HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-11-18 - Orange Coast Pilot• ,,
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Buildinl& Expl~es
Near
S.tndents. Unhurt .
DAILY PILOT
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THURSDAY AFTERNOON, NOVE~BER ·1 a, ·197 f
. VOL. '°" NO. Ufr,.I l l CTIOfltl, 11 PA.1111
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·-Poli~e Step
Ou Pot Vault;
Charges Filed
On,e Jtlan Injured
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-226 ' PU.pils -~f~ U.S. Fears
0 In Building Blast Cainbodiaii
BAY ST. LOUIS, Miss.-A Shell Oil Co.
distributing warehouse holding 40.000
gallons or fuel exploded loday as elemen-
tary school children walked to class 25
yards away. One man was injured, but
all 226 children escaped.
Sc~ officials rushed the c~ildren into
the school building as names shot into
the air. Teachers prayed and sang with
them until parents came.
The blast occurred as the pupils were
entering St. Rose de Lima elementary
school about 25 yards from the
warehouse in thr center of Bay Sl. Louis,
60 miles east of New Orleans, La.
Alvin Genin, owner of the planl. said
the explosion occurred when a truck
driver was unloadin~ gasoline rrom his
tank truck and "the engine idled up and
ignited the gasoline." A series or·murned
explosions followed .
The driver, Donald Van Norman, 28,
fdcComb. was In satisfactory condition at
a. hospilal, suffering from burns on his
face and arn1s. Genin and his brolher,
Charles. were the only other persons in
the plant at lhe time.
Genin estimated there were some
20,000 gallons of gasoline. 12,000 galJOns
of diesel fuel and · 5,000 gallons of
kerosene in the plant at the time of the
explosion.
The warehouse was destroyed.
Oruge <:oast
We ather
, Lo~1 cloUds and fog will engulf
~°'" squtl}land Friday, cleacing by
mid.<!ay to sunny Skies. Tempera·
'tures will reach 65 ~t lhe beaches.
~rl~ing to 73 inland. Lows tonight
i»-tS.
, INSIDE TODAY •
Sister James. principal or the school ,
said about half the children were Head
Starl pupils.
She said they huddled into classrooms
as the flames grew. When there appeared
danger of rurther explosions, they were
moved to the school cafeteria, away from
the warehouse. she said.
No other building!'! in the vicinity
caught fire as fi ghting units from Keesler
Air Force Base and surrounding towns
rushed to control the blate.
Police Uncover
Marijuana Vault;
CJ1arges Leveled
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 llMI Dlltf ,1111 Sltff I
A lawman who stepped on suspiciously
hollow-sounding ground in the Riverside--
County desert stumbled onto an un -
derground vault containing more than a
ton of marijuana Wednesd:1y. allegedly
stashed by five Jlarbor Area n1en.
_ The chance. step led to additiona l
charges against the suspects, who had
already bet!n arrested on charges lhey
sold 300 pounds of ' the illicit weed to
undercover agents.
Esti1nates of t h'e mNijuan:t's val~e
ranged from $100,000 for bulk form in
Mexico to $200,000 safely delivered In the
U.S. and well over $1 million if broken
down into one ounce packets for street
sa le.
Complaints charging the .defendants
with sale of marijuana were issued
Wednesday Afternoon t1nd arraignment
was scheduled today in Central Orange
County Judicial District Court.
. ';t'hey include~
-Leon G. Pboenlx, 21, of 2130 CM-
tinent31 Ave . ., Costa Mesa. •
-Antheny Chri~tina, 25, of 5 2 l
1-.larguerite Ave .. Corona dcl Mar~
-Jetin Dauwen 30 of 1814 W. Joann
A top Santa Barbara S11erif/'1
aide wo.s fired \Vednesday fo r
l1i1 101u.s11a/ di1pla11 of 1neapons lf--1----launng 1asr Jitlir'f 111a vrna r1ot-
l11g, for storu a11d picture, .see
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-James S"·ord, 21, of UG 'A 351h st.,
Newport Beach.
-James L. ~tcf>onald, 21 , or 1582
Baker St.. Costa ~lesa .
Agent Paul Pulliam, of the Justice
Department's Bureau or Na r co t i cs
Enforcement in Santa Ana said the ar-
rest.s climaxed a two-month lnveslig.alion
involving rive law a~encles •.
Ne"'port Beach pollce initialed the probe
which 4ncluded 1 t a t e agents, Orange
County and Rlvenlde County sheriff's
IS.. TUNNEL, Pop I)
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Collap se
SAIGON (UPI) -f\.1ilitary sources in
Saigo n said tonight the military situation
in Cambodia has grown so serious that
Gen. Creighton \V. Abrams. the U.S.
commander in Vietnam. had disrussed it
u•ith top South Vietnan1ese leaders.
UPI dispatches from Phnom Penh said
Cambodian troops battling elements of a
North Vietnamese Division only 11 miles
from Phnom Penh were ambushed today
anel lost five killed and 50 wounded . The
Cambodians withdrew from the trap and
Cambodian 'l"l8 bombers hit the area
with napalm.
Several major Communist units were
reported moving toward Phnom Penh but
UPI correspond!'nt Kale Webb reported
from the Cambodian capital it was
generally believed the North Vietnamese
and K h 1n er Rou g (Cambodian Com-
munists) were trying to isolate the city
and cause panic rather than capture it
outright
Photographer Don Sharpe, who free-
lances for UPI. was with the Cambodian
soldiers ambushed today. He said the 41st
infantry battalion walked into an open
lree line and ran into automatic "'capon
and mortar fire that pinned the force
down ror IWo hours. .
lie said the T28s came in and triggered
an explosion in the nearby villaJ!e of
Ph um Svay, indicnting that munition
slores had been destroyed.
The Communists have concentrated
their efforts against airfields. highways,
bridges and ferry crossings · to try to
<:.iso\ale Phnom Penh. The CambodinfJ high
eom1nand repQrted another rocket· at-
tack in 24 hours against the ferry cros!i·
ing town of Neak Luong. where Highwr.y
1 front Sair:on reaches the Mekong river.
Cambodia al so reported fighting at
Prey Veng, 27 miles east of Phnom Penh,
at Bndaenf?. 15 miles to the south"·est,
and on llighway 6, GO miles north of the
capllal.
In Vietnam, North Vietnamese. mortar
teams battered two American outpost~
near the Demilitarized ?.one and U.S.
p anes s rue 1ns1 e or 1c nam ai'id
in th• weslern~sector of tlie··DMZ to try
to choke off the now of Communist sup-
... pies along the •to Chi Minh trail.
Vi sit Set by Tito
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP)
President Tito will visiL neighboring
Romania starting Nov. 23, the govern·
ment announced Wednesday. The visit,
whose length y.oas not specified, will take
place at an inVitation of the Romanian
president. r
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• • ID _..am 18
· l'lane.s · Rake Big
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Noise • ID County
Airport A~tions .
-"' Ja~kie , a Delli?
Russ ·Paper flits Onassis Troth
1'110SCOW (UPI) -Aristotle Onassis
n1arried Jacqueline Ke·nnedy solely for
"advertising purposes," a Soviet
newspaper said today.
Vodnistransport l Water Transport), the
newspaper of lhe Marine Fleets Ministry,
said in an article tracing the career of
the Greek shipping magnate Onassis
married Mrs. Kennedy to promote use o[
his ships.
"ll Is £or the purpose of advertisement
and Ml for any other reason whate\•er
that Onassis married John F. Kennedy's
widow, Jaet:1ueline. He (Onassis ) says the
more the name of Onassis is repeated,
the more frequently one will use the
services of his ships,'' the article said.
The article saf~ Onassis married his
first wife with busi ness in mind ,
"To consolidale his [>OSition in the
world of big shi p owners, Onassis 1nar-
ried the younger daughter "of the Greek
millionaire, Stavros Livanos hose sister
was married to (shipbu" der ) Stavros
Niarchos," Vodnistranspor said.
"In this way Onassis k led two birds
with one stone. He stop a a competition
war and he got an cited credit."
Noise of Jet Ai1·plan es
Dominates Boarcl Action s
By JACK BRORACK
DI lflt O•llY ,llel Si.II
Jet aircraft noise problems dominated
two hearings before the Orange County
Board of Supervisors Wednesday with
difrering decisions resulting on .building
project.'!.
Denied by a 4 to l vote was an appeal
to a ruling of County Zoning Administra-
~ior R:iy Heed which, if granted, would
have 11llowcd the con.'itruction of a 26-unit
apartment cornpler in the Upper Newport
Bay area near the takeof[ pattern of the
Orange County Airporl.
Approved by a narrow 3 lo 2 margi
was a Planning Commission reco
mendation that single family home
struclion be allowed on 23 acres in
Central Irvine Ranch area just south
the Santa Ana l~reeway Jn the ar
between the Marine Corps' El Toro and
Santa Ana air stations.
Developer Jlichard Jordan of New1X1rt
Beach lost his bid to build the apartments
on property on the east side of Birch
Street, 400 feet south of Palisades Road
In the Sanln Ana lleights area.
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Kidnaping-
Or Death
Ridiculed
CHlCACO (AP) -The Chicago Swt-
Times reported Wednesday that a year--
long investigation by the U.S. Justice
Department has uncovered evidence ·that
billionaire lloward Hughes is la
reasonably good health and is menlally
competenl.
The ne .... ·spaper quoted a federal source
as rejecting as ~'hokum" report.s that lha
66-year-old lfughes might be dead and
had fingernails and toenails six to eight
inches in length \vhen he left Las Vegas
for the Bahamas late last year.
The investigation, the paper said, was
undertaken following persistent reports
that Hughes had been kidnaped from Las
Vegas and was being held against his will
in Nassau. The Sun-Times said federal in·
vestigators to the best of t h e I r
knowledge, determined that Hughes was
not only alive but in good enough con·
dition -mentally and physically -to
take an active role in lhe operation of his
financial empire.
"Just how federal investig&tors were
able to obtain regular reports on Hughes
remains a secret," the Sun-Times said.
''But it was learned that persons known
to be in close contact with Hughes have
been interviewed."
tn Washington, a Justice Department
spokesman said he could not confirm or
deny Lhe story.
They quoted lhe r e po r t as saying
Hughes operates his business affairs
through four secretaries and that he often
works seven days a week.
•1e is 'said 'to make his own·decislons,
based on advice gained by telePhone and
mail from a tew legal and technical ad~
visers ,ati<I With his secretaries handllnt
the communication. the Sun-Times sald. ' Federal investigators, however~ do not
discount most of the publicized Hughes
ccentricities, the paper said, and
reportedly he has contact with no mor1
than six persons including his secretaries.
rvisor Will iam ile avoids sunlight, photographers, and
· 1 would-be J~ughes watchers. tha
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1.oning administrator R,eeU said-he had
denied the variance t4ermlt because
Jordan wanted to double the number 0£
a ar meuts allowed under the resent R·
4 zoning. lie also not F ~ _e pr~pe~ Y
was just outside the lake&! patlern of
the CQUnty airport. _ ~
ise comp aints Sun·'l'imcs said, but a federal sourct in--
e e w 8 Y s • i ted he takes M occasional nocturnal ~h.an-1 getting-~w~oii1k~o~nt.~1=e~pa;;n~;e;;.n;~::=;~.:;n::~.~ .. ;o;;,.;-;1~.~---1
Fifth ""District Slfpetvlsor · Ro n a l d
Caspers ot Newport Beach poinled out ·
lhaL many people in that same area were
suing the county over airport jet noise.
"It is exasperating to me to wrestle
with airport problems Like the Air
California lease and then bt asked to ap-
prove more housing for more people in
the area Jn q_uest1on," Caspers Aa:ld.
"This board has to 1oeet these things
,head on and deny such permlta."
,
New
agreed wilh ·
3to:zto
obert Battin
s a Buck
WASHIN N (AP) -The new
Eisenhower dolla is worth just $1, and
people should not ~.__,,..,. Jum for the
coins, the chairman 9f the House con·
sumer affairs 1ubcommilte aald today .
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Britannica Beach llotel in the Bahamas.
Eugene E~ Barret, manager or thr
hotel , says he has not seen Hughes, tha
newspaper said, and the J us t l c •
Departmeiit's investigation ha!I never
been publicly acknowledged.
The paper said it is believed the Justice
Department's findings were kept secret
because it did not want to become tn ..
volved in the complex leg1J battle that
erupted among Hughes staff members •
the tlme Huabes left for Nasaau.
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"*~·-=O~A~IL~V~P~l~LO~T~~~~·~~~~T-""""~-"'~·~Nowm~r.!!:.._1971
Ask Retraction
Water Officials
Rap Jury Repo.rt
' t'lulrging that ctrlain member• of lhe
Orange County Grand Jury attempted to
~ Lhe poiar or their Qff~ lo elfect a
politkal change within the South C.Oast
County' Water Dislrk:l, dir«torl or the
district have called upon Do r e e n
?otai"shall . foreman ol the Jury, to publiclr
retract a rece-nt critical report and reprt-
mand those responsible for it.
At a special meeting in South Laguna
T\t15day night . the retiring board
directed that a 1wo-page response to the
report be sent to the Gr~ Jury, along
"'itb the demand for rttractKMt.
1be directors and their operaUon of the
"'ater district wert roundly criliciud in a
Grind Jury report on special districts.
iss~ just four days before the NO\'. %
board election.
Retiring director Robert B. ~fal~ne im·
mediately issued a statement calling at-
tentlon to errors in the report and now
the full board has iS!Ued a polnt-by-point
re~nse. . . It reiteratts most .or the correct.tons
mcide....by Malone. supJ>O~.g his chargt:
ttfill tht: Grand Jury's cr1l1c1sm was bas-
ed' exclusively upon information supplil!:d
by a committee seeking to rt:eall foot
directors and that oo effort was mad!!: by
the Grand Jurv inved.igating committtt
to' contact ariy representativt: of the
di!lrict with regard to the charges, prior
to Jlllblication of the report. 'fhe board responds :
Pro-Mao Frenzy
To Seize U.S. .
Government Told
LC:1'100RE (AP ) -A Lemoore couple
"'ho led double lives for more than a year
as FBI agents in the pro-Maoist Rev~lu·
tionary Union say its m~mbers a~e \~ke
religious fanatics in their determination
to:overthrow the American government.
lbey said the RU was r a p ~d I y
r~iting new members from ~1scon
tetlted empl~es of large corporations or
U.. military before the Lemoore couple's
FBI ties were discovered last ti.1arch.
"It's like a fanatical r e l i g i o n , ' '
1.8.wrence Goff said in an Interview
Wednesday. ''Everything they do is part
of tbeir cause to rid the world of
car,·taliam.-1' ff 'bld"the FBT asbii•lllm ti i~
ftl ate \he RU iii 1969 "·hen he applied
for a poUcemao's position in San Jose.
The RU aq:epted him after he work~ through'·~ i l.,ftbnt tfoOpa, he •id.
Goff later recruited his wire, Betty.
-To a charge lbat a waler rate
increase was "unannou11ced.'' the direc-
tors state that the increase was discussed
at several public meetings attended by
consUtuents, including the chalrJTian of
the recall committee, and that the
dellberatiom were set forth fully in open
minutes.
-To a charge that the district refused
to justify the increase. lhey state that
district officials met with the recall com-
mittee and provided them with at! sup-
porting documents and worksheets per-
taining to the decision to increase -the
rate.
-To a charge that the stale legislatiY~
counsel found the eleclion petitions were
valid and stated a.a e~tioo should have
been held. th!!: directors iespond that this
opinion, based on selective information
provided by the recall CQmmittee, was
reversed· when the complele facts ~ere
. provided to the counsel, who then 1greed
the petitions "!Were void.
-A col'nparison of SCCWD rates with
those of a private water company in the
Tustin area is unfair, the diJ'ectorS stale,
since thl!: inland company Is close to a
trunk line of the Metropolitan Water
District. overlies the ground waler basin.
is located on Oat terrain. and is an older
l"Orrlpany v.·ith static customer demand.
SCC\llD, on the contrary must bring
"·ater from Jong distances through costly
transmission lines, construct its own
storage fa cilities, provide p u m p i n g
facilities to serve different elevations,
and ktep up with a mushrooming popula·
tion.
In summary, the report stat~. "The
collective charges made by the Grand
Jury _!!:~t~ly__la.1!' and would im·
mediately appear so to anyone con·
ducting eveo the most cursory ex-
amination." Grand Jury members were
"well aw.a~" that the allegations were
made by the recall committee and
"thus should have been careful to in-
vestigate their credibility prior lo issuing
erroneous conclusions based upon such
allegations."
In conclusion, the directors charge. "lt
would appear that certain members of
the Grand Jury were closely aligned \\'\th
the recall group and that lhey attempted
to use the power of their office to effect a
political change within the district.
"The forewoman, while obviously not
being directly iovolved in the concerted
acti\'ily, was nevertheless thei r willing
accomplice as she allcwed the report to
be Issued over her signature with ap-
parent knowledge of the ¥13"ner in which
th1 ~ wu compttedfl ·
"We call upon he r to publicly retract
the report and \() reprimand those
members fil the jury' who deliberalely
"ablistd ~-•PIMJ"'-1JOSitiM GI ln.1st~
and credibility."
Vl"I Ttlel>Mtl Cfiildren for Sale
Jacksonville, Fla., police sergeant J . L. Suber talks
with two youngsters allegedly offered for sale by
two Oklahoma City men. Arrested were William
O'Hara and Robert \Vestenhaver. The children were
tdentlfie·d as Butch Cox, 2, and Teresa Cox, 3.
Count)' Mexican
Employes Slate
Grievance Meet
County employes of Mexican descent
"·ill hold their second general meeting at
7:30 o'clock tonight in the new County
Courthouse to discuss grievances over
alleged-discriminatiin-iTlt'Ounty hiring
and promotional practices ..
The Merican • American employes first
mel two months ago and after several
sessions decided that an organization was
needed to deal with their .problems . The
group has selected Adeian1e, •r Forward,
as their name. •
They have formed the organization for
reasons that include:
-A di sproportionately low number of
employes in county service of Mexican
descent a.s compared with the racia1
distribution or county population.
-Selection practict>s which admittedly
sc~n out minority job applicants.
-Promotional -practict>s .which ap-
parently-figures suggest -screen oul
employes cf !i-1exican descent.
-A complaint that there is insensitivity
and re jection by some county officia1s ·
and other groups.
-1be lack of •"P3-Y djlfermtial_ror: use
of languagi skills w6en relevant w-
emplorr.enl. ,
-The'.Melican •· American.cammuatfy's
fttllngs•of lienation itom tMlr coanty
government and the services offered.
Nixon Seeks 3rd Plane-
707 Jet From Boeing
WASHJ NGTON (APl -Although the
No. I jetliner in the White House fleet
already has a look-alike sister ship,
President Nixon wants an Identical twin_·
born at a cost of more than $9 million to
taxpayers.
The proposal. treated with such priority
that it Y(aS Included Wednesday in a sup-
plemeptal budget request for the current
fisca l year, would provide him a second
top-<>f-th~-Jine model from Boeing's 707
series.
In Seattle, a Boeing Co. spokesma n
said the plane could be ready by mid-
1972 an election year in which Nl:oton·s exle~slYe travel routine is likely lo ex-
pand. A pre&idenlial aide ·would say only
that a delivery date is indefinite.
The new airship, a 7(17-3208.' would
replace a 13-year-old 707-120 which has
seen considerable serviCf: as Nixon's
chier backup plane. including his recent
trips to Alaska and Key Biscayne. Fla.,
and &lviscr Henry Kissinger·s second
visit to Peking.
And ii would match exactly the "Spirit
of '76." the sleek, 9-yearoiild queen of the
executive jet set al nearby Andre\\'S Air
Force Base.
Although there is no difference in looks
or luxury between it and the backup
plane. the 707-3208 has belter range and
can operate from shorter airstrips. ac-
cording to.Col. Ralph D. Albertazzie, the
Presidenrs pilot.
.. For example." said Albertazzie, "we
got it into the Orange County, Calif.,
airport. and the backup couldn'I have
done that. \Ile went into TempJehof
t Berlin l and Roanoke. Va.. and the
backup couldn 't have don e that, either."
Albertazzie said the Pres ident's 3208
requires about 5.200 feet for takeoff and
landing. whereas •·we draw tbe line at
6.500 with the backup." The 3208 has a
6.300-mile range ; the backup 4,600.
Although speed and altitude capabilities
and most handling characteristics are
about the same. Albe rtazzie said. the
3208 "seems to accelerate slightly fa ster
and the braking i;ystem is better."
Albertazzie, \\•ho has flown Ni:.:on into
all SO states and more than 250.000 miles.
said he had not been a\\'are the President
\\'as going to a'sk for the new plane, one
of several items for which a total of $91.S
million is sought in new spending authori-
t9 from Congress. ·
';But it is a longstanding requirement."
he said. ''It y.•ill give us true backup
capability." Al the moment, he addei1,
the ''Spirit of 'i6" is the only 707-3208 in
the Air Force inventory.
From Pagel
TUNNEL .••
deputies, phi's Riverside city 'police.
Besides the total of 2,700 pound.I ct
marijuana, a pound of the haJlucinogenic
cactus.bud peyote was also !ound lo lhl
subsurface chamber, investigators said.
Newport Beach Detective Sgt. Leo
Konkel, of the narcotics detail , 1aid his
' men have been interested in the suspect s
for· some time.
They allegedly agreed to 8 300-pound
marijuana sale with delive ry from an
unknown pickup point in the rolling
desert near Perris and Lake Mathews
made in a Riverside cafe parking lot.
Only the alleged delivery crew was tail·
ed from a distance. ltivesligators a.aid.
Once the 300 pound. packaged shipmen t
of grass had been picked up at a deserted
cabin, agents be~an poking around
nearby while their partners arrested tht:
suspects in Riverside.
A hollow-sounding footfall on the dsert
floor prompted one to brush away the
sand and find a hidden trap door handle,
aC<.'Ording to Sgt. Konkel.
Lirting it, the team discovered a
plywood-paneled shaft containing lite ad·
ditional 2,400 .pounds or Mexican marl·
juana, all neatly packaged ror shipment
and distribution.
Phoenix, Christina, Sword, Bauwen and
McDonald we re held in Heu of $12."l.000
bail each pending issuance of complaints
and arraignment.
Investigators said the drug suspect
Phoenix is not a relative of condemned
kidnap-rapist Gary H. Phoenix. 30, now
awaiting execution on San Quention's
Death Row.
Santa: Ana Draft
Office Blaze
Damage $1,500
Authorities today continued their tn·
vestigation of a fire which burned
through the roof of the Orange COunty
Selective Service cffice in Santa Ana ear·
Jy i\1onday morning.
Santa Aoa Fire Marshal Angelo
~1inchella said the origin of the blaze is
"very suspicious."
"It was not a natural way for a £ire to
start," he said.
The blaze. discovered about 3:12 a.m.
by police officers in a passing patrol unit.
caused an estimated $1.500 in damage at
the office. 1138 E. 17th St.
Firemen said the fire began on the root
the building hou sing the selective service
office and burned into the attic. Damage
was confined to the structure. No records
were destroyed in the office itself.
Hand-lettered signs reading ''Stop the
\\'ar" and "End the Draft'' \\'ere found
outside the building. which has been the
scene of~test,1-by peace groups in the
past. -· ~ Since testifying before the llouse
Internal Security Committe e in
Washington, D.C. last mootb, the Gdfs
said they have not been threatened.
The RU is committed to a violent
overthrQw M the goVernment a.nd plans
lo infiltrate 1arge 1 oorporatiorui and
military personnel during the ne1t IS to
20 years. Golf said. &lpposedly , a strike
then could Shut down the country, he ad-
ded. . l
Judge Tells Bir1ningham .
'Shut Down' for Pollution
-· luxurious sp1·i11g down sofas
These handsome sofas were designed to give you the ultimate in seating comfort with dacron and Clown
back pillo ws, deep spring down seat cushio ns envelo ped in down and feathers and two foam-filled arm
pillows. Choose from a wid e se lection of fine fabrics. Spokesmen ror the RU have denied
some of the statements by the Goffs.
•·we were alwa)" suspicious of them
because they never really participated ln
the work d tbe organization," S3id Chris
.llenchine. 20.
Mech.int, identifying himself as a mem-
ber cf Lbe RU chapter in San Jose, and
Marcene Stevens. 23. San Francisco, tcld
R news conferenct: last month: "The
Revoluticnary Union is a Communist,
pro-Maoist organiz.ation which advocates
a revolution by millions of working people
to overthrow capitalism and establish
wcialism."
"We think it v.·ill be violent . not because
u•e choose ii. but because the bourgeoisie
will never Jay dov.·n and give up without a
fight"'
OUHSI COAST
DAILY PILOT
H .. ti .. t•1 S..k
f .. --• ., .. ..,. s. c1 ...... .
OAAHGl (0#-lT l"Ul l.."l"INO tON..l".UY
.).' a_,~111 N. Wtti ,.,,......,. .... ,...,.._
i J•tlf II. Curl•y
V'a 1"1nlll..,. •M 6-rt l ,..,....,..
'T1i11n•1 K11•>I
[t•Mr
n ...... J... "'~·~hint
~fttfJll E•'W
Cht flff H. l tot Rid1•ti P. Nill
"-"''~ ,111.IMflnt 1;,Hon
Offk"
t.11 !NM: a WMI lltf St•••I
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H"'"lflf* aff<R' 11111 Midi llv1-Y•ri• :\ S. ~II: J0S NIIMI 1!:1\~l'liilll 11:•1
f
BJRMINGHAfi.f, Ala. f APl -A fede ral
judge ordered 23 major polluting in-
dustries in Birmingham today lo shut
down until an air pollution crisis ends.
Ho.,..·ever, the National Weather Service
reported that the stagnant air conditions
were lmproving rapidly because of rising
winds. Rain was forecast for later in the
da v which should bring further im·
prOvement.
About 25.000 workers would be affected
b\' the closings. The 23 industries include
rriajor steel plants and one of them, U.S.
Steel. employs 12.000 persons.
"We can't expect lhem to im mediately
shut down, that would ruin al\ the
machinery." a spokesman for the
Environmental Protection Agency said.
"The process should take about four
hours. and will leave them in a position to
start 'up again fairly quickly when the
crisis is over" it added.
Asst. U.S. Atty. Bill Mallard said his
office would ask that the injunction be
lifted ii conditions continue to improve.
"We are watching the pollution counl,
and consulting with our medical and
technical advisers." he said. "We v.•ill not
be bashlul about 2sking the injunction to
be lifted if conditions are right :•
He said U.S. District Court Judge Sam
C. Pointer J r. can dissolve the order at
aoy time within its IQ.day lifetime .
Pointer granted the order sought
through the U.S. Justice Department on
recommendaUon of the administrator or
the Environmental Protection Agency,
William D. Ruckelsha us.
The judge set a hearing date on the ac·
lion for Friday.
'The action is the first Ume the "emer-
genC)' powers" ct the Clean Alr Act ol
J970 have been evoked.
The alert began Tuesday when the
• part~late pollution count .soared to 771
micrograms per cubic meter of air. A
spokesman !or the Health Deparln1ent
said the EPA considers a level or 625 lo
DAILY 1>1LOT, wi11i 11t11dl h _,...,,.. ""' require remedial action. til-·l"r-. II ,......w.i ~•llf ••~.,,, ._ ··~ 111 ..,..1'11,. "'"""• tor LttuM ~"c"' The 23 industries were asked Tuesday :=1 ,,= ~\~.~~ ~'::::,\!; to cut back production bul by Wednesday 11.---+--lc•,,._ ..,. '"''-· ,...,. ... 111 -l--'DOJcniJog..nnly JI had .complied-•·ith-Uia r.,o.n11-llfTt1fll.-~~....-111-
•I -Wfil •• , l fttff. C.I• Mft•. r~uest.
•
,...,..._ 1714, MJ-4)11 Officials listed the noncomplying In-
·-• ,~.., 1142 1,71 dustries 11 U.S. Steel, U.S. Pipe, Connor•
O..,... .....,..,.. · Steel, Stockholm VRlvrs and Fillings and S. Ci.-te A" D.,•11111•": An1erican Cast Iron Pipe Co.
,...,.._ '4fJ-44Jt The EPA sJ')Oke5man said the order ap-
nn, ~ c.r.t '"'*11111iot pllt11 to all 23 whether they are in com· ... ,.... •"'""· """"""'-"· ... ,.. ., .. ........._,, '"''*' pllance or not -1.11t •fMl'll""*' Wltl'ltVI i,.c:Jtl ,..,. Th I . I ftlltlll " "'*'.,,., """"· · e au umn temperature 1nvers on
...,. NH,.. ... ,...111 ., H......,, '".e11 v.'hlch forced Tennessee to df!<':lare il.s
,... ~ ,,...., c..1tiMll4I, "*""•'*' firi;L air pollution alert also contlnutd to w ctri'1tr •~.n' .t.ii111Jr1 .., "'•I' ",. h k I r "*"'>tri ...i111t•t cu1~1 ...... m• 1Mnll!•1. old poc t ,s o stagnant air over
Soothr&stetn s!Hl!~s.
Jn Nashville. Tennessee authorities ex·
tended a pollution alert already in effect
for Chattanooga to ail of East Tennessee.
·•we are asking all citizens in east Ten-
nessee to discontinue open burning and
all incineration," said Harold E. Hodges.
state air pollution control director. "If
the problem continues. we may have to
ask large industries to cut back on their
pollution output as well."
A large, high pressure system has
covered the Southeast and Gulf states for
several days, creating a low level
temperature inversio n along with light
circulation.
A spokesman for the weather bureau in
Atlanta said the resull was that pollu-
tants such as smokestack emissions and
auto exhausts did not rise and dissipate
in the "'ind. but collected in stagnant
pockets of air.
The spokesman said that increasing
surft>ce winds were created as the high
pressure system began drifting to the
northeast Wednesday and hopefully will
improve the quality of air toda y.
Hearing Slated
In Blue Chip
Stamp Charges
T\\'O men who authorities allege financ·
M their blue chip life by bilking the
Blue Chip Stamp Company of up to
$150,000 in recent months until arrested
in Newport Beach have a day in court
romlng up.
Preliminary hearing will be Dec. l In
Division 40. Uls Angeles ~1unicipal Court,
for the p.iir a1Taignl!:d Tuesday on one
count each of grand theft by em·
bezzlement .
District attorney's investigators accuse
Paul D. ll'acren. 45, and Oonald.l.....Coo
44. with bilking the stamp firm with
phoney merchandise orders that v;ere
passed in August,
One appro ved by COOk, an $800-per·
n1ontb supervisor of the firm's accounl.!I
payable division, was allegedly made out
lo \\1arren for $106,000 worth of un-
delivered .stamp premiums .
Jn\·esligators said Warren has supplied
trAnslslor radioS1 \ape recorders and
other F'ar East Import products ror JO
years. with the stamp company as almost
his sole customer.
0
8' length reg . $599
YOU MAY SPECIAL ORDER NOW
AND STILL GET DELIVERY
BEFORE CHRISTMAS. Now399
Your fai;a_ri.tt interior dc1lgncr wiU-be happy to as.sis: you •
H.J.GARRETT fURNITURE .
PROFESSIONAL ' 22rs HARBOR BLVD.
INTERIOR DESIGNERS Ope• Mo• .. Thurs. & Fri. Evts. COSTA MESA, CALIF. TRY OUR REVOLVING CHARC<E 646.0275 646°0276
'
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--~--------+-------'---. --4•-•
To6yt1 Fina)
Honjington ·0eaelt . . , . .
Fountain Valley
VOL. 64, NO. 276, 3 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES THURSDAY, NOVlllllE!E 18, ·191r • JEN CENTS
'· . Sanita~tiori Groups Urge Delay on Controls'.
'
Represenl8tives or lhe Orange C.ounty
Joint Sanitation Districts todaY urged t~.
1tate to postpone new controls on the
discharge of sewage into the ocean.
Jl()W)tain-'Valley Mayor Ed .Just,
chairman or the joint bo.an:ls, and .Fred .
Harper, general manager of the' sanlta~
tion clis~ricts, both attended a hearing-on
the proposed new standards in San ,
Rafael. . .
. The cifies or Newport BeacO and ~un-·
tlngton BeaCh have supported the·sanita-
tion district's stand in requesting a delay
in implementation of the s~ standards
until more re~arch is completed. ,
Objections are based on the-cost of put-
ting the requirementf.lnto~effect iand a
reported lack of knowl~(e thit the
restrictions will be effedi\re. _
The proposed policy of,the,state~Water
Resources Control Boiid would-prohibit
the discharge of toxic wastes or solids in-
to the ocean. Treated effluent1a currently a $96.5 million t:>nstructlon program, '°d
pumped into the ocean two miles off Hun-U lhe new discharge policy is put into ef-
tington Beach feet the county sanitation districts would . · . ~-be faced with an additional $65 mlllion The san1taUon dlstrlctl are ask}ng the capital ouUay. .
state board to postpone the controls until "" It has been estimated that the districts'
a $J.1 million stlldy by the Southern average countywide tax rate of 47 ctnlll
CalUomll Coastal Water Research Pro-would climb lo Shit. as a result ol the
ject Is completed. The three-year study is new policy, Just said, '
expected to ie finished nes:t summer. "We believe that discharge restricUons
Just told t~ state board today that the or effluent standards· must be baaed •n
county sanitation districts are engaged in fact on some measurable improvements
to the marine environment and re-
qu.irementi 1hov(d be (OOdifled from time
to time whet( .new changes and hn-
provements are dictated by new aclentific
knowledge," Just said.
He then said that the Southern
California coastal study might provide
such knowledge.
Representatives of the state board and
envirOnmentali1ts have argued tbat oef:an
pollutlori might be too great a problem to
• aolve if action la delayed until the pro-
blem Is properly Identified and poln~
out that the at.tie policy la beJni olfe"'ll
as a more" economical alterutive tii
sti:ingent federal controls llreldy ap:
proved by Congress. '"'
The state board is to hold another hear;
ing on the proposed policy in 'Sa.n·Dieco
De<. l . Robert Battin, cbairman of tho
eounty Board of SujltrYison, bat .told
. sanltatlop directors be will attend tbt
Dec. l hearing.
......... ,~-·· .,...,._,.., T wto•~·--»e....,............ "' -.. Reds Building Up
At That Time, $500,000 Was Enough to Go First Clas1; Now $2 Mill ion May Not S1vt1 It
' So1ne Parts. Must Go
Re1iovation or Deniolition · Set .at Hu1itingto1i?
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of tile DallY •Itel ll1tf
The ofd Huntington ~each H~gb SchOOI
campus, a survivor of nUmerous wall-
crunching earthquakes, is on shaky
ground tOOay. -
Its tower, auditorium and classroom
wing must be demolished or rebuilt to
meet state earthquake safety standards
for schoob. -
Next Tuesday night, trustees of the
Huntington Beach Union High School Dis-
trict will study the possibility of either
alternative and a lot of compromises in
between.
Many people in the community who
would like lo see the landmark tower
campus preserved, are hoping that the
banner advertising a stud ent play on the
auditorium is not prophetic.
The play Is "Kiss of Death."
The school, built in 1926 at a cost of
$500,000, is not unique architecturally. It
was patterned after another campus in
Santa Mari a.
It was originally designed to ac-
commodate 500 students. but now houses
ln excess of 2,200 pupils. Throughout ls
!
t
4S.year life additional buildings were·con-.
structed to increase'ils capacity.
, Mrs. Mar.garet ElliOtt •. wire Of 'fOrnltr
superintendent Raymond 'Elliott., saldihe
school was comldered quite· luxurious at
the time it was built.
"They used . notlilii but llr!j.quality
materials when they constructed it. The
constru~tion ·wa1 so ,good that the-school
was once used on the cover or a pamphlet
on the Field Ad (the state · earthquake
safety standards law). But I guess now
things are a little stricter," she said.
·"During the 1933 earthquake just the
plaster cracked a lltUe bit. The structure
wasn't damaged any place. They jusf
mended up a few little cracks."
'The· neitrt>y grammar school, now nam-
ed Dwyer Intermediate School, did not
fare as well. It's auditorium caved in and
there was so much damage elsewhere
that the eighth grade students had to ~n
tlnue classes in the high school.
Tuesday night's workshop session will
be attended by architects who are ex-
pected to spell out details of how the .old
campus can be partially preserved.
"I feel, if at all possible, preservation
of the tower would be good," said current
school Principal Woodrow Smith, pointing
out that the adjacent 1,tOO seat
a.uditorium l1•used by .~ than IO wm-
munity group1:.each ye•r.
Smith and other educator• are also
concerned abaui imprgving the campus'
educational f1cllltles which are outdated
by modem ttandards.
'1Il we hid to iacriflce the educationa1
program of the future to preserve
something -archaic, that would be
wrong," addf'd the principal. ' ' 1 t
shouldn't have to compete with the
auditorium. I wouldn't want to
shortchange new educational facilities in
order to preserve something old."
A restrictive tax override levied by the
Huntington Beach Union High School
District will provide a building fund of
about $2 million for the high school pro-
ject by the end of thi! year.
The overriding question facing trustees
is how much of that money should be ap-
plied toward the preservation of the old
buildings and how much for new con-
struction.
3 Delivery Men
Held in Valley
Furniture Tl1ef ts
Three furniture store l:leli very men,
who police allege had the habit of deliver-
ing furniture to themselves. have been
arrested by Fountain Valley orficers.
Da vid A. Masse, 22, Charles L. Brown,
Jr., 24, and Gerard L. Smith, 28, all of
1760 Pomona Ave., Costa Mesa, we~
boOked Wednesday In Orange County Jail
on charges of gra(ld theft.
Fountain Valley detective Marty Eng-
quist alleged $8,500 worth or • stolen •
furniture was recovered from apartment.s
occupied by the three men.
The trio is employed by Ralph '•
Furniture In Fountain Valley. Police said
store owner Ric hard Martin told them he
was un11ware of any thefl8 -which
allegedl y'have been occurring over a two-
year period -until · he was told by a
fourth delivery man who-claimed he was
with Smith when he delivered tw o tables
to his own apartment. '
Engquist alleges that Masse'• entire
apartment was furnished with piece!
stolen from the furniture store. "We went
in and ttmoved all of the stolen Items,"
tbe deteCtlve said, "and when we were
finished, we had two tnick loads full of
furniture and the only thing left in that
apartment wa!I the dishes."
Figfiting Heavy Near Phnom Penh
SAIGON (UPI) - Military sources in
Saigon said tonight the military situation
in Cambodia has grown so serious that
Gen. Creighton W. Abrams, the U.S.
commander in Vietnam, had disctissed it
with top South Vietnamese leaders.
UPI di spatches from Phnom Penh said
Cambodian troops battling elements of a
North Vietnamese Division only 11 miles
from Phnom Penh were ambushed today
and.Jost. five killed and 50 wounded. The
Cambodians wilhdrew rrnm the trap and
<::ambodian T28 bombers hit the area
with napalm.
Seve ral major Communist units were
reported moving toward Phnom Penh but
UPl correspondent Kate Webb reported
from the Cambodian capital it was
generally believtd the North Vietnamese
and K h mer Roug (Cambodian Com·
munists) were trying to isolate the city
and cause panic rather than capture it
outright.
Photographer Don Sharpe, who free-
lance! for UPI, was with the Cambiodlan
l<ll~lm 1111-1\>d3YJ ~'!'id lbo~ll! ln!an\ry ba(~1ilion , walked into an open
tree line and nn into automatic weapon
and · rtufrtar fire --that pinned the force
dQ,Wll_fQr two hours.
He said the Ti8a -came in and triggered
an explosion In the nearby village of
Phum Svay, indicating that munition
stores had .been destroyed.
The Communist,, have concentrated
Prof Prefers
S1nall Quakes
Over 'Killers'
UPTON, N.Y. (UPI) -A Princeton
Un iveniity scientist said Wednesday it
often is better to cause small controlled
earthquakes with everyone warrted in ad-
vance than to Jet the earth's tensions
build to a point where large, disastrous
earthquakes are inevitable.
Dr. Kenneth S. Defreyes. an associate
proressor of geology at Princeton, said
tension aloniS the San Andreas Fault in
Californ ia by next October will have
reached a point equal to tbe tension just
berore the 1906 San Franci~co earth-
quake .
De!feyes said theri is a. 50 percent
cha nce of an earthquake in the area
within the next decade and there Is
almost sure to be one by the end of the
century.
If this Is so, Detfeye!I said it would be
better to set off a small earthquake by
man-made means when everyone could
be forewarned and when the re~Jlt." would
be milder than allow it to go on as a
result of natural forces.
"It ii1 better to ha ve a medium size
earthquake every 2S years than to have a
k\Jler every 50 years," DeHeyes told a
gl'QUP of science writer! assembled at
Bropkhaven Nalional l..aboratory.
An earthqllake occurs when two edges
of the earth's cru st, moving in two dU-
!erent direc.1ions. stick together, Def(eye!
~aid. Tension.builds up ;is the two pieces .
push against each other and finall y the
temion makes them slip violently causing
an earthquake.
· De!feye!f <Saki that, acCording to the
theory of plate tectonics -a theory that
he said ha! caused a "revolu tion" in
geology -earthquakea along such faults
are inevllable.
their efforts against airfields, highway!,
bridges and ferry cr~ssing1 to try to
isolate Phnom Penh. The Cambodian high
command reported another rociet at•
lack in 24 houn against the ferry ~
Ing town of Neak Luong~ where Higbw&y
1 front Saigon reaches the Mekong r:lver.
Cambodia also reported . fighting at
Prey Veng, 27 miles east of Phnom Penh.
Not Flt for Trial
at Badaeng, 15 miles to the .00.tbwelt.
and on Highway 8, 80 inHC!.!I nortb OI the
capital. ·
In Vietnam, North VietrianieH mortar
teams battered two America.ft outpoats
near the Demilitarized Zone and U.S.
planes struck inside North Vietnam and
in the western sector of the DMZ to trY.
to choke off the flow of C.Ortununiat 1up-
pies along the Ho Chi Minh trail.
Murder Suspect Peters
Recovers From Wounds
By TOM IAl\LEY
Of th9 O• ""' II.rt Murder 1uspec.t Gig Peters i!I making a
fine recovery from the gunshot wound ht
su!ferd in an alleged escape attempt that
halted his Orange County Superior Court ·
trial.
It wlll !tlll be at Jeaat IO to 90 day1
before he can return to the courtroom, a
neurologist testified today before Judge
Kenneth Williams.
Dr. Stanley Van Den Noort's added
comment that the Jfuntlngton Beach
man 's recovery has been retarded by his
transfer to a locked isolation area spark-
ed an uproar in the courtroom with
defense attorney Barry Tarlow im-
mediately demanding his client's transfer
to new quarters.
Van Den Noort admitted under
TarloW's questionin,11: that Peters 22, had
been "fasting to hasten death" ind that
his removal to a location where he could
communicate with other patients would
Reh11qujst Court
Critics Succeed
111 Vote Delay
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Opponents of
Supreme Court nominee William H.
Rehnquist succeeded today in delaying
until Tuesday action by the .Senate
Judiciary Committee on his appointment,
pending further FBI investigation of the
Arizonan's background .
The committee voted 10 to · 5 against
reopening hearings on t h e Rehnquist
nomination, but chairman James O.
Eastland (0-Miss.), agreed to ask the
FBr to look further Into Rehnquist'!
alleged past connections wjth a coo-
servative political action group called
Arizonan s for America.
There apparently was no committee
opposition, at a closed meeting, to the
nomination of Lewis F. Powell for a se-
cond court vacancy. but the committee
refused also by 10.5 vote, to report his
selection separately to the full Senate.
Motion! to reopen the hearings and to
separate Che nominations were made by
Sen. Birch BaytJ. .. {Q..lnd.), voting with
Bayh on both were SeM.E°cfward M. Ken-
nedy (D-Mass.), Quintin N. Burdick (0-
N,D.), Philip A. Hart (0-Mk:h.)., and
John V: Tunney (D-Callf.).
Sen. Roman Hruska (R-Neb.), then won
unanimous consent for a motion that a
vOte on both POwell and Rehnquist be
taken no later than noon EST Tuesday.
cr•UY lmprov1 his ""'¥ ·alalo 1!14. hasten his recovery. •
The doctor said Peters will walk again
and that he might return · to the
courtroom on crutches if his trial can bl
delayed for a period of to to IO days.
Judge Williams had earlier ICbeduJed
the re!Umplion of Uie trial for Dec .. 1 in
the belief that Peters could be returned
to the courtroom on a 1trelcber to I.id in
his defense.
He will set a new date Friday aftet
discussions with Orange County Medici)
Center ·personnel on the possibility of
transferring Peters lo other quarters.
Tarlow, arguing with Deputy District
Attorney Pat Brian throughoUt the hearw
ing, told Judge Williams that Peters had
been fed by numerous visitors and had
obviously enjoyed the company of other
patients in the intensive care unit before
be was transferred to the jail ward.
Peters is accused of killing bis parents
last April 21 at their Huntington Beach
home. He was shot by deputy Brad
Wood ingtonJast Nov. 3 as he allegedly at·
tempted to escape: while being led to tbt
county jail during the court's DOOJI
recess .
Van Den Noort today said Peters caa
feel no sensations below his collarbone:
but that the patient ·s t e m po r a r y
paralysis Ls responding to treatment.
That paralysis was produced by 'a
bullet which passed through the base of
his neck at the back and was ejected ju!t
above the defendan t's navel during a
scurne in the corridor behind the
courtroom.
Van Den Noort described hls patient 11
alert and coherent and delighted at tfie
news that he will progress to the point
that he can walk with the aid of crutch~•·
"But it will be unfortunate il be r'e-
mains in the j<1.il area of the hospital," the
neurologist said. He was not allowed \it
read a nurse's notes referring to tM
change in -Peters' atUtude since· -tM
defendant's transfer to the jail ward.
Oruge
Wea titer ,
Low clouds and fog will en;utt'
the Southland Friday, clearing ~
mid-day lo awmy akie!I. Tempera·
lures will reach 65 1t the beaches.
rising to 73 inland. Lows tonight
30-15.
JNSmE TODAY .
According to plate tectonics, Def!eyes .
said, forces called plumes drive up rrom
the depth! of the. earth throu gh it.s crust
and break the crust into groups of rigid
plates -huge chunk.!! ol the ewth's
er~ plates retreat from lh• erea of India Forces Repel
A. top Santa Barbara Shen/ft
aide tDaS /ired \Ved1ltlda~ feH
hi.t untuual diaptav of ioeaponf
during Last 11ear'1 Is'ta Vt.ta rlot-
•
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In addition to the standard 'pieces or
furrUture and art objects:, Engquist
alleges the three men also took~ 1n
1rtmclal11lanr,i--lor-l11e bed.,...-ba
and an artificial fireplace.
The delivery men also assertedly sold
some stolen Medlterranean room divlden
to their neighbors and Masse allegedly
gave some of tht stolen rurniture lo hi.I
mother.
t lum .. at. ve slow rate, but the:;::_-A •t·ac'.--by' a'-'s··-n-plumt.!I cause crac !I, e ;cr:-Ei11 • r ft:' kl Rl
quakes occur alo_ng the "margins" of NEW DELHI (UPI) -Indian border
iNg, For. •Corw-G'nd pictur,.1 .:-·"'Y l---1
Pao~·ll.
DAM.Y-"IUIT ~Mff .......
THE OLO CAMPUS TOWU...S.'tlLL STANO$ TALL
11 the Sltn on tho AUjlltorlum Prophetic? •
Engquist said no ·charges will be
brought against the neighbors or Masse '•
mother.
The three mtn were to appear today ln
the Weal Oranp County Judicial Olltrlcl
Court for orratsmienL
•'
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these plat~•. he said. ,,._All the actiol'fhappefii l l the rtratg)ns forces buL back a eaklstani attack at
beteween the plates," ht &aid. Boyra on the East Pakfsten border as new exchanges of fire were rrported New Buck's a Buck across at 1eut two point• on t1ie fronuer. The Press Trust or India ne\¥S agency,
WASHINGTON (AP) -The new quoUng official IOUl'(e!, reported the
Eisenhower dollar iJ worth jutt $1. and ground clash rrom Krla:hnagar, tht
people should not pay a premium for the caplta.l ol Nadia District in West Bengal
coins, the chalrm•n of the House con-state about IO miles north of CalcuU.. Ht
sumer atfalrs aubcommlttee llid lodly, cave no c1etaU1.
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C1tlllr~l1
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I DAllV PILOT H Th~. No•M 11, 1971
•
Huntington Chiers Pay
Sparks .Much Di scussion
By ALAN DIRKIN
Ot .. DIAf l"llet Sl1ff
'-·' • NEXT TO SEX, politlC! and religion, a person's salary must rank as 1
topic to l\lilid if a conversation is to remain Jigbt and superricial.
1 ExttpJ. for the salaries of public employcs. Everyone wanls to talk about
.._their pay since everyone antes into the kitty. Right now you could have a
,.
fascinating conversation over the salary of Brander
Castle, Huntington Beach'• acting city administrator.
J~'s not that the amount of his pay is n~rily
startling or that there is any reason to doubt that he is
earning it, but it iJ the number of times his s,Jary has
been chang'11 in the la.st few months that fasclnaies. Since
July ht ha! rttelved three increases, fazing both Phase 1
an'd Phase II of Presiden~ Ni.ion's wage-price slowdown.
It's difficult to understand, but the amusement might be
worth the effort.
LET'S TRY. Before July Castle v.•as receiving ·
· • $2,142 a month as the assistant city administrator. Then, along with other
management employes in the city government, he was given a four percent
;boost that raised his pay to $2.228. This four percent increase was a holding
.,. rai~, agreed to· by the Management Employes Organization (MEO) and the ~ ~ city cOuncll until rurther negotiations were completed. ·
. ' ' -. .
UCIMedical
Grant Loss
.. ·Shocks Kay
Dr. Fred Kay, ptesideilt of the Orange
County Medical Association, expressed
shock Wednesday when told that c_ount)'
supervisors had rejected· a $1 million
grant from the state to benefit UCI
Medic.al School facilities at the Orange
County Medical. Center.
Under an agreement developed by
medical center officials end those of the
UCI school, the money was to have been
used to increase the quality of medical
training offered and to lmprovt C1Junty
heiilth services at the center.
Joini..g: Dr. Kaf In deploring the
l:!Oard's action was ~· Warren Bostic~.
Dean of the UCI Medical School. He call·
ed. the•.actioo a gr:ave loss to count)'.
medJcal P.rograms for the needy. ·
D.r. Bostick said he would attempt tG
gain aoo~her hearing before t h •
supervisors.
Now for raise No. 2. In September, after City Adiministrator Doyle Mil-
ler was suspended and given his notice of dismissal, Castle was appointed
acting city administrator. His salary wa stherefore boosted again A./ because
he had been promoted and given greater responsibilities and B./ to make him
Get a Horse (or Two)
He pointed out that if the money Is not
used here it will go to some. other UC
campus, probably UC Davis which Is
already slated to receive $1.5 million
from the $2.5 million allocated by the
state legi!lature for medical schools.
'the highest paid city employe since he is in charge of all city employes.
AT THAT Tll\1E the Director of Public Works, Jim Wheeler. and the
City Attorney, Don Bonfa, we~ e•ming $2,420 and $2,327 a month respective-
ly. So Castle's salary was raised to $2,451.
Tandem bicycling can b'e fun Cor anybody, but pity
the poor bike when these 830 pounds of joy riders
hop aboard. Leo Rossi (front), 470 pounds and own-
er of a San Francisco restaurant and his bartend·
er Davy Rosenberg, weighing in at 360, decided
that bicyclin~ would help their contour -or is it
the bike thats getting the new shape.
Dr. Kay emphasized that the board'•
action will slow down development of
medical school facilities and hamper
UCl's ability to provide a program com•
parable to other medical schools in the
state.
On to raise No. 3. It was then discovered th.at the finance department
bad made a clerical error, that the staff had failed to allow for new Jncreaw
that bad ~ granted the public works director and city attorney as part of
the final agreement tha\ was !'!ached between the MEO and council.
UNDER THIS new agreement, Wheeler's pay was hiked to $2,562 a
month and Bonfa's to $2,494. These rasise have not been put into effect yet
-the city attorney has been asked for an opinion whether they are allowable
under Phase JI or the freeze. But the agreement meant that these two staff
memben Yiould be paid at some time something more than the acting city
administrator. • '
Jnfonned, of this complication, the city council authorized another in-
• crease in Castle's salary to $2,592 a month.
Huntington Shows Lead
In County Retail Sa~s
Santa Ana Draft
Office Blaze
Dam~ge $1,500
"Overcrowding has forced the hospital
to use the basement for an outpatient
care clinic," Dr. Kay said. "This in-
adequate space was never intended for
this purpose."
The medical association leader accused
Paul White, executive assistant to Fifth
District Supervisor Ronald Caspers, of
being the principal cause of the boucfs
decision against the grant. And that's all there is to it -unless someone points out that maybe
Castle should receive what Miller was earning, $2,885 '1l,....month, or even the
combined salaries of the assistant city administrator and city administrator
-~ since at present he is doing both jobs,
.• It's something ta talk about.
Huntington Beach has shown a clear
advantage over the total county in
.average retail sales per store, according
to City Economic Development Officer
William J. Back. ' Home furnishings and appliance stores
:_·N, 01· se of Jet A11" ·planes In Huntington Beach sold an average of $157,200 per store for the second quarter
of 1971 to lead the C1Junty, Back said. The ., . county's average is $37.900 per outlet.
~ t • Also leading the cou~ty are automobile ~!il!!,illol<~lf-'' Oji ry...,j;; f" 0 ns ."I" in Huntinglon Beach wilh $334,800 . ~7 .. 71 ' ...-:1* ly Iii, -.., .i"'iioiiW
: ,.,~ average of $171 ,'too, attordihg to Baek.
·' By JACK BROBACK. Caspers of Newport Beach pointed out The figures quoted ·are based on a
,· ot .. ~.,..1111a11 • t~tmanypeople ln that1ameareawere study by 1qte city'sci~t=
, Je~Fn:'"iJe pro~leJll..doipinal<ll. ,. ..,.. tllc ll!llQIJ jVll' ffJ>or\,jcl ..,....,,.J....1i11Jl'lllll!I 'ftl! -· · .No< lr1ielon the CMbge 'County ,-":•ti'• ~IDc .. to ,me to wresue ' Y 1 ·.·' Board oI Supervisors Wednesday wi~b witb ·auJNiit pnibtems ' like the Air procj,uced quarterly by the state &a.rd of
~iffering declslona r,sultlne on buildin& California lease and then be asked to ap-Equalization.
projet:ts. . ; pi-ove mor~ housing. fo~, more people . In Food stores in the city did. an average Deni~ by a 4 to 1 vote was an ,appe!!: ?be·. area tn question, Caspers s_a/d. of 18_9 percent better than the cou nty
to a rubng~~·~lY·.2.o.n~I_D1;Adm1!llsJ.r:a· 1fJ1s board has to meet the~~ things average in the same category. Total
t<Jr Ray~~1j~;t!, ~anted, WQUl_d·, hrad on and deny such permits. retail sales were 28.9 percent above the
have alldifiid f?le~~U'.chon of a ~nit ,.. ~ordan argued that the are:1 was county 's average per store Back said a partme~ C6q'plel. ili',fht,Q'p_per Ne~r~, .d"eslined . to be bcrilt 1.o a heavy de~~ity. Despite a general downtrend · In
Bay area ~ir t¥. tall~ p,attern oJ the '"V(h~ pick on one small parcel? he merchandise sales all over the nation
Orange ~nly ~~rport; .. : · · _ q~~t1oned. . Back pointed out that general merchan: Approved~ • ~~·~ t.o % margin Caspers said he agretd the area was disc stores in Huntington Beach did was a .~ 6;mirii1ss1on recom-th~ proper place for apartments but for
mendatioft}lilt iingtt'"famlly home con-t~e fact that the airport was nearby.
struction )be aJlowed. on ~ acres In the ' The central Irvine Ranch rezone from
Central Ifvfne Ranch arel 'just south of ' ag?icultural to RS-eOOO (single family
the Santa Ana 'F:rfl!way· in the area l'f!idential) use was next for jet sound
between the· Marine Corps' El Toro arid treatment.
Santa Ant air. 1taUons. -Thomas Williams, representing Presley
Developer Michard Johlan of Newport Development Company of N e W p o r t
Beach lost hls bid to build the apartments Beach, said all purchasers would be ad-
on property on the east side of Birch vised or the jet flights from the two
Street, 409-feet sooth of Palisades Road nearby Marine Corps. stations and that
in the Santa Ana Heights area. the homes would be sound proofed.
Zoning administrator Reed said he had Caspers argued that the board was
denied the variance permit because "approaching the problem the wrong way
Jordan wanted to double the number of in requiring sound proofing of structures
apartments allow!<! under the present R-in night zones.
4 zoning. He..also noted that the property "\Ve should get rid of the source -the
was: just ouls1de the takeoff pattern of Marine stations should be moved," he
the ccunty airport. said. "But it is not up to us to get them to
Fifth District supervisor R o n a I d move. It should be up to the developers
~liAMI COAST
DAILY PILOT
~ amr PUIUSMDto cam ,..,
...... H.W,M ---J MI: I. C11rftY .............. ~ .......
1\imn~H?il
n m 11 A. M"'Jllt.i ..
Mt ...... Efiltf
Al,,. Di1~i11
'#wt Ort"" C-l"f EdlW
ttDH ......... OHk•
17171 l••ch loal1f•14
M1lfi119 Alllr111: P.O. In 7t0, •24~1 --L..-'-:Ii: m "'""" "'~ on. M-1 a WMt .. , l!rW ~ --..: ml""'-' ...,... .... .. a..a .... E'--lal
c
and landowners. We should refuse to
allow people to live under the noisy
flight paths."
Fullerton Couple
Flee Home Blaze
An elderly Fullerton ccuple fled for
their live! Wedn~ay when a fire and
explosion partially destroyed their home.
Oran P. Edwards, 65, and his wife,
Nana, 75, of 1~ Baker St., were en-
dangered by a fire which was started by
a smoking "Pipe and the explosion later of
three oxygen bottles. · Edwards told
firemen the oxygen bottles were for
medical purposes.
The couple tried to subdue the flames
with a water bucket and garden hose but
fled when the oxygen explod!d. Mrs.
Edwards suffered minor burns on her
arms and shoulders.
Damage from the fire and expl osion
111·1s estimated al $10,000 by fire offkiaJs.
County Mexican ,
Employes Slate
Grievance Mee t
County employes of Mexican descent
will hold their second general me;ling at
7:30 o'clock tonight in the new County
Courthouse to discuss grievances over
alleged discriminatiin in county hiring
and promotional practices.
The Mexican • American emp\oyes first
met two mohths ago and after several
sessions decided that an organization was
needed to deal with their problems. The
group has selected Adelante, or Forward,
as their name.
They have Conned the organization for
reasons that include:
-A di sproportionately low number of
emp\oyes in county service of ~1exican
descent as compared with the racial
distribution of county population .
-Selection practices which admittedly
screen out minority job applicants.
-Promotional practices ·which ap-
parenUy-figures suggest -screen out
employes or 1'.1exican de scent.
-A complaint that there is insensitivity
llnd rejecllon by some county officials
and other groups.
·-The lack of a pay differential for use
of language skills when relevant to
em ployment.
-The J\.fexican -American commu 11ity's
feelings of alienation from their county
government and the services ollered.
Aiding Adelante in getting organized•
has been Dick Ruiz, uecutiye assistant
to Supervisor David L. Baker ol Garden
Grove.
f::.•R::.-~ ':.w-:1'~::._1_-=L=ib=r"'a""r'-J-__,t,,,o,_,,F,_.,il=e'---~olland Dri.~e.t_ 1--....:_-f-~~.;.~.~ .. !:' ... -:::--:;.., .....:
5T'~~=..=.~ Co uncil Agendas To Beco1ne Dead End
• ., ............. C.,.M-.
hi ;I 1 tf1 4) 64t-4Jtl Copies or the agenda for the Huntington
Buch City COuncll meeUnas complete
wjlh supporUng information will be on
file at the public llbrar)'. $25 Maln St., Cl·
ty Cieri Paul Jones annount't<I.'
C.OU.ncil meetings are he.Id the first and
third Monday1 or 1h1 moDth and t.ht
agenda wlll be available on the f'rldat
Pl'et'Cdln& the meetings.
The ci1y of Huntington Beach has
pledged to vacate part of Holland Drive .
tQ allow it lo be conY!:rted ·Into a cul de
sac,
A resolution expressing this Intent was
approved by the council this week .11t the
request or hOmcowncn on llolland Drive
who said they wanted their residences to
be separated from apartments , planned'
for the area near BeactLBoulevard and
Slater A\•cnuc. .-
almost 4-0 percent better per store than
the county average.
The results of Back·s study show that
local merchants are selling more , in a
fewer number of stores, in ll out of 12
categories when compared with county
averages.
The categories are apparel, general
merchandise. drugs, food, package liquor,
eating and drinking establishhients, home
furniture and appliances, bu i Id in g
materials, autos ll.nd auto suppliet, ·
service station~, other retail sales and
total retall sal._
·The only category in which Huntington
Beach merchants do not lead is service
stations, according to Back.
Back believes that the local merchants
are enjoying greater success sjnce Hun-
tington Beach hes become a 'central shop--
ping area for Surrounding communities.
Authorities today continued their in-• vestigalion of a fire which burned
through the roof of lhe Orange County
Selective Service office Jn Santa Ana ear·
ly Monday morning.
Santa Ana Fire Marshal Angelo
l\1inchella said the origin or the blaze is
""·ery suspicious."
"Ii was no\ a natura1 way for a fire to
start," he said.
Th.e blaze, discovered .about 3:12 a.m.
by police officers in a passing patrol unit,
caused an estimated $1,500 in damage al
the office , 1138 E. 17th St.
Firemen said the tire began on the roof
the building housing the selective service
office and burned Into the attic. Damage
was C1Jnfined to the structure. No reC1Jrds
were destroyed in the office Itself.
White, who also serves as president of
the O~unty Health Planning
Counci s en an antagonist of the
medical association and the principal
cause of. its reluctance to endorse the
health planning agency. White is known
as a strong advocate of privately-owned
C1Jmmunity hospitals.
At the Tuesday board session before
the supervisors' action was taken Robert 1 White; medical center administration,~
told board members that the agreement
covering the grant and fees to be charged
medical center patients able to pay by
l]Cl doctors bound the county !or only the
current fiscal year.
Supervisors Ralph Clark:, F o u r t h
District, Caspers and Roberl Battin,
First District, voted against the 11gree-
ment characterizing it as 1 "trojan
horse" which C1Juid involve the county in
heavy spend,ing programs in lat~ years.
luxurious sp1·ing down sofas
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Getting:· ln;;t.lved·
• •
....... ' , ~'
Gr-(JluQe
In top photo of series, startled
woman at right pursues purse
!:inatcher who darts along the
sidewalk at left. The victim,
who was on a San Francisco
street. was not identified. In
next photograph down , Carl E.
Davis, 44, has joined the chase
and is closing in on the purse
thief, identified as Alice Jean
Jones, who flings away the
telltale evidence. Davis, who
works in a nearby mortuary,
observed the incident and hur·
ried to assist. In the picture
at left the purse rolls off the
sidewalk as Davis struggles
with the 182-pound woman he
has collared. Davis, a former
Notre Dame halfback turned
mortician. brought the woman
to ground firmly as sho\vn in
the picture belo~. He held her
there on the sidev.1alk until
police arrived and took over
the chase that turned into a
case. She is in city prison, held
for investigation of robbery.
The victim is shown below
closing in on her purse. She
left without revealing her
identity. The photographic se·
quence mas made by 21-year·
old photography stud en t.
James .R. Lysaght who had
j":st hap .. pened along.
I
Judge Tells
City to Halt
Pollution
BIRMINGJIMIJ, Alp. (Al')·-A federal
JU<!lfe ordered 23 mil'/" ~Ming in-
~~ Jn1 Birmingham, today1 to shut
doWla W\W.1n air polluUon crisis eOOs.
'Hciwever" th~ N~tlonal Wea pier Se~ice
1eported tMt ~ stagnant air conditions
were improvlng,rapldly beca1,1Se of rising
winds. Rain was forecast for later in the
day which should tiring further' im·
provement . · ' .
About 25,000 l\-'Orkers would be affected
by the closings. The 23 industries include
major steel plaols and one or them, U.S.
steel, employs 12,000 persons.
"We can't expect them to immediately
shut down. that . would ruin all the
machinery,"· a spokesman for the
Environmental Protection.Agency-5&id.
"The process should take about four
hours, and will leave them in a position to
start up again fairly quickly when the
crisis is over" it added.
Asst. U.S. Atty. Bill Mallard said his
office would ask that the injunction be
lifted if conditions continue to Improve.
"We are watching the pollution count.
and consulting wit h our medical and
technical advisers," he said. ''We will not
be bashful about 2.Sking the inj~iQ!l to
be-lifted if conOitiiffii are right."
He said U.S. District Court Judge Sam
C. Pointer Jr. can dissolve the order at
any time within its l<klay lifetime.
Pointer granted the order sought
through the U.S. Justice Department on
recommendation of the administrator o[
the Environmental Protection Agency,
William D. Ruckelshaus.
The judge set a bearing date on the ac-
tion for Friday.
The action is the first time the "emer·
gency powers" of the Clean Air Act of
1970 have been evoked. •
The alert began Tuesday when the
particulate pollution count soared to 771
micrograms per cubic meter of air. A
spokesman !or the Health Department
&aid the EPA considers a level of 625 to
require remedial action.
The 23 industries were asked Tuesday
to cut back production but by \llednesday
morning only 18 had complied with the
request. ·
Officials listed the noncomplying in·
dustries as U.S. Steel, U.S. Pipe. C<lMOrs
Steel, Stockholm Valves and Fittings and
American Cast Iron Pipe Co.
The EPA spokesman said the order ap-
plies to all 23 whether they are in com·
pliance or not.
Thursd'1, N.,..,... 18, 1971 H-
Probe Report• -· /.
Hughes Declare~
•
In Good Health ;: . .. ,;
I
I•
CHICAGO (AP) -The Chicago Sun-spokesman said be could not confirm ,,,
Times reported Wednesday that a.year· deny the story. I
long investigation by the U.S. J_usti~ 'Oley quOted the,.r e p 0·? t 't' uyiri,.
Department has uncovered evidence that Hughes operates~ hls business atfai(I
billionaire Howard Hughes is t n through four secretaries and that he ofttJ ·
reasonably good health and is mentally works seven days a week. ~ ·•
competent. He is said to make his own decision(.
The newspaper quoted a federal source based on advice gained by telephone a~:
as rejeetlng as "hokum" reports that the mail from a fe~ legal and tecbnic..al ad·
66-year-old Hughes ~ght be dead and visers and with his secretaries handlln£ •
had fingernails and toenails six to eight the communication, the Sun--':'imes said' ;
inches in length when he left Las Vegas Federal investigators, hOwever, do ,.
for the Baham4s late last year. discount most of the publicize4 Huaha •
The investigation, lhE: paper said, was ecentricities. the • papec: •&ak1. adl:
undertaken following persistent reports reportedly he has contact ' With no m~.
that Hughes had been kidnaped from Las than, six persons including his aecretarl .;
Vegas and was being held against his will He avoids sunligt\t, photographers, 1 ·•
in Nassau. The ~un-Times said federal in-w o u I d • b e Hugbrs w a t c b e·r 1, the:
vestlgators to the best of their Sun-Times said, but 'i federal aource in-',
diCated he takes 8n oceuional nlilCturnat knowledge, determined that Hughes was · • · , ,
not only alive but in good enough con-walk on the patio o1 his penthouse in thii•
dition _ mentally and physically _ to Britannica Beach Hotel In the Bahamas'/:.
Eugene E. Barret, manager of th& take an active role in the operation of his •
financial empire. hotel; says he .has not seen Hughes •. °18: .. . . newspaper said. and the J us ~ 1 c i8'. J ust how federal investigators were Department's investigation has never1
®le. to obtain regular reports_on Hughes-been..publicly acknowledged_ ~
remains a secret," the Sun-Times said. The paper said It is believed the Justice.·
"But it was learned that persons known Departm~nt.'s lindings were' kept sec~lft': . . because it did not want to become lJtooo to be 1n close contact with Hughes hava. volYed In the complex legal battle tbit:
been interviewed." eruPted among Hughes stall members tr
In Washington, a J ustice Department the time Hughes left for Nassau. • :
'" .. ..
• .. Ja~kie a Deal? .. , .. . .
" .
Russ Paper Hits Onassis Troth
:•· ''. .. . .
ft10SCOW (UPI) -Aristotle Onassis
married Jacqu eline Kennedy solely for
"advertising µurposes," a Sovie t
newsQ_a~r said today.
Vodnistransport (Water Transport), the
news paper of the Marine Fleets Ministry.
said in an article tracing the career of
the Greek shippi ng magnate Onassis
married l\1rs. Kennedy to promote use of
his ships. . . . ·
"It is for the purpose of idverti&emen(
and not for any other reason whatever
that Onassis married John F. Kennedy's
widow, Jacqueline. He (Onassis) says the
... . ' more the name. of Onassis ls repeated.;
the more frequently one will use t1r\
services of his ships," the article said. , :
The article said Onassis married ¥•
f.irst wife with business In mind. .i :
"To consolidate hiS position In tne:
world or big ship owners, Onassis ma"r!
ried the younger daughter of the Greek
millionaire, Stavros Livanos, whose sister
wai married to (shipbuilder) stavroi
Niilrchos," Vodnistransport Slid.
"In this way Onassis killed two birds
with one_s_tane. H~ stopped a compeUUom
'llfjlt and he got an unlimited credit."
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VAlUABlE COUPON
STEREO
HEADPHONES
..
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One Dres,
2'nd Hit •
By S.niper
.'JIZLF AS!', Northern Ireland (UPI) -
A ~per "ho fired only two lhots killed
oDe. 'Brlti!b aoldier and atriously wounded
another today in the Roman Catholic
Short Strand uea of East Beilul, the
army said.
The two sol~ier1, who were not iden-
tified, were believed to ~ave been in or
near an observation pott~ a bus at.atlon
when the ahota rang out, an ll'll3Y
apokesman uid.
·~unfortunately, it wl! utremely good
shootiJli," he added.
'The soldier we the 37th to die In
NOrtbern Ireland thiJ year and the first
Mince another died a week ago in Lon-
ck>nderry. A total of J27 persons has died Ii fighting involvine Catholics, }>rotes·
~ and British troops. J Earlier today, a mob angered by an
~ verdict in lhe British Army shooting
of 1.deef mute went on a ramP,ilge 1n the
birder town of Slra bane. ~ the crowd of 200 persons stoned
~ps. smashed windows and looted
sl>res, three bombs destroyed or heavily
~aged-a-libraryr bus depot_and (U
&iition, the spokesman said.
. \'ln Belfast, troops acting on intelligence
U!formatlon seized 23 persons in Roman
dlthollc areas during the night but later
rj!eased 7$ of them, an army opokesman
lold.
;,>olict in London r1ided an empty 1tore
@d arnsted four men and a girl and
.i.tz.ed 11 rifles, three automatics .and 56 ~s of ammunition. ThLleteetlves
•re invesf,igaUng Saor Eire, a splinter
• pyup of the provisional wing of the Irish
!epubllcan Army, police sources said.
~ltbe mob action in Strabane, a Roman
C).tholic town 14 miles south of Lon-
41?nderry, came after a coroner's inquest
tednesdly returned an open verdict In
August &hooting of E a m on n
Devitt, 24, a deaf mute.
1-.An open verdict means a coroner'• in·
ilest has been unable to find criminal
lib.me for a death and cannot recqmmend
ptoseculion.
-~ct>evitt was killed by a trooper who
iaid he saw him carrying a gun.
tiestdents said McDivitt did not know
llDw to use a gun and was only waving a
~ed rubber bullet.
1--Police and troops finally succeeded In fsperabli the Strabane crowds In tho
·ar1y morning houri, the a r m y
9okesman said. ... )'In Londonderry, a 14-year~ld boy hit IJl a bullet fttm what the army said was
4• anipu'I machine-gun Wednesday re-
malned bospltal.lz.ed in serious condition. *'>i>ert Canninr WU looking throuab a
S.escope when hit, witnwes said. .
,fl'be sboollng was followed by sporadic
rioting.
U.S. Recesses
Vietnam Talks -
PARIS (UPI) -U.S. Ambassador
'Jilliam J. Porter cut short today's
&ession of the: Vietnam peact talks after
tf:Uing the Communilta the United States lits "nothing further to say" until It
rtceives what he called a "constructive
r1ply" to American proposals.
'Porter, in an abrupt switch in
~erican tactics coinciding with the
rt:turn of chief Hanoi negotiator Xuan
Tbuy read a 23-word statement. then sat
back and listened to the usual Viet Cong
and North Vietnamese diatribes Against
President NiJ:on's VietJl&mese poUlics.
When they had finished atl8cking Ni:r4
en's Friday statements on more troop
withdrawals, Porter slated :
"There is nothing new in your
statements today. You are using the
same stale material I have heard since
my arrival bert. I hAve no further com·
mtnt and propose adjournment."
Porter than proposed that the 137lh
le6Sion be postponed until Dec. 2. because
of the American Thanksgiving holiday
next Thursday and "to give you time to
reflect on your position." The Communist
iide agreed 111d the negotiating teanui
left th< cbunber.
UP'I T1lePl!flO
Th1&e Uut
Gov. Ronald Reagan or Cali·
fornia checks out an Indiana·
polis 500 racer on display at
the Republic;;..n Governors Con·
ference being hP.ld in French
Lick, Ind.
Rare Books Stole1,1 .
DA VIS (UPI) -Two sets of rare
botanical books datlng back to 1787 have
been stolen from the library of the
University of California at Davis.
Librarian J. Richard' B 1 an ch a rd
Wednesday said the $4,500 thefl was iden-
tical to a similar robbery at the
California Academy of Sciences in S&'9i
Francisco Wt week.
•
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' Teaclaer Looplaofe1
To Hear
Output Rises,
U.S .. Pleased
WASHfNCTON (~PI) -'11le
nation'• output of goods • n d
aervices grew at a sUghUy greater
rate than the government had
predicted during the July to
Septembtr quarter, while inflaUon arew at a all&htly slawer rate than
Pay Board Firm
President ·On Retroactivity
• pr.dieted. -MLUll BEACH (AP) -AFL-CIO Today's Commerce Department Frem Wire D11patcbe1 this week, however, that lhe board hu
President Geor.1• Meany announced to-reports 00 the Gross National W~HINGTON -The Pay Board his railed to reach a deci!ion on excepUons to
In d . t 11 k b Its b Jts retroactive pay ban. " day that Pruident Nixon will 1peak to Product and the llation rate were voted a secon hme o 1 c y ari · g n f t•-, •-~ I • f ,___ The Pay Board called the mine worken the bi.. labor federation'• con. vention, encouragm ews or nc a.... a1a11~~ retroact ve paymen~ o ral6Q ,. · · trati and sofl coal aperators to talk about -where union leaders sharply attacked DUJUS on. held up by the wage-price freeze. and perhaps to offer·justifi'ca"ooa for _ The GNP was put at a seasonally w new federal wage controls. ad justed aMual rate of Sl,06l But 1 source close to the board said their new 10 ·percent pay increase COD<
Meany who said Nixon's economic con-billion, up $17.8 billion foom these-there.still is a posslblUty that some ex· tract.
trols threaten the future cf the nation's cond quarter and $1.8 b.lllion more ceptions to the general ban would be Nine members of the 15-member panel
economy, sald Nixon would speak to the than the government anticipated. made -perhaps one covering the na· voted Wednesday to review the pact
The rate of inflation for tile third Uon's 2.2 million teachers. which was slgned Saturday alter a '8-day
l,000 labor del~gates Friday mo~~·,..10 ,Qll&rter wu put at !.O percent. It Aspects cf the back pay lss~ were on strike in the nation's soft coal fields. A
The invitation came as ru s.r.... originally bad been projected at 3.4 the agenda again for the board's meeting Pay Board spokesman stressed that the
leaders, charging efforts to harass labor per«nl today, after an appearance by officials of contract wu not belng challenged and
member 1 of. President Nilon'.s Pay _ the United ~fine Workers Union and the that the principa]s in the contract simply
Boord, reportedly will urge coiiventlon Bituminous Coal Operators Of America. were being invited to talk about the
delegates representing nearly l4 million The five tabor members of the· lS-mem· agreement.
union. members today· to fight federal Torture. Toys B "nneJ ber Pay Board tried during Wednesday's But the contract calls for a 11)-percent a U four-hour meeting. to get the panel to or more increase for some 80,000 miners
wage controls in the courts and Congress. reverse its earlier general ban against during the first year, compared · with the
But they will keep their men on the Pay SACRAMENTO (UPI) T h e back pay that fell due during the freeze board's official 5.5 percent guideline. Ac·
Board. California Se.nate without debat~ has but was not paid becaµse of it. But the cording to a management spokesman,'lhe
"There Is no question that the 10 public. passed a bill outlawing toys designed to move IOllt on a 9 to 5 vote, with the five increase over a three-year period would
and industry members are trying to depict torture er resemble a bomb or labor members voting for it and 9 or the be about 39 percent.
sandbag the labor members . . . it is hand grenade. public and business sector members Negotiators for the contract cd'ntend it
harassment in an attempt to discouraa:e The measure by Assemblyman John J. voting against it. Chairman Geo_rge H. is an existing contract for Phase n
us and force us to walk out, but we Burton (O.San Francisco ). was sent Wed-Boldt does not vote except to break ties. because it was signed 15 minutes before
won't," said a source in a private AFL-nesda y on a 24-2 vote to the Assembly for The sourre said the retroactive pay the 91}.day wage and price freeze ended.
CJO strategy meeting. concurrence in amendments. Republican question still is alive on a piecemeal Despite the agreement, s e v e r a J
He said the harassment is aimed at Sens. H. L. Richardson of Arcadia and basis -such as the teachers question, thousand miners umained aff the job too
blaming labor for any failure of wage Clark L. Bradley of San Jose cast the and perhaps the issue of merit pay day in western Pennsylvania and
controls. dissenting votes. raises. Wednesday was the second da y northern West Virglnia.
The federation's 35-man executive 1-----'-----------------"---------'-------_;;~~----
council reached a consensus decision at
the meeting to recommend the legal and
legislative fight against wage controls for
approval by 1,000 AFL-CIO convention
delegates.
"We are going to ao teeat and
legislative-that's the route we are going
to take, but we won't get off the board,"
one source said.
Sources added that the three AFL-CIO
members on the Pay Board, including
President George Meany of the labor
federation, expe<:t the two other labor
members to take the same position. The
· two are Presidents Frank E. Fitzsim-
mons of the Teamsters and Leonard
Woodcock of the United Auto Workers
whose unions do not belong to the AFL-
CfO.
There are five member• each for labor,
industry and the public an the board.
,.
' Our plants are greener.
Penneys Garden Shops.
lndoorplantapeclals. Varieties Include:
Philodendron, Ivy, Peperomla. Dwarf Palm
and Dwarf Fem. In 2·1/4"pots.
•
Thai Strongman Says
China Factor in Move
·3 for 77~
BANGKOK (APl -Premier 'l'blnom
KiUikachorn laid today lhaf ... fictor
which prompted the rretum to full
military dictatorship in Thailand was a
fear that Peking'• entry into the United
Nations would swing the Cblnese in the
country to communism. ·
Speaking to a meeting of 154 seni~r
government orficials, the leader of the
military clique that has ruled Tha iland
for years sild the government is un-
certain what effect Red C h in a ' s
diplomatic victory would have on the
three million Chinese in Thailand ., · ..
"U the Chinese take the Communist
ideology in 1reat numbers," he CQn·
International Meet
On Finance Set
WASHINGTON (AP) -Treasury
Secretary John B. Connally called top
finance officers of the major non-Com·
munist countries to a Nov. ~Dec. 1
meeting in Rome to discuss the in·
ternalional monetary impasse.
The meeting of the so-called "Grou p of
10" finance ministers had been ten-
tatively scheduled a week earlier. but
y,·as postponed when the United States
said more time for preparation was need--
ed .
Connally, who is chairman of the Group
of 10 ministers, bas just returned from a
trip to Japan 1n which he discu&aecl
monetary and trade matters.
tinUed, "the situation in the country cou14
be tunnoll because It wlll agravat< the
existing terrorist infiltration that exists
in every part of the country."
Events had reached a point that re·
quired "quick, drastic and absolute
measures," Thanom declared.
The measures taken Wednesday in-
cluded suspension of the constitution pro-
claimed three years ago, dismissal of the
tw~year-old Parliament and the Cabinet.
and creation of a Revolutionary Cauncil
made up of five men who have been
running Thailand since Field Marshal
Sarit Thanarat died in 1963.
Meanwhile, life went on as usual in
Bangkok, and the reaction of the average
Thai to the end cf the experiment in
democracy was the usual Thai respo11se
when something doesn't work out, "1'1ai
pen rai," or never mind.
"This is not an event that will bring the
people into the streets," said Foreign
Minister Thanat Khoman , who lost his
job with the rest of'tbe cabinet.
Rights 'Violated'
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)
filed an appellate court petition \Ved·
nesday saying slrinj;ent courtroom
security measures violated the rights of
tbe "Soledad Brothers" to a public trial.
The ACLU asked the appellate court to
ease restrictions imposed by Superior
Judge s. Lee Vavuris at the trial of P'leita Drumgo and John Clutchetle,
charged with the killing of SOledad prison
guard Joho V. MU!s lost yeu.
69~ ea.
Black Magic African
Violet mix. Contalris
no ooil ••• add only
water.2qt.size. 1
105 ea.
Special. Azalea
plants, Choose
from assorted
colors, and plant
them in the shade.
99~pkg.
Late Fall Crocus bulbs.
Chooee Velvet King,
Snow S!orm and
Mammoth Yellow. 15 to a package.
99~ea.
Special. African
Violets. It grows
with minimum of
care. In full light
It's Cool • Ill Wyoming: -6
Hardy plants
growing In one
gallon containers.
but not strong
aunllghl Asaortad
varieties and
colors. 4" POIS.
Snow Hits Midlands; Eas Skies Fair
C-•tal
~I' JeMy. Llllll ¥1rltllot1 w!N11
....,.,. 11!1111 • -111111 Plot.Ir• bti«lmlrl• tll/fP!Wflf t le U •t1th 111
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f1rlv flll>"ft/!'11 ltf!lfltfllWti lto'lfflf
l•Ofl'I I MltW llffl II •l·"lllifll. Wft.-M n f l •-•vKlf. ,, ..
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Temperllture•
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Sequoia decorative bark.
Attractive beneflclal ground
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Modlum.coarse,11nd 1 88 pathway. 3 cu. ft. bag.
Hummingbird feeder.
Lifelike plastic Gloxinla
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contains: planting dish,
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ShoP Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at tliefollowlng stores:
NEWPORT BEACH, f.,hion liltnd
Charge Ill
I
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Ne rt Beaeh
EDITION N.Y. Stoelul
. voe 64, NO. 276, ) SECTIONS, 41 PAGES .. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, NQVEllAIE~ l.1, 197f
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Newport, Mesa Should Coo-per ate-Rogers
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of tilt D•IY Plllf 1!1N
Newport Beach Vice Mayor Howard
t\Oger1 said th.ls morning he wants to see
closer Ues with Costa Mesa and said that
unity should extend to cooperation
between the two cities' pollce and fire
departments. '
Rogers, in a talk be(ore the Citizens'
Harbor Area Research Team (CHART)
of Costa Mesa, also predicted that one of
the hottest issues Jn his home town -
high rise -will be decided by a referen~
dum.
U.S. Fea1·s
Cambodian
Collapse
SAIGON (UPI) -Military sources in
Saigon said tonight the military situation
in Cambodia has grown so se rious that
Gen. Creighton ~ Abram s. the U.S.
commander in.Yietnam, had discussf'd it
,Vlth top South. Victnantese leaders.
UPI dispatchrs from Phnom Penh said
Cambodian troops batlling ele1nenls of a
North Vietnamese Division only II miles
from Phnom Penh were an1bu shed today
and Jost five killed and 50 wounded. The
Cambodians withdrew from the trap and
Cambodian T'l8 bomllf'rg hit the area
with napalm.
Several major Communist units were
reported moving toward Phnom Penh but
UPI correspondent Kate Webb reported
from the Cambodian capital it was
BJnetally believed the North Vietnamese
and K ~mer Roug (Cambodian Com·
mun ists) were trying to isolate the city
and cause panic rather than capture it
outright.
:Photographer Don Sharpe, who free-
IMces for UPI, was with the Cambodian
aoldiers ambushed today, He said the 41st
infantry battalion walked into an open
tree line and ran Into automatic weapon
and mortar fire that pinned the force
down for two hours.
He said.the T28s came In and triggered
an e1plo!\ion in the nearby village of
Pbum Svay. indicating that munilion
atores had been destroyed.
The Communists have concentrated
their e.f!orts against airfields, highways.
bridges and ferry crossings to try to
Isolate Phnom Penh. The Cambodian high
command reported another rocket at-
tack in 24 hours against the ferry cross.
ing town of Neak Luong. where Highll'P.Y
1 front Saigon reaches the Mekong river.
Cambodia also reported fight ing at
Prey Veng, %7 miles east of Phnom Penh,
1t Bad.aeng, 15 miles to the southwest,
and on Highway 6, 60 miles north of the
capital.
In Vietnam, North Vietnamese mortar
teams battered two American outposts
near the Demilitarized Zone and U.S.
planes struck inside North Vietnam and
in the western sector ar the D~lZ to try
to choke off the Oow of Communist sup-
pies along the Ho Chi Minh trail.
Gas Tax Seen
For Bike Paths
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gasoline tax
money can be used to build bicycle paths
under a bill signed into law by Acting
Gov·. Ed Reinecke.
The measure, signed Wednesday,
categorizes bike paths as a safety feature
which raise the carrying capacity of a
transportation corridor.
Author of the bill. Sen. Arlen Gregorio
(0-San Pi-1ateoi. said the law gives bike
paths the same chance at stale high,vay
funds as exists now for railroad crossings
and livestock trails.
China Sets Off
Nuclear Blnst
I • WASHINGTON (AP) -The
• United Stales announced today that
Communist China had set off a nu-
clear expl011iMI in the atmosphere
Wednesday at 10 p.m. PST -the
first nuclear test by that country
since Oct. 14, 1970.
The Atomic Ener,RY Commission
• said the lest -conducted in the
, vicinity of Lop Nor. in western
China. had an explosive yte td
equiva lent to aboul 20.000 tons Of
TNT, the same size as the pr imi·
1ive atomic bomb dropptd on Hiro-
ahlma by the United States.
The la:teal test brought to 12 the
number of atlinese lHls announced
by the United States, including 11
In the •tm011phere, ont under·
IJ'OURd.
•
Costa Mesa City Councilman William
St. Clair, in the audience for the talk,
said the Cost.a Mesa Fire Department is
al~y lookjng into the possibUity of the
two cities building a joint fire station
near Orange County Airport.
Rogers agreed "ii woold be rkHcutous"
if-the two cities both built ·separate new
facilities in that area as now planned.
"We've ·got to do SOl'Jlethlng to try to
put it together," Rogers said.
.He predicted Newp<irt Reach would
start investigating the possibility when it
gets a new fire chief next year. Fire
I -·
Chief R. J. Briscoe will retire Dec. 31.
In the general areas Of police and fire
protection, Rogers said, "I see no reason
why wt couldn't get into cooperative
agreements."
Rogers turned what was expected to be
a lighthearted talk into a serious ·
discussiODt ranging over a number of
topics. .
He also said:
-Upper Newport Bay shoo.Id become a
national Wildlife preserve and Costa
Mesa should. help apply the pressure to
make it one. ·
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DAILY PILOT 11111 PM I•
Rummaging Around
Eager sale goers wait for dOOrs of Newport 1-Iarbor Art 11-1useum to
open for museum's annual rummage sale, the Bon Marcbe. Today's
sale, which continues through 7 p.m. at the museum on Newport
Boulevard in McFadden Square, is a fundr.aiser for the art gallery.
Last year, volunteers raised more than $30,000 for the museum
through the one-day sale.
Planne1·s t.o Hear Emkay's
Request to Revise Plans
Newport Beach p I a n n i n g com-
missioners tonight will conduct a public
hearing on a request by the Emkay
Development Company to revise portions
of its Newport Project.
The commission meets at 7:30 p.m. In
City llall to con1dder Emkay's proposed
amendments to the land use plan and
development standards in the project
northerly of Bristol street between
Ma:<:Arthur .Boulevard"in<! Birch Street.
Emkay ha!I made minor modifications
of its ofiglnal plam to change 1 few
roads to cul-de·aac!I and eliminate or
redesign other roods, hoping to improve
trarfic circulation.
is only a fir st step and no de velopment
has begun.
Commissioners will also consider a re-
ques t by the Irvine Company to subdivide
4i.3 acres into 109 si ngle-family lots on
Big Canyon Drive. The request includes a
2.3 acre private park site.
ln other matters the commiSsion will : ·
-Conduct a public hearing on a request
to permit a marine fueling racilily at 705
East Edgewater adjacent to T h e
Pavilion by the ·Seafarer's' Safety and
Service Club of Newport Beach.
-Conduct a public l)earing on a request
by George Koteles and Associates of
Newport Beach to construct an eight-unit
apartment on 6.15(1 square• feet where
regulations cequire 6,400 squart. feet at
1606 and 1608 W. Ocean Front.
-Orange County should build a new
airport and Cosla Mesa should help that
happen, too.
-The structure of .the, California
Highway Commi,.,io'! should be changed
so there ls "more public accountability."
~sta Mesa Councilman William St.
Clair'! idea to route the Pacific Coast
Freeway around Newport Beach via the
Newport and Corona del Mar Freeways is
• a good one.
-He is not "anti-Irvine Company" and
thinks Newport Beach is better oil to$y
because of the land development com-
pany than It would have been without it.
He did predict the pubJlc will inslst on
more control over the firm 's future
developments, however.
"I'd like to see What Newport Beach
-would be like without the planning of
• Irvine Company -without their tremen-
dous planning in the past," Rogers said,
"But," he said, "in the past we have
not 'had the experts to deal with them.
We're going to be at loggerheads now
because we do have the e:s:pe/ts In-house.
"And, there's going to be conflict from
the citizens, themselves.
"The last guy into town wants to build
the wall, He hates 'to set the b1lls
developed," tiie councilman abserved.
RQgers said be didn't know &w
Newport Beach would cope with cieveIO,:
ment problems if. fedenll legiJlatioD
fore~ the Irv\ne Foundation lo liquidate
much of its assets and the company ls
forced to sell off much ot the ranch. ·
"We're aware of the problem, but we
haven't done anything specific about it.''
he said,
Noise Woes Aired
Apartments Nixed; Homes Okayed
By JACK BROBACK
Of t111 D•llY l'llolt 11111
Jet aircraft noise problems dominated
two hearings before the Orange County
Board of Supervisors Wednesday with
dlfr~ring decisions resulting on building
pro1ects.
Denied by a 4 to 1 vote was an appeal
to a ruling of County Zoning Adminislra·
tor Ray Reed which, if granted, would
ha ve allowed the CQllStruction of a 26-unit
apartment complex in the Upper Newport
Three Irvine
Candidates
.1
Run as Team
Three of lhe !2 candidates seeking eJec.
lion to the Irvine city council In the Dec.
21 cltyhood ballot have announced they
will run as a team.
The slate, entlorsed by the Committee
to Elect an Independent Irvine City
Council, includes lfenry Quigley, "'-Ian
Snodgrass and Wayne Clark.
The committee announcing the slate is
CQ-('haired by Dr. Cecil Hoffman and
f.irs. Norrisa Brandt. ••\Ve believe the
voters in Irvine do not wa11t extremisl!I
on either side to represent them on the
city cooncil," they said.
Quigley, no relation to another can-
didate with the same la st name. was
president of the Ranch Homeowners
Association, treasurer of the Council of
Communities of Irvine (CCI) and
treasurer of the Irvine Council for
Education (ICE).
Quigley who ls an investment counsel-
or. is one of four candidates receivin& the
endorsement or the ICE membership.
Snodgrass a businessman, is past presi-
dent or the Turtle Jtock • Broadmoor
llomeowners Association, was charter
vice chairman of CCI, and with Quigley
was "among the first three signers of the
Irvine lflcorporalion petition," Dr. Hoff.
man said.
Clark. a public Information officer for
UC Irvine, has been twice president of
the University Park Elementary School
Parent-Teacher Association and was
founding chairman of lCE,
The trio is running on a "moderate, in·
dependent" platform in support of Irvine
cityhood and a tax rate frozen at a level
no higher than "the e:dsllng average of
county service area taxing districts."
Bay area near the takeoff pattern of the
Orange County Airport.
Approved by 11. narrow 3 to 2 margin
was a Planning Commission recom~
mendation that single family home ca~·
struction be allowed on 25 acres in the
Central Irvine Ranch area just south of
the Santa Ana Freeway In the area
between the Marine Corps' El Toro and
Santa Ana air stations.
Developer Richard Jordan of Newport
Beach lost his bid to build the apartments
on property on the east 1ide of !Urch
Street, 400 feel south of Palisade• Road
in the Santa Ana Heights area,
Zoning administrator Reed said be had
denied the variance permit because
Jordan wanted to double the number ol
ai)artments allowed under the present ~
4 zoni ng. He also noted that the property
was just outside lhe takeoff pattern of
the county airport.
Fifth District Supervisor Ron a 1 d
(See NOISE, Page 2)
* * * * * * Body Overruled
Zon.er Approves Private School
The Orange County Airport Land Use
Cammission (ALUC), a loser in most bat-
tles during its short existence, lost
another one this week.
Coonly 7.onlng Administrator Ray
Reed approved construction oC 11 private
school in the Santa Ana Heights area
which the commi ssion had opposed.
Reed issued a permit which allows the
American Christian School Association to
build an elementary school at the
northwest earner a( Irvine Avenue and
Universit'y Drive.
Commission members had objected to
the proposal because of the high noise
level Jn the area caused by plane1 from
the nearby Orange County Airport.
Reed disagreed with the ALUC
members pointing to the several public
schools in the area. He did stipulate that
the school constructio11 must include
sound deadening materials.
Oceata Sewage Discharge
Cou11ty Sanitation Units
U1·ging .Delay on Control
Representatives of lhe Orange County
Joint Sanitation Districts toda y urged the
slate to poslpone new controls on the
discharge of sewage into the ocean,
Fow1tai n Valley Mayor Ed Just,
chairman of the joint boards, and Fred
Harper, general manager of the sanita·
lion districts, both attended a hearing on
the proposed new standards in Son
Rafael.
The cities of Newport Beach and Hun-
tington Beach have supported the sanita·
lion district's stand in requesting a delay
in implemcntatlon of the strict standards
until more research is completed.
Objection!! are based on the cost of put-
ting the requirements into effect and a
reported lack of knowledge that the
restrictions will be effective.
The propo sed policy of the state Water
Resources Control Board would prohibit
the discharge of toxic wastes or solids in·
to the ocean. Treated efRuent ls currently
pumped into the ocean two miles off Hun-
tington Beach.
The sanitation districts are asking the
state board to postpone the controls unUl
a $1.l million sludy by the Scuthem
California. Coastal Water Research Proo
ject is completed. The three-year study lJ
expected to be finished nexl summer.
Just told the state board today that the
county sanitation districts are engaged ln
a $96.5 million canstruction program, and
ii the new discharge policy is put into el·
feet the county sanitation districts would
be faced with an additional $65 million
capital outlay.
It has been estimated that the districts'
sverage countywide tax rate of 47 cent.I
would climb to $1.16 as a mult of the
new policy, Just said.
"We believe that discharge restrictionl
or effluent standards must be bas~ in
(See SANITATION, Page!)
Oruge Two restalirants · have beell ' moved
rmm interior !lites to areas adjacent to
Afact\rthur Boulevard ror greater visibili-
ty from the larger street.
A major revision ls the addition of a
four acre storage facility for new car in·
ventory on industrial property adjacent
to four proposed automobile centers.
'Muzzling' Sparks Furo·r Weather
Low clouds and fog wlll engulf
the Southland Friday, clearing by
mid-day to sunny skies. Tempera·
lures will reach 65 at the beaches,
rising to· 73 inland. Lows tonlgbt
35-45 •
. Subj~t to a use permit, the ra c.ilily
would serve both domestic and foreign
car dealers.
City planning staff has recommended
approval of Emkay's changes and of a
second requem for the subdivision of l&f.6
project acres Into five industrial and 17
commercial lob.
Emkay officials have said that the re-
quest for subdivision al "Newport Place''
Ski Equipment, Bike
Stolen in New port
A Newport Beach film technician
aoUCied police Wednesday that burglar
had stolen nearly $1,00J worth or sp<>rting
goods from his garage.
Kenneth Storti, or 4161 Hilaria w·a r I said the loss included a1&0rted ski equ1p-
menL.aod a~raclnf; bicycle.
lrvi1ie Civic Leader Demands Retraction, Eyes Sui~·
• .
An Irvine homeowners' association
preside-nt accused of muuling arguments
against iocorporation at a recent meeting
of his organization said today he 'll de-
mand a retraction or else he'll sue the
person w~ made the accusation.
-The munling charge came In a
prepared statement Wednesday from
Mrs. Johnnie Adams, press chairman of
Forum Against Cityhood Today (FACT)
who said:
"A recent annual meeting o{ the Turtle
Rock Hills Association positively ex-
cluded, by virtue of a decision by it.s
president, Bill Littlefield, a chance for
opposition to be turd regarding a
discussion or taxation.
"The taxation presentaUnn was madt
by clly cowx:il candidate Jerry CboY.ke, a
member al City of Irvine Now (COIN),
apparently considered by the oUicers of
the association an authority on taxation
of the proposed city. No opposing com-
ment was permltt4d on the .oUiclal pro-
gram."
''IE you print that, I'll sue her,'' came
the initial response from Littlefield, who
later added that he'd demand a retrac-
tion Orsi. ,, · •
He contendett· ,he statement was
a-misleading" and eiplained tbat the pro-
gram had been aet up before Choyke had
even announced his candidacy and
couldn't have been chringed.
LlttlefieJd aald Choyke had been chosen
l!I the speaker because he had aerved on
the ta1atlon panel or the Cooncil of the
COmmunlllu ol lrVlne,
He al&O said Mn. Adams, who was
present at the meeting, had been offered
I.he chance to ask questions.
"We told her she was free to ask ques-
tions and to pass out her literature but
she sat there silently. She passed out
nothing."
UtUtfield aC'Cllsed Mrs. Adams of
"creating ·100 much trouble about this
thing" and sakl "J don't see why she
wanl!I to make a personal attack agalMt
a member of her own assoclaUo'n," -
In her formal statement, Mr1. Adams
also criticized community associations Jn
general fol' devoting too mU<::h attention
to candidates and loo Utt.le to the queaUon
of incorporation. r
11-The fact that the ballot, accordln& t~
(llee MUZZLE, Pap I)
•
INSIDE TODAY
A top Sant4 Barbar4 Sh.eriff'•
aidt wa& }ired Wednesdau for '
hil unwual dUplov of weaPont
during tasi year'• Isla Vilt.a riot-
in(l.._ For' storu and piciurt, 1e1
Pagt 11 .
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DAILY PILOT PhOltl ~t Lt t 1'1rn1
NEWPORT HARBOR HIGH COEDS CARRIE FOSTER (LEFT) AND KATHY COHAN TRY OUT THE NEW AND THE OLD AT MODERN COMMUNICATIONS fAIR
On Campus Tod ay, Picturephones, Lasers That Transmit Voices, 3·D Photography, • Talking Computer and 1,000-Word·•Minute Teletypewriters ~~~~~~~~~~~--'---~_:c'------"-
B IQs Alleged
County j}fex~a1i Aides
,Stamp Pair
Face Dec. I
Ai_r Hiring Grievances
County employes of A1exican descent
1 will _hold their second general· meeting at
.7:30 o'clock tonight in the new County
• <;ou~us_e • to discuss grievances over
alleged· discrimination in county hiring
and promotional practices. ·
The Mexican. American employes first
met two ·months ago and art er several
; sessions decided that an organization was
l 'ro... rage 1
··NOISE ...
Caspers-of Newport Beach pointled out
that JneJ P'Ople in that aame area were
IUiag,t.bt COWfY over--airpo"rt jet-noise.
needed to deal "'ith their problems. The
group has selected Adelante, or Forward,
as their name.
They have formed the organization for
reasons that include:
-A di sproportionately low number of
employes in county service of ~tex:iean
descent as compared with the racial
dis tribution of county population.
-Selection practices v.·hich admittedly
screen out minority job applicants.
-Promotional practices which ap-
parently-figures suggest -screen out
employes of A-1exican descent.
-A-complaint that there is insensitivity '
and ,rejection by some county officials
and other groups: "It is exasperating to me to wresUe
witk airport problems like the ~ · r.... !Jiel\ as9'j)P.i ·•. £~Pu e I·
the area m question, Caspers sa1 . ' •
~-oi't,.. . , N ~J t-<• ,rf1"1-
"This board has to meet these things SA IT A Tl 0 N • •• bead on and deny suc;h permits." .
· Jordan argue4 th"at the area ·w·u ·
destined_to:lie_Wi1t to~a heavy density_.,.
"Why t:t.it]c' oh -'one _small parCel~..,, 'he~
questioried. -· ·• ' • 1
CasperS said he agreed-the area was
the proP,er pla~ for apartment~ but for
the fa ct tJiat the airport· was nearby. .
The central Irvine Ranch rezone from
agricullµfft-1 tQ .RS:-6000 (singli; family
resident!all use was next for jet sound
treatment •
Thom«WilliaMs.Tepre'stl'iliffg Presley
Develo pment Company of N e w p o r t
Beach, saitt all purchasers would be ad-
vised of tht jet flii:li1s from the two
nearby MariDe Corps stations and that
the homes would be sound proofed.
Caspers argued that the board was
"approaching the problem the wrong way
in requiring sound proofing of structures
in flight zones.
"We should get. rid of the source -the
Mai:ine stations "should be moved," he
said. "But it is not up to us to get them to
move. It should be up to the developers
and landowners. We should refuse to
allow peop~ to live under the noisy
flight paths."
oo.N•I COAST
DAILY PILOT
.,._ O»Sf PUIU'SHlfO CflMP,.,,
a.~N.W_. ,.,..,, .... .......
J1c\: L C1,111•T
Yk9 ,....._,Mill Gm1«1I M.,....
n...-Ko.,.il -1Jlew11s A. fiorr>liio•
~olll l!:dl!OI'
L P•t.t Kri•f fil.-,.ort 8M<h C:Jty EllW
N .. ,..-t h«k Offk•
3JJl Newp•tf loul'"'~
Mair.e, .Y~r•••: P.O. l ox 11·11, t l66l
·fact on some me!surable improvements
\o the marine environment and re-
,quiremen ts should be modified from lime fy time when new changes and im-
provements are dictated by new scientific
, knowledge," Just said.
_.. He then said that the Southern
California coastal study might provide
such knowledge.
Representatives of the state board and
environmentalists have argued that ocean
ppllution might be too greal a problem to
solve if action is delayed until the pro-
blem is properly id entified and pointed
out that the state policy is being offered
as a more econon'lical alternative to
stringent fede ral controls already ap-•
proved by Congress.
1'he state board is to hold another hear-
ing on the proposed poliry in San Diego
Dec. 2. Robert Battin. chairman of the
county Board of Supervi sors, has told
sanitation directors he "'ill attend the
Dec. 2 hearing.
tt.sse ti1bl1' Hono•·
Hearings
Two men \vho authorities allege. financ-
ed their bide chip life by bilking the
Blue Chip Sl\mp Company of up to
$150.000 in recent months until arrested
in Newport Beach ha ve a day in court
coming up.
Preliminary hearing will be Dec. 1 in
Division 40, Los Angeles Municipal Court,
for the pair arraigned Tuesday on one
count each of grand theft by em-
beL:z\ement.
District attorney's investigator's accuse
Paul D. Warren, 45, and Donald L. Cook,
44, with bilking the stamp firm with
phoney merchandise orders that were
passed in August.
One approved by Cook, an $800-per-
month supervisoi: of the firm 's accounts
payable divlsiofl', wa!I allegedly made out
tn \\larren for $106;000 worth o( un-
d~\vered stamp prem}u'Vf;.._ ~
) !.Al'"ll§lltorl sai WllfNi JIU -~ trlmltlor 'radios, t8pe r~rd n-~ahd
other Far East import products for 10
years. with the stamp e-0mpany as almost
his sole custQmer.
•Us business was apparently ruined by
the West Coast dock strike, which tied up
incoming cargo.
Warren was fired from the company
when auditors matching the paid-out in-
voices to purchase orders aUthorizing the
two alleged transactions found none had
been issued.
Cook and Warren had been living
aboard the 55-foot yacht The Shan-
nandoah in high style and left Sausalito
eight days ago for Newport Harbor,
where police picked them up on war-
rants.
Investigators said the boat's title The
Shannandoah -a variation of the
Shenandoah River, is also that of his im-
port firm. The ShannandoeJ1 Company.
Bail was set at $50.000 for Warren and
$25.000 for Cook, who is a Lakewood resi-
dent althou gh each listed 'his address as
aboard the boat at" 829 Bayside Drive,
Ne11•port Beach.
•
. I • Dr. Glenn T. Seabor g 1righl), former i:Jw~an o[ lhe Atomic Energy
Co1nmission, admires a plaque given him -by the Assembly for his
scientific contribulion1", \Vlth Seaborg are Asserilblymen Robert E.
Badham Qefl ) o[ J\ewpor t Beach and Jack Fenton (D·Monlebello) •
. .
f
Gra~t Refusal 'Sho·ck!ng' '
County Medical Chief Cites Dan1ag e to VCI
Dr. Fred Kay, president of the Orange
County Medical Association, expressed
shock Wednesday when told that County
supervisors had rejected a $1 million
grant from the state to benefit UCI
Medical School facilities at the Orange
County Medical Center.
Under an agreement developed by
medical center officials and those of the
UCI school, the money was to have been
used to incrEase the quality of medical
training offered and to improve county
health services at the center.
Joining Dr. Kay In deploring the
board's action was Dr. Warren Bostick,
Dean of the UCI Medical S<;hool. He call~
ed the action a grave Joss to county
medical program!! for the needy.
Dr. Bostick said he would attempt to
gain another hearing before t b e
supervisors. , ,
He pointed out that if the money Is not
used here it will go to some other UC
camp~._ probably UC Davis which i!I
already slated to receive $1.5 million
from the $2.:. millloq aHocated by the
state legislature for medieal schools.
Dr. Kay emphasized that the board's
action will slow down development of
medical school facilities and hamper
UCI's ability to provide a program com·
parable to other-medical-schools in ihe
Fro111 rage 1
MUZZLE ...
California law, also includes a list of can-
didates to be elected to a city council, in
case incorporation is passed, is not the
real concern of the electioh," she said.
One of the 32 candidates in the race for
the five seats in the Dec. 21 eiection,
Julius Mazur, also talked about the in-
corpori~ion issue.
In l 1tatement released this morning,
Mazlll' •ccused the Irvine_ Company of
pushinglfor cityhood "so that it can con·
trol zoning."
He contended there are candidates the
Irvine Company is supporting and ir they
are elected "the firm will be able to call
the shots on land usage."
state.
"Overcrowding has forced th_e hospital
to use the basement for an outpatient
care clinic," Dr. Kay said. "This in-
adequate space was never intended for
this purpose."
The medical association leader accused
Paul White, executive assistant to Fifth
District Supervisor Ronald Caspers, o(
being the principal cause of the boacd'a
decision against the grant.
White, who also se rves as president of
the Orange County Health Planning
Council, has been an antagonist of the
medical association and the principal
cause of its reluctance to endorse the
health planning agency. White is known
as a strong advocate of privately-owned
community hospitals.
At the Tuesday board session before
Ille supervisors' action was taken Robert
White, medical center administration,
told board members that the agreement
covering the grant and fees to be charged
medical center patients able to pay by
UCI doctors bound the county for only the
current fiscal year.
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• Cos·ta Mesa
• ·• EDITION .
VO[ M, NO. 276, 3 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFOR~.(
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·THURSOAY;NOVEMIE~ II, lt71
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TedaY'1 FIUI
.TEN .aNTS
I .
Newport; Mesa Should Cooper ate-Rogers
By L. PET~R KRIEG
Of Ill• D1!1J l'l"I tt1ff
Newport Beach Vice J.1ayor Howard
Rogers said this morning he wants to see
closer ties with Costa Mesa and said that
unity 5hould -extend to cooperation
between the two· cities' police and fire
departments. ,
Rogers, in a talk before the Citizens'
Hlrbor Area Research Team !CHART I
of C.osta ll-lesa, also predict'ed that one of
the hottest issues in his home town -
high rise -will be decided by a referen-
dum.
Costa Mesa City Councilman William
St. Clair, in the audienCe for lhe talk,
sa id the Costa Mesa Fire Departmen·t is
already looking Into the possibility or the
two cities building a joint !ire station
near Orange County Airport.
Rogers agreed '·it ~·ould be ridiculous''
if the lwo ~ities both built separate new
facilities in that·area as now planned.
··We've got to do ~omel hing_ to try lo
put it logelher," Rogers said. .
He predicted Newport" Beach wou1d
start investigating the possibility when it
gets a new fire chief· next year. Fire
Chief R. J. Briscoe will retire Dec. 31.
In the general areas 0( police and fire
protection, Rogers said, "I see no reason
why we couldn't get into cooperative
agreements.''
Rogers turntd what was expected to be
a lighthearted ·talk Into a serious
discussion ranging over a number of
topi cs.
He also said:
-Upper Newport Bay shQuld become a
national wildlife pl'eserv6 and Costa
Mesa should'.help apply the pressure to
make it one.
Reds Building Up
Fighting Heavy Near Phnom Penli
SAIGON (UPI) -· ~1ilitary sOurces in
Saigon s;i.id tonight the military situation
in Cambodia has grown so serious that
Gen. Creighton \V. Abrams. the U.S.
commander in Vietnam . had discussed it
l\'ith top South Vietnamese leaders.
UPI dispatches from Phnom Penh said
Cambodian troops battling elements of a
North Vietnamese Division only 11 miles
from Phnom Penh were ambushed today
and lost five killed and 50 wounded . The
Cambodians withdrew from the trap and
Cambodian T28 bombers hit the area
with napalm.
Several major Communist units y.•ere
reported moving toward Phnom Penh but
UPI correspondent Kate Webb reported
from the Cambodian capital it was
Need a
g('nerauy believed.the North Vietname se
and I\ h 1n er ROttg (Cambodiari Com-
1nunists1 were 'tfyi ng to isolate the city
and cause panic ralher than capture it
outright.
Photographer Don Sharpe, who free-
lances for UPI. was with the Cambodia n
soldiers ambushed today. He said the 41st
infantry battalion walked into an open
tree line and ran into automatic weapon
and mortar fire that pinned the force
doi.1•n for l~'O. hours.
}le said the T'l8s came in and triggered
an explosion in the nearby \•illage of
Phum Svay. indicating that munition
stores had been destroyed.
The Communists have concentrated
theirfefforls against airfields, highways,
T . ·1 " 01 e(. ., " ' .. • 1, ·" •••. :
Bras Also Availcib'fe at Auction
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of !tie Diiiy P'l'-1 Siii!
Once every three n1onths, the Costa
Mesa Police Department condones,
gambling and that doesn 't mean they just _
look the ot her way.
They stage the event.
One never knows if he's bidding on a
bargain or not at the quarterly lost or
1tolen and unclai1ned property auction -
often he is -but a good guideline is the
old Roman slogan: Let the Buyer
Bey.•are.
Saturday al 10 a.m., the action bei:ins
again behind the police facility at 99 Fair
Drive and the old auction fevet ii; certain
to S\\'eep the cro\'1d as usual.
"People just go cra zy ," declares Sgt.
Ed Lovein, who is in charge of the
department's Technical Ser\' i c es
Di vision.
This means that among other duties. he
heads the lost and found office.
Do~·n through the yea rs. the unclai med
property sale held increasingly often as
the tov1n grew has become known the
Bike Auction.
"I've been messing with this since '62."
Ea ys Sgt. Lovein, puffing his worn briar
pipe and surveying an inventory V.'hich
includes much more than 65 bicycles.
Auctioneer Bob McPhe rson has on the
block for Saturday:
-A portable john.
-Surfboards.
-Pool cues.
-Lugga ge.
' -Kegged nails.
-A blowtorch.
-A commercial pie machine.
-T\\•enty pairs of sunglasses.
-Two new brassieres, still boxed.
"Cross Your Heart Brand, size 348,"
gays Sgt. Lovein.
"This 'geetar' came from a wetback
the patrol division picked up," he adds,
•trumming a few notes.
"But of course he hasn't come in to
!See AUCTION. Page %1
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llAILY P'ILOT sr111 .. ,,. ..
READY FDR AUCTION
CMPO's Sgt. Lovtin
bridges and ferry crossings to try lo
isolate Phnom Penh. The Cambodian higb
command reported anoU1er rocket at·
tack in 24 hours against the ferry croos.
ing town of Neak Luong. where Highway
l front Saigon reach ea the Mekong river.
Cambodia also reported fighting at
Prey Veng , 27 miles tast of Phnom Penh,
at Badaeng, 15 miles to the southwest,
and on llighway 6, 60 miles north of the
capital.
In Vietnam, North Vietnamese mortRr
teams battered two American outpo sts
near t'ht Demilitarized Zone and U.S.
planes struck ins ide No rth Vietnam and
in the western sector or the DMZ to try
to choke off the now of Communist 11up-
pies along the Ho Chi Minh trail.
Republican
Money ·Raiser
. --
Jumps Party
WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix-
on, already under fire from the
Republican right, took a broadside fr om
the party left today a., California fund·
raiser William 1'. King or Los Angeles
defected.
King, who said he has raised hundreds
of thousands of dollars for Nixon and
other GOP candidates, including Calif.
Gov. Ronald Reagan, said he is joining
the Democratic party and Y.'ill support
Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine for
president.
"If I "'ere to sum up in one word my
reason for supporting the senator from
~1aine as opposed to the President or the
United States. that one word would be
character," King said in a ne~·s con·
ference. '
"Mr. Muskie has ii," King said. "Mr.
Nixon does not."
The Los Angeles lawyer was Sou thern
Californi:i chairman of the Los Angeles
County Republican Jo~inance Committee in
1968, executive director of Californians
for Heagan in 1966, and h:is held other
posts in the party.
King s11id a long string of events led lo
his split with Nixon and the Republicans,
but said the "last straw" was the ten·
tative proposal by Nixon of Mildred Lillie
and !Ierschel Friday for the Supreme
Cou rt. Neither y,:as nominated 11fter the
American Bar Associ ation withheld en·
dorsement.
\Vhile King 's shift may be less
monumental than that or New York
J'l.1ayo r John V. Lindsay, who quit the
GOP on similar grounds, it ill more em-
barrassi ng to the party.
\Vhere11s Lindsay had been at odds with
the GOP for some time. King has been a
stalwart or the Nixon-GOP establishment.
·-0range County should bulld a new
airport and Costa Mella should help that
happen, too.
-The structure of the California
Highway Commission should be changed
so there ls ''mOre public aceounlabilily."
-Costa Mesa Councilman William St.
Clair's idfa to route the Pacific. Coast
Free\'( .. y around ·Newport Beach via the
Newpo~ and Corona, dCI Mar Freti-w.ays·is
a good one.
-He is not "anti·lrvine Company" and
thinks Newport BeaCh Is 'better off today
because of the l~nd develop1nent con...,
pany tha n it would have been without it.
He did predict the public will insist on
more rontrol over the firm '1 future
deYelopments, however.
"I'd like to see what Newport Beacfi
would be like withaut the plaMlng of
lr\'ine Company -without their tremen-
dous planning in the past," Rogers aaid.
"But," he saidi "in the past we have
not had the experus to deal with them:-
We're going ~o be at loggerheads now
because we do havE' the experts In-house.
"And, there's going to be conflict from'"
I .
Ch,iJd~~n t.,r :Sa,e .
the citizens, themselves.
"The Jut guy into town wanta:-to build
the wall. He hates to tee the ~
developed," the councilman observed.
Rogers said he didn't know' ho1r
Newport Beach would cope with dev~,
ment problems if federal legislation
forces the Irv~ne Foundation to _liquidate
much or its a~se!s and the company 1J
forced to sl!ll off much of the ranch ••
.. 'We're aware or the problem, but wt
haven't done anything specific abOul it,"
lie said.
•
UPI T~ .,
1 ... ,,,,. • ... , .Jactsonville. rn .. policlO'.·liergean~ 3. r.:· Suber Wks
with two yoUngsters' aUegedly,offered tor sale b.Y
two 'Oklahoma City 'men. Arrested ,wete William
O'Hara ind· Ro'bert Westenhaver. The children were
identified ·111 Butch Cox, 2, and Teresa. Cox, 3.
Fair Directors Agree
_To Studr_Site Lease
Directors of the Orange County F'iilr in
C.Osla Mesa agreed Wednesday night to
consider a.'lring-lerm lease for 34 acres of
(air land.
Cautious directors warned that their
decision to write specifications for a
recreation oriented lease does not mean a
"commitment but a survey."
It was admitted -lhat the long-term
lease idea was spurred by a proposal
made by Four Seasons Villages, Inc .. of
Newport Beach to build a $2D million in·
door recreational complex. Directors,
however, said they want lo see what
other proposals might al.so be made for
the land.
Robert W. Krone. vice president of the
fair boar<!, wan1ed hi s fellow direcfors
that leasing the land might be desirable,
but sellirig it wat1ld not.
Under a lease. the. money would be
turQed over to the Orange County F'air.
but profits from the sale of any state land
~o into !he state treasury. In either case
the stale general services department
will. handle the paper work for the fair at
no cost.
A spokesman for Four Seasons, Which
lndicales it would like to speed the pro-
. -cesii. was present bl.It.did not spe;;i,k.
The F'our _Seasons proposal includes
construction of a 500-room hotel, a 200-
room motel, two theaters,, f Iv e
restt1uranls , and about eight separate
sports act!·:ities.
Four Seasons ,offered the F'air Board a
trilnimum guarantee or $115,000 per year
••
for A SS·year lease on 3~ acres at
Fairview Road and Fair Drive.
'James Porterfield, general manager of
the fa ir. told directors that the state ls
now willing to allow long-term leases of
fair land up to 99 years.
"This renCctS a definite change in the .
slate's attitude over the past few
months,'' Porterfield reported .
Directors authorized Porterfield to talk
with officials from the general services
department to outline requirements of a
potentlal lease, so bids could be re-
quested . The primary guideline establish·
ed is that any issue be recreatlnnal in
nature "'hether or not it includes hotels.
Four Seasons: orficials have indicated
that the slowness of !he bidding process
-'Porlerfiefd estimates at least three
months -may eliminale the
fairgrounds site from their coni;ideralion
as the first in a nationwide chain or in-
door recreation complexes.
Th'ey have slated previously that even
lf the fairgrounds is not the prime site., it
might be the i;econd or third project they
w9uld build in the near future .
Funeral Service
For Auto Victim
Still ' Pending
.., '
Billiard Parlor
Gets Mcsa-6kay
With Conditions
-~-•
A controversial billiard parlor· license
was flnally granted this week by Costa
Mesa City Councilmen alter several
restrictions were placed on the operation.
Councilmen agreed Monday to allow a
billlard parlor at 117 E. 18th st., operated
by Mary J. Tyrrell, If the operation does
' not expand to a bar environinent.
The eily also forced Miss Tyrrell to e1·
pand her parking potential by signing a
lease with the owner of an adjaceitt va·
cant lot.
Even the expanded parking waa tied to
a restriction. Mayor Robert WU.son
demanded that construction or .tfie 'par-k-
ing be handled in such a maruier as to
avoid cutting down several tine old trees
on the vacant lot. • •
New Buck's a Buck
WASHINGTON (AP) -The ~"
Eisenhower dollar ls worth just 11, and
people should nol pay a preqtium for the
coin.s, the chairman of the House con-
sumer afralni subcommittee .Wd today.
Weather
Cliiria Sets Off
Nucle<11· Blast
Hush Settles on Mesa
Funeral services for a Costa Mesa area
trave l agent killed when her car slid into
a Laguna Hills JXll"er pole Tuesday night
were pending today, because her father
in Ohio is near death too.
Low clouds and fog will engulf
the Southland Friday) clearing by·
mid~~y to sunny skies. Tempe.rt•
lures will reach 65 at the beachu,·
rising to 73-inland. Lowa .tonight
3.1-4.1. -WASHINGTON (AP) -The
United States announCt'd today lhal
Communist China h:id set orf a nu-
C'1ear explosion in the at mospheN!
Wednesday at 10 p.m. PST -the
first nuclear test by that country
since---OCt.14, 1970. -The Atomic Ener~y Commission
1111id lhe test -conducted in 1he
vicinity of Lop Nor. in v.•es!ern
China. had an ernlosive viclrt
eq•rivt1J('n t to about 20.000 ton.s of
TNT. the s;ime S!71? as th<> pr'mi-
tiVt' atomic bomh rlr(lf'l'l~:I otl Hiro·
shi1"1 11 by !he t'ni l'rf ~· .. 1-s.
Th" Ja•rsl Irr-I brn1·~·11 tn ·12 tre
numbfr nf Chin"~~ lfJ;'~ arnn"·u·rof
by the. Uniled ~ 81~~. jn:'.1Adiri.11 11
In th~ atm o. jlhere. one under-
ground.
'
Anti-noise Ordinance Spreads to Otlier Cities
By TERRY COVILL£
Of Ills 0111' P'IMI $tllt
In 1964 the English recording group
Herm11n's.!..Hermils hit the top or th~p
record charts with a song th11t said :
"There's a kind of a hush all over the
~·orld."
In 1971 the. city of Costa ~!eSa is trying
to Qring .. a kind or a hush all over town"
wl'h Its new noise regul11tior1 ordinance..
'l'he lde:l is celchlng on in several cilie!I
""·re n"i!e pollution is bf?coming a lopic
a~ D'lf11tlar as air pnlluli~n.
"The pe,...ple or Costa t.1~a demanded
lhi.; ordl"::tnct'," tays ~1ayor Robert
\Vilson. ''Of all our problems. two com·
plaints are dominant, ooile and ~auty."
"They constantly complain 11botll nnise
from je.ls, sirens, helicopters, mini·bikes,
motorcycles and othe.r things," Wilson
adds.
Coste Mesas new ordinance, however,
can't cope with some of lht roniplaints.
Jet noise can't be controlled by the city.
Licensed vehicles moving on struts are
exempt from the city law, though there
are state regulations.
Freeway noise, found to he the hi11ge.~t
contribulor to noise pollution during the
cily'a study. can't be atopped , thou,qh the
realiution of its efft(!( might lead to
future preventive mesisures.
The new Qrdlnance can hit Industrial
1ound1 which lntrudt lnto residential
•
neighborhoods. ti can stop the cry of a
btby, the bark of a dog or the wail of a
loud stereo -if such noises are kept up
Cor mor~ than 1$ minutes.
It's basic purpose ts to s~p irrl[allon '
ahd protect the.hearing health of the city.
Otville Amburg"~ dir~ of city
commuhica,tions. conducted ' the sUrvey
which classified the sounds of the city
ahd divided Cbsta Mes~ into two no ise
z-Ones. lie made a number or discoveries.
Such a~:
-Tht polk:e , helicopter creatP.s less ,
noise lhen a car. Directly overbe.ad at 300
feel altitude the. chopper noise ls
measured at 78 d!efbela while a car
(ISee MESA NOISE, P•fe II ,
Relatives or Katherine Dormeyer, 38,
""ere ~eCiding today whal to do, ac-
eording to spokesmen for Smith 11nd
Tuthill Mortuary in Santa Ana.
A trip west is Impossible because the
aecldent victim's elderly father is in a
Cincinnati hospital following open heart
surgery, listed in crllical c:onditlon.
The Oorme)'er woman, o( 317 Un iversi-
ty Drive, In county territory near lipper
Newport Bay: was dead' on arrival at
Afisston Community Hospital, Mission
Viejo. ·
•She was drJving nOrthbound-on Valen-
cia A v~nue just south of Moulton
P11rkway at II :30 p.m. TuesdaY,. when her
com.pact car went out of control, sliding
brnadsidt into the pole.
Mortuary spokesmen 1aid her body
would e.lther be cremated here or &hipped
to Ohio where the e'ntlte family lives for
funeral 1ervicea tbert. • ..
. .
INSIDE TODAY
A rop Santa Barbara Sheriff'•
aide Ul(U /ired \Vedntsdou for
hU untUual dilplay of weapou
dUring lrut y1ar'1 l1l4 Vilta riot-
i11g. FQr 1"'t0rilind picture, 1e1
Paue 11.
l , M, ...... c.u,.,1111
C:IHlll'-' -·· c: ..... tWfff
0••1~ N1tlc•1
••IMrlfl .....
•11ttt"t11f11Mlll
• " .... • • • •
.. 11. •1 Pl11•~t .. ,.
""9M-H
• """ ""'"" n MtllM• ' ' MIM'I ... Lic-t
•
0.ULV l'ILOT . e
Yault Yields
• • ·Ton .of Pot
ToLaWll1an
.· ft)' ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of ,.,. Dllf'I ...... ,...,
'~ .A J1wma:n who -stepped on suspiciously
·:::hollow-soun<ling 1Miund in the Riverside
~Co11nty desert stumbled onto 1n un-
-dtteround v1utt co~taini~g more than ·a
1on ot·marljuana Wednesday, allegtdly
~tashed by five Harbor Area men.
~ l1le chance step led to additional
$ltarges against the sus~ts, who had
already been arrested on charges they
,IOld 300 pounds ot the illicit weed to
·Undercover agents.
·. ·Estimates of the marijuan~'s value
\'1nged from $100,000 for bUlk form in
'Mezlco to S200,000 safely delivered in the
U.S. and well over $1 million if broken
',down Into one ounce packet! for street
-.1ale.
• Complaints charging the defendants
. with sale of marijuana were issued
.Wednesday afternoon aiid arraignment
'Was scheduled today in Central Orange
County Judicial District Court.
• 1They include:
~ .~ G. Pboenlx, 21, of 2130 Con-
~inenlal Ave., Costa Mesa.
--Antltony Chrlttlaa, 25, of S 2 1
Marguerite Ave., Cor:ona· del Mar.
~ • ......Jua Bauwu, 30, of lilt W. Joann
,St., COsta Mesa.
.. -Jamt:1 Sword, .21, of 11614 35th St.,
:Newport Beach.
· -James L. McDonald , 21, of 1582 '~aker St., Costa Mesa~
Agent Paul Pulliam, of the Justice
Department's Bureau of Narc o t I cs
Enforcement in Santa AnJ said the ar-
rest! c11'maxed a two..ni:lntb investigation
involviJ:ig fiW Iaw·.agencies.
Newport Beach police initiated the·probe -
which lnc:luded s ta t e agents, Orange
County and Rivers.ide County sheriff's
deputtu, plus Riverside city police.
Besides the total of 2,700 pounds of
~rljuana, a pound of the hallucinogenic
·:Cactus bud peyote v.::as also found In the
•1J1Ubsurface chamber, Investigators aaid.
Newport Be.ach Detective Sgt. Leo
•.Xonkel, or the narcotics detail, said hls
raen have been interested in the suspects
1 tor aome time. ~
I
Jets· Do1ninate
By JACK llROBACK
01 *' Oaltr l'lllt IMff
Jet alrcraft noise problems dominated
two htarin&s bero ... the 0r&R£• County
Boll'<I ot Sllpuvbon w......i., will!
dlff<r!ni dtclJIOOI ruulllJll Ob building
projects. •
Den.led by a 4. to 1 vote was an appeal
to a ruUng cl County Zoning Adminis:tr ..
tor Ray Reed which, Ir ~ranted, would
have allowed the construction or a 26-unit
apartment complex in the Upper Newport
Bay area near the. takeoff pattern of the
Orange County Airport.
Approved by • narrow 3 to 2 margin
v.·as a Planning Corrunlssion recom-
mendation that single family home con-
struction be allowed on 25 acres in the
Central Irvine Ranch area just south of
the Santa Ana Freeway in the area
between the Marine Corps' El Toro and
•
Mesa to Study
Wilson Street
Parking Ban
Three suggestions made by Costa
Mesa's traffic commissibn to speed autos
over crowded city streets have been
adopted by the city counc il.
One1 -C1>ntrovef.sial traffic suggestion
was delayed at Monday night's IT'eeting.
Councilmen decided more study is
needed before they agree to eliminate
parking on Wilson Street bttween College
A venlle\'od Fairview Road.
A prev40us request for this action drew
dozen., of protests from Wilson Street
homeowners who claimed £our lanes o!
traffic would be a hazard .
Jn quick, unopposed acllon the council
did: •
...;.()utlaw parking on Victoria Street
belwten. Charle_ Drive and Miner Slreet
on the north side and from 75' feet to 250
feet west of Charle Drive on the .aouth
side.
-Outlaw parking on Elm Avenue on
the sooth curb from 120 feet to 250 feet
west.of Royal.Palm Drive.
-Raise the speed> lim it from an un·
posted 25 miles per hour to a posted 35
miles-per hour on Whittier Avenue
·between West 18th Street and West 19th
street.
Santa Ana a1r Jtltlooa.
DevetoPer Richard Jordan of Newport
Beach IOI! hil bid to build the apartment.I
on prope:rty Ofl the e1st &kit of Birch
St-, 481 l•t to11lll ol Palisades Road
to the Soni.I Ano IJtl&l>ll ......
1.onlria administrator Reed aald he hid
denied the varianc. permlf because
Jordan wanted to double tbe number of
apartments allowed under the present ft.
4 :zoning. He also noted that the property
was just outside the takeoff pattern of
the county airport.
Fifth District Super\•isor R o n a I d
Caspe.rs of Ne~·port Beach pointtd out
that many people in that same area were
suing the county ovu airport jet noise.
''It is ei:asperatif)g to me to wrestle
with airport problems like the Air
Calilornla lease and then be asked to ap-
prove more housing for more people in
the area iq questlon." Caspers said .
"Thit board bu to meet these things
head oe and deny such permlta."
Jordan arrued that the area ...
destile,d to be built to a heavy dpialty,
"Why pick on one small parctl?" he"'
que5lloned.
Cas,pers 1aid he agreed the trta was
the proper place for apartments but for
the ract that the airport was nearby.
The central Irvine Ranch rezone lrom
qricultural to Rs.eooo (single f2mily
residential) use was nei:t for jet sound
treatment.
Thomas Williams, reprtsenting: Presley
Development Company of Newport
Beich, said all purchasers would be ad-
vised of the jet flighl! from the two
nearby Marine Corps stations an4 that
the homes would be sound proofed.
* * * * * * Body · 0-verruled
Zoner Appro'Ves Pri'Vate School
Tl\e Orange County Airport Land Use
Commission (ALUC), a loser in most bat.
ties during its short existence, Josi
another one this week.
County Zoning Administrator Ray
Reed approved construction of a private
school in the Santa Ana Heights area
which the commission had opposed.
Reed issued a permit which allows the
American Christian School Association to
build an elementary school at the
northwest corne r of Irvine Avenue and
University Drive.
Commission members had objected to
the proposal because of the higb noise
level in the area caused by planes from
the nearby Orange County Airport :
Reed disagreed ~·ith the ALUC
members pointing to the several public
schools in the area. He did stipulate that
the school constructiOfl must include
so~nd deadening materials.
Two Deplore Grant Loss;
Cite Impact on Medicine
Caspers argued that the board was
"approaching the problem the wrong way
1n requlrJ.n& aoond proofln1 of 1lrudures
ln Olaht r.ones.
"We should get rkt of the 90W'ct -Ule
Marine stations should be moved ,"' be
said. "But it is not up to us to get them to
move. It should be-'up to tbe developera
and landowners. We should rt!fiise to
aJll)W people lo Jive under the noisy
flight paths."
Airport booster Supervisor Willlam
Phillips said the same ooise complaints
could ' be made •bout freew1y1,
motorcycles and diesels. "We are getting
quieter a.lrcraft ," he argued.
Supervisor Ralph Clark agreed with
Caspers but the pair lost 3 to 2 lo
Phillipa, and 1Upervisora Robert Batun
and Da vid Baker.
County Mexican
Employes Slate·
Grievance Meet
County employes of Mexican desce nt
will hold their serond general meeting at
7:30 o'clock tonight in the new County
Courthouse to discuss grievances over
alleged discriminatil>f!I in county hiring
and promotional practices.
The Me.tican -American employes first
met two months ago and · after several
sessions decided that an organization was
needed to deal with their problems. The
group has selected Adelante, or Forward,
as their name.
They have Conned the organization for
reasons that include:
-A disproporlionately low number of
e:mployes in rounty service of Mexican
de.seen{ as compared with the racial
.distribution .or.~unly population.
-Selection practices which admittedly
screen out minority job applicants.
-Promotional practices which ap-
Dr. Fred Kay, president of the Orange covering the grant and fees to be charged parently-[igures 1uggest -screen out
County Medical Association, expressed medical center patients able to pay by employes of Me.iican descent. -A complaint that there is insensitivity shock Wednesday when told that county UCI doctors bound the county for only the and rejection by some county ofliclals
supervisors had rejected a 'l million current fiscal year. and other groups.
grant from the state to benefit UCl Supervisors Ralph Clark, Four (h -The Jack of a pay differential for use
Medical School facilities at the Orange Dislricl...t Caspers and Robert Battin, of language skills when relevant to
County Medical Center. First Dis'trict, voted against the ag ree-employment. Under an agrttment develo....,:i by -The Mexican· American commuaity's .,..... ment characterizing it as a ''trojan I 1· g of 11·, 1·0 1-m the' county
Fro"' P .. e I
AUCTION .•.
pick it up. He's back down home."
"That thing's worth a bit ot,chan1e,"
he continues, nudg ing the pie nuichlne
with hi.$ toe.
The scope and variety of lbouuada of
lte:ma, ranging in value from wortbtea to
sentimental family ~asures, that people
lose Ls almost unbelievable, say1 Sgt. Lo-
vein.
So ls the desire of other people to own
them , at 10 flmes the' price.
"I've seen a lot of good shows,•• says
the man in charge for nearly 10 years.
Bid fees collected -cash or checks -
~o into the city's General fuod to finance
a variety or municipal services and SgL
Lovein bas a theory on increasing the
proceeds.
"We ought lo put up bleachers and let
people watch the show for a buck 1
head," he quips.
The auction ts, literally, a show, one
that can be hilarious or bearl·wrrmlng.
"One IDPe we had a -woman wind up
bidding against herself," he say1. "Peo-
ple just get carried away."
The auctioneer used to be U. Dudley
Van Cleve, since gone. Into private
busiheS!, 'Ind old-timers recall bow fhe
onct helped a little boy get his first bike.
The kid's clothes were old but clean,
hi., hair needed cuttini and~ clutched a
small . amount of hard·e11rned money in
one fist.
Constantly -eyes shining -he raised
his hand to bid· on old beat-up bikes but
Lt. Van Cleve ignored him.
Finally. a shiny. almost-new racer was
rolled out, obviously the best.
"Sold to the young gentleman ln the
front row for SO cents," cried LL Van
Cleve.
Not all the stored goods in Sgt. Love.in'•
Technical Services Department are for
sale, such as automatic weapons seized in
police "raids, twO battered old pinabll
machines and assorted other items.
Some, such as a Sully-Miller co.n-
struction barricade with its automatic
danger light still bravely blinking in a
dark. corner, will go back to the rightful
owner.
And of course !ht office contains a
spillover or materials from elsewhere,
just as a homeowner's jammed iwo-car
garage at the poinl when both \(ehlcles
get parked in the driveway.
•·This stuff isn't going on the block,"
says Sgt. Lovein, poking at a cardboard
box containing. among other things, a
Holy Bible, old greeting cards and a
junior varsity athletic letter.
"It's ,v\defice in one of Detective Ap-
pleman·s ..stolen car cases."
From Page 1 UCI schoo the money was to have been horse" which could Involve the county in government and the services offered. medical c[ler officials and ttlose ol the ee in s a na I n .... ir
used to i ease the quality of medical heavy spending programs in later years. Aiding Ade\ante in getting organized T D . Pl ... MESA NOISE ORDINANCE • • • training offered and to Improve county has been Dick Ruiz, executive assistant Oyota en1es 8ll.8
health services at the center. lo Supervisor David L. Baker of Garden
''viol1~ state noise standards if it
riieasurea 81 decibels. .
-:Tiaf~ street is the qulet.Nt
~ l!l·tflt c!tY. Bttw .. 4 I.JI!. :..nc1 S 'i:.m. it ma9U.res a mere 2' DBA
(average ·~ls). Church Slrtet sits
behind the Pier 11 night spot, the subject
-of.veraJ noi.!e complainb in the pill.
Amburgey found that Church Slrett Is
noisiest between 2 p.m. and 3 p.m. thanks
primarily to traffic noise from Newport
Boulevard. a block i.Way. At this l19llf' the.
noise reachd .U .DBA. When .rock· ha~
play at Pier 11 the ~ level l3 only :3'
OBA. ,. ·
-In conlr.asl, the nei&hborhooda Oear.
the lnteraction-0Ltbe-'San Dlep~aod
Newport Freeways i:nust live with 54
DBA in the evening bours 'from 5 p.m. to
g p.m. It'1 the worst Sjiot 'iri town.
In the noise ordinance , lhe general
level aUOwed b 50 OBA during the
daytime (6 a.m. fo ll'p.m.) and 45 DBA
at night for Zone A.
Zone B (noisier) measurements are: S5
dBA from '& 1.m. to 7 p.m.; 50 dBA from
1 p.m. to 11 p.m. and 45 dBA from 11
p.m. to 6 a.m.
Zone B rovers all areas north of Raker
Street from the eastern city limit lo
Labrador Drive, northwest on Labrador
lo Gibrallar Avenue, north on Gibraltar
I• Gisler Avenue.' west on Gisler to the
"'estem city limit. This is all near the
~an Diego Freeway.
Zone A covers all residential areas not
ln Zone B. Industrial and com mercial
areas are not in zones, but they ca n be
cited {or loud noise if their JOUnds violate
DAllY PllOT
...... (t)Mt PUii.""'" CXll~
lalMrt H. w,,, ,,. ............ ~
J1clc l. Cw1.y l * ........... ~,~
tt.•' IC1tvil ""' n.,.., A. 1io11 ... \i11
~ l<fillt
a. H. la•• ~\aJll P. N1D
-'"""'"': ......... ElfllWI
c..,..._OMee .
lJO W.t l1y $tr1.t
W'-t M•ttw. P.O. I• 1560, 92•16 --
1 K h 4~~lh C F"red Grove TOKYO (AP) -Toyota Motor Co. the quiet residential areas. Join ng Dr. ay in deploring t e . .,., OSmOS I In ~rder to develop organiU1tlonal denied today that It is desilJlinr a cheap,
In general, the law allows sounds lo 'go board's action was Dr. \Varren Bostick, details and evaluate options available to automobile Uiat can be thrown away af·
about .S dBA above lhe level listed for a Dean of the UCJ Medical School. He call· MOSCOW (AP) -The Soviet Union the new group, an interim sleeting com-ter a year·s use. ~ anti ,lime. *IM speelLJc e~pUons . ed the action a gr1ve loS! to county launched the 455th of its Cosmos series of mittee was fonned Oct. 21. This com· A European magazine, Euro pa ,
are at.so· m1de for sirens and for medical program! fot the needy. ' unmanned satellites Wednesday. Tass mitlee has met several times, once wit_h reported on Tuesday that Toyota, Japan's
emergency work . Dr. Bostick said he would attempt to news agency said Cosmos (55 will con-officers of tbe Orange County Employes ·leading automobile manufacturer_, West
Other ex~ptions lnchlde short ttnn gain another h~aring befor the tinue the program of Sjiace e1ploration. Association to consider the offer or Germany's Volkswagen and Sweden's
¥i.les 'da~y), noi11 el an "irri·,:: $UPlfVisors. #f :r: • Its maximum orbil ia 320 miles aqd its operating as a chapter within the associa-Volvo were working on the design for
pu/sive" chatacler (bang. hammer). and He pointed oUt that If t e money ls not low point !IS miles. tion. such scar.
noise or a periodic character (hum, used here it will go lo some other UC 1i~='=========================================:;:: screech ). ----~c~a"!e!!s, probably UC Davis which is
Some of the noises outlawed (in excess) already slated to reC"eive,I.5 million
are: radios. telii'Visions, muslcal in-from the $2.5 million allocated by the
struments. tape recorders. public address state legislature for medical schoo ls.
syatems. bull horns and sound equipment. Dr. Kay emphasized that the board's
The new ordinance also says "no action will slow do~n development of
person shall operate • loud speaker or medical school facilities and hamper
sound amplifying equipment for-the UCl's ability to provide a program com-
purpose of transmitting sound to any parable to other medical sc:hools in the
assemblage or persons in the city without state.
first filing a registration statement and "Overcrowding has forced the hospital
obtaining approval. , . Wilson said the police department will to use the basement for an outpatient
probably be the approving agency. care clinic," Dr. Kay said. "This in·
The legality of noise laws is still a pro-adequate space was never intended for
blem, since most of them are Jess than a this purpose." year old. The medical association leader accused
Amburgey cited the new state Paul White, executh•e assistant to Fifth
workmen's compensation law as one that District Supervisor Ronald Caspers, of
has been upheld. being the principal cause of the boNd 'a
The state law saya workmen can be decision against the grant.
rompensated for Joss of hearing if sub-White. who also serves as president of
jected to these levels of noise: 90 dBA for the Orangt: County !leallh Planning
eighl hours , 92 dBA for six hours, 95: dBA Council, has been an antagonist of the
for four hours, 97 dBA lor three hours, medical sSsociation and the principal
and 110 dBA for a half hour. cause of its reluctance to endorse the
"This doesn't mean everyone will suf· health planning 11gency. Wh ite is known
fer a loss of hearing al those levels, but as a strong advocate of privately--0wned
they have legal recourse if they do," community hosp~tals.
Amburgey ei:plalned. At the Tuesday board session before
Amburgey said his men measured tht the supervisors' action was taken Robert
sounds of local rock bands in several White. medical center administration,
nii;;ht spots. ''Inside, the noise hit 1Q5..1M told board members that the agreement dBA__, boL . outside, on the sidewalk, it
dropped down to 75-76 dBA ."
One junior high in Orange signs a noise
contra ct with bands which calls for a loss
of pay if the good vibrations get too loud ..
Wilson admits there 1nay be some legal
question on the enforcement or the
ordinance -upt to a $500 fine or six
months in county jail Is possible for a
violator -but says. ··1 th ink the
cha llenge is so small it 's worth the gam-
ble."
"I'm convinced we'll ha\'e dozens of
amendments to it after .a year,'' the may.
or add!. "But it's lime we did something
and this is a good start.''
Man Coaxed Out
Of Bridge Leap
SAN FRANCISCO (U PI) -Jeremy W.
Krauss clim~ the raillng of Golden
Gate Bridge, walked tht girders, toppled
Into a safety net and hung by his hands
O\IU tbe Pac.Hie Wednesday.
Two hours o( coating by bridge•
wor~.er1 and a California Highway
Patrolman finall y persuaded the 21·year·
Old man not to jump.
''l've had Ont Jumper go ovu on me."
said patrolman Tim t.tlllcr. ''This is the
first one I've pulled odt."·
Rehnquist Court
Critics Succeed
In Vote De1ay
WASHINGTON (UPl) -Opponents of
Supreme Court nominee William H.
Rehnquist succeeded today in delaying
until Tuesday action by the Senate
Judiciary Committee on his appointment.
pending further FBI inve stigation of lhe
Arir..onan·s background.
The co mmittee voted 10 to 5 against
reopening hearings on the Rehnquist
nomination . bul chairman James 0 .
Eastland 10.Miss.), agreed lo ask the
FBI to look furthu Into Rehnquist'a
alleged past connections "'ith a con·
ser\•alive political act ion group called
Ar iionans for America.
Th're apparently was no committff
opposition, at a closed meeting. to the
nomination of Lewis F. Powell for 1 se-
cond court vacancy, but the com mittee
refused also by 10.S vote, to report bl1
seltcUon septirattly to the full Senate.
Motions to rrope:n 1he he~rings and to
separate the nomln•tions were made by
Sen. Biroh Boyh (0.lnd.), vot!ni <rill!
Bayh on both were Sens. Edward M. Ken--
ncdy t0.~1as!I. ), Quintin N. Burdlt:i: {[). 1 N.0./, Philip A. Hart (O.Mkh.l. and
John V. Tunnt:y {0.Calif.).
Sen. lloman Hruska (R·Neb.), then won
unanimous consent for 1 moUon that •
vote on both Powell and Rehnqul1t be
luxurious spring down sofas
These handsom e sofas were designed to give you the ultim ate in seating comfort with dacron and down
back pillows, deep spring down seat cushions enveloped in down and feathers and two foam -filled arm
pillows. Choose from a wide selection of fin e fabrics.
YOU MAY SPECIAL ORDER NOW
AND STILL GET DELIVERY
BEFORE CHRISTMAS.
'
8' length reg. $599
NOW399
,.
Your /ooorltl interior designer will be happ11 to assi.!C 11ou •••
H.J.GARRETT f.URNITURE
PROFESSIONAL 2215 HARBOR BLVD.
INTERIO• DESIGNERS Open MOft., Tliun. A Fri. Iv... COSTA MESA, CALIF. • . TRY OUR HYOLVING CHARGI 646.Q27f •46-0274
A 1roup oi Iron workers ' Lnd~r the
brldgt talktd calmly lo Kraus5 while tr1f-
Oe ro1red back and forth tbove. One or
the men , 'Eugerte Pell, tried lo grab the
suldde.benL man end they both toppled
Into a safety ntt . t~ktn no lit.tr than t a.m. PST Tuesday. 'L---------------------------------------
-· .
'
. . . ., --
' -
SaddlelJaek
EDITION
YOL M, NO. 276, 3 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES •
. 0 -
.Just in Time
License Revamp
Finally Okayed
San Clemente's C<lmplex set of new
bw!iness license fee revisions finally
won entire approval from City· Coun-
cilmen Wednesday -barely in time for
the mailing of the new bills before Jan. I.
Councilmen tied up the loose ends to
the intricate lee structure by setting the
minimum gross-receipts amount that
--could-be taxed , aUgning--fees--for
Bank Approves
Road Building
On Golf Links
Confusion and doubt over the validity of
city approval of the controversial access
road across the municipal golf course
ended Wednesday as city councilme n
learned that the Bank of America -the
trustee of the links -will allow the road
construction after all.
In earlier letters the bank had opposed
the use of an access easement betwten
the fifth g~n anirslxth tee to---reach -a
major condominium 'development.
But in a letter this week the bank a~
proved or the easement, then stressed
that Avenida Magdalena could be lrft..
proved along the access route a! long a!i:
no encroachment takes place on the .link:I.
The Jetter signifies the end of confusion
over the city's approval of the access
issue earlier this year. The roadways will
serve a large development of more than
300 condominium units and 75 estate Jots
on acreage kno~·n as the Rasmussen·
Ayer property.
The tract approval came after months
of contro versy over which roads would
1erve the large development. Councilmen
examined every possible alternative then
settled on the small roadway across the
links to serve the first 100 units of the
tract.
After those units are occupied the
Douglas-Pacific Corporation must find
suitable. alternate routes to reach the
billy, inland acreage.
Preliminary planning is continuing .lln
the project, but no specific construction
etarting date has yet been announced.
$100,000 Suit
Filed Against
San Clemente
A San Clemente woman who blames
the. city for injuries received when she
fell down the steps of the beach club
while leaving a dance held at the Avenida
Pico facility has sued the city and its
Adult Recreation Association for $100,000.
1'1rs. Gwendoline Alexandra Schabel,
216 Cabrillo Ave., Apt. C, claims in her
Qrange County SuperiOr Court lawsuit
that insufficient lighting at the dance hall
led to her fall and subsequent serious in-
juried last Feb. 20.
·She also accuses the cily and the
issociatlon of failure. to provide an ade-
quate handrail for visitors uSifli the flight
of steps at the dance hall.
A claim filed early th is year by Mrs.
Scfiabel was denied May 21 by the city
council. •
Male Nurse Held
On Drug Charges
A Capistrano Beach male nurse ar-
rested in Laguna Beach Monday has been
arraigned on charges of having more.
than 600 amphetamine capsules in his
passession.
A SOuth County Municipal Court
1pokesman said Charles Dennis Ervin, 29,
of 26242 Via California. will face pre-trail
hearing on the felony charge Tuesday.
Laguna Beach police said Ervin was
taken into custody at 4 a.m. 1s be step-
ped from his aulo in the 600 block or
North Coast Highway. "The pills were
1lle.gedly contained In uveral bottles on ~·beck seat ol the vehicle., police aald,
apartments and simplifying the rules _
governing real estate sales.
One of -the new provisions means that a
person with annual gross income of $1,200
or less would pay no tax. That rule will
affect artists and craftsmen, primarily.
Apartment owners will pay a flat fee of
$15 a year and a dollar ror each ad-
ditional-unit~. ---
Although councilmen approved the en·
tire package., they stressed that more
changes might be forthcoming next year
as the first business license revisions in
15 yea rs take effect.
Changing any part of the ordinance,
fwwever, will require 90 days of
maneu vers and the public henrings.
The original intent of the changes -
besides equity in the fee schedules -was
increased revenue to the city.
But in recent months changes in the
structures of gross-receipts fees and flat
rates have meant that the city revenue
might well be Jess than before.
•·we agreed a long time ago that new
revenue wasn't coming," Mayor Walter
Evans said during discussions Wed-
nesday.
The exact amount of city revenue
under the new ordinance has not yet been
completely computed, said City Clerk
Mu Bera:._ · ·
Ponderosa Firm
' Offers Finances
To San Joaquin
A second land developer has orfered to
assist the San Joaquin Elementary School
District out of Its student housing crisis
- the Ponderosa Homes firm which has
offered fund for site work, design
services and soll testing.
The development firm, located in the
central Irvine "v.·indow·• area, joins the
Irvine Company in offers of substantial
financial help to ease the problem of too
few schools for too many pupils.
District spokesmen today said the
Ponderosa offer includes the. holding of a
school site until the district ca n ra ise
funds to purchase it. In addition , funds
provided by the developer for pre-plan·
ning and working drawings for the prG-
posed school will be on an interest-free
basis to be repaid at the time the funds
for the. entire project are. available to the
district.
District Supt. Ralph Gates this week
said the district is grateful for the help
offered by Ponderosa, and it will be of
great assistance in cutting Jag time
between the enroJlment of new students
in the• district and completion of new
school!I to house the pupils.
Presently, the di strict's lag time is
be.tween 18 to 24 months.
Obtaining early preplanning funds cuts
the Jag time. in half, Gates said,
The Irvine Company began the trend of
developer help recently by offering an in-
tettsl-free. loan, plus design and other
preplanning service to assure school con-
struction.
'Social' Goal
For Tijuana
Track Urg~d
,_
TIJUANA, Mexico (AP) -The. new
governor or Baja California insists that
Caliente Race Track be "more than just
a place to gamble'' when it's re.built, an
aide. says.
The thoroughbred and dog racing track
burned down In August. Two monlhs
later, the permit issued by the federal
government to llipodromo de Tijuana ex-
pired, but that corporation has been
given temporary 30-day permit, since.
Francisco Santana, secretary general
of the Mexican state, said the building
penniL must come from the governor,
Milton Castellanos Everardo ..
The new tr.ack "mU.!il have attractions
\\'ilh social slgnific1nce. and be a
11howcase for Mexican cultural and
artistic achievement.II," Santana aaid
Wednesday.
·-
• ·---·--.
N.V. Steeb
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, NOvEll41ER
_ __,,,
• ers 0 umm1 '
WIT ........ Get a Horse (or Two J ' .
Tandem bicycling Cl!JI be"iun for anybody, bu~ pity
the poor bike when these 830 pounds ol joy riders
bop aboard. Leo Rossi (front), ·470 f.!Ounds and own-
er of a San Francisco restaurant and his bartend·
er Davy Rosenberg, weighing in at 360, decided
that bicyclin§ would help their eontour --or is it
the bike thats getting the new shape. .
U.S. Says Hughes 'Okay~
Sources Reject Death Tlieory of Billivn.ai re
CHlCAGO (AP) -The Chicago Sun·
Times reported Wednesday that a year·
Jong investigation by the U.S. Justice.
Department has uncovered evidence that
billionaire Howard 11ughes is i n
reasonably good health and is mentally
competent.
The newspaper quoted a federal source
as rejecting as "hokum" reports that the
66-ye.aroilld Hughes might be. dead and
had fingernails and toenails six to eight
inches in length when he left Las Vegas
for the Bahamas late last year.
The investigation, the paper said. was
undertaken following persi!'ltent reports
that Hughes had been kidnaped from Las
Ve.gas and.was being held against his will
in Nassau. The Su n-Times said federal in·
vestigators to the best of t h e i r
knowledge, determined that Hughes was
not only alive but in good enough con-
dition -mentally and physically -to
take an active role in the operation of his
financial empire..
"Just how feder¥1 investigators were
able to obtain regular reports on Hughes
remains a secret," the Sun-Times said.
"But it was learned that persons known
to be in close contact with Hughes have.
been interviewed." .
In Washington, a Justice Department
spoke.sm8n said he could not confirm or
deny the story.
They quoted the r e po r t as saying
Hughes operates bis business 'allafrs
through tour secretaries and that he.·oflen
works seven days a Week.
He is said to make his own decisions,
based on advice gained by telephone. and
mail from a few legal and technical ad·
visers and with his secretaries handling
ihe communication, the Sun-'!'imes Sliid.
Federal investigators, however, do not
di scount most of the publicized Hughes
e.centricilies, the paper said, and
reportedly he has contact with no more
than six persons including his secretaries.
He. avoids sunlight, photographers, and
wou ld-be Hughes wat c hers, the
Sun-Times said, but a federal source in-
dicated he takes M occask>nal nocturnal
walk on the palio of his pe'nthouse. in the
Britannica Beach I~otel In the Bahamas.
Eugene E. Barret, manager of the
hotel, says he has not seen Hughes , the
newspaper said, and the Jus t ice
Department's investigatior. has never
been publlcly acknowledged.
Crash Probed •
r
Stun.ting Blamed in l)eath of Four
Al• official probe Into the causes of
Tuesday·s airC!raft collision which killed
four men in San Diego -one of them the
son of San Clemente Councilman Wade
Lower -showed that stunting by a solo
pilot caused the tragic collision. ·
Dr. Lower said this mo.rning ·th~t the
pl3ne ca rr')'ing his son and ·two other
fellow employes or the Briese. and
Johnson Flying Service. was struck by an
old Army training aircraft which was
engaged in acrobatics.
Ea rlier reports had erroneously in·
dicated tha t the Piper aircraft with the
three men aboard suddenly ascended and
collided with the other plane.
Other reports added that strong
turbulence in the colli.!iion are.a over
Chula Vista was apparent throughout
Tuesday.
LOwer and the three other men killed iii
the tragedy were seasoned pilots.
The Councilman's 31-year-old son was
the manager of the service's Brown Fie.Id
ope.rations.
Dr. Lower said today that the probe
showed that his son was at the e-0ntrols of
the-struck ai rcraft.
"He rode it all the way down," he 1aid
somberly.
* * * * * * Lower Last Rites Friday
Clemente Councilman's Son Plane Crash Victirn
Fune.rat services will be conducted In
San Die.go on Friday morning for--llonald
Lower, 31, the -sOn of long·time Salt
Clemente City Councilma n and former
mayor Dr. Wade Lower.
Mr~ Lo.wer, a resident of El Cljon, was
one. of !bur men killed in the collision of
two light aircraft Tuesday afternoon in
Chula Vista.'
• The rites are set for ~ 10 a.m. in
Greenwood Memorial Park, 43rd and
Market Streets, San Diego.
Burial will follow tbe rites at the
memorial park.
Family spokesmen requeate.i! that
friend& who wish, make memorial coo-
tributions to the San Die.go Aerospace
Museum, 1649 Prado, Balboa Park.
Mr. Lowe.i:. was 11 n8tive of Mlll•1be[i,
Ohio, and moved with bis family to San
Clemente in the postwar years.
He attended San Clemente area schools
and was graduated at Capistrano Union
High School in 1958.
He. then entered San Diego State
College where--he obtained a bachel0t'1
degree in buslnes!'I administration.
During his college.. years Mr. Lower
btgan nying commerclally and for a time
he and hi! younger brother, Carl,
ope.rated 1 charter flyin& arvlce.. Mt.' L<lwer joined. the Brie,. and
Johnson Flying service In 1963 and im·
niedlately became. manacer of the Brown
Field branch of the Drm.
It was during a re.turn trip to t6e
Brown Field offices that the plane ·car·
rying Mr. l.Awer and two fellow employes
suddenly collided with another aircraft -
also Down by a Briese and Johnson
employe.. '
Mr. Lower leaves his widow, Mrs. Jo
Ann Lower, of El C11jon ; a son, Jeff, ~1A;
a daughter, Wendy 3; his parenl!'I, Wade
and Dorothy Lower of San ClemenU!; his
younger brother, Carl, of El Cljon: and
his maternal grandmother, Mr1. Genevt
RotlDWl of San Cltment.e.
Differences
On Housing
Aired Out
By PATRICK BOVLB
01 MM Dell'!' l"lllit lttH
Elected and appointed official! of ,Sail
Juan C8pistrano Wedneaday rllght hid u
opportunity to discuss-·their recent dif.
ference of opinions regarding a bouJinC
development by Westport Home Buildefl.
Meeting for ao Wlusual joint dinner
session in Dana Point, the city coun-
cilmen and planning commluionert
seemed lo feel their differing ICUonll on
the development arose. ~m 1 .quelilon of
be.Ing able.-to ·1e.gislate-commwiitJ.
harmony. , '
The council Oct. 25 overturned -tbt
commls!ion's negative recommendation,
thus allowing the developer to ·build 1,IOO
garden and apartment homes. The
residences, in the $25,000 price rwe.,. will
be built in the north eod of town where
homes In the $60,000 price range. are com.
mon.
Planning Commissioner Carol Heim,
who had been against the development,
told the group that s urround i ng
homeowners had to be considered in
allowing such a project. S e v e r a I
homeowners had asked for at least a buf.
fer 1.one or open space between their
homes and the new tract.
HO"'ever. Councilman Ed Chennak
disagreed with Mrs. Heiiit. "lf the people
in the Casas (the existing, more u·
pensive tract) think they should have a
buffer around them," he Aid, "then they
should buy_theJand." _
"I fee.I the planning C1>mmission in the
past few-mont~ bas deve&oped a
negative attitude toward development,"'
he. added.
Commissioner Art Lavagnino said the
commission's primary concern had be.en
for the. quality of the development.
"I felt that what Westport was going ta
do was all wrong," he. told his fellow of·
ficials. "And J still don't think that the
Westport plan is the type of development
this city can be proud of." ·
'--'ft ha! some ba.!iic-faull! in it," he. cOJto
tinued, "and the biggest fault is that I
don't think the developer gives a damn
about this city."
Mayor Tony Forster agreed with
Lavagnino on a general basis, stating thet
no developer "ttally gives a. damn"
about the city.
Forster added, "Every (developer) who
comes into the. city is going to do the
least he can."
But Forster said that in the Westport
project, the developer had been corto
vinced to make a few basic changes ln
his design in the period between the com ..
mission's disapproval and co u n cit
reversal of that decision.
"The on ly condition realty In question,''
the ma yor added, "was whether or .not tt
was harmonious (with the surroundinC
home.!!)."
Forster said he. fel t the council could
not legi.!ilate design with an ordinance;
but Commissioner Lavagnino retorted
that the city was not providing enough
guidelines for developers to follow.
"We are not leading anybody who com-
es into this city and they can see that we
have no direction," Lavagnino said. ''Wt.
are reacting instead of providing ·some
leadersh.ip."
Councilman Josh Gammell suggested
that by having stricter guidelines, the cl ..
ty could possibly begin attracting a "bek
ter class " of developer. • .......
We•dler
Low clouds and fog will engulf
the Southland Friday, clearing by
mid-day to sunny skiea. Tempera-
tures will reach 65 al the be.achu.
rising lo 73 inland. Lows tonight
3S-4S.
INSmE TODAY
A. top Santa Barbarci Shtri!f'•
oidt 100$ firtd W tdntsda11 for
his un1UOOl display of totoponi
during last year't Isla Vi1'4 riot-
ing. For storv and picturt, '''
'Page I l.
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' _r OAllY Pll01 __ .:.sc:_ ___ T_h~-"-'<''-N_ .. _.,,_,.,_1_.e .. 1_91,...1 /..I
, W .ater District Demands Jury Rescind Report
Qiarglng that certain members or the
llll• Counly Grllld Jury ati.mpted. to
... the power or tbtlr olfice to t.ffect a
politic11 change wlthfn the South Coast
County Water Distric t, Uirectors of the
district have called upon 0 ore en
Marshall, foreman of the Jury, to publicly
retroct a recent critical report and repr1·
mand those responsible for it.
At a special meeting in South Laguna
Tuesday rftgHt, the retiring board
directed that a twirpage response to the
report be sent to the Grand Jury, along
with the demand 1for retraction.
The directors and their operation of the
water district were roundl y criticized in a
Grand Jury report on special districts,
' Issued just four days before the Nov. 2 -To .a charge that a water ratl been held , lht directors respond that this
board t.lecUon. ·increase was "unannouaced," the direc-. opinion, hued on aelective information
• Retiring di.rtctor Robert B. Malone Im-tors state that the increase was ~scu.-d provided by the r«all committee, was
mediately issued a statement calllnl at-.J~-~.vtuoraJ.,fubltncl~.A~utr;: J!!~ b~ revened when lhe complete facts were tention to erron in the report and now• r-wm~I en ' LfUJ-1'6 man o I . . the full boa.rd has issued a polnt.-by-polnt the recall committee, and that the provided to the counsel, who then agreed
spons. deliberations were set forth fully In open +. the peUllons were void. re . . ,
Jt reiterates most of the airrections muiutes. -A• comparlson of SCCWD rates with
made by ~1alone, supporting his charge -To a charge that the di strict refused those of a Private water co!"pany in the
that the Grand Jury's cr iticism was bas-to justify the increase. they state that Tustin area Is unfair, the d1rectofs state,
ed exclusively upon information su pplied district officials.met with the recall com-since the inland company is close to a
by a 'COmmlttee seeking to rtcall four mittee and provided them witlt all sui>-trunk line of the Metropolitan Water
diiectors and that no effort was made by porting documents and worksheets per-Oislrict, overlies the ground w8ter basin,
the Grand Jury investiga ting committee taining to the decision to increase the is localed on flat terrain, and is an older
to contact any representative of the rate. company with static Customer demand.
district with regard to the charges, prior -To a charge that the state legislative SCCWD, on the conlrary must bring
to publication or the report. counsel round the election peliUons were water from long diatan~es through CQStly
The board ~sponds: valid and stated an election should have transmission lines, construct ita: owo
storage fa cilities, provide p u m p l n g
facilities to 1erve different elevations,
and keep up wllh a muahroomlng popul•
lion.
-In summary, the report stales, ''The
collective charges made by the Grand ·
Jury are patently false &nil 1wbuld: Un~
mediately appear so to anj one con.
ducting even the mosf cursory ex-
amination." Grand Jury members were
"well aw are" that the allegations were
made by the recall committee and
"thus should have bee n careful to in-
vestigate their credibility prior to issuing
erroneous conclusions based upon such
allegations.''
In conclusion, the directors charge, "It
would appear that certaln members of
the Grand Jury were closely aligned with
· the recall group and that they attergpted
to use the power of their office to effect a
political change wlthfn the district.
"The forewoman,· while obviously not
being directly in~d in the concerted
activity, was nevertheless their willing
accomplice as she allowed the report lo
be issued over her signature wit lt ap-
parent knowledge of the manner ln which
lhe report was compiled.
''We call upon her to publicly retract
the report and to reprimand those
members of the jury who deliberately
abused their app'arent position of trust
and credibility."
Mexi~ans Air Gripes .. ,
c.ounty employes of MexiCan desCent
will hold their second general meeting et
7:30 o'clock tonight in the new County
Courthouse to discuss grievances over
alleged dlscrimlnatiio in county hiring
and promotional practices.
The Mexican ~ American employes fir st
met two months ago and after several
sessions decided that an organization was
needed to deal with their problems. The
group has selected Adelante, or Forward,
·as their name.
They have fonned the organization for
reasons that include :
-A disproportionately low number of
employes in county service of MexJcan
descent 1s compared with the racial
distribution of county population.
Laguna Trustees
I
Set Boulevard
Extension Talk
-Selection practices which admiltedly
screen out minority job applicants.
-Promotional practl.ces Which ar>-
parently-figures suggest -scr~en out
employes of Mexican desCent.
-A complaint that there is insensitivity
and rejection by some county officials
and other groups.
-The lack of a pay differential for use
of language skills when relevant to
employment.
-The Mexican. American communily's feelings of alienation from their county
government and the services offered.
Aiding Adelante in getting organized
has been Dick Ruiz, executive ass istant
to Supervisor David L. Baker of Garden
Grbve.
ln . order to 'develop organ izational
details and evaluate options available to
the new group, an inte{im steerlng·~om•
mittee was Conned Oct. 21. This com~
mittee has met several times, once with
officers of the Orange County Employcs
Association to consider the offer of
ope rating as a chapter within the associa-
tion.
Ruiz said the group will di scuss these
issues tonight and that permanent of-
fice rs of Adelante would be elected soon.
The session will be held in Courtroom
Three on the second floor of th&.
courthouses, 700 Ci vic Center Drive West,
Santa Ana.
Only 3 Hooky Players
Turned by Truancy, Unit
The Enaperor's Jtle1a .. ~· --.
Laguna Beach sChool trustee}; will meet
Friday with coilnty officials to discuss
the need for an immediate extension of
Alta Laguna Boulevard.
A recent three day "truancy patrol" by
Laguna Beach school and city officials
yielded only three culprits, Superin-
tendent \VH!iam Ullom told school
trlJ.slees .Jruesda y.
lege students, a group of youngsters tn
town for a field trip from another school
district, two runawa ys from Long Beach
and several students with excused
absences. Saddleback College's cast presentgf "Henry IV," a
satirical comedy by Nobel Prize playwright Luigi
Pirandello. The play, which weaves the plot from
the 20th Century to the lltb, v.1ill be presented at
to right are David Ellis of Tustin, David Kleinberg
of El Toro, Michael Stoddard of Laguna Beach,
Craig Manchester of Tustin, Paul Barber of Mis·
sion Viejo and Lindsay Karg of Lagun a Beach. The
public is welcome. • :· -8 o'clock tonight, Friday and Saturday. From left
1 ln .S~p .Cl!;sie:ptg ,...
• The Ref Cross B\godn!oblle Jn vjslf ~an Clemente Friday to collect bJOOd
donations under sponsorship of the_ United
Presbyterian Church, ~
Mi •• SIOU
The donations "i.l~ be accepted at the:
chun:h Jlllrtling· IOI )!.iween 3 ana 7,30
p.m. •. , . .
Projec\ ttiredor G'e9rge Hyde 5'id the·
goal for -;-th~. 'Sau am~.-donations is
100 pints~ .
Private citllens. representatives of
business firms and convnunity service
organizalion members all" are urged to·
donate. Hyde said.
The pl"ftHq1iday sea SOI) ·traditionally is
a slack period for blood .donation and
causes a severe dearth of readily
available whole blood he added .
Reservations for donors are available
by calling 492·2889.
455th Cos1nos Fired
MOSCO\\' IAP J -The Soviet Union
launched the 455lh or its Cosmos se ries of
unmanned satellites Wednesday. Tass
news agency said Cosmos 455 will con-
tinue the program of space exploration.
Its maximum orbit is 320 miles and its
low point 115 miles.
OlAKGI com
DAILY PILOT
OLU10W CAST PUlllSHINO CCMPNft
k1'°1rt N. w •• .J
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n91r111 A. M11?M1• MMltir. E<l'ilOr
a..119 H.. leo1 Ric••"' P. Natl Altlilllllt A'llrllgltlt Edltora
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ll911tlf .dclr1n: P.O. l o• 66"5, tl&S?
5• Cit...,, Offk1 ans Norih El Ctmi""' R11 I, t2672
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Trail
EI Toro Selects
New Postmaster
EL TORO -The El Toro post office
has a new postmaster.
: Charles L. Covault, first superintendent
of the Laguna Hills branch. has been
nan1ed postmaster of the El Toro facility.
He and his family reside at 23487 Via
San !\1igue l. Laguna Jfills.
e Swimmers llo11ored
MI SSION V"JEJO -The top swimmer s
of the year have been named by the
Nadadores S\Yim Club of J\·lission Viejo.
Taking the honors were Stephanie
Reinicke and Brian Goodell. Other av.·ard
v.·inners included !\folly O'Hanlon. Jeff
Amen. Julie O'Donovan, Brad Ritchie,
Sue McCarthy and Scott Campbell \Yho
v.·ere cited for individual improvement.
New office rs or the Booster Club
f'l ected recently include Art Cook. presi·
dent : Jim Okazaki, vice president; Bob-
bie Mohr, sec:retary: Pat Cook. v.·ays and
means. and \Vendy Edgren records.
e Go11rmet Cla<S Set
MIS.SIGN VIEJO - A gourmet cook-
ing c!ass will begin Friday et the !\fon-
ta noso Recreation Center.
The class. sponsored by L a s
~largarilas. the v.·omen's club of the
recreation centers. will take place from 1
a.m. to noon.
This session '~ill feature German
cookery by !\lrs. lf annelore Raschk who
y.·ill create rolladcn with dumplings and
red cabbage. For reservations cell the
center. 8.17-4084.
e To!!• for Too Barke d
SADDLEBACK V_ALLEY -The Toys
for Tots program \\'ill have the support of
the Saddleback Valley Ch\rnlx'r of Com-
merce \Vomen's Di"islon this yrar.
The annual dri\·e. sponsored by the
!\farine Corps Reserve. ·will start Nov . 2J
and last for two weeks.
Toys which are in good condition can
be brought ol Royal Savings and Loan,
1'oro Cleaners. Mission Bank, r.1ission
Pool Service, El Toro Cleaners. Phillip's
Hair Fashions, Downey Sa\1ings and
Loan, Laguna Hills Cleaners, Leisure
\Yorld Barbers and Leisure \\'orld 's
United Caliromia Bank.
Tenure Plan
' .1
0.ka yed
SACRAMENTO (UPl l -Leglsla llon
which would give community coll,ge
teachers ttnure eft'r two years but flllow
them to be fired without cause during
the.ir first yea r of employment \Yns pass-
td Wednesda y by I.ht A»Sembly.
-
c "L,ag·"'~fl s.~~~el~~~
--• l
Named Fi1ialists
h ,,fF$ Pr gr m
Laguna Beach lfigh School students
Kim Lokan and Josh Bright have been
named local finalists for consideration by
the America n Field Service (AfS) for
placement in a foreig n country next year.
The two students were selected from a
field or 15 local applicants by the
Americans Abroad committee of the hig h
school AFS chapter. Dossiers on the two
have been sent to AFS headquarters hi
New York where they may be matched
with a parent family in some foreign
land.
A1iss Lokan. 17. is the daughter of Mr.
and l\1rs. Ma rvin Johnson, 67 S. La Sen-
da. South Laguna. She is a seJ1ior this
year and act ive in the Ski Club, Rock-
rtimbers Club, Girls' Athletic Associatio n
and the girls' tennis team.
Brighi, 16, is the son of Col. and Mrs.
Cruger Bright, 787 Diamond St. He is a
j1,1nior and belongs to the Ski Club, Math
Club. Key Club and is a member of both
cross country and track teams.
Ann E. Dillin.ger
Services Friday
Funeral services 'viii be-conducted Fri·
day al 11 a.m. for Ann Elizabeth Dill-
inger, a native of England and a 33-year
resident or Laguna Beach who died at her
home Tuesday. She was 74.
The Rev. Gary Herbertson of the
United Methodist Church will cond Uct the
last rites at Pacific View Memorial
Chapel in Corona de! Alar. Interment will
fo\lo\\' at Pacific View Memorial Park . ·
Mrs. Dillinger. who lived at J502
Temple Hills Drive, is ~urvlved by her
husband . Phillip: two sons, Russell Allen
of Red lands and Willia1n Allen or Dana
Poin t; a daughter. ~1rs . VirginiR •!ill of
&!nta Ana: eight grandchildren and three
great ·grandchildren.
Police Studying
Painting Theft
Laguna Beach police are lnvestig1ting
the theft of an $850 painting from an 1rL
store.
Investigators said the theft occWTtd 1t
Aaron BroUiers Art Mart, 190 S. Coast
Highway. some time during business
hours either 'l'uesd:iy or \Vt:dncsday.
The 34-b}"'46·inch, wood-framed p1in·
ting depicted ~ man in Westerft·style
clothinR walking down a ra·uroad tr&ck
and carrying a 1ultc11sc. 'T'h~ 1rtlll who
pt1lnltd the work ls Jim Daly.
The project had been scheduled for
1972, but county officials recently an-
nounced that, due to a shortage of funds,
the road extension would have to be
delayed for at least one year.
Friday's meeting will be held at 2 p.m.
at the school district offices. Tom
Fuentes, administrative aide to Fifth
District Supervisor Ronald Caspers, and
a representative of the county road
department will meet with school officials.
The school board bu expressed con-
cern with the construction delay because
the road ·is needed to run school buses
betwee n Arch Beach Heights and Top of
the World Elementary School.
"The data collected from our three-day
survey," he added, "presents evidence
tha t truancy is not a severe· problem in
Laguna Beach."
· The survey was conducted on Oct. 18
and 29 end Nov. 3, he explained, with
school administrators taking time off
ri:om their regular duties to patrol the
downtown streets and beaches with police
off rs ind lifeguards.
N ting tltat he himself took part ln·-one
of th atrols, he said all youths who ap-
peared to be of school age were stopped
and asked why they were not in school.
During the three days, chosen at ran·
dom, the patrol yi elded a few junior col-
-~~ --,.._ --
• •
Police off icers also checked the caves
iii the hills around Thurston Intermediate
School and Top of the World Elementary
School, but fou nd no youngsters.
He added that it was often diffi cult to
tell a high school youth from one of
junior college age. ·
"Just by looking at them." he said,
"we could nGt make the specific decision
that they should have been at the high
school."
He said the police would continue their
present practice of stopping school-aged
youngsters on the street' during school
hours and asking why they are not in
class. -
~urious sp1·ing:,d~wn sofas
These hendsome sofes were designed to give you th·e ultimate in $&~tiog comfort with doc ron and down
beck pillows, deep spring 'clown se at cushio ns enveloped in down onCl"feathers and two foom -fi!le"d arm
pillows. Choo se from a wide se lection of fine fabrics.
8' length reg; $599
YOU MAY SPECIAL ORDER NOW
ANO STILL GET DELIVERY
BEFORE CHRISTMAS. Now399
Your t avarltt fnttrlor dtsiflTltr will bt Mm to OJ&ist 11011 •••
H .. J.GAR~ETT fURNITVRE
PROFESSIONAL 2215 HAR BOR BLVO.
INTERIOR DESIGNERS Op'" Mon .. Thurs. & Fri. Eves. COSTA MESA, CALfF. ,
TRY OUR REVOLVING CHARGE 646-0275 , 646-0 276
"
7
. . . -
\
Lag1i l1a , Beaeh.
£DITION N.Y •. Steek•
; I
Y.Ot:. 64, NO) 276, 3 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFO~NIA THURSDAY, NOVE~IEI{ 11, ·1911: JEN .c:ENTS
' -
Police Chief Gives Inside ~ Looi{ at Domain
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEBL
ot ,... o.it~ 1>11tt ll•tl
Laguna Beach Police Chief Joseph J.
Ktlly Wednesday gave members of the
Chamber of Commerce. an "inside" look
into the . workings of his department -
from organllational structure to the use
of video tape equipment for training.
"One month after I arrived in. town , I
changed the divisions in t.he department.
There used to be three divisions ; now
we have two -operations and support ·
services," the chief said. "We have clear am1 simple lines of authority which have
,
' . improved ..cQ.OlJllUnlcalion! b e t w e e n
myself and the uniformed men."
An imporlant part or e<immunications
he said,.is the use of a "KeUygram" or
personal memorandum to the members
of the force.
"The first one dealt with gratuities,"
Kelly explai1le9. "I have insisted the men
accept nothing -not even a Cup of cof·
fee. I don't want them to let the bars
down, because we can't afford to give
favors in return,'' he &aid.
"One problem w™n I arrived her,, '""'I'
that training was not satisfa('•~ ·
~
have recently purchased a video tape
reorder which shouki help in that
respect1.'1Kelly commtnted.
·Possible uses, he said, would be to
visually record crime scenes, lb collect
evidence of narcotics ~Its and to tape
training sessiorui from outside con5ul.lant.s
for use at a later time.
''Another important use wilt be to lhow
the men'· themselves hoW they tOok in ac-
tion. This '(ay we can critique our own
actions,"· Kelly noted.
The chief's comments were made
Wednesday morning when ht appeared
(or a question and answer seaaion ~t the
• • _Ifill
Laguna Bus Pr·eview Slated
Courtesy Rides Offered on Four New City Veliicles
A preview of Laguna Beach's new •
municipal bus line will be offered to
members of any social or service club in
the Art Colony next week.
The courtesy rides in the four new
buses just acquind by the city may be
arranged by calling the Recreation
Department , 1124, Ext. 45.
Organii..ations already signed up for the
trial runs are the 11otel·Motel Associa-
Uon, the J1ycees and the Kiwanis Club,
according to Recreation Director George
P"owler.
The preview is just a prelude to a "free
ride" week for all members of the com·
rnunity beginning Nov. 29.
Idea of the free rides, says City
Board Approves
Purchase of New
'
School Property
Laguna Beach school trustees have
given final approval to the purchase of
1everal building sites surrounding un·
developed school property at Top of the
World.
With the purchase of the lots for
$180,000 from the Prudential Savings and
Loan, the district will own almost seven
acres of land at the end of Alta Laguna
Boulevard.
Under terms of the agreement, which
has been worked out over the past year,
the districl.,. will spend $25,000 of its
building fund' money and pay the balance
in two increments qf $77 ,000 over the nex:t
two years.
Business superintendent Charles Hess
told trustees Tuesday that to level the
land for either recreational uses or
building purposes would cost an ad·
ditional $20,000 to $25.000.
However, he noted that the district can-
not begin any development of the pro-
J>erly until title for the balance of the
building sites is given to the district.
Under the agreement with the owner, the
district will this Year take possession of
.every other lot surrounding its own pro-
perty.
Title for the remaining lots will be
given to the district next year, Dr. Hess
said. 1 1
Oruge «:oaet '
Weather
Low clouds Bnd fog will eng111f
the Southland Friday, clearing by
mld4ay to sunny skies. Tempera-
tures will reach 6S at the beaches,
rising to 73 inland. Lows tonight
~'5.
INSIDE TODA. 'l'
A top Santa Barbara Sherif/'t
aide 1001 /ired Wednesda11 for
hil unusuoL df$pla11 of wtapons
durin a fa,,t year's l1la Vi.fta riot·
hip. ror Jlor11 and picture, 1et
Paae I I,
c..""' "" M Mttl 111 Sink• " C•llft1°11I• " .,11. " Cl•t.CllH ..... "'411w•I l"ll'lft • (tmlC• • N•~I ·-•• Crt111-' • Orllltl C.0111'¥ " .... ...... • 1rrwi. """' • ••111,l•l ..... • '""' ~"' lllfWlll-111 llM• Mtrllelt aa.Jt .. n • " TtltVlellll U
'l11•11c1 .. ~ TllHlln ti ....... ,_ n Wttll!lt t
Allll L•llMn " ••-'• Ntw1 11.n Mttl ... • Wtr111 N... ..,
Ml,,._. Llctll ... t
Manager Lawrence Rose, Is to induce
people to try oot the bl.ls system and ,
hopefully. develop the habit of usinir ii.
"We want people to know how good the
equipment is and how convenient the
service promises to be," he explained.
Four routes have been worked out for
the new bus line, including service as far
south as Laguna NigueJ and inland to·.
Laguna llills, with an extension to Top of
the World.· 1
Buses will run at intervals of no more
than 30 minutes; and more frequently 1t
certain hours, according to detailed
schedules to be posttd throughout the ci-
ly.
Basic fare for adults will be. 25 cents,
exceplon the Laguna Hills run which will
cost 50 cents each way, but with the 25-
cent fare in effect as rar as the In·
tersectidn of Laguna Canyon Road and El
Toro Road.
Children under 5 will ride free and the
fare for children between the age11 of 5
and 12 will be 15 cents. An additional
feature will be a 7f>-cent all day trip card
which will entitle the bearer to as many
rides as desired in a single day.
This, said Rose, will benefit residents
with errands in various parts of town end
guests of hotels end motels who want to
shop in different areas.
\Veek.ly and monthly cards and multi-
trip cards at special rates for adults and
children also will be provided as demand
increases.
~ An attempt also will be made to pro-
vide a "church run " for persons wishing
to attend Sunday services.
"We have brightly uniformed, well
June I. Davey,
· Accident Victim,
Rites .Set Friday
Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m.
Friday for Laguna Beach resident June
Jrene Davey, who died Tuesday at Costa
Mesa Memorial Hospital of injuries sl.lS-
tained in a traffic accident She was 57.
The services will be conducted at
Ml'Cormick Mortuary Chapel by the Rev.
Albert O. Hjerpe ot the United
Presbyterian Cburch. Burial will follow
at Pacific View Memorial Park in Corona
de! Mar.
Mrs. Davey, who lived . at 169 lligh
Drive, died following the CO!ta Mesa ac-
cident in which her auto was struck as
she drove out of a shopping center park-
ing Jot.
An employe of Laguna Beach Van and
St~rage, she is survived by her husband,
Otis: two sons, Lavere Stewart. in
Germany with the USAF and RObert
Davey of Costa Mesa.
Other survivors include four brolhers
Wilford Ashton of Montana. Elton Ashto~
of Idaho, Floyd Ashton of Chula Vista
and Lavtr Ashton of Utah: a sister, Mrs.
Josephine Hunter of Idaho and two
grandchildren.
India Forces Repel
Attack by Pakistan
NEW DELffi (UPI) -Indian border
fortes beat back a Pakistani attack at
Boyra on the East Pakistan border as
new exchanges of fire were reported
across at least two paints on the fronUer.
The Pre11 Trost of India ne1¥1 agency,
quoting offloial 1ources, reported the
ground clash from Krishnaear, the
capital of Nadia Dlstrtct ln West Bengal
•Jato •bout llO mn .. north of Calculi.I. II<
gave n0 delaU1. .
trained operators," Rose said. "We hope,
in time , to carpet the buses and possibly
equip them with music. The experience of
using public transportation should be
totally enjoyable • • • It' should be a
pleasure and not a task to ride on such
well Rrovided equipment.
"We will enter in an experimental
mood ... if systems do oot work well, we
are goiqg to change ••• and ·we are going
to continue to chanae· Ql\til we arriv• at
something that seems optimum."
Council Okays
Se,vage Treating
~tudy for Laguna
Moving swiftly to comply with re--
quirements set forth by the Regional
Water Quality Coiltrol Board (WQCB),
Laguna Beach city councilmen Wed·
nesda y night voted unanimou sly to
authorize a study or alternatives for
future sewage treatmtnl and to retain
Dr. Jan Scherfig as a consultant on im-
mediate upgrading o( the city plant.
Councilman Edward Lorr, who with Ci-
ty Manager Lawrence Rose and Public
Works Director Joseph Sweany attended
a WQCB meeting in San Diego Monday.
at which Laguna was roundly criticized
for the state o( its sewage treatment
operation, told fellow councilmen. "They
made it very clear they want the situa-
tion corrected as soon as pos!ilble."
Describing the meeting as "an in-
teresting experience," l..orr C<1mmented
that the city staff members present~ a
good case for 'the city, pointing ou t
positive actions taken since the cily was
put on notice by WQCB in August.
"1 found myself in the posilion of the
'bad guy' when thty starte<I ask ing why
the city council had allowed things to
deteriorate." he added, noting that he
found himself in the position of having to
explain the actions ol earlier councils.
There are two parts of the sewage
treatment problem, Lorr pointed oul. The
first is the Interim problem o~complylng
with requirements for the existing plant,
for which Dr. Scherfit has ou,tlined an ac-
ceptable program : •the' second Is the
question or providing a permanent solu·
lion, either by joining in constniction of a
regional facility or finding some suitable
alternative, either or which~would require
a bond issue to match government
grants.
Sweany was authorized by the councll
to initiate a study on the second point, for
which a .total of $5,000 has been budgeted,
$3,500 for general funds and $1 ,500 from
an anonymous donor.
However, Rose noted that this amount
was considered sufficient only for a
feasibtllty study regarding joining a
regional 1>lanl, and additional funds
might bt added if alternatives are to be
considered.
He promi!ed to deliver an outline of
costs ind scope of the proposed study at
the ne1t council mettlng.
Lorr said the WQCB had nol "closed
the door" on use of an outlall for e1cesi
water if a fea sibility study could come up
with a plan to reclaim tht built of the
treated sewage efRuent.
Asked if ;a 1968 study on upgrading the
tre•lment plant might not be med, he
11ld, "lt is important to understand that
with the availability of government
grant• we now find ourselves With a com·
pletely different set of 1tartdards ragard-
ln& water qu&1ity, much 1tricter tlian the
1tl'ndards ft formerl~ hid M> meet." ...
monthJy chamber breakfast. Joining him
were City Manager Larry Ro~ and
Wayne Moody, director or planning and
development. ,
Kelly alao gave the group a· picture of
"juM bow tough it is" to ~me a
policemin il(Laguna Beach. .
After taking and pwing a special writ-
ten e:r.amination,· the applicant must a~
pear before a five-member panel J!lade
yp of three members ot the police depart·
ment and two members of the com·
munlty.
"I change the members or the com-
munity each time around to I c.an get a
a
l.AGVNAGRlNS
feel for the various segments of the city.
One of the three police member• is a
patrolmarf. and 1 make a point of asking
that patrolman whether Or not be wouJd,
wut the applicant ln' the squad cir Wilh him," Kelly aaid. • •
"The board can ask any questions it
wants to lbe applicant -moral, finan-
cial, about bl! marriage or education. tt
puts him 'in a 1tress situation. It depends
. on the imagination of the board members
on how deep they dig,'' the chle.t ex-
plained .
Then, he aaid, an applicant must fill out
I form "which puts the top secret
e
IY INTIRLANDI
.. Here'• Our Problem -Your Price Range Is In the Summer of '42
and Everything in Laguna 11 in the Winter of '71."
Parking Problem Solution
ApprovedinLagunaBeach
The controversial problem of removing
parking on Laguna's Nyes Place was
solved with a compromise Wednesday
night.
The city council gave its unanimous ap--
proval to a revised plan, presented by
publlc v.·ork.5 director Joseph Sweany,
that would remove parking on one side of
Male Nurse Held
On Drt1g Cl1arges
A Capistrano Beach ~ male nurse ar-
rested In Laguna Beach Monday has been
arraigned on charges of having more
than 600 amphetaniine capsules in his
possession.
A South County " Munici pal Court
spokesman aaid Charles Dennis Ervin, 29,
of 26242 Via California, will face prei-trail
hearing on the felony charge Tuesday.
Laguna Beach police said Ervin was
taken .Into custody at 4 a.m. as he ste~
ped from his· auto in the 600 block o(
North Coast Highway. The pills were
allegedly contai ned in several bottles on
the back seat or the . vehicle, police said.
';
the roadway only, leaving sufficient room
for passage or the school bus , desired by
uphill residents, without d e p r i v i n g
downhill residents of 1\1 their parking
spaces.
Nyes Place residents in the council
cQamber, who previou11Jy had engaged in
bitter disputes over the parking problem,
accepted Sweany's proposal without com-
ment.
Under the plan, parking will be remov-
ed from the west side of the narrow
hillside road (the right side going
downhill ), a guard rail will be installed
on the curve, the center line will be mov-
ed three feet and renectorized and a
number of speed limit and other warning
sigrui will be Insta lled.
A single parking .space also will be
removed from the opposite side of the
street to permit fire engines to negotiate.
the curve.
The project ca n be completed in about
two weeks, Sweany said, and will be paid
for with approximately '3,300 of gas tax
funds .
He added that officials of the school
district ha ve advised him (he plan will be
acceptabl r to them if It meets city safety
standards.
Bike Tabbing Set
Mass Licensing irt Laguna Beach
Irr an effort to facilitate compliance
wilh a riew City ordinance requiring
Uwislo~ of all bk:ycles in Laguna Beach,
the police department has scheduJed
special bike-licensing sessions in four
locations on the next two weekends.
On Saturday. licenses will be issued 1t
the Agate Slrett Fire Station From noon
to 4 p.m.
On Sunday, officers will be at Riddle
Fir.Id 8bove Boat Canyon to make out
Jlcen&el a.t the same hours.
Qvu the Thanksgiving holiday, llctns--
in( will be av1U1ble at Top af the World
flre Statton on Friday, Nov. 26, and at-
lht Main Fire St1Uon, SOS Forest Ave.,
also from noon to 4 p.m. on Saturday,
Nov. 27.
·Owners· mu11t present their bikes so the
1erlal number may be recorded and a'
license tag 1ffiled. Cost Is $1 for duration
of ownership, and a receipt bearlng .tbt,
blke'• descrtpUon and number Js pro-
•ided. It Is hoped the new program will
reduce bicycle thefts and facilitate the
retum of found bikes to their rightful
owners.
Apart from these special sessions, bike
licenses may be obtained at the Laguna
Beach police station Tuesday~. Thursdays
and Sundayc f~ 1:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
tn the near future, the police depart-
ment will begin ls1ulng c,ltations for
unllcenaed bUl.ea, 11 required by"the new
on!Inanoe. ,
classification que.sionnaire to Mame. Wt
interview his wile, friends, find out about
his past. In short, we want to know what
makes this man tick.••
An applicant must then submit to a
psychiatric evaluation, wilh the final
decision of hiring left up to tbl chief,
Kelly said.
During his remarks, Kelly noted be had
other changes in mind for. the Pollet
department -including r~vi5ion . of the
records system and the policy manual
prepared for all member11 of tbe force.
"But it will take some time lo' do all·of 1
that," Kelly said.
e
Co-counsels..
Will Defend
Court Suii
By BARBARA RREIBICB
Of tllt DIH1 l"lltt Steff
Lagu.na Beach attorney W i I l l 1 m
Wilcoxen will be hired"by the city council
to serve as co.counsel with city attorney
'I\illy Seymour in detcndiq • Su~Gt
Court suit seeking to overturn the Clty'1
building height ordinance. , .
Decision to hire Wilcoxen was made b1
the council during an executive sessl0rtt
cOnvened to discuss the liUgation, follow•
ing the regular Wednesday ·night meeting.
Hearing on lhe suit, which chargts the
Initiative ordinance adopted Aug. S Is ll·
legal. is scheduled for Dec. 6. Judge J.E.
T. "Ned" Rutter ordered the show chause
hearing Monday after attorneys for
realtor Vern Taschner filed the suit.
It charges that the 3fi.foot height limrt
adopted by the city is illegal because thl
initiative procedure eliminates publie·
hearings required by state law on zoning
legislation.
The argument is similar to one used in
an earlier suit, also filed by Taschner.
which sought to block the initiative eleo-
tion. At that time, Judge Rutter ruled in
favor of Taschner and ordered the elec-
tion halted. However Wilcoxen, repl'!sen-
ting the initiative proponents, took the
case to the Fourth District Court of AP"
peals in San Bernardino and succeeded in
having Rutter's decision overturned.
The st.ate Supreme Court refused to ift..
tervene in the case at that ·time, le.avinC
the way open for the election that
resulted in a 3·1 vote in favor of the
hei~ht limit ordinance.
During the pre-election litigation·,
Seymour represented city clerk Dorothy
Musfclt, the only city employe named ln
the suit, while Wilcoxen represe.nted the
citiz~n committee backing the iniUatlve.
The new litigation Involves the ci.11
council, planning commission and a
number of city staff·members who would
be involved in enforcement of the
ordinance.
During the public council session
Wednesday, councilmen indicated thef
might consider adoption of a speciil
building height moratorium at their Dec.
1 meeting, to insure adherence to t6a
height limit until it is fonnally adopted
into the city zOnlng code, a process now
under way. .
Such a moratorium would eliminate. tbl
possibility that a developer coul_~ seek. a
high rise building permit pf.ior to revision
of the code, if the court should Jule the
initiative ordinance illegal Dec. 8. 1
Zoning code amendments incorporatinc
the new height limit are scheduled for •
second public hearing before the planning
corpmlssion ; also on Dec. 6 and then will
move to the city council ,lor a public
hearing and two readings before final
adoption. Under thi11 procedure. the
earliest date On which the amendri'lentt
would go into effect would be lata
January. ~
The moratorium procedure, 1UggesJed
by William Leak. could be put Into ell,.t
by adoption ol an intenm z o n J n a
ordinance prior to Dec. 8, Seymour Jd..
vised the council.
Such an action, he sald, "would ht
w.orth COOiideration as an addltWlaf u.fe~ard should the coon atrtke &own
the mitiative ordinance ttec· 8, teavln.g; I
lapse unUI the amendments an flnall1
adopted , durlng which a devekJper could'
obtain a permit."
Councilmen indicated they · would coo-
sider the proposal
New Buck's a Buck
WASHINGTON (APJ -'!be now
E~enhower dollar i. worth Jul\ fI, and
people 1hould not poy • premium for Ille
COIN, tht chainnan or the KouM COtto-
IWMr allllra 111b<ommltteo 11111 llday.
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~· :J OAlLV·PILOl SC Thursdij, No""'btf 18, 1971
l Charging that certain members of the
~ Couoly r Jury attempted IO
ite ~ PO.,.. Of lhelr ollkt IO effect a
Jllitical change within the South Coast
County Water District, directors or the
district have called upon Doreen
'Marshab., foreman of the Jury, to publlclr
"retract a recent critical rep:>rt and repri-
mand thost responsible for lt.
' At a s~ial me,eting in South Laguna
Tuesday night, the retiring board
directed that a tw<>-page response to the
reporti be sent to the Gnind Jury, along
·1h ijle demand for retraction.
The directors and their operation of the
<Water district were.roundly criticized in a
Grand Jury rtport on s~ial districts,
luuell Just four days be.fore the Nov. 2
bolrd election.
RetlrlnC dlredor,Robert B. Molone lm-
modlltely luue( • lt&t.m<ot eolilnl It·
teriUon to errors in the report and now
the fllll board hu w.ec1 • point-by-point
response.
It reiterates most of the correetions
made by fl.1alone, supporting his charge
that the Grand Jury's criticism was bas·
ed exclusively upon information supplied
by a commillee see.king to recall four
directors and that no effort was made by
the Grand Jury investigating committee
to contact any. representaflve of the
district with regard to the charges, prior
to publication of the report.
The board responds:
_The Enaperor's Me11
-----~---
-To a charge thet a water rate
increase was "WW>nOl.U>Ced," the direc--
ton state that the Jncreaae w11 dlscuued
ot MYlraJ publJo >*111111 llltnded by
constituents, lncledlnl the chairman ol
the recall committee, and that the
deliberations wm 11et forth fully in open
min~t~.
-To a charge that the district refused
to jqstify the increase. they state that
'district officials met with the recall com-
mittee and provided them wifh all su~
porting documents and worksheets per-
taining to the decis ion to increase the
rate.
-To a charge that the stateileglslative
counsel found the election petitions were
\'alid and stated an election should have
'
SaddJeback College's cast presents "Henry IV," a
satirical comedy by Nobel Prize playwright Luigi ·
Pirandello. The play, which weaves the plot from
the 20th Century to the 11th, will be presented at
8 o'clock tonight! Friday and Saturday. From left
to right are David Ellis of Tustin, David Kleinberg
of El Toro, Michael Stoddard of Laguna Beach,
Craig Manchester of Tustin, Paul Barber or Mis-
sion Viejo and Lindsay Karg or Laguna Beach. The
public is welcome. . <
" Bloodmobile Set
T ake
I ~ ---__ ,_ -~ . .\
The Red Ci'oss ""BloodniObile will Visit
San Clemente Friday to collect blood
donations under sponsofihip of the United
·Presbyterian Church. ·
The donations wilt ~ accepted at the
church park!Dg Jot between 3 and '7:3G'
p.m. - , ;
Project dfrector Geoije Hyde said the·
goal for the San C\~me.nte donations is
100 pints.
Private citizens, representatives Of
business firms and ain\munity service
organization members all are urged to
donate. Hyde said.
The pre.Holiday seison traditionally is
a slack j;>erk>d for blood donation. ·and
causes a s~vere dearth of teadlly
available whole blood )le added.
Rese rvatioM for donors are available
by calling 492-2889.
455 th Cosmos Fired
MOSCOW fAP ) -The Soviet Union
launche4 the 455th or its C.Osmos series or
unmanned satellites Wednesday. Tass
news agency said C.Osmos 455 will con-
tinue the program of space exploration.
Its maximum orbit is 320 miles and its
low point 11 5 miles.
DAILY PILOT
.,... CXNT l'\llllSHlf'tl) CDlPAJCY'
l •lt.rt N. WeM
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J•d: I. C111lrr ......... "'-•1-,,
1\eta111 Kt lYll
Eililor
n i.n11 A.. M11rp\i1• MillllNI Edllor a• H. L.ei aic\t..I P. Nttl
All"1Mf Mall-silrot Edit."'
Lei •M .._. Of'fk•
222 For11t AYt~u•
Mllli111 •clclr1u: P.O. lox 661, fJISJ
!• ci ..... te Office aos North El C111ti111 R11I, t 2672
•I OtW Offk:tc
j c.19 MMa• :aJI V.'t\I 81'1 Str.tf 1'1""'9rf •-: =»JJ H...wt •OUMvtll'd ti .... llllcl.: V17J 8.,.;#1 ..... '"'
El Toro Selec ts
New Postmaster
EL TORO -The El Tofu post office
has a new postmaster.
Charles L. Covault, first superintendent
of the Laguna Hills branch, has been
named postmaster of the El Toro facilit y.
He and his family reside al 23487 Via
San Migue~. Laguna Hills.
e Sooimme r s Honored
MISSION VIEJO -The top swimmers
of the year have been named by the
Nadadores Swim Club of Miss ion Viejo.
Tak ing the honors were Stephanie
Reinicke and Brian Goodell. Other award
winners included ri.101ly O'llanlon, Jef(
Amen, Julie O'DonoVa n, Brad Ritchie.
Sue McC11rlhy and Scott Campbell who
were cited fo r individual improvement.
New officers of the Booster Club
elected recently include Art Cook.-presi·
dent ; Jim Okazaki. vice president : Bob-
bie Mohr. secretary: Pa t Cook, ways and
means. and Wendy Edgren records.
e Gourmet Class Set
MISSION VIEJO -A gounnet cook-
ing class will begin Friday at the Mon·
tanoso Recreation Center.
The class, sponsored by L a s
Margaritas, the women's club of the
recreation centers, will take place from 1
a.m. to noon.
This session will feature German
cookery by Mrs. Hannelore Raschk v.·ho
will create rolladen with dumplings and
red cabbage. F'or reservations ca11 the
ccnlcr. 637-4084.
e T aus for T ols Bnrl<ed
SADDLEBACK VALLEY -The Toys
for Tots program wi1\ have the support of
the Saddleback Valley Chamber of Com-
merce \Vern en's Division thi s year.
The annual drive. sponsored by the
t1arine Corps Reserve. will start Nov . 23
and last for two weeks.
Toys which are in good condition can
be brought ot Royal Savings and Loan,
Toro Cleaners. P.flssion Bank, }1-liss ion
Pool Service, El Toro Cleaners. Phillip's
Hair Fashions, Downey Savings and
l.Aan, Laguna Hills Cleaners, Leisure
\Vorld Barbers and Leisure \Vorld's
United California Bank.
Tenure P lan Okayed
SACRAM ENTO (UPI) -L.gi.laUon
w~lch would give community college
le8cber1 tenure after two-years but allow
them to be fli:__ed without cause durmg
their first year of tmploymtnt was pass-
ed Wrdncsday by lhe Assembly. •
Laguna Students
·N_timed Fina'fl .U :
~ . . . . '
In A.FS Program
Laguna Beach Jligh School students
Kim Lokan and Josh Bright have been
named local finalists for" consideration by
the American Field Service (AFS) for
placement in a foreign aiuntry next year.
The two students were selected Crom a
field or 15 local applicants by the
Americans Abroad commi ttee of the high
school AFS chapter, Dossiers on the two
have been sent to AFS headquarters in
New York where they may be matched
with a parent family in some foreign
land,
Miss Lokan, 17, is the daughter of Mr.
and ?\-lrs. Marvin Johnson, 67 S. La Sen-
da , South Laguna, She is a seMiior this
year end active in the Ski Club, Rock·
climbers Club, Girls' Athletic Association
and the girls' tennis te am.
Bright, 16, is the son of Col. and Mrs.
Cruger Bright, 787 Diamond St. He is a
junior and belongs to the Ski Club, Math
Club, Key Club and is a member of both
cross country and track teams.
Ann E. Dillinger
Services Friday
Funeral services will be conducted Fri-
day at 11 a.m. for Ann ~li.zabeth Dill-
inger, a native of England and a 33-year
resident or Laguna Beach who died at her
home Tuesday. She was 74.
The Rev. Gary Herbertson of the
United ?.1ethodist Church will conduct the
last rites at Pacific View Memcrial
Chapel In Corona del Mar . Jnterment will
follo\v at Pacific View t.1emorial Park.
Mrs. Dillin ger, who lived at 1S02
Temple 11ills Drive. is survived by her
husband, Phillip; two sons, Russell Allen
of Redlands and William Allen or Dana
Point; a daughter, Mrs. Virginia Hill of
Silnta Ana: eight grand children and three
great -grandchildren.
Police Studying
Painting Theft
· Laguna Beach police are investigaling
the lhe(t of an $850 painting Crom an art
store.
Jnvestigator.{aid the theft occurred •l
Aaron Brothers Art Mnrt, 190 S. Coallf.
Highway, some time during business
. hourJI either Tutsday or Wednesday.
J he 34-by-46-lnch, wood-framed pai11-
tlhg depicted a man In Westem-1L)'le
clothlng w1lklila: down 1 railroad traCk
and c1rryin1 !II suitcase. Tbe ertist' who
painted the work IJ Jim Daly.
--
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been held, the dlreclOra rtspond !hot thla
oplnlon, band on selective information
provided by the recall commltlle, wu
revel'led when the complete facts were
provided to the counsel, who then agreed
the peUUorui were void. ~
..:_A comPirj!tOn of SCCWD 'Rte1 .with
those ol a private water company ln the
Tustin area is unfair, the dirtetors state,
since the inlirnd company is close to a
trunk line-'>f the Metropolitan Water
District, overlies the ground. water basin,
ill located on flat terrain, and Is an older
company with static customer demand.
SCCWD, on the contrary must bring
water from long distances through costly
transmission lines, construct its own
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storage facllitles, provide p u mp In g would appear that certain members of
faclli,Uea to 1erve-different e.~vatioll; r ·the Grand Jury were closely atJaned \filb
ond lteep up with o mtiahroomlng popW. , the recall group ond that they attempted
tion. to use the power ol their office to effect a
In su.mmary, the report stalell, "The political change wlulin the district.
cojlectlve charges made by the Grand · "Tfle forewoman, while obviously not
Jury are patently false ·and -would ' im-being directly invOlved In the concerted
mediately appear so to @Jlyone con-activity, was nevertheless their willing
ducting even the most cursory ex-accomplice as she allowed the report to
amination ." Grand Jury memberi were be issued over her signature with ap-
"well av.·are" that the allegatlonl were parent knov.·ledge of the manner in which
made by t~ recall committee an d the report was compiled.
"thus should have been careful to in· "We call upon her to publicly retract
vestlgate their credibility prior to Issuing the report and to reprimand th_ose
erroneous conclusions based upon such members of the jury who deliberately
allegations." abused, their apparent position of trust
In conclusion, the directors charge, "It and credibility."
Mexieans Air Gripes .
CoWlly employes o( Mi:i:lcan descent
will hold lheir second general meeting at
7:30 o'clock tonight in the new County
Courthouse to discu11s grievances over
alleged discrimlnatiln ln County hiring
and promotional practices.
The Mexican -American emp\oyes first
met two months ago and after several
sessions decided that an organization was
needed to deal with their problems. The
group has selected Adelante, or Forward,
as their name.
They have formed the organization for
reasons tflat include :
-A disproportionately low number of
employes in county service of MexiCan
descent as aimpared with the racial
distribution of county population.
Laguna Trustees
Set Boulevard
Extension Talk
Laguna Beach school trustees will meet
Friday with county officials to discuss
the need for an immediate extension of
Alta Laguna Boulevard.
The project had been scheduled for
1972, but county offici1ls recently an-
nounced that, due to a shortage of funds,
the road extension would have to be
delayed. for at least one year.
Friday's meeting will be held at. 2 p.m.
at the school di1irict offices. Tom Fil~ admlnlllnU,. 'aide to Fifth
District Supervisor Ronald Caspers, and
a representative or the county road
department will meet with school officials.
The school board has ei:pressed con-
cern with the construction delay because
the road is needed to ~un school buses
between Arch Beath Heights and Top of
the World Elementary School.
-8election practices which admittedly
screen out minority job appllcanta:.
-Promotional pratticeS which a~
parently-figures suggest ·-screen out
employes of Mexican desctnl
-A complaint that there ls insensitivity
and r'ejection by some county officials
and otber groups.
-The lack of a pay differential for use
of language skills when relevant to
employment.
-The Mexi can -AmeriCan commu11lty's
feelings of1 alienation from their county
government and the services offered .
Aiding Adelante in getting organized
has ~en Dick Ruiz, ~eculive assistant
to Supef-visor David L. Baker of Garden
Grove. ,
In order to develop organizational
details and evaluate options available te
the new group, an interim steering com-
mittee was formed Oct. 21. This com-
mittee has met severil times, once with
officers of the Orange County tiilpJoyes
Association to consider the offer of
operating as a chapter within the associa·
tion.
Ruiz said the group will d\scuss these
Issues tonight and that pennanent of-
ficers of Adelanle would be elected soon.
The session will be held in Courtroom
Three on the second floor of th!l
courthouses, 700 Civic Center Drive West,
Santa Ana. __
Only 3 Hooky Players
Turned by Truancy Unit
A recent three day "truancy patrol" by
Laguna Beacb school and city officials
yielded only three culprits, Superin-
tendent William Ullom told school
trustees Tuesday.
"The data collected from our three-day
survey," he added, "presents evidence
that truancy is not a severe problem in
Laguna Beach."
The survey was conducted on Oct. 18
and 29 and Nov. 3, he explained, with
school administrators taking time off
from their regular dutie! to patrol the
downtown streets and beaches with police
officers and lifeguards.
Notihg that he himself took part In one
of the patrols, he said all youths who a~
peared to be of school age were stopped
and asked why they were not in school.
During the three days, chosen at ran-
dom, the patrol yielded a few junior col-
lege students, a group or youngsters in
town for a field trip from another school
district, two runaways from Long Beach
and several studentll with excused
absences.
Police officers also checked the caves
in the hills around Thurston Intermediate
School and Top of the World ElementarY.
School, but found no youngsters.
He added that ii was often difficult to
tell a high school youth frolll one of
junior college age.
"Just by looking at them." he said,
"we could not make the specific deci.!:ion
that they should have been at the high
school."
He said the police would continue their
present practic e or stopping school-aged
youngsters on the street during school
hours and asking why they are not in
class.
luxurious sp1·ing down sofas
These handsome sofas were designed to give you th'e ultim ate in sea ting comfort with dacron and down
back pillows, deep spring down seat cushions envelo pe·d in down and feathers and tw o foam-filled arm
pillows. Choose fro m o wide selection of fin e fab rics.
0
I,_
YOU MAY SPECIAL ORDER NOW
AND STILL GET DELIVERY
BEFORE CHRISTMAS.
8' length reg. $599
NQW399
Your favarit1"-fntcr.ior designer wlU be happy to ossf:C uou •••
H.J.GARRETT fU·RNITLJRE
PROFESSIONAL 2215 HARBOR BLVD.
INTERIOR DESIGNERS Opoo MOft., Tlou,., t. Fri. lvtS. COSTA MESA, CALIF. TIY OUR UYOLY,HG CHARGI 646·0 275 646·0276
I
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San ~le1nente ---------. -·--.. -
Capistr•no
V.OL M, NO. 276, l SECTIONS, 52 PAGES
EDITION
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ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
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Tiday'• Final
N.V. StoelU '
THURSOA Y, NOVEMaER ·11, 197 r TEN CENTS --
• 0 ers umm1 . '
Jtist in Ti111e
License Revamp
Finally Okayed
San Clemente's complex set of new
,,usi.ness license fee revisions finally
won entire approval from City Coun-
.. :ilmen \Vednesday -barely in time for
:he mailing of the new bills before Jan. L
-Councilmen tied up the loose. ends to
If Jie intricate fee structure by setting the
ninimum gross-receipts amount that
:ould be taxed, aligning fees for
Bani\: Approves
Road Building
On Golf Linl{s
Confusion and doubt over the valid ity or
:ity approval of the rontroversial access
·oad across the municipal golf course
!Oded Wednesd~ as city C{)Uncilmen
earned that the Bank of America -the
. rustee of .the links -\Viii allow the road
:onstruction after alL
ln earlier letters lhe bank had opposed
he use of an access easement between
:he firth green and sixth tee to reach a
najor rond.ominium development.
But in a letter this week the bank ap-
1roved of the easement, !hen stressed
tiat Avenida ~1~dalena could be im-
+reved along the ucc.-ess route as long as
lO encroachment takes place on the links.
· 1'he letter signifies the end of confusion
1ver the city's approval of the access
ssue earlier this year. The road\vays '~ill
1erve a large development of n1ore than
100 condominiurn units and 75 estate lots
1n acreage known as the Ra smussen-
\yer property.
The tract approval came after months
1f controversy over which roads would
ierve the large de velopment. Councilmen
~xamined every poc;sible a\ternati\'e then
iettled on the small roadway across the
inks to serve the first 100 units of the
ract.
Arter those units "re occupied the
)ouglas-Pacifi~ Corporation 1nust find
iuitable alternate routes to reach lhe
1il ly. inland acreage.
Prelim inary planning is continuing .on
.he project, but no specific construction
1tarting date has yet been announced.
8100,000 S1tit
Filed Against
San Clemente
A San Clemente woman who blames
he city for injuries received when she
'ell down the steps of the beach club
Hhile leaving a dance held at the Avenida
Pico facility has sued the city and its
\dull Recrealion Association for $100,000.
Mrs. Gwendoline Alexandra Schabel,
!16 Cabrillo Ave .. Apl. C. claims in her
Orange County Superior Court lawsuit
:hat insufficient li ghting at the dance hall
led to her fall and subsequent serious in·
juried last Feb. 2{},
She also accuses the city and ' the
tssociation of failure to provide an ade-
quate handrail for vi sitors using the night
>f steps at the dance hall.
A claim filed early this year by Mrs.
Schabel was denied l\1ay 21 by the city
oouncil.
Male Nurse Held
On Drug Cl1arges
A Capistrano Beach mate nurse ar-
re sted in L;iguna Beach Monday has been
arraigned on charges or having rnore
..than 6QO amphetamine capsules in his
possession.
A South Co1)nly P..lunicipal C.Ourt
spokesman said Cbarlcs Dennis Ervin, 29,
of 26242 Via California, will race pre-trail
hearing on the felon y chilrge Tuesday.
Laguna Beach police said Ervin ~·as
laken Into custody at 4 a.m. as he step-
JU!d from his auto in the 600 block or
North C.oast Hlgh\vay._ The pills were
•Uegedly contained in several bottles on
the back seat of the vehicle, Police said.
apartments and liimplifying the rules
governing real estate sales.
One of the new provisions means that a
person with annual gross income of $1,200
or less would pay no tax. That rule will
afffct artists and craftsmen, primarily.
Apartment owners will pay a flat fee of
$15 a }'Car and a dollar for each ad-
ditional unit.
A.lthough councilmen approved the en-
tire package, they stresse(! that more
changes might be forthcoming next year
as the first business license revisions in
15 YCilrs take effect.
Changing any part of the ordinance,
however, will require 90 days of
1naneuvers und the public hearings.
The original intent of the changes -
besides equity in the fee schedules -was
increased revenue to the city.
But in recent months changes in the
structures of gross-rece ipts fees and flat
rates have meant that the city revenue
mi c:ht well be less than before.
··we agreed a long time ago that new
revenue wasn't coming." Mayor Walter
Evans said during discussions Wed·
nesduy .
The exact amount of city revenue
under the new ordinance has not yet been ~mplelely computed, said City Clerk
Max Berg.
Ponderosa Firm
Offers Finances
To San Joaquin
A second land developer has orfered to
assist the San Joaqui n Elementary School
District out of its student housing crisis
-the Pondcrosa llomes firm which has
offered fund for site "·ork, design
services and soi l testing.
The development firm, located in the
central Irvine "window" area, joins the
Irv ine Cornpany in orfers of substantial
financial help lo ease I.he problem or too
few schools for too n1any pupils.
District spokesmen today said the
Ponderosa offer includes the holding of a
school site until the disLrict can raise
funds lo purchase it. In addition, funds
provided by the developer for pre-plan-
ning and working drawings for the pro-
posed school will be on an interest-free
basis to be repaid at the tin1e the funds
for the entire project are available lo the
district.
District Supt. Ralph Gates this week
said the district is grateful for the hel1>
offered by Ponderosa, and it will be of
great assisl<!-nce in cutting lag time
between the enrollment of new students
in the district and completion of new
schools to house the pupils.
PresenHy, the districl's lag time is
between 18 to 24 months.
Obtaining early preplanning funds cuts
the lag time in half. Gales said.
The lrvine Company began the trend of
developer help recef!tly by offering an in-
terest.free loan, plus design and othC"r
preplanning service to assl,lre school con-
struction.
'Social' Goal
' For Tijuana
T,.ack U,.ged
TIJUANA, Mexiro (AP ) -The new
governor of Baja California insists lhaL
Caliente Race Track be "more than just
a place to gamble'' when it's rebuilt, an
aide says.
The thoroughbred and dog racing track
burned down in August. Two months
later~ permit issued by the federal
gove cnt to ll lpodromo de Tijuana ex-
pire<!, ut that corporation has been
gi.vcn temporary 30-tiny permits since.
Franci!co S.intana, secretary general
or the Mexican stale, said the building
pelinlt m1L,t rome frOm the govemor,
Milton Castellanos Evcrardo.
The new track "must have attractions
With social algniricancc and be a
showcase for Mexican cultural and
artistic achlevement&1'1 Santana &aid
Wedntsday.
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Get a Horse (or Two)
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UPI T ... plttlt
Tandem bicycling <'.an be fun for anybody, but pit y
the poor -bike whe[\.~these 830 pounds oL joy rider.s
hop aboard. Leo Rossi (front), 470 pounds and· own-
er of ·a San Francisco restaurant and his bartend-
er Davy Rosenberg, weighing in at S60, decided
that .bicyclln~ would help their contour -or ls it
the bike that & getting the new shape.
U.S. Says Hughes 'Okay'
Sou rces Reject Death, Theor y of1Billiouaire '
CllTCAGO (AP ) -The Chicago Sun-
Times reported Wednesday that a year-
long investigation by the U.S. Justice
Department has unrovered evidence that
billionaire llow11rd Hughes is ., in
reasonably good health and is mentally
co1npctent.
The newspaper quoted a federal source
as rejecting as "hokum'' reports that the
66-year-old llughes might be dead and
had fingernails and toenails six to eight
inches in length when he left Las Vegas
for the Bahamas late last year.
The investigation. the paper said. was
undertaken following persiStent reports
I hat llughes had been kidnapcd from La!I
Vegas and was being held against his will
in Nassau. The Sun-Times said federal in-
vesliit3tors lo the best of I h e i r
knowledge. determined that Hughes was
not only alive but in go<KI enough con-
dit ion -mentally and physically -to
take an active role in the operation of his
financial empire.
"Just how federal investigators were
ah!e to obtain regular reporl.:<1 on Hughes
remains a secret," the Sun-Times said.
"Bul il was learned thal persons known
to be in close contact with Hughes have
been interviewed." ·
In Washington, a Justice Department
r;pokesman said he could not confirm or
deny the story.
They quoted the repo r t as saying
Hughes operates his business affairs
through four secretaries and that he often
works seven days a week.
lie is said to make his own decisions,
based on advice gained by telephone and
mail from a rew legal and technica l ad·
l'lsers and with his secretaries handling
lhe comm uni cation, the Sun-Times said.
Federal investigators. however, do not
discount most of the publicized Hught\j
ecentricilies, the paper said, an1'
reportedly he has contact with no ,J'llore
than six persons including his secretaries.
He avoids sunlight. photographers, 11.nd
woul d -be Hughes watchers, the
Sun-Times said, but a federal source ·in-
dicatcd he takes an occasional nocturnal
walk on the patio of his penthouse in the
Brllannica Beach Hotel in the Bahamas.
1-:ugene E. Barret, manager of the
hotel, says he has not seen llughcs, lhe
newspaper said, and the J us t ice
Department's . investigatior. has never
been publicly acknowledged .
Crash Probed
Stunting Blunted
An official probe Into the causes or
Tuesday's aircran rollision which killed
four men in San Oicgo -one of them the
son of San Clemente Councilman Wade
LQwer - showed that stunting by a solo
pilot caused the tragic collision.
Dr. Lower said this morning that the
plane carrying his son and two~other
fellow cmptoyes or the Briese and
Johnson Flying Scrvitt was struck by an
old Army training aircraft which was
engaged in acrobatics.
Earlier reports had erroneously in·
dicated that lhe Piper aircraft with the
three men aboard suddenly ascended and
in Denth of F 01tr
collided with the other plane.
Other reports added that strong
turbulence in the collision area over
Chula Vista was apparent throughout
Tuesday.
Lower and the three other men killed in
the trage<ly were seasoned pilots.
The Councilman's 3t·rear·old son was
the manager of the service's Brown Field
operations.
Dr. Lower said today that the probe
showed that his son was at the Cilnlrols o[
the struck aircraft.
"He rode it all the way down," he said
somberly.
* * * * * * Lo·wer Last Rites Friday _
Cle1nente Cou1icilman's Son Plane Craslt Victil'li
Funetal services will be conducted in
San Diego on Friday morning for Ronald
Lower, 31 , the son or long-time San
Clemente City Councilman and former
mayor Dr. Wade 1.-0wer.
Mr. Lower, a resident of El Cajo n. was
one of four men killed in the collision of
two light aircraft Tuesday afternoon in
Chula Vista.
The rites are set for 10 a.m. in
Greenwood MemoriRI Park, 43rd and
Mi.rkel Streets, Ssin Diego.
Burial will follow the riles at the
memorial park. .
Family 6pokesmen requuted '\hat
frlendl who wish, make memorial con·
tributions to the San Diego Aerospace
Museum, 1649 Prado,. Balboa Park,
Mr. Lower was e native of Millersbtrg,
Ohio, and moved 'Nlth his family to San
Clemente in the poiltwar years •
Jle attended San Clemente area schools
and was graduated at Capistrano Union
High School in 1958.
He then entered San Diego Stale
(:<>liege where he obtained a bachelor's
..aegree In bus\neM administration.
i\Durin' his college years Mr. Lower
began flying commercially and for a time
he and . hi11 younger brother, Carl.
operated a charier Oylhg servtee.
Mr. Lower jotned the Briese and
Johnson Flying Service in. 1963 and im·
mediately became manager of the Brown
1'~ield branch of the lirm.
It was ~.during f return trip lo , the
Brown Field offices · that the plane car-
rying Mr. Lower and two fellow employes
suddenly 'collided with another alrcrart-
also nown by a Briese and Johnson
employe.
Mr. Lower leaves his widow, Mrs. Jo
Ann IAwer, or El Cajon: a son, Jefr, 4~;
a daughter, Wendy 3: his parents, Wade
and Dorothy Lower of San Clemente : his
younger brother, Carl. of El Cajon: and
his m1tern1I grandmother, Mrs. Geneve
Rottman of Sin Clemente.
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Differences
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On Housing ~
Aired Out
By PATRICK BOYLE
01 ""' Dtllr 1'1111 SllH Elected and appointed. officials of San
Juan Capislrano Wednesday night had aa
opportunity to discuss their recent dif~
ference of opinions regarding a housinC
developmenl. by Westport Home Builders.
Meeting for an unusual joint dinne.t
session in Dana Point, the city coun-
cilmen and planning commissloner1
seemed to feel their differing actions ori
the development arose from a question of.
being able to legislate community:
harmony. '
The council Oct. 25 overturned tb1
commission's negative recommendation
,thus allowing th e deyeloper to build 1,200
garden and apartment homes. The
residences, in the $25,11® price range, will
be built in the north end of town where
homes in the $60,000 price range are Cilm· -
mon.
Planning Commissioner Carol Heim,
who had been against the development,
told the group that surrou nding
homeowners had to be considered in
allowing such a project. S e v e r a J
t¥>mcowncrs had asked for at least a buf-
fer zone of open space between their
homes and the new tract.
However, Councilm11n Ed Chermak
disagreed with Mrs. lleim. "Ii the people
in the Casas (the existing, more e1·
pensive tract) think they should have a
buffer around them." he said, "then they
should buy the land."
-"I feel the ptanning commission-in the-
pasl few months has· developed a
negative attitude toward development,''
be added.
Commissioner ~Art Lavagnino said the
tilmmission's primary concern had been
for the quality of the development.
"'I fell that what Westport was going to
do was all wrong." he told his fellow 'Of·
ficlals. "And I still don't think that the
\Vestport plan is the lype of development
this city can be proud of."
"It has some basic faults in H." he con·
linued, "and the biggest fault is that I
don 't think the developer· gives a damn
about this city ."
~1ayor Tony Forster agreed with
Lavagnino on a general basis, 1tating that
no developer "really gives a damn"
about the city.
Forster added , "Every (deve loper) who
comes ipto the city is going to do the
least he can."
But Forster said that In the \Vestport
project,• the developer had been coD-
vinced lo m;;ke a few basic changes in
his design in the period between the rom·
mission 's di sa ppro va l and co u n c i J
reversa l of that decision. '
"The only condition really in question,''
the ma yor added, "was whether or not it
was harmoniou.!I (with !he surrounding
homes)." '
Forster said he felt the cou ncil could
not legislate design with an ordinance,
but Commissioner Lavagnino retorted
that the city was not providing enough
guidelines for developers to follow. •
"\\'e are not leading anybody who Cilll1-o
es into this city and they can 6ee that ws
have no direction,'' Lavagnioo said. "We
are reacting Instead of providing som1
Jeadership.''
Councilman Josh Gammell suggested-
that by having stricter guidelines. the cl·
ty could possibly begin-"-ttracting a "be t..
ter class" of developer. •
Oraage
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Weather
1..-0w clouds l'nd fog will engulf
the Southland Friday, clearing by
mid-day lo sunny skies. Tempera·
lures will reach 65 at lhe beaches:.
rising to 73 inland. Lows tonight
35-45.
INSmE TODAY
A top Santa Barbara She-riff'•
aide UK!.! /ired \Vednesday for
his unuBual di$play of weapoiu
durino la8t 11ear1s fsln Vista riot-
ing. F'or story a11d picture, set
Page 11. , •
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~ DAil ~ i>ILOl ___ ~c _ __!hurSday, Novembtf ie, llf • • •
W ate~· District Qenlands Jury Rescind Report
Charging that certain members of the <ian&• County Grand Jury attempted to * ihl->PG!"tr 'OI their oUlct to effect 1
plttk:al change-=wtthln the South Coast
County \Valer District, directors of the
d~trict have <:ailed upon Dore e n
.J\lacshall , forem•n of the Jury, to publicly
l'elracl a recent critical report and repn·
111and those responslble for II.
:'At a special.meeting in Soulh Laguna
Tuesday night, the retiring bQard
directed that a tv.•o-page response to the
riport be sent to lhe Grand Jury, along
with the demand fpr retraction.
'The directors and their operation of the
W3ter diStrict were roundly criticized in a
t?and Jury report on special districts,
lasutd just rour days before the. Nov. 2 .
boird election.
Retirlna itlrector Robtrt. 8. Malone Im·
mediately luued a 1t1tement oalllnl; at~
tenlJon to errora In the report •nd now ·
th< full board has baued a poln~by-polnt
response. .
It reiterates most or the correcllons
made by Malone, supporting his charge
thnt the Grand Jury's criticism was bas-
ed exclusively upon information supplied
by a commillee seeking to recall four
directors and that oo effort was made by
the Grand Jury investigating committee
to contact any representative of the
dist rict with regard to the charg(s, prior
to publicalioo or the report.
The board responds :
.The E11iperor's Men
-To a charge that a water rate
increase was "unannou~d," the d,lrec-
tCh 1late that fhe increase was dl1eu11ed
11 oev1r.I public n>tt\lnl• altond~ by
eonstltuenll, lnctudlni tht cbalrmln of
the recaU committee, and that \ the
dellberatlona were set forth fully In open
minutes.
-To a charge th at the district refused
lo justify the increase. they slate that
district officia ls met with the recall com-
mittee and provided the1n with all sup-
porting documents and worksheets per-
taining to the decisio n to inerease the
rate.
-To a charge lhat the state legislative
C<>unset found the election petitions were
\'&lid and stated an election should have
been held , the dlrectcrs respond that this
opinion, based on selective information
provided by the recall committee, · wu
reverted when the complete racl.J were
provided to the counsel, who· then agreed
the peUtlons were void.
-A C!)mparlson of SCCWD rates wllh
those ot 1 Pri vale water company In the
Tustin area Is unfair, the directors state,
since the. inland company is close to a
trunk line of the Metropolitan Water
District, overlies the ground Water basi n,
is located on flal terrain, and is an older
company with static customer demand.
SCCWD, on the contrary must bring
water from long distances through costly
tra~mission lines, construct ii!! own
storage facilities, provide p u mp in g
faclliliea to-serve different eltv1Uon11
and keep up with 1 mushroomln1 popula·
tlon.
IA summary, the report states, ';The
collective charges made by the Grand •
Jury are patently' false and would im·
mediately appear so · to anyone con-
ducting even the most cursory ex·
aminalion ." Grand Jury members were
''well aWare" that lhe allegations were
• n1ade by the recall committee aQ_d
·"thus should have been ·careful to in·
vestlgate their credibility prior to issuing
erroneous conclusions based upon such
allegations.''
In conclusion, Lhe directors charge, "It
would appear that certain memhtrs of
the Grand Jury were closely aligned with
the recall 1rut.1p and th1t they attempted
to use the pawer ot their office to effect 1
political change wlthfn the district.
"The forewoman,· while obviously not
being direcUy Involved ln the concerted
activity, was nevertheless their willing
accomplice as she allowed the report to
be issued over her signature with ap-
parent knowledge of the man ner In which
the report was compiled.
"Vi'e call upon her to publicly retract
the report and lo reprimand those
members of the jury who deliberately
abused their apparent position of trust
and credibility." ·
Mexi~ans Air Gripe,s
County e.mployes or Mexican descent
will hold their second general meeting at
7:30 o'clock tonight in the new County
Courthouse to discuss grievances over
alleged dlscrlminatiin i~ county hiring
and promotional practices.
The Mexican -American employes first
met two months ago and after several
sessions decided that an organization was
needed to deal with their problems. The
grou p has selected Adelante, or Forward,
as their name.
They have tanned the organization for
reasons that include:
-A disproportionately low number of
employes in county service of Mexican
descent as compared wit h the racial
distribution of county population.
.·--selection pract ices which admittedly
screen~out minority job applicants.
-Promotional practices which ap-
parently-figures suggest -screen out
employes of .l\fexlcan descent.
-A complaint that there is ins~nsitivity
and rejection by some county officials
and other groups.
-The lack of a pay differenti'al for use
of language skills when relevant to
employment.
-The Mexican. American commuriity's
feelings of alienation from their county
government and the S(rvices offered.
Aiding Adelante in getting organized
has been Dick Ruiz, executive assistant
to Supervisor David L. Baker of Garden
Grove.
In order to develop organizatlOnal
details and evaluate opllons available to
the new group, an interim steering com·
nti\tee was formed Oct. 21. This com·
mittee has met several times, once with
officers of the Orange County Employcs
Association to consider the offer or
operating as a chapter within the associn·
lion.
Ruiz said the group will discuss these
issues tonight and that perrnanent of·
{icers of Adelante would be elected soon.
The session will be held in Courtroom
Three on the second Ooor of th!l
courthouses, 700 Civic Center Drive West ,
Santa Ana.
Laguna Trustees
Set Boulevard
Extension Talk
Only 3 Hooky Players
Turned by Trua11cy Unit
A recent three day "trua ncy patrol" by
Laguna Beach school trustees will meet Laguna Beach school and city officials
Friday with county officials to discuss yielded only three culprits, Superin-
lhe need for an immediate extension of tendent William Ullom told school
' Saddleback College's cast presents "Henry IV," a
~.: satirical comedy by No bel Prize playwr:ight Luigi
~r Pirandello. 1'he play, which weaves the plot from
• the 20th Century to the 11th, will be presented' at
•• 8 o'clock tonight, Friday and Saturday. From left
to right are David Ellis of Tustin, David Kleinberg
of El Toro, Michael Stoddard of Laguna Beach,
Craig Manchester of Tustin, Paul Barber of Mis·
sion Viejo and Lindsay Karg of Laguna Beach. The
public is welcome.
Alta Laguna Boulevard. trustees Tuesday .
The project had been scheduled for "The data collect.ed from our three-day
1972, but county officials recently an· survey," he added, "presents evidence
nounced that, due to a shortage of funds. that truancy is not a severe problem in
the road extension would have to be Laguna Beach."
delayed for at least one year. The survey v.•as conducted on Oct. 18
Jege students, a group of youngsters ln
town for a fie ld trip from another schoo l
district, two runaways from Long Beach
and several students with excused
absences.
Police officers also checked the caves
in the hills around Thurston Intermediate
School and Top of the World Elementary
School, but found no youngsters.
He added that it was often difficult to
tell a high school youth from one of
junior college age.
Bloodn1obile Set ~T<>'\iak~ Rounds
) · Ban ~l~;wen~~,
Th Red Cross BtOOtim°Otne W5J vlslf
San Clemente Friday to collect blood
donations ·under sponsorship of the United
Presbyterian Church.
The donati<>n.s will ~ accepted at tlie.
church paJ!il;jng lot lH;tween 3 and 7:.30 ·
p.m. • .
Project CUM!ctor Gebrge' Hyde sajd the
goal for t~ San Clemerile donations Is
100 pints. .
Private citizens, representati'ves or
buslneS!I firms· and community service
organizatioti ~embers all are urged to
donate. Hy.de said.
The pre.Holiday season tr11dltionally Is
a slack period fur blood donation and
causes a . severe dearlh of readily
available whole blood he added.
Reservations for donors are available
by calling 492·2889.
<f.55th Cos n1os Fired
Pi10SCO\V CAP\ -The Soviet Union
launched the 455th of its Cosmos series of
unmanned satellites \Vednesday. Tass
news agency said Cosmos <155 will C'Qn·
tinue the program of sriace exploration.
lts n1aximum orbit is 320 miles and its
low point 11~ miles.
OlAH61 COAIT
DAILY PILOT
ou.Mfl COAIT PUlllSHINO CIMl'AHY
••lt•ri N. W1.d Prnlf•nl ond PllOhll'let
~ \ J11c~ •· Cwrl1y ; • VU Pralcltnt W G_,11 6\Ww ; . Thot11 •1 K11"til lli!llr
nom15 A. M llt'plo.iR1 ~itlg EdUOr •
Q1rl .. H. L11oi Ri'"'"' I'. Ntll AullS.nl .Ma111g~ EllJWS
Le,11~• a.ac• Office
2ZZ f41t11l ""'•~u•
.. tHi19 od~r111: P.O. lor 666, f l6S2
Sn Cl-to OHko aos No.rth ll C1t11ln• R11!, tl672
·l 01Hroffk .. ~ Clllt Mtt•• »O Wftl 811 lt..., """'°" .... (~1 vn t11 .. 110r1 ll•uttv•!'d ~Wlltnlllllll IM'111 1711~ lllKh &!Wltwitl
Down the
Miss-ion
Trail
El Toro Selects
Ne"' Postmaster
EL TORO -'!'he El Toro post office
has a new postmaster.
Charles L. Covault, first superintendent
of the Laguna llills branch . has been
named postma ster or the El Toro facility.
He and his family reside Rt 23487 Vi::1
San f.1iguel. LagUna Hills.
e Stt,i1111tter1 Ho11ore d
'f.11SS10N VIEJO -The top sv.•immers
of the year have been na1ncd by the
Kadadores Swin1 Club of J\lission Viejo.
'faking the honors were Stephanie
Reinicke and Brian Goodell. Other award
"'inners included Molly O'Hanlon, Jef(
Amen, Julie O'Donovan. Brad Ritchie,
Sue McC;irthy and Scott Campbell \\"ho
\1•ere cited for individual in1pro11ement.
New officers of !he Rooster Cluh
rlectcd recently include Art COl)k. presi-
dent : Jim Okazaki. vice president: Bob-
bie Mohr, seeretary: Pat Cook. \1•ays and
means. and Wendy Edgren records.
e Go11r111e f Clns!t Sef
~ ?111SSION VIEJO -·A gourmet cOOk·
Ing class will begin Friday at the 1'.lon·
tanoso Recreation Center.
The clas~, sponsored by L a s
~13rgarltas. the women's l.'lub of the
recreation centers. will take place from 1
a.m . to noon.
This session v.•ill feature Gerrnan
rookery by l\1rs. Hannelore lla schk who
•will ('rca le rolladrn with dumplings and
red ·<'abbage. For reservations call the
center. 837·4084.
e To11• fo1• Tots lln<•kf'<I
SADDLEBACK VALLEY -The Toys
for Tots program will have the support of
the Saddlebark Vntley Chainbrr or Con1·
meree \Vomcn's bi\'ision this year.
The annual drive, sponsored by the
}.1arine Corps Rcscr\'e, V.'ill start Nov. 23
and last for two week~.
Toys \\•hich arc in good rondition can
be brousht ot Royal Snvings and Loan,
Toro Cleanin. Mission Bank . Mission
Pool Service: El Toro Cleaners. Phllllp'!i
Hair Fashions, Downe;.r Saving!! and
Lban, Laguna Hill! Cleaners , Leisure
World Barbers and Leisure Vi'orld's
United Califnmi& Rnnk.
Tenure Pl a n Okayed
SACRAf\-1ENTO (UPI \ -Legislation
which would give community college
teachers tenure arter two years but e11 ow
thtm to 'be rlred without cause during
their flrgt year of employment was pass·
cd Wednesday by the AQembly,
Friday·s meeting will be held at 2 p.m. an~ 29 and Nov. 3. he explained. with
at the school district orfices. Tom school adn1inistrators laking time off
Fuentes, administrative aide to Firth from their regular duties lo patrol the L£1.g u1tU. Stltlle1ttS District Super.t>isor Ronald Caspers, and downtown streets and beache!I with police
a representative or the county road of!icers and lifeguards.
department wilfmeet with school official11. ,Noting that he himself took part In one
"Just by looking at them," he said,
""'e could not make the specific decision
that they should have been at the high
school." Named Fi1ialists The school board has expressed con· ot the patrols. he sai d all youths who ap-
cern with the construction delay because peared to be of school age were stopped
He said the police would C<>ntinue their
present practice of stoppiTig school-aged
youngsters on the street during school
hours and asking ,why they .are not in
class. '
the road is ne'eded to run school buses and asked "'hy they were not in school.
In , JF;S Pro· grar1 l:. between Arch Beach tleights and Top of During the three days, chosen at ran· ::ti ll the World Elementary School. dom, the patrol yielded a few junior col·
La guna Beach lfigh School students 1-;==:::::::::::::::::::::::::::==:::=::::::::::::====:::======:::::::::::::::==::::::::::::=:
Kim Lokan and Josh Bright have been
named local finalists tor C<>nsideration by
the American Field Service (Af"S i for
place ment in a foreign country next year.
The two students v.·ere selected fron1 a
field of 15 local applicants by the
An1ericans Abroad cotnmitlee of the high
school AFS chapter. Dossiers on the two
have been sent to Ar~s headquarters in
New York where they may be matched
v.·ith a parent family in some foreign
land.
1'.1iss Lokan. 17, is the daughter or Mr.
and 1'.1rs. l\1arvin Johnson, 67 S. La Sen-
ds . Sou1h Laguna. She is .1 se11ior this
year and active in the Ski Club. Rock·
climbers Club, Girls' Athletic Association
and the girls' tenni s team.
Bright, 16, is the son of Col. and il1rs.
Cruger Bright. 787 Diainond St. 11e is a
junior and belongs to the Ski Club, J\1ath
Club. Key Club and is a member of both
cross count ry and track teams.
An11 E. Dillinger
Services Fridav ·' Funeral ser\'ices will be conducted Fri-
d<1y at 11 a.nl. for Ann E\iuibeth Dill·
ingeT. a native of England and a 33-year
resident of Laguna Beach who died al her
home Tuesday. She was 74.
The Rev. Gary 1-lerbertson of the
linited l\lelhodist Church will conduct the
last riles al Pacific View Memorial
Chapel in Corona del Mar . Interment will
rollO\Y nt Pncific Viev.• l\·lemorial l~fr'k .
Mr~. Dillinger. who lived at 1502
Tcmplf' JHlls !)rive, is survh·ed by her
husband, Phillip: two sons, Ru ssell Allen
of Redlands and Wlllia1n Allen or Dana
Poinl: A daughter. Mrs. Virginia Hill of
Santn Ana: eight grandchildren and three
great ·grandchildren.
P olice Stud ying
P a inting _Tl1 ef t
Laguna Beach police are investigating
the lhe{I or an ~ painting from an art
.s1ore.
lnveslii.:ntors said the thert occurred at
Aaron Brothers Art 1'1art, 190 S. Coast
1 ll~hway, ·!omen. time during , businets
hours either Tuesday or Wednesday.
'fhe 34-by-46-inch, wood-framed pain-
ting deplcled a· man in Welllt!rn-style
clolhlJlg walking down a railroad lrack
11nd carrying a 11uitc11se. The arllsl who
p;iintcd the \\'Ork Is Jim Daly~
luxuriou$ spri11g down sofas
The se hendsome safes were designed to give you the ultimate in seeting comfort wit h dacron and down
back pi llo ws, deep spring down seat cushions en veloped in down and feathers and two foam.filled erm
pillows. Choose from e wide se lection of fine fabrics .
YOU MAY SPECIAL ORDER NOW
AND STILL GET DELIVERY
BEFORE CHRISTMAS.
8' length reg. $599
NOW399
Your favorite interior dcslgnfr will be happu to assist you .••
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'69YllTlllM1•1'
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The Army's getting a dramatic pay increase.
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At a minimum, the new starting sa.laries will be doubled.
And you still get free meals, free housing, free clothing,··
free medical and dental care, free job-training and education,
, and 30 days 1 paid vacation a year. For all the details,
see your nearest Army Representative listed below.
•
Today's Army wants to join you.
At a much higher salary .
COSTA MESA
542 We.;t 19th Street
Costa Mesa, CA 92627
645-1163
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$C ... !P!'ll' ~!~!:: ~
-Your Money
' • ~p !>~ductibles ·
To Lower Riites " . ' .
by Ti~IY ,GRANT! R.Ph
Tlus para1ihras~ of the old
adage is cspCc1alfy pertinent \~hen 1r 'com('s to J:ood
health~ A~ the first signs of
an 1llnc:;~ dr l\'hC'D symptoms
ere rceul'l'l'ng is the time to
!"heck -,,Ith your ph)'s1c1an
]f ~OU \\311 \Vh8t m i ght be
a srmplc llln~ to cu1 c,
MUJd ··~~i(llO SOll'li!-1
thing serious
The sam.,I premise 8f.!pl!es
\\hf'n 1t come~ to ht\v\ng ~
prescr1pt11.fn fLlled Your doc-
tor wants you to hnve the
n1ed1c1nr he prrscr1h<-s -for
an ailmen t used at on~
That is ''hen it can dd t'ht.' mos t J:ood Don't delay In
bringing your prescription
to the pharmacy o! your
chotce. , ~ • •
YOU OR-YOUR l)oc;fO'I\
CAN PHONE US when you
need ll dell<.~ry'. We win de-
l1v.-r promptly without extra
l'hargc. A ifC8.t many pf'oplc
Tely oo ,us for Jheu: hcaJth n~$ We \l.'('lcorn(' Ttquests
for d1>ll\lc~ s·er\l fc e and
ChllTKt accounts •
PAIK'l.IDO PHARMACY
Uf'Hospltal Ro•d
N•wport l••ch 642-lSIO
''" Oallvary
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from
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d DAILY PILO ThW"sday, NOVtmbe, 16, iq11
DICK TRACY
TUMBLEWtEDS
Mun AND JEFF
BRU~O IS LISTLESS
BECAUSE l<ES flCIT GETTING
A BALANCEODIET!
FIGMENTS
PLAIN JANE
I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by ••• POWE• I:
ACROSS 4Z Ac.tress Y.t stttday 's Puzzlt Solv!d:
-Divis
l Hiding plac t 43 Not caring
6 Solt drinks about right OI ll Wattr frozen wrong
solid 45 Most dtpravtd 14 Dlrtctlon sign 46' lnlrlgut 15 Short maxim ~Muslim judge "t 16 Annoy by Unique -
cons tant 50 A bltsslng
complaining 52-m!UUT!
17 Exactly 56 PrClloun
oppos ft! 57-m1n: i 111an1 19 Unltt Race of the
20 Not dJfferrnt Pleist oe!ne 10 Fabric !nd 33 Porttco
21 Extravagan t .,. that wi 11 not 35 Crafts
speech bO S-sNP'lf worm rave l Jb V!g!lable
22 Swetv!S bl A moment 11 The "I'' of 38 Source of 2-4 Groov! for &2 Call to 1rms "ICC" disVe:ss
receiving 63 Sandpiper 12 City of Afric • 39 Disparage
coins &• Auctions 13 Discharge: 41 lnst19at!s
2b Stmltroplcal b5 Obi lgatlons 18 Trampl td 42 Command
bird 23 Soon!r than 44 MembHs of
27 Exhaust!d: DOW N 2S Allow the: human
Informal 26 Brelthe race
30 Workmen's 1 Bounde:tl rapidly In 45 We:athPrcoe t
sc1llolds 2 Diva's short gasps 4b Utt e:r!I' of
32 Electrrc!ty specialty 27 C!ty of words
used to drive 3 Pre:fl're for Tuscany 47 Not far away
a machint an exam 28 Unusual 48 Ci ph!l's
33 Glinted 4 Plain coarse person : Slang 50 Security
J4 Re:staura11t woolen cloth 29 Kind of 51 ~avl~ been
bll l 5 Lamb's parent theater. fam!l'ly
37 Observed b Jeweler's unll 2 words 51 Mtlvllle
38 Movtd sllddeti1y 1 Supreme 30 AUlfll lary V!l'b charact!f
39 UntOY!fed Norse d!!ty 31 lvin --: !i( Pitct
40 Time:tablt 8 Milk: Pref ix Produc t t of 55 Trtt!i
abbr!viatlon "l Turk!sh "Elephant 58 Tlmt period
41 Stupid pe9plt aeneral Country" 'i9 Radiari: Abt>-.
2 ' 7 • 9 1
II • ,
PEANUTS
JUDGE PARKER
MISS PEACH
.PERKINS
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By Tom K. Ryan
~z 91'/fAT.1'1.l. LM 0J~:8,Rlml
By Al Smith
By Frank Baginski
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GORDO
-'
MOON MULUNS
"-10 'TMAT NO-GOO!>
BUM "'1-l01S WAST!~
HALF HIS LIFI' /AT ')'OUR
seet>YT.AVORN WHEN Me
Sf!OULI> Be flOMe WITH
"THB WOMAN HE LOVES 11'
ANIMAL CRACKERS
g. •.
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By Harold Le Doux
NO, I otCl'N'T MAYE A PMOT'OO•
IA.PMER •T T'ME A.IRPORT .. ,t.WI>
I CANT TMllUC OC: OlrrlE REASON
WM't' .. ,,, on1 ER PA.PE" OR
MAGAZINE WOUt.D! SORRY!
...
By Gus Arriola
By Ferd Johnson
•• couLt> You Be A LITT!.<
MOl<E SPBCIFIC,,M,A•AM?
THE GIRLS
, ... ,a
"I don't ... how he does It-why, I've got my handa full
just kffplng up with what's going on Jn my ·
By Mel
NO, BUT LOTS 1 0• PfOJ'I.!
.lU ~ON(;,
SICINNY
PfNINSUL.AS .,
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By John Miles ·
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DENNIS THE MENACE
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1.U~ ta.l' '3 , o( •' . ~ .
Great Chase
In top photo of series, startled
woman at right pursues purse
snatcher who darts along the
sidewalk at left. The victhn,
\vho \Vas on a San Francisco
street was not identified. Jn
next photograph down, Carl E.
Da vis, 44. has joined the chase
and is closing in ori the purse
thief. identified as Alice Jean
Jones. \Vho fl ings away the
telltale evidence. Davis, who
works in a nearby mortuary,
observed the incident and bur·
ried to assist. In the picture
at left the purse rolls off the
sidewalk as Davis slruggles
\vith the 182-pound v.•oman he
has collared. Davis, a former
No tre Dame halfback turned
mortician, brought the woman
to ground firmly as shown in
the picture below. !·le .held her
there on the sidewalk until
police arrived and took over
the chase that turned into a
case. She is in city prison, held
for investigation of robbery.
The victim is shown be\o\v
closing in on her purse. She
left without revealing her
identity. The photographic se-
quence mas made by 2l·year-
old photography s t u d en t.
James R. Lysaght who had
just happened along.
----~-~---'·-·----rilursday, N(lvtmbtt 18, 1971 S DAILY PILO'i' :J -Election Dispute ·: --3 Arch Bay
Saddlehack Vote -Access B.i.d
Rejected Methods Studied
Flfth District Supervisor Ronald \V.
Caspers or Ne\Yport Beach said, ··1 get
the message," Wednesda'y when about 60
residen ts 0£ Three Arch Bay, a pfivate
residential community in South Laguna
appeared before the supervisors to pr1>-
test an appeal which would require a •
public access path through the com·
munlty to the ·beach.
Caspers moved that the appeal by
County Planning Commission Chairman
Woodrow Wilson Butterfield to the waiv·
Ing of the aecess reuirement, voted by his
ow"n comm ission, be denied.
But he added . "There are some good
provisions in the Beach and Recreation
District {BRO) Jaw. twhich requires a
beach access 10 feet wide every 1.000 feet
along the coastline\. \Ve are trying to
achieve the same things-you are, good en·
vironment.
A "We do not want to see unsightfy groins
nd piers constructed on the coastline."
Caspers added. ''The agony you suffer
coming up here all the time may be
worth the achievements."
At issue was the commissions approval
of a use permit requested by l-.1r. and
f>.1rs . R. W. Newman, 78 S. La Senda
Drive, Three Arch Bay, which would allow I
the undergrounding of utilities, the
elimination of the 10-foot access way re·
quirement and allow a garage front set·
back encroachment.
The Newmans plan to build a new
home on the site a11d because the BRO
law requires use permits for a n y con-
struction in the unincorporated coastal
:!:<lne, they had to seek the approval.
Attorney James Ral ston .S m it h,
representing the couple and the Three
Arch Bay Association. argued that the IG-
fool access way would serve no useful
purpose in that instance. That ttiere were
two other accessways to the beach in the
community and that the Newmans' prtr
perty Included an almost perpendicular
bluff at the oceanside where it would be
difficult to provide a pathway.
Smith asked all tho:;e favoring the
Ne\vmans' position to stand. That's when
the 60 or more residents arose and
Caspers said he had recieved the
message.
Butterfield did_ not appear to defend his
appeal.
A recommendation to add two trustees
to the five member Saddleback College
board may run 1aground if a dispute over
the method of election of the body Is not
resolved.
A number of residents attending this
week's meeting of the college · board ap-
peared pleased with the board expansion
program as put forth by trustee flans
Vogel, but roundly rejected staying with
the present election method. Trustees
now run from one of five areas, but are
voted on by the entire district.
Arter Vogel's plan was unveiled, Larry
Taylor of Laguna Beach -instrumental
in creating the Saddleback Community
College District in the mid-sixties -urg-
ed the board to consider electing the
Working Art
Scl1olarships
Deadline Set
Applicants for working scholarships for
the winter quarter at the Laguna Beach
School of Art must submit their art work
before Dec. 15, the school announced to-
day.
The nine-week winter quarter will run
from Jan. 3, 1972 to March 4, offering
classes in painting in all media, drawing
and composition. ceram ics, life drawing,
color and design, jewelry making,
printmaking, Interior desi gn a n d
photography.
\Yorking scholarships are given to
deserving stud ents upon submission of
samples of art work and an application
which may be obtained at the school of.
lice, 630 Laguna Canyon Road.
In addition, the Verner Beck Memorial
Scholarshi p, which provides four full days
of instruction weekly, will be awarded to
one student on the basis of merit and
achievement.
A free brochure listing all courses and
fees at the non-profit community school
will be mailed upon request.
Chief Rabbi Dies
MOSCOW (AP ) -Ychuda Leib Levin,
76, chief rabbi of Moscow synagogue and
unofficial leader of Russia's three million
Jews, died Wednesday. Tass reported
Levin had been sufferin g from heart
trou ble for the past fe w years.
trustees from their respective areas. The
remark prompted a round of applause
from the audience. ';
The board took no action on the plan : '
and continued discussions to lhe Dec. l* · .
.meeting. • "·
"Trustees elected at large are more • .
prone to represent the interests~ thee~· ~ ...
tire community college district, rather le>' •
submit to pres.sure group! within theii-' •
own district," Vogel said in explaining his"."•:
desire lo stay with "at large" elections.
Vogel pointed out . that only 14 of SJ: . ·
community college districts in California ,.·.
elect trustees by area. "I think that irt' , ,.
dicates more faith in the at large ·
method," Vogel said. · '
Taylor noted that when he served on·
the steering committee there were
•;,many concerns about the voting at large 1.
method." ;:-
• "l think many or us would like le>
believe you are ideologically right, Mt. ·
Vogel. but we still have those concerns," ,.-.
Taylor said. ' ·
Vogel, using statislics from past cot~
lege board elections, said the charge t~t
district wide voting allows cand idates ta · 1
Jose in their area, but win in the entire !1
district is "simply not true."
The only time that happened, he said, ' ~
was in the first election in Febru.ary 196( ·
when trustee patrick Backus lost In his r
area (San Clemente-Dana Polnt} but won T
in the entire district. •
Taylor said the one example showed ti ···
could happen and said, "It could happen
again."
Taylor also charged that trustees -
even though they are elected at large.:;.--
tend to remain in the home areas. "How
many times. have you communicated wiUJ:
Laguna Beach?" Taylor asked. ' ·
Pounding his fist on the table, Taylo~
added: "If we want Saddleback College
to represent the people in thi s vast area, :t:,
we must have trustee Areas -it 's the olh. •
ly check and balance we have."
Vogel claimed the board is already
"answerabl e to the people in the
district." Further, he noted, any action ot ..
the board to reshape the board and .'.-•
change the method of election would have ~
to be sent to the vote rs for final approval. ' .
Vogel noted the e.1pansion of the board
was necessary to evenly divide up tile -
population of the district between thl!i. • :
trustees. His plan calls for splitting the, •
Saddleback Valley into three separate:··
districts. Currently the rapidly growing
· area is served by only one trustee;
Michael Collins. '
TAPE RECORDER SALE! -,
_,·J.
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1/2 PRICE S~LE-WOLLENSAK 3M ...
reg. $J79.50-NOW ONLY $89.75!
ATLANTIC llo' only 121 of tht1• fin• 1l•r•o top• d1c~t. So huny In! No
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R<"i;:u.lar price ~219.90, Clllle lnclud·
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GAl'ltAll:D'S· 401 fs a thrrc 1JJH'd
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"·ilh d iamond 1tylus. ·J!cgul&r
price 369.50.
lANClR 97ll S'"IMlkl't"lll e.t1'I full
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n~~4o SAVE '99"1
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VALUABLE COUPON
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Humble P'•e llKXll' tht f ill"'''' Aritt1lk't '3.29 J l.ctrll1-lr9. SS.ft -"'k•
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HEADPHONES ht· $9.H
S-16.46, U1111t 1 Ptt C......, s3 49 '"feet T• kMll 0. H-4 •
CLOSED THANKSGIVING DAY, NOV. 25th
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DAIL V I'll.OT •
·.
2nd Hit
By Sniper
IELP'-. llortllem lrtiond (UPI) -
A onlper who fired only two ahot1 kl!lod
ooe ~ eoldlet and seriously wowided
.-~ in the Roman catholic
. Short strand area of East Belfast, Ute
1!'111)' ....
11w: two laldien, who were not lden-fui.d. ...,. bellewd to hive betn in or
near u o'-rvaUon Poll at a bus 1tatlon
when ..-atm rang out. an army •pnke-• uld.
.,Unforta»tely, it WIS atre.mely good
ahootinc," be added.
].'he soldier was the 31th to die in
~~n .Ireland tllil yur and the first
I~ another died a week ago in Lon· .
clQDdsry. A total ol 1%7 penon1 hll died
ln) ngbting involving; catholics, .Proles·
111!111 and Britilb troops.
~ ~ay. a mob · angered by a11
oP.. vmlicl In the Btilisb Army ohonting
Gf'1 deef muit Went on a rampage in the
border towll of strabane.
:Al the howd or 200 persons stoned
t~ mwhed windows and looted
ltft~ three bombs destroyed or heavily
d~aged a library, bus depot and gas
1tition, the apoktsman aaid.
"' Belfaat. troops acting on intelligence
t~ion seized 23 persons in Roman
catholic areu during the night but later
re&ased 7S of them, an army spokesman 1alll.
touce in U:lndon raided an empty store
arld arrested four men and a girl and Miied 11 rifles, three automatics and 56 ~ of ammunition. Tbe detectives
w•e tnveat.igating Saor Eire, a splinter
g1'6up of the provisional wing of the Irish
Ripublican Army, police sources said. 1he mob action in Strabane, a Roman
Cltholic town 14 miles routh cf Lon·
dai.derry, came after a coroner's Inquest
Wldneiday returned an open verdict in
~ _ August shooting cf E a m o n n
Mf.Dtvltt, 24, 1 deaf mule. 'Jt.n open verdict means a coroner'• in-
quest has been unable to find criminal
biame !or a death and cannot recommend
~lion.
McDevttt was killed by a trooper who
aiid be saw him carrying a gun.
Jti.sidents aald McDivltt did not know bOw lo uae a gun and was only waving a
uad rubber bullet. ~ollce and troops finally succeeded in
dii,persing the Strabane crowds In the
eai'ly morning hours, the a r m y
•Sl'kesman said.
1n Londonderry, a 14·year~ld boy hit
by a bullet from what the army said was
1-taniper-'1 machine.gun Wednesday r_e·
mained hospJtallzed in serious et1nditlon.
Robert Cannln& was looking through a
teitscope when hit. wilnnses said. ~he shootin1 was followed by sporadic
r~1ting.
U.S. Recesses
Vietnam Talks •
ARIS {UPI) -U.S. Ambassador
il\iam J. Porter cut abort toda y's
,egsion of the Vietnam peace talks after
telling the Communists the United States
has "not.bin, further to say" until it
receives what he called ·a "constructive
reply" to American proposals. . .
Porter, in an abrupt sv•1tch in
American tactics ~oinciding with the
reJuro of chief Hanoi negotiator Xuan
11ruy read a 23-word statement. then sat
back and-listened tQJhJ_~a\ Viet Cong
11nd North Vietnamese diatribes against
President Nixon's Vietnamese politic~.
When they had finished attacking Nlx·
vn's Friday 15tatemenls on more troop
withdrawals, Porter stated :
"There is nothing new in your
st.atemenll today. You are using the
1ame staJe material I have heard since
my arrival here. I have no further com·
rnent and propoM adjournment."
Porter than proposed that the 137th
ge,ssion be postponed until Dec. 2 because
of the American Thanksgiving holiday
next Thursday and "to give you time to
renect on your position." The Communist
1ide agreed and the negotiating teams
ldl the chamber.
'·-
l
Time put
Gov. Ronald Reagan of Cali·
fornia checks out an Indiana-
polis 500 racer on di splay at
the Republican Gove:nors Con·
ference being held in French
Lick, Ind.
Rare Books Stol en
1
DAVIS (UPI) -T\VO sets of rare
botanical books dating back lo 1787 ha ve
been stolen from the library ·of the
University of California at Da vis.
Librarian J. Richard B ! a n ch a rd
Wednesday said the $4,500 theft was iden·
tical to a similar robbery at the
CaliFornia Academy of Sciences in San
Francisco last week.
To Hear .
P1~esident
MIAMI BEACH (AP) -AFIA:IO
President George Meany announced t,o..
day that President Nixon wµJ speak lo
tbe big labor 'federation's convention,
\~:here union leaders sharply attacked.
new federal wage controls._.
Meany who said Nixon's economic C<ln·
trols threaten the future of the nation's
ea>nomy, said Nixon would speak to the
1,000 labor delegates Friday morning.
The invitation came as AFlrCJO
leaders, charging efforts to harass labor
members ol President Nixon's Pay
Roard, reportedly will urge convention
delegates representing nearly 14. million
union members today to fight federal
wage controls in the courts and Congress.
But they \Vill keep I.heir men on the Pay
Board.
"There is no question that the IO public
and industry members are trying to
sandbag the labor mem):>ers ... it is
harassment in an attempt to discourage
us and force us to walk out, but we
won't ," said a source in a private AFlr
CIO strategy meeting.
He said the harassment is aimed at
blaming labor for any failure of wage
controls.
The federation's 35-man executive
council reached a consensus decision at
the meeting to recommend the legal and
legislative fight against wage controls for
approval by 1.000 AFL-CIO convention
delegates.
"We are going lo go legal and
legisl2.tive-that's the route we are going
to take. but we won't get off the board,"
one source said.
Sources added that the three AFL-CIO
members on the Pay Boord, including
Presi~e~nt George Meany of the laOOr
federation e1epect the two other ldbor
membe o take the same position. The
two ar residents Frank E. Fitzsim-
mons of the Teamsters and Leonard
\Vooclcock of the United Aulo Workers
\vhose unions do not belong to the AFL-
CIO.
There are five members each for labor,
Industry and the public on I.he board.
Thai Strongman Says
China Factor in Move ·
BANGKOK (APJ -Premier Thanom
Kittikachorn r;a \d today that one factor
which prompted the return to full
military dictatorship in Thailand was a
fear that Peking 's entry into the United
Natiens would swing the Chinese in the
country to communism.
Spe8king to a meeting of 1~4 senior
1overnment officials. the leader of the
military clique that has ruled Thailand
for years said the government is un·
certain \vhat effect Red C h i n a ' ll
di{>lomalic victory would ha ve on the
three mill ion Chinese in Thailand.
"If the Chin ese take the Cvmmunisl
ideology in great numbers,·• he con·
Interna tional l\leet
On Finance Se t
\VASHINGTON (AP) -Treasury
Secretary John B. Conna lly called top
finance orficers of the n1ajor non·Com·
munist countriei to a N1J\'. JO·Dec. 1
meeting in Rome lo discuss the in·
te rnational monetary imp11 sse.
The meet ing of the so·c111lcd "Group of
10" finance ministers had been ten-
tatively sched uled a v.·eek earlier. but
was postponed when the United States
,;aid more time ro{ preparation was need·
··ed.
Connally, who is chairinan of the Group
of 10 ministers, has just returned from a
trip to Japan in v.·hich he discussed
monetary and trade matters.
ti.nued, "the situation in the country coult1
be turmoil because it will aggravate the
exiSflng terrorist infiltration that exists
in every part of the country."
Events had reached a point that re-
qu ired "quick, drastic and absolute
measures," Thanom declared.
The measures taken Wednesday in·
eluded suspension of the constitution prcr
claimed three years ago, dismissal of the
tv.·o-year-old Parilamenl and the Cabinet,
and creation of a Revolutionary Council
made up of five men who have been
runnini:: Thailand since Field Marshal
Sarit Thanarat died in 1963.
l\1canv.·hile. life went on as usual in
Bangkok, and the reaction of the: average
Thai to the end of the experiment in
de1nocracy \Vas the usual Thai rcsporise
\11hen something doesn 't work out. "lvtai
pen rai," or never mind .
"This is not an event that will bring the
prople into the slreels." said Foreign
Minister Thanat Khoman. who lor;t his
job with the rest of the Cabinet.
Rights 'Violated'
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU )
fJJed an appellate court petition Wed·
nesda y saying stringent c o u r t r o o m
securily measures violated the rights of
the ''Soledad Brothers'' to a public trial.
The ACLU asked the appellate court to
£'ase restrictions imposed by Superior
Judge S. Lee Vavuris at the trial of
f"leela Drumgo and John Clutcl'fette.
charged wit h the killing of Soledad prison
guard John V. Mills last year.
It's Cool -~
• Ill Wyoming: -6
•
Snow Hits Midla.nds ; Ea.st Skies Fa.ir
Coostel
"11111'1' fod.fl', L191'11 1t•fl•bl• Wof'llll\ ,.1911, ... "'IOl'lllti9 '-t1 --!~
Wiii ~ Mllll'l-1 I 16 lf 11:1'$4'1 ho • .,.,_, tod•' •NI Friff,. Ml•ll ,.., ...
(Ml,.I '-ftlll'K ••ntt f,,_ '-l
flt t6, lfll•fld ...,..,.IV"°' NllM f~
• ti ... W•f« ,..,....IV,• JI,
' Temperatures
-'--_ ... • --
• Teacher LoopJtOU!'t
U.S. Pleased
WASHINGTON (UPli -Th•
nation's ®lput of goods • n d
services grew at a slightly treater
rate than the government .had
predicted durl.ng the July to
September quarter, while: Wlatlon
grew at a slightly slower rate lhan
predicted.
Pay Boar
On Retroactivity
Today's Commerce Department.
reports on the (;ross National
Product and the: lnfiation rate were
encouraging news \ for the ad-
ministration.
The GNP was put at a seasonally
adjusted aMual rate of •t-,061
billion, up $17.8 billion from the se-
cond quarter and $1.8 biUion more
than the government anticipated.
'The rate of lnflatiol, for the third
quarter was put al 3.0 percent. It
originally had been projected at 3.4.
percenl
Torture Toys Banned '
SACRAMENTO !UPI) The
California Senate without debate has
passed a bill cutlawing toys designed to
depict torture or. resemble a bomb or
hand grenade.
The measure by Assemblyman John J.
Burton (0.San Francisco), Was sent Wed·
nesday on a 24-2 vole to the Assembly for
concurrence in amendments. Republican
Sens. H. L. Richardson of Arcadia and
Clark L. Bradley of San Jose cast the
dissenting votes.
From Wire Dllpilcbe'
WASHINGTON -The Pay Board his
voted a seet1nd time to stick by tta ban
against retroactive payment of rai.15es
held up by the wage-price freeze.
But a sourte close to the board said
there still is a posslbi ity that&Ome ex.
ceptions to the general ban would be:
made -perhaps one covering the na·
tion 's 2.2 million teachers.
Aspects of the back pay issue were on
the agenda again for the board's meeting
today, after an appearance by officials of
the United Mine Workers Union and the
Bituminous Coal Operators cf America.
The five labor members or the IS.mem-
ber Pay Board tried during Wednesday's
four-hour meeting to get the panel to
reverse its earlier general ban against
bac.k pay that fell due during the freeze
but was not paid because of it, But the
move lost on a 9 to 5 vote, with the five
labor members voting for it and 9 of the
public and business sector members
voting against it. Chairman George H.
Boldt doe s not vote exei!pt to break lies.
The source said the retroactive pay
question still is alive on a piecemeal
basis -such as the teachers question,
and perhaps the Issue o( merjt pay
ra.lses . Wednesday was th& second day
this week, however, that I.he board has
failed to reach a decision on e1ceplions to
its retroactive pay ban.
The Pay Board called the mine workers
and soft coal operators to talk abOut -
and perhaps to offer justifications for -
their ~w lil percent pay increase con-
tract.
Nine members of the IS.member panel
voled Wednesday to review the pact
which was signed Saturday after a 48-day
strike in the nation's soft coal fields. A
Pay Board spokesman stressed that the
contract was not being challenged and
that I.he principals in the contract simply
were being invited to talk about the
agreement". ,
But the contract calls for a JO percent
or more increase for some 80.000 miners
during the first year, compared with the
board's official 5.5 percent guideline. Ac•
cording to a management spokesman, the
increase ever a three-year period would
be about 39 percent. .
Negotiators for the contract contend it
is an e1isting contract for Phase 11
because it was signed 15 minutes before
the 90-day w.age and price freeze ended. -
Despite the agreement , s e v e r a I
thousand miners remaineC off the job to-
day In western Pennsylvania and
northern West Virgin ia.
Our plants ar, greener.
Penneys .~arden Shops.
69~ ea.
Black Magic African
Violet mix. Contains
no aoU ••• add only water. 2 qt size.
1.05 ea.
Special.Azalea
plants, Choose
from assorted
colors, and plant
them In the shade.
Hardyplanl8
growing In one.
gallon contalneia.
Sequoia decorative bark.
Attractive beneficial ground
cover for all planting areas •.
Medlum,coarse,and1 88 pathway. 3 cu. ft. bag.
99~ pkg.
Late Fall Crocus bulbs.
Choose Velvet King,
Snow Storm and
MammothYellow.15to
e package.
99~ea.
Special. African
Violets. It grows
with minimum of
care, in full light
but not strong
sunlight.Assorted
varieties and
colors. 4" POts.
· Bonsal Tree kit. Kit
contains: planting dish,
Bonsal plant, special soil,
wire and Instructions.
'
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·-{;.ampaignt----1-~Ace~N~ar-co--.tic-1 -D.eadly-(;.as•~~
I
Tax Plan 4gentCharged · Fumes :IGll :
Passes Test
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Senate
Democrats beat down a RepubUcan
challenge today lo their plan to futance
next year's presidential election cam~
palgns through a Sl per tal)llyer
checkoff on lf'll Income tu ret,W'nll.
ConservaUve and liberal Democrats
joined in an unusual diaplay of party uni·
ty to defeat a Republican effort to acutUe
the plan, designed to provide '2().4 million
for their debt.ridden party's candidate u
well as another $20.4 mlllion for the
Republicans.
The vole was 46 to 49.
George C. Wallace, if he runs, as he did
In 11168 as a third party candidate would
get $6.3 million. Sen. James V. Allen (0-.
Ala.), who ·campaigned with Wallace
3CTQ$5 the nation in 1961, voted with his
fellow Democrats in opposing the
Republican move to beat the plan.
Under the plan, a taxpayer could check
a special box on his tax form to allow w:e
of.$1 of his taxes (or $2 in cue of a joint
return) to help pay the cost of presiden-
tial campaignln& next year.
Congressiona l observers said chances
• were strong that the plan would be en-
acted since it is an amendment to Pnsi-
dent Nixon's tax bill.
Sen: Charles McC. Mathias (Jt.Md.),
made the unsuccessful move to remove
the campaign financing proposal from
the tar. bill.
Mathias argued that the Democratic
plan was Dawed because it carried no
provision to limit' how much private ccn-
tributors could' give candidates for the
presidential nominations for use in
primary batl1es.
silverwoods
NEW YORK (UPI) -Ten yous
ago, narcoUcs dltectlve Edward •
Egan worked OD a caH whlch
culminated to the .elmre of S31
'million wortb of heroin. RectnUy,
he playt:f a smaU part In and wu
lechntcal advilrr for the "Tbe
French Q)Mection, 11 a movie based
on that case.
Wednesday Egan was charged
with wlthholdlnc small amounts of
drugs and drug-rdlted equipment
be had confilcated in 22 cases.
Deputy Po I ice Commlasloner
l(.obert Daley old Egan, a veteran
or 15 years , also faces department
tharges or failing to appear as a
prosecution witness In 1 court case.
Norman Campus
Swept by Fires
NORMAN, Okll. (UPl) -Fires bellev.
ed set by an arsonist at the University of
Ok1ahoma before dDn today destroyed
one building and caused nwnerous in-
juries among students and visiting
bankers during evacuation of a
dormitory.
Nine bankers •ttendlna: a seminar and
staying in the donnitory were iOjured,
seven badly enough to be hospitalized.
Dozens of students au.Hued llD.Oke in-
halation.
"I cou1dn't ieven begin to counl the
number of students overcome by smoke,"
a spokesman at Norman Municipal
Hospital uid. "The bospltat is full of
them ."
'
Pll£.SOUDAY
SLACK
SPECTACULAR ·
Double Knits Galore
REGULAR!.. YTO 40.00
19.90ro 32.90
Saw now on quel1ly llacb lorFall, llOlldl,.
and gifts. Select from atralOhl llgt, ....,
bell-loop end t»wolst lllOdoli. Sold -
end pottoms. Entire 8loClc notca...,llbop ' . elllY for c:ilolCI HI I cllon.
--•-a111n.
IAMKAMlllCHID --Oii All--
Ja.wasl·-
'I
(
6Workmen
__ __.,_____ ..,.......
flllll1d'1, NM-18, 1971 DAILY f'U.Q;
.
Wm· Funds Killed
&AW SOMETHINGI
Go""""" ill Ille -clirti.. .tin this .-..u .. ~Jlt--~•i>eN9'"" ...-cua1<1g lldlo!l lof..,. .. lo,llign •peed zlpii '°""'11h wood, plN I .. bowd, pltilics. ..,.....lo<> tool>td, •tc.. O,tlll clrcla . ""''°" _._ t lllO!gM llnn .•. u.111M~
...,....,.,._t.rM1..,.1t1o ~~·.e11........i
~-orlft-poli.rtfd
.......,c-.C-.plillli witn wooa cwino
'lliMlli.(flla)Zl.11
NEW 1" HHCH GRINDER
..... G.c .... ~ Ol"l 11""" .-or\! ~--\ ~lllYM.~lt<l ... M: ..... __,._.
,J le ..,_ IMINll -Mil. -.,.,. -. ..,.
1ti1eldt, ......-.....-....... cf780Ct
2688
Come In TODAY 111d see our wide assortment of
Old Cenlurg •""" """'
lloUH lisns. wlll decorltlons and 111any othtr
--..... Wl.50 ......
Items for araci01Js Americm li'rini. WALL OlaMif.-$14.75 1tnAIL
.....
MAii. 1ar s1a1t
$10.50 KTNI.
1i .,...
I.AWN M..cl p ,sowr.u&.
CHl"IHltT
& 1:1.1.11.t.ac
''""' IH I ••UI
112..50 ..
l2•.SO
* LOTS OF FREE
~~~~'{//.'.._ PARKING
I * FREE PANCY GIFT WRAP ,..,..,..-',. .......
OPEN MONDAY,FllDAY~ 9.9
SATURDAYS 9·6 1
SUNDAYS 10·4
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\\'hen the last or the coastline management ,biJls bt,..1ure, 1ome of 'th•;last:mlnutf -.amen'dm•nlJ
was killed by the state Senate Nat,ural Resources Com· were ~t~ndff to incr1a1t local 1r1a vol_ee in\,tb.1 .. op-
lttee last ~1onday, the bill's authQr, Assemblyman Alan eratiora••Ol the control comminiona. But ut;e·_ovtrijl1.tf·,
· h feet atDI 'w11 to trample on~ riJht11c;t CGa1t1l area reei-S roly CQ-Los Angeles), let out cries of anguis · dents_ ind overly interfere wi~ th1111ormal protff11a of
He blaincd Govcl'nor Reagan alJd the lobbyistkis. ind local gov~rmment. . • \ . , . . ,
h public statement. lie probably also had un n .u 'ftl un11eit1td : wu the •qtieition of eompenntinJ
\vords for Orange 1f:ounly's Se n. Dennis Ca rpenter, \vho private .owq_frs or cnalit&I land frozen out' .or dt.,v.elop.
Cast one or the four nay vt1tes that killed the bill. · ~rit. ·Whuld auC'h land-be removed fl'Om th•'tu rolls?
\Vail~ by sorne suppo rters of the hashed-up AB 1471 If so. what \VOuld be the imp1ct 'on loci! a:overn"me'nt ••
that the <'Oastline is Jrretrievably doomed to destruc-financin~ · , 1~· 1 1 : -:
tion because this bill failed are silly. 1'hey are si mply 'Despite the many unreaol.•f'd· que11tions about the
more of the emotional fQoli shness that in fact .handi-me1sµr-e, soroe ·ronservation spokesmen h1vt ·•ct,d· as ·
capped the bill ,by keeping it from being put into a tbOugh any attitude of elution toW1rd C0111tli11f m1ri: _
\\'Orkable and acceptnble sha pe before it went to the agen:ienl.!legisJation·•ill 1quivalent to ·being ~oln;•t .'God~. '1
Senate. ·1 country and motherhood. It was this extrem1·over;ptiy· i
Sieroty atfd his o eatcd supporters may come inc of their hand that-lltlpe41 kill ttM • bill . . · , . . ·
to thank the natural reso cs co1nmittee for the de--One such spot'esman 'now 1aY•·Conservatlo!\ Ja:r.OU,P.•,1
inise of his btll, considering its shortco mings. lmple-\viii push for an iniJiativt to ·place· tht oo<tin, n1,1D:,
men ting -if in its fina\ hodge po ge for might h~ve pro· agement question on the ·ballot ·i,....Nove~;,f912:.,, . ' 1 .
duced so much turinoil, and e en cosll Ja"'SUlls. that Tbe. Legislature should. bf''table to-rom, Up with I
Sieroty and the responsible c n"servar nists probably soJid, acceptable coastlint bill ~ lone . befoft ·ne~t ·NOv-
\rould live to regret ha ving sp sore he measure. ember. And certainly it 1M1dd rbt .expect~. te m,.K,
fen• Californians should · ct to the state th is a priority item. Senator ;c a">:penter, fer · ex,nlple,
setting up guidelines for shoreline development and already·ha11;announctd hit il'ltention.or aubmlttina: a new ·
fun ding programs for needed studi es. But as the Orange bill next ·teT'm, and aurely. thef1·will ltt oth~r4.~1 :·. / •
County Grand Jury declared in opposing the bill, \Vhat .neeas to be.·dorie: nOw · ia • to knock off tht
"actu31 control should re1nain \vith local government." foolish ,·· co,_unltr-prOdut:tivt-.wlilinJ and· 'rtCrirDihltion
The SierotV bill \\'OU id have imposed the authority and · tbre·ats of revengt th1t . t\1v1 been 'domini' ftom i or a st ate co mrTi ission and six general commissions over some ~'B 1471 supporters, and_;tat1_ a conatrUt:t1ve '. ap·
coastal county and city govern1nen ts and .other local proa.ch · ~ ·· ·' '· : :_ 1 •
! agencies in virtually every aspect or planning and de· .T.his means pushinC for 1pfom!p·t inltrirri 1thdie1' by
\•elopment. the a.Ppr'optia.t,e l~JjslatiVt committ1t1.,1A'ful rtldt!t of all
So many last minute amendments were made to it requires aeekihg:. more particip1tion in tti1 . preplra·
the Sieroty bill that it became virtually impossible r~r tion of this. leeislition ~ by the affected "lat:al Jovem· I anvone to consider alt the ramifications in the time avail· mints' -in.stead ol treatin( them· 11 foo11 of 't:rnl\inlls
able. Opponents \\'ere justified in 'their nay votes on unworthy of .. trust. · · · , · · . ·
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! this score... al one . In tht-. interim. uite.r.est~· re1idents arid · organ·
As the 31-page bill came to the Senate committee, izations can and should act as · Watchdog1 , at c;ity and _ . ~~ .s;:.,~ ... ~'-"\'.>,,..... '.
i it had been amended at least 50 times. with some oC county levels to monitor aCtion& 'iCfecting «puW 'en' . "M·AV'lf . WE ('N (JEQLJJ <JTJON. JT . f O" MIS51LE STOaA/.£.' ' the amendments running 40 or more lines Jong. vironment. 1 I P /1 (\ ) f\ f)f1,J j:~~-~~~~:__~~~~~~~~~~~~-,----,-.-.---,--.---i...;...~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_!
Beauty Cari
L4 ttract but
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Plta•e.lli Controoersies, Conflicts· Motitit
' I Not Hold Men :
t "'----. ' i
• •
Sydney J. Harris )
inoughts at Large:
• Beau1 y has sufficient power In attract la man. but never to hol d him: thus, !beautiful women "'ho nri:lcct lo develop
other traits len d lo make the mosl un-
stortunate marriagrr~·
• • • •
f /!lost of lhe people "'ho are against
:stricter gun 'Controls
~are great proponents
;of "law and order''
'and supporters of the ~police fnrce -yet
'e_\'ery urban pol ice
force is in faror of
f&lrlrter ~un controls
~~~a~he t~o~ ~f~~ti;·~
r armed crime.
I • • •
: This summer I heard .about \hf' littl e
1 girl playing croquet 11·ith her father. who
•said. "l think l'ni going to lose'': he r
fa ther replied. '·\'ou·,·e got to h:1\·e a
more positive attitude" -"'h<'rtupon the
liltlf" girl said. "O.K. then , I know rn1
,going to lose." • , • • •
Much of our l'Ul'rcnt environmental ae.
tivity is more cam ouflage than clea nup:
converting jct planes tu sn1okt>lc!;S
engines. for example, simply incrca~es
the em ission or nitr.ogen oxide !a prinle
element in photoc hemical s1nog1. and
just replaces a visible pollutant v.·ith an
invi sible one. • • •
\Vhen you ron into someone who is
:disagreeable to others. ,\Oll may be sure
he is uncom fnrtable "ith himself : lhe
amount of pa•n v.·e inflit·I upo n others is
directly proport ional to the amount v.·e
feel within us. • •
How can the half-educated h11ve the
T~~ violence ·in Ireland under·
scores-thr fa ct our founding
rathers knew what they wtre dO-•
ing \\'hen they separated church
and state.
-H.B. McD .
Tl<Ot ltlh"t ttll«ll ,,,....,,, ""--
NCtUlrllV ,_ .. tM ~twUIHr, ltM
_, !NI -·u .. C_, ..... D91fr ,1191.
temerity to suggest that "history repeat11
itself." "'hen not even 1 sing~ leaf or a
single snowflake repeats i,t st J f ?
( \Vhenever we draw a hi11torkal parallel,
it is invarinbly in or4er to boh1ttr our un-
provable theories or t'ht nature of man or
the ordering of human affairs.l_
• • •
Nobo<ty f'ver imagi nf's thal hf Is, by
do11hle-1n1rking and for<:ing a 1tr~am of
tr:1ffic to i:o uround hin1, in any way con·
tributin!ii: to the disinlegralion or society:
and yet it is precisely in such tiny ·w1y1
tha1 the fnbric of the community iJ torn •
asunde r. with each person blaming some
\•asl abstraction ca lled "They," and
defending his mild trani;gre.~sion as
merely a net·esi;:iry part of "tht :ttruggle
lo survivf'."
• • •
Tiie man \\'ho pul11 on lhf" cloak of non·
\'inh~nce tu concea l i1npolenee can
achie\'f' nolhing : it is only Jht atrong
1nan. who voluntarily renounce111 violencf,
v.·ho can ptrsuade others to follow him ol)
the enlightened path.
• • •
\\'e can all toler111e those \\'ho don't
agree "'ith UJ, unlil they start lo gel the ·
u pp~r hand .
• • •
Half the churches in the rou nlry woOld
he emptied if peoplf" allended lhtm
bli ndfolded ~ that nobody rould tell who
was missing. • • •
Tn "hold" an idea is f"Ventually to be
held by it: unle.~!i an idea is acted upon, it
slt?wly puts its possessor into deep-freeze.
An A1iti-1iunting Tirade
8y '°ITKE AHR A.\ISO~ \1•ihtlife m<ina,l:"ement authority now serv-
ini:; a11 associate ditfi.•tor of lhe U.S.
Bureau of Sports Fii;heries and Wildlife.
Go Ahead·
I Drive Needs a 'Lift'
WASHINGTON -'rtw · lrTI~d ~ 6f
eeonomie:control 11 M" bettftninc to bt
felt and ftw people art re11ly enjoyln1 it.
Busintasmtn, 11 wt.II as labor. ~rt be(in·
ning to 1'ritht in anticipation &f the tf·
fec:ts of prict,. w111 and ·profit ceilin11.
Controvtrstfl 100 connict~ 1r.t .m9urttin1
even hl"fore ·Ph111 fl lias ·&On• fully·. into
effMl.
Tht rt:ttlll is t
kind ol ltt-down ant1
"•kt·Up lo "re"•lity
indicated ~Y • n.1-·
11in11:· 11ock· rr:iarktl
.and me return~ nf
that old feelin1 th.it
we aren't aoing any-where~ ·
Thi1 ltapPeu . lo "'
<'OihcKte with tht'lel-f.. ,.,·r ·, . .,
OOwp fHlinl 1bout ._the~ toentry, ~'ii'( a
wMle •. its ipterllll 1tabilify-;..:.it• 11H>li >in
foreign afflirs; iii folOi't .S;'.."ati;rerld
pow tr, -•nd IO -ioo. I,ater\t· i.~lf:r.M'iitii~ i" ·
stirrilll and ind1111~riH oo lonfer ab1t lo
comptlt with motttmi1.fod ,ind u 111 r y
f'llltW~rt tn 'tht wnrld art 1uking,com·
fort and · protl!Ction.
IF ·TflE PftESl!NT· trendll continut· the
rouiitrY .will -be likely· in 1 netd &f .•i'lother
lift heron •try Joni in tta fonn .of .nt.w
initiatiVe1 by tht Nixon adrbiniitration.
Tht 'r1f~rtnctt · whieh Pr•.sid•.nl Nixon
h11 madt to ""-coniitry 1oihg rhe wa)r of
GrH\.>e:·and RQ111t in-. thtir -rat luxury. and
iri tprt-i1:ir 'of: ttw 'Atnol!rN:an work ~/hie
and nrtif· fnr ;r'rvivaJ ·of tht rompeti ive
spiirit, should :not ·be :diimisied· Is rtttrt
rh"eroi:ic °"' ·P.trilotoY>Pic ntmi~tiqnS. This
i1t;fhf:· kiM' or:thintfht' ill "~itf' likely 'to
•<'!'U. =~-lhin(·.abllot, ··. · · . ff~'lf~.~~,.~~' ph'r.JU · "0ti. or a
dr1vm1 1fdrtim' -.mlr b0rt(jbl1rn1li1Uc o~:.;K. 'wrouJd Mem tv;kient that
, ~~&n:'~~-ijf~~I .it. imper~*iv~, ~
· ffttolt~ijht. nahon tht ~•tn!lt th1t11t is m~:villc' ~Inward ~ •nd ! upW..rd. .. ~'.. ._
ti~Jr THAT .CA'N bt dont .is something
eJ~1· 1iain~·.e1.1t·tht Pu1id~nt Will h•v• to
fOC'llS .1om!'where ind if the hints he has
aiven in 1tpttdlft ·90 far are a guidt t~e
focu1 .will be on reviving the American
eompj:titive .spirit: "J'htrt .art practical
rnHJUl'd ·to1,bt ta~en .. but.• Nttoft • hasn 't
outlined' thehr. .
Pmidenu11 .'CounMkir ftobtrt Find!
obtfrved before lia'finf , on• hi1 cu~t
·' .
' Latitl-Aml'!rican toor that recent e\•ents
hive tended to confirm the Pre sident's
fl'!ars about a revi val of a kind or su pine
and lackadaisical isolationism in this
country. Not the militant isola tionism of
America rirst and lo hel( with the rest of
the world, but an actrptance of
Amtri<'a".!i lirnitalions prob::ibly well
below its capnbilities.
SF:N. J. Wll.1.TA~t F U 1:8 R JG 11 T
reflects this attitude every tinie ht! says
that Ameri~1 ·1 "viUI intertsts'' are not
involved somewhere. Contrary to his at-
titudes of 1 decadf' or so ago. &-nntor
F'ulbrii:ht rinds few p1nces wh ere our
vital interests art' now involved and this
probably renects the widespre:id reeling
of tiredneu ~pMple have about
trying to remr\:~rt.he world in .f>~r own
imaae. In additiol\, we-,9re not too p!eas-
fd by our 0~11 · image t1ght now and are
mainly C'OOC'trnt$.f by thP-neffi-1osifnprove-
it ~or our own ron1rort, safety and
sali11faetion. '
Yet if such attitudes prevaU and the
United States goes into a vrotcctive
period of hibernaUon there can be little
doubt who will move into the vacuum, as
is now IO graphically 'beirig illustrated in.
Egypt and the Mediterranean.
THERE ARE LIMITS lo how much a
President can do lo give the country a go.
ahead drive in the kind of atmosphere
no\I; existing. The "bold, unexpected
stroke" and the sudden revers.al have
been used to good errect, but the counlry
remains electrified nnly for short period3
"(lr tin1e and then sags again for ·lack of
energy. .
• The shock value wears off. too. as is
the case with openin g up talks V!'ilh the
Chinese Comrnunist leaders, and il
becomes evident that the mere an·
rouncem cnt of having done so has more
impact than the pr<i cti cal results to be
expected .
'fhc samj! is true or the wage-price
rrcczc as it goes into the grubbier co n·
ditions of Pha se IT \vith its hard·to-en-
rorce guidelines, yardsticks and ceilings.
IN ANOTllER DAY another President
was "accused or m~sician's tri cks • "pull-
ing n rabbit out of the hat" • at period.le
jntcrvals lo keep the country on its toe:s:
and impart con I idcnce.
This, to a degree , is also l\'ixon·s prob-
1cn1 as he studies how and v•hen to give
the country.ano1_her "shot in the arm", as
It used lo be caJled.
· The President is quite rcsourcefuJ in
this respectfand it should not be supposed
that he has run out of ideas.
Now Chile, Sink Into Mire
'-. . ..
WASHING;roN ·-Chil,:1 Mar1ist
Pre1tde"f .Salvador Allende '.and CUh.1'1
Communist .dictator Fidel Caslra ire
finrlinc . mitCh ' jn Cff11mon· tt .talk aboyt
during thtir l•n~ tla)'i Df hobri<lbbini. ~ . ~ KOOomin ~ bOth lhfir countrit1
ai:• ·in dirt atrajU.: '. · · '
and •l•adily 1inilinl
furlhtr in !ht m)rf.
1nnali011 i11 ' r•in·
pant de11pitt 1tr1n-
genl prire a·nd mon-
•IJ1ry rontr.ol~: food,
material · and .other
1hoi<t 11••1 art
widMprf"ldf.and ra-
~ ..
tioo"'11 CO.J!mOO; • i. ·, ,
m111mil!l•,tm•111 , in<'OmpeWW ,•. 1 11 c1
waAte-ar, aro!l!I and rutht1t11: · *' '\M
chant\c 1 aAd ttt1tn1<-tivt~ •·s. c'•' a·. 1
1·har1citt'i11li:r. or. ertr«mi.t'.1ovemh:ltN~.
art l1kin1 a 11ai1•rin1 :h\1111an, ~\~al
and ihdlf~ritl 11011. , • · , , • , \ .,,
1'~11, di1utrot11 "91t haa ~n hfoavHttt ·
11\ft gt1mm#t1.l •h• £!11ba wh~rf Caittrn h'lr11
.. J • . . . ft ' !'i!~tq .. toe:will W:ia'.4' up .. 11.'ln~lv•pt1al!f! ;th•t)~r.ed as.c~stroit1 ~uba: · ·1 ••
'l'ti1. tqt1Jitar:lan'.rultd · mas.wa .. of 'that
. tr~~-i1}Jnd,..ft li,ttr111y .lcept 1oiri("onfy 11>i~~l(J1,'fia•_~v.1·i0r'ut~ of Rukiia~ a~ -MW am~uil\lnc tO 1round •1 .s miflion ·• . . ' . dly. ')\J1C 'for : th.I,· flm,ine! a·nd tht most p~ltnlji~•. ti.v.1•1 ·,..,cooditionA wnuld .bf!
wMIHpr'dd r _:JI-' they already. trt ·in
remott'rttril~1rea11. '
• J I '' · 'I\ t· It'•· vtn:· questionable w he I he':.{· oiiMN~ .. With :• 1o111\hiitOry and tr1dl-. lfoio .r ' dtmocraey and lndt~,
ft11d. ·'pennlt/·'llOCh' :dt:b'111mmt a~
'iftpdllt\M'.' ' : . . ..
" .. ~ ' '
But only time will tell. them 1970 was a debacle, but lhls year
Meanwhile, after ooe year or Allende would be no better .
and. hi! extremist cohorts, Chile has a "\Ve are stea dily losing ground in our '· , • ... • -• . .strug~le lo create a true ~1 arxist state,'' 1 head ·alart for the -W~me.:catalitrOph~ he said. "The innuincrable problems and
wracki!d depthS to which Castro ~a's immen se demands facing us a r 1
brought Cub3. ovcrwhcln1ing. There is virtually no
PJJRING CASTRO'S fanfa rcd junketinnc_lihootl of i1n~roving our economy and "-'Tin Alltndf", they have emillcd muc soc1a l.structur!! 111 lhc f_oresccable future.
glowing rhf"loric about grandiose aim , '"e "'111 '?; doing \1 cll 1r ""C n1crely hold
plam and olher bombastic propaganda. our uwn.
Much ha!! been said about ideological llAVING ~11\.DE this confessi on Castro
"p.it i~ •l~ .kky ," but noth_ing Moul t.he then announced the launching' or a
bJt:ak . re~J~1es of f"C'Onom1c and socia l •·crusade to cr:idicatc v a g r a n c y , sy11~111n ,~eep tl"ouble. parasitis1n and other vict>s Jn orrlcr to
·Thf'rt' is lgood reason ror th is silence. root 9ut ideologica l 11·caknes~cs and to
1'he unden!~blt record in both countries redouble our efforts to (Tca1 r the new,
is not. thf,li:lbd to ta)i about. , socially conscious sociali st ma n."
Castro, 1dhiitttd th~J ,jn an i11:n!&tingjy 1 f'.\lc1idc look a different turn in JJ 241:·
frank ·~-to top lif"~lenitnls and party hour speech early !his month at a giant leaderl t1rlter Uiis Ye·a~. He not only told Santiago r;illy commcn1orilt in~ his first
. year in or f ice . The J\lar xist gran·
diloq11enlly proch1irnt'<l : There's a 1not1nn p1tlurc 1nakinJ: the
rounds of California thcn1res at \hr nlo·
me11t which if gh·cn pc rspt>l'li1·e should
givt pausr tn those consrrv:1ti!nHs!s "'ho
consider the mselves intt"llct·h1:111y honest
in their concern for the cn11irunn1rnt.
No1ing the nation's bi•gt of Hi·
\ 1runmt·nt:i l 11w1u·1·nes.,, 1.indusk1 ealled
it a gno~t 111011", lnnJ: overdue -but not
alt l!Mt.
.. been; in Pl>"!',tr sum• 12 111r1. .• ·Comic Opera Characters '"l'od;iy the peasa nt rcrls himself a
citizen. and the "·orkcrs :ire consc ious
that they :ire the go"ernn1en!."
The film titled "lllcss the l\(':1.~lll :ind
the Children." <1h11ut n1odc111 1\a\ hnff:i lo
lhooling -shooting not hun1in~ -v.·as
Jmade by Hollywood lu1ni nary Stnnlt>y
Kramer. Kran1cr. one nottfl wt>sh•n1 uul·
donr writtr co1nmcnll'd rccrntly. h;1s l'X·
cellent credenlh.!s for molion pil'lllrc pro-
cl,yction but "in lhc field or v.•ildlifl' pro-
c:fuclion, protection :ind couse1'\'ali11n he
ha! demonstrated oniazing i~orance.'•
THlS, TO ~fAKi;; o long slory ~horl,
because Kramer, in pluggin~ lus 111111,
has IRunched an t1nlL·h1111ting .tlr::iite
before national audi ent-es on lhe l;ite
evening TV 1'a.lk shows, ond like ~o n1 11 ny
other propagandists jusJ docsn'l hilve his
f1ct11 strnight.
The p<>lnt here Isn't to joiil the deb:ilc
"1lh Kr11mer because-no doubt h<"'ll find
1 new crusade all 500n as he produL'tS a
new film. but rather to suggest th at en·
'vtronmtnt111ists take nnte or a v.•edgt
being drJven behvccn the hunung
fraternily and lhtlr nonhunllng fellow
campaig11trs Jn the conservation elfort,
A OOCU~IENTf.D warning of ~s
dJvl&.ivi t.tctlc was \10Jced recently . by
Dr. Joe LJnduska, a nationiUy recoiJliUd
"One vrry 11ppnre 11t ~ymplnm or nur ,
t>nvironn1rnt:il spree is lh11t people art
ov1•1-r~~:-.ct it11J," lie said.
''FO!t .. :XAi\IJll.E, a lotal prOl tttioni:tt
elrn1ent L~ t'lllt'rRU•J: , .. and lhi:t slronl(
:int111:-.1 hy lu killing in any rnrm has
ht•rtunr pe1·v11sivr. Sport hun!in,;. fur
liar' est~ :11111 oUitr suu111I u:te of
r<:fll:.cc·:ihle reAoorc·r:t nrt' idt'nl1htd with
f'.\jiloil:ilion 111111 1lrplrt 1nn. -'nd lhi11,lht>y
prujf'l't lo rul':in l'n\•i1·1>nn1tnlnl im·
J)I)\ f'ri shn1e11L" 1
1.incluf>k3 t·ilttl n1tlllt'rn \\' i 1d1 i r f:
fll:l.1\:l!(t'lllE'lll let'hllltjlll'S, lht U!!t Of
~pottsn1t•n's 1lol1;1 r~ lu cn:ina~" non-xame
!iipecle~ of v.'ihllift> 111111 a hll~I of other
elt>1nrnl~ of "h111 hi' t'ftlll'd "total tn·
\·irui1n1r111:1I 111:in:tri:r1nen1. '1
"F.N\'lltON1\IF:NT-'I• pmlecllon Is a
nohlt an1I clr:idly 11t-riuu11 ca11~e~ it's o~
tletlf'rv1n.i nt ~1n('ere dtdiClltion. Ru1 let's
be rt't1li.11li<'. 1'ht' spnrt~1n11n -~rhapt
abo \"e all others -has long embraced
this ethic.
"Lt'I nnt 'pmtM'llnn' and 'con~ervation'
h11 ve m!'!Ollfl.i!~ wh1rh collklt. TI'lf con·
cept of l,.,tal tn\ 1ronment •ecnmmod•tes
both vie~ s -if t~rh Is underlt.Md."
C1llfornl1 Feat1N Stnikc
An•:f\.:()NF. .,.F.Aft o(.'AMt~'•·Min·
gltng. and in~•nt ru\f:.a,ue i4'"weH
htadtd , on t~ ,11mt . c1l~~i1m,11 :Tda,d.
f:iven tlmt .. and , tht doubtful·. suJ>.
mi11:tiveneq of l1'f: 'Chilean .'peoplt, .. that . -; . : '. :
llv. Ge•".ffl -''.c..,., --•
DPar Gf!Orl•: ' 1 • '
-You kHp· 1ayln1 you'rt tryin1 ·to
writt a lnvelorn <'Ofumn. and 111>-. ' jecu,,, tn lhe1 qu•Uty of· tht qu's·
lion• :you 1!t. Artf!'I anylJ y0tfr
rt:adftl tneraetfc f'ho1tgli"lo tiil ilut
111d If.I ·1ol0>,10mt '4vt difffebttiei?
M11yht Yflll 1hoJ1ld wrile 1nme l'lnw·
l~Atl·ln.ktve-troublt tdfl~. "
HF.t.PFUL •
Otar Htlpful : . • 1 • l
I ' ' 11 i ' Voq'r1 l'IQl tie•n& vtry h1 plul . ,,,,..
nOI l~•t prohlem,t ..,,.,, rt1dtr1 lack.
11'1 Jom probft1'1'1: · / ~ • • t' ' , , ' (Send your probltmi tt)·(ifiGr1t
and makt fQ)lft •for. bit lmportent
prnblt:ms. WM , knoJfc! •• ¥•r ln-.,
''"' may ·mov1 11'1 itU.1.you.t111Y 41J.J .
" ' fe ,fM Ettitnr:·;' •
'i\w .. county 11.rptt,ilort' J.2·awov1J•of
tlft \lt'Odrm•ll Ooti&l11 propeHy rt:tonln&
tr11 rnnr down• the CtJrtaln Cll'I lht ~
act or ,1he ~ie optr1, "Ruponaible
r!a•ntn(. for •Otv,'9pmtnJ M. lht: Airport
Compltt." Aayon. wht htli•Vta lhlt tht
Nov. 11 pt«'tt4li111 ttaJ tiUin1rt1p1M11iblt
• er' ~libtrativ-t ahfruld c001idf"r tht-ca~t t(
rh1ratttt·1 •nd thtlr perfotlllal\C't-':
' Tffg Cl.O'lf;D·!lllNPEP p,.,,
~ti'ayt(t . by .-5\1ptrv"" R1tll1t a1id
Ca:1pe r1. Oft tf Ultir rttMJ\'. thry C'an
· re•tn•ably bt ar..-·111td .r 1p}'lft1Ving thl!I
u11w.1rra'nttd .C"OtJlmf'n-111 fltv,lopment
prlnr1 1>91ly· hfo(ll*ft lht ll"fiM f.ot01>1ny
\'i&&rnuaty. nppotfd ii. 11111 thal ptfK'f:~ ...
Mr. ('aJ1Pft'llP6inttdly lpon'd lhf' rlearly
e1prt iud' vitw1. •f ~ii. Newport Rt.a.t:ll_
1'0nttll11f'Acy.
'1'ht (:on.Man frttn ' OW. Bil City, t'Olto
vilic:.;na1i pl~yed .by Donald l)Ou1Jas Jr-..
Not a lfrious c~ltrite •waa•tteard from
tht ~ird a!l'bt proc'l1lrned that a 2.S0-500
room hot~I. 7511,l'IOl 1qu1re feet el aflittA,
i"M • f11lurt "OJ'IV1J1Uon'C'f:11ttr will cre1tt
nt traffie prttbltm1. 1ntt tb11 ·these
~'tlopmtnUi have . notnin1 to tto with 11,,.n. upllllloo
•
Mailbox
lett.r' """ ,._,.., lrt WI~-. N..-mlll'/' wrfl•" 111111111 ,.,,.,Y 11191' 11>1n1tt1 Ill 1W -41
.,. '"'' T.,. tltlll It •-tnU l11t1n II Ill wo•ct w t h..,la•19 liMI 11 ro•fl'Vt<I. AM llllfl'I 11>1111 I,..
cW. ........... -..... ~.... ........... 11111 ""'"" _, .,. wilNI ... 111 r1111111 II ovllk llftl , .. ...,. lt'
.......... "'""" will .. 1 .. '"Ml!.111•.
TllF. SO~IEWltAT Am bi v a 1 en t
Pr'11tosler in the pcr!IC'lll of IUchard A.
Jttt;;e, Quilt! corTtetly rererrlng lo traf-
fic COOi!t"Stion a11 a m:ijor ntgalive l'OO·
~ldtralion in the MCl)()nncll Do(1glas
cau. he 11a11d11 i!t :\n 11t111oci11e of tourist-
orif'ntfd conslnl dcvclop111ent that could
mike CMllt lll~hway hnpa~blc.
'Supe:rviJOr l~hlllil):t ha~ stt Ille stage
for Ael II , by broadly hinting that the
toolin'uing exl:ttenc:e or the AirpOrt l..tlnd
tJ:te Cominl.~sion ma y be contingenl upon
a rtvt1'1•I of Its posilion against the 1.one
ch11nge.
fn 1hi11 CMllnuing s11ga of power pl11ys
•nd pettint.IS. t r u I )' represrot•tlve
1ovtrnment has not even hitd a walk-<>n.
ROBERT D. RIES
But significa ntly, despite ral kin it lnng
And sonorously, All<:nde carefully avoided
spccirics and details. lie berated op-
ponents. particularly in the Chilean con·
grcss \\•here they arc in 11 majority, and
effusively laul,)ed supporters. Bul abou t
his record - virtu3lty nothing.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Hubert N. \Vec1f, Publishtr
'f l1un1(ll I\ l'Cl'if, Edilor
.41/Ji'r l \\'. IJatr~
J:d1tur1ul f'r1uc Editor
,,,,. c·1Ht .. ri.1I 11oi.:·· •)r th" n~ny
)'1l••l 1'(•1•·k'i l•l 1111,,1111 :inrl 1-t1mt1•
l:t1" 11·;11l•·1'llo l·r 1•1• ... ,·n11ni.: 1h1!1
h•·l\~1~11~·r'l" ••1•ll•l••n~ 11nrl. t.·om-
1111•11la1")' 1•n t opi1"'1: or lnlt!tf'~l "'""
si1:n1 lw1u11'1', l.y 1•111\1dlni.: A f(lrum
fior II\,. t·~prl'lllllun l)r .. 11r t'f'11.drrs'
0111nio111t, and I•)' f'l'Nrnlini;: the
<l11•'T'l<•· \it•1.1 1M1in \11 of in!urrn<'d nb·
1j1•1·11•n 11nd "'i>Ukeimen on t OJ)its
o! \he dl'y.
Th ursday. Novemb<r 18. 197 1
;
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Missile
-Cutbacks
Hurt U.S.
LONDON (UPI) -The
Soviet Union has 'overtaken
and in some cases ·surpassed
the west in developing 11\i.ssUes
and other weaponiy -and
done_so by increasing reliance
on its own technology, Janes
weapons systems for 1971-'12
. said Wednesday.
'nle 590-page volume, ac-
cepted as authoritative by
military and defense experts,
said pressure for defense 1
spending cutbacks in the
United States and o t h e r
western nations was at least
partially responsible for dif·
ferences between the United
States and Soviet defenses.
"The geuer once held in
some plices outside the Soviet
Union that most developn;ien.t~
made there have b a d
precursors in the west clearly
no longer applies," they said.
The editors sa\v a need
''greater than ever before, for
Western nations to continue to
invest in such developments if
they are to maintain--0r
perhaps even achieve-parity
with the East." ·
The editors cited as an ex-
ample the Soviet early warn-
ing radar aircraft codenamed
Moss, which "has been in use
for several years and att
cording to unofficial b u t
reliable sources, is in fact car-
rying out operational
missions."
"This immediately . either
implies a significant dif·
ference between the tech-
niques employed by the re-
spective U.S. and USSR sys-
tems or, If the techruques are
similar, that a.more.advanced
level of applied technology has
been reached in the Soviet
Union," the editors said.
Janes alao Aid the Sovieb
have developed a supersonic
IX>mber w i t b Jow-aJUtude
capability at no tou of speed.
Jt is identified by the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization.
(NATO) cod enam e
''Backfire."
j'The appro:ri m 1tely
equivalent U.S. B-lA bombu
project is as yet only at the
mock-up stage. while Russia
has two Backfire prototypes
flying," the editors said.
According to largely unof·
ficial infonnation in the new
volume the United States shot
264 satellites into orbit from
inid-1961 until the end of June
this year and the Soviet Union
393. This tally does not Include
meteorological satellites, the
navigational and
meteorological satellites, the
editors said.
Among newer weaponry
discussed is a reported Israeli
missile, codenamed Jericho,
capable of a range of 30 miles.
According to "reports from
Washington" the device is
capable of carrying payloads
of u.p to 1,540 lbs. putting it
easilY in the nuclear warhead
.class, the editors sak!..
"lsrael has frequently
slated that nuclear weapons
would not be introduced into
the Middle East by her, and
there has been no authen·
tication of the Jericho mlaslle
report," the volume said. "But
there is little doubt that lf It
were considered•by Israel that
such weapons were needed,
they would be forthcoming."
Among sections expanded in
the new edition are those on
reconnaissance systems and
electronic warfare devl~.
AU YOU GOIN~ _
TO WAIT UNTIL
HE 15 STARING
YOU IN THE FAC U
ln•tall a burglar alarm sys· tem in your home. Give us a
call today.
PACIFIC
ALARM
4M-2U7
• 642-1 21 2
--
----· ---·-------·~ -Thursdl:/, M°"'"b<f 18, 1971 DAILY "LC'1 7
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'1 4 • h ' I ' 11 ;
jr. pantcoat
weather-or-n ot
19.99
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A snoppy cosuol lrom o lomous lobel.
Brushed cotton dertJm, os!or!ed col·
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' girls' skirts,
pucker hlo'nses
3.49-4.49
$6-$7 woshoble oc:rylic skirts, ploids
or ,solids; +6x 3.49, 7-14 4.49. $6
pucker blouses; cotton; red, navy,
lilac, white, 7-14, 3.99. ·
Girls' Spo-rtswear
five· piece
pa rty set
339.95
379.95 Volue. 48" octagonal t oble,
4 block vinyl chairs with .cesters.
Meditterranean style. Fumiture
"
,., I 11• .; ·,r t t 'I • ' ..
' .
:, • ,, •• ~ ~ • I I
I t ,...._ ! ' , . .
'' ··•I l I '" ''I
7.99-11.99
. , , lru;ly~d , •re ,polye~!ff. ,9?J1tlpknit
pullons, ·some proportioned, werm
• jeon~ m.ny othrs.
·, "'t.stls' ~portswee,, ' 1 ..
( :. ~ .... " :r -~ ' •
·.• "'l., ' ~~ -'\ .... ,, '1' I ' .,. ~
...
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• ' ; • t • • ' . -' ' .•.• · • .famom ··maker ... · ... ,
, . · ,slipper savillgS: ; ' ~' .. ~ ' . ,,
r. ~ \ , 5.99 " ... , " . •;' ' .. ~
: ,' $f .Ji ,. vol). on t~~ ':t,"'/Yf,:ood-
. l6okfng style in regular and wide
widths. Choose light blue, novy, ond
•
blod,. Sljppers--, , . ' , . ,
'•
'
, , ' . . " ..
' .. '.
. : . "'
•, •l f ' ' \' I -~ \. ,, opalJlle ·.
~'. .. pati'iy: siooking~
'•• '1
2.40~"2'/4.70
Reg. $3, our opoque ponty Stock·
i.?gs thot stretch wo ist high in one
lonoi,_.Lm()Olh color. A vori~ty of_
~ t .ogesj!Hosiery .
••• . . .. . ' . . '
·''' '
fulL fashion
, ' :, ,Swei!ter: :values
'
"'I• . . ' '
8.99-10.99
l f f,1.ido. A
0
greot sel~ction _qi sweot·
ers. Exciting new styles and bold
fashibn crilofs. Men's Sportswear
.-'I '\<. •. 'I •
,, ....
' . • •
•
., ...
, t.f-' • . .. " . ,. '. \ " .
big ."tat :
, .. J>y, ](el!Jle~· ..
•i9"°·~ •' I · .. ~ .·~99.·'.
i •·· .. ,
..... _-.. ' " ..
• ,• -.. • • • • . •• l
,. R•g. l9.~9." MQiorized troctor w~;,
., · pt&-up scoep ••. makes him en in·'
. stlint .b~ilder. Safe, fun •. T~ys
• •t ~. • ., ' •
,.
.•• velveteen .
-.,11 ),pi,f!~~S·. · -.3· 1for lo~oo
' ' I •' ' ' .
,, , ;· .Wh~t:o ,•gre~t buy! 3' styl~~ !?_choose
• I • I' • from iti r3 !U'st:ioUs colors. Coma see.
·~ 't .... Or~0peri~s, Bedspre'eds ..-
••
stretch nylon
pants, polos
1.99 ea.
"
2.50-$3 volues. 100% stretch nylon ,
solid flare pants, coordinating' strip-
~-~ed~o.r solid tops~olidoy colors.
:Girls 2-4. Toddlers' Wear
}~--\
fa n1ous JaheJ
body shirts
6.99
Reg. $I 0·$15. The shope of todoy-
slim body.fitted shirts in newest pol·
terns an~ colors. Long sleeve.
Un iversity Shop
no-iron sheets
from jp stevens
3.49 twin
"Flower .Potch" country print in
bright gorden colors. Full, 4.49; king
7.99; coses 3.98 ond 4.58 a po ir.
Sheets
it~ $:·:··:~:t ·~ :~~~~"':.::~~oa~way
ANAHEIM
"444 N. f11d!'
1714) lll·l lll
·NfW'°l' . I • • ' I H"'NTINe"l'ON ltACH • •.• . . -CE•JttTOS
1 1!47 Ft1hle11 111,,.4 , .,.. ~ . 1 • •• 7777'Mlflt•/ A~•ll'll• • ••.•· , .. • ' >100 '--• C.rrW6' Mtll
1.ltl4) ~IJtJ.., I " "1 '"'' • ' • • • f7 141 ltJ.J)JI I I ' • IJlJJi ... ~,., .•
SHO~ t :U 10 Y:IO •l .M. 'l.'M! MOND.t.t JHllOU•H SATURDAY.-SUNDA)' h I '.l..M 'Toi..... •· ·
.. OltAN$E flli•ll of Or•nt•
2JOO Ne. Tv•lh• Stt.et 1714) "'·I J 11
, '
•
, ..
•
-----· -~
\ \
----. . ~Nl»tmb<clA~W:-. --
........... ----------~·t~\irsday;' f~ida·r, 'S'aturday 9:~o --aln to ·-9:30 1pmjsho'p ~unday; 11 an1 to 6 pni all stores
C~pe11te1· Tell s
l 7 . . . .
VD Vote Rea son
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of tlle D1llY "lllf Slttf
A POLITICIAN is a man occupied by trying to please
II of the 'people all of the time. 1
This iso't always ~ible,J~ it be-
come ~ pblilician'.s goal in 1ffe ifO"-make
the petpte believe he i.!""'pleasing them
all.Pf(the time. ~ •
Take for instance, the case of state a~, Pennis ··~,· C,.rpenter. He's the
RepUbl~ ftorri Newpof1, Beach elected
lut re.r to fill the\ unexpired term or
Johp G. sChmiti who had moved on to
Uhlngtoo.
~ ·Carpenter was in HWJtington Beach
ecently .to i~ .~ Ill! ·1.tegisliture and education be.
ore a meetin'~~~ ~~y .~h,~l ·~~niinistrators.
BEFORE lf!'·PoT!.Co Ui"d~art of· ~i1, ·~ech, Carpen-
r tried to e•plaJn why he votee against the recent
enereal disease educalion bill. ·, I
Even wit.hoot Carpenler's vole, the b'fn..w_as passed by
th the Senate and the Assembly, but Governor Reagan
etoed it.
. "I want to go .on record · here," Carpenter quipped "U
ot being a proponent of vo.··
The senator told Orange County schoolmen he belil!:ves
1 education is impossible to separate from· sex education.
s he put it. eve'r so politely, "Tho~ subjects are .a little
it away from u;e basic' e'ducational p!'OCUs.~': ::. _
He acknowledge the "obvious soc.i~! r:ittd:"_ for VD
ucation and the ability of educators-te. preHnt .it. But
e questioned whether lhe schools are the place to "present
· material." ·
. CARPENTER DEFENDED the Schmili~ bill: which
. lie VQ.t<h,1saY?l\'biQ w9pl~. ha \'.e O\'.ef¥!~~: T_h~ ~hmit:
bill r.etiuires. wrllteo Pif'nti1 consenf·bdort-any "Jnaterial .... -·· ....
. s giYen-to a child regarding the fluf'l'.'lall re~~ive or-
gans .He said this system gives parents the right to
e.s:amine the material before their children receive it in
the cleuroom and it.gives Lb.em the right 19 ins!rn.cl Pl~ .
own children in these matters if they so wish.
The senator also mad.e scime pointed references to the
large number of subjects that schools by law must teach.
Presumably. his assumption v.•as that the school ad-
ministrators would be cheered by the thought that VD edu·
cation is one more subject they won't be forced to juggle
into already crowded schedules.
It's in'ipossible to say whether or not Carpenter's ex·
planations changed anybody's mind and convinced the
schoolmen that the right thing had been done. Only the
educators know wheJ.her the senator was su~ssful in his
mlssion to pleaa all the. people all or the time.
He acknowledg!d that· he has had second thoughts about
the situation hlmseU~ · ~
HwffETJiER-WE DJD_ the righl~tl!ing_ or not, re.-
remains tO be' seen. Jt is an awkward situation and we
havl!: not come &o grips· with this problem.'~ he said. "It is
quite likely we will be making another run at it nut
sesaion.
Supervisors Stall .
On Park Purchase ~
SANTA ANA -Orange
t:ounty supervisors have balk-b:t again at exercising an op-
tion to purchase the remaining
14 acres of the planned Villa .
• t'ark Dam Regional Park.
~• The option is part of a 1969
chase agrttment with the
ine Company covering 291
~cres of land adjacent to the
county's Irvine Park. -
! A County Master Plan oC
{'legiQnal Parks calls for the
property .. to -be integrated
~'.ilh Irvine Park £o create a
f76-acre regions! fa cility in the
~nta Ana Mountains.
1 Under the 1969. agreement,
tl.03 million was paid for the
irst 177 acres of the property
pnd a $10,000 option payment
mde to secure the remainder
Until Dec.'31, 1971. .
; Original price of the 114 re-
mainiilg acres was set at
$520,tliS. 11owever, damage
cause by heavy .rains in 1969
teduced the value of the
licreage to $398,200, according
to couelY officials.
: Supervisor Robert Battin gf
Santa Ana asked Oct. 26 that the decision on the option be
Jlelayed so that two new
members or the board -
Ronald Caspus of Ne\\•port B<ac!i and ~lp!I ·Clerk of
Anabeim -~d study the
park1 purchaM: agreement.
,
"1 have always been against
this purchase." Battin sr.id. ·~1
see no nason to pay for th is
property when the county has
an easement over it and the
Irvine Company c a n n o t
develop it :to any other use."
The matter has now been
referred to the county Harbor.
Beacht! and Parks Com-
mission and to the county
Planning Commission f o r
recommendations.
Benefit Se t
For Indian s
STANTON -Helpline for
American Jndians is planning
a variety show to benefit the
annual Christmas dinner pro-
gram for Indian youngsters
and their famil ies. .:
Hubert Siegel, a OLippel\'a
Cree Indi'a'n, chairs t b e
children's program set for %
p.m. Dec. 21 in Stanton Com·
munity Hall . 7800 Katella Ave.
The variety show, which is
open to the public with a SI
donation begins al 6 p.m.
~roceeds also wlll help sup-
port a college scholarship fund
for lndian youth, according to
Marshall Langseth-fOunder of
the non-profit organization.
...
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'.
' ' • annual
. holiday
-sale.-~. _--"-'---,-_
. " ~ .-.
•
•
,
save 100.00
sleeper or
cor ner group
The-new---.sp'ace:.:;:saving c~m
po;g n style. ho s·h;d den stor-
age · underne~th th e IQ pc.
• corner. group or qu een size .
sleeper .. Both cover ed in osy-
c'ere1-1erculon®-olefi n® ploid.
Corner group or sleeper, eo ch
299.95. "'Herculon is o regis-
tered trademor~ Qf Hercules,
Inc., for their olefi n fi ber.
Sleep Shop
. -· ... -
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-r--:-· --·
. _,
~_......-.. ~•>w___ -.
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l1:1st 4 days
'
111editerranean
ce dar chest
I
Fro m Lan e an~ specio lly
priced. Sle~k oak veneer1
have a rich , carVed oppaer·
once. Con double o's a seat·
ing piece with upholstered
black vinyl top. Roomy ceder
inside 48 "x I 6''x 16",
Furni ture
vibrating
recliner
99.95
129.95 volue: Double tho
plea sure ... this smort lounq·
er reclines and vibrates. Have
it for the holidt:1ys in Hercu·
Ion® olefin® tweed or black,
avoc ado vinyl. Comforatble!
Furn iture
it!)s -at the broodway ·.
' .
•· · ~AHfl M
••4 M, f:vctill
lf11•1 1u..a12 1
_ "I · NlW,OJIT, • HUNTINGTON BEACH ORANGl
•1 f•1hio11 l1l•11tl 7111 1:din91t Avenu1 ' M1 tl of Or•f'lt•
171•1 644-1 212 (7 1•) 192.JJ)I 2100 No. Tu1tin Strotl 171 4) ••ldll l
SHO' •:JO A.M. TO 9:JO P.M MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY -SUN DAY 11 A.M. TO • ,,M.
". '
CERIUTot
500 loJ Ceirlt•• Mill
11111 ••0·041 1
..
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For The
Record
Marriage
Licenses
N4V. 111
DA Nll!LSON-LOCICf -Al1n G., 16, ol
1111\ Wl!lrtler •~ .. C11111 MIJM. 11\d
L1u .. 1 s., it, ot ms w111 Lll'Cllln
... .,.., A1191\tl1n.
6il'•Rl<S·Hl!RSCHK&JIN -T~11 I .,
2.-, ol l.166 GrNn SlrMI, Loi Altmtlef
1nd 1t11Mm1rl1 v .• 21. of 1un
Otnlv1n Ave., Loa A!t r'l'lllOI. I l"A5SANTf ·l lSHOP -ll.ide•tlile J.,
lt , et 766 Sh1llm1r, Co1l1 Melt 111d
l"t!rldt I(., It, ol 1J1 sn111m1r,
Cuti Meu.
MAGANA·AXTELLE -J-ll., 22, Of
1000 E11t 0<;11n Fronl. NeWPOrt
IMth tlld Holly IC.. lf, ot 411J
Ltrk1toM, Or111111.
STOUT.PAGE -llontld (,, 24, ol lSGf
CtMbeY LtP'lt. Huntrn"an ••tell Incl Chf'l'YI IC., 21J, of 6002 Wtlde Cfrelt,
H11nlln9'ot1 8eKI\. GILB.OEJITEL -Robert I< .• U. el
2JtlS ltOIHll9 Hll11 Ila«!, Torrt nct •Ml Kt tl!Yn L., :rl, ol' ISU 1(111111,
St1rrten Jt>ST-IOIU!!N -Tham11 A., :Kl, of M22
Otrelr Circle, Hun11ns11on Itta. •l'ld
lt•btrt A .• 11, of 11 .. 1 M11no!l1,
G1rd1n Gl'OYt.
klY·WICl(Llf"FE -Gtrt ld f ., 41, of
2!S Stnll lubel, Cat• MfM •fld
P1u11ne H .• .ff, el 2•1 Wur Wlt5on,
Cos!I Mull.
NOV. L
HOL50PPLE·M1LLElt -J1ma It., 21, ot t63.1 AmMrwlck (lrc11, CY•reu
•M Che!'ll D .• :Ill, et lotU K1l1m1
ltlvtr Or., 1"11Ulll1!11 V1ll1y,
GOMlAL&?oltOMEltO -Oc11vlo A., :n, el 320IO Ct mlno C1•l1Tr1no, ~"
JUlf'I Ctpl1!r1no •!Id Eit114 M., 2], of
5111 Ju111 C1~l1tr111D.
OLIVElt..v.J.Bl!Y -Elh111 A .• 22, of ·t136" 11th srr.-t. Wts1ml11Uer tfld
l1i'tlr1 J .. 21, OI Wfflmlnirer.
Kl ltCHNElt-KING -00Utlt1 L., 22, of
Bl* lHJ. 5edont . Arl:o111 •fld
CollMfl A., lt, ot "5 Ettl 20111 .St.,
Co.It MISI .
McDONALD-0CH51E -Jiii&"" I"., 21 , tit '170 Pt<llfc Av1 .• eo.11 Meu tlflll
Jucllltl A,. 23, f1l lllJI Ntl'-1 '••k 0r1v1, L11u.,. Bttdl. BAUM -WHITE -Jaf!ll A,. '5, el 1%2111
Wt slml1111tr, .Stn!I ,t.111 t !ld Stll•• I,. .u, el 11~2 Colllt Line, Hul'lllntl~
8HC~-
WALl51Al(-CHll:l5M -IUch1rd A., :tt,
Of 1Glll Klldl, Wttlmln1ter I ncl
Glf'Oflt II:., 4', el Wt.llmll\9"r,
QUETOT·MAll:KLEY -Thomts L., 11,
Of II• Court Sir"', Sl111ton •nd S~trrv J., lt, llf .Stt11ton.
HULL·l!HEltENMAN -Jd\11 A .. 2t, DI
7111 F111WI Y Drlvt, W111m1111t1r tlld
It-M1rft , 21, el W.slml111t1r.
OUKl!·LITTLl!FIELO -Otrrt11 It., lf, el 2'201 C11IH11, Minion Vitlt
•114 (Ofll A., •2, !If U.!22 Oii AtN,
Tu1t!11.
kENYOH-COltltTT -Gu y L •• "' of 15142 Wllll1m1 St., tu"!"""' Mlrlllt J., It, of J"Sl Etlrtdt, Mlu lon_ '(I
lo. ' MOltGAN·WltlGHT -Wlll!tm H., at.
of Ml Mou s1r111. Lttllnt BMdl tt'Wf . •vt11 C., is, of L,.llN a..cll._ ·
•OU.NO-McOOffAl,.O -Ktltft. 45. f1l \"ft lttdwood, F-l1l1t Vttlty tnd
._.,11 J., «I, o1 FcMflltaJ" V•lllY.
De•tttojleea
ARBUCKLE & SON
WESTCLIFF MOllTUAllY
U'1 E. 17th SL. Co1ta Mtu. -• BALTZ MOllTUARIES
Coram del Mar OR a.N50
cOtla Me.. MI f.Zll4 • BELL 81\0ADWAY
MORTUAllY
UD -dway, Colla M ....
IJ g.14:12 • Me<:ollMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUAllY im i.asua• Ca•yo• u
QUiii • PACIFIC Vl!W
MEMORIAL PAlllt
Cemetery Mortu1r7
Claapel
mt Paclllc View Drl"
.Newport !leach, Calllorma " lll-rllll . • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
DOME mt 11e1sa :U"'iin Wetlmlultt • MJ'BS' MORTUAllY
--"'\t1 Mall II.
Doadof!OI lleadl
• . -T-.. --11, 1971
• 1
thureday, friday, eaturday 9:30 ~am~to-9:30-Uiop 1unday, 11 IUll .to 6 pm all .stores · · annu~I · · · ·
holiday
I '
ale last 4 day&··
9·8eeed
mter blender
24.99
29.99 valuo witli controlled c de blend·
ing. 5-cup glass con tainer. In .avoca do.
Includes cookbook. ·Housawares. ~.
'
rea ~9" diag. mea1.
b & w portable
129.88
A great block.and-wh ite porteblo. Pow-
erf ul I 7 ,000-volt chassis, crisp, clear
reception, built-in an tenna s.
complete gaf -·
color camera kit '
19.99
Everything y6u need at s1>9ciel sav.
ings. Regularly 24.9'1. Great for holi.
d•y pictures. '#43 /i Comores.
• :f.NAHl lM
• 44 N. '"'"' 1711) 111-1121
save on g.e.
percolator
13.99
A<l iu•table brew control for perfect
coffee-brewing. Has -stainless steel
pump assembly. Housewares.
curtis mathe1
console tv
159.'88
Sharp black and wh ite on a 2~" a iag.
mea s. screen. Beeutiful cabinetry.
Televi.sio n.
ealillttaD
kodak x133
99.88
' Rog. 114.95. The ne..,stSu1>9r 8 movie
camera lots you take movies by eend lo
light, without movie lights.
. .
6-pc. ekoo
cutlery 11et
15.99
·-
2~.95 volue set in m1liog1ny lioldstor
has paring, utility, sandwieli, breoci,
roast beef slicer, French cook 's knife.-
Housewares.
Uoyd's digital
clock raclio
29.88
Reg. 39,q5 Am/Fm rad i9 with instenl
digital time-telling. Soft dial light. 60,
minute sleep switch.
frigidaire
18 lb. washer
219.95
S.vo 20.00.-2 spe.i:ls, perm pt1u, S
temps, jet spray system, di•I O.sil'9d
waler lovol. Major Applianees.
'
'
... "~ "
l~ther co~ered
ice bucket
8.99
•
Finely crafted leatlier covered 4-qt. iee
-bucket in-greon or lemon. G:reat-noli·
day gift idee. Housewares..
\ ,.
'
Uoyd'e portable
marine hand radio
21.88
34.95 value. Picks up Am/Fm ani:I ma•
rine band frequencies. Listen wherever
you go on batterios. Willi built-in ~rd.
(
westinghouse
frostpr9of
299.95
·17 cu. fl. eopaeity, adjustable shelvws,
7 cioy meat keeP,1r. lee m~or reedy.
'163 I~. freozir. Major' Appliences,
at the broadway
NIWN)lT HUNTIN•TON IE.I.CH CflllTOS
1111 f4111t1t A•e111"• 100 l•• C1,,lt11 Mt ll
OltANSI
Mill •' Ott•t• ·2JOO Ne, Tw1tl" Sn.e 1714·tfl·IJll •
'----------""'~OHS
41 F11hle11 hltM
1714)644./212 17 14llf2.JJJI 121J ) l.0·0-411
I TO t :JO ,,M, ,,M. MONDAY lMl:qU&H $ATUlCAY -SUNDAY 11 A.M TO t ,M, • •
. .
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• • • _.:,...J, 1;~ ~.; .•
' I •• • •
Office-,,s -Held Back · Jud ge Eyes Widow Wins " Koitnd 'Agains·t Ex.:J.'ngel Player
I peep sh 0 W SANT A ANA -A wldolO uncle~ and -uninlelligi~e and lawsuit and then ruled in her favor during pretrial action on Att<>rneys for the defendant
who refuses to hire a lawyer that there was no cause for favor. a $100,000 slander action filed unauccessfuJly urged Judge
filed "' .. \he --t'uscan Room ln • , · has won the first round in her action. Judge Rutter heard Judge Rutter--had a day by the widow against a woman Rutter to dismlss lbe com-
From .Nqdie ·Arrests
Tusdn"' 01•dinancai 1125,000 lawsuit a g a Inst Mrs. Cass' views on the earlier ruled in Mrs. Cass' ne.ighbor. plalnt. -
· t.I farmer California Angels star iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiii' iiiiiii OWners George \V. and Albie Pearson. Norma St.e.,.-emMme the City m S&nta· Ana 'and Police ChieC SANT A ANA -Santa Ana's Orange C.Ounty s up e r I o r
Edward J. All~ as defendants conlrO\'ersial peep a-how , Court Judge J.E.T. "Ned"
in their Iawsulf and charge the ordinance is about to get a Rutter ruled. in favor of Mrs.
"·f nd his fl ' 'th Catherine Zitlnsky Cass of ~a~t of o Ji:S ;~be long look from an. ?range Santa Ana in pretrial acti on
SANTA ANA -A Santa AM
polke ond Or>nge County
sherilr• deputies ha''e been
ordered m mak.• no turther
amsh 1t tu-o llvtms featur-
int nude dancing until Orange
County superior Cow-! hear--
lnp into allegations file<! by
/r-..,.,--'----the-t1vern owners_att__.t2!!t t rtaiDers.. County Superior Couit Judge. Tuesday thqt appears to clea·r en~ ask tor 1 permanent -Richard~K.-eaulo.,-0-wDU...oL.the..-way_far-1be--1rial oLlhe.
'
•
pleted.
'Both hearings ha,·e been as-
!igned to JU<fle J .E.T. ··~'e<f'
RJJtrer . He has stt Nov. 2t tor
a complaint tiled by the Circes
ta vem. Sant.a Ana. and Dec. 1
for an alma.St identical action
iriJunctiOn agaTusl police <fc·-the Harbor Dfiributing Com-lawsuit:
1jon and claim in the la"•suit pany and operator of two peep P.trs. Cass accuses Pearson.
that cl)scenlty codes recently sho'>\·s arcades in the city, will who now operates a religious
adopted by the state ade-. . . retreat Ur Hesperia , of
qua1ely CO\=er tbt< typt of nudi· challenge the co~titubon~hlf alienating the affections oJ.
tv displared on 1he pre.mises. of the measure Nov. 24 in a her son, David, 21. She claims
· · hearing ordered by Judge that Pe2:son injected his
J .E.T."Ned" Rutter.
Paulo alleges in his Superior
Court lawsuit !bat he spent
more · Utan "-'9,000 complying
vdtb a numbet of health and
safety regulat.ioM recently
"fanatical reUgious beliefs"
into her son five years ago
when he was a Santa Ana High
S{::hool senior and persuaded
the boy to join them.
Da\·id Cass recently married
pas.sed by_ tht dty councU. ~Pearson's 1•7 ·ye a r • o Id
H~ clallllS . be ~as then daughter, Kim, over the
derued a business license O? , vigorous objection:;. of his
the grounds that he had been ~mother. He is r resent I y
co.n\~cted or being drunk. ~ emp}oyed as the manager or a
public, that his partner, Phi!IP Weinerschnitzel outlet in San
Andl"f'>\·s, had sold obscine Bernardino.
materlaJ and had been drunk Pearson's I aw ye r· unsuc-
cessfully argu,ed Tuesday that
A1rs. Class' complaint was
in an au!o and that an
employe, H;erman ~ianley, had
~ been ·charged with reckless
dri\·ing and drunken dri.ving.
7 PIANOS & ORGANS
FARFISA SPINET ORGAN , $695 NOW ,.,, ................. . W1lnut, w1s ,1125,
$699 WURLITZER SP!NfT
Usod, NOW ....................... .
~~,R~:?s~~~J.N.ETPl~~O $595
HAMMOND ORGAN $57·0 lG,e~t fo, Beg;on.,.·; •Vi 70
FA!U'ISA SPINET ORGAN W1/j>ut /io., wu $695, NOW-$395
IRAMBACH PIANO . $795
New 41" Console, w1s $1195, NOW ........ '
1
tt~t~~~~~.~P!~!1Lasli e -············-······ $1 099 "CASH CACHE"
At Mission Bank
AND YOU CAN IANK ON IT Paulo claims the records of
himself and his two aides can
not be used by any public body
as justification for the denial
of a business license.
Cal State ~~~~11Vi1s~ ~~~T~~S'-I-~~ .... $1495 GEORGE STECK BABY GRAND $1595
~!i~ffl "' .
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liiEMBf R F.0.1.C.
. lie also charges Santa Ana
Police Chief Ed"·ard J. Allen
\rith ordering the harrassmenl
of emp!oyes at both pee p
sho'>\-s and the arrest of
himself and his employes.
A sight for sore eyes. \
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Besides your eyes, this bus more natural gas buses. And l ess
does your nose a favor. ·smog.
Because, along with the smoke, The RTD is the fir st bus
the Smell is gone. line in the country to test
It's the first sta ge o( a test. natural gas this way.
, Together with the Gas At the Gas Comp?ny, w~'re
Company and the Air Pollution glad to he! p. Not jtl!t to
Conuol District, the RTD is __ ..... promote gas. But because we
testing clean-burning natural live here.
gas as a bus fu el. If things Southern Callfomla Gu Compaay -' work out, there may be man y 1.M.1~•·" et hc!Jlc l~.,., .. c..r,-.i..
We're. investing in tomorrow.
•
6' 8" Br n. M1ho9 ., was $1 899, NOW
Buvs Land .,
Case Series ) BE A SMART SANTAI LAYAWAY N_O.'rtAT BIG SAVINGS! {
Fl.11..LERTON -Cal State
Fullerton has ·oought a series
of photostatic copies of the
fir st significant Orange Coun-
ty land cases for th e historical
se~tion of the school's library.
The land cases include some
papers which esta blis hed the
ranchos of Gil Yba r ra,
Bernardo Yorba, Andres Pico
and other settlers in the 1830s,
'40s and '50s.
Documents were obtained
with the inte rest on a $1 .000:
gift to the college from the
Orange Co u.li t y Historical)
Society.
•
,
CONVENIENT
CREDIT
TERMS
free Fk>rol
...
•
cnorter and Boit
A great ·Ptice!
Wards-hand-
painted framed
• • canvas pa1nt1ngs
'
Now you con decorate yow home or oport·
ment wittl expensive·looking hond·painted
oils. In vibfont colors that will bring your
l 'room to life, with the contemporary fk>ater
frOmes, favorite subjeds. Each 37~37."
Choo5e your favorite at Words!
31x31" HAND PAINTED PAINTINGS 16.11 ,
ORGAN CLA S LESSON
REGISTER NOW FOR
7 weet ort•• c01tt"M t1ow~etffirff for
bcotll "9h11Mn 011d odn111Cf!d sh1dellts.
Cloues to start' No••mhor JOfti. Coll
540·28]0 for f11rther l11forr11•llo11.
Atl ,1.11111 111ar•ntffd 1• WH~, Wllll I !ref ,.,.."" "'
'/llWf ltemt,
DEPARTMENT ST?RE OF MUSIC
SOUTH COAST PLAZA, COSTA MESA
1400 1RISTOL STlfET
PHONE 540·2130
Majestic Oak
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.88
SPECIAL PURCHASE
•
California Surf
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-SAl.E ENDS NOVEMBER 21
SHOP MONDAY THIU SATURDAY 'TIL 10 PM ••• SHOP SUNDAY 10 AM TO 6 PM
• ililllll' LA CllN(OA
....... '91' ... ""' "· .... 1:16-1911
NORWALK .,.p0 . ..i ............. ~.
161-0'Pll
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SANTA ANA .
i.. .. 1o1.i-"":t 3•1·6 •
PAHOIAMA CITY '"""' "' '""'" ...~.ltl1
CANOGA PARK """r, lllo•o .i-. al.1000
J OSIMIAO • --. ......, •' .... .,......, ....
"" -51J JUD
COVINA ............ ..,-~-0-
i. ..... -...... 661•11
1 ...
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CO ·gesMay ·
Uplift in Status
et
SACRAMENTO (AP ) change," said Assemblyman
California's 19 state colleges Leo Ryan (D-Bur · ame),
could turn inlo ''slate who joined Repu leans
universities" under a con-Newton Russell f TuJu11ga
Th""''" .NoYlmti .. 18, 2971--o•tl V l'tLOT ti ... .
troversial bill sq u e,a king and Frank Lan rman of La Ofitn Mon.·Thtn. 91..m.-4 p.m.; frl 9a.m.~p.m.
through the A 1 s e m b I y Canada In oppoai g Utt bill.
Wednesday on a bare 41·20 "I'm more tan a little BUENA PARK Mtrcury~inpBldc.,ValleyVltwatlln_cOln macgin. my•tiliod by yo oppqsltlon.'' HUNTINGTON BEACH MercllfY Sa'linp B~J .. Edlnpr ot Beath Final legislaUve approv~I of said Assembly Speaker Bob ,
the measu~ -which needed Moretti (D-Van Nuysi. ''This TUSTIN MercurySIVinp Bid(., Irvine Blvd. 1t Newport Ave.
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SACRAMENTO (UPI) -
The Senate bas voted to lower
the a~e-•of 1~u1tl_aood from 21
to 11 , and Impose t h e
respomibllity of serving on
juries, wor.Jting as. policemen
and_ sii!Ylli contracts on
youths. But they still won't be
able to drlnk alcohol.
'GOP· Has Arena at te&/t 41 votes .-sent lt"!o bill.does not aUu the pre,.nl ** * * *-*~ * * * * * * * *~* * * -Ii. iir the governor's desk despite .;s2y~st;:em:;a:!l.!a~11;;.';_' ____ _;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;•J
SAN DIEGO (UPI) -The stiff opposition from both ll'
Republican N a t i o n a I Com-Republican and D e m o c r a t
mittee reports that a contract lawmakers.
HAD OWN ARSENAL
C1pt. Joel Honey
Mistreatment Cited
lh Lawman's Firing
The vote on the measure by
Aisemb(yman Paul Priolo (R·
·Pacific Palisades), was 22-11.
It was returned to. the low·er
• house for concurrence in
ameodments.
Sen. Arlerr Gregorio, upper
house sponsor, saict now th~t
they have the vote, 1s-yea'r.
olds should also be given adult
prjvileges. ·
He said this would include
jury duty, contract sig11ing,
working as policemen, firemen
and even beco mihg UCensed to
carry a machine gun. ,
In the case of young men
age 18, 19, and 20, they could
also get married without
parental consent, which they
now must obtain. Women · are
free to marry at age JI.
But Sen. Clark L. Bradley
senate's more tradition-mlnd-
H&s been signed t h a t They argued the proposal,
guarantee.s use of the sports fi r.it Introduced in 1967, would
artna for the im GOP con-result in more research and
vention . less classroom teaching ~y In-
The $49,000 ren~al fee will . structors at college.s getting
allow the-·Republicans ex· new title.s.
elusive. use of the 13,000 seat "You're badly mistaken H
f~.Cility from July 31-Aug. 24. you think this is just a name
SUEDE & LEATHER
CLEANING
NO TIME LIKE THE PRESENT
(R·San Jose), one of the VAN'S CLEANERS
f\.1erenbach, attorney fo r the ed. members, led opponents to 3512 East Coast Hwy, Corona dtl Mar
GRAND OPENING IN NORTH
HUNTINGTON
,; llEACH
BELL & HOWELL ,
Model 4J J'H
Fil"'o1ou11d l ·Autolo4d-Sup1r I • 5
to I Powef Zoom Mo¥ie C1mer1
witlt 1!"'01' e¥1rv cci11c1iv1ble fie·
tur1 to help you c1piur• • .,erv·
thing 011 film you CIR 111 with
vour ey1 ,
flll YULCAIN WRIST WATCH WOITH S'S-YO~IS WITH CAMllA PUlCHASI
HONEYWELL 550
AUTOSTROBONER
CAME.RAS e PROJECTORS
FILM e RENTAL , REPAIRS
PAPER e CHEMICALS
Fl" 9Hllty
O• Week O•lr
Lh11ltH 9•Mttlty
,,,5 All At Competitive Ditcount Prices
KODAK PROCESSl~G
THE FINEST AVAJLAllLE
~~~~~~-·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---:==
BILL'S
-CAMERA
6022 W•rner at Sprlngcl•le
In north Huntington Bti'ach
'Ii mile fro"" Co11t Hwy. 1Rd J mil11
from the S111 Oie'o Fre1 w1y
•'
SANTA BARBARA (AP) -
Students say they are cheered
by the firing of a sheriff's cap-•
tain accused of mistreating
youthful prisoners during riots
at the Univer.ilty of California
student community of Isla
Vista.
sheriff's office, said. the bill-arguing the vote alone Across from See's, Candy. 673-4920 842·8801 Honey~said hf will appeal l·J· d~oes~n~·t~qu~a~li~ly~a~n~l=S-:ye:ar::..:-o=ld~~~~~~M;u;;•;.,;·";;";"'~' ;··~·~-~·~·;"~"~·;·~·~··~·~~~~~~=========================;;;;~;;~;d the firing before the county for adulthood.
Civil Service C:Ommission.
Capt. Joel 8. Honey, 34, who
directed I a w enforcement
agencies during the three
riots, was fired Wednesday.
lie was charged by Sherifr
Jbhn Carpenter with 11 in..
cidents, including slapping
handcuffed · prisoners" 1 droP:'"
ping tear. gas from ·a
helicopter, · leaving a man
bleeding on the ground and
swinging a mace -an iron
bar with a spike • studded
ball on oue end.
Once during the r i o l s ,
Carpenter said, Honey wore a
long Spanish sword in h.is belt.
Robin Donoghue, 19, a stu-
dent government vice presi·
dent, said the firing renewed
her confidence in Carpenter.
"I think lt's a great day in the
history of Isla Vista," she
said.
Hilary Kaye. coeditor of the
school newspaper, the Dally
Nexus. said 'she •Nas surprised
by the action.
"\Vhen Sher\ff Carpenter
was elected one of the things
he appealed to students with
"'as his dislike of Honey but I
just thought it was a cam·
paign trick ," she said. "I'm
glad to see him follow
through.•·
. 'Mike Grossberg, newspaper
coeditor, said students and
residents complained about
the captain's conduct for
several years but the sheriff_'s
department ignored them.
"If they had listened to peo-
ple in Isla Vista a lot of the
police brutality directed by
Htiney wouldn't have occurred
here," he said.
Honey became unpopulfl' in
the 14,000-population student
community adjacent to the
campus when he directed the
narcotics squad, students said.
Honey was accused in his
dismissal or instructing of-
ficers to plant drugs on
suspects while he was a
narcotics officer. D e n n i s
Last Week Honey's attorney,
James Lindsey issued a state-
ment saying Honey "will no~
be made the scapegoat for the
1sla Vista riots nor will he
continue to remain silent in
the face of continuing.personal
and political har assme n t
against him."
Merenbach said · a ·nine.
month investigation of Honey's
record started after sheriff's
officials in San Luis Obispo
and Ventura counties com-
plained about the officer dUr·
ing the Isla Vista violence.
Death Row
Convict
Acquitted
EUREKA (UP]) A
Super io r Court jury on
Wednesday acquitted \Vill!am
Tidwell, 24, one of two
brothers who won a retrial
after being convicted of three
Lassen County murders.
Both 'Fidwell and hi s
brother, Robert, , 21, spent
three years on San Quentin
prison's death row befo~ the
state Supreme Court ruled
they deserved a retrial. The
brother is to be tried again in
December.
The older Tidwe\l 's trial was
held in Humboldt County on a
change of venue, also ordered
by the Supreme Court which
held their first trials were in-
val id because of pretrial
publicity in Lassen County.
Tidwell, whose home is in
Redding, and his brother were
accused in the 1967 slayings o(
Lavoy and Jeannette Deforest,
a Lassen County ranching co~
p!e, and Keith Utterback, a
Hoopa logger.
Jurors deliberated 31 hours
this time before returning ,the
verdict of innocent.
PERSIAN RUGS
And other vahtable Oriental nHJI
AUCTION ·
Lar9e shipment of Imported handmade. An au·
thentlc and finest quality In smaQ and lor9e sires.
..... SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 21 at 2 P.M.
Fre• exhibition from 12 noon.until time of 11 le
NEWPORTER INN Carouttl Room
1107 Jambon• Rood, Newpon ... do
NOTE ABOUT rms SALE: The carpets "·ert' shipped
by overseas exportt>r for exhibition llnd promotion pur·
pme1• Due lo hl~h OJlt'Tational CO!!t Lhe project w11s
abandoned and the carpets consigned to us for liqu!da·
Uon.
Contrnts include : KERP.fAN, KASHAN, SAROUK,
NAIN, INDO SOVANNERIE, BOKHARA, AFGHAN,
QUME, TABRIZ. ,HAMADAN, ARDEB[L and many
more lncludlng 11Jk, part silk and 1omc an_tique pieces.
AUCTIONlllt: Col. Lelll J1:011nblum TlL: 41.S..3l4·IDI
TllMS: Cath er chec;k
LIQUIDATORl1 Gleb1 Tr1dt lx:c:htnl' Co., Inc.
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AT ARE YOUR -··CHANCES
Of ·GETTING •
' ,I
ERAU LOAN ?
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AMwer ti-alx yes or no q1111Uo11111 they "'*to~
YES NO DD DD DD DD
Do you'-• c.womladrl..,116-11?
HIY8 a telephone?
Al 181113 ynnwlth prWlll or pmloaa emplorer?
D " D Monthly obllpllone DOI cmr·1,;ol lncomt? DD H1ve1goodpa,11ient..-d?
' If you have five correct 1nawers In the yes column 1nd you ar. 21 J'Nll
of age or over your clll!ncea 1r. excellent. Te1r out 111111d 1nd lllke'lt
to 1ny Crocker Bink bl'llncll. Or lake II to yoilr eutornoblle deller, end
hawe him cell 111.
(f) CROCKER BADH '
,'f
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DAILY ~ILOT thllf1dar, No\ltmbtr 18, 1971
·Dospita
-(
•
1 ees ·1 • . Light
a eaGn
aleFy ~td.
Strike's Over
.Bikes, Ate Here
'· s In Stock
.50 Up
OW FOR
CHRISTMAS • BEFORE
STOCK DEPLETES
DAILY l"ILOT 51111 l"ltetcl
Corvairs Recalled
In Heater Defects
Only Coast & Southern offerp savers all three:
• 6% two to five year guarantf;ted certificates •
• >
WASll!NGTO N (AP.) lional Highway Traffic Safety
Administration. The NHTSA
announced Oct. 29 that there
was a defect in the 1965
model.
• Saturday Service. •The Insiders Club.
Gel'ltral Motors Corp. is ad-
viaJnc about 760,000 owners of
Corvair cars. models 1961
throua:h 1961, lo have their
~r systems inspected for
pqsilble defects.
Tb1 1uto maker said it will
contact the owner"' to have
their cars inspected by a
Chevrolet dealer and repaired,
if necessary, to eliminate
dangenNs fumes.
UnJeu wUTanty "'J>l'OVi.sions
lft .till in effect, the owners
will pay the expenS;es,
. 1be: agreement was an-
nounced Tuesday, one day
before General 'Motors was to
-hive appeared before the Na·
General Motoi·s disputed the
finding but bas agreed to issue
the notice" to all eorVair
owners over the nine.year
period.
N H T S A A d m inistrator
Douglas ;roms said: "Genetal
Motors is doing more than the
law req_uires it U. do by agree-
ing to conduct.a searctt for tM
names and addresses of ·all
present Corvair owners rather
Ul8n limitipg its not.ice 'to first
purchasers or w a r r JI n t y
owners as the la" requires.•• "
Kids Like to Ask Andy
•
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Effective
Annua l
Earnings
5.00°/o·5.13o/o Passbook. No minimum.
5. 75°/o·5.92°/o One Year Certificate $1,000 Minimum.
6.00%·6.18% Two to Five Year C!rl1f1cates $5,000 M1niMurii .
UD to 90 days loss of interest on amounts withdrawn
before maturity on all certificate accounts.
The Insiders Club: A new way to beat in flation . Its membershiD card
permits you to buy nearly everything you need from the finest closed·
door showrooms at substantial savings-appliances. furniture, stereo
equipment. sporting goods, draperies and much; much more.
You can even buy cars at the."fleet" price and mobile homes and
motorcycles at substantial savings. The Insiders Club also provide:.
MA1N OFFIC[:
9th & Mill. L'51An1.1!11•123·1351
Otl'>I• ,,r1 1e.11
WILSHllt[ 11 QllAMMl:JICY l'UC[:
3933 W1l1hlr1 Blvd .. L.A.• lll·l26S
•L.A. ~IYIC ClNTlJI:
2nd lo B•n1dw1y • 626-1102
HUNTINGTON lt:ACH1
91 Hununa tnn C1nt1r • (7!4) lt1·1047
•SANTA ANA LOAN lt:ltv'ICt: AO(NC'I:
1905 N. "41ln II.• (714) Sf7·9257
SANTA MONICA:
711 Wil1h!•a Blvd .• 313·07•6
SAN 1'[0110: lOlh " "•tlfll. 131·2l 41
W[ST COVINA:
[•1tl•nlf Sh&ppl~1 Cl•.• ll1·221ll
l'ANOkAMA CITY:
llSllS Vin Nuys 111111!. • 192·1171
TAltlANA:
11751 V1nlu•1 lllvd. • 345·•&14
LONQ IUCH: .
lrtl & Le~u•t • 437-7411
UST LOS ANQ[l,[!l: '
8th & Set" . •}U..0 11
D•lly H•1r.-f AM t• 4 PM o,.. Setwr4eyt-t AM ff 1 PM
•Not 0Jlln S.turt1y1 ;
big discounts on tickets to SDorling and entertainment events •••
plus a whole list of tree services : safe deposit bOXes. mqney orders, ~~ f
travelers checks , r¥>tary services and the use 6t d'ocument · '"t
duplicating equipment. ,~
Membership r.eouir8ment--for savers-$2,500·fT1inimum balance. ,,,..,. u
Goast borrowers now receive associate memberships entitling them
to au outside referra l services. Ask ii bout joining at any Coast off1c.e. * • ~.
--. ..
' COAST
ANO SOUTHERN FEDERAL SAVINGS
" '• c, -----------. ...
_ . . _ ,.-·:c,,.1°"1 distance calls by
. ch9.~in9 : -and -you call.
For ·examp1e,on calti to ··San Francisco:
....
Tonight and every night
from 11 p. m. to 8 a. m.
you can dial direct
(without Operator as-
sistance) anywhere in
California for 49¢ or
less. This new 49¢ rate
also applies from B a.m.
to 8 p.m.-Sunday and
liolldays. •
·'
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If you can 't stay awake
that late, it doesn't cost
much more to d ial a
call direct earlier in the
evening. From !J!.m. to
1!J!.m. Sund ay through
Friday and 8 a.m. to 11
J!.m. Saturday, it costs
80¢ to dial direct.
On a station-to-station
call requiring any type
of Operator assistance
-collect,, credit card,
charge to third party,
etc.-it costs more.
From 8 p.m. to 8 a.m.
weekdays or all day
Saturday, Sunday and
holi days,* an Operator·
assisted cal !"costs $1.05.
..
•
During the daytime,
Monday through Friday
from 8 a. . to 6 p.m. it
costs 1. Oto dial a call
yourself.
A station-to-station call
placed through the
Operator for this same
period of time (Monday
through Friday from
8 a.m. to 8 p.m.) costs ·
$1.50. -
'Holiday ra~es for long distance calls within Ca lifornia apply all day on Washington'• Birthday, lndependinco Day, Labor Day, Thankaglvl~. Chrlalmu 'and. New Yeafa Day. 1
All rates are for three·minute calla from Santa Ana to Sen Franeltpa1 plus tax. •
Dial direct. It's faster and cheaper. •
'
If you do need to make
a person-to-parson call,
It costs $2.25, no matter
when you call.
@Pacific ltlephone
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. . ' . Th1Wsdar, November 18, 1971~ OAILV Pli._g!_Jf
~T .. ~ops Say.Boredom 'Wo.r.se ~~.ban F~glJ.ting ·':'1 Vie na1n ..
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You Jose track of Ume. It's ed out of-can\p, it f~ll lnJo a leaves onto the track', Lract drove up"to·jump atart
900n hard to tell the days and crater left by, a 852 bomb 'h1cGehte sprayed the APC 2$ ud ·lhey were off once
the week.a and the monlM strike. The Gls sweattd unller · · more 1
aparLMonday_L4..IKI Sunda)'.S the scorcbini,sun, wi!Uni for ·w~th inSect killer ·a~ said, ,,...; ~red eoh.tnmJpfllld-
. ' . dense. They were finally back.
It hJ1d liken six hours to
travel five miles.
"I don't think we've· ever rou~·8/ly) d!Ncs. when w~'ve I
gOne. looking for t h e m , • '
Hughes said, a tattoo of a
buuard on his right shoulder
and silver Jesus medallion
around his neck. "\Ve only fit)d
them when they want -US te.
Then, they 1tart the shoot1r9
first. But they haven't ~
doing: much shooting lately."
Junes and Decembt:rs, just the~~lik tti-bel>ulle<l-out. Most 'lY~!ve got-to w&tch those e a Up Is if headed for the base
different names for the same took off their heavy Oak rtd o'nes. Thty 'really eat you camp. The trees.grew smaller
thing. jackets and a few even remov-alive. YoU get these' big welts. and 'the undergrowth ·1'35
Spec. 4 Kenneth Sabo. 19, or ed their hebnets. The;.'re bad.'' . -------~-------------~----------
Arvada, Colo., the track com-"I don't dig the war too ·They moVed 00; winding ~--------,---_...,.. ________________ .....,
mander, cUmbed onto the top much," McGehee said, sitting tht'ough the ·i·ungle~ The lead 'Psst of armored personnel carrier on the Kot steel edge of tbe
(APC) 21 and sat ~.,,.·"""~' --1A:'OPC'c'!:-~wilLh J 5_ctdsty:-comb<tt .sher1~_'_Would leaLa-hOle ---gr-enaa~fll'ii\g ''EilOOper gun." boots alo'ng the side!: of his throUgb the wall of vegetation ••• , S~~!.er, 21, of machine gun. "Not reajly. It's like a football lin~man and the Peel Off':,
Philadelphia · slid down the Rina of a-\faSte:-J just(lo11't ot~s wo~l<t""fo1JoW:-The5un .
hatch up front and dropped on-see no reason for fighting a • grew hoder and Ume seemed
to the canvas driver's seat. war over her~:" . IQ st~nd ·still.,Woiild something Im to
Sgt. DaQiel h1cGehee. ;o. of An hour-out' of camp., Com· happen? Anything, just to m . • . .
,Lancaster, Calif. and Spec. 4 munlsts hidden In nearby bre'ak the tedium .
Derek Hughes, 19, of Newhall, undergrowth dpened up with A couple of hours later. the "..: , ,
Calif., huddled over the two AK47 automatic rifle fire on a Jead lank No. 36. ran into mure PSA' from Moo machine guns along the c H47 ''Chinook" ca r g 0 trouble. It became bogii:ed •
sides of the APC. h I' 1 fl . down in swamp grass. The Gls •
"I think the whole thing's e !COP er , ymg over the waited, clirsing, while it was . .·aeac· . ·h.· • armored column. The chopper pulled ' free again. tiseless," Hughes said, eating was hit, but managed to fly "! think we o·ught to go applesauce out of a brown c. back to safetv The armored · 'W • · \ · home," ""bo said. tak•'•• 01,· ration can. ' e re wasting patrol se h= th b h f -·~ arc 'l'-1 e rus or his green tinker's helmet ·to oqr time here. That's for sure. the CommunisU but came up wi·pe . the ·sweat f-m h•s oJJGA It just wOuldn 't be too · cool t handed '" getting kll(ed now." emp Y · forehead. "The-Vietnamese "We're supposed lo be sit· 1 don't •-nt us here and we 'J1lere's more .of a dangei: of . 1. d • dying from boredo1n "than ing aroun guarding Saig:>n.'' don't want to be here."
OMEGA.THE SWITCH WATCH
What he should switch to. The' new
bullet.! these days. however. Beisser Said, sipping ·from a An hour later. the men on 21
Hughes' platoon hasn't been in can of orange soda . "At least. heard a crunching sound an'
belt! . t t A t A that's wh'al they-say back"in the !rack came to ' •r•'ndi·n e since as ugus . n he • AJ?C hits a mine every few t . world. But. we:re doing. halt. A couple. of bolts and
days, but most of the time no things w_e're "?1 sllpJ>?Sed t~. [ clamps v.•ere broken. off the
one is hurt or the injuries are mean, like this. We re go!ng drive· shaft. Jt look an hour to ·electronic ChrOnometer watch by Omega.
Ruggad,,good·looking, exception)! in
accuracy. Fourteen karat gold top,
stainless steel back with matching-
minor, ont.p~ p~~ol each day lookmg , ;bet? the spare parts.
T\vclve APCs and three for di nks. , ' The · Gls bounced, up and
bracelet, $260. Also available in stainless
steel wit h matching bracelet, $225.
Do Som."ething)Beautiful ........
Sheridan tanks rolled out o( APC 21 soon had its first 1 dov.·n over !he rough terrain
the base camp into the Boi Loi contact with ·Jl.eds. The yehiclc as . thoug b they v.•ere CQ\vbo,Ys
'Voods, a maze of twisting hit a branch. while moving ridirig bucking bi-oriCQs. A few
trees, bamboo t h i c k e t s . through lh,e bush and hundreds miiiutes · later, the batlety
eleg~ant grass and vines 40 of red ·ants · fel l · i rom ,the went dead on APC 25. Another
miles northwest of Saigon. HIDE·A·WAY FOR CHRISTMAS
CNr,. A~ l~wllllll
A-M:N llJP!" .. f l •nliA11Mrlc1,. 11111 Mlo1t.r Cll•rt• IM.
"Back · in the world, do the
people know we're out hue?"
SLAVICK'S said Beisser•· who recently
sv.·itched to a peace medallion
arter the St. Christopher he
used to wear around his neck
turned green and corroded. "I
mean, do1they really know'!"
The lead Sheridan. tank 36,
ran into trouble a few minute!
after the armored patrol pull·
M~rrill t LyP.ch -
looks· at mne
mutual~fimds-+--.
For a Merrill Ljnch research comment
and a current prospectus
on any of these funds, just check
the appropriate box or boxes and
mail in the couponi.oday.
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I I I I
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.Affiliated American Express 11 Anchor Growth :
Fund Income Fund Fund
I Pnmior,1c.br!:::to~e 1i; S-:,e": to proy:<J.E:<i.> •· 11' I On1~ctwl!l 1;;gr°'"lh or I I long.-termgn:mrhol .arnr.com<:..,po-_·::,,!J I ,:,n;;rc.1·.o:aer:.'c..iou..J I I · c;ap1tal'atld ol 1ncom1J. wi1hOIJt vndue ri~k. I OYet !he ~r:.. I
I a· ® I ~· I I . . I I
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I I I I
I I I I
I I Investment I Keystone J
I Fidel tty Capital 1 Company 1 . Custodian Fund, 1
I Fund 1 of America I· S·3 1 Places primacy emphicis Places~~~ 0-i see..:: ca0i~ grOw!h I oru;ap:!Eil 111::.o;&eoat:~ I apprec1&11on ar,d I 11··~._,r;n whi! i re oei.1•,ed J i:io~sioi.111~. oot1n11a1 CS.Y1dend.::. 1.-o-;. ~1'1'r grad<' l'!"Q•• ~ I I I . I au .ecominonctocks. ""· : -: ~ : .~ : I W I V I V I
I I I I o---------o------ - --o- - ------,
' f I
Massachusetts
JnvestOrsGroWth.
Stock Fund
Seeks tong-1erm1rowth c: Pffneio;;
aod 1u1vre 1nc:om..
f I
I Putnam Investors l
I Fund I
I Ol:)IGCtoveb loog·lt•m I
I groNll'i o! C..1P1llil I andol1nc;om1.
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I & I
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Windsor
Fund
Pr rruryc;tijeaive is I orig-term growtn cf
l'..<lo.W andotincorr.. •
!---------~-----------------, I I I Pleasesendmeinlonnationon theMutua!Fundscheckedabove. 1 I I
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,I I
I Address I
I City state 'p I
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I ·, MerrillLynch,Pien:e,Fenner&Smithlnc I
I 4501 Birch Street. Newport Beach '92660 I
I Telephone: 714-54-0-6121 I I , . ~--------------------------J
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And the crowds haven't'
found ii yet. Your t~~,
agent ~11ows the w~ .•.
7:10 anf (~Ieept'SUt\_.)j 10i00 Im,
1:00 pm, 4:'5 pm.(Da.llJ)i 7;00 pm
(Friday ~~d Sunday).,
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DAILY-PT LOT
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• AIL YOU NEED IS 'l1IE
BABY!! ~ly dec-
ontted arid ftniahed .mn-
ery fllrnltift:Att Hkt new,
for )'OUr ON baby! '
e LEAV'lNG 'J1{E 5rATE; · ,,,,,.. .. -..... .. -clan up with socb Jtt:ms
u Jcitcben ~i.anoet.~
-· .,.,,,.,. • pro)ocior, erchery equlpment, lamps,
..... dbhes, and ......
watt. batch them bdore
they l5V.:! '
e LDV ABLE 4 , Jllonth old
f~male German Shephml
for ell!: She's had all her
8hoa. Now she needs a
family?
J.. -
IS A
CREDIT MANAGER ..
.. .,.. ..... ,,. ................ , -.... rtMt ,. , .. ....
... pft .,, ,.,.... -., ........... ,., -.... lllMtMy .. .... ~ ... rnr~··· lllt ... DA.ILY 11!.0T ..,,. .. .. ....... ,., .. , ......... ,,.... ,.. .. ,., ............. .., ,_ -..................... ,...
~ .......................... ,..... ..... .
... ,.,. ................ Ill' ....... ...., .. ...
-<( ...................... --.... -· .. ,.., tWr Wiii. If .,.. .. ,_, yew ......, WI -tr tt ... ...,. wll
... ,.. c.m. ......,, ... • .. .
ASSURE PROMPT
COURTEOUS SERVICE
'DAILY PILOT CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT
• ~. f °tl • ~· I. ct·~ . i '.' • T .... ~""'1 ~ '!fl ....... . . · ·. . · ··Aftll 25 YEARS
.... , .. RANEAN .FURNITU0RE
IS
•. ~ ~rr. 'I I 1 ._, "'~ ~~·)-1 .,,. ~· ... . :.< . ., '· ~
,,.. f ~ • "'"' J ' ' °'It : · · ·...-htt~ ~ tt~'--~re'ds of ~l!ars on quality living room, bedroo~ a'!.d ilini.n_g room
~ llli.1-. .. tlllt-~--tf ~·--M~· verything must go regardless of cost! Our loss IS your 9a1nl Come
""'~~~MIMI J.I n1~Wtt ftN "'t I\", ' I sales final. Terms available.
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J . u,. ·m r· '• ' ' \. ,.
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MORE!
BEDROOM
Omoto ontlqut while $29995 5 pc. bedroom 1ultt.
Reg. $599.95 ...... NOW
Ook bunk btd.
Rog. $119.95 ........ NOW
5 pc. huvy M1dlt1rr1n11n 1ult1,
king headboard, triple dresser, mirror,
2 nlle stands. $49995 Rtt· $899.95 ...... NOW
5 pc. Spinlih sultt, king headboard,
trip.le d~esser, mirror, $29995 2 n1te stands.
Rog. $7'9.95 ...... NOW
5 pc. M1cllt1rr1n1an Kintilzt httdbovd,
m;rror, tr;ple dresser, $27!5 2 n1te stands.
Rtt· $399.95 ...... NOW
6 ft._ High Annoin, $199 5 massive Spanish.
Rtt· $319.95 ...... NOW
t:!;.~~-h Mtdltorr1nt1n $13995
Rog. $219.95 ...... NOW
OPEN TODAY
SUNDAY 12 to 5
Dalty 1 2 .. 9 p.m.
Saturday 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
DINING ROOM
5 pc. Dinette Set, black iron, oak
plast_;, top, one leaf. $4995
Rtt. $109.95 ........ NOW
Mtxlc1n Crtdenu Sft.. 995
Reg. $239. 95 ........ NOW . 7 ..
G1m1 Set, ocfllQOfllll table, 4 black
upholstered'tha;11. $199,5 naugahyde fully .
Rog. $319.95 ...... NOW ,
=~i:i' .. ~·md $399'5
Rog. $747.00 ...... NOW
S pc. Dlnotto, $13995 all wood, antique yellow.
Rtt· $229.95 ...... NOW
J pc. ko Cream Sot, glass top, $49,5 y!llow metal, white seats.
Reg. $79,95 ......... NOW
S pc. Dining Stt, octagon table, red
velvet h;gh back cba;r>, $19995 dark oak finish table.
Rig. $349.95 ...... NOW
5 pc. Dhilng Set, black 1l1te formica top,
dark oakwood, green $36995 velvet high back chai·rs:
Rog. $699.95 ...... NOW
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I -· DAILY PIL~T Jf
ruciy Sewage Effu-cts-an .O ~esa 1rm
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I By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of 111t 01ltJ ~It! Iliff The Biome study, according' ded 1t pttdettrmined ltvels la biological productivity of the areas lo show any changes plans to work closely with the specie! Crom selected areas ttielr , effectiveness' Umited. to Biome president Or. DoDl.ld the area of tht ouU1ll. Q!;:Uf) in the 1electid artas. caused by the discharge of Costa Meaa firm on the prOj· and evaluation by f I e Id The BloOJe 1y11tem will allow
A $65,000 study on the ef-Mitchell, ha s developed a new Periodic llibor1tory analysis These samples will bt com· · treated tfftuent. eel. : biologists with f o l·I o·w. up us to measure the biological
feels of sewage discharge on system ol marine mooi~. of marine 1rowth On' the pared • lo • communities of Ten Dunn, dlffi:tor of opera-"Until now environmental 'labo.ratory analysis. productJvlty of 11peclflc point.t nt_U'·~re ~n w~ters will Basicallyt ht said, specii.I panel• will provide ICientlst.t organisms grown on pa.Mis In tlona ind laboratories for the surveys have con!ls~ ot the "Adequate surveys are time 1n the ocean durln& specified
be undertaker: by a ·Costa ceramic panels will be IU!pt~ with Uiformation aboot tht control stations in undisturbed unitatlon districts, 111d he collection of adult .m~lne consuming, expen1lve and periods of time. fllesa finn with the aid of thel ___ __:. _____ ..:..._ ________ __:_:__:_: _____________ cc:...:...___:_: __ _c_..:..._ ____ ~~------.:....'------"'---'------.:....---------
Orange C o u n t y Sanitation r
Distri~ts. ,-
T,he {itudy~ which will last _-.. -~;;;~~~~t;i,~~~~~t~~~f~~~f'~rii~~t;~(!~~~~~ij~2~.~~;;:;:~~~~~~[i~~~~'.£~~~?' over an eight-month period, (
will be made by Biome Com-
' pany, Inc. along the sanitation
districts' fiO-e..inile ocean out-
Jall oU Huntington Beach.
The st1Jdy is being funded by
the, state Water Resources
Control Board. Aceording to
Keiry W. MuJligan, chairman
of the state board, the study
was funded because· of the
lack ot such material and
growing pu~lic concern.
"The study is unitlue In that I.
It is designed to develop a t
standard monitoring method I
which wUI be a2plicable So all '
of Californias' coastal waters,
thus assuring maximum pro-
tection to the marine en-
vironment throughout t h·e
state."
A spokesman for the sanita-
tion districts noted t h e
districls have c o n d u c t e d
several studies of the effects
of waste water on marine life
including anal yses of lhe
chemical contents ot the
~·ater, bottom core sampling,
microscopic investigation of
water-borne organisms and
1amlfilng of larger marine lit;e.
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f'Pi.er Taxes
Will Co ver
• " B_ay Battle ' .,
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SANTA ANA -Legal fees I
• incurred in the battle over the \ "'S.\../lJ -;--<!LJ
~Upper Newport Bay t:..and Ex-t I 1
·change agreement wifi be paid . ! } /,x.!'-,....(1' '-'?'°" "-_.,...,
• out of Newport Bay tidelands 1 \ \ • .,. ~fees funds, the Orange County 'I ·' I,,,
·l Board of Supervisors has / ..
decided . \ .,
Fees up to last June 30 ,
'i totalled $55,916 in the appeal l
't-to the ·Superiqr Court judg· l
gient which \Jpbeld tbe validity !ft --
of the· a·greement between the ·
~county ·and the Irvine COm-~
1 pany.
c Attotney Herman Selvin of f ~
Be\'crly,Hills and hi s staff will r '.
:rece1vt lhf\: £Wlds. They_.>were • ".,.,,;..
hired , bJ the county la st year _ . .,
to halJIJ~ the ~al litiga~.· •
The agreement covers an \
i exchange of 157 acres o( coun-f
i ty tidelands for 350 acres of t ~·Irvine Company-owned islands (
~and _!!P.lands. It was canceled L ~unilaterally bYµle supervisors I -
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~last January. . \
The Irvine Company con-'\...._ :,--::~':_:~~;jJ.:Jl.,;i~["Jf..:~'~·:.;,._.;,._..];:.;;~;_:!lr::.;,.:l2;~j,:,;.;:J::;:...,..;.:...;i;,.._;.;. __ .,.._;;1.:....f.J;t.;;.:.'.:;.;:;:J:;.:;:~?':00.: .. ~::;;.· -----~.._..~...:..'.:...:.::.'.'.~-,,;.,-: ~tends that the county ca~not -~
cancel the land exchange
agreement without mtitual J consent. _ * Selvin ls paid $75 an hour for
;. his services and $50 an hour ! for assistan t attorneys.
I
; Duo Jailed
In County ,
I Heist Spree
· · SANTA ANA -Two meri
accused on arrest of being the
duo responsible for a spate of
ar:med robberies in t h e
Westminster area last July 19
ha ve been sentenced on vary·
... ing charges in Orange Co1-1nty
~Superior ·eourt.
Judge Byron K. P.1cMillan
~ordered a state prison term of
six months to life for Michael
Calvin "Cherokee'' Nopens, of
' 7281 ·Pla za St., Westminster.
after accepting Nopens' plea
of guilty to second degree rob-
• · bery.
Steven Allen Nickles, 20, of
14792 Co lleeta Place.
Westmlnstir: ~as sentenc'ed to
' six months in Orange County
Jail aind pla ced on three years
probation after tiling a guilty \
plea to charges of possession
of dangerous drugs. Armed
, robbery charges were dismiss-
1 ed. . • Both men were arrested last ~July 19 shortly after the rob-
., bery of Marine o. vid Hutch-
ison who w11s relieved of his
• cash'and wallet by two men he
identified as Nofleris and
Nic kles. fie said .he was rob-
bed at gunpoint after they of-
fered him a ·lift to Camp
Pendleton.
Pofice linked bolh men to a
u·ave of armed robberies that
had taken place in !he
\Vt.Slminster-Midway C i l y
..
, G ~ant Arri vell ' .
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Kenneth J. Lane
designs · for Laguna:
look,. the .values gd to
-.. $70 and more
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necklaces, earrings, bracelets, pins, rings, all by
famed Kenneth J. Lane for Laguna and only at May Co
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It's a fanta stic collection of famous jewelry, Necklaces with
gleaming clasps, earrings, bracelets, pins and rings, Clusters
and clusters of eye-catching stones. Like simulated pearls,
rhine stones and more. In all the jewel-tone colors . Add sparkle
to your new classic look. And what could be nicer for holiday
gift giving? Al l items are tagged with. the origina l prices.
Some are $45, $70 and higher. The savings will' astound yp u. ·· '<.: •
Hu rry and see the whole dazz ling collection only at May Co.
5,834 pieces were 10.00·20.004.99
2,232 pieces were 20.00-30.00 4.99
924 pieces were ,30.00-50.00 4.99
fashion jewelry 22.-all ts stores
372 pieces were 50.00·60.00 4.99
226 pieces were 60:00·70.00 4.99
360 pieces were 70.00~ more 4.99'
were 10.00-70.00 and .more •
m•y ce. teuth coast pl•1a1 san dilfO fwy. at bristol, co1t1 mtu; 546-9321 ••
' shop monday th ru frlday 10 a.m. to 9:30 Jt.m., wturday-10•.m. to 6 p.m.
1und1y 11 1.m. 'tll 6 p.m.
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FWlJ,EltTON -C.I State
Fullertoti P.resident L .. DonAld
Shields h11s announced r:ect.lpl
or a 1120.000 Naijon<I sClen«
Foundation grant to establish
1 10.week summer institute
for community c o 11 t i e
ell ml•ttl' teachers. 1----~---'-----=----".:.---....::--'---------~--------------------'---~-,.-------------
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_t LA's Skinniest· Park-Well Used --
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LOS ANGELES (AP) -For
41 yean tt w11 a muddy,
unuaed alley. llttmd with
carcauu of dead dogs, trash
1nd abandoned 1utomobiles.
W011ld be lighted at ntchl for
the rirat time/' Man &aid.
"And they really llarted to
like the Idea after a
neighborhood tragedy when a
child was killed on the street."
tureo even thougb linlJhing U.S. DepartmenlofLahor; the grant and U.. clealp wu
work b 1110 going on. Ecooomic and Y ooth Op-=·tee! by an j architectural
The trees, grass, graceful portunities Agency made a
arc lights and b arr e t\ "iilrr.'T~~;;;;p;;w;;;;;;;;p .. ~~;;wiii:Z
sculptures are valued at
$35,000. But man said most of
the labor and materials were
donated.
Not Jt is Loa Angeles' skin-
niest part, with p I a y
1eulptures for chUdren to
climb O'(e<, YOUfll· elms, holly
troM and lloodllghll.
The neighborhood Is thrilled
v.ith it now, Rios said, and
children are runiilng up and
tumbling down the hW and
lhruogh the ccncrete 1C11ip-
Y outhlul trainee workers
were sent to the park by the The 51).foot-wlde, !00-foot·
long Jl'llled walkway· which
runs uphill steeply, was .. -----------------created by the Los Angeles
Community Service Organlu-
llon to prove that unused
llrlps of public land don't have
to be wuted.
'l'he Ol"lanizatloa cut throu&h
...... of rod !Ape and Initial
apathy from residents of the
qtng Eut Lal Angelea c:cm-
munity of City Terrace.
• Anthony P. Riot, bead of
CSO, beml about the alley
from a cleanup crew.
N• one WU uaing iL
' .j
Men in Service
• Airman MlHael A. Bon, min<sweeper USS Conflict In
aon of Mr. and Mrs. A1frtd W. the Western Pacific.
Horn , 1S$11 .Sutter ,
Westminster, bu pduated at Army Private Jo1epb B.
Sheppard AFB, -Tu., from the Price, son of Mr. and Mrs.
U.S. Air Foni a ircr aft Dolllld M.Price,9850Garfield
mectiardc course. Ave., Huntington Be a ch ,
SIJCIS
Ste IACH
I BmSPREADS
Alff Sill, llfULAI PIJCl1'$S
SLBPINI BABS
DRAPES
PllPAlllLUN~OUlllt.$1
0 So we started trying to get
permiuion to turn the alley
into a walk-through park,"
Aid Alu: Man, one of Rios'
The airman. who was train-recently was anlgned ·to the
ed. to repair current Air Force staff and faculty batlallon,
jet fighters, ii being autped U.S. Army Field Arlillery
to George AFB, for duty with School at Ft. Sill, Okla.
PRICES GOOD ONLYWITllTRlS COUPON
aui.atants.
After alx montba county of-
lictala arreed to the plan.
Then the local Improvement
agency approached rtJldents
about the idea. Retidenta ·~ pored uninterested until they
llW I model.
.. Tbue wu an audJble gup
u they realtud that the place
a unit of the Tactical Alr Com-· Pvt. Price Is a cltrk typist
mand which provides combat with 'hf battalion'• battery B.
unlta: for air support of U.S. ,_ l. -
ground forces. Navy Seaman Apprentice
Tlmotby SaUot, son of Mr. and
Navy Fireman Paal M. Mra. Conole Sallas Sr. of 3016
Romuo, son of Mr. Roberto WUTtn Lane, Costa Mesa; is
A. Ramano of 13801 Ed"ards StrVlng with Naval Air Sta·
St., Westrnimter, ls ltl'Ving tlon, Chase Field, Beeville,
1iboard the o c e a n -g o 1 n g Tei:. .il:~l::.l~".'.X:"':".r...:
COMMUNITY EVENTS
' J ,.
MARCEi.LA STANLEY
SUPPORT
YOUR HARBOR AREA
UNITED FUND
Al Tl ST
OF
TH!
EARN HIGHER
INTEREST AT
CALIFORNIA
FEDERAL!
Now in Process MONTH
GIVE THE UNITED WAY -::=.--:" .-:... °::' =· ~":.:: .. :..::
"If y~u don't cfo it,·
It won't g•t don•."
.... !"' ef_dllllll If THiii.
.,.,.... .. """ llllfltwt ...... v--. .... ...... ,11'11,....... ...... c....~
-'" L ............... If ......, _,.. ... 19Ully ............ .., ...... la ..... ,,.ncMld
,
.... -.. ICrYlla ...,..,... "'" -""
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7Ur1ta
Certificate Accounts• Certificate Accounts•
$5,(ll)O minimum depoolt. 2-year minimum term.
Daily compounding. Eam ·fn>n date of deposit.
$1,000 minimum ·deposit. 1-year minimum tenn.
Daily compounding. Eam from date ol deposit.
5.25%:~""1 5 O/-o ~~~::.' 7(J nt1-
Passbook Accounts 90 Dey C61 Ulleale Accounts•
No minimum deposlL Dally compaunding. No minimum deposit. Dally compounding.
Earn from date of deposit. Inte rest day-In to day-out.
, ;W{thdrewata.befora tnaturlty permlttf!ld bltt subject to some loss of in!eresl. •
Cal![oml~_,!.~4.£!!!.~,§.@!,!ugs
NATION'S LARGEsT FEDERAL
COSTA MESA OFFICE:
2700 Harbor Blvd. near Adams • 546·2300
CLIFFORD M. WESDORF, VICE PRESIDENT & MANAGER
Convenient Offices throughqutlo~ Angeles, Oninge and Ventura Counties
OW1410M of 1'11 ~•def•I !irl1111t & Lotin l11&11r1nct Ct1rp1N'1tlon, a 1>etrl'l•n1nt 1g1ncy ol th1 Unll..S 1111• 00¥1mlMl'lt.
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HOURS: MON.·SAT. 9-6 SUN. 9-S
IF YO DON'T LIKE THE IDEA OF
cumNG DOWN FORESTS ••• THEN
BRIGHTEN YOUR HOLIDAYS WITH
GREEN, LIVING , :Js,1,
CHRISTMAS -.. } t
.t-?~.lit. TREES ~
~<'! .. ~ ~ . 0 e PINES e JUNIPER e HOLLY
e SPRUCE e EUGENIA e PRIVET
PLUS MANY MANY MPRE!
CHOOSE FROM 20 VARIETIES
In all shapes and sizes
e FOR HOME, APT., BOAT
e TABLE TOP TO 8 FT. TALL
After th1 holidays. j ult put them
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SACRAMENTO (UPI) -·
Imagine a rushing trout
st.ream at your backdoor, the
whisper of pines and the
crackling of a fireplace in
·-I
ThurM!ay, No~unbtr 18, 1971 .,
Ure am Often Turns
new tools lo deal with second-
home subdivisjons.
the protection . of their own
citizens and the environment
itself,"
posed.
~· ' , DAILY PILOT •
Soiir '
....-)'Our-lll.\lic. cabin in u_enmte
section of the Sierra foothills.
what one legislator describes 1
as "modern-day land b1;1rons"
who are '·sys;ematlcally chop.
ping up rare and irreplaceable
land" and whose operations
border on fraud .
In Nevada County. for ex·
ample, state and fish and
game officials report that
more than 150 miles of
streams have been damaged
by subdivisions during the
past 10 years.
Opposed by major
developers, the legislalion is
designed to pr o Le c t fros-
pectlve la._n<Lpucchasersrom
high-pressure salesmen and
help prevent those bubbling
streams rrom becoming silt-
clogged ditches.
The main bill \\'Ill require
cities and counties lo reject a
propru;ed mbdivlsion if it
would sub.$tantlally da1nage
the environment. Previously.
local agencies could not reject
a project for environmental
reasons alone.
Other provisions will require
large, remote subdivisions to
spell out in detail what
measures are being taken to
safeguard the environment.
New subdivisions will have
to conform to city and county
plans, especially In regard to
their open Space and con·
servation provisions,
divisions of ~than 60 lots
located In rel ~e areas -
could TIQl be 11 1 under the
assemblyman's gislation un·
less the -n=a1 estate com·
1nlssioner issued ~ report on
the project. 1 e I a n d
developers wlll be equired to
distribute the report to
customers.
''I don't think inoney counts for everything. I just wish
I had some to count."
.
Nixon Civil Rights
Leadership Lashed
\VASHLNGTON (AP) -The
Nixon Administration has fail-
ed to take a firm and con·
linuing interest in the en-
forcement of civil-rights laws,
the Civil Rights Commission
has chargec!.
In addition, the commission
said Tuesday, only a few
fede ral agencies have . made
any real eHort lo upgrade the
hiring or promotion of blacks,
lndians, qrientals or Spanish-
1ipeaking Americans.
· A bulky 217-page report en-
titled, ''The Federal Civil
Rights Enforcement Effort:
One Year Later" concluded:
"Unless the bureaucracy is
given to understand that civil
rights is a matter of personal
concern to the President, ii is
unlikely to alter the status
quo." ·• ,
·The \Vhite House had no im·
mediate comment.
The commission c it e d
remarks on vprious ci\'il·
rights issues by President Nix-
on over the. past several
Researc h
, Islan<l
~,Gets Okny
LA JOLLA (AP I -ScripP.S
Institution of Oceanography
and San Diego city officia ls
are repOrtcrl in 'agreement on
a long·ler111 lease of 80U ;:icres
ol ocean floor for a man-made
research is:and. ·
Dr. \V i I l i am Nierenberg,
·'Scripps director. said a design
.IJor construction of the island
~is being submilted to Uni\'e rsi-
ty of California regents.
1f federal grants are ap-
proved. the $18-million island
cnmp!c1 c ~ith sophisticated
laborato ries would . be built
25.000 feet oH Scripps' beach.
The island of steel-rein-
forced concrete and perched
atop four 40-foot columns has
been planned since 1952.
Nierenberg said "there is a
very gooii chance !hat this will
be a re3lity in !Jvc years."
months as d9ing little to pro-
vide relief for minorilies. (The
President has opposed en-
forced busing to achieve in-
tegration and has said he 1s
against an active federal role
in the courts to integrate the
suburbs.)
"The net effect of the
President's statexnents has not
been to provide a clear policy
direction necessary to en-
courage the federal
bUreaucracy to step up its ef-
forts to enforce civil-rights
la"·s,'' the rennrt said. ~-. "Chief among t h e in·
adequacies is the failure· to
de \'elop and to communicate
to the public a sense of urgen-
cy over the need to end
discrimination," the report
said.
\Vhile acknowledging that a
presidential statement o n
housing emphasized the need
, to correct past patterns of
discrimination, the com-
mission criticized a distinction
Nixon made between segrega-
tion resulting from income
and segregation resulling•from
deliberate discrimination.
i1uch of the report is
devoted to an evahmtion of
how wen the governmenf ts
carrying out Title VI of the
1964 Civil Rights Act which
outlaws discrimination in any
federally funded p r o j e c t
whether the money is spent by
pr ivate or public agencies.
There were improvement
ratings over the last Year for
the Internal Revenue Ser'-"cc,
the Agriculture Department,
the Veterans Administration
and the Interior Department.
The report said the
guvernment's hiring agency,
the Civil Service Commission.
has done little to encourage
other branches of t h e
bureaucracy to upgrade their
minority-hiring efforts.
The commission said also
·that President Nixon's order
to red~ce _the federal payroll
by 5 per cent may stifle equal
opportunily Programs.
''Any force reductions in
employment levels through job
terminations are likel y to af-
fect most significantly tho~e
emplo~·es with least senority.
a disproportionate number of
whom are minority-group
citizens," it said.
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It's a common dream -one
shared by thousands of.
Californians and promoted by·
scores of land developers.
But that dream has become'
a nightmare for an untold
number of persons lured into
bu ying· undeveloped lots in
"recreational" and "second
home" subdivisions throughout
the state.
They are the victims of
But now, as a result or
Jegjslation sponsored b y
Assemblyman Leo T.
J.1cCarthy (D -San Francisco)
and recently signed by Gov.
Ronald Reagan, the state has
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In signing the cornerstone
bill of the fhrte-niea surc
package, Reagan said. •·\Ve
cannot aiford the luxury of
al l owing real cstale
develop1nents to b e con-
structed which do not meet
the rpquiremenls that com-
munities have established for
Proposed devclopmenls also
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problems 011 if the subdlvlsln11
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f\.1cCarthy's other bills are
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h<1ve up to 14 days after he
signs his contract to change
his mind "without cause."
"Land projects'' -sub-. .
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Forges ----=--e
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Winners--·-
Hotshot Campai@t Manager Logs 75-10 Record
SAN °FRANCISCO I AP I -
·1 "\Vhen you win, you're great.
\\'hen you Jose, you .stink ."
~ys Stanford L. Weiner,
feflecting on his in1age as one
or An1erica 's n1ost successrul
political campaign n1anagers.
A conservatl.,.ely dressed
advertising agency executive,
Welner, 42, heads a company
specializing in m o I d I n g
political unknowns into win ..
ning "new politics" earl:
didates. His record now stands
at 75 victories in 85 election
contests he has packaged and
masterminded .
He also forged victory f0r
former Republican U.S. Sen.
George Murphy in 1!>64 over
Pierre Salinger and ( o r
Demo c rat ic Sen. Alan
Cranston in, 4968.
Weiner took multin1illionaire
industrialis t Nor ton Simon, a
political neophyte, and made
him a major u:s. Senate can-
didate in less than 70 days
although Simon lost to ~1.urphy
in the GOP primary.
The business of winning .
elections for other people
began for Weiner after he ran
for th.e state legislature in 1958
and lost.
strategists, after geiting fired
from his ad agency job.
~p until !964 Weiner was a
Republican· and h a n d I e d
Republican candidates. Since
then, his personal political
philosophy has shifted to the
left. and he now specializes in
helping liberal candidates.
The process begins when a
prospective candidate comes
to Weiner he doesn't ha.,.e to
shop for customers these days.
By the time election dl}y is
past. Weiner may know more
about the candidate than
anyone else.
"It's a marriage. It really
is. It almost has to' be,"
Weiner said.
Alioto candidacy as 1
challenge, even though ii
violated his rule a g a i n 11 t
manag ing campaigns of in·
cum bents.
"This caIJU>aign was dil·
ferent for a tot of reasons.
There was definitely a pro-
fessional challenge involved
there. We are professionals
and there are things called
challenges. The fact that the
guy was under federal In-
dictment and the civil trial
and all was a test of Our
skills.••
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Wei ner's most recent suc·
cess was San Francisco fl.1ayof
Joseph L. Alioto whom he Jed
to a landslide re-election vie·
tory despite Alioto's highly
publicized federal criminal in-
dictment a n d Washington
state tri al on a $2.3 million
civil suit .
"I was well-financed." he
explained. •·But during the
campaign I kept looking for
people to help me \\'Ith press
releases, advertising and so
on. I spent most of the time
looking for people to put it
together for me."
"\Ve get a great run-through
of people talking about run-
ning for office . A good deal or
the time, we try to talk pebp\e
out of it -either because we
don't think it's right for them
or that It's not the right time."
To Aid Prisoners!--~~~~~·~"!'"!"~'~··~'·'~·<·~~~~~~-
Duke's St1it
Charles .M. Duke Jr., luna:r module pilot for the
upcoming Apollo 16 mission, gets a fitting for his
new space suit. The "extravehicular activity suit"
weighs only seven pounds. Apollo 16 mission is
scheduled early next year.
Israel, U.S. Bickering
Over P ... haqtom Shipment
By WILBUR G. LANDREY.
UPI Foreign Editor
The United States and Israel
are in the middle of a first
class row over whether Israel
will get the additional
American-built F4 Phantom
\varplanes She has asked for
NEWS ANALYSIS
them for her security . The
United States says she does
not.
Behind the impasse over the
Phantoms is the deeper im-
passe b I o c k i n g agreement
between Egypt and Israel to
reopen the Suez Canal and the
Impa sse nver peace in the
?i.fiddle East generally.
U.S. Secretary of State
William P. Rogers has been
\l.'Orkilig for ~ long .time lo get
a Suez Canal agreement, and
pertlaps movement towards it
will be possible afler the ex-
pected ·furore of the forthcom·
ing Mlddl~-East debate in Ute
U.N. General Assembl y.
Perhaps the mission from
the Organization of African
Slates now talking to liotl'I
sides ii;i the Middle East can
"' help, too.
There is no guarantee or it.
however.
Pre:;idenl Anwar Sadat of
Eg)'.pt has been say ing for
months ~hat there mu;;t be
some fl.liddle East agreement this~ year and that if lhe
Wear U11ifori11,
Unit Ordere1 I
SAN DIEGO'\ UPI I -Police
Ch ief Ray Hoobler hes ortl~red
the 1 l·man communit y rela·
tions detail to report to 'vork
in uniform instead of civilian
clothing and indicated the
order may be extendeil to
some deleetives. ' ' .
One community relations of·
ficer sai d, "I can't be lieve it.
This will se t us back 10 years
in t.he bl.a ck community."
Hoobler sa id the order is an
effort to build more respect
for policemen in uniform.
now. Israel says she needs
United States cannot hi!lp
bring it about -he means by
persuading lsr:ael to give bet· _ter terms than It tras so far
been willing to give -then
there must be a, military solu-
tion . The threat is, of course.
·that the present cease-fire will
end and fighting on some scale
wilt resume.
Having sald that he would
do something. Sadat must be
under strong pressure to find
something to do if he is to re-
main in power. Few people
believe, however. that Egypt
has the power to force the
Israelis a\\•ay from the canal
or out Qf lhe territory they OC·
cupied in the 1967 \l'ar.
\\fhat is certain is that the
United States has not been
very successful in persuading
Jsrael to do what Egypt ,.,.anls
(which tbe United States could
noi really be expecfec1 to do all
the wa y) or even wJiat the
U.S. governl']'lent wants.
The ..danger of !he fl.·liddle
East situation is that renewed
fighting between Israel and
the· Arabs could 'involve the
bigger powers, Rll ssia on the
side of the Arabs, the United
States on the side of Js'rael.
Israeli Prime Minister
Golda Meir has atlack ed
strongly proposals towards a
canal settlement "'hich Rogers
put forward last .month in the
U.S. General Assembly. Israel ,.,.;u not agree, she said, to
allow Egyptian troops across
lhe canal or to any interim
settlement which does not pro-
vide for a permanent ctase-·
fire .
R~ports from Israel sa id
that Israel \\'ill refuse to take
·part in any more talks until
she gets the Phantoms and the
pl~posals are \\'ilhdrawn.
. Rogers said this week that
the 'ba lance or poWer has not
shifted against Israel. AQ
American stud y_ is sai d to
have concluded that Israel still
has military superiority.
lience. no Phant un1s now .
Behind the U.S. government
sland is the obvious belief that
its leverage with Egypt will
disappear and the prospect of
serious canal n~gotiations \viii
end if it suppliE:s th e• Phan·
toms which Israel wants.
Peppenoine Unioensity
" ' .•
ORANGE COUNTY RESIDENT CENTER
17802 Sky Park Blvd., Irvine Industrial Complex
EVENING CLASSES.....:BEGIN JAN .3
Business, Sociology, Psychology,
Police Manageme~t.
EVENING GRADOAT.E CLASSES
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Educ1tion.
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ALL COURSES MAY BE APPLIED TO
DEGREES.
Adv1nc• Registri1tioo: Dec. 6, 7, 8.
Location: a'etween Newport •nd San Diego Fretw•ys,
'l iu•t ?ff M•cArthur Blvcl.
INFO•MATION : 17 14 1 54b-l91.I ., P'"I B,ckley,
17141 737-0551
It was Weiner who helped
U.S. Rep. Paul N. f\1cCloskey.
iR-CaJU.), to victory over
former child movie s t a r
Shirley Temple Blac k.
lie was looking for a job.
too, after losing to now -U.S.
Rep. Thomas Rees .
Weiner formed Weiner &
Company. political campaign
\Veiner will take the client
only if he .thinkS he has a
relatively good cha nce to win.
Weiner said he saw the
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
Next step, an orgf'niIStion
that helps clergymen l~a\'ing
the ministry adjust to lire
outside, has announci!d that
henceforth it will also serve
prisoners being released from
the penitentiary.
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Thursda:)', NOYembtr 11!1, tm DAILY 1'1LOT J
or y Sfams . Le t1st emocrats as He 'I'a es \ unge
LOS i\NGELES (/\P) -Ing trips to New Haml>$hlrt lo administrator of the nation's companied him on his visits to defeated In a bid for the ready to take an the party Democratic black, Thomas al&o won him official eno
htayor Sam Yorty likes to "test the waters." He's also thlrd largest city and his oft... N~w_Hampshire, speaks wtth 0 em o cratic gubernatorial heavyweights. Bradle):', v.•ho had the backing dorsemeot from the, at1te'•
campaign and likes to travel visited Florida. and a rtw criticized trlps to such locales a sla:shing ad-lib style, and is nomination, against Oedmund His most recent and best · of many prominent Democrats biggest new 11 paper, the
and hopes his fondness for other locations, as Saigon thal qualified him. not slow to smile. G. Brown in ·1966 and Jess publicized victory was when in the technically nonpartisan Manchester Union Leader, and
both y,•ill lead him lo the White J\llhough the mayor broke Yorty, whose wire ol more ,Although he'S lost some bat-Unruh four years later -the he won a third term as mayor ma)'tlr's contest. support from a number of the
llouse. r.anks aoQ publicly endorsed thEll! 30 years_, Beti,J(len_ae: Ues over -the years-twice 5-foot-9 166-poond mayor is in an uphill b<J,ttle against a fils lrips to New Hampshire state'& key Democrats.
The 61-year-old maverick Preident Nixon's unsucceSsful,-==================::::::--------------------:"i:r:;;:::;:;::::;;:::::::===========----
Democrat, whose trips away bid against the late President K<'lnft•K(IJ~•KQJ~•K(1J~ll~(lf OP.,N 7 D-ay5 A W.,.,K K<U~•l((IJ~·((IJ~mJIP.Pfti!!!!!!I from his City Hall home base John F. Kennedy In 1960, Yor-.,.,..._ ... , ... ,,.,Mlill w•1•'1•1 &Y w•1•1t11 ~~·111,1.1 . Iii H . llilli w•11t•'il ..... w•ni'n1 _..,.,,1111 IMiil w~11MtM.mMii1 ...,..,
to all points of the glo.be ty ·doesn't consider his hat is
prompt even supporters to call in the -same ring occupied by o · I f h
him "the only mayor l;Vith a Republicans,orNixon. ne great va ue a ter anot· ·er foreign policy."' hasanno~oced'2.-. Yorly has criticized Nlxort • . ·.. · · . • • • that , he'll seek his , party's ~nomies, China and other
pr'eSldential nomination. rnatters. lie strenuously op-
His first mo\·e will be lo posed a federal grand jury in-
entpr New H a m p s h i r e ' s dictment of several Lo s
primary, he said. Angeles po I i c e oUicers-:-a
Rated a dark horse , move he blamet1 on the Nixon
particularly since he has administration.
broken and battled w it h. In fact. there may hardly be
regular--line Democrats wl\ose a politician who satisfies the ·
con\•entioo nomination support mayor, who says that another
he will !teed; Yorty sees Democrat or· a s i m i I a r
himself as "'hat a Democrat political hue, Sen. Henry
really should be. JackSon of Washington, lacked
He put it this "'ay when an-"leadership" ability in the
nouncing his entry into the defeat of the ssr supersonic
Democratic pt;imary for jet, a project Yorty heartily
governor last year: "I am a endorsed.
lifelong Democrat and will run "Political maverick'\ is 'a
on the Democratic ticket. I term used by his critics but it
\vould like to see t h e has cropped up in his own
Democratic Party of our state campaign literature as a
divorce itself fro1n the ex· badge of distinction. His press
trc1ne leftists, the power seek· releases _call him . "the ~nlr,
ers. the mcrcene.rics and the mayor with a foreign policy
arrogant would-be dictators and dub him "colorful and
\1•ho try to tell registered controversial."
Democrats who can or cannot Yorty, \llhose !riendly Irish
run, and how we are to vote." eyes are often smiling, rose
At another occas ion, in liis from a young man selling
gruff trombone-timber voice neckties and shirts in his ·
the ha"·kish mayor tabbed home towrrof-tineoln, Neb,, to
Dernocralic doves, such asn a law school graduate and suc-
announced presidential can-cessful politician . in . h i s
dldate Sen. George McGovern adopted state of California.
(D:s.D. I as "left-leaning," and He served two term~ as: a
said he considered an ap-cong ressman from Californ1~.
parent Democratic leading but has spent most ~r ~
presidentia l contender, Sen. political .life as a Cahforn!a
Edmund Muskie of l\1aine, as ass em b J·y man and 1n
•·naive." municipal government. He's in
''I think thal the position of his third four-year term as
the 1noderale Den1ocrat needs mayor.
to be presented to the voters Asked once if his
as an alternative lo .the SO· ' background as mayor was suf-
called antiwar doves and left-ficient for a try at the White
\vlngcrs," Yorty said last House, Yorty replied that it
spring y,•hcn he started mak· was h}s very experience as the
4 Gro ups Blast KTTV
\\'ASl!JNGTON tAPI -rec said W~nesday.
Four. organizations clai@ing to The organizations opposing
represent Los Anget{s area renewal of the license for the
TV \'iewcrs have told the l\1etromedia, Inc. station
Feder a J Communications area: the National Association
Commission that s t a lion for Better Broadcasting, a
KTTV-TV is not serving the California-based national non-
coinmunily's needs and its profit corporation: Action for
license should not be renewed. Children's Television, also a
"The deficiencies are national organization; the
especially severe in the area "1exican ~ American Political
of news, public a r r a i r s , association: and the Fair
minority and children's pro-Hou sing Couricil of Sa n
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Company /Attitude Insures-Paym_e_n~t -
New attitudes on morality and abortion
have failed to cause any sweeping
changes in tht health insurance in-
dustry'• payment benefits.
A survey of insurance companies in-
dicates that a revamping of policy
t>enefit& was not necessary following the
liberalization of California's abortion law In 1967 ••
: 0 Llberallzation by the state may have
expanded Allstate's contractual obliga-
tion but the changes in the abortion law
have not forced Allstate to change its
policy provisions. We didn 't m&ke a ne"'
policy. We followed state Jaw." said Ben
Gffrts, public affairs manager l6r
Allstate .
.The proy islons of the health plans
didn't have to be changed because "like
other health Insurance \Vriters, we have
covered medical expenses for those abor·
Uons for many years,'' he added.
Many insurance compr11nie1 did not
have to amend hospital and insurance
coverage to keep up E'th today's
moralities because of instlt tional defini·
tlon or terms and policy co racts. Most
policies use the term "'pregnancy" to in-
clude childbirth, abortion or miscarriage.
MATERNITY BENEFITS
A com~y .spokesman tor OCCldental
Life Insunnce, Jury Miller aald, "We do
not distinguish between normal delivery
and abortion in the payment ol pregnan-
cy btneflLs. j Nor , do we deny benefit.!
solely because of the way pregJ11ancy is
tenninaU<I.''
Wilen the companles were asked to pro-
vide statistical data on the number of
abortion claims or the amount of money
paid in ·abortion claims, they declined
stating Uie claims were pr1)Cessed as
normal maternity claims rather than •
categorized into miscarriaie. childbirth
or abortion.
Richard Sherer, publie a ff a Ir s
spokesman Cor Blue Cross, said, "If the
contract has maWnlty coverage at all,
then abortions al-e handJed .• under that
provision." He added that many group
plans don't include maternity a>verage or
only offer a·loken 'payment of $100 which NO DATA
doesn 't cover much of the cost of having , "The information is on the computer
a baby today. · ·• but it ~1not programmed to provide i!,''.
''Maternity coverage is not a very high said the. Blue Crou spokesman. "The
priority option In group policies. Other fact lhat we treat them a.s. a normal oc-
things are nl()re imporlant to workplg currences-normal maternity claims :-
people," Sherer added. · indicates that abortion makes llO· real dif· ,
ferenca ln our--pollcy.
Blue Shield considers an abortion a
1urgical procedure, aceording to Nick
Walker, spokesman in the San Fran·
clsco maln off~e.· 1 ' Pa y me n t s for
abortions are made by California Blue
Shield If the surgical procedure Is a
covered benefit of the individual 's health
plan and if it is considered a legal abor-
tion under the Jaw," he said. "Basically,
we pay for abortions."
The prime 'consideration ot the com-
Panies is : Is it a covered benefit? They
do not concern themselves with the moral
aspect of whether the claimant is a mar-
ried woman or not. ""We don't make
mOral judgm,ents,'' was the consensus.
A difference may exist between in-
dividual and group policies. Individual
J)Oliclu often stipulate that maternity
benefits are only' given to married
women., pointed out the Occidental
spokesman. ""But'as a rule, grOup policies only if-the Individual 1• an employe or
dOn 't differentiate between· married and wife of an employe. Blue C:.01s a1ao
unmarried women." covers only the. subscriber or spouse.
The group policy alao may be tailored ••individual or group policies may be'
to a specific request , he added, "If an writ ten with P!"egnancy benefits rot
employer says he doesn't want un· employes' depefldents at the specific re•
marrled women I to receive maternity quest or !he policy holder, but this is ex·
benefits (as a pr~aJtion of having a lot tremely rare,," said tne Occidental
ol unwed mothers on the payroll! then he spokesman.
can exclude them at his request." County and state employes have a
~tutual or Omaha will pay SIOO toward number or health insurance options. A
an abortion under maternity bene!its. "It survey indicates that the Prudentia l plan
is not necessary for the woman to be offered county employes has excellent
married but both parties have to be in· pregnancy benefits. ·
sured with Mutual of Omaha .... they According to Lucille Hurbert, insurance
both have to be covered," said J .F. supervisor for the county employes, Sl40
Steiner, Mutual of Omaha agent. is payed toward doctors' fee£ if the $100
"Therefore, unmarried daughters would deductible is satisfied . It also pays 100
not be covered because there has to be a perte.nt oC the first $500 of the hospital
man under the -policy.'' bill. "lt makes nQ difference if they are
Prudential Life Insurance's group married or unmarried but the beneficiary
policies usually cover maternity charges cannot be a daughter." ...._
Path Paved for Problem Pregnancy ·
Storie5 by JACQUELINE COMBS
Of lfM D•Hr 1'1111 St•lf
Obtaining an abortion has always been
a que stion or who you know and how
much money you have.
Despite the liberalization of state
therapeutic abortion laws in 1967, the
lack of money and contacts has forced
some women to continue unwanted
pregnancies. •
Orange County agencies which have
evolved .through the existence of such
unplanned and unwanted pregnancies are
often impoten~ when faced with an actual
demand Cor an abortion.
These private and public agencies refer
women with "prgblem pregnancies" to
two Orange County groups which serve
as effective and immediate liaisons
between the pregnant woman and the
doctor who can eliminate the problem -
Planned Parenthood, Santa Ana, and
Birth C:Ontrol Institute, Orange .•
Birth Control lnstitu te, formerly named
Problem Pregnancy C.Ounseling, is the
only Orange C.Ounty-based agency. It was
organized 17 months agci by Larry G.
Boyd, executive director, and Wayne La-
mont, assistant director, as an outgrowth
of the Orange C.Ounty branch of Planned
Parenthood.
"There were a number of us who felt
that there was no agency in the area tak-
ing an aggressive enough stand on birth
control information dissemination and
reduction of abortion fee s."
Tbe_ institute was formed by Boyd~ a
Unitarian minister, to cut Costs, improve
communication between the patient and
doctor and save time., 1 -• ,. •
Jt bas. A 1ega~abortion now can 1:i
tained for as liUfe as $185 through the in-
stitute.
Private counseling explains the opera-
lion thoroughly to the patients and pro-
vides birth control information.
Paramedical assistance is available to
assist in hospital admission and to ac·
com pany the patient if needed.
If a woman has a positive. pregnancy
test on Monday, it is possible to be ad·
mitted to the hospital Friday.
The charge for most Orange County
hospital abortions has ranged from $453-
$650, according to La.Mont. BCI:s low cost
of $Ula is possible in some cases where
women are less than seven and a half
weeks pregnant and will :require no
anasthesia.
The average cost for women between
eight and 12 weeks pregnant is ~. The
charge for saline abortions between lZ
and 20 weeks of pregnancy is $42S-550.
The cost is low because the institute
refers its weekly average of 100 to 150
women to three pr.Unary doctors and
three hospitals which have agreed to ban·
die the abortions at a reduooi rate. ,
BCI handles all paramedical service,
including counseling and paper work
which reduces time and · cost to the hosp.ital~ ex:plainect UMont. A nonprofit
organizatiot1, BCl ·is financed through
donations and fees re<:1?ived from the doc-
tors for the above services. "It is a slight
kickback ." said La.Mont.
While BCI is working on reducing the
cost of its own referred abortions, the
ultimate goal is to reduce the cost of all
legal abortions. It believes a definite
move in that direction is to refer as
many women as possible to the
cooperating doctors. •
The more than !00 women who seek
help weekly, are "mostly young women,
single, under 21, blonde,, blue-eyed."
These "All-American" types a re
overwhelmingly middle class and of tbe
BEA ANDERSO N, Edilor
""' 21 •
Ann Landers
Horror Story Told
DEAR ANN LANDERS : What has hap..
pened to dignity and respect for the de--
ceased? l was horrified to read of the
"dril'i!·in funeral parlors" where you
don't even have to get out or your Cil'
to view the remains of a loved one. I
wouldn 't be surprised if the fte.xt move
would be a TV ,..segment that ~hows all
the corpses in the local mortuanes. Then
people won't even have lo go. to the
drive-ins. They can stay home, drink beer
and see their loved ones on the Idiot box.
Yesterday 1> woman I work with said,
"My father 's funeral was so lovely. I still
feel a sense of peace." I asked whe1 s~e
had buried her fal.her. ''This mornin~.''
she rt:plied. I was shocked. l( my eh1Jd8
ren can't take o(f two or three days of
work to pi.)' their respects to me when
J die, J'll feel that I did a pretty poor
job as a mother.
The things that have been happening
lately make me ashamed to be a me~
ber of the human rAce. What about you!
-OUTRAGED
DEAR OUT: My Chlcap l•neral co•
suliaat. Mr. Jule• Furth, Inform• me
dlat tlJtrt are 110 dr1Ye41 mortaaritt.
Oae wat opeaed In the South last year
es 1 pabllclty 1tu.at Mortid•ns all over
the contrY "ere oatrapl at tbe clod·
"''""" " "" 11mm1<k • ...I"' drive-ta w•s cl0tt:d. pri>mptly.
IDJofar 11 your c .. lklrH art concened,
tt•1 Mt Hw ltll tKy take CU work" wbea
,.. ate 11111 malitrt, ba1 """ alloy _,
,,.. wlttl .you . are: llVIDI•
DEAR AliN : You've helped I lot ol
people. Will you please help thousand!
more by prinU11g my story?
I could have (iied elghl years aaoiwhen J
I was 27 :1 might have committed suicide
or refused surgery when my life depended
on "f1lei removal of the large intestine .and
bladder. I didn't know that nearly a mil·
lion North Americans had undergone that
kind of surgery and were now "iving full ,
and aCtive Jiveii. These people are "oslo-
mates." They hove had 1 small alteration •
in their routine ol excretion, necesslt&ted
by birth defects, cancer, 1u1d other dis-
eases.
My problem was uhrative.colitis. The
doctors operated on me and I awoke wllh
a aurJ>Mse ileostomy, Today no ooe could
guess. Thase I tell are fi'SCinated. I have
no diet or odor problems. I ha ve earned
a Ph.D., taught school full-time, and I
hav~ a good marriage. We camp, hike ·
and enioy swimming. My life ha.a bten'
more &ctive aJ11d rewarding these f>ast
eight years than before the rurgery.
Th06e .wtto ha ve had colMtomies have
outdone me. They have had babies, they
compete in athletics, fly flanes a!Mi
pracUce law ind rMdicine. hope your
rtaders who have had such an operation, I
or are considering I{ and need emotional )
support, will contact the laternation1·I
Ostomy A!ISOC. at 1111 Wilshire Blvd., Loa
Angeles, Calif. 90017. We have established
180 clubs and we publish an Wormatlonal
magaiil"lf.
No one knows better th.l.n I that a good
life--requlres-understanding. courage and
a sense of humor. If one happens to have
all his internal organs, so much tht bet·
ter, but they aren't nece.u1ry • ..!.CAROL
H. -EU~EKA, C.llf. '
DEAR CAROL: llere'1 ylJUr lttter plua
my lllW. llld lloanletl coecrobol•Hoat.
&aplt religious proportion as the com-
m'"1ity, he added. >.., abortion relerral ls never refused
for lack of funds, LaMont emphasiz.ed.
Ev~ry effort is made to see if the patient
qual ifie s for Medi~al or county
BfSistance. Jf a woman meets county
fiJlancial limitations. she may receive an
abortion at the Orange County Medical
Center for $250 or less depending on ablli·
ty to pay.
ll she doesn't qualify for an y public
programs, BCI assists her in rounding up
ij>e money. "We urge the woman to tell
Her partner, confide in someone."
The institute has no deferred payment
plan ..
PILOT PROGRAM
"People simply won 't pay after an
abortion is done and it costs more money
to attempt collection."
LaMont added that BCI would consider
a pilot program if it had a large enough
fund .
i Sometimes an abortion is obtainable for
free. In those cases where there is no in·
come or money available, BCJ Is able to ~t the palient a free abortion. ·
\ "Because we deal on a volume with
three doctors we have some leverage. If
we sent JO girls each to five doctors, we
wouldn't have the ability to gel a free
abortion when we need it as we do from
the one doctor who gets 50 of our re·
·ferrals," explained LaMonl.
Each month Ber handles statistically
fewer saline abortionl. ·-Salt ls in-
jeeted into the uterus aid-premature
labor induced after the pregnancy has
passed 12·1i weeks. Women with a
problell\: pregxiancy are acting faster as
"the Word spreads. ·
"The minute you think you're pregnant,
call. We'll find out at the earliest possible
time to detennine it chemically," ;tdvised
LaMont. "Don't waste time. It's to a
pregnant woman's advantage financial ly
and emotionally."
Referrals come from clergymen, doc.-
tors, word of mouth, free clinics, schools.
newspaper advertising and other agen·
cies. BCl has a $1200 monthly printing
bill for its posters, handouts and cards
used in outreach.
TEST POSITIVE
Once a girl has made· contact, she is!
advised to get a urine test for pregnancy
through one of the cooperating
laboratories which charges $5 for the
service. Results are available the next
·day.
If negative, the lest may be too early
('° days after the first day of the last
menstrual cycle or 60 days if she is tak·
ing birth control pills or other medicine ).
Usually, a positive test Is a definite in·
dication that the woman has conceived.
The woman must call the BCI office for
the test results for two reasons: If the
test is negative, she is asked to come in
for birth C{lntrol counseling; if it's
positive, to t>egin counseling toward mak·
ing a decision toward an abortion, adop-
tion. marriage or becoming a single
parent.
The volunteer interviewers are mostly
gradua~ students from · UCI a n d
California· State C.Ollege at Fullerton,
directed by Mark W. Sills,. who has a
background in counseling a n d Ur
stltuUonal administration.
Sills believes his trained intervlewef&
are able to explain accurately the
medical processes Involved ~ as one la)'
person .to another. The staff of nine in·
terviewers is warm and aceepUng and
makes absolutely no moral judgments to
the client. Sitls saJd, "We accept 'the
clieOt as she js ••• not as society wants
her to be."
Dottle Llvermore, 22, 1 social ecology
graduate stUdent at UCI, worked for
Planned. Parenthood~ before moving to
BCI. Along with the actual explanation of
the abortion and hO'f to ·move from one
step to another. Dottle and the other in·
tervlewers guide the young girls and
women.
Should you ten your parents? Shou1d
you tell the man lnvolvedr How can you
get the money together?
Most doctors will not operate on a girl
under J6 without her parents' consent. "I!
she Is under 16, she should be able to tell
her mother. She needs to tell her mother
because there is usually a definite pro-
blem there," said Dottle. They also have
to tell their parents to obtain the money
for the abortion. Usually their boyfriends
aren't much older afld they 're still in
ochool.
Many girls like to enjoy a martyr com·
pies: and prefer not to tell lhe responsible
man. "Dottie tries to persuade them into
telling for many reaaons: a boyfriend can
be a real help aod a woman needs all the
suJ>IKlrt &be can gather; he should be
aware of his: respomlbllity to her emotion·
ally and financially and to himself and
any other relationships.
(See PAm, Pago II)
..
l
1
I
., ~-.1
Freedom to ch oose ...
if and when you wan '
to be pregnant .
Public Aid a Passi bi I ity
There b a certain amount of terror in
being pregnant when you don't want to be
no matter what your age, fln'ancial posl·
Uon or social status.
One soiution is to approach the
emergency room of the .Oran1~ County
Medical Center, have a pregnancy test
and ask for help. 1
A patient is automatically screened for
Medi-C6·1 e.Ugibillty by a county social •
worker and then by a county hospital
financial evaluator. Her financial status
.ls dete,rmined at that time , according to
Ms. Rosalie Lentz, supervising financial
evaluator.
If she ls without funds and qualifies
medically (Including a psychiatric
report) stfe will be e1amined by a doctor.
"If the doctor accepts her as a patient.
her application goes before t h e
therapeutic abortion committee which
meets only on Fridays," continued Ms.
Lentz. Ir it Is approved, the abortion will
take place..1:s soon as surgery scheduling
permits. Accompanying he.r applicr.tion
will be 1 letter .written by the patient
1tating the reasons for requesting an
1bortlon, she added.
JI tho paUenL Is ablt to l'IY for 6 doc-
!or's IOrvlc" alon1 with !he bospl\o]
·':
costs, she becomes a private patient. The
hospital costs will be $216-$250 for an ·
abortion at let.s than 12 weeks and Ule
additional doctor's fees may rartge from
~250.
Some doctors affiliated with pri vate
hospitals are known to charge an all-
incluslve fee oC $1 ,000.
If the patient 1s without funds but
d0esn't qualify for Medi.Cal, only the
hospital costs will be charged, dependent
on her abiLity to pay. The costs are
detennin!!d on a sliding scale and !\viii
range from no fee to $250. Payment
agreements may be made, Ms. Lentz ad-
ded.
The same procedure Is used for saline
injection abortions but the charge could
range from tero to $500, depending on
how man y days the patient 1emains in
the ihospital, she concluded.
Working through Medi.Cal, the Orange
County Welfare Dept. gives aid to women
in need of an abortion on the basis of its
Ald to Families With Dependent Chlldren
Program.
"An unborn child, deprlved of parental
supPort, qualifies (or Medi-Cai link~
through AFDC," according to Mrs. MarJe
Crawford-Hansnn, chief o( special P~
grams. The realization iJ, "A girl Is prtg·
nant Md Ule baby has no f1tther.'1
The woman may have a }ob but with
•
her adjusted income, she may still b"'
eligible. Eligibility for Medi.Cal has th •
same requirements as other puhlJ·:
&$.Sistance programs but with financlsl
liability as an addllional ra1tor, she aci
ded.
According to Mrs. Craw!or:d-HaosOn
the applicant's net income or take-hom1
pay is !he basis of calculation. J.n e.ame<f
income exemption of 30 J/3 percent is
subt racted as "adjusted net Income ."
The maintenance needs, based on the
"number of -dependents1' is subtract!(
from the adjusted net .income. Resultt
applicant's personal financial Jiabillty.
Along with a<ljusted ea(fled income
ellglbility Is delernlincd by liquid asseu
and real propert y evaluation. A person is
allowed $1200 o( personal property in
stocks, bonds or mortgages. She also h
allowed to owu ~r own home but no
other real property assessed over $5,000,
Mrs. Crawford-Ranson continued.
Maintenance needs, adjus1e.d eamed iD-
C'Ome and financial llabUity are computed
quarterly. o~ the 1pptic1nt baa
surpassed her own liability within tM
quarter. she Lhen becornt's eligible for
Medi-Cal. "The cUent must l!leet ha\
liability eath quarter," she emptiiiii.iC l
(Ste PUBLIC, Pa;o Ill
l
' Ihur.sday. Novt mbtc 18. l !i1l
Orange Coa -st
'Weekend .Lively
Weekend aCtivities along the
range Coast range from din-
r dances to holiday bazaars
~d workshops.
Dinner Danc e
Dining and dancing will be
embers and guests of the
ollsh National Alliance Sun·
ay, Nov. 21 , in the Plumbers
d Steamfitters Hall, Santa
a.
Dancing lessons will be
·ven from 4 to 5 p.m. and
ining will begin at 4. Music
ill be provided by the
valiers until .9 p.m. '
A-rt Show
Lake Forest Art Association
•ill 1 stage an art show and
r~ale from II a.m:""until dusk,
$unday, Nov. 21. at the Lake
Forest fountain.
Paintin,R:s. c.rafls and gift
terns will be offered for sale.
J Gift Baskets
Thanksgiving gift baskets
re being prepared by the
South Coast Junior Woman's
Club for delivery to needy
lamilies'over the holidays. The
baskets will be taken to the
Youth Service Center of Teen
elp. according to Mrs. Mike
nisseau , youth chairman.
Country Fair
Leather goods, handicrafts,
ms. jellies. candles and
4tocking stuffers will be for
• sale along with many other
iems at Pepperdine
University's Country Fa i r
tom 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Satur-
lAlay. Nov. 20. in Friendship
t all on .campus.
Proceeds from the event,
sponsored by the Associated
Women Students, will benefit
the school's two libraries.
Bazaar
'i Boutique items will be
ivailable for early Christmas
·Shopping during the Young
Sophisticates aMual bazaar
from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
~turday. Nov. 20, in the Long
Beach Elks Lodge, according
'to Mrs. James Winchester,
chairman.
FV Girl Scouts
The Fountain Valley Girl
Scouts Community Association
fill meet from 8:30 a.m. to
noon Friday, Nov. 19, in the
bommunity Center. according to Mrs. Al Krukenberg.
·Workshops will take place
()n nower arranging, folk dan-
cing. badges, arts, crarts and
longs.
Temple Sharon
~The UCI Interfaith Foun·
dation will be honored by
Temple Sharon al 8:15 p.m.
F,riday. Nov . 19, in the Costa
Mesa temple.
guests of Rho Lan1bda Chap.
ter. Epsilon Sigma Alpha for a
&fari party at 8 p.nl . Satur-
day. Nov. 20.
PWP
Growing Up, II Hurts al Any
Age v.•111 be the topic of Elnora
Schmadel, •EdD whrn lhe
South Coast Chapter. Parents
Without Partners meets at
8:15 p.m. Priday. Nov. 19. in
Carpenter Hall . OanJ Point.
A practicing psychologist.
Dr. Schmadel affirms tha~
•·the problems of gro\\'ing up
and meeting life on il!i ov.·n
terryts confront us all our
lives."
Couples Club
Cliff Barrows. music d1rec·
tnr for the Billy Graham
Crusade, will speak \l'hen the
Christian Couples Club meets
at 6 ~30 p.m. Saturday. Nol'. 20,
in -'the Knott's Berry Farm
Chicken Dinner restn11rant.
Mrs. \Villiam O'Brien is ac-
cepting rese~vatil>ns.
Sunsh ine School
A get-acquainted spaghetti
dinner is takin~ place Satur-
da y, Nov. 20, for parents of
children in the Sunshine Coro--=-
Inunity Nursery School.
f\.1rs. Richard Mr Donald is
opening her Costa l\1esa home'.
Kiwi C lu b
A champagne brunch for
prospecti ve. members of the
Newport Beac~ Kiwi Cluh ~·ill
take place at 10:30 a.m. Satur-
day, Nov. 20. in the Corona del
Mar home of Mrs~ Robert \Y.
Howard.
Kiwi Club is open to all
former American A i r I i n e s
stewardesses.
Beta Sigma Phi
The Southern California
Council of Beta Sigma Phi \Vil!
stage a brunch and baziiar
Sunday. Nov. 21. in the
Hollywood Palladiu1n.
Beta Alpha Pi chapter of th e
~ror1ty has chosen a need y
famil y who will receive
a Thanksgiving basket.
Night Ow ls
The Newport Beach Night
Owls of Hoot 'n Holler Rf'IOst
>A'ill gather at 2 p.m. Sunda~·
Nov. 21. in the Bethel Ton'ers
recreation hall, Costa Mesa.
A string band. "Ginnv's
Gang" will provide music fo r
a sing-a-long.
Mob ile Club
Mission Viejo Sweet. Ade lines
will entertain l:lt · the
Thanksgi ving dinner planned
at 6:30 p.m. Saturday. Nov . 20.
bv the San Juan ti.1obile Estate
Club, San Juan Capistrano.
El Camino Women
Original stuffed I o y s ,
. -
I • I •
'
Yvo nne's spring
colle ction sh ows this
shirtdress of sheerest
ro sy wool ch iffon
topped by a sk in ny
rib bed red sweater.
Fashions to Set
Campus Af I oat
TI1e Newport Look of
Yvonne's all-season re sor t
wear 1vill be featured at the
Tuesday, Nov. 23, session of
the Meet tlie Designer series
in Irvine Coast Country Club.
Claudine Schmeling.
Bullocks \V ilshire's fashion
collections have shown Freddy
the Frog and Zit.a the
Cheetah cavorting across
:Printed fabric.
Pure sheer 1vools and sil ks
are the media for Yvonne's
fashion flair as she creates
1vardrobcs for active people at
home or traveling.
-•
•
Horoscope: Cr~dit G .. iven Leos
FRIDAY
NOVEMBER 19
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARJES (Marth 21-April 19):
Plans' which have been block·
ed. thwarted now can be set in
motion. Be confident about
future. Make reservations ;
keep In touch with those at a
distance. Iron out details.
You're ·solng places.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
Creative efforts result now in
fa vorable changes. You are
able to extricate yourself from
sticky si tua tions. \Vhat ap-
peared a financial restrjction
turns around in your favor.
GE~flNI {~1ay 21-June 20):
Better relations indicated in
connection with m a t e ,
•bus in e s·s associate. Misun-
derstandings are cleared ; you
gain public good wjll. Now ,is
Lunchtime Affair
time to cOrrect past mistakes.
Get facts on record.
CANCER {June 21.July 22):
Vitality makes reappearance.
You receive encouragement
from co-worker, associate.
One who had appeared to
desert comes back. You are
beneficiary. Take advantage
of opportunity.
. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Young persons stimulate. You
are given credit _overdue.
Money and emotional positions
are more secure. Utilize in-
nate sense of showmanship.
Refuse to be depressed by
perennial skeptic.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22\:
Long.range projects favored.
Improve home surroundings.
l\fake necessary repairs. Cor·
reel any potential safety
hazards. You get things ac-
complished. Family member
will co-operate.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct.22 ):
Short journeys indicated -
and favored. You can get
special messages a c r o s s .
Improve relations w i t h
neighbors, close relatives. Be
independent, but also be will·
ing to accept new concepts.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-No,, 21):
Finances gain momentun1 ;
means money piclure. is
brighter. You collect what you
seek. Be selective. Slick to
quality. Aquarius individual
aids In sea rch -which will be
succtssfully concluded.
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22·
Dec. 21): Circumstances fall
Into place. You get going on
personal projects. Stress In·
dependence. originali ty. Put
brakes on diet. You exhibit
tendency now I? go to ex-
Romance Sandwiched
By ERMA BOf\-1BECK good under !he yes. Like
J have a fr iend who, every AT maybe you ought to gel the
Friday, carries on a clan· load off your feet."
destine luncheon with her own WIT'S "It's eye make-up, precious. husband. Just for you. Notice anything
She drives her car inlo town END else different about me?"
and he drives his. They meet "You sewed the button on
at s o m e obscue little your coat."
restaurant, get a table in the "The perfume, you madcap.
rear where they hold hands alone." I won't wear it aga in unless
and stare lovingly into one "'What happened to the you promise to be ha v e
another's eyes. fender?" he said, "Another yourself." Jn the parking lot, after "What'll you have?" he ask-
their tryst, they kiss good-bye parking meter run out in front ed. opening the menu, ··unless
ar.d she whispers, "I'll try to of you?" you're too in Jove to eat"
make it next Friday." "We do have to stop meeting "Are you crazy?" I asked .
treme. Avoid too much of I
good tlung.
CAPRICORN (Dee. 22.Jan.
19): One who is quiet is work·
ing on your behalf. Know this;
respond accordingly. Attend tG
details. Concentrate. on slow,
steady progress . Don't
overlook detail that appears lo
be minor.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 26-F'eb.
181 : Accent on obtainlng
de sires. You are rewarded for
efforts. Friendship c o u I d
blossom . Be receptive. Accept
social invitation. A-1ember of
opposite sex plays meaningful
com pliment. No need for ex·
cess modest}'.
PISCES (Feb. I9-ti.1arch 20):
One "'ho cares demonstrates
affection. You are giveo moral
support. Accept challenge.
\'ou are repaid for past,
present efforls. Accent on
career. standing in corr.·
munity. Prestige rises.
To ·llnd ro! more •boll! YOOJfielf •'Id
•1!•ol09v. order SVdf'llY 01n1rr'1 !o-
P•P' book~, ll'll T•Dlh About A1!•0'C!llY· Selld blrl'hdel• and 7J c•~•• 10 Om1rr !lookl~!, th1 OAtlV PILOT. 80~ 31ol0, Gr•nd Ce/'ltr1I S11t!on, NI"'
y,,~, NY. 10011,
i'J HOLIDAY S
:
1
. CAN DLES
FOR THE
O~ll!!t Chlrmwic.~
<U1C11t• l'I t~I popU-
lar 1iltt 1!111 KIPll
... f~~rs ••• plu• l\OV~tli!I"\ , , , 1111111
Ho:du1 •.• CanCllt IUn111 , .• Ill 11 1!'111• •
en prl<tl.
saJ°ma's When 1 told my husband like this," I said, "Every week grabbing the menu. "ri,,1ake j,t
about it, he laughed until he I say I am not co ming, but two hamburgers, an order of
snorted. "How bored can a when Friday comes I am onion rings, a double malt and helpless." b . " CARDS -GIFlS -JEWELRY woman get?" he snickered. anana cream pie. to4, At1ant• A~• .. Hunl. a 11<h
"So bored she would meet "Are your corns bothering l can't Hgure out how sex , ... 0111 iAc••d-M••l•rth•rt•
Walter Brennan without his -;;Y;•u;;;a~g;•i;n;';Y~ou;;;~do~n~·~t ~loo~k~t~oo~~,y~m~bo~l~s~s~ta~y~so~th~i~o;. ;;;;~~;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ teeth ... at McDonald 's ••. Ir
and go dutch."
"\Vho do yol'. know that
desperate?"
"l\1c," I sai d "Every
woman has to romanticize her
marriage," I explained. "It's
woman's nature to crave the
excitement and the stimula-
tion that lured her to marriage
in lhe first place. Why don't
~'e rio it?"
"I'd feel like a fool," he
said. Then, sensin g my disap-
pointment he added. "Okay,
I'll meet you at Ernie's Eats
next Friday."
I dressed ca refully on Fri-
day feeling a bit foolish, yet
with a certain sense of
wickedness. I parked the car
and ran to him. I-le looked· at
me intently. "What are you
thinking ?" I asked softly.
"I was wondering if you
brought your America n Ex·
press card. If you didn't we'll
have to so to the Beer and
Bloat Palace across from the
office. Th~y cash checks
Friday."
"You devil, you," I coun-
tered. "You mustn't say
things like that until we're
KEEPS
'ITALL
Escape
the grease.
1ry the new fry-free way to cook-
the ~""" Radarange Microwave Oven.
Dr. Joseph Hafsten. ex·
ectlt ive secretary of the foun-
dation, will speak. The public
hi invited and a-..social hour
'will follow the services.
Christmas decorations a'ld
baked goods Ifill be among the
man.v items to be sold b,v El
Can1ino Real \Vo1nan's Cluh
during a bazaar \\1hich 1vill
start at JO a.m. Saturday,
Nov. 23, at Von's parking lot,
Capistrano Beach.
director and an avid sai lor.1 ========================;!
11•111 rom1ncnlate the sho1vi ng1l 0 TERl' J ust v.•hat the doctor ordered. grease film on }'OUr kitchen.walls. T he
Your favorite foods cooked without oven is compact enough (223/4• wide,
grease. In minutes. And because the 15• high, and i71;_.• deep) to fit any ..
Amana micro>A·avcs seal in juices, place. Plugs into any 115 ... volt clcctri ...
flavor, and vitamins, the food tastes cal outlet. And the oven cleans with a
beif,er •• , is better when it's cooked in damp cloth. Rho Lambda
''.Mrs. Gordon Knox will
transform · her Huntington
Beach home into a tropical
riJn forest for members and
-~uly Date Set
A major portinn of proceeds
will go toward the club's
scholarship fund.
Kinseys Tell News
lo benefit the scholarship fund
of World Campus ArJoat.
Chapm'" College's Di,ision of
In ternational Studies.
The Fashionables. an in·
\'ilat1on<1l grour1 of ~·omen who
con!nbute $100 annually to the
schol;irsh1r fund, is sponsoring I
the 1 a~l11011 :.eminar. ti.-trs.
\Vi ll ian1 I!. ~lead is ch airman
of the 12:30 event.
Yvonne Origin;ils tra nslate
the expensively C'asua\ look of
con11nl'nl<tl clu!hcs in ln
A1ncri1·n11 rlrgnncc. I Irr bold
c."O!nrs -surnr\1mes off-brat.
AIR STEP -BERNARDO -KIMEL
EDWARDS -GERBERICH
PF FLYERS -U. S. KEDS
C•p11;0 Dene• Slio••
D•nc• We•r by D1nik;n
Correctlff Slloes for CllUdNll
225 · E. 17th ST.-COSTA MESA
548 -2778
• BANICAMll!'RICARD • • MASTElt CHA•or • alwii~·s pr11\'0l'<1tivc -arf' frr-
1Mr. and 1'1.rs. Douglas K. Bruin Belles and illorlar q11£'11tly e1n))cll1shrd ~·it 1il'.========================
Kinsey of Washington, D.C. Board. handknit S\\C!ltcri; nr ):lrn ern-broiiirr\', indirati\c or her and Los Angeles have an-I-fer fiance is a gradua1c 1if · UCLA where he \\·as a l-lunganan hcntage.
DOUnccd the engagement of be f S' l~al·h :-ea~Cln Y\'ClllnC designs
I• · d h c 11.. · mem r o 1gma Nu fraterni· ue1r aug ter. a ~1e r1 n e ty and Blue Key. He 11011, al· an e-..:clusi\·e si~n11 lure print
Elizabeth Kinsey lo Stephen tends Loyola Unive rsil)' Lai\ _ 111\h an anunal then1e. necen ~ohn Stephanou.
He is lhe son of Mrs. Louise School. ' ·
STARS Stephanou of Laguna · Beach The bride-elect also is a1
and Stephen Stephanou of San-direct descendant of RQi;er
!a Ana. \Villlams. the founder nf S~dnf'y f1n1;n·r is Clll" nr· n I I 1111· 11 n1 ld's i.:rrHt n.•1roln-' The news was revealed lo R ode Is and. . . i.:•·rs. I !1'( rul11111n i.~ onr f)f
Miss Kinsey's Kappa Alpha A Jul y \Ve d d Ing ln !he Di\ILY PILOT'S i;rcat
Theta sorority sisters at Washington is being planned! fcatur<'s.
UCLA "'ilh the traditionat.-=b=y=th=e=c=ou=p=l•=·======"-~-=00~-=-=_=_=_=_=_=_=~=~=-=_=_=_=_=_=_=.-'ll passing of the candle. Ir
A graduate of The Bishops
Sctiool. La Jolla, Miss Kinsey
4ttended Briarcliffe College,
N~w Yotk before transferring
to UCL.<'. She is president of
bfr soroi-ity and a member of
s.trffi c.w ,. .....
J •t tl. !; ..,. ,_.,~
C.1i• *"--"• ""°"" U4
THE ST. TROPEZ
T-SHIRT
Co"pied here, curved
1hirt teil, •r>d •II,
in n•vy, burgundy,
or ol ivo cotton knit.
By Quote Me.
S, M, L, 8.00
IO•O Irvine • West r.t,ff Ple:t •Ne wport Be11 ch
Also : Nriwporfer lnl'I
r
• • ~'
Ta\.:e a genuine mo1her of pearl button (~•·1 . lac.c it with
14K gold thread. and you haye a most unusual ind attrac·
11vc ~et of pierced earrings. Availa ble only from 8, 0 . Howa
and Son -"here quali1y ilem' r11nge from len dollars to
the mo~t exiraordinary cuslom-madc jewelry in the world.
· 59.75 !~hii "1d.n •~ctpltd-S~.•' l'(l<olrt'ld )
• ~'-B:"tlQW-t~.,~1J2~$.Qoti , .... ,
N£WPO"T B(ACH1 3411 VI• Lid•
LOS ANO[LES: :1100 Wilth~r• Boul1v1rd
l'ASADlN #i ~ SllUth Lelce A....,.u, & H~nllngton·Sh,rl!DI' Hate!
SANTA BARBAR.A 1~25 St1t1 Str1•1 I COLDWATER S. P!loenl~ & SeOlltd1lt • I
the Amana Radarange Microwave FromtheAmana Radarange Oven
Oven. ••• here's to your good health.
Amana microwave cooking
means no· more hot kitchen. No more ; /
impatience over thawing frozen foods. "<;JUU:Z,t.;ii,-n,q.~-'..
Easy after-Oinner clean ... ups. And no MICROWA11r. 0111!N
1f.m11n11.
BE SMART ••• BUY
ONE NOW TO MAKE
HOLIDAY COOKIN G
A PLEASURE!
' lntegrltt_ anrl De pe11dabillt11 · sl11ee J 9,17
COSTA MISA-411 E. Sev1nt11nth Street-Deily 9-9, Sat. 9-6
646.1614 . '
IL TORO-Lagun a Hills Plata INe•t to S1v•on )-011ily 10 -6,
137-1130 Thurs ., Ft l. I 0-9
HUNTINGTON IEACH-Btookhurst & G.,f;eld-D.ily 9.9, S•t. 9-4
962·5528 .
"================================="'"' • . '
1'
I
'
1
•
r ' I
l
' '
• •
From Page 21
• • . ·Public ·Aid .
For example, a woman Jlable for the dilfe~nce of $126
takes home $300 a nwnth or in medical care. Once she has
$900 in a quarter. She receives spent or obligates herself to
30 1/3 percent off; her spend it, she is eligible for
maintenance needs are set at Medi-Cal which assumes all
$474 a quarter and this amount other medical e x p e n s e s •
is subtracted from her ad-Therefore, if the doctor and
justed net earned income of hospital leei of her abortion
$600. She is then personally are $500, she pays only $126
ilr-"""="""'"' Fullerton Open Sun., 12-5 p.m . .,.==""1:1
'Half Sizes
Pant Suitt
ar• fun
to wear
everywhere.
Add
another
on• to
your
collection.
1805 NEWPORT BLVD:
COSTA MES.4 l l/1 Ilk. N. 11rtl St.J
84 HUNTINGTON CENTER
HUNTINGTON IEACH
!Nert to larlft lros. Fun1Jt1reJ Al .. : 224 ORANGf.FAlll: MALL
FULLERTON
SIZES I
161>-26'n
toward the abortion.
"It Is pretty difficult to
receive fo.fedl-Cal for e.bortions
in liabllity cases," said Mrs.
Crawford-Hanson. "Most abor·
lion cases have zero liability."
Zero liability cases a r e
already on public assistance
rolls, perhaps a minor
dependent <laughter w h o
becomes pregnant. She
already has a Medi-Cal card
which absorbs all costs. Some
college girls obtaln Medi-Cal ·
coverage because l he i r
parents are no l o n g er
responsible for their medical
needs.
The county offers no abor·
tion counseling nor does Jt
recommend doctors. she al·
firmed. "ll is up to the wom<rl
to find a doctor. Usually she
goes through one of the pro-
blem pregnancy agencies."
If there is zero liability or It
has been met, the bills are
submitted directly to Blue
Cross or Blue Shield whlch
works with Medi-Cal. Jn liabili-
ty cases, once she has hadiher
abortion. she surrenders her
J\1edi-Cal card.
The w e I f a r e deMftmenl
does not pressure women into
terminating their pregriancies.
"If a woman decides fo •ileep
the baby or give it ,up for
adoption. she may be eligible
for further aid. Being preg-
nant is a pressure in itself,"
said Mrs. Crawford-Hanson.
''l wish we could work more
"'ith prevention of conception
rather t h a n after-the-fact
aid."
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thursdly, Na"'mbtr 18, 1971 DAILY PILOT ll\')
From Page 21 ..... . ' ....
• • • Prob-lem Pregnancy Path
"I feel if the guy got you
pregiftint, at least let him
know he'• not sterile," said
Dottie.
The boyfriend also can help
finance the abortion. "lf the
boyfriend angle doesn't work ,
then we suggest they sell
something, borrow f r o m
friends or get a bank loan."
Most people are able to get
their hands on $200, she added.
TEST ro51TIVE
After a pregnancy test
:-roves positive and the abor-
tion is explained, the cllenll
2.re given a choice of doctors.
The woman has lo call and
make an appointment herself.
''She has lo mak'e a commit-
,ment and decide," said Dottie.
part of 1.ero P o p u I a t l o n"jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijij~ Growth for its contraceplivell \
Information and referral.
Commenting on wny the cost
of abortions Is high in Orange
County, LaMont said_, "lt ls
improving but still unrealistic.
Orange County has a hang-up
on the moral question and few
doctors or hospital Mt-
ministrators have the integrity
to standup against the
resistence of t h e I r col·
leagues.11
COMPLAINT
"
' '
•'
l ,
...
'3'he length of pregnancy
determines which process is to
be used -the vacuum
. aspirator itechnique,"'saline or
hysteronomy while ·explaining
the process, interviewers are
careful never to refer lo a
"baby." "We talk about a
fetus or enibr}'Q.. and 'remov-
ing the contents o{ the uter-
us.' " said Dottie.
A major complaint is with
the hospital boards w h o
review the proposed abortions.
LaMont said they sometimes
don't meet regular or often
enough, "If a woman is 11
\Veeks pregnant 3!1d t h e
re view board doesn't meet for
two weeks, it may push her
over the time limit and into a
saline abortion," he explained.
He believes the boards should
meet daily if necessary.
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11.
JULI GODDARD
Goddards
Tell News
March 18 rites in the Whit-
tier College Chapel are being
planned by Juli Goddard and
Gregg Rice, both of Hun-
tington Beach.
Their belrothal was an-
nounced by her parents. Mr.
anit Mrs. Paul Goddard of
Huntington Beach, during a
b11ffet luncheon.
Miss Goddard, a graduate of
Huntington Beach High School
was salutatorian of her class.
She will graduate in December
from Whittier College. -
Her fiaJlCe, son or Mr. and
Mrs. Stan Rice of Huntington
Beach, also was salutato:ian
of his HBHS class and ts .a
graduate of UCLA.
FLORAL
ARRANGEMENTS
WIO• S•l.ICTIOH O' GAltOIN l'ltlSN
l'LOWIRS -TO eRIGMTIN YOl.llt HOM•
4s~
YH ll<lflt IM VIMI
CAROUSEL
FLOWIR SHOP
3•1 E. •17th St., CMte MeM
••2-5070 (~•~I t.t M1ri. C1lltlld•r l'llf)
Check tho Most
Popular Now
Column Alive . •
'Checking Up'
Interviewers assist in filling
out the required legal papers.
Most abortions, even ones
performed for m e d i c a I
reasons~ are requested on
mental grounds because there
is "less red tape." It is suf·
ficient to say, "I am emo-
tionally not capable of having
a baby at this lime," added
Dottie.
The younger a girl is the
more she wants to keep her
baby.
FAIRY TALE
"She is living in a fairytale
world, deprived of love or
receiving little attention and
wants someone to love and
love her," surmises Dottie.
"They have no Idea o( reality
and they are the difficult ones.
It would be a child caring for
a child."
Discussing thJ! reluctance of
the Orange County's medical
profession to perform abor·
tlons, Dr. W. B. Thompson of
UCI and OCMC said, ''There
aren't many doctors who will
do abortions mainly because
they were trained ID years ago
when abortions were con·
sidered bad. They ca n 't
abruptly change their thinking
just because of a legal
change." Most obstreticians
enjoy their work and working
with women who are .happy to
have their babies -the abor·
lion is the 2.0tithesis and the
doctors don't adjust well, he
added.
Dr. Thompson a\:;o noted
that lwo major hospitals in the
county are Catholic, pla cing
an overload on the hospitals
which admit aborlion patients.
The smaller hospitals don 't
want abortion cases because of
bed-shortage and community
image. "I think the attitude
will change as younger men
. enter the profession but I
don't think it will be rapid
Dottie considers the "messy change." ·
cases" the mixed race affairs, "·here the husband has had a BCI is determined to spread
vasectomy or the boyfriend or the word that abortion is legal
husband is in Vietnam. ''We and it can be obtained easily.
try to get them to consider · Boyd said, "A pregnancy is no
birth control wh ile discussing longer something a . woman
the abortion but sometimes -::h:;a:o;s "lo"g"r"in"a"n"d"be"a"r". "==
they are too bung up on the r
immediate problem."
BC! also is involved in cut-
ting the cost of vasectomies
(average cost is $85)
and tubal ligation s, The
agency has received the sup-
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Women Wooing Tourists ~to Nepal .-.
KATJ\1ANDU, Nepal (Ar)-kind of women's liberation "1 operates five stores and has tivlties!' Finally, we cot lhe something tha t ~'ould make
In tt valley Of lhe snO\'l'-C3M'f!cl this kingdom of 11 million. introduced the country's first idea ol locally based industry, them independent-"Let us
Himalaya Mountain.!!, t he f.1ts. Angue Baba Joshi. subsidized health insurance and the tourist industry is one not fry lo .. depend only on
Nepa l \\'omen's Organization chairman of the organization 's scheme. It costs about 25 of the most potential In· foreign goods all the tlni e
Is buildlng a tourist village Katmandu dislrict committee, <:i!nts a year per person. dustries in our C()untry." because it's after all business-
designed to capture the dollars says all money raised is usci Mrs. Joshi, educated In The organization has been and business can at times be
or jet,set travelf'rs. to finance social service pro. India and Britain, Is principal one of the dealers for the nonprofitable also." 1 The first sectlon of the grams. of P,adma Kanya College In semi-governmental National With an initial contfibutlon
village, named Tara Gaon Last year the organizatiorl Katmandu. The work so far, Trading Limited, Sell ing goods of 130,000 ru pees, abo u t
after a Nepalese princess. is ra ised enough money to mak~ she explained, was only a dent primarily from Russia and $1 3.000, fron1 Princcsf Tara
slated to open this wJnler. The !,JOO women llterale and to in ·the country's need for malnland China which Nepal Rajya Laxml nanai th e
project will not be completed send 500 pooi-boys and girls education, heal t h and receives In forelgri aid., Women's Organlzal ion had it s
for four or five years. and 100 very poor deserted economic help : J.1rs. Joshi said profit~ from foot in the tourist business.
The Nepal Wo m en 's v.•ives and young widows to ;'So we said, 1Now look, five stores which the organiza· By the time the projecl ,J.'I
Orga nizatio n notes that il has school. what is the best thing that we tlon operates have financed its finished It will cost as n1uc h as
~en in the business of r.iaking Jn addition the organization can do in order to .expand past operations. But the 61h: million rupees, about ~i-m~one-'-y_I_or~e1~·g_bl~ye_a_rs_._1_1 _1s_a~-'-u n_s~l-br_e_e~b-e_a1_1b~-c•_n_ter~s,~1 ~th_e_se~SOC1~·-a1~'-'-'-'_i_c_•~·-~~-w_o_m_e_n~•-lso~-w-•_n_ted~-'o~d-o~-$650~·-00ll~.~~~~~~~
1 AUTO SHOW HERALDS -Carol Brokke OeCt) and Dave E. Bro\vn of the
Kingsmen Dr um and Bugle Corps trum pet the message that the Orange Co unty
International .<\.uto Sho\v is no\v open for a five-day run in Anaheim Conven ·
tion Center. Listening is lovely Ingebo rg Sorensen, holder of the titles of
'·Miss Nor\vay" and "Miss Eu rope."
1972 Unveiled
... of the Big 4
mattress makers,
Only Ortho sells
direct to you! 1
'
County Auto Sho~ Opens 5-day Ru1i Save sso A marvelous opportuni!y !
10 enjoy a full 7 ti. long and 6 If. v1ide
The new 1!172 automobiles
went on display \\1ednesday
)/hen the Orange Count y
1otemational Aulo Show open-
~d for a fh1e-day run in the
Anaheim Conve11lion Center.
;800 W. Katella Ave.
Automobiles valued in ex·
cess of S2 mi llion are on ex-
hibit. ranging from f i ne
limousines to econom ical com-
pacts.
A special exhibit features
the latest in re c re ati on
t. vehicles includ ing campers
and self-contained moto r
homes.
remind show goers of the vital
part au tomo bi le s and
::i u t omobile manufacturers
have played in the dC\'Plop-
ment and economy of the na·
ti on.
In ad dition t.o the p;..hibits,
lop musical groups V.'lli en-
tertain cro1vds alt during the
shoy,·.
Continuous (ntcrtainment
• New Lo ckheed
Trislar Tested
King-size mattress and 2 box springs at the
\Viii be provided by The Samoa very lowest prices! This great King
Three and will be inters persed features Crown Flex Center Support
with special appearances h.v and love!y scroll quilted cover. Includes
some or the nation's tor ORTH O·PAK and DOUBLE BONUS!.
mu sical grou ps. including the Th" K' R $178 Firehouse Fi ve plus T"'"· IS 1ng: eg .
Tommy Ainahua and his
Polynesians, Fred Ashman's
S'>lid Brass, the Kingsrnen
Drum.and Bugle Corps and 11-
year-o!d Scotty P I um mer
'vhose instrumen tal ariistry
has \von him the title of the
"Banjo Prince.''
In addition to the 31 makes
of foreign and domestic cars
·to be shown. manufacturers
are displaying prototypes and
cu taways. Exhibits also in-
clude race cars, dune buggies
and special high performance
eq uipment and accessories.
PALMDALE ( UP I ) -
Administration pilots have
made their first flight in
Lockheed's. Tfistar jetliner.
The FAA crews lOQk up the
LIO!! Tuesday from Palmdale
Airport Just o;,e yea r after the
jel's maiden flight in 1970.
The show is sponsored an-
nually by the Motor Car
Dealers Association of Orange
County and Is' under the
overa ll direction of ~larvey
J·flcrs, f.1CDA s e cr et:i r y-
manager.
Sho"' hours will be froni 5 lo
11 p.m. today and Friday,
Nov 17, 18 and 19: and from ,.
noon to JI p.m. Saturday. Nov.
o, there's ''Never a Middleman''
Cars are being displayed in
colorful settings with "Main
'Street, USA " as the Iheme to
Lockheed plans to deli.\'cr :?2
Tristars in 1972.
20. and from noon to 10 pm.
Sunday, Nov. 21, the final day
of the event.
ADULTS $2.00 JUNIORS $1 .00
( Chilclrtn u~d t112 FRE! wilh Portnh )
SEEi THI NEW DOMISTIC I FOREIGN CARSM.FACTd RY DISPLAYS .f-1 .. 110· TY,15
SPECIAL SHOW CARS . ..MOTOR HOMES & VAtAllON VlHIClES All UND ER ON[
l lG ROOF! '
' SPfCIAt D1SCOUN1 l1CICITS AT YOUR fAVOJt1lE ORANGf COUNTY NEW CAR
DEALER, YOUR NEARlSl ALPHA 8f1 A MARKET, THRIFTY DRUG STORE & lUEN.A
PAltK CENTER.
•
•
on 1h ls fantastic Kong-Size mattress and 2 box ,
sprrngs! Ortho gives you more for your money
v.i:h Crown Flex Cen!cr Supporl aod tempered
steel 1nncrs;>ring ur111. Price Includes ORlHO-PAK
•nd DOUBLE BONUS!
n
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s7a
Long-lasting durebillly ls yours at mUcti
lower prices, because Onho sells
c;L irect to you. Enjoy comfort and
r.upport on lhese great h\•ins and lulls.
Price includes mattress and box spring.
plus ll'le tamOlfS DOUBLE BONUS!
"'~ -'· ,,: ~· ·-You can only buy Ortho
Convertible
Sofa
mattresses ai Ortho stores
FREE DELIVERY
T he accent 1s ttn vers11i1•ty W·th lhoa
bPlulifut Conlt!l'lpor.'lry df'.1olgn.
Comlart1b!a tor $:lting or sl;'.l• ping. trios sofa faature.111u.1li1y ron1!1ucJion. $1 58
Available ., 11ll 1!1e,. lnclud111
Or1ho m1ttres.11Tnd Double Bonu1 1 FULL l lZE
The nati on's largest chain
LAKEWOOD
4433 Cand le wood Av enue
Candlewood Stiopa . ' {across from Lakew0itd Center)
Phone: 634·4134
SANTA ANA and
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16131 Harbor Blvd.
(c orn e r of Ed inger ) Nex t to Zody"1
Pho ne : 839 -457 0 i
Make room for a conversation corner
with the pr1ctic1l adv1nt1ge of sleep..
Ing comfort. Nine piece Mt inclwde!
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2 bolstera and 2 quitted coYM\els,
plus attrietlve comer tablti1
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Group
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ANAHEIM
1811 West Lincoln Avenue
Be!ween Euclid and Brookhutst AvonU O$
Just East Of Fed M11rt
Phone: 776-2590
;OPEtl DAIL'f • 10:9 ~ SAilol0·6:·~UN .• 12·li •IMMEDIATE DELIVERY• CREDIT TERMS .AVAILABLE• BANKAMERICARD •MASTER CHARGF
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' f4A DAILY PILOT Thursday, W0vtmber te, 1'11. -Trading Nations .-Warned-of-U.S.
---I
· By PHIL NEWSOM
WASHINGTON (UPI)
When President Nixon set
abou t in mid-August lo cure
U.S1 dollar ills and served
notice upon Japan and the rich
reading nations of" Europe that
they would be expected to
~elp, he had definite .goals in
mind.
He told Europe that to meet
OUTH COHS' ] M f &t••
'' l ,; •!• • <0• •
o,_. NltJtrty At 6:45 P.M.
S....., At 1 :45 P.M.
Opn Nlthtly At •:45 P.M.
S111uhrr At 1:45 P.M.
ROBERT
MITCl-IUM
-IN-
"GOING
HOME"
GREAT SUSPENSE HIT
,.
NEWS ANALYSI S
global obligations, the U.S.
must convert a projected $5
billion trade deficit into an $8
billion surplus.
or growth of Common ~1arket
exports.
As CoMally carried his
message abroad, the last la be
visited were the Japanese.
Japanese foreign currency
holdings stood at $14.1 billion,
hig):le$t in the world except for
West Germany, and in the
American view the Japanese
could well aUord to help out.
But the Japanese cried poor.
'they anticipated a slump of
their own. They could not
revalue the ye.n upward ar.d
thus make more expensive
their exports to the United
states until they could see
what the nations of Europe
did. • United stales Including di1·cct
In Its broad ouU\nes, the jnvestmcnts.
U.S. proposal was simplicity To ·gain its way, the United
itself: States counted heavily on the
...:.. An easing of the Common lure o( its huge consumer
Market's argricultural policy. 1narket. It further counted on
-Increased access to Euro. the fact that its own economy
pean markets for Japanese depended to a far ' lesser
goods to help ease the degree on exports than diet the
pressure on the United State~. economies of either Europe or
Easier access to Japan.
Japanese markets for the Its posiUon ls that it is
demanding of Euro~ and
Japan only reforms 'A·h1Ch l-0ng
are overdue.
And there lhe n1 a t t e r
TRANSMISSIONS
stands, Uolil a solutlon can be w.,. •. , u ,.,. ... 1r.-1u1111 !~llllilh found, lhl.! greatest sufferers Locol Dectlff Wll Ho•ell
y,•ill be the under develo.....I OPEN MONDAY HITES -!"'"" CLOSED SATUllDAY nations caught belween. No "'Wt 1rv i.arct 1o merit
I
'
"" d. l f ~ovr <onflll!!!t•" one wan s •K; t~s er o a · UttO Dotllflt """' lld, llM.>r v ... 11 world trade war but in this c .. ~1r111t eucn m.nn
global ga~ of chicken some-/~~~~~~~~~~
one must turn aside firsl.
The largest deficit with any
one country "'as with Japan.
Jt came to 13 billion and he
Janted it reversed.
Mesa Girl
Tabbed fqr
Ne'v Campus
!==========================================~.
And lhroilgh Treasury
Secretary John B. Connally,
he told the trading nations he
expected these remedial steps
to be taken right now. not next
week or year or some other
vague time in the future. '
Neither J.apan nor the
trading nalions of Europe
could say they had not been
warned. European menbers
of NATO had bee n asked
repeatedly to take over a
fairer share of European
defense costs. The European
Common Market had been
warned the United StcJ.es
could not stand idly by as a
. tariff wall erased more than '1 billion in annual sales of
argriculture goods to Europe.
But when action did come,
its severity 11.roused both
shock and anger.
The commission which
guides the fortunes ot the
European Common Market
declared U. S. dollar ills had
begun at home. It blamed the
U.S. deficit primarily on ex·
A Costa Mesa freshman
coed at Pepperdine College in
Los Angeles is one or 150· ·
Jreshmen preparing for a
transfer next year to Pep-
~rdine's new experimenta
campus at Ma!ibU. j
Sa n d r a Frieberlshauser,
daughfer of Mr. and h1rs. Paul
Friebertshauser, 2820 Serang
Pla.ce, plans to major tn home
economics at the Malibu cam-
pus.
The Malibu experiement if1.. •
valves removal or the tradi·
tional departments and replac-
ing them with four main
divisions: social sci en c es,
humanities. natural sciences,
and co1nmunications. •
Miss Friebertshauser will
be po.rt of Pepperdine's first
sophomore class next year at
h1alibu. She was a 1971
graduate of Estancia High
School.
cessive military s p e nding ;==========jj
abroad , especially in Vietnam,
and to a U.S. reluctance to
restric t the outflow of U.S.
investment capital.
lt estimated the U . S .
surcharge on imports would
cost lbe Common Market $2
billion in foreign trade an-
nually and cut in half the rate
KIDS
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FURNl'TURE
The double chaise
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We deslgned·it. we made It,
we know it's territicl Full
Couble size, supremely com-
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deep plush fur fabric cover and
base in soft or bold colors.
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CHULA VISTA:. 476 Broadway ClAREMONT/POMONA: 232 E. Foothill COVINA: 945 N. Azusa DOWNEY: 9435 E. Firestone GLENDALE: 333 N. Central Ave.
GRANAOA KILLS: 10100 Balboa Blvd. HUNTING TON BEACH: 19431 Beach Blvd. LA HABRA: 1720 W. Whillier (ONG BEACH: 2189 Lakewood Blvd.
MONTlRET PARK: 415 S. Atlantic Blvd. PASADENA: 85 S. Rosemead RIVERSIDE: 10,000 Magnolia SANTA ANA/TUSTIN: 1703 E. 17 th St. SAN BERNARDINO: 999 S. "f' St.
1926 580 Broadway . SOUTH BAYi '15533 S. C1enshaw Blvd. THOUSAND OAKS: 244 Thousand Oa~s Blvd. W'[NTURA: 3409 Telegraph Rd. WOODLAND HILLS: 22223 Ventura Blvd.
-SliOP7 o,\Y$ A WEEK• !'fEEKl>.('(S 10 UNTll·9··SATURriAY lO"UNTIL 6 • SUNOAYl2:30 UJlflll 6"• fRf[ PARKll'fe • fRfE D[CORATOR SERVIC( •FREE DELIVERY• COf'fVENIENf BANK TERM$
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•
•
Yes, now you can find out what's on San Diego's television chann els ~ 6, 8 and 10
-and even on Santa Barbara's Channel 3 -in the week's worth of listings you
get every Saturday in TV WEEK and In the daily logs in the ·DAILY PILOT. With
the help of our friend~ af TV WEEK, the DAILY PILOT got it all together. Now
·We offer readers, espe.cially those in the South Orange· Coast area an~ all others
on community · cables · who cc:rn pull in all the 'sig nals tliere are · in the So uthland,
'Total Television',· the most comple t e n,ewspapei: listing of television fare available •
•
Every Saturday_ in TV. Week-Every ay in Dail
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•
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DA.ILY PILOT
I R~h111J.U~t Tied
•
To R·ightivingers
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
The st. Louil P:oSt·Dlspatch
lw reported 'dilcovery of
documents prepared by the
late Mrs.· Emily Brookes of
Phoenlx, ATIZ. wtilch SU(·
lated that Supreme Court
nomiDee William Rehnquilt
,_. ·wu a member of an
alleged rlghtwing organization
called Arizonans for America,
a state chayter of For
America formed in 1951.
Jn a dispatch from
'PhilWlpbla, the P.&per said
Wednesday the documents·
Wert, made available b y
Franklin H. Littell , a religion
professor at TeU\ple. Universi·
ty and an authority on ex·
tnmist groups. Littell was
quoted as saying Mrs. Brookes
"collected radical rightists the
way some · people collect
JIOSf.age stamps." tr :J'he: paper aaid the docume~ts· abowed that Rehn-
quist, whO has d e n I e d
member.ship in the organiza·
ljpn, was listed a m o n g
members who attended an
Ac~ns ·for America
meeting on Oct. 10, 1960.
·Rehnquist also was reported to have served as a panel
spuke.r at a Sept. 18, 1961,
meeting or the chapter.
The newspaper said nearly
ball the organiurs of the
Phoenix chapter also were
merilberi of the John Birch
SOciety.
The national organization, ii
said, su pp orted "far·rlght
political candidates ,regardless
of their party affiliations" and
opposed such things as foreign
aid and the federal income
tax.
, The Senate Judiciary Com-
mittee opens a heariag today
on President Nixon's nomina-
tions of Rehnquist, an assis·
tant U.S. attorney general
formerly of Arizona, and Rich·
mond, Va. lawyer .Lewis
Powell. ..
Attorney General John N.
Mitchell said the question of
whether Rehnquist was a
member of ArimnaRJ fOr
America bas beep investigated
tiy the FBI and the results
sent to Chairman James O.
Eastland of the Senate com-
mittee.
''.The investigation 1howed
that Mr. Rehnquist was one of
four persons who participated
in panel. discussions sponsored
by Arizonans for America on
Sept. 12, 1958," Mitchell said.
"Howe ver, a review or the
fBI report clearly indicates
that he wu not a member of
the organization as has been
reported in a St. Louis Posl-
Dispatch news story today."
~oultry Slaughtering
Conditions Lambasted .
WASHINGTON (UPI) -cobwebs and heavy dust ac-
G o v e rnment investigators cumulations."
have reported they found "There was an accumulation
of dead birds all over the "unacceptable" sanitary con-outer premises," the inspector
dition1 in 68 poultry slaughter· reported. "Some had been
Ing plan!J they visited, in· crushed by trucks and had
eluding one that an inspector been there quite some time.
compared to a cheap horror Others were in hidden areas
movie scene. and were decomposing."
11le General Accounting Of· In the so-called "live bird
fice (GAO). in a report to holding area." the inspector
Coagress. concluded that the reported. ·~coops in the
unsanilary condit ions were storage !lrea -had dead and
mainly the result of weak en· decomposing birds between
forcement policies o( the con-them." other inside operations
sumer and marketing service were criticized for "heavy
in the Agriculture Depart· blood accu;ation f r o m -
ment. previous slaugh r" and "flak·
"Weaknesses in the agency's ing rust on-11 gle irons over
en!orcement of sanitation the evisceration trough" and
1 tan d a rd s m a y be "pickers had been improperly
widespread," the GAO said cleaned and the top covering
after its spot ch~k .in ·the 69 showed much dirt, feathers
plants, 17 of which _ tbe in· and old fat in "one corner.'"
vestigators had checked. in The GAO \said that in
September, 1969 and found ·March, 1971, an inspector
ltill to be deficient in the re-· reported he was threatened by
cent check made in October, the manager or "Plant A."
1970 and again in March 1971. 'and Agriculture Department
None of me p1ant.s was iden-investigators said "the in-
tified. according to GAO in. speclor had been verbally
vestigative policies. assaulted and harrassed.'' The
The GAO said one of lbe 17 GAO noted that the plant
plant.s covered in the prior in--manager "was subsequently
vestigation. identified only as replaced by the company.''
''Plaat A," was revisited in "In view or the large
JanUary. 1971 with a new number of randomly selected
Agriculture Department in· plants included in t h i s
spector who commented that review," the GAO concluded,
"the ceiling areas gave the ap-"we believe that conditions
pearance of a cheap horror observed during our plant
movie scene with numerous \•isits may be widespread."
Winter Herding
Wil.d Horses Rescued
LOVELL. Wyo. (AP ) -Sia
cowboys who work for the
federal government a r e
fighting time before the an-
nual ravages or winter to cap--~
lure and thin out part or one of
the nation's last rema ining
wild horse herds.
The roundup is being con.
ducted on the 32,000.acre
Pryor Mountain Wild Horse
Range .
The goal is to pick up
weaker stallions -those ex·
pe.lled from · the herd by
stronger males -and most oL
th11 year's crop of foals from
tfie 1~7-horse herd on the
federal preserve.
The roundup began late last
month.
Officials of the Bureau of
Land Management, overseers
f
•
of the range and iU remnant
of the vast herds of wild
horses that once roamed this
country. decided on the round·
up when tentative plans to
thin the herd by shoolifli,kiCk·
ed up nationwide prolesi.S.
Twenty horses had been
captured by Tuesday as the
_cowboys worked wilh lariat
and corral traps.
To get 10 colts, the cowboys
had to ride the ir mounts
through deep snow. Rex
Cleary, bureau district
manager, e.xplained that the
forage for the animals is bet·
ter back in the snowy country
under the overhang or th~ ma·
jestic Pryors. When the snow
comes, however. the animals
can be trapped and st11rve ·to
death. ' · ·1
"We think we got all the
colt.s." Cleary said. "The
others probably have already
been Iosl."
The man-shy colts are kept
in a corral in Lavell -under the
care of · the Wild HOrse
Organized Assistance, a n
organization formed to act as
a watchdog on the hpr.se round·
up.
"\ft have 100 applications
for ea ch colt.'' said Mrs.
Velma Lovefl .
She said the applications
would be screened carefully
before tbe cells were sent to
their new homes -probably
after a draw ing ,
The Crow Indians are taking
the stalliorui. Cleary 1ald the
1nlmal1 will be released to
Jive out their lives on lhe
maulve Crow reserv3t ion.
•
. . . . ~ .
REDUC,ED PRICES ON NllRE
LOOI FOR THE .
&REEi SHELF
Tl&S f!R &REl1~R
SIVllBS \ .
· tllPPY ltllllS&lfll&
FROI ALL Of US • • ' ... LUCKY CJ)NTINUES TO BE _THE . LEADER
TD ALL OF 1DU!
FROZEN FOODS
JOHNSTON PIES •• ; ••• •=76•
"""' .. -. • lllm: •I.lot
VEGETABLES •••••• ,\':'l.'l 20'
-..i ._ <-. PW• PW & UllOTS
GIEEN IEANS ••• -:::::21•
YIGETAILIS ..... :-r.1:'::!25•
llEADED· PERCH ••• 0,\':1':61' ·
FISK & <;HIPS •••••• ~=-79'
OIANGE JUICE • , •• 1:'=55'
.,.. STIAWIERll£S . '.":':.~'i::21'
ONION llNGS • , ••• =34'
IHF STEW ••••••••. ":::::36•
CO,YalOMT c ''" l 1JO:TITOl:n rMC ALLl l•Ktllalll'l'ID
.PllCll Alt• OllCO\INTI 0 •KC•" ON
fAll·TIAOIO AND,CIOYlllCMINT
CONTIOLLIOITIMS
LOW EVER YDAY PRICE
"IRVEST Dll ROLLS
QOWN&!nVt3~/t 12·COUNT f'
PAQAGE
CANNED FOODS
IAIY FOOD • • • ~~=.:. 91
O"" CIANBERIY .-"';'.',\"~24'
.ICE -... ~ ... ••u55• mMl9t1.-.i • ••••••••••• 11tll'll
/
Liii Fii TiiE KEY
111$; .. · :()•.
"DY IUW' .. •'drt ,..._.. .... ,. ..... , ...... ,.,.,. ... ,., .. , ,, .... ,,.,, -.. u.s.1.i FIDD STllPS
I
Gladly Aceepted
llEAD •••.• ~~~~:::::23• TODDUI MEALS !";'!":'-":23!-
llG-0.PIZZl •••• ":"1::"::19' !1.~ ~~!!!E.;.• ':1:13' •
.,-. M.J.I. COFFEE":.::2.22
IMIM ll IUC'llK,.
HARIEST DAI PEARS M.J.I. COFFEE •• :::::1.2s
3~/t .,-.APPLESAUCE •••• ,,:::::39•
29-~:" . \.-.,-. DOU FIUIT ••••• ;\":.~26'
. . ,,.. PIE FILllNG ••. --:.:;':'!:47'
O'""' TOMATOES ••• ~·:1~:,~20"
PIZZA .olLS -· .,-.TOMATO SAUCE.. ,!:'~:15• , • • • • • • ''""'65' PICKLES <.•.••wn••• 53' •"YOU LL PIND ......... •<•mt.tA#IAOl&o .. •1•••01iu O'""' • • • • • • 0 noii.u OYll1400
TATEi TOTS ••••••• ,.0::0::30' ,,.. KETCHUP ••••• "" :i] 45'
lu •• ITOS ...... -·s2· -~· 'ITIMI llDUaD •••••••• ;.,.,.. .,-.MIN(,lMllT •••• ""'M59' •ILOWTHI .. M CllU lllllf• M M lACOI IOIUlllC
WAFFLES •••••••• ~::::11• CINNAMON··•• ·=:95• 11P11c1ra11z111
VEGETABLES •••••• ::T."0::42' ,,..MIXED NUTS· :'""'~~':'.~79' fotlGlllATEI
••·•.,•uo. PUS ,.,IVllYDAY HOUSEHOLD ITEMS
LIRDSIJ DLIYES
Plnm
L.&IGI, 11'1
•OUJKI
CAN zgc
DAIRY PRODUCTS
,,.. MARGA II NE •• '::':."!.!:::! 42'
SOUi CIEAM •••• 14e1~:~~: 51 1
OIANGE JUICE ••• M O:~-:.: 85'
IMO DIESSING •• .,,::_: 37'
ICE CIEAM •••• ~::::= 79 •
PACKAGED GOODS
DINNEI IOLLS •• ~.:t~!~':i33'
~CHEEZ~IT •••• ~::!?:o~39 1
COOKIES ........ ~54'
ftMWT llTT1I ~I ll CllltOUTI .....
~llCE MIXES ........ ~;,';65'
Wlllt l 1'!ll ..... • WU
O"" DIESSING MIX •• •':\':.'::46' c-...,,, ... au. ntro111
HI HO CllCKERS ••• ,:':'::43'
~CHOCOLATE ••• ~w;si!~:.'!39'
RENCH llEAD •••• ~~:S2•
O""PIE CIUST., ••• ':"'::'::=:23'
Ml LT ·O· MEAL • • .":":";: ::"::4 9 •
.,-.CAKE MIXES •••. ,~."::~3'
--· mlCIUR NM!.. 9-1 Nm! lmt.l l'Ole. ""'1tMCl. tau (9(1Ult, ~ QWI OI JO• -PIUNES •••••••• ·--:~~14'
.,-.DIEAM WHIP -,":i:',.77•
KIDNEY BEANS •• -~:::34•
;. POPCOIN •••. ""T~~=37•
•
IVOIY SNOW ••••• ':':,'::':.":17'
IOLD DETERGENT ... ".': 1.41
Dl1H LOW SUDS •• ,':'::':. 2.35
IVOIY llQUID •••• ,,':1::,tl•
ZEST SOAP ......... ~':.::21'
IVORY SOAP ••• u.a.:r.::i31'
TOP JOI, ...... • ... !To:': 73•
FOil WRAP ••••••• ,.0:,::25•
KEY BUY
PRIRCELLI lllS
2'·0UNCl
CAN 3tt
SAVINGS!
Ell Ill
... , tl1 ' 47. It .l2.0UNCI f'
(AITON
~Van de Kamps
AN OUTSTANDING VlRIITT
OF FRESH llAlERY GOODS .
Av1iltbl1 .t our 1tont with V1n cit k.,..•
\Vlllllll W ~•lll'W lYHVJ
OURSTOlllS Alll IRIOHT, 0.IAN AND OtHIY
We keep our stores bright ond clean ••• th• atmosphere fresh ond
churfu l • , , our wid• o isl" free of clutl•r ••• and our shelves neatly
fill.ed. We mak• It our busln.ss to mok• 11 yoor pleosur..• to shop with us,"
-BANANAS
CINTRAL AMllllCAN
PINISTOUALtTY
100% CHIQUIT~ •IAND••••••••••••
U.S. NO 1
RUSSET
C.
·La
HOLIDAY NUTS
' NOW AVAllAIL• IN DU• ,IODUCI: D•,A•T·
MalfT A NIW CID'" 01" Al.MONDI, llAZIL-
NUTli, f'lllllJITli, MIXfD NUTS, PICilNI,
WALNUTS. "ll.. f'INllT QUALITY AT OIJI• LOW
DISCOUNT Ptlt1CIEI
POTATOES
1 '0~fy44c
Greater Savings on Health and Beauty Aids. , .
:
LISTERINE
MOUTHWASH
99'
200L
1 Mouthwash and
gargle; kills 9.nn1,
1weef9r11 breath
•
CLEftAStL ·
PROTEll 21
SHAMPOO ~~
CONCINTRATI
10•
New prot ein ahampao
.condition• hair and
giv• It added body.
Rog., dry & oily
PE PTO BISIOL
Fost relief
Helps heal on'd prevent for upset
skin bleml1h11. Tinted stomach -
or Vani1hin9
formu la. = 80L
1,2 OL 87' ... ~10 1 ~--"" -~ 'll!CI
DEMURE DOUCHE
Feminim• hygi•n• llquld
deodorant .
;:.,, Cleanses and 84' W deQdori111 4 OL
PROTEI" 21
HAIR SPRAY
136 fi:egulor or
Hard·to-Hald
UOL
BAID·llD
PLISTiC STlllPS
K•_,,• dirt and germll
out of minor cuts
ond scropH
70 82' ITRll'S
· '!"ITllN POWDIR or MllT Gentl•·•ut4'fecll .. ,_lnlnehJl'-Moolannt ............. 11.14
•
1 POUND PIG ,~ .; ..... , 58" (1101,.G,,-W(f' , .
PARTY DIPS -,
UDI UI.,,, ........ , ...... IOI ,.,.37
COTTO SALAMI ,
OSCAI llAtll ..... , ••.••.•. 110? "''' All MEAT W1£1fERS"":::':i':73,
(1 ll PUil llrf FIANKS7ti),.,., .• ,, ••
~.~~.~~!..~~.~~.~~.~~!~~~75'
CREAM CHEESE ,
PlllWllPMIA •••• ,, ...... , •• IOI PIG 39 .
SALAD DRESSING '":~: ,
IOl1 llOCIUEfOll'f DIESS .. GS7c),.,,,;, •1
BOB'S DRESSINGS ,
'·"' ISi ....... , ..... , ..... IOllll 37
HONESTY IN MIATLA81LING .
No "fancy" names for bosic cuts of
meat. our labeling-is ainiple, clear
and honest: you know IXACTLY
what you ore buying •
PET FOODS
KITTY QUEEN •••• ".~'.\'~,':::14'
IAL KAN ••• , ~ :~:::,~:25 '
DOG CHOW •••••• u~':. 1.45
Ourl.1quor Department offers a full 10% cash
ell.count when you purdtaM a case of aplrlta
(12 fifths. 12 quort1,. or • half eallons);
MY Int• th41t , u1UC1lly eqr.t0I or excHcl the
l"lce of one ltottle. You may specify one
ltrancl, or mix t•Y•ral llrontl1 In the
lame size ltottla1, If you wish. ·
SEAGRAMS 7 OOWN IUNDID WHOltl S5ll
• •••• 16 PIOOf fin~ IOnlE
LUCKY BOURBON.~'"~:·;~"~.:;~~; s411
SMIRNOFF VODKA •••• 111r~ =~ s419
LUCKY VODKA •• , , "'""'u.:.":~ 5711
CANADIAN DEW CANADIAN WHISIY,$3,,
IVIOOF flnH IOnLI
OAKMOUNT WHISKEY ·~:::·;.~~ s319•
S~rAGRAM._s v o CAN••• .. w••"· ••ts ? • • • N.I rtOOF flnN toml
SCOlCH WHISKY •• ~·~~~.~::; '4"
GILBEY'S GIN •.....•. 11"~·=~ s4st
LUCKY GIN •••••••• 11n'.° ;~ s3ss . -
Cuny SARK SC!TCllWHISltl,MNOOf S7H
• • • • • • • • flnM IOffiE
A.AILIS w· INE MAIVlSTD.&Y•o• •111 \.ft • , , , Hllf GAUON IOnLI
RqSE WINE ••••..• 2.1ou1kl°'.!~: sj19
CHAMP. AGNE IDINIOC·llGUUl,PIN(l2"
• • OI COlO DUCK flFTM IOmE
~-.•.
i' ,.
'
•
•.
. . .. , '
ThU ... q, N-18, 1971 DAILY l'tl.OT Jj(l •
)THAN 1400 ITEMS BELOW .OUR'"eJ<!ltlo!JDl~-NT-PR-ICES-· -·--o~=~:=~aders
IN DJSCOUNT PRICING WITH NEW AND GREATER SAVINGS
TAILS 145 PORTERHOUSE STEIK .................. ~'..'. ..
• IOfolDIOT0 .. 11 , SIRLOll STEIK .................... ~.~:'.'.~:.'..'.~'.: ..
CROSS RIB ROAST. .. ,, ............ :~~.'.~'..'.'..93~
FRYERS . u~.~·~::::~ 21· FRESH ..... ~ .... W~OLllOOY.cMICKINS', II•
GROUID BE·Ef
~AT CONTIMT , 5 ,. lcb AP,.llOllU"lllCINT
ANY SLll l'KO
FRESH OYSTERS ......................... '.'.~'..'.~.'.79•
COOKED SHRlllP ........................ .'.~~'.'.~79•
Every cut of meot hos a written'
"Bond" ••• which is y9ur
guarantee of superior quality.
flavor and tenderness. You
must be.entirely satisfied •• or'
your money bo~~··
COMPllTI SIUCTION Of
. HOUDAY POULTRY
.r-hT..n..y..Ducb.~
• Chickens. Other Pouftry
CUT -UP FRYERS c
PLUM .. aJUICY (MICKaMI ... ~ ....... 33 i..
PORK SIUSllE i1::~.~-~~.~::!.~.~.~~:.~~.~ 7 5c
ROUID
.STEAK • F.lltMEltJOHllll
FULL ·lllAIK 1/z Hiil ....... ;~)i:i;~:g_ 58,~ /.
STAIDll& RIB ROAST .. .: ........ ~'.~'..~~~88~·
'IOJll·IM
!M>llllOID
TO• CllVALITY .... SLICID 3C LIDI LEE BACOl ........................ ~~.'.'.~5
WILSOH,HOl:M•L
SLICED BICOl .................. ~'..'..'.~:~.'.~'.'.:.63•
SWll'T'Sl"l:IMIUM
SIUSl&E ................... , ... ~'..~~~.~.~.'.'..~~'.'.~~'..'.~59•
TEFLOI ROAST Pit
12 IN. • 11 IN.
. '"''"'* 297 ClllCOUHTPlllCI
• Gleom ing a lum inum
• Non·stick Teflon
1urfoc• • Easy
to clean • For
roosts or fowl
TURKEYS-
•
LOOK fOtl THI UIDA IOIADI A SHlllD, ,.,
. YOUR OUAtANTHIOf THI VHT flNHT.
SElF • "isoNAllT ·11umo ro1 TOP OUAL1nl
YOUNG, fULIAllAITID 8llDI THAT COOK . BASTllG UP MOIST, TENo.11, um11y 01uc1ou11
HARVEST DAY TURKEY
•!!~ 44.c · -~!I.!. 48c
..... U;HLIS . .:~b • ·1 .. IJLU lit
IWlfT NiMIUM '
BUTTERBALL TURKEYS .
"
1E1s53c AVO.WT,
1 .. 11LIS lb
f!~.~.~ .. !!~!!!~t431~
Fll•fHT1JllKl!'l'IAVAIL.ASL• STAl.TIH•TK\IUOAYMOON MOY•MllRlrnt • .OROIR MO'#
T -BOIE CHUCK
STEAK ROAST
TAILS Off
ROASTlll PAI
WITH ADJUITA8ll RACK
~~: 1•1
Nia
• Heavy duty aluminum
• Seamleu construction
• .t-positlon rock
11tn.x16 In.
.OllllDID
TO• 'OUALITY
' . ···~
ILISS er
llLll
llSRll
fOtl THi HOLIDAYS
ILISS
46'
IYLDI
58'
• Easy to use syrlnge type batten
• Heat reslstanl glo11 or nylon
Cl"DI or llEIT
THERllOllETER
RDISTWELL I
ElllEL ROASTER~
SMALL 99c LAIOl 24-i OPEN 119 OVAL OVAL IOAITll
• Nylon with 1ofe "Tiit-up" feature
Accurate • Easy to read
WNJIM ·Sit S., St•• (.ii.,. llwil.
IJ&ANUM • 110 W. t. , .... ,1,,1,
AZUSA • 271 f, , ...... Str.t
IAlOW1N PAii • 1>94f ..... llTil.
CAHOGA PAii • 7224 Mt.1111 "''·
W. COVINA • f•llMI Ml-1P,llit Ctll.
DOWlf(T • IJ20 r1u1l•H 1w•.
GAIDDI GIOVI • l lOJS l•W St.
GUlfDAll • llSJ W. Glt-U 11'4,
GlllfDAU • 1000 St. (111tr1I Aft.
M1GtllAlf0 PAH • lJJ W. "''""' 4S MUllTIMGTOlf llACM • •OSI Atl•lt• Att.
lA MllADA • lll Mlt1Hl1 Sli1pplil1 Ct1,
lAllWOOD • &..\••• .. sti.,,i.., Ct11,
UWMO.tU • 14411 Je.1M1lftlltr111 lh'il.
llM1tol • 1010l Pr9rlit ""·
llllWOOD • 10721 Ati..tlc "''·
lOMG 11.tCM • 62JS _11 S,rilll St,
I 105 AlftllU • J4n t lt..Wp A1a. · .toM1ov1a • UJ w. Ht1111,...,. iPrh•
MGMilllllO • ISS Mt, Wik11
NOllWlUI: • 1101' ,,..,... ti.L
Ol&MGl • 2620 L U.,..• '''•
PilAOIMA • 4M L 'f'h ttn11
SAM lllMAIOIMO • JS14J kMh U,
I.SAM GA II Ill• 9JJ (, ~· 11 .. ...,._
Slit PlotO • 16)6 •"'JSltl It,
SAJITA MO!ftCA • 2617 UJictM ~ii.
SOUlM GAii • >nl fhrtt• .....
llDOllOO If.KM • JllS Att1• llri.
1011.lMCI • 27H ,.Nik''"' tfwy,
TOllAMCl • >IM s.,.ltt4' llfif,
1\llUMG.\ • A2W JHIWJ lho ..
1\lllltl • 11111 Jk.,.,t ""'· .t 11t St.
• WUTCM llTlt • 1101 Uiictlll llwL
WUTMIMITll • 11171 ~St,
WlflTTill • IJOIS S111" ft Aft:
WM1lnllt • 1 IJH I, W•1tt1w ttv•.
•llMIMOTOM • 1212 Jlt. lt.1111
WOODl.AMI> MIU.I · 22"0 Yltte'f. "''·
~. Ab1erb heat; roost faster. Self basting covers
• Gravy well , Safe to clean with oven cleaners
CITATIOI STEMWARE
AHT'D SHAPES· 4 PACK
AHOlnD COLOH
46110. MELlllllE
SET 996
• Break·resislant
• Dishwasher safe. Attractive enough for company dinners
• Practical enough for everyday family UM, Lovely d•1fgn1
T.Y. TRAYS
• King 111• metal trays
• Folding tubulai stand
• Astorted design•
i
99'
BED ·LIP TRAY
• Colorful meol size tray
• lop-high folding logs 7· 7 C
• Easy to wipe clean
TURKEi LACERS 27'
HIA VY DUTT NUTCIACICll '4'
. .
. Stay.sharp 1folnle11 steel b!Qd.1
• Gloss conta iner•. Astorted color• 97c
• £01y to use • Easy to clean
TEF~OI COOKIE SHEET
11 IN. x 16 IN.
• Heavy duty aluminum
• Non·stlck Teflon surface l" 97 • Cookies sllde off
• No acourlng, ever
WllCI
PlllSllT
ONLY
flfOT AYAILAILa
ATIANTAMOMIUJ
.._,..,. ... ...,.z .... -..-. ........... ,,. • .....,,,.., ... ,,. .._ ....,, 11n t 21, 11n. . '
'
'
Weigh Good Life
DURHAM. N.C. (AP) - A the L.Q.c: Laer Sociely. new crop of leaders hopes to an unofficial, bJ lsan lfOUP
tum the south lnlo a model o! · o! SOU!hem pro lvos.
good livlha: for the naUon .. Thf On Oct. 3, taUves
aim la to avoid the proble~ from 13 Soulhern states met
o f the urban, industrialized on the Duke campus and
society by taking advantage of agreed tO .recommend that
the region's often acomed \ their at.ate! enter the compact.
10Clal and economJc l110latlon. An Interim steerinl com-
"People haven't deliberately mlUee beaded by Virginia
set out to destroy the quality Gov. Llri'Wood Holton wu set
of American llle," said Duke up lo explaln lbe propooaJ lo
University President Terry the states, to bin an eucutlve
Sanford, a former governor of director and to leek financing
North Carollna. lrom private loundatlorui until
"What happened in the lltaie funds tiecome avallable.
North wa.s not evil, it wa.s .. The board abould be a
simply. the result or haphazard viable, going legal entity by
lf'OWth," be 11.ld. the end of the year," Silnford
Sanford tielleves the big said.
asset of the Southern states is Tbe board would have no en-
Ume. , fortement authority and would
While the nation's cities and act solely u an advlaer and a
· large industrial areas are research resource-fbr the
desperately seeking corrective states. Therefore, ita ef·
measures to o v er co m e fectlvenesa would depend on
crowding, pollution and in-the wlllingneu ol Southern
adequate public sei:vices, he leaders to make use of its
said, most of the South still resources.
has time to take preventive Governors llO far have ex-
ateps. pressed views ranging from
To take advantage of this enthusiasm to p e 1 s 1 ml 1 m
lag behind the utban, in-about the proposal.
duslrialized centers, Sanford · "Regionalism is the course
propo!es a southern regional to progress in a changing
growth board, a loosely knit South," says Holton. ''Becluse
compact that would study and of the influence and prestige
provide clear policies for of the members such a. group
orderly growth in the South. could have considerable im-
The board would deal with pact in e n c o u r a g l n g
auch problems as population Southerners to unite in plan-
concentratlorui, rural-to-urbali ning for orderly growth in
mtgr1tlon, black emigration p op ulaUon, traruiportaUon.
.and white immigration in the . housing aod industry."
region, new towns and, com-The first taU: of the board
munlties, lndus~rial locations -to develop regional o~
and masa transtt. jectives -could be a con-
Other areas of concern to troversial undertaklng when it
the board would be health gel! down· to specifics, such
care, housing programs, land as housing patterns, race rela,
and planning, pollution, voter tons, urban problems and
regilltn.tlon, nutrition, no-, land use.
fault insurance, judicial and 0 We've lived with con·
prison re f o r m, legislative troversy before in the South
refonn and tax atructures. and I think we ought to be
Sanford proposed the com· able to handle it," Sanford
pact at an April symposium of aaid.
Preacher Defuses
Red Light District
ATHENS. Ga. CUPn -
Backed by the Salvati9n Army
band playing "Oh, Why Not
Tonight." a local minister bu
succeeded, at least tem-
pararily, In slamming shut
what he calls "the gates of
hell" In Athens' red light
district.
Utilities'
Job Bias
Charged
WASHINGTON (AP) -A~
lomey1 repraentlng black
and Mexican American
organizations have accused
California public utlllty com-
panies o f discriminating
against mln6rities in employ•
ment and promotions .
Leading lbe fight II 34-year·
old Gordon McAttee, a
graduate of fundamentalist
Bob Jo~ University, who
preaches at the Bible Mission
Church and manaces the Bible
book store In this college town.
Accompanied by the band,
the Rev. McAttee and' several
other ministers, launched th&r
drive last Friday night before
the heralded game between
two Southern football powers,
previously unbeaten Unlvtrsi· --
ty of Georgia and Auburn
University.
The miniaten took up their
))OSitlons in front or three
houses along Elm street, long
known u Alhena' red light
district. ·
The tra!lic al'llC Elm Street
Saturday · nlch~ the Rev •
McAUee recalled . was
"bumper to bumper," but
most of the cars sped off after
aeeing the preachers,
newsmen and bearing the
blare of the band.
''Her house ls the way to
bell/1 the Rev. McAttee told
the yaung men as they arrived
in their cars.
He said many were dissuad·
ed lrom enlerlng and thanked
the ministers for their con-
They urged the E q u a 1
E m· p lo yment Opportunity
Commission at a public hear·
Ing Wednesday on uUlity
employment practices to bring
pressure on-the companies to
eliminate -testing and other
screening job applicants wbich
tend to eliminate minority •P.
pllc:Onts. c:em.
. Mario G. Obledo, geoeral ''They ~~y they w~
counsel of the Me z I can. glad we ~ them -.
American Legal Defenae and thanked •• for nmlndlnc
"·-·' Fund ··•• utility them of the true Christiaa EdUCIUUIMll , -.au n '"-sa.lcf. employment of Mex l ca ii.· way, ua.
Americw ts less than $ per . By -Y nl&h~ the three
cent of the work force in · houses appeared to have 11hut
Arizona, California, Colorado, down. the Rev. McA.ttee said.
New Mezlco and Tens, a The lights were Old, and park·
geographical area with more tng Iota In the rear were emp.
than lO per cent MUicino ty.
American population. "One of the houae mom1 or
William H. Hastie Jr., an at-madams o~ whatever, came
tomey with Public Advocates out on the street. We must
Inc., a nonprofit law finn in really have been hurting her
.San Francllco, c r 1 t t c i zed busineSI becaUM she slopped
Pacific Gaa & Electric Co. and cars right on the street and
Southern California EdiJOn AJd, 111Us 1s the way'."
Co .. oaylng Improvements in The Rev. McAltee said
minority employmeol In re-Wednesday be hoped lo lhul
cent ytar1 result from down the bouae permanently,
"ICbemea which 11D1ck of and promiaed he and his
tokenism and smell of the followers would be OOt on Elm
pollUc:s ol 6pediency." Simi dngi!I( and -ching
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' At the preeent rate, he uid, Nghjly anW "the pta or
It would lake PG&E unUI the bell," a1 be ct01 lbe houles,
beglnnlnc lbe Zlnd century to are ~Y loc:bd. •
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achle.. parity with I be '""-~ ha .. been ln
populatioo of Its ter91c:e area blla'-for 40 or IO yun and
In black peritciplUoa al a lot of politlclanl have come
manqerlal levels. • and gone -than," be .. 1d.
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Southern Calllomia Edilon, "JUI!~ tt•1 been e<>inr
be said II om 50 per cent In on that tong doeln' mean It
black ~ployment of male has to coatlnut."
service workers but has only\ Speakfnl for the city ad·
one-half of one per cent black ministration, Mayor Julius
offlcfala and m1nagen. Bishop issued a brief' atlteo
An oftlclal of PG&F said the ment saying: 11I want to make
company has ~ached 80 per it abundantly clear that t
ctnt of popul1tion pari ty in ill never told anyone I refused to
employment al minoriUe1. do Ill~ about the-·"
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Writes
~ditorials?
It's • fair question, probably one of the mo,t frequently asked about
the new1pt1~r .. And the answer at th• DAILY PILOT is no one -no one
persOn, that fs.
Editorilil writing is a team effort at the DAILY PILOT. It is tfta art
of phra1ln1 thoughts so that the finished editorial represents the new ..
paper's OP.inlons on news ev1mt1 and problems of the day. Th9 editorials
do not express the opinions of any one man.
Th• newspaper spu~s with one vole• only after many have .been
hHrd. '
The .. Voices are heard -loudly a'nd clearly -in the i!'formal atmos~
phere which surrounds-the weekly meetings of the editorial board. Out of
these rnfftings come the foundations on whldi DAILY PILOT editorials
are built.
At the head of .the editorial board are Robert N. Weed, publisher;
Thomas Keevl.I, editor; and Albert W. Bates, edltOrial page editor.
Other ·board members are Thomas Murphlne, managing editor;-....
Richard Nall, assistant managing editor; L. Peter Krieg, Newport Beach
city «lltor; and Alan Dir:kln, Huntin.gton Beach-Fountain Valley city
editor.
At they discuss news of the •week or of weeks ahead, the talk rant••
over topics affecting each of the Orange Coast communities the DAILY
PILOT serves as well as the state, ltie nation and the world.
There Is fl ltire•way test of ahy topic proposed as the subject for •n
editorial:
1. Is Jt a topic which merits editorial comment?
2. Wiii the commentary serve the na)Vspaper's readers in terms
of their particular ii-aterests?
3. Does the newspaper know enough about the topic to make an
Intelligent, responsible comment? . .
Often the. third question is the most difficult •to answer. And som•
times ltie •nswer is 1'no.''
EVen •fter considerable research and ·further discussion at a later
editorial board meeting, a topic can be dropped a ltogether because the
newspaper still does not have sufficient knowledge to make a meaningful
editorial comment.
. Discussion In an editorial board 'mMting can modify the conclusion,
shift the emphasis or.even reverse the position of the board member who
was the original proponent of a certain position and posture the newspaper
should assume on a given topic.
But who •dually writes the edi oriels for the DAILY PILOT?
The editorial board calls on any man or woman on the staff -th•
one most qualified to write on the sp9cific topic selecte~ for comment.
A reporter who~e assignments have placed him closest to the facts
surrounding the editorial topic may write the first draft.
Most often the orig.jnal draft is written by one of the senior editors.
And usually even fl '1first draft'' repretents .several rewritings by whom•
e\ter ,,.,uces it.
It will be· reviewed as many as thrH times -once by Editorial Page
Editor Bates, a9ain by Editor Keevil and, finillly by Publisher Wetd
(where ''the buck stops,'' a.s the saying goes) -before it finally re~che.s
the publication stage. Each review, Usually b~ings .some further editing
end·rtifining.
Any .:nember of the news team with knowledge to contribute on the
sub(ect is Invited to put forth hi.s IMst effort.
Many voices blend into one. The editorial speaks In the single voice
of tho ntWll"'P"'· Who wrote it? The DAILY PILOT did,
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P-P['OOf 11 chocked In compo1ln9 room by Albert Botos (loft); odltoriol
P.I• Mftor, end Thomai Kffvil, editor. It's last chance to carrect typoo
graphical errors.
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' Thoua~ t!Mv. call it 1'edit board" !or short and,it m~tS in a shirt·slHve atmosphere ·~-informality, the fob of the editorial
board 1s .ser1o~s-: and t,fken ser1~sly by (left. to r19~t) R~ert N. Weed, pu.blisher; 41an. Dirkin, Huntington Beach-Fountain
Va.lley .c1ty editor, .1:'honj.ls1Murph1ne, ma.nag1ng ed.'t~r; Richard Nall, assistant managing editor (he oversHs the Laguna Be~ch, Saddleback .and Sfin Clement~Ca~rstrano ed1t1ons); L. Peter Krieg, Newport Beach city editor; Albert W. Bates, ecfj ..
tor.1al page editor; and ·Thomas Keav1I, editor ..
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· And Other Good Questions
What Is an editorial?
An editorial is a statement o( the
newspaper's opinion OIJ..8 topi~t feels is
of int erest or concern to its readers.
"The fire destroyed the building and
three adjacent slructures." That's a news
story. "The fire could have been
prevented ii the city council had con·
demned the ancient building .•. " that's
an editorial.
Wby do you endorse candidates for
public office?
Many people go tG the polls without
knowing the candidates well enough to
vote on them -or don't go to the polls at
all, for. the same reason. We 1eel these
readers are open to reasoned suggestions.
We know the candidates both personally
llnd from their records because we think
this ts part of our job. We share our
special knowledge with olll" readers when
we carefully exercise our privilege to
suggest that a given candidate is best
qualified for the job he seeks. We also
are careful to.see that our editorial opt.
nions, expressed on the editorial page, do
not influence our reporting of the cam·
paign -or any other news -in our news
columns.
Do your editorial wrllers bave run
freedom of their convictions · or does
somebody tell them wbat to write?
No staff member is obliged to write an
opinion he does not share. He is respected
for his dissent. And dissent is frequent.
though not bitter, among the wr iters and"
editors who prOOuce the DAILY PILOT
editorials.·
Why do you publish "editorials" which
disagree with your stated position?
Often the comments of column ists
whose work appears on the editorial page
are considered "editorials" by readers.
The top or the editorial page containing
the editorials is where the DAILY PILOT
states its position. The rest of the page is
turned (Iver to readers' comments (let· .
ters and Gloomy Gus) and to writers and
carloonists with whose views this
newspaper may or may not agree. These
range from the satirical political com·
ment of Art Hoppe to the hard-nosed in·
vestigation of Washington bureaucracy by
Robert S. Allen and John A. Goldsmith.
Their comments are not editorials. But
they often counter-balance Jdeas ex·
pressed in DAILY PILOT tditorials and,
thus, give our readers a more balanced
diet of opinions on a given subject
Gloomy Gus ... Is He One of Us?
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Without letter-writing readers I'd lose my voice.
G.G.
(Himself)
Gloomy Gus literally is the voice of the people. No starr member
"writes" the Gloomy Gus feature. All of Gus's .quotes are contributed
by readers -many more than can be printed, in fact. That is not to
say that none of the DAILY PILOT 'S some 200 employes may not
occasionally contribute a Gus quote. After all. they 're subscribers ·100;
...._ .....
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Flnel review of fntent and content of an Important editorial Ilk ely wlll find Publl1her Robert N. Wf!ed and Editorial Page
Editot Bates meeting under plaque on Bates' wall which kMps ramindlng them the DAILY PILOT editorial page has high
standards to maintain. Plaque is first place award in Californi1 New1p1per Publishers Association competition for 1961,
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I. Di The1·e, Chatnp
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DAILY l"ILOT l"Mhl llr lllC~ll"lll ICMlllll'
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~ Jody Raya , 8, Costa 1.1esa, admires her turtle, "fl.1r. Peabody," whD won first
•place award in turtle division of recent pet show at Paularino ·School. Mr. Pea-
<J body does not seem the least bit shy about his victory. •
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Te11derest Crocodile Meat
Found in Nigeria11 Marl{et
; BENIN. Nigeria (AP) -
I There's a boo1n i11g business in
crocodile meat. smoke d
, monkey on a stick and giant
;snails at the traditional Oba
market in Benin.
Not far away is the state-
!01vned, ultramodern Hotel
Bendel, \vhere t r a v e I e r s
t can feast on French onion t soup. scampi and escalope,
-viennoise.
In Nigeria. black Africa's
most populous state, the jet
~age and ancient traditions
' happily coexist.
~-Benin, the fountainhead of a
• mighty empire and a major f source of slaves in centuries
, gone by, is changing with lhe l rest of Africa -new schools,
Loffice buildings, roads ·and
~hotels.
\ But its open-air market
t across from the palace of the
S oba or traditional king of
!Benin is probably the most in-
te resting mixture of old and
new in this capital city cf
tNigeria's l\.1idwest State.
f It's a dazzling profusion
i cf hawke rs, child ren. goats.
rchickens, shoppers _and dogs,
r . ' '
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where you can buy toothpaste
and· nail polish -or vulture
heads and sea shells fer juju
magic.
t-.1arket mammies dressed in
eye-catching robes of red,
green. blue and yellow run
hundred of dreary wooden
stalls sheltered by corrugated
roofs.
They are ready to make a
deal \\'ith anyone willing to
bargain. If tourists show up
price fixing system goes into
operation. No matter where
you go in the market, kola
nuts. shrimp, cloth or any
other merchandise is suddenly
triple the price Nigerians
themselves will pay.
\Valking past the congested
stalls is occasionally a shock
for the squeamish foreigner.
but invariably an interesting
experience.
Smoked monkey on a stick,
head and all , is about $.S.
Monkey thigh is deemed
tastiest.
Porcelain basins hold chunks
of fresh crocodile meat. ''It
tastes ve ry sweet," said a
stall tender. waving a piece in
l
the air. Across the narrow
pathway huge snails, a
de licacy are offered at about a
dime apiece.
Playful children poke turtles
piled in a large bucket until
one pops his head out to in-
vestigate and is met by a
chorus of giggles.
Flying feathers and frantic
squawks come from chickens
packed togethe r in reed
· baskets. Nanny gcats and kids
bleat from their tethering
posts.
At the next stall a -wizened
market mammy shoos away
the flies as she neatly stacks
her kola nuts and tomatoes in
appealing pyramid displays,
all the while taking care not to
disturb the baby tied papoose-
Uke to her back.
No one pays much attention
to the stench of rotting , pro-
duce from earlier market days
in the nearby open sewers.
Across those same sewers
you can spend hours haggling
over the price of juju beads,
smoked fis h. yams, co rnt and
other 'products hauled to the
market wach day.
We
never let:
;anyone
keep it
,j before .
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ho ve it brand new! It hes t he Sing e r
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All Singer• machines ·carry the same
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Available In your choice of Singer* 1ewln9
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fhursday, Novtmber 18, 1971 ' DAILY PILOT 3§ -'Hostile Planet'
Scientists Doubt Life on Mars
By AL ROSSITER JR. spacecraft ulat new past Mars moon." that Mars Is lifeless than it is claimed ht, too, saw lhem and
in 1965 and 1969 showed lhal Or. Carl Sagan, Cornell to conclude that it ls inhabit-in time he Identified ever 509
PASADENA (UPJ ) - A the planet is very hostile to University astonomer who also ed." canals.
leading planetary scientist earthly forms of life. It is cold is a Mariner 9 scientist, said Murray said the notion of Lcwell 's observations i.,..
aaya the chance Gt life existina and dry, has no atmosphere of he agreed with t.1urray that life on Mars developed ln the temled the general public
on Mars ts at best 1 longshot carbon dioxl~e with almost no man 's de3lres may have In· late 19th century and ~rew out because he said the canals
and he 'blames man's im· watei vapar\ and there is no fluenced his conclusions. But of proPortion In the early 20th were not natural features but
aglnation for the ·idea in the evidence M~ ever had Sagan said, ~That doesn't century under the Oomlnant the work-of ·''intelligent
lint place. oceans. mean that be<:a · "a possibili-persoqality of Percival Lcwell , creatures. alike to us in splfit,
"Mars somehow has extend-' "I really don't think there 'is ty is Interesting it isn't true." an expert en the Far East who O'MJugh not in form."
ed beyond the realm of any life on Mars," t.1urray "Just as lher clearly ha~e became interested in Mars.-----------
sdence,. and so grabbed em~ said at a Caltech panel been excesses 0 in the direction and formed the Lowe 11
Uons ·and thoughts thaf It has discussion. ''There never has of CQncluslo ns that there is life Observatory near Flagstaff,
actu.iilly distorted scientific been any evidence of H. It hall on Mars. I think there also Ariz., in 1894.
cliinion about Mars," said Dr. just been a very attractive have been excesses in the Several astonomers In the
Bruce C. Murray, pr:o{essor of idea. You cannot disprove that other direction," Sag~n said. last half of the 1800s reported
planetary science at t be any more than you can "There is, as far as I ca n te\\, seeing lines on P.1ars which
California I n st i t u t e of di.sprove there is life on the no more reason to conclude they called canals. Lowell technology and a member ofl1_.::.:::.:...:....:....:....:. ____________ ~----'---------I
the Ma riner 9 science team.
''The reason this happened
is that man as a human
species has been guilty of
wishful thinking collectively
that Mars would be like earth.
"tie had a very deep-aeated
Kesire to find some other place
that ma y somehow be
habitable."
Murray said Investigations
by three earlier Mariner
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OCC Trial D1·ama
Fine But Wordy
By CANDACE PEARSON
Of 1M DtllJ l"!lot Si.ff
This Is less a review than a
recommendation, I e s s a
recommendation than a plea
-go see Father Daniel
Berrigan's "The Trial of the
Catonsville Nine" at Orange
Coitst College.
Not that the productkin as
directed by J. B. Ferzacea or
the play by Father Berrigan
both do not have their respec-
tive weak points -they do.
But to those accustomed to
the comedic froth usually
served up by community
theater groups, the stylized
"TH• TllAL 011' Ttt' C4TOHSVILLI NINI!"
• A dr1m1 Irr O..nlel 11etrl1M1, di·
rKtfCI bv Jeh" Feriacc1, ser bv
J1rM• krlt'IOU. lf9hl1"9 by Wlll11m
$d'ltnldl, preMfttfd b'I Ille Or•~ Cc.ell Col)ffe dr1m1 ~par!ml'l11 lo>
nigh! thf-11 5th,tr01V II ll>e OCC:
1ucll!orlwm, 2701 Ftlrvlew Roed, Co111
MIMI. THE CAST
production of the tria_I of nine
passionate people will be a
beneficial change
On May 17, 1968. nine people
including a nun and two
priests admittedly violated the
law by taking selective service
records from fi.les a t
catons\•ille, Maryland . and
buming them with makeshift
napalm .
The two priests -Oa{I and
Phil Berrigan -have since in·
creased their renown by being
accused in varying degrees in
kidnaping and bombing in-
dictments.
But Daniel Berrigan's play
is only concerned with the
s y mbolic burning at
Catonsville, at least on the
surface. As the nine defendents take
turns at testifying in a
simulated courtroom, their
words indict not o n I y
themselves for their confessed
act. but the United States for
its violence and killings·in·the-
name~f-democracy all over
the world.
In the play, Daniel Berrigan
says :
"My intention on that day
was to save the innocent from
death by fire. I was trying to
save the poor who are mainl y
charged with dying In this
war. I poured napalm on
•behalf of the prosecutor's and
the jury's children ."
Each defendent s a y s
basically the same thing: they
burned papers to symbolically
protest a war which horns
children. They all felt the \aw
was an unjust law. the war
was immoral. and they were
acting as good Christians
should.
It is a noble, sincere and
poetic work . bot it is not
especially · good theater as
staged in play form . Daniel
Berrigan is mainly a poet; his
script for "Trial" is even writ-
ten in blank verse style.
Because it is a very talky
play. its staging becomes very
static, cramped by the con-
fines of Father Berrigan's
courtroom.
A readers' theater pro·
duction of this work could be
immensely effective. but in alt
fairness, OCC's version docs
contain some well·executed
moments.
Lighting. designed hy
William Schmidt, is used very
' .
EHTEllTAINMENT
Carol Takes Crack
At 'Dames' Musical
By CYNTHIA L<lWRY hilarious noises -w e r e
NEW YORK (AP J -In one"' louder.
of those unfortunate coin-Lik~ those television com· , merc1als "The Ca rol Burnett
c1dences . that tu:~ up,, fre-~how" is so fond of making
quenUy 1n te\ev1sion, The Jokes about, the old movies
Carol Burnell Show" on CBS are sn silly they can't be im·
Wednesday came up with a proved upon as camp and
mini version of "Dames at comedy.
Sea." wh ich had been on view Lt. Columbo of N B C ' s
earlier this week as an NBC "Mystery Theater" was busy
special. Creeping around Wednesday
Both .... ·ere efforts to ~ke night getting evidence a~in.st
fun at the 1930 musical an art critic who had knocked
movies, and the Burnett show off his rich uncle to get hold of
worked no better than the his collection of paintings.
'JDore elaborate and longer Once again the show's format,
production starring An n • which permits the viewer to
Margret . know the killer from the
Carol was in the role Ann-beginning. worked v e r y
"Margret played earlier -th~ .saftsfactorily.
Innocent young dancer who Ros,, ~fartin, looking con·
.teps Into the star'1 role . siderably more Portly than In
Nanette Fabray w;i~ the his "Wild, Wild West" days. ~emptramental star with the was particularly effective as
ume nasty disposiUon that the arroganl, cffele villa.in.
Ann Miller displayed earlier, Peter Fal.k, as the humble.
1Jthough she didn 't have any meaching and shrewd cop,
Unclng numbers. Of course, may be an off.be.al character,
wJth carol and Nanette work-but the characler doesn't wear in& toget.ber, the comedy was as well as some of television's
broader and the sound effects better tail ored and more -bruldaa bone.1 and oiher dltecnleuths.
Flillerton
Light Opera
Organized
'
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•
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I
• '
AN OLD 'BOY FRIEND' SHOWS UP
Otho Budd, Constance Crane at Laguna
'Boy Friend' a Sellout
For Laguna Playhouse
\Vhat may ·"''ell be the big-
gest hit in the long history of
the Laguna Comm u ni t y
Players is currently in its
third and fina l \\'eek.
"The Boy Friend" sold out
for five of its first 10
performances at the Laguna
~1oulton Playhouse. and there
were 15 standees last Saturday
night .
Previous commitments by
the large cast and the
orchestra make it impossible
to extend the run. or to
schedule extra perform'.jnces,
according to director Hap
Graham. So Saturday, Nov. 20.
will be the last chance to see
the musical comedy. "Call 494-.
0743, and you may be lucky
enoug h to get a seat,"
Graham says. It is also possi·
b\e to wait in line at the box
office window for late can-
cellations or standing room.
Scott Raises Money
For Patton Museum
' LOUISV!LLE. Ky. I AP I
George C. &ott, the actor who
brought Gen. George S. Patton
to life on the screen. was help·
ing raise money for a new
Patton ~1useum, and the fans
flocked to him.
Scott, who won -buf refus-
ed to accept -·an Oscar for
his portrc.yal of the famous
tank general in the movie
"Pattol'l," was surrounded by
many of the 800 persons at a
fund raising dinner for the
museum at 1'~t. Knox.
But the actor belied his
reputation and arrogant pro-
f He. answering question s • gracefully in a gravelly,
hoarse voice.
Scott twisted the fingers of
one hand as he answered a
question about Patton. saying
it was difficult to portray a
n1an of such complexity.
\\'by did he choose to play
Patton? He paused briefly and
said. "Patton was not a man
of the masses. And J have
never been one to admire a
man of the masses."
Scott spoke briefly aboul the
roles he has played Eince
"Patton" was filmed -an
astonishing variety or parts.
He cx¢ained. "I hate to
repeat myself, and it's not
easy to find diversification."
Scott flies \Vest today to
begin directing a film . It i.o; his
first attempt at directing a
movi(', although he has
directed plays.
Scott was asked what the
film , set in Arizona, will be
about. His eyes flickered with
amusement as he said. "sheep
ranchers in \Vyoming."
\\'as P at ton his favorite
ro!e? Scott smiled a \Vi de,
tilted smile, and answered,
"No. Dr. Strangelove is.''
In that film Scott played an
Air Force general who wanted
to start \Vor\d \Var Ill.
Then he turned away, show·
ing the nose broken five times.
to sign an autograph for a
child 1vho called him "Gen.
Patton.''
Remembering
100 Mour1t Tyrone Po·wer
HOLLYWOOD fAP) -On a grassy slope above a
small lake. Tyrone Po\ver's friends and fans gathered here
1-tonday to honor the film star on the 13th anniversary of
his death. ·
£1-wife Linda Christian and their two daughters sent
flowe rs .
"He left his career at his peak and never realized how
important he was," Ray Sebastian Sr., 70, Power's make-.
. up man for 25 years, told mourners.
Actor Fred Kohler. Jr., 60, re·
called bowling and surfing with Pow·
er and said : "He wanted to achieve,
as well as he could. anything he did.
His greatest achievement was that he
became a great actor."
A Hollyv.·ood ,.lemorial Park Cem-
etery spokesman estimated the crowd
at 100 and said it v.'as the largest
tY•OH• 1"ow1 sirlce Power's friends began the an-
nual observrs the year after his death. ,.1ost appeared to be in the! 50s or older,1 a perponderance of them wo--1 men. . Power 5 stricken during a dueling scene. died of
a heart at~k while on a movie location in Spain in 1958.
On his headstone, a carved marble ~~ch, .lay a cross or white cal-nations with a ribbon labeled Wiili Our Love.
Taryn, Ro\fllna and Linda." Actress I.:.lnda. Christian v.·as
the second of his three wives, and Rom1na and Taryn
Y.•ere his daughters. The cemetery spokesman said the only Power rela·
tlve present was an uncle, Charles Reaume of North Holly.
woodThere were bouquets of red roses from other admirers
And a wreath of carnations and chrysanthemums from the
U.S...?.tar.ine Gorps. . ?\.faj. William We!Wel. a LoSAngelenecn.ilt!n~ff~cer.
told the audience that Power "served with d1shnctlon as I
a Mirina Corps rru>jor pilollng transport planes in the
Sou1h Pacific during World \Var 11. .
Other fan~ R:ither every Aug. 23 at RuOOlph Valen-
Uno's crypt In the cemetery's mausoleum to commemor·
ate the 1926 death or the silent-screen lover.
•
T1Mi1sdoly, Nowembtr 18, 1971 OAILY PILOT :7
V-:Can~ellafion•••a erso1'al~ Reje~t1on
By VERNON SC01T
HOLLYWOOD (UPJl
"Canceled !,.
The word hits performers in
the gut Jike a cannonball.
It'ls total rejection, When a
television star's show is
canceled a multltide of lnx-
ieties beset him. \
First, the public has re-
jected him or her in favor of
olhers. The network, sponson
and producers chalk down a
failure. He is visited by doubts
that he will ever work again.
The rejection is personal,
Viewers, by tuning him of!,
l)ave nixed bis personality, his
taleilt, hla very physical ap-
pearance.
\Vorse, as the "star" he Is to
blame for the failure.
The wlrters, directors, Pn;>-
ducers and others connected
with his show toll l n
anonymity. They do not suffer
the personal impact. They will
v.i>rk again, som; saying:
"Who could work wlth that
bum as a star?"
This past week such major
talent as George (Sarge) Ken-
nedy, Don (Partners) Adams,
Gene (The Funny Side) Kelly;
Bob (The DA) Conrad, Larry
(The Good Life) Hagman and
Dean (Chic.ago Teddy Bears)
Jones were uncoupled from
'thelr prime time netWQrk
shows.
There Will be others. News
recently was announced that
Shirley MaoL:aine ~ill be axed.
The interesting element tn
cancellations ls th e un-
derstanding that no one ever
starts out to produce a failure,
Interviews do1ie with the stars
within the past year are sad in
retrospect. Somewhere inside
e,very top-fll&ht actor is a
naivete to go along wlth the
fragile ego.
George KeMedy said only a
few months ago, ' • T h i s
character of the cop-turned·
priest ta lascinaUng. 11•1 bold.
The man is a human being
who gets involved ln lh• com-
munity. I think our show has
something to say." ..
You're fired, George :
"Sarge" didn't cut it.
"It's a runny premise," said
Hagman. "Here's a hip young
couple who become a butler
and a maid just to leave the
.rat ra ce."
Out. Not funny ahconiing I'>
the ratings.
Dean Jones, contemplating
the new season, said, " 'The
Chicago Teddy Bears' com-
bines a lampoon or the old
gangster warfare days with
HURRY! HURRY! HURR·Y!
last We~k To Name Kerm's Dog!.
Contest Ends Nov. 23rd
WITH SPOUT
comedy. This show is dif-
ferent."
Ne1t! The blgshots and the
dial twirlers thought
otherwise.
''It's a matter of
chemistry," said Don Adams.
''I! ttie viewers are amused by
the characters in a series, or
if they llke them, then you've
got 1 hit."
You misSed, Adams . canceled! -i---
In some cases the star is
notified by his 11tudio. pro--
ducer or network that he has
been dropped from t h e
schedule -effective mid·
season.
Other unfortunates h e a r
rumors, Clnd themselves
waiting in offices or their
tel ephone calls unreturned.
They Sll!pect but can't be s1:1re
that late scrlpls mean the
show is over.
Most unforgivable is the
spineless producer11 w h o
breaks the news to the trade
papers beCore bU .tar is
av•are of cancellation. Then
the star undergoes a trauma
of reading about his firing in
the paper.
As the man said, "There's
no · bµsiness like 1 h o V(
business."
e H1ndy wh1n
vou n11d It
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2666 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA •= PHONE 546-7080
WEEKDAYS 9 to 9
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1088
•
..
Thutsdi11Y, Novtmbtr 18, 1971
I • ii
•••~-.-~•-•">rm ___ ,._ • ----·~·'
. ~-9~LY PIL?T-• -
-~cl"l·e--..jj"lliJ""ICun Bo· iii.ism May .-m~ Canllinjl Cla•,-
, I •
•. ::~il:. t:=. ill
_"Jt's okay•·! didn'f get any ;,,, the ~blecloth,"
SANTA BAl\BARA (AP) -
A statewide campaign to teach
proper ways of ho~anning
rood.! could emerge from the
public concern over the deaths
of two elderly sislera from
suspected botuli.!rn piOBODi.ng,
a heallh" offlclAI Aid Thura-
day.
Since tbe slstm d i. d
several days ego, apparently
from drinking home cllJlfled
celery Julee, the S a n t a
Barbara County health office
&
lw ....,.lved a fl"9'1 of phone
calls from ~sons wantlng ln-
formation on-&ale canning
methods, said • Joseph T.
Nardo, county health offictt,
Nardo said Thursday he will
conta~t other state and county
health officials and I h e the umra and Ille .. 1ery juice In home caMlnJ, ·-~
agricultural eltenalon aervlces that allegeaJy caused their among the YOWll· Nanlo All!,
to map out an educational death. but free caMln« boc*ll1t campaign. Joe Grace Hawley, 77, died ·ti.. · 1y• and
Officials were av: alt Ing last Friday, and Mary M. avauabJe•at l1ate, coun
results of botulilm tes)a being Smlth, 85, died Monday. federal bullh offices are nol
conducted on blood samples of There iJ a growing interest reachlnr young peoplt.
DAILY tlO·lO, SUNDAY .10·7 ·'
I
. ,,
Nixon Gives Tough
Warning in Pullout
COSTA MESA, AND HUNTU9GTON •EACH STORES .O .... LY! ,. r.
By NORMAN KEMPSTER
WASHINGTON (UPn -If
President Nil:on maintained
the · monthly pace of troop
withdrawals he announced last
week. the last AmUican would ,
leave Vietnam sometime next
August, well before t b e
November election.
But Nixon believes such a
schedule may be a mistake
diplomatically, militarily and
politically.
The president, while an-
noWlCing "a substantially in·
creased troop withdrawal,'' .. ,
NEWS ANALYSIS
and progress toward a
ceasefire.
But the big condition ls the
level of infiltration from the
north. The 1:1.S .. Command is
confident it can determine the
military potential of the North
Vietnamese and Viet Cong for
a full year based on the rate
of infiltration in the dry
season -generally the late
fall and early winter.
)
If the North Vietnamese ex·
ercise restraint in infiltration,
the United States will be· able
to continue relatively high 1 levels of troop withdrawals 1
2 DAYS
ONLY
YOUR
CHOICE
WIGS
•
used his news conference to
v•ith comparative safety. That 1 . h d 1· • s h is the tit-for-tat relationship ·1 Darcy or ~r1cket. W•s able rno acry 1c w19s. tretc
Nixon wants to get across to : ~ep. All hair colors. ,
Hanoi. lc':!=""""''°"-=:::::"'1:§:1!'."!0!l""'tn""'""'lN=3':mhl
send a tough message to To toughen his message to l~:::::=""'""'""""'""'""""""'""'"""""'""""'""'""""''ll Hanoi : American troops and North Vietnam, Nixon !iaid
especially American air power unless there is a negotiated
will remain for some time if settlement, the United States
you don't agree to a will continue to use its air
negotiated settlement. power and will keep a residual
Administration strategists power.
believe if troop strength is As far as domestic politics
reduced too much, it could is concerned, the While House
shift the initiative to the North thinks Nixon already has cor·
Vietnamese, giving them a nered the peace issue. With ,
chan<:f! either to massacre the only 100,000 or so Americans
remaining Americaas or to in the war zone -less than 20 -.
deal a significant blow to per cent of the 1968 level -,
South Vietnamese forces. and with Ameri,"9n deaths
A major North Vietnamese running at less than 10 a week, ,,.,
offensive any time nest Year the public will have turned to
could jeopardize Nixon's plans other concerns in the eleclion
to run for re-election on his year.
record of winding down the \Vhite House p o I i t i c a l
.
' ' ·.
smOFOAM·
WIG HEAD
28(
~ Reg, 49c. ProtcctS
1hapc and set of
yovr wig when yoa
are not wearing it.
.... o.9illll c.,. -, ...
,,
war. strategists say their re"iding of
Even an inconclusive attack the national mood indicates 1 i::,..,,,~:;: .. ;;o=C...:0·!1'•1111J•::i.:=t'1·::i=t!i::\:!:::o"-"''~"·"·""""°~:n· """"'""'"""""':>'! could cause Nixon severe most voters are concerned on-1~
political damage even if it did Jy with U.S. participation in [il"""°""""'""'°'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'"'""'".,""'i
no lasting harm to the future Vietnam, not with the war •
of South Vietnam. itself in which many Vi et· ~f
Nixon ordered withdrawal of namese but only a few ~
45,000 U.S. troops in December Americans are still dying.
and January, reducing the These analysts believe the
Vietnam troop ceiling to war will not hurt Nixon
139,000 by Feb. l. If politically unless· the North
withdrawals after Feb. 1. makes a dramatic victory.
maintained the average of The administration hopes to
22,500 a month, all troops minimize the risk of that.
would be pulled back by early ~~~~~~~~~~I August.
But the President em·
phasized the p a c e of
withdrawal after Feb. 1 would
be determined by the level of
enemy activity, primarily by
infiltration of Communist·
troops frt>m North Vietnam in·
to the war zone to the south.
He also said f u tu re
withdrawal decisions ,,.,.ould be
influenc~-by the success of
Vietnamization. progress in
obtaining release of prisoners
ORDER ~, V . ~
LOCAL
EDITORIALS
The DAILY PILOT.
Qu ite Often
Fights City Hall
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HUNTINGTON BEAC·H
19101 MAGNOLIA
fit Garf11ldl
t •• M
•
DAILY Plltr n
oach
Welcome s
Einger-on Punch Makes It.Easy for Clay
•
J;lENVEll (.\Pl, !. Jerry. Smith,. 41· . . . ' year-old offl;nsive line coach of the ' ' ' ., Denver Bronoos who became head coach
Wedneaday, said he "welcomes pressure"
·i,U1 admitted he was "flabbergasted''
wh~n. _11~ed to lake over the reins from
1'1111 Saban. ff~th . .tn ' his first yeir 11 A Bronco
Ciiach, succteded Stban as field com·
mander in a move ~at stunned player!
anp other members of Denver's National
Y.t0tball League organization.
' Saba.n will remain as 1eneral manager t;t.1slressed that _Smilh will be in com.
P!elf: ch&;rge of the team for the ~!J"
malnlng nve games cf the season.
He indicated management will decide op a permanent coach at the end of the
,Jl!IS<?n. blit said he was certain SO\ith
91)uld be in the running for that post. _
"I'm going to work today with tP.e
thought in mind that I'll be the head I . coach next year," Smith said.
(Smith served under Saban I ll defensive
lli1e .and linebacker. coach. of the Boston
Patriots in 1960 'and 1961. He then re-
joined Saban at Buffalo in t!Je1 game
caj>acities in 1962 And remained there un-
1!1 1968.
A collegiate star at Wisconsin and a
l!Jard with Sin Francisco and Grten Bay
in the NFL in the '50s, Smith apent the
list two seasons on the coaching staff ol
tf1e.New Orleans Saints.
. Asked if he considered himstlf pro-
'flCient coaching .defense as well ss of·
fenM!, he replied, "I have tried to school
myself in· every facet of the game and I
think I have alwa ys been a student of
fqotball .
HOUSTON (AP) -!l'here's one thing
Jurgen Blin can learn from Cassius
Clay's 12-round uaantmbua decision over
a weary Buster !d,athis-in the Astrodome
Wednesday night -watch for the
"linger-on" punch. ~
That's· what Clay says he used to deck
Mathis four tisnes in the Jiili and 12th
r.ounds andr also~ to keep from hurting .
Mathis for life.
Blin might also 1loot: out for•·the punch.
Right alter the flgbt, Clay announced he
would fight Blln Dec. 18 in Zurich,
Switzerland. .
u1r a referff l.s 'too dumb to stop a•figbt 1
I
when a man Is so far gone he just can't
do anyt~Jng, then ~·m not going to ta~e
the responsibility for maybe hurting him
for life/' Clay said ,
"I thought the fight should have been
stopped in the 12th when he was so un:
conscious he couldn 't fight off those little
jabs.
: "Xou can't say I was wro9g," Clay
s.aid. "Yes, l .,4&el~ately tried pot to ;
kill him. When a figliter gets hurt In the
ring everybody starts shouting for
something to be done about boxing.
j'N~w when I don't.knock somrone out,
everybody starts yelling 'knock him out,
knock him out.' "
C11y had the fight in control throughout,.-
the fightJ Mathis, trying to make a ring
come-bac;~ alter a 21h-year layoff, fought
well in flurries in .the early rounds, but he
got progressively' more weary as the fight
went on. •
By the 11th, Clay was landing stinging
jabs i:egularly and su<fdenly a short right
put M~thls down. Mathis took a six count
and then went dow.n again but was saved.
by the bell.
"I'm a religious man," Clay said ... I
UPI TtlfPlttlt
•
"I believe l have had measurable suc-
ms in both offensive and defensive ~Jching."
-'.smith said the fir st job ahead of him
lPOuld be to prepare the team for the
Kansas City game this Sunday.
CASSIUS CLAY !LEFT) LANDS A LEFT JAB TO THE HEAD OF BUSTER MATHIS IN ASTRODOME FIGHT.
'He planned no personnel changes, but
18.id Whitey DoveJI, who had been
coaching the tight ends and special
te'.ams, wOuJd talc:~ over his duties as of-
fensive line coach.
"I'm proud Lou selected me," Smith
18Kt. "He's a big mail, a man who
fascinates me by the job tie h.as done. We
hive a tremendous organization and I
don't think w,e are far away from a .500
Rason."
The Broncos are currently 2-6-1 and
had a 20-42-3 mark during Saban's 41h
yj!ars at the helm.
"It Is my choice and I feel at this time
my responsibility to the team to step
aside as head coach," Saban said at a
news conference Wednesday.
"The club has made a lot of progress in
just µnder five years and my only regret
is that we have not been able to give
Denver a champiorahip."
·Saban C()acbed the Bills to AFL cham·
pionships in 1964 and 19& but never p~
d\lced a winning season at Denver.
Irish Decide
To Pass Up
Bowl Grune
NEW YORK I AP) -The Notre Dame
football team has decided not to play in a
post-season bowl game this year, The
Associated Press learned Wednesday
nil(ht .
Thi! feeling of the team was that there
I1·no sense in going to a bowl unless they
cqUJd play a team ranked higher in the
p6Jls. Notre Dame is ranked seventh this
week . ~ · The No. I No. 4 teams, Nebraska
and Alabama, a renUy are headed for
the Orange Bo~I ith No. 2 Oklahoma
and No. 5 Aubum for the Sugar Bowl.
Third-ranked MiChigan Jocked up . an
automatic bowl berth by winning the Big
Ten championship while Penn Stale,
r,ankeil sirltl, ·is believed lined up tor the
CGiton Bowl.
'-Notre Dame ended a 45-year bowl ban
two years ago by accept.Ing a bid lo the
Cotton Bowl and lost to Texas 21·17. The
Fighting Irish returned to th.e Cotton
Bowl last year and defeated to~ranked
Texas 24-ll, ending Texas' 30-game win·
nillg streak and costing the Longhorns a
HCOnd consecutive n a t I on a I cham·
plonship.
Officially, bowl bids cannot be extended
to Jn011t of the major teams uttil Satur··
day evenln1.
QonJJle Coverage
Nicholas' Strategy Set
For Coliseum Bigg·ies
LOS ANGELES {AP) -While coach
Tommy Prothro of the Les Angeles Rams
worries about how he 'll defense wide
receiver Gene Washington of the San
Fra1,1cisco 49ers, Bll~ Ni_gholas rel~e!.
He's already maPPed his strategy for l
Sunday 's big game.
Bill Nicholas?
He's lhe Memorial Coliseum general ·
manager and his plan is double coverage,
nol On Washington but on the Coliseum.
Nicholas is busy preparing for the
year's biggest football weekend al the
Coliseum -the UCLA -So uthern
California game on Saturday and the
49ers·Rams National Football League
match Sunday.
Instead of the normal 50-man cleanup
crew, he's assigning about 110 to rid the
Coliseum of debris froni the college game
in time tor the pro game. ~
On Saturday. he expects a minimum of
65.000 fans with up to a capacity of 80,000
"if it's a nice day." The 49ers-Rams
game is an 80,000-seat sellout.
"We'll have the place cleaned up by 9
a.m. on Sunday," Nicholas said. "lt's
even easier this yea r. Last year the USC.
UCLA game started at 5 p.m. and we on·
ly had 12 hours -9 to 9."
The USC-UCLA game begins at 12 :50
p.m., givina-Nicholas' crew an exlra
three or four hours.
Besides sweeping up and hauling away
countless paper cups &nd hot dog wrap-
pers. plus some illicit booze bottles.
Nicholas has to call In a crane to put up
2,600-seat bleachers for the pro game.
· Fortunately, the C()l]ege game C()mes
Referee Accused ·
SALT LAKE CITY, Utah -Referee
Earl Strom, of the American Basketball
Association, in a criminal complaint [i\ed
by a Utah" Stars fan, has been accust!(I of
, using obscene and Insulting language to
fans at last S8.turday night's Memphis..
Utah game.
, Mrs. Irvin Guss of Salt Lake City sign-
ed the complaint before City Court
Judge Paul Grant Tuesday, accusing
Strom of using "indecent, Immoral or In·
suiting language" and engaging in
"obscene conduct" during the Start 12>
116 loss to the Pros.
before the pro tilt, he said, because pro
fans ''eat more and make more of a
mess. Concession sales are 50 percent
higher per capita at Rams games."
}le hopes the· weather bureau's forecast
for clear skies holds up. While rain would
make the turf slippery ·for football
players, a downpour would bring havoc to
Nicholas' team ol workers.
"If we catch a shower, it just makes
everything that much harder," he said.
"The fans leave behind slickers. canvas,
newspapers -anythlng they use to keep
tlry."
One of Nicholas' problems -the booz-
ing fan who leaves his bottle whole or in
pieces -is still evident but a somewha t
diminished headache.
"They don't leave as many bottles as
they used to," he said . "It's some kind of
eliteness in today's football crowd. In-
stead of dringing from bottles, ther bring
Thermos jugs ..vith rrllxed drinks.'
Frazier to Def end
Title vs Daniels
NEW ORLEANS (AP ) -Champion
Joe Frazier will meet unranked Terry
Daniels of Dallas here the night before
pro football 's Super Bowl in a nationally
televised defense of his heavyweight
title, The Associated Press has learned.
The match is scheduled to be held Jan.
.15 in,the 9,000-seat Rivcrgate Allditorlum,
sources saMi Wednesday.
The promoter will be Heard Ragas of
New Orleans in cooperation with Century·
TV sports, Inc .. of New York. The pro-
moters schedilled a news conferenCe here
Monday, presumably to announce the
fight officially.
Emile Bruneau, chairman of the
t.ouJSiana State Boxing Commission, said
no contract had been presi?nted t-0 th.e
commission but that he had heard o!
plans for the fight.
A source close to the promoters said
the fight would be blacked out in the New
Orleans area but would be shown on
home television thi-oughout the rest or'lhe
nation.
It will be the first fight for Frazier
since be met Muhammad All last fall,
San Jose Star
Was Benched
Early in Year
SAN JOSE CAP) -Coach Dewey King
of San J05e Stale, who has been calling
linebacker Dave Chaney an All-American
for two years, benched the Spartan star
early this seoson.
"He just wasn't pla ying like he's
capable or playing," King explaiitcd after
making his sta r a second stringer briefly.
Last Saturday againsl st an r 0 rd •
Chancy played the way King expects him
to.
The 5-foot-11 , 210.pound middle
linebacker from Greenfield, Ca Ii f. ,
participated in 17 tackles, recovered two
fumbles and intercepted a pass as the
Spartans beat the Indians 13·12 in one or
the biggest upsets-of the college foo tba ll
season.
The performance against the Rose.
Bovd-bound team ear.ned Chancy The
Associated Press' Lineman-of-the-Week
award.
"As long as he is on his feet, San Jose
has an excellent defcrise," coach J0hn
Ralston of Stanford said, adding that
Chaney wasn 'l knocked off his feet many
. times by Stanford blockers.
King called the game "the most im-
portant victory in San Jose State fotilball
history."
Chaney, a senior, played on teams that
fin ished 2-8 and 2-9 his first two seasons.
Against Stanford, the Spartans Jost 6J·2l
and 34-3.
"Sometimes I got thf impression the
people from Stanford looked down on us,"
he said afU!f Saturday's upset. "Ever
since I came here. I 'wanted to beat
!hem."
One of hiS" tackles at Stanford spilled ,
punier Stev~ Murray at the one-y.ard line.
Jo set up a San Jose tbuchdown. ·
On the pass interception, Chaney ,dove
to top the ball into lhe air, recovered
and caught the ball ht!fore it hit the
ground. $
Th.e upset followed San Jose's 45-7 vic-
lory over San Diego State and made the
Spartans 4+1. Their next gaffie is
against ninth-ranked Arizona State here
SntUrd11y night. ' ·
San Jose, as a co-leader in ·the Pacific
Coast Athletic Association, has a good
chance of playing lo the Pas11dena Bowl
Dec. 18. Chaney will play in the Shrine
East-West Game Dec. 31 in .San Fran-
cisco.
Don't Vote Marinaro Out, Says McKay
LOS ANGELES (AP) -John McK1 y, But ptayi ng in the Ivy Lea1ue leaves a
a ~llow who's coached a fe" good run-"' stigma. McKay, who roached two
piu« backs, tJays Ivy Lea~e or not. Ed Heisman Trophy winners, s1ys that M~r~naro must be cons~deredHei:n.a~ stigma is undeserved Jn Marinaro'• case.
leglllmate nominee for f "Do 't ot M 1 t j ~ be Trophy. n v e ar naro ou U::i• cause
'If Marinaro-Cornell's mighty runnihg he plays for Cornell ," says the veteran
flowerhouse', Is college foolball 's all·lime coach. "It takes tremendou1' he~rt to car-
leadlng rµsher with well over 4,000 yards JJ'Y the ball as much as he does. 1
1ained In th.ret seasons. At moet other After Mike Garrell won the award at
tehools he'd be an aulomatic winner of USC in 1965, O.J. Simpson won tht. &ward tflt.. Bei!man, aymbollc of tht. tinest col· in 1969. In his fin al season, Simpson
1t e. football player in the land. averaged a2.7 carries per 1ame, an
NCAA record . At the time, McKay said
this :
"I wouldn 't ask a player tn carry the
baU that many limes if I didn't' think he
cou ld do it. He's never asked me not to
carry the ball. He's never come to me
and said, 'coach, I wanl In block.' Sure,
It's tough to carry that much, but he can
do It."
"'GcnMemf!n.'' he told n e w 1 me n
recently, "when you Wry the ball as
much as !hat, you can hardly walk after
. .
r& game. When you get into lhe shower,
you almost can't hold onto the soap-, He's
done a whale of a job."
McKay didn't say he was endorsing
Marinaro~ only that' talk about Cornell
not being a representative school is a
bum rap. •·tt 4oesn't matter what Jealj.ue
he P.l&.ys In, he's still gelling hit."
f"or the record, Marinaro has carried
the b,\ll 11:n averAge or 39 times per game
and aeema certain lo break Simpson's
one-game record. He's run for 47
touchdowns in three years, 19 this season .
d~'t\believe In killing a man In froot ot
his Wife and child just to please a l few
people. If l'm good enoogh to know \then
he can't win the fight and jiv't keep him
from gelling me, then you can't aay I'm
wrong.''
It was a bitter defeat for Mathis, who
lost {or the th.lrd lime in 29 fights. Before
the fight, Math.is said he didn 't. fear los-
ing only J;laving people say "J told you
so,''
Mathis came out for the 12th roUnd but
he was in trouble almoat immediately. He
went down from light punches early in
'
the rOund but was up at the count of
seven. He went down a second time, but
thls time it was u much from sheer ex·
h.austion as Clay's light punchea .
"IC I knew he. would go down and thefl
get up and be all right, J would ha·1e
knocked him out," Clay said . "But I have
lo sleep at night. I w~ldn't want thtl
man'i death on my mind.''
Mathis wept In hla dressing room priot
to taJk.ing with · newsmen. "I tried, I
tried," Mathis 1aidt .
"Hold up you"" head, you should bl
proud/' Mathla' h"andlera 11ld.
Says Pac-8 Boss
' Cal in Rose Bowl?
-~Chances ·Remote
NEW YORK (AP) -lt's ·Stanford California never-thou&ht the games
agalnst Michigan in the Rose Bowl, Jan. counted.'.'
1, or ls it? 1 The, eligibility question addep a con·
It could be California against Michigan, troversial note to..what wu 1uppoged to
the new commissioner of the Pacific be a pleasant preview of the 1972 ROM
Eight acknowledged Wednesday under Bowl played over 3,0oo miles of telephone
questioning at the annual Rose Bowl wire, with Alexander Graham Bell as
luncheon in New York -but the chances releree.
are very remote. Coach Bo Schembechler oi Michigan,
"It woold take a combinalion of speaking·from Ann Arbor, said he hadn 't
circumstances -a lot or pieces would seen Stanford bt:lt described h.is own
have to fall together," added Miles team's strengths as defense against the
Hallock, successor to Admiral Tom rush., a good running game and the kick •
J1amilton as boM of the big West Coast lie called Billy Tayklr "The greatest
college footOOll league. ball-carrier with a· ball under his arms J
"Right now Stanford is the Pac.a have ever coached."
champion. California is on probation . We Coach John Ralston of Stanford ad-
have seen or heo rtl nothi'ng that might milted from Palo Alto that Stanford had
-disturb thi' silualion." shown a tende ncy lo get up only for the
But CalifornlA plays Stanford Saturday big games, losing to some underdogs. He
in J>alo Alto In whnt traditionally ·is termed Don Bunce, Jim Plunkett's
advertised as "Tht Big Game." Should ~ replacement at quarterback, as a "good
California win, then the two team!! would scrambler with a quick release."
have similar S-2 reeord!I In the confei-ence "We will show up -we think we Can take everything Michigan can throw at
and the Golden Bear!!, were they not in us." he predicted. lie didn't mention
the NCAA doghouse, would be the Califomia.
r&'Qgnized Rose Bowl representative.
But the Bears are in the doghouse.
They have bet'n playing the 1971 season
on probation because th.-y · uYoed two
young playe r; who failed lo mttt NCAA
scholastic reqnirPmPnHI.
The two players, Isaac Curtis and Lar·
ry Brum~y. have gone to U.S. District
Court to challenge the NCAA action.
They contend th.e NCAA a c t e d
''arbitrarily and capriciously."
Should California beat Stanford and
should the Federal c'ourt rule-agaln..'lt the
NCAA -"we expect a deci sion in two1
weeks," says Jlallock -then California
would hnve a legitimate claim to the
Rose Bowl berth.. _.
. "In U1i.s case," a rather shaken llal\ock
said, as newsmen probed deeper into the
situation, "'then the matter probably
would go to the Pacific Eight Council,
which might be ltclined. to pick Stanford on the theory that teams playing
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Cl1icago's Sayers
In Hospital
CIIJCAGO -Gale Sayers, Injury-jinxed
former Chis:ago Bear star, w a 1
hospitalized Wednesday with a skin boil
on his left knee.
Dr. Theodore Fox, Bear doctor who ha11
perfor1ned two major operations on both
of Sayers's knees, !laid the long-idled
player would undergo several days of
rest and observation.
Sayers made only token eppearances
this seasoo after winter surgery on lils
left knee. llis last active season was 1969
when he led National Football LeagU~
rushing following surgery on his right
knee in 1968. '·
... ~ -
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CHICAGO'S MAGNUSON 13), VANCOUVER'S PAIEMENT MIX IT.UP,
lloth Wero Ponollzod for Fighting, Chlctgo Won NH L Tilt, U .
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,. DAILY P!LQ.T '"""4or, N°"mbff 18, 1971
.-.,+--,-•• MD, F riaFs
Mix Tonight
I
111 Finale
It's big game. weekend on the college
front and in the Angelus Le.ague as well.
Mater Del's Monarchs tangle with the
Servite Friars tonight (I). in an Angelus
U!ague footbaJI finale at Sant.a Ana Bowl
and the aMual battle between Orange
County 's t ... ·o parochial powers is more
than an emotional impasse.
The game itself brings out extra in-
cenlJ\'e among the players, many of
v•hom Jive in the same neighborhoods.
Tonight 's game will have added im-
petus for the ~tonarchs ~ith the !OM of
fonner aide Joe O'Hara over the
weekend in a plane crash.
Atater De.i has been installed as a solid
12-point favorile to boost its Angelus
record to. 3-2 and the overall season mark
to 7·2. Servile .will be struggling to gain a
$.4 overall mark and a 2-3 loop record.
With tailback Rocky Simp&On back in
full stride, the Mater Dei running game
is ready for an all-out assault: He is
teamed ~·ith fullback Rick Sheldon as the
one-two punch with Bill Clough ready to
move in with an aerial attack should the
ground game falter-. --•
Clough moved the ~onarchs against
Pius X through the ~ with eight com·
p~ions in 13 attempts for 214 yards and
three touchdowns.
While the A1ater Del offense is ready,
v.·hat about the Servile team of George
Dena?
··Yt'e ~·ill have lo try and control the
ball more on offense in order to win.·•
Dena says. "We haven't been able lo
generate a consistent offense and against
Bishop Amat and St. Paul, we didn·t have
any .''
Mike Van Daele is the leading ground
gainer for the Friars. He is a senior and
a three year starter for Servite who will
be playing his final high school game.
Mike Magner is the junior signal caller
whose passing game has been mediocre
th is season. His favorite receiver is Jim
Ir:win, a 6-2 senior flanker.
"We've always played a pretty good
game against Mater Dei. with one ex-
ception," Dena sums up. "And even
though they have won ejght of the 10
games with one tie, a win tonight would
salvage the entire season for us."
""9• o.i u..s ....... ... _
Pn. l"\ayer w•. w•. l"ttrer ...
" ,_ MM"Tlnd1~ "' "' ..... E
' l•r111 '" "' H.,•wn ' G ·-"' '" ·~· ' ' Colts!ns "' "' P•lno ' G Dr1rbl "' "' Cl1rt; " ' W~IN •• '" Sl1nbt1 " " Cl•rll "' '" ....... l: , •• ,_ '" "' ,..~,... ,. $!""' .... "' "' " Potllfft' "' •• ,.,,,., "' '" E. "°'"''" •• " ........ "' , . H1111Hton •
, Same Sto;ry:
Edison Stands
In FV's Way
U the third time is the charm then
• whaps this is the year that tbe Barons
of Fountain Valley Hi&h 'Will find a way
to defeat Edison and claim tbe Irvine
League Football championship.
Coach Bruce Pickford's Barons, with
three straight victories turning the
season around. can earn a bid to the CIF
AAAA playoffs and at worst. a three-way
tie for the loop crown lf Uu:y__ <;an turn.
back rival F.dLIOn Friday night at Hun·
tington Beach High. Fountain Valley is
favored by four points.
"This Is the third year in a row we
have a shot~ the CIF, but we know
Edison's people will be walking on water
this week." says Pickford.
The Chargers derai1ed Fountain Valley
In 1969 with a shocking 21·20 setback and
the upset knocked the Barons out «!fa co-
championship with Loara .
Last year Fountain Valley wu one of
13 Yictims of the CIF AAA charnpionship-
bound Chargers.
·'Edison was your choice and everyone
else's choiCf: to win the league and we
think that its defensive front seven might
be the toughest physical seven in the
league ," says Pickford.
·•1 think the whole thing boils down to
our ability to move the ball conslste:ntly;'•
he adds.
Fountain Valley's big weapon of late
has been the counter play inside and
-Pickford says it's been a major item
because the opposition has stacked
defenses against the outside option plays.
"That's the so-ea\led beauty of the tri-
ple option," says Pickford, "lf people
stack up outside we move inside, and if
they go after the inside stuff we can go
outside.
"But our counter plays have betn good
plays for us for the last couple of years."
Pickford's also wary or Edison's of·
fcnse, although It was boaged down last
week in a 7-0 loss to Maano1la.
"You can·t beat anyboay fnd giYe the
ball away seven times," says Pickford.
Baron fortunes have been bolstered by
the full-time return of Matt J..1ohul&ki
after an Injury kept him OOt of three
games. He's been a part-time performer
the last two outings.
Mohulskl takes over at fullback on of·
lcnse and safety defensively.
MATER DEl'S ROCKY SIMPSON IN f'INALE TONIGHT
Second Place Ht StHte
Rival s Cla sl1 Saturday
111 Fii1al Pa c-8 Gan1 es
' .
By ·THE ASSOCIATED PRhS
lt all started in:;:September and the an-._
nual autumn madness winds ~p ·Ml· the
PaCifio-3 Saturday with the usual trldl·
tional bloocf-letting on the griii11oo. ;
'Stanfurd, oC -cou.rse, has wOfi ·the Pac.fl champion~ ii-kl 'is headed [or
Pasadena's Rose Bowl NeW Ye<ir'sl.J)ay '
against the Big Ten's Michigan. BW ,that .
will not detract from the Jndians' conflict
with neighbQring California in a 1'seri~S'
that dates beet' tO 1892. PlaY is at lstan~
fcird. · · '.
'Three rivcifs are battling to t;re&l a fie
for second plice ih the conference stan-
dings, Oregon; Oregon State1 and South em
Californla. ·
Oregon hosb Oregon Slate in the 75th
renewal of their hostilities and Southern
cal's Trojans are the home team against
lowly UCLA at Los Angeles.
And it will .be Washington State at
Washington in their 64th meeting.
Conference standings: Stanford ~I:
South.em Cal, Oregon State and Oregon 2-
%, Washington State and Washington 2·3
and UCLA t-3.
Ineligible Californ ia has no official P11c-a standing but the Golden Bears arc 6·4
overall arid have beaten Oregon State.
Washington State, UCLA and Oregon and
lost to Southern Cal and \\'ashington.
On the statistical level, Stanford leads
in total defense and Washington is pacing
the Conference in offense. Either team
could drop back. however. .
. Stanford's Don Bunce and Washington
Slate's Bernard Jackson apparently have
\'frap ped up their indi\'idua\ feats. Bunce
leads \Yas hington 's Sonny Sixkiller in
total offen se. 228.8 average to sonny's
184:2. The two are close in passing,
hOlA•evcr. Bunce leadi11g by only 10 yards
in Yront of S1xk11ler, 206 4 to 196.4.
Jackson has scored 14 tou chdowns and
84 points. 2U over the current runner-up,
place kicker Rod Garcia of Stanford.
The \\'ashington State speedste r and
Bobby Afoore of Oregon are in a close
ra ce for rushing honors. Each has
a\'eraged over 100 yards per game.
J\loore has gained 1,211 ya rd s to 1,178 for
Jackson .
Former Ser\·ite star Cl'Qff DeLapp
leads in pass .receptions with 45 and
Leland Glass of Oregon is only four
liehind .
Jn the interleaguc se ries. Oregon State
leads Oregon. 34-31·9: Stanford paces
California, 33-30-10: \Vashington·s Huskies
are in front of \VSU. 39·18-0 and Southern
Cal !eads UCLA, 39-18~.
Holland Ad1nits CdM
Faces Stiff Challenge
Jt'll be all on the line for Corona del
1'1ar's Sea Kings Friday night in their
Irvine League football crucial againsl
Estancia at Newport Harbor High.
Coach Dave Holland 's Sea Kings can
have the world almost eating out of thei r
hands with a win Friday night. »ec-au!e
a Corona trillmph would mean that
Holland's boys will end up in either solr
possession of the championship ')f either
in a two or thrce·way deadlock for the
crown.
Consequently, the Corona coachin~
staff isn't having much problem gettinJ.:
the squad up for one of the mosl bitter
intradistrlct rivalries in Orange County.
"That's a tough team at Estancia,''
Holland saya, "and they seem 10 be one
of the toughest In the league right no~·.
"A lot of people don't rcallt.c it. but
Estancia has been a good learn all )·ear
long ; they're one of the best groups in the
league."
Holland can 't stop with his praise
without mentioning indh·iduals on the
Eagles lholJih.
"With Prlnceotto and · S<:hullz, their
Ming game. b slill ijood and lhey Mve
a great blocking fullback in Dixon," says
the former Whittier COiiege gu11rd.
"And Boegel is a real good quarterback
who can run and pass. •lowcvcr, lhry
haven 't really had to pass much with
their strong running threat."
Holland also credits much or th e Estan·
cia 9Uccess to llnemen Bob Conklyn.
1;raig Dennis, Kim i)horcs nnd Dou~
Br11nt. .
As for hig Sea Kings, tqc fou rth-year •
Corona head man says, 'we're not a
grlnd·it-oul team like Es!ancia, We
generally break for longer gain5 when we
score.
The Sea Kings 'A'Lll be without the
services of speedy split end Carlo Tosti.
\\'ho l'>l·isled his knee and tore some
liija ments in last week's 15-14 win over
Costa ;\1esa.
Other'>l-·ise. Corona is Intact. with
quarterback Reed Johnson healthy again
and 5('t to direct an offense which is
striving for balance.
Confidence Vote
For Oiler Coacl1
110UST0l\ -Houston Oilers' owner
Bud Adam s. stung by his teim·s poor
showing. said Wednesday it was his
decision lo relie\·e offensive line coach
F.mle z~·nh!en. but he stlll has confidence
In head roach Ed Hughes.
Hughrs. in his first season as Oiler
head ('Oach. told a rather tense wee~ly
new~ confcrencf! that ii was not his
decision to relieve Zwahlen, whom .
Hughes hired.
"\''e rtcognlic thal Ed back~ his
roachin11 start." Adams s9id. •·out we're
doing lhis to.try to help Ed .
. "If 1\'C had the offensive line we had
last year to go with our defense thi s ycflr,
\l't:''d be Jn a lot better shape. The reason
"'e don'l have lhc line is because Zwahlen
\\anted some trades."
Lions Seek
Undefeated "
·Loop Mar~
Westminster's Llons get an early crack
at sewiqg up sole possession ol the Sunset
League football tltte tonight when they
invade Anaheim's La Palma Stadium to
tangle with the upset-Olinded Loara Sax-
ons.
Coach Bill Boswell's Lions, fourth rated
In the ClF AAAA poll and No. 1 In
Orange County. art 13-point favorites
wi'Ui kickoff slated for I o'clock.
It's another oDPQrttmity for the
awesome oCfensive balance and stingi.
ness ol the Lions to be ,pn ruu exhibit
once mart before the CIF playoffs.
However, coach Herb Hill's Loarf.1 crew
fs capable of turning the tables With the
dingerous sprintouts ol quuterback Deen
Lari~in spearheading the ofr.ense and an.
Jea~ue middle guard can<tidate Kevin
McLain (225) anchoring a sometimes
stonewalled defense.
For the heavily-favored Lions, there is
a wealth or capable weapons which
Boswell ca n thro w at the Saxons.
first, of ~. is signal caller Jeff
Siemens, an almost. surefire candidate for
IQO..P back of the year laurels. He cur·
renlly leads the Orange Coast area In
totaJ offense.
In leading the: Lions to a 7·1 record (6-
0 in Sunset play), Siemens has fired lf1
COfT\Pletions in 149 attempi., for 1,232
yat'ds, six scores and a .584 percentage.
Also, he's rushed for 156 yards and has
been guilty of ~owing a mere four in-
terceptions. !
He has the likes of Gary Maddocks,
Kirk Harris, Chuc~.arlson and Gilbert
Rosales to link up ~·
Should the Lion passing game falter,
there's always Boswell's talented group
or runners, including tailbacks Chuck
Winkles (321 yards) and sophomore Tony
Accomando (326) and fullbacks Bob
Dreirus and Jim Holland.
'McLain and Co. should be in for a full
night's work with the Lions' front align-
ment featuring such beefy spE!cimens as
Gary Jennings (225), Bart Frar.khouse
(209) and Marty Trujillo (240).
W11tmlMltPr LllllllPI
Offtft.. DeflnH
Pe1. Pl•r•~ Wt. Wt. Pi.rer Pt1.
$E M.cl6oc.ks llO !IS Thorot E
T Jen"!ntl• lll 210 Hotl•nd T
G Wl>kt•CMn lllO 190 M•cli G
C !icrl•oede• JU 210 Fr1t1khouse G
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F8 Drtllin 11J 165 Keetll!O' S FL H1,,l1 145 U.5 V01Jng I
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Kings Fall Again,_5-1;
Buffs to Meet Hpuswn
PHILADELPHIA lt's on to
Philadelphia for the ahellahocktd Los
Angeles Kings and goalie Rogatien
Vachon.
The Kings play the expansion Flyen
tonight in what should be a breather after
losses by wide margins the last two
games at the hands of Boston and Toron--
to.
The latest defeat, a S-1 blast by . the
Maple Leafs, came not becauae of P>O" work by Vachon. He atopped 37 abola. But
the Kings' deltn1e pennitt.d a and by
game's eod, Vachon was weary.
The King.s have been outahot all year
long but haven't scored well. But tonilht
they face a team they crushed earlier in
the year. •
The Kings used Gary Edwards In goal
on Oct. 21 and the 5-foot·9, l!IG-pounder
scored his first National Hockey League
shutout, 7-0. That was one of three vie·
tories by the Kings this year and they
hope to snap a three-game losing streak
tonight with a repeat. ~
ln the only other NHL game played
Wednesday night, Chicago defeated Van-
couver, 3-0, to rem ain atop the West
Division standings. ,.,,
HOUSTON -Colorado will face the
Univenity of Houston in , the Dec. 31
~Bluebonnet BowJ at the Astrodorne,
the Houston Post said in its editions to-
day.
The newspaper Said the teams will be
e1tended invitations Saturday afternoon
following the Colorado-Air Force game
and before the Houston-Miami game.
Earliest bids may ~ extended at S
p.m. EST Saturday. .
Both teams would be appearing in tl)e
13-year-old bowl for the second tJme.
Colorado defeated Miami ol Florida 31-21,
in 1967 and Houston whipped Auburn 3&-7
in 1969. .
The Cougars, 7-2, wind up their season
with consecutive home appearances
against Miami and Utah. Colorado. S.2,
concludes its season Saturday afternoon
with the Air force Academy.
. ,.,,
NEW YORK -Eilrique Pinder of
Panama couldn't adapt to the cold
weather here and spent most of the past
week in a warm hotel room .
Then he went to Madison Square
Garden Wednesday night and made
things hot for Davey .Vasquez for the se-
cond time within two months.
Pinder, employing the polished moves
~
of a classic boxer, pounded out a
unanimous 12·round decision over V1s-
quez in a bout billed for the North
.American bantamweight Utle wrested
from Vasquez here Oct. l.
"I was in better ahape than the fin1l
time we fought," isaid Pindu, ranked No.
a among the world'• 11a-pounder1 by tht
World Boxing Association. "The first
time we fought J didn't know him and
had to tzy dUlerent styles. This lilm I
made him fight my light." ,.,,
Coita Me.5a's Barry Asher ranka u lht
seventh leading money winner in the
Professional Bowlers Association ltan-
dings with $33,7?.8.
Asher is a mere $2,165 behind 1i.J.lho
place Dave Davis <Jt Miami. Johnny
Petraglia of Brooklyn leads the lilt with
$80,jOO,
"" I Eastern Conference leaders Boston and
Baltimore of the National Basketball
Alsociation won games Wednesday night
along with the Seattle SuperSonlca and
Houston cf the Pacific division of the
Western Conference.
Boston halted Phoenix, 140-121, while
Baltimore was defeating Cincinnati, 113-
103. Boston leads the Atlantic division, by
two games over Philadelphia.
Baltimore is a sillgle game in front of
Cincinnati in the Central divi9ion as a
result of Wednesday's triumph.
Seattle dereated Atlanta, 112-104, and
Houston halted Philadelphia, 111-112.
Aztecs Forfeit
Eight Grid Wins
La Quinta High's Aztecs have beea
forced fD forfeit eight 1971 football vie·
tories followini a vote today from the
CIF executive council regarding an in-
eligible transfer.
The Garden Grove League requested
that the CIF grant a retroactive 1t'aiver,
but the PUiing body turned down tbe re-
troactive portion of the request.
La Quinta may still be able to enter
CIF-AAA playoff competitio.11 , sin~ the
league has the option of sending Its
representative regan:lless of record.
..
AND SAVE!
BUY 1/2GAL.
NOW
$)}98
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Saddleback College rootball
coach George Hartman isn't
flmping up and -down wlth joy
over how his Gauchos have
played to date - but he isn't
moaning the blues either. ·
, flartman's club is in a
strange situation this week as
.it prepares for the season
.finale Saturday night against
invading Cheffey College at
Mission Viejo Hi~h.
For the first time In three
seasons. Saddleback will be
•playing a game that does not
have any bearing on the title.
OCC Mat
.Outlook
Sparkl es
With a new coach and team
that will be..__dwninated by
freshmen. Orange Coast Col-
lege's wrestling team is a big
...question mark as it prepares
for U1e start of the 1971·72
campaign.
The new coach is Vel'n
Wagner. who moves in from
Fountain Valley High where
he produced some of the best
wr1?stling talent in the CJ F.
· He replaces J ack Fair.
Wagner 's to p two mat can-
didates a ppe a r to be
;.;ophomore Guy T\forrison and
freshman Dan Lew is.
f.1 orrison captured the Sou th
Coas t and Southern California
regional championships (165-
pound division 1.
Lewis wrestled under Wag·
Tier last yea r al Fountain Val-
ley winning the CIF 165-pound
di vision.
Another top candidate will
be Tim Bandel, a 180-pounder
who finished second to Lewis
~n the CIF finals last seaso n.
Bandel is currentl y pla ying
football .
Other candidates. who are
now on the football team. in-
cfude Dave (200) and Mitch
(2.1.5l h1 orrison. Dave Jackson
(215). Bob Fate 1200), ~1ike
Davis (2351. George Valbuena
t185) and Steve t\-1ohulski
(li5 1.
Leading lr esh m en can·
dida tes inc lude Steve Joannes.
a 12>pounder from Edison.
130--pounders Dave l\'litchell
(Arcadia) and Gary Peters o{
Green Bay, Wis .. Darrel Dey
(145 ) of Huntington Beach,
Paul La Blanc 11451 of Foun-
tain Valley. Dave Khoury
(146J of La Quinta, Ga ry
Gover ( 175 l of Missio n Viejo
and Ron Brandt (175) of Estan-
cia.
~~r i•...:-.~P.''1-1~~·1 Pitre,, J
OK l-4 -11 \au1hwell.,.,. tournfv.
11b~.v 11 -1t Cal State fFulltrlon)
IO'''"tY. 111 d~ Oe< lb -El Cimino /home\ ere: U -11 Pitre• lr'l\Jrlltv. al! div Jan. 1·1 -1t (II Pol' (San LUii
Or <.1101 •ournev, ~" drv Jal\. 11 -1t Ml. Sall Anionic' Jan. 'l1 -Double dull 1! 1mot<"l•I \t~'••v. ~11 dlV Jan. 1S -Ctrri•M" (f>Oll"t )
JH•. 11 -11 San11 Ana·
Ftfl. J -Fulltrton• (f>,,...tl
Ftb 11 -~t S·•n Olt<1n M••• Frb · H -San Olt<Jo" ll'torn-l Ft~ 18 -s.o.itl't COll~1 Confrrtncr mH t ill Mt. San An!on!o. all div Ftb. '3 -SoC1I rl!<llon1l1 1! C!r·
rl~~.~~ ~~v _ s111e 1111111 ti Sk,lil'lt
1S·~ Fr••c11•ol ~11 ~·v 'd~ltl Sou!f> COll•1 Con~•H•<e
ti 1.:11. unllH
LB Netters
Rout Rival
Undefeated Laguna Beach
Tennis Clu b chalked up its
th ird consecutive win last Sun-
day by stopping Cypress. 7-2.
on the Cypress College courts
in Buena Park.
The Lagunans. p I a y i n g
without four or their top
playe rs, travel ID Te\Vink!e
-Park in Costa Mesa Nov. 28
for a match against Costa
h1esa. anotHer outrit unPeaten
in Orange Count)' \\'i nter
League net play.
Singles y.·inners a g a i n s t
Cypress were J{arvey Klytc.
Bob Jamieson, Ed Stoney,
Norm Poy.·ell and L i n d a
Cushing. ----
Citrus bas already wrapped It "Chaffty l! very tough
J.IP ·defensively. They use an e.lght-
"We're not happy about not man front line and really pol
wln · h ha . . the presaure on you. They run rung I e c mp1onsh1p, but a lot of reverses and stuff li~e
our kids have really improved · that. Our of!enilve line ha! to
and come a long way this do a good job.••
~eason. If we win this game Through the first half of the ~t'tl be a good year for us," season Hartman was very
says ~artman. displeased with the play of his
A victory would give Sad-ortenslve Une -but he admits
dle back a final season !flar~ or that it's really come along
7-3 -~t ·too bad Ill most lately ... They've done a much
football circles. better job of blocking in the se.
Hartman· figures his much cond half of the season."
improved offensive line will But the b i g g e s t im-
get a still test from Chaffey provement. says the Gaucho
this week. coach, has been the play of
Tars Must Pass
I
To Beat Aiiaheim
'°""'lfq, wovembe1 ll!, 1m ,
1ne GWC Goai:
.500 Slate Looking .Pq,st Foe · quarterback Bob Du!Jch.
"We've readjusted our of·
fense to what we think the
personnel that we have can do.
But the No. 1 key has been the
tremendous improvement br
Dulich. He's playing like a
sophomore," says Hartman of
the freshman from Mission
Viejo.
"And we've also been get-
ting some outstanding play
from receivers Bob Haupert.
Tom Simmons and Rick Ged·
des. But the secret to the suc-
cess of our ofiense has been
the maturity of Dullch."
SC Ready
To Brake
With Win . -. Ora11ge CoJst College's root-have oot beell defeated in th!
Early In the year it wu 1 ball team has quite an last 13 games -a school
first quarter start t h at obstacle to overcome this Fri-rd
plagued tht Golden Welt day night. r'::°we. hope to finish ~
Coll f tball '£ Although It hot t s a ~ e1e oo ..cam. tortrudable opponent In San defeated" if we can, but wt-
ln more recent games lt'bu I ht h t h · do Diego M~sa-lta main hurdle m g ave a · oog time ing
been a late fourth quitter this week could be Santa R~a It." says Tucker.
lapse -or enemy surge -that JC~ He eompareS the Olympians
has turned apparent victory That 's the feam OCC's to Mt. San Antonio College in
iato defea t. Pirates meet in a first round size and adds that the Border
Saturday night in t b e large schools pl.,off lilt a week from Friday· and Bue City team has one of the top Orange Coast College · b -•· t be coach Dick Tucker l.!I hoping rurunng a~ n t con.
St 1 d i u m • coach Ray hi! club ll not Jookin~ahtad, ference. Shackleford'• Rustlers will Tucker figure! 's got "Bob Lueke i! probably the
entertain Rio Hondo in the enough to worry about with best running back in the
Southern ~a Ii for n I a Con-tough San Diego Mesa. league. He'! 6·2 and 200
ference and season finale. The Pirate coach readily ad· pounds and a real good ooe."
A Golden West victory mits he doesn't figure his Tucker Dgures the key to
would salvage 1 ·.soo teason charges will be really fired up beating the Olympians is to for th& OJymplans l h I s stop their running game, since
for them (4-4-1 ). • week-but be does •dd that t~ir pa~lng attack has not
Cl!LY l'lltl'I' ;JJ
4 -setliack
For Cards
P.1anagtr Bob Chava"la's
Golden West Cardinals
semJpro baseball team drop-
.ped a M decision to the
Douglas Jet.. last Sunday at
c:o.ta Mes.a'• TeWlnkle Park
and host the Sanu Ana Tigert
this Sunda,y ln a doubleheader
at the same site.
Game time for the opener
against Santa Ana is 11 a.m._
Bob Palmer was the ltading
hitter ror the Cards In the Jou
to ~glas with a pair ot
doubles.
a.Ht1 Wnl C"'*' 141 .. ' • "' Wine.rid. ll • ' ' • "'*'· lb-f' ' ' ' • Jnl"" cl • • • • l lmlf. ~ • • I ' JQfv\IOn, ( • • • krnrwav. 2t1 • ' ' • Hldi::m1n, d-. • ' I • Hllcl-. [J:• ' • ' p~"'""· ., ... ' • ' 01111 • • •
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Newport Harbor H i g h 's It's the first-ever meeting
Sailors will put the lid on the · between Newp6rt coach Don
1971 f~tball campaign Satur-Lent and the Co lony's Cla
Shackleford, while di.sap-OCX: still ha.s a lot going for it. ·gone well at all this year.
pointed about the won-lost "The only thing we hope for "At the start of the · season jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij
record, isn't at all discouraged is that our guys try to finish we talked to people down11
As far as San Clemente High about the season a.s a whole. with a clean sweep. We dcn't theU who said they were
Spartans Doutll l Jeti CD1 001 OO'l-' 11 ' GW C1<d5 071 000 01.._..
day night at La · Palma re head football coach Tom Eads "We have played some good want to end up wilh 8 co-really impressed with San championshi p. We want to win Diego Mesa. We know they
Stadium against An ah e i m VanHoorebeke.
High with hopes of posting ' Lent was an assistant coach
back-to-back triumphs over under VanHoorebeke for four
is concerned. his squad 's football against ·some good it ourselves," says Tucker. have a fine team and we think
Saturdal night opponent -teama. This team has nothing Currently the Pirates are 5--0 we're in for a tough game."
Villa Park _ could well have to be ashamed or in its in South Coast Confertnce ac-Tucker also revealed that
the Colonisls. years prior to coaching etints been the No. 1 team in the performance. tion while second place Santa sophomore quarterback Gary
at f\.1agoolia High and Cal Poly Crestview League. ··ror the coaching staff, it Ana has completed its circuit Valbuena, a.idelined the last slate with a 5-1 mark. three weeks with l '-nee m· -
Streaking
Villa Park
(Pomona ) Say E d "V 'tl p k · has been one of the most en.· ,.
· s a s, 1 a ar 1s l·~OCC'.0!!:_t'."~"°~~h.u~~ib~un~be~a~te~·~!ju~ry~,~ma~y~be~~ab~le~t~o~pl~a~y~~~~~~~~~~~ • "The area or organization is the type of team that could be joyable years we have had at atring to work on. The Pirates against Santa Rou next week.
one of the things that I learned No. I as well as anybody else. Golden West. The morale bu
at Anaheim that has influenc-The fact stands that they're on been good and the kids have
ed my thinking," says Lent. I ~ ood f tball • three-game win streak and P ay....a g oo · · Perhaps another item that has influe~ Lent is the we 're on a three-game loss "While we haven't won a.s
kicking game where he's got. streak. many games as we would
ten mileage out of punt "So, of course we'd like to Uke, everything else has been
returns from Grif Amies. win that last game. But we'll great." Rides Again
"The specialties are where -... R ti wi'il •-t t have to have the brea!·1 go our ''~ us ers ~ ou o After going winless through Anaheim teams consistently avenge a 37~ drubbing by Rio l.
their five football gaines or do a great job. They can way: not like last week. when Hondo a year ago when the
19'1, Villa Park's Spartans are always beat you on those we played a good game and Roadrunners were conference
riding high with a three:game things. the breaks went the other champions. Saturday night,
win streak, including last "And Anaheim a I ways way." Rio Hondo will have a chance
week's surprise upset of seems lo be so much better at E at gaining 8 portion of the title th I tt t. r th ads was talking about a 21· defe nse-minded Katella. e a er por ion o e again Ylilh a win over Golden season. This is always true of 17 losstto El Modena in which Now the Spartans face San V . t 1'oo h • al the Tritons blew a 11·7 th'·d West. Clemente's Tritons in the an 5 earns. • e 5 ways " This ls of little or no concern
Crestview League f i n a J e going to throw in some quarter edge. to Shackleford.
Saturday night at El Modena garbage play at you. You have "Our kids played a good What about the Rustler to really be alert for anything game last week and it could've f' r th High and coach Ted 1\-luUen starting 1neup or e game at any t,ime." says Lent. gone either way." he says, · h R' H nd, ~-b 1 has his forces as ready as wit 10 o o. vo.r<:S e p an they'll ever be . The Newport mentor says "but an interception, a poten-any changes?
he'll be inserting something tial touchdown pass and things "N I d •t thi k the • Says the former Newport o, on n re is special for Anaheim, too. "\\'e like that hurt u.s in the fourth t h And th Harbor Hi gh aide. "it won 't be add little wrinkles as the rt any reason o c ange. e easy at all. But we're coming 1 quaU er. good thing about it is that we season goes a ong, we'd like to " nder these circumslancefl. ill h off · Off the three bi'g wm· s whi'ch V'I w ave seven . en51ve put something in there to keep 1 la Park Will have been the rt t · t Could gi'e our ki'ds a Jot of hem 1 , h t h sta ers re urning ne1 year t oose. • e says. oug est team we've played so ion · th r· '---' the Conf l.dence. a g w 1 1ve u ...... Anahei m has been beaten far. They have a good -looking ,.f · I Th t' "San Clemente 1·s "ery horn m: ens.1ve e even. a a a • £our times in Sunset League sop ore running back and a 1 · 1 t build
da"g erou s WI.th thei'r 1 nd h . h art ba k ho . t •• pretty air nuceus o p ay a on eac occasion t e qu er c w spr1n oui.;, as --" " th · G id w t quarterback reatly com1'ng o". . • . II •-. th arouuu, e o en es winners passing game was in-we as anyone ei.;,e 1n e mentor adds.
We expect them to really fill strumental. league." Bill Cornelius, the R\istler
the air wi lh passes." "We definitely think we'll Eads has most or his squad quarterback. is closing in 00
Sale!
-Our . best ~el ling
-bowling balls and bags.
.t·'
Sale17 99 Villa Park's chief hope of have to throw more," he says. intact. with the exception of the record books and barring
moving the ball and con-It's also worked the other middle guard Rod Giacomin early injury Saturday night,
trolling the tempo lies in the way against Anah~m as the (bad knee) and center Robin should erase two marks set by
poss ibilities of spreading out enemy has intercepted 13 Beamon (Achilles). John lnglehart Jn 1968.
the Tritons' enormous defense. Colonist aerials. "Depth is the thing that's One is for total palsing
"These guys are a s One change in the starting attacking us now," the Triton yardage in one season (1;784)
physically tough as they were lineup is slated for Newport head man claims. "With these and the other for total offense
last year against us and the "and that's at running back. two injuries, the res huffling in a slng/e year (1 ,687 ). Unof-
otlly thing I'm really con-Tony Horvath is lost for the has defi nitely weakened us." ficially. Cornelius J1eeds 121
cerned about in regards to us game due to a back injury suf-On the brighter side of yards to tie Inglehart for total
is ou r aggressiveness," Mullen fered in practice prior to the things, junior quarterback Bill yardage and 122 for passing
Reg. 22.9'. fot"tmo1l P.rt0n•l 300 p1att1c
l>owlll'lf ball. Mlld•exj)l•~y lor JCPenf!fly i
by l.lm()\/s Etion1!9 and "'"II all Amencan
Bowling ConQressspec1lie.1tlons. Endoru d '
by Don Ca it er. Comes in• exciting color1:
?Ce.an btue, 1ierl"I gr8flf'l. due rt 1en and l . l
says. ''We 're not as aggressive Marina game. Kenney · is improving with yardage.
as we should be although we Taking his place is Mike each added game of ex· On a normal night, Cornelius
have had good defensi ve Thompson, a S-3, 140-poond perie~ and Eads says. "we will Surpa.'115 the 200-yard mark
cove rage. · · juni or ,up from the junior hope to keep them honest with in passing alone. Jn fad, his
1 "I look for .us to be behind varsity. 1 Kenney's passing and the run-average for the eight games
Carly iI we're not sharp." He carried nine times for 21 ning of Clark Jarrett and Jose played is 204 passing and 21»
11unen claims his chargesl_y~airidsiiaiigaiiiiiinswtii~ii1a~r~iniai.illiiiii~a1ia1iiamgoini.'ii' iiiiiiiiiiitoijtija1~ori1'j"'jj"iimnm~I ha" had what he describes -s I ;;b;i:J~t.£:};~::\~:~ i MENS FASHIONS at their very BEST a e
a little longer against Katella ~ 1599 ~~i.~~ ~~d~~ "~a;!~ ;a,~~ I"' and at TWO, for the price of ONE!
and 179 on the ground.
'Tm high on our kids oow. Every suit, sport caat, ind wool slack in our fine clothlnr d•partment i's 7'hey've matured and have ,.
heen able to come ba ck from offered at 2 .. for the price of 1. HUNDREDS OF TOP QUALITY GARMENTS
turnovers and mistakes v.·hich they make. BY ANY STANDARDS! If you do n't need 2 at th is timt, brint Hmene
"We f"I that if we shut ta Share your Savings.
down San Clemente's TWOC
quarterback o" the option and I AN PARTICIPATE
passing, we'll be in good
shape."
\Vhile Mullen hopes t o 1a
curlail Triton QB Bill Kenney, ., ··.,. ,,., • • • .... fOn TYrl
he hii.s a formidable signal HORSQHE•'S · ._II~ .. :
caller or his own i" ~9. 165-.. PDl,Cf' ·:Of·:
pound junior Kirk Reidinger. ~ ~ !l( . ~ -. ~[orifit.G: . .,_
"'\Ve feel Kirk is the best in
the league at what he does,"
Mullen fconfides. ''Finishing
st rong like this says a lot for
ou r kids and with hope to end
it all with anot her good ef·
fort." $ 98.50 Suits ............ 2 for $ 98.50
11119.11.11. FOT*"IOll Eboni!• Tom.do
bowl Ing ball. Meets all Americilro
Bowl•ng Congres11 spei:1lic1tions. '-'»tie
ot h11d black 1ubb11r and h!iilur1s dust
•nd 1eritch 1es1~1111t 1urtace.
wild plum.
Sale9 99
11119. 12.19. Don Carter Otlua1
bowrlnfbeg. featurH ITIOlded b•"
holder. met1t shoe reek. Top quality
twD tone Vlt'lyl,
1
"
LEASE Or Buy 1972 CONTlllENTAIS
• • • 1972 MIRCURYS
$130.00 Suits .......... 2 for $130.00
$150.00 Suits ..... ~ ..... 2 for $150.00
~4i
Bud Bowen ...
°"' ..... l-1'0-•••• """· -·~ ................ _ ... -· ...... 11 ..
•]!~ .... ,Mil 1'•"'1-<e 1-· ,,.., ....
D,.., '' e<M1 .. ,~ •• .. , .,.,,. fl (f
IOOf:t.(T .. ••II "'4 ,_, _.. · · ·
540-5630
O""''' Co111'1i,'1 •f•wiii1 of filt• ,,,,,.
ohn son & son
2626 HARBOR llVD .. cosr.& MtSA. S40.J6JO
$ 69.50 Sport Cools 2 for $ 69.50
$ 79.50 Sport Coats 2 for $ 19.50
$ 25.95 Slack1;....... 2 for(~ 25~95
$ 28.95 Slacks .......... 2 for'1 ~8.95
WE HONOR BANKAMERICARO & MASTERCHARGE
HDELSCBER'S
VAIDERM!ST
Ollty ,. " '
"''· It .. t
AW -c-44711.t-
Mw! •• T~•n., Pr'I. ti .. t T.,...., W .. ,, Sii, 11 M l 1M
llllTlllTOll .. Cl
n ~c
-~.,."""' Mflfl,. Tlltn,, Prl, lt " t T-., W•., Sii. If M f
Sale ·799
llllf. I .ti. Don C1rt1r prol111lon1l 1tyle
bowUn1 ..... Two IOl'll Vll'lyl Wtlll tnOldld
tloltl l'lolder end metal ll'!oe rick.
JC Penney
Sflop Sunday noon ·to S'.P;M. at Ille f0Howin9 s!orft1
NfWP.ORT BEACH, Fesh;on hlud. HUNTINGTON BEACH, Hw"ti"9ton Center
U1 t P nn•11• tim e p•yment plen.
I
I
l
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Thunday, N°"mbtr U, 1971
Injuries
Pile Up
•
At Laguna
~yeles lnvade-,OCJR Saturday ·
American FederaUon of lightweight gran priz cycles a.m. with a three-lap aeries
Motorcycles ( AF M ) com· 1Dd1 aldecara slated to follow followln& from 11·11:30 and
!rom 12:»2 p.m. feature racea taklna: place 1&' pelltors will conclude their Allo on the aame day, the p.m.
current aeuon Ulla Sllurday four-wheelers (dragsters) will A week hence at OClR (Nov.
and Sunday when they coo-take over OC:lR'• quarter mile 27 • to be exact) t li •
verge on Oranp County atrlp at 2:30 for the regular Wheel5llndtr1 ChamplonshJP'
International .Raceway. weekly .bracket ed class return wlth etgbl ol the top
Any resemblance to the \Practice in the-.two-day elimtftatlonr. wheelstlnd expert.II from
starting lineup of the Laguna meet begins at a a.m. S.turdiy Sunday'• motorcycle road around the country eipect.t.d
Beach Artist football team with preliminary racta for racing 'practice begins at 9 to compete. Friday n I g h t again!t El _::::__!::::::=!__:::::_:;:__::::;::_:::::::::_.:::!::.:...::.~..::.=.:....------:,
Dorado and . the one that
started the 1971 campaign ii
purely coincidental.
Coach Hal Akins readily ad·
mils be has never gone
through such a season as the
one he will complete Friday
night at El Dorado High in an
Orange League encounter.
"l have never attn so many
Injuries in one year in all my
coaching career." Akins says.
"We are down to three
istarten for the El Llorado
game and we even have to
bring up a junior varsity ARIA'S llST YALUll .~:.~-1:i:':inl!:~~_P?.·itio• BRAKE. o· VERHAUL The three starters who have •
been on the Scene throughout •
the campaign Include Mark •
Diercks at offensive guar~; JI.IOI MIU LININ•
Bob Gill at offensive tackle ; AND I.AIOI INCLqDD •
fullback. And all three play on -froqt whffl btllfln11. (3) •
•
'
;
and .Skip Winship at oflensiVe (l)-lnltaifiin!nf, (2) p1ek $ 88 •
defense in a dual role as well. • tum. tru• 4 drvm1, (4) ,... •
Perhaps the biggest loss tbi~ ~ • build cytiNWa. (5) btMd, ,._, • _-!:
week is at quarterback where • flush, 'flU a)'lttm,(6) l"spect _....,,... •
Gary Fisette is out with a 1l'Hf ro.d hilt. {Self •di.. .t $6t
shoulder separation. His early • dlec: brti.., VW's •l1&htly • , "
se.ason replacement, Clayton • lilllM~ • ate 9RAXD •
Berryhill,; is available on a • •· °"' ...UIALTY' •
limited basis and will play on-• •
Jy on defease. • LIGNMENT This means that B ill A · $ 95 • Robert!On, a defensive cor· • · •
nerback, will take over at the • •
signal calling berth. • Prodtleo odjumo.., • .,
Tellord Collam. an early • of Ml ........ lo loct""f lplCL • , ·b
season starter, was back in 13u
uniform this week and work· • COMPARE AT •
;
~ DAILY l'ILOT l'Mr. '°I' L .. 1'111111 ing with the squad at a • •
halfback position. • ::J ·• ' UNIVERSITY PLAYERS JOEL Ctill1.IPLIN (4 1), RAY HALE (12) FACE BREA FRIDAY Tuesday night he suffered a • SHOCKS TUNE· UP ~ ••
2 Hunters
Fined, Lose
Hu11t Rights
University Gridders
.Plagued by Injuries
University High 's chances up his shoulder against El
for victory Friday n I g h t Dorado and Redman says he
Two young Eureka hunters, against Orange League fQI won't be sure whether Hale or
":ho wer~ caught at ~bout 3 Brea at T\1ission Viejo are on backup QB Gary Wilson will
o clock tn the morning on · shaky terms with injuries a start until shortly before the r~llll?te :P.1offett . C ~e ek, key factor.
S1sk1you County, with six d~er, Coach Jerry Redman's Tro-kickoff,
a battery·powered spotlight jans v.·ill be without starting Fullback Dave . ~ng ls
and four rifles, have drawn center Jim Davis (knee ) and bothered by a back 1n1ury and
fines totaling $900-and Jost startingqu1rrtert>a-cr"juntor-,rattiftot.ike his spot is Joel their licenses for fi ve years. 1 al be Jostlor \Varden John Spotts of Fort Ray 1-la e may 50 .. Champlin. •
Jones cited the pair, Larry the 1971 grid finale. Middle linebacker Bob Gill
shoulder injury and is out of •
Friday's game. His brother • INCL. LABOR & PARTS
Welter Pal'r Pete will handle the assign· '""IN~~AL,Ll,,..D .,..Fin .. _697 .... 11111, ~ .. ,.,._,, ....,11, ctno11111u , "' • ... ment as he has the past two • .... _. flMlnt.....MoST u.1. c••s. • \.
games. • 11_... -..Ck1, ,..,__. 1 COMPAll AT $30. & $40. •
YMrl ., UM •1191. EA. $ 97 ' ' I H.-hli h Doell Akinl!I feel that El • ONI WlllC ONLY 19 . '23 7 • • .. 1g ·g ts Dorado will be crusading • Comporo et $14.00 ' · . Cy!. Cy!. • . Friday night because of a , .•
Lag>Jna Beach victory a year • quALITY Rnll.ADS •
BOXID• g Card ago? • LLS SEAT COVERS • 'Tm oure they w i 11 • WHITEWA •
Armando T\1uniz, with only a remember the game," he • $ 88 Cu1tom T•ll•llf T• Flt nvr Ctr Like •
says. "Ho w much effect that • 'NY 8 or111"1I U,.,_,1ttry, • draw to mar his 16 bout will have on the outcome, ""
record, finds himself an though, I don 't really know. • SID -~ la. NOW '24 99 MOST •
underdog for the first time in "They are a good, solid fool· • 4•FOR $32.00 ~~s ONLY • <;Ats •
his career Friday night when ball team and are much better • .-l't•.r1t1 111.&vv •u••• .&LL·YINLY •19 95 Mosr •
than the record indicates. • SIUCT MA.JOI CASINGS CONv1•r11L1 TOl'I • 1 u.u • he lakes on top ranked Clyde They are very 1 o u n d •
·Gray of Ganada al the l<lng defensively and I hope we can I I I • • •-I • I • • • • I I • • I • • • • • • • ii • • 1 ·1-•
Beach Arena. keep it respectable." • 2860 Ha-Lor /llvd Coda Mesa • Muniz , now listed as the No. Akin.s also recalls that the • ~ • •
.,
Hale, who took over the Mayden, 23, and Irvin Mattos, reins two weeks ago banged b hampered by a badly SI .welterweight, is 8 lQ.-B Laguna Beach victory a y,ear • n-. MM170 e o,.. M...,.·s.t•Ry, M ·• ..
21, on·charges including illegal ' 1~ained ankle but he's ex-
pos sessio n of deer, i th · spotlighting, having a ioaded peeled to be n e starting
ago came with the entire team • · .-
shortender against Gray who intact. "We had au of our iii I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I II• I I I I I I I I I 111.
is the No. 4 contender for Jose slarlers in the lineup last
Napoles' w&Jd title. year." rifle in a vehicle and taking Playoff Set lineup defensively along with
deer at night. _ offensive.duty at Ieft guard. The vacant North American1ljiliiiiiiii
Judge Gene L. Newton of Champlin, although he's bill·
Scott Valley Judicial District F o.r Rustlers ed to start, is nursing a slight·
Court fined Mayden $500 and ly pulled -hamstring.
Mattos $400 on their guilty Golden West and Rio Hondo But the biggest setback is at pleas to the charges in ad· quarterback where the ques·
dition to suspending their colleges will meet la a playoff lion mark exists about Hale.
licenses. Friday to detennine which "We would have had Hale in
In another case three San school will go to the Southern as our starter there before he ~1ateo County hunters, caught CalUornia JC water polo finally broke in but he was in·
with five untagged deer in a playoUs. jured," says Redman.
closed area near Centerville, The game is set for Cerritos Prior to that the Trojans
Humboldt County, each drew a College at 3 o'clock. relied on the quarterbacking
$500 find in Fortuna Judicial Golden West and Rio Hondo of Ed Call. "Call did an
Dis trict Court. tied for the S o u t h e r n outstanding job for us but
Warden Wally Callan issued California Conference cham· frankly he wasn't playing his
the citations to Albert Bae· pionsbip with 6--1 records. position. He's an excellent
cttlli, 42, of Belmont, arKl The winner of the Playoff tilt receiver. blocker and runner,"
Caesar Bazzoni and Richard will face Orange Coast in the says the University coach.
Pigno ne, bo th 47 and both of opening round of the Southern Redman does feel, however ,
San Mateo, who pleaded glilty California tourney Tuesday at that his team Is capable of
lo the charges. Long B~ch City College. slaying v.•ith Brea.
we llerweight championship
will be at stake in the 12·
rounder. Muniz, who KO'd Gil
King in his last start, has
racked up 12 knockouLs In win·
ning 15. His draw was against
Oscar Albarado last May.
Gray, 23, won the Canadian
title earlier this year when .he
upset Donato Paduano in
?'.1ontreal. His overall record
is an impressive 30·1·1.
Colorful Ray !Windmill)
\\lhite is e<r(ealured meeting
Hill Chambers, the Arizona
light heavyweight champion,
in a 12·rounder. While, the
California litlist in the 17~
pound class. will be going for
his 10th win out of 11 starts
this yea r.
Warm Up Suits -12.95 & 19.95
Sweat Shirts & Pants 6.45
Insulated Jackets 12.95 & 15.95 •
Baseball Warm Up Jackets -6.95
Lettermen Jackets & Sweaters
Snow Caps & Mittens
Champion Handball Gloves
Tennis Dresses
Ladies Tennis Shoes -7.95 • 14.95
Mens Telris Shorts 5.95 to 12.95
Mens Tennis Shirts 4.95 • 6.00 • 8.00
Mens Tennis Shoes 8.50 · 9.50 -14.95
Pennsylvania & Wilson Tennis Balls
Dozen 7.95
~nlop Tennis Frames 15.95
Kramer Autograph Frames -16.95
T2DOO llacllets • Nylon Strung 32.95
Ractet Stringing
OPEN 9 TO 6 ClOSED SUNDAY
3.95 • 4.50 . ~95 • 6.50 -
White Stag · Speedo Swim Suits
Paddleball & Paddle Tennis
Rackets & Paddles
Dart Boards & Darts
Table Tennis Sets -Paddles
Nets -Brackets -Balls
Buck Knives
Stop Watches
Wrist Rocket & Whamo Sling Shots
Exergyms -Chest Pulls
Hand Grips -Jump Ropes
Basketball Shirts -Shoes -Sox
Golf Balls -Practice Putti111 Device
Bikes -Parts -Tires -Tubes
•
-In Ji es ~.Coast'Ptua
-s H ·o ES STORE ONLY
ONE WEEK ONLY!
296 Pain • 296 Pairs • 296 Pairs • 296 Pairs
El T. WRIGHT ARCH PRESERVER·8
8:
SIUS:
l ·C
2·0 '1
1·2A
2.C't
20..D't
81 /.2· ~:~ .• i'~ • l-0'1
•
9~:
lO:
.
REGULAR . PRICE
$35.00 To S50~00 .
Innes
SHOES
l·A e 11 °8'1 e 21.C'i
11.0'1 e 1·E
131 I 1-21 I ill'•
9-C's e 10.D's e l·E
1-1 I 7.1'• i itt'•
3-0'1 e l·E
· NOW --All
SALE Priced At •
SIZES
101 J'. 0 2·3A's e 13-8'1 /'2, 12·C'1e4-0's
11: 3-2A'1 e 1·A e
4·B's e 9°C'1 e 4-D's
l1Y2: 1·2A e 3·B's
3.c•1 • 1.0
12:
13:
&.B'1 • 31 .c·. •
1.JE" e19·0'1 e
2·E'S
. 1·2A e 1.C
I
l·B
South Coast Plaza., Costa Mesa
OPEN. SUNDAYS 12 TO 5
lNNES .. OURG&-11ANKAMERICAl<l>-<MAS'l'tR .• CHA1tGE
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Start TheAt.wMPalmer Method
Your
Engines!
by Deke Houlgate
..
They all blamed a 5/10da1 RCOlld tlmlnr del1y betweu tlte
last prerace caution U1bt and tlte l?MD lJCllt wkla tells lite
drfvtr1 to 10. On Ute Wett Cout Ute cu1tom II te allow a "1••
del:t}' ..
By gettht1 ated to tM 4/10ta del1y, Ole bt1t driven aetoma·
llcally left &be 1tattiq llne &oo early, Uley1cJ11med.
lronk:aUy, NHRA bas q1'ffd te aa tltt Ut• delay at 0.-
tario, but t.lae dtdsloll wa1 made lmen 19 Garlltl teo late lor
Dougherty's 67
Set,s ICCC Mark
him to make plan1 to be la &lie bl& meet. Art Do h Other lead1a1 driven alto claim to Pve etMr complaints ug erly, 1 long-time
against drag ncln1'1 bl11e1t JUctloa qeacy. Ram1t:y, for oae, member and a low handicap
rer11se11 to enter tbe Workl Fhl8l1 at Amarillo, ud M calls ~ amateur at the Irvine Coast
World Finals a junk mett because be and otbtr top driven Country Club, rtCGrdtd a red·
weren't tber~ hot course record of 67 Sun-
Amoq tht absentee11 be lilted were Don PradMrnme. Cbrlt -day.
Karames1M1, Jolul Wltbt (a former cllamp) ud Demit ls.Cl. Doughuty a one or two
0 Unfortunately/' Ramaey said, ''ne NHRA feels we need handicap g~Uer for many
them more than tffy need u1. 11le '!'!°"" we ·do, tile more 1ue-year!, Rt a new amateur
ce1&ful we get, llte more they UM as. standard of '7 ~on the par-71
The words almost IOllllCI •• U tlr.ey -wtrt lifted (rom a 1peecla layout.
on women's lib or minority rlgllta. He had three bogiei during
But there wW be no boycott ef the SaperuUonals for Jlam. the round including a three·
aey, ~ spite ~f his baraape. He wW drlve JtCtt only •Is Cali· putt green which means he
fomla s Charier foel clragder bit a Plato flUUIJ cir 11 weU. recorded seven birdies during
And don't ~ &oo many otbtr .'°P drivers .. •It oa the sk!e-the sizzlin,r round.
lines either. Dougherty li\·es in Laguna '1'1eo Ruetc••• Not <:onapeti119 Beach. ·
Ever sin ce plans were announced for COOJtruction of On-
tario Motor Speedway at a cost in ucess of $25 million. auto
racing observers have ·expected a lmock-doW?Hirag-out fight be-
tween the new stadium and ib nt.areSt competitor, Riverside In-
ternational Raceway. ,
OA-tS officials and Riverside management bave up to now
declared co-operation with each other and a reluctance to com·
pftte directly. Last week tbe racing fraternity saw to its honor °'f both tracks' collision courses will-meet· next April 9.
On that day Ontario will present · a double 200-mile ra~ for
lfAC 1tock cars on the road course and championsh1p (Indy)
cah on the oval A few miles rartbt!r eut Rivmlde will dage a
wic'ld championship formula 1 granff pri.r, for whlcb Jt wu giv-
a surprise approval a few days a.o.
Polltlrs Pla"ed a Large Role
: As one might Imagine_. polltlt1 of the varlou1 competing:
.. ction agencies playff a large role ID tills confrontatklll. Bodi
· Richter, president of t~ Rtvenlde l'Old ncln1 plant, and
te Rebert•, '\'Ice president pu.blle relations fOI' O.tarlo, ltave
erlllg vers.lo11s of what kappened. Flr1t Rich&er:
"American officials (Tom BWotd and Charles Moro of Ute
AJiomoblle Competition Committee of tH U.S.) welt to put
Je#;tlis to secu.rt this race for Ontario. Tiie C.S.t. tlntenatMnal
... ct•n group) broke all tradltloa by irant1n1 • second sr•nd
in thl• couaty. It attached two oondltions-bot• tallor·mJde
I Ontario. "One the date had to be 11 far a"ay 11 po11lble n the
i.ndar 'trom Ute preaent U.S. Grand Pris: (bl Septtmber) and
otber was It had to be 11 far away 11 it co•I• be from Wat.
5 Glen, N.Y., geographically. A race at Ontario OI AprU. I
ft.01.' reqlllrements. · ''Ho"ever, Ontario requuted that tke date be moved to the
Jal. SCCA, whlc• llad to appcove the reque1t, eoaJdJl't do tt. be-
cUse tb1t "ould llave pat OatariG"I grand priJ: (Oct. %% or Nov.
s)' in conflict ~.-Ith tbt Lo• Aageld Times Grad Prlz: at Rlvtr·
1'4it (Ocl DJ, which H sapctkm• and sbould pretect.
"Also Ute Watkins Olea people t.1d 1o be co11111dered. A fall
r.ee would take aometblng aW'ay1 from Utelr uclulvlty. SCX:A
fe' It bad to tam "Ontario'• reqttmt for a date claaq:e don."
V "However, co abandon tllls date would meu a blow to the
,dsU&e o( tbil couiry ln lntenatlo11al ncln1. S. SCCA w11 ••
t&e 1pot ud asked u to take over tbe date who ft w11 luntd
OiJ,arle hH IChtdllled another race for April t. We •creed-"
Roberts Gives Bl.s Version
And now Roberta: r "Apparently SCCA decided to do what he did wilhout the
know1edge that the fonnula 1 JssoclaUon pN!:fttnd • date Jn
October. Officials in Europe had been consulted and teemed
favorably disposed to the new d•~e. . . . "We "had been negotl1Ung with ttl.t formula 1 aSSOCJahon. ~t's another condition -we bjd the srand prlJ: en condition
we rould reach a suitable agreement with the driven. Their de-
m&(lds were astronomical." .
_(:,ross Country Finales
Leque final• 1ltts in cross
country compeUtkln for the
nvt ctrcultl tnvolvlng Oraf\le
Q>ut area teanu have been
dtt"1"lned with two outlnp
Friday afternoori, two on
Slturday momlsll and ~
other set for ~tondJY r·
tornoon. Coach Joe Fisher'• Colla
Mesa Muat•np. t a r,J Y
f4vorltes In CIF eompetltlon,
WIJI join othtr Jrvtno Loque
1quada ln a meet at C.I State
(Long BOich) on Monday \3).
Mal<r Del'• Monarclll IWUI
travel to Heartwell Part In
Loog Beach Frklay afler.-
whore St. Anthony Hilb w1111
host the Anaelua Ltqua "*
(l :IO). ,
Huntington Buch enWWN
SuMet wiue toa lncludlnl
Newpor\ Harbor'• dual meet
champions and Marina'• run-
neraup at Central Park, alJo
on Friday (I).
UC Jrv1ne will be the llCtl1t
or the Orlnge wiue ftnals
Saturday morning al I with
Uguna Beach given 1 n
oullldt chanct ol onrlalcinl
El Dorado for Ute c1rcµlt Utlt:
Coach Cf;ne C u r u 1 t ' 1
Miaslon Vlie}o DlablOI, un-
dele•ted In Crostv!tw Ltlll\lf
dual meet octloo, will be
favored ln that clrcu.lt'• finals
Saturd.ay momlng at lO:lO,
1alao al UCJ.
Meadotclark
Defending champion Bob
Abbey .tniggled to make the
flnaJs of the Meadowlark's
men's club championships in
semlfinal action with Larry
Brown over the weekend.
Abbey~ wu _forced to come
from behind on the 11th hole
to tie the match with a 20-foot
birdie putt. On the second ex·
tra hole Abbey sank a IO..
footer ror another birdie to
close oul the match with 1 l·
up victory.
Both players cardtd 68 for
the par 71 layout at
Meadowlark.
In the other semifinal
match, Fred Good defeated
Terry Palmer, 2 and l to gain
a place oppMlte Abbey in the
36-bole championship finals to
be played Saturday and Sun·
day.
Mesa Verde
Peanuts and Lea Lowrey
teamed with Bob and Pug Lit-
tleton to score a victory in the
Mesa Verde C.Ountry Club bet·
ter ball of foursome tourna·
ment held Sunday afternoon.
Peanuts is the ex-Chicago
CUb coach and a member of
the Mesa Verde CC men'• club
for several years.
Jim Mercer, grttn
1uperintendent at Meaa Verde,
acortd a pair of e1gles •c· cesa:lve days on the par-5
fourth hole recenUy.
ln both instances, he rer.ch·
td the green (503 yard.I) in
1'10 lhota and sank the eaRie
putts. He ftnlahed with a SS on
the front •Ide his first day.
Santa An•
Final round or competition
ln the annual men 's club higb-
low tournament will be played.
thl1 weU:end at Santa · Ana
Country Club with the cham-
plouhip matcb pitting the two
remaWng teams from a
&tarting field of 32.
Pat Hart and Ed Ethell will
tana;le with Fred Walktr and
Kt:n Ltwia in an lPr-hole match
play compeUtlon using Ute two
ballJ for scoring.
Gene Faron toored • hole-In-
one on tbe 15th bolt at Santa
Ana tectnUy U!lng I thret-
Woocf to lravtl the 175 yards.
Fuon l.l a nsldent of Ne'ltport
Belch.
Ranelao SJ
The women's club 1t Rancho
Sin Joaqu.ln staged t w o
tournament. during the past
wetk with Fern Sproul and
Kay May t)'tng for flrlt place
ln • low net event at 71.
In the 8 flight, Virginia !de
"u the winner with a 14
lolloftd by Trudy Bone at '17.
Bev Connrt!J coppotl Ute C
fligbt action with an 11 while
Natalie Beckman had a 71 to
win the D fiight. Second platf:
went to Maxine Strickland and
Kay Leutwiler with 11 each.
In a fiag tournament, Fem
Sproul w11 the winner of A
flight with Jackie Boelkl se-
cond. Virginia ldt won the B
flight followed by Margaret
DeBach, Dorothy Wright and
Carolyn Walbridge. ·
In the C flight competition,
Vi Saxton was first and Ginny
Tepln second. Lou Willey won
the D crown followed. by Kay
Leutwiler and M a r g a r e t
<:ostfl Mesa
Women's club gclf champion
at Costa Mesa Golf and Coun-
try Club for the ensuing year
is Robin King with Vi Hoskins:
the ruMerup.
In the low net acticn, Ann
Papp.as and Lucille Wilson Ued
for low honor• and will stage
an l~hole pl1yoff Friday.
In the first fi lgbt, Merrilee
Dungan wu Jow gross victor
with Rosemary Skillion the
low net winner. Sybil Foster
and Elise stlpes w i 11
participate in another playoff
for second low net.
The second fl ight low gross
champion ii Anne Keenan with
Dorothy Bowen first low net
aod Nina Danielsen second.
In 1 low gross and low net
event, Vt Hoskins copped first
fligbt low gross honon with
Mary Evelyn Imler low net
victor.
Ann Martin wu the gross
winner in the second flight
with no net victor named.
In the third flight, Nina
Danielsen copped low grou
with Jean Dalpee and Carole
Rou finishing in tblt order 1n
the low net play.
Mission Viejo
Tht flrat annual member
j1ck and jlll tournament will
be staged al Mission Viejo
Country Club Sunday with
competition by scotch ball.
The Mislion Viejo IM at the
club 11 addin& a new facet to
the a r t a ' 1 entertainment
starting Thunday night In the
Fieata Room. The live en-
tertainment wlll be presented
Thursday through Sat..U1y
nlghlJ with The Natur•~
....... Ute program.
The Inn Is av•llable for
bnallfut, luncheon and dinner
meetlnp b1 arrangemenL
14•-Be11c:•
Tht Laguna Beach Women'•
Club rocantly staged a mid·
nine toarnamant eovlriog the
Jut ,_ boles o/ the front
nine and the first five of the
back aldt at Lquna Bach
Coontry Club. _
In the A flllht eomPttltlon,
Mn. John Poor wa1 the wfn.
ner with Mra. P•lil W1ttrm.1n
second. Mmes. Walter Dl'rilon
and Art G rlllln flnlabed ..,..
two In the 8 flight action.
The C fliJhl wlnntn In·
eluded Mmes . GJenn
McMullen, Clyde J,... and
Richard Wbltaer.
The Just pullJ comPttltlon
wu won by Mrs. John Poor
'frith St. Mme1. D c n a I d
Hurlbut, Gracia JohnlOn and
Paul Waterman llnllbed In a
tit for -at II.
Tars Nab P~lo Crown;
I .aguna Ties for Title -·-eeKll ·, t 't -n ,1 1111 -t "'"~'· ,,::: '· r=: $Hme11. .........
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..., "' ~y JIM NIEMIEC
'-=---
~·~easant hunters bagged a better-than-average number of
rfngnecks over the opening weekend as hunter piessure was
~ert heavy.
T]ie Jmperial Valley boasted a high bird per gun harvest
•• 'f_e_ Department of Fish and Game did a g90d job in tum.
Ing 1ne birds loose prior to .opening day.
. To the north,' scatter-gunners found ph;asanl hunting more
diffiCttlt' as rain and wind kept the birds in hiding, Saturday
P\Olfling ghooj.ers had to settle for a less tha'n one· bird average,
~utmost upland game hunters took limits on Sunday.
-The .bad we~thg also worked against the closing day deer
hunters m the Sbuthland as the deer hid in heavy cover. A lot
of ~Of an.cf fawn· were spotted during the mid-morning hours, but
the large bucks kept well out or rille range. <
·· Mltl~season Break for Waterfowl . . '
Oiler Tilt
ilrossu~·
'
. '
~VikeAide
It was 11uch a busy d~y for ·
Marina High, head football
coach Leon Wheeler Wed·
nesday that he was a hard
man to find iii preparing ~or
friday night's season-closing
Sunset League clash against
Hunlington Beach at
Westminster tfigh,
At any rate, Wheeler's aide·
d e ·ca mp -youthful Mike
Henigan-was available in' his
chief's absence. And Henigan
agrees . t,hat Friday's eon·
frontaUon is a tossup .
. j
l
Cl\f Coach· ~xp,e~tsl
High Scoring Tiff. I
I
Costa Mea High'1 .Must.ang1
wrap up •the 1971 football
..-n Friday night 11 Santa
Ana Bowl against Santa Ana
Valley and they're in the best
physical shape of the year.
"Fran\dy we'd like to start
the seaspn right now,'~ says
Mesa cOach Joprt Sweazy,
"but .I guesa they won't let·us
do that."
Despite the physical and
menta1 shape of the Mesans,
they are one-point undenlogs
Friday. I
Santa Ana Valley," aurmisest
the Mesa mentor. i
No changes are plaMed1 in~
the starting lineup for b:lsta
Mesa so !,t'll be quarterback
Flip Darnell at the control•
with running backs Bob Bom4
.. boy ,and Chuck Glaspy and\
flanXer Pat ~lama. i
Sweazy aJngled out Sweai;y'
for his play 'against Cofona del ~
Mar last week. · 'j
"Pat did an outstanding job.
SholgllJ'.lners closed the first" ball of tht split season on· a
100d note as lots or ducks ,were-.owned a"t bo1h private clubs
and public shooting areas. '
Says Wheeler's amicable " •
assistant, "w~·11 more or fess __ N_Ew_P_o_R_T_B_EA_C_H_'_S_RO_G_ER_B_R_o_w_N_H_O_L_o_s_a_o_N_l_T_o_· ·_H_E_c_A_U_G_H_T_~
Sweazy forsees danger sign!
against Santa Ana· Valley (4-
4).
"They've moved the ball on
everybody and they ha ve a lot
of moti vatiQn and ince ntive
going for them.
He made some great defensive I
·plays despite being blocked
out," he says. Kalama miµed I
a year's ellgibility at Mesa ln :
his soph9more year , after t
playing quarterback for the j
Corona del Mar freshman j
team. . The· northem bifds have 5larted to move 'lnlo Southern Call-
foriila and the second half of the season which open~ on Nov.
27 should be excellen1. ·
Waterfowl bur;iters will have to travel to Bakersfield if they
upect lo shoot any .ducks this coming weekend. Reports fro m ~1(-tbe1'"'Kern WildlUe· Refuge and the Gilbreath Bros. Duck
Clilb ire very encoufaglng, but most of the 'reservaOons for
this weekend are taken.
--A fe,;.~geese-liaWbeen -bagged at the Giibreath Bros. Club
rece~tly and club ,owner Vern Gilbre8th predicts very good
hunting for. the remalndf:r of the .season.
D11rks nrui. Geese ltlove North
Winter stonns have moved lots of birds into Northern Cali-
lontiS: this past week. Rain, snow a!ld strong· winds brought
fligh~ of.bird s down from. the Pacific Northwest.
Shooting· this past weekend al the Sbasta· Valley Ranch W.ing .. and FiJJ Club, this' writer enjoyed a fair duck shoot an.ct
~°'.Ose hunt. Q,n the large public club. The rain held. down the
Pheasant, but the waterfowl more than made·up for the ab-
Benc.e of the· i:ingnec ks.
Wing and Fin club manager Jim Pickering predicts that
hunters should bag easy limits of ducks and geese of the clubs'
th ree large lakes through the end: of the season.
Currently there are about 3.000 large Canadian honkers on
the ranch and the duck population has reached a season's peak.
For more information on the ·club and jls facilities phone Pick-
erin_g at (916) 459-3020.
Si.eelhead HUtlHg, on KlntHnfh River
stick \Vi!h the same things
we 've done all year and hope
they work.
"Defensively, of course ,
we 'II try to stop Steve
Pickford on runs and the
passes to Tony Ciarelli. \Ile
definitely feel these.-two are
their beSt all-round players."
At Marina, mea~whi\e, the
casualty rate has gone down,
although guard Boyd Holliman
is lost for the finale after ac-
cruing a knee injury two
weeks ago.
Wheeler underwent a transi·
tion in his lineup prior to last
week's 27-0 shoutout at the
hands of Newport Harbor and,
in spite of the setback, wlll be
content to stick with the same
alignment.
Jn one or the s\\•itches, &-1,
205-pound Dan Wells was mo v·
ed from the line to the
fullba ck slot and according to
Henigan, "Dan did a very fine
job blocking and was probably
even a little better with his
The win ler run of steelhead Is in full swing on the Klamath running in that game."
River as limits ar_e . being recor~ed by most add _anglers. Al_. other recent t:_ikfilii changes
Kutzkey, veteran guide on the-river for more1haa ZO yean:, ave found the transfer of all·
1ald that fishing will be great for at least the next three months. league middle guard Bryan
Steelhead are averaging about four pounds, but the size .of Kerns to defensi ve end and the
the ga!'le fighters "'ill increase as the 'winter months pass. advent of guard-line-backer
'Kutzkey 9~rates nine cam ps along the famoor steelbead . Don Spreeman and guard
river· offerjng anglers the finest guide service available. The Dean Rilling into the oftensive
ocean going rainbows are returning· up the river on their spaWn.. lineup,
tng r:un and ar·e· being caught on fresh roe, bot shots 'and Eddie Also, sophomore quarter.
Pope fi shbacks. The river· is high and runntng· at ·prime vel-ba ck Greg Foster will try to
oclty for steelhea d action. add to his bag or 663 passiAg
For more information on-steelhealll fi shing pbone-Kutzkey ~Yards.in 46 completioos.
at (918) 475-3691.
Brondblll Action Slo1c• ,.,
Dae to rough water outside, there are very few boats out
trying for broadbOI. No eatches or the game swordfish have
been reported. this past week, but skippers are optimistic abi>ut
more hookups.
Prep Football
SOPl!omort Foolll.tll C«ont ~I M•r o 1' I 1-30 Mt9nollt 6. (I 0 '-11 Coron• d~t Mir tovChdownJ: Jee kc1mat1, Mike Minn•. 8.rlllll 09dtn, Joe f'crto. COOYfi'llons: QvdHi, Sl .... e &e~rtnl. Sllft'l~-Jrn:i G1rn tnd· Mlk• Frost. ·
Rustler ·Holmes to Start "Last year's score is cer-
tainly: a factor (Mesa walloped
the Falcons, 45-7) and we 're
now the difference between a·
winning and losing season. .
Friday's test will be the i;
finale for sever.al key seniors I
in the Costa Mesa attack, but
it will alao be an added game!
under the belt for a' half dozen
underclassmen on offense and
defenae. ~
Runners
Seek Title -Despite:B<id Ankle
"They have the advantage
Aundre Holmes has been the
Golden West College's cross toast of the Crestview League
country team has a good shot in rushing st a tr st i cs
at winning Friday's Southern throughout the 1971 football
California JC small schools campaign.
championship at Grossmont College. The young ta ilback a t
That's the opinion of GWC J\1ission Viejo High wi\l not be
coaci;I Tom Noon. at full speed Friday night
Glendale, Santa~ An a, \\'hen the Diablos .tang)e with
Moorpark and Palomar figure Orange High in the league
to give Golden West its stiffest finale at El Modena High. But
competition. coach Bob Hiynerlias i~serted
"We've beaten all of them a hi~i'le starting lineup
couple of times in invitalional anyway,
meets, but by relatively close "He is still hampered by the
scOres. In all honesty, 1 think ankle injury that kept him out
we have a good chance at win· of most of the game with
ning it, but it's hard to predict ~ Foothill last week," Hivner
the outcome of a cross country reveals.
meet with 25 schools entered,'' "But this is his last high
says NooR. school game and he wants to
Golden West had little trou-start so he will be in there
ble in nabbing its second CQ.Tl· even though it's hard !or him
secutive Southern California to make any moves."
Conference title last week. Holmes was held to his
Seven of the top 11 finishers lowest yardage total or the
were from Golden West. year against Foothill -a net
Sophomore Steve Las.segard gain of 14 yards in nine car·
won it with freshf(lan Da ve ries.
Lockman pla;cing second and W hi 1 e the Diablos are
teammate Jack Mc Quo w n assured of their best winning
finishing fourth. season with three victories
Lockman, a forrt1er Marina already on the books, Hivner
High , star, has been Golden and Co. are hopefill of im·
West 's No. 1 runner for most proving that mark \\'i lh a win
of.: the seaSon until McQuown over another offense minded
beat him a couple of weeks squad.
ago in a triangular me.et. And "lf we can play any kind of
then Lassegard finished 28 de£ense against them , we will
seconds in front of him in last have a chance," the Diablo
week's titl e .run. ~coach s3ys.
"But you can't score without in size and speed. And With TRAVEL (
having · the ball and ·our their passing ability ·we expect TRAILER I
de(ense has had its problems they'll put the ball in the air 35 j
this year. On offense we have to 4-0 times. SP''ACl!SI piltid up close to a;ooo . ya'rds "But other than perhaps an ..
for the season." · • alter2.tion on obvious ~ •5 00 cl..V
Plays we'll be going with our • • G -• Mission Viejo is currently 3.
5 overall while Orange is 4.3.1 same ~efensive !!etu.p. We Htxt door to Palm Sort,..,
for the season. would hke to apply a little ad-finest 1a-hol• public ~ _dilional pressur, with a, good •xecutlv• golf elM'te. •
While Hivner isn't exactly rush on the quarterback too, .. •-• S ,.. ,
di sappointed in the season, he says Sweazy. r9 18 n -·i
does feel the Diablos . could Sweazy is also convinced 0 -..... '
have won a few more gam~s. that his team can move the GI I
•1e also points out th0t ba~l ag8:inst the Falcons. =oio:i~~:1i.n~ t
Orange should ha ve beaten • I think we've proved we CotNdrol Cfty, Collfornle f22M ,
Katella and· Foothill. can :'1'.!9ve the ball on anybody, (714) 32M813
"Orange has a stronger But l think we'll have to score ..,.......,.,,_u.s.,....... ....
de fensive team than we have at least three times to beat and they have a ba lanced at-I-,,======:....:.:....:.:....:=.:_ _________ ~
tack to go with it," he says. ~·
On the Mission Viejo scene. ears
the second·year coach ,says
about half of his squad• will
return next season.
He is also looking aheid ·to
the time when ninth-grader
Randy Echols moves to the
varsity as the tea ril 's
quartel'back.
Having performed· at
quarterback himself for the
University of Washington in
lhe Rose Bowl, Hi\i ner knows
the importance of having a
good signal caller.
Two Diablo pla yers will
miss the game with injuries
including Jon McGraw, an
end, who has a broken ankle
and John Green, out with a
knee injury,
Prlct&
hot! Tl111t
Well., Nev. 24
;
l
I
r
I
.: .Pirates Fall p1111n1mu11111111111D111111U1D1JlllllllD111Dlmlllllm111111111111Jnlftllmnoomm11u11111111111111111111111n1111111111111111m1D11nm11nm111Hnm~1111111m11111111111~w11111mm1m1111111m1111111111Il11R1ml
In Ratings;
.Now No. 9
Despite a 30-10 victory over
ML San Antonio C.Ollege last
~~ek. Orange C.Oast has droi;
,J,ed.'from sixth, to ·the ·No. 9
spot in this week's football poll
of the nation's JC teams.
OCC's Pirates are in a , tie
with Arizona Western.
Gulf Coast, Miss. continues
as the No. 1 team with El
Camino rated second.
' .e '
N1nont1 11:1nn11
fJ,C. Grld·Wtrtl
T1•ojan Coach
To Give Talk
USC assistant basketball
.:Coach~ Stan Morrison will be
the maln spea'ker this Satur·
,•day at the second annual
• KiWanis Cage Clinic at Laguna
·Beach High School .
;· .Laguna cage 'mentor Jerry
'l'air is sponsoring the all day
~con(ab which lasts from 8 a.m.
· UnUI 4 p.m. and which in.
eludes free lunch for alJ the
·young basketball players at·
tending.
Also on tap will be hlghli '~
films of USC basketball and
an added speech by Sad·
dltback College coach Roy
Stevens.
•
Gaucho Runs
• Freshman Marv Francis
will r e p o e 1 e n t Saddlebttck
COiiege in Friday'11 Southern
• CiaUlomJ• Junior colleg• cross C<Nnll'Y ctwnplon.lhlps a t
Gl'O$Smonl College.•
Fralldi linlllted ejg)ltl\ in ..
the MJuion Conft:r.ence meet
tut wfflt. lit'• a gr duate of,
·'l'u1ti11 High, :
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MARKIJI TtLMAT HtlL J111. Slf.tS NOW
StARS STl,·IN llNDlNGS .... $21 .ff .
INSTALLATION 56.00 IXTlA NOW
$25.88 ...
$9.99 ...
.. BOOT SPECTACULAR
C111toR1 hot11•flt hon
I MoM ~ Wo1M111I
I lwckle IMthet 1kl ltoots
Wn 145.00
5 lttckle leoth., •1 booh
Wos SJJ.00
Youth l11ckl1 HI lloot
Wo1 S2l.OO
M111 S·IKkhri •ptMH• .. , loot
Wm $45.00
Touth J bvclde 1111 "91 w .. S10.ff
M111 '1 01111 W1me11'1 Mith 'lll!tlell
'ofter lkl lt0Mh Wm Sit.II I
Met1'1 Hlth ,_hi .. Aftw Sll ... , w .. $14.ft
L!ml!td OutftllllM
NOW
NOW
NOW
NOW
NOW
'NOW
NOW
$90.00
$19.88
$14.88
$14.88
$19.88
$7.99
$14.88
$9.99
AC"CESSORY SPECTACULAR
e T-.... "' ,_, w/le..: . , $14 88 W111 SJt.tt NOW ,
• Uwe• ski ,1 .... w /l11tot"chlft9Mble '"''" $2 99 W01 S4.tt NOW •
• Mell•WOl'llff cetteo t•rtf•MCb $l OO
W• SI.II NOW 1
• WOtN9 ttrlp~ 11yfo1 t11rtlef1Mk1 $4 49 Wm S6.4t NOW .: • w ...... ,.,,.. $14 88
Wot SJS.00 ,• NOW o
• MM t ........ , lfytooj ..... $14 88
W• SJ0,00 NOW •
• Al1111tl111m Ski PoJel 55 99 Wn St.ft NOW •
Lltttll .. Clldlllt!ll•
COMPLETE RENTAL PROGRAM
-lllC.lo .. 1.t.4•1t 01111 J1111f.,. Sl1et
SKIS, BOOTS, POLES ... :.:~v .. " •to
10% DISCOUNl TO SKI CLUB MEMBERS!
South Coast Plaza
3333 Briatol Street
toata Mesa 5!0-3333
JUI S.,a.rpltAtSM.n
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L.M. Botff
Waitress Glides
When Walking
• By L. M. BOYD
"Give me cbutlty ud telfftllralat, bat Mt ytt."
SolllAqwlblo
. FELLOW I know cla1mi be -ldelllll)' a hlll>IY ez.
per1enced proleaalonal wallreu <111 any crowded .U..1 ju.st ~y the way abe, walb ..,_ the bodl<J. Sbe gti""'· he
_Bays. Other women, partlcularly American -lalta
• short choppy atep!I. But the Jon&-time waltms •llJll over
. the al~e"'.alk lib spilled crwn and O. J. SimPIQIL He
-also c!onfinna the oft.reported claim that waitre.1$tt aJ.
! most invariably are food dancers. ,.
'
:WONG the l!IOlt happily married
citizen.a:, one matrimonial 1 t u d 1
abowa, 11' the mithemaUCs teacben.
.• WHEN you refer to "bags" In
England, mlater, you're lalklng aboul
ladies .. slacks .
•
A MEDICAL MAN who l)leCiaJ.
lus In circulatory allmenll lnsllll.
~:"The world!a best cure for swollen feet is a rocking chair."
ANT BILL
His golr ball landed on an ant hill. He swung, must
have bashed 1,000 ants, but mi&led the ball. S\lnD'll again,
and there sailed another 1,000 anti, but the ball stayed
, pul Thl!!J .. went on. Finally, one of the dozen remaln1nc
, ants look~ at .the rest and aJd, "l:Jsten, you guya, If we
want to stirvive, we'd better get on the ball." Slr, I don't
:-ordinarily much go in for talking-insect stories, but thought
f you might be able to me this one at the next board meet.. ~ifig. ·.
"
AM ASKED the lllUal approximale walghl ol the held
of a la5-pound man. Ah, the thlnas a fellow bu to · do to
satisfy I.he customer! All right, that bead wetpa lS
pound s.
J FASCINATING, the notatioru: 10me doctors write on
death certificates. 1be Missouri Board of Health rectr1Uy
turned up these: I. "Death Induced by blow on bead with
._ax. Contributory cause -another man's wife." 2. "Went
to bed feeling fine, but woie up feeling dead." 3. 0 Dled
suddenly. tJothing serious."
QUERY
Q: "I've heard Dean Martin got his nose reshaped
without any anesthetic whatlOever, right?"
A. The first time. When he got it bent. Tbe second
time he had anesthetic. When be got it fh:ed.
NO DOUBT you've. beeo through thal llltle piece ol
comic business wherein You and anebody else mett on
the sidewalk and both feint to tbe rlgh:t and to the Jett to
avoid bumping. What caWJes thU: is the locking of eyes.
Peculiarly, re.search reveals, if you don't Jook into the
oncom ing faces , it never happens.
THINGS that make me nervous: Dop in packl. Pret..
ty colored _capsules. 'llle "Laugh In~' innuendos. Accord·
ioned credit cards. Carloads of cut Ouistmu lreel, Hard
rock records. Homogenized potato chips. And funny llltlt
nolu• In englo.,, • , .... .' r--. •' .
Ac41rtss mail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0. Boz 1875, Ntw-
port Btach, Calif. 92660.
Futurists
Criticized
By Agnew
ALIO •.l•HIUUICI
RIPAIRl•C•ITOM
VPHOLITlltT
ANY CAR PAINTID
FREE ESTIMATES $ 39so A¥r $s9so
'
COITAMllA
·Hett.er Get
A Bicycle
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The Army's getting a dramatic pay increase. ·
At a minimum, the new starting salaries will be doubled,
And you still get free meals, free housing, free clothing,
-ffee medical and dental ca,re, fre~ ]ob-training and education,
and 30 days' paid vacation a\year .. For-all the details1 · ·
see your nearest Army Representat.i_ve hsted below:
.Today's Army wants to join you.
-At a much higher salary.
COSTA MESA
542West 19th Street
Costa Mesa, CA 92627
645-1163
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Your Money
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Th1S psraphrai;c nf the old
adage is cs1X'c1ally pcrtlncnt,
i<' "'t\_E'n it comes ·to J:ood
.. hcaltti. At the first Signs of
,. an fllncss or•'Ahen symptoms
., am recurring is the tlmc lo
-" rliet:lr With vour '(JJlym1an.
; I( yoU \va'1t. 'v.•hat might be
a simple Illness to cure,
l'ould dt>velop into some-
~ tl:ilng !\Crious.
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1--t-----48 OA!tY-PILOT -----T""'J4ay,-m>u IB.J971
DICK TIACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
... -..... -
Mun AND JEFF
FIGMENTS
PLAIN JANE
ACROSS 42 Actress
-Divis
l Hiding plact 43 Not c•ln;
6 Soll drinks about right or
11 Water frozen .,.,,
solld 45 Most d!prav!d
14 Direction sllJl 4& Intrigue 15 Short mu:im ~ MLISllm Judge
16 Anncy by Unlq~
conslant 50 A bltsslna
complain Ing 52 -measure
17 Exactly 5& Pronoun
opposite 57-!llln: lltl817l 19Unltt ll:act of the
20 Not different Ple!stoc;tn! 10 Fabric end 33 Port ico
21 Extravapit .,. that wi II not JS'Cfafts
SJ)eKh 60 S-sllaped WCWlll ravel 3ft \ll!<Jtlab!t
22 Swerves 61 A moment 11 Tht "I.'' of 38 Sourc:t of z• Groavr for 62 Call to •rms "JCCH dlslrtss
receiving 63 Sandplptr 12 City of Africa 39 Dlsp1r111•
coins fi4 Auctions 13 Discharge 41 lnstlgatts
26 Stmltroplcal bS Oblig1Hons 18 l rampltd 42 Co"'mand
bird 23 S®ner than 44 Mtmbfl'S of
27 Exh1U1ttd: DOWN 25 Allow Utt lnl!l&n
lnlonnal 2& Breathe tlCt
lCI Workmen's I Boundt1' rapldly In 45 Weathercock
scaffolds 2 Diva's short gasps 4& Utterer of
1 32 Electricity tflt(lllty 27 City of words
used to drive 3 Prt Pit• lor Tuscany •1 Not fir away
J. machlnt an tzalll 28 Unll\ual •8 Ci~fl'S
33 Glinted 4 Plaln coarse per~n : Slang 50 S!curity
: J4 Resllll'illll woolen cloth 29 Kind of 51 Havlrg been
bUI 5 l amb's pli'ent 11\tater-. fcrmerly
37 Obstl'\ltd 6 Jewe!tr's unit 2 wcrds 53 Melv111e
38 Novtd suddenly 7 Suprt mt 30 Auz lllary verb character
39 Uncovered' Norse deity 31 Ivan ----: 54 Ptlllt'f
40 l imetablt 8 Miiie: Prefix Producer of 55 Trees
abbrtvl1tlon ~ lUflt:!sh "Elephant SS l lrnt l)l!rlod f, 41 Stupid peoplt Country" ~9 Radian: Abtr .
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PEANUTS
-JUDGE PARKER
MISS PEACH
-
ly Tom K. Ryan
~z ~T. ru. LA'(
0,J=Rl"aP
By Al Smith
By Frank Boglnskl
It."!: --
l~A WANTS 1tl 9' A MUMIT? "It) UW
ALON! AMD APATCT FJIOlo\ MUIMNITY ?
PERKINS
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By Harold Le Doux
... ...
By Mel
Np, BUT LOTS 1 °" PICP'I.! All~~'
61CINN'f
PfNIN5U1.AS .,
By John Mllff
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ly Gus Arriola
By Ferd Johnson
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THE GIRLS
IHI
"I don't ... how he does It-why, I've got my hinds full
lust keeping up with whit's going on In my
1p1rtrnent building."
DENNIS THE MENACE
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l!l illl W""'"°'-·-m 0 Sbew h Loe• Yalda Thundoy
Evening ...
NOYEMlfR 11
i :OO G 111 Nftl Jtrry Ounph.r
()) Nlft Bill HuddJ
0 MIC Nin TOl!I Snyder e ,... .. Dolt't [It t1M1 Dahln D,.... itnt~ Schubtc.k ·
G @ WlW.,. tUI mn. ..........
ID, I Orta• ol Je111Dl1
!l)I n ls Wrek
Ill""""'"""' m Ntlciert 34 Ill'""''""' 8""""'"° 1:30 0 Sttwt Alltll Shft Gue5b are
SI~• Martin, fnilda Payne, Noel
Harrison 111d Bill By1d .
0 CARROLL BAKER IS * "HARLOW"! COLOR!
0 Movlt: (C) (90) "H1rloW" Part
I "(drama) '65 -Cantill Baker.
Mart in B1lsam, Red Buttons, Mich·
ttl Conno1s, An11l1 L1115bury, Peter
Lawhnd, Leslie Nl1fs1n.
([) CIS Ntn W11tu C1onkltt
@! NIC News John Chancellor
CD Andy Griffith Show
'CD 1111 Colby Show
Q)l llKk Jo11m1I
IJ Georce Peppard, Jean * Seberg, Richard Kiley
"PENDULUM"
CBS THURSDAY MOY.IE
1J ([)CIS Thunday MO'lil: (C)
(Zbr) "PMdulu•" (suspense) 169-
G'°'I' Pepp1rd, J11n Seber1.
0 ®l Erb JllMI CltlUlr u Michals
"Btrthl" (Ruqfedultd •t•ln)
O IIJ@ ll>"'-··1 s..:
Sild lhl BUiid M1,11-Mike LDlll·
strut "Wilnmess~ the sl1yin1 ol 1
w1iltw; alld sels out to find lht
1$$1llant. Guests 1r1 Lu H11court
Montaomerr as Rudy, John l.JJpton
1s Don Kilm, 1flll Sert Freed u Lt.
Ryder.
ED (@ ttoli,.ood T llAvisioll The•~
"Nelthbors" ArkildJ Leokum's study
of the n1ture of p1ejudicl ctnleri
tflHlnd the encounlu bet'llleen 1
white coupl1 (Andrew Du,11n..
Jane Wyatt) in 1n alfluent nel1hbof-
lldod and the bltek to11pte {Raymond
St Jacqua. Cicely Tyson) to whom
thty a1e 3eUln1 their house.
mu c111
OJ fll111: "A Place in the Sun"
'1:) ROSIS Plfl Yeron\c:1
9:30 (:J later Ward News fI!I PllJ!a1 the Cultlr m 1e11 th• Odd•
9Cretn Acres
10:00 0 ®J m Dttn N 111111 SllO.
m ¥hlln• Hertiruer• muc News
7:001J LIS Ntws Watter Cron kill
(})A~ Ntn Smith, RtHORel
om J1t1C,..., Joh11 cti111t111ot
CIJ Trultl " C.nsequences IIJ Dn ....
G Wlllf• Mr Uni?
@) Ttlll Joflts Sllow m I L111 luc:y
ID I Dn1111 ti Je1nni1
Oll ~kin· f111l1
fm fR1tory of Mulce
al 1..1 lntrusa
9 fllrn: "Ahlfldtn $hip"
m Mintrap
7:30 fJ m lto\Un' en lh1 River Bob
Crane iuesls.
Guests tft »ey Bishop ind Joanne
Pflu1.
O CIJ(!)G)OWen M1 r1h1ll.
CQuwvlor It Law ''The Baby Srtlef"
OWen Marlhatl ind Jus Brandon
defend Howie Bowm, • te1n11er
chllJtd with tilt mufcltf of the
woman who emploJed him •s 1
hibysltttr, Howie, protestin1 inno·
cenct, YOlunteu:s to take 1 lit de·
tl!cior test, which 111 llunks.
0 Morie: "'Kins Rlf' (drama) '65
Geor1e Se1tl, lllfll COllrtenar. m News Puln•m. Fishm1n e I SJ!C1l1 ! The Mrn Up,stalrs
Green Bay Pack11s wide 1rctlvtr
Carroll Dale likes 1 timely plunre
into lht W1lrld of p10 football.
-ID lHl World '11u
€El Viejo Sinwr1111n11
CS focitball :.itcer lntematlonll 0 Lwlt "DIJ' ol Di!uler" lassie
ind Ron Holden are up1rated bJ the
fury of 1 dmst1tln1 e11thqu1kt. 10:30 ID News Bill .lohn5
CJ) Te Tell the Tndh (DE Retralt di Dori111 Cray
(I) I Dn,. of J1111nlt 10:45 fJ1J @E Dnkl Uttl1)ohn/Crilic tt
O Mllllofl $ Mtvit: (t J (2111) "Th Lira• "Gertrud• Stein M10n1 tht
Dtstrvctors" (dram1) '67-Rithard Mish~
£11n, P1tricl1 Owens, .lohn Ericson. m Ktipn's Httot.1 ll:IXI 8 @ eE News
C9 Cll .._1 I O llOl !l)Nm
O Nrws Morris, M(Ccrmlck
@ Mmhal Dillo1
o @mN..,
ED NtwHtttrs
t!l lspecUtutos
al Movie C11111 m Tt Ttll Ult Truth
1:00 ID ()) l11rub! l<een1n W'r~n m Mutn.p
pl1ys 1 WNllhy l1ndowner who is
l!l1111lJ semn1 copper to Gumill)' Q1l f• 17 ind Prtp•nt
19 support of Its wu effort. fE W1shin rto11 Wuk ill Rtvirw
0 [9J fD nip Wilsan Tim Conwry, 11:15 €E) Cran tint dtl Juetts
The C11r1 Wirt! Singe1s and Andy
Grlffrth 1uest. 11:30 6 00 Mer1 G1illin Hu ah Downs
O Movie: (C) (3ht) ''Cuys ind ind H1I Ada~s 1uesl.
Do!l1" (musical} ·55 -Marton 0 @) €D Johnny Clrso11
!fando, J11n Simmons, Fri nk Sina· U Collegiate footb1M Previe• Th!s
lr1, Yivlan 8l1ine. week's NCM football action will M
0 (I} CIJ fB AU11 Smltlt 1rtd analyzed. Bill Frink is host.
Jone• Silly netd deb~ In the re· O . (})@ CQ. Die~ C.Vdt
currin1 rnle of Clementine Hile, thr m Movit: "The 111 Hett" (drama)
dlst1ff eq2iv1ltnl ol I lovtible '53--61enn Ford, Clorl1 Gr1h1mt.
torur. In Dreadful Sony, Clemen· n1o M .. "''·h N ~ d ""•" Btulrse Clementine is the ..u cmt. N nllf' o.,...., ( ,,_
only. penon In the world poue:uini m.ll '65---:'-1do Rty, William Bendix,
1 pitturt of H11es ind curry. she 1s l'lierl P•lnck.
1 m1]0f thred to their hopes fol J1:45 Q) FDf Adults Only
amnesty. G11tsl1 Include Don Ameche
1s Soapy Sinden, Rudr Vallee as 12:00 0 Movlt: (C) "stredl ti llrtdo"
Winlonl fletcllu, Keenan Wynn tt (wrsltm} '49--Williim Molden, Mlt·
Wln21te, t nd Jackie Cooaan ·~ dona!d ca,,,_
C11wtord. m Truth Ot Con91QUlllU!
ID l atin1 F10111 lhe Olympic
Q]l Tllirty Minutes Witlt ••• m Currell! Ewtnb m Sonrtsas
Ci)Nlno
12:30 0 Movit: (C) "Arabella" (comedy) 1 '69--Vim• Lisi, James Fm, Ttrry
lhnmas.
l:IXI 8 Movi1: "leh1ve Yountll" (com·
ery) '51 -Farley Gran2er.
{]) 0 0 Cl) @J New1
1 1:30 m Atl-Nilfr! Sho-.r. "Blood en !flt
1:30 m D1vld frost Show Angela l1n~-1 ·Sun," "st&tt Door'' and "The Snaw
bury auests. Culture"
Friday " 11:00 0 "four ltr Te11s" fd11m1) '£3-
• Frank Sin1tr1, Dean Mtrtln.
DMIME MOVIES I
m "II ShouW HappeR It You•
(comedr) '5'-Judy Holllday, l1tk
Lemmon.
t:00 tD (C) "hllllora 11111 IM flfilll 2:00 m "Mlinslrtet It 8r111dw1Y" Con-
Dutdtlltl'I" (dr1m1) '52--A•I G.irtl-• cluslon (rom11K1) '53 -Tallulah
ner, J.amu Mtw1 Btnklllld, Hehn Hayu.
l :lOO "Sh1111ll1I" (dram•) '35 -S:OO (l)"TlM Ctilldren's Hour" (dram•)
Ch1rtu Bll)'lf. loml• Youns. (C) '62--AuclrtJ Hepburn, Shirley MIC·
"NOflhwut Tnll" (1'tsl1m) '41i -l.J1ne.
John Ute!, Bob St"lt. ®I (C) "foxfirt" (drama) 'SS-Jelt
fJ "Mr F•vtrit• Sn" (come,.) '51 Chandler, .liflt R11ssen.
-Bob Hope, Hedy l1m1rr. 1 4:00 8 (C) "tt Stlrt.d 111 N1plll" (com-
. lD:oa CJ) "24 HHn 11 1111" (dr1m1) '65 ed)') '60--Cluk Glbl•. Sapll\a t.artn.
-Mickey Rooney, Ln: l•r~et. I 4:3D {])SllBI as 10 ~ Rst1111
GOOD SEATS AVAILABLE
FRIDAY & SA·TUR11AT. 11 pm
tommy
n. llock 0 ,. ii Tiie Wh•
In 11.,...._ry with TOMMY
Tllornton Wilder's
OUR TOWN
. ·; Jbuth Coast Re ertor
FOR ADVERTISING IN THE •
WEEKENDER
PHONE 642-4321
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'Mother Co11rage'
U CI Jlevival Timely
.4
BY GEORGE LElDAL The ever-p'"r...,,..nt lnrNIY wag-°' Mil D111Y ,tlol ll•lt '"MOTM•tt COUltAOe" _.,__ lf>J t"' , "'.,,.., b't ••no11 •r1tch1. 1r111111rtc1 by on which. M"oU'Jer Courage at It mak· es •anse to do Br-ht "-T1tior1. rrw11c IW P1111 0t1w111 • ~ ..... dlrecttd bv 1-11rixt1 .1.1~h11, HI• .. nc1 one P,Olnt ~eeps tn exchJnge
on a university campus. t~'11c~ R~!:'-!:f,''=~/~h'1be for the Hre of Swiss Cheese, is
"Mother Courage," Brecht's ~~ <J:r:,IJ:~ • .:'N"::'.'1. ~~:•::! so much a part of her life \hat
humanistic exploltatioh o f ~~ •• ~ S.:ki"'O:,. "r"' "'"' v111.,. It assumes a stage personality
war, particularly make~ sense TM• cAsT or its own. Richard Triplett
. II UC I I Sch I I F" MOi"-• c-'" " .. · •·· Loll• Ltllf• d h ed·t f th 1n s rv ne oo o 1ne K1nt111 •••••••••••. lwMOtl!t. 8,,~•dl eserves muc er 1 or e
Arts setting in the Fine Arts f~ru·c~·'.·:·· ...... :"" 'Jl'..."'c1!rr set and costume designs which Village Theater Tiie coot ·1······" ·· ·1-1~f Ktck..-always add , ne>er detract, • The C!Mlllt" .. . . • . Ot~kl Vblcent
Thirty years aller it ~t• "''" Msr from !he movement of the
first produced, · ' M o t play· Courage" is a timely p . a. Cameron llarvey's lighting
The work Is h nt · Is superb, an excellent ex-a uman PfO Jim Carr Is a delightfully ample ol crca11·ve use ol ade-and loss st.pJ.emcnl of 'A'ar. an . . . . accounting or the profits or an oa01ke Swiss Cheese, 1n spite quate lhealrtcal tools. .
itinerant peddler woman who or momentary lapses from the The fal tering musical ac-
ekcs a living from an endless ideal voice projection evident comparliment opening night
war. The price she pays is the thro~bout the entire pto-might be ascribed to a pear . loss of her three children: ' ducU n location for the musicians,
'"my bright Eilif. my stupid ,' . . backstage right. It would be
h11t honest SY.'is.s Cheese, my T surprisingly strong hoped conductor Peter
ugly. dumb Kattrin." stage voices are typified in the Odegard might request a bet-
"IN GOO'S HANDS NOW" -David Vin cent as the
chaplain in Brecht's "Mother Courage" comforts
Lolte Lenya ,~·ho rejoins. "That hopeless it aint'."
. Lotte Lenya is An})n Fier-performance offered by Eric ler location -perhaps ceD-
hn g. kno\vi1 to roustabout Johnson as the geftcral and tered behind the cyclorama --..
soldiers rrom Sweden t 0 H · K. k from which to hear more ac·
Po land to Bavaria as "htother enry ir er as lhe cook. curately the solo voices.
Courage." Donna Fuller as Yvette the ----'---------1
Bea~lt on Film
Her partlcipalion enhances armed camp prostit ute yields
th,. UCI production, adds another surprise - a beautiful
authori,ta~ive ~ouches _ of singing voice that after Mme
Brecht s 1ntent1ons and makes · · · . one wonder if anyo ne els~ opening phrase d1ff1 cull1es, en-
C'OU\d project so much "v1hore chanted.
with a heart of gold" warmth. David Vincent as
DespHe a slow Act One in turncoat ch.aplain who urges
which liohss-Lenya has trouble war when his nation is at war
Beach where Duell, brother of with lines. her over a 11 and peace when it is al peace
Usecl iii 'Route 66' Rernake
By RUDI NIEDZlELSKI
01 tto• O•OY l'ilcll 51111
Some of the excitement
found during the oil strike
days of yesteryear will soon
return to J1untington Beach -
but only on the TV tube.·
A drag race down Main
Street and a motorcycle jum·
ping over a careening dune
buggy in the Bluffs are.:i will
oo doubt hav~ some residents
wondering how v.·ild their
hon1elown really is.
Both are included in a
Screen Gein.s pilot starrin~
Pat \Va ynell!nd.Ge6ffr'ty'Dutll'
v.·hi ch is now being filmed in
Huntington Beach.
Assistant Director Richard
Learman described the film .
titled "Movin' On" as a
remak e of the poputar Route
66 series. Even the script
''Tiler, Stirling Silliphant . is
the same.
"\Vhat is different about this
film is that the boys will be
tra velins around the. country
in a van instead of a C.or.
vettr,1• Learman exnlainc:I .
"The van will be towing a
trailer wilh a stock car and
the van itself will carrv a
motorcycle. Both of f he
leading characters will be
going from town tv town earn-
in~ their li ving at rac ing."
The beginnin~ of the movie
lakes place in Huntington
I Hele! O•tr
"AMERICAN WILDER.NESS"
performance is outstanding is the ultimate as t h e
actor Peter Dyell, is lured into from the viewpoint of a hypocrite companion to the er-
racing by his ftiencls after theatergoer and the students rant Mother Courage.
having be~n freed from a Viet hn o 'd Cong prison camp, w obviously are enjoying the av1 Wol!os is the angry opportunity of working with a young soldier whom P.lothcr
ln the movie , Dueli will play theater great. Courage cou]lSels with the
the part o( the motOrcycle • G It is, after all , a student pro-' real Cop-out Song." As he
racer, and \Vayne, the son of du clion . ye t the performances grows into this role, it is to be
actor John \Vayne, the stock of the enlire company rise hoped he restrains only slight-
car driver. bo I the a ve the limitations expected Y ado lescent rage that Is
Monday afternoon's fllm ing or student actors. needed to set up the number.
in the B!ufrs area actually in-Herbert l\1achiz. no stranger The entire product i 0 n
vo!vcd both actors very little. to Brecht or h1iss Lenya, pleases the eye as perhaps few
The star was a stunt motorcy· directs this gem of a cast college productions have. The
cle rider from Hollywood. ably, overcoming experiential obvious technical advan tages
The script called for lhe limitations with near perfect of the Village Theater are us-
stuntman to leap over a cliff caspng. ed safely and both costumeil
and across a dune buggy buzz. Bill r..1iller is an exciting, and set3 are professionally ex-
ing along underneath. The handsome Eilif. He possesses ecuted. .
fir st attempt was failure and a rine baritone voice and sings 1-=:=:-:::-:::-c-:::--:::-----
the second near disaster. the difficult music of Paul
Improper timing caused the Dessau with warmth.
motorcycle to miss the buggy Bernadette B"ernardi pro-
enlirety on the first lry. but jects a tota lly credible Kattrin, TUSTIN SQUA"a
during the retake the bike the achingly frustrated , ever a ,._,..,. ........ s-. ..... ,_,
\venl too far and right into the' _v~;~,g~i~n~. _im~u~t~e-~d•~·~·s~h~te~r~~o~f II ir-::::::7•~··:-~··:•§·~~;;;~ lenses of the cameramen. 1 NfW LOW P•IC!SI Relatively unperturbed by ~COllllD lClflC COAIT 111GHWn 1. sTM I\ S the \Vho\e incident, t h e -P: 1 ·°' 51111
• tlit• ff!. S 1.00 Sultdll'f 1 :JO to 7:00 P'.M.
lrn~men kept their c?.mera 's J. Mo•. ~r11 ~I 6:l0·7:00,,.
\vhirring a~ the rider un-' · · allllli~!ll~-~:=:'::'-:::'::~~....!
tangled him self rmm his Steve McQueen HELO OVER!
mounl and scrambled to a 1 "RYAN 'S DAUGHTER"
nearby dirt bank, dragging a in Bruce Brown's ''"'
bru;sed leg. "ON ANY s·uNOAY" "THE LAWMAN" All that was left for the !!l;:rr with l•rt L011c1t1ter
to accomplish is to place 5pecl .. Kldl Motl-
himse!f under the f a 11 en Soturdoy 1 P.M.
n1achlnc. pick it up, a11d n1otor
away in a cloud or dust. BALBOA
673-4048
. . a;.~ .• f
A TRUE-LIFE
ADVENTURE
OVER
HELD • so. COAST l Cosa::~SI 546-2'11 l
WAlJDISN£Y • CIN£DOll[ 10 l)aoJO 531-3328
•
•llt0~'1 ·4"1'1• , .... 1• MT,,•111'1•t-H••:M·J lt•l.lt ....... , ....... , ••• u
NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES
-·""' ·-· -·-1~·1011
Al Y .fl\2T l! __ 0
~TH GHAT WllKI
C.,O.NOIC[ IERGCN-l'f!~R BOYl!
TR.BASK.IN
M ovnt .. IOKM,A1TWTIO•
f\.INHY i-.clW l0V£~ STAllT Ai.,
"friends"
rR T€CHNICOt.OR' ·
A stryy of ™1.
Filrred by David Lean Ryans ~
Daughter -~' r:a!ERT t.f1DO,I .. ""'... ' """"'"""""' _,.,..oe; ..,.......,
l£0-
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li€'1'IOCO.CIR" Sl'B'I ~j
PLUS-JAMESGAPN£11:
IN "MAllOW" (GP>
"RYANS OAUGHT£R'" & "HARt.OWE"
ALSO PLAYING AT
EOWAllOS CINEMA VIUO
MISSION VIEJO -830-6ml
I CINEMA WEST #2 I
G1D11• SIDI PllUla Prlll'lli1s
"llORH TO WI(' (R)
PllS 2#D fUTIJIE
• • • ._ .. ·~· • AT l~LI• • • ... ,._.,_.. ·--··-· .. ,.M09 ............. , ..... ...
Jome• Gorner • lov Go»etl
Skin(GP)
Game
PLUS Michael York & ze'•SommelinG!
~ow.a .. oa
HARBORt.:::al
"·~-'4.'11 u .,'"'°" n COl!o •II& t•t n11
1 • -°"" HELD OV!R-3RD W!!K Von1uo R1dg•o~e •Oliver Reed
" KEN RUSSELL'S FILM
THE DEVILS
,_
Yl6mrr llfw.A Ki..,.,. ln.u~ ~Q
(X
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PETER O'TOOLE
KATHARINE HEPBURN
~
lHE LION IN WINltR i-'n:·-'"'·--· · o~
PlUS· IOA AD.AW D M
CllAl\ll UR.TON
GENEVIEVE BUJOLD
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Are You Letting Cash
Slil>Through Your .. Fingers
See If You Have Any
Of These Things A
DAILY PILOT
WANT-AD
Will . Sell Fast!
DIAL DIRICI
·--
.. 642-5678 .
•
•
' .
CLA •
I _..... -.... I~ I -.... l~I _.... I~
.• ;;.; ... ~ .. ~~~~~:\a::r:.;:;;:;.•~1-1 --------~li_o...... ____ ._i ______ ~ __ G_•_no_•_•_l __________ •I
HIRl'S A WINNl!R
In t.M!mehle • BQ1bon1.
I with pdftte beach. Sp&~
4 BR.. 11unfty -rm, • 8fD. dlnlnc rm. Cuaal I: comfy.
Llvilll ..... -lDvwnc
irpl. Secluded -... ..,_ ... __
U.idt. J'rlced., It'll, $5f,'100. . HOPE GERRIE RL TY. OCEAN VIEW
_ 83S Dover Dr., N.B. Stone'• throw' to beach • de--
645-MOO 1 • IWS.3320 luxe dupi.er; 4 bdrms.,' 3%
$151 .50 PER MONTH i,a•a .. 3 bdtma., 2\0 bo's.
Total pt.ym't. including pr. Both units have family rm.
denir. 6li %, 'tiJ pald. Im· & bi>lc. Amdng 1131.900.
mic. 2 BR. condo. 11' Ba. 675°3000
l·st)', Oleerful kitch. Patio.
. Dl\I. ....... ""·""'· BA\·~ BEACU
* * * * * TAYLOR CO.
LINDA ISlE -·$14$,000
Charming and beautiful! Best waterfront
buy I 5 BR. lam. rm. & formal dining. All
electric kitchen, wet bar in FR. Italian tile
entry. Fireplace in Mstr. BR. Pier &: slip.
''Our 26th Y ••r''
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CC)., Realtan
. 2111 S•ft Joaquin Hills Road -NEWPORT CENTER 644-4fl0 ---GEMMi---·-·~0w~·~"°'~·~t~.H~wy~.,~N~.B~·~u~~~~~~1t~~1.c;n1;· ;;;'";1v;;;;;~;;;;f(:;;;Genera1 ~'!ORS · <n-<623 Hr Harbor High Mose Verde Golf Cout s-.---F-e-nt-.-,t-ic ....... Vi;;;'"'
llAYFRONT APTS. r. ttrls .,.ce11ent ....n design-PREmGE LOCATION
HEALTY
Vista Del Udo. Pier Ii: allp ed 3 bedroom, family room avaDable. From S.U.500. Sell home, tor ttie growing This extra clean fiorne is located on one of ·~-WI.Ill • family. ·2 t tr e p I aces. a kind lot featuring a fantastic panoramic ·
--.-1mson Break:Wt bar. All electric view that just won't quit. Super neat yard
REAL TOR bltin kitchen. Spacious sun-designed for low maintenance surrounds. th•
541-6570 '4S.1564 ny living l'90m. w/w cpts & model fqr gracious living. 5 plush bedrooms. * * * * · * drapes. 2 bath! on clx>ice formal dining, sunken family room, huge liv·
Fixer upper 3 BR, 2 BA, '100
total down, cheaper than
rent at $205 per mo.
quiet stree-t, only $34, 750. ing room with high open beam ceilings over-
Hurry. Call 673-8550. looks golI course and miles and miles of
Roberts Real Estate
962-5511
10 THEREAL
'"\.. ESTATERS
sparkling lights. Truly a majestic home.
Priced at a JZiveaway $79,500. -It will not
last long. Call for appointment 545-8424.
·(Open Eves.) WANT to buy 4 BR lx>me.
Any condition or behind
11ym:nts. Priv. p a r t y • Macnab-Irvine SOUTHc COAST REAL ESTATE -· Realty Company BAYFRONT [ l New listing. DelighUul gar. a...i~·-1NDEX den atmosphei-e. 5 Jarge Advstiling BR's, convertible den, spac-
.:=.=====~=:'..I ious FR. Gas BBQ. Seper-
I ~· llil
( ..... ,.w. Iii!) :m~:=~i
. . vate pier &: float. A Jot of
C.ssification 100-149 bayfront h:>me for $155,<XXJ •
Call 64u235.
Macnab -Irvine
Cla11ification 150· I 84 642-8235 ~200
Gener ii
l!A YSl"!ORES VIEW & POOL
Waterfront custom home, 4 bedroom & den
or 5 bedrooms, 51h baths. Top quality car-
peting, draperies, wallpaper & fixtures.
View from mcist rooms. 87' lot, spacious yard
with beautiful gardens. $280,000.
341
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
Islanders Bldg. at Linda Isl• BAYSIDE DR., SUITE I, N.B. 675·6161
I -II •)I ~R=EA~DY ·MA=D=E=:=:J;Ge;:"n:':•""••:;"I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!T,G:;:o':'no::r•':';l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~j
Oouific•tion 200.260 RANCHO ONLY $25,450
I ---II fl! J °''' horn, • ':'""'""' .new. Best Value Around • . Lots of sWlShlne and fresh . air 35 Acres $35 000 Ran Shows like model 4 bdrm Cl.11ific•+ion 300-355 c~ Calif. ~a. ' · -OOme • Beautiful Landscape
I I~ PET . New root -LMg, comer , ...... · ,__ • E BARRETT lot, room'" boa~ traHe., . . REALTY j pool. Block wall Ie..,.. Only Cla11ific•tion 360-370 · 10% down. 646-TI71
1605 WESTCLIFF 1--11~1 NEWPO~~· HACH t
Cl .,. •. '00 '65 642•5200 ..
\o ·THE REAL
·'.". F:STATERS ' ' ••11 ica ion , ...,. ~ 10 UNITS
r •.. =i-·ts 11 iji41 -~-=a~~es:·3~~
0•11ification 500-510 G.I. NO DOWN =· ~ S:::te 2-~;
I lit.I Monthly payments approx. with lots of spe.ceo Shows ~ $289 and closing costs ap· a fantastic retum with in-
. . prox:. $950 !or a sharp 4 come of $1,400 per mo. Sub-
-Cla11ificaHon 525-535 !bedroom '?nlY 3'Ai years mil on down or trade to -
I ....,...,,_ .. lrm :.,:;'..'.W.. ~.~'.Walker & Lee .._,.,..._,.-.,--,,,:"Lil ~ .6754930. Open Ewrl-Realtors
Cla11ification 550.555 lng!I 'til 9 P.M. 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Ada.ms f'iml ~&CO.I 545-0465 Open 'tit 9 PM I lnltructlon lt.!!J .... r'f~LT~,..,,. -THRIITY PEOPLE?
Cl ·1· t· 575 580 Make Your DrHm Th;, ;, ""'"""'""' •• put a111 1ca ion • your rent money to work.
I !Gel Come True Not too much house but Its "'*--~~Why not build what you real-warm, clean and cheerful.
. • . · Jy want? Lovely location in The right buyer will see the
Cla111f1cat1on 600-699 UPper Bay area with New· possibilities of a second unit
I II I 1 J port Beach address.· Second and an income. Plant a Err...,11•1t f .story could have view. 90'x .garden there now .
_ . 125'. Only $21,500 -with Unbelievable at
Cla11ification 700-710 term!. Call NO\V for de-$n,CKXt
[§1 tails. 673-8550. CAPISTRANO VALLEY
Mod•.... I ~ REALTY L,:,,--,-:.,.-,,,...--::::· 31501 Camino Capislrano
Cla11ification 800~816 493--1124
I ;... ... _ IJ)() . POOLll OFF A HO~i:'~~HOUT
SEASON ST.EAL! I u like a day without sun-
Classification 850.858 A real bargain, 16 x 40 ft. '8hlne. This cozy 3 bdrm., 2
I I~ pool, .easy care decking., 4 bath, ne\\'ly carpeted COR-==-• 1f oversiJed bedrooffil. family ONA DEL MAR home is lo-.... 1'.-room, bride's kitchen, cus-cated on a flowering Eucal·
1 C1111ification 900·912 tom drapesJ &:-. carpets. yptus tree lined street. Pa·
..----· --~ $30,000 and dU tenns. tio _ garage on paved al-
l ~ "'°" 1r-i Walker & ·Lee ,,,. Located~, gramm" , ~ . ~ scbOo1 111t.oppu1g and C.D.M.
Cla11ification 915.949 -Realt0111 ~h'. ONLY $39,950.
8-42-4455 1· -~-ll~l llon~.u!~L~ !~hC:~ ... 'Grange Vista
Clossilie1t.on-9 so.990 ,.-, bedroom 2 ooth PROPERTIES
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
adu1t occupied home. ll's Formerly LaBorde R.E.
spotless. Just steps from a 220 E . 17th St., C .M.
beautilu! park + pool. Only CALL · 646°0555 ·$35,900. Do it now, no obll·
gatkm for mott information. --=E.:;""~"'::;·..,.~;;;"".,·,14_38 __
C.U 516-2313. WANTED
o THEREAL
"\.. ESTATERS
Haw cuh buyer for Corona
del Mar triplex or 4-plex.
CALL 61'j-77'25 p•,• THROUt?H A 1 ~N~ewe='c-; Tha==n~N""ew=1 -
Drive by sk:rN!.y 16th Place &
DAILY PILOT ;"~~~403
.. ~":..:"c~: den. 3 car garage -boat
"1 . R
WANT AD
642-5678
door tn back. Plus 3 Br &
fam room. Charming A Sun-Home & lnve1tment ny 2 story home. Priced rieht • RHlly TRI HARBQR 3>35 E. Colot Hwy .. CdM
REAL TORS BIGGIE IN
.,. E. imt, c .M. MESA VERDE NJTE OR. DAY 646-3255
Looking for a Tax "FHA-VA · TERMS"
COUNTRY . ATMOSPHERE'
APPROXIMATELY V3
ACRE at end o! quiet cul-
de.ac St. Popular MESA
VERDE T-PLAN with l .>rge
living rOOm, master bdrm.
and bath off to ttself away
from chii<lren5-2 rear bdrmx.
Large family eating area,
huge table height breakfast
bar wiht 5 chairs, B/1 clec.
kitchen over looking patio.
Dbl. garage, ~r childrens
awn fenced 1n play yard .
PRICED RIGHT $27,950 -
shown by appointment only.
t5range V1Sta
PROPERTIES·
Formerly LaBordt R.E.
220 E. 17th St., C.M.
CALL 646-0555
Evenings Cell 646-8406
SUPER HOUSE
Real family life is no happy
accident ii it is planned for
and built for -Every con-
sideration was given when
this home was built. This 4
BR. 2 BA with 15 x 22 Bonus
Roon1, 3 fireplaces lots of
decking on tree-lilied cul-
de!-68C street and in Mesa
Verde. Only $37,500. Call
546-2313.
10 THEREAL
\"\._ ESTATERS
-....._ 'I ' , • f't,'
WALK TO THE BEACH
Beautiful Spanish hacienda
only 2 yean old. % mile
from the beach. Large pa-
tio area plus room for pool.
Creatively decorated. 1his
sharp home has ballt-in
kitchen, bi&: Spanish fire-
place, and oVersized double
garage. Only ~.500 and on
'land YOU own. Won't last· -
call
Walker & Lee
Realtors
2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
545-9491 Open 'I.ii 9 Pi\f
9UAUTY BUILT
Ea.st side 2 ·bedroom • !'l!ep
OOwn family room with fire-
place ~ coon1ry kitchen · -
2% car garage · ith alley
entrance. ·Great location -
Only $25,950. Call for de-
tails.
5-10-1151 (Open Eves.>
I~!
OWNER m\lBt well. 4
bedrooms wilh 2 baths,
WnUy room with Inviting
Jr. estate eroundl. Work
bench, extra 11 t Ota g
shtlw1. No down G.r .• Low
down FHA or assume 5" ',\
loan! Brk. SZS.650. Ph.
54()-1720.
Writaoff? Owner desperate, moving * OOVER SllORES *
1Xlfth. Ml.ttt &cll tarp 4 ELEGANT thn.IOUL Nothina
Dandy duplex, 2 bedrooms bedroom home. rmmaculate comparable in thii 2 A de
l
ea-ch, corner location, ex· In ·-Be ut'fUJ c·~ "· e ...... ,, way. a 1 .. -beaut~ ·home. $79,500. No
cellent floor plans with fire. pelJI and drapes, URGENT· LEASEHOLD. 1 t ' 1 ex.
place In e a c h. Tttms 1'fUST SELL (open even-qUilile. Open hse. daily _
$46,950.00. 67S-8551), lng1). $38,500. Call ~2313. Bryant Wle11t Rltr. 675-Z72.1•
646-5538 early Ai.'\ol or EVE.' 'O Trn: REAL
'"\.. ESTATER.S
\
'R_THEREAL \ ESTATE~ ' ·v
Sc!ll the old atuU
Buy tM new 1tuU
>
Everyone Hes
Something That
Someone Else Wants
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS . .
You Can Sell It,
Find It, Trade It
With a Want Ad .
·rhe Bigge5t Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast-"Dial 642·5678 for Fast Results· .
1 • ' t
•
_,,, ....
Just reduced $12l0. Nearly
new 4 ~m. 2 bath noin e
in a lowly a~a. · <!lose "to'
sc:hoolt, South ~t PIJlZJ!l ..
and a 1hort drive tp Irvine
Industrial Complfi)ll. \Vill·seU
or tra~ for $37,500.
A BEEG ONE
One of the la.rgett hornet in
Co!ta ~feaa and 11ke new,
5 ~room_s, 3 baths, huge
family room, Split lev@t ele·
ranee ln an excellent a rea,
GJ. RESALE
A mus! aee • 3 bedroom 2
bath & family room cl~se
to everything. Immaculate
thruout Good VA Lcian thru·
out.
DO YOU EARN
$820 A MONTH?
IF SO
SEE TODAY
4Bed-2Bath
No down to veterans. Bl!auti-
fuJ well cared for home.
Professionally land&caped.
Huge bedrooms. Include11
carpets & drapes. Electric
garage door opener. O\vne rs
ne~ fast sale at only S~.9.SO.
Hurry, Dial
645-0300
IORISI [ OL \ON
"' N£1fJ. TOPS
CORONA DEL MAR
Room for anottk!r unit on
this IPvrl R-2 lot So. or
Hwy. with a lovely 3 Bed·
room 1\1: bath in fronl. Ov.'11-
er will ('11rry 2n<l TD.
OWNER MOVED
Ill'/, DOWN $42,500
Large 4 bedroom, 3 bath
home l';Urrounded by beauti-
ful homes. Near bay plus
large. back ya rd with heat-
~ pool. O.\V.C. 2n<l 'rp.
Lachenmyer
Re.>ltor
1860 Newport Blvd. C.M.
Call 641)..3928 Eves. 646-4067
YOUR BOAT & YOU
With i1 Pier & Float tool
;:RIGHT ON the channel. 2 bedrooms. 2 baths,
built·in kitchen, FIREPLACE, carpelfiig &
drapes, FLOAT IN at .. .. . . ....... $72,000.
LIVE IN THE LAP OF LUXURY
In ''Posh" Irvine
ATRIUM TYPE EN'l!RY, Charming opened,
spacious living room with firepface & VIEW.
3 large bedrooms, 2 baths. carpets ~ drapes
and all the built·ins. ONLY 2 years old.
$59,500. .
"BEAUTY AND THE BESr'
On Linda 1111
OEN with wet bar, formal dining room, 5
bedrooms. 4'h baths, 3 FIREPLACES. 2
PATIOS with built-in gas grill Custom
drapes & fine quality carpeting PLUS a 50
ft. dock. Best buy al .............. $I67,000.
HERE IS A REAL FIND
NHd It?
LARGE FAM ILY. 2 story, 4 bedrooms. 2'h
baths. kitchen built-ins, BRICK FIRE·
PLACE, carpets & drapes & only 1 block
to the OCEAN ..................... $36,400.
WORDS CANNOT DESCRIBE
Th is Beauty
PANORAMIC VIEW OF NEWPORT HAR·
BOR. 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, SPANISH fire-
place, kitchen with built-ins, CUSTOM dec-
orated carpets & drapes. BUILT-IN WINE
CELLAR & WET BAR. Entertain under the
stars. BEAUTIFUL PATIO'. AUTO TIME
LIGHT~ For the discriminating buyer.
$I25,000.
l'f 114tu1-Slllld
~!Mo.._,
REALTORS
644-7270
2 28 EAST COAST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR. CALIF.
NEWPORT BEACH Ueneral
G.I. NO DOWN I;;;;;;::;=;;;::;;;;::;== --..._ General
Beautiful 2-~lory home with I 1 ,;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:
thick sha.;: carpeting, elec-PENDING
"" ""'"·'" kitch'". ""' FORE.CLOSURE famtly room. and ntREE
CAR GARAGE. The k id 5 Owner wlll not refu5e a.ny
can ~'aik 10 the beach. Sell-reasonable offer on this
er has agreed to pay points PRIME MESA
so you can ul!e your GI hen· VERDE
ehts with NO do\\'n pay-home. 3 large bedrooms. 2
ment. Better check this out baths. alt built-ins and 1700
today? Call sq. tt. or luxurious living
W I k & L area. 2 huge fireplaces, a er ee 1.,... m..gu1., lot. .. ..,.,.
1ervice porch and country
11.1:e kitchen. Asking S33.500. Realtors
27ll0 Harbor Blvd. 111 Adams
545-0465 Open "hl 9 PM
$39 ,950
5 BEDROOMS
Paradise! 3 baths, f.amily
room with inspirinr; fire-
place. banquet dining room,
built-in (OUnnPt kitchen,
dish~'asher. Patto. Outside
double BBQ • cost $200:
Separate workshop att11.chtod
to ~ar or guAge. Immedi-
ate po5RSSion? 10% down.
540-tno . TARBELL
H.UGE CORNER
Room for.thllt boat A: camp-
er PLUS! Ru5tic ranch style
4. bedroom plus family roo m,
2 patios &. separate yard
with playhOu~. \Valk to
park&. schools. $33.750. \\11h
a1111umable FHA loan. Don't
he1)tate, call
540-1151 !Open Eves.)
ProYlnclal Ch•rm
or Submit . Submit. $ubmit.
Call 545-8424 (Open Eves.)
\outh ,, (-oas t
--
LUSK
HARBOR VIEW
Lovely one ~ story 4 BR.
Sandpiper model. 3 Ba.,
great fam. rm .. gated entry,
pl.ctures!Jlle a-ardens. Ideal
family bome. A real oppor-
tunity at $73.500. Yee,
~
Coldwell,Banker
~
13::UOO-644-2430 •
$27,750
6o/o LOAN AT
$171 A MONTH
including taxes. insurance,
principle i: interest! 4 spac-
io1\5 bedrooms, 2 baths, ttm-
tly room. buill·in dN!am
kltc~n. Delighl!uJ covered
patio. Water 90ftener, ~111py
extn1.1. Near a.ll~C\)n~nienc·
es ~ M0-1720
TARBELL
Newport Heights
Older 3 Bdrm home in ''BET-
TER THAN NE\V" condition
, . ,new pl umbing, electri-
cal, k1tch &. beth remodel·
ed, new carpeting, draper·
1es &: light fixtures. Vacant
&. ready to &ee anytime.
Drive by 539 San Berna.r·
dino roff 15th St.)
Newport
at
F1irvlew
646-1111
(onytlme)
WITH VIEWI
N"' li1tina -1earce 5 BR.,
Smith built home. 1'e. liv·
lna rm., dlnlna rm .. ocean
& harbor view. Reallatically
Priced at sn.oco.
CORBIN~
MARTIN
REAL TORS 644-7662
$25,950
NO DOWN
low down FHA or . auume
a.pr 5'il'/o G.J. loan now on
property & you r monthly
payments will be like rent
Lovely home in "Mint .. con-
dition inaidll & out. 3 bed-
rooms. all electric bulit-in
kitchen. Carpetg, drapes Ir.
pretty lhuttel'I. Den, lal'ie
patio. Owner ltavin& area!
5'0·1120
TARBELL
2');)S Harbor, Costa Meu
2 Bdrm1.. 1 hAth. Steps to
OCf'An on· Peninsula Pt.
Huee frpl., open beam ~II.:
oomp. furnJsbed. Newly
de co rated & carpet~.
555.000. lmmed. ~ssion!
Call: 673-3663 642-2253 Eve1.
OCEANFRONT
:19;; H..-bor. Coli)& Mesa DUPLEX
associated
BROI< ERS-A EAL TORS
101 ~ w latboo 67J-J66J
* BACK BAY * Let )IOUr tenants make. your 3 BR. 2 BA. family rm, tltept, ~ta in thil prime Joca.
bltlnt:, bll(e walk-ill clole.u. tlOn. 3 Bedroom Duplex.
1800 ICI ft. New crptt/ds-ape1. Both unit& are tully rurni5b-
S30,000,. • ed end· In mini condition.
Roy McC1rdle Realtor Priced 11.t only $83,!T;>(I. Sub-
A YCREST. by owner, lga 3 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. mlt your offer. 540-~.).\'i
BR 211 BA. "'mpl ••<lee. 548-nit SHERWeeD REAL TY $b7,'ooo. Atay trade. 67~77St. ~~~~~~~~~~ J 18004 Broolchurst F.V.
HuntinJ! W1U.b the seJl the old atuff Buy the DAILY PILOT fOr action!
OPEN HOUi;.E calumn. dew atu.U Call 642--f.67& & Save !
--""
OWNER ANXIOUS
\VIII conai~r &U oflm,
2300+ sq ft home. 3 BR, 2
Ba. den. bonus fam rm I:
scmd patio,
CA LL SEE ANYffitE
ROY J. \\'ARD RLTRS. .....,,,
B•lboa Island
DUPLEX FOR SALE By
·o'A•ner. Steps to bay &
beach. l\1ake oiler. Ph alt 6
p.m. S.J0.2676.
__!llE W LISTING
Comfortable 2 bdrm. home,
1'~ baths, small E·Z care
lot. F .A. heat. Frplc., bean1-
ed ceil's. 1-Blk. to beach.
l\1ini -view of ocean. Ottered
for S44.9b0.
MORGAN REAL TY
673-6642 675-6459
TRl-PLEX 2 BR rach. 2
frplcs. elec. bltns, dish'A·hr,
heated pool, 2 blks from
beach. S7~.99.i, 675-0-178.
BY O\VNER: Corona
Highlands 2 Story, 4 Br, 2
!'>a. fam. r m. 1-fuge lot.
$62.500. Call 67a-2652.
Costa Mesa
TRY VA, FHA
OFFER
2241 Raleigh, Costa Mesa
Ne\\"ly painred 3 beclroom
\\'ith add~ fam ily room.
shag carpets on harcl"·ood
floors. Derached i;ara~c
with coverPd par10. Lar2e
101, l:>eaullful la'A'tl. Only
S28. 750. Choose your o w n
lend€'r,
"'lncsil\<rbc'.Rcaft~
546-5990
Small House!
Large Lot!
\\1ell-buil! o!der 2 Bedroom
hon1e \\'ith fireplace neerls
TLC. Detached dbl. garage
+ large hobby room. Large
fenced yd. v.·ith alley at
rear. Low dov.'11. Name your
own terms. Call 646·7171.
BRITE & CHEERY
New hs11ng near Newport
Hts. 4 BR., 2 ba. Kitchen
bltiru, F.A, heating. New
carpeting. Large fenced
yard: just 2 doors trom city
park, Only S.30.500.
CALL · G>, ''6·l,14 .~ Nrar N~"'porl Po•I Office
$19,950 IS THE PRICE
for this very lovely 3 bed·
room, 2 bath home?' The
loa.n is high enough that you
can assume With payments
of $160 per month. which in·
eludes all. Modern built-ins.
deep pile carpets. also
matching drapes. Double
garage to boot! Call -
Walker & Lee
Realtors _
2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
SU-0400 Open ·w 9 P~f
f OR Sale by o\\'ner. Idelll
family home. 3 BR. 2 BA.
P layroom, Family room k
d111'g area. Breakfast bar
w/blt.n.s , walled lrplc. com·
pletely fenced w I b Io ck
wall. Lots o! tttes, Nr Boy's
&. Girl's Club, park, library.
shopping center &. bus.
S31.000 firm. Pre5ent loan
may be increased. Owner
"'111 take 2nd T.O. 548--3681
SECLUDED
COTTAGE
REDUCED TO S2.1,930.
Huge lot secluded by ~Y
to"·ering trtta. Cul-de-sac
loation with counttY atmo&-
ph~re. 3 Big btdrooms plu1
screened in patlO. IncludlnJ;
relrig. & 'A'.lsher. 0'A1'1er
mu!t sell! Suhm1t your
terms. Call MS-5880. Heri·
tage Realtors (open e\lf!s.1
TODAY'S BARGAIN • WIL-
SON BLVD. A.uumt. 6°'~
Gt Loan. 2 br on laqe .R4
lot. Room for un111. to~
dO\\'n. S22.950. FOUR. MOD-
ERN UNITS • 2M7 :i.1endoza.
$62.500. Pa u 1 Westbrook
Realtor. 494·9788.
BY Ov.'nf:T $25.500. 3 lae BR.
2 BA, plasttr, H/\V noors,
SlOI\! for eqty. 645-1622.
I~
Huntington Btoch ~D~OL~L~H-.::o~u~sE=-li HunHngtcin Btadi _;:;....""--.-z----1Acrn .. for MIO CHILDREN WANTED!/,-......,.._._,...,. .... ......, ••
FHA.VA
Here is a 'A' inner. 2 bedrooms -
plus den for only $26;950!
Clean as a pin. Cozy &, com-
fortable 'A1lh loads of charm
&. har J'A'OOd noors roe. Large
yard nicely landacapPd.
P8.In ted uv.ide & out, All
terms.
BY owner 3 BR. 2 BA, 1
le\•cl. 1111 f'iec. kit. C.Orner
5 or lD Ltve-1 acrea. '1 Ra.re opportunity to purchase from Chico State. 'collep,
' ' Bd.~., 2 bath home., Walk· mobile home OK. Ideal
· t.Q2' diituc.. to achool, with horws trttt ioafi
,. Vlew. Low ddwn. =31,900. FlexttJe t«msor ~ 1 Laguna Nlgutl Reelty ·Bia · • l30-l050 499-1344 .
Lkfo Isla ~ ~acre• TAKE OVER. all part, mountain atH, treet,
BIG HOUSE. • • . "rollinc hill•. NO DOWN,
• •• SMALL PRICE -1""· """"'·
' BR, 3 ba., din, ·nn. &Nls SAN JUAN CAPISY'RANO
rm. Lee. krt. $61,500. -Y.r. 1 .i 2 acre Eat.ate Jota,
bowaRb I~ 'JR. Hones OK. Bro!<er. 4S3-4774.
-colcoa · Apartments for sele 152
3416 Via Lido 1 615-4562 EXCLUSIVE BAYFRO
4 BR. 3 Ba. 60x90 ...... ftT,500 APrS Vi1ta. Del Lido. All
4 BR. 3 baths, sthda: corner. util1. &: garqi!. Pier & Ill
J.ce. tot. pool •••••••• n25,000 avail. Sell or lNM!
LJDO RE'AL'tt~INC owner. 673-8.167. 3371 'Via' IJoo·
673--7JIXh. Commerclel -Propttrty
Joe. pool off patio, 2 patios, ,.,..~,-,.--:,-...,.---....,.,.-~--.:,--,...-'== /
\\'alk to store s & schls. Huntington Be•ch Huntington Beech
S.t!.~jj}. ,1st List mg. 644-5793. FOR Sale by owner f BR,' 3
BLUITS Conrlo. 3 & 2 Prime PRICE RE UC f\JU baths. all schoo!S close, ~
'""""'"· Ow"''· $46,500. D ED \I mi. 9/10 Mil• lrom Realtors --Call 644--0675. 4 BR or J BR & den. Meadow beach, all rooms large.
home priced below mkt. Open house this weekend.
$33,500. \V /\V crpts. drps, 2
2790 Harbor Blvd. at Ada.ms J --~~===---1 Fountain Valley
BUILDER CLOSEOUT! bltin R/O, dshwshr. sep 1761 Bushard, H.B. 962-8612
la undry rm, fa m rm. formal Irvine
545-9491 Open 'til 9 PM 7 HOUSES
1436 Mariners Drive on la.tie US'XID.1' 1qt.
By Owne.c,.spacious \Vestclift, 2 bedrooms&: two 1 b.,;,..,nl
4 BR, 2~ BA. frplc, charm· units. Oe&e to ahoppin&
Ing patio. Near shopping &: Never a vacancy. $875, mo
schools. Lovely family home income.
Last few homes available
at builder prices in
Foun!i!.in Valley's
CENTURY PARK
$29,495 to $38,9'5
VA . f"llA or lo1v down
iiv rm w/Palos Verdes stone
ftrepl. Lrg bedrms. encl pa·
110, block i.yaH, ldscpg, l' . 111.ige Real Estate
H2-4411 ( ::l:) 54W1Gl
ConvenOOnAl
Big yards '>'i th high maron-1 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!• I
ary v.·aJls included. Side R.E. SALES
yard parking. best schools.
park, 1vaJled community.
Bu~han:I bet"·een Garfield
8: Elhs.
l'M LOOKING FOR
PROFESSIONAL
SALESMEN
962·5559 * 96S.96DI BE YOUR O\VN BOSS
CALL ED KA~ABIAN
DIRTY GERTIE! 847.!l60l
Needs GT handyman with lots A REAL ESTATE CO.
of 'family and no money! FOR SALE by owner. 4 BR.
Ca.n be 5 bedrooms, 3 baths 2 8A Deane Bros. Home.
\..,Uh little ~·ork. 0 n 1 Y Corntr lot. cpts & drps
S29.S!)J. Long escrow O.K. thruout sunken Roman tub
Buy now. move 1n 1972~ Sprinkl;rs front &. rear:
Agt. 54&-5411. !\Just sell. All 0Uer1 con·
4 BR, 2 BA. lge lot. llaf!l'>lll! atdered. Prin. only. Call
patio. 'A'fBBQ nr l\llle 536-1251 aft 5 p.m.
~;.;~,/"'· 1
"·
500
·
714
' SELLING
Huntington Beach YOUR HOME?
Free appraisal · We hU)' ___ H_E_A_V_E_N_L_Y---1 equities. PermnaJ attention.
HACIE NDA! 25 yn. experienc@:. COLLINS &c WATTS
Proless10nal man's Utopia . -REALTORS -
Elegantly tumi1hed & all ' 962-5523
can be purchased to move in this dream house. Seller TOWNHOUSES
leavuli for overseas. 4 bed· from S16.000 to $24 .000. Low,
rooms 3 baths suncleck for low down payment. DEAN
pr1vacY. Totaily 1mrnacul· REALTY 53&7527.
ate In &. out. Reduced to EVERYTHING
$43.950 and you deal on UPGRADED!
furniture, ·lll or part. In· FORMAL DINING
apection by appointment ROOM!
00
1
1Y· . I I Low:ly. spacJOUs 3 bedroom.
? ~ i'lrw1n re• ty, nc . Owner tran&!erred &c must
21362 Brookhurst, Hntgn Bcb sell ' Many extras'
· 546-5411 anytime HAFFDAL RE.AL TY
POOL + RUMPUS 842-440S Ev•" 541"'46
Pl"' • ..~~~. 2 both•. * 4-PLEX *
butlt·in kitchen, new ghag N_ew CllrJ>el.s, drapes. Built·
carpeting 2 firep\8ces. Over 1ns. 3.BR. • ,t;v.·o 2 BR & one
000 •'1· n: rumpu~ room Jn. l BR. VA ~ppra.isal appl ied
clude11 "·et bar, No qualify. for. Su~lt terms. Good
Ing, no loan fees • just take loans ava.11.
ov" '"bjccl lo """"' Gl LEADERSHIP R.E.
loan. Owner will consider 842-4466
~:,:c .. i. JM,,IBOIATE VET SPECIAL
W I k & L II ,.u'l'e •hort of u.sh, 1ry a er ee lhla 31Jedrm . 1% Bath .....
ty for only $26,900. l total
Realtors 00515 of $400, to move in.
2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams SID-8.i.55
:;.i5-9491 Open 'til 9 PM SHERWeeD REAL TY
DIRTv DANDY -189&1 Brookhurst, r.v.
3 Bedroom $21.000. $14,500 TO $19,950
This 3 bedroom home'nttds 1 & 2 Br. HOUSES. Yo~
tender lovina catt. but \.\·hat make: the termt. Avail now.
a buy! Jr1 located close to DEAN REALTY 536-T;,21
everything. · hlls formal LIDO Sands Leasehold . 4 Br.
dtn[Og area, Rt\0,. plua lots beach house. $32-rocl. see of slor-au cabinets, o\.'!ts\.t• '
ed lot. Ideal home for 221· weekends only. 5.112 River
02 buyf!r. C.ll &47-1221 Ave,, 642-2178 Ow"'r.
SEY1v10UR. REALTY. 17141 2 BR CONDO, by owner, low
Btach Blvd., Hunt. Bch. do'4'n pa.yment.
Tum unused l~ms lnto quick 537·9440 or 968-1629
cash, all 64W678 Call 64i..5678 Now!
, . -·-·· ' • J
TREE STUDDED
View aurTOUnds th1a 2 story,
3 bdrm. 2 ba. townhouse
wlth it1; red tile roof. Situa-
ticns make baraai/15, . .
here's one tor you! S31,500.
Call !10"'.
i)red hill
in immacula.te condition. $79,500
$43,000. Can aswme 5'4% PERRON REAL'IY 842-1
loan, owner will oarry 2nd.
Pnncipals only. Call 645-5740
MOVE in For the Holid.,... 4 **DANA POI
BR + Pool. Custom Home New Deluxe Duplex
Beaut. furn 11 he d . $49,950.
Reason ab le.Owner. Webb Realty 642-C905
5'fr8398 or 642--9165.
REALTY WANTED FOR Sal" By Owner".;,.;,""'~·tsi;I
Uruv. Park Centtt Irvine Bnm Ha.rblr Vil!w 4 or 5 Br C.Onv. loc. Xlnt 1-i
Call An)'time, 811..o.m home. Pnneipa.15• 642.6657 ~turn. Call aft S pm
"'""""""""""""""""' 13 Br, 2 Ba. 40· lot, Mtist &dl.1,...53,,1,.,--0JSO.__. -..=---;;;; Huntington Harbour $53,001. lo~"'· 673-7iss. . 'Lots for Sele
YOU 'U. be home for ~N~e;w;;po~rti'iHfte~ig~h~t~1:.;.=-1::.::::..:.:::..::.::::::... __ ::..:1
Christmas rn thil •paclOU5· 3 I ;.;:;;.;;.,:;;;------o::;.;;.;._,_ Attention Builders
BR beauty. A pool tab~ JUST REDUCED t80X300 ft. bldg, •ite tor
room se'ls off this corner lot Room for boat or camper. 3 units • ;66,000.
"Buy nr :he Week". Nelson BR. 2 Ba .• lge. family rm .. Call Pat Wood 545-
ReaJ Estate, 846--1305 frpl. Open weekends. 241 Scemc Properties 675-
...... iii.iiiOi.iii ... 0..iiii• I D1i~~ 'itE~~· 64Z-7000 ZONED R.-2, 446 Hamilton Laguna Beach =c,..,,:""=='"-'-:..,,.,..:;:...= I C.M. $11.500, $2000 down
CHARMING 3 BR l:v>me. Owner will cany ba.lan
beam clng w/used brick 6%. Call 673-6637. WHITE WATER
VIEW frplc, fam nn., xtra·lge lot,1-----------beaut. ke'pt yd. Jmrnac Mountain, 0.Hrt,
Custom 2-story 3 Bdrm., 3 cond. $.)3,950. 6<\5-5322. Resort 17
b11thl'i. Spac10us view hvtng
rm. with frplc.: formal din-Newport Shores BiG' BEAR LAKE 1nz rm., lat". re~atlon S room w/beautllu1 ~:et bll.r. SPECIALIST in home Jalts
A quality home with many &. rental1. Newpor\ Shores. WHITE OfRI'STMAS
HAVE A
extras Easy.care la.ndscap. Caywood ReaJcy ~1290 in this eoty cabin in
ing-Xlnt location. Asking San Clemente , ""oods. Only $11,950. Ell sm coo terms. Call Ro5s (n4
•
, 3 BR. vu, on golf course, 536-173! or wrh!: Spence ~ $31.SOO. May lease. SOS Real Esla.te, P .O. Box 2828 ~ Ardillll Lane. Owner B )I: Bear Lake, C&Jif.
~'t.:f= 64~755 or 54~1168. FOR RENT c&bin t
"""""~.....,.c.-BY Chvntt. 3 BR. 2 Ba. o. wright\lOld. Near H
• 499-2800 * view .. 403 ""!. Ave .. San Juan. Hill &: Table Mt. Sleeps 7
$41 900. Terms. Mf..-4294. Rent by week or wn:ke.Dd $29,950
2 Bedroom. 11,i bath home
on spa.c1ou11 cOu ntty lot.
Larae family iatchen, be&m·
er! celling. Fireplaeie. ran<.\h
style porch . C.t!J us & We'll
tAke ~u down a dirt road
& over a wooden bridge to
see tlua country home.
.A-Olan
REAL ESTATE
1100 Glenneyre St.
494-9473 Sf9-0316 * SELL OR LEASE 1t
2200 Sq, Ft. 3 Br. 2" Ba~lg.
fam. rm. din. rm., frpl .
Carp & drapes, bltins, wet
bar, etc. lnunac. $47.~
Full p~.
MISSION REALTY 494--0731
EMERALD BAY • Charmin&
tontemp. fi Br .. or 3 suit.1.
Coraeou• v\tw. $1~5.000.
LOVELY view lot • $40.000.
TED HUBERT A: ASSOC.
3471 Vla Li(io. 67s..8960.
' Br. 3 ti., lam rm, pool 11
lot. Bl& valle.y view! $39,500
Owner, 4M-1'6Sl.
•
. 54~7645
Sant• An• Heights /.;;;====,...,.==~
OWNER SAYS
"SELL"!!!
Sharp 3 bedromn on large FOR sale or trade 10 &Cft
lof. Auume 71h:% VA loan. Antelope Valley, nr ·
Total paymts $186. month. mond. $11,CO>. 60-4Q60
Price reduced to S25.500. 6.
CJ llnow for det~lls. :--...,.-~--,,.,......,.--,,=• FULLER'"'R£AL TY Real Eot•tt Wanted 1
5'S<l81< Anytime CASH ONLY
Mobile Homes Tor )'OUr lot in Newport
For Sale 125 C-olta , must be m ;.tli
NEW ADULT PARK for ex tit trtple:c ..
hornet that can Huntinaton Art>or r.robile down for new conatroc.
Home Park. faciht>es 1n. tion.
elude: Jaeuui, 'card nn. Will lease bll.dc Ut'ltil )'DI.I ci.n
MA1'V, outdoor BBQ, pool. find new home. State Joa.
~rd nn, 1huttle.board, 1n· tion, lot size, prtc. 6-pbor!ll
divldual mettt111g. Pet sec· numbtt
bon. ~ \Va!d St .• Hntgn Act f.bt'"a.s our cub bud,pt
Beach. 9684«5. is Umi•ed to lo ~
a.10B1LE home lot ule, 2 only.
BR t.ancef, 20' w Ide . w.1te P .O. Box ~. ~
Located in adult park. port Beach.
645---059-1eve'6 pm to 10 pm,1,.,.:.,,~m'"""·Ch='r1otmu""'-~N--~-..
all day &\t Ii. Sun . 10 outsrown Lev1a-;you eu
:MxU J,J.NCER. adult P1rk. turn "tra•h to cub" In a
Co•t1' Mtsa. New condition. DAILY Pllhr dl'Wifted ad
6-l~m4 • c&.11 64).-567!
•
Rool Etl1M W•-114 Huntt"""' IMd! -YOUR proptf'ty IO ftprestnt 1 Bedroom., baby OK. Sl60
tn the rapidly expandl.nr month. 2 Blocb from <Uan.
bdlante Mark~t. For a no ~18!ll or $.1&-1674
obll.a:adon appointment to Newport BMch dilcuJI tbe' poulbWUea can, __ .;... ______ _
W.W. Pnstl<ll<, Broker. e 0CEANFRON'l'-5)>11ltl1"'
<n4l 8474UO at lJ7l2: M&fn view. nndtck, util inc tm .
SL, ~.B. ALA Rent1ls • 645-3900
REALTORS • STEPS bly/beach, apt.cl
Br chlld/aml pet. UtU pd $125
ALA Renlilt e 645-3900
Ca.ah for your clients • nwed
land or elder home with R·2
or Jl.-3 zonlna. We have
builden waHln&-• quick et· ~:.~!-BR ~ ~~u5l<t crow Call 6D...f000 uk tor ....... ,.....,.. coup e on ........ t. ~~Maschmeyer. Yearly $180. 675-7513.
4 BR exec home in N.B., 3 BR. 2 Ba., frpl, dbJ pr.
r .v .. or Huntnrtn. Wanted Avail. mw thnt J'une lS.
now or alt Christmas. Pvt, $21S month. Agent 67~1642.
,....... HoUSH Unfurn. 305
\\'Ah'TED: Older house «
property needina w..o r k ,
CASH. 5.1S-1694.
Bu1lne11
Opportunity 200
* New Llstln1 *
-BEER BAR-
"Hi Ne1"
TO BUY OR
SELL A BUSINESS
HOLLAND BUS.
SALES
"The Broker with Empathy"
1716 Orange Aw .. C.M.
66-4170. 54B-0608 eYe.
EXCELl.ENT invest. opport.
for ret. or semi-rel. e'Xec.
w/mrkt&: or acct.a. ex-
~rtise. New product. Mall
order ~mphasis. $1500 Req.
for minority participation.
67>7539.
RESTAURANT. Laguna's
mort popular, unique
restaurant. Completely
equlpt Xl'lt Joe. $268,000.
gross income, $35,000 down.
Realonomlcs, Bkr. 675-6700.
Newspaper Dealership
For L.A. Herald Examiner
in Orange Co. area. :-·cur-
lty depos. req'd, Write R.P.,
2662 W. Lincoln. Anaheim.
Money to Loin 240 ---SATTLER
MTG. CO.
336 E. 1'/"m ,fITREET
CASH FOR TD 'S
* 90% LOANS*
lST T.D. LOAN
7'1% INTEREST
I..cr.vHt rates in OranQ;e Co.
642-2171 545-0611
Serving Harbor a.rea 21 yrs.
Mortgages,
Tru11 Doeds 260
NEED CASH
IJ,000, OR UP TO $3,000
$10,000 AND ?tlOR.E
See Avco Thrift for a Real
Estate Loan. Upon approval,
\lie the money however YoU
like. Also ask about· our
unsecured pel'!Onal !oan.s.
620 Newport Center Dr.
833-3440
FOR sale 2nd T.D. $11,000.
Will discount. Interest at 9%.
Bal due & payable S yrs.,
SUD. per mo. incl. prin. &
int. 837--0289
TRUST DEEDS WANTED
Cash for 2nd TO
•• 613-(1140 ••
\ -..'I ... I~
Houses Furnish.cl 300
8albo1 Island
•Winter &: Yearly Rental!•
Ralph Hinger Realty * 675-6775 *
Balbo1 Peninsula
HOMEY &: Charming 2 & 4
Br h!e, walled ln patio, nr
water. U n til 6/15.
213: JA3.-5316.
THE Futest dnw in the
West. .• a Dally P 11 o t
Ourifled Ad. 642-5678
Realtors
2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
545-9491 Open 'ill 9 P~t
FREE RENTAL
SERVICE
Shp 3 Bd, 2 Ba , shag cpt,
bl! ins. fenced yd, pets &
children OK, Bargain $225
p/m. Walker & Lee, RUrs
842-4455.
Horse Ranches
$105 .•. 3 Bedrooms, 2 baths,
acreage.
ALSO. . .2 Bedroom on 2
acres. $15(1.
776-7330 Agt'nt
HOME FOR RENT
N!<=f! 3 bed home freshly
painted. 3 blocks to Hale·
crest Club and recreation
for children. S240/mo. Agent
546-95Zli;>4o.6631.
4 BEDROOM with nn. addi·
tion, cove~ patio, dbl. at-
tached gar. ~1ay t"e>nt or
lease w/option. $225/mO.
Agent 546-95~L
Back B•Y
LOVELY, !ge. 4 Br. 3 Ba.
home, to responsible party
w/ref'1., $400 mo. incl.
gardener & water. Prin-
cipals only, Owner 540-3862.
Corona del Mar
RUSTIC 3 bedroom &. den, 2
bath, bit-Ins, f i repla ce,
walk to tov.-n. Agt. 675-4930.
2 BR. dflls/crpts, garbage
displ. Avail Nw 151h. Call
61>2698. ** 2 BR. Home. Below
highway. Call 8 3 3~ 9 4 10 ;
alter S call 67S-55&t.
•
3 BR., 2 baths, furnished
Tun le Rock ••••••••• $340
3 BR, 2 ha., atrium •••• $32j
3 BR, 21,ii ba., !am •••• $325
3 BR, Z1ii ba fam •••••• S350
4 BR. 2~~ b8., fam •••• SJjO
4 Br:, 2n baths, family room.
Tun.le Rock .. • .. • • • $360
\VE HA VE OTHERS
"!lo~ 11i·lli\,
---'ll11uhor
.. . ....... __..
-· Huntington Beech
1 BDRM Continthtal
Townhou!'.r, corner, $150
mo. 962-5134
Townhouse Unfurn. 335
Generel
-,,-..,,.-..,...._.-.,.--1 Br $125 & $130. Lrg. ldeal
Rent Beautiful Furniture for Bachelor. Pool. Adil!
for as little as only. 1993 Church. 548-9633
ONE MONTH * AVL now-1 & 2 BR. Furn.
Pool. Rec Rm. Gd. Joe. No
complete with children or pets. 64&-5824.
your 100°/0 Nice 1 Br. Duplex
Purchase Option n15. 549-0833
Incl. lrem selection. LOVELY LGE l BR, quiet.
24 Hour Delv. Adults. No pels. Garage.
CUSTOM U52 Elden, 64&-2768.
Furniture Rental NEWLY redE'coralt>d 2 Br ..
517 \V. 19th, C.!'.f. 548-3481 ulil. included. Adults only
Anaheim 774-2800 $150. 64&-2039.
OCEANFRONT cornt"I' or
B_•_•_c_o_n_B_•V'-----I 23rd St. 3 BR .. 2 BA. $350.
COZY Bachelor apt \\'/cook· Very lge. beaut. furn. Kids
ing facililif's. Priv patio & & pels ok. 646-6591 or
C'nlrance. Ulil pd. $115fmo. 64·~111.
A\•ail Iii July 1. 673-7535. l·A~T~T~H~E~B~E~A~CH~.~Fu-n-,-. 4
* 1 BR. $125 YEARLY ft e BRAND NEW e
. Utilities Paid 2 BR, 2 BA apts w/ dishv.T,
F.. l'.11chael Real!or 673-SBSO hugt? closets, priv patio,
$13.'>-Bayfront Bachelor apt, heated pool, billiard rm. ja-
util pd. \Vin!er. 926 E. cuu.i & bbq's. ALL ITTIL-
Ba!boa. 613-9749. ITIES PAID. See at 20102
1 BR, S135. util pcl. on Birch St. (nr. Orange Coun-
ty Airport, Just W, of Pal-pcninsula nr ferry. Adults, !sades Rd). Mgr 557-4246.
no pr.ts, 673-9749.
MILLIOi'l $ Vif'v.', 2 BrJ w... ,,t,, d"" pool. CHILDREN
•u:o''.-'mo::o-:. ,,,",,,"--3600.,...-. ---1 • • • NEW• • • Balbo;t 1sland ............ _
FAIRWAY
VILLA APTS.
YEARLY lease. Gra nd VILLA PEDRO Ap!S
Canal, Little ls. Beaut. 2, 2 & 3 BR's
Br., 2 Ba., pri, patlo. $.1.50 J UST FINISHED Private patio pool • indlY.
+ utlls. Super-Comfortable-Quiet la.Uhdry fae.'
\Vinion Real Estate 675-3331 (10) 2 BR , 2 Full BA. Near Orange Co. Ajzport I:
*2 Bedrm·Fireplace* Must see to appreciate U~~d~~ A..,.,
Cai'JK'ted. Z13: 371-2140 Near Ne\\'port Back Bay, Mgr. Mrs. Jaa.chlrn, Apt lo.A
Balboa Peninsula schools, parks, Yl\1CA, Boy'fi 546-QIS
:::::::--:--::::-·----! Club, 1hoppg, fn\.'YS. etc. I n..:.-....=.;:;.~~==c-1 NE\V 2 BR, crpts, drp!!, Gas heat, gas cooking and BAY MEADOW APTS.
frplc, garage. Yearly. Call water, all paid, M0/1'10 Beaa ceilings. panellnr,
0'A'Jler 67:H644 aft 6. from $18.'i. 2:ru Elden see or prlY patias, reettation fa·
call Manager Barbara Dav-cillt:les. All adults, no tieta.
Beacon Bay is 645-1182. e 2 BR's FROM AS LOW
J..; $l59/mo.
FOR Lease new bayview apt. DELUXE 387 w. Bay St., C.M.
in private beach con1-APARTMENTS CAfl 646-0073
n1unity. 2 BR, 11.~ BA, all Air Cond . Frplc's - 3 S1\'im-I'·--:.------:--!
bltns, garage. $400 mo. n1lng Pools • Health Spa -• e
494-8197 or 675-0-119. Tennis Crts • Game & Bil-WESTBAY ELDEN
Corona del Mar liard Room. NE\V 1 and 2 Bedrm. a:anlen
l BEDROO:\t apartments w/pool.
FROM $155 FROM $180. ADULTS
MEDITERRANEAN 2lU Elden Ave., C.M.
n, C:., ~¥ VILLAGE e 6'5-S7BO . e
~ 2400 ~;;];'"55~~ c~"· VILLA CORDOVA
ON TEN ACRES RENTAL OFFICE e SUPER 2 BR e
l & 2 BR. FW'Jl. &:; Unturn. OPEN 10 A.!.\1 TO 6 P~f ?.1onth lo Month, $170
Fireplae6 I prlY. patios. Gas J-leat-Gas Cooklna:-
Pools Tennis Contnt'I Bkfst. BRAND NEW Gas 1-Iot \\'tr, ALL INCL.
900 Sea Lane, CdM 6i4-26U Frotn $145. Dishv.•asher , shag 2323 E1clen Ave., C l.
fltfacArthur nr Colts! Hwyl carpeting. \l'aik-ln closets. l-;;=-;;;;-;;;;:;&16-003-;:7.;;':=,.,.,.~I
Forced air heat, extra large "GABLES'' & "VICTORIA..'l"
PRIVATE SUNDECK rooms. Beautiful game room~ Lrg 2 BR "'' pri gar. Adlts.
2 BR., 2 baths: upstairs du· heated pool BBQ's, enclos---C Pt 1 • d r P I , b It n •
plex. Carpeted & draped. ed garages," quiet sutTOund-soundproofed. 1-·ncd yrd .,,i
Encl. garage. Con1p. bHns. ings & close to shopping. patio. \\'Ir pd, Gardener
Beaut. lndscpg. 7071 ~ Orchid. Adult living, no pets. main!. Call btwn 1 &: 5,
$250 Per month, yearly, EL CORDOVA APTS. 636-4120.
"'77 S ..
'
44-o 667 Victoria "C" ..•.•••. 'J" ,75•605· 0 0 Charle 1. . -· j ~ "" > r , Ncar Harbor & Hamilton St. 2437 Orange Ave "G'" $155
Ill• lltl!Plf""I SL.& ~~~~~~~~= NEWLY DECORATED
--~--~---1 * * * * Channing I BR. duplex, new e BAYPORT d e BAYVIE\V El Puerto Mesa Apts carp, rapes & paint. lovely
Announcing the quiet opening
of Bayport Apts , • • for
* * * * gardE'l'lsurrounding.s,
1 Bedroom Apts. ~leture adults 'only. $130.
Adult.s; And the slightly less . . ..
quiet o(X'ning of Bayvlc"' $130 & up incl. utilities. ~so
Apts. for families. furn. Pool & Recreation
Call (114) 644-5555 area. Quiet Environment.
~=======~t OU street parking. No Chil-
2 BEDROOM-NEWLY dren. no pets.
DECORATED. Also Garage!! For Rent
FIREPLACE. 19$-1961 !>!aple Ave.
GARAGE. $190. Cost• M""' * 5411-5003 *
548-69ro.
NE\\'LY DECORATE~3 Br,
2 Ba, bltn range. oven,
dsh"·hr. fully crpt'd & drp'd.
POOL & rec rm. All ext.
maintenance & wtr pd.
$185/mo , Cell eves,
540-9365.
l\'E\VLY DECORATED
Corona del Mar BR, 2 BA. \Vinler or yearly 3 Bdrm * 2 Bath ---------I ra!es. 714: 61;,-7057 or 213: BEAUT. Unique 3 Br, 21; ba.
2 BR, fully crptd, pool, So. of 431-2406. frpl, beam ccil, bltns. ffik to Llvini room with cathedral
H\\'Y· Close to 5hpg. Adults. l~B~R~ro-t-t,.-e-tra~il-.,-. -"~b-,-,.-. beach. $285. 673-5548. ceiling & !rplc. Separate
Sli~i Lsc. 673-8213. pref bachelor only. Priv 2 BR PENTtIOUSE, bltns, laundry. area. Encl. pati?.
2 BDR:O.t apt, S210. Avail. bch. $80. 546-3451 dsh..-.•hr, fplc & l!lundeckS. Swimming pool & children s
2 BR "'' gar. Displ-\\'lr pd.
OIU bt\lon I & ~ 636·4120
1571 Orange Avf! ;'A" SlM
2176 Placentia AVP "D".$135
2566 Orange Ave "D" ... $135
675-2291 playground. $200. Dec. Jst. I B1k To Bch. Clean 1 br. . HARBOR GREFNS * 67~-1326 * Childtpet ok. \Vinter $165 LRG 2 story, :I BR.2 BA den, 546-4353
2 BDJ't1\.I, bath, pri. garagr. n10. 646-4071 or 6·12-9955. crpts, drps & 2 car gar·IOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii...,iiiiii
$200. n10. 5()81,) Marigold, ** BACHELOR APT. Lido $285/mo. 544-3124 644-1040 '* BRAND NEW *
Cdi\I. Avail. l nim<'d. J sland-\Vatcrfront . 2BR,~ltns,frplc,2carporl~, La Costa Apts.
673-4&19. $16."i/mo. Ca!I 673-8&;6. pool-sized, nr. ocean. $19;,. L & 2 BR, bl•--. · 673-4441 ...... 8\\'lotm.lng e GUEST HOUSE S!lO e Oceanvic~'. 2 BP., 1 BA. ' pool, lanai, bar-b-que & gar·
Bachelor. Quiet. Private. No \Vinter $22.'i. Yearly $275. * * GREAT VIEW! 2 Bk. age. AU util pd, $150 to $170.
kitch. Util pd, 673--0507. * 642-3639 * frpl, bltns. !lundc.>tk!l. pool. Adulr11, no pets.
Costa Mesa l BOfL\1. furn apt. Util paid. $200 up. 675-3535. 67>-52().l. ~ Avocado, CM. 642-9708
--------. .,-1 $150. Newport Coves. \Valk 2 Bedroom, ne\lo·ly decnrated, •
Unbelievably Beautiful to beach. 673-1517 art S. fin.>place, garage. $ l 9 0 . LIVE in managcr wanled: 12
VAL O' ISERE Garden Apts, . &18-500J fufJ1 ap!s. Rental $150 inc.
Adults • 00 pel!!. F1ower:s l BR Furn. ~~,t. No children, · util. $90 credit for misc
ever)'\\'herr. Streant & no pets. 2-IO;,: 16th SL N.B. 2 BR, cpts. drps, bltns, gar, duties, more for cleanil'lg
\Vaterfall, 45' pool nee. Rm, Call 616-4664. sundc-ck. No pets. $1.95/mo apts. Adult couple only.
Sauna. ,Sgls 1.2 Bdrm, Furn-1 BR. $150 per mo Yearly,' Incl util. 67~737. 658-7976 e\'t>S.
Unfum. from Sll5, SEE IT: Beem ceilings. Bt\lo'fl Qcean Costa Mei• SPAC 2 & 3 Br Apt Sl40 up.
aXJO Parsons, 6-12-8670. & Bay. 675-8374. I ;;-;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;,I lltd pool, play yd, cpt/drps,
SPAC l Br, pool, n r Newport Heighti 11 bltns, patio. Kids ok.
HACIENDA
HARBOR
241 AVOCADO STREET
Adult living • No pets
Drluxe 1 & 2 BR. Pool
Garage. Dish.,,·shr. Paid util.
J.'RO'.'.I $150. 646-1Q04
• l.ARGE 1 BR. $125 e ROO~lY 2 BR. S140
Adll.s 64~2181 , 673--0507
* TOWNHOUSE *
1 .i ~ BR. Shag cpt, D/W,
ulf clean Q\.-en, patio.
lTI l\". \\'ll!on * r>4S.3605
3 BR, 2 BA + dfon, $200. 2
BR, 2 BA $165. Bltns, C/D,
\V/D hkup, Patio, gar. lBl-
11 Del Mar. 548-8'178
AVA.Il. Now 2 BR, 1% BA
TOWNHSE. Bltn.s, cprt.s,
drps, pool. No pet 11,
54B-6tl8L '"°''· Adtt" no """· ms LIVE LIKE A KING 2206 eouego No. s 64M1l35. ~!ii pd. J884 1.fonrovia. CLEAN 1 or 2 Br. Adlt.s. 110 At Budget Prices! 1994 ?.faple No. 3 642-3813 $120-l BR. Cpts, drps. 1
.,,.,8--0336, ""ts. lg kit. ~us..~150. 2421 :\.lFSA Verde 2 BR upper, adWI only, Eastside CM,
,., ~ -1 1'.URNISH:EO-N' sho ~•" ••-$245. NEW E. 16th St NB &IS.-1801. bltns, gar.age, nr shopping. · P1· ..,., ..... .,...;r or UNFURNISHED Adult!, no pets, .$ 1 4 5. 675--0617.
DELUXE 2 BR. 2 BA. Apt. Unfurn. 365 M8-63:i7. ~E"ts"ro"E"'3;-;B::,-, "'i"'e".-."'.~,-•• -•. 1
GARDEN APARTl\1F.:NT * POOLS
Ill E 21 t St CM * ENCLOSED LARGE 2 BR apt ..-.·/cpl!, CID, gar, W/D. f/yn:I. *• 64t8666.,*' . General GARAGES drps, bltns. Child OK. $145. Children ok . .$190. 646-tIM
$30 Wk . Up Apll. *CONVENIENT 1'~ Tulip. Call 548-2100. *BEAUTIFUL l • 2 BR. HELLO RENTERS I 1"0 ALL BEACHES 1 & 2 BR apto, .SU.i &: Contemporary Garden Apts. $111-$25 Wk. Mot•I Rms \Vh · -1' P •--~1 Y a~ you p11ying '"" · FROM $135 MONTH $152.50. · Spacious. I ar ge. at1U11, .. ., c, pool. Sl.50-.$1.65. $6 Night & Up • 1.01·1 wake up to whot·., bl d ..... 14 Call 546-5163
CLOSE 10 ocean, shopping, SUNNY ACRES h11p1Jt'ninll' tOdn,y. \Ve have ADULTS PLEASE tnll, cpls, rp!! . .........., . ;;;;..,-;;:--:;::,,· c-=-,..-1 MOTEL hundred~ ot hOmes ready DELUXE 2 BR. Bltra. $170 2 Br sludk>, adj shclps.
schools, '4 Bdrm .. 2'' b11.., 2 t l · v \ d VILLA POMONA Refrlg. Drp1 Y.'/W cpl. Prlv. drp/crpt, paUo, rsr. Y.3-131>1 = ~7f:Br1:.ase, $225 a ~·N~~ ~~ ~t on54:if.s ;;;~~n::;,1;:·wl;h -:01 PHONE 642·2015 bale. Gar, Lndr,y rm , alt 5, 713: 59'l-5m coll. -"---'--~-~----~-~----1 ll red CE>nt down. Lt-t us (J7fll PomoM Ave.) !J62.-.1180. 2 BR. apt. Crpl',11: all roonu,
Huntincton Beach 1 BR. :Furn. 2 ll'lt clO!l'll, find thllt ""'am hou!e J '!!!..;;,:;~;;;;~;.,;;;;;;,~,.liLJGfiE::Omod;Qd;,;;,;;,11!Bi<,:-:. ,;;,>i:t.~. -q,,p.1;,l!I, drps, bltns, refrig, carport,
quC(n ab.e bvd pr\v, drcu. ;;ou·ve brcn wanllni;: for P•rk·Llke Surrounding drps, bltns, dsh\\"Jhr, 1 child lndry rm. Sl55 mo to mo.
TO\VNHSE for rtnt 2 BR. Ing room, xtra lrx room•. )'OW' vtry OY>'TI. Olli QUlET OELUXE k •1~1 AU ti! ""' 646-6961 or 646-1246
\Vuher/dl")'tt, blln•. pool ~~ti only, no pees. Sl50/ Wa Iker & Lee 1-2 " 3. BR API'S ~T ;,:.:·No. 9. ~: 2 BED R 0 0 M. newly
facll. $165 mo. 11) 892-7818. 2035 Fullerton, CM J-r\• Ptfloil * Htd Pool:• LGE 2BR. Nu cpt &: paint. redecorsted, t I re 11 I 1 c e
2 B E D R 0 0 ~1 C 0 N· Rtt!lota Nr ahop'i * Adults only Dlshl'·asher mo. w/ptl ~· $190, ~. '
TINElli'TAL TO\VNHOUSE, $125-mo. Dlx mnb home 2790 llarlm Blvd. at Adams Martinique Aph. SJ60. 642--0844/9&8-4622. 2 BR l BA. nel'' sha~ -ti •1otn! A "'"'"""14 comp! fw-n. Hid pool . 545-MGS Ot'lt.n 'Ill 9 PM d blti "" •
f' 1•• 0· gent ;n\P"\111 • Adult.I. No Pf>I•. 4 Sc'ason·8 1T77 ~nta Ana Aw., Of S200 r.ro. Jmmac. 3 BR. 2~ rw. m, nr OCC. rar
9UICK CASH ~~ ... ~_''· 2339 Newpo11. $l 60. Ne~ l BR. M..-. Apt lll 646-W-2 JlA.. Cl'Pt•. d.,.,. AvaiL ll39/Mo. 5.'IM!St THROUGH A ~ " 6 UNITS now. Call 557·7768. LGE 3 Br, 2 Ba, 1111w ih11.r
NEW ll'hll.I cpt•, nt'W dri:>1. POOLSIDE ALL ELECTRIC cpt~.Sl69.hno, fr?Shly J'Nlfn-DAILY PILOT -• APARTMENT UP-Al"o $!~. rr·s B'"" ....... ..,,.. Bir· tedo,.OCC.C.i-po>11\1·6!5J new furn. In 2 Br dplx. l'ffU1.1, ,,, ""' w WANT AD kit hal!I full tl stv & xtre tit 2311 Eld•n Avt., C.M. 00\VNSTAlRS Sl6S. sest 1elcctlon ever! SH tho • \VJJ..SON CARDEN~•
retr. Deco. rolors. No pet1 645 .. 5780 CALL !>l11on~r ah 6 PA!. 2 BR. 1 ~ BA, Cpr/drp 642•5678 IJ>G. 523 Bmutro 646-7622 642.llll DAILY Pn.oT OA.u\tled • ..,,, po!lt>, !l<O. ~lL
.
--· --
t •
• Thursda1, No~embtr 18, 1971 D/.ILY PU.OT ... ;"; ~-· ""'" WR•~-tt~ I~~ ........ _·~·.~ .. _~:~~ ~-"'""3~r 1-RonWl-·-·11.A-H'•i-'l'""mt ....... llSJIL.. _1.o11_•_·_ ~ ... _,,~ ,!!!_!!!!. !! ... !!!!!!_~~~===._,~=.-=. ::-;Iii n·1. l
_A._p_t._U_nt_u_rn_. ___ 3_6s.1_Apt. Unfurn. 3~S Aph., OtfTce Rtnfal • Found (f,.. .. ) ~Lott 555 CAaD,....DlT".':' ~6 .... i ... •ab.'H-•_u;..•;..•;..cl;..e"a;..nl;..n;;:g~--.. H1lpWantod,M~~ I
Costa Mesa Me V d Furn. or Unfurn. 370 BAY VIEW OFFICES • .__ .. i · _.,,...._, sa e r I Sl.!MESE kitten about 3 mo. PLEASE return Sta-'e Cun fonnk:a, marllte, Ur tile, DEDICATED CLEANING Aeceuntlno Clerk L_:
-C M Deluxe, Air Conditioned, old ·earlrc b ahtU nu '" * \V Do Ev th • BACHELOk, &harp, clou ro DEL\JXC :z .~· 3 sn, 2 tt,., osta eta red led Lldo Are w rown taektr Arrow Mavy duty p&n•linJ. Antiq. Furn. _ e rey in: * T)"P111" ~1. 1 'tlf t,p..,., 1
ace & ucr. $13(1. Incl utU's encl :-ar $150 up. Rf"T'll&I •• ,,...=-,~ •. •-. 6~ ~100 collar. vie. Wall•ct' Ave., T50 to Alpha Beta fl.fkt f\trr. ftPlllr &: retin. 644-7598 24 hr. Call 6U-<Uli1 t ·ll l.nn'll,. . T
't! ~\TAZlNCAdul:Ll vlna: .. .,.~ ....... .....-1-Co&taMe1154&-6719 UI I k --\\' 1.li>' I &: refri1. 557-7768, -orr. :.W1 ;\IA('t' ,\ v e. Be1tut. l & 2 BR tum ar uni ES bl • , n vera t;y p . Ul• '-!on., EXP Remodelln& cabinets Meu Cleanin; SeMcc ' .
1 BR Apt. nnl urn., wa11'r 5-1$-iML Ar~'· Self clean. ovens, Dmo,K wT~~:n4 ~i: FOUND .. German Shephttd, Nov. 1S by 5?<=ial Security rt~ln. malnt. No job t~ Carpets, \Vindtlw", iil(IOr l't1-.· pr:r. ~ • "'· ·r:v i •P"""v 4 or 5 mo1. Vic. penarkioner, doma: pt. time Im .•• 11 . .,0 •-•. Resid. k Ccnimc'l. 543-1111 all.~ \Y trUTJ fir. ~~.D.'
paid. Adul~. no fX'IS or Newport Bee-ch 01\V fl11 2 Br) d11pl11, shag at '5 mo. Answertnc: llft'Vtce Gl;;yre 4 T bal 1 a, wo , nc VW"'l4"1' ""===-,.~-~~-I t> "'zr, _ '1
chi:dre11. 548-6951 rp1,,, drp,s, jacuzzl & sauna available. rms Beach Blvd. c t Se i JAPANESE larly w lr; hes ===7'~--~~I · PAR:K NE\,'PORT li..ths. H""" ......... 1. Hunt1 .... ton Beach. 66-4321 Lquna. 494-5681. PUPPY, female Samoyed. arpe rv ce house.work, nerd~ !ro!S. AP? AlS~R I
DELUXE 1 Br., gar. Avail. Af'ARTM E S _.. ,....... ...,. i:: NT Merrimac Woods \'VUT'MI' female cat blue eyes Vic: Brookhurst & Adams. CARPET COMPANY Avail. wk-days. &l(}.lll:l, ,n; 1 "I ti, • • Dee. 1. Adults, no p<'l!i. $135 . ..,R h 1 ., 8 Business Rental 445 ·:.-·"".Circl .. -... .. .,_,, l:;a 1 1... , ! l50 E. 2111. 6'1&-60!6. '"'ic "~r. l or 4: Pflt'Mlm!I, 425 Me1T1mac \Vl\y, c.r.r. vi~ f! View School, Rew-.i1.1. 96~. has Housecleanlllg By Duy. \\l"i:t'rl !f'P'' J
1-':.0,.===-'""='---· I anrl Ti\\\ ~h<lU~~. ~. l!(l()ls~ lBR. furn. $l4F."'""l-BR unr. SPACE for be4ul:y pulor or H.~. Very affect lo n a t LOST: Mesa Verde Area - 2 EXCESS CARPETING Own Ttllllspor1~1lon ri:l •'i~f.L ~, -.;r-y ~ :P~;~:x;tv~ B~i\~':i ;;;.: tennis._ l-tom ~1D. Across · Sl~~ utll pd. Adults, no pelt. similar open.tion, around B!W-5980. ti1k Da.ch.&tmnds, male &: VALUES TO $15 PER YD, Call 836-0648 ~t, \\' •r: ~ nr., Jo.: n . !
from l'ash1on I~.1nd 11t .Jam. ,20 C 612.v~.8 flr, Lido Bid&:. 3355 Via GREY &: white ........ ne ..__ fem. Rtlward! MQ..6035. $5.SO PER. YO. ' • ,~v,. , Children ok. $15ll. 612 .. 79;,_•<1., ho-· & ·'''' Jo•ouJ• I/ills C'nte:r. ;,.,., . L'do "B ~ J "·al ~ .,~ H_OUSEKEEPER. hard.work----__ . I ti'• -l ''" ..... " B 1 , ,, • e ones .n.c: ty dog. Ftmale...Blaek'aroµnd le up installed with pad. LOVELY 2 BR, nr \Vf'5tclill, Ro.id:i:. 111.11 All·lOOJ. Ne wport each · Service on remises or call CUrled il · M,.. Sh hi ,_ Jal ing. $.1 an hr. 4-6 hrs fifl).\. r.~~r. ~:a.·11r.,.. 'l'ltu 1 ,. •
l;o,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; eyes. ta • Frie • .....,. ~ a15, ·.....-, commerc s, 516~13 r . 2t .1r.i:JU• ,1 n 1 ~·
S13j mn. No rlulriron or e NO\"/-OPE N--0 -675-JTTI. 645:-3878 alt 5Ji1M. I I all colo~ . ..... 11. &t~5355'. lnltructiolt CUSTOM DRAPES MaintenanCe \1"' 'i·ll, """ \• -!. • i .·rt11, .,.... BP.1\~P NF\V l Ir. S!~:i 2 FOR lease: !MXl sq. ft. J\1·1 BLJ< &. wht Hus.k:le "'-do&· II • ' STIJN N R · '.'iO i\ t ~ ,>.,,. I 10.220 ·-··--' · ,_1.,,.r"' .. 11-1 :;;;;;;;;;·;:;;~1 made to order from c r r• 't, « I '
11
'\' ~ r • * NhG G11rden i\nt-2 I' ~I .. 1Ll. r!l.ITJf.. RES uRT LIVING bdg. l power . F\J\Us.iVlC,Foun .... nV ... y. $2.49YD.INC.LABOR LATE NlTE ~1aint. rn fil l •• f_ , 1·
Br .. 2 Ba. pan'I df'n, SJ P:i. PAID. Priv palio b1Un1rd J\tachinf! 1hop, garaie, ot Red collar 839-U73 Janitorial ..,....und I:'. blli ---Like ne,v. 64~5530. rni~J1,.ntrd ponl y.,/ .inC1J1;·i. 6mall business. 548-8797. ' Schools & Free est. All work a:uaran-' ... ¥ " • ",\fi '\ \' ,Ji,. ·I 1 hu=.e clos•·ts, dt>ep r•ile C'ar-FRO~A $125 FOUND small friendly nutty Instructions 575 teed. Financing avail. House malnt. both resrril'nl .Ii' h1k·,. Ii• r. r y
Dt:LUXE 2 BR, cpls, clr(lb. 1 h SHO\VR001'1 mfg. & office white cat Vic. Dart.more st., -;::;:;;;~~;;::;;---;--;;:;;;l~ot~ca~,,.~~l.~"'6-~~1~523~---com ml, 492-8397 a1t 1 pn1. 1 )r ·; : 1 1' .i '· ~" I
bltns Sl·fl J)l'lln-;:. u~ l:i.'ld.-..capi~g. space. Close in l..agwla 1oc. Lagu Be h • ' p • caii 614_1103 Adults. YQ•J '.\Iu.~t ~('('Thi.~ It's Oak\i'OOd Garde n na ac, 49f-.2463. LOOKING FOR A JOB JOHN'S Carpet&: Upholstery a lnt ing & ~·rr ,~ • !, fr Jr.
One' !!ll!Cl i':·tTh ~' , Nr.. 595· to SU.S. mo. 494-4653 FOUND 1 yr old ma.le Sheltie WITH A FUTURE? CleantTt. Extra Ori·Sham-P aperhanging tC(lr ... l fm· I· 'I I ":'.r ~ Dan~ P oint ~7-t!A fun, flni:-neiihhtlrs and • \VANTED • s~mmina: in Newport Ba.y, National Auto Tu1*up Train· poo b'ff Scolcl\iUard (Soil · r •' 1 r F' I fl in ~
LARGE 2 Br., 2 Sil . rl1n rilt, """" -SRA.NO Ni:VI ~ Apartments . ' and It's !1-finimum r:l)(I' tttail &pa~. 67l-1968. inc Ce:nttt is seleetln1 a Retardants}. Degrta1ers .l BARNET T P ai o ! l n ... ' b"'.~u· ~ " \~ ,.. ti) t "'l" I . I C. 1'1a.x. 828-382{) lim•'led num~ of ··--all -lo• b"·hto·e--•-"" material labor. Slll ~if'l~lr·. r',. I I 'i , . ., • ., • r1 ~ bltn, cpt, drp~. OCf'an ViPW, ·". ~ ~anl I ,\r) I A\'(• (.\ri ... ~ !>rf'~tl:;P IVUlg In one li>.'Ul'· YOUNG female Slame&e cat ""'i-_....,. ...... • ''6 .. •;a "' J.JJ $185 2 I s E . ' •
balcony, 1; mi. 1., n"na !r(lm S .. \. \CJ,J:'lrJ <"luhl ioqs packa~e: 'I11ere's S1 Indust rial Re ntal •SO light color. Mesa ve·rde m~t'd 1peop1e.tobetrain@d mil'luta bleach for white Speciall:e~· ~i~~~;: a~~r ~·f:·"~ ~·1
.. 1, :. \ (""' ,.~ ~;~~;. $190. 8 a 7 - 3 9 27 , ~·~~c;~,l~,\b~:-;:i~~:;:t;~:: [ ni1llion in recreation ••• 7j()Q Sq. fL Olf!ces, assembly F-::. 0~· ::,: male cat, :~::~~;;, ~u~=:~ ~~!ingSa:e ~~a~~~:. ~~~:I. ;~;e~i>t. ges.;;~~ii. · :.vc ,.,-1.i;1 ,1, < 1 ; b IA•· Dt
ln.1,:s of cir.s~rs. J!cia·r,! &\1·!mm1n~. tennis, bil11ard1, · areA & machme shop area. ?<Just be willing to start Will clean Jiving rm dining 1\ntld;; ta; l"»l Jc 1,1u 1 •
E.'t Bluff r I \ d I · I I " ll•aw pov1e" fl·"'-~""'nt blk--y stri......i, wht feet. ..-k 'mmed' t I tt r ' H '"G'IEN •al• & 1 ll l or1 . , ts. :\L1:11.;rr h"O th r lln!'I, saunas. pro-.._ ·.z '• ""''"'""~ ... ~ I""" """ t ia e Y a e rm & hall $15. Any rm $7.50 N~ ~· • ., "5 • ris ·· r!"~p¢C! it ~•·1 "ti" ~ · 07:!-l'.''· lites, fol"Ced air heat & tilt '54>1678. tnt.1 .. 1 .... e -No ,~..., h 110 h Ir 1 · Parv>r, v1n,·I, flock, paint N EWPORT BEACH __ __ F-h"P· inrloor golf clri\'lng d 1 1 . 1 -~~~------.... ,... ......,.. couc , c a $5. 5 yrs, ,.. r 11: .\\'11:-:; r• ,.., •• ,,,1! ,
V
.
11
G d A WESTCLJ Fl'--h noors .. l ea for e ectronics ALL blk kittf'n ,vfflea collar nee. exp ls what counts, not Srore cn1nes in your do1r, ,. ,n 1 ~i," arlvHn:11u(l .nl 1
1 a ran a a pts. ri'lo,t;<', d~1b ousc, etc. 0, lil• manuf. 15 3 5 · Bl e ~ ... , -evon'ng 0 ·h11" rlr · 11 ·-0 '6 CAP"'I " Vtc ue Lanlern, Dana ~ ,,. 1 s method. I do work myself. ""' a · ;i -·"""' • j i·· 1• 11._.1,,1 in~·· ' ~~ra~~;::n~l~~;'.~1~~:~~~~~ 171r,.J7~~ \\e;!\'h!t Dr Cu~jom decorated gingles, 16~~~n!!~ia, Ave .• Nwpt Bch Point, -4~16. CALL NOW Good rd. 531-DlOl. * JNTERJDR EXTERIOR'* pl•ftilal.I~ 111~\iv \~ r •ct 11 l -~'" CUTE -y '"lion to .. ·•, 6 " CTI-4) S58·l815 C Lir ins guaran•eed ('11' th~11· o·.1•n, ('ill , n 11 \II, living & l]Uif't SULTOl.lndin~ ,, u. l\"•!~ • '\'n rrts 1 ,(; '.! en. Furnished & Un-... ~ .... WIU .._ 666 E. 17th St.. SAnta An• •m•nf, Coner•'.• ., .• . . '
for family ,vith f'hi!rlr"n Dl'11''"' 1 ,\;'!BP.. rn~,J. F or L~ase Costa Mesa mos old. Vic. t.1ain &: --!: Harris, 642-4;'58, E.x[l('rl '.i!0-:~11 furni~hed. No Jeac,e required. 1440 SQ FT ATTENTION MOTHERS' · ! Near Corona rl<"I ~Ia r Jl1;:h C"rrwm. f!F·h1\;u"' 1·. • • J\facArthur, S.A. 979--0098. . . : . BEAT The Rain! Concrete Blf ess spraying.
School. Flrrplace,' "·rt har .r., Furu. ,\\ •"' il·H'. l .?-"~ii Mork•ls Open Dally-10 .to S. Industrial 6pace nr Newport· KEYS fou~f'fida:v' nr. Bnng your httle ones to vtsit tlooni, patios, dr ive•' PROF. Painting ext/i.nr. Ac· Arrrc :.
built-i n kltch«!n eppl1:inrr~. :§°~ACLll:'~'~:_1~"1~<; San Diego Frwy. 2930 Grace Gf!isler &:fflicily ~(Mf'Sa oubyr 1!.:!~~tea~~~1 ~•~id7e~w~alks=.~°'-"...:64~2-85c.:.:"=l4~.-cous. ceilings, al r l cs~ r,, r t· 11 rt-r
835 AMlGOS \\l,\Y 6l 1·29'Jl nr.. ~lfll l "nf. sir; furn. OAKWOOD GARD EN Ln <.:;o. o~. Ba~er, E. of Verde). can aft s. 545-6768. M~ ....... Ol' attemoon RS·1QUALITY Cement \Vork. Let -'~''~'~'~"~·~· ~""""~~-='~!7~-=l~=·~·--1 ~' .. !:ti i • ' I Cold\\·e!J, Bankt>r & en. rp·~. rl:r~. hhii~. ~u-j) rii~oi. Fa1N1ew, .1 m1.) ~-,...__ d ti Ll 'd Bonded turn,, \11l"nll\ll\•~ ('~ ·~ ::i
l'!-faneging Agent 511-.1121 1 .!1 Pl ,.~-i'=·i .'\'"'· ~ senlatlve there from 9 to 12 FOUND Pet rabbit vicinity sions. I ~J'iel695. 0 · C · · No \\'a~nri:: r" ~, r .r 1 , APARTM ENTS d .1 o::1 i::o~ ........ n 1 Orange&: 2l!t St., Cos.ta Jl7DMapeAve .. CostaMf'Sa ...,;i.. *WALLPAPER * ,.1.,~ , , ,
Huntington Beach ilbtlut oi,t' rl '(.,., ,r,1, :-•-:..-:.i.·l 111 y. ""·JJO,J or"'"'"' · "~" ~= EDUCATIONAL 1----------\Vhen you call "i\!ac" '
ON BEACH!
'.? BR Unfurn Fr. $230/mo.
Furniture Available
Carpets-drapc~-d lshw a~hr r
heated pool-s1tu11ai;-!cnnis
rt'C room-OC'<"ll n Yit>11 s
patios-an;iple pa1·ki11g
Security guard~.
HUNTINGTON
PACIFIC
7ll OCEAN .\\'E .. 1-1.B.
(714 1 536-1·187
Ofc <1pen 10 am·6 pm D:iily
MLLJA~I \\'ALTERS CO.
LARGE 2 BR. $140
S5CI Move In A1lo11·.1nc"
Childn:!n & sml P"l 111'lcon1ci
Newly rlecora1ed. ~EA AIP.
Ap1s. 1 blk N. o( Adami;, oH
Beach Blvd.
733 Urica ** '=~~--------FOR Lease in Hun11m:;1nn
1-larhour: Condo 2 Br. 21;
Ba. Complete bltns, 1·eft·if:",
w a 5 h r/dryr, crpt/dri'~.
fn>lc, pvl ~ar & patio. p'l"l.
Slip fl\'ai!. $320 n10. 61.>-3108,
846-3.~36.
NE\V Shag cpl , 3 BR, 2 BA,
gar. ch i 1 d r f' n Ip ct c'f'lti·
sldcrcd. 1 blk In i;:orrs.
$185. Also 2 BR. Fur'1 511; '·
7681 Ell!!<, Apl A. 817-i .. i\7
or 847.(1932.
e $13.l • LGE NE\\' 1 r.r:.
Sml co1nplrx. Q111P!. All
hltns, ri sh1vshr. CJ(l}f' !n
shop',:!. AdLJlts. 8262 ,\11ant<t.
53&-7780.
SINGLE STORY
Dlux 2 BR, 2 BA. P..·t p1• !.:
encl i;t'al'., ~J 7i 817 G<"~c ....
536-8659. 1 "'s~E~A~c='H~w=o~O~D~A~P-TS-. -
Brand nc>IV 1·2-3 BR. I~ h'I;
to BEACH ~ Cpl~. drps, bl~n~.
frplc. 125 16ih S:.. 118.
8~7·3957
DUPLEX 1 S. 2 BR np1~.
•New·. dC'lu:ire, ri nvAtr. Cr•~.
drp!i. bltn~. t11~t>11· .. ~!•f'r'.<.
S14j. & $J;J, 218 l\ri11:,\1:Jn,
536-7633
e CHE7. ORO .\PTS. 0
823•1 A1ln n1n. J.2.;: s;:.·~.
Pool. Priv11 lc "l".<:"ri i:::"11r.
\Vasher/rlryt>r. 536-0335
2 BR, apor!mcn! O'l Cul.fir-.
sac. adjiicrnl Pai l\ \':''\'
School. 2 ch1\d1'f'n q k
847-.1397 all 4.
- -. & e \YM'TEDe J\fesa. ~2. C~ENT WOitK, m job too
DLX !. B", 2 B\ 1~ b_ :t 10 1 r:c~1Jrt Lhing for ~iin;le Approx 600. w/220 for am FOUND Parakeet vicinity READINESS small, 'reasonable. Free 5'18-144·1 61&-17\J
, .. .,
\I JI ,., I ' "
II
·h
IY'1l'h. ~n--: ~.-·~. t->•tn~. '.\Ia!Tted Arlults). ma.chi-fihop. 646-'1684. Amold Ir: Btach, Co!ta CENTRE Estlm. H. Stufllck, 54S..SS15 PAL'lTh'\G, pro!e!is1ona.I .. .\ll !'' J ""
yriy I"'<' S.!Ei t, '· r;: ~12? '"'" &fS.4334 ' -:-;£\\'PORT BEACH LA.VD available for boat Mesa, 548-MOli. PATIOS. walks, drive, Install WO r k g ~a r n. c 0 In T ,._. J-n~..,(')Tl''F.
('\'"~·:;o--.,-~=~-~~
Cr..A\'D n"\\ 2 PR. I E.".
READING TUTORING in I b ak spe cia l1 s t . 962 -til'.~. r,... .... , •• l'"'~P"
huildi ng or storage. 1535 FND: Keya on leather strip. new awns, saw, re • 547_1441. r -v ··,
1
< 1! \rry DeL1· ~~::Al.:: LI?, 2 613-0CJYI
BA s~.'lll. i:.-.,,,i, J!l'<, \n· I
16th at Irvin~
or 6~2·8li0
riu-.J rr!P. 3tl-.';ti \'.'. B.1~· 1 .,. __ .,.._..,,,......,..,,,.
-"-"-'-'8:___~c-~~ VISTA DEL MESA
3 1;.~ l· .n Hi E' , <f'!, A partments.
rlrp~, rl•.h11 hr, f'? I. t'lr. 1 & 2 RR. Furn. & Unt. Dish·
Lv>, s:~~~ .. C'>ll ''r. AnJk1n 11·:ii;her • Stove ,~ Refr1g •
_c_ol_lcr! 1;tn ~1n-~1 J!. Sha_!? crrt';:-Lrg Rec center.
~ 1\Li'>POl:T ;--1,ot'~·s Jicn1t>:; r..E:-IT S!arts $155
fnr rrr-i. S!~.l '"' ~:,l(). Tustin & Mesa Drive
C;.v11·0.~1 1'.I' \tv '11"·1~'11 _ t"r 545-4855 *
i\tonrovia Ave., N.B. 64&-00M Vic. Mariner'• Park, N.8 . yoUl' home. Cert. Teach!r, remow. 54s...8668 f<1r es!.
Rentals Wanted ~ 646-45117. all grades. Mr. Hathcock, Child Care
RELIABLE party wilh &mall
dog & n>!'!i. \Vants le~ on
2 bdr. house Not ovtr
$1.2j /mo. P.O. Box 172, San-
ta Ana, Ca. 92702.
BUILDER w·ant& to rent 2 or
3 Br. house in need or
repair, exchange for pa.rt
rent. 642-7377.
3 BR. HOUSE
Reas. priced * 557-865(1
644-0144. --------PIANO LESSONS LICENSED No. 9663 in my
Your home. Cert. Teachen. home off Golden \Yest. Hun·
Lost • 55S
LOST, fully I.Ailed long Mr. Hathooc:k, 644.0144 tington Beach. 536-2600.
haired calico femaJe cal, Contractor
vie. Paularlno & Babb!! St. [C91---,,..,,,.,=----~~1 oi;,e~~~7!ri:699p:[ ~;S.V;;;;lcll~·;;;;ond;;;;-;;;;~1~;;~1 C;:TNR~~~~R &: wkends. Harry E. Brown Co. Better
LOST; Lri· Cream colored Built Homes. For free est.
male, Saluk:I doi. San Juan Accounting Call Hunt. Harbour job site,
area. Name Barnado. $25 ACCOUNTING C.O ulti .. 1714) 846-7681. or main ore.
Reward. ,~ ""'" •·to-• M ng, (213) 442-1444.
FOR clean & neat pa1nlin:!. rl,
lntf'rior & exterior, Call '
Dick. !J6S..4065.
PROF, paintino;-1nlrr/1 ..,1.7, !" \'
Honest \\'Ork. L i c I I n s . 1
M8--275'l, 540-1·1 I I.
' '
• ..
I
' I
JNTERIOR-E."l:ler1oi'. Qu.11. l' 1 ·.:..:
ly \Vork. Reasonoh!y nr"I''] :• I '" Free ~s1imatt'!i. 616-l"IV. I ,, . PAINTING /Papering, 13). r·
in l.farhor area. Lir t.· hnnd· 1
ed. Ref's furn. &l2-2l ~ " '
PAINTI NG: l lone~1 , '
' '
o I
'.
"
" ~·1
; .
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"
-i
I. 1
I L ~
I " '
' l ' jt t •!
l t \
L,\J:r:f: .. fir.~ p, n. · ;;;-1 --,~~~~~~~~~
F~rJ !.. 11! J<, • I-': fn b, Ii ,., :)'f,!1/;;~. ~·" fli-7_ l Rent1ls J[~J
i·T.\n!:1=n-.. -.. ,-.. -.-. -.,-(r ;.7.1 ~-------'
L1 r, :: r::r:.. ~ F':i, f·ri r ~":l.,
M isc. Rentals 465 •.>""OO'N ...., ... FinancialP r ojtction s ,,~--------
4:30. •~no alt 5:30. Bookkeeping. Our/Your 01. MY Wa:y. quality home
BLACK maJe cal, 1 yr. Lost lice. &12-1534. ·· n!ll)od, Walls, cell l n g,
guaranteed 11·ork. L1r'1! ,\n~
size job. Call 67;;..i7l0.
YOU svppy ihe paint. Ro.in,
pa inted StO <'a. Also c>•
tl!rior. CaU ~O-i0-15.
e:J~1 5 1c.:.1 --!
floors, etc. No job too small. r I I"" ' 11 ;
_i:_· _A~ail r.ov . -!~-~~_-: _:____ Roo1ns
L.\l:L•E:-i t~pt'. ~rn1:_11'\ ~ • ... -0-.---,-----.-.---1 400
BRAND new furn. 2 BR Con·
do, Palm Springs area,
ht'alt'd pool, mountain view,
64~3i46.
11/16 between 9th Ir: 10th St. Beby1ittlng f>47-oo36, Z4 hr ans. &erv.
BaJboa. An 1wers to ·J ' J ,.
I. I I c .,
''Ka I u k I a.'' Reward. COSTA MESA Addition'--'* Remodeling
673-2575. PRE-SCHOOL Gerwick &: Son, Lie. • , .. i'•" Cr.t · ,. •· · · ·.. L \ I "'Y Ml'lm "" ba!h, ... ' " . . ' ... . .. " C.t',.! I. Y r: LO T Pla;ter, ?atch, Re,air ~=•r. Sl'Yl. :~ -'1f:f-. !'-,>. t:1'lUS cln<els. pri. en·
!r.u1•·c>, cnclos~d .zarage. LOST: Female b 1 on d State Licmsed 67J...6CH1 * 54~2170 ·I ; • I -'J -J.~.\~.T£;Lt:J<F J-':"·y 2 B•·.,
::''~ BJ., hlln.~. 1!11lc, 2 c ... 1·
s;!ar, povl, re..: a r ~a ,
6!1-6!'.i.
~=--~-• s1~:.-\\'ESTILIFF 2 Rn.
Arlults 1111 .• .,. 11'1 rr's. JL2S
Br,lfnri Lri. 5t~7J·,;,
Sllnta Ana
ELCI -C~h'I li E BEAT
SJXGLE ST0r.Y
South .'\ra ;\lrrr.~nhere
~ rn .. 2 C:\TII
C1Tpr~~ & ri•p~
Air rnnd1l;rt-··1
Pr··-~I!' P:1 1n3
Jli:ATE;) NOL
T\"niy o! Ja·.•.11
C~l'fl"·~~ k S!l";~;;e
!!Inn-.:-; \'~L:_ \CZ
0
--· ,. ..
:': J!c f'cr\"
l..ar;::P (111t>il"'"'<t' .-·r • BGQ ci, •1 C1Tf' c,•;·rr
GrPnt nr1•• I :. ·'· ~ f;1•r,1,s
l"'"l'l'\ ~·
!C~Tl·I C('IAST
\llLLAS
Rr"f'.1kf11~t S: lunch prtvgs. in I II iii4] 'l"I'' "P!lo, ~3. mo. 5.'ii-9360 Armouncemantt
a ft 5~. '-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:~;;;
Cocker-Rttrie"Ver, Nr. 20th 18th &: Monrovia, ~ day 4 ElactrlcaJ
St & Santa Ana Ave, C.J\.f, full day aeuiona. Pta.nMC!l----------
54g.1385. Procram. hot lunches. Ages ELEci:uCAL lnstalla.tlons
2-6, hn 6:30 AM • f PM. Ir: re~~· N? job too 1mall.
Plaster Pt1!l'htn2 ln!t"ri11r
SlU!"CO Repair ExtPr·"T'
SmaJl Jobs. Lie. S.17-Z.lil
Plumbing
.. " . .. .. '
. ' . "' .. ' ~ "' -.1 ' ' \11-. .. : MALE Collie:, trt-co!.or, 2 yn $20 wk<'OMPARE• &12-4050 Reailstlc pncl"!I. Free est.
old, vie, San Juan. Capo. I ~fij;~~~ifi;;j~· iif'T'ii:ll~Li~·~·~·d~/ln~s:._!54&-02~~n.i::_ __ _ Reward: 434-3842, Lona:ISTUDENT will babysit &: It. '
Sl.t:EPI~G room, priv. en. I
Iran{'(', p1-.v toilet. S&"i per Card of Thanks/in
mo. c"~ta :\lesa. &1:Hl878. Memor ium 505
GE~TLE:'llAN room for rent
1n Cos la :'llr~a.
Beach. hlwk J\.f.F ' alt. 12:30 P.M. EL E CTRJCIAN, licensed,
\VE "''ish to express our FEMALE Blk NB.Qf·lrv. area. Trans. bonded: Small jobs, malnt,
PLUJ\>IBING REPAIR
No joh too sm:i.U
• 642-312.i 8 ..
I .• '.o ,..,r ....
~-... ~ "t ~ ... f:f': 'I I ' l
' ' ~-, i I!
.L f1:.I 1.r p, ,11 " & Wht Cocke.r Refs. Jennifer. "0 '0 " alt & repa!l'!I. 54s.sro3. thanks & appreciation to the 3 mos. nerds «hots. Vic. ~ COLE PLUMBING°" \\' • Ir ,, r • -r-, ~
•ti"'_'·' ·1·~
many fl'iends who rt:alled & c M & N B R d l~l2iii,P~Moi';. ;::=-=:-o:=:-:;,l:F~u:r~n~l:tu:r~o:_ ____ _ ~ . . . , r war •
for your expres.sio of sym· 548-6765. CHILD Catt, my home, a.Ji SPECIAL! Avg. chn!r or
pathy 'which hel ~us so ~~--------day or hrly. Fenced yard. k . ••• G 1
!17'JR0726
Gu£lst Homo
Costa Mesa
415
24 hr. 11ervice. 6J",..Jl!i1
R emodel ~ Repair--
. ; '
' ' ,. \ . " ' much to sustain the loss of LOST: 1 mo•. old Irish set;. Whittier School dis.trict. 19th roe er strip1"'"' $5. !u 11f:',
f'RL l"OCl1n iiva1! iv/loving one so dear to us. Mrs. Jake ter, male. $50 REWARD' ,;&~>~lo~n~ro~vu.~·~·d64~6-~2.195.~~:ii00il~~b~ra~''~po~ll~•hto:d~.~-~~:·=
CUSTO:'>f R~TM<l<'l \\'nrl . r
altt'rations, arirlaion~. m1ri"' '
rt'J'111iri:. Firush r.r rr1·t -:1
C.1trpentry. Davi<! SIPYo',Jf ' r
&l&-1108
'r. :. • .... ~. r •'. C.1!1 ' .;i:
("".r" f"r arrhiilatnry male illutz. J\Iax & Oare! Mutl: Ir: Youna Dauahttr Diatraught. RESPONSIBLE Hi~ School Gardening
hr frcnalt>. Ba!;incf'rl rile!. relatives. 06~'~3--0554~-· _. ~~-----•" Vh~:!e-'a"t'.,'onor R!'i~eO.n!t'6a.l'saft 6. ~~~~~~~~l,~.~~I ~'f~P~s,;~.,~'o~:-y~,-~_r_.:_:~al.c..•m_Afg_•_:an~k-. e~se=~ N~tb~~'t~n!re~~ E~ple~:w:~~en~ard:~: .. 425 :I Fa,--fronl lrft ~w. Avail. alt lPP.l. Cal JE'aMc Kamalani, 646-4676: .__ Penonals v•~ -22 Repa ir. Carpentrv, rii"1~1r· t .,
\'' i'.\:·C'" rr·ar !.;ikr, 3 Br, ~;;;;;;;;;;~~~ 642-9757 or 642--0056. &12-00 · AL'S GARDENING etc. Call n ick. 6-12-ti.7..'. ,
'.' h;i. A\,111. h\• \1 knd (11' 1\'k. 2 MALE German Shepherd.I, EXPERIENCED child care lot' a:ardentn& & 1mall 1·
P '~rn·r 11'111· for Chri<.lmas. 1 1 blk "·eekdays for children 2-5 landscap1ng services, ca11 1 _R_oo_fl_n~g;..... ______ -tan &: &: tan. Vic. ""'· Fon-• y·~. Luneh•• ••o n~. •·-•-N--~. L • '.'\,,,. Yc·1:$; nr \Vi nte r P e rsonals 530 W JI A • 19lh St .z•-1.~ cuu _,.......,.. _. ... 16 ..... _. e T. Guy Roohn<, DcaJ n a ace ve. ~ ·· included. Just o" San Di•-CdM, Cbata 1'.fesa, Dover 1
""·_'_''_.-_11;;:;_·---= C.t..J. $25 Reward! 646-3189. Fwy ne'ar Brutd'. S49-4038 .. ~ Shores, WeatclW. .., reel. I do my 011TI \vnr1<. ~ r
SPECIALIZ E D J-!.,,,,. r
0
T ,
., r
, " RE'n~als to Share 430 \I/HY not surprise her for SIAi.\IESE kitten, ll·U~n. L!C'D n ... ea-. ? am-5·."" PROFESSIONAL Gardentr, I ~645-,::",,:!7c.SO:cc. ~"'~~..:"'c.'°c.:.· ---Christmu'?' ~S carat Dia· "'--·( H M -•--~-""'Y ... o7<' REPAIR. reroV('r anv. 1•w;! ·-
UJlU wy nr a~u•w. pm. Hot moalo. Xlnt ··-. tree ~•ark, P r u n I n g . monrl ring, 'Tiffany setting. CdM •· ~ Dy ., .. ., ""'" ""''" problf'?ns. \Venerl11. Rllnffr'l'" • ,t ··r 'i.1 ;.. \\ P(IRT atrornty will
·~-•1: h'1n1e \1/f)OQI. \\'nnl 2
r.1, I' ,,,, 1•:.1iure hus1ness
' ri"'. 5!~71. + Pxpc:nses.
fr,..1·,;·! t·lnrl<, "?' 1
1 :~.:110 a~I\ for Pickell.
· ...... wa1 " ~•MN, Harbor/B.-ako-·-a. 1prinklers, clean up jobo, Retail value $600. AskinO' ~AA .,....,.. • ... "' F....., o•.t. "•o;..1cs1. I l"·•·rn .:;,. t f: . .,. eve .......-...... ..,. 546-l539. I and & cap In i . George, '"" '' <H...--o;
S28.'i. SUrprist • <matching 646-5893 Sewing/ Arteraiions t
Lady's & man's wedding L01!1"..:,,••,,inmnaly•':=Y1 0•,.b1!:1k CHILD & infant care ln myl,Ex,.:.:..:..::::.·---~---___ ,,. . -· ......._.... c · ,.
bands. never worn • .. , .. _ .... ' ""'· 1ovtly C.M. homf!, Exp. &: per Japanese Gardener European Drf':'s111'1f;1n-:: ; 1 1 1 ...
'
'REE'.) Call ""'o710 after Jar. Vic. Balboa .Blvd. Ir: -a•. • ·-•·n··• yd. Complete yd 1ervice. Neat Al -•• h s 613-1858 '"' .._...,,. u: """' I custom fil!ed. Prr•nn~I r .,~,., 1
""'"' ...,U'"';;Q) ..... ..,..~ Fashion 11dvicc. 673Rl~l!l. :01, , "
~I ..
' . \
" ' " '
Jj
• ' ' l ' ' ' • ' ' -) .
~·1
•• I i :rn ;..:.1r.\r.h.1r E,\-•I. TH10~ ''.i.\1 L r1rrrlPd to fihare
~=~~~-----l-1e:11na B"~f'l1 house. 2 BR, l 1<z ha l'rpls, tl?'Jl!<, 494·2819
6 Pm •.. ·-konds. .,.,t, t. · ~·" ""~?. & Rolla. F-"'· 0
'" '389.
SUDDENLY single, little, $2S ReWard Blk Lab Ret. BABYSITI'ING -Llcemed. AL'S Landscaping. Tr ee Alterations -642~SB4S' f'L I
cute, educated & like temii1 LoRt on 4th laland in Hunt. Brookhurst & A t 1 an t a . removal. Yard remodellng.
& brid~e. back .. packing, Harbour. 84&-4072. Clean. Fenced yd, xlnt food. Trash hauling, Jot cleanup.
Neat, accura te, 20 ~"'-'r!\ ""Jl. t;.·" "'rt
l"<>r.1h' l
' .
) l "" ~· •
lili:·•, r100l t., "1'1", S"""'. 1 1•:;;1 h"rS nerrl 1 fenlale
. !l).f,,)~'l e\···~.
ScUth La.iu.na roomn1a1e, 3 BR
\'.JTl'r. fi7~-tfi2-1.
apt on
lravel1n.:. hooks, parties &: LOST: Shetland sheep doJ Loving. 968-6819. Repair s.prinklen;. 673-1166. __,_, '" I . 'I I _________ ...... ii!"'""" T '
n1e11. Arr there any over ..., (She tie) " a I e, White Cerpenter EXP Japanese Gardener. CERA~fJC tile n<'iv .r 1 1 ,
who have some of the samt brown I black. 673.()538 NB. -~;.::.;;;.~------1 Know how, up-k•-. plant • • ,,. ~.. remodel. Free tst ~n1;;1! • · '
Tile .-. i, I " H!
'v l , I !
2 & 3 BR 's. 'Sll i UP. Pain, f'C'S,~'i' J' •r.t. rn'l\ly rfr"."'"11"
pool, childrl'n. :\10RA Ki\ I f'<'l, Z I" 'h·. I P"ll" r.o~·
S8.I ' I. I 1 ~·,, '1' "1;1..,r :-.,.;.-,: l,
Offi ce Renta l 440 interest~ & er~ looking. ~ot' LOST pua: doi grey & black ALL types of Carpentry. By pest, trimming, clean-up jobs v.·elMml'. 5ZS-2-cl26. i•·--~-· -
fl'1endsh1p'!' W~ite, Classified Vic. Baker &: Bristol, C.M. local man. 968-3486. I ~=::.==:::::"-.:=.::.c:::._ r ~,{ -
ad No. 243 Daily Pilot, P.O. Reward. 545-&0ll. 536-1648 Tree Service
! •• , r. M Cal" l iii;ijji;ija;i;i;iii.iiiim.liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilEXPER. Japane;e G1Lrdener -------'''-1'-
•
C"'' ''Ill~ I"".'• Apts. I _ , lnra , .1 .,_, ~ _
blk E. or Beach. %2-R'l·'L AffS.,
WALK TO BEACH! F urn. or Unfurn.
Lovely 1, 2 & 3 BR'!'. Cpr~.
370
M~D I CAL SUITE
''"~~ \'rnfl' '1rta 1111h
!" • .(} St]. fl. 1nclud1ng 3
...,;:.1 n1n~ ronm, nun;c'!!
~1a11011, 1ra rin;:. private
Box """· ....... sta • esa, u. 92S26 Tn!e trimming, Clean-up, GENERAL Tree Scrv. 1·ar<! * * * * * * Lawn !'t1alntenance. clean-up, hauhn::. ~rirlnl..1f'r ,.-------------------... ! 64&-0619 or 54g..7953 repairs. Reas. 64&-~Jo'l!ft O tr
COLl ··~c; o.-:;;r 1 c1 .:('
" -.I
drps, hltns, d"·hr. Rl7-':'.l'i.
BEACHBLUFF APTS-
Spac. 2 Br 2 B~. Pont. P:t·
tio. D/\V. ~ll Ellis. f.42 n:n
LGE 1 Br art. r 'lrl ~·'r,
marriP.ri rouplP /Jr I ~ir,R .. -
adult!li. $125. Jl!2..£.!l, .
Costa Mes a
l.'l:.::: c l!S-'lliil
-ELDEN -
of fice> v. .Th prh•ate
[lrdrn r~ .1mple parking
$3).: Includin~ utU\ties
~
CCMPLETE lawn lr; earden·
ing service.
Jim 543--0405.
Want to get involved?
\Tolunteers needed to work
\\'ith primary age children ~.:'.", ";;"~~ v~~ .~:.~ Trader's Paradise ~I ;;;;'mplo;;;'"";;";;;;;~J l~i~~;i~; ~;,n,. .. c( ,._ ,_h· day~ a · week. For informa· LAWN It.faJn t. Hauling, new .. rn .,. , ·• --tion call 847-2551 ex1 233. 1 • lawns. clean-up, prunlng.
SPIRITUAL READINGS Ines Free Est. Call 54~7379. Job Wanted, Male 700 ~ .. .,
1
' r .... ' ,..,.. :.
Advice on &ll matters • R.JliJtble G~r.dt._nlng f:/G Bookkfif'l"r E x.p-'"'' I • 3l~a~~ i.~ ~~1i~~al •t1 mes Ma!nt . Yd Cleanup, 646-1072 payroll thru F in II n r l8 l u .. 2 BR. Apt. Clo~crl iz;ir, cr'o;.
drps. rhildrmi/sn1all prt ok.
$140/MO. 847-29-10.
CLOSE to Beach~ :.! llR. critr;,
drpS k ~\OVe, nil p >!<:, rh
53&-9!1~2.
STUDIO 2 Br, l 'i Cct. ptl
S111rk!in;;, Xt'\\' 2 BEDr.OO'.'t
$' •Tlit•:1 :ipjrtmf'nt. L11xur-
1.i11~ :"""I. l·z~h l11'1rl~f'1'j'lin"'(,
~1'10. Arfuhs • nt\ r,·1~. 23\l
J.li'i•'1l ,\\e., ("Q\l{l )l,..~'I.
G;;;.;;,ito or G-16-'1'66
RE1\LTORS
Sl\'CF. 1~.t I
673-4400
San Clemente FALL Yard and Garden stAtem~nls. Al9'.1 ty Cl'", ,.,cF<c-, p~ Clean·up. Reasonable r ates. 546-26.:il. · ' -.. ";•
49:Z..9136, 492-9034 d 11 646.(1785 aft 4. ,:.:;:.;;;.::..,..7"',---,...,= 11., 11 l' " •
ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. 0 ars -.--~-;--,.----1 Job Wanted, F emale 702 f;. •1 • 1 • 'f''
Phone 542-7217 or write ''-------------------.J'l;:Gj'.jejjn;.•;•0•_1 ,S,~·~·-•,lc~•:':;:--;-;
P.O. Box 1223, Costa Mesa. THINGS by 1.1oose, Lt.
·---··--'"' '! ••.
NEED HELP AT 1-10~11::~ t • • r -' For Temporary Scn·1rt>:
yrd, encl g&r; nr flllrk -*--2-6-E-DROOM *
grade & hi &chis. 51frfllf_"
t f'll 2 nice su !t"S stUl left In
Lir'11 Bid~ 11100\'P . Blue
rlfl!!'lhi n Re•1 .). F1ne for
1n•1! or ~n'J <lfC ust. Drop
1n or calJ .Jones Realty
!=,..rv <f'. 675--~771, Sl1lte C,
COUNSELING &. info lo r 2 well ttnted homt• • BR Have 20 Ac. orange arove, elect., plumb. fence, tile,
abortion, va.scttomy le ado~ 2 BA in San Mateo I: Bel· prime corner. Rivmlde. inst1ns, carpentry, paint etc. • We Have Con\-.,l1•!U.!Cnl fl 1
Aidefi • Nurses • llonK"· 1 ' ',, '
I J R.1 ,.,,,"M11~r l"'nCf'pf.
$131).$160 1 .t 2 BR .. 2 Rr. 2 Rram ('l'thnl!•. e)(tr.i J.-;
Ba. Blk ro beaeh. Poll. ~!'I' hi' ~tl'l~. ercl 1.11;n, r"crta·
tion. ApCare, 642-4436. mont, rent $245-$260. Ex· Clear. Trade 5165,000 equity 1~51_5-06'> __ • ------~~~~~~~~~ cbana:e for )oc, prop. Leo S. for conuner. or lndust, Fox Hauling •
(\' rirrm'se:i. ;I rgi Laa:asse Rltr. 673-4308. Co. R1trs 673-9495. 1---------l ost and FCMftf I w WANTED! 1'fe1sy I re 11 s , i\1gr; 220 121h. '"'n rm, i!.Unl h1•h,, ,..,r, PESJ\ gpace 11vn1!11blc $50 Canyon Lake Condo, priv ant lncomt property, Or-yards A: ganiat1 .. movln& Ir: Laguna Beach Ar!u..s. (i•U" ~'"""'v arrcr· m n B·B·Q'J & rrr · ,\rl mo. \V!ll prnv1de furniture • . Jake, 2 BR., 2 BA, pool, wa-ange Cilty, Have $10,000 haulina. $7.50 per hr. +.
nt $1 mo. An!l\,'CT!ng IC!rvir-e ter 11riing, tennis, golf. T.0 . to exchange for equll)'. Anytime, (TNT La w n l.r-,,,. 11 JI'.... ' e OCEAN V\O'IY • T.1'1' 1n l'-'h I It 2 Rr. $175 Up. PMI-:.117i 1-\A~BOR GR t:EtJS a1·nJl'll>lt?. Sl)j No. EI Found (frH •dt) 550 Trd eq for C.1. M-1 prop or The Fox Co, Realtors M i 1 ) 543-!i863
.• ... ,, -C?11mlno Rt1.I. San motorhome.Ew1.64S.OMI 0 6'f3.9f95 an .. •
1 UtG 1 BR. furn, ttlil pd -'C:.,l<:;m;;.<no....l•c.·..c4!l>-4c:...;.:ll0;::__~-IBROWN 6 White Sprinpr ** Wlll trade my $17,000 9 yr old Corona del ~far HAULING, ~ltan-up. local S. Csl. Hwy. 6U..J.U'J,
~743.
Lido Isle
ADULTS Dlx 2 Br. l'i B.i ..
2 c11r gar,, bltn~. rclr11 ..
trpJ cpt f dl'J'I. N'r tttfn Sn.:>fi·g $2'J.1 nn l":i. ~l-:?01.i,
67S-3001. ;
2 BR + om, 1~: n~i~. frpl.
Adults only. $2'IO \'rl\
ASSOClATED BROh:ER~
6~3663 96~2505 EYe ...
Sl~mo. I fml 1 BR furn DESR 'P-"ct aYalJable SSO Spaniel, no colltr or tap, equity In R-4 lat In Count)' duplex. So. of hwy. $49,500 movtl, exp d collt&e stu-
uhl pd ~/\\'k. A!llJ 2 BR. mo. Will provide f\lrnlture found at The Ranch in C.Orridor with old rtnled val. Exchange up for prop. dent. Lri· truck Reas.
11nf;1rn tt~>f"n'I. ti! t:I ot $.'mt>, ATll'iW'Ct'lng servtct Irvine. Jeffery Rd & hOuse for aood 1'0'1 or ll'I-erty. Leo S. Llpsse Rltr. =534-=J=lll6~.-;---~-~
Catr\in,,, Mf\..C.t~l. available. 222 FoI't'5t Ave, 1'Ioulton Parkway. 544-8857 oom11 prop. * 64:Z..2150 * 673-4308. TRASH & Garage cltaMJp. 7 ~s:oo. \'0\T 1\:''-"'.11"'10-,,.-,-,,...-Llllflin., Beach. 494-9466 or eves 968-7318. White bamboo bar. temi· (2) R-3 lots, suitable for S dAYlf. Frft est. Anytime. Pre~ ii th l·lrrn ,,·o.irno ~ f:l\J ~q. ft. 2nd noor BLACK PIJPS'lY. 1.2 months circular rteulatlon 1lu, units ta. So. Short Wke Ta· ·"-~-503_1. ______ _ ~.\.' · \' r:.t.:-1 ~ i (,/mri. CO~A i\IESA. old, "'hile markina: on hind portable, boiJtht at Sloane's hoe, trd eq for 5 BR hm or YARD. gara1r, cleanups.
117 r 2;r~1 ~f r ; "'riri Cnll 616--2130. root. Area of Primrtise St. for $200, Trade tor small inc prop ln H.B. Cabin at Remove trees dirt Ivy ~It \I!\' 11.' .,~.1·tr1r. 3 \'ER\' nirl! •crr>nd Iloor ol· Royal Pal Ortve. Mes.a atilboe.t or 'r!, e73-0568. Big BeU or 1 962-3763. Fiii 1and, backhc:M!. s.41.2600
r urn. & r.nt irrt I f,; nt~~. Ti17T "ch Blvd. Vertie area. 5.57-7297 alt * * * * * * A good want ad .Is: a eood
2 nR·•·trti~ S11.\l'P o"'"<'r 121,13qi.oo1s D11y1. ~5·~·3~0·:.._ ________ 'iiil••••••••••••••••••iiiil~l~nve~s~tm~e~n~t:.;_ ____ _
keepe~ T' r,
HOl\1EMAKERS/UrJOH.N lt'•t:"'"~ "'"'le
~TEi 0 £LF. For Pe:rmancnt &-rv1rf':
e We Have Comp;ininn:1 f 1
e Housckt"epcTS 0 P1'.1r1J.
ca.I NLll'!t's ere. 1\t :'.1on.:il~ n
Rates. 1
H£ALTH &
FAl\nLY CARE AGE:Xct
1805 No. Broadw.11v, 11;3 r ·
Cc\l 1 I . I '·
Santa Ana !-47 rA·1 .. . ( i.
• . • .
' • l . ' ' ' • • '
' • • ' RN de.slrt'!> job 1n 11!1.Y"1, un Pho·· ' t':i "" e
office. Call alt<'r Ii I.:" •• • __ , -·-•----·~· ,1 '
~92-S1Zl. .. ' )f ~.
Pl!lme po11tinn wt1n·"11. L , k 1 n
Typing. rtctpl, ban.It f W I · t , 1,: • 1
Call 642-4171. P..• I'•• dt!pr"•l lbj.
Wh it11 EltDhant n ln»-A Lfr", "'r.ftr rilrr, it11~1 ..
-• 0 I ~ • • • ,,.• • .-. ' .... , -
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DAILY ru.or T~urldaJ, Noi.mber IS,J97l
II
11 • ..., ..... 1[11) I
Help W•nted, M & F 7IO Help W1nted, M & F 710 Holp Wintod, M & F 710 Ho lp WontoQ, M & F 710 Holp WonfOd, M & F 710 Fumtturo 110 Gor ... SAio 112 Ml'"11'1noou1 *AUCTION*
DANCING GO.GO
GIRLS & BARMAIDS
QUE&'I/ SEE
1$2 Newport Blvd, C.!1-f,
oply in person. &16-0035
DISTRJBl.TI'E irealth It
EcolOIY line', pt/fulJ time.
Bob ct Bill &46-7056
Drapery • Carpet Sales
INVEST IN
YOUR FUTURE
BE YOUR OWN BOSSI
Men or Women
L9111• A Y ,uaw
T1xl C1b Ettpef. de('(lra1or I y pt
pqaon. Store leBda. Draw •
+ comm. 4i92-225t
Call fo!o Appl
5461311 EMPLOYMENT
COUNSELOR Ask tor\'Hernr'l n
I need an aggres6!Ve msn ..... ;iiiii.iii;li;ii.:;,::.;;;,..iiii
with recent employmf'nt
counsellnf experience. \\'e
~ a nrw agency 'A'ith Ji!).
eral be~fifs, Plf'ase apply
in pet':"(ln to. , •.
C11l-P1cific Ag•ncy
2750 J1arbor Blvd .. C\1
Earn Money At Home
Addrening mall. for Details,
• send stamped, sell addttss.
ed envelope & 25c lo Darc<>-
Oc, P.O. Box 9:1~. No. Hol-
1lywood, Calif. 9I609.
EXECUTIVE
Personnel Agency
--
·-
I~ PERSONNEL
SERYICES"AGENCY
Ftte & Fee Pcxsition11
Girl Friday
Gen'I Ofc Anaheim
Surety Bond Clerk
File Clerk
Typist
NCR 3100 Bkkpr
to lfiOO
$540
$400+
$325
s-tOO
to 1500
SERVJCE Station Attendant, MOVING Sale .. Interior GARAGE I: Yard St.le. 5 tm.
Mgr. Trelnff $9000 RN'S all ahlfts open. 4678 Campu1 OHlgnctr'.a stock marlled Furn. Misc. ho u 1cbo1 d ANflQUE forte bto'A'tf us,
Ulrtime career In a drama-Dr., N.B. S46.J157. down 30 10 .50% thru ~ ilemi. W19-2(1.21. 2033 Marine beat txcbanger $1!1
tic &nJWth situation awaits STENOGRAP:IER • Diver-Nov. 23.rd only. Hrs. 9-3. Paloma Dr. CM. each, U90md alt l•nkl $>
perwn w/llttle Dr no exper. sifted exper. 0 , C. Alf1)0!1 1800 We1tclitt Dr., Newport &!OP Sale! TooJs, table $25. Di 1 h w a ah er $25.
Prn:tl.ie nat'I firm, Call Bob area. Salary open. Send Beach. saw, elec emory wheel, Rl'fri&:eratot S25. A$SOrted
MCCoy, 833·2700. Dennia A ALL SHlfTS refl\lme to C&uilied Ad Z.W. AU. you nted is the ~by ga.rde'n tools, ~min,ton of. Chain $5425. El~trlc motor
Oenn\a Penonnel Agency, 248, Daily Pilot,..P. O. Box, Compl«te decor. finished fice ~writer, m Is c. $7 . .50 each. A$.:IOrted tools
2082 Ii.flchelson Dr., Irvine. fountain V II 1560, Cost Meu, Ca 92626. nursery furn. Glass top Thurs., Fri .. Sat 10 am 5 $5-$25. Electric shoe shiner
MGR. Sales, earn $900+. Oi. 3 ey breakfut table a: 4 chrs. All pm. 5.12 Center SL, No. E, $12. ~3250.
tralnlflJ', bonuse1 flex hours. • , Sr. Acct. to $14K like new. 644-1995. .-C;._'_;M,.. --------'"EXT;;;;,-, '-'.,klng,:,-''-,-""'"'""-ol~l~5.,-0 .
.. ...,., u.. Community Hospital 3 Yn cPA "'"· p.,, .. ~ N ' hbo hood Sal H b _ .. -·-·· ~ . · ship potenw . sma\t tinn. DANI~ couch. blk vinyl e & r e i'urn., ex-ump a"-" u w"' T"'·1n ~fGR sales earn $800. + mo. • NE PORT cushions, 2 bar 110011, blk erclse equip, sand Utts, car bed set $50. Reel. c air $60.
con1m. Full co. training. 17100 Euclld 1t Wimer vleyl seats \\'OOd ba ks SS> kennel, elec bed• · cal-i8mm I proj. $35. An q. dbl
Flex. hn. 8-16-0239. ·979-1211 Perso.,nel A9ency all S42-Sls8 c leclibles, 1un la.mp. tape bed $35. Skis & boo (12-9)
FRIDAY 7,30 P.M.
NOVEMBER lfth
N£\V 6. USED FURN FRO~
MODEL llOMES &: REPOS
Bdrm aets. Divan$, Bunk
beds. Chest• or draweJ"I,
Dinettes. Dining tables,
Bookca~. De1k.1, Office
chain. Colored TV's, S'tfir·
eos, 2 plaOOll. \V111her1, Dl'y-
ers & MUCH .l\tORl:!
,PLUS F.: ST ATE OF
LEAFY 1 FINCJ-f T.O BE
SOLD. ~ L
WINDY'S AUCTION •fODELS ~-• /t' · 833 Dover Dr., N.B. ' · recorder, misc. 9531 Smokey $35. Jee 1kate1 (2) ~0• Span. " necucu . P nne RF Checkout & Quality Con-642-••70 GIRL'S bedroom butch .., evf!s A wknds Will train I eeded mall .,,. Cir., Park Hntgn tract, H.B. &ame tbJ &. 4 cbn. i150. COME BROWSE AROUND
Call •-"'98 a1'1 6pm . tro m,an ~ . bf~ I . 6' x 22''. 5%' h I g h, 1,;963-0079:;;,:::;;;;·~~----644-6333. """""\' N~t Bl"d, ...,.......,.. · new e a-: .. un1c uswss m bookshelves, 9 draWt!n etc. ~--=-~----.w•J 11 -··,...... ¥ Need 10meonf! to assist me We 1 t minster. 63 91 Softw1re M9r to $20K $50. 646-2032. GARAGE Sale: Wed thru Be1uty Shop Equipment Behind Tony's Bldg Mat'ls
in my fut growing buaineu \Ye 1 t min Ster Ave, Real-time computer systems ATTRACTIVE han . d Sun. Mini bike, Golf cluba &: (1) TWO Station Florentine Costa 1\1esa * 646-8686
2 hn a day, $250 mo. For \Veslminster. Call 894-33£11. exper. Degreed. lite alnut, gmg ~!~· Sz 9 shoes, S"''ll.& lamps dre$slng bar w/2 lge mir-OPEN DAILY 9 to 4
Interview appt. Call l\.frs. REJ.JEF RN, ll-7 shift, ex-NEWPORT S48-~. ..roomy, .,._. w/match. 11pread, dbl bed, rora Mx.48 w/matching "P_A_lNT-~B-R_U_S_HE_S ___ P_U_RE
Olson 535-2277 between 2 le pt:r., .mature housekeeper. P e rsonnel Agency . ping pong & pool tbl, liv. rm desk. 2 Rnd based hydraulic BRISTLE .AND A LS o
4 p.m. Xlnt fringe bnft!, Beverly 833 Dove r Dr., N.8 , p.R .. tab!! & chain $75. 2 set. BxlO tent, etc. 81'62 chairs, 2 air conditioned NYWN _ RANGING I N
PART time recept. Beauty ~tanor Con" I, Hosp. 642-3870 chall'S $5 ea. _Coffee t.able Dany Dr., H.B. 847-9531. dryers 4 chairs. one SIZES FROl\l 2" lo 6"
Salon 'txper'd. Send re!Jllme Capistrano Bch. 496-5786. $lS. 2100 Newport Bl, C.M. GARAGE Sale Irvine Ter-Belevedere shampoo boy,· I DROP C L 0 T H S , 1.AO.
to ad No. 252 Daily Pilot, TER.~frrE crewman llsc'd or 9'X11' Wilton· Rug race 1400 Sem!nadfl' Terrace with lerring &: chair; 2 DERS. ETC., BRAND NE\V
P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. RETAIL unll.sc'd. We otter life In-$15 ** 644-8905 s&t. November ~th, 9am-separaters. $480. Beauty ***BARGAIN***
Personnel SALES LADY su~., grou~ health . Insur., BEAUTIFUL Mediterranean I ="'=m~. =~~--~---supplies extra. Cl\( 979-0726. Call Anylin14! -542-3120
Counsellor Trainee ~id vacatiOns. Profit shar-dining room set with server. ESfATE Sale Nov. 19th-20th SABOT. nr new; -racing CARPET
rt ing 5 day 'A'ork ~eek. Call ~to appreciate! 545-ro93. & 21st, 310 Fernleaf, Ccrona centerboard. orange f"ACTORY OU'l't.E~ you are aggressive, en-F Qu 1.1 B k BardE'n's Exterminating Co. ~='--,::.:::cc:.::=::...::::..::::::._ d 1 M G -•f •-1 f·•-1 ~" 2 t " thusia!lic & want to 'A'tlrk or. I I y a try Ask for Joe Laux or Dave DINING Room Set: Hand e ar. ra,,.. atu.:r cock, .1....,rg as, comp. ,,...,.,. ge. SAVE $ $ $
I I . • _, china cab'•et j • w , try wood storage units, make A ,_ A Ow w peor e, we w1U train you Barden 696 No. A Randolph carvcu ma hag a n y Chip-"' • • ttentiun pt ners
to make above avg. income. Apply Jn Person To: Ave., C.M. or call 546--5570. pendale, table 2 leafs serves quilts, pots le pans, etc. ~~i;ing back chair. $25: Nylon Sh&~ $1.90 sq yd & up
BOOKKEEPER
Assisting chief acrountant.
Manufacturing exper. l\ta-N,...
Call Lila Watson, 833-2700. Mr. Anderson URGENT! Boy 6 needs home 10, 6 chairs, buffet. 673-2801. Jane's Antiques. Frer est, Ph 839--0251
Dennis & Dennis Personnel S' HERCULON GA RAG E Sale , 7 • ASSISTANCE League Holl-5021-C \V, Edinger, S.A.
488 E. 17th fat Trvine) C"t Agenoy, 2082 Michelson Dr., SNACK SHOP base after school 2:15-4 pm, sofa & M I ·11 a· h day Fashion Special Sat. 10 Corner of Edin .... r & Euclid 642-1470 BAKERY J.1on/Tues/Wal J Fri. Vic. Joveseat, round game set, on gomery iai ng ing Y· . ..,,_ "il::Z::Z=:;zz:=zz I Irvine. 3444 E C Adams Sehl. Mesa. Verde. tufted crushed velvet living Stove $25. Retrig $25. '59 to 2. 505 32nd St., Nev.-port SACRIFICE!
410 W. Coast Hwy., NB • PLEASANT amall oflire in Coro~a d:r :a~Y· Call s.ro-ilS7 eves. rm. set, hand carved coUee 1'.tercury Sta Warn $00. Beach. ~~ Carat dian1ond ring, Tif-
JR. SEC'Y N.B. nt:'2ds an exper. Clerk1'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,..!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! t -~----------I & end tables. 6'ra--3343. Drifter for 25' sail boat. ·w0~u.so~~N~~ .. -ho~l~lc19i~--~Lc;dco I fany setting. Retail value!'
,Suite H 645-2716 Ptrime. Good ryping, 1i 1 e Tvpist. ~lust be fast ;ccur.i: VIETNMI VETERAN plus many other item!i. mainsail S25 or make offrr. SOOO. Asking S:?S.l. (Matching
SH. dictaphone. 3 Days per tYpist on t?lectric & capable SAL._ ESMEN Once in a lifetime oppor. to ~GUARD 8' aifa & Sterling St.. ofr Pomona Spinet piano $250. Norge Lady's & :\tan's "'eddlng
txrER
1
IE
1
NCED rolCt'"',,"b"l6 \\·eek. $2.60 per hr. nf working w In umber 15 • t-.'eed n1e11 who are ready to start a mgmt. career in a m1. ~tching lovte~-~~· Vebl1vet Costa t.teia. Sat & Sun. 8-6. refrigeraior. 49J....1922. bands, nev"r "'om. FREE! l
mo. o yr exp. • o 1 e For Appt. Contact Perm. posit.ion. Xlr:'t "~rk-learn the car business and local branch of one of coun-iv1ng rm se luu. ta ei, Call 546-5no af1er 6 pm &
Communications, 29:10 Col-Carol f.lnith lng conds. Call hetwn lOam are willing to train. Must tries biggHt companies. l~ps. etc. Wil~ separate, Mlscellineous 818 CARPETING, good cond. 40 "·eekends.
ief:'! Ave ., IHarbor & Bak-Personnel Dept. & 1 pm, &tZ-6667. ~ve good_ personality, be p~ training program hke new. 64>170L. STEREO, 1m Garrard, has yds, white shag. 100 Yds ==~~~~~--=
•erl. C.t.f. M0-5701. AVCO FINANCIAL interested in. R tututt. dres. ' le•-~u learo while ~· MODERN _,,_, w a In u t full nlllt hi-lo $1.50 pet yd or SERRA Thrift Shop. ill PREFER male to bundle cul ..... ,, --' _ _. _ _. n __ _.. "" J~ JV• ~vu•iu stereo changer, air '--•t offer. P•d al-avail. ?.lain St., Huntington Beach FIVE sa.les""Omen PT. Leads SERVICES ,." • -..esmiuu.:u.. oc•=•ts: f!UT1. F ine benefits pkg .. glau lop dining table, 4 s us p e DI ion 11paakers. ""' "" faLric lor NB gnrmf'nt .-...mo ~· ~ per yd. ·~ •~ aft 4 is having annual Christmas lu r n l $he d, 4 9 2-40 4 8 620 Ne",.._. "enter Dr. · · .......,d :;_?·~-pptins., ~-car, expenses paid. This is chairs. Xlnt cond. """'· 1'.te-r AM/FM stereo rad Io ......... ~· ~""'' manuf. S2.00 hr. 540-451L tee ..... ar:y u co """ J~ wkdy•, anytime Sat/Sun. sale l\.londay, Nov. 22nd & , .f92-5Jl8. Ncivport Beach 644-5800 . · . . s mm is· not a sales job. Start $6000. 546-5880, 549-1366. w/F'E'T "": tape deck, still Tu N 23rd 9 30 I 2 l,i==-=---c--..".".'."-,==I PROFESSIONAL phone 111ons. Unhmlt~ income. Ap-C JI H J H ""' ......,,= I ~===-~--'----P00 BLES ho ~ ov. · ·: o tooD Service l\fgr: Salary Equal Oppor. Employer ply in Person. UNIVERSI-a een ayes, J"l\l""UUJJ SECTIONAL couch $60. brand new, \\'as left L TA Ware use pm. ?.!any new & near ne\.\.'
, + pel'Ct'ntage. Call 838_1103 1 ~~~~~"'"'""""~ solicitor • Dana Point, San TY OLDS~IOBILE, 28.50 Coastal Agency Sttteo / TV console $45. unclaimed on layaway. Sold Sale. Freight damaged $49 toys, gilt! & Christmas ac-~before noon. LIVE-IN houseke<'pl'r. Care ~~~en1~· Y':u~is:nno =:: Harbor Blvd., Costa 1'.Iesa. 2790 Harbor Bl at Adam.!I _ Baby's port-a.crib k for $320. pay off balance l'lf tu $199. New lliate fat'tory cessorles.
G I C of toddler, lite bousrkcep-Best d"al in area. Phone SALES WITH Waitresses $1 .65 + hr t1troller. 646-inl. $11:> or take over small crated, $195 to S 3 9 5 · ' e oater ing NB area 675-2298 .. payment&. Collection Dept. 639-8623, 529-8466. Jl.1INK jacket. natural gun : ' · · · · • · · 835-1465 between 9:00 a.m. MANAGEMENT Beach Area. Banquet & din-PLUSH Velvet Sofa & 7141893--0501. metal, fingertip l .en g I h.
· l .UHRS BOAT CO. and noon. OPPORTUNITY ner exper. Nothing taken Loveseat, also blk naug. set. ----------1 YACHT CLUB MEMBER· latest ring collar style, worn Exp'd only for fibf'r.l:'lass r · M L y G • I SHTP $1150 ('ncld' tr f bo r 8-19 W. 18th St., C.l\1. REAL Estate Sales New o[. Looking for a I oc a 1 out of salary. Super tps! Both less than 2 mo's old. y oss.. our •1n · 1 1 ans er only 6 time$, valued at
.po'A'er at manu acturel', Nf'~d~ Exp. Engine lns!allers tic•. 211 Glst St, \Vest saJesman for c .. _,,, .. w/lrg Cat.I Zena, 956-1000, Cal-Eve$. 557~15. %. carat diamond ring, Tif. fee) • .$350. savings. 644-6740 $1700. SCll $700. Eves,
1 permanent I benefits. Apply E Bo -._. F E J A f v •cnn eves ':m person. Skipjack Boal<;, & ~xp. at Carpenters Ne1vport. SalE\s Manager & financial lnstituti(ln. air mpoyment ~ncy. DINETTE, Danish modern any setting. alue 'f'NV· • 97g..uso.
1763 PlaC(!ntia. Co~ta l\1esa. J:nrnerliate Opl'ning~ Salesmen, 3 desks. Lamoine Su.bs~ntial salary + ~m· ~~ah~~. Euclid, Suite A. safa & chair, walnut coHee Asking $2S5. (FR.EE · ne~r FU.LL length dark ranch 6' DECORATED Christmas
GI"' ~d•Y l/t•'m• n•_., _ _. MANAGEMENT E. Means, Realtor, Ofc. mtssions for a 3 yr. penod. & end Ibis. good cond. Best worn, lady's & ma.n 's 'A'ed-mink coal. See to ap-tree S20 port type'A•riter °""' ~·· ...... ,t:U Nl'\IJ fast .....-."ring nationa1 64~3~34. Res. 646--0910. MruTied. callege -..1 or WAITRESSES-EXPER ofter . .,,-. ding bands.) CaU 5-IG-5no preclate. Sacrifice $400. 120 C••h _;g.••t•r 1·~ for expanding de5ign firm. .,..v I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil 6'..., OJV",,_, after 6 p.m. & weekends. 962-2035 · .... ~. Gd math b 11. ck i:: r 0 u n d &_ internat.ionaJ rompany 1, ownl"r of a business pref'd. Day/Eve Shift. Apoly in per-\VROUGHT iron trundle bed · Divan & chair $125. Mixer
neceSl'i. Call &l:i-l2lO. ~king Iocal ml{mnt & sup... Recreation Call 646-8972 between 5:30 & son aft 2 Pi\f, The Derby Make oiler · LEAVING STj.TE, Kitchen FREE! Water bed 15 yr. "''/attach $20 bunk beds $50.
ervisory personnel. Inter-7 p.m. M/F. Restaurant. 1262 Palisadf!s · • appliances, to~. camt>ra & guar.) w / purchase of any 546-8754 aft 6.
HAIR PRESSER, ex-viewing Thar & Fri. Call ACTIVITY Salesman Rd., Costa Ml?Sa. 642·7523 projector, archery equip. frame & liner. 646-2296. ==~~~~---·I
p<'rlenced only. Willing to ~lr. Ketchnf'r, 12-6pm, The AN OHIO OIL CO. ott--op. \VANTE. 0 . Jive-in housekeep· ••WILL move anything you lamps, rugs, dishes & E I $285 SLEIGH • One horse open, \\Vr~. Guaran1C!e &. com-Ro~ Coach Inn, Anaheim, DIRECTORS portunily for high ~mt! er. Nice home w/ own room buy in this column & more. glassware. l 0 am· 4 Pm -;er~!~ • :~~n~un:~qu~l P ~a~I~: n~l~sion, 49!!...J16j. 714n78·1712, ext 22-16. PLUS __ ,, __ c"h • "aca-& bath. 3children.-10. s.& 536-1648. Thurs. to Sun. 10132 -~~~-... ~......, ...., "" • Co ·1 t· D HB KING SIZE extra long, t\\'in beds, )IANDYJ\L\N for odd jobs. MATURE woman capable of Excf!'llent career opportunity tion b 0 nu 8 es, abundant Z. Usual ~~sekeep11~.~ut1es Garage Sile 812 Mn u 10n r. · HEADBOARD & FRA!'1E 540--0617 eves.
Over so. Appear in P"rson assisting in care of elderly for a mature "'()man to di-fringe benefits to mature + ba.bys1111ng. Poss1b1htyof -----ISWAP MEET, Te\Vinkle 135 ** S48-4485
at Firehouse, 117 E. 171h lady, Ii.1on.-Fri. Live·ln. Tttt rem-ation &: social ac· . be h ard working out 1 or 2 day!! a GARAGE SALE School (PTA), Calilornia & EASY Lift trailer hitch $25,
ST .. Costa Mesa. References. North Laguna. tivlties for our large apart· ~an 1~ ~~ Bl'.9a. ~gA F. week. Referel'>Ce!i requested. Good furniture &: household GislE"f', Costa Mesa. Sat G. E. Dlshwashet bltn, ne\V. Chel"T')"A'Ood dining tbl $30.
HELP. I •-.. , a n<w 494-19S4. mf'nt complex. Good bene-ess 0 ''air ma. · · 4!M-5671. misc. Emerson port 1tereo Nov. 20 (9 lo 31 Call for info $175. Searl' table saw $75. 21'' blk &: v.·ht TV, mahog.
. , .... ¥ Read, Pres., American ' Larg ' b $25 al · business in town & I need MEDICAL Re ce.p ti on i 5 t fits & salary. $8400 Per L bri ants Co Box 696 WIG Stylists exper, for near new. e, lovely 546--0783. Anytime 548-2824; 645-1905. ca . , so m 11 c.
Anum. F'ull time position, Dauytocn. Oh'•o 4;~0I. • reta•'I ..;. •'beauty •upply Searagrapb pict.urol~C:.:..:.C.:"--------•••N •-w llOO port 5.16-8)15. your help. If a ground floor needed, bilingual, English .... ~...,, 11ISC baby furn, matching ... ruu .,.. · -but mu't be available for hai A t 12682 Ch w/drapery wall accent d' h ,__ •~::: · WANT I t bl f , opportunity oUered by a Spanish, good typing, 5 days -c n. PP Y apman • crib & dresser $35 ea. IS wasu.:r """• pmg pong a poo a e or e·-ntrig• & "'eekend "'Ork. SALESMAN A G G 7800 Edi Good canister vacuum bl 120 •« ·~ Ch · t • H ct 7 ft hew comp~ny w/new Ideas week. Medical exp req'd. ... -ve., · -or nger, ' O'Keefe & Merritt gas ta e · Q"t<r"tUU\J· ris mu. ave ean · Young, aggressive, experi· H.B. swivel shampoo chair for I & ball Com & financial opportunity for a Salary (lpt'n. contact Mrs. Apply·. h ho N' b range $75. Cocktail table REGINA Floor shant........-., "' cues s. -ence not necessary. Full s op or me. lef' uffet ~ 1 · Will t k t bos11 average Interests you • Tillotson, 519-0385. S25. CaU after 5 PM waxer-poli$her S2Q, pos tion. a e paymen s
Y . 1 t F I-=-~~----OAKWOOD commission pa.id while train· 52" 'A'ide x 35" high, HicJe,.a-6401879 "'" ,.79 & hold SIBQ FP. 549-1506 aft
ou 1n t>res me. or MECHANICAL de,,·gn•r or I M · I ll~J ,__., · f · h & ,,_ · ..... ,,.... ..... ng. anage.ment aSS1stance . U<:1.1, nice re rig., was er I cc:..=:::_______ ·-~~~-~~~~~I 6 ~rwnal lntcrvill'\v only call technician to create hard· GARDEN APTS at all times. Sales position . ~· dryer, quality clothes, WING-back sofa. $50. Slipper MAYTAG gas dcyer , l'nodel -~p_m_·---~--~~1
,714/870-4782 Mon fhru Fri, ware & equipmrnt & pu~h NORTH "'ifh a future. Demo avail-women's, men's, teen's, chair S15. uphal$tered chair 806, 1 yr. old, perfect cond. BALBOA Bay Club -Full
10am-2pm project to completion. 16.11 able, insurane€s. Ca 11 various size11. All in good $15, Baby scale S4. Ne ~v S150. or best offer. 963-1302. family membership inclds
HOLIDAY Placentia, C.l\f. 880 Irvine Ave., N.B. 546-3017. Antiques 800 cond. 557--0496. Magnavox •turntable $35. FRESH English \Valnuts Irvine Tennis, save $650.
* *
84&-5013. \Vrite, Classified ad No. 267 * SALES Lady for gift shop. . Antique wn!Jng desk $40. ::.::::..:='-------3 lbs for Sl ily Pil p o Bo J5tlO
MONEY Men Retl"red Equal Oppcw. Employer Perm. p/time. Some eve. & CHINESE Porctlai~. vatts Din. tbl S25. End Ibis S15. LIDO Isle Garage Sale: * 549-2877 * ~ta Ate::. C~li.I. 9~26.
I •!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.,.!!!!!!!!~I "·knd work. Apply at \\~~s~s. ~l2; 10. ha~ German Racer $20. s·i:ght Stove, Refrig, good cone!. -~~-CAR==p=E'f=~~p~0-
RECEPTJONIST, P I time, Sabina's, 9049 Atlanta A\•e., ss .. ginger Jars, $5, cand f! back chrs sro. Cit ~and Furn & misc. Reasoriable. l2x20 I & A NATURAL Tourmaline
Part Time 6PM-10Pl\t
Reliahle men in lhe surround-
ing Orange Co. art'& n!eded.
No exper. necess. Earn.11p to
$3.96 Per Hr.
Ask tor Ser\'ice Dl'.!pl.
(714) 842-0667
HOUSEKEEPER, par! time,
Spanish &pt'lking pre!. Refs.
Call aft 8 pm. 540-035•t
HOUSEKEEPER -Cook,
Live-i11, Newport, Pa Im
Springs. 2 adlts, Ref's &
drivf"t''s license necess. Give
name & telephone No. to
Box No. 244, Daily Pilot,
P.O. Box 1560, Costa r.tesa,
Cal. 92626.
INSURANCE Agency Girl.
Commercial l i nes .
linderwrilini;: I: Rati11g ex-
per. nee. Salary open.
Health & retittmen t plan.
Peacock Insurance Inc. Call
~tn. Bradley, 5 4 9-3 0 ;J 8 ,
494-1087.
$440 Month Ii t e t y p in R . App 1 y H.B. painted plates \\'/stands, ~ Compete l\Unk, lrx dbl fur shawl col-radio 120 Holvwd ..._. Sat & Sun. 11-4, .1.'°j Vis ** -."• "°'. ** 10am-12pm, 1616 Babcock -~-~~~~---1 holders, 50 Ct'rrts; teapots, ..... ..1. •= ·u •-ut' "1 'I ~, 1 zun'ch. nO"""T>OJ lar jacket "'/full turn back As Santas in .stores & Fash-s-~"'" Search Light Operator antique bowl.5·, compoll"S & u11111e ,,.,, .,,.. see r r 1 k u ion Cente-in St, C.~-1. 64 .:=N· $90 -h 1 t 115 ORANGE \\'ood. $25 hall cocktail cuffs. 1\ a e o er. '" ¥.'anted at the Firehouse, many other ilema 497-1910 · " P ea: mo or · ~!INK Stole~: Silvtr Blue, cord, delivered and stacked. 642-7523. Newport.Orange Cnty RECEPTfONlST I tralntt lTI E. 17th st., c .r.t. or 830-8627. Comm! tbl sav." cost $550, Breath ol Spring, Argenta.
& Sa n Clemente for doctor's office. Age 2~ Appear in person. _ SALE
2
_,• OFF sell $200. 645-2562. . Sacrifice'. Pvt pty. Call tor 1 _63:.:_7-684..c:.~'~· -----~ FOR sale janitorial eqUip.
\Ve train 1..-pmvide rost11 mes + must type. 548.0076 "'1• 646-4011 NICE loveseat, needs 17" buUf'r, "·et &: dry
PHONE FOR INFO: R E SALESMEN SECRETARY Nov 17th·21st. American & GARAGJ? Sa.le, moving, c•"P"P.::t....:.:::..::::.::· ____ upholstering, $20. 920 \V. vacuum. upright vacuums.
521·3361 • · a Long standing Orange Co. European furn., Bronzes, ev~~g must _go by 16" FRAN1'0M diamond rlab CM 646-7082 How about gn:t"'in:; with Development firm \v /of!lces Pnlg'•. Orientals, Acces&0r-Fnday. 2769 Sandpiper Dr., saw. Good cond. $250. 30951,1~8.::th:.;St;·.;;"'7.·==~='=" etc. .
?>iEN to work p/time in ren-brand new office in a. prime in Newport Beach desire~ ics, etc. The Bizam An-C.M. t.furray La .. Cl\f 54a.gi04, TALKING MYNAH BIRD SEAR'S '''OOd la the, takes
tal yard. Approx. 20-30 hrs location?' Let's get togethf'r? h' hi al'f'ed ----------\V ith cage $50 approx 30" length, 1 HP
k ill Call G i 1 es Kavanagh, 1g Y qu 1 1 secn!tary. tiques, 2500 Newport Blvd., HEL1\1ETS, VLV hdbd, baby T.V. RCA color 19 '' ..•. He'• cute i:•o A•K motor. 6 turning ti:>ols, $50. per "' · W train. neat in 79 O.JO N This permanent position rt>· C.?.-1. stun dothes etc. 33922 El w/remote $125. King size J'IO""Tlo" appearance, no long hair. 9 ·l . · i\IAJ, REALTY. qui,_.. the Mgh t k'll & ' ' I 00 673-3~ 25" TRJ'n!ER -"·er, yard l-'~7~3-~5990.:c_~· -~~~~,--688 B1;1ker St. at Bristol. C.?.I. ·~0• es s 1 s ANTIQUE show sponsored Encanto, DP. 496-1585. bed compete Sl . 1 • DJU .!¥u• ""'"' ?.1ust he avail. all day prof1c1l!ncy ~/a commensu-by Santa Ana Jr Ebell lo bE! vacuum, pov.·er edger. Daily Pilol \Vant Ads have
\\'ed/Sat & Sun. Apply 1930 RELIABLE couple or in-ra.te salary, i.nsurance, other held Nov. lSth·l9th noon DAILY PII.m tor aetlon! We'll help you Bell! 642-5678 962-8612 bargail'l.!!I galore.
Newport m., Costa l\.tl"Sa. dividual needed as agency ~~a',n!!m""en"te.fp"'tea&.,!u.,':n"'d f•.•11· thru. 9 pm, 20th noon thru fi Furniture 810 Furniture 110 Furnltur• 110 Furniture 810 ~1Pn, \Vnmrn C'hilrll'f'n representative. Applicants ~ ~~ "" .... I bho 625 F h i~iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-jjiiiiiijiijjjjiijjiiijjiiijjjiiiijiijjiiiiijjiiijjijil FAME & FORTUNE should be willing Io qualifications history & ref· pn11n cu use. renc
supeNlse, train, & motivate erences. All Our ,_.,,.we arc St, Santa Ana. Cotlld A\\lait You 1-"-"t'' Indcfl'ndeni Film Prod. Co. group. \\'rite, g i ving a\\•a.re of this ad. Please GOLD pocket watch
Needs New Faces For TV quRlificalions: T.A. l\1cCue, Write to P. 0. Box 2218, Ana-w/chain, 1 518 diameter.
Commerelals, ~!ovie$: 519 No. Hamptom, heim. Calif. 9'1804. Key "'ind w/key. Enamel
Advertising. Anaheim, CAiif. 92801. SECRETARY $600 face, Hunt in g case.
NO EXPER. NECESS. RENTAL GAr--Fee Pa.id, Rapidly expanding Beautifully l?llgraved, $1.50.
$32-$138 Pf'r Day Large apt complex Santa dynamic firm has an im-1·_2_13_1_<22-4 __ 8_72 _____ _
(213l 4fil-3051 Ana, 11.urac individual for mediate spot for exceptional RARE l\tark Twain books.
l\IOTJIBRLESS home • Lakr full time posilion. \Vork career minded person \vho American Artist's editions.
:Forest, live in or out commences Dec. 1st. Submil enjoys responsibilily. chal-Speeches, poems, pictures,
houSE:1<eeper. i\lon. tbru Fri. f'C'5Umf's to Clas.sified ad # lenge & diversity. Call Now! etc. 546-855(1.
HERE WE GR OW AGAIN!
THE USED FURNITURE OUTLET
1 NEW LOCATION!! .
To Serve Our Customers Better-We've Reloc1ted to 1 Larger 1nd More C•ntr1lly Located
F•cility.
s & 9 yr old 1,·rts Gd 286, Daily Pi.lo!. P. O. Box Pat Kennedy, 833-ZiOO, !Also OAK t bl ~ marbl• top · · · fee i·obs) Dennia & Dennis a es, Cu•<>, Da.ily Pilot Want s a. I a r y . Phone e}:tl, 1.lliO. Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626. d .... sst'r crocks d \she 1 h al 837~1961. Personnel Agency, al82 • ., • • '
WE WOULD LIKE TO START OFF RIGHT BY OFFERING A
3 DAY PRE-GRAND OPENING SALE!! l='~"~'~'"='~g=o="'="::;;::;:::;;;:;:.!.;;::;;:;;;::;::;;::;:::;;:;;;::;::;;::::;::;;:...;F="'=""~'~'="'='ul:;:;t'=' ~64~u.67=~8=~i ;•~l~k~he~t~""'~-~Dr~.~· ~""'~"'!;"'·~C~a~lif. gob\l'ts, brollen. c hurn 1, much more. 968-7079. SECRETARY. versatile, in .:c=c.:cc._'---~~~1 1
-~-. 1-Kirl of~n_r 12 PLACE Httings, bt.'autlful
airport. S/H typing, tiling, ""Efi"iJJfa"n 1tet1tng;43est-of·
PR, figures. Re I I ab I e, fer aver J300· 499-3861. -s~~ut!~-2'i2fos8
Th o Puzzle with the Bui/f./n Chuckle
l~e-u~G_o._s....__,I ~l· _1'11 1. ~~~-· ..-. ~ ! ~_,.F_,Y_F.,.l._,T.-11 ! ~''"';;:. ••id, whon ho . I I I' I _ opened o bottle of Sco1cli1
'--'--'--'--'-' "I'll have to get to the -
I BELT 0 G ~ol•h;,,• u-tB
1-,,~,...,,~,-,...--,...--,.j -i 0 Comoltt• the chut.~!e IQuot&d
_ • • • _ • bv '•!11n11 In lhs "'1"'!'111 word. YOll d11 ... 109 fl'Ofl'I aieo No. 3 l:efcw.
... PRINT NUM8£Rl0 lETtliS IN I' I' ,. ,. ,. I' I
9 THESE SQUARF.S I I I I
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIF-ICATION 900
.
540-5080. Appll1nce• 802
SECRETARY, expcr. Heavy COST + 10•;0 typing. F/time. Ca 11 APPLJANCF. SALE!!
&12-9990. ENTIRE STOCKll
SERVICE Stat.ion, full & Refrigcratt:1n1, \Va.~llt:r!!, 0ry.
pert time. EXJ>l!J' sale1 It f'~. TV's, Conven!Mt
aervice perso~I. Apply Terms.
lO'lm-4 pm in person (lnly. F'lretStone Store, 475 E.
;\fP!a Verde Shf'll service, 17th SI,. C.1\t, 646-2444
:':1 ':11 Harbor Bl\'d. CM. USED Appliancts & TV's.
SERVICE Sta. Attendant, We auar Ir de I l v' r.
expet prefd. Top pay. Full Dunlap's, 1811 Newport Bl .•
& JI/time Avall. Apply, C.ltf. 548-7780.
Shell, 17th & lrvine, N.B. STOVE. new $150. \Vu.her.
SERVICE Station he Ip ne\\". tlryer used both tor
wanted, expo.r. Full & $225,. Washer &: 110,·e have
p/time. Apply 990 E. CoAsl lli yr II.JIU'. 645-1726 alt 4.
H\\')'. NB. COLDSPOT 12 cu rt lrttur,
SERVlcE e\tab. 1'" u 11 er like new SJ35. bron2e.
Brush Customers. C."I, Op * • 646-t 107 • *
•o Sl60 wkly lo start. Cameras &
962--0416. Equipment
SHEET METAL
MECH.
Claaa A ell!ctmnle
t>ha111t1 r.xperience:.
RODAK Su))C!r 8 In1ta-mallc
c1.mf'!"a, zoom len1. Like
new 673--0448, 67S.2713.
Call Spac•·Tek Industries Sell klle ltema now!
1922 P111.ttntia. eo.11 f\fe~ 1:,:M::WG..::::,1::8..cNccow:.::.:l _____ 1 -·-
•
I
Ouell....__T.W..-Codt11U --14.ts _ ___lNO.--.,., •• 1.1 ftlwet '69" -
Tab!• &. Commodft EA. cholf (foctory cl..,..01111 T'.~.~~ .... "'-=.~.=,,=,=,= .. =.=,.'-_-.-,-t -----~,2.,..ct:::S 6old & Whlhl 911lltff Tredltlo11ol s149t1
~·'=-'!.:'"-''~'~"~":..::":...:;''='='='°:..::~=••:::.· -----~~IA. Hl ... A·lhd
Do•....s i s29t1 Wlc•er ..... ,..... '29" ;•=ot<~h~l'f~<~h=•~ln'-,.-..,.--,,.---''~'~O~M'-~ __ 4 Sh•lwn
f•ll slae k a .,, .. , i "'""'"' s29t1 M•don1 Lo11• Ceder Chest '64" fft9i/Mtel typo J(f Otf~K~t~O~"t:._:;<i~-"'-·O~•~tJ:.._ _______ _ ~O~ff~I<~.~.~ ... "-'. ~ ... ~, .. ~,-.-,..--,--_----~s·79t1 42" Gles1 Fro11' lt•llo11 s189"
trol1t ,_,, l h60 Pro•h1cl1tl lutt.f l Chl110
Chnt of Drowors
........... .,. ........
ltKll•r, ylltrllffr
FNt!Cti ,,.,.,_, .et ..t altefr
lfwcffrr c'""41:h &
fOllr.ty MC ... ) IJ l
• ' . .
FltOM '14"
1179"
'54"
149". '69"
S ~. Dl...n.. '"'•I, s39n
A•ocodo, 42" ro11Jld
1 I''· Woll1.t lo4roo111 Gf••I'
l11el.: -~. "''~· hll MN bed co111,1.._, ,.,,.. sto11ll.
...11tff•I 1' S.'9 & Motcltlet
choir. A••ll i. ll1M, G,..,.. Gold '""'
M W
• I •
'89"
'89"
'10"
2756 N. Main Street, Santa Ana 547-3906
(On F11hlon Line, formerly Aneelut Furniture Co. Adj1cent to F•1hlon Square: S1nt1 Ana
Fr .. way to Main Str•et, No. on Main Strfff.) -
HOUltS: ,. ... tllr• "'· t •• 111.•6 •••• -M. '" '· hf 10 •• !R .... ''"'' -I••· 1J MO• te .. ,.,,.._ -
. .
•
,
1---... l§l .;I ;;;._;;; ...... ~1§1~ 1-.. • ... ......_1§1 1 L-_.1. .. _ ....... ---~.il
i_ ..... -',_l_m.-"'°_rt_tc1 __ ;;_3 Autos, Im--.. "8 --...,. ·-AutOI, lmpwted 970 Autos. IJMd
I~ 1.__-_ ... _--__.l§l :;;I ;;;;-"';;;"...--.;;:;J§J;;: ... -~I
Autos Want.cl Ml1c1llaMOU1
Sl.EIGH, one hone opt.II ,)l
trf!e, Pet feet co nd .
Rea.ton1ble. 540--0617 eve.
Mitctllaneous
TV, Radio, HiFi, Ge I _ Cyc .. ,, Blktt,
Stereo 1361.;.;.;;".;."r;,;•;... ____ ...,;.;.; Scoot.r1
19" COLOR portabl• TV, 1 sc· RAM·LETS f1S l--------WE PAY TOP FIAT TRl!JMPH VOLKSWAGEN -IUICK
'69 "1AT "' Cpt. Eni:"" I;:;;;;;;;;;=====::: -.,.,.""""=..,...---....,...,........,-.....,.,....-..,1:
complctoly overhauled tut i]"" · I '69 VW Camp.er . '69 Buiclc RMen. llD .....r, \
--
)'r old. Sella: for $400.
~"',!' ~!. '4Wl00. A>k ANSWERS
• USE our llonda O\rlslma11
lay--away plan. H er b
Friedlander, 537-6824,
89>-7568.
CASH week. 100% i:: u a r a n t y . TRIUMPH Poplttlp Ttnto Exctilent O:llOd, fae air, f.m-fm ndio', llra1o ~
\'PS247. Chick lvet!iiOli, l97IJ bench, landau vinyl top. t W•nlod l20 SWL Receiver H~th GR 54, Tremor _ Boeus _ Fifty _ BICYCLES $21).$40. tor l1Rd can I. b'Uckl, ju.I
can ui f<t" tree Mtlm•tes.
~ • This btautY ii for the c&mp-I
ll•ri><" Blvd., C0<ta M•M. CLEARANCE SALE 1"' family, (YPZ360) :~ ::,.belt oiler. 543-lSlll •
S Band 180 K cycles to 30 M 'Goblet _ BOTI'Otit Xlnt cond.
cycJ ew $45. 546-STIO airer 6 A detective said when he 1 ____ ~ __ 26_1 __ _ GROTH CHEVROLET JAGUAR $2895 •ro BUICK Eloctra 225 Cush :
CASH PAID FOR
fine furnltute, appll.ances,
antlqueL Ona 1 piece or
hou1etul. Call ~ay or nll;hl,
P.M. A wknds. ope~ a bottle ~I Scotch: GOOD Christmas lde'ii, '70 ~/FM Ford car radio ex-"I'll have to aet to the BOT· Hodaka, good dirl bike, Ask for Sales Manain
eel cond. Original v~ut, 'lpM ol this." good cond. + xtra1 . ~Beach BlYf!.
BAUER BUICK NOW! 'ITa -I L 23.!m actual ml Full,pwl :
HURRY & BEAT THE 10% ff O.,CU S, ee AM/F"M ,,,... ¥1 air. i
The I-Tarbor Areas PRICE INCREASE! I Showrm oond. G42-J.08 •
.Only Aulb0r1ud FR,ITZ WARREN'S '$164, !or Immediate aale, I Marine Consult•nt 644-1664. Huntln;ton Beach CADILLAC I I • . JAGUAR DEALER SPO;f CAR CENTER
Always has an exccllenl ge-710 E. St., S.A. Str-0764 547·5826
ll"Ction of both New Jc Used ()pen da ly 9-9; closed Sunday 1234 So. Main Sl
now at $4.5. 494-2521 INDEPENDENT MAVERICK M i n I -motorcy-S47.ti087 Kl 9-3.Ul l~!jjiii!i~iiiiiiiiii!I Motor Homtt 940 e Purchasing-cle. I speed trans. Excellent TOP DOLLAR
549--00 or 547·T13.S.
'67 CADILLAC ;
Ja"""" WANTED Am 11 er · Counseling on purchas· cond. $100. 546-1879 aft. 6. IN CASH
Mechanical I n I e • "Ito T . COR,,.TEZ/Hooodmplet.,•, •, I n t Ing boat.s & equlpment. All day wknds. -w o a mo 0-y e M . S • ~=~---'-=-~-Paid for ""Ur clean used car Write, <laplf•~ •d No. ~". "" · ''" • ar1ne urveuor • -~v TR GT 6 '68 Custom paint. I --;=.;S.;:;:;nt:;:•c;A;;nar.,=,--W~ .,.,.~la. Radiofhtr, '71 YW PICKUP
'.SEDAN DE VILLE '
FUii Power. F&ctory Al r,
<ZWD588) current blUe bl:>ol" ,
$2570. $1.16.74 total down. $83 ~
total monthly. $2416.!J'S Is tht l
"total cash prtce tncludi'1f
tax & license. Defcrttd PBY· )
men! price Is $2988 including I
tax, license & all canying
ctiarges for J6o months on !
out approval of your good i
credit. ANNUAL PERCENT· j
AGE RATE 17.98%. i
DAVE ROSS PONTIAC, J
""' -' cl 494-TlJS r * '69 Yamaha 250cc Enduro. paid for or not.
Daily Pilot, P.O. Box E60, e. . 646-2971 Xlnt cond. 3000 mi. $525. or SANTA ANA DODGE
~ta Mesa, Ca. 92626 22' CENTURY Raven, best offer. 546-5710 after 6 1401 N. Tustin
WANTED! New or Used I Ifs perfect cond..,.cheap! 180 hp P.M. & wknd!. 835-3691
Bl.by Pee Wee Dolls. ,,_lo You .inbd tw.lt tank & pump, ri.&:-SCHWINN M!lfl'S Super WE PAY TOP 001.LAR e 8µ-84'98 e' ged fSr Marlin. Call PJ, Sport. l-'OR WP USED CARS
WANTED Benh\'OOd chairs
w/arms. •3•L•i""'-~· 2•T•l'""'••'•$m2.llOO.i.I jj54:-'7-<693-'jji;;w~kdi';j;>":_•:_t'io'i5~. ;;-;; !Near new $130. u Yolll' car ls extra clean,
. u· BOSTON w h •I e r * 540-45ll t'Ves 644--5034. ~ us f.nt
YOUNG, illy, quiet & loving w/traUer, bucket lieals, 18 '70 SUZUKI 90, 8 gears, BAUER BUICK
Musicel ln1trum1nt1122 shepherd nef:'ds good home. hp Johnson n10tor. Like street/trail, lie. Lo mi. 2J.oi E. 17th St.
Call Cynthia., 642--9630, ext. new. Call 64.5-00'29. $280. Call aft s: 968-5855. Costa Mesa 54&-7765
• &.n-9438 •
KIMBAU. uprlaht Piano 4L WANTED: 13' Bo1ton 305HONDAScrambler, must WE DESPERATJ::LY
Ex. cond. with very nice FREE Puppies to &ood '\Vhalet w/40 HP eng & "Ir NEED see to apprec. $300. or make • tone. $225. !162-7689 home. Mother Engl 1 sh by pvt party. 673-6090 eves. oUcr. 54~. afl 5. Clean used can,.
FENDER Super Reverb amp Sheep & Afghan. ·968-7211 Boats/Marine '70 HONDA cs450 xlnt FANTASTIC PRICES
& Mustang "'"itar. Make Of· after 5 pm E • 904 ' ~,. I Id J 0 -quip. cond., 6000 miles. Best of· riuu. or yoUr car, pa or
fer. 968-3943. FREE Cats &. Kittens ,,-,o:'-7--,,.,-----fer. 64Z-0928. or not.
Pl /0 826 Call Work 548-4565 12 voe to 117 vac Inverter 1>EAN LEWIS •not rgans Home 548-4147 or 833-8243 Heath MP 14, 400 Watts 1970 HONDA 350 CL * SALE SALE * l MALE, whlie ~ftt•n•. rontinooo" """'"""" coo-X!nt Cood, 1!15. TOYOTA• VOLVO lrol 60 cycles, polarity p~ CALL 646-4629 1946 HARBOR BLVD.
PIANOS ** ORGANS Trained. Adorable. 847-4128 tection, input c Ir c u it 250 cc -S"-'ki -X6 Costa Mesa 646-9303
SI · K f H -" call anytime. ..... .. e1nway, awa, ammo .... , --~------\ breaker. NEW-checked out. Dirt or street IMPORTS WANTED
Allen, Baldwin, elc. From LOVABLE 5 mo. female Never used $100. 546-SnO Call 646-1950 alter 5. Orange Counties
$295. RENTALS. Samoyed &: Shepherd mix -'ler 6 P.M. & wlmd•. TOP $ BUYER Mon & Fri eves 'lit 9 w/sbots. Call aft 4 pm. I=-==-~--"='=-1971 HONDA SL 115, very BILL '""XEY TOYOTA
S -• 12 SCUBA compressor & Wts t J t JI u..-. ••;.-. u .. .,ay .5 548-6167 . ., ow mi es, mus sc . ,..~. 18!81 Beach Blvd.
Fl ELD'S PIANO CO. . anchors, Nyl. & Dae. rope. 548-424.7 PART Poodle puppy 2 mo. J\1isc. Marine equ i p. I j(:HiirniN;;::;;;od1r;;;;;.,; l~H:O·~Be~•cl>~. __ ;:P~'·..!"'!'.:7-8555~~ I
ld I hai U h't I SCH\VIlllN l-speed Tandem. o • ong r. a w 1 e. 644-8866. Like neii'. $75.00. 64&-0191 Autos, Imported 970
Loves children, ~{}-7660· IM'"'u"ST;;::,.°"l\c-!97=0"'°"E'"v1c-n-ru-,d-,7.60 after 5:30
2 LOVELY All While-Kil· HP. almost new s750. 16 . .:cc.c::..=_:_-----1 Prestige Sports Cars
lens. 12 Weeks O Id . boat &.trailer $Z'l5 646-9256. '&;) HONDA 300 '69 MOB-Cf, 9000 mi's Cil '68
H b k """ ,_, ' $:n1 or trade for good V\V Lamborghini 2+2 e '10 2-IB-
ouse ro en. ~uo•· 5 HP S.•gull $65. engine. 536-5171 or 645-al05. Z 12) • '68 & '69 Porsche
1833 NewpoM Blvd.
Custa Mesa.1 714/645-3250
ORGAN SALE
"Specializing In Quality"•
BAUER
Buick-Opel·Jaguar
234 E, 17th St.,
Cos1a Mesa 5'18-776.'i
'65 JAGUAR 3.8S
Clas.~ic, t~ully Original
$1900 67f>....4236 alt 6 pm
'66 Jag. 4.2 sed, 4 dr all xtras
\\'/reclining scats & lthr
uphol. Lo ml, $2100 546--0467.
JENSEN
JENSEN
AtmlORIZED
SALES t . SERVICE
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
3100 \V. Coast Hwy.
Newport Beach
LOTUS
LOTUS
AUTifORIZED
SALES & SERVICE
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
Conn Ora:an Armual Fall
Clearance. Save up to $1000
on telected colllOle floor
demos. Hilge discounts on
all models. "
COAST MUSIC
NE:WPORT & HARBOR
Coat& Mesa * 64.2-2851
WOULD YOU
**GERMAN Shepherd Lab SJ&.2400 Eves 1970 KAWASAKI JOO Trail 912's. air.
puppies. free to loving B 1 p . ~ 0 good d Authorized MBZ Dealer 3100 \V. Coast Hwy. homes. 557-$36 oa 1, ower TVllll Boss, 1 spd, con . >$325~·;.64~2~-~:1!4~8~al~tor=g5'.!p~m':._l -;;:;oc;;'"~I ~523'iJ-""1iii'~Ei< Ne1vport Beach
BELIEVE
FREE ORGAN LESSONS
u long u you like! No rt&'·
latration. No obligation. Ju.t
Come. Mondays 7:30. pm
COAST MUSI!:
642-2851
GREY striped kitten -23' partially linishrd hull, -::-:: AUSTIN UEALEY --'-'-=.:..::==--
Siamese kitten. BOT J{ 1narine plyw / fblgs $5(1 '68 BMW R-Ql, Full dress, P MERCEDES BENZ
DARLING, 968-1857 , 250 HP Interceptor V-3 w/ immaculte. -o--=---,_--------F'R EE p u Pp i e
5
Part velvet drive. $30 or both for 642-8704 or 494-3015 ' '55 AUSTIN l·lealy, runs NOW ON DISPLAY
Au•trall•n Shephont & Lab. $700. 5#-6831. '71 HONDA 500-4 good. 1250. 1972 350-SL
lo good homes. 673-2227. 28' Unifl!t~ 1960, $6500 or Immac cond. 545-1318 Call 64:i-~3!'J Sr. all th e elcgHr.t ~•lcrced<'s
K 1 TT EN'S, Burmese, trade for trailer boat ,+ Trailers, Travel 945 BMW Benz 1no!or cars for '72.
Siamese, Abys & others. cash. Ownt:r, 846-14.30. Xhtt lease plan & fine'.' ser-
Perm. homes only. 536--0476. * 4l' CHRIS Craft tri-cabin, HEAVY duty trailer, winch, I---------vlco fc:i.lurcd at ~~~~~~~~~~\ ramp, suitablP for dune Automotive Excellenca J10USE OF 11'.!PORTS
LOWREY Pianos &. Organs; Owner 673-8180. all day wknds. Blvd, Buena Park. Cl)
lwin Chrysler 290 hp loaded! buggy $200. 546-1879 aft 6. 0 Santa Ana F\vy at Beach
Yamaha Piano & Organs; & I ·r.11.t ~ ll"L.i I SELL or partner '70 Formula 1966 13. Travel. Tr a i 1 er 523-7!"".:il,
Stein1vay Pianos. Best buys c. ;;;;;;;;;;;;~;~r.~1 23', xln't cone!. Mr. Joyce ... __ __, In new & used. Schmidt I 494-71S4. W/Clluuvo;r. beaut. COuu.
Mook Co .. E". !91<. ""' N. G 1 150 Boat" SaH 909 • 54>-1.11• ROY CARVER, Inc.
Main, Sant11. Ana. Pets, 1n•ra . . Auto Service, Parts 949 2925 ltarbor Blvd.
lJABY Grand, Brooks.Evans, 1'"0R Sale, custom built :JOO FlBE~GLASS dinghy, 2 WASH ·n wax $I9.90. Hand Costa 1'1~a 546-4.444.
good cond. Must sell this gallon· aquarium OJmplete flotanon tank!!, Mahogany done "Classic" paste \\'U . '69 :1600 SUNROOf", \Vhite,
wk-end, below apprsl. $375. $150, 9?9-0570. ru~der & lee board, dacron 320l Newport Blvd., N.B. Priva!c Party. $1, 900,
549-2673. Cats 152 S&.11. $l&5. 83J-383S. 673-9686. 67l-693-I.
SABOT semi-race equipped. l-":;,,,;.""':,...,===--BALDWIN Wal nut Spinet,
cost nm. Must s e 11 ,
$700/bat olr. 645-50S6.
EMERSON Upright Piano,
light wood finish, good cond.
Call 968-9491.
Sewing Machines 828
SINGER 19n
-::"""'°'...,.--..,..--1 1 Sports, Race, Rods 959 DATSUN
Pc.ERS!AN kltt 6 "·-CFA .N.S.A. reg, !'75. en \\11.3, Offer * 644-8074 reg. parent.s, $25.
546-9965 Boats, Slips/Docks 910
1967 AC Cobra 289 cu in, IndY I------... • • • •• ·-
tires & mags. Black. Best
offer. Call aft 5, 673-15S4. '70 240 'Z'
854 NEARLY new cement deck slip float 21x33. 13, Trucks 962 L:>cal car full y equipJX'c'I ..
\VA'NTEO: small, male Silky Clearwater. Call Croft &. Llke new! Unrler J7,000
Dogs
Terrier. Neville, 675-8222. • miles. dlr. Wlll 1ake trade or
Object: Matrimony . soon. 1971 VENTURE 24 IH. finance PVi ply. (42'48LOJ
0 1an9e County's
Largest Se lectio n
New & Used
Mercedes Benz
Jim Slemon s Imps.
Wa113er & Main St.
Santa Ana 546.4114
MG
MG
AUTHORIZED
SALES & SERVICE
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
lonn". lo & OUI, rec<nl
major tune up. Priced lor
lmmed. sale. $14.95. Firm,
pvt ply. -l!W.-2521
69 G.T. 6T·Priv. Pty, 1
O\\"Jler, Top condition. Must
Sell! 644-7235 eve.1 or
\\'ffkends
TOYOTA
'72 TOYOTA
Large S1l1ction For
Immediate
Delivery!
Big Savin~s On
Ramain1 .. 9
'71 TOYOTAS
..Derut Leoo 9 TOYOTA
&16-9303
:1946 lfarbor, Costa ?i.1esa
SANTA ANA
TOYOTA
StTvlce dept. open 7:30 am
'ti' 9 pm r.tonday thru Fri·
dar .
PHONE 540.2512
4.17 W. \Vatnt!I", Santa Ana
'69 TOYOTA, 4 Dr. Sedan,
Auto Tran5., Factory Air
Cond., Radio,.Jtealcr. $14.99.
Chick Iverson, 1970 Jl arbor
Blvd., Costa Mcs11.
'fi8 Coron11 Deluxe 1900
4 dr, auto, alr .cond.
44,000 ml. BELOW WHSLE.
$999. *** 545-8176
'68 TOY OT A Crown Wagon,
auto., R/H. $1550 or best
offer. Call 11ft 6, 644-5018.
1971 TOY OT A Celica ST 3
mo. old $2700. OU er, trade
possible. ~.
VOLKSWAGEN
Bill Yates
Au thorizcrt Sales &: Service
32852 Valle Rd.,
San Juan Capistrano
R.17-;'1800/ 493-4511I499-2261 "Touch-o-matic'' :r:ig-iag
w/au!() bobbin winder. Put
a "GOLDEN TOUCH" lo
your sewing with this one!!
Automatically: buttonholes,
blind hems ove.rcas1s em·
broiders. ere. J\feditrn-an-
ean cabinet included. Sacri-
fice $38.RS cMh or 1mall
payments. Guaranteed. Les·
sons. 5-15-8238.
494-5994 before noon or e\J'l?S. w/trailcr. Loaded! Racing ~T~~·6811 aft 1 pm
GREAT Dafll' female lawn gear & Spinnaker. $300 I: I tional H est
AKc: P""''n •how quolity, T.0 .P. 548-293'. R=AT!ON ~TE'f, '66 DATSUN RDSTR . 3100 w. C..st Hwy. 'G4 YW SEDAN Newport Beact. ~
41h mo. Cropped & &hots, VARIOUS lrngths and up to ROY CARVER, Inc. ~ . 64~. ll1A Beam. Nr. Pavilion 2925 Harbor Blvd. Nu s1.11'l'r metalhc pain!, Bo!h
GUARD DOG: See my 675-8&25, {213) 967-1259. Costa l\fesa 5454444 lop.<i, $175 undl'r low book.
miniature Schnauzen. AKC, BOAT J\1ooring, Up to -4:r. '66 INT. TRAVELALL ~~ Radi~rl·lca!c~~7-45'10
housebroken. 8 wks, all Choice location. Newport
Champion lines. 64H:l>9. Harbor. 675--5666. '67 DATSUN PICKUP c F Extra nice "'r thruool! Afr AK em. ~llie $100 or BOAT slips avail. 25'~' cond. (SJROOI) Sl499.
share-o! · litter. Gr l'a t Xlnt accommodations in BILL YATES YW Strong heart! -I ~pd. cllr. ln·
wfchildren. 642-4469. new Marina 673-Qi06. cal pickup (TYT140), Take
BEAUTIFUL Irish Setter, Boats Speed & Ski 911 s~all cio1•1n. Call aft 10 an1
Sporting Good1 830
l!;IG, '"For a beltrr cleal'', New or ust."d, Parts & A beautiful little transporta-tion car. OrtginaI thruoul! scrvirc. Herb Friedlander, {JKL827J $89!1.
.:·:~~. n<w dol<h, el< BILL YATES vw
Top & carpet, roll bar, tape
<leek. i9j(I. 673-3052 evl'S &.
\\'crl 's,
?i.1GB '66, nf'w transn1iss1on. * 673-7294 •
3zs.·12 Valle Rd.,
San Juan Capistrano
837 -'IS00/493-4511 / 499-2'261
'68 YW FASTBACK GIRL'S ]{}-speed, like new
cone!. Has fenders &: basket,
$70. &12-3776.
Men's SKIS-Head 3fi0'~ (new
bottomsl w/bindings $80 or
offer. 6'14-4033.
fem. 2 yrs old. Trained. ' 32RJ2 Valle Rd.. s.16-R736 or 49'1-6Rl l . -
Shots. $25. 6'16-9247. SKI Boat. 16 rt. mahog., San Juan Capistrano NE\V ·12 PTCKUP Ai1• Cnnd. 4 Spd, nu paint,
GOLDEN retriever pups w/ll2 HP Grey marine s37-4800/493-45ll/499-226l 4 six!. rilr. dlx. l3un1p<'r. Ra· ---------1 Excellent Conrl, $50 under
OPEL
Store, Re1tauranf,
Bar 132
FOR sale, used restaurant
equipment. Cash & carry.
492--1324, aft 5 pm & wknds.
female, Fld. & show cham~ mtr. Nice cone!. $1150 Or of-'50 Chl"Vy 1 to n truck "''/furn dio. J\1irrors. PL721120. T.1ke '68 OPEL WAGON wholesale price, Ii ~. AKC 675-6915. fe r. 675-644_2 alt 4 PM or delivery body, Good tires. sn1all rlo1\·n or trade. 49-1-6811 646-4540 or 557-4540
wkf'ncis good paint. co n1 p 1 e t e aftr 10 5'16-S731i. 197
DOXIE puppies, 8 \\'ks, red. Ibo & r $39-Kadci(e, 102 HP. with racks, 1 VW BUS
AKC. ml"l'tu-. •hol•. Stud w w. s ·. ta.rpau in ;:i. 240 Z 70, Cully load('(J, air, * •~3127 * '" M ,. I 1 8 6 5 4Spd, Radio, H••t-, 1 <•re· l:;;;;--;;;;;--o~oc.---=----. I 11•1 arlin rurn\ ure. · mags. Xlnt t:o:irt, pri v party ~ ~· service. 830-7338. TtaMpOrl•lion Harbor Blvd, C.M. 548-5131. 64Ui772 6-iS-36..'\3, ful 01vner. '69 VW Delux S und I a I
SAMOYED pups 10 wks, 1963 CHEVY l TON $795 Camper, AM/FM rad .. New AKC Cha r J\fal '70 DATSUN 246-Z. 11.ir cone!., &16-2698 or 557-4540 tires, Xlnt cond, 357--0423 art • !ii! 1~· es. cab & chassis. rtuals, 4 sp, lo Ni's. Must sell, make of-t--=-----'"-'=-6 Reasonable. 557-2504, '68 OPEL Station w~a. 102 p.m. . Campers, Sale/Rent 920 157'" wb, xlnt cond, rbH 28.'\ fPr. ~61. ._ !-~=~~~----COLLIE Christmas Puppies, ..,.; VS eng, less 1han 1000 mi,l--"-'.:;_;"---~--HP, 4 spd .. rlh. Real '68 YW CAMPER
1---------AKC, sho!s. Tri-color, sable $1000, firm, 492-387S. FERRARI Shar11. S1!15. &16-2698.
ALL 191, •-· h •· wht 536-""95 * Jo'ord '68 1'"-250 camper ...... nl! s 11re on sale ao · ...... · . . CLEA N 1952 Che1•y pickup.•---------PORSCHE Pop top, •I spcl. dlr. Fully
TV, Radio, tllFi,
St•reo 136
now 0 ,...,. ,,. · -'th , special. V-S, 4 1pcf, Air, 1• · r ~ ~ ice~ rem ain PET he.... food. 100'1<:> fresh PIS P/B Incld' ,70 Good engine. rad i a Io r, FERRARI camper ('QUippPcl, Take old·
in effect while inventory meat. 20c per lb. Delivered Am~riGo Ji%· seU co~t cab brake~. tires & battery. AUTHORIZED '71) !Ill T, ~, Spd, intmac. er foreign car or · small
lut1. Prices le.~s 1han lhe to your hpme. 557-6243. qver camper. Snap & · na t. _s_:m_o._968_~_1_!9_. _____ 1 SAI..ES 1.r. SERVICE Ye 11o111 I BI ck m ll gs, rlown. Can finance. 546-8736
dlsmunten. 1''ttf' 3 yr. pie-,64 1 NT ER T 0 NA am/Im, ma1nl l' e co r ds , or 494-6811. (WJBO!li) lure lube, I yr narts, 1 yr J\llNIATIJRE Schnauzer sips 6. Jacks & extra.Of. NA I L .,... males, 10 wks, AKC, top 968--0776. w/camper shell IA t. Xlnt 38.000 ml. UlO + Take over 1971 SUPER Beatie, cash or aervice, delivery &. llf"l up. IM". evPs. 6•H-8442. Top Co ABC Color TV, Orange qual. Lively, loving, shots. SJAi rr. Open Road Camper, cond. $79j. 3181 Barbados . . . n.'fider trarte. Call
County's lllrgest z en i 1 h 557-3700 eves. tleeps 4. Stove & oven, sink, .Pl. Costa Mesa., 546-2809. MUST~11acriflce! '62 Porsche 962-6031 aft 6 pm wk days,
Dealer. 9021 AUanta al GREAT Dane pups AKC ice bo..""<. large c I 0 set. ·~9 Studt-, good eng & lrans., 3."JG S plus xtras, new eng ,t,. anytime wkends.
Magnolia, Hunt i n gt 0 n Fawn, 13 wks old. Champ. Cai-pet. Boot And other ex-new seats, body p'. :feet, llOIJ. W. Coas;t lhvy. clutch sys. Cherry red. Xlnt '.71 K0l\1BI; 9,000 mi. Llke
Beach, 968-3329. sired. $100 &: up terms, tru. Like new! 604 N. must sell this week t1 ___ N_•wport~c"-Bc~-•-'h ___ 1 eon<i. 830-lt60 new. $2595. Radio and Ex·
63."""'4117. lfarbor, Santa Ana $795. 646--0481. FIAT '6.l PORSCHE S. Electric lras. 22U San Remo, N.B.
GARRARD co m po n e 11 t ===~,,,,.-~~~~ I ay at t' m, u n c J a Im I'd SCHNAUZERS avail. now or 5.11--0380. ·~2 DODGE Plek UP, 4 spd, sunroof, chron1e whC'Cls. 673-1111·1.
la_yaways 100 walls, am/fm hold tll Christmas. Groom-9~\>~'~E=wo=~R~A~oo=~p~,-w-,,.-e new tires. battery, Runs l---------TIC\\' paint, tlrei>. Blaupunkt '&I K. Gl11A, llke new
ud · 3•0 ""' ~ 1~ ""947 radio. $1300. 529--3732'. lh t 1 J ti I stereo. 8 track, 4-way air Ing, 8t service. 't!J""V0,)9. Camper slctps 4, toilet b"""· "'"'"'' ""'.,_, . §JDE!fi roug iou • me cu oua
suspenllion spkr, llyslm, HorHf 156 room & vanity. S i o ~e 2~~ TON USMC Tntck. Great J "6(1 PORSCHE v.ith 'GS 912 own<.'!'. Pvl . pty. $ 9 7 5.
compl Garrartl turntable w/oven, pressure wa,ter for overland, hunting. X\nt 1·ng. Over $•1000 in eAr. 968--179.l 1\•.kdy evr~.
&OJd separa!l!1y for $309.ssl----------"-'~-8_108=·~~===-C'Ond. $1750 firm. 847-8403. Compl. res!or('{f. $1800. * '£9 VW Bug. Sunroof, APPALOOSA Gelding, 8 yrs. G ON 83.'\-!l"~" pay off smAll hal. \'lf $159.97 JS hands. English, jumps * '65 VW CAi\iPER '5() CHEV "4 TON LAR E SELEC'l'I 1 , SEE · """'· Mng~. $.'>.iO & teke ov~
or pyml.'5 of $5.41. U.S.A. well, !l;Ood gatt& 11 cun-Xlnt cond wh1ide lent Ex(.'('llent! $300. B. J . WE Need Your Porsche and pyn1n1!! or $1200 cash.
Sterea Equip. \V•rehouM", flrmation. Vtry versatile. MUST SELL!? 67~3 -~,---6;>-o.•_J_S_Js __ =~I SPQRTSCAR CENTER will pay top rlollar. Call Bill MS-1626. 179 E. 17th SI., C.M. Sm I xi I d' ··~ B =-or Chuck 53().(l.'lt2. "'68~vw=-,-,..,,.-m-.-"~.,-_,..L~,.,,.,-.. """w
66-2442, 10 to 10 dally. ar · n is p. ww. • rand New, never used Auto Leasing 964 S4s-s&U alt 6. camper shcll for 8' truck 283.1 Harbor, C.M. 540.4·191 'r.6 PORSCHE 912, ~spd. 28,00 mi, P11t. Ply, nu paint
STEREO, Scott rcvr, REC. Appy, (won rnan,y rib-32" h\a'h w/bubble glus. LEASING I FIAT, "For • better deal", Xlnt C'Ond. Must sell. rt1ake hesl offer 642-1447
Hard to fir'Mi tnd·in excel·
lent condition. (f1'5 CCK)
$2499.
BIU YATES YW
32852 Valle Rd.,
San Juan Capistrano
837-4800/49J.4Sll/499-2261.
'60 YW Bfis
Runs better than lt looks!
Good tranSpo!'fation! <QRK:
736) $499. •
BILL YATES YW
2480 Harbor Ulvd., ~
Costa J\tesa
LARGEST
SELECTION OF·
CADILLACS.IN
ORANGE COUNTY
• ' •
SALES.LEASING ,
32852 Valle Rd., AtrmORlZEJ>. .,
San J uan Capisll"ano _SERVICE . ~
"'
148001
"""'111.,._""1 Nabers Cadillac ' ii '63 VW Bug, Clean. Retent
reblt eng & brka. $650 or 2600 HARBOR SL..
Ix-st oUer. Ask for Cary CX>S'TA ~ {
968-1113. ' 540·9100 Open SWK!&J •
'" vw. x1n·1 "'""· Oponiog 1968 Seel. de VIHe ;
rear windov.·s, air oond. Fact. air cond., padded top1 t
New lires. $375. OR 3-8289 full leather lnlerior. all pow•
alt 4:30 PM. er, door locks, AM·FM', tilJ '!
'63 VW BUG, mech llOUnd, &: telescopic sir., etc. etc.
new battery, new tires & {XVF160) , ' ,
new dutch. Makf! oner. • $2555 e .
,,,,_ NABERS Cadillai
./ '68 VW Bug. r.oJ or bes"t AlmfORIZED DEALER •
offer. 2600 H"ARBOR BL., { 1
M64825, a,sk for Lee COSTA J\.1ESA . t
'64 VW Bug $400, Mag!, 540-9100 Open Sunday !
""'""· xlo't tntor & ..,.Y 1970 Sed. de ViOa !' bar. Extras. 64H379. •
•71 VW-ll3 S,.,..., "--•J-Fact. air con<l., padded top, l; y,,... .Pa:< " full p111r., all leathet' inter. I
Beautiful cond. -$1900. crui~. cont.ml. stereo. Ugh! ,
Original Owner 646-8034 t J sen 1ne , tilt & telescopie ;
CLEAN 'GS VW, sunroof, steer., most eVf!t')' delll)lt! I
Runs x1nt, $750. Ask f:or extra &: exceptionally nice, 1
Andy; 545-3315 {ZHB247) : '
'65 vw eoovor11•••. rebtt NAB.ER$4666S c•adillac ! eng" new Ur-es, brakes &:
battery. $675. 54{}-2369. Al,[mORIZEO DEALER :
'67 SEPAN 315 VW "LIKE -HARBOR BL., 4
FAS"mACK" XLNT COND COSTA MESA ,
$1100. ' 540-9100 Open Sundaf !
673-4899 67S.2440 '69 EL Dorado, · Black on i
'68 V\V Bus, Lo mi'i, Clean, black, fully equipped. Ali. l
l owner, $1895 or otter. leather, AJ\!IFM, Stered, 1
!168-1107. full power, vlnyJ IQp, low i
VW ,68 Bux: 4 speed mileage. Pvt. Pty. agentj" ~
V good &ervice<I. $4.595. 968-2929 or ! ery condition. $1195. 96'.J-1113.
Pr!. party. 644--6003 • ) i
'60 vw. Vory cloao, Good 1967 Cpe. de Viii• (
cond, $300. Fact. air cond., full pwr.:, j
** 646-3798 ** padded top, Al\tfFM, beau-
,68 vw BUG tiful leather lntcrtar, tilt k
Clean &: Xlnt telescopic steer., etc. An elQ-t
$1050. * 646-5938 eeptional value! (389AGC); j
'66 VW. Bus, deluxe wfsun
roo[, some camping equip,
Excel cond. $1.150. 494-7473.
• $2111 • ' I
NABERS Cadillac !
Al.mlORIZED PEALER !
2600 1-fARBOR BL., r '69 VW Bus 9-pass, Jo mi's. COSTA AfEs A i
Must sell. Make offer. 540.9100 Open SUnclay I
830-8761. c '
1'"'970;;-';vwi;;;-"'so=•.-,,Xl,-nt,_-oo-,,.7.1 1971 pe. de Ville ;
Asking $2600. But will deal Fact. air cond., padded. lop. '
ir interested. 837-3640. full pwr., all leather inler.-~
ior .. stereo, door locks, tilt ~
&: telescopic 1teer. Loaded ,
with most all deluXe extru: l
See to apprwiate. {Ser. 5676) l
'57 VW Bus. cJassic 1>61 oiler.
'65 VW Bug Clean. '5(]0.
6r;i.1100, 675-5077.
'66 VW Reblt eng .. sunroof,
runs well. Must sell. Best
offer. 646-9152 aft 6 pm.
'66 VW BUG. Xlnt cond.
!n body &. engine.
67~7205 * 675-7420
1970 V\V Karmann Ghia,
aulo, stick shill, radio. Xlnt
&st otter. Contact C.V.
Zena.rosa. 8 3 3-2 5 0 0 or
• $6333 • !
NABERS Cadlllac
Al!l.'HORIZED DEALER .
2600 HARBOR BL., }
COSTA MESA I
540·9100 Opea SUnday !
1970 COUPE De Ville, full,y t
loaded, AM /FM, air, xlnt ,(
cond. $4500. Ca.II StaQ; '\
Tl6-8890.
646-9152. ---------· t ' ==~------Ul67 SEDAN De Ville 4 dr, J
1968 VW camper, rebuilt eng. x1nl Cond. New paint, steam •1 w/warranty, new t ires, cl ned $2000 Call S
clutch, brakes & baUery. 77~ · tan. t
Tent t.. luggeo.ge rack. Best ,,-:.,.c::.c_------1> oner. 4S4-7632 '71 ELOO Conv. Grcen/grce.n l leather int, AM/FM + taper
'64 vw * $500 '°'""' $6835. Andy, "'3-<581: bes( offer. 97!}.1340 alt S e~ 645...(1822. · 1 VOLVO CADILLAC, Gold Coov .
Premium cond. $ 2 8 5 q, ( '72 VOLVO w .. ,,,,., ooly &12-2!1', .........
Large Stl1cti0f\_for
Immediate
D_elivery
Big Savings On
Remaining
'71 VOLVOS
.De.mtlemiA •• VOLVO
fl<&.i103
1946 ll&.l'bor, Costa Mesa •
VOLVO, "'For a better deal",
New or u~. P11rt11 I:
service. Herl> Friedlander,
537-'824.
CAD '65 Convert. fully equip-j
ped, ont ownf"r. 46;000 ml: f
Tmmac! $1595. 842-1993. t
CAMA~O
'70 CAM ARO. _v.s, 11uto. Air. !
AM/FM. p1fpb, blue/blue, •
30.000 ml. $2475. or ufff!r .
646-2&14, 837-7856.
'67 CAMARO RS conv, 327
eng., In top cond. Auto
tr11ns, radio, bur:,ket seats,
needs little bl'ldy work. $600.
G'l>-1828. I
CHEVROLET !
~t'"'-"i'ns~~ir!an:y ~:r',1~ bons A trophi<'ll, !5how =-~·--· =~----SAVE on immaculate: pre.. N<'w nr 11'1£'1:1, Parls & _•f_fe~8~cc6::_1:_· ____ 1966 VW Square Back $750.
tlni.lh Prov. CAb w/Atp tqU1p &: trlr, 493-4751 t\'t!S. Cycles, Blk11, driven vthh:lt'll. '7t MAV· !ll!rvicc. Herb Jo"rif'dlandrr, '71 PORSCHE !ll-1. !5lh·cr, 4 Good trans car. Call aftt.'t S
ipkn. Beaut Nrn. Fine HORSES Boe.rded. Cbrnl or Scootlrs ~ ERICK -4 Dr. Auto., a lr.1_;:'1;_7..c-6824_:__· ---~~-cy\, J1lras. Isl S3\00. offer pm, 536-4606. Autos, Ustd 990
Box Stall p -rki!r' Rkl.I P S R&H predriven appx Tl,.,E fQR takt-!5. 644-7000 N.R. 'vw~~C.~m-per-~v-.-,-.,..,,_-Ex-· ~-o--=----
IOUnd. $i::i0. 67~. s.~ a ! · n& eTHE BIKE SH•CKe 9.~ ml .. "" MO. "'mo·. -
'68 CHEVY VAN !
6 cyl Stlck · See to A~-l Club 551""'304 or 557-5\73 "' uw •1"' ..., 1970 PORSCHE 914 cellent cond. $1275. Private M B TRADES SQNY 4 tl'flck sttreo I.ape ' • 10.SPD BICYCLES open .-net '71 F-250 PICKUP ~. llrm. ,~ ~, Party. S3l-.......... ' ' le U I H .. ........., ...,....,,,, 1""' '7t Chevy Pickup, Auto, air, s~ :.rr:sc ~·::.~ '~';-;;~~;-;r;· .... ;'';";;··~l~l\l'~~ll ';.A~:Lf~:;;~ r:r.~~::;~:·l~:~~ TQHURICOKUGCAHSA SPRITE ·~~ll~. '!;1!l :?.' c~~ ~yt.i11~ ~ti<M.'lt.tp,'°"1s""".~.
, ;CM::::_· ~=~----l l · · --.... .. T"~ • AO•Sl•-llo. 24 mor open end, WE ·ro SPRITE. motor A·l new ,,_..;,oo;i, .JWJ ·~ •NQ ""' """' -· "t"' L POPUI ·R P/B, Long \\"httl base, wtU SONY TOW A track pla~r 1093 C BAKER, CM ....,ASE A L. "' ti.res, 1'1RST $494 TAKES. '69 V\V, Jlke new, sunroor, <It
rm>rder. en.ts p JI) n e 41 r Oen•!•I 900 Near Fairview • 546-4l30 1972 MAKES AT COMPETI· DAILY PILOT 1.tdo Shores Holel, 1117 Lido AMfFM. 35,000 ml. Blue U.:uthonlcc:I t.mz Dtate:r
TPFAS g trAck rM car ="""="°"=.,.,--...,..-BONANZA 1200 mtnl blk:e, TI~J ~;:,;,Reid for 1 -P_ar_k_D~r~·~· ~N~.B=·-~--Best offer, AW4594. (II 523-72.JO ste~. 6~. NO .U;lVEST:\1ENT, no down 3~ llP, Jack shaft, F. &: R. further dt't ·1 WANT AD SUNBEAM 'GS KARMANN ' Ghla, Ve:ry BUICK
PJONEER SX9!Ml it fire o, ptyt, no tsxe1, no slip ren1 . •OOcki, chrome tendtrs. THEOooRE , 1---------clean. Re-bit engine. Call .
plonttr f'eVt"rbtrttor It 10 You skipper. 'la' powttr $.'\:! Included lt new full he.lm~I, ROBINS FORD 642_5678 '67 SunOOam Cnnv. (VTI..091) 968--9708 or ~lS.1.
apkn, $3&0. GI': port Oll TY day, :IYJ'lf' hll $28. day. all In tine a>qd Jl30. 2060 Harbor Blvd. _ $69S Chick Tvcnon 1970 19'3 VW C1mp1r
$125. 54S.1!)7!'i. •, 645"-.i! · I , Costa ~TeM 642-0010 Hsrhl'lr Blvd. Olsta Mf!.a . $995. 61M868 =::=-:.:c:::: __ ....:.;;:=;'-------
•
·~ Bu I c k, A·l, must
sec! $225. !\tr. Ross 3.;o \V,
Bay, C. M. fl68..067S alt 6.
atr (lmTAI $1899. •
BILL YATES YW l
32852 Valle Rd ..
San Juan C.plstrano
837-4800/"93-451,1/$2261
I • I
'61 CHEVY CAMARO : custom 2 ·or Hantrop, v..s, ,
AUIO Trsns, Rcb\1111 Er.¢ne. ~
(VJTI388) Jl39'5 Full Pritt. ,
Terms 10 suit. •
SURFSIDE t.:\O:TORS !
147-3MO .J!
•
•
I
•
-
.-1w-. f§f I . ~· .. fi J!iJ I ·-·•. J§J .__I ___ ,,,-"-.. _,.!~I'--_.oi. .. _ ... _ .. __,l~ I ~-·-]~ I ~ ..... ~-. l[ij
"° LC •. o... M :~:::.:u: ... ::::::;~; 11 ':A~-:~:. ~u ... ~::::::·"°~;~:.:-·:;~.:u; ... ~~~-·-•_•,;.,,.~.1 .1_-._-:·:::J:-:.,:-::::-:· __ .M_ hA• .... -•. u•.ml!111m .. •,•,.•.I
_.;....;;...FO.......,.R""'D--MUST~NG OLDSMOllU PONTIAC , PONTIAC P~NTIAC PON
'6' ,FIREBIRO , GTO 19ti6, xlrit enil
'68 flREBlRD 400 .. Muat Hardtop Col.lpr. ' Automatic little llxlng. Gre>at at
'68 .MUSTANG. 2 Or. ____ .._ __ _
Hardtop, V.S, Auto Trans ., '62 OLDS. F~ * $185 *
,.._..,,______ ;;.. ... .
'~'C!inr Malibu \ '67 "COUGAR . '59 FORD WAQON o1' HUdto_p, V-3: Auto Hardtop . Qlupe, ·Automatic Runs Excellent, ~o 10.nta. Tranl~'ff St~tinc" i Trans~on. Powe_r St_ttr-CGBL1~) $175 Fu.II .Pritt.
0..-·car c8SP.68lf Ing, Pt:rNer 8ra.lces, Radio l-SURFSIDE MOTORS ··-· ·s· 95· H ...... <VCD5531 cu,,,,,, 147.:1142 . :1 · 11 ' • Blue Book $1445. $.X).62 total
Radio ·Heati'r Po\\i:r Steer-2 Door Hardlop. Good Cond, ina. cWfB262). $.1299. Chick (JFU703) $115 Full Price.
,;,.,.,.,, 1970"H>arbor Blvd.. SURFSIDE MOTORS
Costa Mesa. 147-3842
&ell lhla w-Hk· auto. trana-Transmission, Power Stttr-$800. 644-5656
'62 ,PONTJAC pwr d~ brakl"s • pWr 1tffr-in&. Radio&. Heaier. IYPP-1-',..,~9~~-,.-,-.~p'",;'",-.-lo-~
83S-ll57 1n&-P~ffltJ.Ult·whffJ-a1r . 0691 CUm>nt . blue book 0 v
'69 PONTIAC cond.-. Rall~y wheelJ.-' wlde $2'265. t19T_.95 tolal filci"''n, $70 S2575 * 540-5415 * 842-
, .8 . SI'EERJNG WHEEI-1967
Wiant'· · · s Le.e =·95 ~ :::1 ~an~~~ Ford Gatax!e attached. Fae-
1971 MUSTANGS PLY OUTH ovals-1Deluu · Inter-orii. total nfonthly, $2lal,gs 1$ the '65 4 SPp,r OTO
CATALINA owner.: $1~: Or bat offer. loW cash price· Including ~ .~1 545.-9459
Hardtop Cou.,e'.. V.3, Auto-P0011e•9s'-'1i26. • t • • we;&: lic~mie. ~ferred pay.
matip Traruimistdon, PoMr · · ·mtnt pti~ jg $2520 including RA MILER .HERlZ CORP.
'7.0 Pl Dust•f
' to"' air, auklmatlc' .... na. , • prfoe including tax & lie-•J ~ ~' · ense. Deferred payment 390 eniine -recently tuoed. .%11 W. Katella. Anaheim ~Mallirs_n price i. Jl608 inclu01.,. ..,., V•'>' eoooi~tli1m. s111i: 1714) 77~50 Auto "Tr.fn1, Pov.·er· Steerin&,
~io. Low .mlie1, See thl•·
beautiful ear today. t887·
AFCl
Stee~g, Power Brjikes, .. f 'PON,TJAC ta'x; liccnse1 & alt ea.r:tyirig •1 ' (
Factory Air. CYUF5631 \CUr· GRAND PRIX •. charies !or 36 . monthl on V··~·~6A~· ,:n~· .~ ... -'Po:..·~·,· -M7·5126" ... ... . license&> .,U carrying cha~· '6f4..720l eve~:f 1967 MUSf~G 390 conyt.
1234 So. Main ·St. H for :U months on our ap-1963 Ford Van $550. 1965 over/H l"ngi~. new tires,
r9nt bltie book $2295, $191.95 Hardtop Coupe. Full pov<'er, our approval of your good -llilV
total. down. $70 total month· fac!Qry , air. LXSE410) Cur-eredlt. ANNUAL.PERCENT·
? 'Sanla Ana ~. pro\18.l ot yoor rood eredit. Pontiac. Before 6. call disc · brakes, Xlnt coDd.
ANNUAL PERCENTAGE 642-4004; ».19 Placentia. $10:AI. 6#-6127 . $2095 ly. $2101.95 ls the total cash rent blue bOnk $3CXXI. $127.16 AGE RATE 18.825'. SteefinJ', Air Conti, CSBM·
price inci1J<:tW tax &: Uc-tota.I. down. S83 lotal month· DAVE RPSS-PONT IAC 1831 [ ... '.&~ IMJ'AU t.:~ 2i~.PoNTiAC ~· 6PM • .3701,i LaPerle Ln, '69 MAOI J, 390, 4 sp. p/s, ense. Defl'lrttd payment ly. $2731.95 is the total cash 248() Harbor Blvd._ $895 '
priee ls $151). including tax, price indudin'! tax & lie-Costa hteA • Dr,.,V.i,.~'uf.o Tftns. Pow· 2480 Harbor BotµNard, 1,19~10=F~O~RD~-~·-,-v-.,~E-300-. ::~J~occ. Pvt. Pt 'I· Wa.rd S.Lee
n ·Steuina, Radio; Hea~r. ====°"~"=-M::.::""=---$2300. or "beiit olf~. l\l"•l ,.:c,"".=.~~~---license Ir all carrying ~harg· .ense. Deferred paymen\ '
es for 36 months on our ap-priee la $3486 includirc tax. '63 PONTIAC
proval of your good c~t. lioeqae &. au carrying charg: GRAND PRIX
ANNUAL PERCENTAGE es for 42 months on our ap-Rebuilt Engine, Full Power,
~~~ ~,,....__. .. ....., ....., COUGAR' -'-t -~ <><> ?i!ACH J, .1911: like new, air .-~ • •.• -......... n. '" . ~! COllQ.,~w &ell this V.'et'k. 4~1321 O?' •• • .J ...._..__ n · ---$295 t~s .l , bra1c15.· .$ 1 o ; cond., tape deck. Many .ex-..inenc8ll......,.. Wa.rdS.Lee
646-•: . o; · · Ml-4~ m-5135 ~ · · . .~<79(;.'363~=· ~~~~~ trai. sacrifice. S l 3 9 5. 547_5826 * '71 CHEVY's'* '&:4 fORD Galaxil'l, tull 6'1.>-nitl. 1234 S. ~1ain St.
RATE 18.82%. \ proval of your iood credit Sha (FVW830 ·-Full DAVE ROSS PONTIAC ANNUAL PERCENTAGE rp. ) -Amlricen Mollll'S " I 541.s126 IMPAUU ... qf~(..LES DODGE pi>we:r ·.& air. good tires. '65 ~tustang, afr cond, stereo. Santa Ana
. Price.
CAMARO·s ·-'---------runs J:'OOd. S400. or best. of. Good oood. $650. ea 11 ~--==-.:.:::::.., __ · 2480 H.-Blvd., RATE 11.22%." SURFSIDE MOTORS
Coot• """' DAVE ROSS PONTIAC 147.3840 1234 S. Ms.In St.
'63 PONTIAC ·2430 Harbor Blvd .•.
G o o d condition. Interior COiia h1e1a ·
ll!r ,,.,, ,,..,.,c '64 PLY~IOUTH Valiant, 4
HERTZ .Cc~RP. .... DODGE nm v... .ir o:-~· =-~=-_..,,,.,_--= "..,"'· '" •lick. Good tranBport•· ** '66 LE' Mans, V-8, 2 dr,
HT. Xlnt concl. Orig. owr41.
Santa AM
T·BIRD
221 W:•l<ai!!lla, -A:na~bn cond. New efl&. Xint coild. '69 LTD W&l(>ll. ·10 pas1.,· 429 tion, $300. 67J...-07ll
: ("7141" 77M050 $550. '61S-2l7'. -: : : l<P. Po .... : AM/FM st•.... OLDS.MOBILE
'68'CORONET 4 ,.__ ~.... air, nl.int. cond.. S2000.
'70 ·• P"'S. ••· W uuu•· O>CU&n, 6~ '161 ° ~--------PONTIAC
sharp! New brakes ·&: bat· '56 Pontiac ala wagon. Runs
tery, Xlht tih·s, PS. PB. rreat! New brake1. Moving $~. Pbone' aft 5. 842-b,O. J---'-.,-,=-.-,,--
'57 CLASSIC ~ ~ -. 8&· t:'aet V-8 new paint ........1 tin!s ..J ·~ · · 1 ' air;_ ... ~:· · p )·, . Nu • • ,,......... ..: '• =.-'-. .::r=-~.-1y-19=10~F~r<1 tint,. 1qra,.,; :Jm.'mac CD. nd. 'Lo owner. $1125. 646-6759. , -en 1c.-egu1 ! _ .. o
'69 OLDSMOBILE Only neeO~t;;~i· $225. east. JD> or. oHer 962-1678 • 545-0~ *
1; "!'I! 1969 DODGE S ... ~ Wagon, Cntry ted.. ps/pb. SUPREME CUTLASS . Aul N '67· PONTIAC ·'67 BOnn,.• dr: vin ht. exc'-".I 01,. •w
Hardtop Coupe .. ti.utom al!c. BONNEVILLE i~iiiiiiijji Po1ver Steering, p 0 \V er concl., orig owner. pwr .
Bra.Us, Eactor,y Air~ eonru~ Jiardtop Coupe. Power &. $8!15. 642-5851 64>2161
·ml 1., ~h!St 61!11.,MaJ<e otter. UJ)l!r ~an. air. Iva:. rack. Eves/wknds. ·(U4).~3044. Undl!r warranty. Xlnt cond. !92-0143
. ,. '"'""' 9 ll900 or besloffer. SD-2935.. _ · . r-·· waao.n, pass. · · '64 FALCON Convt. Stick. Ca~r1l!, air. ps;-1'8.C'JI:, 1969 DODGE Tr a d-e> 1 ma~ good cond. CHEAP!!! Calt
am/Im, sharp. I l 8 7 5. van, 6 cyl. auto .. 22,0CXI mi. aft 6 pm, or wlmds. 831)...4792: m-.im. XInt cond. S2600. 494-3039. Sed ·'· · · -* '61 Country an 9
·~ Of.EV lrripala • ·6 . pai;s \ FOR.D Pa&s WaiOl\. Looks le runs
W.&0n. P,/S, P/B, air, "' ~· .$195. 673-~. ~.~~· "1""· $650.l-,6-9_F_O_R.,D.__C_U_S_TO_M_ GREMLIN
'6? QIEVY :'CaPrloe. p\l.T k 4 Door Sedan. Automatic 1 __ _
aii:--~ttt--~eond .. Sa.criha! transmi!SiOn, Pov.·er Steer· '7.0 Gremlin
$895. ing. r~EL) Current r'.l!e
. ~ ·1.1)...8)36 * Book $1660. S39 tot.al down.
~ 1 Ca,P~, disc. 'PIS,
P/W, . .P.Ower bck; air, nr. ~~10,:. Ttlt/W.
540-29~-I
Chrom@ Wheels, Ml/F~1 Ra-
dlo. This owner wu careJul
with tlils gem. {491CCK)
$1495
$5J total mont,hly. $1QSt9S is
the total cash price. includ·
ing tax &: lice'nse. Defttred
pa.yfuent P~ is nm t.n-
c1ud1ng ta.xi lieeme & all
'6SroftVA!R MO!\'ZA 4 SPD ca.rry~. eharges· .for 24 ,IT ... ...:a s Lee ~.~ • • 646-8508 Aft 5 mOnlhs On otir approva1 of ff Q.CU · • ,
'65'',IMPALA 9 paQ. win, y<>u1· ~: cridi:t. -ANNliAL· ..1 • 'It ._:u,· air po•",· • P~RCENTAGE .. R:A T)S. Amencel'IMotors,. ~·~:-' . ' ' ....... 22 84 % ....,~bl• pr!~. Gj6..373l. DAVE .ROSS PONTIAC 547•5'2.6
·~ Eij~ ·1mpaJa ·sta. Wag. ·2480 Harbor Blvd., 1234Sa%.,M:1 St.
in· "'~ ~ f<il'kl. A:llldng COs'ta Mesa · 1 ·
$1,195. ~ att 6. JAVELIN
• 1964 !':llF;VY .. '71 To!'ino 500 <;pe . $450 . .'P/S..P:/B. Air Conditioning, · Radio, __ ;_ _____ _
. · .. • 54&-2595. • Heater, VinYl ·Roof, Auto '69 Javelin ·
71· .. VAN; V.S, auto, ta~.
p&nelini. ice-~:·s2,900.
: ..... ~··
. CAPRI
Trans.:·
$2690
Newport ,Nation11I
Le111ing Co •
Division of So. Calil
1st National Bank -
197t'" tiJNeDLN ~ e r cur Y 2022 Business Center 1rvine
C&pn 83 '
l · awTI:er, AMJn.1 radio ~?0
,. 642-0!51 • '69 FAIRLANE ·500
CHRYSLER .
1 _ _. ... ,,.,...,.._,,-.,:,,,._ Coupe. Auto., PS. Air. Ex·
Auto :rran.s, Wicfe Ovals. Rl!tl saarp car. <YCS442l
$1495
WardS.Lee
Amlricen Mo1o1s n
547..5126.
1234 S. Main St.
Santa Ana
MERCURY
Ooning.. (ZVD147J Cum.nt YaCtory Air. (VCK61 4J eur. l -'-'-'~,~68~.~L~Eo-oMA~~N"S,---
blue book~. •'>'lll.S4 total rent Blue Book S.1540. $55.62 C V 8 A l
down. $79 totai"~nthly·. total do\vn. $67 total month-Hardtop oupe. • • u o-
ly. Sl366.-'' t"'· total cash matic, full power, air con· SZ.Wl.95 J: the total cash "" ne ~,......, · (VHA"7\ ""·~rent •ri~ including t.x ,& · lie· u11.•vning. ,_,. ........ •riN! in udina t""" & lie· Bluo Book s·~ ·~ total -~ "¢"' ense. DPferred payment =""'· """ enM!. Defem!d payment down. ·$68 total inonthly.
price is $2S« including tax, price is $l608 including t4X. $1681.95 is the total cash
licen&e & all ca~n .. cha-· license & all carrying charg· 'ncl 0. t • 1 . •• ., .. ,. .,. es for 24 months On our an. price I U 1ng ' ax IC·
es for 3&_ mQ!lths on our ap-proval 01 your ........1 ctt<til. ense. Deferred payment
Proval of yoar .........1 credit. .,......... · · rtrun '>' dudi•g •·· 5 ........, ANNUAL PERCENTAGE price 11 ,,__ n " ....,.,,
ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE Zl.2S%. license &r. au carrying charg· oa.:.~~ 1:lg;5 PONTIAC DAVE ROSS .PONTIAC es for 30 months on our ap-, ... Harbor Blvd., proval of you good credit. 2481) Harbor Blvd., ANNUAL prM>~AGE Cmta Me&a. """"''""' • -~,.-:O>sta'i'i''-''0-M"'""':::...=-1---==:..::=~--1 RATE 1s' ts.94.%.
'69 Qlds Pelta 88 '61TE1'1PEST.exce11 en t DAVE ROSS PONTIAC
ROYAL. Full p1nver, YCR985 tr(ln&P car. $150. 611 Kings ~ Harbor Blvd.,
$.2499 Pl. N.B. 646-4032. Com Mesa
Harbor American
6~6·0161
1969 1--!AllBOR COSTA MESA
TWO 1968 Olds Cutlass •. 2 Dr.
hrdtp. p/1. auto trans.,
t/h, air conc:l. $1650. Ask for
Mr. Marks, 67~3130, 9 am-4
pm. \vkdays.
'68 cusr Tornado, full pwr,
tac air, am/fm. till whl,
crus · con tr. xtra shrp, 1
ownr. 67S-1079.
'68 OLDS Cutlass Con.
vertible, P/S, P/B, Xlnt
cond, Best.offer, Will de"al.
962-2436
'71 Cut. Sup. p/v.·, p/b. pis,
a/c, stereo. Ex. cond. 7000
mi'1. $3000. 548-6598.
'64 Olds 98. xlnt, new tires. 4
dt, air, all p\vr, runs like
new. $550. 646-3471.
Auto~ Uu~d:.:.·-...,.~~ Autos, Used
SALE
'70 BUICK IMMO.'C~ ...... "'"'" s:~*'~" 1t1r10, (llNml wllHlt, Ttp,,_)O_""'"'
Air, l'·Jl-tr. (1'2·AJIY), · '69 BUICK 1tlv1tr1. TtJI, tilt, c1111. lnt.1 ~11)881:. l'I", •Ir, c~Nml wllMll. "6VtrV
(YltW Mt)
'89 CHRYSLER '::. :.:=: ~ S2&9& IMildl.91 ..........
'68 CHRYSLER ~~::;::--' °' $149& l'ull ,...,,, ....
ceM., ttn. (lWM· ....
990
· · · ''8-Ci.fflYSL-ER·.: ciptiollally dea11 and ·wry
NEWPORT CUSTOM low mileag.: <YYJ4"l $2199
Harofoi>;,·'coupo. Aatomatk BJlf YAT£S ·YW. 1971 MERCURY e '61 OLDS 4'dr 98, PIS, STATI~ W,AGONS PIS, R/H, Afr .. ~islion, · POwer Steer-1ng: PO\ver Brakes; Factory 32852 Valle Rd ..
Air,· New Ti~. (\'TD835l San Juan Capistraoo
·Current -blue book s19so. S37-4800/493-A5l;l/4fl'.9-2261
$95.77 tota1_dqwn._S66 total * '7l FO~DS * monthly. $1~.95 ~the !Otlll
eUh .. prlie lncludtng to: a: GALAXIES •· MUsrANGS I~:, t>efemd· pa.ym@nt TOr.INOS
pilO. is w1 tto<h•n,. ux. HERTZ CORP. 1~hse--.&!: all carrying charg. · es for' 36-months ion our ap-221 W._ Katrlla, Anaheim
pi-oVaJ of yoor good credit. (714) nMOSO
645-2068 HERTZ CORP. ~ W. Katella. Anahtlm '62 OLDS Cutlass V-6 'Good
· !714) 77M050 · """· sioo. Call 962-7562
lS10 MONTEGO MX. 2 Or. '68 Olds 442. Xlnt concl. $1400
Hrdtp. lSl, V.S. tac. air, or best offer. 675-4989 p/disc brks, bueket seats.
auto trans.. radkl. Xlnt .,"'~!o=ro~8'_30~AM~. --~=
rond. $2275. 968-1688. '67 Cutlass supreme, A/C.
PIS. Xlnt cond, ~lust MUSTANG •a<rilioo lmm.0 ..... 1706.
~AL PERCENTAGE '64 FALCON W&i(ltt. V-3, -,~-,-=---.,-=-
RATE 19.18%. auto, PI S, depe,ndable h'&n&· '66 MUSTANG $500
'60 Olds, A/C, R/H, new
'l!at coven & trans. Runs
J'OOCI, Clean S195. 64~1768 DAVE ROSS PONTIAC portat;oo. $315. '"8'923 Or Bst Otr ....,.., alt 6
~ Harbor "Blvd.. Autos New 980 Autos, N-980 • Costa Mesa ' ·, Autos, New 980 I
~
'67 YW Nrw '•li!lllt q 1M '#1111 ' C:•"'· s1-CMll. ttM1r, ""' wMtll. &R
'71 DAnUN '"'· "" "'"'" "' •-& cencl., 4 sptlll, l"trfWt .,...
(Olldlllln Ill & tut. ttrf tZTl
1961 CHRYSLER 9 passenger
1tation waton. Air con.
ditioning,. --etc. XTG 8&4.
$1595.. Chick Ive!'Mln. 1970
·Harbor Blvd., Co1ta hJesa.
9 P"85. Wagoh '62; ·an extras
$3%5 or· trade for Compact.
213 ·Ll!J.c LJI., CM !>43-5287.
Step Up To CONTINENTAL Luxury!
,coM~T ** '$3 COMETf', p1/pb, iood condition. S 3 00 .
67?-7985 attu 6 PM
CONTINENTAL
'71 MARK Ill
ThiS beautiful Iuxur)' cu \1
. tuii~. equipi)ed with all the
l\D\lry fta.tufft; )'Clll would
·ripect. ll'i nMr new condi·
tion will be apprttiated
'wben·:)'OU test drive this
&Mic. 366DT A
$!177
,DUNTON FORD
: S46-7070 '
1969 . MARK ill • • • • • • • • • $4875
fi1:lmac1;1late. )leautlful Si:Jver Mink finish with black J,ather interior &: matching landau roof. Equipped with ~11
power melud1na: 6-way.uat. Climate Control Air Cond .. Tilt 1tr&. wheel, Automatic Cruise Control, etc. This fine
Automobile obviously ha• had the belt of care. (\VXF534 ).
~ 1269 4.-Dr. Sedan 1970 4-Dr. Sedan ' I ""~ SO.,Main ·•.t Warner
Sant• Ana
· '10 Cq,rit Mork Ill ~af\hti:, trill Paw~r Equip·
me11t, Spilt Sea!. Both Pow·
a , Air.Conditioning.
19]0 Coupe ·
ExqUlsit__e. Satin Black finish with
white leather &. whit!! Landau roof.
Luxury . e11.tiipped throughout. Full po"'-er. Tilt 1tr1:. wheel. AM-F)-t
stereo· .. Tadio, Climate Control Air
Cond.o 4 Brand nl'lw tii'es a: much
more. See & drive th is beautiful car
Low miles-Clean. Attractive medi-
um iold with matching Uather ln-
tl'lrior &: brown landau roof. Luxury
equipped of cour1e. Full pov.•er, 6-way
seat. Tilt s\rg. \vhl .. Temp. Control
Air Cond., etc. Reflects best of cari!.
Clearance Pricl'ld. (YBN076),
Beautiful glamor &Old metallic !_in· __ '1 ish with leather Interior and match·
In& landau roof. Luxury equipped of
course. Full power & 6.way powt0r · '
: $5890
Newport National
Luslr1t Co.
Division of So. Calif.
lat National ~ 3.122 Business Cl!nter, Irvine
13U620
' 1970 MARK lll, liW new,
llJJ,y equip'd, low mileage,
ftl!Xfblrl cm price and tft'll\I.
~ 5*1600 before 5 p.m,
COR°'EnE
•• STINGJllAY Semi ·' 'OJ'tam· El'ceplloMI. Maey
I 'IS pertt. 327 4 1pd1 lo mi'I.
116-j947.
l17J OJrvette JiJre M.W. Sun , AN/t'M, autG, a I t «iftd. Art« P*f, MU&t tell.
A"'1na 1.'1.100 . ..i._-8161.
. ·_COUGAR
• ~. ~ !
\o·appreclate. t815AGBJ ,
$4575 $3375
seats. climate control air condition•
Ing, Ult ,teering \vheel.. 1terl!O ta~
syst.l!ms, etc. Immaculate through·
out. (838AGA)
$4575
e MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM e
1966 Coupe
SH.utiflll eold mist 1'!'14!·
t&µic finish with match·
ina interior I: landau
roof, full pOWe r l!QUfp-
ptd. climate controJ air
condition.in&. 1tereo tape
~stem etc. (SJClM)
$_1775
.,
Orange County'• 'Family of Fine CO.ri
' I 11\;t t JI ·,
CC)lJt,,1H
1970 Mark III
Altracliv• li1:ht yellow
aold 'vith black leather
lntl!rior il matching Llln·
d&u roof. Fully JUXUQ'
?quipped Including climall!
control 11ir cond., t II'
1teer:lng wheel, ilt/FM
Jilerl!O radio, 1'tiche.lln ra-
dial ply tires, l!tc. 'rh\11
beautJrul car reflects the best of car•. (090ACK)
$6675
''1 Auto, -solo 2829 HARBOR BLVD,. COSTA MESA • l540-8830 ... bif VI. Sllll5. 644-511!·""'-------;,,,_------------------_;;._ _______ .,1
.. . . . . •
THE NEWEST CARS YOU'LL SEE
THIS YEAR
FORD FOR 19·72
' MAVERICK e MUSTANG e CUSTOM
e GALAXIE e LTO
MAVER·ICK-PINTO SALE!
1970 &_1971'1. 4 1pt1d1, J 1p11d1, t l10 t ir eond. l 1utom1tie rnod1l1.
EXAMPLES:
'70· MAVERICK '71 PINTO
Fu ll., f1cfol"f'
!6111EP I.
tqui pp.d. ••dio, '-••trr. Gr•DDJ!, t rttl'l/r1ci119 1trip•1, 4 1pt.d, good rn1l1t. lll7CAX l.
ILUE IOOl PRICI 521 JO
OUR
PRICE $1596 ~~~E $1796
STATION WAGON SALE!
1 S TO CHOOSE FROM. Imports & Domestics. Country 1ecl1., Squires.
Torino, V.W., Volvo, Dahun, OWs., Mere., Toyota, Opel. '65 thrv "71
models. Some wltk fuR power & air cond.
EXAMPLES:
'65 FORD WAGON '70 FORD 10 PASS. .
Country 11d1n, 11.&l-I , t 11to., •ir cond .•
P.S., 9ood inil t 1. (WWIC76'1
Squirr . 'II, R&H, 1uto,, t ir, fl.S., fl.I.,
good "'il11. ! l06BEJJ .
ILUI 10011: PRICI $JJ40
OUR
PRICE $796 OUR
,_ICE $2896
TRUCK SALE!
M•11y to choo11 frolJ. Chtvy., Dthu11, ll.1nc.h1ro, V, ton end 1ili ton1, Fltl bed '67
thru '71 "'ocltl1. '
EXAMPLE: '69 FORD F-250 PICKUP
Good mil••· C1mpfr 1p1ci1I, 'II, 41pted, r1dio, h11lt r. 114141El.
ILUI ioo•'PRICl' 52580
OUR PRICE $2296
LT.D.-GALAXIE-T-BIRD-TORINO SALE!
M•ny h choose from, '65 thru '71 Models, Sport rooh, formals, 2 door
& 4 door hardtops & stclan1. Full power, air condltlonh19. Warranties
nalktble.
EXAMPLE: '71 T·81RD H.T. .
A1,1to., P.S., fl.I ., P.wi!'ldow1, P.'Duc\:11 1t1t, AM .FM St1r10 r1dio, •ir cond ., till
_wht•I, """"• Deel., 1iclt m!d91 ., r1mot1 mirror, t oOd rnill 1. l6941ZJI
ILUI 10011: l'llCI S471S
OUR PRICE $4196
MUST ANG SALE!
M...y to choose from, '65 tltr• '71 models. Coupes,. hardtops, conwfl'tl·
bl• and 2+2Jntbaclu._Sotne.w:lth_4..1peo<11,_also alr_condltlonlng.and
•utomotlc medels.
EXAMPLE: '71 MUSTANG H.T.
11.tdio. h11l•r, •Ulo"ltfic. pwr. •'•••· l Dr•k11. f.ct. •ir, IJOOd ma11. !019CQll.I
ILUI 10011: PRICI SJJll
OUR PRICE $2796
St l1 flric11 Goed for 72 l-lour1, Ctn S11bjtcl to Prior s.1,,
'
•