Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-11-16 - Orange Coast Pilot,, r .. • I . . ·Nabbed • ID ' . ' • •' ' . • , . " I ' . . - ' I • • • ,, Yorty · Will S.eek Dem~ratie Nod . . ' 1,. Buntin-ton Okays_ .. . ,, l;oastwide ·Tax • In ND Pri111ary For College Use ' . . DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * TUESDAY AFTERNOO!'I, .NPVEMBER • .J 6;. :19JJ ,.. \l'OL. ... NO. t14. 4<1•CTJC*St'it •. P~ .I :• ;;~. Pair Seized In$150,000· 'By ARTHVR R. VINSEL Of t"-o.RY P'll•I Slaff A· playboy whose import empi~, financed by a major trading·stamp 'com.. pany purchasing premiums, apparently crumbled due lo the recent shipping sbike was arrested aboard his big Italian motor vessel in Newport Harbor Monday. An ex-bead accountant for Blue· Chip stamp Company -charged b y authorities with aiding an embezzlement scheme that subsequently raked off $150,000 or more -was taken into custody too. " . Deilnls P~ Warren, 45, ·&hd DOnald L. Cook, 44, were arraigned this ri'l.otning 1in LOjl Angeles ¥uNciPl\1 .Cou.rt, Division 40; on;one.courit each.pf grand theft. ·.peputy District Attorney C~arles Kelson said· both men listed their home address as Warren's SS-foot yacht, the Shenandoah. ' · ~ !Police said a manhunt dating back to eiifly October under the . eye of Kelson tidally focused late 'Wednesday morning · on, slip 91 al 829 Bayside Driye in Newport Beach. .. . . ' ...... • ., • Other Cities Pay Huntington OKs New Tax Agency By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI .subcommittee studying the Golden We.st 01 -. °"" ro•t st•tt ptoposal, iiaid he had contact.eel the other " The Huntiniton Beach· ClfY c&'mcif1 cltiei 9nd qoeceived Jette.rs · w b,-t-c h • Monday night reaffirmed an agreement'' ~~ipa~tly objected to _the plan. . with the Coast CommWlity Collegel · l-cannot see impos:ing another laing Di.strict to fotm a new ta~ agency Cori agejfey," said Coen, calling &tie 1913 Act the purpose of 'putUng in $935,000 worth of ~an _..Unacceptable method of financing improvements at Goltlen West College. · c~p1tal improvements, The projected two--cent per $100 .0 c' Though he was supported in his feelings assessed valuation tax will also hit pr<r• by Matney. and Ba_rtlett, Coen en· perty owners in ·the other cities of Costa, ,c6utfler.ed heavy opposition when he call· Mesa, Seal Beach, Fountain Valley.· ed tor rejection of tbe pfan. Westminster. Mklway City and Newport ~~d Councilman Green, "We should Beach which are part of the college not · overly concerned with c6operating district. wit other cities. I am fully in s.upport of Council members approved the con--, , t.hi ·,-regardless what the other cities do.'' troversial proposal by a 4 to 3 vote after · ... 'Mayor George McCracken also implied a lengthy debate on the ethics of im·" uiafl he had."no feelings ·of guilt for what posing the assessment on the other com· 'wa51 being done especially since Hun- munlties. ::. tlngton Beach is committed fina04;ially to The agreement was upheld by Coun-•1 1"* j mprovement of the Oronge County cilman Norma Gibbs and Councilmen H'ar)>of District and fiood. and sewer pro-- . ' • -0 • •• • 1ne I . . WILL ENTER PRIMARY Moyor S.m Yorty Will lncludJ Property Protection By t. PETER KRIEG Of ,.._ DallY Plilf Stiff , .. . -.. State Senator Dennis E. Carpenter (R~ Ne"?P.Ort Beach) said today he will write a ~ cOastUbe managemeDt bill-next yea? · that sbouJd·~ the\.'Legislatlll'ertitcaui• it will be designed to pro'tect private pro- perty rights as well as the California coastline. I - Carpenter, whose vote Monday helped kill the last major shoreline legislation left in Sacramento this year , blarried defeat of the measure on a combinatloil of reasons -aJI of which he said would be eliminated from the law he'JI draft. ~ :· AB 1471, the blll authored by · Assemblyman Alan Sieroty ( D ·Lo s Angeles), died in the Senate Natural Resources Committee on a 4 to 4 vote after a stormy jQurney through lhll! legislative process. · .. Arrest warrants carrying $50,000 bail for Warren and $%5,000 for Cook had been i91Ued. Hot N umber With 'rising• .tem~ures' 1in-. Sydney, Australia, Jan Mathews may raise a few temperatures herseU as she relaxes in bot pants. Donald Shipley, George McCracken and jf~ from which, he said, local residents ~~~Gree~-CfUnsilmen_ Jerry Mat!),., 1· real~ no t>;ene__fit~.. , · t • ., • , 1-. ··.•· _ · ·-°""'·~.l''ld~~~: j .. -~~J'.111!111t;:t.ftlf~"""'~!to.L..:.....~,) _, ' ·' The agreement, formulated urider7a) i'man Watson· · d the counci • a t e · r Ir"-tflf.IM· "' It pitted conservationists against majoit Teal estate lobbies and coastal com.; munities and other governmental a~en· cies 'from which It sought to wrest k>cal control of shoreline development. It •'OS tbiSt'SO'Called ·UStsP.iQg Q(_.PJO- • ·'-'JIYIY\!lil!Us':,811!1 ~,~c,a I~ if<>J'ftl~ authority thBi Catj>eriter h1ghllg ted in JS.. COAS'J'AL, Page I) The Los Ange1es County deputy district attorney said Warren had moved the Sbenandoah from its usual berth at Sausalito on San Francisco Bay to Newport Beach about one week ago. Warren heads the Shenandoah Q:im. pany, which Kelson said alplosl ex· elusively dealt with lbe Blue Chip Stamp O)mpany headquartered iJl Los Angel~. Sergeant Harry Wright, of the Orange County Harbor Patrol, said he took a launch to check the Shenandoah whe.n contacted by Kelson at mid-morning. They confirmed the big llallan-bu~lt Bagllato cabin cruiser was at h:r slip aod men filling Warren's and Cook's descriptions were aboard. ,Deputy District Attorney Ke 1 son dracribed Warren as rather a pl•yboy - both are divorced -and ..said Cook 1s a sligh~ mild-mann<r<d accountant type. ·'111< pair bid been sbarin(. ~arters aboard the vessel, which was berthed in Newport Harbor until transferred, to Sausalito Yacht Harbor 11 months ago. Kelson said Warren was supplying transistor rll:lios, tape reci>rders and sjm· Uar import items to Cook's employers aa \rading stamp premiums. "I guess they'SOfl or fell on hard limes with the dock strike," be explained. Kelson said Cook waa responsible for ICCOUJltJ payable for the Blue. C~lp Stamp Company, which he le!I aboUt the (See EMBEZZLE, P•I• I) Fire Strikes Spo1tfishing Boat ·Off Pier A fire which broke1out in the galley of a commercial sportfishing boat moored just off the Huntington Beach pier early today spread to, the superstructure and cauied '5,000 damage. F'ire!nen said llie . 6S-fgot 'vesie.J ......... enveloped in names abouf 3:07 a.m. and ~t the fire was put out with the aid of a lifeguard boat. No one was aboard. The Ba-passenger ves.se.I, owned by Bob l\1cetlllah, was tied to a buOy about 200 yards of( the end of the pier. A fireman fighting the bl aze, J\.iichael Cooley, was treated for smoke tnhalatlon. Fire C.pl WilUam Newton said the cause of the blaze is under investigation. ·1 seldom used law called the 1913 All., 'provements were primarily for rpea· would-finance a new ,!603,000 wing to tf.O \ .' 1 program.s·)nteoded• to benefit local To Enter '72' Golden West gymnasium and im·' teSidents, . , ' provements in televlsioQ....and computp" ::!fe was backed by Golden' West presi· cabling. · l ~ent Dr. Dudley Boyce who said the city' N·ff p • A similar proposal. calling for $7009!, . ' . IWiXtld be justified in imposing the nmary worth of IM\,W facilities at Orange Co 41telaUvely.sJ.mple1assessment district." · Clollege was rejected after the Ne . t , W'lth another vote, the Huoting4>n• LOS ANGELES.,(UPI).-Mayor Sam Beach Council pointed out·tbat properlY. :Bfach City Council later Indicated it Yorty, a m'averick Democrat, aMounced <lWllers in that comniunlty woW;d also tie W~ld back any similar proposal for today he will seek the presldenUal nom· subject to the tax. ~ Otange Coast College. Malney and Coen ination In New Hamrhire's flrst-in·lbe-o Councilman Alvin Coen, chairman of' l t'galn voted "no." na~~r.:;.:rrm:~~ls 7 t h 1 r d political · pilgrimage to the state earlier this S S J __ i . ~ 1 A month, is the second Democrat to an. ix min in ~ame rea :i~;io~in-~. '~o!~ ~ .. ~~~. . ) • , • S. McGovem (O.S.D.) ! • , . . · :•Enoourag~1 by , the advice ol ·mant CHARLESTON, W. Va. (UPI) 'Wife, Pat. and their aons Jerry, 9, and fr1~nds and sup~rs, I have decld~ P'!'9-..l':ere shot ar stabbtd to 1 lll.ndy, ~. to become ·~ candidate for Presidellt. t<Jday'ir.t\liifiid!iifrm<~ , lf~,..._ •·'l!'.~~~~· dass neighborhood. but pohc;e sal~ there appolntement with a .PIYchlatrist latw .. 'Our Cim lgn is iiready weit un. was . no apparent conne<::t1on 1n the today, apparently shot both his SOM der W.ty in=-Hampshire.''· Yorty said. slay111gs. . . to death with a shotgun as they lay 'The Los Angeles mayor said, however, Police sa1d four of those: killed were sleeping In bed, then fatally stabbed · he has no lntenUon of entering all the vict~ms of a murder-suicide ln the same. his wile to death with a butcher knife. primaries, and at this point the Clllfomia. family . The other victims were a doctor Eder was found 1 dead or an apparent primary wlll "clJmai our campaign. and hls wife who were shot to death , seJl-inOlcttd gunshot wound in an ''The first step is New Hampsh1re while w~tchlng television in their home UJl8l.airs· hallway of the home. ·After that we sha119iM," Yorty sak!. '1 a half·mile away. . Several blocks •wlf, ln ,\he same Fort "Qt.Her states may .• be added as the The ruling of murder·su1clde was made Hill section, Dr. Charle& D. Cottrell Jr., campaign progresses:' Yorty said. t 1We , fn the deaths of Robert Eder, 30, a and bis wife were: found dead in the will be seiecUve. We hive no lntenUoo statl!tlcan employed by the stale, hi! (Set BODU:S, Pase I) (See YOR'IY, P ... I) ' ' .. Weatlaer . ' Cold, gusty winds will continue ' Wednesday w i th temperatures along the coast in the low &O's ris-ing to ru inland. Lows tonight be· tween 34 and 48. INSWE TODAY ,, . It's the biggest totek of the ~ -year m communitu theater ou ~ '·•!J:<;;J}t•11pe.fc_~t,yl'f. si.t ;ne'!' ·· ·s "'opetttnrt•10 701n ·tight. others in pt'bgress. See Enter· tainment, Page 19. Cati..,,,11 I Ml.llNI f'l!l"I It CllUlflH '1·2• NI,.._. Ntww .. , C'Ol'l'lkt lS or..,.. CtlM'ltr ' • c,..,_... 1s s,1.,11 '""" 11 0..111 *"'" • IHl':'I• .,,, Dt'IWC.. t ; IMU Ml!jllttt l•Jt ldlMrlal ..... I felWhlM )t •lrirt81-t IMt T'-tto"t tt '""""'' ltlll ......... 4 """'°" 14 W-..'1 ..... lJ.14 Mil L11111tn 11 W.... .... .. -" t \ • I . ' , . ., • • • rum.,, l<O¥tmber 16. 1'71 • \, Ul"IT .......... _fjoun1b Warning ~ Former President Lyndon ·B. Johnson warns a~ainst a rising isolationist sen timent which ... might prevent the United States from ful!illing its re· s'ponsibilities a$ a world lead· er. He spoke l\1onday night at -: New York University's Grad· uate School of Business Ad· ministration. Fron• Page 1 YORTY • • • of trying lo raise the huge sums ol money necessary lo enter all the primaries." Yorty said be has no Illusions abdut. the difflcultles In winning the support of the voters In New Hampshire, which ls considered to be strongly behind Sen. Edmund S. Muskie (D-Maine ). "My position on the Issues will be that of a moderate Democrat." \'orty said, •·a position I hope will appeal not only to a majority of Democrats but also many Republicans who are disillusioned with the current resort to sheer political expediency . by the Nixon 11dminlstration Ir. Its efforts to win the election 11t all cos~ or by any means in 1972," he said. DAILY PILOT NftP9ff IHdi Hltlltl ...... .._. "''" .... , ....... y_..., , .. ,. .... s. c~ OltANGI COAIT ,Ul lllMlMG COMl"AH't ••••rt N. W11,J "'"'""' ,,.. "lltl..._ Jet!{ It. C u1!1'( V'°9 Pr•"lfloll ,,.. ~•I Mllltflll' n.."'.' ktt •il lif!l9r 1h•m•• A. Murpllf~• Ml l'lltirll l:dl!OI" Chari•• H. L••• ~klitrd P. Nill Mltlflll M•nlll"I Edlltrl ' °""" ~°''' Mftl: )JO w .. t 111¥' Strff'f N-1 ltt(.11! :un NllllllOM teulWI,.. Lit-l-'!1 m '°'"' Awnl09 Mtlflllllflett lttCM 11111 811d'I llvlfYll'll ..,, cr-1n as Nt<lft El ""'JM Rttl l)AllY 'II.OT, wlllil ..,Id! ia _...,.... h fll_,,._ It ,..i.lill\ell 1111'/ t •C.,I 5- .. ., .. -'"'" 9'111'-... l.ttvn• '-"" ,...,.ri l lK!I. c.i. """'· HllMIAtlM Midi, P-11111 Vttll'f, Mft C*"'"'t/ ~'1'9M '"' &Ht,.._., •llflt wlll -r .. IMtl -'i!IM. "'Jflol;""I _..ll'lllllf ,..,. .. II ,. Wm:t II'( llft1l, C.!I Mn.lo ,.~ 17141 642-4J21 Cl•"'-• A"-ttJllt 642·1671 ,_ C ........ All hpittt•l9f'll , • ..,.... •tl-4420 c:"""""" 1t11, on,,,. t1111 hM1~"'9 ,_r· Ht ,.... 110!'IM, nt1111lf'lti..it. .. ...,,., --,, .. ...,11-1111 l!tr•lfl _., " ~ wll!IWt .,.ci.1 ,.... '" ..... "' C'ff"ITWll ,_,, ...... tlMI "°''"' !Mlf 11 M1.,,.,..w1 ltldl .... Clllt M .. 1, Ct ll"rflll. 111 .. tul"'llll tlf ~'"" st.fl _ ... ,,., ... -!I U.11 """!MY' ""llNrr a1t11MtitM, U.11 '""""tr. I \ Flooding feared •• Tr.opical· Storm , -. ~ . . . . . Inundating Cu,ha . . . . l * * * State Controls Over Coastline Opposed by Jury Orange county Grand Jury members oppose eny legislation giving the state control over an coastal development ln California. In a report signed by Foreman Doreen Marshall of Newport Beach, the jury said they had no objection lo the state establishing criteria for shore f<I n e development, but declared that actual control should remain with local govern- ment They said this was the stand of other Orange County governmental agencies which the jury supported. The Board of Supervisors v.·as urged to fight a state law which would 'take over control of coastal development and to seriously consider the preparation af a county coastal development plan and take action to expedite the plan's adoption. The jUJ7 statement read in part: "The county planning stiff has the necessary expertise lo establish guidelines and pla~s suJtable tor tbe proper and orderly development or Oilf"C03stal areas.'' - The report added that conslderlble Ume has been spent 6y the county and other local~agencies in preparing coastal 1tudies. But It warned : .. Despite these studies. the &>unty'a plans have ~ not moved rorward as rapidly as they should and It Is re1u·ed that legislation will be enacted which will give control or the coastal ~evelopment lo the 1tate before plans can be adopted locally.'' • • Dust Clouds •• Still Block • Mariner Eye Let Us Put You On The Map Near the entrance, inside our ,store, is 1 9iant _new m1p. We are in th1 process of. identifying all of th1 homes w1 have carpeted since 1965 on th i1 map with colored pins. jA different color for 11ch yur.) Close 1c'rutiny will Cfeteet some interesting facts: firstly, we have carpeted homes on virtu .. ally every street in the area. Secondly, the pins are in bunche1, indicating WORD-OF-MOUTH 1dvorfain9. Thirdly, tho number of homes we h1v1 corpeted is sta9gerin9. If you desire hon1sty, experience, and recom- mendations from neighbQrs we heve worked for, then Alden'1 is THE PLACE! ( ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Plac1ntla Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS: Meo. thra Tlturs., f le 1:30-Fri,. t to t -Sot,. t :lO to I • l I ' • ·' -· ... -· ...... ~,.....,...-... _..., : ... I Hon:tington, ,Beaeh . fountain ¥alley . . -• • .·. Today's Fl•al N.Y. Stoeks J voe ""· NO, 274, 4 SECTIONS, 62 P.AGES • ORANGE c0(¥Y. CALIFORNIA l TUESDAY, NOVEMBER.;16, 1971 .TEN CENTS Huntington Approves Coastwide College Tax By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of lllf DeilY "litt Sf9tf The Huntington Beach City Council ?..fonday night re11fflrmed an agreement with the Coast Community College District to form a new taxing agency, for the purpose of putting ia $935,000 ,worth of improvements at Golden West Collegt. The projected two-cent per $100 of assessed valuation tu ~ also hit pro- perty o~ Jn the other cities of Costa 1t1esa, Seal Beach, Fountain Valley, Westminster, Midway City and Newpo~ No Vote Now , ' Beach which are part of the coJJefie district. council members approved the con- troversial pr6po'.Sal by a 4 to 3 vote after a lengthy cfebate on. the ethics of Im· posing the assessment on ·the other com- munities. · ~ 'I1le agree~ent. was upheld by CoufF.· cilman Norma Gibbs and Councilmth Donald Shipley;. Geor&e' McC!icken Uc! ' Jack Green: O:luncihnen Jmy Matne)" Alvin Coen ~nd Ted Bartlett voted "no," · The a8refmerit, formulated undei;-a 'Carpenter Plans New Coast Bill By L. PETER KRIEG Of 11\t D9llY .. 11.1 lll'ff the blame for defeat of th~ measure they so ~dJy wanted. .... Senator DeMis E. Carpenter (R-''The eco-6ysteria of the times that a coastline management bill next year . . . seldom used law called the 1913 Act, "wld finance a new '803,000 wing to ·the Golden West gymnasium and im- provements in television and , computer cSbJing. A Similar proposal calllM for $700,000 ,worth of new facilities at' Orange Coast ~ege 'was rejected alter Ille Newport Be,Ach COW1ciJ pointed oµt · lllal. property owr>1rs in that community would also be subject to the tax. Councilman Alvin Coen, chairman of a .... -..,~ ., .... I ~ -~ ' . !'t" ........ .. ~ . subcommittee studying the Golden West proposal, said he had contacted the other cities and received letters w h i c h adamantly objected to the plan. "I cannot see imposing another laling agency.'' ~d Coen, calling the I9t3 f.ct an . unacceptable metl¢ of <financing capital improvements. ' TbouP be was supported'ln bis feelings by Matney and Bartlett, Coen en- countered btavy opposition when be call- ed for rejection of the plan. ' Said Councilman Green, "\\'e . should not be overly concerned with cooperaU111 with other cities. I am fully in support of this, ~8rdless what the other cities do." Mayor George McCracken also implied that he had no feelings of guilt for what was being done especially since Hun- tington Beach Is committed financially to the improvement of the Ort.nge County Harbor District and Oood and sewer pro- jects from which, he said, local residents realize oo benefits. Coast Community College Chancellor Norman \Vatson told the council that the improvements were primarily for recrea· tional programs intended to benefit local resident3. He was backed by Golden West presi· dent Dr. Dudley Boyce who said the city would be justified in imposing the ''relatively simple assessment district.'' With another vote. ·tbe Huntington Beach City Council later indicated . it would back any similar proposal for Orange Coast College. Matney and Coen again voted ''no." ' NewFeesApproved Huntington Takes Oil Code Action By ALAN DIRKIN Of tlle DtlllY Pile! Stiff Huntington Beach city councilmen Monday night approved a new fee struc~ lure for oil operations which couJd pro- \'ide for . stricter enforcement of the oil code. Norma Gibbs said. "I'm concerned that the figure is top low, too conservative." Councilman Jerry Matney recalled that when lhe council considered imposing a five cent3 a barrel oil production ta1 in the summer the argument was advanced that fees in lhe new code would generate $250,000 and the council compromised 'l.t I 2'12 cents a barrel, which will raise $350,000 annually. "They seem to be playing both sides -- against the middle," he said. Councilman Jack Green also felt the estimates were conservative a n d predicted that oil companies would be (See FEES, Page Z) I Newport. Beach) said today .he .will write everything representin2 gr 0 wt h and that should pass the Legislature because change 1s autor;nat1cally bad for the '11· -J---irwlttbnfe:stgm!d~~ironment~d.-nDLsiL v.·eU _with __ I perty. rights as well as the California Jegis.lators, he said. coastltne. ·· Carpenter said the bill he'll introduce I Carpenter, whose vote Monday helped will take all these £actors into. con· j kill the last major shoreline legislation sideration. The council appioved fees that will raise $108,000 next ye/jr, providing an 18 000 "cushion" over the projected F========:-:=:::=::-::;-::c:---::=====::-:------, costs oFCOae enforcement wfilchActlrrg----· ------- City Administrator Brander Castle gave as $89,600. Castle said that the $18,000 could be us- ed to hire another employe to inspect operations or to offset unforeseen legal I I 1' I I left in Sacramento this ,year, blamed "It will provide tax relief·w)lere land is defeat or the measure on a Combination deemed not to be developed," he said, ''It or reasons -3'11 of which he said would wlJI . observe the constitutionality or be eliminated fro'!' th~ law he'll draft. private property and the rights therein . AB 1471, , the. bill authored by "ft will leave the local area authority Asiemblyrn·an Alan · Sieroty ( D -Lo s to hand!~ local government with Ideally a Af18eles}, died in the Senate Natural state agency to oversee the criteria Resources Committ,ee (on, a 4 to 4 vote est.abl)shed and to insure an e q u o· I alter a stormy journey through the representation from both the state and legislative; pr~s1 ,J , • , 1 k. , · • · thf· 1*ltleVfl." -. . t .. It pi{ted.coniervat1oriist1 aigaln11 ina}ot . :\-Can>tnter iilressed. · howevtr. ~Most rea! estate lobbies ~ coastal. "!Dl· lmportanUy, lt will protect the COJ,stline munities and other pYemroerital llM-where'SUch•JWOtection it netded for botb U " I T"""""' WILL ENTER PRlfN\lt,Y C ~ '-.... \ Ma'Ye~ 'M°m *Orfy r ' I ~ costs. The fee was approved unanimously but not before councilmen had debated whether the "cushion" was large enough. · ''If we are serious about this , we should not tie the hands of people who are tryinJ to clean up the wells," CoUJK:il:mah I Five Froln Coast ...... ~-""' ,f Councilmart A.,djourns Hiniself The time was 10:40 p.m. The Huntington Beach City Council meeting which began at 4:30 p.m., and included a one and a half hour break from I p.m. to '1:30 p.m. was still goutg on. And Councilman Al Coen'• mind was ceasing to function •. ,_JJ.e ma"' no bones about u:--· ,_ / ' • H~ recaUed that 1•· man. A(IO the council b~d imposed an 11 p.m, cur· few On meet.ings ~ ~ thil llrn4 had been violated frequently, cies from which , IL sought to wrest local the benefit ol the public and' the state of -c:ontfoIOfSJiOrfiliiieilffilopmenr.-- -Calµornia:'' - It was this so-called usurping of pr<r Carpenter• predicted there very likely .1'>1 - ' ¥ort~~aiis ---Formally Na1ned-"I am leaving at 11 p.m. even If we have to continue every other item on _ ~ a~~" Councilman Coen announced. "I find myself unable _!.o function. If you want to accompany me, you can." party rights a:ild Io c a I government will be others who introduce coastline authority that Carpenter highlighted in legiSJation in the next session and said his post-mortem this morning. thOse bills "that have a sehsible. fair a11d "The ends don't justify the means," he effective program ·that are based on a said. compromise and rational approach to the He said defeat of the measure can be entire situation will be successful .'' blamed on tbe bill's "disr~gard for Conservationists may1not wait for the private property rights. di&regard for tax Legislature to act, however, as their relief proposals for property under the spokesmen began talking about a moratorium and dlsrtgllrd for I o c a I statewide shoreline prqtection initiative. go~mment control:" Sieroty, himself. bitter after the de[eat He said environmentalists also share (See COASTAL, Paa:e %l Valley Planners to Study Bid Doubling Land Fees A prop()Sa\ to double 1an'd development fees will return to the Foantaln Valley Planning Commission Wednesday after commissioners tabled the proposal in August. The measure, suggested by Planning Director Clinton Sherrod, was tabled because of the Phase I economic freeze. Now that the freeze has moved into Phase II, the proposal will be: considered by commissioners at their meeting at '1:30 p.m. In city hall. Sherrod said the increases are based on 11 sur\'ey conducted by the city of Santa Ana which shows a number of cities in the county that impose higher subdivision fees than Fountain Valley. currently, develol)'rs of subdivi!lions of four lots or Jess pay $10 for the first two lots and $5 for each successive lot. The planning-5laff is &;king that-the .base fee Fire Strikes Sportfisliing Boat Off Pier • A fir~ which broke out in the galley of a commercial sportfishing. boat moored just off the Hunllngtoo Beach pier orly lnday spr<ad to lhe supmtruclure one! custd $51000 damq:e. Firemen . said the &5-foot ve&atl was t1nveloped in names about 3:07 1.m. and Ul.lt the fire wu put ·out wtth the ald of a !Ueguard boat. No one was aboard. The 88-passenger vessel, owned by Bob P\tcCullah, wa1 titd to • buoy about 200 yards off the end of the pier. A fireman fighting the blaze, ~flchael Cooley, wa~ treated for smoke inhitlation. be increased to S25 leaving the additional fee as is. In sulxlivisions with five lots or more. the current fee is $25 with an additional S2 per lot. Sherrod is suggesting the per lot fee be upped to $4. He said the increases have be:en sug- gested because sulxlivision fees are an "important source of revenue for the city" and because or the "limited dura- tion of this potential source of income." Last June developers were hit with another fee Increase wben the city coun- cil raised the park development fee. The fee, which iJ paid by developers to offset the cost of city parks now stands at $400 · for each single family lot; $130 pe.r urut for bachelor and single b e d r o o m apartments; $190 for two bedroom apartments; $250 for apartments with three or more bedz:90IDS and $400 per space for lraUer parks. To Enter '72 In Drug Charges NH Primary LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Mayor Sam Yorty. a. maverick Democrat, anooinced today ne .will ·~k' the _presidential ·oom- iaatlon in New, Hampshire's first·ln.-the· nation primary March '1, Yorty, ,who made-his third political pilgrim.age to lhe' state earlier this month, is tbt s~d Democrat to an- nounce hi! bid for the Democratic' nomination in 1972, following Sen. George S. McGo"'rn (D·S.0.) "Encouraged by the advice of many friends and supporters, I have decided to become a candidate for President ."' Yorty said in· a statement prepared for a news conference here. "Our compaign is already well un- der way in New Hampshire." Yorty said. The Los Anieles mayor said, however, he has no intention of entering all the primaries, and at this point the California primary will "climax our campaign.. "The first step is New HampShife. After that we shall see," Yorty said. "Other states may be '8dded as lhe campaign progresses," Yorty said. "We will be selective. ·We have no intention cf trying to raise the huge sums of money necessary to enter a11. the primaries.'' Yorty said he has no Illusions about the diffieulties in winning the support of the voters in New Hampshire, which is considered to be strongly behind Sen. Edmund S. Mu'ikie · (D-Maine). Five Orange Coast residents Jncluding a. pair of-young marrieds from l}f.n- tington Beach were formally charged 1to- day as suspected drug dealers. -The ·arrestees picked up by raj•Jng teams in various cities Monday arternoon were , named in complaints jssued 1.thjs morning. t Sales charged to the group Include a transaction involving more than 20 pounds of marijuana for which agents cf the Justice Department's Burea\t of Narcotic Enforcement paid $1,4.00 a month ago. A second transaction involved an ounce or cocaine. Agent Dave Genins alleged two suspects were negotiating a third drug sale when arrested Afonday. Arraignment was eipected this af- lernoon or Wednesday morning in West Orange County Judicial District Court (or the five defendants. The suspects are identified as: ' -noma1 R. ,._fcPhilllps, 19, of 1'1341 Queens Lane, Huntington Beach. -Patricia L. J\fcPbllllps, 18, of the same address. .....__ -Douglas s. Beaubel, 19, of 1010 W. MacArthur Blvd ., Santa Ana. -Michael L fti.fcClala, 19, of 778 Shalimar Drive, Costa Mesa. -Steven J. Huntley, 21, of 4.90% River Ave., Newport Beach. Agent Genin said McClain and Huntley were negotiating to sell drugs when talten into custody Monday. . Charges-flled "lnciude sate of cocaine, sale of marijuana, arid offering narcotics f0r sale. He said prior sales charged to the . suspecjs occurred Oct. 7, Nov, 8 aid the t"wo Monday. DAILY .. ILOT 11111 "'" Fire Capt, Wiiiiam Newton said the l!ause of the bliu:e Is under tnvestlgatlon. WITH SUPERSTRUCTURl °CHAllll&D, FISHING BOAT RIMAINS A.T MOORING Huntlntton lffdt FlrtmM.-Co_ of Blne llltly Tddoy tiff Hvnlintton Boch Pier .\ • ' Mayor George McCracken, directing his remarks Councilman Coen's way, said that 11horter meetings required more control on comments by COWl- cilmen. The mayor said he also tried not to be discourteous to members of the public. At 11:05 p.m .. after a public hearing had concluded, Councilman Coen bade good night to his colleagues. The sis remaining members stayed for one more hearing after the audieiice shouted down a move to continue it and then the council called it a night at 11:20 p.m. Six zone case hearings and a master plan amendment Were postpaned, two until January and the rest unUI the next council meeting, Dec. 6. Apartments, Church Street Will Be Vacated For H~tington Project A city street will be vacated In Hun- tington Beach to allow for development of a 17-story block of apartments. for the elderly and a church sanctuary. The action was approved by the city council on a 4-2 vote Monday night after a short debate in which Councilman Jack Green criticized the controversial pro- ject. • Green was a member of a minority three-man council bloc that opposed the towers plan when the council granted a. conditional exception for the retirement home a year ago. He said Monday he hopes the city will be taken to court over the development, which he callee\ "totally improper." . · ·He also leveled a blast at Councilman Norma Gibbs, who supported the project a year ago. and who has spoken in favor recently of limiting the number of apartments in the city. "I'm Oabbergasted at Mrs. Gibbs," Green said. "This is a 17·slory monstrosi· ty in an RI mne. No taxes will be paid to the city and extra fire equipment will be needed. Now we are giving them public land free ." Mrs. Gibbs did not respond to the remarks, but moved that the city at· torney be instructed to prepare.a resolu· lion ordering the vacating of the street Mrs. Gibbs' motion was supported by Mayor George McCracken, D o n a I d Shipley and Ted Bartlett who alao sup- ported the zoning variance granted the project a year go. The retirement home, which will pro- ·vtde 281 low rent apartments for the elderly, is being sponsored by the irst Christian Cl'lurch. It wlll be built on a site near 17th Street and Adami Avenue. During lhe dl!CUS!ion1 CouncUman Jer-ry Mainey noled lhal ne ha<I discussed the project with City Attorney Don Bonf1. "Bonfa told me that lt was Illegal, but that no one had asked him for an opl· nlon," Matney said. Bonfa was not at the council meetina. r Matney was believed to be referring to the fact that a hardship must be shown before a conditional e1ception can be Pranted. At the hearing a year ago Coun· cilman Al Coen voted against the rlevelopment because, he said, no hardship was shOWJlt. Subsequently, the city was taken to court over another variance jt granted for the Sunset Bay project. a multi· million dollar ·development near Hun· ti ngton Harbour, and the variance wa! nixed by a Superior 'Court judge on the gmunds that no hardship was shown. Following that ruling, Bonfa rebuked (See TOWERS, Page %) Weather Cold. gusty winds will continue Wednesday with temperatures along the coast in the low 60's rls· ing to 67 inland. Lows tonight ·J>e.. tween 34 and 48. INSIDE TODA.Y It's the biggest week of tht yt01' tn community theater 01& iht Orange Cocut 1Dith st: new shows opening to ;oin . eight others in progre.ts. Set Enter- tainment, Page 19. C1HIWllJa I Clntlfftlll tl•Jt ''"'kt 1J ,,.......,, lJ CHiii Nttk9' t 01-.. ' a41*i.I ..... ' l:11htt1\nmM1 lt•lt "'" ... '' 11•11 MerMc-14 AMI Lelllllrt IJ Mhltt ,, f DAILY PILOl H • Pair Seized h1$lSO,OOO :F1·aud Deal By ARTHUR ft. VINSEL Of l~e O.llY f'lltt 11111 A playboy whose import empire, fina~ by a major trading stamp com· pany purchasing premiums, apparently crumbled due to the recenl shipping atrike was arrested aboard his big Italian motor vessel in Newport Harbor Monday. An ex-head accountant for Blue Chip Stamp Company charged b y authorities with aiding an embezzlement scheme that subsequently raked off '150,000 or more -· was taken into custody too. Dennis.P. Warren, 45, and Donald L. Cook, 44, were arraigned this morning in Los Angeles Muni cipal Court, Division 40, on one. count each of grand theft. Deputy District Attorney Charles Kelson said both men listed their home •address as Warren's ~foot yacht, the Shenandoah. Polict said a manhunt dating back to early October under the eye of Kelson finally focused late Wednesday morning on slip 91 at 829 Bayside Drive in ~ewport Beach. Arrest warrants carrying $50,000 bail for Warren and $25,000 for Cook had been issued. The Los Angeles County deputy district attorney said Warren had moved the Sheilandoah from its usual berth at Sausalito on San Francisco Bay lo ·Newport Beach about one week ago. Warren heads the Shenandoah Com- pany, whicb Kelson said almost ex- ·clusively dealt with the Blue Chip Stamp Company headquartered in Los Angeles. -Sergeant Harry Wright, of the Orange ·County Harbor Patrol , said he took a launch to check the Shenandoah when contacted by Kelson at mid-morning. They conlirmed the big Italian-built Bagliato ca bin cruiser was at her slip and men fitting Warren's and Cook's descriptions were aboard. Deputy Dist rict Attorney Ke 1 so .n described Warren as rather a playboy - 'both are divorced -and said Cook is a alight , mild·mB.Qnered accountant type. The pair had been sha ring quarters aboard the vessel, which was berthed in Newport Harbor until transferred to Sausalito Yacht Harbor 11 months ago. Kelson said Warren waii: supplying transistor radios, tape recorders and sim- ilar import Items to Cook's employers as trading stamp premiums. "I guess they sort of fell on hard limeii: • wilh the dock strike," he explained. Kelson said Cook was responsible for 1ccdUniS pay&ble 'foi-the· Blue Chip Stamp Company, which he left about the lime an audit allegedly disclosed huge cash lo~es. "Warren wa,s wining and dining in style and Cook was sending out the checks," Kelson alleged, as a result of his seven· week probe. He said one single account alone In- volves a $106,000 sum, while smaller losses may push the total to $100,000 with more expected to turn up. The Harbor Department's Sgt. Wright 1aid his men posed as being on a routine patrol after spotting Warren and Cook. "We just moved off and kept them under observation, pretending we were doing something else," Sgt. Wright ex· plained. He said efforts failed lo reach Kelson, who was in court, so he notified Ne wport Beach police and a team of detectives led- by Ken Smith arrived to lake the defen- dants into custody. They were turned over lo Los Angeles County District Attorney 's investigators for booking and Issuance or complaints this morning. Fund Bill Ol('d WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate ap- riroved a House-pa ssed bill Monday night for $2.037 billion · in appropri2J.ions f o r military construction this fiscal year. DAILY PILOT ' ,l OIMIW muT P'IJl\.tlffTNO C'OlllPAMY 'i l11tl'Tt N. w,,4 • .,."""' Miii l"*'Wllt l\. Ja'k R. Cur1 1y f\1l ~ ......... Miii ........ ,....,...., n .... , Ktnit ..... 1\''"'' A. MV'11h11t #Mlllllnll ~11W' ~ Al111 Dir\.:,. I w.t 0nlltf (.wnty Efnllr ! ff-""llftM '"" OMc• .,...._. 1111' lft,h l1ul1v1rtil • M11ft., A.iolrtt•t P.O, loi; 790, tll41 --...... llllldrl: tl2 Forst A-.. C:-M Mftl1 a WRI .. , 'trMI Nftllilrt a.etli JW HfWllOf'f h.li..lt1"f ,, ... ~ ..... "QllllM .... • • ·-DA ILY r•LOT f'llelt •r II.le~·~ KMlllW Winter Sun E~tendon Oh•11ed Airport Runw"ay Given Reprieve , . I I The 50().foot runway extension at Meadowlark Airport, lhe crhrer ot a long controversy last year and back in dispute again, was given a reprieve t)y Hun· tington Beach city councilmen Monday night. The extension was allowed under a zon• ing variance last year with 10 conditions beinf attached, most Of which related to From Page J TOWERS ... rouncilmen for not heeding his warnings that hard ship must be demonstrated in variance cases. Orville Hanson, speaking for the First Christian Church, said that the aban· dorunent of Shipley Street is essential to the developmenl provisions to limit du st and noise pro- blems: Wilen the variance was reviewed by the planning commlSsion two weeks ego, the board tound that one condition -the use of trailers as temporary facilities -h•d not been compiled with and the com· missioners re<!Qmmended that the vari· ance be revoked. ?>.ionday night councilmC!n balked at taking this approach immediately. Thoy approved a motion giving airport operator John Tu r until Dec. 6 -the date or the nei:t uncil meeting -·to resolve the conflic ver use of the tem· porary trailers. If t c 1fion is not complied with , ·councilmen indicated th~t. they would then schedule a hearing to con sider revoking the variance. Silhouetted by sun, Orange Coast family wades in sparkling water on a winter day at the beach. \Vith crowds of summer sun worshipers hi bernating in· land, winter becomes a time of adventure and redis· cove'ry at the beach for many Orange Coast families -a. time for long \valks in fresh, brisk air. At a previous council meeting, Public \Vorks Director Jim Wheeler reported that no traffic oroblems would be caused '.>y the street abandonment. Building Director Jack Cleveland reportW that aside froffi the question of the trailers eve rything at the airport was "in good shape." The trailers are used ns offices. Ques- tioned by councilmen, Turner said that lie had asked the operators of the facilities to comply by asking the city for an e~· tension on use or the trailers. State Controls Over Coastline Opposed by Jury 'Doomsday' Bloc Chided By Reagan in Oil Talk Industrial Park Terms Sent Back For Reworking Turner said that he would be happy to put permanent facilities at Meadowlark, but said that before he could do that he would have to dedicate property along Warner Avenue and Heil Avenue to the city for curbs and gutters. He does not own the land. but is running the airport under a lease which has another three years to run, he explained. Orange County Grand Jury members oppose ony legislation gi ving the state cont:roJ over all coastal development in California. In a report signed by Foreman Doreen Marshall of Newport Beach, the jury said they had no objection to the state establishing criteria for shore I i n e development. but declared that actual control should remain with loc~J govern· ' ment. They said this was the stand or other Orange County governmental agencies which the jury supported. The Board of Supervisors was urged to fight a state law which would take over control of coastal development and to seriously consider the preparation of a county coastal development plan and take _ C!ction lo expedite the plan 's adoption. • The jury statement read in part: "The county plaJlning staff has the neces.sar y expertise to . esta'blish guidelines acd plans suitable for the proper and orderly -de v-eloj:111fent of our coastal areas." The report added that considerable tiJTl'e ha s been spent by the county and other local agencies in preparing coasta l studies. But it warned: "Despite these studie:i;. the county's plans have not moved forwa rd as rapidly as they should and it is feared that legislation will be enacted which will give control of the coastal development to the state before plarui can be adopted locally." J"rom Page 1 COASTLINE. •• of his bill, said he felt a vote of the pea-- pie may be the only v.·ay to get a tough Jaw enacted. "The Legislature doesn't understand the depth of the people·s feelings on pro- teclon of the environment ," he said. Sieroty said he feels · two thin~:i; v.·ere responsible for the outcome -Governor Reagan 's attitude and pressure from lob- byists. "I believe the principal rea son for th is bill's defeat is the attitude of 1he governor and his administration,'' Sie rot y said, but he went on to take equally strong swings at others. "The Legislature has been playing the old game. playing with the people closest •, the legislative process -·the lob- byists." The full-lime lobbyists working for special intrest groups "have certainly earned their fees killing environmental bil!SThis session." The 4 to 4 committee vote was one "aye" vote short of what was needed to send the measure lo the Senate Finance Committee. which had been expected lo send it quickly to the floor where pa ssage was hig~y probable. Sieroty said an absent committee member, Sen. James Q. Wedworth (D- Hawthome) would have voled for the mea sure, but he had been excused "for personal reasons." • SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald Reagan saiQ today the petroleum industry has been plagued ·by the "doomsday syndrome" ei:emplified by the controversy surrounding the recent Amchitka underground nuclear test. l n a speech prepared for the American Petroleum Jnslitute, Rea gan said a strange silenc~ had gripped the harshest critics of the blast since it "went off on schedule without earthquake or tidal wave." "Your industry has been plagued by the doomsda y syndrome as much or more than most," the governor told the petroleum executives. Los Amigos High Hosting Pageant The Fountain Villey :Junior Miss Pageant will be held 5aturday at a p.m. af Los Amigos High School Auditorium. The. contest, sponsored by the Fountain Valley Jaycees is held to honor girls v.·ho participate in school and community ac- tivites while maintaining a strong acad emic standing. Participants in this year's pageant will be Martha Armstrong, Karen Bryant, Safah Ario Hopper, Connie Sowell, Karen Holjannan, Jeneva Henry, Pam Hoyt, Shauna Acey, Karen Scoville, Pam Fero, Victoria Peralta, Bonnie Gunion and Julie Campbell. Disabled Man's Car Tires Taken A disabled Fountain Valley man left a Costa Mesa bowling alley after rolling a few games Monday, to find a thief had in- capacitated his car. Carl A. Livingston, of 1lfl59 1'.Jarigold Circle, went to police headqua rters to report the $220 grand theft case involving all four ca r tires and wheels. He said he had the vehicle towed away on a mobile dolly and re-fitted before reporting the incident, because he needs the car for all transportation. Theater Faces $50 Fee Daily NORTH SMITHFIELD, ft.I. (AP) The Town Co\lncil has taken a step toward eliminating X-rated movies from the town's only theater: it upped the license fee from $160 to $18,000 per year. Councilman Robert E. tilowry proposed the motion to charge Rusti c Drive-In mo\•ie theater $50 per day in fees so it "can no longer operate profitably." Residents have objected to the theater's policy of showing two X·rated n10vles nighlly. Selection of Jury Begins For Auto Contract Case Jury selection began today In the Orange County Superior Court trial of a Huntingk.11 Beach man and two com· p::tinions accused of v.·orking an auto con· tract swindle that cost the Newport Na· tional Bank an estim:.ted $100,000. Judge Walter H. Steiner was as.signed today to the trial of Robert William Dunlap, 37, of 17099 Westport Drive, John Stuart Hamilton. 2$, Rowland lielghts, and Ronald Ros.st al~ known as Ron11ld Clartoce Bates, 35, La Mir&da , All were accused of grand theft and foriery ln an Orange County Gr.itfKI Jury inclJctment. Also named by the panel o'n idendcal charaes was Frink Perry, 38, LI Mirada, who ls still at large and the subject of a nationwide hunt by the FBI. It Js 1Ueged that the four m"!n aub- mllted tp the Newport bank through HamUton, who was the a s s I 1 t a n t manager of the bank's dealer f~e divitlon at the lime of his arrest, auto sale· contrtcts which bore the iden- tification of none1lstent cars and the names of nonexistent motorists. lnvest11ators said ttfe group bilked the bank of 11t JeaSt $100:000 .befo1e the scheme ended with their·•rrest la!t Jan. 29. ' Dunlap Is the former owner of Bonded Cadllloc in Alhambra. , "Yet," he added, "those of you who produce the nation's oil and petroleum products share the determination of our people to end air and water pollution and to stop destructive env ironmental practices." Reagan sald that even .though en· vironmental protection receives a "high priority" in almost every industrial and individua l activity, the ''doo msda y crowd" is not satisfied. "Their exaggerations hurt the cause of the sincere and dedicated con- servationists who ha ve done so inuch to alert us to the need for envi ronmental safeguards," he said. "Their' pervasive pessimism ts anti- technology, anti-industry and Includes op- position to the defense program we must have to maintain the very freedom that allows them to speak their minds and stage their derponstrations. "From all of this hai . ~me a downgrading and eve n a reviling of the most prGSperous and i.dvanced wciety .in thel world!' c,,..; · ~ • · : ~ ... The governor also told the petrolei.im officials it was ''high time" that business review its own position in relation to government. A com plicated agreement for the development of Huntington Beach's largest industrial park has been passed from the city council to the planning oommission for revision. It concerns the Lusk Company's in· dustrial land on the north side of Edinger ·A venue, just opposite the McDonnell Douglas plant. _ About 36 acres of the property were to have been developed as apartments in phases as the adjacent indUJtrial land was being developed. • Company president John Lusk. asked the city council Monday night to eliminate the link with the industrial land ·so that he could build a reduced-deruity condominium comr'"'· Lusk got part o his request when the council approved the idea of the townhouse comp.Jex and instructed the Councilman Al Coen said that the runway extension and use of trailefs were separate issues and indicated that he was not in favor of banning the ex· tension becau~e of the · dispute over the trailers. · Counciln:ian Jack Gr-ee11 argued that r.t- laching the issue of the trailers to ttle onlv way qf insuring full compllance. Mayor George McCra cke n, a developer, revealed that yea rs ago he had tried to lease Meadowlark and tum it into a municipal and industrial airport, but ha"d round that the lease was too short. Turner indicated that although the lease had only another three years to run, he was confident that he could gain an ei:tension for another five years. From Pllfle 1 FEES .•. planning commission to rezone 11 of the fighting the city in court and that le1al 36 acres fo r tha.t purpose. . · costs would spiral. , At t.he sa.f'le tim~ •• Jhe cou ncil asked the. .. }{t'also reoall.edJ.1-.hearlng on the bar· plan~1na-conunils.iOn ,to de\tl)op a neW" .. rel ~roducCiOn tix "when the councll phasing s~.ftem for the remaining deadlocked on a 3 to 3 vote on imposing a acreage over the next t~ree years. . . five cents levy before compromising on Althoug~ the planning c~mm1~s1on the 2v, cents tax .· "To resign yoursel f to the su pposed inevitability of ever more spending and govern ment controls may or_ may not make you healthy, but certainly it will .111ake you less wealthy and sadly wiser," meets. ton1ghl. Ass1stan~ Plann!ng D1rec-"If you had been here that evening, we tor R1cha.rd Harlow .said the issue pro-would have had a five cents oil tax," bably would not be discussed for another Green said pointedly to Mrs. Gibbs, whJ> two weeks. wa s in Sweden with a college group at the time. Bill Affecting "We can try agairi,'' Mrs. Gib~ responded. Mrs. Gibbs was the council member who had proposed that the bat. rel tc.x be brought up. She left on a two- monlh vacation before it was considered. I Free Holiday Parking OK'd f\Jolorists will get a n o th e r reprieve from feeding Huntington Beach's parking meters over the Christmas holidays. . By unanimous vote the City Council de.ci~ed ,_.ionday night to cootinue its free parking program over the holiday season. Green "Merry Christmas" bags will cover all of the city's meters until after New Years Day, Drugs Vetoed SACRAMENTO (UP!l -A bill reclasslfying marijuana from a narcotic to a restricted drug has been vetoed by Gov. Ronald Reagan who sald it was a "name change measure only." In his veto message J..1onday. Reagan said he felt the bill "would merely com- pound the uncertainty and confusion which al ready exlsts nn the subject of marijuana." The bill by Assemblyman William Campbell (R-Hacienda Height s), would make no substantive cha nges in current law and penalties would remain the same. Mayor George McCracken asked the staff to report back in six months on the results of oil cleanup efforts. The only change over present fees a4opted .by the council was to increa~ the annual inspection permit for the l.740 we lls In the city from $25 to $50. Thi! would raise another $44.000 over the $64.000 presently collected with code fees. Charges for waste water perm its, mov· Ing of recovery healers. drilling and redrilling 'J)ermits and sewer connection fees which generate $20,000 a year were left unchanged. No spokesme n for oil companies spoke in opposition to the new fee structur1 Monday night. Lei Us Put You On The ·Map Neer the 1ntrance, lnsidt our store, is a 9iant n1w mep. We art in the process of identifying ell of·the homis wt have c1rp1ted since 1965 on this map with colored pins. (A 'different color for .. ch y•ar.) Clost scrutiny will detect some interesting f1cts: firstly, we h1v1 c1rp1t1d homes on vlrtu .. illy 1v1ry str11t in tht 1r11, S1condlyi the pins ore in bunch•s, indicoting WORD-OF-MOUTH •d••rlising. Thirdly, th• number of homu w• h1v1 carpeted is stt991rin9. If you desire hon1sty1 11peri1nc1, end r1com· mend1tions from n1i9hbors we h1v1 worked for, th•n Ald•n's is THE PLACE! ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 l'lacentla Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 or.tin. TIML, t le l iJO-l'r!., t to t-Sot., tllO ;. I ,. • .,_ . ' •' • I ' • ,. . -.. . -. ' > • tutsdQ", No~rmbtr 16, lm H ·DAILY 1lllt' I Rain, Wind Mariner 9 Snooping Around ' From Storm Mars Satellite Probes Throug h Dust to See S urface Lash Cuba • MIAMI (A·P) -Tropical storm Laura at.alled in the Caribbean Sea today and etood south of the CUban coast, lashing the i&land with gale wiudl and heavy ;Mwnpours. The prolonged ralns brought a threat of flooding. Cuban brigades moved 10,500 persons out of their homes in the coastal lowlands 'of westernmost Pinar del Rio Proviiice ·as the storm moved up from the south ~with 70-mile an hour peak winds on a . course that also threatened South Flor~ Ida. · At 11 a.m. EST, Laura was 'centered .near Latitude 22.0 north, Longitude 83.5 west, 100 miles southwest or Havana and 325 miles southwest of Mlami. She was expected to assume a slow, erratic drift :toward the northeast later in the day. Gale warning flags flew in the ~ower ·Florida Keys. If an expected turn toward the northeast occurs, the National Hur· ricane Center said, gale warnings would be spread farther up the keys toward the mainland. After the evacuations were made in Pinar de! Rio, Laura edged over toward the oortheast and the CUban government called for "the greatest precautionary measures" over all of Havana Province. Until the storm came to a stop, poun- ding a 300-mile wind area with gales, the center had forecast that the eye would pass near Havana tonight. Weather conditions over the Caribbean did not ravor a buildup in the storm's fury but an increase ol only 4 m.p.h. in wind velocity would bring Laura to hur· ricane strength. The change in; direction aimed the 1torm toward the lower Florida coast but Arnold Sugg, assistant director of the Hurricane Center, refused to discus.s the possibility that Miami might be threaten- ed. "You're not going to put words in my mouth," said Su~. The Cuban Institute of Meteorology warned of torrential rains and rough seas on the south coast, especially i1) the Gulf of Batabano and along the Zapata Peninsula, site of the Bay of Pigs in· vasion. Heavy rains battered the Isle of Pines through the night and spread northward into the rich tobacco fields of western CUba as Laura crawled slowly up through the Caribbean. Hot /\'umber With rising tempe{atures in Sydney, Australia, Jan Math1ews may raise a few temperatures herself as she relaxes in hot pants. Reaga:µ to Meet With President SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Reagan planned to leave Califomla late today for Washington, D.C., where he la scheduled to· meet with President Nixon on Wednesday. Neither the subject or the meeting nor the exact time was aruiounced by the White House. Reagan'11 office declin- ed to comment on the purpose of Reagan's trip. From Washington. Reaga n will go to French Lick, Ind., to attend the winter meeting of the Republican Goven1ors' Association. He is scheduled to return to Los Angeles .Saturday and to Sacramento Sunday. Yule ,Deadlines Overseas Parcels Must Go Friday The Christmas mailing season is upon us and postal officials warn that deadlines for mailing packages and greeting cards are nearing. Friday is the last day to mail parcels by "space available mail" (SAM) to servicemen overseas in order to be sure it arrives before Cltristmat . One week later, Nov. 26. is the la.st day ,to mail parcels via the parC1!:1 airlift (PAL). and Dec. 10 ls the last day to send ainnail ,parcels or lettert to servicemen who are overseas. The accompanying table shows various other mail deadlines &et up by the post office to assure senders their episUes or parcels wil lreach the sendee in time' for Christmu. · Sa:rface Air Sarface Atrmall Pll<d Parcel a ... t111r Greottnc DOMESTIC Post Post Can!• Can!• Distant States Dec. l Dec. lS Dec. 10 Dec. lS Local Areas Dec. 10 Dec. lS Dec. IS Dec. 22 Alaska and Hawaii Nov. 30 Dec. 15 Dec. 5 Dec.IS INTERNATIONAL Canada and Mexico Dec. 3 Dec. IS Dec. 8 Dec. 20 South and Dec. 8 Dec. 18 Central America Too late Dec. 13 Europe None Dec. 13 None Dec. 18 Accepted* Accepted• Dec. IS Africa None Dec. 10 None Near East None Dec. 10 None Dec. IS Far East None Dec. 10 None Dec. IS • Due to the continuing East Coast dock strike. PASADENA (UPlf -The Mariner 9 Mars satellite was ordered today to change its photoJJr•phl: rqiiUn~ and do all it can to try to pter through the dust clouds that have fntstrated geologists for. a week. Dr. Jlar9ld )tasunky, a project llclen- tist• from · the U.S. Geological Survey, aaid ground observations of the red planej lndlcate the globe-girdling dusty haze IJ slowly showing 1igns of clearing. But in the meantime, controllera directed' the robot spacecraft to ·•Im tt.s cameras toward polar regions wher~ partial clearings have been obaerved, Shorn Irish . Girl Marries Soldier 'Foe' LONDON (AP) -"ll wasn 't the sort of wedding 1'd always hoped for, but I'm happier now than I've ever been in my life," aaid Marta Doherty, the Ulster lass who m~rried the British soldier who cost her her hair. The lS.year-old Roman catholic girl a.nd Pvt. John Larter, 19, were wed Monday in the chapel of a British army barracks in Londonderry~ Northern Irtland'1 .second city. She said she wept as an army helicopter -took her and John off to honeymoon somewhere in England. Marta bad· planned to marry last Frt- d.r.y in Londmderry's St. Colwnba's Qrureh, Instead troops with machine guns ringed the barracks as the couple ex· changed vows, a1'KI she wore a wi2 to re-fc!:t.ce tile shoulder-length Jocks she had Marta was tied to a lamp post, her hair was sheared off and her head was tarred last Tuesday night by a group of militant Catholic women. It was a warning to "soldier dollies" - a derisive term for Catholic girls who date the British troops sent to Northern Ireland. Another girl was given the same treatment two nights later, y,•hen the guerrilla Irish Republican Army warned the vigilante women to stop. "They knocked on the door and told .me they were punishing me for going out with a British soldier,'' Marta uld 11fter arriving in England. ''I was 10 terrified, I )Judly knew where they took me. I don't know bow lon, I was there but li ...,,,.,.. ID eternity. Pendleton Race Bias Serioiis, Team Reveals r Racial dllcriminati<>n appears to be aertous at the world's largest Marine base, Camp Pendleton, report! a two. man con~ional fact-finding team. The statement was made after meeting• Monday wilh about a:i minority group Marines at Camp Pendleton. A three-day bearing on racial discrimina- tion in the armed forces begins Wed· oesday in Congress. A report about Camp Pendleton was submitted to the Congressional Black CaucW1 in Washington, D. C., by Charles E. Knox, an aide to Rep. Augustus Haw~ kins (D-Los Angeles). Knox, meeting with newsmen. 11&id he will ask Hawkins to make at least one surprise visit to Camp Pendleton to "see how things really are." Base officials were given 10 days to prepare for the visit by Hawkins. "What we found after several hours of consultations was an absence o f minorities in the top command structure which results in an atlib.Jde of in- sens!Uvity to problems of minority Marines," JtnoJ: aa!d. Tax Alternatives ·sought Transit District Study ing $9' Million, Windfall Directors of the Orange County Transit District' couldn't make up their minds Im· mediately Monday if they wanted $9 mil· lion to spend on a transportation system '° they ask their acting general manager to prepare a report on alternatives pos- sible under the new state gas ta1 law. The sales-tax-on-gasoline bill, signed by Gov. Reagan lasL week calls ror a one- fourth of one percent sa1es tax on gas to go for county transportaUon needs. This bu been estimated at $8 million • year oringe County of a total of $129 mllllon stalewide. 'Tbe Board d Supervl!on have an op. U$. If they decide it is of greater t>epetit to the citiens they can apply the new gas tax windfall to a one-fourth cf ont percent reduction ln ules taxes on all: purchases subject to the regular Nies ta1 levy. ~ Soprvlsor Ronald Chpcn, a transit dl•rict board member warned that the bo1rd would probably approve a defl!lite )ll'OJJrlm. "If It la not forthcoming they c:oald let tht! people uve." Chief llepqty County Counltl Clayton Parker txplaJned the facets of the new I law, whlch1akes effect next July 1, lo the district board and warned that the sales tax would be collected on gasoline aold In the county whether the district took ad- vantage of the law or noL Acting General Manager Ted McCon- ville was directed. by the board members to report on "alte.rnaUvea under the new law.'' 'nle district'1 total inoome at this time figures at about $800,000 a year from a 2- ce.nt tu levy. Mt<:onville said the dl!tricl would move as rapidJy as possible to acctpt the state funds to make certi.l.n that tht n\oney generated locally g:oet ror public transportation. "U the district doe! not decide on the need for funds ," he advised, "the ciUtes can uk tbt 1uperv!aora Ill lmPDM tbt tu for road purposes." McCovllle oaid tlle 19 million will be administered through the South• r n California Assoclatlon of Governement.s (SCAG). The transit dllllrlcl would have to opply to SCAG for lta monoy and would have to compete for the fund~ ll(i.th any loeal public transit system which also applied, McConvllle warned. Thia dou not apply tO the Southern California. Rapid Transit D t s t r I c t , however, since its' didrk:t boundaries do not include this area even though it has a few bus lines here. Under the provisions of the law up to 75 percent will De spent on capltaJ ouUay and the balance m operation and maintenance. In other business, Monday the diatricl dirtdors approved interviews to be held ne.rt Monday wilh four lransportaUon consulting firm s, the top candidates for a $35,000 Special Bu.s Need1 Study. McConville said the district'• Teclmlcal Advisory Committee wanted each flnn to name.a project maoager who would carry out the 1tudy. The managen will be tn-- t.erviewed and a recommendatim made lo tl>e dlrecton In two weeka. 1be top four fi.nN, McCqnville uld, an VTN of Orang• County, WUhur Smith-TRW, Los Angeles, Simpson and Curtin, Phllaclelphla and llellew, eapw and Co. of San Francboo; and to try a variety of lens filten to oee U they can ,.. through the planet's veil. other 1cienti.sta and s~e .navtgatlon 1peclall!ts weire bwy pJatinlnc ways to photograph Mara' two tiny ft!.OOM, Deimos and Phobos, that are orbiting well above the dust hue. Mariner ii ezpected to get a close enough look at the lltUe moons to it1.nw surface detail. ._.._ While scientists llltmslecl In studying the planet's surface were diseppointed by the blank JJl'•Y cloud 1mag., beamed back by the 1pacecraf4 atmospheric speclallsta were ddighled. They con- lidered It • rare opportunity to study a weather phenomenon unlike anything Sten on earth. The two television cameras aboard the 1,2()()..pound satellite first photograph· ed. Mars a week ago and scores of pictures received since then showed the same featureless cloud tops. Olbe~ remote sensors aboard the 1pacecraft,. however, were able tg 1look through the dust and study t!:ie planet's atmosphe~ and surface. Of particular interest ts a hot spot detected by an infrare<! heat sensor on Mariner's second orbit Sunday. The instruments found an av!rage U-degree fahrenheit b\crease over a IS.mile widt area. ScienUsts sald 1f that beat 10Urc• was confined to a small area, tt would be much hotttr. Further observation of 111ch hot apoll on the Martian surface w~uld go a long way toward answerlnl, whether Mars' surface la shaped by Internal activity such as vulcanlsm or whether meteoroid bombardment and winds plaY, the major lldllpturlng-role. That would help scientists answer one of the planet's big questions -I! It a dead or dying body or IJ It active and rt.ill evolving? Martha Un~outh? Aug. 3 Vote Lack of R,o y al Courtesy R ebuked LONDON (UPI) '-A British lord, the Earl of Lindsay, haS written tG Martha Mitchell, wife of the U.S. At· tomeY General, rebuk'tng her for "un- couth behavior'' in refusing to curtsy to Queen Elizabeth at a Bucltingham Palace garden party. ·. ~trs. Mitchell, writing in the Ladies Home Journal, said she did not curtsy, a traditional mark of respect, because she did not feel an American should bow to a foreign monarch. "On this principle," Lord Lindsay wrote in his letter to lw1rs. Mitchell published today in the Daily Telegraph. "J take it that it is your considered Opinion I should remain seated during the playing of the 'Star Spangled Ban- ner' ." "It has never entered my head not to stand," when the U.S. National Anthem was played, Lindsay said. Knowing "how to behave in polite society (was) something which has ob- viously been omitted from yollr educa· tion," he wrote. "You have merited a stern rebuke for your uncouth behavior, but do not despair -I am confident that U you kl'iep your eyes open or apply your mind to the problem you will learn in time and, who knows, one of these days you may find yourself a credit to your husband," Lindsay said. Lindsay suggested to Mrs. Mitchell "that you refrain from visiting Buck- ingham Palace or any s i m i l a r establishments in the future, but remain.- at home In Keokuk, Iowa, or Kalamazoo, Mich., or wherever it was you originated. In such places it is likely you will be able to perpetrate any social solecism." Lindsay said he would be "happy to bow" to President Nixon if be wera invited to the White House. Mrs. Mitch~m Pine Bluff, Ark: Tanker Beached; No Spill SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A 28,IMllHon tanker loaded with oil ran aground off the San Francisco city front early today. She was !reed about eight hours later. "She apparently broke herself free by expelling some or her oil into another tanker that came alongside," a Coast Guard spokesman said. He added that there never appeared to be any danger the Phillips Petroleum vessel Phillips Louisiana would rupture and leak oil U!ito the bay. · The Cout Guard said the 851).foot·long tanker, w.hich draws SO feet of water, was ·moving toward Ole South Bay to anchor when it plowed into the soft bay bottom at 1 a.m. with the tide falling. "It grounded in about 45 feet o~ water," the Coast Guard said. Site of the grounding was some 500 yards offshore, approximately between the city and Alcatraz. The tanker arrived In the bay shortly after midnight fr9m RastaMura, Saudi Arabia, and was en route to Anchorage 12 past the south end of San Francisco when On Height Thrown Out By BARBARA KREWICB 0t tlM D•llY PUii SI.ti A new lawsuit f~ed Monday in Santa Ana Superior Court could have the effect of blocking implementation of Laguna'a SS.foot building height 11 m i t a t I o II ordinance until the suit comes up fot . bearing Dec. 6. Judge J. E.T. 0 Ned" Rutter, in setting the De<:embe:r hearing date, ligned a restraining order requiring the city to nullify the Aug. 3 initiative election vote approving the height limit and cease tn- forcing the order, or show cause Dec. C why it has not done so. The ordinance, the suit claims, ts il· legal since it does not comply with pro- visions of state law requiring public bear .. ing on zoning legislation. The suit, filed by attorneys for Laguna: Beach realtor Vern Taschner, ts in effect a re-filing of a similar suit filed prior to Aug. 3 in an attempt to halt the election. At that time, Judge Rutter ruled in favor of Taschner's request, but his decision was overturned by the Fourth District Court of Appeals, which ordered that the election could be held, but without prejudice to future hearings on the legality of the ordinance. . <;ity attorney Tully Seymour ~. after an initial perusal of the suit, "My p:>sition and advice to the city council ls \hat the ordinance is valid until the court rules tbat it is not valid, and ahould rem.tin bl ellect pending the final court ruling." 0 0 0 0 () " • • Only Hughes Alrw.cest. One quick stop at Los Angdes International. Then nOMIDp to Ew:eka/An:ata. And on to Eugene. Daily at 9:20 a.m.. tl.millr"4'Mfl"~ I f .~All Y PILOT \ I ~ps •• Tie No Good For Coast Bill By THOMAS MURPlllNE Of tlle O.ltr .. , ... lllff 81'RIKEOUTS DEPT. -Assemblyman Alan Sieroty'1 coastline protection bill came up for Senate hearina: Monday and won a tie vote, 4 ayea, 4 nay1. And for !;ieroty, a tie was Worse than kissing your lister. It meant a loss. The bill ls dead. T11Hd17, No.,mbtt 16, 1971 Red Chinese Enter U.N. With Roar .. From Vnlttd Pre11 Jnttrnatlonal The honeymoon is 'Over. IL lasted four day1. Communist ChJna'1 smiling deputy foreign m.lnister, Ollao Kuan-hua, took off his glasses, wiped away tus grin and leveled a 30-mlnute attack on the United States and the Soviet Union Mon· day in bb first speech in the United Nation!. Communist China today cast Us firlil vote In the United Nations today in support of a resolution critical of the United States and calling on It to prevent the importation or chroine from white-• ruled Rhodesia. -. UP:l-Tt ... " ~LASTS SUPERPOWERS Red Chin1;1 Chiao. Vietnam Goals U.S. F o·rce-Seen Below 100,000 SAIGON (AP) -Gen. Creighton W. Abrams hu been told to plan on a U.S. force of betweeh 60,000 and 95,000 troops in Vietnam by June 30, inlonned aource1 disclosed today. Thia does not mean that President Nixon won't cut strength .below these ao-called "planning goals," the sources said. They emphasized that the figures sent Abrams by the Joint Chiefs of staU in Washington "was only a goal toward wllich he should plan and not an order." Prior to bis announcement of a new withdrawal program last Friday, Nixon was reported in Saigon thinking in terms of a force of 40,000 to 50,000 Americans by the end of June. Instead he announced a cutback o! 45,111111 troops during the nezt two months, reducing the authorized. celling to 119,000 men by the end of Ja-nuary. The planning goal was oent to Abrams several weeks before NlJ.on'a an- nouncement. But informed aourcu Wd it is still valid u far u they know even though tbe withdrawal nte pro- grammed by Nlmn !<>< the nut two months would cut the total force to Jess than :Kl,000 men U maintaJ.Ded through June. "He jumped the: rate over the holidays," said one informant. "ThlJ la the time of" the year when you alwaya send people home early anyhow. UPIT ...... MASTERSPY SUCCUMBS Ruul1'1 Abel, 61 In the final analysis, it may be just as well. Sleroty's proposed measure had eome good noUons toward environmental protection along Calilornla'a coastline. But it also had some provisions that left creat question marks as to how much telf-detennlnatkln would remain for folks who actually live along the coastline. The resolution passed overwhelmingly, 106 to 2, with the American deleg&tion itself abstaining. Only Portugal and South Africa voted against It. Conifess has approved the plan despite a U.N. embargo against Rhodesia, The embargo was levied when the country unilaterally declared independence rrom Britain to maintain rule by its white minority. Nine Terrorists Pull Off "But that doesn't mean he will continue at that rate. If the North Vietnamese become truculent at. the Parta: peace talks, be might slow It down. lf they release prisoners of war, he might speed it up. The President bas to leave himsell some latitude." Masterspy Abel Dies in Russia Of Lung Cancer -, A Soviet proposal for a world disarma- ment conference ts also expected to come before the assembly later in the day. Communist China submitted its own proposal before it was voted into the U.N. Daring Ireland Es~ape * * * 7 Yanks Kil"led; There was considerable effort to aave Sieroty'1 proposal. At the beginning of the legislative session, dozens of 1<><alled coastal protection measuru had been in- troduced. They died like files. A few ltruuJed on through the session before IUCCWDbing. Sieroty's bill was the last IW'Vivor up to yesterday. 11IE TIE VOTE that killed his bill before the Senate Natural Resources Committee was Interesting. Among the nine commJtteemen, It needed a 5 to 4 blwing to get out on the Senate noor. Two senators from the northerly coutllne voted for the bill, Robert J, Lagomarsino {R-Ventura) and Arlen F. Gregorio (D-San Mateo). They were join- ed iii yea1 by. Committee Qi airman John A. Nejedly (R-Walnut Creek) and Albert Chiao's speech caught most observers by -surprise and was contrary to his earlier statements on the stand his coun- try would take as the newest member ol the world body. Communist China, which was named to replace Nationalist China in the U.N. by a strong vote three week! ago, was expected to take a 11oft line -at least at rirst. Chiao and 45 other members of China's official delegation arrived In New York Thursday to claim the seat they had been seeking for 22 years. BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UPI) - Nine men held on what police sources said were charges connected with using weapons and explosives broke from Crumlin Road Prison today in a well- plaMed, daylight escape, government of- ficials said. The officials said two teams of prisoners were playing football in an exercise yard at the rear of the pr1son when two rope ladders were flung over one 25-foot wall from outside the jail. They said a nuniber of the inmates, members of the outlawed I r i 11 h Republican Anny {ffiA ) apparently had been awaiting the ladders. Nine men immediately clambered up and over the wpll to freedom ln a maze of p.earby S. Rodda (IJ..Sacramento). • YOU WILL NOTE that in voting yes, the two northern coastllner1 are 1plit in party aflillaUon. Those voting no included two southerly coutline senators in Dennis E. Carpenter (It-Newport Beach) and Ralph C. Dills CD-San Pedro). They were joined in the naya department by Gordon Cologne CR- lndlo) and H. L. Richardson CR-Arcadia). Supreme Cou11: Will Hear U.S. Surveillance Appeal YOO WILL NOO'E thit in votinf no, the two aoutbern coastliner1 are apli in par- ty affiliatlon. AD of this may suggest that more lhan party polltica was involved In how the feelings toward coastline control shook down in the voting . The southern coast is more heavlly populated and developed than the rocky and colder sedion of the north state seashore. Thus it may be more palatable for the northern folks lo control areas which have not yet seen development. It gets stickier when you're talking about regions t~at already contain people, houses, business and industry. So anyway, the vote went 4 to 4 and Sieroty's plan for coastal C<lntainment ap- pears to have little chance of being reviv- ed for this session of the Legislature . But you might ask, "What ever happened to that ninth membet of the committee, the man who should have been the tie- breaker in the voting?" GOOD QUEmoN. He is Senator James Q. \Vedworth, the Inglewood Democrat. There were strong reports that Wedworth would apply the death blow to the Sieroty mea sure by casting the fifth nay ballot. But Sicroty reported that the good senator had told severa l con- servation leaders that he would vote for It. In the end, Wedworth took a walk. He didn 't 11how up for the deliberations or the voting. "Personal business" was the rtpOrt from his office. You may all cough quleUy now. Few people in th is day and age would suggea:t that coastline protection is a bad notion. But Sieroty's bill waa 10 1hot full •f amendments in the final colng that it looked like legislative Swiss cheese. Its demise may be just u well. Meanwhile. even in death, It may have •ccomplished much by turning the rpotlight on our coastline as one of Calilornia'1 most precious assets. WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court gave the government a chance today to head oll a full-dress hearing into Army surveillance of civilians. The court agreed to consider an appeal by the Justice Department aimed at suits by civilians who object to surveillance but cannot prove that they were hurt by it. The justices will consider the appeal 1ater in the term. This delays, and may uJtimately prevent, a spying hearing ordered last April by the U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Columbia. At issue is a suit fi1ed last year by the American Civil Liberties Union on behalf of th e Central Committee for Conscientious Objectors and in- dividuals who felt they had been spied upon. The suit was dJ!lmissed by U.S. Dist. Court Ju~e George L. Hart Jr., but he was reversed by the Circuit Court, which ordered him to find out whether · Army surveillance was "unrelated" to the Army's mission "as defined by the Constitution." The Justice Department's appeal. filed in August. doubted that the Constitution gives federal courts authority to bold such hearings. The suit, the department argued, offers no evidence that surveillance has caused MY inj ury to those \Vho filed it. In effect, the department said, the suit seeks an "advisory" opinion on "indefinite and abstract assertions." SALT Talks Resume VIENNA (UPI) -U.S. and Soviet negotiators began the si:"<lh round of the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT J today and all indications were they were going splendidly. The first session lasted two hours and 15 minutes, unusually long for the initial meeting of a new round of SALT. "The threat of the 'unknown' ls not sufficient to invoke the judicial process," said a group of government lawyers headed by Solicitor General Erwin N. Griswold and Asst. Atty. Gen. Robe.rt C. Mardian. The Supreme Court could kill the suit if it decides to overrule the Circuit Court. Shelling Takes Refugee Toll, India An1iou1ices NEW DELHI (UPI) -Government 1pokesmen said today about 75 East Pakistani war refugees were believed kllied or wounded in new artillery duels in an area where Pakistani and Indian troops fought their biggest battle of the latest border confrontation. In a printed release, defense ministry spokesmen said Pakistani artillery fired IO rounds into Bakshinagar village in Tripura territory along the eastern flank of East Pakistan Sunday_ 'ajgi}!._The release said 75 refugees were believe<l killed or wounded but gave no further det ails. Prirue Minister Indira Ga n d h i, meanwhile. was quoted by a spokesman for her ruling Congress Party as saying that she had no particular objections to observers from the United Nations visiting both sides of the Inda-Pakistani border, a possible modification of former policy. Accord ing lo the spokesman, Mrs. Gan- dhi said that any observers would have to take into consideration the entire situation in East Pakistan. including last December's general elections, the army crackdown or 1.tarch 25 and the present civil \\'ar situation. Snow Hits So·me Sections Fort Lauderdale Again Has National High of 78 c-••• CMfa 111 ......... fMty, V1rl1!111 ""-fli.M '"' _,,..1n1 Plou" Mo -lllt I N If kMff 111 ,,,.,,_ todlY 11'111 WWNMt•. Hlfll ''°" 111 ..... CMttll ..,,,_,,_ ''"" ,~ • .. .,, lflltl'CI """'.., .. 1v ... ,.,, .. f'l'll'I .... tL Wlltf ttm..,..IVN ,,, PR'C(l['(OPtlOU NATIOKAl WCATH(ll S[llVJC[ TO J:oa A.M. EST II -If-71 COlD'"f<,.,.__ H l lll, '• Su11, Moon, Tides TUl1D.fl't ..... llllfl • •:• '""'· s........... 21••·""· WIO"llOA't "''"'t lllfll .............. 1r• '·""· '·' Pl,.! lew .............. 1:•1,fll. t.1 S-. ~r ............. ,. t l'IO t,fl'I. '·' heMd few • ):N f,fl'I. O.l lu11 Jll-•:1'1.fl'I. Ith'*''''·"'· M.-ltlMt Jilt t .l'fl. Ith t:d 11.fl'I. Temperatures Ttmoetll\lrts I nd Ol'ftlDl!~UOl'I for t~e 2•-l!olt, oerloo endlno "' • '·'"· 1'11411 "1r Put. lS " 05 .S. 40 .I) --_ .. streets after passing through the ground.! of adjoining St. Malachy's College, the officials &aid. Prison officers on duty in the yard sped forward to halt the escape but were blocked "in a concerted movement of remaining prisoners," said an official at the home affairs m.inlstry. "There was some scuffling between guards and a nllmber of prisoners gaining valuable time for the prisoners to make good their escape," the official said. British Army troops and police raced to the prison and fiung a net of roadblocks across streets in a two-mile rad ius of the prison, home office officials said. By late afternoon, the men had not been recaptured, they said. A number of persons stopped by police and questioned brought a flurry of false reports that some of the men had bee.II cau ght, police sources said. None in Combat SAIGON (UPI) -Seven Americans were killed in Vietn!lm Monday, two of them when they stumbled into an Amer ican minefield near Hue, the U.S. Command reported today, There were no reported U.S. comblit casuaJties in the current battlefield lull. The only reported combat involving Americans was an air strike into North Vietnam today agairut a Communist antiaircraft battery that fired on U.S. planes bombing the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos, and B52 strikes In the central highlands. There was heavy fighting in Laos, where Communist forces bombarded government positions on the Plain of Jars In preparation for a dry season offensive, and in Cambodia where Com- munists bombarded the Phnom Penh airfield and overran a Cambodi'an in- fantry battalion 12 miles away. MOSCOW (UPI ) -Soviet masterapy Rudolf Abel, exchanged in 1962 for U2 spy pilot Francis Gary Powers, died Monday of lung cancer, Unofficlal Soviet sources said today. He was 68. Abel, a colonel in the KGB (secret police), had been ill for si:r months,· the sources said. He died 1n Moscow and will be buried Thursday. Abel was arrested in Brooklyn, N.Y., in 1957 on charges of 11pying for the• Soviet Union and was senteqced to ao years in prison. ' ·Io February, 1963, Abel was swapped for Powers, the pilot of an Americari U2 spy plane shot down over the SOY.Jet Union in 1960. The U2 incident scutUed the Big Four summit conference in Paris in 1960. Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushche1' refused to participate in the summJ t unless President Dwight D. Eisenhower apologized for spy nights over Russia. ••• now 2nd tire through Dec.4th Buy one General-Jet at the regular low price, and get the second General-Jet for 1/2 price. 4 ply nylon cord WHITEWAI I S 2nd TIRE PRICE F.E.T. SMALL INTERMEDIATE STANDARD LARGE " CARS CARS CARS CARS 6.50-13 7.75-14 7.75-15 8.25-1 4 8.25-15 8.55-14 $22 .00 $27.00 $27.50 $30.00 $31 .00 $32.50 $11.00 $13.50 $13.75 $15.00 $15.50 $16.25 per tire $ 1.76 $ 2.14 $ 2.16 $ 2.32 $ 2.37 $ 2.50 • DURAGEN" TREAD RUBBER •DUAL TREAD DESIGN MIN CHl!CIC: Should our 111pply Cl IOIMI ti,. •lrn OI' llMI run 11'1or1 dunno Ihle event. -will honor any ol'dtn. pflttd now lor 1111&11'9 d1llv1ry 11 tl'le 1dvertlNd prlc .. PENNSYLVANIA 3-PIECE TENNIS BALLS WIND 'N RAIN SUIT ~ "···· ,_._ n. •• J 1~98 - 8 HOOD 8 JACKET 8 SLACKS • W11'1d and r1lnproof • High visibility hti1vy duty p laatlc Special This Week Only 199 J $ SET ~ Charge it at General Tire ... ~-""'" ·-~-~· ...... ... . BENERAL DON SWEDLUND ,,ie.d 11 ttlown 1t 01n1t11 1:Jte Jtort., Compellllvtly priced at lnd1pendtnt dftlfn ditptt y(flg ltlt 0.Mtll tlfn, TIRE GENERAL TIRE SERVICE Ill Wnt 1tttri. CetN M- ftt• 540·5710 tr '46·SOJJ AVERY COAST GENERAL TIRE 1,t41 Hell ""4., Hmf""9• IMcai Pftoitt 147·StSO -----•STORE HOURS 0:00 AM· 0:00 PM COay lhru Davi _____ _. I -----__________ ...__ __ _,_,_ ___ -- • ! ' I ,I I 1 · ' I l 1 · I I • . . ' • • Ne .r1 Beaeh Totlay'• Final ' TUESDAY, NOVEMBER '16, 1971' ORANGE COUNTY,;CALIFORNIA • . VOL M, NO. 274, 4 SECTIONS,. 62 PAGES TEN .CENTS Huntington_ Approye·s Co.astFide -College Tax By RUDI NQmZIELSKI OI' IM Otff~ ,Jltt SMff The Huntingloo Beach tity-C:Mncil ri.tonday night-reaffirmed an agreement with th~ Coast Community College Distri~·to form?a ne~:rfng-agency-for the purpose or pu[ting in"$935,000'worth or improvements at Golden \Vest College. The projec:ttd two-cent · per $100 of as~ssed Valua~n· tax will also , hit prO- perty owners in the .other ci~ie! of Costa Mesa, Seal Be~ch, Fountain Valley, Westminster, MidWay City· and Newport ·~: $.' : ' .~ l • -I Winter Sun· i' · Beach which are part of the college district. Council member! app,roved tbe con- troversial proposal by a 4 to 3 vote after a lengthy debate on the ethics or im· posing•the •e11sessrnent on tlie other com· munities. · · The agreement was upheld by Coun.. ell.man Norma Gibbs and Councilmen D:lnald Shipley, Gtorge McCracken and Jack Green. Councilmen J,erry Matney, Alvin Coen and Ted Bartlett voted "oo." 'The agreement, formulated under a .,. seldom used llQV called the 1913 Act . would finance a new '603,000 wing to the Golden West -gymnasium and im- proVerhei1tS ln 'television 'and computer cabling. . .A similar proposal calling for t?00,000 worth or new facilities at Orange C.oast College was ?ejected after the Nnport Beacb counCD poin~ out that property owners In th&t community would also be subject to tbe tax. Councilm1n· Alvin Coen, chairman of a T -, ;, ~ Silhauetled by •Un. Onnge.·Coast famuy wadu In sparkllrig·w1ter on a Winter day 11 the beach. With croVtds of sµolmer sun worshipers hibernating in- land, winter beConte!I a 111.e Ill ao•nture and' redi$· covery at the beach for mlbt Qrange Co1st families -a time for long wl)ks Jn fi'esb, brisk air. )ury S.e~~iion y orty Will Make Jump In Auto Swind,l,e Trial, Under Way Into New Hampshire Race Jury selection began today In the Orange CoW!ty Superior Court trial of a H1;1ntington Beach man and two com· panions accused of working an auto con· tract swindle that cost the Newport Na· tional Bank an 4!stlmated $100,000. Judge Walter H. Steiner was assigned l6da.y to , ,the ·trl{!;I ~{ Robert William Dunlap. 31, of 17'D99 Westport Drive, John Stuart Hamilton, 25, Rowland Heights. and Ronlild ~i also known as .Ronald Oarence Bates, 3$. La 1ifirada. ·Alt were· accused of ' grand· UJeft and rotgery in an:Orange 'County Grind Jury indictment. Also named by tile• panel on identical charges was Frank. Peiry, 36,. Ii 1-firada, who is still at la~ and the gubject Of a nationwide hunt bf the FBl. 1t is aneged that the four men sub- mitted to the Newport bank through Hamilton, who was the ass Is tan t manager of the bank'6 dealer fmaoce division al ,the· iline of his arrest, auto sale contracts which bore the r iden- tlflcation of iionexlste.nt can aod the Motes_.Q{J)oneiistent motorists. Investigators said the group bilked tbe bank of at le¥! $100,000 before the . scheme ended wUh their arrest. last Jan. 29. ~ Punlap is tlle former own'r of "Bonded Cfdillac in Alhambra. Fire Chief Due For Testim9nial .• l • . . Retiring ~ewpot;t1 Bueh Finl Ch~ R. .[ "Jan" Briscoe will _be booortct• 1l, a testimonial dlnnd Dec. 1% at the Balboa f!avilion. . .Briscoe, chief for the past'·20'yeen, will leave his posiUon Dec. 31. 1 The dinner-dance is open to any of Bfiscoe's friends and associates and r'tservations must be mode by _Nov. 29 by writing llatlalJoa Cblef Jim Reed, 415 !Ind st. Tickets m ltO per person. A social bour will prt<ede the , feslivitios al IJO p.m. Dinner will do sorved at 7:30 p.m. .· Power of the Press PORTI.AND, Ol'e. (UPI) -Son. Henry Jackson (D-W.,h.), was spoa\iJ>i to a N WS confertnce Monday Whtn the lights ~ent out becauM! of an overloaded circuit from too many television cameras, lights and ampllfitrs. "There1s an t11mple of the J)O\\'er of the pr8"," Jockoon quipped. • LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Mayor Sam Yorty, a maverick Democrat, announced today he will seek the presidential nmn· i11ation in New Hampshire's firsl·in·lhe-- ilatlon primary March 7. Yorty, who made hi! third polilical pilgrimage to the state earlier this 1nonth. is the second Democrat to an- nounce his bid for the Democratic nomination in 1972. followine Sen. George S. McGovern (0.S.0.) "Encouraged by the advtce or manr friends and supporters, I have decided to become a candidate for President .''· Yorty said in a statement prepared ror a neWs con£erence here. . "Our c•mpaign is already well un-- der way in New Hampshire." Yorty said. The Los Angeles mayor said, however. he has no intention of entering all the primaries, and at this point the California primary wlll."climax our campaign. '"lbe flrst stec is ,New Hampshire, Alttr that we sha I see,•1 Yorty stUd. · "Other states · may be added as the , campaign progresses;' Yorty said. "We will be selective. We· have no intention of trying to raise · the huge sums of rnonef necessary jo enter all the primaries." · ~ Yorty said he h~ no illuslons about the diflicu!Ues in 1"inning t.ht support of the voters tn New Hampshire. which is considered to be. strongly bthind Sen. Edmund S. Muskie .(0.~JaJne ). "lily position on the issues will be that 0£ a moderate Democrat." Yorty said, .. a position-I-hope will appeal n..ot only to a majority or Democrats ·but • also many Republican~ v.·ho are disillusioned with trk current reSort t'o sheer political expediency by the Nllon administration in its eiforts to win the election al au costs or by any 1means in 19?2," he 11aid. 'Never Better,' Says Rubinstein PHILADELPHIA <APi -PLanl~ Artur Rubinstein. says he Is content with llis performance of two concerts marking the 65lh anniversaty of his American debut. "I never Jet rnyselr play worse, and t never played better than tonight," the 82· year-old Rubinstein said Monday night after a benefit performance for retired members of the Philadelphia Orchestra. Accompanied by the Phllodelphla, RubinsteJn played Brahms• stcond con· cttto and Rachmaninoff's second. ) ·Uf'I Ttlttohti. WILL ENTER PRIMARY Mlyor Sim Yerty Nlunhers Theory: Quake to Hit' SF ·Area in '7 4 PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) -U hirlory 00.. repeat Its.If -a theory known H "'the numbers g'am'.e" -tllen the San Francisco area lJ due for another major earthquake in tt7•. a federal eJPert said Monday. · · · Or. Don Tochtt, direCtor of the Earttt.. quake Mechanism Laboratory in San fi'rancisco. noted the Bay Area had a grut quake In 1838 and another in 1906, 68 years later. "Numbers" players would add 68 Y,tars and predict another major quake In i974. Sllld Tocher. who b studying Ille mechanics of earthqualtes ·as the first ltep lo predicting.them. - subcommiUee studying the Golden West proposal, said be had contacted the other cities and received letters w b I c h adamantly objected to the plan. ''I c~t see tm~ing AJ;!Othet taling agency," sild Coen, calling the 1913 Act an unacceptable method of financing capital jlnprovemenl.s. , · Though be ..... 811~ In bis feellni• ·by Matney and Barllett, Coen en- countered ,heavy opposition when he call· ed for rejection of the plan. Said Councilman Green, "We should not be overly concerned with cooperaUng with other cities. I am fully iD support of this, .regardless what the other cities do." Mayor George McCracken also implied that he ba(l no feelings of guilt for· what was beJng .:.done Upecfilly slnC:e Hi.lrF . tington Buch b commlttoil rmanclally lo the improvement of the Onnge County Harbor District and flood and ..,.., pro- ject.. from which, he said, local resldf.Dl.s realize no benefits. Coast Community College Chancellor Norman Watson told the council that the improveme.nts were primarily for recrea• tional programs intended to benefit local residents. He was backed by Golden West presJ .. dent Dr. Dudley Boyce Who said the city would be justified in imposing the "relatively sirrlple asse~ment d.13trict." With another vote, the H Beach City Council later indlca · it would. back any similar proposal. for Orange Coast College. Matney and Coto again voted "no." 'Playboy' Arrested Seizure Made in Newport-Harbor · By ARTHUR ft. VINSEL Of ni. ri.nw '1i.1 st.tr A playboy whose import empire, financed by a major trading stamp com· pany purchasing premiums, apparently crumbled due to the recent shipping strike was arrested aboard his big Italian motor vessel in Newport Harbor Monday. An ex-head accountant for Blue Chip Stamp Company -charged b y authorities with aiding an vnbeulement scheme that subsequently -raked off Quick Study Of Courts' Site Passes BJ ,JAL'll BROBAClt • Of .. ....,. ""' ltlfl Orange County supervisors today ordered a hurry up study to detumlne a new iil.e for the Harbor Area Judicial District courts. The action was pUshed by Fifth District Supervisor Ronald W. C3spers of Newport Beach who said he assumed that the 5.S-acre site the county now owns in Newport Center was no longer viable. Real Property Services Di r e c to r stanley Krause agreed with Casp\!rs saylng that as far as he could determlne the City or Newport Beach would like to join in a mutual cancellation of the con- tract to build the courts in Newport Center. Both Krause and Caspers referred to the Newport Civic Center bond' issue which recenUy failed. Several prospective new sites were discussed. They include the Orange county Fairgrounds~ the Emkay property on J.facArthur Boulevard and the Collins Radio property in the same general loca- tion. Other sites in the Orange County Airport clear zone south of Pali.sades Road and on MacArthur Boulevard closer to Corona del Mar were considered but abandoned. Krause was ordered to have a complete report on alternatives on Nov. 30 at 10:30 a.m. ~1argaret Hamlin. chief administrative officer of the Harbor Area courts read a letter from1he judges or the courts whJch urged immediate action and addlUonal planning for the-interim -perlOd-before- new courts can be constructed. The l.U.r repeated judg"' protests ol the deplorable conditions or present court facllitie.5 and said that they could not long continue to carry out the perfonnance or their duties in 11uch facilities. Caspers also asked that the county counsel be instructed to investigate the legality of the county selling the 5.6 acres now owned in the Newport Center. The possibility o( the Incorporation s?.ibn or--the new t ltY or Irvine-which would be Included In the Harbor Judicial District will be considered seriously ln the Krause report, he said . Irvine Candidates Meet Set Dec. I Candidates for .the lrvine city councll have been invited to appear at a meet.in&' of the Tuftte Rock Broadmooa eom.· munity AasocliaUon Dec. J at 7:30 p.m. in the U Versity Park School mulU..purpose room., Mrs. Louise M. Oliver, president of the association, said each candidate will ba allowed to speak 4 to I minute!, depen- ding on how many are there. There are 32 candlda~1 for the flvt seals up for eleclioll Dec. 21, whtn resl· dents afao vote on whether there will be a city fti-a. city council to govern, Mrs. QUver 11id a quesUon-and·answer sosslon will follow the talkl. . ' $150,000 or more -was taken into custody too. · Dennis P. Warren, 45, and Donald L. Cook, «, were arraigned this morning in Los Angeles Municipal Court, Division 40, on one count each of grand theft. Deputy District Attorney Charles Kelson said both men listed their home address as Warren's SS.foot yacht, the Shenandoah. Police said · a manhunt dating back to early October under the eye of Kelson Votes No Now finally-focused late Wednesday morning on slip 91 at 829 Baya:ide Drive in Newport Beach. Arrest warrants carrying $50,000 bail for Warren and $25,000 for Cook had been issued. Tbe Uls Angeles County deputy district attorney said Warren had moved the Shenandoah from its usual berth at Sausalito on San Francisco Bay to (See EMBEZ7.LE, Pap II Carpenter Plans New Coast Bill Next Term . ~ . . By L. PETER Dl1!G °' ........... State Senator Dennis E. Carpenter (R· Newport Beach) said today· he will write a coasUine management bill nert year that should pass the Legislature becauae It will be doslgned lo protect private pro. perty rights as well as the Califomli. coastline. Carpenter, whose vote Monday helped kill the last major shoreline legislation left in Sacramento this year, blamed defeat of the measure on a combination Of reasons -all or which he sald would be ellmlnated from the law he'll draft. AB 1471, the bill authored by Assemblyman Alan Sieroty ( D , Lo s Angeles), died in the Senate Natural Resources CommJttee on a 4 to t vote after a stormy journey through the legislative process. ft pitUd conservationists against major real estate Jol)bles aod coastal com, munities and-other goVemmentaJ 31en· cies from which lt sought to wrest local control of shoreline development. It was this so-called usurping of pro- party rights and I o e a I government authority that Carpenter highlighted in his post-mortem this morning. "The ends don 't justify the means," he said. {;r * * State Controls Over Coastline Opposed by Jury Orange County Grand Jury members oppose •ny Jegislatlon giving the state conb"ol over all coastaJ development in California. In a report. signed by Foreman Doreen li1arshall of Newport Beach, the jury said they had no objection to the state establishing criteria for s h or e 11 n e devtlOpment. bUt Oec1arRI thit actual control should remain with local govem- merit. Tbey1said this was the stand of other Orange County governmental agencies which the jury 1Upported. The Board -Of Supervisors was urged to light a state law whlch would take over control of coastal development and to aerlous!y consider the preparation or a county coastal deve1oPmtnt plan and take action lo otpedlte the ptan's adoption. Tbe jury 1lltoni...t rold in part: "The coun\Y pltnnfng staff bu the nocosury exptrliso to Mtabllsb guidellnos 1n6 plans 9Ultable for the proper and ordorty development of our coastal areas." The report added that C01111dor1ble time hu been spent by the county and other 1oca1· qencies in preparing coastal stildles. But It warned: "Despite these 1tudlea, the county's plans haVi! not moved forward as rapidly u they should and It Is feared that legislation will be enacted which will give control of the coast.1 d1v!lopmtnt to the 8late before plans can be adopted locally." Re said de'real ol the measure can bl blamed on the bill's .. disregard for private property rights, disregard for tu relief proposals for property under the mora'torium and disregard for I o c ii I government control." He s,aid environmentalists also share the blame for defeat of the measure they &O badly wanted. "The eco-hysteria of the times that everything representint grow t h and change is automatically bad for the en- vironment" did not sit well with legislators, he &aid. Carpenter said the bill he'll introduce will take all these facton Into con, sideration. "It will provide tax relief where land is deemed not to be developed," he said, "Jt will observe the constitutionality o! private property and the rights therein. "It will leave the local area authority to handle local government with ideally a state agency to overs~ the criteria t!:Stablished and to insure an e q u .: I representation from both the state and the local level." Carpenter stressed, however,-"Mcnt Importantly, It will protect the coasUine where such protection is needed for both the benefit of the public and the state of CaJifomia.'' Carpenter predicted there very likely will be others who introduce coastline legislation in· the next session and said those bills "that have a sensible, fair and effective program that are based on a comproml.ie and rational approach to the entlre·&ituaUon will-be.successful.·• Conservati9nlsl! may not wait for the Legislature to act. however, as their spokesmen began talking about a statewide shor61ihe protection initiative. Sleroty, him11elr, bitter after the. defeat (S.. COASTAL, P1ge I) or..,e Weadoer Cold, gusty winds will continue Wednesday w I th tempenitures along the coast in the low IO's ri5' ing to 67 inland. 1Aw1 tonight 1>6- tween 34 and ti. INSWE TODAY l t'r th< blggut ., .. k of tht vear m community theater on. &ht Otanot Cocut with riz n1 a hows opening to ·join' t ight 0U1tr1 in progress. Ste EnUr· tainment, Pagt 19. , Ctllftnlll I Milt9tl ,._.... Ii C!Mlln.I Jl•H flt.tlMll ,._ +I c..in 11 o,..... Ctwtt t ~ , .............. '' °'9111 JiltfkM t lfitftl lt:-M Dl"ftr&K t llitdl .. ,.... .. U ••1""91 '"' • ,......... " • • ...., ......... , , .. ,. TlliM"'' 1, ,illtillte 1•11 ' WMftllr 4 ""'""'" '' WtMM't """' It-II AMI LlllW'I II Wwlill *-.. Me.let It •• DAILY PILOT N Professor Defend s His Candida ex. UC Irvine Professor Dr. Arnold Binder. •n Irvine city council candidate, said to- da y ht doesn't Lhlnk the fact .that he ha• not worked toward incorpora'1\on makes him any less a quallfled candidate. It does to One of his oppor.ent.s,.Jerry Cboyke, wbo last week ~sponded to earlier crlticiw by Binder by pointing out that Binder had sat on the sidelines ~while he and others had mapped in- corporation plans through the Council of the Communities of lrvint:. But today Binder queried. "Why. oh why do some candidates seem to think that only those who worked toward in- corporation are qualified to nin for the city council? "Itltegrity, ability, knowledge, honesty, character, effectiveness and service to humanity never enter as valid criteria of qualifications to the.m, on1y whether one worked for incorporation," Binder said. Binder said his energies in the past have been directed toward ','commu nity agencies and services." Choyke had also sai~ 1Binder's charges he and othe r cer members were guilty of "vilification and abuse" of several Irvine community groups, other candidates and •the San Joaquin School Boards were un- true . Binder said today they are true and aaid their statements questioning actions by school board members and the Motives of candidates who in the past had opposed incorporation demonstrated iru.. From P•ge 1 EMBEZZLE. • • Newport Beach about one week ago. .. Warren heads the Shenandoah Com· .pany, which Kelson said almost ex· elusively dealt with the Blue Chip Stamp Company headquartered in [.(ls Angeles. Sergeant Han-y Wright, of the Orange County Harbor Patrol, said he took a launch to check the Shenandoah when contacted by Kelson at mid-morning. They confirmed the big Italian-built .Sagliato cabin cruiser was at her slip and men fitting Warren's and Cook'• descriptions were aboard. Deputy DI.strict Attorney K e I 1 o n .described Warren as rather a playboy - , both are divo rced -and said Cook Is a alight, mild-mannered accountant type. The pair had been sharing quarters aboard the vessel, which was berthed In Newport Harbor until transferred to Sausalito Yacht Harbor 11 months ago. Kelson said Warren was supplying transistor radios, tape ffi!Orders and sim· ilar import Items to Cook's employers as trading stamp premiums. "I guess they sort or fell on hard time:s with the dock strike," he explained. Kelson said Cook was respon1ible for accounts payable for the Blue: Chip Stamp Company, which be left about the . Ume: an audit allege:d.Iy disclosed hu1e cub losses. Upper Newport. Bay Tour Set Saturday A free environmental tour of uppt!r Newport Bay will be sponsored Saturday from t 1.m. to 10 a.m. by the Frie:nds of Newport Bay. 'lbe w1lking tour begins al the in· tenection of East.bluff and Back Bay Drives. Participanl!I will be met at various statiom along the path by six 1pe:1kers. Speakers and subjects will be Ray Williams , fish; Dr. Charles Greening, birds; Harold Fitzwater, fossils: Gary Rogers and John Wilkerson, plant life, and Frank Robinson, history. DAILY PILOT OlNfll CDQf "'*'"""'° fl*PNtr l•Mrf H. W•M ,,..... .......... J1c~ .. c.,1.., ~ .......... 0-. .. A\IMftf n-·· li:ttn1 If~ """"'" A. .... .,.,111 •• ~··· L P•I•' Ji:ri•I ......., ._. ""' .... / '-11.-.,.rt a..Ji Oftk9 .,,. JJJJ Htw,.-t l111l1v1t4 w.m., All•,_ r.0.1 .. 1111. 12•1, --Clllllf ..... : -W.t • .., """' u.... .. d11 m ,.., .. , ,,_ • ......... , ._,,I l11B IMdi ......... ... ~ ....... I.I c.tMlll9 .... DAILY l'ILOT ,.,_. .. Ill' l lcNIJ1 Kotllll1' EARLY RISERS -After risin~ early to hear for himself the decibel level of Hare Krishna services in Laguna Beach, Judge J.E. T. "Ned" Rutter (right) departs premii;es this morning with enigmatic glance. With him are Roy Christopher Richard and Marjorie LeGaye, attor· ney for the sect. Jurist Makes 'Pilgrimage' To Hare l(risl1na Churcl1 By TOM BARLEY Of frit Dlllf 1'1111 1t1H Saffron·robed members of the con· tro~rsial Hsre Krishna se:ct of Laguna Beach had .a new "worshiper" in their ranks today -black-robed Orange Coun- ty Superior Court Judge J.E.T. "Ned" Rutter of Newport Beach. But Judge Rutter, a de vout Episcopalian, .. is .more concerned with fightlhg than awitchint. And a series 'of spats betwee:n sect members and angry neighbors sent him to the cult's church - a converted lwo-story home -at 641 Ramon@1 St. to me:asure for himsel f the noise , levels emanating from t h e establiShment. Judge Rutter, declining lhe offer of a yellow raincoat from a grinning court of- ficial, ordered the dawn pilgrimage after hearing testimony that shouti ng, chan· ting, cymbal clashing and the playing of a variety of musical instruments had of· fended neighbors on Ramona. Street and brought complainl!I from as far away as Pacific Coast Highway. Laguna Beach city attorney Tully Seymour asked Judge Rutter to order the Hare KrJ!hna members to keep the noise within reasonable limits. "It 's the most difficult thing In the world to define the level at which noise becomes offensive," said Judge Rutter. "We agree there have lo be limits but I'm going to have to go down there and put an ear to the door myself before I can draft the final wording of my court order." It is already agreed that whatever noise limits Judge Rutter imposes must be rigidly observed between the hours of 10 p.m. to 10 a.m. on Saturdays ~nd Sun· days and from 10 p.m, to 8 a.m. on weekdays. .Judge Rutter also r:uled MQnday in a hearing at I ended by Hare Kris hna members and complaining neighbors that visitors to the church for the weekend services will not be allowed to park in tbe immediate vicinity. Local resideats complained to the city council about the noise levels produced by Krishna services before the volume of criticism led Seymour to file his Superior Court action against the sect. A neigflbor com mented Monday that the Krishna services "could only be ~mpared to the wailing of the banshee and it was hell on earth sometimes when they got that house filled for an evenin g service." Krishna worshipers led by homeowner Roy Christophe:r Richard, agreed before the court hearing Monday lo voluntarily restrict the length and volu me of the:ir services and to comply with any court order Judge Rutter may devise. "If they don't comply there just won't be any services," Judge Rutter said. * * * * * * Judge Imposes Partial Curbs on Hare l(rishna By PATRICK BOYLE ''I do understand your religion and t Of "'' ~u,. 1'1111 s 1111 am not ignorant of what you are doing," After getting up early to come and Judge Rutter told sect leader Roy listen to the bells and chanting of the Richard, also known as Rfavde:va Laguna Beach Hare Krish na sect, a Dafadhikari. Superior Court judge lhis morning issue:d "My job in this case is not to represe:nt his own chant in ordering a partial the ~ailed establishment and try to put curtailment of the .religious group's ac-down your religious service. My job is to tivities. -........._ work out a compromise between you and St.anding in the 6:30 a.m. cold outside your neighbor~." the temple, Judge J. E. T. "Ned" Ruller Richard indicate:d tht sect would com· !aid he did not feel the chanters were ply with the order about the Sunday disturbing the nearby residents with the servlees by holding them elsewhere. almost inaudible ceremony. "I am also going to order that from However he did note that because or now on," Judge Rutter noted , "all Laguna 'Beach zoning laws, the steilcef' ser.vlces IJrconducted quietly enough so could only be conducted for residents of that they can'l be heard in the neighbor· the temple at 641 Ramona Ave .. thus put· ing houses when the windows and doors ting a stop to the regular Sunday af· are closed." ternoon religious service11. The Sunday ''lf lhe ceremony Is conducted i'IO cer_emony often attraets about !IO persons qulelly that nobody hears them," he told whde only about ten Jive at the temple. fltlorneys, "then the resident~ won't care Residents of the area and city orflclal! ii they conduct them all day." ha~ sought a halt Jo the Sunday service, Judge Rutter did nole however, that noting legal technallty that as a church the case could raise several quesllom of the te:mple needs lS parking spaces. lt basic rights if the sect complies with lhe has two. zoning ordinance by obtaining IS more . Judge Rutter and attorneys for both the parking spaces. city and the Hare Krishna ses:t took part "I •m not going to be able to make in tPe mOrning "listening test" to them conduct the services so quietly that dett¢nlne if the service was too loud. nobody htar.s them {if they comply as a The group listened rrom the alley. from church),'' Judge Rutter noted. "But ii the windows of several 1p1rtment.s, and stems to me that It will be very diflicult even took off lhetr Jhoes to enter the for them to mtt:t the parking ordinance." temple. Standing In the furnltureless living In rtlatlng his finds and the order lo room of the hou.st. Judge Rutter told , the president of the sect, Judge Jtutter Richard that his members should also noted that he was 11wart or thrlr strong tone down lhe use of cymbals and horns rettglou1 mo!ivalion for conductlng the ilt the ceremony to ketp the neighbors e8rly services. He said he ma jored In happy. religious studies at Princeton Univtrslty, "Try to blow It softly," he said in leav· rpeciallztna: in Hindu and Oriental Ing, "11nd l think the neighbors will not be religions. unreasonable." I • Survey of Econi>my ; A UC Trvlne Project 21 study ·ttam lr plckl.na up Costa Meu support for an e1· amlnation of Orange County's economic development. Hugfi Halderman, lrtasW'er of the Pro- ject 21 experiment, told Costa Mesa coun,cllmen Monday night that seven cities have contributed $1 ,950 so tar for the economic study. · Costa Mesa chipped In another $500 for the effort after hearing Halderman's ex· p!anation of Project 21 '1 financial needs. In the past , he explained, Project 21 :..- a volunteer system Of e1pe.rts assigned to atudy varlout eotJntywlde aubjecta -wls fjoanced throuah atate grants given to UC!. "UCI supplied the money and the place to work. Our committee supplied the ex- perts," eiplained Halderman, a civil engineer from Santa Ana. "Now state funds have bttn cut off. UCI can only supply us the facilities, not the money." He explained that project 21 needs the money primarily to pay for brin&lng outaide speakers to Orange County and • for publishing a report on Ill s!udy al lhe end of the year. "This year we are going to look into economic development and such things a! housing for workers, and zoning and tax· jng practices on industry throughout the county,'' Halderman told the council. · Project 21 recently completed a majo"r study on the need for low-cost housing la the county. Costa Me1a Councilmn Wiiiiam St. Clair took part in th.at 1tudy. "I don't think you'll get a better return on your money than by investin1 In this project," St. Clair commented. From Page 1 COASTLINE. Bonds for Tax • • of his bill, said he {e:lt a vote of the ~ pie may be the only way to get a tGUJb law enacted. ' Dana Citizens Attempt Bargain "The Legislature doesn't understand the: depth of the people 's feelings on pro- tecton or the environment," he said. Sleroty said he feels .two things were responsible for the outcome -Governor Reagan's attitude and pressure from lol>- bylsts. "I believe the principal reason for this bill's defe:at Is the attitude of the governor and his administration," Sie roty said, but he went on to take equally strong swings at others. "The Legislature has been playjng the old game, playing with the people closesl +., the legislative process -the lob- byists." The full-time lobbyists wor~ for special intrest groups "have: ce.rtainly earned their fees killing environme:ntal bills this session." The 4 to 4 committee vote was one "aye" vote short of what was needed to send the measure to the Senate Finance Committee. which bad been expected to send It quickly to the floor where passage: was highly probable. Sieroty said an absent committee member, Sen. James Q. Wedworth (D- Hawthorne:) would have: voted for the measure , but he had been excused "fo r pr~sonal reasons." Voting for the measure were com· mittee chairman John A. Nejedly IR· Walnut Creek ), and Senato rs Arlen Gregorio (0.San Mateo), Albert S. Rodda ([).Sacramento) and Ro b e r t J. Lagom arsino (R-Ojai) . Volin" with Carpenter against it were c::ens. H. L. Richardson (R·Arcadia), Ralph C. Dills fD-San Pedro ) and Gordon Cologne (R·lndio). Dliring brief debate before the vote, Cologne had aaid, "If this is such a good bill, why don't they include the whole state?" Joining Sieroty at his·news confe.rence alter the v~e was Mrsj Janet• Adams, director of the Coastal Alliancei who an- nounced plans to force the initiative. Conservationists will need about 325,000 si~natures to get the question on the ballot. ·. · Mrs. Adams also indicated her groups may very well band together to campaign for some legislators and agaimt others next year. Park Site Top.ic Of BQard Meet Newport Beach Parks, Beaches and Recreation Commissioners will discuss the feasibility of a proposed park site in Newport Shores tonight at 7:30 o'clock in City Hall. The possible 2.5 acre park ls in the vicinity of the Santa Ana River and is part of the proposed interim park plan. The plan has divided the city into 34 neighborhoods to determ ine park needs. Commissioners have been discussing the plan gene.rally , bu t tonight will 2:ero in on the first specific. By FREDERICK .SCHOEMEllL Of ... O.UJ l'llef lllff Bargaining like management officials, a Dana Point citizens' group Monday night told the: Saddleback College board it will slipport a $.1 milrion bond issue to fund a science-mathematics buildings If trustees decide: to drop a 3~nt_, tax, recently approved to fund· the structure. Responding to a question from trustee • Patrick Backus, Paul Sayre, leade:r of the group, said he would "work and work hard for the bond." Other: in his group nodded their approvfl. "I'd vote for such 1 bond," declared David Sandburg, a Laguna Niguel resi· dent. "J think the voters have made their position clear that they want this campus to expand on a pay-as-you-go bash." He said he based his belief on the re- cent rejection of a '25 million bond issue: in Sept.ember by voters in the large col· lege district. Following the bond defea t\ trustees voted Oct. 18 to levy a special 3f.cent tax during the 1972-73 fiscal year to raise $2.2 million towards the: $4 .5 million science· mathematics complex. The remaining $2.3 million of the cost would be picked up by the state with funds made av'ailable under the Junior College Construction Act of 1967. Sayre's Joose-lcpit • group threatened recall after the board decision, but Last week decided to postpone the recall and ask the board to drop the tax levy. · While Sayre said he' would support the Rogers to Speak In '!E,ne1ny ,Ca1np': Newport Beach Vice Mayor Howard Rogers' trip to Costa Mesa Thursday to address the Citizens' Harbor Area Research Team (CHART) may not take as long as hi;_ last visit. He will talk at 7:30 a.m. in the Mesa Verde Country Club, with co!fee and rolls also on. the menu. "Who Wants lo Live In Costa Mesa?" is the topic of his talk. Some, time. back, published comments by Councilman ,Rogers aboul Costa Mesa led !o a gag in which he was picked up by police on his next trip inland. He was re:leased on a technicality, that there was insufficient evidence he in- tended to really badmouth Newport Beach 's sister city on the mesa. Presumably, laws on double jeopardy v.·ill prevent his being arrested again for the same crime. Fund Bill OK'd WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate a~ oroved a House-passed bill Monday night f« $2.0J7 billion in appropri&iona for military con~trucllon thi.s fiscal year. smaller bond issue, he chided the college board, claiming it has developed 1 "credibility gap" with the community. - ''The philosophy of this board is a big part of it. People vehemently dis agree with this board and you have lost th:. respect of the electorate," Sayre charg· ed. "You have impaired and impacted the functioning of this college and arl splittin,it: this communJty right down the middle." Trustee Backus responded to the chari;e:s, calling Sayre "a perpetuaJ egotr1pper." "You're • loser and everything you touch tunu to tarnJsh," Backus tume4. Sayre was an unsuccessful candidate for Backus' seat in 1969. • After the discussion cooled down, trustee Hans Vogel, pointed out that µ: the college does not 10 ahead. with the science-mathematics building with the SO percent in state matching funds, th·e district "will have to pay the entire cost in just a few years. Either we take that state money now or forget it." Vogel added that the college must ac- cept incoming freshmen and is not in a position to be selective, such as 1tat.e col· leges or universities. "And iI we: don't have the room for the students, we have only one alternative - that's to send them to other junior col· leges and pay $1,000 per student per year to have them educated." "That cost," chipped in trustee Michael Collins, "is prohibitive." Taking a suggestion from Sayre, col· lege president Fred Bremer said hi would activate a "citizens advisor)' group" to explore the pc>ssibility of haV· ing the ]i. million bond perhaps at elee- liof\ tim~n April of ~xt ye:ar. Trustees a;reed to continue discussion on the financ ing of the science· mathematics buildin g until their ne~ regular meeting, Dec. 13. They took no Jtction on whether or 11ot lo rescind t~ 3f.cent tax le:vy. Rites Conducted For Ann B. Price Funeral services were conducted to;~Y in Pacific View Memorial Park for Ann B. Price, 62, a former Newpol't Beach ci· ty !mploye. who dted Saturday. : Born in Springfield, Ill., she resided ln Orange County for 41 years. Mrs. Price worked for the city treasurer's offid! for 15 years during the 1930's and 1940's: She was a life me:mber of the Santa Ana Assistance League and the Santa Ana Country Club and a past president of the Business and Pro!esslona! Women'i Club. . Survivors are her husband, John R. Price. 2397-lD Via Marlposa West, Laguna Hills, and a cousin, Betty Met· rick of B!ll. Let Us Put You On The Map Near the 1ntr1nc1, inside our sfore, is 1 giant n1w m1p. We 1r1 in -the proeess of identifying all of the homes wt have carpeted 1inc1 1965 on this m•p with colored pins. (A 'different color for H<!i you,.) • Clo se scrutiny will i:l1t1ct 1om1 int1r11tin9 facts: fintly , we h1v1 carpeted hom11 on virtu .. elly ev1ry str eet in the 1r1a. Secondly, th1 pins ore in buneh11, in dic1t in9 WORD.QF.MOUTH oc!vortislng. Thirdly, tho number of homos we have c1rpeted is st1g91ring. ALDEN'S If you desire honesty, experience, end r1com .. m1nd1tion1 from n1ighbors w1 have worked for, then Aldon's is THE PLACE! CARPnS • DRAPES 1663 l'lacentla Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOUIS: M ... tin T11m., 9 to 1:10 -"''·• 9 1e 9 -Sot .. t:JO to I ' • • r I I • I I ' t ,- Costa Qesa Today's Fl•":1 EDITION N.Y. Stoek8 ' vor. 6-4, NO. 274, 4 S6CTIONS, 62 PAGES ' ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' . TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1971 TEN CENTS l " • I Hunti.ngton Approve·s Coastwide College · Tax By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of "-0.lr, Pllet llttl' The 11unUngton Beach City Cotj.ncil 111onday ntgbt reaffirmed an agreement with the Coast Community <»liege District to form a llf:W luing agency for the purpose of putting in $935,000 worth of improvements at G<ilden West College. The projected two-cent per $100 or assessed valuation tax wUJ also bit pro- perty owners in the other cities af Costa · Mesa, Seal Beach, Fountain Valley, \Vestminster, Midway Cify and Newport WILL .ENTER PRIMARY M.yor Sim Yorty Yorty Pia~. To Enter '72 NH Primary LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Mayor Sam Yorty, a maveMck Democrat, announced today be will seek tht presidential nom- iJlation in New Hampshire's first-ln-the- nation primary l\fareh 7. Yorty, who made hls third politk111 pilgrimage to the state· earlier um month, is the second DeiDocrat to an- nouoce his bid for the: Democratic nomination in 1972, following Sen. George s. McGovern (O.S.D.) "Encouraged by the ad:vice of many friend s and supporters, I have decided to ·become a candidate for President." Yorty said in a statement prepared for a nev.•s CQnference here. "Our cr.mpatgn is already well un- der way in New Hampshire," Yorty said . The Loa Angeles mayor said, however, ht has. na intention of entering . ~ll ~ primaries, and at this point the California (See YORTY, Pase Z) Mesa Councilmen Pass Stringent Noise Controls ' ,Ji. strong ordinance to control S<Kalled noise pollution was quietly passed ~lon­ dl.y night by COsta Mesa 's five coun- cilmen. •No one stepped to the podium to oppose cJr iupport the noise ardinance during the ~blic hearing. ' Beach which are part ol the college district. Council members approved the con· troversial proposal by a 4 to 3 vote after a lengthy debate on the ethics of im- posing the assessm~t on the other com· mUllitie!. The agreement was upheld by Coun- cilman ~orrna Gibbs and Councilmen Donald Shipley, George McCracken and Jack Green. Councilmen Jerry Matney, ·Alvin Coen and Ted Bartlett voted "no." The agreement, formuJated. under a Mesa Pay lncrea.ses Approved Raises totaling about $14,000 for 15 of Costa Mesa'1 18 department heads were approved P.1ondr.y night by the city coun- cil. Councilmen approved the salary in· cre4ses -all subject to action by the na- tional Pay Board -in executive session and made little public comment on the action. ' All wages recommended by City Manager Fred Sorsabal were accepted by the council. Councilmen also granted a $4,000 annual increase to Sorsabal who had made no recommendation on his own aalary . "It is the council 's intention to give him a healthy bolSst." lt1ayor Robert Wilson said. "But we don't know if we can ac· tually give him that much because of the Prl~ Board action." Sorsabal, who is currently on vacation in the Virgin Islands, currently earns $24,000 aooually. If his increase is a~ proved under the new national policy, Sor~bal's salary will be $27,948 annually. a, 15 percent increase. The city managei"'a increase . was the "highest granted in the city. WUson said a survey .of. ptbfr ~ange Qlunty cities, in- cluding smaller ones, 'showed eosta 11.fesa's manager was only 14th in salary, "·bile the city is 7th <largest in the county. The increases granted ,were for salary ranges, not actual salaries. When the city grants a five per~nt increase it means the minimum salary through the max- imum salary for a position is increased five percent. A specific employe can be at one of several steps Oii the salary range. Ranges granted (monthly salarieS listed) for 1971-72 were : -Roger Ndh, police chief, $1,538 to $1,870 (2.5 percent increase). -Robert Duggan, assistant c i t y manager, $1 ,538 to $1,870 (2.5 percent in· crease). -Robert Oman, finance director, $1,464 to $1,780 (2.5 percent increase). -Jobn Marshall, fire chief, ,t,464 lo $1,780 (2.5 percent increase). -Wllllam Dunn, planning director, $1.429 to 11 ,737 (five per~nt Increase). -Norman Spielman, director o f engineering services, $1,361 to $1,654 (no raise). -Jame• Eldridge, director of public :iervices, $1,361 to $1.654 (no raise). -IUcbard Hanhart. director of building !lafety, $l132S to $1,614 (2.5 percent In· crease). -Joseph Jonts, parks director, $1,175 to $1 ,429 (5 percent increase). -Keith Van Holt, recreation director, $1,147 to 11 ,394. (7.5 percent increase). -Roy Stoddard, golf course superin- tendent, $1,147 to $1,394 (7.5 percent in· crease). -Richard Xreke.meyer, data pro- cessing manager, $1 ,147 to $1 ,394 (10 per- cent increase). -William Savage. facilities and equi~ (See RAISES, Pal" ZI Bill • seldom used law called the 1913 Act, would finance a new $603,000 wing to the Golden West gymnasium and im· provements in television and computer cabling. A similar proposal calling for '$700,000 worth of new facilities at Orange Coast College was rejected after the Newport Beach Council pointed out that properly owners in that communitjt would also be 11ubjecl to the tax. Councilman Alvin Coen, chairman of a DAILY l'lLOT l t1!1 ,llllt. E"!lle• t:hoice Senior Paula Knight, 17, is Estancia High School's 1971 homecoming queen.. Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Knight of li1esa Verde reigne.d over homecoming events late last month. • Carpente! Says He Will Author New Coast Bill By L. PETER KRIEG Of 1111 Dlllly l'lt.lt ll•ft State Senator Dennis E. Carpenter (R· Newport Beach) said today he will write a coastline management biD next year that sbouJd pass the Legislature because it will be designed to protect private pro- perty rights as well as the California coasUine. Carpenter, whose vote ·~fonday helped kill the last major shoreline legislation left in Sacrainento this year, blamed defeat or the measure on a combination of reasons -all of which he said wouJd be eliminated from the law he'll draft. AB 1471, the bill authored by Assemblyman Alan Sieroty ( D • L o s Angeles}, died in the 5enate Natural Resources Committee on a 4 to 4 vote · after a stormy journey through the legislative process. It pitted conservationists against major real estate lobbies and coastal corn· munities and other governmental agen- cies from which it sought to wrest local control of shoreline development. It was this »ealled usurping ot pro- party rights and l o c a I government authority that Carpenter highlighted in his post-mortem this morning. "The ends don't justi£y the means," he , said. . • He said defeat of the measure can be blamed · on the bill's ''disregard for private property rights, disregard for tai:: relief proposals · for pro'perty 'Wlder the (.Sere COASTAL.J Page ZI . • subcommittee studying the Golden West proposal. saldioh.bad contacted the other cities and received letters w h i c b adamantly objected to the plan. "I cannot see imposing another taxing agency," said Coen, calling the 1913 Act an unacetptable method of financing capilal improvements. Though he was supPorted in his fee.lings by ?i.iatney and Bartlett, Coen en· countered heavy opposition v.•hen he call· ed for rejection of the plan. Said Councilman Green, "We should not be overly concerned Yl'ilh cooperating v.•ith other cities. I am fully in support of this, regardless what the other cities do." ltfay~·George McCracken also implied that he had no feelings of guilt for what was being done especially sinct Hun- tington Beach Is committed financially to the improvement of the Oringe County Harbor District and flood and sewer pro- jects from which, he said, local residents f1!alize no benefits. Coast Community College Chancellor Norman Watson told the councll that the improvements were prtmarll;r for recra· tional prograw intended to be.odit local residents. H~ was backed by Golden West presi· dent Dr. Dudley Boyce who said the city would be justified in impo&inc the "relatively simple assesament diatrlct." With another vote, the Huntington Beach City Council later indicated IC would back ari'y similar proposal for Orange €oaSt College. Matney and Coen again voted "DO." Costa Mesa Passes Housing· Actwn Sent to County By TERRY COVILLE Of t1M Dlllr Plltf S!tff After two hours of public debate Mon- day night, Costa Mesa Councilmen closed the public housing issue by urging Orange County supervisors to "do it themselves." Councilman Alvin Pinkley tried to quash any sOpport for a housing authority by 'opposing the county plan but his mo- tion died for lack of a second. Councilman Willard Jordan th"en ste~ ped in with a middle-of-the-road resolu· tion urging supervisors to thoroughly study the need for public housing in Orange County before adopting any type of housing authority. His motion passed 4 to 1 wiUt Pinkley opposed. Several groups urged the city to su~ port Supervisor Robert Battin's proposal for a county public housing authority. Spokesmen for the Orange County League of Women Voters, the Orange Coast League of Womeq Voters and Share ·0ur Selves (SOS), a group or 200 members of. the St. John Baptist· Catholic Church, Costa Mesa, all said there' is a gfq\Jl<od ... public bouail)g. ' 'cOunciJm{h William St. ctair also strongly supported the housing authority but went ·along with Jordan's motion because be said "it's as close as this council will get." "I can't go against the housing author)~ ly," Jordan explained. "We don't know enough aboui it. But I think: the supervisors ought to have the guts to do it, if they want it. Let's get the monkey off our back." The council vote followed. lengthy debate for and against the housing authority. William Gasser, a bearded assistant plarmer from Santa An.a, ei::plained how his city has adopted its own housing authority. "Our city council set itself as the hous- ing authority," Gasser ei::plained. "Now we have applied to HUD for subsidies for 250 homes initially." Under the lease plan a housing authori· At Least 3 Die As Planes Hit BONITA (UPI) -At ,least three persons were killed in a mid-air crash or a pre-World War 11 military trainer and a Piper Cherokee over this San Diego suburb today, the sheriff's office said. Deputies found two bodies in the wreckage of the Army AT-6 lrainer, but searchers who went in· to Rice Canyon to locate the wreckage of the Cherokee made no immediate report. Officers said they had a report a parachute was seen from the Cherokee, but there was no im- mediate verification. ty -in this case Santa Ana -forces substandard homes·to meet the building code. Then the authority can work out a l'Ontract with landlords to guarantee rent and maintenance. The contracts can range from one year to a mai::imum of five years. A needy family can then move into ail improved home or apartment, pay 25 Ul'ITe .... Sounds Warning Former President Lyndon B. Johnson warns a~ainst a rising isolationist sentiment which might prevent the United States from fulfilling its re- sponsibilities as a world lead- er. He spoke Monday night at New York University's Grad- uate School of Business Ad- ministration. Top Democrats Don't Credit Nixon-Agnew BEVERLY HJLLS (AP) -Vice Presi~ dent Spiro T. Agnew said today leading Democrats are failing to credit President Nixon for markedly cooling the national ferment or the last decade and putting the county on the road again to-pro. sperity. percent of the family income for rent, and the housing authority makes up the difference. . There is no real cost to the authority because the HUD grants cover rent, maintenance and all administrative costs, Gasser said. He said Santa Ana is also tryinl to (See HOUSING, Page Z) • Quick Study Of Com1s' Site Passes By JACK &ROBACK Of t1111 DeUr l'Oet lllft Orange County 11upervlsors today ordered a hurry.up study to determine a new site for the Harbor Arel Judicial · Di.strict courts. The act.ion was pushed by Fifth District ~pervisor Ronald W. Caspers of Newport Beach who said he assumed that the-5;8"acre-site the COW'lty-now owns in_ Newport Center was no longer viable. Real Property Services D 'i r e c t o r Stanley Krause agreed with Caspers 1aying that as far as he could detennine the City of Newport Beach would llke to join in a mutual cancellation of the con- tract to build the CQurts Jn Newp>rt Center. Both Krause and Caspers referred to the Newport Civic Center bond issue which recently failed . Several prospective new sites were discussed. They include the Orange County Fairgrounds, the Emkay property on hfacArthur Boulevard and the Collins Radio property in the same general loca· tion. Other sites in the Orange County Airport clear zone south of Palisades ROad and on MacArthur Boulevard closer to Corona de! Mar were considered but abandoned. Krause was ordered to have a complete report on alternatives on Nov. 30 at 10:30 a.m. ~1argaret Hamlin, chief administrative officer of the Harbor Area courts, read a letter from the judges of the courts which urged immediate action and additional planning for the interim period before new courts can be constructed. The letter repeated judges' protests or the deplorable conditions of present court facilities and said tbat they could not long continue to carry out the performance or their duties in such facilities. Caspen alao asked that the county (See COURTS, Page I) 0r .. ,. , Weeds-S45L-Weather Councilmen made little comment on the ordinance except for Mayor Robert Wilson who asked if sirens were included. --••No, 1----urtnlr we'll have to make a - sepirate ordinance for those," Cily .At- to'l'ney Roy June replied. 11I'm not sure, bat we may be pre-empted by the state • on· sirens." Cliarges Prot,ested Befor ~ Sliocked Mesa Cou1icil He said Niicon's actions to restore ''public confldencc in the executive branCh" Dave bad "little impact on a hard core of public spokesmen" whom he described as 11oot inclined by either reali- ty or a1trulsm to raise their forensic pipes above parlisan id'eological in- terest." Cold, gusty w~!ll continue Wednesday w l yti. femperatures along the coast in the Jow 60'1 ris- ing to 67 inland. Lows tonight be- tween 34 and 48. The city's noise ordinance, patterned 3fttr one adopted recently in Fountain V'alley, attempts to set up standards for aUOwable noises throughout the city. ,It does not establish a blanktt sound limit throughout the ctty, but atb a cur-- r1nt average noise level (measured with rq>eeial equipment) in each ne.ighborbood. The idea is to keep new, high lnel noises lrom creeping Into qulcl ~lgbborlloodl. A system of ftneS and pmusbment ls in- cluded in the ordinance, but city ofllclal1 expect the ordinance to be most ustful as a warning devi~ to violators. 11'te ordinance will not be ill elfect for a.not.her 30 dayi. Some councUmen questioned whethtr the .noise laws ~II be held valid by the COU\'la, but agreed some tactic must be taken to curb the ever i11creaslng sounds ol lbe city • .. \ ll The elderly, white-haired gentleman ambled to the speaker's podium, cocked me ear toward the city council and sakl : "Last year I paid you $15.78 for clean- lD,g the weed off my property, This year l wa..iJ& a siate of shock when t received a M5' bill. How come?" asked Larry Shay. Sinall cracks of shock appeared on the faces of Costa ~tesa's city councilmen. A11i1tant City Manager Robert Dug· gan, subbing for the vacationing Fred Sorsabal, rushed to expl ain : "Yoo were charged for nine houra of labor for trash removal. That waa n~ver done before." "There's an old, doorless rerrigerator that has been on that lot for five years. If they cleaned it, why Is the n:frl~crator still there?" asked Shay, a Newport Beach resident. No one answered. • Duggan did ei::plain to the man that the $4~ bill was incorrect and he should-have received a corrected bill for $308.49. "We found that we had charged him for work done on another lot," Duggan ti:· plained . ','But the bµI is for nine hour s iabor at $30 an hour." "I got a private estimate of $90," said Shay, whose lot stands vacant at 341 E. Rochester St. "You should hire my man." ••11 you can find someone to do It for less. we wish you would," Duggan replied. "That's the purpoge of weed abatement." "the timing or this is perfect," in- terj~ted Councilman Jack Hammett. "there is no question that th.ls is punlllve." Hammett pointed out that a new ordinance on weed abatement adopted two weeks ago by the city now leaves all Property owners ope:n for ju.st such a situation. In the past, the city only had the right to clean up vacant k>t.s. Now it can order the clean up of any property. "There ii a point to this," added Coon· cilman William St. Clair. "Let" not charge a man $15 ooe year and S300 the ntrt. We should warn him better." Hammett asked for the staff to get a complete breakdown on the costa ror Shay'• proptrty to see U the price was reuonable. "Dou this mean J'll only be charged $90 now ?J' asked Shay. "No," repUed the council. The charge atiU stands pendlni Investigation ol it. Instead of crediting NixOn, Agnew said, "these spokesmen are attributing the diminution o£ tensioM to whit they f2rm the d,.palr of young AnlerlCM! and Administration 'repression' -two readi· ly recogniZed ,cllch6 in the lei.icon of radical liberalism." His remarks were prepa~ !or ~ 19th annual convent.ion or the International Foodservice Manufacturers Association here. Flllld Bill-OK~d-- WASHINGTON (AP ) -The senate ap- riroved a House-passed bill Monday night for $2.031 billion In 1ppropri&ion1 f o r military construction uu,, filcal rear. INSIDE TOD~Y It's ih e biggt.s£ Wtt k of tl1t year ha comruunfly tlitater ou the Ora11 ge Coast "wicla sb 111io show1 openin g to join eight others ill J)l'ogr1.ss. Stt E11teT· ui:lnm1ni. Page J9. (tllfrefM • Clffa/llH ll•U C-1<• II Cnu-• IJ Dell~ ... tk•• t ........ ::::~.!.'r .,.,: l'ltllMI I'"°' 1 .. 11 Htnw-II A1111 ......... IJ Me'flel 1t Mlrlvel '""'" 1• Jol.tlMll..... ..J Of .... et.MW t '''"'' ,...... ,, s .. "' ,,.,, 1*11 Mel'llets 1•11 T•vltlM It TI'letl.n '" #Ntlltr I #'"'"''• Htn lt-14 w .......... 2 DAILY 1'1lOT c Tuttd.111. H•M"6 16, 1971 ,,,.. .. r-.e J HOUSING ... ~ tht houalnl lhrouahout tht cit~ 10 avoid c:re•tin& "povtrty pocket.a"' or abtU.. ..... Alla aJ1cm I llmil o( ti&~I J>Ublic llow:lnc units on ont stte and only one 1 te in uch block. Gasser said the ll!'as:lng has an •d· vant.a1e over public housing projects which he 11ld wert more costly and tend· ed to crea(e ghettos. Jack Hitchcock, speaking ror SOS, 111111 1 county housing authorlty could serve 1111 a trtmendous Information center for hou1lng problems th.rouJthout the county. "Housing Isn't jult Santa Ana 'a pro- blem. it belongs to the whole com· munlty," he said. Mrs. Jean Forbath, another SOS 1~esman, also atrongly uratd city sup- port for the county. "Some or these peo- ple are without food becaUM: they spent tht money on rent. I know a disabled lady who pays $8S a month rent -she only rectlvt.s $95 IJ month lo live on." Spokwnen for both the Orange Coast and Orange County League of Women Voters .said there art not enough low ren- tals ln lhe ·county. "Does Costa Mes' knO\lt' how mi.nv lnw- cost. rentaJs it has?" asked Mrs. Shir ley Prlct, speaking for the Orange County League. When the reply was negative, she said: "I have the feeling this is the problem or many cities. They just brush it off saying they have oo problem." Ronald Berg, speaking for lht Orange County Apartment House Aaaoclation. charged .that the houaing authority is a "bureaucratic waste ()f money." "Everything we've talked about tonight concerns free money from Washington. Somebody has lo pay for it and I have a atrong hunch It's the taxpaiyer," he charged. Berg also said the average person in Costa Mesa is not very poor ar'ld he doubted the real need for a housing authority. "I have figures that show that 50 per· cent of the HUD money in lhese housina: projects goes to administrative costs - not tht landlord or the renter," Berg ad- ded. His figures were challenged by Gas~r, t~ Santa Ana planner, who asked, "How . can you get these figures when all the 11gencies e1cept ~n Diego ~aid they didn't have the figure because their CO.!l.s Jnvolved more than just the leasing pro- gram?" Cou1icil Votes 3-2 to Allow 40 Apartments Phil Spiller'• hi1h density apartmenU !ICl.UUked into Costa Meu 's east side Monday nl1ht . Spiller won a 3 tn 1 council decision lo allow 40 apartments where current r.on-- fnc 1Uow1 only 17 apartments 11 257~ Elden Avenue. "For the-past 17 yean I've couislentlv opposed overbuilding 1partmenl3. I 1till do," declared Councilman Alvin Pinkley. lie wu joined by M1yor Robert Wilson on the minority "no'' vott. Wihon dll!led off lhe conlrover1ial 1bandoned E11uide study and ai\ked, "isn't this e11cUy what people opposed In the Eut.Jide itudy?" ··so, darn ii! This hi not?'' replied an Inflamed Councilm1n William fit . Clair. ..,Pe:iple didn't wanl a c1rU blanche •?1rtmmt zone for commerci1! property .and everything else there!" Jact Hammett called tl'le Spiller pro- j!t'l a "potential ca1alyst'' for the rede'\'dtlpment of older eastside pro- pertits.. Ha.intMtt, St. Clair and Willard JarW al 1L1pported the high density ._,,,.... 7" rr-1/J:;«• and a crOM·lown resi- des ~ to the apartmeol3 bec1use al l=ti demity. --nu. iQ9'll o M ao•ded now that even l&tlt r.±me b-r.sU•.tt the htll out of me ," .a Pm ~ wM live..-. on the west m d wn. '-r're JUll building a lot o:! ~-T.J..n. .lllf. 1 tiny area." eit.t.IMI COAR DAILY PILOT ..,_,.. c;c.o.sr ~ ~ ,~ ......... ,,.__ ,._. J 11f. L c...l-..., Ya ....... _ "'-'II ......... n-nt'!..-.ril -T\•"'11 A. ti1 ... 1~i11 -·-o...a-H. l111 •:•~•-' r, N1B AlllllWI: M-.ifle t:-1 c.-. M4ll4 Ofllk• JJO WMt l•'I' Strttf M1illl1t A11,..11: r.o. ••• •••o. '2•1• ............. , .. ....,. ~i Jm M-1 ......,. "_.. ''""' m ,._, •-...,....,.._ atkl'I! Ul1J l•tll ,...,_,. -~---&·~··· Big Grid Bet Ring Broken Survey of Economy , MeJ,eor Show Pre1niere Set Dr:l'l\OJT (UPI) -Polle< Ir· reited U pertptW. and eonfbcated $11,00f ... 11UKlull.oda •nd thou• suds'' '11 football w1se-rinf al'M In raldi I'" !be la'IHI football bet· tin& rlo& -at!n& In tho Detroit area in recent years, authorltlts said today. Study Ba~ked by Cash SAN Ol:ECO (AP) -Asttonomer Jludolpll LipJl'rl llYI Solllhtnt Califomilln• will watch the •l*- lacular Ltonlda mtttor 1hower best 11 3 a.m. on both Wed~.sclay and Thursday. Pollet said 55 officers from five different l1w tnforctmtn1 agtncles were involved In lhe raids on several ' Dttroit locations Rnd In suburbln St. Clair Shorts. H1rpu Woods .and Clinton Townahlp. 'l'hty also confiscated 1 O automobiles, three leltphones, three guns ind four prlnlina: presses . The suspects were oot Identified pending arralanmenl ln Dtlroit Recorder's (criminal ) C.OUrt on charges of violatin& 1tate 11mbling laws. Detroit fiOlke said a n in- vestigation into tht gamblin& rin& be1an in September that indicated "that a l1r1e.acale football c1nt bettln& ring was beginning lo e1- p.1nd in the fir e11t side of Detroit.;' A lfC Irvine Projtcl 21 atudy laam Is pickins up Costa Mtaa tupport for •n ••· amlnaUon of Oranae County's_ economlc: devtlopmenl. Hugh Halderman, treuurr.r of the Pro- ject 21 u:perlmt:nt, tol'd eo,ta Mes11 cooncllmen Monday night that aeven citltJ have contributed $1,950 IO fir for the economk 1t\Kly. Ciosta Me11a chipped in another seoo lor the effort alter Marin& Halderman'& es:· planation of Project 11 's financial netd.•. In the p.aJl, he explained, Project 21 - a volunteer 1yrtem of e1pert11 1ssigned to study vark>u1 countywidt subjtds -was financed through 1talt 1r1nts given to UCJ. "UCI 1upplied the money and the place to work. Our ~mitttt supplied the e:1- pert!," e1p\1lned Halderman, • civil tnglnur from Santa Ana. "Now 1tate funds have betn cut off. UCJ can only supply us the facilltltll, not the money." Ht explained that project 21 needa ~ rponey primarily to pay for bringing l''rom l'age 1 COASTAL 'MEASURE ••• moratorium and dillttl•rd for I o c a I government control." He sa.id environmentalista also shai:e lhe blame for defeat of the measure they ao badly wanted. "The eco-hysteria of the time!\ th1t everything representin.11 g r o w l h r.nd change ill' automatically bad for the e11- vironment" did not sit well with legislators, he said. Carpenter aaid the bill he'll introduce will take all these 'factors Into con· llideratlon. "It wilt provide lat relief where J1nd ill deemed not to be devtloped," he said, "It will observe the constllullonallty of private property and the rlght.11 therein. "It will leave the local area authorlty lo handle local government with Ideally a1 11tate a1ency to oversee the crlterl1 . established and to jn11ure an t q u ,. I repruentation from both the state and the local level." Carpenter •tressed, however, "MMl importantly, it will protect the coastlirlf! where such protection i1 needed for both the benefit of the public and the 1t1tt of Cllifomla." C.rpenter predicted there very 11kely will ht othtr1 who introduce coastline legl1laUon In the next 1esslon and said those bills "that have a sensible. fair al'td effective program that are baaed on a compromise and ratk>Dal approach to the entire 1ltu1Uon will be 1ucce11ful." Cooaerv1tioni1t1 may not wait for the Legislature to ad, however, 111 thelr 1poke1men began talk.ln1 about a statewlde thortlint protection lnlUatlvt. Sleroty, hlmulf, bitter after the defeat of his bill, said he felt a vote of the peo- ple may be the Only way to 1et • tou1h law enacted. "'I'bt Le1lslature doesn't understand the depth of the people's feelin11 on pl'O-" tecton of the environment," he uki. Sieroty 1aid he feels two thln(s were responsible for the outcome -Governor ReaRan's attitude and pressure from lob- byists . "I believe tht principal reallon for thi~ bill's defeat is the altitude of the governor and his administration." Sieroty llAid, but he went on to take equally strong 1wlng11 at others. , "The Leg islature ha1 been playin1 the old game, playing with the people clo!e11t '' thee legislative process -lht lob- byists." The full-llme lnbbyisl, working for 5pecial lntrest 1roup11 "have certainly earned their fees killing environmental Rogers to Speak In 'Enerny Camp' Newport Beach Vice Mayor How1rd Rogers' trip lo Costa Mtsa Thursd1y to address tht Gitluns' Harbor Area Research Team (CHART) m1y not take a~ long 11 his last visit. Ht will talk at 7:30 1.m. In the Mesa Verde Counlry Club, with coffee and rolls 1 IJO on tbt menu. "WM W1nts to Live in Costa Meu?" is lhe topic of his talk. · .. Some time back. published comment~ by Council man Roaers about Costa Mesa led to a gag in which he w1s picked up by police on hill neJt trip Inland. Ht was relea~ed on a ttchnlcallty, that there Wll! ineurtlclent evidence ht h1 • ltnded to really badmouth Newport Bt•ch'a 1lster city on !he mes11 . Pre8umably, l•wA on double jeopardy w\11 prevent his beln1 •rrested •1aln for tht .same crimt. Disabled Man's · Car Tires Taken A diSAbled Fountain Valley man lert a Collti Mesa bowling alley after rolling a few games Monda y, lo find a lhitf...had In- capacitated his car. Carl A. l.lvlngston, of l lS.59 M1rlgolll Circle, went to police htadquarters to report lht $220 arand theft case involvlng all four car tires ind wheels. Ht said he had the vel'licle lowed away on a mobile dolly •nd re•litted btfor'e reportln« the incident , because he netds the car for all tr1nsport1lion. bill! this session.'* The • to 4 commiltet vote wa~ one "aye" vote short of what w1s needed tn send the measure to the Senate Finance Committee, which hid been etpected to ~end it quickly to the Roor where pa ssage WIS highly pro~blt. . Sieroty said an absent C'Ommittee member, Sen. Jarrles Q. Wedworth ! ().. Hawthome1 would hive voted for the measure, but he had been f'I CU&ed "for personal reason•." Voting for the measure were com- mittee <!h1lrm1n John A. Nejtdly IR- Walnut Creek ), and Senators Arlen GreJtorlo (().San Mateo ), Albert S. Rodda (D-Sacramento) and Robe rt J. Lagomarsino (R-Ojai). Volin" with Carpenter ag11inst It were (.'l'!f'!S. H. L. Richardson (R·Ar<!adiai, Ralph C. Dills (D-San Pedro) •nd Gordon Cologne (R·lndlo). During brier debafe before tht vote. Cologne had 1aid, "If this is such a good blll . why don'L they include the whole state?" Joining Sleroty at hill news confereoce •fter lht vote was Mrs. Janet Adams , director of the Coastal Alllanct, who an- nounced pl1n11 to force the initlallve. Conservatlonlst1 will need about 325,000 sign1ture1 to 1et the que1tion on the -b1llot. Mrs. Adams also indicated her group~ may very well band together to c1mpaign for some legislator• and against others ne1l year. * * * State Controls Over Coastline Opposed by Jury O!'ange County Grand Jury members oppose .r.ny legislation J iving the 111te control over in coastal development in C.llfornia. Jn a report .11igned by Foreman Doreen Marshall of Newport Beach, the jury aaid they had no objection to the state establishing criteria for ah ore Ji n• development. but declared that actu11I control should remain with local govern- m~nt. They said this was the atand or other Orange County go vernmental agencies which lhe jury 1upported. The Board of Supervisor• was urgtd to fight a state Jaw which would take over control of coastal development and lo 11erlously l'.!onsider the prepar11tion of • county coastal development plan and take action to e1pedite the plan's adoption. T,he jury at•tement read in part: "The county planning staff has the necessary exper11se to establish guidelines and plans suitable for the proper and orderly development or our coaJlal are111." The report added th1t considerable time has been 1pent by the county and other local agencies Jn preparing coastal studies. But it warntd : "Deapilt these studiell, the county's pl1m have not movtd forward 111 rapidly as they should and it IA feared that legislation will be enacted which will give control or the coastal development to the state btfore plan,, <!In be adopted locally." From Pa1e 1 YORTY ... primary will "clim11 our campaign. "The first istep is New Jf1mpshlre . After that we shall aee," Yorty aaid . "Other states may be added 11 the camP1l1n progresses," Yorty said. "We will bt aelectlve. Wt have no intention or 1tyln1 to rtl!t the hu111 sums or money nectsnry to enter all the primarlta:." Yorty sakl he has no illu.5ktns about lht dllflculUes in winning the support. of the vottr1 in Nnr HamP1hlre, whlch Is considered to be atrongly behind Sen. Edmtind S. Muskie CO.Maine). "My JJO&ltlon OR Jhe Wu<J Will be that of a moderate Democrat," Yorty said, "a position ~ hope will appeal not only to a mlJ()l'lty of Democrat! but also many RepubUcan11 who •rt dlsllluttoned with the current resort to 1httr p:>llUcal etptdlency by the Nl1on 11dmlnl1tratlon Jn Its efforts tn win the electlM at all cosb or by 1ny means In 19721" he uid. _, , oul&lde speaker• to Orange County and for pubtlahinc a report on It.a study •t tht e:nd of the ye1r. "This yc.ar we art going lo look. into et.'Onomlc development 1od such things as hooslng fQr workers, and zoning and ta1- ing practices on Industry throughout th e county,'' Halderman told the couni;il. Project 21 recently completed a fJ'lajor 11udy on tht need for low-coal ho03ln1 la the cou nty. C.Osta Me¥a CounCilman Five Froni Coast Fornially Na1ned In Drug Cliarges t"lvt Orange Coast rtsidents including a p1lr of young mirrleds from Hun-- lington Beach were fonnany charged to- day as sullpected drug dealer1. The arrestees pi cked up by raiding teams in various cities Monda v afternoon were named In complaints issued this morning. Sales charged to Lhe group include a transaction Involvi ng more than 20 pounds of marijuana for which agents nf the Ju11tice Dtp1rtment's BuruU of Narcotic Enlorce(Tlent paid $1 .•00 a month 1go. A second lr1nsactlon Involved an oUnce of cocaine. Agent Dave Genins alleged two suspects were negotiating a third drug sale when arrested Monday. Arra ignment was es:pecled this af- ternoon or Wednesday morning in We$l Orange County Judicial District Court for the five defendant.!. The suspects are identified as: -Thoma1 R. McPhllllp1, 19, of 17341 Quetns Lane , Huntington Beach. -P1trlcla L. McPbllllJ>A, II, of lhe 111 me address. -Dougl1s S. Beaubel, 111, of 1010 Vi'. MacArthur Blvd., Sanla Ana. -Michael l.. MeCJ1ln, 19. of 771 Shalimar Drive , Cosla Mesa. -Steve• J . Huntley, 21, of •901/i River Ave., Newport Beach. Agent Genin said McClain and-Huntley were negotiating to sell drugs when taken into custody Monday. Charges filed inc lude sale nf roc11int , !'ale or marijuana, and offering narcotics for sale. He 111id prior sales char1ied ln the ~111spect.1 occurred Oct. 7, Nov. 8 alKI the lwo Monday. Fro1n Page J RAISES ... menl m11nager, Sl,119 lo tl,3&1 tfive per- cent increase). -Harley Bogart , streel superintt.ndent, $1.1 19 to $1.361 (2.5 p;ercent increase1. -Eileen P. Phinney, city clerk. Sl.040 In ll ,26S (2.5 percent increase ). -Wiiiiam Todd, assistant perllOnnel of· ficer, $1.00I to $1 ,!65. The lncreallell reflect result~ of • · !urvey of 10 comparl'lble cities taken by the city administration. f'ron• Page 1 COURTS ... counsel be instructed tn lnve11tigate t.he legality of the county ~elling the 5.6 11cre s now owned in the Newport Center. The pos~ibility of lhe incorporation i1oon nf the new city nf Irvine which would be included in tht. Harbor Judicial Dirtrict will be cnnsidt.red 1erlously in the Krause report. he sAid. William St. C.1air took part ln th1t study. ''I don't think you'll &el a betttr return 6f'I yoor money thin by lnveitin1 In this projec1, ·• st. Clair commented, Pair Seiud In $1 .50,000 Scheme Case By ARTHUR R. VINSEL OI !Ill O.MY P'lllt llloft A play boy whose import empire, financed by a m1jor trading stamp com· pany purchasing premiums, apparently crumbled due to the recent shipping strike was arrested aboard his big Italian motor vessel in Newport Harbor Monday. An ex-head accountant for Blue Chip Stamp Company charged by authorities with aiding an embezzlement scheme lhat subsequently raked off SIS0 ,000 or more -was taken into custody too. Dennis P. Warren, •s. and Don11ld L. Cook, 44. were arraigned this morning in 1.os Angeles Municipal Court. Division 10, on one count each of grand theft. Deputy District Attorney Charles Kelson said both men listed their home address as Warren 's 5a-foot yacht, the Sht'nandoah. Police said a manhunt dating b•ck to early October under the eye of Kelson finally focused late Wednesday morning on sll p 91 at 8Z9 Bayside Drive in Newport Beach. Arrest warrant.! c.arrying $50,000 bail for Warren 11nd S25,000 for Cook had been issued. The Los Angeles County deputy dis trict attorney said Warren had moved the Shenandoah from its usual berth 11t Sausalito on San Francisco Bay to r\ewport Beach about one week ago. Warren heads the Shenandoah Com· pany, which Kel!!On said almost e1- tluslvt:ly dealt with the Blue Chip Stamp Company headquartered In Los Angeles. Sergeant llarry \Vrlght, of the Orange County Harbor Patrol, said he took a 1!1unch to check lhe Shenandoah when contacted by Kelson at mid -morning. They confirmed the big Italian-bui lt Bagliato cabin cruiser was at her 11ip and men fitting Warren's and Cook'• descriptions were aboard. Deputy District Attorney K t I s o n described Warren as rather a playboy - bolh are divor~ -and said Cook is a slight, mild-manner~ accountant type. The pair bad been sh1ring quarters aboard the vessel , whicl): wa1 berthed in Newport Harbor until transferred to Sausalito Yacht Harbor 11 months ago. Kelson said Warren was supplying lranSistor radioa, tape recorders and 1im- ilar import items to Cook's employers As trading stamp premiums. "I guess they sort or fell on hard times with the dock strike ." he explained. · Kelson said Cook was respOnsiblt for accounts payable for the Blue Chip Stamp Company. "·hich he left about the time an aud it allegedly disclosed huge cash losses. "Wa rren was wining and dining in style and Cook wa i\ sending out the checks,'' Kelson alleged, as a result of his seven· week probe. He said one single account alone in- volves a $106.000 sum. while smaller lnsses may push !he lot;1I to $150,000 with more eqiected to turn up. The Harbor Department's Sgt. Wright said his men postd as being on a routine palrol after spotting Warren and Cook. "We just moved off and kept them under observalion, pretending wt were doing something else," Sgt. Wright ex- plained. ··The meteors wlll appear to be coming from all diUerent direc- tions ," said Li ppert. "I think It will be very beautiful and spec· tacular." ]t will be the first limt since 1966 for l'.!ommon viewing of the meteor 1howµ named for the star constell•tlon Leo. 'The sl'lower occurs when Earth pas.u:s through a stream of debr is !railing a comet and pieces ot Ille debris. Ice and frozen gast.'I fall into Earth's magnelic: field and ignite in a nery plunge. Jn 1863, sight of the Leonilts shower brought panic In some places on Earth. Mesa Council Mulls Legal Fee For LAFC Battle The shock still hasn't worn nff over high legal fees stemming from the recent battle between the Orange County League of Citiell •and the Local Agency Form1tion Committee ILAFC). Costa Mesa councilmen mulled A S768.70 bill for their share cf the action Monday night and decided they didn't know what lo do with it. "Let'1 refe r it lo our city attorney lo determine if il is a just figure," said Councilman Willard Jordan. His moUort was adopted , but most rouncilmen e:t· pressed indignation at the high cost. '·When the hassle started we com-· milted ourselves for $265," e:1plainll an angry Mayor Robert Wilscn. "Now Ed ·Just (mayor of Fountain Valley ind then president of the LeagueJ says each cily't shart ill over $700." The total legal bill for the League nf Cities was $18,501 for a case that didn 't even go to court when it was appealed. Wilson e1plained. ''That covers 337 lega l hour' at $50 an hour. ls that a reasonable figure?" "The thing that bothers me,'' added Councilman William St. Clair, "i~ they never went lo court. never fought the battle. We hired Tom Woodruff, not all three· .1ttomeys . '' Woodruff is' Fountain Valley's city 111· tomey. The bill covers time spent by three atlomeys in their efforts lo cle11r up controversial memberships on the I.AFC during the hearings over Irv ine cityhood. Councilman Jack Hammett said lhe d- 1y oughl to pay up. ··Jn the heat of rom· bat everybody wa!I saying Jet's go get 'em. We jmpljcated ()urselves and we should pay the money." Councilmen will "'ail for a report from City Attorney Roy June before acting on the bill. 2 People Found Shot in Head CASTRO VALLEY (UPI) -A younJ: man and woman were found lying on 11 lonely deadend road 1od11y, shot in the head in what poli<!e said was "an ex- ecutlon-type slaying." The woman was dead. The man was in critica l (!()fldilion a11d believed to h:tve been lying on the road for about 12 houri before ht was disco ve red. Their identities were not revealed by police, pending notification of relati ve!\. However, police put out an all point.' bulletin for a canary yello w auto believed to belong to the yout h. Let Us Put You On The Map • Near the entrance, inside our store, is a gi•nt new map. W1 a r1 in th1 process of identifying 111 of the homes we have c.arpeted since I 965 on thi' map with colored pins. {A different color for .. ch yeor.) Clost scrutiny will 'detect some interesting facts: firstly, we have cerptted home.,,on virtu· ally every street in the erea. Secondly, the pins ore in bunches. indic•ting WORD-OF-MOUTH 1dv1rtisin9. Thirdly, the number h1v1 carpeted is ste99ering. of home.s we If you desire honesty, experience, encf recom. mendetions from neighbors w'i hevt worked for, th•n Ald•n 's is THE PLACE' ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS: Moo. thru ThutS., 9 10 5:30-l'ri., 9 lo 9-S.1 .. 9:30 to 5 ' 'l I .. ·. • Saddlehaek WILL ENTER PRIMARY Mayor S•m Yorty • Mayor Yorty Flips Fedora Into '7.~ Ring LOS ANGELES (UPI\ -Mayor Sam Yorty, a maverick Democrat, announced today he will seek lhe presidential nom~ in:ation in New Hampshire's first-in-the- nation primary March 7. Yorty, who made his third political pilgrimage to the state earlier this month, is the second Democrat to an- nounce his bid for the Democratic nomination in 197%. foUowing Sen. George S. !\fcGovern (J>..S.D.) "Encouraged by the advice of many friends and supporters, J have decided to become a candidate for President:• Yorty said In a statement prepared for a news conference here. "Our co.mpaign is alre2dy well un. der way in New Hampshire." Yorty said. The Los Angeles mayor said, however, he has no JntenUon of entering all the primaries, and at. this point the California primary 'viii "cllmax our campaign. "The first step is New Hampshire. After that we shall see," Yorty said. ''other states may be added as the campaign progresses," Yorty said. "'i~le will be selecti\'e. We have no intention of trying to raise the huge sums of money necessary to enter all the primaries." Yorty said he has no illusions about lhe difficullies in winning the support of the voters in Ne\\' Hampshire, which is considered to be strongly behind Sen. Edmund S. Muskie (l).~laine ). "My position on the issues will be that or a moderate Democrat." Yorty said, "a position I hope will appeal · not only to a majority of Democrats buLalso many Remiblicans who _are disillusioned with the current resort to sheer political expediency by the Nixon administration In its efforts to win the tlection at all costs or by any means in 197!," he said. , Oraage Cout Weather Cold , gusty wind! will continue Wednesday w I th temperatutts along the coast in the low 60's ris- ing to ~ inland. Lo\vs tonight be- t"·een 34 and 48. INSIDE TODJ\ l' It's tht biggest 10eek of tM year 1'11 community theater on ihe Orange Coast with six: mw show opening to join tiuht otheYs in progress. Set Enter- tainment, Page 19. t.111i.t1111 • (llullltd n,u c1mrn 11 Cl'IU-' U DHlll Neilcn t Of..n:tt • 1-iftrl.. ~... • l~ltrlllllfl'lt!ll IJ.Jt 'INJ'loCe 11·11 "'''K9H " A~• L1111Mr1 It Mtvltt It EQ.ITION Pe11dleton Race Woes Said Large Racial discrimination appears tD be serious at the world's largest Marine base, Camp Pendleton, reports . a tw~ man congressional fact-finding team. The statement was made after meetings ~1onday with about !Kl minority group Marines at Camp Pendleton. A three-day hearing on racial discrimina· lion in the armed forces begins \Ved· nesday Jn Congress. • A report about Camp Pendleton-was submitted to the Congressional Blac'k Caucus In Washington, D. C., by .Charles E. Knox, an aide to Rep. Augu,tus Haw- kins (().Los Angeles ). Knox, meeting with newsmen, said he will ask Hawkins to make al least one surprise visit to Camp Pendleton to "see how things really are." Base officials were given IO days to prepare for the visit by Havl'kins. "What we found afler several hours or consultations \vas an absence o f minorities in the top command structure which results in an attitude of in· sensitivity to problems of minority 1'.larines.'' Knox said. The promolion and training op- porti.utlties "are stacked in favor of \\'hitey," he said, adding his _belief that military justice is often unfair. · Knox said he will investigate the case of a black sergeanL· with 17 years' service wbO claims be is being forced out of U:le l\farine Corps for no apparent reason other than. color. The sergeant was identified as Hilton L. Hart. 38, of Richmond, Va., who faces discharge Saturdav. A two-year Vietnam veteran he told newsmen that he is the victim 'of "an attempt to limit the number of bta·ck and chicano marines." There was no public explanation why Hart's request to re-enlist for a last hitch entitling him to a retirement pension was denied . Said Hart: "I'm over six feet and a pretty toug h 160 pounds. I'm what the corps wants in a noncommissioned officer except that I'm black. They trust me enough to train kids to fire rocket launchers and name throwers right up to lhe day they throw me out." ri.1. Sgt. Billy Churchman. the white first sergeant of Hart's outfit. told newsmen that Hart was ~1arlne of the Month earlier this vear and "he's always on the job by s a.ffi. ,.. Knox con/erred with Maj. Gen. George S. Bowman Jr., commander of the base where 32,000 men are stationed. There was no formal comment by base officials on the statements made by Knox. Nine other bases in the nation are also undergoing scrutiny. Reagan to Meet With President SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Reagan - planned to leave California late today For Washington. D.C., \\'here he is scheduled. to meet with President Nixon on \\1ednesday. .. Neither the subject o( the meeting nor the e-xact time was announced by the \\'hlte House. Reagan's office declin. ed lo comment on the purpose of Reagan's trip. From Washington. Reagan will go tD French Lick, lnd.. to attend the winter meeting of the Republican Governors' Association. lie is scheduled to return to LOs Angeles Saturday and to . Sacramento Sunday. Water Districts Get Se,ver Line The ~1outon·Niguel and S a n t a Margarita wa ter districts have been gfven permission to install an Interceptor sewer line within F1ood Control District rights of way in San JUan and Trabuco creek channels. The permit had been held up for two weeks at the request of Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers who ex· pressed concern for the disposition plans Mt sewage in the Laguna Niguel-Dana Point areas. Caspers said Tuesday that Cart Kymla. general manager of the A1oulton-Niguel Water Distrid had detalled plans in the y,·orks for better sewage treatment plants lo W"Vice the area. • I Winter Stan . ' Silhouetted by sun, Orange Coast family \vad~s in sparkling \Vater on a winter d.~y !_t the beach. With crQ\vds or summer su nworshipers hibernating in· land, \Vinter becomes a time or adventure and redis- covery at the beach for many Orange Coast families -a time for long 'valks-in fresh , brisk-air. For, New Fire Station A construction firm In Artesia Is the apparent low bidder for San Clemente's proposed new fire department head· quarters and has offered to build the structure for $145,786. The 11.id of Victor construction was $2,000 J"s than the nearest compttition in last Friday's bid opening. The runner- up in the race for the figures was the finn of Snydu·Langston Construction Company with a bid of $147,770. City councilmen will probably consider the award of a contract to the lo\\·esl responsible bidder at \V e d n e s d a y ' s regular meeting. . The bid by the Victor firm is within the budget area set by councilen and the ci- ty stafL A price of about $140,000 was set by ci- ty aides for the major project. The new headquarters building will in· elude a hose drying rack and tower plus fueling facilities will be built on !he driveway approach to the existing £ire station at civic center. Funds for the construction of the city's first station capable of overnight housing of a full·llme squad of firemen will come from accumulated rebates from the state cigarette sales tax. No riew equipment is proposed at the outset. but the hiring of four more men to allow for 24-hour duty is planned. City 1';1anager Ken Carr said that ff contract! are awarded soon by coun· cilmen that the new station could be ready·for operation early next spring. In all, six construct.on firms {none or the~ locally-b&sed) offe red to· buUd the new facility. The rest ol the bidders Were: ~ NW-Cal Cbrporation, $158.400~ -Lomar Corporation, $178,138. -First A s s u r a n c e Construction, 1152,850. -Benton Construction Company, St61 ,4'1. COuncttmen have an option to cut the low bidder1s offer' i! they wish tD by deleting some facilities, including the towers and fueling facility. The new building will have to be placed on concrete c2issons driven into t.he soil beneath the parcel at civic center because soils tests .showed that special foundations would be required. The low bid Includes the special caisson work. Designers for the project were local architect Marvin Renfro ~orking in alliance with Willard T. Jordan of Costa ~lesa. • Teacher· Parent Conf eren«;es Set This Week The first moment o! truth of the school year for Capistrano Bay area youngsters will take place late this week -parent· tea cher conferences. And during the conferences most students in the Capistrano Unified School District will have two days off. Those enrolled at San Clemente · High School, however. will remain in class. District aides urged all parents tD seek Information Crom teachers on the child,rens' progress. Teacliers have sakl that the most fre- quent parent's questions include: -~s my child working,up to his ability, and if not. why not? .,.. -Does be di.splay ·an aptitude T shoUJd encoµrage? What c;m I do help him? · -Row does he get . aJong with oth1r children? -Can I 'Stt samples of'his work? TheJ aides stressid that the prllne goal of the conferences It. to help teachers understOO<l·how to help pupils do better in. clas~. Tough to Give · Whiw 11 ouseGifts Ru1i Into Snag ' - .If. you plan to· gjvt a 1ift to·the .Presf .. • dent of the UNted States be prepared to pat wjlh milel et red tapC. . That Is the warning o( Winston Updegraff. executive .aecretary of the Orange County League of Cities. Updegraff was given the job or seeing that city seals of the county's 2$ com- munities were presented to and displayed in the Weste~ While House in San Clemente. • His first hutdle was the General Services Admlnktratlon. Then approval of the President's military aide, Marine. Maj.1 John Brennan was necessary, Next -· and he ls stUI working on this one-he must obtain ::permission . rrom the President's appointment secrete ry Dwight Chapin of a date for the .ceremony tD present the city seals, UP-dqrafJ says the conference room where the seals wlll probably be hung Is on the sen Diego county side or the line in the San Clemente compound. He hopes he doesn 't have to get permission or that county's officials. ' . ' Saddlehack Umt Votes to Reject Fimding Request In an unusual 3-2 split vote, trustees of the Saddleback Community College Mon· day night dumped a motion by Hans Vogel to seek up to $365,000 in federal aid for construction and equipment !undlng for the science-mathematics building, . President of the board Alyn Brannon was the. only member to join Vogel" In 1 voting for the request. Trustees i1ichael Collins, Patrick Backus and John Lund sent .ii lo de!eat. San Juan Capistrano resident Arthur Black pointed out that the 1969 ac- creditation report for the coUege pointed •1!.lt that "it is a policy of the board not to accept federal aid." "ls th.is true ?" Black queried. "There is no such policy," responded Voegl "but it has been a philosophy of the board. But things have changed. There was a time when the people who tlected me didn't y,•ant us to seek federal aid. But that 's changed. Now I will vote for every federal program that comes down the pike." ''I've seen schools accept federal funds, use them, then the government stops the funds and the school is left holding the bag," observed trustee Patrick Backus. "I think we can get together and do this thing without federal funds ." 'I don't like to see the inevitable en- r roac h men ts of the federal bureaucracy,'' commented MI ch a e I • Collins. "We need to show that some districts . can edtlcale children without federal -aid .-'-1- Presidential ' Citation Due M?rine R~giment Secretary or Defense Melvin Laird will present the Presl<tential 'Unit Citation to the lst Marint! Regiment of the 1st Aiarine Division at Camp ~Pendleton Thursday. ' The 2 p.m. c_ere._mo !es will involve 1,400 Marines and will offer the Pres en· tial honors for the largest helicopter assault by 1'-1arines in the Vietnam war. th~ omation~ 11-1eade ~iv er' laster 20 days, and began on Nov. 20of1968. Marine spokesmen said more than 1,000 of the enemy were kiDed in actions llnlc.ed to the assault. • Power of the Press PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) -Sen. Henry Ja_ckson (0-Wash.), was speaking to a news confertnee Monday w1*n the lights went out'because of an overloaded circuit from too many televlskln cimeras, lights and amplifiers. · "There's an example of the power Ill the pms,".Ja<kson quipped. Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks Group Asks Override Be Dropped By FREDERICK SCHOEMEBL Of ttt. O.itr """' 11111 - Bargaining like management officials, a Dana Point citizens' group Monday night told the Saddleback College board it will support a $3 million bond issue to fund a science-mathematics buildings iC trustees decide to drop a 34-eent tax recently approved to fund the structure.' Re;;ponding to a question from trustee Patrick B~ckus, Paul Sayre, leader of the group. said he would "wo1k -end· work hard for the bond." Other:; in his group nodded their approval. ' "1.'d vote for such a bond," declared Da vid Sandburg, a Laguna Niguel resi· den_t.. "I think the voters have made their pos1t1on clear that they want this campus to expand on a pay-as-you-go basis." He said he based his belief on the re-~nt rejection of a $25 million bond issue 1 111 Sep~ber by voters in lhe large col· , ege d1st r1c!. Following the bond defeat. trustees vot~ Oct. 18 to levy a special 34-cent tax du.r1~g the 1972:73 fiscal year to raise $2.2 mtllton towards the $4.S million science· mathematics complex. The remaining S2.3 million of the cost would be picked up by the state with funds made available under the Junior College Construction Act of 1967, Sayre's loose-knit group threatened recall after the board decision but last week decided to postpone the ;ecall and ask the board to drop the tax levy, While Sayre said he would support tha smaJJer bond issue, he chided the college board. claiming it has developed a "credibility gap" with the community. "The philosophy or this board is a big P~rt of. it. People vehemently disagree with this board and you have Jost the res~.ct of the el_ector~te." Sayre charg· ed. You have impaired and impacted the. functio~ing of this college and are spJ1ttlni this communJty right doWn the middle." Trustee Backus responded to the charges. calling Sayre "a perpetual egolripper." ''You're a loser and everything you touch turns to tarnish," Backus fumed. Sayre waii an unsuccessful candidate for Backus' seat in 1969. Alter the discussion cooled down trustee Hans Vogel, pointed out that J lh~ college does not go ahead with the science-mathematics building with the 50 ~rc~nt, in. state matching funds, the d1str1ct 'will have to pay the entire cost in just o. few years. Either we take that slate money now or forget it." Vogel added tbat the college must ac· cepl incoming freshmen and is not in a position to be selective, such as state col· leges or universlties. "And if we don't have the room for the students, we have only one alternative - that's to send them to other junior col~ lege.s and pay $1,000 per student per year to have them educated." "That cost,',' chipped in trustee ~1ichael" Collins. "is prohibitive." jjking _JI suggestion_ from Sayre,_ col!.· Tege president Fred Bremer said he would activate a "citizens advisory group" to explore the possibility of hav .. ing the $3 million bond perhaps at elec- tion time in April or next yea~. Trustees agreed to continue discussion on the financing of the science-- mathematics building until their next regular meeting, Dec. 13. They took no action on whether or ~ lo rescind the _3kent tax .levy. CSF Regi~trar Named Planner John B. Sweeney. administrator at California State College. Fullerton, has been named to. the San Juan Capistrano Planning Commission. He fills the seat vacated by Charles L. Allen who resigned two months ago. Sweeney, a retired Marine Corps col· onel, holds the oUice or registrar at tho college. He has a master's degree from Ohio State· University. The. new commissioner ls currently serving as vlce president or the h11ssioa Hills: Ranch Homeowners' Association and is a member of the year-round school cOmmittee of the Capi.straoo UnHied School District. He is married, has four children, and resides at 27101 ~tission Hills Drive, Snn Juan Capistrano. ''· • Z OAILY •ILOI ,, Sho1·t-te1·1n Sanitation Ideas 01\.'d Short-term Ideas geared lo solving a crisis in waste Lrealment along Jt>e South Coast by several sanitation districls won hearty approval Jlitonday by the San Diego Area Regional Water Quality Con· trot Board. The board, meeting in San Diego, heard plans by the Dana Point Sanitary District and the Moulton Niguel Sanitary D!imict on how the agencies will l}andle growing volumes of 'A'aste until a new regional plant is completed in San Juan Capistrano. The •approval by the board was a strik· ing contrast to scathing criticism of the city of Laguna Beach sanitation picture. But de:ipite the approvals of the Dana Point and Moulton ideas, the boa rd nonetheless demanded monthly sewage hookup reports and quarterly reports on progress of the interim solutions. lf the plans bog down, then board members agteed they could schedule public hearings and issue orders Y:hich could halt all new development uiitil bet· ter w~sle treatment can take place. The crisis hits Dana Point much worse than Moulton-Niguel. But Dana Point manager Hugh Kimball explained that his district will receive a larger capacity of 750,000 gallons per day when the new San Juan plant is completed under a joint-powers agree.. ment with three other districts. He added that during the construction period, Dana Point will buy unused capacity in the San Juan plant and divert large volumes or waste from the tiny Dana Point facility . The small Dana Point waste plant is running at fulJ capacity and at one point last summer its effluerit discharged off Dana Point left "something to be dtsired," according to board spokesmen. MoultorrNiguel's plans, said manager Carl Kymla. include reactiva ting a dor· mant plan' in Laguna Niguel and using effluent for irrigation of El Niguel Goll Course. . The agency also sends some of ill! waste to South~na for treatment. -soara sta ff gaVe-the -memt>ers a general overview of the entire South County waste picture and agreed that although a crisis is imminent. if prudent measures can be taken in the next 13 months, the districts can meet the squeeze. . staff members said reserve capacities in the local districts are just barely ade- quate to cope with the crush. The ultimate solution is the completion of the San Juan plant under a regional authority known as SERRA (South East Regional Reclamation Authority). Under those plans the San Juan ~ facility's capacity will be increased lo six million gallons daily and four agencies will use it -Moulton·Niguel, the City of San Juan Capistrano, Dana Point and the Santa r..1argarlta Water District Irate Motorist Facing Charges Laguna Beach police today are S"eeking charges against an irate motorist who allegedly punched another dri ver in the eye, then drove over his foot in an early morning altercation on Coast Highway. An offic~r summoned to the scene of the battle at Fairview Street and North Coast Highway shortly after 1 a.m. oaid lhe victim of lhe fisticuffs was accused by his assailant of almost causing an ac· cident when he ran a stop light at Laguna Avenue. The latter then pursued the alleged lawbreaker to the Fairview Intersection where he forced his car to the side of the road. Both drivers stepped out and the fight ensued, police said. As the officer attempted lo weigh the charges, the pursuing driver jumped back into hU car and departed, driving over his opponent's foot as he left, police said . OIANGl COAST DAILY PILOT cwr;t ctlAST PUIL1$HIHQ c:.cw.pAjojy ' a.t1l.1rt N. W11d PralCJtttt •M 1'11Dll\htt • ' J1dc It Cwrl1y 'VD ~ •NI GIMfll MWt1r llio111•1 K1t¥1I f.dltvr n.011111 A, M•'ll~:n• "'-"tGlriO Efiilu Qa.c.. H. l to. a.ic1r11rd P, Ntll A11111Mit ~illf EfiTwt -1..t•H .... Offke 22? fat11t A'f'•llu• llalfi11 •ddren: P.O. 101 •~6, 92651 -., s-C'--t• Offke f IOI Nortla El C1111i110 ~••I, 926 72 0"9t OHie*& Cllt9 ,,,.,., 2lll W"t llY Sl't•I """-' •fl'Cftl1 »U ,,._, eou'f''frd thlllln• 1Mdl1 1111• a.f.11 twitvtrd e!;ft.Y Pll..OT, wllfl .... ldt It ~!llW "'9 ~. "' "*"""" <l•UY U (ffll $,_ .. , ... ..,.,.111 tlfll-. ,., LIOl!'I<> •••c~. .. llNCflt C..t• #>ftt, """'lfltfaoJ •-tell'. Vt lff'I', ''II Cit"""''' ,,_ '""' Slcld~ • ..,,. ''""' -......... 9fllllo\. l'rfllll:IMI ,rift! ..... Wit .. el ~ W.I .., 11'"1, Cltte Mht. 'fel9't llF f7141 '4J~)JI Cl_.. A._,.slr1 '4Z..S671 s.. ca ..... Al '••• .... ," , .. _..•4ft..;4JI .......... All ......... , , ....... , .. ,... ~ J::" ~ onr PuW11111r11 ~~· • IMWt ,.,..., fllwlr•lf•· i. 911ltllf19 ... " .,_.._. .. " lie ~ _, ... ~ .,,,... .mu ,.,... ~ flt (lllpyl'ltlll -· "' ... dflt& llllllttt "" .. ~ tafCfll .... c .. ,. Mft.. C.llftnl... ktl!KT1'119f! .. , Cff'rier D.11 ~ tf .... II DJt ..-!lllr1 ~llltr Hslll'ltt , tut,,..,_,,. I • 'Little S1nokey To Take Over WASfUNGTON (UPI)--Smokey Star'• 1uceeuor, 1n orphan cub named "UtUe Smokey,!• ut 1n Ills caae mournfully studyinl h~ front paw1 · Mond1y whlle forut service oUlcltls made spttebes about ptin. - Then they sent him to the na· Uonal zoo wnere he will be given quarters not far from his adopted parents -t h e original Smokey and his mate Goldie , who failed to proVi'Ce a natural offspring. Both Sniokey came from the sam e New Mexico fore.st where the elder bear was rescued from a forest fire two decades ago. N1unhers Theory: Quake to Hit SF Area in '7 4 PORTLAND, Ore.' (AP) -U h~tory does repeat Itself - a theory known as "the numbers game" -then the San Francisco area is due for another major earthquake in 1974, a federal expert said Monday. Dr. Don Tocher, director of the Earth· quake Mechanism Laboratory in San Francisco, noted the Bay Area had a great quake In 1838 and another in 1906, 68 years later. "Numbers" players would add 68 years and predict another major quake in 1974, said Tocher, who is studying the mechanics of earthquakes as the first step to predicting them. Truancy Reports Top Board Meet A report on truancy in the Laguna Beach Unified School District will top tonight's meeting of the board of educa· tion at 7:30 o'clock at the district office, 550 Blumont Drive. The report was compiled by the ad· ministrative staff during the past week in conjunction with the Laguna Beach Police Department, according · 1 o Superintendent William Ullom. Also heading a rather light agenda Is a r~port from officials of St. Catherine of Siena Catholic school concerning the number of students who may be in at- tendance in Laguna Beach school next year due to the announ~ closure of the private facility. Meteor Show Prerniere Set ' SAN DIEGO (AP) -Astronomer Rudolph Lippert says Southe'rn Californians will watch the spec- tacular Leonids meteor shower best at 3 a.m. on both Wednesday and Thursday. "The meteors wlll appear to be coming from all different direc· lions," said Lippert. "I think it will be very beautiful and spec· tacular." It will be the first time since 1966 ror common viewing of the meteor shower named for the star constellation Leo. The shower occurs when Earth passes through a stream of debris traillng a comet and pieces of the debris. Ice and frozen gases fall into Earth's magnetic field and ignite in a fiery plunge. Jn 1866, sight or the Leonids shower brought panic in some places on Earth. r I . Annexing of .Two .Area~;· Supported Bringing Dana Point and Capislrano Beach into San Juan Capistrano bas been termed feasible from a public service, financial aod legal viewpoint, according Capistrano's to ·a study· releaeed by San Juan Ciplstrano Monday. "All public 'ervices existblc in San Juan can be extended In a short time following annexation without creating deficits, raising property taxes or lower· Ing service levels," said Cilf Manager Donald Weidner in the report's con· clusion. Annex Plan He pointed out thal while the ad· vantages seem to be with the two an- Bel"ng Stud:ed nexed areas, the trend or development in " San Juan is residential and the two 1rr 1 nexed areas will bring in a diversified tax san Juan Capistrano's study of the base with commercial and service. possible ennexatiOn of Dana Point and oriented activitie.s which usually produce Capistrano Beach was fonnally accepted more than they cost in tenns of service. by the City Council Monday. "~I .other concerrui aside, San Juan . . . -·· Captst.t;ano cannot escape the re111lts of Examining the document for poss1~le even~ that .take place in Capistrano revision, the city fathers expressed the Beach and Dana Point in the future. U most concern about the method of elec· future land and s o c i o • e c o n o m i c ting councilmen. developments in these two areas are of 1 The study does not make a recom· high quality, San Juan will 'benefit. U they are not, San Juan will be negatively mendation, but points out three ways the affected in spite of all lts efforts to avoid council could be elected: election by the consequences of uncontrolled and districts, election at large, or district unguided growth,'' said Weidner. representation with election at large. The study points out that if combined Councilman Edward Chermak said the three areas would have a combined population of 14,653 (June, 1971 statistics) and a total assessed valuation of $50;873,452. The city would be a large one geographically with 17.2 square miles or area. The cost of extending services would be $523,2.58 more than for San Juan. But revenue would be $651,1111. The biggest budget item would be $350,000 for more · elaboration was needed. "We should guard jealously the number of seats san Juan has because in the future San Juap will have the majority of the population. We don't want to be ruled by the annexed territories." he said. Councilman Bill Bathgate pointed out that if election is by districts, lines would have to be redrawn periodically to equalize population. The council agreed lo settle this Issue with proponents of the two areas before deciding to proceed with annexation. Other concerns were the possible dissolution of special dlstric1' within the annexed territory and complications which might arise if one of the two areas voted to become part of the city but the other did not. Water Board Set to Answer Jury Charges The retiring board or directors of the . South Coast County Water District has scheduled a special meeting tonight to discuss its official reply lo charges made against the.board in a recent Grand Jury repor t. At the 7:30 p.m. session in the dislrict office, 31652 Second Ave .. South Laguna, directors will discuss attorney George Logan 's point·by·point rebuttal of criticisms directed against the SCCWO In tbe Grand Jury's report on special d~stricts. The dir~tors' reply is expected to point out several errors of fact in the report which they maintain was based only on inIQrmation provided by a com- mittee seeking lo recall four board members. No member of the Grand Jury contacted ~ny representative of the district priQI" to issuance of the report, the director-& state. The boaid is expected to approve Logan's draft reply and order it sent to the Grand Jury. At the special session tonight, directors also "''ill discuss the status of talks with Tri-City Metropolitan Water District regarding annexation of a Dana Point area served by a six·inch water line in- stalled some time ago by SCCWO. Ne1,1•ly elected directors Robert Dwyer and Harold Edwards, aod incumbent Ted J. O'Connell. who was re-elected, will be Installed at the ne1t regular board meeting, Dec. 2. police. - San Juan's general tax or ~ cent. per $100 assessed valuation would be assum· ed by people in the annexed areas, but Its 30 cents for bonded indebtedness would not. The sftldy shows that the two anne1ed areas lie within 50 separate tax code areas. These taxes range from $7.46 to $10.111. They include county general fund, fll'lod control anct school district taxes in addition to special district taxes . If annexal"ion takes place some special di stricts could be dissolved. Areas within the new city could also de-annex from some special districts whi ch duplicate ex· Isling city services. But this would 11ot take place immediately. The sludy, which is now available for limited perusal and will be available for the general public next week, includes a list of services: _ -Police: initial local police operations would have two cars at all times on duty· and this could be extended with minimal additions · to manpower; i( Sheriff's department cont ract continues it could CQSt the new city "5(1,000 for less service than the city police could provide. -Fire: continue county service -Planning: San Juan has one director, one assistant and another assistant im· minent ; immediate local control of development and the creation of plans to guide this control. -Public Works : services could be ex· tended. -Building, Inspection : same except for coordination of planning, zoning and building use and occupancy permits 10 improper or illegal butlding and land uses don't pose threat to adjolnigg property. -Animal Control: enlarged arta could afford lo seek other method than county se rvice which has proved inadequate. -Refuse: remain the same but city would hold franchise instead of county. -Sanitation: would remain the same initially. .. -Government Controls: some ordinances would take immediate effect including curfew, handbill and sign con· trol. Unce and wall regulation, nuisances, • use ol motor vehicles on priv1te property, 1weed abatement. LECTURES IN LAGUNA Paychic Mere Reymont Reyrrto1tt, IVoted Psychic, Speaks l n Lagu1ia Beac h A nationally known psychic credited. with successfully predicting both elec· tions and disasters. will lecture in Laguna Beach Friday under the sponsorship or Spiritual R e s e a r c b Associates. Marc Reymont will discuss and gi·:e demonstrations of extra-sensory perce~ lion (ESP), mental telepathy 6.nd clairvoyance during the 8 p.m. program at the Woman·s Clubhouse, 236 St. Ann 's Drive. The 2g..year-0ld New York native Is most fqmws for his predictions of na· tional and international events, claiming a record of 93 percent accuracy. He is credited with predicting the r~ cent Sylmar tunnel tragedy, President Nixon's election, the 1969 fire aboard the aircraft carrier · USS Enterprise and the marriage of Jackie Kennedy lo Aristotle Onassis. The public is invited to attend the Fri· day event. Fund 'Veteran' Slates Meeting In San Clemente A v~teran in the field of United Fund drives will explain the concept of a joint c:ollection agency for worthwhile service. organizations along the Sooth Coast at an open meeting tonight in San Clemente. fi1erritt Johnson, an executive with the South Orange County United Way, will emphasize the role of the newly launched South Coast United f'und drive which begaR in the Capistrano Boy area early this month. The meeting to which the general public is welcome, will be at 8 p.m. at the San Clemente Elks Lodge. Fund Drive chairman Bob Gannon urg· ed all citizens willing to donate lime as a volunteer for the fund drive to attend tonight's function . The fund 's goal for the first-ever drive is $75,000. The amount is des igned as a replacement to dozens of separate fond drives by many benevolent agencies which can, instead, obtain a share of the United Fund. Fund Bill OK'd \VASHINGTON (AP ) -The Senate a~ nroved a House-passed bill Monday night for $2.037 billion in appropriP.tions for military construction this fiscal year. Cm~penter > Plans New Coast Bill By L. PETER KRIEG Ot "" Cllll~ 1'1i.t ll•!f State Senstor Dennis E. Carpenter (R• NewPort Beach) said today he will write a coastline management bill next year- that should pass the Legislature because lt will be designed to protect private pro- perty rights as well aS the California coasUlne. Carpenter, whose·vote Monday helped kill the last major shoreline legislation left in Sacramento this year, blamed defeat of the measure on a combination of reasons -all of which he said would be eliminated from the Jaw he'll draft. AB 1471, the bill authored by Assemblyman Alan Sieroty ( D • L o s Angeles), died in the 5enate Natural Resources Comm ittee on a 4 to 4 vote after a stonny journey through the le~islative process. It pitted conservationists against major real estate lobbies and coastal com· muniUes and othe r governmental agen· cies from which it sought to wrest local control ol shoreline development. It was this so-called usurping of pro-. party rights and 1 o c a 1 government authority that Carpenter highlighted in his post-mortem this morning. "The ends don't justify the means," he. said. He said defeat of the measure can be blamed on the bill's "disregard for. private property rights, disregard for tax relief proposals for property under the moratorium and disregard for Io ca J government control.'' He said environmentalists also share· the blame for defeat of the measure they so badly wanted. "The eco-hysteria of the times that. everything representin1t g r ow t h ond change is automatically bad for the en-. vlronment" did not sit well with legislators, he said. Carpenter said the bill he'll introduce will take all these fa ctors into con· sideration. "It will provide tax relief "''here land is deemed not to be developed." he said, ;'It will observe the constitutionality of priv ate property and the rights therein. ''It will leave the local area a11!ho~jtv to handle local government with ideally a state agency to oversee the criteria established and to insure an e q u o I representa tion from both the state and the local level." Carpenter stressed, however, "fl.lost lmportanUy, it will protect the coastline where such protection is needed for botA the benefit of the public and the state of California.'' Carpenter predicted there very likely will be others who introduce coastline. legislation in the next session and said those bills "that have a sensible, fair and effective program that are based on a compromise and rational approach lo the.. entire situation will be successful." Conservationists may not wait for th@: Legislature to act, however, as their spokesmen be11an talking about a statewide shoreline protection initiative. Sieroty, himself. bitter after the defeat· of his bill. said he felt a vote of the peo-- ole may be the only way to get a tough - law enacted. "The-Legislature doesn't understand the depth of the people's feelings on prcr tecton of the environment." he said. Sieroty said he feels two thini::s were respon si ble for the outcome -Governor. Rea,l.'!an's altitude and pressure from lob- byists. "I believe the principal reason for this bill's defeat is -the attitude of the governor and his admini stration.'' Sieroty said. but he went on to take equally strong swings at others. "The LegislaturP. has been playing the old game, playing with the people closest · ' t!ie legislatlve process -the lob- byi sts." Y nle Deadlines Let'Us Put You On The Map Overseas Pa.reels Must Go Frida y The Christmas mailing season is upon us and postal officials warn that deadlines for mailing packages and greeting cards are nearing. Friday is the last day to mail parcels by "space available mall" (SAM) to servicemen overseas in order to be sure it arrives before Christmas. One-week-later, Nov, 26.-is Utt hist day to mail parcels via lhe parcel airlift (PAL), and Dec. 10 is the las~ da y lo send airmail parcels or letters to servicemen who are overseas. 'The .accompanying table shows vRrious at.her mail deadlines set up by the" post office to assure senders their epistles or parcels wil !reach the sendee 1n time for Cliristmas. Surface Air Surface Airmail Por«I P1rcel Greetln1 Gre-et1a1 DO~IESTIC Post PO$l Cardi Cards Distant States Dec. l Dec. 15 Dec. JO Dec. 15 Local Areas Dec. 10 Dec. 15 Dec. 15 Dec. 22 Alask4 and Hawa ii Nov. 30 Dec. 15 Dec. ' Dec. 15 ll'tl'ERNATIONAL Canada and Mexico Dec. 3 Dec. 15 Dec. 8 Dec. 20 South and Central America Too late Dec. 13 Dec. 8 Dec. JI Europe None Dec. t3 None Dec. 18 Accepted• Accepted' Africa None Dec. 10 None Dec. 15 Near East None Dec. 10 None Dec. 15 Fir East None Dec. to None Dec. 15 • Out to the contlnuina: East Coast dock sttJke . ' I Near th'e 1ntr1nc11 inaid1 our store, Is a giont new mop. We are in the process of identifying all of the homes wt have carpeted since 1965 on this mep with eolottd pins. (A diffettnl color for ueh yur.) Closo sclutiny will doled some lntaruling f1cts: firstly 1 we h1v1 carpeted homes on virtu · 11 lly every street in the ar••. Secondly, the pins are in bunches, indicating WORD-OF-MOUTH edvartising. Thirdly, th• ·number of homu we hove carpeted is st1ggerin9. If you desire honesty, experience, and rtcom· mendations from neighbors we have worked for, then Aldan's is THE PLACE! ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646·4838 HOUIS: M ... lfvw T1tm.. t 10 l:JD -l'rl., t 10 t-Sat .. t olD to 5 ,. • ' ,. . I .I I I I ,\ ' ' I · . . Lag1111a Beaeh. EDITION Today's ~al .N~Y. Stoeks VOL 64, NO. 274, 4 SECTIONS, 62 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVE~BER 16, '197 r TEN CENTS . - Laguna Assailed for 'Water Treatment Plant· By JOHN VALTERZA Of Hie ~ll'f ,1194 Sl•ff TI'le city of La g u n a Beach found itself on the carpet of the San Diego Rtgional Water Quality Control Board Monday afternoon and received a stem w'rnlng to Improve its waste treatment plant immediately. In sometimes scathing discussion, the board set new effluent standards, de- manded monthly and quarterly reports of progress snd then issued a ban on ocean discharges after the start of 1973. The complex meeting included pro- mises by Laguna officials that the city council Wednesday would lat'lnch a major • Ul feasibilify and cost .1tudy on immediate improvements to the. crumbling sewer plant; seek federal and state grants to help pay for the Changes; then go to the voters in April to seek bonds ror a new facility. It Was the city's past decades of in· action, however, that dominated board members' criticism of the crisis in Laguna . . , Board member C. J. ~louson of San li1arcos said be saw no reason why hear· ings should not be held Immediately to issue cease-and-desist orders against th e city and halt any new sewage hookups in- to the city's system. Ju1·ist Makes 'Pilgrimage' To Hare 1\.rishna Church By TOM BARLEY ot JM Dtlt'I' 1'1 .. t Sllff Saffron-robed members of Lhe con- troversial Ho.re Krishna sect of Laguna Beach had a new "worshiper" in their ranks today -black-robed Orange Coun· ty Superior Court Judge J.E.T. "Ned" Rutter of Newport Beach. But Judge Rutter, a de vout Episcopalian, is more concerned with fighting than 1witching. And a1 series of s111t.s between sect memt>e,rs and angry ntlghbors sent hlm to the cUlt's}:burcb - a converted two-story OOme -..ai Ml Ramona St. to measure for himself the nblse levels emanating from t b e eStablishment. Judge Rutter, declining the offer or a yellow raincoat from a grinning court of· ficial, ordered the dawn pilgrimage after hearing testimony that shouting, chan- ting, cymbal clashing and t11e playing or a variety of musical instruments had of· fended neighbors oo Raroona Street and brought complaints from as far a~·ay as Pacific Coast Highway. Laguna Beach city attorney Tully Seymour asked Judge Ruller to order the Hare Krishna members to keep ~ noise within reasonable limits. .. It's the most difficult thing in the \vorld to define the level at which noise becomes offensive," said Judge Rutter. "We agree there have to be limits but I'm going to have to go down there and put an ear to the door ·myse4f befon I .... can draft the final wording of my. court . order." It is already agreed that whatever noise limits J udge Rutter imposes must be rigidly observed between the hours of 10 p.m. to 10 a.m. on Saturdays and Sun· days and from ID p.m. lo 8 a.m. on ~·eekdays. Jildge Rutter also ruled Monday in a hearing a t t e n d e d by Hare Krishna members and complaining neighbors that visitors to the church for the weekend services Will not be allowed to park in the immediate vicinity . Local residents complained to the city council about the noise levels produced by Krishna serv ices before the volume of criticism led seymour to file his Superior Co urt action against the sect. A neighbor commented Monday that the Krishna services "could only be compared to the waili ng of the banshee and it was hell on earth sometimes when they got that house filled for an evening service." Kri sh na wor s hipers led by homeowner Roy Christopher Richard, agreed before the court hearing Monday to voluntarily restrict the length and volume of their services and to comply with any court order Judge Rutter ma)' devise. "If they don't comply there just won't be any services," Judge Rutter said. Judge Imposes Partial Curbs on Hare l(rishna By PATRICK BOYLE 01 ..... DlollJ 1'1 .. 1 '''" After getting up early to come and listen to the bells and chanting of the Laguna Beach Hare Krishna sect. a Superior Court judge this morning issued his own chant in ordering a partial curtailment or the religious group"s ac· ti vi ties. Standing in the 6:30 a.m. cold autside the temple, Judge J. E. T. "Ned" Rutter said he did not feel the chanters were disturbing the nearby residents with the almost inaudible ceremony. llowever he did note that because or t.£guna Beach zoning laws, the services could only be conducted for residents or the temple at 641 Ramana Ave., thus put· ting a stop to the regular Sunday af. ternoon religious services. The Sonday ceremony onen attracts about 50 persans while only about ten live at the temple. Residents of the area and city official• had sought a halt to the Sunday service, noting legal technallty that as a church the temple needs JS parking spacts. lt has two. Judge Rutter and attorney• for both the city and the Hare Krishna sect took part in the morning "Iiate.ning test" to determine if the service was too loud. The group listened lrom the alley, from the windows of several apartments, and even too k off their shoes to enter the • temple. In relating his finds and the order to the president of the sect, Judge Rutttr noted that he was aware of their strong religious motivation for conducting the early services. He said he majored Jn religious stud ies at Princeton University, specializing In Hindu and Oriental religion" "I do Wlder1land your religion and I am not Ignorant or what you are doing.'' Judge Ruller told sect leader Roy Richard, also krxn\'n as Rfavdeva Dafadhikari. "My job in this case is not lo represent the so..cailed establishment and try to put down your religious service. My job is lo wo~k out a compromise betjeen you and your neighbors." Richard indicated the sect would com· ply with the order about the Sunday services by holding them elsewhere. .. I am also going to order that from now on," J udge Rutter noted, ''all services be conducted quietly enough so that they can't be heard In the-neighbor- ing houses when the windOws and doors are clased." "If the ceremony is conducted so qqietly that nobody hears them," he told 3ttorrieys, "then the residents won't care if they conduct them all day." Judge Rutttr did note however, that the case could raise several questions ot basic rights if the sect complies with the zoning ordinance by obtaining 13 more ~rking spaces. "t am not going to be able to m.ake them conftUct the services so quletly tbal nobody hears them (if they comply as a church)," Jildge Rutter noted. "But it seems to me that it will be very dilficult for them to meet the parking ordinance." Standing in the furnltureles.s living room of the house, Judge Rutter told Richard that his members should also tone down the use of cymbals and horns in the ceremony to keep the neighbors happy. "Try to blow It softly, 11 he sala in leav- ing. "and I think lhe neia:hbors will not be unrf'.asonable." But in its final motion the board agreed to use the hearings as a club if the city doe! not ffiake significant improvements by early next year, Aboqt the only praise for the ~guna crisis came after Dr. Jan Scherfig, a con· sullant to· the city, outlined his pl!m! for 10 interim improvements which could be put Into effect by early next year. He agreed. however, that the changes could only take place if the city had the funds. The bbard commended the consultant's swift sci.ions sinct! starting on the project a month ago. Laguna Beach City liolanager Larry Rose followed Scherfig to the carpet and urged the board fo judge the..;city by its rectnt performance, not the past decades. "I'm not responsi ble for the sins of the past " he told the b6ard "We don't have to ~ndone or explain t~. because most of us did not participate in them."• He stressed · that si~ the board recognized the crisis last August O)e: city has been working swiftly to correct the problems. ''We want to do what's right within our capability of doing It," he said. Rose said the grants for the .interim Improvements are critical to the project. and exhorted the board to help.Obtain the oc . ' •'DAIL.Y l'ILOT•,.lkltt bv'1uc111nt•Kffllltf EARLY RISERS -After rising early toJhear for himself the decibel level of Hare Krishna services in Laguna1Beach, Judge J. E. T .. "Ned" Rutter (right) departs premises this mo~ning with enigmatic glarice. \Vith him are Roy Christopher Richard .And Marjorie U!Gaye, attot· ney for the sect. Bonds for Tax Dana Citizens Attempt Bargain ey-r°REDEl\ICK scuoOOm. 4 O! !M 0.llT l'lltf .Sllff Bargaining like management officials, a Dana Point citizens' group Monday night told the Saddleback College board It will support a $.1 million bond issue to fund a science-mathematics building." if lrustees ·-d~cide to drop a 34-cent ta:ir, recently approved to fund the structure. Respondi ng to a question from trustee Patrick Backus, Paul $3,yre, leader of the group, sard he. would "Work and work hard fOr the bond." other;; In his group nodded their approval. "I'd vote for such a bond." declared David Sandburg, a Laguna Niguel reSi· dent. "I think t.he Voters have made their positk>n clear that they want this campus to e1pand on a pay·as-you·go basis." He said ,he based his .belief on the re. cent rejection or a $25 million "bond issue in Sept.ember by voters j n· the large col-.. lege district. FoUowing the bOnd deieal, ~ees voted Oct. 18 to levy a special 3kelf tax during the 1972·73 fiscal year lo ra!Jl!i $1.2 mlll!on towards the $4.5 million science- mathemalics complex. The remalnlng $2.3 million or the cost would be picked up by the state with funds made ayll)lable und& the Junior College Construction Act of 1967. Sayre's foose-knit group threatened recall after the boalit deel!lon, but last -( I week decided to postpone tile recan~ and ask the board to dr'Op the tax levy. . While Sayre said he would support the smaller bond Issue. he chided the college board, claiming it has developed a "credibility gap" with the com munity. "The philosophy or this board is a big part or iL People vehemently disagree with this board and you have lost the respect or the electorate," Sayre charg· ed. "You have impaired and impacted the functioning of this college ind are splitlinl!' this community right down the middle." • Tru~tee Backus responded to the charges, calling Sayre "a perpetual egotripper." "You 're a loser and everything you touch turns to tarnish.'' Backus fumed . Sa}Te was an UMuccessful candidate for Backus' seat in 1969. After the discussion· cooled down. trustee Hans Vogel, pointed out that if the college does not go ahead with the science.mathematics building with the &O Percent In state matching funds, .the district "will have to pay the entire cost in just •· few years. Either we take that stale money now or forget it." Vogel added that the college must ac· cept Incoming rteshmen and is not· in • position to be selective, such as state rol· feau o'r--universities. - funds from state and federal sourca. "There is no alternate ansWer ·to the grant," he said. ·•it is inconceivable that local cities can hack it alone • • • you have to help us get there,'' he said. City Councilman F..d Lorr promised board members that the city council would work hard at approving the in· terim changes and predicted a unanimous yes vote Wednesd ay on the approvaJ of the feasibility study on the 10.pojnt im-· provement project. Costs will be included .in the study which will be ready for the COUJICJl and water quality board in early January. IUflecling on the board action this morning, Water Quality Board Executive OftlCer · Dennis O'Leary sald the board plans to rorrespond direcUy with the city council in coming months. ''The board will do the rorresponding and stress thJ grave nature of the situa· lion and in months to come we will set a schedule of termination of the ocean out· fall." To board members Monday O'Leary stressed that the plant must be ready to meet the increasing demands of the tourist crush next summer. "The real remed,y, however, will come when Laguna is able to build a new water reclamation plant and no.longer dump its treated waste into the ocean," he said. an Judge Declares Election V o·ided By BARBARA KRElBlCH Of tM Diii'( l'lltt Sl•lf A new lawsuit' filed Monday in Santa Ana Superior Court could have the effect of blocking implementation of Laguna's 35-foot bulldtng height I i m i t a t i o n ordinance until the suit comes up for hearing Dec. 6. Jud~e J.E. T. "Ned" Rutter; in setting the December hearing date, Signed a restralnina: order reqWring tbe city to nullify the. q . S Initiative election vote approving the height limit and cease en-- fon:tng the order, or show cause Dec. i why it bu not done IO. -• The ordinance, the suit claims, Is JI. legal since It does not comply with pro- visions of state law requiring public hear· ing on zoning. legislation. The suit, filed by attorneys !or Laguna Beach reallor Vern Taschner, is In effect a re·filing or a similar suit filed prior to Aug. 3 in an attempt to bait the election. At that time. Judge Rutter ruled in favor of Taschner's request, but his decision was overturned by the Fourth District Court of Appeals, which ordered that the election coold be held, but without prejudice to future hearings on the legality of the ordinanct. Saddleback Unit Votes to Reject Funding Request ln an unusual 3-2 split vote, trustees of the Saddl eback Community College Mon· day night dumped a motion by Hans Vogel to seek up to $3'65,000 in federal aid for construction and equipment funding tor the science-mathematics building. President or the board Alyn Brannon was the only member to join Vogel in ,·oting for the request. Trustees Michael Collins. Patrick Backus and John Lund sent It to defeat. San Juah Ca.plslrano re sident Arthur Black pointed cut that the 1969 ac· creditation report for the college pointed • ..1J Cfiat-"it is a policy of the board not lo accept federal aid." _ -"Is this true?" Black queried.~- "There is no such policy," responded Voegl "but it has been a philosophy of the board. But thing~ have changed. There was a time when the people who elected me didn't want us to seek federal aid. But !hat's changed. Now I will vote for every federal program that comes down the pike." ...... ''I've seen schools accept redenl funds, 11se them, then the government stops tbe funds and the school Is left holding the hag," observed trustee Patrick Backus. "f think we can get together and do th1s thing without federal funds ." 'l don't like to see the inevitable en· "roachments of the federal bureaucracy," commented M I ch a e I Golllns. "We need to show that some districts can educate children without federal aid." Drug Treatment Set SACRAMENTO !UPI) -A bill allow· ing persons released (rom the Cali!omia Rehabilitation Center to partfcipate in methadone maintenance programs for drug addlctk>n was signed Monday by Gov. Ronald Reagan. The measure by Assemblyma" John Vasconcellas {0.Srut Jose), requires a p erso n tiking methadone to receive appro\tal from t~ Department of Corrections and the Narcotic Addict Evaluation Authority. City attorney Tully Seymour said, after an initial· perusal or the suit. "My position and advice to the city council is that the ordinance is valid until the court rules that it is not valid, and should remain i11 effect pendi!!g the final rourt ruling.'' Judge Rutter, however, in response to a hypoU!etJcal question, said today, "If a building inspector issued a permit for a high rise building between now and Dec. 6, it would be valid in law. It's highly doubtful that a building inspeetor would do any such thing, but i{ he dld, I'd be very hard put to find him in CQntempt." The judge added that he would re-read his order "and do some thinking abaut this particular problem" but it would be his present opinion that if a building permit were requested and issued in de· fiance of the initiative ordinance, pending the Dec. 6 hearing. "It would be valid." When asked what recourse a citizen ob- jecting to the iss uance of such a permit would have, Judge Rutter · replied, "They'd have to go to the appellate court and have my rest rainirig order aver· ruled.'' The JiteW suit by Taschner followed lhe Oct. 27 refusal of the Fourth District Court of Appeals in San Bernardioo to grant a similar writ of mandate. The a~ pellate court at that time indicated U\e matter should be heard at the Superior Court level. Legal authorities, noting that Judge Rutter had, in his pre-election ruling, in-- dicated his opinion that the initiative ordinance is indeed illegal, said the city would have the right to disqualify him in the case if it S<l desired. Judge Rutter ls in charge of the law and motion department of the Superior Court and such requests for writs of mandate would automatically first go to this department. Meanwhile in Laguna B e a c h machinery to place the 36·root height limit in the city's :r.onlng ordinance through the .formal hearing procedure continued Atonday as the Planning Com· mission concluded its first public hearing on appropriate amendments to the wning code and set a second hearing for its next meeting Dec. 6. · The amendments then will undergc> hearings before the city council prior to final adoption. Completion or this pro- cedure wou1d-com-p1yw1th tlie slile coda- and nUlli!y attempts to overtum the in~ itiative ordinance on uncl.s of Jlle alit • Oruge Cout Weather Cold, g\lsty winds will continue Wednesday w l th temperatures along the--coast in the low 60's ris· ing to 67 inland, Lows tonight be· tween 34 and 41. INSIDE TODA\' It's the bigge1t week of tht year tn communitv thtattr 011 the Orange COOi& with 1Jx ntto 1how1 openi11g to joi11 eigl4t other1 in progren. See Enter· tai nment, Paoe 191 • • M~l lllfftltt .11 lllltleMI ....... , °' .... c-11 • ITl'rll l'wfw II '""' , ... 1. Sr.di Mtricth .,.11 ftlt¥1-'' Tll4•1«• lt lifl'ffltttr • .. lifl'_.I Hntt 1).14 WWllll HIWI 44 • ' 'II' D41LV lo'ILDl · Sho11:-te1·m Sanitatio11 Ideas 01\'d Short·term Ideas ge.ared to solving a crisis in waste treiltll'lent along the South Coast by several sanitation districts won hearty approval Monday by the San Diego Area Regional Water Quality Con· trol Board. The board , meeting in San1'iego, hearQ plan! by the Dana Point Sanitary District and the Moulton Niguel Sanitary District on how the agencies will handle growing volumes of waste until a new regional plant is completed in San Juan Ca_pistrano. Tht approval by the board was .11 strik· ing contrast to scathing criticism of the city of Laguna Beach sanitation picture. But despite the approvals of the Dana Point and Moulton Ideas, the board nonetheless demanded monthly sewage hookup reports and quarterly reports on progress of the interim solutions. U the plans bog down, then board members agreed they could schedule public hearings and issue orders which could halt all new development until bet· ter waste treatment can take place. The crisis hits Dana Point much worse than Moulton-Niguel. But Dana Point manager Hugh Kimball explained that his district will receive a larger·capacity of 750,000 gallons per day when the new San Juan plant is completed under a joint-powers agree- ment with three other districts. He added ·that during the construction period, Dana Point will buy unused capacity in the.San Juan plant and diveri large voJumes of waste frt>m the tiny Dana Polnt facility. The small Dana Point waste plant is running at full capacity and at one point last summer its effluent discharged off Dana Point left ".something to be desired." according to board Spokesmen. Moulton-Niguel's plans, said manager Carl Kymla, include reactivating a dor· mant plant in Laguna Niguel and using efnuent for lrTigation of El Niguel Golf Course. The agency also sends some of lta wa ste to South Laguna for treatment. Board staff gave the members a general overview of the entire South County waste picture and agreed that allhOugh a crisis Is imminent, if prudent measures can be taken in the next 13 months, the distric;s can meet the squeeze. Stafl members said reserve capacities in the local districts are just barely ade- quate to cope with the crush. The ultimate solution is. the completion of tht San Juan plant under a regional authorjty known a'll SERRA (South East Regional Reclamation Authority ). Under those plans the San Juan facility's capacity will be increased to six million gallons daily and four agencies will use Jt -Moulton-Niguel, the City of San Juan Capistrano. Dana Point and the Santa Margarita Water District. Irate Motorist Facing Charges Laguna Beach poUce today are seeking charges against an irate motorist who allegedly punched another driver in the eye, then drove over his foot In an early morning altercation on Coast Highway. An officer summoned to the scene of the battle at Fairview Street and North Coast Highway shortly after 1 a.m. said the victim of the fisticuffs was accused by his assailant of almost causing an ac- cident when he ran a stop light at Laguna Avenue. The latter then pursued the alleged lawbreaker .to the Jo~airview intersection where he forced his car to the side of the road. Both drivers stepped out and the fight ensued, p0Hce said. As the officer attempted lo weigh the charges. the pursuing driver jumped back into his car and departed. driving over his opponent's foot as he left , police said. OW•I COAST DAILY PILDT CllMW• COAST PUlllSHINQ CCIMPAHV Ath•rt N. w.,, Prnodent Incl P""lithtr ' J1cl It Cwrlt't W VP ,,.w111t .-c.-f.I Mwrtt Tlrioa11 IC1twil •dllW no ...... A. M~•ift• Mlntt ..... l l\IOr Chrf• H. loo1 A!t.h1rd P. ~tan l•Ull .. ftl M.Mll!lj!lf Edllti"I • •• ' ' San ltum St.tUljf Little Sniok~y To Take Over A~nexing of Two -.-. ' \ . Cal!penter -Plans New · WAS GJ'llN (UPI) -Sm0\ey Beir's aucttss0r, ln orphan cub named "Llttle &pokey," &al in his cage moumfully studyln1 hls fronl paws Mond11y while foreat service officials made speeches about him. Area:s Supported Coast ·Bill Then they sent him to the na· tlonal ioo where he will-be given quarters not far fr om his adopted parents -t h e original Smokey and his mate Goldie, who failed to provide a natural offspring. Both Smokey came from the same New Mexico forest where the elder bear was rescued from a forest 4rire two decades ago. Numbers Theory: Quake to Hit SF Area in '7 4 PORTLAND, Ore. (APl -I! history does repe.at itself -a theory known as ''the numbers game" -then the San Francisco area is due for another major earthquake in 1974. a federal expert said Monday. Dr. Don Tocher, director of the Earth· quake Mechanism Laboratory in San Francisco, noted the Bay Area had a great quake ia 1838 and another in 1906, 66 years later. "Numbers'' players would add 68 years and predict another major quake in 1974, said Tocher, who is studying the mechanics of earthquakes as the first step to predicting them . Truancy Reports Top Board Meet A report on truancy in the Laguna Beach Unified School District will top tonight's meeting of the board of educa· lion at 7:30 o'clock at the district office, 5SO Blumont Drive. The report was compiled by the ad- ministrative staff during the past week in conjunction with the Laguna Beach Police Department, according t o Superintendent William Ullom. Also heading a rather light agenda is a report from officials of St. Catherine of Siena Catholic school concerning the number of students who may be ln at- tendance in Laguna Beach school next year due to the aMounced closure or the private facility . Meteor Show Prerniere Set SAN DIEGO (AP) -Astronomer Rudolph Lippert says Southern Californians will watch the spec- tacular Leonids meteor shower best at 3 a.m. on both Wednesday and Thursday. "The meteors will appear to be coming from all different direc- tions," said Lippert. "J think it will be very beautiful and spec· tacular.'' It will be the first time since 1966 for common vie~'ing of the meteor shower named for the star constellation Leo. The shower occurs when Earth passes through a stream ol debris trailing a comet and pieces of the debris , ice and frozen gases fall into Earth's magnetic field and ignite in a fiery plunge. In 1866, sight of the Leonlds shower brought panic in some places on Earth. Bringing Dana Point and Capistrano Beach into San Juan Capistrano has been termed feasible from a public service, rinanclal and legal viewpoint, according * * * Capistrano;s An11,ex Plan Being Studied san Juan Capjstrano's study of the possible annexation of Dana Point ,and Capistrano Beach was fonnally a~cepted by the City Council Monday. Examining the document for possible revision, the city fathers expressed the rnost concern about lhe method of el~c­ ting councilmen. The study does not make a recom· mendation, but points out three wa ys the council could be elected : e\ettion by districts, election at large, or district representation with election at large. Councilman Edward Chermak said more elaboration was needed. "We should guard jealously the number of seats San Juan has because in the future San Juan will have the majority of the population. We don't want to be ruled by - the annexed territories," he said. Councilman Bill Bathgate pointed out that If election is by districts. lines would ha ve to be redrawn periodically to equalize population. The council agreed to settle this issue with proponents of the two areas before deciding to proceed with annexation. Other concerns were the possible dissolution ol special districts withlQ..Jhe annexed territory and complications which might arise if one of the two areas voted to become part of the city but the- other did not. Water Board Set to Answer Jury Charges The.retiring board of directors of the South Coast County· Wat.er District has scheduled a special meeting tonight to discuss its official reply to charges made against the board in a recent Grand Jury report. At the 7:30 p.m. session Jn the district office, 31652 Second Ave., South Laguna. directors will discuss attorney George Logan's point-by-point rebuttal of criticisms directed against the SCCWD In the Grand Jury's report on special districts. · The directors' repl y is e:ipected to pofnt out several errors of fact in the report which tlley maintain was based only on information provided by a com- mittee seeking to recall four board members. No member of the Grand Jury contacted any representative of lhe district prior to issuance of the report, the directors state. The board is expected to approve Logan's draft reply and order it sent to the Grand Jury. At the special session tonight, dir@ctors also will discuss the status of talks with Tri·City li.fetropolitan Water District regarding annexation of a Dana Point area served by a six-inch water line in- stalled some time ago by SCCWD. Ne wly elected directors Robert Dwyer ond Harold Edwards, and incumbent Ted J. O'Connell, who was re-elected , will be installed at the next regular board meeling, Dec. 2. \7 ule Deadlines Overseas Parcels Must Go Friday The Christmas malling season Is upon us and postal officials warn that deadlines for mailing packages and greeting cards are nearing. Friday Is ihe last day to mail parcels by ''space avail'able mail" (SAM ) to servicemen overseas In order to be sure it arrives before Christmas. One week later, Nov. 26. Is the last day to mail parcels via the parcel airlift IPAL), 8-nd Dec. 10 is the last day 111' send airmail parcels or letters to servicemen who are overseas. The accompan~ing table shows various other mail deadlines set up by the post office to assure senders their epistles or parcels wil !reach the sendee In time for Christmas. Surface Air Surface Airmail Parcel Parcel DOMESTIC rost Post Greeting Greetl111 Cards Cards Distant States Dec. 1 Dec. ·~ U>cal Areas De<. 10 Dec. IS Oec. 10 De<. ll Dec. 15 D«:. 22 Alaska and Hawaii Nov. 30 Dec. Jl De<. s Dec. ll 11'"fERNATIONAL Canada and ~fexlco D«:. 3 !lee. JS Dec. 8 !lee. 20 South and Cenlral America Too late Dtc. 13 Europe -None !lee. 13 A~e_pt,ed• Africa None IJ<c. JO Near East None Dtc. 10 Far East None De<. 10 De<. 8 Dec. 18 None Dec. 18 Accepted• None Dec. ll None Dec. IS None Dec. JS • Due 10 the contlnuin& East Coast dock slrike . I to a ~tudy released by San Juan capistraoo 1'.1onday. ti AJI public services existing in San Juan can be extended In a short time followlng annexation without creating deficits, raising property raxes or lower• ing service levels," said City Ma'nager Donald Weidner in the report's con- clusion. He pointed out that while the ad- vantages seem to be with the two an-. nexed areas, the trend of developmenUn San Juan is residential and the two an- nexed areas will bring in a diversified tax base with commercial and servlce- orient'ed activities which usually produce more than they cost in terms of service. "All other concerns aside, San Juan Capistrano cannot escape the results of events that take place in Capistrano Beach and Dana Point In the future. U future land and socio-economic developments in these two areas are of a high quality , San Juan will benefit. If they.are not, San Juan will be negatlvely affected in spite of sll its efforts to avoid the consequences of uncontrolled and unguided 'growth ," said Weidner. The study points oul)hat if combined the three areas would. have a combined population of 14,653 (June, 1971 statistics ) and a total assessed valuation of $50,87$,452. The city would be a large one geographically with 17.2 square miles of area. The cost of extending services would be $523,258 more than for San Juan. But revenue would be $651.118. The biggest budget item would be $350,000 for police. San Juan's general tax of 90 cents per $100 asse.53ed valuation would be assum- ed by people in the annexed areas, but iU 30 cents for bonded Jndebtedness would not. The study shows that the two annexed areas-lie-wlthin -5&-11eparate tax code areas. These taxes range from f/.45 to '10.18. They include county general fund, flood control and school district taxes in addition to special district taxes. If annexation takes place some special districts could be dissolved. Areas withih the new city could also de-annex from some special dlstricls which duplicate er- lstlng clly services. But this would not lake place immediately. The study, which is now available for limited perusal and will be available for the general public next wee k, includes a list of services : -Police: initial local police operations would have two cars at all tlmU on duty and this could be ertended 'with Jrrninimal additions to manpower; if Sherilf'a department contract continues it could cost the new city $450,000 for less service than the city police could provide. -Fire: continue county service -Planning: San Juan has one director, one assistant and another assistant im· minent ; Immediate local control or development and the creation of plans to guide this control. -Public Works : services could be ex· tended. -Building Inspection: same except for coordination of planning, zoning and building use and occupancy permits so improper or illegal building and land uses don ·t poseChreat to adjoining property. -Animal Control: enlarged area could afford to seek other method than county service which has proved inadequate. -Refuse: remain the same but city would hold franchise Instead of county. -Sanitation: would remain the same initially. -Gov ernment Controls : aome ordinances would take immediate effect lncludlng curfew. handbill and sign con- trol, fence and wall regulation, nuisances, use of motor vehicles on private property, weed abatement. LECTURES IN LAGUNA Psychic Mire R~ymont R ~y rnont, .1Voted · Psychic; Speaks In f,aguna Beach, A nationally known psychic credited with successfully predictlng both elec· lions and disasters, will lecture in Laguna Beach Friday under th e sponsorship of Spiritual Research Associates. Pi:larc Reymont will discuss and give demonstrations of extra-sensory percep- tion (ESP), mental telepathy and clairvoyance during the 8 p.m. program at the Woman's Clubhouse, 286 St. Ann 's Drive. The 29-year-old New York native is most famous for his predictions of na· tional and international evenls, claiming a record of 93 percent accuracy, He is credited with predicting the re-- cent Sylmar tunnel tragedy, President Nixon's election, the 1969 fire aboard the aircraft carrier USS Enterprise and the marriage of Jackie Kennedy to AristoUe Onassis. The public is invited to attend the Fri· day event. Fund 'Veteran' Slates Meeting In San Clemente A veteran in the field of United Fund drives will explain the concept of a joint collection agency for worthwhile service organizations along the South Coast at an open meeting tonight In San Clemente. Merritt Johnson, an executive with the South Orange County United Way, will emphasize the role of the newl y launched South Coast United Fund drive which bega11 in the Capistrano &y area early this month. The meeting to which the general public is welcome, will be at 8 p.m. at the San Clemente Elks Lodge. Fund Drive chairman Bob Gannon urg- ed all citizens wllling to donate time as a volunteer for the fund drive to attend tonight's function. The fund's goal for the first-ever dr ive is $7S,000. The amount is designed as a replacement to dozens of separate fund drives by many benevo lent agencies which can, instead , obtain a shart of the United Fund. Fund Bill Ol('d WASHINGTON (AP ) -The Senate ap. oroved a House-passed bill Monday night tor $2.037 billion in approprie.tions for military constru ction thi.s fiscal year. By L. PETER KRIEG 01 rht 0•111 fllltl Sllff State Seitator Dennis E. ·Carpenter (R• Newport Beach) said today he will write a coastline manacement bill next ye ar that should pass the Legislature because U will be designed to protect private pro- perty rights as well as the California coastline. Carpenter, whose vote Monday helped kill the last major shoreline legislation left in Sacramento this year, blamed defeat of tht measure on a C<llJlhination of reasons -all of which he said w'ould be elimqiated from the law he'll draft. AB 1471 , ·the bill authored by ·Assemblyman, Alan Sieroty ( D • L o s Angeles). died in the !ienate Natural ·Resources Committee on a 4 to 4 vote after a stormy journey through the le~islative process. It pitted conservationists against major real estate lobbies and coastal com· munities and other governmental agen· cies from which it sought to wrest local conlrol of shoreline development. It was this so-called usu rping of pro. party rights and Io ca I ~overnment authorit y that Carpenter highlighted in his post-mortem this morning. "The end s don't justify the means," he. said. He said defeat of the measure· can be blamed on the bill's "disregard for private property rights, disregard for tax relief proposals for property under the moratorium and disregard for I o c a 1 government control." He said environmentalists also share the blame for defeat of the measure they so badly wanted. "The eco-hysleria of the limes that everything representinJ? g r o w t h and change is automatically had for tht en- vironment" did not sit well with legislators, he said. Carpenter said the bill he'll introduce wit\ take all these factors into con• &ideration. "It Wll provide tax relief where land \!I deemed not to he developed," he said, "It will observe the constitutionality o[ private pfoperty and the rights therein. · "It will leave the local area authority to handle local government with ide,ql!y a ~late agency to oversee the criteria established and to insure an e qua I representalion from both the state and the local level." Carpenter stressed, ho wever, '1f\.tos~ importantly, it will protect the coastline where such protection is needed for both the benefit of the public and the state of California." Carpenter predicted there very likely will be 'others who introduce coastline legislation in the next session and said. those bills "that have a sensible fair and effective program that are baSed on a corripromise and rational approach to the entire situation will be successful." Conservationists may not wait for lhe- L!rgislature to act, however, as their· spokesmen began talking about a· statewide shoreline protection initiative . Sieroty, himself. bitte r after the defeat. of his bill. said he felt a vote of the peo- nle may be the only way to get a tough Jaw enacted. "The Legislature doesn't understand the depth of the people's feelings on pro- tecton of the environment." he said. Sieroty said he feel s two things were responsible for the outcome -Governor Reagan's a~itude and pressure from lol>- byists. ''I believe the principal reason for this bill's defeat is the attitude of the governor and his administration." Sieroty said. but he Y.'ent on to take equally strong swings at others. "The Legislature has been playing the old ~ame. pla ying with the people closest tl1e legislative process -the lol>- byists." Let Us Put You On The Map Neer the entrenct, inside our store, ts 1 9ient new map. Wt 1rt in tht process of identifyin9 all of +ht homts wt h•vt carptted since 1965 on th;s map with colored pins. IA ·dilleront color for each yur.) Close scrutiny will detect some Interesting facts : firstl y, we hive carpettd homes on virtu· tlty every street in the •r•e. Secondly, tht pins ere in bunches, indicatin g WORD -OF-MOUTH edvertising. Thirdly, th~ number of homes we have ctrpeted is staggering. If you desire honesty, t iptritnct, end rtcom· mendations from neighbors wt h1v1 wor~td for, then Alden's is THE PLACE! ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Plae•ntla Ave. • COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOUU1 Meo. lt!nr 'noun., f to l :JO -"'" f to t-S.t., f :lO to 5 • • - -! I I I .1 I ' " I . •• • • • Today's Fl•al San Clemente Capistrano · EDI TION VOL M, NO. 2H , ~ SECTIONS, 62 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1971 TEN CENTS a ac on r • .. !f"".1 . ,,,..,, ,,......, "' •, • -~ 1 • ., ~ • ' -.. U"I Tt"""""9 WILL ENTER PRIMARY Mlyor Sam Yorty Mayor Yorty Flips Fedora Into '72 Ring.· . • J LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Mayor Sam Yorty, a maverick Democrat, amounced today he will seek the presidential nom· ination in New Hampshire's first-in-the· nation primary March 7. Yorty, who made his third political pilgrimage to the state ·earlier this month, is the second Democrat to an- nounce his bid for the Democratic nomination in 1m, following Sen. George S. McGovern (0-S.D.) . "Encouraged by the advice of many friends and suppOrters. I have decided to become a candidate for President." Yorty said in a statement prepared for a news conference here. "Our ch.mpaign is already well un- der wa; in New Hampshire," Yorty said. The Los Angeles mayor said, however, he has no intention or entering all the primaries. and at this point the Calif_ynia primary v.·ill "climax our campaign. "The first step is New Hampsturt. After that we shall see," Yorty said. "other states may be added as the campaign progresses." 'Yorty said. "We will be selecti ve. We have no intention of trying to raise the huge sums of money necesSaiy to enter all the primaries." Yorty sa id he has no illusions about the difficulties in y,•innin g ttie support of the voters in New Hanipshire, which is considered to be strongly behind Sen. Edmund S. Muskie I 0-M aine). "My position on the issues will be that of a moderate Democrat," Yort.y said , "a position I hope will appeal not only to a majority o( Democrats but also many Republic.am who are disillusioned with the current resort to sheer political expediency by the Nixon administration in its efforts to win the election at all costs or by any means in 1972," he said. Oruge Coast Weather · Co(d, gusty winds y,1UI continue \Vednesday wit b temperatures along the coast in Lhe low 60's ris. ing to 67 inland. IA>ws tonight be· tween 34 and 48. INSIDE TODA l' It's the biggest week of tht year in contmunlty thtater on f11e Ora11ge Coost with si:i: ~ shows op1ning to ;oin eiQht othera hi P"OOrtss. Set Entcr- to in me11t, Poge 19. Ctl!Mr11l1 t Cltullltt JI·>' C""k' II Ct9UlfltN IJ Offlft Nff;c" t ""'""" . 1:•n1rt11 "'" • •11r1ttt1l111M~I IP.to ''"'"Cf 1 .. 11 "-"•-" ·~~ Ltlllltrt U Mt"'ltt It ----• • Pe11dleton Race Woes Said Large Racial discrimination appears to be serious at the world's largest: l\farlne base, Camp Pendlelon. report! a tw~ man congressional fact-finding team . The· statemenl was made after meetings Monday with aboul 80 minority group Pt1arines at Camp Pendleton. A three-day bearing on racial discrimina- tion in the armed forces begins Wed· nesday In Congress. A report about Camp Pendleton ¥.'as submltted to the Congressional Black Caucus in Washington, D. C., by Charles E. Knox. an aide ' to Rep, Augustus Ha1v- kins (0-Los Angeles ). Knox. meeting with newsmen . said he will ask }lawkins to make at least one surprise visit to Ca1np Pendleton to "see how things really are." Base officials were.. given 10 days to prepare fo r the visit by Hawkins, "\Vhat we found after several hours of consultations was an absence o f minorities in the top command structure which results in an attitude of in- sen.sitil'ity to problems of minority 1.1arines," Knox said. The promotion and training op- portul\.ilies "are stacked in favor of whitey," he •said, adding his belief that military justice Ls often unfair. Knox said he will investigate the case cf a black sergeant with 17 years' service who claims he Ls being fon;ed. out of -the Marine Corps for no apparent reason other than color. The sergeant w;, identified ~ Hilton L. Hart. 38. of Richmond. Va .• who facu discharge Saturday. A tw~year Viel.nam veteran he told newsmen that he is, the victim 'or "an attempt to Jimlt the number of black and chicano marines." There was no public explanation why Jlart's request lo re-enlist for a last hitch entitling him to a retirement pension wt_t denied. Said Hart: "I'm over six feet and a pretty tough 160 pounds. I'm what the corps wants in a noncommissioned officer except that I'm black. They tnnt me enough to train kkil to fire rocket launchers and name throwers right up to the day they throw me oul" M. Sgt. Billy Churchman, the white first sergeant of Hart's outfit, Wld newsmen that Hart was Marine of the f\.1onth earlier this year and "he's always on the )ob by ~ a.m." Knox conferred with f\.faj . Gen. George S. Bowman Jr., commander of the base where 32.000 men are stationed. There was no formal comment by base officials on the statements made by Knox. Nine other bases in the nation are also undergoing scrutiny. Reaga11 to Meet With President SACRAMENTO CAP ) -Gov. Reagan planned to lea\'e California late today for Washington. D.C.. w.here he is scheduled to meet with President Nixon on \\'ednesday. Neither Tue subject of the meeUng nor the exart lime was announced by the White House. Reagaq's office declin- ed to comment on the purpose o( Reagan's trip. From Washingtoo. Reagan w:lll go to French Lick, Ind., to attend the winte r meeting or the Republican Governors' Association. He is scheduled to return to Los Angeles Saturday and to sacramento SUnday. Water Districts Get Se,ver Line 1 The tt1outon-N'iguel and S an t a Margarita water di stricts have been given permission to install an interceptor sewer line within Fk>od Control Diatrict rights of way in San Juan and Trabuco creek channels. The pennit had been held up for two y,·eeks at the request bf f'lfth District SUpervisor Ronald CMpers who ex· pressed concern for lhe disposl tk>n plans (or sewage In the Laruna Niguel-Dana Point areas. Caspers JJaid Tuesday that Carl Kymla, general manager of the Moulton-Nlauel Water District had detailed plans In the ·works for better sewage treatment plant.I to service the area. • Winter Su1a Group ·Asks Override ' Be Dropped By FREDERICK SCHOEMEllL Of tilt O.llV "lie! Slaff Bargaining like management officials, a Dana Point citizens' group Monday night told the Saddleback College board it will support a S3 million bond issue to · fund a science-mathematics buildings if trustees decide to drop a 34-ttnt tax, recently approved to fund the structure~ Responding. to a question from trustee Patrick Backus, Paul Sayre, leader of the group, said he would "work and work hard for the bond." other.:; in his group nodded their approval. "I'd vote for such a bond." declared David Sandburg, a Laguna Niguel resi .. dent. "I think the voters have made their position clear that they want this campus to expand on a pay-as-you-go basis." He said he based his belief on the re· ~ent rejection of a $25 million bond issue m Sep~~ber by voters in the large col· lege d1str1ct. Following the bond defeat, trustees Silhouetted by sun. Orange Coast family v.1ades in sparkling water on a winter day at the beach. \Vilh cro\vds of summer su nworshipers hibernating in· land, winter becomes a time of adven\ure and redis- covery at the beach for many Orange Coast families -a time for Jong walks in fresh, brisk air .. voted Oct. 18 to levy a special 34-cent tax du.ri~g the 1972-73 fiscal year W raise $2.2: rrulhon towards the $4.5 million science. mathematics complex. The remaining $2.3 million of t~e cost would be pic ked up by lhe state with funds made available under·the Junior College Construction Act of 1967. $145, 786 Lowest .Pid .s . •. ' !\ ~ Saddleback Unit . . ,. ~ Votes to •iect.. s&yre's loo~knit group threatened recall after the board decision but Wt week decided to postpone the ~ ud ask the board to drop the tax levy. For New Fire Station Funding R~est While Sayre said he would sUpport_the smaller bond issue, he chided the college !!°ard~ . claiming it has developed a • A construction firm in Artesia is the apparent low bidder for San Clemente's proposed new !ire department head· quarters and has offered to build the structute for $J4q,?86. The bid of Victor Construction was $2,000 less than the nearest competition in last Friday's bid opening. The runner· up in the race for tbe figure s was the firm of Snyder-Langston Construction Company with a bid of $1<1.7,'770. City councilmen will probably conskter the award of a contract to the lowest Tesponsible bidder at W e d n e s d a y ' s regular meetiJ]g. The bid by the Victor firm is within the budget area set by coun cilen and the ci- ty staff, A price of about $140,000 was set by ci· t)• aides for the ·major project. The new headquarters building will in- clude a hose drying rack and tower plus fueling. facilities will be built on the driveway approach to the existing Ure station at civic center. Funds for the construction of the city's first station capable of overnight housing of a full-time squad of firemen will come from accumulated rebates from the state cigarette sales lal. No new equip!!J!nt ls p~sed !,I. the outset. but the hiring ol four more mento allow for 24-hour duty is planned. City J.1anager Ken Carr said that if contracts are awarded soon by coun· cilmen that the ,new station. could be ready for oper3ilon early next spring. In all. six construction finns (none of them locally-based) offered to build the ·new facility. The rest of the bidders were:~ --Near-Cal Corporation. $15'400. -Lomar Corporation, $178,138. -First A s s u r a n c e Construction. 1152,850. -Benton Construction Company, $161,461. Councilmen have an option to cut the lo\Y bidder's offer if they wish to by deleting some facilities, Including the towers and fueling facility. The new building will have to be placed on coocrete c2Jssons driven into the soil beneat h the parcel at civic center l)eCause soils te-sts showed thi t special foundations would be required. The low bid includes the special caisson work. Designers for the project were local architect Marvin Renfro working in alliance with Willard T. Jordan of Costa Mesa. Teacher-Parent Conferences Set This Week • The first moment of truth of the school year for Capistrano Bay area youngsters will take place late this week -parent- teacher conferences. And during the conferences most students in the CapiStrano Unified School District will have two days o!f. Those enrolled al San Clemente High School, however. will remain in class. District aides urged all-parents to seet · information from teachers on the Child'rens' progress. Teacbers have said that the most fre- quent parent'$ questions include: -Is my child Working up to his ability, and If not, why not'? -Does he. display an aptitude l should ·encourage? What can I do help him? -How does he ge t along with other children ? -can I see samples or his work? The aides· stressed that the prime goal or the, conferences it to help teachers understood how W help pupils do better in class. In an unusual 3-2 split vote, trustees of credibility gap" with the community, . the Saddleback Community College Mon--"The ~hilosophy of this board is a big day nig ht dumped a motion ~y Hans P~rt of . d, People vehemently disagree Vogel io seek up to $365,000 in federal aid with this board and you have Jost the for OQns tructlon and equipment funding ··~~res~t of the el~tor~te," Say~e charg· for the science-mathematics building. ed. You. have 1mpa1I'ed and unpacted President or the boa rd Alyn Brannon the. f~nctio~lng or this college and are was tile only member to join Vogel In sp!~~Jn~, this community right down the voting for the request. Trustees Michael rru e. Collins Patrick Backus and John Lund Trustee Backus responded to the sent it' to defeat. char~es, calling Sayre "a perpetual egotnpper." San Juan Capistrano resident Arthur Black pointed out that the 1961 ac· creditaUon report for the college pointed f'lu t that "It ls a policy or the board not to accept federal aid." "Is thls true?" Black queried. "There is no such policy," responded · Voegl "but it has been a philosophy of t)le board . But things have c~nged, There was a Ume when the people who elected me didn't want us to seek federal aid. But that's changed. Ndw I will vote for every federal progra m that comes down the pike.•• , "I've seen schools accept federa'I funds, use them, then the government stops the fund s and the school is left holding the bag," obse rved trustee Patrick Backus. "I think we can get together and do this thing without federal funds." •t don 't like to see the inevitable en· r ro.achments or the federal bureaucracy," commented MI c h a e l Co11ins. "We need td show that some districts· can educate children without federal aid." Presidential Citation Due Marine Regiment Secre(ary of Defense Melvin Laird will present the Presidential Unit Citation to the 1st Marine Regiment of , the 1st Marine Division at• Camp Pendleton Thursday. "You're a loser and everything you touch turns to tarnish," Backus fumed. Sayre was an unsuccessful candidate for Backus' seat in 1969 • After the discussion cooled down, trustee Hans Vogel, pointed out that It the college does not go ahead with the science-malhematics building with the 50 percent in state matching funds the district 0 will have to pay the entir~ cost in just a few years. Either we take that state money now or forget it" ·Vogel added that the college must ac· cept incoming freshmen and is not in a position to be selective, such as state col· leges or universities. ;<And if we don't have the room for the students, we have only one alternative - tbat's lo send them to olher junior col· leges and pay $1,000 per student per year to have them educated." "That cost," chipped in trustee Michael Collins, "is prohibitive." Taking a_ suggestion from Sayre. coJ. lege president Fred Bremer said he would activate a "citizens advi.!ory' group" to eiplore the possibility or h.av· ing the $3 million bood perhaps al eleo. tion time In April of next year. Trustees agreed to continue discu!sion on the financing of _the science. mathematics building until their next regular meeting, Dec. IS, They took no action on whether or ROt to re!clnd the' 34-cent tax levy. CSF Registrar ' Tough to Give The 2 p.m. ceremonies will involve 1,400 Marines and will offer the Presiden- tial honors · for the largest helicopter assault by Marines in the Vietnam war. Named Planner John 8 .. 'Sweeney, administrator at California State College, Fullerton, has been named to the San Juan Capistrano Planning Commission. Whi.te House Gifts Ru1i luto S1iag U yoo plan' to give a gilt to the Prest· dent ot the United States be prepared to put with miles of red tape. ol' the President's military aide, Marine Maj .. John Brennan was necessary. •Ntn -and he is still working on this one-he must obtain permission .-from. the President's appalntment sect el a r.y The opera\ion, Meade River, laster 20 days and began on Nov. 20 ol 1968. Marii'le spokesmen saTd more than [000 of the enemy wtte killed in actions linked to lhe.-asuult. · Powel· 'of the Press He fills the seat vacated by Charles L. Allen who resigned two months ago. Sweeney, a retired Marille COrps col· one1, holds the office of registrar at·lhe college. He has a master '11 ctegne: from Ohio State University. . ' That is the \\'arning of Winston Updegraff, executi ve Sf!Ctetary of the Orange County League of Cities. Updegraff wa11 given the job ot seeing Dwight Chapin of a dare for the PORTLAND,'Ore. (UPI) -Sen. Henry : ceremony to present the city sea)s. Jackson (b-Wash.), was speaking to a The new commisslot;1er Is currcnUJ serving as vlce president of the Miss~ Hills ~Ranch Homeowoen ' Assocl1Uon and is a membtr of the year-round school committee of the Caplstr•no Unified. .School District. ' that city seals of the county 's 25 com- muniUes were presented to and displayed in the Western White House in San Clemente. Wt firat hurdle wu the General Services Administration. Then approval Updegraff says th e conference room news conference tt1onday when the lighU! where the seals will probably be hung is went out because of an overloaded circuit on the San Diego County side of tilt li.ne • t~m too rrlany televlaton came'ras, lights in lhe'San Clemente compound, 1 and amplifiers. 1lle hopes he . doesn't have to geL "There's an ~le of the power permJsslon of' tl,18t county's ofticlals. · or-ttle pressj" ~ •quipped. • ".J, I He i5 marritd. has four children, 1n4 resides al 27101 Mission llllls Drive, San Juan.Capistrano . ' • --~~ ·-- • ;.; . .... • -1 "f OAllY l'llOT SC Sl1art-te1·1n Sanitation ldeas Ol('d .. ~ Short-term ideas geared to solVing a crisis In waste l.re.atmenl along the South <:bast by several sanitation districts won hearty approval fl.1onday by the San Dlqo Area Regional \\later Quality Con-trol Board . The board, meeting in San Diego. heard plans by the Dana Point Sanitary District and the Moulton Niguel Sanitary District on how the agencies will handle growing volumes of waste until a new regional plant Is completed in San Juan Capistrano. The approval by the board wa s a strik- ing contrast to scathing criticism of the city or Laguna Beach sanitation picture. But despite the approvals of the Dana Point and Moulton Ideas, the board nonetheless demanded monthly sewage eyookup reports and quarterly reports on ·Progress of the interim solutions. :"1° IL the plan.s bog down, then board mem_bers agreed they could schedule · public hearings and issue orders which ·could halt all new development until bet· ter waste treatment can take place. '""" The crisis hits Dana Point mu ch worse than Moul ton-Niguel. ·But Dana Point manager Hugh Kimball ·explained that his district will receive a larger capacity of 750,000 gallons per day 'frhen the new San Juan plant is completed under a joint-powers agree- 1tnent with three other districts. • He added that durlug the construction l'Uiod, Dana Point wlll buy unused capacity in the San Juan plant and divert large volumes of waste from the tiny Dana Point facility. .~··The small Dana Point waste plant is .running at full capacity and at one point bat summer ill effluent discharged off .Dana Point left ''something to be Q.uired," according to board spokesmen. .... • Moulton-Niguel's plans, said manager ·~I Kymla. include reactivating a dor· mant plant in Laguna Niguel and using effluent for irrigation of El Niguel Golf Course. ·:. The agency also sends some cf Its lVaste to SOuth Laguna for treatment ~· Board atafl gave the members a gene.ral oYervJew of the entire South County ~aste picture and agreed that although a crisis is imminent. Jt prudent rneasures can be taken In the neir.t 13 months, the districta can meet the Mjueeze. Staff m~mbers said reserve capacities in. tm JocaJ district.a are just barely ade- qµate to cope with the crush. : The ultimate solution is the completion of the San Juah plant under a regional aulhority known as SERRA (Soulh East Reg ional Reclamalion Avthorily l. Under those plans lhe San Juan facility 's capacity wiU be increased to six million gallons daOy and four agencies will use It -Moulton-Niguel, the City of· San Juan Capistrano. Dana Point and the Santa Margarita Water District. Irate Motorist Facing Charges Laguna Beach police today are seeking charges against an irate motorist who allegedly punchr..d another driver In the eye. then drove over his foot in an early morning altercation on Coast Highway. An officer su mmoned to the scene of the battle at Fairview Street and North Coast Highway shortly after l a.m. said the victim of the fisticuffs was accused by his assailant cf almost causing an ac· cident when he ran a stop light at Laguna Avenue. The latter then pursued the alleged lawbreaker to the Fairview intersection where he forced his car to the side of the road. Both drivers stepped out and the fight ensued, police said. As the officer altempted to weigh the charges. lhe pursuing driver jumped back into his car and departed, driving over his opponent's foot as he left. police gaid. ORANG! COAST DAILY PILOT owi;i '°.ur PUILUHIHQ CON.l'AJ(Y ~t\.trt N. w,, .. PraoOmt •rid l'ltlM•1i'ltf J1clr: R. C~tlty va P/'lllflfll •rid c-111 M.tnttw 1h1rn11 KttYil i!f/!Of Thf,,,11 A. Mwrp\1:11, M-l lftt lf•llr C~atl., H. l••• Ri(~•NI '· t!tll Hlll\1111 .,_lntginf l:flltrt "-t•M '-'-Offke 21! f•rt1 I AY111w• M1i1J119 •d4r•11: P.O. l er •••, tl611 S.. Cle111•11hl Off!(• j Jiiii North El Cimino \J:.1 11, tl•72 "" Otllet Offlc .. f C"'-Mn.• ,. WtH art Strtfl t.J,._rt aMcl!: WI Nf-1 .OlllO•fr'd tillftlll'!llfll IMClll VllJ IW'11 l~l•••ril r.n.v 'llOr, wl!lro ..,,..,, It~"" _,,...,, It ~~N •11l.,••C'111 ·-.. ~ "' ... , ... .,1,_ .... ~· ... , ... "''"'""' lttcll, CM11 M•1, ,....,t..,.!ffl Me• ,._.lit Yt lltY. ~II\ C~!I/ I~ .,_ $Hf~~ •ltfll Wllll ... , .. ..,_. ..::v· ~'""-'"' .,..,,..,. •14111 It I t ~ 11, Srrwi. C..te ""*'• llf1pt 11 (1141 64J-4JJI Cl..wtNI .-;..,"""' •42·1 611 S-Ct1 re Al 1_,_,.....: 1.1 ...... 49J-44!1 ....... ._.Al ...... ..mz ,,.., ... 494-ftH L..,....,, 17,., or.,. CMlt Mlltl\lo1 (f ...... ,. fWI ..... tMf.... JftwtUll< " ••lttMI -!Mr • ,. ....... '"""'"" /It I .,..., 11f ,.,.Ir... wlfMl.lt .-.ltl ,,_ '"1HltOI .. ~ .... ·-· &.ctN <IHI _..,. •If •I .......... 1 .. (11 ..... C"Mll M"t, Ct l ....... Jt. '1*tctt .... ~ ON"W U .U -Ill~ W -II .Jt .-111iy1 '"II""" .. rlrltl , il.U fNtflllll\', '• .. .... ~ittle Sniokey !fQ Take Over .... ASHINGTON-CUl?I) -Smokey Annexing of;Two Carpent'er Plaits New · '"Wr'a 1110CeUOr,• an. ·o~ cub >' llllned "UUle iinoi<-.. , ut In ' ---. . . . . Areas· ... ·S~pportetl· '.,, Ill• cap ~b' ·~illl .hll (...,I paw• MClldaf •hU• I forut tervlct offJciall made 1ptethl1 about him. r Then they sent him to the 1 na· llonal ioo where he will bt given qµarters not f,':.r from his adopted paren t.s -l he original Smokey and .his mate Goldie, who failed to provide a natural offspring. Both Smokey came from the same New Mexico forest where the elrler· bear was rescued from a forest fire two decades ago. Numbers Theory: Quake to Hit SF Area in '7 4 PORTLAND, Oro. (AP)", If history does repeat lllelf - a theory known 11 ''tbe numbers ·game" -then the San Francisco area Is due for another major earthquake in 1974, a federal expert 1ald Monday. Dr. Don Tocher, director of the Earth· quake Mechanism Laboratory In San Francisco, noted the Bay Area had a great quake In 1&38 aRd another in 1908, 68 years later. "Numbers" pla yers would add 68 years and predict another major quake In 1974, said Tocher, who la studying the mechan ica of earthquakes as the first step to predlctln1 them . Truancy Reports Top Board Meet A report on truancy In the Laguna Beach Unified School District will top tonight's meeting of the board of educa· lion at 7:30 o'clock at the di strict office, 550 Blumont Drive. The report was compiled by the ad· ministrative staff during the past week in conjunction with the Laguna Beach Police Department. according t o Superintendent William Ullom. Also htading a rather light agenda Is a report from officials of St. Catherine of Siena Catholic school concerning the number of students who may be in al· tendance in Laguna Beach school next vear due to the announced closure of the Private facility. Meteor Show Prerniere Set SAN DIEGO (AP) -A!tronomer Rudolph Lippert says Southern Ca;li!omians will watch the spec· tacular Leonids meteor shower best al 3 a.m. on both Wednesday and Thursday. "The metears will appear to be coming from all different dlrec· Lions," said Lippert. "I think It will be very beautiful and spec· tacular." It will be the first time since 1966 for common viewing of the meteor shower named for the su1r constellation Leo. The showe r occurs when Elrth passes through a stream of debris trailing a comet and pieces of the debris . Ice and froien gases fall into Earth's magnetic field and ignite io a fiery plunge. Jn 1866, sight of the Leonids shower brought panic in some places on Earth, .... Bringing Dana Point and Capistrano Beach-Into San Juan caPistrano has been termed feasible from a public service, financial and lejal viewpoint, according Capistrano's Annex Plan Being Studied San Juan Capistrano's study of I.he possible annexation ol Dana Poi"nt and Capistrano Beach was formally accepted by the City Council Monday. Examining the document for possible revision, the city fathers expressed the most concern about the method of elec· ting councilmen. The study does .not make a recom- mendatlori, but points out three ways the council could be elected :, election by districts, election at large, or district representation with election at large. Counci lman Edward Chermak said more elaboration was needed. "We should guard jealously the number of sealt San Juan has beca1,1se In the lulure San Juan will have the majority of the population. We don't want to be ruled by the annexed territories," he said. Councilman Bill Bathgate pointed out that if election is by districts, lines would have to be redrawn periodically to eq ualize. population. The council agreed to settle this Issue with proponents of the two areas belore deciding to proceed with annexation. Other concerns were the possible dlssolullon of special districls within the annexed territory and complications which might arise if one of the 'two areas voted to become part ot the city but the ether did not. Water Board Set t9 Answer Jury Charges The retiring board of directors of the Sooth Coast County Water District has scheduled a special meeting tonight lo -di:tcu!l!"""its o(ficial reply to charges made against the bOsrd Jn a recent Grand Jury report. At the 7:30 p.m. session in lhe district of£ice, 31652 Second Ave., South Laguna, di~tcrs will discuss attorney George Logan's poinl-by·point rebuttal of criticisms directed against the SCCWD in the Grand Jury's report on special districts. The dlrectors' reply is experted to point out several errors of fact in the report which they mainlain was based only _on informati on provi ded by a com· mittee seeKing to recall foor board members. ND member of the Grand Jury contacted iny representative of the district prki-to issuance of the report, the directors state. The board is expected to approve Logan's draft reply and order il sent to the Grand Jury. Al the special session tonight. directors also will di scuss the status of talks with Tri-Cit.v Metropolitan Water District regarding annexation of a Dana Point area served by a six-inch water line in· stalled some time ago by SCCWD. Newly elected directors Robert Dwyer and Harold Edwards, and incumbent 'fed J. O'Connell, who was re·elected, wil l be installed &t the next regular board meeting, Dec. 2. Yule Deadlines Overseas Parcels ilfust Go Frida.y 'fhf'. Christmas malling season is upon us and postal cfficials warn that deadlines for mailing packages and greeting cards are nearing. Friday is the last day to mail parcels by "space available mall" (SAM \ lo servicemen overseas in order to be sure il arrlves betore Christmas . One wetk later. Nov. U, Is the last day to mail parcels via lhe parcel airlift <PAL). and Dec. 10 ls the last day to send airmail parcels or letters to servicemen who are overseas. The accompanying table ~hows various other mall deadlines set up by the post office to assure senders their epislle11 or parcels wll lreach the sendee Jn time for Christmas. Surf let Air Surfact Airmall Parcel P1reel Greetln& Gretllag DOMESTIC Pott Post Cards Cards Distant Statts Ott. 1 Dec. I ~ Dec. 10 Ott. 15 Local Areas Dec. 10 Dec. 15 Ott. 15 Ott. 22 AJ&ska and Hawaii Nov. 30 Ott. IS Dec. s Dec. 15 INTERNATIONAL Canada Md J\1fxico Dec. 3 Ott. 15 t;>ec. 8 Ott. 20 ' South Ind Central Ame.rlc1 Too late De<. 13 Ott. ' Ott. II Europe Non• Ott. II None Ott. 18 Acce pted • Accepted• Afr lea None Dec. 10 None Ott. 15 Near t.st None De<. 10 Nono Ott. IS Far E1st None Ott. 10 None Ott. 11 • Due. to lhf. continuing East Coas' doek strike • • ' to 1 •ludy released by Sin Juan Capis trano Monday. "All public services existing ·i(I San Juan can be extended in a short · time following annexation without creating deficits, raisin& property taxea Of lo.wer• ing service levels," said City Manager Danald Weidner in the re.port's con· clusion. He pointed out that while the ad· vantages seem to be with ' the two an· nexed areas, the trend of development in San Juan is res!dentlal and the two an- nexed areas will bring iil·a diversified tax base with commercial and service- oriented activities which usually produce more than they cost In tenns or service. :•All other concerns aside, San Juan Capistrano cannot escape the resultJ of events that take place In Capistrano Beach and Dana Point in the future . tr future land and aoclo ·eeonomic developments In these twO areas are of a high quality, San Juan will benefit. If they are not, San Juan will be negatively affected In spite of all its effort! to avoid the consequences of uncontroUed and unguided growth,'' said , Weidner. The study point~ out that if combined the three areas Would have a cambined population or 14,853 (June, 1971 statistics) and a total assessed valuation of $50,873,452. The city would be a large one geographlcally with 17.2 square miles of area. The cost of extending servk:es would be $523,258 more than for San Juan. But revenue would be $651,118. The ·biggest budget Item would be $350,000 for police. San Juan 's general tax of 90 cents per $100 aaaessed valuation would be as.sum· ed by peaple In the annexed areas, but its 30 cents for bonded indebtedness would not. The study shows that the two annexed areas lie within ~ separi(e tax code areas. These taxes range from $7.46 to $10.18. They Include county general fund, n...oo control and school district ta xes Jn addition to special district taxes. If annexation takes place some special distri cts could be dissolved. Areas within the new city could also de-annex from !'tf"lme special districts which duplicate ex· lsting city services. But this would 11ot take place immediately. The study, which is now available for limited perusa l and will be available for the general public next week, includes a list of services : -Police: ipitial local police operations would have two cars at al\ times on duty and this could be extended with minimal additions to manpower ; if Sheriff's department conlrac~ continues· it could cost the new city $450,000 for less service than the city police coul d provide. -Fire: continue county service -Planning : San Juan has one director. one assistant and another assistant im- . mlnent; Immediate local cantrol of development and the creation of plans to guide this control. --Public Works : services could be ex· tended. ..... Building lnspectlon: same except for coordination of planning, iooing and building use and occupancy permits sa improper or illel{al building and land uses don't pose threat to adjoining property. -Animal Control: enlarged area could afford to seek. other method than county service which has proved inadequate. -Refu se: remain the same but city would hold franchise instead ot county. -Sanitation : would remain the same inili;i\ly. -Government ~trols : some ordinances would lake Immediate effect including curfew, handbill and sign con· trol. fence and wall regulation. nuisances, use of motor vehicles on private property. y,•eed abatement. LECTURES IN LAGUNA Psychic Marc R1ymont Reyrriont, _lVotecl Psychic, Speaks In Lagunct Beacli A nationally known psychic credited with successfully predicting both elec· tions and disasters, will lecture in Laguna Beach Friday under t h e sponsorship of Spirltual Re s ear c h Associates. Marc Reymont will discuss and give rlemonstralions of extra-sensory percep- tion (ESP ). mental telepathy snd clairv oyance during the 8 p.m. program at the Woman's Clubhouse, 286 St. Ann's Drive. The 29--year-old New York native is most famou s for his predictions of na· Uonal and International events, claiming a record of 93 percent accuracy. He ls credited with predicting the re· cent Sylmar tunnel tragedy, President Nixon's election, the 1969 fire aboard the aircraft carrier USS Enterprise and the marriage of Jackie Kennedy to Aristotle Onassis. The public is invited to attend the Fri· day event. Fund 'Veteran' Slates Meeting In San Cleme11te A veteran in the field of United Fund drives will explain the concept of a joint collection agency for worthwhile service crganizations along lhe South Coast at an open meeting tonight in San Clemente. Merritt Johnson, an executive with the South Orange County United Way, will emphasize the role of the newly launched South Coast United Fund drive which began in the Capistrano Ek.y area early this month. The mee ting to y,·hich the general public is welcome, will be at 8 p.m. at the San Clemente Elks Lodge. Fund Dri ve chairman Bob Gannon urg· ed all citizens willing to donate time as a volunteer for the fund drive to attend to night's function . The fund 's goal tor the first-ever drive is $75,000. The amount is designed as a replacement to dozens of separate fund drives by many benevolent agencies which can, instead, obtain a shart: of the United Fund. Fund Bill OK 'd WASHINGTON <AP ) -The Senate ap. nroved a House-passed bill Monday night for $2 .037 billion !n appropri?.~ions f o r military con~truction this fiscal year. Coast Bill By L. PETER KRIEG Of lht De!IY l'lltl l1tll Slate Senator Dennis E. Carpenter {R· Newport Beach) said today he will write a coastline inanagement bill next year that should pass !he Legislature because tt will be designed to protect private pro- perty rights as well as th e Callfornla coastline. Carpenter. v.·hose vote Monday helped le.ill the last major shoreline legislation left in Sacramento this year, blafT]ed defeat of the mtasure on a cambination cf reasons -all of which he said would be eliminated from the Jaw he 'II draft. AB 1471. the bill authored by Assemblyman Alan Sieroty { D • L o s Angeles·), died in the Senate Natural Resources Committee on a 4 to 4 vote. after a stormy joumey through the leli!iSlative process. It pitted conservationist s against major real estate lobbies and coastal com- munities and other governmental agen· cies from which it sought to wrest local control ot shoreline development. It was fhis so-called usurping of pro. party rights and lo ca 1 p:o vernment authority that Carpenter highlighted Jn his post·mortem th is morning . .; ''The ends don't justily the •ns," he. said. He said defeat of the measure can be blamed on the bill's "disregard for private property rights , disreg'!fd for tax relief proposals for property unde.r the moratorium and disregard !or I o c a I government control.'' He said environmentalists also share the blame for defeat of the measure they so badly wanted . ;,The eco--hysteria of the times that everything represenlinl? growth and change la automatically bad for the en· vironment'' di( not sit well with legislators, he said. Carpenter said the bill he 'll introduce will take all these factors into con· sideration. "It will provide lax relief where land is deemed not to be developed," he said, "1.t will observe the constitutionality of private property and the rights therein . "It will lea ve the local arpa authorit >' lo handle local government with ideallv a state agency to oversee the criteria established and lo insure an e qua I representation from both the state and the local level." Carpenter stressed , however. ''~los t importantly. it will protect the coastline where such protection is needed for-both !he benefit of the public and th e state of California .'' Carpenter predicted there very likely will be ethers who introduce coastline te1?islation in the next session and said those bills "that have a sensible, fair and effective program that are ba sed on a compromise and rational approach to the entire situation will be successful." · Conservationists may not wait for the Legislature to act. however, as their spokesmen bcjilan talk ing about a statewide shoreline protection initiative: Sieroty, himself, bitter after the defeat of his bill, said he felt a vote of the peo- ole may be the only way to get a tough law enacted. "The Legislature doesn"t understand thf! depth of the people's feel ings on pr<r tccton of the environment." he said. Sieroty said he feels two thinqs were responsible for the outcome -C.avernor Reai;ian's altitude and pressure from lob- byists. "I believe the principal reason for this bill's i:lefeat is the attilude of the governor and his administ ration," Sieroty said. but he went on to take equally strong swings at others. "The Legislature has been playing the old ~ame. playin,q with lhe people clos est ·' tt1e legislative process -the Joi> byists." Let Us Put You On The Map Ne•r the entrance, inside our store, is • 9iant new m•p. W1 •re in th1 proce ss of identifyin 9 all of the homes w1 have c"arpeted sin ce 1965 on this map with colored pins. (A different color for each y11r.) , Clos1 scrutiny will detect some interestin g facts : fir1tly, we have carpet•~ homes on virtu· ally every street in the area. Secondly , the pins ore in bunch11, indic1Hn9 WORD.OF.MOUTH 1dvertisin9. Thirdly. the number of homes we have carpeted is staggering, If you desir1 honesty, exp1ri1nc1, ind rtcom .. m1n d1tion1 from neighbors we h•ve worktd for, !hon Aldon's is THE PLACEI ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS: M ... thrw ,,,,,.., ' II l :JO-!'rt., ' II ' -Sat., ,,Jo .. J + I I For The Record Dissolutions Of Harriage '"'-'" Nov 4 Vltktr•, ... , ... ::irl• 1ii.l G'!i.' C•rl Htrl'l•.11!!~11 l'rlnc nt M.lrlt • D1vld Gr-.nwuuo;i, LI 1n II. 11\d P1tr Ck\· "!'""""' 1'1rrr Mflrf• oriel .ck •rn1rd "'il~~/ K1tt1e1'1111 Anne alld How1rcl .,~r, Mflr11rtf A. 11\d 1100.rt 0. ,II , l'rontt• l!!lllM I/Id Jolln I . M•ll •• l'IWlllCI M1r!e •!Id ""' DIU1rd SlllrmfJI. Nwrr1't' S1nlord •!Id IE~lne Sarw:lr• "! Ctva, ,:IOMPll lhom.1 Incl llubet~ 11 .. 11 Dudmtn, Clltrltnt Ind Otvld IC.nt VtrcM...r, Glorlt J. '"" Arnold M. lkMll; Dffll'l't' HIHml Ind L't' .... lt Rlcftmond. l1•r1111e tNI D~rtl A. LM/ld9r, Ct r I "" Ind Mldl111 .._., """~""No M. •llCI "<k k•r v,,. Top Atllator ''"r. "m"obeft L•n• Ind M ....... , . El ll I O'fd, Y:n.Hollr•ll Ind JIOt>trt c. ,O:::.K11mn"A.·,':: J'r::r.0~~ lt1aj. David G. Vest, H•rk.,., 111rPh 1nd P1ut1"" l 11Cllle or,erations officer for $Ull1bluth, v..,.11. Ind Erl< j\/\IDfl "'"'· c11r111tn• 1nc1 M1c111e1 E. :fl: arine Fighter Attack TulMlr1, An,,. 1<111 M1 rk A. o..sota. 1111.111e111 Jun •nd 111c111ro Squadron 531, El Toro, J1~!!~"11011n.i "'r1n11:11n 1nc1 s .... 1., lvn • is 1971 winner of Al- G•llff.ot, o.wr111 M1•v '"" 111c111rd I d A Cunn·ngham Kl1utler, llulti E. 1'1(1 Tlmolhv II, re , l C.MdV. l"r1nc1 Mll.'tl111 Jr, •nd M•rv Award as 0 Marine Av-,ii,~'."~C:Hn 1:1r1 '"" zei.;1, Ml'fl iator of the Year." Vest l!n11r1'11 N11v. t £~1t1n, ~n1rl1Y" Jtll'I on<I Edwin W. is 10th recipient Of •cl\Dl1, L nd1 •nd Jame<1 urr1r. Evl!'l'n Pam111 Ind John award, Damed for fl.far• Patric~ 1"red1r1c11:. N1om1 P. •nd •olllrt H. ine Corps' first aviator. ll1rc1, Rtln A!lrt tM Garv ____ __:. ______ _ Dllbtr, Allct lrtnd1 1"11 11"1"'td """ llommtr JtmH I!, 1nd M1rv J . Prl11. Allct 0 11r tnd lllctiard Tocmo llQbtrt•. J•t~uel!ne A. and Kur! .-.rol .-.111n, M1rv carolOll 1nc1 llolllrl l<t lth fl<lQm, Otlr• Ind Tl\Dma• L. AW1nt, Judy A. Ind llHlllUld J, e loechlr, John J1mt1 i nd 1<1ren l<l~~f."f:'ut,.... M ind Shlr11v M. PtttrRI\. J1c<1iHl l11t Shaw ond 1"1ul l.CHPh ~c.,,_, 01n.. Jt11n ond J1m1s E, rift' P1 trlcl1 A. ofl<I 81!1"" E. rCl'I, Richard J . H. •nd Oor1hlt J. \li1nt, ~'""' •ftd lo1<ortneo Wlli.on, Rtbecc• Jcv and KlllMlll "'" Huqftn , M1ro1re1 1n<1 J<>hn Ed..., McH1t1, John J111111h Jr. 1nd Jlldltll St~k':.":°t:mmo J•,,. Ind Dolllild M. Sl\ade. H1rold Morrin Jr. incl IC1thtrl,,. -'IMll • ,.....~!•. Ml•lne J1nt a...i Btr,,.rd -'lberl C11rk•. Roblft Aflfl Ind Sttl>Mn Gt1'1rcl Mon'llOfl, Alltlllclt Ann I/Id ThcmlS OH l!ff\/H. 8 1111t 1111 ind 01!0 Wlllllm r•rlne. llon!lfil Delli ond Aon.rt P1trldc Jr, ICntllt l. K1vln E<1w1rd Incl 81rblr1 !(~;"..,., E1rl C1maron Jr, ind 81rt11r1 LYnl\t Str1d1r, M1rv Vlclorl1 Ind Grovtr 11iTe':°'.U:~11ret LY1'n and Vlr11l1 .lit•• •ndJr l<IMl'll, IClrtn J1r1tll1 11\d 5tu1rl !~~r.'l.iormt 0. 1n<1 Harrv G. bu1eh1r. Judllh .-.nn 1nd Edw1rd H1m111on. 111 ~101d1, Ch1rvl Ind Wlllfam Dt1n orm1n, Ernest nt 1nd Boblly J11n 11111, JllMI A, 1n<I (lrOI Aj '""''"· Ger•lj c. end Ciro"' I. 11un1r1. 1•11 LllU" and W1rrtn LtRov Collon, 11..,trlv nn '"" Cl1v OK1r 1-0~,~llltr, JOl'l/lllnt l fl 11'1(1 Bl1k1 WtlhChlH111I II. 11\d Orrlfl 0 . G Moort. rsitr J. oncl 8rrn1d1T!1 . &£'bert, WUU1m L ond Hll/o L rltn. Joon E. Ind J1mn . r, J1ek •nd Jtlnfll Edw1ro1. f ilm Y1m1Hrl 11'111 Rlth1rd E1rl Mvtrl, Miry Arlfl t nd Wllll1m 5. Miii Chlrltl H. I ncl lrtM Flem(1111. Ntno L. end Emme IC, "'iF1cldtn. C1rolvn 11111 111<1 Brlltl ()w~~:11~nn1 (, Ind Dooll\11 J, wv111. Bdlr Anrl i ncl J1m11 J1ckt.Ot1 W:~i'n'.'w11111m T. 1nd N"'"" J11n Hu1rt1, 0.¥no K. I nd Edwtrd PlMdl, J11ntl!t J, tfl<I ~lrltd A. O\in!an Svlvll -'· 1r>d Ht""'»' R, Lare, S111ran Burke Ind Joi.to'i M1•l1 ltew1r1, Olone M1rl1 1nd fdwlnl Slllllll 1111 .. YvOfl"' tfld (h1rlt' WellfY ' l/ICI N1v1mb1r 10 l\!lr"!11.:v~1't:-.~dy:)I~~ 'Towllll,. C.P1 bO. Jr .. N1dln1 Rot1merv 1 ~=r~~'""' lfl<I Hubf:11..,. C M1nt1. Ooofll L. tnd 1m11 H. H•mlllOfl John P ond lr1n1 LOU!'9 Ptr11, ct1e1tlno d. and Alto ,G1r .. ldl"' ~1eo1. Mero~rtl A. 1nd Ctit1J lllONr L, '!:' Shlrllv -'· 1nd G1rvlD. •• , Dlnnl• O. 1fld Btih Lu cl ,, Norm! J1an 1nd H1rr Lton L1v1r,· NI~ L. 1na Thom11 f'w~r:'."~1rlu\~~1lf.":~~"iJ'~f~~~ Wi lker. J•~ tt •"d 1C1nneth E, Grtfll, Gordon Ou1n1 I ncl Chtrlvn Ann Kern, Pllvl!l1 ""' Fri nk Edwin Hutcm•· c1ro11111 Ed1111 1nd Robert Jury Asks For County Ethic Code SM'TA ANA -Most of Orange County's boards, com- missions and committees ar~ operating without a written code of ethics and the Grand Jury thinks this is wrong. In a report signed by Foreman Doreen Marshan of Newport Beach, the jury asks that "the county counsel be in- structed to draft a code defining ethical standards of conduct for members o f regulatory or advisory boards mandated by law, or ap- pointed starting responsibil· ities and penalties for the mis- use of office." The jury report states that there are some 57 existing boards, commissions and com- mittees, that were created to render advice to county agen- cie and departments. "By law, only 16 of these en- tities are mandated." the report reads. "The jury has found that of these bodies, the member! of 12 r~ive a stip- end per meeting with a @eClfied limited number of irieetlngs per month. 1n~~1' tr~ .. uou111 !nd "'"" o.1n Almfe.t Merit 1nd 1tvnt~r1 J. ------------Mcl(1m1v Joe~ Mat '"d ROtl LY!t H1s11n, Jr., Clrll J ov tnG Wll!Ord Concern is expressed by the jury because many or the groups "wield great power and deal in fields or constant public interest. Their decision or recommendations c a n greatly influence the direction that Orange County takes in the near future ." LtJh ., , ... (rc1l1Y, Vlrolnl11_ -'nn 1n<I J1m11 "'"" M"'trl Allred E Ind Jn1n (. God in, i::trol Morl1 Incl A:lchlrd JcHOh Mevers. M1rv \llld J~n T. Cllmr S1m1111 ind °"'°'" M••I"" ' l'lltcl """tier 11 Ft11irr1 •1rtn0f\CI R. Incl J°'"•"· MQtJnll n lttrrY ... Ind J•c-. Gllbtrsl1;,1, M111"j Ind Elt!~ ~~ 'h JifTI~. A:cbtrt rv!no '"" ..... c. v c~.::r..":n {:~"'~I 1n<1 Phlllo J. R1111ch. 6{1 t I nd Mii T. H0<ow!l1. I UI I Tllvan E. Rici, Corll11 f nd 1mn Fred Wtt1htrlv, GlrY L" i ncl lltvtrl'I' ,1i!:1~'1ollbtrl Ml•l•:r::•nd 1C1r1n LM p,,.1• Doliv M 1nd n1!d CrYI N1rd i:o. 1'11rlri Evt vn Ind N.lcht!I o:io;-.w. Roetr D .Ind Nlll M. Tr.omo1on. wind• 11. 1fl<I Bvron H. l<vle. M1r1h1ll T. 1nd 8rrnd1 J. $!ew1rl. Norm• Jtan t nd Wafl<l1I Lte (lfUllO, C1ra!•n J. and Jostoh C. ""bbort, Judv J, end Li ii•• J, (til'l'fl, N~• CKt ll• and Jou Jtl" w .. 1111:1. sn1ron .-.. and c11 .. 1er · HIJ' t. Cv1'1MI Hldeko Ind ol1nd vr,0:,1:'.'"Enrttlt!th Merv i nd Guido HcJ:r;fn. J1n1c1 Lorr11"' tnd Jerrold RoMrl Death Notices OILLINC:.1!111 Mrt .-.~n Ollllr'lller. 1502 Temolt Hlll1 OrlVt. l.1oun1 Btlth Ot•t o! d11th. Novr,r.~ 1', 1911. Servkn otndlno ti P•c le Ir.. ~~ai1·1~f\N Ch1rln Thcmo...,, S~I 11h A'l'ltflUf, 01 AnotlU 04t1 ot 11!h, Hcvembff ~ •• ltll ~urvlvld bv ion. M1rt1n -'· Tl'Hli-no1on. ol Sill L1kr Cllv: a1uoh!fr. M"1 lltlt'I' Ht,1nh lnoer CCHll Mist. ~1,..:1,r· -Th11rsa8v. J PM,. Pie lie v 11..,, nooe lnltrmtnl. P1cu1c vlrw M1rnor!1I i rk, P1clllc View Morlv•r.,, Olr11<tar1. ARBUCKLE I< SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY 4%7 E. 17th St., Costa Ale1a 1411-4881 • BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona del Mar OR 3-HSO Costa l'tle1a l\U 1-!ill • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 111 Broadway, Cosla l\le1a LI 1-8131 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 17'5 Lapna Canyoo Rd. 491-lfll • PACIFIC VIEW AIEAIORIAL PARlt Cemetery l\1ortuary Cbapel SSOO Pacific View Drl¥e Newport Beach. Callfornll 14~17111 • PEEK FAAnLY COLONIAL FUNERAL ROME '7801 Bolaa A¥e. Westmlnster 193-3515 • SMJTllS' MORTUARY ft7 l't1aln SL BunUn gtoa Btacb 13Ml3t Get more "home" from your house. Houses grow small and cramped without the things that make themhome- speclal furniture, betterTV, stereo hl-fl, paid up bills .. , and money lalt over for fun. Avco may help with a homeowner loan on your house, whelher It's paid for or nol HOMEOWNER LOANS TO 125,000 OYER SS,000 ON REAL .ESTATE AffD, PERSONAL PROPERTY .dll=.:- We believe tn ~ 100 N, AMMl111 lhd. 111·2116 210 s. luclld ,.,.._ 716·1110 , ,,, """* ''"'" C11thl Mft!I 642·1414 617 W. 17tll St., hllt• AM 147-4421 2017 S. M•ln St., S.ftto A•o 149·2161 Tuesday, No~tmbfr 16, 11971 DAILY ~ILOT • 'Doctors Say They Have Proof: Counseling By Faculty Approved H~~ID~Y TURKEYS RISIRVI YOUR fttlSH, LOCAL .JUICY TUIUllYS J9gging Good for Your Heart IRVINE -UC Irvine AND HA VI US DILIVIR THIM WITH ALL THI TRfMMINIU By TOM BARLEY Of ftlt 01Hr Plllt Stiff ANAHEIM -Keep jogging ·-It's good for you and even better for your heart. So are swimming, tennls 1 walking and any of the sports recommended by your physi- cian as elements of your physical, training program . Some or the doubters who believe you can jog your way to a heart attack were silenc- ed here in the closing stages or the American Heart Associa- tion convention by t w o Pittsburgh scientists and a report that defines the ba.!rlc chemistry produ ce d by physical conditioning. Ors. Ashok. Bhan and James Scheuer used teams of rats to carry out their experiment! dt the University of Pittsburgh * * * * * * Moonshine Drinkers Aid Heart Research ANAHEIM EI even •1moonshine" drinkers have helped heart speclallsts put their ringer on a hitherto unknown enemy of the body's most vital organ -lead. The imbibers of 11moonshlne" whiskey all suf- fered heart disease In varying forms and a research team. at an Augusta, Ga., hospital trac- ed the common poison that had corroded the heart cells as lead. That lead came from the whiskey stills. But t he discovery ltd the team to find that other heart victims ex- posed to lead• In other forms had also undergone the kind o( cardiac trauma Qiat hit the Georgia moonshiners. Three doctors from the ~1edical C.Ollege of Georgia in Augusta told an American Heart Association i1"eetlng here they spotted exactly the same degenerative effects on the heart muscle when they fed a lead acetate solution to laboratory rats. facu.tty members have voted School or Medicine and those to include coUDleling o r 1tudies, they claim, con-students among the ltenu elusively prove that physical uPon which facuJty p;erforman- tralnlng enables the healthy ce ts judged. heart to contract with greater The Irvine Division of the force and deliver more blood UC Academic Senate has per squeeze than the heart of adopted a recommendation of the S1!dentary person. its committee on student ad- Bhan and Scheuer said the vistng which directs "the tests proved that coronary budget committee to solicit ln- blood-vessels in the physically formation on each . facuJt~ trained rats deVeloped a member's contribution to greater ability to deliver more academic al;lvlslng before con· oxygen and nutrients to the sldering the faculty member heart muscle. for merit increase or pro-, •. yoJA r 'Skllf'P~fl~ P~fe Physical conditioning, they motion." "1• Qqt UltiM&lc ~ said, also alters favorably the The senate Budget Com--·- chemistry of the heart linked m It tee makes recom-COAST 51JPER MARkn I DAILY ~ HOME ;: : DELIVERY ~: 673· 3510 to muscle contraction. Trained mendatlon.s to the University ~3411..~\"""r•~di:IK.- rats developed ln their hearts administration on fa cu It yl:~~~M~·~··~·~Y~·~·~·~·~·~··~·~~·~,.~·~·JO~;~l~u~.,~·~~~·~,.~·~;:;::~ more of an active protein fac· performance. tor called actomyosln ATPase, In adopting the recom- a substance that sparks the mendation, faeulty members TAKE THE NEWS Q UJZ fuel necessary !or heart mus--.agreed it ls dUficult to cle contraction. determtne the "quality otad· We Dare You , , • Every Saturday The chemical provided byr-"~i~ce;;.~··~-jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjiiii~================-~~== the conditioning -swimming wa! the main 'xerclse used in the Pitts burgh experiments -86 ·STORES BRIM-FULL enabled the heart muscles of the trained rats to pump with more force end thus Improve Of Christmas Goodies the efficiency of the heart Itself, the doctors said. Both men ere satisfied that their conclusions would have been exactly the same in tests on human beings. South Coast 'Plaza GRAND OPENING HARBOR VIEW OFFICE, WED. NOV. 10 I tick-tock Just for opening your ,NEW PERSONAL CHECKING ACCOUNT or for SECURING AN INSTALLMENT LOAN Either way, here Is your opportunity to check the right time, the easy, courteous w.ay, Receive your choice of a beautiful decorator clock •• , Free of eharge ••• for openlr>.g your new personal checking account for $100 or more or for starting a new Installment Joan of $1,000 or more. Qualifying Installment loans are: Home Improvement, Automobile, Mobile Home, Boat, Airplane, or Personal loans. Add to the decor of your living room, den, kitchen, bedroom or office with these specially designed electric Decorator Clocks. There Is a slight additional charge for clocks B and C. PRESENT DEPOSITORS may buy these fabu- . lous clocks at a cost that'~ hard to believe! It's our way of saying "thank you" for being a depositor at Southern California First Nallonal Bank. One per family. FIRST NATIONAL BIUIK ~---..... ~--..... ,.IJ.L HARBOR VIEW HILLS OfflCE MACARTHUR BLVD. (New) and PACIFICVTEWDRIVi (off San Jc»quln HUI• Rd. at Hieb« View Sho0Pi111 Ctatlr) Newport Beach/Phone (714) 644-8511 • ., • .. .. • • Jt o.ILV PILOT SC Tutldq, N..,mbtt 16, 1171 Super Rich Use r Tax Free Bonds BY SYLVIA PORTER Whatever bapptned to the 154 Am tr lea" __ who had in· comts or $200)000 to $1,000,000 t.nd more ln 1968 on which they paid not a penny tn Federal Income ta1es -and 'ffho thereby kicked otf what wu to become the historic Tu Reform Act of 1969? They grew. Tht 154 with lncomes of $200.CO'.I and up who gilt away with paying "O'' dollars in Federal income taxes in 1966 muJUplled to 301 in 1969, the latest year ror wtllch we have stalisliC$ on indlvldual lrlCome tax n!lurns. The JI with "oontaxable" adjUJted gross incomes of $1,000,000 or more in 1966 ex:- panded to 56. A .new 1971 tax Jaw will bt on our statUe books in a ma t- ter of days under whlch tax- payers in all income groups are gettin~ some immediate tax reductions. Actually, the tax cuts were written in basic form in the '69 act but they werea't slated to go into effect until 1972 and later. The 1971 law ii accelerating part of the cuts into this year to help lift our economy out of tts slug- gishness -which has forcibly reminded me of that mass.ive mishmash of tu legislation in· 1969, that monstrosity which 24 Hour nLEPHONE ANSWERING SERVICE Tl>nt Pl'llltch nwsl mett IM Fede•tl r-frtmMlll tor.lftd under 5.tt110ft 236 of TIM Nt• llonil Hol.ISl'lf Ad. For-l11tor .... 1kln "'""''" ..... FHA 2» Wf'lll or phOM • M.P. KRUSE & CO ., INC. M1rnkl1r P1cific Co11t Stock E'ch11191 21• N. MAtN, Ol!l"T. A·1U SANTA ANA -f7H) 141•Htl Ntmt •••••• : ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• u••··············-----···•· Alktr.a ----•••·•···•·········•···••··-···•····•···········-··--··· C:llV ···············•········•·········-··-···· Pllollt --········-.. - •• •••••• ••••• • • • • ••• MULTI BENEFIT REALTY FUND An investment vehicle that allow s you to select those benefits that best suit your particular situation. And offers ( PROF ESS IONAL MAN~GEMENT RES EAR CHED PURCHASES -LIMITED LIABILITY -DIVERSIFICATION Attend an inHstor's m erlin~ to learn the income and tax ad1·anta ges ALL MEETINGS WILL START AT 7:30 PM TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16 ANAHEIM Jolly Roger Motor lnl'I Hotel 640 W. Ka1alla WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 17 LOS ANGE LES tury liiiiiHottl, ~••twood Room" 2025 Av.nut: of the St•ts THURSDAY,NOVEMBER18 SAN DIEGO lf&"t•z Hotel 7111 & Alh CALL cower ,OR REURYATIONI 1714) 645 .. 650 Consolld1t1d C1pit1I £quitits Corpora tion Gtr1trtl Ptt1~ ,.. ,....... .. , Ml-', C4 ..... , .......... -... -·-............................. , .•. •' .......... ~,. .. -· , .... .. .. --~· '""' ,, ..,_ ""'' ftT ••• 0""''"1 (;<"'"'"' ""' •• ,. •o -· •oto , ...... II Ill"'° MIU1f'9l1l .. 1W"'•t1"1 u<'""' '-"' ,_.,.., I " -=---------.------,,_____ -_ ....... _.._.-------- • OfER 1THE COUN1:ER •••••• 1•••W.011tir....,...••Mset ....,,AJIL,,..wa.. ....................... _,.... _, ..... " Cll•R I•""' NASD Ll11fn91 for Mond1y, November 15, 1971 I I I \ • • ~!~ El~c! \~ i(~l~e.r.,c:1 110 ""\ c:IJ>ot ~'' oc,c:IP o ltO "''" 15a n ol 11 fi dP en ' ~Ec:I• 1Si Ec:I ct 'olO Erl o :190 ~II GE !]( 1GF o IO llNG• 1 ]i ~'",'1;,• .~ t,OILI It 11~·11 ' 1 )0 :11 •• ' t.d'M1 1 el Co 6J rnllT &II '" <"9 I htn II! 1 lS "'"""' i>•lS Oolrd tnd IJJ •jtC~E I e.ot ti c 'IE~P llO l'&e LIO 1 60 l\i(l>f1• )"r ll1cPwL i U Pie ~"' A. '" lt" ~ Pte l<I~ Palmllcll lS llanAm5 :rllP ~nAm WAI •M EPlllG ""' ell 6Cll Gii I( 111 g-.. en'' llakHr"l~ I'"" "" t nn Ol• •lf l~;:iA,1 : '[''ell~' • " .... .0 " 'I"' 1PL cj.fO ..,nwl! 1 10 ... ~". 1nn1 n 110 l'lril II JJ 'Fi~ l~ l'llJ O I l, k m •0 ~. "'< :la l't! If'( ct 1'11 I& l>I IO illlel"IY /I) ll~lrlf St .0 "•' 0 '" 611 Pt "'' pl JI b trll'!'I 1 (f1 l'llH'I' I~ P"-1115 0 1 0 ~/lif1.,i'1'ts II I 1>11 I! ~II I""'' !Wiii E cu JO 111'111 El ofl to ""' 1Sub ?<I ~llMOr 110 l'ftll M ctJ'° PlllUc I"" t PMI 111c:1111 II' ... • yj.I .0 t'ONGs I 10 U1burv .i io!>NG•n to nt'lll .61 ll!F.Grt 10 llt/;IW 11 !11! 6oe l•>t ~elf•~ '"[LI ?t eo-u In lG 1'0!1rDIO Jl llltl "" llNh I """ L1w Cll11 Cllt ~ ~lW VtHtlC IA,I -lll• flt!lawllltl I ti lhO'll't tl'll lhldlt Will n,vt ..... VII t141 mo\! •ml 6CIWll tnt f'IMl\I blltt on 1 H rl:llnt ol <l'llifllt °" lht Mew Yorti s °'' ~J(~•nt• '"'"'",. 01 ve1-. Net lllCI H '(lt!'l1lfl tll•flttt llt IT'9 CIUltrtn(t IMP -WHl1'11r't U•I"' t rlC• t nd lo0t1 I '-1 ~la. DOWNS '" ... • ' • ii ~"" fl~ ,, .... .: ~ !7 t~.,,.,_~ !)~ Jl~ 11~~ i'mf;· .!. ~ 1)2 ,~;, l\io ' .. Ii n ~· 'I~ u _,. Stocks Advance In Fhlal Hou1~s NE WYORK (UPI) -1 he $tock mnkel scored a Sl!IBrl g11n Tuesday In pulling out of a decline In lhe last two hours or trading JI J•i\'ll'+l'I ?!!! ,,. 1 11fl + ~ """1"' ·~ '~-11 ''"' 'I" ,, -t '' n 1 '• 11 + " !\-1urb ol the turnaround was attributed to spec u-.L ,"' UO 1\' I '' UAlg'~ • 111 11,. ''"" .. 1. ulahon that Treasury Secretary John Conna1z u.o, c , ','~ 1U JS JlU ~II + ~ UG JJt ,, • ,..,.. J ~ , would reveal some encourag1n a ncY.s when he a uMc '"° 1 10-1 Jt 31,, 1''1. + \o " un~ tc '° ' Jl'1• 10 >' • J v, dressed the economic club of New York 1n the eve-un,'~!~ ... SIJ ,., 11 u .. .+ \'i u -"I ' ".,, 1n. ,,"' -.. ntng The speech has been billed as a maior econ~ un •t'\l IM! 1 11 !N ,~"' '~ t' UnM Cop 9! ?:~ fl~ n~ _1 mlc address ~: ~ ~ p l '1 im ~\lo S~-'lo U~f pll}O ll :.!... 1,.~ ~-+ '-Some analysts said hov.ever that the market ~~o1ic:1 11~"° 11 ""'" "' '"• ... • had been oversold and v. ould have advanced any uoc.1 ''' ~ 1! !f,Z !~.I !Jv., 1 tt u0•,,".!< c•'••' ... ..way with the Connally item prov1d1ng 1t with an ... J µ,~ ~~ ni: .!. ~ excuse to rally The Dow Jon es Industrial Average ~:= : ti ~~ !!~ ~ := ~ showed a gain of 818 at 818 71 Standard & Poor s ~~-~ 1 ~ l .. ·• 500 stock index was ahead O 89 at 92 70 and ad u"•: ,.fJ70 ~11~ r.~ r ..... dd i szg h 666 U•rt1••110 a l ~ ii! ll""' _ 1 van res toppe ec Ines to 510 among I e 1 ~~l'I "'T.t 10 ""' " " issues crossing the tape unu G•• '° Ill n 7'~ ?• ... ._. Unl!tnd .lO fJl,.Jl~!l'~7 .l': UntlnplO ~' :I.I\' ll ~ -""•••OllEIC!<llZl!ml!lll!O!l:CZ:l! .. <:'°'" ...... O:::!::>::"''""'"'"'IUnJer1llk1 ' ••• :Wo, '-I '1 > "'1'!f ~~l!~~r I lO ': 1~~ 1,i... '~·~ : ~ Un I l"k Min 11! lf tJ .... ~ +~ Unillt1n11 IS I 2 "t Jl 21 -" U5 l'l~G l 10 tutsoay "ovtmbtr 16. tm SC DAILY ,!LOT , J.l Complete Closing Prices-American Stocli Exchange List S•IH -IMll ) Mltll Uw Cit .. Cllt S•I... Rll f/1111 I Hl•h Lew Cle11 Ch• 11111 n.i (hdl I Mir/I Ltw Clt11 Cllt S1l11 n1t (hdl l Hit/I L.w ci.u Cht S•l1t 1111 lh41 ) Mltll Lew CIH4 Ch .. Phone 6424321 For Weekender Advertis ing . .. • ' J . DAILY PILOT 111rsday, Novrmbtr 16, 1971 .. ,.,_ .. ... ~ ... • ..=o=ue=eN=1e ___ _...ay_Ph_u J-"'-"''a-"d--ti State 'Laun~l1·es . Dri"Ve on Horse Virus • SACRAMENTO !UPI ) -A state health official has urged an aJJ-0ut campaign agairu;t mosquitoes to prevent the spreaO to Ca1ifornla of the sleeping sickness that killed hwxlreds of horses in Texas last summer. Dr. RJchard F. Peters, chief of vector conlrol for lhe Stale Department of -Public Realth, said "everything is needed" to control mosquitoes, \Yhich car· .fl _lh!_ dlsel!S!_ }q_lo~1 ~ veneiuelan e q u i n e en-- cepbalomyelitis. Testifying reoouly before the Assembly Environmental Quality Committee, Peters ' said t~ biological conlrol or Earller ln the tiearlng, mosquitoes "is not promising 1-lerald Wixom, assis(f1nt atate or Immedia te rescue." agriculture director. testiried Jle urged the use ot all that only fiYe percent of m_ethods OI IJMtSfil!ito CO~l._~g_!'lcujtural..,.__pests_c<fn~bf.Jl· including pesticides, J a n d feCtively checked w i t h o u t preparation a n d irrigaUon pesticides. \vl}ich will ,ivoid stagnant The department favors more ponds where mo s q u 'i t o e s nonchemical controls, Wixom breed. · said, addin£ that more research is rleeded betore biological controls could be widely used in place of pesticides. _ _But H.w>l!l 6eynold s , chairman o! the department or entomology at the Uni~ersity of California, Riverside , disputed Wixom's testimony. He said 11hundreds'1 of ln- sects are controlled b y biological means and that more than fTve percent or th.e pests could be handled withou t ·pesticld..e..t. But he agreed with Wixom that more money is needed to support research into the ,use of biological controls o n agricultural pests. l'l'Jl 1lfU1JQ:tll:ll 1lfU1Ji11illib111•1FU•101jl101•1Ei(•Jl!IOj$1ZJl•1~U•llllllUll•1EU•ll{:O~:t1 DISCOUNT ' I .. Fron1 this point on I drop lhe slern execulive image and becom~ the lov.ible executive." Tunisia's President Keeps Countr y Stable By PlllL NEWSOM UPI For•ltn NtWS Anl lfll As revolutions have changed the political faces of Algeria and Libya, Tunisia, sand"•ich· ed behveen them. has been a model 0 r stability-thanks largely to its president, Habib Bourguiba. Bourguiba has g u i d e d Tunisia's destinies with an absolute, though benevolent . NEWS ANALYSIS The crisis had been sim· 1nering below the surface for two years and broke into the open in late October at !he eighth congress of Tunisia's · ruli ng Neo-Destour Socialist party. ll was the first such 1..-on· gress in seven years, hav ing been long dela yed because or Bourguib<l ·s fai ling health. and even then taking place only because Bou rguiba yielded lo pressure. The opposition e nl e r g e d qui ckly. A large group led by Armed h nd th ho t th 15 ears J\1estiri, a 46-year-old lawyer a .' r?~~~-~~-~~-_ _: __ -Yr---· rece11tJ.y forced fro m his post ----+-H<>-<'1~nister of interior, deman· Franc~. Nov.·. 1n 111 h~alth and ded democratization of the comm1t~ed to a. pronuse not to party and liberalization of ~k office again a~ the end of Tunisia's ·politicantre. m: lus present term ui 1 ~4· he eluding greater press freedom s~eks to prepare lhe \lay for and th e righl of the party and his success~r. . !he people to s e I e c t But pov.er once . attained Bourguiba"s successor. I becomes a habit a n d Bourgujba. v.•hile paying lip ' Further, con Ir~\' er s y service to encroaching lime. developed ~~er selection of !he finds it increasingly difficult ~4-n1an poht~cal l~ureau wh~ch to institute the government is the party s chief execuh\•e reforms which a little mor group. th an a year ago he himself pro· II had been Bourguiba's mulgated. practice to select br himself The Tun isia he seeks for the the men to hold important future is to be in his ov.•n im· posts both in the government age but he argues that the and I.he party. people are not yet 1nature lie comprom ised in the end enough for democracy and bul not before l\1estiri had th?t they musl be led to it been suspended from the par· slowly. ty ~nd accused of sedition in He is particularly concerned the controlled press. that Tunis fa is squeezed Bourguiba further made il between two mililary die· clear he belie Yed the con· tatorships. and he believes a gress·s only acccimplishment regime wilh a strong executive bad been to divide the country. is necessary to i n s u re On the whole it is a Tunisia's survival between the n1clancholy picture_ l\110. Bourguiba has done a good As .. supreme combatant'· job for· his cuuntry. 11e has during Tunisia 's st ruggle for been a fTiend or the \Vest and independence, Bourguiba has y,•as one , of the fey,• Arab had no real rival for his leaders with lhe courage to authority. But nov.· a political talk back to'the late President crisis is developing .. brought Gan1a\ Abdel 'riasser of'Egypt. on by the same emotions that The voices in ~position were war within Bourguiba himself. relatively moderate and in the one that tells him to start stifling them Bourguiba may relaxing his grip <.n power. and br ing about the very power the other that tells him he siruggle over his successor he cannot. sought to avoid. Yes. GenC'rati ons of Chri stian Scientists throughout Ill e v.·orld ha\'e brrn he:ilcd of every kind of di:;e:i,,e -evt>zl "incttrJble'' disease -through Gotl's 11elp ;1l onr. By using !he same 1neth od lh :it ( 0 hrist J CSU'\ l Jllght :u1J proved. Corrie thi-. \Vcdnc~day lo ou r public test imony meeting. You can hear your neighbCSrs tell \Yhy th ey've turned lo God for health and their spiritual 'vell-bcin~. COSTA MISA-l'lnt Cl>llrd1 M Chr11t, Sct.flhil lW ~ VtrM Dr. -CIHll M~. I i>.M. HUNTINGTON IEACH-Flnl Chvt<h 01 Cnrht, ~ll\I 11n & 01111• -Hu111i111ton •-n • 1 l".M. NEWl'OllT IEACK-l'lnt Ch•rch OI Cllti1I, Sci.,.1111 '"9l VII Li.t -H9Wpo9r! 1-" . I l".M. · NEW,.Ollt llACM-sittOIMI Cl'l•r<~ It Chr11I. Scitoftll1I ~I .. ,.Mlllc"V/ew Of'., C1rf111 d•I Mir . I l".M. • Kids Love Uncl e . Len , Saturday in • WARE ·HOUSE 'PRICES PLUS 10% W HOLE .J~OY FRESH FRYERS GOLDEN DELICIOUS U.S. GOV'T. INSPECTED LB. . ROUND STEAK FARMER JOHN'S SMOKED HAM SALE 'SMOKED PICNICS c lb FARMER JOHN'S 8 01. Pkg. SAUSAGE LINKS c EA. SHANK HALF ~ BUTI HALF c lb COMPLETE SELECTION USDA GRADE A TOMS OR HENS ALSO SWIFT'S BUTTER BALL ' ORDER YOUR FRESH TURKEYS TODAY BONE IN FULL CUT FULLY COOKED WHOLE HAM c lb FRESH· LEAN GROUND BEEF ·c lb Now you too can become a professional shopper and save hundreds of dollars per year on your CJrocery bill. No need to run all over town huntin9 for bar9ains ... You can be assured that when ~ou shop at Top Yalu, you are buyin9 atthe low· est prices in town. Naturally, we carry all of the famous brands ... Top Quality Meats and Garden Fresh Produce. WHICH IS MORE IMPORTANT TO ,you? BEST SERVICE \ • OR • LOWEST 1 PRICES • NO MARKET CAN GIVE YOU BOTH· WE GIVE PRICE STORE HOURS 10 AM TO 7 PM l OAYS A WEEK CLOSED SUNDAYS AND WEDNESDAYS SHOP IN A WAREHOUSE OF FINE QUALITY FOODS AT 535 W. 19th ST. AT HARBOR, COSTA MESA. IT DOES· N"T TAKE A LOT OF NERVE TO BE THE ONLY STORE IN TOWN THAT DIS· COUNTS THE DISCOUNTERS. 'N HAT IT TAKES 15 THOUSANDS OF LOWER PRICES! EVERYTHING IS MARKED Warehouse Prices Then the Checker Adds Just 10°/o. To Arrlva at what you pay. So If you wound up with $10.00 Worth, you'd si mply pay that, plus 10°/o or $11 .00. THIS GbES FOi E¥ER'rTHIHG EXCEPT THI FEW ITEMS LEGALLY CONTROLLED lll E MILM AND l1$UOR. WE CHALLENGE ANY MARKET TO MATCH THE TOTAL SAVINGS! STORE HOURS' 10 AM TO 7 PM 5 DAYS· A WEEK Closed Sundays and Wedn esdays THE "FIRST" COST PLUS SUPERMARKE.T IN CALIFORNIA we welcome .FOOD UllllJ ST AMP BEING CLOSED TWO OAYS A WEEK SA YES YOU A LOT OF )II.ONEY • We reserve the ri9ht to chan9e prices as wholesale prices chan9e. • SHOPPERS We Make Discounters Look Expensive I 535 W. 19th ST. AT HARBOR, C0$TA MESA ,. . · 1 t'll1lfU•lillill:!l1],i(1Jl!IOljHZJl1]fU1]i):jll:ll•lf1(1Jl!llij$1i11•1EU•Jl!a11a1a~«·Jl]liiti1vm1<1Jij:U • ' •• /. ' . . TUtl4<r, llMmbtr 16, l'ITl I DAILY Pll:fJ a La·st Rail Union Reaches Terms With Carriers, The signalmen ire the tut of the major rail unkml to reach agreement with the carrim durlng a prolonged series of negotJations. · WASHINGTON (UPI) -The n1tloo'1 l'lllroodl onnounced today Ibey bid ~hed •ereement with the Brotherhood el lllllroad Signalmen on a C-month cmtract covering 11,000 workers. Terms o( the agreement were not announced, but were eipect.ed to follow ,the pattern of 42 percent wage and blnlllt lncruees over three end 1 half ytiarl esllbllabed with other rail unions earlier thiJ year. A apokesman for the A.s&ocilUon of American Railrolds said ag!'eement "Waa · reached Monday at the La'bor 'Depart~ ment with the aid of Assistant Labor Secrelacy w, J. Usery Jr. and'Cl>alrman ~~ Ives of Ille NaUooal Mediation spring over the twin issues of wages end workln,f ccnditlons. The signalmen lnsilted tney-,,e given a greater lncrease than other.rail unions woa because they eaid they wore grossly underpaid com· pared with proresslonal electriclanJ in nonrailroad fields. They also said out-of·to'fn Uvlng con· diUons were bad, with m~ often fcrced to day, in old railroad curu> care: rather Board. ., I The lllnalma '• dbpute flared Jul than hot.ls or·motel.. \ A opo!:esman for Ille slpalmen eaid (. Humanizing the P .olice • Capistrano Appoints First Public Safety Director By PAMELA HALLAN Of-ftte Delly •llft Steff Joe McKeown believes that some police departmenµ: have become Islands unto t·h ems e Ive s -·coo I y impersonal. mechanized, pohorized. Jot McKeoWlf, a policeman, IS San Juan Capistrano's first Director of Public Safey. He Is charged w i th the responsibility of ·finding out what police protection San Juan wants and needs and provldlng it. And Joe McKeon intends to start off on the right foot in his new assignment. He's going tQ spend his first few months meeting with members of the conµnunity in an effort to detennlne the kind of police department that will fill the bill. Not only will he be making the rounds ti service clubs, business groups and church organlzaUons, he'll also be meeting with housewives in neighborhood coffee klatches. "I intend to be open to every idea," said the 39-year-old father of six, who formerly headed the 20-man Manteca Police Department. But he has a few Ideas of his own. •1 am personally · convinced that one reason why there ls pressure, antogonlsm and polarir.aUon of police and society ls because the policeman too often goes 1tricUy by the book. ••There is no room for fiexibllity and this creates tension. . "[ a1so believe that some police departments have become secretive, eJannish -entities unto themselves. They have become too mechanlttd, too 1mpersonal. They have lost their huma•· lty ... CIAILY •ILOT Sl1H rM .. McKeown said he'd like to 1 ta rt fresh-to give his men more room for In- terpretation and 1long with this, more HE PLANS TO TAILOR POLICE TO SAN JUAN NEEDS City M1n1ger Donald ~1idn1r, Safety Director McKeoWn responsibility. "'Ibe policeman must become more in- volved, he must be a member of his com· possibility of consol41.ating all areas of munlty. , public safety undef one administrator. - "There must be'fhne fOr him to get out 1"l'he Idea ot iomblnlng fire, Police, of his car and ~· the time of day with animal control, building inspection, and the guy on the comer watering his lawn. cit)'. ordinance control ill a new one," he "there must be time for him to walk.a 1a1d. "It ha~ been discussed by police few blocks, to chat with businessmen scholars but pever, to my knowledge.,put downtown. into operation." '"Iba police department shouldn't be Th bl f t t thought of 11 the local gestapo that you e p~ ic sa e y concep means a have to be constantly watching for in police .pffir.er would from the beginning · able to function in every area of public your rear view mirror." guJ f He &aid he will explore the idea of safety. In addition to his re ar unc· I tions, he would be responsible for the eJt• allowlhg policemen to take patro cars jorcement of city ordinances, building home -to use them to take the wife el ed r bl. hoppln the kid to the drive-in , codes, and other r at aspects o pu tc • . g or s , safety. . moVIe. ' "People get used to seeing the cars and I pclicemen can be reached off duty 2· case of an emergency." McKeown said be feels very strol)I y about good community relaUons. "No'one wants to be disliked. A police fo?Ebas lo be accepted to be effective no atter bow well-trained the men are.'' , Wblle McKeown is exploring style t1F law enforcement best 111i~ for San Juan, he also will be loo*lng at the I If he didn't know an answer, he would have a team mate who did who he can call to give the citizen prompt, efficient service. ' "One real advantage will be th& availability of &0meone local to go to if contact. U someone has a gripe he con come in and discuss it. or, if be prefers he can write in bis comment&," said McKeown. The personal touch 11 soritething that 11 ;-' Legendary Desert Fox I Royti~l 'Not a Leader' ,. ~ . . FJV.NKP'URT, Germany (AP) -Field long months of construcUon of the ship Manbal Erwin Rommel w1s not Hitler's In the United States, the Rommel name most able war commander -he was always opened doors for us." a medklcrt leader and politically naive. The documentary suggests that Rom· according to a West German television mel 's World War l exploits as an infantry documentary. lieutenant on the Italian front and hs The prograro "The Myth of Rommel" memoirs of the experience were vital claimed Monda). night that the legendary to his rise under Hitler. ••oesert Fox" owes bis reputation to "Hjtler felt that Rommel's book of the Nul propaganda-machine and sen-' memoirs co~~ed al! ol his vlews about timtoLll polt war biographers. war leadership, the film said. Thrt documentary's director, Helmuth lost when services are contracted wilb another qency. · But MCK'eown said the San Juan Capistram City Council bas not yet of· ficially decided 11 I~ wants to continue contracting with the Orange County Sheriff's Department for a few more years, to contract with another city like San Clemente, or set up its own type of law enforcement agency. It will be McKeown's job to find out which is the most economical, efficient way for San Juan to RO· District Rep To Vote Choice Tustin Union High School Di3trlct trustees voted Monday night lo authorize the board's representaUve to the Orange County Committee on School District Organization to vote his choice on Wednesday's nominating slate. Chester G. Briner, Tustin trust.et from Mission Viejo, 1s the board's de.legate to the nominating committee which is con- sidering replacements for vacancies in three supervisoria1 district thls Wed. nesday. SJnce nominations will ht acted on at the Wednesday meeting there will not ht time for the full Tustin board to review the nominees, Superintendent Willlam Zogg said today. Two Envoys Resign WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nill· · on has acce:pted the resignaUoos of John Palrick Walsh, U.S. ambassador to Kuwait, and C}larles T. Cross, am- bassador to S~re. The White HouM said Monday no ""cceuor1 have been selected. Rempa, concluded aftei: Btudying war ~hives ln Koblenz and Washington that Rommel "was 1t best a good tactician but he couldn't work with large bodies Of troops. He panicked when faced wtth Martha Un~onth? jreat tasks." . · Gen. Ulrich de Mal!lere, formf:T tn- gpedor general of the West German Army, sakt Rommel had only slight 'understanding of large atrategic pm- blema and was backward in bis political lhlntlng. Gtn. Woll von Baudissin, another pro- )ninent army commander, suggested that :J!ltltt built Rommel Info 1 follt hero ·and then used him ,. a poliUcal ln-...trument beciUMI ''he Wal l'IO anob and :.. Intellectual. : "We would be dolne Rommel 1 favor :u ... would try to ... him ' today .. ~ P:""°"•,. Von Baudltsin told the TV 41udience. • The program ahowed that ~!?'mi:J. who was allowed to commit 1u1c1de 1n • 1944 after being implicated In the plot '° bomb Hitler, retains his almost _mysUcal reputatlon, abroad as weU 11 in Germany. : Thi commander of the new navy mlulle lhip Rommel reported: "I want to emplwiM that durlni Ille Lack of Roy al Courtesy Rebuked LONDON (U PI) -A British lord, the Earl of Lindsay, ha& written to Martha Mitchell, wlfe of the U.S. At- torney General, rebuking her for "un- couth bebavl~' in rerusing to curtsy lo Queen Elizllbeth al 1 Buckingham Polace garden party. MN. Mitchell, writing 1n the Ladles Home Journal, said ahe did Ml curtay. a traditional mark of respect, because she did not feel an American should bow to a foreign monarch. "On this principle," L<lrd Lindsay wrote in his letter to Mr1. Mitchell published today in the Dally Telegraph, "I take it that ll 11 your considered opinion I 11hould remain seated during the playing of the 'Stor Spangled Ban· ner' ." · j'lt has never entered my head not to SlMd," when the ll.S. National Anthem· wu played, UndpY 1aid. Knowlni "bow lo behave In polite $0Clety (was) something which hAs t1b- viousty been omitted from your educa· lion," he wrote. "You have merited a stem rebuke for your uncouth behavior, but do not degpair -I am conlident that ff you keep your eyes open or apply your mind to the problem you will learn in tUne and, who knows, one of the51 days ymJ may find yourself a credit to your husband ... Lindsay said. Llndsar sugg•sted to Mn. Mitchell ''that you refrain from visiling Buck- tngham Palace or any 1 I m 11 a r establishments in the future, but remaln at home in Keokuk, Iowa, or Kalamazoo • ~1ich., or wherever it was you originated. In such places jt la Ukely you wilJ be. able to perpetrate any social solecism." Lindsay said he would be "happy to bow" to President Nl%on if he were Invited lo the White Roust. Mra. Mitchell 11 from ~ Blufl, Art. the tentative contract wu hammered out ln a day ot "real blr1ainln1" at the Labor Dtparbnent. He iave Utery moat ol the credit for bringlnC off Iba qreemenL The contract, euhjoct lo raliflcaUon by the members of the union, was made retroactive to January, 1970 .. with an tl]>iration dat.e of July, 1973. It wu not clear how the agreement would flt Into Prelldonl Nllon'• wqe controla. Witness In Corona Case Dies MARYSVILLE (UPI) -A key wltnesa in the Juan Corona mm murder case died today of Injuries suffered In 1 fight at ~ Skid Row hotel. He was Roy Delong, 53; a laborer who told anthorlUes he saw one of the 2S vic- thns, Sigrid Belennan, 63, get into a vehicle driyen by COrona, a 37-ye&Mld fann labor contractor from neighboring Yuba City. Police sa.id Delong fought Oct. 30 wilb Wa1ter Taylor, 37, a room clerk at the Golden West Hotel where Delong lived. Delong w11 hospitalized wllll bead and face injuries Nov. 1. Taylor ls being held on .manslaUibler charges. Pollce said they believed there was no coru:etU(\O between the figbl and the Corona case. They said there had been 10m1 "name-calling" prior to the fighl Corona la in custody in Yuba City while his attorney b appealing a Sutter County court decl1lon turning down a defense at· tanpt to have the triaJ moved to a melropolitan area. Delong was one of the few persons whom authorities aald could directly link Corona with one of the victims. Delong was held1n jail for a short time aa a material. .witnesa and he testified before the Sutter County Grand Jury which Indicted Corona. Corona'• trial has been delayed In- definitely pending appeals. The Mexican-born father of four ls ac- cu.sed of hacking to death the 2S iUnerant farm workers and buryin& thf!m in peach and plum orcl>arda along the banka of the Feather River north cl. Yuba Qty. Thi average 12 percent annual Increase ii more thin twice the ,,$ percent aMual Umlt established as a general rule by the Pay B o a r d. And on the surface, the board'• ban on retro1ctlve lnctease1 before Nov. 14 would ap~r to nullify nearly two years of etira pay for the 1i111&lnten dating back to when the contract period began on Jan. l, 1970. But union· murces indicated that the 1lgnalmen would claim erempUon under the equlty clause of the Pay Board'• cuJdelines on the bull tbll -eCher rail workera b&ve already ptten tbe pay ralsel ldleduled lo IO Into o!locl before Aug. 15. The signalmen went on ltr1ke for about 40 hours Jul May 17·11 lo b ae t up contract deman~a. Congreu «dered lllem back lo ~ IRIW Oel. L BeciUIO of !/'" 'wqe f,_. In effect 11 lhal , timli, algnolmeo Platdent C. J. Cl>amberlain continued .,IOllallni nll>et -c:allin1 -- Transit Dis~rict Eyes $9 Million Windfall ' Dlreclor of the Orange County Tran!ll O~trlct couldn't make up their mlndl Im· med.lately Monday it they wanted $9 mil· lion to spend on a tr&n!portat.ion system '° they ask Ufelr· acting general manager to prepare 1 report on alternatives pos- sible under the new state gas tax law. The aales-tax-on-guollne bill, signed by Gov. Re1gan last week calll for a one- fourtb of one percent sales tu on gas to go for county transportation needs. This hu been estimated at $9 million a year Orange County of a total of $129 million statewide. The Board ol. Supervisors have an op- tion. U they decide it is o( greater benefit to the citzens they can apply the new gas tax windfall to a one-fourth of one percent reduction in sales taxes on all purchases subject to the regular sales tax levy. Suprvlsor Ronald Caspers, a transit district board member warned that the board would probably approve a definite program. "If It is not forthcoming they could let the people aave." Chief Deputy County Counsel Clayton Parker explained tlJe facets of the new law, which takes effect next July t, to the district board and wamed that the sales tu would beullected on gasollne sold ln the county whether the district took ad· vantage of the law or nol Acting General Manager Ted McCon· ville wu directed by the board members to report on "alternatives under the new law." The district's total income at Ull$ lime figures at about $600,000 a year from a 2· cent tax levy. McConvllle Mid Ille diltrlct would ft¥>V4 u rapidly as possible to accept the state fundl to mate certain tbal Ille money J;enerated locally 1ot1 for publlc transportation. "ll the district does not decide on the need for funds," he advised, 11tbe cltitea can ask the 1upervisor1 to Impose the tu for road purpo.ses." McCovllle eaid Ille $9 mlllloo will ba administered through the Souther D California AssoclaUon of Govemementl (SCAG). The transit dl!lrlct would bave lo apply, to SCAG for Its money and would have to compete for the funds wllb ony local public transit system which allo applied, McConville warned. This does not° apply to Ille Southel'!I California Rapid Transit D t 1 tr I ct , however, .since ita diatrict boundarle1 do not Include this area even though lt baa a few bus lines here. Under the provisions of the law up to 7S percent will be spent on capital ouUay and the balance on operation and maintenance. In other busineu, Monday the district directors approved intervlew1 to be held next Monday with four transportation consulting finn•, the top candidatea for a $.15,000 Special Bus Need.a Study. McConvllle said the district'• Technical Advisory Committee wanted each flnn to name a project manager who would CUTY out the study. The managcn will be in- terviewed and a recommendat.ian midi to the directors ln two weeks. The top four firma, McConvlll1 aid, a;e VTN of Orange County. 'Wilbur Smith-TRW, Loo AqelH, ~ IJ1!\ CUr1in, Phlladelpbla ud Dellew, C1tbar and Co. ti Sin Fronclaco. # ,r"'"'\ (, •.. , senb ... ••••• Smda Ana 0 0 0 0 () 0 Only llutfaes Alrv.cest. 11 One~ stop at Los Angeles International Th-en non-stop t.o~ And on to Eugene. Daily at 9:20 a.m. . ....;,~IN • l .. r f OAJ1. V 'llOT \ \ •' I ~ps Tie No Good For Coast Bill By THOMAS MURPIDNE Of Ill• D.lllJ f"llot St•tf · STRlKEOUTS DEPT. -Assemblyman Alan Sieroty'! coastline protection bill came up .for Senate hearing Monday and won a tie vote, 4 ayes, 4 nays. And for Sieroty, a tie was worse than kissing your sister. It meant a loss. The bill is dead. Tutsday, Nowmbtr 16, 1971 Red Cliinese Enter U.N. With Roru· From United Prt11 hternattonal The bol'leymoon is oVer. It lasted lour days. Communist China's smiling deputy foreign minister, Chiao Kuan*hua, took off his glasses. wiped away his grin and leveled a 30-mlnute attack on the United States and the Soviet Union Mon· day in bis first speech in the United Nations. Communist China today cast its first vote in the United Nations today in 1upport of a resolution critical of the United Sta'tes and calliiig on It to prevent the importation of chrome from white. ruled Rhodesia. UPI T•l9Plltt. BLASTS SUPERPOWERS Red Chin•'• Cl\iao Vietnana Goals Below 100;000 SAIGON (AP) -Gen. Creighton W. 'Abrams has been told to plan on a U.S. force of between 60,000 and 95,000 troops in Vietnam by June so: informed &ources disclosed today, . This does not mean that President Nixon won't cut strength below these so-called "Pl.arming goals," the sources said. They emphasized that the figures sent Abrams by the Joint CWefs of Staff in Washington "was only a goal toward which h~ should plan and not an order." Prior to his announcement of a new withdrawal program last Friday, Nixon was reported in SaigQn thinking in terms of a force of 40,000 to 50,000 Americans by the end of June. Instead be announced a cutback of 45,000 lrooJlll during the next two months, reducing the authorized ceiling to 139,000 men by the end of January. The planning goal was sent to Abrams several weeks before Nixon's an· nouncemenl But informed sources said it is still valid as far as they know even though the withdrawal rate pro- grammed by Nixon for the next two months would cut the total force to ' Jess than 30,000 men if maintained through June. "He jumped · the rate over the holidays,'' said one informant. "This is the fune of the year when you always send people home early anyhow. Uf"fT ........ MASTERSPY SUCCUMBS Ru11i1'1 Abel, 68 • In the final analysis, it m8y be just as well. Sieroty's proposed measure had some good notions toward environmental protection· along California's coastline. But it ·also had some provisions 1hat left great question marks as to bow much aelf-determination would remain for folks who actually live along the coastline. The resolution passed overwhelmingly, 106 to 2, with the American delegation itseU abstaining. Only Portugal and south Africa voted against it. Congress has approved the plan despite a U.N. embargo against Rhodesia, The embargo was levied when the countrY unilaterally declared independence from Britain to maintain rule by · Jts white minority. Nine Ter rorists Pull Off "But that doesn't mean he will continue at that rate, U the North Vietnamese become truculent at the Paris peace talks, he might slow it down. If they release prisoners of war, he might speed it up. The President has to leave himself some latitude. 0 Masterspy Abel • I A Soyiet proposal for a world disarma· ment conference b also expected to come before the assembly later in the day. Communist China submitted its own proposaJ before It was voted into the U.N. Daring Ir eland Escape * * * 7· Yanks K il'led; Dies in Russia Of Lung Cancer l I There was: considerable effort to save SJeroty's proposal. At the beginning of the legislative session, dozens of so-called coastal protection measures had been in· troduced : They died like flies. A few struggled on through the session before succumbing. Sieroty's bill was the last isurvivor up to yesterday. THE TIE VOTE that killed his bill befofl; the Senate Natural Resources Committee was interesUng. Among the nine committeemen, it needed a 5 to 4 blessing to get out on the Senate floor. Two senators from the northerly coastline voted , for the bill. Robert J. Lagomarsino CR· Ventura) ana: Atlen -F. ~ Gregorio (~San Mateo). The·y were join· ed in yeas by C.Ommittee Chairman John A. -NejedlY (R·Walnut CreelC) and All:iert Chiao's speech caught most observers by surprise and was contrary to his earlier statements on the stand his coun- try would take a.!I the newest member of the world body. Communist China, which was named to replace Nationalisi China in the U.N. by a strong vote three weeks ago, was expected to take a soft line -at least at first. Chiao and 45 other members of China's official delegation arrived in New York Thursday to claim the seat they had been seeking for 22 years. BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UPI) - Nine men held on what police sources said were charges connected with using weapons and explosives broke from Crumlin Road Prison today in a well· planned, daylight escape, government of· licials said. The officials said two teams of prisoners were playing football In an exercise yard at the rear of the prison when two rope ladders were flung over one ZS.foot -wall from outside the jail. They said a number (lf the inmates, members of the ouUawed I r i s h Repµbllcan Army (ffiA) apparently had been awaiting the ladders. Nine men immediately clambered up and over the wall to freedom in a maze of nearby S. Rodda (D-Sacramento ). YOU WILL NOTE that in voting Ye!, the two northern coastliners are split in party affiliation. Those voting no included two southerly c_oastline senator~ in Dennis E. Carpenter (R-Newport Beach) and Ralph C. Dills (D-San Pedro). They were joined in the nays department by Gordon C.Ologne (R· Indio) and H. L. Richardson (R·Arcadia). Supreme Com1 Will Hear U.S._ Surveillance Appeal YOU WILL NOTE thot in voting no, the two southern coasiliners are split in par· ty affiliation. All of this may suggest that more than party politics was involved in how the feelings toward coastline control shook down in the voting. The southern coast is more heavily populated and developed than the rocky and colder section of the north state seashore. Thus it may be more palatable for the northern folks to control areas which have not yet seen development. I~ gets stickier when you 're talking about regions that already contain peOple, houses, business and industry. So anyway, the vote went 4 to 4 and Sieroty's plan for coastal containment ap- pears to have little chance of being reviv· ed for this session of the Legislature. But you might ask, "What ever happened to that ninth member of the committee, the man who should have been the tie- breaker in the voting?" GOOD QUESTION. He is Senator James Q. Wedworth, the Jngle\vood Democrat. There were strong reports that Wedworth would apply the death blow to the Sieroty measure by casting the firth nay ballot. But Sieroty reported that the good senator had told several con· servation leaders that he would vote for It. In the end, Wedworth took a wal k. He didn't show up for the deliberations or lbe voting . "Personal business" was the report from his office. You may all cough quietly now. Few people in this day and age would suggest that coastline protection is a bad notion. But Sieroty's bill wa.!I so shot full Df amendments in the final going that it looked like legislative s,viss cheese. Its demise may be just as well. Meanwhile. even in death, it may have tccomplished much by tu rning the 1potlight on our coastline as one of California 's most precious assel.5. WASHINGTON (AP) -The Sopreme Court gave the government a chance today to head oft a full-dress hearing into Anny surveUiance of civ ilians. The court agreed to consider an appeal by the Justice Department aim ed at isults by civilians who object to surveillance but cannot prove that they were hurt by it. The justices will consider the appeal later in the term. This delays, and may ultimately prevent, a spying bearing . ordered last April by the U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Columbia. At issue is a suit filed last year by the American Civil Liberties Union on· behalf of t h e Central Committee for Conscientious Objectors and in· dividuals who felt they had been spied upon. The suit was dismissed by U.S. Dist. C®rt Ju-dge George L. "Hart Jr., bUt he was reversed by the Circuit Court, which ordered him to find out whether Army surveillance was "unrelated" to th e Army's mission "as defined by the Constitution." The Justi ce Department's appeal, filed in August, doubted that the Constitution gives federal courts authority to hold such hearings. The suit, the department argued. offers no evidence that surveillance has caused c>.:iy injury to those \\-ho filed it. In effect. the department said, the suit seeks an "advisory" opinion on "indefinite and abstract assertions.'' SALT Talks Resume VIE NNA (UPI ) -U.S. and Soviet negoti ators began the sixth round of the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT) today and all indications were they were going splendidly. The first session lasted two hours and 15 minutes, unusually long for the initial meeting of a new round of SALT. "The threat of lhe 'unknown' ls not sufficient to invoke the judicial process," said a group of government lawyers beaded .~ Solicitor General Erwin N. Griswold and Asst. Atty. Gen. Robert C. Marcl.ian. The Supreme Court could kill the suit if it decides to overrule the Circuit Court. Shelling T akes Refugee Toll, India Ann,ounces NEW DELHI (UPI ) -Government _spokesmen said today about 7ii East Pakistani war refugees were believed killed or wounded in new artillery duels in an ires where Pakistani and Ind ian troops fought their biggest battle of the latest border confrontati on. In a printed release, defense ministry spokesmen said Pakistani artillery fired 10 rounds into Bakshinagar village in Tripu ra territory along the eastern fl ank of East Pakistan Sunday night. The release said 75 refugees were believed killed or wounded but gave no further details. Prime Minister Indira G and hi , meanwhile, was quoted by a spokesman for her ruling Congress Party as saying that she had no particular objections to observers from th e United Nations visiting both sides or the Indo-Pakistanl border, a possible modificati on of former policy. According to the spokesman, ?-.1rs. Gan· dh i said that any observers would have to take into consi deration the entire situation in East Pakistan, including last December's general elections, the army crackdown ' of March 25 and the present civil war situation. Snow Hits So·me Sections Temperatures Ttmotr•lurts 1r>d 10rec!0Uar1.., ·~ lhe 24-hour wr10d •ndl'IO 11 4 1.m. HMll L.ow Pc11, Al~~v " " " Alt1Vauer111.>t ~ • ·" Allt n!• ~ " Bob• " " Boston " ,. ullt !o ... ll•rlll!I• fi ~ jlKl~lllll :1~::rwl nvtr MOfnft r·~~ " u " o lulu ll ~~~r, ~ ~n'-:1 ~ ri •• ~8~ " "' outsvl !• • t1f:f!lllfl . u ~ IWIU t ~ nn'AOl~I il " 40 ... '"' ·~·"· ~ i "' ~· v3 ~I= .. , t • Cltv "' l•llf.IO!I!• Pi.otn • !! ii >:'\\'"" ~ .. :W Of ~'j!· re. ~•a llv n ll t"' tll~,v•. ~ ~"'lt~ 1• C!lv ;,I ''". il u :n .,~r,,;,oi1 II Sun, Moon, Tides TUISDAY S.c:Olld !11th ... 4.4f·"'· l l &9COlld 1tW t :lO •·Ill· C,J WIDNllDA'I' llfr1t hltl'I .............. 1:••·"'· 1.0 l'l"r low .......... , 1:)0 •.m. t .1 S..:cnd fllll'I .......... , t :M•.m. 11 $t<ond low , , J•N •·"'· O.J Sllf'I ··-l:U '·"'· St11 •ttt •·"'· Moel! an.t• t :lt 1.m. Stlt 1:4 1.~ streets after passing through the grounds of adjoining St. Malachy's College, the officials said. Prison officers on duty in the yard sped forward to halt the escape but were blocked "in a concerted movement of remaining prisoners," said an official at the borne affairs ministry. None in, Combat SAIGON (UPI) -Seven Americans were killed in Vietnam Monday, two (lf them when they stumbled into an American minefield near Hue, the U.S. Command reported today. There were no reported U.S. combat casualties in the current batUefield lull. MOSCOW {UPI) -Soviet masterapy ; Rudolf Abel, exchanged in 1962 for l12 r spy pilot Francis Gary Powers, died ; Monday of Jung cancer, unofficial Soviet i sources said today, He was 68. • "There was some scuffling between guards and a number of prisoners gaining valuable time for the prisoners to make good their escape,11 ,tbe official said. Abel, a colonel in the KGB (secret : police), had been ill for six months, j the sources said. He died in Moscow l and will be buried Thursday. British Army troops and police raced to the prison and ·flung a net of roadblocks . across streets in a two-mile radiw of the prison, home office officials said. The only reported combat involving Americans W8.!1 an air strike into North Vietnam today against a Communist _antiaircraft battery that fired on U.S. planes bombing the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos, and B52 strikes in the central highlands. Abel was arrested in Brooklyn, N.Y., ~ in 1957 on charges of spying for th~ '. Saviet Union and was sentenced to ao : years in prison. In February, 1963, Abel was swapped for Powers, the pilot of an American U2 spy plane shot down over the Soviet Uni on in 1960. By late afternoon, the men had not been recaptured, they said. There was heavy fighting in Laos, where Communist force.s bombarded government positions on the Plain (lf Jars in preparation for a dry season offensive, and in Cambodia where Com· munists bombarded the Phnom Penh airfield and overran a Cambodian in- fantry battalion 12 mile! away. The U2 incident scuttled the Big-Four summit conference in Paris in 1960. Soviet Premier Nik ita S. KhrushcheY refused to partici pate in the summit unless President Dwight D. Eisenhower apologized for spy flights over Russia. A number of persons stopped by police and questioned brought a flurry of false reports that some (lf the men bad been caught, police sources said. ... now through Dec.4th 2nd tire· .. Buy one General-Jet at the, regular low price, and get the second General -Jet for 1/2 price. ' 4 ply nylon cord WHITEWAI I S 2nd TIRE PRICE SMALL INTERMEDIATE STANDARD LARGE CARS CARS CARS CARS 6.50-13 7.75-14 7.75-15 8.25-14 8.25-15 8.55·14 $22.00 $27.00 $27.50 $30.00 $31 .00 $32.50 $11.00 $13.50 $13.75 $15.00 $15.50 $16.25 ~u . pertire $ 1.76. $ 2.14 $ 2.16 $ 2.32 $ 2.37 $ 2.50 • DURAGEN " TREAD RUBBER· iDUALTREAD DESIGN RAIN CHICK: snould our 1upply ol .OIM ti,. 1!zn or Un•• nJn 1hort durino this tvtnt, "will honor 1ny ord1r1 p!1e•d now for future dellv•f)' It th1 •dvtrtl••d pr!e1. PENNSYLVANIA 3-PIECE TENNIS BALLS WIND 'N RAIN SUIT YCKwttt11 P••H Thi of J HI Yklblllty YoUowl TIRE llJ W•t 1M, Coste M ... Phoflf 540•1710 or 646-SD3J •HOOD • JACKET •SLACKS • Wind 1nd r•inproof • Higl'I vls!blllty he1vy duty plastic Special This Week Only Ptietd .. 1hown •I Genetti Tlrt ltorn. Competlllvoly prlc1d •I Independent do110,. dilptey!ng tho Gonor•I algn . .l\VERY COAST GENERAL TIRE 16941 ooch II.ct., H1111tl119to' It«• PhtM 147·1110 --..---•STORE HOURS 0:00 AM;O:OO"PM (Day thru Davi _____ .. . , • Power Plant Report Recruiters To Give Up Post Offices Mercury Said Presen4 WASHINGTON (AP) -The milit.ary is beefing up Its sales force and moving Its n<;rulting stations out of the Post Office and onto Main Street in an effort to slga · up an all-volunteer army. But Not Dangerous Now ' WASHINGTON !UPI) -Sen. Clinton P. Anderson (0-N.M.), says mercury spewed into the air from the F~r Comers, N.M. power plant Is \in "significant quantities," but not an im- mediate dai:iger to human he,alth •. If extensive tests are required, he said. Its $2'17·mlllion program, including 804 new recruiting offices, 3,857 more recruiters and 2,691 more sedans to ·scour the countryside for volunteers, is granted in a '71-bllllon defense money bill headed for a House vote today. The facts are in a report from the Environmental Protection A g e n c y • Anderson said Monday. Anderson said the EPA report said: -About 96 percent of the mercury that enters the plant -near the Four Comers area where New Mexico, ' Colorado, Arizona and Utah join -Is emitted as mercury vaPor from the stacks. The coal the plant uses contains mercury. This lncludes a $2.9-milllon recruiters' expense accoul which the House Ap- propriations Committee says is for such Items 11 "parking fees, coffee and doughnuts purchased for recruiU or pro- spective recruits and other out-<lf-pocket incidentals." The EPA and the state of New 1'-fexico plan more tests, including taking hair samples from Indians, to see if humans in the area have mercury ln their bodies. -The mercury vapor that comes out is dispersed so as to cause little hann to human health or the environment. But more study is needed. The Indian Health Service will check patients at its regional clinic, Anderson said. -Assertions that the plant Is dumping mercury over the &urface of Navajo Lake "must be viewed as speculative and sub- ject to qualification." The biggest share of the $103-mllllon in- crease over the present recruiting budget 1oes to the Arm'y -500 of th~ new l'fCf'Uiling stations, 2,575 or the new recruiters and 1,500 of the new sedans. The service's director, Or. Emery A. Johrison, told Anderson "our preliminary investigation of mercury· p o I 1 on I n g hazard associated with the Four Comers power plant operation indicates a Anderson said a three-phase study by the EP·A 's Denver of rice of water pro- grams, two other EPA offices and the · state Of New Mexico's Envi{onmental Improvement Agency will detennine the amount or mercury in bodies of water such as Navajo Lake. . minimal risk of health damage." But hair samples will be collected anyway-, to see ·was Maheu's CUSTOM TAILOIS & '6HIHMAKERS IN ORANGE COUNTY PERMANENT SHOWROOM -,_,--.,,-,,,-, .. ~...,-"-= .. ~ .. "" Pll-CNllSTMAS SAU .uni AT BIG SAVINGS 2 s135 H11Y.1•thniNt•.tt1t1mte111mJ Trash Checked? oouau ••1T SAVE UP ro so•;. r_.,0--1 • ......_ .... SPICIAL "Kl Reg. NOW DOUILI !CHIT .. sns ... ... llffd f•Ji....t' c..-"""""' Suitt, St>ert<-. Sloth, 5~1"1, 100% Guo•oo-So!lolwcff.,, •WI PIT ANT 1111 From Wire Dispatches LAS VEGAS -Billionaire Howard Hughes' top security chlef in southern Nevada screened the garbage o f Robert A, Maheu, former head of the Hughes' ga~bling em: pire, Sheriff Ralph Lamb has said. l lUC MOHAii •• H 61 • ANT snu CO,llD CASHMEll • , • , , ti It SJ.IAUSllH .... IS 61 • Ji ii ALTDATIONI Sill WOOL •• ., U I• • 4 WlllC DW'hlY SJ.lllTS •••••••• 10 • •'"',,...'°'°I .. .,,, 7000 FHllST 1woano WOOi.iie$ & OOUIU llOTS • IAST 'AYMINTS ,_ ..... ..._ ... IV....._ l'ttMeAS<Olll •017•11'1 °'*' lhll Sulllll'f' ..., 2012 MICNIUON-IUITI 10,_..IWP'OIT IU.CN ~ o... .. c.. ~ """""'"' '~~ .. MKArtli ... ,..,, ••• Maheu . was ousted last December from the t op Nevada post and is challeng- ,. Merrill LY!lch looksiat ni11e mu ~fonds._ ·- For aMerrillLynchresearchcomment and a current prospectus on any of these funds, just check the appropriate box or boxesand mail in the coupon today. []---------0----'----o--------, I I ; I I I I I I I Affiliated I Anierican Expniss 1 Anchor Growth I I Fund I . Income Fund I Fund I I --• I s;...,, """"""'""' I et;edlw•..-.. I I lonc1'.-m gtoW!h d I an incoma as OO&Sibl9 I lhateholders' Cll~ CAPl;al&nesalnca'nlL witho!Auicn.risk. a.-.-u-~ I I 1 I I :~:.~:A: I .. ).-1 u I~ I I I I o---------u--------0---------1 I I I I I I I I l '. k..11y capital I ·~~:! I eu::~ I I Fund I of America I S-3 I I "'°91prWTwyetnphlsis I Placasemphaslson I &!ilbaicllllOl'Mll I cncapijal~ I aD0(8Ciation1nd I tTougtiwtw:arwbeli4Md I : -I _..,....,,.,.,, I =.\"~~ I : ~ : "" : ~ : I WI VIV I I -------6--------·-b--------~ iJ"" I I I I I I I ing his firing in a ISO million suit against Hughes Tool Co. and Hughes. Lamb said that Jim Golden, head of Hughes' security force. was questioned by authorities recently a b o u t paying for Maheu's garbage. "There is no Jaw against buying garbage, but he ad· mitted it was done," said Lamb. The Sunday edition of the Las Vegas Sun printed photographs showing c i t y garbage trucks s t o p p i n g around the corner r r om Maheu's.Jast Las Vegas home and the garbage being switch· ed to a pickup truck registered to Golden. "The great garbage caper Is only one fact of an intensive surveillance of Robert A. Maheu which began when the JlOwer struggle erupted last year," the newspaper said. Meanwhile, p r i v a t e in- vestigators' efforts to, force entry lnta a · Nassau hotel . penthouse where Hughes was believed staying were ' foiled last ~ember by agents on the Hughes payroll, the Lo.! Angeles Times said today. U'I T1a..Ml'I Science Position Ur. H. Guyford Stever (above), president of Carnegie • Mellon Uni- versity in Pittsburgh, was nominated Monday bf President Nixon as director of the Nation- al Science Foundation. Red Union Slips ·Men Into U.S. WASHINGTON (APl Confidential Justice Depart- ment reports sa} a Hong Kong-based seamen's union is 11,ipping Chinese Communists into the United States on-es· pionage missions. A secret FBI analysis in- cluded in government reports obtained by the Associated Press says t h e Hong Kong Seaman's Union is putting members aboard flagships of non-Communist nations t o sabotage or capture the ships in case o{ war or to jump shi p In non-Communist nations and engage in espionage activities. s $69.50 IEI~~ .... w. '*" 11 .. Cell• M9M .... ,., i101 S.• Lull •-v 1•. 111·1* O(Mnllde Tue5dQ', Novtmbtr 16, 1911 DAILY 'IL01' 1J the best It isnl surprising that Seagram's 7 Crown is the whiskey more people prefer. Aft.er all, it's only right that America's finest whiskey should be America's favorite. Sly$apn's7Crown llldlcSUrc. • er1ca •. ~ ,I. .IUGIUI DllTIWU r.o,.1,f.t. IUIDEDWl!ISll.Y. M noor. ~,.. GUil 111.UlUL UlllII. 1 For Top Sports Coverage Read the DAILY PILOT • • I --I Pu1n1m Investors I Wlndsot I I lnvel!Ol'l Growth I Fund I Fund I I Stock Fund I """""°"-I ........,_ I I s.b~CM'lh I g:::r:: I =:rJ=: I Thsend~~see,yuw~ r;aneeas~wi you getp ~ ~<If'hlilk. ~l!JO!e.111>~ nine, 3 gla :a; up t.o eighteen, 4 gla-. Pregnant and nuraing WOO'.llnalso·need the<alc:ium.in4glu us of.milk daily.) I """'"'"".....,., I I I ! ~ i • l I! ! I ' I I I !------------------·---------, I I I P!eesesendmeinlormationcntlteMutlla!Fundschecbdabove. 1 I I I N I I I I Addnm I I <ll1 "'""' 7-<i> I I I • ~ I I I I Merrill Lynch, Pieree, Fenner & Smith Inc I I 4501 Birch Street; Newport Beach 92680 l I Telephone: 714-540-8121 I L---------------------7----J • • in And that's OtllY one reasoo t.o drink two glasses of milk a day. Because you also need calcium t.o send the signals that let yoa hear, smell, feel-as well as see. And you need it t.o make your muscles contract. And t.o make your bloocl clol And t.o keep your bone; strong and healthy throughout life. How much calcium should you have? For adults, the National Research Council recommeods In) milligrams a day: about as much as yoa get in a DOIJD1I.! diet if it incUuies Can you get eooagh calcium from other foods? Not easily. For example, two gla'ISeS of milk giw you as much calcium as each of the following: . --, 23slicesof bread,13cupsrlfbrusse/$ " sprouts, 14grapefruit,13 cups of row carrot,s, 1 !h pints of ice cream, 2!h cups of cottage cheese.· When it comes t.ocalciom, there's no real substitate far milk. ~ boclyneedsealcinm. ' Eftry'body needs milk. • • • ' ~ • . . • -• -... f • DAU,Y PRQT EDITOJpAL PAGE l ' ' ' ' • • • Time to Stop Piraey . , I ! i I • • l ... • American hackles have been nlsed agalll by the latest acts of piracy end blackmail by Ecuador. Using a converted. U. S. Coaat' Guard patrol bba~ the Ecuadorian navy not only oeizod five U. So-owned tuna boats in international waters but damaged one of them by gunfire -a $2 million San Diego-based clip- per on her maiden voyage . Three of the beats w;ere held for ransom, eupbem· lsUcally called fines and penalties, tolalln~ U60,000. The other two had Ecuadorian fishing licenses and so were released-but-the licensea themselves are black· mail since the boats fish outside tho 12·mile limit Jong agreed upon by most other maritime nations. The little Latin Amertcan. nation has seized 30 boats so far thls year. The current. $160;000 levy will be added to the $1.33 million previously collected. Peru_ collected $18,204 oC that amount but the rest was all • Eclladorian plunder. . The American taxpayer, not the tuna boat owners, Is the fall guy. It's his dollars· the federal government uses .to reimburse the tuna fl~t. 'through special con· gressional act after each occurrence. Now Sen. John V • Tunney (!).Calif') is urging Congress to approve his bill. for quick reimbursement of boat operators, which ap- parently would make the payment of the fines a porman· ent'U. S. poJJ<y. Ecuador's renewal of the decade-old '4tuna war" has brought more 5eizures and higher fine totals thi$ year than in any previous year. Why the high-handed treat,. ment should be tolerated is a question the Statellepart· ment has not satisfactorily answered.~ · The hot-headed response would of course be to re- turn to gunboat diplomacy. A U. S. destroyer escort for tl1e tuna fleet would be part of this. The ,idu of.abro- gating our good neighbor policy toward Latin America is highly distasteful. But it clearly Is time to get a Jot more flrm than we haH been. Ecuador and Peru aren't·tbe only ones making auch a ridiculous claim to ocean territory. Chile, ArgenllDa, Uruguay, Brull, Panama. Nluragua and El Salvador are other Latin Amerl<an nlllons doing the same. After 10 years of harwment, it'a time the 1U. S. got tough enough to ca we · the affected nations to setUe the dispute once and for all. Wbo' knows? Maybe th• U. S. would cOma out of such ·a conference with a 200- mUe limit of its own! Then what would be the response of those Russian triwlors llld Japanese Jong lines along our coast? Right ~f Free Association Fraternities and sororities have not been 1>ermitted on the UCI campus since its opening some aix years ago. Comes now the news that the UCl Academic Senate may graciously consider lifti.Dg the ban on these par4 ticular student organizations. The professors reportedly will study a plan under which interested students Would be assigne.d to available fraternities and lororiti~~ by a draft lottery system. This conjures up fascinating pictures of WXY fraternity swapping a left-handed guitar player (with amplifiers) to the YXWs for a biology maJor who hits straight A's. Or of some "draftee" seeking deferment on grounds he conscientiously objects to service in the ZZZ fraternit)''s theater of operations. The whole fraternity and sorority issue also con· jures up a disenchanting picture of professors meddling with the rights of students to freely choose their person· al associates. And that ought to be embarrassing to people ahd an institution dedicated to intellectual free· dom. Measuring Judicial Qualifications Army, Ford Produce a Clean Engine Rehnquist's Depth of Mi·nd WASHINGTON -'!be nominatloo ol William Rehnquist u a justlce ol the United States Supreme -Ciiurt preaenil the issue between President Nizon and the Democratic Sen· ate majority in a ur.J.que and direct way. No fringe questions cl:>ud th e issue. Rehnquist's record u a lawyer is al- ll\<IOI will!oot blem· Jsh. No reproach arises f r o m his p:!rsonal lire, his financial affain:, or hil iP~llectual qualifications. Rehnquist is an activist conservative. lt dot'll!I not wash that in the Justice Depart. ment he merely did a lawyer's duty as an advocate of his client's cause. Tbe record ehows that he did so with the force of conviction. His record as · a private lawyer equally 6Upport.s the conclusion tMt ht bas articulated. the rational con- servative position as a believer, and by no means in the sense that a lawyer mljlt defend an accused murderer whom be suspected, in his beart, to be guilty. A VOTE AGAINST Rehnquist in the Se:iate, there!ore, must be based largely upon opposition to his politi~legal philosophy as revealed in his record l!S a 18wyer. ls thia a sound basis upon wlllch to oppose a president's nomination of • Supreme Court justice? · Th:::re is no use saying that lawyer. trained senators are above basing the.ir votes on &uch differences. If William Kunstler were to be nominated to the Supreme C.ourt he would be oppolfd as a d,.. .... ~rous radical who could not be tr.! • • ~ as a judge. It ia precisely tht dif. ference between a Rehoquist and a Kumtler whi~ makes the poinL Rehn- quist rupects the processe.s of law and Kunstler does nol -U' INNOCENCE ol Ill poliUco-legal doctrine or' ideology were to be made the di!initive qllalifi<atlqn tlf . a Supreme Court justice; the court· wouJd not have -1ed Olar! .. EVIJIS H\IP.S. Earl \V•r· hll, J1ui<> Black; Felix Frinkfur\er and othen. Hughes WU go'Vernor' or .... New Yort and a candidate for Presldenl War· ren wu governor of canromia and a can-- didtte for . VJce -PruidenL Both were Republiean& and adhered to • certain political philoaophy. Black and Frankfurter were liberals in thtir time and very active as &Ucil:''nlat was a major reason why they were ap- pointed to the ·court. Others were ap- pointed for th~ same controlling reason. One Jaw achool dean came to prominence as a supporter of Franklin D. Roosevelt's court reorganizatioo plan and he was subsequently appointed to the court. President Nixoo hu placed oo tbe gcales by which a eenalor weigh& ~ nominee's q1JalificatJons the Jdea of "strict construcUon" of the Constitution. Just what this phrase means is beyond clear definition. It might be said that under strict construction of the Constitu· tion the President of the United States could not conduct tbe Vietnam War without direct congressional authorization and declar1tion. Would Nixon agree to that? Even the strict cmstructionists on the Burger court evidently do not. STRICT CONSTRucnONISM h a I becune • code-phrase for infle1ible ailb&rtnce ... to the past Which Nixon bimstlf negate• nearly evtri ~ In bis executive policies. It wu a mistake to in- troduce the idea, for Ule court is com· pelled.to move with the times·as tt did so dramatically in the school desegr!gation cases. in these cases the 1tricl con. struction of the words of the Constitution changed the centuries old pattern of American life. The current need ts not for those trap- ped by the past, but for men with mind.9 or penetrating depth unswayed by shibo boleths and flied concepts. Rehnquist brought that kind of mind lo the problem of legally raUonalizing "l')>OOiUoo to loog prevailllli concepts which were supposed _A SENATOR MUST judge wbether or to be "liberal" and therefore sanctified, not a nominee's past record of advocacy as was the separation of the races so long and his polltlcal Orlentlttorr1s suth as M-urrcttnelf. disqualify him from being a fair and able So, a Rnator who votes against Rehn· judge weighing all aides or an Issue. Fair-quist must say to himself: "This man is minded and able men orten come t.o dif· qualified, evidently brilliant, capable of ferent conclusions, as the Supreme Court growth, and with an enviable grup of the Illustrates very often. Justices rupposed law. But l cannot support him because he to be ''liberal" or "c:om«vati.ve'' often doesn't fit my definition of a liberal." EJ:. end up the oppo11ite or somewhere in perience lhows this is a poor way to between. meuute judiciaJ qualification. Sex, Bible, H.isto·ry Again The cautornia Assembly defeated, 41· 29, Bill 437 by Assemblyman Willie Br:lW?I., San Francisco. The bill would leeallza sexual acts performed in private by mutually consenting adults. Whether this bill would ha.ve proved a profitable relaxatattrol--Callfonlla law. b not the theme here. It would releage srme policemen to chase bank robbers, but if it woukl diminish the incidence of bank robbery i! problematic.al. 't Is lnterestlna that opponents of the bill quoted the Bible at &Orne length. This Js natunl, since the Bible in large se"lnents of tbe Western clvtiultlon iJ 1s sacred u Cbairman Mao's LltUe Red Book. Further. especially in the King James version, it ts done in magnificent prose. s.imple •and ea.sf to understand, ttnllke legislattve·dehltes. Among opponents; of. the bW waa OllANOI COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N._ Weecf, Ptlblllh<r TllotMI Kteofl, Editor Alben w. Bow Editorial P<1i1• Editor 1'le oOJtorlal -of the l>ollt Pilot tttkt to blfonn and 1timu· late readers b)" prncntlnr this rtrlt"tl)t.P8'"'1 opln!Ons *"'1 com· mmwY on topict ol lntern:t and. algnlfict.nO!. by provfdtftf a forum for tM ~ of·our readen' oolrlions. and by j)relenUns the dlYU1e ~n~ of Informed obo eerven and .epoJCameq on toplcs ot the day. Tnesdly: November 16, 1971 Royce . Brier '-·-·-----· ----- I ) Assemblyman E. Richard Barnes, San Diego. who quoted Leviticus, Romans, Corinthians and Timothy. Jf you would know what be &aid, you will have lo con- sult those books. BE ENDED SA YING th• Aosembly would do beUer to work on "re-establisfl. tnent of the moral lltandards of our na· tion.'" 'nils ts a very large order, and only tangmtially related to tbe qu..iion in hind. Morality or course Is enmeshed with law at many pain.ta. It ls tmmor&l to • kµI a fellow _belng, or even a lower animal unless tt happens t.o be a wUd pheasant, a detr or an el,pbant scared out or Its wits. Jt ts still questionable if our moraJ &landards are in need of re • establishmMt. Possibly 11e:me of thenf cOuld , use a little of our help, but the moral pbenomeoon: in the mass ii ao com. prehtnslve it can hardly be handled ln a. •Ingle admonitory senteoce. But• It· ta f&lrly ctrtl.in our moral stan- darda, if they lapse, are not going to be restored to thelr pristine atata by tho Clllfomia Assembly, or any other governing body wlthill • free society. Morality. 1t le11t in that area whlcli evokes the w.iety of Mr. Barnes, is not a m&-Uer of law. It is " m1:tter of precept. of tradition, of manner s and of pract!Ca.I sense. Jn 11ret society it iiS not a fllld value but ch anges under Impact of changing ~ditlons. rr IS NOW tho fublon. ov.en llllOl1I IOme 'hi>tonans Who npmad· hiotory.-to compare the Americans and t b e Romans ·-like, see what happene(f to Rome! The analogy ls delusory because the Americans and the Romans arose from wholly different life experiences. The Romans of the republic, before Caesar whacked it, were no "better" than the Romans of the imperium. Yet Juvenal, the great moralist, built hi1 name on such a delusion. Rome "fell," not because it was sex· ually free, but because it was historically sterile. Jt could not cbange, or adapt itseU to the growing and changing non.· RomM world. It faced that world e1actly 1s Caesar'• precursor, Marlua, faced It. and in four centurlu tL was dropped from history. . So w111 we drop from history 1f "" can- not change and adapt ourselves to lhe non-American world, and our aeiuaJ folkways wW have precious UtUe to do wlth·Jl Dear Gloomy Gus Observ1Uon at tbe COW!ly coort bouJo: If WOlll_<ll looked 11 eoocf at home .. they do -they 10 to court for a divorce. there would be ftwtr diYOl'Ctl. -J.P. ,.,_.. ... ,.. ,.,,.,. ......... ....... "" _........, ............. _., ..... ,....., ,,_ .. , MW Ill • ......., .... o.llJ Plltt, WASHINGTON -The Army bas touch- ed. oU a J'Qund of teeij).gnashing in the boardroom-of the Bi.g•Four automakers by producing a. virtually Ponuuon-free automobile. Tbe motor 11 almost ceitAin to meet !lie t~. fOll~. 'ilandltU fot~JoW• emlislOft cars ·by 1971 evert-tbougb the · Big.Four cannakers -.... ,b a v e "wflµled that &Jch a motor cannot be m .... procluced hy the deadline. The radical, four. cylinder, 72-horse· power Army · engine shows. evtr)' s i g n ol bearing up through t b • S0,000 miles of tests required by the federal standards. It bas already breezed through 7,000 miles of tests, emitting only harmless e1· haust. -1'HE-AllMY--TANK Automotive Com· mand ·near Detroit is moving ahe•d with plans to put the englne in Jeeps and some other military vehicles by the 1975 cut· off. Ironically, the clean engine was developed by one of motordom 's Big Four, Ford, under Anny supervision. The ·enthusiastic Ford !cientisJs. who swear by the engine, have been dismayed by the Ford high command, which has dismiss- ed tbe engine as merely "experimental." One reason the auto executives are cold on the hot engine is that they are still trying lo make their current engines poUution-free with Rube Goldberg "add· on" contraptions. One Detroit gimmick melts the asphalt beneath the motor and 1ets the grass afire. Another requires cosUy asbestos sheathing. But the economic advantages of such makeshift devlcts to the automakers far outweigh melted asphalt. FOR ONE THING the "add-ons'' will cost car oWners t1.00 to $300 annually alter the first year in adjustments and in new parts. The new parts mean higher profits for tb.e automakers who will have a 'monopoly on paits minufactw-e. For another, the "add-ons" can be girn- cracked ont.o current englne1 without the full-scale ret.oollng necessary to produce the Army engine. By clinging to lhe same old basic engine, Detroit can avoid taking ~ chance of making mistake• and losing money. In .J;urope, meanl!hl:1e, several car man\ifacturen have already 11id they can meet the U.S. exhaust glandards by 1!175. FOOTNOTE: Even before th~ 7,000 mile tesll were completed. President Nii· on had hinted to top aut.o execulives that he felt the Army engine. might be a pollu- tion aoluUon. Now. a Texaco reseatcb team• ii on tba verge of ·producing a 1lmllar .-for the Army. Allhoogh It la -about 1 month behind ICbeduJ•. delivery 11 e.tptd<d by early January. Quotes Jim (Modcat) Grut, u.Oatlud A '1 plt<ber, 111 C.J~. wltb Pl«1hilrgh ttam, j)ll nchm -"Somebody can ,hate me, but thlt person can't make me. hatt him. It I do I've become j\ut u 1lck u h&-11." --- - 'WAH, THAT'S A TOUQt ~I<.> Dehuman-izing by 'Status Jargon~ Of all the disciplines, psychiatry is su~ posed to be -and &hould be -the most personal and most humane. But something happens to disciplines between the time they leave the textbook and the time they arrive in the consulting-room. As a melan.ch<ily exampl~ of such degeneration, a psychiatrist friend of mine receaUy sent me what he rightly calls "a sample of linguistic monstrosi· ty" that• oo-lnslSta - "reveals th e pro-' gres.sive dehumani· at.ion" of even the most humane activi· ties. The speciman at · course in aeronautics: \I/here else do we find words like "linkage" and "networks" and ''high-impact, high-velocity''? All this pseudo-scientific ja rgon is more than just a pretentious attemp t to pro- vide status for the dl&Cipllne; il is a way Of removing the 'persOnal and humane element and regarding people as so many ,interchangeable parts that can be link ed t.ogether for the· sake of "prog ramming.'' It bas the abstract, mathematical air of a computer course. hand is a bulletin from a lOcal medical school. announci,,_g a seminar 4!1'ries of I CITE THIS instance not because I eight sessiorui in "ReceptiOn M1CI'. :4.ssess-have aily animus against the theo ry or ment Method for Use in Triage &;J.tings." practice of psychiatry -indeed, as \ readers . know. I am dotingly partial SO~IE OF THE titles in the series are : toward it -but rather because it m. "Review of the Seven Essential At· dicates that even the most intim8le and tachments and of Normal Coping Jl'WJC· subjective of human inquiries runs the tion," "Arrangements to Receive, AsSess real ris~ of losing sight of its basic goal. and Link at Crisis," "The Conduct of It has already happened in the field ot Convened Network Sessions for Maximal social work, where people long ago tum· Linkage," and "Clinical Skills for High· ed into "cases." and we even have that -Jmpa , H·tg-h-..-\1--e-J·o c.-i t y Ser.vice~dreadful phrase. "case-worker." When Programs." the Department of Psychiatry at one of Now, if I hadn't introduced this subject tbe nation's fine st medical schools begins with a mention of p.sychiatry, no layman juggling phrases like "network sessions" in the world would know that , these and ".high-velocity" programs. we ha ve seminars bad anything at all t.o do with cause f\!' concern that the healing proc· people. ess has turned into a travesty of its WOULD YOU HAVE guessed elec· tronics? Or engineering? Or ma.ybe a original purpose. You might-say the whole seminar is beycmd our nonual coping function. What Nixon Stands Fo r To the Editor : " J have become Vtr)' Cilncemed wi th much of the criticism which has been levied against the Presldent in recent weeks. J would like to present you with another point or view that seems worth considering. Perhaps President Nixon has been forc- ed to do some Ordinary political maneuvering due to the fact that many who surround him have acted in bad faith. Illustrations of this point would be the Pentagon Papers controversy and the fact that high ranking officials of the Justice Department itself have been recently Implicated due to their ques- tionable, if not criminal . behavior. ALTHOUGH Jam supporting President Nixon 1n thfs letter. I dD not intend to Im· ply or suggest that the American people should be misinformed by their public of· ficialli . However. It seems to me that too many of us in this Ciluntry today are hav- ing a good deal of difficulty d.ishnguisbing between our "rights" and o u r "responsibilities." Ra ther than impugn our President for behavior that may be forced upon him, let us rtYiew what be 1tand1 for and Is trying to accomplish. HE HAS SERVED our country wlth dedic11tlon In publi~ ofnce for a major portion ol his nr •. Early in his career he was ln- 1t.rumental in protecting our country against those who wouJd betray us. He has made, and is malting. courageous at rtffipt! to ease intern&tkinal tension so that our country WW find a new peace and pro~perlty. Ht Is •ltempt1r11 to bring the Vietnam War to a close. BIS PAST AND recent 1ppointments to lhe Supreme Court are an 1ttempt. to ' Ma ilbox '; lttllrs '""" retiltr1 •rt '"'korn.. Horm•llr Wrlt1r1 lhlNIUI (011...., ""'Ir IMINtel Ill Ht WOl'dl er lllJ. Tiie rltl'rt i. cond111sa ltll•r. r. fit ll>Mt .... 1lo111lMll 11 .. 1 h rt1H"'ltlll. All ltll1r1 fllllll lrto C:I~ lltll•lllrt lllO ftllH1119 Htlrt"-11111 11111111 ""r H w!l!lh110" 111 r1qu111 II 111Ulclt!ol n 111111 If •PP••••"· PMlrr will ""' M p~~lllhl'd. reestablish faith in our Constitution. -His administration has been very ef. fective in thwarting many of the ac· tivities of organized crime. radical anarchists and narcotics dealers. His new economic policies are an at· tempi to establish stability and a renew· ed sense or eq\lal opportunity and fair play In our economic system. Finally, I \vould like lo suggest that we offer our President some support and gratitude for the many fine things he ha& done and is at tempting to do for our country. ROBERT JACOBS ,---B11 George ---. Dear Geor&e: , l smoke too muc h, stay up too late. waste tao much money, can't seem to be faithful to one woman drink heav ily. gamble, and my ne~ girl friend Is complaining about my old car. a convertible. which Is l•st year'1 model. Tell me, George, how does the U.S. Government eiitpect me lo gel along on my ridiculously small old-age Social Se c u r i t y benefits? DISGUSTED TA XPAYER Otar Disgusted: Cut down on gmoklng. Anyhow, it'a bad for your health. • I • - DAIL 'f PILOt 7 ,. i No Doetor• Required Robin Graham jewels by joseph searc hes for jowols CMftrt'__,.. fl'#tWY tt ~ 11• c•tll W Wit tt I """ ..... kMWI..... u,_..IM, .. .....,..., lt111N ~ Clrtflll ........ , ... ltf ... .. ,. _,... .,, ...... '. w. ""'" ................... ,._. lllM 11M1 ..., ... ,....nlillt ...... ..... _ Missing a ·Yeat Acupuncture ·Due in U.S.? .. . I • -·· SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -A Jay prao- tiUoner of the ancient Chinese healing art of acupuncture 18id SUndly he hopes to get the practice legalized soon in the U.S. acupuncture demonstraUon by Dr. Leung K. K. Yuen, director of the North American'CoUeie of Acupunctur'e in Van- couver. B.C.,_ and former he!:ad of two clinlca In Hong Kong. ora:ans, Langrlck said . LOS ANGELES (UPI) -with hJm Is not known, but It's been a year now that police from the beSiMlng Robin Graham has been,gone.. suspected tha~.MJs:i: Graham's Ctl Mr, ....... M' Mt. ,... If ... for trained lay persons. \ At present, only licensed medlcal doc- tors in the u.s~ and Canada may perform th" 11rt, but "we do'n't believe it is r1 ary for a person to be an M.D. to P-~ ~e acupuncture," said Roger Langrick. Langrlck wu tbe IUbjecl of an Langrlck said he felt no paln during the demonstration lfld generally felt better r'"ifter~fow; thin needles were carefully in- Rrted iltO hit arms and legs. Aeupunctcre is based on the theory that c:ertain point. on Ille &kin (about 300 in all) art linked to specific internal Passenger Auto Sales ·Fall For instance, a certain point below the ~lat corresponds to Jhe heart, and a point under the knee, '-:hen stiglulate<f, allect..s the 1tomach, be aald. · .Stimulation of th~ points can restore lnternaJ balance t o malfUn<:tioniJlg organs, which are thought to·be the cause of all diseases, be sild. But acupuncturists are "not lntef.ested in pushing M.D.s out of the Pill·prescrib- ing business," Langrick saicf. Instead, he said acupunctutt can be useful in curing or alleviating the pain of AID St d such "neuromuscular complaints" as • U y arthrlti!, rheumatism, multiple sclt!rosls, _ _ _ · - disappearance was \inked with .. The IS.year-old p i er c e at ·least three other cases · COiiege freshman disappeared H d Nov .. 15, 1970 after her cai' fin w er& yollng women. Isa~ out at gu on the Holl)'Wood re:~~ . and were tater. found Freeway in the middle of 'the .DetectiveJ say that a year night. later, they still bave·no clues · She telephoned from an .as. to what ba_ppened to Robin emergency call tioz and aii Graham: . operator left word at Mis&:i-.:;..:!"'=-------~ Graham's hom~ for h e t parents to pick her up. palsy and para1ysL!. But when they arrived near- ly an hour later, her car was still parked beside the freeway1 NEW YQRK .... (UPI ) -Passenger car General Motors, Ford Motor Co., Gr, oup Set . and Miss Graham was gone, sales by the four major U.S. automobUe Chrysler Corp. and American Motors .. ~ highway patrolmin J>4ss; companies ·dnip~ sharply in the first reported sales for the Nov. l·lO perlod';of Japan to P ay U.S. ' Inteiioi-designers interested ing the stalled car 8 short tllird Of Nov'ember' • Ille. lut full sales 290,781 cars, down about 16.3 percent " r her . time before had Sttell. th~ from the 347,085 cars sold in the final in qualUying or mem ship ' young woman talldni . ..yith • period before the end cif the price-wage third of October, a record sales month. TOKYO (AP) -The Japanese govern.-in the Orange Cot.inty Chapter . . ho h d ~ • .. 1 ment will pay the United States an of ·the Arilerican Institute 'of young man, w a; parAt:\I • freeze and the imposiuon of price hikes. In the corresponding period of e,sUmated SI7S million for prQ1S1erty in . Interior Designers are invited late model sports car near November, 1970, when GM's Operations Okinawa to be turned ove.r to Japan when to attend accreditation study hers . . . were affected by a Strike, the four sold. the United States .returns the island to groups to be held on_alternate:i:=.-:--=Wh:_::::!tll~er~s~heigoit~in~l<>~tl!eii.C~ariii' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~iiiiii-~~== 132,381 cars. Japan in 1972, the Finance Mini~ry told ·Wednesdays ino'Fullerton. . The October spurt in new car sales questioners today at a session of the Claire Robinson, AJD, of SACRAMENTO (UPI) State '~ generally developed from the promised House of Representatives special eom· ~giina Beach, said the next . Lib rary Fees? Attorney General Evelle J. Younger says repeal of the federal e1.cise.tax on c8.rs mittee on Okinawan a(fairs.-The ministry meeting, at 7:30 p.m. Wed· MOR·E. PARKING NOW attorneys could help .finance expanded and the deferra~ of price 1ncrea~s on said Japan's payments will include $57.9 nesday in room 107A of the art prison law libraries by paying a fee to new models du~1ng the fr~ per1~-of million for the Ryukyu ·Development building at Cal S t a t e tha. · 11. after thanksgiving use them. Younger made the sUggestion the governments new economtc policies. Financing Corp .. $44.9 milllon . for the _ Fullerton. will feature Helen Thursday in coMectlon with . the U.S. However, the sales drive apparently .ran RYukyu Electric Power 'Generating Brunlg of the Orange Tree ~ ............... (illf ?I Supreme Court's ruling that California out of steam two weeks before termtna· Corp., $9.6 million for Naha airport and Studios in Redlands. She will · ....... .' . AD must provide more extensive legal tion of the freeze per~·iod=~and=·~tbe~ad=ven::::.t ~l~l:!lfm~i~lli:on:_:fo:r~g:ov:e:rnm:•:n~I _:bou:•ln:g~J'pe~alt~on~co:lo:r~t:heo:ry:_:•nd:.•:P-1-'--~_:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:_--librarles for convicts. of car price hikes. facilities. j>lications. ' Ancient Astronomer Correct About Mars WASHINGTON -In the early 1600's, the brilliant German astronomer Johannes Kepler conceived of his Jaws of planetary motion. In the course of this work, he predicted in 1610 that two moons orbit«i around Mars. 1 He arrived at that con. clusion this way. Around the Sun were the planets Mercury, Venus, ~tlh• Mars, Jupiter and Saturn and between Mars and Jupiter, a missing planet. Some of the planets had moons orbiting around them. Earth, ol course, had one. Venus had none and Gallileo Ma yor, 19, · Youngest In Nation NEWCOMERSTOWN, Ohio (AP) -Gov. John Gilligan and some 1,700 other well· wishers have turned out to celebrate the election of lg.. year-old Ronald Hooker as the nation's young~st mayor. The Ashland College economics junior said he was "determined to justify the faith of those who have en· trusted me with public of fl~." He defeated !our otbtr can- didates Nov. 2 to bttome mayor of this village of 4,600 In eastern Ohio. "Those who advocated ·a change in legislation to allow 18. 19 and 20 years olds to..fvo te did so not to hold ou.t 1some special favor to youth, but because they felt th~ govern· ment would be better , stronger and rWile reflective of the total society if the young penflle of the country were iidmitted to f u 11 E_iJ!Rnship," Gilligan t o I d Hooker at the celebration Hooker said he hopes young people will gain other rights that go along with the right to vote. As mayor he can sign city contracts, but he is still too young to enter into a personal contract. He is too young to get mar- ried without parental consent, but as rrlayor he can perform marriages. FAMILY CIRCVS .n:::.=:.. with h i S newly-invented telescope had just discovered four moons around Jupiter (his new instrument couldn't see the other eight). With this evidence, Kepler reasoned the.re was a simple sequence in"'the moons around the planets, working out from the sun. Venus had none, Earth had one, Man had two, the missing planet had three, and Jupiter, as observed by Gallileo, had fourt It was so logical that for nearly two centurie11 astronomers diligently search- ed for the two moons of Mars until discoura.s:ement set in. lt took until 1811 to prove that . Kepler, Wba'fever his logic, was right. · '.;l'hey w 1 i: e . discovered by Dr. Asaph HalJ at the U.S. Naval Observatory, Washington, D.C. ~He named them Deimos and Phobos -in Homer's Ili:ad., the attendants Or sons ol Man. In our solar syste m 's population of planetar.y moons, Deimos and Phobos are no great shakes. They are very small and they orbit close to their parent. planet. Deimos, the outer moon, ls only about eight kilometers (five miles ) in dia meter. Phobos, the inner moon, is about 16 kilometer! (ten miles) in diameter. Our m!;l()n has an average distance ·from Earth of about 384.000 kilometers ( 2 3 9 , 0 0 0 tniles). Phobos' orbit around Mars is almost circular and only about 6,100 kilometers (3,750 miles) from the surface of Mars. According to mat hemaUcal calculations that is just about as close as one body can orbit another without disintegrating. This led to speculation by a Russian scientist in 1959 Uiat Phobos is hollow and is an artificial satellite. Phobos has another peculiarity. Like our moon, it orbits in the ·same direction as Mars rotates. But it circles Mars in about 71/a hours ..- less than one-third the lime It takes Mars to rotate once. Thus Phobos is the only known tnoou in the solar system with an orbital period shorter than the rotational period of its parent planet. So a Martian observer would see Phobos rising and setting twice a day . bg Bii Keane "PJ picked that uo from Klttycal; II meons he 11 hungry." .. ' If you presently own a savings. certificate atailysavingsanclcloan·association ,, · " ' that matures · ill th~ n~xt 90 days READ THIS IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT: Fifty year old Anaheim Savings introduces an important and valuable service to savers. Appointments are now being accepted for preparation of 1971 lndlvidual Federal and State Income TilX Returns by an experienced Anaheim Savings Tax Consultant This income tax service is free to savers maintaining a $5,000 passbook or certificate account at Anaheim savings. Acoounts of $2,500 or more may enjoy this professional ser>lce for a maximum charge of only $5.00 IF YOU OwN A CE13'.fl.f1Ct\TE MATURING WITliIN '[HE NEXT 90 DAYS- You ca·n.make an appointment now ••• for a time convenient to you ••• toe meet one of our .taic expe rts who will.prepare your Income tax returns. We Will arrange now to have your funds transferred at.maturity. without any 'loss of interest! There.ls no charge for, this service. · For complete Information andan appointment, call, write or come In to Anaheim Savings. EARN6% U.S. Government Agency INSURED SAFETY 2·10 yr. term-certlflcate accts. $51000 min. bal1nce ANAi-i El M SAVI NG·S ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION AN~H~IM 187 W. llncoln Ave. 92!j03/'rel:'n2·1532 BREA 633 SO. Brea Blvd. 92621 / Tiil: 5294971 HU NTINGTO N BEACH ·411MainSt.92648/Tel:536,6591 Offices also In Riverside and Escond ido , .,. ' ("-------"\ I Please. send me complete Information on I -, :;our Income Tax.Preparation Ser>lce. •1 I Naroe I PIWe Print I -I Please Print I Cl1Y I PleltePrlnt I Stat• Zip I I ,.,, .. ,,Int I Telephone Number-------- \.. ""'''' J __ . ____ ..., ___ .,/ - . ' ., I C OAILY PILOT Two Injured Rival Panthe~rs J • Brawl Ill Court LOS ANGELES IUPll -Led by lhe furious husband of a woman believed to have been executed in an internal fe4d ripping the Black Panther party, a group of Panther prisoners jum ped members of a ri val faction in a courtroom Monday and battled until deputies broke up the melee at gunpoint. Tu'o 1netnbers of the group that was at· tacked were bloodied, but it was not clear whether they \\'ere injured by the at· tackers or by v.·eapon-swinging deputies trying to restore order. The brawl appare~tly was the latest Olltbreak in a feud between supporters of exiled Panther lead er Eldridge Cleaver and party founder Huey P. Newton. Tensions have run high since the body of Saundra Pratt, who was eight months pregnant, was found stuffed in a sleeping bag in a gutter earlier this month. Pol ire said they believed Mrs. Pratt. who with her husband was part of the Cleaver fac- tion, had been executed, or tortured to ·death, by Newton supporters. She was killed slowly, by five bullets, and police theorized her captors tried to force · her to teJI them when Cleaver would return to the United States. She and her husband, Elmer. \\'ere both among a group of 13 panthers currently Se,·a·te ReJ"ects •landing •rial on charges stemming 1rom " a gunbattle between police and panthers at the party's local headquarters two C. • tt. T years ago. . ,igare e OX Pralt and six olher Cleaver supporters were led into the courtroom SACRA.~1ENTO (UPI) -The Senate Monday. confronting four defendants has rejecled by a lopsided mcorgin a from the Newton faction who had been bill that would boost the cigarette tax freed earlier·on bail. a nickle a pack to raise $90 million Led by Pratt~ lhe Cleaver group annually for cancer and other medical vaulted a courtroom table and attacked research. the Newton supporters, punching and The measu re by Sen. Alan Short (D-kicking them, officials said .. Stockton ). who said smoking ''sinners" Deputies, reportedly tipped there might should help pa y for the health con· be trouble when the two groups met, sequences of their "sin" and provide swarmed into the courtroom, swinging funds for medical research, was defeated clubs and pointing pistols and shotguns. ~1onday. Pratt was chasing Albert Armour inlo The bill needed 'JJ \'Otes for passage the jury box when deputy pOinted a but received only 12. Eighteen SCnators revolver at his head and shouted "Pratt, voted against if after a floor debate stop! Get back over there!" in \Yhich non·s1noking Sen. \\1alter Stiern Deputies forced the Clea ver group into (D-Bakersfield 1. said "I don·t think we a holding tank at gunpoint. ~hould Jov.·er the boom on those people The jurors were filing into the \Yho might be cigarette smokers. courtroom when the fight erupted, and In urging approval of his bill, Short Superior Court Judge George M. Dell said it would assure that Cliforn ia would que stioned them closely as to what they have the best medi cal research program h~d he:>.rd about the killing of Mrs. Pratt. 'in the nation. if not in the whole He ordered them locked up nightly to \\'orld.'' shield them from "prejudicial publicity.'' The prese1. per·package tax of IO-cents The judge denied motions for a would be increased to IS.cents starting mistrial , but agreed to consider a motion Jan . I and produce an estimated $90 to grant separate trials lo the an- millioo in additional revenue each year. tagonistic groups. ' . • Tape Recorder Reveals Cri1ne SAN PEDRO (UPI) -One ol four young boys scrawled "Guess \\'ho:" on the wall of a school room they'd just va9dalized. But teachers didn't have to guess because they 6ccidentally flipped on a tape recorder during the mayhem. Principal J. W. Pluim of Dana Junior High surveyed the damage Monday and postponed classes until the $5,000 in broken g I a s s , typewritecs and mus I c a I in· struments could be cleared away. A tape recorder was also found amid the debris of the damaged music room -the the tape was still running. On it, said Pluim, where the wtioops and cries of glee -and sound of the boys shouting one another's names -when they van· dalized one of the three school room s. "We know those boys," said one teacher, "we recognize their voices without even hearing their names." The unidentified youths, ages 14- 15, were arresled Monday night -and awaited a juvenile hearing. Profs to Vote On Oath Issue . LONG BEACH (UPI) -An angry faculty at Cal State Long Beach votes Friday on a course of action concerning a special oath they've been ordered to sign before they're paid each month. Beginning Nov, 26 the faculty has been ordered to sign an oath certifying that they've completed the teach ing dulies they were assigned to by their contract. The proposal. approved earlier this yea r, was inroduced by state college trustee Dudley Swim after a Cal State Los Angeles professor was fired in Jan uary for accepting pay for a class he didn't teach. CSLB President Dr. Stephen Horn, who has characterized the oath as "de· meaning and unprofessional,'' met for two hours Monday with representatives of th United Professors of California. 1-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-1 • Prisoners May Get Out Dates SACRAMENTO (UPI) The Adult Authority has voted to begin granling p r i s o n release dates to hardcore con- victs -a move which State Prisons Chief R a y m o n d Procunier says may prove to be a "miracle" in rehabilita- tion. The new plan was approved Monday by the authority, which has the responsibility for setting release dates for all California convicts. Procunier told the board that setting such re lease dates "would sure make a hell of a lot of difference in some human lives." The change is aimed at encouraging better behavior by prisoners in so- called adjustmeht centers. Under Ca Ii f o r n i a 's in- determinate sentencing plan, now under heavy fire from prison reform groups, convicts are not given a definite sentence by the court. Instead. they are given a relea se date after they are imprisoned and have sho\vn progress IO\\'ard rehabilita- tion. Convicts in adjustment centers \\'Ould_pot ordina ril y have release dates because of their poor behavior. Procunier said in the past convicts in adjustment cen ters have had to ll'ork their way out of the isOlalion facili!Y before the y could even begin work ing for a release date. T,vo Babies Die, 4 Hurt In Blaze OAKLAND <UPI) -Two small babies \\'ere kilted and four other persons hospitalired ?o.1onday night because of a tire in a one-story bungalow at 10659 Acalanes Drive In Oakland. The victims were Mario Daven.port. 6 months. and Healh McGinnis. 6 weeks. Among those injured was Glenda Johnson , 16. mother of the McGinnis child. The Davenport child was the son 'ot Sheila Smith, who was not present. Others injured were Trini Johnson, 15: Cory Hall. 2: and. Jtttie Franks, mother of Glenda Johnson. • Firemen said rour other younR.Ste'rs escaped the fire . orficial5 ·were unable to determine the cau.te of the b!aie but slid lt apparent!} centered around a f I o o r j furnace. • • establislied · quality at a new low price. • 1.,. Ut.ts he\ "-- • Super Value from Simmons SIMMONS BORDfR BRACES Sturdy, heavy gauge spring· steel btaces are bu1Jr tiQht rnto the mallres.s borders 10 prevent u ggrflfJ edges. /eJ YoU sleep ifl comlorr right lo the very edge., TWIN OR DOUBLE MATTRESS OR FOUNDATION. SUPER SIZES AVAILABLE Nothing hos been changed but the name. Some extra firmness, some come fort. Striking blue floral ond stripe print cover quilted to foom (polyurethane) and felt for firm, yet gentle rest; and thick layers of 1009/o cotton upholstery for deep Oown comfort. Exdusive Border Braces prevent sag, special S·im ·Guord keeps edges firm and straight. Soni-Seal protected cover guards against bacteria, odor, mildew. Why not make your change for the better today? FEATURED AT ALL 3 STORES SANTA ANA Mein at Elt'i'tnth 547·1621 POMONA PASADENA • I • • , Air Force Mom Loses Big Appeal SAN FRANCISCO I UPI) - A federal appeals court bas upheld military regulations regarding pregnant officers by retuslng to block the discharge of Capt. Susan Struck, the first Air Force officer to give birth while on .active duty. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Monday that the 27·year-old unwed nurse could be discharged because of "a be unconstitutional since men who father children out of wedlock or contract venereal disease are not similarly forc- ed out of the service. Girl Dies On Tracks compelling public interest in SHAFTER (AP) -A 20- not having pregnant female year-old woman has been kill· soldiers in the m i I i t a r y ed by a freight train that establishment." struck her as she sat on the Capt. Struck became preg-tracks smoking a cigarette, nant while serving at Cam police say. Ranh Bay, Vietnam in earlr. Witnesses told officers the 1970 and gave her baby gir , ta I Tanya .Marie, up for adoption woman, ten tive y identified as Debby Jeanine Givens of after its birUi in Tacoma, Nampa, Idaho, was sitting Wash. She went to court over Air Force moves to discharge between the rails facing the her, arguing that military northbound Santa Fe freight pregnancy rules were un· train last weekend when it hit constitutional. her. The court Monday turned The engineer told police he down her petition to remain in saw a person on the track but was unable to stop. Her confidence irl you raises your spirits. When she looks at you. you're ready to climb tho highest mountain. You feel her whol .. hearted approval. Ask her to marry you with a beautiful diamond solitaire. Solitaires illustrated priced from $500 to $1000. HIDE-A-WAY FOR CHRISTMAS Cflt"'I• Acctwnh l~Vllld AIMl'IUll l!x,r•H. llllkAl'l'lltl'l<trd 1ftd Mllllr Clllr" tee! the service, upholding a Miss Givens had been regulation providing for the visiting 3 r e 1 a t i v e in honorable discharge of officers Bakersfield , about 15 miles who become pregnant. "We are not persuaded !hat southeast of this rural Kern SLA. VJCl{'S it (the regulation) 1·s either County community, po 11 c e 'd Jewelers Since 1917 arbitrary or irrational," the 581 · ISLAND court said in an opinion by The death was tentatively 18 FASHION Justice J. Warran Madden. listedassuicidependingacor· NEWPORT BEACH-64•-f380 The court said that in oner's investigation, officers Open Mon. and Fri., I 0 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. hospitals in combat zones in ;:s~a~id~·========di:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=::=::;=:=:=:=:::::====.: Vietnam, a pregnant nurself could sufler a miscarriage GERHARD LANG'S during an attack and become GE "a liabilily and a burden to SAU SA the Air Force" instead of an effective member of the military team. HAUS The circuit court had already ruled last year the Air Force had a right to discharge Capt. Struck, but before the Air Force could act, U.S. ·Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas ordered .all further attempts to discharge her suspended until tne completion of proceeclings. Still to be considered at the time was the essential ques- tion of her lawsuit -whether the pregnancy regulation may ONLY AT if.~·~~ "' . ·"" "' ·' , . ~~~~~ ... ,,. ""'"' ..... ~'\ii -HAM- •n••L STOlES JJOO I. C:.. Hlghey Col'OH 4el M• -6JJ_!_tto0 1222 S. lreotli.nt, AHIMI• 611-2461 FINAL SESSION 20th Anniversary COOKING sc,Hoo.L Mesa Theater 1884 . Newport Blvcl., Costa Mesa Thursclay (Nov. 18)-9:30 to 1 1 :30 A.M. HELPFUL HOLIDAY HINTS MORE THAN $1,000 IN FREE PRIZES e SURPRISES e GlflTS Charmglow other Gas Barbecue • prizes • 91ven each week For $1 buy per copy Souvenir Cook Book for yourself or as a gift • 247 of best recipes the school's first from 19 years. Solcl on•y at the ·cooking School Co·Sponsorecl by Alpha Beta Markets . Callf Ga• Appliances, Inc. Davis· Brown Coast Community College , Southom Calif. Gas Co. Mesa Theater Orange Coast DAIL 't PILOT ~istrld for..,. c .. ,, •'"'Golden w,., """"l • For The Record DUsolutions (>fMarriage Vlck1t1, ,..,~. ~ A-~" H1rnena11, Frtndne M•rl• vld OrttnwOOd, Ltt.nl V. •nd P'1r k . SI~•· Ttfrv . -""•I• • ack K11JfE1~''l11Mrl.,. A111111 111d Hoiiqnf ••Ilda r. Mllr11rt1 ~nd llobert o. "":i*il'r1~n Ell i llld Jolln I ,,,.., a. FIOnnce ,,1, Woll .,, ... · Oii 1rd Sh«!f\1111. MllN"IY S.r>lord _,,_ !Ei.tlle s..1111~· v'I C1v1, ~Ph Thorn91 Md lluWlll Rill" Dudl!Yfl. CMtftM And C.Ylll l(llf'lt V1rdl1u'I'!". 0 1 .... 11 J. Ind Ar""'d M.. lktml, 0.1111'1' MllllTll Ind LYl'ltlfl . Rlclwnof!dJ._lOl'rllne I nd 0.rtl A. '"ii' .... rr1 Sw 1nc1 Mfd'l.Mr Hotnrt ()«II , r,•ne M. Mid tire~ 'U." '';1 ,bef11 •atiert i.-• '"'" Top A elator 10 ~~a1ir.::1 •nd 11:ar" c. '~'tc1111rYn'A.·,'..~J'..f!..01... · :fiiaj. David .G. Vest, ~:,:=u.'t~1'1fw"i'l:'?~uiiL,t;J~ operations officer for NNI, cnr1111n1 •lld Mktll.i I!". Marine Fighter Attack Tulnilr1, Anni llncl M1rk A. o.soto, e n11bttfl JHn •nd 111ct11"' Squadron 531, EI Toro, Lucltn Jl"JS,, Roltfld Fr1nk!ln Ind $.,,.,n lYn iS 1971 Winner Of Al• GallffCS. O.bor1h ~...,Mid Rlclllrd f d A C · b 1(11ublr, Ruthe.• T11mo1hv 11 . . re . unn1ng am eat.~1n:r•nc.• Mell•• Jr. anc1 MlrY Award as "Marine Av- suv, R"'"~n~'.rov~~d• Mi\11 iator of the Year." Vest ~rt~~~;.5r~: ~=n~:~crwin w. is 10th recipient of M~~,1~TC:k ... , • .,... •mtt• •ncl John award, named for Mar· ~~~~:r,1c:11~·,r.r~,Pin~'i:~·1 H. ine Corps' first ,aviator. DllblY. Alie• lrMid1 1rld ll"llWltd ----'-----'-----"'" I Dll'lmtrl Jama E. 1"11 Ma..,. J. Frl11, A lei 0 111 1nc1 Rlchttd Tocmo R~,. JIC<>utllnt A. Ind l(urt Arol Atl1n, Mlrv C1rollll\ 11!d lloOtrt K1llh Dd<>m, Do•• 1nd Tlloma1 L AW.IWI, Jucl'I A. 11!d 11-uld J, l lotdlt r, J<>lln J1m11 and Klrll'I Su~n"' ~~~:.0,,~"'1:.,:i~nd ~~"',f:i P1ul 01~= Dana J11n 11!d Junes E. OMllY, P1Trlcl1 A. t rod tlr!on E. Plrd!. lllchlrd J. H. 1iid Dor1hl1 J, VIOM, $1'11t0fl and LllWrtllCI WlllOl'I, Rlblttl JOY 11111 Kmntlh '""' Ht.Ollws, Mlrll~ Ind J<>lln Ed'°" McH1lt, Jatln JCl~h Jr. I nd Judith s151:."'Em,,.. J1111 1nd Don1!d M. Sl'lldl, H1rvlcl Mltrln Jr. •rid K1thtriM .... , Mnher. M11lne J1n1 1nd ltr111rd Albert ~rk1, "°"'" An.n Ind Sltllhfn Ge•••d 'rrl10n. Adtlt ldl Ann Ind Tllonll• " Slr1~1s. 111111 1111 Ind Otto Wiiiiam l rtrlne, lll>flNll Dell• 1nd RObl:rt P1"ie. Jr. Kn1!11r, l(.vln Edward ind l1rblr1 '"" Krurer, t:•rl C~n Jr. and l1rWir1 LYftNI Slr•d1r, M&rt Vlctor11 Ind GrCIYlf Thoma• Ritt ,· N..r11r1t l l'lln and Vlrt ll AftJC· and1r Klndttt, 1Car111 J1111!11 Ind Slu1rt ,,_ Stitch, Norm1 D. I nd H1rrt G. . Outclltr. Judith Al)n 1nd Edw1rd Hamilton. ll lti>eOe, Cllll'l' 1rld W1111am Dffn Gorman, Ernt1lln1 and Bobby Ju n s1ao11. J1m.1 A.. •nd Carol A. F•oft'slan. Gera ld C. I nd C1rolvn I. 111111,., lrl1 Louin and Warran l1Ror conon. lltv1r1·r Ann 11'11 Cl•Y Dsc•• k Hlnd~llltr, Jonntllll Lft I nd I ll I w~rt'Kh H•trl R. 1nd Orrin o. M<><>rl. lnlfr J. 1nd lrrnMlel!I G, L1mblrt, Wlllltm L. 1nd Harri L. D'Br lll't, J.,.n E. and J1rnt1 F. CH.JC'!', JICk Ind JllMI £dw1rd1, Ellen Y11NWrl Ind llk:llllnl Et tl Mver1, Miry Ann Ind Wllllam S. ""'( Chlrle1 H. I nd Irene t"ll!fl 1111, Nino L. Ind Emmi IC. MCFldd.,., carolYl'I 11111 and Brian ~.''!:.nna (. Ind Doullll J. Wv1U. Btl!Y Alm Ind J1m11 J1cklcn w:='w11111m T. 1nd Norm• Jttn f-1"1t11, D1rn• I(, 1nd Edwlll'd P'"edl, J11n1Ut J. 1nd Mllrl'd A. Dunton. Svlvl• A. I nd HatVt'f A. l•••· s11.1ri1n Burt11nd Jowl>I! ~rll s-111, DI.int Mir I Ind Ectw1r<il 50'11. Rltl_'(VQnM Ind Clllrla Wult'f l'lltd Nnt mber 11 !llrnold, Htlfm M! .ind J1m11 IC. "I' Lvnd1 Ltt '1nd w 11111m Josrol'I.,. IOI DO. Jr .. Nadlnt llo .. IMrY I AnlhoftV LOUii Sthoenhrrr. 5ur1n1111nd Hubl!rtu~ C Minn Ooo!' L. ind Jame. -H. Html/ton. c11n F Ind ....... LoulM P1rtr, CtluHno d. 1iid Alli GtrlldlM Drlt<l1, Mir 1r1I A. Ind ChrlllooMr L, Ol.lllon, Shir .... A. Ind G1 ..... 10. C!1rt, 0. ITld lt!IY Lu WOlf1. J1an and H1rr LIOll n l , I L. Ind T1[." 11\IOI Ind Ii•~ ''\Yn K. 1"11 E w n E. 1n tt tnd IC1nntlh I!'. Grttn. Goroon DI.It~ Ind Clltrtvn Ann Ktrn, PIWlll1 and Ftlnlt Edwin H~ciltnl, C1roll111 Edl!h 1nd RoOttl 1 sc"~r!frlHI uou1 nd Aron Dt•n Ai~fert M1rr1 .~ \1tv11Qr1 Jl ~ McK•maY Joen Mii and MOii .'fl H111e11. Jr .. C•rl• JOY Ind WI ford Ct~;l!'v, Vlra!nlt Ann 1nd Jt<nff ICtllh Mnen, Allrtd E Ind Jgln C. G<>dln. C1ra1 M/rlt 1nd Rlcllllrd Jovoh Mn en. Mt..,. • Ind J~" T. Cllmt Slm\ltl E. and lor11 Mt~lnt 'F111<1N..,.,..r11 Fr1r1er1 •1rmoncr R. i nd Jotn M, Mounta n. rierr,: F. •nd 1,acll" M. Gllber111dl. Ml Ion Incl E ••not .t!:.. ,. Jarvis, Rablrt trvlna Ind ...... o .,v El•lM Clla~n, Peflnv G. I nd Phlllo J, Jt<>Ud'I, B lilt •nd Lindi T. HoroW~ti. P1ul I nd Tlly1n E. Wi:fh ... 11'~'.11 ~~ J•r= F;~ 8tvtr1V A;:~~1Gllblrt Ml tfl I nd l(tr1n lM P~•1· CMll1Y M. 1nd~n1ld Crul N1r d co, H1tltt Ev1l;'n and Mlthlt l ofW':'.lfl. Rootr 0 .1nd Nll1 M. H Tnomoson, w1nnd1 B. 1~11 B¥ron . ~Ylt. M1r1h1 TJ tnd Brtnd•-~·,., l1W1r1. Norm• 11n 1nd w,,,.., "'" 1r111a, C1ra1yn J. •Ml JOH'.fh c.. c~~!'i. ~:: c'tc:rf. ;~~15~sf .:th"' Wrot11kl, hlrOl'I A. end Chc:sltr . HarrJs. ynt1'1!1 Hldt ko 6nd ol1nd ,..,,_ Ventt l1. l!lltlbtl!I M,•~ 1nd Guida Hii:f~fn J1nlc1 Lor••ln1 ind Jerrold R<>bttl Death. l\lotlces ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY U'1 E. 17th Sl, Costa Mt11 -• BALTZ MORTUARIES Corom dtl Mar OR 3-9450 Coit• Mesa . MI t-iill • BEIL BROADWAY MORTUARY UI BrOldny, Coltl Meu LI 1-USJ • MoCOIUDCK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1'11i 1Apn1 Canyoa Rt 111·'411 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK C<met<ry Mortuary Chapel llOt Pa<lllc View Drtn Newport B<odl, Calllonlll HUIOI • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL ROME 7111 Bolsa A Vt. ' Westmlnattr atWSZI • SMITHS' MORTUARY IZ'I Mali SL ROU .... 1B<1dl 13.- .... - Jury Asks For County Ethic Code SANTA ANA -Most or Orange County's boards, com- missions and committees are operating without a written code of ethics and the Grand Jury thinks this is wrong. In a report signed by Foreman Doreen Marshall of Newport Beach, the jury asks that "the county counsel be in- structed to draft a code defining ethical standards of conduct for members o f regulatory or advisory boards mandated by law, or ap. pointed starting responsibil- iUes and penalties for the mis- use or office." The jury report states that there are some 57 existing boards, commissions and com- mittees, that were created to render advice to county agezr cie and departments. "By law, on1y 16 of these en- tities are mandated," the report reads. "The jury has found that of these bodies, the members of 12 receive a stip- end per meeting · with a specified limited number of meetings per month. Concern is expressed by the jury because many of the groups "wield great power and deal in fields of constant public interest. Their decision or recommendatiom c a n greatly influence the direction that Orange County takes ill the near future ." Get more "hc;>me" from your house. Houses grow small and cramped without the things that make themhome- speclal furniture, better TV, stereo hl·fl, paiOup bills •.. and money lett over for fun. Avco may helpwltha homeowner loan on your house, whether it's paid for or not HOMEOWNER LOANS TO 125,000 OVER SS,000 ON REAL ESTATE ANO. PERSONAL PROPERTY ~f,T..Al. Wt believe in ~ HO N. A"'-'• 11'4. IJS.2116 JIO I. l1crhl Awe. 77MJIO I 17f H.tH.t 11 .. ,. c .... M... 64Z•J414 617 W. 17tti St., ..... .... 147-4411 2017 S. M•S. St .. s.tt AH 14f.JJ61 ; Tuesdu. Novtmbtr 16, 1971 DAil V "LOT 9 Doctors Say Tiiey Have Proof: Counseling By Faculty Approved HOLIDAY TURKEYS RESHVI YOUR FIESH, LOCAL JUICY TURms Jogging Good for Your Heart 1 IRVINE -UC Irvine AND HAVI US DRIVIR THIM WITH ALL THE TllMMlNGS By TOM BARLEY ot ftll DlllY Pllft SltH ANAHEIM -Keep jogging -It's good for you and even better for your heart. So are swimm ing, teMis , walking and any or the sports recommended by your physi- cian as elements of your physical training program. Some of the doubters who belleve you can jog your way to a heart attack were sllenc· ed here in the closi ng stages of the American Heart Assocla· tion convention by t w o Pittsburgh scientists and a report that defines the basic chemistry prod u c e.d by physical conditioning. Drs. Ashok Bhan and James Scheuer used teams of rats to carry out their experiments at the University of Pittsburgh * * * * * * Moonshine Drinkers Aid Heart Research ANAHEIM Eleve,n faculty members have voted School of Medicine and those to include counseling o f studies, they claim, con-students among the items elusively prove that physical upon which faculty performan- trainlng enables the healthy ce is judged. heart to contract with greater The Irvine Division of the force and deliver more blood UC Academic Senate has per squt:.?ie than the heart of adopted a recommendation of the sedentary person. its committee on student ad- Bhan and Scheuer said the vising wh_ich directs uthe tests proved that coronary budget committee to solicit In· blood veMels In the physically rormation on each faculty trained rats developed a mem ber's contribution t o greater ability to deliver more academic advising before con· oxygen and nutrients to the siderlng the faculty member heart muscle. for merit increase or pro-.... y6~f 5kop~~t\~ P~re. PhysicJi.I conditlonJng, they motio n." ·,. Ot.tf'Ultif\";o:l.f( 6':ia.I! said, also alters favorably the The senate Budget Com--·- chemistry ~f the heart linked mit t e e makes recom· COAST SUPER MARKIT DAILY : I HOME f: : DELIVERY \: 673· .. 3510 to muscle contraction. Trained mendaUons to the university sJ4TE..c..~.-,•O:l•cltltW rats developed in their hearts administration on fa cu It yl:~~~M~""'~·~·~-~·~·~·~·~··~·~~·~··~·~,,.~, ~S~u~nd~·~·~-~·~,.~·~~ more of an active protein lac-performance. tor called actoinyosin ATPase, In adopting the recom- a substance that sparks the mendation, faculty members TAKE THE NEWS QUIZ fuel necessary for heart mus· agreed it is difficult to cle contraction. · determine the "quality of ad· We Dare You ••• Every Seturday ''moonshine" drinkers have helped heart specialists put their finger on a hitherto unknown enemy of the body's most vital organ -lead. The Imbibers or v.·hiskey stills. But t he dist'Overy led the leJm to find that Other heart victims ex- Posed to lead In other forms had also undergone the kind of cardiac trauma that hit the Georgia moonshiners. The chemical provided by vice." the conditioning -swlmming:,-.'.::~::;jjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii=:::::::::::::::::•:::==I was the main exercise used in J the Pittsburgh experiments - enabled the heart muscles of the trained rats to pump "'.ith more force and thus improve the efficiency of the heart itself, the doctors said. 0 moonshine" whiskey all suf- fered heart disease in varying ronns and a research team at an Augusta, Ga., hospital trac- ed the common poison that had corroded the heart cells as lead. That lead came from the Three doctors from the Medical C.Ollege or Georgia in Augusta told an American Hearl Association meeting here they spotted exactly the same degenerative effects on the heart muscle when they fed a lead acetate solution to laboratory rats. Both men are satisfied that their conclusions would have been exactly the same in tests on human beings. 86 STORES BRIM-FULL Of Christmas Goodies South Coast ?lau GRAND OPENING HARBOR VIEW OFFICE, WED. NOV. 10 --, • tick-tock . Just for opening your NEW PERSONAL CHECKING ACCOUNT or for SECURING AN INSTALLMENT LOAN Either way, here Is your opportunity to check the right Umt, the easy, courteous way. Receive your choice of a beautiful clecciator clock ••• Free of Charge -• -for openir?g your new personal checking account for $100 or more or for starting a new lnstallm&nt loan of $1 ,000 or more. Qualifying installment loans are: Home Improvement, Automobile, Mobile Home, Boat, Airplane, or Personal Loans. Add to the decor of your living room, den, kitchen, bedroom or office with these specially designed electric Decorator Clocks. There Isa slight additional charge for clocks Band C. PRESENT DEPOSITORS may buy these fabu· lous clocks at a cost that's hard to believe! It's our way of saying "thank you" for being a depositor at Southern California First National Bank. One per famlly. RR8T NATIONAL BANK ·w...-._.. .. ., ...... , ....... _HARBOR VIEW HIUS OFflCE MACARTHUR St.VD. (New) •nd PACIFICVIEWDRIVl (Off Sin JOlquin Hl111 Rd. It HtrborVlew Shoppinc c...., Newport Beach/Phone (714) 644-8511 • ' I i It DAILY PILOT S Tursd<1, -mlw llo, 2971 Y-r MOtM!ff · ~uper Rich Use Tax Free Bonds BY SYLVIA PORTER Whate\'er h11ppened to the lM Amtric1111 who had in- _,. ol !200,llOO to 11,llOO,llOO and more In 1961 on whlcb Ibey paid not • penny In Federal income taxu -and who thereby kicked off wbat wu to become lhe historic Tu Reform Act of 1969? Th<y' gnw. 'l'be 154 with Incomer of rzoo.ooo and up who got away with paying "0" dollan: in Federal Income taxes in 1966 multiplied to 301 in 1969, the latest year for which we have ltatistiCJ on individual income lax returns. The 11 .with "nontaxable" adjuated gJ'OSI incomes or 11,000,000 or more ln 1966 tx· paneled to 56. A new 1971 tu law will be M our statue book! in a mat· ter of days under which tu· payers in all income groups art gettin4 &ome immediate tax nduclions. Actually, the tu cuts were wriUen in basic form in the '69 act but they werea't slated to go lnto effect until 1972 and later. The 1971 Jaw is accelerating part of the cuts into this year to help lift our economy out of Its slug· giSbness -which has forcibly reminded me of that massive mishmash of lax legislation in 1969, that monstrosity which TAX WRITE-OFF OF OVER 300°/o 'WMAT O''IEIS TMI MIOMIEST TAX SM•LT•lt AVAIUIL• TOOAYt 111 lfl• ff!ftlol> af ft'llftY NlllDMlly kriowl'I •ccounlffll tlrm1 Jiit mGtt 1111• lt•·•Mllf>rtll lft'ffl"""11 COl'lc:$t •Y•lltbl• fodty It • l"HA·DI Jlthtbllllt-t!Dr> Limit"" "•rtntrlll!p. Thnt orelt clt fll111t-_. the ,.c1,..1r r~u1~i. fltllll4ll Ulldtr &tdlori 2» If tM Nto 1101111 Houalrto Afl. For lntorft'llllon CC111CMnl11t1 FHA IJ6 wrtt. ltl' phorlt M.P. KRUSE & CO., INC. Mtrnb,, P1cifle Co••• Stock E11t.h1n91 21• N, MAIN, D•,.T. A·TU SANTA ANA -(114) Ml•JNI N1.-••·•···•···•········••·•·•··-----··········.,··--------· Add .... ···------··-··----··-··--··················-----· Cllt ............................ _ ....... -.• -.• f'i'lorle ___ ,,_ ..... . . MULTI BENEFIT REALT.Y FUND An investment vehicle that allows you to select those benefits that best suit your particular situation. And offers • PROFESSIONAL MA 1.AGEMENT ·RESEARCHED PURCHASES ·LIMITED LIABlLITY -DIVERSIFICATION Attend an in1·estor's meet ing to learn the income and tax advantages All MEETINGS WILL START AT 7:30 PM TUESDAY,NOVEMBEA16 ANlo.HEIM "JOUy R.,-Motor Inn Hot1l MOW.KnUo JlllDNllOAV•NOYEMBER 17 ~ElfS · · 1 PIODliotol, "W...., ~--· za:ll-of1heSton THURSDAY,NOVEMBER18 Ctftlllld1t1• C1plt1I lJ!ult111 Corpor111on G.,..,el '•tt.ntr ........ , ....... a_ • ___ ., ._ ........ -• ....,__ ...... t.M_w __ _ n.....,•w• f.,. ,....._,.,..,._.o.-...c: __ .., ___ _ ·-TM •It ---........ ~ ...... • Complet&-New YorlC St0cli List OVER :THE COUNTER '&:..-... -J:. .................. , .............. .....,,..., .... lllAI ... .. ,.. ............... "' ....... _.....,..,. ~- NASO Lltttnp-fof'(Mond•y, November 15, 1971 • • Novtmbtr 1971 s DAILY PILOT Monday's Closing Priees-Complete New rork Stock Exchange.List Complete Closing Prices-American Stock Exchange List ' S1lfl Ml (Ml ) Hlfll Lew Clotl Clll S1ltt Ml tl'MI• l Hltll Lew C1G11 cn1 S1111 nit (11<1, J H!tll low CklM Chi SllH ntl tlMH J Hlth ltw Clo .. Cht S111t lltl (PMlt I Hllfl IAw CltM Cll .. ' II ~ 1 • 11 -\o Ull' CDr• 0 'lh J ! JU l1 ! l o + 1 Unexct!led 111111 ,._ t'l-'9 1 1 11 1ttl2110 +.,..un Flro1161 111.,..1 ~1 1~-11 U I ... 1>1 + ~ Un lnv1S! 1'C I 11 11 11 J l o lh 110-1Un1rn 2 '21 II JO~io l't.\oo lO -,. l7 1214 n • 11 .. t .,.. Un A1be1 01 :J9 > ts.11 ~ J~-111 • •~1 •• •Vi .._Unll 8d c1 1 J n.. 1..,, , ... _ .. I ,, 1?1 .... _\~Unllr1nd1 WI lf9 ,, 1\o , ..... ~ ll U~i II 1 I• 1 Uni! Fooda •I ... •V. '" l• 2l n1, 11"" -t. Un tu Corp 9 •n •\~ ·~ • l' 'l • 'l\1 UnNal Cp "'' s 1 ~. 1 • n. lS 2~ 2 1 l + l\JnN1! pf7C IJ ,,_. l't l'h+\1 1100 •1\1) •I •lit -U POvt SO. 30 2".I. 11'\ 21h • 11 l II US(uT l)5tt I "" 4-'il •lot-\.\ 33 20 • lt I 10 US FWt1r ' 1GV. l!". ~-t st.. !l'> s' us w.11 1011 11 :nw ~+~ 111 ••It •9 • '' •-4\US L•• 11 wt lJ S ''° .W.-~~ JJ s • s.. Sh us N•t lltrc SI s... ,_ s• + • I 1 , 1\o n '-l•U$ llfdl11m l 1...-. 1 714.+l; ••• ,. J\~ ' -ll us 1111!" \ '° 1 ll'h ll'Mo 1"9 -v. It S • • •l• -.,. us lleoucln l ~ 011 ... '°' 3' lS>~ 10;;, lS'lll + \US SmtH wl 1 ,.. ~... ·~ - J 1111 t ._ 11'11 -~Uni! odt Cp 2 ""' '"'° flO -ito 10 17 11 11 -.. Univ C 91 J 7l,;i J:W J + \.<o ~ I~ 1 ~ 1}~ + 11 tl~rv'..:.~ x!11 2. l 3 ]~~ 1~~ -\.<o " ~1: :~ , v;~~'s 's'","' .~ 11.,. 11 111"-'' ' ,._ I" l• -YI 1m1 ,... S, ,,•,. ,!" " -. Vt1h lc1!>11 to • l J\.t ,.. Vi 16 21 20 '> 21 + '" V1ll11Sr I Ill l• 1114 11.... ll lllo -, s n .. 11~. 11't -• Va tv MIT • 'I'! '"" , ... -It I '' ') •i-l'IV1lm1c ll>d l ,..., 6 tlli S IU. I• 7~ -• V1 1PJ1r Ill ... '1J l" l Slo S•• S\o -• v~ .. Dor" 2 1 11 • lf I • _, .. 7~ 11 : 14\o 1~.,: + "'~!~~ur~~ Int ft ~ 1 , , ... -• 1 1:.: 1i) ll~ = 1• ~~,~~ 1,,"J"~o ~s It~ lt" lt\~:; ~ 1~ ,, 1:r~ '"-\ ver"l''Cl!I 1 ,, ••• "'° ' < 'l '' 4 0 Veo.yco 11 '41\l u _.,,. It 31 Jl ~ ~1 " Vr:ca 01111! 36\/i lS\lo '\\ + • I •• t:O.:. ,,:; -~~'l"t~!MC l J"1 l!JO i _ ... S lo 31'o l o -"Vll<1» tnc 39 '~' • \"+ • '6 U 11 l'l +I " Vin!•~ E"I •? !• t t t " ... • ,. '• t '> 1v.~1tovtN c ... o t !JI. ll 1 -'4 1 U • 16 t Sh + v; V N C1>PI J '{ !loo, ! l'o XI l 'o J\lo 7\to -VIII Mtrch 77 ~{; 1:~ lfl• -\'I It 10\lo 10111 10''1 + 1\ Vu!c Inc .lO J 1:ir. t\(i f\l _ '4 ~ ~'; ~~ ~\'o -\o ~1~ ~~"?.' 11 1,.iz lj~ 1~\t: :!:. (: • ,.,,. .S t So -.WKMNI ''p ·m 1" j 10\li l~ 1Q"' -:it Wade I llV•P S 0 " "t \~ s 3'1'4 3'\lt ,..,.._ ,.w1~e• 4 11 l I \ ... ::!: ·• lJ 71V. 161.: 71 -1"4 .w. '~ o. ' 'l(~ -1: i ll S'l'" Sll'I -, w•r F 5 wt t <Iii ' % > •J ~1~~1..,.~·' t! ~•a v.+a. r• 1s11 ji"-7 y, + \ ~:~ ff: 13 ilI: l1l4 j,1t -·~ 1 :11 1 11 -'4 ~1 !<0 2.i 1 SI!. .J\i Ji,,,+ v, 11 11,,. 1 lo 11a -~ r Mel 50 1 ,,iii ,,4 ,)• , I " Js>t Jui l4~ -flt •rlma~ co ll !"' JI'> 14 ... J 6\'o • •i.+ ~Vl•ldl11Am 1 sil j~ ~\'!.".:.!'"'. l lCl"Jo 106 lo& -1 WtJlco Enl J ' ,.. - 1l 1 '" """ -~ w,,IC~P 12 t 11'0 JI 31 --~ " l"' S • so.:. -:It Wes111., Pll to, ,1"' 3.,. 1~ _ ,, , I'> s~, , .... + WeitbY F'" ~ "" 1•1 IS i 14"' l•'h -1 • WeJlrn D P~ ! Mio '" 2 -\ ' • j'i • W1tnFn t ''~ 76._ 26=• + 4 1 "J.; ..,,., •¥.-l WtitUn nl '?f -\.\ 6 7111 'h ~-,We,1n 0[0/ 2l' JIO l"° ri 1 '" , .. ,.,_ ·~i!'''"' I~ 1S 11~ ITVi ·:i.··~ ' 6.\1 1111 ~ -i.., .. :r.1n1 I t \lo 1\lo I ._ 61"°1 1 -W !1llE l'6"-'1'1 :J: ls 7<o !J'~ 11~ + Wr.t"'ICO I 1,,,.. H\olo I~-~ ' li o ltl<:o U1 -, Wlllll•~ wt ,, 4\.li .).'A V. 1• 1' I• '" w 1cr.111 nd r l's l>t .., - t f , t ~ ti.lo WIUCllJI Gibb ,.", .1~. 1,_ ··"' __ '> " I~ lllo a~, + \4 Wmhllu1e ,, t1o9 .. 1/i 6 I, 1111 1\'J + >t w111hl" 2'r ' •111 '!"; 4\1) ~ ,3 ,.. 1 1 __.,, w ltn er~ XI 10 5:16 S\:o s~; - I Ji HI Jl~ + , ::/..l:tn" C0o w<10 lt 11~ 111' 11\1 ''!• H 111'-"liwi C 10 J\lo J ... Jlll -"" 1 1 1'I 1 •t 11'~ -t, IOt> 8 ]7 1• ll.i I~ II,, + ~I IS 19 ia .. 141, -~ Wllo.on Pr. 12 1 S'4 5 I n; 11111.,., 2 •1'~-v.W•MSn•o l 7"" , ... 1~+4 !O n, I ,... w lson5PI .., ' 15"" 1~ 1J'4 -~ ' II.\ ,, 11t+ ,w11onSP "'' J ,V. '" .t\lt-\; 70 Jl'j )4o 31" -Vo W !Uolon MUI ,2 U\ro J~ l~V. U, lSl'J !5 IS~ + u, W lC P Pfl SO ll'!I 621,:, 62V. •:rv. _ " 1 11 11 t 11 + \, Wolvr Ind 70 f ,·.~ ,',,! l:lo _ , l S 5 S W-tncl 6)f 7 ,,., ., u"'+~ I ,, .... ](~ ,,~ + 'Wool Ltd ltt, I II U J 1116 111 16 ) 10 t lo t 1• -,. Work Wr 60 l lJVo ll '-' ll'\' + ~ 1? 10{. f't 10 -V. Wr1tl>er Co 1! I j.. j .. _ °' 1 )11 J~ JI + • Wrltohl Hlrf lJ I J. '1 J.1• I J.1' If ,._ ,y, '~ \WTC.t.lr Olf 10 11'4 11"-17 -"i 16 f \\ t t \lo + V. Wy1n(I' Incl J '" '"' ~ 1 Jll'a 31~ l'' -11 WYlt lf~I 11 )~ 2 l -17 1)'4 ll ),:. +~W1n~ 01 l? 2'\'o 23~ 211'1 -.tll 2• 1•; 1¢"• l~ -"'Wvoml1 no ! •v, ·~ •'4 _ , 1 5 \ J 1 '• 'l'•leJ!nd 9J ~ l'• •u.+~ 7 5 • s1, Jllo Vonk~• I01 16 ~ 1'• ,,...,._.., 1 •:w. 9\. 91'; -+ lo ltrP M!t ~ J"' J"' ~ h? ~'II ~°" • ,,_ llm ~-lt 10 ISi.\ 1• .. "" = ~ ! t~ '" ''-"="'lonFooc11 'J4 J~ JI.ii-\' iN :IO ltl,, 'O ,1 11.! '~ 1~~ +~: l' 1i\li ~ I~ -\l r h '!• l" ·i:: -• M lt~ ll1o lt~ t1';::1 ' ''"'" 1'14 1'14 -v. 15 lt,14 10 101'1 -"' "~i f,,. ,1:~ 1l~'::-~ 1 n i.u .. 1 _, 10 ~ 'r· !•-"'" I 1S S 15 +It.I l u~u~u .. • ,. 4\l '"" -"' !l ,.... lt\lli 3'1'11 -,, Finance Briefs e SEC Lnm1uit 1 " n~ l' 1~ ++t! 11 "" ra %1~ + f '"-... '"' +"' BOSTON - The Secur1t1es " !:;; f ~ ~,Z .+ 11 and Exchange Commission 'J 1 ~ ull 1n? -" has sued Marrocco & Co and 1 "-1~ 1'11 ! ~ ~ ~" = l~ its president Ronald Mar-11~ lf"" 1,...., -"' rocco seeking an order en- 11M 1~ jl• !Jt: -~ 1oln1ng the company fro m 60 '•-1 I led! 11 • "'' ,,,., -"' v10 at1ng era securities l 1,;: J~:t i1~ -~ trading la\ll s The suit charges ! , j'..; ~~ -1'1 the defendants with sohc1t1ng l 7'.I .. 7 1 + ~ d h (h ' ,~ .. j1"" ""' + t'. or ers w en ey were 1n no ,J Hl.t ~~ Y\l t , position to execule them 1i •t! 1f' '~"' + "' because. of a Uquldlty problem ~, t'!'l. '1\01 ~ -"'1------------.1 ~~~+:: •• 6\t ~t:~ fv. -t Symbols u ,r.. tr .. 1~\.; t ~ s.1 •• • 11Ur•· .r. 11nollf(l11 l l Y. •~•~ Unlt11 otherwl•e no!l'd rt!tl ot ' I" l"' \\ -!1o Cllvl0'11>d1 I" I~• totttol,,. l1bl1 1r1 in-14 \\ " 1'11111 Ol•bu•ttmt"ll DllH Oii Ill• lt•I 1 7Mo1 1 -.,, <1u1rt"IY Of' Mtt'll~flf'llJal dttl1rrUOr\o "i ~ ,t, j'M t t' ~111 or ••••• OlvlO*Nb ot P•r,rnentt 74 , 11\toll -i: nol Oltlon1rfd •• '"""' 1r1 ldtntlloMI '1t " I ' b'" -.. 1111 IOl-1119 foo!N!fl ll lit.. 1 1.1!! -l a-.AllO t Xlfl ot tJC!rM ~.t.MUll fill ~' lE''I 1 :"f~ = \'I 1!u• 1tack O'lvlllltld c-lloituJC11llflt 61"1 , u '!:: ~ -\'I cttllll a-0tc11r...i or h !d In 1tn plu1 1 11act di• ~na e--P11d 11t1 ~"' 1-l'•kl r Z Ill 111 Jlack d11rl11t 1'11 •tllmtrH Clstl Ylllll ---'"-cllwlat!ICI Ot u-dl•!rftl\l'llO!I 0111 2 Ullo ''~ u>.1 -.,. ~l••tcl or .. 1a 10 I•• 11111 Yt•r " !"' u. L'! -"" "-"~Ill~ °" ••10' •fief' 1!0Ck dlY!derod u I ~ 'l 'Jo': i ~. Qr 111m Ull k-DKl•ttd or Nkl !hi• Ytlr U 1 \II. 1 ~· ~ _ 1'! 111 tcC1.1m11ltl1Y1 111111 wllll d1Yldf!ld1 I" IJ llil , -.,,...Ml n.-H .. 11-~tld 11111 rtrt, > j' I ' 1 1"1dlf!CI ornttttd ffft'ITIMI or PIO tcTlon 406 11411!14 I -I"" llkM t i lt1I dMdlnd m1t flll l 'lo /!1ti;1 I -\\ t--Otcllreel or N ld 111 1t1G 111111 1rot11 -1 lltil ~ CIM CIOnCl1 T-Ptflf 11'1 ttodl turlrot lfJ'I I ~ Iii + It ntlm1rlllf c111\ w1111t Ol'I 11M1l•kltlllf • 1 \t.\I ;\ \)U. _ '4 111-dl1trlbUtlOft O'ti.. ! 2 1-S1ltt In IYll • J 11 = 'l cl0-C411ttl x-E• dtvleltl'ld t-l!ll d1"'-1'l l I -9' Of1'd ""' 111tt In f11H t•-cll.,_t:• d 11•1~ l \.. • l'~ _ ,,. tlo!I ••-I.I: fftllt:I ••-WlllloUI w1rr1ntt. a 11 --wi111 "''''""'' ~Wiiow 1iW 1 t"\ ~ ti dhtrlbotllll wl-Whoft kWld. l!d--Mlld " '!"; I' , '" .., .... d911Yfnl I) 1 ·'~ %',~'~'-tu v -•n ...,..<Vlllft' ., tKIFll'tnJ\19 w • • ' • , \It ~, ... l'Wll'"h" yndoH lttt ••ltkrir!llCV '! I" l \i -... 1.4 ""' OI' IKllf"ll!tl •l-Wl'l'ltd tr"I MKfl ,_ • • t;, ,.. .-.,. •1-1:11 lnllol"fll cl-.Ctttlil~•tn. ~" ~\& It .J ' -1 • tt-5!aml>ICI 1-Dtelt tn fltl 11-M11\rrOi G ' Ii ltto' -"' b0nll1 M'tll l1bllU1 l1t1t•ltOICI bY ,,,ltli,11¥ II '1' 1 ,,. nCl-NtJll (!~' dt llVlf'I 111'#-b •ltfl Mt. u ~ -~.""'.;...'."-"-'~~·-·-·~~~~~~~~· I l J t \••· I I .. . . 12 DAILY PILOT Tu°tsday, Novtmbtr 16, 1971 QUEENIE By Phil Jnt erlandi • • • .. .. .. . . . . . . . . ' . . .... -- • Staie · Laun~hes Drive on Horse Viru~ ,SACRAMENTO fUP IJ -A state health orfici~I has urged an all-ou campalg03gai'iiSl mosquil\)(!S to prevept the spread to California of the sleeping sickness that killed hundreds of horses in Texas last summer. Dr. Richard F. Peters, chief of vector control for the State said the biological control of Department of Public Heal th, mosquitoes "is not promising . aid "everything-is neededu to -of-immediate-rescue.-" control mosquitoes, which car· He urged .the ~e of aU ry the disease known as methods of mosquito <.'Onlrol, Venezuelan e q u in e en-including pesticides, I a n d cephalomyelitis. preparation a n d irrigation Testifying recently before y,·hicq will avoid stagnant the Assembly Environmental pondS where m o s q u i t o e s Quality Committee, Peters br~. Earlier in the hearing. research is needed before ~ts . are controlled b Y Herald Wixom, assist~t state biological controls could be b1olog1cal ~eans and that griculture-directorrlestifiedlwidely-used-~in lac of ~more th.an..fu'.e...per~ent_~fh IJttL that only live percent or pesticides, pest:~ ~Id be handled w t out agricultural pests can be ef-But Harold R e y n o I d s . pesticides. . .. fectively checked w i t h o u t chairman of the department of But he agreed ~1th WlXQm pesticides. entomology at the University that more money ~s needed to The department fa vors more of California, R i v e r s i d e , suppo~ re~earch into the use nonchemica l controls, \Vixom disputed Wixom's testimony. of b1olog1cal controls o n said , adding that more He said '1hundreds" of in-agricultural pests. l?il 1lE«1Ji!:ill:11 1lEfi•1!1111fiW'Jl•Jft<•1QOlllll•l~«•1i!liliifl1Jl•1~«tlnllill!l•1~u•1illili :fJl•l~«•1i!lil "From this po int on I drop the stern executive image and become the lovable excculi\'C," Tunisia's Pr~sident Keeps Country Stable By PllIL NE\\'SOAt UPI For•I•• Hews A~~IYll As revolutions have changed the political faces of Algeri a and Libya. Tunisia. sand\\•ich- ed .bet\\·een them . has been a model of stability-thanks largely to its president. Mabib .Bourguiba. Bourguiba has g u i d e d Tunisia's destinies with an absolute, though benevolent The crisis had been sim- mering below the surface for iwo years and broke into t he open in late October at the eighth congress o( Tunisia's ruling Neo-Destour Socialist par!~'· It \1·as the fi rst such con· gress in seven yea rs. having been long delayed because of Bourguiba's failing health, and even then taking---place only because Bourguiba yielded to pressure. WAREHOUSE P'RICES PLUS 10% GO.LDEN • DELICIOUS .. LB. \ U.S. GOV'T. INSPECTED BONE IN FUU CUT Th~<2J!PQSition em er t::.•::dl.f'!~ quickly. WHOLE flOOY A large group led by Armed band. throughout the 15 years f\.1estiri. a 46-year-old lawyer recently forced from his post of -its -independenCe from as minister of' interior, deman- France. Now. in ill health and ded democratization ~ of the committed to a promise not to pa rty and liberalization of see k office agai n at the end of Tunisia's political life, ln· his presenl term in 1974, he eluding greater press freedom seeks to prepa re the \l'ay for and the right of the party and his succtssor . lhe people to 5 e J e C t But power once attained B ·b • becomes a hab it a n d ourgui a s successor: Bourguiba. while po.ying lip Further c o n I r o v e r s y service to encroaching time. de veloped over selection of the finds it jncreasing\y difficult 14-man political. bureau which to instij..ute the gove rnment is the part y's c'hier exec utive reforms which a little mor group. than a year ago he himself pro-It had been Bourguiba's mulgated. ----practice.:..to-.selecLby.Jtimse _ The Tunisia he seeks (or lhe the men to hold important future is to be in his own im-posts both in lhe government age but he argues that the and the party. people are not yet mature He compro1nised in the end enough for democracy and but not before f\.1esl iri had that they must be led to it been suspended from the par- slowly. ty and accused or sedition in ' He is particularly concerned the controlled press. that Tunisia is sq u eezed Bourguiba further made it between two military die-clear he believed the con· tatorships. and he believes a grcSs's only accomplishment regime with a strong executive had been to divide the ·country. is necessary lo i n s u r e On the whole lt is a Tunisia's survival between the melancholy picture. t11'0. • Bourguiba has done a good As ''supreme combatanr· job for his counlry. He has during Tunisia 's struggle for been a friend or the W)st and independence. Bourguiba has 11·as one of the fev;• Arab had no real rival for his leaders with the coura ge fo au thority. Bui now a political lalk back to the late President crisis is developing. brought C.ama\ Abdel Nasser of Egypt. on by the same emotions thrit The voices in opposition were war \Vithin Bourguiba hini.self. relatively moderate and in the one that tells him to start stffling them Bour guiba may re laxing his grip o.n potter. and hring aboul the very power the other Iha\ tells him he struggle over his successor he cannot. sought to avoid. Genera lions of CJ1ristian Scientists throughout 1he \Vorlil have been heal~d of every kind of di sease -even "jncurable'' di sease -through God's help alone-. By using the same method that Ch rist Jesus l:i t1ght and proved. Come this \Vcdncsday to our publ ic teslin1ony 1neet1ng. You ran hea r your neighb-ors tell \vhy they've turnrJ to God for he alth :ind their spiritual \Vei l-bring. Christian Science Wednesday Evening ~~~::~"~~tio~~~sr, Sd1~1;11 .'. :1;'. 1 ... Mew Vtn11 Cr. -Coll~ Mew · I "·""· _, ~ MUNTINOTON l [ACM-1'1.,t C~t;tdl of (hti>I, Scll~Uit c 1111 & Ollff -M""11l!>tl0ft BNtb • I ,.,M, '-' HIWf"OltT •tACN-l"lttt c~ ti Cllrnl, $d1nli1t JJOl Vil t.Wt -N•wperl l tlc.h · t l".M. NlWPOltT llEACM-Stcen« Churcll el Chriit, k\9f!llsl J!Of Pl(ltk vi.w or .. Ct•ffll '"Mir -• P,M, Kids Lo ve Uncle Len , Saturday in ~-• ~FRE-SH FRYERS tB. ROUND STEAK - FARMER JOHN~S SMOKEP HAM SALE SMOKED SHANK BUTI -~PICNICS HALF HALF c lb FARMER JOHN'S 8 Oz. Pkg. SAUSAGE LINKS c EA. c lb COMPLETE SELECTION · USDA GRADE A TOMS OR HENS ALSO SWIFT'S BUTTER BALL. ORDER YOUR FRESH T'URK'EYS TODAY FULLY COOKED WHOLE .+AM c lb FRESH-LEAN GROUND BEEF c lb Now you too can become a professional shopper and save hundreds of dollars per. year on your 9rocery bill. No need to run all over town huntin9 for bar9ains ... You can be assured that when you shop at Top Yalu, you are buyincj at the low· est prices in town. Naturally, we carry all of the famous brands ..• Top Quality Meats and Garden Fresh Produce. WHICH IS MORE IMPORTANT TO . YOU1 BEST SERVICE ·OR· LOWEST -PRICES • NO . MARKET CAN GIVE YOU BOTH· WE GIVE PRICE SHOP IN A WAREHOUSE OF FINE 9UALITY FOODS AT 535 W . 19th ST. AT HARBOR, COSTA MESA. IT DOES· N'T TAKE A LOT OF NERYE TO BE THE ONLY STORE IN TOWN THAT DIS· COUNTS THE DISCOUNTERS. N HAT IT TAKES IS THOUSANDS OF LOWER PRICES!. EVERYTHING IS MARKED Warehouse Prices Tllen the Checker Adds Just 10°/o. To Arrive at what you pay. So if yov wound up with $10.00 Worth, you'd simply pay that, plus 10°/o or $11 .00. THIS GOES FOi EVERYTHING Dern THI FEW ITEMS LEGALL1: C0N1'0LLED Liii MILi AND LIQUq_R. 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 we welcome STORE HOURS 10 AM TO 7 PM 3 DAYS A WEEK CLOSED SUNDAYS AND WEDNESDAY S ...---·-...;> BflHCi CLOSED TWO DAYS A WEEK 5AYES 'YOU A LOT OFlilO,HEY' We reserve the ri9ht to chan9e prices as wholesale prices chan9e. • ·'we Make ·Discounters Look Expensive 535 W. 19th ST. AT HARBOR, COSTA MESA ' FOOD STAMP SHOPPERS l'JJl•l~«•11llili:ll•l~«•1flliififiV1•1EU•11!1Jlilll.t]lt(•lllliii:tl'.t'J•11,H111Jlililll1],H11Dlli!if1W1•1ED•1111E I 'f . t . '!' , • I • • • . .. .. . • It ~ ' • ' .. • • " • ;; . . " • • • ~ :: ' !>-~ ~ r ' ... -· 6m .en .. ' . BEA ANDERSON, Editor ~: . •• .. ... • PH I lJ An n Lande rs • • ~Schism Singled Out t DEAR ANN LANDERS : l am writing ~-this letter to the thousands of unhappily t married parents who hate each other's ( J(Uls but are staying together for the sake L of the kids. My advice is DON'T DO IT. S. I grew up in a house where Mom lr.nd , • Dad thought they were doing us kids a ' .. favor, but believe me, we would have lr been better off if they had split when the t~ trouble started -10 years ago, at least. j The oo1y peace we knew was when Dt.d I·. left. When he came back we were mis- erable because we knew It was just a ~~ matter of Ume before he and Mom would • . 1 be at it again. l• -. My kid brother his an ulcerated colon. h.fy sister has migraine headaches. I have I• a skin rash that breab out when I get ,,_ upset. I am thankful for one thing, how- : I • : ever. My parents' marri•te has .settled something Important for me. J1m staying single. -DAYTON VICTIM DEAR DAY: You didn't ask lor lllJ • advice bat bert's some anyway. Don't : . : . l !<-•' .. ., I r throw out the whole crate of eggs be· •~.. cause a couple: are cracked. All marriag- es ire not like. your p.!lrents'. • I ! ' DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 have. never written to you before and am surprised that l am doing so now, but J couldn't let today's column pass without .com-r: menHng. 1 reJer to the letter fn>m the woma11 who de3cribed psychil.trist.. as ''fakes" and "charlatans.'' · -I have bee.i1 ln therapy for three yurs , .. and have encouraged other members of my family to get btlp, I credit ther.'P)' ,.... with changina my ouUook on liVing. A • pSychiatrist can save a life in the. same = dramaUc way that other medical doc- tors can. N. in &ny other< professlo", )'ou .. must· ·be ·lucky enough to get the right doctor. Somellmes it takes shopping, (It ~ did in my case.) Tt also takes a wllllnanest to work wm-c the doctor at the most difficult job In the world -discarding old ideas and comlortable prejudlc,., I'd li~e lo see this letter in print. If you publish It I'll tell my therapist I wrote it. -ANONYMOUS DEAR ANON: Here It ts: Tell blm •• , and just ta c1se any of yoa less articul1te ones out tbere would like te tell YOUR therapist YOU wrok It (or wWI JOO laid) -be my pat. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am II and have never bad a date. It's my own f1ult and I !mow it. Please help me ret my thoughts ,..ted Olli. My dad died when I W6' ei4bt. Morn didn't know anything 1bout business and with.ill two years she wu flat broke. She took a job doing houlework fOT' different families because she could make more money as a dd.y lady than If she worked in one plact. Many nights 1he comes home so tired she can battly drag her· sell lo bed. I cool< and clean and help her as much as l can. 'nte prvblem ts U..t our houoe Is awful- ly shabby and I am ashamed lo lei •llY· one see il lt'a spotlessly clean, but it needs painting and wa1Jp1per, i nd the rugs are wont cut :.nd the fUrniture is awful. When the boys get friendly I flnd myself giving them the freeu before they ask me out. t don't want artyotte to see where I live. I have upstaged some awfully nice guys for this reu<n 1.r1d I don't know what's going to beeon'le of me ll I keep this up. Please give me 90me confidence -or l1llfbe •· k~k in the pants. I need """"'lhlllf. -WYOMING NIT WIT . DUii WY: Ne prt llOl 11 apo!Olflo for lier-.. 1t IM1 .. II b -· Aoeopl dle..ry_t_ ....... ,..--H-yulll·-.. -"'" we<b-1_,..,,_ __ .... ,.... .... ..U:-Jlll lo ,..,. .... om u4 1ou...oo. ,.. pl ..., 611 loolb~ llllllpp yoo'll bo llot. Gel .... and &ood lack. What awal~ you on the other aide of the marriage veil? How c&.n you be s11re your marriage will work? Read Ann Landers' booklet, "Marriage-What to .Expect." Send your request to Ann La~ ders Jn cart. of the Dally Pilot mclolinf. 50 cents iJt coin and ~ lont, stamped, tel • addres..d envelope. , Furs • Warm to Couture French Flairs Classic Greek - By MARIAN CHRISTY • NEW YORK -Clotheshorse Sophia Loren doesn't tbooBe her own fai;hlons . Carlo Ponti shops the couture salons holding Sophia 's hand and barking orders to the designer abo\1£ which fasblons best suit his famous wife . Ask Nk:o Terzis who has designed furs for Sophi&• via Carlo. "She is like a child to hhn." he says. "And putty in his hands." Nico Teri is. is a Greek-born, Balenciaga·lrained designer who spent seyen years creating furs for fi1as:imllian .. He could wtite one of those controversial books about the Beautiful-PeQP~ and their magnifj- cent obsessloDS. But why dynamite a design car.eer? He has just opened his first fashion collectlon -all cu9tom- made clothes in the $400-$4,000 range. And he'd like to keep the peace with the rich-and·famous who are buying his clothes. But, as thee x· Maxim i I la n desigoer, there are am·uslng memories . When · Carlo Ponti was in the Mulmilian showroom one day he De signer Nico Terzis tops bloc k evening trousers wit h o white mink jocket, trims novy georgetle sheoth with ruffl es. I ordered two coats -9tble and ocelot ,..... plus a cocoon-shaped white flllnk for Sophia to wear to the "Dr. Zhivago'' opening. Jt so happened that when the tailors brought the mink cape for Nico to approve, he was conferring with the ex·Mrs. ~fartln Rev son of lhe Revlon cosmetic f o r t u n e . "That's the fur l wanl!" she ex- claimed unhesitatingly a b o u t Sophia's ta{)' which was to be the one-and-Only. "[ paled," says , Nico. not ex- aggerating. ·Mrs. Revson was 1 $30,00IH.-year clie:nt and not to be ~ifled. To make a long story short, Nico created a similar cape for Pitrs . Revson who promptly wore it to -you guessed it -the "Dr. Zhivago" opening . Nico : "The post -o pening fireworks were creaJed by Carlo. Ah, such explaining I did." Many of N\Co•s Maxim.Oian clients are buying fashions from his first collection, so I l' s un- derstandable he can't talk about them. By .name that is. However, one elegante, whom Nico describes as "nervous-inst· cure-nouveau riChe," once came for a fur fitting and admonished that he must not pinch her . ll was the furthest th ing from his mind. ';But every few minutes she'd say don 't pinch me. Finally, f got very angry and jabbed her with a pin. She said delighleclly.-with a 6Tllile, 'Oh, you pinched me.'" Nico told her it was time for the psychiatrist but she said, no , it was time to jog. In her half·fmished blond sable coat, with its. $45,000 price lag, she jogged around his studio for 15 minutes. Then the fit· ting continued. Marlene Dietrich ls an avid Nico fan. But she doesn't like to spend large amounts-of money although· she yearns for fashion spectacul&rs. \Vhen She bought a Jean Louis skin· tight gown, she asked NiCQ to design an ennine coat that she could drag behind her nonchalantly for shock effect. He quoted the price -$3.5.000 - and she reneged. "Finally she set- tled for white maribou feathers ." says Nico, ''It was substantially cheaper." When the Duchess of Windsor was interested in furs, she brought the Duke to the showroom. 'l'he1 wanted to see the whole collection together -In a prlvate salon and :>n models. The Duche9s never bought direcUy from a show. ''She always said she'd think about I~" says Nico. •1 And the Duke's parting words were always the same. 1 came to see how my wile spends my money.'' Nico, being Greek, Is deeply superstitious. He's got 1 little gold box in which he carries the rem· oants of the membrane doctors removed from his face at birth. Greek mythology has it lhal lhe residue is a dynal"{lie good·luck symbol. The dramatics of •destinf also enthrall him. Whe~ Nico's rather died. he and his .mother moved to Paris. In due time . he graduated from • •• gnth e l' lik e c o111rades ••• Universite des Beaux Arts and into the Balenciaga sc.•lon as a cutter. He was h11 good company. Givenchy worked there as an assistant. Ungaro was the pants cutter. Cour· reges was a tailor: "There· was no competition among us." says Nico. ''Balenclaga made us all feel like hlghly in· dividual princes. Sometimes w• would all gather together like com· rades in a Left Bank bistro just to talk fashion. Here the designers are jealous of each other." But they move in the same cireles. When Nico came to New York he found the apartment of his dreams which turned out to be "lucky." It was once-occupied" by-e-e It Zuckerman before he became "the suit and coat king" -and made milUons. Then. Givenchy took it and Bergdorf Goodman contracted to carry bis collection. Haisten was the next tenant -and that's when Jacqueline KeMedy made him and his pillbox hats famous. ;'Now," says Nico, "I've got it . When 1 first signed the lease, Max· imilian offered me a contract. And now I'm on my own ... " High Fashion Takes Flig~t , .. , ·' Hughes Airwest hostess Zonio Arouzo swirls her sundonce yellow cope os Morge Morques moi:lels coot ond hot. Sundance yellow, a vital, electric color rerJecting the sun And its warmth. It's just one aspect of Hughes Air· west's new look -from color to .total concept. Jt has combined its name. de· signed a new logo and spashed sundance yellow on its great airplanes . Dazzling as a abuk of sunlight and keeping with the air company's total concept are Hughes Airwest'1 new host.. esa fashions. "The look Js a totally new visual et- perience, o n e never-before undertake• in the airline industry," claims Mario Armond Zamparelli, originator or the look and industrial designer. The entire fashion er1semble Is in sun- dance yellow, using a specially dyed pure polyester throughout the wardrobe A particularly fluid bendable material· tt ls set into graceful lines. The elfect i; movement. The balic drm is IUll.dance yellow with short set-in sleeves and a jewel neckline A princess bodice molds into a conserva: live-length pleated skjrt. .""-"I~-· ••JC we come-auuord" J&.'Cket a short one_ with wrist-length sleeves, 'a mock turUe neckline and superb fitting in poly- ester adds an alert. businesslike appear. ance. The princess-line sundance ye 11 o w coat -created with Western weather ln mind -becomes a straJgbt line or color. The cont.emparary Western hat is a jatmty topper for the coat and Jacket. .A naughty brim bends to suit any hairstyle or fancy. Sundance yellow Is a play ot light when coupled with the geometry of a brJlliant universe blue eight-inch-wide t r i m on the exciting cape. . A hood carries the wide contrasUng border, while a z.Jpper front and millum- backed lining mate the cape a gannent of comfort &whine and gracioua living are pie. ~ wlth the orange, lipper'-front serv. mg smock !hat is trimmed a1onf1 Its lrutl and neckllne In Ille new Hughe, Alnrest mark in Universe Blue. 'nte Mes:ico serving cape is lciuany called 1 quizqueme.J. That's a Spanlsb word describing Ille contour ol lhis mq. netic pink serving uniform. Sundance: yellow leather b o o ts a~ low-heeled leather pumps in the same color add an ty~atchlng fOllndatlon for lhe new look. "A1y favorite accessory ls the •lrplar.e 1Vhicb matches my boots," aaid - Hughes Alrwest hosttss. 'll1C •irplaae is 1Wldance yellaw fl'om nose 1'>·~all. , , • ·- •' • ' I .. , .. ' . • Tut'<fay, Novtmbft 16, 1971 Carn ival Capers to Fill HB Boys Club Coffer "Klowning " and fun will highlight the Karnival planned by the Ladies' Auxiliary of the Boys Club of Huntington Beach for Satur· day, Nov. 20, at the dubhouse from noon to 8 p.m. Taking a shot at one of the prizes is Rod Morrison, while the Mmes. Dan Rober· ticchio. Hardine Holmes an d Mamie Seltzer offer encouragement.. . ___ ............ .,..,,,,.....,,~-­ • Peering 8£ • .\PPOJNTED state 2e advisor and ~ ol the Council of CL....""'cl?U \"olunteer Advisors for the Xational Foundation- M.ardl of Dimes is Mrs. • 1'"orman Watson of Newport i .. BeadL 1.. MRS. ROBERT Heide of t"-Costa Mesa has been named to the 1971 edition of "Outslan-1 · ding Young Women of J America." \ A sixth grade teacher in • Ocean View School District, : Mrs. Heide is a 1966 graduate _.. of Evangel College, Spring- field, Mo. She ranked se- cond highest academically in r her class and was vice presi-f' dent of the student education ,~ society. • NEW OFF1CERS of the • 1 Juniors oC Bahl& Cor• .. +h;,.., • • : Yacht Club are Geri Johnson. i · ' commodore; Roger Rawlings, ·: vice commodore; Cynthia t 1' Iavelli, rear commodore ; , • Leanne Miller, secretary and j 1 Scott Mason, fleet captain. Others are Brad Mason, port captain; Jeff Stone, woiking committee chairman; Dave Eastman, treasurer: Robert '"' Holyoake and Richard Iavelli, directors. and Arthur Bandi , £taff commodore. JOB'S DAUGHTERS, Bethel 321 elected Miss Mitzi Eilts as honored queen, and to serve with her the Misses Darcie Nicholas, senior princess : Joye Crosby, junior princess: Robin Londeree, guide, and Cathy Reed, marshal. RECENT visitors to San ta Barbara weff: the Messrs. and Mmes. H. B. Lawson and Keith Burnham, Ne w p o r t Around Beach: and William M. Lansdale, Huntington Beach: Mrs. William Otte, Laguna Hills and Dr. and Mrs. Alex· antler 1.eller, Laguna Niguel. The Santa Barbara Biltmore ":as their headquarters. MR. AND MRS. George -Jack-of--Huntington Beach were surprised with a 15th wedding anniversary o·p en house given by their daughter, Miss Linda Jack. Hosting the event was Mrs. Vincent E. Gaskell of Westminster. RECENT VISITORS i n Laguna Beach from Roberts Creek, Briti.Sh Columbia were Mr. and Mrs. Sumner Perkins. They were entertained by the 1'1mes. James Martin, Frank Zelarney, Edwin Myers and Harry Hyman u,d their son, Arthur Perkins of Fullerton, and his wife. SELECTED to head the Girl Scbut Recognition D i n n e r committee for 1972 is Richard Dickson of Newport Beach. The dinner, given annua11y to hOnor adult volunteers' who have assisted the Girl Scout progmn, ~ill take place' Jan. 27 at Knott's Berry Farm. NAMED WINNER of the 1971 Rheta Gillette Teen Art Award is Miss Lily Hofstedt of Santa Ana. The HunUngton B e a c h Recreation and Parks Depart- ment estalilished the lf>.year teen award in recognition of Miss Gillette, a Huntington BeaCh artist who is a founder of the Huntington Beach Art League and fonner art in. structor at Dwyer Intennediate School. California Greetin gs Culo1 de · Aiba Oelt), diredor ol the School ol Marine Science• ol the University of Baja California, • Is greeted by Mrs. Carl Nciss er and Dr. Donald Macl..ean, director oC the Orange County Board of i ~Educatron marine &clence program. during '3 fie sta • In Mrs. Neisser's Newport Beach home, sponsored by the California Partners of the Am ericas ~~ounda· lion. Thirty-two students from the Mexican school visited Oran1e County !or lllree days wi th de Alba. • • Coast Couples Link • In Fall Nuptial Rites STOUFFER-ROSS St. James Episcopal Church, Newport Beach was the set· ting for the nuptial rites ~ink· ing Karen Rita Ross and David Lloyd Stouffer, both of Newport Beach. The Rev. John Ashey directed the vow exchange fpr the daughter of 1'1r. and Mrs. Bradley K. Schwarz o f Newport Beach and the son of Mr. and Mrs. George 0. Stouf· !er of Whittier. Bridal attendants were the Misses Jan and Jody Schwarz, while Richard StooUer served as best man. Ushers were Lawrence Broering, David Karlson, Peter Stys and John Turpit. A teacher in the Newport· Mesa Unified School District, MRS. STOUFFER the bride is a graduate or Newport Harbor High School, earned a varsity letter in eamed her BA at UC[ where she did graduate work. She water polo and now is a Jaw was named to CONSEHO, a student at P e p p e r d i n e senior women's honor society. University. He also served in Her husband is a grad1.1ate • the Army .:i.nd completed a of Sierra Iiigh School, Whit-tour of duty in Vietnam. tier. received an AA-at ~enlo They will reside in Newport College, a BA at UCI where he Beach. ECKHART-SOUTH The First Christian Church, Westminster was the selling for the nuplia1s 1 i n k I n g Vanessa Gall South and · Ronald Reid Eckhart. Reading the double ring ceremony was the Rev. Everett Auger. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Virgil L. South o( Huntington Beach and Mr. and Mrs. Don 'Eckhart of Anaheim. Attending the bride was Mrs. Becky Garcia, and serv- ing as best man was Tom Coogan. Guests were seated by Don Eckhart Jr. and the Misses Sheila and Teresa South. The bride is a senior at Fountain Valley High School and her husband is an alum· nus of Mt. San Antonio College. They w i 11 reside in Fountain Valley. December Date Set Mr. and Mrs. Ian E. Robb of Newport Beach have an- nounced the engagement of their daughter, Karen Robb to Mikel E. Middleton, son of Mr. and Mrs. John C. Middleton of Yorba Linda . The couple plans to wed Dec. 11 in st. Andrew's "' Presbyterian Church, Newport Beach. Miss Robb is a graduate of Corona del Mar High School and attended Orange Coast College. Her fiance ts an a1umnus of Troy High School, Fullerton and attended caUfornla State College at Fullerton. He now is serving in the Navy aboard the USS Dixon in San Diego. Layered Look Leg layering keeps legs warm as well as stylish when the temperature dips. Achieve the look by pulling knee socks over pantyhose. you ASKED for it! Now Open Until 9 P.M. Mon. thru Fri. UnUJ 6 P.M, Sal. 'IJ1e Bookstall 333 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa 548-1611 ' BEHIND THE PANCAKE HOUSE MURRAY ·OSTERHUES Toni Kathleen Osterhues became the bride of Andrew Murray Jr. during afternoon rites in the Church o ( Religious Science. L a g u n a Beach, read by the Rev. Dr. Henry Gerhard. Parents of the couple are Mrs. Shirley Oste'rhues of Hun· tington Beach and Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Murray o f Kearny, N.J . Mrs. Philip F1eischer was matron of honor and Miss Celeste Shearin was bridesmaid. Best man was William LeMaster, and ushers were John Conger, Robert Murray and Timothy Woodruff. The new Mrs. Murray is a graduate of Huntington Beach High School and Orange Coast College and is a member of Theta Sigma. Her husband is an alumnus of OCC and at· tends California State College at Fullerton. They will live in Costa Mesa. von KLEINSMID·ABBOTT St: Michael and All Angels EPl!COpal Church, Corona del Mar was the setting for the wedding of Walter B. von KleinSmid and Jean-Abbott, who were attended by Mr. and Mrs. William von KleinSmid. The newlyweds will reside in Corona de! Mar alter a honey- moon in Hawaii. She is the daughter of Mrs. Louise Eddy of Lakewood and the late Ne.Ison E. Abbott. WILLIAMS.BORIS Residing in West Lo 1 Angeles and completing their senior year at UCLA are Paul Williams and his bride, the former Judy Lynne Boris, who exchanged wedding vows in calvary Church of t he Palisades, Pacific Palisades. They are the son and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John M. Williams of Huntington Beach and Mr. and Mrs. Alex· ander Boris o! Reseda. Betrothal Told Christina Jane Burton will become the bride of Gary Allen Pitts during Nov. 26 ceremonies in Ferndale Wed· ding Chapel, Santa Ana. Their betrothal has been an- nounced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sidney A. Burton of Newport Beach. He ls the son of Mr. and Mrs. O>arles PiU. of Provo, Utah. ----1 Pi«ollno • Imp • c- Florence EIJeman Ruth or Carolina FllCM Millbrook e Btttl Temll . ........ ~ .......... ,,."'"_ ... , ........... -., ..... _ ..... ... u .. 11ng1o1 ]lorboar 11111 84&.IMI Town & Country Oraa1e (lll) llMllS . . . . ' Your Ho roscope • • . . . . • . I II Scof~t-e: 9en t F.o ow WED NESDAY NOVEMBER 17 By SYDNEY OMARR Taurus can be stubborn but also determined and loyal. Many born under this zodiacal &ign have unusual speaking voices and a sense of the dramatic. Taurus, like most of us, appreciates money -and, where finances are concerned, Taurus makes a good team with Gemini. ARIES (March 2l·April 19): New outlook concerns mate, partner, investment pro- cedure. Emotions are in- tensified; nothing occurs hallway. Be receptive. You could receive offer whlch puts you on more solid emotional· financial ground. TAURUS I April 20-May 20): Pace yourself. Don't insist, ca- jole or chide. Permit others to show their hands, have their say. Your role now should be that of careful observer. Emphasis is on marriage and public relations. GEMINI (May 21-June 20 ): Be wary where apparent minor details are concerned. Take nothing for granted. Key is to be thorough. What a~ pears simple is complicated - if you are careless. Keep medical, dental appointments. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Be ready for change of scenery, variety o f ex- • periences, emotions. Opposite sex is involved. Creative juices now. You overcome obstacles. Loved one pays meaningful compliment Children bring joy. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)o Practical issues dominate. Accent on security in relatioO to home, property, domestic affairs. Strive to t\#rrn_onlze family situ_filion. Make gesture o f recon- ciliation. You'll be happier as a result. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22)o New moon position stresses short trips, dealings with relatives and neighbors, Pisces persons figures pro- minently. Throw off ideas, fears , doubts. Express ideas, take notes. Pliln !or future . LIBRA (Sept. ~. 22)o New , financial arrangement works out In your favor. Insist on faclli, inventory. Get what's due you. Some around you now are fast talkers. Realize you have authority on your side. Stand pat. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)o Welcome contacts, challenges; you are stimulated by one who expresses confidence. Accent original methods. Lead rather U;lan follow. Lunar position coincides with success. SAGl1TARIUS (Nov. 22-- Dec. 21): New light shed on mystery. Puzzle pieces can fall together. tork behlf!d scenes. Co o erate in charitable proj I. Remember one who Is le rarily con• fined to home, hospital. Be considerate. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19 ): Jncome from professional erforts could increase. New moon position coincides with greater pride, achievement. Caottr Individual could play important role. Be aware or security requirements. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Utilize altern a tive methods. Analyze ambitions. You can go far -if versatile. Saglttarian can help you solve dilem ma. Don't be afraid to ask questions. Some surpris-- 1.ng, helpful answers come forth. PISCES (Feb. 1~1'1arch 20):' Favorable now for publishing, submission of plans, formats. PJan 1ahe~d . Look to future. in· stead of brooding about past. Barrier to progress is remov· ed -if you don't pr<r crastinate. Act on beliefs. IF TODAY IS YOU R BIRTHDAY you are a powerful ad versary and a· loyal ally. You are not one for splitting hairs. You desire facts, not speculatiofP or gossip. Some claim you lack sense of humor. But those who really know you disa gree. If single, marriage Is on horizon. • • • .. BRUSHING UP -Mrs. Llllian Hoban looks over one of the children's books she has illustrated with her daughter, Esme, in preparation for her guest aP.pear· ance at a Balboa Bay Club luncheon sponsored by Harbor Friends of the Library group. Mrs. Hoban will exhibit original illustrations at the Thursday, Nov. 18, event. Invited by Friends Artist Sketches Talk Mrs. Lillian Hoban, ii-original illustrations from the Robert Badham. Justrator of children's books, books. Hostesses will be Mrs. H. B. will offer a glimpse into her Special guests at the lun-Benham in and Mrs. Robert world of whimsy du r i n g cheon will be Mrs. George Askin. Friends presidents. and a luncheon in the Balboa Bay Coenen, a docent for the Los the Mmes. \Vatter · White, Club, Thur s d a y, Nov. 18, Angeles museum , and Lloyd Aubert. Alvin Pinkie)' highlighting Ch ildren 's Book Assemblyman and Mrs . and William J. Collum. Week. 1----''---~~~~~--"--"-:..::C-"-~ Sponsoring the noon gather- ing are the Newport Beach and Costa Mesa Friends of the Library groups. Mrs. Hoban , a resident of Wilton, Conn., Is in the Southland to promote a Reading Circus at t h•e California Museum of Science and Industry. She has illustrated more than 38 children 's books, In· eluding Russell H o b a n ' s stories about Frances lhe badger, and will dis p 1..a y We hope this is the year ~the RAMS I TASTE BEFORE YOU BUY! cheese ball , AND BEEF STICR c· '!'WI> IMailM fltm ibowido •h o1illl ohpeaoltr foodl flan , • • ~~~~~ ~~r~i. ~· s .... ft11tpwl'Z:" I 111st0t AT su111now11. cosTA MUA I '"°"( J.t0.6'91 Jl/1111'1 JIJ/lll llllll lfll/I • • Hrn',KEV.I FlNALLY OOTEREI/ mAT TIE-DYED ~T5HIRT'lW LIKE 50 !AUCH! .-"f..:.:, ~· :. II lo PLAIN JANE . ' "" ' . ,,..... HAVE TllE DOS MEET US AT TME LAS TO CHECK TMIS SKULL . -. ~ • :.'!.'l:.:,":;~'":',;- M "'°' I;;., ..,,, ' "~ "' "" -··-··----I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• b-;"'.:-UowER I r ACROSS l Ctittrful 5 Accused PtfSon's derense 10 --Anton y. Var. 14 Card woo l 15 Part or a joint l b Person greatly loV!d 17 Hobbies lei Palm or Austrillia 21 Lowe rtd in rank 13 As sert JS I ll excuse 2:& Unprincipled t!liJI 27 Petroleum product 30 Former P'OYirKe of Ireland 3• Enthusli1Slic 35 Shine lnlensefy 37 Bib1ic1I ruler 38 Went first 1s a guide J' Dtctivrs •I Witticism •2 Btforr 4) Enconlum 44 Tendency, i s of fortune ,.5 Stru11111td •7 Inc idents 50 Brink 51 Scatter 52 t.ltxitan border city 5& Sharp ridgfs 00 ··-AmKh e· Ylisconsm football great 61 Complete candor. 2 words b4 Be rilled with SOlllld bS G1oup of three 1esor\ b7 Venetian ma91strate &a Does ~ polis!11r19 job ti'l lnanimalt 00~/N l Gr•SP sudden ly 2 Song1·1r ilt1s' subJtcl 3 At knowltdge 4 Slrimp, far one S Clerntrrl ·- UK Prime Mlnlstrr !i Ga!litnd 7 Cadmus' daughter 8 TR NT STOA l l AS (A ' _5 f<t 8 Binding agretmt11t 9 Unslablt I 0 Those undrr legal age ll IJine entranc e 12 Death by liarging 13 A.ttir td 18 Ci uses p.i in " 22 Hybr id ani11111 ls 24 English: Cont. rorm 25 Floods 27 C:ibbilgts 28 Tum Inside out 2, Addi!itw'l \O 1 record Jl Hesitant 32 Form by wtaring away 33 Proportions 1111fin1 3fi P1oficlenl 39 Errand boy on a ntwspaper ~I) Fundamental coust1tue11\s ~4 Loomed 40 Fr11il-bta1 ir.g tree 48 Mosle•11 decree s 41J Spani9h painter 52 Spikenatd 53 Misctll•ny ~ Pack of wolves 55 Indian of the Carolinas 57""' 58 Heating vessel 59 FoOO fish 62 Rtlatives b3 Extremity ' 3 '+1' • 7 • • ! " " " " " " . " " " II' " I l'> . ·~ . ll ', r ' 1-. " " " " -• '"" ' ••• ' I " " " ' 30 " Jl lJ "' " » ,, -"c' .. .. " . "' i " " ~ " •• .. ,!'> -I ·~ ,. ' " " " " '''" '· "' " .. " -6l " .; " " • " lk' ~ . " ·<' " --- ! " ., ' { J " ,, ~ ~ -" PEANUTS .....,...---.-.... JUDGE PARKER By Cliester Gould "'IOU Neyi:R l<NOW WMAT 'IOU LL FINO: By Dale Hale By Frank Baginski i'VE BROKEN 1\lE Iii.ANKH HA6IT ! I MADE 1T-rnROV6f! 1H£ WEEKEND WITHOllT AW l!tANKET ! I DID IT! I DlO JT! . ll'l ABNER " E.VEF<'I •.t.e~t:L.Ofl HATES ME, eECAlJSE ~ EVEr« GOP.L GOT A. otANCE. AT'EW\- WHV DID I EvU< Pi:'«Xl..AIM THE SADIE. HAWKINS DA'I RACE:, NOVEM&ER 1111 SALLY BANANAS l'.QQ.e,et I~ "~oo .. Q~ P~ .. ~ GORDO MOON MULLINS 1/-/b ~: DID nlC ,. CR.EAKl!Vb li "I IC tceR " <JIZ&ff 'KJ<l !j FO!i'YH, ii 700.f' .. " WoW ! :nloY SURE' LOOK <OoOD-· NEE'P ANYONE TO TASTE'. if:ST 1EM? ,. ANIMAL CRACKERS By Charles M. Schulz ~~~~~~~~ THAT'S 7ll€ SCREAMIN6 ANO 5ilOllTl>IG AllD l'OllNl>!N6 ON lllE 6ROONJ) AAP MAl<IN6 A Rd. OllT OF 'I0/1115CLf 1<¥>11 •• By Harold le Doux NO PKTURE a; T C""''T llMGINE WM'( ERIC. IN nus rnERE'P ge ~"1' MMN EDITION El-PMOTOGR:A.~E:RS IV TME I C.A.N"T EITHER! rLL OROP 'IOU OF~ '-T YOUR ROOM: LET'S 8E 5t!RE ~..6.T JEEP l ~PPOSE TMA.T IF Eli!IC. WONT ge: RE-- TURWlt.lG roR SEVEm P"V5, WE"t> &ETTER I 'M A.LL FOR: TMA~ 1 WINP UP MY ~WESS TOMORROW At.IP WOULP &E R:EMV lD 6ET THE E"RLV TMER', A!BEY ! .l.IR:POIIT TO lrAEET MIS PlANE ._NP °™EN NO PICTUR'E f'.~ "-?PE.US IN TME PA.PERS! '· MISS PEACH FR:ANCNf, l ~AVE THIS AWFUL NEED TO 6E APPR:EC IATEO. \ I I I ' ,. -·.' . .,,, / . /• ' . . '(, ' . PERKINS (' ' ( AJ?THU!t, l lllLD YOU THIS MO~NING l APP~ECIATE YOU. 1s rneire! :i: KNOW. COULD YOU IELL ME AGAIN, NCJtN1 PLEASE> 1N1WK A&OUT 6ETTI NG MOiAE. S"M ! MWIN6 FU6Mr. tET\ TJ.t.: TO 1EEP! :i: APP!l:ECIATE -.OU . :i: APPR:ECIATE YOU. C' • UH, WI-EN'S Tl<E NEXT TIME YOU PLAN 10 IELL ME ? \ I I / ' ' ' •• 'i' - . . .JI -.. By Mel ~,. ly John Miles Tuesday, Novembtr lb, 1971 DAILY PILOT JG ·~~~~~~~~~~ ly Al Capp ,--~~~....--. ;~~-'---~~,~ -AND NOT1::'HER.L"I I GOl"'' TO Fl~ IT SO Q.lE. OF M'/ ~ANO EVER:1 60tU. WXTE.S ME, P>ECAUSE: THE'\' ALL WANT O LIVEK WEND£Ll. PO~,NOTCHt:RL."I- NOPE! THAT COULOA /3EEJJ G-1-0PEZf • . DOTTP~ ':::==:::'.'.'..._ GATS HIM!!' J.. 0 0 • By ·Gus . Arriola By FercLJohnson -mN1i>E PASSltJ'-m' "TEST--TEL• M,AMIE TO PROCEED WITH 'TH., RECIPE! By Roger BoUen fUNlllJ QOO DOll'T .GET' T'O CH005E ~~\U­rr 1.s !!Eff~R, s.\SCD S'f~1Cf~l/ ·• 1 61:1' rr! rT 11 ' I OIJ I CHAAJCE-· E~IMllJA1E$ 'JHE ' f()SSI 6/1 .. IT<J OF , AWeotXI arri00 ~ 1t1E OOllOll mtr f I HE1S SVPffZIOl ! 1 rzl6ffr. . .' ·1' " "Ali' my life Is w1itin9 for something I want to buy to be reduced.'' • ' . ' • DENNIS THE MENACE . . C DAI LY PILOT • • • • • • • • . -. . . . Tutuli)', Novtmbrr lb, 1971 . •• ... '.,· .· o ' ' o o o o '• •l I o I I . ..... " .. # • ., ..... ~ ••• .... . . . . .. . . . . .. . ' . . . . . .... • . . • • ·~ . Everyone Takes His Lun1ps Pick, Top Makillg .. _, BOSTON (AP) -The New England Patriots have one of the most effective ..:passing combinations in the National Football League these days, with rookie Jim Plunkett, the league 's No. 1 draft pick, throwing to his former Stanford teammate, rookie Randy Vataha, a last round choice. Everybody knew Plunkett, the Heisman Trophy winner and potential superstar. Vataha was another story. At :".-10 and 180 pounds, he was considered too small by most to be a pro receiver, despite his outstanding performance in college. The Los Angeles Rams drafted him iii the 17th round, then cut him late in the exhibition season. On Plunkett's recom· mendation, he was picked up by the receiver-thin Patriots. ''They were looking for receivers ..and 'they asked rne about Randy," Plunkett said in an Intervie w ~1onday. "The basic question wa s: Could he he.Ip us? I told them yes. I knew he could catch and run excellent patterns.'' Vataha has not mape a liar ,out of his roommate. l~e is l he eighth-leading receiver in the American Football Conference with 30 cati:hes for 496 yards and five touchdowns. •·I guess they were looking for someone J im had confidence in," said Vataha, who once played one or Snow Whit.e's dwarfs for . a summer at Disneyland in California. Plunkett shows the confidence by look· Ing ror Vataha in key situations. ''I know he'll get open, and when he does he'll catch the ball," Plunkett said. Vataha admits he would like to be big· ger, "but I think most of the detrimental effect or my size is in the minds of coaches and general managers. If I we re 6·3, there would be a lot different reac- tion lo my plRy .. Now they're skeptical." •' ST. LOUIS' LARRY WILLINGHAM TAKES HIS AGAINST SAN DIEGO ... There n1ay be skepticism about Vataha. but about Pl unkett there is no doubt. llis four touchdown passes Sunday in New England 's 33.33 victory over Buf. falo gave him 13 for the season, second best in the AF'C. He has completed 91 of 203 pa sses for ' thar9ers Wi11, 20-17 , .. :.: Cl1a11ce s of Field Goal ·= -Were l in 3-Partee SAN DIEGO fAP ) -'Vhen Dennis Partee left the field among a happy mob of San Diego Charger teammales, he knew he'd succeed . Othern·ise he'd ha\'e \\'alked alone. "J kept my head down and just follow. ed through so I didn't knO\Y it was i::ood un til I got S\11amped." Partee said Mon· 'l 'l1e G1·e 11t (S11111e H'e Did11'I See day night. "Then I figured it must have gone through." The 45-yard , last-second field goal lifted the Chargers over the St. Louis C::irdinals, 20·17, in their nalionally televised National football L e ague meeting in San Diego Stadium. The kick th at made the Chargers 4·5 in !he American Conference West and the Cardinals 3'6 in the National Conference East was Partee 's longest of the season. He learned thal later. "f didn't know how far it \\'as," Partee 5aid ... I didn't think about distance or anything -I was determined not lo miss this one." He said he fell his chance was one in three of succeeding from such a distance. J>a rtee's bbot follov.'ed a game-tying SI. Louis touchdown with 17 seconds left v.hen Cid Edwarlis plunged for a yard . The Ca rd inals then allemptcd an onside ktck. but they didn't reCO\'Cr arnl San Diego. \l'ilh John Hadl thro\\'i ng a 16-yard pas~. to Gary Garriso n. got field goa l pos1\ion and stopped the clock \\'ilh a last time out. The onside kick plus an all-purpose i:f· I . by San Diego ruTVJing back Mike !\: gomer y in-his first NFL start. two i ceptions from rookie safety Bryant * 1:r * C11111n111 Ch1r91rs ,1,,1 ~· " " Ufl\tl•,lrdt 11.1.u ll·IO!l 1u ln1 Y••dt9t '" ,. ti urn ~•roa9~ " •• ... ,. .. 11.)~J n .)(11 ... ~·U ' " f:11mbl11 ... , • ' 'r'•tOI eotn1!11td " ' dA RR IN DEBUT AG1AJNST LAKERS J:llS ANGELES (APJ -Cleveland 'a Civaliers, wJUi on1y four victories lD IS ~ this young National Basketball i.IUon season, '<Mil use a pair of new w ns tonight when they attempt to '" a Los Angeles winning streak of t ight games. Austin Carr, lhe first man chosen in th& NBA draft last year. will make his lel'fue debul tonighl. . 'm'le Laker• arc wlthln -thre& of 01,C Los ~cles record ot II consecutive vlc· tor1es. To reach that plaleau, Los Angeles would h11ve to beat the CaYaliers, thtn Houston and then the mighly f..1\lwaukee Bucks. Salter - those "·ere factors in San Diego's victory. Rookie St. Louis coach Bob Hollway said he called the onside kick "to regain possession of the football" and go for \Yinning points. He also hoped the ball w~uld travel to the San Diego 30 or 35 if th~ Chargers recovered, force them to use their la st time out and wind up with a tie. But Charger rookie Lee Thomas fell on the ball at the San Diego 47. ~1 ontgomery, who ran for 98 yards, pa~sed for 43 and caught passes for 77 - total offense of 208 vards -was a Charger hero. · USC's Harris Not Injured, Says Mcl{ay LOS ANGELES -Affable University of Southern California football coach John f<.tcKay scoffs at his best runner's "injuries.·• "Lou Harris has more \'ulnerable places on his body than an ybody 1 kno~·,'' said the coach f<.londay, jokingly. "He 's al\\·ays sore from one th ing or another. But he always gi \'eS you 100 percent v.•hen you need him."' Harris was apparently hurt in last Saturday's 13-12 victory over Washington. But McKay said Monday that the tailback v.•ould start again Saturday again st crosstown rival UCLA. The S-foot-10, 205-pound se nio r has had asso rted ills this year but remains the on· ly ex11Crienced back McKay has left. The rest have gone oul via debilita1ing injuries. Harris may team "' i 1 h sophomore Ray Washmera In the backfield. llCLt LOS ANGELES -t<.farv Kendrick!!, l:CLA 's top runner this season, is work- ing out with the Bruin team aga in and may see action Saturday a g a Inst crosstown rival USC. ~ The hard-<lriv ing hallback. who set a school record against !he Trojans last year of 189 yards, has bt>en hobbled with \•arious inju ries this year including knee problems. The Bruins \vere idle last week giving th<! entire team a chance to recuperate. Ho.,..·ever. defensive b<lck Ron Carver, out last "'cek with a broken jaw , jirp- bably won't play. "\Ve hall hnped he'd be itble to be fitted wit h a spcrl al cast and helmet nnd play.'' 51tld a 11.'llm S'pOk(!SffiRn "but he dldn'I show up on lhe practice field Monday so J assum~ he 's through for the year." _ j • , • AND WRESTLER KARL GOTCH IS READY FOR HIS. Bucs' World Series Ace Does11't Get Full Share NE \V YOHK 1AP \ -Baby-faced Brute Kison, the hero of the first night gan1e In \Vorld Series history. \\'as given only a three-quarter share by the \1•orld cham· pion Pittsburgh PiratCs. baseball com· missioner Bowie Kuhn annow1ced today. 'The 21-ycar-old right·haJ1der. ·who was called up by the Pirates in mid-season and compiled a 6-5 record before hls World Series heroics. wa s voted $13.62l.44 by his teammates. A full share was worih $18,164 .!>8. The vote was taken before the Series. Kison relieved starter l.ukc \Valker in the lirst inning or the fourth \Yorld Series same against Bnltlmore on Oct. 13 1:1nd bl tinkcd the slugging Orioles' on one hlt over 6'i inning s. He left in the SC'Vf'n!h in ning for pinch hitler Milt May. "lm dCJlvercd the game-winning hit ln a 4·3 Pittsburgh triumph .~ KJ son was cre!dlt«l with the victory, tying the Serles 2·2. Plt~burgh then "'ent ' nn to "'in !he cham pionship In seYe n games. Over·all. the Pirates voted 31 full sh11res from lheir pot of $627.237.11 of the 1971 \Vorld Series and championship series receipts. They went to 23 players, manager Danny !\turtaugh, five coaches, tratncr 'Tony Bartlrome and clubhouse manager John Hallahan . They also voted several smaller shares. but dicl not give any money to lhelr ground crew. The ground crew ' had rc~l\•cd a full share to split last year 1,1·hc11 the Pirates won the National LcRr:ue·s East Division title. ~lcunwhilc. the Orlolcll also voted 31 fl•ll iihAres of ·$13,006.45 Fro1n their total cnrnlngs of $470,427.84. They gave a one- tf'n!h 11hare to JRy !\1azzonc. their crii>- p\cd britbny whose hands were bumcd off In a childhood accidcnl. The l8-ycar.-0ld !\tazzonc retired after the 1971 seaison. He had held the balbgy's job for four years. Tough Comp? 1,281 yards and has had 1onJy one in- terception In his last four games. He Is the only person who has played quarterback for New England this year, which h&s won four of nine games after winning only two all last season. "It's hard to evaluate one's own performanct,'' Plunkelt said. "One is always harder on himselfJ I find J'm teaming something new eaCh week, but I'm also finding It tougher to do better each wee~ because all the teams are ao good." Plunkett finds play<alllnJ the mo1t dlf· ficult. ffe was asked Jf he geta any help II callinc plays. ''I help him all the time," Vataha I~. terjected. "l tell him I'm open on tht screen, the out, deep ... " "When everything's working, play call· lng is no problem," Plunkett said. "but tbal hun't always been the case. Sometimes I get help from the bench, but· never when it's third and 25. "They say : 'You got yourself into that mess, now get yourself out.' " • Red's Seeing Re~ As Sun Baits Celt BOSTON (AP )-Red Auerbach. presi- dent and general manager of the Boston Celtics, is seelng red again, the "same as in his coaching days when he became the National Basketball Association's most fined personality. Auerbach, who used to take out his anger on officials until he moved into the front office, still was fuming Monday over a fight-filled 128-119 loss to the Suns in Phoenix Friday night. He was disturbed over a fight between Jo Jo \Vhile, the Celtics' leading scorer, and Phoenix reserve John Wetzel. Both players were ejected , wilh White leaving after being awarded two free throws. "What would happen in the NBA if second-li ne players began punching around Kareem Jabbar. Oscar Robertson or Jerry West?" Auerbach asked. "The guys \YOuld retaliate and both players would be thrown out. "Make your sub pick a fight with the other team's star and you're way ahead Sports in Brief of the game when both playera get thrown out. I thought thef put a stop to this long ago. "I remember years ago when Paul Seymour of Syracuse used to pick fights with Bob Cousy. I went to Maurice Podoloff, who was president of the league then. and warned him that if this tactic was anoWed I'd put Bob Brannum on Dolph Schayes, for instance. "Schayes had a lot of guts and would fight back, and both guys would get thrown out. The pra ctice stopped." As for the Phoenix game, in which Boston coach Tom Hei nsoh n also was ejected, Auerbach said there was "a real fight " between Don Chaney of the Celtics and Dick Van Arsdale of the Suns, with neither getting thrown out. "Wetzel · takes a punch at White and th~y both get heaved," Auerbach adde~. "That's quite a trade, Wetzel for White, isn't it?" Meredith Raps Landry; Services for Coaches SAN DIEGO -Retired Dalla s Cowboys quarterback Don Meredith says he didn't think very mu ch of the way his fonner head coach was alternating quarterbacks earlier this season. Meredith was queried on the subject r.fonday at the San Diego Sportscasters· Sportswriters Association 1 u n c h eon , which he attended before broadcastin~ the Nationa l F'oootba\I League clash between the Chargers and St. Louis Cardinals. "I don 't think that's the way you play the game," Meredith said of Tom Lan- dry's shuttling tactics Involving Roger Staubach and Craig Morton . "I think they're tak ing away a big part of the game. "Of course,'' he added, "Eddie LcBa ron and I used to alternate with the original Cowboys. But that was to lessen the chances of one of us being killed." • Funeral services have bten arranged for former Mater Dei athletic director Joe O'Hara , Bill Hanna h and Dallas 11oon. 'The three Cal State <F'ullerton f assis- tant football coaches were killed Satu r· day night in an airplane crash in the San· ta Ynez Mountains. An eYening Rt:qui em Mass Is slated \Vednesday (8) at St. Cecilia's Church, 1301 East Sycamore. Tustin for O'Ha ra. Interment will be Thursday. 8:30 a.m. at Hf'lV Sepulcher Cemetery. Orange. Interment for llannah is slated in San LiWObispo following services at St. ,prnaeus Church. 5201 E v er Jt r e en , Cypress Wednesda y afternoon (2). Rosary is slated tonigh t (8) for Moon at Our Lady of Perpe tual Help Church . 1n727 Downey Ave .. Downey. Requiem ?ifass will follow Wednesday morning (lOl at the same site, with private interment following at Rose Hills Cemetery. • NEW ORLEANS-Second\.ranked Okla· horns has voted to pla y in the New year's Oa.v Sugar 8 01\'[ against fifth-ranked Auburn , The Sttr.tes-llem said toda y. • BF.JlKELEY -California Golden Bea rs Coach Ra y \Vi\lsey says Saturday's Big Game opponent, lhe Stanr4lrd In· dians, "appear to be better th.an last year when I hey won the Rose Bo\\'I," Wiiisey said Stanford has "one of the best defenses 1,'ve seen on film and Don Bunce adds a new dimension to their of- fense with his running ability." "It's a better, complete team and we'll have our hands full ,·• he said. • STANFORD -At le;,-st two Stanford In- dians art doubtful starters for Saturday's Big Game against the Unive rsity of Califomia . Berkeley. Coach John· Ral.~lon says strong i;afety Randy Poltl. forced out of last Saturdr.y's San Jose State gan1e with e sli1thtly dl.,located shoulder, ls likely to still be out lhls weeke nd. Fullback Hillary Shockley, who rein- jured a 1pr.a!ned ankle ln the lJ.12 non· Pacific 8 football conference loss to the Spartans, also is unlikel,Y to be back Saturday, said Ralston. • NEW YORK -The New York Rangers traded four players to the St. Louis Blues ~1onday in exchange for veteran \Va yne Connely and two others :n a mammoth National Hockey League swap. Moving to the Blues were left wing Jack Egers, defenseman Andre Dupont and right wing Mike Murphy along with a player to be named later. Ac"companying Connelly to New York were rook ie center Gene Carr and left wing Jim Lorentz. • LONDON -Jerry Quarry, hoping for another crack at the world heavyweigh t title, faces British champion Jack Bodell in a scheduled 10 rounder at \Vembley tonigh t and said he will quit the ring if he gets beaten. The 26-ye ar-old boxer from Bellflower, said, ''If I lose to Jack Bodell. I will give up boxing because I will have no right to stay in the game. ''l need to win this fight to mainta in my claim for another crack at the world crown.'' • JOHANNESBURG , South Africa - Clarke Graebner advanced in the International Clows Classic lenni~ tourna- ment r...londay but Pancho Gonzalez was an early victim . Graebner. of New York City. defeated Pierre Barlhes of France 6-4 , 6-0 in the fi rst round of the men·s singles while Manuel Santan<o· o{ Spain OU!led Gonzalez 6-1. 6-4. In other first round results Tom Koch of Brazil beat Jan Leschley of Denmark, 7-S, 6.-4, and Lew Hoad of Australia overcame Ray Moore of South Afri ca fr<!, 7·5. • NAGOYA. Japan -Japaq's cha mpion TokyQ YomiUri Giants, teaming with the NaEoya Chunich i Dragons. walloped Baltimore 9-l loday with utili ty Infielder Jerry DaVaonon of the Oriones pitching 3\!i innings in relief. The Japanese rapped out 14 hits In· eludin g a home run . Starter ri1itsuo Inaba and reliever Hisat oshi Ito held the American League champions to four scattered hits. The setback was Baltimore 's second in 17 games. • College Grid Poll I f THE AS50CIATI O f'ltESl Tt<lll'I •·I .. h . Tt•m •·I P'lt. I, Htor. '"°' 10.0 l,OM 11 , r,~ ... llH •·t l!t J, 0-.... ll•rMll ) ,, fM I). l tMtt '•J 1')• l . Mltlllttnf4l l&.6 1M 1l f Olfda 100 U) .... At1~mf!ll la f II! 1• UV 1 l ft J. Auburn(!) ... 6U U, USC I ' r. I. Ptrl~ Si.11(11 t·f l lS II, Mo~l!Ofl 1•1 1• 1 NOlre 0..IN •·1 ... 11. Afkln)~I , , ' n I. Otortl~ t I 11) It. St•fli.td 1..J 1' t A•ll. $11,. 1-1 lSJ 1t, M!<ll S!•!t 1, Jt 10. Color•Clf l·J lU '° MIHIH!aal • ., , Oltlrr ,,.,.., t f(tt .. r,,. ''""· II"" !~ II~•· Mllc•I •rel~: ,.,,.., Collco11.. Cor.,.11. 1111.,011, 1ow1 S!llt, Horlll C•l'Clll~•. North"°'1tern, Otllt 6111e, Wll~~. ; ' ' ~ ··~·••,•;•~·· ' . ' TUtsdq, Nov1mbtr 16, 1971 DAILY PILOT Jf . Area JC A~es Amat Tops. CIF .List; OCC-Bearcub Playo.ff Tilt MD SETS UP O'llARA FUND Lions Are Without DAN RUSSELL S1ddl1back-Off1nH PAT SWEETLAND Or1nge Co11t-01f1nse JIM LINK Golden West-Defense MIKE COIT Saddleback-Oefense DOUG YOUNG Orange Coast-Offense KURT DEDRIC K Golden West-Offense \ 3A Shaken The Big Four of Bishop Amat , St. Paul , El Rancho and Westminster continues inlact Jn the CIF AAAA football poll as the list of elite sustained only ·one minor change follow· ing the weekend's results. Sunset League p o w e r Western moved up a couple of notches after whipping Hun· tington Beach, 40-12. The Pioneers jumped past Pasadena and Arcadia, who fought to a 14-all 5landoff in a Pacific League crucial. The two leaders meet Thursday at Veterans stadium In Long Beach to determine ihe Angelus League champion 'and the No. I team in the CIF Southern Section prior to the playo(fs. The AAA tt1ngs were shaken followi Pioneer's 14-- 7 conquest f Bellflower. Pioneer, which lost to AAAA Santa Fe, 27--0, earlier, jumped from fifth to share the top spot with West Covina. West Covina's only loss is a forfeit decision to Whitmont League (AAAA) leader Rosemead. Freeway League toughies Kennedy (7-11 and Fullerton continue in eighth and ninth . La Quinta. despite an S-0 record , dropped to I h i rd behind the Pioneer-West Covina combination. Temple City's unde!eated Rams and Mira leste (also 8--0) continue as the one-two setup in AA circles. St. John Bosco (7·1) is third. The latter's only loss was a 41-26 decision to Edison in' the first game of the season. PCi~tl "' "' '" "' "' M .. O• ~~ May Be Played on a Friday It's quite likely that Orange Coast College'• \football team will play its opening round large schools playoff tilt with Santa Rosa College on Friday night, NOv. 26. It was expected to be staged the following day but since Santa Rosa plays all of Its games on Friday nigh.ts, Bearcub officials would prefer the Friday date. And OCC coach Dick Tucker lsn 't against it. ''We'd just as soon play on a Friday night," says the Pirate head man. "It gives us that much more time to get ready for the second CRAIG SHEFF playoff game. And Santa Rosa feels the same way .'' Santa Rosa coaches scouted Orange Coast's 30-10 victory over Mt. San Antonio last Sat- urday and will probably be on hand for this Friday night's tilt with San Diego Mesa. Santa Rosa completed the season last Fri- day wfth a 34-3 victory over College of the Marin. The Bearcubs tied West Valley for the title (both finished with 4--1 records ) but earned a playoff berth with a 19-18 decision over West Valley. Pirate coach Vern Wagner scouted the Btarcubs' victory over T>.1arin Friday and came hack with glowing reports, says Tuck tr. "'Santa Rosa has a real good team. They're much like Cerritos. They run a full house backfield and do a lot of stunlin g on defense ," says Tucker. Santa Rosa figures to have a little edge in the preparation department since the Bear· cubs will have two weeks to get ready for the OCC invasion. Meanwhile, the Pirates are preparing for Friday night's tilt with san Diego Mesa. A victory would give OCC Its first Wlbeate.n season since 1963 when the Bucs were na· tional junior college chamPlons. * * OCC wlll probablY mo\'e up to th~ No. 2 spot In this week'' football rating•. The Pirates were No. 3 la1t week, tr1lllng top-ranked College of San Mateo and El Camlno. But San Mateo was upset by San Jose CC (32-111) while El Camino was beating Santa Monk:a, ZS-1%. El pamlno is expected &o move into tbe No. 1 spot ahead of OCC. * * * More on Sant.a Rosa: the Bearcubs have been quite offensiVe-minded the p.ast· t~o seasons. This past year coach T\.1arv 1'.1ays' club scored 279 point~ in the nine games for a 31.0 average while allowing 113 (12.6). A season ago Santa Rosa tallied 332 points in rolling to a 7·2 season mark. That 's an average of 36.9 per outing. The Bearcubs gave up 178 (19.8) two seasOns ago. * * * The Camino ~rte champion bas bad no 1uccess at all µ. the state JC playoff• the past tw~ seasons Wesl Valley won the title last year, but fell lo College of the Sequoias, 3M, ln the opening playoff tilt. COS later won the state championship. Two stason& ago West Valley nabbed the title, lhtn lost to Chabot; 45-ZO, ln lbt playoff opener. * * * Tn all likelihood OCC's football team will fly to San Francisco or Oak!Md the morning of the game , then take chartered buses to Santa Rosa . Three Area JC Stars Kishi Tops Picli:eroo Seel{ Receiving Crown With 21 PASSINO " .. ,, " " ... A memor.i.al fund.for-the-Ja•i..-- Joe O'Hara, former Mater Del Weakness High athletic dirtCtor ·and Cal State (Fullerton) assistant rootball coach, has been set up by ofrlcials at Mater Oti High School. Contributions can be tent to the Joaepb O'Hara Memorial Fund, clo Mater Dti High School, 1202 W. Edill:ger St., Santa Ana. ~ O'Hara wa! one of three CSF assistant coaches who perished In an airplane ac. cldent Saturday night. Van Daele Menaces Mater Dei Stacked up against UNi No. football team In Orange CouDo • ty, head eo1ch Herb Hill of t.hl Loara Saxons can't find to; much optimism when thin~. about Thursday nlght'a Su°"* League finale again.st powertpl Westminster at Anaheim's La Palma Stadium. Says Hill, "if we win this one, we'll end up 'at 1-3 overall. So, I guess you could say it . would be a relatively 1uccessful season~ "But,'' the be5ped.ac1~ Saxons head mentor hasteu to add, •·we'll just try to s~ alive because We're at the end of the line right now." Loau can salvage a pi~e of lhird place by upsetting the LioVS Mater Dei High's Monarchs and hoping that Anaheim ctn have one final foe remaining turn the same trick agai.iilt on their Angelus League slr.te Newport Harbor ( 4·2) On Thursday night and it's the Saturday night. annual collision with the only Howe.ver, a Saxon triumph other Orange County parochial against Westminster would lie hi h hoo l quite a surprise, indeed. g sc · 11rm sure Westminster's Servile High's Friars will in-record ind 1c a 1 es their vade the Santa Ana Bowl to toughness," Hill exclaims. provide the opposiHon and "They're outstanding and coach George Dena's were darn tough against ua Anaheim-based eleven will be last season. And they have a trying to post its 5econd win in ~:a~f0~;:r saa~e~;~sm~~~k~~ the 11-game series.. perience, depth and COil· The last time a Servile team fidence." beat Mater Dei was in 1964 Hill is hard pressed to meh- when the Friars posted a 13--0 lion any "Lion weakness. Why? triumph, ruining an otherwise "They don't really ha•e unbeaten and unscored upon any," he states, starting with seaso n for the Monarchs. skill positio ns: "first, they The chief threat in the have a quarterback I i ~ e Servile o!fense this year is the Siemens and split receivers 11 same as the past two seasons talented as Rosales, Maddocks -halfback Mike Daete. and Harris. Van Daele, a fi.I , 195-pound "Then, there's their runnln& senior, has been hampered a backs. Chuck Winkles was bit by a bruised shoulder dur· good a year ago and he's just iug the course of I.he year but as good this year . And Tony the durable Friar hasn't miss-Accomando is a dandy; he 's a ed a game. nifty runner who's fresh and His best effort of the year ready to go when they calt on was in the St. Anthony test him." } whe n he carried 10 times for The Saxon coach contlnuew~ A close battle for the pass receiving lead is being waged among a trio of Orange Coast area JC football players. !t1twnko C1tt h1n " ' ~ ' ' • Fountain Valley's Ray Kishi 164 yards and l hr e e with his siting up of the Lions is the top prize winner in the touchdowns. by adding, "Also, they 're big m • • ' 101111 "' 'M " 1,su ' Wooden Calls Walton O!Mrt: Cr1Kent1 V1\lev \'''I• l1kirwood 15·2·11 I. Aoseme•CI \'·' 's. ~••ncls f}.J) 5, C1nt1nnl1t (}.1 . Miler Del !'-!l l. e11rr 15..2-11. Al"4lmbr1 1• 'j· S1nll Monk• •11 1, llnll 1'1 • 2, Compton (5-1·1) l. Saddleback's Bobby Haupert 141 (34) holds the lead with 1~1 .Orange Coast's Steve "' ... 1. !tit ) PIOMI• 41•11 •... ,,,"' K HIYffr'I • Slm..-1 • ~ ... " eighth week o( the DAILY Operating in the same and strong up front and PILOT'S Pigskin Piekeroo. backfield is quarterback Mike especially at tackle with Gary Kishi picked 21 of the 15 Magner, a righthanded junior JeMings. " " •• ' m ' ., ' Wnl Covln1 (6-l·ll Pickeroo games correctly and In Dena's T·formation with "They'll be a very represen-" ' " • ··-' " ' Key to· Bruin Chances ~: ~~l~~'.t1!«tl S. U11!1no· 11·11- '.· Btllflowtr 7·11 t EdllfWll<ld 6·1·11 I . ICennltdv ~ 1-1 t t. F11lterton l'.0-11 10. H1r! !7·1) '~l .Monahan (33) and Golden H West's Mike Shaughnessy (29) ·•6 not far behind. e " Golden West quarterback Bill Cornelius has the passing lead with 1,627 yards while OCC's Rick Hartsfield is the top rusher with 415 yards. ·~-~· ·-Wilson ~IMIVO " ProciP1 ' u ' ' " ' • ' • ' • 'M 1.su • • • • • • " . was the closest in the Tie variations. (See Loar• Pap II) Breaker competilion by being ---------------'------"'---'-- 49 off the proper total of 838 . Runnerup spot went to Sam BURLINGAME. Calif. - Bill Walton , a 6 -foot-11 sophomore cenler, holds the key to UCLA's 1971·72 basket- ball fortunes. head coach John Wooden says. - The Bruins, who captured their fifth consecutive NCAA championship last s e a so n , have only one of their top seven players back from that squad, but Wooden says a host of talented sophomores may pave the way for another sue· cessful season. I "Wallor; is the key to our doing well," Wooden told San Francisco Bay Area reporters during a recent new.s con- ference invol ving all of the · Pacific-8 coaches. · "He's a keen student of basketball and an excellent team man," Wooden added . "Walton may not score many points, but he will mean a lot of points for our teaTTis on offense and defense." The carrot-topped youngster from San Diego is an excellent rebounder and last year led the unbeaten freshman team with quick passes that started a swift fa st break. "This is a potentiall y outstanding running t e a m . because we are very quick," Pro Cager Takes Hike For Indians SALT LAKE CITY IAP I - Utah Stars ace ~terv Jackson, hobbling on crutchf'.s, was one of 200 persons who set out on a hike this weekend to raise money for the Navajo Indians. The purpose of the hike. called Projtet Concern, was to get enough money to buy a mobile dental van for the Bisti Navajo Indian Projtel 30 miles south of Farmington, N.M. Most of the hikers. including Jackson. who is recovering from 1urgery. fall~ to com· plete the 20-mlle walk, wltlch began at the State Capitol. About SO hardy 1ouls finish· ed. The hikers got money fnr each TTiile walked from their sponsors. Amount.! pledged per mile varied from one cent to 1211. ,p~ject ofrlclals said they had not yet figured the total 11mount of money raised. he added. "But we also are wilder. Youngsters play more with emotion than rea son.'' Wooden praised s e n i o r guard He,nry Bibby. the one returning ·starter from last year. "Henry loo ks better than ever ," the skipper said. "He's been shooting better this year and the rest of his game has improved . He's much better defensively now and he's a real hustler." .. 1. Temol1 Cltv tl-01 l·. Mltllt~ll !l·ll St . .Jolln 80\CO fl•ll ~-Sarlo•• 17+1) s. c111r11r O,,k t1.11 •· An!•I-V11lev 11-!I 1. Ltlflno• U·H I. P110 Vt•de (7·!1 t. C1nlr1I j•O 10. Nortll A v..,.ld1 11·1 I "' ,. "' ,.. " " ., " " " OCC's Benny Ricardo has scored SO points to pace that category. Orl!IH (Oil! !1+11 ll Y)l\irtl '" " " M' " H1rtsllt!d n ., " "' ' ltMtll!IYr " '" " "' ' Mol>lllUtl " ·~ n "' • N.o-i1111n ' .. • " ' W~llt ,. '" " " ' ..... " .. ~ " ' V1I01,1en1 n "' " " ' ,_, " .. " " • V1n!lml1fl1 • " • " • WIH ' • • ' • Miller ' • • ·• • Tot1la •• l.4•f 21J 1,UO " .. :c••s~~· Ylll. " "'· WllUt ,. " ' "' • ••• V1IDlllrll fl .. • "' • .m ,...., • ' ' " ' ·"' Tottll 2G '" " , .... " .'11 ltKthl"' Tolt!I Scorln!. -lto!l!roc-J1 O!~fl )6, Holm1' W Hlllptrt lJ, 0111\c~ 24. Sim· mon5 11. Uson '· McNam1•1 6. Oold111 Wtil IJ ... I) ltUll'lin1 "" .. " ~' " Woll '" "' " "' ' ~OM " n• • ,.. ' 1rkfr • , . ' "' ' RICI " '" • ,. ' ·~~ ' " " • • Hl11oloH ' ' • ' • e~fn1 ' ' • ' • ' I • • • ·~ ' ' ' • ~rlc-' • " .,, • 01111 ,. 1.0'1 " •u ' P'111lnt " .. " " " '" CorMfllll m "' " 1.,,,,, " .~• Hine low " • • • ' ••• Tc1111 "' '" " ,,., u ••• ltt<tl~lnt Flanagan of Costa Mesa who also had 21 right but who was 52 of! the Tie Breaker's cor· reel mark. The third place finisher - Jon Roberts of Corona del Mar -also guessed 21 but was 62 off in the Tie Breaker . One family nosed into the fourth and fifth spots as John and Rosalie O'Brien each guessed 20 games correctly. However, John nabbed fourth by missing the Tie Breaker by 50 white Rosalie was fifth. 53 ~llthl\HIY ~ n 1'lli '~ off the right Tie Breaker total. 'n~~ :! ffi t Nine other entries had 20 kH 10 UJ 1 right. Ktllv f 111 I --"-----------1 Woll •111 ~~~!:' ~ ~l g Your Hometown DYnn I II O LosMr 1 7 1 Tot1ls lU J,t.17 n N I Sunset Combo Leads County Football Poll cia Friday at Newport in perhaps the biggest threat to a ranked eleven. k«I~• -wo11 JO. P1•kv ,., ewspaper s P< ty hf Dldrlck 11, DY"" 1., CIH>O 1f• Monthin 31 ~" • Sll11111h~HJv n. lt lct n, $choonov1r I • Th DAI LY Pl LOT The Sunset League's one-two combination of Westminster and Western continues to dominate the official Orange County Top 10 footb:ill poll as selected by the DA I LY PILOT. ~::rnll!d ~~ 5!~ '1·-:b:.;wM:'r:~:\:'·:'M:'~:-';;:M;' ;d;;;;,,;;;;.;0 .. ;';';;;;'';;;;=;;;;"=======,-1 Kr!slln1t 9 l l Y Wi!t I " Mollul5kl 5~ ~ Mater Dei jumped to third place after crushing Pius X Thursday. . The ratings appear stable with this week's final round of regular season action coming up. Corona de! ?-.1ar is the lone Irvine League team in the rating and is involved in the wild loop championship race . The Sea Kings meet Estan- Westminster and Mater Dei close out the regular season with Thursday night games against Loara and Servite. ORANGE COUNTY TOP 10 Pos. Team Points I. \Vestminster (7-1) 40 2. Western (8-1 ) 35 3. f..1ater Dei (6-2) 33 4. La. Quinta (8--0) 27 5. Sonora (7-0-1) 25 6. Kennedy 17-1) 21 7. Fullerton (6-0-2) 19 8. Corona del Mar (fi.2 ) 12 9. Newport Harbor (S.3 ) 5 10. Santiago (6-2J 3 PSA knows a capilal way to gel.to Sac(llmento. It slarts Power 5 4J O leM~llleuwr • u I Edw1•di ~ j', o M1lon1 ~ o, 1'111\ ,' " Mo.lll~v n o Tot1ls lU 1.Ht u Scorln' -Rlc1rdo 50, Mon!ll•n 41. Youn11 36. MOllYli k( 2~. ltMt 1111• !'· H1r11!itlO u , l1ltll~~· n . V1lb\<fnl ,, ~~!i!~·t•· Fl511 •· Whl! I , Z1 llo5•y 6. Sl ddlfbft-U·.MI ltUilllnt '" " " M' o•::r:, "' lil " ., D•" " " ,,. Mero111rdl " 1Jl • 1~' McN1m1r1 u • Wl!50IO 11 " • " ... " I ~ l'll!Cl!tr " t ~ CIMIVO • llown~o u "' ''I " H111P1rt ' • ., ltot~r«k ' . " ·» Tot1ls an '·"' "' "' , And tho crowds haven't Jound It yet.., Y9ur tr,vet agent knows tho way. · " • • ! i 8 I ,, at Long Beach Airport. Easy to get inlo and oul ~· ' Plenly of parking. ...,,,,,,, 7:10•m (Exc•pl Svn~);1 0:001m1 1:00 pm,4!•5 pm (Dilly); 7:00 pm (Ftid1y and Sund1y), The most dependable Telephone Girls in town I Our lelephon. Mcr.t•rlff 1rt lpecle11y Mltcltd for the qu•llty ot their •olc..-, penon•Hty, •nd courtny. All •r• 11r1du1t1a ol th• N•llon•I T•l•phone a.cretarl•I Tr•lnlnt Program. 111vre your phont 111" the hand of• lr•lnff, 1fftcitnl 1Ktttary. OUll. Cllf todq tot lnlonrteflon 548·5522 DAYTIME• NIGHTTIME• ANYTIME , ALL AMERICAN ANIWllllNQ llllYICI 535 Center Street, Cotta Meaa Allstate's new office in Costa Mesa • 1s now open. These highlv experienced Allstate Agents know insurance from A to ~ And they know it pays to give you facts, not hlgh .. pressure sales talk. Whether you need insurance for your home, car, business, or life insurance for yo ur family, you get toMuality protection at low cost. Drop in at our new office in Costa Mesa or phone, and one of our agentt will be glad to come to your home. •You'll find us i.n our new office at 2326 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa, California Phone: 557.2200 lShirky M.ul¥ihlll .· 'l[l,t ,. ' • •• '·'~ I •1lf 110 ) .1~1 ·rn ... l''' '•10 ·n t ., •' ,, Al Isla~: AJ1-te lnluraocil CocoPd1•,. ~ .......... , ..... h ' I ,, . 1,t 11ifi ___ ..,. l~============~I.~~~~~~~~ • • .. • .. ·. , ~··· . ',• / .; . -..... ,/ .... .. . . . ... ~ " . . . .... ... .._ ·-. . JI DAllY PILOT TUHd'1, N"""btr 16, 1971 I ••• Area Defensive Stars of Week-- Newport _Driver's Rac e Bill The ,I/~ P.almer Method "'ATHUIS Of TH& DICADC" -.'STl(fll."Bll.L>'IRST 1JN IRON1lll01S MacLean's __9:20 Tops SA Valley LO ARA-LIONS (C\>ollaued From Page 11) tative team for our league in the ClF playofis." A! for his own Loara squad, Hill notes, "we played some pretty good people early In Western and Newport and now ner: llJld 215-pound K..tl McLalll: a tlerioua all-leaguo candidate at middle guard. Feed Slated LARRY DENNER C-0 del Mar CRAIG WAY F.dison Defense LES BECHER F,..talll Valley WOODY WHITE Laguna Beach "" JIM WAND Mission Viejo KEVIN WRIGHT SU Cltmentt: JIM BOLLAND Wtllmlnll<r DON DELANY Costa Meaa LEE JOYCE Estancia JOHN GARLAND Huntington Bea.Cb llllKE PAINO Mater Del JOHN TUPY Ntwport. Harbor STEVE TIMMERMAN Edison Offense Lakewood Girl .. Lolhar Motschenbacher of Newport Beach. Is prepari'!g for a two-monlh campaign in Australia and New 1.ealand beginning Jan. 8 but that is only a part or his busy, up- coming schedule. Costa Mesa High's un-we have the class of the Mi!slon Viejo High School'• d l led ..., t booster club will be holding Ill e ea . cross coun .. ,I' earn league in the last game. I led perfect •-•--filth annual pancake brtaklul comp e a "'"~ "Bui In the last few weel<s Pl In '"-' League dual season Monday at La Pu, ua -on afternoon in preparation for our kids have been able to Viejo Saturday. the league finals Monday a.t come back and gain a bit of Ducats, priced at $1.25, are Cal Slale (Long Beach). r<speelabilily. We're hopelll!, available at the breaklut or Coach Joe Fisher's crew anyhow." at the Wednesday evening The only man to compete in every CanAm seri es race since the J-Wax Ser!es began, will compete in eight races down under -four i n Australia and four in New Zealand on successive weekends. The next time you watch · the pros play 1ott, either on TV or in person, notice how they hit their iron shots. Invariably ihcir clubbcad strikes the ball fint. and then cuts into the turf, The divot mark ia always ahead or the ball's original position. overpowered host Santa Ana Most of Lcara's hopes of (7:30) booster club meeting in Valley, 21-36. viCtory lie with quarterback the Lecture Hall at Mi!Slon Mesa's Doug Mac L e an Dean Lappin, a sprintout Viejo High. ' recorded niftt 9:20 clocking, arUst; 170-pound tailback Tom . The feed runs from 7 to 11 good for a course standard. Bjarnason, a tough inside run-a.m. Pushing MacLean were .thejjO;i;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;.,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; .. Asked if he would remain in the land down under for the two-month period, racing ev- ery weekend, be replied : "I can't do that. I will be coming back to this country quite often, even if it is for on- ly one day. "We have some heavy engine development going on in our plant in Orange and we are building some engines for other owners to race in the E u r op e a n Interserie com- petition. "I want to see that· everything is done properly and I have to come back to check on the details," he says. Motschenbacher will take one car and a two-man crew to Australia and New Zealand with their departure set for Dec. 15. Lothar will probably remain here until the last possible moment. In fact, he is planning a trip to England in the immediate future to check on details o( bis new CanAm series cars. "We are getting two new MSF's ready for next year," he says. "They are McLaren cars and we put in the engines ourselves here in Orange County." Long Beach Boxing Card Set .Friday Striking the ba11 first Ja the manner shown in the illustration helps put bac_bpin on the ball. (Vertical arrows in the drawinp indtcatc the ball's original pos.ition.) The clubhead nioves downward into the ball; the ball rolls up the clubfaoe, taking on backspin. and. jt finally jumps off the face u lhe dubbead continues downward into the turf. The backspin enables the btll to 111 at. the height· expected from the cl ub yo11 hive uscd, Jt also htlps the ball to ·ny straight, instead or spinning to the side. . . Always catch· the ball ·fust o.it iron shots-especially on the shorter irons which you play a bit farther back in you r stance. ~, ~ 1n1 1o1An -s,....,. Noise No Handicap For Deaf Grid Team COLORADO SPR I NGS, Colo. -Just because they sometimes i g n o r e the referee's whistle and never react to the crowd's cheers or jeers, that doesn't mean the Bulldogs are oblivious on the football field. In fact, they were un· defeated in high school play this year. It's just that the Bulldogs play for Colorado School for the Deaf aod the Bliiid ; all are deaf. But in the highly com- petitive world of high school football, where even athletes with no handicaps fail to make some teams, the Bulldogs don't talk about handicaps. Instead, they go out and win. C-Oach Joe Sisneros' team high school champion in the 1()().yard dash with a time of 9.7 seconds. "He could play with just about any college team I've seen," says Sisneros. "He'd have trouble with signals on offense, since he can't hear a thing. But he'd be great on defense for any college team. "We had one coach this year say that if they stopped Gary they\vould stop us," said Sisneros. "We just showed them the other side of our of· fense, giving the ball instead to Fidel Martinez. He scored four times, because they spent all day watching Washington." Olswang brothers, Tom and John,. wbo crossed the finish line with identiC3} 9:28 clock- ings. In other Irvine action It was Edison turning back host Fountain Valley, 17-39, and Estancia beat C.Orona del Mar, 22-34 on the winner's course. Estancia's Steve Schureman captured the varsity race with a 10:47 clocking while the junior varsity race was won by Tom Smallwood. Smallwood, a water polo player, surprised the field with a 11:32. Schureman made up an ~ yard deficit in the final 330 yards to beat out Corona del l\1ar's Doug Knapp, who finished second with a 10:48 clocking. John Weston Jed a quartet of Edison runners ahead of the first Fountain Valley runner to pace the Chargers. V1rslty E$11ncl1 IHI (loll CC>l'Gtll del .,.., 1. •Schu•tm&n IE) 10:41; 2. K~Pfl "\' l. O. W11!mlre fEl; 4. ~l1n1Y IC ; 5. Rol!ln1 fEl; 6. Olson !El; 7, D. Wallmlre (El; I . Holdenbf1nd {C); t. Rudd IE); 10. Guy ICJ. Junior V•rs11Y 11!1t1ncl1 (~f(l) Coroftl ti .. hMr 1. Smellw <El 11 :31; '· L1rion IC ); J. G\llelr (:=II 4, M1llllln fElr 5. u urtiien r • Ccnn•r (El: 7. Rom1n (El; I. Cr Ir (CJ; 9. 81rlow ICJ; I~ H1111" (C), No fr0&ll<sooh rice. V1r1lty Edison P7l tl9l Fo1111t1J11 V1l11Y 1. Wll•cn (El 10:05; 2. A1v1rer (E); 3. Varq•s !El; 4. JenM lngs (FV); 5. Youn11er \E); 6. Soderberg IE)1'"7. R!!'ea (FV ' I. Pull IFVJ; '· MoOrt (FVJ: 10. Jenn!nos tEl. Junior Y•rsl!Y Edison !1'1 1471 Founlllft V•111Y 1. wts1on (El 11 :081 1. M~Gowen (El; 3. Fosler !El; 4. Lindroth (l::l: 5. Strlnoer CFVJ; 6. B•ur {El: 7,. Hahn IE}; t. M•rll (FVl1 9. Lt IFvli 10. was undefeated in eight games Laguna Ne tters ,,.....,., th.is see.son. That already No 1•cisft..M»h r1ct. Kell (FV). raaks as the best season in the R d v· V1nltl' Th. lll'S' t .. ver bo•!ng ShoW SChOOl'S history and they were ecor lCtory Cost1 M"' f11l !VI SA VlllfY " I. ~cl••n cc! t:20 fcour1o1hreci:lt'dl1 at the Long Beach Arena will aiming for their fi rst state h 'i< Tl ~';12~1~".'~:xi~~ •1=,n; l JG.0~~~f1~ be held Friday night and will championship when they T e Laguna Beach tennis v, 6. Ho1111a..-eel; 1. T. Allull•• tv1, as·-· t' ded I!." • e. Blakey CVI; f. Gottnlc.k (Cl1 10. feature undefeated Armando entered the state Class A .,.,,..1a 100 recor a.,... vie-Priest tel. Muniz against the No. 5 rank· quarterfinal playoffs Saturday tory over a Founlain Valley Jon1or v.nlf¥' a1n Cl ... r--en t I y at Founla;n (Otl• Meu I"\ UOI SA V•HIY Ing welterweight in the world, ag st Westcliffe. \W ........ "' T. s1i1rsmon r 1, o:Jl1 2. T•vtiWuth Th B"'ld d Valley H·1·gh School · 1v1·. '· <•r~nt<• 1c1,· •. H•1111t 1c11 Canada's Clyde Gray. e w ogs average 39 · s. Gurrc1. ""1v!1 6. GoslY cc11 1. The bout will be for the va· points per game in winning the George MacCall and Rolf ?lt~a~~~'V,:~~1k ?c,~''1 cch '· LIPk• cant North A m e r i c an Black Forest League title-an Engen clinched the match for Fros1>-Sosoll welterweight championship. eight-man football conference the Lagunans with a doubles No trcsh-so11h race. Muniz, who has only a draw where two linemen and a back victory over Art Rosetti-Don !iiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiii with Oscar Albarado to mar are dropped from the tradi· Pletz, 64~· 7·6· If it can be dOne his 16 bout record, is a former tional 11-man formation. Also r ord· g do u b I es national AAU champion and The main weapon in their triumphs f r guna were Lin-by telephone-we was a runnerup in the 1968 potent offense was sophomore da Cushing and Ro'ger James I . can do it. Olympic Games in Mexico Ci· Gary Washing ton of Denver. and James and Dick Dorus. .-- ty. He scored 31 touchdowns in· Singles winners were Pletz, .~ ~ .... Now a student at cat State eluding nine in one game when James. Harvey Klyce ....... (LA), the 24-year-old Mexican he also rushed for 410 yards in (Laguna ), Bob J ami e son Tet.pho11e A•-rl .. ,.,... American is managed by Jake a 5&-26 victory over Calhan. (Laguna) and Mary 935.7777 Hom of Lvng Beach. .1-~W~ashi~~·n~gto~n_:aJ~s'.llo~i~s~th~e:_s~t~al~e~R~a~d~a~b~au~g~h'..!(~F~oun~l:ai~n~V~a~ll~ey~):. ~!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!ll Gray, wbo bas lost but one professional contest, is the Canadian champion a n d recently defeated top rated Donato Paduano. Also co-featured on this pro- gram is Irish Mike Nixon, popular Southland mid· dleweight. Nixon will draw Sal (The Animal) Martinez ol Reynosa, Mexico, as his la. round rival. Matchmaker Mickey Davies is hopeful of finding a suitable opponent for colorful Ray (Windmill) White to round out the card. All seats well be reserved and priced at $7.50, $5 and $3. Five Marks Rewritten By Pirates Five Orange Coast College football r e co r d s were established Saturday night in tl;le Pirates' 30-10 victory over Mt. San Antonio. The win ran OCC's unbeaten string to 13, breaking the mark of 12 set in the 1962-63 geasons. And Bue quarterback Alvin White established single game passing and total offense reco rds. He passed fot 330 yards, breaking the old stan- dard or' 297 set by Paul Le- moine in 1967. ADULTS $2.00 JUNIORS $1.00 ' ( Children undet12 FREE with Portnts j . ~~----~~. ~ ... ..-- Pilot Pigskin PICKEROO Co-Sponsored by S..ut1t.Coast_tlm And The DAILY PILOT BE A PROPHET FOR PROFIT $10 SOUTH COAST PLAZA Merchandise Certificate For Each Winner 5 Winnen Every Week of Contest BONUS .. PRIZE Each Week's First Place Winner GETS TWO FREE PASSES · to the Pasadena Bowl from the DAILY PILOT Be a pigskin P.rophet. Play the Pilot Pickeroo game for weekly pri zes. Winners each week receive e $10 9ift certifi cate good as money at any S·outh Coast Pleie store or business. Each week's top winner will be in• vit ed, a long with a guest, to be honored et the annual South Coast Plaza Football Players of tht Yetr B~n­ quet. Watch for th is pla ye r's form each week in the DAILY PILOT Sports Section. Circle the team you think will win in each pa iring in the list of 25 games •nd send in fhe player's form entry blank or• reasonablt facsimift. Th en watch th• DAILY PILOT SJl'orts pagts for ••ch week'.s list of fiv e winners. -· RULES t. Sublflll tllt tnlry lllent llerow er 1 n.son•b1t flnlrnllt It II It ...,.. tnl (Oflt.lt, I. Slnd II 101 PILOT PIGSKIN PICICEllOO CONTEST, Sport DIJ,lrtnllllf, P,0, 811• 15'0, Coil• Mt11, CA. '2616, I. Olllf "" ..ih'y pet' ,.l'SOft Nth wek. 4. Enlrlt1 rn1111 111 dtllverttl Cbl' rn•ll er In ,_non) h OAILV PILOf •Ill<• bl' s p.rn. Thurld~y. s. Stlllfl Cont Pi.tu llld CAIL y PILOT ''"''°"" •n• TNtr lmf'!Mlflll9 f1mlllt1 Ml 111111111 lo .n11r. .. TIE 81U!AICllt 11.ANI( MUST ae JJILLID IN OJt •NntY IS VOID. •••••••••••••••••••• • ENTRY BLANK • • Circle '""" yo1 tt.lnt will wht tt.lt ..... , ,.,.... • • I home team It s.cend •N llstffl • • San Francisco vs Rams • • ucLA vs use • • • • Cal vs Stanford • • Washington State vs Washington • • Oreqon State vs Oreqon • • Ohio State vs Michigan • • Notre Dame vs LSU • • • • North Carolina vs Duke • • Dartmouth vs Princeton • • Harvard vs Yale • • Wisconsin vs Minnesata • • West Virginia vs Syracuse • • • • San Diego Mesa vs OCC r • Ria Flan do vs Golden West • • Chaffey vs Saddleback • • Laguna vs El Dorodo • • • • Mission Viejo vs Oronge • • Huntington Beach vs Marina • • Costa Mesa vs SA Valley • • Edisan vs Fountain Valley • • • •• -Corona del Mar vs Estancia • • Servite vs Mater Dei • • San Clemente vs Villa Park • • ·Newport vs Anaheim • \Vhite's total offense output was 342 yards, eclipsing the old standard of 320 established by Gary Valbu na in -the Gymnasts at CM Golden West tilt this year. Recel vers Doug Young and Slit THE NEW ociMESTIC I FOREIGN CARS.~FACTORY DISPLAYSM.PROTO·TYPES SPECIAL SHOW CARS...MOTOR HOMES &. VACAllON VEHICLES ALL Uf\IDEl ONI l taROOA • Westminster vs Loara • • • A gymnastics exhibition will Steve Monahan also have set marks. be given ..,py the Lakewood Y o ung caught two KIPS girls' team Wednesday touchdo\'t'O passes to run hi! at the emta Mesa High ovm. OCC career to';BI to 11. The old . e.,t••• record was nine -held by nasium. . ·-Young an~ Mike flunter (1963\1 '"tve1tt'"lr~atetr"n>r1 M<ma~an•r"1srynd• ·1n - p,m, with performances given rectplions against Mt. S.in by remlnlne gymnast.!J In all Antonio gave him 651 for the •• r d season. breaking Yo u n R ' 5 ' «r.oges 0 evelopment from mark of 474 established last btglnnera ~ elite. year1 I SPECIAL DISCOUNT TICKlTS AT YOU l FAVORITE ORANGE COU NTY NEW CAI DEALER,1'0UR NEAREST ALPHA BETA MARKET, THRIFTY DRUG STORE & IUlNA PARK CENTER. Tll l llEAICIR -My tv.U 111 ftlt llttl Mtt1t1r .. """' .,... • • lft Ill U tlll'fl' /I•! .. tboVt I• ...... .,,.,_,,,,., . .,,,, ... ., ..... .,. • • . ·-• • • a Add,.. • • • • City ZI• • : tllotte Sn : ···················~ \ ( ' J ~ty I I ••• . . ' • • Tue~Q', Novtmber l~._1971 DAILY PILOT J,, Theater Notes DAKY _Co·ast In:nndated By New Shows • EDWARDS CINEMAS Tuesday Evening NOYIMBllt JI ~°"• "•-lonJ "'""'' ())MMllU Huddy D kJtlC Nn"l Tom Snydtt' 8 P\tUI Doll't Dt IM Dll .. Q UC Nn1 Btntl, Schubtcll a C1J ""' "'" w .. m n. nllfltMa m I Dru• Cit Jtannll (JI In IM S,Otllitlt m ..,..,. Lld11 ., IWklett J4 CDDl•it lttport a•....., ... l:Jll l!I SIM Miii .... ~ IM:!ude Mtl Tonne, U urenct Huw, t nd Gunllt1 l<nud$tn, D FRANK 51,NATRA stars *In "A HOLE IN THE HEAO" ·IN COLOR! fJ Mtwlr. (C) (60 .. , Holl .. ltl• Hud" P1rt l (CG~tdy) '59-frink Sln1tr1, Edw11d G. Robinson, Eddie Hod11s, E111iwr Parker, C1rolyn Jonts, Thelm1 Riiler, 1<een1n Wynn. Ae1dfll'ly Aw1rd-wlnn!n1 film 1bout • foolloos1 widower w!th 1 12·ye•r· old son, 1 n11r b1nkrupt Ml1mi 11 .. ch hot1I, 1 banro-playln1 allow· rtr1 111d 1 m1tchm1kln1 1l1ter·ln· l1w. CJ) CIS NIWI Willer Clonkitt 9 NIC News John Ch1neellol m""1•--m"'""'""" IUl loolo.t fZn atll M..tllp aM Sdloo\I Wllhovt Fallutt mw tM Odd• ac ..... Am• m VMtnt ttortruera muc "'" 7:00 IJ CIS Ntws W1llu Cmnkltt CI) lit ,.... Smith, Rtasontr Cl m NIC NIWI John Ch1nctllor 11) Tl'llt!I or CeneqwncM l :JO 8 (i) Hftllll FM.o McG1rrttt ha' '8 hourt to try to prMnt tilt mur. der or tn unknown vktlm tided onl1 ~ blz1rrt clun 111d p00nt calls from ltll selt-proc11lmtd m1H1nl. Eddlt · Sh1nn1n, nottd Honolulu news11tper columnist 1~d husb1nd ol h &U Ryll!, pll)'l himstll \11 I iuest 1ot1. o a ms 1, a• "Qu1c1ts11ttt" C11ol llwr1nct 1uests IS tlle wlft ol 1 we1lthy .lip.1nest bu1lnmm1n whO&I myst1rlous de1th pub $1r11 on tht trtil of 1 murderer. 0 ABC Movie of the w .. k * Desi Arnaz, Jr., Chris Norris, Dan Dailey, Dina Merrill star O CJJCIJ !iDUC --... W~: (C) (90) "Mr~ llld Mn. lo JI loMI" (dr1m1) '71~ Arn1t JJ., Oiristophtr Horris, 0111 01111)', Din• Merrill, Jtssit Rort• Landis, Tom Bosley. A tMn•r• coup!• tries to 1d- just to th1 newness of 1 m.1rrl•1• tilt! t1m1 •bout bec.lllM or Ill Un· upeci:ed prt1n1nty, m DAVID WELCOMES GOV •• * RONALD REAGA~ m Drtld Frost Sl!Ow G~. Ron1!d R1111n ruests. ED (!j) The Advoc.lles "Shou!Q Con- aress Ban !Mnership· of Hind Gunsr· ill""" t:OO [il Thlrtf Minutes W'rth ••• f!) LI Cnit 0. M1risl Cnlcu CD RDMI fN1rl Y1ronka t:30 O ([)cannon A trirht ened wCH11111 comes 1bo1rd C1nnon's yacht to re· port th1t her mlssfnr brothu m11 be 1 mu~der Y+ctim. carol Rouen 1u11b. 0 l1]l m T1lt funny Side 1ht Funn1 Side of Eduutlon 1nd Siii· lmprovemant'' Adu 11 educe lion cl1uts, 1plittlde tests 1nd 1011 las· sons 111 spoofed by the c1tt of couplu. O luttr Ward Nftn (E) It T11tts I Tllitl By TOM TITUS Ct ~t Dellr ,lie! Slt U A new comedy, an old com- edy; a new drama , an old drama; an American classic, an Italian . satire -that 's the burgeoning lineup of live theater productions maltlng their debuts on the Orange Coast this week. Jn short, there's something for anybody. The new comedy is Woody Allen's "Play 11 Again, Sam." the sprtng production of the Lido Isle Players, opening tonight. The old comedy is "Under the Yum Yum Tree," opening Friday at the Costa li-1esa Civic Playhouse. · The new drama is "The Trial of the Catonsville Nine." bowing in Wednesday at Orange Coast College for a four-day run. Ttie old drama is BreCht's "Mother Courage," also opening Wednesday at l)C 1rvine with famed actress Lotte Lenya taking the title role . The American classic is Tennessee Williams' first play, "The G 12-s s Menagerie ," Thursday's opener at the San Clemente Community Theater. And Saddleback College has imported Pirandello's "Henry IV" for its fall production. also opening Thursday for three days only. All in all, il 's the heaviest week of the year on Orange County's theatrical calendar. with the six new sho\\'S joining eight others already on the boards, most of which are winding up this wetkend. UCJ's "l.1other Courage'' <launches the university's new . stage season in high gear with Herbert Mach~ directing the , Brechtian drama and Miss Lenya -widow of Brecht's collaborator, Kurt Weill, in the title role. She was coached in the ''?vtother Courage" role by Brecht himself. but will be playing the part for the !lrst time in America when she ap- pears on the Irvine stage. Eight performances o f "~1other Courage" \viii be presented at 8:30 in the Fine Aris Theater. A special benefit preview will be given tonight fpr the university's fine arts program .. Reservations 833- 6617. * "Play It Again, Sa m ' ' makes its e-0unty debut tonight at Lido Isle wit h Martin Fuchs playing the role Woody Allen wrote for him~lf. Tom Titus is directing the comedy. Barbara Garlich, Ja y McCor mick and William Mer- rell, the latter appearing as Hun1phrey B o g a r t , are featured in major roles in the Lido production. Compleling the cast are Gloria Soss, 1-loni c a Kezar, Pat ~-lcCormick. Beth T i t u s • Marge \Vahler, Ursula Miller and Heidi l\1axwell. "Play lt Aga in. Sam" will be presented at the Lido Isle Clubhouse, 701 Via Lido Soud, Nc\\·port Beach. in fi v e performances only, closing Saturday. Curtain is 8:30; reservations 67~. (JJ Drapt 0 Whtfa MJ Untt 9 P1t111u1 fD (IJJ llldl lo\rmll '1he B!1ck Psychics" I ~~-. OJ Monty Nish I 1 * John Ferzacca directs "The m 1""""' ID I DrM111 ot Jnnnlt (111 Thi CovM of Our TillllS fl) Miltofy II Mtdco IE Lt hrtru11 Ill'""~"'""" (!)Mantr1p 7:Jll I) QI Gltn Campbell Guests ire Pltul1 Cl1rk, Altt Johnson, Hal D1Yid ind Burt B1chtrtch. CJ Ill m lronlidt "If I Body Sits 1 Body" D CilCil GD T~t Mi d S1111d Whatntr H1p111ntd lo line H11tsr' Unc, 111tttt1n1 from 1mntsl1, wi n· dtn th• city 1fttr two men rob him 1nd llk1 his W1tltt. l1nt1 Teylof Sr. rvestr II DH• Glbloll. Cl) I Drll• of Jltnnlt IJ Mllllon s Movie: (C) ~I) •Doft1 Jlllt Stllld Thtrt" (CGmedyJ '68 -Robtrt Warner, Miry Tylar Moort. Glynis Johns, H1tve1 Jt:or· man. An Americ1n wrlt1r·1dvtn\urer 1mu11lln1 300 Swlu watcll ITIO'ie· mtnb Into P1ris Is surprhed whtn they btlh'l lo tick i nd Mtund 1l1rms. m Hot1rr's H11t111 m"""'' (JI) I'm Stwlltll~ arid Prqntrrt 10:00 0 CJ) (JJ Q) M1rcua Wiiby, M.D. "Tht Best Is Yet to Be"' A 11oup ol performers from lfollywood's aold· tn days 1ppe1r tn 1 story 1bollt rtsldtnts In 1 retirement home. In· eluded In !ht cast 111 Ruth Hussey, P1trlc Knowlas, Betty Bronson and B1rb1r1 Luddy. Myr111 F1hty tnd Robtrt Cllfke are 1150 featured, 0 Tlte llwtnlffl m NINI Putnsr:, frshm1n @ Sptci1I 11 the Wetk Et) Maltlrpltcc Tblatr1 ''The G1mb- bler" Dlmt Edith Evins sttn In a two-part drtrnatil11ion of DolloJeY· skY• novel. @!I Tip Tip 9 Roll" GI•• (!!) Fnllftl Ill.._ 10;!0 0"" -......... ,.,, trey C1mbr1df1 welcomes Dick Jen· sen, Corbett ' Barker, 1nd Dtvld Brenner. OMonty Nash ())At Issue ®J Sin OiflO l"lnor11111 (D Newt 8111 Jahns a:l D Rtlrato tie Dorlan CflJ @D Call of the Wnl u;ao l!J 0 <II III "'"' O ®J !llNm @ M1nhll DIUOll fD I SJf tlAL I Thi CUr11 el Los 0 (}) G) NIWS Feltz: 60 Years of Studio II 111111· f> Movie: (Cl "'Did Yoa Htlr !tit A TRUE·LIFE ADVENTURE ENDS TOMORROW •SO. COAST I Cnsta ~esa 546--2711 o CIHEDOME 20 llranie 532-3328 W!llO•lS ·l'10•1:Qf·t·~ M 1.:•11.0D• I. U · 0'11· 1:°' • 1:11 Ill.IN.: ·J:U ·4'll· l ·OD·t·" Trial of the Catonsv ille Nine'' at Orange Coast College with Ken Falsetto starring .as Father Daniel Berrigan and William Verderber playing his brother. Philip. Linda Falsetto tak es the role of the former nun, l\1ajorie Melville. Others in the production, based on the 1968 draft records burning incident, are Bob Wentz, Thoma s Roman, Peter Bland, Doug Maclean, Mark Koba, John Childers, Terri Garrison. Scott Crane, Pamela Hall, Margo.ret Moore and Jeff Muller. Four per(ormances o { "Catonsville" are scheduled, Wednesday through Saturday ' in the OCC auditor i u'm. Admission is free. * Tennessee Williams' "Glass :l\iena~erie" is being directed NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES hurted look 11 tht history of KCITs Ont About thl T1tv1llrr1 Sll1sltdyr ntw Sunsd Drive lludios, form11 (CGm·""' '68--llb Diller, Bob SAT.·SUM. & HOL. '""11 '"1 2 ·l:•·S:117-l:U •11:» home of Mono1nm 1rtd Al!led Art· Denver, JOI ftrnn. l._:::~=:~~~~I~~====~:=~ lst1 Picturts. m T1 Ttll thl Truth a:l LOI lneffJ d1 h ralvl11o ID M1ntnip 1:00 0 Mowlt: (C) (lhr') "Cllt" ind 11:30 IJ (I) MtlY Crlffirr Dells" (mus~!) '55 -M1rlon 0 0 iD JohRnJ Ctl10ll Br1ndo, Je1n Slmmw, Frink Sin· O MW: ''Dtllh T1t11 1 Holkl'1" 1tr1, Vivian Bl1lnt. Mlulon1ry 1irt (dr1m1J '34-Fredrlc Much, Eve!1n meets a Bro1dw1J 1ambl1r, propri· Venible. elor ol rloa!lna cnip a•me. 0 rn 00 m Dic1I Clvett Cl) Tbb Is four Ute m Movie: ''Th1 ltlt C1111r11 Apley" (comedy) '47-Rontld Colman, Pea· m Tnrth or Con11qu1ne11 i"i Cummins. ID The Ylfllnl111 OJ Movie: "Thi Purple 1i1n(" (mys· illJ M11quertd1 tery) '60-Barry Surllven, Robert ID Lt Coll Juzpd• Bl1k1. EI.!) Nino 9 For i\tlulb Only Wednesday DAYTIME MOVIES l :GD m "Mt111btf ol tht Wlddln(' (dt1· m1) '53-tlhtl W1ltf1, Juli1 H•rril. !i:ll) 0 "Surtlt (Mpmt' (drlml) '34 -M1rien1 Dietrich. Sim J.tfle. 0 (C) "Hmen hWI, Mr. Am· so11" (dr1m1) '57--Debonh Kerr. IO.-Ga Cil (C) "Sodoll Mid lollomh" P1rt 1 (drsm1) '63-Stewart Grin· 1er. Pier M1el1. 1:00 O (CJ "Donovan's Rttr-(comedy) '63-John W1y11t, Oorottiy l1mour. m "Tokyo Jot" (dr1m1) '4S- Humphre1 Bo11rt, Floience M11ley. 2:0D m "lttraytd Women" (drama) 'S5 -Torn Drake, C1ro!1 M1lh!l'll. J:OO (J) (C) ''C111ttrt Strow tn C.rth" Conclusion (d~1m1) '53-Ch1r1ICH1 Htston, Betty Hutton. 0 (C) "Mlsslulppl liimbltl" (dfl' m1) '53 -Tyfl!llt Power, GOOD SEATS AVAILAIU FRIDAY & SATURDAY • 11 pm tommy The Roell 0 r• by Tha Wlla In Repartory with TOMMY Tharntan Wlldar's OUR TOWN DAILY PILOT THE HELPFUL GUIDE ' FOR TODAY'S HOM EM AKERS ' ' SOMETHING for EVERYONE ~ C!~BR!iTiES friday • saturday • sunday tl\OM 'nAffLt fl! TUESDAY -WEDNESDAY ,·THURSDAY "La Noche de Esclavos" MONDAY MARIACHI MUSICIANS • Complimentary Hor5 d'oervres • DBL Cocktails • Singing Guitarist 4 till 9 . 1 • Sanora Style Mexican Food • Steaks • Luncheon • Dinner 'Til Midnight NITE OWL BREAKFAST Midnight Tll 4 A.M. ivC.HILI .PEFFER CORONA DEL MAR Reservations 673-8950 3201 E. Pacific Coast Hwy. OCC'S BERRIGAN Ke" Fal1etto by Richard Andersen at the Sa.n C I e m e n t e Community Theater. The autobiographical clran1a opens Thursday for three weekends. Playing the role or Amanda will be Carole Dahl , \vilh Tom Taliaferro cast as her son, Tom (Williams hi ms e If ) • Sharon Huesinkveld appears as the fragile Laura , with Jim Spiers playing the gentleman caller. '"The Glass Menagerie" will be staged Thursdays through Saturdays at 8:30 in the Cabrillo Playhouse, 2 O 2 Avenida Ca br i 11 o, San Cle1nente. Reservations 492- 0465. * The romantic c o m e d y "Under the Yum Yum Tree" is, the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse 's second production of the season, with Pati Tambellinl directing the tale of two semi-platonic room· mates. Debbie• Ensign and Ron Long are the lovers keeping each other at arm's length. Ray Scott plays the lecherous landlord l~ogan while ~tary Sullivan completes the small cast as the girl 's aunt. Three weekends of pro- duciion are planned for ''Yum Yum Tree" at the Community Center auditorium on the Oran ge County Fairgrounds, Costa Mesa, with an 8:30 cur· tain. Reservations 834-5303. * Pirandello's "Henry JV" (not to be confused with a si milarly tilled work by Shakespeare) opens a three- ptrformance run Thursday night at Saddleback College. Drama instructor Bonni e Cogbill is directing. . f\.1ichael Stoddard plays the modern man who envisions hlmself a German ruler, with support from J udie Pieper, Kim Ba<es, BUI B•ldw<n, Dan Mulldorfer, Paul Barber , Richard Cordery and David Kleinberg. "llenry IV" will b e presented Thursday througll Saturday at 8 o'clock 1t the college, 2800 Marguerite Parkway, Mission Vie jg. ReservaUons S37·0'700. * While six theaters are opert· mg new productlo ns, seven others are pulling the curtain on old ones (including Lido Isle, OCC aRd Saddleback wh ich run for one week only). Other shows taking their cur- tain calls this weekend JOre the ·Laguna fiioullon Community Playhouse's ' 'The Boy Friend," the Santa Ana Com· munity Playe rs' "Stalag 17," the Garden Grove Ci v i c Theater's "Never Too Late" and the Buena Park Players' '"Come Blow Your lforn." .Final perfoi:1nances of "The Boy Friend" at Laguna are being staged tonight through Saturday under the combined direction of llap Graham and Frances Rafferty Baker. Doris Shields is musical director and Lila Zali haOOles t h e choreography, Lana \\'alker, Steve Plum- mer, Blanche Mickelson, Otto Budd, Constance Crane and Lee Millar are among the featured players in the old· tin1e musical comedy at the playhouse. 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach. Curtain is 8:30; reservations ~94-0743. * "Stalag 17" winds up Friday end Saturday at 8:30 at the Players' Theater, 500 6th St., Santa Ana. Dick Langseth directs the wartime comedy· drama wllh Jim Williams, Paul Gerowitz and Bud Weiss in major roles. Reservations 531-9738. Also closing with two stag· ings Friday and Saturday is "Never Too Late" by the Garden Grove Civic Theater, with John Craig directing. Andy and Mary Helen Cleary star at the Pacific High School lvceum with an 8:30 curtain. Reservations 537-4.200. Three performances o f ''Come Blow Your I-lorn" wrap things up ror the Buena Park Players, at 8 o'clock Friday and Saturday and 3 o'clock Sunday in the city's recreation center, 8150 Knott Ave. Jerry Weiss directs with John Loughman and Michael Fiore featured. Reservations 828· 0331. * C.Ontinuing their I o n g engagements this weekend are four other productions - "Tommy" and "OUr Town" at South Coast Re pe rto r y, "Arsenic and Old Lace" al the ·'""'C~ILI .PEFFER lloliday Party Reservations Non> Available tor Groups , Up to 80 Persons 3201 E. PACIFIC COAST HWY. CORONA DEL MAR 673-8950 NOW -INDS TUESDAT ~~·" loMrt Mttcll•M OF '42 TrGYor Hawar41 -~ "RYAN'S tlll=:!Gil =---~ -DAUGHTER" .ALSO Sllaw11 af t p.111 • AUlllllY ALAN HIPllUllN ARMIN ~ == WlllT 1111111L ---· STARTS WEDNUDAT -·~~"'; COH wffiil'ifi"'iiND ·--Jloot CAMl:.--.. t. ~0.11.l~ril.... ~-. .,._tne11 .. -·-.,,. Aht Acafftnv Award Wl111Mf "Th• Racing Seine" "WA111 l lltDS'.' BARGAIN MATINEI at 1110 ,.m. -. Evary W•d. 1 p.m. "G•• Wlfll T1-WJH" ''" latr.1ti1MJ1t1 at t '''"' anlr A4ult1 1.00 Huntington Beach Playhouse and "liay Fever" at the Long Beach Community Playhouse. "Tommy" is being staged tonight through Thursday at 8 o'clock and l''riday and Satur· \day at 11p.m.11t SCR, while '~'Our Town'' ls the Friday th.rough Sunday fare at 8 ,<l'clock. Performances are at the Third Step Theater, 1827 Newport Blvd., C.Osta Mesa . Reservations 646·1363. . coon ••• "' •-""'' • ,.._, .......... ,.,,, HELD OVER· 41H BIG WEEK CAND ICI l l!WlN • PffER IOllf 'IR.BASKIN W OllTSIAIDllll ttRAOIOI RINNY HOW LOV£RS START AS.,, I " ' ' Ron Albertsen d i r e c t s "Arsenic amt Old La~" at lluntington Beach , with Bobbi Murphy and Katheryn Offill sharing the spotlight \\'ith Tony Castle, Hank Sorkin, John Phillips, Debor ah "friends" liacket l and John Hensley. Performances are Friday and Saturday at 8:30 Jn the Barn, fRI TECHNICOLOR. 2110 Main St., Huntington 1~;J~;~~~-iil Beach . Reservations 536--8861. ·I Finally, there's '• Ii a y Fever." playing Friday and Saturday at 8:30 under the direction of Alex Koba at the Long Beach Community Playhouse. 5021 E, Anaheim St., Long Beach. Barbara Crooker, Denis Thomas, Ron Filian and Randy Keene are featured . Reservations (213) 433,()Sja_ ({'(\'I• ........ .. ~m• ~.~!; •-r. ~ COIONA OEL MA' T'HC L.OVS •TORY I P'"OM D••Ma"C AMlTSllLI ' ALSO PLAYING diary of a mad hou-wlfe.i a franl<. perry film ~ ·----"'-- l~!T~.'~!~ HELD OVER I" Sllow Stem 7 p.•. Ca11t. Su11de '""" 2 ·"'· w111111• or' .t.c1d1111y Aw1rd1 Htkl Ovtr UNCLE I;EN ' Saturdays in The DA ILY PILOT - ._ ... ,.,. .... ,, .... .llCI l.fMMOI SANDY IJEMlll$ lllll.SMll STDIY TIE DUHIF·TOWES {gj ·~ .. -.. ·-,..._ - • • •••c" ••~o. •• •1..u• • • MT. CN•t _,. 41 M • 01•-rw¥. M 1·IMIOG • MU,.1"1.,0f ON •l.o.cll 1 ST TIME SHOWN TOG ETH R James Garner t Skin Game Plus-Rorrmy Berggren ln "Joe Hill" , • • , rctPI«» .. u..,,,_.,_. F.~~~:1 ·HELD OYER· • • •• • -; -~ 'lo Vontuo Rtdgrave • Oliv•r Rrltd ~· " ~ KEN RUSSEU 'S FllM ,,. ™!P.~115' i. ·-WtmtrlnaAKi11M)'~~~ ALSO lST RUN ® "DEEP END" A story of i<M>. Rlrood l7j David Lean Ryans "-i Daughter fi':8:m liMl't>U1 I ,,, ~ ~ •• ' ~e ~"'=[ ,,......,. (£()- .-SNWiw..ES l!IB "'" • ALSOSHOWINGAT • lJIWAIDS CINEMA VIEJO MISSION YllJO • 130-6ffD Skin Gaine ! P!u1°Mlthat.l Yo'rlt In "ZIP PlllN" (GP) . . . ... .i,;;', -•• . ... . ' . ' . •• • • • I • , . ' ... . . ., . . .............. 1 :. ••• ! ' • • • • • .. • • • • ~ . . ' . . . . . .. I • " • ' .. o . . . . .. \ IWLV PILOT ··Barlior BlgJa Cmaeert LEGAL NOTICE °'""' .. nll IUPll'IMI cou•T 01" OtlT&tlO JaM HOTQ Of' &ALI 01' •IAL NOtN:• .. TllUITI•• ..... NllTICI ,. c••DfTM• ,1111 HOtil9U• Juoe1 w11.P't10 '·LAME NOTICI °' IHttMTIOM TO l"IOf'••rr AT l'llV&TI u.1.1 • T.L .,.., n~ , 1u,1111101: cov1T ol' 'Utt, -\.OCA~ ~~=.:ro r:~ .. =~ll Cl .. TI ~HCUk!TY '*ITllllllT "''°''ior C-~~ ~r-et C•llMPN ~!:"::.=.." ~ ':.:C1!i':.: ~~·c:11W.1.::':':ai:' f: .,...., ""5"' HY DI Mw ... 111•. A.0 NOT1c~S.:-'~~·L...-,..i'o'-•N '-"' ot Q[_~-M ftl'I' ..,oilit .. T"*-·llMilr .._.. I .... ,..... ' ;t•~TW'ft:M: OOMNA STELV. RAVIN, ~:...::..!::" =-~~ :~c,j~~°:::r~ L~i 1~::~::. k=·~ t!~:: ~-=-!9.:= :,-..,'';.,11111f:~i = r::c.. tf !ATHIM W, l"OR~ll!'• •- .... 111.onfr ..... llll(HAllO ,AUL II.I.VIN, erv~ ManMn111 !Midi COl/lllf °' l " HAGE llMAN. •I'll •• LAURA L. N•. lMOl, !fl ... t'lOO. HM "' .. Of• NOTICE " HEREIV 01\llN It NW 1 lt~I. ,i,~11~in, St-It DI t.Ml..-.;i.. !Nol 1 W<\lll• lllAGERMAN, Dtc11'90. Jld1t llte"fl l(I l!lf etl'k• .. 1111 COlllllV CtMllllA If IN 11ow<t Ml'\H ~ Harp . D~~ Superb LEGAL NOTl<:E OltDElt ,., ln!frHI It lllOUI II lie c.: ... ,tct In< Otl>f Motke 1, llefwbY ~... "'-' 1M ""'.,°" ot dl'M" Cl\l!lf~. 1111• .. n..t Ill --P1111ln11 clilfN IN1ntt ,,.. VPl'f' Iii. 1POll(ltlllfl ol lllt Ptt!ltOMf' OI' Ind trio\ttct IO •n.intWlt On.It Ctrn: \l-tl1N'CI wm NII II ll(i¥111 ult:, Oii Ot Ctlltol'flll WIU. SELL. ,\T, l'UILIC 11M 91: .... 1' ll't ~ to th1 """"" , f for .,. °""" 1or WblllllflloMI ....... ~, on ..,.,., &ecllrW l'arlV """°"" butlntt• ac1 1/11r ,.,. 1tlfl N' of M,..111'11111'. Im, 11 AIJCT'OH TO HIOH{St llOOlfJI !'"Oil ffill\ 1M ~tr, vtV(lllP(, I~ lht lffl« 'Bf TOM BARLEY i '"" •• , ....... ~t., "'' Ntlllet II l't11llon ll•H• (t J•!G E1tl ).uh ~trfft Vt•llOft' Ille ollltt OI !i••t J. JofltlltOll, 2GI So. (;A$H l,.YI~ ,, 11-.. M~ ... l•wfllj., ... """ .. ~ '"°"'' ... 1111M c .. n.... Ollllt °""~·Ill .. .,, I ... ' ~· l't!lllClll IOI' 01 ....... e' llY: COi.iniy ot L• .&-1•s. '"" ' oi l•U Av.i>IM, 410 UnlOll ll•llk Pl.,t-~ ~ ~ \l:!W"4 $1Uftl •• tht N•lll I• ... ..-1 ~. ""'"' ~ -flU•Y "'1.1. critic" -wond-~ -., •• ,...Ol t•lltol .~ ltdlCt of ll'lftt .,ocffdll\Q C•lllornl~ . • Pt..,_ tllfl, C.,nl'I' ·fl L~ ~ltl, lftftl .ntr~• ft ... ClRflll' C-IY lM""'._ lo ltlec under\!~ 11 'Liit JW.O g-&I• i I"' 11'9 llfWlllHr k"°""ll 11 ll'lt Or1n1• Tiit pr0o.r!'( 111 'l'IJl<h !Pit S.curltY $111• of C1lllor!ll1, lo tllt "1ttle•I ~ lltJI COii~ .. ,.. 11• * C1vlc-C.n1• ""!fl_. #td Tn,111 c..,_,.. bJ Soliltl ' diY' nigh{ is he Wended' hill c .... , 011lv Pl!Ot. llllM 11t1rll'lt r-ld 11'11 1111 ttl Ill IHI er lf'lt Iii 1 1 11 llltlo.,., Ind WOl,.ct !O C011llrm1tlon 'l>Y O.lv• WQl"tt....,.....tr W _, IM> 111 tilt kflM $tf9'(. '--t A~W.., ~llfotfl!I . • I '"'"'" • ...,.. .,.,. '"''· ""' "" 1,.,~,K. • """ '.' _,.;,:;.<;:"'"> ,', "" ..,w•• ,_,, •" •• ""''· •r.• •"" ci. • "~' •~ • .,.,,;,.,,. ;11 ,,., .. "'" ~"" " .. •'"' ~ ""'""' • wot and mlser~bl• woy lo-the 1 Jrltrtl« o1 ll'1 t1ti... 1no P,rllllOft tor Plllt-'ktt W!Hlllff; orttUIPl!orl 111,. 111,.mf • ulll· df<:••.-11.J:llil lmt .i 1~1 .. 1M ln1trMt Qlfl~ .. IN -IM -..,\ff'IM Ill 1tt n•111ttt1 ,...t1lfll11t , N-Mrt Harbor 'Hlgb •·•-t , Dlverc... tllfcl, ..,.,. llPO" tw1!4,.. e.,ni..1 of dtb•or ind IH• K'l!l!Nd llWtlllorY duth ,...., 111 .t~ •!tl'll, tit .. •)'Id '"''"" bf1t1 11¥ 11 llf'IOlr ,..uhll ·Detll tf 'I'"'•' In ,. m1 11111t .•' t11d•.......,,, w1111111·IWf "':r' ~ 1 lO!' ttwi ,..11c1111; •HiawnMI .Jlltt• ll •!Id 1 , ""' "" "'''' " ••a.ti ""4•ttd ri1t 1t1e 1,.,r,.,. .~,.-111 .. w cfNfttl ,.,, -IM ~ *"' 11r.t Mlkltllll .<.11'11• 1udU:arlum how two . hJrplsts 1. '' 1$ Oll:OERfD 11111 IV\ll(t " • I tit , lcK tect ~ ' ' ICC~ ~tel 'l'I' _,,non ol' ~ fW lltlftw! ... mlll!~lllN ... ~ ... ,, .. Tf9Ct "'"~ ' • -.J.1 ....... lbl ·''d ... I tf'W "°"" ., '"' Motk• °' ll'ttlllon '"" ~~~vi N~ 'e•ICt\i' c.:.! ':., :~o" ' ot11tr 1!1111 of in lddlllO.C til rh'il .,rn1d 111t~•t ,,.w,. ~-1 • • ,..,.. ~ o.ttll Oclirali.r n :1m -:-l."IUJV. ~ Y....,. wrs lnter,st , ,._tt•'t :'I tor 01w0t~ ir,. .uollshlnt tt>o 5111~·o1 ciutotnl•, 1 ...., ii.yi:'neu 11,:.:n"';; oe<••ted. 11 lilt """ ot •nth, In tMI 1, "°"' ie, ,..... 3t'tt ,. lntfvli.,., ., Ml•· TUii -tliw••ll« i nf · of •n audience for ult enlirt: toll-I~• nDllCt on -GC(l llClll ln !flt: Thii GUjld D•utr NI t' 'all lht (frltl~ retl Pf-fl) 11!WI' In "'-(1111.-MHf, rlClll'lll II' O•lftte TnlJI C_.,.111'1' t • '°"'""' CMll O.lly 11'11111 •• -IP-• Tiit •forfllld ~;.flY 1f1ftuctliwl 111 Courll' of . Or•nt1t. s1111.ef ,(alllor11l .. C~lt' Cl llfOlllll. ~ ••mrlvr~d.ll!t Wi M Vtntng. . I clrailllld In 1111 (ll'f (II N-1 1"(11, be cansu'""'•I"' O<I OI ittw IN 2'111!: "''tll;ult•I~ ffKllbed 11 lallOWI, 1-11: N ~lrffi idctreH nd -toll'WMft el thl ~ 11.rnlf 11«.ldt~I The•insln.un!nt•ill one ef thf C&l/fotf111, u .... 111111 tlft IOOCI tnd 1111· .. IY Loi tlf'Hll Ill) In TrAc:I ,..,, sn. ff\IW""" II ILLll o. •llT••· . ' 'fldlfll ,_i(, .;.· tM NDlll;t. P11l!lon Brll~;,~~rv'.. ~~·~ 1n:: E~::"Jt~~ V•l•ntl• P1•k Ttld II~· Mii ""'"' o.w1.,!o •IMl'v•·11~· ~J~ ~: PllAlllCll M."ll•ITlll, mcqt •beautiful ever de.vised ,1...., '"" ""It'°" tor DI-Cl -"" Strttl, Vt..-talllorfll•: In 1'"111 ........ tt. r«ercltll 1" look 11• P••• n .. FMtr1I A ... nw. GM•• Miu. C.llfor 0 nll . • •LLIS 0 • lll~YI• and that thought alway• ... . •-*"'; ~ lat IU 11:.-11 lo "" SK\lff!!I P1rl 1',11Ctll1n4H1Ut ,,.,. •• rKor•• '" Orlntf The .,.,.~ Tl'llt1" diKlllml -......... II, ..... • 1111 T ... IUl'lllMI C.OUll' OP ON'Al!IO 1U butll'WU ,..,Ms .... iddflSilt \IHll ~ CO\llltf,• C•lilornll. Mir• CllYW'*"lT llallllli'f'"" N'IW •roc. ... t.C-•" lht fl1'-.t ...... ,.. If.ii"'.... curs to me on the all toio rare • ~.~-TWE-',"...,' oo,,,'"'~,n,t:Lv. llAVLM, 111e o.bloi tor 111t 11>r" Y••" 11tt ,.,1, = "'::.~:..J!" J'11"'""' "'~"""'· ..,,,,......11141 •IMf' -H•l-tlltt. H ~:1 ~,~· *" occasiom whtrrit Is allowed.to ~·• • t .. D .. UL 11 .. VIN, 1•1· ume • · MW, ~ .... tln. , • lltSIOl!de"'· 0 ·ATEO: Movtfl!W ,, itn. suaJl!CT TO:· Cuntnt I'••• 1, •aid MM .in 111 m .... ""' wltMut Allw•,. tv •-• emerge from the depths of an MOTICE TO; ltlCHAllO l'AUL ll:AVIM l!lrut1tw!I DrllfCclmN 1 c1v1111nt 1, cOf'dll lont, rlllrlcllOlll. C!NeNllll Ol'Wltfllllh' fllpr .. tf/I lml!IH l'ublltNd DrtllN Coetl Dt!IV l'l\Of, or•• tr nd '' -,. A Ptllllon !Ot Oh1orct 1nd !of t l!......,Y. 5Kurfltl Par!Y " rfttf"'•tloo\1, t1'9ht.. f!tihtl al W.,y, rttt rdl"' lltM, I~ 1 1 t t t I 1 ,. , .; .iM"tfl\llOf l. 9, ,., 21, H11 tf~11 ~11"S a I 3\W ha 0 W n •!'Id .for m1 r111-nu, 11"4 1or cu••DllY .,..; JQPll'I , WMdlmlfl ••-"" "' re<oro. t11ClltMl'•nttt. ,_ ,..,. 1111 ,...,.1111in. uniq~ touch of grace a n d m1ll\l1111rw:1 M lhl 11111111 d>llcr. ll:lla Dlrt<t;." Fl1M1'Cltl kn'lcts T1~tt, rtn11. ~r•!111t 1 lfttlnlentl'CI pr!N:i11t wm if 1111 11111• MCUttd 1rf ••Ill LEGAL NOTICE 1o. .. ..-to•~ -~· ltfll'l\IN ~lll1tl. Ind ftlr tollt hit bffn lllUHSWIG ORUG CO, tllllel""'' lnll 1'"°"111"'1 .. IMU•l lKI DHd el Tr111t, l•Wll: m,n1.6f, wlll> ' e,,..,,. .. fC pr ..... ~Jn&S· ' prHtlltecl b1 Dor>nl Sltlll ll1vln. YO\I ,.., 111\1'»1~ "'"" -llblt N "" PUrtllaW tNll bl lnlt•HI thtr-· It·~ ... .-10 Mn. IAll ... Gran~. we had tw; 0 PM'!' lfislOKI 1M l'tlJllOll 1t "" Mlle• ol v ... -, C•MI. 1llttSI oror1ttd II " "" ~·t• ol r~ordii.. .. ldv1nc:t1. II • ..,. • .,........ IN"""'" Nkl NO'flC• ,. , .... ,... ··-.,... but Id th IM lOtll ll:t11l\lr11r of lhl• COii•! •I "" Attll" Jtlul Wlldllftlll COllV ... lllCI. °"'° ol' T11111. ,_ ~ lfld -111•t IU:U pl _..,... •• • cou • • y Caurl HPUM, lr1nlfonl. Ol\llflo, II 'fllll Publhfltd O·•~ CNtl Dilly Pllol Tiie •••mlMlklri DI HIM, recordl ... of,, tllt TfUINf 11111 .... lrvth ''''* \~~~:1:: c~«t.~:~.:r .. ~=: possil!ly ... overJ.'i>mt: the (n· ;1v. 11'° :::1~ or,:.,-,~.t'"!:; Movtrnbtt u , 1971 J064.1J ~:v::i,""!:.:,y ..!~~~M ~:~ bYT:lcl ~:,.;'~ Id 0..0 " THI COUNTY Of' O~N•I :1.Tieoi'i. obyipus Uniilatiorus APPPffllCI ... AM-or A111wer .... ••PlllM °' -'11llfl. • T . ... Jll. ... ,..,. • d ··-.r:.: ldnd' • !.1 Counl .... -MTl!lon """'' bt 'deflv•rtd'ln LEGA.L ,NOTICE Thi 11ndtrtl~f!ecl ,e,......1 lllf rftlol 1110"'~ ti,:r,.:~!n"l<"::'""".,..,.o!:'uw:: Etlllt If ROIE"' LLOYD kEMILE. a eVI~ ·~ft:' • UJ. ~ ICCOfClllKt wl!M Ille ll:Ylei ol c rl I relKI .,,, 1n4 •II bld1. . " Otl I ••• DKttHd. gram thJi •· Harbor Area ' def111M of A1>Plltlntt or"""""'' ~llll.WI~ , Ttrm• al Siii t1lh In liwWI inonev 11 ~ 11111 ind OllM(!Cl ,tor S.le, ind I l)IOTICE 15 HellflY GfVfN tt Ille • • 'h-• not bt .,tllltd 19 nollc• DI .~, turll'ltt 1•11 MU ""' v 1111ec1 si.m °" e001flrmit1011 ot u 11, 5,1\"'f'i:~:!t~r~.=•1111 :;: E~ct~n 110 erldltor• o1 IM 1'°"9 ·"'"'·" .d.c;ed...t Commuiuty, ""nculs Msocta- .,-ocete1h'i'l1. A CVllf o1 "" Petition ,..., su~O.~fo1111 T~o~::o~~o•,~11 Te,. "' t tnt of 1m1111nt l>ld la bt o1 0.iiull •l'ICI l!lact~u 1, r.11 1 01 : thll Ill """""' Nvlnt c111,...._1t•l"'fl Ille Uon hacfa. right'to. expect'! N"lce el l'tlllton wm bt mtllld 11 vou dt-11111 wllll bid. . , ordeel 111 • o 11ld do<-..nt •t• 1Mulrtd to Ill• 11\em, -.A. . on rttt1PT o1 , ,,., 111 e11 rnuist iddrtWM s;~~Ecg~,..cf'vu:~":a':,.~°..~ Bids or otttrt· lo bt ln .... 111n11 1nct wm •~•rt¥ l• .!:',.;..,11"" Wfltrt lilt NII w11h 11tt ntet1t1r'f YOUC.llert. In "'' aHlct 1111?Se musings ·Were , soon «i lh• 1b0¥1_ 1Mmld loi11 110!'911tr1r. Nt. A·J"" bt ·rKtlvtd •' lllt •lortuld oHlct t i 1ny Dtlt: Navembtr's lf11 " !Pit ci.rk d Ille iboVt i nttn..i court, 0 ' d ispelled inlo the damp nigbl &ALO.CHEY, MOOlll! lo HAll:1 , llmt ellt• lht llnl 1>11blk111.., h1re01 •nd FEDEAAL NA'l'lONA ' lo Jll".tWll tl\lm, with 11'1t M<ttP"!' • Ntl111'1 llrctl • Etlllt GI ROGER s. POOLE. 11.o beklr• d1l1 ol 1111. Ma.TGAGE .usoc:il°TtO~ VOIKflttt. to !Mt Ulld41ftl•ntd •• lllt otllc• when Longs treth and Escosa ' .been made. The intttplay achieved by t!iese artists Is aomtUUng that hls to be beard to be lielteved •od theh• arrangements of at t•st two works, 011 that varied .. prog_r•m gave U;ils critic a n6w-inslght Into an instrument that must not, on this showing, be. alloftd to languish. In the 1 t>Aher regions of , a n y emembl~. '-ecltnl,::ally, the Bach Largo •t¥' the gloriously deli•ered Handel r.oncerlo in B. Oat . were the pick of the program. Both works en}oyei:l flaw.less remlings and the uncanny liakon between Longstreth · anf Escosa was never ,more evi~ent than in their in- 'terPre tation of the 'three niovem·ents in the Mandel acore. B6t this critic's personal preference was 1for t h e J?ebossy trio that followed the Bach and Handel; the wistful, trerwindously appealing "La fille 1aux cbeveux de Jin", the detply m oving and everifeen ·'Clair d.e . Lune" and the joyous "En B ateau" thiat com- pleted the ttUog1. Here was all the justlllca· tion we ,needed f o r a night with our duo harplstl and their interpretat.lon w a 1 ideaUy suited to the message of the Debussy worlc. Both artists a r e well aware cf th~ need for a little public education !n terms of the novelty o! their combination • That is why they alway s devote a portion of their prD- gram to the role of the harp in the nineteenth cent u rrty (Longs treth) and the pa played by the harp in the twentieth c entury (Escosa ). \Ve learned a valuable \esson 'long befor e the pro- gram reached that point never try to define man's limitations in any instrument until you have seen exactly what he can do with it. Bravo , Lon!lslreth a n d Escosa. ar1nllorll, 011t1rio. '::"i.e:I ROGER STANLEY POOLE, Ottld NO~llnber 4, 1111 ., Slhf TtllSIH .. flh •ll•M~I: COHEN, STOKKE .. quickly demonstrated their $OllClklr1 lllf' Pll!l!Dllt• t i . EGBERT T. HAGEltMAN. • Mon 1' OWEN !l PGJ , un NOl'll'I l•MdWI¥. Wllfnd I U.M • NOTICE " IS HEREBY GIVEN to "" lllO kr-n •• Aythort '..iM:f'" $u!l t )tJ, $11111· ....... Citlfornl• WOI, unique-ability to adapt to their Loctt J....;" 'c 0 el'ldllort ol 11'11 lbovt Nmltd dt<Mtnl E T HAGERMAN u I . IMhll'f •"""' lt ""' ,,.,, ol bull-•-" "" J> ·11· .• IALLACMl!Y M00'1tl. a MARY 1""1 111 ..er ..... 1 htvll\9 c111mt 1111ni1 1"' E~f<!~,.,,. ii•"" wni , btl •MJt undtrtlfM'll 111 111 m•lrtn .,..r1.1 .. 1,.. HI own n 1ant rend1llon a series , • ,., 1 .. '""'· • 1o1,1c1 oet~r 1•• r....il1td to 1111 1t1em, o1 .. 1c1 d.ctcttnt " "*' Or•"" COHt ~11V lllol, ·"" .,, .. , <iA ·~;a dtefdtnl, w11111ft 11111• of scores that were never ;. ... lr111Htr4. Oll1rll. w.111 Ille MUtUry 'o'OIKMrl, 1,. '"' ol'llct ll:Oll!•T J. JOHl'ISTOlll NOVembtr f, ,II, .21~ 1'71.._ .... ,, ""°"Ill• '"" IPl4! l)nl publlc1llOll .. 11'11• ·A~ded f h h nd •• 1111c11 .... w 1111 ~.iltilnor o111>e ctttk ol 1111 abo>'e ...,111wo courl', or 111 """' L•kl •vt....., notlu . """'' Pf t e. arp a would PubtllMd Orlflllt CM•i OtH'f Piiot. lo prHll\I lhtm, wlth lh• ""'"''"" ... Unllll 111111 ...... . LEGAL NO'MCE °''" H!WftftWf' 4, 1971· have ltd· their composers to l>l,,....,,.f "· "" )Otf.11 vDUdltft, lo IM Yl'lcltnltnfd •• !ht ollk t ,..uo. .... Ctlll. t1111 .EllNEJT L. IROWM • . . I ol "'' lllOt.,..,I! flOBEl!T~ON, HOWSE It ... ,_, fir 1!1ec11W ,. ........ na Admtnltlrllclr CT• " !flt acoff tf the suggestion had A GARLAND. ~ • t:•fl!Plll Drlw, t1>4.0C , NOTIC• OP Tll:UST•l't SAL• E"1lllt ol !Pie 1D11¥1 NIMlll LEGAL NOTICE NewPOrt Beach, C.lflOl'lllt '2M3. wll!Cfl 11 l"llblltlllid On,... CNtt o.ltw· ,.11111. , !.¥• W.. 15'<114"-~-''"' 'LEGAL NOTICE --.,-.,-----------!""' 1>l1Ct M INtlOfQ llf lhl"Vnller•ltMCI kl Ncw..,..tltr t , JO, It, 1f71 30U·11 T11ttd1y, Navembtr ».. 1911 11 ll·ot .COHIN, ITOKKI I OWl!I ILP'O) Television Specials Get Overly Cautious SU,.lfJllOR COUIY OP THI! 111 "''""" ""''''";"" 10 .... e1lll• ol uld ' o'clock •·"'-· On .... "'blk I 1klew111< 0 In ltn ............. .,. , .... ftl STATll Of' CALtPOlllOA P'Oll '*_."'' within tour "*''"' llllf lflt LEGAL NOTlCE front M Thi enlrlntt lo tht bulkll"' 11 ttMt·A• Cttltor"'I '"" P'l_..T1!;~1•",uso•••• '1:11: COUNTY OP' OllAMCll: 1·•11 PU!>lk:1l1an d 11'111 notlct. 1117 SQutPI lnmkh\lrtt Sllt1l ln 'the CITY tf Toi: OWi UI l•J '"" "" NI. A•1ll6J 01ttcl NO'f...,btr" 11, lt111 Anlhilrn, ClllfW~ lltllh' ··--•IN , ;..11w-t .... Ulftllllllrilll' (TA lllAMI! 1YATlfMIHY 110,ICE Of' Hl!ARIHCI 01' 11.TITIOM RUTH M. POOLE ..... >614 '_. cwpor1tion.., '"'''" """""' the Dttd l'ublllMd O•lftlt CM•I Oiolly l'llot Tiit lallowl'I" --... Oo;11t ll'Olt l'ROl•TI 01' WILL AND l'Oll .. dmlnl1tr1lthl. of tM £1ttlt of NOTICE OP t•LI! OP ol Tn.ttl mMI• by Cl\lrlH Lerov WIU\lml Nowrn1111 f, 1'-U, )Cl, ·IHI )IQG.7j b<.>11,,..,. _,,, , LliT,llll:S TlflYAMllHTAllY tlOHD !flt lbo~t n.l!ITltd Ot<etllnl REAL l'llOl'f.ITY aT .... NIW'IC's' If, Wl!U-. ht.ttll•...., Ind wilt • , Yll' TOI' TV., 1212 So l rl1tol, 51nll WAIVED} ROllill,SOM, HOWSlll • ,..IVATlf SALi! •nod recud"" Jll'IU•r¥ 1, 19'1 ill ·-Ml1 AM , Ct ll!Ol'lll•. Ettl1t ol SA.M LE VtN DKtlted GARLAND CASI! lilt ...... ,.. , ... '" of Oftlclil llK•ft '11 O••M• LEGAL NOTICE I H COOi(, INCORPOllATIED, .. NOTICE IS Hf:llEI Y (;ivEN lft~I Alvl n 4)411 c1m1111 Driv•. 5111>t•lor Covfl ol 111• Sr11e of, C•llfw~I• Cllllnly. Cllllot,nit, ti'ltn I• ltcu,. 111 C1Lilorni1 corpott llon, "l!l R111Cho LtvlO'I "'' !UtO lltrtl" I 1>1!lll011 IOI' .... ~,, ltfdil, Cll1f. ""' tor "" Cov"IV "' Or~nt· lnOtlltfd'..... In llVOI' ti Tht Cotwtll ,.. 14111 l'11mtr••· ,....,1.n Wtltt. C1tltornJ1. Prclllllt OI Wiii Ind IOI' llWlntl ol Lellttt Tt.: Mt-MN ,,, !)It M•lltr °' -E,.,,, .. AONl!S Ci!l'llll flY, I cori>orelion, --Md Ind PICTIYIOUI IUILllll!ll Thi• 11u11...... II COlldvcttd b'f I TflltrntllllrY lo · Pt1ili°"'t I B 0 n d AllorllfYI Ill' Adn:llftltlralri•. CECELIA !'ll:AHCIS, Dtc:111td. htl• by $!lit OI Ct Hlornli ll'ubtl( ,MAMI ITATIMINT eO<'-lliM. Wtlvfc!J rf!@t'ence 10 wfl!c)I It mtde tor Pybllthtd Or1nH CNtl Dlilv l'll al NO,llCt 11 ll•ftb\' ,1...... '"'' !hi EmPlovtll' RtUrlfMlll s,.~ ... by -TIM lollaWlllt """' It dalfltl ..... ,..... l!I H COOk. INCOlllPOllATEO f\lrllltr ,.rtlcularl, Ind lhtl 1111 lime Ind H0111mbtr 16, 2l.. lO incl Dtc:..,,btr 7, u!1dMtltllld wl ~ Mii 11 .Ptl¥~l1 "~' on TM Co1W<ll1 ComP•nv. It r v 1e111 , It: l y I . H. Cook P1ICll of r.eirln11 I'-Mm' llll bffn HI 1911 llD1 ·11 or efrtr lht 2fttl d1y GI MO'f_.,,bl>r, 1'11, (Mltictors, bW rtll~,OI !he bretd'I 9I l lMGUiG Sl'IUNGI CONVALESCENT Ptt1ldenl tor Dtc:..,,btr J, nn, 11 ,, 30 i.m .. 1 " 1111 ,'' '"' alllc• of Edmond 11•1"" A.-""' ctr1•1., .ot"91•tlri NClll'IOlll ""'I'll'!', fllllkt HOME. 1:1C111 Tittl!. AYtnut, Girdtn Tiils ~l•l•m.nl w11 tllld willl ttlt murt•oom ot OtPlftment No t al uld LEGAL NO'I'ICE '·• Union 81"" ku•rt. 50\llh .t-r. ot which ,..,,. r..i:orcStd JlllY· M. 1m 1 Grove, c1111. ,,,,.,_ • COVlll'I Cl""' 111' Or111t1 C0\11'111' on~ court. 11 700 Clvl~ Ctnl•• o ri.,. WtSI In Suil11 ~. Or•11111: COl.lntv M Or•nvt, lioat "911-1 "'" '6> 'M' tli. Offi It~ H & V Inc. !A C11!torfllt Cor110r1U0n), OC!obll'.:!;.,!!11. -,,_ -, • c • 51111 o1 c11u.,~11 '2661. to 11>t , , "' b ' '"' "-•-·-· ,,,,. " , ••• -.,,t .. '" 1n11 ... 111. 1ll!ornl1. 1110,.,11 •fld btit bide!..-1114. •~ltct tO KOi" 1, w Mn 11 Pl.' tk 1uctl0ft It IM """"'' .---.... v • 11 ' _,., • D1ttd NOYtmbtr li, 1t11 , ,Pllt Nt. f'·lntl c fir !Ian b • S • ' C 0 '' 111tfltlt'blddtr fDf' ei111,,1111blt ~n lt'#llll C1)11 "70! 1'11blilh.01 Ot ..... C1111t Oflly l'Jlol, w. E. ~' JOHM •All H11. • .. ~ •,"'' ,,,.· .. "" ",",' M' ~·' •• _.,. ol Ille. Unllfd Slli!tl 11 Ille 11m·, °' Thft '11Wslllti1 11 belntl cClllduct.0 ~., • Octobtr "· "'° Hw,mlMr 2, ,, ,., co....,w c1 .. -P'ICTITIOUS ·IVSI Ml!SS ' 1 • "'''t "' 11 ult wflllaut wauinl'f 11 lo 'tit .. CIH-•tlOll. • 1m · 2'07·71 BY RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD !UPI I - What is happening to netW1lrk television specials? Are the networks choosing them more selectively because of the fewer bour.s available as a result of the cutback on prime timei IS the content more cautious and harmless because of the criticism from Influential figures in ' govern· ment and elsewhere? Well, let us today take a look ai an announceme11t from CBS.TV. LEVIN ANO !'OKRAS HAM• SYATl!Ml'HT Otc1111d •I the llin.. ol dHlll Ind 111 tllt p0,;.111on ., tn<:uml>l•"'ta. lllf lnlll'llj Arthlfr Alen L1ndtkt !:, ~::: ... "~:~,.11 f6fll bJ;;~,u to!~~!nt ';"on' 1r• dol110 ;~~''o~~~: ~=:",'i!i~ :-:!:~~i: ~=:v::i!' ~~ ":"·T":~.";~'~:!,; '~:: c:~• .:'~!':",.;'c!': :,;~ ,.!':m;.~111~.<----·LEGAL--.,-,,,-Nclr-Tl_CE::::: ___ , Tll f1U} lll·1J1I A "~ H OEVIELOPMENf CO., Uta ol l1w or olllttw111, allltf lh111 or In toll-l;,t 0.tcrlbld ir-r1'· I 1911. 'I v ftlllflV •J, Mlddo-, Oll>UIV·r p 14 1p Atltwnt" fir l'tlll .. ,,.... C1m1Yt D_rlve, M-'I I 1 I c II , addlll"" lo l~t ot .. I, CllcNnd II tllt lot 2J o! Trtd ND. "60, 0 lh '"'Cl!¥ 11 c_.v Cltft, •tCTJTIOUS IUSIHIJS ,. .• , '""M"• """ · ,,_ • """ '' ""' " "' ,,. "'"'" ""' 'M~. ,_,,.~ <><•-· "'" • ""'-O<•M• '"" ""' .,.,. """' ""'"'"' ll is a "'Y long and' im· 1'11bl(i.htd Ortflllf C1111t D•llv Pi!O!, D1vfd $,' Aabn'h011, ?«n M1cf(kl Rttl P•OPe<l'f tl!Yt !K In ht CllV •• ,Of-C1IHDf'11l1, •• IMWn Oft • ""'' 1"tr•ol N ... eo'llbtt ,,, u ••• 1nd Dl'(ll'l'lbtr" 1. TM followlflll ptrtOll II da1n11 bulllllH pressive looking press release P+avemlllt u , 11. 2], n n :IOQ.11 Drlvt. MIHIClll Vltln.~C•lllotnll. • ..... Covn' .. Or1"9f, Slllt el Ctl!IPl'llll. rKordld .In booti 151; DllH 11. tt, :JO. 1'71 lOIJ.11 11: c111rltt H1r1i.rodt. '611 w. CfllPtl\1" Ptrtltul1r1v ou.ulbtd 11 Hl ll'l"ft. to-wlr: 31, 32. 1nd JJ, l\'ltctll•l'IHU• Mt••· THIE aus1N1E5S llOUTIQUI!, 11114 that was sent out by CBS.TV, As for that other special which doesn't qualify for the "Appointment With Destiny' title, it is "The Americ an West of J o hn F o rd," a tribute to the great director with John Wayne. J a mes Stewart &!'Id Henry Fonda. All r ight -now these prD- grams may well turn out to be excellent production in them selves. , Lt:GAL NOTICE "· " "'-· '"""'"" " "'0 ""'° 0" . "" •K"'•" "" °''"" '<w""· LEGAL NOTICE '~" '""· """ '""'" and Ille whole idea is that the - -------------! 'bk ""'"""" II bflflt tofl6ucted ti'!' I INTEREST IN : PTI:iperlV IOdr9'H: »tl·l.e $1111, C•h J0$11>111111 Sdlfnldt. llth Lup1n 1'1~1, GIMf.&,P•f'lllf•lfllP. lot 1, Black "-'"., "Tr1c1 Na. 110 Mut, c1111or~ -s1111111 L.1-. n etwork-this season will offer f'ILI! MO. 11-1u" 'btorii:i s. Raber11on. c111pm111 .&vt nvt. Home Sl1tt", 11 lor ""' purPIH of ,.VI;.. 111111.,1i.-P 14277 Thlt butlr>H• It bti,.. conOuCtld bv 1n (In addit1'on to ,.,_ other one- IAll J6lf G«>trll Plrtritr "'-~ on 1 ~I> recordtd In l!loO~ 21, teturld b' u lcl Dtld (II Trvtt IMlll4inf l'ICTITIOUS I UIOilSI l~ldllll. i.:; P'tCTITIOU5 IUUNl.SS Thlt 1llte-nl !IL~-wltPI Ille Covnly. P891 ., ol MIKt lll..-JI MIPl o rtclltdt '"''di••~· ..... Uflfl'ltel of I~• Tru1IM, NAM• STATIMIHT ;>. -.loU'tfl;nt $dW!lld1 shot s)iows) six specials, five NAME $TAT IMIN' C~r~ of Ortrlllf C"""""' Oii: Now. 11, lt11. ol DrlllOI Cov11ty, CtlllOl'nh . id.,.ne.u, 11 ""'· 11r0.r ~l1nt11.of i1IO Thi Ioli-I~ ""'°"' 1r1 dolnt1 Tiil• 1!1ttme11t flied wllh Ille C111nl'f f th h Tho •••••M ,.,_ " "'M ,,,.,_, " "'"" J. M-"""' '~"" • "'~"M ,,.,.,_ '" '"""""' °"' • ,,~, '"""' ••-.. _,_, "' '""' • ,,.,_ cw"" ~ •~ s "" o em wit the dignilied and •t: c 11 t1r.. • •. -41•11 1n1@t'n1 111 1,... E••' 1t Ifft o1 S2f,»tM 111 ~•id "*i,:.1 ., .... "°'', IA5LEll·llftCHl!JtT. lTD~ 1 011 1y kttt J 1,,.11~ OIPVI' C.,..fy vague , overall tit\ e "A~ But la st season there were m ore prime time h o u r s available, and the o uts ide pressures hadn't q uite reached their full impact In making broadcasting niore cautious There is m uch talk in television these days about in depend ence, and lhl!re have bee n m any s tatemer.ts defen- ding all kinds of noble prin- ciples; but in the end the c ur rent state of affairs is best docamented b y what com es out on the home screen, wher e every one can see it. ..t,U!.',', ,'.'.~'..'"•'•co .. , ,',',' E11I ..... 11.•TSOM .... MOWS~ll. •&•LAW "",Id L•l,_!l•,•,h1dl JI 19 lie IAtcl ". tKll{ld bv ••Id Deed ot Tnlll, 'wtlh N""", .!.' ... , .... ,.,",,Z!!...A ... ,. 92 101. .. _ c11nr.. pom" t-·nl Wt'lh Destiny." ..... .... ·-. r ""' I ' orMYt II w ommun " .. W~IY. 1,.i. .... t1 ""'"" """ ...,...,., 1 1tn It . • ...... ~. I .-·-· ._,,._.}, . l'uMllillld o ... ,,.. COit! Otllf 1'11111. ""' Tilt Fh'tl Nlllol'Mll 811'4: Ill OrlllH H1Wperf atldt. C11ff, tiua Mor• COl'l'WnOll!Y k,_n It 1:t.U E1tl i;, Mid ncrlt i nd bv 1.,,. ~' 1011 !Mrfll l•-•Y·-''"'' ADI, '2111. N t » Oka to '(' W'lh ,~,,.., ""~" """M ,,,~•••~. ,.,, ,...,.. ,,._, •-· .,.-. ""'""" """ °"'"",., ''"· . . · """'" 'H. ""'"· "" ,..., ,.....,.. • "· n. · "" '''"" y. no.-spec< tcs. 1 ltl E1tl Cll•~•n Av.-, or1n11r, PublltMd Or-•"" CNit DlllY PLlol T1rm.1 o1 ule c•lh. In t1whll """"Y ot '11:t11tv hw:Or-•tM Trv•'" • ••~•Y• '"''' ...... n111. LEGAL NOTICE prime time hours m ore scarce c1111. Naven>btr lf. :D. 30 tnd Dl<Mitwr 1, 1111 un!ttd s111" .. conllr""'11on Ill' 111t 11 lllCMrd io tty.ii • • Jtllt 1tualM:11 I• lltl111 coMuetld lt'f 1'----~---------I lhan e"er for the networks, TPll• butllllH 1• bl>l11t cOlldllcled bf 1'11 llllf-11 Of ,,,, Cl.ti I...., blltnct f'l!dt'llC:ld q,. . SlcrtllrY' • • t.lrr'lltd ....,,,...,...,1.. ' . • I" • 11t111on1L B1111<1,., .-. '1 o t 1 1 11 an r>01e MCl!ftd 11'1 ~t110t °" T""1t offd ·-• ·.U.. •111111r A1t• .. Llndlll• • • i..lu and with countless important (Corpor1tlol\l. LEGAL NOTICE an Ille ·.,-11Y IO tllld. T.n perai'lt M l'Ubl llhell OUftfl (.Nit Otl!y r l'llet Tt-1• tlll..,..tnl flllld wllri "IM CGIJ'nl PICTIYIOUS IUSINISS. l "" '"" "'"""'"' . , • ...., '" "" .,_,..,.,. "'· """"""" '"" ,;,,_ • ..,.,; ,...., o1 "'"" '""" •'-·""""" ..-.:. .,.,.. ""''"'"' con emporary issues being im· of ,orentt Cov11i'f' . --, Bid' or"'"'' la bt '" wrlllnt ...ct will · • -,ay 1'iwm J,~ .v..llRlt °"""". c..,. 'C.~' ,.._,.,. --''' Oo1 11 • pressivety lgnpred i11'.'. prime It is the best kind of proo[ that broadc asting. I i k e newspapers, should be free of licensing by the government. One could hardly argue that licensing has b r o u g h t televisio n to a state ap- pfoach ing perfection in what it has to offer. The few points in fa vor of licens ing are far outweighed by the sense of freedom that "'ould perme ate television if it didn't have to keep looking o ver its shoulder. Bv Jofln A. Whl!t , ,. 1"'4 bf ''ctl-vld 11 1111 .ioret•lll ollltt t1 1nY LEGAL NOTICE • · Cl•rk. · ' · ~"*'' ~" · · ,., '"''""' '"' """""' '"""" "" "'" ,., '"" '"""'"" ,.,.,, ,.., ""''"' o .. M, "'" °''" '""· <OU> """" ,.,., • .,.,,.,, time speci•ls, CBS-1" has th~ Ltll l C1111Mel l'IAW ITATllMINT Dele><P cta!t ol ••!~· . Howlfllbll" 16, J), )It .-Id ~"""' 1. Allt COMQIJJOH_LNG AND Hl!ATI HG, group of sll 1led "A "" ""-"""" """ ,., cw"" ,,. ,., .. ,., . ,.,~.., "' .. ,,,, 0.,,. "~""' u;un. , "" ,.,, ; " . . • ,.....,. "'""'-• ''" """"""" ""' ows ca p-c 1en ol Orantt CllUnlv (tl'I: MovemO.r n . butlMU 10: Gii.ANT ALGAN FltANC15 ,NOTICI 'TO CltlDtTCHtl / Edw~•JI E. Hl1tl, Jl)) M•Plt. C11l1 pointment Wi~h.Destiny." and "t tn. av eeverty J. M1!1clolo, OtllUIV CHi!ETAH FAST FREIGHT, 11>12 l!llt<ulor ol 1111 E11ett • llJl'llltlOll. CDURT OP TN• LEG.•• NOT!~ MeP niJ1 ! t I ll h t th '~"" '"'" """"" ... 0 .,,., 0 ,.,., ,.. • ,.,, "'"~ ,,.,, • ., '"""'"" ~ '""'" c. '""· "'' '"""., 00 .. now e me e you w a ese Publl•llKI Or1110t (Olll 01ll'f Pllcl, Joli" o. Lll!lt, lWI 5111111 SI .. EDMON D RALIH Ai'tDlllSON J.. POii TMll COtJNTY OP OllAM•• ' p 1491 W1tfmln 1!1• ., • ., ' programs are about. Nowembtr 16, 1~. )(I 1n!I DKt mbtr J, FO\mllin V11\t'f, (1, #Olla'"'' II L1w Ethlt'111 j~'k'·:iti:~~. OK-.... / 'PICTITIOVS IUllHI ' . p T~!t bu~lntll It btlnl eondll<lld bv • One Of them, to be:seen NO'. 1,11 JOfl-71 J1me1 E. ll:ld'lar~•• latJ6 S1n Htliee. Un .. 11 ·lank S-rt, S111lll T-11' --HAMI STATIMIH' 11 ,.....lh p, • Bi.ft"" Plrk Cl SN 5 M1 l11 SI klll• m NOTICE 15 ,Hl!llEIY GIVE N " ""' Tiii 1o1l.r.t1 • • .. I I "'I ' lllch trd L. KHtl 19 is called "The Last Days of LEGAL NOTICE Tt1l1 1;1us;,..;, I~ 'bt1no conductld by~ 1 Or1,11;., (1lii.r;11 ftl61 credllOl'I of 1111 •llP•t "..,." Otctdtnl , "" ,., 1 !Id"' 1 "'" T~lt '!•ltmtnl 10IMI wllh lh• CounlY ' --------------I"""""''• . . , • ,,,, "'" ., •• ,, ., ., •• ,. "'" '" H•M• """ """" '"'~'•• "· "" "'"'" """"'"' '"" •"""''cw•• M' '"· " "'" DilUng"'," and is about the IAlt ,,., Jolln o. Llllle PubUtlled O••,... c111t1 OtllY PllOI. ,.._ d«.Ml.nt 1'" '""1'M to lilt mem, MOll'IT.o.• .. 1 SOU1" H•rllot •l t>Ht , 1' Be!IY J. Birtiu n. Deputy c .. nty famous gangster who was kill· SUl'l!lllO• CDURT Of' THI. Tlllt ttillmll'lf ,Jilld wl111 !flt (D1Jl\IY NOllM'll>f:' 11, \1, u ; 1911 JlP.'1 with ll'lt N(fHlrY vaucfltrt, in ll'tl•tllltl Anll!ei..T".;..Qi! ' CMrk. ""' ,. "' ,. ,,. ,., ""' • "''"'' '~"" "" •~ ,, "'' • '"' '~' d .... _, """' -"· • , , ., ,. , , , , """'" ''"" '"" '"" '""· ed ~ y~ars ago. Another will TNE couHTY 'o,. ':, • ..,No1. Bv '""''"" J. MIOdoK OtPVt~ C1111n1Y LEGAL· NOTICE 1:~'f:."~0 :~~nd;::~,.11111""ii-=::i~ c..!!111..:') ~\J Nori: .~:o;_;.,;,_,.,..:..;_•"°"c'-'·-'-'c· _"c· c•c·-'-"-'---"':;:.'c·'c1 1 be "The Plot to ,Kill Hitler," H1. •·11146 Cltr~. of ht• 1norntY1 I LOCK eR1Cl(HE1t A "'"'· ""'' AN·92111· · LEG" NOTICE d ........... ..; .. th · ti led HO,IC• CP HllAlllHG CH l'EYITION Pllbll lilled °'~"" COlll t>11ly 111ol, IAll Ill! LOl'iN rne. .... .:O..oitecl • 1n1 N I" Tlli• llu'llllllf •• Mint condllcf.0 bv • ., ____ :::..:c-:::.c' :;:.:;:...:::_ ___ , an Cvo,.;~ ,.,, e a emp f'OR l'ROIATll OP' WILL A.MD FOii N""tmbH u , :i:I. )It, '"" 0KflTI""'' '· 1'10,ICll TO Cllll5DITOlll B,~.y s.i.11 ""'' C•lllllf' I ·,:,., cor-•tloll ' I assassination of the World L1n111s TllS,AMEHTA•Y 1'71 3062'11 su•E111011 cou11T oP THI: ""'k" it '"" ,111:• d 11u11,..~.'" nit ~ur Al•ft LlnHll• P 14114 War II Nazi d ictator: Yet Etlllt Ill' TEO Bll:All'IARO AD51,, •It• STATE OF CALIPOltMl#O FOi\ ..... c1eullned In tll ll'lllltrt Ptrt•l"l"" IO Tllll ,,.""""' llltd wtlfl ""' CPUlllV P1CTIT!O\JS IUILllll SS TED 1. ADSIT , OecetleCI. LEGAL NonCE TH• couNTT 0 , 011ANC11 lhl n111e " t1ld dKMont wmiin '°"' c1m 01 0r1111t CPUlllY on: H...,,.,..._ n , The MA.Ml STAT•MIMT another, "Lee and Grant at NOT ICE LS HEl:EIY GIVEN 11111 111. A·*M monlb• lfltr "" ll•JI ,_.111iUt11111 of 1111• nJl .• , liyerl'I' J. M.lckle•. ~ followltlt "''""" 11 Ml ... \Mlritu Appomattox," foe""""' on 'the Dillinger? Grant and Lee? H itler? The gunfight at the OK Corral? This ls 1971. the y ear of Attica . Graves Guests UNION BANK •• c1mornl1 (or-•!lon, Etl~tt al CH#OllLES A. GRA~Ell. 511., nollct. C-'l' Ci.rt. . IS: . ~ 1111 1111<1 hfffill • Pfllllon tor Prab1te '" ,. 1'292 •kt CH .. llLE5 .... GAA51ER, DK•111d. Dlltd NOlltmbH 1. 1t11 l'ubll.tlfd Dt•MI Coit! D••" P'ILol. MAIL ORDEll MARINE, lOO W~I surrerider ending the war ~;: .. ...:::.~·~. ,:;,~:!:.: .• ~ •• .;::•;: ·~:;:~·:~.~~":::" ~ ,.':~~~· .",,::•::.:: ,;::,:•,;: ... ~ ~'!".;!.:~':i:w'" •~~""·"· "· ••"' ,...-, l;.\.')1 '':!.',;:::;; ::;;:;;",,~:'f.';,".\':;,M,, between the states. A four th wt>lch i1 m1d1 !er turlilt• parllcul1•1. ind Thi !ollowlnt "'''°" J1 dOIM tM111111 11111 •II """""' hevlntl cltlms ,.,1"'1 Thi of tt>t 1bc"" 111mtc1 oec""nl. Otl'fl, HtwPOtl l eich.. snorial will be "The Crucifix· HOLLY\VOOD (UPI) -1t1•• !hi 11m1 '"" 111.ct of 1111t1n~ -11: t1ld dlfOIClell• 1,1 ,_1m ,.,~ 1111 lllfm• aLOC:K, •••CKMlll 1 LOl'IN, lltC. LEGAL NonCE T11!1 11<11IMU 11 btlftl COfldutttd bv 1n r~~· u m•"""'"'"'"•-•"'•·"'" •o"" ,,.,., '""""" "" ••• •• -""" _,,..,.. ",.. """ ,,. ,_ ,_., '""''~'" ion," about the death of Jesus. Peter Gr"es will take time •I 9:30 1.m., 111 111e c1111r1room ol E111 K1ttlll Avenut. Dt•ntt '2W. °'Thi c1et11 al 11>1 tbOwt ,,.1111td tourl, or. SHI•-.. .. , c_.11i.ni11 ttJ•ll • 142n Ai.xi rioer Torbllt 111 And the fifth "Sh wd l off lrom his " '11' s s ,· on •• .......... '" ' " ... '~"· " ,. .......... ·~· " '. I ' '. '" '. " """' ...... """ OM _ .... ~ "'' '"" ....... ,,,,,,, ... '"""'" ""' ""~"' "'" ••• OM '~"" 0 own a " "'" """' ''"' "'"· '" "" "" " ,,_,,,~,. "" ••• ,._., .~ .... " '"' '""""'"" ., "" o• '"w-• "'"~"' ""' ""'"'"' '"" " °'"" '~"" ~' '"· • ''"· OK Corral," naturally con· Impossible" series to play a s1n11 .. n •. c111tor1111. 5r•" 1 • ''"'' ""''27111. Pl•1I• Larw, Hu"11n11ron ll••d>. c1nlilrnil l'~btislwld 01i"P Cottt Dilly l'flof, Tiit 1ouowln11 ,.,_ ll't 001n11 By Bttty J, 111 •• 1 tn D•Plll• Cllllntv cerns the legendary western g ues t role on Sandy Duncan'1 Otled Novtmbtr •• 1t11 Thl• tM;lllltU 11 be\llf COlldllCltd by I '16'7 Ot' ti !Pit olllct ol hll 1ilorntY: M'1. Mllltmblr t, 11, 1J, •• 1t71 Jti11·11 bull"'H I t: C!i1". , I w. •·" ""'· '"~"""" '"" •-•· •• """"'"'· """·'· '"' """ "'"'· "" ""' '""'""' '""" '"" '"" '"'" gunfight. new show. "F unny Faco." CO\ln" Cltrk . Art11u• Alan. l llldl!ltt . cor ..... dtl ~,. c1111or n11, r»lS. whldl LEGAL NOTICE ''"°""'' Jl•ttt, s1nt1 •111. c.n1. n1111''~"=-~~·~·~·c"~·~»~. ~·~·c'~n~•,,,-c"'~·~':' \-~=:.::::.-------;.,.;;;;;;;;;;:-.:::'.'.::.:....:..:::~.:.=:=. __ JAMl!S L. llUBIL. Jll. Th11 tl1!tmt"t folf'! wlln lllf COi.iniy 1f 11>1 pltce al ~slntll l>I !flt undu•llllld H lo V Int. (A Ci!lllnlll c-••llOll).1· Adv•rl'lumtllf MU VII 0-1• Clttk M Ort,... C11111111' on: HO'fflTlbtt n . In 111 mirtert pet1ilnln11 to "" tlltlt DI -·---'''' I LEGAL NOTICE Ntwl>lf'I Btltlo. C1lll. nu• 1911 . I Y BtvtrlY J. MaddOx DtOlllY Mid Ot<fCltnl, wlt~!ft IPllf ITlOf\IM '"'' Motic• TO c••DttVltl Morlh l rtidwl Y JlrH!. 1111 • Alll. No Pl . c Ttl: UU) UM\11 C111nlf (ltlk. lht llr1! 1>11b!lc1!1an cf tM1 nollct. ,,_._ .~~-~ ..... ll•Oo. ~:l~'·.::10:.11 11 M!nf tlftdl.IClld ff ,!-------.-,-..,-,------! w ast1c ream AlffltntV tor: l'tll!lllMt' Pllflrltllld Oraf\OI Coe'! Oallv l'llOI, Otltd Hl'IM'lbtr 11, 1'71 ........... _,, .., •IC T OU PYbllllllld Or1noe Co11t Otltv Piiot. Nov...,bf!r 16. 21. )0, tnd 0..:Hnlwt 7, LEllOY A. GA#OSEll C1!11«11l1 ftl' 1111 (:•fllY M Or•-CorPDrt HOfl. Tl I I t UllMISI •• •1• Novembll' t, 10, 11. 19)1 Xlll-11 ,.,, ltll2·11 ,.,_,, •• -''" "''' E1!1te of SAVAS A. LC>f'l!L iho k-.&rlhlfr Al111 1'-lncltli:.• HAMI. STATIMINT I t' F A "f' • l _ .,. "' 11 SAVAS .&. LDPl!l . JR .• DM:otr•d, T~lt 11tlttrllfll !llld wlll'I 11111 Couni'f' Tiit lot-I"' ,..,.011 It dol~t llll1!11ill rt I th LEGAL NOTICE .......... M ..... ·K"'"' """' ,. · .......... " ....... , .... • ... M. '·~· ~, ......... ... ... nven ion or 1 1c1a ee LEGAL NOTICE MRS. ALIC• MOOR• ... H11 B• •ovor'-J M•" o-·'"' VAGAIOND Ml'G, <O., I Io O ., ...... pettont l'olvinw d•lmt 1,111111 tM ttld CO!JnlV Cltrt. l'l1unl11, Cotll M"•· C1tll. - ---------------------------1'11 HtH•'r•~, "·''', "'' •-• "'"'"° d.ctOenl 1!111 11! · " • °"" _.,,. 1TATE D,. CALll'"OllNl#O C1•1111 ,,.. Mlf, c1111. Hits cllCtdtllt •r-l'Mlllrld to ti• -· ••-l'~b11111tc1 D•1"'" C011t 011iw ~11o1, Sfllfon L. Gu.,., 1tn1 llli;lnl ln.. Artificial Teetll Nettr felt lhat haa rtvolutionized denture DEl'AllTMl!HT OP' MEH,AL HYGllENI: T•I, ,,,..,, tl'le ne<tllf,., -.c.11m. I~ ,;.. ,,net ;; HOlltmbll' ,,, n . )0 ..... fl_.,., J, Hllnlllll!Oll l ffCll. C•llf. wearing. '"""" ""' """"" '"""" "' hK"" •• '", _ ~ _ '"' _,, "'" .,,,_, " ,,.M """"" ,, " So N1llral Before 1 , 1 ,,, ,,, •. ,,, "'''''· chc• •• 1 • NOTICE TO (0NTRACT011$ PubHthtd Or111t1 Co11t 01lly Piiot r "' ........ ""111911 '"""·or"''!------------"'-'-holllvldll4ol N uo;: $£ALEO PROPOSALS w!tl bl r1celvtd bY "'' FAIRVIEW STATE HOSPl,AL, Na¥tmbl• \I, 2J. lO Ind Otcfll'Obl!• i trtttlll ""'"" witll l!lt MCIHI,..,. VOllChtt'• NOTI SN!fOll L G\IY o• forth'fl"t tim,.Kienteoffeo;a ter, eat more naturally. f iKOOl!:N!' ,., """" .,.,, '"" "'"' ''""'"" ~"' '"~ ,,.., • .,-.,, --· "" .,,.,; "''" """""'"" ""' """ • "~' LEGAL CE "" .,,_.,. "'"' .,., ••Cw "'' ,mHt;cc,~m <h>1"ofd•do"'"'u" IH1' fo< hoon. Ru;,,, mo;"""· ' .. ''' " '' 0 __ "" "' ._ 111 Vlncf!lt, lJ~ .. ........., 11..c11 .. Loi .1.n11el1t,l---.:_::.:.:_:c_:.:_:.:_:.:_::.._ __ c il'ever bcfon:-rorms an tla~lk mem· Oi-ntures that "•I ''' -··otlol to '· "" '' ~•• '~ '"' ••" ''"' • " "• --• ' -' ""'M'" ... ~"" " ,,.. "'" • """ .,,_ cw'"., O<t "· om . •--" ~-11111111111c1n ol lttPl1<:1 L111dtc1pe SP"lnklff Syttt m. , LEGAL NOTICE bu 1 Ill' !tit ltllld P 1~1' I Y ltVtt'l'f' J. MtOdall. °"""" countv 1111 11 e that llf/(J! Jt1/4 1/rt.m lit /hr health. See your dentist ttJ[ularly. "' """"· •• "''"' '"'"" '" •w~"' • """'" •• ,.,,.,,,,., ""'"'~ . • -• .... '"'" "'""' """'OU' '"""" '""· "''"""'"""'"'" ~•"· It'>• °'"""'~"~ F''°°'"' 0.otw• -'"'"' ·~·-.,. M• '·'-'· '""" '"' _,., '"" ~""' ""'"' "f~"""l • .. '""' • "" '""'"'· ""'' '"""'"" .... ,.,.. .,_ '"" '"" .,.,, """"' "K""'"''"" Foxoo<>,. Adh~;,., Coum. sprirlkltt heldt to 1111 ntw l'.v.c. piping, 111 , 1 ,..,.1M1t1r toecitled or de11Utd. IAR Ht4 w in ""' "'°""'' ''"' 1"' llttt ,,:'", 1oo ... 1n1 _..,. It dtln• bullllll•\•:•~•~-~"~'~';·;•~-~,.~·~·~·~n~•~;:;--"~ .. :'~'\jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Cool" M pl111t, 1pecl!lull0M Ind bid pNICICl!.11 !llrfm 1r1 1v1ll1bte ti tht Pllftl IUl'l!lllOR COUii' 01' THI llllbliutlofl of lhll Nlke. (>.'Jo>••tlolls Oflk t, io 1 1 ..... 1ew s1111 1+m>111~ :iso1 H•i'blt 11..c11 .. ea.11 Mn •, ·c-. ST'iTI! o• CALll'OllNtA P"Oll Dlttct October 11, 1111. SVNKAVEH c o N v A'l E • c '-M'T LE. GAL NOTICE "11il, °""" (110 $1S-Ul1, «I. Jl?. TNI COUNTY OP OltANGll EVAHGEL11'1E LOl'l-Z HOJ,.IT .. L, llll 1.i·ltl'ftndlur\'•ltot0,., ______________ ,11 110 1 nwtt b11 i111>mltltd for 11'11 ..,u,, _,\ dt«rilltd tMr,m. Otvlllionl I"'"' Hto A·11Mt 11'111 lllENE LOPll F~lltrllol nfll 1 Plll\lo ..... 1pt<lllc••~ WH1 not bll COMkl••"' ..... Wiii bt e•uu "" ••!K11on HO,ICI Of' HE .. 111Hll or. PnlTIOM IEnadOl'I."" WI" •• ,.... . '"""'""" (A C1l1Nr11l1 .,_ P'ICTITIOUI IUllMllS NI.Ml tYAYllMllllT follow!,,. ,.,_ 11 OOI,,. M l""t ~ bld1. ' P'O• l'llOIA,. 0, WtL AND •Oli ,_. v'!-':: Otudtnl. Cw-1tlOlll 1011 N""" l roedW1v Tiit l!ld 5111t A.Ol!ntY !'ft"''"'"' •lgfll lo ttll<t ,,.., Ot tit billl. LITYIRS Yl!TAMllllTAtY ""' ,_} ltrMI. S1nh AIM "1'01 In 1cc~rd1nct wllh IN provlllOm o1 Jt<lion 117J o! 1114 Ltbar Codt, II" Slid 0 1!t11t!. 04 HECTOI! L. OlllOHS, ~~ ,°'!:"",.,. ,•,-,,,·,•,.,, -Tllh Ml-11 llellll c.nclllclld W 1 Tilt l t1tt AOf"(v •Wl•dlnQ tflll canlrttl hn •sctrltllltd ll'lfl lht •-•l lty ,rf'ltlll1'19 .., .... ~ "' Cwto1t11en. 11: r1t1 ot wtgfl 1ppllellll1 NThi ~loIllclollt 1t t• IOllOWI : NOT1c£ IS HEllEl'Y GIVEN lllll ·~ ,.. l•.aflrt 1 Arfl'lllr A.Ill! lll\Olltt k·TEll E MG I H f ER I HG , tt6tt lm1i9Ytf "''"""'' .. , WllLIM\ a. GlllONS .... 111.0 1111'•1~ • I'll~ thtl ''~""""' fl lld with .... ,_IV fll•--1111 Ulllt J, (61h M .... ll"'t'-Y" llfllllll Pt!lllon tor .,-..,11 11 wm ..,. .., Publllhef Ori"" CM1t Off.., 1'111111, cr.111 o1 er-c .. lllY on: HMmbtr 11, 12.U • Crtlt .. TYPf lllk lll lf H .. 1111 " Sil.. 1,111111<1 ot Ltlt••• THlfll\tl'lllfY• Iii OC:!Oblr ,., Ind N ....... btr l. ••. ,,, Tt11. IY, l tvorlv J, Me<ldOX. OePUll' ARltn .... 1111. llO$ Nter••• ,I,, II W•"""'" , .. NIUf Wtlllrt VICl!ltl! ....,..i... OYtr1111M N•M••f 1'1111'-t'. •tft ftn(f •• wflldl 1, mtdt ..... ,,,, ,.,.n CIUnl'!' Cltr1I Colt• M... • l'IPI Trllll"-l"lg.ellOll lurll'I .... Plf1kulor1. •1111 11111 the llmt •fld P~Olllfltd Or-COit! 0.11, ,,lot, Tlllt ...,,,,_, b llflllf c.ctfWIKIM n 11'1 .. Ll'#ll Sprlnkltn t.6.~ I~ 1~ 11"" Dovl>lt tlmt Oovtll• 14""' pl..c• of M•rl.,. tilt ••mt hit "-' 111 LEGAL NOTl~ N°"'"'btr 1" JJ, JO, end Dtcfmbtl' 1, llld1¥ldlll l. u11or1r.-10, N""Mibt• 14. ""· ,, •=• "'""" 111 th•l------.,,;ru•-.:..---r":':.' --::::-::-_,...,,.,,,.,,,,,,-! .... ~"~! Alllfrt k•ns PIPI U.y1r J . .ss ,d .Jll .'5 Ti1n1 •-flelf 00\ltllt ,_ c1111•troom OI Dtt1trtmr,.1 Mo. J of uldl p ltln Tl\11 tl1ttrntnl 111..l will! #II C:.UlllY PIPt L'L''-taurt. 11 "° Civic C1n11r Df!vt Wffl, kl •1ct1T1ous .1utiM1:11 LEGAL NonCE Cle"-of Or1nt1 CO\lllf'/' 11111 • OCloblt' Jt, Tr=• .. 111 M~:~ln• J.:!li .d .XI ,lJ Tlll'lt ·-"·" txlublt tlrnt '"'(II,,, S•flll Arll. C1ltfor11!1. MAIM ''ATIMINT , Jtn . t y B-•IV J, MldllOll. OIPUIV OOtrl lo<-Hln!I DOllO NOYtmbtf ), 1fl1 . Tht folJPW lnt 1tr1on1 art etllduttll!f • l~ t-IY C1tr-. ......... ''" .O> •• .U "-·~·"" ""''" ,,_ W, 0." '°"'· ..,,_, '""' ............ Mmo. ''" ""'"""' '"""'" """"" ... _ C..H "'" .... . L•nclK•PI Gtrd ..... , $.14.1 .0 .lO .I~ Tjmt & ~hlll Do\lblf t&!>t COi.iniy Cllrk OAO•ll EAST C0..,5T HUSHWAY .. »OCIATES tt . ,NAMI S'At•MIMT Novtmbtr t. ,t , U, n. 1m Jtlt-11 Glr>lf'•I or c-tl'llCllOn s.od .d ,)0 .lS 1111'11•-""*' 00111:111 tfmt DUllYIA, CAlll'IH,llR • 34.!S 1!.••I CN•I H11t1w1r. CllV ., c ... -Tht tet1awl11t ... -lrt dOI,,. ' Any c.l~Hllki!1on omlntO fllflln -no! !Ht th~n '5.6"15. 11•1 lllNlllT J, ICHAG, Jt .I .,, 'At, CiunlV el O••""• l!tlt ti bu1lnHI 1t: LEGAL Ncrt'JCE ()vtrfJ,... _not ltK 111111 -I nd -f\llll•l l\'1) lllnel 111, 1bo--. fllH, 4111 MICArllllll" l t•lt vt rd Clillomlt t THl WHOLE IEAJITH lAN05C .. Pli--------------il "'""''""" SlllMl•Y• 111111 H1IW1yt -ner '"' 1hen c!Ollblt lht ..,.,.,,. '""'''' llmt ,..,, OlllCI I•• 1U6 H•llOLO T, eu111. Jll .. :IH1 1'•111 COMll'AMY, J.IO Awl\CIOO. COiii Mn•. p 1tn1 ri!n, t ... 1111191'(1 i;.,on wllk.h tl!Cfl rllf'I ilMll be peld .... II p, 1h 119110t'(I N"""tlllf1 l11C11, C1lli.r..i1 '24>6l Grl'fl't t>rl.,., C-.Mir, C•lli..1111 ~ Slldfltll II~ , Hlfl~u, 1"5 "ICTITIOUI IU.IHlflS r.cP9111Jtll 111 Ill• c111ecllw• bt•t~llllllO 19'"""""' 1119llceblt 11 "" ..,.111culll' cr•lt, t i ltpMnt1 111•) 111""' '211S i!'wrrYlnot1111. "'.....,.. t•el!, ~ ,.AMI ttATllllrillHY • t1 1 , 1 111c1tloll « ll'Pt al-"""" tmPklyt<I on 1 ... 111'{1]¥'1. All•""•..,., l'tUlltlMlf HAllRtl!'fTIE It. HUSTON, MOI kl Clltrltt Jann_, , .. AwtlfO. Cotll ,.,,. followffll WMll II llolnl 11\11.!ntH Tiit Conlrl'Ctor wlll 111 ,....,1rld to U>tlfft '"' IMfn'lflfll ot COfl'lllft\Ml1on le fllt PYl>l!lfl~ Or1 ... 1 Cotti Diiiy l'llDI l•Hlt L1n11, Cor-IMt Mlf, C1"*""lt Mt11, 11 : tll'IP~ In 1<(ot'lltf!Ctl wllll 1M prO'fllia.i. Of LlbP' CoOt ~Jon JJ'llO, N""""btr 10, 11. 11, 1911 .-0•11 fMH 0..rw Oulniln, u.I Vil LIOo klJd, 11.EMOH f_OUAll.0 Df NEAULT , 1110 Trlvtl ""' ..... )Utn(I IMYll'lel\h .ti.Ill bf Plld IO Nd\ -1<:mtll ~Id HI ·-ICUll 'fhll butll!IU 1• ctlllll.odtd 11¥. tlf>C'•l 1 .... _. llttfl. Vhl• liMr161. Ntw0Df'1 • 11 (". ""' -11_, •1 •ucfl ln'fll ,...., tlfllloltlfn<:e PIVmtnlJ •r• dtllntd In lhl 1ppllc1blt LEGAL NOTlCE 11r'-lhl1. Thlt IM.i•IMn It llfi"' ctl'fllllcl.0 bY 1 C1llf'""'9 co11tcflft OfrVllnl<'il 19•een-ll 1111!:1 "' IC(ordll\Ce """ LIDOr Co« SKllOll OATED 11'111 :11'11 HY ol N'"'"""'' 19tl. '"""'11111. ll•Yll\Ol'l'll (, l)lnM, 1ne VIII• 1n3J , MOTICI OP' l'UILIC' SALi HAROLD T, IUTTI, JR, (f11rlet Jlfl-IE"'1idl, N..,....i ltKfl• C1ll"'"°l1 ,.,...,.., llldtlltw...i tPCftllllC• l'l'llY bl! W!'lOioYtd In lhl P'flKUIJOn ol !tit wortl· MOTtCE 1S HEllEl't' GIVIEN 1t11t .._, ll•l-1 lli,t wl!ll IM C-IY (ltrtl of Yllll t!tlfff'tfll 111M w41" N C-IY Till• llltl-1 11 llelllf <ol'llllKIM bJ 111 T1W'!' """'I bl "° ..,,....... " .,,, «Wll•tclll' ... 1\lllC•'lftl(IOI' tmP'°'llnt --""" Wiii lie .old 11 !'Wiie Siii, Ill Mllld•Y· Or-"""'*'· Stilt ., Cllltor!ll•. Ill Cl .. -., Ot•ntl CO\lfttJ "" ....... n. 1971, IMtvtdull 111 ll'IY ~tk"bll <ft ll " lrldt, l.t .. I crtfl fl' lftdt ~mlntO le lit 911 Hlll'tmblr J2r ltJI, 11 H:• A.JI. .. it tUO Mf¥, S. ttn, I• IMIY J, ltrfltlft, If 1....,1¥ J, Ml~ CNllll"I' (!"'"IV lll'f"!'f'd I . ~ ~~ «eWllllOOI Ill ta:ordtnct wl1ll ruh!I M'!ll ffl!j1111-ll prft(rllltll b\I MlflPltlfltll l'"ulltr'llfl. o n_,1111 ... Otllli't C°""'1' (ltr';, Cltr~ Thi• 1111:;;:1 m10111 Wiii> 1M C.unly tM ~kftfllf cwrocw. ~lll l lltnllOOI k dlrKIM ,,. ll'Mll POf'lllln .. Ltbor lolllOw"" tttc:t1btd .... lllMl'I: ' Pyltllv.tt Or•ntit CMll O•il¥ 1'11111. l'lltMtPl.0 0r ..... • C-1. Odllt' l'l!M. Cltrl" Or CtlllllT 1111 O(I. "· 1tn. coo. SICllDll 1m .f Wfllell '"""" well ' C*'lllKlll• « .. l\ltlCll'llfl>C'IW i.·tt111"' ' VIWll 1 Wtfftlf Sw.,.,. ,.. •• , ~ 1.1 .. ~· HJI •" NoYtn'l.btr 1'-,,. ,. tlld ~ ,, •Y ,_.,. J. Mw.r °"""' cw,.,.,. ,_ ""' .Hlllll ..... tlllkall'9 c-111" temllll1"'fflt "' .-1111ktt11• •i.fllll· "T'vfft1 LllM No. n?UtJ I c... ''" .... n Oetk. 1nlt tf !I'll crll"I er tr ... !fl 1"" ,, .. °' lht 1U1 ol lht ccw>lflt:t W9111, t <trlllk•1• lllWtri 1 Mlfhl~• Lt.tllt ,lrlofl!l Mt. J,.EGAL.NOTJC£ l'lllltll.._. Or•""' ·c .. 11 Dttlr ,.! .. !, t tlllllf9Vlfll ,... '*"'11CW "' IVkOl\lrt<lvr ""' ll'MI '"""'••11•m •1111 1r11o111111 o1 "'MK!Oi 1 CHIHtc HY#llfk tr1e.,. LEGAL N""""CE w.wmMI' t; 9, 1•, Zl. lt71 ttSW1 tCIO'Wllk• !fl ilVdl l fM. Upptt 1111 1t1111nc1 r(/ lllt Ctrllflctl .. 1"t (tlllfl<tw er Vl~ ..,....,1r.cllf, """"' t:ll"""' """"*"' '° ktlrlll 1n1 s " ""' Lablr '°"'• .,u.n wl"-u n11 SH WI •It'll .i1 P ,_ .1..,. ..,.ioy 1M _.... tf •JllllAl'll~ft ... lhl rtl!o of lflfll'tl'llkl'I to lllfrnt.,_ 1!1tld l\lllttllvtlOllt ''-' r19llCllMl!h twtol' •ICTITIO\IS IU111111tr LEGAL NOTICE ... "" eotrtlllufl, " !Mr• II !fl ""' ., •• OI ""' !lit .. "" --I lllllCI ., ...... 11\111 lt CIHIOl'll ,,,.,t, .. ' NAMI tTATIMlln' llllCTITIOUI 11111 .. 1•• ti ""111111111' 11111 ~ tM 1~tk-"'lf lllf00£1111 ill •ny ll)fll'tntkt~~lt fll~ II GATE MANVl'AC,UlllHO CO,, dttltor, Tiit tel"'*'"'-llllf-,. llolllll M l-MAMI t'ATIMllllT tr irldl, te wflkfo 1111'111 fll lunh 11111t fClnl,.Utrt 1rt 11111 1•t1 , .. , -111t '°"' Wl'llCll colltlt•I! It MJblitd lo 11'111 t trtlln .. : Tiit ftllewl,. "''°" 11 Ml,,. ltl/tlfttll htc'OI' " 1\lll(el'lfftc:lof It !IOI, t$'11rlbul\nt, 11\t (OrltflCIOI' 11111 t\lkelltrl<totr 1h•H S.C:llrllV A1r-nt. d•ltll .. ..,llfl'\tler Jll, ( 1 I P' AC I , IC l"'a OJ" l It TY 1•1 unlrlllutt le Niii hnt tr f\lfldt "' 11\t t.fJ'M lll'IOll"I .. ""'°" "" .. .,.. N•lt 11111 1tll. ./ IMVES'tMl.'M' co. IJI , ... , '~I c U.llRIAGIE INVES,Ml!:NT HUM·,,,. ~ • II' 1•11 l'ICTlY11Ml1 IUllflllll , l'lh\MI tTATIMIMT 111·1ow1nt --.. ...... ltutllltll YOUR NEWSPAPERBOY IS A CREDIT MANAGER MrrM tfte "pu111ft'" lhelftlf do11't '"'" lmpo,to11t to\.. I ..... y9I ,.t eff ,.YJ114 -., n.11 fotftt ft pay -the MO:;\• ly Mii far 4tlt"'Y of your MWSIH1,.r. l 11t eoeh DAILY PILOT COftt.f h 111 .......... fot hlmMlt. Ht tr1111ts you to p.-, 111111 mul ~._ ... ,., '" tM MW1,.,.,. P ftllren to ya11, c.m1r1. .,. at!Yts.4 te 1tc1rt collectl11t 011 ttl1lt r111tK • ""' • tM 1 lttt If Htll 111af!th, •r c.rMh11., ~ tllt ZO!h, M tWr f• ff .... ,... af IMl11t pol41 Illy the eM .t tl11 111a111ti •Ml IMy it... ft p.y IM!r 1111111. If .,.,'H prr your mt11thly 111111 Mrl'f It •t .... wlM ..., Y"' c.,.Mf 119ppy, '"'' It wUI ASSURE PROMPT CQURT'EOUS SERVICE DAILY PILOT CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT Ill 111t 11 .,... rnflllll'" !M 1 111tr ttnllKIOll dO, Fw wHllul 1111\W't N tOIT\,11 wttPI Tlll1 w!t It bll,,. l>t1d le ""tll'C. ltll l'ROP'EltTIES. ms I , CMtt Mlf!'t-(1,, llLlVIM, "'9 Nttlh l rltlll lt...i, 1•1 1«ti0<1 1m.J of 111a.u.tior (odt, tht. tonlr•1.tot \!ltll lit dt111H tllt •IOfll 19 "" "" rltP\11 ol OA\llD Wl!ISl CO .. 9'I South (ll'lfll IMI Mir, 9'12$. l1n11 Alll. C1!11ot11t1 '1,.. ~ STIVl tACHMAl"N • AINX.IATIS. 1 Mlle ......_. l'lll!lrltCt tor • ptt'10ll ti 1111 rnOtlil>t I•-111t ... It lhl clt!tl'll'll""tton fltobtrllon 1111\tvt('O, Lff A""lfl, G-A, rt'*'111, * ,_..,., Afl,, l!olllfl S. 111.,.r, 1652! G,...,.,flr 11 17f \llrt l11I• ,t1ttr, Colli Mltl>•• " mid•• t •llfor"!', •' 1KIH'td ••M'f' \INll!r-""" c-<!fl Met, mu.-"°"' f•lll• A111. C:llller"i" li.v4 t•dlml'fll'I• 111 Vlrt lfllt '•«•• ~1 111c1 will lit ct111ill~fd 11111-f• h lt mldf Ofl 1 1111•""" ,.,,..,. tur11h"" 1>¥ llA lll• ,..,1111nl I• 1111 1b0v,.1Mmtcl lew,itv Tlllt llutl..U 11 btl"' c.nouor:ttd lly '" T~ft ~l-1 II """' ~llOlll Ir\' 1 ' COS!• Mtt•· Vlf.W ltATI' HOSPITAL •1'111 I• '°'"' In •<<onlll!!(11 wl111 IM -v1•.on• ol ll'lt A11•ell'ltt1I 11111 lilt pf'O'llltlanl 11 !Pit ll\llllvld:utl.. Ll..,11td l'ttlftrr"11J1!. '111' bullN11 11 llelllt clfil!llCl'tll !W "''ji~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!'ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ "'°'*'' ,.....,........,. •1111 (OIWl!lont .,1 llflll \IM " tilt 1Pl<ll"lllont. l kl'I ltid· C1t1101'11l1 Un11onn C:Oll'lfl'ltrdtl Cecll· Gf>ef'll ,., Tjlem1• , "*rl S. I!•-WM11111rfu1t. •u l!!WI M ti(MMll..,.. ... prt4Wllfltd •• ,_qulrM .., "'"'· 0111'11 : NOV''""'' f, 1t11. Tiil• 1r1t""*" flkllf .min m• CounlY Tiii• llllMi•"' flltd with ,lt\I c.iu1111' $~ .. CPl~l!ll'I p..,1RV lfW STATE HOSl'ITAL OAVIO WfllZ co. (ltrk of °'""' (O\lfl!Y flfll Niii, n . '"'· Ct•tlr. "' Ori .... COll"IY el>' Octeb!!r "· T~lt tUltriiefll llLl'd Wftl> '"' '"'""' ,,., Miff« t "'('9v•fd ·~ 1111 A. Gii~ ,, ''""'' J.' MNIM ONlllY ""'""' 1m. ,, lntrlf J, ,....,, ~ c1enr "°''"" CeunlY Ofll Ott."· ltn. Kids Like to Ask Andy CMfft MtU. (lhlernll A~ll\Ol'!itd A.It!\!' Cltr-. , Co1i111Y Ct.nr. I~ IWll'IY J, Midooc btwlY C0\1111J ,., PHILll' ~llE ••• -.. tnf.OC ,\ l'ullJltlltd Or•"ll C..tt 0111¥ ,lltt. ,.Ultll•~"' Dt•~~ Cf~~' 0t11¥ l'\1011 C!ll'~ .._olt1I Adfftlfllttfltit •ublltPlld °''~ c.t1t 1)111"1' ,,tot, \Ml\ltfl\flll' ! .. la. • 11'1f OKWl'W 1, C)eteW II., •Ill ~ I, t, 1., l"\IMIU!tf OrlMt C:Olff OtllW 'I!-', """"~ °""" (MU.0.UV "tlDI N•.....,,a.r , .. U,.1'11 JOn-11 tot-"11Mr 1 .. tt 11 Jlll0.11 '"' aon-n "" • • ,...,,, Ndlltl'!lbll"_ I, 9, 1..." n. l~ WP.fl I • • I : I • " ' • : • ' • I • ..... I 0 • 0 .. ·~· ' ) • I •' \ OAJl.Y I'll.OT JJ • ' Everyone Hes ·soinelhing The! Someone El~e Wents ADS f ou Can Sell .It, Find It, Tr•d• It 'lith e Went Ad 2619 Harbor, C.?.t. SAVE$$$ OUTSTANDING VALUES AT POPULAR PRICES ... 3 BEDROOM, 2 IATH $19,500 This 7 year old home hlls It all. Built-in kitch- en, d o u b I e garage, forced 11.ir heat,. dining area, large lot and lots or big trees. It's priced to sell fast w act NOW and move in for Xmu! 546-8640. $100 TOTAL DOWN PAYMENT PLUS NORMAL CLOSING COSTS · and this 3 bedroom, 2 bath townhouse can be you.rs for Xmas. How about a built-in . kitch- en? 'Forced air heat! Big brick firtplilce? Dining area? This one has. it all! Full price mo~??! Hurt);'. 546. U.STSIDE COSTA' MESA $23,'50 A good 4 bedroom, 2 bath home at this price is hard to find, but here it is and it's a beauty. It has . a convenient.J.y laid out kitchen. good size bedrooms, and in excellent condition in- side and. aut with large lot and beautiful cov- ered patio. All for ·full price of $23,950. ,545. 8640. 4 llDROOM FIXER UPPER $2S,950. You'd better h urry this home is located in a $27,000 • $28,000 nelgh- bo'rhood. All it needs is paint a n "d clean up. This one has it all, 2 baths, built-In kitchen, forced air heat, brick fireplace, double garage, . hardwood floors, new carpets, and water heat. er. You ·can't miu at 525,950. r u 11 price! Hurry. 546-8640. EXCEPTIONAL U.STSIDE HOME $26,750 U you \Vant Eastslde Costa Mesa. stt this 3 bedroom, 2 bath charm· er, largf! corner lot. floor to ceiling brick fireplace, ranch style kitchen, 2 car garage, forced air heating. Owner anxious. Will carry 2nd trust d~. Try 10% dO\lo'll ! 546· 8640. INCOME-DUPLEX $300 TOTAL DOWN Pay n ormal closing costs and you can O\lo'n this Costa Mesa duplex. Each unit hu 2 big bedrooms, sepe.rate ga- rage, good loCation and valuf! priced at· 529,950. Call tor appointment 546-8640. TERRIFIC LOCATION Popular 3 btdroom 'T' plan, near schools, In Mesa del !\far for only $30,950. Just tie11.ned a n d repainted inside. FHA/VA financing okay. 546-8640. EXCEPTIONAL . LANDSCAPING Great ,..fl.1eY Verde 3 bedroom home In excel- lent sh&pe. Comfortable family l'OOm. Just $29,· 950. All ttrms. 5-f.6-8640. INVISTOU DillAM . Beautifully remodeled 2 Bedroom h-o m t with large living room and r't'1·ner lireplace. Nea.rly JjJJOO sq. ft. Eastsldf Tt-2 property. Priced to sell. 546.a&40. 2629 Harbor, c .M. \. J!! .. r ·•1 • • GeMrel ' Goiwet Gonorol .GonoNI :-*a"":, ;-'.*T' -*:-;--.'"1~T· .-'.""'",\T~· 11 -.*&''-I;;-=···:;:;=;;;;:;;:;;;,;;;:;;;, ;;,.,,:;:7;;;;, -;;;o;::==o i ;;Ne=wport;;;:;;;H;;;•~=,tl;,f ,.11!AC$~J~PLIX 1 , · ·• • ~ DOVER SHORES Older 3 Bdrm home In "BET· Ma>bo your Jut chance ., 'l TAYLOR ' co.· : bqlo~&GjllaxyDrivevie~ho'me. 2doors TERTHANNEW"oondition own ~II ~.at. om Galaxy Paik. Lari~ ind,Qor.entertain-.. · · ·""" P1uinb1.,., •lectrl· ·'''"'"' prlc<. Two un1 ... 3 , ing area : with pool; l'acUizl, wet . bar. fire. cal.. kitfh A: bath remodel-blocQ to beach. neu ·~ l 'Ii ed. new carpetini, draper-pina...-10" down • owner wua WESTCLIFF -5 8EDR.o6MS ", pace, plus ormal livmg1i'Qc)m. $122,QOO with ies It Uaht µxturet. Vacant help ftnanc. and rents make See this exclusive ·today! WonderluI fimily .Jand l~ase. ~ t : • · & ready to ate anytime. ~nta. Fix it up • n d home with lge. nt0ms. Fai:n-' nn., 4 baths; BILL' GituNDY, REALT01t :0"",.:;r J:;:_ 5"::) ""tw' ~MONEY. Better "'; 20·~40· Poohw/separate Jacuzzi p0.1, $79,900. · • ' · & l -341_ .. Y•,Mle Dr., .suite 1, N.8 . 67.1-6161 N-rt Walker ee · . "cUr 26th Y.-.r" --c- WESLEY H. TAYloOR ~o ... ReGlteln-l~c;.~ .. ~ •• 'l", ·"' ............ """!G!".., .. ,."'r•'!'l. ................. 1 •I :. 2111 S.nJ""l"I" Hlll1. lt04d .. : Oio!LY $26,950 falrvi•w , Provinclol Chem. ' NEWPORT CENTI . ' . ~10 OWNER IAli.tNG T-laip bdma ........ 111 646-011 SEE y~~~r.1!.~E BAY . . ~.·~~CIAL SALE o.H:.·rels·.E:'_;.RA. N·,CH '. our. ~1.:-~=.~::;1·: ====''="::=yt=lmt=) DELUXE DUPLEX. Custom built 4 bedrobm, c oae to COSTA MESA 3 . bath, 2 fireplaces, deep shag carpeting. New and olighUy .....i hom· . IN LA. GUNA? , ·$.49,950 PAl!K. Two "'-1'• c. ... Macnab-Irvine · 2 Bdmu.. 1 bath. Sle:PI to ccea.n on Penlnlula Pt. K1:11e: trpl.; open beam cell.; co\iip. fumblled, Newly decorated I: eerpeted. $55.ooo. Immed. pomtasion! Call: m-36U 142-2253 ~ Kitchen \vi th all the built-ins. Glass walled es. Wint~ dole outa, e~ry-" . · · RMuced $40QO Unckor'Appn.JJ-ten and BANK or AMER.I· staircase. PLUS 2 bedroom RENTAL UNIT. thingmust10. See cur Com-We ~ve it? Alf1l0St tacre1 al. Prime resMkntial arff.. CA.Thisexcellenthomecan Rll!atty 'O>m.-ny - A real buy at . •99,500• plete stock. Fresh ell the incl?~ .a,fab41ou1 4 tJed. 3100 Sq ft cl llvin& area. be yours with only $2,695 HARB'ORVIEWHILLS " abeU is a charmingly ~-~ ~~, •WTOUnded by Formal dinll)C • .' 3, baths. down if you call imr~Jdiate· For the wine CcMolSleur -associa ted U. NOBSTRUCTED Oc;:EAN VIEW •1"' ' be•"oom, 2 bath '"'" ,,..,_ • spectacular 11.,.. ...,...t!ori~ .,..,, Tiiis 1'-· • • 20 1t. -«11at. home near ~.NeWport , Hb. VIEW, a iue:sf cott&gt, «nd ls.a Corgeotla 4 bedn!Gm tri· ~ Vi Cuc.a.ding waterlalls drop. BP ~K(J;iS -REALTORS !.J2S W Balb"o 67J.)66) In lilgun1 Beach ' with nef c1rpe.1Ing and a ~'corral~. C~I now while level w/owner fofced to tell. Urange ISf.a ping into ipectacular 1qnk:· This beauty has everything. Large livihg Jarg;e.yard fD ll'CW )'()UtC'Vfl it IA 1tiU ravalli.bJe. Call 5'.~ (optn eve&) en pool. FO!"e\ler Ccastl.ine LooldlM) for a Tax room, 3 bedrooms; 3 baths, HUG'E kitchen Christmas ....... J .. t$30,5titl. • TRl·l'LEX ~V.A; ' · ' ' &.Octth Vi.W. 119,SOO. Call . W-' ..... ff? 'th b ill. F' l d °' a prime .,., N•wport PROPERTIES Lois Ega• """"'°· n•sv \Vl u ·-ms. uep ace, en, carpets & Hu. modern home with 3 An ,excell_tnl investment and ~ duplex. 2 bedroom.'! drapes, full sprinkler system. VA appraised. BR &t 2 Ba for $3?,900. a. fine home .. Three 2-bed· Tcrmerly LaBorde R.E. ea.ch. COl'Mr location. 0 . OWNER ANXIOUS. $35,500. Would you like a.Clift Drive room 'unit!, b1,1ill·ip' kitdi-220 E . l7th St., C.M. oellent floor pia.na with fire. PUT YOUR 'i>R' EAMS AWAY add""'°' Ju!( 133.SOO. o, •n•, littpl•'"' in the owne 's _ ..__,...,_ .CALL 646°0555 642-8295 6'U200 p1aoe In e., h. Term• 'a Costa fi!esa older home unit, and closed ranges fOt Eve-ninp ·8(2...8453 i "'""""l"."'!~~~!!!!9-l -$415;9!!0:08.-f73..8550. Jn l~gun1 . \Ve · have the ptace for you. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. SEPARATE MASTER . SUITE,. SUNK· EN living room, fireplace, family room, kitchen ·with built·ins. Carpets & drapes. Dream away for . . · ·. $35,000. . . TOPS~ TURVY On' i•lbo• Island THE CIRCULAR STAIRWAY leads you up the stairs where , you will find the living room, dining room( kitchen, 1 bedtoom, 1 bath, ALL CAR P!:TED. Downstairs, 3 bed· rooms, I bath. Great idea? · $79,500. ' ' NEED A BEACH COTIAGE? W1 Have It! ON BALBOA ISLAND. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, living room, fireplace, front patio. A· DOLL HOUSE for only $32,500. I tor Just $18.500. c.otne in and aµ.· ' . . --=~~=='=-~-10 UNITS brow ... Let Us ohow you .. A BEE.G O~N .,001,,. •UCH. WALK TO THE ,b THE REAU •'."... ESTATER manyotherstochoosefrom. Qne ol ~~in ' 1 YACHT ' Be.aufiluI ~~~·hacienda CALL (9 '41·.2,14 ,Cdsta .~·.and.llke ne . 5 ALL THESE FEATURES_. Of1ly 2 ~an old, 1,i-mile . Aa • ~ .. _ bod"'°'"'· J balba. ~,. """ ,_.. Uvlnz room !Yorn the l>eecll. W.• pa. 7'::£'P~-~miJy ~m: SPiit I .,eJ. dtn, luxurious mUter l\li~ tio lll'N,plus r6om for pool. Ht•r Newp•rt P••t orrtr• ~.in aq ~oeU.ent a.z:ea. with fittplaCe: , . • O'tatiwly d~ted. this ROOM TO SPARE . ;y,;,h,·&111, PETE BARRETI = .. "'.: s':i.~J!~ 42l)O Slf. ft, of luxury all on ,._ ·" ' REALTY ' pl.ace, and cvenlud double one floor. Four h\!dn)Oms, 4 c•raie. Only $26.500 and on baths, fiUge: family room ' • 1605. WllT~Llff land YOU own. Won't last · ~th large wet ba.r overkiok· ~ Wnfc1j'.tt Dt!Ve' . NIWro:;· llACH ~ call '-._ '' '. I Eastside: Costa Mesa, lf'M,t rental area.. Seven 3-bed· roonui ·&rid · three ll-bed· rooms. All aepuate units with k>ts of space. Shows WANT to buy .( BR home. a fantastic return ·with ln--Any ccl)(\IUon or behind come: of $1.400 pez mo. sub-pymnls. Prtv. . P • r ty . mit 6n doWll or trade to -~-~"'-~· -~--'--Wa Iker & ·Lee 1-B•_i11oo_i .. _.nc1 __ DUPLEX FOR SALE It'• Owner. StePI · to bay & beicll. Make ctter. Ph aft 6 p.m. MQ.2676. 'Realtors . 2790 Harbor Blvd.-at Adams ~:;.()165 Ope• 'ti! 9 PM ..,. • 1• .x 38 " he•'"' • liiiiiliiilnu o , .,. 9 PM ,.2 1200 ~.. Walker & Lee lilte're;l:f pogl, ~'.O fireplae!&, ' ' ' -~ One fn master bedroom. 3 I•""'""""-'!!!!!!!!! .. ~"' Realtors In fashkmable Bayshcres, car prage, in hont p,I us Small Housel 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams With.private be&Ch. ·spacl®I s· I 8 Ow HERE'S A WINNER Beacon B•v one ill ~ar-that can be an La'le Loll 545-9491 Open 'til 9 PM ' BR. family rm. It aep. l'o~ • ~ y ner extra playroom. ~very con· c ... ,.1 h 111 f I dlnin•' rm. Casual I. Comfy. Be;iutifUJ ~ e W wa:""front venlence for luxuriGUI living · Well-built : .der i ~ ..._. .. s e roo • sec udE!d LMng nn. with lnvt•i-.. hothe, C...Pt Cod thn\·out. 3 bu been 'in · -ted in home· with ~f;--a .. ee needs 1ardena, beamed ceilings I. ..... 16 S d ! ba.. Also 2 br l~ · ~ · ""r n-._.:.."..-dbl · paneled den. All lend charm frpl. Secludi!d outdoor pa· r, en, • ~l•23hol3me .. , $110,000'. Ca 11+ ·~ 1."...::-~~':°''-1.m' -~• to this lovt1y ca.sa. in San tio blends beautifully wfth ha apt. 3 Car fat. Boat sll'l .,_ -·~ .......,,. ~ .......... ins0id'e. Priced to tell, $5-t.'700. avail. Prine. Only. 6T'a-0419 r1 : ' 111-· ff!l)Ced fd. with alley_...J1. -Juan ~pl1~ano. ~ned to HOltE GEflRI E RL:rY_. _,;."'""''""'.;.· ,;.1,,!'~·~----1 A"4t/ll-S. llddJ.'11 BEACH}iJDEAWAY.1dooi ::!'~~~0 S,,';:.~. 0i::.!:.0'; ..._.:no...-o.., N&!':;:.,,;,,, _c.1~ P•r~ __ ____ ,!""' ·n.m'di<i.JBJ~ .. 2Bdnn: -~ .. . · DAMN THE' aµest •apt.'w/view. Build on OPISl'R.ANO VALLEY CORONA Del MAR ll>OKS like new mori ~1• 3 · •AlllU\ra ,'D•up· ~'ESS · front le~r. $45,000. ASKING $46,000 OUPLEX,::_Le•H/Opt. BR. 2 BA, new cpts, drapes, """" "' ALMOST NEW · • "hard to p.aint lee yd Owner Does yaur RJIEVMATIZ say find" ou...i.. .... ..S. f 8 . CAPISTRANO VALLEY La.rge, Spaniah. ' Bed.rm., 3 · ,, • REALTORS 64+7270 it's t;i.me to move: inl&nd,? Jjij\.;,"3.~·.,.Bt 2 ba~: $19.~50 ISTHE PRICE REALTY Ba tri·level home + 1 BR ~"°"-9593-·-~~---r Live: near Major Sboppint. $lf,,:i00 .,., ) for Utis ~ lovely 3 ·btd· 31501 camino Capistrano apt. $3115./mo lease. SlSOO CorOn1 del Mar Anaheim Stadium a'.nd DIS· £J.5-3000 room. 2 .be.th home'!' The . 493-UJ4 OQtiqn,,or: ~% dn. Im.med 1 _ _.. ______ _ (Formerly· O.lancr Rul 'Estate) 2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR. CALIF. NEYLAND:• ""'I"·. 2 both, " ' ., ·1oan ••his!> imugh lh•t you Make Your Dream "'f:ru J~SMiNE AVE. * NEW' LISTING * Bii 1ai kit w/, tttamlc tile can usuffie With payments $'3 ~ J &: convert. den, s~llt· bttakJ'Ut Mr. Fireplace, of $160 per'lricmth, which in. Come r,,. PE""~N R.EA.sooLTY 542.1m ~ J Stall ahowers, 2 carpets, extensive: and u-dllde:s a.ll. Modern built-ins, Why not build what you real· ~ frplct., Wice roof, patio. ICl"ted fruit· trees. 15 x 24 L:''='O-~"':=~-,---deep pile , carpeta, alsa ly want'!' Lovely location in • DrHm No . More Terrific view o1 the canyon covered patio, fenced dee luUden ClosHut matching' i:frapes. Double Upper Bay arii with New-,EAsmLUFT with a VIEW. A: ocean. lmmed. possess . I -~---~~~~~-GeMral STEPS TO BIG CORONA 511,•eeping ocean view frcrfi • bdrm. home en 3 levels. 34' Living /dining area. Onp of the few homes availatile close to the 11,•ater on tte simple land. # ll'6, $98,230. Ca.tJ 6'5-?225. - H i 0 __ • .. ••-•-•-l------I run. ASSUME Si,.( F.H.A. On! .(. ma: ) and 4 bd gara1e kto boot!&Calll· port Beach addrfts. Second ·3 Br· muter auite Terrace Only $53,500. -If You Have ~~.·Full pri~ on.)y S~s~ Sty~~ wi~, Wal er ee •IOI')' could hlve view. 90'x entrY. worksaver kit .. form. ·=~AN RE:;ZJ59 baths. No Wwn GI buy~ni 125', Only $21.500 • w l t h dining. Bargain at $44,500. l~ginatio~ 'G ' Vi l..... and min~ dOwn FHA. Prk:ed Reallorr; tf!~s. cau NOW for de· -GEM- And. _you're look!""", lrokina •a·nge 15-W from $30,&ro. Price iMludes 2790 Harbor l!lvd. at Adams tails. 613·8550. 1610 w C 111 NB for a buy, take·~ look·;; I' landscipe; sprinkltn: and. M5-0465 Open 'tU 9_J>M REALTORS cu wy.64if673 SPOTLE!"S Costa Mes• lhi•Jbedroomhom•lnB&y· PROPERTIES ::r.'.'~.,~-""C:; Newer Than New OWNER ANXIOUS CONDmON crest with new shag C.U-· Fonne"y ' ·"orde R•E. ,. ' Ori by law! 16th Pl & Will Id all II pet. and custom dra,....s. etc. 1• I.AD P1aza. and ~w tchoola.. Mo-' ve s Y ace -;ii;i;i;i;i;~i;;;;; cons -er o en, G M V ,__ . .. -220 E 17th St C ~ dels open ·Call . Tustin. (403 16th :Place). • 2300+ ·1q ft ·home .• 3 BR, 2 re:at es& erde ""-'ation , ~1i~% down •. 1'6.950. CALL 646:o·sss Walk. 'e·r ·& Le·e ;.;ie·,~~ "::%~ ~; H··R~~:Kv1Ew ::;.:;;.:""'.•am "" & =·~ ~"=~~igl~ o THEREAL ''."... ESTATERS ·. · Evening-a Call ~-5226 doo •· b k Pl 3 B • " CALL SEE '"'""""""'....,. tolidly b1,1JU home &: it's , • ,. 1 r ,.. ac .. 4s .r <>< Love:l.y one: •. .-.(·BR. · · ... · ·"--'• 1 11••1.i:. _,,11•• •<Kl · ' ~ton Wn roam. Charmin& le Sun. D-·~ ROY J . WARD RLTRS. ··~ · clean! _.-,950 takes CO~(>NA DEL MAR 279o Harbor ·SJvd. at Ad1m1 ny ·2 ~11ory t\QnX:. Priced ~~~r:.~:~ted3e_!;:: 6t6-0028 it See ~fore lta ao!d, ll R DO YOU EARN ., $820 A MONTH? Home & Investment '1 rr so CANYON SIDE >IS-9491 open 'tll 9 PM· ' ''<ht.. • plctuiosm~ lard"'· 1d'e&1 HOME . PLUS UNITS ~· CO:TS Lib b.1ng In the M... . TRI HARBOR •- . ,., onty OW,.ER MOVED, REAL TORS , :;'1.,." .~m:~.rea1 .. ..,.. 2 Bd,.:;,...\'!uC.,~~=""· 3 m~q\;~ .!~""' 10';, DQWl!I · $U,500 Day°'·"''· ..... ~ -DUPLEX R~t~~i~ 353; E. ~1trwy , CdM SEE TODAY . . BEACH DUPLEX $23,950 l\faybe ycur last cha.nee to own beach properly 111 a de· cent price. Two units, 3 blocks to beach. near shop. ping. 107o down ·owner will help finance and ren1s make payments. Fuc it up a n d l\IAKE MONEY. Better see it. Call Walker & lee Real fora 968-JJn -~--.DUPLEX Let your tenants buy you 1 luxury duplex at the beach, both units hive huge liJ\O.a: room~. Upper has 4 bed· rooms •-bath. One com· ple!ely tumished. Only steps fl'Om be11ch and 1vaile111e for only ~.DOI) down. Call 675-4930. Open Eves 'ttl 9 1:..~!:1 VACANT 4 BEDROOM V1ca.nt and walling. OoNnm movtd and want quick sale. Lovely conditioned home. Fuoclional floor plan. Sep- arate family room, ~·et bar. Quality wall to wall carpet• and drapes. Park·like y1rd. Sprinklen. •. ONLY $.i7,900 •.. EZ ~Call 673-~ · 0 'l'HE RI:!•.!. ''.".., [STATLP;-; 4 Bed-2 Bath . No down to veterans. Beauti- fUI well cared for .home. Profe:uionally landscai>eid. Huge bedroom1. , InclUdN carpets & drapes. Eltttric 1arage door opener. Ownen need fut u..le at only $25,950. Hurry, Dial ~>-0303 lllH l.\I I. 01\0 \ 4 ' ,, • ' c I;> View· Lor Corona del ·Mar Idea.I for the imligihativf!, ·this two levP:I lot shews dMr cut bey mw po1entla1. Driveway a~ from both fmnt and 1't!Ar, with 1d- ditiona1 otl 11treel parkinJ. P.f1ke: this property an ex· <'epttonal 10uth -of • the • hlchway offering. $30,000 teftnL Qill ~. rustk A oe<ludO! W,.. 4 bed,room., 3 baO. ONLY $25,450 .....--~ Fix up & .. ve on these unlbl. ~546-4141- . 0 . •·-' f I t .,,,,,.. IU1'TOW1ded by. beeutt.B . . v.o.1.. A uncl Top lo<:ation. (Op E I ) n UL>-1§~ ee 0 ftil.. hornet, :-:far bay pl,UI .. , ""'.--ro ,.. ............... _ .. _ Fortin Co. Re•ltort '" Yin"''· 3 BR., large 1-umpus mom · ""'9U'W'tPVllf INllllUll' , Lots cf wood &: stone: 14t1e ~a.ck .Y~ with hef-t· Sbow1 like model 4 bdrm ~· REALTORS 642·5000 _£ , $53,1tltl ed 000!· · homo • BeautiJul Lando<ope "'e"""'O"L-,D"'S"P-.Ao;N"'IS"°H..,e• BY OWNEI\: 2 •14ry, obake ~ New roof • Large oomer roof, 4 Br 2~ Ba, Bit-Ins, let, room for boat. trailer, PJ.0700 ~2430 Solid adcbe bit. 3 BR, nr. Frpl, ~ patiO, Boat Lo chenmyer REALTORS .siNCE 1944 ~?3·4400' 'S25,9SO · NO ·DOWN low ~ rnA or uaume apt 5~%.G.I. la.n ·now ·on property & your monthly payments·will be like renL Lovely home in "Mint" con· dition inStde It 'otit. 3 'tied· rooms au electric built-iii kltchtii.. C.rpeta, dr1pe1 ii: Jll111Y 1hllU,en. -Dtn, larp: pa.Lio. Owntt leavln&" atta! """"' TARBELL. 2955 Harbor, Calta Mesa- BllOlBMOOR .. ROOl. Bleck wall fence.·Only --------· IOWn It pk. One-of·a·klnd, sate, 1t0rap· area. Xlnt. 10% down. &f6..n11 spotles1. Ph.. tor d~&ila. cond. thnl-ou( Sf0:.72' . R" 1lt..,r 1860 NeWJ>Grt Blvd., C.M. , Ca.U 64iol928 . . Evea. 675-112'7 · O THI: RE:.!\[, "'\. £ST,\T£l!S OWNER mu.st 1ell. 4 $24,950. PERRON REALTY bedroo\ns with 2 baths. C0.;642·171!. . MOVE tn now! Ne: w I Y family room with Inviting M90~L HPME . decorate:i! home. 3 BR. den, -==-Jr .. estate irounds:. Work 3 Bdrms , 2 Baths 2 BA. bltlnl, encl patio, dbl bench·. extra 'I tc r && f! Steps to ~-11.n. 129,900 1 hlii.c: Colle:p Park. Owner, HUGE CORNER O .CEANFRONT shelves. No down G.l. •I.ow A-FRAME ·· !4&,96!1 RopiJi Jo'r th.af · bOat .l ~P'" · DUPL.ix down FHA er usume 5,., % 3 BR. Family rm., 2 bl.Iha Llb1 to .trade?: Our Tndtr'a er :PLUS! Jtustie ranch style , -• -..ii.... ' ban! Brtt.. $28.650. Ph. Walk to beach. $36,900 Paradise cclumn LI for you! 4~m·phla-famllyroom. a.el. )'OUr te'nants u .. _ )'0\11' S41).:i121.. Caywood Realty ~548-1290 51inei._5dl,Ylfor5buda. 2 patioa a: .epuate yard J!lymts In thls1.prtme )Oea. _ . """ ........ ....... 'l"lh ,..y,.,,,;., wait. to "°"· 3 Bedroom'. Duplex. • -· . park A ei:bcds. $33,750. With Both wt.I~ an fully furn~.&h· C,fiQ·"(] ·~, f ~~!/Is• as~um.able:,fl:IA.JofJ1. lj>On't ed and in .mint condltlOft. p~ I.',. .~ .. -p ,, hesitatc. c.n P.rleed at ohly $33,950. Sub- >til-ll51 '' ,, co.,., Eve! l mit you,. ott.,, SIO-•;;s The Punf• with the Buiff.fn Chuckle ~-~,.....,.....-~· SHEkW .. D REALTY ·· 'ijiR:;;;;;;;'.i;;;;;;~:-;.:;;:~:;;;~-:;;;:;;;;, I~. . ... , 18964 Brookhunt. r .v . 1 ••• O Rearto~· lett1r1 of fh• ~ f011r Kra1"bl1d wOrdr bt-, • -· INVESTORS DREAM low to form four .timple words. Eut&lde home + duplex. Xlnt :oeation and eondltion. •' \· -. --~. *. MCK My .... lli<b lnoom~. • v<,Y low J·BR 2•BA f&irlll>'l'ftl tir;pt. maint. Priced for fa1t sale. .bitbU.~·•,,uk-ln t...ei.. Call ~08BO (Otfen l'""-1 TARUNE I 2; a ':.:~-~~!-· 12n ~I ltoy MOCet'dle ltHltor -'--'-' • . I JSJll J<ooijOil 81\od. C.M. ' • ' ' 1 S41-772f ' t DOV!=R OllORES * . ...... I, ..... r. y=·LL .... r ·_,,~1,..,l. i • • · ELllCANT thniouL Noth!llC TUl .. ;• R=K . oompanble In tlU 2 • .. n. I Ii& • ""-bwlL homo • .msotl. NO I>cm't delay to' Me' tb1s ·fan-LEASEHOLD. I t' 1 ex. ta&t\C 3 ..._,, 2 bo\h qulolte. Open hse. daily - adult ~ home. Jt 1 Bryan\ Wiest ,!Utr. 675--2123; spotleu. Juat tteps from a 646-5S38 early AM or EVE. beaudf"1 paft< + pool. Only IAYFRONT APTS • $35,900. Do u-now, l'k\ obll· . 11tkMI Jor more informatlon. Villa Del Liao. Pitr A allp c.tl 046-bu. · -av>ll&I>~. From $31.Stxl. sell er1-. ·o.orve wnn.,,., .... ltlALTOR 54U57" Mf.1164 'K.EFAC, ! News ltemr A coreleu . plumber connected a wot., · pipe ro a gqt line by mit.tok• r---=-:--=-,,_,..,,_~ond rhe fovcers ran - I ' Z AT NA S lwoter. t1·'" ~ I I I I ' , . O Cornplett tll• chuck!• quot.d by filling 11'1 th• milling WOl'd • 'fOll dev.lop fN)ln lltp No. 3 p.1-. • PRINT NIJM&(RED lETTfRS 1 lN HfSE._ SQUARES , ! ~:c::.'~i~ LETTERS TO I I I I I I I r SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS .fN CLASSIFIED • 00 ' I ' l • { ' ' . ' . . ' • • ••• ' . -. ' . ' .. ' • ,. ' . .. ' . . ' •• .i ' •' • ,, •. , • • .t., • ' Do\ILY "LOT lutidaJ, N0vt:mw 16, 1971 ....... ,,..... I~[ _,...... l~ I -""~, I~ -I -....... I~ I -··-I~ ""1!::t' !ill ~ ~::" l!il I .. N .. ~ ~~~,~~~~~ HOW SWEET IT IS! 4 bedroom•, 2 1f2 h•lh•, 3 car 9 .. "age, formal d ining, fam ily room. $39, 9'10. and tho ownar is moti- vated. 893 ·8533 Cotta ~u . 3 BEDROOljl HOME ZONED FOR BUSINESS On hi&b traf1ic strfft Comer &r x 150' lot $31,950. Submit on trade or 10% down on purchase. Call 646-nn tor appointment. 'O THE REAL '"\.. ESTATERS FOR Sale by owntt, Ideal family hom«!'. 3 BR, 2 BA, Playroom. Family room &: din'g area. Breakfast bar \l.'/bltn5, walled frplc, com· pletely fi~ wJblock Wall Lots of trees, Nr Boy'g & Girl's Oub, park. library, Jhoppinr cente'r & bus. $31.000 firm . Prfsent loan may be increased. Owner "ill take 2nd T.D. 548-3681 SECLUDED COTTAGE ro:DUCED TO $23,950. HUge lot ttcluded by many to\l.'tring ~. CUI-de-sac location with country atmos- phere. 3 Big bedrooms ~Ull ~ in patio. Including retrlg. & wuhi!'r. Owner must ttll! Submit :your ttmu. Call 546-5880, Hui· tag:e Realtors (open ews.) TODAY'S BARGAIN • WIL- OON BLVD. AMume 6%'ni GI Loan. 2 br on Jara:e R4 1ot. Room for units. 1070 down. $22.950. FOUR MOD- ERN UNlTS · 2947 ~,endoza, $62,flOIJ. Fa u I WHtbrook Realtor, 494-9788. 3 BR, 2 full bath.I. Recently painted Inside and out. W /\V cpts., drpL L&rJe yard, room for boe.t. C.Orner lot close to schools in WP!ll· side CM. Reduced to $25,000. By Owner. 548-6f49. 2 BR. large gar, fenced yd, close to schools & shop· pin&:. $16,000. 272 C<>1ta Meu St. 641j..91J6. VACANT $22,950. 3 BR, 2 car gar, lrg lot. Im~ med pou. No dn GI/Lo dn raA. Raymae 894-1351. BY Owner $25,500. 3 lge BR, 2 BA,. pluter, H/\V noon, $10f\f for eqty. 64~1622. JUST REDUCED. • $29.950. Sharp 3 BR on 1J4 ac. Bkr. 54~7139, 54S-34U. East Bluff e THE BLUFFS • Homes Ir Inwstmenla: ,•'?t.... fftst t~-PJutr' "'V ~,_ Multi~ ServiCi- 241.t \'ista Del Oro, NB 64f..ll33 Anytime 545-0458 JUST TAKE OYER . NO.QUALIFYING BEACH 1'.fODERN .• Low dn . buys equity. Still !Ike new. 1 yr. old. 4 BR. 2 BA. Built· ins. Dishwasher. Beautiful interior. $40,000 area near the beach for only $27,500. For details call CTI4) 962.5585 I OKISI [ Ol\0\ ... Pf'4L701J~ 1!?131 Brookhurst Ave, Huntington Beach POOL + RUMPUS ROOM Plus 4 bedrooms. 2 bath!, built·il'I kitchen, ~ shag CIU'pet!ng, 2 fireplaces. Over 600 sq. ft. rumpus room In. dud" WP!t bar. No qualify. ing. no loan feea: · just take OV«!'r subject to existing GJ Loan. Owner lloill consider $1.000 down. IMMEDIATE OCOJPANCY. Walker & Lee lte&!tors 2'7'!ij Harbor Blvd. at Adams SfS..9491 Open 'til 9 PM "$173.00 per month" That's less tkan rent. Dar· ling 4 bedroom home on 1 cul-de-sac. ~ ownnw are extremely anxious to sell. Assume the 1ow 5-% %. in- ,erest rate and move tn tight away. Cail 11! for de· taila:, 842-2535 ~ 847-«no. 10THEREAL 1"\,. ESTATERS EXECUTIVE HOME 3 BR. 3 BA , 3 car car. Sl't.750. Ali upgraded, hltin kitch appl°s, lrg fam rm, w/w crpts & drps. Lri bed· rma: "'·/giant sizl!d master BR, Eep serv porch. 14x30 ft cov'd patio w/ gas S.B-Q. 7li4 % financing avail. C.om- parr ... sre today. I' 1llJge Re.ii EstJte '62-4471 (:;;: l 54~103 "READ THIS" Wuh no money down (if you are a Gil or easy moflt'y down. you can purchase a 4 bedroom home at the un- believable price of $26,900. \Vhat's more, It is loeated in a fin!' residl!'ntiaJ area of Huntington Beach, c)OSe to &ellools and shopping. Don 't let this one get away. 842-2535. 847-f.010. \O 'THEREAL "'-ESTATERS I '• ', r1L •IM BY owner 3 BR, 2 BA, li!'vtl, all f'lec. kit. Co~r loc. pool oH patio, 2 patio!, walk to stores & schls. 1---,T=t B"u=R'"O"N.--~ $32,950. la:t Listing. 644-5793. TOWN HOME LUSK Condo. 3 &:. 2 Prime Outstanding 3 bedroom ~ location. O\\~r. $46,500. bath, decorated impecahly. Call 644-0675. Cent air, wet bar, super pa· Fountain Valley tio with B-B-Q. Try $3,000 dn. Otsi>erate! 2 BEDROOM! * CALL 847-8507 .. * ONLY $23,000 * ~ Lovely Spanish condo! frpl! cor! dbl gar! 2 pis! 2 clu~ TtO S t•t 1s ff IAJUI 'HAi<fl'DAL,REALTY ~ M2M05 Eves: 541·24461 --,==~~==- ' BR. 2 BA ,!~ lot. nagstone DIRTY DANDY patio, w/BBQ nr Mile 3 Bedroom $21,000. Squara Park, $29.500. n4: Thi1 3 bedroom home needs 839-3619. tender loVJnit care, but what a buy! It's locat~ close to Huntington Beac:tl '"I ---• ll!WT)'uo n.g, , .has fui-111&1 "IMMEDIATE dining area, R&O, piU& Jots of •toe.all "blneu, """"'" OCCUPANCY" ed tot. ld .. 1 home for 221· The ownera a.re movi ng back D2 buyer. Call 847-lm east and must sell lhis SE\'~10UR REALTY. 17141 BPach Blvd., Jtunt. Bch. beauty. Shae carpels throughout ""' double..,.,. * 4-PLEX * Ing on each window. There New C3.rptts,• drsJ)I!~. Built· ii a huge covered 1)1.tlo and in1• 3 BR. • two 2 BR & o~ It is walking distance to the 1 BR. VA appraisal applied bucbel. PRICED $2.000.00 for. Submll ttrms. Good BELO\V MARKET -ALL loana: avaU . TERMS AVAILABLE. eau 1 ic.Anic•SHIP RE W.Zi.15 -8'7-<0IJ). ...,.......... • • ' 142-4466 TOWNHOUSES :o THE REAL "\.. ES'I'ATEHS from Sl6,o00 tO $24,000, Lew. low down payment. DEAN 2 BR. eJec. blti-1n RIO, FA REALTY ~1527. wt. cuptta, dbl, ....... r$14,500 TO $19,950 60 x 1DO fenced lot. MO'-'t ln 1 &: ~ Br. HOUSES. You tioda_y. $195. per mo. A&k tor make the term.a. Ava.II now. rtnt&l acent. DEAN' REALTY ~~ .,.----7,-""'n':-::=:-::::::: 12 BR CONDO, by ~'nfl'. Jaw Tum unused ittmr -cuscr down Pl)'TM:IU. f'uh, call M:a..5611 5'Sf·tf40 cw 968-1629 Huntington 0.ech Huntfngten Boadt Hunllngkln Boach lncoma p,_rty 1'6 lncoma Pr.,,.rty If' ---------1 HoulM Unfurn. --------P'OR SALE by ownor, < BR, * $26 900 * SELLING 2 BA °''"' Bro•. Hom• ' ' 9 GARDEN TYPE BUNGALOW APJS. YOUR HOME? ~ lot. cpt1 It drp1 4 BR, 2 8.A. 1.loor to cellltli , , · throout. 1unkfn Roman tub, stoot fireplace. ~I car-4 t b 'Id! * New Ustine * S BUSlNESS MAN'S ATTENTION VET • BAR • U yoo are re.nti ng, it'1 dint Frff appraisal . We buy pe~ .l drapes. 1 -. ,rove~ separa e UJ ngs. Shake roofs. Private · 1 n..... · spr inklers front & rear. ...'" 1· N ia· All I to b al 2 & TO BUY OR to buy. \Ve specialiie in VA equll e1. '"'rson&.I attention. natio. t.fany V<ITQ, Assume Ka 10s. 0 s lfS. s ry ung ows. ~ rl Must sell. All Offen con. ,~ bed So b "" l-1'1· expe enct. io..n, Pl)'mt"nts ~l 'fMnth· rooms. me ave fireplaces. The type COLLINS k WA'l'l'S !~:::'.· altl'rln' • m""''' Call !y. ot buildings that attract and hold tood ten· SELL A BUSINESS A rnA ••les. We can 1ivt " you t"Xtactly what.)pU wa.nt -n~;.~RS --~· •· . LEADERSHIP R.E. t I *16 740 • __ an s. ncome • , yr .• 145,000. cellent VET SPECIAL l'M LOOKING 142-4466 financing, HOLLAND BUS. for just $47.50 total Invest· SALES ment and monthly payments "The Brok~ with Empathy" less than "ttnL call u )'OU're •hor1 ot cash, try For P ro lt.E. Sale1men BULLHEAD "Our 26th Yur" thi.a so<1rm, 1% "'"'be••· BE YOUR OWN BOSS HANG 10 WESLEY N. TAYLO~ CO ., Rtalton ins°'"""' Aw .• C.M. w lk r •-Lee 8'5-4170 • -.... a e a: b' for only S.26.900. &: total CALL ED KASABlAN C&tTy bo.trd to surf. 4-BR. 2111 S~n Jotqul Hilla •-·d costs ot $400. to move in. 847·9604: 2 BA 1tln ~ OI0-1155; A REAL ESTATE CO. , t '"'" qulot "· NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 ~•!...!!..Loan 240 Resltort SA TILER ' 2'1911 H"b'" Blvd. a! Adamo S • ALTY I Vacant. $32.950. DEA.N HERW •DRE Not a R E. factory REALTY 536-7521. ' Lois for Sole 171) 18964 Brookhurat F.V. BY I . tat 5 H , I I~ 5-IS-9f91 Open 'ti! 9 PM MTG. CO. FREE RENTAL ' owner. eavmg • e, unt1ngton Harbour ff&KwforU. .,e BUILDER'S , l"ht El h ••.• BR, 2 1ty, very clean, clOlie . . BON•N••t 336 E. ITl'll STREF:r SERVICE CASH FOR TD'S Shp ! Bd, 2 B•, •bac opt, ' ,.,. t ti! ep an.,, over· to grade &chis, Marina YOU'LL be honie Io r l ~iiii!jiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiii ~ ~ runnlna: :your hou&e? Tum Chri t I th. · 3I J them into "CASH" _ aell Hi&h, Golden West College, s mu n II spaciou!; Mesa Varda Approx. 6 acres, sll or part, r.oned R-3 and C on Hwy. 71 near trwy. May subof. dinate. Xlnt size toi: apart. ments or restaurant. * to_OJ. LO~NS * bl! ins, frnced yd, pets & children OK. Bargain S225 new park. 5~"" raA, "''ill BR beauty. A pool tablel-;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:-them thru Daily Pilot consider 2nd. $38,500 . roomsl!'lsof!thiscornerlotl' IST T.D. LOAN p/m. W"1ker & Loo, Rltn a ... 1fi1"1· SIZ-$78. . Mti-tm. "Buy of , ... w .. k". NelM>n FUN HOUSE 7~~ IN'TERFSI' 1-"-'-"'_»_. ___ ~~~1 mW1i'" 111 ~~I HOME FOR RENT · ~al Est&te, 846-1305 Beautlful 4 bedroom, single Exc!UJ.lve Agents lar.wln realty, Inc. ~ Brookhurat, Hnt&11 ~ch 546-5411 enytlme DON~T PINCH . YOURSELF (You're Not Dreaming) But You Can PINCH YOUR . PENNIES ·with a PILOT PENNY PINCHER Classified Ad 3 LINES 2 TIMES ~.00 Irvine story home in f\1esa Verde. •;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;-I Sparklina: heated & filtered • pool in maintenance tree FIXER UPPER yard. Water sottener includ· ed in Wes price, Askin&' $45,950. 2031 Phalarope Court "llltsn\<ro<'.Rcn1ir 546-5990 Bring paint brush snd Im· agination. This spacioua: 3 bdrm. 2~ ba family room townhouse ean be youn to enjoy for only $31,500. It has a t1uper location just doors away from tennis and pool. Quiet cul de sac street sur- rounded by parks with lots i:!'l'""""~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!P of trtts and bicycle paths Newport Beach a!~ordini safl!'ty for ~r 1436 Marin•r• Drive children. Can \l.·e show 1t to . you today" By Owner, «pac1ous Westcll!f, ' 4 BR. 2~ BA, frplc, charm· ' d h.,, Ing paUo. Near shopping &. . re I schools. Lovely family home in imm""I"' <0ndilion . $43,000. Can assume S~'la loan, owner Will ca.rcy 2nd. REALTY - Univ. Park Center, Irvine Principals only. Call 645.5740 Call Anyt.ime, 833--0820 WALK TO OCEAN !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!;,,,,!!!!!!!!!!!!""'INeY:er, modern 3 Br. 2 ba.. Lagun• Beach Not a cracker box, a true ....,R""A""""IN""'"'FO..,..R_E_S_T_l 1amily horn•. Only 1'9,ooo. F. J. HORVATI-1 REALTY Secludf'd from ttlf' world. this (ask fur Dave) Closed Sun. ahingled home h~ reached by 675-1972 675-7497 crosslng_a "''ooden bridge & AVA IL now, We're descenchng thni the tree!;;, desperate, 4 BR Harbor past a lily pond. 3 Sides View home All xtras prin· Me surrounded by 10\\'er ing cipala: only.' 644-2649. ' treea: .. exot ic plants & foilage NO DOWN so thick the ground can't be seen, yet this troplcel Vets homes • NpB /CM forest Is a:o natur11 t 1 h a t Cali J. Peck, Bkr, 545-G465 little ~ than wa!erin~ is EASTBLUFF 11.rea, 4 hr, 2 required. Tov.·ering walls of ba. den, 2 patios. By Owner, ilass provide an expansive $42.000. 535-2450, 644-0066. ocean vjew from all rooms. . Inside are beamed ceilings, Newport H11ghts parquet l'looni. tirepla~. pri· JUST REDUCED vate decks. 2 Bdrms .. mas- Room for boat or camper 3 ter b11.th bas elevated Ro-BR. 2 Ba., !s:e. family ~-. man. bath. O!fttt'd at only !rpl. Optn \veekends. 241 '52,SSQ. Call • , Knox PL $28,l:iQ. DAVIS REALTY 642-7000 M-1 BLDG. $30,000 1.250 sq. ft. young Ind; bldg. & old holta:e on 100' x l20' choice Costa Mf'Sa sile. Room to build more. W11l1y N. Taylor Co. Realtors 21ll San Joequin Hills Rd. Servin.a: Harbor ana n yn. Nice 3 bed home freshly painted. 3 blocks to Hale- Mortg•ge1, crest Club and l"f'Cl"eation Trust Deeds 260 for children. S240/mo. Agent NEED· CASH $1,000; OR UP TO $3,00l $10.000 AND MORE 54&-9521/540-1163!. Horse Ranches $105 .•. 3 Bedrooms, 2 batha:, acre11e. ALSO. • .2 Bedroom on 2 &(''°": $150. n6-7l30 ....., Newport Center 644-4910 See Avoo Thrift for a Real Houses Unfurn. 30S M I I D I Estate Loan. Upon approval, oun a n, eser , use the money hoW1!i"-e' """'' B•ck Bay Resort 174 ;§"'" _ like. Also ask •bout our • BIG BEAR LAKE unsecured personal loans. LOVELY, Jge. 4 Br. 3 Ba. HAVE A ~ home, to resporu:ible party WHITE CHRISTMAS r w/ref's.. $400 mo. Incl. in this coiy cabin ln thf' gardener &: water. Prin. wooda:, Only Sll.950. EaBy ' • TH"I~ cipals only. Owner 540-3862. tl'!rn1s. Call Rosa (TitJ _g) Newport Center er: Corona del Mar 536-1738 oi" \I.Tie: Spe ncer 833-3440 Real Esl11.!e P.O. Bo.I( 2828, 1---------Big Bear u'..k Cal '! FOR sale 2nd T.D. $11.000. BRAND NEW HARB OR FOR RENT e, 1 . \Vill discount. Interest at 9%. VIEW HOME. 3 Bedroom, cabin i n Bal due & payable 5 yrs.. family room, 2 baths. Com· Wrigh!Yo'ood. Near Holiday $110 '-cl · • ., f . ·per mo . ..,, . pnn . .,. mun1 y poo, courts, etc. HUI & Tablt!' Ii.ft. Sleeps 7. int. 837--0289 $395. pet· month. Broker. ~';'.'.~: week or weekend. TRUST DEEDS \VANTED '"'644-=m~o_. '""'=~~~-I Cash for 2nd TD NICE, lge, 3 BR. 2 ba. lower BRAND new furn. 2 BR Con- do, Palm Springs area, heated pool, mountain view. 64 5-3746 .• Real E1tate Wanted 114 • • 673--0140 • • duplex. Ocean a:ide of bwy. S300 monlh. Houln for Rent 11§-Large patio & yard. Near I~ DELIGHTFUL 2 BR. homt:. ~;i;i;i;i;i;i;;;;~I Bayside Dr. $275 mo. ALSO -Balboa Island CASH ON~Y t 1 il bl Houus Furnished 300 ren a 5 ava a e For your lot in Nf'wport or ,_,,_ _______ 1SaJisbury Realty 673-6900 Co&ta Mesa, mW1t be zoned Balboa Island for duplf'x or triplex • also CHAR.\llING 2 BR house. older homes that can be "•".'W':";n_l_"_&_Y_'_"_ly-R-,-,1-.,-,-.1 Cpts. drp!, stove. Adults tom down for new construe. Ralph Hinger Real ty pret'd. $210/mo. 673-4841 Hon. • 67S-6775 * eves or 675-3000 Agent. Will lease back until you can Balboa P•niniula • 2 Br, ~rps IC r pt s. find new home. State loca· ~,.,.,...,.------1 Garbage D1sp . .Avail. Nov. lion, lot alu, price & phone HOMEY &. Charming 2 &: 4 15th . 675-:l698. number . .. Br hse, walled in patio, nr 3 BR, 2 BA, din rm, Harbor Act-fast as our cash budget water. Un ti I 6 / 15. View, $350/mo. Comm. pool ls limi1ed to 10 purchases 213:243-5316. & nark. 833-3894. OtARMING 3 BR home, only. ,,... beam dng wJused brick Write P.O. Box 1515, New~ Huntington Baach RUsrIC 3 bedroom &. den, 2 ~Ian frplc , tam nn., xtra 11e lot. port Beach. 1 Brdroom baby OK ii6Q bath, bit-ins, f i repl ac·e , U90 Glenneyre St. beaut. kept yd. Immac 1 ;,;==~°"'.--..,.-~ mo"lh, 2 "'~-•--from '-••" walk to town ....... 675-t930. REAL ESTATE 494 9473 549-0316 \\/ANTED: Older how;e or ., OJUl:A3 ..... ... A6' · cond. S.13.950. 645-5322. propetty needing work, 536-7860 or ~1674 ** 2 BR. Home. Below * SELL OR LEASE * 5 :ooi Sq. Ft. 3 BR. 2" Ba. an Clemente CASH. 539-1694. Newport Beach highv.·11.y. Call 8 3 3-9 t 1 o; n --~R~E~A~L==R~--1 after 5 call 675-SS&t l1t. fam. rm. din. rm .. frpl. 3 BR. vu, on golf course, TO S • OCEANFRONT S Carp & drapes. bltins. wet $31,500. May lease. 505 Cash !or your clients • need ' • parlding Costa Me•• 1 view, i.-undcck, uril inc SIM. bar, etc. lmmac. $47,950 Ardilla Lane. owner and or older home with R-2 ALA Rent alt e 645-3900 l·.-D-,-_,,-.,G-----Full price. 645-0755 or 543-1168. or R·l zoning. We have n:n.i..u~ Dump • Vuy, MISSION REALTY 494--0731 BY Owner, 3 BR, 2 Ba, o. bu ilders W!llling • qulf'k es· • STEPS bay/beach. spac 1 priv', f/yrd, atv/ref, l1fil pd crows. Call 642-4000 ask for Br chlld/sml pet. Ulil pd $125 $100. EMERALD BAY. Channing vie"'" 4(13 ":.Ave. San Juan. G""'rg, M""hm•y•r. R A R I e ,., 900 • B 3 · $41 900 T .,, ·~• w • ALA ontals e 645-3900 LA onta s ~~3 contemp. r., or suites. . . emu;. '1't't""'t..,.., Go · $145 000 WANT to buy home on l~ue 3 BR 2~ rgrous .view. · · Santa Ana Heights option. Have S650 cash. • BA, ~S blck to • FRESH p&lnt-2 Br st:v/ LOVELY View lot -$40,000. ---------beach, un!urn i1 desired. ref, 'Cpts. Vyrd, child/pet. TED HUBERT & ASSOC. OWNER SAYS Total Value on home not to Immed poS&. $225. Also 2 Br $135. 34TI Via Lido. 675-8980. ''SELL"l,,fl, exceed S2J.OOO. 548·722.l home avail. l\fcNuh Realty ALA Rentals e 645-3900 LAG ROYALE. ocnfrnt, 2 4 BR exec home in N.B., 642-8400. F V H I gt W I d --~~=====.1 • E/sidc-l Br, stv /rer, f/ BR, 2 ba. F11.b Vu apt. L~e Sharp 3 bedroom on large · " or un n n. an e * _. l BR. \VATERFRONT ym , child/pct u!il inc $150. opt, $47.SOO. 213/849-5225, lot. Al!sume 7~~~ VA loan. now or aft Christmas. Pvt, COTIAGE. Just Redf'CClrat· ALA R1ntali e 645-3900 499-3005• To:al paymts $186. mon1h. 54-0-SOSO. t:rl 3404 Marcus . NB. ===-oo----1 Price reduced to $25,500. 673-1593. • MORE Room-J Br, huge OCEANFRONT. ~-n your Call nov• for dPtails. o\l.·n apartment. S 3 9 . o oo. FULLER REAL TY 11 • l 2 Bdrm, 2 Ba , partially furn. f/yrd_ kids/pets. $l75· \Vallace Netf. Res 11 or. 546-0814 Anytime t"1n1nci1l . Until J une' 30th. $185/mo. ALA Rentals e 645-3900 49'-9318. · Adlts only, no pels. Phone BEAUT t.lesa Verde home, 3 4 Br. 3 ba, ram rm. pool sz ~ lot. Big valley view! $39,500 Reil E1t1!9, Gen1r1I Owner. 494-7651. 1 ~------' Laguna Nlauel Acreage for sale 150 CHILDREN WA~TEDI !ll acN"s TAKE OVER all or Rare, opportunity to purchase part mountain area tre<'!I t Bdrm .. 2 bath home, walk· rolli~g hills NO DO\\.N ss8 ing distance to sc;hool. with mo. 96S--OIH7. ' view. Lew dawn. ,31.900. Laguna Niguel Realty SAN JUAN CAPlSfRANO. 't 1 & 2 acre E st11.te lot.~. 130-5050 499-1344 Hor!.l!ll OK. Broker. 493-4774. Lllo Isle Commercial 1--------Properly ISi * EXC.LUSIVES * 1-----------1 4 Bdrms .• 3 Balhs ~ondomlnluma 60 x 90 Lot ...••...•. sn,500 for sale 160 -------3 Bdrmr .• 2 Baths CONDO SPECIALISTS · h11ve 42 l"t. on Nord ...... $79,500 one 1o sell'! \\'e can do it!? \\'anna buy one'! -Wt"'ve -4 BR. Plus Family, 2~ Ba. got 'em! US,500 and up, all SO X 38 Lot ....... , $89 500 area11. ' larwin realty, Inc . 3 Bdnns .• 3 Ba!lu 21562 Brookhurs1, Hntgn Sch Cornf'r lot on Soud •• $99,500 5~5411 anytime Bu1ine11 OpPorl•nlly 200 tolled. 714: 183-0609. Br, 2 Ba, new crpts & paint, NICE 1 BR house for quiet cov patio & porch, prof 1\·orking couple on 33rd SI. landscaped. mi n of I yr Ye arly SlSO. 67>7513. lease. $275. Re is exchanged. DISTRIBUTORS ~-~~---==1 646-1 522 betwn 8 &: 4:30 t-.fon HouHt Unfurn. 305 thru Fri. NEEDED -~~~----1 Limited number of DfS'rRT-Gener1I New -Vacant · Custom BUTORSllIPS now avail· ---------Bat h., utils pd. $140. mo/mo ahle In your area. Ne w Spa c, 2 hr, 2 full ba, B/~ i\tul!i -i\flltlon Doll ar ad· Spac. 3 br. 2 full ba. Bfl! \'ertised Puddi ng & Fruit RENTAL FINDERS DEAN REALTY 536-7527 CuPI!. sold through Auloma· 41s w. 1titr. COSTA MU.\ A'ITENTION OWNERS! tic Merchandisers. It qua!-. Houses* Apti. We ha ve rental customers ified, YoU will be provided * ,., •Ill * for HOMES, APTS & CON. wi lh all equipment and lo---DOS. Call DEAN REALTY cations, and De tr11.inl!'d in ;r,,,.i:..,••Free ,,, LnndlortU Rental Div. 536-7527. ' 11.IJ phase5 of this highly Jue--FURNISHED -3 BR ho t d rative busint"ss {no selling). $1()()...UTIL PD. Lsguna! Lrg u.11~, cps, rps, Yoo must be reliable, have Bat'h w/ l ft & pe.ti 2 blk gs~ge, p~tio, la"'!'\. a:tove, a good car and 4 hours 11 ° 0• s relrig, util. room, c:tntral v.•ttk spare time, and ])!' ocean. loc. $225. lse. 646-6961 or able to make an lmmediatt> Sl25<'0Tl'AGE by the Sea! 646-1246. inv-estinent ot $2100.00 (~· Nice 1 BR \II/ JA?'. l•LE"'A"'sE<'·'i3-..;:,:-.. •2"s.""' .. -.-,.-,..,l~iv cured}, Sf'nd name, addre1s _ UNFURNISHED _ rm. w/lrp!c, din rm .. fam and phone number to: Ne"·· $00·UTI L PO ~Nest It clean mi., pool.tab]~ .11z.-.Playrm .. port Jntemational Dlstribui. 1 BR. Conv. tn ~~. ~:!t! .. ,ss0,Q .• ,.! :: .. ~.-s 300 . ing Compt1ny, 3700 Ne.wport -"'1~ .,~ Blvd., Ne\\'porl lkttch. n 15 MA~~E I e ., • , • un Co U P I 2 Br, garagt, patio, crpts, Calif., 92860, Dept. #30A. drf'am. 1 Br 'h&e, 1tv/refrtg, clrps, stove At relrig. Qu iet Excellent Opportunities cpts, drps. Plenty of room 1ropical li(lttina: !or adu1tJ Duplexes/Units _ _ 5 BR. 3 Baths • Pool sale 162 'tO Ft. strada corner $125,0001--------- Any Item Priced $50. or Less (It more thin one Item, the eornbfned tot•I c1nnot e:iccHCI $50.) 642-5618 -~o~--= --~-------- 4 Bdnru: ..• " Baths 90 x 88 Lot .•.• " •• S't!S. BALBOA ISl..AND Duple'JI. for saJe By 01vner, Steps to bay & beach. t.1ake oUer. Ph. aft 6 p.m. MB-2676. + Lge. Fam. 3\i + "'Ba tha1~--~----~ Patio. 100' On Nord Slt9.500 Income ProJMrfy 166 Beach pharmacy e " t. ll for chlckf'n~ & garden. only. J blk 10 ghops. $l60. yrs, 100% loca tion. Retiring llJ!>.2 BR HOUSE-all ttdec 64~1765 or 646-4430. owner "''ill sell for 293 down. $2:1,000 p I u 1 in-w/ slove /refrlg, cpts, drps TOWNJ{OUSE 3 Br. 2 &. ventory. Large. re t at 1 & gar. Pool. Kids • pet ok. Avail bookstore e1t. 8 yesn . 'i\!1· S17!>1...ARGE 3 BR, 1'"' Ba, :~i~ $215/mo. Ph . jor shopping een1er locattr.n. bltns, cpts, drps, gar. Child· ;;;-;o::=7eo:-~~~-1 * WATERFRONT * Good lease $55.000 lncluoes rcnlpets ok. OLX new 3 Br. 2 Ba, trple, 5 Bdrms .. 6 Ba tM **DANA POINT lart«! invt!ntory. drp~. bltns, 2 car gar Pl-• Slip ........ $"5,"~ VOGEL COMPANY. R.l.TP.S. \\IALK to &ech! Besut 4 + Westcltft. S275. 675-1849 . " • -N D lu D I N 10 ~• N rt Bl d fam rm w/ frplc, compl tt· · LIDO REAL TY INC. •w 9 xe up IX 0• _.. ewpo ' ·• dee $335. 3 Br, S175. Crpt/Ltg renctd 33n VIA LIDO $49,950. CM B,EACON RENTAL Yd on Vlcioria, CM Call •7)..7300 Webb Realty 642-4905 • ~S-9346 • · "·eek day• (2131 446-0673 G OUSE RESTAURANT. lA,luna'1 FINDERS * 645-0111 2 BR "°""" 1 . Bl H •• ' EASTSIDE TRIPLEX -n oourt, ''~· SMALL PRICE mo!t popular, unlqae drps, no pet1, one a:mall 4 aR.. •3 ·ba d1 Bo 412 BR units. Garagf'1;, pa. restaurant. Compl etely 4 BEDROOM wi th rrn. addi-child. St-45 mo. G46-27l9 .. " n, rm. nus !los, trplc's. Xl n1 conrt $470 equlpt. Xlm loc. S268.000. Hon, eo\.'E'td patio. dbl. II· 3 BR rm. 1'rf· lot. $6l.500. mo income. ,Yet only $42.500. gt'05s Income, $33,000 do·m. taChed 1ar. 1'.1sy ren! or ' f'~ll, drp!, partially bowcm& loweon jca.. BROKER. 646-8.22.6 Realonomlcs. Bkr. 6'1S-6700. lf'lff w/npllon. S225/mo. furn, Kids & pera: OK, S22S MOtto-INVESTORS SPF£IAL N D I h i Aaent 5f6-9521/540&1. mo. cardn!r Incl. 548--5957 3416 Via Lldn fi75-4ti62 DiYOrce! •wspajMr ea ers p 3 BR. 2 BA with ht'Att"d pool. Mes• Varde 1'.lust sdl now! For L.A. Hf'rald Exami11er NE\V 2 BR. 2 Ba. houst.'. & $23.i monlh. 646-f.697 or .-Duplex at Ne11.J1Grl Bach in Orange Co. area. r•rur· Sltle C.M. Adul ta: onl.y. $195 12131 69-1·29&3. ---------ity dtpos, ttq'd. Write RP., SPACIOUS Reipublic tri-level Call aft 4 pm, 549--08M 2862 \V. Llncnln. AMhtirn. mo. 13th mo . frtt. Phone aft Slll. 2 BR, ltange Ir Rt frtJ. in beaut. locaOo.n. 4 BR. 3 FOR Sale By Owner. 4 un11t1• SELLING Your boa!? "List" 5 or wkndl. 646-8665. C.rtgt. 1 child OK. 733 .. A. .. BA. ls• flm rm • liv rm., Conv. loe. '.\.1nt financial with ua. .tell tt tut. Daily EASTSJDE New 3 BR. 2 BA W, 20th 642--05.l() . 11tce lalx!1eapinf. $(7.~. ttt\lrft. Call att S pm. PUot OUltt\ed. ~ Spanlah duplex Avail Ok. ltt ms wl.tb east. u11e Dir.Uy Ml-7364. _53_1~ __ . ______ Jt's 1 bm:ie •. HU )'OU1' ]!i, Rtfa:. niq, $235. $4.3-4424 . Pilot Cusified. 642-56"11, •<t·-~<O•···,~ •• , ... , ' . • • DAILV i;.tf Jr3 ---~I ]~ I Ap0<tm<o10l«-1~ I ApollowoUf«R"' ]~ [ _,,,,._][!JI ... 11moo,.l«R .. lrtJI ---1[!] '-'-L!'~'"'"";;;"l«Ro;;:~ 1~~·1 1 ..__1 ___ ,~ 305 Condominiums ~ G Unfurn. 320 Aph. Fum. 360 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unlurn. 3'5 Apt. Unturn. 3'5 Apt, Unfvm. 3'S Apts., Office Ren••I · Houses Unfurn. C t• Mo -------.......: c "'"-ti_ ..... 111--ch Furrt or Unfum. J70 •01 ;.;.;i•• .... Huntfncton &each C0tta M.11 Corona del Ma r Co1t1 Mes. ot t• ,..,, ,_wpo,, -' NIWPORT•Cl!NTllt GROUND FLOOR 2,500'. 8,894' f\llly lmprowd. Prime location for tenant wanllng Identity • .ExciMlent park.!11a:. 60c per moqth per foqt. ** 3 BR Home.'""' yed,1 ---"------------¥ HACIENDA PARK NEWPORT Cotti Me11 TO\YNHSE for ttnt 2 BR. 1 BR. Furn. 2 lrc cl<lffll, --,~'"""""--,--crpts, drps, bltns. $22a. \Vll&lle:r/dcyer, bltns. pool queen alze bed. priv. dtt.sJ. CHILDREN HARBOR APARTMENTS 'Ml£ EXCITING incl'• util. 837-9317. facil. Sl.65 mo. 11) 89'2-71118. In& room, xtra Ir& rooms. ~.,.; • • e NEW e e e 2.P AVOCAOO STREET Bachelor. 1 or 2 Bedtoom1, PALM MESA APTS. 3 Bdrm ho1,u1e patio & car, Adults on!~, no pets. $1::;(1/ D,. •rt• Adull livini -No pets 81ld TownhoUses. Spe, pooll, 1'11JNUT'S TO NWPT. BO!. 2 BEDROOM CON-I 2 " walk to Harbor Sh>p'c. mo. De u.xe l & BR, Pool tennis. From $170, Acrou FURN. OR UNFURN. Sl55fmo. 642-7253. 'l1NENTAL TOWNHOUSE. 2035 Fullerton, CM ON TEN ACRES VILLA PEDRO AptS Garage. Dis!l\l'shr. Paid utU. from Fashion,Isla.nd at Jam.. Unbelievably larre aJ)t.S, huge Wuley N. Teylor Co. Dan• Point Sl80/Mo. Aa:ent 544-08l4. Attract. • Cle an 2 BR. 1 & 2 BR. Furn. & Unfum. FRO~l Sl50. 646-l204 boree 6 San Joaq~ln Hills pool, Jacuul. elect b1Un1, Newport B11ch Htd pool. -}'~urn·Vnlurn trom Flreplacn / Prlv. patios, JUST FINISHED $200 MO. lmmae. 3 BR, 2~ 'Roads. ln4) 644-1000. sha" erpts,' dr'ps, sauna, 2W San ~~!~~1Hll1' Rd. $2501'10. 4 BR, 2 Ba, llv m1., *All Facing Pool* $140. !idulls. 642·~20 Pooinnls O>ntnt'I Bld•t. Super-Comfortable-Qultit BA.. crpl.li. drps. Avail. e NOW OPEN e etc~ Adults, ho pe~s. din rm., kit, 2 ear gar, ntw-3 BR., 2~~ ba .. 2 ear garage FURN 2 Br. apt utU pd. $170 900 , Lane, CdM 6#.261l (1 0) 2 BR; 2 Full BA. now. Call ~7-7768. BR.o\.ND NEW 1 Br $155 2 ~INGLES ........ Ji'rom $135 ly paln!td interior. Dana 3 BR .. 2 ba., 3 car garage. per mo. 2277-B J\laple Ave. <~tac thur nr CoMt ~wyl Must see to a pprtclatl * TOWNHOUSE * Br $190. ALL uTILITiits ~ BEDRM ···"' F'rom SlfO Point Knolls, 496-MM or REALTOR S48-6966 548-~13. Near Nev.•port Back Bay, l 1: 2 BR Shag cpt D/\V PAID. Priv patio billiard y B~DR~l ...... ;rom ~l60 Newport Ce:n1er 644--4910 1 OR 2 nlet'I suites 1tlU left in Lido Bldg £above Blue Dolphln Re•t.). Fine' lor prof. or gtn'I ore u.se. Drop Jn or call Jones RealQt Service. 6T:t-377l, suite c, on premises. 494-2982. C d PRIVATE' SUNDECK AChools, park!, \'~fCA, Boy'1 sr1f eJe11n 'oven patio' ' rm. heated poal. wi jacutil, ~:;_. r1 1•56"1• ,~Y tt0 " '" F I V II on o. Furn. or Dana Point · -Cl b ho ~ 3•1 .. , • · • h cl et d u Prh .. -..-..! "'es.a r. ounta n a ey Unfurn, I--.,,,,,_;;.:;;.;...____ 2 BR., 2 baths; upstail'! du· u , & ppg, u •\'YS. etc. 1 ". Wilson * 548·360~ u~e os s, eep P e car· rs blka from Newport Blvd.) LUXURY 3 Br twnhse~ _ 325 ** SINGLE, TV, pool, pt;'; pl~x. C&rJX'IN & drapc'd. Gas heat, gas _cooking and AVAIL Now_ 2 BR, 1~ BA peung, lush landscaping. 54&-9860 Hurlt·nato 8 ch ok Da•· •t I I "Ul Encl. g&>'age. Comp. bltns. \\•a1er, all paid. ~10/l10 TOIVNl'SE Bl••• _, Adulls. You Mu.s1 8ee-Th11 cpl. d'""!, patio, dbl ,.,., "' ----' ..;;._"_,•_•.;:;;__ · '"' "ar na nn, ,,... 11•~ 2J3 1 • " ' cpns O 20102 I LRG 1 BR tu b'] pd I '" -COi-St J-1,,.,'Y. Beaut. lndscpg. 70'7 \i Orchid. from ..J. 2 Elden see or d 1 N ' ne! Birch St, NB. , rn, u l ~""°,-7·~'"°-·-·-"'~-~'-'"~·-__ 11 BDR~1 Cont inental $250 Per month, yearly. call ?o1anqt'r Barbara Da\'· 54~1 poo . 0 pets. 557-4246. $155/mo. 1 •ml.1 BR furn Huntingtor B•ach To"·nhousc, corner, $lfl0 0H::"::"::tl_n..::gc..to_n_ll_•_•_c_h __ :~~.,~~~ll;"~·::::::::::·I~~~~·~~==-::-::: -~--8=R_A_N_D_N~E-w--~-util pd $35/wk. Alim 2 BR. DESK 5pace available $50 mo. Will provide f\lrnl.ture at S5 mo. An5werin&: ~ available. 305 No. EI Camino Real, San Clemente. 492-4420 mo. 962..,jl:J.t FREE utilllic.s, 1 BR ? C '7540~0 0 Da na Point 2CM32 Santa Ana Ave (Acl'OS5 unJurn $165/mo. 998 :E:l FOR LEASE Duplexes Unfurn. 350 $13{)/Studio '851 810<:.k. 10 WM•lllWll'J'CL.llt. DE LUXE LARGE 2 br. 1 b1., duplex. from S.A. Country Club) Camino, 54&-045l. OPTION TO BUY beach. a!l·lOth St. ~3777, . APARTMENTS Ne\\·ly paitt1ed, cpi, dps, lge Spack>us 2 BR. units. ~··., .. Lido Isle ~ 3 BR, 2 BA, drps. 5hag crptg, Coron• d t l M a r 5J6..72&2 or 536-l366. a BAYPORT Air Cond • Frple's • 3 S\Vim· patio, rncl g&r, Ctildnn FffiEPLACES. Prlv patios, LIDO BAYF'RONT. Apts. &. oew P••'•t ,.,,.,, & O•t. O•t· OPEN d il I SJ" LCE od I B C a BAYVIEW mi,,.. Pools • Health Sp• -OK. 496 '~'. loa'ds of closet.. Reated ' " u• a y vacant & ready ...... m r. pt5., A · the · 1 · ... ~:.::._;::::~"=~:::.. _____ 1 p 1 Ad 11 M homes. SXIO to Sl.200 mo. aide patio \v/lots of storage. ror occupancy this 4 BR, 3 drps, redec, nr ocean. 218 nnouncing qwe opening Tennis Crts • Game &. Bil· ~E t B'"ff 00 ·-· 1• anager · * NEW STORES * CJ hool 536-2617 Chi c'"' ~ of Bayport Apts •.. for ,,.,,, Room. . a s "" 979.1~. Oceanftont, 3 Br., S325. Agt. Reta•'! ,~p•'•g ma•'• o•-•m me lo SC s, , BA home. Cozy frplc, great cago ...,.,...1.....,/847-5169 sic;.;ruii'i'M';;;;i.-:i;Pi'-°ii!i; l,~M~o~c~k~. ~673-<>44~~8~o~r~6~7~5-:'2723~~· ,...,., " " uo: M&-7368, 645-0466. Adults; And the Klightly less 1 BEDR00~1 NEWPORT BEACH · SEACLtli'r .Manor AP"· l Br Ney,•port. Costa Mesa Area, patio, no pets. Annual lse. L•guna Beach I 1 I ! 8' · " B h qu e open ng o yv1cw FROM $155 $140. 2 Bdrm. 1160. ~·-. ewport eac 17th St. l:IOO ro UW'\n sq ft., PROUDLY offered. 3 BR .. 2 $375. &1Hl504 or 644-4430. --· il V iii Grana da Apt ~i'.,. JV\111 BA., trplc. bit-in!. Near SUS r.10. UP; S40 Wk ., Bach. Apts. for fam· ies. MEDITERRANEAN ~ • ·. s. drJ)s, bl1ns, gard disposal. VISTA DEL MESA air cond. Covered arcade. b h ire C·osta Mesa Utll pd. Color TV. Crncl'.'nl -~C_a_u_m~._41_64_4-055.5 __ ·__ four bedrooms with balqon-1525 Placentia Ave A' k ample parkini. Contact Bank eac , eways, shopping, Bay Bch. 494-2508. 675-4367. * BRAND NEVl, Deluxe 3 VILLAGE l~s. above & ~Joy,•, Grac~us about our discount. ~18-2682. Apartments of Calif. Trust Dept. (714) schools. $255/mo. V i e. 2 Br unlurn duplex tor 1'(!TJL 1 CM l1v111g ,f,; quiet surroundtng 1-=~--'-'·=-'-'-"'-' l & 2 BR. Furn. & Unf. Dish· 547-7191, ext 75. Brool;hursr & Ad ams. Children ok. $160. 549-4218 Newport Beach bedroom 2 bath. iirrpl;iC'e, 2400 I arbor Blvd., .1 • for fan1ily with children. 3 BR Condo In Bluffs, cpl, \Vasher • Stove & Relrig • "°'==''-'c;-=--~- 52S..3.167 alt. 6 pnt. wkdays aft 6 p.m. buillins, OCEAN VIE\V. Ri~~~~L556fF~CE Near Corona del r.Iar High drps, dsh\\'shr, pool. gar. Shar crpt'g-Lrg Rec center. SPACE for beauty parlor or • · BRAND NEW e pool. jacuzzi. Avail. Dec. ·1 ,,'•hool. Fl-place, ,,.-''' & Lse. $325. Call ~Ir. An•klo RENT 51,~. 11cc similar operation, iround 3 BR. 2 BA, elect bh·ln R/0, 1 Month Free Rent •~.,::. A k ! J p OPEN 10 A~1 TO 6 P~1 '" " "'' ·~ olJ Il L'do B" "'"" VI 2 BR 2 BA 1 •/ d' h ..,_.. s or erry or eg, 1-'iiiiii.iii;iii ... i;i;;i;;;i.iiiil ,,,.,,_,•. kliche• •pp!•·•-•· collect (7141 346-8151. T . & M D I r, 1 "'g. v.>ViJ a FA ht. crpts, 60xl00 ft. fene. 3 BR. 2 Ba . $275. 548-l309 • ap s · is wr, ,,A 727 " " '"""' ust1n esa r ve ,,._ . h"ge closets, priv P•••, ""'4. O or eves: 644-7722. 835 A~f!GOS \VAY 644-2991 1,. BLK to be••h •eacly oow Lido. NB . .x:e Jones Realty cd lot. dbl gar, Jndscpd. D p •v * * * * ;s ... " * 545-4855 * Vic.ant-move in loday/$225 ana o1nt heated pool. billiard rm. ja. 2 BEDROOM-NEWLY El Puarto Mesa Apts Cold\\·eJI. Banker & Co. 2 BR 2 BA' $245 yrly.1 ·="3"'==~~==cl Service on premises or call per mo. Ask for nm1al Agt. DELUXE 2 BR, be'dut1ful -rr'"1"ES' &PAbbqlD's.~~-LL UT201llr02 DECORATED. * * * * :\tanagina-Agent 541·5221 67:-r-3126 aft 6pm. OAKWOOD GARDEN ='~T"'="~"~·~~~~~=,I " °'47! I ~ ~:e at FIREPLACE. B d H 1· t B h Apa rtments PRESTIGE l&ation 1400' ...-. v t'\\', 1650 sq. ft., 2 frplcs, . Birch Sr ( · 0 C 1 e room Apt1. un ing on eac l NE\VPORT Shores homes (R Sina: 3 BR Condo, tii BA, pools. \\'elbar. 2 lge sundecks, Ii':} ty Ai~rt j ra,~ge I~~: GARAGE. $190. for rent. $275 to S3:.o0. }.1~~~ L~~~fts~or le & ~botp/~:fic:~T:i \2723Vill divide. clubhous~. patio. garage rm &: lge den, $255. 347-1457. isades Rrli. r.~;~ 557-40246. a * ~5003 * $130 & up incl. utilities. Also ON BEACH I cayy,'OOd Really 548-1~ Newport Beach g . ae > . \\'/&torage. nr lhe beach. Laguna Beach OCEANFRONT cormir of BEAUT. Unique 3 Br, 21~ b1, furn. Pool & Recreation • LARGE 3 Br. 2 Ba. Duplex. 16th at Irvine SHO\VROOM rnlg. It. office 962-0986 aft 5 pm. frpl, beam ccil, bUns. Blk to area. Quiet Environmt"nl. 1 I & bl! , blk 1 •-h 64~o~ 0, .. 2.1170 space. Clo&e in Laguna loc. UPPER DUPLEX 23rd St . 3 BR .. 2 BA. $350. Ott '·· N Chil 2 BR Unfurn Fr $230/mo rp c ns, •1 o ...._. · ..,... ......., '" $95 I'"" .,., .,,~• 3 BR. 2 BA. big eul""'<le-sae · 3 br, 2 Very lge. beaut. furn. Kids beach. S2S5. 6i3-554S. d slreet par ... ng. 0 • Furniture Av~ilable . S300 mo yrly. 644-7214. 902&9CM "A .. Ba lboa Blvd. 3. · to ....... mo.~ ba, cpt, dps, vie'\\·, 2 blks ren, no pels. . . Industrial Rental 450 home, all bltns. d!x area. bch, lse. $300 mo. 494-1949 &: pets ok. 646-6591 or 2 BR PENTHOUSE, bllns, Aho Garages :For Rent Carpela.-Orape~-d1shwasbl"r e S18;>--\VESTCLIFF 2 Br. BR deluxe, move in now, $265. Vacant. 536-9153 dya: 494-34:-ig &14-6W. dsh\\'hr, fple &. sundecks. l!D9-1961 J\~aple Ave. heated pool-saunas-tennis Adults only, no pets. 1728 eV'l!rylhing furnished. Week-COSTA MESA 10,COO sq. ft SJG-1212 eves. AT THE BEACH:_ Furn. 4 675-2191. Costa Mesa rec room-(ICean vie\\'s Bedford Ln. 548-7533 ly $125. bi·wkly $200 . clear span + yard space $165. Mo. 2 BR, 2 BA. BR, 2 BA. \Vinte r or yearly LRG '2 s!ory, 2 BR 2 BA den. patio5-am ple parking 2 BR apt, nfo'\O,•ly paintl"d, f.ionthly $300. Lease S250: 4 110, 220 power & com TO\\•nhouse, washer. dryt:r. Ap,utm,nl~ lor Renl rates. 714: 6/;>--70.:i7 or 213: e1•p!s, drpg & 2 car aar. fAIRWA f Security guards. w/\\' erp!. Adul!s only. No BR dtx., yearty lsc. S300 pressed air prov Ide d refrig. Vacant. 536-9153dys; 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~j 431-2406. $28.'i/mo. 541-3124 644-10·10 HUNTINGTON pels. $150. 548--Q633 nio. 673-3663 or (213) Sprinkled. fiberalassed & 536-lm eve~. I "2~B~R,. ~n~.~p1~.,~.~F=,-,7k-.-b7li-n•-.~i,s 2 BR. Cpts, drps, bltns, gar., VlllA APJS, PACIFIC ./ LARGE Yearly 2 BR nr 2&3-7077. cabinet makers "·elcome. 3 BR, 2 BA \V/encl p.a1io. Apt1. Furn. 361 blk to beach. Nice. S260Jmo ~undcck. No pets. $210/mo 7 OCE N Ocean & Bay. Avail Dec. 19th & Placentia . ]""]. 111 ,.1. 67, o-,37. ll Ai AVE .. H.B. I~ Reasonably priced. Call or Comp!. crpt'd. Nr. schools&. General \ Yrly. 644-7214. "" .ru 2 & 3 BR's (7141 536-1<187 5th. $199.50. 673-1909 & shopping. $230. 846-7694. 11'" 2 BR 1 BA t I Of 10 " R1ntals ,-come, 548-3486. ------~---· 17304 Oceanfront. Spacious 1 > . , rp . gar. Private patio. pool _ lndlv, C' open am.., Phl Daily GARDEN type, grnd lev 2 Br ~-------' NO FEE. 3 BR, frplc, all Rent.Beautiful Fllmiture br. \Vinler. refs, no pets. garden selling. Gas & \\'tr \VILLIAr.I WALTERS C.U. lriplex. Cpt, ~1v. drp, enc ••••••••••• J For L••se Costa M•sa lo' .' l,·111e '' ' I 1 h'Jd k. "AA '"'"2 laundry fae. 54 1"" SQ FT bltns, lg fncd >'d. $195 mo. (213! 626-9101. fl'. c 1 o .,...,.......,., · Near Orange Co. Airport 6 gar. $160 .. 8--9695. '""' • • 1st 1\1onth only. $50. Security ONE MONTH 1 BLOCK ..__ h 2 RR Cdsta Mesa UCI. Adult•°'''· * $1 SO. * 2 BR 2 BA. C"'I!, drns, Rooms 400 Industrial space nr NeWpOrt· d-Agl 962 5·11 10 ..... ·ac · · ... ... San Diego F"""'. 2930 Grace ,.,. · -J · new shag crpt. S225 mo incl -;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;-20122 Santa Ana Ave. LARGE 2 bedroom aparl· bltim. dsh\\'Shr. Nr Hoag \VANTED past r.iiddte-aged Ln !So. ot •. B'aker, E, of * 4 BR. Crprg. drps, 2 complete with util. Yearly. 613--0731. • Mgr. Mra. Joachim, Apt 3-A ment \Yilh built-ins, new 11osp. S170/mo. Adlls, no \~·oman to rent room&: !hare Fairview, ~I mi.) Repre· Baths. fen~ yard. 2 car your 100% Oceanvie"" 2 BR. l BA. BRAND NEW MC~215 shag carpe!ing. Redecorat-pets. 642-4381 Agent . lovely Corona del Mar home, sentative lhere lrom 9 to 12 garage. S250/mo. 1 90 7 2 Pur chase Option \Vin!er $225. '\'early $275. From $145. Di!h\vasher. shag BAY MEADOW APTS. c<l. Near ~hopping & schools. \VATERFRONT new 2 1.r. 3 be companion \Vilh same. $65 daily. 557-3.585 or 879-47U. Stingray Ln. 67~78. I·' I ·' * 64"3639 * Be u· lln CHILDREN O.K. BR .,~ 1 $'00· I·• 3 BR -, mo. P.O. Box 124.' Cd>,!, uu. tern &oeclion. v carpeting, \\'alk·in clOSt'IS. <1r,1 ce ings. pane g, * 536-1 738 · · ~ o " · ! .._ · r-FOR Lease, 4<XXl sq. ft . l\tl $1Ml. 3 BR. l BA. erp1s, drps. 24 Hour Delv. I BDR.\1. furn ap!. Ulll paid. Forct'd 11ir hrat, t>XTra lar't"e priv patio! recrealion fa. * block to beach $325. !12G:B. Ne,,.,, Bldg. Ample parking, bltns. dw, fn<'d yd, 2 car CUSTOM Sl50. Newport Oives. \\'alk roon1s. Beautiful game room, ci!ities. Al.1° adults, no pets. FOR Lt'ase in Huntington F. Horva!h Realtor 675-1972 LRG room . linen !urn., 548-6730, 6n.4il69. gar. 531-3830 & 53.1-0027 Furniture Rental to beach. 673-151i afl 5_ hf'aled pool. BBQ'~. enclos-e :l BR·s FROl\t AS LQ\I,' Harbour: Oindo 2 Br, 2'~ EASTBLUIT luxury 2 Br., \\'a5hing facilities avail., Re ntals Wanted C60 1 -·i'ne 517 \V, 19th, C.1\1. 548-3481 ed garages, qu i<"t surround-A ; Sl59/mo. Ba. Complete bltns. rrfrig. 2•~ Ba.,· bltns. t ...... le. z car employed adult . $75. ____ ------I • • 1 BR Furn. Apt. No children, · & •--· w w C h Id tld '"'t' co" -....,..._ __ Anaheim 77+.2800 1n~s Cruo.t: to shopptng. ""' . Bay St., .r.1. \V 11 I r ryr, c~ rps, gar, pool, rec are a • .....,...1742. BUILDER wanl5 to rent 2 or Balboa Island ~lj~ss..!::2 16th St. N.B. Adult \i\·int:. no net~. Cl\ll &l&-0073 frplc, pvl ri:ar & pallO. pool. 644-6405 s'"L~E~E~P~l~N~'C'°"",~oo~m.,..., ~.~,~"-.. -,-n. 3 Br. house in neerrl of 3 BR, 2 ba., atrium .... $325 3 BR, 21.1 ba., fa.m .... $325 3 BR, 21Ai ba f1m ...... $350 4 "BR, 2!h b8. !am ..•• $350 4 er., 2~li baths, !ami!y room. Tur!le Rock • • . . .. . . S360 WE HAVE OTIIERS 1lnb'l 1i·ll1I , EL CORDOVA APTS. e e Slip avail. $320 mo. 67:>-3108, · trance. priv toilet, $6.> per np.air, exchange for part WINTER rental. 3 Br. 2 ba. I Btk To Sch. Clean l br. 2077 Charle St. 642"1·170 WESTBAY ELDEN 8~0..3.136. ~ta Ana mo. Costa Mesa. 645-0878. rent. 6t2-7377. Stop to the Bay. $300. ,·~ Child/pct. ok. \Vin trr $165 Nea r Harbor & Hamillon St. NEIV 1 LARGE J BR 2 • BA ,,.. and 2 Bedrm. garden ·· ·• NICE comfortable room for eluding utilities. mo. 646--1071 or &12.995.'i. •P""im"•la w/-l. -garage, secluded porch, CAN'T BE BEAT · 1 · F ----------1 · 3 Bd m * 2 B th ... " ,......, rent 1n rv1ne: are1. emale -1 \Vi nton Real Estate 675-3331 1 BR. $150 per mo Yearly. r G FROM $180. ADULTS quiet, deadend st. Children, BRAND new furn. 2 BR Con· • WINTER rental, 1 Br. furn. Beam ceilings. Btwn Ocean Living room with cathedral 2.lll Elden Ave., C.M. pets considl"red. $175. 2 BR. SINGLE STORY Go;~~=·room for rent do, Palm Sprlna:s area, ! Elee. bltns. S200 Inc. utll &: Bay. 675-837<1. ceiling & frple. Separate 645·5780 also $150. 7681 Elli~. Apt, A. South Sea Atmosphere hE.'ated pool, mountain vlew, Winton Real Estate 675--S331 laundry area, Encl patio. e e 847-7547 or 847-0932. 2 BR .• 2 BATH in Costa Mesa. 645-3746. Newport Heights -979-0726 l ~~~~~~~~~'.I WATERFRONT·! Br. Frplc, S\\imming pool & children's VILLA CORDOVA SINGLE STORY Ca.rpets & drpe Misc. Rentals rl . ,~ S CLEAN l or 2 Br. Arllts. no playground. $200. Dl•x 2 BR. 2 BA. p .. 1 "'] & Air Conditioned FEMALE, Share b a t h & ~ p v pallo, ....,... . Bayfront I "'2 e SUPE 2 • "" ) Apt l. 673-6640. pets, g kit. SJ2.r;....s1:io. &'I 1 HARBOR GREFNS R BR a r.ncl 11:ar., $175. 817 Geneva, Private Patios kitchen Mesa Ve.rde nr Pirton•I• E. 16th St NB 64~1801. 546-435.1 !ltonth lo Mon1h. S170 5.~-86.l9. JfEATED POOL 0.C.C. $19. ,veek. 549·151<1. · * 1 BR. $125 YEARLY * ·--------iiii G•a Heal C•• Cookl•g ' Apt. Unfurn. 365 · ~ " • Plenty of lawn SLEEPING Roo~vt, Bath. Utilities Paid *BRAND NEW* Ga.~ Hot \Vtr, ALL INCL. BBE_~CHW00123DBARPTS. Carport & Storaae Cd;\!. Close m beach. -- -'l \ ru ho r "SINCE 1946" 1st \Vestern Bank Bldg. Uniwrslty Park Days 833-0101 Nights * UNIVERSITY PARK * 2 BR + den N'pf Bch .. $375 3 BR. 2 ba t'nhouse .•• S.125 1 BR. & den. l ba ...... s250 4 BR., 2~1i baths ........ $.~ 3 BR. 2 ba. homes .. $2S0/325 2 BR. 11Ai ba. honie ...... $27.1 (ired hill REALTY Univ. Park Ct'!nter, Irvine Cali Anytime, 833·0820 Laguna Nlguel NIGUEL Shores-Spar. New. Priv. beach. Ocean View. 4 BR. $390/mo. Ava!I approx. Nov 20. Ph. 835-4889 or get key from ;\1r. Batl"S at Broadmoor Homes. Lag. Niguel. Mesa Verde .:..;.;.;;.::. __ _ 3 BR. 2 Ba, $240/mo. 1st .t.. last mo's + SlOO clean dep. Close to 1chls &: shop'g. 545-ti084. * Immacula te! 3 BR 2 Ba th. 2 Frplc·s. Bll·ins. $240/mo. * 540.GO!H Newport Beach BEACON Bay. 2 Bdrm .. l Ba., frple, yearly ll"ase. $300 Mo. J\1r. Robinson DAVIS REALTY 642-7000 BEAUT. ?i1odern Townhouse. 3 BR. 21! BA, Frplc, patio. pool. 2 car gar. 111 bltim, C'rpts, .Jra~. ~ase $295. 846-5991 . E. r.tirhael Realtor 673-6880 Gene ral 2323 Elden Ave., Of. raun new · · · ~; blk liIDDEN Vil.LAGE Personals BAYFRONT 3 BR .. 2 BA. ---'------·I La Costa Apts. &16-0032 to BEACH! Cpts, drps, b!tn~. 2500 So th Salta ~'-7_>-_26c.9c,.8·~----~, I $2.50. \Vinter HELLO R ENTE RSI 1 & 2 BR, hltns. swimming 3 BR, 2 BA + drn, S200. 2 frpl e. _ 12'5 16th SI., HB. Santa Ana u a 5f6..1S25 Gu•st Home 415 SU--00-EN-L-Y-.-.. -n~gl-ey, -.-ttl-,·.I 675-3331 \Vinton R.E. \Vhy are YoU paying rent"? pool, lanai, bar-b-que & gar· BR, 2 BA· $16:>. Bltns, CID. R·l7·3!)J? C t M ••t•. edu"ated & I 1' k e • -1· k h , a~e. Ali ut il pd. $150 to $170. 2 BR t I C J, 1,..,..,..,.., ............... 1 __ 0_•_• __ •_•_•_____ • • B Ibo ~ s \\"R e up to \V at s \V/D hkup. Patio, gar. 181-· ap.ar men on u ..,(". back-packing. lravelina, a a Peninsula h i lod w h Aduhs, no pe ts. d 1 p k v· ·~ appen ng fl.Y. e ave H Del ~lar. Ms-8278 sac, a Jaet'n ar 1ew 3 Heated Pool1 PRI ·1 II · books, n,.,.lies & nten. Att hundreds of hom~s ready l'H Avocado, Ci\f. 642-9708 School. 2 children 0 k . room ava1 \\' oving ,..... • $25 \l,'K & Up.· On 0cl"an for your inspection. VA and ~""! ... ~""!!"'!!!!!!!!..,.,. LOVELY 2 BR Y•/W cpl, 817_3397 aft 4_ Large Clubhouse etc. BBQ carC' for ambulatory male there any over 40 who have Lovely Bach • 1 BR • Rooms FHA T Park-Like Surroundi'nn ...,l>Od fir.;. d .... s. '"· mature Child Care Center or female. Balanced diet. some of the same inlert5UI erms, some y,•ith not • ·,. 2 c 1 2 & 3 Bd Maid Service. Poot. Util Pd. a red cent do"'n. Let us QUlET • DELUXE adults. no pet!I. Rel\S. 7160 & 3 BR's. $145 UP. Patio. reat new rms 612-9862 or 540-2562 aft 6. .ti: arc Io o king for , • Call 675-8740 • fi nd thaJ. dream house 1-.2 & 3 BR API'S Placr...in!ia. &l~31oo. pool, children. l\10RA KAI From $149 Rentals to Share 430 friendship"? \Vrite, Classitltd Co'on. d.I M.r . ~ . 1 -u .... ...,,1~ * !lid Pool• Ap1s. 18881 ~1ora Kai Ln., ~i SOUTH COAST ad No. 243 Daily Pilot, P..O. you vc ..... ...,n wanting or ,.,, •-"'~ E/S!DE 3 Br, 2 Ba, blrns, blk E. of Beach. 96" -·. VILLAS your \!Cry own. Call Nr !hop'g * Adult! only Children ok. Sl90. 6'16-4l04 g-o;r..,. ROOMMATE ne('(fed, 5 min Box 1560. Costa l\lesa. Calil. 2 BR. fuU y crptd, pool. So. of w lk & L Martinique Apts. CID. gar. \V/D, flfrd . WALK TO BEACH! 1101 MacArthur Blvd. from acc. nice Joe. Pref 92626 >. H1ey. Oose !o shpg. Adults. a er ee lm f.anta Ana Ave .. Ct.I Ch ild ren ok. $1 90. 611>-4101 Lovely 1, 2 & 3 BR's. Cpts, 546-8823 student. Only $50 mo. Call SPIRITUAL READINGS"'~ Sl7 j. Lle. 67~213. RC"altors r.igr. Apt 113 &t&:i.Y..2 *BEAUTIFUL 1 & 2 BR drps, bltns, dwhr. 847-3957. 2 BR. l ~i ba crpt11, drps, 546-!1291 Advice on al! mailers 2 BDRM apl, $210. Av•il. . BEACHBLUFF APTS hltns. pool & 5Uana SI6J. \V0'.\1AN. w/chi!d OK, to Daily 10 AM·lO Pill 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams 6 UNITS Contemporary GRrden Apts. 5-10-6569 eves. Dec. lsL 545·0465 Oprn 'til !I P'.\1 ALL ELECTRJC Palios, frp!e. pool. $150·$165. Spac. 2 Br 2 Ba. Pool. Pa· shRrl' hon1e wlwoman & 312 Nia,;~!~~~~~~ Real * 673-1326 * urs~AIRS sir.n. Call 5'11)...5163. tio. D/W. 8231 Ellis. 842·7644 South La guna children. 540--5665. VE " .AJ 492-9136, 492-0034 Costa Mesa NDOME OQ\VNSTAJRS $165. 2 BR. y,·/gar. $l30. \Vlr pd. • OrEZ ORO APTS. a OCEAN front n.-wly decorat· MUSICIAN wants to share A· CALL 1\1ana.c:er alt 6 Pil1. 1S71 "A" Orangr Ave. Call 8234 _.\Uanta. 1·2-3 BR·s. ed, 2 hr, 2 ba. Laguna Roy-frame. Capo Bch. $125. mo. SISTER Gr&ce. Te a e up, Unb•llevably B•autiful IMMACULATE AP'l'S! 642-1131 btwn l & 5, 636-4l:Ml. \ra.~her/dryer. 5.36-0336 ale 499.1075 or 838-34l9. 1·i utU. 496-9562. C.rd Reading. Open 8 AM..fi VAL D' ISERE Garden Apt11. ADULT a..nd Pool p · t cl d PM. 525 Victoria St. Ci\'!. "THE VICTORIAN· .. · riva e ose gar. A t ~10TliER with child wishes Adults • no pets. Flo\\'ers FAil1ILY Section $170 2 Br studio, adj shops. . , P s., 645-1468. evef'Y\vhere. Stream &. Close to sho""ping, Park Lrg. 2 Br w/gar $155. Adult~. drp/crpt, pallo, gir. Y-'.:·8JOl 2 BR. Lrg Pr1v patio. Bltns, Furn. or Unfurn. 370 10 share house or apt. in La-" I d b I c·pts d"'s llWlmo N '--~-------'?Un& \\'i!h same. 497-1185 COUNSELING & lhfo for \Vaterfall, 45' pool Rec. Rm, 1 Specious 3 BR's, 2 ba c P R · r P s · ! n s , aft 5. 21 3: 592-5227 coll. • • ·,. · · o, · Sauna, ......,5 1-2 eifrm. Furn-* Swim pool, P•t/-n S(lundproofed, ind yrd wl 2 BR 1 C . 11 pe ls. 1503 A I ab am a. Cost• Mesa ROOMMATE needed to share abortion. vascetomy & adop. "'!!' ..,....... . ,,,.,,, .• • ap. rpt g a roorns. 5.~c .,785 , _ Be lion. ApCare. 642-4436. Unfurn. from Slli. SEE IT: * }-'rpl, Indiv/Lnd.-.i fa e'ls pat io, \\'Ir pd. u.....-.120. drp~. bl!ns, refrig, carpo•I. ~·~;.:::::' =·~-~-~--1 ----------..... guna ach house, XlOO Parsons, st2-8670. 1845 Ana hti,,;JA v•. 667 Victoria "C" C.1\1. lndry rm. Sl5S mo 10 mo. i:GE l Br ap!, encl gar. 494-2819 ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. 'ed I I · 2 I h ed 1 I I Phone 542-7217 or w r it e 1 BR. furn . apt., ground COSTA ~tESA 642·2824 LIVE in manager \\'an!rd. 12 li46-6!l61 or &j6-1~ marr1 roup e or single cac crs ne e.ma e level. panel heat, priv. t'ncl. furn ap!s. Ren1al $150 inc. LARGE 3 BR. 2 BA , bllns, adults. $125. 842-4549. weBliBJlll roommatt", 3 BR 1pt on P.O. Box 1223, Costa. ~1esa. fu rn. palio, re\uh·ing shelf ,B~a~c:.:k;;...;B~•~Y:.._._____ dutll. $90 eredil lor misc frplc, dshy,·shr, nr shoppin11:. LGE 3 Br. 2 Ba Studio. Lge _ ELDEN _ \lo'ater. 673-4624. Gm0!~~ycto1, M10inn.~?lplT•·ake __ ~ rC'frlg .. ne"' stove, prk'g. No -u!lcs. mo«' for c~ltan1ng Encl. garage. 557-8188. lncd yrd. encl gar. $185. No Office Rental 440 lHU•\. 1' •uu pets. Extra quiet. $110. 173 MILLIO~ S Vie11, 2 Br, apts. Adult couple only. sngls 842-4549 earn $75. 536-4305 after 5 Dtl ~far. CM. &12-7696. bltns, cpts. rlrps, pool. 653-7976 ei·rs. 2 BED R 0 0 i\1. nrwly · · Sparkling NEW 2 BEDROOM COSTA r.1esa 5 delux. pvt. of-p.m. $170/mo. 673-3691'.l. redeeora\f'd, r I r~ p I 1 c e, 2 BR. Apt. Ooscd gar, cpts, iard.en apartment. Luxur-fices or desk space w/draf· ~~~~~~~~~~~I SPAC J Br. pool, n r SPAC 2 & :I Br apt $140 up. garage. $191'.l. 548-5003. drps, chUdr@'ll/small pet ok. lous pool, lush landscaping. ting rm. Furn. crpt, air shops. Adlfs. no pets. $155 ~!~a Island lild pool, play yd, cpt/drps, ~ BR 1 BA, new shag. crpt1. $140/ilfO. 847-2!M1J. $180, Adulta -no pets. 23ll cone!. Avail all or in-jlnl ~~:.· 1884 Monrovia. YEARLY -lease. Grand i:111eori::·N~; 0~2-?03S. df'J"!. bl tins, nr ace, g1tr CLOSE to Beach! 2 BR. ~Iden Ave., Costa Mesa. divldually w/answerlng & ';;;L;";';,..;;;f....tmm;;;.DJ~:I Canal. Little 11. Beeut. 2 1994 Maple No. 3 642_3813 $139/r.lo. 557.{;151 Cpt11. drps, & stove, no pets. 645-5780 or 646-86e6 •ecretarial strv. From $100 1 $2D4El.5 UXE, 2 BR. 2NBEAW. !r·~ti~~a., pri. palio. $350 l BDRl\t unfurn, crpt~ drp$ ·LGE 3 Br, 2 Ba, new shag $140/mo. Ph. 536-9942. BED D * :"'°'="·,;54:.:>-M::..:c::"::;·--.,,..,.,~~ Found (frH ads ) 550 l'~l· elccl ''" , ·,· ••• e' <:Pl. $169./mo, freshly. pa in· $130-$160 1 &: 2 BR .. 2 Br .. 2 * 2 R OM DESK space avaUable $50 Winton Rea.I Estate 675-3331 ,. '" g g '.,..g d oc GARDEN APARTI.IENT dispo:)I, rear yard.' child f!Cl 1c Nr. C. Carport 5;i7·1i151 Ba. Olk to hflaC'h. PooJ. See 111' Ba T~wnhouse conccpl. mo. Will pnwtde furniture FOUND ll/12 2 pnodles 151 E. 21 s t St., C.M. Balboa Ptnlnaula O/K SliO. 6~2_91~ a WILSON GARDENS e Mgr: 220 12ih. Bea1n. ceilings, extra lrg al $5 mo. Answering servtce. collars. Vic ot Victoria &' * 646-8666 * NE\V 2 BR. crp"c.-.-.-~-,·. I LA.RGI-; 2 BR apt w/rp1s, 2 BR. 11,~ BA. Cpl/drps, La guna Beach ~rm11, t"ncl pstlo. reen!I· av&ilable. 222 Forest Ave, lgray & eharcolJ studded $30 Wk U A t · r cnrL patio, $140. 642-6!111. 11on rm, sauna baths, etc. Laguna Be11.eh. 494-9466 \Vilson 646-~77 • P P s. frplc, garage. Yrar!y. Call drp~. bllna. Chlld OK. $115. e OCEAN ViC'W _ 250· to bch. AduUs. Our Sunday after-0 "F $60 $18-$15 Wk. Motel Rms Owner 675-4644 a.ft 6. 1.\11 Tulip, Call ~8o-2Hll,i. BACHELOlt. ~ri11rp,_ close ~n 1 & 2 Br. s175 Up. Pnol. 7175 noon B·B·Q·s & Free Art f~r~~~~. util ~~"tn ~~ GREY &. \vhlte poodle type $6 Night & Up Bea con Bay 1 & 2 nn ~pis, $~ OCC ~ UC~. $130, incl utU 1 S. Cst. Hv.')'. 645-MZ9, Lesson~ &lartlng llOOn. ping cenlcr. 333 E. l?th St. dog. Female. Black around SUNNY ACRES $1 :12.00. Sp11ciou~. lar J:I", & rr:'fng. 557-77AA. 52811~3. HARBOR GREENS Co~ta Mesa 64:-r.:Z..50. eyes. Curled tail. Frieridly. MOTEL FOR Le1!1e new bllyvh•\v 1pl. hi d 2 BR u f 1 u u Id ~"= 645-3818 aft 5P:\t. tns. cpts. rps. 543-40\4. n urn ap · 1 pa · L 'd 1 I ~ BAY VIEW OFFIC 530 LEASE or lse oplion. 4 BR. Harbor Vie"' home. A\.•aU Thli ad \\'Orth S.'J on rent. ~·. Principals 0 n t y. 2.176 Npt Blvd .. CM 543-9755 644-2649 1 Br $12.:i & $130. Lra:. Ideal ln priva1C? be1C'h com· 11'5 I 0 s. ES s•v. h H DELUXE 2 BR. Bllm. ., mo. AMAZING Adult L I v I n I ..,.. v.• t uskie type do&:. munity. 2 BR, lt,. BA, all fll'frig. Drps "'"'" cpt. Pr1v. * • ~ •• LOVELY 2 Br, 1~~ Ba, 2 car Be:aut..1...\..2 BR tum or unt Deluxe, Air Conditioned, Found vie. Fountain Vallfy. ~i97':;a6~f~ mo. bale. Gar. Lndry ~m . l BR Apt. unfurn., water gar, bltN, retrti, trpl, cpt, Aprs. Sell clean. ovl"n•, Re~=~edei!:'.® ~TOO ~collar 8J9..1873. \VES1U.IFF Exl".c. homt!', 4 for Bachelor. Pool. Acllts Br. 21~ BA. lge corner lot on only. 1993 etrul'Ch,-54M633 quiet st. $500. 646-il806 * AVL l"IOW·l I. 2 BR. FUnl. R E il!ODELED oef:anfmnt Pool. Rec Rm. Gd. Joe. No home , 4 BR, 21~ BA. din rm children or pets. 64fr58l4 . '450 mo. 64H402, fiTl..098.1. Nice~ l Br. Duplex SI l!i~ 549-0833 Sa n Cle,.nl• -LOVELY LGE 1 BR. quil'.'t, 3 BR 2 BA. dsh\Jhr Q.vte\lo', Adu trs. No pets. Garaa:e. aduiis only. $26.1. mo. 2452 Elden, 646.2768. Avan Dec. 1. :W4-4294. 1N"1"c"°E"1"'kc..;.2..;B~R"-T~RA""'t~LE~R-s. South Lagun • S9:i & up. ll3 E. 16th St. 642·1265. LfJA.SE l~e. c\f1n, older h4'Jme. 2 Br, 2 Bl, df!n. eptsl BACHELOR. APT. drps, Prl\.', heh. ocean vu, GarAge, No Pet~ 1 Jm., 497>!4i6-I. 174 {'4onte Vista, Of 962-4180. paid. Adults. no pets or drp, $295 on 1Ae. Shown by D/\V Un 2 Br) dl1pla, •hi.a FOUND 1 ,yr old m•le Shfltle Corona cle_I M•r chLdren. 548--69:>4. appt. ~:IMS. 675-.?967. CPI•, drpt, jacuu.J &: 11\U\& Of.SK space availabl• $50 , .. n--1 .... In Newpor-·", l BR. ~•alk-in closet, shag bath&, u pool tpa. Will provide hanlltul'I .......... .....,. ~ U<aJ 2 BR, bltns, frplc, 2 carportw. crpt thruout, altrac residnU DELUXE 1 tJr., gar. Avail. 2 BR + Oen, l" Bath&, trpl. M. 1UJe Wood al SS mo. Ans'llmilla: service ,,6~7~=~~-·~~---I pool-sized, nr. occsn. Sl!S. environment, nr So. Cit Dec. 1. Adult s, no pets. Sll5. Adults only. S290 Yr · 1 rr mac s avallabl•. 17815 Bea.eh Blvd. YOUNG re.male Siamese eat 673-4447. Plaza. )tr. w a k f! t I e 1 d 150 E. 21st. 646-0016. ASSOCIATED BROKERS J:r'ra2Sf:"M>eiCrri~m~a~ciN'Wi"~·;;C;,;;M~. ~ J,~H~un~UDg~l!>n~S..~~ch.~GU-021~~~ J light color, l\ttA Vt:rde ** GREAT VIl.'W! 2 BR. 968-5335 • DELUXE :l Br 11~ Ba 673-3663 968-250S Ei.·tg. .SlOO . ~lOVE l.N Allowance MEDICAL SUlle or office atta. 54!)..1502. " ·• M v d f're.Scbl chlldren welmme frpl. b!tn1, sund«:k&, pool. LGE modtirn l Br. apt., cpts, cpt/drp, stv/ 0/W, gar. •sa t r • NASSAU PA.t..,1s Air-concl .• 10 rooms. 425 N, CUTE lft!Y k\ncn found, 4..e S.200 up. 675-:WS. 615-6204. drp~. bltns. dsh\\•shr, 1 chnd Children ok. $150. 64,_7958. ** 2 BR. apt at reductd rn E. 22nd St . 642-l64:J NeWS)orl Blvd. $3CJJ° Monlh ma1 old. Vic. Main A 2 BR Duplex, Orps, erpt1, ok. SISIJ/mo. All uti l. pd. LOVELY 2 BR, nr \Vl"slclifr, rl".nl tllr couple to mo.nag!" 8 SHADY El.~1S.POOL DAVIS REALTY 642-7000 l\lacArthur. S.A. 979--009&. ll'IU"•J:~. Quiet. no dogs. ca1s 307 Avocado No. 9. &15-0984. $133 mo, No children or aptll. Harbor 4t. Blkl"r loc. 1-'l.lrn. & Unrurn 1 &. ** 600 sq. ft. 2nd Door KEYS found FrldAy nr. (Ir mo1Urcyelt$. 5f8·2720. •D•luxe 1 Br, 2 Ba* ~1. 646-SJ$. 64;;..tiJ5, 2 BR's from'" $13 1 5 UP $9Q/mo. COSTA MESA. Gf:lslcr 1': Slcll1 CM (Mtsa. 4 Bedroom, ne .... ·ly decorated, Adults, M pel•. A.Ji! ~141. * STUNNING G11.rden Ap t.2 fiELUXE 2 & 3 BR. 2 Ba ., l BR furn. $14(). 1 OR oof. Cill 64&-2130. Verde). Call aft 6, ~768. f\l't'pl1ce, garage. S 19 O. LGE-28 t-L'Nu cpt & l'IA!nt. Br .. 2 Ba. 111n'I den, $185. f!ncl gar Sl~. up. Rent11.I Slll utll f'd. Adult•. no pets. 3 vr:nv nice 1econd floor of· WHITE 11l!>rl halrl!d male ~8-5003. ' Dish"washcr SlMI. w/pel Lik~ new. 645--55..10. Oft'. 309a !\face Aye. 820 Centtr. 64~. ltcc.1. 17817 Beach Blvd. cal, ftppmx 1 year. Vic. Turn unuM!d llem11 Into qulck ='"''00~. ~"'~2--08<=~!~1_963-<622.~'---House Huntin11:? \Valcb the 546.103'. -O&tly Pilot W&nt A41 b&vt bwnu (2UJ JM..0015 D•Y'· C'apo Beach •tu.. 495--5eT. c1sh, c•ll 642-567i Call 64z..o!i78 Now! OPE.'J HOU~E tolumn. DAlLY I PILOT 1M aeUon! ba~alns 1alore. t Wt!!i'll ht)p you tt:ll! 642-~il, For bl"st tt1u01t MMGTI I • / 1 .. > •• , •• • ""' 61\;"1..Y ~ilOl T11tsday, Now111btr 16, l.S~ ~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ 1 !.__ i..t_.,._-_J[SJ [ .. ...,.. l~l ~.,.-J~ I -.. ... -J~I ..__ _...,.._,11••__,J[lIJI .__ _r""'°_Y•N<rt--'J[lIJ I --J[j]] I Lo-Jllll I [niplo, ... i )[DJ I•••••••• .. •. I ~--·-·I li&mmm::.;; B•bytllllnt Houl•·-J b W 1 W Help Wint-• M & F 710 Help W1nted, M & F 1101 ;;;;;;;;;;-~~I Found (frw ads> -.-$""'100 1 • .., o anted,, Female 702 Hep ant~, M & F 710 -F 710 1---------1 ln1tructlon1 , 575 CHU..O &r ln!J.nt care in my ,---,-------· ... -1~-.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiJ •-'----·----HOUSEKEEPER t ti HelpWanted,M.&. 8, ·~ pu1>~. 1·2 months iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii lo•·elo C.',!. home. Exp. •-HAULING, cl, ca~up. loeAAI I-CAFETERIA ••rk·-I"" •-' par nte, .....u..n r>T >T " "" d • NEED HELP AT ltOl\ilE'? ''0 Wl"' -1\fon. lhru Sat. <I hl'S per PR01"ESS10NAL ph o n_, old, ..... ~lie marking on hind reas. l..w'ae fenced yd. movts, exp eollege stu-parl time Ne1•"t>Ort Beach da ,., "" h ~A"' ... . . 1 •· foot. A~ ol Prbnrose s1. -64&-0037 dent. J..r&. truck Re.11$. For Temporary Ser.ice: f\tlljor Con1~ny ~rtt~ y. -·-r . .,.._ .. s10. ll()Clhcitor • Coo~~ Po n1, .,.,.. •-I Pal Drl •• IT'S YOUR MOVE ' 534.1846 • \Ve Have Conva.leicent 8JS..l''ll o .. 1191 "-r ... -n 0 INSURANCE A-n~·y Girl. .crrir1~fe, apistra.no area. ~ya '" """' BAB"S!T'l'ING -L·r-n"d ""-'--'-·-----Aid e N u -• ~ ~ "" ~ •· \\ark 01 o"n ho-5511"7 .. ~ .. ~ ~ er unes • ~<vust• Ch • t -ll · l·S Cotnmerc i a\ l ines.. in Y.1r " ,., .... 'lerde area, -aJt Brookhurst & At I an I a. HoustclN n ing kee r1s mas am o1 pm. Und . . R &•51 deal 1n area. PhOne S~ESE kitten about 3 mo. INDUSTRY CAREERS Clean. Fencetl yd, xlnt food . HOLIDAYS AHEAD! HO~!AKERS/UPJOHN c:~~1!Eti~~ t~:1'c.~1~s~.f~ per.crv;,~~'.ng ~la;tl~~~~ 83.~1~ bel\\'Ct'n 9:00 a.n1. Lovini. 968-6819. Jla\•e a Clean Jloli&ly! Call 1..agu Ex ' , lleallh & reurtn1ent plan .. !~·=":;,,"°":;::="~· =---~- old wearing brown shell f!ea AIRllN£ & TRAVEL Carpenter Dutch Maintenance Servi~ For P ennanent Servloe: At na areas. per req d. Peal Insurance Jnc. Call PROCRAMi\'fER (Busint.l!S collar. vie. \Vallace Ave., for all floors, ll'indows & • \\'e Have Companions . 1--tui;t be over lB. ~. 1\1rs. adley 5<19-3058 Appllcations). :! ~Ts. college Co6ta J\1esa. ~9. , AODIT. & Repair. cab, carpet_ cleaning. Xln't work e Houstkeeper:s • PracU.. CLERK Typlsl, .. El e e . 494-10 , ' ' or ·equiv. spec i a Ii i ~d FOUND black puppy near • 9PJ;;f:Y\TI9~S" AGENT rormica,-marl!te, fir.. tile,. done. No ettlY', 537.1508 any-cQ.J. Nlltses etc. At l\fonthly '-' lyl)e\\Titer, 50 \l'.p.m. Ac\ ' \ . training, 3 to 5 yrs. rtlated 23rd Street In Sunset BE:ach. • TICKET SALES panl!Jillg. Antiq, Fum, -timt'. Rates. Ro"b1'ns"on's <:urAlt' fli:UJ'fl; typing, 10 key 1 l'.1eed ~ prof .\11 s I0 n ~I experience 51.rong jn mfg (213) 592-5081. .• AR!ESER FRRVEAITION~ARGD repair & tt:fin.164d·ia98 ;;H~O~U~S~E~C~LE=AN=!N~'G~-w-l_t _h I HEAL11-f It adding n1ac-h. Good phone Xlmechan1c.Ti\tu&t$hove Ure! s. systems: COBOL, RPG. "'-A FAMILY CARE AGENCY personallt)'. Apply 1741 nt pay. om arp nion BAL. St nU re1i un1ie PRESCRIPI'ION glasM"S on e COl\Th CATIONS EXP. Remodtling, cabinets, N'.f's. Own transportation. N OU 673-.53211 2201 E C t Pi •• ,,,.,,,, ma!nt. No,.. b too Call 1805 No. Broadway, .eWpOrl Plactntia Ave., c .M. • , · • • s \\·/salu11· history 10 Victoria St .. vjc_. er ,,,..n e TRA AGE.VI' .,._ u• J-l\\')', Cd.\I. C'a••"•fl•d Ad ..... 281, Daily Clement(', 492-'1501. sm. Reas. 646-422-t ~~ .>jlnta Ana , 547-wol _. " ••v 1 ~~-----~5"'55' I Airline Schools Pacific ALL types of Carpentry. By GER'. !AN' \V"man "'ill do • COCKTAIL INVEST IN Pilot , P .O. Box 1560· Costa Lot t h El\'PER. Ref's & Carry All ·' .., ,, YOUR FUTURE l\ll'sa. Calif. 92626. Equal 610 E . 17t , S1nta An• local man. Cleaning Equipn1ent. Phone e.1ipcrt housecleaning. 4 hra. WAITRESSES Opportunl!y Entployrr. $100 RE\\'ARD, lost large l ~!!!!!!!!!!J!!54,)~~-6~5~9~6!!!!!!!!!1!'!!! 1 _____ 536-__ 1 6<_' -'---Alter 3PM, 646-3307. min. $3 8.n hr. 8n-3608 or --G0,erm~n3 Shep X !o 1 ng hair&. LOOKING FOR A JOB Carpet Service DEDICATED CLEANING 839-6943. ~~, , • 1. Apply In Pe1'SOn BE MYOUR OWWN BOSSI ~~z~ ;~~ate61~le~t~ci~\.:!; ct. -:. , nr u arlno · * \Ve Do Everything * RN desil'e!i job in physician'• ~ en or omen Newport. Sales l\fanager & Fain>le\\· Cl\!. Blk & tan, WITH A FUTURE? , CARPET COMPANY 2'1 hr. Call 673-4072 offict" Call atte"r 6 PM . 'fl 2:t.ll·3P~1. ~1on thru Fri. Salcsinen. 3 desks. Lamoine lthr collar. tags, "Ario". Na1ionalAutoTune-upTrain· EXCESS chAsRPETING *NEAT & CLEAN * 492--5721. t;~ JOLLY OX Lease A Yellow i:: .. 1\teans, Realtor. ore. Call collect 213: 8Z1-97¥-in£ Center ii;, 5elecling a Prof H 1 H I • Taxi Cab 64:>-3434. Res. 64&-0'310. ~JALE Chocolate Poi n 1 limited number cf career VALUES TO Sl5 PER YD. · ousee eaning t P Wanted, M & F 710 ., ,.... (I RESTAURANT _ minded ......... pie to '--trained $5.50 PER YO. & PainVng 557-4244 RELIEF Cook, exper. req'd. Slamew, Inst vie. Cabrillo ,....., "" Call for Appl H betY;een \VestminslE"r & on,the latest in automotive & up lns!alled v.i th pad. Mesa Cleaning Service Accoontarr'.s · 10 $800 ) 25192 Cabot Rd. 546-1311 Baptist Convalescent osp. Santa Ana . Answers to dia.goostic equip, & methocls. Shags, hi·los, con1mercials, Carpets, \Vlndov.'S, FIOOl' etc. Exec. Sec-y-TraveJ to $800 ~ Laguna Hiiis . fi6l center St, C,;'o.f. 548-5585. ''Fink". &1&-5763. ' ~~ ~ro:~\~~et;0 :~ a~U~0f<>M DRAPES J::;:s:7a~;·1.w~~s ~~~~~~lcs 10 !: · / -}; CLa Paz turnoff s.D. Frwy) 1'iiiiiiii;.,,~·~k~l~o~r~Hiie~rm ... •~• ...... ,~e!r 1;;;.~e~or !r toN~W:t 1'.1AU: Part Aust r a Ii an triilning. e No experience made to order tron1 housework, needs trans. Sec'y/Lite bkkpng $600 ~ 1• 64&-7764. Equa,l Opportunity Shephl?rd, Ian & • silver nee. $2.49 YO. INC. LABOR Avail. v.·k~ays.. 540-1332. Cashier·lnsurance $520 ' ' · · CUSTODIAN, SE'Oli retired Employer. \\'/blk frosting. "Brut" lost • Da""' or evenings Free esL All work gua-n-Sec'y-Insurance !'~ t k · l--'--'---.,.,--::-----1· '0 •• H 1 · ,}JV n1an o \\'or p/hme ln bldg Vic .. of Charle & Bernard CALL NOW teed. Financing avail. House o'"'°"Teaning By Day. Acctng Clf'rk·LA, s.;25 niainlenance, c.r.t area. RN'S St., C.~1. Rev.·ard. 646-4023. tn4l 558·1815 of Carpet. !H6·1523. \VnC llc~~~i;ation P/tin1e Sec'y $3 hr , • Re. s p ., depend ab J e, • -~. REWARD! Ornge/bl'\l'll/\vht 666 E. 17th St .. San1a Ana JOHN'S Carpet & Upholstery a ...,,,..,,.,..s NEWPORT I non-drinker, $.16-2820. ~ _.- long hair tml cat. v.·ear'g PROFESSIONAL model in· Cleaners. Extra Dri-Sham-,Masonry Personnel Agency DANCING GO.GO flea col.&. bell. Vic. carna· structing i;mall classes in poo free &otchguard (Soil BRi:CK. B~'"'&.'"'St;;;;;w;;;; 833 Do,v.e2r .,P 7 r 0 ., N.B. 'I ~,' \ , GIRLS & BARMAIDS ALL SHIFTS Fountain Valley Community Hospital tion & Bayside Dr., Cd!'i1. Personal Development & Retardants). DegreaseN> & Call v<t ·'10 ~ ·~ . QUEEN BEE 6rJ-8807. !'ifodeling. Individual at-all ('()!or brighteners & 10 5.f0.-0929 or &16-09.JJ """A~!!!!!!'!"'!!!~~!!!• I .. . •. , i.. t 1562 Ne\vport Blvd. C.i\I. IR.VINE PERSONNEL SERYICES S.AGENCY LOST ·. , -. c-am colo-d tention. 646-8354. minute bleach for white ~.,.c.c...=c..;;:....:.::..:::::...._ ccounting Clerk I ~' ' · 1 · -• ,. •• ----Paintln• & T ·. app y in person. 6-16-993.'.; male, Saluki dog. San Juan READING TUTORING in carpets. Save your money • YPillg 50, 1 yr e:\l>f'I'. /ii area. Name Barnado. $25 your home. Cert. Teacber, by saving me extra trips. Paperhanging call Lorraine ~A..o~ DJS"T'RlBUTE Health & R .. .,,,-~. 67., ooAn '-~fo-d Mr ll k \Vill clean living rm, dining 1-----..o....;;___ \VESI'CLIFF i1'" ..... Ecology !inf', pt/fult lime . ... ..,... ..........., ""' ... al] gra es. i . athcoc' rm&ha11$15 Anyrn1 $7 50 BAR?:JETT P ainting, PERSONNEL AG ENCY ,.,. ·it-. BoborBill646-7D56 Secretary "to$475 4:30. 493-4TIO aft 5:30. 6#-0144. · · • material labor, $135 Single, ~13 \\' cl !"' 17100 E I'd I W LOST: Female long hair • PIANO LESSONS couch $10, chair $J. l:i yrs. $185 2 sty. Stucco. Eaves. ~v-est iff Dr., N.B. ~ ESCROW OFFICER 1 Girl Office-SH uc I a arntr exp is \Vhat counts. not ,. ._,. d bid -.,.-,,;=-''~·~~m"'-'o'-~--1 "")(4 Better hU""" on thi• on<'. Girl Friday to $600 979·1211 tiger cat, 1 yr old. J_.ost in Your home.. Cert. Teachers. .~pec1 ... 1ze ding f or ~ ••J Free & Fee Posi.!ions method. I do work mysell. 1 ho ~.3236 ALA R.\f antllor intercom P~stige position, plush of· SH, Lite Bookkeeping * R. E . SALES * area of 594 Joann St.. Of. !\tr. Hathcock, &W-0144 Good -~ 5Jl--Ol01 cus om mes. .,.,..,... , G 0 A h • $600 I ~~~~~~~~~~ m. • 810 ~. 34. F-· E•. t. service & installation. fice, terrific opportunity • • na e1m to SALESMAN • \\.'OMEN Sh~'s all I have. Please call -;;;;;;;;;;:-;;:;;;;;;;::;;---! ~~~:;;";,:;::.--~·c_;~"'.:.,.__ • ., I k Ce men"" Concre·e <>"•.v3830 or the experienced gal \1-'ho Type 60, Book l'.'e ping llelpful Needed ror general real f"S- 642--2:158. 548-4004. I I~ · '' · HANG?!tEN, sales & Insll., Ai\tBITIOUS \Vo men l8 EARN EXTRA \vants ,this great PR spot. Surety Bond Clrk $400+ 1a1e brokerage, to complere }·Er.fALE Blk & \Vht Cocker Services and Repairs BEAT The Rain! Concrcte Paper, vinyl, floc-.k. paint. yrs 10 G:; for direct selling. Fee paid •••••• srart to $900. Math Aptitude· l)•pe our ex isling lllaff for Hunt· 3 mos. needs shots. Vk. floors, patios, drives, Store comes to your door. Fantastic nioney. Sell an MONEY Other free & fee jobs al-'ail. File Clerk $325 ington Beach. Guaranteed C.)1. & N.B. Re\\' a r d. sidewalks. Don 642-8514. Schii•artz, 547-5846. idE"B., ('arn tangible money. Call Carol : ·; ·• .. · 540-9010 Typist $400 training, fo1111al cla$toon1 548-6763. Accounting QUALITY Cement 'Vork. Let *INTERIOR EA'TERIOR * 645-3997 between 9 &. 11 ani Cal-Pac1f1c Agency DictaphOnr, Type 60+ and on·1hr·job training. 2 MALE German Shephen:ls, . -.. George do it. Lic'd, Bonded. Lie .. ins., guarantecd. Call &. bchl-'E"en 3 & 5 pm Tues FOR 2750 llarbor Blvd .. C.i\1. 1 tan &: 1 blk & tan. Vic. ACCOUNTING, Consulting, 645-1693. Jfarris, 642-4558. Expert lhn1 Fri. 488 E. 171h lat it'\'lne) 642-1470 Cl\I \Ve are \\'illing to spend the money, time and effort 1o make professionals of our staff and rE"lain them by high <'On1missions, 8 to 10 new of.fices, and manage- ment that ii; interested in you, and \\'illing to \VOrk \11ith you. \v-'I A & 19th St FinancialP rojl!clions , =~~-------airlcssspraying. APPRAISER CHRISTMAS ..., ace ve. ·• CE~fENT \VOitK. no job too C.M. $25 Reward! 646-3189. Bookkeeping. Our/Your Of. small, reasonable. F r ee PROF. Painting ext/int. Ac· Strong experience. LOST:. female Shepard Collie I ~!-ice~. -~~1~53-'~· ~~~~-Estim. H. Stufii~k. 5"48-S6I5 cous. ceilings, air I es s Cal_l 1.o1Taine IN HAPPY Black & Tan, Relands lie. M 0 NT H Ly bookkeeping Child Care spraying. ~rs. 8~7-1358. \ If'F tag Vic Harbor & 19th service. All reports and ----------J'lio \Vasung ,PERSON=AGENC\' 642.9483 taxes. LICENSED No. 9663 in my * WALLPAPER * :;mg \Vestclir Dr., N.B. SIAl\fESE kitten, 11-10.71.1 ~~--·~•75_,._3345 __ •___ home olf Golden \Vest. Hun· \Vhen you'caU "!\lac" 6-15-4 Coast H"''Y nr ;\1'.acArthur Ba bysittlng tinglon Beach. 536-2600. 548-1444 646-lnl AVON PRODU~~·s the '.:v'•M~,;te_7:;;r.d Dy 833-7240, l --~c"°'o_s_T~A'"""M.,...E~S~Ac--_c_o_n_tr~•-•_1_0_, _____ PAINTING. professional. All worlds largest · most .._ "'" "~11 _-work g uarn . Color respected cosml'!.i . com- LOST: skinny gray & black PRE.SCHOOL l\IY \Vay. quality home s P e ci a 1 ls t. 9 6 2-6143, p;iny. AVON represen ves CITING SURRO DINGS I State Licensed remod. \Valls, ceiling, "°"" 0•1-11•1. can lake advantage of · striped female. cat, flea co -.n ., lar. Vic. Balboa Bh'd. &. 18!h &: Monrovia. ~~ day + etc. No job too small. fine reputation in successful "--"--/ full day sessions. Plru1ned 5-17--0036, 24 hr ans. serv. FOR clean & neat pa.inting, profitable businesses 0 r 35th St. 673-18:>8. pro...,.am, hot Junche•. A,_,_ intE'rlor & exterior, Call o · ,., Arld"l"on * n . od lin their 0\\-11. Call no \V, LOST: Female aHered black 2-6, hrs 6:30 Ai\! • 6 Pi\f. 1 1 s .-..:m e g Dick, !J68..406j, ri40-7041. cat, flea collar, been in ac-$20 wk-COMPARE! 642-40.;Q Gern·ick & Son, Lie. PRO · . 673-61»1 * 54~2170 1''. paint1ng-inter/exter. AUTOMOTIVE cldent recently. has hair STIJDENT v.i ll babysit & It. Honest v.-ork. Li e /Ins. BOOKKEEPER missing, Rev.·an:I. 842--9006. hswk !\1-F aft. l2:t.ll P.M. Driv•ways 548-Z759, 540-144'1. LOST SJ rthair P I I r N" ~1 ll'V T ----------E~per. Sm.'111 offiC'C. Various : )() o n e D"\.,,l' • • area. rans. HAWLEv'5 Dn"'''"ay o-a! PAINTING/Papering. 1B 'Ll>'S d Bm/wh R.. J ·1 o•o ~,. 1 ~ • .. = J ' utie.s. Salary open. Laguna dog. Fem .. 4 mo's, t 12o•p',;,, enni er, .............,. a t Coating .~ small parking Jn Harbor area. Lie & bond· B<'ach area. ;..f6.9967 01. markings. 492-1925. " lots. 545-519.i 11ft. 5 pm. f'd. Re!'s furn. 642-2356. 494-1131. $25 Rf."Ward Blk Lab Ret. EXPERIENCED thild care Electrical PA 1 NT I NG : Hone st BABYSITTER to care for Lost on 4th Island in Hunt. v.·eekdays for children Z.S ·---------guaranteed \l·ork. Lie'd Any 2 d n grade boy in my home HarOOur. 846-40IR. yrs. Fenced yard. Lunches ELECTRICAL lrutallations size job. Call GT:>-5740. during after school hout'S in LOST: Shetland sheep dog included. JBus~ oUl San Diegu & repairs. No job too small. 'y~a~u"'",.-p-py~t7he_p_ain7. 71.7R~oo-m-s 1'1esa Verde Elementary (Shellie) 1\-t a I e. \\'hite/ Fwy near nsto . 549-4038 Realistic priC<!'S. Free est. painted ;to ca. Also ex· school area C.~1. 5.37·7297 brown I black. 673-Cf.i38 NB. LIC'D Day Care, 7 am-S:30 _L_ie_'d_l_I•_•_· _5t_6--0_2l_l.___ tf!'rior. Call 5-IG-7046. aft 6 pm. LOST Old English Sheep pm. Hot meals. Xlnt care. ELECTRICIAN. licensed, 'pc::.:.::....:.=p,,..:."----'=R--.-l ~B=A~N~Ko'-~Sec._Cl_''-1'----,-.-.,-,-,d. laiter, atch, e)air '" Dog. 1fale. Vic Adams/r.lag-Harbor I Baker area. bonded. Small jobs, maint. Exp'd in banking pref. nolia, HS. Reward. 96Z.7280. 546-1539. & rt:"Pairs. 54S-5203. * PATCH PLASTERING Please contact Mr. Barnes * * * * * Trader's Paradise lines Furniture All types. Free estimates. at 673-2500. An equal op-* I·---------call M0-682S por!unlty l'mployer. * SPECIAL! Avg. chair or ~~-~-~-~~-rocker stripped $.'i. Gluing, Plaster Patching Interio r BAR 1\1a.ld. 20 hrs. \\'k. 61 b Stucro Rt'pair Exterior Mother's Saloon in Laguna. rass polished. &15-0866. Small Jobs. Lie. 847-3471 49"1-6245 aft 6 pn1. G a rdening P lumbing EXP. Hay,•aiian Gardener. PLUMBING REPAIR Complete gardening serv. No jot-too small Kamalani, 6.f&-4676. • 64.2-3l1S • Bookkeeping 100':0 l'~ree to AL'S GARDENING t • for gardening &: small COLE PLUMBING I mes lanciM:aping services. ca11 24 hr. service. &1a.1161 $600 54G-Sl98. Serving Newport. Remodel & Repair Th r e • Challenging Perma nent Positions; d 11 CdM, Oista Mesa. Dover 1------..;...---0 ars Shores, Westclitt. CUSTOM Remodf'I \\'ork, l'-------------------.1 I PROFESSIONAL Gardener , alterations, additions, minor tree \\'Otk, p r u n i n g , repairs. Finish or rough sprinklers. clean up jobs, <.arpentry. Oa\•id Stewart. H iring Now, M ission V iejo a rea. Gen'I Bkkpr to $550 Cash Re<:E'i\'able~. Hand Posting, Self Staner. 196.1 Chrysler 4 dr Sein Ot-- lginal owner. For 14 II alum· inum boat or outboard n10- tor or band saw, sand~r or '? Call 536-7123. San Clemente, bes1 area, :! BR, vu, on golf ttse. $31.500 $26,000 eq. Tracie on un\tll. Costa i\1e1'11 at'l'a. i\otad<lox. 6-15-0755. s.JS.U68. Have very d!'sirable Ne\v- port 1nooring, close to jetty & a beaut 21· Cruising sail- boat w/inhrd motor, \\'ant 1 BR hom1t. Call 894--41194. landscaping . George, 64&-1108 646-5893. Roofing Exper Japanese Gardener e T. Guy Roo!ing. Deal Di· Complete yd servi~. Nl'al reel. I do n1y O\vn '''ork. & Relia. Free est. 6-12-4.189. &&2780. 548.9j!)(), AL'S Landscaping. Tree Sewing/ Alteraiions .... . . . --European Dressmaking All custon1 filled. Personal Fashion advice. 673-1849. F I C Bkkpr to $600 Post Journals. JnsuranC'<'. Gen'] Ledger on Cornputer. Payroll Clerk to $600 Bool<kcepin;: Background, Payroll On Comput('r. Use Your Immediate Discount For Christmas Shopping Full & P /Time Day Or Evening Schedules SALES AND GIFTWRAP EXECUTIVE Personnel Agency Acctng Clerk $550 , f''amiliar "'ilh all phases JR. SECY or bkkpng. Job order cos.I P/Tim~. Go1X1 typing, Ii t e accountin~. i\Ianulacturing SH. d1ctapOOnc. 3 Days per f'~'l:pcr. \reek; $2.frO (>E'r hr. 410 W. Coast Hwy., NB 1'or Appl. C?n.tact Suit H 645·2716 Carol Sm11h e Personnel Dept. Also, guaranteed income ESCROW AVCO FINANCIAL while you are in your learn- SERVICES ing period. SECRET~RY 620 Ne\\'J)Ort C'cnter Dr. FOR CONF1DE~TTAL Beau! local offlcr' needs Newport Beach 6--J4.5S00 JNTERVIE\V, CALL sharp gal. \\·ho .c~n really Equa'l Oppor. Employer i\IR. 1-IAIGl-tT. handle !lus position. Lorsl 962-5;}23 of public con1act. Gi:at KEN Templeton Hair S1y1is1 COLLINS & WATTS boss pays ft'e ...... to $7:JO. needs. recepllonisf Ca 11 -REAL TORS - Other free & fee job~ avail. 642-6857 ' RELIEF' RN ll-7 shift l'X· ~ Call Carol . . . . . . . . .i~0-9010 • · Cal-Pacific Agency LLOYDS NURSERY J>{'r .. ~ature housekee~r. 27:"l(I Harbor Blvd .. c.~I. JOB OPENINGS >.1n1 fnnge bnfts. Be"·eHy . Nu1·sery delivery man l\tanor Con v 1 • Hosp. FE~ALE i:ano P 1 a Yer: Nur~ery Salesman \1'i lh at Capistrano Bch. 496-5786. ~ri/Sat 111te:i; only. Call least 1 Y<'ar exp. n1les, bartender, &ffi.1428. Landscape installer y,·ifh at FIVE sales\\'Omen Pr. Leads least l year exp furn is h E"d. 4 9 2-40 4 8 Spl'inkler ro.tan 1vith at least 1 49Z-j208. year exp in residential FOOD Sl'rvice i\·lgr: Salary Bprinklers. + percentagl'. Cal! 838-1103 Call for appt. &l&-7441 before noon. LUHRS BOAT CO. FRY Cook. E"xpe.r. f"ull or 8J9 \V. l81h SL, C.i\l . pl time. Apply in 'J)E'rson, Needs Exp. F~ngine lnstaller.s 512 \V. 19th St.. Costa Mesa. & Exp. Boat Carpenters Gel Coater ln1medlate ()p(!nings RETAIL SALES LADY For Quality Bakery . .\pply In Prr~n To: Mr. Anderson SNACK SHOP BAKERY 3444 E. Coast Hwy. Corona del Mar i\1AClfir-..l ST. 4 yrs job shop or proto-fypt' e"per. Apply Exp'd 011lr for fiberglass in Pt"Tson. Inca Plaslics.,I ~Sa~I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ... 1 ,~-, C 11 p rl esinan po\\'er .,.,..f manu acturer, .<JI a. e f' E'cto, San AN OHIO OIL CO. lf permanent I benefits. Apply Juan Capistrano. No phone . . (I ~rs op. in person. Skipjack Boats, calls, please. portun11y for high income 176..1 Placrntia Costa 1\1t>Sa. PLUS regular cash & vaca· . ·, 1\1AN 1van!al for floor lion bonu ses, abundant GIRL Frida.~· f/hm_c needed maintenance & other duties. fringe bf!ncfits to mature for e"Xpanchng des1gn firm. Apply in perl!On, JtunUngton man in beach area. Regard· Gd math b a ~ k g round Beach Conval<'scent llos.p, less (If f"Xper., air mall A.F. necess. Call 64.rl210. 18811 F1orida H B R d p A · . • . . ea . res .. mPr 1c11n l!ANDYMAN for odd jobs. J\IEDlCAL Ree E' p t ion is t Lubricants Co., Box 600, Over ?.O. Appear in person needed, bilingual, English Dayton, Ohio 4~01. at Firehouse, 177 J.:. J7th Spanish, good typing.:; daysdiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•I ST., Cosla J\lc&ll. \\'eek. i\Tedical f'xp l'E'q'd. Sales Secretary HARBOR MASTER Salary (l!)('n, contact Mrs. Unusually fine oppor. \v/N.B. 750 Boat Slip.~ Tillotson, 549--0386. eslab. firn1. Employrr Pays fine fringe benefits I i:alary :\1ECTIANICAJ .. <lesigner or Fe<>. I Also Ff'1• Po~itions) open,. So. California major 1('{'hnician 10 creatE' h,ird-PNEERWSOPNONRETL niar1na. &ncl complete re-ware &. equipment & pu11h :<UITI(' to Cla~ifird ad no. projccl lo cornplet ion. 1631 AGENCY 266, Dai1y Pilo1, P. 0 . Box Placentia, C.i\1. :IS•l8 Calnpus Dr., :-.:.B. 1560. Costa i\1esa, CalH. MEN 1 ,_ 11. . Nona \\', Hoffman :;40.063:; 92626. J o \1·oro; p imc in ren-·,.,~~!!l'!~~~~~~' l ha\1(' a nC\V !al yard. ~.PPl'OX: 20-30 h~·sr SALES-CONSTRUCTION H:;;~~~ss in to\\·n & r need per v.·k. \\ill train, neat .111 \\'ell kno"·n nalionnl ro. ha.o; Have freE" & elear O~on acreage plus -. Desire houses or duplex!'s \\'/small loans or free & cll'ar. Genr Tribolet Realtor S3J.959j. TRADE: v.·asher, dn·er. re· frig., misc household }~OR automobile or bike. Beautiful country :'i acrt!s neJ<t to Sequoia, \\'ill trade $1200 eq. for lat!'r model station y,·a~n. van. boat, etc. 8.184515 or 644· 7321 reinoval. Yard remodeling. Trash hauling, lot clE"anup. Repair spri•klers. 613-U66. EXP Japanese Gardener. Know ho\\•, up·kt!l'p, plant pest, . trintrp.ing. clean.up Alterations -642-5845 Neat, accurate, 20 yearn eX{I. appear&nce, ~ long hair. local tl'rrirory open for sales A ccountant, ltd Anr.y your hcl~. If all~ncl floor ;\fusl be avail. all day type wi!h some record or ., opportunity o er""' by a \Ved/Sat & sun. Apply 1930 C Div, of REL Er>terprlS<'S ne\v co. iv/ntl\' ideas, possi· N l Bl ~.. M success. o. car & expense No Sunday Sales CALL * 539-16!"4 .. San Luis Obispo 14.P.OO ac ::attle grain ranch, $3.300,000 Lois of water. Trd for rnnch fUrlh. north. Doyle Co. Rhrs Maddox 54&.1168, 64j·DrJ5. Ha\'e oceanfront duplex, Ne•1>0n Beach;· '"ant ~It. cabin or T.D.'s, THE ffi\VIN CO. REALTORS &1~·6111 3 BR, F .R. &: D.R., 21; BA nome. » blk to beach. Hunt· lngton Harbour, $18,000 ccgy for bOflt or T.9 . O.\V.C. 2nd. Act. 547~. (I~ 54M261. 2 weK renfed homes 4 BR 2 BA in San Mateo &: Be1· mont., ftht $245-~. El'· ~ for loe. prop. IA!O S. L.a-Ritr, 67M3(18. Can,on Lol<e Condo. prlv lalc<0 2 BR. 2 BA. pool;-"'•· 1er aklJnr, tennis, golf. Trd,eq for Cl. M·J prop or mot.or home. EVff. 646-0681 ~~:e 20 c:~;~aiw~~~: Clear. Trade $165,()00 ~ity for romm('r. or indust. Fox Co. Rltrs 573.9495, \Van! inoome pt"Oper1y, Or- an~e Cnty. llav{' $10,000 T.D. 10 exch11ngr for equit)'. Th<' Fox Cn. ReaHor~ 673-9'195 96&-3486. S""' ll!io ewpor ·• ....._.,,ta 1 e'Sa. aCOJUnt + '"""m Sal ' • .,. hie earnings .in <'xcess or • """ m, ary EXPER. Japaneie Gardener ----------InlPrviews 9 to 12 only $30,000 or more Pf'r yr in· MG~-. Sal«, earn $9JO+, Co. $8500. Tree trimming. aean.up, CERA1\1IC tile new k '!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.,;.,. Appficat'ronS NOW teresls you-you interest me! training, bonuses flex hours. Call Bob \\'ilson, 540-6055 Lawn ?>taintenan~. remodel. Free e~. Small BOYS 10.14 And I '\\'OUld like to meet 646-0949 btti. Coastal Agency 646-0GtD or 5"8-79"J8 ~ jobs \\'elcomr!'. 536--2426. to deliver papth in the San you! F'or personal interview ~tGR sales earn $800. + mo. 7790 }Iarbor mat Adamr ' CCl\1PLETE lawn & garden-Tr•• Servic• Oemenle. San Juan Ca.pis. Being Taken call 833-9130. comm. Full co. training, SALES Clerks fur Chr istmM Ing service. ----------trano and Capistrano Beach HOSTESSES k \Vailre:'!-~S Fleoi. hrs. 8~6--0239. seas~ n, '· d c a 1 f 0 r Jim 548-0405. GENERAL Tree Serv. YElrd ueaDAILY PILOT Ji\·e l'ntertalnment & dan-Need .so1ncone lo assist n1c houst"l\'l\'C'~. J.hrkory f'ann L\\\'N .l\lainl. J-lauling, new clean-up, hauling, :1!-prinl:!;ler 492•4420 clng for JS and OV('r, Cllll In my fast growing business of Ohio. \\'r~!cliff Plaza. la"·nS. cl<'an.up, pruning. rrpairs. Reas. 646-5.«S. -c-.,....~==~--, :'ttS-9288 or Apply at 2 ·hrs A day, $2:;1} mo. 1-·or N.B. Free Est. can s.1&--7379. Boy's \VANTED Applu In Person Popeye's, 19th & P1nce1111a. inrerv\c1v appt. cnu i\h·~. "sA~L~r.".s~,~,7,~,~-P~A=t~r DEPT. Tllo Reliable Gardening-[ II I 1 J 10 ~·~~i;'" '1 "11. ~'~" ;.,;.zm berweeo ' & S•fary dopernteor .,. exp. 9 ~· old Corona del :\'!Qr 1\-Iaint. Yd Cl('anup. S.16·1072 L--Empt--°"""--'--' t HOUSF:f.:EEPE'R·C'l)()k. \\'!ll .ni . Xln'1 bcn"!it~ k "'o~king duplex. ~. of h\\'}'. $49.500 . _ BEELINE Fashions nr.eds con~idt>-r cou ple w/huaband NURSES. all shif1s, Private t' c> n d . Kc 1 01 R 1 m a 1 a1. Exchangt up for prop. General Services \\t:imcn. ful\ or p/tin1c cmploYt'd else"·heN'. Cnre Duly. n..~. LVN, PrlJ.clictal. Mard11'Rrf', 2666 11 a r b or my Leo s • •• Rlt THt••cs b I ivork. \\'e train. car nt.r. for 7 "r old bov •. Top livil"' l~ef'!l n('ct"u. Le s" o u I i e,,,,a~''~'~·7C_»~t~. ---~-7 · · -isasse r. 1~ >' i\toose, 1.1. Job Wanted, Ma• 700 SilO-SSO y,•k. 636~08 -4 2 . 10 AM 5 PM J "" i: 673-.\:lOS. t:lect.. plumb, fence, tile. 5.1.9-543S. • " rontls. "tu11t he. leg~l res!· ~u"'f11.1 H.~dg is~ r y, 3:;1 SANTA Claus needed in 121. R·l lots, gu.Jtable for 5 lnstlns. carpentry, paint etc. I----------dent & 1:K-avail. 'vkndii. osp la • ' .B. Call Harbor Shopping Centtr, U> unrts "II. So. Shore Lake Tll· MS-0820. SCRAM-LETS BEAUTY operu1or. Follov;-Ref'~ re<fd. State iskl111" A ~995.> any ht. lnten'I\' hrs o~ ll'Ork. 5~2439 bet\l'n hoe. trd <'<t f<ir s BR hm or t-H-~1-1 -------Ing, Guaranteed or <."Om· _ glary t xpec-ted, P.O. Box !tA·SP, MIF. l & 5. Jnc:.. prop. in H.B, CAbin 81 au "-9 .• ·. ANSWERS miss.ion. Also 1 manager. _ _ 393, ~.ona. ~('J ~ar!... Ca. OPENl_!!Q_ for F/1!_!!1! <&_n. Search Light Ope_r&tor. Big Bear or 1 962·3763. WANTED! J.1essy trees,_ s:J0:.1010. .. 92Ci25. fl ent retail clerk w/exper \\'&nled at the. f!tthoo8e ** \VJll l:l'fldc my Sl7.000 yards It. gtit'~. moving & BUILD 2nd Jnromc, Sell #2 fASffJQN ISLAND HOUSEKEEPER, lh•fJoo!J), in grocery, btizen food ot J77 E. 171h SI., C.i\l. • ('qui!)' ln R-4 lot In County hauling. $7.50 per br.' +. ~,= = ~,-ii~e -B.'\ltc -lt. VUa-E, Proltoin, Motht>rle!:!I home. children deli purcha,.ing. See Harold Appear in penon. Corridor v.~lh old renied Anytlme, (TNT La"" n Skin C11.tt. C311 OOs-4203 or NEWPORT BEACH ~ & 6. r11.) [)Qy \\1k. i\tust in peN!l'ln. lti·Tlme Gourmet 5 -· hou • al 1 o•• ,_3 Nev.'1" ltem: A carelcsg 6,. ,,,3_ h•·-e••, 1,-~ mo. ,._.,._1107 1-~oods & Spirils, 493 E. lith eamstress $520 :\C for l!:ood TO'g or In· "I nt, . ;M~ • 1 •• --·• 1 ,,....,..,. Y<> .., ~ .,.....,.... Ab! p um""'r con'"'""''"" a \\'a er I~~~----==~ bet 5. St., Costa :\lesa. e 10 CUI k ~~"" fumitutt come prop. * 6~2·ll50 * TRAg-f & Carage cle11n-up. '1 plpci to a gu: line by mi.slake Busboys $1.SO hr upholstery. :\lust be exptt. White bamboo b.'l.r 1;emi· 1ill)'l. Free es!. An;ytlme. and tho taucet-1 ran SELT· Be11.ch area, Sonie expcr. HSKPRS Emplyr pe.ys fee. Psychiatric Technician Cal·Flllr Etnpl(lyme.ni Agcn- What dQ rou have 10 trade? clrcul:tr T't'gUlatlofi gjz-e. 518-50.'\l. ZEH \\'ftter. rrnf'd . ('.ooo 1i~ Call 7.ena, (;eo11te Allen Byland Agen• P~l Shift It \l/knd.11. flliml'!, cs. OO:; l'Oo. Euclld, Suite A. Ltst It Mft------tn Ora.np portable-. bou«ht ot Sloane'11 r.=•nn""'""' ........ -,-,."-,--,-, -,-1,-,-n.-p-s. YOUNG man hM capi!t1I. (714l !riG-lOOO, Qil.Falr Em· C)' 10&-B E. 16th, S.A. adult retarded. Call !or In· An11h ... im . CounC)t's latRfft read tnd· for $200. 'l'ra~ for _small P..einovf' trees, dlrl, 1vy, good fin, connecllons. 3 yr plo)1nent Agen1:y. !JOj Xo. Equal Oppor . E-mployer S-li'..Ol~j. lrrvitw. t2l31 426-1721. (714) 956-1000 J:ns po51. ~. N-llboft ot t .. ~ f"lil snnd, baclc-hoo. ft4T·2600 \V/institutionll, t.xptrti&f: trn Euclid, ~Uilt'-A. AMIM'1m. HOU!\E1'F;f;P1NG-rt11a!d Oon'l . five up the thip! The futtsl drav.• Ln !he W~I * * * * * * llOUSF.1-tuntlnf? Watch~ al ork 1nkl , 11 ee.ks Tumunu~ ilt'miiintoqUlck Servlct. Full k Part lime. "Lillt" it In ch1ullled; Ship., a Da.ily Pilot Cius.Wecl lli••miio••lllitlll•••••••••lltir.!..:0::!1'£N~,,~H~O~U~SE~co~l~um~•·:_ ._•e,.m;.:p"'io;.:ym..,_•_nt_._<96-<6_-'-'3-·_ cash, clllt 6{2..$73 !J!!!'!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!l !..!F~or:....!!ln!!!ic:.'."~·i~•w~.~77~<-11.12~~1.:..... m Shore R~ult"! 642-5678. Ad, 64~& • I I ( f-• /, • • .... .-• 1. ·-· ,. __ ' '-' • • • ~ 1' ....... • • • 11'-...... " •• • •• I " <DAIW Pllllf '!5 ,.___·"'"'-""'"'-1[11] ..__I _ ... ,._, :··-~ I -I~ I -I~ ._I -_-_ ....... ~l~[B I T~...,.u ... lliJ I .,, .. ,,,... ]~ ._I _-.-_ ..... _I§] ........ I __ ... _ .. ~!~§] -------·I ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~ Cw/"' Moc11C:. I m --Help Wanlo<I, M & F 710 Appllonceo N2 M lscollaJ10ous 111 SINGER 1971 Dogs 154 Compen, Solo/Ron! ftD Auto LHslng 964 WE ,AV TOP '"' SECRETARY USED Appllancn & TV'a. GIANT "&st of Evtry1hlng "To~matle" zig-zac IRLSlt Setter. female, 10 * Ford '68 i·-250 ca,mper oun. volume leue dppa,rt· CASH WE OESPERATeLY Long atariillng Orange Co. We ruar &_ delive r . Sa1e." Bon· Marc be., w/a1.1to bobln winder. Pl.It a mo'• old, AKC Hill., $85. special, V-8, 4 1pd, Air. ment Oncn all riOPutu N EEQ •. Development !irm w/oftices Dunlap's, l8lS Newport m, ntURS. only! Nov. 18th. 10 "GOLDEN TOUCll" to 6t2.-8129 aft 7:30pm. P /S, P/B. lndd'c '70 American &: ltnport makct CIHn tlJcd ears in Newport Beach desltts C.M. 54$-?m. am to T pm. At the NEW )'OW' le'Nin8' wtlh th.ii one! 1 Horses 156 AmerlGo llliii' at1f cont. cab at C'Ql1\pedtive ra1t1. Let our tot used can l trucks, Ju.st FANTASTIC PRICES highly qualified secretary. location of Newport Harbor Automatically: bUnd hem1, ovtr CfJl!Rer. Snap & nat, leue ~ tailor YOUR call 111•tor treit fttimatea. P&1d for )'OUr car, p&ld tcr ' This pennanent pogition re-• MAYTAG man-wubera/ Art Musaun at 22ll w. embroiders, fancy stitches, Part qi.larter-bone needs ex-sips 6. Jacks &: txtru. lease to YOUR needs. "It's GROTH CHEVROLET or not. quirt'S the highest skills & dryen/mtchaet&Del·90da.y Balboa Blvd., Newport etc. Meditern.nean cabinet perience rider $150, or bst. 968--0776. the serv!Ce~tbat makes the DEAN LEWIS proficiency w/a commensu-KtW'· 5.ll-8637: m.im. Beach. Admission $1 ., included. SacrWce $38.88 otter StS-8075. ·• Brand New, never u$ed difference.'' rate salary, insurance, Qther F RICIDAIRE refrigerator students 50e, members tree. cash or small payment&. camper sl\CU for ~TRUCK. THEODORE Aile for Sales Manqt'l' TOYOTA • VOLVO lringebenetits&futuread-w/crosstOP,~,fairly 613-8603 Guaranteed. Lessons. 32'' hia:b w/bub~lo ala.ss. ROBINS.FORD • 182UBeacbBlvd. 1!W6HARBO"-BLVD. v~~ellont. Pleb~ ~nd fUU new $70. 64z.;79S8, PAINT BRUSHES _ PURE 545-3238. I _ ... _., .... ,, . lP I E";>-~2800~~· iik.ii:"---j~~lOGO~!HARB~~O-R_BL_cV~l>!:.:O"."~ I !"~-~~H~wi"llnaf=,.,on=Be~~~·~ -~I Costa Mesa 646-9303 Qtl JCa ns, lll!ory & ref~ SACRIFICE 48" dbl door, BRISTLE AND ALSO Sporting Good• ••A tC. t'OSJ'A MESA ~2.0010 !>'II ft.4 ~ Autos, lmport41d 970 erences. Al.I our people are •-·1•--~-A -Cycles, Bikes, ANNIVERSARY a•• .-..... u_. ...... ...,. pt&izea:as NYLON -RANGING INll ----------1 Scoot 925 Auto1 Wanted 968 ~ S C aware of th!! ad. Please stove. Also 8' aofa. M~748. SIZES FR0.'1. ·2" to 6" SCHWINN Continental 10 ---------___ e_r_•_____ AUTOS WANTED Prestige ports ars rte t~l·ro·:: 2213• AM· Cameras A DROP c LOTH s, LAD-.spd. bleYcle, 1 m~. aid $85. Gentral 900 CYCLE TRAILER __ T_O_P_D_O_L_L_A_R__ Top dollar lor clean used •nLam~'~l 2+f'e"s '7eO ~: iczm, I • . Equi ent IOI DERS. ETC., BRAND NEW Golt clubs Spaulding Golden --------Almo6t new, haul 6 bikes, 20 IN CASH Cl!.ts. See Andy Brown. Z {2)9"•'68 & '69 Porsche pm ***BARGAIN*** Ram. 2 thru 9 lrons, 1, 3 & 4 Marine Consultant tt, Jong s ft wide. phone THEODORE SECflETARY KODAK Super 8 Insta.matic Call Aeytime 543-3120 v.'OOds, bag incl. $90. INDEPENDENT 540-5630 ask ftJr Bill Harold Paid for )'9!.lr dean used car ROBINS FORD 9~~;f~ r.-mz Dealer Accurate. typist, 65 w.p.m., camera, tcom lens. Like * 645--0058 aft 6 pm. • Purchesint-532-f.443 after 5 pm. paid for or not. (lJ 523.125{1 electric typewriter. SH 90 new 61J....G.t.f8, 67S-2723. * AUCTION RIFLE_ lifarlin Golden l9A Counseling on purchas-* ,69 Yamaha 2S()cc Enduro. SANTA ANA DODGE 2060 HARBOR BLVD. w.p.m. Diversified duties. Furniture llO Fine Furniture J.tountie, .22 cal, lever ac-ing boe.1$ &: equipment. Xlnt eond. 300) mi. $525. or 1401 N. Tustin OOSTA MESA 642-0010 AUSTIN HEALEY Ind~~r~1':~ns , & A~liances tion , BlllhnelL4X scope. $40. • Merine Surveyor best offer. 546-SnD a.lier 6 llS..3691 WE PAY TOP OOu.AR (714) 494-940J 8' HERCULON &Ota &: WAu.etionsd , FnAdayt, ,1=.oo Bp.m, 546-5710 after 6 P.M, 646-2977 P.~f. IMPORTS WANTED FOR TOP USED CARS TE LON IC love.seat, round game set, In y S UC ion arn SJ{( Cl.othlng, Ladies s-ize 12, 22' CENTURY Raven , Orange Counties If your car b extra clean, • tufted crushed velvet living 2'.175% Newport, C~1 M6-8G86 pants, parkas &: etc. L<i.ng , perfect cond, cheap! 180 hp 19~ HO~D; :75 CL TOP $ BUYl!:R &ef: U.! first. rm. set, hand carved coUee &hind Tony's Bldg r.-tat'I Flo boots &lze 9, all priced inbd bait tank & pump, rig'. c~ ~79 · BILL MAXEY TOYOTA BAUER BUICK & end tables. 6Ta-.1343. Custm Drapery S•I• to sell. ~Bl after 6 PM ged for Marlin. Call PJ, ==""'=-'-''-"'::.:..--1 18881 Beach Blvd, 2M E. 11th St. '55 AUSTIN Healy, -· $250. Call 645-5839 BMW "'"' ' lndustrfts Inc. Laguna Beach Equal oPportunlty employer SCOTCHGUARD s· sofa & Dl'l'lpe"" wotkroom closing Store Restaurant . S.17-wll wkdys 9 to 5. SEARS Spyder 20 inch girls H. Bes.ch.. P!l. 847-8555 Costa Mesa stS.1765 • •s ' 1 Stingray Aqua marine, '69 1600 SUNROOF, White, roatchuu:; loveseat. Velvet • out 5(XXI yds o! materials at Ba r 832 BRISI'ON 24 Cnlising sloop. speedometer S20. 644-1(15. rr•s Beach bowe·tiine. Bi&"· Vacancies cost money! Rent SECRETARY to projec t manager on large rnn- living nn set incl. tabll'S, % price. Fabrics from T;>e Only 3 mo. old. Equipped to gest selection ever! See the )Wt house, apt, store Prl¥ale Party. $1, 9oo • lam~. etc. Will separate yd. Bring measurements & NCR Caa.h Register, ll ssaJQ new, must sell $7200. 250 BULTACO, best oller, as DAILY PILOT CaasWed bldg., etc. thru a Daily Pilot 673-6934. Ilk~ riew. 645-1701. ' save. 3853 Birch St., N.B. tolals,.Gooc:f cond $350. Len Hutton 548-7765 or is. Contact after 6 pm section nowl Classified ,Ad. Sell ldle items .now! &fG..1431. Adj to o.c. Alrpc...·t. * 11:· 962-5959 ** 642--0248. 646-626S. ,_A_u_t_o-s,-No-'-w----,-80-A~u-to-,-, ~No~,.-...--~9=90 Autos, New stroction site'. Requires ex-KING s-ize mattress & spring cellent shorthand & typing $75. Upright Kimball Pian skills, 5 years office ex-$150. CaU aft 6 pm 847-4216 perience min. Prefer con. BALBOA Bay Club -Full TV, Radio, HiFi, Boats/Marine SCHWINN 3-speed Tandem. · family membership tnclds Stereo 136 Equip. 904 Like new, $75.00. &16-0191 struction backgmd. Salary PLUSH Velvet Sofa. & open. Can ttfrs. White Loveseat, al.so blk naug. set. 833-8680. Both less than 2 mo'1 old. Irvine Tennis, save $650. f---.,;·--·---..;.;. after S: 30 Write Classified ad No. 267 GARRARD component 12 VOC to ll7 vac lnverter ,;19c,TO~KA,:.,:.\:.,VA-SAKI=~-,OO=-T~ntll Daily0 Pilot. P.O. Box 1560 system, unclaimed Heath MP 14, 400 Walls n~~ 10 pd ~ -> Eves. 557--0215. I 100 D<.t=, s ' .,"""' co11u. Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626. ayaways watts, am/fm continuous, irequE'hcy co~ $325. 642-2048 after 5 pm. SECRETARY, N. B. resortQ '""=.::::7',-;;,-,-,...,,-~ hotel. Must have good skills. UEEN-1;z bd, Bunlc bed set & swive·I rocker, CE AM/FM atcte01>hono console $35. Cameras-: Ex· 8kla VX _rl.5 $40, Argoflex f4.5 $15, Kodak Flash Ban- tam f4.5 $15, All xlnt & \\'fleather cases. 673--0734. stereo, 8 track, .f..way air trol 60 cycles, polarity p~ suspension .!ipkr, .fiYSle'm, tection, input c i r c 11 i t '68 BM\V R.-00, Full dress, comp! G1tITard turntable breaker. NEW-<:hecked out. immaculte. Ability to meet {ll'OPle &: be detail oriented . Gd starting Reasonable. 133 E. 16th St, salary. Ph: 644-1700 ext 5.33. Space No. l, C.M. SECREIARY, versatile, in 11: 5 PIECE WALNUT * ntW; 1-girl office, n r Dining Room Set sold separately for $309.85 Never used $100. M&-Sno _ _c.64_2-ll7_D<=o~r-•9<-311=_1,;5~ pay oH s-mall baJ. cif $159.97 after 6 P.M. YA~fAHA 125 Endure, Pert. or pymts' of $5.41. U.S.A.scu "=a~A,;,;co__.m'-p,..-.,.-r-&-w-.,-.. cond. Xtras. 800 mi's. Stereo Equip. Warehouse, 548-7988 or MG-8289. airport. S!H typing, filing, cll~00==----"""-3_99_1 PR. figures. Re I l a b I e , MOVING, house full of 540-50&1. tur.n.iture & .tJoosehold i1ems. SECRE:TARY, exper. Heavy All tn xlnt rnnd. 546-T:i27. CARPETING, good cond. 40 179 E. 17th st.: C.M. anchors, Nyl. & Dae. rope.1 ..:::.:.=:..:.:,,:..,c..:,,,..c-~ yds, whlle shag. 100 Yds 645-2442, 10 10 10 daily. Misc. Marine e q u Ip, 'TI Yamaha 175 Endure. Gd 50 yd &14-8866 rond, warr. Gd. Mini blke rust hi-lo Sl . per or PIONEER sxm · 42-961 best oiler. Pad also avail. . .!itereo, MUST ,;e!I 1970 Evinmde 60 cl35=·..:6::.:.1=::.·----- 50c per yd 833--0367 aft 4 pioneer reverberator & lO HP. almost new $750. 16' Auto Service, Parts 949 kd ~ Sa!/S spkts, S350. GE port col TV .. AA! & .._,,_ 4'onc, ... -. \\' ys, anyume un. $125. 546-1075. """' .. ...., ... .,,.,., ~:;rwg COST + 10°/o POOL TABLES Warehouse SWL Re(.'(,'i H th CR 54 Boats, Power 906 APPLIA~"'CE SALE!! typing. F /lime. Ca 11 D.R. table & chain $75. 2 642-9990. chairs S5 ea. CJUee table SERVICE Sta. Sates man $15. 2100 Newport Bl, C.ltf. \vt1ube exper. Time + time * Jl'WILL move at1ything )'Oil & in. Clean & neat, group buy In this column & more. Sale. Freight damaged $49 5 Band~~ cy~es ta 30 M 28' Unilllle 1960, $6500 or ENTIRE STOCKI 1 ID $199. New slate factory cycl .,5 ""STIO ·•t 5 •·1n·--1 ... -w .... he-'"'-· "'""'· $195 to $395 . es.,..·.,.,.,... ilJ.et trade for trailer boat .+ •-..c ::..~'"'"''" ..., """"':t· PM h ~---•"1430 ers. TV"s. Convenient 6.'l9-862J, 52M466. J~~· ~-~~~~~~~ cas . vw1,.,r,......,.. . Term!!. Garage Sale 812 TEAC Tape Deck, Nat'I ); SELL or partner '70 Formula Firestone Store, 415 E. ----1 Panosonlc stereo w/ I If I 23', xln't cond. fl-Ir. Joyce 17th St., C.hf. fi.46..2444 ins, pd vac. Apply Boyd's 536-1648. Arco, 490 E. 17th, cross rd. Irvine Ave., C.M. 3 FamUy Garage Sale speakers & 6 band radio, Fm lo You _<_Of.._718'_.______ Corvalr parts, engine ~Sunshine Drivt', Hu~ Nikkomat 1.4 camera. -· Boats, •-1'1 909 ·' · -~ 3 L• 2 T' ""' anu mlSC. .,.._. ,s. SERVICE Sta. Attendant, exper prefd. Top pay. Full & pJtime avail. Apply, Shell, 17th & Irvine, N.B. SERVICE Station he Ip wanted, exper. Full & p/time. Apply 900 E. Coast H1vy, NB. tington Beach. Sat/Sun. (oil 675-3592 tntt, 1mes, $2.00 e 545--0906 e Magnolia/Village). 26' T-Bird, prof bu i It !~~~~~~~~~ AM/FM Ford car 5terco ra· fb Is/ tywood & 4 ITEMS from 6 fam ilies:· dio, excet cond. Origina.!HOME EDUC A TED : rg p ' ps ' Reas. priced. Starts Wed. value $164 for immediate S'he Ph e11d Co II i e &. head, 6 hp OB, new cockpit 1· AutosfarS. If '4) ~~m. 8402 Friesland Dr., sale, ~ af $45. 49<f.2SZ1 Dachshund both 1 yr. old. ~~594~ sail cov. $3lOO. ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~·~; DIAMOND rings 11) IA K. Great for Kids! 962-3385 aJt SERVICE estab. Fu 11 er Brosh Cugtomers. C.M. Up to $160 wkly to start. 962-0416. SHAG carpet Clearout, All _, 15 03 K R 6 • Boats, Slips/Docks 910 tine qu ... ; > • t"a. eg. · Trucks sizes & colors. Inst. avail. appr $650, sell S300. HIGH Spirited 1 yr old NEARLY new cement deck 962 SERVICE Station Attendant. all shills open. 4678 Campus Dr., N.B. ;,j6-1757. SHEET METAL MECH. Clas-s A electronic ' chassis exncrience. Space-Tek Industries 1922 Piaccrilia, O>sta Mesa Sun (It eves, ~2-TIOl. 836-6936. Beagle, AKC regis. to slip noat 21.x33. 13 • Misctllaneou1 118 SERVlSOIT auto water con· home w I older chi l d. Clell.l'Water. Call Croft & dltioner, x!nt cond, $190. 536-7711. Neville, 675-8222. STEREO, 1972 Garrard, has full stereo changer, •air 675-5525. OOLL parts~ bodies & heads. PRIVATE -boat mooring. suspension speakers, YAOIT CLUB ME~iBER· 646-4647. E. 21st St., Front lie Sl.15 ft Minimum AMfF~f stereo rad I 0 SHIP fUSO. Oncld's transfer Costa Mesa .al', maximum 25'. 673-7506. w/FTr + tape deck, s-till fee). ·$350 savings, 644-6740 FREE Puppies to good 38' BOAT Slip, Villa Marina, brand new, was t e f t eves. home. Al other E n g I i s h Balboa. All services avail. unclaimed on layaway, Sold FULL length dark ranch Sheep & Afghan. 968-7211 $85/ma. 541-9Z71, for $32Q, pay oU bala~ cf mink coat. See to aJ> LOVEABLE 4 rno. fernale' BOAT slips avaU. 25'-65' $115 or take (Iver small preciate. Sacrifice $400 · German Shepherd w/shots-. Xlnt accommodations in payments. Collection Dept. 962-W35. Call alter 4 PM 548-6167 new Marina 6'73-«i()6, STENOGRAPllER • Diver-TI4/893-050L s-ifiecl, exper 0. C Alroort ;;--,,..-,.,--=--..,.-~ FREE! Water bed (5 yr. FEMALE German Shep, Boats Speed & Ski 911 are'll. SaJarY ope·n. Send Beauty Shop Equipment gUar.J w I purchase of any gentle disposition, l oves ' resume to Classified Ad No. (1) TWO Station Florentine frame & liner. 646-2296. children. 548-5122 ---------•--· b · '57 Harvey 14'. fiberghw, 60 248, Daily Pilot. P. 0. Box, un:IW>lng ar W/2 lge mir-Exercyclt $285 FREE Cats & Kittens. HP Mercury, $325. 844 1560, Cost MeSa, Ca 92626. · rors 38x48 w I m a I ch I n g e 675-5525 e Call Work 548-4'''"' C St c M d k 2 R·• b d hyd 1· ....., ongress .. . . eg . ,..., ase rau 1c Home 548-4147 or 833-82-13 I ~~~~~~~~~ chairs, 2 air conditioned Miscellaneous 820 '72 GMC % TON CAMPER special, 350 V-8, automatic, radio, hea1M, gauges. power disc. brakes, auxiliary rear springs, wide base !ires, buy now before the price freeze ls taken oU. Stock No. 502684. Th• t.ruck people fr~m General Motors! $3395 MIKE McCARTHY GMC 894-1336/531-2450 Corner Beach &: McFadden, Wtstmins'lcr TEACHER needs babysitter mature woman required to sit in Culverdale home for 2 girls ages 4 & l ~. Call 83>-2!156. dryers &. chairs, one Wanted 1 J[i] llel<""'d"' •hampoo bowl ~;;;;;.,,,,;;;;;;;;;;.,,,,~ I ""' ...r -ll 'L. l T,.._•tlon I'll with fming & ·chair, 2 r, . . • TI-IE Wanderfu! World Of supplies extra. Chl 979-0726. Camnar1, Salt/Rent 920 "para""· S40J. e.auty CASH PAID FOR IH. ?lfovies Could Be Your. . • nne furniture, appliances, p G I r- BRIGHT PROMISE FIREPLACE WOOD anttqu•~ Ono pl<ce 0• ots, enara SSO Intem&tiooal ~ Ne\v Faces Now Needed Fot houseful. Call day or night, FOR Sale, custom built JOO NEW OPEN ROAD 11' RF.CREATION CENTER Maim-. . . Grand" Opening Sf9.2241 "' 547-7733. gallon •quarlum complote ROY CARVER, Inc. TALENT HUNT Specia l 100/o OFF $150, ~iO. Camper. (336141', Stove, re· 2925 Harbor Blvd. (213) <ffil-3051 Regular Price \VANTED Amsle r Dogs 154 frigerator, side dinette, in Costa Mesa 546-4444 Waitresses $1 .65 + hr Mention this adl Mechanical In te g r ato r. -=-------;:,; beautilul olive green to CLEAN 1952 Chevy pitjrup. Besch Area. BanqUP.I & din-N. OF ADAi\!S ON BEACJl \Vrite, classifie!d ad No. 28j, h1INIA'ruRE Sc hnauzer match a 1969 Ferd f.250 Good cngill(!. rad i at 0 r, ncr exper. No'thing iaken HUNTINGTON BEAOI Dally Pilo!, P.O. Box 1560, males, 10 wks, AKC, top Camper Special (7S534). brakes, tlr'es & battery. out of salary. Super Tips! CALL 545~8tl75 Costa i\1csa, Ca . 92626 qual. Livety, loving, shots. Automatic, air, radio, heat-$275. 968-4119. Call 1.ena. ~-16-1000, Cal-After 6 pm M • 11 t ts 822 557-3760 eves. er, hc.>avy duty equipment. A '59 StuUe, good cng & trans .. F . E l ' ==~---",---us1ca ns rumen WEIM • "ANER Pups, AKC real sleal at air mp oymrnt ngency, COME to our yariiagc pat1y 1u~ $ new gca1s, body JY.rfl'Ct, 005 No. Euclid, Suite A, at Corn! Reef motel, Exec. rcgis. Over 100 chan1p. 3995 must sell this wee k 1 Anaht>im. rm. 2&tS Harbor Blvd. 01. FENDER Jaguar. dl'l?p blue. Ped i gt e ed. X I n 't The truck people f rom &16-0481. WAITRESSES-EXPER Thurs. 11/18, lOam.Spm, ~~t: ::f~a~cupS~~ =·~·a~tc~hdog,....c~'·-540-~--~·~~ Gentral Motorsl '&I Ford Cabover TJO. 11· Day/Eve Shift. Apply in per-7pm-9pm. Bargains plore! master.rev c r b head, 80 DOXIE pu~pies, 8 wks, red, MIKE MCCARTHY stake, 10 whl, lift gate, nu son aft 2 PM, The Derby Cris.'!)' & Velvet doll clothes. watb RMS. custom encl. AKC, miniature, shots, Stud tires $2600. 64fr1278 aft 'R£os"taura.nt, ll'62 Palisades B of A card, Master .Charge w/4 Altec Lansine U" 417 service. 830-7338. 5Pi\t. Rd., Costa Mesa. accepted. mwiical intr. spkn. $550. SAMOYED pups 10 \\'ks,. GMC '56 FORD P .U. lh ton. 8 WANTED· live--in housekeep-$29J. BUYS 3 Pc. Wedding Tum ~1888. AKC, Champ line. 1.Iales. cylinder, Runs good. Call er. Nice home w/ own room ring ae t , (inte'l'loc:king), DRUM Set, $125. or btlt of-Reasonable. 557-2504. 894-1336/531·2450 646-7622. & bath. 3 chi!dren -lO, 6 & w h Hf/gold, Engagement fer. 5 Pc'1 & cymbals. COU~lE Christmas Puppies, Corner Beach 1 f\lcFadden, 2% TON USMC Truck. Great 2. Usual housekttpingduties ring ill tillany style with % 54()..4804. AKC, ahota:. Tri-color, sable \Vestmlnstcr for overland, hunti""'• Xlnt •. + babysilting. Pos,,tbility cl _,_, di·a-~ Call·-•no 8" FT 0pe •-·d c -"1""6 ,...,,..,. ~ Baldwlo A-·nlc •~ ht ·-•195 ,z ' n nu.. amper, .... M ... $1150 11·-. ••7 ••03. working out 1 or 2 days a a t Wkd /·" d , .. .....,.., °' \\' · ~ · t < s • · k '"""" • "' °" ....,.. k R f ed. p.m. ays ... ay SpiMt. FUil .,,..,.J, PET I h r-• 100 'eeps · tove oven, sin ' FO I d ~ 1 ;~71.e crences request v.'kcnds. Private Party. , 1375 • &45-0906 "*" heat uuu, % fresh iee box, large c 10 ge 1. R s-a e or Ira e 1 .. .,.. Ford JACUZZI \Vhirlpool Bath like _ ___,. meat, 20c per lb. Delivered Carpet. Boot and other ex· Phl~kl U96~ ;ru25ck & camper WOMAN to care for polio new $65. 54,, Round walnut CANTELLO Al.u.o1-..1on, 12) to your hOme. 557-6243. tras. Like new! 004 N. c'::::::"c.:•..:.:,~:..:.:1::.:, ___ _ lady. No smaking, lite dining table, 4 cliairs good basJ, xlnt mnd. $100. AKC GREAT DANE Ha.rbor, Santa Ana $795. DAILY PlL01· !or action! h.!kpng. Mon. thru Fri. 1 rni\d. $40. Ne snow chains * 54S-3842 * j·""="';,:·;::9;;::;wks1.z:;~968-~5348~~53~1:--03JJO~=· :::=:::::::::~Cal=l~642-$;::~78~&fSa;::"";;::;! .:;:;;::; am-3:30 pm S2lK1 mo. HB firs 14" & 15" "'hee1s $12.SO Office FumffUre/ area. 962-4997 alt 10 am. 4 962-lTaS (afternoon cir Equip. 12 · WIVES, penn8"'nt part Om• ""'»· ST,,. R GA'ZEK-1<~. '1 position at O.C. Ract'Way ==,,-,--,...----1---------~ "I' food concession. 838-ll03 11ISC baby furn, matching 1970 IBM Exec. Typewriter, F ""''-,.:.!!,.,'-r---BrctAY J:pOI.J..AN before noon. crib &: dre~r $35 ea. Ulll!'d 3 mo's. $!'60, ;fl u.u.i ){ YOlll'.Doi'1Aflh!if)IQlfo. M srnu:-:n , O'Keefe & Merritt gas =--~644c:·::""=--= ~A,l. It ...,-J.ccordi11g lo lhe StCJI!• -V-oa' 22~~ range S~ Cocktail table Pianos/Organs 116 11.1&.1 Todcvtlcpmes.sogeforW.cMesdoy, .i.ti:29-l4 l ______ ,,Jl~J =~=·=·;s:'."ca_._"_•=f-"_'_'=-P~t __ ,,.,;._.;;..____ 458-63 teodwordscormponding torurtiers J3.V MerdltndiH """"'" ORGAN SALE ofyourZodiocbirthsign. . ~-~ A 1 Ta11 ~ N"" ·31 Gemirll 61 ~ WING-back .!iOla $50. Slipper , ....... n ..,,~on nnua 2Lucky JlMoy 6lF017" • •••••••••! chair SIS. upholstered chair Clearance. Save UJ> lo $1000 311twt1f\ll »A 6lT~ on ielectcd ron~l~ fJoor A Conuntratt 34 Prejctl 64 F•J"'Nlf $15, Baby scale $4. Ne w 52.s.s.66 6 '(auf 35Vou ~In Magnavox turntable $35. demos, }luge dlscountt on GIMIHI 61nlk.tncM 36PotTif'I 66Htm1Hw GOLD pocket watch 846-5013. aU models. • 7Coopwot• 37<:an •7St!QM w/chAin, 1 5/8 diametl'r. ==,..,..,.,.,~~-~~I COAST MUSIC ~l/Af JI ·•~rt 38 °'°""' t.1Mo1 .J<ey v.1nd wfkcy, Enamel STROLLO-C ha tr Baby NEWPORT A llARBOR .P~(nHr /'fo~th ~~ ~~ •--, Hun.tlna • ,..~ turnlturt makn: Into 14 dil-,.._,__. :y,.. * ~ t·~~ttj 11 Y°" • "''~ ,.1.._... Ml""' ._... ltn!nt Ule_ful ~ -UJM-~=-,,.,,:,:;:.~~=,_,.:.,.I t l21't:ro# •2Try 72Tlllfi6ilt; BeautitUlly t?ngraved, $1!iO. nev,•! 548-2406aft6. WOULD YOU .. :~ := r,=.,_ c:An~ 2UI~ SIOS. Hart T Ft. competillon, BELIEVE '1itfft :r.:m ~~~ltltl ~u ~ 1 RARE J.fa.rk Twain books. Hart S'll" metal Std. $50 FREE OnGAN LESSON'S ~7Lo:a •••aDh 711°"1t .. IAH.t;t1'1,~ 1 American ~t'1 editions. ea. fl-ten's hfolitor ski bootl a. long u }'CIU Wee! No reg-l~ltilllt M~ 71~ S.f.31>..5.C Spttehes, poems, pictures, 11 .,1 ""· 67, ·~s. im'atlon. Nooblliatlon. J ust '"-11 "'VOi.i · 1'A 1-tJ ! etc. 546-8550. n ....., .r;wo Corne, Mondays 7:31) pm ~:eddl!o41 fi~ ' ri:: AQUAlJUS Beautiful LeMled C. E. Dls hwuht!T bUn, new. COAST MUSIC ~~ H= :.J='* ',"",· .•,", GI • H ~1 L $175. Sean tab\l' ow $75. 64Z.285l 2' FrUilld S4And 11'...:.ortl .. as a .. ., ng amp Anytime &16-282.I: &t>-1.905. ~~-~=-==---1 2!1,_ s,s,1..,. 15Chiill.,.od ~'-lf.2'l $200. * 67.S.7973 • LO\VRE·Y J>i11not ~rgan.': 26V-5'11M1f Nltodlf ~1·78 ' T.V. ' RCA cc>lor 1 9'' -?i10r 7'TW Appliances 802 Yamaha Plano & an1; & ;,1~'" !pe M~ J.~ , !": w/rcmotc $123. King s\u Ste\n\.\·ay Pianos. Best bu)'& 'If A All~.21 29"""" $9 Dittaru 19 Pca11t!f COl..OSPOT 12 cu ft freeier, hed comple!t SlOO. fi'1WXl6 in new &: used. Schmidt Whjst,r. :1 .»Confdlita IAY-90Now like new $IM. brorm!!. A good want ad ii a aood Music Co .• Est. 1914, 1907 N. · wn Oeooa @A.dnnt ()N~ ** 646-11-01 ** irMstm!n' Main. s.nta Ana. \21 .~~~-"-'""-~~-"-~~-1-~~~~~----~~.;_.,~~..!-~~-===~ IDCI Antiques I • THE NEWEST CARS YOU'LL SEE THIS YEAR FORD FOR 1972 MAVERICK e MUSTANG e CUSTOM e GALAXIE e LTD A~~ES USED CARS! MAVERICK-PINTO SALE! EXAMPLES: '70 MAVERICK '71 PINTO 980 Fully f1ctory •qulpp1d. lt.otdio, h••t1r. t61&1EP l. Grebb1r 1Jr••n/r1ci119 drlp11, ,4 1p1.d, good inil11. !ll7CAXl . OUR PRICE $1596 OUR PRICE ILUE IOOK PRICE $2130 $1796 STATION WAGON SALE! 15 TO CHOOSE FROM. Imports l D0tnoslics. Country seds., Squires, Torlllo, Y.W •• Volvo, Dcrtsun, Olcl1., Mere., Toyota, Opel. '65 thru '71 modtls. Same with tun power & air cond. EXAMPLES: '6B OPEL WAGON '70 FORD I 0 l!ASS. · R1dio, h•1t1r, IXJE5$61. 4 1p••d, good "'1101. Squir•. va: R&H1 '"'to., •ir, P.S., P.I., good mil11, IJ068EJJ ILUE IOOK PRICE $lJ40 OUR PRICE $896 OUR PRICE TRUCK SALE! $2896 M1ny fo c:hoo11 fron1. Che vy., D1h u11, Re11ch1ro, '.1/J' ton 111d ,'.4' ton1, Flit bff '67 thru '71 mod'1l1. EXAMPLE: '69 FORD F1 250 PICKUP Good mil11. Camp•r 1p•ci1I, Vt, 4 1p•1d, r1dio, h11l1r. ! t4141E f. ILUE IOOK PRICE $2580 OUR PRICE $2296 L.T.D.-GALAXIE-T-BIRD--TORINO SALE! M .. y to choose IT0tn. '65 lttru '71 Modeb, Sport rools. lonnab, 2 d- & 4 door hardtops & HdaM. FuH power, air conclltlot1h1t• Warrontlu cnallable. EXAMPLE: '71 T-BIRD H.T. Aulo., P.S., P.I ., P0w!n1'ow1, P·buclr•I •••t, AM°FM Stereo u1dio, eit cond., t!ll who1I, w1w, body 1id1 rnld91.1 r1rnol• mirror, good mll•1. 169'48ZJ I ILUI 1001 PRICE $4715 OUR PRICE $4196 MUSTANG SALE! Mony to choost !Tom. ''5 lttru '71 lftodols. Coupes. ..... to,.; cooyootf, bi. end z+z ""'bodis. Some wl,. 4 spoeds, also air condltloolot ood automatic models. EXAMPLE: '71 MUSTANG H.T. Redio, heeler, •ulom1tie, pwr. tl••r. I br1lr•1, f1ct. •ir, 9ood mll11. I0 19CQk) ILUI 1001 PllCI SJJll OUR PRICE $2796 ~ti• Prite1 Good for 72 Hcturt. C1r1 Sulij1et lo P1ior Sil• • ' , I • . \ • DAILV PILOT TatSdl:r;-u.·un l§: '1._, ;;;-;;;-... ;;;;1§1;;; r ~-!!!!!!-!!!!!! .. !!!!!!!!!!!!!1!1~!!!! "'-1. _ ..... _ ... _ .. _J§J I ~,,..,.. 1~ '.1 L.:..... _ •• ,._ .. fqr_l,_l§J 1._-_ ...... _ 1~ '!r l L .-;;;:;;-.. ~1§l;; .. ~i :';;;;-;;"';; .. ~1~!!!I ~·: • AutOI, Imported 970 ··-------• •·"-"""-·-•-m..,111_•r1 .. ..i __ .,_1r _A_u_iu_s._1....., __ ._r1_.., __ m_ ;.;;;.,.;.=S;;:;PRl=TE;....__ AUfol,\I_.... ·--_ ~ A .... U... · 990 Aulos, U... 990 . ......... BMW LOTUS 1---"-' -----VO~WAGEN VOLK,SWAGEN 197·1CP.. ·•.YIU._ CHMOlEr _--~--...;..,..----ll--l·-;....M"'""a...,c:~§f~llY::---I --------SPRITE '64, OelUl, Runs F LOTUS well. N•w top, Radio, 19 Wt PAHll VAH '60 VW, V.ry c1 .. n. Good t,,"i' ;:, ~·i,:"a!edU.:: * '71 CHE~;,;l'!.E~ 1969 F....t LTD 1969 Morcury Morqul• AlmlORIZED Michelin tires. $ s 7 5. cond, $.100. , ior eterto dOor lockl tilt IMPALAS • . c_,. Brougham 4 D. SALE.Cl I SERVICE 7141646-3017. "'OOO m1' 61 __ •---' ** 646-3198 ** & 'tel..,...,..ie ttftf\· ~ed CAMARO'S ·!-e ... .ie Leader,~ ...... , Super Clean n, . _., nu .... ~, u1wM1CU--M......-"-HERTZ CO.RP' · 1'1.,,. ..,,._.., hh · SUNBEAM late. '68 VW Camper, e.bg 'need• with most all delUXe extras. \ ; Cool Arctic white with dark Sparkling royal maroon blw k -------_ " $2150 work. Must sen. $1600. See to a~ate. (Ser. 5616) 221 w. Katella., ~ • ·blue irftrior A landau roof ma.tcbina: interior' & ac ROY CARVER lllC: '67 Sunbeam eonv. IVTU!lll . or be9t olfer Eveslwlmdl 847-4688 ·• $6333. e (714) 77M05I .. au1o trana., radm, ·lttAter: landau roof. Auto trans, ra· • • $695 Chick Iverson '1970 will Consider ~ '61 vw BLl&'. ~built eng. NABERS CadHlac '57 BEL ··-............. v'-• 'f&cklry 4if"~· »OW' strg, dio, heath', factory air 2925 Harbor Blvd. u---bo BI··• ~·ta Me ·~ -7 ~ ~ ""' pow blks, ·-wlndotwa & cond., pwr steer, pw, brks, Cne:ta Mesa 5464444 3JOO W, Coasi Hwy. oai r vv . ._ sa. ~_,.,,,,.c°'.c,,·=='"55"'-4540,::..; 29,000 mi. S395/Best offer. Atn'HORJZED DEALER Auto. t1'anl. Aho '64 ~ much ~::-X:Suso. Oear-pow windows. twin comfort DATSUN 1 _~N~•~· lleach TRIUMPH '68 VW CAMPER · 646-1998 alt 6PM. "100 HARBOR BL., SS coupe Wiatr. Both "°" ance priced $211S: Johraon & 1ou..,.. seals ond mott, S.. ; M"RCEDES BENZ '67 VW. GOOD condition COSTA MESA cond. Im Santa Ana -\ft·• Son, ~ Harbor Blvd., and drive this attractive cat • 1··--;~1-o--·2";io '?' s; • ' Ji" I Pop top, • spd. dlr .. Fully MUsr .ltil! $700. or otter. 540-9100 Open SUnday No. l'.3, ·c .M . CMta Mesa. 540-5630. today. 501741. Clearance 'I 6. -• .. .,_ c TRIUMPH oamper"1Ulpped (WJB066J 645'13'9day•. '68 S.O.V. Lood<d. Good* '55CHEVY,2Dr.,r•ll '71Tori SOOC pr!oed$2615.JohnMn&~, ~OW ON DISPLAY· , ·Take older torei&n c. ar or '68 VW BUG cond. lST. $2,600 .. Pri Ply. bar, b41cket teats, sway no pe 2626 llarbor Blvd., C.0.Sta Local car fully "flllpped. 1972 350.SL -CtfADlltCE SALE . small down. can linani:e, Clean• Xlnt 64"'1600 d11Y1, 675·11!4 ban .. Call m.ao; a 6 AHlr Conv~· Radm, Me... 54~5630. Like new! . Under 17,000 &: an the elegant Mercedes MR 546-8736 or ~ $1050. * 646-5938 Eves. p.m. or:::• ,"v• ,Roof, ~uto 1969 Mercury g;:;.~~;~pm0( ~::,'1,~'";~ai; rl: !: NOW! 1!.'i1o.:c1<::::::..~.: VOLVO 196-7 Cpe. de VIiie ,CHRYSLER ' $2690 Mo;•~~~.f100 vice featured at HURRY &: BEAT ntE 10,.;, ~ Am_C!mfl.c.t_c._y. Fa~alr top ~~I =·· 1967 CHR.Y.st.ER 9_pauenger, Newport N•tional The Sportiest ~ .'rl PICKUP HOUSE OF IMPORTS PRICE INCREASE" Zenarosa. 833-2500 or RERTNOW! ~lea~ interior:-tilt~ •talion waron. Air ~· Leailnt Co. tlglit Ivy yenow-wtttrdack Santa Ana F.wy ·at Beach FRITZ WARREN;S 64,_,&-,_,.,9152::;:;.·-·-----~-ete . ~ IM Division (If So. Calif. ivy bucket seats & console., 4 gpd. dlr, dlx. Bumper. Ra· 81 d B p-~· (l) • ALL NEW tetescoplc steer., etc. An ex. • • ,..~4 "' ;.,,; 1st N tional Bank Tilt str whl auto trans dlo.,Mirrors. PL'/2ll20. Take v • uena ..-... SPORT. CAR CENTER ~ VW camper, rebuilt eng. ceptional value!-(389AGC) ~ ' Chick .Jvenon, "1'." 2lm BuSi:Ss Center Irvine P'Yr .It., pc;w brks., rad ' small down or trade, 494-SSU 523-'1250, 7\0 E. lat St., S.A, 5t7.(1764 wJwarranty, new ti re'•• 9 $2111 ·•. Hubo1' Blvd., Coat~·Melf! • . 133-1620 ' air. Like new ~ppearance • "'~"'546.B136. 0...dally9-9:cJ"""Sunda.Y clutch. brakes "'battery. '72 NABERS Cadlftac: COMET ? . ·1910' F rd GI . througoout.s;.••nve . .,,._. '68 DATSUN . WAGON * '67 TRIUMPH GT67 Tent & luggage rack. Best AUTHORiiED DEALER.~ 1 , • _ • • ; o • ixie AUi. Celarance pnced f.167;i. • 510 Xlnt' cond. Custom features. offer. 494-7632 2600 llARBOR BL., · *·*, '63 cpMET, "-pa/~, , 50!J ,2 D. H. T. Johnson & Son, 2626. H~rbor air, 4 apd_, $1150. <f94.:.7136 or 491-1928. '67 SERAN 315 VW "LIKE COSTA MESA good condition. $ 3 O • tn:1!0"!1a~te ~-Sporty. Attr~c-BJvd., Costa Mesa. :>10·5630. 240 Z 70, fully loaded, air, mags. Xlnt eond, priv party &lU772 $§5-3633. FERRARI l--°"'FERRA·_-;R::-:1-- AtmfORIZED SALES 1: SERVI~ : .• NEWPORT "1 ·.: IMPORTS . ' 3100 W. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach •--FIAT 1---····---ma as I.Ar.GE SELECTION, SEE B. J. SPORTSCAR CENTER * 'M-100, NE'W valve job, AM/FM, auto, lmmac. cond. ·$1200. 644-6740 .eves. ·MG -·~-..,..:.,,---~ •MO AtmlORIZED SALES • SERVICE . NEWPORT .. IMPORTS 3100 W. Caul Hwy. N ........ S.ad. MGB '64 MGB, new clutch, etc. Top &-carpet, roll bar, tape deck. $950. 673-3052 eVt'S & Wed's. PORSCHE TOYOTA FASTBACK" XI.NT CO)ID. VOLVO 54~9100 ope S nd '6'1>-7985 aft<r 6 PM , UV• .light . NY ,yellow wtth 1971 MERCURY $1100. 1 '---"----"-'""...:::•=ay -gold 1ntenor: ~ark brown 673-4899 6'15-24411 . '69COllPE do vm •• l•atJ\el', CONTINENT A!-. landau roof. Auto "mp., ra· STATION WAGONS full p>Wer, air oond. 1 dlo, beater, po-steer., HERTZ CORP. TOYOTA CLEARANCE SALE NEW J971'S 1971 SUPER Beatie, caab or T.0.P. Cons:idl!l" trade. Call 962-0031 aft 6 pm wk days, anytime wkends. Featuring Fuellnjecredf>tgine ..i>Wt Lf.IN owner, div. forces 8ale Best '71 MARK Iii factory air. cond. ·Huny on 221 w. Katella Anaheim otter 673-1150 att 6 pm ' This beautiful lWdqy car· . this ooe. 395AU11. aean.nce (714) 118..toso 1968 Sed de Viii 1Ully equipped with an ttt priced $2675. Johnson & Son, • I e Iwrury ......... yOa """14 . !16,l<l Harbor mvd., Costa 1970 MONTEGO MX, 2 Or. Fact. air oond., padded mp, expect. It's nee.r neow coid-.. 1ifeu •. ~56lJ.. · Hrd.tp. 351, V-8. fac. all'~ full leather interior, all pow. tion will he apPreclateil *· '7l • FORDS * pfd1sc . brks, buck~t seats. er, door locks, AM·FM, tilt when you test drive this . . auto trans., radio. Xlnt "'-.....,... I: telescopic str., etc •. etc. cl--'e ~A GALAXIF3 • MUSTANGS cond. $2275. 968-1688. -616-9303 (XVF160J • -· · -u• · • · ·rorJNOS ..nerut lewtt '1P TOYOTA ~ VOLVO ·n KOMBI, 9,000 ml Llkt! new. $2595. Radio and Ex· tras. 220 San Remo, N.B. 673-1784. 1916 llarbor, c .. ta M .. a ·~;:;.,.~.H~. :~cul-::. 1916 Harbor, Coria M... • $2555 • DUNTON FORD . ~:rz co.RP. MUSTANG SANTA ANA owntr. Pvt. ply. 197 s. NABERS Cadillac: 546-7070 m . Ka"'1a, Anah•iln '68 MUSfANG, 2 Dr. TOYOTA 968-479:1 wkdy eves. _A_uto_•.;.•..;U.c""..c.----"°-AtmtORIZED DEALE.it 2240 So. Main al Warner (714) n-8-4050 Hardtop, V-8, Auto Trans., Service d~pt. open 7:30 am •s; VW Bus 1600 reblt, crptd, M . B. TRADES 2600 HARBOR BL., Santa Ana e Sl'EERING WHEE!r 1967 Radio, Heater, Power Sleer-• 'ti: 9 pm Monday thru Fri-pandled, stereo, gd tires. ~70 Cadillac Sedan de Vil.le, COSTA MESA '70 Co t Mark Ill Ford Galaxie attached. Fae-ing, (WFB262). $1299. Chick I day. Going in service! $900. fully equip'd, landau, air, 540-9100 ' ~n · SUnday ft tory air, automatic trans, Iverson, 1970 Harbor Blvd., PHONE 540-2512 84fr9093. stereo, etc.• A1sc> '69 Im· CADILLAC Leather, Full Power Equip-390 eriginl!. recently tuned .. l_c_.,"'ta=M~"~a,.,. ===,-·I 417 W. Warner, Santa Ana 'Gl VW Camper, stove, pala 4-dr hrdtp, bargain at _____ ...... __ ment, Split Seat-Both Pow-Very good condition, fl89. 1971 MUSTANGS '69 TOYOTA, 4 Or. s.dan, fttrig. water. $900. Call $1795 • '70 'Cuda, auto, 1970 Sad. de YUie "·""'Conditioning, '44-720I '""'-HERTZ CORP. Auto Tfans., Factory Air Larry Morgan, 673-(1397 (Ir P /S, $2195. Fact, air ~nd., padded top; $5890 :M FORD Galaxie, full 221''\v. Katella, Anaheim Cbnd., Radio, Heater. $1499. _6_<_1 _403_I_be_f _5. ____ , Autho~ :~Dealer :full pwr., an leather inter., Newport ·National power & air, rood . tires, (714} nMOSO Chick Iverson, 1970 Harbor * '69 VW BLl&', SunrooJ. ---'~='="C''--cruise control. Stereo. light Leaslftg Co, · runs good. $400. of best of··j"''-"'"===,-,,=---,.1 Blvd., Costa Mesa. Mags, $550 &. take over BUICK ·sentinel, tilt .A teleecopic Division of So. Calif.. fer. 64&-6125 1967 MUSI'ANG aro convt. '68 Corona Deluxe 1900 pymnts or $1200 cash. steer., nJ0Jt every deluxe ht National ·Bank · '&I FALCON Wagon, V-8, ~rtH £'1'lgine, new tires, 4 dr, auto, a.fr cond. .54&-c:...1626::=; ... · ~-----I '69 Buick Riviera, full power, extra & exctpUonall1 nice. 2022 Busl.ne-as Center, Irvine auto. PIS, dependable trans· Sdl~ ~!31~~ Xlnt cond. " -I BELOW WHSLE -fac air, am-fm radio, strato (ZHB241) · 833-1620 portaliOn, ••15, =•8923 , ~-~-· ~-------I •70 911 T 5 5 Tt,vw m . · '69 VW Delux Su ndial O e:•.l.U "" .....,.. ,, • pd, immac. $999 *** 54S.Sl76 Cam AlMIFM d N bench, landau vinyl top: ..,...._ • 1970 MARK ID, like. new, 968-8923 '65 Mustang, 6 ·cyL AUto It Yellow/Bick mags, • per, ra" ew NABERS C d'lla -I'd •-mil PIS. ...._. ,. __ _. · 91 t. Xlnt --• 557 ••-aft $2675 or best otter. 548-1578 . a I C: equ P • ouw eage, ·n Ford Tor·1no GT, 9,000 m·1. v• ig owner, vuuu 2833 Harbor, C.M. 540-44 amffm, maint re•ord•, •n 'IDYOTA C.orolla Wagon, ires, .. vuu, ~ fie ·bl · -·• t nd 00~ """14 " 6 aJt 5 pm. A'~ORIZED DEALER Xl eon pnce ..,,.. erms. AIC. Lt grn, pert -nd. co ' .,.,..,, ~.,....... JAGUAR 38,000 mi. IMM+ Take over 5,000 miles, radio, auto p.m. uin · -----=-1ooobef 5 -lse. eves. ~. trans. & tape deck. T.0.P. CLEAN '65 vw sunroof 'SS Buick, A·l, must 2600 HARBOR ai.., C1AlllC .,,._ Ott p.m. $2950. 644-6440 dys, 645-16Ei6 '66 ?tfustang 2+2 fastback, ' 893-3169 Runs xlnt, $750, Ask ~ S(.'e! $225. Mr. RDss 350 W. <X>STA MESA CORVETIE eves. 289 eng., 4 barrel, auto, BAUER BUICK MUSf •aaili .. ! '62 Po1'11dte . . Bay c M !l68-tJ675 aft 6 540-9100 Open Suhd•v' --------PIS R/H 1895 6r,,om 356 s plus xtra.s, new eng & '68 TOYOTA Crown Wagon, Andy; 545-3315 ' ' · · ..., 1 • '69 LTD Wagon. ID pass., 429 • • · Tbe Harbor Areas clutch.,.., Chen'y red. Xlnt auto., R/H. $1550 or best '69 vw Good Condition ·CADILLAC CAMARO '65 CORVErl'E HT Convert. HP. Power, AM/FM slereo, '69 MACH I, 390· 4 ,., pis, off Callalt 6 "'•• ~· Body Xlnt shape, eng.' air, mint. eond. •9"'M. p/b. $1.900. Pvt. pty. Only Authorlzid cond. ~ll.60 er. · .,...._.,..,u,. Mwit Sell • Sacrifice Needs work. Sacrifice $850 -JAGUAR DEALER $1100 *** 493-3972 LARGEST "69 CAMARO SS, amltm, ' ' 675-6161. <!14-99!2. '63 PORSCHE S. Electric VOLKSWAGEN pslp disc Plwindo'to auto or best otter. 644-79211. l -'-~"-"··,;,:;,.-.-=--l:-:MA°"CH=1°"""19"n"""'1ik._--alr~1 Always baa an excellent se-sunroof, chrome wbeela, '65 vw Convertible, reblt SELECTION OF ' • •I~~===~-',,;...-Sa .. ,i.uce eqwty! 1970 Ford • · • e new, lectlon of both New & Uaed new· paint, tires, Btau-·-t.t '68 VW automatic. IJke new e ... , new tires, brakes & CADILLACS IN air, vl.nyl top, orig ownr. '6? CORVETTE Convert., Waaon. Cntry sed., ps/pb, cond., tape deck. Many ex. Jaguars. ndio, $2300. 52!J..3'132 • .,........ 28,00 mt, Pvt. Fty, nu paint battery. $675. ~2.169. ORANGE COUNTY $2500C .. 5'6-4HEYSJ<R•Or 54~7495. w/air cond. &: ne'W ttres. ~~·. nck. Eves/wlmds·. ~:72.00~acrifice. $ 3 3 ~ 5. "'Spedali%1ng in Quality" '60 CPE, nu tram, clutcb, best offer 64Z-l4.f? '68 vw Bus, Lo mi's. Clean, SALES-LEASING .~ Like new. t200), 832-935B. BAUER paint, fn~ chrm .... $1895. l9e6 VW Squue Back S1Etl. 1 owner. $1895 or otter; AUTHORIZED COUGAR '66 COUNTRY SQUIRE '65 Mustang, air cond, "'"'°· or tnde for van. 557-7268 Good trans car. Call aJter 5 96&-1107. ·SERVICE · 'TII 8 PASS. Sta. Wag:. Fa.ct. full power.VXlnt condition Good cond. ~650. Call Buick Opel-Jagu•r bet 2 • pm 536-4606 =='"""-....,......,..--0-1 Nabers Caclilac air, auto. PI•. Nu '67 COUGAR, idiit cond., new .67>3331 Ask fM Phil 61.>-5132. -· ·E 17th S ore pm. ' • '69 VW Squareback, sunroof, tfresJbrks. Immac cond. Lo tires &: brakes. S l 3 O O ; I -.;",:,,:,~""'-"0..:.=-1 ,,,_..,.,...,..-""'"..,.....,.- .-.. · !., · '58 1600 SUPER, reblt eng., '67 \'W 1600 eng. Bmken auto, am./tm, $1800, 2600 HARBOR BL., mi's. Must sell. Make ofter. 83G-5J.35 1969 LTD Wagon, 10 pass. '65 Mustang 6 cyJ, rfh, new Costa Mesa . 548-T765 runs perfect, looks great. c:rankahaft, u is $495 or ~2238. . COSTA MESA -<n4) 842-30f4, --~-o=~~--~~ !!~er~pm~ $2195 -paint,C:~~ow1125.ne84~la~· . '66 Jag. '·'.ed. • dr .u xiras GOING CHEAP!, 673-7085. $695. 542-5316. ~.~=vw='-B-1---71..:.....000 540.9100 °"" SUnda3 ,63 CHEVY lm··•-ss Cpe, D DGE ~· ~ w/reclini.ng seats .l Itht U"' ua, owner, • --1---------:e .FA1£'QN amvt. stick, 166 MUSTANG $500 uphoL Lo ml. $2100 S46-046'7. WE Need Your POl'SChe and '62 VW Bug. Not pretty, bl}.t miles. Make otter. '69 EL Dorado, Black on PIS. P/B, xtraa, orta. own. -nd. CllEAP.11 .Call will pa,.y top dollar. Call Bill runs good $250.' Call 6t4-0278 black, tully Equlpped. Air, $.150." 968-?973. 'fl Dodge Van. VS, auto.,-' co I_. Or Bst ·Ofr 646-31181 aft a JENSEN Ch k 530-<l812. 675-8126 ~ leather AM/FM Stereo new -·..!'!..!'""'L . ,.,. 6 pm or wlmds, 8'0-4792. OLDSMOBILE or UC ' '5_7 yw Van,_ ~ mechan. ' ' ' '66 Chevelle Malibu, V-8, ~n;i.i ' SEN '68 Poncho 911, Immaculate vw~cam.., Van "63. Ex· tond. $130. Bdon 5:30PM, milfull-power.-vinyl-tnp;-low aute, Pl•, rlh. bk! ...... '67 DODGE-DART ·na.. MAVERIGK--f,----· ----i A~ORIZED condition.67s.au ~.;~:i~mr15' Private _S<_s-~:='.68=~~ .. o-,-,..,-d-se~:'ci. ~595~;,:~ ·white-blue inter. $7 50. ey17, A·T, Rf1!:~~.:il~--------1RoY't!..~'PI>°:~.·~~ SALES • SERVICE . u~ 1.,:.:96.:.c2-lll3~,~-~-546-M3S. ~OOO ml. ~.. -· 70 MAVERICK 42499 I. I~~~·~' 15 ~~jS:~: .. · i.:63v:::~: :E~.=:.1:: i£~~00\=~· .iE:~ '!~:S-~~;~v-:--:-~-:'-Z4"',". 4...:~:c"c.:~ I ·:.~~!~~~.a~: 2 ~::;.f~.;o;T,;y Y.:: Harbor American 6'46·0261 1969 ti.ARBOR COSTA M(SA II . • I • tt. outgrown·Levis _)'OU can over low book. tires, ndio, immac. $UOO. Yellow w/blk. landau top & R & H , air, po \Ver. $550. 6Tr2176. tle old banker, Take srnal! ~~':all~ tum "trash to cash" 1n a Call 675-5016 833-0351 R bl · 646-37:11 _._,_ f ("...,.,EN) '!II 1 blk. llhr. inter. Asking easona e price. · '65 DART, air cond., aum. ..., .... or lllanC'e. .>WP TWO 1968 Olds CuUass, 2 Dr. 3100 W. Coast wy, DAILY PILOT clas&itied ad Dally PUot Want Ada have Fast resu.lts are just a phOne $5195. sµ.mDl or 833-0144 ·rum unused !terns into quick transm. New tires, 1 owner. 4!M-6Bll att.11 am 546-8736: hrdtp. pis, auto trans., 'lewport Beach -call 642-5671 bargains galore, call away. 642-5678 eves. cash, call 642-5678 Gd. cond. $575. 644-5998. We'll help )'OU-aell! M2-5678 r/h, air cond. $1650. Ask for A·.:.a:., New 980 Al1tos, N•w 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos1 New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 9IO Autos New 980 Mr. Marks. 6?3-.'ll3tl, 9 am-4 -. __...... ----~ , -' • pm. Wkdays-. ''~68,,....,o"'L"o"s"°"c-u..,t '"1 .-,-,~eon~. wrtible, PIS, PIB, Xlnt cond, Best offer, Will deal: 962-2436 WAYNE L. (BUD! BOWEN LEASE MANAGER FREE Q O~LEt .. .. .j(;t!r --I ti<!drHI to " t• ...., f01 • FRD ......, M .. --... lcow-pi;Gtr-. NAMI ••• •••• •••••••••. •• , • ., •••• , .. , ,, •••• •••,, ADDlal • •• •• • • ·• • • •• • • •-• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Cln , , , •••• , ••• , •• , , ••• , • • rHONI •• , • , , • ,, , •• AiilM'IONr -..0 IOWIN" LEASE Or· BUY? WHICH IS THE BEST WAY TO GO! Bud Bowen, the new lease manager for Johnson and Son , is without a doubt the most qualif~ed leasing ex- pert in the Orange county area. After thirteen years of leasing and selling cars in .Orange county Bud can show you how to determine which is the best for your "individ.ual situation." Our unique full main· tainance lease plan may be the ideal way to put you in that brand new Lincoln Continental or Mercury you've been wanting. Give Bud a call or drop in and let him show you how leasing can save you time, money and trouble ••••• " ContinentalsO Mercury e Cougar e Comet e Cap~i and the all new 1972 Montego Orange County's 'Fa1nily .of Fine Cars' I ohnson son • .' ' 1968 a.ITLASS. all P\lT, auto, R/H, air. $1,600 . • 4!19-200!I '61 Cutl ass Supreme, AIC.. P/S, Xlnl cond, Must sacrifice immed. 846-1706. · LEAVIN G country '64 01dk 'Vagon, xlnt cond. Nu tire$, Major tuneup. 543-6901. · PLYMOUTH '64 PLYMOtml Valiant, ;4 spd stiek. Good tr~­ tion, $300. 67J..-0731 ,' PONTIAC '68 FIREBIRD 400 • Lots of power • Big auto. trans., All power disc brak~s. aµ., ralley 'vheels belted rid . . ' wall wide ovals, like new vinyl top, very deluxe 1n- ~Jerior, til,t Wheel. You name it, it's got it. Car bas b.8.d loving catt -Original owner. $1695. Phone 962-7626. ' '70 LE l\fANS conv, V-8, auto, air, pwr tqp, steering & windov.·s, Ai'\llFM atereo radio & tape deek. Xlnt cood. $'2800. 673-2415 '63 PONTIAC G o o d condition. Interior sharp! New brakes &: bal· !ery. Xlnt tires. PS PB. Only needs paint, $225. stS-8778 '70 Firebircf Sprlt. Loaded, xlnt, cust Yin)'!, p w r eYl'cything, wire w h 1 a , 873-4314 eves . GTO 1!166, xlnt engine, needs llttle fixing. Gn:at buy at $800. 644-5656 1$800 ' '65 4 SPD. GTO ,.,...59 T·BIRD '57 CLASSIC * 5&-0:a>s * 2621 HARBOR BLVD .. COSTA ME Sell the old srutr JL.~.,..!!!!!!!!!!!'l' ... !!!!!""lf'"'"""'""'"""""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""""'"""'""""'""'""'""'""'""''""..,.,."""!!!!!""'""'""'""'""'""'!!!!!"""'"'..,"'"'"""'"""""'""'""""'""'"""'!!!!!l""''""""""'"""'""'""'""'""'""'""'!!if!!!!!l!!!...PIBuythenewstutt I