1orld f:len1ent:iry School.
21601 Tree Top Lane.
Parents and other interested
n1embers of the community are in·
vited to attend the session. organiz-
ed by families of shxlents attending
lhe school which Ms servl'd the
Catholic rommunity for !he past 16
years.
It "·as announced l\londay thst
lhl' lsters of Sl. Joseph of
Caro11dele1 \\1111 no longer be able to
staff lhr school afttr the close or
the present school year A shortag~
of perM>nrlel In the te:ichlng order's
65 1veste.n1 schools necessitate:i;
"'llhdrawal of SL Catherine's four
leaching sisters for o t b er
assignments. SiJ\er SI e p ha n I e
Jfanly, prlncipN, explained. ,'------------'
Crom a Nal'Y tanker.
The mishap gained international at·
tention after traces of the thick fuel oil
stained the President's private beach in
San Clemente.
Fire Sweeps
Coffee Shop
In Cle111ente
A smoky blaze \.\'hich 11•as discovered
by passing San Clen1ente po I ice
patrolmen caused abou t $4.000 damage to
a coffee shop shortly after n1idnight this
morning.
firemen using special breathing ap.
paratus finally quelled lhe blaze at Bob's
Coffee Shop at 1409 S. El Camino Real.
The alarm lo volunteers 1ve11t out al 12:44
a.m.
A P~11et1~nti1ag \/ietv Fire department spokes1nen said the
fire started in the rear storeroom of the
business. 1'he apparent cause 11·a~ a
discarded cigaret.
Patrolmen noti1:ed the srnoke within
the business which had closed at 9 p.m.
l\fonday night.
Dr. Robert I\t. 1\n1alo ex111nines X-rays in radio-
logy at nc\\' 1'1ission Community Hospital in Mission
Viejo. The ne\1.' 124-bed facility is already carrying
a big patienl load. llospita.J Administrator George
Ollendorf attributes this not only to the modern
medical equipment and star! but the innovative ap-
proach to patient relations. See the story and addi-
tional picture· on Page 2.
Entry into the business. firemen said,
had to be forced because or locked doors.
The coffee shop is ownOO by Roberf Pyle.
Damage to hi s business 1vas set at
$3.000 lo the structure and $1.000 to the
contents. The entire building, officials
said, received major smQ.ke da1nage.
Marine Stricken
By Meningitis
A young l\tarine pri1·ate f ro 111
Oklahoma was reported in '"very se rious"
condition at the Camp Pendleton base
hospital today after being stricken 11•ith a
noncontagious form or memingitis early
last weekend.
Pfc. Donald R. Loftie. 17. of the baSf'
schools battalion \.\'as hospitalized late
Friday, base spokesmen said.
Loftie 1vas the third victim reported
lhis year of menigococcemia meningitis.
Tusti11 Boa1·d Says Youths
May Ru11 f 01· Vaca11t Seat
Declaring he \\'as nor a candidate. an
18-year old student leader fron1 Tustin
High School nevertheless led school board
n1embers to suspect they n1ight be the
first school board in Orange County 11•ith
an under-21 board candidate.
Bill Drenttell of "Tustin. asked the
board :0.1onday night if l8·year-0!ds \\'ere
cligibl~ lo run for the seat being vacated
F't·b. 2 bv :O.lrs. Jun e Smi!h.
Board ·rresidenl Paul Calhoun of Santa
Ana, replied that. J8.year-0lds indeed
were eligible and Iha! lhe only re·
quirement \\'as that a candidate reside in
the district and be a registered voter.
.. I'm a registered voter," Drenttell of·
fered. "But I won't be running."
The board votOO to set the{) trustee elec·
t1on at the same time as the $15 million
bond and $1.99 maximum tax rate elcc·
lion -Feb. I.
Candidates seeking the unexpired term
on the Tustin 1-ligh district boa rd u·ould
have to file 1vith the County Regislrar of
Voters by Dec. 9 in order to be listed on
the ballot.
Brig Shapes Up Dickran Borartian. who was elected to
the board April 20, counseled tbe youthfu l
candidate lhat !here is no charge for
signing as a candidate unless a statement
of qualifications is printed in the ballol
pamphlet. Percentage of Black ln1nates Do-iv1i
Spokes1nen at Carnp Pendleton ha\'e
issued figures sho11•ing a sharp decline in
the percentage of black inmates in Lhe
base brig -figures calculated to answer
charges by the Congressional Black
Caucus.
i\lembers of the caucus. \vho will tour
!he base brig on l\1onday, issued their
own statements rectntly charging a
''disproportionate·· percentage of black
inmates in milita ry, brigs.
Pendleton press aides said the number
of black inmates in the new correctional
facility is half of 11.·hal the figure u·as in
1970.
And the figure still is declining. lhC'y
addel:I . "'
In 1970 24.1 prcent of the inmates v.·erc
NegnM!s. The present figure is only 13
percenl .
The 13 1ncmbers of the Congressional
group plan to hold hearings on U.S.
military bases in coming Wet!ks.
Presumably the group on :O.londay \l.'ill
lour the Pendleton facilit v 11"hich was
dedicated several \reeks. ago as a
replacement to a brig ""hich drc\\' harsh
criticism because of conditions and treal ·
ment of prisoners.
The mw facility has an average 400 in·
mates, Pendleton aides sa id.
The district is going for another bond
election following last year's defeat of a
Sl7 milUon issue. Further, the district's
present tax override expires in June.
If voters turn down the 4!k:ent increase
includPd in the $1.99 tax limit on the Feb.
1 ballot, the high school tax rate \.\'Otild
drop to 85 cents, Supt. \\lilliam ZOgg
noted.
Nevadans Get Holiday
CARSON CITY, Nev. (UPl 1 -Gov.
Mike. O'Callaghan has declared Nov. 26,
lhe day after Thanksgiving, a legal holi -
day in Nevada. giving stale worker~ a
four-day weekend.
License Fee Cha_~g~s. Due
San Cle1nente Meets on Siveeping Revisions
San Clemente city Councilmen will ba sis. ~ r year for the license holder with gross in·
meet in an early morning study session The latest fet structures were the come of $250,000 or more eath )'ear.
\\'edoesday to gil"e a final review to 11 re sult or hours of study and discussion by Councilmen also expect to iron out minor kinks in several other areas-of ttrc complex ordinance rilled 11·ith business private advisory commltttts anri COll.Q· fee schedule. including matters of dispute
license fee changes. cilmen. in lhe list or nat·rale fees for dozens or
As soon BS lhe S<.'Ores of separalt They represent a ceiling of $300 per miscellaneous business activities.
categories of gross-receipts formulas and vear in the retail wholesale and m11nufac· Other Items set for• discussion al the
nat rates are totall)' revic\li'cd the council luring licenses. The minmum in th.ot 7:30 a.m. session in c:ouncil chambers in·
will l'ake a vote on the first fer revisions c11t1?gory is for business-with $10,000 or elude a list or zoning ordinance changes
in the past 15 years. less in gross income each year, and tlu1t l:l5 proposed by planning commissione.l's.
The target dale for The ne\\' recs Is Jan. license holder would pay $10 annually. 1'he ne1Y inclusions in the mMter zoning
J when license rcne\\'tll notices \\'Ill be Under the professions and occupations ordinance \\'Ould allow service stations,
mailed to city lk:ense holders. ('alegory or gross receipts tonnulas. lht restaurants a1;1d ambulance servici! to
It will be the first time lh4ll lil.'ense fee11 range in fees proposed is from $12 a year locale in the ~1-2 industrial zone afler
have bt."Cn t.'OUccted on • ~calcndar·year for a business of $6,000 or less to •tjli a luuance or a conditional use permit.
' '
Scliools Delay
Move on Joining
Stateivide V nit
Tustin Union tllgh School District
trustees took no action on n1embership in
the California School Boards Association
follo"·ing a presentation at l\-1onday's
board meeting by a CSBA official.
Board ~!ember Robert Bartholomew of
Tustin look issue with Rich a r d
i\lontgomery's presentation on the
statewide school board association.
·•You told legislators you represented
;,ll districts in California when you push·
ed for sex education and a statewide pro-
perty lax. \Veil. we were members then
and I'm telling you no\v, you didn't
represent the wishes of this board,"
Bartholon1ew charged.
i\lontgomery. one of three field
representatives or CSBA, explained thaL
the association's lobbyists in Sacramento
\Vork on matters approved by the
delegate assembly and th e board of
directors.
l\1ontgomery noted it 1vould not be
•·politically" sound to tell legislators that
CSBA wishes did not have the support of
all school .districts, when lobbyists are
trying to convince legislators to. act.
Bartholomew agreed, but added, "it
isn't moral, either." to. represent CSBA
as having the support of every district in
the state. r
Dickran Boran1an. board member from
Senta Ana. urged membership in CSBA
to allo\V the district to take· advaotage of
the publication services of the organlza.
ti on.
Dana 01amher
Cancels Meeting
For November
Directors of the Dana Point Chamber or Commerce have cancelled a general
membership meeting for this month
because of the busy holiday season.
The monthly function wlll be replaced
In December with a Christmas luncheon
for all chamber members and thelf
families.
The regular meeting of chamber diree-
tors, however. wlll still be held In Novem-
ber. That functJon will be on Nov. 16 at
noon In the Village lnn restaurant.
Directors recently set more plans for
the observance of the Holiday season in
Dana Point.
The chamber wlll sllQnSOr a Christmas
tree lot near the Dana Point Plata along
with a store-front decoration contest.
Mrs. Florence Larter Is thairmM of
the decoration committee.
5.5% Raise
Lid Scored -
l\11AMI BEACH (AP) - A majo r AFL-
CIO union urged today a nationwide
general strike if neces sary to reverse pay
regulations imposed by President Nixon;,->
Pay Boord.
"We are shocked and disappointed that
the Jirst \"OJe taken by the Nbcon
Administration's Pay oBard <'Onslituled
an attack on the economic standards and
the general \\'elfare of the wcirking people
of our country," said lhe executive board
<>f the 500,lm-member Ama1@mated
hfeat Cutters Union.
The union's board, conducting one or a
series of AFL-CIO meetings here. said it
will introduce a resolution before the
main AFL-CIO conven tion next week to
urge a notional \\'Ork stGp'page.
'1'he Pay Board ha s robbed sco res ol
thousands of our members or fairl y
negoliated and non·inflati('n.1rv 11•r•-.. 1,.
creases which ~·ere due
Septen1ber under agreemc:
more than a year ago,·· s<i , ,
Cutters' statement.
The Pay Board l\Tonday 1u1n-L i
general 5.5 percent wage hike Jin1lt ·
and ruled out retroaclivily in most c:,
for pay hikes frozen since Aug. l:i. "
fi\'C industry and five public member~
the board outvoted the five Jab ,.
members. including AFL-CIO Presidenl
Gecrge l\[eany.
.. The Pay Board 1najority has taken
money oul or the pockets of hard·working
and hardpressed food workers and put il
into Lhe treasuries of immensely wealthy
corporations." said the l\1eat Cutters.
Mean1vhile, AFL-CIO leaders were split
over whether to quit the Pay Board or
stay on ii and fight its ru/il1g on Phase 2
wage increases and deferred pay boosts.
While most of the labor leaders are
awaiting offlci;,I ll'ord ·from AFL..CJO
President George l\1cany on what course
to lake, some advocate an immediate
1valkout or the five labor members f.'j;~,,-'.
the 15-member Pay Board established
President Nixon.
"If President J\.1eany \\'ants to resig ri
from the P:iy Board, he has my support,"'
Edward J. Ca rlough, President of Iha
Sheet ~1elal \Vorkers, .said l\tonday night.
But President l\laurice Hutcheson or
the Carpenters union said. ''If you walk
of! the board, how can you argue with its
decisions?"
The Pay Board ruled Tl.londay that alter
the current wage·price freeze terminate.~
Sunday the general limit of pay raises
will be 5.5 percent.
It also ruled that payment of raises lo!>l
because of the current freeze will be
allo\ved only in a limited number of
specifically approved cases.
Jn both rulings. the rive busine ss and
five public members of the Pay Board
outvoted the labor members of the
Board, Including Meany.
Labor's key demand has been for full
payment of raises lost because of the
wage-price freeze.
"'It is a stacked board.'' co mplained
President S. Frank Raftery of the
Painters union .
But Raftery and t1i.·o other members ot
the AFL.c10's·35-man policy-makinEt: ex.
ecutive committee "'e re more cautious
about advocating that labor quit the Pay
Board. The other two were Hutcheson
and President Peter Fosco or the
Laborers union.
Orange Coast
Weacher
Don't look !or any lifting of the
fog on \Vednesday, the weather
lady warns. It'll be the same kind
of day \Vith temperalurts ranging
from 6.1 on the beaches lo 73
further inland.
INSIDE TODAY
Dipto111atic .sources /lave re·
ported A·tao Tse·tuno'.s dtsigna t·
eel heir Lin Piao was involved
ii& a plot, ous!ed from his office
and perhaps killed fn a p[aue
crasll while tscaplnu. Story
Pagt 4.
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•
2 DAIL V PILOT SC
Viejo's New HoSpital Doesn't Look Like One
!y PA1'1EU~Hi\LLAN
01 tN DeHJ 'lltf ll•H
It boasts gourmet cuisine. cocktails,
~rator inttriors. coiffure and barber
Rrvice. and .i. newspaper with every
breakfast.
It guarantees friendly staff and
p erson a I I z.ed attention, says
management.
The newest branch of the Hiiton?
No-f\1ission Community Hospital.
Images of white walls. antiseptic odors,
11.nd bland food don't seem to fit the new
proprietary Mission Viejo facility.
It doesn't look like a hospital-and
that's the whole idea. liays administrator
George Ollendorf. -
"ln a J)atient's eyes, tht only thlng1
that make a hos pital dlifertnt are the
surroundings, the food, and the nurses,''
said Ollendorf.
That's why each room has a different
wallpaper pattern, • color tel evision and
carpeting or decorator tiles.
"We provide ext ras nov.·-a full -time
beautifician whose first stop is the
maternity ward, a bo~ber one day a
week . a newspaper with breakfast, and a
champagne supper for new parents the
Comp_uter Remap Pact
'
Held by Cor y's Relative
SACRAMENTO (UPI ) -A Southern bids, the newspaper said. _J
California firm. whose officers include Chairman of the board of America n
former Assembly employes 'and a C.Omputer Resources (ACR) is William
relative or the Assembly Democratic Butcher, brother in low of Assembly-. . man Kenneth Cory (0-Ga rden Grove), Caucus chairman, 1s the holder of a near-and a member of Cory's legislative staff
ty $200.000 computer contract for reap-in 1967, the newspaper reported. Butcher
portionment. the San Jose Mercury is married to Cory's wife's sister.
reported today. Cory. says th~re is no confli~t of in-
The contract was awarded without terest involved_ in the c.ontract ~1th ACR.
Highway Zone
Move Reversed
By Council
A planning comrriission decision to prG-
hibit a new zoni ng of land on the Ortega
Highwa y was overturned by the Sa n Juan
Ca:pistrano City Counc il Monda y.
The commissio n had denied the rezone
of 210 acres from unclassified to residen-
tial because they felt it was not ;'in the
best interests of the city."
After hearing arguments of proponen~
and opponents of the rewne, the council
voted 3·2 to allow the new land use.
Voting no were Councilmen Josh Gam-
mell and Jim Thorpe who wanted to
rezone to be conditioned .
The land is to be developed into 517
housing units by Pace!elter Homes, a
company that ha s projects in Costa
Mesa . Irvine, San Clemente, and Laguna
Niguel.
John Klug, Pacesetler's representative,
urged the rezone because the 2.4 dY1e!ling
units per acre would conform with !he
city's general plan, the development
would be compatible with surrounding
area, and there is a need for medium-
-priced housing In the city.
Opposing the rezone was Robert
Creber, who said said il was not com·
palible, the re would be increased enroll·
ment in schools. and there would be too
much traffic on the Ortega Hi ghway
which is already in poor condition.
Councilman Ed Chermak said he ob-
jected to the council or the planning com·
mission planning a development before
the land is toned.
Councilman Jim Thorpe, said the coun·
cil's job is ro promote the health. safety.
and welfare of the people in the city.
··we should condition the rezone so
that there are provisions conct.rning traf·
fie, schools , grading and landscaping," he
said .
He said it should be a concern of the
council to make sure there is coordina-
tion with the school district, to influence
the state to improve Ortega . and to make
gore grading and landscaping improve!!
the appearance of the development.
"But land in this city is being assessed
Ill its highest and best use." said Ma yor
Tony Foster."/ think we shoul d gel the
be st we can ond be sati sfied with tha t.
''\Ve could condition any de velopment
out or the city," he added .
OlAN51 COAIT
DAILY PILOT
<IMH~ COAST 'Ul ll$HIHG CXIM.PAHV
ft•"•rt N. w •••
,., ... ..,. '"" l'll~lilW
J1c\; ft. Cv1l•v
"l have no fi nancial interest 1n ACR. If
there was anything at all unhealthy, and
I don't personally think set, 1t is that we
all grew up in the business together."
ACR was awarded the contract Feb. 3
to deveJop reapportionment data for the
Assembly elections and reapportionment
committee, whose c h a i r m a n is
Assemblyman Henry Waxman (Q.Los
'Angeles).
Bids are not required for contracts
awarded by the Legislature and paid for
with Assembly contingency funds.
The newspaper said ACR President
William Below is "a close personal
friend" of Cory and they both worked
together on the Assembly staff In 1965.
Also employed by ACR is Gary
Bamberg who worked for the Assembly
from 1965 to 1968, the Mercury said. ·
Although Butcher Is no longer actively
engaged in the co mpany. he still holds
stock as well as his nonsalaried title as
chairman of the board . He left ACR late
last year while negotiations were still in
progress with the Assembly . From
March I to Oct. 31, he worked for tht
Senate Elections and Reapportionment
Committeee.
The Mercury reported that ACR receiv-
ed the Assembly conlracl at a lime when
the firm 's financial problems endangered
its survival.
Below said, ''I didn't know if we could
stay open. We were hoping the contract
could make a differtnce."
Lag una Council
To Study Trash
Laguna Beach City Councilmen wi ll
gather in an adjourned meeting Wed·
nesday night to study a recently proposed
waste management system to handle
both rubbish and sewage.
The plan, as outlined by City Manager
Larry Rose, would be based on a waste
management tax of $1.50 per month per
parct.I ot land in the city. Additionally.
single 'family residences would p;.y a $2
per month surtax. Hotels, motels and
apartments would pay a Sl per month per
unit surtax.
Portable Class
Lease Awarded
Speed Space tnc . was the successful
bidder and will provide three portable
classroom un its for use at r-.1ission Viejo
High School. Tustin High School District
trustees decided !his week .
The district will lease the rlassrooms
from the firm al a cost of $3.412.50 each
for three years. Supt. William Zogg said.
The district may also lease as many as
se\•en more units if they are needed since
the relocatable units were bid on a one to
10 basis, Zogg told the board.
night before tht mother goes home.'' said
Ollendorl, ...
"I feel it's the hospita1's responsi bility
to provide these extras to make the pa-
tient's stay as pleasant as possible."
The special service extends to the din-
ner trav which is one of $4.2 dirfere.nt
menus in addilion to special dietary food
ordered by the doctors. Even cockta ils
are a\Pailab!e if permitted by one 's physi·
cian.
Ollendorf believes the approach and
style the new facility is the reason v.•hy it
is nearly full.
'·Today we have 101 patients in our 124-
bed facility," the admin istrator said.
Ollendorf said the faellll)' has 2.00 doc-
tors -149 are specialists. It also has 300
ancillary employes and only 15 are not
from the surrounding community.
"We have a special trainini: program
for nurses' aides," he said. "We pro~de
three monlhs of intensive training and
pay them while they are learning. When
they camplete the course they become
full-paid employes."
He said he has a full backlog of nurses.
Most work .two or three days a week,
devoring lh e rest of the time to their
famil ies.
I
OllendorC said there Is a good deal of
h.igbly specialized equipment. Th e
hOspital maintains a device which allows
doctors • to check their bosplt.allied-
patients' electrocardograms from the ol-
fice; one nurse for every two Inten sive
care patienls; special supplies stored ln
the emergency rool.TI which can treat nine
paticnls a! once: a monit or which allows
a patient to ~peak to the ~1urses' station
rarher than waiti ng for her to ans\\·er a
light.
He said future plans include a heart
monitor in an ambulance whic h will tell
the hospital how a patient is doing
enroute and waiter service which willi. ,
allow the prlvale-room patient to ha1·e >
his meals whenever he wanls them.
··one of our best features is our patient
relations counselor who visits every pa·
tient every day to /ind out it they have
any problems or con1plaints," said the
administrator.
Ollendorf said his facility is deterffiined
lo be unique. ·'Sati s(ied patients are good
for the hospital and l have a file lull of
letters which prove we've been suc·
cessful," he said.
Coastal Bill
Changes Sna g
Senate Move
A rash of last-minute amendments lo
the coaStline control bill authored by
Assemblyman Alafl Sieroty (0-Beverly
Hills ) has resulted in a further one-week
delay or the measure in the California
Senate. ..
A spokesman for Senator Dennis
CarPenter (R·Newport Bea ch) said i\1on·
day the bill is being reprinted for a se-
con<t hearing next Monday before lhe
Natural Resources and \Vild!ife Com·
mittee.
A spo kesman for Assemblyman Robert
Badham (R·Newport Beach) .said the
more than 30 new amendments to the bill
included one that would pr o hi bi t
homeowners living within 1,000 feel of the
mean high tide line from painting their
house~ withou~ approval ot the regional
agencies the bdl "·ouJd establish.
the Sieroty bill. pockmarked with
amendments. is the last remaining
coastline preservation bill given a chance
to pass the state legislature.
Another preservation bill, sponsored by
Asse mblyman Edwin Z'Berg ( D.
Sacramento), was killed Monday by the
Senate Governmental Organization Com-
mittee on a 3 to 6 vote.
DAILY PILOT si.11 Phot• "ONE OF OUR BEST FEAT URES IS A PATIENT RELATION S COUN SELOR "-OLLE NOO RF
Irene Nohr, Ph•rmaceutic•I T•chn ici•n, Check1 Drug Supplies at Mi,sion Community Hospit•I
Z'Berg's bill would have created a
supe r agency to con trol air. water ond
land pollut ion. It had been passed by the
Asse mblyman, but was not even debated
by the Senate committee.
State Education
Unit Receives
School Bond Bid ~
'rhe bill to raise the ceiling of school
bond sales ha s now gone to the stale
Assembly Education Committee.
The measure·, introduced by Slate
Senator Dennis Carpenter ( R·Ne\vport
Beach) to help ease San Joaquin Elemen·
tary School District's construction crisis,
h<Js passed the Senate and has been in·
troduced in the Assembly .
Richard R o h r b a c h . administrative
assistant to Senator Carpenter. said the
Assembly Education Committee has of-
fic ia lly adjourned for the year. But ef·
forts are being made to get it to
reconvene.
In order to pass, the bill would havr to
be approved by the Assembly Education
Committee. !he Assembly Finance Com-
mittee, and Assembl y.
The bill is designed to allow no more
than five school districts to raise their
bond celiing from fi\Pe to seven percent of
its assessed valuation up to 197~.
If approved this year, $4.6 million
WQUid be available for San Joaqu in
enough to b'uild three schools.
Tots to Ge t School?
l!OUSTON !UPI) -Or. Georgr Ose r,
president of the Houston School Board.
has recommended admitting 3·yea r-0lds
to public schools by the yea r 19i3.
He said the plan. \\'hich \\'ould start
next year with the admission of children
aged 41h, v.'Ould cost $3 million and could
be financed by the federal government.
Fraternity Draft Pinn
Proposed at UC Irvine
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of lh1 Dt lll r1111 'lt!f
A lottery syslem lo draft mf'mbers for
fraternities and sororities is being pro-
posed to !he UC Irvine Academic Senate
as a way of overcoming historic op·
position al UCI to !he collegiate social in·
st itutions.
The faculty committee on uni\'ersity
\\'cllare is reco111mending that the
Academ ic Senate approve a measure that
bans ··ru shing" and would allov.• fraternal
organizations to recruit members only by
··the printing and dis tribution of descrip·
l1\'e lilera 1ure."
Secondly, the committee, chaired by
Charles A. Lave. assistant professor of
economics, suggests a f o u r · p o i n t
):!uideline for the lottery seleclion of
tnembers :
-Interested students would place their
student bod.v num bers in a lottery drunl.
-Fraternities and sororities \\'OUld tell
the dean of students ho\v many ne1v
n1ernbers they can accepl. •
-Only !he previously set number o(
s1udent body rfUmbers "'OUld be drawn
from lhe drum.
-One lottery each for fr.!lternities and
sororities "·ould be held.
In 1968 the Academic Senate opposed
fraternities for the UC! ca mpus. After a
two year moraloriun1, Chancellor Daniel
G. Aldrich Jr. has been asked to pei'mi t
the social groups on campull.
Advisory action by the academfc
senate, is due Thuriday.
"\\'c members personally are not
enthusiastic about fraternities a n d
sororities," the v.·elfare co m m i t tee
reports.
"Such organizations have a long history
of discriminatory practices ... and tend
to pron1ote \'alues Iha! are antithetical to
the goals of an intellectual community.
•·\Ve are sympathetic to the sect:1nd
par! of the argument. but recognizing in
it strong elements of thought control. ""'e
reject it." the committee re.com·
n1endal ion said.
"Either our intellectual \Palues are good
enough to eo1npet e with conOicting values
or they are not."
THANK YOU, ERA STUS !
Mis me.asure was backed by the.
cnnservationist Sierra Club, but opposed
by local government officials who claim·
ed it would take away local control.
Other amendments to the Sieroty bill
Indicated it would exclude from the
statewide coastal control portions of the
California shoreline lying w it h In
municipal boundaries.
However, the exemption would not
· spare Upper Newport Bay from the
purview of the superagency. Another
amen<tment indicates deVelopments along
shoreline that is less than 80 percent
developed would be subject to agency
review.
Laguna Hi gh Se ts
Football Feast
The final foolball feast of the seaso'n
will be held Friday evening in the
cafeteria at Laguna Beach High School.
preceding the Homecom ing football
game.
The popular hamburger d i n n er .
prepared by members of the high sc'1.ool
PTA, will be serving from 6 p.m. t<Y1"':30
p.m. Price is $1.50 for adults and $1 for
students and the dinner is open to the
public.
The football feasts benefit the school'!!
athletic program and !he annual senior
party.
Here
It occurred to us the other day that we owe a lot to an innovator in ·our
carpet industry who operated about 150 years ago.
are some facts about ERASTUS BRIGHAM BIGELOW:
VU Ptl&illlflll """ '"-••I MwtV
Tll•111•1 K11.,il
Ef(tor
n i'."lt t A. M 1~M~•
MMqq f"l'°"
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l..t•M IMc• Orfke
~2Z f•r•1t Av111u1
a.lam., •ddr•u : r.o. l er '''· •1•12 S-C'-te Otfk•
Time-lap se Movie Mo11ito1·
Of Sewer Outf ::_ills Sougl1t
• Born 1814, W. Boylston , Mass.• Poor family, required to work at 19e
10 •s farm.hand and clerk.• Genius at math and mech•n ics. • At 23
years old, invented loom for lace. • Invented revolutionary power loom
for BRUSSELS and WILTON c•rpets. This created a domestic carpet in ..
du stry, and •irtually eliminated foreign competition. • Foun ded BIGE ..
LOW CARPET MILLS if'I Clinton, Mass.• Great economist, one of small
group founding MA SSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY al
Boston in 186 I. • Di ed 1879. IOS Nw1• fJ C1mi11• Rt•/, t2•72
OtW Offk" °"'' Mto•• U Wn! 11• S!ttet tt_., 11 .. dl: Wt '1._t 10..1;~
tuia.!11111111 ... tlll J1l1S ~ ._,in\r-
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PALO ALTO (UPll -The placement
of "time·lapse'' mo.v ie camera s near
se..,.•age outfalJ points in coast al waters
could provide early warnings of possible
dari1ge to marine life, Lockheed C.Orpora·
\ tion scientists said today .
Of. Lee Tepfey, a senior staff scientist
at Lockheed Missiles & Space Co. in
nearby Sunnyvale, described develop-
ment of a system-which 0ptrales unat·
tended for long periods in water 8! dttp
as 200 lttl.
He addrtssed 1 three-day joint ron·
ference · on sensing of environment;il
pollutants. which concl ude!i \\'ednesday.
It was sponsored by a half dozen sclen·
tific and environmental groups.
Tepley sek! undersea camera s using
th<' '}ime-lapse" tehcnlque -In v.•h\ch 8
single. frame ls taken every few seconds
or minutes -can provide more In·
formation than divers making Ylsual
observations.
''UndC'rsea photo-documenh1tlon cftin
point out slow changes ~ the underwater
environment before they re ach
catastrophic proportions, and thereby
lead to corrective action before it is too
~ late," he said.
lie said the automatic. battery-powered
system .. ·which can take 32.000 frames
over a span of several days v.·it h
floodlights coming on autom3tica1\y to
provide light; could provide . data on
harmful changes in marine ecology,
especially at sewage outfall points.
lie. !ihowfd confe1tnce del egates a film
demonstraling the de$lruction of corial
reefs In Kanoehe Bay, Hawa.ii, by alg11e
v.·hose growth was spurred by nutrients in
sewage flowing into the bay.
"Unfortunatt'ly. the condition w<is not
rtcognlzed untll g re a t damage w a s
done ," Tepley said. "The important thing
here is that if systematic, long-term
photographic monitoring -includin~
time-lapse photography -11ad b e <' n
1tarted <ibout five years ago, the algae
grnwth would have been discovered at an
earl)' date JJTld preventive action could
ha\Pe been la.ken."
•
ERASTUS:
MY GRANDFATHER THANKS YOU! MY FATHER THANKS YOU! I THANK YOJ/! MY
CHILDREN THANK . YOU! .
I Four generations in the carpet business since 1894, th en ks to the in v•ntion1 of
Mr. 8i9el0Yot,)
P ,S. Amazingly, without Erastus, Bigelow Carpets have remained an industry
leoder. Please stop in and see their sparkling carpet line.
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOUIS: Mo•. 1111'11 Tllun. f to 5:30 -l'•l.. t to t -Sot. f:JO to S
. I
•
Laguna Beaeh
EDITION
VOL. 64, NO. 268, 2 SEC TlqNS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, '197f
St. -Catherine's
By BARBARA. KRElBJCH
Of 1111 01Jlr Pllel It.ft
Laguna Beach Superintendent o f
Schools Dr. \\'llliam Ullom said today the
Lagwia Beach. Unified School District will
have tile facilities lo accrimmodale
iitudents from St. Catherine of Siena
:atholic School if the school is closed
·next year. but the financial impact on
district budgeting would be substantial.
One problem. Ullom said. "'as that the
:listricfs basic aid from the state, based
ln adverpge daily altcndancc (ADAI.
runs a year behind. so that the stale con·
•ributlon or $125 per year per studen t
11.·ould .not be received in the first Year
the new students were received.
"We will not know just how many
studJ!:nts to expect until a survey of
parents has been completed," she ex-
.Plained. "Sisler Stephanie (priqcipa.1 of
SL Catherine's) was good enough to let
us know about this at an early date So
plans could be made to incorporate the
youngsters into !he Laguna Beach pro.
gram and I must congratulate her on this
planning."
Prese.nt enrolln1ent at the Catholic
school is 212, of y.•h.ich, according to
!)ister Stephanie, about one·third co1ne
•
Clo·sure May
from ?i.1ission Viejo and other areas
outside the Laguna school district.
Noting that some of fhe parents may
look to enrolling their children in Our
Lady of Fatima Catholic School in San
Clemente or the Old Miis ion School in San
Juan Capistrano. Ullom said it will not be
possible to get an-acrorate grade level
count of those planning to attend Laguna
schools next year until the parent survey
is completed.
"However," he added. '·our operating
budget next year certainly would have to
be increased to accommodate them. \Ve
have the buildings. but there wou ld be in·
creased cost in staff, male r i a Is,
transportaUon and cuStodial care. For
example. if we gel 120 youngsters we
would llffd rour more teachers, custodial
seryiCes for four classrooms and bus ing
for 120 students."
The. overall impact of adding 1()0..plus
students al the elementM')' ·level in
Laguna Beach, which has a current stu-
dent population or :lbout 1,900. would not
~ too many problems, the super!n·
tendent indicated. beyond the need to in·
crease the ope.rat.Ing budget. .
The basic aid payment from the state
of $125 per student definltely would not be
Prove
suf(icient to cover increased operating
costs, he said, even after it starts in the
stcond year of the increased enrollment.
Sister ste'phanie announced this week
that she and the three other teaching
sisters of the order of St. Joseph of
Carondelet, who make up half the
teaching facultY at St. Catherine's, will
be withdrawn next June and re-assigned
lo other schools operated by the order,
which are suffering from a shortage of
teaching. personnel. :
Father Gerald lrloschel. pastor of the
parish or St. Catherine of Siena, said
present plans.are to use the schs>ol lacili-
Today's Flnal
N.Y. Stocks
TEN CENTS
Costly
ty as a center for a religious education
program for all catholic children In the
district.
For the past 16 years SI. Catherine'•
has oUered regular elementary classes
for children in the first through eighth
grades.
A special meeliJlg of parents of
children who would be affected by the
school closure y.·ill be held al 8 o 't'!ock
tonight at Top of the \Vorld School in
Laguna Beach to explore possibilities of
keeping the school open.
• ewer on u Ie
Plata11e1•s Agree
20,000 Residents
Laguna's Limit
B)1 FREDERICK ~HOE~1EHL
Of lfW D•!lr ,li.t Stiff
The population of Laguna Beach should
oe kept to about 20.000 persons by 1900
and high density development acreage
should not increase. planning com·
missioners agreed ~tonday night during
study of the land use element of the
General Plan.
St. Catherine
Parents Meet
A specia l meeting to explore the
possibility of keeping Laguna's St.
Catherine of Siena school open
after June. 1972, will be held al 8
p.m. today in the auditorium ,at Top
of the \\lorld Elementary School.
21601 Tree Top Lane.
Parents and other interesttd
members of !he commun ity are in·
\'ited to attend the session. organiz..
ed by families or students attending
the school which has served the
Catholic community for the past 16
years.
I( \1·as announced ~ronday that
the sisters of St. Joseph of
Carondelet y.·ill no longer be able to
staff. the school Arter the close of
!he present school year. A shortage
of personnel in the teaching order's
65 western schools necessitates
withdra\\•al of St. Catherine's four
lcachin~ sisters for other
assiiznn1ent s. Sister Stephanie
Hardy, princip:?J, explained.
Big U11ion Urges
National St1ikc
O!er Pay Ruling
~OAi\11 BEACH (API -A major AfL-.
CIO union urged lodsy a nalioi1~·idc
~eneral strike if necessary to re\'erse pa y
regulalions in1posed b~· J1 resident Nixon 's
Pay Board .
"\Ve are shocked and disappointed that
'he first vote taken by the Nixon
Adn1inistralion's Pay oBard co:-.sli!uted
an auack on the economic standards and
lhe general welfare of the "'orking people
;if our country,'' said the excculit:e board
nf the 500.000·membcr Amalgamated
~leat Cutters Union,.
The union's board. conducting one of a
series of AFL-CIO meetings here, said it
11.•UI introduce a resolution before the
1nain AFL-ClO convenfion next \Veek .lo
urge a notion1d work stoppage.
"T.be Pay Board has robbed scores ot
thousands of our members of lalrly
negotiated !Ind non-innahonary Vl'age in·
creases Y.·hicb were due ~ be paid in
September under agreemc~t.s \\'Orked out
more than 11 year ago,·· said the ~teat
Cutters· statement. . l
The Pay Board ~1onday abnounced"
~eneral S.5 percent wage hike limitation
11nd ruled out retroactivlty in most cases
for pay bike~ frozen since Aug. 15. The
~\"f? induslry and rl\'r public members of
the hoard ·nut\'oted the ri\'e labor
members. \ncludhtg AF'L-CIO PN!Sident
11f0rge ~tean)'.
'
Commissioners are expected I o
formalize the study session conclusions at
tbtir regular meeting this A1onday night.
Adopted, the ney.· guidelines y.·ould pare
rhe. General Plan 1990 maximum popula·
I ion by 8.000 persons and reject high
density development in the. Thlrd Street .
Canyon Acres Drive. Top of the \Vorld
and Bluebird Canyon areas.
The decision of the commission closely
resembles recon1mendations recently put
forth by Village Laguna to limit the city's
population and contro l 1nultiple unit
developments.
"TbC thing Y.'e mi.isl keep in 1nind, ''
commented \Vayne t.·loody, director or
planning and develo pment, "is that by
keeping loy.· density docs n o t
automatically insure high quality.
"r'or example, Top of the \Vorld has
low density, but I don't think it has the
highest quality." he observed.
J\loody noted that properly used. cer·
tain amounts of multiple unit de\'elop.
ment could,.achieve "high quality" and al
the same time not "tax cily services as
much as low density single family
residences.''
"\Vhat v.·e ha \'e to "'at ch out"ffor is un-
controlled high density del'e'lopment. All
it can do is damage the physica! en·
vironment," J\loody con1mented .
Commissioners, on the suggestion of
John J\lcDowell. also agreed that the
General Plan should be given yearly
revie,\·s. '·It see1ns to n1e v.·e'll be able to
accomplish more if y.·e look at !he
trenerat Plan often ." ~lcDo\\·ell <'O•n·
1nented.
The 20,000 person population figure.
planners agreed, would be a "'orking
nu1nber and that specific references lo
the number or dy.·eJ\ing units per acre be
deleled from the land use eletnent.
The final decision by the conunission
\Vas to "hold" the use of l\\·o vlllage
centers-one at Bluebird Canyon and the
other at Boal Canyon -until such lime
as they are needed.
J\1oody pointed out that creation of the
sub tillages would mean destruction of
several well established "Laguna charn1
neighborhoods '' such as the area around
Bluebird Canyon Dri\'e. '
Bud Scl1roeder
Nan1ed President
Of Fest Board
By a unanimous vote . Festival of Arts
director 0 . E. "Bud" Schroeder was
elected president of the Festlval lx»ird
during the annual reorganization meeting
~1o00ay nighl.
Schroeaer. just re-elected to his .second l~ree·year term on the board. is arei.
manager of the Automobile Club ot
Southern California. lie moves into the
position held by \IJilll;:im D. ~fart.in for
the past three years. ~fartin and Mrs.
lfelen Ketley also were re-elctted lo the
board.
Paul D. Griem wa !I named vict pres!·
dent by his fellow dlreclOrs on the nine-
mem~r board. OtMr officers. nlso elecl·
fd by un11nimous ballot. a;·e Glenn Ved·
der. secretary, Slu&rt Durktt. ln?a!urer
nnd Festivo.I buslness manager Robert
Leppert, recordln11: secretary.
Commtttee appointments u'ill be nn·
llOunced within the ne.:r:I re"'' day11,
Schroeder sakl
Nixon Due
In Clemente
On Holiday
President Nixon is planning to begin a
\\'Orking vacation in San Clemente on
Thanksgh1ing Day. it y.•as learned lhis
\\'Cek .
Sources in \Vashingt.on hinted that the
Chief Executive and his wife , Pot. would
a,ltend a major football game somev•hen
in the East on Thanksgiving then board
Air fort'e One for the trip west.
No confirmation has )'ct been orficially
1nade by the \Vhite House.
. The lenglh of the possible visit to La
Casa Pacifica has not yet been learned.
The lrip \\'Ould be the fi rst lo San
demente since the President's long
1rorking vacation v.·hich ended Sept. 3.
·rhat vi~it \rhich lasted nearly three
\Yeeks. \Yas marred by a massi\'e oil slick
from a Navy tanker.
The mishap gained international at-
tention after traces of the thick fuel cill
stained the President's private beach in
San Clemente.
Laguna Police
Probe Handgtm
Heists; 2 Held
Laguna lleach police are _investigating
two burglaries Jlonday in v.• hi c h
handguns v.·ere stolen. one from an
Orange County Sheriff's Deputy. 1
In vestigators said deputy llerbert
Kanns left hi11 unlocked hon1e ror about.
an hour during the afternoon and return·
ed to di scover his .38 caliber re .. ·ol\'er
missing. The gun was va lued at S97,
police said.
The second theft ,.,,as reported by
Ronald Elliss, of 21386 Laguna Canyon
Road, who said his unlocked residence
had been entered and a .22 caliber pistol
taken.
Police later arrested two men on a
street corner and conliscated a pistol
matching the description of the one taken
from Elliss. The suspect& are being held
for questioning.
Police identified the pair as Peter
Antonio Carrillo, 18. aod Gaberial Miles.
21. bolh of 2111 Crestvie'v Drive. J\files
was allegedly carrying the loaded weapcn
in his waistband when the men \\'ere ar·
rested at 9 p.m. in the JOO block of North
Coast High\vay.
Marine Stricken
By Me1tin gitis
A young J\larine prh·ate f r o m
Oklahoma was repcrted in "very serious"
condition at the Camp Pendleton b3se
hospital today after being stricken with. a
noncontagious form of memlngitis early
last weekend.
Pfc. Donald R. LaUie. 17, or the base
sc.hools battalion was hospitalized late
,.~riday, hue spokesmen said.
LOfUe was the third victim reported
this year of rnenig~emla meningitis.
Man1i e Heads West
SAN ANTONIO. !CJ<. !UPI) -Mrs.
~1a1nlc Eisenhower. discharged rrom
Brooke Army Hospital in good rondltlon
?1-fonday night lert 5311 Antonio by train
lodey ror the P11clfic Coast. •
LAGVNAGRINS BY INTERLANDI •
"Hack away all you want at the sy1t1m, the war, and the ecology,
but don't pick on l•guna."
Catalina Street Widening
Proposal Nixed i11 Laguna
A proposal in the circulation element or
the Genera l Plan to convert Catalina
Street into a four lane traffic carrier was
soundly rejected by Laguna Beach plan-
ning Commissioners Monday night.
"I don 't think such a plan will take
traffic off Coast Highway and I don't
"''ant to see us lose all those homes along
Catalina." commented Commissioner
Carl Johnson.
"Four lanes down Catalina," observed
\Vayne Moody, director of planning and
development. ';would not increase the
quality of the environment. And no one
can say how much it would cost."
An alternative to the use of Catalina as
a major traffic carrier is an old concept
by \Vilbur, Srriith and Associates, traffic
engineers ror a road carrying traffic
from Laguna Canyon Road south behind
city hall and north along Cliff Drive. said
l\loody . •
"It would be a much belier solution."
he added.
Speaking from the audien ce, Gwynne
Kirkpatrick of the Citizens' ToY.'n Plan-
ning Association (CTPA) pointed out that
all traffic JlOl destined for Laguna Beach
"should be removed from the city."
"I would suggest an allernali\'e coast
highway, inland. It would be expensive,
but 'not as much as a freeway,"
Kirkpatr ick said.
Johnson observed that if "we build two
highways throught town we will have two
crowded highways."
"I think a Jot of people want to be able
to move faster along Coast Highway,"
Johnson continued . "But it is not
achievable.''
Commissioners a$reed that before con-
tinuing discussion of the circulation ele-
ment they would each develop a Jl!t of
g0tls for traffic and parking to be
presented al their next study session
Nov. 22.
"I think if we develop some decent
goals we'll be able to achieve something.
But if we order soother traffic study, 1
uilnk we'll be forever I ot Johnson mused,
Two Lagurtaf!,S Honored
By Festival of Art,s
Two LaguntM were honortd for lon.g
serv:...'e .to the Festival of Arts Monday
night wtth-lhe presentation ol honorary
Ille memberp1!ps at the annUAl genera!
memhership Mftting.
Recipients of llfe--lwards were box of·
fice maniger Belle LlnenkugtJ artd
J~oward ''tlap" Graham, narrator of the
Pageant of the Masters tor the past
several Ytars.
Only about 50 of the t<"'e&Uval 'a current
membership of 11600 turned out for the
brief meeting in the Forum Theater.
Lacking a quonim for business action,
retiring president WUIJam D. MtrU.n con-
rmed lhe qenda lo reporta Iiom direc-
tors.
The Festival Chorale, directed by
Jack KrelUng, entertained with selec·
tlona from ''Bri&adoon."
The 1971 season ws.s haUed as lhe most.
suQCtastuJ year In the history of tht
Festival and Pageant, with gross ticket
sales passing the hal! million dollar mark
and an increase of $88.260 in surplus
lunds after payment or $81,898 rent to the
city. '28,368 In aid to othtr cultural
organlzallon.s and $32,922 in capital Im·
provements.
Laguna Eyes
$2 'Million
Upgrade Bid
By PATRICK BOYLE
Of lftl Dl llW ,1111 11111
Laguna Beach city manager Larry
Rose said this morning his staff is tu·
dying the possibility of having a Sl
million sewer bond ele<:tion on April l l,
the same day as city council elections.
In making tbe stateme nt at the city
staff's regular morning meeting, -Rose
noted that one major problem in getting
voters to approve the measure could be a
school tax override election at ahoul the
sa me time.
The bond issue would require appro\'al
o! two-thirds of the elecforale for passage
and, JC approved, the funds would be used
to upgrade the city's existing antiquated
.sewer facility.
Rose stressed that the April 11 date is
only tent~ti\'e as it requires more study
. and must be finally approved by the ciLy
council.
At the regular April 11 election. voters
will be asked lo fill for another four years
the expiring terms of councilmen Roy
Holm and Charlton Boyd.
School orficials have been dlscuuing
for some time the possibility of seeking
voter approval of a tax override
measure. Rose speeulated that such an
election might be held in February. A ta:ic
override need only be approved by a ma·
jorily of the residents voting. '
Rose said the S2 million figure was sub-
ject to change as city officials were con·
tinuing to study the costs involved in
upgrading the plant and trying to
determine how much federal or state fun-
ding could be obtained for the project.
The old city sewer plant recently came
under fire from the regional \Valer Quali·
ty Control Board ( WQCB I as being be Jo,,
.standards. Asked what could result if
voters refu sed to pass the bond issue lo
improve the plant, city public works
director Joe Sweany said the WQCB
could fine the city up to $6.000 a day for
polluting the ocean wi\h in1propel'ly
treated effluent.
Nevadans Get Holiday
CARSON CITY, Nev. CUPI J -Gov.
!\like O'Callaghan has declared NO\'. 26,
the day after Thanksgiving, a legal holi·
day in Nevada. giving state workers a ,
four-day weekend. 1
Oraage Coast
·Weather
Don't look for any lifting of the
fog on \Vednesday. the weather
lady warns. It'll be the same kind
or day with temperature,s ranging
from ' 6.1 on the beach rs to 73
further inland.
INSIDE TODA V
Diplo1natic sourcts 11ave re·
porud Mao Tse·tung's dt1lgt1o:t•
ed lltir Lfn. Piao toa.t Involved
ii& a plot, ou.sttd from lib office
and perhapi killed in o plo11t
cra$h whilt t.scoping. Story
Pagt 4.
C•llltr11ll I
CM(Jl119: u, ' Ct1Wnt.t il.J•
C1mk1 U ,,..__. lJ
DHla Hlllut I OfW!'(.. , t
t•lttrlal Pltl I
'"'"'''"""" It ,,_, • tf;'1
""'~ 11 AH Llllffrt IJ
L
Mtoritt It
M¥TMI ~ .... , 1' fllllitf1411 ,.., .. , •J
°'·~·· ,_"' ' .,.\'!. ll'trltf .,. ,,_" '"11 INdl M1'111th 2f.H , ...... ,... ''
TlllM!t" " \lf .. llltr I Wt!ll"''' ""'" ,,.,. ww•• N.-w
"'f OATL V PILOT SC
Viejo's _New Hospital Doesn't Loo;k Like One
By PAMELA HALLA~
OI IN Dlllf ,lltl Sltll
It boasts 1ourmet cuisine, cocktails.
lfecorator Interiors. coiffure and barber
1ervlce, and a· newspaper with every
breakfast.
Jt guarantees friendly staff and
personalized atte~tion, says
management. ·
The newest branch of !he Hilton?
No-htisslon Community Hospital.
Images of white 'A'alls. antise ptic odors,
ftnd bland food don't sec1n to fit the new
proprietary Mission Viejo facilit y.
It doesn't look like 1 hospital-and
that's the whole Idea, says administrator
Georce OUendorf. _
"lo a· paUent'1 eyes. the only O\lngs
·that make a holpital different art the
surroundings, the food, and the nurses,"
said Ollendorl.
That's why each room has a different
w.al\paper pattern, a color television and
carpeting or decorator tiles.
"\Ve provide extras now-a fu]\.time
beautifician whose first stop ls the
maternity ward , a barber 'one day a
week, a newspaper with breaklast, and a
champagne 1upper for new parents the
Computer Remap Pact
Held by Cory's Relative
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A Southern
California firm, whose officers include
(or mer Assembly · employes and a
relative of the Assembly...J)emocratic
Caucus chairman, is the holder of a near·
ly $200,000 computer contract for ·reap-
porlionment, the San Jose Mercury
reported today .
The contract was awarded without
Highway Zone
Move Reversed
By Council
A planning commisSlon decision to pro-
hibit a new zoning oI land on the Ortega
Highway was overturned by the San Juan
Capistraoo City Council Monday.
The commission had denied the rezone
of 210 acr~ from unclassi fied to residen-
tial ·because: they felt It was not "in the
best interests of the ci!y."
After hearing arguments of proponents
and opponenl.s of the rezone. the council
voted 3-2 to allow the . new land use.
Voting no were Councilmen Josh Garn·
mell and Jim Thorpe who wanted to
rezone to be conditioned. ·
The land is to be developed inlo 517
housing units by Pacesetter Homes, a
cnmpany that has projects in Costa
Mesa, Irvine, San Clemente, and Laguna
Niguel.
John Klug, Pacesetter's representative,
urged the rezone because the 2.4 dwelling
units per acre would conform wilh lhe
city's general plan, the development
would be compatible with surrounding
area, and there is a need for medium-
priced housing In the ci ty.
Opposing the rezone was Robert
Creber, who said said it was not com-
patible, there would be increased enroll·
ment in schools, and there would be too
much traffic on the Ortega Highway
which is already in poor condition.
Councilman Ed Chermak said he ob-
jected to the coU.ncil or the planning com·
missi on plann ing a development before
the land is zoned.
C.OUncilman Jim Tl)Orpe, said the coun·
cil's job is to promole the health. safety .
and welfare of the ptaple in the city.
''We should cond ition the rezo ne so
that there are provisions concerning traf-
fic , schools, grading and landscaping," he
said.
He said it should be a concern of the
council to make sure there is coordina-
tion with the school district, to influence
the state to improve Ortega . and to make
11ure grading and landscaping improves
the appearance of the development.
"But land in !his city is being assessed
at its highest and best use." said Mayor
Tony Foster. "I think we should get the
best we can ond be sa tisfied ·with that .
"We could condition an y development
out of the city," he added.
•
DAILY PILOT
OJ,Nr6G'I COAST PU1l l5HIH~ (CrMpAJtY
I l•lt•rt N. W11• Pr-iftnl •lllf ,~ll•Mr
J•ck It C.rlty
l \'U Ptllllllllf W ~1111 M&Mttt
bids. the newspaper said.
Chairman of the board <lf American
Computer Resources (AC R) is William
Butcher, brother in J;.w of Asse mbly-
man Kenneth Cory (D·Garden Grove),
and a member of Cory's legislative starf
in 1967. the newspaper reported. Butcher
is married to Cory 's wife's siste r.
Corv savs the~ 0
is no C<>nflict of in·
leresl invOlved in the C<>ntract with ACR.
"I have no financial interest in ACR. If
there ,was anything at all unhealthy. and
I don 'l personally think so, it is that we
au grew up in the business together ...
ACR was awarded the contract Feb. 3
to develo p reapportionment data for the
Assembly elections and reapportionment
committee. whose ch a i rm a n is
Assemblyman Henry Waxman (0.Los
Angeles).
Bids are not required for C<>ntracts
awarded by the Legislature and paid for
with Assembly contingeney funds.
The newspaper said ACR Presidcnl
William Below is "a close personal
friend'' of Cory and they both worked .
together on the Assembly staff In 1965.
Also employed by ACR is Gary
Bamberg who worked for the Assembl y
from 1965 to 1968, the Mercf y said.
Although Butcher is no longer actively
engaged in the compa ny. he still hold s
stock as well as his nonsalaried title as
chairman ()f the board. He left ACR late
last year while negotiations were still in
progress with the Assembly. From
March t to Oct. 31, ·he worked for the
Seftate Elections and Reapportionmen t
Committeee.
The Mercury reported that ACR receiv-
ed the Assembly C<>ntract at a lime when
the firm's financial problems endangered
its survival.
BeJow said, "I didn't kaow if we could
stay open. We, were...hopifll the contract
could 'make a dilftre11ce.11
Laguna Council
To Study Trash
Laguna Beach City Councilmen · will
gather in an adjourned meeting Wed -
nesday night to study a recently. proposed
waste management system to handle
both rubbish and sewage.
The plan. as outlined by City ~tanager
Larry Rose, would be based on a waste
manag~ment tax of $1.50 per month per
parcel of land in the city. Additionally,
single fa mily residences would poy a S2
per month surtax. Hotels. motels and
apartments would pay a $1 per month per
unit surtax.
Portable Class
Lease Awarded
Speed Space Inc. was the successful
bidder and will provide three portable
classroom unils for use at Mission Viejo
High School. Tustin Hi gh School District
trustees decided this week.
The district will lease the classrooms
from the firm at a cost of $3,412.SO each
for three years. Supt. William Zogg said.
The district may also lease as many as
seven more units if they are needed since
thi relocatable units were bid on a one to
10 basis, Zogg told the board.
night before the mother goes home," said
O\le.edorf.
"I fetl it's the hospital's responsi bility
to provide these extras to make the pl·
llent'a stay as pleasant as possible."
Th&i special servlc.e extends to the din-
ner tray which Is one of 542 dlfferent
menus in addition to special dietary food
<lrdered by the doctors. Even cocktails
are available if permitted by one's physi"'
cia n. ,
O\lendorf believes the app roach and
st)'le the new facility is the reason "'hy it
is nearly full .
"Today we have 101 patient s in our 124-
bed ficilit,y." lhe administrator said.
Ollendorf uld tile lacl!Uy b.as 200 doc-
tors -14t are specialists. lt al90 hJs 300
ancillary employes and ooly 1$ are not
from the surrounding community.
"We have 1 special training program
for nurses' aides," he said. "We provide
three months of intensive training and
pay them while they are learning. When
mplele the course they become
employes.''
I-le sa d he has a full backlog of nurses.
1.1ost work two or three days a week,
devoti ng the rest or the time to their
fa milies.
1
OUendorf said there Is a 1ood dea( of
highly specialized equipmenl -1 h 1
hosp!t•l maint.alns ~ device which allows
doctors to check their hospitalized.
patients' electrocardograms from the of-
fice; one nurse fol' every two intensive
care patients; special supplies store<l in
the en1ergency room which can treat nine
patients at once; a monitor which allows
a patient to speak to the nurses' station
rather than waiting for her to answer a
light.
He said future plans include a heart
monitor in an ambulance which will tell
HUV ~
1971 I
DAI\. y ~l\.OT s11U rtiotD
the hospi~a\ how a patient Is doing
enroute and waiter service whJch will
allow thl private-room patient to have
his: meals whenever he wants them.
"One ot our best features is our patient
relations counselor who visits every pa·
Uent every day to find out If they have
any problems or C<>mplalnts," sald the
administrator.
Ollendorf said his fa cility is determined
to be un ique. "Satisfied patients are gOOd
for the hospital and I have a file full of
letters which pr.ove we'\'e been auc-
cessfu1," he said.
Coastal Bill
Changes Snag
Senate Move
A rash of Jast·minute amendments to
the coastline control bill authored by
Assemblyman Alan Sieroty (0.Beverly
Hills) has resulted in a further one-week
delay of the 1neasure in the California
Senate.
A spokesman for Senator Dennis
Carpenter (R.A"e\vport Beach) said Mon-
day the bill is being reprinted for a se·
C<>nd hearing next Monday before the
Natural Resources and Wildlife Com·,
mitlee.
A spokesman for Assemblyman Robert
Badham (R·Newport Beach) said the
more than 30 new amendments to the bill
Included one that would p r o h i b i t
homeowners Jiving within 1,000 feet of the
mean high tide line from painting their
houses .without approval of the regional
agencies the bill would establish.
The Sieroty bill, pockmarked with
am endments, is the last remaining
coaStline preservation bill given a chance
to pass the state legislature.
Another preservation bill , sponsored by
Assemblyman Edwin Z'Berg ( D .
Sacram.ento ), was killed Monday by the
Senate Governmental Organization Com·
rnittee on a 3 to 6 vote.
"ONE OF OUR BEST FEATURES IS A PATIENT RELATIONS COUNSELOR"-OLLENDORF
Irene Nohr, Pharmaceutical Technician, Checks Drug Supplies at Mission Community Hospital
Z'Berg's bill would have created a
super agency to con trol air. water and
land pollution. It had been passed by lhe
Assemblyman, but was not even debated
by the Senate committee.
State Education·
Unit Receives
School Bond Bid
TI1e bill to raise the ceiling of school
bond sales has now gone to the state
Assembly Education Committee.
The measure, introduced by State
Senator Dennis Carpenter (R·Newport
Beach) to help ease San Joaqujn Elemen-
tary School District's construction crisis.
has passed the Senate and has been in·
troduced In the Assembly.
Richard Rohrbach , adminislrati~
assistant to Senator Carpenter, said the
Assembly Education Committee has <lf·
ficially adjourned for the year. Bul ef·
forts are being made to get it to
reconvene .
In order to pass, the bill wou ld have to
be approved by the Assembly Educat ion
Committee. the Assembly Finance Com-
1nittee. and Assembly.
The bill is designed to allow no more
than fi ve school districts to raise their
bond celling frOm five to seven percent of
its assessed valuation up to 1975.
If approved this year, $4.6 million
\vou!d be available for San Joaquin
enough lo build three schools. ~
Tots to Get School?
J~OUSTON (UPll -Dr. George._Qser,
president of the Houston School Bo)i:_cl,
has recommended admitting 3·year-old.§
lo public schools by the year 1973.
He said the plan. which would start
next year with the admission of children
aged 41h. wuuld cost $3 million and could
be financed by the federal government.
Fraternity Draft Pinn
Proposed at VC Irvine
By GEORGE LEIDAL
01 Ille 0.llJ ,1111 Hi ii
A lottery system lo draft members for
fr11tc rnities and sororities is being pro·
posed to the UC Irvine Academic Senate
as a way of overcoming historic op·
position at UC! to !be c;ollegiate social in·
slitutions.
The faculty committee on university
welfare is recommending that the
Academic Senate approve a measure that
bans "rushing" and would allow frat ernal
organi1.ations to recruit members only by
"the printing and distribution of descrip-
tive literature."
Secondly, the committee, chaired by
Charles A. Lave, assista nt professor of
econom ics. suggests a f o u r -p o i n t
guideline for the lottery selection <lf
members:
-Interested students would place their
student body numbers in a lottery drum.
-Fraternities and sororities would lell
the dean of st udents how many new
men1bers they can accept.
-Only the previously set number or
student body numbers would be drawn
from the drum.
-One lottery each for fraternities and
sororities l''Ould be held.
Jn 1968 the Academic Senate opposed
fratern ities for the UCI campus. After a
two year moratorium, Chancellor Daniel
G. Aldrich Jr. has been asked to permit
the social groups on campus.
Advisory action by the academic
senate, is due Thursday.
"We members personally are not
enthusiastic about fraternities a n d
sororities,'' the "·elf are comm it tee
reports.
"Such orga nizations ha ve a long history
of discriminatory practices . , . and tend
to promote values that are antithetical to
the goals of an int ellectual community.
"\\1e are sympathetic to the second
part of the argument. but recognizi ng in
it strong elements of thought control. y,·e
reject it."' the committee recom·
· mendalion said.
"Either our intellectual values are good
enough to compete with conflicting values
or they are not."
THANK YOU, ERASTUS!
Wis measure was backed by the
conservationist Sierra Club. but opposed
by local government officials who claim·
ed it would take away local control.
Other amendments to the Sieroty blll
Indicated it would exclude from the
statewide. coastal control portions of the ·
California shoreline lying w it hin
municipal boundaries.
However, the exemption would not
spare Upper Newport Bay from the
purview1 of_. .. Jhe superagency, Another
amendment indicates devclcipments along
shoreline that is less than 80 percent-
developed would be subject to agency
review.
Laguna High Sets
Football Feast
The final football feast or the sea.son
will be held Friday evening in the
cafeteria at Laguna Beach High School
preceding the flomecoming footbali
game.
The popular hamburge r d i n n e r .
prepared by members of the high school
PTA, will be serving rrom 6 p.m. to 7:30
p.m. Price is SI.SO for adults and $1 for
students and the dinner is open to the
public.
The football feasts benefit the school's
athletic program and the annual senior
party.
It occu1Ted to us the otller doy thot we owe a lot to an innovator in our
carpet industry who operated about 150 yeaB a9o·
Here are some facts about ERASTUS BRIGHAM BIGELOW:
: . ~
'Tli0,,.11 A. Murp)ii111
N.Ml.Uirlt l!d•IDr
a.I• H. loo• Rit).1,.f P. Nan
At.lmenr M11111"1111 .£111ora
'-I ... hell! Offk•
212 F1r11t A .. 111~• Mlllfot 1ddr111: P.O. I•••••· •2•s2 6" Cl-9•0fflco
Time-lapse Movie Monitor
Of Sewer Outfalls Sought
• Born 1814, W. Boylston , Mass.• Poor family, required to work a t a qe
10 as farm hand and c:lerk. • Genius at math and mechanics. • At 23
years old, invented loom for lace. • In vented revolutionary power loom
for BRUSS ELS and WILTON carpets. This created a domestic carpet in·
dustry, and virtually eliminated foreiqn c:ompetition. • Founded BIGE·
LOW CARPET MILLS ;n Cl;nton , Moss. • Groot eeonomht, one of smoll
group lound ;n g MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF .TECHNOLOGY ot
Boston ;n 186 1. • D;ed 1879.
IOI Notti. El C.1111~• Rtd, •K72 ••
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'
PALO ALTO (UPI) -The placement
of "time·lapse" movie cameras near
sewage outfall point s in coastal waters
could provide early warnings or possible
damge to nu1rine life. Lockheed Corpora·
lion scientists said today.
Dr. Lee Tepley. a senior staff scientist
at Hockhccd ~1issiles & Space Co. in
nearby Sunnyvale. described develop-
ment of a system which ope.rates unat·
tended for long periods in water as deep
as 200 feet.
lie addressed a three-day joint con·
fercnce on sensing of environmental
pollutants, which concludes Wednesday.
It wa~ sponsored by a half doz.en scien-
tfrlc and envlronmentil groups.
Tepley said underse11 cimeras using
the "time-lapse" tehcnique -in which a
single frame Is taken every few seeonds
or minutes -can provide more In·
form ation than di vers making visual
observations.
"Undersea photo-<locumenlatlon can
point out slow changes in the und erwater
'
environment • before they r ca c h
calastrophic prOPortions, and thereby
lead to corrective action before !t is too
late." he sa id.
fie said the automalic1 baltcry·powercd
system , which can take 32.000 frames
over a span of seve ral days with
floodlights coming on automatically to
provide light. C<luld provide data on
harmful changes in marine ecology,
especially at sewage ouUall points .
He showed conference delegete s a film
demonstrating the destruction of coral
reels ln Ktinoehe Bay, Hawaii, by 1Jlgae
whose grt1wlh was spurttd by nutrients in
sewage flowing into the btly.
"Unfortunately, the condition wa s not
re.cognlud until g r e a I damage w a 11
done,•· Tepley said. "The Important thing
here Is that · if systematic, lnng·te.rm
pholoRraphic monitoring -)ncludlng
lime·l::tpsc photography -had ~ e f! n
started about live: years ago, the algae
i;:rowth would have been discovered at Rn
early dale and preventive action could
have been taken ."
J
• ERASTUS:
MY GRANDFATHER THAN KS YOU! MY F.\THER THANKS YOU ! I THANK YOU I MY
CHIL DREN THANK '(OU! .
I Four 9eneretions in the c•rp1t business sioce 189'4, th•n~' to tho inventions of
Mr. Bi91low.l
P.S . Amiain9ly, without Erastus, Bi9el0w Carpets havt remained an industry
leader. Please stop in and see their sparldin9 carpet line.
I '
ALDEN~S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS: Meo. th,. Thu11. f to S:JO -Fri. f to t -Sat. 9:30 to 5
'
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Sail Cle111enie
• \ Capistrano EDllT ION
VOL. 64, NO. 268, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES
• lllOll
lfo1•ki119 Holiday
Nixon Will Visit
On Thanksgiving
President Nixon is planning to begin a
v;orking vacation in San Oemente on
Thanksgiving Day. it \\'as learned this
\\·eek.
Sources in \\'ashington hinted that the
C.'hief Exeeulive and his \\'i!e. Pot, would
atU!nd a major football game somev.·here
in lhe East on Thanksgiving then OOard
Air r orce One for the trip v.•est.
No confir mation has yet been officially
made by the \Vhite Houst'.
The length of the possiblt' visit to La
Casa Pacifica has not }'t't bc<'n learned.
The trip would be the Hrsl to San
Clemente since the President's long
working vacation \Vhich ended Sept. 3.
l 'hat \'islt, \1•hich lasted nearly lhree
1\·eeks, was marred by a massive oil slick
·· Marine Cleared
Of Attempted.
Murder Cl1arges
An Orange County Superior Court jury
took Jess than l\\'O hours Alonday to clear
a San Clemente ~farine of attempted
murder charges fil ed after he pumped
five shots into his mlstr,ss' lrusband.
The pane l agreed with defense att.omey
Frank Hester that William Archer Reid,
22. of 119 Coronado Lane, was acting in
'self defensc ·last Aug. 4 when he emptied
his guu at i\·larin<' Sgt. Hern1an Viernes.
26.
Hester argued in !he 1~·eek-long trial
that Viernes, or 2~8 \V. Palizada. \\'as
believed by Reid and the defendant's
1nale companions to be a karate expert -
a belief that \Vas reinforced when the
angry Vierne s kicked a rna\e witness -
t~1icc in th e groin during lhe apartment
confrontati on.
Viernes. ::i ,·eteran ot t"·o \l ietna1n
trips. sa id he \\'ent to R<'id's apartment lo
dfscuss divorce papers filed against him
by his 11•ifc. Connil'. 2fi. He ad1nltted taht
he burst into the ap:irtn1ent and told Reid
he intended to "r:un that gun dov.·n your
throat and 1n:ikc you eat ii."
Reid testified that he shol in self
clefensc and rell he had no other recourse
after 111atching Viernes deliver ·what he
felt y,•as a very effccth•e karate kick to
one of his guests.
from a NaV}' tanker.
-The mishap gained international at·
tentioll'l.f.t.er traces of the thic k fuel oil
stained the President's private beach in
San Clemente.
Fire Sweeps
Coffee .shop
In Cle1nente
A smoky blaze which ~·as discovered
by passing Sa n Clemente po I i c e
patrolmen caused about $4.000 damage to
a coffee shop shortly after midnight this
morning.
Firemen using special breathing ap-
paratus finally quelled the blaze at Bob's
Coffee Shop. at 1409 S. r:J Camino Real.
Tbc alarm to volun teers went out at 12 : 44
a.m.
Fire department spokesmen said the
fire started in the rear storeroom of the
business. The apparent cause v.•as a
disca rded cigaret.
Patrolmen noticed the smoke \vithln
the business \\•hich had closed at 9 p.m.
.l\tonday night.
Entry into the business, firemen said,
had to be forced because of locked doors.
The coffee shop is owned by Robert Pyle.
Damage to his bu sines!I was set at
$3,000 to the structure and $1.000 to the
contents. The entire building, officia ls
.said. received major sinoke damage.
Ma1ine St1icken
By Meningitis
A ~·oung l'\!arinc prl\'ate f rom
Oklahoma was r<'ported in "very serious''
condition at the Camp Pendleton base
hospital today after being stricken with a
noncontagious form of memingitis early
last \\'eekend.
Pfc. Donald R. Loftie. 17. of the base
schools battalion \vas hospitalized late
Jo"riday. base spokesmen said.
Lollie was the third victim reported
this ¥ear of menigococcemia meningitis.
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 197f
es reeze
• OAIL't PILOT ....... '-Y JMIR YlllWll
A Pe1aetrati1tg l'ietv
Dr. Robert ~·I. Amalo examines X-rays in radio-
logy at new A1ission-Commuoily Hospital in 1'1ission
Viejo. The ne w 124-bed facility is already carrying
a big patient load. l-lospital Admin istrator George
Ollendorf attributes this not only to the modern
medical equipment and staff but the innovative ·ap-
proach to patient relations. See the story and addi-
tional picture on Page 2.
Tusti11 Board Says .Youths
Mav Ru11 for Vacant Seat
,/
Derlaring he v.•as not a candidate. an
IS.year old stu dent leader from 'l'uslin
High School nevert)'ieless led school board
members to suspect they mi ght be the
first school board in Orange County "'ifh
an und er-21 board candidate .
Bill Drenltell of Tustin, ' asked the
board ~londay night if 18-ycar-olds were
f'ligible to run for the seat being vacated
Feb. 2 by ~Irs. June Smith.
Board President Paul Calhoun of Sanl:-1
Ana. replied thaf 18-yea r-olds indeed
\rerc eligible and that the only re·
quiremcnt y;as that a candidate reside in
I he district and be a registered voter.
"I'm a registered voter ." Drenllell of·
fered. "But I "'on't be running.''
The board voted to set the trustee ele<:·
lion al the same time as the $15 million
bond and $1.99 maximu1n ta x rate elec·
lion -Feb. I.
Ga ndid ates seeking the unexpired tern1
on the Tustin High district board would
have to file with the County Registrar of
Voters by Dec. 9 in order to be listed on
the ballot.
Schools Delay
Move on Joini1ig
Statewide Unit
Tustin Union lligh School District
trustees took no action on membership in
the California School Boards Association
following a presentallon at Monday's
board meeting by a CSBA official.
Board Member Robert Bartholomew of
Tu stin took issue with R l c h a rd
Montgomery 's presentatjon ..... on the
statewide school board a"ssociatiOn.
''You told Jeglslators you represented
all districts in Ca lifornia when you push~
cd for sex education and a statewide pro-
perty tax. \Veil. we were members then
and I'm telling you now. you didn't
represent the wishes of this boarrl,"
Bartholomew charged. ~l rs. Viernes testifiecl that she had suf-
fered many beatings at the hands ()f het'
hushand and lh:tl she told hlm ofl the eve·
ning of the shooling that she wanted
noth ing furt her to do y,·ith hhn. She Y.'as
livin~ \Vlth her three children at Reid's
aparlment.
Brig Sl1apes Up Dickran Boranian, who wa s elected lo
lhe board April 2{), counseled the youthful
ca ndidate that therP. is no charge for
signinJ.!: as a candido"te unless a statement
of qualifications is printed In the ballot
pantphlct. ·
f\.tontgomery, one of three field
representatives or CSBA, explained that
the association's lobbyists in sacramento
work on matters approved by the
delegate assemb ly and the board of
directors.
l\lrs. Viernes also testified that her
husband often braf!ged of being a "third
degree black bell'' karate expert and that
he had delivered what she bclie\'ed to be
karate b101vs on her body.
Viernes argµed that he knew nothing
aboul karate. The Ho no I u I u ·b orn
serge:int. y,•ho is still receiving hospital
treatment fllr \\'ounds in U1e chest and
arms: testilted tha t he only niade lhe
stalen1ents to impress his ""ife.
St. Cotherine
Parents Meet
A special 1neeling to explore the
p<>sslbilily ()f keeping Laguna's SL.
Cnlherine of Siena sc~ool open
nfter .June. 1972. v.•ill be held at 8
p.rn. toclny in the auditorium at Top
of the \Vorld Elementary School.
21601 Tree Top Lane.
Parents and other interested
members or the community are in-
vited to attend the session. organiz..
cd hy families of studenl s attending
thr school which has served the
Catholic community for the pasl 16
~ears.
It \vas announced ~londay .. that
lhe sisl<'rS of St. Joseph of
Carondelet \\'ill no longer .be able to
staff the sctw>ol afte.r the close or
the present school yea r. A shoMage
()f personnel In the teaching order's
65 v.·cs1.en1 schools necessitates
withdr11wel of St. Cathe rine's four
tcnc~lng sisters for o l h 8 r
ussijlnments. Sister S t e p han I e
llardy. prlnclpeJ, explained.
Percentage of Black lnniates Down
Spokes1nen at Camp Pendleton ha,·e
issued figures showing a sharp decline in
the percentage of black inmates in the
base brig -figu res calculated to answer
charges by the Congressional Black
Caucus.
J\lembcrs of the caucus, v.'ho will tour
the ba se brig on ~fonday, issued their
ov.'n statements recently charging a
'"disproportionate"' percentage or black
inmates in military brigs.
Pendleton press aides sa id the number
or black inmates in the nev.' correctional
facility is half of \\'hat the figure v.·as in
1970.
And the figure still is declining . they
added .
In 1970 24.J prcent of the in111ales ""<'r<'
Negroes. The present figure is only 13
pe.rcent.
The J3 me1nber s of the Congressional
group plan lo hold heArings on U S.
military bases in coming weeks.
Presumably the group on A1onday will
tour the Pendleton facility which was
dedicated several "'eeks ago as a
replacement to a brig which drew harsh
criticism because of conditions and treat·
ment of pMsoncrs.
The new facility has an average 400 In·
mates. PendletDn aides said.
'fhe district is going for another bond
electio n following last year's defeat of a
$17 million issue. Jo~urther. the district's
present tax override expires in June.
If voters turn down the 4_kent increase
included in the $1.90 tax limit on the Feb.
I ballot, the high school tax rate would
drop to 85 cents. Supt. \Villian1 Zogg
noted.
Nevadans Get lloliday
CARSON CITY , Nev. (UPl l -Gov.
~like O'Callaghan has declared Nov. 26,
the day after Thanksgiving, a legal holi·
day Jn Nevad~. giving stale workers a
four-day weekend.
License Fee Changes Due
San Cle1ne1tte Meets 01i Sweeping Revisions
San Clemente City Councilmen wiU
meet in an early moniing study session
Wednesday to give a final revievr to a
complex ordinance rilled with business
license fee changes .
As soon as !he st'Ores of separate
categories of gross·receipls rormulas and
flat rates are totally reviewed the council
will take a vole on lhe fir st fee revisions
in the past 15 y'ars.
The target d11te for the new fees is Jan.
1 when license renewal notices will be
mailed to city license holders.
It will be the first time thnt license fees
have been t'Ollcctcd on a c11lendar-yw
basis.
The latest fee structures were ~
result of hours of study and discussion by
private. advisory commilltts and coon·
cllmen.
They represent a ceiling or $300 per
year in the retail wholesale.and manufac-
turing licenses. The min mum in thAt
category Is for business with $10,000 or
less in l{fOSS income each ye!\r. and that
license holder v.·ouJd pay $10 annually.
Und er the professions and occupntlons
category of gross receipts formulas. the
ran ge in recs proposed ls from $12 a year
for a business or $6,000 or lcs1 t.o $1'6 a
I
year for the license bolder wllh gross in·
come of $250,000 br more each year.
Countilmen afso expcci to iron out
mioor kinks in several olher areas or the
fe?e sc hedule. Including matters of dispute
In the list or nat-rate fees for dozens of
mlscajlaneous business activities.
Other It.ems Set for discussion at the
7:30 a.m. session in council chambe rs in·
elude a list or 1oning ordinance cllanges
a.s proposed by plaMing commissl<lners.
The new inclu.stoos In the me.Ster ioning
ordinance would allow service stations,
restaurants and ambulance services to
locate In tht: M·2 ind1.1Strial zone after
lss uarrce of a <.'Ondltlonal use pcnnil.
Montgomery noted it would not be
"politically " sound to tell legislators that
CSBA wishes did not have the support of
all school dis tricts. when lobbyists are
trying to convince legislators to act.
Bartholomew agreed. but added, "it
Isn 't moral, either," to represent CSBA
as ~aving tbe support of every district in
the stale.
Dickran Boranic.n, board member from
Santa Ana, urged membership in CSBA
to allow the district to take advantage of
the publication services of the organize·
tion.
Dana Chamber
Cancels Meeting
For November
Directors of the Dana Point Chambe r
or Commerce have cancelled a general
membership meeting for this month
because of the busy holiday season.
The monthly funclion will be replaced
in December ~wllb .a Christmas IUDcbeon
for all chamber members and the.Ir
fam ilies. .
The regular meeting of chamber direc.·
tors, however, will still be. held in Novem·
her. That function will be on Nov. 16 at
noon In the Village hln restaurant.
OirectDrs recently set more plans for
the observance of the flollday season in
·Dana Polnt.
The chamber wlll sponsor 11 Christmas
t~e lot near the Dana Point Plaza along
with a store-front decoration contest.
Mrs. Florence Larter Is ·chalrmM of
Uie decoration comrnlttce.
•
Today~s Final
N.Y. Stocks
TEN CENTS
Pay Boa1~d's
.5.5% Raise
Lid Scored
MIAl\11 BEACH {APl -A major AFI..r
CIO union urged today a nation,vide
general strike if necessary to reverse pay
regulations imposed by President Nixon's
Pay Boa rd . .
"\V'e are shocked and di sa ppointed that
the first vote tal<en by the Nixon
Administration's Pay oBard constituted
an attack on the economlc standards and
the general welfare of the working people
of our country," said the executive board
of ~h.e 500,ln).member Amalgamated
!\feat Cutters Union.
The union 's board, conducting one or a
series of AFL-CIO meetings here, said it
will introduce a resolution before the
ma in AFL·CIO convention next y,·eeJ,; lo
· urge a niolional work stoppage.
"The Pay Board has robbed scores o(
thousands of our members of fairly
negotiated and non-inflationary wage in·
creases which were due to be paid in
September under agreements worked out
more than a year ago ," sa id the Meat
Cutters' statement.
~ay Board Monday announced a
general 5.5 percent \Vage hike limitation
and ruled out retroa ctivity in most cases ~
for pay hikes frozen since Aug. 15. The
five industry and five public members of
the board outvoted the five labor
members. including AFlrCIO President
George ~1eany.
"111.e Pa y Board majority has taken
money out of the pockets <lf hard-working
and hardpressed food workers and put it
into the treasuries of immensely \veallhy
corporations." said the Ateat OJtters.
A1eanwhile. AFL-CIO leaders were split
over whether to quit the Pay Board or
stay on it and fight its ruli11g on Phase 2
wage increases and deferred pay boosts.
\\lhilc n1ost of the labor leaders are
awaiting official. word from AFL..CIO
President George A1eany on what course
to take, son1e advocate an immediate
\valkout or the five labor memh:lrs from
the lf>.membe r Pay Board estabbshed by,
President Nixon.
"If President f\.teany wants to resign
from the Pay Board. he has my support,"
Edward J . Carlough, President of the
Sheet A'letal \Vorkers. said Monday nig)lt.
But President ~1aurice Hutcheson of
!he Carpenters union said. "If you walk
o(( the board. how can you argue with its
decisions?''
The Pay Board ruled A1onday that afte r
the current wage-price freeze terminates
Sunda y the general limit of pay raises
will be 5.5 percent.
it also' ruled that payment of raises lost
because or the current freeze will be
allowed onlv in a limited number of
specifica lly 3pproved cases.
Jn both rulings. the rive business and
five public members of the Pay Board
outvoted the labor members of the
Board. including f\.1eany.
Labor's key demand has been for full
payment of ·raises lost because of lhc
wage-price freeze.
''It is a stack ed board," co mplain'd
President S. Frank Raftery or the
Painters union.
But Raftery and two other members or
the AFU:IO's 35-man policy-making ex-
ecutive committee were more cautious
about advocating that labor quit the Pay
Board. The other two were Hutcheson
and President Peter Fosco of lhc
Laborers union.
Orange Coast
Weather
Don't look for any lifting or the
fog on Wednesday, the weather
lady warns. It'll be the same kind
or day with temperatures ranging
from 63 on the beaches to 73
further illland.
INSIDE TODA\'
Diplomaiic sources 11ave re·
por(ed flfao T1e·t1111g's cf'esignat·
ed heir Lin Piao wat i11oolv1d
in a plot. ousted from Iii.I office
a11d per/1(Jp~ killfd fit a plane
crash while ticop1ng. Story
Page 4.
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.2 DAILY PILOT >c TLitsd.ty, N0vtmbtt t , 1971
Viejo's New Hospit~al Doesn't Looi{ Like One 1•
' By PA!\1ELA HALLAN
Of 1111 O.lly ..... 11•11
ll boasts gourmet cuisine, cocktaila,
leeorator interiors. coifrure and barber
1ervice, and r. newspape r with every
breakfast.
it guarantees friendly staff and
person a·l 1 zed attention, says
management.
The newest branch of the Hilton?
No-Mission Comn1unity Hospital.
lmag~s of white walls. antiseptic odors.
•nd bland food don 't seem to fit the new
proprietary ~tlssion Viejo facility.
Jt doesn't look like ·a hospital-and
thafs the wbole Jdea, says administrator
George Ollendorf.
.. In a patient's eyes. the only Lhings
that make a hospllal different are the
surroundings , the food , and the nurses,"
said Ollendorf.
Thafs why each room has a different
wallpaper pattern, a color television and
carpeting or decorator tiles.
"We provide extras now-a full·lime
beautifician whose first stori is the
materr1ity ward. a b<.rber one da y a
week. a newspaper with breakfast , and a
champagne 1upper for new parents the
Computer Remap Pact
Held by Cory's Relative
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A Southern
California firm, whose ellicers include
form~r Assembly ejliployes and a
relative of the Assembly _ _Q~mocratic
Caucus c~airman, is the holder of a near·
Jy $200,000 computer contract for reap-
Portionment. the San Jose Mercury
reported today.
1be contract was awarded without
Highway Zone
Move Reversed
By Council
A plaMing commission decision to pro-
hibit a new zoning of land on the Ort'lga
Highway was overturned by the San Juan
Capistrano City Council Monday.
The commission had denied the ~zone
o( 210-acres from unclassified to residen.
tial.because they felt it was not "in the
best interests of the city."
After hearing arguments of proponenl.ll
and opponents or the rezone. the council
votea 3-2 to allow the new land use.
Voting no were Councilmen Josh Garn·
mell and Jim Thorpe who wanted-to
rezone to be conditioned.
The land is to be developed into ~17
housing units by ~acesetler Homes, a
company that has projecl.ll in Costa
Mesa, Irvine, San Clemente, and Laguna
Niguel.
John Klug, Pacesetter's representative,
urged the rezone because. the 2.4 dwelling
units per acre would confonn with the
city'• general plan, the development
would be compatible with surrounding
area, and there Is a need for medium·
priced housirig in the city.
Opposing the rezone was Robert
Creber, who said said it was not coin·
patible. there would be increased enroll-
ment in schools, and there would be too
much traffic on the Ortega Highway
which is already in poor condition.
Councilman Ed Chermak said he ob-
jected to the c.'ouncil or the planning com·
mission planning a development before
the land is zoned.
Councilman Jim Thorpe, said the coun·
cil's job is to promote the health, safety.
and welfare of the people in the city.
"We should condition the rezone so
that there are provisions concerning traf·
fie, schools, grading and landscaping," he
aaid.
He said it should be a concern of the
touncil to make sure there is coordina·
tion with the school district. to influence
the state to improve Ortega, and to make
sure grad ing and larnlscaping improves
the appearance of the development.
"But land in thtl city is being assessed
11t ils'hlghest and best use," sa id Mayor
Tony Foster. "l think we shou ld gel the
best we can ond be satisfied with that.
"We could condition any development
out of the city ," he added .
,
OlANGI COAST
DAILY PILOT
ll.11t1tf N, w •••
Pr•WWll 11'111 PWll1hlr
J•c\ II.. Curlty
_ , VS. Pr•Went 91"1 Gtrlolr•I ....,l»I., ~. ;
bids, Lhe newspaper said.
Chair man of the board of 4,merican
Computer Resources (ACR) is William
Butcher, brother in lr.w of Asse01bly-
man Kenneth Cory (0-Garden Grove ),
and a member of Cory's leglslalive staff
in 1967, the newspaper reported. Butcher
is married to Cory's wife's sister.
·Cory says there is no conflict or in·
terest involved in the contract with ACR.
"I have no financial interest in ACR. If
there was anything al all unhealthy , and
J don't personally think so, it is that we
all grew up in the busines..! together."
ACR was awarded the contract Feb. 3
to develop reapportionment data for the
Assembly elections and reapportionment
committee, whose. c h a i r m a n is
Assemblyman Henry Waxman (0-Los
Angeles).
Bids are not required for contracts
awarded by the Legislature and paid for
with Assembly contingency funds .
The newspaper said ACR President
William Below is "a close personal
friend" of Cory and the"y both worked
toge ther on the Assembly staff In 1965.
AlsO employed by ACR is Gary
Bamberg who worked for the Assembly
from 1965 to 1968, the Mercury said.
Although Butcher is no longer actively
engaged In the company, he still holds
stock as well as ~is nonsalaried title as
chairman of the board. He left ACR late
last year while negotiations were still in
progress with the Assembly. From
11-1arch 1 to Oct. 31, he worked for the
Seftate Elections a n cf. Reapportionment
Committeee.
The 1t1ercury reported that ACR receiv·
ed the Assembly contract al a time when
thl! firm's financial problems endangered
its survival .
Below said, "I didn't know if we could
stay open. We were hoping the contract
could make a difference."
Laguna Council
To Study Trasl1
Laguna Beach City Councilmen will
gather in an adjourned meeting Wed·
nesday night to study a recently proposed
waste management system to handle
both rubbish and sewage.
The plan, as outlined by City ~fanager
Larry Rose, would be based on a waste
management tax of $1.50 per month per
parcel of land in the city . Additionally ,
.single family residences would pay a S2
per month surtax. Hotels, motels and
apartments would pay a $1 per month per
unit surtax.
Portable Class
Lease A warded
Speed Space Inc. was the successful
bidder and will provide three portable
classroom units ror use at Mission Viejo
High School, Tustin High School District
trustees decided th is week .
The district will lease the classrooms
fro.m the l.irm at e cost of $3,412.50 each
for three years. Supt. William 7.ogg said.
The district may also lease as many 11s
seven more units if they are needed since
the relocatable units were bid on a one to
10 basis, 7.ogg told the board.
night before the mother goes home," said ,_Ptd facility ," the admini strator said.
OJJendorf. Ollendorf said the facility has 200 doc·
"I !eel it's the hospital's responsibility tors -149 are 1pecialists. It also has 300
to provide these extras to make the pa· ancillary employes and only IS are not
tient's stay as pleasant as possible.'' from the surround ing community.
The special service extends to the difl· ';We have a special traininl:? program
ner tray which is one of 542 different for nurses' aides," he said. ,;We provide
menus in addition to special dietary food three months of Intensive training and
.ordered by the doctors. Even cocktails pay them while they are learning. \Vhen
are available if permitted by one's physi· they complete the course they become
ci1u1 _ full -paid employcs. '•
Ollcndorf believes the app roa'cti and He saJd he has a full b:ick\og of nurses.
style the ne\I' facility is the n~ason why Jt ~losl work two or three days a week,
is nearly full. dsvoting the rest of lhe time to their
''Today we h~ve 101 patients in our 124· families.
Ollendorf said there is a good deal of
highly speciallzed equipment. 'r h e
hospital maintains 1 device which allow1
doctors to check their hospitalized-
paticnts' electrocardograms from the of.
fice; one nurse for every two intensive
care patients; specia l supplies stored in
the emergency room which can treat nine
patients at once: a moOilor which allows
a patient to speak to the 'n urses' station
rather than waiting ror her to answer a
light .
He said future plans include a heart
monitor in an ambulance which will tell
1971 I
0.1.ILY PILOT 11111 l'hlll "ONE
lrtnt
OF OUR BEST FEATURES IS A PATIENT RELATIONS COUNSELOR"-OLLENDORF
Nohr, Pharmaceutical Technician, Chtck1 Drug Supplit5 at Mi11ion Community Hospital
State Education
Unit Receives
School Bond Bid
TI1e bill to raise the celling of school
bond sales has now gone to the state
Assembly Education Committee.
The measure , introduced by State
Sena lor Dennis Carpenter ( R-Newport
Beach ) to help ease San Joaquin Elemen·
tary SchOol District's construction crisis.
has passed the Se~ate and has been In•
!roduced in the Assembly.
Richard ll oh r b a c h , administrative
assistant to Senator Carpenter, sa id the
Assembly Education Committee has of-
ficially adjourned for lhe year . But ef-
fort s are being made to gel it lo
reconvene.
In order to pass, the bill would have to
be approved by the Assembly Education
Committee. the Assembly Finance Com-
mittee. and Assembly.
The bill is designed to allow no more
than five school districts to raise their
bond celiing from five to seven percent of
its assessed valuation up to 1975.
if approved this year. $4.6 million
would be available for Sa n Joaquin
enough ta build three schools.
Tots to Get School?
Fr.atRrnity Draft Plan
Proposed at UC Irvine
By GEO RGE LEIOAL
or th• 01uy I'll•• 1r.11
A lottrry system to drarl members for
fraternities and sororities is being pro·
posed to the UC Irvine Academic Senate
as a way of overcoming historic op-
position at UC! to the collegiate social in·
stitutiohs.
The faculty committee on university
welfare is recommending that !he
Academic Senate approve a measure that
bans "rushing" and would allow fraternal
organizations to recruit members only by
"the printing and distribution of descrip-'
live literature."
Secondly, the committee, chaired by
Charles A. Lave, assistant professor or
economics. suggests a f o u r -poi n t
guideline for lhe lottery selection of
members:
-Interested students would place their
student body numbers in a lottery dr~m.
-F'rfllernities and sororities would tell
the dean of students how many nC\Y
llll'lllbcrs they can accept.
-Only the previously set number of
student body numbers would be drawn
from the drum.
-One lottery each for fraternities and
sororities would be held.
In .1968 the Academic Senate opposed
fraternities for tht> UC I campus. After a
h\'O year moratoriuin, Chancellor Daniel
G. Aldrich Jr. has been asked to permit
the social groups on can1pus.
Advisory action by the academic
senate, is due Thursday. ,
•·\\le members personally are not
enthusiastic about fraternities a n d
sororities," the ~·elfare co mm i l tee
reports.
"Such organization.~ have a Jong history
of discriminatory praclices ... and tend
to promote values that are antithetical to
the goals of an intellectual community.
"\Ye are sympathetic to the second
part of the argument, but recognizing in
it strong elements of thought control, we
reject it," the committee recom-
mendation said.
"Either our intellectual values are good
enough to compete with connicling values
or they are not."
THANK YOU, ERASTUS!
the hospital how a patient i!I doing
enroute and w1ittr service whlch will
alloi.r the private-room paUe9t to have
his meals whenever he wants them.
"One of our best features is our patient
relation's counselor who visits every pa·
tient every day to find out if they have
any problems or complaints," said the
administrator.
Ollendorf said his facility is determined
to be unique. "Satisfied patien ts are good
for the hospital and I have a file full of
letters which prove we've been suc-
cessful," he said. . .
Coastal Bill
Changes Snag
Senate Move
A rash of last·minute amendments to
the coastline control bill authored by
Assemblyman Alan Sieroty (0.Beverly
Hills) has resulted in a fu rther one-week
delay of the measure in the California
Senate.
A spo kesman for Senator Dennis
Carpenter (R-Newport Beach) said Mon·
day the bill is being reprinted for a se·
cond hearing next Monday before the
Natural Resources and Wildlife Com-
mittee.
A spokesman for Assemblyman Robert
Badham (R·Newport Beach) said the
!Dore tha!l..30..n.e.w amendments to the ~ill •
included one that would p r o h i b i t
home6wners living within 1,000 feet of the
mean high tide line from painting their
houses without am>roval of the regional
agencies the bill ~d establish .
The Sieroty bill. pockmarked with
amendments, is the ·last remaining
coastline preservation bill given a chance
to pass the state legislature.
Another preservation bill, sponsored by
Assem blyman Edwin Z'Berg ( O.
Sacramento), was killed Monday by the
Senate Governmental Organization Com·
mittee on a 3 to 6 vole.
Z'Berg's bill would have created a
super agency lo control air,· water &.nd
land pollutioo. It had been passed by the
Assemblyman, but was not even debated
by the Senate committee.
Mis mea sure was backed by the
cnnservationist Sierra Club. but opposed
by local government officials who claim·
ed ii would take away local control.
Other amendments lo the Sieroty bill
indicated It would exclude from the
statewide coastal control portions of the
Califo!nia shoreline Jring w i t h in
munlcipafl>oundaries.
However, the exemption would not
spare Upper Newport Bay from the
purview of the superagency. Another
amendmerit indicates developments along
shoreline that is less than 80 percent
developed would be subject to agency
re\·iew.
Laguna High Sets
Football Feast
The final football feast of the season
y,·ill be held Friday evening in the
cafeteria at Laguna Beach High School,
preceding the Homecoming football
game.
The popular hamburger d i n n er ,
prepared by members of the high school
PTA, will be serving from 6 p.m. to 7:30
p.m. Price is .$1.50 for adults and $1 for
students and the dinner is open to the
public.
The football feasts benefit the school's
athletic program and the annual senior
party.
HOUSTON {UPI ) -Dr . George Oser,
president of the Houston School Board,
has recommended admitting J-year-0lds
to public schools by the ye:ir 1973.
He said the plan, which would start
next yea r with lhe admis.'lion of children
aged 411:1, would cost $3 million and could
be financed by lhe federal government.
It occurred to us the other day that we owe a lot to an innovator in our
carpet industry who operated about 150 years ago.
Here are some facts about ERASTUS BRIGHAM BIGELOW:
l~Ol'l•I k•1¥il
E41ter
TI!t'."'11 A. 1rt4..,,,\iR1
M..,tgiflt EGllOI'
0.tt• H. Looi Ricl.1,d P. Nill
A>1llW!t Mtnllint EGl!ori
L .. •'"' IMcli Oftk•
22? for•1t A¥•nu• •
M•tfi111 eilclr•u : r.o. l •r ••&, f2,1l
S• ci.-1• Oftlc•
Time-lapse Movie Mo11itor
Of Sewer Outfalls Sougl1t
• Born 18 14, W. Boylston , Mass.• Poor family, req uired to work at age
10 as farm hand and cler~. • Genius at ma.t h and mechanics. • At 23
years old, invented loom for lace. • Invented revolutiona ry power loom
for BRU SSELS and WILTON carpets. This created a domestic carpet in·
dustry, and virtually eliminated foreign competition . • Founded BIGE·
LOW CARPET MILLS i111 Clinton, Mass. • Great economist, one of sm all
group found ing MASS ACHU SETIS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY al
Boston in 1861. • Died 1879.
'• 105 Nltflt El C1min1 R11 I, 92&72
Otti.r Offlrn
CW.. M"o• J.Jt w .. 1 ll'f SW-.!'t •
, .. lf""'rt lffrfll ~)) H•WPD•I 80\l!l ... td
hwili.INI htdl1 11111 1-.Kft &aill.l.,..rf
DAn.Y PIUlT, win. '""'!di 11 clfrllllftlf ,.,. .. _ .......... """'"""" 11111'1' t•Ct-4 5.,... ••'I' In ..,.,.11 "II""' tor Llf\lll• •uc.,. H.-..rt ••t(fl. C"lt Mftt. t'llOOlif>O!M ~. •-••Iii llollr/'. 'ffl C.......,lt/ CiJ' .. tr ......... 'tf01tk<~ •IOflt "'lit< -, .. ;..,11 edltiln. l'r"'l-l•tl "'"''"" Di'll II •I P Wftl atp 'h'N t, C•11 Mon ..
,..., .... 17141 &4t-4J21
Cl..tfle4 A•ffll'tl""I 642·S'71
S.. C*'-'9 AH 0.,1"-fftli
1...,....4,2-4410
~ .._. At! D''"'~ Tel•r•••• .. , .... ,.,,
c~ 1m. °'""" C•ltt M11.t1r... c.wi..11r, "• -,1.,.,.., 111111,.,,...,,, .. l!lrltl ,.,.,,., w ....... ,,.~,. ......! .. _., ... ,..,...II(., •m.wt •ll'itl ,.,..
flliNilil .. ~fil'IS _,.
._.. Cl.I .. •llfl .-11 el HIWllPt l .. dl
.... CllUI ~ftl, C"!ll.,.11. l*<rll! ... •r U lfltr 11.U ,,.,.,,,,,, l"I' ""Ill l f,JJ ~Ir; lt'llllwt .. llntlr.n&, .sl.11 nn111t.
PALO ALTO {UPI) -The placemenl
of "time-lapse" movie cameras near
sewage outfall points In coA.stat .waters
could provide early warnings or possible
damge to marine life, Lockheed Corpora-
lion scientists said today.
Dr. l..ee Tepley, a senior staff scientist
at Lockheed ~fissiles & Space Co. in
nearby Sunnyvale, described develop-
ment of 1 system which operatea una~
tended for long periods Jn waler as deep
as 200 feet.
He addressed a three-day joint con-
rere.nce on sensing of cnvlronmtntal
pollutants, which concludes Wednesday.
ll was SPonsored by • half doun scien·
tiflc and environmental groups.
Tepley said undersea cameras using
the "timt·lapse" tehcnlque -In which e
single frame is taktn every few seconds
or minutes - can provide more in·
formallon than divers making visual
observatlont.
"Undersea photo-documentation t!lln
point out slow c::hllnacs tn the underwater
environment before th ey reach
cat.astrophic proportions, a n d thereby
lead to co rrecti\'e action before it is too
late ," he said.
HI! said lhl' auton1atic, battery.powered
~yst<'nl, which t•an takr :12.,000 frames .
ov<'r a span of several da.vs y,•ith
floodlight s coming on automati cally to
pro\•ide light. could provide dAl;i on
hannful changes in marine ecology,
especially at sewage outfall point:ii.
He sho'A'ed conference delegates a film
dcmonslrating the destruction of coral
reefs in Kanoehe Bay, Hawi.ii, by algae
whose growth was spurred by nutrients In
Sl''A'8ge flowing into the bay.
"Unfortunately, the condition wa s not
recognized unt!I gr ea r damage "'as
done,'' Tepley said . ''The Important thing
here Is that if 5ystemaUc. lonll·lrnn
photographic monitoring -includlnjt
tim e-lapse phojography -had b et"n
started about five years ago. the algoe
growth would ha ve been discovered at an
tarly date and preventive actlon could
have bt.Cll taken."
ERASTUS:
MY GRAN DFATHER THANKS YOU! MY FATHER THAN KS YOUI I THANK YOU I MY
CHILDREN TH AN K YOU!
(Four 9ener11tions in the carp•+ bu1ine11 1i11c1 I 89'4 , th•nks to th• lnvtnfion1 of
Mr. Bigelow.)
P.S. Amazingly, without Erastus, Bigelow Carpets have remained an industry
leader. Please stop in and see their sparkling carpet line.
I
ALDEN'S
CARPETS • DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
' HOURS: M ... It.,. 11tvn. 9 IO 5:30 -Fff., 9 10 9 -Sot. 9:30 10 s
•
• '·
•
•
'
Tuesday
Evenin!I'
NOVEMBER 9
l:GO R Ill D Nm
1:30
8 Ltktr luhltwiH lo& An111es
Laktrs vs. Cblr.tto Bulls ti Clllcaio. fJ Hna Btnll, Sehubtck &!J (l) WIW Wiid Wlilt m Thi 11111tmn1i
di I Dr1111 If JNRnlt
llJ) In Utt Spotllfht
fr) Hodl'podP Lodi' f!I fDNtws
9 M1rbeny ~ lfD
0 COLOR! DORIS DAY
*AND RICHARD HARRIS
STAR IN "CAPRICE'.'! D Mll¥M: (C) (60) "Caprice" Part
1 tcomtd1) '67-&rb 011, lllch11d
Harris, Mlch1el J. Pollard, Edward
Mulhart. Comtdy·s11Spente story at
1!fl who bec:omes Industrial :py
wllll• ectu1ll1 u1rchln1 fot 1 ntr·
eollcs flnr lh1t had htr l1th1r
~111·~· (l)·®J m•-m Andy Crltllth Show
QJ Biii Cosby stlow llJ.l Book 8111
fl) Cl1a MMtbtp 111d Sthoob
Without Falh1r1 m a.n tt1t Oddi
9Grt1n Atru
ai) Y"rvl1n1
7:00 IJ CBS Nns Waltlr Cmnkll1
(])ABC NIWI Smitll, R11son1r
0 m NIC Mtws John Chancellor
Cl) Trvtll 1r ClllMqutnct·
CIJ Drarntt 0 Wltlt'a Mr UM?
(Ii Pri•u1
ID I "'° ""1 (I) I Dt1111 ol Jtillnl1
OJI Tht C.UDI ol Out T1111n
fl) Hlsteff ol M1lko
@II LI lntru11
at""' HI"'""' tl)M1nblp
O ABC Movie of the Week
~ Helen Hayes, Myrna
Loy, Sylv,. Sidney,
Vince Edwardtitar. 0 Cl) (J) m A.IC Movi1 of lh•
WHt: (C) (90) "0. Not fold,
Spiftdll or Mutilate,. (comtdy) '71-
Htltn H1yes, Myrnt Loy, Mlldrtd
Natwlek Sylvia Sidney, Vinet Ed·
W1Nls, itderly ltdin c111!1 1 flctlol\•
11 tirt !Gr a compule1 d1tln1 .. iv1tt
.. only to h1w1 their seemln11J hum·
ltSt ]okt boMlt11n1.
ID DAVID previews "JESUS
*CHRIST, SUPERSTAR" m DIV!d Frost SlloW F11tur1d lrt
Ktres.s Deborah Kerr; 1utl'lor ·Pettr
YNirttl; 1 loot tt ttlt new mu1!ail
hit "1esus Chlht, S\lptllltr'' with
tyrKJst Tim Rice; compaitr Andiew
Llo)'d Webtr, tnd 1ever1I ust mem·
beri; 1nd Reverend Mite.aim Boyd. tD (OJ JN Adlllltiltl "Shollld Con·
arm £sUblish 1 tlltiOnal No·F1ult
Auto lnsur111te Plan?"
Q1Une•1
t:00 \lJ) Thi
@El l1 G
,1lh ...
al) ltosas pua Veronica
7:301J S Cltn C.rnpbell Guest Andy
Griffith arrives aurround ed bf • lln1 '·
of 1l1morous cliorus 1lrls to urivtll _
his sophlstk.1tsd new lm111 11 he
loins comedian P1ul Lynd• 1nd
L11cJa A1naz. l'I
D 0 m lronlld• "DNr Fnn"
Officer Fran Seldln1 rrlem Ml
th1 1pp1rent suleldt of her ....., '
until It 1ppe1rs ht m1y stlll b1 ..._
O (])(i)(DTh• Mod s,111
"Ult th1 CIO$tr" Th• squad 1ou
undercover 11 1 used car lat to
crack 1 n1rcotlt1 smuu llnr OPtr·
•lion. l1ny B!1den 1uesb u Robtrt
H1rdy, Rut1 l •t H his wile, 1nil
1:00 C1J Thl1 l1 Your Ul1 m Truth or ConMq11111e11 ·
m Thi Vlrslnl1R
!I1J M1squerad1
@II l1 Cost Juzpda
a.l)Nlno
1:15 0 Llk11 Wrtp·Up
-·
Wednesday
DAYTIME MOVIES
1:00 m "~a TolllOfM' Coodbfe" (di;t·
m•) ·so -J1mt1 Caaney.
t:J!I g "I Was MOlllJ'• Doublt" (dr•·
m1) '59-John Mins, Cecil P1f1ltr. u (C) "l.ia1!41 " Low" (c:omldy)
'63--Aobtrt Prnton, Tl)l!f' R1nd1ll.
10:00 ()) MoN: (C) "Joun117 f8 tl!t CM·
t• 11 tlll llith" Part I (scl·fi) '59
-P1I BooM, Jamu Mnon.
.,
1·:00,e (C) .. llltnd In tht ~"" (dr1·
ma) '57 -James M1son, Join
Font1lne. m (C) "Hirl'I Fll&)tt" (tdventur l)
'58-R11 Mil11nd, Anlhony Newitt'.
2.-00 OJ "Munter Without Tt1rs" (mys·
Ill)') '53 -Cr1i1 Slmns,
l :OO (() ('C) "'lltbl" Col!Clusiofl (dra·
ma) '64 -Rich11d Sur1on, Pet11
O'Toolt. l1Q1 (C) ".loh11 Coldl1rb, P'llne C..1
Honl1" (tom1dy) '65 -Shlt1ey
Mecllln1.
ALL
ADULT
PROGRAM
•
Ber1iga11s'
Drama Set
' For College
WWII Cotnic Drama
.,tTAU.0 If"
tie the othe r cast members.
All. that is. except Gersowitz ,
"·ho handles himself with
authority, b I ending his
basica lly comic character with
nashcs of sudden anger wh ich
ring cleac: and lruf.
!\lost disappointing of the lot
Is Bud Weis! as the "security
man" of the barracks who, it
would do no harm to mention.
turns out to be the German
agent. Weiss is thoroug_hly un-
convincing, lagging behind the
action to the point h I s
character fac ade is. never pro-
perly constructed.
Ron Langseth is One as the
wisecracking Sha piro, though
.he is hard to accept in his
more serious scenes. Gary
Scott has his moments as the
tough barracks chief, Hoff-
man, but his character lacks
firmness and consistency.
Director Langsetlt does a
credible job as , Dunbar. the
rich boy who arouses Seiton's
ire. Jon Sherman's youth
proves a questionable asset as
the barracks "kid." Tom Tri-
man turns in an acceptable
performance as Reed. the im-
pressionist, while Joe Laws
prOvidcs some comic contrast
as ti1arko, the c a m p
TuHCIA)', November '· 1971
messenger.
The German guard, Shultz,
Is given 11 firm , businesslike
intcrpretalion by John Deur,
while Andreas J , Slebioda con·
veys cruel authority as the
commandant. Skip Schwanz as
the SS guard and Jerry
Ca rpenter as the Geneva man
are effective in m in or
assignments.
Visually. the primary fault
appears to fl!VOlve around a
table placed so far downstage
that lhe blocking becomes
awk ward and stilled. Ad-
ditionally, more cohesion is re-
quired in the many ensemble
scenes, and the curtain call
could be cleaned up as well.
"Stalag 17" continues for
two more wttkends on the
stage of the .Players' Theater,
500 W. 6th St., at Ro6s. in ·san-
ta Ana . Performances arc Fri-
day and Sa turday evenings.
J1npresslve Concert
PGcific Yibfa~.
COLOR .. _.. ... ~-.,.,..,,.,,,,,,.1
ADULTS $2.00 JUNIORS $1.00
1a.~~1t;ft•lltl '""""I
llM M "'8 OOllfmt & ,f,u'ldN u 11 .. 11(1'0tl lmlUtSJtOTO• n"I srtOll 1NOW U.ll.JIOJOI WO.OU l ll'AU.llON VPICU.I ~ 11111411 ONI
l lO I OOPI
•KIAl OIKOUNI 11C1Ctl1 Al •OVI Jl "{Ol!ll OtAllGI COVNn 1'1111 Cll '"A\U ,lOllt lllllUT 111M.t. l lTA •Al(ll, IMl:lftT 01111 nou. l llfl\I ~All Ctf'iltt.
w1nn1r 11 ' Ati41rnv Awtr~t
HtMI Over
STARS
Sydney Omarr lt one of
the \vorld'a grt?at a1trolo-
R~n. His column I!! one of the DAD.-Y Pll.OT'S IJ'tll
ft:AJl.lrtl.
•SO. COAST t Costa Mesa ~&.2711
•CI NEOOME 20 Clfange 532-3328 • rox fUll[RfON 525-4747
n:t •O-Yt •• l l •1' .. ·l ·tt
U,T.·• 11.tt• l,,.·O:ll·l·"•t lt
"'-"'·:•l.U •4 l l •I ot·t 11
o"'
Town
"Incredible Suspense" -N.Y. Times
Better than "BULLITT" -Daily News
201" CENT\l!Y-RIX Pff.SlNTS [!ijO
TBEFmCB CONNECTIOlr:-~r
EXCLUSIVE NOW
~N lWPORT 61ACH·ot the
entrance lo tkc.• fabulou• lido l"e OR J 8350 .......................................
STARTS WID,. NOV.10 AT IOTH THIATIRS
• • W MAllHll IMOl'l'l/111': CflfTflt • •
•ow.a111oa
HARBOR:O.l llA"IOll II.YD. Af WIUotl IT,
tt.t, •llA '4•·M7
DAILY PILOT J9" ~
• t " ...... -~·-....... ... -f llllllC"• ... ,., ..
HllOOYll· :SID GllAT Wlll
CANOICE BEllG£N · Pll[lt IOY~l
TR.BASKIN
W OllHIAlll ... ITllACTIO•
fUNHY HOW lOVERS START AS .••
"friends" 00 TECHNICOlOR~
-•-9\(0lt•°"'"·-,,,,,., __ ,, .. __ ,_.,_ ...... _
DIRtcriD BY JACK l£MMON (Gr)
·--""""''"'"""' ~SUllY••asmmmn
Tll DUHf.TUWlllS ~ ......... -....-~-
.. .... _ .. ·~· ... -~ .LL.. . . I ..... ,.-··-·----· -.. 7.9901·· .. u .. n-To1t .-
!
"Tlie AfriC:an
Elephant"
,,._.,~ 1ro~oi~· IQ!•
;
1
I
I
' ~-·;;:
•. ",...···· . __ ,. .. ..,. -;;~11i:111·1~i -"Joe Hill" ~:
[GPJ4> .,_,,.,,.__ ..
... _., ..... _,_ ..... ,A,, _.., ____ .... -. ,,,~ ·-· ..... -.. _ ...... -Plus -Tom Loughlin In
"BILLY JACK" (GP)
1 t twTM OI IM -nn. HO bNl UNDf:lt 17 ADMITllD
VANESSA
REDGRAVE -OLIVER
REED ..
NRUSSEU'SFILM
THEDEVII.S __ ,__
·-Bow. AK.in...,. l.dou~ S-.-in
ALSO lST RUN @
"DiEPBC"
"GONE WITM TMI WIND" •1111
"THE ODO COUl'LE"
·NOW ,lATIPUi•
kDWAROSCINl~A YllJD
Mi11io1t Vitio, tl0·6tto
..,il•ll,flO I M!U)lll "'JI • ftJ •Ul •'•tt• -••111 • ~•••••I•• ..... •••I
r-L~hnr! I. o.io... l..,..,
BILLY
JACK;GP)
Al1 .. lnic1 lrow1t'• •11111
"ON ANY SUNDAY1'
'
•
•
lO DAILY ~!LDT I SC Tt.rtsdl! NO¥tmbtr ' 1"71
Your /fJoney
•
Chm1ce s Slimme1·
Fo1· a Tax Audit
By SYLVI~ PORTER
Al. )OU adopt \ arlous tax
strategies to minlm1ie your
1971 Federal income tax dur
i.ng the &2 days that remain to
year-end you would be merelv
normal if you wondered ~hat
are the odds that the Internal
Revenue Services mechen1cal
brains will pluek your return
for an audit out of the m1lhons
la be hit<! next April
The reassuring an.s~er 1s
that the odds or an audit of
)Out return have shrunk to the
smallest in many many
years
This goes If you are fling as
an lnd1v1dual and it also goes
If you are f1hng a corporation
return
Speclf1cal\y U you file an 1n
d1vldual return the odds are
one out of 250 ttiat you II have
a field audit at your place. of
1 _______ b~u~1~ln~•~•~s i!i..! a111st one out of
200 JUSt last yea r The odds
are up to one out of S8 that
you•t1 have an office audit as
against one out of 41 last year
and one out of 25 as recently
as 1967
(
If you file a corporation
return lhe odds are one out of
11 that 1L 'Alli be examined as
against one out of eight in
1961
This Is from the IRS s point
of view a shocking setback
and a startling mess -yet for
reasons which have nothing at
all to do with tax returns the
odds on audits ot your return
well may plunge still lower 1n
the months ahead
Here :-1n brtef -1s the com
b1natlon of developments and
circumstances leading to
todays news
( 1) lt all started in the early
1960s 'Ahen the Treasury
switched lo the computer and
began entering our 1nd1v1dual
income tax 1nformat1on on a
national Automatic Data
Processing ftle But instead of
this merchan1zalion leading to
an enormously more eff1c1ent
processing exam 1nat1 on
system precisely the opposite
occurred An analysis by Leon
Gold chief tax expert of the
a,esearch ln s t1tule of
America disclosed that the
proportion of audited in
d1v1dual returns dropped from
S 6 percent 1n fiscal 63 to a
scant 2 7 percent for 70 The
proportion o f corporation
returns audited fell from 12 3
perce nt In fiscal 63 to an
estimated JO 4 percent 1n
fiscal 70
~
121 Utterly unan{1c1pated
de\ eli:ipments contributed to
the IRS s aslontsh1ng retreat
Between 1963 and 1970 the
number of tax re turns with
adjusted gross 1nCQme of
$10 000 or more DOUBLED -
from 8 470 000 to an estimated
20 million Simultaneously
Congress cut back lhe funds
allotted to the JRS for h1r1ng
re\rnue agents and I he
number or exam 1 n er s
ava ilable fell from 15 569 1n
24 Hour
TELEPHONE
ANSWERING
SERVICE
5• ~ 119 -Co 011t dt! Mtr
to1ta M11• N1wport Beach
•11d S•~I• All• • •••
ORANG! COUNTY
RAOIOTELE,HONI
SERVICE INC
835-3305
Heart Unit
$10 Million
Contract
BEVERLY HILLS IAP) -
A consortium of European
passenger a1rhnes has award
ed a $10 milhon contract to
Litton Industries for the com
pany s 1 n e r t 1 a I nav1gat1on
systems Litton ha s an
nounced
A company spokesman said
Thursday the contract has a
potential value of about $20
m1\11on depending on the
ultimate number of aircraft
involved
The systems will be 1n
stalled 1n McDonnel Douglas
DC 10 aircraft
The consortium is known as
the Atlas A1rhnes Group ll 1s
comprised of Ahtal1a Luf
lhansa Air France and lbena
a1rl1nes
The spokesman said orders
for an 1n1t1a\ 26 aircraft each
lo be equipped with three
I TN 72 systems have been
placed by Atlas The LTN 72
wUI be manufactured by Lit
tons Aeto Products d1v1s1on or
Woodland Hills
The syste1n use~ a miniature
1nert1al platform and
g)roscopes, Litton sald.
§ -,r;';J/ 1000 ORDER 'eautiful "">' '/ Stick·on
YOURS ' \.< LABELS \
'-
/ .?'ONLY~ TODAY! 1 $125
~·••c~
Personalized • Stylish • Efficient
Order Fo r Yourulf or a Frltnd
Mty b1 u11d en envelop•s •s return 1ddr1s1
lebels. Al10 very hendy es 1dent1f1cet1on
lebels for merk1n9 per1onel items such es
bocks, r.c;ords, photo1 etc lebel1 shc;lt on
9l•1s end rney be u1ed for rnerlun9 horne
ctnned foc.d 1tem1 All lebels e re printed w~fh 1tyl11h Vogue type on fine quel1ty white
gummed peper.
•
OVER THE COUN1 1ER Complete-New .f or-k Stock List
............... _. ....... _, ...... '' ·~llMll'ly ' ................ ..
•rlC.a .. !Iott llilc.,._ "''"" If IMlll-_" .. Wfl '' Cl-Hilfi
NASO Llttlng1 for Monday, Nov•mber I, 1971
•
' '
•
l ' ' •
•
•
' • • • •
• • • l • :
• •
• • • • • :
• '
• • •
~ • • " ~
•
.. •
• • • • " •
"
• • ,,
• • • ••
~
~
• ~ • •
• ,,
" .. ,,
l •
~ • •
" TllitSday Novembtr 9, 1 m SC -""---
Tuesday1s Closing Prices-Complete New Y orl\: Stock Exchange List
•
-
Finance
Briefs
CHICAGO -Steel Industry
shipments of 95 million toru1
next year werj! foreca s t
Thursday by President 'fen-
nebaum of Inland Steel Corp
Thia would compare with cur~
rent estimates of 88 million
tons for 1971 Ten nebaum
mal:le his pred1ct1on at a
meeting of the Jlhnots State
Chamber of Commerce
•
t(
.;/I • lo ._ I 'f '' " •• ~ '} f' • ~. ,_ r ' .. -+ ••• . ' . ' ' 'TY> r .--' f• • -) 1 ~ I > ! I I tf I '\ • f I I .,-• If' 0 I If' ,,_ • ~, -..
:f2 DAILY PILDf Tut~a,. NoYff!lbfr 9, 1971 •
l
Everyone Has
Som'ething That
So meone Els e Wa nts
DAILY 'PILOT CLASSl _FIED ADS
:The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
You Can Sell It,
Find It, Trade It
With • Want Ad
2529 H&rbo t, C.?tt.
SAYE $$$
BEST BUYS
ON THE MARKET
. PRICED FROM
$19,500 • $40,000
XMAS SPECIAL
3 Bedroom, 2 Bath
$19,500
General
"LET'S GO TO THE BAY"
Deluxe Duplex
* * * * * * TAYLOR CO.
LINDA ISLE · $143,SOO
Orastit reduetion!! Ar.chitect owner reduced
price for quick sale on NE\V 4 BR home.
Beautiful vaulted ceilings and many new
features. Fam. rm, formal DR & study.
"Our 76th Ye1r''
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
BIG CANYON
Five bedroom, 3 baths, family room, laundry
room, 3-car garage. Beautiful corner 'fot at
Hermitage Land and Royal St. George Drive.
This home is being finished now and should
be available for moving in before Christmas.
Drive by and see it. then call owner at
644-1140. Price $92.500.
2111 San Joaquin Hiiis Road ~N~E~W~P~O~R~T~C~E~N!T!E~R.-~-,-~~6~44~4~91~0'..._1 ·;;;;;:::;:;::::7:::::~~ ~D-E_L_l_G_H_T_F_V_L-LY~·-
Gonorat Gonoral BONANZA! COZY
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;lrf you've thought of living on
BA YSHORES VIEW & POOL
.t"rlend.ly ramlJy home. En-
closed !.ront court yard •
fenced, \\'ell 111.ndscaped
ONLY $26,950
Three large bdrms. plus 1 ~
baths. comple!ely carpeted
thru«1! ·fully draped. Huge
62' x 135' fenc:ed, Jevei'lot
close to COSTA M.ESA
PARK. ~'O Shopping Cen.
ters and BANK OF A..\.tERI·
CA. This exC1!Uent home can
be yours \\~th only $2,695
dO\\'n if you call immediate-
ly.
°'.Grange Vista
PROPERTIES
Formerly LaBorde R.E.
220 E. 17th St., C.M.
CALL 646-0555
Evening:1 &12·8453
This 7 •year old home
ha.s it all. Built-in kilch·
en. double garage, forced
air hrat, dining .area.
large lot and lots of big
t.rtts. It's priced to sell
fut so act NO\V ! and
.move .in for Xmas! 546-8640.· -
ON BALBOA ISLAND • Custom built 4 bed·
room, 3 baths, 2 fireplaces. deep SHAG car·
peting, kitchen with builtins, glass walled
staircase PLUS 2 Bedroom RENT AL UNIT.
Waterfront custom home, 4 bedroom & den
or 5 bedrooms. 51h baths. Top quality car-
peting. draperies, wallpaper & fixtures.
View from most rooms. 87' lot. spacio us yard
with beautiful gardens. $280,000.
the PDNDEROSA, then don't
rn.is!t this real r~ 1 NE
SPREAD, looated on beauti-
fu l"""-.f?ONDERISA STREIT
in t.1~11. Verde. You'll holler
"Eureka", \\'hen you 8"C this
sprauling RANDI STYLE
home wilh 4 large bC';:!rooms,
v.'ith .a tolal of 19?.Q sq fi!
STAKE YOUR CLA1~1 for
only $33,950. \Vifh VA or
FHA 1erms. VA APPRAIS.
ED FOR $3-1,0CKI.
rt:ar yarct. iirids 1o the charm $27,750 of this l\1ESA VERDE new.
A real Jmy at .................... $99,500.
"SEE YOU AT THE POOL"
ly carpeted and draped 3 NO DOWN TO VETS
btirm. family room home Sharp 3 bedroom in beauti-
\\'i th B/I elrc, kitchen. Near ful MESA VERDE. Over-
i!rammC'r & intermediate sized garage. lovely cover-
school:t. A good buy at only ed. patio. deluxe landscaping.
cozv
COSTA MESA
COTTAGE
$23,500
Let us show you this SHARP SPLIT LEVEL
2 Bedroom, 11h bath hortle, all carpeted and
draped, kitchen with aU the builtins. CLUB·
HOUSE and POOL PRIVILEGES. Only
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR $30.%0 \Vi!h terms. F'asl mo\•e in OK.
'Grange Vista !:.;.:;;, .......................... $23,800. 341
Islanders Bldg. 1t Lindi lt l•
BAYSIDE DR ., SUITE 1, N.B. 67$-6161 A iood 4 biodrnom. 2
bath home at this price
is hard to find. but here
it ls and ifs a beauty.
It has a ronveniently
laid out kitchen, good
size bedroomi;., .and in
excellent condition in-
side and out with 111.rge
lot and beautiful cov·
ered patio. All for full
price of $23,SOO. Hurry!
546-8640.
ARE YOU READY c & . ~COATS PROPERTIES · ·
THE BEST BUY
AT $25,000
ls this unbPllev11hle 3
bedroom home i n Costa
MC!U. featur inlil 2
roomy baths, large
kitchen, nut5tandlna:
condition and you Jtame
the termi; -FHA, VA.
or '!''!''!'. Owner llrudous.
~ it!!! 546-8640.
BEST BUY IN
MESA VERDE
$26,950
For 27 Units? •
NEW ADULT APTS., Consisting of I. 2 &
3 Bedroom units v:ith 1 & 2 baths, reaturiRg
a POOL. B·B-Q and REC ROOM. Indiv idual
garages. builtins, shag carpeting, forced-air
heat, laundry facilities and award·winning
landscaping. Will trade .......... $422,000.
ENtERTAINING TONIGHT
in Baycrest?
Here's the perfect setting; 4 large bedrooms,
21h baths, family room, 2 fireplaces, large
covered patio, fabulous landscaping. IDEAL
FOR INDOOR·OUTDOOR ENTERTAINING.
.............................. $04,500.
"HONEST TRUE"
your boat and you!
FLOAT INTO this 2 bedroom, 2 bath, builtin
kitchen, fireplace. carpets & drapes. YOUR
OWN PRIVATE PIER & FLOAT ... $72,500.
General Genor•I W WALLACE
r.---------1-..-REALTORS
OLD SPANISH . YOUNG MAN (Opo~4i!~~in91)
Solid .adobe hit. 3 bedroom
home close to to~·n & park.
Ifs one-of-.a-kind and spot·
less. Ca.II for de1ails.
$24,950
EASTBLUFF
Larie Lusk built 3 bedroom,
lovely home with 2 tire·
places. king lriu bedrooms,
fonnal dining room. family
room. electric garage door
opener. Priced right at.
$51,950
CORONA DEL MAR
Over to our excelll!nJ 3 hed,
2 ba. home 11.•ith 1. lg. H&F
Pool. All this on ea,o;ts1de
Co«ta Mf'M. Cul·de·sac lot
and it can be purchased No
Dow11 VA or minimum FHA
at only $33.950.
CORONA DEL MAR
CANYON-SIDE· -
Like being in the l\1ts,
yet only
HORSE RANCH
IN LAGUNA? 3
\Ve have it? Almost 2 ar.res
including 8. rabulou11 4 ~
room home surrounded by
fru it trees a spectacul11r
VIEW. 11. g\iest rottage, and
hon;e corrals. Call now \\'hile
it is still available. ·
NEW HOME
LUXURY
3 Blocks to 5 Cro\vns
Unique home,
rustic & secluded
On large fee lo\'
BR.. large rumpus room
Lots of \\'t>OCI & gtone
$53,700
REALTORS
SINCE l!M4
without the inconvenirnce of 673-4400
having to do 1111 the 1vork. A
fabulous 1 yr. old Mesal !!""'""''!!!!'!!'!!'!'~""'~
V•ro• hom•, 5 hdnn, • "'" SHHHH!! magnificent Cll.l'J)E'U!. dr11~ :
Formerly LaBorde R.E.
220 E. 17th St., C.M.
CALL 646-0555
Evenings 646-4:'17'9
GOLF COURSE
·VIEW HOME
4 Bedroom, family room, for-
mal dining room. Dramatic,
split levt-1. cusrom home, t'X·
quisitely decorated and pro-
fessionally lanscaped. This
i~ one of ~1esa Verde's hn-
esl. Only two yeani o I d,
ready for immediate occu-
pancy, $96.500.
"lncstl\hbc'.Rcaftr
546-5990
LOVELY 2 STORY
$28,000!
Pool + Rumpus Room
Plus 4 bedrooms, 2 baths,
built0in kitchen. new shag
carpeting, 2 fireplaces. Over
600 sq. ft. n1mpus room in-
cludes ""et bar. No qualify-
ing, no loan fees -just take
over, &U.b,iect to existing GI
Loan. OWner will consider
$1.000 doWn. IJ\1MEDIATE
OCCUPANCY.
Walker & Lee
Rt>altors
2790 l~arbor Blvd. at Adams
545--9~91 Open i111 9 pro,1
5 Bdrms., fa.mily rm. & din.
ing rm. home. on fee land
(you o .... ·n it). A scarce item
& prict'd ri~llt at $67,500.
~Iler says 1ell! Now
vacant You can really
save on this f.antastic: 3
bedroom home in Costa
M68.'s most desirable
area. Just painted In
and out, carprtlng, bullt-
in kitchen, double ga·
rage. \Valking distance
to schools and shopping.
Nn do-...•n to vets or
min. do\vn FHA. Don't
wait. It \\'On't lafit.
546-8640.
Four bedroom tri·l~I homl!',
plus I bedroom rentll.l unit.
6 year sold. Units in top
condition. \\'alk to beach
.and shopping. 10% down,
xlnt financing.
es, profeuional 111.nd~c.1.pin&
and MUCH, MUCH r.10RE . ''Don't let It Out''
Dandy Duplex
-VA
Call for picture cataloa:
4 bedrooms, 3 separate haths. \\'ith prices & details
Large lamily room with in-675 3000 REALTORS
644-7270
$63,500 vitin~ fireplace. built in •
efficiency kitchen, dish11.'ash. I '"""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'" -FHA
-221-D2 er. Patio. f"rrshly painted. WARM AND
(Formerly Del1ncy Reif E1t1t1)
2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF.
"' --ONLY $29,950 Nothing !o do hu! move IO
righ! in 8: star! to really Jive TRADIT NAL
PERRON
-"':I ~,,..
BE FIRST
DIAL
145.0303
& rela.."1:. P11tio. DP.<-orator Roomy 5 Bedroom. dining
fe1ttures inside & out. Bkr. room & f11m ily room. Ulti-
BEST DUPLEX
BARGAIN
$29 ,950 . $300
TOTAL DOWN
540·1720. ma1e itt privacy. Many l:rtti,
General Gener.11
'42-1771' Anytime
TARBELL
covered outdoor entertain.
ing ;irea. \VelJ planned lor
Here it 15 and \\'hat a
great investment -Lo-
c.att'd in Costa ~t!"sa,
e.ach unit has 2 big ~
rooms. hard\\·ood floors
for 1100 sq. ft . I" a ch and
a g11rage. $300 do\vn to
anybody plus normal
closin.it costs. Call for
arpointmf'nt. 546·8640.
$100 TOTAL DOWN
PAYMENT
PLUS NORMAL
CLOSING COSTS
G.I. REPO
$950 DOWN
FEATURING
e 3 Bedrooms
• Ha.rd"'OOd floors
• 2 baths
• Us('d brick entry V.'ay
• Built-in kitchen
e Dishwasher
• Huge heated pool
e Concrt'te drive
• No 2nd trust deeds ,
$239 mo totel payments
CALL NOW, IT'S HOTI
Newport
•t
Fairview
OWNER BAILING
OUT
$49,950
R@du~ $400() Und\l'r Appl'll.is-
al. Prime residenti&J area.
3100 Sq tt of living .area.
Formal dini~. 3 imfh!.
Huge recreational area: This
i9 a gorgeou.R 4 berlroom tri·
level w/owner forced tti sell.
Call 545.-8424 (Opt'n eves.)
\outh (. oast -,_ ,-,,, -
El RANCHO
Nearly lfl Acre
Guest House + Coral
+Den+ D ine
Breatht11.king! ! E\'erything
for complete f11.mily living.
Only 7 years old. Gue~t
house ha~ 3 Bedrooms. \Ve
J UST LISTED IT. So Hurry,
Diol
645-0303
HJKI \I l Ol\O~
'" R!'A lfOAS ___ ,_rJ_
'"' 1hi• 3 ''"""om, 2 646·8811 Income Producer ASSUME balh lOll'TlhOUS\I' ran br
yours for Xm11.s.. Hov,• (anytime) Enjoy fin.-li\'in~ 11nd good This krn'-low inlett'sl loan &
about 1. built-In kitch-incom,.. This rharmin.it ru~· 5a\'t' lot's A Un. Anxious
en? Forc\l'd air he11t? "•""'~~!""'~~""'""'"' tic dupl<'x "'ill fill yooc Big brick fir,.place! Din-· llf'e<U. 3 bedroom unit . II S23 450, 011.Tier w1lling to Aslli.'I! in · • Th' h additJOnal financ:ing. Neat 3 1ng are.A . 11 fin~ a& I • 11.~th 2 Mths _ l11.'8e living ., .it y,11 p<i""' •"1 bedroom, Jam ily room home. 1 ... " -.-3 \.._.__ mom fi"J>lo, heam ... ,·1,·,.. • 500.,.,., Hurr)' 546-86<0 ueui1J1Jm. 2 sepa.ra1e baths. '"' l\lodf'rn, •l•p·saving kitch-. · · · · built in kifchf"n . di•hw••.h· .all e.IN:tric ''A\\'il.rd" wife l!n. Generous ~~ yard QUIET PRIVACY
5 BEDROOM
S&\-er kllcht-n, dishpsher. \l'r. Plus . love.ly 11tudio apl wrth covered petio. p A Y·
"-I d~ 1. . ovt-r 2 <'Ar a-11r1111:e • \Ile.II 'm•,~. 1.,, ~--re-,, only ~ u ~.,., rtar !\1"g -m " "-' '" "'" J11nd1'1Cape.d \\'ifh pat10. $.10 9 • .... ;th mvi1m11; fift'Jll!!.~. , . 163 ~ "· 67 · 00. · I .. iw • ..... 11 ·1·8a50. r....., Ev ... '"I 8 Pi\1 f';rw y paintl"d iMide & nuL v-.,.: "
Gar11ge fin ished for f11m lly .COl.ESWOR'Tl<'flCO.I
room. Patio. pool , clubhou,;e ~T,2!!~11.,,"
WITH VtEW I f OR ISf [ OLSON '" NPw li!11ng -scarce 5 BR.. A£Al..TOAS
Smith built home. Lge. liv·l --~====--
ing rm .. rlinln.g rm .. OCl!fll1 VIEW THE
& harbor view. Realistically BLUE PACIFIC
priced Al $12.(XX). anrl Ca;alina iron1 this SU-
COR BIN
PER SHARP HO~!E in our
• Huntington Hills area. J
BR'" \\'I th n1c:e carpets,
MARTIN matching drapes. and be11u·
tifu J ki1chen for ro.Jom on a
REAL TORS 644-7662 pool-size lot. Buy subject to
VACANT AND P""'"' VA loon Wrth to"I
pmts $196 mo. Full price
LONESOME w"'"aoool.ker & Lee Q\1'nE'r desperA!r, moved
oor1h. ~lust ~ell lary;r ·1
hedmnm hon1r. lmmacul111e
in every w11y. B('it.uliful cllr·
pet! A.nd drapt's. URGENT-
Realtors
F'ountain Vlilley
968·3371
295.l HarboF. Cosla Mcu
lt9,9SO IS THE PRICE
for 1his very lovely 3 bed·
room, 2 b11th home. The loan
is hiJ:"h enough lhal you can
assume \\'ith payments ol
Slf() per month. \l'hich in-
f'l udes all. l\lodcrn bu1lt·ins,
deep pile carpels, .also
matchin g dr11!>('5. Double
garac:e to hoot! Call •
Walker & Lee
Rc111tor.'!
:noo Harbor Blvd. al Adams
545-o.iti:i Open 'ti! 9 Pl\!
ASSUME
-VA LOAN!!-
Sh11.ri> 3 bedroom on large
lot. Total payments $186. per
month. Low Down. Priced
4 Bedrm. + Pool + 11.t $25,900. C111l now for de·
l\.1UST SEU. $38.SOO. lopenl~~""'""'""'~"'"""'~ ~venings) Cllb 546-2313.
Que lity IA il,..
$31,500 FULLER REAL TY
Very ,.paciou!> f11m\ly Jivif1'?. 5-16-081~ Anytime
--,==;7.==,--I dcsi~ned for entprraining. 2 AFRAID TO BUY?
NEWLYWED batM. family room \\'i!h DON'T BEi
DREAM COTTAGE mAssJve fiN'pl11.ce for indoor TRI-LEASE -OPTION -ON
cute a.s a hug·1 \l'ar and actJOn. Cloud soft ('arpetJng. :; Bednn!'. 3 Baths, Ne\\'J)Orl
I G Id ... custom dra~. Price in· H SI -d 1-0 / squeaky c e11.n. o Snng t!. .IJW. n., ·""'· mo,
carpet. cu11tom kllchtn, elude regUlation pool table. TRI HARBOR
tO\\·ering tree-sM.dt'd lot Pa!IO, loads of dech.ing, lush REAL TORS l11ndsraping encirc1£>s the completely fenced. Only $175 h d ~ 8 k "'"I._. 400 EAST lmt, C.l\1 . Hidden t)y lols or t1111l
trePS. I his hnmP \1·1 ll
excJtt" )'Oii \\'Jlh thP
usPd hrick firP p!11ce 11nd
built-in bAr·h·QUP con1-
ple!P \Vilh MllS!iC'l'lt\
gorgPnus built-In kilf'h-
en 11.nd dinini:: room,
built-in TV In dC'n, 3
ma.i;t,.r 1b:e hedrooms. 2
tiled bA.th1. Pro\'en
nf'iJ:hh<'lrhnod. l\(>~t buy
at $34,950. 546-8640.
& plav~ounds. bkr .. 5M).1720
TARBELL -VETS-
PllYB all. less than rent. eaT" A'~R· B 'E· L.n~L· IN. NTTE OR DA\' fHS.3255
122.IXXI Tutat. 6 UN tTS-EASTSIDE
$24 950 Walker & Lee 2955 H'"'°'· Co;t• M•"' •ll 2 b<l<m, l\o bath, P" I ~:;:;;:;;;;::;:;;:;;;::;:;;:;;;::;; l t;o,. '"" ,,.1o1Nt. Show• ' Realton t-~return of Sll.800 gross
s1 00 Dawn rnove.~ YOU In :?9&> 1111.rhor, Cost11. ~1PM 4 Bdrm . + Fa mily Rm. 8:12-4456 SUPER DUMP lncomf'. GI"t'At location with
Beauutul famlly home. Enlry , -===~===--only 3<;':-va1!11ney f11r.tor. Call
$27•500 Stolle,r PllYll a ll your COl!I~.
Hug" 4 hf>f!ronm COLl~EGE
Yo..1 \\'iin•t Brhtve 11 Unlt-s5 PARK hon11" "''llh ~Ill iShAg:
1-\Vo1\'! Wh11.l·11-ti:<t>r·UPPf"r! w lk & L hall. d1n1n.1t room. cozy den. BEACH COTTAGE Br:in"--vou.. ~liAl'll'I shovel. a er ee
2 bath!, ""'''"'"· b"ill-io PLUS INCOME! • k 1 · k 3 Bedrm. 2 bath, CClrnf'r 101.
"You Sre It. 'F11.nta.stlc; 3 bed· c11rprt.~ 11nri covrre.rl f)fltio
room Mme. \\"II.II k\nch: of l'lvrrlookini;:-11. 1p11rk'lin.1t 18x
usl'fl brick. coun1ry 111tyle '.l6 f1 pool. VA "'ill l<Mn you
kitchen, hard"'ood noo,,. & $33.500 & Sl.00 do1,1·n totaJ
canie1s, huge. rtJmpu$ room will move you In. Hun')',
range « oven, par 1 e Live tn the front home and large mw?'f'd pa!lo & dbl.
yard, brk, ~0.1720 enjoy b!-1.ch UvtnJ "·hile >'.ou gAr. Hiih ASaum11ble 6~ ELEGANT
2 STORY.
-.. 5 BEDROOM
TARBELL J'Pnt ou1 !he rear unit to loan. Best pan is the price
make )'OlJ1' P'YTnents, N~s , .. $71 .450. ''For stout hearts
a little TLC but ba.rpin only!"
& lal"R:,. plu1b Jrttn ~·an1. C111l ;;.u;.:,..~ f()pen Eve.1.l
No do\\•n to Vets A~5ume
low tnll"rt'SI loan. c 11. I I 1-naa HOOAG( I
"295,lj Harbor, Costa J\lesa
2 STORY STEAL
Ov'1' 1700 sq. ft . ol f11.mlly
llvlng with 4 decarator bed·
rooms, p I u 1 b c::arpe1i,
brklc:'11 kitchen and )'Ol.l O\\'ll
evtrythlng, NO c1:i1~11CKS
You ha\•,. t(I f'"" thi1 SOt.m-1 COAST REALTORS, ~ • MAI. nt•n
hom« -lt't> bttttr 1h&n 5-ls.Ml4 IO[lt>n E\•1$.) ·========~ a new model. ~uxe II '""!~~~'l!'l~~!"~
Iona ~n ih111' cR.rptt~ I I PARK PLACE in& tn all "'°m' 1pnwl·
Ins llv!ni: ....,m, h"'' VALUE ldtchen. All utrem•ly
neat end clt1n 11.nd rea-Just 2 bloc~ to the CnstA
dy to be lived l,n. Alk· l\ftu. PArk. 11 hMroonu 11.nd tns $40.000. A den. 2100 11:q. ft. J u,t re·
d ucrlf 10 S3f,ooo. c a I I
5-16-?313 btfore: yoo in\·r~t.
• $11,~. I
Walker & Lee
LUXURY LOV ERS
\"our (l'IH'Stl y.•111 .':MP~ they
st~p lntn l h111 dramatic
-BA\'CflE!'T f'ntry. 3 B I ~
BR's \\1th IOPh1lillC&ted m1!r Rea.IIOT'I
11u1lf'. Spa rkhni::, slep.SAver 8-12-4455
kit. Pictu resque lnd~rpg. O\VNER trans. 4 Btdroom. 2 ~ "'hiu ~.!>DO Will buy. baths, r.ntry hall, huae -GEM-firt'place. built-ins. p,111lo, \-o· THE REAL ~ r;;:>'f ATE'3~ 2629 Harbor, C.~t. 1610 \V. Coa.11 H11o')' .. N.B. 1prlnkler 1ystl!m. Br k.
j~~~~====~~~~~~~~~=-1tE:Al.'T'ORS &12-4611 ,_S_><_.8'<1_. _P_h._962-__ ,,_ ... __
•
priced 11.I $23.950. Call f>.16.5880 (()pen Eve:1, l
Walker & Lee HOITAGE
IUI. atAfl
TT NT 0 * DOVER RES A E I N ELEGANT thnl t. Noth!"'
liOUSE OWNERS ('Ompuabl• '" thio ' • d,,,
v.·ha.t fs ""''T' propmy beaut. home. $79.500. NO
;.v v LEASEllOU>. I I. 11 ' ex.
\\"Orth? For rt11kll"n lial pmp· qul~tte. Qptn hse. dally _
,.rty &116IYll!1 & l"l'llOn&l In· n~·ant \\'lt~I Rllr. 675..2123: terview c1ll 6'16-7171. ..... ,.
\-0 THE REAL
···:'\.. ESTATERS
I ' ' I
Sf&..~ early AM or EVE.
NO DOWN
Vets homes • t-:pB l(:~I
Ca ti J. l'«k. Bier, 5'5·0463
Rtaltor1
21!l(l Harbor Blvd. ft! Ad.rims
545-04a·, Open 'Iii 9 Pi\!
4 BR · WATERFRONT
Lovely yard & patio. ~'rplc.,
2 b3ths. Pier & slip.
$195,00)
can: 673-lGG.1 &i2-m1 E~
associated
BROKEA S--AEALTORS
lOlS W Bolboo 67J·J66J * TRIPLEX ·*
Out11!and1n.r location. Ctolc
10 \\'f!'!ltcHn ShopplnA" Ctn-
l~r. !3J 2 Bedrooms. Imm11c.
Cond, l.on«i llmt l~n.rint.
Rf'n!s llN' k1w. but a good
invt"sln1rnt,
MORGAN REAL TY
673-6642 675-6459
mot!l('r-in·law or ma id.
$•15.:ioo. 2424 Holiday, open
daily 1-5.
PETE BARRETT
REALTY
642-4353
Macnab-Irvine
Realty Company
BUY ·OR
LEASE OPTION
Beautiful 2-s!ory, 5 BR, 3
bath home \\'/FR & formlil
DR. End of quiC't cul·rle-sac.
3 yi'!. new -$52,500. Cal!
Lois Ei;:an &l·l-6200.
Macnab-Irvine
642-8235 644-6200
HERE'S AN
INVESTMENT
\Vorth considerar ion . 4 bf"d·
room duplex 21.-i bath in
each unit. Bu 1Jr in kitchens
-forced air hf'ating, over
2(XKl sq foot of living An'a .
carpets + drapes • solKI
income. price $79,500
673-8550.
GREAT •••
. , . for entertaining. Priv.
hr11ch. 4 Bclrrns., fllmily
rm., 3 baths; carpets.
drapes·, in('[. new ref:rig.
Only $54, 700
HOPE GERRIE RLTY.
~\1 Dover Dr .. N.B.
&JS..4-100 645-3.120
OWNER ANX IOUS
\Vil! con11~'r all otfen,
2300+ &ti fl homt>. 3 BR, 2
Ba, rlen, bonus fa.m r m &.
~pa tio.
CALL • SEE ANYmtE
ROY J, \VAP..D RLTRS.
'"6-0228
Builders Attention
Choice R·3 -180x1U • ·Lfvtl
~Ady fot building l" unit11.
Excellent Costa Mr$8. loca·
lion. Askin~ $52,500, 673-8550
r ut re11ult1 are jutt 11 phOnt
call a w1y • gu..ss?I /
'
5 BEDROOMS
EASTBLUFF
OPEN WEO. 1.5
2854 ALTA VISTA
A place for everythin1 In thll
2500 1q. 11. 2-fitory horn~.
Formal d1nin1 room, car-
peted &: draped. bll-in kilch-
en, 3 ba.ths. Beautifully
landscaped. Top location.
Vacant. f .a 11 posse1&ion.
S U8. $;>,,SCIO. Ca..IJ 675-~.
Hom• & lnve1tment
• Rulty
3535 E. Coasl ljwy., CdM
THE EASY LIFE
No work, just rela.xt This
Dolore« model ~presentll
one of the bes! values ln the
Bluffs. Walk to schools,
stores, tennis & pool.!!. 3
Bedrooins, 21,i bath.!!. Entitt
price $36.900. This is cer-
tainly a fast seller. so call
now. 546-2313.
\-0' THE REAL
~ESTATERS
L ' •, ''
*BACK BAY*
3 BR, 2 BA, family rm, firepl,
bltins, huge walk-in closetA.
1800 sq ft. New crpts/dta.pes.
$30,0CXl,
Roy Mccardle Realtor
1810 Newport Blvd., C.M.
548-7729
BAYFRONT APTS.
Vista Del Lido. Pier & sllp
ava.llable. From $31,500. Sell
or lease.
George Williamson
REALTOR
673-4350 -645-1564
REPOSSESSIONS
Sparkling clean homes, .,me
newly palntt>d & carpet~. 2,
3, 4 & 5 bdrms. Some with
pools. F1iA-VA conv. terms,
from $20,000 to $40.000.
COLLINS & WATI'S INC.
8843 Adams Ave. 962-5523
Fa.st results are just a phone
c.all away • 642-5678
CLASSIFIED
HOURS
8:00 a.m. to S p.m.
J\·Ionday thru Ftlda;'
9 to noon Saturday
Advertisers may place
their ads by telephone
COSTA l.1ESA OFFICE
330 W. Bay
642-5678
NE\VPORT BEACH
3333 Newport Blvd.
642-5678
HUNTINGTON "BEACH
17875 Beach Blvd.
540-1220
LAGUNA BEACH 222 Forest Ave.
494-9466
SAN a...E~tENTE
305 N. El Camino Real 492-44.20 .
NORTH COUN'I"t dial tree 540-1220
CLASSIFIED
DEADLINES
Deadline for copy & ldlls
is 5:30 p.m. the day be-
fore publication, except
for Monday Edltion
when deadline !.I Satuf'.
day, 12 noon.
CLASSIFIED
REGULATIONS
ERRORS: Advert.ism
should check their ads
daily & report crrnni
Immediately. THE
DAILY PILOT assumes
liability for the finit in-
correct insertion onty,
CANCELLATIONS:
\Vheo, kllllng an ad ~
.!lure to make a tttord
or the KILL NUl\fBER
i:J~·en you by your •d
taker as receipt of your
canceH11.Uon. This klll
number must be l>!'e·
scnted by the advertiser
in case of a dispute.
CANCELLATION' OR
CORRE<:nON OF NEW
AD BEFOHE RUNNING:
Every cfrort Is made to
kill or correct a new ad
that has bttn orde~
but \\·e cannot gu11.ran-
tee to do ao until the ad,
has appeattd in the pa-per.
DIME.-A-UNE ADS:
These-ad~ are 1trlctlv
ce.sh In advance by mall
nr at l!.ny one of our of· fi~ NO phone ordrrs.
THE DAILY PILOT ~
serves the rl.itht tn clas-
stry, ~It. ttnsor <1r rt·
ruse any aavcrt11ement.
and to chani;• I ta ra its
Is reir;ulatlona without
prior notlct.
CLASS IFIED
MA ILING ADDRESS
P. 0. &x 1S60,
Costa Mtu.
92626
•
' .. I• •
I
Youtl1 Radio
Shut Off:
No License
LOS ANGELES (UP I) -Y.'our-day-old
radio station KPOT . a youth-oriented F?.I
station , housed in a two-bedroom apart·
·1nent with the announ·cer's booth in a
closet was shut do\vn ~tonday night by
the F e d e r a I Communications Com-
mission.
•·rt just ·shocked us thal the govem-
mebt would want lo shut something like
this down. I thought y,·e we.re just as legal
as apple pie," said station manager Brad
Sobel. 19.
The 50-watt station, \\'hich has a JO-mile
range usin,R Army surplus equipment~
broadcast 58 hours o( classical and rock
music without a government-assigned
frequency before two FCC officers knock-
ed at Sobel's apartment door. They said
they had monitored the station's broad-
cast and then ordered him to shut do,vn.
"~right in the middle of the music."
Sobel said, "I walked over to the
transmitter -asked them if they really
liked their jobs -then Clipped the equip-
Jllent off. We were all in tears," he said.
"\Ve-played allYthing-and everything
from Beatles to Bach," said the bearded
young announcer. "and despite out call
letters. we didn't push drugs."
Sobel said he and his friends did not ap-
ply for a license because of the expense
1 invol\·ed and an FCC requirement that
each station have a licensed engineer.
The FCC did not indicate \vhat action.
if any. would be taken against the
operators of the unlicensed station.
Soldiers Warned
Yule Packages
Might Blow Up
CA1'.1 RANH BAY, Vietnam (UPI) -
American soldiers have been warned of a
Viet Cong plan to mail Christmas
packages to them bobby trapped to ·ex·
plode y,·hen opened.
Guerrilla girls have been ordered to
make up to Gls in restaurants. night
clubs, hotels and other public places to
obtain individual mailing addressu;, the
Anny's Cam Ranh Bay support com-
mand reported today.
"Packages ~esigned to e~plode when ·
opened would then be mailed or delivered
to these addresses at a later date." the
command said.
The command issued a y,•arnihg not ·to
give personal details to strangers and be
sus picious when Vietnamese offer to sup-
ply items by mail or seek the address of
a friend.
"ISe suspicious or packages that ha.ve
addresses y,•ritten in u n f a m i l i a r
handwriting," it said. "Jf you have any
suspicions -feport them. You may be
saving your life."
The command said that so far there
\\'ere no kr1o\vn instances of servicemen
receiving booby trapped packages.
Naomi Williams
·Succumbs at 73
Seivices will be held at Plymouth, Ind.
for Mrs . Naomi R. \Vi:liams, former
head nurse of the Laguna Beach Nursing
Home, v.·ho di~ Friday at South C.Oast
Community Hospital after a brief illness.
She was 73. ~lrs. \Villiams, a longtime Laguna resi·
dent. retired after 10 years service at the
nursing home. but returned from time to
time to work when needed.
She is survived by a daughter, \Villa·
dean and son-in-law Richard Smith or
Pomona ; grandchildren Leslie. Roger
and Paula or Pomona and Richard Smith
of Tel Aviv, Israel; a brother, Dean
\Valker of Plymouth . Ind.: and sister,
alonche \Vooldridge of Culver, Ind .
P1·incipal Shot Dead
GROVE. Okla. (UPI) -T, J. ~1elton.
46, principal of Grove Elementary School.
was shot to death t.1onday in a janitor·s
litoreroom at the school. ·
Police held a janitor who had worktd at
the school for 20 years. lt!elton was killed
by three shots to the chest and head.
FELLOWSHIP GRANT RECIPIENT
Artistic: Director Lil• Z•li
Laguna's Ballet
Founder Zali .
Gets F ellowsl1ip
• A. $1,000 feJloy,•ship grjlnt has been
awarded Lila Zall. founder and artistic
director of the Laguha Beach Civic Ballet
Company for her work in training a
regional company in the classic "S\van
Lake" ballet.
TI1e National Endowment for the Arts
choreography fellowship grant \vas f.fiss
Zali's second national government honor.
In 1967 the National Foundation on the
Arts and Huflanities awarded her
Laguna company a grant for expanded
programming throughout the county.
The new honor was in recognilion of
her interest in training future prc>-
fessieinal dancers in the traditional
classic ballet repertoire, as well as in
new experiment,_al works, and because the
Laguna company, in presenting some 40
programs around the county each year,
brings the classical works to young pe<r
pie of the area.
YMCA May Get
Vacant Scl100J
Site in Viejo .
Three acres of a vacant high school site
in t.1ission Viejo may be leased to the
Saddleback Valley Yt.fCA pending the
outcome of a Dec. 13 public hC'aring call-
ed .by the Tustin Union lligh School
District Board of Education ?i·londay
night.
The portion of the district's •·Baker"
sjte conl ideft'CI for lease lies along Toledo
Street north of El Toro Road.
ll would hou se a •·temporary ad-
minislration facility" for the Yt.1CA until
such lime"as the school site is needed for
construction of a school.
The school board resolution setting the
public hearing requires a minintum bid of
s~ a year to lease the property which
would be cleared at lhc end of the ren!al
period.
Thanksgiving
Park Space
Going Fast
Thanksgiving holiday openings for
campers and !railers are still available in
many Southland state parks. but San
Clemente State Beach and sevf'ral others
are alr<'ady booked solid, officials said
this week.
The San Clemente trailer hookups as
1\·el las those for the l\1orro Bav area
are already all reserved. ·
Some re servations for the normally
bu sy holiday season still exist and can be
obtained through the nearest Ticketron
reservalion se rvice, said State Director
of Parks and Recreation William Penn
l\1ott.
lie urged persons planning to camp at
state facilities to make reservations well
in advance.
Reco1·d Ent1·ies Expected
. .
111Tl1anksgivi11g50 Miler
A record field of entries is e~pected for
Laguna's ninth annual Thanksgiving
weekend 50-mlle hike. scheduled this year
foi Nov. 27, the Saturday after turkey
day. Scott Byington. spokesman for the
Laguna Beach Sea'rch and Rescue. Ex-
plorer Post 717 said notices or the !JG.
miler are being 1t:nt out to area high
schools and the stouls eltpect they may
spark the inttrest of track and field
enthusiast!.
"But we still \\'elcome e\'eryone who
thinks he -or she -can walk 50 miles."
said Byington, "and that includes all
1ges."
The hike will set out as usual from
Andrus Plumbing, 155 Cltnne.yre. St..
Laguna Beach. proceed d ow n Coa'!t
lfighway to Laglll'la Niguel. cross Crown
Valley Park\.\•ay ~nd ret11m \'la Laguna
Jlllls, t:l Toro Road and Laguna Canybn
Road.
I
Thal makes the fi rst 25 miles. Hikers
~who are going for 50 will have lo repeat
the course.
An entry ree of $1.50 will be charged to
cover the cost of gas for cars patrolling
the route and medals to be awarded all
those who complete the 50 miles in 18
hours or less. The winners also will be
guests at an awards luncheon in
December. •
Record time for tht cour_se. s e ven
hours, was set two years ago.
Byington said the hike. usually attracts
about 110 to t20 entants. of \\'horn about
50 nonnally finish lhe two lap!!.
Age range In previous years has Ileen
a I !he way from 10 years to more than
'iO, but there is no age limit. he em-
phasized. ·
Furtber lnfonnation on the hike mny
be obtained by calling Byington at 49-1.
8756.
....... ---.. -
• Tuesday, Nowmbtr 9, 1971 S DAILY PILG"I :J
Oops, ~nig Ben Blows It '
LONDON (UPI) -PassersLl' otared In
amattmeJ1t. 0 l I i c t workers unint.en-
lionalty . worltelt overtime.--Callers Jam·
med tht switchboards at Parliament. the
1'1inistry of \Yorks and ney,·spapers.
The cause of the commotion l\londny
was that Big Ben had stopped.
The 112-year-old clock above the !louse
of ParJiaplent, one or the world's most
accurate timepieces, stopped Gt 4:S3 p.1n.
for 67 minutes.
Iv. a hurried call went to Thv•aites "'~d
Reed Ltd., caretaker of Big Be.n, croy,•ds
stopped in Parliament Square and stared
at the 23-foot clock faces.
J~hn Vernon. one of the firm 's
engineers, rushed up the 336 steps to tfie
320-foot clock tower and by 6 p.m. had
fixed the trouble.
':-ministr~ of public y,·orks spokesman
said post off1~ workmen had been in the
tower fii:ing a telephone link to ensure
that the clock striking JI a.m. Remem-
brance Sunday coincided with a Cun
salute.
, "Unfortunately they left a cable ha11~-
1ng on one of the counter-balance anns or
Jet's Engine Burns
N~\V YORK (AP) -An engine of a
Boeing 747 jumbo jel carrying 216
~rsons ~ght fire during tikeoff fron1
Kennedy Airport Monday night. The ic1:11fl
y,·as forced to turn back :ind make · an
emCfgeocy lclndiiig. • -
. It
..
the clotk hands," sald Geoffrey Duggins,
1n:inaging directo r of Th~'aites and Reed .
"All !he-minutes ticked away-, the-cable
got itself enl\vined \\'ith the gearing at the
back of 1ne clock face.''
There did not appear lo be any damage
to the "'orks, he said. ''It's impossiblt' to
put a value on them -they are still in
beautiful condition. A little bit of
carelessness could have caused unlold .
• damage,'' he said.
• ,It "'as not the first .time Big Ben has
~topped because or a c~lt3tt-Workman.
The last time \\'as In Jury, 1969, when a
balance weight got caught in workmen's
scaffo lding behlnd the clock face.
Then there was the time in 1963 when a
\\'Orkman left a small hand sweeping
brush on the trWmission sbart. The
voice of Greiit Britain fell aUent for 13
minutes.
Since it was first started in 1859, BiC
Ben has stopped about l~' times, not an of
. lhen1 unintentional.
In 1!160, Big ,Ben was halted when
Queen Elizabeth was five minutes late to
the annual trooping of the colors on her
official birthday. The powers that be
decided that while Big Ben might M
sJoy,·, the Queen could never be.
High Court R1ali1•fJ
Man Left Without Country
\\'ASHIKGTON !UPll -The Supreme
Court let stand today a decision that
Thomas G. Jolley, 27-year-old draft
dodger \rho renounced his American
('itizenshi p four years ago, OO\Y is a man
\\'i\hout a counlr\'.
The. cou1t in 'a brief . order rejected
Jolley's appeal from a decision by the 5th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.111at court.
sustaining the immigration and
natu1·a!izaUon service, held that Jolley
1vhile in Cannd3 had renounced his
citizenship. and slil:I his action \vas volun.:
tary, meaningful. and binding ...
Jolley1 a native of Geeensboro. N.C ..
registered Jor the drart at Bremen. Ga.,
11•hen he \\'as 18 years old in 1962, and He returned his selettive servic1
11•as gl\'en a studenrs deferment because papers to his local ·draft board.
he y,·as attending the University of J'olley returned lo the United Slates
Georgia. But early in 1967. he left school y,·ithout a visa in early 1968. He resisted
and "·ent to Canada. deportation after what an appeal!! court
From there. he y,•rote his local board. desC'ribed as an "unannounced, unherald·
infocnting it of his change in status and ed, and ·surreptitious re-entry to this
residence and asking that he be classilied country."
as a conscientious objector. Instead he The court affirmed the immigration
11•as classed as available for induction. board's order that he leave the countrY,
The foll owing May 16, he went before v.•ithin 90 days or be deported to Canada.
the U.S. Consul in Toronto and formally Jolley admitted swearing the une-
execulcd an oath of renunciation of quivocal renunciation or his citizenshi1>9
citizenship. snying, "! do not wish to ... but said this was done under duress -
break the la,vs or Uie U.S. These (darft) his desire to avoid breaking the selecUve
laws conflict y,•ith my beliefs." service law .
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If O•ILV PILOT
' \
\ •' I ~ps
It's a Bird-. -Naw, A Piane
•
•
••
TutsdaJ, N0vtmbtr 9, 1971 9
By THOMAS MURPRINE
Df till 0.llY ,.1191 Sllff°
WINGS OVER OUR COAST: By
golly, it wasn't too many years ago here
along the seashore when you heard the
throaty roar ol an aircraft overheid, you
looked up. I rman, it was an occurrence.
MAO. LEFT. AND CHOU EN·LAI, RIGHT, ALLEGEDLY ENDED PLOT
Heir App1r1nt Lin PiAO, C1nt1r, S1id Ousted, May 81 0 11d
In the_ early' years, It could have been
one or those Intrepid birdmen airborne in
an old Jenny or other wire-and-cloth con-
traption from Eddie' Martin'• Airport just
off Newport Boulevard near the village of
Cosla Mesa.
Mao's 'Heir' ·May Be Dead
Lin Piao Linked to Plot; Said Killed Escape • in
Or later, the skyward roar might ha ve
been George "Peanuts" Larson in an old
red Waco doing stunts over San
Clemente. Timea later, the flier might
have been former Daily Pilot staffer and
aviatrix Evelyn Sherwood in her second-~and ·single-engine Army trainer winging
1t from the old airstrip above the West
Newport bluffs.
YESSIR, IN YESTERYEAR along the
Orange Coast, aviation was fun ex-
citement and adventure. Today 'u iJ
business. Big business. -
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Foreign
diplomats here report that Lin Piao, who
once was groomed as the successor to
Mao Tse-tung, has b e e n ousted from
power in Mainland China and may be
dead.
Lin, China 's defense minister since
1959, was purged this year when Mao and
Premier Chou En-\ai rooted out the last
vestiges of a military plot to overthrow
them, the diplomats said.
They added, however, there were in·
dications that the purge was a post-
mortem fonna1 ity th a·t followed Lin 's
death in a plane crash in Mongolia.
The report made by the diplomats
Monday night coincided in some respects:
with rumors that surfaced in September
in Hong Kong and elsewhere. At that
time, the Feklng--government prohibited.
all aircraft operations over China. The
ban lasted -with a few exceptions -for
seven weeks.
American officials declined comment
upon the latest reports _ by foreign
diplomats other than to say it was ob-
vious something had happened to Lin
Piao.
U.S. officials said they knew nothing of
Lin's fate or any deta;ils of the reported
Chinese struggle for power. ·
However, the diplomatic sources said
Lin's fellow conspirators included. the
army and air force chiefs of staff.
The sources did not know the names of
the chiefs but assumed they were Wu Fa-
hsieri, the air force member of the
Chinese Politburo, and Huang Yua.ng-
sheng, the army member.
Lin, Wu, Hua ng, and Li Tso-peng, the
navy Politboro member, were absent
from the Oct. I ceremony in Peking
marking the· anniversary of the Com·
munist regime, the sources pointed out.
When the plot was exposed and failed,
the diplomatic sources said, Lin and
some of the higher-ranking military con·
spirators tried to escape to the Soviet
Union on an air force plane, which crash-
ed in Mongolia.
The Mongolian Press Agency reported
Sept. ·30 that a Chinese air fprce plane
had gone on course and crashed. deep in-
side Mongolia near the Soviet border the
night of Sept. 12-13 with nine persons kill-
ed . It identified none of the dead and
there was no lndicatioo of survivors.
You've got Orange County Airport, for
ei:ample, where even today debate
roges on whether or not Air California
will get a new :lease to fly out or the
place. And if Air Cal does, will it get
more-flights, fewer flights or the same
number as present?
Some days the airstrip at Orange Coun-t~ Airport is so busy It looks like an
a~rborne Chinese fire drill. But the county
a1~drome doesn't have a lock on the
skies.
Main Delegates
Of China Leave
Peking for U.N.
Cutoff of Pal{istan Arms
.T~e United States Piiarine Corps flies a
bit Jn our territory out of the old lighter:
tha~·airbase in Santa Ana and the big
station at El Toro. And the police
departments in Huntington Be a ch,
Newport and Costa Mesa have gotten in to
the act pretty well too with their own
helicopter air forces.
Political Boon for Nixon
. ~EEO, IT'S gotten these days so the
k1dd1es don't turn their faces skyward in
eager ant icipation when they hear the
roar_ of the intrepid birdman bravely
soaring aloft. They w i " c e and huk
Chinadoll to protect her from the sonic
boom. '
Flying airplanes today is big. You want
s~me idea how big, take a look at Hughes
Airweiit, who some might bill as one of
those "little regional airlines."
Well, the other day J mused in this
space on ho...,•come Airwest would fly one
plane out of Orange County Airport to
&attle without a return flight. Do they
1hip the thing back here by boat?
. PITY NO, replies Lee Pitt, public rela·
hons dir~tor for Airwest. As a matter of
fact, after the Orange County jet gets to Se~tUe. it is then ,routed on to Portl and,
Boise, Salt Lake City and then terminates
back In Los Angeles.
So th~y sneak it down from LA to ~ran!e County for the next Seattle flight,
right . Wrong. The next Seattle flight
likely . comes into Orange County from
Phoeru:r or ,.Las Vegas.
"L'!J:LE" Affi\VEST, you see, flew
892 r,rul~on passenger miles last year in
1erv1ng more than 100 cities in three c~untries and eight Western states.
Airwest Oies between 29 airports in
California alone,
In 1968, the airline used to be Air West
lnc., being a merger of Pacific Air Lines:
Bonanza and West Coast Airlines.
Howard Hughes bought it in 1970 and
renamed it Hughes Airwest. Hughes Tool
Company owns 78 percent of it. Howard
holds the o!~er 22 percent personally,
wherever he 1s.
Anyway. you get the notion that H
Orange County Airport is part of all this,
It is indeed big business.
With Howard Hughes involved, you
1uspect we may never return to the era
of the Flying Jenny.
UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (AP) -
Three members of Red Ch ina's advance
party visited U.N. headquarters for the
first time today. The main delegation left
Peking for New York to cheers and
chants of thousands.
The group , headed by Kao Liang, was
greeted by a U.N. protocol official who
escorted the three through a main cor·
ridor to the protorol Office.
At the ·delegates' entrance they made
th'eir way ttirough cameramen and
ieporters, ignoring questions. They wore
dark Mao jackets and each carried a
briefcase.
The Yugoslav ne~ agency Tanjug
reported from the Chinese .capital that
several thousand persons shouted slogans,
sang songs and danced as Chiao Kuan·
hua and his staff of about 50 boarded a
Chinese airliner for Shanghai wh ere they
will pick up a foreign commercial plane
fcir the trip to the United Stales. They are
due here Wednesday.
Tanjug, which has 11 correspondent in
Peking, said the main slogan for the
departure ceremony was: "Long live the
victory of Ma o Tse-tung's proletarian
foreign policy line!"
Consumer P rotecti on
Approved in Senate
WASHINGTON IUPll -A strong
consumer protection bHl that would crack
down on deceptive advertising and sales
practices and make product warranties
more honest was passed by the Senate
~1onday.
The Senate approved the bill 76 to 2
after defeating by 57 .to 24 a Repub!ican-
led attempt to amend the lej!islation to
remove a provision that would allow the
Federal Trade Commiss ion 1FTC ) to get
quick injunctions to stop decept ive ads or
sales 'scheme while a case in decided in
court.
WASHINGTON (AP) ..:.. The cancella-
tion of U.S. arms shipments to Pak istan
has taken a weapon from the harids of
one of the Nixon Administration's most
vocal critics while making important
diplomatic gains.
Administration officials acknowledged
domest ic political benefits will be one of
the major results of Monday's arms-
cutoff announcement.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, t h e
High Court OKs
Women's Rights
In Two Ru1ings
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme
Court refused today lo interfere with a.
lower court ruling that pensio11 p I a n !
compelling women workers to retire at
an earlier age than men is a civil rights
violation.
In another action. the court let stand a
circuit court decision that ai.rli.nes cannot
impose a "women only" qualification for
the job of flight attendant without
violating the civil rights law against sex·
ua\ dis crimination.
The pension order came in the form of
R brief order without comment. lt left
standing an appeals court deeision which
is technically binding only in the states or
Indiana. Illinois and Wisconsin which that
circuit contains.
But it could have '>''idcsprcad im·
plications if ;,nd when suits on behalf of
women's rights are decided in other
areas of the countrv.
The ruling on behalf of an Indiana
"'oman brewery employe came from !he
7th U.S. Circuit1Court of Appeals which
said that forcing women to retire earlier
than men "is tantamount to discharj!e''
on the basis of sex and thus violates the
1964 Civil Rights Law. ·
Cold Weather Marks Fall
From New York to Carolinas, It's Free zing
MassaChusetts Democrat who had led the
constant ciriticism of the arms aid, .said
the cutoff "is a welcome first step in
what I hope will be a redirecting of our
policy in South Asia."
But other sources on Capitol Hill and in
the administration said the arms can-
cellation removed. one of Kennedy's most
<potent issues while relieving con-
gressional pressure on both the While
House and the military regime in
Pakistan.
Both sides apparently had this in mind
in agreeing lo the cancellation. According
to State Department spokesman Charles
W. Bray, "neither we nor the gover.nment
of Pakistan were unaware of the con-
troversy" this subject has generated in
the United Slates.
Another and perhaps even more im·
portant result is an improvement in U.S.-
Ind ian relations.
The Indians never were really con·
cerned with the amount of the shipment.
mos tly spare parts and small pieces of
equipment worth less than $5 million
since last March.
The real problem in the eyes of the
New Delhi government was what it sa w
as the implied approval of Pakistani ac-
tions, particularly in the rebellious East
Bengal province, that the shipments
represented .
So. the end of American military sales
to the Paki stani military regime at a
time when the two subcontinent nations
appear on the verge of a general war is
being read in New Delhi as a symbolic
victory. '
· Amchitka Cave-in
Registers Five
Richter Points
A~1CH1TKA, Alaska (UPI) -The land
immediately above the site of the most
powerful U.S. underground nuclear test in
history collapsed ~1onday into a h u Jl e
crater. The collapse was caused by shift
of earth that registered 5 on the Richter
scale.
Atomic Energy Commission (AEC)
spokes man Dave Jackson said the ground
movement, which occurred 38 hours after
Saturday's blast 5.975 feet below. had
been expected. The flve-mea_aton ex-
plosion formed an 800-foot diam~er cavi-
ty more th11n one mile below the ground"s
surface. .
"No radialion escaped ," Johnson said.
"But '>''hen the cavity cooled and pressure
Inside It decrea sed. the earth above it
collapsed and filled the cavily."
There was some seismic activity at the
site until the collapse. then It ceased, he
s11id.
Two dead seals and two dead sea otter!
were round P.:tonda.,Y. Jackson said. addlng
01 that all the animals had sustained ln-
,11 temal ln)urics.
'tUfllOAY
........ 1111911 '~l• ··"'· "·' *" .... f,f2 •.• , ..... ,
WIDMllDAY
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.. 11111 Twe !ll(llft ot 1now ""'' rti«l•ll""
I T l>lt MOIMt, fO'fl'I In • 1t1~011r
P"°loll.
Thirteen dei.d birds of VATious species
were found . he said, but none were of
species considered endangered.
''One pcret:rine falcon nesl and fiv e
eagle nests we.re destroyed. but of course
the blrds art'. not nesting at this time of
year," Jackson said.
He said several hundred rock $(recn\ing
fish. which 11ve In kelp beds along
Am chltka 's shoreline. wt?rt round dead as
were 3 IAi"ji!e number of thret spine
$tlcklt?back fish. a non-gamt? fish living in
lakes on Amchltke.
Guns, Bunkers
B52s Pound Red
Buildup· at DMZ
SAIGON (UPI)·-\Vaves of Air Force
B52 bombers &wept in to smash Com.
munlst antiaircraft pqsitions and supply
bunkers just seven miles south or the
main headquarters for ttle .. d!:*ilitarized
wne (DMZ) defense line at QUa'ng Tri Ci·
ty today.
It was the first time ih at least one
year the eight-engine bombers had fl(lwn
slrikes in the rolling, sparsely jungled
foothills of the Annamite Mountains
overlooking the northern coastal plain
and highway 1, the main north-south traf-
fi c artery below the DMZ. '
Spokesmen said two waves of B52s -
at least six warplanes -dropped about
180 tons of bombs on the guerrilla posi-
l!ons, ~bout one mile apart and ro ughly
five miles east.or the highway.
The · targets were listed initially as
0 about JO supply bunkers in each loca-
tion," but spokesmen later said a'lied
helicopters had reported taking an-
tiairCraft fire Irom the area In the past
several days.
The site was seven miles south of
Quang Tri combat base which overlooks
th~ majGr land connection between Quang
Tri, headquarters of the South Viet-
namese Ist Division , and major supply
bases to the solfth. .
There was heavy righting for control of
two allied fire support bases overlooking
the Quan-' Tri Valley, Nui Boa Ho and
Base Camp Sarge in a Communist of-
fensive last summer. South Vietnamese
forces withdrew from both \.bases but
later reoccupied Nui Ba Ho.
Intelligence officers said later the Com-
munists might later try lo cut off
northern Qua.ig Tri Province and drive
the South Yietnamese out after American
troops withdrew.
It was the first time in more than a
year that B52s had flown raids in the
area south of Quang Tri, a ma ior forward
headquarters _beJow the DMZ, miljtary
spokesmen said.
Action was also reoorted along the rim
of the A Shau Valley, a heavily-used
Communist infiltration route along the
Laotian border. B52s flew one raid
{;{ {;{ {;{
Heaviest Rains
In Centur y Sloiv
Hanoi Supplies
SAIGON (APl -Torrential rains, by
some accounts the heaviest in JOO years.
appear to have delayed North Vietnam's
annual dry season push of war materials
southward. t~formed sou rces said tciday that the
ma tn supply network, the Ho Chi Minh
trail running through eastern Laos is
now beginning to dry up and truck tr~ffic
has increased slightly,
"But there is no big push yet." said one
source. "Typhoon Hester seems to ha ve
delayed any significant enemy activity . It
was anticipated the push would begin the
last half of October and things.would be
~:eJI under way by now ."
Typhoon Hesler caused catastrophic
damage in the northern quarter of South
Vietnam two weeks ago and dissipated
over eastern Laos. Rains spawned by the
storm caused landslides a"nd interrupted
road Cflnstruction along the 300-mile trail
network.
Lo1ado11 ltlode sty
against a Communist truck route in the
norUlern end o.f the valley today and a..
U.S. AHl Cobra helicopter was shot down
nearby on Monday. Both crewmen
escaped injury •
Heath Fig hts
New Pressure
Over Ireland
LONDON (AP) -Pressure is building
Oil Prime Minister· Edward Heath to p\&11
out the 14,000 British troops In Northern
Ireland, but both Heath and opposttion
leader Harold Wilson are opposed to such
a drastic step.
Foremost, they fear a pullout would
touch off a bloody civil war that could
engulf the south as well as the north of
lreland,
Al the same time , such an admiss ion o(
British inability to preserve order in the
Irish province could tempt Scottish and
Welsh nationalists to try to quit the
United Kingdom.
There is ~another unspoken reason.
Son1e British authorities are convinced a
military withdrawal would expose a
united Ireland to a Communis t takeover.
creating conditions for an "Irish Cuba"
on Britain's doOrstep.
Nev ertheless Heath'S Conservatives
and Wilson's Laborites are aware that
the existing deadlock, with its endless
shootings and bombings, must be broken
if Northern Ireland.. is not to bleed to
death.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (0.Mass.).
introduced a resolution in the U.S. Senate
Oct. 20 calling for British troops to quit
Northern lreland. and he warned that the
prOvince 'could become Britain's Viel·
nam . He was met by angry criticism
from ~feath and most Br i tish
newspapers, but surveys of British public
opinio n since then disclose widespread
approval of Kennedy's demJIKI.
In the latest Gallup Poll. 44 percent of
those questioned want the troops to stay
in Northern Ireland, but 39 pe rCent favo r
their withdrawal. And the National Opi-
nion Poll found 59 percent in favor of a
pullout.
Marcos' Party
Losing Election
MANILA (AP) -\Vith un.off ic l a l
returns in from more than 40 percent of
the country,· candidates from th e op-
p6sitioi:i Liberal party were leading for
seven of the eight senatorial seals at
stake. President Ferdinand E. Marcos
appeared in for a major rebuff.
In the 15,085 race s for municipal and
provincial offices, a strong majority of
the candidates from f\1arcos' NaciOnalisla
parly appeared to be winning, but many
contests were not decided .
The senatorial race was the only na-
tionwide contest in the voting Monday
and the Liberals campaigned hard on the
contention that the election midway in
f\farcos' second term was a referendum
on his performance.
\Vearing a con siderably more subdue~ costume than the slit dress she
wure to a While l~ouii;e State Dinner. A·lrs. Willian\ ~1cr..1ahon is flank·
cd by British Prime Minister Edward Heath IL) and her husband, the
prime minister ol Auii;lralia prior to dinner al 10 Downing Street.
Drive Fails
For Prayer
In Schools
WASHINGTON ( A P ) Tho
congressional' right for specific con·
1titutlonal approval of prayer in public
schools has been lost for this year bul
may btcome an Issue in .the 1972 elec-
ti!Jns.
The battle lo offset a 1962 Supreme
Court decision that the 1st Am endment
bars states from composing prayers for
use in schools was lost in the House Mon·
day.
It got.a majority; 240 to 162, of the total ·
votes cast but needed tw~lhlrds' for ap-
proval. Had it won in the House in its in:.
itial test in that body, it would have need·
ed. a tw1>thirds clearance by the Senate
an~ ratllication by 38 states before
becoming a part of the Constitution.
Supporters o( the amendment were
unhappy but not surprised by the result.
They blamed their defeat on absenteeism
-29 members didn't vote -and on
organized opposition from religious and
legal groups. •
Rep. John Buchanan (R·Ala.). a
clergyman, said he hopes the Supreme
Court, with its complexion changed fiince
1962, will take another look and "restore
the free exercise of religious freedom."
Rep. Chalmers P. Wylie (R-Ohio ). who.
Jed the fiSht for 11· Hous.? showdown after
the Judiciary Committee bottled up the
resolution, s a id absenteeism hurt his
cause. But be predicted that public de-
mand would revive lhe amendment and
the result would ~ different the nest
time. -
A national organization called Citizens
£or Public Prayer predicted the prayer
J issue would be raised "repeatedly and in-
sistenUy" in the 1972 elections.
The resolution fell 28 votes short of the
two-thirds needed . SuppOrting it were 102
Democrats and 138 Republi cans. Against
it were 136 Democrats and 2 6
Republicans.
Voters Trying Again
In Independence, Mo.
INDEPENDENCE, Mo. (UPl ) -Six
days ago, voters approved spending $2
million for a police building. The same
day th e schools closed because voters
would not approve the money to keep
them in operation.
Voters have been asked twice to ap-
prove a school tax increase to keep the
schools running and twice they refused.
Between 12,000 and 15,000 persons:-in--
eluding former Preside nt Harry S Tru·
man-were ezpected lo vote today on the
proposal to open the city's 2.5 public
echools few the third time.
Po1idering Preside~y~
Alabama Gov. George w ·allace announced at the Southern Governors
Conference in A~lanta that he may enter five presidential primaries
next. Ma~. He s_a1d he would enter as a Democrat and is considering
running in Florida, North Carolina, Tennessee, Maryland and Indiana.
Environment Direcwr
Denies Ouster Rumors
WASHINGTON (UPI) -William D.
. Ruckelshaus, administrator of the
Environment.al Protection • Agen cy
(EPA), has become the second high ad·
ministration official in recent moriths to
be reported on the way out because or
White House opposition to a tough
regulatory stance toward business.
In an "interview late M ·o n d a y ,
Ruckelshaus denied the rumors and said
he was mystified as to their source. He
said President Nixon told him last week
to "keep plugging" on his/drive to force
cleanup of the air and wa er.
In August, Federal Trade Commission
(FTC) Chainnan r.1iles W. Kirkpatrick
was similarly rumored to have angered
the White House with the FiC's
crackdown on allegedly deceptive ad·
vertising and sales practices. Like
Ruckelshaw:, Kirkpatrick denied any hint
of administration displeasure and any in·
tention of leaving.
Rucklelshaus and Kirkpatrick both
acknowledged, however, they hav e
angered some business leaders, including
potential contributors to the 1972
Republican campaign. Both contend this
is inevilable for a n y conscientious
regulator of federal environmental and
consumer programs.
Both men were appointed by Nixon.
Under the FTC law , Kirkpatrick was ap-
pointed to a five-year term and cannot be
fired. The rumor was that he would be
''promoted out" with a federal judgeship.
He finally squelched it by soyina-he
would refuse a judgeship if offered.
Ruckelshaus serves at the President's
pleasure and could be fired. The New
York Timea l\fonday reported "persistent
rumors" that Ruckelshaus wrote • letter
of resignation_ lo Nixon two weeks ago
because the White House had diluted hi•
air and water cleanup programs.
I
Tut~lJ, tfovel!lbtr •. 1'71 DAILY PILOT 5
Henderson Charge Dropped ,
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Abridged
Pay Check
In Store
FT. r.tEADE , l\jd . (A P) -fa iled to prove Henderson lied Wondolowski , denied molionl
Col. Oran K. Henderson's under oath lo a Pentagon for dismissal of the othet
lawyers begin a defense In his pane I Investigating the charges which carry a com-
1\fy Lal coverup trial today -1lau~ter bf V I e t n a m e s e blned penalty of three year1
a task lightened by the civihans by U.S. soldlers at and three months In prison as
dismissal or the most damag, My Lai on A-farch 18, 1968. well as forfeiture of pay and
t ..
WASHINGTON (AP) ing charge facing the berlb-"This was their main con-I dismissal frqm the service.
MIUlons of individual tax-boned combat officer. tenl'ion. branding him a liar The jury of two generals and
·payeri-will-find-their-takt.-The first -of 40 defense and perjurer,'' Roth..blJJL~ file c.oW.nels. wjJI .be in tht.
home par. dropping in January witnesses w111" testify· 1rter an "This is really where they at-trOUrt room today for the fil'lt
despite iil'OOme lax cuts U a opening statement by He(U'.y tempted to prove their case. time since Oct. 20 when the /
$16-bllllon lax-reduction bill B. Rothblott, Headerson's cl· Now we don't have to concern · prosecution rested.
approved by the Senate Fi-villan lawyer.· ouraelves with that problem Remaining to be tried are
h.i..nce Committee becomes "This was the heart of !he anymore." charges that Henderson was
r::iw. prosecution's case: from here The dismissed charge car-derelict in his duty by failing
In many ca!ies a new on it's easy sailing," said ried. a maximum penalty of to investigate "reports of ex·
withholding plan adopled by Rolhblatt after the judge ruled three years in prison. cessive kjlling of non•
the panel will take away more 1t1onday that the government the judge, Col. Peter S. combatants," at My Lai
than the tax cuts will yield,\-------'--------'---=-----------"--'--:....::::__
even though everyone will get
some tax reduction.
The withholding p I a n ,
recommended by the Treasury
Departrrient, is designed to
eliminate underwithholdlng for
many Individuals.
The principal groups which
now must pay when filing
n!turns are persons earning
Sl5,000 or more a year. work·
Ing married couples and In·
dlvlduals with two or more
jobs.
What the new schedule will
mean Is that a taxpayer now
· in t h e underwithholding
category \\'iii not have to fork
over a large sum when he files
bis re tum for that year.
It is estimated un-
derwithholding now totals at
least S800 million a year.
The House, in passing the
tax bill, voted to put the new
plan to correct this into effect
In two steps -in 1972 and
1973.
Mariner's
Cameras
Activated
PASADENA (UPI) -Scien·
tists successfully tested the
cameras aboard America's
Mariner 9 Monday night as the
2,200-pound spacecraft entered
the homestretch of its 1ix-
month voyage to Mars.
Twenty-seven pictures of the
red planet were snapped by
cameras aboard the $64 mil-
lion space explorer and radio-
ed back to the Jet Propulsi01
Laboratory (JPL) here. from
where the fl ight is controlled.
"We had a little trouble at
first while we unscrambled
the computer system at the
ground station," a J P L
spokesman 1aid. "But they
came in fine."
Louis Roth • SeitW.Yck • Michaels/Stern
HartSchaffner&Marx•Eaglo• Gilto Salvaw
J,411,E: ?_pant$ligrl&ctn..,$ui(§
Colors lo please every tute •• :-whetl!er
traditional or contemporary. Superbly
designed for the man who demandJ the best
in value and all in comfortably fitting suit&
•• , w:ilh that atra pair of t?o1lllera for
longer lasting wear ••• Res; pricedat$140.
Charge accounts anilable
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
3333 South Bristol Street
COllla Meoa • M0-4611
TWO
LOCATIONS
LAKEwOOD PLAZA
6412 E .. t s~ street
l<>ng Bead> • 461-4611
..
•
Save on long distance calls by "
choosing and . _ · you call. .
For example,on calls to San Francisco:
Tonight and every night
from 11 P..m. to 8 a.m.
you cen dial direct
(without Operator as-
sistance) anywhere In
California for 49¢ or
less. This new 49¢ rate
also applles from 8 a.m,
to 8 P..m. Sunday and
holidays.•
•
T
If you can't stay awake
that late, it doesn't cost
much more to dial a
call direct earlier In the
evening. From 6 P..m. to
11 P..m. Sundaythrough
J=r1day and 8 a.m. to 11
P..m. Saturday, 1t costs
80¢ to dial direct.
On a station-to-station
call requiring any type
of Operator assistance
-collect, credit card,
charge to third party,
etc.-lt costs more.
From 6 P..m. to 8 a.m.
weekdays or all day
Saturday, Sunday and
holidays,* an Operator-
assisted call costs $1.05.
During the daytime,
Monday through Friday ·
from 8 a.m. to 6 P..m. It
costs $1.20 to dial a call
yourself.
-
A station-to-station call
placed through the
Operator for this same
period of time (Monday
through_ Friday from
8 a.m. to 8 P..m.) costs
$1.50. -
•Ho1td1y rate• for long dletance cal11 w1tl'lln C.llfomla 1ppfy 1U drt on Wast!Jngton•1 Blrthday, lndeperKfenot DIY, Llbot Oly, 'l'MnklgMng, Chrletmu ll'ld New Year'• Day.
AU rate• are lbr lhrtt·mlnute Cllll mm Santa AN to sen francllOOr. plul tu.
Dial direct It's faster and cheaper.
I
If you do need to make
a person-to-person call,
it costs $2.25, no matter
when you call.
@Pacific Telephone
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. • Support Oce.an Oil B·ills
. .
All 1Califomlans who would have reasonable pro-
tection or the state's coasUine against future oil dam-
--aelnbould e!pond prompUy lo_Sen,.~~ ~ston:•
(IM;alif.) call for support of his package o! seven oil
sanctuary bills (SB 144ll-1452). . . · .
The bills would establish s1x oil·free areas m fed-
eral waters seaward from Six existing state oil·free zones
- a protecUon for 250 miles of coastline. The measures
were revised to meet administration objections. Bxplor·
ation but not drilling would be allowed. Areas of present
oil production are excluded. And the President could
grant oil leases in a national emerg~nC}'..
Despite these and other modif1cat1~tts lo meet ob-
jections from the Departmen~ of Intenor, t~at depart·
ment remains stubbornly opposed to the bills. ~t ~p
parenUy will not honor the fact that, in estabhshmg
the state sanctuaries, the people h~ve voluntarily given
up the economic benefits of oil because they place a
higher value on the coastal environment, as Cranston
has put it.
Letters to federal officia1s often get results. The
DAILY PILOT suggests letters in support be addres~ed
to Hollis M. Dole. Assistant Secretary of the Interior,
with copies to President Nixon, White House, \Vashing·
ton, D.C. 20000. · .
Conflict of Interest
Those lawyers in the California Legislature who
killed the no-fault insurance bill likely would find it bard
to face up to this question:
Why did ?tfassachusetts, which established no-fault
insurance last year for bodily injury .aut.omobile cover·
age, act last week to extend the .concept to compulsory
property damage and collision coverage?
The obvious answer is that the no-fault idea proved
sound as established in frtassachusetts.
Motorists in that state now have the option of
choosing one of three different plans fo~ property dam·
age and collision auto insurance. And insurance cOil_l·
panies must .Pay claims within 15 days or pay double.
In addition~ a new law requires auto insurance com·
panie'S to establish reserve funds to repay policyholder;a:
for any windfall profits obtained through' the flrst-year
success of the no-fault plan for bodily injury insurance.
~ If lli>-fault Insurance has worked to the benefit of
both motorists and auto ins.urance companies (but not
necessarily lawyers) In Massachusell&, the plan certain·
ly deserves more consideration than it has received from
California. legislators.
It seems quite obvious why the la.st surviving no-
fault insurance bill was killed by the Senate Judiciary
Committee last SepL 28. All of the members of that
co~mittee are lawyers.
The Amchitka ·Trauma
The Amchitka nuclear test so far has measured up
to the best hopes of the Atomic Energy Commission and
has produced none of the catastrophic possibilities so
strongly forecast by the various ecological or anti-De·
fense Department spokesmen .
It is easy to fear tl':le unknown and, for most of us,
atomic energy -particularly bomb warheads -· nee·
essarilf represents a great unknown. Obviously those
oC us outside government caMot have access to all the
facts needed {or such judgment -and this handicap
extends to some very great scientisb as ·well .as to the
layman. And perhaps this is where the federal govern·
ment made a serious mistake and caused itself and the
citizenry needless anxiety.
Undoubtedly the Russians know at least as much
as we do about hydrogen bomb blasts, having set off a
huge one of their own fairly recently. So perhaps we have
another case of over-zealous secrecy in government
which might easily have resulted in abandonment of the
Amchitka test.
On the other side of the coin, the cause of the
serious environmentalists has been damaged by their
own hyper-emotional approach. There is still the pos·
sibility of after effects of the 'test blast but as it stands
now, the Atomic Energy Commission bas clearly scored
a credibility viCtory over its critics.
• Money Rolls in for Gardner's Lobby Supe.rv.isors
Riches o·f 'Common Cause~
WASHING TON -When il comes to
being in the chips, Common Cause, mili·
tant · llbiraJ , lobbying and pressure
or anlzation, is in a class by ,it.self.
As of Oct. 15, it had a cash reserve of
S3 ~a'!,406 -and the money is continuing
to r·ll in.
Headed by John Gardner, 1965-68
Secretary o1 the IJe.
" Ro~S,Allen
i. ... »l ····-"'
cisco, chairman of Levi Straus& & Co.,
$5,000, plus $5,000 earlier this year; H. L.
Karp, New York City. $2,500.
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Should Phase
Out the Jets
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Mailbox
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+ partment ol He<h,
E:l.ucation and Wel-
fare and previously
president of t h e
Camegi Corpora·
tlon, Common Cause
Is the best-heeled
lobbying outfit in
.WIJ,shington -out ..
ahining in that re.
gard even COPE, the well-fine.need po-
llti:al arm of the AFL-CJO.
~ipts comprise two items -dues
and gifts. In the first half of this year.
they produced a combined total of
$2 ,204,200. ln the third quarter. dues
atnOWlted to $667,427; gifts, $165.133.
Dues are. $15 a year, and Coriimon
Cause claims a membership of between
205,000 and 240,000.
DURING mE .third quarter. there
were 26 gifts to Common· Cause ranging
from 11,000 lo $10.000. •
Most singular of these gifts was $1,000
from Allied Chemical Corporation -
which gave another $1 .000 earlier in the.
year. NotX'hown is whether the. company
infonned its stockholders about these
grants.
Also R. E. Larson. ·New York City.
vice-chairman Tiffie. Inc., $2,000; Mrs. F.
Worden. Weston, Mass.. $2,000, plus
$2 ,000 in 1970: P. S. Bing, Los Angeles,
$2.000; American Federation of Slate,
County and Municipal E m pl o y e e s ,
Washington, D. C .. $2,000: J. C. Wilson,
Roch ester, N.Y ... $1,250, plus $1,000 in
1970; C. R. Smith. former Commerce
Secretary, $1 ,000; V.1H. Palmieri, Los
Angeles, fonner preslttent Janss Invegt.-
ment C.O., fl,000; D. C. Burnham.
Pittsbui-gh, president Westinghouse Elec·
lrlc, $1 ,000, and a similar amoWlt last
year: S. C. Johnson. Racine, Wisc., pn!Si·
dent, Johnson Wax CS., $1,000. plus $2.500
in 1970.
To the Editor:
In a recent newspaper (October 29
issue), I read an article. whlch stated that
Robert Clifford. president of A i r
Calilornla, is asking .Orange County
businessmen for support to enable ex·
pail.sion of their service from Orange.
County Airport.
Members of the Board 0£ Supervisors
have a duty to represent the people o~
Orange County, basing their votes on any
motion, as far as possible, on the views of
the majority, and not based on the finan·
cial status of that majority.
r.,nsistenUy anti-Nixon administration
and stridently dovish on one hand, and
markedly 'pro-Democratic on the other,
C3llltnon Cause ha5 a balance sheet that
reads like a promoter's dream.
FOLLOWING ARE the highlights as of
~ 0 :-t. 15:
Receipts: $3,036,761l: Expend1ture1i:
$';:!~,574. Cash reserve carried over from
1970: $1 ,070,220. Total cash reserve:
$: 3::'2,4-05.
''l addition, there was a $40,000 grant
from the tax-exempt Stem Fund to
finance a "voter rights" suit. This money
' is !isled as in a special account and Ylill
n.,t be used in federal lobbying opera·
~ tions. •
Another gift that raises legaJ questions
Is $1 ,000 from the tax·exempt Mr. and
Mrs . Elliot Handler Foundation. He is
head or 1.tattel Toys. While Common
Cause professes not to be a political
organization, there can be no argument it
is deeply embroiled in political affairs.
OTHER BIG contributors during this
period were:
J. W. Drown. Bel Air. Calli., $t0.000,
and $10.000 in 1970; I. P. Crowe,
\Voodstock. Vt., $5.000; C. S. Robertson,
New York City, $5,000 and another $5,000
last year; W. A. Haas, Jr., San Fran·
WHll.E COrtfMON CAUSE bas a 6B-
member board of directors, policies are
made and operations conducted solely by
Gardner and a small hand-picked staff of
assistants.
This autlJcratic rule Is defended by
Jack Conway, leading Gardner
lieutenant, as necessary to obtain the
best results. He argues. "The citizens of
the country have to have Someone they
can trust who is involved· in the
mechanics of government. We can't call
our several hundred thousand members
and ask what we should do on a
particular issue. They have to have con-
fidence in Ule leadership to judge situa-
tions and "Becide what to do.'
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Masculine Scent Mystery
Several years ago a story clrcuJated
t ab:JUt a m'ysterious masculine scent
r which could be dtlect.ed only by women.
t Certain men v.·00 emitted this aroma
I h--"ame irresistibly aUractive to females r who coaldn 't understand what was hai> l penlng to them, it was claimed. •
• The tale mu&t have been some.what ex·
agg:eratetf, else the scent surely would
h:ive been patented by a manufacturer of
. after·shave lotion. But recent scientific
discoveries indicate the story may have
h1d considerable basis in r a c t. r Pheromones, defined as "substances
secreted to the. outside by an individual. a 111'4 received by a sec<ind individual of
the. same spec;les, releasing a specific
• reaction or behavior," have long been
known to influence animal be.havJor. New
evidence suggests they may be operant
ll among humans, as well, • " PHERllMON~ USED lo be caned
"ect.ohormone1," which w11s a more
graph.le name 5lnce they actually an tit•
te.rnal, airborne hormones. Scientists
OIAHOI COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert 11. W•ed. Publish.,.
Thomof Xeeoil, Edi.tor
~ Atbnt W. Botf"I
Editorial Pogc Editor
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Editorial
Research
. ,
have identified two types: "releasers.''
whlch act directly on a recipient's central
nervous system, and "primers," which
trigger a chain of physiological events
in the recipient.
In the past, pheromone research ~as
concentrated on lower fonns of life.
Articles with such titles as: "Pheromone
Transport and Receplion in an
Amphipod ," "Seit Attractant of lhe Grasi
Grub B~lle,"·and "Persuasive Scents in
Moth Se1 LUe" frequ ented the science
journals. But lately knowledge of
pheromone!! has moved up the e.volu·
Uonary ladder.
THE FIRST JtESEARCH breakthrough
came abo1,1t 111 decade ago when scientists
discovered that male mice can emit a
phett)mOne powerful enough to induce
abortion in a female mouse in the early
6lagts of pregnancy. This occurs when a
new male moves into another's territory end wants to mate with the local females.
Fish . also mmmunlcate through their
chemical W1Se.s. "SOme fishes have been
found to possess-almofit incredible
chemoseMOry acuity.'' wrote John H.
Todd In the ~av. mt Scientmc
Americlll. Jn exptriments w l t b
l>ullhead<. Todd found tll•t pheromones
carry lnformaUon about "species. status.
Aelf, age or size, reproductive state, In-
dividual cha racte r1sOc:1 arid perhaps even
fam ily ide!nllficatJon "
At the Primate Beh11:vinur Rtsearth
Labor11torle.s in Kent. England. sclentl11'
learned that olfactory mtehanlsms play•
mle In lntersexual communication among
rhesus monkeys. Ylheu small dose1 or
estrogen -the female. sell'. hormone ...l.
Y>"er& administered lntrav1g1n11Ly to ttt•
tafn re.male&, •ubi:tances were Product4
·which increased the ardor or their mates .
Males wearing nose plugs did not res-
pond.
DO HUMAN PBER0rt10NES exist'?
There is ample evidence that the nose
and the seit organs are linked. Nasal
membranes show erectile properties dur·
ing times or sexual eitcitement. For
years, many perfumes have. c;ontained in·
gred ients derived from animal seit
&larids. such as ambergris, civet and
musk. • Sexually mature women. especially
during ovulation. can sense certain odors
whose chemical structures are similar to
that of testosterone. the. male su
honnone. l\1en and young girls can't
1.mell them -unless they are given
t!ilrogen.
But the real importance. of pheromones
may be ln the realm of communication,
not .sex. As zoologist Edward 0 . Wilson
wrote: "It is conceivable that on other
worlds civilizations exist that com·
mun lcate entirely by the exchange of
chemical substances that an! smelled or
tasted ••• It is becoming increasingly
clear that chemical systems provide the
dominant means of commu11icatlon In
many anlmal species, perhaps even ln
most.''
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
A poll'. on all the Jerks "'ho wilt
untn !he last mlnute, then dart
acrou four lanes on the fretw1y
in order Lo catch their off•r•,tnP-
-Drl vlna Scared
'nil ... tw-1 rttliot" ......,.. ."..... "'' lt(Hl•'l1' """ ti ,,_ lltftllt,.r ...... ,_ Ml ................. , .... OlllY l'I ....
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I have. attended many of thi meetings
on the airport question and find absolute-
ly no evidence of any substantial minori·
ty, far leSJ majority, which supports ex·
pansion of Or'ange County Airport. The.
majority Of Orange County residents, in
my opinion, either have no opinion, or are.
strongly opposed to airport expansion. ln
a normal democratic system, this would
result in a vote from their represen·
tatives against this expansion.
I AM SURE THERE are some small
minority. special-purpose Interest groups
who want airport expansion. including
"airline and hotel chains. but local
businessmen are not that small minority.
I am a local busi ne ssman, involved with
many of my counlerparts and we use
Orange County Airport because it is con·
venient. -However, any inconvenience in
using a feeder airline service once or
even twice a week is small. and none. of
my business acquaintances would oppose
that kind of service.
Newport Beach and the surrounding
beach are.as are some of the most at·
tractive residential and holiday places on
the whole coast. Today when pollution
and population expansion are gradually
eliminating many beautiful areas it is in-
conceivable to me that the supervisors
have any choice but to gradually start
phasing out jet operatio ns at Orange
County Airport. The net!'ds o't special in·
terest groups. no matter hoW financially
poY:erful. should have no effect on their
votes whatsoever.
J . OOBBIE
Letters 1rom readers are welcomt.
Normally writers should convtJI their
messages i'n. 300 words or ltss. The
ri11ht to condense letters to fit space
or eliminate libel is reservtd. All let·
tcrs must include signature (lttd mail·
ing Clddress, but names may be with·
held on request if sufficient reason
U apparent. Poetry will not be pub·
lished.
Quotes
Albut Camus, Frtncb tu&bor abd
pl1ywrl1bt. wloD<r oJ 1111 Nob<! Prlu le
Uterature -"A frte press can, of
C()Urse. be: good or bad: but most ce.r·
ta lnly without freedom it ,wUI never be
anything but bad."
l>amllla Loupy, USF. undergrad -
"Leve is a process o( growth In which a
person decides to give of hbngclf to other
people in an unselfish way and 'tries to
live up to this ln every moment of his
Ille."
John Do1U1, Vealct. Viet vet. -1'The
question one. 1bould 1sk Is not whether we
wlll Mll'Vive what crlUcs crusade. agains t
.as 'In Immoral war, but -.'bether we wil l
1Urvive the moral c:ommitmtnLI of
Idealists."
'
Latin Knowledge
Is Essentia1 Tool
A high school student In West Virginia
has written to ask me 111 thln,k he should
continue with hls Latin studies. "Has
Lalin done you any good?" he inquires,
''and is it useful in your work?"
The answer is ")leS" to both these
questions. Nobody
can speak. write,
or undentand Eng.
ti.slj properly unl"8
he hu some rudi·
mentary knowledge
of Lalin. For Eng-
lish is a hybrid
language -fewer
than half our words
are native., and the
re st borrowed from foreign tongues,
m06Uy Latin.
In no other language, for instance. do
we find so many native. nouns taking
Latin adjectives. The adjective fnr
"mouth'' is not "mouthy" but "oral"
which Is straight from the Latin.
LIKEWISE, "NOSE" gives us "nasal,''
"eye" gives us ''ocular," "mind" gives
us "mental." "~n" gives us "filial."
"house" gives us "domestic," 11sun" and
"moon" give us "solart• and "lunar.''
There are hundreds of similar cases.
We don't even have natlve English ad·
jectives for the. four seasons: fa11 is
"autumnal." winter is "hibemal ." spring
is "vernal.'' and summer is "estival." the
first words a child learns. "mama" and
"daddy ," lake Latin adjectives
"maternal '' and "paternal.''
ENGUSH IS PRI?ttARILY a "loan
language." If you want to know how
much, read any of the books by Otto
Jesperso n, the great Danish philologist.
aiid you may be surprised at the
enormous debt we owe. not only to Latin
and Gr.eek but ltlso to the Scandinavian langu~ges, to French. and even tr the
Gennanic influences upon Old English.
A foreigner learning English would find
it insuperably difficult if he did -not have
a solid base in Latin.
This explains why educated foreigner s
are able to pick up our tongue so ragidly,
and why some uneducated foreigners can
live here 30 years without really grasping
the language.
.,.s AN li\IPORTANT parenthesis, 1
found my own Latin (shaky as it is l of
great use "'hile travelin g through Europe.
1 "'as able to gel along handily in Italian
after only six WE'.eks of living in Florence,
and my French is at least passable. using
the glue of Latin to stick together French
and English words.
Studying the classic languages is
neither a waste of time nor a form of in·
tellectual snobbishness : it is, rather. the
quickest. and most permanent "·ay to
master one's own tongue and io become a
genuine citizen in the cor11munity of man,
past and present.
Born: A New Barbaris1n
From the W11bln1ton Post
We were minding our own business -
at least to the extent that we ever do -
reading along in a Senate Armed Services
Committee report the other day, when we
came across a new barbarism -new to
us, anyway.
It is not a weapons system, mind you,
but a verbal barbarism, a new turn in
linguistios, which stands in relation to the
a11o·ful word "deflrJ.ilized" more or less as
the anli·missile. stands in relation to the
missile. It is "undefinitized" -as in :
"The committee desires also to give
due recognition overall to the positive ef-
forts of the service agencies toward pro-
curement improvements through ... the
redeductions in undefialll1ed contract
change orders ... "
UNDEFlNm2ED? Well, yes. And the
blood~hilling aspect or 'this particular in·
vention is the certain knowledge, which
comes ""itb it that. as these things tend to
develop, this will be the last we shall ever
hear of poor old "dtfinitized." For dread-
ful as tbat locution may be (which is
pretty dreadful), It is surely preferable
to what is now bound to become the o~
oosite of "undefinitized."
· Of this much we are certain: the o~
posite of undefinitized will no longer be
definilized. It will be. ''non·undefinitized.''
From which it follows that by the mid·
70s, as they say in the military planning
circles, "-'hen you wish to describe
something that is not nonundefinltized, it
will not be a simple matter of referr ing
ba ck lo it as something undefinitized. It
will be -precedent strongly suggests -
at the very lea st. something that has
·been denonundefinitized .
\VE AREN'T VERY optimistic either
about the prospects for survival of the
''ize" suffix -a barbarism of its o"'n
designed to change an adjective or noun
into a verb merely by. '° to speak,
verbizing ii. From verbizing of course It
has only been a short step to nouRizing the
verb form -as in. nounizalion. '
But these things have. a half life , if
anything. shorter than that of the denon-.
un· process. On the basis of which 11,·e
predict the ultimate outcome of all this :
Denonunde.finiUzationified ~ meaning
"uncertain'' or "unclear."
By George-------~
Dear George:
Why don't you write more about
sex? You 're supposed to be doing a
lovelnrn column. You don'l have
very 1uy problems.
' WONDtRING
Dear \Yondering :
It's my readers who don't hive
sex problems -and. frankly. r
re!ient it, too. If my readers h•d
the consideration to &t:t in the
troubles that happert-In other ad·
vice columns. 1 would be in HUN·
OREDS of papt_rs. I don't even
think my readers ti')'!
Dear George:
Whert can I {1J1d an attractive
and wealthy young woman to sup-
port me "-'hile I flnlsh writing a
novel~ PAUL
Dear Paul
I don't know -l'vt bf.en lookin1
for one of tho&e tor 18 years. which
l~ when I fJr1t etartcd my novel. So
far t haven't gottl!:n hut halfway
through the title - I kerp having to
go to work .
'
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CHECKING -• UP-•
•
'Pigging' Popula~-
Despite Crusade
By L. M, BOYD
THE GOURMET BOYS tell me all the French wines in
the odd numbered years of the 1950s are regsrded as ex-
ceptional .•• NOTE JOE NAttfATH is advertising a but-
tered popcorn maker. Thought he 'd gabled back a little
\\'eight lately ••. IT'S'SAID about 29 percent of the nallon,.s
r;tockholders never bought even so much as a single share
of s!Dck:
SOtt1ETltt1E after twin beds were invented by that fellow
named Sheraton in England, a London crusade against the
double bed broke out. Chief spokesman for same was one
Dr. Jamee Crabam. His standard bitter speech on the mat.
ter started out like this: "GenUemen. there is not, in my
opinion, a~ything In nature which has more immediately
calculated totally to subvert health. strength, love, esteem
and indeed everything that is desirable in a married state
than that odious, most indelicate, most hurtful cu"stom of
man and wife continually pigging together . in one and the
same bed •.. " Dr. Graham's following was not · notable
for its size.
YOU'VE HEA RD of Ireland 's celebrated lakes of Kil-
lamey, but were you aware the~ were once owned entjrely
hy a Californian? One William B. Bourn, to be specific . , •
THE NORWEGIAN PHRASE ''slengja kjeften" means "lo
sling the jaw." Not only is it slang in itself, but our Language
man says it is the origin of that word "slang."
DROP YOUR F Al\IIL Y CAT between two plates. one
\vith tuna and the other with mackerel. And that cat will eat
the tuna first, then the mackerel. Tesls by the American can
Qimpany proved that, definitely.
CUSTOMER SERVICE: Q. "Which ls the bigger. a baby
blue whale or a full grown elephant?" A. The whale •..
Q. "WIDCH KILLS more people, lightning or tornadoes?"
A. Lightning. About twice as many.
BEAR IN t.IIND, Ohio also · was the birthplace of the
door-to-door survey relied upon so heavily now by the
politicos to predict the oute<>mes of elections, Originally,
however. it was called "the straw vote," a phrase coined
almost 100 years ago by that governor most -colorfully call.
ed Calico Charlie Foster.
AS TO WHICH came first, the chocolate drink or the
chocolate bar, it was the drink. Like Ivory soap, the first
chocolate bar was an accident . , . "ONLY WAY I know to
cut down on the pre-Christmas shoplifting," writes . a Great
Falls department store manager. ''is to hire a crosseyed
detective so nobody will know who he's watching." ... ANY
SEASONED CITIZEN can tell you Franklin D. Roosevel t's
dog was named Fala. But not one in 10,000 remembers the
name 'of Sir Winston Churchill's pup. It was Rufus, a poodle.
Yo ur questions and comments are welcomed .and
wil t be used in CHECKING UP whereve r possible; •
Please addres1 your Letters to L, M. Boyd, .P.O. Soi:
1875, Newport Beach 92660.
In Britain, Humor
Taken Seriously
BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) -
The editor of the British
humor magazine Punch says,
•'I'm surprised that in this
country so little use is made of
humor ..• Everyone tends to
get so uptight."
\Villiam Davis. 38, made the
observ ation-during an address
st the St ate University
College.
Davis said he thought the
best humor being published in
the United States was in
Playboy magazine.
The New Yorker. he added,
has become too comfortable .
"There is the atmosphere of
a morgue about the place."
Davis said of The New
Yorker. "I don't see how
anything funny could be writ·
ten there."
Davis also noted that humor
varies from country to country
and ga ve this synopsis:
Americans prefer snappy '
one-liner jokes, while Egyp-
tians and RusSians prefer
lengthy narratives in which
half the fun is in the telling.
The' French end Italians
draw great delight from jokes
about unfaithful wives and
cheated husbands, w h i I e
Germans prefer "bathroom
topics."
Soviet humor approved for
publication tend& to be "heavy
handed and old fashioned."
But some of it effectively
mocks lower-level bureaucrats
and inefficiency.
The Japanese laugh at
glories about henpecked
husbands. but the jokes tend
to be childish. One has lo go
back several decades to find
any satire in Japane&e
literature. Davis reported.
"The English have always
taken their humor seriously.''
Davis added.
KitchenAiiL
Disp,oser Installed
No-Char9e with Dishwasher
Purchase and Installation
Tuesday, Novt"'bet'9, 1971 DAILY PILOT f
Apollo 16 Faces No , •. , ...... _ .• c . w ... ~.. ast1c ream
More Moon Time l~S!'!~~.f ~r Art!!1.~!!tI,!t~
t-------------;----------1-So •·ta I le! •eattnJ. .. ,... rl ore It le.It you bite hardtr chew bet• Now.-fortheti!Jtt~;tc~ffl• ter,-ut.-rmica. naturally_' FlXQQ!!JfT
EST. F 'd plutic cream that hold• denture••• la1t1 for hQun . Reai1ll moi1turt:-:-.CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -1:03 p.m. ( ) r1 ay, neverbefore-f.onn1an elastic mcm· Dentura th at tit are nMnti1l to The Apollo 15 astronauts will :M•rcb 17. bnile that Jitf/>J Ao/L/k 111 111 1111 health. See your dentiat re1ularly.
d I• th rso/11t1il liHNtr of :!fl"' lfl°OWf", lt'1 a Get tllY·lO-U5C FtX.00£HT Dtatura spen _more !me on e moon . The.1pactshlp will brake in-uniQoe'diKo_vUycalled;FtJOOCN'T9 AObetiveCrwn. ~
next March than the Apollo 15 to orbit around th' moon threei-:::::::::::=========
' '
"Where have yoU been? Your skis came back hours
ago."
Foreign Carmakers Meet
Smog Standard-Offici~
explorers and· follow a revised days later, at 5:10 p.m. Mon-
Umetable to get more rest day, March 20. Young and
before their runar takeoff. Duke will separate from Ma~
APollo 15 astronauts Davtd tingly· in the command ship n: Scott and James B. Irwin lht next day and land in a
had only 3Ya hours betweeh hilly stretch of terrain north
the end of their f i r. a I of the crater Dt.scartes at
moonwalk last August ·and 5:25 p.m.
their blastoff and w e r e The landing area lies In the
fatigued when they had their central lunar highlands and it
rendezvous· with Alfred" i-1." w.ill be man's first trip there.
Worden in Lunar orbit. . Scientist.s expect the ex-
Doctors said that fatigue peditlon to fill In some gaps in
might ha ve contributed tQ the their knowledge of the moon's
heart l"rregularlties Scott and maket:1p and evolution.
Irwin experienced during the Yo~ng and Dllke are
mi ssion: schedUltd to conduct three
Apollo 16 astronauts John W. surfaee outings .lasting seven
You_ng and Charles M. Dulle hours · each. They will use a .
are scheduled to stay on the rrioon car Identical to Apollo
n~hours six hours 15's. Scott and Irwin had thref
onger an Scot't and trwift,i excursions of 6 hourS' 33
and skip a half-hour, open-minutes, 7 hows .12 minutes
hatch ter ln survey that and 4 hours 50 minutes.
Sc<ltt conduct~ two hours The first Apollo 16 surface
after Apollo 15 l ed. exploration period will start at
Young and Du -also will 9:18 p.m. March 21. 3 hours.an
have· 1~ hours bet een the end ·53 minutes after the landing:
of their last surf e excursion The second is set to begin at
and J!l.eir..._ ta ff and ren-7:48 p.m, Wednesday, March
WASHINGTON (AP) -A Middleton discussed he ous wit the third Apollo 22, and the third will last from
top U.S. air-pollution official European clean ~rs ing a 16 crewman, Thomas K, Mat· 7:13 .p,m. Thursday to 2:13
says European auto makeri; briefing <i. an internati al en· ingly. a.m. F'riday,
have developed test vehicles vironmental e<>mmittee'ioJcm-/ According to th e Young and Duke will blasf
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A,,IOVfO fOI VlTltANS
apparently able lo meet the ed in 1969 by the North Atlan· preliminary timetable, Apollo off 16 hoursJater, at 6;23 p.m.
United States' 1975 and 1976 -~tic~T~re~a~ty~A~lli~an~c~e~n~a~ti~on~s~. ~_i16~is~sc~h~ed~ul~ed~f~o~r~l~aun~ch~a~t_!F~r~id~ai_y.===~~-=-=J_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!~ emission standards.
Dr. John T. Middleton,
director of the air-pollution·
control Office of . ~e
E n v i ronmenlal Protection
Agency, told newsmen ht' and
an aide saw low-pollution test
cars in Germany, Sweden, Ita-
ly, France and Britain ..
EPA announced sever a I
weeks ago that a n ex·
perimental auto en g I n·e
developed by the Ford Motor
Co. also appeared capable of
meeting the future standards.
which require 90 percent
reductions in emission of e<>m-
mon pollutants.
Ford quickly protested that
the engine was .a long way
from readiness for com.
mercial production.
So are the European
versions, Mitldleton said, but
he added, "What it means is
that they have the technology :
·It's just a mattec of. getting
them ·into · production
ecooomically."
Mkldleton said some of the
European -eng-infs were im:
p r o v e d internal-combustion
engines -the . kind now com-·
mon1y used -but others were
other types, such as a
modernized steam engine, an
electric-battery engine, or a
hybrid combining batteries
and fuel combustion.
All of the new "clean"
engines, American and Euro-
pean. have yet to pass en·
durance tests demonstrating
they can keep up their low
emission performance for at
least 50,000 miles, he said.
But he said they have been
test-driven for a few thousand
miles elready and performed
well.
Beauty. Weds
MODESTO (UPI I -Cindy
tt1ac hado has given up her
crown . as California dairy
princess to marry her high
school sweethearl M i s s
?\1achado, 18. of Modesto, Sun-
day turned the duties of dairy
princess over to first alternate
Nancy Vandenburg of Artesia.
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Hostage Raped
K-idnap~r-Seized.; 'Mini Tax' Compromise Due
•
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>
Reag an , Democrats Ne ar Acc ord ·A f~r Concessions
SACRAMENTO (AP I -Democrats
and the Reagan administration i,o,·ere
close to agreement today on a so-called
"mini" lax increase bill after the impact
taxpayers was softened .
The measure also was afitended to cut
the business inventory tax by 30 percent
permanently, with business picking up
operation. Ge I 15 F By the end of the hearing, Ken liall, d
Reagan's chiel depuly finance direcl.or, \ Ir. ' ' re e said the Republican administration could
accept the measure with a few more ' '
changes: to implement witbholding of the 1· ·, PL' EASANT HJl.I. (AP) _ wi·th a gun state personal income tax Jan. 1 instead 1 surrendered. Witne&se5 said she bore
of April 1 and to spell out just what con· at her head, t5-year-0ld Debbie Devore struction projects would be funded with I bruises on her face. the one·time windfall money from a shift h!!lped police and the FBI talk her captor Before dawn Sunday the Whitlow house
lo withholding. inlo surrendering eariy today to climax a was broken into and the room entered
GOP Ma y Olcay Revamp
SACRAJ\1ENTO (UPI ) -S e n a I e.
Republicans have registered a favorable
reaction to the latest Democratic reap-
portionment plan v.·hich GOP leaders say
could be approved by Friday.
But Assembly Republicans Monday re-
jected the latest Dempcratic-sponsored
proposal after reviey,•ing it behind closed
· doors: ' Senate Republicans discuSstd the
Democr8tic proposal but decided to
analyze it further before saying publicly
they are satisfied. Several G 0 P
lawmakers indicated they y,·ere pleased
with it.
entirely within Los Angeles County. It is called a "mini" tax bill but the l . 'f , ; manhunt following a double shoot ing and where Susan Whitlow and her guest Deb·
Undtr the previous plan he would also total tab now is roughly $500 million in in-. CA JFQDINIA ... reported kidnap ing. b' have represented portions of Santa creased taxes and revenues. The bulk of ~ 1e were asleep. Barbara; San Lu is Obispo and Ventura that would go to wipe out the S3Sfi million Pleasant Hill Police Chief Ed S. Kreins As the girls screamed , the man ·struck
counties. debt in the current $6.8 billion state said 1'.Iarvin .Jose ph Hauber, 29, of Susan wit h a gun believed to be a .44·
Asse mbly GOP caucus chairman John budget. Ali E } Washington stale, agreed to release Deb-caliber long barrel revolver, then drag·
Stull or Leucadia said the latest But there was some question, with the en mp oyer bie and give up his gun after a three-hour ged Debbie away, investigators sa1d.
Democr.i;c proposal would have meant bill in its present shape, whether it would "negotiation" at an unoccupied Concord Tb h t \Vh'll d " two Republicans _ Floyd Wakefi eld or raise enough new money in the last half $200 f' QK'd e gwunan s o I ow, ~.an •.us South Gate and Charles Conrad of of the fiscal year to eliminate all the red llle house. wife, Doris, 55, when they tried to block
She rman Oaks -would have met certain ink. Delective John Lilly said the girl had his esc~ with the &frl clad in a blue and
political death. Committee experts worked all night to SACRAMENTO (UPI ) -Rejecting the • been raped after she was dragged out of white blouse, office.rs said.
"Republicans found that to be try to determine the full effect of the advice or the State Board of Agrieulture, the house of Mr. and ?.1r1. John R. Police said the gunman appa' re.nUy fled
unreasonable," he said. "We are com· amendments adopted by the Senate qov .. Rona.Id Reaga n .has signed legisla· Whitlow of Pleasant Hill near Concord milted to not less than 8 43_37 plan." Revenue and Taxation Committee, of uon im posuig a $200 fine on employers of 1 S d in a red late model Mustang which one
Democrals control the lower house by a which Stiern is chairroan. The committee illegal aliens. ear Y un ~Y· patrolman pursued unsuccessfully from "r-.1y initial reaction is very positive',"
said GOP caucus chairman John L.
Harm er or Glendale. He said a final vote
on the bill could come before Friday.
43.37 margln and have a 21.19 edge int.he called another specia l meeting for today Reagan said Monday the bill by The Martinez glrl, accompanied ·by her the shooting scene.
.Senate. -possible for a final vote on the bill. Assemblyman Dixon Arnett IR-Redwood parents, was taken to a hospital for treat· Debbie, 5-foot-2 and blonde, Jives witli ·
only part of the tab. CityJ v.·ould help improve job op-mcnt. her parents in Martinez and was an
The bill is sponsored by Sen. \Valter J . Steel Stri'ke Looins portunitics for "thousands of legitimate Police were without a clue t.o Debbie's Sliern (0-Bakersfield), who was forced Cali!_ornia resident s." whereabouts when they received a tip overnight guest at the Whltlows. Senate Republican ~floor leader Fred
Ma rler Jr. of Redding agreed. Both
t-.farler and Harmer were · recipients of
major shifts in the la\est Democratic
plan, Y.'hich they both appeared to like ..
during a special hearing Monday to ac· Jn signing the measure, Reagan acted that Hauber and the girl were in a house Susan Whitlow was treated for scalp
c:ept a number of amendments sponsored FONTANA (UPI) -The United counter to the recommendation of the in an exclusive area of Concord. wounds at a hospital where her pare.nll: ·
by Republicans. Steelworkers Union placed Kaiser Steel State Board of Agriculture, which ?.lore than 30 officers surrounded the were listed in fair condition .
"It looks promising," said Marler. "~ly
initial reaction is favorable."
one amendment cut back the impact or on a I!klay notice of a strike Monday and decl ared its opposition last week on house. Kreins said it took about 3~ hours Her father suffered an abdominal
Stiem's tough minimum income tax by said a meeting will be held next Tuesday grounds the bill places an unfair burden of talking before the suspect tossed down gunshot wound, and her mother was . bit
Harmer's proposed new seat would be about $90 million in its fir st full year of to consider a strike vote. on farm employers. a .44-caliber revolver, let Debbie go and on the ann. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-=---'--~~~--~~~~~~~~--''--~~~~~~~~~-
Muskie and Humphrey
Open State Campaign
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
The same team that led the
Democrats in the I 9 6 8
presidenlial campaign -Sens.
Hubert Humphrey and Ed·
mund S. Muskie -officially
opened the 1972 race in
northern California Monday
night by pleading for party
unity and attacking President
Nixon.
Muskie and Humphrey, both
unannounced candidates for
the 1972 presidential nomina-
tion, spoke to some 500
Jobless Pay
Boost OK'd
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -
Leg isl atio n increasing t he
weekly unemployment check
for jobless Californians from
$65 to $75 has been approved
by the Senate.
The. measure by
Assem blyman Jack Fenton
(0-Monte.bello), cleared the
Senate Monday on a 36-0 vote.
and was returned to the lower
house for concurrence in
amendments.
persons, including California's
top Democratic leaders. al a
$100-a-plate dinner sponsored
by the Northern California
State Central Committee..
Muskie , the Maine senator
who is his party's front runner
for the nomination . warned
that any attempt to create a
fourth party would result In "a
stunning defeat~' for t h e
Democrats.
"As Democrats. the things
that unite us are so much
stronger than the things that
divide us," Muskie said.
"Surely, then, we can make
our party safe for diversity."
Humphrey,· the former vice
president who won reelection
to the Senate from Minnesota,
called on "everyone in the
party to understand that you
can have competition without
confrontation.''
Two announced candidates
for the party's nomination -
Sens. Fred Harris o f
Oklahoma and G e o r g e
McGovern of South Dakota -
had been invited to th·t affair,
which was billed as a
"presid.ential dinner," but
were unable to appear
although Mrs. McGovern sat
in for her husband.
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MACARTHUR BLVD. (New) and PACIFIC VIEW ORIVE
(off S.n Joequin Mills Rd. •t H•rbot View Shoppin4 Center)
Newport Beach/Pttone (714) 644-8511 •
I
-.
For The
Record:
D eath Notices
AUSTIN ;,o F. A11•t!t1. Aoe 61, ol :>G6 1toc11ester
SI , (051• M<IW. 0.lt ot '"1!11. Now~t>tr • 1971 Servk•• DeftdlMt •I Btll BrllldWIV
Mor!UlfY, l llY.1.N
£01111 Brv1n. Ave 11; tormtrlv of Hun·
11,,.,1°"' flt1d1 .0.tt ot deflh, Nov1mblr 1. 1911. S..rvlct1 Olln.clina .r Smllllt
Morh1Pv. GALE Euox"" K. Gilt . 1!Jl·P Vii Pu•rl1. L1ouM Hiii•. 0111 of <IHlll, N011tmblr '· 1911 .Strvlct l Ollndl"" 11 P1clflc "'"" M"'tu1rv. GRANT
l>'tr< C. Gr111t. 71' Jlvoclodo .I.Vt .• Coron1 dtl Mir. Dflt ol ~1111 Novtmboff I. 1911 . Survived DY nus.,.nd. (111111r V. Gr1n1. ol 1~1 h•m~ 1to1~rv. Wecin ... <11v, NOV~'t\tlet' 10. I PM. R..iultm Miu, 111111"fd1t.
Nov•mbotr II. ' AM. O\/r I.adv Oue1n ol Ar.otl• C•!,.ollc C"utell. 811!1 Coront dtl
Mir Mortu1rv. 01 .. '.ILo~s.
JMn F. H1un. APt n. of ml P1cltlc Av• . Cool• Mt11. Ollt ot clttlll, NO\'~mbtr 7 1'71: Sur11lved bv 90n. Wllll•m, ol Co•'• M•1•= d•uohler. Mro. ~'~*!hlfu~11. ~~nl ':,~~~-o~=~~f.11~1,""~ Services. WedneJd•v· 10 AM. Bet! flro•dw•v Cll•ot!, wlltl Rtv. Loren F!lc~lnoer ollltl•llllO lnltrmtnl. MOl'>IKllo M1morl1f P1rk. llell 8ro1dw1v Mcrtu•rV, Olrocto".
ARBUCKLE & SON
WESTCLJ;FF MORTUARY
U7 E. 17t6 St, Costa l\ftsa
NS-4131 • BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corona dtl l\1ar . 01\ S-t450
Co5ta l\fesa MI g.trn • DELI, RROA DWA Y
MORTUARY
110 Broadway, Costa l\fesa
LI 1·:1433 • ftfcCORl\flCK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1795 Laguna Cu yoa Rd.
{9'-9415 • PACIFlC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery l\fortu1r1
Chapel
350I Pacific Vltw Drive
Ne•tport Stach, Calllornla
~f.Z7• • PEEK FAl\ffi.Y
COLO!l.'IAL FUNERAL
HOME
7301 8ols1 AYt.
\Vestmlnsler 19l-SSU • SMITHS' MORTUARY
627 l\1aln St.
Hunlirtjl:tnn 8eac-
UHl3t
Escapee
Goes Back
I
To Prison
•
Tuesday, Novembtr t , ltfn DAILY P!Lor D'
Coastal Training Vnit. Will Decide on School C~edit
TUSTIN ..: Trusf&r~ -maOe up-of-Ubstees-liilm eiCh The venfure ~ WSa faUi'IC}led credit plan is used by other
Coastline Regional Occupation or the Huntington Beach and this year to provide a jolhUy districts. As future courses
Training program (CROP) Tustin Union high........._ hool operated vocational s k 111 s are added, some may grant
will decide Wedne$day on districts and t Ne rt· training program . Training f~r units of credit less than the
whether or not the three. Mesa Unified Sc I · r1ct medical aides is already usual 10 per semester, he said.
district joi.nt program should boards of educ The underway and involves 58 Trustees this week ques-
·class. "That's not enough timr-·w0uld be-possible to earn.
!or hlm to know what he'll get Airs. Beverly L a n g 1 t o n
out of a course," Tustin trustee from the Newpor~ Trustee Robert Bartholomew •• U ·r·~ d' 1 . 1 said, 1t1e33 n1 1,... is r1c • con-
SANTA ANA -A young grant partial credit Io board meets p.m. studenb. tioned the validity of graaJ,lng
woman prison escapee whose students. Wtdf\e$day in t e Tustin Tom Boetich, CROP ad-a student one unit of credit
He urged a t w o -1,1 • .n. i t curred, noting it would be u~
minimum, or two Weiks of fortunate for a student to take
study, be set for the least up space In a class only to
amount of partial credit It drop It alter a week. freedom from a six-month to The newly formed board is djstrlct board room. mlnlstrator, said· the parti<il after only seven dars in a
15-yehr sentence wa5 abruptl y 1 ----------------------------------------~--------~--------------:::::y•E~f ~~,~~F:1;1 11if'IZIJ'llr.i]'1~~ir.l(r:eI'1jrT)l'llt;]llr1'0"['llllr..l:'l']~r:~r:1r:t:'l'}j"),,lj~ir:llr,,.iEl':IJl1l,ITl1r:l1r..aT:EiF.(1:1:!i1'1IJITljt'l·iin·Tial'l1r.11]"'f~'!'t~l"'i)"lT'ii""j"i~"l.,.1"1"1"1]"'~"i"'("'t]"'j"Jl"j"lrl'lln!"lr.1~~~r:ir:(r.t:'l'Jj")'l1:jt'ljr:lj':'ljJ!r:ljl'1:!~T:~ir.(F.t:tlnl)ITljrlJll.:i
term today.
Lindsay Va~ H e u sen
Horst man, 21, h been sought
since Aug. 3, w en sh~ was
named in a $62,500 bail arrest
warrant, charging f e I o n y
escape.
The former Los A I t o s
resident's record
discovere d during in·
vestigaUon of the two-car rol·
Jlsion shortly before midnight
Saturday in which she suffered
lacerations.
She was treated "'at Hoag
Memorial Hospital. t h e n
transferred to Orange County
Jail, to await shipment back
to the California Inst itution for
Women at Frontera.
Records personnel t h e r e
said she was convicted of se.
cond degre·e burglary and
committed to the women's
prison near Corona in May.
Circumstances of her escape
three months ago were not
listed by the prison records of·
fice.
Records showed M r s .
Horstman had left the prison
under guard several times Ior
subsequent court appearances,
apparently as a prosecution
witness.
Traffic Patrolman S t a n
Bressler said the Horstman
woman was a passenger in a
car driven by Brenda J. Wood,
19, of 9909 Hazard Ave.,
Garden Grove when it collided
with another vehicle.
Miss Wood and the other
motorist. Maurice W. Haff, 24,
of Orange, and a third
passenger, Gail Martin, of
Santa Ana, also suffered in-
juries in the crash on East
Coast Highway at Jamboree
Road but were not seriously
hurl .
Office Bressler said he did
not know the relationship
between the escapee and Miss
Wood, who was apparently
unaware that he passe nger
"''as a wanted woman.
State Gets
Agreement
On Free'way
SANTA AN A -A new
agreement on the route of the
Orange Freeway between the
Riverside and Santa Ana
freeways has been forwarded
to the st.ate Division of
Highways, paving the way for
construction of the new link.
County Road Commissioner
Ted McConvi.lle said changes
had bee n made from the
original plan at interchanges
with Ball Road, Lincoln,
Katella, Chapman and Orange
Avenues.
New loops are included for
the Katella and Orangewood
interchanges to provide better
traffic flow, he said, adding
th.at work is expected to start
early next year on the new
1ink and will be done in two
bases.
Completion will open traffic
on the Orange Freewa y
between the Santa A n a
WA·REHOUSE PRIC ·ES PLUS 10%
TOP Q.UAL.ITY MEATS
•
BONELESS
CHUCK
ROAST
'
0-BONE
ROAST
c
lb
~
CHUCK1
ROAST
CHICKEN
PARTS
•
BREASTS· LEGS· THIGHS
RATH'S SLICED
RA-CORN,
BACON 35~
;;~;~;;sls oz.3PKG .C PORK
LINKS ea CHOPS
c lB. lb
U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED
FAMILY PACK BONELESS
FAMILY
STEAKS
c
lb
FRESH LEAN
GROUND
.BEEF 53~-
FRESH SLICED
' BEEF
LIVER 49~
FRESH FRUITS & VEGETABLES
LARGE WASHINGTON FANCY
REAL FANCY GOLDEN RUBY
CALIFORNIA RED DELICIOUS NEW CROP DELICIOUS TEXAS
14~b. WALNUTS 3.S~b. APPLES 14~b. GRAPEFRUIT 12~ ..
Freeway to the Sa n l E'~~--------------1..----------------:~--:--:---;---:--:;--------~-------:-:::--:-:-----;--~
Bernardino F re• w • Y Now you too con become a professionol shopper and save hundreds of dollars per yeor on your grocery bill. No need to Po.;;:~n'r;eeway is now op'" run all over town hunting for bargains ••. You can be assured that when you shop at Top Yalu, you are buying at the low·
from the Riverside Freeway est prices in town. Naturally, we carry all of the famous brands ..• Top Quality Meats and Garden Fresh Produce. to lmpePia\ Highway in Brea
and completion of the northern
section from Brea to Pomona
is expected next spring.
Man Jailed
In Assault
On Officer
SANTA ANA -A man who
admitted he attacked a
Westminster policeman while
the officer was questioning
him about a shoplifting com·
plaint has been sentenced to 60
days in Orange County Jail.
Superior Court Judge Byron
K. ~1cMillan ordered the term
for Alex Camacho, 23, after
the Stanton man plflded
guilty to reduetd charges of
assault 1nd battery.
He also ordered Camacho to
serve one year on probation
afld dismissed I d e n t I ca I
charges against a co-defen-
dant. Rudy Rodriquez:, !I. of
Stanton .
Both men wert arrested last
Aug. 11 following a free-for-all
outside a Westminster surplus
store in which 0£fk:er Herman
V11mer was attacked after
questioning the two men about
a shoplifting a lleg a tion .
Several onlookers came to the
aid o! Varner and helped him
subdue Camaeho and Rl>drl·
quez.
WHICH IS MORE
IMPORTANT TO
YOU? BEST SERVICE
•OR· LOWUT
PRICES • NO
MARKET CAN GJVE
·YOU BOTH • WE
GIVE PRICE
SHOP IN A WAREHOUSE OF FINE
9UALITY FOODS AT SlS W. 19th ST.
AT HARBOR, COSTA MESA. IT DOES·
N'T TAKE A LOT OF NERVE TO IE THE
ONLY STORE IN TOWN THAT DIS·
COUNTS THE DISCOUNTERS.
WHAT IT TAKES IS
THOUSANDS OF
LOWER PRICES!
EVERYTHING IS MARKED
Warehouse Prices
Thtn the Ch.ck• Adds Just 10°/o, To
Arrive et whot you pay. So lf°You-Wo1iu1d
up with $10.00 Worth, you'd olmply pay
that, plus 10°/o or $11 .00.
THIS GOES fOI 1¥11YTHING 11c1n THI
FEW IT.EMS LIGALLY CONTIOLLID
LIKE MILK AND LIQUOll.
WE CHALLENGE
ANY MARKET
TO MATCH THE
TOTAL SAVINGS!
STORE HOURS: 10 AM TO 7 PM
5 DAYS A WEEK
Closed Sundays and
Wednesdays
THE "FIRST" COST PLUS SUPERMARKET IN CALIFORNIA 11e welcome
.FOOD UllW STAMP
STORE HOURS
10 AM TO 7 PM
5 DAYS A WEEK
CLOSED SUNDAYS
AND WEDNESDAYS
8E1"1Ci CLOSED·
TWO DAYS A ll!EJ:
SAV!!S
YOU ALOT
0,MOHFf
We reserve the right'
to change prices as whol esale
prices change.
•
We Make Dl1counter1 Look Expensive
535 W. 19th ST. AT HARBOR, COSTA MESA
SHOPPl•S
•
1'
'
~
'10 DAILY PILOT T11esd~, Ncvtmber 9;-rt171
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAl. ~OTICE
••
LEGAL XOTICE
J.EGAL KOTICE
• ._,
LEGAL NOTICE
Dt1h• Piiot,
lCICt·71
LEGAL NOTICE
I
•
Some Skies Small Co_lleges
Friendly . T() Driitlier-Becoming.Extinct
11:
LEGAL NOTICE
,. 14t'"
P'IC t lflOUS •1J11Nl!SS
HAMii: ITATEMENT
IOllo .. int pe11an 11 llaiflt
VAGA&ONO MF-ti. CD.. I • 1 0
l'lact111I•• Co1i. MH•· c.i;r, Sh••tn L. Guv, 1'131 Blllnf l n .
Hu~li"9tcn Beach, C•lil. This bu•ln~u ii ~tlnt concl11c!H ~Y an
lndlYlclull.
S~•ron L. Guv
T~i1 $1tltmtfll til..i with ''" Counl'f Ctwk et Ort ,.., CounlY GI': 00. 19, 1'11.
\YASJIINGTON CAP) -A "The lnvlslble college Is
Carnegie Commission 0 n caught in a bind btlwt:en the .
1-Ht:her Educ:itlon study con-elite eolleges, which are able
to charge high tuiUon ftts
eludes that the 494 small. because 0 ( their popularity
little·known colleges with ~·ith prospective students."
relaxed admission policies are the report said, "and the pubo
the kind . "most likely to i,!c institutions which lack tb1
become exlinct." ~Pfestige or the elite coUeges ;
Unless steps are \taken to but can attract stud e nts because or their .very low
save some or them, the report fees."
said, "A1nerican higher educa--------------
Cambodian Regime
Now Dictatorship?
tion inay suffer a severt loss
of its diversity."
The instituliom represent
nearly one-fourth of the under-
graduate college~ and enroll
.about 500,000 students.
The report. called "The
Invisible College" and to be
published by l\1cGraw Hill. has
been released in Cleveland by
Dr. Clark Kerr, presiOent of
the commission. and the l\VO
authors. Alexander \V. Astin of
the American Council of
Education and Calvin B. 1'·
Lee, chancellor ef the
PllNOM PENH: Cambodia case back against the monks. University of Maryl and.
(AP J -TI1e tangled \Yeb of lie tha nked then1 for their The 494 "ino;isible" colleges
Cambodian politics has pro-support. He turned down the are further identified by the Jwo authors as having unselec· duced a new question: Is the presidency, saying the job did th·e adnlission policies as
country now run as a die· not exist pending the ne\Y con· reflected in the average
latorship'! stilution . academic ability of their
Recently re&ime headed by One description can1e from st ud ent 5 and s m a I J
Marshal Lon Nol did aW'Jy the Republic Association. the enrollments. Seventy per cent
with Cambodia 's elected Na· embryo of a new political par-of the schools have fe\Yer than
ty in \\'hich Lt. Col. Lon Non, 1.000 student s, 50 ""r cent tional Assembly and began to r~ rule decree. ll \\'as 19 inonths the prime minister's younger fewer than 750. hrother. is very aclive. The The high dio;erse schools in-
to the day after the assembly association·s English-langua11 e elude Roman Catholic. Protes· ousted Prince N o /' o d o 111 e Sihanouk. \veekly spoke or •·orit~nted tant. nonsectarian. black and
democracy." teachers· colleges and a few In removing the politicians "What will ' o r i e n t e d technological schools. from day-to-day politics Lon democracy' consist of?" the Although '"ggestiog that Nol ordered them to write a paper asked. "The govern-both the staes and federal f..'Onslitution for the year-old ment will inform us y,•ithin the government should try to help
republic. Ile told seven million <.'Oming week!." the schools stay alive. the Cambodians !hat he u•as mov· f\1eantime, theories abound writers said that "institutions ing against "this sterile game on why Lon Nol acted all he that are plainlv incompetent. .
or liberal democracy." He did. !\lost seem to boil doy,•n to hRve no particular right to asserted that "certain groups. an inabil ity or 41n un\\lill· supporl or survival." clans and associations'' wrre · · "bl • ingness to face up to op-Jn support of the 1nv1s1 e sowing anarchy and dragging Cambodia toy,•ard defeat. position. Brought UJ) i n colleges. Astin and I,ee note
Sihanouk's shado1.r. today's !hat they "provide a warmer. If criticism of democracy leaders of Cambodia lack ex-1nore cohesive atn1osphe re; ;ind governing hy fial fqua l d perience in !he practical give stu ents a greater op-dictalorship. then Lon Nola busl nf'SS or trying lo make por lunil.y to p{lrticipate in ::ind his associates demon-. . d rr democracy 1\'0rk. more activities an o er pro· 1ilrate a fresh approach . Assemblymen who attacked grams that sui t the less ablf'
A handful or asseniblymen government policies \\'ere not and less w e 11 • P r e P a r ed
whose oppo~ition appe?r5 10 1nuch help. Their outcries students who currentl y impose
have ipurred Lon Nol to against war-fed i n r I a t ion a heavy burden on many
decide that he could do sounded to some observers public institutions because of
1vithout the lf'gislature are still like the cavils of men acting thei r great n11mbers."
at liberty to denounce him: as if the "'ar did not exist. Jn contrast, !hey said. larger even the information minister. bl ' nd · t sch I ft is likely that the hard-hit· pu 1c a pr1va e oo s l...ong Borel, admits i! 1Yas ling package of economic "are coming to resemble each
"not 100 per cent lega l." reforms introduced by Vice other more and more: they
r ore i g n <"orrespondents Premier Sok Chhong would are complex. impersonal and
found that army censors llidn"t have stirred the assembly to ali ke in their curricular of·
like certain ter1ns, such as denunciation s. A need to clear fers."
dictator. and cou p d'etat. !he decks for economic.reform Almosl all colleges, both
Loca l newspapers got a warn· is believed to have been public and private, have finan·
ing that a special military behind much of the marshal 's cial problems but nothing to tribu nal a,.,, a i t e d ani• th t t r th 'n ·s·ble col
Get more
"home"
from your
house.
Houses grow small
and cramped without
lhe lhings thit make
lhemhome-
speci al furniture, ~
better TV, &lereo
hi-Ii, paid up billS •••
and money left over
for fun. Avco may
help with a
homeowner loan
on your house,
whether it's paid
for or not.
HOMEOWNER LOANS
TO $25,000
OVER $5,000 ON
REAL ESTATE AND-
PEASONAL
PROPERTY
,Af,~anat..'
\Ve believe_j n you.
500 N. A11ctll1in. 11•4. 131·2116
910 S. l re•k.1111rtt St. 916·2211
250 s. (11<"d •••• 776·5210
117t Horbor ll•tl .•
Cetto MIN 642·3414
617 W. 17111 $1.,
S.11to .... S47•44l 1
2017 5. Mel11 St ..
Sollto .411• 14f·Jl61
thin king. e ex en o e 1 vi 1 -
journalist deemed lo have Other explanHtions for his =l~e~ge~.~t~h~e~r~epo~rt~s~ai~d~. ===~~~~~~~~~~~~ w ri t ten subversively: A decision Jay him open . lo jli government newspaper h r k I published an editori al full of c arges o ove r ii . His op-ponenl s are few -and none is praise for the press law devis· ed by·the colQ.nels of Greect"·s ready lo square off against Cambodia's army. !he prin· military junta. Even so. ne"·spa""rs still cipal sou rce of Long Nol's, ,..~ po\.\·er. I criticize the regime. Con· -============~
Phone
Announcing the Opening of
NEW OFFICE
Amorelli Counseling C enter,
2850 Mesa Verde Drive East, Suito N
Costa Mesa
STATE LICENSED COUNSELORS
Inc .
l'O!llEll:, 8'1' 1.vtrlr J . /,\.ef$µ, 0e,u1v Counrv
(Jttl<.
trasting the fate or ne\\'Smen I'
who offend the government,
J\lahajan commented : 1
"Nobody thinks of sending 1
corrupt offjcial!!' to l h e·I'
military tribunal." 6424321 e Sonsit ivity
Specie liiin9 in:
Encountor Groups
1'11bUsr+t cl 0tl"9l Cc1s1 Ol il't' P'ilo1. No~mbor ?. t, I•. )l. ltll H••Tl
LEGAL NOTICE
Buddhist m o n k s demon·
strated, handing out
leaflets calling for democracy,
,. i4m juslice and the rult: or la\.\'_ "'fiZ::~o,u:,.:~~':::" But the saffron-robed monks
For
Weekender
e Ps ychiatric Services e Hypnother•py
• Weight Co ntrol e Gestalt The ra py e Primal Thor apy_
17141 546-1441
'The 1011owi11t "erton 1i doi~• builrte.H also asked Lon Nol to become I :!4 hour ans\~·cring strvice
•
3
: IC-teK EN G',.. e E 11 1 N ti. ''60 president of lhe republic. J\dverlisin.," lot Artgtl•• County number
ll•t!Cloll"ll u1111 J, ccn11 ""• • • Lon Nol. \.\'ise in the ways of 1213) 776-5344 ''!21~rt '"'"'• nQs Ntbrt•~• l'I .• !:~B~u~d~d~h~is~t=t~h~o~u~g~h~t.~tu~m~e~d~th~e~I::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;~~:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;='. co.ti MM•
Th!t Dusill~>l. 11 Dt•nt concl11c•tcl -~ •111
lndiviclutl. Alb~rl 8 u•nl '
'Thi• s1tllmtnl llltcl w.tn lht Coun!v 1 C••rl{ or Ott nt• Ceunr. en: Otleb•f '9.
1t11. av eevt rlv J. i'>"OOo•. Dt•utvl
County Cit•-· l'ubtrs!'I.,. Or1ne• Cotil Di lly 1';101 ..
Nov.ml>11r 1. t, U, ,l, If/I 11lt ·ll '
LEGAL NOTICE
Good Wiiiy Su.
During This
Traditional
Holiday
"Thankt For
Giving'' Htlp
To The
Handictpptdl
GOODWILL Industries
590 w. 19th
Costa Mesa
646-2470
I
''Turkey Time At Goodwill'',
20 LB. TURKEY
TO BE GIVEN AWAY AT EACH
GOODWILL STORE
DRAWING NOV. '20-2 P.M.
COME _IN AND REGISTER
OUR Thanks For YOUR Giving
Is
Ille,
ble
•t s.'•
!).
lb•
es
ts
OW
• • •
•
'
•
·Ruling on Secrecy Iss.ued
Fact-finilingMeetings Get Approvcil ·in Ne:Wport
·City council committees may conduct
secret meetings as long as such gather-
ll)gs art fict-flndlng In nature, Newport
Beach City Attorney Dennis O'Neil has'
ruled.
In an opinion prepared for tonight's
rtjee.t~ of the council, O'Neil said com-
mittees of councilmen that do not con-
sUtute a quorum and are comprised of no
outsiders, would not violate California's
•'right-to.know" law by conduct Ing
private gatherings.
But O'Neil cautioned councilmen "to be
guided by the eicpress purpost" of the
law, also known as the Ralph M. Brown
Acl.
"In enacting this chapter, ,the
legislature finds and declares the public
commissions, boards and councils and the
other public agencies in this state exist to
aid in the conduct of the people's
business," O'Neil said, quoting from the
act.
Planners Grant
Balboa Dancing
Over Objection
The Newport Beach Planning Com-
mission conditionally approved •• permit
for dancing and live entertainment in a
Balboa bar Thursday night over the ob-
jections of one commissioner who declar-
ed dancing inoppropriale for the penin.
sula.
"I think a piano bar is the only proper
use in this area." declared Commissioner
Donald Adkinson, in objecting t-0 small
musical groups at The Ga~lery, 810 E.
Balboa Blvd.
Adkinson opposed any amplification or
music, saying it was disturbing to near-
by residences and the resulting dancing
was wrong for the area .
Adkinson is a resident of Peninsul
Point.
He was joined in voting no by commis-
sioners Jackie Heather and Wi ·
tin, but they were overruled b the com-
"It is the intent of the law that their
acUons be taken optnly and thelr
deHberations be conducted openly,
"The people of this state do not yield
their sovereignty to the agencies which
serve them." the act teads, "The people,
in delegating authority, do not glvt! their
public servants the. right to decide wha!
is good for the people to know and what
is not good for them to know. The people
insist on remaining informed so that they
may reta1n control over the instruments
they have created."
In short, O'Neil said, "special council
committees should limit their activity to
the gathering of information for the
purpose of reporting back to the full
membership of the council for open and
public · deliberation and action by that
body."
In his opinion. O'Neil cited a recent
Newspaper Guild against the Sacramento
newspaper GuiJd"·against the Sacramento
County Board of Supervisors in which the
board was found guilty or a Brown Act
violation.
Thi! <:ase dealt with a luncheon meeting
of the supervisors, a point O'Neil said his
office has reminded councilmen of
t-efore.
"You haYe ~en -advised in a prio r opi-
nion which I believe is worth reiteration
that informal gathering11 of more than
tfifee councilmen for the purpose of
discus$ing city business mfr.y constitute a
violation of the Brown Act, since four or
more members of the city council con-
stitute a quorum. capable. of reaching a
colle<:tive decision.
"For example," O'Neil said, "it would
constitute a violation or the Brown-Act
for more than three councilmen to sit
down together to discuss city business at
luncheon or dinner prior to a council
meeting.
"This was the cons\usion reached In
state District Court of Appeal in the
Sacramecto Newspaper Guild case,''
O'Neil said.
Education Task Force
G"i1idelines Get Okay
Guidelines for the creation of a blue-·
ribbon· task force to study educational
planning and "construction have been
adopted by Trustees of the San Joaquin
Elementary School District.
The committee function will be to study
and re<:ommcnd methods of acce lerating
planning and construction practices to
provide more classrooms with less lag
time between housing development com-
pletion and school openings.
The length of the st udy will be 60 days.
The first 30 days will consist of galherirtg
data from various agencies with a final
eport ready for the board Jan. 14.
Members, who have not ycl been
qualify fo r state aid building funds
(should include cost facts ).
-Possible financial requirements for
expenditures in coordination v• i t h
builders or develope rs.
-Legislation available or required lo
exceed "standard'' procedures in school
planning and constru ction.
-Procedures ror acceleration of ap-
plications and or increases in priority
standings within the present state school
aid building program.
-Alternative class scheduling ar-
rangements.
mission majority.
chosen, will include a central committee
of non~ducators who have special
knowledge in ' the fields of either '----~sociology, law, architecture, design,
eaUcation and finance.
Go-slow Actioil
On __ ''f.hrowa,vay'
Papers Urged
•
His Algae
Can Pass
As Steak
•
Tutsdtf, No¥embtr 9, 1971 DAILY PILOT J J
Eff~ct on llun1ans
Lab NoU;e J(ills .Off Mice
~-.--------••·• •• •• • •· ·-·-··r····--•····•· .. ····· ·•· ... •• ·-·•·
DAVJS (AP 1 The. will produce convulsions and Henry said ht 1ccldentaU1
researcher jangled his car d_eath. d1scov tred mice died from tht
keys over the two laboratory The technique Is called double dose of high-intensity
"acow;tical prirrilng." noise w hi I e eXJ>Olllnll! th 1 mice. Mo1nents later they Henry said s c i e n t i s t s creatures to var1oos stimuli
were dead. already have determined that and noting the~ r~ctions.
That, said Dr. Kenneth t.'f!rtain forms of epileptic lie theorized the first blast
Henry, Is an example of what seizures in humans a r e of noise physically destroys or
happened in tests w.ith keys brough t on by noise~. seriously impairs the ability or
and bells of n1ore than 5,000 lie would11't speculate on mice to block out unpleasant
what would happen to humans sounds, something u s u a 11 y
mict oYer the last three years. under similar conditions. done by m u s c u l a r cyn-
NineQ.r·five per cent of them "Obviously, noise under cer-tractions.
died. lain circumstances can be The mice show no signs of
Henry, 32, a psychology pro-very serious," he said. "The beiog bothered by the first
fesso r at the University of mouse Is unique because it's sound blast, but the second
California's Davis campus, is prone to convulsions anyway. one causes t~m lo freeze
studying the ph ysical effects But it's possible noise will at momentarily, then run wildly
of noise on rnice. He hasn't ex-least make people irritable or in circlet, go into convulsions
!ende4 hi s tests to humans,,-;;l;;e;;ad;;;to;;u;;n;;s;;ta;;b;;\e;;e;;m;;;o;;t;;io;;ns;;.;;";;;;;;;';;nd;;,;d;;i•;;·;;h;;•;;s;;al;;d;;. ;;;;;;;;;""i
but reporters asked him ifJI
something sin1iiar might hap-
pen with people.
" I don 't think pcoplt! a re
going lo drop in the streets
from hearing chimes," he
said. "'But i,11e certainly should
I See by Today's
Want Ad s have greater respect for DAVIS (AP \ -Dr. Walter sound."
Jennings has made carrots, He said when the mice are
celery and peaches taste like 16 days old he cxp<ises them to
Bartlett pears, and he says a ~0-second blast from a stan-
mak ing algae taste like steak dard electric bell, similar to a
is not impossible. modern school bell. The 130-
Jennlngs, a white-haired decibel SOUfld, bomQarding the
rood flavor chemist from the ears of the nlice when they
University of California cam-first are able to hoar. ap-
pus here. says navor changing parenlly dCstroys the. "safety
is slraighl·forward : Just take va lve" which otherwise would
any substance !ha1 1ron"t help shut out sllarp noises.
harm the body and !hat won't "\\'hat \\'C are doi ng is
add "'eight lo the body C'ither breaking down ·a prolective l
and give il fl avor. b.-irricr in anin1als early in
'"Hell, you can make it taste lire." ht' said.
like lasagna, ~ef stroganoff, Five to se1·rn days later.
\\'hatever you want." said Jen· virtually any sound 11·it h an in·
nings. 49. Jn theory, anyhol't'. tensity abol'c 90 decibels -about the amount of no i s e
I
e OAK BEDROOM SET,
complete with chest and
mirror dresser, two bed
frames and a nlte aland.
It's in good condition,
• U-HAUL, only on waler!
Wi!h this 17' heavy util-
ity boat. It's a 6 cylinder
Chrysler. ·tt needs work,
:tnd It comes without a
trailrr.
e CLASSIC Porsche; Jt'1 a
1937 Spcec'lsll'r. Strong
1800 CC 912 engine. Over
$3,000 was ln\'csttd in this
car, but thl'y must sacri·
fice. See about II in to-
day'3 clauifi~ section.
In his lab on the campus, made by an automo bile whizz.
Jenni ngs is trying to isolate. =·~·n~g~pa~s~t~a~l~70~m~il~es~a~n~bo~u~r;-;!J:=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;:=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;:; complex chemical CQmpounds1~
that prOvide the sensation of
flav or.
To make the single-celled
algae taste like steak, Jen·
nings says, '1you Is o I a t e
chen1 ical components of a
New York steak . Find out
Wh.i,lt makes it taste like al
New York steak.
"Thei:i add those chemical
coinponcnts lo alga e, 50 it too
"'ill taste like a New York
steak. Then people will relish
eating algae."
GERHARD LANG'S
SAUSAGE
HAUS
ONLY AT
HOW • , , llltme m~cle, Mtkery •1Nklcl 11111 .. 1 M cltllclow ....,." '°'''' 1boul any 01~1• 1.;u1w11 you hlvt n1r 1111 ... ORiy tfll finest ln9r.cl11nh incl lllTlt t11IH Oki Wor!4 t. MllWMff retllplt
••• ulllt by 01m1n1 L1n1 In m•-11111 111111111 -""' .i 1t1Hl11t n••I " • dtlK1•blt Honey l iktcl H•m. Our t lll!UIVt HIKllM lnclllllt• 11uu911 of Gtrm111, '•ll1h, 11.111111 t. SjNtnllll 1rl1l11. IA
1dcllflon, Ho,..y 91ktcl H1m1 lllW INhlrt tfMI tllll tnd lvndl-m .. 11 111eh1cll11g 111 y0ur 11wrllH, l1'9m fllt 1dklllll1 If Gtm1nl
Li nt. -HAM-.n ... ·11 STOlES Irvine Council
Hopeful Quits
School Of fices
Other oommittee members will be
selected from each of the dislrict"s al·
tendance areas. All will be chosen by the
board of trustees •
The central committee will, after an in-
itial meeting, recommend the services of
a consultant ir members feel his services
are required. The cost for the consultant
is not to exceed $3.600 plus up to $1 ,000
fo~ expenses.
Jennings, chai rman of the
Oavor chemistry section of the
Newport Beach should hold off enact-American Chemical Society,
ing slrict regulations ogainst the dis-observes that only in the last
1700 I . Cow H5'11•11Y
Cat ... ffl Mw -67).tOOI
tribution of "throwaway" newspape;rs few years have scientists pending the outcome of a case before the
Californ ia Supreme Cou rt, City Attorney 1 _m_;ad:._':._':._d_,_a_nc:._e_s_in-'th_e_f_ie_ld_. _;_;==~==================
Dennis O'Neil said lod ay.
lrV\ne City Council hopeful ' Wayne
Clark said Thursday he was resigning
several school leadership posts to "speak
more directly on issues of primary im-
portance" to Irvine cityhood .
Clark, public relations office'r for UC
Irvine, said he is stepping do,wn from the
presidencies or the University Park
Elementary Sc hoo I Parent-Teacher
Association and the San Joaquin Elemen-
t"ary District Coo rdinating Council as well
"'s his post as chairman of the Irvine
Council fo r Education.
The candidate in the Dec. 21 city coun-
cil election said the leadership posts
made him feel "constrained" from voic-
ing opinions on the school construction
crisis and related issues "which are
foremost in the minds of Irvine
residents."
An administrator provided by the
district will serve as liason to the central
committee.
SpecifiC' areas for study will include :
-Modular construction techniques
available with comparotive immediate
and long·range costs.
-Expanded use of relocatable building
techniques and their effects on ability to
Signals Will Go In
In an opinion prepared for Mondr.y
night's meeting of the city couocil . O'Neil
said the c our t struck down a recent
Thousand Oaks ordinance. but did so
only on the grounds that ii was too broad.
"Thousand Oaks h ,; s petitioned !he
cou rt for a rehearing," O'Neil said. "It
is hoped that even if the court refusci;
to rehear the case that it will render a
supplemental opinion more clearly de-
fining wh~l would and would not be per·
milted in this \ype of ord,Vu1nce."
O'Neil urged lhe council to wail and
see what . happens.
Councilman Lindsley Parsons had ask-
Huntington Beach city councilmen have ed for· the opinion. decrying the distribu-
ordered the installation of traffic signals tion of free ci rculation nt'wspapers and
at the intersection of Mansion Avenue asking if 1hCre aren't ways to slop un-
and Golden We st Slreet. Cost of the pro-solicited delivery of them onto private
ject will be $18,633, city officia ls said. propeMy. I.~===============; GET A
-Female Moth Foresters' FREE
Secret, Deadly Weapon
SAFE DEPOSIT BOX
when you ma intain only •
$500 Sav ing.s account .. ,
PUYALLUP, Wash. (UPI) shoot moth invasion was stem-
-Now that DDT has been med by removing about 800
banned from the woods , ornamental trees.
At your nel4hborhood Downey
Savlnqs Off(ce at 360 E.
17th Strnt, in Costa Mesa.
C•ll Mr. Davenport, Manager for an appointment •t
642-7422 foresters are hoping t o Oregon has j o i n e d
develop a more deadly way to Washington in the sex at-
kill the European pine shoot _::l':.':;:''::'":::':.:''.'.x:!'.pe~r_::im~en~l:'.:s. __ __;::,====================='I moth that is infesting the•·
forests and shrubs of Oregon
and Washington.
And whal could be more
dtadly than the female of the
species?
Recently, student foresters
gathered about a quarter of a
million pine shoo ts containing
about 30,000 female pupae.
These were brought lo western
\\'ashington experiment sta·
tion in Puyallup. There they
were dumped into large bar·
rels.
As the pupae cl1anged into
moths ar.d attempted lo fly
ou~ of the barrels they were
snared. A power(u\ sex at·
tractant then is extricated
from th& female moths for use
&5 bait.
The most successful method
so far has been to soak wads
of cotton with the bail . putt.he
wads in a cardboard box and
hang the box on a lree. The
male enters the container and
Is trapped by a sticky substan·
ct on the walls of the box.
The moth. wh ich is believed
to have made Its way Into the
Scallle area from Vancouver
lsh1nd. B.C .. cannot fly very
high and therefore It usually
5tays close to where it Is
' hatched . lt ma rnly attacks .
young trees. lnfe5tlng the
needles of the tender iihoots.
Other than the outlawed
DDT. about the only sure way
of getting rid of the Insect is
to chop down an infested tree.
In Spokane, Wash ., a plne
'lli'C_.X$~X~
f1Du> Of>C"ll
Succulent B~ef from Captain Cooks
broiler. Delicacies from the Se ven Seas.
Magnificent Hnrb or View .
Cocktails, Luncheon
and Dinner daily
25001 DANA DRIVE
' DANA JIO INT HARIOR
496-6195
Ott Pt¢iflt Cotu H111hw1y -
Tw•~t L101,1111 N10111l11\d S.1n Ct1m1nt1
•
l
,
El
r ,r'"'l
( fasteit
r service
\.. .......
Santa
Ana
J
0
0
0
0
0
0 •
Only Hu9hes Alrv.rest.
One quick stop at Los An ge les Intern ational Then non-:;top
to Eureka/Arcata. And on to Eu ge ne. Daily at 9:20 a.m.
.......,. ... ,we-.~
. -•
i ·'
\\
Jf DAILY PILOT
~
Old Capo High's Laho1· Unit U1·ges I BONG .KONG .
'Future Uncertain
CdM Banker
Heads Fund
For Business
Lockheed Loan C11t
, . -
CUSTOM TAllOIS I SHltTAAKftS IN OIANCf COVNTT
• PERMANENT SHOWROOM
iu•-t1n ... t4 cw1.. ...... '11l·CHlllf1'M.U SAU
'2 SUITS AT BIG SAVINGS · $ J 35 Htw. t ttlni IS !t •!JIM I""'> .~~!~~ -..... AVE UP TO so•;.
The old Capistrano High School may not
become the Capistrano Unified School
District's admlnlstratlve center after all.
Kai Porter o~ the Porter-Jensen
architectural Urn1 studying the Use of the
ST. LOUIS. Mo. (UPI\ -A beyond \Vhal's already In lhe
Perennial city council c a n d i d a I e labor organization, charging hopper," the spokesman said.
He told the board better use of existing Theodore C. •·Ted" Bologh recently crit· that a $250 m i 11 i o n He said Lockl}eed a n d
lcized a report by a citizens group.. governn1ent -guaranteed I o an l\1cDonneU are bolh dependent storage facilities and the disposal of which_ said Co.§la Me!! is not ready for to Lockheed Aircraft Corp. on government ' contracts and
marginal items now consuming space charter government. would hurt business at thal the problem created by
would meet short-lerm needs and provide Bologh . 845 Joann St .. said the cUy's fi1cDonnell Dougl~s Corp., has !he loan to Lockheed was "the
iime to determine ho"' new storage iuight Charter Study Committee, which studied asked U.S. Treasury Secretary biggest in ti1cDonnelJ ·s ex·
be added . This '\'OUld eliminate the ini-the question of charter versus the current Jol'ln Connally to s top pro-istence."
S,ICIAl H:KI l19-NOW
DOl/llf KHIT •• $115 St•
Sil~ ~ ... 11 •• N ~
CA.SHMElf • • • • H 51
$H,.\Jl(}SJ.M ~u · IS ,!2
stl~ WOOL •• . • I' Sf
SIOUS ..... ... 10 • •'•• ,..,ro,. a ""'' )'000 fUUST IMl'OllTll
WOOllNS & OOUILI KNITS
... -d 1111.M °''-~ s..1 ... 'S,0..1< ...... 51i<kl. 51il ....
100% Guor ... tMd S.oh,..11"'
• Wt flf ANY Sllf
• lNY STYLI COl'llD
• ••tt ALTt•ATIONS
• 4 WllK DIUVllY'
• fASY PAYMINJS m 68
\
site In do\\•ntOy,•n San Juan Capistrano,
suggested last \\'eek that the boar<t adopt
a ·•v.·ait-and-see'' attitude before ju1nping
mediate necessity for a warehouse on the gent!.ral law government for Costa Mesa cessing the loan1 ''Some 8.000 \Vorkers ha\'e
Sile ;.. ,. k-A ,., .. , .• 1"' .... "' •• u Y111t1. ,,...,, 1.i.io0111., ss1-1nJ · for ,1~ore than a year. was packed by The organizatipn, 11vwn as ~n laid off at ~leDonnell,'' 2012 MICM(LSor+-suni lO.s-NlWH>tr •l.t.CM
into plans for !he administralive1centcr.
He urged the consideration of cen· coun~'lmen who do not favor charter TEA~1. '''hich is seeking to spokesman said. "and · · II ro-111. °'•",. c-. A~t--1-4.,,, Alt-1ot "'" •• 111-w~.,, l he'.I
1tralizing all district support services in gove ment. represent 10,000 l\1eDonne liaa~n~'j'hie~r jbi;g~taiyo~fifiis~pl~a~nnied~. ~~ij~iijijiiijiji~~ji~~ij~iiiiii~~~ . . . '>one area. rather than having ~d-"Sbe's not qualified ." he said of the em p Jo ye s cut rent 1 y
ministr3tive functions at one loCation a.1d committee's chainnan. Mrs. Helene ~Ioli-represented by the lnterna-
L b transportation al another. ingsworth, Bologh contended he is tional Associ ation of Beacli i rltry Porter also suggested sea rching for qualified. but was refused an ap-Machinists. said sun d a )'
another potential site for a district center polntment 'lo the study group. Lockheed is in direct com·
l R • and exploring possible methods of ac-Bo\ogh has long been a proponent of petition with McDonnell for Fi lflS esu111i1ig quiring such a site. charter government for Costa ~1esa. government contracts.
Joe Wimer. director of administrative By establishing councilmanie districts A TEAfi1. spokesman said
· h h · ·11 services. said that because 1 h, through a: city charier, Bologh claimed . the gcwemment -i#ould fa vor Friday n1g t at t e movies V.'I resume · the city's west side, which he described Lockheed in a\.\·arding future
t th H t. t n. h p bl' L'brary Capistrano facility is alid will contin)le to a e un 1ng on ix:ac u 1c 1 as a "ghetto" bounded by Harbor contracts to g u a rant e e be used as a sixth grade school in-this wetk. definitely. a search for another silc \vould Bouleval'd, 16th Street. Adams Avenue Lockheed's success.
Here is the schedule or National not cause any probleins. and Estancia Drive. l\'OUld get council The spokesman said TEAfl.1
Geographl·c fi'lms to be shown in the ad· representation. would \.\'ait until Wednestlay If another site is found. district 11 ed th h · I ed f c II · 1 •·f mm. 1·strat1·,, annex next to the library. He a eg at I e city s represent or onna y s rep Y "'""'ore services could be eased-into ii gradually. h ·1 I t ) I b t 'd k. f · · t' to h It 525 Main Sl.. on the second Friday of on t e cou.ne1 a mos soc y y eas s1 e as 1ng or an inJunc ion a
each month: Nov. 12, zoos of the world ; Porter's recominendations were tnade interests. not~ng that all councilmen. ex-processin$ of·the loan.
Dec. IO, The Great Barrier Reef: Jan. 14, because he believes the locaUon of the cept Jack l{ammett. clive there. "Lockheed is picking up
Sad Song of Yellowskin ; Feb. 4 (first Fri-Capistrano school 1night make it a Bologh recently sold his east side horne work which normally would
day) The Japanese: f\1arch 1 o, valuable piece of property in the future. on Del f\1a r Avenue to the city and moved have· gone to f\fcDonnell;" the
BY POPULAR DEMAND
MONDAY NOV. 8-TUESDAY 9-WEDNESDAY 10
.. Santa A•• Henry's Newport kh.
Our Grand Openin9 Menu
Henry's Combo #4
. El General #2
Pancho ViUas Favorite '# 5
Any Steak
Of 1970
Two $5.00
Two 6.00
Two 4.00
Two 8.50
With Any Dinner , , , • Gl1111 Of Win~. Cold Duck or Ch11mp11gne
2122 PALISADES 2S3d"W. COAST HWY. Polynesian Adventure: April 14. J.T.: Trustees agreed to hold off for awhile lo the u'est side address. His Del ti.1ar spokesman said. "No govern-
f\lay 12, \\'ild River. and June'.{9,~T~he:_~a~n~d~e~x~p:to~r~e ~l~he:__:':"g:g~e=st=iO~n=•-l=h=at~w~e~re:__A~•~e~n~oe!':pr~o~pe~r~ly~w~as~need==ed~fo~r~a~s=l~ree=-1 _im~e~n~t :_w~o~1·ik~ha~s~c~o~m~e~he~r~e~~~!llll'~~!llll'~~~~~~!llll'~~~~~~~~~!llll'~~~~~~~~ ~Iusic Box and Felix's Auto Anti~_s. made. widening project. (since the loan was appro\'ed I
Vietnamese
Deserters
Are Afraid
SAIGON (AP) -In Viel·
nam soldiers desert to go
home, not to join the other
side.
· Nguyen -not his real name
-deserted his bunker on lhe
demilitarized zone ,;because of
the hardship -I never l1ad a
~·oman for a month."
Now he is a civilian again, a
slender 20-year-old in tight
pants and winklepicker shoes.
wise in the ways of the street .
Nguyen had dodged the
draft for two years in the back
alleys of Cholon. the capital's
Chinese quarter, before the
army nabbed him. H is
military career lasted four
months.
"Basic training wasn't too
bad, bUt the food '''a! awful."
he recalls. "Then they sent me
to fire ba!:ies on the Dl\1Z -
Fuller. Can1p Carroll. Sarge .
That was v.·orse, bul there v.•as
no chance lo escape.
''There \\'ere 40 n1cn in my
platoon v.·hen \Ve reached
Dong. They told us v.'e would
have to t:ike up positions on
the Ben i JHver. looking right
into Nor th Vietnam. By the
time \1'e reached those posi·
lions there v.·ere only 35 men
-the others deserted .
·•\Ve had to dig our 01vn
bunkers. Every few hours
there v.·as incoming. 82mm
mortars mostl y. I 11•as very
scared. I stayed only a fe1v
days.·•
He and fi\'e fel1 0111 soldiers
v.·ere gh·en 24-hour leaves and
a jeep to pick up their pay at
Dong Ha. 10 tniles below the
D:\1Z. They kept right on going
soulh\\·ard.
"\Ve spent the night at
Quan g Tri. then hired a taxi to
go to Hue." said Nguyen. "But
the police stopped us on the
road . Our shou lder patches
sho,vcd we were fron1 the
D"fZ. from a tough outfit. The
captain didn'l ,~·ant to arrest
us hut he told us to go back. J
th ink he \\'3S scared of us."
Ngu~·en and his friends
returned to Quang Tri. \vaited
until next day and again took
off in a taxi.
"This time ,,.e 1nade it lo
Jlue.'' he con~inued. "1 spent
several nights hiding at the
house of a friend before· 11
found a supply truck driver.
lie said he would take me to
Saigon for 25.000 piasters."
That is $90.
Nguyen arril'ed in Saigon 10
days arter lea\'lng: the D~IZ.
lie ""Paid the tru ck driver \\•ith
money he had :;a\'ed before his
induct ion. kt•pt rot hlm by 3
girlfriend here.
Does he feel gui lly about 1
abandoning his frienrl fl on the
D~1Z'! ··No. ~1ost or• thent 1
are froni Saigon. All or the1n
feel like I do. Tht~' loo v.·iJI
desert when they cct the chnn·
ce.''
\Vhat ''•ill ha!Jpen if Nguyen
Is caugh1?
"They u'ill send me back to
the front. But first they ha\'e
to catch me. There are man~·
places to hide in Cholon."
CAREER OPENING
for
SALESMAN
SLAVICKS JEWELERS
;11 Ffl.hl•• bl••tl
N•w19•rt t..ch
our ,,.,plov•• b1111fit• l11clud•;
profit 1korlflg , 1lotk option,
1111illcol ho1pit1 li11lio" I"'~,.
111eo, '"d oth1n.
FOR APPOINTMENT CALL
Mr. M••a.11-644°1~11
Bring SO
Beniamin Franldins
to California Federal
for two years.
Earn 309.16
~year.
6 °/o annual interest, lhol 's what 1he Cal iforni a Federal
lwo-year Moneymaker certificale accounts earn. And when you
leave your money and interest unlil lhe lwo-year malurily, !hey
pay o 6.18% onnuol yield. You ocluolly eom $309.16 annually on
a $5,000 minimum deposit.
Wi1hdrawals may be mode on certificoles prior lo malurily
al any time. Loss of interest never exceeds nine ly days.
You have a choice of olher high inlerest Moneymaker
accounts, too. Investing $1,000 or more gets you into o one-year,
5.75% Moneymake r certificate occoun t. Or, ony omount cf money
will open o Moneymaker passbook account and eom o 5% currenl
annual rote . •
Come to Cal ifornia Federal now. There's no easier, safer
way to make money lhan wilh a Moneymaker.
~-
California Federal SaVings
a nd loonAssocialion •Assets over $1.8 Billion ·
Nation's Lcagest Federal
CALL CAllFORNIA FEDERAL FOR LOW-COST
POOL OR PROPERlY IMPROVEMENT LOANS. PHONE 62=21.
"
Costa Mesa Office: 2700 Harbor Blvd.· 546-2300 Anaheim Office: 600 N. Euclid Ave.· 776.2222
Orange Office: 4050 Me1ropoli1an Dr.· 639·3033
'
l
Benjamin Ftanklin
Fomou1Amwkon
wh°'a porlroit opp&Ors
onthaSJOO blll.
•
•
•
•
~ 'B ·-: k · . -·-.. 00. -W.0 -r:.m
I s
&men
Bea Anderson, Editor
Tu•11l•Y· Ne..-mblr J, lt71 ~111 U
Ann Landers
Arm.y Not Private
DEAR ANN LAt\DE RS: I am praying
that you \l'ill fix up my letter so it ...,;n be
Iii to print. I just don't kl"lo~· ho1v to put it
in better la ng uage, and there is nobody I
can talk to. I am a boy 19 who is gett ing
ready to go into the service. l\1y problem
is thal I cannot urinate in a public place
if there is anyone around. ·
This may not sound serious but it is.
All the 1vay throug h srhoo1 I managed by
1vaiting Ull I was alone in the boys' room.
ln the Army there is no such thing as
being alone.
Sometimes 'vaiting for privacy can be
uncomfortable and painful. \Vhat can I
do? Is there a cure for my problem?
Please help me. You are my only hope -
19 ANO HOLDI NG
DEAR 19: Yours is a psychological pro-
blem rooted In early chil dhood. Your
mother probably made you feel ashamed
of any activity related to the genitals ·and
now you are tragicall y inhibited. When
you take your physical-tell the doctor
about the problem. Vou may be in·
• eligible. If you are inducted, see the
Arn1y psychiatrist prtlmplly. 1'm belling
you will conq uer the hang·up before you
leave lhe service.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: In a recent
column you printed assorted facts to im-
ply that 1vomen are superior to men. Like ·
most women, you present only those facts
which support your position and con
venienUy ignore the rest.
You state that v.·omen live longer tha n
mt;n . True. But are you aware that the
American male ranks 37th •compared
"'ith the m&\es of other naLions? This
...,·ould tend to suggest that the re are
socio·cultural factors fnvolVed in OUs
comparison.
''ou also state that more men die from
heart disease than women. True. But
more v.·omen die from cerebral strokes.
And we know that even though more men
die from Jubg cancet4 this disease has in-
creased among WOmcn nearly 50 percent
in I.he last 20 years.
Dr. Estelle Rainey states that more
men commit suicide tha R women. True.
But she neglects to mention th at more
\vomen ATTEJ\1PT suicide. And ac-
cording to the present National Jiealth
Suniey's report. "Selected Symptoms of
Psychologica l Distress." women had
sign ificantly higher rates than men for
every symptom.
The syn1ptoms investigated were in·
somnia, nightmares. perspiring hands,
headaches. dizziness. heart palpitations
and feelings or impending nervous
breakdown. I am sure you won't print
this letter but J feel better for having
V.•ritten it. -f\.fONROE, LA.
DEAR ~10NROE: Thanks fo r the fact&.
And now may I suggest tlie reaion so
many women suffer . from insomnia,
nightmares. perfplring hands, headaches.
dininess, heart palpitation s ud feelings
or impendiltf. n e r v 0 u s brt•kdown is
r.rEN. And l m not kidd ing.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I want t.o con·
gratulate the person who left that "drop
dead'' note under the windshield wiper or
the \\·oman who did a lousy job or parking
and spoiled it for two other dri\'crs. 'I've
been t~mpted lo write such a note
myself.
I drive a s1nall car and can get into
almost any space, if the people who
park ahead and behind are not slobs.
Sometimes 1 get pinned in by .rotten
drivers, and this makes me furious. It not
only happens on the street'but'Jn Parking
lots.
l\1ore than once I've had to climb
through the sun roof becc.use the h o.g
next lo me didn't lea ve enough 11pace to
open the door. How come you didn't side
with the note writer instead of taking a
sate. non~mmlttal position? No guts~
CALIFORNIA DRIVER
DEAR C. D.: '-le ... no Ji:Uts'! You
must be a new reader. We lcome aboor4,.
\Vhen romantic glances tum to worm
embraces Is it love or chemistry? Send
(or the booklet "Love or Sex and How to
Tell the Difference," by Ann Landers.
Enclose a long, stamped, self-addressed
envelope and 35 cents in C(lln with your
request in care of the DAILY PILQT.
, ..
(
Shelve Ca . .. .. ree .r
-· -" --j
Everything from Mrs. Winslow
Lincoln Jr's wood en spoon
to Mrs. J ohn ston Ballard's
ba by grand will be ;old
No v. 18 at Le Bon March e.
Museum Offers
'Best' Coltection
Friends of the Newport Harbor Art ~luseu1n are \vCeding
out wardrobes and cl earing out closets gathering Lhe best of every-
thing for the annual Le Bon J\1arche sale scheduled for Thursday,
Nov. 18, at 7 p.m. at the ne\v muse um headquarters.
The Mmes. Johnston Ballard and Win slo\v Lincoln Jr. arc
~ochairmen of the event. An array of art. antiques. clothing, furs,
Jewelry, sporting goods and exotic junk will be offered for sale.
Items may be donated by contacting the chairmen or the
1nus~um. 675-3866. for piCkup service.
By ALLISON DEEllR
CH Ht.-0 1lly Pl'-1 S!llt
A library is a building full of book s.
And people with questlens.
Judyth Smith and Loretta Farley work
at finding the answers.
Both are .. ~ewcomers to the Mesa Verde
Public LIOfary, Judy as reference
librarian a'f)d Loretta as children 's
librarian . Both are wives of young
_professional men. Both love work ing with
people.
Judy Smith didn't plan a career as a
librarian. Born in California and reared
in La Habra, she was graduated from
· California State College ~t Fullerton, with
a degree in F1ench.
She studied in Paris between her junior
and senior years at lhe Alliance
Francais. ?i.1eeting her sister in Berlin,
who was studying there through ;a Cal
State Fullerton international studies
program. she toured Switzer l and ,
Germatly, Denmark, Sweden , and
Finland.
VJSJ.TS EUROPE
Her famil y spent 1957 in Finland when
her father was awari:ied a Fulbright
scholarship.
\Vith her Paris roo1nmate she visited
Brussels. Amsterdam . Italy an d
Pamplona for the r'unning of the bulls.
,1-ter knowledge of French. Spanish and
German made the trip even more
enjoyable. she said.
Back fro1n France she completed her
degree and did a stint as an airline
stewardess. stationed in Chicago and she
met her future hu sband .
librarian Loretta
Farley (left J
looks up reptile
data for Ph ilip
Adams, 4 , Mesa
Ve rde's pet Alfred,
J udyth Smit h,
MV li brarian .
\Vorking as children's llbr1rian at the
\Vashington, O.C. Public Library sparked
her interest In the field. Library work at.
CSJo' her freshman year had not. She
decided to study library science at UCLA,
earning the masters degree.
"I was sure," she explained." that l did . 1 n;want to teach. ~ly parents, my ,
·sis ers, their husbands are all teachers."
· M 'TS PEOPLE
" feel corrifortable in library work. r
like working with the public and with·
books. You get to meet lots ot people and
it keeps you current,'' she said.
Her previous jobs weren't exactly dull.
She worked for Disneyland and then for
Hunt-\Vesson Foods as a tomato checker
on the graveyard shirt. She quit when she
got "belt sickness" from the motion of
the conveyor belt.
Her hu sband: Eric, a recent graduate
of a Washington. D.C. law school, is
waiting for the results of his California
·bar ex ams.
"Librarians can 't know everything. \Ve
learn from the questions people ask. If
we don't· know something, we learn to
find the answers,'' Judy said . "There are
questions a library just isn't designed to
answer. We must know where to refer
que stions for answers."
"f\·1any people don't realize the many
specialized areas offered in li bral'}'
science.·· she added. "There are public
libraries. junior co lleges and universities,
and special libraries. law. for example.'1
STI LL LEARNS
She sto)>ped to find a book on precious
stones for a young man and referred aR
OCC studen t to the UCI library for
in!ormati-On on a chemical additive to
foods.
The blue-eyed blonde shares many
interests with her lawyer husband. "We
both enjoy skindiving. My husband
introduced me to div ing and now we dlve
at Laguna and Corona del ~far. where
\ve're now living. We snow ski and love lD
fly . Someday we'd love tc> go up in a
glider and maybe try parachuting."
Th.e couple al so enjoy a mat eur
photog raphy and would like to get int<>
the writiTfg field.
Loretta Farley is the wife of James
Farley, young assistant minister at the
St. Luke's PresbYter ian Church, Rolling
Hills. The couple li\'e in Torrance.
(See Bookworm Page 141
Library C~talogs
Lasting Friends
Orange Coast College Friends oi the Library have been
around fo r a \vhole year now and have proved that their friend·
ship with the library wil l be a lasting one.
Getti ng a ne\v organization off the ground has its prob-
lems, as the officers have found, but it has its challenges also, said
Larry Bennett o[ Costa Mesa. instructor of .F rench at OCC and
president.
There are no precedents to follow and nothing that has to
be done because it has been done every year in the past.
\Vith a wide open field in which to work, the Friends are
trying to emphasize the relationship of the community to the
library and to the college, Bennett said.
Under discussion by the program committee for the com·
ing year are book revie\vs, meet-the-author sessions, art exhibits,
and othei-events to "add to the cultural life of the community."
Members 'viii seek gifts, endowments and 1nemorials for
the library as well, and encourge residents of the district lo use
the facilities.
Ne\v officers of the group include the Mmes. Charles
Beecher, and Al .Pinkley, vice presidents; Sam McCulloch and
Jackson Harris, secretaries, and Stanley Allen, treasurer.
Chairmen are ?.1rs. Robert Moore. hospitality, an d Mrs.
11adden publicity. Miss ?t1ary Lou' Wilhelm, OCC librarian. also
serves on the executive board.
The Friends will begin their year's activities by hosting a
public open house at the library from 5 to 7 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 14.
Library staff members and Friends officers 'viii be on hand
to conduct guided tours ol the facilities, Bennett said.
' ' What is· there about the library that the Friends are ex·
cited about?
The fact t hat comm1unity residents ca n obtain library cards
and check out books is a major attraction of the OCC library, Mrs.
Beecher said, an unusual junior college librayy policy.
1\lso. there Is a copy machine that only takes a nickel,
niore than 600 magazine titles, an art gallery. traveling exhibits
and a host or books that may not be round on the shelves o( a
public library.
'l'here are audio and video carrels. a calculator, type\vrit·
ers to be used free of charge, a collection of paperbacks and an
assortment or cur rent popular books.
The tiUes: of the books t efleCt the curriculum of the college,
Bennett said, but t here are many books on timely topics such as
macrame, women. sex, food science, marine science and Eastern
philosophy.
1i1iss \Vilhelm pointed out that the books are on standard
topics bul are up-to-date versions or the topic!-Organic garden·
ing, instead of. flower arranging, backpacking instead of traveling .
ft.1embers o( the Friends most of all want every community
resident to become a friend of the library, if not a Friend, and
hope to foster the relationship by offerini opportunilles tor as-
sociation. ·
•
• j
J f DAILY PIOT
Horoscope:
Leo Paid Off
WEDNESDAY
NOVEMBER 10
By SYDNEY OMARR
For qulc.t action It is Aries.
For speculating and pon·
tlficating, choices are Taurus
and Sagittarius. For a run·
: • down on health, Virgo is your
person . F o r l ates t
neighbOrhood news, cal~ on
Gemini. ·For real e s t a t e
values,~ check \\'ith ~r.
For "'hat's happening in ·the
theater. dial Leo. For beauty
tips, Libra is right there ; for
Investment potfntial, Scorpio
;· can £ill the bill. For a psychic
demonstration, don't overlook
pm~.
ARIES (~farch 21·April 191:
Be di5crintlnating. You \\'ill
have freedom of c h o i ce .
Choose quality. Bypass ap-
parent easy way. Adhere to ~ basic principles. Attention now
z -to details is essential. Observe
t -rectify errors.
t TAURUS (April 20-~tay 20): t Good'"lunar aspect now coin· ~ ·cides-with Cfeative endeavors,
i romantic intem;ts, associatio n ! with children. Be ready for
changes, including t r a v e I •
C Open Jines of communication.
; Express true feelings.
! GE.~I (May 21-June 20):
~·Accent on home, end of mat-
.. ters, dealings with those witb
strong viewpoints. You may
find yourself slightly out of
sync. Key is to ride with tide.
Listen, observe and gather
knowledge. Don't press.
CANCER (June 21-July 22):
circumstances !um In your
favor. )'ou gain 'recotnition In
areas previously taken for
griO ted. Appeal w l d e n s ;
advertise and publicize. Tak•
initiative with original ap-
proach.
L!BRA (Sep!. 23-0c:\. 22):
Look behind scenes r o r
answers. Take initiative . in
asking questions. Don't be
satisfied with the superficial
\Vhat appears obvious may be
just the opposite. Leo in-
dividual now serves as fine ex-
ample.
SCORPIO (Oct. !J.Nov. 21):
Trust hunch. Lum b y
teoching -share knowledge.
Accent on fulfillment " de-
sires. friends play important
roles. Income from occupa-
tion is stressed. You are re-
v.'al'ded for doing what comes
naturally.
SAGITTARIUS tNov. 22-
Dcc. 21): ·Forces tend to be
scattered. Be versatile. but
keep ultimate goal in mind.
Ambitions shou1d be analyzed.
Be sare that what you want
actualty is \lithin reach. Get
rict of daydreams. Use im-
agination roastructivel.y .
CAPRICOR."' (l)ec. 22-Jan.
191: Good Lunar aspect now
coincides w i t h long-range
planning. travel. Catch up on
correspondence. Keep com-
munication lines clear. Give
attention lo one you recently I •
neglected . Nev.-s is favorable. I
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): wnat in·as mysterioU.'!I is ~·
no w arailable f 0 r in-r
vestigation. Accent on money
which represents investment
or savings. Ask quest.ions -
obtain ansv;ers. Get an ac-
counting. Take inventory. Rummaging for Sale Items
J
•
Luncheons, Boutiques
Events Calendared
Many organizations a r e
sponsoring luncheona a n d
fashion afmis next weekend,
and others are planning boull-
ques and parties.
~)Yee+ Ad e,lines
Shades ol Aulujnn wUl
theme the mother~aughter
fashion show and b u f l e t
luncheon plaMed by the
Harborlites C~pter of Sweet
Adelines, Inc., for Saturday,
Nov. 13.
Tickets for the 12:30 p.m.
event in College Park School,
Costa Mesa are available from
Mrs. Dan Partin or Mrs. Ken
Krum.
. Class Reuni9 n
1966 graduates of Santa Ana
Valley High School will gather
in the Saddleback Inn, Santa
Ana on Saturday, Nov. 13.
Mrs. David Galvin and Mrs.
John Irwin are spearheading
arrangements.
Holy Eucharist
From 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on
Saturday1 Nolf. 13, in Peek's
Colonial Terrace R o om ,
Westmln11ter Holr Eucharist
lnatltute 220 wll aponllOr a
Christmas bauu1r and Jun·
oheon. General chalrmen a.re
Mrs. Robert Newell and Mrs.
Austin Aker.
Nurse ry School
Westminster Nursery School
will •Ponsor a boullque from 9
a.m. to S p.m, Saturday, Nov.
13, in Westminster H I g h
School. Proceeds wlll be used
for upkeep of the nonprofit
parent participation school.
HB Juniors
Mlle Square Country Club
will be the setting on Satur-
day, Nov. 13, lor an autumn
diMer danct sponsored by the
Huntington Beach J u n l o r
Women's Club. A buffet dinner
will be served al 7:30 p.m. and
music for dancing, provided
by The.Gen ts, will bel:in af 9.
Tickets, at $11 per couple,
may be obtained from f.trs.
Richard McDonald .
Method ist Schoo l
A rummage and baked
goods sale will be sponsored
by the Methodist Schoo! for
Young Children from 9 a.m. ll>
4 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 13, in
the Lt1guna Beach Wom an's
Club. 1'he achoo! la a project
of the Laguna Beach United
Methodist Church.
MG Foundation
A luncheon and fashion show
In the Royal Coach Hotel,
Anaheim, on Saturday, Nov.
13, will bcnent the Myasthenia
Gravis F'oundation. Sponso red
by the Orange County Aux4
ilia ry, II wll l begin at 11:30
a.m. and wlll be themed
Days of \Vine and Roses.
Special guest will be Dennis
Allen frorn television's Laugh-
in show.
Cancer Society
Fountai n \"l'alley Woman's
Club members are playing 1 C'nrds for cancer in a new
:>cries of pa rt ies, aci:;,ording ta
ri.1rs. Edwin Booth, club presi•
dent.
Funds are given to the
American Cancer Soci e ty
through the Orange County
Branch.
Coastal Couples Say
Vows, Exchange Rings
STOUFFER-ROS S
Shott journeys, unusual deal
lngs with relatives -these
are spoUighted. P e r c e i v e
moods and needs. Realize
many around you pow are
supersensitive. Sense of humor
can be great aid. L
LEO (Jul y 23-Aug. 221: You
get paid for efforts. Income
increases, materially and in
, psychic sense. 1'1eans you gain
PISCES (Feb. 1 9-~Iarch 20l:
Spotlight on ma rr iage .
partnerships. relationships of
permanent nature. S t r e s s
diplomacy. family harmony.
Gift purch ase .... ·ou\d soothe
ruffled feelings. Turn on
charm -and mean it.
Collecting furniture, toys, books, clothing and bric-a-brac for their rummage
sale are Mrs. John Coyne tleft) and Mrs. Richard Jimenez along with other mem·
bers of Santa Ana-Newport Chapter of Delta Gamma. The sale \Viti open at 9
a.m. Saturday, Nov. 13. at 410 \V. Fourth St., Santa Ana. Proceeds will benefit
the Blind Chil dren's Center in Los Ang eles.
St. James Episcopal Church,
Newport Beach wu the set-
ting for the nuptial rites link-
ing Karen Rita Ross and
David Lloyd Stouffer, both of
Newport Beach.
The Rev, John Ashey
directed the vow exchange for
the daughter of Mrs. Bradley
K. Schwarz of Newport Beach
and the son of Mr. and Mrs.
George 0 . Stouffer of Wh ittier.
Mesa Unified School District,
the bride js a graduate -()f .
Newport Harbor High School,
earned her BA at UCI where
she · did graduate work. She
wa s named to CONSEHO, a
sen ior women's honor society.
Her husband is a graduate
of Sierra High School, Whit-
tier, rece ived an AA at l\.tenl o
College, a BA at UCI where he
earned a varsity letter in
water polo and now is a law·
student at Pepperdine
University. He also served in
the Arm y and com pleted a
tour of duty in Vietnam.
greater satisfaction. G o o d
chance now to add l o
•·possessions. Collect d e b t s •
Stand up for rights.
Ta tllld out mor• •llDlll vouri.elf alld
a11•okl'llY, OO"der SYd,..Y 0m1rr·• .50-~M tlOC>i<lf'I, ~ Tn/!~ """"' .-1troJo9y, S<!'nd birn..WI• •1'111 75 cim11
TO Om•rr 6«*.Wt,,,,. O.t.11 .. V PILOT,
S... l2«1, (;tand Cll!rllr1I S!•l!orl. New
Yant, H.V, 10017,
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221:
, Lunar cycle is such that • I
1.
l
: ~-.
"setting Harvest Tem po
A han·est o r run is planned by Golden Key. a sup·
port group or the Child Guidance Center of Orange
County, v.·hen members and guests gather in the
Pacific Sands Caban a Club Saturday, Nov. 13, for
a Golden Harvest Time Ball. Ready to trip the light
fantastic are ?iilrs Cy Peterson, president and her
husband.
Unlimited · Services
PERSONALIZED 'SHOPPING
Mad• to Order · Mac:ram e & Knitted
GIFT ITEMS
Complete & Unique Pa rty Planni ng
Call U.S. 645·2440
From Page 18
• • • Bookworms
Bridal attendants were the
~1isses· J an and Jody Schwarz.
whil e Richard Stouffer served
as best man. Ushers were
Lawrence Broering. David
Karlson, Peter Stys and John
Turpit.
A teacher in the Newport-
They will reside in Newport
Beach .
Born arxi reared in Santa
Ana. 1'1rs. Farley wa s
gradua~ from OCC and UCI
with a degree in Spanish. She
earned the masters degree in
library science fro.11 UCLA. A
semester at the Na tional
University of ~texico City
came between her junior and
senior yeii rs .
She worked for two years in
the main branc h of the San
f'rancisco Public L l b r a r y
v.·hile her husband w a s
completing semina ry stud ies.
There she bough t and provided
Spanish language books and
malerials for the library,
located in a chiefly Mexican·
American area.
Her career plans were
directed toward e m b a s s y
work. but changed when she
met he r future husband . She
still hopes to teac h langua ges
on the junior college level.
Why become a librarian?
QUESTIONS VARY
''Within a day you've stuck
your finger into a hundred
subjects," she explained .
"Everyday I feel gro"l\'th
within myself. People aslc
diffe rent questions each day."
As children's librarian she
fields quite a few unusual
questions. She. also hel ps the
smallfry find his way in the
library by visiting a r e a
schools, explaining how to use
the library materials and th e
book catalog. This is followed
up by a library tour , arranged
by individual teache rs.
For the prereaders and
preschoolers she holds a story
hour two InC1rnings a ¥.'eek. It
has become so popular that
Mrs. Farley has a waiting list.
Her husband helps her in
her work, especially f o r
holidays, costumed as a ghost
for Halloween or a Santa
Claus for C hr istmas ,
be coming the d ay 's
storyteller.
ALWAYS CHANGING
"I feel library work gives
me the opportunity to be
gro wing and changing all the
•
D~ P~t J)bJJl~
<0--~~.,.~~
To avoid disappotntment, prospective
brides are reminded to have their wedding
stories with black and white tlossy ~bot~
graphs to the DAILY PILOT Womens D"'
apartment one week before the wedding.
Pictures received after that Ume will not
be used.
For engagement announcements it is
imperative that the story, also accompanied
by a black and white glossy picture, be sub-
mitted six weeks or more before the wedding
date. If deadline is not met, only a story will
be used.
To help fW requirements on both wed-
ding and engagement stories, forms are
available in all of the DAILY PILOT office s.
Further questions \Viii be a ns\vered by
\Vomen's Section staff members at 642-4 32 1.
OLD FASHIONED CAKE
DONUTS " " L
DONUT
SPECIAL
NOV. 8 thru 12th
ONLY
135 E. 17th · St.-Costa Mesa
JUST EAST OF NEWPORT BLVD.
time. I am so aware of the
learning process around me. I
ne\·er firxi myseU bored. The
kids are all avid readers. In
San Francisco I had a hard
time making the library a
\\'arm place where people felt
welcome. Here we h a v e
wailing lists," she said,
Loretta also helps her young
husband in his work with the
church's young people. They
take the junior high and high
school students on grunion
hunts and college groups
sailing and to the mountains.
The couple also coordinates
campirig trips.
Spare time activities include
sewing her oy"n clothes,
bicyc le trips and tennis games
with her husband. Farley
played varsity basketball for
OCC. and has a marvelous
sense of life. she said.
J udy and Loretta add a little
more warmth to the yellow
and orange 1'1esa Verde
Library, putting the people
and the books together.
Storks
Deliver
KIRCHNER-KING
Colleen Ann King a n d
Douglas Lee Kirchner ex·
changed vows before the Rev.
Don Kribbs in St. Joachim's
Catholic Church, Costa Mesa.
Their parents are l\.1r. and
1 Mrs. Jack King of Costa f..1esa
and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Kirchner o( Newport ~each .
MRS. KIRCHNE R
Offense.
Realized
NE\V YORK (UP!)
Drunkenness is no longer a
legal offense in Minnesota
under a new slate law that
recognizes the principle that
alcoholism is a disease.
Mrs. Michael Stevenson wa s
matron of honor. a n d
bridesmaids were f..ti ss Joa nne
Rowell a n d l\.tiss Debor;::.h
Klinger.
l\.fichael Kirchner was the
best man.
The newlyweds are both
graduates of Newport Harbor
Hig h School and he at tended
Colorado State University,
They will reside in Sedona.
Ariz.
MAHONEY-
SCHNEIDERJOHN
Mrs. Carol Schneiderjohn
and John P. l\.1ahoney ex·
changed wedding pledges in
the Costa Mesa home of the
Rev. Vince Goe lluso, with
Mrs, Christy Selby and Bob
Lee as honor attendants.
The new Mrs. Mahoney at·
tended Ohio Schools and her
husband attended UCLA. They
will reside in Costa fi.1esa,
Unde r the new Jaw. persons
may not be jailed for being
CHICAGO (UPI ) -Babies drun k. However, they are still
born suddenly at home usually subject to arrest for any
have normal and easy birth, crimes committ ed wh ile under
Dr. J. p. Greenhill says in his _lh_•_m_· _n_ue_nce_-:::o=f :-al_coho __ i. __ 1 new book, "The hliracle of
Life."
MRS. STOUFFER
GRIESSER-GILLMAN
to.tarried al Lak e TahOC' were
Roberta Eileen Gillma n and
Robert Holl Gricsscr. son of
11r. and r.trs. Hobert A.
Griesser Jr. of Ne \Y por t
Beach.
The bride is the daughte r of
1.fr. and r.1 rs. F. Harvey
Gillman of San Diego. She at-
tended La Jolla High School
arid San Diego St<.tc College.
Her husband attende d
Newport Harbor High School.
Orange Coast College and the
Universit y of Sou ther n
California.
Drug Use
Cu t Dow n
CH!CAGO (UPll
Dramatic declinrs in the
wr iting of a nip h e t a m i n e
prescriptions have b c e n
reported in various section s of
the country \1•hcre physician s
have started programs lo curb
use or the stimulant drug, at--
cording lo the American
~1edica1 Assoc iat ion News.
Dr. Greenhill, senior at-
tending obstetrician a n d
gynecologist at Michael Reese
Hospital and Medical Center.
says usually the baby will
start crying immediately, a
good sign.
It means the infant is
breathing on his OYl!l. At that
stage ii is okay to leave the
baby and 1nother connected by
un1bilical cord until the doctor
arrives.
Cheese Of The 117eek
MAMMOTH CHEDDAR
jewels by joseph
searc:hes for jewels
Unique & Unusual
Clothing
for Children
• ""¢>'"
....... 4oll1k•f•ll,. ...... .
~kll<ln.•'• ............ _ .... .
Hunllqtoo Harbour
C..WM't ~·.,., 1....iry flt'"'~ (711) ""!"" .... <•ti! " u• ... a 11~ ...,.... cnr -...,...,., ••,..-ti .. , ..... 1111 .. r1ry Town & Co1111try ., .. ,, .,.. c1re11111 1v•IN'*' ., • Ornie
''"' rnertlll vehle. W• wlll Ill ,... .... le ... ~ ,_.. (714) 5$l4U5
,_ 11111 H\'IM ,....,.191 111.ir '"' ll~~~~~~~~~~~I .. ~,
~Mr. J1Hllfl If Mr. ••111 •• ,..
•South Coa1t 'l•t•
Bti•lol 11th• $111 Oitto fwy.
C olla Mt•• S40·9066
KIDS LOVE
UNCLE LEN
SATURDAYS IN
THE DAILY PILOT
REGULAR
$1 59
20'
OFF : 1~~?
Ki ds Like to Ask Andy
I
J
_.. '. .. j_•. "• • O. .._ ~ .._ I f •I • • 1 l'"V ' • • t• I 'I 1.. t .. . . .. ... .... -·
DICK TRACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
H~SlJGARPIE!
N011CE AN'ill{IN(;
PIFFERENT
AEIOUf ME?
MUTI AND JEFF
POP, HOW SOON
CAN I GET
MY DRIVER'S
LICENSE?
fHANKSf01liE IMPERN MIRACLE
OF COSMEflCS, I NO LONG-ER HAVE
MY FReCKLES1 RENl7ERIN6' ME,
fHEREf1'<1 0005 MORE.ALLURING'
ANl7 DESIRA0LE!
NOT UNTIL
YOU ARE
-EIGHTEEN,
SON-
?
I
•
By Cliester Gould
Wl-IAT A BL.OOOV STORV
TMEY COULD TEU. IF
THEY COUlO TALK!
DOWN1 !!01/!
By Tom K. Ryan
By Al Smith
lL~~~~~::__J
" " ..
!i
FIGMENTS By Dale Hale
riJAi.E
i.....-==--=~~--=::::;~~~~.......:J· iW<
PLAIN JANE
ACROSS
1 Ki11d of
so!! drink
5 Ont of l'i~
senses
10 \'/01 ks on
the stage
14 F ligh!less
birds
15 BOOy d Jewis!1
11teraltrre
lb l'leathtrman's
•od
17 Termin~t1on of
an impoitanl
period·
4 words
l'I Vi llage of
lre!and
20 MalJj!ISted
pe1sc111
21 Sea ea1_1le
22 Si1'9le ~rt1cle
23 Mass ive
25 Note 111 th~
mllsica1 stale:
Var.
20 Orop witho11l
restraint
JD Town 1n
Lt banon
31 Cait!u:!i(fJ p.Yl
34 Blotkht~
Jb Epol(y, for one
38 Insect egg
39 Resistance of
a material to
being torn
j1p,11t: l word~
4Z BrtwPfy 1lfoci!1C\
~l Newsp~fl"l5,
TV , et~.
' ' l • ,,
' "
I 0
' i, .. • " 21 ll " ,.
"
•2 ,, ••
" "
" ..
67
44 Joh11 ·----:
US mdustiial·
ist
45 Perc eived
47 Small drml:
4q ·-Rabbit
50--cent
51 P1.11is h In a
certain way
5J Bro~en seed
coats
55 Gi1l's narie
56 !n this
2 WOldS
bl Enraptured
b2 Serving to
adOl"ll
b4 R om~n
h1QhWJY
b5 Wall recess
Arthrniarl
lege11d
b1··-Quee n
of Scot~
b8 C!ose by:
D1al.
b9 Com~ssed
lumps
OOWN
l Give the
imll'ess1on
of being
2 All: Prefix
3 Clothes
~ Al I Sllttilied
!unt: Z words
5 Re l~tivt
posil1ou
6 I011it: Abbr.
' ' "' " ,,
'
" •
"
" " ..
"
"
"
' ' "
"
' ~ ~ I r o u ~ ' " • ' . '" " '" .. ' . ' S I ( S " " " " 1119171
7 '111'/ II 35 Track ~el
ullderground official
group: Z wor~s 37 One of a fligl1I
8 Mr. Truman of steps
q Compa1ative 40 Ylent first
conjuction as a 911ide
10 Series or 41 Beak or
movements
11 Closet ite~ ·
2 ~ords
12 R1J}ped
13 Attack
v"'bally
Slang
18 Untruth
24 Bequiled
25 Ate
21> ---a fiddl e:
2 words
27 Actrt~s ---
Mara
28 Stationery
item: 2 w01ds
2't Spanisli
article
JI '1.'oOO
32 Unit of
~olume . Var.
33 The l"!!'~~ens
• ' &,.; ,,
16
"
"
' "
" . ',
"
" ..
•• " -
"
" " .
"
a bird
4b Soldier on
9lJard
48 Arnold--:
Noted golfer
51 Canary's
relativt
52 Past1y Item
53 Edge
5~ Pro--··: In
prO!>Oftion
55 --fide". -~
Sincere
57 Was fami liar
with
58 Heat ing vessel
S'J Stated
bO Ransom Ell
auto ma~er
b3 Exclamation
of triumph
II 12 "
" ll
-
"
" " "' .. ,
"
PEANUTS
'
'
JUDGE PARKER
By Frank Baginski
COME OUT, ANO 6RING 1HAT
ll!ANITT WIT~ ~00 ! ro ~Oil
HEAR ME? ~E 01f !!
r M TERRIBLY '501:.KV"!
::: !:.MOULD HAVE LET
'10tJ "LL 60 TO DINNE!t
Ai.ID TMEIJ MET YOU
-rn1»1C MOTMIWG
OF IT, ER.IC! we·ve
PE(lPEP TO HAVE
A L"TE S~PPEK'
Ar Tl-I E THE"TEK'! MlU Tl-IE lllE"TElf
MISS PEACH
I UNDE~STAND 'rnE CLASS
J
PERKINS
IS INVITE(;> Ta
DINNE~ AT
A~TMUR'S
TON16Mf?
" .
~ JUST CANC ELLE~
MISS PEACM .
ME 5AY5 THEltE'S
NOTJ.llNG TO EAT
IN HI$ MOUSE.
. " "' ...
•
Ll'L ABNER
T111iday, No~rmbtr 9, 1971 _.
SALLY BANANAS
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
W<RE'ibUA
<;ooC> BOY Ar
CHRISTOPHER
'TODD'S Bll'Tll·
DAY PARTY?
. • ' ' "' ~. _l,.
;~ ~
"·~ .
ANIMAL CRACKERS
L<J\.'E.1 11/1.Ue <100 EIJi;f?.
~El.I lflE. l.lUMBER CJ\'
,l\lllt.1/<.l'S Oil TtlE:
E/JDA1l€1E~D 'SPECIES
usr" Ir's ffl611®11119 \
...... " '
" " ..
•
Lli;s, BOT,' A HO!'EFU. 61'*1
I'S ~ ~ill6 llVMfER.
OF PEOP~E DET'f.RMll.IED
'TO ~SERVE l\l!U>l.IFE
fOl1. 1llEIR ~ANOCHIW~.
By Charles M. Schulz
I
.1-1 W \l!.ANllET! I PREFER TO
l{Olf HAO IT THfNKOF Ii A5
MADE INTO A ONE Of'. THf NEW
5PlllT: ~T!! VOll81.f-KNITS_
--·---~~.
! ' '. .. .,
By Harold Le Doux
--II.:
l1"ill~~I ~?
DAILY PILOT 15
By Al Cajip
By Charles Barsotti
By Gus Arriola
By Ferd Johnson
l PINNED'TflETJ>,I!.
ON Ml'~· TODD·
By Roger Bollen
{
-
.J.::::: jl .. _,,__
"You'rt perfect, don't diet-you'rit perfect, don't dk:t-
yo u're perfect •• :•
BUT AR'TlilJlt, t
TMOUGMT VOUI<
Mori.iEir e~r
BS DoL~ARS WOl'TM
O~ GROCEIZIES
Y\!!STEIZPA.,. ?
'"
'" ...
"'
'" ..
'" ... ... ... ...
-
By Mel
YES, SME DID,
BUT WMENSHE
GOT IT ALL MOME, SHE'
TU"NeD ON ™f IZADIO
At-JD MEAIZ D Tl<AI
EVERVIH'ING 5i<e llOUGHT
WAS R ~ALL!D.
By John Miles
. "
" .
' " .. . ... ,. .. . ••
~ ... \ ~~
• I
DENNIS THE MENACE
•
-•
lll'I Ttlubot• THE RAMS' DAVE ELMENDORF DOES HIS THING MONDAY. HE ROUGHED BALTIMORE'S PUNTER DAVID LEE TWICE TO SET UP TO.
Sports In llrief
Surgery for USC Back;
CdM's Laver Still No. 1
LOS ANGELES -Fullback Sam Cun-
ningham. who leads the Southern
California Trojans in nuhing, faced
surgery today on tom knee ligaments
suffered in last Saturday's Washington
Sla.te game.
·A USC spokesman said ?.tonday that
doct ors had determined the operation
1'as needed, and Cunningham. a 6-foot-3,
212-pound junior from Santa Barbara will
glay no more football this season. The
T1ojans ha \' e games remaining against
Washington and UCLA.
··The big fullback, USC's second-leading
ground gaine r as a sophomore, has
tveraged 4.7 yards a carry this season in
(l~ing 742 yards in 159 carries. ...
':DALLAS -Corona del ?.J:ir's Rod
Laver remains in the lead of !he World
Championship te.nnis standings released
~fonday. with only the No. 8 position in
doubt for the $100,000 playoffs begining at
Houston Nov. 18.
The championship match will take
Place in Dallas Friday ~O\'. 26 for the
~.000 first prize.
Laver leads the current standings.
(ollowed in order by Tom Okker. Kt.n
a ose wall, Cliff Drysdale , Arthur Ashe,
,John Newcombe. ~!arty Riessen. and B ·
Lut:r:. Only Andres Gimeno of Spain has
~ance to catch Lutz for the !\o. 8 posi·
Cion. . ,,.
•OMAHA , Neb. -Boston protect its
lciid in the Atlantic Division of t e Na·
ti.oflal Basketball Association n the
above.overage-shooting of Dave Cowens
attd a late point flurr y defeating Cin-fY1nali. 120-109. in the only league game
?,V>Oday night.
" ,,. .,
:°?\EY.' YORK -Each member rrl the
Siittsburgh Pirates "'ill receive SIS.164.58 tor the team's 1971 \\"orld Series victory
<
-· Heart Expert
ays Hartford
..... ule to Play
BlR~11NGHAr>.1 , England !AP ! -Asa
fartford, one of _Britain'i brightest young
F.cer stars whose career appeared to
~ v.·hen two specialists said he had a
e in his heart . went back into training
ay.
A third specialisl _gave the 21 .year.o{lld
est Bromwich Albion star a go-ahead to
ain Monday night.
over Baltimore, but the shares are $52
Jess than each Oriole collected for ""in-
ning the 1970 v.'o rld championship.
The reason fo r the slight dec rease from
a year ago is 1hat Pirate players voted
more than $64,000 in partiol share! and
cash awards to others invol\'ed in helping
them beat Baltimore in a thrilling se\'en-
k_ame series.
Each losing Oriole will get $13,906.46.
' ...
C0Llif\.1BUS. Ohio Heavyweight
champion Joe frazie r said Monday he
"'ould like to fight Muhammad Ali next
year. but legal problems will probably
hold up the rematch until 1973 or 1974 .
Frazier appeared on the Avco Broad-
casting Corporation's Phil Donahue Show
before more than 200 convicts in Ohio
Penitentiary. The show is carried in 44
cities across the nation. ...
PH0Ef\'1X -University of Arkansas
football coach frank Broyles indicated
~1onday his team ...,-ould be in terested a
bid to the first annual fiesta Bol'i·l game
Dec. 27.
for the post·scason game
·nner of the Vt'estern Athletic
erence own. Arizona State. S..O in
pla y. is regarded as the almost
certain club. ...
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -Alabama run·
•ing back Jotmn}' !\.lusso will miss the
Miami game Satu rday because of in·
juries.
Alabama coach Paul '·Bear " Bryo nl
said ~looday night that Mus~o hurt his
shoulder and bad ly sprained his big toe
durini the game i..ga1nsr Looisiana State
last Saturday. ,,.
BOLOG NA, llaly -Seventh-seeded
Pilarty Riessen of Evanston. Ill., breezed
past Tom Leonard of Arc.adla, 6-3, 6-3
Monday night in the lirst round of the
Itali an Open tennis tournament.
Charles Pasarell of Santurce. P.R., also
had an easy tin1e, defeating Dick Creal y
of Australia 6-3. S-4, but Rov Barth of
San Diego bowed to Adriano "Panatta of
Italy 6-3 , 6-2. ,,.
SAN FRANCISCO -For the second
time this year, Sl.ilnford's middle
linebacker Jeff Siemon has gathered
Pacific.a Conference defensive player of
the "'eek honors.
The 225·pound ~nior from Bakersrield
v.·as credited Yo'ith_c.ight tackles and fi\'e
assists Saturday as the Indians held the
UCLA Bruins "'ithout a 1ouchdo...,·n until
late in the fourth quarter and nailed down
the Rose Bowl berth, 20-9.
. -. -4 •
MITCHELL DROPS PASS, ALEXANDER DEFENDS.
No Press i11·e 011 Cowboy
.
-He No Savvy English
DALLAS ~AP) - Toni Fritsch was the
target of St. Louis tauDts "'hen he trolled
on the field Sunday Y•ith 1:53 left lo play.
"You"re gonna choke.'' yelled Cardinal
linebacker Larry Stallings at the-Dallas
Cowboy kicking specialist, "'ho is a
soccer hero in \'ienna, Austria.
Fritsch lined up his 26-'yard field goal
while Cowboy linebacker Da\·e Edwards
yelled back at Stallings "Sa\·e you r
breath. He can"t understand a word of
Engli sh ."'
Fritsch, playing in his first regular
season game, kicked the field goal true -
his third of the game -to give the
Cowboys a 16-13 NatiOnal Football
League \•ictory.
Resti ng in his apartment ~lond:iy \\"ith
his wife, Sonya, Fritsc h said he doesn't
feel pressure.
"I pla)•cd soccer before over 100.000
fans in all the countries of the \\·orld for
seven ye ars as a pro." Fritsch said. "All
shouts go in one ear and out the nther ··
Fritsch said lhe only diffcrenct
betv.·een kicking in American football
and playing soccer is "You have more
chances to kick a goal in soccer. In fool·
ball, you sometimes win or lose on just
one chance. There are no second times."
A notional hero on the Rapid-Wien side
in Vienna. Fritsch was on the verge of
lea\'ing the Cowboys two weeks ago until
he was activated off the taxi squad when
~like Clark missed three field goals
again st Chicago.
The eo .... ·bo)"S discovered Fritsch on a
lour of Europe during the summer. He
kicked three fiel d goals-including a 51-
yarder -In preseason in aS many tries.
Coach Tom Landry placed him on the
taxi squad for seasoning.
Ex -Badger Star Dies
~!IL\\"Alil\EE -John r.icssmer. the
l ni\·ersity of \Visconsin "s firs! nine·lettcr
\\'\nner in major sports and a membe r of
lhl' statc·s Athletic Hall of fame. died at
Columbia Hospital late r.tonday after a
brief illness . He was 87.
..
•
Stroke' o·f Luck
--Curtis' Cast--
Saves-Baltimore
BALTIMORE (AP} -Mike euhis will
have two metal pins removed from a
mending broken thumb today, and he
hopeis the operation will give hlm more
foothall mobility.
But the bulky cast worn by Baltimore'•
middle linebacker may have restricted
his play just enough Monday night to pro-
duce a 24-17 victory for the Colts over the
Los Angeles Rams.
With his right thumb In a 'rigid position
and unable to grasp properly, Curti1 used
his arm as sort of a, club to jar the b~ll
loose from Larry Smith of the Rams 1n
the fourth quarter.
Fellow lineba cker Tfd H e n d r i c k s
snared the ball in fUIJ stride and romped
31 yards into the end tone for a
touchdown which snapped a H~IO tie with
9:03 to play.
Scores by Baltimore's Tom Matte and
Matt Maslowski of the Rams were added
in the closing two minutes, but it was the
fumble popped free by Curtis which turn-
ed the tide in the nationally televised
game.
"Without the cast, I probably would
heYe tried to grab him," Curtis gaid.
''But with tht cast, all I tried to do was
clOthesline him arou11d the chest. I hap.
pened to get in front of him and knock
the ball out of his left hand.''
Hendricks first saw the ball about
seven feet in the 1ir, and grabbed it
about a foot off the ground. He wasn't
sure whether it hit the turf or not.
"It was a freak thing, and I just hap.
pened to be there ," Hendricks said. "My
only thought wos to make sure I reeov-
ered the ball and didn't fumble."
Just 82 seconds before Hendricks .scor-
ed, a 3Z.yard field goal by Baltimore's
Michigan No. 1,
Growls Coach;
Press at Fault
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP ) -Bo
Schembechler, University of Michigan
football CGach, has said many times he
doesn"t believe in polls until a season has
ended.
Yet ht seems to be peeved that his
th ird-ranked Wolverines are not rated
No. I .
"\Ve will never be No. I in lhe nation
because of the press,'' he insisted
angrily Monday at his weekly pres s
luncheon.
He teed off on the press soon after he
arrived, criticizing one Detroit writer for
a story saying Michig1n Stale still has a
chance to go to the Rose Bowl.
MSU upset ninth-ranked Ohio State (17·
10) Saturday .and received quiie a bit of
newspaper space, more so than ~ichigan,
which clobbered a weak Iowa team 83·7.
"Why don't you put two men on MSU
and nobody on Michigan," Schem~hler
growled at the reporter, referring to
press box coverage.
Bo is usually cordial with reporters, but
he appa rently belie\'es his Wolverines,
with a 9--0 record and impressive offen-
sive and defensive statistics, de!erve
more good publicity.
They lead the Big Ten with a 6-0 record
and can clinch a Rose Bowl berth with a
victory Saturday at Purdue.
The next week , they close the reaular
season with a game against arch-rival
Ohio State, which js 5--1 in the conference
and can still win or tie for the tiUe. MSU
is 4-2 and in third.
Of the two wire·service polls, one is of
sports writers and broadcasters and the
other of coaches. ~ Asked what he thought o the coaches'
poll voting opinions Schem chler said,
"They're worse than the writers."
He said the only way to decide who
deserves to be No. I is "on the field " but
added that, because of expansion to an
ll·game schedule, a playoff system would
no longer be practical.
Although there is .11· month layoff before
the major bowl games. Schcmbechler in·
dicated it would not be good to have
playoffs then .
AtMl:lll .. ''"' 1. NM>. 4111 Ml 1 • ..0 II. Tenntu" 6-1 m
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)6 Sttnklnil (1-n )I Hit ) Olllt Sll!t (6-U I
Jim O'Brien had tied it lG-10, overcom-
ing a Los Angeles lead that had existed
since just before halfUme.
Matte. Baltimore's 3 2. ye a r . o 1 d
workhorse who aalned 97 yard!, had
given the Colts 1 1·3 le1d wllh the fir:st of
his two touchdowns with 5:25 to go in the
second quarter.
But the Rams, who opened the scoring
with David R1y 's 2G-yard field 1011,
struck back quickly. The y drove 60 yards
.in seven plays to go in front 10-7 on ' 12·
yard TD pass from Roman Gabriel to Lts
Josephson .
"I was happy to su Matte have a great
game,'' Baltimore coach Don McCafferty
said.
'"Everybody knocks him for bein1 too
old and being a 'garbage can runner.'
"He may be the oldest running bac.k in
the league, but he's a money ball
player."
The Baltimore game plan didn't call for
Matte to carry the ball as much as he
did, but he was given added responsibility
after Nonn Bulaich -already ruMing 1
fever -reinjured his ailing left foot.
"We couldn't spring anything with
Bulaich," quarterback Earl Morrall said,
"so we stuck Ydth the plays Matte was
working well."
The victory pulled Baltimore to within
a half game of first place Miami in the
American Conference East, while the
Rams fell 1 lfz games off the pace from
front-running San Francisco in the NI·
tional Conference West. ·
"The loss just means we're eoing to
have to work harder to catch San Fr•D·
cisco," said coach Tommy Prothro of Iii!
Rams. "We only have one more game
with them, and that 's a point in their
favor.''
Baltimore has two games remaining in
the final six weeks against Miami, the
first on the road on Nov. 21.
Prothro noted the Rams had difficul ty
maneuvering in the second half because
of poor field position, and contended they
were hurt in the fir st half by "those two
penalties." .
Baltimore 's lone scoring drive in the
opening half was twice kept alive when
rookie safety Dave Elmendorf of the
Rams ran into Baltimore pun ter David
Lee, giving the Colts a first down each
time.
"He gave me a good shot the first
time," Lte said, "and on the second one,
he just ran into me ."
Elmendorf, animated aiid disgusted,
claimed otherwise .
The rookie from Texas A&M claimed
he tipped the ball on the first punt, and
said he .. may have brushed him a littl e
bit'' on the second kick.
"I think the second one was more of an
acting job by Let," Elmendorf said.
''After that, all I knew was that I didn't
want to rush any more.'' .. ~
J).1JI ·~ lJ·l1·1 .,.
' •
Ctl/J
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LA -M1sfaw1ki :Joi 6-H lrom Gtbrotl flhv klckl A -J7.IU
KC Prese11ts
The Ultimate
In Gimmicks
• KANSAS CITY (AP) -Ew ing Kauff.
man, owner of the Kansa! City Royals
unveiled plans Monday for the baseball
club's $2 million scoreboard and 1750,000
waler spectacular bein,1 erected In lls
new stadium in the Harry S Truman
sports complex.
Kauffman revealed the plans at • mid·
mornina ne"'s conference.
The scoreboard will extend 12 storie.!
higtt and wil~ be read y April 11 when the
Royals launch the 1972 uason In their
, z:i~w stedium. ll will contain 16,320 ligttt
bulbs.
When a player hits a home run, a facial
likeness of the hitter flashes on the
scoreboard in a size 40 feet wide ind iO
feet high,
The scoreboard. located in center field,
will flash stali1tlcs much faster and in
more detail than in the p8Sl. II also will
present the usual game Information . •
It will al!o be able to illum inate
animated cartoons 11nd figures in·
slanlaneously.
Spectators will bt 1b!t: lo participate in
scorebo1rd acllon. As !he chetrlng
mounts in volun1e, the liihls rise In
height Tl's posslble for the volume to
make the lighL, reach the top of the
board. Or. Paul Davison, one of the top heart
perts in Britain, promised to give a
atement soon on his r'asons for
areelng with lhe other doctors.
For Hartford. Or. Davison 's verdict
as 1 reprieve from a lilt sentence on
sidelines. Leeds United agretd la&t
k to pay 177.000 pounds -1442.lOO -r Hartford hut backtd dawn -wtie·n a
M~Kay Squashes R11mors He~11 Quit The water spectacular will be located
almo1t entlrtly to the right. of !he
scoreboard. It w\11 1tretch SU feet from
tip to tip. A 11).foot hlll:h waterfall wlll
descend from lhe upper cascade pool
whic h forms a b1ck11round for two water
fountain pools 4(1 feet Wide and
lcrm in11tin{I: in front with five10-ftet hl1la
hor~eRhat. f11ll~. utlne medl cal checkup turned up the
l&in-the-heart diagnosis.
That trade stlll Is off, but Ha rtford" Is a
w mem~r or lht': ScG,tland nati onal
Uad to play against wor ld teams and he
U) hes a spot with. West Bromwich In
English Ltaguc.
'/If he <;.an train," said mttna.ger Don
e. "he must soon be In with a chance
1t pl•Ylna onCe more." '
"f '
LOS ANGELES (AP i -John i\lcl\ay.
head fo0tball coach at the University of
southern California ..... bo be<-omes athletic
director on Jan. I. said ~londay he "ll
defi nitely continue coach ing.
Quashing rumors that he would quit
coaching to ~er\•e solely as alhlelic direc·
tor. f\lcKay revealed he has 14 more
seasons as head roach under .11 contract
signed last Dcce.mber.
"A lot of people A~sume that when t
take !he p(isilion of alhltllc director thi&l
I:d_.gil.'LJ.IP coachin1 .. " Hki 1l'X1y. "But
that's not the agreement I have with the
unh·crsity .. ,
The gr.i.y-haired. qtifck-v.ftted ~lcKay
has coached Trojan football teams to an
87-33-5 record since he took the job in
1900. His teams "'On national cham·
pionships in 1962 and 1967 and the record
includes three Hose Bo"·I victories .
i\lcKay has been serving .n.~ co·alhletic
dire<:tor with Jess Jilli "'ho retires .Jan. 1.
Leonard \\'Ines. liSC's execuli\"e direc-
tor of un!Yersity reh~tions. ,;aid McKay"s
rontrte wasn't anpounced prv:wialy
because none of his other contracts had
been publlciitd.
"\\'e hope this ends spec.ulalion.'' Wines
said.
So dots i\icKay.
··A lot of our compelitlors have b:>en
sa~ 1ng I m not going to coach." McKay
said of the rumor that has reached
players USC Is tr ying to recruit. '"They
say I \\"On"l be around tO coach them.
"! plan In handle both jobs, I still loo;ic
cmiching , and ·l"m going to keep coaching
., long as they wanLme.."
~TcKay won't be the first major colltge
football coach to take the du111 role .
Others who ha\•e done it 1ua:essfully in·
elude P.11ul "BeAr" Bryint of Alabamt1 ,
Darrell Royal of Texas and Bob DeVaney
or Nebraska.
Wines sa id ~fcKay will be helped by
Bircil Lubberden as assistant director of
alhletlcs for business affa irs and Corona
del Mar's Ray George 1ts asslslaht
athletic director. tubbcrdt.n now Is
business manager and George Is 1
former 1sal1tant coach undl!r McKay. ,
The rounta ln pools Ari! lht base for •
displ ay of d1nclng w11tcrs cornblnln&
tound and C<llorcd lights.
One jel of wi&ter resJ)Ond• lo the •ptc-
lators cheers. ris tng AS the cheers grow
more Intense . Tht jtl c11n rl!lch a hel1ht
of seven storlts. Another Jet \viii orate
to • hclaht of 70 feet with each home run
hit by the Royals.
I
• " .L ...... .L I J ----....,.-
r
Area-P-larer.sJ_llstrumentnl .
Tuesda1, November 9, 19/l DAILY PILOT Jf
--! -Pirates Draw Balanced Rival
-... JI, ..
In Heri~ge Grid Success Wfhey Go A ~--ainst_Bear C~hs
---1
By PHIL ROSS
ot •~• 0111r l"llot 11111
Frank Custar from ,.._ Santa Rosa JC wlll probably be Orange prior to.....the W.tsL.l'alley game, had hit ill
Coast College's first round opponent In the 49 of 89 passes for 772 yards and eight touch.
state junior college playoffs Saturday, Nov. downs. With only a small handful of
tiny parochial high schools (32
10_.l>e exacu in s_o u th e.r.n.
California partleipating, six.
man footba ppears to be a
quite excl ive club, indeed.
Un.lversity, Schickedanz hall
one Orange Coast area player •
on his varsity roster and three
fr.om this area on the junior
varsity.
Westminster and center Rick
Claxton from Jluntlngton.
~rs ol lhe Patriots' att.ack .~~ • .,"..,
have bt!en quarterback Mike
fl· -that is if both schools don't stumble _...,..Javorite.recelve.r is Jame.s Brown •. HU--i f--it!.,,.,..~-ba11ly In Ifie fem8Jning two weeKs.--~---caught 18 for 274 yards and six TDs.
Santa Rosa is currently deadlocked with Santa Rosa 'a defense has alao been allo•·
The ra of the
gridiron sport is so unco mon
that only one sc ;·
populous Orange Cou
Anaheim's Heritage Hig -
numbers itself in the relative-
ly minute legions of the past-
time.
tin fact. the only graduate
·of six-man. prep football who
received much later fame is
fi.1innesota Vikings' running
back Dave Osborn. a star in
the six-man rendition at a
small high school Jn South
DakotaJ.
Newport Beach's Steve
Burlingham is the backup
varsity offensive center while
varsity manager Jim
Stephenson hails from Hu""
tington Beach.
On the JVs, there are ends
Art Dyck from Newport and
Hadsall, last year's most
valuable Patriot; ta i Iba ck
Kevin Spencer, fastest player
on the team; and inside end·
Mark Brown, who caught five
touchdown passes f r o m
Hadsall in a win o v er •
Brentwood. ~ • r
J-lerilage is ;.n infinitesimal
small !225 enrollment)
coeducational school which is
run under the auspices of
Anaheim 's Central Baptist
Church, a denomination which
has a llranch congregation in "
Huntington Beach.
While the school i!self is ju~t
a small speck on the massive
map which encompasses the
Cif' Southern Section, the
Heritage Patriots h a v e
nevertheless been able to post
continually successful records
in six-man football. , ... .,., The Patriots are members ...
of the rugged Academ y " .,.. ·' League <considered t h e . ...;,
toughest ol the Ii" loops NEWPORT BEACH RESIDENTS ART DYCK (LEFT) AND STEVE BURLINGHAM WITH QB MIKE HADSALL.
which play the abbreviated,
15b:-man sport) and their cur-
rent record is one to be proud
of.
Under the tutelage o f
l!iecond-year head coach Norm
Schickedanz, , Heritage h a s
rolled to a 5·2 overall record.
And a CIF playoff berth looms
as a possibility if the Patriots
can get by toug h host Whittier
Christian this Friday night.
Having completed their
home sched ule last week by
absorbing a 52-6 past i n g
against defending loop cham·
pion Brethren. the Patriots
play all their home games at
Chapman College in Orange.
Playing at Chapman does
bring about one problem,
though. according to
Schickedanz. "We practice on
our own field at school," he
says. "But we have to rent the
field and locKer rooms at
Chapman and that averages
about $135 a wee k in rental
fees."
Other than the rental fee at
Chapman, not much more has
bothered Schickedanz and his
Patriots thus far in 1971 -the
t"·o losses notwithstanding.
As the graduate of South
Carolina's Bob Jones Universi-
ty puts it, "one of the main
problems or six-man football
has, been with the offense
v.·here most teams ha v e
generally gone with tight
formations. And there was
15ome difficulty in defensing it
properly.
"So," says Schickedani., "we
moved to the spread offense
and found it's a little more dif-
ficult to defend against and
creates rTiore one-on-one situa-
tions.
"Also. six-man foot b a 11
being the game it is, it gives
you more freedom than the 11-
man game.''
Schickedanz attributes his
squad 's high scoring thus far
primarily to the weak offenses
and defenses of the opposition
and also to the fact that the
•1eritage offense is a
formidable one.
"The spread offense has
probably been cne the big keys
to all of our success." he says.
"Also, in six-man, it's a lot
easier to have all your boys
play each position and you
have a much great~r ability to
swllch players back and forth
at a minimFl Ires of efficiency.
"\\1e have six boys, for in·
stance ron a 13-player rosferl.
V.'h-0 we use for running but
v.1ho can also play end for
blocking." adds Schickedanz.
Assisted by Dean Grissom. a
1!166 Heritage alumnus ..and ..
also a grad of Bob Jones
Six-11ia1i Football
No Dull Moments
In This Sport
Wh ile drawing generally
smaller crowds and played by
littler schools. six-man football
can boast of all the excitement
provided by its 11-man cousin
and maybe even more .
an alter ego of the inside end
as a blocker and receiver. But
Schickedanz says. "in what we
call the blue formation. the
tv..·o ends play lo the right of
the center. thus making the
center an eligible receiver.''
The three backfield positions
are quarterback. tailback and
•
i
NORM SCHICKEDANZ
Played on a field 80 yards
long and 50 yards wide (as
compared lo llle conventional
100 X 50 dimensions of the flankerback . -----------
field in the JI-man version),
six-man football is t he
trademark of 32 high schools
in five leagues of the Clf'
Southern Section.
Only in his second year as a
head coach after graduating
from South Carolina's Bob
Jones University. N ci r m
Schickedanz of Anaheim's
Heritage High (Orange Coun-
ty's lone six-man football
As the field gcnerzJ and play
caller, the quarterback has to
run the offense much like his
11-man counterpart. However,
the six-man signal caller is
also responsible for accurate
lateral passes to trailing backs
on running plays and pin-
pointing passes downfield in
aerial forn1ations .
"Tai ID o ck," Schickedanz
representative ) knows enough notes. "is usually the horse
CM Man
Tabs 23
Costa /\1esa's Bill Flanagan
is the top prize winner in the
seventh week of the DAILY
PfLOT Pigskin Pickeroo con-
test and he set a Pickeroo
of the not-too-common version and runs as much as he can record en route lo his victory.
of the sport to discuss it. with the bait and occasionally Of the 25 gridiron games in
Says Schickedanz. ' 'our blocks on passing plays. when the contest, one ended up in a
sport is quite a bit faster than the quarterback drops hack.
II I tb II d th · tie wh ile Flanagan receipted -man oo a an ere s "Defensively, you ha ve a
usually more scoring because center. !wo ends. 3 linebacker for just a single loss in the re-
of the ""'.ide open style of play. and lwo safeties.'' maining 24 lilts.
"For instance, in nu r In one other departure from Flanagan's only miss was
version. you can pick up a conventiona l American foot-tabbing Air Force o v er
fumble (which is always a live ball. it's easy to pour on the
OCC Rips
Polo Foe
Orange Coast C o 11 e g e
Pirates returned to semifinals
action th~s afternoon at the
Southland water polo in·
vitational at Santa Ana Col-
lege following their H!-4 rom p
over Los Angeles Harbor MOn·
day.
Coach J a ck Fullerton's
South Coast Conference jug-
gernaut led from the outset
over Harbor.
And if Fullerton's crew was
successful this a f t e r n o o n
(against Rio Hondo I they'll be
in the finals lonighl at 7 -
possibly against the host Dons.
Orange Coast split its two
conference matches with San-
ta Ana, winning 8·7, ·then
losi ng 6-4.
Scoring for the Pirates in
the LA Harbor romp was Jed
by Bill McAneney y,·ith three
goals while Mike Bartosh.
Toni \Varnecke and Bob
Wurster had two each.
Single goals were accounted
for by Rich Hyland, Dan Kent
and Neal Richey.
It was the overall play of
Bartosh and Dick Jones,
however, that gleaned Ful·
lerton's pra ise.
U.S. vs Cubans
Volleyball Film ball ) and advance i t, points early in the contest Oregon.
sotnething you can't norm111ly without any ramifications or His amazing total of 23 bests Volleyball enthusiast::; can
do in JI-man high school balLn moaning from the enemy. the old Pickeroo record of 21 view the .. recenl U.S.-Cuba
"Also, there has to be a Because after one side has which y,·as.11ccomplished tw ice volle~·ba!I encounters on film
backv>'ards lateral before the rolled up a 45-point margin by earlier in the season. tonight and Thursday night at
ball crosses the line of scrim-the start of the scccnd half. A top prize winner from a Orange Coast College.
mage. so you don't see any then the game is called and previous week in the current The flicks wilt be run ton ight
handoffs.'' logged into the books as a Picken'° -Cathy Supple of at 7:30 and 9 while Thursday's
Each of the six offensive complete result. Huntington Beach _ was run-agenda is for 6 and 7:30.
positions in six-man grid play In its first seven '71 games. nerup behind Flanagan in the Admission to the Orange
ha ve the ir own varied and im· Hcrila~e has pili!d up 264 seventh week tally with 22 cor-C.oast gym foyer is SO cents
porta11t responsibilities. points to the oppcsition's 211. rect guesses while being just with monies geared to the
"The quickest player on the Six-man football is the name 10 off the proper Tie Breaker Orange Coast Co 11 e g e
line has to be the offensive of the game. total o{ 91%. volley ball fund .
center,'' Schickedanz says.,.-----------------------------------
"He has several key blocking
assignments but his main
responsibility is to get the ball
to the quarterhack'.
"Then you have the inside
end whose main job is btock-
i"nc: and pass protection."
However. when the Patriots
gn to the air. il's their inside
end rsenior f\fark Brown) whn
is the prime target.
What you can expect from a
little American car priced $228 *
less than Toyota Corolla 1600.
The outside end is primarily
Disgraceful Decision
Won't Be Reversed
You can expect an engine proven by 50 million miles in Ford-built European cars.
A body that's welded solid and painted six times. Rack·and·pinion steering like
a spc>rts car. Exceptionally good handling. In short, a car every bit as good and maybe
better than the little foreign cars. .
As a matter of fact, we built Pinto to sell for about the same price as these·little
foreign cars. •
And if we're """priced below them !$228. less than that Corolla, $335' less
than VW 113, $300' less than Datsun 510), it's not because we've taken anything away from oufcar. ~1ADRID (AP) -The presi·
dent or the E\lropean Boxing
Union is opPoSed to a move to
rtlurn the World Boxing Coun·
cil's Jighty,·e.ight title to ~1ando
Ramos.
The referee's decision In the
recent. Ramos-Pedro Ctirrasco
fight should be unchallenged.
president Vicente Gil said
~fOnday. He noted : ;,The WBC
cannol tran:ifer the title to
Ramos."
Gil's statement was a rcat·
!Ion 10 a recommendation by
I
WBC President Rambn G.
Valazquez that the title be
returned to the Los Angeles
native.
Ramos was clearly ahead of
Spain's Carrasco in their title
bout F"ridiiy and sent the
Spaniard into the canva~ four
limes "11en referee Samuel
Udobote disqualified t h e
American for an alleged low
blow.
Valatquez s.aid the decision
or the Nigerian referee "WlilS a
disgrace and an injustice:•
-
It's because their price$ have gone up.
See your Ford Dealer r<!H. PINTO ..
1912 P111to 2·0(1(Jr Sed•n •l'lown w1tl'I ootlon1t wt111e •!C1tw11t tnts ("2> '"d 1ec111t 1rouo ($72).
•A t0"'0'"'°" ol m1nul1th.rr1rs' 'uaetttd r1t111pric11.11nd1opl1c1bl1 !mpon t1.1rcl11r111, f~r 1111 !llJt
2-door modtll . Oe1!1r 0111Mr1t•on c1'11r1ts (JI 1ny), t l1!1 t nd loc11 t1•11 1nd d11t1n1t1on ct11r111 (Sl05 for l'lnto) 1r1 1-.1r1.
Wesl Valley and De Anza for the Camino ing just .I86 yards ...... r game. Norte lead. All have 4-1 records. ",.. But Santa Rosa has beaten both West Val-Thus OCC figures to have a fotm.idable f0t
ley and De Ania and meets winless College In its opener.
CRAIG
SHEFF
* * * ,.
The rest"of the lar1e Kbool palrlafl m
just about 1el.
.Citrus figures lo represent the Ml11kll
Confuence against El Camino fMelropolltu)
ft'blle it'll probably be Loi .Angeles City Col·
lege o.f the Sout hern C1llfornla circuit a11IaR
~estern State represtnbiJ,h·e Santa Barbara.
l..ACC and Sa nta Barb3ca are the only an•
beaten teams in their conferences wllk twe
games to go.
&!nta Barbara v.·bipped a pretty good Welt
LA team last Saturday, %4-0.
of the hfarin this t'riday night while West
Valley and De Anza are tangling.
In the other playoff Ult lt:.11 be tbe state'•
No. 1 rated tea m (Sa n Ma teo) aga inst ell.her
San Joaquin Delta or Fresno. The first round playoff will be played at
Santa Rosa. San Mateo knoc ked off lt1 only threat-
Cbabot -by a 17·14 margin last weekend
while Delta and Fresno battled to a 7.7 tie. Santa· Rosa's Bear Cubs defeated West Val·
ley, 1~18, Saturday night lo gain a share of
lhe lead. \Vest Valley was unbeaten in
circuit play going into that one while Santa
Rosa had lost to Contra Costa. 2.8-24.
Both Delt a and Fresno ha ve 3..0-1 marks
~-Ith just one circuit tilt left. But Della meets
fltodesto 12·2) while Fresno must face d~
fending state champion College of Sequolu
(3-IJ.
Coach Marv Mays' Bear Cubs ha,•e just
the Marin game remaining on their schedule.
Thus far in "71 Santa Rosa's only loss was
to Contra Costa. \Vins have been over Shasta
(35-18), Cosumnes River (39-12), Napa (41-
12). Ohlone (32-0), Solano (43-12), De Anza
( 12--0 l and West Valley.
* * * OCC's victory over Cerritos Saturday night
tied the school record fo r most consecutive
games y,•ithout a Joss -12. And it appear•
it w111 be broken this Saturday against Mt.
San Antonio. The Bear Cubs ha\-·e been averaging about
370 yards a game and it"s equally balanced
bety,·ttn passing and rushing. Orange Coast y,·on its final two games of
the '62 campaign. nabbed them all 110) iJI
that banner season of '6.1 and then dropped
Lhe "64 opener lo LA Harbor.
Running back Larry Steele is their leading
rusher. He had 513 yards in 78 carries going
into the \Vest Valley liff. And he's also the
conference's leading scorer ~'ilh 60 points. * * * Another Santa Rosa running back -Joe
Spender -has 379 yards in 74 ca rries and is
the second leading scorer in the circuit with
48.
Add Santa Ro1a-OCC game: The two teamJ~
have met twice ln the pasr. Oran1e Coa1t
fell to the Bear Cubs in 1950 13%·13) but sot
revenge the following season (IS.7), Bear Cub quarterback Tom Kirkpatrick,
Amat, Swordsmen Lions No. I
In County
Grid Poll Stay Atop Field
The CIF AAAA prep football
rankings remain unchanged
through the first seven places
following the 1971 season's
closest run lo form this past
weekend .
Only ninth ranked Damien
fell to the upset over the
Weekend, dropping a 21-13
decision lo Nolre Dame.
Pa sadena and Weste rn mov-
ed up a notch in the ral ings
and Redlands (5-l·ll moved
into the 10th spot.
The Angelus League one-two
punch of Bishop Amat and the
Swordsmen of St . Paul con·
tinues as the one-two punch of
the CIF SoulhCrn Section.
They'll settle who's best
Nov. 18 at Veterans Stadium
in Long Beach in the Angelus
League championship decider.
\Vestminster held on to its
No. 4 ranking after its 6-0 wi n
over Newport Harbor but No.
5 North Torrance closed last
week 's JO.point gap to four
points.
The crucial or the week for
ranked elevens is the Pacific
League biggie Friday night al
Arcadia where the No. 7
Apaches will host No. 8
Pasadena.
Both teams have 6-1 record~
but Pasadena has a one-game
advantage over Arcadia in the
Pacific circuit standings.
La Quinta continues in se-
cond place behind undefeated
Bellnower in the AAA ratings.
And Sonora's Raiders are
fourth in AA circles behind
Temple City's spotless Rams. AAAA
,,,. T•f m """" I, 8!"'°" Am•I i•-GI llS '· SI. P•ul (-ll 11J l. El llulth(I U-G-11 IU
4. W••1m!n1l1r ll-11 in
l. Norlll Tor•t'1C• 11 .. I Ht
' 8Uffl• {7.(1! •S 7. -"•tMlit (f ·IJ 61 •· Pa .. den• !~IJ 5' Weslminster High 's Llon1 •. Wf'•Tern C6·ll lf> .,
10. 11r<111no• B -1-11 11 continue as llle No. 1 prep foo(.. Orllero: C:tn1ennl1I (J.!1 11, C"\.l:•nla v1111v is..n. Nolro 1>1m1 11.11 J eacn. •ball learn in Orange County, Mlln Otl 4J.!1 l, KtPllel Cl·l ), ,
ll1>Hmt1<1 c~n. 1>am1111 c1-n J ••<"· according to the official poH LBM Wit.on ().,.1), i.tuenrme CS.1l.
a1.1r f4·1·1J, S•ni• Monie• (S.ll 1 e1t11. by the DAILY PILOT.
'· 8,1111_,, p~~A 110 The Lions' rating will ~
l. L• ou1n1• <7.(ll 144 challenged f'~riday by riv l, w ... 1 Covl,.. CS.1·11 IJJ '· uo1aoo r•-n 1 • 101 Anaheim at the farmer's fi eld.
S. Pion••• 16·11 tt ' •· cr~•QI 1141 87 Sunset Leaguer u n n e r u p 7. Edv.-wood IS·l·H S6 . a. K1nnr<1v ct·!l 45 Western remains second fo)i.
t. F11lllrl"" (S·O.'! ~l I · h p· , 0 10. HArt '6-1i ·• owing t e 1oneers 19-14 win
O!ti•"" s1. ll1rn1rd 1s.n 1. 1'ftou••nct 0,er Anahe.Lm o.~, !S·l l ~. lomPOC U-11 1'h. S•n-• 111;0 1s.n s. Newburv P1rx c1-11. Loi " Corona del Mar's Sea King• .AltM !J·7l • .lvllll<ln cs.n 4 11c11. llo!I·
'"' Hl111 cs.n. s .... 111 H111, is-11 J •~<"· moved back into the select cl~ Sunnv Hllh U-G-ll Bonita (4.,.1) t•tl'I, I ft t• 2"9 · ~ C:1tlfi110 11-t·ll 11~. • K11e111 cs-1.1), c e a er pos 1ng a v-victor H1w1nor"" 11·41. B•v••lt Hlll1 u-1-u. over Magnolia . · 111~1n1 rs.1-lf 1 '''"· ,; .1oA The Sea Kings. mired in A
1. ltmp1t c11v 11.a) • u' 1· t• f 1· I " 1 M1r1iu t• n.a1 u1 1ve-way re or 1rst pace in
J. ~' JOhn eouo t•·l) 1 1~ the Irvi ne Leaoue are the oil-
4. Sane,. 1M-11 1u I •. • '· cn111tr 01k 1•11 91 Y representative from thf: •· .1onr.1ooe v111tv Cl-11 •J circuit in the top 10. -1.'l 1. P1lo Vtr<lt 16·'1 U ,,
1. Ltnno~ n-11 •1 A key test this week iii· ,:· ~=:~·~~~,~~111, 16_11 !~ volving ranked elevens is thi Oint r•: 11ov11 O•k fJ·ll u, w11nu1 Kennedy-Sunnv Hills Freewa
11.J) '· C:oron1 IS.1·1) t. Sou tn Le t I ·F ·d B ' p1,~c1en1 4•·1·1l J. wor•m•n u-n. ague USS e rJ ay at uen Northvltw (4·'·11 • tt<h, C:1ntwtll IS·n Park. ' s, Stltllln 4J.J) J. MU'll~V u-1·11 l. The Freeway tossup ls u~
2·1 Se thack
For H.an uers " LONG BEACf-1.-The Coast
Rengers soccer team of the
Orange Coast area suffered
double defeats at Heartwell
Park here Sunday.
The major division entry in
the Pacific League collected a
goal by Johnny Haynes in tbe
first minute or play but then
went on to lose. 2-1.
And reserves bowed, I--0.
Haynes headed in a corner
ki ck to put his mates on top.
'
only game where a ranked
team is not favored over ill
adversary th is week.
Only four undefeated teams
remain in Orange Coun~,>v
ORANGE COUNTY TOP If • Pus. Tea m Polnlt
1. Westminster (6-1)
2. Western (6-IJ
3. La Quinta 17-0) 33
4. Kennedy (6·11 18
5. Corona del Mar (S.2) ~
6. Katella (5-1·11 t't
7. Fullerton (~2) f8
8. ~1ater Oei 15-2) 12
9. Rancho Alamitos (5-2)
10. Newport Harbor ( 4-3 J
"
•
LangBelKl1-S1cr:111tento$1llnchldlng~
PSA knows a capital way to
get to Sacramento. It slarts
at ~ong Beach Airport. Easy
to get lnlo and out~· '
Plenty of parking. ~
"
And the crowds haven't '
found It yet. Your travel '
agent knows the way. r
7:10 1m (E~C•PI Sun.);10:ooem: I
1:00 pm, 4:45 pm (Di lly); 7:00 pm , '
(Frld•J and 9und1y}. ,.
"
:
. f
j f OAILY PILOT T11esct.v, Nowmbtr ,, 1971
.Pr.e.p __ Of f ensiye
Players of Week
JOHN ANDREWS
Corona del h1ar
JEFF CARTER
Edison
FLIP DARNELL
'Costa rt1esa
SCOIT GAYNER
Estancia
• .
1-' • ' •••
•
PiusX
Strength:·
En1otion
... . .......... _ ~
OO~Y -Coach Warren ~ Simmons., in his first year at 1 •
Plua X High School, has I ~faShioned a rmpectable -rOot:-f__,_,
boll team despite tho 1... I thao gaudy J.s record. .,.,,
The Warriors are slat~to
meet Mater Dei High ThUtj;. , ~.
day night at Santa Ana Bowl r--"\
in an Angelus League en-• · ·
counter.
The last t ime Simmons'
underrattd crew Jn v ad e d
Orange County it Je(t with a
10-0 upset over Servlte.
Simmorui, who ,Played center
uoder Don Coryell at San
Diego State, says much of his
team 's strength Jies in the
emolional aspect.
"We'll have to be rabid to
slay with Mater Del ft we're
not -weU we're 1mall and a
bit slow.
"But If we can overoome the
mental factor we might be OK
against Mater Dei. , .
"Physically we can't stay
with anyone except maybe St. ~
Anthony. Maler Dei is a lot j '\, . .;c ' ,..._
more physical than us. ,. -.
"We'll just have to be extra f
ornery Thursday," says the 29-,
yearo(lld Warrior boss. • l' ..
His team operates out of the -
'· . . '
•
•
-.,_ • .,_, .. _,._....,u I and pro I-formations and ;._.v.a...,.
leading the offerui:ive attack is
Ready for Mounting senior quarterback J o h n
Hopkins.
•
The chief ruMer in camp is Cyril Peterson Oeft} of Huntington Beach and Ken \Vedul of Seal Beach show off
tailback Tim Rose:. a 5-8, lliG· their recent sailfish catch . P eterson's is a 112·pounder while \Vedul's checked in
·---
P~l~t.. _pig_~~i~
PICKEROO
Co-Sponsored by
~uth foast?Im
And 11le
DAILY PILOT
BE A PROPHET FOR PROFIT $10 SOUTH COAST PLAZA
Merchandise Certificate
For Each Winner
5 Winners Every Week
of Contest
BONUS· PRIZE
Each Week's First Place Winner
GETS TWO FREE PASSES
to the Pasadena Bowl
from the
,DAILY PILOT
pound senior who has averag-at 130 pounds. They connected off Acapulco, Mexico.
ed nearly 100 yards per game. -~~==~~=~~:~:~~~~~==--~~~~~~~~~~~~ill B• • pigskin prophet. Play th• Pilot Pickeroo, g•m• for At fullback is Ou an e W••kly prizes. W inners each w••k receiv• • $I 0 9ift
Beckman. who is used more certificate good •s money •t any South Co1st Pl11•
like a blocking guard in Sim-Deep Sea Fi'shing. Report store or business. Each week's top winner will be in·
")nons' offensive setup. WHY pay full vit•d, <11lon9 with• guest, to be honored •t th• annual
, .Simmons says he has nine South Coast Plaza Foo·tball Players of the Year Ban·
players that must go both •• ~N ... ".,,~,·:.'~,~ .•• -, !n~o~.1en1 2~ cod, 1 li119 cod. price to call L.A.. quet.
d h h "" "" "" LONG laACH (Plw"91nl L1ndln1) -\\'ays an t at as been a OANA WHARF _ Jt •nv1er11 u o 16 ,,,...1era; '6G rock cod. (P1cl!lc 41! .-' definite disadvantage in the c111co t11u . 1u 11onao. • h1Ht1u1, Jl Sl>Dl"!H1~1n11 -n 1nv11r11 2 h111w 1, • -m, Watch tor this player's form each week in the DAILY roe:~ cod. c111ui t11n. n 11on1to. 'Cf1# coc1. 302 PILOT S rl S 1· c· I th t th' k '// late goings. po s ec ion. ire e e ••m you 1n w1 f>AltAOlll! COVE -l5 1nt1lt1S1 512 rock cod. • • h · · • th /' I 25 ; ; • As for ~1ater Dei. Si mmons rDtk cod. 6 co..-cod. 11 n111tw1. N•w,.011.T !Art'• L11111r1111 -79 win 1n eec pa1r1n9 1n e ist o 91m•s ano seno 1n
says: "Mater Oei is the same SAN PEoRo IHorm•i Lindln•I -I 1"'1''" ·~9 bonllO. • Telepha11e A111w1ri1t9 lurHu the player's form entry blink or• reason1bl• facsimile.
109lers; UO rock eocl. OXNA•O -107 l l"9ltr1; 11 1lbla1re, Th h h D / y Pl LOT ' I h type of ptoblem as in the past OCl!AHSIOE -15 •ntlln.1 12 Ynd 1,:w5 .w cocr, 31 11n1 eoe1, 1• caw coct. 835· 7.777 en w•tc t e A L sports pe9es or ••c
h U n . 130 rod cCICI, 4 caw cOd. k' /' t 11' • l ~·;•~c~ep;t~t~ey~'~re~p~as~s~in~g~m~o~re~-~~·~·~'~'~"~0,~0~,~·~•e•~<•~-~·~·~~~,~~·~·~~""'~'~"~"~~~"~·~~=·~~"~"~'~""~"'~· ~~~~~~~~~~~11 ·wee s 15 o 1ve winners. But we do a little passing of • ~ coc1.-n roe11 coct. ' Mo11•0 1AY cv1"''' L1...i1,..1 -56 •EOONOO -37 11'9ltftl 2 W11!tt Ml ll\lflrll 26 N lmoro,. J:1 line cod, 364
our own, SO who knows?" .,.,.., 37 bonito, .a45 rDt-c.od, ' c-r oclc cod. RULES,.
LES BECHER
Fountain Valley
J\!fKE J\tOORl\IAN
LagU.Da Beach
JOE JONES
l\Usslon Vltjo
BILL KENNEY
San Clemente
•
JOHN VOGT
Huntington Beach
J lM ~IOISE
l\'e~·port Harbor --.-..
CHUCK WINKLES
Wtst:mlutf:r
Don.ke y Cage Tilt 'Slated
Edison High will Jlold it.s
rtrst-ever donkey basketball
game Nov. %2 at the school's
boY• gymnasium.
Starting time for the contest
ls 7:~.m.
Pitted in battle aboard the
donkeys will be (a c u I t 'I
members from Edison and
GJ1 ltr a nd Dwye r
' •
rntermediate Schools ag.11lnst
Edison seniors.
Tickets are $1 In advance
Hnd $1.25 at the door the night
of the game for children under
12 years ol age and $1.25 and
fl.50 for adults.
AdvMce sale ef ducats is
currentl y Uk.Ing place at all
tll"{!choo!•.
PRECISION
WHEEL ALIGNMENT
$850Most U.S. Cars
.... "'"'-~· ..... ~:?· ..
-"'"" ·~ ... I lh.
% ... now
through
N_ov.13
Greatest Sale Ever
on General Tires
for Import Cars
4-PLY NYLON CORD WHITEWALL
DURA-JET" fits 9 out of 10 import cars.
20% OfF FED. EX. TAX
SIZE REGUl...AA PRICE SALE PRICE (per lin1!
.!1,605-12
1.oos.12 s.eos.1 :1
5,llOS-1l
7.~S.1l
s.~14 5.llOs..14
.!l.~1S
1.00$-1 5'.
•.~lS ,...,..
S,4,00
S25.00 s:n.so
$:1'8.SO
""'' "'-"' ., .. ., ,,..,
$31,00 "',. S25.00
$19 20 sro.oo
$18 &O
121..20
S28.•0 12?.00 123.;oQ ,,,_ ..
S24.llO
127.liO "'·"'
Sl.~
Sl.3<1
SL" 11.S!>
11.81
S1.5'4
11.71
11.74
Sl.11 "-" SLW
~!f!°!i!!.!~ .. ~=-m: ~ VW SPECIAL!
buy , 111 ,. regulM" 1ow *inO price. ~ . General
... -••• 4-f'l.YPOLYESTEACOAD SAFETY JET" •$lillOOfll "~DIJIWlltN•HIEAO llU88EA ONLY -• OISTIHCTIY'C 3.fllNQ ....,,.EWAU.
General JATO SUPER 100 ~..:: KRAFTREADS I: GOLF
....,_........, ....... _...,..
BALLS 2tor'2395 ...... 133 __ ..... _____ -1.50-1:1 ...... 7,5&-11
only ••• 7.00-12 , ...... ,,.. ..
'9utl 31-• m FoM.. Ea. Tu P9" "'9 C-C...C-1 ......... N ~MllllO Oii ........... ' ... ~ =:n .. ---.,.. .... tirn. F'All INSTALUTlON
• 4.f'l Y NY\.ON
CORO BOOV
•CONTOURED SHOULDERS
~ ~c:!..l'f.E.! ·-General TRACTION
SAFETY RIB •24gs:;sw ~u. .. ~ ·----.-.o.~llCICl't·..-~ .~ ... ,""""°_" _ _, __ _., _______ ...,. _________________ ..... .._ .......... 0-M.,_
GENERAL
TIRE
. -
DON SWEDLUND
COAST GENERAL TIRE
SIS W11t 19th, Coit• Md•
Phon• 540•5710 or 646•50ll
S10fn. Co-1-f .,.-M ~-~ .... -....... .,,.. "'-~ .... .
AVERY
GENERAL TIRE SERVICE
16941 Inch llvd., Huntington l••ch
• Phan• 147-5150
121:m:z:sia::s,.• GENERAL TIRE ... GOES A LONG WAY TO MAKE FlllENDS9 mm••••
•
I. littlmlt tile entry blt11k INIDw •r • ,...,.....,._ l~lm11t et " • lltf# ti!• (.,.Int,
Z. s...-II "' PILOT l"IOllCIN P'ICKE•OO (ONTIST, Sflllltf 0.,.rtrMM, l'.O ... x 1.ua, Cfft1 Mesa, CA. rau.
J. 0nlf -... lry ,... PtfWn Ntfl Wfflr.
t. E11trlet ll'IVll Ire dtllvtrlHI llty lftlll .,. 111 "nenl It DAILY l'ILOf
tfllcl llf J J.m. Th~rodlJ. _
I. S..,,111 U.11 "llll Ind DAILY .. ILOT '11\J .. Y" Ind 1t1.ir llll"ltlifte
lllftllltt Mt tli!llbi. It ... ltr,
I. TU! BltEAKElt BLANIC MUST IE l'ILLEC tN Dill INTllY ti VOID, ••••••••••••••••••••
• ENTRY. BLANK • • Circl• teo/M you think will win this ..... , 9•"'" • • Cho-ffflll Is HC011d o• l11r.dl • • Rams vs Detroit • • USC vs Washington • • • • Washington St. vs Oregon St • • • Cal vs Oregon -· • ii Tulane vs Notre Dame • • Michigan vs Purdue • • Arkansas vs SMU • • • • Pittsburgh vs Army • • Auburn vs Georgia • • Illinois vs Wisconsin • • Oklahoma St. vs Colorado • • CorneU vs Dartmouth • • • • Rorida St. vs Georgia Tech -• • Syracuse vs Navy • • Yale vs Princeton • • Cal St. !LBJ vs San Diego St. • • • • Golden West vs East LA • • Mt. SAC vs Orange Coast • • Saddleback College vs Riverside • • Anaheim vs Westminster • • Fountain Valley vs SA Valley • • • • Corona del Mar vs Costa Mesa • • Magnolia vs Edison • • San Clemente vs El Modena • • Los Amigos vs Laguna Beach • • • Tl• llllAll:lll -My lfflt "' rllt fitltl _...,.if .... tl.Klnll • ill tll U ... IMS lb,_ ...... II ............ ,.~ ................. ,. • • •
• NaN • • •
• Adchw •• • • • City Zlo • • • rho11e s.1: • • ............ , ...... .
Kids Love Uncle
Len, Saturday in
the DAILY PILOT
'
.... '· '". I ,. .. l' • -. . . . ..
' :-JV .~01
O ABC Movie of the Week
.,). Helen Hayes, Myrna
Loy, Sylvia Sidney,
Vince Edwards st.ar.
-. . . . -.... .. ' . . . .
-
. . •• • • . . .
Tu•id11. Nov1mbtr CJ. 1?71
WWII ·C'omlc Dra1na ~-... •
'-Stalag· 17' Staggers at SA
-By TO~-l'""US "ST.a.u.o 17,, would do no harm to mention, mC"ssenger.
01 t~• 0.11, 1"1111 11•·~---~v-~••IN bv Dot1a1., •~•n '"'* turns o~t to be the German The German guard, Shultz. It the decorative ingenuity ~~~\· c1.~':.,~.,t:'d,Jv1u9~~ agent. W!!iss is thoroug~y un· is given a firm, businesslike
Tuesday
Evening
-----N0Yf.MB£R 9--·---D.IDlll.l!lm..M!l'!. ~y~-· WMk: (C) (911) "DI Not rlliu,
Spllldlt or Mutilate" (comtdy) '71-
Htlen H1yes, Myrna Lor. Miidred
Nttwlck. S)'lvia Sidney, Ylntt Ed·
wards. Elderly ladles cre1t1 1 llctlan·
1l 1ifl !Gr I eornplJter d1tln1 llHVICI
onl1 to ht~t thtlr seemln11y ht!Tn·
Im !eke boomer1ni.
of the lobby display for the bv 11ur~• -a1>1t ,J<.el:>blt Lvnn convincin<' lagging behind the 'lnterpret11tion by John Dt!ur Gor<lon, Prl1toled by ll>t 111111~• "' · h I ' ~n Ana .. C o m m u n i t !~M~~"''! "'~~~ov~;o'~~~~tion ... Jo_~!.!!LJ ~-while..Andr.cu.J •. !ilcbioda..cot1 .. -
·-Players' "Sla18T".It"-~ere Pil~t11 '111."1t'· ~ w. '0111. s1., s1nt• characrer racad~.Jlever pro-veys cruel authority as the 1:00 fJ (I) Q NtWI ' '~""""°'"4 matched by art 1 st I c ac-An•. """'1 cllu 1·'1"· perly constructed. rommandant. Skip Schwanz as
l :lO
O l•ktr l11btball Loa An1t!11
Laktrs' 'IS. Clllc110 Bulls 1t Chlci10. D N1w1 Btntl, Schubeck ·
0 (I) Wild Wiid West m Tiit FUnbtolJll
I!) I DrtUI ol J ... nllll
QJ) In tilt Spot1J1ht
fl) Hodppod11 lod11 ttl EDN1W1 9 M1Jbtny RFD
TH ll CAST complishment on the stage, o1.1t1ert ~iron . Jim w1111,(!I, Ron I...angseih is fine as the lhe SS guard--a_nd Jerry
this World Ylar II comedy-fi:~· _P•c• · ·;. ·• ... P•u1 8i:.::1,~~ wisecracking Shapiro, though Carpenter as the Geneva mo11
drama Y.'ould be among the ~:~~.;~~g;~.n ... :··· .... ~Ol'Gir~"~~t~ he is hard to accept in his are effeclive in min n r
highlights of the season. Het~ Goruon ·· ...... JOll s.i.e.rn•" more serious scenes. Gary assignments.
But once you Jeav,. the Vic· tec?t' : ... _.:-:::::·:::.:·: .. O)t~~1'Vi~ Scott has his moments as the Visually, the primary fault
tory Canteen atmosphere of ~~~1~~ :······· •• • • r°Toti~11~': tough barracks chief, Hoff-appears to revolve around a
lhe lobby, festooned with Gfl'm•n t•11••1" · .lnd•..,• J. Slff>ioclt 1n"". bot his character lacks table placed so far downstage SS 11u1rd .... SklD kkw•n• ~• \\'artime memorabilia and Gtntv• rn•n ·· ·· Jt rrv '''"""''' firmness and consistency. that the-blocking becomes
Glenn !\liller records, things Director Langseth does a awk"·ard and stilted. Ad·
begin lo go downhill . for Santa Ile the other cast members. credible job as Dunbar, the ditionally, more cohesion is re.
0 COLOR! DORIS DAY * AND RICHARD HARRIS
m DAVID previews "JESUS
*CHRIST, SUPERSTAR" m David frost Show fu!uftd trt
actlw Deborah Kerr; 1uthor Pettr
Vltrtel; 1 look 1t the n"" musiul
hit "Je5us ChtiSI, Superst11•• wit'
lyrlcist Tim Rice; comPQHr Atldrew
Lloyd Weber, 1nd sever1I cest mem·
bers; 1nd Rmrtnd Mtlco!m Boyd. m llJl Tht Ad'IOClltl ~Should Con·
frW Establish a N1tlo111I Mo-F1ull
Auto lnswranee P11n?"'
Berrigans'
Drama Set
For College
Ken Falsetto and \Villiam
Ana 's "Stalag" falls a great All. that is, except Gersowilz, rich boy who arouses &Hon's quired in the man y ensemble
deal short of its potential both ~·ho handles himself with ire. Jon Sherman's you I h scenes, and the curtain call
as comedy and drama. authority, b I ending his proves a questionable assei..as could be cleaned up as "'ell, STAR IN "CAPRICE"! 0 Mo\'lt: (C) (IO) "C.price~ P1it
I {comedy) '67--0or!s DIY. Rlch116
H111is, Mlchltl J. Pol11rd, Edw11d
"1ulh11t. Comedy-suspenu story of
1fri who becomes indu1trl1I :py
while 1clu1lly se1rchint for 1 n1r·
cotlcs rin1 lh1I hi~ he1 hther
killed.
Verderber wil l portray the
Berrigan brotherS. Daniel and
Philip, in the Orange Coast
College production of "The
Trial of the Catonsville Nine"
Ense"mble rappqrt demand-basica llv C<lmic character Ydlh the b•cks "kid." Ton1 ·Tri· "Stalag 17" C<lntinues for
eel-bv the script is only flashes Of sudden anger which man iums io an acceptable l\\'O more "'eekends on ·the
partia11y in evidence on the ring clear and true. performance as Reed. the im· st.age of the Players' T~eater.
Santa Ana stage. Wh ere vitali· ?-.lost disappointing of the lot pressionist, while Joe La\\'S 500_ \V . 6th St.. ?.l. Ross, In S~t~· 9l111··· tv is a must, the n1ajorily of Is Bud Weiss as the "security provides some comic contrast ta Ana. Performances are F r1·
the performances are n1an" of the barracks who, it as ft1arko, the ca mp day and Saturday evenings. 9:00 ill) Tl u1e1 .1itll . •. next week.
m~ . c:Il> Rosa~ !JJl'I Yeronlcl J ohn Ferzacca is directing bloodless and slow, lacking in
CIJO tE NeW1 m Andy Griffith Show
&J Biii Ctlsby SMw
QJ) Booll Beil
the Orange County premiere
9:30 B CI! Ca nnon Brookl Bundy (If the dramatization of the
1uests es the d1u1hter of • pallet-1968 incident in which the tWO
the comic desper.;;.tion which
must pervade this tale of life
i_n a German prison c;omµ. I111presslve Co11cert
tEl Cl1u M1ttl11p 1nd Schoob
Without F1U11rt m Be1t the Odda
min friend of Frink Cannon who II priests, a former nun and six
fr1med on • muider ch1r1e. other persons protested the 0 @) fL' The Funn)' Sidt ''The d f Funny Sid• of Communicltlon• Thi Vietnam war by burning ra t
Funny Sidt els! spoofs TV networ~ records.
The problem is primarily
directorial, for novice tlirec!Q_r
Dick Langseth has chosen a
difficult pro~ct for his first
assignment, and has com·
pounded this difficulty by·tak·
ing over a role on two weeks'
not.ice. This dilution of ~nergy
\\'Orks against !he o· ~rail pro-
duction . resulting in a
notiC'Cab!e uncertainty afoot.
VCI 'Fanta~ia' First Rate
9 Grttn Atre1
ail vtvt1n1 prov•m seleetlnn. They 1lso visit 1n The subsequent trial pro-
1rt 11llery wheie they hlVI dllferent vides the dramatic episode on
7:00 IJ CBS Nns Willer Cronkl!1 relclions lo the s1m1 p1!nlin1 •nG which the play is based.
{])ABC NeWI Smith, Re1son11 1111 un1t1ual "lct·breikeri" 10 1'1 Linda Falsetto "A·ill portray
0 Ill NBC N '·h Ch 11M 1cqu1inted. · · ews ..., n •nu -BAXTERWARDANDTHE the fo rmer nun . J\1arjorie
Ci) Tnrttl or Co1nequence· -ES J\1elville, while New po r t
([) Dr1111et * NEWS FOR LOS ANGEL Harbor J1igh School drama -What's MJ Unt1 0 Barter Wini N1W1 -~ "·~ ,... teacher and veteran com-0 Prt11111J u~ "' ...... an •• urns m I Lovt 1JJcJ ID It l1kn I Thief munity theater actor Bob
&JI Dr1111 of Je1nn l1 £m !IJJ B11(k Joum1l \Ventz ha s been recruited for
(lJl Tlwl Ccwtst of Our nm1s 9 M1111ty Nish the role of the judge.
ID History ol Medco lO:OO O @@ aJ Mircus Wtlby, M.D. Four performances of ''The
€!>LI lntruu "Echo From Another Wortd" Th• Ill• Trial of the Catonsville Nine" 9 Altic Hl1hlls'lb of 0111 of Or. Welby's patients 11 will be presented \Vednesday
t:Fl Mentt1p 1ndan1ered when 1 youn1.n1urnlo-through Saturday. Nov. 17·29.
7:3011iB111111 C.mpbtll Guest Andf 1ist stubbornly ttfuses t11 •dmit at 8:30 p.m. in the OCC
Griffith 1rri~es surrounded by 1 lin1 ~1vin1 made the wr11n1 dl,1noslt. auditorium. There is no ad-
of 1lamo1ous chorus iir!s to unveil Dorothy Lamour 1uests is Mrs. Dt mission charge.
his wph!stlcitid new im•i• •• he Socio ind Ted Bmtll 15 Dr. H•lli~i~;;;~~F.;;~ Jo!ns comedian P1ul Lynde ind Pnwers. Also 1uesti111 II L111lnt
Lt>cl3 "rn11. Stephens as Kay Powers.
~ !ll , 0 F .. O The Aven1en D WO • lronlid• ' ear r1n m Nm Putnam, Flshm1n Ofnur Fran Be1dln1 1rlevu °"" th• appa rent auiclde ol her IOllSii, Q"j) SPICl•I of !ht Wee• "lnlrodue·
unUI ;i eppe1rs ht may still bt ilM.. ln1 Roy Buch1n1nN (R) m M1sttrpi•c. The1tr1 NJud• th• O (])@ t:!)lh• Mod s,u1d Obscu1t" The Conclusion of lht
"Ell! !ht Clostr" Tht SQUld iotS BBC d11m1tiz1lion of !ht H11d,
und11t0vtr 11 • used ur lot to novt1 ls 1ntitled ''Chrlstmlnstu
crick • narcotics smuulin1 oper· Ait in."
1tlon. Urry Blyden 1uests IS Robtrt gi TIP Tap
H1rdy, Rut1 Lee n his wife, 1nd Qt; Aoller Gantt
Austin Willi! 1s Joseph Bellen. a!) FestiY•I Mexicltlo
(I) I Drum of Jt1nnl1 . 0 M1111on $Morie: (C) (2hr)"ltlM 10:301) (])Thi ~ldd1q111 Fl!m 1t11
Ovt D rt' I" 1 dy) '63-Dorls Einest eor1111n• maku. his tel• r, 1 11 ~me vision debut 1s 1 sln1tr-tlanctr. D1y, J1mes G1mer. O Monty Nish "Thi nmt of !ht
&J Dt11111t E11le" Mon ty Nash comes to th11ld
(fJJ Canvers.11tlon With YMOI ,.... of two Indian bro!hen In Arlzon•.
1nl One brother is runnin1 !or statt sen·
eI1) Flrtn1 Un1 1tor; 1nd the other Is runnln1 IWIJ
€!)Loa Bev11ly de Per1lvlUo from the lew, '
1:00 Cl) This I• Your Lill OalNfWI
@ At luu1
@) S.n Die10 Panor1m1
SHOWN AT B P.M.
STARTS WEDNESDAY
Wl~RbF
2 ACADEMY AWARDS! m Truth or Consequence• m Th• Vlrslnltn
(B:l M1squer1d1 e> El Rlfrtto de Dort1 n Crrr.. ROBERT M10iUfv1. m C1H af the Wat EE LI Coll Juzpda
fl!) Nino
1:15 9 Llktr Wr1p-Up
11,00 e rn m .... TRE\OR HClv'VIRD
D ®l Ill""' rnd SARAH MlfS e !ilorie: "Junp Prlnuu" (td· ''n.,.. a's 1;30 II Cl) H111{1U Flw..O Jtckle Coap~r ~•nture) '36-Dorothy L1mo11t, ~~I.
1utst.s 1s Dr. Al•x Southmore, who CJ) M•rshal Dillon Daugh"a.•• becomu 1 wspM:t In !ht lnvestl· 0 (]) fl) News _ -~
11Uon of Jils wife's murder when O Morie: (C) "Thf MO'lie MutOtr-r.:;m
McG1riett finds holes In the con· tr" (mystery) ·~11ur Kennedy, ~-~G"°'
Only t"·o actors emerge with
m e m o r a b I e pcrforances
fr'Om this gutsy vehicle "'hich
has enough raw meat to go
around. One is Jim \V illiams
in the leading role of the un·
popular Sefton (the role \Vhi~h
won William tlolden h 1 s
Oscar): the other is Paul
Gersowit-z as the beery,
volatile Stosh (done in lhf! film
version by Robert Strauss and
called "Animal").
\Villian1s is clearly the
strongest actor onstage; his
menacing power seems to rat-
fessed killer's story,
mToTellthtTrvth K R I O ®l !!JS.~· "Silo~ 1 .. ,... SPECIAL BARGAIN ceps 0 e Ltsll• Nlelu n 1utsls IS I re!uct1nt m Bell !hi Cl«• MATINEE EVERY ALSO
;•Id :1o~mtr Sar1e feels compelled 11:30 1) (])Mer. Gritrl~ WED. AT l :OO P.M. AUDREY Al.AN HOLLYWOOD (UPI ) 0 pr &C. D @l m JohnnJ C.rsoll FREE HEPBURN ARKIN Eileen Heckart will re-create ~~.~~~~d!~"·~1~~r~:,11:~~ O @@ mDldc.vttt REFRESHMENTS 1IM w..:: her stage role in ''ButterOics
I m M~• "Th• Intruder" I-ta"') Are Free" in the movie L1lne, Alan Arkin, Rossano Bratt , : . . "''~ '' ADULTS-$1.00 --1 W.llTUNTILDARIC
Michael Calnt, Vittorio Gmmen, '5J-J1ck H1w~1ns, Denn11 Price. 1:~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~-~,~-~-~~¥:~~~-~·~l-'~'c~r~si~o~n~IEor:_~p~rn=du:ce:r-:M=ik=e:11 Peter Sellers, Robert Morley, Ltx &J Movie: 'VICI Squid" (dr1m1) Frankov ich.
• B1rker. A comic evaluat!on of the 9 Fo1 Adulb Only modern tam1le, set In Paris, includ·I
ln1 sevtn love stories. j1Z:30 9 NeWI
Wednesday
DAYTIME MOVIES
t:00 m •Kia TolllOITOW l;oodbyt" (drt·
m1) 'SO -J1mes C11ne1.
1:30 9 "I Wis lttont)"1 ~oublt" (di•·
m1) '5~John Mlll1, Clcil P•rt.tr.
O (C) "lllltld ti l.m" (comedy)
'63-Robert Prtslon, Tony R1nd1I
ID:DO rn Movlt: (C) NJoumt)' I• th• Ctn·
ter of tht r.rth" P1rt I (sd·fi) '59
-Pit Boon•. J1mes M1son. I
1:00 0 (C) "lll111d In tt11 lun" {dt1·
ma) '57 -James M1son, Join
rontaint. m (Cl "HIP Fllcftt" (1dvtnturt)
'!la -RI)' Mill1nd, Arrt:hofl1 New!.,,
Z:OO Q) "M11rd1r Without Turi-(m)'I·
lery) '53 -C<1i1 Stevens.
l:OO (I) (C) "Btcbt" Conclusion (drl·
1111) '64 -Rlch1rd Burton, Pt111
O'Toolt. O (C) "John ;o1c111rb, PlNM Co111
Home'" (comedy) '65 -ShlrflJ
M1cLline.
N"alley
~ o:ftheDoils . -
COLOR by O~LUXE • PANAVISION
ALL
ADULT
PROGRAM
. Pocific Vibf~.
CQLQR,._..., • .., ___ .. •n••u llill
ADULTS $2.00 JUNIORS $1.00 l a;w........,., nn -111o ,_,)
Hll l'Hf NfW OOlll!Jnt a 'OfflOlll (,l.fl.,IAC10tl lllst\.&YIJltOfO·nrn 1'1Cl•l $1!0W (,1.11..-0IOl llOlllU l Yol.0.11011 VlHICLU •LL VM0M 0111
111100"
U1ci.t 111$(0Ulfl TICl.nl Al YOlll IA110ft11 OfAlfGI COUNT'!" MfW (A•
OIAUl,lOU• lflAlUT AllMA. t n l llllllT, 1"'-lfTT M UI ITOU I fUUOtl.
,,I.ti( UM!lt. Sydn~y Omart 11 one ot the u.·orld"s s:;reat astrolo-
si:er1. ll\5 column is one or
the DAILY PILOT'S il't&t
f P&lurt>s.
~,,j
A TRUE·LIFE
ADVENTURE NOW
SHOWING
•SO. COAST 1 Costa Mesa 541:i-271 l
• CINEDOME 20 OranRe 532-3328
•FOX fUlllRION 525-4747
PURE DYNAMITE
"Incredible Suspense" -N.Y. Times
Better than "BULLITT" -Daily News
201M r.EHT\JIV.FOX Pfl.SOOs ~o
THE FRENCH COlfHECTION :r..~r
EXCLUSIVE . NOW
£ido NEWPORT BEACH• ot tke
entronle to the fobuloul lido 1111' OR J 83SO .•.................................•. ; .
STARTS WED., NOV. 10
AT BOTH TH!ATIRS
· • 111 ".._~, s"°""MI crm11 • •
e.DWARD8
HARBOR ,;tirt 1
N&lltOll II.VO, AT Wl\.SOl'I IT.
COSTA MlSA '41•05'1
:
OAILV PILOT jl} ,
• t .. u -· •• ..,,_ "'"· • .ot•-1 l(~M ' ... Dl..0
•
. .
KILD OVll • lllD GIEATWllK
-~lit>fCT1net'17"mc• BOYt.rtr---....
TR.BASKIN
ho! OUlttAllOIM &TTU.CllOll
~ HOWlOVERSSfAftT ,6,S,,,
!'friends"
fRJ TECHNlCOLOR"'
••-•>(I••\ (M'• "''"--'''''" .. _ ... --·-.. -.... -' MfLD DYfR • 4TH CllU T1WEUC
DIRECTm BY JACK l(MMOH (GPI ._, ....... _ ... ,. ....
JACll LI-SAllll'flllm
1111.-Stllf
lll llUHl-llNllllS
@ ........ _._"""" -
..
• • •• M: .. ••vO. "' IU.I• • • _,_,._ .. _... .......... --. .. .,. . ..,.. """''·-··"' -HElD OVEI • 310 GREAT WEEK
. ,._ .
"The African ~
Elephant"
P~ TrOl>'!(OU.~' @•
Pt11 . Aley & A Sit! ftcl tH CIN~
11.,i 1f th Wttli6'1 L11t frt•l itr.
IGP)
Walkaltoat 1
' ttolltllOll,l.JIOll.O,.,,.,.
HO ONE UNDtR 17 ADMITTlD
VANESSA •
REDGRAVE -OLIVER
REED
'" KEN RUSSELL'SFI
THEDEVIIS -.. -,_
lmr.Atli.,_,. ~~ ~
ALSO lST RUN ®
"DEEP END"
:'GONE WITM THI WIND" 11HI
"THE ODD (OUl'LE"
·NOW rtATllfl>-lDWARDSCINIMA Vl(JD
Ml1don Yie]u, IJ0-6990
W~.-Thu•J.·Mon~lue'-"l'OO f•idoyAtl30 Sot.· l:J0,5'00, 8'30
Sun.-1:00. •·30. BOO
.rtr..\Tff ' 00tM" "'~' • n1 '"'1
I "•11 0 ''°""'" '•°"" 6 "' IM4e •••1
Alao·lruc1 lrown's fll•
"ON ANY SUNDAY"
. '
•
,
%0 DAILY PILOT 5 Tuts~, Nowmbtr 9, 1971
l' our ltlo1aey OVER . THE COUN1 1ER Otan~es Slimmer ........ w. ............... "~ ' ..... ,,_Ula
..,_ ............ 1"111•11 ., ............ ,...._ ., ~-·
NASO Listings for Monday, N!vtmber I, 1971
For a Tax Audit HeW YO•ll'. ""'' AllGat U -Tl\f folltrof1,.., 11'1 AU'9 Scf 1, • .. llCtG I CC !nil
-r
-Iii-SYLVIA l'OlltER-
As you adopt various tax
atrategles to mlnlm1ie )'our
1971 Federal incilme tai dur·
tng the $2 days thal remiun to
year-e.nd. you would be rnerely
normaJ ti you v.ondertd what
are the odds that the Internal
Revenue Ser\•ice's mtthan1cal
brains i,11lil pluck )'Our N!turn
for an audit out of the millions
to be f\J~ next April
The reassuring answer is
that !ht odds of an audll of
l our rttum ha\e st\runk to the
Smalleit m man). many
''ears • Thl.S g~ it ~'OU are f1llng as
an lridiv1dual and 1t also goes
If you are (1hng • corporatlOll
return.
Spec1hcall), if you (Ile an ur
d1v1dual return. the odds are
Ont out of !SO lhat )OU'U b8\'C
a field audit at your place of
busiMss as against one out of
200 just last year. The odds
are up to one out of 53 that
'ou'U have an ofOce audit as
iiga1nst one out o( 41 last year
and one out o( 2.5 as recentl y
as 1967
If ) ou file a corporation
re[urn. the odds are one out of
11 that It will be examined as
again!t one out of eight in
1967
This ls, from the JRS 's point
of \llew. a shocking wtl?'ck
and a starthng mess -yet for
reasons "''htch ha ve nothing at
all to do \\ilh tax returns, the
odds on audits of )'QUI' return
v.·ell may plunge still lower 1n
the months ahead
Here, 1n brief. is the com·
b1nat1on of developments and
ctrcumstances leading l o
today's news
111 It all started in the early
1960s >A'hen the Treasury
S\\ itched to the computer and
began entering our 1nd1v1dual
income ta1 information on a
national Automatic D a I a
Processi ng file But instead of
this merchan1zat1an"lead1ng IO
an enormously more efhc1ent
processu1g exam1nat1o n
system .precisely the opposite
occurr~ An anahs1s by Leon
Gold, chief tax expert of the
Research I nstitute of
America, disclosed that tbe
proportion of audited in·
d1\1dua\ returns drop ped from
S 6 percent 1n fiscal 63 to a
scant 2 1 percent for '70 The
proporlion o I corporation
ret urns audited fell from 12 3
percent 1n hscal '63 to an
estimated 10 4 percent Ul
hscal '70
121 Utterly unanti cipated
developments contributed lo
the IRS's aston1sh1ng retreat.
Between 1963 and 1970, the
number of ta x returns with
adjusted gross uico me o[
SI0.000 or more DOUBLED -
from 8.470.000 to an estimated
20 m1!11on Simultaneously.
Congress cut back the funds
allotted to the IRS for hiring
re\enue agents !ind the
number of exam in er s
available fell from 15,&69 1n
24 Hour
TELEPHONE
ANSWERING
SERVICE
MlliONI *11rlt!11 B1lrd At Dfflw"I Aa111,. fYff &111 ,,,IC
"" ,_,... ··~~ •• .,. th J•l o-13 7$6-fn 1971 :I'he ll\,llrlMt -a. -llllM' BkMf"'ltll • trl1I 1loc.ll1, &IFrf'lt ll comn1t!('r rl!!Jle.m prtVfd far llnll .... 1,,_I •uell F 1-.~J 111 ••1• lwmrn more eff1CJt:nt than humans In 111 &k I ,,.,.. • ,,,, Mk
I od lllElnP tJ\O 1111. Mii ... I' 1dent fy1ng e r r o r s a i.r;:r NC 11 ,.~ •t!! k•ll
omlss10ns so that, w h 11 e ta. 8~ fi1, ~ l;;; ::!.
Congress was forcing person-~.\'~ :~t ~'ht :l:.:.'":11111 nel cutbacks, there was ao un-,-111 u~"t"I'~ ll\'o :=:-A~' mense increase 1 n cor· 1..w11r1111 ,,..,.
-· I <I.AL Ct '"" '"'I'"'' res....,. .... e.nct to c o r r e c 1.F" "'' 11"' u11i "" :k•
rtlums. ::Vs 1~ ~~ ~ :~ ... w!~
d I 1\1'¥ Ct 'I l,.. B""k• "" l3l Ttie IRS became etp y A~ 1,.. \• -,~; ,__...,
co.ncerned over what 11 '-d· :~.~· 1~"' '~ a::'fim milted >A'e-"1nd1cators po1n-Ackl'"' w i.t l4V. C•IW5v '.. Ad• ltn Poi JI. C•lflllt 1\1 tmg to ser10us non-compllanct Au ... s11 ·~, N C•M ,,.,;n
., Alf 11111 j • '" Ct_,_ g 1n e\'U)' tu area and several Atlltt "• 1, J't C•n•M P
d . Albt•h 11 1' (111 M!t• months ago, lt di COn\'lnct A1to1"-•"-,,,, c ... s.,.,1
Co I od t ~-d I Alffn El 1-. 1 ~ c ... 1 .. Air ngres.s o eipa 1 s lN ge 1.11('11 Lnd 14•• 11-•• rec.
for -I AU T~~ Ui "" Ct•• Ct • ,.,..rsonne . """ II•• 1 ,., c1r11 11,
t41 But of!se1t1ng -if not !~nE:"! ~tt i~: c:r: ~~
more than nulhfy1ng :::,,,;;"' J.;: t:: c~,";'/' c
a'hatever help the add1t1onal A!gln GH 71• ,... c.-.v1 1'$ Am B111P ll"t 11~ t<IY Lib funds ha\e g1\•en the IRS 1s 1. !I k111 ~ ' Ch•nu A
d . . d Am E•P lli 111 (hlfl Oh Pres• ent !'!xon s ec1s1o n U> .. .,, ,,,.. ,.\la"' c~m k••
I th I t (3000 A Finl LS t tVo ~II tn trans er e. equ1va en o . A"l Fu•n ll•• n Ch••g u1
IRS .,·orke.rs to help super\•1se :"'"~;1~1 ~~: •::~ ~~]11~1111
>A age-price controls 1n Phase ::::~~\~" 1;~ ': ~~~~ev A
fl 1 ,t,nHIHt 7°' '°" ~ltrnllt g l.n~ul I il'• SJ" I••-Ml "11 makes complete sense. An~•n in 11, J'~ i.U11>11 ,t.rc1 11\d !'4-!1 Cllntn OH for IRS agents and oJf1ce.rs Ard M•Y i.1 1p,, ci-C•
f ,t.~W!G I!"• 11'• Cog1r are prec1selv the cahbre o ••n•v 1n 11~ J>.;, Collin Fd
I d• th I f Arrow H 11 l'i i-• "' peop e to o IS sor 0 A,..,,161 101~ 1e-, om G1s work " sais Go.Id .. But that AM>en s, t•. P.• ""'"" '• • -AICC I D! , 43\t ~t CIN!I C1'I doe.sn t ctiange the probable
impact on the number of tax
audits"
1s 1 ·And e\'en assuming
Congress now votes more
money 10 the IRS lo hire more
personnel. 1t "''111 take con-
siderable lime before the IRS
will be able to cope efhc1ently
w1lh 1ls new responsibihttes.
New IRS workers must be
trained There has to be a lag
between a~equate money and
adequate manpower.
One v.•arn1ng your odds on
an audit ~·Ill be much greater
if your gross income 1s $2$.000
or more, you 're 1n a trade or
profession 1n which payment
1n cash l!I v.·1despread; your
deductions stand out as ab-
normally big agamst averages
for your income. bracket . yq_u
ha\e substanlial Unre1mbursea,
entertainment expenses.""
Heart Unit
$10 Million
Contract
BEVERLY HILLS I AP J -
A consortium of Europe.an
passenger a1rhnes has award·
ed a $10 m1lhon contract to
Litton Industries for lhe com:
pany's i n e r t i a I oav1gat1on
s~ stems. Litton h a s an·
nounced
A company spokesman said
Thursday the contract has a
potential value or about $20
milhon depending on the
ultimate number of aircraft
in volved
The systems will be in-
stall¢ 1n t.1c0onnel Douglas
OC·IO aircraft.
The consorllum is known as
the: Atlas ALrhnes Group It it
comprised of Alitaha, Luf-
tha nsa. Air France, and Iberia
airlines
Ad Trend
S•rv'"9 -Co•o~• d11 M••
~I Coil• M•11 N•wporl l••~h
t ~d s.~;, "'"' ,,,~,
O••NGI cnUNlY
••l'HOTlllPHONl
Sl•YICI, INC
The spokesman said orders
for an 1n1llal 26 aircraft, each
to be equipped v.·ith three
LTN·72 systems, have been
placed by Atlas The LTN-7?
"'ill be manufactured by Lil·
Ion S !ero Products dl\'IS1on of
\\"oodland Hills
'The system uses a miniature
-~ .
•
!
., ..
' •
'
I • • ' • ..
835-3305 1nerhal p I~ t form and
g}roscopes. Litton said.
~
ORDER t~
'/'
YOURS \I~
1000
Beautiful • Stick·on
LABELS
TODAY!
./ ,?'ONLY"':
$125
~l JNCJ
Ptrsonalbed • Stylish • -Etficient
• Order For Yourulf ol' 1 Friend
May be used on envelop•• •1 return eddresi
l•beh. Als o very h•ndy •s id ent1f1cttion
labels for meriting j>erson•I items such · ti
books, r•cords, photos, etc. labels itick on
9ltss •nd rnty be u1 ed for m1rkin9 ho me
unned foc.d items. All ltbtls tre print ed
"'!itft stylish ¥091.1• fyp• on fine q1.11lify white
g umm.d p•ptr •
§
•
Complete-New York-Stoc~ List
•
•
•
•
.. . -" . • • . ' . ... ; •I .'·--' I ' • ~-.--~..;.. . . •
~ .., ,, , ~ _...,:_lfoWmtitr .19!.}==.!_
Monday's Oosing· Priees-Co1nplete New York St~k -Exch8nge List
•
DAJI. Y PllOT.
Complete Closing. Prices-American Stock Exchange List
S•lt• Ml
(lldl ) Mllll L.fW (loH Chi.
11111 Ml
(1101.) Kltll lllll' CloM Chi, ••It• llft U.d,,I Mltll LOW (le,. Cllt.
Stl• ...
(Ml.) Kiili Ln CltM Ch-.
Finance
Briefs J
Di1lldettds
NEW YORK -The volun-
tary freeze on dividend 1n·
creases cut such boosb to 15
in October, the 1malle-st
nurbber in decades:'Standard
& Poor'a repart.ed Monday. Jn
October, 19$9, there were 19
dividend increases reported ~Y major companies. '
However, Standard & Poor•s not~ the number of divideid
reduction! and omissions •
declln<d to October. Only nine
Dmlssions weri announcfd
agalnst 2S 1 year earli""
Thert were fJve: dividend cujs
against 21 a year earlier. <
j
' . . . . . . . . . I " . . . . . ' '
•
•
%! DAILY PILOT
---
'
Everyone Has
Somet~ing That
Som eone Else Wants
.DAILY . PILOT Cl.4.SSifl-ED ADS You Can Soll It,
' Find It, Trade It
With a Wont Ad ' The Biggest MarkE!tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
'629 Harbor, C.~t.
SAVE$$$
BEST BUYS
ON THE MARKET
PRICED FROM
$19,500 ::)40,000
XMAS SPECIAL
3 Bedroom, 2 Bath
$19,500 -
This 7 Year old home
has tt all. Built-In kitch·
en. double garagf', forctd
air heat, dining area,
large lot and lots of big
trffS. It's prictd to sell
fast 80 11c::t NO\V! and
move in for · Xmas~ 546·
8640.
cozv
COSTA MESA
COTTAGE
$23,500
A good 4 bedroom, 2
hath home at this price
ls hard t o find, but here
It ls and It's a beauty.
It hu a conveniently
laid out kitchen, good
size bl!drooms, and in
excellent condition in-
side and out with large
lot and beautiful cov-
er@d _patio. All for fµll
price of $23,500. Hurry!
546-8640.
THE BEST BUY
AT $25,000
ll' this unbelievable 3
bedroom home I n Costa
Mesa, feat urJng 2
roomy baths, lara:e
k It c:: h e n, outstanding
condition and you nsme
the terms -FHA. v A. or ? ? '!'. Owner anxious.
See It!!! 546-8640.
BEST BUY ·IN
MES4 VERDE
$26,950
Seller aay1 at>ll! Now
vacant. You can really
SAVe on this fanttstic 3
bedroom home in Cost.a
Mesa's mogt desirable
area. Ju11t Pftinled ln
and out, carpet ing, built-
in kitchen, double ga.
rage. \Valking distance
tt> 1chools and lihopping.
No do\vn lo vets or
min. down FHA. Don't
\Va.it. It Wt>n't la.st.
546-8640.
BEST DUPLEX
BARGAIN
$29,950 • $300
TOTAL DOWN
Here it is and \vhat a
great investment -Lo·
cat!d in Coi\ta l\tesa,
each unit has 2 hig bed-
rooms, hard"·ood floors
for 1100 sq. ft. each and
11 garAl:f'. S300 dnv.:n lo
anyhody plus normal
c)()sin~ C'OSti. Call for
apnoinlment. 546-8640.
$100 TOTAL DOWN
PAYMENT
PLUS NORMAL
CLOSING COSTS
Gener ii General
"LET'S GO TO THE BAY"
· Del11Xe Duplex
ON BALBOA ISLAND -Custom built 4 bed·
room. 3 baths, 2 fireplaces. deep SHAG car-
peting, kitchen \Vith builtins . glass walled
staircase PLUS 2 Bedroom RENTAL UNIT.
A real buy" a! : .................... $99,500.
"SEE YOU AT THE POOL"
Let us show you this SHARP SPLIT LEVEL
2 Bedroom, 1 Ih bath home, all carpeted and
draped, kitchen \vith all the builtins. CLUB·
HOUS£ and POOL PRIVILEGES. Only
...... " .. " .................. ' $23 ,800.
ARE YOU READY
For 27 Units?
NEW ADULT APTS., Consi5i.ing of l, 2 &
3 Bedroom units with 1 & 2 baths, featuring
a POOL, B-B-Q and REC ROOM. Individual
garages, builtins. shag carpeting, forced.air
heat, laundry facilities and award·winning
landscaping. Will trade . , ........ $422,000.
ENTERTAINING TONIGHT
in Baycrest?
Here's the perfect setting; 4 large bedroom~.
21h baths, f3mily room, 2 fireplaces, large
covered patio. fabulous landscaping. IDEAL
FOR INDOOR·OUTDOOR ENTERTAINING.
. ·~·· ... ' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 554.500.
"HONEST TRUE"
your boat and you!
FLOAT INTO this 2 bed room, 2 bath, builtin
kitchen. fireplace. carpets & drapes. ''OUR
OWN PRIVATE PIER & FLOAT ... $72,500.
•
REALTORS
644-7270
(Formerly Delancy Reil Estate)
2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF.
Gener el
G.I. REPO
$950 DOWN
FEATURING
• 3 Bedrooms
e Hard.,.,'OOd floors
• 2 bath!
• Us~ brick entry w11 y
• Buil t·in kitchen
• Dishwasht'r
• Hu£e heated pool
• Conc~te drive
• No 7nd trust deed'.s
$239 mo total payments
CALL NOW, IT'S HOTI
Newport
••
Fairview
OWNER BAttlNG
OUT
$49,950
Rf'du~ $4000 Undf'r Apprais·
al. Prime residential area.
3100 Sq ft of Jiving area.
Formal dining, 3 baths.
Hu~ N'creational arl!a. This
ia a gorgeous 4 bedroom tri.
levf'I w/n"'nf'r forced to sell.
Call 5"S.8~U (open evf's.)
\outh ~(~ oast
and this 3 ~room, 2 646·8811 lncame Producer
Enjoy fine living and goorf
income. This charming rus·
tic duplex v.·111 fill y o u r
rwds. 3 btdroom uni! •
"ith 2 hiilhs • large living
room firplc, hf'am ceili~ .
built in k11chf'n • tlish.,.,·ash·
er. Plug · lovt'ly 11tudio apt
Ovi!r 2 c11.r i11rage • \\'t'IJ
land!ca~ \\ifh patlo. Only
$63.~ • ca11 67.1·8550.
ba.th tov.·nht>use can be
your1 for Xmas. How {1nytime)
about a built-in kitch· lll'!!!..,..,.!"'!!""!"""..,..,!!!!!I Pn'! r nr<.'rd air h•at?
Bti; brirk flrt>placf'~ Din-S23 4501 ;og u"! This on• hu ! •
it all r un pril'" S21.· 500'!'!~ Hurry. 546-8640. 3 bedroom, 2 St'parale baths,
all elt"ttric "A\\'llrd" \\ife
11:avPr kttchf'n, dish\\·.'lshf'r.
Stcludt'd rf'ar living room
\\1th inviting ,fireplacr ...
r-.•,.11·Jy pa1n1Mi inside & out.
Garage tinisht'd for family
room. Pa1 10, pool. clubhoose
QUIET PRIVACY
5 BEDROOM
Hidden hy lt'lts l'lf 1Rll
trrr~. 1h1s Jvirnr v.·1!1
f'XC'!!r )'t'IU \\'llh thl'>
H~"d hrick firf'place and
htiilt·ln h11.r·h·qur rom.
f1IP IP. \\ith ftJllSSl"rir,
i;:orgenus huill·in kltch·
en and dinfng room.
built·in TV In df'n, 3
mastf'r S'ltl' bedroom~. 2
t 11 e d baths. Proven
nt"IS:hhorhood. Bl'~l buy
at $34.950. 546·8640.
& PTARBEiL1120 I::::::;::::::::::::;;:
-VETS-
ELEGANT
2 STORY
5 BEDROOM
$27,500
\'ou \\'nn't 8f-l1P1·e It \!nlp'~
\'t'l\1 ~It. rant11s11c 3 bed·
room l\Qm11 w 11U ki nd~ nr
11~ brick, rountry style
kllchf'n, ha.rrl\l'fl('(f floor-. <Cc
CA?'J>f'ts. huge rumpu5 room
~ IAni:e plush ~n ~·ir.rd.
No ~ .... ·n 10 \'ets 1.s5ume
lnw inttl'P~ lt'>il n. CA 11
\'OU have to """ 1hir. SOtmf COAST REAL TORS.
home. -It's btttf'r than 545-342..t <Open E\·rs.1
a new model. DelUJrt II•!!!! ... ~..,..,..,..,..,,.
long grtli'en fib.a( carptl· PARK PLACE
'"' In all "'"m~ •P••WI· Inc living room. h"i' VALUE
kttcht":n. All e:ctT"'mPQt ne•t and clf'!an and rf'a• Ju~t 2 hi...,.~ tfl the C11~111
ti.oo l:)o\\n movrs YOU In
S.-llf'r f'lllYI All your C'Olll1>.
H11gr 4 bedroom COLLEGE
PAR!\ home "'l1h W>ld ShRI:
Caf1)1"t.' And t'O\i"rt'd p.1!lt>
l'l\'f'rlook1ng a fip.irkli11g lRx
:iii II rool. VA \\'111 \011n \'flll
$3.l::.00 k SI.I)) do11·n 101al
\\·111 mn,1e you in. Hur ry.
Call S.16-5880 \(}pt>n Eve~.l
I Y ~~~~1
LUXURY LOVERS
Your C\lf'sts \\111 gasp As th,.y
!lter HI!" this dnimatlr
RA VCR EST f"ntry. 3 B i II'
General
* ONLY $26,950
Five bedr~~!\~~~~y~o~m, laundry room, 3·car garage. Beautiful corner lot at
Hermitage Land ajid Royal St. George Drive.
This home ls being fini shed now and should
be available for moving in before Christmas.
Drive by and see it. then call owner at
644·1140. Price $92,500.
Three large bclrms. plus 112
balh.s. comple!"' earJ)t"ted
thnl-oul · tully draped. Huge
62' x lJS' fenced, level tot
clos e 10 COSTA J\1ESA
PARK. T\\'O Sl\Qpping: Crn.
tf'rs and l3ANK OF AMER!·
CA. This excellent home can
be }'OUT'S v.•1th only $2,69:>
do"'n if you call immediate.
5 BEDROOMS
EASTBLUFF
OPEN WED . 1.5
2854 AL TA VISTA
A place for r very1h1ng 1n this
2.500 &fl. It. 2·story homf'.
Formal dining room, ea.r·
pe!t'd & d1•aped: btt.1n kitch·
en, 3 baths. Beautifully
landscaped. Top location.
Vacant, f 11. i t possession.
•118. $31.500. Call 675-7225,
LINDA ISLE· $143,SOO
Drastic reduction!! Architect owner reduced
price for quick sale on NE\V 4 BR home.
Beautiful vaulted ceilings and many new
features. Fam. rm, formal DR & study.
''Our 26th Veer''
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO ..
2111 $an Joaquin Hllls Ro.1d
NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910
Gtnt"I Gonual BONANZA!
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!If you'vio thought of living on
the P0NDEROSA, then don't BA YSHORES VIEW & POOL _,,._...._iss !his real FINE
S AD. located on beauti-
ful PONDERISA STREET
in f..1f'!Sa Verde. You 'll holler
"Eureka", \\'hen you see this
sprauling RANOJ STYLE
home "'ith 4 lall!:e bP.drooms.
Waterfront custom home, 4 bedroom & den
or 5 bedrooms. Stf.z baths. ,Top quality car·
peting. draperies, \vallpaper & fixtures.
View from most rooms. 87' lot, spacious yard
\vith beautiful gardens. $28C,OOO.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341
ltlanders Bldg . at Linda Isle
BAYSIDE DR .. SUITE I. N.B. 675·6161 . .
General
OLD SPANISH
Solid adobe bit. 3 bedroom
home cl05e to to\\"n & park.
It's omo-of·a·kind and spot·
ll!SS. Cal! for details.
$24,950
EASTBLUFF
Large Lusk hui]j ~ hrrlrnnin.
}o\:ely home \111h 2 lire·
placf's. king size hedrnom~.
lormal dining room, family
room. electric i:i:arage door
opener. Pnc,.d r11?hl a l •
$51 ,950
Over ro our excellent 3 bed,
2 ha home .;.,,i!h a Jg. H&F
Pool. All this on easts1de
CostA Mesa. Cul·de-~ac lot
and it can be purch.'l~ed No
Do\\•n VA or m inimum FHA
a 1 only $.13,950.
HORSE RANCH
IN LAGUNA?
with a tt>tal ol 192() sq le!
srAKE YOUR CLAIM f 0 r
only $33.950. \Vith VA or
t1-IA 1erms. VA APPRAIS.
ED FOR Sl-1.000.
CORONA DEL MAR
CANYON SIDE
Like being in the M!s.
yet only
3 Blocks to 5 Crowns
Unique homf',
rustil' & scc!udetl
On large fee lot
BR., large rumpus room
Lots of \\'OOCI & stone
SZ>l.700
REALTORS
SJNC!: 1944
DELIGHTFULLY
COZY r~riendty rami\y home. En·
closed front coort yard •
fenced, "'C!ll landscaped
rear yard, addt: to the charm
of this f\.1ESA VE'RDE new-
ly carpered and draped 3
bdrm, family room home
with Bil elec. kitchen. Near
~rammer & intermediate
Schools. A good buy at only
S:l(l.!Y.JO \\•i!h lcrn1s.
'Grange Vista
PROPERTIES
Formerly La.Borde R.E .
220 E. 17th St., C.M.
CALL 646·0555
Evenings 646-4579
GOLF COURSE
VIEW HOME
4 Bedroom, family room, for-
mal d ining room. Drama!ic,
spli1 level. custom home. ex-
quisitely decorated and pro-
fessionally lansea(lE'd. This
is one of Mesa Verde's fin·
t'SI, Only f\\·o years o I d,
ready for immediate oceu·
pancy, $96,500. -
''lll"d\'ir6c'.J\cali£
546-5990
ly.
'G~ange Vista
PROPERTIES
Formerly La.Borde R.E.
220 E. 17th St., C.M.
CALL 646-0555
Evenings 642·84Zi.1
$27,750
NO DOWN TO VETS
Sharp 3 bedroom in beauti.
f 1 J\!ESA VER DE. Over·
·zed garage, lovely cover:
ed patio. deluxe landscaping.
Fast mo\.'e in OK.
Call 540.1151 (Open eves.)
Hom• & Investment
'Rt•lty
353.'i E. Coast Hwy., C:dM
THE EASY LIPE
No wt>rk, ju&t relax! Thia
Dolor<'s model repreientl
one of the ~t values in the
Bluffs. \\'alk 10 schools,
stores, tennis & pools. 3
Bedrooms. 21!! balhs. Entire
price S.36.900. Tlus is cer·
ta1nly a lase seller, so call
/10\\'. 5-\S.2313 .
Pool + Rumpus Room
Plus 4 bedrooms, 2 baths.
buil!·in kitchen, new shag [ •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~I
carpeting, 2 r1replaces. Over * BACK BAY *
600 sq. It. rufnpus room in. 3 BR, 2 BA, family rm, tirepl,
eludes Y•et bar. No qualify. bltins, huge walk·in closets.
ing, no loan fees • just take 1800 sq ft. New crpts/drape:s.
over, subject to existi ng GI $30,000.
Loan. O"·ner \vilt consider Roy McCardle Realtor
$1.000 down. IMMEDIATE 1810 Ne\\·port B!vd ., C.r-.I.
OCCUPANCY 548-7729 ~a''•l"k"°~"~\,'v• &&. ,L,d~~. Vis~~~~~!.rr~~!s~up ~'"'-' ~ , , l~~ ..,., available. From $31,500. Sell
545-9491 Open 'til 9 PP.I or lease. Geor9e Williamson
REALTOR
673-4350 64S.1564
CORONA DEL MAR \\'llhout the inconvenience of 6 73.44QQ .: h,v;o, "'do '11 tho wo•k. A 1-..!!!!! .... ~~~!!!!!~[LOVELY 2 STORY fabuloos 1 yr.' old l\lesai=
5 Bdrms., family rm. & din-
ing rm. home. on Ice land
(YQU own itl. A scarce item
& priced right at $67,500.
REPOSSESSIONS
SpArkling clean homes, r;ome
ne"'IY painted & carpetfil. 2,
3, 4 & 5 lxirms. Some with
pools. FHA.VA conv. terms,
lrom $20,000 to $40,000.
COLLINS & \\'ATIS INC.
8843 Adams Ave. 962-S523
Fast results ~ just a phone
call away· 642-5678
Four bedroom tri·le\'el ht>me.
plus 1 bedroom nntal unit.
6 year sold. Units in top
condition. \Valk to beach
and shopping. 10% down,
xlnt financin(.
V•ro• horn•, 'bdnn, • b .. , SHHHH!! $28 0001 magnifirent carpets, dra~ 9 •
Call for picture c.ita!QK
$63,500
642-1771 Anytime
EL RANCHO
Nearly 112 Acre
Guest House + Coral
+Den+ Dine•
Breathtaking!! Ever;thing
for complete family li"ing.
Only 7 years old. Guesl
house hai\ 3 8f'drooms. \Ve
JUST LISTED IT. So Hurry,
Dial
64S.0303
I OKISf L OLliON '" H E ALfCRS
-a-ASSUME
f's, professional landscaping ''Don't Let It Out'' ~nd i\IUCH, MUCll l\10RE.
20\:i \Vegtcliff OriVe
lliiliiliiil
BROADMOOR ·
WITH VIEWI
New listing -scarce 5 BR..
Dandy Duplex
,-VA
-FHA
-221-D2
-ONLY $29,950
BE FIRST
DIAL
645·0303
HlRISI l OL'ION °'C H£AL70AS
Smith built home. J..«e. liv-1 __ ~""""='7="'--"
ing nn .• dining rm .. ocean VIEW THE
& harbor view. Realistically BLUE PACIFIC
priced at Si2.0CK'I.
CORBIN-
MARTIN
REAL TORS 644-7662
VACANT AND
and Ca talina from this SU·
PER SHARP HOr.YE in our
~{un!ington Hills area. 3
BR0jl; \\lllh nice CaiiJets,
m;;itch1ng dra~s. anr:I beau-
11!11] kLtcht'n for ~lon1 on a
pool-~11.e lot. Buy ,;ubjecr to
pt'f'~ent VA loan \\'llh 101;:il
pnl!s Sl96 mo. Fu!! price
LONESOME 1'°'·900
Ow"'' d""""''· mov•d Walker & Lee norlh. l\ll1st srll lari::e 4 ,
tx>droom home. lmmal'Ul;:itC" Realtors
in every \\·Ry. Br1tut1ru1 c::i Ft>unlain Vallt>y
pets 11nrl rlrap<'li. URGEN -968-3371
l\!UST SELL P:.500. lopcn['-"""-~""l..,""'':"'~!!J!! .....
evenings) Call 5'16·2313. 4 Bedrm. + Pool +
Quality
$31,500 This Jaw.low interei;t laan &
MVf' lot'& a $U'S. Anxipus
owner wilhng to assist in Very ,;f18Cious fAm ily h\i~.
additional lina.nc1ng. Nf'at 3 ...:=~;::::::;:~="'C::--= I dP5ismed for entertainini:. 2
bedroom. family room home. NEWLYWED bil th,, fam ily room l\'ilh
\RTHEREAL \'._:: ~~rr~r.~~5>
!\1odern, gtep-saving· kitch· DREAM COTTAGE ma~«1ve fireplace for indoor
en. Gt"neroui; fenced yard Cutr Rs ll bug'~ ear and a<.'l1on. Cloud soft carpeting,
with C'OVf'!red p;itio. Pa y· ~qu<'aky clean. Gold "1;hag custom drapes. Price in·
ment:o; less than rent at only carpet. cus!om kitchen, dude re~larion pool table.
$30.9j(), to\\·ering tree·shaded 101 Patio, loads of decking, lu5h
Optn E\'es. 'til 8 Pf.1 nl 11 land~caping encirr.lf's the •~-·~&CO.I completely fenced. 0 y 75 hea ted pool. Brk, 540-171.0. ~"""""" pays aJJ. less than rent. TARBELL _,f2LT,2!!~,..... 12',000 TutAI.
$24,950
4 9'drm. +Family Rm.
Beauuful family homf'. En!I')'
hall. dinin.1t room, cozy den.
2 baths, fireplace, built·tn
range k ovl'.'n, PMk I i k e
yard, brk, 5-10.1720
TARBELL
~·lla.rbor, CO!(!& r.1esa
2 STORY STEAL
Over 1700 1q. fl. ol f~mily
living "'itb 4 deeorator bl!d·
rooJN, p I U I h carpets,
bride's kitchen and you M\'n
evrrythlng. NO GI~L\UCKS
. "'·""'· Walker & Lee
Walker & Lee 29:JJ Harbor. CM!a t.fei;a
SUPER .DUMP
BEACH COTTAGE \Vo\\'! \Vhat -a.fixrr.upper!
Brins: you r boot~ and ~hovf'J ,
PLUS INCOME! 3 &dnn, 2 ooth, "'""" 1~.
Liw. in the front home and h1rge cowred pa tit> & dbl.
Pn}oy beach Jiv in2 "·hile you 11::ar. High 1'.\Sumabte 6'"'"
rent O\Jt the rear unit to loan. Bes t part is the pr1ce
m11.kf' your pa}menlS Needs , • ,$21,450. "For 11toul bfart&
a llitle TLC but be..rgain only!"
rrtCftl at $23.950. Call a46-588CI (Open ;f.:\-"f!S. l
Wark!~ .• ~ Lee I yr ~~~I
8424435
* OOVEfl $ORES * A TIENTION ELEGANT thrunuc N~hlntt HOUSE OWNERS rompn•bl• ., lhi• ' & den,
4 bedroon1s, 3 separate baths. "'ilh pri~s & details
Large family room wah in· 675 3000
viting fireplace, built in -•
efficiency kitchen. dii;h1\.'ash-I miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•
CLASS,IFIED
HOURS .
er. Patio. Freshly painted. WARM AND
8:00 a.m. to 5 p.m.
:r.tonday thru Friday
9 to noon Saturday
Advertiserll' may place
Nothing to do bu! move
right in & s!art to really live TRADITIONAL
& relax. Patio. Decorator Roomy 5 Bedroom, dining
leatuf'l's inside & out. Bkr. room & family room. Ulti· t heir ads by telephone 5-10·172{1. mate in privacy. r-.1any trees,
TARBELL covC"red ou!door entertain-
ing area. \\'ell planned toT
COST A ?i.1ESA OFTICE
330 W. Bay
642-5678
2955 Harbor, Cost3 r.fry
$19,950 IS THE PRICE ror this ,·ery lovely 3 bed·
ronm, 2 b11th home. The loan
is -high enough that you can
a.'isume with paymenls of
$160 Pf'r month, which in-
cluclts all. l\lodem built-ins,
deep pil e carpets, also
matching drapes. Double
gara~c 10 booe Call .
Walker & Lee
Rc11l1ors
2790 Harbor Blvd. a! Adams
Mj.()46j Open 'Ill 9 PTIT
ASSUME
-VA LOAN!!-
Sharp 3 bt-droom on la.rge
Jo!. To1al payments $186. per
mon!h. Low Down, Priced
at $25,900. Call now for de·
1a tl.~.
FULLER REAL TY
f,46.0814 Anytime
AFRAID TO BUY7
DON'T BEi
TRT·LEASE -OPTION -ON
5 Bednn~. 3 Bath!;, Ne"·port
Hls. Sl.000. cln., U)O.fmo.
TRI HARBOR
REALTORS
400 EAST Im!, C,)f.
NJTE OR DAY 64&3~
6 UNITS-EASTSIDE
all 2 bdrm, 1 ~1 hath, pa .
ti~. Just 1>11ln!N'.!. Sho\,·s
gooi! rc12rn of Sil ,800 gross
inron1r. GreAI Jocat1on with
nnly 3~~ vac11.ncy f1ctnr. Call
Walker & Lee
Realtors
77~ Harbor Blvd. a1 Acl;;ims
!'Jl:>-0-\Gj Open '!11 9 PM '
4 BR · WATERFRONT
Lovely yarrl It patio. Frplc ..
2 baths. Plc!r "-slip.
SltlS,000
Call: 673·3663 642-U.13 F.vts
associated
BROKERS-REALTORS
lOlS W lalboo 67l·J66J
mo1her·1n·la1v or maid.
$45.500. 242~ Holiday, !'>pen
daily 1·5.
PETE BARRETI
REALTY
642-4353
Macnab-Irvine
Ri'alr~· Comp;:iny
BUY · OR
. LEASE OPTION
Be11utifu! 2-s tory, 5 BR. 3
b11th home \1'/fR & formAI
DR. End of quie1 cul·de·sac.
3 )T~. nrw • S.>2.500. Call
Loi.~ Egan 6.\-1-6200.
Macnab-Irvine
642·8235 644-6200
HERE'S AN
INVESTMENT
\Vonh ronsidC"rat1on • 4 hf'd·
room dup!C":oi: 21~ bath in
each unit. Built in kilchf'ns
. forced a ir hPat ing, ovrr
2Q'Wl sq roor of h\!ing area,
r11rpf'li; + drape~ • 5o]ld
1n1·nmr , pnce $19,.J!O •
673·85.j(J,
NE\VPORT BEACH
3333 Neu•port Blvd.
642-5678
HUNTINGTON BEACI?
17875 Beach Blvd.
540-1220
LAGUNA BEACH
.222 Forest Ave.
494·9466
SAN CLEl\1 ITTITE
305 N. El Camino Real 492-4420 .
NORTil COUNT'l
dial free 5•10-1220
CLASSIFIED
DEADLINES
Deadline !or copy&. kills
is 5:30 p.m. l hc day bl!·
fore publication, c:i.:cept
for l\tonday :Edition
"'hen deadline is Satur-
day, 12 noon.
CLASSIFIED
REGULATIONS
ERRORS = Advertisers
sht>uld che<:k their ad&
daily &. report errors
immediately. THE
DAILY PILOT 11ssumes
liablHty for the first In·
corr<'ct insertion only.
c ,\NCELLATIONS:
\Vhen klllln~ an ad be
sure to make a rt"COrd
or the KILL NUMBER
i;:iven you by yo\1r ad
GREAT , , • Inker ns receint of your
. , • for entei-taining. Pri,v. cancrlla,,Uon. This kill nuniber n1u~t be pre-b<'ach. 4 B<tnns.. family scnt<'d by the advertiser
rn1 ., 3 baths; carpets, in case of a dispute.
drAJ)l'5, int i. new n>frig. CANCELJJATION O'R
Only SM.700 CORr~ECTlON or NEW
HOPE GERRIE RLTY. AD BEFORE RUN NING ,
· 833 Dover Or., N.B. Every cfft>rt Is made-to ~4'100 &45-3.121) kill or correct a new ad that has b<'cn ordercl,
OWNER ANXIOUS but 1vc c1111not ~aran-
\Vil1 consirlt>r all t>flr~. 1C't" to do so until the ad
2.100+ gq fr IKtnie. 3 BR, 2 ha!I a ppeared in the pa-. ""'' 11., den, bonus fam rm &
~cmt pal.lo. DD\IE~A·LINE ADS:
CALL SEF. AN\'11111£ These ad.11 are strleUv
ROY J. \\0ARO RLTRS. cash in ad\•anci! by mail
Sl6-027,8 o.r at a n:v one of aur or·
t1ets. NO J)hone ordera.
Builders Attention THE DAILY Prt.OT ...
CboiC"f: R·3 • 180x132 • Level serves the rl.i:ht to c.l•s·
ttady for buildini:: ll~ uniis~ slfy, edit. censor or~-
* TRIPLEX * £xCf'lll!nl Costa .M!Sa toca. ruse any Bd\'ertlument. , 2 and to chllnre Ill rates Outstanding toc11.rion. Cloee hon. A.11k in: S.l .~. ti73.S.\'i(l & rt>i;i:ulatlons without
dy to bl!' lived In. Alk· riltr;11 P3rl: 3 htdroom.c and
tna: $40.000. • df>n, 2HIO 11-11 .• fr J LJ\t rf'-BR's "'lth 11.ophl1tir111t'rl m•tr Rea.llon 1\·ha1 Is y<M1r pro~rty
wonh? For resld~nllal Jll"OP·
f'rtY at\lllysls ~ prnionAI In·
terview call 646·TITI .
beaut. home.· $79.500. NO
LEASEHOLD. I t ' 11 ex.
qulsltf'. Open hse. daily -
BryAnt \Vil!st Rltr. 6i.'~2i,J:
646-&538 ~arly Ai\1 or EVE.
to \\1f'!ltclitf Shoppina Cl!n· prior notice.
ter. (3J 2 B~rooms. lmmac.'. ducl!d IO $.ii.COO. ('A 11
si6·231J bl?lorf' yt\11 invr~t.
511\lf'. ~p.irklin.c:. llf'p.g\~r 13124\56
ki!. P11:IUl'f'Sqllf' lndscpg. "o-11~'1'~.E~R~IT-.,-,-. -. "BM~l"OO-m~. 2
~ "'hAI $61.~ wU\ buy, baths. entry l\all, huge -GEM-rlrepl1ee, hu llt·1ns, patio,
2629 Harblir. C.M. 1610 \V, O>a,gt H..._y,, N!B. sprinkler s:yAttm. Brk.
l~~~~~~~~~'j.J~~~~!!!!!!!!!!~'!_l~R~r.~A~LTO~R~~;__ _ __!~~2~··~62~3 1 ...:S~~~.~~~-·~Ph--96l-.;.;:_TI_%:..:._· __
f
\.0' T.HE REAL
\'"'\.. ESTATERS .. ,., ,, '"' ' ' ·~
• NO DOWN
Vets hemes • NpB/01
CaU J. ~k. Bkr, 54>0485
(
CorKl. Lon1t time tenant. CLASSIFIED
Rents 11re iow, but a good MAILING ADDRESS
inv~tment. F t 1•• l P. O. B()X 1560 • MORGAN REAL TV u resu ~Aft ust 8 phone Cosla .l.ft"sa '
673-6642 675°6459 1..::'all=.:•:.:•c:'"''-' 64Z-=56::::.:7S~-l"--..::;92:;;62::6:..-...1
I
-• • • • • • • I' •• "
• • -
DAILV PILOT U : -l~I _,,,Uo I~ I _,,,Me l~I I~ ·...,.I ._"' ..... _'"_·::_'"___.I ~l __ .. .:..._"_·:_· .. ~J ~I ,._.,~I~!-:---~~-'~ J _,.,_ J ie i:-~;;;;;;;1 .
lrv1n• 305 Hou ... Unfum. 30~ '
Co1t1 Mesa
Irvine Income Property 1661ncom• Property 16' Bu1lne1s Hou1et Unf ur n .
I;;;;;;;;;;;:=;;;:=;;;;::;;;;;:=:;;;::;;;;;:;;;:;;. l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;i;;;;;i:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-i;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;=I Oppo•tunlty 200 Generol
S BDRMS. ·-ALL ON ONE FLOOR S GARQEN TYPE BUNGALOW APTS * New Ll•tinc *
VETS: Stop writing rent c~ech! Own
your own ~om• & build on equi ty.
Only $21,500. fu ll price. 3 BR en d o
lotto lot!
545-0458 893-8533
General Costa Mist
l,;;;;;C;l;;:T;Y:;. ;;;E;ST;;:A;T;E;;;:;;;;;; BY .OWNER' 2 "ory, •ha!<•
roof, 4 Br 2% Ba, Bit-ins.
Enjoy country living here in Frpl, covtred patio, Boat
this new 4 BR., 3'balb Lusk gate, storage area, Xlnt.
home. Important entry. cond. thru-0ut. 5;!0.7244.
Beauti/UI decor! Plus, wall-ed privacy \Vith harbor OWNER, comm 1 BR cpls
In ""-"" drps, panUd, gar. $18.700.
view. ·"""'· $3500 dn. bal 7% CM
__...._ 646-5632
............. ............ 2 SHARP REPOS. 3 & 5 Coldwell;Banker BR'•· io x1ot ..,., 134 M. . Bkr. 546=-7739; 545-3412.
REALTORS '-----=....,,--1_Ea1t Bluff
833-0700 644-2430 e THE BLUITS e
Homes It Investments
Ocean View Lot ;t~t..,.
Newport Heights fee land. &. .ii,~·.J!i!f· Call frir apopintm('nj to see. a.st g;'.;f
Lachtnmyer Realtor '9:'
616-3928 E". 64&4067 0 r eally
Back Bay
NEAR UCI. 3 BR. Jam rm .•
I~ BA, l8x20 liv rm. huge
brick frplc, massive boOk
cases. sep util. Hrdwd firs,
crptd, drps. Cov patio. Det.
2 car gar. Cot lotflncd.
r..tultiple Listing Service
2414 Vista Del Oro, NB
644-1133 Anytime
Fountain V•ll•Y
CUTE AS A BUG!!
$29,950. Broker, 54~3663. 3 Bdrm. 2 bath townhouse
in F.V. Like new cond. ~1.1.89• P1rk _ throughout. o,vner trans-
LOOKS like new modt'I. 3 ferttd & owner has to sell
BR, 2 BA, new cpts, drapes, quick. Submit on terms or
paint. Lge yd. Ov.·ner, assume IBA loan, Priced
540-9593. right at $2.J.~.
Corona d•I Mar O)LLTNS & WATTS
REALTORS
• • R.T.AOAMS
19171 B iddle Or ••
Irvine·
• 962-5523 (Open Eves.)
SPANISH
You are the winner of
2 tickets to the
Ora nge County
International
Auto Show
at the
ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
CENTER
Novtmber 17th thru 21st
Please call 642-5678, ext 314
between 9 and 5 pm to claim
your ticket~. (NoM.h C211nty
toU-free number is 540-1220) • • •
Costa Mesa
ID UNITS
Eru;tsidt Costa Mesa, great
l'f!nlal area. Seven !·bed.
rooms and three 2-bedrooms.
All separate unlls with lot11
of space. Shows a fan!asic
return with income of.$1.400
per mo~ Subn1 it on do\.\•n or
trade to • Walker & Lee
Realtors
3 CAR GARAGE -
4 BR. plus 22x24 den, Span.
ish firepl, block wall fence.
sprinklers. Assume low VA
~oan w/krw dn. $~4.500.
HAFFOAL REAL TY
8424405 Eves: 541-2446
WOW! LOOK!
A REAL BUY! * 5 BEDROOMS * * 3 BATiiROOMS *
AND ONLY $32.500!!!
HAFFDAL REALTY
8424105 Eves: 541-2446
Huntington Beach
"Spanish Manor"
Introducing a fantastic tri-
level home on a cul-de-sac
lot. For thf! man on the
move, here is a -4 bedroom,
family room, formal living
and dining rooms, PLUS .••
A basement rumpus room
and COOL POOL. Priced be-
low market. A mttst to see.
842-2535.
2790 Harbor Blvd. al Adams I""'""'""'""'"""""""'"'"' I $45-9491 Open 'Iii 9 PM
BY OWNER
$25,500
3 BR., 2 full baths, attractive
\.\'ell kept interior, carpeting,
y,.·aJJ to wall, drapes. Large
fen ted yard with room for
boat. Corner Jot close to ele-
mentary & hi schools in
west gide Costa ~lesa. Phone
owner for appointment to
see. 548-6449.
BRITE & CHEERY
New listing near Newport
Hts, 4 BR., 2 ha. Kitchen
bltins, F.A. heating. New
carpeting. Large fenced
yard; just 2 doo~ from city
park, Only $30,500
CALL e 146·1414 ~ ..
Ne•r Nt•por1 Po11 orrfre
COLLEGE PARK
4 BR, fam rn1, shag crpts,
all this on xtra lge corner
lot. 10~::, Down or VA or
trade. 239 Princton. 823-4~
Open Hou~ Sar • Sun 1 to 6.
BY OWNER
f"URNISHED or untum. R-2
lot w/2 BR: din nn, 1%
BA. new crpts, drps. East
side-. S2S,oo:>. untum. Ph:
642-2552
Leaving CounflW! By OwrK'.f,
f BR. 2 ·BA, on lge lot,
M'X155', alley., covered patio
on quiet 11. Nice I y
,J~nd5ca~. $25,SOO. Try
$2.000 down, we'll carry
2nrl. $48-t3fl4, '" alt 5 or
Wf'e.kends.
3 BR. 2 Ba, Uv & din, bll1ns
laundry rm. crpl1, drps.
Dct11.n view • flO traffic.
$2j,500 0v.'l'!l!f, &12·53&4, 101~
\V. 19th C~I.
LOOK AT THIS!!!
Very sharp, clean: gd nbr-
hood and nr schls & shop·
ping, This 3 BR 2 BA home
with w/w crpts, drps &
great ldscpg is lowest price
in town at $21,950, Low·low
paymts. Call today.
I' 11iage Real Esta te
HM471I=1546-1103
LUXURY LIVING
4 BR or 3 & den luxury type
condo located in H.B.'s nic-
est area. No bothersome
yard ma.int., lovely w/w
crpts & drps, all bltlns. Pri·
vale patio for children.s
safety. Loads ol storage,
Has pool &:tennis courts. All
type financi ng and on I y
$29.000. Hurry and call for
appt. 962-5523-Eves. 962-5081
COLLINS &. WA'ITS INC.
OCEANFRONT
DUPLEX
l£t your tenan1s make your
paymi.g in thil: prlme loca·
lion. 3 Bedroom Duplex.
Both unlfs are fully furn ish-
ed and in mint condition.
Pricrd at only SSJ.95(1, SuJ>.
mlt your offer. S.~O-R.i55
SHERWeeo REAL TY
18964 Brookhurst F. v.
l'M LOOKING
For P ro R.E . Sa lesmen
BE YOUR.-OWN BOSS
CALL El> KASABIAN
847·9604
A REAL ESTATE CO.
Nol a R.E. factory
BULLHEAD
HANG 10
Carry board to sul'f'. .f·BR,
2 BA, xlnt arta, 11uie1 st.
V11,c11n1. $32.950. DEAN
REAL TY 536-7527.
BY OWNER • California
ClasslC'li. lmmac. Must aeU.
~l&-232t.
This one is only 6 mos. ·NEW. Corporate • -BOAT RENTAL _
owner is offerinf this spacious home at 00..
low cost for quick sale. PRICE JUST RE-
DUCED TO $47 ,900 INCLUDING THE LAND! _
FRE E ll. 3 BR. z BA, Jre tAm •rm
kit. Spae llv rm w/frple.
din rm., pool 15 x 35 w/dlv·
ing board, brick BBQ, bat I
ndwood turn. Bia crptd .
pool table size playroom
·w I bar on cul ·de ·NC in
Collqe Parle. $300 mo. on
yrs lease. 548-3446 or
494--6364.
Landlord1-0wner1
TO BUY OR We wiU re!er ttna.nt. to you
SEE THIS ONE TODA YI
4 separate buildings. Shake roofs. Private
patios. No stairs. All 1 story bungalows.
2 & 3 bedrooms. Some have fireplaces. The
type of buildings that attract and hold good
tenants. Income $16,740 yr. $14~.000. Excel·
lent financing.
SELL A BUSINESS FREE of cherge •• , MMy
HOLLAND BUS. desirable tenant• on o u,.
''J ' I 'J I .111 I I' 11 ii .
·---"J \pollor
Huntington 811ch
BITS OF SPANISH
4 BR., FAM. RM.
$29,500.
SPANISH walled Iron gate
courtyard entry. 4 KING
·SIZE bdnns. 21,ii ba. Walk-
in closets, vaulted ceilings.
Massive FAMILY ROO!l-1
with crackling fireplace.
l.Alrge gourmet kitchen.
Laundry center. Patio. 3-
CAR GARAGE. Only 3 yrs.
old. Low down. Must see for
yourseil at thi!t low low
$29,500. Hurry & call (TI4)
962-"'85.
IORl\I [ Ol\O\
'" '?I ,A ( ruR.I
19131 Brookhurst Ave.
Huntington Beach
BUILDERS
CLOSE-OUT
Only -4 remain. 3 and•4 bdnn
Spanish Style homes with 2
baths. No down GI buyers
and min. down F1tA. Priced
from $3{),651). Price includ-
es landscape, sprinklers and
bu~r chooses color on car·
pets. Close to _ .So. Coast
Plaza and ne\\' schools. 1\1~
dels open. Call •
Walker & Lee
Realtors
2190 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
545-9491 Open 'lil 9 PM
"TWO-STORY
·BEAUTY"
\VHAT A LOCATION. , •
Prime residential area ad-
jacent to the new central
park. 4 bedrooms and a huge
Z1 x 15 open beam family
room. Fully ca rpeted
throughout. A lot of livin'
for only $34,100, Call today
••. 842·25.15.
"SINCE ~946"
1st \V~sttrn Bank Bld&'.
University Park "Our 26th Year"
D•ys 133-0101 Nights
WESLEY ftl. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
2111 Si n Jo1quin Hlll1 Ro1d
NEWPORT CENTER · 644-4910
Huntington Be1ch
BUYER .Wl~L
SALES walting llat
''The!> Broker With Empathy" ALA Rental1 e 645-3900
_rns Oranae Ave .. C.ti.f. e PRIVACY Auuttd-Spac
&1.,..1470 540..()608 ev@, Bach, tum util incl $80.
Investment ALA Renta.b1 • &15-3900
Opportunity ~~ • STEPS to bay or bch·Furn '* * * Bach, all uti.I pd. $100.
GEORGE OSLER At.A "'ntal• e &1~3900
326 16t h Place
Coita Me•• e HARD to Btat·2 Br, fnci!
yd, cpl.I, kida It pett, $13'5.
ALA Rentals • 64>3900
IMMACULATE 3 BR. 2 BA.
Frplc, bltns, d!!lhw1ht, cpts,
•lge p11tio, lowly fenced yd. f
Nr. major shopping. all
schools. S25cJ mo. lease. Call
549-1783 alter 4:30 p.m. or
wkends. PAY .CASH FOR
4J1Ulty, and auume FllA or
VA loan. 3 (If' 4 BR hoURS. r ~-----.......,
Mount11n, Desert, You are the wiMer of
R11ort 174 . 2 tickets to th@ _ Ora nge County ii OOWiOUSE-1 Br. Fned
EXCEPTIONALLY CLEAN
• l BR, 2 Ba, College Parle
home -Large fa.mlly rm.,
big double a:ara.ie, nice
yards. $~. per mo. Call
546-5880, Heritigti Real '
Estate. (~n Eves.)
Any condition, any area.
Bia-... 847·8407 *1r* BIG BEAR LAKE lnt~rnation1I yd, Child/pet, Util pd. $150.
Put your 'SKIS" in this Auto Show ALA Rentals • 64>3900
Irvine Newport Beach
Popula r Rutge rs ~ocltl Any;.;;"' Fo_r_G_ol_t?
To-pricod to.. qUlek $
large A·frllme et.bin on a at the w ki
view lot. Only Si7,700. E·Z ANAHEIM e E Like 'ds & pm. 2 "·U R 714 ) BR. Stv/ref. Encl gar. Sl.50. tenns. ...... oss < CONVENTION ALA Rentals e ~39<»
536-1738 or write: Spenctr CENTER ~-~=="'-'""-'"' EASTSIDE-4 bds., 2 bath, ·
fireplace fenced yd,, nr.
schools. Available Nov . ,
alth, Yrs. lease req., $215
mo, ~Option ro buy. J"or
appt. call 548-1862.
sal•. SeJ>ont• dloing room 34, 950
& fa"1ily room. Lots of pa-This is ·not on a golf coune,
tio area, low maintenance but it is right on a profes-
landscaping and other amen-sional!y manicured putting
itles offered here. 3 bdrm., g~n in NeWpl'lrt B@ach's
2~ ha.. Only $39,500. finest condominium, There
Real E1tate, ~.O. Box 2828, November 17th thru 21st • LAGUNA' Retreal·l-Br.
Big Bear Lfke, Ca1it. Please call ~2·5678 ext 314 Stv/ref; cpts, child/pet. $150.
(ired hill
REALTY
Un iv. Park Center, Irvine
Call Anytime, 833-087.0
UNIVERSITY PK~ 4 Br, 2~
Ba, frpl, cpt, drpg, fam nn.
$51,000. Owner, 833-0313
L1guna Be•ch
LOWER
MYSTIC HILLS
E.~Cf!llent view of town &
btach trom all rooms. Well
built custom home with pr i-
vacy. Be am e d Ct'ilings
thruout. Large entry sky·
light. Fireplace. 4 Bdrms.,
2~l baths . 2600 11q, ft., sep·
arate master suite. Spac-
ious built-in ki!chen 'A'ilh
dishwasher. Large decks
for outdoor living. Low
maintenance. $64,500. Call-
AO/an
REAL ESTATE
are two swimming pools In
the garden-like community
consistiqg of 33 homes on 5
acres of. land. The home ill
1hrcc bedrooms and t 11" o
baths a~ the lowest price
ever. Can be>. shown any.
time, Cali 646-1171.
1-0 THE REAL
\"-ESTATERS
,( I ', ._,/, I • I
MINT CONDITION
Real Estate Wanted 184 !>@tween 9 and S pm' to claim ALA RcntaJ1 • 645-3900
---------1your ticket1. (North County '• LOTSA Room-3 BR. Stv/
CASH ONLY toll·ff'ee number iS 540-1220} rel. Kids/pets welcome. $175
For yaur lot ln Newport or * * • * ALA Rentals e 6'15-3900
Colrta Mesa, must be zoned Money to Loen 240
lot duplex or triplex • also e r.IlNJ Ra.och-4 BR. 2 BA.
older homes that can be SA nLER Hu~e yd. Kids/pet!/sngls.
torn down tor new con11truc-MTG CO $225.
tion. ' • • ALA Rentals • 64>3900
VACANT 4 BEDROOM 3
BAIB tO\Vnhouse w It h '
carpets. drapes, and Ult" of
recrearion hall &: pool.
Lease it for $:?25. Call Aa:ent
$16.4141 w.nI leue back until you can , 336 E. t mJ S'I'REF.T CALL DAY OR NIGHT
find new home. State loca-c h F TD' . Fountain v.11., tion, lot ""· price & phone as Or S ALA Rentals e 645-3900 I ::-::=::=~-,:~--· I
numb@r 1999 H•rbor Blvd., CM LUXURY 3 BR twnhu:.
Act tut ·as our cash budget 1st TD LOAN plush crpt. drps. patio. Dbl
is limi+ed to 10 purchases 7.25% INTEREST gar, Nr pool. $225 mo.
only, 2nd TD LOAN 962-232&
Wri•-P.O. n~ 1•••, N<W· Lowest Rates Orang• Co. RENTAL FINDERS "' PW< ....., 411 w. ,,.. COST~ MESA 3/5 BR, 2 BA, rec room,
port Buch. 642-2171 54S-0611 H *Apt frplc, bltns, lge yard, near
REAL TORS Serving Harbor arta 21 yrs, ouaes s. scbool, 968-4576 attft" 6 PM.
Charming modem home in Cash for .-or clienl'I. need Money Wanted 150 * '45-0lll * H I ,.. 1•::::::::!.::.=;c.:;;...-...:::::1 :1),.~ ... F • __ _.. __ ,_ unt ngt~ Beech Nev.rport Hts. Delightfully land or older home: with R-21 "' ree lo UUlll~
decorated. 3 BR., 2 Ba. New Or R-3 :roning, We have $4000 -Jo'URNlSH~ -3 BR 2 BA, elttt blttn R/O,
shag ""·:"PCUng, frplc. Kitch-builders \\'siting_ quick es· ,.., FOR ONE YEAR T"IJJ'IL Pd. Nice Bach. FA h!, crpts, 60x100 ft fenc.
en bltins, covered patio .I: cro\.\·s. Call &12-4000 ask far IO 10 pre-paid in!erest s~ur-teps to ocean, N.B. w/ gar. ed Jot. dbl gar, ldscpd.
of.her tine featW't's. A.skin&: George l\tasChmeyer. M by a lit TD on $10.~ $l50-trrJL P<l Charming La-V&.cant-move in today/$22:1
$37.900. PRIVATE p&rty wants -4 BR ~fp:1~b~ni:,"1ue, clear. Prin-gons. t BR. Ll"g deck+ pa-per n10. Ask tor rtntal ~
CALL . '=", ,,,.J,14 home fo~own use. Any cond (714) 536-7511 H.B. tio."Ocean Side ". Ideal cpl, 962-44TI.
\:I~ or behind pymnts OK. child ok. $~. MOBILE Home, 3 BR, dJffl~ S9-l-4Q9.1. MMtgages, ·~UN~FURN--~-E-0-1.l Ba .. crptd, sundeck &
· REAL TY~ I ~~~~~~~~~~I Trust Deeds 260 -'"'"' -patio, kids/pets OK. Util Nc ar.Nc•porl Po11 Office Ii l---=-----·1$125-2 BR. BltnJ, lndry hook pd ' Le
BAYFRONT "'""Ill I[ •I NEED CASH "P.ChHdren ok.AVLNOW! ooi-5914."'· 5J6.83ro O<
By owner • I >over Shores.1 ~;;;;;;;;;;;;~·;;~I $135-2 BR. Cottage. stv/ttt.11 '"155<'--7.M"'o"s"'rLE=~H"°""-.~2-B~R," I
Spacious 5 BR., conv. den., I cpts. drps & gar. Hl1RRYI parUy turn., patio, fned
Jrg. lam. rm., "P· dining $1.000, OR UP TO $3,000 .... _. kids/-•-OK !il Bu1ines1 $155-SPAC:.3 BR. Stove, cpts, ,,.""'""• ......... • u • rm, -4 ba, all elec. kitchen. O I 200 d 1 fa . _,_ pd Lease 536-8360 or Newly decorat~. Pri. beach pportun ty $10.~ AND MORE rpi;, ge mlly ""· ooS-5914• ·
1190 Glenneyre St. & d k &lG-6400
494-9473 54~316 oc . . THE. PROOF IS See Avco Thrill for a Real $18&3 + Fam rm home. Gar. 3 BR. 2 BA, big cul~e-aac ft BY O\.\'ner, 3 BR, 3 BA con-Fncd yrd. Children & petli .. _ *SELL OR LEASE * IN THE PUDDING Estate Loan. Upon approval, w·'-•· . '"'me,. all bltru, dlx attL do, Nr Hoait Hospital, t:.1._..... $265 v 1 53&-9 2aio + Sq. F't.. 3 BR. 21,l ba. s32 500 S45-l522 S4S-J4J8 DISTRIBUTORSHIPS ap-use the money however yoo · acan . lS3 dyg;
lg. tam. rm. din. rm .• frpl. ' · · · pointed by the leader New. Ii~. Also ask about our $ZlO-CORONA del t>.far 2 + o;5.1&-;;,-1_22,',:',-v_•0•·-,;~-.,..-=,-I
Carp. & drapes, bltns, wet Newport Heights port International, c~n ex-UnS('c:ured personal loans. oftiee or den w/ pool. Child $165. ~lo. 2 BR, 2 BA,
bar, etc. Immac. $47,950 ClfARMING 3 BR hoine, pec:t Jucr~tive eamings ~' &B~A.CbN RENTAL$ Townhouse, "'asher, dryer, full Price. beam clng w/ust'd brick while v.·orking only a few refrig. Vacant. ~9153 dy&;
1'.11SfilON REALTY 494-1'.1731 trplc, ram rm, xlra lge mt. hours per week refilling , • THlllll'T 435 W . 19th St,* 536-1222 eves,
EMERALD BAY. Charming beaut. kept yd. immaccond. AUT0;\-1ATIC MER.CHAN-64S.0111 3"""'B~,-.. -nd~o-.~,%~b.-.-poo-J-,,·I'
contemp. 6 Br., or 3 suite~. $33,950. 64:>.5322. DISERS with nationally 620 Newport Cenler Dr. Frff Rental Service clubhouse. patio, garare·wt
GorgE'tlus vlew. $145,000. ••*• OIARMING, older, knO\.\·n ' ·_p UDD I N G 833-3440 Shp 3 Bel, 2 Ba, 1hag CPI. blt storage, nr the beach. TOWNHOUSE LOVELY v1ew lo! • $40,000. SPANISH stucco, 2 BR, & rnu IT CUP" Snacks, TRUST DEEDS WANTED Ins, fenced yd, pets & child· 962-0986 aff 5 pm.
LIVING TED HUBERT & ASSOC. frplc, redec in & out, ~2. and collecting: the mooey Cash for :nd TD ren OK. Bargain S225 p/m. 2 ·BDRMS., nr park. W./W
-34n Via Udo. 675-1!980. $26,000. By Owner &l~l446. ~es. What an easy way to •-• 673--0l40 • • Walker & Lee._Rltl'$ 842-4455 drapes. No-pell, Clean.
About time to leave the 1ro=P~O~F~W~O~RL=D~Cil=A~RM=· 'an Clemente make mo~y! U you are Balbo1 Peninsul1 Gardent-r & water paid'. For maint. to someone else. See ~ r bl ha · ~ C21
th'·, J--ly 4 ~•room 2 ER. 3 BR. tam rm, 2 1 ..,~~---------re 1a e, ve a good car, I "---for-1-N••• B• & B-h b nd appt. 3) ~7882 aft 6
UY<; ........ ,.. hath!!, w I 20 x 55' deck BY O"·ner, 3 BR, 2 Ba, o. and can lmm~iately 1.nve11t ._. J'EJ ... y caC • ra pm. bath Townhouse. Has all _ . new 3 BR 3 BA $450 mo °"'====----builtins in Queen's kitch. "-Great View! $37,5CXI. Sell vlew, 403 ~. Ave. San Juan. $2100.00, you may be 11elect. * 673-&lSo • EXCEPTIONAL valut, 3 Loads of storage thruout. or lease w/ option. oWntr. $41,900. Terms. 544-4294. ed to join our 1111Cce111 team. * BR, 2 BA, tam rm, nr
Exceptional buy at s24,950. 494-3381. or 496-1260. San Juan C•pistrano Drop u1 a note showing Houses Furnish.cl 300 Corona del Mar Brookhurst & Adams. $255
Submit on terms. For furth-4 Br. 3 ba, fam rm, pool sz your sincere interest, and NJCEj"'""·,~ °'B'°R....,.2"'b---I mo. 528-3567 aft 6 PM. we'll h how Se d i.ien1ral , ge. · a. lower er info. ca 11 962-~23/ lQL Big va11ey view! $39,500 ONE ACRE na s ow you · n _ duplex. Oeean llidf! ot hwy. 3 BR, 2 BA W/encl patio.
Eves 536-!r.'l54. Owner. 494-7\i'Sl. In area of homes selling me, address, and phone WANTED past middle-aged $300 month. Comp!. crpt'd. Nr. schoola &
COLLINS & \VATIS INC. Lagun1 Niguel from $50,000. Al.I un-nu~berl 1~. N~bwport Inter· M>man to rent room & •hart DELIGHTFUL 2 BR. home. shopping. $23{). 846-7694. C&W dergrourKI utilities. Club na tona istn uting Com-lovely Corona de! Mar home, Large patio &: yard. Near
PRICED RIGHT house facilities including pany, 3700 Newport Blvd., bf!' companion with same. S65 Bayside Dr. $275 mo. ~ln1~l;n";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I UP FOR GRABS I tennis, -I & shuffle~-~. Newpo11 Beach, Calif, 92660 per mo. P.O. Box 724, CdM, ALSO _ Balboa Island
3 BR 2 •-pl" ~ q JI An outstal1dlng 4 bdrm. 2 """ ............ '"'· 1 #JOA 3 BR 2 b · " .,... s """' s · ' Ocean viPv.·! l.A'P · 92625. rentals available · a .. atr:i um · • • • S325
hobby • family room. As-bath home wilh family nn., ONLY $2S 000 MONEY MAKIN'G B Ibo p • I Sal>'sb"ry R••lty 673 ........,. 3 BR, 2'..i ba., lam ••• , $325 sume rHA Joan. $194. per living mi. Parquet flooring · ; a • enrnsu a · · ..,......., 3 B
$23 800 Lo Do & tile entry; fe11ced yard, CAPISTRANO VALLEY OPPORTUNITY IN $285/mo Lge 3 Br, 2 Ba dbl 3 a:· ; ha, bonUs rm '• $350 m~ cAU: 84~ w~ beautifully Jndscpd, Garden 31~1 c R~ALTCY . Ow*n B!,_~, .. BE0AR LCAK1E * 1 ' .. &1,.0• BnR w"°,,""· Uwn"1,.11•Jd,nln• !rpl. patio, bltns, gar. 4 sR. 2~ ~a.1~·:::: :: , palio, $33,500. .,,.., am.ino ap1strano ;ru.... wn O on e · r. er. Child/pet ok. 675-3708 eves
Laguna Nlguel Realty '1'93-1124 ~~;:ers Cou
1
oh'yd Fb ,
1
died 15th. 213: 243-5.116, 241>-6395. & wkl1d . 4 ~rtT~R~:.~~:.~
5 83~5050 499·1344 . ;", "111 '" ' 1 g • Laguna Be•c RUSTIC 3 bedroom & den 2 -4 BR, 2 bath, family ..,,m, ' TAl'lS " rm e:qu1p m , ness o r c e s . . • \._ w •••n .( SOMETIUNG S P EC IA L! fteal Eslit., [.IJJ present owner to sell. Call OCEAN side, · w, !lll'P'I to bath, bit-ins, f 1 replace, Turtle Rock Hills •••• $400 ~ Lagona Nigul1 TerTace. 4 General Ross (714) 536-1738 or bch, "2 hr, 2 , 1rg beaut. walk to town. Agt. 675-4930. WE H·AVE CYitlERS
br. 3 ba, fam rm. high beam Write: Spencer Real Estate, fam nn v:/f~p c. Vie w liv. BAOiELOft: Apt. UtU pd. "BUYERS
WELCOME!!"
Super 11;harp 3 bedrooms and
a family room, Walk to the
new central park. A great
family hOme. Priced at
$29.950, it \.\'On't las!. 8•12-2535
ceilings, lge lndscp lot, P.O. Box 2828, Big Bear rm. w/frplc wash/dryt'r Pool & ·pn . entrance $100.
sprinklers, outside lights, Acreage for silt 150 Lake, Calif. dshwhr. Ava· to July t .$325 549-3997 or 642-8171.
walk to bch. Must sef!. Open PARTNER 494-1147 * 2 Br, o, PI / c r P 1,, 14 daily. $65,000. 496-2456 80 acres TAKE OVER all or
P · · ·' ·n1 P•rt, mountain area, 1.,.., Active w/ $30.000 CASH WINTER rtntaJ, 2 br furn Garbagf! Dis p. Avail. Nov. -'-'"-'~''-~-'-0~'-· --=~I roll.ing hillrf, NO DOWN, $58 FOR LT. MANUFACTURING frplc, Yd & dose to toWn. 15th. 67:>.2698. OP~~~~~ ~~1~ SUN mo. 968-0047. Genera! ~usiness background t2'l5 ino. Call 497·1648 eves. 3 BR, 2 BA, din rm, Harbor
NEW 2 Br.. den, 3 Ba SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO. preferre . First year's In. Lido Isle View, $350fmo. Comm. pool come sh?uld exceed $50.000. & park. 833-3894. 32311 Caribbean l,,\i, 1 & 2 acN: Estate lots. For interview Write Class!-BAYFRNT 5 BR, 3 BA, furn.1-:-__o,~~-----
"!'loli'"l 1i·llil .
---''l li·1ill 111'
"SINCE 1946"
ht Western Bank Bldc.
Uniwrsity Puk •
Days 133-0101 Nlthll
Will Con11ider Trade . Horses OK. Broker. 493-4774. fied Ad #280, Dally Pilot, Avail. 4-8 mo. $800. mo. Costa Mesa
-492·9'n34 or 1213) OL 5-Qi52 Condominium• P .O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Brittingham. Agt. 675-0123. :"::Co---..,..----* UNIVERSITY PARK *
• ,
SHARP FIXER Lido Isle for s1le 160 .Ca.·~. Newport Beach 2 BR, gar, patio, crpts, drp1, .2 BR..+ den N'pt Bcb •• '375
UPPER PARTNER 11tove & refrli. Q uiet 3 BR. 2 ba t'nhouse •••• $325 ~
Nord W•tt rfront COUNTRY Club Villa ad· •-J··• ttl ~ d·" 1 BR. & de 1 ho -$25,000 cash required for ac-CONSI DER -nl'>ng mtl h .. uvp Ca.I &fl nc IU~ a wta n, ······~ J Aggume existing VA lORn, Brand new 5 BR., 4% baths, jacent to Mesa Verde Coon· ·~ J 1 Blk t •· $l'9 4 BR 2•L ,__,...., M"" live or ln11.cti~ intere11t. Ac· on 33rd to quiet, working on y. F 0 e:n ... ps. · '• n .................. ....,... and pay just it68/mo. Sep.. deck & dock, on Lido Nord. try Club. 2 BR, Adlts, -J. . 1 . 1 "'1765 0, '" "30 3 BR 2 •-hom., --,..,.. ti Ve part crpant wtU rece ve coup!•, ye a r I y $180. <rtV" ~ • • --. • ·-' -1 arate rnast~r bedrm suite, $197,500. By owner, 54G-5188. ,,M kl _, 2 BR. 1" ho •-· -........... w Y s ..... to start + 675-751~. 3 BR holl!e, cpts, drpa, .,. · .,,,,,,., .......... ,,
f.irepl., bhln RIO &: large 40 Foot Lot 2 BR CONDO, by own<•. low h t ~·1 ~~ !'"I ,.. ed hdl "' tio Pricod f • ""' 0 ''"'" w" ~ r . ....... polio lawn •lovo i "· r . . cove pa · or A !Ir. expo~d beM'l 3 BR., 3 down payment. secured, National Sa I e 1 2 Bdrm, 2 Ba, partially furn. re frig ' util ~m 'centrai
fa!!! sale at $24,':"ilO. 540-85.i5 ba home w/South patio. 557-9440 or 968.1629 Q)mpany for manufacturing Until Junf!' 30th. $185/mo. locatl~n. s22s. lse. ·~961
SHERW••D REAL TY Only $6.i,000. P 166 roncem can do S500.000 ht Ad\ts only, no pets. Phonel====~~~~=:..
1R964 Brookhurst r .v . Bill Grundy, Rllr. , Income roperty year. c a I l Mr. Lucia, collect 714:783--0!i09. TO\VNH~USE 3 Br, 2 e~··
B'f 0\1•nrr. leaving stale, 5 341 Bayside', NB c675.f;l6l Corner Home 645-3380 10 to 4 daJly. Houses Unfum. 305 ~I. Kids ~ pet ok. Avail Univ. Park Centtt, Imne BR, 2 sly, very clean. close unmed. $215fmo. Ph , Call Anytime, 833-<l'l20
10 •"" "h"· ""'"' < B•, 3 s. liOX!IO rn.5tl0 Zoned For Offtces MONEY MAKERS -;,;;;:;t"'-----1~55~1~-7'!648~.c_,...,,--;,_ __ I !~"'"~"'"'!"'"'""'"""L
J1igh, Golden \V~st Col~g~, -4 Br, 3 Ba 10X!\S f!?l,000 1200 sq, ft. on lcvrl lot wi!h * HEALTH FOOD·S"I'ORE Gt ne r•I 2 BR. Home, Jrg din area, Laguna Be•ch
new park. 514. '/o FHA, will 4 Br, 4 Ba 90X88 $135.000 good traffic exposurt, 10"/i! * HOWE & SPORTING drpa, 11tove, dbl gar, lrg I ·p-.-.E'-'ST!-G-E-.,..-.-.. -pn-.v-bch-,
consirler 2nd. J38.SOO . ]LIDO REALTY INC. dn. Pric-ffl $.11,9'"JO. For ap· GOODS LEASE OR wooded tncd yrd. Nr ucr. spec octan VU; lie, lovely
846-t7n. • -3Jn Via Lido pointrnent to see. ca 11 * BOOKSTORE '.f GfFi!I TION $165. Util pd, 5~8-WJO. older, clean, roomy home,
NIFTY & THRIFTY 673-7300 616-7171, ED RIDDLE REALTOR LEASE OP 2 'BR apt-guage. No p<ll. cpt•id'P'. $325. 49$-176~
l BOOrm + sep. u · x 18' 646-8811 (Ask tor Van> Eutslde 4 Bedroom 2 balhs, 377 E. 18th St. CM Inquire C111un1 Hlll1
workshop or rumpUs rm, BIG HOUSE. • .• RE S TAURANT. 1.aguna'1 dbl ca.rage, frplc. el~. built-apt 4 or ph. 645<-2451. •
forml din area, newly paint· ••• SMALL PRICE mo11t popular, 1.1 n1 q u e lnS", d/w, CflJ'Pf!t throortt-1,,.,:,.=-:--~~--NEW WOR.LO .. 3 BR, 2 BA,
ed lnslde, nicely ldscpd lot. 4 BR, 3 ba., ~dln. nn. Bonus n .st.aurant. C 0 m p I e t e l y out. Deoep tot ahOWs . "pride 3 BR. Nu Dec. Cpt, drp, fncd 1 t10 1 priVD
J1L1t reduced 10 $2'2,900. All rm. L«e· lot. $61,500. JNVESI'ORS SPECIAL equipt. X1nt loi: p:;s 000 of ownership". Avail Nov. ya, cov patio, Car. ;:~~~ 'at::'° B 1 t n •:
tcrm11. Call 847·1221. 1>-·-~ lo··--J-· DiVQ.Ct't'! --1 income, '35.ooo &wm: 6. Mtl-7171 A&:ent. $210/mo. 61$-1821, 673-6267. ~""" ...,_... -•·-refrig, A w/w c p t. SEYMOUR REALTY, l nU •eo'CclA Must ll(!tl naw! ~alonomics, Bkr; £15..6700. 2 BR bouse In court, crpt1, $l49/mo. 962 _9521 or
Btacti Blv~ .. Hunt. Bch. 3416 Via Lido 675-4562 Duplex a.t Newport Beach LAWN route gross $750. Rer drps, no pets, one iunall ~6 SELLING r.ruST .sell this week! $55,000 Call aft 4 pm. ~9-f.644 mo. 4 days a wk. new equip, child. S145 mo. 646-Zll.9. L NI 1
I d I I p rt 161 Included + !tuck & PVT po.llo, encloled aar~. aguna OU• YOUR HOME? or 0011t otter. 3 Br. 2 ba. 40' n ustr a ~y ~ ltalning. FP $.3,000. 839-3051 F IXER UPPER 2 BR, Crpt11 A drps, $165.
Fitt appraisal • \Ve buy lot, 673-7185· M.I BLDG. $30,000 911 6. Old 2 story ho~ w7atUC. 673-3690. NIGU1':t. SHORE~clou1
~i!le11. Personal attenHon. Newport Be1ch 1.250 11q. ft ynung Ind. bldg. , $140. 3 BR + form.1 din rm. G 1 ntw 8to11.dmoor bo u 1 e .
25 yrs. f'X'J)erienct. -.c..-------1 & old houl'le on JOO' x 120' ESI'BLI> lnl. Dt1t1r1 Needs some v.·ork. Kids&: SIN LE house ~n o!, 2 BR. private beach, au a r d'ed
COLLINS & WATTS 1436 M•rintra Drive chOlcc Costa Mesa sl!e. Business. Nc,vpol1 Be11.ch J>Cl'ls ok. dbl ~~~J:· No pets, $183 JA!c'S, tennb:, octan view, f
962·552.l · 642-0427 By Owner, sN1ciOu1 \VestcliU, Room to bultrl niort. area. (213) 399-1576 afttr 6 776-7330 Age nt. mo. "" • BR. $3.IJO ptr mo. ~vaO ap.
T OWNHOUSES 4 BR. 2'i BA. frplc, charm· Wesley N. Taylor Co. pm. * ATT ENTION TV Room,! BR. 2 BA. Patio, prox. Nov 15th. Ph.135-4889
f $16000 iuooo Lo ing pe.Uo. Near ah(')flpln& & Reiltors CANDY Machln's for ~nt. OWNERS* BBQ, tned. cpl.I, dbl &~r. or iret key trom Mt. Bt.ltt
REALTY
VACA NT $22,950.
3 BR, 2 car rar. Ire 101, Im-
m~ pou. No dn Gt/IA dn
TflA. Ra.yma~894·1.~51.
;:' ~n ~me~t. DE~ fn"°';~~~~z:o.m~~~"'n~ 2111 San Joe.quin Hills Rd. $5 mo. Already In eatabhsh· We have rental customers $2JO. 548--9536. at BraadmOOr" ltomea,
rrs Beacn houJe l!mc. Bir-REA'LTY' 536-'1S27. $4l,OOO. Can UIUme S1.ot9' Newport Center !).j4-4910 <'d piACf., 646-2816 545--$180 for HOMES, A.PT'S A CON· •LOE. 2 BR., (DCd ~· $150. Laguna N{Juel.
aest atlecHon IWfl Set the SeU the old 1tutf • 8\1)' the toan, owner w:llJ carry 2nd. Dally Pilot Want Ada have Turn UJtWJtd I Wms into quick 00'$. Call DEANE REAL-mo. J11qultt S3S Uruvenit;y Si!ll the old •tuft Buy the
_E.AILY PILOT___..Qujlflt_d..~;:cw~•fJlo:tt"=· =====~-erinc:lpW.onb-..,Call 645.57.4.0 ~am._~. e11sh,pU~~a Xl....RtntaL.Di:v ~1527;: ..No..A. er:~-;!""!w~!.·~"'!!!":::....._===--:--.
• •
..
' I
•
i A OATlY PILOT • TUHdry, ,.~.,, ~
; ~l~!""'-!!!"'!!!-~l~~j~-~ ... ~ .. irl~"" .. ~. 1=~1~-~,-~, .. ~ . .,~. !~~. l~---_·'_"-~J[tj I ,,..._,,,,IM, j~ ._[ ...,_,.;..._u"'_'"'~j[tj I -"'-1['1 1 ~~~.~.-~, .. ~ ..... ~,. l~=·ii,'._I _'_'""-'' _..I~
·1---------1·--------; HGusu Unfurn. 305 Apto, l'um. UO A;ots. Furn. :UO Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unhlrn, 3'5 API. Unfum. • 3'f Apt. Unfurn. 3'5 Apt.., Rontol• to Shor• 430
---------I N 8 h --C ,-;:-----H ti I •-..... u I •· h Fur". or ,Unfurn. SJO FURNISl·lED -·n w/,lew -Mesa V_~•;;.td=·=-='"·--1 :-8o-l_bo_•_l~•~•'.l'nd"""='"""i+~;-·..,w-';po;:r~t~e:;;o:-e::;:;c:=~:" iCoB..,,.~·-:p,;;d~o;jl~M'.jo;;r;-:;;;;:;;1 -0-•I_•_~ __ ,.____ un "I on ue"'l"':'' • . ..i.ewpor u.acC :-~~-t-~"'Mo.,._11.l.<-----I of Balboa Isla;;'ln tie 5 br.
•BL\f'ACULATE! 3 Bdrm, 2 * * • e BRANO NEW e 1 BR •Partl,t.11..V.J~IY ' PARK .NlltWPORT l--='O'"=o:::'.""'--1 tiou69 10 lha1'9 v.·/(-othu
Bath. 2 F'RPLC'S." Bit-ins. c. J . STRACHOTA 2 BR, 2 BA apt.I w/ dish\\'t, decorated. Nr, s ho P'.&' DELUXE ON -aEACfff::------.(P~TMENTS ~ \ THE: EXCITlNG girl1. Sill mo. 673-1077. Lea~ $250/mo. Avail W3. -71 Emtrald Bay hua:e dORts, prlv palio, center, Adu1u. 499-1460 APARTMENTS • Bachelor, 1 or 2 Bedroomt. PALM MESA APTS. F'Ei\!ALE w/S yr old girl k
Ph. MQ-0094. Lagui'ta Beach healed pool, billiard rm, ja. AM/PM. Air Cond • Frplcls • 3 Swim· 2 BR Untum f'r. $230/fl'IO. and Townhouses. SPfl, paoh, MINUTES TO NWPT. BOI. lge ap! 10 share' w/s&me.
Newport rlkach You irf: tbe wlftn"r of cu:u:J & bbq's, ALL UTI!.,. 2 BDRM nr beach. Bltns, mlpa; PoOU • Health Spa • Furniturt Availablt tennU,. From $170, AUou "!RN· OR UNFURN. 557--01961546-9142 2 .tickf.t• to 1Jte. ITIES PAID. Set at 20102 piool. $225. Also pet1!houae TeMIJ: o-ts . Game &: BU-Ca..rpets-drape ... di1h""'a1her from Faahlon ls.land at Jam. Unbehevably large apts. huge1~---·:--..--:--.=
BEAUT. l\olodern \.O"'nbouif!, Oranga County Birch St. (nr. Oranre-COUn· apt. $2.50« 675-53>4, 67~3535 llard Room. heated pooi·•auna•rtnnl1 tioree Is &ui Joaquin Hills pool, Jacuui, elect b)tins, Garages for Rent 435
3 BR, 21~ BA, frplc, patio. Jnttrnation1I ly A..lrport, Just W. of P&.I· 1. BEDROOM f'l!C room-oc;ean view1 Roada. <n4J 844-1900. .sha1 crpts, drps, sauna, GARAGE !or R 1i: N r .
pooJ, 2 car rat, a.II blHiu. Auto Show iaad~s Rd). f.Jar !IST-42-16. Costa Mesa FROM" Sl30 patiOH.mple park.inc SEACLIFF Manor Apta. l Br ere. Adu1t11, no pie.ta. -Sl'ORAGE ONLY
('rpts. drapes. l.east $.29S. at the 10 x 60. 2 Bdrm, Mobil• MEDITERRANEAN Security tuanh. SltO. 2 Bdrm. $lfi0. Crvt•, SINGLES ........ From $1 35 Call 540--list
846->.'91. ANAHEIM Hom• rompL F"""· I block 'HUNTINGTON ·•-bl"--~ l BEDRM ...... From SJ40 , ~=-~~~--=
BEACON Bay, 2 Bdrm .. l CONVENTION from beach In Ne1Yport. CHILDREN VILLAGE J525• PJa';~ti~ .... Av~k 2 BEDRM : ••.•• From Sl60 10ffice Rental '40
ba . trplc. "I.' early lease $300 CENTER $137/mo. \Vinter r a t e . • e e NEW e • • ;400 Harbor Blvd., C.M. 7U OCEPAC~FVEIC about our discount. 548-lSiU. Yquri:._e .. rilg56hl, Mthey'roe under-NEWPORT CENTER mo. NM:embtr 17th lhru 21sl 1-822--7021 or 882-7767 alter (Tit) 5ST-802o AN I) :, H.B. --P '"-=! l esa r.
l\lr. Robinson Ple11..5e caU 642-5678. @let 314 5:30 pm. RENTAL OFFICE <n4J 536-1487 e NOW OPEN e f5 blkii from Newport Blvd.) GROUND FLOOR
• DAVIS· REAL TY 642-7000 i>t-[Y.ttn 9 and 5 pm. !O claim LGE l B tu '-VILLA PEDRO Anis OPEN 10 •M ro 6 PM Otc· open 10 am1 pm Daily BRAND NEW l Br, $153. 2 2500 To 6894 fee1 . Jully im-r rn v.•/gaT, Sl50. r ~ WIILIAM WALTERS 00. Br $190. ALL UTILITIES pro1:ed, prime location for
HARBOR V1ev.• 2 br k con1·t. your tiCket:a. (North Couoty \Vinter lse. 2202 \\', Ocean-PAID. Priv pat'-bill•'•-' tenant .,.,·an't lng identi•u. Ex·
d 1011-lree number is 540·1220) tronl J A t c ft• kd • * * * ov ..,u .,..._.liB ... U ~ den 2 ba. ""'/1v c.rpt, rps. * * · 't nq: P • ".,.,. YI JUST' flNISHED FOR Least': Condo. 2 br, 2.1; n:t), heat~ pool wi jac.un:i, ~ t'9 cellent parking. 60c Per
bltn°s. patio, frplc. comm. \\"NTER •~• or anytime .,.,.knds. 6'5-i:>ro. Super-Comfortable-Quiet El Puerto Mes• Aptt ba. Complete bltna, tt.trig, huge closets. deep pile car-_ ELDEN _ n10nth Jl('r foo t.
pool. SJjO mo. Eves k ... ~n ...... 3 Br. 2 ha. OCEANFRONT corner of (101 2 BR, 2 Full BA. .. * ... * • washt;/dryr, crpt/drps, pt-ting, lush landscaping. Wesley N. Taylor Co, "'·lmd~. 644-0173. Slep to the Bay. $300. in-23rd St., 3 BR, 2 Ba. $375. Must see to appreci•I• 1 Bedroom Apts. trplc, pvt gar & patio, pool. Adulta. You Must See Thi.I S "·'I ·~· 2 BED 00 Realtors eluding utilities. v 1 be k o ,. ~02 B' pa.,.. ng •~L... R M 2 SPACIOUS oceanfront home. ery ge. aut furn. Kld5 & Near Newport Bae Bay, Slip avail, 6 7 5 -3 1O8, ne. £u~ U'Ch St., NB. IU San Joaquin Hills Rd.
4 BR. ''' BA . d;n rm StiO. w;ntoo Roal >:.tato 6r>-333t "'" ok . ..._.,91 or "'4-<111. ..,r.o,,,, P"k" YMCA, Boy'• 1130 & up Incl. utilHleo. Aloo 84&-JS36. 557-42... ,..,,,.,, •Partm•nt. Lwru•· Nowporl C.ntor 6'4-4910
\\'fNTER t I l B furn Club, shoppg, fr\o\'Ys. ett. furn. Pool &: R~cttation BR 1ous ·pool, lush landscap1Dg-. ~"'i-"'-"~-~""'-"'C'I mo. &l&-8402, 673-0983. Elec. bl:~ Jn-c:·util · 2 ~i..R Duplex, FTplc., bltns, 1i Gas beat, gas cooking and area. Quiet ~vironmM_t. LARGE 3 BR. 2 BA, garage, """' AND NEW V6 $180. Adults_ 110 per,. 2311lJ!2 nBifde suites still lell
1
;n
Newport Heights 1 · b.,.. to beach. Nice. $260/mo wat•r. all -•·d. 'ID/MO Oft 5tmt parking. No Oiil· secluded porch, quiet, dead-20432 Santa Ana Ave (Ac.rou Elden. Ave., Costa. Mesa. • g (above Bue Vinton Real Estate 67f>-3331 Yrly. 644-i214. ..... " _.. Ch" from S.A. Coun•-· Cl"b) "~5780 ,.... "•" o,,,,,, Dolphin Rest.). Fine' for "~.-Ad It -t 2 from '$185. 2332 Elden see or dren, OD pets. ~iu st. 1klren. pets COil-5 ... 1 " ,.....,. .... V'l<1'"0IJ!;J<I $l,..,....,.. .. 1et u s. no pe s. 2 BR .. garage". \Vinter •2 BR I'°' l'""'"r, sm -ly ATso G F R 1 sidtred. $175. 2 BR al~ packlus 2 BR unit&. ~::d. prof. or gen'! ofc use. Drop BR. Nt11' shag. bltns, beam I BR ho'·u w· t J.o.J ,-........ 'VJ 3 ' call Manager Barbara Dav-arages or en FIREPLACES Pr•·v " --;:,,.,;;:,,,-.,.,-.,,-.,.-,.,_~-I . II J R al · u · in er inc.I utll, 1019 W, Bay Ave, 1, &ta.1182. 1969·1!16"1 Maple Ave, S15(}. 7681 Ellis. ·Apt. A. · pa ... os:, AMAZING Ad 1 L · · In or ca ones t ty <'t!lling , H/pool. 642-2514· Hinger Realty 67~775 Costa Meu. MT-7547 or M7~. loads oJ closets, Heated u 1 1v 1 n g Service. 67j..3771, Suite C,
Sh 673-1674 ~ ~ _ Pool. JI. d . 1 t •· Manager Beaut l & 2 BR fum or unl on preinises. Newport ores _ WATERFRONT-I Br. Jo'rplc, $12.)..mo. Yearly. Bachelor 979_1268, Apts. Self t'lean. ovens, 1~~~~-~~--~
-BR f 2 BA Cpti priv patio, 400 S. Bayfront apt. b111•n Bay & Ocean. NQ EL CORDOVA fAfRWA.Y * $145. -* S D/W (in 2 Br) displs, shag C?5rA Mesa 5 detux pvt. of-,, · am rm, · ' Apl 1. 673-6640. PACIOUS 3 BR, 21'2 BA, dbl p~ d · · & f1ce1 or desk space w/draf bllns. "'aUfr dist. to I ~'"'"'~-=-~-~--~ts. Util pd. 613-22S6. Apts. LARGE 2 bedroom apart-ean.ge, pool, fxpk, new c • rps, Jacuzzi saW1a tl ·
o •• h C I & Balboa Peninsula VILLA APJS. ment with buih-i .. •. Near baths. Hure pool. ng rm. fo'urn. crpt, air ~c ! om m. poo ten· 73W Oceanfront. Spacious l New l & 2 BR Luxury Apts. ·~ carpet. NHr Hoag Hospira!. Merrimac Woods cond. Avail an -or tn-
ni1 . .;tS-9637. .LARGE J BR fui:n .• Peti.in br. Winter .. refs, no pets. D.11hwhrs, :-,:tra elose11 & CUP· ihopping & schools. CHILD-$29:>. mo, on be. 645-2346 or 425 Merrimac \Vay C.M. diYidually w/answerlng &
S n Cl.m.nt. P' P • ,. I (213·1~626-9101. ..... _ .... ,, )UXU'"" shag C""t'r.. 2 a I BR '• REN O.K. 546-1426. ' l . I F 1100 a , v .. pa io. w w crpt, UUIJ.lU •J .,. * 536-1731 * AJ\fAZING Adult L I vi n g sec.tt aria M!rv. rom
-adults onlf. lM 'til June or 1 Blk To Bch. Clean l br. beaut. rec tac.ii&. POOL. !'rlvate patio, pool • indJv. \VATERFRONT new 2 & 3 B••"l. 1 , 2 BR 1 .. ,. 0 , "nf mo. 54S-3486. 3 BR, 2 BA, dsh1•hr. 0-view, Adulbi: e No pet:s .. <>< " .. ==------~=• adults on I y. $265. mo. Sept. Sl80. 64""'°16· ~~~~~165 mo. 646-4071 or 2077 Charle SI. 642-44.70 Jaund.ry tac. BEACHWOOD APTS. BR. S350 to S400: al50 3 BR, ~Apts. Self clean. OVl!'f1$, DESK space available S50
Avail Ott. l . M4-42!M. BEAUTlf'UL furn apt, 3 BR, Nea:r Orange Co. Airport A Brand rl('W 1.2.3 BR. ~i blk block to beach S325. D/\V <in 2 Br) displs. shag mo. \Vill provide furniture
S Ii L 2 BA + den. frpl, porch. 1 BLOCK 10 beach 2 BR. Park-Like Surrounding UCJ. Adulta only. to BEACH! Cpts, drps, bltns, F. Horvath Realtor 67.>.1972 cpts, drps, jacur.zi & sauna at S5 mo. Aru;werlng service 1-°"-'--•-g~u_n_•____ \Vinter rates S 2 2 5 /mo . new 5hag crpt, sns' mo incl QUIET • OELID;.E M-'J!J. ~.San. Joa"'-~tm, AApwl .•A ,frplc. 125 16th s1., HB. EASTBLUt'F luxury 2 Br., bath.'!. Huge pool. available. 3()j No. E I
UPPER ThreE! Arch B11.y. 3 646-82ll. uril. Yearly. 673--0731. 1.2 &: 3 BR AP'I'S -"'""" "'' ~ 8-i7-39j7 Z1i Ba., bltns, [rplc. 2 ear Merrimac Woods C11.mln o Rea l, Sar.i
Br., l'i Ba. Private beach 'e~125~--"~,-K-&~u~,-.-.-O~n~o-,,.-,.-• l BR. modern apt btv.·n m • patios * Htd Pools i-,,,;·===~~~-215===~ DELUXE 1 BR with pool, gar, pool, rec are a, 42:> Merrimac Way, C.i\f. Clemente. 492-4420
&. club privileges. $32j, Lovely Bach . J BR. Rooms ocean' & bay. Sl:50/mo. Nr sbop'g * Adults only· INDIVIDUAL. PRIVACY $135/2 BR, Sl.55; 2 BR plus 644-6405. 1 BR turn. $140. 1 BR unf. D:Eg{ 1pa.ce available SSO
Lease. 32225 Vista de la l\la.id Service. Pool. Util Pd. Yearly. Call 675--8374. Mart• • ue Apts Dix 2 Br W/&a.r & stor. \111 z ba, $160. 1303 \lialnut, .see WESTCLIIT 2 BR -Stl5 util pd. Adults, no pets. mo. Will provide furniture
Luna. 638-9583. • Call 6Ta-8740 e 1 BR 1 lftlq ' • Ba, adults, crpts, drps, Mgr. 220-12th,St_., H .. B. $18.3/mo. Ad .. Ito only _ No 820 Center. 642·5843. at S5 mo. Answering &ervlce · urn ~pl. ,No children lTTI "..anta Ana Ave C~ bl " ail bl -F I A C d · · • ·• Ins. fncd yrd w/patlo. LGE 1 b _,, 1728 B·•J nl · Ln Hunt' 1 a. h av •a e . .....,. ores ve, on om1n1ums Corona del Mar or pets. 24051~ 16th St, NB. Mgr. Apt ll3 &f&;SY.2 \Vtr pd. Gard~r maint. rapt, enc.I gar, mar· :_~ ... ~ ... -7.... = o . tng on u.ac Laguna Beach. <194-94fi6
Unfurn. · 320 -----Call 646-4664. <i: • ried couple or 1 5ingle ,,....··.,~,.~~==-=-=-~ -1--"===.,...==~-I !----------1 BDRi\f. uni pd. $125. l ,-;---...,-07_,...~---• • Call betwn 1 lt 5, 636-4120. adult. SlZ.i. 3-12.4549. PARK Newport 2 Br. 2 b• e OCEAN VIEW From Sl35. i\rEDICAL SUITE
General Quiet tenant. Newport Heights WESTB"AY ELDEN 2619 Sl'lnla Ana Ave No E Sl.55 l BR. Furn. or Unfurn. Dis-OR OFflCE
NEW J 2 B d --' 2 BR. Lrg Priv patio. Bltn.11, ror--sub-1..eas-e. Haibor & -unt fo• '""''"''· CASA Air-cond .. 10 rooms. 42,· N·. Ph. 6r3-463J CLEAN 1 or 2 Br. Ad!ts. no and e rm. r;ui.ien VILLA CORDOVA c-t• " 1130/ N &yvie\\'. "ciose lo pool & -• LAGUNA RoyaJe, ~'hite ----------apartments w/pool. .,. • urps. mo. o PLAYA, 14th & \Valnut, HB. Newport Blvd. SJOO mon1~.
v.•ater vie.,.,'. 2 br, 2 ba. $450 Cos~ll Mes• pets. lg kit. $125-$150. 2421 FROM Sl80. ADULTS e SUPER 2 BR e pets. 1503 Al ab am a . l!pa. 644-4524. ~7. DAVIS REALTY . ~2-fcm
il'ase. 499-lOU --E. 16th St NB 646-1801. h1onth to J\fonth. $170 536-6735. 1 BR I Unbelievably Be•utiful 23.U Elden Ave., C.M. · a.pt. 1 Bk ro Ocean. KIDS WELCOME I DESK space available $5<l
Newport Beach VAL D' JSERE Garden Ap ts. Santi Ana 645-5780 . Gas Heat-G11.s Cooking. e CHEZ ORO APTS. e Nel'·ly decor. S 1~0 I m o · Moye Jn Toclay! 2 Br Sl39 & mo, Will provide furniture Adu!~ -no pets. F1o.,.,·ers ~B~A~CH:-::E~LO"'°RC--ap~t-,~b-y-t~h•-. -d-ay. a e Ga~;c;;l:tr, AALL ~CL. 8234 A!lanta. 1·2·3 BR 's. Yea.rly. ~1632. $159. Pool. Petg ok. All f!-"· at $5 mo. AnS\.\'erlng &ervice EASTBLUFF TownHse. New
2 Br & convert. den, 2~i Ba,
cpls, df'P$, hllnl. $360.
Lea~"' & Refs. 21 3 ;
3j1--0567.
NE\V execur:ive condo 3 Br.
2\, Ba. In rhe BluHs $47:5
mo. avail. 11115. 557-4202
aft 6
Townhoust Unfurn. 335
General --------LUXURIOU S t.,.,·nhs
Ne""·port Upper Bay, Lease.
3 BR. 3 BA, 16..iO sq 11. 2-cir
gar., Poot. Clubhse, Only
S29i 5.l7-803i.
Newport Beach
* All Facing Pool *
3 BR .. 21 ~ ha .. 2 car garage
3 BR., Z ba., 3 car ,arage.
REAL TOR .l-48·6!!66
TOWt>.'HSE for lease. 2 BR.
\Va~her/dryer, blt11~. pool
f11cil. $165 n1o. (11 892~781 13.
345
Newport Beach
IX1!1lnvie""" 2 BR, l BA .
\V1nter S2{5. '{early S275.
• 642-36..'m *
Duplex•• Unfurn. 350
Corona del Mar
OPEN daily/vacant & ready
for occupancy th is 4 SR, ~
BA home. Ctizy frpl c. Jrr('l.t
pa110. no prt!. Annual lse
S3Th. &l4.Qj().\ or &14-4430
everywhere. Stt'l!am & .,.,.t!'!"k or month. Util. & 3 Bdrm * 2 Bath s:r.~~e., · \Vasher/dryer. 536-0336 BRAND ne1v 4 BR. 2 ba. trag• 17362 "A" Keelson Ln. avai111.ble. 17875 Beach mvd.
\\la tertall, 45' pool Rec. Rm, linenll furn. 3225 \V. llll, S.A. 1--,..,,..,,='°"====~-1 Pool. Private closed gar. Studio. 7 door.11 to ace11 n. 968_7510 or 312.6235. Hun tington Beach. 642-4321
Sauna. Sg'ls l-2 Bdrm, Fum-(near HRrbor) 531-0429 Livinr room with cathedral . l MO'S FREE·RENT 2_& 3 BR's, $145 UP. Patio, SJOO/nio. Yearly. 646-1631. BAY VIEW OFFICES lJnfurn. Jmm 1135. SEE JT: ceiling & frplc. Separate NASSAU PAL.MS L1gun1 Beach
A U
'
pool. dlildren. 1t!ORA KAI YEARLY beach rental, new. 2.0IXl Parsons, 6-12·8670. pt. n urn. 365 laundry area. Encl patio. 177 E. 22nd St. 642-364."i Apts, 13881 Mora Kai Ln., i,;, ly decorated 2 BR. Immed s .... 1mming pool & children'• Shady Jap.<1nese FJms -Pool lk 1 BR furn apt. Senior General b E. oI Beach. 962-8994. occupancy. 832-182:>
citizens. Ground level, in· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; playground. $200. 1 BR. $135 UNFURN HARBOR GREFNS Z BR. Sl45 UNFURN' WALK TO BEA.CHI ~ BLK to be11ch, ne1rly ntw sulated panel heat, priv enet Lo I I 2 3 BR' c VEN DOME 546-435.l Boat -Camper Storage ve Y ~ & s. pts, 2 BR 2 BA $24j yrly. furn patio, revolving shelf -d bl d ,.._ 0•7 """7 67"3 26 $160 NEW 1 BR rps, tnll, .,.,., ... o-o -~. ,,... l aft 6pm.
Deluxe, Air-Conditioned
MODER.V dclux~ 2 s1ory, Lido Area
view apt. 2 br. llh ba, sun Realonomies Bkr. 67j.6700
decks, · blk lo bch, shpg. OFFICE Space City Center '
Lse, S260. Adults. Ref. Blk. N.B. Elevator. Janiror,
494-9982. Parking. 200', 300', 500',
·Newport Beach 17141 5'14-1U3. relrig. now """'• parking. L'dMACUt.ATE APl'S! *BRAND NEW* ' POOL SIDE • LGE 3 r-;0 peu.. E."tra q 11 i e t. Br. 2 Ba studio, lgE! LARGE 3 Br. z Ba. Duple"'.
SllO/mO". 173 Delmar, Ci\!. ADULT and La Costa Apls. APARTMENT fncrl yd. encl gar. JW. No lrplc It bltns, 11 blk to bch. VISTA DEL MESA * * 600 sq. ft. 2nd t'.loor '
642-7696 FAMILY Section J & 2 BR, bltns, swimming 151 E. 21st. St. sngls. 842-4549. S300 1110 yrly. 644-7214. Apartments $!Kl/n10. COSTA i\1ESA.
Cloae to shopping, P1rk BEACH& UFF APTS Call 646-2130: S30 Wk. Up Apt.. pool, lartai. bar-b-que & gar. * ,., 8666 * L LARGE 2 BR nr ocean &. l & 2 BR. Furn. & Unf. Dish--~..:..:...,,:...c..:;::;:.:__~ ~ Spc;.cious 3 BR's. 2 ba. .,.... =a $16-$25 Wk. Motel.Rrn_s. *Swim pool, puUgreen age. AU ulil pd, $150 to Sl70. LUXURY 2 BR. Upper Spat'. 2 Br 2 Ba. Pool. Pa· bay. Avail Dec 5th. Sl99.51J. wa11her -Stove & Rehir • usiness Rent1I 44.i :
$6 Nl·aht &>Up * F 1 Ind" IL Adults, no pets. tr" 1 . 0 1 tio.J)AV. 8231 Ellis. 842-7644 Yearly. 673-1909. Shag crpl'g-Lrg Rec center.l:o,,-,:=-'.'"".,.-----• rp • iv ndry fac.'Js 3.54 Avocado, CM. 642-9108 1P ex. n Y Sl.30. \V/W. RENT Starla $155 SPACE for beauty ·parlor or v
SUNNY ACRES 1845 An1heim Ave. !"~~~~~'\!"~~·J Gar .. B/I. Nr. O.C.C. & 2 BR. Apt. Closed gar, cpts, * OCEANFRONT 1 BR, Tustin & Mesa Drive similar operation, ground
MOTEL o:JSTA MESA 642-282-t BAY MEADOW APTS. 1hop1. Mature Adults, no drps, childr~/small pe.l ok. $15() I mo. Yearly. Crpta, '* S45-4855 * llr. Lido Bldg. ;ms Via
Thi! a<l \.\'Orth S5 on rent. Beam t'ei!ings, paneling, pets. :i4S-0059. Sl40/MO. 847-2940. drps. 644-5307. Lido, NB. See .Jones Realty '
2376 Np! BlYd ., Cl\! 548-9755 PVT palfo, enclosed garage, P'.,l_v patios, reereation fa-'lo~E=L~U~XE"'"~,-=B-r,-=,-.&~.-.-ar, Sl50. & up new 2 br. in· CLEAN 4 BR, 2~~ BA. studio OAKAWOOD GARDEN $en>ice on premises or call ~IO'~FREE fq:NT 2 BR. Crpll &: drps, Sl6:>. ci.1Ues. All adults, no pe111. u 1 e d • br ic. k fr P 1 c , sulated Child OK. 17542 Jef. apt. l blk to ocean. Nict partments 67~3771 .
NASSAU PAL:.VIS 673-3690. e 2 BR's FROM AS LOW cpt/drp1/bltns. Ad u J 15 ferson Ln 842-6447 ·g42-283t area, S30Cl. yryly. 673-U5,j (~~:i!d L:~~fts~r Single & OfFICE, STORE, neiir N'pt
Ii7 E. 22nd.St. &12-3645 B•lboa Island ;.; Sl59/mo. only, no pe ls. $185 ; mo. Lagun• Beac.li . BRAND new deluxe 2 Br. Newport Beach Pollt _OUice, 450 sq. ft. Good
Shady Japane~ Elmii -Pool Y-EA·RL-,Y-:--~1,------337 \V. Bay St., C.M. Yearly. 642-8520. 2 Bath patio ye a r I y. lGth •l lnnn• parking. Sl20 mo.
J BR. II~ FURN ease. Grand ,.._,, "•".0073 . • OCEAN v· 2~· t .. _,.. i:-· ~~"" I '" ..,...... .,...., iew • '" o ,,...\" ytJ:..>C!U\I &1:>-rooo or 642~170 Graham Realty 64&-2414
2 Br. $165 FUR.~ Canal, Little ls. Beaut. 21 --.H'o-e~ie~· n-d;-a-.H'o-r;-bo-,-* TOWNHOUSE * J &: 2 Br. $175 up. POOL 2175· TRAILEr. for reni. 1 hr. I ~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!~ SHO\\'ROOM mfg. & ofli<:e "·at_ C·--• S•o••i• Br., 2 Ba., pri. paUo. $350 I It 2 BR. Shag cpt, O/W, S C•t Hwy 64"-"-A""
ou ...... r-+ utih. 241 A\.·ocado Street llPlf e:lean oven. plltio 52s...t;743: ' .,.."""""• J80 mo. 111t l las!. After I II Jbl space, Close in Laguna 'loc.
I BR. FUrn. 2 Jrg closets, \Vinton Real Estate 6i5--Jlll Deht"<e l & 2 BR. Pool. Gar. 377 \V \Vil * 5.18 3605 ·s: 30, 673-5749. Rental& ,-$95. to Sl;'J.j. mo. 494-4653
quern ~iZe b:ed. priv. dress-8 Ibo p . 1 Dshwhr, Paid UW. FROi\J · son · Lido Isle Industrial Rentol 450 ing room. xtra Jrg rooms. • a en1nsu • $1.)(J. 646-l~t 3 BR, 2 BA + den. S200. 2 S•nt• Ana
Adults only, no pets. $150 / * * N£>ar Bay & Bellch. SPACE 2 & 3 Br apl $140 up. BR. 2 BA $165. Bllns, CID, LOVELY 2 Br, l ~l Ba, 2 car ;i;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;m Rooms 400 COSTA MESA 10,000 g.q. ft.
mo. brand new J Bedroom J1td pool, play yd, cpt/drps, \l.'/D hkup, P11tin, gar. 131· gar, bHns, re[rig, lrpl, cpt, •
2035 Fullerton, CM b.ltn•. pa"-. K;'· ok. H Del 1\1•r. 543-8278 drp, S.295 on 11;1!. Shown by ca· N'T BE BEAT 1.-.,-R-Vl_N_E_"_W-.-----,--1 clear splln + yard space. garage apt. S7ii0 mo, uu ..., appt. 5#-XM5. 6T;>-l967. 1 w/ yr. 110, m po11o'er & com.
SUPER 1 BR. 673-6450. 1994 J\laple No_J 642-3813 I .f LRG aunny l BR upper I ~==-~~-~~~-t old girl wishes to rent 2 Br pressed air provided.
Lovely furniture, Frigidaire NEW 2 BR d 2706 College No. 5 &IZ-703.). New crpt11, blt{ls, refrig~ UPPER 2 Br. 2 B 11 • SINGLE STORY furn. or un1urn. to v.'Orking Sprinkled, fil>erg[Bgserl t,,
appl's, frost free refrig. frplc., g".r'ag~. ~':a~iy. ~j $13{1, Up tri, Redec 2 BR, $135/mo. 969 M i s 1 Ion, cpt/drps, frplc, hlln kit. Soutll Sea AttnOl;Jihere "·omen or I I u de n Is . cabinet m11kers welrome. Ql~n sz bed. Crpts drp1. Owner 675-4644 alt 6. \\'/\V, Nu drps, Bllm, 545-52i0. Adult.I only. $2.lO. 673-3824. 2 BR .• 2 BA'Ill W a aher/dryer/kit privil. l 9 ! h & PI ace n I i a.
2'220 Elden. Adlllts. Si.50 mo. Corona del M•r Disp .. Gar., Nr shops &'r''°A~,~,~,L~Y'""'o'"n~ly-• ....,,'",-,-,,.1d7r-nl Mesa Verde Carpets & drp.11 Refs. 832-878.') eyes. ReasonRhly priced. Call or
&1&-9213. OCC. Perm lldJtg only, no Nr. schls. 2 BR Sl.55. 99j Air Conditioned ./ FURL~ or Un/um, Lake c.omr. 548-3486.
1 Br $12:>. 2 Br $150. Lrg. pet~. 51g....(ID9. V11.lencia. Nr Baker & Men-* NICE VIEW * Private Pali<MI P11.rk area, H.B. ~1~1700-~1474~0-S~Q~.~F~T-.-
ldeal for Bachelor. Pool. LRG . i\loder n l BR apt. doza. Upper 2 Br. Cp!s, drp.11, e.ncl •IEATED POOL """53&-;;;;·~'"•2=0'.,,:,"->-~34=-97=:;:-Read,Y now, near N"ewpocl· 2 BR Qui~i. m11ture 11.d11ltl\. Adl1s only 1993 Ch•'"eh •7 ;,-;c-;;.,.-..---,--=-H "--B k Pl •· I I o No pets. No children. S2lO. 548_9633. ' ... ft~-Crpt~, drp5, bltn~. dshwhr, 11D EL u XE ap!, Spllc. car. ar""'· & a er shop'g, en..,. O awn SLEEPING Room Pvt. Bath. Ean Diego fr.,.,·y. Bide:-fully
67>-0ll,I aft 6PM. I :;;-;;-=-,,~-7-c=c--.. child ok. S150/mo. All util BJ t -i ns I D sh w sh r , Adults, no pets. $140/mo. ~~ "v~r.r:~~ Cdi\f. Clo~E! to be a.ch , sprinkled. Cabinf't m;ikcrs,
•Bach. For uni. $110 up ....,. pd . 307 Avocado No. 9. PAt io.-$lll. 72j Jllmes. Apt 64j.Jj15 or 6-14-1408 or 67j..269S. fiberglass \.\'elrome. 2!J40
Costa Mesi • 1 Br. Furn or u.nf $12:> up. ON TEN ACRES 64:>-0984. to share 646--0735. 644-0753 for appt. 2500 South Salta SLEEPING room in private Gracr Ln. !So. of Baker. E.
Adults. Pool. 642-2131 2 DELUXE 2 k 3 BR, 2 Ba. Santa Anll • 546-1525 home. of Fairview 12 n11) Repre-• PRJV. Pallo·enct gar. 2 Br I .,-=~=~-,.-~-,~ J & 2 BR. Furn A u-.. ·-BR. apt. "Crprg aJI rooms, LOVELY 2 BR w/w cpl, . h 1 9 12 1 BR POOL ! I pd d Its • '"w-n. d bl f 1 encl gar. $150 &. up. Rental ** '·"o cgJ..'j * * srntaf11·c~ 1 ere rom . • cp\g, drps. $165. Ca 11 . • u l . a u ' Fti'eplacea I ~riv, patlo1. rps. tns, re rig! carpor , "t>Od firs, drps. g11.r, m11.ture Of '~" M A """""~:""~"!'"'\'"""""I """"'"=~~~~;;-".c,-.,,,.--,,:· I d l s.--3:>8-g·9 4711 67~ ~""" no ""'' 114~$1~ 383 \V I d 11·· m _ 0 c.: ,)11.,;; ace v e. BL y. · J j·. ,) or t. • ,,....,,.,"". ,.... · ""· · Pool, Tennlo Con"'l'I Bkf•t. n ry rm. Ja 0 '" m · 1ldu!t11, no ""Ill. Reas. 22fiO 3 Heat£ .. Poolo UPSTAffiS R m 1 F """] A I 12 Cil[ 6'°'96 1246 ,.~ 546--1034. ni oo ~t· e· FOR Lr11.~. 4000 sq. fl. Ml 1 Month Fr•• Rent 1 son P · · ·' • -900 Sea Lane, ~M 6H-26U 'IV"""'<)
1 or 64&-Pl11.ct"lllia. 646-3160. l..arre Clubhouse etc. BBQ male Student or \vorking girl NP Bid A 1 k.
3 BR. 2 Ba. $2T.i. 548-lY.19 * AVL TIO\\"·l &. 2 BR. Furn. l~facArthur nr Coast Hwyl STUNNING Garden Apts, BEAUT!f"1JL new df!luxe 2 Newport Beach Child Care Center 833·0098 54~7.'lO, g673~~~~ par ing,
Log_una Beach Phooldl. Rec R,'.! ~;,, l~2·4No pool, 2 BR'~. 2 Ba, pan'! Br., 2 Ba a.p f. For in· 3 BR Condo in Bluffs Great new 1 2 & 3 Bdnns V•c1tion Rentals 425 S'roRE 1-nt bu•"ld•ng, 'f·I
c i ren or"" .s ..... ..-...o . * BAYFRONT den. SlSO Infant or sml dOi: formlllion, call 54S-l886 or .,.,,,garage & pool. Le11.se From $149 '" "
UPPER DUPLEX. 3 br. 2 l BR. Duplex. S9:>. Pleasant * BAYVIEW ok. 2 BR. Sl6.>. 64j.l)3Q. 645-25:.o. $350. 644-4807 or 832-5631. SOUTH COAST (l)NDO on ~laui. oceanfront. Pl:~~i;i:ooc:.' ~~~3.
ha, cpt. dp~. vil!'W, 2 blk1 t:arden surroundings, J\la· Announcing the qu iet opening * BEAUTIFUL l k 2. BR. 2 BR. w/g•·· l l30. \\'-pd. VILLAS ~-i Fl 2 BR. · 1 '-;-,--------= bdl f Ba A • " 2 BR. winter t'l!ntal, 40th St. llln MacArthur mvd. ...-. oor; . pnva e , ·s . IMO:, S300 mo. 4!M-I949 rure adult only. 548-6920 o yport Pis · · • for Contemporary Garden Apts. 1571 .. A" Or11.nge Ave. Call SlS5 month. Call Ruscy at cov@. For free pieture & tor age 455
494-3458 FURN 2 Br. Children ok. Nb Adults; And tht slighUy less Patio!!, trp\c, pool. $150-$165. btwn 1 & 5 636-4lal. 833-8863. !:::-...... -:::-"""""------i ~'!'~'·~·~-~~o~all~!64~;~4~4~43~=llruonm;:;:;;>;;~:-;:-;-:-;::-Loguni Hills petA. HeRtfil pool. Lnd"" quitt opening of Bayview Call 546-5163. , RECREATION h I I
rm. 126 ~Tonte Villta, Of.·~ Apts. for familtts. 1 BR Du 1 / Attr•ct. • Clean 2 BR. YEARLY nr ocean, 1paeious Westcliff Rentals to Sha,.. 430 motor home~. ~=ilcn;~ c:~:
Call t7l41 .. , ..... ~~"' P ex w garage. Htd pool ~-m-Un!um 1-m up• 3 B• 2 "'-~Jc 12'5 1----------1
<H """" Ad J•· I \Y 1 • . r u AU " •• Dll, • 'I' • ''""""'""":"""'--,,---1'14!rs. bnats. lioldin, tank Dana Point u '* on Y· 11. er $1"" Adu!•s 642·"~-Ref11. Avail now 4~2128. 2 BDRM I BA lk I blk c • •s .,, BRAND NEW, Dtluxe 3 gardent'f furn. SllO/mo., ~~~=-~~"-·~~-~--·= ' . . Wll. !O ....... 431 . •. •. . rlump S11llinn, 11 i h t' cl '
YOUR choice ol 2 "NPw
.1'orld" duplexe~. brand f'll'\\' -----,-----
3 BR. 2 BA, Ctp1 k drp~.
BH;, appliar\ce.i;. 2-car encl
iarw. Pvt. patio & yArd.
PIU'IOramic view of enlit'I!
Sa.ddlebal'k V11lley. Even 1n-
"':_* siNGLE. 'rv, pool. pets bedroom '! tl111h, hrcplaCf', :HH9il4. CLEAN 2 Br. Isl floor. Sl2~. SELLING Your boll?' "Lisi" We1tcliff thops. Ntw c.pl.11 & * * * fpncl'l'l. \\'llSh rll ck. C'f'ntral
ok. Danll ~tarina Inn, 3til1 buill!ns, OCEAN VIE\V, •'°';-,-=-;,:=:-:--;--;;;;--,"'I Gil~ pd. Adult1 O\ler 35. with us .. sell tt fast. Dally drps, frplc. patio. Adults. RUSSELL DICKEY HuTll. Bch area. 968-4788,
Coast H\1)'. pool, jl'lt'Ulzi. 1\\tail. Der, J S200 MO. Jmmac. 3 BR, 2 ~ 360 Vic.lori11.. ~24<17. PilOt Cluslfied. 642-5678 SITS. 642--0239 123 Frankfurt 962·2384.
132' l•k , ... J~.... ....... BA., crpLo:, rirps. AYail.1:::;:;;;:::;:;;;:::;::;;::;=::==:;=:::;::;:;::;:~:;::;;:;::;:;:;:::;:;:;;;:;;;:::;:;;;= Hunt•'n•ton 8ooeh l=-~~~-~--~I Huntington B11eh ·' "' ,,,y or ··~g. c 11 ""68 • • R t I W t d .,, Gll-1"170 or eve.~: &M-7722. t)O\.\', a ;'J.j7-H • \'ou are the winner of en a s an • -
·cJude1 all extrrlor mAin-----------ll'n~ntf'. pool & Tt'C faril. SlJj. LGE mod 1 Br. Cpt~ .. drps. rcdec, nr oe('lln. Zl8 Only $26.; per mo on )-ear ChicagQ SJ&..1506/847-5169 lease. S37-S506, Bkr.
BACHELOR APT.
$100. 646-2687
,[,iii....,.iiiiiiiii_,.iiiiiiiii .... iii-iiiiii~J~l•~l r.L-•_g_•n_•_a_._•_•h __ _
11 $12:> ~10, UP: S40 \\'k., 8'1c.h.
Apt1. Furn.
Jtent Bee.u tiful FurnlfW'tl
• for u lltl.Je &fl
ONE MONTH
• complete with
your 100'~
Purchas• Option
Jnd. lltm telecdon.
24 Hour Delv.
CUSTOM
Furnltur• Rental C1 W. 19tlj, C.M. 5t8'3Ul
tt1.1htlm 11 .. 2800
TIM rutesr drav1 tn the \Vest
•• • O.Uy Pilot Oia1Wtd
Util pd. Color TV. Cre>l'.'ent
8'1y Sch. 49-J.-2j08, 67>-4367.
CHOICE Joe. 2 Br, 2 Ba, pvt
pa.Uc, gat. $200 mo. 1st &
IA1it. 538-~ art .l P~f
1 Br & garage t'I~ to 1hpg
&: beach, north *nti, $190
)Tlf. 499-1108
Newport Be•ch
3 BR. 2 BA. lrplc. p.llho. no
pe!!, l blk" 1~ B r h .
ST.ii/mo . en yr·s 11 e .
6l'l-6788.
1 BR Furn., Ultl pd., With
car., oce•n V1!!w, Balboa
Ptnln1ula. 968-179l
LUSH cp!, rC'lni;. rang,, cln, *Deluxe 2 Br, 2 B•* d~-0 .tS\•• . .',( ..:_ f)-C fillStt 2 tiekf!ta 10th!'
1 br + 5hidy. \'rly, S22'>. Adlills, no pe:1?· Agt 54&41<11. \:)\!:;> 1.'ut.J l.~Ji. ~ P(/• Orange County
furn il d""''· Uhl pd . •WILSON GARDENS • The Pun/e wilh +he Bui/f./n Chuckle lnternotion•I adltl'o, no pls Nov. 1.j 2 BR. l\i BA. CpUdrps. Auto Show
BUILDER .,.,·ants to r!'nt 2 or
3 Br. house in nel'd or
rep11ir, ~t'_!.'iang* for p11..r1
rtn!. 642-7377. 642-9890 encl. patio, $140. 642-6SU . QR6Cll'ronge J,tt,ra of thto ,,~-:-.... ~~:""''v--...,, at the four .:ru!l'lb!td words boo. -ANAHEIM
BEAUT. Unique 3 Br. 2
1
, bll, 1 BEDR001\t APT lowl ·"s'"o"yfc,vr liA••'R• word•' f·· CONVENTION l ll•l lrpl, be11m c~il, blln11. Blk to OCEAN VIEW. $150/mo. -• -8•'° I., I PenoM!s
beach. SW>. 673-~. 645--4~ , ~ November 17th thtu 2Ut
.• Plta&e call 642-5678. e"'' 1141 ~••••••~~~I 2 BR PENTHOUSE, bltna, $170 2 Br 1tudio, adj shops, 1. I j I j I betwttn 9 and 5 pm to claim !I
dshv.·hr . fplc .It sundeckl. drp/crpt, den. cu. 5'H30l 7 your tickett, !North Counly Auto tr1nsportatlon 525
67>-2291. aft 5. 2.lJ: 592-5217 coll. I • . toU-frte number ts $4()..1220)
DELUXE Duplu 2 BR, 2 LGE 3 Br, 2 Ba, new ah•r W Y L E 1' l t · * * **-----.----.·I
Ba. 323 Ja11rnine. $260. CPl. $169.lmo. fttshly ~in-I I r I I" BEAtrr. Tow~ge apt MRS. TOM GOLDSTON
67H&42 ltd Nr. <X.'C. Carpon 5n1u;1 • . _ . J 11han1 v.•/profewo~eJ man 1714 Irvine Ave.,
2 8R Twnh~. bltns, dlhwhr, BAOJELOR, sharp. c.lo!.e to l ._..__._.._~ .... _,
1
.•.. . ..-or V.'Oman, Pref. »-45. SlOO Newport Beach
f'!'frls: a Villi. 2 rllrportl. OCC &: UCJ. Sl.10. ind util'1 H U C G 0 ~ ~ mo. 5'1&-2806. You are the ..,.,1nnf'r ct
Sl9;).67l-41~7.MT-3717 & N'fri1. ~7-7768. 1 j• 1 1 1
PEMALE teacher "'eds 2 iu:kcis In +he 'One cc,_nter fO anotheh ,.._ o UNf1JRN 2 BR, nr bf:seh • 2 RR Unfum a.pt. Ulil paid. ,,. .,..,.. roommate ro ~ ... re 2 BR r•ng• County '· 1'm a Yale man myself, u.. c 1 'I · ho shopr'c. Sl6il per mo. $1"5 mo. 05 11. "esa u~. Pool International
• ~.,, ., • ~8--69M • *" I H E 11helr -on every lob.~ fenced yd. StiO. S~S-OS18. "i Auto Sliow K L E-H • · 11-9 L.RG 2 11ory, 2 BR 2 BA den. 2 BR 1 BA. new ahag crpts. 5 1 1 1 1 1
0 ComJ>lete:the chut.l.le quofed \\'0P11AN:"-wlchild OK~ 1u !hi>
rrpts , drps & 2 c.11.r lllr. drps, blfif!J;, nr OCC, rar • , by filnno In 1h• ml"in; word aha1-.. home ""/.,.,'Oman II ANAHEIM
S2&.ll mo. ;).14-.1 12t 6~4-1040 s1 391~10. 5S7-':il51 · · · • • . you dr;elop frotr1 tte No. 3 b•low. ('hl\drt'n. ~5665. CON"i_ENTION
3 B!t 2 BA, cpt!, d~. l>llns, .. DEtUXE 2 Dr .. 1% 81, ~.PRINT NUMBERED lEnERS IN r r .. 1· I' I 3 BR. 2 BA, w/w ('pf'f. CENTER
c11r. 6001., p 0 i n I e I Ii .. ept, dtp.s, gtv/D/\V, (!If, THESE ~ 1A•~s dl'P!. bllNl. l'J(l pt t I . Nn\'"ltlhtr 17th lhru Zl•t
S273/n10. fi7~3;;.t Children (lk. $130, St2·i958 : 8 UNT!OCIGAM8!T ~ENASW!•ov,e LETTtRS • I I I I I I Ts~~5/mo. C•ll !162-4221 . ~~:!nc~1~~125~~.1~x:1~1~
The lule.11t draw U'I tht \\'t&I LARGE 3 BR. l BA. bltna, .::, ,, • • • • • • nw fa..slefl draw In the \\'eat your lick1>tll IN 11 Cou
-.M..m-~ ====----
Uke to trade? Our Tra&>r'1
Pu.d\lf! eohtmn I 11>r you!
5"1iM&, 5 days for 5 buelu. • • ' Daily Pllo• 0 "'111'° "'"· dshw•hr. "''""•''"'· SCRAM·LETS ' AN' SWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 900 ... •Dou, PiJ,n• o...,;n.o 1011",.,. .,,,;,,;,°~; sc0-12~ Ad. 642-5671 Encl. garage. 557-.8188. • Ad. 642-!i67i ., .. ,
I
• .. .i ., -
•
r
' . v
• • • j + + • • '. . . . . • . ' + ' • ~ • ~ • • + .. • • • .. • • 4 • ' • • .. .... -. . . \ .. .... ~ . '\•
. . ,.
• · \ Tuesdiy, No,.mif<.t, i971 DAILY PILOT
' ..
Thls variety of fine schools ; [ ]~ Ptr1onals . .
Auto trans_portatlon 525
RIDE wanted from Hun·
-'tlngton Beaeh1o Laguna.s·•----
' or 8:30 A.1\1. Leave 5:30 P~1
!Schools and I . I
-1:DS1ruc 10.ns
could introduce k ·
you to a new tomorrow -.....--=~,=-~ ... 1--_-_-_, ... '"11
For further lnform·atlon-reg1r<l1n9 the Da ily PiloT
~ch.oots · and Instruction Directory I
.Mon thru Fri. 536-4.336
P trson a l1 .... J
SPffiITUAL READINGS
Advice on all matters
Daily lOAM·lOPM
312 N. El Camino Real
San Clemente
492-9136, 492·9034
P 1 lm & Card Reader
Put, Present, f"uture, Ad· ·
vice, Love, Marriage, Busi-
ness, etc. 893-~. 7421
Westminster Ave, Westmins-
ter. Daily 9AM·l0P~1.
ALCOHOLICS Anonymous.
Phone 542·7217 or wri t e
P.O. Box 1223, Costa Mesa.
GOING to Minn.? Take a
motorcycle to l\1p\s. and
earn $75. 536-4305 ,after 5 ,
p.m.
COUNSELING & info f or ,
aboft.ion, vascelomy & adop.
tion. ApCare. 6424436.
[ Lost .ncl found
Found UrH •dsl
FOUND AtghaJJ dog on Pac.
Cst. Hwy. Vic. Aquatic Cnt.
in Ne"'port. 8 o'clock Thurs.
Jtome ph. {213) 425-2904,
Call aft 6 or 1714) 870-2138
& ask for Jerry.
ORANGE/ye1!01v cat, 1vell
cared for w/fiea co l., male.
loves J1is head scratched,
jumped [rom car on New-
por~ Blvd., C. M. Call
548--0050 or 646-4982
FND: Vic. Pitcairn Dt. &
Mesa Verde Di., We st.
Female mix breed , blk
w/tan legs & facial mark·
ings. Has had pups recently.
549-3654.
FOUN D: Nr. Hospital in So.
Laguna; gray & white short
hair cat, pink nose & ears,
wtating clear !lea collar.
Call 4~2129 aft 6 pm.
The Reading. Room
Reading
Improvement
Instruction
Enrollment limited. Certified teacher.
Call For Testing Appointment.
Office: 541-6203_
Home: 642-6959
474 E. 17th Stroot
Coste Mesa, Calif.
Newport Air Associates
Flight School & Flying Club
LEARN TO FLY
$500.
FOUND, black male cat. fFhiCH11h1t A••llo~lal
brown collar, yelio"' eyes.
Vio Mi"" St. & WilS<m. * FAA APPROVED · * C.M. 5j7-8380 •.
MALE wht & brown puppy,
blue eyes, bobtail. Vic
Charie-& HamillDn, C.M.
646-9735.
DACHSHUND, male pup,
vie. Old Newport Blvd.,
Costa Mesa. Call after 3
p.m.; r->48--0927.
Coune Includes:
35 Hours fl ight time in Ce11na I SO's w'.th
20 hours dual in1truc:tion. Club members hip.
3 Month's free due1. Individual instruction,
tailored to YOUR ability.
ID AIRCRAFT AVAILABLE AT
LOWEST RATES IN ORANGE COUNTY •
L11rn to ·fly now - -and have fun I * Fly Mexico & Canada * Spec ia l Rates for Comm•rci1I or
Instr ument Students.
For Compfete Details C1ll NOW
67.3°0313 .
l ~·~
Children discover great things .
at our school~ Themselves.
O ur school. Early Achievement Center.
Unlike most pre-schools, we do more than
keep little hands busy.
We keep little minds busy.
With science. Math" Language. Art.
Social Studies.
Things llke that.
lmpiesse.d? Don't be.
It's not what we teach that's so'6pecial.
It's the speci al way we teach.
We encourage chil dren to discuss things.
Touch things. Act out th ings.
So they will better know their capabilities.
And themselves.
(Which is just about the greatest
lesson of all.) .
Ok, like to discover more about us?
.. Call or write for our free brochure. Or drop by
our Sunflower school.
We're open year 'round.
So parents can come in anytime. And
children can be enrolled anytime.
•
•
CALL 642·5678, EXT. 325
()(;A CQq;I
' .wt •• ,,,;.· 'Sf•O't' 'r
COITl ""•'"-qr;~ .
GET THE BENEi:m"N'ow·.,.;·~, -
A .Method For Living! There IS A Scientific
Step-By-Step Procedure For EXp"eriencing
Great Vitality. More Will Power & Inner Peace.
Bharati Oeft) & Kalidas Teach YOGA Postures
& r..1editation. People From 12 to 72 Take Our
Classes. Why Don't You? (4 50 Students This Ye.ti!).
Tuesday Classes Now Enr~lling
Tonight At 7 PM Or Next
Tuesda y Morning At 9:30 AM
YOGA CENTER 646·828t
SEW-KNITS.
SPECIALIZING IN STRETCH & KNIT FABRICS
.,d LING ERIE ·
Alt Brands Stretch Patterni -
Vogue &. Butterick Patterns
Original Knit Fabric Store
· In The Harbor Area
With Finest selection
Of Knit Fabrics On
Orange Coast.
STRETCH
SEWING
CLASSES
Morning-Afternool')
and Evenl"'t .i.··--
2199 FAIRVIEW ROAD
COSTA MESA 540·3268
YOUNG male Siamese.
Vicinity of Labrador in
Mesa Verde, 546-7308.
FOUND in \Vt'stclif f
blueprints fo r Nevada Coun-
ty subdivision. 673-2025.
BEAUTIFUL Black Persian
fe male, ~" Grown, Call
mornlngs, 673-8269. {;J Jlarrelf
......... liiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii,,_'ilr I I I I 8 I I I I I I I I I I
FND: Small puppy· on Knox-
ville, H.B. pis identify,
968-fil62.
SMALL Kittefl, &f'tY, .strlped.
Vic Mesa Verde School.
545-7642.
FND: Lrg. red setter, (~~
Setter ~i Lab1 nr. Euclid &
San Dier o Frwy. 557-9302.
Lo1t 555
REWARD. little finger ring,
wide gold. chip'd diamond,
family ring, sentimental
value. Los vie: Broadway
Store, Fashion Island, N.B.
Fri., Oct. 29, call 548-879:>.
FEMALE Cat, long-hair, lite
arey & blk tiger w/aome
tan highlights. Wht chin &
green eyes, Yt'l'aring a fie'!!.
collar. Last seen Nov, 4.
644-JTij, alt 5; 646-3506.
$100 REWARD, lost 11.rge
German Shep X king hair.
b e!. 23, nr F'Jularino &
l'airvie1v OM. Blk & tan.
\1hr collar, tags. "Ario",
Cal! collect 213: 821-9746.
MALE Apricot Poodle, vie.
1400 block Seacrest Dr.,
CdM. Lusk Hom!! area.
Answers to'' Cha r l le·'.
64-4-5173.
LOST: Gray female poodle,
wearing red collar w/1lick: I
attached. Vic: Orange k
\Valnut, C.M. 642-62-41 aft .
5:30.
. STUDIO of CHARM
Memtier fll
Screeri .i..ctors G1111d
And MODELING
Phone for FREE Brochure on
"SECRETS OF BEAUTY"
ENROLL NOW FOR
FALL CLASSES
Houn: 9 o.m. ·to 9 p.rn.
Courit approvtd Chlldrttl'I .....
bv the '----
Calif. Supt. of P"blic Instr. * Modolln9 and Tol<Ylslon * CHnn & Personal Dtvelopm11tt * Dra-lc•·SpHCh·llttlo Th-• * Sptclol Counes for Homtmalctn * Corter Girls
PLACEMENT ASSISTANCE THRU
OUR STATE LICENS!D
MODELING AGENCY • , ,
1519 N. Main , Sonia A"a-547·'971
j MOS. Irish Seiter puppy Accou nting
(C.M.~ Is sick,_ nee~ds med'll l·,-1-:0-,N'.".T:"H::"'."L":Y:'~boo-:k-:-k,'.'.t"'.'pi::,,
attenoon. Reward 549-0670. service, All ttports .and
B1by1lttlng
FEi\lALE Irish Setter, Cd ¥ taxes. Stitte Lic:enaed
Red lea1he r collar. 6i3-4842 e 6i5-334:i • I81h & Monrovia, 'ii day +
COSTA MESA
PRE-SCHOOL
or 67a.7919. Babysitting full day sessions. Planned
LOSf: 2 FUieoons, ma.le & program. hot lunches. Ages
fem Rf'Ward. Any info ap------:-:-:-:-· i 2-ti, hrs 6:30 Ai\I • 6 PM. pre~. 548-0796. EXP. Mo!her Y•Ou ld like lo $20 wk.COMPARE ! 642-4050
ST· C -010 re r1 care for children. Any tir11. EXPERIENCED child care ~th~n :~l~ck cface, $2.l Day or night. All ages. Lg, vieekdays ror childr!n z-5
·ard 53&-7972 fenced yd. hot meals. gooi-1 yrs. Fenced yard. Lunche1
rtll. • · atmosphere. $12.50 wk for 1 included. Just off San Diego
child, $.25 wk 3 or more. Fwy near Bristol. 549-403&
( "-slrucUon )Jl• J ~n~g..~~~ school area. Ce rpenrtr
1-;~~~--··-1 LIC"D Day ea ... 7 am.s,30 1-L-A'°'R"'G'°'E"°"o"R'"""s"MA:-:-:-L-:-L-I~ pm. Hot meals. X1nt care. AU types work: CUt doora,
Scheoli & Hsrbor /Baker area. panel. cabinets, finish,
ln1tructJon1 575 54'-'1539. frame, re1>3irs, etc. 962·1961
---------
--• -BAB\"SITilNG -B ea c h ALL types of Carpe'l'ltry By
READING TUTOJ\ING . ln art•·, my hotne. by hr or · local man.
your home. Cert. Teacher, \\'k, 3 yrs & up. 673-8470. 536·1648
all ,erades. Mr. Hatchcock. BABY STTIING my home. EXP. Remodellna, cablnel.l!,
644-0144· All Hours, Paularino Area. repalr.s, maint. No job too
PIANO LESSONS ;:,t"J-5166. 11m. Reas. 64~224.
Real Estate School
PREPARE FOR STATE EXAM
IN 4 WEEKS
Licensing Preparation for:
e Real Estate Sales men & Brokers
• Building Contractors
e Insurance
• Day & Evening Classes
California Departrhent of Education
Approved-Master Charge and
BankAmericard Accepted.
You May Stort At Anytime
For lnform1 tion-Br ochure-
FREE GUEST LE CTURE
Phone 646-3229
ANTHONY SCHOOLS OF
NEWPORT BEACH
325 No rth Newport Blvd.
Newport Beach • 646-3229
Edmond F. Jackso n
• Mtllllcll At1!1i.111 • Dt11i.t Allltllfll
• ll'lll•ltlltn Tll•r•'Y Ttchllcl111
• !Emttfl MY MN!ttl Ttdlnlcllll t EICD Ttcllnlcll11 • Mtdlc11 •tct,lltnl1I
ly •·recnt ecqulsltlOft of .Newport_ lus~ness
Schoel, C•llfemkl Pro,nsional College ftOW
offtn: e Tfltllll • IMkkMlllll e S11trt111M e l.1111 ltcrt11ry Trtlt11f11
DAY AND EVENING c l.J.ssES
CALIFORNIA
PROFESSIONAL
COLLEGE Your home. Cert. Teach:s· BAB't'SITIING 24 hrs. all CARPENTER. "Man for all
Mr. Hatchcock. 64-1-0l age,.. Blg &: ·rt.need back reasons." \Vork guaran . 1101 New,.rt.l l•• .• C-.t•M ... ,Cellf.
Wh.Y store 1t tu the attlc yard. 642-1592. Realtisfie price". 673-U66. 714/641•2tlJ
WbeD you can tum It Into I w l ...... _ ""'"' "•YITlll'll l"lt11~1•d11•i. '"'"'"""'' lHllllRU mo-y '"-··rh & DAILY DAILY PIT.OT tor action. Daily Pilot an .... iiavt Owntt & Optrtt• 11:r,M1rnlltn tf lllt l"rt1nt1tt1 .... u11vt.1 1 -Ctn 1r Wr ftr ,,... C•l~ltt i,rn.or Want 114. C11ll 642-$11.,\ Save! h11rt11 IM t• Ol'f' L----------):-'"-----~,
PLAYMATES
SCHOOL
"FIRST IN CHILDHOOD
EDUCATION"
Pre·School, Kindergarten, F irs t Grede
Limited Openings Ava ilable
e Educationa l P rogram For All Ages Of
P r•·School e Full & Ha lf Day Sessions
e Kinde rga ~ltn-morning &. Afternoon Ses•
sions e Extended D•y Care AW'allable •
Snacks, Hot Lunches e College T raine d &
Gr aduated Teachers • Certified Progrt m
e Ages 3 Thru 10.
6:45 AM·6 PM Monday t h ru F rid•y
IN COSTA MESA-
2 LOCATIONS
1937 Church St.
(1 blk. t•st of Newpor t a bove 19th)
Phone: 646-3636
795 P1ul•rino
(2 blks. W. of Bristol near So. Coast P le11)
Phone: 540.1919
AIRLINE
AND TRAVEL
' -
CAREERS
FOR MEN AND WOl:AEN
e Tr•vel Agent • R11ervetion1 e Ticket Salos • Air Freight C•rgo
e Communicetlen• • Optr•tlo ns Age11;t
''DAY AND NIGHT CLASSES"
ACCREDITID1 N1tio111I At1oei1tion Tr1d1 & T1ehni•
etl Sch1ol1 • Appro .. t d for Vtt•!'"'· Ell9ihl1 l111f1h1·
tlon undt r tht F~111 tly l11111rtd S+11d111t Loin Pro9r11T1.
Airline Schonls Pacific
61 O East 17th St., Santa Ana
714 -543·6596
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
~COSTA MESA
PRE·SCHOO.L
1797 Monrovia Avenue
(Corner of 18th Street & ~lonrovia)
Coste Mesa
642·4050 or 838-5237
Open 6:30 AM 'Il l 6:00 PM
STATE LICENSED
Full & Half D•y S111lon1
Ages 2 to 6 Y~ars
Carpenter Cem en1', Concre!e
•
• • •
I • it
• • • • • • • •
" • • • • • • •
ADDIT. le Repair. cab,
furm lca, marllte. Jlr tU!!',
paneling. Antiq, Furn.
repair & refln. 644-7598
BEAT The Rain! , ConcMe
noon, pat19s, d r t v e 1 ,
15ldewalks~ Don"MZ-8514.
Carpet Service
Additions -Patios
c£:r.1ENT WORK
• 642-8638 •
JOHN 'S Carpet & Upholstery QUALITY Cement \York. Let l
Cleaners. Extra Ori·Sham· Georie. do it, Llc'd.: Bonded. 1
poo free Scotchguard (Soil 645-1695.
_Retardants). Degn:ascrs & ~PA°"TI=o"°s.-=w:::alks=,-:d;:rl;::,.:-,-:mmu:::;::~I
all color btighteners & 10 new lawns, saw. 'break, 1
minute bleach for white remove. 543-8668 for est.
Carpets: Save your mo~y CE.\fENT WOJ1K, 1» ,klb tOO I
by HVJng !11' extr_a t;ips. small, tt'asonable .. Free 1
WW clean· li\tlng rm , dining E.!tim H Stutllck 548-.861S rm & haJI $15. Any rm $7.50, ' ' •
couch •10. chair $5. 15 yn, Con t ractor
exp is· wha.t • couni., not ! 1
method. I do work myself. MY w-.y. quality home
Good rd. 531..0101. remod. Walls, celllnf. 11oon l
AL'S RUG CLEANING etc. No job too small. •
We wash ru11 at our local 5474)006, 24 hr ans. serv. ~
plant. It's the only way to Additions * Remodellnr '
tborougbly clean r u I ' . Gerwick & Son, Lie.
WIW C.rpet Cleanlnf. Fret 6'1)..G()U * .. 54g..,n70
:~v. Bay, CM ~8-20'ltl DriVew•y1
DUPONT nylon carpel CFIJS llA~W'°'LEY~:'..S:'"'.Dti::-.".v .. e~way--;St&l:'.'.;l j· _
aha.e. ~lfl' from $3.99 aq. Coatlni & small ·
yd. Guar. 642-7101 evf!. lots. 545-519'5 att.-S ymi, •
I
II
•
DlllY PILOT TutSdaJ, Howmbtr '· im
FREE PASSES·
Yo11-e-oilil--.OM of-Today's~ Winners
10 l'alrs of $2 Tickets Given Daily
FOR THE YEAR'S BIGGEST AUTO SHOW
• • JIM PFEIFER
34515 BH<h Rd.
Capistrano Beach
You ~ the "·inner of
• AL'S GARDF.NJNG
for eardenin&: I: a m a 11
lanciscaping setvioes,. eall
S<0-51911. 5'Jvina N.,.__
CdM, Coe:ta Mesa. Dover
Shafts, Wntclitt.
Painting A
Paperhanging
CUSTOM Painting At Reu.
Rates.
SPECIALIZING IN
BEACH PROPERTIES
\\re kill th(-mildew &: fungus
that is a known problem w/
Find Your Naine
-----· lf-your-nam1~r l1steirln • 1ptclala d -It could appear under any
cla11lflc1tlon. 10 look at them all .:... phone-642-'671, EXte·nslon
314, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. to make arrangements to pick up
your tickets at any convenient DAILY PILOT office.
•
Be The Guest of the DAILY PILOT
llllll -_ ..... __ ,[Il] .._! _.__,,...·__,l[l]
Htlp Wanted, MA F 7!0 Help Wanted, MA F 710 Help Wtnted, M & F 710
LLOYDS NURSF.HY
JOB OPENINGS
l"ursery delivery man
Nursery $ales111an \l'ith al
lC'aSI 1 Year exp.
Land:u-ape 1ns1ail('r \1 llh at
li-ast 1 year exp 2 lickel.$ to the
Orange County
lntern•tiOnal
Auto Show
at the
ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
CENTER
P6.DFESSIQNAL Gardener,
tree \\'Ork, p runing,
sprinklers, clean up jobs,
landscaping. George,
~.
HICKORY
FARMS
Heach properties. Wt do f'iOtJl;;;;;;;~~~~;~;;;;~~§~~~~~~~~~~~I paint over the mildew. \Ve use a proven method not Attention Housewives? Stan
used by otbel'!I. Best paint · training for pf.time, peMTI. &
avail .• ""'1 on all "'"'"'' L __ ,ITTl,• I L __ lrr11 l.__ _ _,lrr11 Chmun'" ..,., ;ob<. Enjoy.
Sprinkler i\lan 1,1.•ilh al leas! 1
Y<"dl" l'Ap 111 rt·~1dential
Spl'ink.lers.
C.'all for appt. 646-7441
LOVE cloltK'S? c 0 n d u c l
~line fashion sho\\'S in
spare tin1e. Comn1. free
clothes, car nee. 892-5497,
5-16-6407.
RENTAL
AGENT
A11ractlvr. dynan1ic: pt>n.on-
alny, nuJst h<ive-adeqWL!t
knO\\'lrtJ~e of Jra~s A! N'lll·
al agreeinf'nls. :ja,J,1ry ;400
to start. J'hont> ~,.16-502.:i.
Recept • Sec'_y __
Exec ofc ~irl 11•/frnt o!fi«"
appearnnc:t>, J>('llOM.lity &
public contact f'Xpl!r. Re-q's
skills in typing, f'.H. & o!fc
syslems. Call for appl,
71-1/833-R711.
General Services
THINGS by Moose, Lt.
elect., plumb, fe~. tile,
in.suns. carpentry, paint etc.
545-<IB20.
80 we can gua.ra.ntte 4 long. El'flloj11te11t. . l!!J . ~ .l!!J . lfrPOymefttl!.!J able "-'Ork. Oayi, eves. Ap-
'er life paint job. Lic'd. ply, Hickory 1'·arm3, So.
November 17th thru 21st
Please can 642-5678, ext 314
beh\"ef!n 9 llnd 5 pm 10 claim
your tiC'kets. !North County
toll-free number . ~12201 • • *
Electrical
675-&'tlt Coast P laza., Lower 1\1all.
l'\o Wasung Htlp Wanted, MA F 710 Help W1nted, MA F 710 Help W1nted, M ~ F 710 HELP for Camper E·aotory. * COOK .FEMALE * \Vood"·orking equipnient ex-
ELECTRICAL l nstallations
G\RPENTRY, painting ,
cemenL Elec. Bob, 646-&l46,
54s.4398 Sm. jobs ok.
Hauling
* WALLPAPER * When yoU call "Mac"
548-1444 &fS..1711
PAINTING, professional. AU
work g u a r n . Col or
specialist. 962-6143,
547-1441. & repairs. No job too small. YARD, garage, cleanups.
Realistic prices. Ftte est. Removt trees. dirt, ivy, PROF. palnting-inter/exter.
Lic'd/lns. 5-'6--0ZU. skip l oader, backhoe. Ifonest \\'Ork. LI c /Ins.
847 2666 5-'S-27;;9, 541)-1444.
A Better Temporary
Position
URGENTLY
NEEDED .
EL E CTRICJAN, licensed, -----·------, 1 -~==~===~ boooed. sm.n jobs, mainL HAULLNG, cl........ local EMPIRE PAINTING Receptionist
& repairs. 548-5m. m<ives, exp'd college stu· Sen·1ng Org. Co. since '5.5
• dent. Lrg. truck Reas. SJ.1·3749 or 008-0335 T • t Engraving .,.,. yplS S 5.14-1-. PAl,TING/P•p<riog. 18 yn
}:XPERT Hand Engraving HAULING & Mov i ng. in Harbor a.N!a. Lie k bond-,
Trophies. plaques, cups. etc. Anytime. $7.51) per hour +. <'d. Refs furn. 642-2356 .. Secretaries
Russell, 54&-2194, days. 54g..5863. Plaiter., Patch, Re:">air
"'·''" •""'· TRASH • Gang• "'""'"'· ' Repro Typists 1.F.:::;u~rn=i=t=u=rec.:;;;_ _____ I days. Free esL Anytime. * PATCH PLASTERING
548-5031. All types. F'l'ee t.Stimatts.
Asst. Bookkeeprr
,..HA/VA Loan Pkg
Sec'y/Bookkcepcr
Compuf('r Trainee
Sre'y·San!a Ana
&!c'y-Anaheim
Jr. Sccretru1'
Ge.n'l Office·Anahe1n1
Cashier-Ins. A~l'Y
$450
$100
$650
$,),){)
$.jj{]
$:.00
$~j{]
$47j
$:i2:;
NEWPORT
Personnel Agency
833 Dover Or., N.B.
642-3870
RETlREMENT llOTEL per. Apply r..tajorway 869 \V.
962-5531 18th SI, C.11.1. No phone calls
C 0 , please.
0 K / Ii o u s ekeeper, 2 ""===,,--""°--,,---adults, 51~ day v.·eek. Top HOSTESSES & \l'aitresscs
salary. Refs. 673-7877 live enlerlainmcnt & dan-
;,:;-.;o;;--;::c:;:=:--::cc:::-;:-:-c:I c-ing for 18 11nd owr. Call DANCE teacher, must have ~S-92&8 or apply ,1 !
professional b a 11 f! I in-Popeyc."s, 19lh & Phu:C'ntia.
slructor \\'/S!rong jazz c:-,1.
~lAJDS, P/Tin1e, "'ill I.rain.
Apply in person, Don Qulx-
cote ~Io!cl, 2100 Ne\\·porl
Blvd., C.l\1. &12-2670.
J\1AID \\'Ol'k i'il ttxchangeo for
a partnlt'nl. 23i6 Ne\\'port
Blv<l, C:\I. =>18-9'ijj.
MAINTENANCE
COUPLE background. Also need,1-~=~=====o
beginning' tap teacher for HOUSEKEEPER TI'IOrough!y e.xperienccd for
H.B. area. Call S.noon Live-in Care tot 2 childl'('n latgC' apt. complex. Furnish-
5-11-3325. 4 & 7 .' 5 Days. liousecl('an-<'cl apt + $250 I mo to slart
Adult!! only, no pe!s. Phone DENTAL Jng, laundry. Exp'd & (('-!).JG.502j.
Automobile ASSISTANTS sponsible \1•/ ref'~ F:nglish l::l::::i:~~~~==: LOT 11.tAN, s tudent af-S""ak~.Prcfl.'rdrivc,OY.·n -----\Ve have severat openings for .. ~ ternoons. Apply, ~1arcus rm & ba, color TV. Paid MAINTENANCE chairside, front office re. i\lotors, 2100 Jlarbor, Costa vacation.. $70 .-.. wk. Raise n ·ption & combinalion. ..... MAN l'llesa. in 3 mos. Ne"'port Arca. E.'\:p·d to S·IOO J)l'r mo. Call
Our large aparbne-nl t'Om·
RN or LVN for 3 to 11 ~hift.
Clen llaven of Ne-1,1.•port.
&16-77&1. :Equal Opportunity
Employ('r.
Restaurant Help
CASIIT/l/counter s:irl for De.
Ji-Re~tauran1 . Food exp.
pref'd. 21-3.\ apiily in per·
son afler 2 P:\I, ~hef, Hrook-
hurst & Adams. rnr Savonl
Jl unLing!on 8<-aC'h
RETAIL
SALES LADY
For Quality Bakery
Apply In PPrSOn To1
Mr. Anderson
plex in 1he Orange County SNACK SHOP
AUTO Book k e <'per. Ex-for appt, 510-9010 • 1 ,.,·"~~~'='~'°~·===-::-.,--::,,;
JXTlnce only in au10. office. Cal-Pacific Agency HOUSE'KEF.PER.Cook. \\Ill\ __ cai_1_..,..._75~_,Hostesses SPECIAL! Avg. chalr or Housecleaning
rocker stripped S:i. Gluing, -----"'"----brass )'IOlL~hed. 645-0866. EXPER. Ref's & Carry All
Plaster Patching ln!erior I m m e d I a I e po s i I t o n 2TJO Harbor Bl I'd, Costa ,\IC'Sa eonsid<'r l'OUple \\'/husband
availab!!'. Please apply. DISTRIBUTE Jfl.'alth .~ f'mploycd elSC\1·here. Cart:'
area needs a resident n1ain· BAKERY
Stucco Repair Extt>nor
Small Jobs. Lie. 847-3471 lntervic\.\'ing Tlours
tlam-llam & lpm-tpn1
University Oldsmobitl', 2850 for 7 yr old boy. Top living
lenancc man . .i\[ust br a '3444 E. Coast Hwy,
n1ain1c:nanc:e engirK'C'i'. Prf'· Corona del Mar
Plumbing
Cleaning Equipm<'nl. Phone
3ardenlng After 3PM, 646-3307.
Ecology llnf', pt/full time. Barbor Blvd. Cosla i\1esa or Bob Or Bill 616-7036 ronds. ,\1usl be' legal resi·
call Business i\.fgr. 5-10-9&10. ===~--~__,,-.,--1 den1 & IX' a\'ail. \l'knds. frrably \\"ilh aparnnent I •"'"'~~~~~"'"''I
maintenance background. SALESMEN DEDICATED CLEANING \\'ANTED! Messy Yards, * \\'e Do Everylhing * PLUi\tBING REPAIR
, Trees & Gar.ages. Light 24 hr. Call 673-40n No job too small
Moving & H3uling. TNT 1---"--""--'-~~~~-e 642-.3128 e
J.a1,1.•n Maint S48-5863 Housecleaning By Day, COLE PLUMBING Own Transportation
\\fork \1'hc11 & \l'hCn,:
)'OU \\'a nt!
Interim
Personnel Servic:e
Anytime! Call ~s ~ 2-1 hr. service. S15-ll61
AL'S Landscaping. Tree 1 -~-::;:...::::c,:""'=c::--Remodel & Repair 778 W , 20th, C.'M.
removal. Ye.rd remodeling. '.\tesa Oea.ning Ser.·ice &42 7523 ~2592
Trash hauling, lot cleanup. Ca.rpfts, Windo\l.-S. F1oor rte. CUSTO)I Remodel \Vork, •
Repair sprinklers. 61l-1166. Resld. & Commc'L s.tS-tlll alterations, .a~ilions, minor ALARM and/or . intercom
LAWN & Garden Service. Ironing TC'pa1n. Finish or rough service & installation.
Small Cleanup \Velrome. c.&rpt"nlry. David Ste1,1.-art, &12·3&".0 * IROY.."IXG * ~1108 Call Rog, 54&.67~. P.ea..<;Qnabie rates ARCHITECTURAL
Exp. JaparK."Se Gardener ~ Roofing DRAFTSMAN
Lawn 1\1-alnt. Clean-up M --.-,-..,-ry....:.::.;:;=c____ !..EE Roofing Co. Roofing Min. 2 yrs college + ~ yrs
'.J'rimming 5-16-1~ all types. Recover, repairs, expcr. local ,\/£ firm.
COMPLETE lawn & garden. BRICK • .Bkx-k & Stone \\'ork. thermo roof coolings, white 833-8320, ext 8.
ing serviC'<'. 540-00'29 r:;1646-QJ.13 & rolor. Lie/bonded, since * * *
Jim 548--040.';. ·-17. r.42--1'222. EUGENE DELLS SR.
LANDSCAPE and Gardening Painting & e T. Guy Roofing, Dc.a1 Di-611 PDinsettia
C l ean-u pi, J.lauling, Paperhanging l't'Ct. I do my own work. Corona del Mar
Sprinklers, CelniinL 642-6332 ----------1 &t.>2'7!10. 54&-9590. -•You are the wlnnl.'r of
LAWN Maint. Hauling, new PAINTJ NG : Hone&t Sewing/Alterai'ions 2 Hckels to th<'
'1awnll, clean-up, pruning. guaranteed v.'Ork. Lic'd Any ---... • -Orange County
'Free Est. Call 546--7379. size job. Call 675--57~. European Dressmaking International
All custom tilted. Penonnl Auto Show SPENCER'S Lawn &nice, you·suppy the paint. Rooms Fa~hion advice. 673-1849.
fJ'l"e esl. Lawn c a re, painted S10 ea. Also ex-at the
ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
CENTER
cleanup5, rea5• 548-5213. · tl'l"ior. Call 540-7M6. Alterations -642·5845
-. n..-" Keat, accurate, 20 years exp. X PER . Haw a 11 an E>.'TERlOR-lntenor. .., .. ..,,.. G. rd en er. Com pl,,, ty \\'ork. Guaranteed to last. Tile November l71h lhnt 21st Ga.rdeni ng Ser vice 673--3230 before 7A:\f, ~=-'-~-~-~-~-CERA'1.1IC tile new & Please call &12-5678, CXI 314
Kamalani, 646-4676. 1'"0R clean & neat painting, l'f'mod<'I .. Free !!SI. Small betwet'n 9 and 5 P!TI tn claim
EXP. Japanese Gardener. intl'rior & exterior, Call ,.. bs \\·l'l...,,me. 536-2-126. your tickets. (North County
Know how, up.keep. plant Dick, ~. T S "v • toll-fI'C'e number is S.10.1220)
pest, trimming, clf8l>-Up. VINYL Paper bang i ng ree ervice * * +
968-3486. specialist. \l.'Ork guaranteed.
Expe.r Japane-se Gardener Est. 547-5846 or 846-2182.
' Complete yd service. Neat
& Rella. Free m. 642-4389.
Daily Pilot Watrt
bargains galore.
Ads have
GENERAL Tree &:orv. Yard ASSEMBLERS
cltan-up, hauling, sprink1cr {~tarting range up to f.!.0
repairs. Reas. 646-5848. Per Houri
DONUT Shop \1·ork-Fe1nale. R·I·, ~·d Stal• •k·'ls & AUTO Polisher &. ,\1olor • ... ,, · " "· Night shifL No ('Xp'd ner. larv pected p O Box pain1er. Exp'c1 only. Apply 2.>-4:J. Apply 135 E. 17th St. sa 'c ex 1 j Mt . C . JS621 Beach Blvd .• H.B. ur ~3. orona ( c ir. a. CJ\1. ' \ ,.....,,.,. call 847-35'17. ~o"=~='=· ""°~~---..,,-
Af)1lly
8So ln'inc A\'(', l'\B
AVO~ PRODUCTS is !he DRAPERY HSKPRS Emplyr pa~ fee.
WORK ROOM George Allen Byland Agen-.<'.IAN to nt•k< donuts 6 v.;orlds largest & most 6 h s A Se\\•ing & pressing. Ex'per I. cy 106-B R l t • · · ni<>h1i:; a \\'"'"k, Clean cut. respected cosmetic com-,... ,,_,,_
pany. AVON representatives trainees. Beach Drapery, 000 547--039.). PtcTmanen!. Trott e r's
can take advanlage of this \V, 17th St., Costa Mt>AA. Insurnnt't' Bakery, 234 ·Forf'Sl A\'e,.
fine t'('putation in succrssful DRAPERIES eXpCrienced FILE CLERKS Lai,'llna Beal'h.
profitable businesses of help flC('(f(_od, Paid holiday;;. PMitions open in our Hunt. :\!AN l\'antl!'l:i for I Io or
iht•ir ov.·n. Call no 1,1.·, bonus program, plenty of Beach offi('(', r·un IL pllilllf' mainlenarn'.'e t... other duties.
540--70-11. "'ork. ~),,.,g..$11.31 hrs, A1n·1 lX"nerils: & oppor. Apply in perron, Huntinjtlon
BABYSITIER nel'Oed 6:30 to };;\lPI..l>Y:\1E~T for advancrm<"Tll. Reach Con\-alC''"l'l'nt J-losp,
COU NSELLOR Call Pf'rsonnel J,'{lt\l F1oc,·d,, J-l.B. s:.15 am. \\"al'nf'r &. Ne1l'land 842·7751
arf'<i, Could bring 1 smaU H you likr lo \Ind;.. \\'!Ul l\TA~AGl:.'"RS \\'Al\'TED -pl & h ' h I •. ,, ... ~ E11ual Oppor. Employrr t:hild. 0 1\'n 1n1ns. 812-7902 .. ~~ "· · a ·c 81 .;..cs "' Unlim1!ed income op-
af!C'f '1 pm. pobl1c contact experience INVEST JN port.un ity in g ro i\· in g \l'C l\'jlJ train you in an in. .,, .
BE A UT 1 CI AN \\'/some tcn:.sting c.lreer. Commis-Y.OUR FUTURE prestige fictd of J•1otiva·
follo''.,·.g. Ne11.,....,r! Io c. Ilona! Sc:ierl{'('i;, Cail i\lel " 1~ s1on + Salary provide high
Nc"·ly drcor shOp. CaJl ·aft C'arntngs. I-'iJ·st ye'ar S6000-BE YOUR OWN BOSSI Birr til~I 5.S8--$11.
6. 675-8281. $(KXIO M W Mature Hostesses
C. 11· 'l H ...... "'"'-~ en or omen 1'0 NT vtEW BEAUTY OPERATOR assis-a 1' r. arper. J1<r1>UJJ I ER
lant fully licensed. Contack Coastal Agency Lease A Yellow NEW RESIDENTS Ir,,~· T.empleton·~ lla1r 27!lO !-!arbor Bl. at Adams -Par! Tin'!e -,,,_., Taxi Cab Styles, 170'1 \\lestcliff Dr. CAR & TI~Pt.'\VRITER NEC.
N. B. &12~7 EXECUTIVE Can !'l47-309j . Call for Appl
*BOOKKEEPER* Personnel Agency 54c1311 Secretary to $650 U"
CAREER OPPORTIJNITI', Markeling exper. f'or nat'l
N.k for llerman Varied <tutl<'s. n1any hen-sales mana~rr. Expcr. \\'/
('[i!s: hosp., m€'<1., profi1 consumer proc1ucts. Topi;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
sharin~. sloe~ option & skills.
inuC'h more. For appoint-410 W. Coast Hwy., NB
men1 call &l-1·1380, ask Suite H 64.S.2716 lor l\Tr. i\\u n:i;on.
SLAVICK 'S
JEWELERS
#IS 'F"A~llO~ ISL .. ~.8.
BOYS 10.14
MTST/SC OPR
Ne\.\•port BeaC'h firm seeks
expcr. MTST/OC OPR for
p/lin1<.' e\'l'ninµ: 11ork. ~1usl
be able to mark copy, De.
sirr n1ature individual v.·irh
ab1lily to \\'ork ind<'pcndent-
Jy.
Ca II 644-3258
--
* * * * * *
ti> deliver papers In the San
En~)1ne11t II i I I Elt>etrontC'S <.'O. seeks as~· Ocmente, San Juan Capls-. f blers for temporary assign. trano and Capistrano Beach ~------' ment {approx 2-4 nlO's). are9 ..
Earn Extra Xmas $$$$
No exper. nt'Ci'Ssary. \Ve ·will
leach you th<' secret~ of
profe.c;sional ni.1ke-.up tech·
111quN>. No door·tCHloor.
ChooSf" yoor 0\1-n hrs. J\l;ike
111oncy & have fun 100. CALL
NO\V Jj.12-6449 \'IVIANE
\VQQ.DARD COS:\lETICS,
~ PER.SONNEl
SERYICF5 ""AGENCY
NuRSES-:-atlShif\s. Private
Du!~·. RN, LVN, Practical
Ref'.!> ncce~s. Le-s co u I i e
Nurses Reg i s try, 1'11
l-lnspital Rd, N.B. Call
612-9!1.=xi llny hr. Jnt<'l'l.'"'
~A-:1P, r-.111". O_R_TI_l_ODOc::;,N~'T=l~C,----A~,-,~,,~ .. ~,,~,.
Jle("('p!ionist. Ctingenial &
i111clligent. Expcr. not nec.
r.«s. ·ryping. ~46-923\
••••••••••I Background in ,,·1re1,1.•rap. DAILY PILOT
,-----------------... Job Wanted, Male 700 pin~. soldering & hoard 492-4•120 ~tuf[in~ required. ,\lust be IC"°"A~S~l~·t 'i'E~l;;<--,C~J~e~c~k;;---: I
Trader's Paradise able to work from \Vire list Pcr1naner11. F\111 li111c & & diagrams. Color code
kno\1·lertgc helpful. ReC'cnt part lin1f', ·l·i\tost. S.11
Job Wanted, Female 702 flS.~embly f'XIX'T mandatory. Baker SL, C.<\t
,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;..;;;;;;;;;";;;;;;;;I Intervic\v Ttn•sday, Nov. 91h, Cl-l!LD ca1'c, :1 hrs 11llt>r
NEED HELP AT HO;"o.IE? Phone for Appt. school. 111 my hon1r. &in!a
SE7'ollN.ARY St)ildent needs
part time f'mployment.
f;..1:>-j693
TRADE ltomfs Kona C:OOst
Hav.oall for Ne"''POrt area
Dec. 1~ lo Jan 5. Adults
)n]y. P.O. Box 1031 Ke-alake.
kua, 1-laWaii. 967:()
TRADE Top ol \\'ortd 3 Br,
fam rm, 2 Ba hon1c "·/
greet Vll:ll\': FOR Dana
Point or Capo Bea C'h Prop.
O\\ner. 494-llSl or 496-1260.
Junior Shopp1ni:: Crnter.
Parking 38 c·a Ni. $175,00:>
clean, consider Int or aoros
a.~ do\\'Jl paymenL ArntM>n
19"·7'260.
2 BR, 1 Ba, 4 bl~ 10 bcll.
Assumablt 71~ loan . Tra~
~uity far Jarg,ttr Laguna
hOme ctose to be'.a<":h. SJS.000
Owner. 494-5512.
Near new 1970 Holiday Tr
Motor llome. Cost Sltl.500.
Trade for property or '?!
Boll: 4196. Pa.Im Spnng&.
T14-32SJOO!
lines
times
dollars
3 BDR:\T rental home in
Oceanside. $14,90;) F1-IA ls!
TD. \Vant paper or ?? for
Sl.100 equity. :\lilt Tlan~n.
Rci'.11tor, 49.1.g.171,
Dt>sert; Victorvilll' area nr
El i\llrage <i illXlrt. 2, <21!i)
11rre ]Xlf'('('I~. Trade for
hoai, propen:--or ?
613.J!l?.l
Have \'Cry clesircable Ne1\"
port moorl"J.':, close 10 jetly
,{· a bC'11111 27' Cru ising sail·
bo.1t "'llnbrd motor, "'l'ln1
4 BR home. Call 894-41)9.l.
For Tcmp:irary Sen·iCC!: e \Ve Have Convall?'M!enl
Aide: • Nurses • House·
keepers.
llO:.\lEi\11\KERS/UPJOllN
For Pennanent ~=
• \\'e Havt Companions
• flousekeepers • Practi-
cal Nurses etc. At Monthly
M .S.I. Data Corp.
1381 Fischer Ave.
Costa Mesa, Calif.
1714 1 540-6600
F,qual Oppor. Employrr
APARTMENT
CLEANING Rates.
HEALTII ~ SUPERVISOR
FA;"o..11LY CARE AGENCY for large Rpartment ron1plc.'<.
180:i 1'.'o. Broad\\'ay, J\1ust qe thl.>roughly rxperi.
Santa Ana 547"6681 cncerl in in\·en!ory con1rol.
~~"'!'"'"'"'"":-"--"'--"~I work s<:hedulC' & .-;upervi~·
EXP. doi:: trainer. Sho1l'ing. ion. Goocl salary. Phone
Con-al f'IC"<1n!ng, horM!. ~X· 5-16-502:>.
cer. l..nurlr &12--0217. !======::::::::==
Jobs Wanted.MA F 704 APARTMENT
, CLEANING ,
COUPLL to managn apt5. \Vomen for llpt f'lcanln~ in
Orang;. Counly arra. !'>18-~ large complc:<; Must ht' f':t·
'rn.ADE Th't'lvt foot Ski aftL.,. .1 pn1. pcril'nccd. Good salary. •10
OOat. z; 1-1.P. Johl1!<(ln out· & F 10 ~rd and trailc-r for pickup Help Wanted, M 1 hr \\'Ork v.·rek. Phone
rrock, camping ttallrr, car, ___ A_C_T_N_O_W ____ I ;,.16-J02:j.
Or hou5" painting. IW7.QTOO 1,-P-T""'","'1.-N'"A"c"E"n-""R<"ua""•"1.
Full or Pffthnr i:ouplt', good Eal(."g\\'OJTltn &
Casting 11.U types I« Jndepen-handyman.
Ana llls arC'a. Afl :l;
5.j7-SHZO.
CHRISTMAS
MONEY
MALE HELP
P!l rt T1mr f~Vf'S 6-IOptn
:\'o F..-:per. NecrSEary
$98 A WEEK
842-0667
COOK
WAITRESSES
DISH MEN
All Shifts
Available
Apply 9 AM-3 PM
See
Mr. Dave Cornelson
&-auhfu! eountry 5 acres
next lo Sequoia, will 1rade
n:ioo eq. for later model
~t11.uon wagon, van, bool ,
Mr. 8384:;75 or 644-7321
~nt films ~ C"ntnmerclal~ .. \Vrite Oa~fird ad N?. 189
Also dtspt'tately 1X"Pd ttX· O;i\ly Pilot, I'. 0. I3rn( 1500
Cf:Ulh.'C' type ml!n At ht.'au!) r..01tt11 i\lf':'lll, Ollif. 92626 ,
ron1es1 lypr girls. Call San-APPL'' no1v for pt•rmane-n1 CJ /
ford !::n!t>rprises, f21ll p.1r1 11mf' securuy IK'rvict•. ~Ct 111 ho .1
464-3121. Pn!litk>n :11 0 .C. Rattwtty.
Experienced
Executive Secretary Sccr~tary-1..nguna . . , cl Jm.•01C'(' Clrrk Pn;v,1ous .exper'.t>llCC' ~n a · Gen'! Ofe/Figurr.~ m1n1~t n1l1on off1Cl' pr1 fcrrt-d <-~-· r..1 k · • . • .:io..~ y, i·· ru· ct1n~ r.1·p1n~ io. ~h. 110. Respan-Bookke('fX'r/EDP
:.ible, full 1in1(' pooit io n, good
S·1j0
$.'JOO
10 s l?.J
SIS:J
$~:00
fnni;:e ben('fils. Send resume '1S8 E. l7th rat Irvine) c:\t
to ClassifiC'd Ad #281 r./o 642-1470
the Daily Pilot, P.O. Box
1J60. Cos!a J\1rs.1.
F/C Bookkrl'per n«dert im-ISLANDER
n11tl. Constn1cHon r~r. YACHTS
drs1rabl('. Contact Mrs . Now Interviewing
Alliorw, S.W-SS.U. For
FI-:7\tAL~ Piano PI a y.,. r : PRODUCTION
F"l'l/Sal nitrsc only. Call LINE
nites. hartcndrt', ~&-1428. SUPERVISOR
FRO:\'T Ofc. Girl tor physi· With min. of 2 yrs •. re-
f'iitn r1ntrrn1~\I Plrasan! cent exper. in the field
personnl11y &· :':Qmf' rt·nt of<· of fiberglass boat a s·
t'Xf'lf'"· lmportaoi. a 11 sembly. Pleas e submit
611..fl'22S nft 7p n1. resume w/cover letter
Gl'nl.'J'til Off1l"f'
LEASING
AGENT '
in porson to:
ISLANDER YACHTS
777 W. 17th St.
Costa Mesa
. J-nN'l'l a pru1P11sion al
Our exp;,1~hn~_Oak\1'ood Gar· mechn.nic. j\,us1 ttnvf' 1't>f'~.
df'n Apl in -~C\\'J)Or1 ~ach Xlnl pi\v. Tom ~rr Union n1•rcl~ a ~1rl v.•/50mf' hook· Oil, 6'7?.-.3320, 22(11 E. Csl
kC'C'Jlln~. ~ pholl(' person· 1-lwy, Crl~t.
nlny ,t-pl'f'v1ou~ \f':lStn~ or1-~"7.""°''-"'===~-
rt'ntal ('Xfl('rience. Typi~60 INVENTORY
\1'.p.n1, Thi11 i~ a lull 1imf' CONTROL CLERK
po.~iuon, but must be Rble to To S.fOO. S.A. Art'a
\\'Ork r\'t'n!ng.\ & v.~kends. BE SURE
Good salacy J: be.nl'fits ~ Employm•nt Agenr;y
6268 Beach Blvd. APPLY
OAKWOOD
GARDEN APTS.
But-n;l Pk. (\I m.2690
Legal Secretary
(.'rJm1n11\ J,fl\V f:X['ll"r.
PAINTER
Prolesslonat painters nrec!-
rd for our large Gar<ir11
Apt. romplex. Bxtcrior, in-
lerior ,'.[ ftnish (':»per1en('('
necessary.
Appl~·:
OAKWOOD
N""'"POl't North
8a> Irvine, NB
Equal Oppor. EmployCT
PAINT'":'ltaintcnan<'e \\'Ork
In e)(changt" !or n1otel apt.
2376 Nwpt Blvd. CM . rl'l&-975.'.J
PART tin1e hPlp \l'anTed,
architect's ollicf'. various
joh!l-making n1o<l<'l.~. color
p!"l'senlalion~. f'lc, Ca 11
'.°~IS.:J.1·11 f\Jr ilPflL
• PLASTICS e
Jnjrct1cm 1nold1n[:: 0Jl('1·atn~
or tralnf'f'JI. Gr1n·eyard !Shill .
,il1U11l he neat & d('pe.ndablf'.
f"l'mAle prPrc rrl'<l. Apply
8:::0am ·111 11 :30an1.
Apply ~:30-ll :YIA.lf * Orangf' Coll$t P1a~hl'S *
87lO \\'P1't 18th Fol.,
Costa Mesa, Calif.
PROF'FSSIONAL phone
soUcl!or • Dana Point, San
Ol!mt'nte, ~pistt-:lno area.
\\'ork In )'(lur 01,1.·n home.
Bt!t deal In Rf'Cll. J)hone
!1.3.'t-lot6.i bern·etn 9:00 a.m.
xntl noon.
ARE you tired or unkepl
promises about your ad-
Yanccm<'nt? Are you "°"'
able to handle a S2j,OOO •
year ~alrs job~ tr so,
DO YOURSELF A
FAVOR AND
EXPLORE THIS
OPPORTUNITY
\\'ork dll'f'C'tly \1ith na1iona1
imles m11nagf'r.
Lead S).S1f'n1 that guar:i.ntees
1hu-e c:1lls ll night.
Pay \l'(.'('kJy \l'i!h 1nnnth rncl
bonus.
ChatlC'c !-0 manage yourself
"'ith a contract tl'Lat "·ill
supply yoo \\·ith unlimited
incon1r.
l ntcrvif'W by np)'IOintmm -
10 A.i\f. lo 4 P.i\I. 5.38·7071
ask for 1\1r. l\1cGuy,
SALESLADY
P/Time ,.~or Christmas Rush.
Awly in ~rson,
KIRK JEWELERS
2300 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
SALES \\'JTll
i\lANAGEi\IE.~T OP~HTUNIT,.
Looking for a 1 o c ll I
:oalc~ma n for C:tn'<'r w/lrg
linarl<'ial i11s!1 tul i on .
Substantial !'ala11' + com·
mission.~ [or a :: }T. pcnod.
!\tarried, colleitf' grad or
01,1.11cr of a bushl('~S pN'f'd.
Call 646-$72 bctv.·cron j: 3D ii!
7 p111. i\1/F.
SALES/NII tiunall y •.ad-
\'<"l'li~NI .SJ'l(lrls11·rar rom-
pany & lradrr in Hs field
has openings in this area.
Aee 18 10 60. Earn $20 to $·10
rwr C\.'l'ning. full or part
nmr. Call ;\\r, Parsons,
77.1 ..... 10M: ~139-:i4ll.
Secretary
PURCHASING
DEPARTMENT
Type 60 w .p.m . & SH of
80 w .p.m . required.
Previous experience in
purchasing or relatt d
f ield desirabl•. Excel·
lent company benefits.
·"r>fllY Jn Pcr~n
3333 Harbor Blv~.
Costa Me sa
ATLANTIC
RESEARCH
A D1\·. of SUsquf'hanM Corp.
Eq\lal Opr.or, Em~r
--S-EC'Y EXEC-. -
For ~auurully ~1111'd Jo.
raJ oorporall" otf1ce of a na·
11on.1I N>. \\'ork for youni:
,. P . :\TrM \'l!lltOT"( from 1111
0\1'1' f'11un 1ry. ('onipany Pa)'!I
fo"cc. Fron1 $'.l.iO.
0111/'r Fer J11b.11 i\\•a11.
C.:oiU J1•1111 Rm"·n. ~~lfl.fiOJJ
?rklHl'foQwnetshlp tripll"X,
C,P.f. tncome S7JJ./mo. E~·
cha.nge $17.500, equ.lly foe.
multiple :mnlns building.
lot. Pm"On ReaJt1. 642-)771.
{4) 2 BR. 1'°' BA duplexe5,
Car .. pot_io, bltna. cpta,
df'PI, like nu. $32). mo tncm
ta. S33.»> ea. 81.lhmlt trad·
nob Ollon PJtt 5'~.
Want 1i or '\ Ton Pick Up,
for 5 llM'f'S F.artt'rn Utah
Rrc'l"l'etion lA(ld. $1500
Value,
ATTRACTIVE young 11:\rls 18 838--l5!13 before noon. V ) · [
yrs to SO for Olrect M.>lllng. AS:5£MBLY Trainees. day /'<.e.1 fa u1•a11
r anta!lt1c monty. St-II ,.,, !!hill, fcm11 tr, ~ lA-28. no Newport Beach North
SSO Irvine Ave. N.B. Id~. 1:arn lanitlblc 1nol1('y, C'xptr. heet'M. but mu~t 3001 S. &Astol
645--3997 bel\\·een 9 & 11 nm haYI! l!:QO(I f'yr!ll~t & lln11:er Santa Anl Equal 0M>Qf'. Employrr
Cn II 1 .or"' ii"'
\\'E!'l'CLIF'/
J>f:tt.i::oNNEL A{IENCY
:»13 WH1e11rr nr., N.n .
61:-.. zno
P..El.IEF' Cook, t"X~r. req'c1.
Btlpll~l Con\·ale!!'N>n! Hl'l~ll·
001 Center SI, (.\1. SU~..:.:,$\
Coa.;;111 1 Ai::rno:·y
:.!7'lfl Hru OOr Bl :11 Arlam~
SECli.r::"rAn'=:-onH'1lil'.r Coun.
!y O.-*lnorr11!lr P11rty ntrd~
hps:th! 1111r11ct1vr ll 11" l ,
))(omocraHr "l')(llllical ex-p.
<lf'll'lrN:I .. ~::3-.'U~~.
& boh\ttn l & :i pm Turs drxtcril.y. At>ply in {)('Mn. _"""'"'"'""'"'"'"'"" IFast rt!!!\11\s are just • pbOne thnl Fri. S.A.r.:. Advanttd Pa<:kllR· .!
* * * A aood "'llnt •d la: a K<JOd Ing, 216.l 5(), <;rand A\'f't IJOV~a:: Jl untlngf WAich 0ie 0311)' P1lot \V11;nt Ads ha\.'e c.1JI -.1,1.ay . &IU!678 * * * 1 OPEN HOUSE column. hlltnlra Jr&lore. I Iii;.. .... ;;,.--~-'--------~--..;,. nVf'!ilmf'nl f..A. '_:::.,:;.:_::;:;::::::.::=='---'-"='---'----------------
HOUSE 1-lunttng? \V:i tc.h Uie
OPEN HOUSE column.
•·
' ' . •
• T11eM1a:;, November'•. JCJ?l DAILY Pll.OT
• 1§1 ~! ~'-~·"··~·-· ;l[II]~Hl~-~=l~~~r.1 =·=""'--"::;'· ~l~=l·· l ~I ~·"~ .. -~-;'.;;;I~ I ....::=-· l~l 1-.:.. _;___ ... i:...-.:..;,_"" __,1~11~1 ;;; ..... ;;; .... ~I~§] I . '""~... l§l I
SH:Rlpv1Wc'Ea~stect,~.~~tu'1'1FZl!._,F,,,u:-:ro-nl.,1u,,r,,_•_,,, ___ 1_1~0 1 ~ ·.:!;::•-~:'!_llT'.'•:;-:·~-~:,-';;·:.·;:-·;::!;.-!P,!il·TV_;S:,:l..::;R:;::.:d:;·~o,::·'.~.H;_·l~P.:~~_: .. ;: .. _:·A6~ ~G;.;an;.;.;•;.ra:'l~:::-z~--'°°-1;~: •• ::;!:.:"~·;S:.;!~!Pz!/~.Doc:;.:; .. ~~!!~.-~?Jj:~:~.-:, -::-. .. ".lT ·-'-uc.,.k_•--o,-:,,.,_,,.-,,._..;;;9c,6;;;2~.~!~.!~t~·--~'-ffl -
AutotforWI
.,,. tat ... n, l me MUST Sell Chine&e Modern TEAC Tape -'Dttk, Nat'l CAPTAIN ./ Sl.IPS-AVAILABLE •
days. Exper. M'rviet! station fl.totit Living Room tum.· pan o 1 on I c ste:rM w/ MAGNAVOX maple con-Unllmtted license -ar.y crosa Slips &: side ties from 20' to '68 fREIGHTLJNER IH. ANNIVERSARY •50 53lcsman. l\tust be neal & wilh accessories. E.xquilile 5peakers & 6 band radio. IOll!'. IOlid •late AM/FM , tons, JO Yean experience 74'. Avail at Hatteras
aggressive & capable• to ebony & marble tables, tall N\kkomat 1.4 camera . phono & tape reoorder. Xlnt sail & power. Professk>na.I r-.tarlna, 3408 Via Oporto, TRACTOR
per tor m comp I e l e Chinese tloor lamp on base. 675-3592 -cond. $325. Call 67~1192 sport fishlng eulde; Mexican next to Imperial Savings, NIJTC ~, C"n•m•'n• DI-·'
• AUTOS WANTED
Jntttn11.tlonal llarve:rter Top dollar tor etein. .used
automotive aervlce 4 mi110r La Sc ph · lu eves. & Central America & Pa.cit-N "· h * 64" ...,..,,,. ~· "' """"" r rge aragra pie re Mlscollan-•s ev.""'rt ocac or"'"" e~ne R~l3 t . . repairs. High vo ume Shell with all d t •-llO l\fUST sell Treack Nikko le Coast waters • Instruc-.. -·~· • '"" ransinissW>n,
RECREATION CENTER can. See Andy Brown.
ROY CARVER, Inc. THEODORE
unit , ln Costa 1\-lesa. Xlnt Teakw-:00 g~'::ryd t:ie~g W•nted amp &. Pioneer turntable, tion tn boat handllJli, sea-Boats, Speed & Ski 911 Rl70orear axle, Zl'' tires and
earning potential. Apply in table '"~th chain. All ln Must see to apprec.-Contact ma.rtahlp, DR &: celestial ts' THUND'ERBlRO 100 hp ;~'~.2,s!;/:1 ~~~~:.,~ ms Harbo< Blvd. ROBINS FORD ~osta Mesa ; . ~46-4444 ' 2060 HARBOR BLVD.
person, 10 am to 2 pm. anly, Xlnt cond. 557-0309. after 6pm, 646-Q68, naviga.tiOn. PICK UP &: Joh 1 1 .....,.,.., .. l\tesa Verdt' Shell Se'rv!ce, r ASH PAID FOR DELIVERY' AN'i}VHERE: l'l50n, e ee mo or tilt, The truck people from
66 CJlEV\"·, ~ Pick Up. COSTA r-.t.ESA &ti.oolO
Sl{"(,1Cr/can1pcr. he J\ \' y 1 -=~=°"'=""'=""=-I
tirei; tuwin~ hitch trlr brk WE PAY TOP OOLLAR 3131 llarbor Blvd., C.l\f, SJLVERTONE Sle'teo 48" V captain available for ~:it-elec bilgt' pun1p, fut! covers, Genera l Motor1I
pro>inoi'1 "'· i100 . One fuml""'· .--.. [I -nded ""'1£1"•· ExteMive good oond. m ,84&-1492. MIKE McCARTHY 4 11~ lrans, spa're tank.'!: . 1'"0R TOP USED CARS
Sll.10. Owfl('r 545-0953 evrs. I! your ~ar b utra deu, wmg mac • an es. no piece or frff to You administrative experience. SERVICE St.alien Sales, full Zig/Za< se · h nqu· 0 · I S '"
timl". l\1ust be neat & de-?11aple cabinet ' $60. Bot~ bousejul. Call day or nliht. ~-------' 646-2977 I jr:a:l ::~a:~=d.~~lyM~90
Ne"'· ~~~:;,, ~.~;~1~ :lv::.,;;;;;;Sl!l;;;;·;;2211;;;;;; .. ;;;i"';;;;';;";;733.;;;;;:;;;; 3 Lines, 2Times, $2.00 sc' ••. AM-LET.S, , __ l_,._ ... _,,,._,_, .. __ _ GMC
SERVICE Station Attendant. $150. pr, gold upol. chairlkiLN all I trilr·-1 894-1336/531 -2450
all shills open. 4678 Cainpus $SO. 842-3079 . !m e ~· cen oq.a.o 2 PEDIGREED Si am e .5 e NS'WERS
}"OR sale or trade 1950 1',ord
Pick Up truck le camper
shctl. 962-8125
5e'; us r.rst.
BAUER BUICK
231 E. 17th SL
c.asta Mesa · 543-7765
Dr .. N.B. 54&-1757. ~-==------casting machine. Elec. wax cala, ,_ •• ~. mother k A . Camp.rs, S11le/ Rent 920 Cmner &-aeh ~ l\1c.Faddcn, 8' HERCULON sofa_ & -e&rvll'r. ~. .....,-..u WC!Stminster
SERVICE estab. ru·1-1 e r love~a. round game set, ~--~-----= Claugtita-, ~S-&. 4. FOR ule 1971 Ken Coacb•l----------
TOP DOLLAR
IN CASH
Auto Lea~ing 964
Brush Customers. C.l\I. Up tufted crushed velvet living Musical Instruments 122 "83~7-_2738..;c~· -"""---~ Savory -Ne-wl.Y -Cough -camper shell. Big rear door, '66 DODGE Van Camper, O~nt vti:u~~ le:~ =;-Pald-for your clean _used car
10 $160 \11kly to start rm. set. hand. carved coffee CONN g_h ~nch Hom. LOVABLE 10 mos, old Kennel -LOCKS 4 mo old. Xlnt cone!. $~00. Stovf', sink Ir iCf'bQx. Auto., pair! for or not ·v r ,., One carpenter 10 e'lOther: J>O t Sl 4 2 nC!\ ti Amf'rlcan Ir Import makes A, DODGE 962--0l16. & f'nd tables. 675-3343. l\Unt concf. Cost ss:zs.: new, orange/white male kitty, "I'm a Yale man myself. Use 642~7 or 548-8915 Pop. P5 • v res. at compe!ilive rates. Let our SANTA AN
Fn "''K H il alte-d ·""' box Ira'--.. tw;.....io~. l'"l N T"-'n SERVICE Sta. Salesman, ,..,..,, am ton W a I e r asli:lng $680 or best offer. • .. • .. .,~, ., .. ,u. their LOCKS on every iot?." Cycles, Bikes, I~ experts tailor YOUR ..., · u:iu
p/time, eves & wknds. ex-Color. Appraised at $1000. 54S-7010 aft 7 p.m. 644-0139. USED Boat Show Ir. Swap __ s_c_oo1 __ •_•_• _____ m_
1
01EV 11~ ton PU, VIS, auto, lease to YOUR needs. "1t's 83>3691
per. Neat in appear. Apply Best oiler . over $600. GIBSON Les Paul-SG MALTESE/Poodle, male, to r/h, nu tires v.·12 bunk the ser\'lce that makes the L'dPORTS WANTED
2590 Ne\\'port Blvd, C.M. 644-2649. $150. 546-96.12 good home. =·au!':iti:ui~~=~:: 1971 TRIUMPH ~~~~ shrll & cargo dr. diffei<>nce." Orange Counties
STENOGRAPHER
~1ajor Newport Bf'acb firm
seeks stenographer. Aceur:
·ate 70 w.p.m. typing, Sll
hel pful, but not necessary
if proficient at 1r:1nscribing
from dictaphone. Xln't \VOrk·
ing conditions & company
beneriti;.
FORCED to sell near new Office Furniture/ ** 673-4678 * * Dec. 3, 4, 5 -Across Coast THEODORE TOP $ BUYER
1'\Jrn 8' avocado velvet SO· Equip 124 BLACK mini pure poodle, 2 Hwy from Reuben E. Lee, CLEARANCE SALE '56oyl•'FO<lO•RDr. R~:~,· good!~ lo, "c'a1'1 ROBINS FORD : Bn.L MAXEY TOYOTA fa Tables ete. Also Jlerculon,1 ____ ._______ yrs old, gd pet, oklr cpl pref N.B. For space reservation. ' ..... 2060 l{ARBOR BLVD. 18881 Beach Blvd.
sofa w/matching Ioveseat. '71 ADLER Port. Elec. 642·7414 714: 64¥751. I -"-"&-'-"7'-"22'-.-----=• I ,:.CO=ST=A.:.c.M=E=S:.,A'---'64:.,2:..-00)~0: 1 _H-".-'B~ea_;,<h7.,_ __ .,.,_. ~"='-=~=I
\Vilt sepil.rate call 645-1701 typewriter. Brand new. ---J~U,:.N::K,:..::F:..IA~T,---l?i' l-l)jY Utility Boal 6 cyl House of Autos, New 980 Autos, New . 980 Autos, New --910
Garage Saie 812 Perfect Student Christmas YOU HAUL C--hJ1'slrr. Needs work. No Suzuki· Triumph '.':'::~'C:"--:-----1 gifL Paid $240. Asking $210. S.1~9663 Af ter 6 pm trlr. $350. 64!>-U20 af1 7 pm. l6ll2 lfarbor Blvd., f.~
l\10VING sal(', {µt!Jiturc , Prl. Pty. 637-a545. 1 YR spayed female mixed Boats, Power 906 531~545 or 531...S.541
clothes ·& household items. 9 1970 1BM Exec. Typewriter, Beagle, good w/children. Open Sunday
A~1 to 4 P~f Sat/Sun, Nov Used J 1no's. $550. Needs fenced yd, 83.1-2482
13 & 14, 1833 Highland Dr. &W-8066
_N_._s_. -------I Pianos/Organs
Call 644-3258 * * * LABRADOR , German WILLIAMVANCLEVE
Shf'pherd Puppies, 6 wks 18831 Otodar
Machinery 8161---------old. Call 646-763. Fountain Valley
----------1 * SALE SALE * COCK-A-POO puppies need You are the v.inner oI
lMl!la
HONDA ... 826 STOCK \\lork. Pf'rmanen1.
Full tin1e & part time. 4-
l\IOSI . 841 Baker St., C.M.
TI~ E \\'onderful \Vo rid Of
/.1ovics Could Be Your .. .'
BRIGHT PROMISE
AIR COl\1PRESSOR PIANOS ** ORGANS a good.home. 846-9015. 2 tic:kets to the & l\f d Orange County isc woo work i ng Steinway, Kawai, Hammond, lnternati?nal
''FRIOONDER~
111r11 IUCM .....,.,.,
New Faces Now Needed For
l\lajor ...
machinery 53&--7140. Allen, Baldwin, E'lc, From 11 ~1 Miscellaneous 818 $295. Ptt•and SUppld 81 t"· [
Auto Show
Mon&Fri~'W SI _ ""'
Cam for ro¥r Honda
537-6824 •J 893-1556
I ORDER NOW I TALENT HUNT
(Z13) 461-3051
Sunday 12-5 ANAHEIM
SAVE II .••• 3 Pc. Wedding FIELD'S PIANO CO. CONVENTION
r1.ng set, ve'?' beautiful & 18.1.1 Newport Blvd, Cats 852 CENTER BICYCLES $31.95 UP TRAINEES, male for cook &
other restaurant work. The
·Zoo. Cst Hwy at MacArthur.
\VANTED mature. live-in
housekeeper, Spanish speak·
1ng OK. 495-5438.
\VIVES, permanent part lime
position a.I O.C. Raceway
food concession. ' 83S-ll03
before noon.
\\'Or.tAN wa.n1ed f o r t1lock
ron1rol & shipping clerk.
JI.lust iype & be able to drive
car. Apply lo Box 1438, Li-
guna Beach. for app't.
different, white . gold ·with Costa Mesa n4/64~3250 November 17th thni 21st
yellow gold ring Insert --~~-~-~--BEAUTIFUL Himalayan kit· Please ca1J 642·56711, ext 314
Onter-locking engagement & ORGAN SALE tens , Male, Ll t t er bet\veen 9 and 5 pm to claim Large stock available!
wedding r ing ), and. ma.o's Conn Organ Annual Fall registered. Call after 4: your tickets. {North County Lay-away for Christmas!
\\'erlding band. The engage-Clearance. Save up to $1000 644--0591. toU-free number Is 540-12201
merit ring has a % Carat on selected console floor DARLING PART PERSIAN * * * 1' .. irestone Store, 475 E.
diamond in a Tiffany set-demos, Huge discoun'lll an KITTENS. $3 to gaod Si(I •. FISH~ ENTERTAIN J?th St., C.l'\1. 646·2-l·I.\
ting. Very clear & beautiful all mCndOoAl's·T M'USIC homes. 642-4818. 20' Glastron 160 HP I/0 TRIUMPH, 650cc, 19 6 6 '
stone. ALL THREE RINGS w/lrailer $4500. G4•1-2Ggl beautiful cond. Ex\('nded
for the Jaw price of $285. NE\VPORT & HARBOR Dogs 854 forks, l'ng pertcrt, no leaks.
can sbow sail's receipts to Costa Mesa * 642-2851 I•---------SELL or parlll('r '70 Formula OwllC'd & lovingly cared for
verify original cost. \Ved· WOULD YOU LABRADOR pups, 4 wks old . 23', xln't cond. 11r. Joyce by 1nrchanic. Asking $700.
READY TO GO! MUST 494-7184. 494--0Zi6 ding bands never worn and BELIEVE ..::.:..c,::c.:_______ ·
the jeweler says engage-FREE ORGAN LESSONS SELL $10 each! Call 38' CHRIS. Tri-ca b i n CYCLE TRAILER
ment ring shows no wear or as long e.s you like! No re&:· 673-77Z1. Constellation, 1963. Loaded Almost new, haUl 6 bikes, 20
scratches. Call owner, tstratian. No obllgatlon. Just LABRADOR RETRIEVERS Ir. top con"",· $22,500. Days: rt. kmg 8 ft wide phone
54&-5710 after 6 pm & Come, Mondays 7:30 pm AKC che.mpion bloodlines, 2 l 3 / 6 3 6-0 7 51 , Eves: 540.5630 ask for Bui Harold
I[§] \\'eekends. COAST MUSIC lO wks old. Blacks & c7l,:.4:.:./=55-"7--=2250=:.:.· =-=~-532-4443 after 5 pm,
J>ORTABLE TV, 16" CE, '68 642-2851 ~llows, shots, 494-5132 aft 6 28' Unifilte 1960, $6500 or '69 KAWASAlO zo Sidewin-
1.l~el. Xlnt _cond •. l-15. Ge-LO\VREY Pianos &. Organs; pm. trade for trailer boat .+ der eqpd for dirt 0·nly $275. n~1ne Hendricks bird cage Yamaha Piano&. Organs; Ir WEIMARANER Pups, AKC cash. Owner, 846-1430. aft 4 P~t. 24 La Jolla Dr.
S;,: Student desk & chair, Steinway P ianos. Best buys regis. Over 100 champ. ** 71' TROJAN lnbd ., Newport Beach Antiques 800
ANTIQUE organ. 98 yrs old,
$1 ),00. Excellent con d.
49-1-8983 after 4 pm.
Appliances 802
$la. Power rno11•er, 3 HP. in new & used. Schmidt p edigreed. X ln'1 Tandem trlr, lOIA." Glass '71 l!ONDA 3jQCB
$2:1. Se as ca Pl! 2'x4' Music Co., Est. 1914, 1907 N. watcftdogs. 540--5964. rowboat. $700. 968-3925. Wind Screen Helmet
w f ma P l e frame $5. !\lain, Santa Ana . PUPPIES AKC. Adatable BO.Its, S•il 909 $550 * 67S-2785
642-1775. S . 828 t-·p & toy poodle• -" ~· ew1n9 Machines -... u "-" ....,., BULTACO, best ofler, as
STEREO, 1972 Garrard, has colors.ltinyfemaleYorkie FAl\fOUS 26' Swedish is. Contact after 6 pm
LADY Kenmore auto ,,..asher full stereo changer, air REPAIRS 893-..,:,_97_1~9-· ~~-~---I "Folkboat" 1recen.t comoodpl &16-6:1611.
' " ' p e n ',· o n k " ovf:'rtlaul inc . en.me, • & W·-1·· ooho"•• a '' Io .. """" ers, AKC -d f•mal• Doberman, . '"" . .., .. ~ .. -A .. • ·1 l\1 t 'f • ~3100 !2) SCH\\llNN girl's bi kes 20 \Vasher. Bo1h late models, Al\1/1',l\1 sterro radio ny & all makes, Special this temperament b re d., .... ex· sa1 s. us sacr1 ice. ~ .. & 24", $2.V rach.
in xlnt cond. $65 ea. GuBr & \VfFIIT + tape deck, still week, Clean, oil & check, ceptional, $25, 83()....9633. I c64'--5--'~"~67• ==-~,,.--~ 54~251
delivered. 5-16-8672. 847-8UJ: brand ne\v, \Vas I e f I Sl.99, All work licensed & 13• SAILBOAT Me l e a If ----------
unclaimed on layaway. Sold guaranteed. Sewing Center, DOXIE puppies, 7 wks. red, w/yd. dolly. Xlnt cond. 1971 KA\VASAKl. 90, less
USED ApplianCf's & TV's. for $3W, pay oU balance of 545-82311. AKC, miniature. Stud 205 than 1000 miles, 2 mo old.
\\'• ~·or & d e li ver. "'-I 8'"733864 ·:.:o"'.:'=·~·--~~~=~I ,... $115 or take over small SINGERS .xrv ce. Jlr" • -fl.1ust M-ll i JOO. l mmac. Dunlap-,, 1815 Newport Bl., 8' SABOT .+ TRAILER $.~. 64"574L payments. Collection Dept. -.,/ SHELTIES, ..r C.l\1. 548-7780. 714189, =t i~· l97l' z & we ar sell 51"parately, Calli -:C:-"-:C:..----,---~ • """' s to '· ig-zags J'U',' , ~.26SL '70 SUZUKI 90, 8 spd,
NEAR new G.E. Rcfrig. for Beauty Shop Equipment autom~ti~. $9.95 up. Sewing Sable&. wht. 5.57-7869 .:,::.:.,=~-~~-,--,-""' xlnl cond. $295
ollicc, boat or camper. $50. 111 T\VO Station Florentine Centers Who!f'SB!e to the * ST. BERNARD pups, SCHOCK racing Sabot No. * 836-l901 •
6i3-1755 Publi " 545-8238 6132. F\111 racing gear, fbgli t -----------dN'ssing bar \\'/2 lgl' mir-c • · AKC, $50 &. UP. Terms. HONDA 450 CB xlnt cond.
O'J<EEFE & r.1errit bltn rors J8x48 \V /matching Sporting Good1 130 12131 352-3624 _::m~•~"~·~l3~75.=-cc"~""~11:.:.,,,"~·=~-Sf"c ro appreciate. $450.
dish\\'asher, all xtras, $75. desk. 2 Rnd based hydraulic L~ 410 Mnd 42 AKC Afghan Hound puppit:s, Rl~ODES 33 SLOOP • 675-3224.
Good cond. 833-3329 aft 4. h · 2 · d·u· d 1.n.c.. new · ga cl 1 Strong Racing Class c airs. air ?>" i one \\linchester. Fact. ~ent. rib & Show qua ity, Males & $6,500. 714.~4-3200 HONDA '66 450, Super clean,
e r.tAYTAG man·washers/ dryers & chairs, one fact &keet barrel $265 :Females. Call 557--0585. just overhauled, $450 or
dryers/mtch sets. Dcl-90 day Belevedere shampoo bowl 838-~. · · FOR SALE: German Boats, Slips/Docks 910 trade? 842.-4372.
'
uar. 531-8637; 839-1778. \\'ith h'rring & chair, 2 =~~~-~~-~~ S"-h__, AKC bl k & separaters. $480.' Beauty SKI Clothin,e:, Lad ies size 12, •n:P '-""''· • ac SLIP Avail., New po r I '68 lionda ~60 r.c
Ca meras &
8
supplies e)(tra. 979--0726. pants, parkas & ('IC. Lang tan. S50. Call 962-59-19 Harbor, up to 40', ~100. mo. Gd. cond~ $\~I(}.
Equipment 80 -7--o""====-;-Flo hoo1~ size 9, ail priced IRISH Setter, female, 10 or less tor smaller. 962-1267. 548-020I apt B-3 aft. 5:30 l--'H'-A-'SE,_L-LB~LA".'00--':'.500o:::-" * AUCTION * to sell. 6T.'l-2692 alter 6 PM mo ·s old, AKC regis,, $85. Newport Slips $2.50 ft, *·* '70 tlON DA 7SO cc
LIKE NEW $450. ·'-Fine F urniture TV R d ' H IF ' 642-8129 aJt 7:30pm. Days 548·2rfl2, Eves 4~1-2671 T<ili'?o o\'<'r paym!'nts
& Appliances ' a io, I, GOLDEN R-IEVERS F * * 548-6088 * * &14-2649 S "'' '~ · • NEARLY new ce1nen t deck -~~~--,~~~-~ Auctions Friday, 7:00 p.m. tereo 836 l'C Tu ho Fdl Furniture 810 A~ • P s w & • slip f!oat 2Jx33. 13 " * Used 3 speed blcycle~. 26 ..,...,..__ ..... __. Windy's Auction Barnt1-----------champ line, $1 2.5. 67~915, Clearwatrr. Call Croft & inch ladies & men. Ca I I * 20751h Ne,vport CM 646·8686 STEREO: Garrard system, SAi\.fOYED pups, 9 wks, Nevil!(', 67~222. &lG-7880. * * PETER BOWIE
126 Amethyst
Balboa Is land
\'ou are the winner or
2 tickets to 1he
Orange County
International
Auto Show
A.I 1hc
ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
CENTER
November 17th thru 2lsf
Please call &12-5678, ext 314
between 9 and 5 pm to da.lm
you r tickets. (North County
loll·free number is 5'10-1220) • • •
USE D Furniture-!\1ust 5elJ
Private party. Beds, staves.
rcfri.ll'. , couches , etc.
673-808$.
g· PRINT Sofa, con-
1rn1pcr0ry rlc5l!ln, rxCf'l]("11
canrll11on, $.'JO. 642-164S after
Beh'nd Tony'~ Bldg Mat'l left on lay.a-\vay, JOO '"'"115• chan1p line. _malc'S. SI' " II M · "•2 i'"onI. '66 En<in", •ood · A~1/Fr.I strrco, 8 track, 38' BOAT 1p, v' a arina, ,, ~ ,.,
CARPET, phono, solrl for $478.25. Pay Rea:-llnable. 557-TJO.t Balhoa. All S!'rviccs avaU. lires, deJK'n<lahle. $29 5.
1-'ACTOnY CUTI.ET on sm balance of Sl97 or sm SCHNAUZE RS avail. now or SS:i/mo. 547-9277. After 6, call 642-4657.
SAVE $ $ $ pymnts o! $6.28. U.S.A. hold Iii Christmai;. Groom-=s~O~A~T-,~17ip-,-,-,-.~ll-. ""'25~'-°"'<5' '52 DODGE Pick Up. 4 spd,
AttrnUon Apt Owners Stereo Equip \Vare house, ing, stud service. M(i..-0839. Xlnt accommodations in Jll'V.' tires, runs good, $225.
Nylon Shags $1.9() sq yd & up 179 E. 17th SI. C.l\1. Horses 856 nl"W Marina 673-6606. 646-49'17. F~ est. Ph 839-025l 64S-2442. 633 Trailers, Travel 94S 5027-C w. Edinger. S.A. 1-.~L~L-1m=~z~EN=rr~H~S,--... ~ 1---------17• SIDE lie, $34 !HO. • ---------
Comer or Edinger & Euclid on e ARABlA.i.'1 Dispersal sale: Lido Park Or, No. 18. 23, Safewlly, $S50
C D S 1 n:iw at Orange County's Serafix, Sotep, Regis &. Real 673-93.'>8.
ustm rapery a e Jarp;est Zenith Oeler. 19" McCoy mares, Fillies. &0 =~N~E~.~15~.~,.-x.10=·~u~.,~1~,P-1~95~~. loiv down. &12·t26:i
Drapery workroom closing Chromacolor l\fodet C4030, colts. Terms. (213) 352-3624. Ol'K! side tie, 11.ccommodate Tr•llers, Utility 947
out 5IXX> yds of material$ at $395. FJtt color antenna in· -"''-"'=-'-"'=C:-""=.,.:.c:c;,,:.:.:...
1,2 price. Fabrics from r-x stalled w/all c 0 n 10 1 e HO~ BOARDED 30' boat, $15. 673-WIO. '"' B · " & 20062 Acacia Santa Ana Dad FOR sale 6x4' utility tralle.r. 3u. r1n~ measuremen,_,., purthases. No dawn re-• . "l\1ake Room For • l\iake oiler.
sa\'e. 3853 Birch St., N.B. quired OAC Ask about Helghll. Ask for Liz. d y '', .clean out the 531-7468
51G-J431. Adj lo 0.C. Airport. 'Cash &: c~m· prfceS", ABC Part quarter-bone needs ex· prage . , • your trash is!"!~~~~~~~~
\VIDOW Break l n g up Color TV, 9021 Atlanta, perlence rider $1.SO. or bst. CASH with a DAILY PILOT
housekeeping sclling,1 =H~u~o~tl~n~gt~o~n~S.;,;:•::':;"·=968-=3329=~·.::;o~tt~or=~=======::.'.=Cl=•~""~·=ned:;;;~•~d,;=::=::::;=::. [ ______ _,!! ~ J household articlrs & ap-1 . ,\ub)llorW. .
p!iancet1. CM. 548-16J7.
DlAi\IOND engagement ring,
r.fust sell 55 po ints •.
Insurance appralsal $.>l:t
R.17-3370.
..
Antiques/Clas1ic1 953
PEUGEOT Ctihribl~!. c..·011-
courne con<l. White w/black
interior, Tonnt11u cover,
lo1ichelin·X tires, 31,000 orig
,ml't1. Take 1r11dc. ALSO '67
220-S f\.18 convertible in xlnt
c.-ond.
Authorized MBZ Dealer
fl) 523-i250
1937 roni 60 l-dr 8f'dan_ Orig
mint cond.. Best olr over
Sl 700. 5'l()...44Tl aft Spm.
Dune Buggies 956
FIBERGLS VW baaed. Dune
Bu_uy, 1600 cng. Many
xtras. $1600. 968-M20 eves.
Trucks
THE NEWEST CARS YOU'LL SEE
THIS YEAR
FORD FOR 1972
MAVERICK e MUSTANG e CUSTOM
e GALAXIE e LTD ---
Ford -LTD -Galaxie -T-Bird -To~
Mairy ta choow front. '65 tlir• '70 Models, Sport roofl, fo,_lt, 1 dOOf • 4 4oer
llordlopt It MdOM. Fllll power, air coftditlorih19. Wona1111H CYOll•ltl•.
EXAMPLE: 1971 T·BIRD H.T.
A~kl. P.S., P.a .• p .... 1nc1ows, P-blKket st&!, /4N./FM 1ter«1, •Ir «11111., body,.,\d• mlclg,,, W/•tw. 1111 Wiii., P .. nrenn1, r1mo11 mirror. C6t• BZJI .i
' BLUE BOOK t"RICE $471S
OU.._ PRICE $4296
'71 PINTO $1796 Gr&b~r 11reen1r1clno ttrt11e. I ,pd., good mlln . ClJT CA:itl
Blue Bo0k Price $221S Our Price
'69 FORD Cobra
Fitlf1&nl, 2 or, H.T., R&H,
• speed, sllt'Clil wl\Hls &
tl•n, gOOd m!les. (1.JSl ll)
Our Prk•
'69 FORD F-250 $2296 Blue Book Prlc• $1740
P.U .• Glllld m lle\I, c:•mPl!f' IP«ltl, Vt, 4 1peed, Rl.H,
t!IUllEJ
'71 VEGA l·Door $1996 H1fchbltk Cpe,, • '""°'' radio. lleeter. Low mllfl.
ftlS 8ZTI.
Me~ to choose front.~~~! ~~~01,es~~'~ conY9rtlb~ aM J+J ~
f05tbocU. SonM with 4 •Pfftk. abo alf coltdlrio11lltl) a11d 011to!Htk fHllNlt..
. EXAMPLE: '71 MUSTANG H.T.
R1dio, ho1f1r, 1utorn1fic, pow1r tfe1rin9 l btak11, fief. 1ir, good rnil11 . I019CQR) ~
BLVE BOOK PRICE $3315
, OUR PRICE $2796
'67 FORD WCNJcn
Country Sr'd. R!.cl{,
auto., l'.S., i.:nod
1nil1·~. 1ucz:10G )
'J,7 SIMCA 1000
•I door. Ln\v mil!'s'.
Original thru·out.
( VT 1\1868)
$596
'65 PLYM. Fury 111 $796 '66 VOLVO 122S $9.96 2 dr. 11.T. R&ll, t111lo.. Station \Vag:on.
IJO\vrr sll'rrini.:. air eond., 4 sf')('('{], low miles.
l!/)od mill's. r rrT484 1 l~(Z~x~·v~'~';9~J----------
~6u~lyV~~·i :i:~back $996 ~a5di~~~~te~~85 Wtn. $796
1-:ood miles. auto .. ·r.S.,
(V\VTJIMJ INYP4121
ALL OFFERS CONSIDERED
TRADES ACCEPTED PAID FOR OR NOT
'67 MERC. Ccmot $696 s..i. RHllo, .... tl!'f', l~Ory l<l\llPPo
ed. GoDcl mlln. ()(SP Dl7)
'65 FORD Wagon
Cntr1. Seel, Jt&ll, ~utc. 1lr
tond .• P.S , good ml!n.
(WWK 16?!
'67 FIREBIRD
Harlllcp, V.I, Au10 Tr1nt, Pcwfr 5!Hflng, R1dlo. llfel'>
tr, lftKll'>ll Gre~, DOCICI mlt11,
!UTX l"'I·
$1396
'70 MAVERICK
F11lfY 11.;t. equipped, ltl'dltro
lle1111', (6M BEPI.
'70 ELECTRA
2 Ct'. Hetdlop. R:l(llO, hfflll',
Auto. Tr1ns., Power Stffr·
11>11, PoW41r l!r~k~$, Air
Cond .. Vinyl tl:oo!, Tiit Wl!Ht,
1",go,;t mitts, AM /FM, (0,1·
BSW). 811/0 8llOll. l"rlcl SIOIJ.
'68 Galaiie H.T; ··-
va, A~!o., R&H, f'.S., Good
M llH , (VCV ~U
$1596
Sile Pri co1 Good for 72 Ho11t1. C1" S11bjoct to Pfl•r .s.r •.
-.
_ . .,,
·'
-'
olO\.Y PlLOT _Tutsday, Nowmb« 9, 1971
WE PAY TOP
.CASH
tor Ulld care • bUCX., tust cau ua tw trte ..tim•t,...
GROTH CHEVROLET
Autos, Imported 970
,. ......
"FRIEDLANDER"
AU klr Sales ManRj:er 13750 llACH ILYD.
l82l1 Beadli Blvd. tHwy. JtJ
Hunfinaton Bl!ach 893-7566 e 537-6824
811.fm Kl~ --------
WE DE~~~~ATELY-. r.:tl .. /l;W~
Oean used can .... ,.,&6
FANTASTIC PRICES ,
Pald for )'OUr car, paid for
"' Mt DEAN LEWIS
-1-TOYOTA-•-voi,vo
1946 HARBOR BLVD.
Costa M@Sa 646-9303
Au~Os, Import.cf 970 --·-------
LARGE SELECTION, SEE B. J.
SPORTSCAR CENTER
'70 Fiat 124 SpydE"l', 5 spd, lo
mUes, Pirelli's. good cond.
J\.tust sell! $2300 548-4532.
'JAGUAR LAMBORGHINI Super Leg-
ger 400 GT 2+2 in beautiful
....,hell white w/blaok in-__ B_A_U_C:-·R_B_U-IC_K_
terior. V12, 5-spd, stC'rl:'e,
pwr. windows. l\fust see this
re,.t gem. _
AutllorizE'd MB Denl«ir
Ill 523-7250
-AUSTIN AMERICA
1959 AUSTIN America, good
oond., auto, AM radio, 25
MPG. Pvt. pty. $900. Eves:
642-7469.
BMW
Automodv"' f.:tN'Jler"Lce
ROY CARVER, Inc.
2925 Harbor Blvd.
Cnsta r.!esa 546-44'!4 ------
The Harbor Areas
Only AuthorizC'd
JAGUAR DEALER
Buick-Opel·Jaguar
23~ E. 17th St.,
Costa l\1esa f>48..TIS5
3.8 MARK II Jaguar Sedan.
Very sharp. '62 With
chrome wires, air .con d .
Silver \~:/red inler. Live it
up, drive & chjof. this
classic beaut)'. $1,650. \Vant
'67 Jag. 420.
ROBINSON GlZ-7000
'67 XKE ROADSTER-
1§1 I
;t 'NEWPb.RT""a
14 IM~ORT$' . ~
3100 \V, Coast llwy.
Newport Beach ---MERCEDES BENZ
,:10 rDn·g'e. County's_··, t(f~l ar:gest, Se lection 1 of-. f>i~w & Used ,
?.;....Mercedes J;\enz. , ..
I ' ' , . • ~ • ~im. :5.fe\"~"s l!rips: ·~Warrler :'&. -M.,in St. ·
f,--.Nf WP.If RT ~:
i IMPORTS , · , . -~ ~ DATSUN 4 spd. dlr. \'1ire wheels, mint 3100 \V. t:oas1 Hwy.
•
•
,,, .. ,,,... l§J I .,~........ I §l I ........... 1§1 ,__,_I _.,, .. _, .... ,._!§] I
NOW!
.,, ..... !§JI • ..... .... 1§1
990
P/8.
G<>9d
* '71 FORDS*
GALAXIES e h!USTANGS
TOf.L~OS
HERTZ CORP.
---'70 2~0 't' ' oondltion, Al\f/FM, radial NeWJ)Ort Beact.
tires. Sacrifice! Take small ---'====--
'68 V\V Camper, body excl,
needs eng \11ork, $1800. Pr
pty 847-16811 eves/wknds.
IJ1Jf IBIAC" CNWY. •i 893-7566 • 537-G824 990 '07 LTD 4 door. PIS, P/B, .:,:.:.;,;.;.,_.;;;,;,...==--:..;.: air, radio. :\take offer.
Local car fully equipped.
Like ne·w! Under 17,000
m iles. dlr. Will take trade or
finance pvt pty. (42-IBLO)
C:-11 49U811 alt 1 pm
5-!5-8736.
'&7DA=TsU~N PICKUf
Strong hear!! 4 spd, dlr. Lo-
cal pickup (TYT140). Take
small down. Call a.ft 10 am
546-8736 or 4!H-68lL
NEW '72 PICKUP
4 spd. dlr. dlx. Bumper. Ra-
dio. Mirrors. PL721120. Take
smalJ down or trade. 494-6811
aftr lO 5"16-8736.
do\11n. (UJ C505) 546-8736 or
494-6811.
'62 J nE:llar XKE, nC\\' paint,
tires. Needs \•alve job, top.
$750. Aft 5: 30, 67J....5749.
'67 Jag 3.8 ~1ark JI. \\'ire
'>'"'his, air, white w/ blk int.
new paint & eng. 838-7222.
JENSEN
JENSEN
AU'I'J{ORlZED
SALES • SERVICE
-NEWPORT J
•· IMPORTS .
~ THINK m ,.~~··
"FRIEDLANDER"
U75t IBEACH (HWY . :itl
893-1566 • 537-6824
PORSCHE
'69 VY.'. Convert, xlnl cond.
1\-lust sell this \\·eek. Best of-
fer 644-6760 aft 6 pn1.
V\V Bug 1963. Xlnt niecli"l
cond. $1:i0. or best olio-.
!\lust sell. ·191-3193.
"69 V\\I, 2•1,000 n1i. r.1ake ol-
frr. 714:89-1-1311 'ti! 5, ask
for Jerry J ones, Aft 5
714:962-I:i76.
PORSCHE Classic '5 7 1963 VW Camper
Speedster. Strong 1800 CC 912 $!l3J. 013-1868
eng. Over $3000 invested. J.tust sac. Ask'g .$1995. • 1968 VW Camper
4 Door. Radio, Heater, Stand·
ard. (JY~13-lll
$495
HIGHLAND MOTORS
21-13 Harbor Blvd.
Costa i\1esa 61j·:i40-t
Autos, Used 990
'69-SUpet Bee, 383, VS, A-T,
PIS, A:\t/F~t. Vinyl top,
Ne\\' radials . .$1695. 846-~90.
BUICK
494--1865 or 49-\-8561. New eng • .$2,050. 494-7632
"' VIV B bit '69 Buick R iviera, tuU power, '58 PORSCHE 1600. Burnt "' us, re eng, new
eves.
"6j ·cad Fleetwood
Brougham, 50,000 mi's, vin.
top, full p\\T, leather inter.
Xln"t rond. $21;.o. -Pvt pty.
642-mB.
CAMARO lirt'li, radio, !mmac • .$1200. fac air, am-fm radio, stralo ~~nge, blk int, chrome 833-0l3l bench, lan4au vin.yl top. ~~-------
DATSUN Roadster 1967 Good 3lll0 W. Coast Hwy, r ims, skj racl<, A?-.1/F}.f. =--------$2675 or best offer. 5-18-1578
Besl o!ler. After 6, 675-8304 '69 V\V Squareback, sunroof, aft 5 pm.
'69 CAi\1AROt like new.
Loaded! S2300 or trade !or
Van or Camper. Pri. Pty
673--Zl.91.
clean car in A·l shape. Newport Beach
Owner leaving and must seJJ. ==-"'""""'""""""'"'"'-o="'"""'7 '68 PorM:hc !HI. i1nn111cul11.tc auto, an)/fm, .S 1800 , ..:::.:.='-------
t.nd•tl'", • &10.ms. CADILLAC 1895 Firm """-""'· -K.ARMANN GHIA 675-52-1·1 196-l \7\'' Bus, ! O\\'ner, 71.000
FERRARI
AUTIIORIZED
S~ & SERVJ~ •.
3100 W. Coaal Hwy.
Newport Beach -
Sell idle iterris
642--5678 Now!
1 '69 KARl\1ANN Ghia, -,6-7-PO-H_SC_l_IE--91-2-, -~-,-pd-, n1i!es. i\lake' offer.
auto/convt. Rims, \i·ood Xlnt t'Ond, blark, chrome' '°'""'=~'-'·-•·0c.278.c.,. __ _
inter, mats. Sac. fHiOO. \"'.hi~. p..,1 pty. 968-9:)JG. '57 V\V Van, gd mechan.
497-ll16. cond. $450. Bcfor(' 5:30P:'II,
1970 GREEN Karmann Ghia, '5.S HiOO Super, rf"blt eng., !HS-7988.
auto stick 5hif' xlnt cond. runs f>C'rfect. look~ great, 1 "~=~-~~--.. going chC'11p~ ! 67l-7085. '66 V\V Fastback, 12,000 ini's
$1850. 6$-9152. on ovl.'rhaul, Ne\11 clutch &
TIME FOR TOYOTA ""'"1m. 968-5632.
9UICK CASH ---------1 CLEAN '65 V\v, sunroof,
'68 Toyota Corona in xln't Runs xl111, .Sl;iO. Ask for THROUGH A rond. 1950 "''" C • 11 Aody: ;i;-331;. DAILY PILOT 673-1~ Jor arr1·• ":i~,~V\~v-c~.-m-"'-,~bu-•. -x-1n-,-,,,.
WANT AD Sell the old stuff Buy lhe ler1o r. cherry €'11gine, $Jl0
new stulf or offer; 6-15-3496.
Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980
CHEVROLET 1968 Sed. de Ville
Fact. air cond., padded 1op.~¥-.. ID-CH_E_VY--L-ON_G_V_AJ_N_.
full Jcath{'r inlerior. all pov•· BEST OFFER! 968-8023
er. door locks, AM-Fi\I, 1ill ASK FOR JOE
& !C]PsCOpic !ih'., CIC., etc. __ _:::::.:_c..:.:.:..;_c-:...._
CXVFl601 '69 E L Camino, P/S, Air. e $2555 e \Vlttl or Mthout · camper
NABERS Cadillac 1 ='"'~'=1 • =""="~1"~-'·=·-~ AuntORtZED DEALER '57 CHEVY, reblt ti-ans, $200. or best offer. 2fiOO HARBOR BL., * &1Z-4l81 ...
COSTA ?o.fESA
5-ID-9100 Open Sunday '70 EL CM11N0·396, SS, lo'v
lniles excellent condition. A good v.'Bnt ad IS a a:ood Investment Evenings: 496-62a4.
Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980
OVERSTOCK -SALE
'70 MARI Ill ~:::.~. ~:;,~.;"' $6295 L••lll•r.
'70 RIVIERA """· "N•• WhHll, Air. $3695
'70 LTD 4 DOOR ~~:: u" $2695
-'71 LTD 4 DOOR ·~-:'.·~;.;.; $3695
'70 IERC. WAG. :,o;:-r •. M•. $2695
'70 FORD WAG. ~;~" ·~ "" $3495
'70 E200 VAN ~:::'; ~~·:'"
''fftEL CAMINO ~;;;,;~~ '"
'70 IMPALA '~~'.' '"· '"·
'67 vw ~ , ........ . (11$1. l'l!ldtff
OR
Corner 1st & Harbor
Santa Ana .
980 Autos, New
$2795
$2695
$2995
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
D NO REASON TOW AIT
• 1972's at. 1971 prices .•. still frozen ...
•Plus additional 7% rebate when congress
approves you receive your check from
the factory
• Be sure to ask about our new exciting
lease program also available on 1972 models
. .
•
Con!inentals e l\l_a1:!-IV e l\lercdry e_Cougar e Con1et-e Capri and the all new 1972 rontego
~moo
Setter: lcleas
iMake Belter Cars
Orange County's 'Fa11iily of Fine Cars'
ohnson .& son
' . .
1.l'JCOL'i ~H HCLIHY
COUGAH
. l (~fl.Pf~ I '
2626 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • 640·5630 ' '
Phone 6~2-9172 after 6 pnt.
'61 FORD GALAXIE
$125 * * 6ti-:,M.".i6
1969 LTD \\"agon. 10 pas!\,
po11·l·r, air, un111ac. $26..Xl.
64-l--OJ91 :iltrr 5 pn1.
'6~ GALAXJE j()(), 6 C) I
stick,. R&JI, i;:ood {'(Ind, $~.
962-18~1
"6.) Galaxie. PIS. P/B.
Needs trans & body \l"Ork.
$400/Besl offer. ~8~:>363
INTERNATIONAL
'62 TRAVELALL 4 Spd, fa.cl
air, r/h, 6 ply I.ires, ~j.
Eves. 673-4712.
MERCURY
1971 MERCURY
'STAI"ION WAGONS
HERTZ CORP.
221" '"· Kalrlla. Af!aheim 1714) 778-4050
MUSTANG
1971 MUSTANGS
HERTZ CORP. :m n•. Katella. Anaheim
1714) 778-4050
'69 BOSS 302. Ne1v engine.
Xlnt cond. -n1ust sell!
.S2.-li0. 5-18-78'10 4 to 9 pm
OLDSMOBILE
'69 Olds Delta 88
ROYAL. Full J)(l\\·er. l'CR.98:;
$249'
Harbor American
646·0261
1969 "ARBOR, COSTA MESA
1967 OLDS 442".4 speed.
RC'built, Real CI ea n ,
646-1031 ni~hts •
'57 OLDS 98. Top C.'Olld, :'<lust
sell, S28;}. .
* * 54i>-7361 * *
1968 CUTLASS, aJ'~l -p,-,.,-.-,-ut-o,
R/H. air. Sl.600 .
• 499-2009
PLYMOUTH
"SJ PLY :\1. Barracuda, 273
\\ 14 barr, carb. 4 fipd.
O can & :rast. Lo mi's. S700.
6~j62J.
'63 BARRACUDA • Rcbll
273-<IV nu paint, 1\•ide tires,
niags. auto. $750. 96&-6564.
PONTIAC --·-------'67 flREBIRD
\'-~. Au!o Trans, .Air Cond.
Po11·('r \\"indo1\·s, Very Cll'RU,
S99.·i or IX'~t orrrr. \1·il1 1"011·
~idC'r trade .
6'16-26~~ or ;,.·,7 -'l,110
BY 01\ner 19ill Pon11ac
Catallna, 4 dr Yrhin, p1\T,.
h('a1t-'r, air rond. One O\\l"lf'r,
priC't'd for quick sale. S1990.
842-3781.
'70 Fir<>bird SpriL LoalM-d,
xlnt. cust vinyl, p w r
evt"rything, \\ire "' h I s ,
673-431-1 l'WS.
PQll;'TJAC GTO ·~. 4 spd,
air, disc brks, pos1tractlon
ttar end. 644-8909.
·70 Pontiat . s1a '' 11.gon, xln!
rond. Call bet\\'ll 8 A~I & j
Pl\1 r-iID--$-15 ;\Ir. Gendron.
'62 PON'ri~\C
Good v.'Ork <'Ill' $1~. e R38-ll ji e
RAMBLER
'66 A mba~i1dor \Vag. VC'I')'
CIC'Bn. New tires. sm Call L,,....,....,....., ..................... ,,... .......... .,.....,.... ....................................................................... !!!l!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!....., ............................................................. ~11 w.-. -
.. I
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7