HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-11-23 - Orange Coast Pilot•
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Newp"v.rt Bay Pollution
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Faces Powerful· Attack
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I: First Love
DA'll Y "ILOf lhlff Pllfll
Tracy Madden, 5, a kinder·
gartener at Jrvine Elementary
School, cuddles up to "Ger-
aldine," a papier rnache giraff c
built by seventh and eighth
grade art students at the
school. Geraldine is one of sev-
eral jungle animals built by
students, who plan to donate
them to pediatrics wards at
hospitals.
Newport Bay
Pollution
Under Fire
By L. PETER KRfEG
Of !hi O.Uy Pilot Siii!
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Ne\l'port Beach envirorunentalists led
an assault on Newport Bay pollution
at a city ·council meeting 1'.fonday af-
ternoon and won pledges from every
~gency in the county \o,rith responsibility
for the problem to do something aOOut
it.
Miss Sue Ficker and Miss Susie
Sllcdaker used photographs, slide·s and
posters to illustrate \vhat they claim
is the biggest culprit, the county's "an·
tiquated storm drain system."
Orange County llarbors . .Beaches and
Pal'ks Director Ken Sa1npson said he
couldn't agree more. estimating the
drainage system transports at least 95
percent of lhe pollution into the bay.
Sampson ''ov.·ed the help of his depart·
!See BA'\', Page !I
Love Stro1ige r
• Tlia1i In jury
MADERA (UPI) -Broken bones
and bruises -are no obstacle for
a couple In love.
Thus George Gilreath of Fresno.
confined to a \Yheelchair wilh a
broken arm and leg, rolled · up
to the hospital bed of Barbara
Alex of Chowchilla this weekend
to take their n1arriage voews .
The newlyweds were hospitalized
h(!re Nov., 10 after being injured
when their car collided ,~,.itl\ a
semi·lrock rig.
"We were supposed lo get mar·
ried last week," Gilreath ~jd. "We
just decided we ought to go ahead
and get married."
Justice Court-Judge Alex Brown.
who perfonned the ·ceremony.
noted "Jt's_the_o_nly_ casel'..ve.. evc.r
heard of where two ~pie were
both patients in a hospital and
got n1arri~."
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Shared ·for 26
Wife Attackell
On Golf Links
A 20-year-old San Clemente
house\\.·ife was raped at kn ifepoint
by a burly assa ilant at the
municipal golf course t.fonday
night.
Police said the attack took place
al abou t 9 p.m. as the \voman
was \valking hon1e from a South
El Camino Real restaurant.
The aUacker crept up behind
his victim and 11resscd a kn i f e
to her throat and forced lier to
·walk to the area of the 18th tee.
After the offense. officers said,
the attacker told her not to turn
around. He then fled.
The vicUm moments later stop-
ped a passing n1otorist to report
the inciden t.
Police said the rapist is a male
Caucasian stand ing about five-feet-
eight and v.·eighing about 2.30
pounds.
Judiciary Panel
OKs Rehnquist,
P owell No minees
'VASHINGTON · .(UPI)-....-Lev.·is F.
PO\\•ell end \l."illiam 11. llehnquist \Vere
endorsed today by the Senate .Jud icia ry
Conunittee for confirn1a tion as Supreme
Court jus1ices -PO\\'ell unanl1no11sly
and Rehnquist by a 12-4 vote.
Opponents of Rehnquist, 47, an assis-
tant attorney general, vowed they woufd
continue to fight his appointment to
the Senate fllor. 111e £~-year-old Powell,
a Richm ond attorney and a former presi-
dent of the American Bar Association,
is expecled to have clear sailing.
Voting against confirmation of Rehn-
quist in the con1mittee were Sens. Birch
Bayh t0-1nd.,,r:dward M. K~nnedy !D·
Mass. J, Philip /\. Hart (D·l'ii ich.J, aud
John V. Tunney !D·Ca\if.).
President Nixon announced the selec-
iOl'r-Of----Powell and Rehnquist on Oct
21 to succeed tv•o longlinte associate
justices, !·Jugo L. Black and John ~-f,
Harlan, Y.•ho retired within a week of
each other in September because of
ill health. Black died eight da ys aftf;r
his retirement.
Ad1ninistratioo leaders expressed con·
ric\Cnce that both Rehnquist and Poy.·ell
v.·ould be' conrirmeCf -prob-ably carlg
next month -to bring the shortha11ded '
Supre1ne Court back to its full ni9e-man
strength.
llPI T1ltJ11!olt
Cli1·ist11ias Lights
'fhe Chris tmas season arrives at Chi cago's North Michigan Avenue
as the "1\fa gnificent Mile" can1e alive \Vilh thousands of sparkling
1niniature lights stretched across trees. The \Vatcr To\ver. a Chicago
landinark. looms in the foreground.
Elli11gton Ba11joi st Dead
ClllCAGO (UPI\ -Fred Guy, 73,
a former banjo and _guitar player in
nuke Ellington's band, -shot and kllled
himself Monday night. police-said today.
Sgt. \Vesley .Dtllard said Police unsuc·
•~essfully· attempt.ed for 20 mintites to
tnlk Guy out of his action!!' thrQu~h
a locked door.-
Guy was a banjoist with Ellington
in the c.arl y 1920s. He swilched to guitar
it. lhe I~.
A native or Brookfield , Ga ., Guy retired
rrom Elllrigton's band in 1947, taking
up re,sidence in Chicago.
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DAILY PILOT
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TUESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 23, ll97J
\tOt.. "' NO. ... I SICTtOf\I" • Pdll
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Court Fight
Continuing
Over Estate
From Wire Services
Arguments resumed today o v e r
divisio n of the Jl million estate of an
inlemationa! merchant-shipper who led
a bizarre two liVes with two wives who
shared him unaware for 26 years.
Juan Vargas insisted on a rigid
timetable in his separate Santa Ana
and Torrance households, right to supper
at 6 p.m, with all the family present.
Death defied Juan Vargas' strict
schedule.
He was killed in a car accident two
years ago -leaving no will, despite
his meticulous business methOOs -and
the echoing crash shattered two homes
in Its protracted aftermath.
Testimony unfolding at a probate hear-
ing in J.;os Angeles County Superior Court
Monday portrayed Va rgas as a husband
and father with a blueprint for daily
life but no plan for eventual death.
He left a total o! $1,063,165.
Mildred Vargas, 65, of Torrance, wed
him in 1929 and bore three children
now aged 38 to 40, hence the hearing
is in Los Angeles.
Josephine Vargas. 54. of 6411 Lin·
denhurst Ave., Santa Ana , wed him in
1945 and bore four children, now Zl
to 26 and so contends they are entiUed
lo a share of the estate.
Mildred Vargas was initially granted
$2,000 per month in living expenses from
the international merchant's contested
estate, but claims all community pro.
perty.
Attorney Ervin Roder argued before
Superior C.ourt Judge Robert Kenny that
Vargas' second wife and children living
in Santa Ana qualify for compensation
too.
"C.ourt precedent gives a woman the
right to compensation when she is deceiv~
ed into entering an invalid marriage,"
Roder said .
The second ~1rs. Vargas testiiie_d__sbe
k new her husband had been married
before but believed he was divorced
iil Mexico.
Vargas. lived alternately In each
household, telling his family In Sant a
Ana he had to be away ·on bllsiness,
specifically being near import-export
cargo in L<>ng Beach Harbor.
Throughout the 28 years of his mar·
riage to Josephine Vargas, t-h-e
milljonaire insisted supper be on· the
tab!l at the Santa Ana home prompUy
1t six, ahe testified.
Royal Pox
VPI ,..._..
Buckingham Palace said that
Queen Elizabeth n bu been
confined to her room, suffer-
ing from the lowly chicken
pox. The 45-yeaN>ld monuclt
has canceled all engagements
for the d uration.
Car jliP.s,
3 Suspects
Picked Up
Three teenage burglary suspects nar·
rowly escaped death early this morning
\tvhen their speeding station wagon,
pursued by p(iuce, Dipped off the
Newport Freeway, rolled over se veral
times and caught fire.
Tustin police, who initiated the cha·se
at the Saddleback Saddlery, 13922
Newport Boulevard, said one of the
y outh s was pinned in the burning
wreckage and was rescued by units from
the Orange and Tustin fire departments.
The trio, all boys, ages 15 and 16,
were given emergency treatment at
Chaptnan General Hospital and transfer·
red to the Orange County Medical Center
where they are being held for juvenile
authorities. Office rs said none of them
wa s se riously injured,
The chase started when Tustin police
were alerted by a silent burglar alarm.
They arrived at the saddlery just as
the trio in a 1970 wagon were pulling
away.
The chase followed with five police
units from Orange, Santa Ana and Tustin
joining in. "'
The three boys, all from Orange, sped
on to the Santa Ana Freeway, north
to the Newport Freeway and north on
that thoroughfare to the Chapman
Avenue East offramp in Orange,
Orange Coot
"'eat.her
\Vinter Weather has definitely
blown in as the mercury will be
dipping to lows of 37. on the c.oast
and 47 inland. Highs will be 63
and 70 respectively. Early morn·
ing fog will clear to· hazy sun tcr
day and Wednesday.
INSmE TOD~ 'l'
"r guets we all feei that any·
one of us could be in the same
position ." says ,a spokes"1a1i for
a group of afrTMe PilOtl' wives
aiding the cat1se of the Poiv1
and 1r11As, See Page 9. • l. M. ltYll 1
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Senate V ote·s Tax Cut
$27 Billion Bill Carries Campaign · Rider
WASHINGTON (UPI\ -Wllh • ma·
jor1ty of the Republicans voting no, the
Senate Mondas p 1 s s e d a bHI cutting
bu.s.lness and individual taxes by moi:e
than $27 billloo over the next three
yean -far mort than P~sidenl Nixon
sought for revival of the eccnomy.
Dr.moerala made good lhe:ir vow to
change the bill to put most of the
'" ~ings In the hands of individuals,
not c porations.
Whe the bill pa~ .at the end o(
a marathon 14-hour session by a iw:io·
vote. only JI Republicans voted for it
and 26 voted against ii.
Their complaint was about the rider
attached by the Democrats to provide
pubUc financing of presidential election
c,ampaigns. a provision expected to give
the Democrats ~.4 million for the i r
White House race next year. The
Republicans said they would spurn the
money.
"A raid on lhe treasury by every
special interest group starting with lbe
DemocraUc party," Sen. Gordon Allott
CR-Colo.), called tht bill: "The econorliic
program or the President has been
warped out or recognitipn. Thtre has
been no real effort to curb the insatiable
appetite or some Sena'tors to grab
everything for political gain."
The expectation was that the tax cuts
will be whittled down to close to the
$15.4 billion over three years provided
in tax relief by the House.
The chopping will be done by a House-
Senate corlference committee which rmi.st
write a final·compromise version.
· Here is the gist of the ta1. bill passed
by the Senate:
Individuals -Increases the personal
exemption, now $6!i0, to $675 fo r income
earned in 1971 and to $800 for income
earned in future years. House bill pro-
vides $750 exemption for 1972 and
thereafter.
'The· poor -Relieves 2.8 million of
all income tax liability and lowers taxes
for 25 millio n low-income taxpayers by
raising the mini mum standard deduction
for income earned in 1971 and thereafter.
Parents of students -Allows parents
to subtract from taxes owed up to $325
per student in college or trade school.
Motorists -Repeals the 7 percent
auto excise tax and the 10 percent tax
on li gh t trucks retroactive to Aug. 15.
Working mothers -Allows couples
with children under 15 to deduct up
tG $4,800 fGr child-care costs, incl ud ing
mai ds, babysitters or day care cen ters, 1----para while the mother is at wGrk. Full
benefits available lo couples v•i lh joint
incomes or $18,000 or less but tQose
with incomes of up to $27,600 can take
partial benefits.
Elderly poor -Permits elderly couples
with taxable income under $6,500 to
Cyclist Critical
After ·Serious
Vallev Accident
" A young motGrcycle rider is list~d
In critical condition tCKiay at Fountain
Valley Community Hospital after he suf.
fered major head and neck injuries in
a traffic accident thi s weekend.
A hospital spo)lesman said Lawrence
Cox 18, or f.1 oore. Okla. is clinging
tG life today despite a broken neck
and brain damage.
Police said Cox was riding his motorcy.
cle westbound on Warner Avenue v.·hen
he collided with a car at Newhope Street
The car was driven by Alfredo r-.tacias,
20, of -428 Central Ave ., Santa Ana.
Macias was not cited by police, but
l'lfficers say investigation or the crash
is continuing.
Sgt. John Beddow, chief of the traffic
detall , noted Iha~ Cox v.'as not wearing
a helmet when the accidl!nt occurred.
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OlAHGI COAST
DAILY PILOT
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subtract from taxes owed up to $300
a year if they pay that much ID property
ta>:es or if that represents al least
2~ percent of, their rent.
1 'The unemployed -Exlends ror 26
additional weeks periOO unemployment
compensation is paid in states with
unemployment rates averaging 6 percent
O\•er 13 weeks.
Businesses -Permits firms and
farmers to subtract rrom taxes owed
7 percent of the cost or new equipment
and machinery, purchased after April
15.
Exporting firms -Allows firms which
uport their prOOucts to defer taxation
on half of their profits arising from
exports If profits are reinvested in
export·inducing activity.
Ca mpaign spending -Permits tax·
payers to earmark $1 of taxeS to finance
the presidential campaigns of their
party's candidate or to devote $1 to
a nonpartisan fund £or that purpose.
Expectecl to provide $20.4 million fGr
the GOP and the DemocraU lf their
candidates pledge to accept no private
contributions.
Nixo~1 Cautio11s Against
Troop Slash in Europe
\VASHINGTON (UPI \ -President
Nixon said toclay that a Senate move
to cut t.:.S. troop strength in Europe
by 60,000 cou ld severely damage the
American posi tion in "vitally important
Witch Doctors
Get Modern Da y
Co1ifidence Vo te
MADISON, Wis. ! L.PI) Some
surgical and medici nal method :.
employed by primitive \Vilch doctors may
be laughed off by n\od ern mediCine but
thei r bedside manner could not be
disputed, acco rding l.o a University of
\Visconsin medical historian .
'Wilch doctors who administer mainly
to the mental needs of the sick con·
centrate on relieving anxiety and im·
proving morale of their palients, Dr.
Guenter B. Risse said in a statement
released by th e University Monday.
"This is an area in which the modern
physician, engrossed in sophistica1ed
medical technology , has fallen short,"
he said.
Risse said that when a person becomes
ill he loses his self-assurance and
becomes depressed and worried.
"Jn a pnm1Uve tribe the mere presence
or the highly respected shaman 1s an
important morale bu ilder," he said. "The
shaman represents all of the religious
and social beliefs of the tribe and can
call on the powerful spirit world. His
rituals dra1v attention to the palii!nl
and build up the patil!nl's hope."
Risse said wh ite docto rs in NavajG
reservations have acknO\\'ledged the
shaman's J>O"'er. He said they say
recovery fron1 operations is nGlably
faster if th e pa!ie nt is \·isited by the
1nC'dicine n1an before surgery.
H.isse, who is both a physician and
historian , sa id the success of fa ith
healers points up a need for phys icians
to develop a greater understanding or
the psychological and emotional aspects
of illness.
CLEVELAND (UPI) -Prophets o!
f'<'ological doom \\'ere taken lo ta s k
~londay by a prominent resea rch scien·
list, v.·ho said n1an cannot seriously
deplete the supply of oxygen in the
air and delergent phGspha!cs have Hille
to do v.·ith the deterioration of Lake
Erie.
"I'm sick an d tirC'd of hearing the
pronouncernC'nl s of the n1 isinformed and
the uninformed ar{'h·druids \\'ho ta lk
i;hrilly about the end of 1hc \\'orld :'
said Dr. A. L. Hones. vice president
n( the Tuberculosis and Respiratory
Disease Association of Cleveland.
A research chcn1ist and naturalist,
Jones said new information shows that
new initiatives for peace" with the
Russians .
Nixon cautioned against the reduction,
from a present force of 310,000 Gls
in Western Europe . The cut is called
fnr in an amendment approved by the
Senate Appropriations Committee las t
v.•eek in the $71 bill ion defeh se money
bi!l.
In addition to the troop reduction
amendment, Senate doves served notice
they would make another attempt to
attach IG the bill an amendment to
force U.S. withdrawal from Indochina
by cutting off all funds except for the
"·ithdrawal process.
Nixon cautioned against approv.11\ of
the European troop reduction in a latter
to chairman John C. Stenn is (D·Miss.)
or the Senate Armed Services Committee.
The letter was made public by Stennis
late this morning and by the Wh;te House
:lhortly afterward.
Nixon said a U.S. emissary, ManliG
Brosio, would be going to Moscow next
week to begin discussions on balanced
force reductions in EurGpe by NATO
and Communi st Warsaw Pact forces.
''At the same timl!, the Berlin negotia·
lions have entered the final and mos t
difficult stage," Nixon wrote. "As you
know, we are also making significant
progress in the SALT (Strategic Arm s
Limitation Talks) negotiatio ns.
··we are now preparing to undertake
vitally important new inltiatlves for
peace in two great capitals of the world .
If these iniliaflves arelo galnpolltlve
results in the monlhs and yea rs ahead,
I mll<it be 2ble to rely on the r i r m
support and the substant ial and creative
contribution of a bipartisan Coniress."
Nixon said the apprGpriations rom·
mittee action approving Sen.a I e
Democralic Leader Mike Mansfield 's
proposal to trim U.S. forces in Europe
to 250 ,000 was .. ill timed ." Passage,
he said, ""•ould, with one stroke , diminish
v.·estern milita ry capability in Europe
and signal to frie nd and adversary alike
a disarray and. weakn ess of purpose
in the American government."
Nixqn said implications of approval
of the troop cut were much brGader
than Europe and could seriously af fect
ihe delicate military balance in the
mideast as well.
most of the oxygen in the air is prGbably
produced by the solar chemical actiGn
on water vapor in the high atmosphere
rather than from plants th r o u g h
photosynthesis.
"If all the organic matter on earth
\1·ere ·oxidized it would reduce the al·
n1ospheric ox ygen supply by less than
J percent," Jones said.
As for Lake Erie, he said sew11.ge
:.ind garbage disposal are responsible
for the eutrophication, or reduction of
dissolved oxygen in the water.
"If Cleveland, Detroit and Toledo put
in the proper sewage t r e a t m e n t
facilities," JGnes said. "the lake will
spa rkle blue again in a very few years."
Good Old Days
Solon Plays Organ for Old Films
After a ~2-ycar hiatus, State Sen.
James E. \\1hctmore 1 R·Garden Gro\'r 1
:\londa y tonk his place al lhe org11.n
keyboard be-neath a flickrri ng silver
screen.
The legislator. who at 16 gave up
"" career as a silent fil1n accompanist ,
\\'<IS seatrd at Clil SIR!!' F'ullcr1 on grind·
ing OUL th<' organ RC('nmp11nilll{'lll r or
11 Buster Keat on silent classic "The
General.''
An1ong the 125 studl!nts al each nr
l'o\·o af1ernoon pl!rfnrn1;incC'S.~· '
\\lhe1more'i; 2.).year-o!d son. Ed , 1v n
:idmils the pre1·i<ius i>ho\1·inRS of t
classics led him to rnllst his father's
t11lcn ls.
"The org.-in musiC' added another
dimension of rmo11onal depth;' the
~·oungcr \\'hc1n1orr ~:ud tod11~. Pre\·inus
sho\\'ini;s 1n !hi' thr11tcr course ha\e
been n1orc dull. he noted.
Edd \Vhclmore. 'o\hO h\'l'S in Silver11do,
Is a graduate student Rnd teachlni; assis·
tant in tc!t'{'On1munica t1ons at CSF ··u·s no secret that my h1th!'r 11nd
I don l often see <')'r to r:yc pOlit1c3lly .''
he said, "bu~ '}'.\: m11tual lnttrcst in
th<' i;1lent screen r.r11 has been one nf
the ~111~ y,c'1•e b"en eble to com·
muni<·a1C.·•
The slatl' senator. 8 prorcssion11l mu~i·
t ian b11nd let1dcr and opcr:i,tor of .a
theatrical booking agency . hadn·t played
a theater organ since 1929. He quit
his job playing organ for two theaters
ln Wafts when talkies came in.
CSF professor George fl.1astroiannl
\\'anted a professional lG enhance the
i:;Bcnl classic ., prese ntation. Averetts
r-.1usic Co. of Fullerton lent a $16,oro
n1odern organ thal duplicates the sound
t1f a theater pipe organ.
\\'hetmore. whose last visit to thr
Fullert on Campus four years ago w11s
lc~s pleasant, agreed tG play for the
class.
llis son said I.Oday, "I WAS probabl y
lhe only student there who remembered
that my dad had bee:n involved in 'The
Bt:ard' Incident.
.. Tht' Beard" 'A'as c1 C)F' production
or 11. play lhaL Included depictions .of
!;{'X Acts wh1cb Whetmore and ot~r
Orangt Counly legislators found ob-
JCCtlonable. •
~ixons Get Turkey
\\1ASHINGTON (UPI ) -First lady
Pat Nixon was .to acce pt 11 3S·pound
California white 1>r o a Cl · b r e11 s I td
Thanksgiving 1ur1<ey At lhe White flou se
lod3y In 11 ceremonial chore tr1dl·
hunHlly rcser\'ed for presidt:nlS.
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U'°I 'Tel•!IMIO J PAKISTAN CHILDREN, FACES SCARRED BY WAR, REACH SAFETY
Victims Arrive •t Refugff Camp When Their Village Was Destroyed
India Destroys 3 Jets ,
Leader Tells Parliament
NEW DELHI (UP!l -An India n
cabinet minister tGld Parliamenl today
that Indian jel fighters shot down three
of four intruding Pakistani warplanes
Monday and government sources on both
sides reported hea vy fighting along their
borders during the day.
A state of ernergency was declared
throughout Pakistan in view of what
the Islamabad govern ment said was the
threa t of foreign attack.
A Radio Pakistan broadcast cla imed
Pakistani troops repelled an attack by
regular Indian forces in the Comilla
sector of East Pakistan today and
"completely annihilated " the 19th Punja b
Battalion of the 31 lth MGuntain Brigade,
57th Indian Division. It said the Indians
left behind · "197 dead bodies." There
was no mention Of Pakista ni ca sualties.
In Pakistan, the government declared
the sta te of emergency. A broadcast
heard here bY. official Radio Pakistan
said "In Pakistan a state of emergency
has been declared. A proclamation issued
io Islamabad says the president is
satisfied that a grave emergency exists
in which Pakistan is threatened by ex·
ternal aggression."
Pakistani Pres ident A. M. Yahya Khan
said Monday that India was waging
an undeclared war against the nation.
Government sources said fighting with
India11 forces was under way in f o u r
sectors along the border but gave no
details.
In ' New Delhi, Indian government
sources said fighting went on during
the day in three sectors "on the border"
with Pakistan but declined to deta il
the intensity of the clashes except to
describe them as "battles." They refused
to specUy whether the fighting was a!Gng
the border or in Indian or Pakistani
lerritory.
Pakistani newspapers said thal if
Pakistan is forced lo fight for ils
survival, il will right with all its might
and India. too, will go up in names."
The Indian minister of defense pro.
duction, Vid ya Charan Shukla . told
Parliament four Pakistani Sabrejels in·
truded i.!!_to Indian airspace near the
village of Boyra Monday. Three of them
were shot down by Indian Air" Force
Gnat fighters and twG of the Pakistani
pilots were captured after they
parachuted from their planes. he said.
He did not say what happened to
the other pilot. There was no damage
to the Indian jets, Shukla told a cheering
Parliament.
Pak is la n spokesman earlier
acknowledged that four F'86 Sabrejets
crossed lhe Indian border near lhe scene
of reported rightifig and were fired upo n
by the Gnat fighters.
But the spokesman said the p!anl!s
did not fire back and returned Un·
damaged tG lheir own territory.
The Indian disclosure came following
charges by Pakistan in lhe United Na·
tions and over its official rad io that
Indian troops launched ·an all-out of·
rensive actoss the border into East
Pakistan. The charges were den ied MGn·
day by the Indian government.
At the same time. further restrictions
were put into effect. The Indian govern-
n)ent tCKiay banned travel into border
areas and any flights above them not
give n specific clearance.
It 'o\'aS the latest restriction placed
on border areas fGl!owing the barring
earlier this month of foreigners from
ground travl!I along the East and \Vest
Pakistan frontiers with out gGvernment
permission. Officials said the nl!w rule
was aimed at easier identification of
aircraft over border areas.
PASSWORD ---
A good word pa1sed around about 1
busines1 is invaluable. A bad word can be
unforlunote.
Fron• Pn11e J
• BAY ...
ment, uying be is about tG aall l1>unl1
Suptl'Visors to apply for federal funds
for mGdel S!Udies of the bay and tho
San Diego Crl!ek watershed areas.
Sampson said he had delayed illny
proposals pending /l\ewport Beach's try ··
for a U.S. Sea Oran!. lt railed.
Aggressive antl·pollullon efforts were
also pledged by Mayor Newport Beach
Mayor Ed Hirth. as well as spokesn1e nR
for the county Health Departn)ent anJ!.
Harbor Commission, the county flood
Control District and the Regional Watet
Quality Control Board. "'
Hirth promised strong city support
for the harbor distrlcrs proposal and
said the city staff will be asked fo r
immediate recon1mendations about "'hat
the council should do.
Impetus for the day 's cho ru s of
cooperation was due to the efforts o{
Miss Ficker and P.1rs. Snedaker, however,
who fired a relentless barrage ot
photographic damnations et councilmen.
They showed slides of countless storm
drains emptying into the harbor.
"There must be a thousand of them,"
}.!iss Ficker said.
She complained or two other key pro·
blems -runoff of the San Diego Creek
basi n into Upper Newport Bay and siHa·
lion created by development of property
around the bay.
She said a mGratorium on all con·
st.ruction -perhaps in the entire
watershed area -might be necessary
. pntil adequate environmental protection
can be offered by builders.
Officials confirmed that the San Diego
Creek watershed gets about one-fifth
of all rounty runoff.
Paradoxically, the other runoff benefits
other waterfront areas, according to
George Osborne of the flood contol
district, who said siltation is needed
to replenish oceanfront beaches.
He said his agency has plans for
retarding basins in the upper end of
the watershed. but said they 'll trap only
about 25 percent of the silt and debr is.
"We'll need other mean s Qr else we'll
be faced with cont inual dredging and
maintenance of the Upper Bay," he
said.
Excavation for a high rise project
near the Lido Isle bi"idge was also blam·
ed by Miss Ficker as a TQajor source
of pollution.
Both city and county officials said
they have been monitoring the project;
however, and said the chlorine Miss
Ficker complained about ""as ordered
by them to neutralize a high hydrogen
sulphide content in the settled waters.
Robert Stone, county director of en·
vironmental health, said he had apprGved
the chlorination although he conceded
''the pumping should have bee n
prevented in the first place."
councilman Donald Mcinnis 1dentified
the two basic problems. the San Diego
Creek runof f. and the drain sySll!m. call·
ing the latter problem "one \\'e have
generated ourselves.''
She Sizes Up
Turkey Di1uier
Tryi ng on a shirt or pa ir of
shoes for size is nothing nev.•. but
\1•hoe\'er heard of pre·filting a 21·
pound Thanksgiving turkey'!
\\'ell, meal specialist Nelse
Shepard at Country Co u s i n 's
Market. 1031 El Camino Drl\'e,
Costa Mesa. figures be i n g
neighborly \l'ith the neighbors goes
with the store's name.
He loaned Mrs. Pat Ponselt the
hefty btrd to take home !!>day
and see if it would fit in her
oven. v.·hich it just barely did .
··rhe only thing is the legs "'ere
scrunched up against the roasting
pan," said Shepard.
Our growing success in the pest 14 yeers
hes been due to the "good words" end
referrals sent to us by cur customers. ALDEN'S
No amount of advertising con replace a
pe rsonal recommend1ticn.
We are not infall ible , but we ere working
tow ard s that goal by givin g our cust omers the
best serv ice and qual~ty possible.
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS: M ... th,. "'""" 9 to 5:30-Fn .. 9 to 9 -Sat., 9:30 to 5
' r
'
7
7
Huntington Bea~h
Fountain Valley
EDITION
j
Today's Fl••I
N.Y. Stoen
VOL 6'41· NO. 2ao:2 SEC11QNS, 28 PAGES -ORANGE COlJ,NTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS
Court Nominees Baclied •
Powell, Rehnquist Endorsed By Senate Panel
APPROVED BY 12-4
Wilfiam Rehnquist
Parties Clash
UPI Ttlultltltt
UNANIMOUSLY BACKED
Lewis Powell Jr.
Remap, Oil Tax Bids
Delay Vote in Senate
SACRAi\1E~'TO (UPI\ Reap-
portionment and oil taxes delayed a
Senate vote today on a half-billion-dollar
tax increase thRt would establish state
h'icome ta.'t withholding on Jan. 1.
Dfmocrats caucused and announced
they \Vould not vote on t h e
a~lininistration-supported lax bill until the
AssemQ,Jy act~ on ~ Senate reap-
portionment plan. The reapportionment
v9te was scbtduled ror earl,Y a.tt~rnoon
and the tu debate wa s rescheduled
until afterward.
1a1aRy Deinocrats also object.eel to a
proposed amendment by Sen. \Valter
Stiern (D-Bakersfield), to reduce a pro-
posed tax Increase (Ill the oil industry.
Senate Democratic caucus chairman
Mervyn i\t". Dymally of Los Angeles
said Democrats might kill the entire
bill if the oil·backed amendment was
approved. •
The bill, by assemblyman \\1illiam T.
Bagley (R·San Rafael\, would raise taxes
high enough to plug a $310 million
revenue gap in the $6.8 biUion state
budget, finance $200 million in one-time
Fountain Valley
Schools Struck
By Vandal Spree
Vandals struck at tv.•o Founta in Valley
schools over the \\·eekend. causing an
undetermined am ount of damage. police
rej>orted today.
The destruction at Fulton School, 8778
El Lago Ave. and at Fountain Valley
lI}gh School , 17816 Bushard St., was
d!Scovered ri.fonday by school custodians.
tAt Fulton, the vandals broke into a
classroom area through a boarded up
pt!te glass window. Last week somebody
tlirew a rock through the window.
·Once inside, the vandals '\\.TOie obsctne
words on the walls. doors and window~.
r&nsacked the classroom and broke into
the library which they also ransacked.
building const ruction and provide $23
million in business inventory tax relief.
!\los t or the money -$470 1nillion
-Would be raised from withholding.
The remaining $83 million would come
from increased taxes on banks. cor·
porations, the oil industry and wea lt hy
individuals no\Y enjoying "preferential
income" loopholes.
State Reports
Pacific Coast
Freeway Stall
Construction or I h e <!ontroversial
Pacific Coast Freeway has been delayed
indefinitely. according to the California
Division of Highways' mid·yea r 1971
report.
1n a brier summary of free\va y activity
in Orange Count y, the official report
says the slate highway commission has
adopted the route or the Coast Freeway,
"ffo\Yever, curreot disc u.ssions regardin~
alignment with several coastal com·
munities may delay construction for an
indefinite period.·•
The report doe!i not explain whether
the freeway may be abandoned entirely.
shifted in certain sections. or eventua lly
built as planner!.
Newpo1·1 Beach residents have raised
the biggest objections to the freeway
and tha t city has officially asked that
the freeway not be bu ill through Ne wport
Beach.
Other objection s to the freel\·ay have
been ra ised in Seal Beach and some
areas south of Laguna Beach.
The only coastal city still st rongly
supporting construction of the freeway
is Huntington Beach.
The mid-yenr report dedicated only
two paragraphs to the Coast Freeway
and d cept for admitting that the con·
troversies have delayed its constructi on,
gave no further clarification of the
freewa y's future.
..
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Lewis F.
Po\l..·ell and William H. Rehnquist were
endorsed. today by tht Senate Judiciary
Committee for confirmation as Supreme
Court justices -Po\l.1ell unanimously
and Rehnquist by a 12-4 vote.
Opponents of Rehnquist, •1. an assis-
tant attorney general, vowed they would
continue to fight his appointment to
the Senate fllor. The 64-year-old Powell,
a Richmond attorney and a former presi·
denl or the Amer ican Bar Association,
is expected to have clear sailing .
Voting against confirmation of Rehn-
quist in the committee were Sens. Birch
Bayh tD·Ind.l, Ed,vard ri.t. Kennedy (D·
Solons Refuse
To Override
VD Veto Bid
SACRA~tENTO (UPI ) The
Assen1bly today refused on an important
first test to override Gov. Ronald
lteagan's velo of a controversial bill
ta allow venereal disease instruction in
public school!! v.·ithout p_jrental notifica·
lion.
The n1easure bv Assemblywtnnan ~·larch K. Fong (D-0ak1and ), needed at
least 54 votes but on an in ilia l vole
the roll ca!! stood at 44·27.
She placed a "call" on the Assembly,
a procedure enabling her to attempt
lo round up additional votes before the
final outcon1e was announced.
Asseinblyman Robert Burke fR=llun-
Ungton Beach). an ouLspoken opponent,
said the schools must "provide some
instruction about what is right and
wrong. There _certainly are moral .!ltall-
dards that have lo be observed and
recognized. before this problem can be
prevented."
''VO ill a clear and present danger
lo our ch.ildren," f\frs. Fong told her
colleagues. She said a poll showed 7!1
percent of youtfis between 16 and 21
want VD instruction.
The initial vote broke generally al ong
party Jines. with Democrats voting to
overturn the veto and Republicans voting
to uphold Reagan.
During an emotional floor debate, op-
ponents contended the bill wasn't
necessary for the prevention o( VD
among California school children while
proponenls argued it was needed to bring
a VD "epidemic" to heel.
Reagan vetoed the bill on grounds
tfiat parents should retain the power
lo be told in advance by the schools
that their children would receive educa·
tion in VD prevention and cure.
But Mrs. Fong said many teachers
"'ere afraid to teach such classes beca use
lhey feared loss or their credentials
under a sect ion or the law \lo'hich prohibits
instructi on in sex education and family
planning without prior parental consent.
The bill was strohgly supported by
Assemblyman John Vasconcellos (!).San
.lose). who contended if !he Legislature
rerused to override Reaga n's \'eto it
would be "simply doing one th ing -
selling out the children or California
lo the governor who vetoed it or the
irrational fear of sexuality."
Assemblyman E. Richard Barnes (R·
San Diego), an original coauthor of the
bill, argued against overriding the
governor's veto. lte said the measure
"could be Improved and reintroduced
In January" when the Legislature coflo
venes its 1972 session.
At the high school. the damage was
confined lo the outside wells. Vandals
used a pink v.·ater base paint. and a
green oil base paint to paint obscenities
on lhe walls or the cafeteria. !he ad·
ministration building and industrial arts
building.
,Police also rrported that tra!h cons
\(tfe overlurned.
'
General Telepl1one's Bid
To Rai se Rates Approved
No Layoffs Seen
At Douglas Plant
A strike in Canada whlch caUsed t,465
McDoriitell Douglas employes at Long
Beach to bt laid off for two weeks
Monday will have no s i m 11 a r
rtpertusslons at the firm's racllity in
J1untlngtoo Beach, i company spokesman
,.Jd today. '
The Ct"lrporallon Is MJMl{li short of
parts for the DC-10 and DC' Jetl lnen
because of a stoppage at itJI Toronto
pl.int \l.·hlch...builds the wings. The planes
are assembled at Long Beach.
"The.re Is absolutely no lie In wllh
• at all,'' Walt C!t vd.ind.• (ilrnctDr oC
u 1ernal relaUons for McDonnell Douglas
A&tron11uUcs In lfunUnaton »each, said
tllis mornJng. "This will not arrect oor
~)'el in any • .,,.."
LOS At\'GELES <UPl l -General
Telephone was given permission today
by the Californ ia Public Utililies Co m·
mission to boost its rates by a total
or $16.8 million.
The increase, a PUC spokesman said,
wvuJd mean a 95-cent a month hike
in the bill of the averagl! bouseho}dep
and $1 a month on business phones
in the metropolitan area.
The spokesman sa id the incrtase "is
consistent with the federal government's
economic stabilization program.''
General serves nearly 2.5 million
customers In 250 cilies In 16 counties.
The increases "'ttich go into effect
in 20 days wlll give the company an
8.3 percent return on its Investment
in comparison with the C.'Urrenl return
or 6.61 percent. ---
Tht basic rate for one-party restdcntla1
icrvlcts in metropolitan Lofl Angelet
g<K's from $.4.80 to $5.75 a month. The
)
Increase for one·p:irty business service
is up from $10.60 to $12.60. •
In the Northern California communilies
of Courtland, Isleton and Walnut Grovr,
the one-party residential rate was
boosted from $4.26 to $$.95 and the
bus1ness rate from $11.80 lo $13.20.
In granting the increase, the PUC
said :
"General h11s had a history or rell-
derlng inadequate ~ e r v i c e and
di ssatisfaction with Gentral's service by
.!!Orne subscribers, especially those with
heatty usage, still exists."
Service has improved over the past
several years, the commission said.
The rate increase rollo\lo-·ed 43 days
of hearings. Gener11I submitted a budget
for rate-making purposes and the com..
mission cut several Items from it in-
cluding $455.000 toward teb!vlslon ad·
vertising which, Jt said, "was directed
prlnclpally toward Improving the com-
pany irnsge."
)
}.1ass,), .Philip A. Hart (I).Mich.), and
John V. Tunney (0.Callf.).
President Nixon announced the selec·
lion of Powell abd Rehnquist on Oct.
21 to succ~ two longtime associate
justices, Hugo L. Black and John M.
Harlan, who retired within a week of
each other in September because Of
ill health. Black died eight days after
his retirement.
Administration leaders expressed con·
fidence that both Rehnquist and Powell
\\·ould be confirmed -probably early
next month -to bring the shorthanded
Supreme Court back to its full nine·man
strength.
Afte1· Session
1''oes of Rehnquist said they were still
·unsatisfied with his written responses
last weekend to questions about his past
actions, particularly in the civil ·rights
field,' and would contirn.le to press their
case on the floor.
They particularly were critical of
Rehnqulst's attitude, whue-practlclng Jaw
in Phoenix, toward lowering barriers
to voting and public accommodation by
Negroes. .
Some Negro leaders, in cl u ding
members of the Black Caucus in the
House. had also called for rejection ol
Powell but Bayh and other leading foes
of Rehnquist made clear early in the
~
bearings they would not oppose PowelL
With today's· Committee approval
assured, the chief remaining queation
was bow much lime opponer\ls of Rehn-
quist would be allowed to write a mlnori·
ty report detailing their opposition.
·It waS"llndel"s:t.OoOthe ltfijOfitfl'lPdtt,:
favoring confirmation of both nomin«s,
already was written.
Normally the committee allows at least
a week for preparation of minority views.
Rehnquist's opponents, however, want
tonger thi s lime, because the·Thanksgiv-
ing Day holiday will cut out two work
days from this week.
Seal Beach Aide
Quits Position
Robert Myers, city manager of Seal
Beach for only 10 months, resigned from
his job early this morning.
The resignation. made public after a
leng thy and believed stormy executive
session was accepted by councilmen on
a 3 to l vole and I abstention.
Myers who took the $1,500 a month
Seal Beach post last Jan. 25 cited "a
sign ificant -change" in his employment
relationship as the basis for vacating
fils ofnce-:-
AUhough the resignation wu im·
mediate, ~!yers will stay on as • COD·
sultant·for about twormonths. Qimcilmen
meanwbilt have appointed AsSistut CltY
1ifanager Dennis Court.emarcbe to terve
a.s acting .. city manager.
It appears today that Courtemarche
is likely to be tabbed as permanent
city manager arter a probationary
period. This morning he was in a staff
meeting with ~fayor llarold K. Holden
and Myers to discuss the changeover.
The council was divided on accepting
the resignation. Councilmen Franklin
sales, Thomas Blackman and Holden
voted for the measure. Councilman
Edward-Smith·decided a~ainst, the-Coon--Q 'T ~' Ul"t T"""" .. cilmu-Tbomas Bamu abolainecL ueen opp.eu
_A second rescNutio.n to. •PP o i n t Buckingham P alace said that
COUrtemardle· .. acting ciiy llWlal"' · be h n h be -'Jllll'O•ed by a 4 to 1 ..ta wllb Que~n Eliza l as en ~ith ibstainlnc ~ confined to her room, suffer-. Ing from the Jowly chicken
'1l 1f '({ * '({ * .. pox. The 45-year-old monarch
has canceled aJ1 engagements Seal Beach Mayor Insists 10
' the duralion.
Resignation 'Friendly'
Seal Beaeh ft1ayor Harold Holden in·
sisted today that the resignation o[ City
ftfanager &bert Myers was handled on
a friendly basis, but agreed. that the
action was hoUy contested by Councilman
Edward Smith in the executive session.._
The mayor also admitted that be voted
against ~1yers' appointment 10 months
ago and tbat he had then favored giving
assistant city manager D e n n i s
Courtemarche, who was named acting
ci ty manager when Lee Risner was fired,
a longer run at the job.
"I fell we should ha ve giv e n
Courtemarche a better chance at proving
himself." Holden said. "If he does a
good job now I think we would hire
him on a probationary basi.s as city
manage r.'•
Courtemarche was hired by Risner,
th e city manager who v.·as the center
Judge Declines
TQ Preside
In School Case
Lawyers for two Orange Coast school
districts and the defending Orange Coun-
ty Committee on School D i s t r i c t
Orga nization ran into problems today
when they attempted to air their unifica-
'lon dispute in Orange County Superior
Court.
Presid ing Judge \Villiam C. Speirs gave
lhe lawsuits filed by the Ocean View
and Fountain Valley School districts to
Judge Charles A. Bauer this morning
for his ruling on their opposition to
lhe controversial "four-way plan."
Judge Bauer pointed out to the battery
of attorneys Involved in the combf!Md
actions that he, as a lluntington Beach
resident, could hardly be expected &o
give an impartial judgment on Ule acUotl.
lie just as quickly sent it back to
Judge Speirs.
By that time, every courtroom
avallable tod ay was busy with ca~
as.signed out by Judge Speirs. It meant
a long wait for a courtroom to open
and all parties Involved were still walling
at ooon.
When they get a t'OUrtroom lawyers
for the school districts will argue that
tht county commlUee'11 actloM· or last
Aug. 26 and OCt. 13 which led to approval
or a rour·way dlvi5ion of the HunUnaton
Beach Union Jilsh School District viol•tes
the state Education Code. •
or the controversy 18 monlhs ago.
All the councilmen who instigated the
ouster o! Risner and subsequent ap.
pointment of Myers have since been
recalled,
"When he was being considered Bob
(Myers) asked me, 'ir they hire me
will you cooperate with me?' I said
I would, but I'll get you fired the first
chance I get," Holden said.
The mayor said, however, that about
two months ago there was an opportunity
lo fire Myers. but the new council ma·
jorlly did not act. llolden explained that
this opportunity meant that all Jegal
qualifications for the firing of a city
manager -90 days after the last council
election -had been fulfilled .
Asked if Myers was asked to resign,
Holden replied, "l don't think so. I'm
in city hall every day and he and
I talked Ibis over a number of times."
llolden said he would recommend
Myers "hlghly" to another city.
"? insisted t.hat he should get two
weeks pay and be kept on for a couple
of months to see through various projects
he knows about,'' Holden went on.
,Holden said he found lltUe fault with
Myers. "Some things simpJy were not
exactly the way we wanted them to
be." the mayor explained. "Some coun--
cilmen relt he did not communicate with
them fully, but I didn't find this to
be true."
The mayor flatly denied that Risner.
now city manager or La Habra, would
return to the top position ln Seal Beach.
''It would look bad for him and would
look bad for us." llolden added. "He
has atated he would not take the job."
Smith, who voted against accepting
1.1yers' resignation and reportedly spoke
oul strongly at the exeeutive session,
ceuld no\ be reached for comment this
morning.
Nixon Names Curtis
To New Rent Board
• WASHINGTON (AP) -Presldenl Nix-
on today named a 14-member Rent
Advbory Board, beaded by Thomas B.
CUrtls, former Republican congressman
from Missouri, to help formulate regula-
tloOJ to control 1ent1.
The board includes five p 11 b I i c
members of whom chairman Curtis Is
one ; five industry members, and four
l'Omiumer members -two of them
women. one repre.sentatlve of Wtln--
American citizens, and the fourth, former
governor ol Iowa Robert D. Blue.
I
Nuclear Plant
Request Sought(
For Mendocino
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI I -Pacilic
Gas & Electric Co. today asked the
C&lifornia Public Utilities Commission
for permission to construct its planned
Point Arena nuclear power plant on
the 11endocin() County Coast, 11ubject
to a controversial 1968 state agreement.
PG&E said the plant was critically
needed to avoid possible power
"brownouts" in California by 1978.
The cotnflany said exhaustive studies
have indicated the $831 million plant
can be constructed and operated with
no "significant effect on the ocean en·
vironment" and can be designed to with·
stand earthquakes.
The plant will have two generating
units of 1.1 million kilowatts each to
go into operation in 1978 and 1979.
"The company has been able to main·
la in adequate and reliable power to
satisfy California's increasing energy
demands because we planned and built
ahead or load growth," said Shenner
L. Sibley, PG&E president,
Orange
1''eadaer
\Vlnter weather has delinitely
blown in as the mercury will be
dipping to lows of 37 on the coast
and 47 inland. High.!! will be &l
~nd 70 respectively. Early morn·
ing fog will clear to hazy sun to-
day .and Wednesda y.
INSIDE TODAY
"I guess we all feel iltat any
011e of iu could be in Ute .same
posilio11," 3oys a 1pokc1ma:n for
a group of oi rli'ne piloU' toive.s
aiding the cause of t1te POW1
and MIAs, See Page 9.
... "'· .. ,. ' Mvlv•I ..... M
C•llMr11l1 • Ntllfllll ""' ...
CllHlllM .... Or"H c.u111r " C.mlc1 H IYl•Lt P.,..tt M ,, .. ,_... n ,_ 1•1• Dtfllll ~lcH " 119(11 M1/'tteti •11 1.i1.n.1 ,_ .. TtltYblM ..
t:11l•rl•lll...,.~I .. TllM"'' ..
Plnlll(I ... ... -• -,. Wtllt1 W11fl .. ... .__.. " w_.1 ...._. 1•11
Mll"'R • . .... , ... .. -·· "
I
2 OAIL V PILOT H Tue~. November 2J, 1m
Picl\:et Lines_Light • Ill County
\'Teamsters Union Strikes Slww Little Effect Locally
Teamsters union strikes which threaten
to shUr down tbe btJilding industry in
Southern California have apparenl!y
!aken little effecl in Orange County.
Spokesmen from the Orarge County,
Costa Mesa and Newport Beach building
departments al lsa id they are unaware
of any Teamster pickets on local con-
struction siles. 59me general contractors
reported scattered strikes, but of very
few locations.
'A spokesman for Teamsters Local 235
Jn Oralige said truck drivers are on
Air Cal Girls
Set to Vote
On Pay Hikes
----1r-California-stewardesses, scattered
all over the state at various altitudes,
today were sched uled to vote. on a con~
tract hammered out into the wee hours
by management and un ion officials.
Settlement of their demands for better
pay and benefits was cautiously predict-
ed, along with prevention of a strike.
Dudley Miller, executive vice president
of marketing, said leaders of Local 505
or the Transport Workers Union of
America recommended contract ap-
proval.
Girls employed as stewardesses, about
100, were to cast ballots in shifts between
flights, with the. last crews coming in
to vote In the early evening.
A contingent of the orange mini·skirted
stews demonstrated ou tside the Orange
County Airport Terminal Friday morning
as a show or force .
The pickets gave the wrong impression
of a strike actually in effect, but negotia-
tions were still under way.
If stewardesses should strike, officials
said, they will hire and train new girls.
One difficulty cited in negotiating a
settlemen t was initially the Nixon w;fge-
price freeze and more recently the s1,J
percent Phase II pay hike ceiling set
by the Administration.
Specific contract details were not
revealed pending the vote.
"Like all contracts, there are dozens
of conditions," Miller said. "We both
gave and took until we were just about
•trike, but the spokerm~_)Y'! not sure
Jf they planned to plcietJ ob-sites.
Reports rrom Los Angeles County in· :
dicate that \\'Ork stopped today at more I
than hair ot the county's public and
private construction sites as other union
workers honored the Teamster pickrts.
The Te8n1sters Union is striking over
a dispute with the co nstruction industry
over the use o{ operator-owned lruc!<;ers.
Teamsters officials sa y that dr ivers
\\'ho own their own trucks and contract
"'ith the building industry, ought to belong
to the unloq. ~--ow'O'ants ano_ther_ ss·_cents an ho1.1r in wages Represen~tlves ror the builping fn-and frinae benefits each year for three
dustry say the owner-operator trucker years. --,
ls an independent businessman. Some of the building construction
One manageme11t spokesman predicted halted 1>y -the strike included the new tli~t the multi·million building industry hall of justice in the Los Angeles Civic
would1 come to a halt by tonight if Center and the annex to the Los Angeles
the strike continues. Times.
Union officials claim 11 Southern A federal mediator is sitting in on
California counties. including Orange the contract talks, and union and
County, are involved in the strike. management personnel are meeting tG
The Teamsters contract with employer set up a list of priority jobs where
groups expired J\.1ay I. The union also work must con tinue.
Good Old Days Three · Youths
.
Solon Plays Organ for Old Films
Arter a 42-year hiatus, State Sen·.
,James E. Whetmore (R·Garden Grove)
Monday took his place at the organ
keyboard beneath a flickering silver
screen.
The legislator, who at 16 gave up
a career as a silent film nccompanisl,
was seated at Cai Stale Fullerton gri nd-
ing out the organ accompaniment Io r
a Buster Keaton silent classic "The
General."
Among 1he 125 students at each of
two afternoon performances, w a s
Whetmore's 25-year·old son, Edd. w ho
admits the previous showings of silent
classics Jed him to enli st his father's
talents.
•·The organ music added another
dimCnsion of einotional depth," the
younger Whet more said today. Previous
showings in the theater course have
been more dull, he noted.
Edd \Vhetmore, who lives in Si!verado,
is a graduate student and te aching assis-
tant in lelecommunicaLions at CSF.
:1rs-no secret that my father and
I don 't often see eye to eye politically,''
he said, "but our mutual interest in
the silent screen era has been one of
the ways we've been able to com-
municate."
The state senator, a professional musi-
cian, band leader and op·erator of a
theatrical booking agency , hadn't played
a thea ter organ since 1929. He qu it
his job playing organ for two theaters
in Watts when talkies came in.
CSF professor George Mastroianni
\vant~d a professional to enhance !he
silent classic presentation. Averetts
Jl,lusic Co. of Fullerton lent a $16,000
modern organ that duplicates the sound
of a theater pipe organ.
'Vhctmore, whose last visit to the
Fullerton Campus four years ago was
Jess pleasant, agreed to play for the
class.
His son said today, "I was probably
the only student there who remembered
that my dad had been involved in 'The
Beard' incident.
"The Beard'' was d CSf production
of a play thflt-included-depictions Ill.
sex acts which Whetmore and other
Orange County legislators found Ob-
jectionable,
India Destroys 3 Jets,
Leader Tells Parliament
Escape Death
As Car F'ips
Three teenage burglary suspects nar·
rO\\•ly escaped death early this morning
when their speeding station wagon,
pursued ·by police, flipped of! the
Newport Freeway, rolled over several
ti1nes and caught fire.
Tustin police, who initiated the chase
at the Saddleback Sadd!ery, · 13922
Newport Boulevard. said one of the
you th s \\'as pinned in t he burning
\.\Tecka ge and was rescued by units from
the Orange and Tustin fire departments.
The trio, all boys, ages 15 and 16,
were given emergency treatment at
Chapman General Hospital and transfer·
red to the Orange County Medical Center
where they are being held for juvenile
authorities. Officers said non~ of them
was ~eriously injured.
The'\.chase started when Tu stin police
were alerted by a-silent -burglar alarm.
.lfhcy arrived at the saddlery jlff!t as
the tr io in a 1970 \vagon v.'er&~ pulling
away,
The chase fol!o\ved with five police
units from Orange, Santa Ana and Tustin
joining in.
The three boys, all from Orange, sped
on to the Santa Ana Freeway, north
to the Newport Freeway and no rth on
that thoroughfare to the Chapman
Avenue East offr amp in Orange.
right down the middle." NEW DELHI (UPI) -An Indian truded into Indian airspace near th e
Six Huntington
A(."i(;!
Christttias Lights
The Christmas season arrives at Chicago's North Michigan Avenue
as the "Magnificent f\.1ile" s:-ame alive with thousands of sparkling
mi.niature lights stretched across trees. The Water Tower, a ChicagQ
landmark,_looms in the foreground.
lle11d erso11 : Not Ordered
To Probe My Lai Slayings
FT. MEADE, Md. ~UPI J -Col. Oran of service and combat duly in three
K. Henderson testified today he had wars, also said he talked to the heli copter
no recollection of being told by superior pilot \1'ho reported seeing bodies of
officers to investigate the killing of civilians in and around My Lai. 'The final negotiations to avert 8 strike, cabinet minister !old Parliament today w•h~i~ch~h~a~dcgbee~n~a~po~s~s~ib~il~it~y~s~j~oc~e;=:c~on~-~lliiffTriffi ----tract expiration Oct. I, were conducted that Tnd1an Jet-figh ters shot down three
under a federal labor mediator. of four intruding Pakistani warplanes Monday and government sources on both
villageJlLBJl)""a Monday-Thra--0Wh~•m~-p0z;cem"ft·~et-were shot dQwn by Indian Air Force 1.-t;I(, UC'1
Gnat fighters and two of the Pakistani
civilians at !\1y Lai. Henderson said the pilot told him "he
--------ntkTnglllFStarrd-as-the-4tst-and -didn't-k-now-reaHy--what-he had seen~. ---
fin al defense \l'i\nesS at his court-ma rtial He was inexperienced. He was nervous."
•
"We're darn near down to a perfect ·d d arbitration." the Air Californi a executive si es reporte hea vy fighting along their borders during the day . said, adding the session lasted until Jong
after midnight. A state of emergency was declared
"I'm tired1" he observed, throughout Pakistan in view or wh;it
the Islamabad government said \.\'as the
Cyclist Critical
After Serious
V allev Accident .,
A young motorcycle rider is listed
in critical condition today at !-"ountain
Valley Community Hospital after he suf-
fered major head and neck injuries in
a traffic accident this weekend.
A hos pital spokesman said Lawrence
Cox 18, of Moore, Okla. is clingin g
to life today despite a broken neck
and brain damage .
Police said Cox was riding his motorcy-
cle westbound on Wa rner Avenue \\•hen
he collided with a car at Nev.•hope Street.
The car was driven by Alfredo Macias,
20, of 428 Central Ave .: Santa Ana .
Maci as was not cited by police. but
office rs say investigation of the crash
is continuing.
Sgt. John Beddow. chief of the traffic
detail, noted that Cox "''as not wearing
a helmet when the accident occurred.
OU.NII COAST
DAILY PILOT
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threat of foreign attack.
A Radio Pakistan broadcast claimed
Pakistani troops repelled an attack by
regular Indian forces in the Comi!Ja
sector of East Paki stan todav and
"completely annihilated '' the !9th Punjab
Battalion of the 3Ilth Mountain Brigade,
57th Indian Di\'lsion . It said the Indians
left behind "197 dead bodies." There
\tas no mention of Pakistani casualties.
In Pakistan, Lhe government declared
the state of emergeflCY. A broadcast
heard here by official Radio Pakistan
said "in Pakistan a state of emergency
has been declared. A proclamation issued
in Islamabad says ·the · president is
satisfied that a grave emergency exists
in which Pakistan is threatened by ex-
ternal aggression."
Pakistani President A. ~t. Yahya Khan
said Monda y that Tndia \\'as \vaging
an undeclared war against the nation.
Government sources said fighting \\•ith
Indian forces was under way in r o u r
sectors along the border but gave TIO
details.
Jn New Delhi. Indian government
sources said fighting went on during
!he day !n three sectors "on the border''
""'ith Pakistan but declined to detail
the intensity of the cl<ishes except to
describe them as "battles ." They refused
lo specify whether the fighting was along
the border or in Tndian or Pakistani
territory.
Pakistani ne1vspapers said that if
Pakista n is forced to fight for its
survival. it will fight with all its might
and India, too. will go up in flames ."
The Indian minister or de fense pro-
duction. Vidya Charan Shukla, told
Parliament four Pakistani Sabrejels in·
Suspect Seized
5 Months After
Valley Hit, Run
Nearly five months after a Huntington
Beach teenager was injured in a h!t
and run accldent. police have arrested
a 1nan in conne<'tion wi!h the crash.
Fountain Valley trriHie investigatnr
(;lark. Corbin s;iid the man. Dennis
Patrick Muldoon, 32, wa~ arrested this
weekend by officers from the West Valley
01 \1\slon of the Los Angeles Police
Department.
J\.1uldoon is in custory at Orange Counly
Jatl tnday, charged with lclony hit and run .
Corbln said they believe f\!uldoon \.\'as
the drivtr of a car which struck the
rnotorryrle ridden by Thomas L. Jones,
J6, of 10061 Jli!\1narck Drive. Huntington
Beach, at the intersection of Ellis Avtnuc
and Magnolia Street.
Jones su ffered a broken collar bonc1 nu1ncrous laceration! and a concussion .
Corbin said Muldoon was !raced
throui.:h his t1ulomob\lc Uccnse plate
number \.\'hir;h \.\'as obtained by a witness
to the accident.
pilots were captured after t h e y F C f C H
parachuted from their planes, he said. or 0 011or
He did not say what happened to
the other pilot. There was no damage
to the Indian jets. Shukla told a cheering
ParUa1nent.
on cover-up charges. Henderson said that Henderson said he l<oler made inquiries
during a n1eeting with the assistant com· among other members of the task force
mander of the America] Division, Brig. that conducted the My Lai operation,
J> a k is tan spokesman earlier
acknowledged that four F'86 Sal;lrejets
crossed the Indian border near the scene
of reported fighting and were fired upon
by the Gnat fighters.
But the spokesman said the planes
did not fire back and returned un·
damaged to their own territory.
The Indian disclosure came follov•ing
charges by Pakistan in the United Na-
Uons an d over its official radio that
Indian troops launched an all-out or.
fensive across the border into East
Pakistan. The charges were denied Mon-
day by the Indian government.
At the same lime, further restrictions
\Vere put into effect. The Indian govern-
ment today banned travel into OOrder
areas and any flights above them not
given specific clearance.
It was the latest rest riction placed
on border areas following the barring
earlier this month of foreigners from
ground travel along the East and West
Pakistan frontiers without government
permisSion. Officials said the new rule
was aimed at easier identification of
aircraft over border areas.
Council Studies
Road Landscape
The Huntington Beach City Council has
supported a resolution calling for im-
provrments in block walls and par~ways
along arterial highways.
"More cutouts and tree well5 1o break
up the straight line are cn\'isaged," Plan-
ning Assistant Robert Vasquez e1tplaincd.
The council instructed the public works
department to prepare data on the cost of
maintaining the additional high"·ay
landscaping.
The council also has amended an
ordinance to limit the height of all
business signs to 35 feet. Under the old
law the height or signs varied according
to locatiol'I. but in some-cases signs as
high as 50 feet were alJowed.
Cigarette Cited
In $1,500 Blaze
A cigarette which fell out or an ashtra y
onth a bed Ignited a fire f\tonday night
\\1hlch cau sed an estimated $1,500 damage
to a seal Beach aparttnent.
The fire, \.\'hich was reported al 11bout
5:45 p.m. at the O;ikwood Apartments,
"'as confined to the bedroom of the
apartment <X'tupled by Darlene Parker.
Battalion Chief Cene Hutaln said the
five units \.\'hich respondtd 10 tht call
h11d Ifie 'tire out in tS n1lnutes.
Therr wcrr. n-0 Inj uries reported, ,
allhough Ml~s P11rker was treated for
s1noke inh~latlon.
-
Six: pollcemcn will be honored at a
''Police Re cognition Day" luncheon
scheduled by the Huntington Beach
Chamber of Commerce Tuesday, Dec. 7.
Gen. Goorge H. Young. "There was and received no su'bst8ntiation. ev'ert
no discussion of murder, There was th rough rumors, of what the pilot had
no discuss ion of excessive kill!ng of told him.
District Attorney CeQL,..-HHlks will be
thi? guest speaker at tli'e luncheon , slated
for noon in the Sheraton Beach Inn.
Awards will be presented to six: officers
for "outstanding and conspicuous public
services" according to Allen Klingen·
smith. chamber president.
It will be the chamber's first such
luncheon. Klingensmith said the chamber
hopes to make it an annual affair.
Mayor George McCracken will be
master of ctremonics. William Foster,
vice president of the Huntington Beach
Company , is program chairman.
IRS to Eye Pushers
\VASHlNC.TON (AP) -Internal
Re venue Service . agents have begun
\\'atching !he spending habits of
suspected drug dealers so they can be
sued or jailed for tax evasion.
A Treasury spokesman said agents
are piecing together information on how
much drug profiteers spend for such
Hems as their homes, cars. travel and
children's edu c<'llion.
civilians."
Henderson said that during his session
with Young, the general related a report
of a confrontation bet1veen a hel:cop!er
pilol and ground troops in the field,
and said: ''By Cod, we're not going
t· have U.S. forces firing on U.S. fo rces."
As he left the brief meeting \vith
Young and three other officers , Hen·
derson related, "lhe strongest thing
I remember, \Vas ''Ve'll not have any
subsequent incidents of this nature.'"
Both Henderson's testimony and that
of Young on Monday rebutted that of
two prosecution witnesses \vho said they
were present at th~t meeting and heard
Young inst ruct H£>nde rson to investigate
and re port back immediately on com-
plaints of civilian slaying.
The government has sought to prove
that Henderson received such orders to
investigate the slaying of civilians during
the J\.l/arch. 1968. sweep of the Vietnamese
hamlet but failed to ca rry through on
them. The defense is contending that
Henderson's subordinates !n his I Ith
Brigade withheld information about what
actually took place.
Henderson, wearing a chest full of
ribbons won during n1ore than 30 years
PASSWORD ---
A good' word passed around a!iout a
business Is inveluable. A bad word can be
unfortunate.
Student Burned
Ligl1ting Fire
A 25-year-old college student from Seal
Beach is recovering today from burns
he suffered while trying to light kindling
in his fireplace.
Brad Becker, 216 4th St., was said
to be improving at the Orange County
~l/edical Center's burn unil where he
was taken after the ·accidcnt early Sun·
day morning.
Firemen said he suffered second and
third degree burns on hls chest, back,
legs, arms and hands. They said the
accident \vas caused when Becker at•
tempted to help the fire along by pouring
some gasoline on ii.
The fire fla shed back into the Jlving
room and also caused about $700 in
damage, accordlng to firemen .
Our growing success in the past 14 years
has been due to the 11goo d words" and
refer rals sent to us by our customers. ALDEN'S
No amount of adverti5in g can repla ce a
personal recommendation.
We are not irtfallible, but we are working
towards that go&I by giving cur customers the
beif sorvice and quality possibl~.
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
\
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS: MOft. lilro T!tu.._, t le 5:30 -l'ri., t to t -Sot., t :lO to 5
t '
2 Wid-Ows ·
"
Seek Estate,
Of Biga·mfflt-
1 ftom Wlre Services
Arguments re11umed today o v e r
division of the $1 million estate of an
International merchant-shipper who led
a bizarre two lives with two wives who
shared him unaware for 26 years.
Juan Vargas insisted on a rigid
limetabl! in his separate Santa Ana
and Torrance households. right to supper
at 6 p.m. with all the family present.
Death defied Juan Vargas' strict
liChedule.
He was killed in a car accident' two
years agG -leaving no will. despite
his meticuJous business methods -and
the echoing crash shattered two homes
in Its protracted aftermath.
Testimony unfolding at a probate hear-
ing In ·Los Angeles County Superior Court'
Monday portraYed V<irgas as a husband'
and father with a bluep rint for daily
life but no plan for even tual deat h.
He left a total of $1 ,063,165.
Mildre~ Vargas, 65, of Torrance, wed
him in 1929 and t?ore three children
now aged 38 to 40, hent:i! the hearing
~ in Los Angeles.
Josephine Vargas, M, of 6411 Lin·
denhurst Ave., Santa Ana, wed him in
1945 and bore four children, now 21
to 26 and so contends they ue entitled
to a share of the estate.
Mildred Vargas was initially granted
$2,000 per month in Jiving .expenses from
the international merchant's contested
estate, but claims all community pr~
perty.
Attorney Ervin Ri>aer argued before
Superior Court Judge Robert Kenny that
Vargas' second wife and children living
in Santa Ana qualify for compensation
too.
"Court precedent gives a woman the
~ight to compensalion when she is deceiv·
ed into entering an Invalid marriage,"
Roder said.
The second 1'-1rs. Vargas testified she
knew her husband had been married
before but believed he was divorced
in Mexico.
Vargas lived alternately in each
household, telling his family in Sant a
Ana he had to be away on business,
--.pecif"ica!ly-being-neaHmport.ei:porl
cargo in Long Beach Harbor.
Throughout the 26 years of his mar·
riage to Josephine Vargas, the
• millionaire insisted supper be on the
table at the Santa Ana home promptly
at six, she testified.
DAILY l'ILOT 11111 l'lloM
Firs i LfJt'f!
Tracy· ~1adden , 5, a kinder·
gartener at lrvine Elementary
School, cuddles up to "Ger·
aldine." a papier mache giraffe
built by seventh and eighth
grade art students at the
school. Geraldine is one or sev·
era! jungle animals built by
students, who plan to donate
them to pediatrics \vards at
hospit~s.
Medical Center
Director Quits
Orange County Medical Center Director
Herman W. Rannels has resigned to
return ·to the east coast and e higher
post in Pennsylvania, it v.•as announced
today.
He will become .. erfective Feb. I, vice
president and medical direclor of
Williamsport Ho.spital anU.1 e d.i ca L
Center in Williamsport.
-A specialist originally in obstetrics
and gynecology, Dr. Rannels joined
Orange. County 11edica! Center in 1964 .
Besides administering the facility in
Orange, Dr . Rannels is a director, con·
T11tsd.JJ, Novt:nbtr 2l, 1971 H DAILY PILOT 3
$27 Billio-n Tax Cut Approved
Bill Contains Controversial Campaign Donation Rider
WASl!INGTON (UPI) -With a ma·
jority of the Republicans voting no, the ;
Senate Monday pas g e d a bill cutting
business an!:! individual taxes by more
than $27 billion over the next three
years -far more than President Nixon
sought for revival of the economy .
Democrats made good their vow to
change the bill to put most of the
tax savings in the hands of individuals, . ....
Nixo11 Warns
On European
Troop Slash
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President
Nixon said today that a Senate move
to cut U.S. troop strength in Europe
by 60.000 could severely damage the
American position in "vitally important
new initiatives for peace" with the
Russians.
Nixon cautioned against the reduclion,
· from a present force of 310,000 Gls
in Western Europe. The cut is called
for in an amendment approved by the
Senate Appropriations Committee last
week in the $71 billion defense money
bill.
In addition to the troop reduction
amendment, Senate doves served notice
they would make another attempt to
attach to the bill an amendment to
force U.S. withdrawal from Indochina
by cutt ing off all funds except for the
withdrawal process.
Nixon cautioned against approval of
the European troop reduction in a latter
to chairman John C. Stennis -(D·Mi.ss.)
of lhe·Senate Armed Services Committee.
The letter was made public by Stennis
late thi~ morning and by the White House
shortly afterward .
Nixon said a U.S. emissary, Manlio
Brosio. would be going to MosC-Ow next
week to begin discussions on balanced
force reductions in Europe by NATO
and Communist Warsaw Pact forces.
"At the same time, the Berlin negotia·
tions have entered the final and most
difficult stage," Nixon wrote. ''As you
know, we are also making significant
prog ress in the SALT (St rategic Anns
Limitation Talks) negotiations.
''\Ve are now preparing to undertake
vita1ly important ne.w initiatives for
peace 'in two great capitals ol the world.
If these initiatives are to gain positive
results in the months and yea rs ahead,
I mu.~t be able to rely on the firm
support and the substantial and creative
contribution of a bipartisan Congress."
not-eorporatlons.
When the bill passed at the end of
1 marathon lf·hour s~sion bf a ,64-30
vote, only 16 Republicans voted for it
a.nd 26 voted against It.
Their complaint was aOout the rider
attached by the Democrats to provide
publio financing of presidential election
campaigns, a provision expected to gi ve
the Democrats $20.4 million for the i r
'ltlother Courage'
\Vhite House race next year. The
Republicans said· they would spurn the
money.
"A raid on the treasury by every
special Interest group starting with the
Democratic party," Sen. Gordon Allott
(R·Colo.), called the bill. "The economic
program of the President has been
warped out of recognition. There has
been no real effort to curb the insatiable
Stage Star Lotte Lenya
Back in UC Irvine Play
By LINDA DEUTSCH
Anotl•Mll l'r•u Wrlttr
"Retirement is the fi!Lhiest word in
the English la nguage. Hemingway said
that and I agree."
The speaker, using her hands as ex·
clamation points, is Lotte Lenya, a
theatrical legend. At 73 slim, red haired
and vigorous. she's
back al work, her
f1:-st stage appear·
ance since a loog
BroeJJy.·ay run in
"Cabaret.''
\Yith a cast ol
young acting slu·
dents, J,enya is
starring at UC Ir-
vine in "M other L•NYA
Courage,'' the masterwork of her old
friend the late Bertolt Brecht.
"i love working with students," she
said in an interview at lhe Laguna
Beach apartment where she is staying
during the two·week run. "They are
so quick and bright . . . Professional
aclu1s know all the ans"·ers. I llke
to be surprised."
The massive production. with a cast
or 45, 12 sets. two revolving sta~es
and eight musicians. isn't ordinary stu·
dent fare. It's directed by Herbert
Machiz. a Broadway veteran who
persuaded the lady known internationally
as simply "Lenya" to star. It's the
fi rst time she has done the role in
English.
The students remain a bit awed. To
them, she is a legend-symbol of an
era in theatrical history.
\Vidow of composer Kurt \\'eill, she
was at the center of the Weill·Lenya·
Brecht triumvirate which dominated the
pre-World War II Berlin theater. Their
collaboration on caugtie, bittersweet-bit·
ter musicals including the classic
''Threepenny Opera" was Interrupted by
war and Nazi disapproval. They fled ,
first to Paris. then America.
''The students all say lo me, 'Tell
us about your life in Berlin.'" But-
Lenya does not reminisce.
"I am noL interested in looking back.
Neither was Kurt Weill . He looked into
the future . He became an American
citizen and that \vas it."
On other subjects, Lenya is loquacious.
Some of her o~servations:
-On being dubbed a legend: "It's
nice. If you become a legend you must
have made your point somewhere .•
Perhaps I did :something ~:hich, ii you
want to get hifalutin, is recognized as
art.''
-On stage. nudity: "If it's called for
in the play and not just done for shock,
I am absolutely not against il ... It's
riot that new. In Sweden, they've been
naked since time began."
-On \!.'omen's Liberation: "It bores
me to death : It's so nice to be dependent
on a man . I can't think or anything
nicer . . . Besides, I was born free
and remain that way.''
-On •·method" acting, "\Vho can be
so conceited that he thinks he has a
method? I have talent. Some young ac·
tors may need classes to learn movement
or speech, but nol method."
-On her youthfulness: "I started as
a ballet dancer, and when I was four
I lea rned to stand on my head and
walk a tightrope in a litl\e neighborhood
circus . . . I feel that if you reach
73 you should be grateful and 'keep
functioning and admit your age .
American women - I haven't met one
who admits her age freely."
appetite of some Senatnrs to gr1tt
everything for polillca~ gain."
The fxpectation wai that the tax cull
will be whittled down to close to the
$1S.4 b\llion over three years provided
in tax relief by the House.
The Chopping will be done by .1 House--
Senate conference committee which must
write a final compromise version.
Here is the gist of the tax bill passed
by the Senate:
lndividuals -Increases the personal
exemption, now $6.50, to $675 for Income
earned in 1971 and to $800 for income
ea rned in future years. House bill pro-
vides '750 exemption for 1972 and
thereafter.
The poor -Relieves 2.8 million of
all income tar liability and lowu1 taxes
for 25 million loW'income taxpayers by,
raising the minimum standard deduction
for inC-Ome earn·ed in 1971 and thereafter.
Parents of students -Allows parents
to subtract from taxes owed up to $325
per student in college or trade school .
l\fotorists -Repeals Ufe 7 percent
auto excise tax and the 10 percent tax
on light trucks retroactive to Aug. 15.
Working mothers -Allows couples 1
"·ith children under 15 to deduct up
t0-.$4,800 for child-care costs, Including
maids, babysitters or day care centets.
paid while the mother is at work. run
benefits available to couples with joint
incomes of $18,000 or less but those
with incomes of up to $27 ,600 can take
partial benefits.
Wife Attacked
On Golf Links
A ~year~ld San Clemente
housewife was raped at knifepoint
by a burly assailant at the
municipal golf course Monday
night.
Police said the attack took place
at about 9 p.m. as the \\.'oman
was walking home from a South
El Camino Re al restaurant. ,
The alla cker crept up behind
his victim and pressed a k n i f e
to her throat and forced her to
walk to the area of the 18th tee.
After the offense, officers s1id,
the attacker told her not to turn
around. He then fled .
The victim moments later slop-
ped a passing motorist to report
the incident.
Police said the rapist ls a mile
Caucasian standing about five-feet.
eight and weighing about 230
pounds.
Save on long distance calls by I
c ing and how you call.
For example,on calls to San Francisco:
•
Tonight and every night
from 11.1~.m. to 8 a.m.
you can dial direct
(without Operator as-
sistance) anywhere in
Cal ifornia for 49 or
less. Th is new 49¢ rate
also applies from B a.m.
to 6 P..m. Sunday and
hol idays.*
If you can't stay awake
that late, It doesn't cost
much more to dial a
call direct earlier In the
evening. From 6 11.m. to
11P.·m· Sunday through
Friday and 8 a.m. to 11
P..m. Saturday, ,i t costs
_80¢ to di<'!I 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 6 p.m. to 8 a.m.
weekdays or all day
Saturday, Sunday and
ho lidays,* an Operator-
assiste d cal I costs $1 .05.
During the daytime,
Monday tli rough Friday
from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. it
costs $1.20 to dial a call
yourself.
A station-to-station call
placed through the
Operator for th is same
period of time (Monday
through Friday from
B a.m. to 6 P..m.) costs
$1.50. -
If you do need to make
a person-to-person call,
it costs $2.25, no matter
when you call.
"Holiday rates for long distance call• within Calllornla apply all day on Washington's Birthday, Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's Day. @ Pacific Telephone
All rate• are for three-minute calls from Santa Ana to San Francisco, plus tax.
Dial direct. It's faster and cheaper.
' -; l \
. '
• DAii. V PILOT TUHdiy, Nowmbtr 2.J, 1971
'
\
\ I ~ps
·~Breathe Easier
Next Christmas
By moMAS MURPHJNE
.,;.· Of -. oau., Pli.t s1•11 .
;,o, • TIS '1'111! SEASON DEPT. -For an ~you uninitiated Mommies and Daddies,
there is hppe for you yet in the toy ;r. cJepartment after this Yuletide season.
~ The California Assembly. in its infinite
,.., wisdom, yesterday approved· a bill lly
St;San Francisco Democrat John Burton
which will make it illegal to sell or ~ manUfacture horror qr torture toys in
our fair state.
~ Trouble is, uninitiated Mommies and
!It" Daddies, Mr. Burton's bill won't become
It law untll next July 1. So that leaves
you this happy Yuletide. For e_xamj>le :
YOU WGHT TIUNK it was a real
cute gift when Aunt Maude sent Johnny
that Medieval Torture and Horror KiL
:Sut you won't think it's so funny when
you wake up screaming the morning
alter because clever Johnny (he has
;,.-• mechanical mind) has attached the
., thumb screw to your left hand. i£: You were also impressed with Uncle
~·Claude's giftllf the plastic put-it·together-
ourself working model of a genuine
thre~r &cale Freoch Guillo_tine.
Kids · sOmehow are capable of getting
• these kinds of things into operating shape
in ab:>ut 30 minutes. ·
My advice Would be to hide the family
I 'cat. if_ yOU Wafit rum to keep biS tail. J You'd better Jock up the garden hose, ,,, too.
} THE GENUINE Zappo Air Blaster ~ Supersonic outer Space Pistol is another
~delighUul Yuletid e gift. It is capable
~of genetating a blast of air that can
:~ knock over dishes at 20 paces. Well. ~ maybe .that's okay.
~ It WJJI be less popular around your
:-house, however, when you've just setted
'.;+ down With the evening newspaper and
¥ you're concentrating on the sports section
. .,. and the kid sneaks up on you. "Zappo, i: Dac;ldy," he screams. He has just stuck
~· the muzzle in your left ear and pulled
"°.the trigger.' . U you bad anything left
... tn there, .Johnny just blew It out your
4 right ear and over into those dishes
·~ be'd been knocking down. ~ But It's all ln the spirit Of the season,
_ you know. Just smile and carry on.
AS I UNDERSTAND it. Assemblyman
: Burton failed in his effort to ban war l toys within his new bill because Senate
-! amendments knocked that provision out. i: They left in, however, a measure banning
-:.-items that resemble bombs or hand
) grenades.
~ _ That's probably because some time
,.. In the past. a senator's youngster took
( one of those plastic grenades,, filled it
1 with• black pcwder and test~ it on t:_ the front seat or the old man·s new
.: 'Mercedes.
' Now I'm certain Mr. Burton's bill r was passed in an effort to make life
safer for the younger folks. So Johnny
:. won't try the Ancient Chinese Water
• Torture on Janie next door. This is
t a very serious matter to some folks.
But you'll have to unde?'!tand if some
veteran Mommies and Daddies smile
just a bit when a ban on torture toys
get approved.
: We know who is really getting pro·
' tected, don't we? • ' ' •
i· Mao Holds Meeting
i; ~ HONG KONG (UPI) -Cha;rman Mao
;; Tse-tung of the People's Republic of
? China conferred with North Vietnamese ~ Premier Pham Van Dong Monday, the
-. New China News Agency (NCNA) said
~ today. ~ Chairman Mao shook hands with the
' North Vietnamese delegation to Peking
" and had his photograph taken with them
~ at the reception hall in Peking. NCNA
said.
3 Columns
' '
Into Enemy
SAIGON (UPI) -Thr .. columns of
South Vietnames troops supported by'
U.S. jets and helicopters pushed into
Cambodia today in a new drive to blunt
a guerrilla threat to Phnom Penh and
a long-range threat to Saigon.
Army of the Republic of Vietnam
(ARVN ) troops along a curving JOO.mile
front moved in landing ships up the
Mekong and Bassac Rivers toward the
Cambodian capital, in vehicles into the
Parrot's Beak area and by helicopter
into the Krek rubber plantation area
50 miles north of the Parrot's Beak.
The new drive was mounted as Can\·
bodian troops ran into heavy Opposition
about 15 miles south southwest Of Phnom
Penh, aceording to the Cambodian high
e-0mmand. Spokesmen said at least 19
government soldiers were wounded and
a still unknown number killed in a three·
bour clash todi!Y with North Vietni_mese
forces.
U.S. Army Cobra helicopter gunships
were called in against the Communists
who attacked a Cambodian column of
armoied peorsnnel carriers pushing ·
through the Viet Cong-occupied area.
The clash broke a three-day lull in
fighting round the Cambodian capital.
UPI Correspondent Stewart Kellerman,
reporting from headquarters for the Krek
operation, said 25 guerrillas had been
killed Monday and today at a cost of
20 ARVN paratroopers wounded.
He said three paratroop battalions were
lilted by U.S. and ARYN helicopters
to landing zon~--respectively one, two
and nine miles northwest of Krek.
UPI-Independent television new s
cameraman Tran Dai Minh flew over
the first two areas by helicopter and
reported paratroops fanning out through
the jungles in search of the guerrillas.
The only contact, however, was
reported by patrols sent to the area
around Chup, 25 miles northwest of Krek.
Kellerman repcrted 35 ARYN and 30
Army he!iC1lplers lifting troops and nying
gunship missions in support of the Krek
column. 1
The three columns were reinforcing
ARYN troops already in place for a
new push against the guerrillas. ARVN
soldiers have been operating continuously
in Cambodia since the U.S.·ARVN in·
vasion there in May, 1970,
Nov. 22.Slips
By Connally
WASHINGTON" (AP)
Secretary of the Treasury John
Connally, did not realiie Mon<Uy
was the eighth anniversary of
President John F. Kennedy'i;
assasslnaUon until he was asked
about it at his news conference.
Connally was seriously wounded
in the shooting in a Dallas
motorcade.
Concentrating on President Nix-
on's Phase 2 economic program,
the former Te1as governor was
starUed by a question on his
thoughts on the anniversary of the
assassination.
"I didn't realize that today was
Nov. 22 so I haven't had any
thoughts about it," Connally said.
"I hope you'll forgive me if· I
don't respond any further."
Chou Says U.S.
Certain to Lose
,-) --Indochina War
HONG KONG (UPI) -Communist
Chin_ese Premier Chou En-lai, in 8' sweep-
ing indict01ent of U.S. policy in Southeast
Asia, said today that "no force on earth
can alter" an allied defeat in Indochina.
The New China News Agency (NCNA)
said. Chou spoke at a rally in Peking
honoring visiting Nor t h Vietnamese
Premier Phan Van Dong and other Hanoi
government officials.
"Over two decades ago, the United
States pushed "Chinesization" in China,
by arming over five million troops of
t~e Chiang Kai-shek clique and provoking
the all-r-0und civil war, which only ended
up in notorious fiasco," Chou 15aid.
"This is also -the· tactic the U.S. ag.-
gressors used in Suth Vietnam in the
beginning which they called 'special
warfare,' aJlld it very soon fl~d in
face of the valiant war of resistance
of the Vietnamese people."
The Communist Chinese premier said
the current situation on Indochina bat.
tlelronts was "unprecedentedly fine"
and said~that "inspiring news" has been
received of Communist victories along
Highway 6 in Cambodia north of Phnom
Penh.
He said an allied defeat in Indochina
was "inevitable" and that eventual Com·
munist victory there "is a law of history
which no force on earth can alter."
Price Unit Takes Step
Toward Rent Controls
WASffiNGTON (AP) -The Price
Commission scheduled its first tentative
5teps toward formulating a national rent
control pclicy today with the first
meeting of the new Rent Advisory Board.
The White House established the board
Monday to assist the commission in
working out regulations to determine
how much America's rents may go up .
Until these rules are put in effect
most rents on private dwellings remain
generally frozen, able to rise only to
the level that prevailed for the highest
10 percent of the apartments in the
same unit during the 30 days before
Aug. 15.
Commercial. farm and industrial rents
have been totally excluded from rent
control since the freeze ended. l\1onday
the Price Commission announced another
minor exemption in allowing existing
state or local rent control agencies. such
as New York's, to resume their authority
over previously rent.controlled units.
A commission official said the ruling
applies to rent-control agencies in New
York City and elsewhere in New York
State, in the Bosto n area and Miam i
and Miami Beach. But he said there
might be other rent-control agencies in
the nation of which the commission is
not yet aware.
Price Commission chainTian C.
Jackson Grayson , said rent increases
approved by such agencies may now
go into effect. However previously non.
controlled units, public housing and
publicly subsidized housing remain under
federal supervision.
It had been expected that the Rent
Advisory Board would be made up of
Price Commission members, but assis-
tant Whlte House press secretary Gerald
L. Warren said Monday "it was felt
a separate entity shoUJd be created ... "
The rent panel will act in tl1e capacity
of adviser only, as Ni.Ion's order stated,
to "provide advice concerning special
considerations involved in the stabiliza.
tion of rents."
Earlier Monday, Secretary of the
Treasury John B. Connally expressed
confidence in the success of Phase 2,
and said the Pay Board's recent approval
of a 15-percent pay increase in the
first year of a soft-coal miners' contract
should not be taken as indication Phase
2 controls are being eroded .
His views. however, were disputed by
Democr2J.ic National Chairman Lawrence
F. O'Brien, who said : "The American
economy is in deep trouble and no
amount of well-0rches trated' cheering,
even by such an experienced cheerleader
as John Connally, can alter the situa-
tion ."
• , • Thunderstorms • Ill Texas
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Snow Flurries Cover Area Nea r Great Lakes
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Coe'11! t""'af•8h.l'e' r•noo lro"' 49
fl! 6"I '"11..., !~mP'''ture. •4~tt troni
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6ftPrld '"""' 1:»•m, O.J WIOHllOAY
Flnt M•~ , J,lll • m. J.•
. -Temperatures
lJ" UHITIO P'lt155 IHTl!ltHATIOHAL
Tet11Plltture1 tnd erttlolttUon f«
Ille ~•·!>ow Pfl'lOd 91\0l"O 1t 4 t .m.
Hflll Loll Prtt.
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_Who Has-Arms Edge?
Jews , Arabs Each Have Strong Points . • •
LONDON (UPI) -Egypt has ""i'mbl·
ed a majpr assault fof e al on' lhe
Suez Canal, but without aatery f the
air an atte~pt to cross could rove
"hazardous ·in ~e extreme,'' w . tem
intelligence riports said today. The other eclsive factor, they said,
is whether oscow is willing to enter
the batUe.
Egypt has ~ve divisions\in the front
Jlne on Its side of the .can«t,! witb as
r!lBllY as 100,000 more troopt behind
tbe front, the reports said.
\ Their equipment, 15upplled by the
Sovieta, is in some lnst.aocu auperior
tb the Israelis'.
An array ·of tanks lS complemented
by the latest amphibio\u craft, brldge-
buildirlg equipment and telescoping
bridges. the rel"'rts said.
Egypt also bU vast numbers of planes
British Soldier Shot
·By Sniper in Belfast
BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UPI) -
.,.. sniper today shot and wounded ·a
British soldier standing guard at a
sandbagged-post-near a Bel!ast -mill,
an army spokesman said.
The spckesman said the soldier was
struck by a high-velocity bullet.
Troops of the Scots Guard immediately
began a search of the North Howard
Street area of the city where the soldier
fell , the spokesman said.
British troops earlier fired at a gun·
man, dispersed a youth gang with rubber
bullets and rounded up security suspects-
and weapons in a sweep through Belfast
Roman Catholic districts, an army
spokesman said.
An army spokesman said troops were
unable to report whether they hit the
gunman during their four· hour search
operations in the Ballymurphy and
Westrock Road areas Of the city.
Troops arrested. 20 persons ii1 llie
Ballfmurphy district, the spokesman
said.
Scots guardsmen seized two rifles, five
pistols and a supply of ammunition in
the Westrock Road search.
Soldiers fired rubber bullets at the
gang of youths who gathered in a street
and hurled two gelignite bombs at the
troops. The bombs caused no casualties.
In Belfast, an army source said the
man killed in a bomb explosion in
a crowded Lurgan pub Monday night
may have been one of two gunmen
planting the explosive device.
The 8 p.m. blast in the O'Neill and
Donnelley public house 20 miles south
nf Belfast injured 11 persons, one of
them seriously, an army spokesman said.
In Belfast, court officials convened
a special session in RoyaJ Vict'oria
Hospital and charged a 28-yearo()ld
housewife with attempted murder of a
_B.riti!h soldier -_lhf:_firs.t_ JV.Qman _to.
be so charged in the current troubles,
the army source said.
Near Coal Island, troops today arrested
five men after they saw several persons
run from a car into a nearby house.
The spckesman said sGldiers found three
mines, detonators and fuses behind the
vehicle.
Frogmen to Hunt
For Philippine
Tragedy Victims
MANILA (UPI) -Navy frogmen were
dispatched to the central Philippines to-
day to search for victims of an overload-
ed cargo launch which sank Sunday
night with some 200 passengers aboard
-10 times the ship's legal limit.
Capt. Estelito Veloso, commander of
the Philippine Navy unit in Cebu City,
said 101 persons survived the disaster.
He said 16 persons were confirmed dead
and 62 others had been identified by
name as missing. Others as yet uniden·
tified may have been victims, he said.
Some of the victims were believed
trapped below decks in the vessel which
sank in heavy seas near the northeastern
tip. of Cebu Island, 350 miles aouth
of Manila.
Bush mills.
and anUaltcraft delenw. lncl\lllini
surface-to-air (SAM) inisgUu ot' the
SAM.2, SAM.3, and SAM4 types.
But Isra,el &till has supremacy tn•lhe
air, and air superiority is certain to
prove decisive if # Eg)(pt 'begins its
threatened crossing : of the canal, the
report said.
Sources gaid Israel's defensu on its
1Side of the canal have been heavily
reinfprt=ed.
Tbe ~ailed Bar·Lev Line probably
ls one of the most effective known
defense barriers'llince World War U. ·
E"gyptian losses in an attempt to cross
without itir superiority could be ''tremen-
dou&," but Jsraeli losses also probably
WOJJld be considerable, the reports said.
They said,. the Soviets have · supplied
lmprtsSlve quahtities of ·amphibious
equipment. including tanks, troop rear•
·riers and landing craft•of variot.1s1type1__.
many more advanced than th o s e
Moscow-has So far given its East Euro-
pean allies. .
_ Eg)'.Pt'S advantage in the air WPuld
lie 1n a possible air battle over Egyptian
territory, where the SAM missiles and
other defenses could come intG play.
But defeiise experts said ,it is unlikely
the Israeli ·air force would oblige. It
would probably ·chose its own battle
area.
The unknown and decisive factor, the
experts said, is the attitude of the
Soviets. '
They are known to be masterminding
Egypt's air defenses including the SAM
Js and radar. They fly their own MIG2.1
jets.
But Russians have said they do not
want to get involved direcUy In war.
but will go on helping with equipment
-which they reportedly lately stepped
up in the shape of TU18 "Badger"
bombers -and-" advice." ~ -
Meanwhile, President Anwar Sadat told
an African peace mission in Cairo today
there can be no peace in the Middle
East without an Israeli commitment to
withdraw from all occupied Egyptian
territory, a foreign ministry officiaJ said.
Sadat, who had said war with Israel
was the only course left open to Egypt,
without such a pledge, met for two
hours with presidents Leopold Senghor
of Senegal, Maj. Gen. Yakubu Gowan
of Nigeria and two top cabinet mini3ter1
from Cameroun and Zaire.
Both Egyptian and lsraeli newspapers
warned again of the dangers of resumed
warfare. Israeli officials already haVe
said they are taking at face valt.ie Sadat'1
repeated statements that the middle east
conflict must be resolved this year, either
by peace ·or by war.
The whiskey that spans
the generations gap.
For 300 years, a whiskey from Bustimills has been
with us. Charming us. Beguiling. us in a smooth,
polished and altogethf!'r light~earled fash~on.
15generationshave refined 1t.15generat1ons have
sippedit.Theverdic t:Nearperfec.tion .Bu shmllls.Full
of c.l;aracter. But not heavy·handed about It. Flavor· ·ru 1. Bui never over-pov.1erin g. Bushmills. It reflects
1he past \Vi th a ligh t and lively flavor that is all today.
Compare it to.your present whiskey. You needn't
purchase a bottle. One sip at your favorite pub will
tell you \vhy Bushmills has intrigued so miny gen-
erations. It is, simply, out of sight.
IMPOl!TfD
BUSHMIIJS
'"l'" la,, 1 04 t m. 3.) l::: ;:;:." '' ·'::~ ::;: :.: -
Sii" •l• ,. ~ t m. IOI• •.44 •.m. • M(I!)~ 11:\IU 11 ;11 t .m. $th J:JI ,_,,,,
.... -47 3,"T ~ n ,.
l! r:
FROM THI WORLD'S OLDEST DISTlll.in
• ilfNilOf IO~llR!SK WlilSKIU-H PROOf-tOnllO IH l~WND. THfJOS. OAAAE•U CO., tilW YOllK, ft"f.Olllt
• '
j
-
\
I
, -·Newpori Beaeli Today'11 Final
• EDIT IO N N.Y. Stocks
VOL. 64, NO. 280, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1971 TEN CENTS
I
1 Councilmen Ask Public •Trust' on High Rise
-·-·
•
Ne\11port Beach co uncilmen refused lo
schedule a referendum on skyscrapers
after meeting with high rise foes Atonday
afternoon, but later tried a mo:.: con·
clliatory tack in tbe face of threats
that the group would force an etection
by the initiative process. •
• The council heard pleas from Newport
Residents United (NRU) that residf!nts
be allowed "to set the goals" for the
"'"' master plan by voting on some
kind of ai tall building ballot question.
Councilman Carl Kym.la. who earlier
in the day had in effect told the NRU
if it wants a citywide vote to go collect
signatures on an initiative petition. Mond -
day night said he and other councilmen
will meet wllh spokesmen of the group
and come back next month "with specific
recommendations."
Kymla and Councilman Don f\fclnnis
said one pcissjbility would be the forma-
ti-On of a citizens' committee lo help
guide preparation of the new general
~ourt: Time Out
Blackie Ga.dariau' s Hearing Op ens
r l
..
" ' ' .. ~
~
FIGHTS FEDS
Newport's Gadarltn
Ccunpus Dri-ve.
Extension Gets
A1iother Dela.y
Construction or the extension o[ Olm·
pus Drive from University Drive to Jam·
boree Bouleva rd was delayed for the
second time today by the Orange County
. Board or Supervisors for an additional
study on the environmental impact of
lhe project.
At issue is a proposed road 1;icross
tbe north end of the San Joaquin Marsh.
a University of California outdoor
laborator)'.
The supcr\'isors had p r e v i o u s 1 y
authorized an ecology study on the
$700,000 road project, but that study
was attacked today by a representative
of the California At torney General'!i or-
fice.
Supervisors voted to order another
study to be completed within 30 days
and to encumber the construction funds
so that the roadway might be built
at a later date.
Blackie Gadarian and lhe federal gov.
ernment broke off for lunch shortly after
noon today. two and one half hours int<>
what may be just the first day or testi·
mony in the U.S. Dept. of Labor's quest
for its $16 penalty.
Proceedin&s moved slowly as both Ga.
darian, operator of Blackie's Boat Yard
and labor department attorneys laid th•
_ growxLwork for their cases.
It was obvious from the start neither
had the foggiest idea of what they \\'ere
about to gel in to.
All Blackie wanted was to go back I\)
\\1ork.
This morning , Gadarian confounded
the government with his logic and the
government managed lo overwhcln1 hiln
with red taPe.
Hearing examiner Harold A. Kennedy
gave the first hinl of the proceedings
that were to follow when he spent fi v•
minutes determining how !hr tah~e!
should be arranged in !he Newpor1er
Inn board room which the government
rented for two days for the hearing,
Kennedy next announced that Gadar·
ian's \\o;fe. Sara would not be allO'M-·ed to
addml ~im.
"Only .one, persoo can reprtsent each
side." Kennedy said, "However you can
confer with Mrs. Gadarian, but it is bet·
fer to be represented by only one pa rly.
"She can interrupt the record lo con·
jer with you at any time," he said.
Kennedy next tried to determine if
there was an "affected emp!oye" prj$ent
in relation to the citation that had been
filed by the occ~pational safety and
health administration of the labor dcp::r!-
menl.
Gadarian informed him he had an em-
ploye, but stressed that he is "a witntss"
not an affected employe.
"Are you 11n afft<.'ted employe or was
Mr. Gadarian's statement correcl ," Ken.
nedy asked.
Intorme dthe man, Carl Sleeper. was a
witness. Kennedy said. "I want lo make
a" inquiry, who are !he afft<.'tt>d em·
plovt"s?''
l'.frs, Jeannit" Meyers. atton1ey for the
government said that none had bee n
asked to be represented and she did not
know the names of any who 1night bt"
affected emp!oycs.
Kennedy then proceeded to outline in
detail !he rules of procedure of the hear-
ing, informing the participants that the
burden of proof of guilt is on the secre-
tary of labor and saying thal either side
could buy transcripts of the proceedings
from the stenographer.
Kennedy encouraged the purchase of
the trariscript poinlinlil out that he expects
briefs and repl y briefs from each side
and they would be very useful in pre-
paring thOse documents.
The hearing had !urned to testimony
ol witnesses prior to the luncheon break.
plan of de\'eiopmeot.
1\fayor Ed Hirth rilade it plain be
didn't think another commillf' i s
necessary, however.
He said the profesaional planners are
well aware of what the citizens y;ant
and said, "This is what you are going
to get.
"Trust us ,"· he said, "have patience,
find out• this is what you are goina:
to get" J
' '
Hirth pointed to exhaustive community
·--~.,. .. ,,.~-rr-..
~· ' ,
,_ ..
DAI LY l'ILOT lt1fl l'ltfte
Stacked lip
·ooug Lorenz. 7, a second.grad·
er at Harbor View School in,
Corona del Mar, leafs through
one of 380 used telephone
books coUected by his class for
recycling project. Every class
in school participated. collect·
ing 1 2,~00 used telephone
boo~s. but Doug and his 24
classmates in litrs. Linda Lo~'·
der's room collected more than
other classes. They'll celebrate
wi lJi ice cream party.
Careful Rapist
Assa11lts Coed
A rapisl who clipped telephone wires
berore entering a Newport Beach apart·
ment and assau lting a 19·year-old college
coed in her bed is being sought by
f)(}licc today.
The victim aw akened Saturday night
to fi 11d a weapon she said f e I t like
an ice pick at her throat.
Detective Sgt. Ken Thol'{lpson sai d the
young w·oman was prevented from gel·
Ung a good look at the intruder '!''hich
would aid in the hunt for him.
"She was defmitely in fear fe>r her
life," Sgt. Thompson said.
efforts jus\ two years ago that began
with the Citizens Hatbor \vea Research
Team (CHART) and Newport Tomorrow
and concluded with the citywide public
opinion survey that covered · virtually
all planning issues.
"All this information is in. tbe hands
of the professional planners," the mayor
said, "they know what the citizens want,
they're not just going to start to design
a teJtbook city."
Hirth pointed out the general plan
process provideS for "many public hear-
ings where the people can come and
express their views.',' . ' Even though Kyrnla later asked any
final action on the · NRU's request be
delayed a month "untU I aocl' other
councilmen have an opportunity ·to meet
with these people," the chairman of
the NRU expressed displeasure wifh the
meeting.
Allan Beek said following the afternoon
study session that the council 's action
had "increased the probfbility" bis group i
will force an initiative.
"Not all councilmen ha\'e expressed
themselves," though, Beek said.
011e councilman the NRU was countinf.
on for strong support didn't offer l •
Vice Mayor Howard Rogers, -who said
he supported the idea of a referendum.
said any proposals for oAe would 'have
fo be a lot more substantive "and well
de fined" than the_ NRU offerinj:, which
(See IUGU RISE, Page I(
Bay Pollution Hit
Agencies Pledge to Fight Problem
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of 1111• OlllY PllM $llff
Newport Beach environmentalists led
an assault on Newport Bay pollution
at a city council meeting Monday af·
ternoon and won pledges from every
agency in the county wilh respon sibility
for the problem to do something about
it.
Miss Sue Ficker and Miss Susie
Snedaker used photographs, slides and
posters to illustrate what they claim
Pentagon Se s
Punishn ent
For 5 Officers
WASJllNGTON (AP) -The Pentagon
confir{Ded tooay d e m o t l o n 1 or
reprimands are planned for five high·
ranking Army officiers as • result of
the bloody North Vietnamest attack on
U.S. Fire Base Mary Ann last March.
Thirty three Americans were killed and
76 wounded in the surprise assault.
Spokesman Jerry W. Fried he i m
acknowledged onl y that "letters of intent
to take administrative action" were sent
to five individuals Nov. 8.
Although Friedheim refused to identify
them or discuss details. sources said
the five include Maj. Gen. James L.
Baldwin. former commander of the
America! Division,
It was learned that Secretary of the
Army Robert F. Froehlke has decided
10 reprimand Baldwin -·a procedure
\vhich usually forecloses any further pro-
n1olions.
The others. including two colonels, a
lieutenant colonel and a major. face
either reprimand. demotion or both. All
five v.•ere given 60 days to present
t"videncc tha t could change the
sercrelary's mind regarding the punish·
menl. which does not require trial by
courl·martial.
The sources said a lengthy in·
vcstigation of the March 28 enemy sapper
attack holds Baldwin. as division com·
n1ander, responsible for "failure to insure
that adequate defense measures were
taken" around the hilltop outpost. Similar
compl aints are lodged against the other
four. one of whom also is accused of
dereliction, the sources said.
is the biggest culprit, the county's "an·
tiquated storm drain system ."
Orange County Harbors Beaches and
Parks Director Ken Saffipson said he
cpuldn't agree more, estimating the
drainage system transports at least 95
percent of the pollution into the bay.
Sampson vowed the help of his depart·
ment, saying he is about to ask county
Supervisors to apply for federal funds
for model st udies of the bay and the
San Diego Creek watershed areas.
APPROVED BY 12-4
William Rehnquist
Sampson said he had delayed uy
proposals pending Newport Beach's lrY.
for a U.S. Sea Grant. It failed.
Aggressive anti·pollution efforts wen
also pledged by Mayor Newport Beach
Mayor Ed Hirth, as well as spokesmen
for the county Health Department and
Harbor Commission, the county flood
Control District and the Regional Water
Quality Control Board.
Hirth promised strong city support
(Ste BAY, Page 2)
UPIT ........
UNANIMOUSLY BACKED
Lewis Powell Jr.
Senate Panel Approves
Powell, Rehnquist Bids
\VASillNGTON (UPI ) .-Lewis F.
Powe ll and William H. Rehnquist were
endorsed today by th e Senate Judiciary
Committee for con!irmation as sut>reme
Court justices -Powell unanimously
and Rehnquist by a 12-4 vote.
members of the Black Caucus in the
House. had also called for rejec~ion or
Pow ell but Bayh and other leading foes
of Rehnquist made clear early in the
hearings they would not oppose Powell.
With today's committee approval
assured, the chief remain ing question
was pow. mUch time opponents of Rehn.o
quist would be allowed to write a minorl·
ty report detailing their opposiflon'.
Speaking strongly in favor of the pro-
ject wa s county Road Commissioner Ted
McConville. who poin ted out that the
original environmental study, was made
by "VTN, the only mu'ltt,sm.rpose
engineering consultant rirm in Orange
County."
Attacking the project "'as Deputy At·
torney General Anthony Summers of San
Diego,
Good Old Days
Jn the night attack on Fire Ba~e
l\1ary Ann. a battalion headquarters of
the Americal's 196th Infantry Brigade
25 miles west or Chu Lai, enemy sappers
cra\vled th.rough the barbed wire and
grenaded bunkt:rs manned by 400 Gls.
The North"'-Vietn amese suffered £ew
losses, bllt left 109 Americans killed
or wounded -the heaviest toll at a
U.S. fire base during the Vietnam war.
Opponents or Rehnquist, 47, an assis-
tant attorney general, vowed they would
continue to fight his appointment to
the Senate floor. The 64-yea r-old Powell,
a Richmond attorneY and a former presi·
dent of the An1erican Bar Association,
is expected to have clear sailing.
Orange
He said he \vas speaking for a task
force appointed by his chief, Attorney
General Evelle Younger.
Market 111.dex
Dips to 797.97
NEW YORK (UPI) -The 11lide
on Wall Street acctlerated as trad·
big moved into the lasl hour today.
P.faintenance or the trend to the ses-
sion's end would m21rk the first
Ume since last Oree. I that the Dow
Jone! industrial average closed be-
low 800.
-This barometer-of 30 sel-ecttd
bhle chips was off more than S
points at 7'17.97 al clMlng. ~fore
lhan fi\'e limes as many issues de·
clined as advanCt'd, 1,193 again~
232.
Standard & Poor's 500 :stock In·
dcx showed a IOS& of 0,91 ::at 89.88.
A four-hour vo lume of' 12,120.000
shnres swelled from 7.680,000 shares
traded at • conlpara ble period thf.
pr(ll'iou.~ se!l~'lion.
-~
Solon Plc1 ys Organ for Old Films
. After I\ 42-ycar hiatu s. State Sen.
James E. \llhetmore jR-G ard en (:ro\'c\
l\olon day took his place al the organ
keyboard beneath a nickering llilver
screen.
The legislator, who at 16 gave up
a career as a silent film accompanist,
was seated at Cal Stale Fullerton grind·
Ing out the organ accampaniment . f o r
a Buster Keaton silent classic "The
General."
Among the 125 students at each of
two afternoon performances, w a s
"'1letmorc's 2$.year-old aon. Edd. Who
admits the previous showings of silent
classics led him to enlist his father's
talents.
"The organ music added another
dimension of emotion al depth... the
younge r Whctmore said loday. Previous
shov;lng:s In the !heater course have
been more dull. he not~.
Edd Whetmorc. who lives ln Silverado,
is a graduate student o:id teaching assis·
tant In telecommunications at csi;·.
"H's no secret that my father and
T don't often i:ce eye to eye politically."
he said. "but our fT\Utual Interest In
·'
I . •
the silent screen era has been onf' of
the wa~ we'vt hcen able lo com-
municate .''
The state senator, a professional musi·
clan. band leader and operator of 1
1heatrical booking agency, hadn 't played
a theater organ si nce 1929. He quit
his job playing organ for two theater-.-
in Watts when talkies came in.
CSF professor GeofJ!:e 1\1astroiannl
wanted a professional to enhance the
silent classic presentaUon. Averetts
Music Co. ol Fullerton lent a $16.<Kt>
modem organ that duplicates the sound
or a· theater pipe organ.
~tmort. whqse last visit to lh1
Fullerton Campus four· y~ars ago was
less pleasant, agreed to play for the
class.
His son said today, "I "·as prob3bly
the only stude9t there who remembered
that my dad tiad been Involved In 'The
Beard' incident.,
"The Beard" was .. CSF production
of a pla)' Iha! included dc.plctlons:i O(
sex acts which Whetmor~ and other
Orange County legi!llators found ob-
jectionable. ••
Arter the aUack some officers and
enlisted men claimed the base's ·defenses
we re lax and the troops were not.
prepared for an enemy assault.
She Sizes Up
Turkey Dinner
Trying on 1 shirt or pair of
shoes for size is nothing new, but
whoever heard of pre-fitting a 21-
pound Thaoksgiving turkey?
\Veil, meat specialist Nelse
Shepard at Country C o u s i n 's
1-farket, 1031 El Qmim Drive.
Costa Mtsa. figures b t i n g
neighborly with the neighbors goes
with the store's name.
He loaned Mrs. p_,t Ponse\I the
hefty blrd to take home today
and se:e If it would fit In her
oven, which h just barely did. •
''The only thing Is the legs ••ere
scrunched up against the roasting
pan," said Shepard.
,. I
Voting against confi rmation of Rehn·
quist in the committee were Sens. Birch
BJyh (D-lnd.), Edward M. Kennedy ([).
Mass.), Philip A. 11art \D·Mich, ), and
John V. Tunney (D-Calif.).
President Nixon announced the selec·
tion of Powell and Rehnquist on Oct.
21 to succeed two lq,ngtime associate
justices, Hugo L. Black and John M.
Harlan, who retired within a week of
each other in September because of
ill health. Black died eight days artcr
his retirement. .
Admini!tration leaders expressed con-
fidence that both Rehnquist and Powell
would be confirmed -probably early
nelt month -to bring the shorthanded
~preme Court bsck to Its full Dine-man
stren&th.
foes or Rehnquist said they were still
unsatisfied wllh his written responses
last \\'eekcnd to questions about his past
actions, particularly In the civil rights
field, and would ronllnuc to press their
cue on thf floor .
They partlcul~rly \\'ere c:rlllcal of
Rehnqulst's attitude. whtle praclicing law ,
in Phoenix, toward lower ing barriers
to voting and public accommOdatlon by
Negroes.
So1ne Negro leader~~ Inc I u d Ing
Weather
Winter weather has de.finitely
blown in as the mercury wil l be
dipping to lows of 37 on the coast
and 47 inland. •lighs will be 63
and 70 respectively. Early morn·
ing rog will clear to hazy 11un to-
day and Wednesday.
INSWE TODAY
"! Q'ut#1 wt all fetl that 0.1111
011e of u.t could be ht the same
position.," says a spQke.rman. for
a group of airlt11e pilots' wives
aidi11g the caus• of tilt PO\Vs
and MlAa. ,Sec Page 9.
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'I ,..
Coast· Route
Worl\: Delay
c.onstn.1ction of the ('(l(ltrover11ial
Pacific Coast Freeway has been delayed
Indefinitely, 11ccordlng to the Califor nia
D~vision of Highways' mid-year 1971
report.
In a brief su mma ry of freeway activity
Ir, Orange Co~nly, the official report
says the slate highway commission has
adopted the route of lhe Coast Freeway,
''However, current discussions regarding
alignment with several coastal com-
munities may delay construction for an
indefinite period:'
The report does not explain w~elher
the freeway may be abandoned entirely,
shifted in certain sections, Or eventually
built as planned.
Newport Beach residents have raised
the biggest objections fo the freeway
and th11t city has officially asked that
the freeway not be built through Ne'Wport
Beach.
Other objections to !he freeway have
been raised in Seal Beach and some
areas south of Laguna Beach.
The only coastal city slill strongly
supporting construction of the freeway
is Huntington Beach.
The mid-year report dedicated only
two paragraphs to the Coast Freeway
and except for admitti ng that the con·
trovei;sies have delayed its construction,
gave no further clarifi cation of the
freewa y's future.
Schumaker pointed out that the Tuslin
district students should perform well
on the statewide tests since the average
'·scholastic ability" score -IQ -for
the district places Tusti n students ahead or 96 percent of the students from other
districts in Califo rn ia.
"We serve a more stable. wealthy
community in relation to other districts,''
he noted .
Spanish Coastal
City ilf ay Become
Newport's 'S is'
One of thrtt resort citie~ along Spain's
Costa de! Sol on the Mediterranean Sea
Jack Barnett . mana,ller of the Newport
may become Newport Beach's sister city.
Harbor Chamber of Commerce. said t~
day.
Bubbling ove r with enthusiasm for a
country and people he called, "absolutely
wonderful. absolutely outstand in~." Bar-
nett re turned Tuesday evening from his
quest for a city sister.
The three Spanish cities -all with
climates, beaches and tourism si mila'r to
Newport Beach's -are Malaga, 1ifara-
bella and Torremolinos.
Marabella, population 2{1,000 , and Torre-
molinos, population 15.000, are under the
province of the larger (population 400,000)
Malaga , Barnett explained.
Negotiating through· an interpreter.
·Barnett brought the sister city idea to
the Malaga's equ ivalent of a vice.mayor,
Carlos Raggio. and his assistants.
"They were thrilled v.·i1h the idea."
Barnett said, ''and will take it up wilh
the Lord Mayor when ht returns from
~fad rid."
Barnett sa id he expects lo hear from
:P.ialaga's Lord ~layor soon regarding
which cilv he wants chosen.
Both ~1alaga ;i nd ~larabella have har-
bors similar to Newport P.-cach's, Barnett
said, while Torremolinos ha s a small
cove.
Barnett said he was able to ''break
rlown the barriers" and see the city of-
ficials because of an introductory letter
from Newport Beach mayor Ed Hirth
and the helpful contacs of Carte Blanche
International. who spon!ored the trip.
I,
OIANll COAST
DAllY PILOT
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• I
•
Bid Criticl%ed
Off-street Park
Plan ·Gets D.elay
A public hearing on proposed off-street
parking reglila.tions wa s postponed by
Newport Beach councilmen Mond8y night
after the recommended new standards
were criticized by \Vest Newport Coun·
cilman Don Mclnnl!.
"Adopti on of this ordinance would do
nothing more than stifle, pinch off the
upgrading of the older areas of Ne11o·port
Beach." Mclnnis said.
¥r Cal Girls
Set to Vote
On -Pay Hil{es
Mcinnis said he objected primarily
to a prov"ision that duplexes would, In
effect , have t~ provide three parking
places. This would make construe.lion
of new ones 4conomically impossible,
he said. I .
. T~e councilman warits something
s1m1lar to the existing regulation that
requires one parking space per unit.
~1clnnis maintained West Newport and
other sections of the city do not have
an overWhelnting on-street parking pro-\
blem.
"West Ne wport ~as a real parking
problem maybe: 10 times a year -
summer weekends and Easter Week ,"
Mclnnis said.
He said the rest or the time ttsidents
ha\•e liftle problem finding a place to
park.
• DAILY l'ILOT Still Photo
WATER FROM HIGH RISE CONSTRUCTION SITE IS PUMPED INTO NEWPORT HARBOR
He1lth Offic i1ls, Environment11ists Riise Questions About Lido Peninsula Project
Air Califor·nia stewardesses, scattered
alt over the state at va rious altitudes,
today were scheduled to vote on a con-
tract hammered out into the wee hours
by management and union officials.
He sa id the new regulations, as drafted
by the planning staff, would provide
about 200 new parking spaces in -his ·
area in the next IO years. ...
Parties Clash
Remap, Oil . Tax Bids
Delay Vote in Seoote -
SACRAMENTO (UPI ) Reap-
portionment and oil taxes delayed a
Senate vote today on a half-billion..cJollar
tax increase that would establish state
income tax withholding on ,Jan. I.
Democrats caucused and announced
they would not vote on t h e
adm inistration-supported tax bill until the
Assembly acted on a Senate reap-
portionment plan. The reapportionment
vote was scheduled for early afternoon
and ·the tax deba te was rescheduled
until afterward.
Many Democrats also objected to a
proposed amendment by Sen. Walter
Stiern (D-Bakersfield J, to reduce a pr~
posed tax increase on the oil industry.
Senate Democratic caucus chairman
Mervyn M. Dymal!y of Los Angeles
said Democrats might kill the entire
bill if the oil-backed amendment was
approved.
The bill, by assemblyman William T.
Ba gley (R-Sa n Rafael), would raise taxes
high enough to plug a $310 million
revenue ga p in the $6.8 billion state
budget, fin<ince $200 million in one-tin1e
building construction and provide $23
million in bu siness inventory tax relief. v
~1ost of the money -$470 million
-would be raised from withholding.
The remaining $8.l million would come
from increased taxes on banks, cor-
porations, the oil industry and -wealthy
individuals now enjoying "preferential
inrome" loopholes.
Trustees 01( Toi} Nu1nber
Of Graduatio11 Requests
A record number of midyear gradua-
tion requests -52 -were approved
l\1onday night by Tu stin High School
District trustees . Students from Mission
Viejo Jed the district in requests to
graduate early in order to go on to
tr * tr
Tustin lligh
Stuclents Top
State Nor1ns
By GEORGE LEIO AL
01 lht Di lly PllOI 11•11
Studen ts in the Tustin Union High
School District taking the 1969-70
statewide achievemenl te sts scorC'd
better than 96 percent of the other
districts in Cslifornia in reading .
Jack E. Schum aker, a ssoc l ate
superintendent for personnel and special
services, detailed the lest results at
?i1onday·s board of education meeting .
The Tuslin district high school students
did equally well in other areas,
Schumaker said.
The average distrlctwide score com-
pared to othe r districts in the state
fo\I OY.'S:
-Language -Tuslin students scored
better than 95 percent of tht. districts
in Ca\lfornia.
-Spelli ng -!he districl scored better
than 97 per cent of the districts tak ing
the sa me te st.
-l\lstbematics -the district's average
score was higher than average scores
of 96 percent of the districts taking
the test.
. Schun1.aker noted the scort'~ werr more
1n1press1ve when con!lde red with the
fact !hat the Tu stin district tax rate
is higher than only 30 percent of the
districts in California. and below the
average tax rate in California.
On the other hand. Tustin High district
is "wealthiC'r '' than n pe.rcenl of the
districts. Schum:iikrr ec>intcd l'lut. 1
It has relatively few minorit y sludrnts
-mort than only 2.\ percent of the
districts. Further, the dlslrlct's index
of J)O\'Crty level h1mllles puts the Tustin
dtSlrlct ahead of only It percent or
the di strict . That n1ean5 86 percent
(l( !he dlrtrjCts h8\'C rllOrC flOOf famJI JCS
than Tusun dOt's .
Pupils in the district tend lo i;:tick
aroond longer as evidenced by the pupll
nioblllty lndt x placing the d i~lricl ahead
of only 21 percent of other di~trict~.
Con versel y, 79 percent of the dl51rlcts
have a hight.Prate of pupil turnover.
I
college.
Of the 16 Mission Viejo students ~
will graduate in Janua ry, nine are goin~
on to college, the school board was
told Four early graduation requests were
granted for "hardship" rea sons and three
students \\'ill leave to take jobs.
At University High School -\\'hich
\\'ill gradua te its first senior class this
coming June, there were nine midyear
diploma requests. Four students \\'iii
begin college after Januarv and five
v.·ere granted midyear diPlomas for
reasons of hardship.
Districtwide, the figurcs showed 11
grads are leaving early to tilke job~.
19 are going on to college and 23 have
family difficulties necessitating early
graduation .
The Tustin High district maint ains R
strict . policy on midyear graduation,
Superin tendent William Zogg noted.
The exception to the district's eight-
semester study program is granted only
if a student has met all of the other
graduation requirements.
In the case of students who are leaving
1o further their education. th e district
requires 11 3.0 or B average for all
their coursework, Zogg noted.
Noted Lecntrer
Editl1 Blackburn
Services Slated
Private service~ will take place \Vf'd·
nesday at Grand View Presbyteri11n
Church in Glendale for Edith H. Black-
burn . 82, who died Saturday.
~1rs. Blackburn resided in Ntv.·port
Beach for the past 10 vears.
Born in Denver, Co.lo .. she rnoved !l'I
Glendale in 1930 and became a recognized
author nf juvenile novels.
One or her four sons, Thoma! W. B1<1ck-
burn, 11!50 of Newport Beach, fo!lov.•('d
her literary example and wrote "Da \'Y
Croc kett" and several motion pic tures.
She ia also tht mother of Newport renl
es1ate developer Cap Blackbum .
Also a noted lecturer, she wns 11 mem·
ber of the Ameri cin Ptin.Womcn's Cluh
and St. Andrews Presbyterian Church 1n
Nrwporl Bf!ac-h .
She Is sur \'h·ed by her tlusband, How-
ard W. Blackburn, 1731A Bedford L.ane :
four sons. Cap and Thoma~ of Newport.
Bt 1'1,'h. Howard H. Blackburn of l..a Verne
snd f<~lmer Blackbu rn of Washingl on.
D C .. a daughter, Lois Mal'ISfleJd or ffl.
glewood, 20 grandchi\drtn and JO grea t-
arandchlldrcn.
The fam ily ha!i suggested conlributir>n~ tn rh~ C.r;ind View Presbyttrian Church,
11(0 Rubetta St ., Glr:nda!e,
(
f'rn111 P11ge I
BAY ...
for the harbor district's proposal and
said the city staff will be asked for
immediate recommendations abou t what
the council should do.
Impetus for the day's chorus of
cooperation was due to the efforts of
Miss Ficker and Mrs. Snedak~r, however,
who fired a relentless barrage of
photographic damnations al councilmen.
They sho1,1.·ed slides of countless storm
drains emptying into the harbor.
"There musl be a thousand of thc1n, ''
l\1iss Ficker said .
She complained of two other key pro-
ble1ns -runoff of the San Diego Creek
basin into Upper Newport Bay and silta-
tion created by development of prop'erty
around the bay.
She said a moratorium on all con-
struction -perhaps in the entire
watershed area -might be necessary
until adequate environmental protection
can be offered by builders.
Officials confirmed that the San Diego
Creek watershed gets i.bout one-fifth
of all county runoff.
Paradoxically. the othir runoff benefits
other waterfront areas, according to
c;eorge OsbOrne of the flood conto l
district, who said siltation is needed
lo replenish oceanfront beaches.
He silid his agency has plans for
retarding basins in the upper end of
the \Vatcrshed, but said they'll trap only
about 25 percent of !he silt and debris.
"\V e'll need other means or else v.•e'll
be faced with continual dredging and
maintenance of the Upper Bay," he
said.
l 'rnm Page I
HIGH RISE. • •
\\'as a general proposal ..-.·ith no de tailed
question prepared.
Beck had told councilmen the NRU
1\'ants hei1:ht and density limits "which
will Jlo beyond the po1\'er of future
t'1I\' eounc1ls to repeal or circumvent .''
Ile pointed out a zoning ordinance
could he re pcillcd by !he council.
Hirth later said that's the 1vay lt
shnt1ld he
"To put it in as part of the charter
is ton inflexible for planning standards,"
he said.
Settlement of their demands for better
pay and benefits was cautiously predict-
ed, a.Jong with prevention of a strike.
Dudley ri.1iller, executive vice president
of marketing, said leaders of Local 505
of the Transport Worker s Union of
America recommended contract ap..
proval.
Girls employed as stewardesses, about
100, were to cast ballots in shifl.s between
fl ights, with the last crews coming in
to vote in the early evening.
A contingent of the orange mini·skirted
stews demonstrated outside the Orange
County· Airpofl Terminal Friday morning
as a show of force.
The pickets gave the wrong impression
o.r a strike actua !ly in effect, but negotia-
tions were still under way . ,
If stewardesses should strike , officials
said. they 1vill hire and train new girls.
One difficulty ci ted in neg otiating a
settlement was initially the Nixon wage-
price freeze and n1ore recently the 5'11
percent Phase II pay hike ceiling set
by the Administration.
Specific contract details were not
revealed pending the vote.
"Like all cont racts, there are dozens
or conditions," Miller said. "We both
gave and took until we were just about
right down the middle."
The final negotiations to avert a strike,
which had been a possibility si nce con-
tract expi ration Oct. 1, were conducted
under a federal labor mediator.
"\Ve're darn near down to a perfect
arbitration," the Air California executive
said, adding the session lasted until long
after midnight .
"I'm tired ," he ob6erved.
Correction Made
011 Endorsement
Henry Quigley, an Irvine city counci l
candidate, has been endorsed by a group
. known as Irvine Tomorrow, not the
Irvine Council fo r Education, as reported
by the Daily Pilot last Thursday.
The reference lo the earlie r en-
OOr-sement appeared in a news story deal -
ing with the forn1ation of a three-man
slate of candidates and their endor sement
by a group calling itself the C:lmmiltee to
Elect an lndcp!'ndent City Council. The
Daily Pilot regrets the error.
The leadership of !hat organization. Dr .
~ecil Hoffman and Mrs. Nor~issa Brandt,
is the same as the leadership of another
newly formed group. the Urban Planning
Committee, that Mrs. Brandt had said
will not be backing 11ny of the cand idates.
PASSWORD ---
A 900CI word passeCl t!lround t!lbout a
business is invaluable. A bad word can be
unfortunate.
"The problem isn't 150-200 cars," he
!aid. "we 're tal kihg about thousands of
cars."
Mcfnnis moved that the matter be
referred back to staff, which it was
on a unanimous vote. l\1clnnis suggested· ,
that duplexes on lots less than 3,6001
square feet in size should have oniy1 two spaces. '
Mcinnis aslo was critical of proposed 1
standards for commercial developments,
noting they set requirementll based on
a gross square footage formula.
He pointed out the council had ju!t
amended the standards for oUlce
buildings to be based on "net square
footage and said one premise has to
be right and the other wrong.
Jasmine Creek
Zoning Request
To Get Hearing
A public hearing on an application for
planned community zoning for Jasmine
Creek , an 83·acre development of single·
family homes above Corona de! Mar, will
be conducted by the Newport Beach
Planning Commission Dec. 2.
The proposed project would include up
to 450 homes in the area previously called
Center View, located south of San Joa-
quin Hills Road and across from Lincol n
Junior High School.in Harbor View Hills.
Irvine Company vice-president Jame~~
Taylor said the area will be developed at ·
a density of about five d\\·elling units per
acre.
Jasmine Creek will be similar to The
Bluffs, Taylor said.
Greenbell or paseo systems will be em-
phasized. accordin g lo the application
before planning commissioners.
No development costs are y e t
available, Taylor said, because a
developer has not been selected.
Under the plan, residences will be
limited to 35 feet in height while com-
munity recreational buildings or fire
stations may go to 50 feet.
IRS lo Eye Pushers
\\'ASHJNf.TON (AP ) -Intern at
Revenue Service agenti; have begun
watching the spending h.abits o f
suspected drug dealers so they can be
sued or jailed for tax evasion.
A Treasury spokesman said agents
are piecing together information on how
much drug profiteers spend for suc h
items as their homes , cars, travel and
chi ldren's education.
'
Our growing success :n the pt!ist 1 '4 yean
ha s been due to the "good words" and
roferra ls sent to us by our customers. ALDEN'S
No ~mount of t!ldvertising can
personal recommendation.
replace 1
We are not infall ible, but we ire working
towards that goal by giving our customers the
best service and qua lity possible.
CARPETS · e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA 'MESA
646-4838
HOURS: M ... lt.v nm.., f 10 l :JO -M ., f IO f _ s.t., f :JO IO 5
•
l
J
' '
.. _,.,.,.,, . .
Costa Mesa -. E·D I Tl 0 N
•
• Tod~y's Flllial
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 64, NO. ~80, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1911 ' TEN CENTS
Downtown Me~a Redevelopment Agency Eyrd
City Planning Commissioners agreed
~londay night that·a rede\•elopment agen-
cy should be form~ to study all pro-
posals to rejuvenate downtown Costa
Mel,'.
Tllat's \.\.'hat they are reclln1mending
lo the city council. •
CotnJnissioners said formation or · such
an agency should not be a guarantee
that rede_yelo_pment will take place_, or
th.at any particular plan '(Vilt be followe{I.
"This acticm does not comnUt the city . . . -.. ----·
to an expenditure of funds or any specific
plan," explained Charles Beck, com-·
miss ion chairman. "Establishment of this
agency might pinpoint some of our pro-
blems." ,
A ·dozen speakers argued the merits
o! downtown redevelopn;ient. 1i-1ost were
against it.
"r llved . in three· ar1..as whee r they
•came up 'A'ilh the idea of refurbi!hing
a worl'HMJt, downtown area ," said . Sam
Wakely. "Burbank, North Hollywood, Van
Nuy+:s --: they all failed."
··rm opposed to spending taxpaye1·s·
money to build-up downtown Costa
~-lesa ." \Vakt)y added.
A man 'A'ho owns property at Harbor
Boulevard and 19th Street argued that
the area can take care or itself.
· Commissioner -H. J . ..,.JimmY'' Wood
said some or the speakers haJ a
misconception or the plan. "This program
is basically financed by the merchant s
themselves, with so me tax funds."
Another speaker, Harold Cooper, a
property owner and former chairman
of the redevelopment committee, argued
for it.
"There is an urge.1t need for a plan
of streets because of the Newport
Freeway," Cooper said. "Anyone using
.the d-Ow~town ~treets bi already aware
of the problem."
Commissioners did not tackle the 47-
page Wilsey and Ham report "'hich
outlines a method fot· redeveloping
downtown.
\Villiam Du~1. city planning director,
did point out that the report does not ·
call Cor destruction of buildings, but
primarily concerns itsell with realign-
ment of streets and methods for sprucing
up the bui!dings.
"This is not going to be· a shopping
center or·a Se.ars store," Dunn said.
The Wilsey and Ham plan calls for
three phases of work spread over 10
yea rs at an approximate cost of $3
million. Its major feature is the realign·
Jnent of Harbor Boulevard to c:oruiect
with 17th Street.
It \Vas also explained lbat the council
can form the redevelopment agency in
any manner it wishes. The council may
appoint itself the redevelopment agency.
it may name ltsell plus other members,
or it can set up an entirely different
body as the agency. '
Councilmen will take up the redevelop-
ment agency recommendation at their
Dec. 6 meeting.
Remap Plan Ol('d
Democrats Use Muscle; Veto Vowed
UPI Ttl.,,_efl
Christ1raas Lights
The Christmas season arrives at Chicago's North Michigan Avenue
as the ''ltTagnificent Mile" came alive ~th thousands of sparkling
miniature lights stretched across trees. 1··e \Vater Tower, a Chicago
landmark, looms in the foreground.
Bu1·glru·y Susnect Nabbed
111 Mesa Industrial A1·ea
A suspect already named in $12.000
"'orth of arrest warrants on felony check
fotgery cha rges 'vas captured at 3 a.m.
today by a patrolling Costa Mesa
policeman \•:h en he assertedly backed
out of a business that had just been
burglarized.
Johnnie R. l.A\"C, 37, a transient \\•ho
poliC'e said also is kno"'·n as Robert
L. Chapple. was booked additionally on
suspi cion of burglary .
The patrolman said he was passing
Newport Auto Works, 120 Industrial Way,
at 3 a.m. when he saw a vehicle backing
out. Me became suspicious du e to !he
hour.
"I stopped the guy." said Officer
Rodgers, \vho sa id he confiscated $70
in rolled quarters. a variety or other
change. l\\'0 revolvers and a supply of
blank checks.
Police said !he check.' were i!Slled
1See BURGLAR\', Page ZJ
SACRM.1ENTO (UPI) -Democrats
used all their political muscle today
to push a legislative reapportionment
plan through the . ..\ssembly o v e r
Republican charges that it constituted
a "totally partisan gerrymander."
Assembly Republican leader Robert T.
1'1onagan promised that Governor. Ronald
Reagan would veto Ure bill if it reached
his desk. "I can tell you unequivocally
it "•ill be vetoed," Monagan reported.
On a straight party line ·vote , lhc
Assembly passed 41·34 a Democratic plan
11 Speakers
Oppose New
Apartments
Eleven speakers apPfoaChed the~e~ta
htesa Planning Commisston Monday nl&ht to.oppoae..tbr~rate apu:tmem
projects.
Ea ch time a speaker called for a
halt to apartment construction in the
town scattered applause echoed through
1he city council chamber.
Planners decided to approve one pro-
ject and deny thC others.
Approval went to St. John Divine
Episcopal Church, 2043 Orange Ave., to
zone property to the rear of the church
at Fullerton Avenue and Bay Street
R-2 (medium density ).
Planners were unanimous for the
rezone, stating that the land would likely
be developed with duplexes and triplexes,
rather than an objectionable large unit.
Nearby homeowners argued against the
apartments, claiming it would downgrade
their own homes and create greater
traffic problems on Bay Street.
The other project, 10 units propc~e<l
by Olindo Verrico for property at 1960
Wallace Street, was defeated 3-2 with
Commissioners H. J. Wood and Nate
Reade supporting the apartments.
Afler the defeat. commissioners were
unanimous in their decision to ask the
staff for a complete study or the area
around Wallace Street and Palace and
Sterling Avenues.
Commissioners were also unanlmou:o;
in turning down a request for aparlmen!
zoning on properly al 2100 Valley Road
nn the bluffs overlook ing the Santa Ana
Ri ver .
Several ho1neowners objected to the
intrusion of apartments onto land cur-
rently zoned for industry. but surrounded
by single family homes.
Police said he will be prosecuted in
Santa Ana on the l~'o arrest \varrants
Officer Pat Rodgers learned had been
isaued ~·hile questioning the suspect.
Orange Coast Good O.ld Days
Went her
\\1inter wcnlher has definitely
blown in as lhe mercury \viii be
dipping lo lo\vS of 37 on the coast
and 47 Inland. llig'hs \\'Ill be 6.1
and 70 respectively. Early morn-
ing fog ~·Ill clear to hazy sun 'to-
day and \Vednrsday.
INSIDE TODAY
•· 1 gu ess wt all ft1t1l that any
011e of us could be in. the !f1f11t:
position," says a. spokt:Sffl(Jll. for
a group 6/ a.irl t11t: pilots' w{vts
• aiiling the cause of the POWs
affd 1\flAs. See Poge 9.
L. M. l"t 1
Ctllle>nll1 f
ClaUllld 1t.7t
Cernlc1 1t c,•u--' " 0..111 Ntliclt II ltl!lrll t ,,_ • •l!lforl•lll"""' " '''"lie' 1'·11 ...... w.... 11
Allll Lt""'' lt
M1Hlroe1 I M••lt• It
\
""""'" '"'""' tt Nt!Wl'll l Nt-i •·S o.-• c-1, n "h'llo ......., ,. lfll'h , .. ,.
Sl«ll M•l1ttts 111-tl
TM:\'h!M lf
TlllH'n 1' W .. !Mr 4
W111t1 Wll~ 1•
W~1 Ktwt 1t.U WerHI Htwi 4"1
Solon Plays Organ for Old Filrns
After a 42·ycar hiatus, Stale Sen.
Ja1nes E. \Yhctmore (R·Garden Grove)
Afonday took his place at lhe organ
keyboard benC'ath a fli cke ring sil ver
. screen.
The lcki sla lor. who at 16 gave up
a caree.r as a silent filn1 accompanist,
\Y3S seatec:f at Cal Stale Fullerton grind·
ing out the organ accompanlment r or
a Buster · Keaton silent classic ''The
General."
Among the 125 students at each or
two afternoon performances, w a s
Whebnore's 25-year-old SOP!, Edd , who
admits the previous showings of silent
classics led him to enlist his father"s
talents.
"The organ music added another
dimension o! emotional deplh," the
younger \Yhetmore said today. Previous
shov.'ingi; In the !heater· courst have
be-en nvire dull. he noted.
Edd Whttmore. who \h:es_ln Sil\'erado,
i!I a graduate student and teaching assls·
tent in telecommunicaHons at CSF.
"lt's no secret that my rather and
t don 't oUen see eye to eye politically ."
he said, i:. "but our mutual Interest in
•
the silent screen era has been one oi
the \Yays we',·c been able to t.'On1-
1nunicate. ··
The stale senator, a professional mu si·
cian. band leader and operator of a
theatrical booking agency, hadn'I, played
a theater organ since--1929. He quit
his job playing organ for two theaters
in \Vatts when talkies came in.
CSF professor George f..1astroianni
wanted a professional to enhance the
silent classic presentation. Averetts
J\fusic Co. of Fullerton lent a $l&1oro
modem organ that duplicates the sound
of a theater pipe organ.
"'hetmore, whose. last visit to the
Fullerton Campus lour years ago was
less pleasa nt. agreed to play for the
class.
His son said today. "I was probably
the only student there who remembered
that my dad had been involved in 'TM
Beard' incident.
"The Beard" was d CSF producUoit
or a play that included depletions Of
sex acts which Whttmore and oth~~
Orange COttnty legislators found cio-
jectionable.
•
·• ,
designed to increase their majority in
the lower house from 42-38 to 44-36.
The Senate plan, which had bipartisan
support in the upper house, would main-
tain the current 21-19 Democ ratic ma-
jority.
Monagan served notice he wiU seek
reconsideration of the bill \Yednesday,
thus technically delaying its return to
the Senate ror concurrence in Assembly
ame ndments.
Democrats have said U the bill is
vetoed. they are prepared to reapportion
the Legislature by a resolution which
\Vouldn't be subject to gubernatorial ac·
tion. That would set the stage for a
court case on rtapportionment:
Monagan called the threatened court
test the "most critical issue" facing
the lawmakers and urged Democrats
•·not to take this precipitous: action."
But Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti
(0-Van Nuys l. responded. "we're going
lo find out what is going to happen
in the California Supreme Court."
Court: Time Out DEAD AT 66
C1rleton ~Bud' M.1r1
Blackie Gadariart's Heari1ig Ope1ts
DAILY .. ILOT lllH "'"'"
FIGHTS FEDS
Newport's G1d1ri1n
Blackie Cadarian and the federal gov-
munent broke off ror lunctl shortly afte:r
DOOD today, two and one half tK>ur1 into
wllft may beJust the nm day«. lt!fl.
mony in the .S. Dept. of Labor's quest
ror its $16 penalty .• -\
Proceedill(s moved s10wly as both Ga.
darian, operator of Blackle's Boat Yard
and labor department attorney:i: laid the
ground work !or their case:i:.
It was obvious from the start neither
had the foggiest idea or what they were
about to get in to.
All Blacltje wanted was lo go back to
work.
Tllis morning, Gadarian confounded
the government with his logic and the
goVernment managed to overwhelm him
with red tape.
Hearing examiner Harold A. Kt11nedy
gave the first hint of the proettdings
that were to follow when he spent fi ve
minutes detennining how the tables
should be arranged in the Newporter
Inn board room which the government
rented for two days for the bearing.
KeMedy nexl announced that Gadar·
ia n's wife Sara would not be allowed to
address him.
"Only one person can represent each
side." Kennedy said. "However you can
confer with Mrs. Gadarian, but it is bet·
te r to be represented by only one party.
.. She can interrupt the record to COJl·
(See BLACKIE, Page %)
Longtime Mesan
Carleton Mears
Succumbs at 66
. Carleton "Bud" Mears wasn't flam-
boyant and he never stood on a soap box. ·
"He was quiet, unobtrusive. but when
you needed something done he never
turned you do\vn, There aren 't many
men built in the same mold." says
Costa Mesa Cou~cilman Alvin Pinkley. ~fr. Mears died this morning at the
age of 66.
"It's a great loss ,lo the community.
He was the kind of rella that radiated
when you were around him -you tell
good,·• says ~fayor Robert Wilson.
Funeral services for the longtime
Harbor Area resident ha"e been set
ror noon, Wednesday, at Paciflc View
Chapel in Corona de! ~lar. Burial will
follow.
. Bud ?>.!_ears was born APril 20, 1905
1n Asheville, Ill. He was an Air Force
f..fajor in World War ll and got his
first view o! the Harbor Area when
he was assigned to the Army air fa cility
in Santa Ana .
Nixon High Court Choices
•
He liked what he saw and settled
here with his wife, Frances. They have
lived for several years at 332 N. Newport
Blvd., Newport Beach.
Friends say "Bud'' wa s an ac-
complished inventor. a painter' a wooa
carver, a camera and electronics expert
and a great !ix-it man.
Endorsed by Senate Panel ··Anything he saw on a wall, he'd
try to figure out how it worked . Then
he'd re.create it in his workshop," says
longtime friend Henry Vaughn. •
\VASHINGTON (UPil -Lewis F.
PO\Yell and William H. Rehnquist were
endorsed tod ay by the Senate Judiciary
Committee for confinnation as Supreine
Court justices -Powell unanimously
and Rehnquist by a 12-4 vote. -
Opponents or Rehnquist. ·47, an aSSTs-
lant attorney general. vowed they would
continue to· fight his appointment to
lhe Senalt floor. 'nit 64-year-old Powell ,
a Richmond attorney and a former presi-
dent or the American Bar Association,
i:o; expected to have clear !Sail ing.
Voting against confirmation or Rehn·
quist in the committee were Sens. Birch
Bayh (D·lnd.), Edward M. Kennedy (D·
Afass.), Phillp A. Hart ID-Mich.), and
John V. Tunney (D-Calif.).
President Nixon announced the selec·
lion or Powell and Rehnquist on Oct.
21 to !lucceed two longtime associate
justices, Hugo L. Black and John J.:1.
Harlan, who retired within a week of
each other in September because of
Ill heallh. Black died eight days after
his retirement
Administration leaders expressed con·
fidence that both Rehnquist and Powell
would be confir.med -probably early
next month -to bring the shorthanded
Supreme Court back to It!! full nine-man
slrength.
Foes or Rehnquist said they were still
t:nsatisfied with his written -responses
last weekend to questions about hls past
actions, partlcularly in the civil rights
lleld, and would continue to press their
case on the floor.
1
They particularly we.re critical of
Rehnqu ist's attitude, while practici ng law
in Phoenix, toward lowering barriers
to voting and public: accommodation by
Ne.groes.
Some Negro leaders, i n e I u d in g
members o( the Black Caucus in the
11ouse, had also called for rejection ot
Powell but Bayh and other leading foes
of Rehnquist made clear early in the
hearings they would not oppose Powell.
Slie Sizes V p
Turke y· Dinner
Trying on a shirt or pair of
shoes for size is nothing new, but
whoever heard of pre-fitting a 21~
poWld Thanksgiving turkey?
Well, meat specialist Nelse
She)>ll:rd at Country . c o u s I n 's
Mar~tf. toll El Camino Drive,
Costa fi1esa, figures be l n g
He invented a burglar alarm that dial·
ed the police department telephone when
tripped. This year he was taking flying
lessons at Orange County Airport.
Mr. Mears was one 0£ the old timers
who helped make the annual Costa ~1esa
Newport Harbor Lions Club Fish Fry
a famous event.
He joined .the ~ions Club in 1945 and
was its presi~ent in 1964.
In 1970 a Lions Club bulletin described
his 'achievements. Fellow members wrote
of Mr. Mears that "He always gave
full mea&ure."
He fo unded Mears Camera Exchange
in 1945 at 1750 Newport Blvd .. and retired
from that business in 1962. The shop
is now known as Cal's Cameras.
Mr. Mears has also been active In
the St. James Episcopal Church. Newport
Beach, serving as chief usher. He has
also actively supported lhe Harbor Area
Girls Club.
Survivors in~lude his wife, Frances,
of the home; one son, Carleton Mears,
Jr. of 'Los Alamitos; a brother, llaroJd
of Knoxville, Tenn., and t w·o
grandchildren.
neighborly with the neighbors goes Whi C h with the store·s name . ' zzer Oil l'lllC eS
Ile l~ned Mrs. Pa_l Ponstll the. V . WASHINGTON CAP )-Supn!me-Courl
hefty bu·<! l? take home toda~ Justice Byron R. "Whitter" White Is
and see 1r it would fil In her suffering a sprained ank1e and will be
ov:;n. which It Just. barely did . on crutches until at least Wednesda1.
The only thfng as the legs were White $4 did not appear on the bench
scrunched up against the roasting with the six other jusUces When thf!f
pan, '1 uid Shepard. held their regular Monday sestlon Yo ,
hand down opinlona.
J • I
•
...
Face Action
Due to Raid
' " WASHINGTON (AP l -The Pentagon
confirmed today d e m o t l o n s or
reprimandi; are planned for five high-
ran~ing Army officiers as a result or
th• iloody North Vietnamese attack on
U.S. Fire Base Pifary Ann last March.\
Thirty three Americans were killed and
76 wounded in the ~urprise assau!L
Spokesman Jerry W. Fried he 1 m
acknowledged only that "letters of intent
to lake administrative action" were sent
to five individuals Nov, 8.
Although Friedhcim refused to identify
them or discuss details. sources said
lht five include Maj, Ge11: J11mes L.'
Baldwin, former comrriandet of the
America! Division.
Jt was learned that Secretary of the
Army Robert F. Froehlke has decided
to reprimand Baldwin -a procedure
which usually forecloses any further pro-
motions.
The others, including two colonels, a
lieutenant colonel and a major; face ·
either reprimand, demotion or both. All
five were given 60 days to presen t
evidence that could change t h e
sercretary.'s mind regarding the punish-
ment. which does not require trial by
court·martial. ·
The sources said a lengthy in·
vesLigation or the March 28 enemy sapper
attack holds Baldwin, as division com·
mander, responsible for "failure to insure
that adequate defense measures were
taken" around the hilltop outpost. Similar
complaints are lodged against the other
four. one or whom also is accused of
derelic~ion, the sources Said.
In the night attack on Fire Base
Mary Ann, a battalion headqu arters of
the Americal's l96th Infantry Brigade
25' miles wesf ot Chu Lai. enemy sappers
crawled through the barbed wire and
grenaded bunkers manned by 400 Gls.
The North Vietnamese suffered few
losses, but left 109 Americans killed
or wounded -the heaviest toll at a
U.S. fire base during the Vietnam war.
After the attack some . officers ·and
enlisted men claimed the base's defenses
were Jax and the troops were not
prepared tor an enemy assault.
Fro1n Page J
BLACKIE ...
fer with you at any time," he said.
Kennedy' next tr!ed to deti>rm ine if
there was an "'affected employe" Pri>o:ent
in relation to the citation that had been
filerl by the occupatfona l safetv and
heallh administration of the labor d··· ··t·
men't.
Gadarian informett him he had an em·
ploye. but st~~sed !hat he is "a witness"
not an affected employe.
"Are you an affected emplnye nr was
Mr. Gadarian's statement correct ," Ken-
nedv asked .
Informe dthe man. Carl Sleeper. wa~ a
witness, Kennedy said, "I want to make
an inouiry, who are the affected em·
ploves?"
Mrs. JeaMie Meyers, attorney for the
government said that none had been
asked to be represented and she did not
know the names of sny who might be
effected employes.
Kennedy then proceeded to nutline in
dt>tai\ the rules of procedure of the hear·
ing. informing the participants tha! the
burden of proof of guilt is on !he secre·
tary of labor and saying: that either i;Jde
could buy transcripts of the proceedings
from the stenographer.
Kennedy encouraged the purchase of
the transcript pointinp; nut that he expects
briefs and reply briefs from each sirle
and they would be very useful in pre.
paring those documents.
The hearing had turned In testimony ot witnesses prior to the luncheon break.
OUJtll COAR
DAILY PILOT
elWGI awr PUILISMINt COMPAMY
l t\i•rt N. w •• ,
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J,,1{ k. Cutl•Y Viet l'PllUollllt .... 0-tl Ml~
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M1l1i~t "''••11: r.o. 1111 ,,.o, t26 Jl
OtWOHktl
'
Market Inde x
Dip s to 797.97
llEW YORK (UPI) -Tb< slid<
on Wall Street accelerated as tr•d·
inc moved into the Jut hour 1od1y .
M1lntenari'ce ot the trtntt to 1k1111,,..
sion's tnd marked lhe fl rat
time slnc1 l111t Dec. 1 that the Dow
Jon~ induatrlal <1verage closed be-
low $00. ,
This barometer of 30 selected
blue chips wa s of: more th:in S
poinl$ at 797.97 al closing. Mort
than five tirnes as many i.,suf!s t clil)ed as advanced. 1,193 agai t
2.12. \
Standard & Poor's 500 stock in·
dex showed a loss of 0.91 at 39.88.
A four.hour volume of 12,liQ,,000
shares swelled from 7.680.000 shares
traded at a comparable period tht
previous sesi;ion.
High-rise
Balloting
. ·Rejected
Newport Beach councilmen rtfustd to
schedule a referendum on 1kyscr•per1
afttr meeting with high rise foeii Monday
aflernoon, but later tried a more con·
ciliatory ta ck in lht fac-e ~I threats
that tht group would force an election
by the initiative process.
The council heard pleas rrom Ne~port
Residents UnitKI (N RUl that residents
be allowed "to !let the IJO!ls" for the
new master plan by voting on some
kind of a tall building ballot question.
Councilman Carl Kymla, who earlier
S D I in the day had iu effect told the . NRU ta te e ay s if It wa.nts a citywide vote to go collect
· signatures on an Initiative petition, ~1~nd·
day night said he and other councilmen
F ' J h will meet with spokesmen of the -aroup reeway 0 and com• back next month "with tp<clflc
recommendations."
Kymla and Councilman Don 'Mclnnis Indefl·m·telv .aid 000 po"'iblllty would he tho form•-tiori ·or a citizens' committee to help
" guide preparation of the new 1ener!I
Construction of the controversial plan of development.
Pacific Coast Freeway has been delayed Mayor Ed Hirtll made it plain he
indefinitely, according to th California didn't think another committe is e ""'fnecessary, however.
Division of Highways' mld·year 1971 1 He said tbe professional planners are
report. well aware of what the citizens want
In a brief summary of freeway activity and said, "This is what you are going
ir, Orange County, lhe official report to get. "Trust us," he said , "have patience, sa ys the slate highway commission has find out this is what you are going
adopted the route of the Coast Freeway, to get.''
"However, current discussions regarding Hirth pointed to exhaustive community
alignment with severa l coasta l com· efforts just two years ago that began
munitics may delay construction for an with the Citizens Harbor Area Research Team (CHART) and Newport Tomorrow
indefinite period." and concluded with the citywide publlc
The report does not explain whether opinion 1urvey that covered virtually
the freeway may be abandoned-entirely, ali planning lu ues.
shifted in certain sections, or eventually "All this Information 11 in the hands
built as planned. of the professional planners," the mayor
said, "they know what the citizens want, Newport Beach residenls have raised they're not just going to start to design
the blggest objections to the freeway a textbook city."
and that city hai officially asked that Hirth poin ted out the general plan ~~ea~~eway not bt built through Newport process provides for "many public hear-
Other objections to the freeway have ings where the people can come and
been raised in Seal Beach and some express their views."
are.11.s south of Laguna Beach. Even though Kymla later asked any
The only coastal city still strongly final action on the NRU's request be
supporting construcUon of the freewey delayed a month "until I and other
i.\I Huntington Beach. councilmen have an opportunity to meet
\\'ilh these people," the chairman of The '1lid-year report dedicated only the NRU expressed displeasure with the iwo paragraphs to the Coast Freeway
and exeept for admittinJ that the con-meeting.
troversies have delayed its construction. Allan Beek said following th~ afternoon
ga ve .no further clarification of the study session that the council's action
freeway 's fUturt. had "increased the probability " his group
\11111 force an Initiative.
General ,Motors
Asks 3% Hike
On Cars, Trucks
DETROIT (UPI) -General Motors
Corporation roday asked the Federal
Price Commi~sion fo r permission to raise
prices tln 1972 model cars and trucks by
3 percent
GM Chairman James M. Roche said
GM really needs increases amountinJ lo
at least •.9 percent. but held it.~ reque~t
lo what lt considered the mi nimum in
support of President Nixon's economie
prollram.
"General Motors maintains its beUtf~
that only by support or the pro~ram can
we achieve our national .ioals of reduci"lt'
inflation, expandln.1t: employment. and
strengthening the dollar abroad," Roche
said.
"Our application for less...ihan a cost-
justlfied prict increase demonst)•1ues our
supoort of the program," he said.
GM said lt made fo rmal application for
a 2.5 percent average Increase on current
models and asked the pri ce commissioo
for consi deration for another one.ha lf ppr.
cent "for recognition of product improve-
ments related to emission controls and
bumpers.''
GM. lhe largest of the bi.I{ four 1uto--
n1akers, was the last to make a formal
request to the government for price in-
creases. Its total app lication for three
percent exceeds the two percent request
made by Ford and the 2.S ~rcent made
by American Motors Corporation. Rut it
is less than the 5.9 per cenl asked by
Chrysler Corporation.
"Not all councilmen have expressed
themselves," though, Bee k said.
One councilman the NRU \.as counting
on for atrong support didn't offer it.
Vice Mayor Howard Rogers, who said
he supported the Idea of a referendum,
said any proposals for one would have
to be a lot more substantive "and well
defined'' than the NRU offering, which
wa1 • general proposal with no detailed
question prepared.
Beek had told cou ncilmen the NRU
wanta height and den11lty limits "wh,\ch
will go beyond the power of future
city councila to repeal or circumvent ."
He pointed out a :zonln& ordlnance
could be repealed by the council.
Hirth later said that'i the way it
should be.
"To put It in as part or the charter
is too lnnexible for pl1nnin1 atandar da,"
he sald.
Residents: and buainessmen on both
sides QI tht question also addressed
councilmen, presentlnc alm0&t evenly
divided opinio ns.
Central Newport Community Associa·
tion President Thomas Hyans was sharp
in his words. however.
··1 elected you, I like you, btlt it's
getting to the point I don't trust yo u
-and that's th e way most of us feel,"
he said.
Kymla didn't take too kindly to the
remark.
"I've been in local govtrnment 12
years," he said, "this ia the first time
I've had somebody say they dnn 't trust
me."
He, too. asked for limP.
''I find it difficult that you people
Rre standina: here saying you will do
thili (force an Initiative) without giving
the city council the opportunity to work
on the goals.''
Teamster Strike Effect
Jl1inim ,al Around County
Tramsters union strlkes 'which threa ten
lo shut down the building industry in
Soulhern Californl1 have appJrently
taken little effect in Orange County.
Spokesmen frorn the Orange County,
Costa Mesa and NewPort Beech build ing
departments also said they are unawar(!
of 11ny Teamster ~ickets on loca l con·
struclion sites. Some gener1 I contractors
reported scattered strikes, but of very
few locations.
tt .. the union.
Representatives (or the buildlnt In·
dustry say the owner·operator trucker
ls an independent buAinessman.
One management spokesman prt:dlcttd
th11t tht multi·mllllon bulldlna 1ndustry
would come to a halt tfy tonight if
the strike continues.
Union offlcl1ls claim ti Southern
California counties, lncludtna Oranae
County, ire involved in the strike.
A spok esman for Teamsters Local 235
in Orange s•ld truck drJvtrs are on
S\r\ke. but lht spokesman "'as not sure
if lhey p]annf'd to picket job sites.
Reports from Los Angeles COunty ln·
dicate th11t \\'Ork 11topped today at more
th.an. half Qf the counly1s public and
_ pct_vatc ronstructlon sites 111 nther union
-W0r:Ker11 tionor 1 e Teems er olckelf.
The Teamsters contract with employer
aroups eapired May 1.--The...unlon-1l10
wants 1nother 8S cents an1'1our in W'lfta
ind frinae benefit. each year for three
years.
Some or the building construction
halted by the strikt lncludtd -the new
htill ot justice in tht Lot Ana:etes Ci.vie
Center and thl-annn: l6 th! Les Afffelft
Times. The Teamsters Union is striking tlver
a dispute with the conslruction Industry
over the UM' of <tperator-cwned lru c';e.r11.
VD Issue
Override r
Secret Age Ht?
MISS Kathy Clark, 23, or
Pueblo, Colo., 1s' under consid·
eration to be named a Sec~et
Service special agent. Miss
Clar~ is one of seven women
being c6nsidered. ·
Air Cal Git!ls
Set to Vote
On Pay Hil{es
Air· California stewardesses, scattered
all over the state at various altitudes,
today were scheduled to vote on a con·
tract hammered out into the wee hours
by management and union officials.
Settlement of their demands for better
pay and benefits was cautiously predict·
ed, along with prevention of a strike.
Dudley Miller, executive vice president
of marketing, !laid leaders of Local 505
of the Transport Workers Union of
America recommended contract air
prov al.
Girls employed as stewardesse5, about
100, were to cast ballots in shifts be.tween
flights, with the last crews coming in
to vote In the early evening.
A contingent of the orange mini·skirted
stews demonstrated outside the Orange
County Airport Terminal Friday morning
as a show of force.
The pickets gave the wrong impression
of a strike actually in effect, but negotia·
tions were still under way.
Jf stewardesses should strike, officials
said, they will hire and train new girls.
One difficulty cited in negotiating a
settlement was initially the Nixon wage·
price freeze and more re cently the 5 ~J
percent Phase II pay hike ceilin& set
by the Administration.
Specific contract details were not
revealed pending the vote.
"Like all contracts, there are dozens
ot conditions." Miller said. "We both
gave and took until we were just about
right down the middle.·•
Careful Rapist
Assaults Coed
A rapist who clipped telephone wires
before entering a Newport Beach apart·
menl and assaulting a 19-year..old college
coed in her bed is being sought by
pollce today. '
The victim awakened Saturday night
to find a weapon she said f e It like
an Ice pick at her throat.
Detective Sgt. Ken ThompS-O n said the
young woman was prevented from get·
ting a good look at the intruder which
would aid in the hunt for him .
"She was definitely in ftar tor her
llfe,'' Sgt. Thompson said .
Investigators speculate the rapist did
not act merely on sudden impulse aince
he cut phone wires first.
The victim lives in the heavily
populated old Newport area of the city.
Bid Fails
SACRAMENTO !UPtl The
Asscembly today refused on an importan\
first test to override Gov. Ronald
Reagan's veto of a controversial bill
to allow venereal dJsease instruction In
public schools without parental noHflca•
tlon.
The measure by Assembl ywoman
1'-tarch K. Fong (D·Oakland ), needed at
least 54 votes but on an initial vottJ
the roll call stood at 44·27.
She placed a "call" on the Assembly,
a procedure enabling her to attempt
to round up additional votes before the
final outcome .was announced.
Assemblyman Robert Burke (R-Hun·
tington Beach), an outspoken opponent,
said the schoo•s must "provid~ some
instruction about what i..~ right and •
\\·rong. There certainly are moral stan·
dards that have to be observed and
recognized before this problem can be
prevented."
"VO is a clear and present danger
to our children," Mrs. Fong told her
colleagues. She aaid a poll showed 79
percent of):iouths betwee n 16 and 21
wan\ VD instruction.
The initial vote broke generally along
paity lines, with Democrats voting to
overturn the veto and RepubliCans voting
to uphold Reagan.
During an ·emotional floor debate, op.-
ponents contended the bill wasn 't
necessary for the prevention of VD
among California school children while
proponents argued it was needed to bring
a VD "epidemic" to heel.
Reagan vetoed the bill on grounds
that parents should retain the power
to be told in advance by the schools
that their children would receive educa·
tio n In VD prevention and cure.
But Mr!". Fong said maily teachers
were a(raid to teach such classes because
they feared loss of their credentials
ur.der a section of the law which prohibits
instruction in sex education and family
planning withou·t prior parental consent.
The bill was strongly supported by
Assemblyman John Vasconcellos (0-San
Jose), who contended if the Leglslature
refused to oyerride Reagan's veto it
would be "simply doing one thing -
selling out the children of california
to the governor who vetoed it or the
irrational fear of sexuality."
Assemblyma n E. Richard Barnes (R-
San Diego ), an original coauthor of the
bill, argued against overriding the
governor'• veto. He sa \d the measure
"could be improved and reintroduced
in January" when the Legislature con·
venes Its 1972 session.
IRS to Eye Pushers
\VASHINGTON (AP) -Int e.rn al
Revenue Service agents have begun
\vatching the spending habits o f
suspec ted dru g dealers so they Can be
sued or jailed for tax evasion.
A Treasury spokesman said agents
are piecing together information on how
much drug profiteers spend for such
Hems as their homes, cars, travel and
children's education.
From Page 1
BURGLARY. ••
by Newport Aulo Works and the ntarby
Queen Bee beer bar, both owned by
James Harper.
He was summoned to ('examine the evid~. since.Are was no sign of
forced ~olict: said he identified
it , and opened "the paint and body shop
to find the cash register pried open.
A quantity or stolen credit cards issued
to Robert L. Chapple, whose name Love
first gave police, was also taken as
evidence, officers said.
PASSWORD ---
A good word passed :rou•d •bout •
business is inv•lu1blt . A bed word can be
unfort unet e.
Queen 'Toppled'
Bu cking ham Palace said that
Queen Elizabeth If has been
confined to , her room, suffer-
ing from the lowly chicken
pox. The 45·year·ol'd monarch
has canceled all engagements
for the duration.
Deliherate t Only
Boy, 5, Friend
Know For Sure ·
Stymied pallce simply gave up on
investigation of one case in Crista Mesa
when the key figure wouldn 't talk about
anything.
1;,he way lt appeared to officer Richard
Bowman, the 5-year-old boy would tak e
his secret to the grave, or maybe just
until after he had supper and setUed
down.
A motorist called police Monday to
Fairview Road and Avocado Street in
late afternoon, saying he heard a thump
on the door as he passed the boy an d
a companion, stopped and found one
had a tiny knick on his knuckle .
Did he get tapped accidentally, or
were he and his pal playing a dangerous
game by slapping at passing cars?
'"When asked what happened, he Im·
mediately broke into tears and could
not state," wrote Patrolman Bowman,
who drove the boy home in his big
black·and·white police car. ·
Reunited safely with his mother, the
boy burst into choking sobs again, so
Officer Bowman considered his case clos·
ed.
Mesa Housewife
Salon Bid Lost
A Costa Mesa housewife has lost her
fourth bid to establish a one·lady beauty
1alon In he r garage.
Mrs . Gilda Mae Sanderson, 635 Plumer
St., faced city councilmen recently
for the second time -she's also been to
the planning commission twice-to plead
for a home occupation permit.
"'My mother is just leaving the
hospital," she told councilman. "'[ want
to work afhome so ( can be near her. 1
am ask ing for a hardship'.'
P1Jt she lost her plea 3·2 with M;;yor
Robert Wilson and Councilmen Alvin
Pinkley and Jack Hammett contending
that a beauty salon is not a proper use in
a residential area, no matter what the
hardship.
Nixons Get Turkey
WASHINGTON /UPI) -First lady
Pat Nixon was to accept a JS.pound
California white nroad-breasted
Thanksgiving turkey al the White House
today in a ceremonial chore tradi-
tionally reserved ror presidents.
Our growing success in the pa st 14 years
hu bttn dut lo lh1 "good word1 " ond
referrals sent to us by o ur customers. ALDEN'S
No amount of 1dv1rtisin 9 ca n r1pl1c1 1
per5on1I recomm1 nd1tion.
W1 art •ol inf1llible, but wo •re working
towards lh•I goal by giving ou r outlom1rs lh1
best 11rvioe and qu1lity po11iblt .
CARPETS • DRAPES
• 1663 l'lacentia Ave .
COSTA MESA
646·4838
•
•
Teamste.rs ofOcl1l! 11ay that drlvt.r11
who own their own trucks and contract
with the bulldln& lnduslry ought to belon&
A federal medl1tor 1a 1lttinr In . en
tht contr1ct talks, i nd union and
m1na1ement peraonnel are meelin1 to
"' UP. 1 list of priority Jobi when l!OUUt Mlft, thru 1'11011., t fl J :JO -l'fl., t 11 t -Sot., 9:JO to S
work mustconUnue. 11.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..,,l...
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Saddlehaek .. EDITION
. . Today's ..Flnal •
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 64c NO. 280, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PJ,.GES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, .NOVEMBER 23, ·1971' TEN CENTS
\
0
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C-ourt Choice·s ·Backed
Senate Unit .Endorses Powell, Rehnquist
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Lewis F.
Powell and \Villiam H. Rehnquist were
endorsed today by the Senate Judiciary
Committee ror confirmation as Supreme
Coort justices -Po\\·ell unanimously
and Rehnquist by a 124 vote.
Opponents of Rehnqu ist. 47. an assis-
tant attorney general. vowed they would
continue to f ight his appointment to
the Senate fllor. The 64-year-old Powell,
a Richmond attorney and a former presi-
dent of the American Bar Association.
i! expected -to have clear sailing.
Voting against confirmation or Rehn-
Wife Attacked
On Golf Links
A 20-year-old San Clemente
housewife was raped al knifepoint
by a burly assailant at the
municipal golf course Monday
night.
Police sa\d the attack took place
at about 9 p.m. as the woman
was walking home from a South
El Camino ReaJ restauranL
The attacker crept wp behind
his victim and pressed a k n i f e
to her throat and forced her to
walk to the area or the 18th tee.
After the offense, officers saicf,
the attacker told her not to turn
aroWld. He then fled.
The victim moments later stop.
peel a pas&ing motorist to report
the incident.
Police sald the rapist is a male ·
Caucasian standing about five-feet-
eight and weighing about 23D
pounds.
Security, Credit
To Be Discussed
At SEBA Meeting
Atembers of the South El camino
Bijsiness Association (SEBA) and other
inlerested cltlZ'efls will hear a local detec-
live explain bu.sines! security against
crlmt at a meeting Dec. 7, at the
San Clemente lrm.
The program presented by Detective
t.t. Clifford Gatts will include methods ror merchants to avoid ghopllfting,
pilferage and burglaries. especially dur·
in& the busy holiday 11eason.
other items during the meeting will
include a talk by Stewart M-0rttnsen,
a representative of the San Clemente
Credit Bureau. who will present new
ideas and problems in extending credit
and collecting unpaid bllls.
~ other segmnt of the meeting will
iiiElude a pruentation by architect Leon
Jtyt;en who is chairman of the chamber
of,. commerce ecology committee. Hyzen
wU1 give details for next year's monthly
a-Wards to businessmen who best improve
tbe. appearance of their buildings. The
muting will begin at 7:30 p.m.
Orute C:Out
• Weatber
quist in the committee were Sens. Birch
Bayh (D-lnd.), Edward M. Kennedy (D·
Mass.), Philip A. Hart (0.Mich.), and
John V. Tunney (0-Cali(.).
President Nixon announced the selec-
llon of Powell and Rehnquist on Oct .
21 to succeed lwo longtime associate
justices, Hugo L. Black and John P,1.
Harlan. n•bo retired within a week of
each other in September because ol
ill health. Black died eight days after
his retiremenL
~inistrition leaders expressed con-
fidence that both Rehnquist-and Powell
would be confirmed -probably early
next month -to bring the shorthanded
Supreme Court back to its full nine-man
strength.
Foes of Rehnquist sai d they \.\'ere still
unsati sfied with his written responses
last y;•eekend to questions about his past
a.ctions. particularly in the civil rights
field, and would continue to press their
case on the floor .
They particularly were critical or ~hnquist'.s attitude, while practicing law
1n Phoerux, toward lowering barriers
Three Youths
Escape Death
As Car Flips
Three teenage burglary suspects nar~
ro\vly escaped death early this morning
when ·their speeding station wagon,
pursued by police. flipped orr the
Newport Freeway, rolled over several
Limes and caught fire.
Tustin police. wha iniliated !he chase
at the Saddleback Saddlery, 13922
Newport &ulevard, said one of the
y o u t h s was pinned in t b e burning
wreckage .and was rescued by units froni
the Orange and Tustin fire departments.
The trio, all boys, ages 15 and 16.
were given emergency treatment at
Chapman General Hospital and transfer·
red to the Orange County Medica l Center
v.""here they are being held for jU\'enile
authorities. Officers said none of them
v.·as seriously injured .
The chase started when Tustin police
i\·ere alerted by a silent burglar alarm.
They arri\'ed at the saddlery just as
the trio in a 1970 wagon v.•ere pulling
away.
The chase followed with five poli~
units from Orange, Santa Ana and Tustin
joining in.
1'he three boys, all from Orange, sped
-0n to lhe Santa Ana Free1Vay, north
to the Newport Freeway and north on
that thoroughfare to the Chapman
Avenue East offramp in Orange.
to voting and public accommodation by
Negroes.
Some Negro leaden, i n c J u di n g
rr.embers of the Black Caucus i11 the
House, had also called for rejection ot
Poy;·ell but Bayh and other leading foe11
of Rehnquist made clear early in . the
hearings they would not oppose Powell.
No Seniors
To Attend
Dana Hills
Dana Hills High School will -0pen late
next year with no senior class, but
nonetheleM with a pupil population of
alxlut 1,100 students who Jive in the
area served by Richard Henry Dana
Elementary ScliOOI.
That was the plan hammered out by
Capistrano Unified School D i s tr i c t
Trustees Monday - a patcbwork brought
on by unforeseen delays in completion
of the district's new high school.
If the scbool were to open on schedule
at the start of the school year next
£all, trustees agreed, blending a ·leflior
class into the populatiQn would have
been simple.
But because of the delays, having
seniors attending at the midyear opening
of the Dana Point school would mean
splitting up the San Clemente High School
seniors.
And board members and staff agreed
such a plan would be wrong.
Dana llills Principal Walter J. Spencer
told trustees that the idea of keeping
the San Clemente High senior class Intact
was also the choice of the students,
themselves, and the majority of their
parents.
Despite the·deartb or seniors, however.
the school still will have a varsity sports
program with members coming from
the other three grade levels.
Earlier ideas to include the eighth
grade classes from 1ifarco Forster Junior
High School into the Dana Hills stude.nt
body were also abandoned by the board
Monday.
The idea came as a possible solution
to a pressing crush of student!! at ~1arco
Forster, the district's only interme<iiate
school.
Board members agreed to lea ve Dana
lJllls to the freshmen, !!Ophomores and
juniors, however.
They also began discussion on se tting
the schedule for planning and con-
struction or a new intermediate school
in the next few years to ease the pinch
at l\larco Forster.
Bluff Road Protests Due
Before Clemente Planners
Opposition to the concept or a scenic
bluff road along San Clemente's seashore
will find its way to planning com-
missioners Wednesday after being duly
noted reCently by city councilmen .
near the new homes. The proposed sign
would advertise the links and would
stand on a pole. It would be lighted
at night. ·
-A use permit sought by BruC'e Conrad
y;·bo hopes to use a building at UJ3
S. El Camino Real for nondenominational
religious worship.
a
Christmas Liflhts
' '
e
The 1Christmas season ai:rives '.at Chicago's North Michigan Avenue
as the ''Magnificent Mile'' came alive ·with thousands of sparkling
miniature lights stretched across trees. The Water Tower, a Chicago
Jandmark. Jooms in th·e foreground.
Trustees OK Top Nu1nher
Of Graduation Requests
A record number or midyear gradua.
tion requests -52 -were approved
l\·londay night by Tustin High School
District trustees. Students from Mission
Viejo led the districl in request!'! to
graduate early in order to go on to
college.
or the 16 Mission Viejo students wha
will graduate in January, nine are going
on to college, the school board was
told Four early graduation requests were
granted for .. hardship" reasons and three
gtudents will leave to take jobs.
Al University High School -which
will graduate its fir!'lt senior class this
coming June. there were nine midyear
diploma requests. Four students will
begih college after January and five
were granted midyear diplomas !or
reasom of hJrd!hip.
Districtwlde. the figures showed Jl ·
grads are leavi11g early to take jobs,
19 are going on to college and 23 have
family difficulties necessitating early
graduation.
The Tustin High district maintains a
strict policy on midyear graduation,
Superintendent William Zogg noted.
The exception to the district's eight·
semester study program is granted onJy
if a student has met all or the other
graduation requirements.
Jn the case -0f students who are leaving
to further their education, the district
requires a 3.0 or B average for all
their coursework, Zogg noted.
Lecture Series
Made Available
By Phil Grigno1i
South Coast area community groups
interested in hearing slide lectures -0n
various aspects of the sea can contact
Phil Grignon at San Clemente Jfigh.
School to mltke n~ry arrangem,ents.
Grignon, chairman of the school's
science department, developed the h.igb
school's successful marine biology pro-
gram.
He also has developed a series of
lectures covering these topics:
ac
Board Set
For Meet
At College
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of t111 DlllY Pl•t JI.if
Trustees of the Capistrano · Unified
School District -charging they are
being snubbed -have mapped plans
to cut short their meetin& of Dec. IJ
and' appear en masse before Saddleback
College's board and fight for the elect.ion
of college trustees from separate
districts.
That unusual visit was mapped out
Monday by the Capistrano board, claim·
ing that Sadd1eback bl! ignored them
and given Capistrano "not even the
semblance of courtesy or recognition."
The Capistrano trustees also have 1
regular meeting set for Dec. 13, but
they agreed they might knock off early
or start late to allow for attendance
~at Saddleback.
The springboard tor the unusual plan
Is the asserted failure of Saddleback
to answer a letter Capistrano Unified
sent six months ago.
In that message the Capistrano Board
urged the college trustees to set up
specific districts, not elect their board
members at large as is now done.
"All they sent back was a bunch
of charts," said Capistrano Trustee Bob
Dahlberg, "and I couldn't under&tand· ...
them." ·
lt was he who launched the attack
... Monday by the school board.
''We should resent the dictatorial paint
of "Yiew by that board and their method
of determJning what the community
desire is. l do not feel we have been
given the proper semblance of courtesy
and recognition," he said,
Dahlberg, former superintendent of
Tustin Union High School District, added
tha~ six months "was a long time to
sit on something.
Fellow trustee Fred Newhart stressed
that because Capistrano Unified has
seven trustees elected in sep~ata
districts, the board's counsel should be
recognized .
"\Ve work well under the system and
we might be the only school district
in the county that does. It works very
well and never have I seen any e1ample
of selfishness by any one trustee on
this board. If Saddleback were to operate
the same way, people would be much
closer to the Saddleback District," he
said.
Dahlberg added that he has never
thought "on a parochial approach'' simp-
ly because he was elected from on•
specific district.
"The entire matter at Saddle.back is
a politically oriented operation," he ad-
ded. "We will not be intimidated, even
though that s e e m s to be the effort
there ."
Dahlberg stressed he had a "personal
Interest" in the issue over Saddleback
trustee districts, because or hi!! long
tenure as a school administrator in
Tustin - a post which he left in recent
years to enter private bu.sine!ls in Dana
Point '(_
The strategy by the Capistrano Boardfl
at this point, is to declare a recess
at the Dec. 13 meeting, attend Sad~
dleback to be heard, then return to
the board meeting later in the night.
"U. we don't decide on that, then we
could adjourn at about 9 p.m., to go
Saddleback, then reconvene the night
afterward!'! and finish up our business,"
said Trustee Chairman Bob Hurst.
Love Stronger
Than l1ijur y \\tinter weal.her has definitely
blown in as the mercury will be
dipping t.o lows of l7 on the coast
and 47 inland. ltighs will be 63
and 70 respectively. Early morn-
ing fog will clear to hazy sun to-
day and Wednesday.
A letter by San Clemente physician
Dr. Edward Westphal is scheduled for
commission action. The communication
strongly protests the use of the coastline
for a scenic roadway.
Commissioners have been asked to
study the road idea calculated by the
city st aff to cost about $2.4 million.
Diversifi~ation Set
"Of Whale and Man," "Between the
Tides of Southern California," "Volcanic
Island Formation and Coral Reef
Growth," "Ecology of the.Open Reef,"
"Seas and Beaches or Baja," "Hawaiian
-Past and Present," "Waves, beaches
and Harbors" and "The Candian Rockies,
a Sea Uplifted."
Scheduling or the lectures is available
by reaching Grignon at the high achool,
411Z-4165.
MAOERA (UPI) -Broken bones
ana bruises are no obstacl• for
a couple in love.
INSIDE TODAY
''l glltss wt all /eel t1ltlt any-
one of us could bt fn the same
pwition, .. sayr a spokesman. for
a group of airltne pilot.t"--uiivtl
aid ing tht coiue of the POW1
cmd MIAJ. S<~ l?IJQ< 9.
L. M. Im!
C•"fWlll• Cl•Hlflell c-1c, Cr'M•-" OMllt Ntflcn llflNt"ltl ,,_
SllMl"ltlRlfttllt
flllltMt -•t111 Llllffl't MtllMK
Mt~lh
' • ••• n
" " • " •·1• ..
11 • "
Mt.lllMr"Plfllti ?t N1~I frWW• 4.J
OreMt C...llrt1 1t
1,l•lt Pwlw H 1-1' 16-11 lfM• Mw•tb .. ,,
Tt~ lt
"Tllt9N" It
Wt11Mr 4 W~it. Wtl~ )t W-'I Nww$ 1,.11 Wtrlll NtWt .. J•
•
The project bas not been appro\•cd
either by council or commission,
Councilmen last n1onth heard the initial
ataff reports that such a road would
be feasible, but expensive.
Since tl'ielf rom mlssloners have also
lake.n up study or the matter.
Other items on the commission's light
holiday week agenda inclucie :
-Final re»olutlon or the latter fialf
o.La tw:~part r~uest ff9m the Rich-
Land Developmefnt Company which i!
building 1$ houses in the Shorecll ffs
area. The finn won approval two w~ks
ago for a billboard announcing the sa le
of homes. but commissioners delayed
action on a huge banner along the face
ot a slope until this week'a meeUng.
-Another 1tgn request, this one from
the owners or S~orecllff! Golf Course
UtiUty Allots $20.7 Million
Low-$Ulphur oil, underground utllitie,,
and i'es!:afeh Into other fields related
to the environment wlll cost San Diego
Gas and Electric Company $20.7 milUon
next year , aides said today.
The b\Jlk or the ei·pen~s ~ill be the
rinn's allocation or $10 million for the
undergrounding o1 Uffiilylines. Tile fillfd5
are parceled out to local government
on a formula basis, then used primarily
for assisting improvement dlstrlc4.
Other itern.s in the environmental
budget, utility spokesman sald, include:
-$45i000 toward research •nd develo~
"tne:nt to achieve better-appearing uUJlty
I Ines.
. .
•
-$383,000 for studies involving thermal
discharges. marine e n v i r .o n me n l ,
meteorology and radiation. All ar! in
connection with · nuclear and fo6sil-fuel
power plants. -m;ooo for research Into geothermal
steam.
-$149,000 for a cooperative-program
to develep • liquid-metal, rast·breeder
nuclear reactor.
One other expensive allocation will
be the use of nearly S7 million to revJmp
the firm's fossil· fuel . plants .to pcnnit
the use or low·sulphilr on and help stem
the fioW Of ltnOi•prodUCing nitrogen OX·
Ides. '
Nixon Names Curtis
To New Rent Board
Thu.s George Gilreath of Fresno,
confined t.o a wheelchair with a
broken arm and leg, rolled up
to the hospital bed of Barbara
Alex of Chowchilla this wtekend
to take their marriage voews.
The newlyweds were hospitalited
here Nov. 10 after being in)ured,
W,ASHJNGTON ·(AP) -President Nix-when their car collided wtth a
on today ~med a 14--member Rent semi-truck rig.
Advi9ory Board , headed by Thomas B. "We were suPJ>Oled ·to pt mar.
Curtis, former Republican congressman ried la.st week," Gilreath said. uwe . r~m Mluouri, to htlp rormulate-regWt---1 J ust-aetfded we ougtino go a?lei.d
t1ons to control renls. and get married ." ,
The board Includes five \Dub Ii c Justice Court Judge lex Brown
member• of whom chairman ..l::urti.s ls who performed the ceremony'
one ; five Industry members, and four noted "It's the only case I've evt;
consumer members -.two of them heard of where two people were
women, one representative of Lalin-both patients In 1 hospital and
American cltlr.ens , and the rourth, rormer goc. married."
governor of Iowa Robe1't D. Blue. '-------------'
J I
•
SC rn,sdly, Ncwembtt 231 1971
Down the
Mission •
Trail j
Aegean Hills
Party Slated
MlSSlON VIEJO -The Aegean Hills
Homeownen Association will hold a pre-
holiday cocktail party, buffet and dance
on Friday, ~. 3 at the Montcnoso
Recreat ion Center in ~1ission Viejo.
Homeowners and their guests will
gather rrnn1 8:30 P;m. lo 1:30 a.m.
~1usic will be provided by Hayde'n
Causey,.former1y with the Harry James
band .
Tickets are S5 per person. They may
be purchased from association represen-
tatives or by calling Dorothy Fiarro,
837-9498.
e Remefliaf 7feadi11g
MISSION VIEJO -The English
department at Los Alisos Intermediate
School has developed a remedial reading
program for youngsters unable to keep
up with the regular Engl~ courses
because of a reading deficiency.
The program, developed by reading
teacher Marsha Oaerr, acce pts students
referred to the special class by the
school English teacher. The st udents re-
main in Mrs. Daerr's class until they
can rea d well enough to function sa tisfaC·
torily in a standard English course.
e Co1111seli119 Program
MISSION VIEJO -Los A 1 is o s
Intennediate &hool has initiated a new
counseling program.
The sChool, which shares the 1.a Paz
Jntermediate &hool c;:impus in Mission
Viejo in the afternoon, has begun the pro·
gram so that each student can meet with
a counselor during the school year and
more often if needed .
The principal, Pat Bushman, has made
the caunseling service possible by replac·
ing one of the assistant principal posi·
tions al the school with one full time and
one half time counselor.
He hopes to expand the pro·gram next
year to two full time counselors.
e Sort l' 011r Glass
EL TORO -The glass reclamation
depot sponsored by Parklane Residential
&hool has been moved.
Donation s of glass and aluminum cans
may still be brought to the depot wbich Is
now located behind the school at 13442 El
Tqro Road.
Spokesmen for the reclamation center
have asked lhat all caps be removed and
that glass be sorted into.clear. brown and
green groups.
The center was formerly located Ui the
Torrocenter shopping area.
Trot Winner
At El Morro
To Get Turkey
The third annual El ~forro Turkey
Trot gets under way al 1 :30 p.m.
Wednesday at Laguna 's El Morro
Elementary School.
Recalling pionee r days when boys
would race through woods and st reams
in pursuit of a wild turkey for ThanksgiY·
lng dinner , fourth . fifth and sixth grade
boys will run a 500-yard obstacle course.
complete with simula ted logs , streams
and fallen trees .
The boy with the fastest clocked lime
will take home the turkey -a frozen
one, courtesy of the PTA, which also
V.'ill provide trophies for grade level
v.·inners and certificates. for contestants
v.·ho finish the race.
OU.NG-I COAtT
DAllY PllOT
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\
One From County-
2 Widows Claim
Bigamist's Loot
F'..Jm \Vire Serv\ceg
Arguments resumed tbday o v er
division of the $1 million estate of an
international merchant·Shipper who led
a bizarre two Jives with two wives who
shared him unaware for 26 years.
Juan Vargas insisted on a rigid
timetable in his se parate Santa Ana
and Torrance hou seholds, right to supper
al 6 p.m. with all the family present.
Death deOed" Juan Vargas' strict
schedule.
ffc was killed in a· car accidenl lwn
years ago -leaving no wi~l, despite
his meticulous business methods -and
the echoing crash shat tered two homes
in its protracted aftermath.
Testimony unfolding at a probate hear·
ing in L<ls Angeles County Superior Court
MondaY portrayed Vargas as a husbind
and fathe r with a blueprint for daily
life but no plan for eventual death.
He left a total of $1,063,165.
Mildred Varg as, 65, of Torrance, wed
him in 1929 and bore three children
now aged 38 to 40, hence the hearing
is in Los Angele!.
Josephine Vargas. 54, of 6411 Lin·
denhurst Ave., Santa Ana , wed him in
1945 and bQre four children, now 21
to 26 and so contends they &e entitled
to a share of the estate.
Mildred Vargas was initially granted
Robert Arion,
Vietnam Vet,
Services Slated
Funeral services will be held in Laguna
Beach Wednesday for Robert Arion. 25,
Vietnam veteran who died in his sleep
Friday night at the home of his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. James /i.rlon, 1445 Temple
Hills Drive.
Drafted shortly after his graduation
from Northwestern University, the young
soldier suffered a spinal wound in Viel·
nam that left him a paraplegic. After
a long perio~ as a patient in the Long
Beach Veterans Hospital. he returned
"'1-o his parents' home about six mont hs
ago.
In addition to his parents, he is surviv-
ed by a sister, Barbara Arion of Laguna
Beach; grandfather. John S. Arion:
grandmother." Mrs. L. D. Darb.v and
~real aunt. Sue Barrett. all of Grand
Jtapids. Mich.
The Rev. Bruce Cushing of Laguna
Beach First Christian Church will of.
ficiate at lhe Wednesday services at
11 a.m. in the chapel of Sheffer Ltip:un11
Beach Mortuary. Burial will be at Pacific
View Memorial Park.
T,a.guna Sho'tving
To Note Works
Of Ca.rtoonists
Original works by 77 newspaper and
magazine cartoonists will be featured
!n "The Cartoon Show ," a special Laguna
Beach Art Gallery presentation honoring
tht 75th anniversary of the birth of
the comics in Ameri ca.
~1orc than 90 exatnples or the cartoon
art will be included in the show which
opens at the Cliff Drive gallery Saturday
and will run through Dec. 31.
Loca l cartoonists Frank a11d Ph il
lnterlandi, Virgil Partch. Roger
Armstrong and Ed Nofziger are among
niany Orange County art ists represented
in the show, along with East coas t
artists.
An original color page of the legendary
Krazy Kat by the late George Herriman.
considered by some the world's greatest
cartoonist, will be on display, along \.\'il h
a Sunday page on Buster Brown, crea!ed
by R. F. Outcault, who origin11ted the
newspaper comlc carto.on "'ith his Yellow
Kid in February, 1896.
-
$2.000 per month in living expenses trom
the international merchant's conte'sted
estate, but claims all community pro-
perty.
Attorney Ervin Roder argued before
Superior Court Ju,dge Robert Kenn y that
Vargas' second w!fe and children Jiving
in Santa Ana qualify for compensation
too.
··court precedent gives a woman the
right to compensation when she is deceiY4
ed into entering an invalid marriage,"
Roder said.
Skyscrapers
Referendum
Bid Rejected
Newport Beach councilmen refused to
schedule a r~ferendum on skyscrapers
after mee ting with high rise foes Monday
afternoon. but later tried a mor~ con·
ciliatory tack in the face or threats
that the group would force an election
by the initiative process.
The council heard plea's from Newport
Residents United (NRU) that residents
be allowed "to set the goals" for the
new master plan by voting on some
kind of a~tall~building-ballot-question.-
Councilman Carl Kymla, who earlier
In the day had in effect told the NRU
if it wants a citywide. vote to go collect-
signatures on an initiative petition, Mond·
day night said he and other councilmen
will meet with spokesmen of the group
and come back next month "with specific
recommenda tions.''
Kymla and Councilman Don Mcinnis
saii:I one possibility wou ld be the forma·
tion of a citizens' committee to help
guide preparation or the new general
plan of development.
Mayor Ed Hirth made it plain he
didn't think another comm itte ls
necessary, however.
He said the professional planners are
well aware of what the citizens want
and said, "This is what you are going
to get.
"Trust us," he said, "have patience.
find out this is what you are going
to get."
Myers Resigns
As Sea.l Beach
City Ma.nager
Robert Myers. city manager of Seal
Beach for only 10 months, resigned from
his job early this morning.
The resignation. made public after a
lengthy and believed stormy executive
session was accepted by councilmen on
a 3 to l vote and l abstention.
~1yers who took the $1,500 a month
Seal Beach post last Jan. 25 cited "a
significant change" in his employn1ent
relationship as the basis for vacating
his office.
Although the resignalion wa·s im·
mediate, Myers \vlll slay on as a con·
sullant for about two months. Councilmen
meanwhile have appointed Assistant City
h1anager Dennis Courtemarche to serve
as acting city manager.
It appears today that Courtemarche
is likely to be tabbed as permanent
C'ily manager after a probationary
period. This morning he was in a staff
meeting with Mayor Harold K. Holden
and Myers to discuss lhe changeo ver.
The council was divided on accepting
the resignation. Councilmen F'ranklin
Sales, Thomas Blackma n and Holden
voled for the measure. Councilman
Edward Smith decided aga inst. the Coun·
cilman Thomas Barnes abstained.
A second resolution to a pp o i n t
Courlemarche as acting city manager
was approved by a 4 to 0 vote with
.)mith abstaining.
General Telepl1one's Bid
To Raise_ ll~tes Approved
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -General
Telephone was given permission today
by the Ca lifornia Publi<' Utilities Com·
mission to boost its rates by a total
or Sl6. million.
T increase. • PUC spoktSman "id,
.,.., Id mean a 95·cent a month hike
l n lie b fll of fhe aver;lge householder
an $2 a tnonth on business phones
in the metro1>0Htan area.
The spokesman s<1ld the Inc rease "is
t onsistent "-'ilb the federal governmtnCs
econom\c-fitabilization program."
General serve!': nearly 2.5 million .
customers In 2SO cities in 16 counll es.
The incr('ases which go into effect
In 20 d11ys will glvr the: company 11n
8.3 percent re turn on Its Investment
in comparison with lhe .. currenl return
of 6.61 perc('nl. -..
The basic ralc tor onr.·party resiQentia1
l'iCr\•ices in rnetropol•an Loll Angeles
gN!S from $4.80 to $5 75 a month. The
I
increase for one-party business service
ill up from $1 0,60 to $12.60.
In the Northern California communltie~
or Courtla nd. Isleton and Walnut Grovr.
the one-party residential rate was
boosted from $4 ,25 lo $5.95 and lhe
business rate from $11.80 to $13 .20,
In granting the increase, .Lhe PUC
said:
.. Generlll has had a history or ren·
dering inadequate service snd
dissatisfaction with General's service by
some subscribe.rs, ospeclally (hose with
heAvy usagt, still exists ."
Service has lmprovcd~ovtr tfte pasl
several ye ars. the commissions.id.
1'he ra te lncre11se followed 43 day!!
nf he.arings. ("reneral subn1itted a budget
ror rate.making purposes and the com·
mission cut several Items (rom it In·
i.:h1ding $455,000 toward telellision ad·
\'ertising which, It sitid, "was directed
princip:ilty ·toward improving the com•
pany imii.~e." ·
Lag••••a's Faature
Planners-' Amend
Land :use Plan
First J,ove
Tracy Madden, 5, a kinder·
gartener at Irvine Elementary
School. cuddles up to ."Ger·
aldine," a p~pier mache giraffe
built by seventh and eighth
grade art students at the
school. c:eraldine is one of sev·
eral jangle animals built by
students, ""·ho plan to donate
them to pediatrics wards at
hospitals.
Laguna Realtor's
Sign Ripped Out
At His Office
Laguna Beach reallor and high rise
proponent Vern Taschner was the target
of apparent vandalism early Monday
when an identification sign outside hi~
office was ripped from its mountings.
Police said 'the sign. which simply
sai d "Vern 1'aschner," had been bolted
to the concrete block wall at 828 S.
Coast Highway. Vandals removed the
bolt and one end and jerked the sign
from its other mounting, investigators
said.
The eight-inch by four·foot wooden sign
was valued at $25.
Taschner. y.•ho publicly opposed the
successful Aug. 3 initiative election ban·
ning high rise. has continued his op-
position by filing legal suits to have
the election results voided.
'End of World'
Prophets Hit
CLEVELAND (UPI\ -Prophets of
ecolo.'):ical doom were taken to ta s k
Monday by a prominent research scien-
tist. who said man cannot seriously
deplete the supply of oxygen in the
air and detergent phosphates have little
to do with the deterioration o! Lake
Erie .
"I'm sick and tired of hearing the
pronouncl.'ml.'nts of the misinformed and
the uninformed arch-druids \lt'ho talk
shrillv about the end of the world."
said 'or. A. L. Hones, vice president
of the Tuberculosis and Respiratory
Disease Association of Clevel and.
Laguna Beach planning commissioners
Nonday aga in tackled the land use ele-
ment of the general plan and made
several changes regarding the future
makeup of the city.
Among the points that will be stressed
in the land use element are:
-Develop toning s,tandards to keep
the maximum population of the city
to approximately 20,000 persons by 19!1(),
-Seek , planned residential develop-
ments (PROJ for hillside slopes, as op-
posed to higher density development s.
-Include a statement recnmn1ending
against rezoning -land for higher. density
uses.
-Review the land use element annually
to keep up with changes in the com·
munity .
-Include the 36-foot height limit .
The rev.ised element will now be
redrafted and presented before the com-
mission for public hearing at its Dec.
6 meeting.
During the discusslon, commissioner
J ohn McDowell asked if lhe word "will"
or "shall" should be used ln describing
the future policies for the city.
Wayne Moody, director of plannin g
and development, said "shall" is usually
used in planning matters. Commissioner
Roger Lanphear said that in terms of
the maximum population , the word
•·wiJI" should be used.
John Elden of 494 HiUedge Drive charg·
ed the commission may "tie the hands
of future planning commissions. You caft
not tell what will happen in the future."
McDowell noted that the land use e!e-
State Reports
Pacific Coast
Freeway Stall
Construction of the controversial
Pacific Coast freeway has been delayed
indefinitely, according to the California
Division or Highways' mid-year 1971
report.
In a brief summary of freeway activity
in Orange County, the official repor t
says the slate highway con1mission has
adopted the route of the Coast r_reeway,
"However, current discu ssions regarding
alignment with severa l coastal com·
muni lies may delay construction for an
indefinite period.''
The report doe~ not explain whether
the freeway may be abandoned entirely,
shi fted in certain sections, or eventually
bui lt as planned.
Newport Beach residents have raised
the biggest objections lo the freeway
and that city has offlcia\ly asked that
the freeway not be built through Newport
Beach .
Other objections to the freeway have
been raised in Seal Beach and some
areas south of Laguna Beach.
The only coastal city still strongl y
su pporting construction of the fretway
is Huntington Beach.
The mid-year report dedicated only
two paragraphs to the Coast Freeway
and except for admitting that the con-
troversies have delayed its construction,
gave no furthe r clarification of the
freewa y's future.
Nixons Get Turkey
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -First !adv
Pat Nixon Y.'as lo accept a 3S-pound
California white b rna cl· breasted
Thanksgiving turkey at the White House
today in a ceremonial chore tradi·
lionally reserved for presidents.
PASSWORD ---
A good word passed around about a
business is invaluab le. A btd word ctn be
unfortunate.
menl would be reviewed every year.
thus future planning commissions would
be able to make changes.
At the conclusion of their discussion,
commissioners agreed that o t he r
elements in the general plan would pro-
bably move more rapidly than the land
use portion.
"This lays the groundwork for the
other elements," commented chairman
Carl Johnson. They include traffic
circulation, open space, utilities, etc •.
Tus~in Pupils
Exceed State
Reading Norm
-ll.LGEORGE LEIDAL
ti! lht OlllY ~Ho! Slit!
Students In lhe Tusiin Union High
School District taking the 1969-70
statewide achievement tests scored
better than 96 percent of the other
districts in California in reading.
Jack E. Schumaker, assoc i a t e
superinlendent for personnel and special
services, detailed the test results at
Monday's board or education meeting.
The Tustin district high school student s
did equally well in other areas,
Schumaker said. '
The average dislrictwide score com·
pared to other districts in the state
follows:
-Language -Tustin students scored
better than 95 percent of the dist ricts
in California.
-Spelling -the dis! ricl scored helter
than 97 percent o[ the di stricts taking
the same test.
-Mathematics -the district's average
score was higher than average scores
of 96 percent of the di stricts taking
the tes t.
Schumaker noted the scores were more
impressive when considered with the
fact that the Tustin district tax rate
is higher than only 30 percent of the
districts in California. and below the
average lax rate in California.
On the other hand. Tustin High district
is "wealthier" than 77 percent of the
districts, Schumaker pointed out.
It has relatively few minority students
-more than only 25 percent of the
districts. Further, the districrs index
of poverty level families puts the·Tustin
district ahead of only 14 percent of
the districts. That means 86 percent
of the districts have more poor families
than Tustin does.
Pupils in the dist rict tend lo stick
around longer as evidenC"ed by the pupi l
mobility index placing the district ahead
of only 21 percen t of other districts.
Conversely. 79 percent of the districts
have a higher rate of pupil turnover.
Schumaker pointed out thaL the Tusti n
district students should perform well
on 1he statewide tests since the average
'·scholastic abilit.y" score -IQ -for
the dist rict places Tustin students ahead
of 96 r.ercent of the students from other
di strict s in California.
"\\le serve a more stable. wealthy
community in relation to otheT districts,"
he noted .
Yet. the 1961).70 school year test scores
in all four areas y.•ere better than the
Stale Department of Educatio n had
predicted taking wealth. turnover and
other factors into <tccount.
A comp<trison of actual with predicted
scores showed sign ificantly higher scores
than were expected.
Teacher salaries, paid during the 1969"
70 school year, "''ere higher than 83
percent of the districts in the slate,
Schumaker said.
Our 9rowin9 success in the pest 14 years
has been due to the 119ood words " and
referrals se nt to us by our customers. ALDEN'S
No amount of advertisin9 can replace a
per$onal recommendation.
We are not infallible, Dut we are.....w,orki ng
towards that goal by 9ivin9 our customers the
best service and quality possible.
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838 ' HOURS : Mo•. thrv Tltun., t lo l :JO-"(., t lo t-Sot., t :lO to S
' • ,
•
I
--1·
Lagu11a Beaeh
-EOITL6 N
Today's ~lnal
N.Y. Stoeks
·* VOL 64, NO. 280, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES .T \ JUES OAY, NOV~MBER23, 1971, TEN CENTS ·
\ ' '
Capistrano Trustees Charge Saddlehacl{
By JOHN VALTERZA
Ot lllf' D6111 l'l•t illft
Trustees of the Capisltano Unilied
School Dil'ltrict -charging they are
being anubbed -have mapped plans
to cut short their meetint; of Dec. 13
1nd appear· en masse before Saddleback
Co!Jege's.J~:iard WJd fight fOf the election
of C<lllege trustees from separate
districts.
That unusual visit was mapped out
Atonday by the Capistrano board, claim-
ing that Saddleback has ignored them
i od given Capistrano ''not even the
llnit Acts
semblance of courtesy or recognition."
The Capistrano trustees also have a
regular meeting set for Dec. 13, but
they agreed they might knock off early
or start late to allow for attendance
at Saddleback.
The !!lpringboard for the unusual plan
Is the asserted failure of Saddleback
to answer a letter Gapistrano Unified
sent six months ago.
In that message the Capistrano Board
urged the college trustees to set up
specific districts, not elect their board
members at large as is now done.
"All they sent back was a bunch
'
C1 y's Greenbelt
Plan Given Okay
By BARBARA KREIBICH
Of IM: U•lt't l"lltt Sr.tf
Laguna Beach Greenbelt supporters
a.re jubilant today after receiving un-
qualified approval of a plan for interim
~servaUon of the proposed greenbelt f"1m the Orange County Planning Com-
mbsion.
By a 4--0 vote l\Jonday afternoon, the
county planners approved a staff recom-
mendation that provides ror recognition
of the Laguna Greenbelt in concept,
instructs all departments and agencies
cf the county to consider Its preservation
in their future operations, and pennlts
the Laguna Greenbelt Inc. to "'review ·
and comment" on all prop o s ~ d
developments o'r other land use action.,
within the 10,000 ac"' area encircling
Laguna.
"It is very. very encouraging, a great
vk:tory,'' said Greenbelt president James
Dilley, who answered questions of the
coUnty planners for more than half an
hour during the l\1onday hearing.
Dilley was one of half a dozen
Lagunans who appeared before the com4
, mission lo urge adoption of the policy
proposed by county planning director
Forest Dickason.
In his report for the planning
staff, Dickason said recognition of
the proposed greenbelt, which
Aliso Canyons, would be valuable during
the period when the county is con.sidering
ways to regulate growth. "Greenbelts
work to discourage urban sprawl." he
said, "and encourage community identity
by providing buffer w nes."
It was noted also that the Army Corps
of Engineers is engaged in a study
of the flood plain and watershed in
lhe Laguna area and that greenbelts
pi:ovide opportunities for recreational
deVelopmenl of flood hazard areas con-
sidered unsuitable (or other uses, as
Well as preserving the watershed.
. The new planning (Xllicy would not
wohibil development ·within the greenbelt
8rea, but would make any proposed
land use subject lo close scrutiny by
county agencies. The action. said Dilley,
recognizes the Laguna GretnbelL Inc.
as a "party of lnt·erest" to any develop-
ment proposals and will assure notifica·
. '
"'eatlter
\Vintcr y.·eather has definitely
blown in as the mercury will be
dipping to lo\va of 37 on the coast
and 47 inland. Highs wilJ be 63
and 70 respectively. Early morn-
ing fog will clear to hazy sun to-
day and Wedftcsday.
INSIDE TODAY
··1 gueis we all feel that a11y
one of UB could be in the l<ltne
position,'' .say& a spoke1man f01'
a. group of airltnt pilotJ' wiver
aiding the cause of the POW1
a11d fttll\r, Stt PGQ« 9,
' •iw.• IJ•lllt ,. I l'• .. 11"•1 HtWJ .. $ u-tt OrMt• eev111y n
tll IYM• ,~ 2t
lion of the organization in all land use
matters pertaining to the greenbelt area.
The county Board of Supervisors also
will be asked to adopt the greenbelt
recognition policy and, in due course
Dilley said, supporters will move toward
sect.Jring govenunent grants for publir
purchase of greenbelt lands.
Lagunans participating in the ~'londay
hearing included planning commissioner
Roger Lanphear, who 11!8d letters of
endorsement of the policy from both
the planning commission and city coua-
cil; Joy Dickerson. president of the
Laguna Beach Coordinating Council; Bea
WhJtUesey, representing the Business and
Professional Women of Laguna Beach:
Michael Schley, representing the Citizens'
Town Planning Association: Betty 1-leckel
of the Laguna Beach Taxpayers Associa·
lion: and Paul Colburn of Lagu.na Hills.
speaking !or the Retired Teachers
Association and Kiwanis. All have been
active on the board or directors or
Laguna Greenbelt ~nc.
Dilley also presented a list or 56
Laguna area groups which have endorsed
the greenbelt concept.
Judiciary P anel
OKs Rehnquist,
Powell Nominees
WASH.JNGTON (UPI) -Lewis P.
Powell and \Vi\liam H. Rehnquist were
endorsed today by the Senate Judiciary
Committee for conrinnation as Supreme
Court justices -Powell unanimously
and Rehnquist by a 12·4 vote.
Opponents of Rehnquist. -47. 1111 ass is·
tant attorney general. vowed they would
continue to fight his appointment to
the Sen3te fil er. The 64-year-old Powell,
a Richmond attorney and a fo rmer presi·
dent of the American Bar Associat1bn,
is expected to have clear sailing .
Voting against confirmation of Rehn-
quist in the committet were Sens. Birch
Bayh (0-Tnd. ). Edward M. Kennedy (0-
~fass.), Philip A. Hart (0-?i.1ich.l, and
J ohn V. TuMey 1D·Calif.).
President Nixon announced the selec·
tion of Po\\•ell and Rehnquist on Oct.
21 to succeed two longtime associate
justices, Hugo L. Black and .John 1\1.
ffarlan. who relired within a ¥leek of
each other in September because of
ill healttt. Black died eight days after
his retirement.
Administration leaders exprcssec!. con-
fidence that bolh Rehnquist a~ Po\vell
would be confirmed -probably early
next month -lo bring the shorthanded
Supreme Court back lo its full nine-man
strength.
Foes of Rehnquist sa id they v.•ere still
unsat isfied with his written res(Xlnscs
last weekend to questIDns about his past
actions, particularly in the civil righl~
field_, and 9.'0uld continut> to press the1t
ca2 on tliC floor.
They particularly 11.·ere critical or
Rehnquist's attitude. \\1hi\e practicing low
in Phoenix. toward lowering barriers
to voting and public accommodation by
L. M. ...,.
C11i1enti.
Clllffllllt
Cwnkl (,..,,,...
l)ff!lr """' . .,,..,.., ,_ n ''""" 1~11 12 ~sttcr-Mltfflt •-n _!Segr:oes.
.""''•"'"""' •l"lllU ··-AllR LtlMttfl ,.., .. .:
Mtvlto•
•• , ....... ,.... 1t
l t TllllMl'I 1t
2t·fl w .. llltr I
II W~ltt Wt t.11 ll
IJ Wtm'fl'I Htwt 1)-U
I WtrN NtWf I·~ ..
;
Some Negro leaders, I n c I u d i n g
members of the Black Caucus in the
llouse. had also called for rejection or
Powell but Bayh and other leadlng roes
. of Rehnquist made clear early In the
hearings they would not oppose Powell .
• .
of chart!," said Capistrano Trust et Bob
Dahlberg, "and I couldn't understaoo
them."
It was he who launched the attack
l\londay by the school board.
"We should resent the dictatorial point
or view by that board and their method
or determining what the community
desire is. I do not feel we have tieen
given_t.he..propet:..S.~ of courtesy
and recognition," he said.
Dahlberg, former superintendent of
Tustin Union High School District, added
that six months "was a long time to
sit on sorriething.
c
Fellow trustee r~red Newhart stressed Dahlberg added that he has never
that because Capistrano Unified has thought •·on .a parochial approach" slmp-.
seven trustees elected. in separate ly because he. was elected from one
districts, the board's counsel sbou1d be specific district.
reeognized. "The entire matter at Saddleback. is
"\Ve "·ork well under the system and , a politically · oriented. operation," he ad-
we might be the only school district ded. "We w:ilf not be lntimidated, even .
in the county that does. It Works very though that s e e m s to be the effort
well and never have 1 seen any enm~~le~_the= re~
of• selfiSMesS ~ on Dahlberg stressed he hai! a "per.sonal
this board. ll Saddleback were to operate Interest" in the issue over Saddleback
lhe same way, people would be much trustee districts, because of his tong
closer to the Saddleback District," he tenure as a school administrator In
:;aid. Tustin -a post which he left in recent
00 e
•OAILY ·PILOT f'Mle•'r-P•lrlct.a1yll
Snub
,
years to enter privale business ln Dana
Point.
The strategy by the Capistrano Board
at this point, ·is to declare a recess
at the Dec. 13 meeting. atttnd Sad-
dleback to be heard, then return to
the board meeting later in the Dight.
"If we don't decide on that, then we
could adjourn ·at about 9 p.m., to go
Saddleback, theg reconvene the night
afterwards and finish up our business,''
said Trustee Chairman Bob Hurst.
The board also agreed Monday to
ask other school distrlds in the com·
munity college area to join the fray.
een
PreliminarYi
Costs Eyed
For Laguna
By PATRICK BOYLE
01 1111 D1H1 1"1111 Slt ll
Teacher salaries, facility maintenance
and the purchase of new equipment
next school year could put the Laguna
Beach _Unified School District more than
$400,000 in debt, pre.limh1ary budget fig·
ures reveal.
The $457,<XX> deficit reflected in the
income-expense. estimates stems primarl·
ly from increased teacher salaries,
district business superintendent Charles
Hess said in releasing the figures.
Asked for his reaction to t b e
preliminary budget, school board presi4
dent William Thomas termed the
estimates "very realistic" but added
that trustees may sUU be able to slasb
a few expenses.
Thoma s did note lhat trustees may
have to wresile with the deficit wilhou.t
voting to increase income by raising
property taxes. He said the proposed
school tax override election. necessary
for a significant increase in property
taxes, probably would not be held in 1February as originally planned.
l11diuns' Role Explained
"With the city planning a sewer bond
election,'' 'Thomas noted, ••jf we held
a tax override election at the same
time, the voters would send them both
right down the drain." He did not say
when it might be held. Janice Turnbull of Laguna Beach explains Indian
culture to kindergarten students of EI Morro School.
The youngsters are learning the origin of Thanks·
giving and the Indians' part in it along.with the his·
tory of the American Indians. Mrs. Turnbull, 'vho
has a daughter in the class, lived on an Indian res·
ervation for a year and volunteered to work with
the youngsters.
Dr. Hess said that while district income
in 1972-73 would remain relatively stable,
expenses could increase by about
$400,000.
Architecture Review Eyed
or this amount, teacher salary in-
creates could cost $55,000 lot regular
increment raises, $125,000 for a five
precent pay hike and $128,000 to achieve
the school board's goal of having a
24-1 student/teacher ratio at the elemen-
tary schools.
Board president Thomas said he would
be wary about cutting the ratio expense
without further study. Laguna P la11 1iers Have Li ttle Com1n ent on R equest "Ideally, we would like to have a
low load per teacher." Thomas said,
"but It is also expensive and whether
we can maintain it remains to be seen." By FREDERICK SCHOE~1EH L
Of lltt U1itJ 1"11411 Sllff
A proposal !or an architectural review
committee presented to Laguna Beach
planning commissioners P.ionday night
would turn the review powers over It
the already existing Board of Zoning
Adjustment
The board would be expanded to five
members from the present three. Tu·o
members would have to be from the
professions or architecture or building
design. Other members would be selected
from the community at large.
Commissioners received the plan with
little com ment and will again study
lhe proposal at their Dec. 13 study
session. reported Wayne l\foody, director
of planning and development.
The architectural board, under Moody's
plan. would have "the power to approve.
disapprove or conditionaJIY approve"
Teen Heist Suspects Held
As Car Flip s on Freeway
Three teenage burglary suspects nar·
rowly escaped death early this morning
"'hen their speeding station wagon,
pursued by police. flipped ofr the
Ne wport Freeway, rolled over several
times and caught fire.
Tustin police, who .initiated tbe chase
at the Saddleback Saddlcry, 13922
Newport Boulevard. said one of the
youths was pinned -m the burning
wreckage and was rescued by units from
the Orange and Tustin fire departments.
1'he trio. all boys, ages 15 and 16,
were given emergency treatment at
Chapman General Hospital and transfer-
red to the Orange County A1edical Center
where they are being held for ju\'enl/e
<iUlhorities: Officers said oone of them
was seriously injured.
The chase started when Tustin pollce
were aiertea Dy a silent ·burglar alirm.
Tbty arrived at the saddJery just as
the trio in a 1970 wagon were pulling
away.
The chase followed with five police
------'---'------1unks-lrom-Orange;Sanfl Ana and-'l'ustin-
?>.!ADRID (UPlJ -llealth authorities
~londay estimated that 500,000 of the
more than 3 million persons living In
~J{ldrid are suf~rlng from the nu. Health
authorities said the epidemic was a v~ry
mild one .
' .)
jolnlng In.
The three boys, all from Orange, sped
oo to the Sant.a Ana Freeway, north
to the Newport Freeway and north on
th at thoroughfare to the Chapman
Avenue East offramp in Ol'ange.
plans for all structures to be built In
Laguna, except for single family dwell·
jngs in the R·l (single family) zone.
The review board would evaluate the
project based on the following criteria:
-Continuity with the village at-
mosphere of Laguna. •
-Continuity with surrounding struc-
tures in the neighborhood.
-Enhan«ment of property value of
the city and the s ur roun d in g
neighborhood.
-Continuity with the natural featuus
of the site with emphasis on site im·
provement.
-Reduction or visual, psychological
and social stress. The proposal asks
that "conflicts between vehicles and
pedestrians be mlnimiud" and "garish
and conflicting r~_Hillonshlps" be aVoided,
Specific standards pertaining to screen•
Ing, lighUng, enclosure of mechanical
equipment and ductwork and landscaping
would also be under the jurisdiction
of the architectural review board.
Dr. Hess said other major expenses
in the coming school year might be
$122,000 for equipment purchase and
building improvement and $27,000 to hire
additional custodians and gardeners for
the schools.
He said the capital outlay for equip-
ment and grounds Improvement renects
the district's desire to replace worn
material •·on a reasonable level." As
ao example, he cited the district's prac·
lice of replacing a few typewriters each
year to insure that they dan't all wear
out at the same time.
District income would actually drop
in the next school year he noted largely
because of the Joss o( $105,000 in federal
funds. He estimated that .an increase
in property tax income due to increased
assessed valuation would amount to only
about $55,000.
"These are all just lump 1un1
amounts," he noted. ''They are not exact
and are not intended to be exact."
l\foody noted that the Board of Zoning
Adjustments bas been consulted on tak·
ing over the artbitectural review and Boy Who Shot Self
that is not too happy with the idea.
"Fw. the present time , I'm oot going In 'Game' Recovers to Me any cbanges1 '' Moody said this
morning. "U we Und there is too much LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A l&.-year-old
ol • load on tho Board ol Zoning Ad-boy who shot himself Um>dgh the head
juslment.s, we can also set up a eeparate whtle playing Riwian roulette will pro.
architectural committee. bably recover, doctors said today. Aaron
"lt would be easier to do It that Wiggens took the revolver from his
way lhan to try and compress two poeket 83 they walked home from the
boardJ into ooe,~he adl~':-.,---07-,.---mo\lies Sunday night, said ~two com~·~--1
During !ht meeting. Moody pointed !>'•ions, a boy and a girl.
out that the architectural board would He spun the cylinder several times
probably have to review 70 plans a an dpulled the trig'gcr wUh the barTel
year -based on past experlen~. ''It's at his head, escapfng unharmed u..cb:
really not that much of a load," Moody time, until the -pistol finally fired, the
commented. / companions told poUce.
.! ' •·
'
Z DAILY ~IL01 iuesdty, Navembt, 21, !9?1
D0tv11 tlic
Mission
Trail
Aegean Hills
Party SJrted
MISSION VJF..JO -Tht! Aegean Hil l"
Homeowners Association will holrt a prt·
hol!da y cocktail party, buffet and dance
on Friday, Dec. l at the Montenoso
Recreation Center in Mission Virjo.
Horneowntrl and their guest:-; will
galhtr from 8~30 p.m, to 1:30 a.m.
Music will be provided by Hayden
Causey, formerly Yiith the Harry James
band.
Tickets. are $5 ~r person. They may
be purchased from assoct ilion represen·
latives or by calling Dorothy Fiarro.
837·9493. ,4
o,ne Erom Count11
2 Widows Claim
Bigamist's Loot
From Wire Services
Arguments resumed today o v e r
dlvisioo of the $1 million t:slate of An
international merchant-shipper who Jed
a bizarre two lives with two wives who
shared him unaware for 26 ye ars.
Jufln Vargas insisted un a rigid
timetable in his se parate Santa Ana
ind Torrance households, right to supper
at 6 p.m. with all the famil y present.
Death defied Juan Vargas' strict
schedule .
He was killed in a car aceident two
years ago -leav ing no will, despite
his meticulous business methods -and
the echoing.crash shattered tw'o homes
in its protracted aftermath.
Testimony unfolding at a probate hea r-
ing ln Los Angeles County Superior Cou rt
S2.000 per month in living expenses from
thl'. inlernAtional merchant's contested
estate , but claims all con1munity pro-
perty.
Attorney Ervln Roder argued befort
Superior Court Judge Robert Kenny that
Vargas' second wife and children living
in S<1nta Ana qualify for compensation
too. -
"Court precedent gives a woman the
right to compensation When sh• is decei v-
ed into entering an invalid m1rriaie,"
Rod.er ,;aid.
e Remedial Reading Monday porLrayed Vargas as a husbAnd
Skyscrapers
Referendum
Bid Rejected MISSION VIEJO -The English and father with a blueprint for daily
department at Los All sos 1ntermeCliate life but no plao ror eventua l death.
School ha s developed a remedial reading He left a total of Sl,06.1,165.
program for youngsters unable to keep M'!d ed v 65 r T d Newport Beach councilmen refused lo
sched ule a referendum on skyscrapers
after meeting with high rise foes t.1onday
artern oon. but later tried a mor~ con-
ciliatory tack In the fa ce of threats
that the group would force an election
by !he in itiative proce11s.
up with the regular English courses . ! . r Arga s, , o orrance: we
because of a reading deficiency. him 1n 1929 and bore three children
The program, developed by reading now aged 38 to 40, hence the hearing
teacher Mar sha. Daerr, accepts students ls lo Lo.s Angel es.
referred to the special cla ss by the Josephine Va rga s. 54. or 6411 Lin-
gchool English teacher. The students re.. denhurst Ave., Santa Ana , wed him in
main in Mrs. Daerr's class until they 1945 and bore four child ren, now 21
can read well enough to function satisfac-to :!6 and so mntends they z.re entitled The council heard pleas from Newport
Residenls United (NRU) that residenL~
be allowed "lo set the goals" for lhf'
new master plan by voting on some
kind o( a tall building ballot quest ion.
torily in a standard English course. to a share of the estate. Mildred Vargas was initially granted e Counseling Program
f.flS.SION VIEJO -Los A \ Is -0 s
Intermediate School has initiated a new
counseling program.
The school, which shares the La Pa:r.
1ntermediate School c::1mpus in Mission
Viejo in. the afternoon, has begun the pro-
gram so that each student can meet with
a counselor during the school year and
more often if needed.
The principal, Pat Bushntan. has made
the counseling service possible by replac-
ing one of the assistant principal posi-
tions at the school with one full lime and
ane ha!f ·ttme C<lunse\or.
He hopes to expand the proJtram next
year to two full time counselors.
e Sort Your Glass
EL TORO -The glass reclamation
depot sponsored by Parklane Residential
School has been moved.
Donations of glass and aluminum cans
may still be brought to the depot which Is
now located behind the.school at 234.U El
Toro Road.
Spokesmen for the reclamation center
have asked that all caps be removed and
that glass be sorted into clear, brown and
1reen group.Ii.
The center was formerly located in the
Torrocenter shopping area.
Trot Winner
At El Morro
To Get 1'urkey
The third an nual El ~1orro Turkey
Trot gets unde r way at I :30 p.m.
Wednesday at Laguna's El ti.1orro
Elementary School.
Recalling pioneer days when boys
would race through woods and streams
in pursuit of a wild turkey for Thanksgiv-
ing dinner. fourth, fiflh and sixth grade
boys will run a 500-yard obstacle course,
complete with simulated Jogs, streams
and fallen trees.
The boy with the fastest rlocke d lime
1'.•i\I take home the 1urkcv -a fro7,en
one, courtesy of thr PTA. which alsn
will provide trophies for grAde level
winners and certificates for contest.Ants
"''ho finish the race.
OllAN•l COAST
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Robert Arion,
Vietnall! Vet,
Services Slated
Funeral services wilt be held in LAguna
Beach Wednesday for Robert Arion. 25,
Vietnam veteran who died in his sleep
Friday night at the home of his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. James Arion , 1445 Temple
Hills Drive.
Drafted shortly after his graduatio n
from Northwestern University , the young
soldier suffered a spinal wound in Viet-
nam that left him a paraplegic. After
a long period as a patient in the Long
Beach Veterans Hospftal, he returned
to his parents' home about six months
ago.
In addition lo his parents, he is surviv-
ed by a sister, Barbara Arion of Laguna
Beach ; grandfather, John S. Arion :
grandmother. Mn1: L. D. Darby and
great aunt, Sue Barrett, all of Grand
Rapids, Mich.
The Rev. Bruce Cushing of Laguna
Beach First Christian Church wlll of-
fici ate at the Wednesda y services at
11 a.m. In the chapel of Sherrer Laguna
Beach Mortuary. Burlal will be at Pacific
View Memorial Park.
T,aguna Showing
To Note Works
Of Cartoonists
Original works by 77 ntwspa per and
magazine carloonists will be tealured
in "The Cartoon Show." a speci al LagunA
Beach Art C.allery presentation hnnoring
!ht 75lh anniversary of the birth of
the comics in America.
More th an 90 example.~ or the cartoon
art "-'ill be included in 1he show which
open~ al the Cliff Drive gallery Saturday
and will run through Dee. 31.
LocAI carlooni~ts Frank <111d Phi l
lnterlandi , Virgil Partch, Rog , r
Armstrong and Ed Nofziger Are among
many OrAn~e County artists represented
in the show, along with East coast
artists.
An original color page of the legendary
Kraz y Kat by the late George Herriman,
considered by some the world's greatest
cartoonist. "-'ill lit on display, along wit h
a Sunday paJtl' on Buster Brnwn. cre11 ted
by R. F. Outc11ult. who originated !he
ne\\'Spaper eomic cartoon "''ilh his Yellow
Kid In February, 1896.
Coi.!ncilman Carl Kymla, who earlier
In the day had in effect told the NRU
If it wants a citywide vote to go collect
signatures on an initiative petition, Mond-
da y night said he and ·other councilmen
will meet with spokesmen of the group
and com~ back next month "with specific
recommendations.''
Kymla and Councilman Do n Mcinnis
sAid one possibility wou ld be the forma -
tion of a citizens' committee to help
guide preparation of the new general
plan of development.
Mayor Ed Hirth made It plain he
didn 't think. ar10ther commltte Is
necessary, however.
He said the profes.!ional planners are
well aware of what the citizens want
and said, "This is what you are going
lo get.
•·trust us," he said. ''have patience,
find out this Is what you are going
to get."
Myers Resigns
As Seal Beach
City Manager
Robert Myers. city manager nf Seal
Beach for only 10 months, resigned from
his job early this morning.
The resignation, made public arter a
leng thy and believed stormy exttut!ve
session was accepted by councilmen on
a :I lo I vote and I absletition .
fo.1yers who look the $1 ,500 11 month
Seal Beach post last Jan. 2S cited "a
significant change" in his employment
relationship as the basis for vacaling
hls office.
Although the resignation w1s im-
mediate, Myers will sta y no as a con-
sultant for about two months. Councilmen
rneanwhile have appointed Assistant City
l\1anager Dennis Courtemarche to serve
as acti ng city manage r.
It appears today that Courlemarche
is li kely to be tabbed as permanent
city manager after a probationary
period. Th i~ morning he w11s in a staff
meellng 'll'ith Mayor Harold K. Holden
And M.vers to discuss the chan geover.
1'he council was di vided on accepting
the resig nation. Counc ilmen Fr11nklln
Sales, Thomas Blackman and Holden
vote d for the measure. Councllman
Ed"·ard Smith decided agafnst . lhe Coun-
cilman Thomas Barnes abstained.
A second resolution to JI p p o i n t
Courlemarche as acting city manager
"'·as approved by a 4 lo 0 vote with
~milh abstaining.
Ge11eral Telepl1011e's Bid
To Raise Rates Approved
LOS ANGELES /U PI ! -Genera l
Telephone w11.~ given permi.,sion IO(IAy
b.~· the California Public Utilities Com.
mission to boos! Its rates by a tot11I
or $16.8 million.
increase for one-party-business servlcri
Is up from SI0.60 lo 112.60.
In the Northern California communities
of Courtland, Isleton and Walnut Crove,
the. one-party residential r1lt was
boosted from $4.25 to "·95 and the
The increa~e. a PUC spokesn111n s11\d, bu~lness rate from $11.80 lo 113.20.
\\'Ould mean a 95-ce.nl 11 month hike In granting the lnc:rtast, the PUC
In the bill of the aver11ge householder sa\d :
and 12 a monlh on buslneu pho11ts ~efl as had a history of ren-
in the metropolitan 11rea. derlng I uate s' r v Ice and
The ~pokesman said the lncrt11se "i~ · action with General 's service by
eon~istent wtth the ftdefa l 1government ·5 som1 ~ub$Crlbers. especially those with
rconomir st11bili1.t1lio n program." 11ta\ly usagt'. ,;till exists."
General servr~~ nearly 2 S mill ion Strvlce has improved O\•er lhe p11st
cu~om~-fn~ tlllc!i: tn 16 C:71Ul'ltlts ~everarye~rs.-the commiisio1i s1Jd.
The inerrilst3 which go into tUcct The rJ1te Increase rollowed 43 d-.y11
In 20 d11ys ~·111 give the ('(lmp11ny an of lu~aring!\. c;eneral submitted a budgel
ft.3 percent return on I~ lnl'e~lmPnt fnr ralt-making purposes and the com·
In comparison with lhe current return mis~lon cut sevtrlll lttms from tt in·
of 6,61 pe_rctnt. eluding $4M,OOO toward l.elevislon 11d·
The bask• rllll" for nne-parly rcsidt111lal vtrlising which, it said, "was dlrtt:led
~tT\'i('e$. in mctropolf11n l.ns Ang~lc~ prlnclpa lLv Inward Improving the com·
goes from J.t .811 lo S5 75 a month. Thr Jlany imll{lt'."
' . I
-
Laguna's Ftature
Planners Amend
Land Use Plan
CIAllY ,.ILOT Siii! i-11t11
f'lrsf J,ove
Tracy Madden, 5, a kinder-
gartener at Irvine Elementary
School. C'Uddles up to "Ger-
aldine," a papie r ma<'he giraffe
bu ilt by seventh and eighth
grade art students at the
school. Geraldine is one of sev-
era~ jungle animals built by
students, who plan to donate
them to pediatrics ' wards at
hospital s.
Laguna Realtor's
Sign Ripped Out
At His Office
Laguna Beach reattor al'ld high rise
proponent Vem Ta schner was the target
of apparent vandalism early Monday
when an Identification sign outside his
office was ripped from Its mou ntings.
Police said the ,;ign, which simply
said "Vern Taschner," had been bolted
to the concrete block wall at 828 S.
Coast Highway. Vandals removed the
bolt atld one end and jerked the sign
from its other mounting, investigatprs
,;aid.
The eight-Inch by four·foot wooden sign
was valued at $25.
Taschner . who publicly opposed the
successful Aug. 3 inilialive election ban-
ning high rise. has continued his op-
position by filing legal suits to have
the election results voided.
'E11d of World'
Prophets Hit
CLEV£LAND (UPI ! -Prnphets nf
ecoloRical doom 11·ere taken to ta s k
Jl.fonday by a pro.minent research scien-
tist , who said man cannot seriously
deplete the supply of oxyg en in the
air and detergent phosphates have litt le
10 do with the deterioration of Lake
Eric.
"I'm sil'k and tired of hearing lhe
pronouncements of the misinformed <1nd
the uninformed arch·druids who talk
shrilly about the end of the world.''
said Dr. A. L. Hones , vice president
of !he Tuberculo~is And Respiratory
Disea~e AssociAlion of Clevela nd .
Laguna Beach planning commissioners
Monday ag11!n tackled the land use ele-
ment or the jeneral plarJ and made
several changes regarding the future
m11keup of the city.
Among the points that will be stres,;ed
In the land use element are:
-Develop zoning standards to keep
the maximum population of the city
to approximately 20,000 persons by 1990,
-Seek planned residential de velop-
ments. (PRO) for hillside slopes, as op-
posed to higher density developments.
-Include-a statement recommending
against rezoning land for higher dens.ity
uses.
-Review the land use element annually
to keep up wlth change& In the com-
munity.
-Inclu de the 36-foot height limll.
The revised element will now be
, redrarted and presented before the com·
mission for publlc hearing at its Dec.
6 meeting.
During the discussio n. commissioner
John McDowell asked If the word "will''
or "shall'' should be used in describing
the future policies for the city.
\Yayne Moody, director of planning
and development, said "shall" is usually
used in planning matters. Commissioner
Roger Lanphear said tha t Jn terms of
the n1aximum population, the word
•·will'' should be used.
Joh n Elden of 49.f Hilledge Drive charg·
crl the commission may "He the hands
of future plann ing commissions. You can
not tell what wi)l happen in the future."
McDowell noted that the land use ele-
State Reports
Pacific Coast
Freeway Stall
Construction of th c controversial
Pacific Coast Freeway has been delayed
indefinitely, according to the Californi a
Div ision or Highways' mid·year 1971
report.
In a brief summary or freeway activity
In Orange County, the official report
says the slale highway commission has
adopted the route or the Coast Freeway,
"However, current discussions regarding
alig nment wit h several coastal com-
munities may dtlay CQnstruction for an
indefinite period.,,-'
The report does not explain whether
the freeway may bt: abandoned entirely,
!!hifted in cert11in sections, or eventually
built as planned.
Newport Beach residents have raised
the biggest objections . Jo the freeway
and that ci ty has officially asked that
the freeway not be built through Newport
Beach.
Other objections to the freewa y ha ve
been ra ised in Seal Beach and some
areas south of Laguna Beach.
The only coastal city still strongly
supporting construction of the freeway
is Huntington Beach.
The mid-year report dedicat ed only
two paragraphs to the Coast Freeway
And except ror Admitting th at the con-
troversies have delayed its construction ,
gave no furthe r clarHication of the
fr eeway's future.
Nixons Get Turkey
WASHINGTON CUP!) -First lAdv
Pat Nixon was to accept a 35-pound
Califnrnia white ti road-hr ea !I le d
Thank sgiving turkey at the White House
today in a. ceremonial chore tradi·
Uonally reserved ror presidents.
PASSWORD ---
A good word passed around about •
business is invaluable. A bed word c.an be
unfortunate.
ment would be reviewed every year,
thus future planning com1nissions would
be able to make changes.
At the conclusion of their discussion,
commissioners agreed that o t h et
elements in the general plan wo\Jld pro•
bably move more rapidly than the land
Uje portion. ··
!·This lays the groundw ork for the
other elements," colnmented chairmAn
Carl Johnson. They include traffic
circulation , open space, utilities, etc.
Tpstin Pupils
• •
Exceed . State.
Reading Norm
By GEORGE LEIDAL
01 lh• O•Uy l'Hctl 51111
Students in the ·Tustin' Union High
School District taking the 1969-70
statewide achievement tests scored
better than 96 per~nt of the other
districts in California In reading.
Jack E. Schumaker, a s soc i at t
,;uperintendent for personnel and spcciAI
services, detailed the test results at
Monday's board of education meeting.
The Tustin district high school student s
did equally well in other areas,
Schumaker sa id.
The average districtwide score ('()m -
pared to other districts in the &late
follows:
-Language -Tustin students scor~
belter than 95 percen t of the districts
in California.
. --Spelling -the district scored be!ler
than 97 percent or the dist ricts taking
the same test.
-ti.1athematics -the district's avcrAge
score was higher than average scn rPs
of 96 percent of the districts taking
the test.
Schumaker noted the scores were more
impressive when considered with the
fAct that the Tustin district tax rate
is higher than only 30 percent of the
districts in California. and below the
average tax rate in California.
On the other hand. Tustin High district
Is "wealthier'' than 77 percent of the
districts, Schumaker pointed out.
It has relatively few minority students
-more tha n only 25 percent of the
di stricts. Further, the district's index
of poverty level fam ilies puts the Tustin
di strict Shead of only 14' percent of
the districts. That means 86 perceht
of the districts have more poor families
lhan Tustin does.
Pupils in the district tend to stick
around lorlger as evidenced by lhe pupil
mobility index placing the district ahead
of only 21 percent of other districts.
Conversely, 79 percent of the districts
ha ve a higher rate or pupil tur nover.
Schumaker pointed out tha l the Tu5Un
district students should perform well
on the statewide tests since the average
•·scholastic ability" score -IQ -for
the district places Tustin students ahead
of 96 percent or the students from other
districts in California.
"We serve a more stable. wealtl1y
C<lmmunity in relation to other districts,''
he no ted .
Yet, the 196~70 school yea r te st scores
in all four areas were heller than the
State Depa rtment of Education had
predicted tak ing wealth, turnover and
other factors into account
A comparison of actual with pred icted
scores showed significantly higher scores
than were expected .
TeAcher salaries. paid during the 196§..
70 school y~ar, were higher than R.1
percent of the districts in the state,
Schumaker said .
Our growing success in the pest I ~ years
has been due to the "good words'' and
referrals sen t to us by our customers . ALDEN'S
No amount of adver+isin 9 can replace a
ptr'°nal rec om men dation.
We art not infallible , but we 1r1 wor~in9
towards that go•I by giving our cu1tom1rs the
bost service a·nd qllality possible.
CARPETS • DRAPES
1663 Plac,enria Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS : Moo. ll1rw Tltun., I le 5:10 -l'rl .. I to I -Sat., l :lO 10 s
\ \
•
San C e111enie
Capistrano
,. (j *
Today's· Flaal
N.Y • .ltoeks
• :. VOL 64, NO, 280, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGfS ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, ·1971' TEN CENTS
0
Senate Unit Endorses Powell, Rehnquist
WASHINGTON (UPI! -Lewis f".
Poy,•ell and William II. Rehnquist were
endorsed today by the Senate Judiciary
Committee for confirmatkln as Supreme
Court justices -PoY.'ell unanimously
and Rehnquist by a 12-4 vote.
Opponents or Rehnquist, 47. an assis-
tant attorney general, vowed they would
continue to fight his appointment to
the Senate fllor. The M-year-o1d Powell,
a Richmond attorney and a former presi·
dent of the American B~r Association,
is expected to have clear sailing.
Voting against confirmation of Rehn-
Wife Attacked
On Golf Li1iks
A 2~year-old San Clemente
housewife was raped at knife.point
by a burly assailant at the
municipal golf course ~Ionday
night.
Police said the attack took place
at about 9 p.m. as the "'oman
\\as "'alk ing home from a South
El Camino Real restaurant.
The attacker crept up behind
his victim and pressed a k n i re
to her-throat and forced her to
walk to the area of tbe lath tee.
After the offense, officers said,
lbc attacker told htt ·not to turn
around. 'He tben Oed.
The \·ictim moments later sto~
ped a passing motorist to report
the incident.
Police said the rapist is a male
Caucasian standing about !JVe-feet-
eight and weighing about 230
pounds.
Secmity, Creclit
To Be Discussed
.i\t SEBA Meeting
?i.lembers of the South El Camino
Business Association (SEBA) and other
i.11.terested citizens will hear a local detec-
tive explain business security against
crime at a meeting Dec. 7, at th e
San Clemente lnn. ~
The program presented by Detectiv~
Lt. Clifford Gates \Viii include methods
for · merchants " to avoid shoplifting,
pilferage and burglaries. especially dur-
ing the busy holiday season.
Other items during the meeting will
include a talk by St~wart ti.1ortensen,
a representative o( the San Clemente
Credit Bureau. "'ho will present ne\V
ideas :i nd problem!! in extending credit
•nd collecting unpaid bills.
One othe r !legmnt o1 the meeti ng will
include a presentatloo by architect Leon
J~yzen ~·ho is chairman or the chamber
of comn1erce ecology committee. Hyzen
will gi\'e details for next year's monthly
awards to businessmen who best improve
the appearance of their buildings. The
meeting will begin at 7:30 p.m.
Oraage Coast
Weather
quist in the comm ittee were Sens. Birch
Bayh (0-lnd.l, Ed\\·ard til. Kennedy (D-
Mass .1, Philip A. Hart (0-Mich. ), and
John V. Tunney (0-Calif.).
President Nixon announced the selec·
lion or Powell and Rehnquist on Oct.
21 to succeed two longtime associate
justices, Hu go L. Black and John t.1.
Harlan. \\'ho retired within a week of
each other in September because of
ill health. Black died eight days after
his retirement.
Adm inistration leaders exprtssed con·
fldence that both Rehnquist and Powell
"·ould be confirn1ed -probably early
next mont h -to bring the shorthanded
Supreme Court back 4o it s run nine-man
strength.
Foes of Rehnquist said they "'ere still
unsatisfied with his \\'ritten responses
last \.\1eekend to questions about his past
actions, particularly in the civil right.s
field, and would continue to press their
case on the floor.
They particularly were critical or
Rehnquist's attitude. while practicing law
in Phoen ix, toward \o\vering barriers
Three Youths
Escape Death
As Car Flips
Three tee11age burglary suspects nar-
rowly escaPed deaU1 early this morn ing
when their speedin~ station wagon,
pursued by poli ce, flipped otr !he
Newport F'reeway. rolled over several
times and caught firt.
Tustin police. who initiated the chase
at the Saddleback Saddlery, 139'n
Newport Boulevard. said one of the
y o u l h s was pinnt'd in t h e burning
v.•reckage and was rescued by units from
lhe Orange and Tustin fi re departments.
The trio. all boys, ages IS and 16,"-
\Vere given emergency trea'tment at
Chapman General Hospital and transfer-
red to the Orange Counl y Medical Center
where they are being held for ju\•enile
authorities. Officers said none of them
v.•as seriously injured.
The chase started v.•hen Tustin police
were alerted by a silent burglar alarm.
They arrived at the saddlery just as
the lrio in a 1970 "'agon were pulling
a"·ay.
The chase follO\\'ed \\'ith five police
units from Oran ge, Sant.a Ana and Tustin
joining in.
The three boys, all from Orange, sped
on to the Santa Ana Freey,·ay, north
to the Newport Freeway and north on
that thoroughfare lo the Chapman
Avenue East offramp in Orange.
to voting and public accommodation by
Negroes. ·
Some Negro leaders, i n c I u d l n g
members of the Black Caucus in the
l!ouse, had also called for rejection of
Powell but Bayh and other leading foes
of Rehnquist made clear early in the
hearings they would not oppose Powell .
No Seniors
To Attend
Dana Hills
Dana Hills High School will open late
next year with no senior class, but
nonetheless with a pupil population of
abo~ J.100 students who live in the
area served by Richard Henry Dana
Elementary School .
That was the plan hammered our by
Capistrano Unihed School Di s t r i c t
Trustees A1onday -a patchwork brought
on by unforeseen dela ys in completion
or the di strict's new high school.
Ir the school were to open on schedule
at the start of the 'school year hf!xt
fall, trustees agreed, Meoding a Mnior
class i.nto the popula.tiGa would have
been simple.
But because of the £elays, llavine
seniors attending at the midyear opening
of the Dana Point school would mean
splitting up the San Clemente High School
seniors.
And board membefs and slaft 1greed
such a plan would be wrong.
Dana !!ills Principal Walter J. Spencer
told trustees that the idea o[ keeping
the San Clemente High senior class intact
was also the choice of the students.
themselves, and the majority or their
parents.
Despite the dearth of seniors, however,
the sc hool still \\'ill have a varsity sports
program with members coming from
the other three grade levels.
Earlier ideas to include the eighth
grade classes from Marco Forster Junior
High School into the Dana llills s41dent
body \\•ere also abandonedDy the &oard
Monday.
The idea came as a possi ble !IOlution
to a pressing crush of students at MarcG
Forster, the district's only intermediate
school.
Board members agreed to leave Dana
llills to the rreshmen, so phomores and
juniors, however.
They also began discussion on setling
the scl1edule for planning and con-
11truction or a new intermediate school
in the next few years to ease the pinch
at Marco Forster.
Blttf f Road Protest s Due
Before Clemente Planners
Opposition to the <'Oncept of a scenic
b!u[( road along San Clemente's seashore
\\•ill find its 1vay tu plannini;: con1·
nlissioners Wednesday after being duly
noted recenll.\' by cit y councilmen.
near the new homes. The proposed sign
would advertise the links and would
stand on a pole. It ~·ould be lighted
al night.
-A use permit sought by Bruce Conrad
who hopes to use a building at 613
S. El camino Real for nondenominationa l
religious worship.
a e
Christmas "Lights
VPI T .........
The Christmas season al'l'ives at Chicago's Norlh Michigan Avenue
as the "'Magnificent Mile'' came alive \Yith thousands of sparkling
1niniature lights stretched across trees. The Water Tower. a Chicago
landmark, looms in the foteground.
Trustees 01( Top Number
Of Graduation Requests
A record number of midyear gradua--iT a stuaent has met-all o{ {he Other
lion requests _ 52 _ were approved graduation requirements.
ln the case o( students who are leaving Monday night hy Tus'Lin High School to further their educati on, the district
District trustees. stud ents from Mission requi res a 3.0 or B average for ali
Vi ejo led the district in requests to their coursework. Zogg noted.
graduate early in order to go on to
college.
or t1.t 16 Mission Yiejo students who
will graduate in January, nine are going
on to college, the school board was
told Fou~ early graduation requests were
granted for "hardship" reasons and three
i;tudents will leave to take jobs.
At Univers ity lrigh School -which
will graduate its first senior class this
coming June, there were nine midyear
diploma requests. Four students will
begin cullege after January and five
were granted midyear diplomas Ior
reasons or hardship.
Districtwide, the figures showed 11
grads are leaving early to take jobs,
19 are· going on to college and 23 have
family difficult ies necessitating early
graduation.
The Tuslin lllgh district maintains a
strict policy on midyear graduation,
Superin!~ndent Wiiiiam Zogg noted.
·The exception to the district's eight·
semester study program is granted only
Lecture Se ries
Made Available
B y Phil Grignon
South Coas l area community groups
interested in hearing slide lectures on
various aspects of lhe sea ca n contact
Phil Grignon at San Clemente High "
School to make necessary arrangements.
Grignon, chainnan o{ the school's
science department , developed the high
school's successful marine biology pro--
gram.
lie also has developed a series 0£
lectures covering these topi cs :
ac
Board Set
Fo1· ,Meet
At College
By JOHN VALTERZA
01 fhl D .. lr Plllt Stiff
Trustees of the Capistrano Unified
School District -charging they are
being snubbed -ha ve mapped plans
to cut short their meeting of Dec. 13
and appear en masse before Saddlebac'k
College's OOard and fight for the election
or college trustees from separate
districts.
That unusual visit was mapped out
1.1onday by the Capistrano board claim·
ing that Saddleback has ignored them
and given Capistrano "not even the
semblance of courtesy or recognition."
The Capistrano trustees also have a
regular meeting set for Dec. 13, but
they agreed they might knock off early
or start late to allow for attendance
at Saddleback.
The springboard for the unusual plan
ts the asserted failure of Saddleback
to answer a leUer Capistrano Unified
sent six months ago.
Jn that message the Capistrano Board
urged the college trustees to set up
specific districts. not elect the ir board
members at large as is now done.
"All tbey sent back was a bunch
o[ charts," said Capistrano Truatee Bob
Dahlberg, "and l couldn't understand them."
It was he who launched thl attack
~1onday by the school board.
'"We should resent the dictatorjal point
ol view by that board and their method
of d~te.rmining what tbe community
desire is. I do not feel we have been
given the proper semblance of courtesy
and recogniLion," he said.
Dahlberg, former superintendent ol
Tustin Union High School District . added
that six months •·was a Jong time to
sit on something.
FeUow trustee Fred Newhart stressed
that because Capistrano Unified has
seven trustees elected in separate
districts, the board 's coun sel should be
recognized.
"We work well under the system and
we might be the only school district
in the county that does. It works very
well and never have I seen any example
of selfishness by any one trustee on
this board. Ir Saddleback were to operate
the same wy ,_people would be much
,closer to the saadleback District,'' he
said.
Dahlberg added that he has never
thought "on a parochial approach" sim~
ly becau se he was elected from one
specific district.
"The entire matter at Saddleback is
a politically oriented oi;>eration." be ad4
ded ... We will not be intimidated, even
though that s e e m s to be the effort
there."
Dahlberg stressed he had a· "personal
Interest" in the issue ove.c: Saddleback
trustee districts, because of his long
tenure as a school admln islratQr .... i(I
Tustin -a post which he left in recent
years to enter private business in Dana
Point.
The strategy by the capistrano Board
at this point, is to declare a recess
at the Dec. 13 meeting, attend Sad4
dleback to be heard, then return to
the board meeting later in the night.
''If we don't decide on !hat. then we
could adjourn at about 9 p.m., to go
Saddleback. then reconvene the night
a.!terwards and finish up our business,''
said Trustee Chairman Bob llurst.
Love Stronger
Than Injury \Vinl.er weather has deflnitel y
blown in as the mercury will be
dipping to lows of :n on the coast
and 47 inland . lllghs will be 63
and 70 re.spletlvely. Early morn-
ing fog \\'Ill clear lo ha zy s1u1 to-
day and \\'edne!iday.
INS IDE TODA l '
A letler by San Clemente physician
Dr. Ed \.\'ard \Vestphal is scheduled for
con1mission action. The communication
strongly protests lhc use of the coastline
for a scenic roadl''ay.
Commissioners have been asked to
study the road idea calculated by the
eily staff to cost about $2.4 nJillion.
i1le project has not been approved
eiHier by council or commission.
Councilmen las1 month heard the initial
star( reports-that such a ro11d "·ould
be feasible, but expensive.
Diversifi~ation Set
Utility Allots $20.7 Million
·•or Whale and Ma n," "Between the
Tides of Soulhern Cnlifornla," "Volcanic
Jsland Formation and Coral Ree(
Growth ,'' "Ecology of Ute Open Reef,"
''Seas and Beaches of Baja,'"·"Hawailan
-Past and Present," "Waves, beaches
and Harbors" and "The Candian Rockies,
a Sea UPiifted."
Scheduling of the lectures is available
by reaching Grignon at the • high school,
492-4165.
Nixon Names Curtis
To New Rent Board
MADERA (UPI) -Broken bones
and bruises are no obstacle for
a couple in love.
'l'hus George Gilreath of Fresno,
confined to a wheelcha ir with a
broken ann and leg, ro lled up
to the hospital bed of Barbara
Alex of Chowchilla this weekend
to take their marriage voews. "l guess tee all feel Iha' an11·
o11c of !lS' co1dd be in ilie Sllmte
µosi tio11,·• 1aus a spokesman for
a. group of airli'M piloti' wives
Riding rhe couse of the PO\V1
and f,f/As. Stt Pa.Qt 9.
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Since then conunlssloners ha\'c also
taken up study ot the matter.
Other items on the commission's light
holiday week agenda include :
-Final resolution or the latter half
or a two-part request from the Rich-
-Land Developinefnt. Cornpan}I-whi ch is
building 15 house~ In the Shorecllrfs
area. The flrm won approval two weeks
3go for a billboard announcing the sale
or homes. but commissioners del9y<'d
action on a huge banner along lhc lace
of a slope unlil this WCC'k's mCC'tinc.
-An&!her sign request, thi s one (ro1n
the owners of Shqrecliffs Golf course
Low-sulphur oil , undergrouod utilities
and research into other fJ~ related
to the .environment will cosC:.6an Diego
Gas and Electric Company •. 7 million
next year, aides said today.
The bulk of the expenses will be the
finn's allocation of $10 million for the
undergroundlng of-utiUty1iner.The1un~s
ere parcele<I out to local goverM1 e.nt
on a formula basis, then usecf prlmarlly
ror assisting itnprovement di rlcta.
Other ilems in· the t'll onmental
budget, utility spokesman said1~ncludc.:.
-$45,000 toward research and develop-
ment to achieve better~appeadng utility
lines.
\' ' I
-$383,~ for studies involving thennal ·
dLschalges, mirine 'environ m.e n t,
meteorology and radiation. All are in
connection wlth nuclear and fQSsll-fucl
powtr plants. . · -rn.ooo ror research Into geothmnal
steam. ·
-~149 ,000 tcr-a-aioperatiVe-program
to dtvelep a liquld·metal, fast-breeder
nuclear renctor.
One other expensive allocatlon will
be the u~e or nearly $1 million to reva mp
the firm's fossil fuel plants to per mit
the use of low-sulphur oil nnd help stem
the flow of smog-producing nitrogen ,()IC•
Ides.
••
WASHINGTON (AP) -Presldenl Nix·
on today named a If.member Rent
Advisory Board, headed by Thomas B.
CUrtls, fonner Republican congressman
£rom--MilJ80Url. to htlp rormulate-regWa--
Uons to control renU.
The board IDCludes five p u b 1 i c
members oC whom chairman Curtis Is
one ; five industry members. and four
consumer members -two of lhtm
women, one representative. of Lalln-
America n c.itlzens, and the fourth , former
goveroor·of Iowa Robert D. Blue.
'l
The newlyweds were hospitalized
here Nov. IO 1rter being Injured
when their car collided with a
semi-truck rig.
"We were supposed to ge.t mar-
ried last week," Gilreath Al.id. "We
u~t·decided'we ougltt"tv·)tr'lhead
and get married."
Justice Court Judge Al ex Brown, '
who performed the ctrtmony,
noted "It's th~ly else I've ever
heard ot. wherl two people were
both patlont 11 In · 1 hospital and
got married ."
j
Do1vn t Jtc
Mission
·Trail
Aegean Hills
Party Slated
MlSSJON _VIEJO -The Aegean 'I-tills
Home<>wners Association will hold a pre-
holiday cocktall party. buffet and dan~e
on Friday, Dec. l at the Montenoso
Recreation Center in Mission Viejo,
Homeowners and their guests will
gather from 8:30 p.m. to J.30 a.m.
~1us1c y.•1U be provided by Hayden
Causey, ronnerly with the Harrx James
band.
Tickets are S5 per person. They may
be purchased from association represen-
tatives or by calling Dorothy Fiarro,
837-9498.
e R e m e dial lh•adi11g
MISSION \111-.:JO -The English
c1epartment at Los Alisos Intermediate
School has developed a rcntcdial reading
pi·ogram for youngsters unable lo keep
up with the regular English courses
because of a reading deficiency.
The program, developed by reading
teacher Marsha Daerr, accepts students
referred to the special class by I.he
school English teacher. The students re-
main in Mrs. Daerr's claSIS until the y
can rP.ad well enough lo function salis!ac·
torily in a standard English course.
e Coiu1Self119 Pragrain
MISSTON VIEJO -Uls A I is o s
Intermediate School has initiated a new
counseling program.
The school, which shares the La Paz
Intermediate School campus in Mission
Viejo in the afternoon, has begun the pro·
gram so that each student can meet with
a counselor during the school year and
more often if needed.
The principal, Pat Bushman, has made
the counseling Service JXlSsible by repla c·
ing one cf the assistant principal posi·
tions at the school with one full time and
cne half time counselor.
He hopes to expand the program next
year ta two run time counselors.
e Sort ¥oar Glass
EL TORO -The glass reclamation
depot sponsored by Parklane Residential
School has been mcved.
Donations of glass and aluminum cans
may still be brough t lo the deJXll wh ich Js
now located behind the school at 23«2 El
Toro Road.
Spokesmen fer the reclamalioo center
have asked that all caps be removed and
that glass be sorted Into clear, brown and
green groups.
11te center was formerl y located in the
Torrocenter shopping area.
Trot Winner
At El Morro
To Get Turkey
The third annual El ~1orro Turkey
Trot gets under way at 1 :30 p_m.
Wednesday at Laguna's El Morro
Elementary School.
Recalling pioneer days when boys
would race through woods and streams
in pursuit of a wild turkey for Thanksgiv-
ing dinner, fourth, fifth and sixth grade
boys will run a 500.yard obstacle course.
complete with simulated logs, streams
and fallen trees.
The boy with the fastest clocked lime
\Viii take home the turkev -a frozen
one, courtesy of the P'T'A. which ·also
wl\I provide !rop_hies for grade level
l''inncrs and certificates for contestants
who finish the race.
OIAHGI COAST
DAILY PILOT
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One From Count11 Laguna's Futur.e
2 Widows Claim Planners Amend
Bigamist's Loot Land Use Plan
From Wlrr: Servlcr:1
Arg11ments resumed today o v t: r
division of thr. $1 n1llllon eslatt of an
international merchant·shipper who led
a biiarrc two lives with two wives 'f''ho
shared him unaware for 26 years.
Juan Vargas insisted on a rigid
timetable in his separate San ta Ana
and Torrance households. right lo supper
at 6 p.m. with al! the family present.
Death defied Juan Vargas ' strict
schedule.
He "Yas killed In a car accident two
years ago -leaving no will. Oespite
his meticulous busjness methods -and
the echoing crash shattered two homes
in its protracted aftermath.
Testimony unfolding at a probate hear·
ing in Los Angeles County Superior Court
!\1onday portrayed Vargas as a husband
and father. with a blueprint for daily
llfe but no plan for eventual death.
He left a total of $1 ,0G.',165.
!\1ildred Vargas, 65, of Torrance, wed
him in 1929 and bore three children
now aged 38 to 40, hence the hearing
is in Los Angeles.
Josephine Vargas , 54, of 6411 Lin·
denhurst Ave., Santa Ana. wed him in
194fl and bore four children, now 21
to 26 and so' contends they ue entitled
to a share of the estate.
Mildred Vargas was initially granted
Robert Arlon,
Vietnam Vet,
Services Slated
Funeral services will be held in Laguna
Beach Wednesday for Robert Arion, 25.
Vietnam veteran who died in his sleep
Friday night at the home of his parenls,
f\-lr. and Mrs. James Arion, 1445 Temple
Hills Drive.
Drafted shortly after his graduation
from Northwestern University, the young
soldier suffered a spinal wound in Viet·
nam that left him a parapleg ic. After
a long period as a patient in the Long
Beach Veterans Hospital. he returned
to his parents' home about six months
ago.
In addition to his parents, he is surviv·
ed by a sister, Barbara Arion of Laguna
BeaCh: grandfather, John S. Arion;
grandmother. Mrs. L. D. Darby and
great aunt , Sue Barrett, all of Grand
Rapids. Mich.
The Rev. Bruce Cushing of Laguna
Beach First Christian Chur cn will of-
ficiate at the V..'ednesdav services at
11 a.m. in the chapel of Shefft'r Laguna
Beach Mortuary. Burial will be at Pacific
View f\1emorial Park.
1,ag una Showing
To Note Works
Of Cartoonists
Orig inal works by 77 newspaper and
magazine cartoonists will be feat ured
in .. The Cartoon Show," a special Laguna
Beach Art Gallery presentation honoring
!hE: 75th anniversarv of the birth of
the comics in An1eriCa.
t.1ore than 90 examples of the ca rtoon
art 11•111 be included in the show wtli ch
opens at the Cliff Drive galler y Saturday
and v.•ill run through D<>c. 31.
Local cartoonists F'rank and Phil
hll erlandl. Virgil Parlch. R o g e r
Armstrong and Ed Nofziger are among
many Orange Cnun!y arlists represented
in the sho"''• along with East coast
artists.
An original color page of the lege ndary
Krazy Kat by the late George Herriman.
considered by some the \\'orld's greatest
cartoonist v.·ill be on display. along witlt
a Sunday page on Buster Brown, created
by R. F. Outcault, who originated the
newspl\per comic cartoon \.\1ith his Yellow
Kid in February, 1896.
$2,000 per month in living espenses from
the international merchant's contested
estate, but claims all community pro-
perty.
Attorney Er\'in Roder argued before
Superior Court J11dge Robert Kenny that
Vargas' second wife and child~en living
in Santa Ana quail!~ for compensation
too.
"Court precedent gives a woman the
right to compensation when she is deceiV·
ed into entering an invalid marriage,"
Roder said.
Skyscrapers
Referendum
Bid Rejected
Newport Beach councilmen refused to
schedule a referendum on skyscrapers
after meeting with high rise foes Monday
afternoon, but later tried a mor ~ con·
clliatory tack In the face of threats
that the group would force an election
by the initiative process.
The council heard pleas £rom Newport
Residents United (NRU) that residents
be' alloWi!d "to set the goals" for the
new master plan by voting on some
kind of ~ tall building ballot question.
Councilman Carl Kymla, who earlier
tn the day had in effect told the NRU
if it wanls a citywide vote to go collect
signatures on an initiative petitioo, Mond·
day night said he and other councilmen
will meet with spokesmen of the group
and come back next month "with specific
recommendations."
Kymla and Councilman Don Mclnni!
sai d one possibillty would be the forma-
tion of a citizens' committee to help
guide preparation of the new general
plan of development.
!\1ayor Ed Hirth made: it plain he
didn't think another commltte I s
neeessary, however .
He said the professional planners are
well aware of what the citizens want
and said, •·This is what you are going
to get.
"Trust us," he said, "have patience.
find out this is what you are going
to get."
f 'irst Love
Tracy Madden, 5, a kinder·
gartener at Irvine Elementary
School, cudd.Jes up to "Ger·
aldine.'' a papier mache giraffe
built by seventh and eighth
grade art students at the
school. Geraldine is one of sev·
era! jungle anim~ls built by
students, who plan to donate
them to pediatrics \vards at
hospitals.
Laguna Realtor's
Sign Ripped Out
At His Office
Lagu na Beach reallor and high rise
proponent Vern Taschner was the ta~get
of apparent vandalism early Monday
when an identification sign outside his
office was ripped from its mountings.
Police said the sign, which simply
said "Vern Taschner," had been bolted
to the concrete block wall at 828 S.
·coast Highway. Vandals removed the
boll and one end and jerked the sign
from its other mounting, investigators
said.
The eight-inch by four·foot wooden sign
was valued al $25.
Taschner. who publicly opposed the
successful Aug. 3 initiative electic.n ban·
ning high rise. has continued his op-
position by filing legal suits to have
the election results voided.
Laguna Beach planning commissioners
~tonday again tackled the. land use ele-
ment of the general plan and made
several changes regarding the future
makeup of the c.ity.
Among the points that will be stressed
in the land use element arl!:
-Develop zoning .standards lo kee p
the maximum JXlpulation of the city
to approximately 20,000 persons by 1990.
-Seek planned residential develop-
ments (PRD f for hillside slopes, as op-
posed lo higher density developments.
-Include a statement rect1mmending
against rezoning land for higher density
uses.
-Revfew the land use element annually
to keep up with changes in the com·
munlty.
-Include the 36-foot height limit.
The revised element will now be
redrafted and presented before the com·
mission for public hearing at ils Dec.
6 meeting.
During the discussi on, commissioner
John McDowell asked if the word "will''
or "shall" should be used in describing
the future policies for the city.
Wa yne Moody, director of planning
and development, said "shall" is usually
used in planning matters. Commissioner
Roger Lanphear said that in terms of
the maximum population, the word
''will"' should be used.
John Elden of 494 Hilledge Drive charg·
ed the commission may "'tie the hands
of future planning commissions. You can
not tell what will happen in the future."
~1cDowe\I noted that the land use ele-
State Reports
Pacific Coast
Freeway Stall
ment would be reviewed every year,
thus future planning commissions would
be able to make changes.
Al the conc lusion of their discussion' . . ' cornm1ss1onors agreed that othe r
elements in the general plan would pr<r
bably move more rapidly than the land
use portion.
"This Jays the groundwork for tha
other elements," commented chairman
Carl Johnson. They Include traffic
circulation, open s~ utilities, etc.
Tustin Pupils
Exceed State
Reading Norm
By GEORGE LEIDAL
01 tht Dlllv ,Hot Sti ll
Students in the Tustin Union High
School District taking the 1969-7(1
statewide achievement tests scored
better than 96 percent of the othe r
districts in California in reading.
JaC'k E. Schumaker. as soc iate
superintendent for personnel and special
services. detailed the test results at
Monday's board of education meeting.
The Tustin district high school st udent!
did equally well in other areas,
Schumaker said.
The average distri ctwide score com·
pared to other districts· in the state
follows:
-Language -Tustin studen ts scored
better than 95 percent of the districts
in California.
-Spelling -the district scored better
than 97 percent of the districts taking
the same test.
-!\1athematlcs -the district's average
score was higher than avera ge scores
of 96 percent of the districts taking
the test.
Construclion of I he controversial Schumaker noted Lhe scores were more
Pacific Coast Free\vay has been delayed impressive when considered v.•ith the
indefinitely. acco rding to lhe California fact that the Tustin district tax rate
Division of Highways' mid-year 1971 is higher than only ·aO..-perccnt of the
report. districts in California, and below the
In a brief summary of freewa y activity average lax rate in California.
in Orange County, the orficial report On the other hand. Tustin High district
sa,.s the state highway commission has is '"wealthier'' than 77 percent of the
adopted the route or the Coast Freeway, districts, Schumaker pointed out.
'"However, current discu~ions regarding It has relatively few minority students
alignment with several coastal com· -more than only 25 percent of the
munities may delay construction for an districts. Further, the di strict's indct
indefinite period." or poverty level families puts ttle Tustin
The report does not explain whether di&trict ahead of only 14. percent or
the freeway mny be abandoned entirely, the districts. That means 86 percen t
shifted in certain sections. or eventually of the dist ricts have more poor families
built as planned. than Tuslin does.
Newport Beach residents have raised Pupils in the district tend to stirk
h b. t b · h r around longer as evidenced by the pupil I e-iggcs 0 jections lo I e reeway mobility index placing the di strict ahead
and that city has officially asked that of only 2l percent of other di strict s.
the freeway not De built through Newport Conversely, 79 \lercenl of the di stricts Beach. Ott.er objections to the freeway have have a higher rate or pupil turnover.
Robert Myers. city manager cf Seal been raised in Seal Beach and some Schumaker pointed nut that -the Tusti n
Beach for only 10 months, resigned from 'End of World' h r B h di strict students should perform V.'ell
Myers Resig1is
As Seal Beach
City Ma1iager
areas soul o Laguna eac . · h his job early this morning. Th 1 1 . . on the statewide tests since I e average f e on y coasta city s11\l strongly ··scholastic ability"' score _ JQ _ for
The resignation. made public a !er a p l H• supporting construction or the freeway the district places Tustin students ahead
lengthy and believed stormy executive rop 1ets It is Huntington Beach. f h session was accepted by councilmen on The mid-year report dedicated only dof 96. per~enct o,rrthe. students rom ot er
a 3 to 1 vote and 1 abstention. istr1cts in a 1 orn1a . CLEVELAND (UPf) -Prophets of two paragraphs le. the Coast Freeway .. We serve a more stable, 11·ealthy
Pi-1yers who took the $1 ,500 a month ecoloi;i:ical doom "·ere taken to task and except for admitting that the con · community in relation to other dis tricts,"
Seal Beach post last Jan. 25 cited ··a Monday by a prominent research scien· troversi es have delayed its construction , he noted.
signi ficant change" in his t!mployment list. "'·ho said man cannot seriously gave no further clarification of the Yet, the 19fr9-70 school year lest scores
relationship as the basis for va cating deplete the su pply of oxygen in the freeway·s future. in a!l four areas were better tflan the
his office. air and detergent phosphates have little State Department of Education had
Although the resignation was im· lo do \.\'ith the dete ric.ratlon of Lake predicted taking wealth. turnover and
mediate, Ptfyers will stay on as a con· Erie. Nixons Get Tut•key other factors into account.
sultant for about two months . Councilmen ··rm sick and tired of hearing the A comparison of actual with predicted
meanwhile have appointed Assistant City pronoun cemen ts of the misinformed and WASHINGTON <UPI ) -First lady scores sho1vcd significantly higher scores
Manager Dennis Courlemarche to serve the uninformed arch-druids \.\'ho talk Pat Nixon was to accept a 35-pound than were expected.
as acting city manager. shrillv about the end of the world." California white l) road · b re as led Teacher salaries, paid dUring the 1969-
lt appears today that Courtemarche said ·or. A. L. Hones, vice president Thanksgiving turkey at the White House 78 school year, wt're higher ttlan 83
is likely to be tabbed as permanent of !he Tuberculosis and Respiratory today in a ceremonial chere tradi-percent of the districts in lhe slate,
city manager after a probationary Disease Association of Cleveland. lionally reserved ror president s. Schumaker said.
period. This morning he was in a staff lr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;-
meeting with Mayor Harold K. Holden
and Myers to discuss the changeover.
The council was divided on accepting
the resignation. Councilmen Franklin
Sales, Thomas Blackman and Holden
voted for the measure. Councilman
Edward Smith decided again!:!, the Coun·
cilman Thomas Barnes abstained .
A second resolution to a p p o i n t
Courtemarche a~ acting city m11nager
was approved by a 4 to 0 vote with
.Sm ith abstaining.
PASSWORD ---
Ge11eral Telephone's Bid
To Rai se Ra~es App1~oved
A goo<:J word passed around about a
business is inv aluable. A bad word can be
unfortunate.
Our growing success in the past I '4 years
has been due to the "good words" ancl • referrals sent to us by our customers. ALDEN'S 1.0S Ar\GEtES !UPI\ -General
Telephone "'"S gi ven ptrmissinn today
b~· the Califor nia Public Utilities Cnm-
1nls.~ion tn boost i1 s rates by a total
of $16.8 mllllon. •
Tht lncrea:se, a PUC spoke~mnn said,
v.ould mean a !15·ctnt a mnnth hike
in the bill of thr ;11erage householder
and $2 a month on business phones
in the metropolitan aren
Tl)(' spoktsman said !he increase •·ts
consistent with lhr federal government's
econ(lmic stabiH?.ation program."
C'renerSll -i;erves nearl\1 » mll\lon
customers In 2.'iO cities in "16 counties
The lncrea~s \\'hlch ito into cffecl
In 20 da )'!I will ~ivt the compAny an
3.3 percent return on its investment
In CC\mparison with !he current return
Qf 6.61 percent.
The basic rate. for one·p1r1v rcsldentit1!
r;ervic12s in 1nelropt)tlt11:n Ln.s Angele!
goes (rom $4 SO lo $5.75 a month. The
increase for one-party business service
Is up from $10.60 to $12.60.
In the Northern Californi11 tflmmunltles
of Courtland, Isleton and Walnut Gro11e.
lhe one-pa rty residential rate was
boosted frorn $4.25 to $5.95 and the
business rate from $11.80 to $13 .20.
In granting the lncrtase, the PUC
.said:
"General has had a history or ren-
dering Inadequate sf: r v Ice ind
dissatisfaction with General's service by
some subscribers. rspeclally those with
heavy us.age. still exisls."
Strvlet has improved aver the past
several years. the commission said.
The rate increase followed 43 day!I
er-hearings. General submitted 1 budae.t
for rate-making purposes and the com·
rn isslon cut several items from it In·
eluding $4$5.000 toward le.levtslon Ad-
vertising \\'hich . It said, "was dlrtttrd
J)rincipally toward Improving the com·
pAny lffiUe." •
\
CARPETS • DRAPES
personal recommendation.
No amount of advertisin g can replace 1
•
We are not infallible, but we are working
towards that goal by giving our customers the
best service and quality possible.
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS: Mon. lttru l'llm., 9 lo l :JO -Fri., 9 to 9 -Set., 9:30 to 1
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. . . . . . .
Tuesday
Evening
NOVEMBER 23
1:00 IJ 111 Nm Jeny Dunpl\1
(I) Nt .. Biii Hu~dy
a:30
Cl XNIC N1 .. ";om Snydt1
0 U IGnp HocU, KJ111s vs. St.
Louis 0 NIWI BentJ, Schubttk
fJ (]) Wiid Yf11d Wtst m Th• F1111tatom
ti) I Dru111 of Jttnnll
(jJ) II tlll Spotll1ht
EE Hodlfpodp l..Dd11
el Notlcluo 3'
g:) 0.Mlt Report
QJ • .,...., "''
0 ANTHONY PERKINS 1.n * ALFREO HITCHCOCK'S .•. "PSYCHO"!! ! 0 Ml)Vl1: (60) ~Psycho" P1rt I
(mystuy) '60-TD!I)' Perkins, lint!
Leigh, Yer• M11ts, John, '•vln. A
youn1 wom1n st11ls • fortun1 1ml
oncouMtn • young min loo lon1 ·
undei domin1tion by his mother.
CIJ CBS N'ews W1Jt1r Cronkltl
@)NBC N1n John Cha~llor m Andr lir!Hltll Show
ti) Biii Cosby Show
@ Boot Be1l '1r1cy and Htpbum"
EE c11u Mfftinp ind Scbooll
WithOtrt f1llutt m W1ndut11sl 9 Green Aerts
CiE) YiYl1n1 Hcrtlpu1
&'J ABCNewt
. ... ~ ... •
f
Side wlll bl 1hown In tht 1:)11 time
pe~d. D Mowle: (C) (Dr) .,Noeater ltrt'"
(homi1) '66--Hltk Ad.lm1.
0 ABC Movie of the Week * Ken Berry, cameron
Mitchell, Trint-lopez,
Wa rren Oate11tar. G (]) (j) a' ABC Mowf• ,, tlll
Wff•: (C) (90) "TH lltlu~nt H ..
roe•" (1dlentur1) '71-llen Btny,
Jim Hutton, Trinl Lopez, Den Mir·
shill, Ralph Meek1r, C1meron Mii·
chelt, W1rr1n lhftl. A mHk Army
hlstorl1n finds hlmse!I comm1ndin1
1 unit tleftndln1 1 1t11te1lc hill In
Korea. Hnpelusly outnumbered, he
calls on his 'k110wled11 ol h(stolJ !n
hopes th1t th• tfdlcs of th1.Gfffb,
Altx1nd1r the t;ce•t and Ntpoleon
c1n 11vt his tpp1rent1J doomed
men. . m GEORQE HAMILTON * JOINS l>AV!D tD Dt'o'ld Frolt Sfltw Slnaer 8. J.
Thom1s tnd Tli• Kln1 and Quttn of
Sikkim g111st. ·m l,Ij} Tbt Adwotttes "Shcu!d the
U.S. Support Independence in Et$1
P1kist1n?" Jr 9 Ltnetr
9!00 el La 1i1t1
CI!) Rosas P1rl Ytronlca
t :lO IJ (I) Ctttnon Guest Arthur O'Con·
nell pl1ys JudJt GIMJ, 1n 1tl0fnt)'
who $l1ods In C1nncn's wty 11 h•
seeks lnfarm1tton In 1 mlssln1 ptr·
sons case from h!s clitnt, 1n 1lusM
Nl'V1d1 mu ltlmllllon1ire.
7;00 IJ CBS New1 Walter Cronkite
@ ABC News Smith, Re1santr
0 m NBC News John Ch&llttllor Cil Trvth or Conseq uencu
0 ®J m l1mts G1m1t aa Nichols
''Th• One·Eyed Mule's Timt Hts
Come" Nlehc1s Is stymied by e1rth·
11uakes ind cutthrc1ts in his 1e11cb
tor silver in 1n cld mining town.
Alter cnt of the temblor1, Nichols
finds himself trapped in the «ll•t
ol 1n old mtnslon with t str1n11
youn1 min .n1med F11nklt (Kristo!·
hr Tobori) 111d Ms mult.
m oraanet fJ Whit's Mr Unel
@} PlfmVI m I lowt Lucy O l1xter W•td Ntn
I!) I Dr11m of Je1nnl1 ID It T 1k1s I Thief tD lfi) Blick Journ•I ''Tiki Bick
Your Mind" First s11ment"ln 1 twet-
part examlnttion ol Bite-Studies
pro11rams In Amtricln eollq:es tnd
unive11ities.
liIJ Tiit Cou11t of Our Timu
ED Hittoiy ot Mulco al LI lntruu
O!J AztK H1ihll1hh a> M1nt11p Qj Monty N1dl
7:30 EJ Q) lilen C.mpbell Ken Berry, 10:00 0 fl) (j) (D Mutus Wtl~J. M.D.
Dom Oeluist auest. O Th• Avtngt~ 0 ®J &D frtnsillt "Good S.mtr· m News Pllln1m, Fhhm1n
l!•n" Mlchatl C1ll1n 1uests 1s 1 @ Sptd•I of Ill• Wt•k "Sl11vlnskY
Vlttn1m rttumet 1ccused of mu1· Remembered"
dering 1 WAC, a cl11r11 6etect!ve m Budd Botttkher Sc>ICltl Close-
Si!. Ed Bro.,,-11 (Den G1llO'ilty) rt· up on film dlrector/writ11 who hn
rum lo belim . Ironside mOYes to recently comp\rted a lilm on ne•T·
Thul1day nlahb (9 PM) end w111 be le1end1ry bullli&htu C.rlos Arruzt.
,een twice this weet €IJ Tip Tip
0 (}) (1) aJ Tht Mod Squid Mil· 9 Rntl1r G1me
Ion Berlt 1uests ts Uncle Bobo, a C'i) fntivtl Me~ietno
TV clown wtlose tile is tm!angered, 10:30 6 Tht Gclddi&a:t~ Mike Conoori
In ". , . And 1 littl1 Child Shall Is ruest·host. Ch1rles Nelson Rtil!t
E!!eed Them." Keenan Wynn 1!so portr1ys fabled to!k Sillier Jo,hnny
1u1sts tt Luther 1nd Henry Xmu ti Trish.
P•ull1. 0 Monty N1dl "Whert HIVI NI
[()I Or.11111 al J11nnl1 the Children GGllt?"
0 MitUon $ Movlt: (C) (2hr) .. Min 0 News Morris, McCormick
of tht 'lllut"' (western) '58-Ctry ®At Ism
Coop11, Jull1 London, Let J. Collb. ®) 5111 Diep P1naum1 m Mop11'1 Htrou «0 NIWS Bill Johns
(E) Dr11ntt ED ti Rtb1ta de Dorian Cttr
@ Brina 81tk !ht Bands a;, C.11111 the Wiit
tD Fil'fnJ Uni ''Who Owns Amtf· 11:00 0 00 @Il News
iu7" Gue3! Is forme1 Interior See· 0 @1 (!;) Nrws
retary Wa!ter Hlckt!. O h10¥!1: #fe111 R1n1111" (west·
til Los l•vtrlr d• P1ttlvl!lo ernl '36 -Fred MacMurray, J1ck
Oakie.
1:00 CIJ This Is Your Ult m Truth or Constquences m The Virclni1n
@ M1squ1rld1
tli) LI CW Juz11d1
(l'i)Hino
(j) M1rsll1I Diiion o mm..., fJ Morit: "Johnftf CoJIC!to" (west•
ern) 'S6-F11nk Sln1tr1, Ph)'lli1 Kirk,
Keenan Wynn. m To Ttll the Truth
ID M1ntr1p
1:15 0 Klnp Wrap· Up 11:30 0 C!J M•rv lirtffin
1:30 IJ(j)Hiwili Flv •·O MeGtrNtl (J®)Johnny tl.rion
fears • 1angl1nd war Is lmm!nen! ~ ~ (]) (D Dick Cavett Georgi
when It seems 1 mainland syndicate Hurit0n, t member of !h• l\OW·
Is lrying to ta~e OYef crlminil oper· llh~rnded E!t•t!•s Is spee111 ruest.
ations in Hiwail. David Opato&hu He IS 1ccomptn1ed by Riv'. Sh1nk1r,
r uests the 110ted slt•r p11yer with whom
0 ~ e.l ... A B I Harrl50!1 ls now 1ssod1ted. W1J~...,r11" adCasto ,, , Mono11my" Monie Ma1kh1m ruests m M,owlt. 'Thieves Ml1hWIJ" (d1,.
as 1n ex·conv\tt who, upon his 11. ma) 49 -Rlchud Conte, let J.
lease frnm prison Is de!ermhll!d t Cobb, Valentlnt Cortesi. • • renew life with his former wife, who (!)Movie: "Tiit Plundertl'I" (west·
hts si~ce nmarried. Sarae movts ernl '60--Jefl Chandler, John S.Xon.
to 7:30 PM ned week 1nd Funny OJ for Adults On!J
Wednesday the Yoleei ol Ari link letter. S1ndr1
Det and Tommy Kirk.
1:00 0 (C) "lrtd11s t t Toko-RI" (dr1· DM1ME MOVIES mt) '54 -Wil!iam Holden, Gr1et
Ktlly.
1:00 m "Gfrli TownN (dr1ma) '59 -m "Tiit M1lln1 ol Mll!lt" (CCm·
Mamie Van Doren, M1a1le Hayes. tdy) '48-Evelyn Keyes, Glenn ford.
1:301J "Whtt 1 Ult" (comedy) '39-2:00 tII ''The N1ked Gun" (fll)'Slery) '56 . .. -Wiiiard Ptrlrer, M11a Cordty, Jltk1e Cooper, Betty fields. A.mon1 3.00 Cll ''' 1 1 ., 0_ 1 . (d ) th1 liYin(' (drama) '41 _ Sustn · , e r1 n .....,nc us1on ram•
Hayward, Albert De~~tr. 65--Burt,,L1nc1s!er, Paul Sccfl1ld.
O (C) '1h• Pony Soldier" (tdvtn· ~ (C) , Mtni•I• ltall•n ~,.
lull) '52-Tyroni Power Clmercn ( m~dy) 64--Mtrtlllo Mts!rt111nnl1
' Soph11 Loren.
Mitchell. -4:00 0 (C) "Nipt ti the lirtnly'"
Cl;l)O (I) (C) '1he Snow Queen" (lanla~y) (western) '66--Clint Walker, Muthl
'60-tnimal!d lerture based on the tty-er, llHn•n Wynn.
H1ns Chlisli1n Ander$tll 3tOfY, with 4:30 CIJ Ste lOAM Utt1n1
For Advertising • 1n
Out 'N' About
Phone Norm Stanley
. 642-4321
FINAL SHOWS
ThQnl!sqivlng Weekend
~J'&t, tommy
.,~~\~:~::: \"::::-::· Tiie lock o,.,. lty n. Wlil• ..... ,, r11. •,SAT. -I & 10 p.111.
,lnol Siio• -hn. I p.111,
--Mitzi Shows -Up
Twice on Video
By CYl'j'J'lllA LOWRY
NEW YORK (AP) -Th•re
will be a regular Mitzi Gar nor
festival -on television during
the next couple of weeks: the
singing and dancing star will
be seen Ort two occas;ons.
That's a lot -Mitzi likes
to Umil her TV exposure to
once every year or so.
First there will be ABC's
three-hour broadcast or the
1958 film version of Rodgers
and Hammerstein's landmark
musical, ''So u th Pacific,"
If they can
get a grip on
each other,
· maybe
they
can tum
their
lives
around.
. ·"·' -A TRUE·LIFE ADVENTURE
LAST DAY
•SO. COAST 1 Cos!a r.iesa 546-2711
•CINEOOME 20 OranRe ~32·3328
Wlt•OAY5 ·• 10 • 1 ·ao· '11 IA T ,,. IJ"Gol• Jc n ·'=lO • 1:M •t:I'
-.:·J;li•4:3D• 7 DD·t-1•
H•ld OVtr
"AMERltl.N WILDERNESS''
•
Wednesday night. Then on
Dec. 9 she will be a guest
star on "Perry Como's Winter Show" for NB"C.--
"South Pacific," Mitzi .says,
was the greatest single break
in her career. Every actress
who could sing and dance
yearned for the role of Nellie
Forbwh. which Mary 11.fartln
had played on Broadway.
New Group
.Auditioning
By CHARLES H. LOOS Gene !Jackman plays the
01 ~· 0.11)' Piiot lllff j'The French Connection'' is principal d 0 g g e d oop. Hackman is a journeyman ac·
hOC the kind of movie you get tor who has been around t
up in the middle of to get the ·Wb,lle~ Hts n11;me is not exact!~
sail you forgot for your pop-a hous~hold word, After "The
corn. French Connection;" it coulC
It is a tough, brittle, fast· become one.
paced cops and dope dealers In the role of a tough lrlsh
movie. It will entertain the cop - a narc -Hackman is
Humphrey Bogart-Sam Spade mean. smart. bumbling , fun·
devotee and the moviegoer ny, stupid, clever, ridiculous,
who has never he-ard of and pathetic. "It was someUme ln 1956,
I guess," she ricalled, "and
I went to see JO>h Logan; •· F 'F' ddJ ' the director. about a pro-or l er
duction of some other musical.
Of course, I wanted to do
'South Pacific' deS'peraJely but
1 didn't think tbere was a
chance. When he 9pened the
door. he smiled and saidt 'Oh,
:yes. you're here Ur talk about
Nellie.' I just nodded: I
DS.shiel Hammett. ' The photography is In neo-
Warning : "The French Con-realism color reminiscent of
nection" is violent. Tlle body "Bullitt," the Steve McQueen
count may be higher. than it cops and killers piece of a
was last week in Viefnam. The while back.
. couldn't speak."
Mitzi moved into television
with a couple of very well
received specials. Her
husband-manager, J ack Bean,
now is planning another,
maybe even two. ·
"We have a one woman
show that plays theaters,"
said Mitzi. "It takes about
45 people to put on a one-
woman show. We also play
Las Vegas. It works out nice-
ly. I work about 18 weeks
out of the year unless there
is something in films or
television I want to do. Most
of the time I live like a
housewife in Beverly Hills. I
keep in shape by jogging.
Television is fine, but 1 want
to make my appearances
seem very special, so I space
them. You last longer."
Auditions ror "Fiddler on
the Roof," the first production violence is up close' and· ex-Another thing about "The
· o( the ney,•!y formed Full-plicit. Besides that, the French Connection '• is
erton Civic Light Opera Com· players, to a man. have bad reminiscent of "Bullitt."
pany. have been announced mouths. They s~ak the It is the chase sequence.
for Dec. 6 and 7. language of the street -the Perhaps you recall Steve
Tryouts for the popular portion just below the curb. McQue~n careening up and
musical, whiCh currenUy holds The story is real enough. l t d<lwn the streets. of San F'ran-
Broadway 's longet.ivlty record, is about Marseilles and $32 cisco, first ell.ding, then
will be held at 7:30 p.m. in million worth of heroin and pursuing the g uns e J s .
the Hillcrest Recreation New York and greedy men fi'.1-cQueen's chase sequence
Center at Lemon Street and and a couple of dogged cops was good. Probably one of the
Hillcrest Drive in Fullerton. who stumble onto the deal. best.
Rehearsals will begin on Jan. The story is based on author But Hackman's is better,
3. Robin Moore's account of a more terrlfying, McQueen the
A cast of 12 men and 10 1962 narcotics bust in New driver alwavs seemed to be in
women is required for the York City. The movie takes its control of the situ at j 0 n .
show, along with a number title from the book. The real· Hackman ,the driver _ and
of members of the chorus and life bust involved 120 .pounds the character for that matter
dancers. All roles are open. of pure heroin -enough junk, -is always on the brink of
Jan Duncan, whose direc~ when cut, to supply every ad· disaster. That's the real ap-
torial credits i n c 1 u de diet in the country for about peal of "The French Con·
"Oklahoma," "The Sound of h~lf a year. nection."
f\.1usic''. and ''Brigadoon" for'-----------,,-------------
Fullerton groups, will stage
the musical.
"Fiddler on 'the Roof'' will
open Feb. 11 at the city's
Plummer Auditorium for a
two·weekend , five ·
GOLDEN STATE
rodeo finals
COllJH:• ACIJIC CD.uT. . "'"""~-6 "' n . performance run. 1'"urther in· _,,,_ formation may be -0btained
by calling Mrs. Duncan at
"":'~"!il·~525-687~::;::;1~·============;I
ONLY THE TOPlEN COMPElllORS in mh
of se~en contest events fr<lm Golden Stale
Rodeo C().'s 60·plus rcdeo season. NO
OTHER REGIONAL ROPiO FINALS is 11·
lowed by the professional R<ldeo Cowboy,
Association. $28,000 IN PRIZES! Co1tl•11on Today front 2:10
Steve McQueen,
in Bruce Brown's
"ON ANY SUNDAY"
INDS TONIGHT
Robert Mltcl111nt
"GOING HOME"
••• "THE RAC!NG SCENE"
STARTS WEDNESDAY
James Garner
Skin Game
Lou Gossett
Susan Clark
,~. ""-· @!'] 0.
F'rom w,.1111, 8101., A Kinney Com~1ny
ALSO
Yul Brynner
''CATLOW"
Bargain Matinee
Every Wednesday, 1 p.m.
FRl!I RIFRESHMENTS
ADULTS $1 .00
HELD OVER
letter Than "lullltr•
-0.ily News
AllO C•rtoon R
"THE PLUMB TREE"
e NOW · l!NDS TUISDAY e
THE GREATEST FILM
OF All TIME!
"GONE WITH
THE WINO"
Sho.tlnte -1:00 p.111.
''WATERllRDS" ot 7:10
oncf flle y .. r•s "'"' Olltstcindln9
cidve1tt11re fll'll -
"THE RED TENT" (G)
A journey to the top cif th•
•orld -In color -Storrln9
Seo11 Connery -Peter Finch
Clcu1dlo Co,dlnole
NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES
lXUUSIVE O.C. EHGAGEMfNT
NOW P'LAYINGt fTN Wl!EK
Mo", I Tllfl. 1:11 .. t
Wtd. & Prl.-1·1:)$-10:11
Tl!urt., 51!,, Sun.
t·l :to.S : U·7~ :'5·10: 11
. , ·,MAMMOTH EXCITEMENT!
THE 'A'EA TEST WIUIU,E
· S:%::~u1
TICHMICOl.Off •···•'""'" •• ""'"~ .,,,. "''~"'"" .. '" "" , •• ,,, .,,, °'''"'~'-''""' STARTS WlllNISDAY, NOVEMIER 24
•AT BOTHCINIMAS• MATINEES :iHURS .• FRI •• SAT .• SUH •
,,._ .... " .. , ... "
C•lf•"'U ••lftrl
SPECIAL AnRACTIONS: lh• "Sag• of the
West''. Famed Madison Square Garden
l ightning C Ranch Square Dance <ln Horse.
back. Louie Sil~a·s 8 mammnt~ Clydesdale
draft ho1ses.-
11CKETS: $5.00 lhlU $2.00, 16 yrs . & undt r,
Sl.00 distount. On sale •I Convention Ct~!e1
Tickef 01flc1; Wallich's, Mu!u1t and Llbeity
Aiencles; Orange County So. Ctlil. Banks. Per·",~<~ . .:.:i.~·~ii'!llj;::~""-" farmtncei: Nov. 26, 8 pm; Nov. 27. 2 & 8 pm .... _
Nov. 28, 2:3Cl pm. rOR INFORMATION CALL
714/635·5000.
rodto 1ssac!1t11
~ CONVENTION ~ E/MCENTER
NOV. 26-2'7-28
CLINT EASTWOOD
STARTS WED.
NOV. 24
HOLIDAY MATIN!!
THURSDAY, NOV. 2S
• STA~TS WEDNESDAY• ••reo [Ql
AT 3 EDWARDS CINEMAS
··ALSO AT-
IDWARDS CINEMA Vf!JO·MISSION ·VIEJO 830·6990 •
., , ... "... . .... .. ,.._,_. ..... ..
5TH GREAT Wiiii
CA~fgfBERGE"1 ·PflfR80YU
IR.BASKIN
WOlllnTUO•a.nucTIDI
ruNNY HOW LOVERS START AS •••
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2NO OUTSTANDING COMIDY ._ ..... , ....... ,,
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A story of loie.
Rimed ~David Lean .
Ryans Q.
:oaugbter
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"""1lJ't£R""" --lfO-.-.~Ml.ES
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-itYANS OAUGHTtlt" & "HARLOWE"
Al.SO PLAYING AT
EDWARDS CINEMA YIEJO
--M~·~SiiilON VIE.ll • 130-6991!
I CINEMA WEST #1 I
HELD OVER. 3RD WllK
Vo"•na R~grov1 • Olivtr l!etd
" KENRUSSEU'SFJLM
THE DEVILS
\
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luesdar Novtmber 2'1 19n SC
Complete Closing Prices-American Stock Exchange List
$• •• "'' (l!Oi I Hit~ Lew CloM Cht
DAILV PILOT .:J
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i.2 DAjLV PILOT Tumlay, Novtmbtr 2l, 1911
) •
DICK Til.ACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
~EffER
FOR
CLAUPEO CLAY!
MUTI AND JEFF
HMM·· REMOVE
YOUR CLOTHES! ,
I CAN'i FINO ANY
THING WRONG WITH
'/OU! --ARE YOU
IN LOVE? -...-'.I
FIGMENTS
PLAIN JANE
H·tl'.
ACROSS
1 Rough
Jll"Oluberance
5 Successful
strokes
10 Cliff
14 Contine:il
15 i!r. Palmer
16 Of aircra ft
17 Amtrkan auto
safety critic;
2 words
19 Sweitrr:
t11form~!
20 Cape -
Island: Part of
Nova ScohJ
21 SU!llnier111
Fra1ice
22 Ac t of passing
over: Abbr,
23 Dried coconut
meat
25 -goo gai nan:
Cantonese
dish
2111'1 ost
satisfactory
Ji) Infant
31 f lat-bollomtd
vessels
34 Tum outw;uds
lb Youn11 larm
animal
38 Pad of h~ir :
ldorma l
39 VI P's
personal
emplo)ee:
2 words
42 Supplemeol
with effort
I ) •
"
"
"
43 Bloodsuc~ing
wom
44 Sin~ 1n a
certain wa~
45 Examintd
47 Compass cl
endeavor
49 Ancient
Asian
50 Ship's call
for help
51 Gas, wood,
coal, etc.
53 Clear and
sun11y
SS F~mily
5/:i Time of year
bl Greek god
bl One who
lnterv~nes
&4 -Domini
65 Lotal ity as
seen by a
~1ewer
lib Far: Pre!11C
&7 Throw
&8 S'l\all amount
t.~ Airport cf
Paris
DOWH
Yesterd~'s Puzzle Solvtd:
11.123171
7 Sold illicitly: 33 A particular
3 y,·ords fashion
8 Painting of
Mary and the
body of JtSllS
9 Char the
35 Oe!lberate 1its
31 Moderate
Ol'ange yellow
40 Was in first
surface of: place
Var. -41 Malt cat
10 St3rjn Gemini 40 Human·trunks
.JlMcwe 48Souldtdtcujly'
backward 51 FDl"mtr HEW
lZ. Zone S!Cretary
lJ l oose flowing 52 Dinr
garment 53 Act of daring
18 Ad -:For a 54 Famed
specific
purplise
24 Sheriff's
1 Unrileasant helriers
cartoonist
55 Caress with
the lips
57 "-the ant.,
1tmatli: :ZS Sociablt
2 Unittd Stairs 2b Attack from
Army Rtserve: all sldt s
Abbr, 27 lnsrilre
'""' sluggard":
2 WOl'dS
58 ExerCise of
J Olslurb 28 Acts of a rillht
.; Dttply withdrawin9 59 Exchange O!
absorbed 29 Thret: Ptt lix goods lot
5 Is unablt · 31 Unit if music monty
6 Domesday 3Z Ha~ing bD Pl1ylng card
Boole money heallng organs t.J CompaSs pclnl
" 5 '• 1 • " I "
" 116
II ~119
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l • e > -~
l6 " " " lO ' )I " ff ,, " " 1 " .
" "' . ,, " .. "
" .. " •I ' •
51 " L: . .. ' •
" .. " " 51 51 " 60 .. " .. .. ., '" ..
" .. .. '
TM! "CU!VER•ONES
NEVER FAIL TO
'TRIP TllE'MSEl.WS.
NO, Sii< !
l'M NOT
IN LOVE!
WELL, WHY
ON EARTH
CAN'T YOU
EAT?
PEANUTS
flW.0,
SCllROEDER? I
J\15T HEARD A
SON6 Off 1\1E ~A~.ANDIT
REMINDED NiE
Of ""'·
1-:J
JUDGE PARKER
COME, MV KW .• LET'S NOT
GET TE/llPE.RMEt<.ITA.L:
C.ALL MISS CJ.R:SOM:
MISS PEACH
y Cliemr Gould
''FOR I!, ,.,t.;e-t;,, ~
~EM ARE VERY POOR
MARKSMEN •1•
By Tom K. Ryan
By Al Smith
I HAVE
NO
MONEY I
By Dale Hale
By Frank Baginski
LI'[ ~BNER
~OOK. HEN RV .. THEl1!th!l-ONE
0 ' )()RE DOTI"ER.5
CAUGHT OLIVER ·
'NENDEl...L POMf.S.'!
'
t>UT, M'I
OTH~
!>OTTER S
t;OrT'll. . . BE.
&~KEN!!
SALLY BANANAS
'GORDO
MOON MULLINS
J ;llN1T GETTIN'
;IHE'.AI> 'TH' WIN
I O<JGHT;I,
'PROF.
BUR RD.
ANIMAL CRACKERS
0000. HER!:1S AA EPll'ORIAI...
'21) I>. \\ll(tr!:R lllHO 8f1JcVE:S
1Hllr T~ERE IS TOO MUCll
AP/r:rHCJ Ol 1HE'. WORLD·
Bv Charles M. Schulz ....-------.
By Harold Le DoUJC
WHEl-J TODAV, IF f'OS'51BLE! rnE:
. . '
,_WV VOUNG WOMAN MER -'GE WOULD
WELCOME rne OPPOrmlNlTY TO BE-
COME "N INST ... MT TV ST ... !t, Ell1C!
&ES.IDES, IT WOULP BE AN IDEAL
V-'C.ATION FOR: HER: ~ERE It.I
MOWTREAL-A.ll EXPENSES P"ID!
WOULD vou· )LONGE.~ WE W"IT, THE MORE
"ANT MEI<: PROBLEMS WE'LL 1-1-'VE IN
UP ME!i:E? GEITING THIS OUT OF n.IE
C.OUNTR:V ! ,,,,.,-1111 _......,
By MeD
YOU MAY TAKE lOUll Dl!AWINGS
HOY.E AS LtSLIAL, CLA&S-;:;r-_
MY MOTHER
HAS
ASKEP ME
NOTTO,
MISS PeACH •• ,
-AS ITIS,
5HE CN>/•T
ll!MEM8ER
THE' COLO!t r
OF OUR . I
' I ' ! l •
PERKINS
REFfllGERATolt ...
'\I I .. ' '1.' :.:.
"· .. , ·,,"', ..... ... ""·
By John Miles
\\ If
By Charles Barsotti
. I
By Gus Arriola
'AAY!
By Ferd Johnson
~.B~ARD5l'/-.,
Cl.ASS OF '<05', JI
WASN1TIT? jJ ~
!l !I Il •
By Roger iolen ---
O~, llEGIC: \lll1H rr.
THE GIRLS
-
,;,rl'Jfat.
"r71 ilf""l/11-JJ
"Welt, I certainly don't think the ne"·s Is so dreary."
DENNIS THE MENACE
·~ CAN PULL 'IOU~ TONGUE 6ACK IN NOW. THIS IS AN
EXNrllNATION .... Nar AN a'INION A:ltl.. •
' • ' :,
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WWII Winners Monopolize Weapons Spread
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Four vie..
torious World War II powers have since
lt4S taken the lion's share of one of
the most politically and economically
profitable ventures to emerge from that
conflict -the arms trade with the
nations of th e third world.
. The Uriited States and the Soviet Union
deal In arms as part of their global
pbwer play. The United Kingdom and
France do it for economic reasom.
Between them they control 90 percent
Serret Agent?
Miss Kathy Clark, 23, of
Pueblo, Colo., is under consid·
eration to be named a Secret
Service special agent. Miss
Clark is one of seven women
being considered.
Laguna Teachers
Due Pay Raises
The average Laguna Beach teacher
will be taking home an additional $42
a month when wage increases emerge
from the "freeze" in January, but the
47 days when salaries were frozen will
have cost each teacher about $104.
Business administrator Dr. Charles
Hess said teachers eligible for wage
increments at the lime of the freeze
will receive them, retroactive to Nov.
15. beginning Jan. 1 for a total or
eeven months. Th.e increases will caver
135 days of the school year instead
of 182.
of a business valued at close to 18
billion dollars gince 1950.
··This builU·up of arsenals of weapons
In third world countries is one of tr ~
m~st striking and disturbing features
of the post.war world," according to
a study released today by the Stockholm
International PeaCf: Research Institute
(SIPRI ).
The arms trade, the SJPRI study said,
"has become the hard currency of in·
ternational relations."
Niguel Area
Phone Tolls
Will Cease .
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
01 tho OlllJ 'li.t Slt lt
There are probably few things more
maddening than living on one side of
Crown Valley Parkway in Laguna Niguel
and having to pay a toll charge to
telephone a friend across the street.
But all that will change Dec. 19 when
oo-charge dialing areas will be expanded
for residents of both south coastal com·
munities and the Saddleback Valley .
Telephone subscribers in the Trabuco
Ganyon and Laguna Hills areas. prefixes
586 and 831, will be abl~ to call Laguna
Beach, Newport Beach, Anaheim. Garden
Grove, Huntingfon Be a ch and
\Vestminster exchanges without paying
present toll charges.
Customers in the communities of El
Toro, Laguna Hills and Mi ssio n Viejo,
prefixes 830 and 8.17 , will be able to place
no charge calls to Laguna Beach and
Capistrano Valley exchanges.
People wiUt 830 and 837 prefixes
already may call Anaheim. Garden
Grove. Newport Beach, Huntington Beach
and Westminster toll free ..
The only negative aspect of the pri>
gram for Mission Viejo Pacific Teleph.one
subscribers is that they will lose their toll
free privile,11;e for calls to the Fullerton,
Buena Park, Brea and Placentia ex·
changes in northern Orange County.
Users in the Capistrano Valley ex·
change, including 493 495, 496 prefixes
will be able lo call Laguna Beach,
Mission Viejo, El Toro and Laguna Hills
free when the calling area expands.
Presently, General T e I e p h o n e
subscribers on one side of Crown Valley
Parkway with prefix 499 mu st pay a 10.
cent toll charge to call 495 prefix
SIPRI, set up as an independent foun·
datlon in 1966 by the Swedish govern·
ment. disclosed this and other finding!!
in a 910-page study on "the arms trade
with the third world,"
The report was prepared over a period
ol four years by five research sc.~ntists :
Frank Blqckaby and Mary Kaldor of
Great Britain, Eva Grenbaeek and
Landgren Baeek.stroem of Sweden and
Prvoslav Oavinic of Vugoloslavla .
The authors said their report is "the
Urst po:.trwar &\udy to bring together
the political, economic and military
dimensions of the arms trade ~·Ith third
world countl"il!s."
They de!!ned the term "third world''
as encompassing all developing and
underdeveloped naUons of Asia, Afrlca
and Latin America. For the purpose
of this study, they also included Israel
and South Africa as recipient countries.
In addition. .. !.:> the United States and
Russia, the :.tudy identified the following
The Town's B11si1ig
' Directors of the Laguna Beach Holel·Motel Association \vere given
the first courtesy ride on the new city buses Monday afternoon. Serv·
ice clubs are tryinG: the shiny new vehicles through the week. Next
week buses rides will be free for the community to acquaint residents
with them. From left to right are Loren Haneline, Betty Robinson
and Tommy Thompson. bus supervisor.
numbers on lhe 0th.er side of the road.
Residents of Laguna Beach "''ilh prefix·
es 494 and 499 will have their no·charge
calling area expanded to Trabuco,
Laguna Hills, El Toro and ~1ission Viejo,
in addition to the C&pistrano Valley.
Laguna Beach subscribers now are able
to call Newport Beach and Costa Mesa
\\ 1\houl having to pay a toll charge.
The onl y South Coast community not
affected by the changes is San Clemente.
Residents there and those on the other
end of the line with the exception of those
In the Gapistrano Valley, will still have to
pay toll charges.
nations as arms suppliers~ the United
Kingdom, Fra~. Italy, Canada, West
Germany, Japan, Sweden, Switzerland
and Red China.
One of the key findings of the study
~·as that, in addition to being a profitable
business. through the arms trade the
United States and the Soviet Union had
turned the third world into one of their
main cold war b11ttlefleld.5.
According to the report. this remains
true toda y even though the cold war
is thawing between Washington and
\ 'Mother (;011rage'
t.1oscow as the two super-Powers wk
to· avoid a direct nuclear confrontation.
"Whereas the great powe!rs ar1
1Studiously avoiding any direct con-
f rontation, they are exacerbatine local
conflicts by their massive supplies of
arms to I.he third world," the study
noted .
It stressed that all of the many war1 •
fought since 1945 have been ln thkd
world counlries, but with weapons sup-
plied by the industrial p o w e r 1
themselv~.
Stage Stai· Lott~ Lenya
. .
Back n1 UC Irvine Play
By LINDA DEUTSCH
J.11oclt1N ,,..,. Wrl'4Pr
"Retirement Is the filthiest word in
the English language. Hemingway said
that and r agree."
The spea ker. using her hands as ex·
clamalion points, is Lotte Lenya, a
theatrical legend. At 73 slim, red haired
and vigorous, she's
back at work, her
firs t stage appear·
ance since 11. long
BroMway run in
''Cabaret.''
\\'ilh a cast ol
young acting slu·
dents. Len y a is
starring al UC Ir·
vine in "li1 nth er Lt:NV.l
C.ourage,'' the master\\·ork of her old
friend the late Bertoli. Breehl.
"I love working with students,'' she
said in an in terview al the Laguna
Beach apartment where she is staying
during the lwo·week run. "They are
so quick and hright . . . Professional
actors know all the answers. I like
to be surprised."
The massive production. with. a cast
of 45. 12 sets. two revolving stages
and eight musicians, Isn't ordinary slu·
dent fare. it's directed by Herbert
Machiz, a BrnAdway veleran who
persuaded the lady known inlernationally
as simply "Lenya·• to star. It's the
first lime she has done the role in
English.
The students remain A bit awed . To
them, she is a legend.symbol of ail
era in theatrical history.
\Vidow or compo6er Kurt WeiU, she
was at the center of the Weill-Lenya.
Brecht triumvirate which dominated the
pre·World \Var 11 Berlin theater. Their
collaboration on caustic. bittersweet.bit-
ter musicals including the classic
"Threepenny Opera" was interrupted b)'
war and Nazi disapproval . They ned,
first to Paris, then America.
"The students all say to me, 'Tell
us about your Ufe in Berlin.' " But
Lenya does not reminisce.
"I am not interested In looking back.
Neither was Kurt Weill. He looked into
the future. He became an American
citizen and that was it."
On other subjects. Lenya is loquacious.
Some of her observations:
.--On being dubbed a legend: "It's
nice. If you become a legend you muat
have made your point somewhere ••
Perhaps I did something which, i! you
want to get hifalutin, Is recognized u
art."
-On stage nudity: "If it's called for
in the play and not just done for shock,
I am absolutely not against it ... It's
not that new . In Sweden, they've been
naked since time began."
-On Women's Liberalion: "It bores
me to death : It's so nice to be dependent
on a man. I can't ..,think of anything
.nicer . . . Besides, l was born free
and remain that way."
-On "method" acting, "Who can be
so conceited that he thinks he has a
method~ I have talent. Some young ac·
tors m2.y need classes to learn movement
or speech, but not method."
-On her youthfulness : "1 started as
a ballet dancer, and when I was four
I learned to stand on my head and
walk a tightrope in a little neighborhood
circus • • • I feel that if you reach
73 you should be grateful and keep
functioning and admit your a I e •
American women -I haven't met one
whn Admits her 1uze freel v."
Save on long distance calls by
choosing n and how you ~II.
I
For exalilple,on calls to San Francisco:
Tonight and every night
from 11 p.m. to 8 a.m.
you can dial direct
(without Operator a~
sistance) anywhere in
Californ ia for 49¢ or
less. This new 49¢ rate
also applies from 8 a.m.
to 6 J!.m. Sunday and·
holidays.•
\
c $.
If you can't stay awake
that late, it doesn't cost
much more to dial a
call direct earlier in the
evening. From 6 J!.m. to
11 J!.m. Sunday through
J!riday 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 6 p.m. to 8 a.m.
weekdays or all day
Saturday, Sunday and
holidays,' an Operator-
assisted cal I costs $1.05.
During the daytime,
Monday through Friday
from 8 a.m. to 6 J!.m. it
costs $1.20 to dial a call
yourself.
A station-to-station call
placed through the
Operator for this same
period of time (Monday
through Friday from
8 a.m. to 6 J!.m.) costs
$1.50 •.
•
'Holiday rat .. for Iang diatance call• within California apply all day on Washington'• Birthday, Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's Day.
All rates are for three·mlnute calla from Santa Ana to San Francisco, plus tax.
Dial direct. It's faster and cheaoer.
..
If you do need to make
a person-to-person call,
it costs $2.25, no matter
when you call.
@Pacific Telephone ..
•
4 ~,IJl;V PtLOr-TlltSday, Novembtr 2S, 1911
•' I ~PS"
Breathe Easier
: Next Christmas
:~ By mol'ttAS lt!URPHINE :~ Of .. O.lty Plitt Staff
•. TIS THE SEASON DEPT. -For all ~ you unlnJtlated MolilJ1lies atld Daddies.
?: there is hope for you yet in the toy
~ department after this Yuletide seas~n.,
:! The California Asgembly, in its infinite
wisdom, ,yesterday approved a bill by
~ 6an Francisco Democrat John Burton r:: Which will make it illegal to sell or
~manufacture horror or torture toys in
..: aur fair sta~.
~ Trouble l!:, uninitiated Mommies and
: 'Daddies, Mr. Burton's bill won't become
f l~" unW next July 1. So that leaves
~)'OU thls ·~ppy Yuletide. For .exainple:
~. YOU MIGHT TmNK it was a real
!~·CU le gift when Aunt Maude sent Johnny
<that. Medieval Torture and Horror Kit.
' But you won't think it's so funny when
you wake up screaming tbe morning
t after bec'.ause clever Johnny (he has
i a mechaillcal mind) has attached the
t thumb &erew to your left hand.
: YoU Were aJso impressed with Uncle
~ Caudt'1 gUt of the plastic put-it-together-
) your~lf working model of a geouine
: three-quarter scale French Guillotine.
:-Kid&· somehow are capable of getting
• these kinds of things into operating shape
in about 30 minutes. ! My advice. would be to hide the family
~ cat it you want him to keep his tail.
;·You'd better leek up the garden hose, j IDo. .
• THE GENUINE Zappo Air Blaster
SupersonJc.OUter Space Pistol is another ! delightful Yu1etµ!e gift. It is capable
• of g'enerating a blast of air that can
' knock over dishes · at 20 paces. Well,
maybe that's okay.
It will be less popular around your
House, however, when you've just setted
• down with the evening newspaper and j you're concentrating on the sports section
.. and the kid sneaks up on you. "Zappo,
~ Daddy," he screams. He has just stuck
.• the muzzle in your left ear and pulled the trigger. Jf you had anything left
in ~; Johnny just blew it oot your
right ear ·and over into those dishes
·! be'd been· knocking doWn.
·But it's au in the spirit of the sea.son,
you know. Just smile and carry on.
AS !'UNDERSTAND it. Assemblyman
Burton failed in bis erfort to ban war
toy1 within his new bill because Senate
amendments knocked that provision out.
; They left in, however, a measure banning
Items that resemble bombs or hand
grenades. ~ That's probably because some time
:· in the past. a senator's youngster took
0: one of tho!!ie pla15tic grenades, filled it
;~ with black powder and tested it on
~ the front seat of the old man·s new
Mercedes.
Now I'm certain r..tr. Burton's bill
was passed in an effort to make life
safer for the younger folks. So Johnny
won't try the Ancient Chinese Water
Torture cn Janie next door. This is
a very serious matter to some folks.
But you'll have to understand if same
veteran Mommies and Daddies smiJe
just a bit when a ban on torture toys
get approved.
We know who is really getting pro-
tected, don't we?
""'"'U ' ; !U80 Holds Meeting
HONG KONG (UPI) -Chairman Mao
Tse-tuni of the People's Republic cf
China conferred with North Vietnamese
Premier Pham Van Dong Monday. the
New China New!!i Agency (NCNA) said
today. Olairman Mao shook hands with the
North Vletnamese delegation to Peking
and had his photograph ta ken with them
at the reception hall in Peking, NCNA
wd.
Viets Drive
3 Colunn1s
Into ·Enemy _
I SAIGON (UPI J -Three columns of
South Vletnames troops supported by
U.S. jets and helicopters pushed Into
Cambodia today in a new drive to blunt
a guerrilla threat to Phnom Penh and
a long-range threat to Saigon.
Army of the Republic of Vietnam
( ARVN) troops along a curving 100.mile
front moved in landing ships up the
Mekong and Bassac Rivers toward the
Cambodian capital, in vehicles into the
Parrot's Beak area and by helicopter
into the Krek rubber plantation area
50 miles north of the Parrot's Beak.
.The new drive was Jn()Unted as Cam·
bodian troops ran into hea'vy oPposition
about 15 miles south southwest of Phnom
Penh, according to the Cambodian high
command. Spokesmen said at least 19
government soldiers were wounded end
a still unknown nuriiber killed in a three·
hour clash today with North Vietnamese
fOrces . ·
U.S. Army Cobra helicopter gunships
were called in against the Com munists
who attacked a Cambodian column of
armored peorsnnel carriers pushing
through the Viet Cong-occupied area.
The clash broke a three-day lull in
fighting round the Cambodian capital.
UPI Correspondent Stewart Kellerman,
reporting from headquarters for the Krek
operation, said 25 guerrillas had been
killed Monday and today at a cost of
20 ARYN paratroopers wounded.
He said three paratroop battalions were
lifted by U.S. and ARVN helicopters
to landing zones respectively one, two
and nine miles norlhwest of Krek.
UPI-Independent television ne ws
cameraman Tran Dai Minh flew over
the first two areas by helicopter and
reported paratroops fanning out through
the jungles in search of the guerrillas.
The only contact, however, was
reported by patrols sent to the area
around Chup, 25 miles northwest of Krek.
Kellerman reported 35 ARVN and 30
Army helicopters lifting troops and flying
gunship missions In support of the Krek
column. -'
The three columns were reinforcing
ARVN troops already in place for a
new push against the guerrillas. ARVN
soldiers have been operating continuously
in Cambodia since the U.S.-ARVN in·
vasion there in May, 1970.
Nov. 22 Slips
By_ Co1inally
WA SHINGTON (AP)
Secretary of the ~asury John
Connally, did not' realiu Monday
was the eighth annlvernry of
President John F. Kennedy 's
assassination until -he was a:ii.ed
about it at his news conference.
Connally . was seriously wounded
in the shooting irl a Dallas
motorcade.
Concentrating on President NII·
on·s Ptlase 2 economic progrjlm,
lhe former Te.zas governor wa11
startled by a quesUon on his
thoughts on the anniversary of the
assassination.
"l didn't realiu: that today.was
Nov. 22 so I haven't had any
tboughts about it," Connally aaid.
"l hope: you'll forgive me if 1
don't respond al)Y further."
Chou Says U.S.
Certain to Lose
Indochina War
HONG KONG {UPI) -Communist
Cbinese Premier Chou En-laJ, ta a sweep.
ing indictment of U.S. policy iri Southeast
Asia, said today that "no force on earth
can alter" an allied defeat in Indochina.
The New Cliina News Agency (NCNA)
said Chou spoke at a rally in Peking
honoring visiting N or t h Vletname&e
Premier Phan Van Dong and other Hanoi
government officials.
"Over two decades .ago, the, Uhi.t.ed
States pushed "Cbinuiiation" in Qlin.a,
by arming over five million troops of
the Chia.og_Kai·s~k cli~11e _and provokiQg
the all-round civil war, which only ended
up in notorious fiasco," Chou said.
"This is also the tactic the U.S. ag·
gressors used in Suth Vietnam in the
be.giMing which they called 'special
warfare,' and it very soon flop~ in
face of the valiant war of resJ.Stance
of the Vietnamese people."
The Communist ChineK premier aaid
the current situation on Indochina bat·
Uefronts was "unprecedentedly fine"
and said that "inspiring news" has been
received of Communist victories along
Highway 6 in Cambodia north of Phoom
Penh.
He said an allied ·defeat In Indochina
y.·as "inevitable" and that eventual Com·
munist victory there "is a Jaw of hi!tory
V.'hich no force on urth can alter·."
Price Unit Takes Step
Toward Rent Controls
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Price
Commission scheduled its first tentative
steps toward fonnulating a national rent
control poli cy today with the first
meeting of the new Rent Advisory Board.
The White House established the board
?o.tonday to assis t the commission in
working out regulations to determine
how much America's rents may go up.
Until these rules are put in effect
most rents on private dwellings remain
generally froien. able to rise only to
the level that prevailed for the highest
10 percent cf the apartments in the
same unit during the 30 days before
Aug. 15.
Commercial. farm and 1nduslnal rent,.;
have been totally excluded from rent
control since the freeze ended. r.tonrlay
the Price Commission announced another
minor exemption in allowing existing
state or local rent control agencies. such
as New York's, to resun1e their authority
over previously rent-controlled units.
A commission official said the ruling
applies to rent-control agencies in New
York City and elsewhere in New ''ork
State, in the Boston area and l\1iami
and Miami ~ach . But he said there
might be other rent-control agencies in
the nation of which the commission is
not yet aware.
Price Commission chainnan C .
Jackson Grayson, &.aid rent increases
approved by such agencies may MW
go into effect. However previously non-
controlled units, public housing and
publicly subsidized housing remain under
federal supervision.
It had been expected that the Rent
Advisory Board would be made up cl
Price GoI\lmission members, but assis-
tant \VJtj(e House press secretary Ge.raid
L. \Varren said Monday "it was felt
a separate entity should be created ••• "
The rent panel will act in the capacity
of adviser only, as Nixon's order stated,
to "provide .advice concerning special
considerations involvtd in the stabiliza·
lion of rents.''
Earlier ?o.1onday. Secretary of the
Treasury John B. Connally expressed
confidence 1n the success of Phase z.
and said the Pay Board's recent approval
of a !~·percent pay increase in the
first year of a soft-coal miners' contract
should not be taken as indication Phise
2 controls are being eroded.
His views. however. were disputed by
Derr.ocr&ic National Olairman Lawrence
F. O'Brien, who said : "The American
economy is in deep trouble and no
amount of well-orchestrated cheering,
even· by such an experienced cheerleader
as John Connally. can alter the situa·
tion."
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Jews, Arabs Each Have Strong Points
L1lNOON•(UPI) -Eopthaa assembl-
ed a major assault force along -the
Sutt cana1: but wltbout ·masltty of the
air an attemi>t .to cross could prove
"baiardous ·in the extreme," western
lnteUigenct·nports said today.
The other deci&lvt factor" they said.
is ·whether Moscow is willing to enter
the. battle.
Egypt has five divisions in the front
line on tts · aide of the cinal, with as
many as 100,000 more -troope: behind
the front , the r1ports said. ·
'lbelr equipment, supplied by the
Soviets, ls in some instances. superior
to the Israelis'.
Ao array of tanks 11 complemented
by the late1t amphiblous craft. bridge-
bullding equipment and telescoplllg
bridge5, the reports 1ald.
Egypt also has vast number• of planes
British Soldier Slwt
By Sniper. in Belfast
BE;LFAST, Northern Ittlanil (uPl) -
A aniper today shot and wounded a
British eoldier standing guard at. a
uhdbagged post near a Belf3;St mill,
an atmy. Spokesman said:
'J!he spokesman said the !lOldier was
at.ruck~by a high-velocity bullet.
Tro0ps of the Scots Guard iminediateJy
begin a l!efl'Ch of the North Howard
·Street area of the·city where·the soldier
feQ, the spokesman said.
British tr.~pr ·earlier fired at a gun-
man, dirJl'.ersed a youth gang with rubber
bullets and rounded up security suspects
and weapom ·in·a aweep.through Belfast
Roman Catholic distrlct:s, an army
spokesm'11 •said.
An army spokesman said troops were
unfble · to report whether they hit the
guiiman--during their-fOUf.·.hour. search
operations· in the Ballymurpby and
Westrock Road·areas of lhe city.
Troops arrested 20 persons in the
Ballymurphy -district, the spokesman
said. ScotS :guardsmen seized two rifles, five
pistols ·and •a supply ·of ammunition in
thelWeatrock Road search.
Soldlers 1 fired ·rubber · bullets at· the
g8:_ng.of youths.who gathered in•a street
a~ hulled two geligpjJe .boinbs , at the
troops. Tbe bombs caused no casualties.
In Belfast,' an army source said the
man killed i11 ·a bomb eiplo.sion in
a crowd~ Lurgan pub Monday night
may have been one of two gunmen
planting the explosive device.
T}\e 8 p.m. blast in tbe O'Neill and
Donnelley public house 20 ·miles south
of Belfast· irljU:red 11 persons, one ·of
them seri6lls!y,.an arnly spokesman said.
ID ~ast.. aiurt officials convened
a speclal session in Royal Victoria
. Hospital and charged a 28-year-old
housewife with attempted murder of a
Britlsb soldier -the first Woman to
be &0 cbarged in the current troubles,
the army source said.
Near Coal Island, troops. today arrest'ed
five men after they saw aeveral _persons
r.un· from .a car into .a nearby house.
The spokesman said soldiers fo'und three
mines, detonators · and fuses behind the
vehicle.
Frogmen to Hunt
For Philippine
Tragedy · Victhns
MANILA (UPI ) -Navy frogmen were '
dispat ched to the central Philippines tcr
day to search for victini.s of.an ·overload·
ed cargo launch which sank Sunday
night with ·some 200 passengers aboard
-to.times the ship's legal.limit:
CapL Estellto Veloso, commander of
the Philippine Navy · unit in Cebu City,
said 101 persons survived the disaster ..
He said 16 persons were confirmed dead
and 62 others had been identified by
name as missing. Others as yet uniden-
tified may have been victims. he said.
Some of the victims werl': believed
trapped below decks in the vessel which
sank in hea vy seas near the northl':astern
tip of Cebu Island, 350 miles · south
of Manila.
Bush mills.
and antiaircraft defenses. including
surface-to-air (SAM ) missiles ol lhe
SA.M2, SAM3, and SAMt types.
But Israel still has supremacy ln the
air, and air superiority is certain to
prove decisive if Egypt begins its
threatened crossing of the canal, the
report said.
Sources said Israel's defenses on Its
side of the canal have been heavily
reinforced.
Tbe so-<:alled Bar-Lev Line probably
Is one of the most effective known
defense barrier:s since World War TI.
Egyptian losseJ in an attempt to cross
without air superiority ~ld be "tremen·
doua," but Israeli losses also probably
would be considerable. the reports said.
They said, the Soviets flave supplied
impressive quantities of amphibious
eqWpment, including tanks, troop car·
riers and landing craft of various types,
many more advanced than t h o s e
Moacow has s0 (ar given Jt.s East Eurcr
pean allies.
Egypt's advantage in the alr would
be in a possible air battle over Egyptian
territory, where the SAM missiles and
other defenses could come iOto play.
But defense · experts said it is unlikely
the Israeli air force would oblige. It
would probably chose lts own battle
area.
The unknown and decisive factor, the
ei:perts said, is the attitude of the
Soviets.
They are known to be masterminding
Egypt's air defenses including the SAM
3s and radar. They fly their own MIGZJ
jets.
But Russians have. said they do not
want to get involved directly in war,
but will go on helping with equipment
-which they reportedly lately stepped
up in the-shape of TU16 "Badger"
bombers -and "advice."
Meanwhile, President Anwar Sadat told
an African peace mission in Cairo today
there can be no peace in lhe Middle
East without an Israeli commitment to
withdraw from all occupied Egyptian
territory, a foreign ministry official said.
Sadat, who had said war with Israel
was the only course left open to Egypt,
without such a pledge, met for two
hours · with presidents Leopold Senghor
of Senegal , Maj. Gen. Yakubu Gowan
of Nigeria and two top cabinet ministers
from Cameroun and Zaire.
Bot.h Egyptian and Israeli newspaper,;
warned again of the dangers of re sumed
warfare. Israeli officials already have
!!iaid they are taking at face value Sadat's
repeated statements that the middle east
conflict must be resOlved this year, either
by peace or by war .
The \Vhiskey that spans
the-generations gap.
For JOO years, 'i whiskey from Bushmills has been
wi th us. Charming us~ Beguiling us in a smooth,
polished and altogether lightheat'ted fashion.
15 g~nerationshaverefined it 15 generations have
sipped ii. Theverdicl :Nearperfe:ction. Bush mills. Full
of character. But not heavy-ha nded about it. Fl avor·
ful. But never over~powering. Bushmllls. It reflects
1he pa st with .t light and livelyfl.tvor that is all today.
Compare it 10 your prese nt whiskey. You needn't
purchase a bottle. One sip at your favorfre pub will
te ll you why Bushmills has intrigued so many gen-
erations. It is, simply, out or sight.
IMl'Ol!ltO
BUSHMllLS
FROM TllE WORLD'5 OLDEST 01mwRY.
• lllNO Of 1~1 1~!$M y;~1$k1LS-M l'ROO~-IOTI~tO IN 1•tllNO. 1MlJOS fllRl't•ll to., 11£WVOl!ll. 11.Y.•llft
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" st
er
Meany Says
President
Not Capable .
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -AFL-CIO
President George Mean~ continuing his·
assault on Prestdes<"Nixon's economic
policies, says Nixon doesn't have the
ability, intelligence or knowledge
necessary to manage the nation 's
economy.
The 77-year-o\d labor leader told the
closing session of the AFL-CIO con-
vention Monday that the public, includin~
businessmen, has lost confidence in Nix-
on. The labor federation said several
months ago it no longer has confidence
in the President's ability to manage
th!' economy 'and asked Congress to
take ove r the job from him.
:\1eany's charge that Nixon lacks tt
necessary economic credentials ca e
after the AFI.rCIO chief accused e
President of deliberately staging e
allegedly rude reception Nixon recei ed
when he spoke to the labor conven on
Friday. Meany denied that Nixon ad
been treated badly by the ion
delegates.
Shortly after the convention re-el cted
1'.leany to a ninth two-year te as
head of the 13.6-million member AFL-
ClO, he stepped up his running feud
v.·ith Ni:ton and the adm inistration, which ·
Qrganized labor charges has favored
business and the rich at the expense
of \1•o rkers and \\•age earners. Joli1any's Bo11ae
UPI Ttltllholl
DAILY PILOT
Mariner9
Distracted
By Light?
·,PASADENA ( U I' I I -
!>18riner scientists tried to
figure '. out today w h a t
d,lslrgi~ tticif Mars-circling
satellite and ~inted it in the
wrong direction· for 4. 8
minutes.
Scientists also confessed
disappointment that the dust
storm that has tempora"rilY
~iled their ·picture-taking is
subsiding so . :;lowly that no
improvement was not iced in
Monday night's photos.
. l\1ariner positions itself as
it whirls around Mars twice
a day by keepin g a fix on
the bright star Canopus.
The l\1ariner s e n s i n g
mechanism somehow picked
up the-light from an object
"about 100 times brighfer than
Canopus" Sunday and swung
around to · fix on that, a.
spokesman ~t the Jet Pro-
pulsion Laboratory said.
The scientists radioed com·
mands to· Mariner that
brought it back where it
be!Onged 48 minutes later, but
"'ere left to puzzle over the
source of the distraction.
2640 · Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
Hnlrisl~!:,·MON.·SAT. 9~ SUN. 9.5
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"There's a complete lack of confidence
(in Nixon) today on the part of the
Arnerican people, even on the part of
business peQp!e who have been busy
applauding ri1r. Nixon and all of his
actions,·· l\Ieany said. "They show very
little confidence in his ability to manage
this ect•nomy.
Having. not seen her uncle except in pictures, little Tammy Groppi,
3, mainiains a tight grip on Sgt. Johil Sext~n upon his arrival home
in Warren, Mich. It was a long trip for. the 23·year-old sol dier \\'ho
was a captive of the Viet Co ng for 26 months.
Most speculation centered
on reflected light from one
of Mars two moons, ·or
perhaps , a glittering dust
speck. "\Ve'll find out and
it's nothing to worry about,"
the spokesman said .
Scientists dism issed specula-
tion that the distracting glim·
mer could have come from
Russian space explorers
riving near t-.tarin cr,
GUARANTEED PROMPT DELIVERY
• ~~
Five Shot to Death
By Laughing Killer
BALTIMORE · (A P )
\Vitnesses say a 'gl.lntnl!l .a.rm·
ed with t\vo rines and dressed
in Army fatigues yelled and
laughed hysterically as he
moved through a paint brush
fa ctory on a fatal shooting
spree.
Five workers died. Three
other persons. including the
alleged assailant and
.a police1nan, were wounded.
Police gave this account of
the Monday aft ern oo n
shootings at the P P G
Industries plant:
Police, unable to arrive at
a motive for the rampage,
were exploring p 0 s S 1 bl e
parallels to a i'ecent Hawaii
Five O television segment in-
volving a multiple slaying,
said Dennis S. Hill. police
public information director.
Many characteristics, in-
cluding the assailant's garb,
method of operation and a
ba g of candy found ju his
pocket, resembl.ed the
televisioo program, Hill said.
He also noted th:t receipts
found for one rifle and am-
munition were dated shortly
after the broa dcast. Raymond D. Ferrell-el, 30,
failed to report for work 1\1.on-
day morning. his first absence
in six months at the plant. Keep. Sa· n· ta But he appeared at the factory
in the afternoon armed with
a 30-30 carbine .and a .30-Claus Alive caliber rifle.
He walked through an ad·
ministrative building and a ''°''s' room 10 • "dipping Says Doctor room" \\'here brush handles
are painted. and fired about NEW YORK (UPI) _ A
a dozen shots. They killed two men who. like Ferrell-el, noted child ·psychi atrist says
\\'orked as dippers. Still firing. parents should foster the myth
the gunman returned to a of Santa Claus so the ir young
storage room where police children can accept Christmas later found two other bodies. Another man shot in the ship-gifts without feeling obligated
Xerox Head
J. Wilso11
Dies in NY
. .
NEW YORK (UPI).
Joseph C. Wilson , ctlairman
or Xerox Corporation and a
man responsible for revolu-
.tionizing office \\'Ork around
the world. died Monday of
a heart attack suffered while
attending a lunch with Gov.
Nelson A. Rockefeller.
Shortly after \Vorld War 11,
Wilson took a gamble on a
new copying process that at
the time of his death had
brought a new dimension to
the business world and made
the name of his company a
common \'erb in the popular
vern;icular.
Wilson, 61. attended a Xerox
manasemenl meeting Monday
morning at the company's
New York office and had plan;
ned to go to a board meeting
in the afternoon.
He ~ccepted a lunc;heon date
with Rockefeller, with whom
he had worked closely as
chairman of two state com·
n'litlees on social welfare and
medicel care. Wilson was also
chairman of the presidential
committee on health educa·
tion.
ping department died en route to parents and relatives.
to a hospital. Dr. Bruno B ette I he i m , F LJ •
\Vben F'errell-el Oed the writing in the current issue arm Jtlt~
building he fired several times of Ladies Home Journal. said
:it converging: po I ice. Monday belief in Santa "is F • J B
Patrolman Kenneth l-laydcn, the only way some children zg ·it Utz
24. was wounded in the left can permit themselves to en·
leg before t1vo other officers joy Christmas presents. WASHINGTON IUPI) _
shot Ferrell-el at least three "Many children feel they Two farm organizations
times in the abdomen. don't deserve presents from mounted lobbying campaigns
llayden was later treated their parents," he said. "Even today in an effort to block
and released at a hospital. more children sense that ac-President Nixon's nomination
Ferrell-el remained in crilical cepting gifts from parents or of Purdue University Dean
condition Monday night follow-relatives creates an obligation. Earl L. Butz as the new
ing surgery.. . . None of this is true while agriculture secreta ry.
Police said h o m t c 1 d e children believe in Santa." I charges would be filed against 1 Sa . t 1 The Sen a I e Agricu ture
Ferrel!·el, ivho formerly work· Belie in nta 1s no on y Committee voted 8-6 l\.1onday f pleasurable in itself, Bet· to send the nomination to the rd as a teachers' aide or telheim said, but is "an im· Senate floor. The full Senate
do
eomethinG
beautrul
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face: Textured finiSh diamond bridal
sets in 14 karat yellow gold. $595. $42'i.
Man's ring, not shown, goes with both
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Divided Payments Av11i1able.
,.
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HIDE.AWAY FOR CHRISTMAS
Ch•rv• A<cawntt Invited
Amttcl~~ E•P•H~
a111t.11nel'lc1111 a M•1ttr C.hargf, loot
SLAVICK'S
Jf'\V('ICrs Sin('(' 1917
18 FASH ION ISLAN D
NEWPORT BEACH -644-1380
Open Mon. and Fri., 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.
IF YOU DON'T LI KE THE IDEA OF
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CHRISTMAS ~>1 ~t--.$'1~·'~''' TREES ~ "i'r1 t'· \;." ... :, ... L ', .'Oii•' ... ~ ,.' )'i' .'v'' 1-tt,•'.' .~ .... "X"'li*-J·lo/ '"'>\,)1~1'.>'
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e SPRUCE e EUGENIA e PRIVET
PL US MANY MANY MOREi .~ ~t(\'.~.r~~ ;~;;.,. ~~~~~t~#Jbf. CHOOSE FROM 20 VARIETIES
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e FOR HOME, APT., BOAT
l"i )1 ~L' I ~~:~~~~i;~;~r1N;~i,~.~. e TABLE TOP TO 8 FT. TALL :.·:i ,··.. ......... szso '50 '.~.:!~'. ·"~·/'•-' • f~tJJ:/ frorn to '~~~ ~·· ~ After the holidays. iust put them $
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for Christmas year after year.
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ARRIVE DEC. 3rd the city school system. · d I · ''I-le was so interested in portant step in eve oping is nol expected to vote until I'======================
1 h adult concepts." next week on the confirmation the children," recalled Beu a All children must one day of Butz, 62, who once was
M. Caldwell. as1tistant prin-learn to distinguish between an assistant to controversial cipa\ at Sc:hQOl 141. 1· d r I Kid s Lilce to Aslc Andy PHONE 546-5525
Ferrell-cl's family to Id rea ity an an asy sooner or Agriculture Secretary Ezra v· later, he added. But "they Taft Benson.
police he was a ietnam will learn this on the basis ----------------------------------===== veteran, but details of his of their own experiences."
military service were -===========I unavailable .
l\.1rs. Caldwell and other
associates said Ferrell-el did
not speak with a foreign ac-
KIDS LOVE
UNCLE LEN
Only C .oast & Southern offers savers all three:
cent. "There was a day when I
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Mrs. Cald"1ell remembered,
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Saturdays in
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':ORONA DEL MAR
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. c DAILY P ROT EDITORIAL P AGE
• .
-' ' '
' • i
l • • ' I
I
I
'
l • '
Big Labo r's
George l\'feany and bis AFL-CIO union hierarchy
a re arrogantly telling lhe country that they don't \1•ant
J>hase 2 to 'vork.
l\1eany has indica"ted he doesn't \l'ant anything to
'11ork that might rcdoulld to the credit of President Nix·
on -even the vi~its to Russia and China. l\1cany's crude
tactics arc out of touch \ri th the mood of the natio n.
l\1eany and his "Big Labor" boys 01rc the nation
better than this. 'the average product ivity gain has been
only 1.3 percent per year since 19ti7. But even in 1967,
th~ median increase in wages and frin ge benefits in
union contracts \l'as 5.2 percent. And currently it has
been running 8.4 percent.
So big labor bears a very heavy share of the re-
sponsibihty for infla1 ion, and for the loss of sales and
jobs to foreign competition.
The" people understand this nation's economic ill·
nc:?.s and the people '"ant Pha.;;c 2 to \vork so that \l'C
t:.an get over the crippling inflation sickness quickly.
l\1eany's personal pettiness and his 'vill ingness to
g.!lmblc on sin king the ship can only earn hin1, and the
labor n1ovcmcnt. and some of his errand boys in Co n-
gress, tile bitter rese ntment of the American people.
... and Mea ny Over Miami
\\lhatever the validity o[ Big Labor's viC\Vs on Pre_s.
ident Nixon's efforts to bring inflation under control,
there can be no excuse for the boorish, insulting treat·
1nent accorded him \vhen he addressed the AFL-ClO
convention in J.1iami Beach last Friday.
Before, during and after the President's courageous
a ppearance in the lair of his foremost detractors, the
Bad Show
dignity or the presidency was Ignored whUe he w~s trc~f...
ed as though he \Vere an interloper from a foreign dtc·
tatorship bent on destroying the United States.
A part or the ill·mannered performance by_Meaoy
and hi s n1inions can be attributed to the stron g-3U1ance
,\·ith the De1nocratic party, where the labor bosses _see
themselves also as the political bos~es. .
And part of the antics may have been defensive,
for Big Labor's pushing for,. wage increases far in excess
of productivity gains, and 'I ts insistence on feather·bed·
ding and make·work rules, have been major contribu·
ti ons to the inflationary spiral.
\Vhatever th e motive or combination of motives that
drove lt1eany to his crude actions, the net effect re-
portedly is \l.'Orrying Democratic leaders. And well it
should.
. Bus Syste~ for County ?
Does Orange County want a public transportation
system? If it does, then the Orange County Transi t
District had better move to latch ont.o the $9 million a
year expected to come to the county from the new one-
fourth of one percent sales tax on gasoline.
If the transit system isn't 'vanted, the money can
go to roads or to a one-fourth of one percen t reduction
in sales taxes on all purchases subject to the regular
sales tax levy.
lf there were some way to be certain residents will
use a public transportation system in place of much of
the present automobile use, the question would be
anS\\'ered. As it is, the ans\ver must await the transi t
district's forthcoming study to determine \vhether the
county should have a bus system and to what extent.
•
"What do you plan t.o do for an encore?'
A Wea lth Deteriorati1ig Co1idit·ions Stre1igthe1i Presidetit's Resolve
Of Talent
Squa11d ered
(. \-
' Sydne
~
J. l{arr is J
~!y piece on the mo\·ies a few months
ago brought in a lot of flack from the
film buffs, who accused me of being
u·illfully blind about the virtues and value
of modern cineinatography.
\\'ell. I decided to lry once more. This
tin1e I opted for a screening of the new
Julie Christie film.
''The Go-BC!llr'Cen."
•'h1ch not only \\'On
!he Grand Prize at
Dear
Gloon1y
Gus
-Anoth~r Try for Revenue Sharing
The FCC kicked cigarette adver·
tising off te!e1•ision , because the
surgeon general detcrmini;d lhal
s1noking is dJngerous to you r
he alth. Then, \vhy do they allow
the Arn1y lo ad\'crtise on T\'?
-P. 0.
neces~•llY 111011 al lhl ntw1111e>e•. S11td
WASHINGTON-Despite congressional
hostility, President Nixon will press hard
next year for a revenue-sharing program
to rescue states and localities from finan-
cial crises.
Only a major overhaul of the tax
system, he believes. will save the nation's
schools, cities and states from deteriora-
tion. Here are the disturbing facts which
ha\•e strengthened
his resolve to share
federal funds with
local governments:
M~--~~--..... --..,-·~~
' " tJ~ck •And~rson
-In many localities. public schools are
substandard and falling into disrepair .
Some have actually closed for lack of
fund s. Teachers everywhere are
threatening to strike for decent wages.
Yel the taxpaye rs are refusing to shell
out more money for schools.
they represent an expense of spirit in a -The taxpayers, waste of shame, a \\"ealth of talent squan-angry over the high -~10ST STATE governments can no -st of go,ernment longer raise the revenue lo keep up with dercd on the most impoverished content. '"V • are -,ott'•g aga1·nst rising costs. They are on the brink or It is almost as jf \\'e hired the Vienna '" "' J>hilhc.rmonic::. \\"ilh Heifetz as soloist. to more taxes. In many fiscal chaos.
p:.>rform "Jingle Bells" for two solid plat-es, t~ey .h.a ve As President Nixo~ sees it. the federal
ing proposals for next yea r. They seek a
palatable way of helping to finance local
govem1nents. They think a value-added
tax. for exam ple. might be sold to the
public as an "education tax."
Or federal income taxes might be
earmarked for worthy local programs
that the public would approve. This would
be easier to put across , they feel, than
simply handing the states and localities
blank checks.
AFTER ON • THE • SPOT investi-
gations of Attica, N.Y., and Raiford,
Fla., prisons, Rep. Oaude Pepper, D-
F'la ., is ready for the most exhaustive
prison hearings in House histo ry.
behind the bars of lhe bullet-pocked
prison. Staff invesUgators have also
journeyed to ancient. misasmal Raiford.
Pepper plans five days of hearings. He
will avoid name-calling and blame-plac·
ing. He will concentra te, instead, on
cures. With ex-convicts returning to
prisons at a 75 percent rate. Pepper is
convinced that present penal practices
are bankrupt.
t/le Cannes .Fesiuti~•aa11-_-{''7''h
last ~lay, but also
h . voted do'.ln cr1t1cally government musl either share revenue
I---' o~~~· modern mvstique of the film is _n~dedhnew bood.Jssues._And.JocaL.oifh.__with-local-government.s-or-lake-over.lheir_
part of our curreiit dcb<isen1enl nf con· dla s ~ 0 hoped to be reelected wouldn't functions. The idea of taking more power
The veteran lawyer-legislator has ten.
tatively scheduled testimony before his
House Crime Committee at the end of the
month. He will follow up earl y in 1972
with hearings on juvenile institutions.
NE\\' YORK CORRECTIO'.'llS head
Russell Oswald and Attica Superintendent
Vincent Mancusi will testify at the Pep-
per hearings. Members of the famous
"Ad Hoc Observers Team," which tried
to mediate the Attica dispute, also are
being invited . Richard Clark. the
articulate black inmate spokesman, has
tentatively agreed to appear al the hear-
ing on a panel with a fellow pr isoner and
an ex-inmate. A guard who was hel d
hostage and a guard union leader have
also been asked to appellr as wi tnesses.
11 as adapted for the
:;1.-reen by my favor-
ite tonlen1porary
pla~·11r1gh1. Harold
PintE>I'. 111ho has nev-
t>r 11·1·n1en a 11lay I didn't appreciate and
cn1or.
. F..\IH E\Ot.:Gll? I sat through two
hours oi splendid camera v.ork. consum·
n~a1c ac!ing. beaul1tully nos I a I g i c
!\Cts. ancl gnrgeous p..!Sloral co Io r,
\ 1sually, it 11as like 11 atch1ng a Renoir
canvas t"Ome to_ hie; but as a ··••Ori\. of ge-
nu :ne ar11stic in1aginati0n. it was a bust.
The story \1as tedious. lrt\"ial, and
ban:il -and lreated as prct~ntiousl~· as
passihlr. A \cry minnr ta!e of an heiress
\\·ho !alls 1n love \\llh a tenant far-rner,
<1ntl the IJtlle boy the~' use lo arrange
their clandestine 111relings .' "The Go-
Bel \reen·• is i-carcel\" \\Orth a line of
Dickens. ti stntence of Cnnrad"s. a p;1ge
of J lenry Jan1cs. Its inner n1eaning is nil.
A:'\ll THIS 'VAS the gra1 :im~n of my
e<.Jr!1er char&e ag~i11st the flicks: thal
tent in fa\'Or of form ' Forni it self is are increase taxes. ~\vay from the JJCOple and C?ns~Jid~ting .lt
never sufficient in an art-work, unless the -YET OUR GREAT cities are 50 starv· in the central government, In his view, IS
form symbolically expresses some mean· ed for funds that they are turning into un acceptable. .
ingful relationship bchrecn persons. their vast slum f. Sections of New York City Therefore. ~e sees ..r~ alternative lo
l·deas, odeclin"s. And a trite icl e,, or a · revenu.e sharing .. Th. Is could. be ac-e are in worse shape than the war-ravaged I shed b rt of th stereo typed feeling, does not gain in cities of Europe after World War n. comp i . y ass1gn1ng a po ion e
strength or stature simply by being trick-Sl.ootouts and violence are more co mmon federal income tax to local g~vemments.
ed out with pho!ographic effects or s1ar-in our big-city ghettos today than in the Or a ~cw tax, s~ch as the aluc-ad~ed
tling techniques. l he iechnique n1ust be a frontie r towns of the \Vild West a century tax w1del~ used in Europe. could be im-\"ehic!e of content, not iJ substitute. posed. This would assess a !ax on goods ago. Indeed, city administralions have at each stage of the production process. lost control over some sections. "'hich
are run by hoodlums and militants. WIUTE JIO USE aides are now prepar-
The Attica pr ison revolt left 32
prisoners and 11 guards dead last Sep-
ten1ber. At Raiford, guards shotgunned
demon strating prisone rs in the ya rd last
February.· wounding ma n y but
miraculously ki lling none.
PEPPER ANO FOUR committee
members personally visited Att ica im·
mediately after the revolt was quelled.
Later, he dispatched sta[f lawyer Chris
Nolde and two investigators to piece
together quietly \\'h2'J. had happened
Pepper hopes to hear abou t Raiford
from Gov. Reuben Askew of Florida. His
prison head, Louis \Vainwright. who is
blamed by many prisoners for the
Raiford debacle in February, also may
testify.
Pepper's staffers also have conferred
\\'ith John Ricardo, the ex-convict who
guided my associate Les \Vhilten throug!l
Raiford in 1970 for our expose of the
med ieval-type prison. PINTER \\'RITES 1n:tgnificent plays
because he lumself determines the coo-
te nt as v.·ell as the form. Het'J!, he \\'BS
handed a story by someone else, and his
screenplay could just as easily have been
done by any competent craftsn1an. Even
Sh.1kespeare founde red 1vhen he "'as
ordered by Queen E:lh~abeth to \\·rile a
'·jnl!y" play about F;ilslaff.
Conti~uing the 'Dick and Pat' Serial
J)O not mistake me -the film has in-
credible possibilities for expressing oar
humanhood with depth :ind sensibility.
~ly criticism of it is so seve re precisely
because it has failed to utilize its poten·
tialitl es to edify as n1ucl. as to entertain.
Good morning, housewives and other
shut-ins. It's time for anotber chapter of
"Dick and Pat." the heartwarming
daytime serial that asks the question :
··can a traveling man \Yho keeps leav-
ing home have a happy marriaGe? If he
keeps coming back?"
-··
Ar t lioppe
tainl y. Those are very serious problems.
'J'akc care of them while I'm away.
fbri ghlening ) But there !"II be in Hanoi.
•·Accept our heartfelt wishes for peace,"'
I'll tell them. "or we'll blow you off the
face of the m2'{>." Then in Moscow, I'll ...
nounce bombings, you could renounce
BilJy Graham JJrayer breakfasts. And
think of a summit with George Wallace!
Liqitor <tnd Christ 1nas As we join Dick and Pat toda y, Dic'k is
packing with the help of his aide, Dr.
l·lughes KisSinger·
now. Pat is looking
on. Glumly.
out of our marriage. All you ever think of
is your siBy old foreign affairs.
Dick: Now. listen, my fellow America n
· 'KissiagernO\\': Excuse me , sir, bu t
she's ri ght. You\·e got domestic troubles,
Kissingemow: 'Vait, sir, I've got a
great idea for ailother summit con·
ference,
Dick: \Vho with?
Dick (eagerly \: I could offer him two
more Supreme Court c.ppointments. Then
I'll have an eyeball -to-eyeball summ it
confrontation with 'Vilbur t\.tills over
revenue sharing. I could offer to make
him Economic Czar. I mean officially.
Kissingernow: And lastly, you coul d
make a ten-block pilgrimage to the AFlr
CIO Building for a summit meeting with
George f\1eany on Phase Tw o. To the F.ditor:
This is 011r 20th Annual Christn1as Safe·
ty Cn111p;11 pn appeal \\llh thr sa1ne 20th
)e.1r Objl'l'\i\l':
"Ornil hquo r al officr and f(1ctory
Chr1s1n1as pariirs and donate lhc nionev
:?.cn•ed to a "·orlhy char11au1e ori::aniza.
lion".
On Christmas Eve, 1%1. a 1Jr11liant.
)Ot1ni;: professor and hi<; h~cn-agr
1lau,i:hlcr \1C're ~l rurk ancl kii!NI hy an
nutomob1lc The lln\cT. going h·•ine from
:i l~ctory f'hristn1as p:irty. s:lld, "l l1ad a
couple ur h1J!hb<11J~ ' ' :·
'fhl'~e shock •nR, nf'i•dle~s dcn!hs arous·
£'ti <1 te1v concerned ciltzcns lo crusade
<J!!;1111st !'ut·h giJlh(·nn].!s. "l hP pr111111ry
reason \\<IS ''s11il'ty" b111 1n:in.v felt -
<"\lid ft!el -Uquor ::1dd.~ ht1lc In i.i rl':.!1\"t>
gathering celebr1Jln1~ 1hr ('I ii;\rnns
l,enson. A few hu ndred appc:il<: 11ere
mu1tcd to business leaders in l:J~,~-
TlllS ''EAR. "1E wlll mail mf1te 1ha11
:ro.000 appeals throughout !he nJ'1r1n nnd
Cnnada. The appeal has the unqu~· f ··J
support of business leaders and f(11 1·om·
panies hold Christmns parUcs w h l' r c.
ttp1r1tuous liquor flows fr ee I~ •
tnfortunafCI)" departments or many
bu!lnesscs plan Christmas gptherln,e,s
out.s1tk! the!lr plants. The danger is the
5ume:
A drinking drh'er Is a potcaUal
murderer. •
\\'on't you join thousands or others in
lhis Cru5'\de for Safely?
T. EMOl\Y DANlEL. JR.
THE RT. RE)'. MSG!\.
JOHN P. WODARSKI
Co-Chainncn
Chrlstmaf Safety Campaign
r ..
~1a il hox
Lt!ltrt from re1111r1 •rt -~. N<lr;,.,11,..
• ..... ,,,,. stMIYfG t<lnv•' TIMI~ "'""''" hi )GO Wllr'<ll ftr IM1. Tri. rl,hl II uindMiM 111111"1 le lit NMI
tr elimfftl lf 111111 l1 ,.."""'' All i.11ett mu1! 111-
clu<I• "'"'tyro 1na m•ltlnt •dd•tH, bu! n1me1
m1Y i.. wil~~tlll In ''""'" If iUllirltnl '"10ll 11
"""'''"'· Potlfl' wru nor h PUblt11'1ed.
T/1c 11 IJ011't 611., T/1eirs
To the Editor·
The bureaucrats at HE\V, \•.'hO liCI
gui delines for busing other people's
children. 1101\"1 h11 vc to v.·orry about their
011·n children being ha ul ed miles fro1n
their n('i~hborhood schools.
So reports the American Conservative
1,.'nion fnim \Vushingtun, D.C. An ACU Jn·
l'CSlig.'ltion has found ltn1 t Of !ht lop 17
offici:Jls of lf£\V \U'lose \\'ho rormulate
bu~ing JXIJlcyl. not one hos a chUd who is
bused lo <1chieve racial balance in
s~hools.
~JOST. LIKE l{E\V Secretary Elliot
!{1.:h;i rtlson. ha1·e their children in
jlnvale schools. In the case of ?llr. lllch-
ard.:!on, hl.!! chlldrrn attend a most tX·
clu~i\e S<'hool in \\'a~hinjtlOn and are
rh:u1lfC"ured there dally. There v.ro'i not
O'll' ex;iinp!c or a llE\V offieial"s (top 17
1ifl!Ci<1\i;1 child })cing placed on a bus
and dru·cn ou t of his nc~hbor.hood... Thi~ 1~a11~cs on!! to think out loud that If
the ~oci:il planncr:o; nl llE\\' h.ad to bus
their ch\ld1·('11 . 11\r.y rtiight not b<' !iO eager
lo bus tho~l' ~,r other people.
ls lhi~ 1hr 11ay the Colclcn Ruic iJ ap-
plied?
(;JO:OnGE C. SCOTT
\
Pat: But. dear.
you just got back
from chatting wi!h
lhe Emperor of Jap..
an and seeing off the
President of Yugo-
slavia. Where are
you going now?
Dick (airily): Oh. just a little jaunt to
Peki~ and l\foscow and maybe Hanoi
and Havana and f • , ls it Bucharest,
Hughes?
Klssingemow : No. Budapest, sir.
You've been to Bucharest lately.
Pal: Sometimes I think you're just
trying to get out of the house.
Dick (frowning): Let me be perfectly
candid about this, my fellow American . It
is my duty. \\'hether T like it or not, to go
about the world meeling at the stimmlts
with my deadliest enemies In otder to
build bridges to peace ru millions cheer.
Thank you.
·pru (dabbing at her eyes with a
handl!.crchicf\; Oh. the spark has gone
B!J Ge orge --~
Dear George:
People \vho writt'. nutty letters
are called "cranks." \Vhy is this
and do you get many "crank'' let-
ters~ 1\1.A Y
Dear ?11ay:
-Crflnks !re called that beca11st. 1
~u~!!S. they're wound up so light.
~!. for how many crank leUcrs I
receive, it's hard to say, 'Vhen
you·ve been doin g lhJs job as long
ns I have , yon get to.where yoit
can·t t~ll lhe difference.
too. •
Diek (gloomily ): You're telling me.
Kissingerno \\·: I "'as referring, sir. to
such problems as the militant young
radicals. the threat of George 'Vallaee,
the near demise of revenue sharing.
la bor's reluctance lo go along "'ith Phase
T\l'O •••
Dick lsupprcssing a yawn): i 'es, cer·
Kissingernow (triumphantly): Abbie
Hoff1nan! Here"s a deadly enemy right
at home with v.·hom you can pit
yQur wils in delicate negotiations .as the
television cameras record the momentous
e\"cnt for history.
Dick (interested): Hmmm . but how
could I build a bridge to peace with the
likes of him?
Klssingernow: Perhaps iI he'd re-
Hoppe's Nixon Problem
By Il{)N/\LD B. TllA CKREY
United Press lnt ern.atiooal
Columnist Art Hoppe has a problem
.... ·ith Preside nt Richard Nixon. J{e just
isn't funny. ri.1r. Nixon. that is,
Jloppe, who writes a syndica\ed eolumn
of political satire, is extremely funny. As
is hi s latest book. a collection of column..:;
called "r.1r. Nixon and My Other
Problems.'' recently published by Chroni-
cle Books of San Francisco ($6.95.)
Here is Hoppe on l\ir. Nixon : "The
key to the problem ls not what f.1r. Nixon
Is; It's what ,.1r. Nlxon isn't. What r..tr.
Nix-on isn·t. In the rinal analysis. is funny
"TllA.NKS TO A quarter of a ~entury
of lncrcdlb.ly irueling errort, he h;:is
somehow managed to boo>me the only
~residcnl In Jiving memory who ls
neither loo urbane, nor too earthy, too
flan1boy11nt nor too stuffy, too short nor
loo tall, tno fat. nor loo thin, too athletic
nor too seden hH')', too. ,
•· .i\Ir. Nixon ls sUnply not too
I The Bookin an
anything. How do you satirize l\ir. Nixon?
11ow do you capture the comic essence or a man by exaggerating his flaws? When
you find a minor one and joyfully exploit
It. he Immediately corrects iL He doesn't
t\'Cn say he \\'IUl{S to make one thing
perfectly clear any more."
BlJT SOl\tEl.fOW Hoppe perserveres
and turns out columns on l\1r. Nixon.
Ills other problems Include "The En-
vironment and Other Oisa.tter Ar.~.". "~fodem Living and Who Needs It?"
"the Generation Gap and Let's Keep It
That W:iy.'' 1oAll Men Art Brolher1 and
They Fight Like It," and other things.
lie even includes some columns that
are not rinriy-prfmarlly bec11use there
Is 1nuc h that Is not comic in th e world
surve)'ed by poli tlcnl satirists.
Dick (enthusiasticall y): Right! (frown·
ingJ But what can I offer him that I
h.'.lven't given him alread y?
KissingtmO Y.': We 'll think of
something.
Pat (smiling tentatively): Does that
mean you 'll be staying home. dear?
Dick (putting an arm around her as he
shakes hands with Kissingemow): Yes it
does, dear. For I ..have found th2'.l
domestic troubles, by golly. can be fun ,
too.
See review
book· below.
of Art Hoppe's nci»
-Editor
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. \Vttd, Publisher
Thoma.s Ketvil, Editor
Albf'rt \V. Batts
EdUoritit Pooe Editor
Thr Niltorif!.1 J><'~t' nf the DA.ny l'Hnt i;{'('ks to lnl!•rm 11od ,;tlmu~
111.te l"C'l'd•·r;s \l)' 11rrsenting thla ncv.·spnf"'T':c flplnlon!I and com· mrnJIU'): on. tnpft"I tJf lnt~l 8nd 'ii;nlfll"l\nrt. b)' providlnir • fnn1m
for-1hc tXTT""Utrrn of 1mr 11 Adt'T'I'
orlnion~. 8nd hy 1~111'nllni: thlt divrll'lr ''i""'fJOlnt~ ()f lnformt'd ob. 'rrvrr.c 1\nd apokes.mc:n un lOfliC:S
u{ the day.
Tuesday, N9vember 23, 197 1
t
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r--==-----===::.::;:;::::......,.,,,,.,.,..,_, QUEENIE By Phil lnterlancil ~ U.S. Agriculture
Dept. Given Lile
L. ltf. Boyd
Cleo Made Out'
Witl1 Long_ Nose.
"If ~be neae of Cleopatra bad been a little shorter . the
whole face of tbe world 'WOUid-have been cbang°ed."
Pascal
Cleopatra's.rose was· lorig. Exceedingly long. That's
known because 1her likeness was imprinted on coins. To-
day, the ~o. 1 d.esire which ygung ladies ei:press to plastic
surgeons 1s, "Shorten my nose." Wisdom of this remains
in doubt. Girls with small turned-up ooses have their ap..
peal, true enough. ~t in matters of romance, notoriously
long-nosed women, like Cleopatra, have made greater im.
pact. Experts agree on that. Unanimously.
81AGINE the football crowd these blustery days win
see small boys hawking plastic garbage can liners kl front
of U)e stadiums shortly. Step in one
of same. and you'll find nothing work!
qw'\e so well out there tq keep you
warm and dry below the belt.
MOST STATES outlaw the sale of
liquor to those swinging beginners
aged 18 to 21. But recent studies in..
dicate they're the country's heaviest
.drinkers. That's odd, although not
very.
jj 'NOW we're even,' said Steven,
as he gave his wife five blows," Jonathan Swift wrote that.
Report this in reply to a customer who wants to know
where \\'e got the term·"Even Steven." That's where.
NOTIONS -The Evening Walk: What a man neglects
first when his cold gets too much is shaving ... Another
wa y to categorize acquaintances is to label each either .. a
natural hos t" or "a natural guest" , .. U the clothes are
all right , there's no such thing as bad weather, never
ever ... Wbat do you suppose an opthalmologist calls
himself the third martini? . , . Anybody who prefers
fresh black caviar to fresh blackeyed peas must have a
fundamental button loose. I think.
IT WAS FOR the good of the national image, he said,
that fascist Italy 's Benito Mussolini issued the following
order a generation or so ago: "Only buxom types of women
shall be used in printed advertisement." This was the
large pr ide of Italy, that Its women were remarkably cur-
vacious. Still is, somewhat. Believt I told you earlier those.
skinny Paris models are outlawed in Rome.
QUERY -Q. "Any accurate statistics on what pro-
portion of the adopted children were born to married par-
ents?"
A. About one out of every 100, say those bureau opera-
tors ~·ho ought to kno\w.
HARDLY ANYBODY realizes the old Devil's Island
itself, a palm-decorated paradise cooled by the fresh sea
breezes, never hosted more than a dozen French prisoners
at any one time. Was like rest-and-recreation-ville. But the
big penal colony on the mainland was pretty rotten, may.
be you know.
Address maiL to L. M. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875, New-
port Beach, Cati/. 92660.
Driving Tests Begun
By Highway Patrol
SACRAMENTO (UPll -
The California Highway Patrol
has announced the start of a
program utilizing s p a c e
medicine techniques to
determine individuals' reac-
tions to driving under stressful
conditions.
The patrol said the $238,000
test program will be con·
ducted by 40 patrolmen during
weekends through November.
Goal of the study is tO obtain
infonnation which will lead to
a reduction of injury and ac-
cidents.
The patrolmen will wear a
transistorized helmet which
will monitor brainwaves, heart
action and eye movements
during dri ving tests. The
helmet is similar to the one
developed to m e a s u r e
physiological reactions o I
astronaulS.
Braking, acceleration and
turning movements will be
recorded to correlate with the
driver's physiological reaction
data, the patrol said.
Collection of the data, which
will be fed into a computer,
will be performed by the
space biology group or the
brain research institute of the
University of California al Los
Angeles .
HEY, LOOK WHO'S BACK!
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-"···~·h·--,.·--·-·---······~·...,...,..·---·--... '
On the Reuben E. Lee . . .
Nov. 22 · 23 · 24-26 ·27
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Dec.19 · 20 · 2_1·22·23
Two Shows Nightly, 10-12
Cover Charge 1.50 per person
. •
"Don't just do something, stand there."
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Conservation Service, which
revised plan of the Nixon ad· administers fam1 progra111J
mlnlstratlon ror reorganizing and.at least partly the ma~
the federal bureaucracy agencies dealing with farm
guarantees farmers they wi:n-ecoriomics and research, and
have the Agriculture Depart.. functions associated w I th
ment around for a while. · cooperatives and extension.
Under an original pro~t~· The decision to retain the
the agency would have been Agriculture Department as a
el.iminated and its parts department reportedly was
distributed among several new ()Oe of the conditions specified
departments. .r.ut a revised by Earl L. Butz in accepting
plan wlll keep the Agriculture the nomination is Secretary of
Department stripped down' to Agriculture.
serve only farmers. Ho ... ever, the decision to
As it is now, the department keep the agency also was a
includes a hodge-podge of prudent political choice. Fann
~encies which administer organi?.ations and r u r a I
programs or are ~fwise members or Congress pro-
deveoted to many nonlarm tested vigoriously the original
clients. plan to do away with the ccn.
Yes .•• wittl the help of SIGHT LIGHT. At home or away at school, SIGHT
LIGHT's ctear, bright, glareless light
gives unbelievable seeing comfort. Re-member, better li1ht means better grades.
from '43'°
President Nixon said in an-tu,ry--0ld institution.
nouncing tjle switch that Rep. \V: R. Poage (0.Tex.)! OPEN DAILY: f TO l :JO
peripheral agencies in the.. <'hairman of the House FllDAY-f ·TO t
agency would be transferred Agriculture Committee, said it CLOSED SUNDAY
out. At a farewell news con-•PP"" to him Nixon "just 1865 HARBOR BL
•
Numbers Overtake
20th Century Man
ference, outgoing Agriculture deeided he can·t do it all at
Secretary Clijforo M. Ha"1in one lime so he'll do it COSla Mesa-548-5131
mentioned the U.S. Forest 1_.,!P'.'.iec~em~ea~I •. "•jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjj~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~ Service and parts of the· Rural
Electrification 1r.'dmlnlstration
and Farmers Hmme
Administration which d e a l
with community development.
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -deviates . Also expected to be moved
86 STORES BRIM-FULL
Of Christmas Goadin
Modern man has not changed "Viewing man as an en-out are parts of consumer-
from his hunting ancestors, dangered species helps us to oriented agencies which do not
but has been overtaken by his focus on ·the most serious deal directly with farmers: ~ -ufb P.Oasf '3.---
own numbers. failure of social science -the Among the most obvious OU \'---J' lilD
Many of his social and men·:l~fa~il~ure~to~d:••~l~w~i~th~th~e~spec~~ie~sJ'~urv;i,~o~rs~~w~ou~l~d~be~~t~h~•J=:==~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:== ta! ills are the results of man, as a whole." the authors said. . Agricu ltural Stabilization and
the hunter, stepping on his
own toes and those of other
hunters, say the improb{lbly
named authors of a new
anthropology book.
"Copulation control is as
much the issue as population
control," write Lionel Tiger
and Robin Fox in "The
Imperial Animal," recently
published by Holt, Rinehart &
Winston, Inc., of New York
($6.95).
"The human organism is
like a computer -then the
fuses blow and there is risk ol
a breakdown," they write.
• ' 0 u r maximum-security
prisons and hospitals are full
of homicidal maniacs ... but
in every society the dedicated
killer crops up, and it takes no
great imagination to see how
useful he would be in limes of
trouble," they ·write.
lie would be a perfect com-
mando or Green Beret, who
could be sent out to do what
his computer w a s pro-
grammed for -murder.
"We do not seem to mind
paranoid delusions of mind in
our leaders; it is only when
they occur in 'inappropriate'
people -like assistant prof-
fers or busboys -that we
send for the straitjackets,"
they say.
Jn small hunting groups,
deviate behavior is acceptable
and places were made for the
Get more
"home"
from your
house.
Houses grow small
and cramped without
the things that make
them home-
specia! furn itu re
better TV, stereo
hi·fi, paid up bills ..•
and money left over
for fun. Avco may
help with a
homeowner loan
on your house,
whether it's paid
for or not.
HOMEOWNER LOANS
TO S25,000
OYER SS,000 ON
RfAL ESTATE ANO
PERSONAL
PROPERTY
.4/JIS::::-
We believe in you.
100 N. AMheh" 11"4. Sll·2114
250 S. IKll4 A... 774-1210
ll7t H•rbor ll•d.,
C.1hl ,.... 44J·l414
617 W. 11ttl St.,
Sotmi AH 141-4431
2017 S. M•l11 St., s ... ,. .... 149·3161
' Gallo Eden Roe Cold Duck
bubbles with the festive spirit of
Thanksgiving.
Sparkling, purple and chilled,
Gallo Eden Roe is the better
breed of duck.
Taste the deeper, fuller flavor
that springs from_ not on(:), but
three choice varieties of grapec
Fill your glass with Gallo
Eden Roe Cold Duck. The
official bird of Thanksgivirtg.
Gallo Eden Roe
Cold Due~-----
~-~
I
•• ' ' \ \
G
'
K
-~G•llO~D ·DUCK.
111E BE I I ER BREED.
l'llODtJQD AND llOTIUl) BY •
GAII.OO!AMPAONE CELLAru;, MODESTO, CAI.1P'.
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1J OAIL V PILOT TutJdlr. November V. lli71
, Attack on Fratuf · Solons Protest Comments
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Tough Bill Inked Reagan Criticism B"fusted TRAVEL TRAILER SPACES SACflA?o.1'.ENTO (UPI) -as upense allowa ncss, prin-Republican Sen. J~. L .
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I
On Auto Repairs Gov. Ronald Re a g an' s Ung and clerical help. Richardson of Arc ad i a
scolding of the legislature for Reagan told reporters at a characterized the 1971 session
meeting too long and spending news conference Monday that
too much taypayers' money "something mu.st be done as ''pretty much ot a flop"
drew angry fire f rto m because t think this is and added "we've spent a
Democrats today and con· disgracefuL" lot or money, we've increased
currence !rem Repqblicans. "I think Ronald Reagan l.s taxes. By .and large. I think
$5.00 a clay
Shorf)t:n y our 9olf gome-
p,ocllce on 1h1 public.
Cfrlvlhg range neir.t door.
Palm 5Rringr Oasis j , SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Conswner
:., legislation designed to pro~ect the
· Ca1ifomia car owner against an auto
rep.\lr dealer who gouges blm for an
overhaul but only replaces his spark
plugs has been signed by Gov. Ronald
~agan.
Crooked dealers could be put out cf
business and in jail under the bill, which
Reagan said was "the toughest and mos t
significant conswner protection legisla·
lion of the year in California."
The measure's author, ,Sen. Anthony
·Beilenson (D-Beverly HUis) s a id ,
-"Almost every car owner has been the
·victim of fraudulent auto repair prac-
!' tices. The new 'la,w will finally give
lfl the victimized motcrlst an effective
means of redress." ·
~ In signing the bill Monday, Reagan
declared that it was "aimed at cracking
down on a certain irresponsible segment
of the auto repair industry which persists
in using di~honest and u n e t h i c a I
~ operating methods."
~ The legislation protects motorists
against fraud by requiring stale licensing
of the some 40.000 dealers in the $2.5
;} blllion·a-year Cali!omia car r e p a l r
~ bu siness.
DJshonest dealers could lose their
Jicenses, be fined up to $1,000 and sen-
~ tenced to up to six months in j8il.
In his statement, Reagan said that
an "increasing number of complaints"
have been received about the car repair
business. He said that fraudulent prac-
tices V.'ere not only harmful to consumers
but also to the industry.
According to Beilenson. estimates of
the amount swindled annually from car-
owners by mechanics range from $250
million lo as high as $1.5 billion.
No standards are set fo r licensing
under the bill, but it applies virtually
to every dealer -from the mechanic
who runs a one-man shop to big new
" 'car dealers.
Mechanics -employed by dealers would
not be licensed.
Ttie measure es tablishes wlthin Ule
Department of Consumer Affairs a
v;atchdog bureau of automotive repairs.
Tbe bur:eau ~'OUid license dealers. in-
cluding most gas stations, investigating
complaints and make spot check.s.
"There's no question that d I 1 g r a c e f u I , ' ' snapped • tte · th
Rwrtotl-1 v ... ltt. "-' 36100 Dote Palm Dr.
Calhedrol Cily, California 9223'
(714) 328-4813 ,,. "'~"''1 of tho U.S. FlM...'61 G.OOI,.
the legislature could have Assembly Speaker Bob Moret· we ve go n 10 e way of
been out of here a Jong time ti (D-Van Nuys) when in· people rather substant.ja!ly."
ago,'' agreed Ass em b I y formed, by a newsman of The legislature's No. 1 ac-
Republican Leader Robert T. Reagan's remarks. • • H e's oomplishinent this ye a r
ltfonagan of Tracy. never been willing to govern generally is regarded to be
Monagan said he will push (this state since he has been:\fran~o~v~er~h~a~ul~o~t~t~h~e~w~el~fa~r~e~;;;;;~~~~~ 1egislaUon next ye2.r to limit governor." and Medi.Cal health care acts.
the length of I e g i .s I a t i v e Senate Democratic Leader
sessions and permit bills to George R. Moscone of San
Corporal Punishment ·.stay alive for two years, as Francisco said "the reason
in Congress. we've been here this long is
·The Democratic-controlled that Republicans re.fuse to
legislature has broken all consider an issue on its
Jongevity records and today merits, b\lt feel they first
·marked the 324th ~alendar day much check it out with the
AUTffENTlt:? NEW EN61:ANl9
THANKSGIVING BINNER!
Opposed by Grand Jury ol its session." It already had governor.
spent $20 million through "If the governor would get
October and each day it con-out of the legislature we could
tinues to meet costs an extra get our v.·ork done much
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The County
Grand Jury told the school board ~1'.onday
to spare the rod and the child.
The grand jury unanimously opposes
corporal punishment for children by
teachers, a spokesman said, calling th e
practiee 0£ paddling students "inef·
fective" and "psychologically harmful ."
The testimony came from ·Marian
Loeb, chairman of the Grand Jury Com·
mittee on Schools and Juveniles, a~
pearing before a school board committee
weighing a proposal to reduce or
eliminate corporal punishment in the
schools.
"I think most people working in the
schools would like not to have to do
this," said Robert T. Cooper. chairman
of the school board group and an area
superintendent for the city schools.
He said that "loo often, corporal
punishment ls administered outside the
framework of policy." He did not
elaborate.
Currently, school board rules allow
corporal punishment -usually a pad·
dlini on the buttocks -when milder $11,IXlO just for such items faster." '
disciplinary measures fail to control 3 11~--;;;i; ___ ;_;;;o;~;;;;;i;;;;:;; .............. ., / 1
student. The rules require the paddling · "O r 11 1 o 1 r rw :~i:~~ b~ ·t~c;:;.~~p:~:h:: BONG "i:oirG
CUSTOM TAILORS & SHIRTMAl(EIS IN ORANGE COUNTY .-
Cooper said school officials should be r=7"-c.;.P_oER,,,M:::::A~NINT SHOWROOM
required to keep records on paddHngs, 11 ... ,.,111,,.• cm .. MIH PRl-CHltSTMU SAU
but he argued that the alternative of 2 IUITS $ AT BIG SAVINGS
h I 110 Ho~.Ufllrv2t!t1m111,m1 p ysica punishment must be kept DOUBLE KNIT AVE UP TO SO•'o availab le to until schools have f••" Go,.,..,,• Moo1 .. ,i.c. tt
I. d <>~ Ho•d Tollt.-4 c:."°'" Ma<k more counse ing a n psychological SPlCIAL n1c1 1~ 11ow s.1h, S.oo••<"""· sioru, s11.111, services available to deal with problem · 0ouo1e Kn11 • 9~ ut 100% G•c'"""" $ot1>1<K110~
t d t Slllt Mo!\air .. 18 ., • W( flT ANY SIZl-S u en s: • ANT sry,, COPlfD
Larry Sibelman, a spokesman for the ' '""m"" · ·· ~ " T~tE WHAtE U . d T s11 .. rk5kln .... 15 41 { 4 n1te eachers of Los Angeles, said Sllk wool .... 82 5, • Fau AlTUl:ATIONS
the leade rship of his organization is S!\Tns . 10 ' • 4 w11K DIUVIRY t
about to .projXlse that the members adopt .,i., ,....,o.,.. • d.,,, •EASY l"AYMINTS n ,n 8, ~~a:1~ea£;~~~l t~~G::~:e~i~~~:~~sort w~:~N:s:o~~~~'::~n (., .• _j fS8 UJ t:· -
to hitting students ··out of desperation" '°' .1.,-.. ;"'"'0"' ... u "0•ht "-'• mo0211 .,. ss1-1112 At the Old Pavilion, 400 !\fain, Ba_l boa
bee th d •t h th t" 20!2 MICHllSON-SUtTI 105-NlWPORT llACH Open 1111• ause ey on ave e 1me or Suncl•Y Rescrvati·ons·. 673-4633
help to ha;n,d~l~e ~t=he=ir:...:d=is~c=ip=lin=•:..:p=ro~b=le=m=s1~·0~-~·~"~0'~'"~~~,~··~·~-~-~·~-~·~-~~.t"'~'~'"~'"~"·~"~"~'·~·~·~~·~;';";';~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::::::::::::~ another wa!.
EVERYTHING FROM SOUP TO NUTS $4.95
Court Hears Welfare Protest
•.
Reagan Says
VD Bill Veto
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committed "gross error" Oct.
29 when it vacat ed an earlier
restraining order issued by
Sacramento Superior Juclge
William Gallagher and set the
case down for hearing Jan.
19, 1972.
Judge Gallagher had issued
an order Oct. 14 stopping the
department of social welfare
from collecting the increased
money from childreo of the
elderly under provisions of the
state's Welfare Reform Act
'>''hich took effect last Oct.
t.
~ DAVIS Q BROWN ""!.iJ TELE VI SI ON APPLIANCES
CO$T A MESA-411 E. s .. •nl•enth Slf•ot
646°1684 Daily 9.9 Sot. 9.6
EL TORO-lafiuna HIDs Pkncr I n"t to Sov·On I
837°3830 Doily I Q.9, Sal. I 0·6
lo
Sal.11 kilter
A deposil in thl! tllrtl1Wlt of
s 150.00
has bl'rn made atCalifomla Fetkral Saving.I
and Loan ~ .udciation to bt ~ up tn tt
Slll•ings acccunJ in 10W" llml'lit'OI' tu ]<JU mq
dilect-or if a milllT,m JOUr gumtli.an ""1J direc/,
This gift depm/J MD'made b1:
D..t 8lld ~
PlerJ..<;.f! take this gift tkposft to Qlly o{fia of
California Frdaal Sa11ingsand open 1our aa:ount.
~..tJ .......
Califcmio f'erkrol. Stlvin.g6 No. 3
July WoT. 17 .1971
Brandi Date
This ~ift tkposiJ i.I not~ or trtlMferribT.t.
/ntcrr..rt rtar11 cm the dlTf the ocrmmt iz
11p~nf'd ond Mt on W dati: of the· gift tk{KW.
And a beautiful giftcard•free!
Choose from cards f0r 6 special occasions.
Tired of racking your brains for unusual gift ideas?
A gift deposit fro m California Federa l fits every
occasion-Christmas, Han ukka h, Bar Mitzv ah,
weddings, birihdays, graduations, anniversaries
and alher happy limes ! And we'll give you a free
special occasion cord lo accompany your thou ght-
lul gilt. Choose from six beoutilul cards.
Gift deposits can be made in ony omount. All the
recipient has to do is lo bring it to ony Cal ifo rnia
Federal office and open ane of our Moneymaker
savings accounts. The high inll'res t will ma ke your
gih grow and grow. ·
Siert a Moneymaker for someone at
California-Federal Savings-
ond Loon A1sociotion •Asse ts over $1.8 Billion
Costa Mesa Office:
2700 Harbor Blvd. • 546·2300
Nation's Largest Federal
Anaheim Office:
600 N. Euclid Ave.• 776-22'22
~
Orange Office:
4050 Metropolitan Dr. • 639·3033
H.od omc.: WO Wibh!,. Boo!Mtd. tos Mg-ties • Olhtf office1 ~lot Nlgtl-. OruflOtt ""'•!'lid• ond Ventum Countt.t.
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Tuesday, November 13, ·im--DAILY PltOT 9
Suit Says
Holdings
Not Given
Schedule
~Started -
At Center
ORANGE Tbe Easter
3 Carnival
Bids Eyed
Three carnival operators
have submitted bids for tbe
midway operation at the 1972
Orange County Fair.
.JCP~nney
COSTA MISA STOU
not HARIOI ILVD.
Fair Directors referred all SUNDAY
th"e bids to the staff for an
A lawsult which claims that
Santa Ana Mayor Lorin Griset
fa iled to reveal his financial
interest in land earmarked by
the city for conversion into
an assessment district is on
, file today In Orange County
~uperlor Court.
Se•: itehabilitation Center's
new Saturday, Recreation
Program for physically h~·
dlcapped chijdren has ,begun
weekly sessions. r--:::;jjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii The purpose of the PM?gram, .
Investigation of each carnlyal 1 2 lo 5 P•lll•. operation to sey: which would
be the.rnost~s~U~IJ~a~bl~e.iliiii~~~~~~~~~=~
according to program dJ.tector
James Bart-On, is to Provide THE WARM & COZY PLACE opportunities for handicapped .
chi!dren to take part actively To Shop
in sports, craft.a, field trips,
and other organized activities. .c: ___ tdlt P.oast .. __ _
The program began Satur· _CIU . \'--~JU.ii
· Grisel.and five fellow coun-
cilmen are named as defn·
dants by Councilman J. Ogden
~1arkel. Joining him in an
action charging unlawful ex-
penditure of public funds is
John W. Harper, a property I
owner in the afected area.
The $2S3,000 development I
recently authorized by the Ci· '
day. ~
The overall program lsl==::~=~~===~=========~=~~~~~~~:::;'" dlvlded !!Ito two groups ac-
cording to age. 11ie first
session, scheduled from 9 ~.m. GERHARD LANG'S ty Co uncil in a 6 to 1 vote
v.·hich left ~1arket as the old
man out has been halted by
Judge \Villiam C. Speirs. He
set Nov. 30 as the date both
sides will be heard on issues
raised in the lawsuit.
DAILY ·PILOT ll1H P'llelil
SIGN DESIGNER HULSE (LEFT) WITH M.J.A. MOTHER · BETTY LANCASTER
Mrs. L1nc1st1r's Son. Ch1rl1s LH of Huntington B11ch, Is M.J.A.
to 12 noon, will be for three to
eig ht year olds. A Second
session, slated from 9 a.m. to
2 p.m., will be for those from
nine years of age through Six·
SAUSAGE
!i.1arkel claims that Griset
failed to disclose during C()Un.
cil debate on the assessment
district that he, his parents,
Eugene and Lula Grisel and
family interests identified as
the Griset Foundation owned
land in and around the
affected araa.
?i.tarkel says Grisel should
have disqualified himself and
that action would have meant
an insufficient vote for crea·
tion or the assessment district.
All such improvement action
needs at least a 6 to l vote
of the ~ity Council.
The City Council decided to
create the assessment district
last Nov. 1 over the protests
of residents representing 62
rpercent ·of the area.
teen.
Pilots' Wives Put Dunning Named
School Officer
Volunteers, under pr~
fesslonal gu idance, will work
with the han<tlcapped
youngster's on a one-to-one
basis. Parents or others in·
Up Signs for POWs IRVINE _ Dr. James E. terested in further in format ion
on the Saturday Recreation Dunning, associate director of Program or other Center
relations with schools. Office services. are invitM to write,
of the President, University of visit, or call the: Easter Seal
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of flM Dtllr P'l .. I lllH
A group of airline pilots'
wives who decided to aid the
cause of prisoners of war and
men missing In action to-re·
mind Orange County residents
of their cause. ,
One of the wives, Mrs.
Kathy Hulse of Fountain Val·
ley, helped design the bill·
board which can be seen at
five locations throughout the
county. One is at Beach
·Boulevard and Quincy Street
in Huntington Beach. -
the club's PO\V proJ'octs, CaliforrUa, has been appointed Rehabilitation Center at 1800 -admissions officer at the UC La Veta Orange 9 •'& 6 6 · helped design the signs with ' ' ·• ' the aid of Mrs. Susan Gaede, ,_1rv_ine __ cam_,;pe,u_s_. ______ t•_l•..:P_ho_n_e_l_7_11_J _6.13-_7_IOO_. --''-
representing the City of Brea.
Mrs. Hulse said the next
project the club will tackle
is the sale o! cookbooks. With
the money raised from the
sales the women will help
other POW-MIA organizations
buy some prime television
time or donate the proceeds
to a trust fund which bas
been set up for children of
MIA s.
HAUS
ONLY AT
Property owners have been
advised that improvements in
the form c,C construction of
si~ewalks, curbs and gqtters
will cost $700 for each average
residential Jot. Construction
work was scheduled to begin
next month.
Mrs. Hulse and the other
members ol the Continental
Airline Pilots W I v e 1 As·
sociation of Orange County
became interested in the
plight of the POWs and MIAs
about a year ago after hearing
a speech by Garole Hanson .
0£ El Toro, wife of an MIA .
"If anyone wan ts to know
more about the cookbooks, or
the POWs and MIAs. they
can call the Orange County
POW-MIA office at 832-7200,"
she said. So Real. So Rich. So Good.
Man Barred
Frorn Track
Faces Trial
"A lot of our husbands have
been in the military too," said
Mrs. Hulse, whose husband,
Robert, served in Vietnam
three times during h i 1
military career.
Tustin Bid
For Federal
Aid Sought
SA.tVTA ANA -An owner· "I guess we all feel that
traine r who ·was barred from anyone of us could tie ' in tHe TUSTIN -Two measures to
the Los Alamitos race track same position," she added. seek federal aid for the Tustin
following his arrest on varying The Idea for the billboards Union High School Distr:i~t
drug charges has been ordered come out of a project in which ha ve been approved by district
to face trial Jan. 26 in Orange club members "adopted" Mrs. trustees.
County Superior Court. Hanson's husband. Steven. One, a grant request for
Judge Byron K. McMillan "We wanted a .billboard for $7,875 to pro vid e Ii b r a r y
set thal date for Charles him, but then we though t it resources, sailed past the
Michael Pisciotta. 30, o-f would be a good Idea to in-board on .11. 4-0 vote. with
Anaheim. He also ordered the elude all the MIAs'," she said. Trustee Robert Bartholomew
quarter horse specialist to The space for rthe ad· abstaining.
face a pretrial hearing Jan. 7. vertisements was donal.ed by The second measure, to
Pisciotta was arrested last F<lster-Kleiser so the women allow the district to borrow
Aug. 26 after an investigation only had to bear the cost surplus equipment f r o m
in v.·hich it "'as alleged that he of designing and producing the federal agencies was approved
offered to sell dangerous billboards. unanimously. The equipment
dru gs and mar ijuana to an un-With aid from the city of might include shop equipment
der co\'er policewoman he met Brea, club members raised for vocational training and of-
at the Los Alamitos track. He S275 to complete the project. fice furnishings, school of·
is free on ba il. Mrs. Hulse, as chairman o( ficials said. =-~-==-=~-'-~~...:....:.:.__::::::....:.:=-:=-=-~I
FREE
WHOPPER
With This
Coupon and
Purchase of
Another at
the Regular
Price ...
NOW • , • 1'1tftM mHt, l!lcllHY -kttl .a....,, M ••lkltltts ...,.II , ..... lbevl •nY t!ller MUUtl .,.u M¥t ... ,; IHIM. Only ,~.
ll11nt ln9r9dlt11h tnd 111111 !HIM 01.& Werld & o\llltw1ukN r..:tl"' trt Ul141 i.r GtrMnl Llltll Ill n'ltklnt llllll .. W.1111¥ of 1tt11cllfll
_, ••• •tltclt~I• HOM¥ ••kM "'"'· Our •• , .... r.,. qlM.llon
lt•d\Mln MUUfll of Gtr!Mii, P'tlllll. 1!•11•• & s ..... llfl 11'11111. '" Mtlllloll, HtMY a1tM Hln'll 11-fllt'rt ·111111 C"I 1lltll M.llKll .. 11
"""" ltlclllllllltl I ll '(1Mlr 11\IOrltn, lrtM ..... kltdl-"' Ot1111nl
L11>1.
•
-HAM-
•rT•IL STORES
J700 I. CMlt Hlttiw..,
CeroH Ml Mor -67J·t000
1212 s ........ ,., ........
6J'"'24'1
LIMIT 1
COUPON Piii
CUSTOMEll '----------·~··---.i....----·-·· -··--·-----Winston
Sutt, wt could htvt mtd• !he Whopper
sm•ll1r. But""' fi9ur1 whtn you come to l ur;•r !Ung•. vou'rt hungry. $o Wll
m•dt ii gigtnlic. Put IWIY. Whopper,
en ord1r11f our crisp frtne:h frits, ind
ont of our thk.k 1h1kt1 and ygu·..,,
r111ty hid yourstlf 1 me1f. l ut,.emem-
btro don 't try to h1nd1t 1 Whopper
w11h ju1r ont h1ndl
HOME · OF THE WHOPPER*
Oflw ""Mir "''"' itilo ~M ..
HUNTIN&TON llACH COSTA. MlSA .
163'1 1-h llwd. 2015 Harbor I d.
Winston tastes good
like a cigarette should.
King Size and Super King Size.
I
• '''' I • ,,,. ... , TO U <09 l~•t10 • •toOfl• .... • • !,
kJNG1 19 mg. "1ar". 1.3 mg. n1co11.n1. SUP EA KING> 20 m~ "11(.1.3 mg. nicotint. av. psr tig11ene. FTC Ripoll AUG.7L
rILTEll •ClOARETTES
' •
l
J
J~-OAJL Y PILO_T _ Tutsd.ty, Novtmber 23, 1971 ,_
Dates Set
·In Drug Case
Dial 834-41-44,
Talk to the Mayor SA~'TA ANA -Five Orange
Coast residents arrested In
Riverside have been ordered
to face preli minary hearings
?\1ond•Y in Sanla An a
ti1unlci pal Court.
Judge Robtrt Rickles set
that hearing date for Leon
G. Phoenix, 21, of 2130 Con·
tinental Ave.; Jean Beauwan.
30. of 1815 Joa·nn St. and
James L. McDonald, 21. of
1581 Baker St., all of Costa
Mesa; Anthony Christina, 25,
of 5202 Ma rguerite A v e .•
Corona de.I ?\1ar. and James
Sword. 21. of 1161,., 35th SL,
Newport Beach.
SAt\'TA ANA -ln an ob·
vious public relations move.
the cit.Y of Santa Ana hall
instituted a "Dlal-lhe·mayor"
project that will cost $27 a
month.
Installed Friday was a
recording machine which wiU
ha ndle calls to the mayor -
823-4144, between 5 p.m. and
8 a.m. weekdays and on
weekends.
Persons calling the city of-
fices durin~ the off hours v.·HI
get a recorded message in-
viting them to voice their pro-
blem or suggestion. ·
"We on the city council want
to make It as easy as possible
for the people of San.tp Ana
to let us know your needs
and desires," the record of
Mayor Loren Grisel 's voice
repeats.
Those v.·ho voice t b e i r
names, ad dre sses and
tel ephone numbers will be
notified immediately by mail
or phone that the message
was received, according to
City Clerk Forence Malone.
Withi n a week, if possible,
a follo w-up letter will be sent
to callers detailing what
remedial action has beJ:n
taken.
12xl2-inch
Shag Tile
...
I
each4 7c
Fabulous shag til e with fo am rubber backing. Continuous
filament nylon. Releasable pressure sensitive acrylic type ad·
hesive. Choose from Flame red, Caribbean blue, Inca gold,
lime mint, coral reef colors. I:.ow;low·priced!
Floorro1·eri11r.. Dept.
SAVE '4!
'28.95 Baker-Broiler-Oven
Push-button for broiling or baking. 2488.
Sheathed elements in top and bottom.
Heavy gauge 2-position chrome tray and
uivet.
SA.VE '4! '23.95 Buffet }'ry Pwi
Teflon• II swface interior. 12-in. square.
A..Ulable in poppy, CU!?f ... d panley } 988
colors.
Dinnerware Clearance • • • Discontinued Patterns ••• Exceptional Buya!
.t.IMAM••A.
,, ...... 21
aVtHA. ~A.Rte ,,,_..,00,.121"4~
(AJfOOA P.Utc _,
<o.rtOH
6J6•2J• '· m.11•1
COVINA ........ ,.
fl MO!ffl•
••)·)ff !
OUJ\IDAll
14S·I004, , ....... ,I
HOU'rWOOt
4tf•Jf41
llfOUWoot
t11•1Sl l
'.
FINE CHINA
Service For 8
F onnerly $49.98 to $59
Cbnice el. Pattaw
57.Pe.SihorS..... s...-..
45-Pe. Bl:mlll Home
Jauipu
Y01l!'Cho!ee
2988
Fornurl:r$79
98-Pc. Service for I2
Silver Sonall, Starflower_ 49"
Fo,._,.J:rl69.9B 3nu
98-Pc.J;!oeeba"'-----7-,
'49.98, 4.S.Pc. Indigo Mooa..__ 2488
H1ll'I')' For TbNe Out1tanding Bu ya For
Holiday Service or Gif'ta
u.p ,.; Chin• Dtpt
SAVE•2NOW!
Elegant "Sorrento"
Tablecloths
Regular
$7.99 . s~ri..
Rectangular
Border wich nylon lace, this polyester
and rayon ublecloth res ists stains. Scotch-
gard• treated. Penna·Prestfl ucatec4 -
$10.99, (,Qi81J.lo. Rectangu ltt 8,97
$11.99, 60192·10. Rroangul 9.97
$1 2.99, )Oxl04·ln. Rectangular-10.97
$11.99, h7-Jn. Rou n 9.97
$11.99, 67>80.In. Ov 9.97
$12.99, 67192-ln. Ov 10.97
SJ3.99_, 6i1104-I n. Oval 11.97
~apkins 3.99
lOHO llACM
•lS.0121
"°'""""' .... ,.,,,
Ol TMil'IC' IOfO
1ll•S111
DDmtsti& Dtpr.
Sears
h:vi11e-Vo-te Notices Care Facilityl~~~~
Posted-in 6 Places Faces Charge
GARDEN G R OVE -
Allej!ations thcJ. a Garden I
Grove santiari um skimped on IRVINE -Election notices
required by law have been
posted in six public places
withi n the boundaries of the
proposed city of I r v i n e ,
Orange County Clerk William
St John announced today.
St John said the posting
was necessary because there
is no newpaper of legal stan-
ding both printed a n d
ci rculated in the area.
Included in the postings are
the notice of the Dec. 21 in·
corporation vote, the names
OtAMGl
6J7·1100
PA IAOIHA
••1¥211,3J l ... 111
"'° ....... ,.,
POMONA .,._,,.,
IAHTA Jf ll>llHGJ
t44·t01 I
SlHYA MONICA ,,,. .. ,,,
of 34 nominees for city council
posts, the wording of the
measure to be voted on and
a listing of election officers
and polling places.
There will be tight official
poll ing place:; for the election,
Registrar o( Voters Dave
H itchc o c k announ~d
previously.
Latest estimates en the pro-
bable number of reg istered
voters eligible to cast ballots
in the ine-0rporation vote is
about 6,700.
:'lloJe)
2056
' food supplies and adequate i
nursing care for its .Patients
will be aired at a public hear-
ing scheduled for Dec. 16 and
17 in Loe: Angeles.
Operators of the Garden
Gi-ove Sanitarium, 1 O 4 7 I
Garden Grove Blvd., have
been ordered to appear to
answer charges filed by the
Stale Departmen t of Public
Health.
.A~Q.~ffS
·~ 8 l!Sl-tTOTAl.
'·•,CR!DJl ~AL>ji'CE
"u~r .. t . ..U•
$69.50 ae~~.t.11.R ............ ~ ... --.... -
145 W. a11ctr SI,, (1111 Mn& J~lfl
JI02 51n Lull lltY llld. 111·1•
"<••~11111
Kenmore I-HP
Hand Vacuum
Regular anister-va.c
motor. !or powerful
1uction. Ideal for hard
to .reach places. Boats,
automobiles. 1(ork-
sbops, draperi~~·
itwe Model 6112.
V ... ,. ci..n..D,pt.
SA.VE •sot AM/FM Stereo Radio
2 separate speakers in simu-
lated walnur wood cabinet.
Solid stare ••• instant p lay.
Input jacks for tape recorder,
cassette or record changer.
TV Dept.
Regnlar$129.9S
7988
SAVE $7 to *11 NOW!
Handsome Bedspreads In
Your Choice of Colors
SOU"hl (OA.ll 1'l.A1A
s•O·l)ll
TMOUIAND OAl"S
ilt f-4J•t, J11-11.JI
TOltAl\ICI ,,,,,,1.
vAh l'I' ,,j .• ,,,, •••·2120
Vll~Q.MT
1Sf•lt l 1
Regular $14.98 to SIS.98
Twin
Size 797
Regnlar Sl5.98 to $19.98
Full
Size 897
Choose from a wi de selection of
tailored and thro:w 1rylcs in tolid.
1cylish print and floral colors. Not
all styles available in all stores.
Come in early for bcsr choicewb.ile
quantities last at Sean!
_Sati$faction
GuarontHd
Or Your Monty ' .. ,,
\
DowuJJi& Dtpr.
•
Ste this mere hand 1st
on the TV premiere of
IODIUI I ll••mmn ~t WED., NOV. 24 0
l-11 P.M, CHANNEL 7
Firenien Hit
Benefit · Plan
ORANGE -A City of
Orange decision which com·
milted three city employ.1
organizations to a state fetire·
ment system in place of the
now rejected social security
plan has been challenged by
the city's 75 firemen .
.
Two Fineil; Acted
In Obscene Fil1ns
SANTA ANA-A couple who
admitted distributing obscene
movies in which they play_~
major roles have been given
suspended jail sentences by
an Orange County Court judge
and ordered to pay fines total-
ing $600.
four , must ser\'e 18 months
on probation and pay a $100
fine. Guerry must serve an
identical probation term and
pay a $500 fine .
Flood Cha1uuil
Co1npleted
STA~'1'0N -A new,
2-06.1-foot section of Or·
ange County's Anaheim
&rber City Flood Con.
trol Chan nel is complelf.d,
county officials said.
The $276-737 project in.
eluded lin ing the formerly
unimproved channel with
concrete and the replace-
ment or an old railroad
bridge with a new one.
The new section Of chan-
The Orange F'i remen's
Benevolent Association states
in Its Orange County Superior
Court lawsuit that the cilv
failed to adopt the better cir
two state retire ment systems
when it switched plans for
the firemen. the city emolores
associat Ion and the Oraflge
Police Association.
Judge Byron K. Mcr-.111lan
suspenaed the jail terms ·or
Arlene Carvalho, 45, Sant a
Ana. and Edmund W. Guerry,
40, Long Beach. They y,•ill
ser"e the sentences on pro-
bation.,
Vernon It Testennan, 42,
Westminster. earlier pleaded
i;:uilly to related conspiracy
charges in connection with the
m~vle making enterprise. He
is serving two-year probation.
fn\•estigators said
Testerman, who Is confined
to a y,•het>lchair, 'vas the direc-
tor, producer and ca meraman
in the film s.
. nel runs between the
Southern Pacific Railroad
crossing south of Lamp.
son A\·enue to Beach
Boulevard.
~1rs. Carvalho, mother of
S34.99, 10-Pc. Teflon" II C<lokware 26.99
SAVE•70!
Sears Micro-
W aye Oren
Rr-~'U lar S39'J.95
32988
Spacc-savin~ swing
door bas window, auto·
macic timer, operating
l ight. Tawny smoke
enamel sides .. #99100
i'lajor Applit111ft Dtpr ••
•
Sears FIBERGLAS~
Roofing Shingles
J5%oFF
f\laterials on Installed Ba ::i~.
FireProteclinn
Sears Fiberglas' Shingles v.1ith t9''0 layers of Fiber-
,glas• reinforcement offer the highest fire ratjng
J'ossiblc. They are rated ClaJs A by Uodervi'riters
laboratories.
W nrer Protect iori
Scars monoli thic asphalt, reinforced with Fiber·
1;\as~ mat, pro\· ides: 40% more \vaterproofingasphalt
coating than with conventional shingles.
Wi11fl Prolpclion
Factory-applied, heat-acti\'ated a<lhcsi\·e forms a
str_e>n.'t wind. ~t seals ea~b shingle down tight,. to e!'d
1h1ngle !1app1ng and w1.nd damage and to keep shin·
gle$ an the roof.
Wfln l)l'rolect ion
Rigid ei\gineered construction reinforced lll'ith mu
layers of suong, non·absorbent FibergW*.
BNiltlint Aft:Jtria/1
SAVE
•B!
Tenon" II
7-Pc. Colorful
Cookware Set
Regular $24.99
1699
Set consists of 1, 2-qt.
covered saucepans, 5
qt. covered dutch
oven, 10-i n. skillet. In
flame red. avocado or
tawny gold color.
1-loN!ru ·art Dtpl.
• • ' J" . ~ ~ I .. / · t. ,' d ,j . . , J
' . :~-, .
'
•
. .. ,,. .. ~
Companion
Clay Model Kit
Sears Low Price!
1999
Kit contains; 4-Jb. modeling
cl,1y, stone clay, woodsc one
clay, bronze clay, 5 bon'ood
tools, 2 l'l'irc tools and much,
much more. #111119
1-lardu•are Dept.
Companion
Gem Maker
Low Priced! 2999
Big. hca .. ,..Jury 6-lb. capaciry
rum bler, )·lb. of rough gem
S:lones plw 33 gold.flashed
mounti ngs mak e jewelry. Su·
per value •t Sears! #-141)7
3Jh.Cem~f1kinp;K.it $1 9.99
Httrdu·art D1p1.
•
c:-r ,..,,,
A.akA.boutSeon
Con1'enunt Credit
Plaru.
.. -
J
lJuenaPark Seeks
DAIL V PILOT } J
Detachment
To Be Heard
Bil{e Theft Drop IRVINE -The proposed
detachment of 215 acres in
the northeast Newport Beach
area from the lrvlne Ranch
Water District wlll be: before
the Local Agency Formation
Commission Wednesday.
BUENA PARK -~In 1970
there were 1,537 bicycles
reported stolen In Buena. f'ark.
So far in 1971, the picture
has not improved -1,638
bikes have disappeared.
Buena Park police know the
bike theft problem is not uni-
que to their community, bu.t
they are trying to d o
something about il.
Because most youn~sters
did not purcha se bicycle
licenses In previous years,
there was no way to trace
stolen bikes and return thl'!m
to their owners, even when
the cultprits w e r e air
prehended, police said.
So Buena Park officers have
started a new system. All fees
for registration of bicycles
have been dropped and of·
ficers are going out into the
field searching for "busi ness."
Sgt. Jlm Bakken, who Is
in charge of the program ,
says tbe city has been divided
into eight Sl'!Ctions. Last Siitur-
day. the drive "'BS star ted .
1'.1ore than 250 bikes were
registered .
"We sent our men door-to-
door telling parents a n d
children of the progra'm and
the fact that we had a
registration booth set up for
that day I n t he ir
neighborhood,'' Bakken said.
The detachment request was
made by the Irv ine Company rAt 'the iarea in Upper Harbor
View Hills,
1 Rlchard Reese, plannlng
vice prellldent for the com·
pany, says the deta chment is
not opposed by the ranch
water entity and that the
acreage involved was annexed
to County Sanitation District
No. 5 by action of the LAFC
last July 28.
SAVE•JQ!
• Economical "37"
Water Heater
SAVE•30!
Sears Compact
Paint Sprayer
l\egular $99.99 6988 _
Unit is powerful enough 10
spray autos and houses. Al-
so sprays insecticides, in·
flates titfS and can clean
with air pressure. Delivers
3.2 CFM at 40 PSL #lll21
Paint Dtpt.
SAVE•20!
Sears 10x5-Ft.
Storage
Building
Regular $129.95
Convenient storage is yours,
with this roomy gable roof
building. Handy pcgboud
panel for your tool!. Year
round pcotectio.o..
·! '
11 54.f),j, lfb:7-Ft. Storage Building l 34.88 -
$1.79.9:i, 10x9-Ft. S1or•ge Building_-159.88
~tntini Dtpt,
Regular $59.95
4988
Sin&le S"8" 3().pl.....,.. hoer
has rust-res:istant glas,s..lined tlDlr..
Built·in thermosw: and high lim-
it cut-0ff; efficient fiber glass iD-
sulation. Pilot filter; 100% Pl
safety shut-0ff,
~69.95,4-0.,;al. "37" •
~1 ater lleater: 9..88
!89.95,40-Gal. "'45"
Waler Heater '79.88
P l•lllhing anJ Hllllitlg DIP•
Sears Handy 10-Inch
Tapered Candles
Holiday Priced
orl2ceach
Available in the three mostpopo.·
Jar colors ... red, white and med-
ium green. Beautify fOtlltabfe M
mantel Stock up now!
Gttrdm Shop
CHRISTMAS SHOPPING HOURS · MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9 30 AM TO 9 PM SU NOA Y 11 AM TO 6 PM FR fr PARK INC' Stethl1~
on lht TV ptlmllrt Of
.t.lHA/llllA
171·4111
I UI"' PA•C
I Sl·••OO, IJ1-4)l0
CA'l!OllA P.t.11
l•f·Olll
COMf'fON
121.2111, 132-5711
COVIN A
411..0111
ll MOH'll
llJ~f11
'
Glo.IOAll
241-1004, , .... ,11
HOttTWOOO
4•t•Jf41
IHOlfWOOO
171·2J21
lOHG llA(lt Sears oaANet
4lS·01lll U1·2100
HOltHllOOl PAIAOIH.t.
llS-7272 111-1211,JJl ·•211 1~ Ol TM•IC ~ IOfO Pl(O
2•1·J211 &U..U, lOUUCl..uu> CO. ·~•o4211 • . I I
POMO HA SOl.111{ COAlfPLilA YAlU'f' Satisfaction 12f•5 I •1 J40o.laJa 7•'·•••1,tu.2,20 Guorantttd IAHfA '' SPllHOI TMOUIAHO OAICI VllMONT
t••·SO I 1 4f1·4Jt•, S2ll·l 1ll1 71f•lf11 Or Your Money
l•HIA MONl(A fOllAH(l Back 142•1 111 lt4-1711
•.
J
'
J ! DAILY PILOT
JAVIER CAN HEAR
Opening New World
Man Enters
Lesser Plea
SANTA ANA -An auto
wrecker accused on arrest of
the murder of his girl friend in
what police described as a
lovers quarrel has pleaded
guilty in Orange C o u n t y
Superior Court to I e s s e r
charges.
Judge Byron K. Mc1'1lllan
accepted the plea of Charles
D. Dwyer, 25. of La Palma to
ame nd ed charges of
manslaughter. He sent Chvyer
lo state prison for a tern1 of
up to 15 years. ---
Death Nolices
\
TutSda~. NMmber 23, 1971
Easter Unit •elps Deaf Cliild-
ARBUCKLE & SON
WESTCLIFF MORTUARY
427 E. 17th Sl, Costa l\.1f:sa
&!M8U • BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corona del !\.far OR 3-9450
Costa rt1esa Ml 6--2424 • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway, Costa l'tfesa
LI 1-3433 • McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1795 Laguna Canyon Rd.
4!1f.9415 • P ACIFJC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery l'itortuary
Chapel
3509 Pacific View Drive
Nr:wport Beach, California
'44-%708 • PEEK FA~my
COLONIAL FUNERAL
RO~IE
7801 Bolsa Avr:.
\Vr:stminster 893-3525 • S\llTHS' htORTUARV
_ m l'italn SL
Huntington Beach -
I' hone
6424321
For
Weekend er
Advertising
.,
WAREHOUSE PRICES .. PLU
TOP QUAL:ITY MEATS
10%
SPECIAL
ANNOUNCEMEN1'.
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED
'OPEN · THiS . WEDNESDAY
HAVE A NICE THANKSGIViNG
/1)11£' \ 11~
FOR .YOUR
SHOPPING
CONVENIENCE
10 AM-7 PM
YOUNG.
TURKEYS .,
c . ·F"' r , -· . * NORBEST with TENDER TIMER
lb TOMS
GRADE A PREMIUM QUALITY
SW!FTS BUTTERBALL 'TURKEYS
TOMS
43~
' BONE IN fUl:L CUT c .NORBEST
lb ROUND STEAK HENS
FARMER JOHN'S SMOKED HAM SALE FULLY
SMOKED SHANK
PICNICS HALF
c
lb
sun
HALF
c
CENTRAL AMERICAN
COOKED
WHOLE
HAM
c
lb
BANA AS
tB.
Now you too can become a professional shopper and save hundreds of dollars per year on your grocery bill. No need to
run all over town hunting for bargains .•• You can be assured· that when you shop at Top Yalu, you are buying at the low-
est prices in town. Naturally, we carry all of the famous brands ••• Top Quality Meats and Garden Fresh Produce.
WHICH IS MORE
IMPORTANT ·TO
YOU? BEST . SERVICE
·OR· LOWEST
PRICES • NO
MARKET CAN GIVE
YOU BOTH. WE
GIVE PRICE
•
SHOP IN A WAREHOUSE OF FINE
9UALITY FOODS AT 535 W. 19th ST.
AT HARIQ.R. COSTA MESA. IT DOll-
N'T TAKE A LOT OF NERVE TO IE THE
ONLY STORE IN TOWN THAT DIS·
COUNTS THE DISCOUNTERS •
WHAT IT TAKES IS
THOUSANDS OF
LOWER PRICES! ..
EVERYTHING IS MARKED
Warehouse ,-Prices
Then the Checker Adds Just 10°10. To
Arrivl' at what you pay. So if you wound
up with $10.00 Worth, you'd simply pay
that, plus 10°10 or $11 .00.
THIS GOD FOR lYElYTHINli EXCl'1 THI
FIW ITEMS LIGALLY CONTROLLID
LUil MILK AND ll9U0l .
WE CHALLENGE
ANY MARKET
TO MATCH THE
TOTAL SAVINGS!
STORE HOURS: 10 AM TO 7 PM
5 DAYS A WEEK
Closed Sundays and
Wednesdays
THE "FIRST" COST PLUS SUPERMARKET IN CALIFORNIA we welcome
BEING CLOSED·
TWO DAYS A WEEK
SAVES
YOU A LOT
OF ltONEY
I
We reserve the right
to change prices as wholesale
prices change.
' ,
'
FOOD
STAMP
SHOPPERS
-
By AWSON DEERR
Of -. Otill)' P'lltt S"9ff
President Richard ~f. Nixon, tbe Hon.
Pat Reilly Hitt and Mrs. George W. Rom-
ney gave key talks.
li1rs. Nixon greeted dele~ates at ·a
reception In the White House.
Panel speak'ers dlScussing aging, equal rlgh~. bwlng, Nationalist China, PO\Vs
-and reaching young voters.
These were highlights of the 16th bien-
nial convention of' the National Federa-
tion of Republican Women's CJubs in lVas~lngton, D.C. for Mrs. Scott J . Ray· .
mood, president of the Laguna Niguel
Republican Women's Club, Federated.
She was among 270 California delegates
and 3,000 delegates from the 50 states at.
tending the three-day con£erence in late October.
'
1Humphreys on Today's New Politic1,
Mrs. Mary Ellen M1ller, special assistant
to the chai"'1an d. the Republican
Congressional Commltte~. on Modem
Political Techrilques, and Patricia Reilly
Hitt, assistant sec·retary of Health,
Education and Welfare on Workrare, Not
WeHare.
MUSIC TRIBirrE
A musical tribute wp.s paid to lhe late
Dorothy Kabts, ~d treasurer of the Ulllt.o
ed States and past pmldent of the NFRW
by the U.S. Army Chorus. .
Tbe Mount Vernon Guard, a marching
drum and file corps performed on the
last convention day,. presenting an
American Revol11tiori pageant. Panels
discussed the' problems of aging and
equal iights. ·
What to wear to the White House took
planning. Mrs. RaYJt!ond finally chose.a' "They were full days," she said, "\Ye
were on the go from 6:30 a.m. to 11 p.m.
with something planned all the·lime.
"I was most impressed with President
Nixon. He comes across as a very wann
person. He doesn't come through very
· camel hair sleeveless dress with . mat· ·
ching · coat "trimmed in natural fox,
purch:ased in La'guna Beach. ,
\\'ell on television. ·
"&,!rs. Nixon is warm, open and outgo-
ing. At the reception she met each and
every delegate personally, almost 3,090
people. She looked as poised after three
hours of receiving as she did at the start.
J found her extremely attractive e.nd
well·groomed." I
The South Laguna,mother of five spent
five days in the capital. She described the
first day of the convention, kicked off by
a reception at the White House as im-
pressive.
On her tour of the First Family's home
she admired most a full-length portrait of
Pr~sldent Lincoln and a small library
frequented by the First Lady.
SPIRIT OF 71
The Marine Band played a medley of
lively music for the reception in keeping
wilh the convention theme "Spirit or 76."
Jn the _evening hour$ she attended a
welcoming reception for f e de r a t ion
nominees and GOP senators from sev.eral
states.
Talks by Pt1rs. Anne Armstrong. co-
chairman of the Republican National
Committee and Mrs. George W. Romney,
\\'ife of the Secretary of Housing and
Urban Development were followed by an
address by the President.
President Nixon's talk, described as the
highlight of the convention by Mrs. Ray·
mond, foil<>wed the Spirit of 76 theme of
"building a generation of peace, foceign
and national policies and our great coun·
try."
Other · speakers were Raymond V.
By JO 01.WN
01 Ille OallY Pllel Slllf
What do Ruth Finley of Huntington
Beach and Kit Drollinge.r of El Toro have
in common with Vice President Agnew's
wife Judy, Sen. Maurine Neuberger, Rep.
Shirley Chisholm and Doreen Marshall,
former Newport Beach mayor?
They 're all members of the League of
Women Voters and they're all dedicated
to the same purpose: promoting political
responsibility through informed citizen
participation.
They 're also all potential "threats" to
their husbands because they're apt to
know more about political issues than
they do, and to congressmen and polilical
candidates beCause they have a tremen-
dous grass-roots lobbying power.
The league, now Sl years old, grew out
of the suffragette movement because
women felt that they should be informed
now tJl& they had I.he vote.
hlrs. Finley, president of lhe Hun-
tington Beach unit, and Mrs. Drollinger,
head of the Orange Coast unit, are follow·
Ing in the footsteps of such prominent
women of the past as the Mmes. Franklin
Roosevelt, Ovela Culp Hobby, ·Herbert
Hoover and Frances Perkins, and current
members including the Mmes. Pat
Brown, Robert McNamara, Robert Finch
and Birch Bayh.
League members have gone on to be
-i more than "inronned," however. They
delve into issues with the strength of
crusaders and stand finn upon lhe posi·
tlons they take. ·-··
Past iS!ues they have studied and s~p-.
ported to complelion include SOC1al
security, the Food and Drug Act, United ! Nations charter. Nuclear . Non.
proliferation Treaty and Economic Op-~ portunities Amend1nc nt.
WELFARE RF:FGll.1\I
Thill , ··r un~ of their biggest co ncerns
Is 1 • .:itiirc reform.
The individual league units have
.. general meetings six or seven times per
r ytlr and small group meetings monthly ..
.. where the women discuss issues , under
• trained leaders. Resource per!On! art
"' called upon when specific information is
t needed on a topic.
When the opinions or every lea~
member are recorded. the consensus 1s
round for the organiUltlon's official post-
.... Uon and basis from which to lobby.
The league is nonpartisan and does not
support polifical candidates. lllrs. Drol.
linger pointed out.
An unusual feature o( the ore:aniza.Uon
Is that there are no ~a~, bake aa~. or
other traditionally remwne tund-rlUlllJI
,.. events.
What kind of a per80n join& the league?
Mrs. Drollinger answered:
"One who ts a voracious reader and
collector or all kinds of infonn atlon: one
' who is Interested In new Jdeas .
"Aware women -aware of the pro-
blems or society today ; well-informed
An interestihg sidelight of the trip was
infor{'rlal meetil)g with representatives of
other <:00ntries in the city for a UN-
related even(. she added:
~ 'f.he . .delega,tesl she said, came from all
walks of life, 1 This .. gave the Soutb
Lagunan .. an . opportWlity to hear of
philanthropic and se rvice ideas of groups
nationwide.
Mrs. Raymond, who describes herself
as "the jeans .... boots and hang ten type,"
heads the lJQ-member Laguna Niguel
group. Assistant teaching at t h e
Palisades School of einotionally·han·
dicapped children is a major project.
They also gathered rumme.ge to benefit
the South Coast Community Hospital. Tbe
group hopes to provide a means to
educate young voters· in politics anq the
alms of lhe Republican party with a pro-·
posed bulletin. · ·
GIVES SERVICE
_:Jn tbe past Mrs.Jiaymond has been ac·
tive in Children's Home Society, 1he
Laguna Niguel Women's Club, ,is pa~t
president of Delphians and did Girl ScOut
work. Painting is a favorite hobby as well
as horses -the family owns six, boarded
in 'San Juan Capistrano.
She has one son, Brad and four
daughters -Linda, Diane, Ci0dy and
Joanne -from 6 to 16.
The Lagunan limits her club activities
to the daytime -a family philosophy -
devoting the evening hours to her home
and family.
"If I have something to do during the
day," sbe said, "I get up at 6 to do my
housework."
women: women whO want to do
something."
The league Is . much more. ·action
oriented lhan it WI! 00 year1 ago: Mrs.
Drollinger said. "Peop~ also •~e ·getUt11'
more action oriented and less party
oriented," she added.
What does the league do be!ides study
issues? Its brochure reads like 1 buty
airline schedule: ii provides voter
registration, election lnfocmallon, fiicts
for voters. a spt!:akcrs bureau and
legislative inlervlews: observes govern· . ,
Porled
Women voters Kit Drolli nger,'
Ruth Finley (left to right)
practice grass.roots
right to lobby for cau•es.
ment in action and i>toYides publications
for libraries al!_d schools.
The league also a;po'tl.!Ors candidates
nlght8, "youth in civic goverMlent"
ri'eka abd public meetings.
It alsO can be a stepping stone lo
politics, as many women now holding of.
fice have found.
It is a plact to find ·slinlulating ne\V
friends, Mrs . Drollinger added.
f'or those who dismiss the league light·
ly, saying it's "just another woman's
club, "-the members have 11 cht1llengc .
Just call them to action and there will
be a barrage or phone calls or lettel'3 to
Sacramento or Washington when a bill ls
under C(IOSideraUon. or an intense stUdy
when there is a need _or a prob1cm.
Legislators admit that 25 letters can
make a difference In their opinion, so the
league, more than 150,000 strong. na·
tionally, truly is a powerful force.
Perhaps lfi11klng the women slay home
so long with the kid~ wasn 't such a put.
down for· Oie1n after all, Members' time
obviouslly has been well spenl.
)
Mrs. Scoff J.
Raymond sorts
information . she
gathe.red at
Washington, o:c.
convention
of Republican
Wo men.
•
~men
BEA ANDERSON, Editor T~tc11y,.Neftm11tr u. nn P• ti
Ann Lande rs
Rumors Never Die;
They Grow, Grow
DEAR ANN LANDERS : Our 14-year·
old daughter looked depressed and seem.
cd unusually quiet all through dinner. She
ate . almos r knew something
was w g and I. ped she'd tell me.
She di n't, so at edtime I went to
her r m and asked hat was: the mat-
ter. he broke do and con(essed
tear lly that she ha ne e
thin She started a rum at a girl
in be 1 class who . had been ab.Sent for
two weeks wa s away having an abortion.
The absent girl returned today and
someone told her about the rumor. She
became so ill she had lo be taken
home. Betty is a wreck. She says she
doesn't know why she did il. She will
do anything to get it off her conscience.
What CAN she do? You know how hard
ft is to put down a false rumor once
it gels started. Please advise. -NEED
COUNSEL
DEAR N.C.: Tbere Is only one way
to gel this matter 11tral1htened arouad.
Betty should go at once lo the girl
and her parent11, confess that It was
she who started the rumor and ask
then1 U they can possibly forgive her.
She should then go to each person to
whom she told the lie a.ad confess that
she made up the story. I. agree, false
rumors die bard -because people who
start them rarely have the COW'qe to
4:0D.fess .• 1 bope your daughter leanted
a lesson that wUI stay wtlb btr the
rest or bef We.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I'm a good
cook but J'm no magician. I can·t wave
11 maglc wand over a four-pound roast
and make it big enough for a family
of six plus three extra-people. Why
can 't my husband get th_is through his
head?
Clyde works for , a big company and
someone Js always In town, either a
customer or a purchasing agent. He
also has a couple of Cree-k>adlng brothers
who have a habit of dropping by Clyde's
office just as he Is leaving for home.
They tag along and of course J have
to ask the1n tp eat with us. \Vhat else
can 1 do at six o'clock~
When · It's the brothers I open up
11nothcr can, of btans and add more
potatoes to the hash, but when it's
a customer or a purchasing agent I
have to give the kids peanut butler
sandwiches in the kitchen. I think this
is very unfair.
Is it unreasonable to ask a husband
to phone first. Even a half hour's notice
wou1d help. It would at least give me
a chance to comb my hair. I've asked
him a dozen times. Maybe if he sees
himself in the paper he'll get the
message. Thanks, friend. -SUE-PRIZED
DEAR SUE: From DOW' oa put the
burden on Oyde. Tell him lf be brin11
home uneJ:pected guests you aren't going
to do one thing different -the meal
will be served u planned, and the kids
will stay at the table. No apologies,
either. Just a small announem1ea1,
"Smaller portions, everybody, We It.ave
--
I ,,. ,.
I
unexpected guests." But about yoll.f hair,
Kkldo. You COULD eomb It just for
Jru.1, couldn't you?
DEAR ANN: My boyfriend, age 17
and a high school senior, is very proud
of the fact that he can drink six bottle1
ol beer and not show It. He abo says he
will aever become an alcoholic because
he doesn 't like alcohol. He loves beer
and has to have at least three bottles
e:very night. I'm worried . Should I beT
-THE NAG
DEAR FRIEND: A high 1<hool tld
who prides himself on his capa~Uy for
beer con1wnptioa 11 headla1 for treuble,
l>rhaking beer e1cluslve.ly wUI eot in1urt
'im 1gaill1& aJcohoU1m. Sonat Ncohollt1
drW< Dol!Unl Birr lleer. 'l\ey' 1re cllltd
"beer dnmll."
Unsure of yourself on dates? What'•
right? What's wrong? Should you? ·
Shouldn't you? Send foi Ann Landen•
booklet, '1Datlng Dos and Don'ts,'' enclos.
Ing 'with your request S5 cents In coin
and a long. self-addressed , stamped
envelope in care of the DAILY P'ILM.
•
14" o_my l'llcOI _
_,,, ..... -"' cxnwooo..i111T --
) .... ~ .... ~--~ U.,\'n. 1' llJ.NJ•"' -y-tj --(iA1Q . ~J . \\ \
. , I ,rJ dYi~
""' .
Wedding Bells
Toll on
HORVATH-ROGERS
St. Bonaventure Catholic
Church, Huntington Beach was
the setting for the nuptials
!inking Teresa Rogers and
Richard Horvath.
The bride, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Wllliam E. Rogers of
Huntington Beach, was at-
tended by Miss 1'-fariruth
Rogers. Bridesmaids were the
Misses Joan Bruce and Sherry
Hassett, and flower girl was
Kelleen Rogers.
The bridegroom is the son of
Mrs. Albert Horvath of Hun-
tington Beach and the late Mr.
Horvath. He was attended by
Joseph Horvath as best man,
and Richard Rogers and Steve
Judson, ushers.
The bride is a graduate or
Fountain Valley High School
and attended Orange Coast
LYN RANCOURT
December
Rites Set
St. Bonaventure Catholic
Church, Huntington Beach will
be the setting for the Dec. 17
Coast
and GOiden West colleges. Her
husband is a graduate of Glerl<-
dora High School and i.5 serv·
ing in the U.S. Coast Guard.
They will reside in Staten
Island.
HOROWITZ-DINIZ
The Unitarian·Universalist
Chapel, Costa 11-fesa was the
setting for the rites linking
Loys Ann Diniz of Cypress and
Wayne Sidney Horowitz cir
Costa Mesa. The ceremony
was read by the Rev. Roger
Walke.
Attending the
daughter of Mrs.
Turner or Cypress,
David Horowitz
bride,
John 0.
wa s Mrs
The bridegroom, son of Mrs.
Ida Goldi n of Phoenix, asked
Horowitz to be best man, and
flower girl and ring bearer
were Becky Horowitz and
Stacy Turner.
The new Mrs. Horowitz will
graduate in the spring from
California State College at
Fullerton. Her husband earned
his BA and MA degrees Crom
Arizona State University and
is finishing his PhD in in·
structional technology at the
University of Sou t be r n
California.
They will reside in Costa t
Mesa.
KAMALANl-BROWN
Julie Brown and Benjamin I
Kamalani e:schanged vows
before the Rev . John P. Ashey
in the chapel of St. James
Episcopal Church, Newport £
Beach. i
Their parents are Mr. and
Mrs. Grant W. Brown and Mr. 1
.and Mrs. John Kamalani, all
of Costa Mesa.
The new Mrs. Kamalani is a
graduate of Newport Harbor
High School and attended the
University of Arirona and
Orange Coast College. Her
husband is a graduate of
Corona del Mar High School
and attended OCC.
They are residing in Corona
del Mar.
WALDEN-PAPP
wedding of Lyn Helen Ran· George Louis Walden, son of
court and Phillip Eldon Bailey. hir. and Mrs. Don M. Walden
Their betrothal has been an-of Fountain Valley, claimed
nounced by her parents, l\1r. K th· A p h. b ·d and Mrs. Norman J. Rancourt a 1 nn app as 15 ri e during ceremonies in Our
of Huntington Beach. Lady ot the Snows Church,
Parents of the benedict-elect Reno.
are Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. The bride is the daughter of
Bailey of Palos V e rd e s Dr. and Mrs. Andrew J. Papp
Estates. of Reno. She is a graduate of
MW Rancourt graduated Reno High School and her bus·
from Marina HJgh School and band is • a graduate of Marina
attend.I Callfomia S t a t e High School and has served
Colle,e at U>ng Beach. Her with the Army.
fiance, an alumnus of Rolling They will reside in Hun·
• Hills High School, attended 1~t=in:g~to~n~B~ea~c~h~. ~;;~~-CSCLB. I
~
FRANCIS·
'\.ORR./
Chignons Take
Floral Shapes
New chignons are twisted
into floral fruit lhapes and
1 worn 1t the nape of I.he neck
or on the crown. The newest
chlanons developed b)' Carlla
'":"or "Paril are "lemon•" that
"lf'OW" down the blc.k of the
boJd.
;
FINE STATIONERY
PE•SONALlllO
CHltlSTMAI CAltOS
01STINCT1Vf
CHllSTMAS Olll'fl
Jiii l.CIAU lllU•if f fl·llll
c11114 •u •.o c11n11111 tAIK111
..
Family Bra-ces for Budget -· Bite
HOW TO BUILD
A TEENAGER
II' YOU-WANT-T.0 ~
Sometimes I wake my son in
the middle oi the night and
ask hi~ to ~mile. Those
braces that twinkle in the
darkness represent my fur
coat, my trip to Monaco, my
second car, my College educa·
tion, my Insurance policy (for
my old age nut week), the
operation on my s i n u s
passages.
It seems lili:e only $2,000
ago that we sat in the den·
list's of£ice and discussed my
son's teeth.
0 Have you looked in your
son's mouth lately?" he asked.
"Actually, no."
"He has a bite problem," he
said.
"I find that hard t 'O
believe."
"Do you base this on
something scientific?'~
"I base it on the fact that I
go to the grocery store every
three hours to keep him fed."
"He. has one tooth erupting
in the roof of his mouth and, if
-,
International Outlook
you will note, bill molars do
.not meet."
_ '"(ou're 1r)'ing to_tell me my
son Is a werewolf?"
"l am simply trying to tell
you if the teeth are not cor·
rected be may suffer some
permanent dam8ge to the
formation of hi! teelh."
"What would happen if we
ignored it?"
"He could try to develop hls
personality and buy his way to
the prom but •.• "
"I understand. What do you
want me to do?"
•·1 want you to schedule the
boy with an orthodontist. He'll
take X rays, give him fluoride
treatments and set up a• long·
.range plan for his teeth.••
My husband reacted with his
usual parental concern. "How
mucb is all this going to
cost?" he asked.
"A couple of thousand
dollars."
"Why couldn't he have had
something cheap like b a d
breath?" he snapped.
"Ask your side of the fami·
ly," I retorted. "They're the
ones with all the crooked
. '
teeth. U your grandfather
hadn't been to Ugbt with a
buck be could haU lml><O.\'.e<l --o--;, the"8:en;--and your son
might have straight teeth t~
day."
"Personally, I think they're
rather sezy.11
"I look like a computer."
In me began to bulld. I thought
of all the sacrifices for those
l9~y bracts. Tht new• 111~
covers ••. the permanents , ••
the color TV set .• the NP.
port stockings and something
in me snapped "It's no use blaming peo.
ple," he said. "What's done 11
done. We'll go the orthodonUst
route."
.. You do not look like a com·
puter. Did I ever tell you whit
my grandmother told me
when I had to wear a bag or
garlic around my neck during
freshman orientaUon?"
"Yes."
I went over the girl and
whispered, "Believe me,
darling, my boy ~ not tor
you. I know you think that
now, seeing that row of
straight, white teeth that
become straighter by tbe
hour. But just believe me
when I say that someday
you'll meet some nice boy
with a bite problem who wUI
make you a wonderful
husband.'!
The orthodontist route, if not
a rocty...ne, was a steady one.
At least once every three
weeks found me sitting in the
waiting room reading t h e
''Bleeding Gums Journal."
After every vi.sit I wo1,1ld have
the same conversation with
my son.
"Oh, well, anyway one day
you'll forget yourself and open
your mouth and laugh right
out loud and some beautiful
girl will say, 'Oh, are those
$2,000 worth of bra~ in your
mouth? I hardly noticed them
at all."
"Are you sure I told you the
story my grandmother tcld me
when I had to wear a bag of
garlic around my neck during
freshman orientation?"
Later, my son said to me,
"Mom, what did you say to
that girl at the bus stop? She
didn't even wait for the bw.''
"When are you going t6 open
your· mouth?"
''Never."
''You can't go on day alter
day clenching your I I p 111
together. How are we going to
know if your tonsils are bad?
And if they are, how are we
ever going to get them out?
Through your nostrils? You're
being ridiculous, you know.
Thousands of teenagers wear
braces."
"Yes."
This went on nearly two
years. Then one afternoon my
son and I were standing at the
bus step when I noticed a pert,
little brunette ogling him. She
smiled shyly at first, showing
a dimple in the comer of her
mouth. Then she s m i I e d
broadly.
Suddenly, all the resentment
"I didn't bring you this far
to have you run off with two
front teeth that overlap!"
We rode home in silence.
NEXT: Theories I Have
Blown.
!E•cerPl...t from I~ book, "Jlilt
Will Tiii You H•~• C~ltd1'1'" ef Your
OWnl" Coi>vrl9"1 lt11 bY Erm• llorfi·
b«k I nd 911 Ketllt'. Publlatlld bY
DclJDltdt't' I. Co., Inc:.) "Name me two ."
Your Horoscope
Capricorn: -Don't
To Past; Future
Hang
Bright
WEDNESDAY
NOVEMBER 24 .
By SYDNEY OMARR
Capricorn is great f o r
gathering in stray animals and
persons. C2.pricorn can be
tough, but also tender. Natives
of this sig n are ambitious,
aware or material needs but
also poetic. Indeed, they can
be a contradiction. They are
not easy to understand. but
they are fascinating. Some
famous persons born under
Capricorn include Sarah Miles
Federico Fellini and Sandy
Koufax.
harmony. Be open to chance if you so desire. Streamline
for improvement. basic procedures.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl 22): AQUARIUS (Jan. 2~Feb
Creative force flows. You are 18): Lunar cycle coincidM
able to achieve. Personal with time when opportunity
magnetism soars. People are knocks, beckons -and you
favorably attracted. Family successrully answer. Stress
member makes fine gesture original approach. lmpr\nt of
to reconciliation. Be receptive. your individual style fills bill
Don't turn away happiness. -more than adequately.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
Values should be subject for Element of mystery prevails.
review. especially as they ap-Aquarius person figures pr~
ply to land, home, real estate. minenUy. Cooperate with
Some persons may want special group, hospital, or
something for nothing -from charitable project. You get
ou. Be wary. Take time to facts which in recent past
do some double checking. were obscured. Move ahead.
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. •IF TODAY IS YOUR
ARIES (March 21.April 19): 21): You can gain through. BmTHDAY you have ability
Friendship is tested. Express journey -short one. Idea to appreciate music and the
views. Some around you are wha"!cyhancehad, combeees nto lifhe0ld. Yoinu arts. You !'Ire fond of teaching, ·u B t ~ helping others to know. You now supersensl ve. u you are re ..... id for past ~'ro~·. th ·t r tr· h have a right to upress ,... ei 11.) ·are e oppos1 e o se ts .
yourself _ and to live a life Relatives, neighbors figure You are due, in upcoming
of your own. Help one who prominently. Conditiom im-months, to gain greater
shows willingness to be aided. prove. recognition a n d additional
TAURUS (April 2Q.May 20): CAPRICORN (Dec. 2 2 ~ personal happiness.
Accent on ambition, career, Jan. 19): Personal possessioru To find out more 1bout v1111r111t
general standing in com· highlighted: take inventory. •nd 111ro1wy, ordt• S1d .... 1 om1rr'1
D···--· 1· I r· . h Ml·Nll• bl:loll;ltf, T~• Truitt Aboul munity. Leo person figures IM:41-u nonessen ia s. UUS A1tr11100~. Send blr11...:111• ind ,, cM!I
Proml.nenlly. Origi·nal co•-pts project. Don't hang on to past. io 0m1rr Book let. 1~e DAit v PILOT, •-• y f tur •-b ·gh 80~ 3200. Gr•nd Ce~lftl Sltllon, NM can be successfully utilized. __ oo_r_u __ e_ca_n_~ __ ";:...t_-__ vM_'c.'..c'c..·v.:_ • ..c'mc..'::.'-____ _
Career area gets boost. Exude
confidence.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20):
D e v e I op philosophical con·
cepts. Strive for iMer peace.
You have the answers: know
this and begin acting on what
you know. C h e c le cor·
respondence. Be in touch with
one you have neglected.
CANCER (June 21-July 22):
Be cognizant of investments.
money, savings, threats to
security. Don't feel wed to
one method, thought or con-
cept. Give yourself room .
lnvestigate and an a 1 y z e.
Sa~ttarlus ls In picture.
..
. To avoid ~sappolntment, prospective
bnd.es ar~ reminded to have their wedding
stones with black and white ~lossy photo-
graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women's De-
apartment one week before the wedding.
Pictures received after that time will not
be used,
For engagement announcements it is
imperative that the s'tory, also accompanied
b~ a bla.ck and white glossy picture, be sub-
rrutted SI% weeks or more before the wedding
dale. U deadline is not met, only a story will
be used.
Jose Trucco of Argentina takes a picture of fellow American Field Service ex-
change student Najwa Saidah of Jordan and 1w1rs. Paul Beemer, membership
chairman, as they discuss the AFS coffee al 10 :30 a.m. Wednesday. Dec. 1, in
the home or Mrs. Jack Carney, Emerald Bay. The students will compare holi·
day customs. American Abroad candidates Josh Bright and Kim Lokan and re·
turnees Karen Cutkomp and Robin Oli\•er will be introduced.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Lie
low. Play waiting game. Give
attention to mate, partner.
Take back seat -tern·
porarily. Your time will come.
Patience now is your ally.
Wait and observe. Your judg-
ment, intuition will g e t
sharper. vmoo c Aug. 2.1.S.pt. 221:
You gain knowledge about job,
well-being, general service.
h1ore persons express ap.
preciation. Where there was
To help fill requirements on both wed·
ding and engagement stories, forms are
available in all of !he DAILY PILOT offices.
Further questions will be answered by
Wofnen's Section staff members at 642·4321.
'
friction> now there~~ca~n'.'.,,,~be~~==:::='='::::;:
THt RED
BALLOON
LTD .
~
Picroltno • Imp e Grace
John~ton • PISC"hcl Flot't'nel! Elscm3n
Ruth or Carolina
Millbrook • Bettl Terrell
''Aiij'ft
.... -· .. llt••l•U,. ··-"' ~•.ii.tu.• ............... , •••••
LISTEN TO WEIGHT .
WATCHERS
Enjoy
Thanksgiving Dinner
at the
EL PESCADOR
Complete Turkey Dinner $3.50
CHILD'S PLATE $2.00
Complete catering for 9roups of 50 or more. Ucenstd
caterer for food and llq110r. Ltt us cater your Christmas
office or plant party.
548·3241
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l
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I
I
Woman Takes Stand;
Receives City's Vote
By JOHN A. WEBSTER
ALBUQUERQUE. N. M.
_ tUPll -A 40 ·yCiit'·olrl
.c;--_ ._ t1pusewifc who ran ror office
-,,.... .. ·•·Just to get my feet \l'CI and
··£i11d what it 1\'all like to be n
·candidate'' found out quickly.
She now is this ('ily's first
\\'on1an comnllssioner.
··1 think being a y,·onuu1
1nade a difference." said Mrs.
Ja1nes A. Koch. "The timing
has a great deal t lO doJ as far
as any candidate is concerned.
J think Albuque rque 1.,.as ready
to have a woman as cily t'Om-
missioner and I just happened
lo be there at the right time.''
Nancy Koch. n1other of
three. and wife or a physician,
bucked tradition in gaining a
19-month ·term to fill an unex-
pired one. Not only had a
1voman never 1'/011 a com.
mission post before. but ~·!rs.
Koch ran as an "independent''
in a rield of 30 candidates.
Although city elections are
non-political . groups of can·
dldales frequently combine
forces to run as a slate. Tradi-
tionally. persons without a
slate fare poorly at the polls.
During her campaign. ~1rs.
Koch repeatedly stressed com-
munications \\' i t hi n the
commission Itself. bel\\'een the
commission and city hall and
between the commission and
citizens."
i\IEDIATO ll
She believes a woman com·
1nissioner "'ill help -.. I think
a woman is generally a good
1nediator. I lhink \re gel used
to the role iiS "'ifc and
mother."
Then there is the ti1ne
element. She believes she \vill
have more time for the
unsa \aried post than a inan.
'"As I see it. a man has three
responsibilities-to his job. his
fa mily and to the commission.
I only have two. to my family
and to the commission.''
The campaign \vas \'er·y
much a folksy. family style
matter-at the start. .. \\le just
\\'anted to get our feet "'el and
find out \\'hat it is like to be a
candidate.
"i\ly husband \Va~ my cam-
paign manager and I h e
children helped. At candidates·
day \al an Albuquerque
--. -alt
•
.,
'GETTING FEET WET'
Mrs. Nancy Koc h
sho pping center) they "'ere
lhere talking to people and
saying. "Come 1neet n1y moth·
er \.\'llo is running for !he city
L"Ommission. ·'
"Then.·· she said, '"\.\'e be·
g;.n to gel all these Olfers of
help." She esti1nated thal by
election day. there \1•ere about
200 volunteers. mostly \\!Omen ,
\1·orking for her.
"\Ve also 1vanted tu prove
the day \1•as not gone \\•hen a
candida!e could run SU('·
cessf ull.v \\'ithout \iast su ms of
money," she said. !·!er sta rlinJ:
campaign fund \\·as SS. but she
found "'omen donating ""which
is a phenomenon .
"If there is to be a political
contributioJ1 from a family. it
a!1nosl ah1·ays comes from the
hu sband . You could t a I k
yourself blue Jn the face to
thern 1husbandsJ artd they
\1•ould just sort of walk the
other way.''
The ne\v cornn1issioner said
that naturally she \\"OUld be in·
terested in mattte's of irn·
parlance to won1en bul would
not serve to r epre s ent
'·11•omen ttny tnore than I
1vould expect a man lo
represent men."
~1rs. Koch believes the role
of women u1 politics is in·
creasing rapidly. ··rin not a
card carrying me1nber of a
\1·01nen 's liberation group.,.
l'hc said. •·aut I feel J"m doing
very rnuch "'hat lhey're talk·
ing about. \\'hich is becoming
involved."
Southern Belles Open
Old Medicine Cabinet
Southern ll'Olncn m;·:1) years
ago had a ren1edy for every
kind of ill that could beset
1nankind, and these \\"ere pass-
ed dO\\'n rron1 generation lo
generation. bcco1ning on I y
legends as they \\·ere replaced
by modern medicine 's cures.
fi!embers of the f,1nma
Sansom Chapter of the United
Daughters of the Confederac~·
brought so1ne of t h e ~ e
remedies and beaul .v secrels
!o !heir meet ing In the Tust111
hon1e of l\1rs. H. H. Platt. and
ca me awa.v 1~·ilh R fe\v l?.ugh.s
LAURIE BURNS
May Date
Selected
Laurte S110\1 B urn ~.
daughltr of i\lr. and ~1r:..
Donald S. Burns of Corona del
i\iBr "''ll beet1n1c the bride of
Phllllp H. Btdtgein dur1nf1
~lay 23 rites In her parents'
home .
~lis.s Burns attended the
JnsUtut Montesano. fislaad,
S"•ltzerland, is a graduate of
1"ht Orme Schoof. ?11 3 y er.
Ariz. and is a jur1lor at the
University of Arl1.ona
Her r1ance. son of i\1r. 11nd
1'1r11. Phillip 8. Rideg .. 111 of
~lontoy11, N.i\t is 11 graduate
of Tucun1C'Ori High School nnd
the University or Arizona .
-and so111C' \\"Orkable ideas.
From l\'1rs. C. A. l\1isson of
Santa Ana. v"hose ancestors
"'ere fron1 Texa s. came a
ren1edv for a cold: '"Take
three Or four onions and cut
them up and 1nix \\•ith aboul
half cup of brown sugar. Bake
in a slow oven until a juicr is
obtained. Then drink !he
juice.··
Son1e rernedic s for
rniscellanrous ills. as rcC'orded
by lhe ancestors of the hostess
fron1 North Ca r o l i n a .
Arkansas and Texas. included
GA_LE OLANDER
Betrothal
Revealed
Gale 0 \<Andcr and Paul
Brandstetter. "'ho met :d Con·
t'Ord1a Collcg_e in Se"'llrd.
Neb .. ~rei:itannlng a Dec. 29
wrdding in Christ Lutheran
Church, Costa i\1esa.
Tht brldc...ctect, daughter of
i\lrs. \Yahlers Olander of
Corona de! filar and Or.
Robert Olander of Newport
Beach. graduated fron1 Coron11
del Mllr High School.
Her rinnce. !cacti in si.
L<iuls, l\lo. He 1s \he son of
~lrs. VL'Ol'gc Nelsun (Ir
Snohomish, \\la sh.
Beauty secrets fro1n 1\1rs.
Lillia n Stanley of Orange ,
whose :01ncestors \1·ere fro111
J\·lissourr and \llrgini<r. in·
c:ludcd using light crean1 for
cleansing crean1.
"Just massage in \\'1lh 1he
fingertips," she told I hf'
n1embers. "This 1\•as used
back 1n the 1800s in lhe
l\1idwest ;ind \Vesl when the
ladies' faces \\'ere tilnstantly
exposed lo the dr.l'1ng suns.
"A very good racial pack is
n1arle of plain honey. Ruh all
over lhe lace alld neck and lei
rernain for five minute s: then
rinse \veil 11·ith 11·arm watrr
and elose po1'Cfl with a chunk
of ice .. ,
conN PONt-:
An old Southeru recipe for
Corn Pone was presented:
Take nbout 1 '~ cups corn
meat. 1 ~ cup flour. 2 teaspoons
baking powder and 17 1ea-
spoon snit . In anOlhl'r bo\1•] pot
a belllcn egg. 111 ct1ps milk
arid 11 rup "fatback " (salt
pork1 which has been cu l 111
ple«li and fru~d vtry c.nsp.
1'1J:ic up "'tll. 1'hen put the
l«X:ond n1ixture wilh the first
and beat together well. Pour
lti a greased_~Rn anc1 bt1ke in ;i
moderate oven until dont. II
should be brown .
Another rttlpt! was for clab-
ber : Take skim milk and put
1n R crock and set on the back
Inflation
Sparkles
'rwt'41.Y, wow1mbtr 23, 1911
o~·l'I P!!ot,
Oe<tn'llter ),
JOlf·11
DAILY PILOT Jti
~ u2n
FICTIT IOUS aUSI HEl S
NAMI' iTATEMENT
1
Th• toliowln• "''°"' ''' 1101nt l>u1on~H ••
TH£ BASlE~ HOME, 1e1~ Norllt
llrc·acrwav Slr~~I. S•nt1 ""'' C11ir . .,NII '1 I> V Ill<, IA C1!11ii<ni1 C:orPOraltonl,
10!5 Nor!I! Broldw1, Slrfft, S1n11 ""'' (~Ill, •1101
Tnl• bu1inen Ii bl!ln9 condu<ttG bv • Co•!>C<•lion
"nnur "l•n lindfkt
lll•• ora!emtl'I tllf-I! with 't~e Coun•v
C1~rk ot Or•"lie Countv 01>· Ncv1mbor n,
ltll B• Btve,lv J. M~lldo~. D•~11tt
Cau"IY Clerk.
Publl~hed 0'"'9f CC.ii D•llv Pilot,
NcvPmbor 11, 7J. JO •"" Ot«mbt'r I. 1'11 JOM-11
• 1
• Plt•OI~•
l>\lllt1'11"G Q1•11ot C:o•tl Otll~ "'1.-
..,.,..._~f 1l . ..., •no OtC'"-""lltr 1. u
1•11 ~·
j
• . .
•
1-,.,-.,.----·· DAILY mor
·Rival Coaches
Outline
It'll Take Our
Top Effort
-Deveney
By BOB DEVANEY
Nebraska Football Coacb
LINCOLN, Neb. 1AP) -From the
standpoint of preparation, this Oklahoma
game Thursday is the most interesting
I have had the opportunity to be involved
in as a coach.
Oklahoma's wishbone offense is dif-
ferent from any we ha ve faced this
year, and they have ideal personnel
for it. Quarterback Jack Mildren is a
fine leader, a good runner and a good
passer. Their halfbacks -Greg Pruitt,
Joe Wylie an.d Roy Bell -ha\'e fine
speed. Pruitt especially has been a great
back all year with tremendous speed
and agility.
Views
•
Sooners Need
Con1plete Game
--Fairbanks
By CHUCK FAIRBANKS
Oklahoma Football Coach
NORMAN, Okla .. (AP) -Thursday's
game \\'ill be a rarity in college football
history . Only a couple of times have
two teams come to such a showdown.
Our pla yers and coaches are proud to
be part ot ii.
There is no single key to a vic tory
against a team like Nebraska -we 'll
ha ve to play a complete football game.
Defensively, we'll have to come up
with the big plays, We can't affo rd
to allow Nebraska to control the ball.
They've been doing that all ye ar with
lhe passing of Jerry Tagge and a strong
running game. They ha ve tremendoua
balance.
Jn additi on, we must ha ve excellen t
coverage on punts and ki ckoffs. We'll
ha,·e to find a 'A'ay lo contain Johnny
Rodgers.
Pi1·ate Boss; ,._,_
Driver Dies
PIITSBURGH -Danny Murtaugh, the
tobacco-chewing manaaer of the world
champion Pittsburgh Pirates, re11igned
today for health reasons. Coach Bill
·Virdon immediately was named to suc-
ceed him.
Vlrdon, 40, has been the Pirate bi tting
• and outfield coach since 1063. One of
the greatest defensive centerflelders in
Pirate history, he began playing for
Pittsburgh in 19~ and retired as an
active player in 1965.
Vir"don admits Murtaugh has been a
tremendous m1nai:erlal influence on~him.-
but s1ys he will be his own man.
During the World Serles, controversial
pitcher Dock Ellis said of Murtaugh:
"I don 't' know what I would do if
that man ever quits.'' .,,
Gene Redd , 41 , a professional stock
car driver from Rowland Heightl'i, Calif.,
was killed at 4:25 p.m. Mond!y when
his car went out of control on a practice
run, skidded into a gullrd rtil and
overturned, track ofr!cials said.
At fullba ck they have Leon Crosswhite,
one of the most underrated ball carriers
in the Big Eight Conference. He is
the back that keeps 1he defense honest
inside.
I don'l expect Nebraska to change
its attack mu ch. Thl':y've had great suc·
cess pa s.sing off the sp read formation.
We 'II need to put pressure on Tagge
up front and get excellent covera11e in
the secondary.
GREEN BAY'S JOHN BROCKINGTON ILEFTI GOIS 24 YARDS FOR A TOUCHDOWN.
Redd Was making his first test runs
In a newly • acquired 1972 Barracuda
at Or1nge County International Raceway
when his engfne apparently blew and
the car skidded on its own oil and
.hit the ran at more than 135 miles Oklahoma also has a fine offensive
line. In watching films of their games
with other opponents, our coaching staff
has been impressed by the Yl'ay their
offensive line gets off the ball quickly .
T-hey have some great blockers in that
line and their qui ckn ess Is a great asset.
ORlahoma·s defense also is underrated.
Jn fact I feel Oklahoma could be the
toughest defensive team we have faced
this year.
To stop Oklahoma and move the ball
against them , we simply have to do
the things we have been doing, but
do them better than we have at any
time this season.
\Ve can't throw out our whole defensive
system because we are facing a type
of offense we haven't seen yet this
year. Yet we have to make some ad-
justments.
On offense, we will need a sound
and solid mixture of passing and running.
Th is balance has been the key to our
offense. We can throw the ball and
we can run the ball.
We are anxious to defend our No.
l rating and we hope that against
OklahOma we can come up with the
best game of the season, because it
v.'ill require our best effort to defeat
th is fine Oklahoma team .
Of course. our offensive team is well
aware of whal iL is facing -the best
defensive team in the nation. We'll ha ve
to use variety in our attack to dent
it and our execution and blocking must
be exceptional . You can't have success
against Nebra5ka and have an unusual
number of errors.
Variety and the ability to adjust to
game situations. I feel have been the
keys to the success of our wishbone
formation.
We are not , as some ma y suppose
because of our rushing )'ardage, an
assaulting type of attack. We likl': to
run downhill, adjusting our offense to
counter the defensive situations con·
fronting us. We will pass when we have
to and success in passing has helped
us win many games.
It is my hope that errors or fluke
plays will not be a deciding factor in
the game : that it will be won by the
team with the best playerl'i. Then both
teams will be able to walk off the
field with their heads held high. There
will be two fine football teams on the
field Thanksgiving Day, but only one
can win.
Falcons' Win
Over Packers
Tightens Race
ATLANTA jAPI -It's a three-team
race in the National Football League·s
Y.'es t Division now and the Atlanta
Falcons feel that anything can h1ppen.
The Falcons jumped right into the
fight with a 23-21 victor)' over the Green
Bay Packers in tt1onday night's nat ionally
televised NFL game. They now trail
th~e division-leading Los Angeles Rams
by one game and the second-place San
Fr3ncisco 49ers by just a half-game.
''Anything can happen now ." said
Atlanta's defensive end John Zook, who
along with the rest or Atlanta's front
four made it hot for Green Bay
quarterback Scott Hunter all night in
the 31-degree weather.
"We just have to win our own games,
not worry about the other teams."
Zook, end Claude Humphrey, and
tack!~ Glen Condren and John Small
each sacked Hunter once for a tot.al
of 31 yards 2.1d then Zook hit him
in. the end zone with jUst over 1 minute
to go. Hunter fumbled out of the end
wne for a safety, icing the Falcoru'
victory.
Prior to Monday night's game, Picker
quarterbackl had only bten dumped six
times for 56 yards this set90n.
However , Falcon mistakes, especially
In the kicking game, kept the Packers
In the contest. Green Bay tackle Bob
Brown blocked two placement attempts
by Bill Bell, one on the first Atlanta
extra point try and the other on a
37·yard field goal attempt .
Cornerback Doug Hart picked up the
ball and raced 57 yards for a touchdown
to give Green Bay a 7-6 lead in the
seco nd quarter.
With Atlanta leading 26-14 in the final
period. Art Malone fumbled and Ray
Nitschke recovered for the Packers ti
the Atlanta 24. On the next play, John
Brockington ra ced around the right slde
for 24 yards to put Green Bay ri11ht
back in the game. 26..ail.
Bui the Falcons' Tony Plummer knock-
ed a Billy Lothridge punt out Or bounds
on the Packer one-vard line with I :04
rem1ining and on ihe next play Zook
hit Hunter for the safety.
0 1117 -11 ',,,_11
~ "'"" -Ml!Or141 ! run !~oc• 1•1111111
Ga -Hit! J7 "loc~'IC( llfld -I r 1tvrn !Mlc~u ... ~ lcll 1
' --"'"" -lu•i.• r '"" ''"" l1llffl
•
GI -A11C11nln II OIH trom H11n1tr (Mit~1tl1
U01I
All -MllclWlll l Of"U l•oP, 9ttrl' !9f11 -1(-)
All -Ml~ .... I "'" l l lU ~1(-)
Ge -l 1KJ1;l1111,on ,, "'" !Ml<httl• ~It-I
"'"II -111••~. ~·u 1tt• lumllltd 11111 11. 11\11
·~ A -Sl,IJO • l"•t~tn I'll(-
F!ral dDW~~ ' " llllllwl·Yl ldl ,.,., ....
1'1111,,. v•r•~•• ~ "' lltlur11 ~lrOIO• "' '" P~llll ••• 1'-Jl·t
l"un11 ••• •• THIS IS THE CALL THAT SHOOK UP WOODY HAYES. F11rnt!lt1 ~II • I
Yt rd1 IH,,.l>ied ~
per hour, officials said.
Recalling Disasters Doctors said he died
of multiple injuries.
in a hospiW
Grid T eci11i T1·agedies
Started With Trains
.,,
_STANFORD -If Pacific-8 cham pion
Stanford had lost its final regUlar seuon
iame to Catlforn!a, coach Jnhn Ralston
might not have had a team to take
lo the Rose Bowl.
"There was some Lalk about turning
down the bid if we lost," Stanford
quarterback Don Bunce revealed after
the 14-0 victory over Cal Saturday.
More recently, disasters involving foot·
ball teams have centered around plane
crashes.
Yet thumbing through tbe archives
we find that tragedy began to take
its mark on American grid teams even
before the airplane wu flown .
On the morning of Oct. 31, 1903, a
special 14-car train carrying the Purdue
University football team, band and fans
to Indianapolis for the second annual
-------WHITE
WASH ---
OLl:NN WH!TI
claJih with Indiana. crashed into sleel-
built coil cars which were backing down
the tracks .
The Purdue team train cars were
wooden and when the collision occurred,
the first ca r was halved with the noor
lyi ng under the tender of the coal cars
and the roof resting on the second car
of the coal carrying section.
Sixteen died in the wreck, including
13 players and an assistant coach.
Among those injured wa.s Harry G.
Le slie. who went on to become governor
o( Indiana .
Miraculously, the Purdue band escaped
injury. It was in th!! second car which
derailed and plunged down an em-
bankment .
Purdue named its memorial gym-
nasium in homage to those who died
in that tragedy.
Purdue was later hit on Sept. 12,
1936 by a dressing room fire which
was ignited when a clogged dra in backed
up and the gasoline film on it got
near a stove and caught fire.
The gas was being used by players
to remove adhesive tape.
One of the two who perish~d was
Tom McGannon. who had beaten
Northwestern the previous year with a
SS.yard punt return.
* * * Congratulations are surely in order
for coach Dave Holland , his staff and
the team which brought the Sea Kings
their first-eve r varsity football cham·
pio nship.
And the Irvine League litlisls dlcl -if
the hard way. winning their last two
games by a point.
Wonder when was the laat Ume a
pro football tea n\ fi lled to mike two
conver1kln1 ln one 1ame? AUanta did
It l\1onday eight with one blocked i nd
tbe other falling 1fter a hl«ih past from
etnler.
What price, victory? St. Paul football
coach Marljon Anclch had to go with
injured starter Jamie Quirk when the
.second string QB was hurt ag1inst Bishop
Amat.
The cou rageOus Quirk could hardly
stand - in fact twice he fell 'A1ith
no one touch ing him . Yet he stood there
and threw, handed Off and took his
licks. The same type deed in combat
\lo'ould have gotten him a Medal of Honor.
After seeing Bishop Amit and St.
Paul -the teama voted one-two in
Southland prep grid polls, It must be
said that In reality Westminster may
have the best outfit. And one of the
best coaching staffs .
Correction for our publishing neighbors
in Santa Ana : Your story that an up-
coming Lowell frosh vs Rowland frosh
football football game is unique is in
error.
In 1958 Ne wport Harbor High's Bee
team met and lost to Burroughs of
Burbank in a special playoH at Newport'l'i
old stadium.
Es ta ncia High athletic director W1yne
Hughes was coa ch of that Newport outnL
PS -It's not like the old corps.
You wonder wby admlnl1trators did n't
alt on the Corona de.I l\1ar rooters who
were loudly disrupti ng the pl aying of
the Na tklntl Antbem Frld1y nlgbt.
Speaking of the old corps, how man y
of you can remember !he days when
I.he ice man used to come through the
neighborhood?
Gillman Lost
His ~jte, Says
Charger Kiclier
SAN DIEGO (AP ) -Sid Giiiman has
often been accused ol having poor rela-
tions with many of his players , but
few of them have any unfavorable things
to say about the departing San Diego
Char11ers coach.
Players contacted Monday tf le r
Giilman announced his resign1tion as
head co11ch and executive vice pre!ldent
generally agreed that the SO-year.aid
coach came back this sea!On as a mi n
Wier ror them to get· along-with-tha
in past years.
"Sid changed his attitude this season
-he wasn·t as coarse and hard on
the players as he had been in the
past." said linebacker Bob Babich. "I
thought we were more closely knit this
year. Everyone on the club changed
to try and help Sid."
Stanford, with a ~-I Pac-8 record, had
already been assured of the in vitation,
partly because Cal is on NCAA probation
and ineligible for the Rose Bowl, The
Bears went into the Stanford game with
a 4-% record against conference OJr
ponents.
"Some players just felt we wouldn 't
be good enough if we lost,'' Bunce said.
Stanford finished 8-3 this season. .,,
KANSAS CITY -Ifs difficult to asses.!
~ind direction or velocity three da ys
1n advance, but skies should be clear
at Norman, Okla ., Thanksgiving Dav
with temperatures in the upper 40s and
lower 50s.
The forecast was provided Monday
by Allen Pearson, direttor of the National
Severe Storm Forecast ctnter in Kansas
City. .,,
PORTLAND, Ore. Former
heavyweight boxing champlnn F'lovd Pat·
ter~n is rated a . 7-2 f1vorit e 'tonight
to d1l'ipose of Charhe "Emperor " H1rris
in his campaian to earn an unprecedented
third straight world champ ionship.
Patterson underwent a prellminary
physical eir:1mination Monday and Dr.
Jack Battalia or the Portland Bo1in&
Comm ission pronounced h i m in
remark ably sound condition for a man
who will be 37 in January. .,,
KNOXVILLE, Tenn . -Oregon's Stev~
Prefonta ine outdistanced a field of 302
runners in near.freezin1 weatli'er Mond1y
and led his team to the NCAA Cross.
Country Championshi p.
The Oregon speedste r, defending the
~ndividual .crown he won a year ago
1n record time of 28:00.2, crui sed around
the 6-mile course 1l Fox Den Country
Club in 29 :14.0.
Prefontaine crossed the finish line 41)
yards ahead of Minnesota's Garry
Bjorklund , the onl y runner to aive him
a serio us challl':nge in the race. Bjorklund
wes limed at 29:21.
Oregon's team score was a low 8.1
39 points ahead of runntrup Washlngto~
State. The low score wins In cross a.un-
try.
~tarty Liquori. Villanova's ire at
ditt&ncuunner:, e.nded his colle1e CJretc...._
with 1 30th place fin ish.
UCI Cagers Play
Frosh Tonight
"He had lost a lot of his bite." said kicker Dennis Partee. ''I felt more com· Opening salvo or the 1971-72 basketball
fortable around him than J ever had season will he fired lonight.Ahftn the before." UC Irv ine varsity tangle~· "°1th the
Not everyone on the club, whic h is freshman !tam in !he annu al openln~ 4~ lhls yeir. felt quite so cordia l, but skirm ish in Craw ford Hall on the UCI
the crlllcal players chose not lo comment campus. Tipoff i~ set for 7::'t0.
publfcly Monday. Coach Tim Tift i~ preparing his
Quarterback John Hadl said he and charges ror an· inv1sion of four major
Gillman hadn't had 1 problem all year eastern universilics and wlll opef th•
Worst. Called Play in History••Woody
COLUMBUS, Ohio tAP J -Ohio Stote
coach Woody Hayes says he was very
50rry for his emotional outburst O\'er
1 controversial Michigan Interception
before be saw film• of the game won
by the Wolverlnea J0-7.
0 NOW J'd havt been aahamed if I
••ouldn 't have 1one out there ," ~ !old
1 team footba ll banquet Monday night .
''It WI& the worit ulled pity In th e
Jtistory or ~liege rootball," mttlntalns
Hiyes, dean or the Bl& Ten coachts
In his 21 st season with the Buckeyes .
Ha)'es was referring to an interception
Michigan i;afety Tom Daren m•de over
Ohio State spilt end Dick Wakefield al
the Wolverine 31-yard llne in the game '1
closing moments Sat urda y.
"How ean two offlrials st;1nd there,
look at It and not call ii~·· asked HAyes.
The 'ol!llill' H8ye~ $i1Rlkcd out on the
riclrl Rl'ld w11it 11•sr ·~ ""'" 15-)'0rd
misconduct pen11lties by rtJcree Jerry ~1arkbr_tlt. Tht Ohio Slate coi:ich re·
•
counted his version of the conversation
with the referee.
• "Aren't you aoina:
pen1 lty~" H1yes said
Mtrkbrtlt.
lo Cl lJ thal
he asked
"What penalty?" the Ohio State mentor
aald the referee 1sked.
"Th11t in:terlt!ren_ce call ," Ha y e s
replied.
"I WI S 40 yards RWR)'. How can I
c11H It?" Hayes said tt1arkbreit aald.
'11 \\'R~ 50 yards SWAY and I cnuld
have called II," H1yes retorted.
h d I I. I h t " ind add-" that .. ,._ man I.• an offensive season Dec. 1 at the University o Ten· "We a a very n ce 1tt e c a , cu 1 ~ ·' nessee.
11y1 Hayet, brln&Lng laUJhter from more genius. He brou1ht a lot Into the passing The Anteaters wlll leave Monday.
than ~ at lhe banquet. game and his dedic1tion lo football is Following the Tennessee 11ame. they wlll
remarkable." go to West VlrgJnla University for a The Ohio State mentor was dragged Meanwhile, Harl1nd Svare, who iB SWlt· Saturday ni!lht encounter with Jerry
of! the. field b}t assistant coachea and chln1 hat1 from 1cneral mana1er to West's aim• mater.
players. brokl!: 1 down m1rker oVer hl.11 'head coach , 1ald a !cw changes would After th1t it will be Army 1t Weri
knee and ripped the colorful trapping.II . be made "but I Set no reason to start Point on Tuesday and Seton Hall In
or the chains. _doing tt)Jngs a whole lot different." South Oranat'!, N.J. on Wednesday.
"It doc~n·t make you happy when Even li;ecnnd·atrlng qua rterback MarJ.y·-Jiirsl home g11me In Crewford Hall
gomeone else d~ides the outcnme. The Onmres. who h11s seen action nnly briefly 1ftCr toni~ht 's fre shm1 n entan•l•ment
pla yers should decide It on the field ," this sea~. s1ld he was "surprised and I~ S11turd11y, Dec. 11 . with. WhellDD
Hayes rc1soned. a llttle disappointed. '1 College of Illinois. '
• • • -.
-.
t •
BOB FERRARO
Bick of the Year
·'
DAVE HOLLAND
Coach of tht Ye1r
. ..
JEFF CARTER.
Lineman oJ th. Y11r
Area Dominates All-Irvine . .
Ferraro, Carter, Holland Earn Top Honors
Corona del ~lar High 's Bob Ferraro
is the No. I back on the official All-Irvine
League football team as selected by
the DAILY PILOT.
The Sea King whiz was an overwhelm-
ing pick after leading his mates to
the Irvine League championship and a
berth in the CIF AAAA playoffs.
The Sea Kings' Oa\'e Holland wa s
named coach of the year. Corona finished
v.•ith an' overall mark of 7-2 and the
a\'erage victory was by a margin of
one touchdown.
Twice the Sea Kings escaped with
one-point victories and they came from
behind to post crucial league wins over
Edison, Magnolia and Costa Mesa.
Holland 's crew picked up only one
other first team spot -quarterback
fleed Johnson .
Lineman of the year goes to Edison's
<l,eff Carter, a returnee from last year's
first team . ·
Edison gridders Fred Hernandez,
Rocky Whan and Brian Bayless were
also accorded first team berths.
Estancia High's beefy offensive
linemen were keys to the Eagles' season
and it's reflected as three of their of-
fensive linemen made first team.
Tackles Kim Shores and Doug Brant,
along with guard Craig Dennis, were
first team selections.
Other first team picks from Estancia
are back Dan Princeotlo, and defensive
standout Lee ,Jovce.
Founta in Valli:i:y's Eldon Kidd ltackte)
and Gary Hernandez (defensive back )
w~re named to the first team. along
\V1th Costa Mesa's Jon f\1archiorlatti
(tight end ) Jand Pat Kalama (defensive
back /.
CdM vs Lions:
Coaches Agree
It's a Natural
By ROGER CARLSON
01 lh• Dt ltt PllO! S!tll
There may be disagreement on several
iems when football talk is bendied about
)etween coaches Bill Bos~'ell of
t 1estmins!er High's Sunset League cham-
~on~ and. Da\'e Holland of Corona del
l iar s Irvine League champions.
But one thing they do agree on -
each wants a shot at the other in the
first round or the CIF AAAA playoffs .
They meet Friday night at Orange
Coast CoJJege in the first round in a
test pitting both Orange Coast area
eleve ns.
Says \Vestminster 's Boswell. ""\Ve're
real!.v plea sed to draw Corona del Mar
in the playoffs. \Ve've been in the
el iminations on four other occasions and
each thne we had to play a non-county
team in the first round .
"It's geographically sound and we ex-
pect a tough game. Corona det f\1ar
has explosive speed . And they've won
a.II the big ones . They beat Newport
and Edi son and then came back to
y.·in their last three in a row to win
the championship."
Holland is also looking forward to
Friday·s clash.
"Sure. we'd have like to have drawn
someone like North Torrance. Rosemead
or Santa Fe . But we also feel it's
a real honor to play Westminster.
"Our kids are jacked up about it.
They \vere talking about the possibility
nf playing Westminster Friday night
after_ we beaJ Estancia. _
"\Ve recognize that Westminster is
ranked No. 1 in Orange Qiunty. But
it's 11 real cha llenge for us. We think
"'e play better against the better op..
ponent any"'ay," says Holland.
Bnth coaches spent. !he beller part
nf Sunday revleY.•ing films of their op-
poncnl s and lhe Corona de! Mar mentor
paid p11rlicular 11Uention to the film
of Westminster's 6-0 win over NewPort
H11rbor.
The Sea Kin11:s of Corona del Mar
beat Ney.·port. 7-0. in the season opener.
"\Ve think we 're fairly similar to what
Harbor runs . But of course Westminster
is 1'0 doggone physical. J don 't know
ho"; long we can slay in there," says
Holland
\\'estm1nster has rolled to eight straight
y.·\ns 11fll!r an opening loss l.-0 Lakewood
(24-19 1 "'h1le Qirona del t<.lar has com·
piled the bc~t ~~~~ in the IQ-year history of the c 'th a 7-2 mark.
Baylor Coach Nanted
HOUSTON. Tex. -Iowa State Football
coach Joh nny f\fajor5 will be Uie new
head fnolbt1ll c:oach at Ba}•lor University,
t.he HOl:lston Post 'aid today.
l
-
* * * * All-Irvine League
first Team Offense
Pos. Player School Weight Class
SE Slawson. Los Alamitos 175 Sr.
'l'E Marchiorlatti, Cosla Mesa 201 Sr.
T Shores, Estancia 200 Jr.
T Brant , Estancia 185 Sr.
G Carter, Edison 182 Sr.
G Dennis, Estancia 205 Sr.
C f\1ontaro. Los Alam itos 160 Jr.
B Johnson. Corona de! f\1a.r 178 Sr.
B Hernandez , Edison 150 Jr.
B Ferraro. Corona del Mar 182 Sr.
B Princeotto. Estancia 145 Jr.
f irst Tea m Defense
E Bayless. Edison 170
E Jovce. Estancia 145
T Kidd. Founta in Valley 205
T Beres, Los Alamitos 180
J\1G Bauer, Magnolia 178
LB · \Vhan, Edison 189
LB Svoboda, Los Alamitos 170
B Kalama, Costa Mesa 165
B Hernandez, Fountain Val. 165
B Correa, Magnolia 168
B Roberts, SA Valley 165
5'.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
ros
TE
SE
T
T
G
G c
B
B
B
B
E
E
T
T
LB
LB
LB
B
B
B
B
Second Team Offense
r1ayer School
Carson , Los Alamitos
Comin, Magnolia
Weight Clas!
175 Sr.
165 Sr.
Graves, Edison 200 Sr.
Collins. Corona de! Mar
Conklyn, Estancia
Pickett, SA Valley
Carrozzo, FV
VanderRoest, SA Valley
Becher, Fountain Valley
SchwerdUeger, Los Al.
t<.1ohulskl, FV
186 Sr.
185 Sr.
185 Sr.
180 Sr.
18fl Sr.
190 Sr.
160 Jr.
15fl Sr.
Se('(lnd Team Defense
Shurelock, Los Alamitos 160
Mitchell, Fountain Valley 190
Carpenter, CdM 183
Lynch, Corona de! Mar 203
Timmerman...-dison 215
Crouse, f\1agnolia 175
. \Varren, Cosla Mesa 185
Grower, Corona de[ Mar 15.1
Kipper. Edison 150
Stark. Magnolia 145
Morado, Edison 150
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr .
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Ho1·ger, Maras Pacing
UCl's Yearlii1g Cagers
By µn\\'i\Rn I.. HANDY
Of "" D•llY PHel llt ff Added hl.. .• uut a lack of depth
C<luld sum up the picture of lhe UC
Irvine freshman basketball team for the
1971 season after the Anteater yearlings
posted a 22-2 record a year ago -
best in schoo l history.
''The big thing right now," coach Jerry
Hulbert says, "is trying lo leach them
our system."
The height Hulbert is referring to
comes from 6-91/z center John Horger
and 6-6 Gerald f\1aras. two starters with
the freshman team this season .
Another freshman is Dave Baker, 6-8,
but he is currently playing with the
varsity. In fa cl. is bidding for a starting
berth with the big leam and "'ill not
be available to Hutbert's frosh squad.
''Horger is a super prospect right
no14·." Hulbert says of the big center
from Servile. "! think he will develop
into a great one before he is through.''
f\.1aras . the highly touted Pacifica High
graduate. is one of the most polished
players on the court for the yearlings
and at times has sparkled in scrimmages
with the varsity.
Joining r<.1ara s at a forward position
is Richard f\lraule, a ti-2 star from
Bishop O'Dowd High in Oakland .
The starting gu11rd posts are he!d by
Jeff l\lasterson (6·2f of Mission Vlejn
High and J\1ike Esposito (5-l lJ of St.
Anthony High in Long Beach.
First line reserve is Dave Lynch (6-2 ),
former Fountain Valley High player.
·Other reserves include Jim Small (5-10)
of Miralest.e: Scott t<.fclver (6·4) of Cate
Military in Santa Barbara ; Alex Bootzin
lf>.10 ) fron1 Los Angeles; Mark
Montgomery (6-5) ol Redlands High ;
and Allen Fenner (6-0 ) from Katella
High.
When Hulbert goes to the east coast
with the varsit y Monday for an eight-da y
trip, former UC I great Jeff Cunningham
will be in charge of the freshman squad
for the first three games.
Cunningham is serving as an assistant
coach and has been working 14•ith the
yearlings this season, along with Hulbert
The freshman schedule of 24 games
sho"·s away games at UCLA and USC
in addition to a home-and-home series
with Cal Stale (Long Beach ). There
are also seven games ~·ith junior college
foes including Fullerton and Cypress.
lt11 uc · FlllOSH SCHEOUL I ~· I -At..CJll w .. 1.rn UJ JS«· l -lll•~$\llf Jun.or Colleci• Ill 1 Collta• "~: 1: --cvn~::; J1
1:. ;:::· il~;s~0· , ll -t i (i1'u> un•o• ColltC11 !' , 1t -C~I Stolt 1Lot111 i\Nthl .•!I Jf n. • -C•I w .. tern !~ <ll Ji n. JO -Los AnMIK Soul~"'"' J~nior Colle<1•
l5:.UI Jtn. \' -C~1e>m1n (o!lf<:r !S.lll
J•n. I -Ce• w~'''" !!:di J•n. I -•• Lovol1 U:llj Jon, II -"' Cvore•S J1m>9r Colle..« II) Jon. '1 -"' Fullerton J1m1or Collt<1' l4 l Jon. 15 -Ot~·~~nl81 lS OJ
Jon ~ -"' UCL" F ros~ •l ~:£: I : .~' c~'i1 r,::: /(~0~~c(~l fll
Fee./ -l!Kll~"'h 15 •!I Feb. -ln"•m~,., A"·~l••r U:•Sl ~::· ,'J.: :,1 S~!"~,~;~' r1~~1 1 Feb .. IS -~! ~•n Dl..:>~ S 1•• !\.l!l Ftb. I~ -UC llllvp •i<I• !S.'51 Ftb. l• -Lcvolt 1•. !Sl
.4 nteater P oloists Open
NCAA Pla y With Titans
LONG BEACH -UC lr\'ine will open
defense of its NCAA water polo cham-
pionship Friday afternoon (1) against
-Gal State (Fullerton / in the~Belmonl
Plaza Olympic Pool.
UC! won the champion ship a yea r
ago "'ilh a sudden-death overtime victory
over the UCLA Bruin~ in the cham·
pionship game on a 5hot by graduated
Ferdy t<.1assimino.
Ca! Stale (Fullerton ) lost to UC! during
the regular season, 11 ·5. but won tbe
CCAA water polo championship.
Should UCI get by Fullerton in the
o~er, a second encounter is scheduled
at 8: 10 triday even lng against the winner
of a game between Stanford and San
J ose Slate 1 2:4~).
Stanford Is runnt:rup In UCLA In the
Pacific·8 Conference .and has Rlck
Massimino (Ferdy's brother \ in the
starting lineup. Rick plays for coach
Ed Newh1nd of UCJ during AA U com-
petition.
San Jose State is the Pacific Coast
Athletic Conference champion ind along
with Stanford, has defeated ucr thls
ye•r.
In the upper bracket. UCLA will n1cPt the -Univtrslty of Washington 19·30 1 In
• openln1 round pla y with host Cal Stale
<Long Beach\, the PCAA runnerup, fac-
ing the University of New Mexico 111 : \$).
All teams play two games Friday
and a single game on Saturday. The
third place game is set for 7 Saturday
night and the title game wil! start at
8:45.
UCJ defeated UCLA in suddcn-<lcath
overtime \~st yeai:; to win the "!'Own
and the two schools are among the
favorites to reach the finals again this
weekend.
UCl has posted a record of 20-4 and
has split a pair of games with the
Bruins. In addition to Stanford and San
Jose State holding victories o ver
Newland's team. USC .also won one of
three games between the two scliools.
Pia yoff Tickets
Tickets for the...ClF AAAA football
playoff game Friday night at Orange
Coast College bttwetn Westminster Hig h
and Corona de.I Mar lligfi are on sale
a.t both school campuses.
Prices are $2 for adults, $1 for students
without ASB card and 75 cents for
students with ASB card. Children under
12 are :'>Cl cent5.
Ducats Rre 11vailable •t e.11ch schMl's
student store during achoo\ hours
\\'tdnelday from 8 a.m. to 3:30 ·p.m.
•
. "
Com1non Foes
Choose Lions
To Top CdM
By ROGER CARLSON
0 1 flll 0111)1 ,1 ... '""
•
Considering that Westminster High's
Lions are ranked No. I in Orange County,
it would Hgli:ri that coach Bill Boswell 's
Sunset League champions would be tab-
bed to defeat Corona del Mar Friday
night at Orange c:Oast College in the
CIF AAAA football playoffs.
And . the opinions of two prep coaches
coincide v.·ith that theory.
Coach Dave Holland 's Sea Kings and
Westminster have two common foes .
and both were non-league tests with
Sunset League elevens.
The Sea Kings whipped Ne~·port, 7-0,
then returned a week' later with a come.-
from-behind 20-i4 win over Santa Ana.
\Vestminster triumphed over NeY.'port.
6-0. and did in Santa Ana, 42.fi .
Says Santa Ana' coarh Tom Baldwin:
''I thought Corona del Mar was reall y
good when we played them. But then
they turned around and lost lo Santa
Ana V-alley a.nd~could-only beat Estanci a
and Costa Mesa by one point.
"So I'd have to say Westminster wo1,1ld
be a couple touchdown favori!es . I
\\'OUldn't have said that earlier in the
year. though. Corona has great speed.
But Westminster should win. 21 ·7."
Newport coach Don Lent is a bit
more reserved in his op in on:
"I'd say they're both equal and the
reason is because both are so well
balanced. Westminster might have the
edge 14'ilh their size and depth. And
of course West minste r has been in the
playo~[s before and the experience might --
•• . "
•
fut5dlY. Novtm~r 2), 1971 OAILV l'JLOT !J.
Santa Rosa Balanced
'
Controlling the Ball Keyi·
To Victory Says Coaeh •
•
SANTA ROSA -Marv Mays, the head successful season -the conference was
football coach at Santa Rosa JC, is pretty "·ell balanced. And we have a
hoping for a lot of rain Frida y night. balanced attack that has really helped f
He figures that might even things us."
up with Orange Coast In the opening The two keys in Santa Rosa 's attact ·
round JC state playoff tilt here. ace: quarterback Tom Kirkpatrick and
Jn ether words the Bearcubs coach halfback Joe Stender -both sophomores.,
feel s Santa Rosa might be in over its Kirkpatrick, a S-11, J58-pounder. com.. head. pleted 68 of 125 passes in the nine •
"Orange Coast is the best team we'\•e games for 918 yards and 12 touchdowns. He also had 12 intercepted.
seen this year and Sa n Diego t<.1esa Stender, a first team all-conference ~ .. ~s the second best team." says Mays, selectioii . rushed for 498 yards in 114
"'ho scouted Mesa 's shocking 33-7 victory carries. He 's a 5-11 , JOO.pounder.
over OCC Friday night. Two other halfbacks also have som e
"It's really a shame that some of good rushing credentials.
the second 11nd third place teams in Larry Steele tS-lOJ, 182) picked up
strong l'Onferences can't gel into the 623 \'ards in 1!17 carries and Kenny
playoffs , I understand that Santa Ana Altori t6-0, 2021 added J.SB in 57 carrie~. -'•
h;u; a fine team. "All three running backs are fairly '"'
"The South Coast C<lnference is one equal. but we don't have the supe r
of the strongest in the ,;tale. Our ('(In. ball players like Orange Coast does ." "
ference (Camlnl) Norte) isn't very strong says r..1ays.
al all .'' sRys Mays. "Orange Coast has a very fine football
"Our conference is classified in the team. \Ve feel they have unusually good ;,
large schools. but that's. only because team ~d. not only in their wide
West Valley has a very la-rge enrollment·c. -~,.~,.~el"Vers but In thei r backfield, also. '1
"\Ve only have about 4,SOO students They throw as well as anyone we've 1'
here." seen this season."
Two reasons why Santa Rosa "'On Santa Rosa is similar to Cerritos in .• 1 eight of ils nine regular season games, its style or play. The Bearcubs run ,I,
says Mays, is balance -nol only in out of a full house backfield and attempt
the conference. but in the Bearcubs' to control the ball with their balanced '·
offensive alignment as well. altack. And Mays figures that's a very ,•
r-.-fays, in his seventh year as head big key in beating OCC. 1"'
coach at Santa Rosa, feels there was "We feel we have to keep the football
no real standout team in the Camino away from them. Sa n Diego Mesa too'k
Norte circuit in '71. control of the ball in the third quarter
.. That's one reason why we , had a against them and we think that might u
have been a turning point. 1<
be a faelor. p· k w· "1-ihink Cocona de\ Mar has !he com· IC ·eroo Inners
"But ru tell you this. \Ve can't afford
to make mistakes against Orange Coast.
Thf<y rally lo the play. They come up.
with the big play offensively and they
reall y capitalize on mistakes.
binalioi. to score on Westminster. 'They
run the \•eer very effectively and ha ve
a good passing game.
"That's hard to stop when both ilems
are going for them," says Lent. The
Newport mentor was unable to predicl
a final score.
Top prize winner in the ninth week
of the DAILY PILOT 's Pigskin Pickeroo
is Huntington Beach's Robc_rt Jahn , who
guessed 22 of the 25 games correctly.
Doris Flinn of Founlain Valley and
Huntington's Dt'bbie Simmonds and Lori
Zirbel all had 21 right to occupy second
through fourth places with hespeetive dlf·
ferentials of nine , 49 and 55 from the
proper Tie Breaker total of 866.
College Grid Poll
Baldwin says the Sea Kings can upset
the \Vestminster wagon if they can ef-
fect ively control the Lions' quarterback
Jeff Siemens.
AISO(IATIO ,11.ISS
TH m w·I I'll.
I N~~r. 1.-i! lil.G 1.01•
;. OOl•~am•lll 9.G tll
), Al•C~m•ll) 10.0 1.0
4 Mlt"lt•"iJ) 11·0 otS
I AUl>Uf,.11\ 9-0 5U
-· P"'n St Ill 11).(1 ns
"He 's very difficult to rush. \Ve used
a man-to-man defense in the secondary
but tbey 'd break one guy loose and
he'd hil.
Huntington's Paul Schilleci (20 right)
was just one off the Tie Breake r fo
nose oul 12 other entries who had 20
correct guesses.
l,Gecra•• 9-l •ll
I Cclor•ao f.1 "4
t AtllC"" SI, t ·I l5'
10 L~U 7.) JIJ
. .. now
through
Dec. 4th
2nd
tire
Buy one General-Jet at the regular low price, and
get the second General -Jet for 1/2 price.
4 ply nylon cord WHITEWAI I S
SMALL INTERMEDIATE STANDARD
CARS CARS CARS CARS
SIZE 6.50-13 7.75-14 7.75-15 8.25-14 8.25-15 8.55-14
1st TIRE
PRI CE $22.00 $27.00 $27.50 $30.00 $31.00
$11.00 $13.50 $13.75 $15.00 $15.50 $16.25
F.E.T.
pertire $ 1.76 $ 2.1 4
• DURAGEN "
TREAD RUBBER
$ 2.16 $ 2.32 $ 2.37 $ 2.50
•DUAL TREAD
DESIGN
AAIN CHf:CIC : Sho11!d our l uDply <1! 1omt llrt 11111 Of line11un 1hon cl11rin;, lhl1 t Yt"I·
we will honor 1n1 orcl1r1 placed no"' lor l11t11r. d1hv1ry •I the 1dv1n111cl P"CI.
PENNSYLVANIA
TENNIS BALLS
1,98
HI Yhlblll"I Y~lewl
GENERAL
TIRE
111 Wnt 1 ''"· C11t• MIMI Ph1111 S40·l710 1r 646.,0JJ
•Wind 11'd rainproof
• High VIJlbilt1y
Navy duty pla,tle
Special
This Week Only
Pnc•d u tl'I0"'1'1 tt Qenerel Tire Slotea.
Compelrtive!y priced 11 1t1•epend•nt
de11e,. d•pt1yit1t tl'le Q.lner1t 1i0n.
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Plt1111 147•Sll0
-----•STOllE HOUllS 0:00 AM· 0:00 PM IOav thru Oavl _____ m!M
}
'
-•
I
,•
,. ...
•'
-.
' " ' ,.
•
I
•
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DAILY PILOT Totsdaf, Nowmber 23, 1971
Area Defensive
Sta1·s of Week t
KEN ,CARPENTER
Corn a del Mar
BRIAN. BAYLESS
Edison
DALE PETEllSON
Fountain Valley
ldARK STANBRA
~taler Del
GEORGE BARNEY
tJnlvertU)'
I
STEVE BROWN
Costa Mesa
SCOTT DEVRIES
Estancia
SCOTJ' \VlllTFIELD
Uunllngtoa eea:-clf,..
W.L STUART
/ Marina
BOB SAUDALA
~11ssloo Viejo
ROBIN BEAMON
SIR Clemetlte
KEVIN LAMB
We1tmln1ter
Lagunans,~
Uni Duo
Honored
University and L a g u n a
Beach each picked up a pair
of second team choices 011
the official All-Orange League
football teams M selected by
the Orang e Cou nt y
Sportswriters A~iation. ·
Linebacker Bob Gill and
defensive lineman W i 111 e
Jarman were honored from
the University Trojan1 outfit
while Laguna's Gary Fisette
and Mark Diercks gained
similar laurels.
Fisette made the team as
a defensive back w h 11 e
Diercks stood o u.t at
linebackei. Back of the year is Sonora's
Bob Blum and Dane lllertson
of Valencia is the lineman
of the year.
Coach of the year is Valen-
cia's Dave Pinckney . ... _
1!:-C11dWtll. V1ltMl1. 11111, Sr. E-Mell,r, Sonortj 1641, Sr. T-lltf!Mll\. V~ltl\Clt, jU, r. T-Prvnt. Std· <iltb•ck. 1t$, Sr. G-M11tcll, Sonon.
110. Jr, G-P1rm1tu1r. s-r•j '"' Jr. C-l''r1ol1, El 0or100, JJ . Sr. B-L•botdt. v11enc11. uo. s r. 8-Bh.1m, S-t. 190. Sr. 8-Rt llltf.
Sof!Orl , 110, Sr. 8-Mlddltlon. kd-
dletl1ct. Ziii, S/"D-111111 .
OL -O'Sl\1uo~H1· Vt l. :!QI, sr. DL-Snt1d. Vt . lfl, r. Dl-Lld,,.r, 5onor1. no. Jr OL-Ac~t. ~nor•. ~5. Sr. LB-F'leldl"!I. S-rt . 1M. '· LB-De.veroort. El Oor1<1e. 11.1. '· LB-Kl v. V11t 11, · llO. Sr. B-W•tll0fl.b\:r11, 1111.'1r. OB-Reves. Vi l, lil. S•. 08-Mldl11. El Dor•,•.· lMl. Sf. 06-Tl>urmond. Y1lencl1. •
5'· Sec:-Turfl E-C1rotnler. l r11. UO. J r . E-Me<nandtr. V!t, 160. Jr, f -M1vr1, £1 Dor100 ll'.IO. r. T-8r11«. Sorore, JIO, Jr, G-Wtber. S1ckll1b•c-. Ito, ~'. G-G111111n. V1l111Cl1, lil. •''· -MCOonM !. S-1. 160. r · -Lnlon, l•t•. l.O. Jr. B-Grnn. tMonlr, l rtl . llS. Sr. O---Alllm1. El Oor.00. 17J, Sr. l -F11llnl1mJ, Vel.
no. Sr. ... M M ~-Roedl. El Dor ...... 1IO. Jr. DL-rm1n. Un!Vtrllh. 12\• •,• · L-Y11!1der1r, Sonor'I , 60. r.
DL-Aot>trls. llr11, 1 t 5. $rl
b8-D'9rrt1, L1oun1ll11. Sr. L8-Gll nlv1r11rv. 110. S•. B-Fl11\l!f , 8rE. no. Sr. DB-"""'-· a.u . 1111. r. §)8-Jene1. Ef 0or .. 1f'!;o l~, r. ll-Pritcti.lt El Dor • 1..,, • 8-FlHtlt, L~1un1, Id . .
Amat Still
Atop Poll;
Lions 3rd
. ... • •• . . -.. ~ . . .
Young Key Lion.s County Champs
To Lions'
Success _
Br PHIL ROSS
Of tM D.it~ 'li.t Sl1ff
Just as valuable I o
. '
Westminster High Sunset (9-0-1 ), which placed. fourth
League-champions rule the in the Poll and Fullerton, (7-6-
roost In the fin<'J 1971 official 1) which finished si.zth behirxl
Orange County prep football Kennedy.
poll as selected by the DAILY
l'ILOr ---ORANGE COUNTY TOP 10
The Llons compiled. an 8-1
mark throug h the regular
season and face No. 7-Corona
de! Mar Friday night at
Pos. Teem
1. Westminsler IS-1)
2. Western (3-1)
3. Mater Dei 17·2)
Westrnins tei'a aturd) defense Orange Coast College in a CIF AAM first round test.
4. Sonora (8-0-1)
5. Kennedy (8-1)
Pola ts
40 46 ..
3'l
28
2.1 as qu arterback Jeff Siemens Western's Pioneers finished has been to the Lions' potent second with Mater Dei's
offense-that's senior Terry Monarchs 8 notch behind.
Young. Only two teams finished
6. Fullerton 17-0-1)
7, Corona de! Mar (7-2)
8. Newport iHarbor (6-3)
9. Katella (6-2-1)
10. Edison (6-3 )
21
15
13
8
4 A S-10. 170-pounder, Young with unbeaten records, Sonora
hits people on the gridiron ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ with the same impact as if f
he were 270 pounds. p• 1 t p• k•
Having been a stacler since I 0 I g 5 I_ n
his sophomore year i n
Westmirui ter's . def en s Ive
alignment, the strong safety Pi1i~~E1l00 and signal caller of the Lion
sec<indary is an ample reason
wh y his squad has annexed
the Sunset League cham-
pionship. -.
Wes tm inster tackles Corona
de! Mar in the opening round
of the CTF AAAA Friday night
at Orange Coast College, and
Terry Young is scheduled to
be one of the keys to more
Lion successes.
Young's co a c h -B i 11
Boswell-isn't shy in his
praise for the hard-nosed sen·
ior who also toils on th'e var-
sity basketball team. , -
Say!i Boswell, "of course,
'l'erry will be a big factor
jn our playoff game. We'll
be trying to figure if they
plan on letting him stay on
the side against their tight
end.
"We've found that as a
strong safety Terry is
normally assigned coverage of
the tight end. And people
haven't really thrown their
tight ends at us because · of
him. Jn fact, Anaheim ran
away from him two weeks
ago (a 29-7 rout ).
Co-Sponsored by
5outh foast ?Ian
And The .
DAILY PILOT
BE A PROPHET FOR PROFIT . $10 SOUTH COAST PLAZA
Merchandise Certificate
For Each Winner
5 Winners Every Week
of Contest
BONUS .. PRIZE
Each Week's First Place Winner
GETS TWO FREE PASSES
Bishop Amal High's un· ____ w_E_ST_M_l_N_S_T_E_R_'S_T_ER_R_Y_v_o_u_N_G ___ _
A deep (or_kee) safety up
until this season , Young ha:i;
only two interceptions but,
Boswell is qu ic k to point out,
"the opponents don 't go near
him if they can possibly stay
away from him. So the two
interceptions are pretty good.
"Also, Terry was the leadin g
t.ackler on the squad last
season and he 's our leading
tackler this season too.
to the Pasadena Bowl
from t he
defeated Lancers and Angelus
League champions are still
No. 1 in -the final CIF AAA.A
football poll for the regular
season.
There will be another poll
taken, however, aftei;. the first
round of CJF playoff action
this weekend . ·
The Lancer( polled all but
one first pla'ce vote, the only
dissent~r favoring North Tor-
rance/·
\Vestminster· High's Lions
moved up a notch to third
place foll owing the demise of
St. Paul, which fell by the
ways ide Thursday night to
Bishop Amat. UH.
There were no new teams
to break into the "top 10 with
the minor shufRing at top the
only movement.
Western. the Su n set
League's No. 2 entry in the
playoffs, is ranked seventh
and treks to North Torrance
Friday.
Prep Polo
Mesa Runners "We keep a scoring system
on our defensive players, and
to show how well the boy
does, he's been co nsiste ntly
over three, which is outstan-Race to Title ding.
LOf\G BEACH-Costa Mesa
Hilb's croS! country team
eased lo the Irvine League
championship Mo n d 1 y af-
ternoon at Cal Stale /Long
Beach) behind the one-two-
three sweep of seniors John
Olswang, Doug MacLean and
Tom Olswang.
The former edged o u t
MacLean for first place with
a nifty 9:40 clocking.
MacLean was credited with
the same time. five seconds
better than Tom Olswang .
' Coach Joe Fisher's crew
won the title with 29 team
points to outdo Santa Ana
Valley (44 ).
Mesa's junior varsity was
also victorious, paced by fresh-
man Dave Smith (10:45).
Andy Virscsik won the frosh-
soph race for Costa Mesa.
The Mustangs from Mesa now
await the CTF prellms to be
held at the same site Satur-
day.
Fisher w<1s happy wit h his
team's overall per formance
and singled out sophomore Tim
Gol nlck for an especially fine
Cardinals
Post Double
Whitewa sh
The Golden West Cardinals
will host Westminster this
Sunday in Southern California
Munici pal Baseball As11oei a-
tion action til Costa Mesa's
TeWin kle Park.
Game time is slated for
l p.m.
Last Sunday at the sa me
site. the Cardinals whitewash·
ed Santi! Anti 's Tigers in an
abbrevi1t~ doubleheader by
7-0 and.J-0 scores.
.....
race. Golnick fini shed 15th in
the varsi ty race.
'"Also." Boswell continues,
''Terry has been our defensive
player of the wetk three times
this season and that's un-
precedented here." V.ARSIT'I'
In addition to his defensive
prowess. Young is also an
excellent backup QB t o
Sie mens.
Young's aerial stats show
six completions in 10 attempts
for 93 yards, or 15.5 yards
per completion. He's also
ru shed for 18 yan:ls in three
cracks for a 6.0 ave rage.
''If Young were our quarter-
back," Bos"'•ell says. "we'd
be able. to move the ball well
\Vllh him. He's a fine leader
and the team fo\lo~·s him.
He's a ve.ry big reason why
\Ve've had three shutouts and
have given up only 43 points
in league play."
Boswell sums up his ace
secondary in just two words:
''tenacious competitor.''
The Sea Kings should be
the next group to realize that.
Soncy stand-by
secretary to serve 1 ..... you.
---:&.ab
T•l•pho11e An1-rln9 l11 reo•
835-7777
MOGUL SKI CLUB PRESENTS :
WARREN MILLER'S
EXCITING SKI FILM
II any snow,
any mountain''
Recently f1atured in Sports ltlustrated, J•lf
Job• skis down Sun V•!l•y·s famed Baldy
Mountain, takes orf and fl le1 three mlles,
soarina over lifts, trees 1nd skiers with hls klte
strapped to his body. As Warren Mill er s1ys ,
"I saw It 111 happen. and I still don't believe
I
whit t saw." but Any Snow. Any
Mountain prnves that Jobe did indeed
11y-See foryoul'lell-Just S2.00.
Nov, 14th -1:00 SI.Ill.
PASo\0£Ho\ HIGH
2125 [. Sllrr• M•dre l lvf. l'•••d•n•
NOv, 2•11• -1:00 SI·""
N[Wf"OltT Ho\RIO" HIGH
15111 •I lrvlrr•
NtWPOl't lttel!
o.c. J•d -1:00 #,,,,,
VAN NU'l'S HIGM &~JS Cld'lll Ven N\1)'11
DAILY ·PILOT
Be • pigskin prophet. Play the Pi lot Pickeroo game for
weekly pri:r.,es, W inners each weak receive • $I 0 gift
certificate cjood as money et any South Coast Plat a
store or busines,. Each weak'' top winner will be in4
vited, along with a guest, to be honored at the a nnu al
South Coast Plaza Football Players of th1 Year Ban4
quat •
W a tch for this player's form each week in th1 DAILY
PILOT Sports Section. Circle tha team you think will
win in each pairing in the list of 25 games and send in
the play1r'1 form entry blank or a reasonable facs imile.
Then watch the DAILY PILOT sports pages for each
week's list of five winners.
R ULES
I. Submit !~t 111try bl•~• btll!"' tr • tttMH'ltblt ltctlmlltl 11 n "' 111111'
!ht u1n1 .. 1.
2. 5111d II lo• l"lLOT 1"1G51(1N 1"1CICEAOO CONTEST. Sllllrt Dt111rtm111t,
1",0, I O• IHO, (0111 M111. CA. '1t2,.
J, O~ly one tnlry Ptr peoon etch "''""·
I , ln!riet mull .. d1llw1rtt1 lo l~t DAILY PILOT Wtdn1M1.1y "lthl er
1tOllm1rlltc1 net 1111r lhtft "°°" Tll~rtdtY.
I. Sl•fll Co1st Pl111 .ind OA1L'I' PILOT tmpll!yH l ftd lhtlr lmml'lllt t.
l•milltl llOl thtlblt lo enter.
t, TIE IAEAICER ILANI{ MUST I E ,ILLED IN OR INTll'I' IS VOID.
••••••••••••••••••••
• ENTR Y BLANK • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Circle teains yo• think wlll win ttllJ "'"k's 911mt1
lho111e teom 11 Heond 0111 llstedl
Rams vs Dallas
San Francisco vs NY Jets
Cha r9ers vs Cincin nati
Atlanta vs Minnesota
Baltimore vs Oakland
Auburn vs Alabama
Cal State LB vs Texas El Paso
Clemson vs South Carolina
Geor9ia vs Geor9ia Tech
Florida vs Miami (Fla.I
Mississippi vs Mississippi State
Navy vs Army
Pittsbur9h vs Florida State
Nebraska vs Oklahoma
Tulane vs LSU
Vanderbilt vs Tennessee
TCU VS SMU
Texas vs Texas A&M
Utah vs Houston
Iowa State vs San Die90 State
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • : Baylor vs Rice
• New Mexico State vs Colo. State •
• San Jose State vs UC Santa Barbara •
Oran9e Coast vs Santa Rosa •
'Westminister vs CdM : • • •
•
Tll t"l),,ltlR -Ml' IWSI Ill 11!1 1'11111 ftUmttr If Miflh Kll'lll •
hi I ll U flllllt 1111 .. lllln II , , . , ,. ., • • N•M
• • A4',_
• i. City . .. . ... •••••
"• ...
• • • • • • • • •••••••••••••••
• ' ..
. . ... .:; .... -. '
T uesdoy Sldt w111 11e ibowll 111 tll• 1:30 tlmt """'· Evening a"""' ttl Qhtl • ..,.., z,n• (harrorl 1&-Hitk Ad1ms.
NOVEMBER 23 0 ABC Movie of the Week
---1 *"Ken·llen'y0C.meron
1:00 II Ila Nm Jerry Dunphy Mltthtll, Trlni Lopez,
(l)Htn em Huddy Warren Oates1tar.
6:30
CJ kNIC Nm -;om Snyder U (])Ci) ft' ABC Mowlt et tM 0 LA Klnrs Hockey Kln1s n. St. WHk: (C) (90) "Tiit fleluctlllt Ht·
Louis fOli" (1dv•ntU1t) '71-lltn Blrry,, fJ NNS B1nll, Schubeek J!m Hutton. Tr1nl Lopat, Don M11· 0 @ Wl1d Wild Wut shill, R1lph Mttktr, C1muon Mlt· m Thi fllntlto1111 chtll, Warren D1t11. A mtek Almy
ID I Dr11m ol J11nlli1 hlstort1n finds hlmse!I ~m1ndln1
(J]l In t11t Spcitll1ht 1 unit dtfendin& 1 st11ltg!t MU In
EEi Hodp podp lodp Korea. Hopelessly outnumbtrtd, II•
ai) N0Ucl110 34 Ciiis on his knowled re of l\lstory In m D1urt Report hopu th1t the tKtk:I of th• Gretks,
9 MtybefY)' ltFO Aln1nder tltt Great 1nd "1pol1011
can sa'll his app1renllf cloomld
0 ANTHONY PERKINS in * ALFREO HITCHCOCK'S
"""· m GEORGE HAMILTON * JOINS DAVID ... "PSYCHO" ! ! ! 0 Mowl1: (60} "Psydlo" Part I
(mys1t"l '60-Tony PertJris, Janet
Leigh, Vtra Mlle1, John Gtvhl. •
youna womat1 1tt1ls 1 fortune 1nd
encounters 1 roun1 min loo 1on1
under dom!nallnn bJ his mother.
(!)CBS "•wt Willer Cronkltt
@)NBC News John Chancellor m An<ly G rfflith Show
(BJ Biii Cosby Show
OJ) Boot Bett '1racy 1nd Hepbum" ED Cl1ss Mtttlnp ind Sc:boclls
Without F1H11rt
ID Wand11!urt 13! lilllh At/IS
Ciil) Yl'll,n1 Hortl1111r1
!IDABC Hen
m D1vid Frost Show Sln1er B. J,
Thomas l!ld Tht Kln1 1nd Qunn or
Sikkim 1uest. m Qll ltM AMcltn "Sllould tb•
U.S. SUp~dependenu In East
P1t1s1111r
.9 Lancer_
1:00 al LI Gitt
Ciil) Rous p1ra Veronlct
9:30 IJ (j) cannon Guest Arthu r O'Cofl..
nt11 plays Judie Garvey, 1n ittomtY
wtio stands In Cannon·s way 11 he
seeks lnlormlllon in 1 mlsslnr PH·
sOils Clst from his client, In el111lvt
N~ad• mulllm1111onalre.
0 ®) m J1111es Carner .. Nklloll
"Tht Ont·E)'td Mule's Tim1 Hts
Com1N Nichols Is stymied by 11rth·
7:00 f) CBS Ne .. Walter C1onkit1 11111kes ind cutthratts In his 111rdt
CI) ABC Nen Smith. Reasoner fo1 sil'lfr in 1n old minlnc town. 0 m NBC News John Cl11nc1llor Aller one ol Ille temblors, NlchGls
@ Truth or Con511111t11C1S li11d$ himself trapped in !ht ce111r
Cl) Dnpet or 1n old 111111sion wilh 1 stnni•
O Wh1t'1 NJ U11t? youn1 man 11med fnnkit (Kllslol·
@l Primlrl fer Tobon) tnd hi1 mule.
m I lo'lt l.IKJ' 0 lutn Ward Ntw1
G) I Dream ol lltn nl1 Q) tt Tan• Ttlltl-
OJ) Ttle Course al Dur tl1111 fD (fi)Blad Jou1111l 11k1 81Ct:
fD_HirlDI)' ot Mtilco Your Mind" Rrst seamen! ln 1 two-ED LI lntruu p1rt e11mtnation or Black studies
R} Aztec +lltbli1;hll pro1rams In Amtriun colle1t•s i nd
(@ M1nt11p uniwrsitles. QI _Monty H1sb
7:30 ii 9 Gltn C1mpbtll Kin Berry, 10:00 0 (})@ a> M1rtus Welby, M,D.
Dom Deluise 1uest. O The Avenpn
0 @1 a;, Ironside ~Good S1m11· m NfWI P11tn1m, Ashm1n
l!an" Mlehaet C1ll1n 1uests as 1 (@ SpK11\ of 1111 Wffll: "Slr1vinsky
Y\elnam 1eturne1 IC(Ustd of mYf· Remembered'.'
dtrinr • WAC. a ch1rre Dettctlve ED Budd 80lttlcl111 Sptdal Clos ..
Sst. Ed Srown (Don C1llaw1y) ,.. up on lifm dlrtctar/wrlttr who hn
lum lo btlltvt. Ironside mavei to recently completed a film on netf•
Thursday nl&hts (9 PM) and wltl bt legend•IJ b11U!l1hter carloa Arruza.
seen twice this week. @II Tap T'tp
0 (]) (l) I'!) Thi Mod Sq uid Mil· 9 Ra11tr G11111
ton Berte 1uests as Ulltle Bobo, 1 CE fetti¥tl Mtxictl'IO
TV tlown whast lift is elll:l1nctred. 10:30 B Tht Golddlwi11 Mike Connon
In " ... And 1 little Child Shall is ruest-llosl Ch1rtes Nelson ReillJ
Sited Them.~ Keentn Wynn also portrays l1bltd folk sln1tr lollnny
1u1sts IS Luther 11111 Htnry Jones ti T11sh.
PauH1. 0 Monty Nllh "Whert HIYI All
CD I Ort11r1 or l•nnlt the Childrt t Gone?"
0 Milllon $ MO'flt: (C) (2hr) •w111 0 NflllS Monts, McConnldl
ef tht Vlfut" (westun) '.53-tirr @ Al Issue
Cocf!1r, Julie London, le• J. Cobb. ®I Su Ditrt hnon11111
ID Hq1n'1 Heroes IEJ'NIWI Bill Johns
Q) Dnprl el E Rttrnt di Dori11 lirlJ
@ Brlnr !,.._. tM ltnds €?;) C1U of Ult West
EID Firi111 Uni "Who Owru Amtr· 11:00 fJ {[}EE Nth
i<:11" Guest is fanne r Interior Sec· 0 ®")EI;) Hews
retary Walter Hickel. O liltavl1: "T1i11 R1np11" (west· €D Los BevtrlJ dt P1r1lvltlo ern) '3G -Fred MacMurny, Jltk
.. 1:00 (j) This ls Tour Ula m Truth or Con11que11C11 m Tht Virgtnl1n
(@ M11qu1rtde
€?) LI Cost Ju111d1
CiE)Nlno
l :lS 0 Klnp Wr1p·Up
9:30 8 (j) H1w1 U Fivt ·O McG1rrett
leers 1 11angland wu Is lmminelll
when II seems 1 mainland srndlcate
Is lryln1 to take aver cr1min1I opt!·
1tlons In H1w1if. D1Yid Opatosh u
ruts ts.
0 ®1 fDS.r11 "A Bid Cis•
Mono11my"' Monti Markham rues!!
as an tx·corNid who, upon his rt·
l11sa !ram prison, is drtennintd to
rel\eW lire wllh his !armer wile. who
has since remarried. Sa11e mOY1s
ta 7:30 PM nei:t wetk ind funny
Wednesday
DAYTIME MoVIES
011de .
@ M1rsh1I Dillon o rn ai•m O Movie: "JollnllJ Condla" (w11I·
e1n) '5&-fr1nk Sln1lla, Phy111s Kirk.
ti:ee:11n Wynn. m To Ttll thl Tnrlh
• mM1nb1p
11:30 t1 Cl) Mtrw Grilfl1 0 ®J Johnn1 C.non 0 CI!@ E!) Did cawttt Georp
H1ui1t1n, a n:embe1 ol lht now·
disbtnded Battles Is speci1I ru•st.
H1 Is 1ccoft';p1nitd by RIVI Sh1nk1r,
tht nottd situ player wl!h whom
H1rrlson is now 1ssoci1ted.
m MD¥1t: "Tblrres' Hirfiwl'(' (d11·
mt) '(9 -Ri<:hlrd Conte, let J.
Cobb, Valentina Corte11.
(D Movlt: "The Plunderers" (wts!·
tm) '60-.ltlf Chandler, Jol1n suon.
Qt For Adults Onlf'
lht voices of Aft Llnkletter, Sandra
Dee and Tommy l(lrt..
1:00 0 (C) "8rid11s at Tokt-Ri" (dr1·
m1) '54 -William Halden, G11e1
Kelly.
t:OO m ''Girls Town" (drama) '59 -m '1ht Mltlnr ol Millie" (com·
Mtmie Vtn Doren, M1ul1 H1yu. edy) '43-Evelyn tltJts, Glenn Forcl.
l :JI> 0 "Wllil 1 Ult" (comrdJ) '39-2:00 m "Tiie l'ltktd Gun" (mys!ery) '56 . ,. -Wi!ltitd P1fker M1r1 Cord1y.
J1ck1e Cooper. Setty f,lelds. Amon1 l :Oll (j) "Th• Train" Conclusion. (drim•)
tilt Uvln(' (dr1m1) (l -Suun '6S-8urt t1nusltr, PtuJ Sl;ol!eld.
Hayw~rd, Albert Dekker. @I (Cl .,Mirritft 1bli1n SIJlt"
0 (C! 1h1 Pony Soldlu" (idven· (aimedJ) '64-Muullo Mntn>l1nnl,
tu.rel 52-Tyrant Powtr, cameron Sophi• Loren.
M1tchell. (:OD 8 (C) "N!pt ol tN Gl1atr"
1:00 (I) (C) '1111 Snow Quu•" (!1nl1sy) (western) '66-Clint Wilker, M11tht
'li0-4nirn1ted le1ture based on th• Hyer, Keentn Wyn11.
Htns Chrislian And1run stofJ', with 4:30 (]) 5" lOAM H1ti11
For Advertising in
Out 'N' About
Phone Norm Stanle1
642-4321
FINAL SHOWS
Thank51Jiving Weekend
i Tiie ltock Openi lsy TM Wll•
1111. a. $AT. -I Ii 10 P·"'·
, , Fl11ol Shew -S110. I ,, "''
gg.IJ!IQl~ift(JII4i6Jij
Costo M.--t4 I J ... M11ttrol •.-cm
J
:.. ·~ ... ~ ., • t. '· . • .. . . . ' ..
Twice .on Video
•
By cYNTHlA LOWRY Wednesday nl«ht. Then on
NEW YORK (AP) -There Dec. 9 she will be a guest
will be a reglJ.ISfMlttrCa~star~on "Perry Como'1 Winter
festival on television during Show" fo r NBC.
the next couple of weeks: the "South Pacific" ?o11tz.i says
singing and dancing star will was the greatest' single break
be seen 0111 two occas!ons.. in her career Every actress Tha~'s. a lot -Mlut likes who could sing and dance
to hm1t her TV exposure to yearned for the rolt: uf N~Jlie
one~ every year ~r so. , Forbush, which Mary Martin
First there will be ABC s had played on Broadway.
three-~our br~adcast of the "It was sometime !n 1956,
1968 him version or Rodgers J guess" she recalled "and
and Hammerstein's landmark J went'. to see Josh i..ogan
musical, ''So u l h Pacific," the director, about a pCO:
If they can
get a grip on
"· each other,
· maybe
they
can tum
their
lives
around.
A TRUE·LIFE
ADVENTURE
LAST DAY
•SO. COAST l Costa ~sa 546·271 l
• CINEOOME 20 OranRe 532-3328
WfUIOAVS ·t ll·T·OQ•f 'li
SAT., •11 00 ·1.••·.,~0· 7.0Cl ·l:U Sl,IOl.:·J.1'·• JO • 1 ot·l .U
duction of some other musical.
Of course, I wanted to do
'South Pacific' despe,tately but
I didn't. think there was a
chance. When he opened tbe
door, he smiled and said, 'Oh,
yes, you're h'ere to talk about
Nellie.' l just nodded: I
couldn't speak."
Mitzi moved into television
with a_ coup!~ of very well
received specials. lfer
husband-manager, Jack Bean,
now ls planning another,
maybe even two.
"We have a one woman
show that plays theaters,"
said Mitzi. "It !'l.kes about
45 people to put on a one·
woman show. We also play
Las Vegas. It works nut nice-
ly. I work about 18 weeks
out cf the year unless there
is something in films or
television I want t.:. do. Most
cf the time 1 live like a
hcusewife in Beverly Hills. 1
keep in shape by jogging.
Televisinn is fine, but 1 want
to make my appearances
seem. very special, S9 J·space
them. Ynu last lnnger."
Steve Mc0uffn
in Bruce Brown's
"ON ANY SUNDAY"
ENDS TONIGHT
Roffrt Mitch""'
"GOING HOME" ...
"THE RACING SCENE''.
STARTS WEDN ESDAY
James Garner
Skin
Gmne
Lou Gossett
Susan Clark
,.~~ioo~
I' tom W••-Btot .• A 1(1,.,,.V Ca.rnii1ny
•LSO lGPJ
~ ... \ •• ~1, •• , '.
I Tllfsdat, Novembtr 23, 2q71
Thrills kplenty
' ~ . ' -
ln'Connection' -
By CJI ARLES H. LOOS Gene Hackman plays th'
01 t~e O•Hr Plitt SHl!f I pr nclpal d o g g e. d cop
"The Ftench Connection" is :.~~~h;~-=,.;;~ ltackman i!..!_journeymap ac·
no t e kind of movie you get tor who has been around 2
up in the middle of to get the while. His name is not exactlr
salt yOu forgot for your pop-a household word. After ·~The
corn. French Conne<:Uon," it could
It is a tough, brittle, fast~ become one.
paced cOps and dope dealers In the role of a tough Irish
movie. It will entertain the cop - a narc -Hackman is
Humphrey Bogart·Sam Spade mean. smart, bumbling, fun·
devotee and the mnvlegoer ny, stupid, clever, ridiculous,
\vho has never heard of and pathetic.
Dashiel Hammett. The photography is in n~
Warning: "The French Con-realism color reminiscent of
nection" is violent. The body "Bullitt," the Steve }.;tcQueen
Auditions for "Fiddler on count may be higher than it cops and killers piece cf a
the Roof," the first production was l~st week In Vietnam. The · while back:. violence is up close and ex~ Another thing about "The
New Group
Auditioning
For 'Fiddler'
of the newly formed Full· plicit. Besides that, the French Connection ' ' is
erton· Civic Light Opera Com· players, to a man, have bad reminiscent of "Bullitt."
pany, have· been announced mouths. T~ey speak t h e It is the chase sequence.
for De.c. 6 and 7. ' language cf the street -the Perhaps you recall Steve
Tryouts for the ·popular portion just below the curb. McQueen careening up and
musical. which currently holds •. The story is real enou'gh. It do,vn Ule streets. of San Fran-
Brnadway's longetivity record, is .about Marseilles and $32 cisco, first eluding, then
Will bC h-eld ar·1:M p.m. in-million· worth of heroin and pursuing Ule guns e 1-S ,
the 1-lillcrest R ecreation New York and greedy men McQueen's chase sequence
Center at Lemon Street and and a couple cf dogged cops was good. Probably one cf the
Hillcrest Drive in Fullertnn. who stumble nnto the deal. best.
Rehearsals will begin on Jan. The story is based en author But Hackman's Is better,
3. Robin Moore's account of a mere terrifying. McQueen the
A cast of 12 men and 10 1962 narcotics bust in New driver alwa:.rs seemed to be in
women is required (or the York City. The movie takes its control of the situ 8 t i 0 n .
shew, along with a number title from the book. The real-Hackman the driver _ and
of members of the chorus and life bust invnlved 120 pounds the character for that matter
dancers. All roles are open. of pure heroin -enough junk, -is alwavs on the brink of
Jan Duncan, whose direc-when cut, to supply every ad: disaster. That's the real ap-
torial credits i n c 1 u d e dict in the country for about peal of "The French Con-
•·ok.lahoma," "The Sound cf, __ ha_l_f -•~Y~•-•_r. ________ ne.:._cl~io~n~.'-' --~~---
1'.tusic" and 1'Brigadoon" far
Fullerton groups, wiU stage
the musical.
"Fiddler on the Roof" will
open Feb. 11 at the city's
Plummer Audltnrium for a
two-w ee k end, five·
perfnrmance run. Further in·
rormation may be nbtaincd
by calling Mrs. Duncan at
52~.
HELD OYER
letter Than "Bullitt"
-Dally New•
e NOW -INDS TUISDAT e
THE GREATEST FILM
OP. ALL TIME!
"GONE WITH
THE WIND"
Showtlme -1:00 P·"'·
"WATIRllll:DS" ctt 7:10
GOLDEN STATE
rodeo finals
ONLY THETOPTEN COMPETITORS in m h
of seven contest event!'ftom Golden Stale
Radeo Co.'s 60·plus 1Gdeo season. NO
OTHER REGIONAL RODEO FINALS is al·
lowed by the prolessional Rodeo Cowboys
Association. $28,000 IN PRIZ£S !
SPECIAL ATTRACTIONS: The "Sa1• ol the
West''. Famed Madison Sq ua re Gar den
lightning C Ranch Square Dance on Horse-
back. louie Siiva's 8 mammoth Clydesdale
draft hGrses.
TlCti:ETS: $5.00 lhru $2.00, 16 yr1. & under,
$I.DO diwiunt O~ u!e 11 <A:inwenllon Center
Ticket Otlit1; Wallich's, Mu\u11 ind liberty
A1encie1; Oran&• County Sa. talil. B1nlr.l. P1r-,,.~<~""~"~1)"11,j;~'.E;,.i5I la rm1nces; Ha~. 26, 8 pm: Nov. 27, 2 & I pm, • :_
NllY. 28. 2:30 pm. FOR lHFORMAT10H CALL
714/63S.5000.
rodeo 11s.oc:i1t••
~ CONVENTION ~ E/MCENTER
NOV. 26 ~·27-28
CLINT EASTWOOD
Hilt Over
"AMEJl 1(11.l'I WILDERNESS" NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES
IXO.USM O.C. D«iAGlMiNT
NOW PU.YINOI tTH llYlEI<
Mon. & f\111. 1:15 & t
WM. & f".-7 .. :U-11:11
T~11n., Sit,. Siii'.
• 1·1:404: U·7 .. :U.ll:1S
. , ·,MAMMOTH EXCITEMENT I
rHE PEATEIT Wll.IUfE
UECIACLE
Of THEM AU!
t"I WALT DISNEY'S 1111
LIVING t vanishing DESERT ... Prairie g
TWO BllUI IClllMY UlllllWllEISI *" __ ._ ...... "'11• .... .-.. ~ .... , ... - ...... -·-
-STARTS WIDNISDAY, NOVIMIER 24
oATBOTHCINIMAS•
MATINllS ·THURS •• fRI. ·SAT. -SUN.
STARTS WEDNESDAY• F1AT£0 @
AT 3 EDWARDS CINEMAS ·cm:il · ·-•m·
1"11'-tftl I tfl"'" WflT HI ttll tn•ll• ,,..,. , .... l o• '"" •••I
;.AlSO AT-' . EDWARDS CINEMA VllJO·MISSION VIUO 130-6990
DAILY.PILOT ~9
T. R.BASKIN
W M m AllMfl 11.Ttu.tTIOll
RJNtlY HOW lOVUt5 ST.UT AS..!.!!..
"friends"
llil _TECHN!:Ql.00:
•DWA•Da
~w
2ND OUTSTANDING COMEDY _...,_, ........
•IMDSllDYllm llU.-SYlll'
Ill DUT-Gf-MUS r~t-.. -......... """ ..
~-..... ~ PLUS-JAMES GARNER
1• ''llAllOW"'fSPt
*KY ANS DAUGHTD." I 'W.llfOWr'"
AlSOPLAYtMGAT
IDWAROS CINEMA VIE.ID
-~M~ISSK.IN VU) -1311-6999,
I CINEMA WEST #Z I
• HILD OVER· 3RD WEEK
\'011e110 R1dgro,,. • Ollv1r lle.d
" KEN RUSSELL'S FILM
THE DEVILS _ _. ...........
. ~·
'
•
,
•
•
'· . . .. • ... • . '
•
DAllY PILOT
List l' ••r Mmaey
O'Hare Still '
OVE~R THE COUN1,ER C~mplet~Ne:York~Stoe
histant Poverty 11 .... ttffV • ....., .............................. ,..,.. .. "'.. UMll.,.1""'' ... a... ...... i..w.c.-,c:• .. ,
, 1 "l'k• ...... .,.. ....... tt _...,, _....... '"'--...... ~ .:. t1 11111~ ~~ lm-= t !fYr11" ... ~ ',j !~ ~ ~~ t.,. ."v .'I' i·~' ,ft: int~:~
NASO L• ti ,_ Mond . N L-22, 1971 AM'.i!'7ftC" 1 11f v !"' w-"' -l'lllr. -1 '11 t'tt 3l !l ••
\
1J ngs rvr 1y, C!,Y•m.,.-r ""''te ·" ,l ,1 •ii -.. -~ -~ 1•w ,.., 'f' 11~ ,n =;
Ovel.1...:.1rm· g Aged?I·---•..,, ..... -----------.. --------·$r~:t~7 ~\~"' ~~ ~=~;~ ~'~ ~ =il ~~· ·91 ~ 11~~~-ai'" • i;Nf~ ~~:1~~r.11;1r~:: j~ :in 8it1~n"F? t:z i~ :~;,l:.: 1~ 't~ =~ ~ ~a il111 ~~I~~ '~~ !a e: r.'~:I 1t 3: J: ! : : ~tl;,sa!t 1 a I rt I Ill ~2i ~·M,~ ,:,~ :ft !f: ;i: Pit I:
-N11ion.1 S.C11rhln llM Mj ·-llit 0•1111 lr11 1tl'I 10~ 0•"'*' J ~ id Ill 141'1. 14~ rud Miii 1 Ito. tel _:JO 3S '~ '"' .,. -""' 111 1;fi -t r. ·~w,r~tl-1~ ~~ \)~ ,t~ = i: _ ----~ ...-.. ftllu 1t• ,aa..._z1 u DtLt;A c "l'I SQ'irl Ha"*' 1t '""' 11-. .·w U>A twi P11b5 NM 'j ~ AMClllMI .tDp &1H• " Hiii -1' ' ·1 H " D ~-;;
----• 1111 '°"""' 11n11, 11<1d1r N m _.-..., lt'Jlt 1 iL...___._J;,.. L. ~1111 s "'-1 'llJJ: Hlldl.J---1 .._~ '""'"'" ~· "--11-' , • ~ ntAo •· iit. l""y-:-svi:vrx PORTER-For wblle most of us are 11111.1r111a. • 1N1G1· 11ct H111, ~ 11 · o.1Uo ..., »l'I )11'1 trtrtd 11 ~ •1111Mlot9ii-----.~ 1" PllblMr '~ ~ • 11¥1 Nl -4:m -"~· , 1\11 -. Ml =~ trllJ ••.U. loOllH fl 1,. 1-. Oii 11111 11ll lrll "' 1 Jlili Mldw" Gt 11 It Pvrftll ,,l'I ,1tt.!: c . L• llll'I' • :.:·i,i., ~· .. t 'f. "#' cl ~ -$)\it
not among whal the National lallk. Md T1111t ION AH ,, 1~ Del CllllT 1•\li 11~ .. "Ar. J\li Hi Im...--tl'i'I Ml'I p ._, "it -· u 50 n l\'I 11tl -.... ~ i i ;-~··.·.·.. ' -... _·,·.H·"·"'" __ •" .... ,,. .. ThJ11 cor:ning &.Jf¥1a\I. Nov. . 111 lancp B••Ge<\ • 7 lnlBr 11\lo , V) HlclOC n )I• lit Miii MUI 12\\ U\11 Pll!O Clll •ll '"' AllCOO .!ff 511 UYI -"' _.,_ ~ • . ~ ... , -h\i ~ ... .. •• .._ I ~ Council of sen I o.rr Citizens ,, ... $1 JI ll~ 8rl11kt 71"1111' o.w., El 11'1 '"' olQ!lm , .... 11'1 IMr Ill l:it. ,.,.. Ull CM 11~ m AHct c .. ·" UI ~ •.} t -'4 'liil ei'r
•IJ, """' ong-planned White recently classified as the U!~r'Ht ~ ~ l~'r.e St•", ::141 lr' g\:~i 'A: ''~ 1l"" = 11.-f~ t\-Mr~ ~l im :i.15~ 11!~·~, i{t 11.L :~t ~ri,.. j , l:t; lt~ ::~ :-.~ Jmt~ ,;
House Conference OD .Aging "lifefong poor"' -who have Mllll lkt 1'\o olO\'t lrlfl W~Q 11 .. lf\\ OitllrOl'I )'It 4'1\ 14Gwrd GI J\11 ~ !11 Vl G lftlo 0'1111"11111 C t-Ow ""'llMI ~ 17 I~ Ii: lilt -\\ 11111m II ·• ~ ;, " He""11 ~II I~ O ' ~'It ~ n-. "J4 will 0,...." ;., Wa-"l••lon WI'.. ~W Bot ffill 50 lvd1b M 10\.'t 101' DIK Inc !'It~~· Jt\li ~ llKtl 1\<t 1~ ll&Mbl I 11 1t ARA'5WC \/It U Ill~ UJ U11 + \'I !'!.'\..~ "" ~ -_,. t.J !.J!~r1.">,.01 l~ ., ... ",'·~ 61\$ = ~ ,...., .. , -.i• •oe ~' alw1ya been undereducated, u • B•>t 11" 21"" 811C:k•f• 11~ 1th ~11 Cr"' 11 1 ~ 111Kk Mlt m ~ 1 ce1 1 ,,,. •well C• N 11 Aru!• .1;41 11 11» u~ 1w. -14" ~ rt ll .... u w ,. ~ + w
3,400. delegates 1tteriding -underskitled and un-v.~_1::,,:;o 22u "rn"~m 2fr,,m00n~91L-J 21~ rv.~:':1 ~1' '10:.1~ ! r 1~1itt 11::::""t:• ~l:~r1e~~r11 11: iii f!"" ~""=,~ :::i.:._ ~a ,t 1 =1"'a:,:•~1 1
::: 'Iv, 1il'I=~
one 0,f lhe largest meetings d _ plo' ed IU 1 11 Fiii u~ LI .,,,,... 1' .iwsv 7P• JS'-O.• J-..,~ .Olli Hr•tt Cp J•V• 75 tst1 K !At u~ M<:e , 21 11,,. ArLr ,.sv f.. 16 1m 11\\ 1Hi ..... , , "''" 1 = ~ ,''",."" •i"", "'.n r," U\.'I ,1~ .. u -,.
b Id e 1 <:m y -many W 8 lftffllfflJ, ambr N '""' 41'1 Dovie DB :rov.11 Hv1tt Int •h 1~ 19 Gr I 1•411 1~¥1 HP fR\f 1"' ·• Arl•nt 0 Sir Ut '"' 4 ' -"' I~ """ u-111 + ~
eVtr e jn OUr capital and t' J lnsta t rt he Jh AAI Cp 1 ... 11'\ ''"' Mill "11'1 fl~ Dunkl11 D 10\lt I Fm191 lf l \lo '" tpTr •I 5\t. ' R~d l!x lJ'h )II Arlen llllfD\f ti 11\li lllli lJ -"· _1ft1 '' ~· ,,. -I• a':•M,1r.•' ~.· :·"· t~ ':1"••• ~3' ·~"·".· _-_ ·.' no n J>OVf: YW n ey Af'A PrS 1• ls ennon B 11 tO Du~lxP 11v.11v.1~x Cp ll'i 1"1 tch M •"" 5"'Robl11 M. 111'1 •V.Arm.coiJ 1 101 u"" lfl'J 15\li-\\ v-..,...,, .......... the first confe rence On aging berome Old AIO Inc " 11~ •l'I •nr1<1 I' $ •14 Dlirlron 17U U\~ 11\0 Nuelr JlV. Jl\\ I Cl~b it'll Jilt oblrl&. J WI IOV.. Armc. P 2.IO t 21\1 27'4 2~ + 11.i a::'91llv~r• in a fuJI decade, ' • ' AITS lllC \Ii lh •P Mt111 H Jlh El P•lllt I" tl'l ll!IOI lllC f" ..... Utr 10\lo 1~ 01tlon ™i J!'! Armr pl4.1S 11:111 '31') 62"" •Jl'I .. .. Ill C ~ ' J!-1-\lo •rr l Int 1 11 ' ',0 M>Mi ... 'Ill -l'<ii Millions will (ind thtu have A'JM C• Ul'I u .. S'*'! 114 .,. Ebtrln tn )!~ '"'Into Cly ,_ ' Mllf'llfl "' 1141 1"'11 "°"" ~ ...... Arrnll. Cl! .IO lf1 lUl 31\li 311" + v. •rt.~ . 4'r. ... Hltl(D c .. 1 1' lt111 ltV. ,'"'··~ , .:
•
The conf•re-wJJJ ~ppJe . ~ Ablfl 11111 1 IV. 11>ln Alr JYI 211 Econ L•b JS'lo H\i ln!r1 llld lllo J'it NCC 1114 ~ .._ l>Wtn In 1,,_ Uli ArmCI! 111).Jf 1•10 lfl'I :Ul'I 5J1J, + \Ii •i1 Incl ! l ' I • ..~. --· •• mH!!:!~.M~rx .;,Ill .! U..-... ,, ,," _+ ~-
"" ..... ., .,. u drBshcally underestimated the ACl,!illVlt 2iv. :nv. "" TK '' l~ auc1 st , •• ""111trn •n 1~ 1\4o 1r" c11 1214 It* 111 ~'°"' Jt¥i ..014 Arm "" '·'° i M>A M\t lt-\t t v. r«i<:1> .1• o -• -"' W!lh I broad ran·ne of pro-h · J · n. Ad mlr tl't JYI 1r• CP 1'+ )11; EIP11 El '"' 1'~ lnlrml G l"'-11\:. N11C1t • ~ ll'J i.t" 1\lo 2'4 o COlll .• 2 11'41 ""' 11\o ~ •r<o ~ .lf r!O '51'1 IS\.'J -114 ••U I 1.4' ;J UYI U\li :Hiio -· b uge amounls o savings-~uey Addi,.,, w n u. n11o 1rre 111 th 111o El1>ao 5yt1 s\\ ' 1nBk w111 5~ " " G .. o 10 10,,., ,.., 0.1 ' '* In lrld 1 11 :Miio ~ ,." Ito.vim .u 1f 11t1i ll'Ai 1114 _ ..., re1 Albn 1 '1 11 1•14 ""' -~
blem.s facing 20 mill,i.Pn elderly need to make tbejr retirement :?,~. 11.ll'. fi: :~ ~ ~'l \t ;::: E:• "'~"' 1~"' 1~~ :~~'i~1~ l:"" l:lli ""'~ .1~ ,;~ w!lr 1~1 ~~ i~ $'"'"" ~r1 1ra 101l 2m 120 20 = fl g:~~ 1 :~ 11 H'Ai m1' ~ ! = Hf;"1,'.::, ·•• ~ .~ .:.. .!~ -_ .. ,~ CiU1ens tod.ay. For lnatance; nes'•••• J fl J' [ Air 11111 l J'llo av1111h C 5.... PA Eltctrm 4\lo s lntrwtr 1V. 11'1 N P•ttnt 4iO 61 Sdc Clltr 21'1 rn N J,.tO 1 »"" -"CPL plB l.JS tlO J'J SJ 52 11.lo "'"T '"" ..S\li •• w """'MIS n a !On p r 0 0 ; l lbu Ha t"' 214 enltl 77\lo I~ Elk .Mod 2\\ 1\41 IO(ll's lllC 7'111 no N 5'1CA;lll '"' IV. Scripps H . :IOI'! 21 ~. ~SD .Xb l 2t' •. , OF!t. 91E 110 )0 103\l IOJ\lo lo.3 -i,li nK(Mt\ .»I 72 1~ l?h 1:no -\.fo
Should eafly rttlrement bt millions will sudden!" findo\lber11 H \loU nVtPs 1sv.H•.~1<1ec.1rch '"" Jfol1swu1 ''1'o?1'1ioN11sriow 1"' i*scrlp111 ml ,....~Tr•r111 " -""'o..,.cof
1'° '1"-'2 .n111
=,,.,H:111rHJ 1 at"'-31 ~-1• ff .II h I " Akolac •!"'""'Lab 101.;1~Em11so1111•1111 JKOtiFL Jl'o•l'JNttSUvr S\11 6 s.11.0,027"'~~ 1 1,"'J! lfj'-" -~Dtltl'i.rP .It 11, ""•11"" t7l'i-u.~\:!11~ur~' ,i2!~2!,..2t -•4 () ICl8 y enc 0 u r. g e d or t emse ves out of a Job Allltn EJ 1\41 ~ Clllntt " ,.~ H~ E ... ,., c 1 ' J ... 111n c UUi 11 N EJlllGE 17'li 11\l ~1r"le ,, ''" 14""-., ~. ~ I -.. Dtl Mftlt 1.10 I t• 241'11 1 .... + \l" I'· I ' 6"' -i.. d ' because the'1r skills or oc Atlcol..nct' n lf\.\Cllti1011 4\CoJl'o EriertY R 1 1'1ioJJmW1f 1 l NJNllG 16\'111 ICOll'\ lffll11""-"t ·1c:1111111 I +·u.D•ll•Alr JO '171 .01'1 0¥. 4J --H:~P~t'.-6 t& ff f:t; 11,tt -~ JSCOUrag~! How much. in· -411 Tec.n 1,.,, l\ 1hnl le• •Vi 1ov.1111w1sn '"' j:W. •m"°" 11'1 II\ Nld'l11n F 2m 1414 11K1 F SMo ~A kll Pl -J 100 I ~ '" DtllK Int 11 ""' ..,,. ~ -""H9'11Vllf> .20 2,.. Mjlj '"< 2 •" -" come do elderly cif.ize.ni need cupal'o h be l ll11 B•v 1u. 1•1i tteM 1n •\• •\\ PKO 1.. ' v. utv Fos t 21\o ~ A 3''4 :it"I s-tr11 I* '* it P12A ~' -"' 0t11ec. int 111 t .. •"' .,.. ..... Heml•Pfl c., 11 1:! 1 -2u JnS ave COmeAllllE0<1t ..... .f!lo llHIUI 1W.16\l.Eoul10H t\Co lO\ioOAIYn M 111'11 17.ioNt.fsllB 3'\11""" U SW.ff AllllCl>'O i ='Ai0t1111Mlt.60 .. H\lo 2'\.\o16 .... -1\l!Htmllnc."9 3 7\lo i,; ~-·l'I now lo Uve with a 'minimum obsolete· .or some illnes! will AHrn ••c 1•;, !" 111 Bride 121 n• Er!t Tee ,.,. •t~ KMS 1nc1 s'lo 1 NOC•• G1 tt'-' 1J1• s~ 11111 1 tt•1 Cp ~1~ 1 1 1 ~ • OeMMfl .i 1 1 nl'I :u~ 111'1-11'1 H•<"'-1....... 12 4 -. ''" ,, •• ~ 1,
r d . ' Aloe Crm '" "' llhln w. '" PllA Cp I IV. K•llf 511 U!'o UM. N Ell• 011 lt'o '""' mBus 111 j '"' TO fllC .. . ~ : .. ::" °'""''"' ~ 13 "' ,.,... n;, \lo H .. -• ,. o ecency? Where should the eradicate their lifetime sav-.1.1p11nm 1 Pt. 11r11Se 1uv.n •v. 1 c1co i 111o Kt1,s11 pf ,.~ :ioiM NW N1tG 11"41 11n n.P Tis n •v.A, !'..°',!. 1 . • -1 n1111r"t'1nt 1 n 30 2"" nv. + lll •• F I.lo 1 11~ ,,~ 7"" -YI. '-· ~plfl Geo H• 2,_ CU111U1 A 32'h Jl Fib J~~ ?\lo jYt KeJ\f!t 1j 111/i NVf PYSv 71 Wit U .... " '"' ~ l"~ -'rll •rtCa 11 A 1 IOl'I S?\lo ~ 2 Heub!tln .U 17 '4h 44\io '4\'I + lit _moneycome.1.n.1m? -ings: or they'll be ·forced to1.m SusP is'-1• nznut·B JO 1011t F.or.ivnE •\4 ll'am•n A 1v.n•,Nott1 co 3J • ·Te1 :11"' Av c .!l• ·n' 1 1\ii l -~01$010•nc ,o111 .,. mo mi._21~+.,,,~r;_P,:~,.20 1!) 3:"" lJ= ~"'+·,,.
··-"Id all Id I .. el' I . ,t, El l..•b ~ JI~ Cl•r~ M! 71U nv. Fi....,11¥ ·~ 51' Kt!t Grt l'lo JV. NIKJ R~ 11'1 Cl> 14~ 15 •• ,.· ,•.. I if -Otll!dll 1.«I " :IOl'J 10 • to~ ...... ,,,_ "''' ' ... ... , ........ -• ~uvu e er y c1t1zens r ire ear y on meager pension ""' E-.:p nsv.116•·, 1111-"' 1·~ Floe or1 ,,, .w. K1rum ''' 1~ llvv M 31 Sv 11Vt 11 A p~ 1 15 ~ -Ott &ti P"·" r210 111\'I iu '""" .. .. Hatit;ii 10 11 60"' Sfv. ~ 1 b< exempted lrom proper!" benefih• ...,.. Finl n!'t 16"" nntn Oil 2111 1~ Fina mi J•\.\ a t11 Tr '"" ti;. 10 Ar• sv. Pl C11 1t\lo :io11o A:.'l:.f'J · ' n " ~;, ;, .:.: ·~ 0.1 Ed 011." i«i1 '"'..., ••,...\:. 102~ + \lo• Hownw1i .91 s :ni. nt'. JJfto = • " \.'>• A Finl l..S l\lr ' llw CP 20\4 10lot " Bot.I ~ 11" K-Cll n. I ;, Fter lSY· 16 fry lMo J\4 ...... 1.JO m , .... tt + "'Ce! Ed pfJ.50 ~ -Hoff E!lci " 12h l"Mlo
taxes! Should w 0 r k'e r 5, More· than six years ago. :::: ~~~' ll~.u~ ~r: fd ~ ~Ill F::PG~,: ,!f; ,?:: ~~ 7~~ ,~"' u, 5tc'.~ l" m Id R.".li r~ n~ AltKOI l.20! •a-11~ 1•"' _...., 21.1'.f~ . .so '~ ~ H~ !¥.1 :-Iii ~\~~7' l ti ~ rr ~li ! ~
pension rights bt "Vested" SO when Congress passed the 1965 !..,"'t~(i! 1i~ ~r: ~=1 ~~ :i .... :l~ ~f~:::t .:in 2n! ~~ ~:!,7j ~~~ \'r~ ~~\.<, ,;~c J.':f j!! ~l'o .:::111 Hf,~ ~f'lll n:::: llbcl!'ff. ., 1ff ~V. i i-0!!:'$1.1,~ ~ n mt 1:~ ~~ ::'.a'lll ~=:~'1i1'° ~, 1U.Y1 ,r,t 1tJy, -\,.
lhey can take, their pension Older A m e r l c a n s ' Act, Am Wtlll Jt. II' omw P• ''"' 1~V. F•IWnF 1"1 Hlo KtYe Fib 1J llt~ rmonl II' 1'111 trawb Cl ]l" lJlt '1'1"'••' •..••• k ~'Ill ... l•S pf 01,XI ,,•,• ••••• .... "•• -_ "•!'!',[,~, 1:..'10m ,! n,,.~ ?!~ ....... __ .. ·:: red't! f b Jabl' · b• · Anedlre 2"' 1"41 mpt Cm S 'I'/ Flck119r 111/.o HV. KtY CUIF ' 91' ll1r TP :!Oh 21"1! SvD:sc Tlv l.... 1.... G C:· XI Iii -.,. .. ,. ,~ ., .....,. " :: c I rom.. Dllj! jo to es 1shlng the am 1t1ous Anlltl/S B ~, ... d \4 cm11 lnu ,.,,, s fl• re1 "'• im Keri PC uu 1~'" er NA Jiii '" suo11a1 F 1ov. 1°" 1:-0J~ r7l n. "" -'° l "" " 'I -"'H,,., 1n11 .» 22 21 JW. 21,1o _ ~ another? Should the Federal Fed '1 Ad .. t J' A Anlt..n '" ..... 4'111 m!>l lK •llr ."" 11 WatU '"' l Klno Int 1\!o ?Ito Pllbsl •• ut• llb'o S111>tr El 11\~ 11 1/ICIP r 2 4 :.z + llO 15 u~ I~ l:Ma -... Houll1lllt .. 22 1114 , 11 "' era m1n1sra1onon g-Arc,1nd sv., comre. 1..., 1'" oooF•P n• lr't klo•E1 ll~ nli P1cGA• 11,...241'11TIMEDC 111o1olt\lofi"t 1_,, 1 1t11111E•ul11 ..,. tJ\11 11111111!.-!l'I H-Mur · . .o 13 2G1ti 11!\li 1Wl'.t\·
government great!" increase ing Jlle goals ·included ·n the Ari! ~' t 9'\li on P"' 1tl'I 1tv. Fo•nt o uu, 11~ Kint c1 •"'-SY. 111kco l~ •v. T•m.,.._ 3l!J lU •Ilk NY t 111 37 + 1111111111m ..., d •too "' Mo . .• Kal.lllllF 1.20 '° 511" lWI »11 _ ..:, " • I kWIG 10"'11\/i Ol'I Rod;,, ,, .... Frmleli ''" J .. K..-1.Yot 4'lo'i l6 P•llllll 0 1~ J T1uWY 12 .... 13 "* r !.IM fl n 1\\-1111119pfA_' 1 ~ 25\lo 15'1'-V.HOlll.f_llU.i , UI 1Sl '" l'I
subsidies for mass transit as Jaw glittered and glistened r111v 111 J11i 3'Yo contt•n ,~ 11'1 1111 Gr11t 71'4 n l•n« •1n d vt "'-Park Dr 11v• 12111 •110< 1 '" m ·~ l.llf 2' ~ 111 .#l'lio + 1111111"' • 2 l 2Hi M\t '1W + l'I H°"''F p11.)0 2 ~"" ~"" ~"' -
II bs'd ' . h J f -. . ' rrow H 2• 26'4 Cor..nco 37'• ll"° 0111m_11 3\lo '"' l•nll R11 Jlo 1"' P1rk1 H ·~~ J\~ T1vlr WI 3J """ ffi ' 3'" ' :f JN -1111111 Co • J f'l'I 2•1'11 2-•l>o + \Ii HCllllLP 1..31 ti 4Mi •:m «ll ···:it su 1 1zes ot er orms o Among them: an adequate in· rvld• ,,, '* c""' s 110 2•.• Frnk1 CP s1" Sl'i L11r~an 111 JI\ ,..., P•rkv Ge l'o-\ ,., Ttt~ P,!!tt "' s •s c rK" .«1 1 ,.. N -lsriew XIII :n• 11ttl'i' """ ""-Pt. HOll•NGs .IO JO :19111 ,, ,, = v.
Ir I lilt! used b lh . . """'"Sr 1\(o 11'l1CC$m Yrs •v. J .... Frllkln El 11/t t LtlllV CP 711. ru Parkw H ,,., 1D\IJ ecum, 1'1 151 1·~ Dl?.SO 1100 l' '• 31 -l11S111 1.40 '551'1" " ""' OllG ot.150 11' .UI\ " ,.
ave e y e come In retirement: the best ,.,cc Bot 411-\ 41"" Craw (o 111~ ii·~ Frnll ,,, •SIAo ""' '" Caal 1 IV• P1I F1•h J1) 5\/t Ttletom ' 61,(j '!ti Mfa !i 0 h •h .. "'9nlnll JI 'nu, ,"', , .... ,·.~ =_ ~ ~sr."·"•''.·,,,. ~ tt:" H'" ~~ = n eideriu? health Whl'Ch oe"oence can ATIG•~ I.I B"lo 1S'4 '""'Co 10"• 71\~GRI Cmo fltl 21'1 el1 GrP IV. 2 ll1ulev P 311' 4\~T\I Cam ll'r lt'o~tt~f..:-1 jfl 1Y ~ 1~ 11-All +2 lvMt1 2,11, ., ,. ' ,.. ~ ..... ICC IN! '"' '"' rut RH , ....... Gelb MPt 261:. HU owls BF 10"• 11 P1velt1 , ... 7"11 Tennant 1'\.11 )1)'4 IUKllLli ao 3w ·~ I .... 1 -\\ rP-·'° '° l?\li 11\1 32 •. . ... d l.4611 2 v. f ;..:.·" Tht questions are profound make.availablewithootregardl•lrd Al "'~ s"' ""'Fell '"' 1•-Garfnk 1 11~onv..1n a''" 11...,11 .. ,.P,,L nw ?O'.li71~Tt• Amo 1 114 ,.1u11 .ll 1 "' 111 v.=14 0onwMns .ao .. 61 s.,v. J•t! .s..'4-14 U0hi!•'~ IS ·~ ' ... ., 1•11 P11IC ... ·~ '"Cam I'' I\~ ., Gfbf'I ..... 5 kiclnlc: l\' m 1>~r1 Ml 1111111 ... Thtrm A JV. lli •11111" .50 v. 14 l/.o _,.. FllCI .• ,, '.".,_ ... .l:! ,!'.!'-+ ~ 11111, ~ ·,,, I 1. I' 't -... ~. and affect every ont of us. to economic status: suitable Btr111 Hr 16W 16•\ o.n.111b •1• s"' Gtn Alrc S\'o 51'11 obi•• •"" 1 Pl!lrlu T u u T11""' co n.. ,.,. 1Fos 1.16 '' ..., "" v. Doll!llll1r .u .... ··-...... ., CD . . . Bktm RI! 24 2,V. 01nly M 11 111') Gtn RlE~ I l>.lo 1111 Etrft 7U. II.!, PtM PK 711t 7ll 11111'1' In 10tlo 11V. lecl!tllln .SO lG 31"" :Jt'to • ~-'4 0....fc c;.:11 .l? 5 17~ 11 11 "° c D .• '' 4 h ' -housing; Opportunity f 0 r 81ttll9 II 4'11i SV, DIM Cll 1li l\~ lllfft 7\\ t!\o vl!dl C 1'11. 10\!i Pa Gl.W ?»lo 74V. Tlltft Gtl> 11', ~ !tel OICll •.311 In t"•"" 1J~ "'"' + "'Dorr Oliver
I 'h 111uet1F •&''l '7 01ttOvn •:l!o•\!oOl1Utll 11 lN\\llll•nG U'llol5'4 Ppp1IBW I~' r.corC H02\\8eetllA~.IOb 7~ 1~1'1'&-\\DorH'f ,\0 1514 IJ1"11l~+\lo1•llov1t ~ ~ em p 0 y men t Wit no Btvmrll JO• 15111 01!1 Gen """ '' lelln w 14'1> 25 M1( PM>! l'-t 3"1 Pelrnllt .... ~ 50\J.o rncnt g lnlo 17~ ltkoPtl .SOb " u ,,Ill 1~ -"'Davtr Cp .H ,, jOY, 50 50 -1 II int I u \Ii 1· _,
dl'scri'mi'nato'on Gold Cvd n 1~\'i Maj Rltv 1 ~ Petllllcn l?..., u Tr111.. lP'Ji 1t !'4111<1 1.20 t !! ~ ~ -\Ii OOWC:llm I.to 1i1 """ "~ 64.\1. -111t II .., 11hJ.O .JI :w. " + • Got;ld IT 1 IV.\\alkrl J\'/i S?V)PMU1> L 11\ l'f;Trl Hom I tl'r 1~d~H ·~ :II ... n:: ll'"'-\,i,OPF Inc 110 n'o I 1\'11 -V, OW•.1·~ • i+
The lac•-today shockingly •~,,,,",',11 2ru 711!. "'"' c s1,1o l'I. 11o1CW1 '" 7vt rlco Pd l•V. 3S t ow) . •1 ''"" '5\\ ..... Drtul"" I.ID n, i~ '514 7514 --•~• I •,•. ~~' 0 • __ ,. 1-3 t\lo ,..., 8 l0Wf" 1J'~ 1•'~ PIH!ml A 1\!o N r1111lr 3\io J"" Btml' o .411 S II 11 16 -14 reu pf 2.10 lh• 11,.. l:Mio "' 0 f 0 ,_ • ~ k • ti roh Sci 11,,. \:!\\ Mtui 1..P tllo 1111 l11krfn 61'1\ ~II> Trlln CG • 4\lo !~,'' .... , 41 3',. :~ lll'J -14 Hlf OIB 2 711 311/t 30'4 j01foi -IV,, mrl CD "' 11 "" ' 14 -
-Busiest m oc everyasp1raon. 'Exhaust' Grt.1.M'•""'"""Mccor n 1~ rs1111n 11"'11>.liT~ionF ''"'i::il'c .. 1io '~"'~"''""'····· seo1 n111"11i'""""-"INcD~'-, l'lU~'1 t
The Administration on Ag· '"n Ml 1l\lo u.-cOvrY UV. TJ• .. Of! HIC '° '°"' Unllec ?VtM Bfllfll ,,,,_;,, ~ ~t? '' c~ +1~ : 011.~' Jgg 11l~ 11114 ,11~ t ~ :S~H · "' l'" l'" !!tt'"'-~ ..
I , t I I bud I th" ltnft 5011.'° , ... ,,~ Diil :mr-;-~ • o11.» ll10 106 106 '°' +I llldt.~ d1. I ra JVi _;·~
ng s o a get or 1s ..,,.,. := 1n 5 :ii; :~ ~ .:... ,,:"i~~ J ;~ ;t"" tt"' = ~ INlolJPt ·1J.O 62"~~"' ~-...:~
Airport
CHICAGO· (AP) -O'Hare
International Airport remains
the nation's busiest 8irp0rt
idthough total aircraft opera·
tions there dropped from
676;473 in 1969 'to 641,390 in 1176.
·The Federcil Avia·
ti:on Administration in a report
issued Monday said Van Nuys
Airport took over second place
with 575.784 operations. Los
Angeles International Airport
moved to third place and Ken-
f\tdy International Aliport,
I.few York, slipped from ninth
t9 14th place.
· Midway Airport In Chicago
qtopped from 106th to llSth.
•
Takes Post
Kurt W. Kalmbach of
Newport Beach h .a s
joined Dunn Properties
Corp. Kalmbach will
coordinate operations
·between the marketing
.and finance depart-
)nents at Dunn's head·
quarters.
'
24 Hour
TELEPHONE
ANSWERIN~
SERVICE'"
$ 1"Yin9 -Coron• d1I M•r. Go•'• M,,,, N1w~1t l1tth,
1o11d S111t• An• 1r1•1.
ORANGE COUNTY
IADIOTll.ll'HONI!
SIRVICI. INC.
835-3305
,lud Bowen ••• °"' ..... l-................... .....
..... IN! -Mf t.· ........ -i...
~ -•·tt ,,...., __ .__,,......... ..... .., .. -'"' ..... -,.,,
IOOltllT • ..it ... ~ ..., .... .
540-5630
fiscal year ending June 30 u • E d l'le•k.., Pho 1111 1~ 17 11 .: .. ::Vi o... l•n .m •• it lWi 11 ncuu H11 1111 l ~ ~ ~ • · $"4 7 000 bu ha( mt ye Bttll Sii 1.'.j 510 '"'° :U41o n... -¥1 dul ont Sn '1 1fl Ul\'1 133¥1 :.;·1, 1~:J:~0 Re!l,11~52 7 I =;. JS ., • 50, -a ut w 1110 TllrH l ., '"" ''" _ '" duPont 1>!•.511 j " " + "· Ro p,,_, • "' ~
the ·Pentagon · spends to aJ =~~~' li t;.-t:: ~:+-~ ~0~_l1JN: ,l,l, n~a •• ~«~~ ~ .• ~-~.~, l',"11'1,'.,:f;1&.~,r,'.~. 1tt, iU ff~ n"'"•il ~.·~. publicize its m ilitary pro-B B . Muto Funds 111..,. Be" . .ct ,, ,..,,,, Jj"' :Ut\ :+1 Oual..l•ol , .,.. ..... + j,';!i~ ... i;
g rams and accompl'tshmen•• y ntons lobblt lrk1 U 1J"6 If~ 1N l Dvmv '"" lO I ~' ll -'~ ~:co ay_~ fl ........S • . "'"· BMl111 Ca .let ISi lf't '""° J'"" + \t 0.1111m Am .saE :1' 64' ~ -\lo 111rf-tnc l.IO I'• ~ j:i ,-+ ~
The· AOA has been repeated-l:!:ik''~ '"~ 1:!': 1t-i, ~ = ~ -·r--1~ s:JO 2lf ·~ 2Jm : 1U'
ly reorganized -as have J nNDON IAPI Two ma • ,Boal\Mt~ 1·" 1 1'"" ,.,,,. '2"' -'4 l~l•PJc ~·" ,•, !' J', 21 •·· ~'rf):~~. H.~ JI 11" "" 11
1 :: ·' -AJ -. -NEWY'OAK(.t.PJ FllFdV1IO . ..r.1l .'5Pi111!I 10.1011.6' l"lduc •. lltl.JOPrdMl1.?0 ,,~'"''~'""-11t-'0 ;;iD· •Vo l~ -""n'!t•vl-. ·~' l"" -· many of the special agencies ' . . . .d t -Tfte loll-In• QVO--F$1 1nve1tort : Pkm Elll 7.11 1.n Sltlft Rae l'ds: ~:"~~, 10:,s 3S 211'111 ,~ ... ,,. :WO+ ~ 111 Ar n 2ll ~ ua, U'" -f" ~•H1;,c11:1 .4:Jci ff I ,,t ,i~:;: ~ . . 11 50 t t B t JOr Brillsh compan1es sa1 o-1.11on1. ""'"""..i bv DIKo '·" 1.11 P10ft FNI 10 . .tt 10.tt B11111 n .... 1''"" BosE1111 '·" :~ J1YI ,I,,., J\i -v. ::krtif1 · Jo ,.", ;mu" ~ 11: · ·· ·· "l1111't"'" ~ •v. ·~ -v. on agmg Ill a s a es. U • dao theo have developed 8 1111 NitlklNI! Assoc:I· Grw•h t.01 e.,, Pl•n 111v io.1311.01 ''" o 1.n 1.1111n 11!"11 Pt11.• 1.o-i 11•14 11~ 11"' .:..::~ '•' o011k 11 11 "'" 1.H.1• :.::~ ~,1M1nerpf.oso 1~ 1 ~i1 ,:i.. 1J"'.= ~ charged a recent report to ~ " non o1 Se< ... r1t1t1 s1o0 1.Jt t.1t Pll..-th u.n u.u Stoct 1i.J1 n.ll l1M111 '"' n 1m;, 1016 1ov. -v. ,13f'11 bf'° ~ ,, ~ -""I'!! ~~ Iii I"
Jh Se S , J Co . system to cleari automobile Otalt,., t11t.. trt Fst Witt 1.,1 1..54 Ptk« FUllCll! S.U-PINll.cl lrrv: llrMll AlfW 3" 1~ 1~14 Ullo -"°' dcrdJk i4 l,11 g~ J1'io 21"' =ii r~;'t~~1 lf0 ·~ l j •,,-d.~ -_, .~ e nate pec1a mnuttee ~r1<t1 ,, wri1e11 F11 Nit 1.7' 1.J Gl"f'111 2s.si 1s.s1 Grwt11 •.n 1.1t1 =~l:~''i':J 1~ ~ 311'"> 311 ~+ 'io dl•d Ne· "° "'"' P,"" 1611o +" 1111 p 1 ... ,,.,. "
on Aging, the changes "have exhaust to the rigorous stan-llM• lec:11r1tlfs ,,, s1err· s.H J. H ''' t .OJ •.0$ s...,.11 10.11 n .a1 lrh1Mv•Pit n .ut.. ST' ~ -214' ~1r11Nc ·wt l 11\li ..., """ .... hti i!':'cui~ ~1 ~e~ 2:~ ':~ .• · coo~ ~IYt btenFnllGlll 4.D•.11 NHor!tltt.lttltt.ltt Tecll l.Sl1.1Jr!IP@1 .3"<1 1'111-' 1•>.il•'lo+·" 1°"!1'11$1 H 1 t\lol1 ···lnlT&T llS ·«11 'nt '7""-i\ not Strengthened the Federal dardS tO be introdUCed by the iokl tttllll or bouglll FounderJ G<0up ; Pro Funll f.61 t.61 Sync Glh 1,0 t .1' Br Ptl fn . .Jtq 1 IHlo l~:lio ).i'4 ... tCIG Ai~IK )J m '" + Vi ntT& T pfH 4 1 &! H -
programs and conunitme1:1t in U $ government for 1976 (1•kt<I) Mond1v. Grwtft 14.88 1J.U Pro Porlf 1..$2 7.17 TMll App 10.•111.1< =~ ;{1tlti0 ~ "'lo •n~ '~ +" 11cl11 Dll_• ltt l~ '!'~ :i:~ +114 1~1t1f101j-~ lj ll"'i ~.~•It +1 ' , . h · · I!~ .t.•• l11C0tn U .JG 11.4' Prcwlll ,: .. J.01 Te1d>tf '·d f.tl J1~1:.0~i;'1·11 tl ~,4 nv. ~;':? ±_ }t l~q Dfl~ 16 ,.... ;')'. 05111 -"'l"'TTT .. T pfK4 10 llV. t1 " fiY,i : {"
aging 10 any way ... rat er models. AOE Fnd -'.I• •.M M11111 '·'° l.t:I Pru SIP t.•110.S6 Tect1111<1 2..U 1.la 11wn-~llr1> .:in 10 1ni. 1~ 111'.6 + 111 111111 Hit •f,, .. , t~ ,~ .. 11 "r "'L s.50 rno 71,. nlii -~ +•"
th h fr led Ahtnln 1.0l 1.0I SPKI l0.1•11.0&P11tNm F11....,11 Temp GI 4.11 5.1111••"1~ ..... l'IO 14 ."Ill'~..., ·"' -V.llP•IOJIG 1 '7' (." -I t.Tp!N !'! !Of St"" Sf ,., ... ey ave agmen an A spokesman for lmperlaJAdmlrtttf Fu....,s: Fou"o t.01 t.tt fqull 1.U ... 1TowrCICI 5.11 5.llllnlfllwll l~ 5" ,...,,, :t"I ,.. -"" llr•<ilO'CI ~tt?' 114 lt -1' nlTl.T pfl)S 10 fl 8l ~ =1•
already fiawed and feeble Chemo·cal lnd"•tro·es sai·d the •,,~ s60 •.I• F11F o"" t.10 •.10 Georv u.m 1s..n Trns C10 1.s.i •· ~~ fr 1·" ll f~,. ~"' ,~ -~ rn.er I i 16 in n1 ~ l1-. 1Hi .:.: 14; lnr u111 t.«1 u1 ll'A n,,. J,t? _ ~ ...., ,_ .. ,.lJ•.nF1111111ncGro: Grwtll t .4'1G.SITU'llrHlld11.0011 .00 11;;c;;;c:p1J ~-l~t\ "'t\-\li """rF"1 111., S1Yr 71..., n•UlllA l'l •1¥o •l '4 .:!'Ii ,,
agency still further. The situa· system. worked out 1n col-inwr 1."1 t.n comm t.oJ •.tt 1rw:i1m 1.12 1.ss Tw!IC G• 1.12 3.ot """"'~' 1rid '~ lf S:,,. ~ ... =' ~.1i.1' 1 l! 1tn 18l't + i.. 1nffil~c• Ji. l JA< mi. ""= r:
tion has created chaos." I bo t' 'Ut h B .,. h Allvltrt ,,75 S,), lm1>1c 1.4$ 1.u lnveot l .G• '·" TwnC Inc 2-'7 ,_QJ BullFort l.'/O 11 ,, :n~ :ni.a -1 iMf Lid oto 21 m -,,; m"' .. ' In flraP,..,· 96 '* l~ 1 ~·· 1•'4 -~ a ra ion WI t e r1 JS A~na F t .H 10.U Ind Trd 11.~ 17.4] Vlsl• 1 ... 1.n USAA Gt t.91 f.97 flu1CW1W ... ,, J"".to 1.\1 .. ,_,.,, • moOIJI ).11 2 21 7,\-il ~ + l.? '~ lflPw 1'.n • 11 im l~'"' -+ \\
As just One' illustration o r Le\lland Motor Corp. Britain's Afllll110 t .21 1.n Plkll 6 . ., 7.6' VP'l'tl 1,tl 1.1• us G,,...S. 1G.f7 10.U 1u:::R "1r"t· l'14 '~ ~ ~ ...: ... m111rt Gal 'J •,, ij" ,•,•·-_ • ,1~•'",.5.!r• ", ,·.~ ••••• • -'· • . '1 ' Afulvre F 10.:12 10.12 Fncl Am 7.11 1,)0 R.vert t.O~ t.N UnU Mui t .11 \0.11 l~rt tnd I ;f '1 1'J'O :i'lilj '7'-'> -~ naltiM1n ·"° "' 111 v n ~~• l .., ltU, \
the utter lack or national biggest auto manufacturer, 1o111om Fd .11 .llO G•t-r 1.11 •.u 111n1ret ll .... 15.11 un1t11"" '·" 10.11 111,1Nor 1 •50 '?1 !:~ 1:w. Jr' =l•Jo (::::m~FDI~:-J 111 !Ji -J..., Iowa El 1.» 10 iev. '''' 1t'4 = .:;
direct.ion Jn thill area, there used catalyst materials which All•'•'• l0.64 11 • .u GE s & s 11.11 •• S1vH•~ 2.12 l.U nlon svc Grp : l urlNor "'..u t 1Jlo '"' "" 1111 ~ 11ll ll l\o, Ji~ ····· I:::~~ l·l: 'l b"' 11v. 1•>.1. . , AlpM 11.tt"n." G«11 sec JM 7 ~Ir 14.•S 11.112 !•Olid lJ..K 1S. llllrncfV .1' U 1~!4 111• nv, ····· Oii 'Gs ~. _ V. lJV..:..:. W. IPW1P5v 1:«1 12 1'D"t ~ ~:;:: \?
are now 20 dllfertnt Federal changed the chemJcal form of Amc11> '·'' '·" Glttt1ttr 1.11 s.u 1111111• l'11nch: N•t Inv f 11 .,., i ur"'"' ·"' ·1111tno 1H'4 121w. :..:v; ""'~'Jld 1~t 1~ ~ M~ ='•" •'f! •,~m.~ '°' 11~ ll~-~ 111.11 -\tt · JI ti. t · nd d ed Am Bu• l.1' 2.'2Gr111JP Stc: Int Inv n.tlll.'3 U C1p 10.4011.37 -C-~l11t l.H .... 2M "' .-n 31 .. ~,,. nv; agencies ·a emp ng o run noxious gases a ren er Amoiverlo.1111.12 A~~ 710 7.16 s.-1 lLff l1."9 wi.1,11 u.nn.fl!it1otC•.10 , (19\\ '9'4 )9l4 -'lliE11<1ulre .:111 3: » 1~ ~i!:=~" '-°'"' lot J1'!-l »14 .J0\11-"
special programs or provide them harmless. Am EQllY '·'' s.•1 e~t•n ·'" t. a11•n l•.•• l'·'' unue.i FuriOS: tc1e11tt r, ,, • sYo 5!1' + "' E11n1111 1.'16 11 J:t 3''1i l9.\to _'!-I -J-K-
1 A~r ExPrtH: Com SI 11.10 11,ts (am $1 t.11 t.JI Accm •.rt 7.,, tl flntn ~ ·~ ~ 6'!0 EHllt Pf2 M J .j1\.'o '1 11 Jttger 70 34 7 6,,,,
s peeia services for the The spokeSman said that up c1o11 1.tl 1.11 GrlhFd ,., •.21 6.IO securltv Fu11111: con Gr 11.oi 11.0I c~:R'1..• n•~ 11 1r. 1"' 1v. .:..:·~ Et,.•1111 ,jOI 11 ·m 1-'li 1'1i ~-~ J•mHF .:n 11 lHll 115,,. '"" -"'
elderly. In almos t all cases t · A · nd tncm• l.K •.'9GrM 1"" 1t.111t."11 EO\llV l.ll 2." con Inc 10.a111 .nc,""' so1·1 11 2':W. 2'\lo 2~-v. ~n:'lcr,.1-1 '; m: j~ j~~:;:~j:~~~ i~"9 rf 11,~ 10,~ U~ .
rt
. I . • r h 0 now ma1or mertcan a lnvt sl 1.5-1 t.Jl Gutrd M 22.ll :n.JI l11vt1I 7.7S 1.49 lllCom 12.12 ll.t !En !rtw . ~ 2!:Z 2t~ ~ + ~ Evlm~ ;~ :IS 1614 •S '! -1"" JpnF ln!."9 .! ••" .... •v. + "
-pa ICU arly true or t e Eu'ropean auto companies had Spec.I 1.t • . H1m!1Jon: unr• 1.11 1.•2 Sc:len '·" 1.n 1rw 1n·..., ' 'w •~ '"" Ev!111 Po •I 1 ?Jlli ?l fl"' , J1ffnP11111 •• ~ ~ ,11, 1"' ··
AOA lh g eah . . • !totk 1.111.N FdHF14.l0,.1Cl~leetellFu""" V•lll 1.419.22 nP1jU «l ll'41l n .:.;_·~F.Jl.tlKll.25 19111 lU'a ,v....:1~Jf'rCPLtDI'• 11511.Sl\oi.51~4'. ... ,,.
-e pro rams T c maintained the Amer 1 can Am Grlll I.Ji •, . GrwTfl 6.u 1.51 st1 Am t s1 1&.•1 v Fd ca" 1,10 1.11 :~:,~cf 1~" ' t'"' 11~ 11\1. ., ~~''""(ett · '' J1t ,,"' '"'° +"' J~t co 11111 ~ s1 ,,.,,, ·
only a smattering o f people. standards could nol bt met. A Inv cv '·" •.12 t11t9f1! 5,11 a.~1 st1 Opp u .52 14.11 v11u1 LI"' Fd: ~P c iiktt ,~, .:; ~~ ~ :_::~ F:C'1:?: ::g 1i~ li&n ~!'I ~ = lt j1~ww:lt 1~ ,ff ~"" .~t ~,,. ~ ,i~ As altother example of in Am Muu l.JJ t.13 H&C Fd 11,u 11,.:1 se1 Spl i. . .s.s 1J.t1 Ve1 LI s.•G 5.'2 pllHold ·" 10 lll'll )7h 37,,. _ \i F11rch Cam 2JS 19"° if ''"'_'\lo JH1111nv ;10 46 ni, 22, ... *.__, ~., · · • The standards call for a 97 AmN G111 2.K ~23 H&C Ltv 10.CM 10.CM Sen1 G•~ 1.01 1.n l11COm •.11 s.11 arb.,,,n 1 lO .., JG 48"' 'tt"' -"" F11r Ind .:io. m av. t•4 l \'a . .. J011nM111 '110 ..., 31 "' 4 '""
adequacy,theCommunity perce t ed cl~"n .0 carbonAllCl'lar Grot.11>: HedbGor 1,57 1.52stn1..,.w1·u .eu.J1 sp1u1 i.ll '·,.E:r~~Oh"°s 1,~~ L"' ~I"I ~·"'=•"~:l~mr1 _1 ~i l~U 1l"' 11 +ii;1°"tLJ°" .«11 511 ~ ~~ i:~-~
Nutrition I n s t i t u t e in n r U "' I C:ti•tt 1.-'• 1.u Hlflhl• 1.11 t.7l Stoam Fii t ,n ,_,, 111ce Stnclers: ~!~0 Fr.i Joi .tS 15.,,, u i\ lnlo _ * FimlvFln .'60 11, 11~ n: 1t.: :+ ~ :~oi:' . .oao ~l ~Vo Jj~ 31 v. :;:: 1,
Washington a while a g 0 monoxide, 98 percent In r:n:: 1~:~ I~:~: ~=-11:.n 2.!~.!-~ Sll~~~dfl"Jl.~·~.O! :::'"cm ::~ ::r.~~~ .,~, f# 11: il: i1: n~ =,:± ~.=~·Jt~, 1~11 ~ I~ 1~ 1~ -v. ~onltl/9 .7Jo '' 121't 12\lr t~i::: :!
hydrocarbons and 90 percent Fd inr 1.1.1 '·"'ICM f 1n1 1.1.1 1.Jt Enrrp 1.t1 •.ss Si!OKI t.1s '· 1•rr1tre11 :'° 110 lt'M :1J .1t _ 11o er•~M1,. ·" ,P. ~ 21'' 1114 -i\i. J~r:',111.J·» ,# ~:t! ~lli 19,,. -\'< ~Unted a grand tota\ Of 265 . ·d f 'trog Vtnl IO.U 16.0ll ISi GrOlfp: Fie! Fii '·" 5.l:l Val!Clrbt •. 11 •M &rrGm .:JOI! 1 JS ... IO"'° ljlli + \iO Fllktfrs .50 ~ 31'4 36\oli 3A0 + .... JIW Ml• I «I Jl J Ht """ -\\
prokrams ; for home-delivered in OXl es O n1 en. Aslron , 1.91 '·" Grwt~ 3.s1 3.t• H1r~ 1.1• t.01 v1nOt:1 1.15 • . .s.. :i;r~'kt~ 11\ l~f.: \~\~ \,v. -11 ~::l~ ;-.: '9 ~ 21 11 -.,.. ~•jsAlum · 50 lt M"' t""" m:--..
m •. a ls · for elderly shut-1'ns The Imperial C h e m i c a I "•' H""vMon: lncom 2.ll ,_,, LH11 s.?• i.11 v1nro TN •.•4 10.32 Ca!t•T• 1.411 402'" ~.~ ~.~ Gil'! =.,.. F,., .. ,•,•,,,•~, ",'! ,'I" ,Jl1l,Slli ~ :..:1'111 11::1; A~ t{~ 2,1~ .,,,~ .,,,,_ st,,_ __ .. ,,. :~
reaching a grant total of fewer spokes man said the British Fnd B 1.n 1.t6 Tru1 Yn 1.11 .... s11e1• "" 1s.1111 . .u VlklM s.u '·" c1 Df.t., 10 irv. 16 1 v. +l Flll<ns .to 11 l~ 13v,. 1!~ :·: .. K•j~me~h:jg 2 14"' U\'11 1'v. -1•
. . . Fnd .... $,If S.6' Tru1 "' 11.ss 12.67 P•t• l.Jl •.ll \/~I In p "'·'° •.11 ~I Coro ... .. l'"' + 1 ~ ?l Kii r( 1 ..., .. ...,,., .!().,, ~-
th~ 12.000. ~pie. cat a I y s ( s \forked ef-Sloc:lt 5,6J 1.11 lmP Cap t.Sl 10.Jf Sht•• Inv 10.2211.11 Well SI G 1.57 f.31 rr.~°'",·~ J. ~"· •'•'·· ,•,• .. --.~ ~!:r>.8Jrslr"') 11~ x: ,f.'• ,!., -!1 K,• m Pll.J7 ll t1i, :i ... ~ -+ :i ,-..v Sc!tn •.JI ,,61 1mpGlll ,.12 7.45Sflerm O n .n 1,.dWa$11M 11 .U n .ti ·-llC 111 ,. "' .... FtrroC 10 ~-.. •111MTr IOV n 111·1 ,,,,_ ..
ad", 'eel reSUIJ•. fectively Without marring the Babson I.IS I.IS lncF Am ll.S.. U.tr:t 5~e Fii 1.11 f,11 Wt111notn G<11111>: )::0~1:-'11 1: 'A l,..t'Jo 3$1,\ -I Flbrtbr: ."711 i~ ~ ~ r. · ··· ~~l~Plt :f.ot 6 34 ll~i :LJl<t -....
rf l lh 811vrk Fd 7.N I.st lncF Boo t':ID 1.11 Sl1m1 F11llllt: f1rD1r 11,t.I 20.0I ~111111..f 1.S6 2' .il\4 }hi, ~ 1 ~ FlllU11B11 J.10 2 IO'M 11'1\lo .i ····· ICC PL pfJ.IO J~ J2 52 52 :+'.i""" pe ormance o e car. 81~·• Gr s.01 s.s• 11111u11rw J.n •.o1 ca1111 1.u 1. ,.,.,, u .02 1'.a 111~ p1•.so ~" o\o\ ., +1 ~f•hkTM 1.«t 2 ,.. .. 1'\'• ,,it :~:\\ Kin 5re''fl!"2 ll''> llY. 331to -'4 •One in four Americans aged
65 or, over lives in poverty,
according to th~ latest census
tabulations. for e Ider 1 y
blacks, tpe 1 poverty risks is
about 50 percent. In addition
to the 5 million elderly poor.
another 5 million among us
are "near poor." L
•on!Y one in three older
American household:-, -in-
dividuals and families -has
income of as much as $4,000.
•So low are Social Security
benents that 2 million older
citizens are now being forced
onto welfire rolls to sup-
plement their income, and
private .pensions now provide
only about 5 percent of the
income of our elderly.
Today's elderly may be
d ocile about their d ire con-
dlUon. •
But, 8sks Edwin F. Shelley.
former pres ident of the Na-
tional Council of the Aging,
Will today's militant young or,
for. lhat matter, lhe middle,
not-so-militant millions settle
for instant poverty and
degradation in old age?
The resounding "No!" is im·
pllcit In the question.
"The only question now is lo IN<n HU 10.00 10.00 1cA u.,, n.11 lnvt•' 10 . ..i 11 Mor• 10.1t 11 enit,i111xi l' ,!,~ 211~ 7~~"' _-~ ~~·~Ji~•lft ~ 'f:v. Jm J;.%'= ~ ~:~~fir ~~ 2
1,: fl,,1~ ~,l".~ ~l~ t ~~ Btl<ft In 11.7111,13 tnv G11id 11n•v1ll Tr<11t I.SI f.ll TKl\V I.II ·· Ml • 110 I )1 l•V. II + .... Fires!-l2 2j"" JlV. 23\.11 _ 'Ao Kttr ll\O ' t •• ·• 7411 ...
establish bow long a life the Btre Kt~ 1.11 1.11 1~v lndk •.10 •••. Smith 1 t .16 '·" Tn.o11 11.19 11." tnrsw11 1· •11 ..... .,111 ''"' _ ,... ~11C11r1 1..-H t6 ' " 14\lo """ _1,.. ~"' 018 1.. ,1 1ov. 9~; lO -111
ta! ~ h be th Berk G1h 5.0( l.S1 1nvtt 801 10.tl 11.DO 5w lnv1 1.71 I.II Wtl!IF 11.1• IJ,f) tnl Sov1 6 Jl:W. 11 j! -1J.o F1\M!o 1.611 2S6 1J',\, 7'~ ~11 _ "41 lul lrd ii' t..c> 26h 76 U -i\ ca Ya~ as cause e Bonllsr-s.11 6.1s IJ\vnlOI"• Gr-: sw1n GI 6.11 J.ll wellln 10.n 11 .N T.i~1 ·?5! IS Jtv. ltti \C: -"' Fs NJ1!Bos 3 JO "'4 63t(i " •we B r · 10 ld~~ l4~ 35 -1v.
American r egulations will re-Boil Fdn W.'111.•} tD$ ""/ '·'1 1.MI Sovtr Inv n .:n ll.ll Wtnclr 1.31 t .IJ rrt~1..: .• ,n !1v. l7'M ~1'.11 ~'!!: ~!t~il~ ,~ 1~ ;l~ ;~tt ~~:.z ::1,·, i.• .. •M,,',,rlo.;.IJ) t& r.1
'1ti l~~ lri! = :.; . . ·r lrwn Fii 3.54 3.11 Mvll '·" 10.!6 SPf<:tr• 1.3.<I •.•s We1I 11111 ... ,, s..o -... -' -' ,, ., ' .. F1tv1B~1 ., ll ,, •• ,, •• '" ,,v iJ y., '1• ,, .• quire a working Ii e of 50,000 1111111<:k c11-.111: Pr1111 1.11 s.n sw-mi GI •.It •.11 WIMt F' ..i• .s.11 ;u...A1r"':60 .. 22 l'" 1•1 ... = ~ F,srw1sc 1.611 .. .. t1o K111., 1"" 2J "' 11,,. .. -.Jlia 5 s I Jn 'n Ft s 1 IOI 21 .. .. •• hd\b(I! IO ll 31 :JDllo 30"o ...;_ .. Klfion I " 16\4 2,.,. II ~1 miles " he said Bulick 13.IJ 1•,)I $10C:lt 1t.ll 1'.1l !Bit I 'l.91 6-1.lt 111 tld · · d~ · t J 1• i"· >• -"Mo F'llhrFli .1ooi ,i r •• ,•,,,, x,,,L ... l(<fli.tVH J.:!I) Ud ll ).( .... ?f,~ ~ ... • . Ctlldn 11.1119,!I !tit<! •.s110.:nStelllm•n F11ncl1: f$C Fd 1.211 ..... ~ •• ,',,!"" "'· • •• ,. j 1 •..•.. 'i::r' "' ·'' --. " fllll1lt •• "'• -··
Th ' •• A 1·• >"l"W • >H2'2" .., •• " .,.. 19 """ 111\ 11 '1> ·~K . .., ..., ..0 ..0~0 -lii e British system f;Ur· 01v111 l.n 1,11 v1rPw 1.d l .ll m •N ·-·""a< · · 111m i.20 21 ""' """ Al~.:.:·~"HTEnt 12 1•1 ~"' ,,,., ''"-:..'-' K=~c'.:i~i'° IJ 2J 22'1< :ttli:i-i;, II , b . I d N11W S •.I'll IG,11 Inv AHll 4.1, J.11 Ano I'" l .ll 1.21 Z!t1tler t.11 t.96 h1rt11r NY 2 U 3HI :Jl .• l -1 Flemln• .:50 16 tl lC•\ 10\i _ 1~ ICw Ul!I 1 6a •1'1 ll\o\ 70•0, ?ll'4 -~ rcn y 1s e1ng .este . a proc· NY vnt ,,t:i 10.16 111t1 10.ol 111.1s ~··r•nh 2 sn if"'° ~ ~"" -~ Fl!nt•m-1 ~1 ?t '~'"' 11 _,.,, !SerrMeG· 60 71 ''"" 1~ '~ .
ess expected lo take three Burnh Fd lo.u to.ti. IYY ?.«t 7.ID 1~1 1·1~ Ifs 1'\lr 'u 1r" ·.:.:·· ~\:~: ::: :·~ %
1°'.J,1 ~,',,, ~ •• ",'• \.,~~ ::_2~ ~IY~J,'",',·""·'"' ,,•, r,','•~ t,'•1
:), fj~ ='~~
lhs Th k Biii Mvt 1.1' •.• 5 J Ht n<k 1.JI l.ltt rft· 411 l • 16V. 1j'4 lN _ Ill FleE C1111t ... I( ,.. , 24:wi 1
mon . e Sp 0 es ma n er. l'uncl t 46 10 Ja11n1111 11.11 21.11 NEW YORK !AP\ . Moncl•v·i com1>ltte f\emNY t'.11 11 SJ s u. j?"' ""' '"''• .i.c x" l'll.,. .,..,~ ,...~ + :-: K ~tl11~ "f·/g • 54 S4 54 =J"
declined to S"" hO\V mu<"h the C1P~m 7."9 1.11 K1Y1tOM '"""s: New vorli 5t«k E•O..ntt .... 1c:11: tw1V• 1.60 1 21~ 11\'t 711 + ·" Fla Pow 1/6t ?\ •1 "'"" "''" _ ,~ Kl~oo SI ·-,~ 21,1;-:. 's 1s11o "' , '''" G>O >.•> l.t• •··••o ••.• t>.05 fhel Ollla .... lll i$(t •7•t ··~~ -1•~ Flt-LI .ll it r," r.•• r,•• • '"' ... ..., .,. 14'"• ll ·'
'
Id ·-, .. ·--•• ,,, ·-· ' .,, •" ,,·.· -+ • .<,•,~· ,_ '' ''' ~ '' '' 7 -new sys em wou cost to 1n· C•J>f• Sf! 1.01 '·6' c111 111 ,,_..., :ro.35 111" Net ,.,,.h 1.11. 11 .u s11'J 51"' -"' T'~ • • .. · ~
stall bul American chemical C•P Trln 11.'112,0 C\11 llJ 20.JS 21.JI 111111.1 Hiii! Ltw CltH Cll•. ~~,w.~r·~pt~ ~ \~ 1;,,_ \t'it : 'i? f!r.t~'' p1f.20 1U i• n~ H~ -~~ ",1;::~ ~fj~ l 1 ss 1~.,,, lr:i .... ~ 1:z ' Ctf\11¥ Sii ll.1' 1•.Jt CYs 114 1.17 t.7? Chi MlljP ·• • Jo•• ''" ~-_,,, ~F~M ,?,,'jiC1> ;,il> 15 t11 -~ 11\.11 -• fr1ch n.60 • 16\. JS'" l"
pe '" bel' ed 't Id i' • • o A ,.. " •• .. 6 'I> ,..., 37··-+"•',lMAlr .a•P ,1 ll\!o ' ···•-'• ex r.., 1ev 1 wou en 111nn ""' Fvnd1: CYs 11:1 1. .41 --Ch1Pne11 1 tS lBt JS + 1,1 ~ r l'l'.I .oo 1.,_ •'Ito 1~ _ '' ~hi N . .soo 3S 'l"' ~~Vo fi"' =,~t
about $100.a third of tht price ~:ns, '~·~ •::~ ~~: ~: 1!:~J:: :~:f~~F1."lo'' J i~ U'4 lf'-.:..:.. ~ ~~11~r ~i Nu: 11 ·r~ ~tt ~ ~ ~ ~:1: CJ1n·'° Ii ,ri.; ,g;~ 1rl• .:!:_ ~ 5~TI ·m I~ q" l81o, l•'-lo -a.
of other alternatives con-Grwt~ s.2' 1.1 cu' s 2 •.n 10.n: ~\"' J.;g ta 11 .. :ti? ;"tt' -~ ~:::fF~ ... ~ ,. t.._ ·~ t'I. -~ ~00!, fit ~ 'IJ "" ~· z~ -v. R_,. ri1 ' no v. llt; .ll~ --i.t side red 1ncom 1 01 1 10 cu1 s1 1.n 1 . .i ,.~e ,:;, l b H ,.we """ ~ + .,. crwi:c11 ,.,pf si t\l lv. ri_: •· ·· · F~~I& i·io u "" Jl'I -i. !K°'"f'"'" 1nc1 1• .,.. tu + \\
• SDKI 1.11 1,11 cus "' • ., •.n Adm1EJ1 .Mtl 12\~ '' ., . -v. crwom.n ·'° ,_, 16:W. """ 16 -111 FMc 1111. IT 11::~ '• g~ :: , ~ ~.c,j,•".~ ,It :ii.? 'jll! '•'"•·· -t •" The British Jes•~ will have c~a1•. Gr "'" Pol•{ 2.11 •.ll 1o11 Mll1!1 ,~ ,••, •'Ao v. -* c11rvm1 llf s 1 ""~ eo,,., """ _2 ,., whl .. . ... "' ..... 1 , , "'° CIP•I 6 fl 7.61 Knlckb I 42 1,04 Addre11 , Je 6 .PO 11"4 l ~ -"'° Cllmlr 60 JU 26'\lo 1!\lo 2~ -... OJlbel'o • 'I> 6\li "' ' l'Ojllr 1..30 • 'r '"' 24.. '-'• to make 111lowance for ex· Funcl ,,,,,1Knldl:Gt 1-,5 tnAllml••I "1.w. 1l~-. JVt -1l'lo.rw11erw1 •! u•t 12\.lo ni•-"' r1fllo;!tr ·"° , ~I'" I'"_·:·.; -'"L'-''• 1"'° V:w.-~ • Frol't • · · • o\etnallt 1.to 716 $1 56 U -1 Cl Mii I"' •2•7 1t'M 1~ 11 -1 rHDMln .to ll" 11" " cess1ve discharge of noxious 79·11 · Leno• Fii 3-~' •,o7 Attn111..1 I' 2 2 .rrv. " ..., -""c1nna111; » 11 21,,., 21•;, ?1''• + v. rueM 1.10 ,10C1 •• "" -l'a 1-~1 aas,1.•~ ,,• I'"' 22..., 22,,_ _ ,, . . Sl,.hld lo.a• 11.15 Lt• Grl~ I.rt t .11 A<1ulrrt a U 7~ 1V. l"'i -\lo ci;;n GE f 56 11 1, 71,~ ?l¥1_14 1,111w1 111 .Ill 11 • \!o + \.Ii t•mtn Stu 1 •\• uv. 1~,"' !~~e: ... deurconagr rubancsk'w",.e,hd thoa; c:.:~~. ,:.1: It .at tr:..~~d 't:: i::n Sl~~'!~ocl"~~"' •r.". rr,~ :j1~ ~A,~~~ ~J..1r.':·f."° 11~ '~ .. 1~~"" '~"' -,., ·~· Ind -G-L:l°:-~v"s,i" fl lJI' J(I ~" =-.-UI C ColCW1l1!: lilt St-J.U 1.01 • • '!'' '' ,, _•~CIT Fin! 1 !'9 U~ ,, 41'\lo + .'.G A ~· .. > :Iii 70'4 :IO\to -.,., L11rSltQ .XI ,. 7"' t:! 1•. T ii '--" ' ed -' • ''' ~, .. I Ill I I 1 ' 17,j P,"" ''~ · l..etr$Q P11ll ,,• JO 2t"'-.. -i . c11ul\e 1amm f.111J'Y l .N •.n I.II• Inv 7.ts '·''Aki-• u lj"" » ~"I + \.'I "' ' 1 11 " ~o . ..c> 191 . " 11-. _ ,,., L-••sco coio ,.,~ ,,... 1t~ --~ •• f . . FllNI 100010t:ll..lr>e Nit IOJl1l:lfAl1 G11l.IO ~ l I~'' Uio ... C!T pl5 SOC Jl17 111 117 ... .t.l'lica1·r: lJ ~J:: 'H -\.\o ltPsco pff.10 M J.1\i 3"l"" 1~~-..,
I
I 1the device prove!I com-fr•lll s:tJ ,:,, une iu .. :~rot1~~" lip ~! 11i~ 1
1m .:!:_ ~ ~t:.,""'f~./o10 1;! fl,, :tl'I ~ = ~ :::::s ~ 1:l°j 3 ~ 37:l i~I\ = J.t t="'.ios. J 4 "• •nl •N -;~
p ete y success r u I . an ncam 10.1111.DJ Loom1' s.,1,1: Alber™" . 111• I !lii-. Cll'f ll'IV ., ll6 I~ •• , ..... -1\11 ·~ .Git 10i 171'1 •N -lV, ...... _ ..., ~ n1,'•' ·.·.~ r •• -_ " A · k f V,f\f •.SI 4.t• C1111d 1•.l1 f,,J1 Alc1~ Alum 15 .. 1!\'lt 'Mo ·· ·· CllYlnv pf 12 «t ll'.4 30'Ai lO"' -'Ill rrortll f.JO 'S fj'h •,I}:-•1 '4 l::hPC. 40 " 41 l ~ mer1can mer el o some IO '"'" Gr111 11.1tu.1t c11pi1 10.,l io.ti :rco 'lnct -~ •fl 1Jt. ~111 1 . •J c11'f1n 11n.J1 1 3:1 J1 ,, _, :~r..!:: i~ot ~ 16'1 1~ l'ml'I :~:;; 1hv1r"1nd 15 1 r. 1i~ i~ _,,..
millionnewcarsayearwiJlbe Cwl!ll Al 1·'1 1.3! M11r u.111J.11Al~r'1111r1•bior •o 4Ht 1j~ ~»=ltc;luk Eo l.•O J137~h.•1J1.;,40ui;-"" l!.ltw~r Incl 11 1ooq 1r,,. +vo t•hmn 1.ntl 1.st• im:~ 16 !f -'4
ed II I Cwltft c 1.54 1 .• 11..ard Abt 10.!'t .. A IAmL .'•11 ,, 171' "'2~kc 01! •O l CA Con! 57 1"" ' '9 = ~ L::~~;c:,~ ,. •• " 21 open up as we as one or como As s.11 •.ll L11111 aro lt.,, H.n Al"-CD }ii : !"' l I = ·~ ClwEu"' ~'7'2 11 '~ '/';a ~ "' ''l'lfll ~·D 1 1A\ 1.r~ 1~ ..._ ,~ L•w F!11e .ni 'f j J~ 10\lo -'-41
.boul a m 'ill>'on cars exported como Cp .s.11 •..nMt11n• 1n •.utt.n~,~i::""' . 17 .~ GIA"• 1,.~ t' ,•1 """. uo 11 1 1t -""•wi:''• ~~111 n 11 ~l't 20Vt -•-1..ivlStr• .l6CI 69 ... .__ ~., l~"'-•. c amold t.flt."Mtr•Mll -'.S'f•.•••"•-''"•'•' -,.: ,:! ,',c10rOJ1.1• 11s1.i.5111o51\li :.::•~ ···1. ~I" .u -""t"'"IFl/f1l 511~ ., .... v. from Europe and Japan to the Comp fd 1.1.l t.JI Mkt Gtn ... , 4.H t·~~ "ur 1 li" ~ ;ll -.... Chltl!Pt~ ·'° 2' ,. ... 11 ,.~ + u a:-r. ~ ~ In i~ 1i~ ::1: Lrt1of1 t 1or ~'-"' ,l, :!~ =1i
United lates. ~=p~~ .. ,::~ 1i:: M~~~lll,!Mlj,1~0~.,. AlldM•l~ 1:!1 ,~~ n"" ~ ...... ~.~ = ~ 2~.:11:1n'l'.le 13; ~~ u~ m:: ""r:i" •ti: iiv 1G ~ fl., r:~ + Vi t~,~Of rt['·" t~ iii,. 1li, 79 _,~.
conitel G • 11 111 inc1eo • 71 • u AnoM111, .i.s 6 l\t 16 ,, ..... CNA p1 ;.1.10 112 J0.'4 Xt l!I -'tli n ~' . • r," ••• :m im"" -1•1i t I:: 'e ... , If'' '!''• •'t'•' _ '! ,.__ · · · · "111911 Pd .M • 11 u~ n~ ~ 1• r~.1 '' "'' ''' '''' ••• '''' ,, ~ m + •• ' ....,.,1 M~I J.K 1.H Mell 10.!'011.fSA HP<I oil ~··,,,,,••I•.,,._, !sos pfllt '45 ""' 4''4=1'A tnt=ec I.Cl '•' .... .. ,,., II .s.o 11 \'4 I 1 Cont Gth t . .i t.S! Mtll Fln111cl: .t.!llell5l! 1.40 11:11 2•h ff~-~ ociC111.5s IJ7 1~"'° 1o.i .... 10.VJ _'It J!!,,''"i:: . .uci.. !O f,l~i -.. l trl<Ln pfl.7$ l !Pio 16V. 1'1' -t ~
Salesmz Corplll, l!.Ol1t ... MIT 17,14 11.0JAlllell UNr •141 1"-5 -111 OC:I 1111 ."6 31 40"' 3''A 3'\lo-ll'l"it'.~ "°'111·._ ltt ,•,, f,~ il\\·:··•l..tlll~t~r .~JO •"o •0 .• ,•,l_• ., ... ,.,_',, Cllf C•D 11.IJ 1). MIG 11 ,, U.IJ A111sc11 .l'Oo 11• ""' 10'• 10 -It Olclw Bllkr a 2Pil 11 71 -n1o ~. ,_., ... .... ...... 13'\o Inc~' •
r11 WDlv S.41 a.10 MID H 41 U.15 :~~Cut(= I '"" i~}t p11o +: ~ olK~':i \M tr l11i:! t'" "'o:' _.::·\6 li::~~·.mr.~flr ,tifJ ~ ~ nit~ llU~ -_.'. "" t~-'•m"l,J J ~ u~ ll~ i-\t rn WO.I t.S1 1.11 MFD U.H ... AkM I Iii 1ri ~" ~11'1 u +1 M r.··~ zno .... -1'111 Cl[ n n\4 5\11 \lo ~ ·N~ • y lt7 l\lo 1tt ,,. -16 lleV11h t1,0S•1.05 M11PS ).11 l.U A,mM .. 1s ... s" 1.to , ' ;,t " .. ... "'' -!'' • -• ~~ .. 1,•,.H ,, . Vt <L ... • .... J ti~ 11, L -Ge K .. • ~ . .. ?.:-I'! J51 't lt"=•",l'tl Pl 5 ',, .. , ••• ,,:-:----. t OeltWlte Group: M.tthe" lt.ll n .1 • . ' ' ttlo -• 1t I \.lo lffi • -• ·-M• ~. l . I ' • S OS Otttl la.I'll 11.t1 Mid AM $.'K SJ! A~'£1 '0 1·:3 J 11"' ~l'i JZ!'o -\.lo Ion l.IGI\ '' !"· • jj"" .: .. :;tt ~-"ot p1'i1J , ~\lo L."" S6~ :+:"1~" t tlntll(I °'."1~f 4' ll" r:•~ 10'"' ::::·"' [W!Ow 11 .• lt.ffMOOOV 11.4'11,,1Af!IHHiii0 !!!-'~ n\l·~ Ol lnllwt•H ij lo 0 r. 'i'PC~m lkl !j" 21'> !·'" \IE"'" 1j l' " " .. ' ... ~ ' -"' 1 13"" -• ···~ , ... ·~ • ·i·· :;:i···,_-. r.:-·' " .~ l'·~-· .. ,, '·" 1.1t MOOG~'' n °' 11. "If\~ ~ J. •• 1i! •.... II '" · 1,eo \l ""' 1 "'+ R" · .. ~· •• ..
Do Id E I I bo 'd Olr C10 <1fll¥eil Mii' Fd J.ll 1.1, .u.i. U!r .t 1' lm • t I . l 125 .S ~2 !!.'! ::l" 'l1 r~~io 4' l4 -~ ~lllot1 Df I 1 ~ 1 \lo '\~ lo! -t.i n8 s r n. w rt!l es..., , __ ,, .,,,,,, M" 0111 ,.as 5.2, A,m1,•,,•,• iij40 ,.1 t• ~ '•'~ ~· , ljS •• " I ~ 64 -uq~ Air 111 1"-~\.'I 1~, _
"" .., 7t I~ ~V. t\.li lt '/t " • l' n ' J"" ,"•'' '""' 5"11 <,...._I t-Ca<a l. l• ff; Ii !'" _" at 16822 Edgey,·ater Lane Dr•~~1 n .u n .» M Orl\tG s.11 1.10 A e.-11111 · .20 101 !Iii" "' ,,.,. -•Ii • 11p : i 9, ' , = ~ .. ill! :J·ll -~ r;u; mt ?£' -"' -twn • • Hi. JF + •
lluntingto B h I ed Dr"'' Fii n .oo 11.ltS M O<ntllt 10.11H 11 "'""des! 1.10 ~ ..r. mt ~ -"' 0 I IO 71 ''~. 14• "'_, = ~ Gtl'~ "l:iO ll\! '!,_ lnlo l!i--v.. ~s1111n 1 1.tt 111 "' . n eac • rect v Df1w1 L~ lJ.:i. u 11 Mut 111r1 1~.u H,u ::::'t~ ;.!'' ::1 ~ it -'° llj =1" m 11 1:o111 'r 4!JJ .. ,!' .r +i" r-,.. b . 1·..., 131~ ~" :_ l? tL::f1Gi:L::~.31 1'1• ii' Vt 157~ 2""+ i• the Merit Award of lhe S:iles E•!Cl!\&How1rll• Mvf lfl\ 1.•~ 1.t! A c~~ orf,1J '11'\ '~~ )~llt .. mb 1·!8 .. 1,U 1h1r 11~ -.. G~.,,r.t.a' 11,~. ·~~ ll ~ .... -t-1 IL r ' J.1! I ~ ~ fO\lo -"'
d ., k ~ B.ol•~ •.JI !O q NEA Mui •. It t.ll Am Cl'!n UI 11D ... ,... ~~ -Ui oml .. ~.. I 1 .,.. "" ~.-.. <W ln ' , t•• ~om J4 "' )Vo l \.'> I.\
an 1• 11r etlng Executives Grwtft n .1t 1J.•1 "" 1nd 10.1110.11 A ?,t.•1n ,.,,,. 1~ ''"' !~'" '"'~ -" =:::., d ,.10 10 1:.. !'~U l1fl = ~ ~:;:~.1~~1·~, 4 511-it. 1111 ~~lil •L.~1 •m,. 1 uo .,,. 4•~ =,.,,
A!ISOCiation or Lo A I·· lncom • l1 I '1 N•I Staor Sef• ~ rln I j uo '9\~ U\ "'"' .. ·' °'"I 0 Wt 11 21, 1-.. ~"' \Ai G '.atll IOb 1 r. ~l'llo t LO\I. Ii' .All I ID .14 .14 + \~ . . . S nge<;;>, :k«I l_,S t:U l~ltn H.1'i1.11:1!'1!>™11111 l J '•'" ',1\/i \~\i =, .. orrt olt.4.1 ll"'ljl'4lll,li~ r.:Ptrp1"!,iill 4 '~ -tolil-Mln ,l'O l' V. 2fl\ :lfV. I ... J?..~trlnl!"V!ctpres!dent. &toc:k 1114\S.ll .t.ond J.llS.lt~1J!°.,Y..,~ ':"' a-.:.'4 ~-'° li "h ~1'11 -)l~•"-pt1.'211tfl:l._'il~~lltt~.,\4:;mll(~~~~tf.O 11? '!fi;':f! .... =1~
marketing of Bekins Building ~~1~"'sp1 ~:: g.i. g:=, ::: :·-'i :~a,r.,_ 01.~ f,t ~ht l~ ~~ +_~ 5g ~~~;;. 1!1 11: mi ~,a=~ R:~ lf~ ~ rtt; rm f "".::. i' =1t1''4. U s\:: ir if"= ~
MaThintenancedCompany.ted b ~r.~~·r \~·.~"-~ ~= t: it iS!~,;r ,., lb: 1i"' rh::7 " == ri~ 1! ft1
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In recogniUon or "his outslan-::i~:;.1• ~-~. ~.n ::w .:: :t: :;·" ~,,,'Hft 1:: ,H n"'~ Z:i.;, ll:"~ ~ 1; :: ~~I r:'n 5' 2irz... ~ -:! R~r~ 'I Sf a 1\i =\;=\~IO. 2 l:tt iii: ·ft;= a
ding contributions to the F11r1111 1.aa ' "'""., u.n 11.1 2,,,'r::'fe',E .;: n1oo '';m -i1 1111 F[=~'ii 1 112 4 m '~ ·~ !~ 1· A Df ! Ii J -l Mee¥~ .,g: ' ~ ln .... " . u· the I nd ,_,.,,, llu 'II tu Nido Slrt 11.71' 11.1 ... IWl""'1~ JI• ~ I ,, ~ .. . N11G . ~ ~ E .... ,... .. r. I rl11 l ~1~ .~ ff~-=~ =;!._S:,h!. 1 'l ~,. ;m :: t:
assoc1a on, Sii ea a l'kltlltv Gr01o1•• Nor,111 u.u ll.111 l ~11(:1• 1-• 11 j"" "'" )>lh -I'll -P-I \1 n111i •• '' Dr Ji'j~ "" l lllli ~ M ... ..: c :II 11 ~ ~r. .. "' 1 1 11 11 -4" ~ on!w ot1 • 1 l "'l!lll'I +·" r. ' In ' I~ '~ ~U~ t\ M 1 ' -" marketing profession and the ~onll •. 5' 10 .~ 0«•,,.,, .... , ""' ~~. 1•4 m , , _ '4' en w pl~:, 1100 'J::
11
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Wh C l!w 11 ll 1&1'n ONt'IH 10'110.,,Sft'ltltlt l'O r.: 1"" IUI ""--IC,.~ " .. 'R'°""I.!' n I~ ... \Ii ..... 0 1 l ~+ 0 •res? ··-" ,,·,,, ·-' .-,,,.-·Air -.. ~ ,,..., "™'-J m"«/ ! • ??" -f~ ···-· ' . ~-,,.-_,,\"'•a<."t." -.., _, •· .............. ·'• •· A,,.SA,~ tn'"it i U\\ "t' """ C1 II( •. "5lot ~ J1 IA! ' ,p,. 12 """ '" 4,;: "-M!!•1'1 I It! " 'II -1,
No ntht'r fl('W•l)l'llW'r in U1e Pw1!11 '" 11.45 °"' AIM 11uIf1 "-"' St•lld Ill Ill t•u. h '" -~ 'ri pl:'· t •s:: ~ ::.. "Rim= In ,,, ~"" !ja '; ~ c.·,~::: . ..., ,'!!'I \~~ ~+··~
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d U d I r_ O•"" J.M ,,19 p'"" k , .. &.tt Am .. T f.60 ~ ••• ., !'" n11 ri( l ! "E "1c 1'l'lo _+"' GtH•"'f.•·'' , •"• lfl M•r 1.1Ni '4 " I!.-• 11 y l'lt'WllJ)ll]"l('r Qt>g. l I IMlu" I SI J ff '' Miil l,U J 0 X "" ;1-. -~ Oftf,i?I in \;, !W; f\ fl ~aH '° Mii W «I e " • ~ 1hr O~Y PlLOT '""'"' J71 I UPllllt 1l U h •1 AmTl.T 1!' lf ~f't. r,-~ ... ":;it ., mt: if' n~-" Wq l'!nl s'; ~ ll4 -l'1 M1~·'.! ' -..
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2% DAIL' PI LOT
DfCKIRACY-
Tutsday, No~en1ber 23, 1~. 1
Ir Cliester Gould Ll'L ABNER
.
TUMBLEWEEDS
~EffE R 1~..--..
FOR
CLAU~E: l'ICJITh
CL.AY!
MUTI AND JEFF
' By Tom K. Ryan
IT
FIGURES
By Al Smith
eur, M'I
OTM~ DOITERS
~'LL . ae. , .
e.P.Ot<.EN!!
11-i:s ..... _ .... _..._
SALL\ BAN:~:S
GORDO
OOC, I
FEEL
SICK !
HMM··l<'EMOVE
YOUR Ct.OiHES!
I CAN'T FIND ANV ,
1141N6 WRONG WITH
YOU! --ARE aYOU
No, sr~!
I'M NOT
IN LOVE'
WELL,W>lV
ON EARTl-I
CAN'T YOU
I CAN'T
EAT .'
FIGMENTS
f7-Za:>
.I
PLAfN JANE
ACROSS 43 Bloodsuck ing
wom
I Rough 4~ Sing in-a
llfolubtrarte tertain way
5 Suc:ctsslul 45 Examlntd
strokes 47 Cornpass or
10 Clirl rndea~or
14 Con!-nt~t 49 Ancitnt 15 ~·r. PJ1r:Pr Asian
lb or airtra't SO Ship's call
17 A~erlcan auto !Of he-lp
safet~ c111 1c: 51 Gas, wood,
2 wo•ds coal, etc.
111 $Nelt<r: 53 C!rar and
l nfor~al sunny
20 Cape--· 55 FJri1ly
!sla11d: Part of 5~ Tirr.e cl year ~l ova Scot J bl Greek god
21 SumrePr in bl Ont who Fr,uKe i11ter\'enes 22 Act o! rJssing b4 -Oomini over: Ab~r. bS Locali ty as 23 Dried coconut seen by il me JI Vil'wer
25 -goo (pi pan: b~ FJt: Pref•~
Canto11ese ti/ Thro""
d<5h b8 s,,~ II amount
2b r-'ost b~ A rpo1t 1lr ~)\ts!at:ory PJn~ 30 111'11 .t
31 Flal-bG\!o:t·ed oo;·,r~
vessels
34 TuM outwards 1 U •pleasant
3!> Ycu'"} farrl 1e..,a1 K a111mJI 2: U.i1te:I States 38 P.1d o: hair· A''"'Y Reserve: lnror'l'al A!l!;r.
39 VI P's 3 Oist.irb per~or1,d 4 Deep\1 e"lp\o~ee: ;:i&sOfoed 2 words 5 b lHIJbie '12 Sl!Ppleme•it b Oi>mesday wilh eff01t Book f!"on~y
• l l • ' • '
" •
" "
'" -lJ 2• ,
. " l1 " " JO
,. " 16
" ,..,. ..
•l "
IN L OVE? EAT?
l\IE GO"T IH\S 'FEELING.
1iHAT PEOPLET'41NK TM
DUU.H-iiDBORiNG!
Yeslerdiiy's Puzzle Solvtd:
7 Sold illicitly:
3 ~or.ds
8 Pain!ing of
IJary and lhe
body of Jesus
9 Char the
surface of;
Var.
11n3111
33 A particular
fashion
35 Deliberate lits
37 Mode1ate
orange yellow
-40 Was Jn first
p!ace
41 Male cat
PEANUTS
JUDGE PARKER
COME, MV &OY .• LET'S WOT
GET 'rEMPER:MENT.O.L:
By Dale Hale
By Frank Baginski
-
MOON MULLINS
!AIN'T<SETTIN'
,AHs;AP "TH' WAY
I OLJGHTA,
PROF.
!lLlRR!>.
ANIMAL CRACKERS
OOD();. HfRl:'S AA WITTJRIAl.-
'Cll A WRtfi=R WHO 8ftJcVeS
T\\AT Tt1CRE IS TOO MUC/l
APAiHC/ Ill 1HE lllORlD.
Bv Charles M. Schulz
~-------.
l1M SOR~, l/OUR CALL OJ C> :!
NaT 60 TIIR0061Ll'LEASE HAll6 "
Uf, AND DO NaT DIAL AGAIN! ;I
" ii a -..,·~
By Harold Le Doux
WMEN TOOAV, lF POSSIBLE! TllE
WOiJLt:' \IOU LONGER WE WAIT. nu~ MORE
11) Star io Geminl
J l Mcve
4b H11man trunks
48 So.n:ltd lottlly'
C.ALL Jr.\1~5 C.1'.R:SON!
1'~V VOUNG WOMA\.J ME!r "-GE WOULP
WELCOME: ™E OPPO!<:TUN1TY TO BE~
COME AN INSTANT TV ST.6.lr, ER1C!
&ESlDES, IT WOULD SE: AN IPE AI.
Vl..CATIOl<I 1=0 1<: HER HERE IN
MONTRE>.l-.ALL EXPENSES PAI P!
W.t.NT l-IER: ) PROISLEMS WE'LL HAVE IN
UP HERE? GETTINC:t nus O\IT OF ~E
C.OUNTRV: "'~-rfll _..._
'
backward
lZ Zon'
13 Loo$e !!owing
garment
18 Ad -.;For a
specific
purpose.
Z4 Sheriff'$
helpers
25 Sociabl'
2& Attack f1om
all sides
27 Inspire
28 Acts 1lf
51 Former HEW
Secretary
5Z Din'
53 Act of daring
54 Famed
cartoonist
5~ Car,ss wit~
the lips
57 "-the ant,
thou
.sluggard":
2 words
SS Elc'rcise of
a right
'flitbd rawi09 59 Exchange of
29 T-hrtt: Pt!l1x 1}oods for
31 Una if music mOll!y
32 Hitving 60 Play J09 card
hearing organs b3 Compass poinl
• • •'" .. " " "ii" ~
•'!' , ...
" .,.
" ll 11
11 ll .
" -..
MISS PEACH
' i
I
PERKINS
YOU MAY TAKE ""'-'" DtlAWINGS
MGl'IE AS t./SUA\.., CLASS-
-~ --
MY MOTHER
HAS
ASKEP ME
NOTTO,
MIS$ PEACH •••
·AS !TIS,
SHE CNJ•r
llfMEMSER
THE' COLO!l
OF OUR
Rl!'.FlllGERAT~ •.•
By Mell
By John Miles
,, ,, ., •• " • • • .,
.
N " " ' • " " " .. " " " " 60 •
61 ' 62 J • .. .. " ..
61 .. •••
•
'· •
•
'J<AY!
By Al Capp
DID 'IOlJ E.\IER.
H1!.AF\ WHAT'THE.
POLAReEA.R.
SADlOTHE.
WALRUS?
By Charles Barsotti
By Gus Arriola
By Ferd Johnson
By Roger BoDen ·--
ll€!>1 60!" 0~1 llEC:IC. w11H IT.
tr'5 t!OME-
THE GIRLS
''Well, I certaln1y don't think the news Is so dreary ...
DENNIS THE MENACE
' :~ I ,
" ' ,,
. I
,.., 0 • ;:fJ p-t!'--...
...,, "' ll·lJ
''.0u ~ PlllL 'lOOR T~ 6ACK IN NON. 1illS IS AN
, EXM\INAT/ON .... NC11' AN Ol'INION lbtL. •
I -
' • • I
.~ .' . . . . . . . ... -~ \. . . . . ·. . ' '• •
DAI LY PIUT_U
'
Everyone Has
Som ething That
Som eone Else Wont s
DAll.Y PILOT CLASS·IFIED ADS (ou Can Sell It.
Find If, ·Trade It
''i ith a Went Ad ·The Biggest MarkE!tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
2629 HIU'bor, C.P.1'.
SAVE$$$
OUTSTANDING
VALUES AT
POPULAR PRICES
Owner Desperate
Foreclosure
Pending
Sacrificing this beautiful
4 bedroom home with 2
1 a r g e baths, family
room. huge covered en·
clost'd patio, built-in
ki tchen, double garage,
brick fireplace, great
Costa :r..·Iesa area, only
3 years old - Hurry.
Reduced to :S29,950 t l'lis
1\·eekend only?!!! 546-
8640.
Gene ral General
HAVE A HAPPY TURKEY DAY
In This Beauty
Antique mirrored living room with fireplace,
custom drapes & deep, deep carpe ting. 4 bed·
rooms, 21h ba ths, kitchen with all the built·
ins PLUS FORMAL D!NlNG ROOM . You will
be r ight .on the canal & have your own
DINGHY & WRO UGHT IRON FURNlT URE
That goes \vith this GOODY, GOODY at
....... ' ..... ' .......•......... $64,950 .
Gener ii
"GOBBLE GOBBLE"
Thi1 On1 Up!
8 units in LOVELY EASTBLUFF SPLIT
LEVEL APARTMENTS. Owners unit, 3 bed·
room s, 11;2 bath s, four 2 bedrooms , 1 ~ baths
& three 1 bedroom, 1 ~~ baths & a view at
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $198,450.
YOU BRING THE CRANBERRIES
We'll Do Thi Rest
Over to this BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom, family
room, ATRIUM ENTRY. Custom dral"s, shag
carpeting, kitchen with all built-ins, self
cleaning oven, covered patio & great land·
sea ping. . ....................... $47,900.
OWNER WILL TALK TURKEY
How About You?
SPLIT LEVEL 2 bedroom, 1 \0 bath home with
\vall-to-wall ~arpeting, kitchen with all the
bu ilt-ins, NO CARE CLUBHOUSE & pool
privijegt!s at onl y ...•............ $23,800.
MOM"N" PUMPKIN PIE
WOULD Be Niu
r ..
In this great house for indoor-outdoor enter-
taining. 4 large bedrooms, 2¥.i baths, covered
patio, famil y room & "Mom" has the kitchen
she al~'ays wanted. . .......•..... $54,500.
Gen1r•I .
* *'* * * * TAYLOR CO.
EXCLUSIVE LINDA ISLE . $143,500
A Great Opportunity! Architect owners of
these 2 biand NEW waterfront homes will
consider in exchange: your smaller liome,
land, apartment bldgs., or Trust Deeds! Or
will lease/option. Each one has ·a 4 BR, FR.'
formal DR & study. High ceilings, spacious
rms & luxury carpeting.
''Our 26th Y11r''
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtars
2111 San Joaquin Hiiia Road
NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910
_a ..
Owner Transferred
AhC;1 anxious, Spacious 4 bed-
room, 2 bath, 3 year old In
MINT condition, 1'1odern
step-saving l_dtc~n. Shag
CArpeting & special tile .
E~. garage door, work
~nch & covered stora~. 5
minutes to the beach. No
down G.I. small doWn FHA.
$32,500. CALL ~
~~'till
~::1
Spanish Hacienda
Total old world charm is
found In. this tiled roor • 3000
sq foot home • 4 large bed-
LAGUNA
roomw • SJl9,cious charming ;;;::;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;:=;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;.1 11v room -_Firplc. Function-
Newport Heinhts .i Uvlog ·d•mgn. T......,o
'3 floon. AU electric bH in kit
General ·
HORSE RANCH
We have 1t! Almost 2 acrM
including a fabulous 4 bed-
room home surrounded by
lruit trees, a spert.a.cular
VIE\V, .a. ~t cottage, .a.nd
horse corrals. Ca.II now while
·it is still evailab~.
V.A. TRl-PLEX
An excellent investment and
a fine home. Three 2-bed·
room units, built-in kitchens,
fittplace in the . oWner's
unit. and closed gamge for
all.
BIG TWO
Older 3 Bdrm home in "BET-• Located in choice Baycrest
TER THAN NEW"·oondltion Newport • Price $89.~
• . .new plumblnr, elecirl· 673-8550,
al, kitch &: bath remodel·
ed, new carpetinz, dtaper-
i~ l light fixtures. Vacant
&. ready to see anytime.
Dri'ie by 539 San Bernat·
dino (Off 15th St.)
Newport
at
Fairview
646-1111
(1nytlm1)
'-0 THE REAL '~ESTATERS . .
$1B5 PER MO.
Includes taxes l irrsura.nce •
anyone can a..slSUme this 6%
GI loan. 3 BR ranch style
with 5eparate family room .
Heavy shake roof, oversited
living room, b}t,.in step uv-
er kitchen. On.quiet street
-"' .. I~
General
STEPS TO
BIG CORONA
S\\~plng ocean view from 4
bdrm. home on 3 levels. 34'
Uvhlg/dlnlng area. One ct
the few homes available
clOR to the water on fee
simple land. •126. $98,250.
Call m-ms.
Home & .Investment
RHlty
3535 E. Coast Hwy., CdM
CORONA del MAR
Rara Find 10% Down
So. cf Hi-way, Custom built
3 bedrooms, 1 ~ baths. On
R-2 lot. Room for another
unit. l...a.rge living room with
fiN!place. Nice sUe kitchen
with eating area. Large pa-
tio for enterta.inlng. Walk to
the beach &: shops. Move 1n
...... Cbriftmal.
Lachenmyer ReJ lt~
lll60 Newport Blvd., C.M.
Call 646-3928 Evet1. 6464067
PRIVACY •
OCEAN VIEW
~' AllO.UiOtl~Tll of the largest homes in c.o&hl
Mesa and like new. 5 bed-
rooms, 3 baths, huge fam·
Uy room. Split level ele-
gance in Mesa Verde. •
""""'""'""'""''"""'"""'"'I close to ~booll~New FHA & VA terms. Available at only BUILDERS
CLOSE-OUT $26,500. See it topay~
540-1151 (Open Eve!)
Unique • Upper level bas
1paciou5 beam celltng llv
room with wail of gla.~s for
spectacular view _ 3 Jorge
bedrooms -All new expens-
ive w/w cpta thruout • 21Ai
baths • All electric bltin
kitchen • Separate family
rm w@t bar. Truly great
home -Shoreclirls • $98,500
Call 675-8560
Big Family Home
5 Bedrooms
$34,900
REALTORS Only <f remain. 3 and ~ bdrm
Spanish Style homes_ with
2 baths. No down GI buy.
ers and min. · down FHA.
Priced from $30.650. Price
includes landscape, sprink-
lers a·nd buyer ch009es ool-
or on carpeu, O<>se to So.
Coast Plaza a'nd n e w
schools. 1\-1.:odels open. Call
,._.:"~~1 2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF.
$600 Total
Down
Pay n orm a I closing
costs and mnvl! Into this
vacant 4 bedroom home
located ln Costa l\1esa.
\Valklng distance to 11 -N~E-w-p~o=R~T-H~E-IG=H~T~S
schools -back on mar-Clean shii.rp '""o bdrm. on se·
ket NO\V, So act fas t !! eluded cul-de-sac. l..a.rge pit
546-8640 i:haperl lot. Choice starter
home or pertect retirement
location. Close to a!I grades
of schools and 17th SL ~hop.
ping Center. Only $21,SIJl.
"DOUBLE GOOD" 'Grange Vista c'"?"' ,,1 M". 2 hoose b"-
gain. 2 Separate houses, 2
Eastside Lovely
$26,750
PROPERTIES b<h"m•. '"h. F'PIC. .. · "P· garai;es. cm·ner financing •
low ln1ercst rAle, no points.
Please call for app'!. $6'5,000
Formerly La.Borde R.E.
220 E. 17th St., C.M.
CALL 646-0555
3 bedrooms, 2 baths -Evenings Call &12-743S
corner Jol -floor to 11-~~=~=~---
celling brick tireplace-BEACH DUPLEX
roomy built-in kitchen s23,95o
II k t hat J\.faybc your las1 chance to -1.1·e t'P -1'' own beach prol)(!rty at a de-else c11.n 1.1·e say -set C't'nt price. f\1'0 units, 3
it -lt'i nice!! 546-8640 blocks 10 beach, near !';hop-
ping. 10% 00\\11 • O"'ner \\"ill
help finance and rents makt'
payments, Fix it up and
l\IAKE MONEY. Bet!t'r tte
if.
Dirty Bargain
4 Bedroom
$25,950
Walker & Lee
675-3000
BAY• BEACl-J
REALTY ,.
Best Ar.ea. Best Buy
Locatrrl in l\fc53 Verde prime
area, This large 4 BD, fam-
ily room home rcf)rescnts
lhf' fine!lt valu~ hy fer in
the area. Chvner or t his
sharp homp hai:: bt'cn trans-
f<'ITt'd up north anti h 11 s
property pri«d ri;?hf for
fast s11le at Just S33,500. As-
sume lbw in!cres1 loan et
5~~% or try 10',~ do1>.•n.
HIJRRY! 5%--2313 .-
\-0' THE REAL .. ~ESTATERS
' I',' 'I'•
Locat~d In Nor th CostA
P.1es11.. This home has It
a ll, 2 baths. built-In
ki tchen, ha rd ,,·oo d
floon, cozy fireplace,
large yardll, quiet tree
llnl!'d street, new car·
pe.Una -ne<!ds-~t
but priffii to 1ell!! ~6-
8640
Raduced to $49,995
Pt'nlnsula Pt .. sleps to ocean.
Newly decoratid & cn.rpet.
ed. Comp, furniilied 2 BR.,
l ha, Huge lrpl., open beam
ceil. Immediate ptlSM'!kSion! !::::~~~~~~~======-· Ca.II: 673-3fi63 642·2253 Eve1. 1 ·
associated
BROKERS-REALTORS
1015 W Balbot1 67).)66)
NEW-[ISTING
2 story Met.8 Verdf'. 4
bedrooms, fa.mil)' room,
separa!e dining room ,
StJ.950.
RO'i J, \VARD RL!RS.
64&--0228
LARGE
MESA VERD.E
LUXURY FRENCH
REGENCY
Our bea1 5 brdroom, 3 bath
homr; has bttn decorated
hfoaullful/y, landscaping pro-
fessionally done, frnnl en·
closed brick courty3rd. Key
at our office. 2734 Sandpiper
Dr. Aliking $61.500,
UNlflUI: tj()Ml:S
lletl EIUl!t, 575-6000
DIVING POOL
BAYCREST
Dee p pool 1vith 1 meter
board, 4 bedrooms & a hu~
t11mily room. Gracious tree
lined area.
Walker & Lee
DREAM
HOUSE
ONLY 21/2
2190 Hart>o~ti;::~ at Adanu YEARS OLD
545-0465 Open' 'til 9 PM Chvnen hate iD give up
Charmin& 3 'odnu home. t24 950 CLOSE TO STATE BEACH. ~ I Will 5'11 .0th "' ®"" VA
4 BEDROOMS " FHA """'· SACRIFICE at $30,950. Broker
Lovoly 2 bath homo. l"shiy 546·368B
pUnted inside &: out. New -~=====--
!ormka. Liko now pluo "'"--BROADMDOR peting. Large built.Jn ward-
robes. Wide concrete drive.
No down G.I .• low down all
others! 540-1720
WITH VIEWI
New listing -scarce S BR.,
Employ" Transferred
Vacant & ready far OCC\JPM-
cy. Sharp Eastskie 3 BR.,
2 BA, fam. room home.
CUl-de-sac loc. wi th shingle
roof, brick trplc. &: elec.
Jd tchen. Company owned &:
priced rlght with no down
VA or low down FHA tt!nna:.
Cfil
546-5880 (Open eves)
TARBELL Smith built home. Lge. liv-1 ,.;;;;.~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~j
inr rm., dining rm .. ocean I !
& h•-'""'· Rean.ttoa11y Big Canyon
f llKISI E Ol.,11\
'" Macnab-Irvine 1
PEAlTORS
' 2955 Harbor, Costa Mesa
"4 BEDROOM
CHARMER"
$25,950
priced at $72,00J.
CORBIN·
MARTIN Spotlesa condition inside &
Realty Company out. 2 baths • finest featur-REAL TORS 644-7662
PQOL & VIEW 4 BR • 2 STORY "· pt"'h "'""' • uoiqu< HERE'S A WINNER
DOVER SHORES Only $3J,9j() for this roomy landscape, corner lot, room In fashionable Bayshores.
Rolling Hills & Upper Bay family home with beautiful for boat. trailer -Uta won't with private beach. Spacious
View. Distinctiv~ custom shag carpets throughout! last. call 646-Tin. 4 BR., family rm. l sep.
Five bedrooms, 3 bat.rui. fam-
ily room. laundry room, 3
car garage. Beautiful corner
lot at Henni~e Lane and
Royal St. GeofBe Road. This
home is being finished now
and should be available for
moving in before Christmas.
Drive by and see it, then
call owner at &H-1140. Price
$9:?,500. home. 4 BR, tam1ly &: !or-Upgraded fjJe &: loads of dining rm. Casual & comfy.
mal thn1ng room /separare decoratlve nlcities too! Cozy, Living rm. with inviting * EAST SIDE *
breakfast room. Luxuriou! crackling fh~place in the frpl. Secluded outdoor pa-5hag carpeting. Obie. drap-big fa mil y room. Wide trail· !lo, blends beautifully with 3 BR, 2 BA, family rm, flre-
t's throughout. 2 fireplaces. er space will accommodate -0~C~l!-A~N~F~R~O~N~T"'" inside. Priced to sell, $54.7()(). pl, blt-lns, huge walk·ln
\Vet bar. Lovely patio sur-your leisuretime vehicle!! HOPE GERRIE RLTY. closets. 1800 sq. ft. New
rounding large heated pool. Why Wa il? DUPLEX .,. ~ 0 N 8 crpt&/drapes & paint. Va-
Appl. only. Call Waller Ki ng 64~ ......,ver r., &ii-3320 cant. Immet:I. poS'Sesslon.
Macnab -Irvine & er all often on thi~ 3 bed-TRIPLEX.Ju1t Listed Roy Mccardle Re.-'tor
. WALLACE room deluxe duplex. Both Walk t.o stores ... A-1, 2-2 1810 Newpo rt Blvd., C.M.
644.6200. *' COATS Owner anxious&: will consid· $29,950.
uniti ate in mint condition bdrm. &: 1·3 Bdrm. apt.s. 548-7729 lJ/'tll()lJ[ ti()Ml:S 642-8235 644-6200 REALTORS k Mly lurn!sho<I. Full pn0< Bltns., C/D: -ly kitchens, ...,..,...,...,...,...,...,,...1 llUI Etiate,!7WOOI) "!!!!!!!!~~~~~""'"' -546-4141_:_ $83,500. 540-8555 patios, aund.eck. frplcs., plus * DOVER SHORES *
2HJ e. co1st Hwy. TIRED OF (Open Evenin91) SHERWeeo REALTY laundry, By app't. only. ELEGANT thruout. Nothing
C-.OelMlr,Calit TRACT HOMES? l"==:l=:l=:l 18964 Brookhun t T.V. $49,500. comparable In this 2 & den,
CORONA HIGHLANDS
Only $39,950. Comrorta hle,
custom built hOme will) mi n-
imum yard care, cozy patio
k !iecludi'd pool. Friendly
Jiving room "'1th fireplace,
I 11. r g e kitchen, oversized
bedrooms (master "'it h
drt's!ing room), t"'o baths.
This "''on"t last long • Hur-
ry!. 437 SEAfVARD RD ..
C.D.M. Open Daily 1:00 lo
5 :0~.
'Grange Vista
PROPERTIES
Formf'rly La.Botdt R.E.
220 E. 17th St., C.M.
CALL 646-055.5
Evenings Call • 64~83
I• . LUSK BUILT IT HOPE GERRIE RLTY. boaut homo. $79,500. NO
Tht'n consider this 4 bedroom SQUEEKY CLEAN Eutblutf with a view. Feel 83.l Dover Dr., N.B. LEASEllOLD. J t' s ex-
?eau!y. Lush ~ha':'. carpet· P.fove right in to this immac· outskle, inlid~. 3 BR., par-645..f400 645-3320 quilite. 0pm hse. daily -
ing, Indirect lighting, dra-ulate 3 BR Mesa Verde quet firs. She'll love the From ''Christmas Neckties" Bryant Wiest Rltr. fi75....2723:
ma.tic entry with Iron gates, home. Beauti!UI low main-kitchen! Priced for quick to out.grown Levis_ YoU can 64&-5538 early AM or EVE.
front courtyanl. and ru~al 1enanct landscaping & walk sale, Call now! turn "traah to ca.sh" in a Put a Uttle "lrot' in your
•tmol !~~~· ~thst cf all its to shopping. Low dawn rnA --•GEM-DAILY PILOT claMl.fied ad Levit • sell tmse baubles
on Y -'·'""' 1t.•1 an a.ssum-&: VA tenn1. Offerrd at all 642-5678 11.ble loan. Call 54&-2313 to s29.950. for details call 1610 W. Cout Hwy._ N.8 . -c for "buck.a.". Can Ous111ed
see, 540-llSl (Open Eves) REALTORS 642-4623 We'll help you. ldl! 641-5678 642-5678.
-o'THEREAL
\'.'\.. ESTATERS
· OP~N U~l,•L ~ P.J 1
FHA YA TERMS HOUSE PINCHING? • Sp,.ad oot in thi• 5 b«h-oom
Sunken hvlng room, all elec-two-story. On corner Jot .
ttlc bu!lt-tn kitchen, block Just llA yell.J'S cld. Let ua
wall, hN':'Y 1hake roof &:. show you how easy it ts
cement drive are Just some to itep up?
of . the qua!!ty featurn of Full Price $38,000
th1~ 1parkhng 3 ~m. CAPISTRANO y ALLEY
famlly room home. Offt'r1ng REALTY
S@~~1J.-.!&£~Se
The Puzzle with the Built-In Chuckle
I SlDTAS I I I I I 1 I
aJJ tenns at $28.SOO. Call 31501 Camino Capistrano
BA YCREST ~~ <o,., E""' ---•~_tu< ____ 1
-CAPE COD ' I * * * * * I PYNOH I 'i· 1 I' I I' I .
4 ~m. dinu11 room 1~AGI home. Pttfect setting for ~ M llflft Fi>cer 1.1.~Jl!r 3 BR, 2 BA, $100
provtnc1a\ or antique turn-~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1 total down. chtaper thi.n · hi S.52 !l» I! rent at $305 per mo. ~ "'· · · Mother-in-Law's Roberts Re.i Em<e
PETE BARRETT Hideaway 962-5Sll
tee this 5 bedrooms, poot POOL, 4 BED HOME
l .... ..,...c....,u _o .,..1 ..,.L -1j !
I I I I j On,e fish in o ieafood res ..
touront to c notlier: ,.It feels
arr
REALTY
'
You'll be delighted whtn )'O'J WET LUXURY
JIOS WISTCll" "~ homo f.atunnr fmcmal dlo-$29,500 FULL Pll!CE
BAYFRONT APTS. HIW,OU IUCH ~ 1,,. ""'· .. ,. ... 1. rumpus w·alker & Lee 1.,,...,...,.,...,..,,,.. .... .,, I 642·5200 '-"" room, 3 posh balh areas .l
V\1ta Del Lido. Pier &: allP I" '"""'"'l'""'""'""'""'""'"" I mo5t important, M1para1ed
')llco<il~rbc ':Rcatir
546-5990
Ir """'c'""I"'L,_,C_O,__,A,__,, good lo ba ~.'.'.';~-:-ogoin.•
~...,,,...._ -.
1
-.,
1
,,...,
1
..,7,...,-t O Compt.fl th• thvckle qvoted
by lill1n; Tn !he mining words L. _..._....__,__,_..__,_ you develop lrom irep No, 3 b1low,
'
evail•blti. From $31.500. Sell "l\-fake Room For Dad· livlna.quarten for Dear Old ~a.Hors
pr lease. d Y '' •. c I ea n out the BAYCREsr, by owner. lgt! 3 .Mom. Full price $34.lnl. All ~-,-,.-,5'0-·..,51,.40..,......,,.-=
Ge o rge Willh11m50n garage .. your trash t~ CASH BR, 21~ B·ir; compl ~ec. Tt'rms? S40·85M The faste1t draw in thl!'
. REALTOR with a DAILY PILOT 151.000. M•Y tradt. 613-7784. SHERWeeD REAL TY w .. 1 ... a O.Uy Pilot SCRA ... LITS ANSWERS IN DIME·A·UNI· •
._ _______ _,,~54::::8-:.:6::5:.:70:_ __ .:64::::5::.·1::5.:64:1 Cla11tl~ ad. ·-DAILt PILOT tor action! 18964 Brookhurat, F.V. Cl.~•::•::•lti:o"ed::..;Ad""".=61=\l--=56-'-18-'-.-------~lft"~--------------~·----
t .
2629 Harbor. C.~f.
•
I
' . •• •
TutM'll~-No~mber21),~1~9~7~1 ~~~~~~~-~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~f~~~~~~~~~i":~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ _,.... I~ I _..... I~[ _..... ·I~ I _,.,.. I~ I ~~:'' I~ ~.~:~:'' ..... ,., I • ~~~/ ~;;;;;;;~:1~~~~~~1 ~~~1
DON'T PINCH Ge_nerel
-.. S-PA-Nl-SH fiX-ERS-" liiiiiiiiiiii
BEACH -$25,500
Hunt.lngton 8eac., Me1t Verde Income Prop9rty" 16' Income Propeirtv 166 Mortgt g11, iiiii~!!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!/sp;;Ci(iiJs"'R;~;ik";;:J::j';;; ---Tru1t D•ed• sr,A~~s .~':;';!~.' :'\;~"~ 9 GARDEN TYPE BUNGALOW APTS.
BA. ~e tam rm & Uv rm, 4 t b "Id" Shale f · nlct land!ICaplng. $4'1,500. separa e u1 mgs. e roo s. Pr1vate-
260
TRUSf OE~OS WANTED
Cash for 2nd TO
YOURSELF
(You 're Not Dreaming)
But You Can
PINCH YOUR
PENNIES
with a
PILOT
' •
PENNY PINCHER
Classified Ad
3 LINES
2 TIM·ES
Any . Item Priced
$50. or Less
Clf more then ont Item, t he combl,,td to t1I
unnot e xcHd $50.)
642-5678
J UST U STEDt NH<t some
elbow grea&e. 3 Bl'drm1, 2
~· Family rm. B!:am ceU·
inaz. Adobe tile rool. Only
• 2 yrs. old. Near the beach.
Low dn. Only $25.SQO. Bet-
ter hWT)' • Call (714) ~-5585
HIRlST E OLSO., ,.,,
PEAlrORS •
19131 Brookhurst Ave.
S42-73tW. patios. No sta
5
irs. ~1 1 s~?ry bungalows. 2 &
Newpor t Bt•cti a_ bedrooms_. ome av~ 1a;p_taces . .The type of buildings that attract and hold good tenf
10% DOWN ants. Income $16,740 yr. $145,000. Excellen\
BY OWNER, Immaculate 4 financing.
BR, 2~ Ba, charming fam\ ''Our 26th Y1ar1'
uy home, westclut area. WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
n@wlydecorated, 1850sq. fl., 2111 S J ' H iii frplc, patio, xlnt crptg, Near an oequ1n 1 Road
schools I sl_'JOppini. S-13,000 . t:fEWPORT CENTER 644.4910
•• 613--0140 ••
FOR-u.lt.':; 3 TD's, total 1L-
n1ouf11 SS, 160. 1 or all. Dls-
counl. 673.-6756.
' ...._-_, _ ... _ ... _._,\ I~
Hou1e1 Furnl1htd 300 owner wfu cilrry Znci. Income Prope rty 166 Mountain, Desert,
&15-5740. Resort 174 Ba lboa Island HARBOR VIEW H0'1E INNOVATIVE _;,.;... ___ _;;.,;.
Popular Palerlno r.1odel-A 2 INVESTMENTS
Yosemite, Oakhurst,
Bass Lake Huntington Bea('h
EASTBLUFF
BEST BUY
\Vhere can you get 4 bdrm. &.
family rm. with some view,
in the best achool atta for
$4g,rJO? Vacant &-sparkling
clean.
"HANDY MAN SPECIAL"
\Vhat a bargain ... Just a litllt; paint will
freshen up this doll house. 3 bedrooms and
a family room, how can you miss at $25 .800.
All terms avail abJe . Call us today 847-6010 or
842·2535.
Story, 4 br; 3 ba w/dlx 2 1uper deluxe 4-pll'xea: In
w/w crpt, v.-etbar. 2 frplc's, C.osta Mesa. Invest In one or
prof. lridscpng, sprnklrs, both. Floor to celling fire-
ett'. Like new-Mu s T pl11.ce in 3 bedroom owner1
SELL-Will Ta.ke 2nd. BY unit. Cl05e to everything ln-
0\VNERS, 67~. duding beach. A 1 k I n & , __________ , $74,500.
LIDO Sands leasehOld. 4 Br. * CALL 847-8507 *
beach house. $32.500. See
Weekends only. 551.2 River
Ave. 64Z-2178 owner.
YRLY Cult furn 2 Br hol.lsf".
11•/bar. frplc. Sl!IO. Call
days, li7>a706.
Beaut 4 BR. 3 BA, air conq. Bc.lboe Peninsul.1
Lodge on 2~i acres. Priced
below market. $75,000. Also HOJ\1E'i &. Charming 2 &: 4 Br hse. walled Jn p&tio, nt 40 acres at SlOO,<XlO suitable • 11. a t e r . u n t \ J 6 / 1 5 ,
for ranch or .mobile park. 2
Col 13:2-13-5316. ored slides avail !or ---"--------I _.......
Cold\Y811, Banker
~
833-0700 644-2430
WAIT •• • • • • • •
'Til You See This!
\VArm, cneenul. l!nle 2 BR
home, lge ba:c:k yard "''
shade trtts in bolh front &
rear. Zoll@(f R-4. A Stt'al I t
$21.500. Get this~ Only $1500
down.
REALTY 642-8400
Balltoe Island
OPEN SAT/SUN. 1.5
312 GRAND CANAL
!\e11• homto !.· apt. pills pier
$129".500
OPEN SUN. 1.5
201 NO . BAYFRONT
Just rtke owning 2 horn!:'!. J
BR., 3 barh luxury home
1vith a charming sep. cot-
tage 11ith 2 bdrms .. frplc.
& patio. $145,000.
WILLIAM WINTON
Real E sta ft
229 '.\larini-BaJboa Islar.d
675.3331
DUPLEX FOR SALE By
O"'·ntor. Sttops to bay &
beach. ~1ake offer . Ph alt 6
p.m. 5-l(}.2676.
Balboa Peninsula
ON the Polnl. 4 BR. 3 Ba,
2 frp!cs, bltns. by O\\'fK'r,
7% loa n avail. S57,j()j).
67>6666
Collegt Park --LOOKS like new modl'l. 3
BR. 2 BA. new cpts, drapes,
pain!. Lge yd, Ov.·nc-r.
S.Kl-9593.
Corona de l Mar
O\VNER needs buyer fur this
NDrPORT HEIGIITS va-
C'anl home. Drive by :l39 San
Bernardino & call to see in-
sidf". 646-8811 Bkr.
EAST51DE ideal fa m i l y
home. 3 BR. 13' BA .. fam
rm. 1",ar st'hools, quiet cul·
de-ir.ae. All eltt kit .. frplc.
S26.900. Q\\·ner, ~7966.
$1000. TOTAL DOWN
Eastside 3 BR. new <'Pt!. nt'w
paint, xtra lge lot, :>40-7823
Pa,yts sno. mo.
2 BR, large gar, fenced yd,
close to schoOls & shop-
ping. $16.000. 272 Costa
r.tt<sa St. 646-9136.
5 BR . BAR HARBOR
l 11ty, very sh11rp $33,700. Bkr
546· n J9: MS.3412.
East Bluff
BY owner Newport Bch con-
do. J BR. 2 BA, l level, 2
palios, nr pool. Lo\\'e!!l
assoc. dues. Only $32.950.
\Vii i carry 2nr!. 2411 Vista
Hoi::ar. 644-5793.
Fountain Va lley -LARGE 5 Br .. 2 Ba, very
clean home in quiet area.
1".V. schools & shppng cntr.
Sell VA, nlA, Conv. Under
C'Urr. mkt price. DEAN
REALTY 5.1&-7527. ,
Huntington Beach
Follow The See Breezes
To This One
4 hedrooms. 21,~ baths. A
gr,,~t 2 story home "'i fh con-
\•en1en! boat or camper s1nr-
a ~. Nrar the ocean k new
park. $35.990.
REAL ESTATE BY
McVAY
*MOVE RIGHT IN* 893-8533 Sharp 2 &: convert. den, splil· /iiiiiiiiii..0.0.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiii
Jc-vel. 2 S!all &howers, 2
frp!cs .. shake roof, patio. $21,950
Terrific viP111 ol the canyon Exceptionally clean :1 BR 2
& OCPan. fmmed. pogsess. BA 11ome wflrg shady trees
Only S53.5QO. & nice Jdscpg. w/$2.200. dn.
MORGAN REAL TY mo pymts of $220. incl tax-
673-6642 67.S.6459 ('S. All mod bltin app\'i;, F'A
BY O\\'NER: C 0 r 0 n 8 h1 , <!bl gar. patio. ft-need.
Highlands 2 Story, 4 Br, 2 ,,
ha, fam . rm. Huge lot. 1llage Real Estate
=ss-'~·soo_.,.. c~a1_1_s_1;._26_s_2. __ 1 ''2-4471 1 :::: J 546-11 Ol
Costa M esa
POOL + RUMPUS
ROOM
Plus 4 ber!moms. 2 baths.
bu1lr·in ki!Chf'n, nf'IV shag
carf)f'l1ng, 2 fireplaces. Ov-
r r 1iOO &q. ft. rumpu.~ room
includes \\'et ha.r. No qualify.
1n11:. no loan fees -just take
nvl'r subject to r:xisting GI
Loan O\\•rJl:r 11•11[ consider
$1.000 do\\'11. IM:-OfEDIATE
OCCUPANCY.
Walker & Lee
Rl'alrors
2i!l0 HarlXlr Bh·d. 11.t AdRms
.w.;_~~!lt Open ·r11 9 P:-01
OLYMPIC POOL.
MESA VERDE
,Just rrrluCf'rl $,'t'i.':iO. One or
th,. mos1 hfoaurlful 4 hdrm
home-5 -,.!1armin5! rlu11ng
mom • 1-'lrt:l' mr nrr lflt rl"·
tall,.rl lanrl5r'illlf' • no n1111n·
1rMncp hack .varrl • h,.a1·y
«hi.kc rnor. SHU'l:.O • SU B-:.nr TER.\fs;, fllfi.7171
O\\'NER !\IOVING -l lust
!tll deluxt' <'IJS!om 2 BR
plu~ drn home on Jr11. Mr·
ner lot. Sha kr iwl. sh111:
('tJl\MI!. /..· hus:::P moms. l'\r.
Harhr!r H1th oil Irvinp A\'t .
646-$11 hkr.
0\VNER ILL A-mu~t !lf'll ;,
!"paralt' hr!mrs on filhc:ll\'1
lot. Onr J BR I.· fn11r 2 BR
IN'C0;'.1E S711l \IONTH.
?-.1akl' nUrr 6" 11 Gj\R.
3 BEDRQO;\JS. 2 Ba th, n"ar
Irvine k 2f'l1h. S36.~i00
Ch\·ner &12-7892
COLLEGE P k .l RR. 2 BA,
~w <'-rp1, rtrps, h1111:r yl'i.
2J9i'i ColJPitl' Dr l..l(l-'ll!ll
Tht f11.1trst dritw 1n ihr \\'Mj
.. a DllUy Pilot C1Asslf1 l'd
Ad. 642-5678
A FIXER UPPER
FOR CLEVER YOU I
4 bedrooms, 2 baths. needs
\Wlrk. A buy at $27,500.
REAL ES TATE BY
McVAY
545-0458
MONEY?
You don't need· it to ht' able
to movt' into !hill l bedroom.
11)1, bath, a.JI modern home.
Asking $26.900 \l'ith GI no
do"'n ferms! 5't0-8.'i.\";
SHERWeeD REAL TY
18964 Brookhurst, F.V.
•
~D MOVE in For the Holidays. 4 \_ --. .;.;, .. (
BR + Pool. Custom Home ~
8 e a:u, t , r u r n i s h e d .1 _,'""°'~"°"'"--~--~
R .. ., .. b•o.o woer. 3.32 Acres Comm'I 64&-8.198 Of 642-9165.
WANTED Adjacent to Orangf! Couo!y
Bren Harbor View 4 or S Br Plaza, Chapman & Brook-
home, Principals. 642-6657 hurst, Garden Grove, 10101
WALK TO BEACH LO\V Cost Home Owners Chapman. 1-44.000 fiQ ff va-
B!!:auti ful Spanish h11clcnds Insurance". Krumpholz & cant. ground lse or !rade for
only 2 yeal'!I old, 1A mile McKenna. 644-8TI2. income property. !\1r. Rog-f~m the beach. Large pa. 3 Br. 2 Ba. 40, lot, Must srtl. ers. (Zl31 357-1111 . ext 2S8
I.Jo a~a plus room for poo!· $S3 <XlO. U::i do\\'n. 673-TI&;, or !2131 6!J.-l-1313, eves.
Crrauvely dtt'ol'iltf'rl. 1h1s ' PREPAID INT $44 800 s~arp honi:e has built -. in Newport Heights $10.000 c:a.m wll[ buy b~and
kitchen, big Spanish fn-.!-rwiv Deluxe 26 Units at
pla<'e. and oversized double SPECIALS $330 000,
'"'"'" Only 126.500 •od o" TR.I HARBOR land you own. Won't Jut -
call 4 BDru.1. 2 BA. Bright &,. REALTORS
W I k & L cheery. Large lot. Ne a r 400 E. 17th, C.'.\f. a er ee Nowport Hts ....... '30.500 •1•= "'·"· .. ,.,..1
4 BDRM. 2 BA. Family rm. 7 HOUSES
Real!ors In Nl'\vport H!!i .... S28,500 on lar.l{l' 115'XM3' lot. F ive
279o _Ha~r Blvd; ~! Ad ams J BDRM: .2 BA., 3 s::a~ge~: 2 bedroom!! & l\l'o l lx>d~~
545-0463 O~n. hi 9 PM Condom1n1um \\/pool. ' e\\ units. Close to shopp1nc:.
$19,950 IS THE port Beach ......... SJI.OOO Nrver a vacancy. $875. mo.
PRICE J BDRM. 2~ BA. Chlf Dr. lncnmc.
f b. 1 1 3 '-d Newport Hts ........ S33.500 $l! 500 or I Is vt'.'ry OVC' y '"' · '
room. 2 bath home. The Joa n CALL , 0 tli 4tli•2 414 PERRON REAL Ti' &12-tnl
is high enough tha! you qan ~ ... ~ 41.-. 10 UNITS
assumr with payments of ~ Eastsid .. Costa J\1~11 •"'•' 1160 b h" b · REALTY .. , per monl . w 1c in-Near Ntwport Po1 1 orrlc t rental area. Seven 3-bed-
clude11 11.l.I. Modern built-ins, CHARMING 3 BR home. rooms and three 2·bedrooms.
deep pile caf1X'ts, also .__ 1 / d b · k AU separale uni!s "'ilh lots matching drapes Double ...,am c ng w use ric .
· frplc fam rm xtra Ji::e Jo! of space. Sho\\'S a. fantastic:
garagclk!o boot!&Call • beaui. · kept ·· yrl. l~ma~ return with in':°me ol Sl.400 Wa er Lee conn. $33,9.i(). 6.t~5322. ii.:n~~ ~ubm1t on down or
R .. Uoe> Newport Shores Walker & Le-e 279o Harbor Blvd. I'll Adams SPECIALISTS in home sale
545-M65 Open 'Iii 9 P~f 1r; rental&. Newport Shore!). Reallors
SELLING Cay"'·ood Realty MS-1290 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Ada.ms
YOUR HOME?
Free appraisal -\l.'e buy
equities. Personal aUention.
25 yrs. experienct'.
COLLINS &: \YATI'S
-REALTORS -
962-5523
FOR Sale by 0\\'ntr 4 BR, 3
San Clement•
BY Owner, 3 BR, 2 Ba, o.
view. 403 "':. Ave. San J uan.
$41.900. Tc-rms. 544--42!14.
Senta Ana Heights -OWNER SAYS
full baths, all schmls close, ''SELL''!!!
~ mi. 9/1{) Mil~ from Sharp 3 bedroom on lar£e
beach. all rnnm5 large. lot. Assume 7~~'7.. VA Joan.
Open house this weekend. Tol a\ paym1.~ $186. month.
21761 Bu5hard, H.B. 962-8612 _Price reduced io $25.500.
Irvin• Ca\J now !or details.
-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I FULLER REALTY -546-0814 Anytime
IT 'S A BEAUTY
5-1~9451 or 545-0465
Open 'til 9 PM
NEED 11 UNITS
BY TAX TIME?
Convenient Easl!!i<le Cosla
l\T~a lfX'1tlinn. 1 blk. rrom
Nrit. B tvri. 8-1 Bd, 2·2 Bri &
1·3 Bd. Thl:'SP '>''ell ma intain·
t>d un its havt! huilt-lns & PB·
!JOl!. II with lircplacrs. Ex-
cellrnt rerr1al reC'Orrl also
good terms ::1 1•ailahle.
Price $175,000
lnVt's!n1cnt Div.
546-1600
private showing. Corona del Mir
0\VNER 545-5130 --------Luxury Beach Home
FOR RENT cabin i n u~e or club &-boats
\Vrightwood. N~ar Holiday ** 67?,.-1306 **
Hill I: Table Mt. Sleeps 7. Laguna Beach
Rent by week or weekend . ........._..,_ •. ______ I
54!>-7645 OCEAN sid<', vie"" slrps to
Real Estate Wanted 184 beach, 2 BR. 2 BA .. lrg.
beaut. fam. rm., w/rrprc:.
CASH ONLY ViC"w liv. r m w/frplc,
For your Jot Jn Newport or w11sh£'?'/dryC'r, dshwsh r .
Costa Mesa. must be zoner! Avail tu July 1. $325.
for duplex or trip\~ • also 494--41 •17.
older homes that can be Newport Beath
tom 00\\•n for neW construe:.
lion. e \\'ANTED
Will lease back until you can nice family wants winter
find new home. State loca-rental, no pe'ls. 642--6657
tion, lot size, price & phone Houses Unfurn. 305
number
Act last ·as our cash budget General
Is limi'~ to 10 purchases ~·~~~~ii~iiil only. = •
\Vrlre P .O. Box 1515, New.
port Beach.
REALTORS
Cash for yo\Jl' clients • need
)::ind or older home \Vi\h R-2
or R-3 zoni ng. \Ve have
builders 1vafting -quick cs-
crmvs. CaU 642-4000 ask for
George Maschmeyer.
Bu s iness
Opportunity
I ~
200
D istributors Ne eded
Lim i ted numhl'r of
DISTRlBUTORSHtPS no"''
available in your area. Ne'\\'
~fulti-Million Dollar ad-
vertised Pudding & Fruit
Cups, so ld th r ough
Automatic Ml"rchandisers.
lf quallficd, you \\'ill bP pro-
vided wi1h all equipme"tll
anrl location~. and be train-
ed in all phases of this
hi11:h!y lucrarive businr'ss
loo 11elling\. You must be
N'liable, have a good car
and 4 hours a week spare
time, and be able io make
an immediate investmenl of
$2100.00 (secured!. Send
name, address and phone
numbe r to: New p ort
l ntPrnationaJ Distributing
Company. 3700 Newpo r t
Blvd ., Ne"'1>0rt Be a ch ,
C11hC.. 92660. De-pt. No. 30A.
* New Lis!ing *
-~1ARINE RAD10-
T0 BUY OR I
SELL A BUSINESS
HOL LAND BUS.
SALES
"~ Broker \\'ith Empathy"
!TI6 Orange Ave., C.M.
6'1:1-1170 ~(I.~ ev ...
RECREATIONAL equip. r.1rg.
& Sales Corp. High profit.
rai. prnrl. Proprietary ilem.
Nreri operaling c:api!al in
exchange ror contro!hng
s!ock. Ph. 17141 644-1.l!ll.
ESTBL'D Int. Des i.qn
Rusine~s. Nc-1l'por1 BC'ach
are11. (21.1) 339-1576 aftl'r 6
pn1.
Loan 240
RENTAL FINDERS
4l$ W. lttll, COSTA MISA
Houses * Apts. * 645-4111 * ;i,,,~.,.~frtt to LruwUorh
-~'U RNISJIED--
$81) Util 's Pd. nlre bach at
bch w/gar. Avail yrly.
$100 Uril's Pd, Laruna. Lrg
hach "''/loll &: patio. 2 b!ks
ocean.
-UNFURNISHED--
$90 1 Br. all uli!'l! pd, stoV!,
refr1g, Av11i1 now.
l\lini ranch. t br cottage near
f>N!11n, garden & chickens.
$113.
$13:> 2 Br home w/lr.I{ le:nced
yd for children. Hurry!
$160 E-sidC". Spacious J br w/
gar ,!;; fenced yd.
$170 3 Br homP, !rplr. stove:,
refrig, Cf'Jll/dr]'!!i;, children/
pc1s 01\. f<'nc:ed yd.
BEACON RENTAL
Finders * 645-01 ll
LONG HAIRS
Jnron1plclf' :l Br. home in the
canyon on 2 acrt's. Keep
kids, J)C'!s, horses. fam 1lic-s,
singlrs or long hairs. $!:;().
776-71".0 Agt.
FOR ren! 3 bedroom -
available now. Carpets --
drapes, yard . Pers and
children 0 .K. SI i5. ~
-RC"aJ!or.
2 BR. newly pa.in te:i, refs.
No pels. Baby OK. Avail
Dtc. 1st $135 + util.
548--4767.
FOR rE'llt -3 hed room, 1
ba!h, largr yard, children
0 .K. $160. 546-M
Rcal lo r.
FOR RC'nt 3 brdroom, 2 bath,
hLI1l1.1n~ -r xcel!enl con·
rlitinn, & r1r1ghborhood. $285.
Sharp!~ i"!!6-l!fi60 -Rral1or.
FOR Rent $1.15. 2 bedroom,
private Arr:;i -"'On'1 lll~I.
516-l!fifi(l -Rc-altor
Sl l1\RP 4 Br & fa m. Quiel
c:ul·dc-s11r. ST.>5. ,\vAi l 12/\.
No lei'. Bl<T :'14()...1151.
Corona dt l Mar
L11l4
StfT.11 ri":l
ocT. 12~l~
'·'·~· b>M-1• :¢.
.. , ••
TUHU1,-Novtmbtr 2:J\-197l---
l~I _.,._ 1~1~! ;;;-;;-;;-~l~~l I ............ -_ )[t] I Apo,, ..... 1 ...... 1~! f .,.,,, ..... 1 ......
"305 Townhou,. Unhlno. S35 A,o'--t-•._F.,.u_r_n. ____ *-ll :Apt..._._u_n1_,.""',...,.·,----l65-Apt. Unfur n. 365 Apt. Unfurn. MS Apta.,
l'um • .,. Unlum. 211 365 Apt. Unfurn.
Newport le•ch Coit• Mei• Corona del Mar Coit• Mew
BRAND NEW HARBOR LEASE WITH OPTION *All Facing Pool* LOVELY LGE 1 BR. qui1t. PRIVATE SUNDECK ---fA_l_R_W_A_Y __
VIEW HOAtE. 3 Bedroom, $350. Month. ~ Bdrm., 2 story 3 BR., 2\l b.a,, 2 car iarat;e Adults. No pets. Ga.rqt. 2 BR., 2 bllhl; UP1talrs du·
family room, 2 h•tl\I. Com. with pool. S500. Down. 3 BR~ ba., 3 car garare 2~ Elden,~646.-2768. plex, carpeted A. draped.
munlty pool, courlB, etc. 138.000. Katclla. M7-fi061. REAL·1uR 5(8.fi966 NEWLY--rtd~ated-2-Br .. EJl(!i:-'larece. Comp, bh ~J. YltLA APJS.
$395. per monlh.. Broker. $165 MO. 2 BR,_ 2---.BA. Townhou.ae,-uliJ. Included. Adults only ~u~ lndacpB1h 101V. ~hid.
644-7270. To~·nhouse, washer, dryer, Furn. o r Unfurn. 340 $1JO. 64~2039. er mon . )'C!lr y, 2 & 3 BR't
RU~IC 3 becJroom & den, 2 refrli· Vacant 536-9153 e LARGE l BR S13.'i 1 5 •11.,0IO o PriV•~ patio. pool.· lnd.iv.
bath, bit-Ins, J I replace, days, 53&-1222 eves, , L•gun• Beach • ROOMY' 2 BR SlM W "*"''J1111J Cl. & lat.indry fac.
\valk to town. A,1t1 . 67:>-4930. 3 BR, 2 BA.. paneled lwl'Ulhe, MODERN dclu'xe 2 story, Adlts. 642-2181, 673--0507 • Near Oranre Co, Airport •
Co1ttj Me1a Irplc, nc. Schls, shops. view apt. 2 br, lY. ba. 1un 2 br furn $155. 1 Br unfurn • BAYPORT UC!. AdullJI only. e SVDCE"J' SAVER 2 Br. ~~i~~an. 1· By owner. deck, -blk ta bch, ahpg. Sl~utU pd . Adults, no pet1. An e BAYVIEW Mar~:.~:ch>:: !;~·3-A
d kl Lat, $250. Adults. Rt.I. 820 Center. 642-5848. nouncing the quiet opf!'llinit 546-Ql.5 l'LA ~nt:is&.•'45.'J~ 3 B_R Condo, 1'11 BA, pools. 494-9982. Dan• Point of Bayport Apts. , . 101·
clubhouu>, patio, garage Duplexes Unfurn. 150 ---------1 Adults: And ltlf! sli&htly legs BAY MEADOW APTS. e !\fORE ROOM 3 Br, 2 Ba, w/storage, nr the beach. * SINGLE. TV-POOL. Pets qult't opening of Ba_yvie "'' Beam ceil~s. pa.Ml.in&,
Incd yrd .. crp1 5, dms, kids/ 962--0986 a.fl 5 pm. Coit• Me1a ok. DANA l't1ARINA INN, Aps. lor fam Oies. prlv patio!'!, recreation la-
Huntington Beach
ON BEACH!
2 BR Unfum Fl'. S230/mo.
Furniture Available
CarpetM!ra pe,.sdl1hwuhtr
healed pool-aaunu-t~ls
tte roon1-0eean views
patlo.!!·ample parkin&
Security ruards.
HUNTINGTON
PACIFIC
7U OCEAN AVE., H.B.
(714) 536-1487
Ole open lO a.m..fi pm Dally
WlLLTAhf \VALTERS CXl .
Newport ... ch Ne rt -
>' BRAND NEW >' ~==~==ii 20432 Santa Ana Ave {Acrog OAKWOOD GAlltDIEN
from S.A. CoUntry Cluh) Apartments 1
SpacioUJt 2 BR unlts. ~· ~l. <-Rt'IOl"t Uvlna for--llintle A
J.1REPLACES. frlv patios, Married AdultJ)
loads Qf . close11. J-Iea~ed N'~port Beacb
Pool. A d . I t s. Mana.qr 16th at Irvine
979-1268. • \ 660000 or 6'2"'110
WESTCLtFF
CAPRI
170!'r-1738 WestcllU Dr
Adult Living . No Pets
Deluxe 1 & 2 BR. Pc;fl.
Ca.rporl. Dishwasher, Room1 40I
f'urn. Availablf'. 642·6214 SLEEPING room, priv. en·
San Clement e trance, prlv toilet. ~ per
pels. Sl70. Irvine 34111 Coast Hwy, D. Pt. Call (7141 ~ ci:itJes. All adults, no pets.
ALA Renta11 e 64S-3900 2 Bdrm. l~ bl. Garage Huntintton itiach l BEDROOM-NEWLY ._ 2 BR's FROM AS LOW
. 2 BR d-' heh . mo. Colt& Meu. 645-0878. , o:iuxe. nr , pr1v1~~~----~--1
NEW Shag cpl, 3 BR, ! BA, pat.io, ocean vu, !hag cpts/ QENTLEMAN room for rent
g_11r, c h 11 d rt' n Ip e I con-drps, lndry rm, gar, Adulta/ ln Colt& Meu. ~!ESA VERDE 3 BEDf!OO~t 3 BR., 2 bath.!, fumisht-d Carpets & DrlJ)el Bltins DECORATED. J. ;~!!591y/mo.
ho lh Sl65 54&-.3085 I BR. furii s 12;,/mo . F IREPLAC E . ~· .BaySt.,C.M. me \\' r in walking dis· Tun le.Ack .... •• ... S340 0 look" be 00 646-0013 11dered. 1 blk to 1tores. no pets, S180. mo, 221 La 979--0726
S1R5. Also 2 BR. f'urn S165. Paloma 492-7006, 492-9419. BEAUTIFUL VIEW. ~i bUc tance to &<:hools. f'A mlliet 3 BR, ~.,atrium •... S325 I BR. frplc, beams, pi1.1io, ver ing aut. garden GARAGE. $190,
only. Va_1=ant & ready a.I $265. 3 BR, 2'11 ba .. fani •. , . Sil~ w/\li!, util incl $148. 1 adult, fo~io t ~S Adulli;, no pe!1. * 548-5003 • Parl(,Llke Surrounding
per month. Call agPnt 3 BR, 2% ba, lam ...... S350 tl() pt'IS.' 642-8320. t I. AC1'05.~ from QUIET • nELUXE
7681 Ellis, Apt A. 847-1547 S•nta An• to OCEAN. $20/WK 1 Up.
or 847--0932. 2500 Seaview, CdM.
546-4141 '4 Bjt., 21,\ ba. tam .... $3j() 2 BDRM '''''' ,,.,. Y••d Lake Park. ~2692. S08UTH of highway Rharp 2 1·2 &: 3 BR API'S ' ' ' s·~LRG Mod-n I , BR. R, new drps. cpl, S\li'f!dish 2 BEDR00:\1, 2 Ba. 1 h, 4 B::.. 21,, baths, family room, Adulls only. Sl35. .u;>-""' f 1 f nd k 1-rv pi1.tkls * Hid Pools
I d b .11 . Tunle Rock •..••..• $3flO ~" •a~c wkdoy• al>•r 6 Cpts, drps, redt'c, nr ocean. rp c, 80 I water; su f!C ; Nr &hop'g * Adull:I only
BEACHWOOD APTS. CAN'T BE BEAT Guelf Homo Brand new 1·2·3 BR. 1,J blk
to BEACH~ Cpls, drps, bltn1,
frplt:. 125 16th SI., HB.
847-3951
415
carpes, t·a~"· u1 ·ins, WE HAVE OTiiERS _...., 218 Chicago. ~36-1506 , Immac. Private on rea~ 1ri M rt' • A ts
ne11r S.D .. Freeway k I Month Free Rent 847-5169 .. ot lot ovl-t garage11. $1!5 + a 1n1que p ~ H~rbor Blvd. :it.:roi"li"I lhP 3 BR, _2 Ba. $275. Sot8-l309 'L---.---,,-----I SlllO. deposit. 67~. tm ~..anta Ana Av~ Qf
strltt'I fl'om a park. $155 per aguna Beach :o=--~-~...c.---IMgr. Apt U3 646-55-12 2 &-J BR'i"I. S140 ·UP. PAtio, month, call aflm-6 p .m. Dana Point ' --·----2 BR., carp, drapes, range,
557_30R4. ~ · S125 MO. UP; $40 Wk., Bach. 1'£'frlg. Priv. patio~ ga'rl8t'· * * * pool, children. MORA KAI
DELUXE 2 BR, bE.'RuH!ul Util pd. Color TV. CN!'Scent Near BiR Corona. $225 Mo. NE\V J & 2 Sedrm. garden Apts, 188111 Mora Kai Ln., 14
CLEAN 3 BR, 2 Bath, (rplc, vie\P,', 1650 sq. rt .. 2 frplcs, Bay Bch. 494-250&, 615-4367. UniVersity Really 673-651() apattrnentii. with pool. blk E. nf Beach. 962-M!M.
hll-in1, dshwshr, cptii., lrg \\'elbar. 2tge sundeck8, liv. F'ROM 111,·. ADULTS DUPLEX l • 2 BR Apt• "SlNCE 1946" Newport Beach BEAUT. Untque 3 Br, 21'1 ba, "' · pAlio. Nr major shopping . 1st \VHtcrn Bank Bldg. rm & lge drn, S255. 547-1451. 7 _.,,,'707-:-:':o::-c:-.,-I frpl, beam «ll. bltns. Blk lo 2311 Elden Ave., C.~i. Nt1\li'. de1uxt!, private. Cpti,
S2li mo. lt'as!". Ca 11 u · . p •• • BRAND NEW e 64:'>-5780 drp.~. bhns, dishwi1shers. 54~1183 ft 4 30 niversity ar beach. 1285· 673-5548. WESTBAY ELDEN wknd•. a. : pm or Days 833-0101 Nights IV ] 2 BR, 2 BA apt.s w/ dish\\•r, LRG 2 510..., 2 BR 2 BA den * * * Sl45. & $175. 218 Knoxville, Ap1rtmt11t1 forRtnl huge dosetll . 1. •3• , ;,.JG-1633 • '. .PMV pa .'°· crpts, drpl & 2 c11r g11r. -New ' Vecant-Custom heated pool_, bllhard rm, Ja-S28!'/mo 544-3124 644-l040 NEWLY DECORATED $2:50. 3 BR, 2 BA, crptll
Costa Mesa
SINGLE STORY
South Sea Atmosphere PRJ. room avail w/tovin&
2 BR .• 2 BATH care for ambulatory male
Carpets & drpt or female. Balanced diet.
Air Conditioned MZ-9862 or ~2562 aft 6.
Private Patios Vacation Rent•ls 425
HEATED POOL
Plenty of Jawn . CABJN-Big Bear Lake, 3 Br,
Ca.rport &: Storairt!' 2 ba. Aval!. by wknd or .wk.
tflDDEN VILLAGE Reserve now for Ch rlstm:u.
2.iOo South Salta New Years or WI n I e r
Sant& Ana e 546-1525 Skiing. 644-1548. l=-~--~---~·I
Rent•I• to Share 430
Bllch., utils pd, $140. mo/mo l BR. "-den. l b& "·· $250 cuzzl & bbq's. ALL UTJJ... ~ · · Charming 1 BR. duplex, ne1>.• & drps. bltn1, dshwbr, lAUnd
Spac. 2 br, 2 fu ll ba, B/Q -4 BR., 2\~ baths · "1" S350 Apts. Furn. 360 ITIES PAID. See at 20102 2 Bedroom, newly decoralM, carp, drapes"-painr. Lovely rm, 2 car gar, close lo 3 Heated Paola NEWPORT attorney will
Spac. 3 br. 2 full ba, B/D 3 ·BR., 2 ba. homes · 260/32j Gener•I Bil"Ch St. (nr. Orange Coun-firt"Place, 1ara1e. $19 0. J.?ardf"n 1 u r r 0 u n ding 5 , SC'hooli;: It shop~. Ava il Dec. LArge Cluhhouse•etc."BBQ at\are home w/pool. Want 2
DEAN REALTY ;>.16-7~ 2 BR .. 1~1 ba. home ·• Sz;JO ty Airport, Ju~t W. ot Pal· 548-5003. Mature adults onJy. SIJO. 4!h. 67~036 (213). Child Care Centu over 35 mature business
SE I d h 11 1 iiiiiiiiiiii!iiii W.des Rd). M-557--4"u'. '" ·~. Gi'eat new 1 2 & 3 Bdrms """ 1125 + f!XP'""'· LEA 3 Br.; 2 Ba.., spac !iv ·· ·· e 11 A ~· ~ ...,,......,,,~ e CHEZ ORO APTS e • re C I Mtl --~===~--~ · From $149 645-1512 ~·•-••, or 1 rm. \\•/frplc, din rm .. tam · ._.! I OCEANFRONT \\1 I nt~ r, Ol • • HACIENDA 1123-t Atlanta. 1-2-3 BR'.!. SOUTH COAST 683-2410 ask ,~;Pickell.
rm., pool·table sz. playrm., Bold New Concept Various Loe. 1.2.3 brs. HARBOR Pool. Private dost>d gar. VILLAS
briclc BBQ. 15x35 Pool. $250-Adults only, no pets , 2-11 AVOCAOO STREET Waiihe-r/dryer. ~336 ll"" \\'ILL ahart' home w/M!>rk·
IJIJI) u.3,46 <"' '"t REAL TY "" 1'.facArthur Blvd. · d t CJ .. -.:.... or """...,.,.,.. FURNITURE R N A 673-8088. BRAND NEW Adult living . No petll LOVELY 1 Bdrm, extra lge 546-8923 Ing Wl)m.!ln or stu en . ose
ATTENTION OWNERS! U~i11::~~i;:~t~ne ( T l •ON BAY-NrLido. UNIQUE From $145, Dtshwa~her, ahag Deluxe 1 & 2 BR. Pool !iv rm. $125. Gas & wa!erl:s•o~u~t:;:h-;-L-a_g_u_n-.----·I to ocean. Call 673-1437 a.It
\Ve have ~nlal customers 1 BR wt priv. patio. Slip c11.l"J)f!'llng, walk·!n closets. Car;;P-", Dishwshr. Paid util. paid. Ctraning fee or pe1 de-l;;',·==~-,--,---,--,-.,-
for HOMES. APTS & CON· Laguna B.atch * ~1onth to r-.1onrh avail. Util paid. $195/mo F'tlrced air heat, extr11. large rnoM $150. 646-1204 posir. 546·7860 or 842·3902. OCEAN front newly decorat· WANTED employtd hep
DOS. Call DEAN REALTY, * 100% PurchaM! Option Yearly. 673-&t50. rooms. Beautifuliameroom, SPAC 2 & 3 Br 11.pL $140 up. WALK TO BEACH! ed, 2 br, 2 b·a. Laguna Roy-chick to 1hare with eame
Rent1'1 Div. ~7527. e Cozy Cottage 1 br, nr * Wide Selection-I Blk To Bch. Clean 1 br. heat~ pool BBQ's, enclos. Hld poof, play yd, cpt/drps, Lovely 1, 2 & 3 BR't. Cpls, ale 499--1015 or 838·3419. house yours or mine No
NEW 2 BR, 2 Ba. houst'. E· shol>S, furn, ulil incld. $1:i0. Style.COiors Child/pet ok. \Vlnter $l5S. ed garage.!,' quiet aurround· bltns, patio. Kids ok. drpll, bltnll, dwhr. 847-3957. Tustin child~n. 121.ll 592-2690.
Side C.M. Adultll only. S195 ALA Rentals e 645-3900 * 24 Hour Delivery mo. 646-4071 or 642-99i"i. in!!:ll & close to ~hopping. 2206 Collt'J.?e No. 5 642-70..15. BEACH BLUFF APTS
mo. 13th mo. rree. Phone 11,ft ;-,=-,-;-=-,----I Adult llvlnj.! no pets. 1994 Maple No. J 642-3813
:; or wknds. 646_8665. e Sparkling View t br; stovt, ~ l ~R. % blk from ocean EL CORDOVA APTS. 6 UNITS Spac. 2 Br 2 Ba. Pool. Pa-
WTLL share-furn aPt on
DOWNING APTS beach. Laguna Beach. Own
NORTH CORNER room & bath. 49446.lS N"frig. Oiild/l>f!I Sl ZiO. ~ ut1I pd. Sl75 mo 128 40lh '.MTI Charle St. 642.4470 tio. D/\V. 8231 Ell lft. 842·164-t
2 Br. §II.rage, patio, crpt~. ALA Rentals e 645-3900 rt( IL St. 11!12·-4936 Near Harbor & Harf\ilton St. UPST~ILLRS E11L50E.CTRIC 2 BR. Apt. Closed" gar, cpls,
rlrp5, S!OVf! & refrig. Qu iet OCEAN vu ... ,,. '" heh. ~ t'l"' I BR I t N h't d h'td I '' I k
WILLIAMS&. ROOMMATES 10 Aha.re apt
ALLIANCE on Balboa Island. Call ,. . urn, ap . o c 1 dren, DOWNSTAIRS $165. rp.!, c I ren sma pe o ,
tropical settin& for adult.! Jrplc, beamt'd ceiling, 2 br, 51i \\I, 191h, C~f 548·3481 no pr1s. 24051~ 16th $t. N.B. DELUXE CALL Manager aft 6 PM. $140/~IO. 847-2940. :~ij7~5 ~~k ~~~~~s. Sl!IO. l ba. partially furn, \\'asher, 2756 N. !\taln, SA :>47·0.114 Call 64&-4664. APARTMENTS '42·1131 CLOSE to BfoAch! 2 BR. cpt1,
SJ80. Adults Over 18 Janet, 64>-279.1 or 645-3482.
Upper 2 BR. 2 BA. YOUNG ma.le teachl!r needll Priv;ite deck-Fireplace:
S26(J. ye11rs Je11se. Mature ** BACHELOR APT Lido Air Conri · Frplc'1 -3 Swim-Nu 1 & BR fr $130 drps & stove, no pets. l'h.
CHRISTMAS DINNER adults. call 52~3254 <714) B•lboa liland Island-Watertr'ont. ming Pools -Health Spa· J 536-9!:142.
Jn yoor 3 Br home. Crpl/ af!er 6 pm. -. $165/mo. Call 673-8886. Tennis Cris . Came &r; Bil· US! complet · spacious Pll·
1200 sq feet-Pool roommate to •hare 2 Bnn
Soundproof-Cntr\ air con<! housi on B.al 11. 673.-3577.
Special! <ftvnrr 646-5301 LADY will share my
drps, patio, gar. sltJVt', J'C· L H II \VINTER rental. 3 Br, 2 ba. -----=----1 liard Room. lios, end garage , nr shop'J.!, STUDIO 2 Br, l \~ Ba, pri
frig._ .$2Jj, 646-6961, 646-1246. aguna i S S1ep lo the Bay. S300, in· • WANTED 1 BEDROOr>I Adlts only, no pets. 1970 yrd. l'ncl gar: nr p.!tl"k, f\tanager 16507 Alliance spaciou!I home with u.me. A=c::-1c-~-------I $18.j() Per week. ;,.tG-4-436 p s.,
C -clud•'"' ultllt•'••· nice family \\·ants winier FRO'l 11 .. , \Valtace St. 548-0804 646-2200 grade & hl schls. 546--0469. L E 2 BR . Private" H/F NE\\1 \VORLD · ~ BR. 2 BA, . .., " .,,,
I · \V inion Real Estate 6T..J--333! rental, "° pets. ~2""'657 MEDITERRANEA N $90-lBR dupt", 1 adult, non-2 Br 111 ha slurilO, encl Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Office Renf•I 440
]JOO, ww Cpl.I!. lg cov patio, pri\' palio, pool prh"il. ...-
gar. $115. Arinlt~. no pets. Volle.vball eris. Bltn~. rf'lrig \YJNTER rental, l Br, furn. NewPort Hei1ht1 VILLAGE smoker. Stv. refrig. drps. ga.r, frK:d yrd, $15(), mo.
642-4·122 or 646-Ji.30. & \\'/W crnt. $249/mo. Elec. bltn1. 1200 Inc. util No pet.!. Dep, Ref. 954 W. laund. fa cil. R42-4549 . • ,. CLEAN 1 or 2 Br. Adlts, no ... ,.,. H ~ Bt • CM ll>h 64. 3787 3 Br, 2 Ba, all elect kitchen,
nn beach. 308~' S. Bayfront
Balboa Island. Ca.ll 67~TI37
aft 5. Winier or yearly.
MEDICAL SUITE
.Mesa Verde area with
900 Sq. Fl. including 3
examing room. nune'1
atation. waiting. private
* 2 BR. ]"' No' A Ch'''' 962-~21 or 968-6976 Win!on Real Estate 675-1331 6'Wll 8' uvr vi... · · ' ~ Huntington Harbour pets, lg kit. SI2~Sl50. 2421 1714 1 5.'>7·8020 f\; E
SI4.l mo. No dogs. &12-2259 Lido l1le F-'URN apt, Balboa Island, E. 16th St NB 646-lBOI. o f SA Verde 2 BR upper, RENTAL FFICE New!y decor.: b!tns, ,_1,, $150. Brand nu 2 br, crpts, 6'1&-7011. 2 BR, $16.'l. mo incl. util. S OPEN JO A'l ~ 6 P'! ., d 1~542 J JI ll\1MACULATE 4 BR. 12111 l»-6l5.i an Clemente 1.,.iiiiiiiiillliiii"iii'iii v ,..ii"iiiiq drps, Atllls, no p e 11 , rr>s. rec!'m, . '" · P enton
3 BR, fam rm, crpti;, drps, 1500 month Call Perry Gill .-..--=--,--,----l 2--B---------1-G 0 540-7562, 54s.....~7. Ln 8-42-2834, 842-6447
FS, Plec range & oven, cov. 673-TOTI 675-2723 Balboa Peninsula R, ownr's apt, compl furn , e BEAlITJFUL R UNDS • I;,=_,-~-,-~~~--Laguna Beach
ciftlce with private
garden k Ample parlrinz
$3.i1 Including ,utilities patio, fnctl yrd, Ruttger.! B I w· RI N B -----------1 deluxe, nr bch. Priv sundcck SPANISH DECOR. C11s & MESA Vtrde 2 BR upper,
Dr. S235 635-6750 ryan tc~! tr., · · • S25 WK&. Up.· On Oce11n. lndry, shr cpla/drp~. Adul t.'! water pd. Car, poo J, bhns, garage, nr shopping. •OCEAN V!l"N. 250' to bch. l BDR.\f, lge living rm, I blk
lo ocean. close 10 shopping,
nrw!y crptrl. Ocean vil!'W.
673-4582, 2.'l.30 SeaView, .apt 4 BR. 2 RA, nf"w cpts & QUAINT 2
1
B
1
R, 1 .BA.
122
dhl Lovely B11ch · 1 BR -Rooms I no pets, util pd, Sl95. mo .. air-cond, Rrc hall. lr1dry. Adult.~. no pets, ,S l 4 5 . 1 & 2 Br. $17.'> Up. Pool. 217'.i
J.?arage, rp c, patio, 3. Maid &!rvice. Pool. Ulil. avail till July, 227 La Pal· l br-Slll up. 2 Br Sl.\5. !l48-6.l'i7, s. Cst. Hwy, 64~5t29,
freshly painted. 1..f'ase $225. mo. Adults, no pets, Pd. on1a, 492-1(()6, 492-0902. up, 160 \\', \VilsOn , C.M. 3 BR, 2 BA + den, $200. 2 528-6743. ~10. Call 54.'>-8424 (Open 968-7348. e C 11 67>8740 e A U See A 1 l 1,-~-,-,-------Evesl South Coast RPalton;. I ~~~~~-----a pt, nfurn. 365 m1n11grr, P . . BR. 2 BA $16.5. Bltns, CID, Lido l1le
,,
Lido Sanda YEARLY 1 br ht!auliful roncl \V/D hkup, P11tio, J:'&r, J81·
3 BR, 2 BA wilh hfla1ed pool. ----------1 watPr pd. adulrg, no pet~ General H Del Mar. 548-82711 ADULTS Dix 2 Br .. 1~1i Ba., THE EXCITING
S2li monlh . 646-6697 Dr 3 BR .. 2 ba ths: unturn. $1 50. 673-fi244 673-8224 "CABLES &: VICTORIAN" VILLA CORDOVA LARGE 3 ·BR, 2 BA, sep 2 Cllr 11:ar., blln~. refrig., PALM MESA APTS.
(21"1) 6M-2!J8J. ~~~~\r A~~A~;~i'bea~:i-3&50 DELUXE 2 BR furn. 8pt . 1h Lr~ 2 Br w/pri i&r· Adlts. e SUPER 2 BR e uni1, E. JRth SI. Clostd ~:p·g~P;~ 0~rf~e.N~~~~ MJNlITES TO NWPT. BCH. * * 3 BR Home. fncd ynl, blck to oce'lln 'ii blck to bay C p Is. d r p s , b I t n 1 . h1onth to :f.1onth. S110 gara.gC', a.du I I s $17~. 675--3967. r URN. OR UNFURN.
crpts. drps, bltns. $225. Me5a Verde ** 615-1351. IOUndprooll"l::l. Fncd y r ii Gas Helll·Cas Cooking. ~431. Unbl':lievablylara:e apts, huge NEWPORT Cl!NTl!R.
incl's util. &37·95 17. l----V-R---3---C d I M "'/patio. Wtr pd. Card~Jl('r Gas Hot \Vtr, ALL INCL. AVAlL Now_ 2 BR,!'< BA 2 BR. + den, 1* baths, frpl. pool, Jacuzzi, elect bltins, GROUND FLOOR MESA E DE mas!t'r orona e •r 1 2323 Eld A CM •• Adultll only. $190 Yellrly shag ct'Jltl, drps. sauna, , , . 2 BR, palio, g11r., S150 bedrooms, family room, 1----------main!. Cal b™n 1 k 5 en ve., · TO\VNHSE. Bltru, cprls, eic. Adults, no pets. 2.~ . 6.~ Fully improved.
3 BR, lrg rd, gar .. 1200 r· t t h ...,,.. MAGNIFICENT View, ~ blk 636--4120 646-0032 tlrps, ......... J. No pt t 1 , ASSOCIATED BROKERS SfN·GLES ......•. F-m ll:t.l Prime location for tenant ll'f!P ace, pus car"".1ng ~ oc••o. 1 Br, 119 •.• ,~. tt7 V 54,.081 .~ 673-"'' ~· 0-• Ev•• •• BKR/i\IANAGER 64~226 and dra.pes. Prestige area "' " ..... v uo ictoria ''C" Sis.5 LIVE in m1t.nager Wllnled . 12 ,,,,., """" ...,.,_~, 1 BEDRM ...... From $140 wanting identity, Excel.lent
3 BR House in court, g;i r, UKt a month. Bkr. no fee . itlCld util. 2500 Sea view, 2437 Orange Ave "C" Sli'i turn apll. Rental $150 inc. DELUXE 2 BR Bl Mesa Verde 2 BEDRM , ..... From S160 parking 60c ~r month ~
fencl"d. 2 kid, ok. E/side. 546-1720. cn;i.1 2619 S1nt11 Ana A\'' "I" S15.'i ut!I. $90 credit for misc Rt"frig. Orps Yo'/w ~pt. p~~~: 2 2 You're right. they're under· fnot.
11"'/ 0 .. ,_""' 2 BD"•M , 1210 A ., duties, morl! lor cleaning b 1 G Lnd BR, BA, Bltna. Crpls, priced! 1561 ~fpsa Dr. Wesley N. Taylar Co. m · ... .,.,. Newport Boach "'"' 11p • · v1.i . 1 a c. ar. ry rm . Drp.!, Delux. u psi 11.I rs. R 1 ,... ..... 1 1 llpl~. Adult couple on Y· 962 't80 (5 blks from Newport Blvd.) ea tors LGE clean ? Elr., Nt'\11 Cpt~. ~-s · 6"7976 •v•<. ~. · Children OK. S ! o r a g" 2 67:1-1~~ * .,.... 546-9860 111 San Joaquin Hills Rd. iar. Priv&C)'. Ba.by ok. No * ' · $155 NEW J BR LGE 2BR. Nu cpt & paint. Carporl, Avail Mon, Nl'l\'. N 1 C &!' '910 • Oceanfront 1 br. \·irw· 3 Bd * 2 Bath AMAZING Adul t Living ewpor entPr .,.. p!lll. $140. 1!145 Pomrina. ._., d k . . td e GUEST HOUSE $90 e • • rm Di~hw11sher Sl50. iv/pet 22nd, $135. W111er paid, CaU D "' w1,,uow, sun ec ur111nc . POOLSIDE . Beaut. 1 & 2 BR tum or unf E8K space available ...,...
E •• t Bluff ,120 · Bachelor. Quiet. Priv11te. No Living room with c1lhedral $160. 642-0844/968---4622. ;i4~20S2 11nyt1mf'. · ·1 pd >7• •-7 APARTMENT Apts. Seit clean. ovt'n.!, mo. Will provide furnltun ALA Rentals e '4S.3900 kitch. Uti · t1 ·~·"" • ceiling: Ii frplc. Stparate S200 MO. Immac. 3 BR. 21,~ DELUXE 2 & 3 BR, 2 Ba.. D/W lin 2 Brl displs shag at S.'i mo, Answering aervlee
• THE BLUFFS • Costa Mesa 2311 Eldin Ave., C.M. laundry &l'fla. Encl patto. BA., crpls. drps. Ava il. encl g11r $150. up. Rental cpls, drps, jacUZZ.i .r. 'u.una. avaUable. 305 No. E l
·I BR, 21,1 ba., f11n1ily kilC'h. • RARE TNDEED 2 Br, 645-5780 Swimming pool & chlldt1n'1 nnw. c1111 5.i7-7768. Ofr. 309j Mace Ave, baths. Huge pool. cam l n 0 R e a 1,• Sa n
I..iz"e. priv. patio. Clnt=.r-hy furn, child/Pf't tittl. inclit. SlO W k. Up Apts. * * * p!ayrround. Sm. SllO 1 BR h ri 546-1034. Merrimac Woodi Clemente. 492-«20 pool, llhoppinli!: . .'IChoob. V.<1 -$150. HAJtBOR GREENS ' OUM', en. h DESK -" bl -'.:"ant, clran & wai!!ng. S37j ALA Rentals e 645-3900 $1~$25 Wk. Motel Rma Back Bay 546._.353 jl'.trage, patitf, yard. Sh11re Newport Beac 42:i l\.1crrimac Way, C.1'.f. spa« av ... a e _,
Ptr month. BEACON Bay 2 Bdrm. 1 ba. $6 N ight & Up pool. Adl!i1, Quiet. 646-3764 PARK NEW~ORT * l BEDROOM * mo.~ Will provide furniture
1BroliC'r CO.(ln in\li lrrJ\ f'rp\. Yearly lease. '300 mo SUNNY ACRES MILLION S View, 2 Br, $210. NEW NEW 1. 2 & J BR. crptg, APARTMEN.TS l ~ Ba T~~nhouae con«pt. :~~~I~. ~~~t:.
EASTBLUFF REAL TY Mr. Robinson MOTEL bllns, cp:_s. drps, pool. DELUXE 2 BR. l BA. rJrp~. fncd ya.rd. 2515 Elden Bachelor, 1 or 2 Bedroom•, Beam «thng.!, ~xtra lrg 1 "-·na Beach.<"' .,0,
"'1133 A t • a Sl70/mo. 613-3690. GARDE", APARTMENT A 0 "1657 ~d t ti -" ~ ~ ~y im DAVIS REALTY &12.7000 This 1'1d worth S.'i on renl. '" ='='·-·~·"7~_~·~~=--I and Townhouses. Spa, poolJI, "" rms, enC' P1 0 ~rea·1,.;·;;=;;--~--~~·I
F V II 2375 N Bt d CM .. 19765 Balbo• lsl•nd 151 E. 21st St., C .M. :--: lion rm, sauna ba'ths, etc. MEDICAL 1uile or olfice. aUAtain a ey 3 NE""'PORT Shore,; homes Pt v ., .,., • --.. ~ * '46-86'6 * LCR. 1 bi. util J)d. $l2j. mo. tennis. From $170. Acms1 Adults. Our Sunday a.lier· Alr~nd .. 10 rooms. -42!! N.
4 BR. 2 Ba, lgr i;.-.-.,m-m-i,-g for rent. sm to S350. 1 BR. Furn. 2 Irr closers, YEARLY lease. Grand Adul1.~ ovrr 3;i, G-46-4292 · from Fashion l11Ja nd at Jam.. noon B-B-Q's & Free Art Newport Blvd. $300 month.
pool '-yard. S27j, Near Ca,y1\'00d Realty 548-1290 quttn site bed priv. drf's~-Canal Little Is. Beaut. 2 • LIKE A HQ,\.fE • !118-2407· boree & Sa.n JOAquln Hilll Lrs~ons s!Arting soon. DAVIS REALTY 642-7000
\\1.11.mrr & :i.1agnolia. Av11il Newport Shor es in.11: room. xtrA lrg rooms. Br., 2 Ba., pri. patio, $350 Bea.urilu~,2 BR, 21~ h11. 2 e LARGE I BP.. Sl1l1 ~R_oa_d_•7·~'~"~'-1 ~'"=·1~900~·-~ HARBOR GREENS AIRPORT CENTER
• Adul1s only, no pets. $150/ + uUls. 11tory, lQW 1q. ft. ShA.g cpts, e ROOMY 2 BR. S140 e NOW OPEN e 546-502-Df>c. 10th. for 11pp1 call !213 ! CLEAN -CLEAN -CLEAN WI t tg, mod kitc:h "P Dr Ad i>< "2-~!l , 67' ""'7 ., Deluxe I, 2 &: l room ofli~s 32:)..2210 mo. nton Rta Esl&fe 61:>-3331 · 1 • ' '" ~• ~ BRAND NEW 1 Br, $155. · · · 4 Bdrm unf w11rlv New 2035 Fullerton, CM oc=-co:-~-=·-~-7 w•sh rm. Sl!t1. 546-1152. B ,. ALL UT! * BRAND NEW .11djacent Airpor1er Hotd.
H · t B h ·· ·· · ·' *2 Bedrm-F1replace* N>·wt ,. DECORATED St70 2 Br studio, adj shops. r Sl. . LITJES * Lowe~t rate•. tult ,.-.,·-. unt1nQ 01"' eac cu~L carp. f'amily only! U b 1· bl B ·1 '""'
BBEY RE LTY •12 "" n e 1eva y eaut1 ul Carpeted.. 213: 377·2140 · • di-p/crpt, pt1.tio, gar. 5""'r&301 f'AID. friv patio, billlard La Co•t• Apts. 833-2840 or 833·:1223 \Vkd.11.ys
e WAl_,K TO BEACH 1 Br,
turn. ctiildh mt pet . S17.J,
ALA Rentals e 645-3900
e HARO TO f!ND 2 Br,
crpl11, fn cd yrd, kid.11 /pe:!.
S13.i.
ALA Rantals e 645-3900
FOR LEASE
OPTION TO BUY
l_BR, 2 BA, drp1, sh11R crprg,
new paint Inside Ii out. Out-
&irl' pallo "'1!011 of 11or11ge.
Clo:qo to 5ehools, 846· 7368,
&!S-0166.
3 BR, 2 BA, t:f'C'1 hll·ln R/O,
FA hi. crpt~. 60x100 fl. ttnc·
NI 101, tlbl s::ar, lnd1cpd.
VacAnt-mo\-e in today/$225
per mo . A11k lor Mlt•I Agt.
962-4~71
2 BR. ,lee. bit-In R/0. f"A
heal, cuptll, dhl. garqe,
60 x 100 fencrd Jot . Mave '"
tt>tlay. Sl!IS. Pf.r mo. Ask for
rental Ut'nl.
!lSl-4471
3 8R, ~ BA. bll cul-de-11c
home, All bl rns. dlx A.rtA.
$255. VAr11nt. ~91!13 day1,
l'8--J222 !"VI'~,
2 Br htluse. rug&, qufel. Sll.'i.
lt~•r of 1229 °'11•"•are St,
HB.
'.
A A -.... :.O VAL D' ISERE Garden AptA. , 2 BR W/ll'ar. Dlspl-Wtr pd. Afl !'i 213: 592-5227 coll. rm, hc11ff!d pool w/ j.11cuul,
S Cl Balbo• Pen1n1ula CAii b!wn 1 & 5 Gli-4120. ~~·~~~~--~-i t d I It. 2 BR, bltnll, •wimming BAY VIEW OFFICES an emente Adu Ill! -no pet~. F'lower1 . _ "... B••·••rd .•• ·., ...... $llO 2 BED Ro o M. nP.wly huge c osets, tcp pile c.11r· pool 1 . b • ,_ Det ..,... .... . · I h t d 1 . 1na1, ar-... que.,. a:ar· uxe, Air Conditioned, everywhere. StreAm It YRLY 2 Br, crpt/drpr,prti. >r~ 0 A "D'· ,·,~~ ttd·eoorated, t l rep I ace, peung, us an scap nr. 1.ie. Alt uttl pd. SISO to $170. r~ecorated. LiOO An!a 3 BR, 2 BA, d8hWhr, Q.virw. \Yaterfall, 4j' pool Rec. Rm, dl!l""Fal , gar11<>e, 1 blk ~ range Vf' • , • '"" ''''''· 11~. 5"5003. AduH1. You ?.fust See This .d•·t~ o "I y 1~• mo ,...,, "' "" ....-0 -02 Bl Adults, no ""t•. Realonoml-Bkr. 675-6700 , "·~ · ...,,,, · Saun11, Sgls 1·2 Bdrm, Furn-oce11n or ba~" 620 w. Balboa ALI. eJectric, 2 Br. Crpt~. ne! • .,, rch St., NB. ~-_., Av.'·t n-. 1 "'·-· , 2 BR 1 BA 0,w •h•'" e~t• "l <"'• 354 Avocado, Cl\f. 642·9708 DESK ~a-av-"-bla •~ , ....,.,,, · ,,_...,.,...,, Unfurn. from Slla, SEE lT: Blvd. 675-0892. Drp1, encl garage, elo!f! lo ' -'"' •c-.·, 1 ~~=·=~~· ~·:--,,,--~~~ u,. .. &; ...... _,
S th L -p "2 -7 b 1 d-, blUnB, nr OCC, gar 1 mo Will p-·""e .. -1•·-ou a gun• ~ aNJOn1, .,., •av 0. u~ & theatt'r. Ad ts. no ' .. ~ SEACt.tF'F' MAnor Aplo-2 llM MOVE IN All · ... v.., 1 iu·n , ... ., NEW 2 BR crpt• d-• 1139/Mo 007 ~'I w • . · owance at 15 mo. Amw~·· ,.-"-* AVL nOw-1 &. 2 BR. ~I ' y j (:.-·1j pel~. Av11H Dec. 1~L $155. · """""' BR, $160 Unf, 1175 furn. ,. ... ,. i v•.....-1.,.~ASE 2 ~ge,2 8cle~, nl~t~ 1'~urn. Pool. Rf!'C, Rm. Crl. ~;r ~~~ .;:~.Y· a 645-351j or &W--07~. EASTS I DE l BR Cptll, drps, blln1. garb dl1pl. ~~~~ ';l~ ~:~~ .. l=c~-= d~~· Pri;: heh~· oc~~~p :U. ioC'. NG chlldre:n or pels. * TOWNHOUSE * crpt1, drps, bltns. 644-U03 1525 Placentia Ave. Ask 177 E. 22nd St. 642-364:> 6 ...... •
$32:>., 495--47&1. 646-582-4. Coron• d•I Mar 1 '= 2 BR. Shag cpt, D/W, Dina Point about our dl1count, 548-26A2. SHADY ELMS-POOL 311~RY1= 1e .. coodhtloorBlvdof·
I fo"um. &-Unf\rm. 1 &: """·'· ""' ac . C."d.ml"luml LGE., nicely turn. 1-BR. 1pt. iwiii.iiiiiiiii-iiti-ii.i"i"i--i l 1el cltan oven, patio. 2· 2 B d' DLX 2 BR, 2 BA, % bl:ck to 0 12 39, -• ,77 IV \V 't "~a ~""" LARGE Br., a. 1n mt., l BJl.'i fmm $1~ UP wner 13} ........,1., Daya. Unfurn. 320 Sl3."1. G11r1111:r-. I 11 u n dry . · · 1 "°" * ·"~"""·' hl!n, rpt, drp!. ocr-i1n vitw, beach, ahaa-crp11, blln1,
\\lomr-n only, or couplf". ~ -LARGE 2 Br.. J ~ bath, hlllcony, 14 ml.· 10 Dana yrly Ju-$245 mo. 675·3126 Laguna leach 600 sq. ft. $90/mo.
Newport Be•cfi 1!12n-B \VAllaCf' ;i43-6:l111 Q.~ !ltudlo 11pl. F11mlly only. No Marin;r,. $l90. 8 3 7-3 9 2 T, I='•~·~··~·-,;,--,--,-=;-,,.---COSTA MESA 646-2130
S!IO _ Now 1 BR Triilrr. ....,. pet&. $145. 726 Jnann Sr. a~7-517!. 3 BR Condo In Blurts, cpl , 1·""'B~R-.~N~,-~r--..,,-:-...,-.~,-.. ~."'11 Business Rent•I 4Cl TifF: 81111!11 To-.·nhouM! nr.\v ""
2 BR • Vr-ry nirr 2 BR mobile ON TEN AC'RES BACHELOft, ,,,. .... , close lo E Bl ff drps, d1hw1hr, pool, i:ar. blk lo beach, 0 CE AN e WANTE• D e ronvflrt tlrn, 21., ·,. a st u • ·-•. ,.. "-'I M A -'·I ~" ~ ~1 llnme av11!1 12/1/71, S1 2.i. DCC & UCI SI M Incl utU 't ~ ........ ...ar .r. nuo n Vlo::.••· SUO. -4:iv-1..., · •t· 1 7500• U ba, rug!I, lfrpil ' bhrui. $300. 132 \\r, Wi110n, Of 64>-l5.10. 1 ol 2 BR. 1'\Jrn, 4 Urdum. . . . collect 1714) 346-8151. in mum reta space.
lensP. 213:3.lil--0567. Firtpla.cet I pri•. patioL 'rt'frl,. m -7768. NEWPORT BEACH ==""=;-.-.,,.-,--.,.-,=-·I L ldo l1le C. Max, 828-.lDl
T"o_w_n-;hc-o-u-,-.-;U"'n-l"u_r_n-. ~3~3~51 SPAC 1 Br, pool, nr Pools Tennll Contnt'I Bktst, DELUXE 1 Br., gar. Av11il. Viii• Gran•da Apts. EASTBLUFT luxl!f'Y 2 Br.,1---------·ISHOWROO~t mf& .... oftl~
1hops. Adilil, no pet.!. Sl55 900 Sea La.nt CdM CU-2611 Dec. l Adulls, no pell. $13.), Four bedronms with h:dr.on· 2'\ B.11., bltna, fFplc, 2 c11r LfDO BAITRO!'i:'T. 1p11. &. .!paci11 Close In Lacuna loc.
General utll pd. 1884 l\tonnivia. !MacArthur ~r Coll.tr Hwy) 150 E. :n.1. 646-6016. ff!• above l be.low. Graclou• ::-'"~r°I, rec a r 1 a · homn. S-200 to S0l~. mo. $9;> 10 $155 mo. -4!M-4633.
548--0336. * -~~·me c-~., Apt·2 II 1 • 1 -.... ,,, Art Mack 61....,..... or CLOSE le oetan, ihopp!ns. I 2 BD d bl ... u,,., ... ....., v n1 qu et 11u....... ~, . COSl'A MESA, 981 W. 19th.
achOols, -4 Bdrm., 21,; b.11 .. 2 Attract •• C ean 2 BR. ~ ~pts, rp5, tru, gar, Br .. 2 Ba. pan'! den, .JI&.;. tor fam ily with t:hild~n. • $185-WESTn.Jf'f' 2 BR. 67~2723. Corner Cl or M-t, $22),
Hid pool. Furn·Unturn fl'Qm IKlndeck, No pets. Sl.95/mo Uktr new. 645-M30. Near Corona dt"I Mar Hith Adults onJy, no pell. 1728 ttewport ... lh mo. M2-3490.
::. ~7:r.Bt.erk.•~. Im a $140. Adults. 642-9520 ln<!l util. 615-6137. DELUXE 2 BR, cp~. d""S, School. P.'lreplace, wet bar & Bcd!ord Ln. 54~7511.
__ ., 2 B •t tit~ 1170 2 Br bltn -1 2 ._ I ... bu.ilt·i n "itchen applia1"1Ce11. OARD""•· nd I 2 B 18x80 RE'TAIL start on I:. H untln r ton B••ch r un .• , r .... u ""' • I, .. ,.. • Cll.rpor ..... b In$, Sl~~. 835 AMTGos WAY 644·2991 ""'~ ..,pe, er ev t VISTA D&L MISA lTth St .. C.M. A\'aU Jan 1M, J>C!r mo. 2377-8 Maple Ave. pool, nl'. oct•n. $200 up. Call 644-1.103 lrlplex. Crpl. stv, drp1, enc ._ .. •rtrnents nM ,., mo. 67, •iM.
di .r.t-4,47 Coldwell, 8Anke.r It Co. 1100 "' ~9~ ......-..,.,,., ....., "" ~WNflS" I 2 BR '" '"13 A 11 -pell LGE l B 2 8 <ar' ' '"a-\111 " l l 2 8" ~. ' U I DI h 'v r. or renr · 1 =~-~,_,,-·.,...,--.., • '"' , , , r. ll, new eha• M11nAtlrc Agent 2 Bdrm -2" n. -l"••lcilll n.. iovm. • n • s • lndustrl1I Rental 4.SO \Va~hc rtdrytr. bltn1. _ml Bachtlor Apt, frplc, ut\1 VIE\V! 3 Bdrm -2 B• -Ex· Cftt, $1~9/mo, rreshly p11tn· -,. mi ,y w11sber • Stove & Refrlc • ----------1 f11cu. Sl~i mo. UI ~iltlR. p11d, ont \\'nrkln• 11dulr, ecutlvt Dplx : Atlult~ nnly! ted Nr. OCC. C11rport fi.57·6f51 H untlntton-h•ch A.rta -Adull$ only -S2iS Sh11.1 crpl'J·l..rg Rec etn!tr. COSTA , MESA
2 8 £ D R 0 0 Jl.1 c 0 N· tl() pelt, 123 n10. ~6-3734 s.il'lt'r'Mo. -7\rt:-6TS-493ll. • \VlLSON GARDEN!; • LGE 1 's'r 6 a'P1. '"er-Pr. -mn:--Agt. 815-4930. RENT~ StartLSl.$.'i
TINENTAt. TOWNHOUSE. A ioolf wafll ad ta • tood Turn llnulM Items Into quick 2 BR. t\t BA. Cpt/drp1, m11rr!ed coll"f)lt or I rinJI• P.-ul' re1ulta: are Ju1t • phone Tuatin & Mes• Dr v• SI~ :\10. Aa:,.t11 546-081~. lnveslmenl cash, call 642-.56711 flnrl. J>A1in, $140. li42-68 11. adUHll. $12:i. M2-i549. ' call aw11y • Mi..sg73 * 545-41$5 * j ' '--'-'-~~~~-~~~~~-
. Sq.._ n. 11.rtet lrontap.
0 ''-4 11de <kxar, 4225 ~
l?j!> W. 17>h 11. lt t; 6.19-JllO. ~
• '
I
Tut$C11y, NMmbtr 23, 1971 #fl DAIL V PILOT
I~ I ..... _ ![g]l----l~~l~---__,J[DJI ~~~i'~~~I ![Ill [ ..,..,_ lllli l '--' _ ...... ,...._. ~],l~iJ , ![II] [ { 1-,.·· ~~;;1~;;;;;;;;=1
lndu•lrlel Renlal 450 Found (ftM Mi) 550 S.bytltt!,. 1~;:..;~~~~~~~~ ~ ·~~~~~
For Lease Cost• Meaa
1440 SO. FT.
Jndu•trlaJ ~pa.tt nr 1'eWJIOtf•
Sin OittO Fni')', 2930 Gra~
Ln ISO. ol Baker. £'. Of
rairvi'"" 1;, n1I.} Repre·
_1 . .wita.tirc:..Jhcrt n1 9 to 12
t!aily, :...11.:u.~1 or 679-4ill.
... R•nta ls Wanted 460
BUILDER \\ anls lo rent 2 or
3 Br. hoo~ in ne~ or
rep11 lr. rxchnnge for part
n>n1. &IZ-7.177.
,,[~~~·--_'"'~'-"~~J[j]
Persona Ii 530
Want to gtt Involved?
\'o!untttrs nttded 10 v.01k
11ilh primal)• aet" children
1:i the Ocean \"1p11· &hool
Dist ~ Hours per da_v, .l
da~·s a 11eek. for 1nfonna·
!ion call .S-1.i-li'JJ t"Xt 233.
\\"HY no! surpnse ht'r for
Chns1n1a~! 1 ~ carat Dia-
mond ring, TJUany ~!ting.
• Re!ail \"alUC $600. Ask.Ulg
SZSJ. Surprise . tmatchlng
L&dy's & n1an's 11-etld1ng
bands, ne1·er worn -
FREE~ J Call j.$....5710 after
6 pm & v.l'ekends.
SPJRITIJAL READI:'.\GS
Advice on all maltf'rs
Daily 10 A.,f.JO P)f
:;12 :'\. E.l Camino Real
San Clemenre
4.9'2-9136, 491-!m-I
OIS..."'OVER OISCO'"E"RY
F'ind YOURSELF in Someo.nt
El"
Call J'IO\V • i'\o obligation
j71~1 ~ in31 m-3393
NATIO~ALY R£COG:'\1ZED
ALCOHOLICS Anonymom-.
Phone 5-12-7217 Ot" "' r i 1 e
P.O. Bo)> lZ".'-3. Costa )lesa.
C'OlJ~SELl:\G &: iltfo for
.aboruon, VL'ieC tomy & adop.
TINY, ""y/bl>cit • wlll~ COSTA MESA
khten with big e)"t!s. Cran!'• PRE-SCHOOL
Store parkin&-Jot, c.~I. Stale Llcenstd
6il-i069 home or GH-2292 18th &. l\tonrovta. n day + ~'Ork a&k Jor Dana. hill day snaiont. Planned
FNI>. Cal: grey I black / tan Proe;r&m, hot luncbi!s. Aaes
stripff--with -wh.t_tt cbearlr U. hn i : 30 Ai'lt • 6 PM.
\i\illtt paws. Altertd malt. $20 wk..CO~lPARE! S42-40Zi0
Vic htesa _Verde, C.l1. Ol!LD Catt, my hoa)f!, au
5'1.S-3.NG. day or hrly. Fenced yard.
fu\lALL \\'hile Poodle: found \Vhltl.ler School dl.strlcl. 19th
in apartment. Santa 'Ana. & ,\1onrovia. 646-239,;.
~1938 or 54~9jt1. LlC'D Day care, 7 am-:i:30
Lost SSS pm. Hot meals. Xl nt care.
Harbor/Bake r area.
5-'6-1539. 2 Lost Dov:. one ·white
female Samoyed, ans\1·ers to
Fro sty & Apricot
cock-a·poo fema.Jc , llllSl\'ers
to :\liMie, Euclid I Edinger
839-006.
RE\\'ARD; Los! C i b son
Guitar 1 Johnny S m i I h
CW;rom) Lelt in parking )ot
at Don the Beacha)mber
Cd:\!. 6'.;t-.100 ask for Jerry,
LOST German Shepherd,
black & Tan. Ans to Heidi.
Chain Collar no tag, vie
Hun! Harbour. Rew a rd.
592-~.
Carpenter
ADDIT. le Repair. cab,
. lonnlca, marlile, fir tilt",
panellng. Antiq. Furn. -
re~!r & refin, SW-i.)98
E.XP. Remodt!ling, Cabinets,
n.>pairs, malnt. !\o job too
sm. Reas. 646-42:!-I.
Carpet Service
JOfL~'S Carpet & Uphol5tery
Oeanen. ~tra Drl-sham-
poo free Scotchguard (Soil
Relardanlsl. De~asen &:
all color brighteners &. IO
BL'\CI\ male cat, l yr. Lost minu te bleach for white 11/16 between 9th & 101h St. carpels. Sa\•e )'OUl" money
Balboa. An~\\' er s to by sa.vinl:' me e5ctra trips. ··Kaluk la.·· Rw·ard. \Vil! clean li\!lng rm, dining 673-251;). -----~----I rm &: hall SI5. Any rm S7.50,
LOST: 1 mos. old lnsh Set· couch SIO, chair S5. 1:; yn;.
t.er, male. SSO RE\\'ARD exp is 11·hat roun!s, not
Young Daughter Distraught. method. r do ~'Ork myself.
67~. Good rE'f. J:Jl-0101.
LOST; 4 Yr. Femalt" Afghan C•merr:, Concre'.e
Apricot 1>.-/blk mask.
Fa\-ors front left pa11-. QUALITY Cement \\·ork. Let
642-91;>7 or stZ-0136. George do it. Lie'd. Bonded.
64.>.1695.
LOsr: sk.iMy gray & black °"'==;-;==-~-,-~ striped female cal, flea col· CE'.\.rEl\'T \\10!tK. no job too
Jar. Vic. Balboa Bh-d. &: .small, tl'a-'!onabli!. Fre e
3Jth St. 67l-l~. Estim. H. f.tul'l ick, 548-8615
2 ;\lALE Gema.n Shepherds,
1 tan & l IXk & tan. Vic.
,\.allace. A\<e. l:. 19th St.,
C.:\1. S25 Re\l·ard! 646-3189.
tioo. ApCare. >12..j.!JO. I 1114'. I
PATIOS, 'va[ks, drive, inslall
new la11·ns. Sil\\', break,
remo\'c. :>4S-8668 !or E'S!.
BEAT The Rain~ Concrete
!loon, patio~. d r i ve1,
sid~·alks. Don 642-8514.
Child Car• •
H•ull"9 Job W•ntod, Female 1112 Help W•ntod, M & F 110 Help Wanted, M lo F 110 H•lp W•nted, M & F 710 Help W•nttd, M & F 710
\VANTED! ~1my ire e .-• ~~;:~;:;~~~··;;~:/0;:;;:;:;;;:;;:~~====:1 ~;;;;;-:::;::::::::::::-::::--:-...,_ yan11 &: pr9.1es, rnovin& 1;. NEED HELP AT 1'10i\tE? FIVE sa.les1\'0men PT. Leads
hauling, st so per Jl[, _t ... For T~mpuary Stl'\'ice.: COAST ~~::.'!.!os. h e d , f s 2 -f o 'a t\tAJO, lhoe--in, over n. Ex-R. E . SALESMEN
Anytime CTNT La\\' n e \\e Ht\'e Con\•alescen1 COMMUNITY .uuo 't.lalnt.).'~5863. Aide! e Nunes e Jlou$t· COLLEGE DISTRICT
Jlll"ieneed Onl)! 2 children. HO\\' 11botl1 a:ro\l•it\JI: \\ilh I
f>i4--09W. brund ntw office in a pr1n1t
HAUUNG, clean-up, local
mO\'t'r,-txp'd coUe~e ifu·
dent. Lr&. truck Reas.
534-1846 .
TRASH\&: Garage clean-up. ':'
days. Free est. Anytime.
$18-jOOl,
Hous•clNning =-------APT. mo\'e in & mo1'e' out's.
New apt. openings. AIM o!-
flce & business bldgs. Pat.
"'8-3068.
DEDICATED CLEANING * 're Do Everything *
24 hr. Call 673-41112
J\fesa Cleaning Ser\'ice
Carpets, \\'indo\\"S, Floor etc.
Resid. &. Commc'I. ;,f8-4Ul
Housecleaning By Da.y.
O\\·n Transponation
Call 8J6...06..'8
EX-PERID'CED houseclean·
ing. 01\·n transportation. Call
* .>l.2-1530 *
P•inting &.
Paperh•nging
HANG:\tEN, sales &. l nstl.,
Paper, l'inyl, flock, paint,
Store (.'Omes to your door,
Sch11ll11Z, ~7-5.S46.
* LlliTERIOR EXTERIOR +
Lie .. ins., guaranreed. Ca!!
}larris, ~. E:\-pert
airless sprayiog.
PROF. Painting e.xt/int. Ac·
eous. ceilings, a i r I e s s
spraying. Refs. St7-1358.
i\o \Yasnng * WALLPAPER * \\'hen you call ''?.lac"
548-1444 64&-1711
PAl!\"I'L">;G, professional All
\vork guarn. Color
specialist. 962-6143,
5-17-144.1.
PROF. painting-inter/exter.
Honest \\'Ork. Li c / I ns .
Zl-IS-2759, 5-I0-144'1.
kttpers..
HO~ERS/UPJOIL~ --.ua~ the
G•I Frid•y to $550
V11,rk'ty la herr! P:ubllc Q>,..
Colk>\\ina: opm· tic!, phonC": bookl!, &· 5teno.
for Ptnnanent Service:
• \\'e f-la~·e Companions SKILLED
•• Housekeepers e-Practi-MAINTENANCE MAN
Busy 4: intcruling. C.11
~Uss Connie', 537-6122.
,Abigail Abbo! Pl!l'SOllntl
Agency, :t."IO \\'. \\'a1·ncr, caJ Nurses etc. At ?itonUily Jn area ot air condl!lonln,e; Suitt' 209, S.A,
Rates, &: hc11.tinst maintenance &
f-IEALTH &. t'e'pair. fialary range S7Q.;-** Have .~ opc>n!ngs tor
1''A .. \llLY CARE AGENCY soot Placeinen! comnicn-early morning U e I 1 v e I' y,
lscG No, Broadu.·ay, surate u.ith e>.J>CJ'. truck needed. 962--1489. ·
Sanla Ana 5-11~1 HELP 'Vanted Female. Q\•f'r
""""""""""'""""· '"""·"IOFFSET PRESS OPR 18, nite shift only. Apply in NURSE, R:~· Cahf. Lie. To v;ork \\ilh 2 color offSf't person, 4pm to Gpm daily.
deslre.s poilllOn. Pr1. home. & direct impression dupli-19004 Brookh1Jri1, H.B.
Exp. \l'llh ex c. Ref. Coocl eating equipment, prcpara-llELP . .
<'OOk. Free lo travel. lion of negali\'f! & plates. ~. · 1. ha\t a ne1>.
64&-3171 673-6:>19. Opaqueing & masking Sa1-s1ne1s Ln town .r. r need
Help Yt1nted, M & F 710 ary rdnge $.l97·S72:J. Pia~-!~:~,· If all~~ndbflo'" men[ commensurate \\·1th ,.,...., ·~· Y 0 ''t'.\l Y a neu.• company 11•/ne11• Ideas exper. SIOO A JI.to. + X t r a &. financial opportunity for
1v I Goldf-n Jndu.stries u·ain-INTERMEDIATE atm-e a1·erage interesrs }'ou
ing, Call 5.l>-029j, 5-13-2834 STENO CLERK' • Yo1.1 inte~t n11'. r or
Mail" Girl $325 locet1011! 1~1'11 it'! togcltwr?
Acllon & \'ai·Je1y l,ovrly C11ll G 1I,.11 Kn.vanag:h.
bldg. ~ otcs. C..\1, area. 9T9-ll)j(), ~1AIN REALTY.
Pr 01nopoual opportunity, 688 &ker_ :SI. ~~!ol, C.i\I
Top b~1efi1s. Call 1\lls~ RENTAL GAL
Diane, · 7~1?!, Ablgall Ab· l.argl"' ap t ("0111p1 .. , S11ntA
bo1 Prr onnel Agcru.:~. 2::0 Ana, a111·ac uidl\•1duuJ for
\\'. \Vnrne1'. );uilc 209, S.A. lull t11nl' po11i 11on. \\'ork
1\IALE or r·<!mall' for Aninial 1.:on1n1rn('('~ Dec. l.'11, $ub"111
care-laker. Over ::0 for rcsu111c1t ro ('1.~.\$11lrd iid •
. al ho . I >I I t:IG, Dady Pllo1, f>. 0 . Box a.run1 . sp1ta .. , ust_ 1avc ljlj(l Cos!it 1\Jr~;1. c.1. 92626. sincere interest in animals. --.~·°"'c.;c-cc.c'-'='-=~
\Vrl1e Class1lled Ad :\o. 291 RELIE!-' Cook, r~f>l'r. rttfct.
Daily ,Pilot, P. o. Ro . ..: Bapti_sl C o n v a I r s c e ~ I
1:)6() Costa :'llesa, Calif. llosp1tal, 661 Center .St.
92620. • C.:\1. 5-i&-l'W!J.
:\IECHAi'\IC, alt a r 0 u n d RESPONSJBLE prrson to
mrchanic \\"anlt>d in 11.B. operate parking 101 Sl\·ecper
area 893-934~ betwn 6 ani SUnday & some 11·k nll:'hUi.
k noon 30-40 hr~. \I kl). Pr1711ancnl
. 5\.)..2611.
:\IEDICAL R c c e p l I o n i s ll --~.---'-----
nee<led. bilingual, English ~ RN'S Spanish,~ typtng, .i da.~~
\Veek. ~1ed1cal exp rcq d.
SaJary open, contact :\lr!t
Tillotson, 319-0386.
bcl\1'n 10am·lpm. l: S pm-P/Tlme from 4P:\f.9P:'.l J\lon-~rsonal interview only call
6:30 pm. days iliru Thursday. \Viii 4/8704182 :\Ion th11.1 f'ri,
Arch Wldr. St. $3.25 h r. operate tht> :'.1TS'T. Sala.iy1-10
0 •;;m;c-2;;;pc;m'"""'•o.:--
Some tools, Sttady job . ov-range $271-$329. HOLi D·AY l--~7j~,,,,-.-l~\7'p-m-,-,_-C~lu~ld~,-.,-,,-t
ertimc a1·ai1. Stable N.B. -FAME & FORTUNE
ALL SHIFTS
Fountain Valley
Community Hospital
<.:o. CaJI JI.Tr. Gof!. &57-6122. Apply MONEY Could Au.·ait You
Abigail Abbot Personnel 1370 Adams Ave. JtlClependcnt Film Prod. Co.
Ag<"ncy, 230 '"· \Varner, Cost• Mesa, Calif. NcCtis New Faces f1>r TV
Suite 209, S.A. CommerciaJs, r.lovies,
APT. i\Tanager. i\fature r:ou-Phone: 834-5708 Part Tin1e GP:\l·IOP:-.1 ' Advertising.
pie. 24 deluxe units, Bem·een 8am & 5pm :'.lon-J."ri . . ::-i'O EXPER. NECESS. 17100 Euclid at Warner
'\'esicliU. Ko pool, children, P~hable inen in the surrou11rl-S~2·Sl38 Per Day 979-1211
or pc!s. Call pin 0 v er. COl\JROLLER -lmmed i~g Orange Co'.are~ needed. '2131 4Gl-30:.J RN 's t..· Aid<'~. all shift.~.
'
•• "-. opening top acct. Responsi-No exper. nccess. Earn up to -<Q"-\1~4" i\lEN lo 11ork p/time in rcn· x!nr fringr bnfts. Bi..=wrly
ble for all Corp & Divisional $3.96 Per Hr. laJ yard. Approx. 20-30 ln;s :'llanor Con\'. Ji 0 5 p,,
Asst Bkkpr to S600 acc1g. \\'ork l\irh & reoort per wk. \\'ill train, neal in Capi~tr•-"·h, ~= ~786. d" •1 t p 'd t Sal Ask for Sen•ice. Of-pt. ~ "" <><.: .,.,..... .. Bkkpr-1..egal lirm S3(l() ln(uY o res1 en· ary (714) 142 0667 appearance, no loni; hair. Rf'. C! k t & Q 1 C-
Se<-'y, Spanish. Fmch ~23 open. Supply resume 'l .~=="'°.,.-~7·~~~~ JI.lust be avail. all flay iec ·ou · UR 11Y on·
P.T. Acctng acrk SJ hr personal ref & must be bo,.. HOSTESS & Cashit't' in N.B. \\"ed/Sat & Sun. Apply 1930 lrol man needed for small
Auto i\lachinis t $4j() dablt, 492-3163. 25 hn per \vk, S2.00 per !\e\\"J)Ort Bl., Costa l\ll":!;a . new rlet'tronic business 1n
Jr. ,\cct. Attract. $800 COUNTER ,..;,.! pt/time ,1.; .. s hr. Will leach. 67~533. i ~, .. = ... ~-~2~1--~~c--~1 -\Ve s 1 n1 i n st er, 6 3 9 1 .. ~ '"" a.ft 10 -lL."' O\·er y.;ani, .... or \Ves1n1i nster Av,, Acctng Clerk, L.A. SJOO. maturf! \\·oman only. Apply er a.m. ..._, A'f t t ' F" Cl k L c;..., Y ' au 0 rou e, ' I>' \\'esfminster. Call 89-1~1. igure er , .A. S~35 ·in person. J\fn. S\\·iss 18939 HOUSEKEEPERS lull !imc p.t'Ox 21~ hrs pcl' da;. J.1ust'J iiiiii,..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;/
Pe1·sonnel As.cit, L.A. S4!i_.l Mal!'nolia F.V. expe,·d pref'd. Apply. in ·cl · II B •· v K h L.A •i~" ., res1 e In ·. . or r .. eypunc . · ., ~ GO-G penon. lluntington Beach
P .T. Sec'y. P.R. S1.50 hr DANCIN~ 0 Convalcset'!nt JiospitaJ, ISSU I ~'~';;'-789-'~'-· --""';;;--,-=
Sr. Acct .. CPA e.xper. SI4K GIRLS & BARMAIDS f lot'ida, H.B. l\ICR sale!'i earn SSOO. + nlO.
Solt\1·are :\fgr. S20K QUEEN BEE con1m. F'ull co. 1raining .
NEWPORT 1:'62 Nen1>0rt Blvd. c.l\I. i.JOUSEKEEPER. Balboa J Fle!X. hr.~. 8~6-0239.
Personnel Agency apply in person. 646-99~ days p!'r u.·k. 3-4 hrs. each l\IODELS needed p/limc
RETAIL
SALES LADY
For Quality Bakery
833 Dov•r Dr NB DIPLOMAT GIRL day SZ.:x> pei· hi·. own trans. eves & \1·knds. 'Viii train. YOUl\'G SET SCHOOL PAINTING/Papering. 18 )'I'S " • ' references. requiff'd call
Open 7 days 6:30 a.m-7:30 in Harbor area. Lie & bond· 642•3870 TRAVEL l\1rs. Davis 1\'kd~s 9 · j ,c,.',.1,.1 ,."',, .... ,....,· c;"oc";:c'~6~P0_'c· ;::;:=I
. Instruction .
r """"''""' 11n1 ~~~ l\[lply In Person To:
Mr. Anderson
I L::.iJ Schools &
ln11ructions 575 pm Professional teachers, ed. Ref's furn. 642-2336. ~~~!!':~~~.,..,.~I "'.ork al! around Disneyland &12-1626. Nl1RSES, all shifts. Pi-iva!('
ATI'RACTJVE girl to model in fashion circulation 1\·ork. . Duty. RN, LVN: Practical. SNACK SHOP
BAKERY
Found (frff ids) S50
Pre-11cllool ares 2-6. PA I N T J.N G: H o ne 11 t bikinis. lingerie. Gri!at i}ay Commission. bonus &:: im· HOUSE\VJFE to '~ork J~ Ice Rrfs necess. Le s c 0 u 11 <'
Transportation for O'lfter guaranteed \\·ork. Lic'd Any for one afternoon a v:eck. m~...1. f!X""'""'• a<oouol. Ex-Crean1 store lO :.:Oam-:ipn1. .. .. 1 3444 E. Coast Hwy,
Corona d•I Mar
ATJ"DilO:"i :\fOTHERS!
Bring ~'OOl' little ones 10 visit
FOL?\D youni; G e r m a n our tie\\' pre-school. Staffed
Shepherd (!ull gnm-n) male by credentialed teachers.
hool "10 ~ "'""" Nurses Registr y , .)J SC c~ agl!s v-· size job. Call 673-5i.W. Strictly private & for fun. ....,, oot -. ''· '' \\'e train. l\1on.-Fri. 54S-92:'.6 lo noon , 8 C 1 •~3-00 ,~ '"''·"' Hospi!al Rd, N. . a ! ~ ' · YOU •••ppy th• p-'"l. Room• fConsid(!l' g>'rl for full time Above av." earnings. St)() -r 6Ta-8562 aft. :Jpn1. ·1 ,.~!'!'!"!!"l"~~~~~· j "" ...,.. •-612-9955 any hr. lnter\o11·1
Contr•ctor painted SlO ea. Also ex-rec,ptionist/hostes.~ in mo aft training. English INTERIOR 9A.JP, \IJf'". *SALES CAREER*
\1ith choke ch a I n \'ic. )Joming or aJternoon .se,s.. ---G,.-E_N_E ___ R_A_L __ _ tmor. Call 5i0-7CH6. beauliful office). 'rri!e to speaking foreigners a{'C('pf-DECORATOR ===,..-,~~----
clai;sified arl No. 284, Daily ed. If _hired. mu~t be ab,le.~o This is a trainPf' posJtwn for r-;URSES Aid('s, f'.x Pf' 1· · 110 Yf'ar Old Finarx:ial Finn
P iloL P.O. Box Ijf,Q, Costa start t~m('d. Co~1ac:1 .11"s a sale~ orienlNI per90n ~ref"d. am & pni shi ft. Ba~ is 1aki11i::-applicalions for Hamilton C.:'11. tJu.S! off sions. FOR clean & neat painting,
Harbor1 call .>l!MllSI durm; 20iO :'llaple A\·e .. CO!ita :.\tesa CONTRACTOR Interior or exterior & reas. EDUCATIONAL Harry E. Brou.·n C.o. Be11er day. aft. 6 f>.l(}..i609. READINESS Built lfomes. For free esL rates, Call Dick, 968--IOG~i.
GREY tiger .s1r1pe<1 ca: CENTRE Call Hunt. Harbour job site, Pl•iter, Patch, Re-,eir
1>.'/while stomacli, chest & £HS--ll34 !TI4) 8-16-7681. or main ofc.
front legs. Vicinity i'\e111>0rt --==~===--t2131 Ml-I~~~. Plaster Patching Tnterior
\Vest. Huntin,..."n B-""h. PIA..'°0 LESSOSS Stucco P..epair Exterior t.>.U """ T L . ~lY 'Vay, quality home 968-1360. Your htJme. Cert. eacuo:rs. mod _, Small Jobs. Lie. 847-3-171 re . \\'LLls, ceil ing ,
ClllHU :\fr. Hathcock, SW.01-14 !loo 1 N · b •--all Plumb1·ng AHUA, fMnaJe. Stater ~~~~~~~~~~ n, e c. o JO wu &m . Bros parking lot, J~f'1>.1>0rt ; ~ 517--0036, 24 hr a ns. serv. PLU!-.IBING REPAIR
Bh·d. betu.71 4-j pm friday. [ Senices a'lll Rf9Ws ] Additions * R'modelin; No job too small
557-G(WJ, J612 Pegasus St. _ _ Gcrv.·ick & Son, Lie. e 642-3128 e
S.A. 673-.fiO.ll * 549-21 TO
FOUND Siaint'5c c a 1 • COLE PLUMBING Electrlc•I •u hr · ,.. u~ chocolate color male, wear· Accounting ..,. • service. ,,..~ ,,.
ing yellow jeweled leather 1------·----.. ELECTRICAL lnstallationl!, Remod1I & R_ep•ir
collar. Vicinity Pmney's ACCOU~TI:'\G. Consulting, remodeling. 1<pain. Ltc'd.1-----------
F h. 11 SPEC I AL I ZE D Honsr as 10n s and. &l-i--0139. Financial Projections, In!. Realistic prices. Free Repair. Carpentry. paintin&", FND: Injul'ed white malt Bookkeeping. Our/Your 01-Est. 546-0211. t Call o· k 64°'722
I. "'°1~" ·---~---~--e C. ic , ...-ii -· pood!c, approx 2 yrs old, ~'"=·----~-·-·-----iELECTRJCIA.'O, licenaed,
has ha rn es 1 • Bctv•n Babysitting bonded. Small jobs, main!. Roofing
Baytrest & F' r .11 n c 1 s co I----------&. repairs. 54g_:;003, e T. Guy Roofing, Dea.I on livill('. &124696 l=-..c.-______ _ '=-~-~-----RESPQi'\SIBLE High School Furniture Direct. I do my 0\\'11 \\'Ork.
GRAY mall" cat possibly girl ~·ants babysitting or 64.>.2780, 548-9390.
Russian Rluc Vic. Stop 'n housework, Npt Hgts area. SPECIAL! Avg. chair or REPAIR, recover any roof
Co !Edingrr & Ed11·ards1 A\·ail . alt lP.:-.1. cal JE"anne rocker stripped S5. GJuin(, problems. \Veneda Roollng.
H.B. Hurt leg 8!»-5980. 6U-OOZ!. brass polished. &I~. F'ree est. &t:>-1691.
LARGE Bro1111 cat 11·/gold EXPERlEXCED child care Gafdening Sewing/Alterations e~es. 11h1te !ipol on '>''eekdays for children 2-5
stomal·h. Ha.s flea collar. yrs. Fenced yard. Lunches
="'-=9
7
5="-· -~--~~-I includt>d. Just oH San Diego
FOV!'\D sul'fboal"fl in Hun -r·1>.-y nE'!lr Bristol. ~9-4038
lington Beach. Po s 11 i v e VACATJO~ 1'-fother \.,..ill care
------
AL'S GARDENING European Oressmakin;
ident i!ic11r 1on j,16-:l07l. for cluldren in your home.
for rardming & am a 11
landscaping serv:lces, call
510-5198. Servine Newport,
CdM, OJ&ta Mesa, Dovtt
Shott!s, Westclill.
All custom titled. Personal
Fa.i;hion acl\·icr . 673-18~9.
e Dressmaking -Alterations
Designed to suit )"OU.
Call Jo * &16-6446 fND: youn~ Irish Seiter.
Collri:e Park .111l'a. ~9-1347.
* * *
Refs. OY.ll car. Ex p,
64j....().1i4.
* * *
PROFESSIONAL Gardener,
tree \\·ork, p r uni n g ,
~prinklers, clean up job!\,
land~cap i ng . Geori;e,
646-~.
Alter•tions -642-5845
Nt-at. 11.ccuratc. 2Q yeai·s e)(p,
Tile
Trader's Paradise
lines
times
dollars
AL'S Landscaping. Tree
ll'moval. Yard remodeling.
Tr<ll!h hauling, lot cleanup.
Repair ~prinklers. 673--1166.
UXIQUE Landscape. Light
hauling, cult.ivation, pla,..
1ing. l:'en. cleanup 646-0785
aft 4.
EXP Japane1e Gardener.
CERA1\11C tile l\e\V &
remodel. Frtt est. SmaU
jobs 1relcome. 53G-242G.
Tre• S•rvice
GE~N"ERAL::-,...,Te-..,--::,.,-""-· "v".,-:,
clean-up, hauling. sprinkler
repairs. Reas. &16-5848.
l\now ho"" up·keep, plant I 11 i• I J pe~1. trlmmln1, clean-up EmploYf"le"t T
Ha\'e lot in Cambria P111e~
near !\form Bay. Trade for
lot on C.olorado Rivf'r, near
~Iavasu area. Ou.·ne.r
548·796.l
Lux. condo'5. \\'rukikl Bch. t
&: 2 BR., e>:ch for comn1 ·1.
indust. Ot" aptA., Or. or l'an
Diego Counties, &1-1-tilll
Tiie IT'lvin Co .. Rral1<tr~
Palm Sprin~ dP]U>:e II Un·
its w/pooJ. \\'an! dlx Mme
or un its, coaq are11 . Only
$140JlXI. SJ(l,000 l"Q. Roy
J, Arntson, Ritt. <t91°i260
!U-34S6. -· ------
l'iava.)o rugs &. pa intings by
Corley for trade for other
rugli, guns or any type of
merchandi~ of equal \'al-
ue. &16-0620.
Hy Ou.Tl('r: 40 oc.re level in
An1.a VaJ .. Rlvernde Co. f
EXPER. Japanl"Se Gardener
Tree trimming .. Clelll1·up,
La1>.·n l\111lntenane,.
646--0619 or 5-IS-79;)8
CO ~1 PL lau."T1-3Arclf:'tling
11 e r v , cl e a n-up/maint.
Rc1111. Rates. Call Enid.
7J40.-85.)j.
& C, vdl! trd a.II or parl, 1n. CCl\fPLETE la\\'n lr garden.
roml' flTW. pttrerrM. (jJ ~J ing service.
J.16-88.13 A!;k fnr Ann. .Jim 51S-Q.IOJ.
.Job W•nted, Male 700
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
Sadi11t -Phony -Lucid -
Calico -IN the CHIPS
Ont-fi~h in a seafood rest·
aur11nt 10 anothei-: "It feel~
good to ~ IN the. CHfPS ""=-=c-,.,....~-l\1ouJll.111n home. Rig Brar, LA\\'N J\111lnt. Hauling, new
1 RR, furn .. ~\\·en, ~11 ut1l , 111.11·11~. cle11n.up, pt\1ning. a:;:aln."
F1t,\ lo.an. Ti·ade ror local Frr,. E~I. Call 5-16-131'9. ,\tAN "·111n1~ Clean-up &
imp1m'efl, k11.s or ~! 1-·r.ol\"1' yan:I l&\\'n ierviCf', <"uslodian 1\'0rk. Ge11craI * • ·6i3-6T:".;. • • SIO mo. B:iclcy11.rd~ also. Laborer. :>12-Qi94.
H1n·r : T.D.'11 S..ntlY'r1nve~t· ''•rd.cleanup. 96~12. 1 J-ob~~W-•_n_t_e_d_,_F_e_m_a_le~702~
l\Ie~a. Calif. 92G26. Star: (1141 838-1833 al! 11·cck 1111~ in1ercst~ arc an & tis! Con\·alescen1 Ho~~·:. 661 sales posi11on~. :'\o travt>I.
AUTOMOTIVE including Suf\day. decorating. Call :'llarion Center St, C.~I. ~IS-~. ~ala11· + Comn1. Sl:!.000
BOOKKEEPER: DISTRIBUTE Health & :'.1ann, 83.1·2700. Dennis & ~sible .. \lu!it ha\'c 2 yrs
Exper. Small ofrice. Vai·ious Ecology _line. ptl_full time. Dennis Per5onncl Agenc)·, PART TIME colle~c .t· sa!<"i backl)1'0und.
dutic!I. Salary open, Laguna Bob or B11l 64&-7056. 2082 l\fichelson Dr., Irvine. RESIDENT ~:1~?.J oppor. rmp!oycr,
Beach area. 5-16-9967 or DTSH\VASHER, K it ch.en INVEST IN MANAGER:
494-1131. Helper, i\[ature: lady. Bap. For new 30 unit adult
AVON PRODUCTS is the list Convalescent Hosp .. 661 YOUR FUTURE in Cosla Mesa. Call Ron Gill
District Men•ger \rorlds largi!st & most Ccnttir St, C.Jl.J. 54S..-558:>. Call Mr. Barr at
respected cosmetic eom· DRIVERS BE YOUR: OWN BOSSI 646-8666
pany. AVON representatives P/time 1.3 afternoons ii \\"k. Men or Wom•n
can take advantage of this O\'er 2J. Neat, friendly & in
fine reputation in snccess!ul good health. No -special Ile.
profitable businesses o f req'd tor pe rfonning art
1heir 01vn. Call now. school. Call 5-11-3323.
540-7().l l.
L•ase A Yellow
Taxi Cab
Call for Appl
546-1311 ENT H US I A S T l C ~oung
s=A~N~.K~.-~5"'-...,-,~,-,.,--,-,,3-,7,..,-:, sec'y/rccept.. for architec·
Exp'd In hanking p~f. tural offc . Typin.i::.
Please (.'Ontact J\lr. B&rni!S bookeep'g & some S.H. t-i.k for llennan
at 673-2:i(X). An equal op-pref'd. ArUslic Ab i 11 l Yl•iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.,.iiiiiiii
portunity employer. desired. :;.w....276.J.
BE A U TY 0 per a Io r/Oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•[
i1·/follo"'·ing. Paid v a c . p EXECUI TAIVE
Costa ~le&a. 5--10-893-t. •rsonne g•ncy ~ • _
Secretary to $500
BEAUTY Opr. A1nt. ~ppor. F'or progrcssi\"e co. near Or-H.B~ ~Salon. 968-353.> or .11n~e Count~· Airport. l\'o
96S-33::4, A!k !or Cal. SH. typing iO & up accur·
ROOKJ\EEP11'G ate!). E\'e-ntually setup con-
'.\IACHlNF.: OPERATOR ve-ntions.
'Viii train recent high school
grad \\'/gd knm\"lCcll'.?£' or Bookke•per to $700
bookkeeping. KER:-.1 Rl:'IIA Assisting chief acoountanl.
IRVINE PERSONNEL
SER.VICES~ACINCY
Frt'<' &: F<'t' Position~
835-4545
PART time, typing & Jitr
bkkpg req'd. Neii·pci·t Floori-~'~'~·,::.,d 1hru t•ri Only
Co\•,1·ing, Inc. 3j()() E. Cst SALES· BOAfS--
!hvy, Corona det .\lar. Gro1\·th ori('nlcd boa! dealC'r-
-PBX RECEPTIONIST ship i~ SC•·kinl? lhr S('l..,.ices
of a caJ'f'P!' n1indrd salrs· Position open for attraelivr man \\'ho \l'OUld enjov \\'Ork·
('Xper. PBX Opr in H.B. ofc. ing in the expandin.i:'recrea-
Auto. fyJlf> 32Q dial cord 'tion n1arke t. Succcsstu! :;airs
board. X1n'f l'.'Orking L'Onds. background a mus1, Salarv
f·rt'!e fringe benefit progt'am against roinn1i~slo11. Send
& compeli1il·f' salaD'· lcrter nr l'f'Sl.1n1f' To Classi-
CALL PERSONNEL
842·7751
UNIGARD INS.
GROUP
An Equal Op110r Empioyrr
PERSONNEL--
SECRETARY
:-.·e1\1>0rt 1Bcach
fied ac! no. 219, D;tiJy Pik11,
P.O. Box l.i&O. Cosra l\fcsa.
Calif. !l2fi26.
SALESMEN
Nl"ed n1en \\-t-10 arc 1'f'ady lo
IC',1rn !he ca r bu~it)('s! and
arl'.' \1 1J/in1; 10 ll'llln. J\111.~r
ha\'I' good pc>rsonal1ly. br
inlC'ff'.~!cd inn f11lt1i·r. dtf'5S
11·ci1, salC'sn1indrd. BC'nc"fJ!s:
l lARD,VARE. 2666 ltarbor l\1a.nu facturing expcr. :\la· Z\J;ijor Land del'e.!opmrnt
Derno .. ~roup in~ .. guaran.
teed i<alaT)' plu"' ('On11ni~
sic1n;;. Unlun'i1ed i111..'0n1I". Afl·
pl,v in Prl'!i0t1. UNIVl::RSl-
TY OLDS:'llOBIJ .. E. 28:50
llarbot• Blvd .. Co.~ta \Trs;i .
Blvd, C.i\1. lure, P/Time Gen"! Oh· $2.j() hr company seeks J)f'r~onnel
BOOKKEEPER Clerk Typist $350 ~~~:1iy!87o :~ ~~ -:~~~:~s~7. i~SS:i~1 ~;:°~f i\~1m beaJexlTemel~/organ;z: Fa..."4lion .Island, Type 50, Girl ~Tiday·Anahri111 ro S.i40 <"mployrnenL Position re-
. nu~u oppor. " mgm . :\fisr. • File Clerk $32J quires 2 years Pf"l'SOnne! cx-
tentinL D_raf( f'Xemp~~ Xlnl't 410 w. Coast Hwy., NB Claims Clerk $3,;0 per., lite sh & 60 \\'.p.n1. 1,\P·
S:\ LF;s \ViTf1-
\J Ai\'AGF.:'llF.!'\1•
OPPOHTUXITY <·o. ti:neflts._ App_ly 1• pc· S ·1 H 645-2716 Gen '! Olc/Rcccp1. $133 ing. Stable con1pany 11/ lion 1.l&l ;\fonro\·1a. N.B. UI e l~~~!!!!~"!~~~'::'l':[ xln't benerHs. Look1n& ror ;i J 0 c a 1 BOYS 10.14 EXECUTIVE SECRETARY 488 t:. 17rh lat Jr,·ulC) c:-.1 salesman ror ,.,1rrf'!' 1.,·/lr~
to deliver papers in Ute ~ Difficult job requir~ ex-642·1470 Call 644-3258 fin11.nc1al I n s 1i 1u1 i on.
Oemente, San J uan Capis-perienced \\'Oman, s e I fl'==~=~~~-=;ii=:1 PIZZA COOK Sub~ta111ial -"111111,Y ~ 1·on1·
trano and Capistrano Beach directing & good al let1erl1 C PENNEY CO t'u!I & p/tinie, Apply art ~1 111issions ltir a 3 }r. period .
area . oom~ition aA St'CY to the J, · · prn, 1\1,...N-Ed~ Pizza, J6.iJ2 i\farrird. L'Ollci:r i:. rad.
DAILY PILOT prt'sidenl of a large corp. F11~.,sh~ .. ,-~' •• l•f~o~ &ach Blvd., H.B. 01\""Til"f or a bu~lnr~~ p:"f'l"rt
•""·4420 R U I ' I• d ,·n ""' "'"""" ' ==°'=c'-"""'=""',..-,~-c-1 Call 61fh~9~2 '--h, ... ,, .. >·.30 '· ""' ecen Y re o c " POLICY AUDITOR: For rhc ..,.. ~~" " "'
BUILD 2nd Jnromr, :)eil '\'estminster. Xltn oppty for COFfEE SHOP gal \\ilh a dewee \\"ho 7 p.in .. \l/F
Basic II. Vita~E. Protein, capable person -must be \l"an1' 10 pul hf'r 1r11.ining to . SALES MAN
Skin Care. Call 968-4WJ or sale8 oril:Tlled. Beautiful WAITRESSES work ort a job \l'ht"'l'f' her Y011ns;, a<::!:rt"l..<1 1'f', f'.~fll'ri-
&16--4523. sum:iundln~. goof/ bf:nefit5. abilit.\' \\'ill br l't'rogn\zrd & l'll('f' not tll'l'<'~>"Hr.\'. 1''11 11
CASHIERS: Car \\'ash. par1 Call (i1 4l 89i-I024 lor an Xln 1 \lnrk!nJ.!' (-onrl~. rr11·arded. Typt> ~·out· oirn i'()in1111!i"~1on paul 11hilt train-
& full time lot C.l\I., F.V. & appt. Oul!l"landing Brnrr11, lcne:r!'. l\l, riays fef'. Grcal ini:. \l,1na~r1nrn1 a~i~1ant'1'
I E 'd bcn('fil!. $j()(]. a1 all ll1rn•,. !'nlf'~ rio.~1t10r1 .ai;iuna area!. ~xpr-r rrq . EXEC SEC'Y I $700 . I I 1~ l\1ust be o\•er 18. 6~~460. • ~ . Apply In Pcrl.IOn Olher f'rc .Jobs A,·ail "''lt l 11 uturr. "'n10 .11va il-~===~-o--:~--.~I D)"Tlamic N.B. organization 14 Fa!'ihion Island, NA Call Jean Broivn, :;.tG-OOj,J ahlr. lnsur.111<·c:1. Cal r
CLEANING !11dy 2 ltrllk ;n negts aura.ctlve young Equal Oppor. Employer Coe st11.I Agcmcy c''c1~~'"...:...1 -~'·~----
f'vening. 5 days a \\·cc n iiflf"'' lpolish & a"·1u-enes1. 2700 Jiarbor Bl. at Adan1s S•c'y·Receptioni~
()fflcr. \VrilP-Cl11~slfieO Ad Onr Girl OfriC'~ ~ ·v1
l'io. 290 Daily Pilot P. 0 . NEWPORT PRE·school tracht"n:. scr1d ·' 11•1 ~·<.1. (.;d Porrnllal
Calif LUHRS BOAT CO. resume m P.O. Bo • ..; JOSi Cnll Lorrainr. OO:it 1060 Costa J\le~a. · Personnel Agency \\'J.;,"i1'CLJFr
926W. 38.JS C.m-pus Or., N.B. • .. , w. 18th St. ~e\\'por! Beach. Calif. {)(>pl. PF.RS<.)NNt.:L AGE~·cy
IBranch Offittl 2032 \rr~trl 1rr Dr,, NB
Nona ,V. Holtman ~Ml·Ol~W Costa M•s• ..f'RODUCTtON wo1·krr. 1\'(\-t>l',.2i~ll Clerico I
:'\ri'ci~ n)('n nn!), ;1on·OlC'ch11nical SLCH l:."Ti\ll)\\-rrsallk,'m
EXPERIENCF.D soldel'f'i·•. fi lll>!'l'n1bly. l' ull tltm" only nc-.i J~·•irt orri ·r
mo. lo l yr e,;p. l\f()hilr t:xflt'fll'lll'l'd ~1 10-9-.l!lj 9 i1n1·6 pn1. ,,·,.po·,., 0•111 , , 0 ·11 "'
II k ~ -----------" 1,.1111::. 11nJ::. N'f'1>.J>01't B~at'h 1111 sec s C:Ornrn11nicatiotl1=, '"30 Col· En,.ine lnst•lltrs Prof•ssional l'R, 111:ui'f' .. n c 11 11 1,i 1,.
f'Xperlenced :\ITST/SC oper· Jcge AVf' .. (lt11rbor "1 811.k • Clerlc•I • Industrial ,;.l{)-jOg(J,
alor !or part limr l!\'enin~ er\. C.i\I . S.W-5i0t .~~---
MTSC/SC OPR
'69 DODGE COROl\ET
Auto, p/a. plb, e:IM"f"'I tape,
t,,andiau top for V\Y bug,
f bui or campl't'.
men1 p1·pty. \\'an{ 3 of1 tia.1-~R~l;,-~..o.,,....,~~.--
rrn home 1i·/poo1 ln btlyftnt • lable G•tden1ng
Jrea to SlOO,\I. B11X'ltrruin J..fntnt. Yd Cleanup. 646-1072
lnw!ftll'lel'll Co. 6i3-2163. EXP. Ha., .. tian C~ne.r.
.smog Frtt Wa!lhin1tlon, 3 Complete g\n:lenina aerv.
rent111 Muses, bcttch ca.bin, 1 ,K~·am_•_1_'"71~· ~"-...,~-'-~---
10111 6t Al'rtll~. -t + unit General ServiC9•
'!''Ork. ,\11J11t br 11blr 10 mar:" EXPER. SAILMAKER: ln1mt'diale Openings • :\!AN'{ JOBS SECRETARY r>iJ!f'I" li~v 1". C. Con11t. bkkpr. J\lalure ""· ,_ I 1-•, e ALL. AREAS 1,~,,,·. t'/. tlm• . C 0 I I copy, ..,.,r; .. t ma ure nu. ...i... Hood 5" I , C I p ·1-A ,. . lhni Piel,,. \Vrite clusified vklual \l'ith ability to ~-ark Ca.Jl or .i.p""'. .1 • M achine Bklcpr $500 up • • ac1 1c gency &12.-99'JJ. ~
Haw $10.0IXI eq In 2 BR hm
• in Ef..st C.M. Und 6.300 sq.
(L, Jotwd R .... y,>JJi 111:':11 or
trade for duplex or f Sob·
mif otffT. Bkr. 6'12-SIOO * * .... /J.16 FORD clull<: ~ T.
j>ldc up. laot «>n<I. """' for motoreydt or T.
51MU2 •
* * *
11p1, t>xchg for So Calif ..,,.
llA\\'llli. 119-Hl~I mom. only. Till:-iGS by l'fOOSP, U. elect.,
pJumh. ft nct, 11111', lmllns. H&\'t 11.1.<XXI equity In Cor. ona del :\Tar trlrfttx, lll'('l'f fl) ('lu'Jl"ntry, pa.Int ~ 1 c'
d t ;,1:,..0!!20. tra e up or unll!l or~ S11h-1 ~,.-.,,-----~-
mlt otrer. &12·8Kl0 i\lcNash Hauling
Realty, 1---'-------~
Y ARO, p,n.a-t, cleamip,-.
Rl-mov" tl"ft~. dirt. tvy, rn1 li.llnd, backhoe. M1-2666 * * *
ti
Ad No. 292. Daily Rilo!. !ndeptndently. maken:, 1161 \Y. l81h ~1.. Xlnt N.B. co. Stiblc 1:. long ZT".il Jlarbor Blvd., C.t\I. _
P. 0. B¢'oo: tsGO. Costa t.tesa. Call 644-3215 Ct\I. ~ ~stttb. Lovely new ufcs & ===i.54"1).~90,_1"0-:.,,-:-:-SERVJCE St!lli<in, lull f.:
Calif. ~. ~~~:~:;~~"""!''1-::~EX~0PP~E~R~IENC~~E~D~=-equ ipment. Top brnef1!s. P"·Ol.ESSIONAL p n 0 n ~ p;1rt timl'. E.\llfT t.alcR A-~ "' 1 &e.rvi(f' 11tnionntl. Anpl)' RN , i\tasters drif'('(', ~~s CLERK 111 F\1h Counter in J\tarint lta.rdv.•are Clerk ~I r.ttss J\lclan~. :»7-6122. soliM!Or • Dana Polnl, San lOani-4 prn Jn J'll'fS(ln onJ.v,
1ullable posh. AlllM, non N.B. -to hra per \\'k. S2.50 548-~1 afttt 6 p.m. Ab igail Abbot Pf'1~nnet Clemtn1e, Capistrano nrea. l\!tRa Vcrdt' Sllf'll Sl'rvice,
nursing fir.Ids coosidt'rl"d , Pf'r hr. \\'Ill ll!ICh to f\let F{C BookkHrYr Agency. Z'IO \\I. \Varner, \\'ork in your O\\'n homt'" 313 1 \VIII relocate. (80.'il 643-9612. t. Rell. 673-Ml e.ftr.r 10 am. CPA f'irni. ~~I Sulit> 200, !'\.A. Besl deaJ In 11.rt11 . Phonr _.l 1 llrhf'lr R~C'\L __
+ \\'ANT OREA~! JOO * A.ni. CaJI Lorralnr MACHINIST HEl .• PF.R &: 83.'J.1"6.j bch\ttn 9:00 .i..111. ~ERVJCJo: Slfl .\!il'11d11.nt. 11·1c.ST''Ll1'~1-' A"'Sl:.,IBl-""R~ NEY.OED And noon. l'Sl'lf'r rrrfrl. Tnfl I'll.\ ~'!!II Rei:lli1,rtd NUN;(', Cflnlp:lll• COUNTF.R alrl l\'Al\IM. g .,; .o;:, I.: ,, I
Ion. 1, ....... -.m•-~ .. •M 'l.". M:RSO/liXr:L J\GENCY 'lu11! ...._ 1l'll11"lf'. S1sble con1· Rf:LJEF :O.lald, 2 da)'l " 11 P 1111'' "'1111 \flpl). '"""'" ........... .,,,.,.., ,.. 'Iii 2 d"11y, Apply in person '"' ... "I Ii ,. , ' I £asibtulf Cleaner•, 2.a11 2013 '\'eslcl\fl Dr., N.8. mc~'<'.ial fa'm, Chrl~til' Elt'r· l\'rrk. $2.00 hour. lt1u·hu r .~1e · 41 l •' r\11tr. 'LR.
DEPENDABLE NuNll' I Com· 6U-27i0 trir Corp., 2120 Plfllcen1f11. Inn l\IOll'l1 1.SOO \\I, BalOOa. A Rood \lanl 11.cl hi a ~ .... .. Ion fN' ~tderly l l E 11 st h I u ft Dt.. N.6. . ··~· . . . 61' ~3!1. -(~au 64i..'56n C.:\1 . N.R. U"l\'fc4'ln\ll!U h~kPQ". !.!vein :~3-0739. ......,., .
' •
'
• --··· ''
T1.1t~.Y. Novembfr, 23, iq7~ OAllY Pl~O
~~~l'l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! llB ~I ~E-:;:'""~-~lli;ll~l~-~"'~Ue'.::l§l~~ .__I .,_,,.iw ... __ l§l I .......... ,. l§l Auto L•••lno it ~;;;;;;;;I ;~'~s;I
TV,. Radio, HiFi, Horses 15' Cycle1, Bikes, Autos W•nttd 968 Autos W1nted ,..
Stereo 836 2 ~-~ -~ 6 _old Scooters 915 LEASING! -..,,.,====:::::.-
lr§ll ..__-_!~I [ '--_...,,.,_, .... _J[Il] I -I
Help W1nted, M & f 710 Furniture 110 Ml1cellantOU1
l~I -~---
111
~~~~ ~·-,. -,,_..-------SAVE on immaculate pre. --------ll\fPORTS WANTED AIJ..1972 Zeniths are on Hle mare & 7 mos. old Celdinr. II IC If EST Q UA LIT y driven vehicles. 'Tl ~L'\V· WE PAY TOP Oranee counties
1--------SERVICE Sta. Atteod&nts. NEAk new acotchgua.rd 8' 72" l"OLOlNG bed IQ!a
Full Ii p/time. Apply ln sofa • love seat wUI w/matt. Like new $13S.
penon, D> W. Cout Hwy, separate. Sacrltlcel ! ! Man'& 42 suede jacket M5.
NB. 645-l?OL ~ters, l 1tand. $7.9>, I •G,----S~---~ 1-port'. $15. c.....rano Su· SERVICE StaUon help ara9• 11• 812 uvv
wanted. tx])tr. Full & ophone\ $~. 5'19-3171.
now. Fl'ff'ie priors remain Saddl~ & . brlddle. 1125. BRAND NE\V 10 SPEED ERJCK 4 Dr. Auto., a ir, CASH TOP 1 BUXER
in eUect while inventoryl,~>13-5<>1~~9~•~l~te~r~l~"'~'~l.~~ RACING BICYCLE, P.S., R.tJ( predrlvtn appx. BJLL ~tAXEY i'roYO'tA lasts. Prices less than the WEIGHS 21 lbs. $21'1. TJllS 9,000 ml, fl5 l\tO. 24mo. 18881 Beach Blvd.
discounters. Free 3 yr. pie-I 1 ~ IS n11::-A-B s 0 LU TE open c-nd. ·n F-250 P.ICKUP H. Beach. Ph. 147.3555
ture tube, 1 yr parts, 1 yr bts Md J • :)f LICltTES"r J.-1' AC ll IN~ cant()('r 1pec, V8, auto., for wed can le trucb, 1Ult A 1 led 970 Mlrine ~pment ¥. ctll u1 tor tree tttlmatn. vtot, mpor scrvi«. dtlivecy & set up. AVAILABLE UNDER ~. P.s .. Jong whl. base, pre·
ABC Color TV, Ocange'I•------Call M'-15>18 lo 5. dclv<" appX. 6,0Q> ml. 188-GROTH CHEVROLET
County's lal"gest Zenith e USE our Honda Christmas 1\10. 24 mo. OJ)('n end. \Vl-~ Distinctive
p/time. Apply 990 E. Coast SU p ER NE'IGl:t1')RHOOO OLD fashioned meal chOp-
GARAGE SALE! 'Mu.st ate pl.ng biock& 30'X30" xlnt
Hwy, NB. to believe the ' m • n y cond. $150. 543--1345
StRVICE estab. Fulle r bargains you will find in: =~__,,.------
Brush Customen. C.At. Up turn. toys, appliances, col· Mlscellaneou1
to Sl60 wkly to start. ltttors items etc. Sat Nov Wanted '20
962--0-llf= 27th ~5 3891 Flniste~. 3rd
Dculet. 9021 . Atlanta at General 900 LF.ASE ALL POPULAR .'.." !or' •-· .. M·· .. -Sports Carl~ ~--------lay-away plan. H et b n;>ft '31 ..... .. .. l\.tagnolia, Hunt Ing ton -~M . C I Friedlander S 3 7 6 S 2 4 1972 l\fAKES AT COMPETI· 1!211 Beach Blvd. '71 l\.fCB roadster e '6!1 Au5-
Bf!ach, 9&S-3J29, ar1ne onsu tant ' -• TJVE RATES. ttn Healef Sprke • '70 Flat
rNDEPENDENT 893-'r.166. Gall J\lnlcol.m Reid lot liuntil'lgton Beach p;porta racer • '69 Porlche
SERVICE Station Attendant, I ~I~.t~an_d.~Hn-lg.=.... _H_ar"-. --~
all &hifta open. 4678 Ca.mpUS Miscellaneous 118
Dr., N.B. M&-1757.
le srEREO Sale• Buy lge. • Purchasing-?>IAVERICK Mini -motorcy-fuMher ck-tails. sn.tm7 KI 9-3.131 912 • •n TR-6 9'"&6 Tf#r, CA$H PAID FOR S~ am/fm mul!iplex Counseling on pUrchas-de. 4 speed trans. ExCt"llent THEODORE WE DESPERATELY VS e 190-SL. 4 to choose
SHAo"\f POO Girl -for busy
shop. Must be 11 c 'd
operator. Ask for J\Ianager
548-4179.
l1De furniture, appli&neel, recen·~r tor 2 ~·95 & tng boats ,\ equipment. cond. Jl!iO. ~546-1879 afl. 6. ROBINS FORD NEED lrom &: MANY MORE.
STEREO, 1972 Garrard, baa antiques, One piece or rec f! v e · 0 nee r e Marin• Surveyor All day \\'knds. 2060 Harbor Blvd. Ot>an usM CU'S Authorized r..mz Dealer
full stereo chani'f'r, air houseful. C.a1J day or nlt::ht, Amhassi;idor speakers for 646-2977 ,,. '69 Yamaha 250ce Enduro. Olsta ?>fella 64Z-0010 FANTASTIC PRICES (1) ~·7250 le. Savings of over $300. ___ _::c:..;:.:.:.:_ __ _
s us Pen 1 lo n speaken, SG-2Zil cr·547·T133. U.S.A. Stt>reo E qu i P \\11Y ln\'t'Sl in youro .... ·n boat, Xlnt cond. 3000 mi. 1525. or Autos Wanted 961 Paid for )'OUr car, paid tor ALFA ROMEO
AM/FM stereo rad lo \Va.rehouse, 119 E. 17th St. ..,.·hen you can go "-'here ,. best offer. 54~il0 after 6 or not.
SH IP PING1'VAREHOUS'& w/ITr + tape deck, still \VANT ED Amal er C.!\t. st5-2442, open 7 days. whe-n you \\'LSh. Be your own P .r.1. k v•knds, TOP DOLLAR DEAN LEWIS
·Well known firm mo\•ing brand new, was left Mechanical Integ r ator. skipptr. 28' J>O'-'o'er cruiser '&I TRIU~1Pli, chopped, IN CASH TOYOTA e VOLVO
to '-"-pro">Ot<• from th>'• llnclaimed on la.ya~y.-Sold ·~~ ..i 'le• U 1-d l 1 uv..... " Write, clauii'ied ad No. 285, <NJ • ..,ay, ~ sa '""· ay. chronic, Har ey rear \\'bee . Paid for ""''r clt>an used ear 1946 HARBOR BLVD. :~ ;~~~~ ~~!rti~2.s~ ~$3:: ~~ouo~~ Daily Pilot, P.O. Box~. I frMtoY~ If I 22~5-5500CE. ~'R" Rav••, runs good S!Dl or best of-pa.id for .. ~; not, Costa' Mesa 646-9303
ALF A Romero
Sprint a>Upe,
A~1/F'M radio,
$1695. 4~7'217.
1967 GTV
l owner,
Lo mi's,
Call Don Ben!IOn, 54Q..6055 pa~nts. Collection Dept .. cc=°'~'~•~M~""'-'-Ca~·-9'6_26~--1 . . ... v .. " fer. 91)S.6520 alter 7. SANTA ANA DODGE WE PAY TOP 0011.AR
al 714/893-0501. WILL take good care ot your ~ perfect cond, chfo!lp! J80 hp 1969 CZ, \'t'ry good rond. 1401 N, Tustin F'OR TOP USED CARS
Coast A&:ency ~..... piano while ,,,u 3 Lines,~ Times, $2.00 iiihd bait ta.nk & pump, r ig-•<.t15, Please.' call after 5 83S.3691 If vnur car 1s exlra clean, 1790 J.larbor Bl. at Adams Beaut Sh E • t •·--~, ,. Y op quipmen travel or rt>nt yoltr home. t:ed for J\tarlin, Call PJ, pm, 962-4356. \\'ILL Buy your car paid ror &&; us :lint.
'61 Alfa Spider Conv. Lo
mi's very gd cond. SJ!fl(I.
~3786, 494-1569.
SALES: Leading sport-sv.·ear (1) 'TWO Station Florentine No chil"-" "~n ......,. alt 517..w.13 \\'kd~ 9 to 5. a•UER BUICK dre ...... "'" ...,.,....,.,;i LOVABLE 5 mo. female ----~·-·----Motor Homes 940 or not, •Call Ralph Gordon "
co. neeCallds lD wom8•3~ A~$ ss38xing,8bar/w/2, 1,r•hml ir· SPA!. Sa....,..,ed & Shep"-d mi" 8' SABOT type-dingy, gl11~·-----------_I 6~ -549-3031, 1970 231E,17lh St. aN'a. Pal, """''...,, rors 't w ma. c ng ... v.. '""' I I xlOd $75 642-806a '7l EL Dorado i\lini·homc, H•-bo•Bt,·d. Costa ?-.lesa. Ooiti-?i.feSi. $3.77«i
. 1959 ALFAR.
Nttds wo rk. Engine
rebuilt 645--1250 aft $.
523·9348. desk. 2 Rnd based hydraulic Mu1lc1l lnstrument1 812 w/shots. Call all 4 pm. I'( PY'' · '· . '" •
h . 2 _,_ ••• •167. aft 7 pm. n-lf~n1, sips 6, all p\.\·r. 1 T A t N 980 Autos, New 980
TERMITE crewman, exper. c au·s, .tUJ-conditioned FOR SALE .,..,,...., Dodi::". "'inter ra t l's. iiuiiosi,iiitiWiiiiiiiiii
Autos, New 990
personnel, lic'd or ufllic'd. dryers A chairs, 0 n e CETZEN gold trombone ArRE'DALE Trrrier needs Boats/ MarJne
904
5'1S-9513. .....
\Vo offer li fe ins, gro"p Belevedere shampoo bowl Excellent Condition home lov£>s children & ha· Equip. 'th 1-i ..... k h 1 2 t---------Trailers, Travel 94~ health inst.tr, pd vac, proht WI '"'u'6 Ca r, ** 492--0963 ** bi~. raist'd w/cat. Lic'd,
-"•ring. 5 d•y ·work vok. separaters. $480. Beauty -------------shots 545-37'66 CHRISTMAS LIGHTS '" pp1· ~ C ORUl\t set · everything goes. 12.'JD \\' AC DC t II h Call for appt. Bardcn's Ex· BU let: e......... M 979-0126. · d FINE talt>nted kitteno; 2 au, · por · ~ t
CHRISTMAS Ludv.•ig chrm. snare". Zil • mal-'•. 1 f<mal<. 11;0-'· plants. ideal tor Chris'!mas terminating Co. ask for Joe LIGHTS jian cymbals $215. 557-81.fiO '-,-,, Laux or Dave Barrlen, 696 1250 \Vatt. ACDC .......... li""-t al> 5. &33-5Zl3 Stepb· 557-9769 lights boat pamd", campers,
,,....,, '5" ' ' cabins e1c. Sold n<'w at A Randolph Ave., C.~1. or plants • ideal for Christmas eves. $778.:5. Limited supply Rt call 546-5570. lights boot parad<'. campers, KIMBALL upright Piano b' t Sold Ex. cood . ...,ith very nice.' LABRADOR Puppies, black, fantastic sa\·i ngs, $129.50.
TRAL'l'EE 'VAREHOUSE ca ins e c. new at t $2'l5 962--7689 6 \\'ks , to good l\!umey·~. 2'537 \V. Coast
This nationally respected $278fa astf.2S. Li.UJited supply at one. · 6 -=.,.::ho=m::::."=·_.c897:::._-="='='·:.__1 ~t~I•~)~'.~. =N=·"=·~,.--.,..--,--,,-
11 · · nt c savings, $129.50. Pianos/Or,.an1 12 co. promotes to a posttJOl\J Minney's, 2531 W, Coa:;t • S.'iAlL mixed cock-a-po.) 12 VDC lo 117 vac Inverter
from this entry !~el job ~~ Hwy., N.B. -CONN & ALLEN -* Good ,,ith kids ..-Hea th r..tP 14,· 400 \Vatts
ly. A real New Years Ser1U· ORGAN DEMO SALE 54&-9596 after 5 continuous, frequl'nCy con-
off. $6200. My Loss· Your Gain! MALE blaek Lab, 1 )T okf. trol 60 cycles, polarity pro-
Call Bob \V\lson, 540-t.055 1h carat d~mond ring, Tit-d tl'c-t ion, Input cir cu 11
Coastal Agency fany setting. Value $600. ~~: b°c!~:.~~~t Loves children breaker. NE\V-checkcd out.
2i90 Harbor Bl. al Adams Asking $285. (F'REE -never l ==~*~"'-6-63~-'-'-*~~-Nt>vrr used SlOO. 546-a710 worn. l•dY'• • man·, ··-.1. buys on our dl'mo 11pint>tfi . 1 . , __
TRESSES EXP ER "' ,..~, 'NHITE Spanie puppies, u= f 6 p '' & k ·" WAI • ding bands.) Call "'"S7IO Riso. All merchandise 60ld A. tcr ·· · \\' '"'~·
I · ...,.,. · · to good ho1nes: Day/Eve Shift. App y 1,n per· aftt>r 6 p.m, & weekends. \\ith new \\'llrrantics, prtvatP 837--0560 23' partially finished hull,
son att 2 PA1, The Derby EXT. king bed $ l 50 . lessons I.· d<'livery. Wlill..E 1----,--c"-.,,C'---,--~ marine y.ily.v I fblgs. S.)()O.
Restaurant 1262 Palisades H b k n-IEY 1~AST! FREE till dirt, Y1Xl haul. 250 HP Interceptor V-8 ,,./
Rd .• Cos!a · J\1csa. ump ac trunk S35. Twin GOULD J\1USJC Good soil from our front bed set $50. Reel. chalr $60. vclwt drlvl', $.150. or both for
WAITRESSES <.'lep'd only, all Hmm proj. $3:>. Antiq: dbl. Since 1911 A yard. 540-22'19 all 5~f. S700. 544-6831.
oc
HEAVY duty trailer, \\>inch,
ran1p, suilablc for dune
buggy S2C<l, 546-1819 aJt 6,
t'.ll <lay \\:knds.
1966 ll' Travl'l Trai l e r
w/cabover, beaut. cond.
545-1318
Auto Serv1ce, Parts 949
GUARANTEED
"' USED TIRES "'
YOUR-CHOICE $4'$6=$8 **** La.fge selection to
choose from! ~ !
Firestone Store, 415 E.
17th Sc., C.1\1. 646.2444
L,__._"_"_1"_"_"_..111 ·~·I
shifts. Apply in person J im· bed $35. Skis_& boots (U.,g) 2)4! N~7~n, ~.' ' STRIPED Gn'Y/Blk furry 28' Unlfllte 1960, S6500
bo's, 3050 E. Cst H"-'Y· Cd.~. $35. Jee skates (2) $8. Span. bundle of lo.ve & energy. trade for trailer boat
WANTED. Jive-in hou&ekeep-game tbl & 4 chrs. $150. * SALE SALE * Box trained kitten. 54S-788l. cash. Owner, 846-1430.
.+ Du~• Buggie~ 956
er. Nice home w/ own l'OOm 644-6333. PIANOS ** ORGANS
& bath. 3 children • 10, 6 & 1-*~-A~U~C=T~l~O-N--*-Steinway, Kawai, Harnmorid,
2. Urual housekeeping duties Allen, Baldwin, etc. From + babysitting. Possibility of Fine Furniture $29'a. RENTALS.
\\'l'.>rking out 1 or 2 days a & Appliances :l\1on & Fri e\'C'!l 'til 9
v:eek. References requested. Auctions Friday, 7:00 p.m. SUnday 12-5
_.:'"::.:,;:·":::',::1.= ____ ..,...1Windy's Auction Barn FIELD'S 'PIANO CO.
WAITRESS, neat, a 1 f!r t. :w:r15~ Newport, CM &1&-8686 1833 NN'POrt B1tvd. "'"'
Dcp'd rood & cocktails. 3 Behind Tony's Bldg ii.lat'! Costa Ml'Sa 714 &15-34JU
to 4 nites J>l'.'r "-'k. Sml SACRIFICE! WOULD YOU
din ner house, CdM , % Carat diamond ring. Tit· BELIEVE
673-7'722. lany getting. Reta.ii valul' na:E ORGAN LESSONS
\\'A{TRES5, EXP. EVES S600. Asking S285. (Matching as long u you like! No rer· e BLUE DOLPHIN e Lady's &: :l\tan·s wedding Lstration. No obligatlon. Just
335:5 Via Lido, NB bands, never \\'Orn, FREE!) c.ome. l\.fondays 7:30 pm
WAITRESS expe:r. Not under Call 546-Sno a.lier 6 pm & COAST MUSIC
21. No S u n or Holidays. weekend!. 642.2851
Apply in person. Kramer's EASY-lift trailer hitch, ORGAN SALE
512 W. 19th St .. Costa Mesa. Elect. brake control, like Conn Organ Annual FaJI
WOh1AN for lite housework new, both S::O, '~ sr. Clearance. Save up to $1000
& aome cooking, 5 dayg Roll-Away be d w/in· on selected console noor
wk, 8 A~t to 2 PM (hrs nerspring mattress. SlO, demos. Huge discounts on
flc"iblel Own car. Rl!ls. Wbeelbarrel $6.50, 3 cubic all models.
Lindbergh School area. ft. garden cart S2.50. post COAST MUSIC
~3681. hole auger $1.50. 646-3.t58. NE:WPORT & HARBOR
I~
Antiques 800
SLElGH, one horse open &:
trl'e. Perfect eond.
Reasonablt. 5'10-0617 eve.
Appliances 801
Coldspo! Refrig -S20
Norg!! Stove-gas. S20
Both O.K. condition
SLEIGH -One horse open, 0>Sta Mes11. * 642·28Sl
authentic antique, per f, Organ Storage Sale
cond. Bumper pool table, Allen 25 pedals, Allt>n 32
extra long, twin beds, pedals, Artisan Chapel mod .,
541}.{11;17 eves. Baldwin 5A, Wurl 460'l, Wurl
WING-back liOla $50. Slipper 4460. Antique Recd organ.
chair $15. upholstered chair Neo.vport Orpns * 6f">1530
$13, Baby liCale $4. New LOWREY .Pianos & Organs:
J\1agnavox turntable $35. \~amaha Plano & Organs: &:
84Ej..5013. Steinway Pianos. Best buys
POOL TABLES \Va.rehouse in new & usl'l:l. Schmidt
Sale. Freight damagl'd s49 J\-lusic: Co., Est 1914, 1007 N.
'!\lain, Santa An~ to n99. New slate factory
crated, $193 to $ 3 9 5, BALD\VJN 'Val nu I Spinltt,
639-8623, 529-8466. cost $12C<l. i\lus! 'e 11,
Coldspot Refrig. _ $20 $700/bst ofr. 645-5086.
Norge Stov<'-gas. $0 BAB'{ Granrl B 11ldw1 n,
* 41' CHRIS Crflfl tri.cabin,
Pets and Suppl.in I[ "L.i l twin Chry1dc.r 2!Ml hp loaded! . T" O....•ner 6i3-8780. ';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;:1· WANTED: 100-ll:; HP I ;\lcrcury outboard motor.
Pets, General 850 Prefer 135 !IP. !!28-6431. 1 -~--~---1 FOR Sale, custom built 100 Boats, Power 906
gallon aquarium complete ...,. N . S ~-,. ,_
979 70 "" . e\\ , po,...,. L!in•·r,
Sl50, -05 · !hrgls, Flybridge k tu·in
Cats 852 cng's., Fast. 0\\'Tler v.·UJ ____ F_R_E_E____ finance. 5'16-3676.
Striped grey/blk }'urry Boats, Sail 909 1::..:=:....-----bundle of .love ~ energy, * TORONAOO * Box ·trained kitten· to . ~ ho "07-. Excelll'nt condition
""""' me. . ... o-""' ssso * s12.i.1n
Dogs 854 LIDO 14·\\'ith trailer. 6 mos
DUE to child's allergy must o!d No. 3576. $l•IOO. 67J.5~
sell our SL Bernard puppy, Cd:\!.
4 mo. Champ i;ired. Pick:i -~s·T~E~A~l-o_u_r~f~li_p_pe_c_
of litter. Show stock. Asking S115. e 675-4950
only balance' due, $2j(), B Sii /D k 910 54{413.s. oats, p1 oc s
sruo Service-AKC male t<>a · 1911 v ENT u RE 2 4
cup Poodle. Crey. $85 or pick \\'/trai!rr. Loaded! Racing
of little. 87'9·5758, 63J.9264. i::eri r & Spinnaker. $300 &
MIN. Schauzer pert. ChriS1· T.0.P. 548-291'>.
mM ¢rt: mal<'S, AKC, ll VARIOUS ll'ngthi; anrl up to
wits. Ot. bred 557·3ifl() eves 11'7 Beam. Nr. Pavilion
GUARD DOC: See my lii5-SR25, f21JI 967-1259.
miniatul'f' Schnaurers. AKC, 75x24' Lido Pcnin. $HIS. Call
homebrokcn. 8 wks, all 673--2792 between 9 am &: 2
Champion lines. 64>4209. P'.11 days.
PLEASE ~ive a hnme 10\!~;;ii;!!!!!!!!~~~
fl beauti ful o~ yr old cat. I J[i]
Mink bro"·n \\•/gold eyes. Tran5portation m
968-9'571. -------·
GREAT Dane pups AKC ••••••••••
Fa\\·n, 13 .,.,.k.o; old. Champ. Campers Sale/ Rent 920
sired. $100 & up terms,1-'"--'--~'-"-----
6.1.l-4117. e Brand NC'"', never used
\Vork Good! 5.1S-78SI
CLEAN la!e model
washcr I dry!'rs / m1ch scts.
Del-00 day guar. 531-8637;
839-Ii78
Both O.K. condition \Valnut. Paid over $1200.
\Vork Good~ 548-7881 -=B="='=•="~'='='-''-_·_'l34_j·---\VANTED: Small, male Silky T"rnrr. FREE! Water bed (5 yr. PRIVATE party \\•a nts lo Objccl: l\latrimony . soon.
f'111nprr !lhrll for ii· 1ruck
32" h1i;:-h "'/bubble ~lass.
!162-2AAO.
'68 Dune Buggie Xlnt Cond.
cllmplete top & slde cur-
tau\s, consider older \".\'
or Pickup partial trade
612™3.
Trucks 962
TRUCK SALE
'69 Chevrolet '/4 stake
6'?10
SALE PRICE-$1995
"'4 Chevrolet Pickup
Long \Vheel Base. l.26101
SALE PRICE-$695
'69 GMC 3/4 Ton
Camper Special Loaded,
6923"0
SALE PRICE-$2295
'6S Int. Travelall v.s, overdrv., trailer pullet.
RfAg.15
SALE PRICE-$1295
CAMPER COMBO
r (33614)
Stove, mr· tor, side din-
ette, · autifuJ oli\'e green
10 match
1969 Ford F-250
Camper spl'Cial (755341 autl).
mallc, air. radio, heater,
heavy duty equlpmcnt. A
real steal ::it
$3995
MIKE McCARTHY
GMC USED Applianceg & TV'1,
'Ve guar t.; deliver.
Dunlap's, 1815 Newport BI.,
C.M. 548-1780.
guar.) w I pure-ha~ of any buy piann for ca~h. 49.f·5994 before noon or eves. Cycles, S ikes,
frame & liner. 646-2296. R35-2?1R GREAT Dane fl'Tnlte fa..,.,•n, Scooters 925 894-1336/531·2450
REGINA F!Oor shampooer, FOR sale S1cin.,vay Grand A,i;c, provrn show '!Uality, 125 Yamaha i\IX filtron, Corner Be&rh &. McY."adden,
waxer.polishel' 120. Piano, 5'6" Also piano bar 4 ~ mo. Cropped & shots, \\'ebror + many e"tras. --~="='""='=m='=""="='"'----
Cameras & ~ 546--1879 avail. i\.1ake offer. 642-829.'t 645-4209. Xlnt cone!. $375. I oUer '72 GMC ~ JON
Equipment I08 f\fAYTAG ras d1jlt'r, model STEINWAY CONSOLE BOXER male. 10 mo. Papen 67l--1922. l NIR·-0-N--PhotO--m-l_c_Fttt_.'"'.:,.~1'."'..4 806, l )The. old, ffperfect cond. w/bench. Beaut. Italian nyle· & atiot.s
30
. ~;114~kends or·l,,=70,=-s~u~zu=K~.-1 -00,..-.~8-,-,-,.,-, CA.\fPER gpecial, ~ v.s,
Nikkor lens 35mm Vivitar $1j(I. or st 0 er. 963-1J02.1 .~=..i=""='_cS750=·:...:83.l-0=-~1=13:___ after 4: · ""..,... ""· strcct/ttllil, He. Lo mi. au tomatic, radio, hcatt'r,
..,.,.ide angle lens. 2 strobe NICE klveseat, needs Store, Re1t11uranT, SCHNAUZERS avail. now or $2$'.l. Call aft 5: 9fi8...5855. gaUf:;'es. pov.·pr disc. brakes,
nits k Nikon caming case upholstering, $::0. 920 W. Bar 132 ~ld HI Cbnslmas. ,Groom· HONDA 4yi •66• very clean. auxiliary J'('ar ~rings, wide
& stras $375/oUer call alt 18th St:C.M. I ·F·0-R-,a!·,-~---m·1-G-•. ,-,-1ov-, 1ng, stud 11Crvlce. 846--0R39. rack, bal'S' ju~t o'haulcd, base fires, buy now tx-fore
5 "'"606 FO --• · . ._ ,_, ~" a.; lhto pncc ~zc is taken of/. • ...,.,..... · R w.ie Jani..,r""' equip. le hood (Wolf Junior a c. PET health food, 1007n fresh $450 or 1r11de, 84~372. sirick No. 502684.
Furniture 110 17" butter, wet &: dry 622G::OL, 2 deep fat tryen, mear. 20c per lb. Drl\vcrcd Boys Sch..,.·i nn 3 i;pced The truck people from
vacuum, upright vacuums, Comm! kit. &ink, Uprighl lo your home. 557-62~3. General Motors! \\'A~UT Bt'drm fu rn· etc. 646-7082. freerer, roll \.\•anncr. ho! AFGHAN Pups, champion y!~~~;'J'.· ~~~~;:~if
Sax!. 21" Zcnilh color 'rV ~FlR=•EW=oo=o~F=o=R~s=A•L•E~ dog v.·armcr. Sta1nlcs~ !i1rel sirNI, sho\\' ,~ Pl't. !-~--------$3'395
ncw pirture tube $200. Orange & Eucalyptus 10' counter, ice crcan1 &15-42{)9 '67 KA\VASAKI 2fiO SS :v!any MIKE MCCARTHY
\Valnut & natigh pedestal 544-7ro3 freezer, 2 cigArctte nlllChln· ~~~-~,-..,,,..--,,,,--1 xtras, nins good. $225 or
chr ,t._ fool 5!00! $75. ----~-----cs, cash reglstt>r, booths, AKC Fem, Collie $100 or hl>s! off<>r. &16-2;yj7,
979-1627. \VASHER SIO, iron(,'r SlO. tahl~s. bcnchC'S, l'fc. l\!ak~ share or Jilter. Great 1969 YA'.11A!-IA Enduro GMC
8. llERCULON wfa & rolfee table SJ, upholstered offer all or part. 492.1324 all, \\'/childrrn. 6'12-4469. $325. chair $10. 675--0892. ~ loveseal, round pme set, ===~-~-~= ~5~•-·.•~''-"°~'-· -=---1 SAMOYED pup, ll \\·ks, 6'15--.16'18 894-1336/531·2450
tutted crushed velvet living MINI Bike, good cond. $45· TV, Radio, Hi Fi, ~KC, stJ:ils, male: C!_lamp BOY'S Schwinn JJ" Bike Corner Beach & f\1cFadden,
rm. set, hantl carved cotfce Surfboard s5. Stereo •'Lt hnl'. Reasonabl£>, 55t-2.iQ.I. ...,,, c>xtf'nclcd chromr ror k. \Vestmlnstcr ""3 54S.:l768 ......, 1-----'------& end tables. 67.....,...... · LAB R1rrricver, rem. 6 yrs Prrt. conrl. $3.) &12-4~9
5 rooms furn & appliances. FOR SALE: Girl's skateit, FISHER ·aid, AJ<C regis. Ff'ee to Uflrd 3 speed blcyeles: ...
rombo TV. altreo & 1ize R, & a unicycle. 1008 KX·!IO i;tet'l'Q Amfl . .ttl ~d home. g,16-4834 ('YC~. """'. """'' l••bel, C. i\f, •-• d k 646-4740. watt!! j~/iJ) phorio. tapr, •~,1 .x. A:i.11n1 radio. ~s. l'S ''I==,,--,--~---~-FREE vi''"" fricnclly tan & * 646-7°-* 1uner, aux lnp, t.dnM cont. ·~ l\Oll blk & \\·ht TV. etc. 557-049&. BENOI for entry hall or hi fil!l'r, roilCl'nlric .,'OI . wb.ile riog. \\'ei~hs 1$1 lb~ 'i:l CB i'londa 750 MOVING! co z.1 p LET E •e1ephone $10. Wal. cast'. $60.00 or otfer. ~ abl 9 i\lo. olrl. 67J...'.ll22. Good Cond. V.lOO.
lfOUSEHOLD FlJRNJg{. &1Z.3l63 Ph. 89'7·7791 aft. 5, LOVABLJ.; 2 yr old blklgray l)r.fono 5 pm. &ts-t663
TNGS. &n-5851 PARTY dresse!!, vinyl outfit, PIONEER SX900 & t ere 0 , lt'male C8l. ShOts, spayed, %!() C'C _ Suzuki _ XS
I b -~t skirts, tops Sl-$5. Juniors I ~ • 10 ~ ,_; ··-' "-'• '"~n Mt. Ary l'l!IUU>"" p oncer ttver.,.,.ator "" ..... ,. ._. ... '""°' V'M"VW'>• D•rt oc 1~t ... _.... s.u. fiU..3163. """' lruitv.'OOd flnllh pt11ttl "'"""' splcrs, $350. CE port col TV OLD English Sheep Dog pup· Call 646-1900 attrr 5. *•* &44-1034 ••* MrNK 1tolr, Autumn Haze, $1~ 546--1075.. piet, l mos. \Yonned, 16321 SCJ-lWINN ~ Tlndeni.
FOR salt' solid "'al n ut $400. ~tust 5tt to ap-1_SW_L_R_oc<i __ V<_r_H_ea_lh_G_R_S4, Anita, HB. Like new. $Th.OO. 646-0191
dresser & mirror, 2 bedside ,preciale. 6i~:r173. · 5 Band 180 K cycles to 30 M SHO\V Schnauzer (l'lY It alttr 5:30
tbls, ~4. \\!HITE v.'C!dding dress, 11i 14. cycles $45. 546-SnO at~r 6 white.'. • AKC Call 6~2'170IT-=Rlc.UM::..:=P~H-ttArt--,-lor--"1e~-0,
SJLVERTONE t'lec oraan, $40. HOOVt>r vacuum cleat'ICr J'l.J\t. & wknds. afttr 6:30. trad~.
sro. \\'lllte br.drm set SEO. 1 _1_15_· °""'="'~"°~· _91ll-.....c1::.6.l:c7=· __ 1970 ?-.tomrola 1tctreo coru;ole 'Cockapoo Puppy $10 &l5-J2j() aft 5
Antiques &· m~r. ~7-.r,7i's. TWIN box spring A1\ll/n.f tuner. turntable.. .._.., AIH8 .., * 5,14 3885
• .,.._, . '6' 9,, !tV " '", "ult d-ss,
GllT I I
"
top ta mattress S20 tape deck. GOOD COND, 56 •~ ' '° \VROU ron g 11.. • Horte1 8 immaculte. blr S'l" x 31 ", 6 matchlna * 64Hi06 * $300. or hes! nllrr 646-ol67t. ehal~. Sl~. fn!>.SE09 SERVISOFT 11.uto "'·ater con. CF. am/fm 1terro phono-HORS ES Boarded. Olrrtl or 6~2-STQ.l or -i!U-30ll'i
For that 11em und€r 150, rlitioner. xlnt ro----na. $175. a·l'ftph con110lt. Xlnr cond. l!;O'XSt11ll~. ~r'i"llTrftng 7 T HONDA 50~
tey the Penny Pinchtl! 675--5525. SJS. * fi1s-orn Club. S51-431'.M or ~7·517l. rmm11.c cond. 545-1318
" ' '
1n1ernaUonnl Haiv~er RECREATION CENTER
ROY CARVER, Inc.
2925 llarbor Blvd.
Costa J\te!a S>is.4444
CLEAN 1952 Chev)' pickup.
Good enJ:lllt'. radialo-r,
brakes, !ires &: battery;
$27.1. !Q.4119.
'61 FORD v.s. Rf Ton.3 Jpd
S4~JO or Best offer. 646-i387.
2246 Eldrn. C~1.
'67 Eronolinr VAn 6 C)'t.
Chrm ...,·hl ~. xln'I cond.
SJ300. !i.YT.,,792, 49:k1022.
•SS!1 TC11tTr11ck ,.
• $3.'l(t, ...
• fl62,.1489 ..
THE NEWEST CARS YOU'LL SEE
THIS YEAR
FORD FOR 1-972
MAVERICK e MUSTANG e CUSTOM
e GALAXIE el TD
MAVERICK-PINTO SALE!
EXAMPLES:
'70 MAVERICK '71 PINTO
Gr•bber 9reen/r•cin9 dripe1, 4 1p11d,
good ""H11. tlJ7CAlCI. F1.11lv f•c.tory equipped. R•dio, he•ter.
l llllBEPI, ILUE IOOll PllCl S21l0
OUR
PRICE $1596 ~~~E $1796
STATION WAGON SALE!
TS TO CHOOSE FROM. Imports & Domestics. Country sed1., Squlrn,
Torino, V.W ., Volvo, Datsun, Oldf., Mere., Toyota, Opel. '65 thru '71
modets. Some with full pow« & air cond.
EXAMPLES:
'65 FORD WAGON
'70 FORD 10 PASS.
Squir1, VI, R&H, 1ulo., eir, P.S., P.I.,
9ood ""U11. llDbBEJ ) C(lunlry t1d1n. RIH, 1ulo., 1ir, P.S ..
9ood rni!11. ly¥WK76;9) ILUE IOOl PRICE Sll40
OUR
PRICE $796 OUR
PRICE $2896
LT.0.-GALAXIE-T-BIRD--TDRINO SALE!
Mony to choose from. '6S thru '71 Modeh, Sport roofs. formats, 2 door
& 4 door hardtops & sRans. Full power, olr cot1dltlonint· Warrantla
avalloble.
EXAMPLE: '71 T·BIRD H.T.
Aulo., P.S.,
wl\t1I, w1w,
P,I ., P-window1, P·buc1t1t 1eot, AM .FM St1r10 11.li(I, t ir co11d ., tilt
body 1id1 mld91., r1mol1 mirror, 9ood ll\il11, lb,4IZJ I
'65
'67
'66
'65
'63
'66
BLUE BOOK PRICE S471S
OUR PRiCE $4196
OLDS f-85 WAGON
R&H, •utomatic, pow•r •t••r•
ing, good mila5, tNYP'412 I.
SIMCA 1000
4 door. low miles. Original
thru.out. (VTM868 ),
PLYMOUTH VALIANT
R&H, •uto., P.S., air condition.
ing. Good milas. I SVZ862 J.
PLYMOUTH FURY Ill
2 Dr. H.T., R&H, auto., P.S., air
eond. Good mil••· I PIT48'4 l.
THUNDERBIRD
lmmaculat• thru·out. New paint,
Full power, air cond. I UEZ879 I.
MALllU S.S.
H•rdtop. 4 spaad, radio, heater,
9ood miles. ISLV41SI.
Sal1 Pric11 Good for 72 Houra. C1r1 Subit<t to Prier Si le,
(
1
l
l
• I • • ' ' •
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