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1971-12-14 - Orange Coast Pilot
• l ' I ' r I t • ID • Europe E i ,, ,-·JUESDA•Y. AFTERNO.ON, DECEMBcg':J,4, U.97J. . . , .. '. . VOL; 6',iNQ. m, 4 Sl:CT"*!'-it PAGES • -. • II ' } • r ' ,·oe~1s -.Dri~ng ' ' ' i " .~ . I Uf'l\T ......... ' ,Philip Mills, HI, who beats the bus strike-by' roller skiting to work, bas been told he is breaking a 50-year-old law in Sydney, Australia. 'J'he law fo.rbids ~destrians 'traveling lon~itudinally on a main road, or skallng Ol\,a'\fOdtpatb.' 'One 'thlng's CA?rtaid -he oould have )>eaten the bus. • :: . • · · . ' ' Battle for Dacca Begins ls·:Indian Borii,hs Rip. City ,,, 1 1!f": .• 1.~r' .... . . . • he /Ozrdunng disf,Otc,. po1>led 'by( wtr'e·disarmed'Mo~ay hight to prevent fore~Qtl correspo~dents ~ rece iyed · a potslble-\iprising. out.nde ,n°"1!<1l comm:nica~cms.. . ., Red Cro~ offi<;J~ls reporttd a gi:owing • AccA ~ils[ p~~stiln (~) -The· scarcity' of kxx! for city dwellera, who ~e fur' OaCca beganrtoda:fas lndlan · once numbered ;1.S. millioll rbut are now i.,tiblnt'attilck.s hit the'cily, set ~ove~ Jtobably I~ than h,allothaf aa many fled mitnt houses 1'own~q . ahre ~nd\ hit tb their Jlfcestral couittry!k:le \tillages. ae\teral other targets w1th1n the city· A Pakistani army doctor reported One column of Indian troops advanced military wounded have been brought Into wt&bin seve~ miles of the city wi~ oriJy Dacca hospitals, "more than we can deal one more nver to cross. ilb ,, East Pakistan's pv,:rnor-and COUDCil w , · • , ti) ministers resigned ind 1'ith their Time magatme s Dan Ko~ and Jack femilles fled to the Red a.a neutralUied Fol!le ot the Loo Aogelu Timet reaclted :zont at the Hotel lntercoi'ltinental, where lhe front line fighting at De'1'f'&, the about 15 were gtven sane ary. croaing point of the Lakhya River seven ,In midanemoon a transport plane 11e'lf miles southeast of Dacca. over the city dropping leaflet.I urging They witnessed a brave ferrym1n mall. non·iengalia given arms earlier by the lng crossing amid geysers of lndJan arm.y West Pakistan army to "~ave your area shell fire and flapping fish to evacuate a od rurrender to the nearest army unit. Pakistani's army rearguard unit from an Your livea and' ,RfOperty will be pro-east bank village being entered by mixed tected.,. ' ,.-' Indian army and MukU Bahlni, Bengali It w• re»orto« that B<ngall pollcem•n ~errtlfH. ., ' Nixon Tells Deyaluation OfDon~· • • JINGRA Jio . HEROJSMo,, Amrt!s <UPn -President Nixon announced to- day a 'direct ~valuation of the American dollar to help solve the· lnterilaUonal monetary ·crfiis. · . The bom~lt' announ~ment, made fn a· co min unique following 10 hours of talks between Nixon and President Georges Pompidou ·of France, did not say bow the devaluation would be accomplished orlb)' bow much. · · Presumably, it woold come through an Increase in the U.S.-set world price of f.ss an OURce in the price of gold. Nixon and Pompidou did not mention the matter In a meeting with newsmen following completion of their thlrd and final face-to-face mCeting. Nll:on did say "we mide significant progress in the problem of the in- ternational monetary situation/' hike other major U.S. trading parb1ers1 Fr~nce has been pressing United states tO devalue the dollar, by raising the<prlce of gold, while the United States wants· them to raise the value of thej.r pri.nciEJ&l currencies. The U.S. aim is to make prices of U.S. goods more attractive overseas and reverse \lJe growing American deficit in world trade. Nixon headed back to Washington aboard his "Spirit of '76" jet at 10:85 a.m. (EDT), an hour and a half behind (S.0 DOILAR, Page !) * * * Dollar Tum bles In ~urope .4ft;er D.S. Devaluation . LONDON (AP) -The dollar !ell sharp- ly on European foreign uchanges today after Presidents Nixon and Georges Pompldou announced agreement to work toward a dollar devaluation as part of a general currency realignment. The dollar dropped in Frankfurt, Paris and Zurich. It had already set a record low In Tokyo before the announcement. In London it held evenonly because or Bank of England intervention to keep the pound level at $2.5191. Trading was heavy. In Frankfurt the dollar closed at US75 marks, down from 3.2750 at the opening. The closing price was equal to a 12.4 per· cent mark upward revaluation. In Paris the dollar' dropped below its official Ooor of S.5125 francs, the point at ,., which the Bank of France is SUJ>PO!ed to intervene with suppcr1 buying, and fdl to 5,5100 fl'll)CI. On the financial market there, whml cum!ncla floot ltoolY, the dollar dlooed ·11igbtly to cloll II 5.aa francs, a frinc revaluation of about U percent. In Zurich tllr dollar closed at 3,1193(). l.95 s.ta tra..ee, down from 3.901~ 3.80SI Swiss !ranca Monday. Today's rate repre9ented a franc revaluaUon of 4.l percent1 In Tokyo the 'dollar hit a new low ol 322.57 · )'en, the equivalent of a yea revaluat.ioft of 11.12 percent. •• ·• ·Ir ' . ,. • I ' '. . '. BIQtd1 E·•mo:pte~ ' U,I T,....... • Using their fingers to '!ee' Sallta,iltUe IJsa Cosy,'5, and others gather lmpressiOns of-the folly man durinJ a Christmas party sponsored· by the Blind Service Association at ChiGago's Pick Congress Hotel. More than 450 youngsters and adults aUended the party. • • . I' , , Mother, Son F!ee Werno In Home ·o yerf ooking Bay Q-ecklin( nunes and a banPig doo< 0 """'ied Mrs. Thompoon and their )'OUllg blown open by furna<e-llke heat blasis son. awakened a Newport Btoch mother and Dem~e estimates Included $10,000 to her son early today, rwtinc !hen) tnto the the lllucture illell and an lddltlonal cold as a llJ,000 nr. 1Wepl port ol their '2.0IO to household cantenfl, whlCh tu!· hOmt. ' : •·fer!dfromrsmokelndwaterapcmire. No ooe was Injured tn the blaze that Fire dtportment crews had to tear broke out Ill the William R. Thompoon throqh the residence's We roof to home at illiii' Barranca, overlookfnll Up-thorou&hlY e•J"'1ullb flames and steam- per Newport Bay. _ tng embers tn the structural Interior, lnveotl(aJor• blamed bouaehOld Items They alao pointild out storagt o! Dam- 1tored in a closet boullnif a forced-ah: .mable i&ems so near the household's heat beaUnc system for the· predawn fire ln JOUrce was es.tnmely hazardOU11 u 1 the Eliitblua cltvelopmtot. warning to other potenUal vlcUn\s, lleepoadlnc to a 1•4 1.m. almn. Only 1 mooth qo a family living tn Newport Beecb RI.re J)eolrtm.ent untt1· nearby Harbor View Homes was awa'i.en- !ound lllme1 '-tn1,""" the point of ed by 1\mll•r ~s In time to flee_. orfl!tn up throurh t.be HCond Door to the major blaze, tiellevtd caused by an elec-rool. trlcal malf\JncUon, 1 Investigators were told Thomp&OD was Investigators 11\d they were lucky to away In Palm Springs ajlll thal the sound •scape with their Um1 while a pet clol of the flrt c•tlfnc furiously Ulllltr WI'/ traJll!<d brlelly tn11de was al1<>rescutd. -t c .. ., .. N. ',, . Zo • : ew . :Q1ng • I . . Re<JU€St~ )-·f I . GDllio" ,. •J . s ., .. ... llJ '!;. PEIER Xl\IEO °' .. ..,,, ...... ·• ' CO!llmt'!llldio ·Compony b fOfll& to osli Newport Beach for· a zone change that wW allow, construcUon of a nine-story. ~room hotel and two mlllfon square feet of office space on ~ts 140-acre tract near Or~e County Airport. -company official! confirmed today they will go before a study sessk>n of the planning commJs.sion Thursday with the proposal. Less than a week ago, a eoru.n. vice Jresident said it would be one month btlo(O any plam would be eomploled. • Oevtlopnient of the Collins Rad.lb Com- pany property for commercial use would be the third major project of its kind in 'the vicinity of the airp»t. Newport Beach 'epproved a 200-acre comm.-cial development a c r o 1 s MacArihur Boulevard one year ago and Orange County supervisors last month approved a controversial zone tjlange for the 50-acre McDonnell Douglas tract between the Collins pnipetty and tht Airporter Inn. , , ' • , All three sites propose major botela. Another hotel b scheduled to be built at ?ielf?Ort Center. Collins cfficials this morning said they have not determined how much develo~ ment ot the property will cost. O:lllins executive Roger Hopkinl also disclosed this morning that the Irvlne Qmpany, whlch owns the Collins pro- perty, has agreed not to oppose the J'e7.0ning request. lrvi~ ofricial1 led strong opposition to both the Emkay Development Company and the McDonnell Dou&las zone cf1anso proposa1s. Hopkins said tenns of the lease may even require Irvine Company support of the COililis request An Irvine Company spokesman this ~rning refused to confirm · or deny (~ COLLINS; Page !) Orange Weadter 1 SUMy but allghily windy b the I weather word for Wednelday. Loot for tem~atures dropping a couple notc:be1 to 55 along I the coast and up to 60 Inland.. ! INSIDE TODA 11' I I Merfccm·Amnicani in Foun.-' tain Valley ore becoming more I awc11t of their polition and t heritape throuah a new Chicano 1 awo.renes1 program -otttmded 1 b~ Anglo1 .. W<ll. Stt />ag< 9. t L M. -.n 11 MwM • t ,C"""'11tt ' 11 ...... ....... 11 } C"""he 11•1' Ii'"'-' M1w1 ... ~ 11 01'11191 Ctvlltt" t Cttttwt,. JI SYIYle hmt 11 1 DM1'I Nttkff • ..... 1•1? ........ , ,_. • ·-Mafhtl 1•1• •11t1r1......_. 11 T~ tt ,.,,... 1•1• .,.....,. tt 1111.... 14 W•lllW 4 AM U111Mn ll ......... ,....,. 11o14 Mi"'"9 1.lctfl-t Wtftl ,._ I , ' • .1 • f' ~n.v1'1LOl ~ s Pea~e -Dija~k Justices Bar Be1~hb.i1f-Boy ~EW YORK (AP) -Arnold Pa1- li1 c1n play blttbltl for hb·Stalea r11~ • Wttle Le1sue teem nut •P<lni' ~ bl' order of the AJIPfUalo OM•iO!J ol the s,;te; ""lqn\I 'r.;ooper' Says He-,s ·Doomed : Court;-4 c ' ,. The eourt mentioned unanlmou. ly Mond•Y thlt the Jeague'1 prul· dent w1s out of order In benchlp(. ll:Y'9':'1\d Arnold last May be<a11,1e ' hjj,,,fit~r ,tia(ln'f .helped 1n mai~ . i., l\llJI the 'b.atl field.~ . Qr, ~!i~ha~J,Pagll•. a cancer su_r. geon, 111d lib ~hedu)e prevent~ bin\ from 'taking ~rt 'Jn the lawn care bi.if -~fered "ld hire a boy at . feltd nil handyman 'to do his ttiari. ' Tflt · Jueu;e ~sldtnt refused the 'offer and iiot10ed Dr. Paglia that hb: Mf'I Wis beriched. Arnold gult • tM team ln d~' ahd his father · oued. • . ' Arnold, I U.pound second baJ&- man. said he ••~ happy with tht court viodicati~ but. WllTl't sure he wadtecl 'tO 10 b1ck to tht te1m. LOS ANGELES (UPI) -letter purportod\y writleo jry fu&IU'~ hljacter "0. 1t· Cooper~' Clatma lhe parAhuled In- to the night with P00,000 to•buy peace. 9f mind becaUJe he hat only 14 months to li '(C, tht t..ot Angeles i,mes saJd today. . The letter writer 1aid he ll11ed a lite 9f halt •nd lplbt a hm. . _ A number ol letters, IUppogedly from "Cooper," ha11e b' en r,.ceived by newspapen throughout the West Id re· cent wetks. It Is not known U .. any art ge. nU.lntty from the m•!'. wbO hijacked a Northwest Orit.nt 'lt7 Nov. 2•, claiming to have • bomb. He cOllect.a the ranaom aod )Sl.rt.cMlted out the rear dobr with it between Seattle. and. Rtno, Nev. -The Seatlle Times 11.Jo received a copy Of tjle· ktter, Uie Los AnJ<lu Tto>es reported, and the ·letter "indicated that eopiea also went to thl New York Tlmt11 and the Washington Post." The letter was .malled to the Loa Angele.1 Times ·from SeaUle. ·Saturday, · •· ~ ·· ., a.nd baa been turned over to the FBl. the D ' "Ar fs pap<r said. · · rug res "I didn't rob Northw!lt Orient becauSf 1 ~ .:. • , ' • I thq&Jght it would be roin1ntic, heroic or • · , ' any of the other euphtmiallUI that ~IOefD to attach themael11es to 1ltuatlofis of high ~ rl!ks," the letter said. "l am oo modern day Robin Hood. Unfortunately J do have only 14 montht to l111e. , ··r.fy nre has been (Ille of ~te. turmoil, hunger and more hate, This seemed to be tM fastest and most profitable way to gain a few grains of peace of mind . 1 don 't blame people tor hating me for what I've done nor do l blame anybody for wanting int to be' caUgbf arid pUn\1b- ed. though thls can neveil happen." The letter writer said he would never be caught bec;ause he left no fingerprint.a, wore a disguise, and empJoyed other unspecified means to co11er bls, tr all. Ht was wearing e. toupee a.bd ')Utty makeup at the time o) the hijackl"t and would ~ impossible to recognite frop1 the com- posite picture drawn• up by FBI artlsta from the descrtpt\oni of witnesses, the letler said. ';I've come and gone on several airline flight.s and am not holed up in some obscure backwoods town," the letter ~aid. "Neither am I a psychOptthic killed. As a matter of fact I've never eve n received a spetdlng tlcktt." · ~~.i:npJ· Seizure . : . · o~~~tpl!>~ives . Fear Expressed by Nixon War May Cancel Visits A.f't.J:tlht lirtet of w·ee~l!:nd marijuana alrtlti' Chi.fig~ tompleJl6n dr•sticilly rn Sin Clen\enlt TUesday when police an- nDUl'lee6 lht ·.e1zilte bl blasting caps and a detonation coid from an AVenfOa Pali*a· apartment occupied by two of the 1w1pects: On the tame day a ma11 ·who was ques- tioned in the original arrest produced • large antlaircrart shell for police -a piece whi~tl.had r!eentl,v been emptied ol ~o pouqdl of tJU>JQSlve powder. • , .• ;l'ht developments caused police to seek . Distrigt f .AUomey;1 cornplalnls tott:ay, charglni possession ot IUegal expk>si.ve . devices. against Chris 0 . NjcKnight and Ra~y ~llli,am Comte. both".22, and both res1denfl or 22• Ave,Vda Pahzada: Tbe::in~ originaUi Were arrested by oatrOhnlotliit Stturd&y ifter polk't"ln-" Vesttg~~ eMnplaii1~i( or: i.it ·~to ~l"I<~. '. in a red ione near Oit resldenct. After ofncers entered Uie residence they liHegeifly.noKced several marijuana cigaret1 ancl a roach •clip ·•nd arrested five Occuputt ot tlMf residence. · 't'fie'blasting ca?! were discovered~dur ing fQUow:up-su.rcheJ of the apartment. .Poliet repoi:ts this morning stated that the anUahaaft.. devk:e,1a· shell with Ill DOH• iport~ missing, wa• SCAl .to military . .avthoriUes at Camp Pendleton for e1aminallo11. late Xueaday the Provost Marshal' I of- tice (of<t !IOlke .that ~ .a~ared tbot th<! dtvice'htit'beeri recon\ly· a11niontild 'and a ~· thirte"ol; ell:pLollvta lhad bttn mnovet.:I! .. PoUCe nowi art aeeklng to determine whtrt thou tft·pound1 of <p0wder art,· they 1ald:'-:-:-'-~·· -· · · -.: Federal authorlUe1 also are in- ve1tlgltinJ, • po1ict iald., b t c a u 1 e po1se11Son ot. UM upl01lve1 violate a ftderaJi law. '.. t ·~ - ANGRA 00 HEROISMO, Azores '(UPI) -Prisident Nixon is deeply concerned th~t the 'lndia-Pakistanl war could spread and ·threaten cmcellaUon of•hls trips to Peking and Moscow.~ ' He has engaged in intensive discussions on the Asian conflict with Freoch PrtlSi· dent Georges Pompldou during their iwo. day meeting ori this island in' the inld· Aflantic. Informed soutces said there ls ap- prehension that the Indians, having all but overrun East Paklltan. mlaht turn apJnst · West Pakistan and attempt to selie.the remainder of the country. · The potential dan11;er to World peace, with the Rul!iam liding with India and · the Chine.st" closely allied to · Pak1stan, hu prompted Nixon to undertake ex- tensivt'"diplomatic efforts to ·brl.n1 a bait to tht fighting before it spreads. Tht question of what the Chinese would do i( faldstan's vitblllty as • 'statt· la Uftltened caused ~ concern. M'Otit of Nixori's diplomacy ha1 been conducted in the open arena of the United Nations where twict the Soviet UnJon us- ed Its vetof 1o till a Security Coundt rt~lutloa <;ailing for.:. a ~ate-fire ¥d motUal troop "llhdrawal. . ., fn bfth vo€t1, the United States tnd Oilna we,t On the . nme 1lde, hil' op-· l posilion to t~ 'SoVieta. The White' HOUie. charged the Soviet ·u nlin 1hwarted "oveiwhelmi11g" world opinion" when it vetoed a U.N. Secli,rlty Council resolution calling for a eeue-flre ,in Pie J ndo-,aki1tan war. .. The Uni Statu cannot but rearet ' 3 ;Lil eguards Honored For R,l}~~ll:f}·:.pj .Reagan ' • .... .... ":·. ... • • , • • • ..lo Thr~ lif~i;'"Who r1~«1' i .~: .. ~y. ~ere 1h11ied;ool for the honor by from a c~ril't whlripool. ol rn.U!J .. and reaCu.ln& a 2i-year:0~ Placenlll min who debrl1 . cai-ried _ utw~ H\J!'llngto11 Buch:. had drifted out tO tea whlfe takln& a waters by the Santa~Ana Rl~!r dUrlpj_~· jOyride with a frle'nci on the flooded;Sant. lHt fl~ will be·ttttid "for:--h·eroibn by · Aili Ri\lfr on Jan. 28. 1911. . Goverqor Ronald Rta~a'i\ Thursdii:y. , r:.. J;lt -was the moat terrifying day of my The ~edal of Valor -ofte of the state'.•· life \! iai~ Emery an" Edison High School highest honor. -wlll be given to Eric '-· · 1 • Emery. 33, of Huntington Beach: Knut teachtr .who was working as a )!&11-Ume Skjonberg, 29, of Costa Mesa: and to Jer-winter lifeguard at the time. ry Benftetl, 2$, now living Jn Australia. Emery said that Charles Sarrett and OlAH•l C041f DAILY PILOT ' . • .i.,... .... . H .. tl ..... s.-11 -·-._ .... . c.,. .. .. .. c ........ l•'•'* N, w,,4 ,., ........ lilllll """ ...... T~•"''' A. M11111Jr.l11• l10t""1iftll ••Ill!" his friend had pla111n~ tO "shoot the rapids" of the ri ver lo its mouth wllh In· flated inn~rtubes and then disembark near the ;etty. "The second man made It to the bank, but. Sarrett didn't and •ashed a quar- ter mile lnto the ocean ," said~ Emery. •·Someone spotted him but we couldn't get i boat in or a· helicopter down there ." Emery i:nd Sk.jonbtrg decided to swim out to Sarrett, braving five to six foot high surf which had created a vortex effect around the victim. 'There was a lot of debris in .lbe waler -trees: telephone pol.ea ·and de.td animals. lt was difficult lo bre•the. Whenever 11 swell would (()me thmigh, all this stuff would press down on ~r bod11. ll was terrifying." Emery reca lled. The two guards, assisted later by Ben· nett, worked . for more than an hour trying to free Sarrett from lhe maelstrom .... "When we first looked at the pool. he ••s jus4n0thtr Piece of debris noatlng ~ Ji1. tbtrt .. Bot IQ!nebow there w1s _,aiethlng just I little bit different about fhal pler:t ot .. dtbt1a." aatd Emery. , "sr)obbet( 1inoJJy , 9""-'«ed to ,Jl!act hlmttlf into po1ition to catcb fht _w lrUni vic.tiin, and together, the three men twam him Into shore. When he was brought In. Sarrett was di.~vered to be ne•rly unconscious. Both Emery. 21382 Sand Dollar Lane, Hunttngton Belich; and Skjonberc. 580 Hamilton St., Costa Me.1a, plan ta attend lhe+J:)O p.m. ceremony Jn lht! 1011trnor'a of nee. · Search Abaniloned MANILA IUPI J -Autborltl" olticlllly ended the aearch Mon~~>' for 10 penons mllaln& llld believed tilled ill Iha cr11h of a Navy a plant SUnday. ' the failure of the Soviet Union lo join the vast majority of the membership of the U.N. who called for an immediate cease- fire and withdrawal of forces from foreign te1Titory," White House P r e s a Secretary .Ronald L. Ziegler said Monday night. The Jndia'-fakislani war became one oC the major topics on the agenda of the Nixon-Pompidou · talks overshadowing other foreign policy matters. Secretary of State William P. Rogers warned e11 route to the Azores that the war is a "classic test" of the U.S. 's tf· fectlveness in keeping the peace, In his talks with French Foreign Minister Maurice Schumann, Rogers IOUgbt the support ot France to end the "bloodletting." He llso conveyed Nixon's feeling that "if the U.N. waits for the dust to settle in Pakistan it will settle over the 1raves of those involved." But Nixon and Rogers struck out in their "')peals for FrencD backing ol their movts. France abstained on the Security Council cease-fire resolution M o n da y ni1ht. A WhJte House prtss spok~man 1ald that in addili<in to Ow summit talk.I and the 0 .N. movtt, Nixon h11 en1a1ed in extensive diplomatic activities to urge restraint by the warring p1rties, He decllne<I to disclose whether there had been , direct contact with Ruasian or Chlne!t official•. . Camp Pendleton Commander Says Probe Welcomed Maj. Gen. George S. Bowman Jr., com- manding general ol Camp Pendleton, the world's biggest Marine base, says he welc:omea a formal investigation of racism demanded by the congressK>nal black caucus. Rep. Augustus F. Hawkins (0-Callf. ), reportedly has called on the Defense Departnient to look into the charges fnade by an aide to Hawkins after a re- cent vl,iL The aide, Charles E. Knox, said Mon- day. that "the severity ot the complai11L! raised by the men interviewed auggested that a significant number of Marines at Camp Pendleton believe racism on the base is a serious problem." ln a letter to .Bowman. Knbx 1ald he listed cases of discrimination in 1rantlng liberty, reviewin't applicants for officer tralriing and harassment of black Marines. Bowman said, "we are lnve1tigaling the!f. Incident! and will report our find· ings to Mr. Hawkins as soon as possi· ble." When Hawkins 1akl the con- gressklnal black caucus will ask formally . ror a probe. Bowman said: "I welcome it. There has been no nagrant discrimination against any minority group mem1:>frs or this ~as~. but U the alleged incidents merit 1t, 1 welcome an in11estigation. I indeed welcome ii.'' The recent nine-hour \'lsll made by Knox was part of a nationwide tour o( military bases by representatives ol th~ C(lng re ssional black caucus. Knox said Marines, both white and Ne11:ro. replied candkily to bis questions and "I doubl the 1ener1l'1 finding will alter ~bat 1maunl1 to rtal examples of racism. Knox said, "with the te.11timony we already ; .. ve we expect the: black caucus will seek • full Penl.lgon investigation." COLLINS ... Hopkins' statement. '"We ha\lt. had no dllc\laslon1 with Collins R1dM> on thiJ m a t l t r whatsoever," he said. "We have no further comment." 'Mle· propostd planned community development for the Cotllns property would place the high rise holtl on 11 10- tcrt 1llt. at tht lnterstct\on or MacArthur Boul111ai'd and Cl~s Drive. ' • ·~ ' Rustlers Net Man's 'Horse' ' ' Somebody has rustled h~ horot, COMtruc:Uon wOrker MWTIY G. -McMurray compla.intd to· Newport Beach pollee MQnd1y. The Ll&una 8tach man -.ld It was itolen fro.m 09lf)de hla job at »48 E. 1¢oiaat Highway, Jivtria P.atrolman, 1 Don r Col's ~ good 1 description of the mluln1 ltem. • He said the. sawhorse says: DANGER In large letter.1, was worth $25 and had been placed on the sidewalk to warn passertby. Adult-at-18 Law Signed; • No ·Drinking • I • SACRAMENTO (UPI J -Gov. Ronald Reagan today 1igned le111lation .making Ca,llfornJans .tdulta a~ a1e 18 -free to sign eo~tracta, serve on jUrles and marry wlthoUt parental consent, but .1tlll unable to buy a drink, The bill by Assemblyman Paul Priolo (R·Paclfic PalisadesJ, lowers the legal age of .adulthood from ·21 to JI for virtually everything except drlnking•a.nd certain juvenile court procffdings and child support cases. They already ha ve the vote. The state constitution Um.ill the privilege of drinking to 21-year-olds. A proposed comtltutlonal a m e n d m e n t which would have lowered it to 18 was passed by tht! Assembly but killed by the Senate. The Jaw will become effective next March. By granting legal adulthood to 18-year- olds. the Priolo proposal gives them the right to serve as J>Olicemen and to be licensed it o t h e r w is e qutJified, to transport and possess machi ne guns. The new law amends virtually every cede section in the· California Jaw books, including the removal ol an antiquated provision from the Agriculture Code: No lon1er will an 18-year-old be required to get his parents' permission to record a cattle brand. Male 18-year~ will be able to marry without parental consent. Females could already marry at agt 18 under existing California law. The bill provides that 18-year-olds may be tried as adull! In criminal cases, but gives judges the discreUon to send l~to ~year-olds to California Youth Authority institutions, instead of to prison. Youths now receivi ng child support as 18-ytar-olds ll'lll be allowed to continue receiving the payments until the age of 21. Future child support agreements will end al age 18. 1.'he bill narrowly passed. the Senate. receiving 22 affirmative votes, one more than the bare minimum needed for passage. Sen. Clark Bradley (0-San JO.lie ), vigorously opposed the bill saying that the argument that 18-year-olds can vote in elections was not enough to qualify them as adults. . "I'm amazed by the idea," he said. "Two wrongs don't makt. a right." He was joined in opposition by Sen. H. L. Richardson who C()mplained that giv- ing Judges the discretion to treat 18-year- olds as juveniles was wrong. "They're given the rights of adulthood, but not the puniMunent," sakf Rictiardson No11. ti. when the Assembly voted 47-6 to C()ncur In &nate amendment& to t¥ bill. Corn Bougltt by U.S. WASHINGTON ! UPI) -Tht govern· ment has bought 1.4 million< bushels of corn from Midwest markets In the first of its open-ended series ol purchases deslgntd to rescue fanners from a depression caused by their record crop 11nd the rttent dock strikes. ' . - Import• to Rt1e ' Devalue Impact Due Overseas By BILL NEIKIRK A1Hcl1IM I',_ Wriltt WASHINGTON -If the Unlied Stat" devalues the dollar, as President Nixon Indicated today that it Woo\d, the biggest • a.nd moat lmmediatt Impact would be on loreian trade1. 1-r * * Nixon, Pompidou Release Text Oil Devaluation ANGRA 00 HEROISMO, Awi:oo (U)'I) -Text of a joint communique Issued following the. meeting behvee.n President Nixon and French President Georges Pomp!dou : "President Nixon and President' P-om- pldou reached a broad area of agreement on measures necessary to achlf:ve a set- tlement at the ear:llesl possible date ol the · Immediate · p'.'roblema of: tht In· ternatlonal monetary system. "In cooperation with other nations co~ cerned. they agreed to work toward a prompt realignment of exchange rates through a devaluation of the dollar and revaluation of some other currencies. 'Mils realignment could, in their view, under present circumstances , be ac- companied by broader p e r m i s a i b 1 e margi ns of fluctuation around lhe newly establishtd exchange rates. "Aware of the interest in measures in· Volving trade for a lasting e<iullibrlum of the balance of payments. President Porn· pidou confirmed thal France, tog:ether with the government! of the other coun· tries which are members of the European Economic Community, was preparing the mandate which would permit the im· mlnent opening of negotiations with the Unlted States in order to llf!!tle the short- tenn problems currentl y pending and to establish the agenda for the examination or fundamental questioru In the area of trade. "President Nixon underscored the con- tribution that vigorous implementation by the Unittd States of measures to restore domestic wage-price stability and pro- ductivity would make toward in- ternational equilibrium and the defense of the new dollar exchange rite. "The President agreed that dlacu6sion should be undertaken promptly In ap- propriate roruma to reaolve fundamental and interrelated lsaues of monetary reform." Yule Shoppers- Dress Warmly Christmas shopper 1 c<1ntemplating trips ouUlde had better take jacket.i;, because there's anow in them thar hills and the weatherman predicts chilly for down here on the Orange Coast too. Cool but fair weather i1 forecast through Thursday, with xusty wind! blowing down out of foothill and mountain canyons. The U.S. Weather Service says \ow temperatures will drop to 30s and •Os In mountain areas. wntre l<>lllt winds gusting up to llO miles per hour have been recorded. Skier1 heading for winier wonderland during the holiday season will find fj ve inches of snow al Big Bear, four at Mount Baldy and three at Fawnskin. A weak storm system that swept through Monda y dropped rain along the coast, registering .40 inches maximum in some cities. Americans would nnd importl mart expensive. U.S. exporttrs .trylnj: to aell ~ their aoods in foreign markets would • have an easier time, alnce their product• ' would be relaUvely cheaper, Behind the facade of the hlahly : academic field of currency devaluatitHt and revaluation ii that basic ecpnarnle fact : It meaN gettin1 either a trade ad· ~ vantage or disadvantag't. .. Otherwise, devaluation of the doll ar will not be noliced by Americans unltu they travel abroad. ThoH will find' ' foreign goodJ and services. more ex~·~ pensive, since their doll~ra wi,U purchul 1 fewer foreign currencit~ As part.of any Agrternen~. currencit1 of other countries would bi: raiaed fn .. relation to the dollar -by how much, no .... one knows. i Revaluation would achievt the 1am.1 economic effect a.s a dollar devaluatl<HI -., incruse the price of import& comint tnt13-';. the L'nited StatM'*nd reduce JPe price OI . V.S. erport.s told in other countries. • •· The Pitsid~nt·1 11nouf'K;tment, JOfl• e.xpeded de.Spite officiil itenJals, allo • • reco1nius a basic economic fact of life: ~ The· economiea of Europe and Japan have ·• recovered from World War JI. Japan's economy has become • strong, in fact. that its currency, tht. yen, l was regarded by U.S. officials to bf grossl y undervalued, givin&: tM JapenMt an artificial advantage in sellinc in the U.S. market. That is one reason why Trea1W')' ' Secretary John B. Connally pushed tht · . Japanese so hard to revalue the yen. t Nixon's decisio11 should smooth the way for settlement of tht! International monetary crisis, which has persisted since Aug. 15, when Nixon announced tht ., United States would no longer redeem dollars for gold. But just what kind of system will bt forged has yet to be determined. for Ult announcement from the Azores failed to specify wheth'r the United Sties •ould resume paying out gold for dollar claims . ._. Such a move is considered highly ': unlikelv. -, Neither did the President say whtn ·: devaluation would take place. The United States coold devalue the - dollar by raising the officlai prict of &old, now set at $35 an ounce. Ra ising the price ·! of gold to $38.50. for examplt , would be a · 10 perCent devaluation, one figure mtn-· · tioned prominently by parttdpants In ifto · temational monetary talks. · The monetary .1ystem of the non-Com· munlst •orld has been based on the value of the dollar -and its tie with gold -· since it was put together at Bretto" Woods, N.H .. s quarter-century ago . The exchange rates of all other cur-· " rencies were related to the dollar, ill other words-. The United Stales removed that ba1ie ~ underpinning when Nixon made his bold ·• move on Aug. 15. Since then, the cur-·! rencies of the world have "Ooated'' : against each other. in eCfect flndinJ their ' own price In the exchange markets. From Pqe l DOLLAR ... his original tchedule, and Pompldou left .; for Paris aboard hi1 1leek Conconte. supersonic jet about ball an hour later. ~; Nixon arrived at the airfield ahead of Pompidou and accepted an Invitation for . -: a quick tour of the Concorde befort bt : · left. Another major session ls acbedo1ed .thll \l'eekend in Washington of fln1nc:e ministers of the 10 bi& non.communist trading na tlon11. The Junk Busi11ess Addressin9 tho Conlral lndiona Floor Cov1ri11t AllOciation , tn industry spoke,man, Walter Guinen s1id: • "Too m1ny people in the floor c::ov•ring indu&try t r• convinced the public only want& to buY 11Junk" carpet." W1 'r1 afraid t~t you mi9hl olso 91! thi1 impression from tht 1d1 whi ch specify unb1:i1v1Dle low prices. lnvesti91ting the.st ids will determine one of two thin91 -oithor tho carpel IS junk, or !hoy will try to sell you something mort t l ptnsivt! Wt don't soil junk al Aldon's, ~ut wt ilo have qu•lity •t competitive prices , tnd the best in&t1l1tion in the county, ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COST A MESA 646-4838 HOURS: Mon. thru Thur>., f lo 5:30 -Fri., f to f -Sat., f:30 to. J ~ J • •• ~ • •• .. ,. .. , ·' ,, ' ,. I • ' 'I I 7 l ! 7 Dontfu11ton · ~--~h Fountain Valley I ~or. M, NO. 297, 4 SECTIONS, 60 PAGES • • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ,TUESDAY, DECEMBER 14, J97 ( . - • TodaY'• n it,J • • • • . . ' ' :rEN CENTS : -• • IXOll I eva ue 0 ar India Hit's Governor Sign.$ ' ' Bill Creating Dacca Area New Judgeships A bill <nating 16 new Superior Court WithB01nhs judgeships in !ii S<Jlftiland counties, five ol them to be added to the bench In Orange COunty, was signed Monday by Gov. Rooald Reagan. 1be ~her of Orange County Superior The fo!Wwing dispatch pooled bu Court jurists will rise from 24 to 29 under terms of the legislation authored by fortign correspondents wa.i Teceived Assemblyman John ·Knox (0..Richmond}, outsidt normal .communicatiom. it was announced. .DACCA, East Pakistan (AP) -The No immediate prediction was made on bow · &Oon · Gov. Reagan wlll appoint battle for Dacca began today as Indian nominees from Orange County's five bombing attaw bit the clty, oet gomn-oeparato judicial districts, ment houses downtown afire and bit As&emblyman Knox'• measure only In- aeveral other targets within the city. creaaea superior court judg,. from 10 to 11 ill bia own'COntra Co.ta County, .One· column of Indian troops advanced Ono new judge each will be added In within seven miles of \he dty with only San Bernardino and Montery counties, one more river to cross. while five will be named in San Diego and East Pakistan's governor and council tlree in Santa Clara coontles. of minlsterl ruigl\ed and with their families fled to the Red cross neutralized z.oni at th! Hotel Intercontinental, where Jackie Kept about 85 were given sanctuary. In mida!te'rnoon a transport plane flew over the city dropping leaflets urging Harlem Visits non-BengaUs given arms earlier by the West Paklstan. anby to "leave your area and SWTellder to the .nearest army unit. Your lives aod property will be pro-'Her Secret' tected." It was.reported: !hot Bengall·policemen w.,. dl!anned IJon\lay Dlght ·to prevent ·NEW YORK (UP!) -Once a week last •i::lbleu~ . eroa ~ a poWlng lprjng, P>e -"" -..... to ~ GI -Jllr m'lllf;.dwellers; -IJie ·llarlem •heller for deJl<ived cblldren ~ 1.4 . 'lilt Ile .,.., 1liil•tpent MVenl -~ting ' bly less t!W! llaff tllOt u DWl1' 8ed and bU!ldlng bloc:u w!th·the I t year- thetr aQC<Stral countryll<W Vlllq\!•. oli!J. A 1'aklst8lit anny doctor repOrled Jacquellne Kmmecly'OnasslS wanted to military wounded bave been b11)11ght Into keep ber vohinteer wort ...,.I bo t the Dacca bospitala:, .. more than we can dtal details leeked out Monday. with!' A spokesman ror Mrl'. Onassis said she Timi! magazine'• Dan Koggln and Jack bad asked that ber work not be disclosed. Folsle of the Los Aqgelea Times reached "lt was sometblng sbe .wanted to do the front line fighting at Demra , the very privately," the apotesrqan 1af4. crosSlng point of·UM,: Lakhya River seven A IP)kesman for the McMahon miles 90Utheast of Dacca .. Memorial Temporary Sbelter coofirmed They witnessed' a brave·rerryman mak· that Mn.J)nassis spent several months Jlljf crosslni amid geysers of Indian army as a volunteer at the East Harlem center shell fire and flappipg fish to evacuate a (or children abused or negleeted by p'akistanl'i army rWguard unit ~m an mothers who were drug addicts: east Jiank village being enrer.d by tlllled She came incognito once a week to Indian army and MukU Babinf, Bengali flngerpafnt ind build blciCJ<s. with the gumill ... cblldren and then put them to bed for The P~ were identilied as being their n~, with a frontier fotce' unit in retreat for 14n. assis reportedly ran into only da}s, from Akbaura on the border. one problem. One ~ster complained 'l'be men were looking back toward that the widow President Keruledy Dacca as they setUed In the prepared didn't know bow to make a bed correctly, west• bank defensive poslUons for new He showed her bow, delaying acUon. They soon, came under Indian artillery, No Fire Damage mortars cross-river machine-gun flre and ~vltable Indian air force jets, which rocketed and strafed. At Stacey School The Paltistanls ·have only an antitank gun to meet the oncoming Indian army forces. · · A fire aet at stacey Junior High Returntng to Dacca, Koggln and FolSle afoot were !lopped by Muktt guerrilla Sdlool in Huntington Bead1 Sa~ band armed with Sten guns who when morning caused no damage to the , learnillg they were American journalists according to police. Officers aaid clothing and books teken demanded: "Why are Americans not sup-from lockers at the school were piled ill portJng us?" a central court yard and set afire. Biit they iet them pass with a gay wave 'Ibey aeld the small blaze was easily saying: ''We won't harm you. You are extinguished wilh damage only to the guests .. items used as fuel , The ldtool, which IS A ~idafternoon bomb attack OD. the ill the Weatminsler Sdlool District, Ill government house caaaed a· rooftop fire, located at 6311 Larchwood Drive, Hunt. apparenUy·by a hit~ the generator. lngton Beach, 'Lei-ing It On Haw(lii Trip Cost Sparks Antics Ftlr the head of i. city which finds itself , City Finance Director PauJ Lew had In th ldst of a torrid controversy over predicted that the. voya1e or rtve city of4 e m ficlals would cost about $4,000. cooyention ~s, Mayor T 0 n 'I Uproar followed that predict!on. Forster's Invitation to the 1udleoco ll<lo-Wben the bllla came In, city staff paint· cJa7 waa bold is brags. ed lo a -Der amount just under 13 000. "Does anyone want .to speak .on any Thus, the 4,000 mid.Di. o1 San Juan aubje<I not on the agenda!" be uked al Caplatnmo each gave tbelrfalr llhare for on< point In the meeting. the voyage,ol Mayor ronrer. Councllman "On any 1Ubjedl" be said Ed Chermak, City Manager Dollafd WeJd. emphallcOlly ' ' ' ner, City Plamer Bob JolUll and Plan- Presto. ' nlng Ornml•sion Qialrman Gerald Gaf· Forster then whipped out a lavender fney. . ffftallan lei and ·dangled tt from a Jn a, "'1DJ)lrlaon of sorta, the City of finger • Laguna Beach, which bas a population Loud but nervous l~hter welled up In foor -larger tho the Mbalon city, council chambers ient a lone ddtgate to the annual con- Ev ryone bad ~ IOIDe reference venUon. No one went. from San Qemente. to u! controversy over the number of Those left behind to condiict city delegates and the tab they ran up in bUsinela tn San Juan were Lew, PubUc Honolulu to att.nd the League of Cltie• Worts Director T. J . Meadows and AasJa. cmvenUon in Hawaii recenUy. . tant Planner Phil Schwartze. But a real v.riion ol the tradillonal Althou&b the delegates nturned from ymbol gt. Hawaiian welcome wasn't ei· Hawall with declani~ that the con-~ • venUon. was 0 Yery import.ant for the To ;,,,,....·Ille Jel JlllY bave l)'lllbollzed dly" no ooe bas ytl 1illen a full nport GO the p,ooo tab for the trip. the aflalr, " \ Big .~f!ect' On Foreign Trade Seen . 3 Guards Cited: Reagan Lauds Rescue by . Co~ By Bll.L NEIXIRK AiMdltM ,.,_ WrtMr WASIUNGTON -U the United states devalues the dollar, as President Nixon illdlcat.cl today that It woold, the biggest and most Immediate impact would be on Coi'eign trades. Americans would find imports more upensive. U.S. exporters trying to aell their goods Jn foreign markets would have an easier time, 1lnce their product:a woU:ld be relatively ·cheaper. Behind the facade of the bigbiy academic field of currency devaluation and revaluation is that basic economic (act: It means getting either a trade ad· vantage or disadvantage. Otherwise, devaluation of the dollar will not be noticed by Americans unless they travel abroad. Those will find foreign goods and services more ex· pensive, 1ince their dollars will purchase (ewer foreign currencies. As part or any agreement, c:urrencles or other countries would be raised in relation to the dollar -by bow much, no one knows. Revaluation would achieve the same economic effect as a dollar devaluation - Increase Ille price of hnPorta ~ lnio the.udlid Jllatao ond nicJOce ""-~ .C U.S. uports aold in other countrre.: The Prealdlllt'• ana.ioemet, lotlf expected d~ offlcW clenlall,. tllo r6CopiJll a J!Ulc economic fact Gt Ult: Tbe eoonondOI of Europe llnd J1rlmt'bave recov~ from World War n. Japan's economy has become JO olrong, in fact, that !IS currency, the yen, waa regarded by U.S. offlclafa to bo grossly undervalued, giving the J-an artificial advantage In aelllng In Iha U.S. mm:ket. , Tbat Is one reason why Treaaury ~ John B. Connally pushed· the Ja~·so hard to revalue .ihe yen. Parkland Purchase OK'd 'Nh.on'1 declllon should smooth the way for setUement cf. the international monetary crjs!S, wbich bae perafsted since Aug. 15, when Nlzon announced the United States would no longer redeem dollars ror gold. But Ballot ,pJan Shelyed But juat what kind of syatom will be forged bas yet to be determined, for the Approval wu given by the Huntington announcement from the Azores failed to Beach City C.ouncil Monday night for the apecify whether the United Staes would · purchase of another 40 acres (or the Cen. resume paying out gold for dollar claims. tral Park. However, the council shelved a Such a move is considered highly proposal for a bond election to buy unlikely. another 125 acres. Neither dld the President say when City officials were directed to make devaluation would take p.lace. further studies on the remaining 125 The United states could devalue the acres to determine whether it is feasible dollar by raising the official price of gold, to develop a municipal golf course on it. now set at '35 an ounce. Raising the price The study will weigh the pros and cons of gold to '3fl.50, for eumple, would be a or building a golf course in the south of 10 percent devaluation, one figure men. the park compared to purchasing the tioned prominently by participants in in-privately-owned Meadowlark G o I f temational monetary talkl. Course. J.. * 'k The land the council ordered acquired H is for the right of way to allow the realignment of Talbert Avenue so that It Dollar Tumbks will swing aouth of Lake Huntington between Edwards and Golden West In Europe Aher U.S. Devmuation LONDON (AP) -The dollar fell obarp- Jy on European foreign exchanges today after Presidents N\s:on and Georget Pompidou announced agreement to work toward a doUar devaluation as part o( a 1eneraI currency reaUgnrnent. The dollar dropped in Frankfurt, Paris and Zurich. It had already set a record low in Tokyo before the nnouncement. In London It beld evenonly becaUJe of Bank of England Intervention to keep the pound level at IUlll Trading waa heavy. In Frankfurt the dollar cloeed at 3.1511 marks, down from 3.mb at the opening. The cloalng price was equal to a JU per- cent mart upward revaluation. In P•ria the dollar dropped below Ila official floor ol UU5 francs, the point et -the Bank ol France is "'-"' to Intervene with aupport buying, and fell to 5.5100 franc:» On the Onanc:ial ~ there, where -!loot freely, Illa doller dl-1 111&1>Uy to clooe at Ut !ranee, a (r"1e revaluation of about U porcenL In Zurich the dollar closed at 3.aa.1Q. U8116 S..la fr111c1, down from Ulll~ t.• :::i frlDCI MoDday. Today's rite repre1e1 a franc revaluaUoo of 4.1 porcont. In Tokyo the dollar hit a ,_ low o1 SZl.57 yen, the equtvafenl of~ Jiii revaluallon of U.a percoat. ' ,., -IS. ·Two 10.acre parcels, expected to cost a total of more than $300,000, were ordered acquired "Immediately" because the land owners have filed zoning appllcations to de•elop their properties u residential areas. The 0 uIUmate" acquisition of two other adjacent 10.acre parcels south of Lake Huntington also was authorized. The council was presented staff pro- posala reciommendlng e 15 mlllilln bond election for the acquisltton of all the re- maining acreage in the last Phase of the park. But councilmen were not opUmlstic on the Pl"'JJe<I of the voten approving l1ICh a bond laaUe. Jn 19611 voters did approve a 16 mll!lon perk bond eledlon. Nearly all this mooey hu been spent on· the fire! two phut• of 1he park, totaling more ' than 200 c:crtl. Cow>cllmen painted out that although that land hu been acquired and develoJ>' ment la 1<beduled II> begin In February the-'" .,. not yet apparent to voters. "It 'Will tMe a year to a year and a half for the work on the first two pha1es to be oeen," commented Vice Mayor Jerry M1Jney, who chaired Mondai .night's meetltil. 1'Tbat. and today's economic condltlone, make the llmlnl poor," Matney aafd today. "We ruled out an elect.ion ror the 100- ment. We want the staff to take a further looJc at the feaaiblllty ol a gall courae, redefine the boondarleo ol the third pbase ol the park and see ll we can get IOl1lO new IOUl'OI ~" '!'ht oouocll lo II ... rtprleVt • '" ' to the ·mushroom rarm, 1• acrel'"owned by Ocean View Mushroom Growers, by ordering the at¢! to study whether> that should ulUmalely be in the park, About 11 million would 1be saved ·if the city did not buy the mushroom farm. '1be remalnlng acreage the ·council ls looking at would cost about If million to buy, according to stall reports: lf a.golf course Is built on it, Development Coordinator Tom Seveme aaid the .a million development COl!lts would be borne by a private company with the city . gaining an annual return during , the lease. · ' Severns also told councilmen It would coot bitWeen 12 million and 13 mtlliOO'lo buy Meadowlark Golf Course, lie pointoo! out that the course is 1uJ>.atandard in tenns of size since Jt covers only ;131 acres. • Acting City Administrator 'Brander CasUe reported that· at the end of a J6.. year lease on a munldpal goU course'tbe city .would have an annual income ot. 1300,000 from the operaUoo and e'ltimated that this would cover most or the cost of maintaining the entire park. • The staff was also lnstruded to detennlrie whether other revenue-pro. (See PARKS, Pip I) H arboµr Readres ' Light8 Cruue 'Along W at.erways It's ••Cruise oflLtgbta"' Ume< In Hon-· tington Harbour. , ' The HunUn&ton Harbour· Philharmonic Committee Is conducting boat IDlll'I each evening <i the Yule clecoratloos Iba! can be seen ft'OPl the harbour'• waterwaya. The cruises, which began Monday even- ing, will continue throogh Dec. :D. Thirty· five pluenger boatl leave the doc:k op- posite the Huntington Harbour Corpora- tlon'a Warner Avenue aalee: office ~ oour from I to 10 p.m, Ticket J>r1ca ara 12 for adults and~ cenla lor chlldren II and Wlder. Pn>eeeds wllM>en•flt llle·Ol'anl•·°""" 1Y PhWW'moolc lloclety. Presid~,it, • 0r .... Wudter SUnny but .usJiuy ....., lo tbt weather word for WedllettlaT. Look for tempenlunt dropplnf a couple notcbu to 65 alon& the cout and ap to 80 Inland. IN8mETODAY Me.U:...Amm""" "' rovn- tai• VGUtV GU bc"°""lftfl "'°'' CIUICTI Of tAtlr poll-aftd heritoge l~rouQh a MW Clllcawo 01DOT'CMll program -attended bv Anglol .. 1DCIL Sec PO{I• 9, I L M. ~ 1i Cellftrltlll 1t C......... 1t·M Cllll!o II (,......,.. 11 --. .......... ..... ' ....... 1 ••• • ...... •tt -.. """ LeMiwl ,, ---· . ' • J • , .Frew Pqe J NIXON.~. or Investment dollats oveneu IJld h•lp correct a chronic U.S. balance ot .,.,_ 4'lloil. nM UDllM Siiia II - • ,,.,_ towll'9 Ill lint ww)d trade dtriclt ..... an ezceu of lmPorts over tx· ports -1 ror~the time 11tnce 1893. 1 t1'he jbiilt allltement did not Ii.st the o~·tr ~urf.enclel to be ievalued, nor did it ~ho"-much lhe dollar would be reduc- edl:in valUe Gr bow much the worth of 9ll,DI other currencies might . be ln CNased. l'hue was no mention of the franc in the communique. ...\llheugh the communique !pecified the "4jlar woold be devalued, I\ gave no tiipetable.' 'PresumabJy a d d I t I on a J 090Uatlons . wlt'h major U.S. trading partners will be necessary. ;.tter devaluation, the dollar would be Wfrlh fewer fra ncs, West German mark.!, J~ yen and other currencies. The. United· state.a previously had demanded ao increase in olher currency values to ease itii balance of· payroenta pi-oblems. «'he-two president! uid they favored new W<1rld monetary machinery that .,.u1d pennlt lhe value or currencies to nuctuate more than la now theoreUcally a1Jowed ln response to the Jaws or supply and demand. * -tr · * Nixon, Pompidou Release Text ' On Devaluation ANGRA 00 HEROISMO, Aaom (UPI ) -Tert of a joint communique Wued following the meett,ng between Prtsident Nixon and French President Georges POmpldou : "Prt!ldfnt Nl:r:on and President Pom- pidou reac"hed a· broad area of agreement orf meaturH nece$!1ry to achieve a set- Utm'.ent 1t the tartlest p0S!lble date of the lm.medtate problems of the · ln- ternltiobal monetary system. "Jn cooperation with other nations con- ~rned, they agreed to work toward a prompt reaUgnment of exchange rates thro\lj'.b • 'd,evaluatlon of the dollar and revaluitior1 -of some other currencies. This realignment could, in their view, under prdetll circumstances, be ac- companied by broader p e r m i s s I b le margip, of flqctu1tion around the newly estabijshed, e:rcha1J&e rate.. "Aware of the interest In mea!W'9 ln- volvtn,ttrade. for 1.Jutin1 equillbrilrm of the bala~ of payments, President Pom- pklou eonfirmed that France, together with the govtrnmenl! of the other coun- tri~ 'fhlch art. m.QJTibers .o~ ttle European Economic Community, Wu preparing the m11'!diitS 'h!ch would permit the lril· miMnt opening of negottltioas with th& Unit.ed States In order to settle the short-· t.nn Problems CWTentJy·pending and to eat1.blish·fhe agenda for the examination of fundamental questions In the area of trade. · "President Nixon underscored the con... tributlon that vigorous implementation by the Unlted States of measures to re!ltore domestic wage-prlCe stability ·and pro- ductivity would make to w a r d in- ternatlqhal eQulllbFium and the deferue of the &ew dollar e1change rite. "'I'tle .President agreed that <Uscussion thou!d be undert1ken prompUy in ap. propri1te forums to resolve fund1mental and interrelated 1ssuu of monelary re1onn:11 Ballet Star injured ' LONDON (AP) ,..... A torn leg muscle baa forced Rµulaq ballerina N1talia hfakaro\'a to· withdraW from her first 1tage appe1rancl in Britein since she · defected last year, a 1ala benent . performance before Queen M o t h e r Elizabeth today. A spokesman for the Royal Opera House said Monday the ~ year-aid former member of the Len· inrrad Kirov Ballet had been ordered to rest for at least 10 days. She suffe red the injury during rehearsals. OU.M•I COAST DAILY PILOT OlAMll t'OAlf f'\llLf'Hlff C'OMPA'fl't l•Mrf N. w ••• PrwJrMlll .... """"'""" • J1c.'c I . Cwrl,y Ya ,,_.._. .... 9-tl MtMtt• 'Uit111•1 Kt•vll ...... )' -Tlo•n A, M""""' "'' .... I"' EGlllf' Ali~ Dirk i• w..t Cr1111 ewnt1 EdlfW H-' .. ,.. .._, Otfke 17171 ••• ,11 .... ,, .... ,4 M•lti11t A.Um•• r.o. In 1to, ,,,~, --'*" 9-Q1 tn ,.., ... A..,... C.. .... r D W.I ..., I..,._ ~ .,._,... mt """""" ......... ... ~ ...... llC:...-ltll Rolling Co1n111ute1• Philip Mills, 19, who beats the bus strike by roller skating to \\'Ork, bas Deen told he is breaking a 50-year-old law in Sydney, Australia. The law forbids pedestrians 'traveling longitudinally on a main road, or skating on a footpath.' One thing's certain -he coul d have beaten the bus. Massachusetts Cuts Rate Fo1' Car Insurance 55.2% BOSI'ON (AP) -Massachusetts slate officials ordered a ~.2 percent cut toda y in 1972 premium costs for compulsory bodily injury auto inrurance. They at· tributed the reduction to the state's no- Camp Pendleton Cominander Says • • Probe Welcomed MaJ. Gen. George S. Bowman Jr., com· manding general of Camp Pendleton, the worfd'i blgkest Marine base, says he welCOO'les a ronnal investigation or racism demanded by the congresslonal black caucus, RfP.. _,.ugu.*tus F. Hawkins (D-~lif.), reportedly bis called on the Defense Department to look Into the charges made by an aide to Hawkins after a ~ cent visit. The aide. Charles E. Knox, said Mon- day that "the severity of the complaints raised by the men Interviewed suggested that a significant number of Marines et Camp Pendleton believe racism on the base is a serious problem.'' lo •a 1etter to Bowman. Knos: said he listed, caaes of discrlmlnation In granting liberty, reviewing applicants Ior oflicer trainfng and harassment . or ,black 1'.1arlnes. Bowman said, ;'we are Investigating these incidents and will report our flnd· inp to Mr. Hawkins as soon as possi· ble." When Haw~lns said the con· . gressional black caucus Will ask formally for i probe; Bowman said: "I welcome u: There has been no nagrant discrimination against any minority group members of this base, but if the alleged incidents merit it, I welcome an investigation. I Indeed welcome It." V all.ey Tee11 Aid • Founders Feted Founders ol Founlain Valley's Teen llelp have been honored by the city coun- cil. Carlton and Eva Hinz ,' the couple that originated Teen Hel p, were given an award from the council for their efforts on behalf of the comn\unity's youth . Teen l-lelp opened about a year ago under the guidance of Mr. and Mrs. 11inz and some of their friends. Teen Help, Inc,, currently .sponsors the Youth Service l!enter, a hoUlne, a job t'OO nseling program and regular IC· Uvities and counseling for I o c_ a I teenagers. Deadline Slated For Parks Job . Dtc. II has been set •• the deadline for candld1tes: 5eeking appointment lo the Fountain Valley Parks and Recreation Commi1s lon. The vacancy on the comm ission was created when cha.irnlan June Boykin was appointed to the city Planning Com- mission. The parks and recreation commission meets thtJ fourth Tuesday or ~Ach month. AppUants must have lived within the cl· I)' for more than thrfJe mont hs. Applica~ion form!! are avallable at city hall, 10200 Slater Ave. . •, fault insurance payment system. Gov. Francis W, Sargent and state Insurance Com"'issioner John G. Ryan said however that half the ordered cut might be challenged in the courts by the insurance companies. They announced direct cuts of 27.6 per· cent in the 1972 rates from the 1971 figures and they ordered the Insurance industry to grant state motorists another 27.6 percent cut in the form of credits against the 1972 rates because of what they termed e:rcw profits in 1971. Sargent' said, "we'r'e going tO try to get tho!e · e!tcesS chargfs back' ror the ' motoris~ iU the forth of premium credits. ' ' # ' "The in!iur.ince' companies question our authority to provide for these credits. They may challenge tllem in the courts. "We are confident the rate cuts of 27.I perceiit I am announcing today will prevail. We can't be sure the extra premium crediLci we're trying to deliver will survive a court test." As applied in Massachusetts, no-fault Insurance -provides that liability claims up to $2,000 be settled out of court without re~ard to blame in the accident. It re- quires a motorist's own insuror to pay a claim or less than $2,000 and prohibits suits for ''pain and suffering" unless medical expenses exceed $500. The legislature passed a Jaw this year ex· tending the no-fault concept to property damage coverage but that rate structure has not been set yet. Sien·a Club Sue~ for Vote On Oil Drilling LOS ANGELES (U PI) -The con- servaUonist Sierra Club filed suit today in an effort lo force placing of an anti-oil drilling initiative on the next Whittler municipal election ballot. . ·Joining the club in the action were Florentin J. Pearne and Leonard l}ayless, v.•ho circulated lhe initiative petition: and the Prevent Residential Oil Drilllng organiiation. The Whittier City Council refused, on · legal advice. to place the matter on the · biillol on the grounds zoning issues are not a proper subject for initiative pro-ctedin~. Superjor Court Judge Robert A. Wenke set the 1sull for hearing Jan. 20. L.t\ Won1an Hu.rt In Mesa Crash A Los Angeles visitor suffered major injuries ~fonday in f;osta Mesa, when sht was struck by a Fountain Valley girl's car on a busy ~treet and tossed onto tha center divider. · Rose Veglin, 65. wa~ listed ln fair con- dlUon today at Costa Mesa· Memorial Hospital with a tractured leg and pelv\1 resulting from the 1:50 p.m. accklcnt on Adams Avenue near Royal PAim Drive. Police !Aid motorist JeAnclte A. Thompson, 11, of !G'iSS ~fulberry.Circle. Founl.aln V11lley and Mrs. Veglin both • denied seeirig each other prior to the im· p11ct. Search Abandoned ·htANILA (U J>J) -Autho rities otflcially tnd~ the search Monday for to person• misting and belie ved killed In the craab of A N•"Y C2 plane Sunday. • -- ' . Irvine Counell • • ' J ' ~ ' ' . Citizens Group Endorses 5 Men }ustiCes Bar Benchi1ig Boy NEW YORK (AP) -Arookl P.,. Jia can play hlseball for his Stattn Jaland Little Uague team next sprm1 -by order of the Appellate Division ot tht State Supreme Court. ... Five.ItviJle. City Council candid.ates, all of whom have ties to the Council of the Communities of Irvine (CCI) have been endorsed' by ·a new, 63-member com· munlty organization. ,Lew Waaserburger, cha.lnnan of the . Citizens Committee for the City of Irvine (CCCI) today a n noun c e d the can- didates the group deems to> be "effective and reasonable men." The five selected by the CCCI organiza· Wildlife Refµge Hearings Eyed In Seal Beach Public hearings on his blll to create a wildlife refuge at the Seal Beach Naval Wc3r:-ns StaUon appear assured, U.S. Rep. Cr'aig Hosmer (R Long Beach) said today. The bill, introduced by Hosmer last August. would have the eff«t of preven· ting the Pacific Coast Freeway from cut. Ung through the one square mile marsh on the station. "I have been assured by the chairman of the House Subcommittee on Wildlife and Conservation, John Dingell or Michigan, that the Seal Beach Wildlife Refuge bill will be on Its calendar for hearings early in the neit session of C-Ongress.'' Hosmer said. The bill has drawn support from en- vironmentalists who claim that the freeway would d«imate bird life on the salt marsh. ' "As presently planned, the freewaY, • would do pos!libly irreparable damr.ge to a unique ecological system In Southern California.'' said Hosmer, who believes the freeway coulct be re-routed. Two Countians Hurt in Beach Traf fie Crashes A Huntington Beach man and a Foun- tain Valley teenager a~ in satisfactory condition today alter they were injured in sepante car ae<:idents :Monday rin Hun- linflton ~each. , John£, Da vids;on Jr .. , 31, ol 9602 Cbevy Chase.i.Dr .. suffered be1d ,and che5t.in· juries when his car struck a pole ·on Atlanta Avenue near Kimberwlck Street . Police said he was alone in the car at the tiine of the crash. Brian T. Snyder, 17, of 18.1&1 Basswood St., Fountain VaUey, suffered his in- juries when his motorcycle rammed into the rear of a car making a left tum from Bushard Street to Yellowstone Street. The driver of the car, Collln L. Myers, 9931. Moore Circle, Huntington B •a ch , reported no Injuries in the collh1ioil. Both Snyder and DavldsOn were taken to Pacifica Hospital. J'ren1 Pqe l PARKS I I I ducing activities, such as a miniature railway. miniature golf course. children's zoo and volleyb.all courts, could be put in the third phase of the park or Jn parts of the second phAse. William Foster. vice president of the chamber of commerce, urged the coun- cilmen to submit the question to the voters throug h a bond election. tion membership are: John H. Burlon, chairman of CCI; Miles E. "Pete" Peterson, co-chairman • of'lhe CCI edUcatlOn co mmittee; E. Ray Quigley Jr., founding member of CCI; Jes:ry Choyke, CCI study committee chairman, and David H. Smith, CCI member. Wasserburger said the CCI organiJ.a. lion considered the following questions In making its choice of five of the 30 active candidates seeking election to the new city 's council in next Tuesday 's balloting. . "Do we~ want a council that will hberally spend our money on ques- tionable experiments In city government, ptrmlsslve attitudes in the pollcy ol our city -for example, will lt be wea\: or strong drug law enforcement? -and the inhibiting of proper physical, aoclal and economic development of the city? "Or, will the new council reasonably and firmly represent what all of us came here to tlnd?" Wasserburger inquired. The CCCI endorsement is the first one to back a full slate of five hopefuls in Tuesday's election. Another c o m m u n I t y organiiatjon, Trvine Tomorrow. voted to endorse· onJy four candidates, leaving room for voters to make up !heir minds about a filth city councilman. The Irvine Tomorrow endorsees are : attorney William Fischbach, teacher Robert Potter, housewife Gabrielle Pryor and economist Henry Quigley. Additionally, there Is another "slate" of candidates: running as a team which has been endorsed by another organization, the Committee to Elect an Independent Irvine City Council. 'Phey are: publicist Wsyne Clark , aviation proposals director Alan Snodgrass and economist Henry Quigley. Stewardess Wins High Court Test Of Marriage R1tle WASlfINGTON (AP) -A United Airlines stewardess who sued the com- pany after she was rorced out ot that post by her marriage was handed a victory to- day when the Supreme Court d«lined to hear the airline 's appeal. Thus the high cour\ let stand 1 Di.Strict Court de(fslon In Northern Illinois whl~h approved ~ suit by Mary B. Sprogls who was terminated as a stewardess in 1966 following her marriage. She was offered another job at that time, but refu sed. United and the Air Line Pilots Associa- tion, which is the collective bargaining agent for the stewardesses, agreed in 1968 on elimination of the no-marriage rule and she later resumed her stewardess duties. She has bee n away from the job on maternity leaVe, Viejo High Boys Now Wear Wigs Boys attending Mission Viejo High School are wearing wigs to cover up long hair that violates the Tustin Hig~ School District's dress and grooming code . Trustee Dickran Boranian asked Mon- d'ay night if students were being all owed to wear wigs. Principal Robert Bosanko confinned that students were wearing them. Wigs haven't yet been deemed lo be disruptive, Bos11nko said adding , "when they do we'll take appropriate action .. , The court mentioned unanimous· \ ly Jllonday that the league's' p&'es~ i;lent wa.s out of irder In benchln1 lt·rear-ald Arnold last May because hfS father h&dii't "helped in main- taining the ball field . ~Dr. Michael Paglia, a cancer sur- geon, said his schedule P.fevqted hifll from taking part in lhe l1wn care but offered !o hire a boy or send his handyman to do his ahare. The league president refused the offer and notified Dr. Pa1lla th1t his son was benched. Arnold quit the 'team in disgust and his father sued: Arnold, a 65-PQUnd second base- man, said he was happy with tht court vindication but wasn 't sure he wanted to 10 back to the team. Valley Curbing Traf fie Snarls Over Holidays ' Fountain Valley Is iMtalling AOme tem· porary traffic restrictions in an effort to cut do1vn holiday traffic snarls, accord• ing to the police. Traffic investigator Clark Corbin 11ld the restrictions stttted today and will remain in effect through the holidays. The measure.1 were suggMted by the Fountain Valley Traffic Committee, a group consisting ot · cititens and traftic engineers. Under . lhe temporary restrictions, all · traffic leaving the Gemco, Linbrook arMj ' Woolco department stores will be r• quired to ma'kt right turns onto Brook~ burst Street, Warner and Edinger Ave- nues. Le!\ turns from these ltreet.s into these ceners will' be Permitted. All left turns at the Intersection. ol ' Brookhurst Street and Edinger Avenue will be prohibited. Q:irbin a.aid the no- left turn ruJe prob2.bly will last beyond the holidays due to major road construe-· tion at the intersection. Planners' Meet Switch Rejected A proposal to switch plannirig c:om- mission Jnte1iog days from :n,u:~ay night to WedqesQay night has ~n given the cold ahoulde{by HUntlniton Beach cl-, ty coun.cilmeri. The plan, offered by City Clerk Pau! Jones, was rejected on the grounds that it could have an adverse effect on city council meetings. Jones recommended the switch to leave Tuesdays open for city counCi! business not taken care ol during the Monday night council sessions. He recommended that an 11 p.m. curfew be set for th• Monday night meetings and that the re- maining items be held over to the follow· ln1 day, Councilmen adhered to the curfew at a recent session and completed their agenda well before 11 p.m. Mills a Candidate _SHREV.EPORT. La. (AP) -Rop. 'Vilbur Mills, of Arkansas, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committtt, says he v.·ill campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination after hls name la placed in nomination at the convention, "I'm going to be a candidate at the con.. vention whether I want lt or not , and let me tell you this,'' he said, "When my state puts my name up, I'm going all out to get as many delegates all I can." The Junk Business Addrossing tho Central lndi1n1 Floor Covering Association, an industry spokesmen, Walter Guinan s1id: "Too r:n•ny people in the floor covering industry ere convinced the public only wants to buy "Junk" carpet." Wo'ro 1fr1id th1t you might elso got this imp~ssion from the ads which specify unbe!i1v1ble low prices. lnv1sti91ting these ads will d1termine on• of two things -either tho cerpot IS junk, or thoy will try to sell you something more expensive! Wo don 't sell junk at Aldon's, but wo do h1vo quality 1+ competitive prices, end the best inst1l1tion in tho county. ALDEN'S CARPns • DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 • HOIJRS' Mon. th ru Thurs., t to J130 -,,1., 9 le 9 -Sat., 9:30 te S ' • ( f I • ' ' Adult-at-18 Law Signed By Governor SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald Reagan today signed legislation makijlg Californians adult& at age la -free ' to algn contracts, serve on juries and m~ without parental consent, but still unable lo buy a drink. The bill by Auemblyman Paul Prlolo CR·Paclfic Paliudea), Jowers the legal age of adulthood from 21 to 11 for virt~Jy. eve.J?'thlng ell:cept drinking and ctrlaln JUVerule court proceedinp and child support cases. They already have the vote. The state constitution limits the privilege of drinking to 11-year-olds, A propo.sed· constitutional a m e n d m e n t which would have lowered it to '13 was paS¥<1 by the Assembly but killed by the Senate. The law will become eVective next March. By granting legal adulthood to lS-year- olds, the Priolo proposal &ives them the right to serve as policemtn and to be licensed if o t h e r w is e queJified, to transport and possess mat-tUne guns. The new law amends ,Viftually every code section in the California law books, including the removal ol an antiquated ·provision from the Agriculture Code: No longer will an 18-year-old be required to get his parents' permission to record a cattle brand. Male 18-year-olds will be able to marry without parental consent. Females could already marry at age 13 under existing California law. The bill provides that 18-year-olds may be tried as adu1ts in crimina1 cases, but gives judges the discretion to send 18-to :ZS.year~lds to California Youth Authority Institutions, instead of to prison. Youths now receiving child support as 18-year-olds will be allowed to continue receiving the payments until the age or 21. Future child support agreements will end at age 13. The bill narrowly passed the Senate , receiving 22 af{irmative votes, one more than the bare minimum needed 'for pa55age. Sen. Clark Bradley (0.San JoSe), vigorously opposed the bill saying that the argument that IS.year-olds can vote in elections was not enough to qualify them as adults. "I'm amazed by the idea," he said. "Two wrongs do111t make a right." He Was joined in opposition by Sen. H. L. Richardson who complained that giv- ing judges the di~etion to treat IS-year- olds 8.s juveniles was Wrong. ~')'hey'~e givenlthe ri&h&I. of ~4µ1thooc!. but.nQt the punishment," b1d Richardson Nov. 19. when the Assembly voted 47-6 to concur in Senate amendments to the bill. Disneyland-LA ~opter Flights To be Resurned • A Civil Aeronautics Board ·ruling on a request by Golden West Airlines to revive commuter helicopter service between Disneyland and Los Angeles Monday has opened the way for flights within six weeks. Fred L. Austin, president of the Newport Beach-based shutUe service predicted it would take that long to begin the 16 daily scheduled flights. The CAB approval is only temporary, remaining In force &O days. Golden West Airlines is trr.ing to ac- qu ire the old disaster and strike-plagued Los Angeles Airways, with a CAB verdict on that issue pendil'€. If approved, permanent flight service authorization could be granted. No plans have been made to request any other routes, linki ng various other points such as the N~wt>Orter I~n ~d Ontario International Airport, Austin said Monday. During the interim . Golden West Airlines will use the 3~passenger Slkcnky helicopters idled 25 months ago by 1 strike that ultimately put LAA out of business. TlltMl•r. D«.tmbtr 14, ltn Threat to· China H DAILY I'll.Of ' T . " . rip.~ 1 . " India-Pakistani War May Peril Visit.I ••• ''° •• Visit With Santa Using their fingers to 'see' Santa, little Lisa Cosy, 5, and others gather impressions or the jolly man durin~ a Christmas party sponsored by the Blind Service Association at Chicago's Pick Congress Hotel. More than 450 youngsters and adults attended the party. County Transit District 01\.s $25,000 Bus Study VTN of Orange County and Allen Voorheis and Co .. or McLean, Va., a joint venture partnership were awarded a $25,000 Special Bus Needs study contract Monday by directors of the Orange Coon.. ty Transit District. Monday project managers or the four companies bidding for the study were in- terviewed in open session and the winning firm named shortly thereafter. In a related action, a proposal for a pub1iC subsidy or an experimental free bus Service for UC Irvine students was proposed by supervisor Ronald Caspers of Newport Beach., directors in the past two weeks, They have advertised for a general manager and the five leading c~idates will be in- terviewed Thursday in; a special session. Regarding the free busline for studE:nts, Caspers read a letter from UCI Chan- cellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. asking for cooperation. He said he will ask for a vote on the proposal at the special Thurs.- day meeting. If approved, the plan would provide $6,000 of district filnds to which would be ' added $6,000 from the university and the Associated 'students. This sum is an· tici'pated to be·enotigh to underwhte 'the service for the first six months of next year. ANGRA DO HEROfSMO, Azor .. (UPfl -Preeldent Nli:on Is deeply coneernM tbal the Iedll-Plld•tenl war could 1pr"d and thrtaten cancelfaUon of bla trips to Peking and Moscow: • He has engaged In intensivt discussions on the Asian conflict with Ft$tCh Preei· dent 'Georgu Pompldou durtn1 thelr.{w1>- day QlefltiDI on thia ialand in the mid· Atlantic. • • · Informed llOUl'ces said there la ap- Hearing Slated For .Dr. Gwynne In Girl's Death · Crusading abo(lionisl Dr. Jolin S. GWynne, who ,ended scores ot'.pnanan.- cles in assembly line fashion at Santa Ana and West Los Angeles clinics, has been fo rmally charged the murder or hla teenaged girlfriend. The 29-year~d physician -already facing two sentence hearings on abortion, convictioru -was arraigned Monday morning In West Los Angeles Municipal Court. He is accused of the triple-shot slaying of Debbie Dwyer, 19, late Thursday at their West Las Angeles apartment, in the complaint signed by Deputy District At· tomey Billy Webb. Homicide investigators summoned t.o the apartment near UCLA by Attorney Ron Minkin said Miss Dwyer had been shot' three times in the back with a ·.357 Magnum revolver. Sigru of a struggle, plus bruises from an apparent beating were also found on the victim's body. The defendant faces preliminary hear· ing next week, at which time the case will probably be transferred to Los: Angeles Q:iunty SuperiCl' Co u r t for prosecution. The bachelor physician who belive11 all women are entitled to abortion on request is due in Orange and Los Angeles county superior court& next month for abortion 1entences. He readily admitted guilt in the criminal charge in Santa Ana and to a five-county Los Angeles County Grand Jury indictment stemming from his clinic activities. His purpose in operating the now-closed facilities in association with his mother and a large staff or female attendants was to test and perhaps overturn CAlifomla's 1967 Tbrapeutic Abortion.Act. Legal problems additionally faced by Dr. Gwynne include a yet-unscheduled hearlna: before the Californi a Board of Medical Examiners which could strip his license, plus a federal tax lien on Santa An.a property. pr<he~n that o.. 1nc11ina. havloi an but·ov n Eut Pakistan. m)&ht turn apili,. est Paldltan 1114 a£tempt ID aeiu the remainderof tbe country. The potelliial danger to world pt.let, with the Russians aiding wit h India .. nd Iha Cblliose 'Cici"'I~ alllod lo Paldttan. hu protDpted. NlPn to: und,..take ex- ,.nsive dl~Uc •fforla lo brln& ,. hall lo the fiib!ljlg bef.,. l~1pr.acls. 1be question of what the Chinese would Rustlers Net Man's 'Horse'. . Somebody bas rusu.d his hor'I!( CORftruction worker Murray G.~ ' McMurray complained to· Newport' Beach police Monday. · The Laguna .~ man .. aaid i~ was s:l'olen fro m outside hii jdb·at .. 2948 E. 'Coast Highway, giving Patrolman Don . ,Coll'. & , goOd: descriptio n of the mlss!ng•ttem. · . • He said the sawhorse says : DANGER ln l~ge letters, was worth $25 and had been placed oil· the sidewalk to warn passersby, Routine Drug Check Turns Up Big Explosives A rwtine series or weekend marijuana arrests changed complexion drastically in San Clemente Tuesday when police an- nounced the seizure or blasting caps and a detonation cord from an Avenida Pali:zada apartment occupied by two of the suspects. On the same day a man who was ques· tioned jn the original arrest produced a large antiaircraft shell for police - a piect which had recently been emptied of two pounds of explosive powder. The developments caused police to seek District Attorney's complaints today charging possession of illegal explosive devlcts agains t Chris D. McKnight and Randy William Comte, both 22, and both residents of 224 Avenida Pa1izada. The men originally were arrested by patrolmen last Saturday after police in- vestigated complaints of an-auto parked in a red zone near Ule residence. 1 After oUicers enter!!1 the residence they allegedly noticed several marijuana cigaret& ,and I niacb CfiP and •rres~ t five occupants o{ the residence. 1 The blasting caps were discovered dur· lng followup searches of the apartment. do if Pakl!tan'1 vl1blllty aa a ltMI llb threatened caused deep concn. 1oq MOl!it of Nixon'• diplontlcy bu tii-. conducted in the open arefla of the Uni._" Nations where twice the Soviet Union ua- ed its veto lo kill a stcurlly c:-g• resolution calling for a ct1 .. Ure _., mutual troop wllhdrawal. Mt In both vot.s, Iha United Stateo adll'> China were on the aame 'tide, in oP- position to the Sovieb. 11111 • The White House charged Iha !ov~t n Union thwarted "overwbelmlnc worll. opinion" when it vetoed a U.N. Securltj.1 Council resolution calling for a cease-rn n in the lndt>P..akistan war. · ·'4 "The United Slates cannot bl.it regret the failure of the Soviet Unlcin to jdln thlll'i vast majority of the membership ot. tht.~ U.N. who caUed f edl1te cuai!lV fire and with •wal o fwees front• foreign ,.rritory,'f White ._.P~r'l'edioajf' Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler sa1 , 1 night. _ ·-.n The India-Paklstani war became the major topics on the aa:enda · Nixon-Pompldou taJQ overaha~riJl~""°.:._ll other foreign policy matters. .u Secretary of State William P. Rotert warned en route to the Azores that the war is a "classic test" of the U.S.'1 ef. fectiveness in kee,P,ing the pea~ , ~ In his talii with French Forer,.-• Minister Maurice Schumann, Kogen; 50ught the support of France tQ. end ~ "bloodletting." He also conveyed Nixon' I feeling that "ii the U.N. wait.I for the dust to settle in Pakistan It will sew._ over the graves of those involtred." ~ But Nixon and Rogers 1truck out In their t.fl'PtalS for French backing of. their moves. France abstained on the Securlt)'-· Council cease-fire resolution Mo n di y,.,i night. '..: A White House press spokesmu u hl 1 that in addition to the summit talk& and the U.N. moves, Ni.ion has engaged lnio extensive diplomatic activities to \D'I&," restraint by the warring partlea. He.11 declined to disclose whether there bad.u been direct contact with Ruuian or •1 Chinese officials. • Boxer's Brother 1 :: .. Seeking Divorce ·,'.; Heavyweight contender Jerry Quarry11 ~ brother filed for divorce Monday in Orange C.Ounty Superior Court citing "ir- reconcilable differences" betwee n ' himsell and the Anaheim girl he marrled 1' nine years ago. '" James M. QVarry, Long ~ach, llalff.1 in the lawsuit filed by 1Beter1Y HhiS at.. torney Paul Caruso that he and his wile, Roberta, separated May !11. She.llv~ in '* Anaheim with the couple's four children. ; Carugo said. Jim Quarry Is one of hii ,, brother's trainers. The lawsuit bas yet to ? be set for pretrial hearing. v 'I The Special Bus Needs study will outline needs, proposed routes, fares and schedules and recommendations on tquipment according to an outline offered previou:;;ly by Ted McConville, acting general manager of the transit district. 'The winning firm will have 120 days after formal signing of the contract to complete the study. The ''Better Idea'' Christmas Gift -·q I/ "~ ,, ,\ Monday's selection or a consultant was a second vital decision by transit diatrict Car Talks Back To Motorists GLASGOW, Scotland (AP ) -You're driving along and a voice comes out of the dashboard , saying: "You are break· ing the speed limit." Or: "Your engine is overheating ..• Your oil pressure is falling ..• You are running out or gas." Glasgow University has developed a talking speedometer that checks your speed and analyzes the condition of your car. It worb with a tape recorder, 1 library of prerecorded tapes and a bat- tery of gauges under the hood. A statement from the university said the gadget could contribute to road safe- ty, 1>4rticUlarly in heavy traffic or fol "wheJi the driver must not·1for a moment divert his attention to readin1 in· struments on the dashboard." For Your Year 'Round Driving Pleasure CAPRI • • • Our Sexy Europen Import Unbelievable & Unmatched In This Price Class •.• From only ... $2699. Motor Trends "Car of Th.e Year" '" ,_ . .. .. I l '" '" i • ' •• 1lll,I • I • ~ I MONTEGO Pea~e Hija~k • • • $3323. Priced from Only ••• • I • • • I I I I 'Cooper' Says He's Doomed LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A let,.r purportedly written by fugitive hijacker "D. B. Cooper" claims he parachuted in- to the night with $200,000 to buy peace of mind because he has only 14 months to live the Los Angeles Times said today. The letter writer said he lived a life of hate and is not a hero . A number of letters, suppol!dly from ''Cooper," have been receiv~ by newspapers throughout the West 1n re- cent weeks. It Is not known if any are ge- nuinely from the man who hijacked a Northwest Orient 717 Nov. 24, claiming to ha ve a bomb. He collected the r&n!Om and parachuted out the rear door with it between Seattle and Reno, Nev. The Seattle Times also received a copy of the letter. the Los Angeles Times feported· and the letter "Indicated that copies ai!O went to the New York Timt.1 and the Washington Post." The letter was malled to the .Los Angeles Times from Seattle Saturday. and bas been turned over to the FBi, the paper aald. "l didn't rob Northwest Orient because I thought It would be romantic, heroic or any of tht other euphemllml that teem to attach themselves to situations of high risks," the letter said, "I am no modem day Robin H o o d • Unfortunately I do have only 14 months to live. "My life has been one of hate, turmoil, hunger and more hate. This seemed to be the fastest and most profitable way to gain a few grains of peace of mind. I don't blame people for hating me for what I've done nor do I blame anybody for wanting me to be caught and punish. ed. though thiJ can never happen." The letter writer aaid he would never be caught because he left no fingerprints, wore a disguise, and employed other unspecified means to cover his trail. He was wearing & toupee and putty makeup at the time of the hijacking and would be impossible to recognize from the com· posite picture drawn up by FBI artbts from the descriptk>ns of witnesses, the letter said. "I've come and gont on several 'lirlint tlighta and am not hol~ up In 10me obscure ba.ckwooda town," the letter said. "Neither am I a peychopothlc killed. As a matter of fact I've never even received a 1peedlni Ucket." ' • ORDER YOUR CHOICE TODAY! "Orangir Countv't Famllu of r lM Cari" ohnson&son 2921s'HARBOR BLVD~ COSTA MESA • IWOll30 e COUGAR e MARQUIS e MONT;EREY e COMET e CAPRI • • ALL 1972 l\iODELS •• ) • I I I I j I t t I I I ' I • I -• I I " I • I -__, I • , DAILY •ILOt T"'1dq, Otctmbtr II, l!n Back Ip (J .S. f Allres Join lJn .:A·ttacks China Pri·soners I . . . jon· N. Viet,s Find Big Change I SAIGON !UPll -A force ol !,000 bmbodian Jroopo bu joined a !,Imm,. ~!.h Vietnamese t.Uk force aeeldng two ~ortp Vietnamese dlvislOns ln the ruins bl the Chup rubber planUition in eastern ~bocil•, military ~urcu repcrted to. 1 The IOUr'CeS II.id South Vietnamese- ~Mli&sance teama of up to :rJ men ,.cb jumped today into the plantation from the itttl ladders of U.S. helicopters to lry to guide the allied task l<lrce to the 10,000.man Communlat force. I U . Col. Tran Va Phu, commander of i:outh Vlelnam'1 9th Airborne Battalion, Pid government paratroope killed seven (:ommunlsta: toc:11y while p a l rb 111 n &: Mound Cb.up but "we don't uped, much iclion today or tomom>w." ; He said It would be like Dambe -"two ~ three days more and we'll make con· tact in a big way." Many of the same troops in the Chup area battled for four. days Jut week around the town of Dambe, 20 miles to the northeast, and the South-Vietnamese uld they killed 750 Communi!t. and JOit 75 Saigon troops tilled and 100 wounded. • The allied action was centered around the tiny town of Chup which was occupied Without a fight two 1nd a half weekll ago 6y South Vietnamese paratroopers soon liter the st.trt ol the current drive. PHILADELPHIA (AP) -A young woman who hid betn alven up for de·ad by her parents and a government civilian employe 'flAlo spent much ot his Jt years d. coriinement in solitary returned to the U.S. mainland today after their release by Communist China. One wu am.iling and exuberant, the other withdrawn, cautious. Both Mary Ann Harbert, a slender, at- tractive woman who celebrates her 26th birthday two days after Christmas, and Richard Fecteau, Lynn, Mass., expressed wonderment at technological changes. An Air Force officer who accompanied them on.the 27-hour, 10,000-mlle flight to freedom said Misa Harbert was anxious to know "if we had put a man on the moon yet." "I told her yes, we had put six men on the moon," said Col. Leonard W. John!on Jr., commander o! the 9th Aeromedlcal Evacuation Group at Clark Air Base in the Philippines. He said she replied, "I really don't know, I hadn't heard about it. Many peo- ple in China don't know that. The last thing we knew about space was that Russia had something circling the moon." "I feel great, It wa s a fine trip and I'm glad to be home," Miss Harbert said In the only words spoken to newsmen since Storm Builds Up .. ' !f ~ • .~ nM'IV ll'l1nl+9d wlttl .-. ~ !'Jt t,.~n·p:11et~~·w1iio: ijft"Lt_~-.' "!!!!' ...... "' .. e,;~·-'I""'"~., <it!"'.!"'~.,: I Ml' .. rlw1 ' .Jj"'·' ~15 Jl(H"m. !f"ld r-11 co. b.01111 1 dn.fft 111cel11 1 'T.ia fli9 o¥ernllllll lew1 dll'Wn to 11 II I 11 U 6QrN1-l11 C11C11T101111. 11 LOI A""'"' ttm~tur.. ltlehtd W lnht the .. 1 1 111 II wio lOf'l'ltwhet ..,rl'ldy,i..Jow I 1 uinV<1111 n ttl• mornln1 ·P1Wr1. n c r • 1 1 t d cloudlflltU IOl'ltM Wl l HDt'(!ed I" <IH~~l"lf.i.c:llV, Tiie hll h !Odtl WH ~ 1 II• ...-..w111111 u!d tron Wi t ex fo dll!ytr ttn"IH•Murw In lhrt "' -tu""w •Id• tltlll firm evw Ille ::1~ I~· ~ .:'.'"'.:'II~ r.-,, d.-11 o fnc:llel•fl'I •CM'Plt Plt cn !ell 11 tht •«•rtl 11orm tl'ld f r•1ln1 It,.,. -·tu·n Mond.., drollllm 11 ... l llCIW ...... ! to ,GOii. A c&I , wllldV ener,_ w11 the ... she and Fecteau began their fil&ht from Hong Kong where they were treed Mon.- day. "I'm so happy to be back," 1 smilln& Fecteau said as he and Miss Hubert ar- rived by helicopter at Valley Forge Military Hospital, 25 miles northeast of here. The pair arived at 5:40 a.m. after' I short flight f r o m McGuire Air Force Base, N.J., thelr first malnland U.S. landfall sinef: boarding a U.S. Air Force Cl41 at Hong Kong, Newsmen were not pennitted to talk to them, although one reporltr managed to get close enough to exchange . a few words. An Air For1 spokesman uid it was their decision t to t.a1k to enyone. Fecteau, served 1 years of a 20-year sentence on Chinese charges of spying, Miss Harbert, whose parents live in Pale> Alto, had been a captive of the Red Chinese for three years. "They are In very good physical con- dition," Johnson said. "Thls permitted them to go half way around the world withou t pause." He said "Miss Harbert is lively and outgoing and both are congenial and ~lert." He described Fecteau as very quiet and reserved. • Ill West the Ze v-o K iV\5 WiV1d~h i rt ' \ the teffect (ei 0uve o~te f" ~r ~~vtt ' , I 7 fash ion island; new port cen te r 644 -5070 ui-1 Te'""9i. MARY ANN HARBERT, FLIGHT SURGEON LEONARD JOH~SON One of Her First Questions: "Did We Put Min on Moon? Irish Extremists Attack Homes of Public Figures BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UPI) ..... Gunmen and bombers today struck at four private homes mosUy belonging to public figure9 and including the residence of another Northern Ireland senator, the army said. Three extremists, one with a gun, hi- jacked a schoolbus near Newry, County Down, ordered out the 14 children and the driver and set it afire. In the incidents in the residential Malone area, a religiously mixed district near Queen's University In Belfast one gunman fired a shot into the home of Mrs. Edith Taggart, a senator, when her husband went to answer the door. The man hit Taggart on the head . He was taken to a hospital, Mrs. Taggart was suffering from shock and an armed guard was placed at the home , the army aaid. Sunday, gunmen killed Sen. John Barnhill and blew up his home. "It appears they were picking mostl y on public figures today," army sourcu said. Shortly before 11 a.m. two men forced their way into the home of David Wilkinson, former chairman of a Protes- t.ant Unionist association, ordered the family out and blew out the front of IM house. Extremists also planted a bomb at the Ma lone Road home of William Christie, a justice of the peace, but it failed to go off. Another bomb that exploded at a home on Springfield Parade set lire to the house. The residents were not im- mediately identified by the army. Gunmen earlier bombed a hotel, Masonic hall and a customs porl near the border with the Irish Republic during the night in escalating violence along the frontier. Wall Street-· Blaze Hurts •, I 36Firemen NEJW YORK (AP) -Two bulldlnp were 1 ravaged and 36 firemen Injured Monday by a spectacuJar fire that smothered several blocks Jn Manhattan's financiaJ district with a curtain of thick smo)\e. AbOut 175 firem~n supported by 30 pieces of fire apparatus poured thousands of gallons of water into the burning buildings for more than rive hours. Several thousand Wall Streeters were e\iacuated into the streets, service was: cut off at a nearby flooded subway sla· tion and traffic was blocked up in what became a monumental tieup complicated by tht enveloping smoke. "You can'~ see your feet in front of your face," ~aid one bystander 11 others hurried away with handkerchiefs and acarves pressed tightly to their faces. The fire bri>ke out aboot 1 p.m. in a grease duct of Schwartz's Restaurant at 29 Trinity Place and spread through the 250-foot-Jong ri;staurant into a rear ad· joining building' on Broadway. The flames were finally brought under control about I ip.m., but not before part· of the fifth and sixth floors at the top of the Schwartz building collal)l'led . Firemen reported rescuing four me!\ trapped in the• 19th century structures. There were no r~ported civilian injuries. The fire deslrd,Y~ about $250,000 worth of Xerox equi~nt and spare copy machine parts t'at were stored in the Broadway buildirlg. Fire officials said the fire fightm 1u!- fered from smoke inhalation and mOf'f! minor injuries. U.N. Adopts Egypt's Pullout Resolution UNITE;P NATIONS (UPI) -The U.N. General A s s e m b ') y overwhelmingly adopted an Egyptian-sponsored resolution Monday night urging that 1 s r a e I withdraw from all occupied Arab ter- ritories and demanding a ''just and lasting peace" in the Middle East. The U.S. abstained from voting. The resolution, sponsored by 22 nations, also urged reactivatio11 of the Middle East peace talks under the guidanc~ of Swedish Ambassador Gunnar V. Jamng, Israel broke off those talks in February. ·--·--=-:• excise tax•is repealed, you'll save money on all ·of our cars. But thats not·hing new from us. - Forihl-pOst 24 yeors, Volkswag ens hov• hod th e justiri ed reputation of saving people money.~-- - And now thot the 73 federal exc ise fax hos been repee>led, you con save even more. In fact, even if you happened to have bou ght on e of our cars be for e now but ofter Aug. 15, the 73 wi!I still be refunded to you at your Volkswagen dealer.\ If you bought. one before Aug .. 15,"don'I feel deprived. ( You 're still saving over;the-overa;1 car, cbout $1500 on the car Itself, over $100 a year on gas, and $who.knows.how-much on re poi rs. HUNTINGTON BEACH Harbour Volkswagen, Inc . 18711 Beach Boulevard 842-4435 NEWPORT BEACH Ch ick Iverson, Inc . 445 E. Coasl Hw y. 673-0900 \ • • SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO Bill Yates, Inc. 32852 Va lle RaacJ 499-2261 It 11 I I I I .I • Orange l;oas~ • • EDIJION . • ' voi:. M, NO. 297, 4 SECTIONS, 60 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY,. CAUll'C>RNIA .TUESDAY, DECEMBER" ·14, '1971: N JEN CENT$ ' • \ • IXOD 0 Zone Change Asked President, Pompidou Tell Accord ~ Nine-story Hotel Eyed in Newport ' WASHINGTON (UPI) -~ Nlmn offered the lint fonnal iloval1111: · ' lion of the dollar since 111.14 fodaY In q effort to restore the. United states'# cont peUUve position in world tr8de and to eniJ. the international monetary crfsb:.~ , By I. PETER KRIEG Of !ht Pll"IJ PJlot Sl•lf Collins Radio Company is going to ask Newport Beach for a zone change that will allow construction of a nine-story, ~room hotel and two million square feet of office space on its 140-acre tract near Orange County Airport. Company officials confirmed today they will go before a study session of the planning commission Thursday with the proposal. Less than a week · ago, a Collins vice president said it would be one month before any plans would be completed. Development of the Collins Radio Com4 pany property for commercial use would be the third major project of its kind in \the vicinity of the airport. Newport Beach approved a 200-acre commercial development a c r o s s MacArthur.Boulevard one year ago and Orange County supervisors last month Planner's Bid For Annexing Freeze Fail.s Orange County Planning Commlsslon Chairman Woodrow Wilson Butterfield failed Monday to introduce an annexa. tion moratorium resolution to protect Jr. vine lamb for a period of two years. The resolution, believed to be a last. minute effort to sway pie voters in next Tuesday's incorporation election, was to have been voted on Monday, Butterfield Nid last week. The measure, he said, would have re- quested the Local Agency Formatiot1 Commission (LAFC) to "freeze" aMex- ations of Irvine land. Such a "freeze" Butterfield contended would put the voters in Irvine at ease. Potential aMexation of Irvine lands, particularly the Irvine Industrial Park, has been a key issue in the cityhood cam- paign. Most Irvine candidates agree the But- terfield resolution is related to previous imbroglios involving the so-called "prom- ised land" that have taken place before the OraJ1ge County Supervisors and the LAFC. The promised land Is the Industrial park which Santa Ana contends was promised to them. Should tbe voters of Irvine approve for- mation of the 18,000 acre city next Tues- day, the lands would no longer be subject to annexation. The LAFC's executive secretary, Rich- ard Turner, said last week that there is no legai way to effect a freeze or mor- atorium on annexations. Skeptical city council candidates were quick to point to the CAFC and super- Visors' wrangling over the Irvine incor- poration issUe while noting they had litUe faith in the 11protection11 that But- terfield's resolution offered. Orange Weather Sunny but slightly windy Is the weather word for Wednesday. Look for temperatures dropping · a couple notches to 55 along the coast •.nd up to 60 lnland. INSIDE TODAY Me:tican-Amtricant in Foun- tain VaUeu ar.a becoming more aware of their poli;tion .. and heritage through a ntto Chicano owareness progrom -attended by Anglos as well. See Page 9. L, M, lt'ff 11 C1Ur.r1111 11 C!1ulfltf tl·M C~lu 11 Crvtswwf 11 Dt11!1 Hiiien t •fltorlal "'• ' •11ltrt1111m...1 • 'lftlllCt 1•1• ".,....... 14 AM u-.r. 11 Mini ... uc.i .. ' approved a controversial ·zone change for the SO.acre McDonnell Douglas tract between the Collins property and the Airporter Inn. All three sites propose major hotels. Another hotel is scheduled to be built at Newport Center. Collins officials this morning said they have not determined bow much develop. ment of the property will cost, Collins executive Roger Hopkins also disclosed fills morning that the Irvine Company. \hich owns the Colllns pJ'Oo> perty, bas agreed not to oppose the rewning request. Irvine officials led strong opposition to both the Emkay Development Company and the McDonnell Douglas zone change proposals. Hopkins said terms of the lease may even require Irvine Company support of the C.Ollins request. An Irvine Company spokesman this morning refused to confirm or deny Hopkins' statement. • Harbor Lights The President's breakthrough decision to accept devaluation, consistently urgecl by France on a reluctant W~n, w119 announced in a joint eominuniqt.19 after two days of talks between N'aoD and French President G.orges Pompldou tn the Azores ialandt, -. • "In cooperation with other nations eono. ""11ed, they agreed to WOrk toward lj prompt realignment of exchange ntet through a devaluation of the dollar and. revaltiation · of some other currencim, 1• the communique Wd. · ~ Although no detall.s were given, Nixon'• offer presumably would entail an ~ crease In Ute olliclal price ol gold; wblch has stood at $35 an ounce since 1934, and, this would require congressional ap. prov al. • A change In the ~ of gold would mean little by itselfi. since the United Stale.! has stopped ae1llng gold In ex· change for dollars, even to tbe cen~ banka of foreign-countries. U.S. cltizena "We have had no discussions with Collins Radio on this m a t t e r whatsoever," he said. "We have no further tommenL" ~ propaied planned oommunlty devettD_ment for the Co1Uns J>IOrllY would~ piace the high rl9e hotel on a 10- aere site at the intersection of MacArthur Boulevard and campus Drive. Newport lhrbor's annual Christmas Boat Parade starts Friday. This .year, the parade, which runs nighUy through Dec. 23, will be led on5· · g night by Jen:y Th0111pson:• !15'foot Pad.tic · Instead of one of the Balboa ferries. S . · for the sponsoring Newport Harbor Chamber of are forbidden to own gold ,coln or bullloQ Commerce said they expect 60 to 65 entries In this and there wouM be 00 ell«t on - year'_s Jlarade.. It starts at 6:SO p .m. etch n!sht a.t pr~~r devaluation . by this route m-~ lll!~Jaland:f~ I~, c~ Ille~..-~· hl:4ollm oll!dalll' ,...id 11o wm!1·1-an4 retutiiinc t t 9:15 p.m. .,in terms of inosl other nal1oos' cur- It wpuld be located at the far end of the parcel from the proposed Harbor Judicial District courts that are to be bullt on eight acres at the comer of Cimpw and Jamboree Road. The development plan, p'repared by a Los Angeies firm that provided details of the project this morning, also provides for up to 80,000 square feet of stores and restaurants to service the area. No timetable for construction was an- nounced by C.Ollins officials although they confirmed. that, depending on the out- come cf Thursday's work session· With the planning commissio~. they hope to apply for the formal zone change ln January. Hopkins said the finn has given up hope of development the property in- dustrially because of an overabundance of empty industrial buildings throughout Orange County aod the nation. Balboa Club Joh OK'd by Newport Planned expansion of the Balboa Bay Club cleared one hurdle Monday night as Newport Beach city c o u n c i I m e n unanimously approved a $13 million refinancing plan for the club, which operates on leased city property. Richard Stevens, executive vice presi- dent of the club, said planning for 66 motei units to be built adjacent to the clubhouse will get under way immediate- ly as the result of the loan from the U.S. Financial Corporation of San Diego. He assured councilmen the financial arangemeot will have m effect on club manag~nt. Stevens said the rest ol the money will be used for corporate development purposes and to pay off existing debts. Dollar Tumbles In E1J.rope Airer U.S. Devaluation WNDON (AP) -The dollar fell sharp- ly on European foreign exchanges today after Presidents Nixon and Georges Pompidou announced agreement to work toward a dollar devaluation as part o{ 1 general currency realignment, The dollar dropped In Frankfurt, Parl!I and Zurich. It had already set a record low in Tokyo be!ore the announcement. In London it held evenonly because of Bank of England intervention to keep the pound level at $2.519L Trading was heavy. In Frankfurt the dollar closed at 3.2575 marks:, down from 3.2750 at the opening. The closing price was equal to a 12.4 per- cent mark upward revaluaUon. In Paris the dollar dropped below its official floor of 5.5125 francs, the point at which the Bank of France is supposed to intervene with support buying, and fell to 5.5100 francs. On the financial market there, where currencies float freely,. the dollar dipped slightly to close at 5.38 francs, a franc revaluation of about 2.9 percent. In Zurich the dollar closed at 3.8930- 3.8955 Swlss fraAcs, down Crom 3.9015- 3.0055 SwiSs francs Monday. Today's rate represented a franc revaluation of '4.1 percent. In Tokyo the dollar bit a new low of 322.57 yen, the equivalent of a yen revaluation of 11.62 percent. 'Ride Along' Program ,., • -,,: rencieL . . ~~I ' T11ee11ectontbo~- Mother, Son Flee Inferno :==f~=ri'fS ports. · It also will make it more expensive f~ In H 0 .) kin-B Americans to travel abroad. Since It will ome ver100 . g ay !"!un':"':t lo~~;'~ ::ru::n: Crackling flames and a bangln'g door blown open by fumace-llke heat blasts awakened a Newport Beach mother a,nd her son early today. rouUng them into the cold as a 112,000 fire swept part of their borne. No one was Injured in the blaze that broke DUI ht the William R. Thompson home at 200.1 Barranca, overlooking Up- per Newport Bay. Investigators blamed household Items stored in a closet housing a forced·alr heating system for the predawn lire in the Eastbluff development. Responding to a 1:4& a.m. alarm, Newport Beach Fire 'Department WI.its found flames shooting Crom the point of origin up through the second Boor to the roof. Investigators were told Thompson was away 1n Palm Springs and that the sound of the fire getting furiously under way aroused Mrs. Thompson and their young son. Damage estimates included. $10,000 to the structure itself and an additional ,2,000 to household contents, which suf. ·fered Crom smoke and water exposure. Flre department crewa had to tear through the residence's tile roof to thoroughly extinguish flames and steam· ing embers in the structural interior. · They also pointed out storage of flam· · the end would pay more, for example, {OI" mable Items so near the household'• beat source was extremely hazard.out) u a warning to other potential victims. Only a month ago a family living In nearby Harbor View Homes was awlieno ed by similar sounds,fn time to flee .a major blaze, believed cauSj!CI by·an,eJec- tricaJ maUunctlou. lnvestlgal<ln said they were lucky. to escape with their lives, while a J>f:.t·doC trapped briefly inside was also rescued. lhal tailored Savile Row sull ln ~n. • All of this has been happerilng ·to • degree since Aug. 15, with foreign cur .. rency lncreaelng In value and the U.S. Imposing a 10 percent sun:barge on Im· ports. Nixon's announcement was a big step toward setting new offlclal eschang• ratesJor U.S. and foreign money. Even as the President returned to Washington aboard hls Jetliner, "Splrll 'of '76," leading members of Congl'MIJ ~ (See NIXON, Page Z) · * * * Foreign Trade Pinched Most by Dollar Squeeze By BILL NEIKIRK AtMd•fttl-l'r.u Wrtttt WASHINGTON -If the United States devalues the dollar, u President Nixon indicated today that it would, the biggest and most immediate impact wduld be OD foreign trades. Americans would find imports more expensive. U.S. exporters trying to eell their goods in foreign markete would have an easier time, 1ince their products would be relatively cheaper. Behind the facade of the highly · academic field or currency devaluation and revaluation is that basic eoonomlc fact : It means getting either a trade ad· vantage or disadvantage. Secrebtry John B. Coiinally pushed the Japanese so hard to revalue the yen. Nixon's decision should SUlQOtb the wa;t for setUement of the international monetary crisis, which has peral!t&t since Aug. 15, when Nixon announced tbt United States would no longer redeem dollars for gold. · But just what kind of system will be forged bas yet to be determined, for thl anooµncement Crom tlie Azores railed to specUy whether the United Staes would rtsume paying out gold for dollar clal?M. such a move Is considered higlllJ. unlikely. • Neither dld the Prtsident qy when devaluation would take place. Project Funds Requested otherwise, devaluation of the doll&I'. will not be noticed by Americans unless they travel abroad. Those will find foreign goods and services more ex- pensive, since their dollars wlll purchaH fewer foreign currencies. As part of any agreement. currencies of other countries would be railed ln relation to the dollar -by bow much, no The United States could devalue tbe dollar by raising the official price of gold. now set at S35 an ounce. Rai&lng the price of gold to $38.50, for example, would be a 10 percent devaluatloil, one figure mm- lloned prominently by· partlclpanta In i... ternatfonal monetary talks. ,. • 'Ille Newport Beach Police llEj>ortment llllid the program would be cancelled and 11ride along'' progiam may have to, be Kyrnla lodkiated •be felt ·that lbould. be cancelled bi!cauoe ol a lack ol funds that. ~' ""'"' h -Jam·• es Gia • · •• d .,~·~ '.'Wh!,l ls b<in(•lmplied lien ta that tlio ruuce '""'" "• VU•lll "wn• dtYJ-or' bu l\IMn ~00 tlJai wou1Q .day. CllllO tho level ... ~ to fall tio- Glav .. told city councilmen he Just ~ hind," ~ .Ji, "and !Mt•s not a cloesn'I hove enoogh money In hls bud-fact." It ·•at )l'yM who Jnlonned the get. About lt,500 .would be needed Jo keep council ol.'tlle il<tJon upon receipt rl a the program going for the rest Of the memotM<fur1'. from CUavas. fi"'al year, he said. Councll,... lolllan i)qotal al<ed !hat tile Councilmen agreed l<I dlscuss the poo. mailer be '81\'111 oonilcter\lll>n •~· albiHty of providing additional money al Ing the progr~ M<f say~that -y tbetr next study session, but ooiy alter is available• 'f:bt dtl-, ~·,. Councilman earl Kymla indicated he serve 1. r .... " _:"I "'? . waon't al all happy !bat the matt.r had Gla~as tiild .,,;-iflii ibe pro- come be10<e the cooncil. gram baiJ bOen "highly 9Ueceosful" and Cllf Manacer -L. l\'ynn bod bo ..W "l regrel very much bRvJni to f eliminate lL tt ·Uniler, Ille p!'Ollrllll, ·eliht.high echool -Oldt. -~ ride•ln a police aar for oblervallon ol field Incidents and Ille cro!uctolpollce. · "W has proven to be a very popular .~'W!Ut a long waiting lilt at each school fer those desirous of ttl! exper· lenct/' Glava.s aeld. J{e aJao. Mid he had -Jved many letters from par- .. Ylnj! Ille experieoce IW brought about an elirupt ~' 111' •tlttuae In theJr· child.nm. • ; F;" ~pr_.,~ addlUonal..,..ey -tlio<llfletn portlclpallf>« In !I c1o· not become involved In any ol the in- cldonta which are hlndied by olOcert on regllllr potrol. 1 one knows. Revaluation would acbleve tht wne We're Off by Miles eoonomlc effect es a dollar.davalualion -On Chr• Smil lncrwe the price of Imports c:mnlng Into . 18lm88 e8 the United &otes an<l reduce·ll>e price ol U.S. uports aold In other oounlrl... ~ · 'l'J!e"' ,....,,. amllt;a!-lbe Corona del The President's 1nnouncement. long Mar Cblmber or Commerce when Mo• expected despite offlctal deniala, aleo day's DaUy PUOt arrived. In the ;'"' recognizes a basic economic fact of We: Miles of Christmas Smllea" story, the The ecollomlea o( Europe •nd Japan have newspaper listed both the wrong nama recovered from World W1r II. and the wrong phone number f'Or local tDo J'ap#ln 'a tcormny bu btcome so U'ies. 4 strong, In fee~ that Ita·curroncy, Iha yen, In Corona del Mar, the man to call If wu regarded by U.S. officials "' be )'OU want to be judged In a.n.tm11 groos1y undervalued, giving the J-decorating and lighting compeUtloo b an artificial advantage In ,.Wng in the> Hal Plnchen. The phone DlllDbef b m. U.S. market. 4392. The Dally Pllol regrets the emrs. That Jo one ,...... wbT TrellUrT &nllel " • .... .. ' ' ' .. DAJl.V PILOT • T...,; Du• U, lfrl tCI Backing Harbor Board • c Given to 5 :Candidates Meet Canceled A mlltlnr ol Ille °'lbll Col&ni1 JOIDI Hll'tlot Oommltteo wu ..... ctltd tltll -n1n1 due lo lloll 11 • QllOl'lllll -liotlt NIWPOl'I ~ clly cooncll .... ""' tailed lo show· up. ~. Ive lrvl~e City Council candidates, all whom have ties to the C.Ouncll of the mmunlties of Irvine (CCI) have been The panel was sch6dultd to dl1- cu&s y,•ater quality In Newport Hr.-.. 'bor and din1Jhy ricks on 1treet1 and beaches. · Councilman Carl Kymla and Milan .00.tal were not present and other members t.id county and city officials Pl waiting for n~&rly an hour before cancelling the meet-ing. orsed by a new, Q.member com- ity Orgtniu.llon. w Wasserburitr, chairman or the Clliaons Commlll,. for lht Clly of Irvin• it"CCJ) 'today an l'I o u n c 1 d the cart-llaltea the IJ"Oup deema to bi '1Mftctiv1 Met rNaon.ble men." • '"'The five selecled by the CCCI organlza. · n ,membership are: ,John H. Burton, chainnan of CCI; u: E. "P.ete'~ Peleraon, co-chairman ht CCI education committee; E. RI)' ley jr., foundlnc .mtmber of CCl; y Cl)oyt:e, CCI study committee lTman, and David H. Smith, CCI member. ...-Wa.sserbur1er uld the CCI or1anJza. ...,n conaldved t.he following questions in paklng Ill choice of live of the 30 active c1ndidates seeking el~tlon to the new 1lty'1 council in next 1\lesday's ballotina:. "/'Do we want a council that will liberal1Y apend our money on qllf&. tlonable experiments In city government, Ptrmlsslve attitudes in the policy of our city -for example, will it be weak or ftronr drui law entorcement! -and the Wtlblttn, of proper physical, social and economic development ol the city? :sJ"Or. will the new council reasonably and firmly rtprtsent what all of us cflme here lo find?' Wawrbur.&er lnqulrtd. .. The CCCI endoratment 11 the flrat one to blck a full slat• of five hopefuls in 'l'\Jeaday•1 election. Another c o m m u n 1 t y organlu.tlon, Jrvlnt. 7omorrow, voted to endorse only low candldates, leavlnc room for voten to mak1 up their mlnd1 about a fltth city QOUncllman. J Tht,lrvint Tomorrow. endoraees •r•: IUOtne)' · William Fllchbach, teacher. ~ Potter1,houaewlfe Gabrielle Pryor And economla Henry Quigley. Additionally, there ls another 111l1te" ol candidate.a runnln& as 1 team which has been endorsed by another oreanlzaUon, the Comm!ttet to Elect ·an Independent Irvine CftY Council. They are : publicist Wayne Clark, aviation proposals director Alan Snodgrass and economist Henry Qul1ley. · fl · Tree Fall.s But Fireplace ,T.o··Biitn Br!ght Ttia: man stood in ~is yard in Newport Rel1lllll · lo1'1ornlJ w1tchln1 d •lly !llelntt11111C• mon rut llilot ·uaec1 lo be 1 beautiful eucalyptus trtt·Jnto firewood. Santa Lands In 5 Newport School Yards · Jolly Old St. Nick will zoom In and land at n1ne Newport Beach public, private and parochial school's Wednesday ind Thursday, Jn a black and white, llO reindeer-powered 1lel1h. The Santa and His Pollce Helper1 pro- gram will deliver greetlna1 tnd candy canes In return for loads or Chrl1tm11 letters written by children In kin· der11rten throUJh third 11rade. Letters are prep1red In claasroom. ,,.. vldJng a learning experience or youngsters just starting to read and write . Santa Claus wUJ hop out beneath the whirling rotor blades with a jolly ho-ho-ho Cor I total or 2,523 ol his little friends and perb1p1 some of their camera-carryinl parents as weU. SJnce mornlnr and etrly artemoon vlaU _h o u. r 1 art acheduled, no ln- terruptloa In rt,W.r pollctt helicopter patrols wUI reault. Nobody la 11ytn1 just who will bt playi11g Santa Claus. But a peek at a pre--Christmas duly ro!f.er reveals orders for Lt. William Blue to report in a red uniform, for two days of special duty. Santa's schedule or elementary school visits for \Vednesday shows fl :f5 1.m. at Newport Heighl!, 10:35 •t Olron1 del Mar, 11:15 at Harbor Vlew, 1 p.m, at Our Lady Queen of Angels and I :40 p.m. at Eastbluft. Thursday's itinerary includes 9:f5 a.m. at Carden Hall, 10:35 a.m. at Harbor Day School. 11:15 a.m. at ft1ariners' and 1:30 p:m, at Newport elementary schools. Irvine . Heiress Gives Rebuttal Id talk Touight The ~foot tree landed on th• aar11a roof at .UO Santa Ana Ave., about noon Monday. 111 heard the wind and then a hu1e thud and I kne'N tomethlni w11 on the roof," uld Earl C. Walktr, who ••• In hi• 11rep It Ure tlrfli' Of the Incident. Daniage to tha houu 1ppe1red to be ouperllcl1l. Mrs , Joan Irvine Smith, majority In- dividual stockholder in the Irvine Com-- pany and critic of company m1n11emtnt, wHI '.1pnk at 1. o'clock toniCht In Turf.le. Rock" Elementary School, 5151 Amatn Drive, Irvine. -· ·- India Hits Dacca Area WithBoinhs Tht following dispotch pooled by fo reign corrt1po11dt11ti 100-s rtctit>td outsidt nonnal communicatiu111. DACCA, East Pakis\an (AP) -The battle for Dacta began today as Indian bombln1 attacks bit the city, set 1overn- ment houses downtown afire and hU 1everal other targets: 't\'ithln the clty, ont column of JOOian troops advanced. within seven miles of the city with only one more ri ver to cross. East P1kist1n'.s governor and council of ministers resigned and with their families fled to the Red Cross neutralized zone 1t the Hotel lnterCt1ntlnental, whertt about 85 were given .sanctuary, Jn midafternoon a transport plane new over the cJty dropping leaflela urging non-Ben111lls given arm• earlier by th• Weit Paklaten army to "leave your area and surrender to thtt nearest anny unit. Your llve1 and property will be pro- tected." It was reported that Benga11 policemen were disarmed Monday night to prevent a poulble uprising. Red Cross officials repnrted a srowlng scarclly of food for city dwellers. who once numbered 1.5 million but ire now probably leas than half that aa many fled to lheir ance1tral countryside vlllages. A Pakbtanl anny doctor reported military wounded have bten brou1ht Into Dacca hospitals, "more than we can de al with,'' Time magazine's Dan Koggin and Jack Falsie of the Los Angeles Times reached lhe front line fighting at Demra, _the crossing point or the Lakhya River seven miles southeast of Dacea. They witnessed a brave ferryman mak· tn& crossing affiid geyse'rs of Indian army shell fire and napping II.sh to evacuate a Paklstanl's army rearguard unit from an east bank vlllage being entered by n1lxed lndJan army and .Mukti Bahini, Bengali guerrlllas. The Pakistanis were identified as being with a frontier force unit in retreat for days, from Akhaura on the border. The men 1,1.·ere looking back toward Dacca as they settled in the prepared west bank deferuilve poslllon.1 for new delaying action. They soon came under Indian artlllery, ~rtar1; cro!l·rlver m1cbtne-1un • flrt and Inevitable Indian air force Jets, which rocketed and strafed. The P11kisUtnls have only an antitank gun to meel the oncoming Indian 1rmy forces. Returnln1 to Dacca, Kog1tn and F'oiele afoot were stopped by Mukti guerrilla band armed with Sten guns who when learning they were American journalisla demanded : ''Why are Amerlc1n1 not sup- portlnirus7" ? But they let them pass with a gay wave sayin&: ·~we won 't harm you. You are 1ue1ts.') · _ Shingles on the Roof Shingles stacked ror placement oh roof or new building in Newport Beach made th.is architectural pattern which caught photographer's eye. Loca· 'OA.11.Y "tLOT '"'" llr 1uc111nl kNll• tion is at new Versaill~s apartment project cur- rently under construction near Hoag Memorjal Hospital. Council Orders Newport Police Facility Study Cityhood Talk On Cable TV Board Ref uses To Identify Textbook Critic A one-hour cablevision program Involving an Orange Coast League Newport Beach could build a new of Women Voters panel discussing By GEORGE LEIDAL police station on the lawn of the present the Irvine cilyhood issues wlll be 01 Ill• O•ltr l"lltt Jltff city complex on Newport Boulevard with repeated at 7 o'clock tonight, on Tustln Union High School Dl1trict a 2(1...cent tax inc rease over the next four ~ennel 3. trustees Monday took no action on 1 re- The league notes that anyone who quest to seek the identity or a teacher years, City Mana1er Robert L. Wynn does not receive the cablevision who criticized an economics textbook in told the city council Monday. channel, may view the broadcast at an anonymous survey. . Councilmen ordered 1 1taff analysis of Turtle Rock Elementary School, Robert Bartholomew, a member of Uie that proposal -ind four 1others, includ· !HSI Amalfi St. John Birch Society and trustee from Jnr one that the pollce facility be built The program ls a replay of a re-T~stin, had su~gested the board should on the Collins Radio Company property · cent discussion of the issues by find out whicH of the district's nine persons who are not ciendldates for teachers of economics "is not en• adjacent lo the new H1rbor Judicial Dis· h thus iastic ab".ut this course." t e proposed city councll of Irvine, " tr1ct Courts -during a study session The course is economics. The district • Monday 1tternoon. recently comoleted a year of requiring They told Wynn to rePort back Jn two the course of all seniors at University, week!. Noted Inventor ~:1~~1~. Viejo, Tustlo and Foothill high They unanlmoualy agreed a "dire" "\Vhen I see there is a teacher in our need f« new facllltlts n lst!J, but a~r A } D JI"ll district 1,1.·ho says we don't teach enougb sharply divided on where they should be 1•f lllf • l f\'farxism and who objects to flag waving built. then I want to know who that teacher Is,'' Wynn was direct~ to 1tudy all propos. Di"es i"n Mesa Bartholomew declared . alt, lncludlnll' the present location, New. The rem ark followed presentation to 11 the board of comments solicited from port Center, Collins, Jamboree Road A h 1 nine economic• leachers who had been rt ur D. !ill , 68, inventor of I popular 11ezt to the new lire station and an lnU!r· brand or marine automatic pllol'>, died asked to ~y.aluate the 197G-7I school year Im plan to move out o! city hall, givln11 Monday al the Port Mes!I Convaleaeent trial of economics 1111 a r~uired subject. room to the police, and rentin~ sp,eCe Horne in Costa Mesa. The reJ)ort' did not identify teachers in the Imperial' Savin&s and Loon ·Asst>-Mr. Hllt Invented and manoractured the who respanded to the survey. L. Jay Jngall. assistant superintendent for in-ciation Rulldln& on Via Lido for city oe-Hill Cunningham Auto Pilot found on struct.ion, totd the board that numbered fices . 1>01ver boats, sailboat.'! •nd larger fishing written slalements Jn reply to four que&· Wynn disclosed the savln~s and loan vessels. He wss a native of Ohio, but lions did not necessarily correspond. has offered the ci ty use of 8,000 square s(M!nt the past 58 years Jn Southern Board members Indicated they believed feet for two years while new Police fa·· Callromia. the answers numbered seven end eight cililies are undet construction. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m., 1vcre from the same two teacher~. Ingall This would relieve much of the tern-Wednesday at the Westcliff Mortuary, said they were not, noting "They've been por11ry splice burden, Wynn S<lid . Costa Mesa , With burial following at the mixed up," His 0 1fn proposal for pa y.as.you.go Good Shepherd Cemetery, Huntington Bartholomew said. "I'd like lo ice the flnanclng ·for a pollce station On the lawn Beach. original reports then. There are one or Walker praised city workmen for rt1pondlng IO quickly to hls Cfill for help, He uld he wlll ml11 the tree, one of many In hl1 well·l1ndac1ped yard, but ad· mltted the ml1hap would mean ri11 fireplace wJU be full for the · rest or-tht . winter. Mrs. Smith's attorney, LyndoJ Young, said Mr1. Smith l1 returning "for the specific purpose of respondln& to all o( the prev1rlc1ted statements made by Irvine Compiny ofllclalt f0Uowin1 my 1peeoh •!;UC l(Ylne." A mldafternoon bomb attack on the governm1nt house caused 1 rooftop tire, apparently by •hit on the generator, would rilse U.G mlllion to build a two. There will also be 1 deep sen memorlnl two teacher~ here we should talk to." story, 30,000 square foot buildlnll' at the I w d d e Trustee Dlckran Boran1·an. who earlier comer ol Newport Boulevard find 32nd serv ce at 3 p.m., e nes ay. oats will Street. le11ve the Newport Jetty and head three h8d suggestlXI. the district consider mak· Blast ~ps 'J'.ijuana TIJUANA, Mexico (UPI) -one man was kWed and 32 'person1 Injured Mond&J by an e1plo1lon at· a Jara• Tijuana ~ duce market. Salvedor Serrano Rubio, about 45, was killed. two others were seriously injured and 30 othe r customers received minor cuts and bruises from Dying 11111 and debrl1. The blast w11 being lnve1t111ted. ( OIAM•I COAO' DAILY PILOT .,..._ COAtT PUIU1Hlttt r:IM#Nff t.Mt N. Wt.4 ..,.~ ............ J•tli .. ev.1.., v. ,,....., ....... ,,,.., n. .. r..., -11 ...... ,._., .. ............. L P•l•r kri•1 "..,., ... di Or llfllr .. ..,... __ iJJ) ..... ,..tt ··~1 ..... rti Mtm11 Mtr•111r.o.1t11111. ti''' ..... _ e... .... , ,. '*"' '" """' i-iiiC~t fll ,,,.., AYtfM ~1 1mi.-..........,. • Nwll II C.""llw _., i Wynn said the city could get lmmedhtte mlle.1 out to sea. ing chan1es in \·Jew of the crillcism, ob. cash for the projt<'l by borrowina $750,000 Survivor! Include the widow, Ann Hill, jccted to Bartholome w's request to find from the waler fund . 4~ E. 18th St., Costa Me1a : fl 111uJ!'hter, oot "'hich teachers said what on the sur· He said the bulldln11 could ~ de!i11ned Pally f\.1ae Hill, 11 stul1ent at Cal Stale vey. so a third story, addln11 15,000 more U>ng Beach: and hl.11 brother. Roland c. "This ls their evaluation or the course From Page 1 NIXON ... M~. smlt6 1111 week addreased students at UCI and deialled the p 1 1 t history of dif!lculties -between member1 ol the !rv111< !aJl!ll~ llld !he Irvine Fo1J11-dl~. NOf.:ifll ~ hbjied to_ overturn tfta foundation's present "control" of the ' Irvine Company, Mrs. Smith urged voters to tum down the incorporation. The elec-- tion is :n11t. Tuesday, and will deten:nlne the r•te of a propo!ltd 11,m.acrtt CHy of 1rv1n., square feet. could be bullt ltter. Hill of Inglewood. as they sec It." Boranlan said, "not a That would still leave the facility 8.000 statement of their personal philoso phies." dlcated they "'ould support devaluetlon, square ftet under the S3,000 reet pnllce EIRht of the teachers agreed the Ctluru ·pos1ibl,y' Jn a hurry before year-end ad· officials and 1 consulttnt say wl!l be S J Ab d d should be taught during the senior yea r journment, nel!ded In 20 yean. ea1•c l 80 Olle and that it should remain as a one-, Among those reported willlne to go Wvnn said the 2fk'ent tax hike would semester offering. 1long Vfere Reps . Wilbur D. Mills (0-be cir0pped after the 1!175-76 fiscal year MANILA (UP I) -Authorities officially Seven said the course should remain in Young said Mrs. Stnith will be in· trocluced by Dr. Jay Martin, a UCl English professor. Ark .). chairman of the How:e W1y1 and unless the city elected lo ret11ln lt to star t ended the search Monday for 10 persons the curriculum and that the present M11na Committee; Wright Patman (0. 11 slmllar rlnnncfng program for a n~w 1nissing and believed killed Jn the crash course outllne meets the need.11 of Unllkt the UCI appearance In which Mr1. Smith respond6d to written ques· lions from the noor, she will converse with members of the Turtle Rock au- dience during 1 coffee hour follow ing tonieht's spttcll. Tel.), chairman of the House B1nkln11 city hall flt that Umc. of a Navy C2 plane Sunday. students . Committee; Sen. William Proxmire (0. 1-1-----;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;,;;:.;,;;;;;;;;;;-Wlt. ), chairman of the Joint Economic I Credit .Forgery Charges Leveled Commltte, and llouse and Senate let1ders of both pat·ties. Agreement on new currency allgnmenta, opening the way for llft1n1 lhe 10 percent import 1urcharge which NIKOn imposed In mid-August, cvuld be reached this weekend when . finance ministers of the free world's 10 wealthiest indus1rlal nallona -the so- calltd Group of 10-meet in Washlntton. Devaluation o!_ ~ dollar by raisint U\1 prict ... ol JOJd would tend to make U.S .• Crtmlnal complalnla charitnr 1 pair -erPorts cheaper arid import! more ex· o! Newport Beach' bartenders with dotn1, pert!lve, re9trse the present he1vy flow Chri1trrui1 1hoppln1 the easy way -~on of 'Jnve.1tment dollar• over1ea1 and help someone else's credit card -1r1 beln1 . cOrreel a chronic U.S. balance of tou&ht today by police. -paymtntl deficit. The United State1 11 Mlchael Slatl, 33, of 404 Acacia Avt ., • Newport Beiech and Nirlind O. JohnMin, headint toward 11!1 £irst world trade 33, of 767 Olymplc Drive, Costa Meta, deficit -an exctss of imporl! over eJ:· wert arre!ted over the weeke~d by cit-porls -for the ti1ne since 1893. teg~~;~iracy to commit credit card rnr-The joint statement did nol list the gery was the charge on which both em· other currencies to be revalued, nor did It ~lorts &I the Hunc~ TJ\er, M.1 E. Coast say how much the dollar would bt reduc· iahw1 ay, were boo td y lnve8l1Jators. ed In value or bow much the worth or De ecllve Sfl, Kttn Tt!ompson a&ld both some other currencies might be In· deny tbt ch1rg1. sed , crea . Viejo High Boys Now Wear Wigs Bo.Y• •llendln« Ml,.lon Viejo Hlah School •r' we1rlni w111 lo cover up long ht1r that violates the Tustin Hl1tt School Dlstrlct's dres:s anct •rooming code. Tru1tee Dlckran Boranlan asked Mon· day .nl1ht 1r 11ue1ent1 were being allowed to wtar wl11. Principal Robert Bosflnko conrlnned lhat studenta were wearln1 Utom. Wigs h1ven't yet btcll rif'emed tl'I bt dllrupltve, -nio .. hi 1ddin1, "wlttn thfy do we.'ll t.&k! appropriate action." l There was no mention of the fr11nc In lhe co mmunique. Althou&h' the communique speclUed lht doll11r would be devalued, It 11v1 no timetable. Presumably a d d I t I o n a I ne10U1tions with major U.S. tredlnt partner• wUl ht neceu:ary. After devaluation, 11\t dollar would be worth rewer h'ancs, Wtst Gernian m1rka, Japenut )len and other curttndt.s. The United Siii's previously had dtmanded an lncrtase In other currency values 10 ease Its balance or pAymenUI probltms. The lv.·o presidents said they r1vorad new world monetary machinery th1t would permit th• value of correncles to fluctu1tt mort than 11 DOw theoreUcally 11llowed ln reeponse to the l1w1 of 1Upply and demand. Tl1e J u11k Busi11ess Addre11in9 tho Centrol lndiono Floor Covering As1oci1tion, tn industry 1pok11m1n, Welter Guinan uld: 11T oo m1ny people in the floor covering industry 1r1 convinced the public only w1nt1 to buy "Junk" c;1rpet." We're 1lr1id tho! you might 1lso get this impression from the ads which specify unbe:ieveble '<>w prices. lnve1f•:91tin9 t hese ad5 will determine one of two thin91 :.__ tither the carpet IS junk, or they will try to sell you something more expen1ivel W1 don 't sell junk et Alden's, but wo do hove quality at competitive prices, ind the be1t instillation in the county. ALDEN'S ' CARPETS e DRAPES 166l Placentia Avt. COSTA MESA 646°4838 HOURS1 Mon. thru Thur~. 9 lo ,,30 -fr!., 9 to 9 -S.t., 9:30 to ' • I I f I • Or-ang" £oast •• i:DIIION N.Y. Stech . Y.01.:. M, NO. ·297, 4 SECTIONS, 60 ·PAGES ORANGE•'COUNTY, CAt:U:ORllll);. I I ' :TUESOAY, DE,CEMBER ;14, J97 1i c :TEN PENTS • • •• IXOD I () Annual Cf!tnpaign President, Pompidou Tell Accord . ' ·Me.sa · Seeks Out Drink Su~pects WASHINGTON (UPI) -Presidd Ni:ron offered the first formal &,vaiu. tion ot the doUar since 1tM today Jo aa elfort to restore the United Slatol' cont petiUve position in world trade and to mil the international monetary crtsll. Cracking down on drinking drivers, the Costa Mesa Police Deparbnent today in- iilated its annual Christmas holiday cam- paign to curb motorists consuming too many cups of goodr cheer. Beginning tonight, two addilional patrol cars will be assigned to clear the roads of drunken drivers. Tiiey w1ll do nothing else. SpeclaJ holiday briefings are em. phasizing control of drinking drivers among the deportment's entire patrol division. "We intend to be very, very strict in our interpretation of California Vehicle Code statutes on drunk driving,'' Sgt. Bob Bnllinger emphaslus. The traffic division's acting CM'l.- mander acknowledges that some drinkers don't or won't find a mere warning suf- ficient. For those who lake It seriously, however, he also offers some guidelines on hOw to enjoy holiday get-togethers and hospitality. NatiOnaJ Safety Council officials sug- • CITED FOR BRAVERY E1t1ncl1 High Grid Todd Mesa GI Wins Medal in Wa r An Army warrant officer from Costa Mesa has been awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross for valor in Vietnam. Richard ';l'odd, son of Mrs. Helen HU!- tado 2816 Sbantar Drive, was cited for brav'ery tn 1ICtioll oo 'Sept. rT for tWice flying 6>roogb heavy ground fire with his helicopter to mark an enemy vehicle , ., oilier choppen could destroy It. ' Todd ts a 1969 graduate of Estancia High School. 0r .. ge <:Gast :Weather i Sunny but ~ighily windy I! the weather word for Wednesday. Loot for teinperatures d'ropplng a couple notches to 55 along the coast and up to 60 Inland. INSIDE TODAY Mt%ican-Amtricam in Foun- tain YaUev are becoming more aware of their position and heritaQt throuuh a new Chicano awartnt.ts program -attended bu A.1lQlos cu wtU. See Page 9. LM.lml tl (tllflinll• 11 C~ 11·H ctmk• lJ c,. .. ...,. 1J Dtltll Netleft ' ........ ..... ' •llftft•llllM!lt ,2t l'lftf!Ke 1 .. 1, ti.....,. 14 AMI L111ffr11 11 MM'!'" Lkl!IHI t 1 I gest that no more than one drink per hour -under ordinary circumstances :._ is a sale margin. Califprnia law sets a muimmn .10 ~ cent blood alcohol level •• the t.chnlcal margin between drunk and sober when one is oo the road. Having just one more for the road could push a person post the legal limit, Sgt. Ballinger notes possibly putting a $308.50 fine into those first-of-the-year financial headaches to be faced . :eertain other factors must be con- sidered loo, in calculating whether one drink per hour Is a "Wise limit for the holidays' traditional tippling. Some people hold thelr liquor better than others, but even erperienced drinkers will feel it more if they are not eating while partying, Sgt. Ballinger notes. Beet'le Bopped DAILY PILOt Sltft•Pfltlit The President's breakthrough cledalon to accept devnluatlon, ~Uy urged by France on a reluctant Wlllbqtoa, was announced tn a joint comnnmlque after two days of talks between Nlml: and French President Georges Pompldou In the Ar.om lslands. "In cooperation with other naUons con- cerned, they agreed to wort toward • prompt realignment. of exchange l'ates through a devaluation of the dollar and revaluation of some other currencies,'' the conununlque said. ·· · Although no details were given, Nl:ron's offer presumably would entail au in- crease in the official price ol gold, 'Which has stood at $3S an ounce since 1934:, and this would require congressional I}> proval. Too liUle rest during the hectic holidays can also combine with the alcohol's effect, to make even a little bit a little too much fOr" the total risks in- volved. Mrs. Don Zerwekh parked her new· Volkswagen (two months old) under a tree outside 2317 Colgate Drive in Costa Mesa's College Park Monday. Then the wind came up and a branch of the· tree gave way, creasing her shiny new auto. "Aaaaagh," said Mrs. . Zerwekh. Wouldn't you? City crew reinoved the branch. A change In the price of gold would mean little by itself, since the United States has stopped selling gold in ei:· · change for dollars, even to the central banks of foreign counbies. U.S. cltiztnl are fotbldden to own gold coin or bullion Nol only drinking, but all other viola- linns of traffic safety laws will be clolely watcbe<j during the .....,., when spop. PiM: ~ swell the city's traffic ....., Ballln&er ~ Sticker Prices On 1972 Model Autos Reduced DETROIT (UPI} -The sUcker prices of 1m model automobiles changed once again today as automakers announced reductions -as much as $341 in one case -to reflect the repeal ol the 7 pen:ent federal excise tu. The cuts brouJdtt the under • $2,000 American car baCk to dealer showrooms as the Ford Pinto and American Moton Gremlin were given price tags at or near 19'/1 models bought before Aug. 15. In the c,ase of the Chevrolet Vega, the new 1972 price was lower than the 1m model price -$2,030.50 compared. with $2,090. The cuts were the latest in a series of price adjustments since President Nl:ron announced the wage-price freeze on Aug. IS. Prices were virtually stabilized at 1971-model levels during the freeze, but increases of 2.5 to 3 percent were put into effect following the freeze and further price hikes are possible U granted by the Price Commission. The automakers had promised to pass on the entire amount ol the ta:r repeal to customers and began relaUng some f160 million to about 3.8 million American car buyers within minutes of President Nl:r- on's signing of the repeal last Friday. The actual repeal has had little effect on car sales in recent days, a spot check of several automobile &bowrooms show-ed. Dollar T~mbles In Eu~ope Aft.er U.S. Devaluation LONDON (AP) -The dollar fell shsrp- Iy on EurOpean for'etgn e:rchang'es ' today after Presidents Nixon and Georges Pompldou announced. agreement to work toward a dollar devalpation as part of a general currency realignment. The dollar dropped in Frankfurt, Paris and Zurich. It had alread~ set a record low in Tokyo before the announcement. In London it held evenon1y because of Barut of England intervention to keep the pound level at '2.519l Trading was heavy. In Frsnkfurt the dollar closed al·3.2575 marks, down from 3.2750 at the opening. The closing price was equal to a U.4 per· cent mark upward revaluation. In Paris the dollar dropped below its official floor of 5.5125 francs, the point at which 1he Benk ol France I! suPllOSed to intervene with support buying, and fell to 5.5100 Cranes. On the 'fin.8ncial market there, where currencies float freely, the dollar dipped sllghUy to close at 5.38 Cranes, a frlnc revaluation oi about 2.9 percent. In 1.urich the dollar closed at 3.8930- 3.8955 Swiss Cranes. down from 3.901S.. 3.9055 Swiss Cranes Monday. Today's rate represented a franc revaluation of 4:.5 percent. In Tokyo the dollar hit a new low of 322.57 yen, the equivalent of a yen revaluation of 11.62 percent. Spiro as Santa Agnew Reads List of Gag Gifts NEW YORK (AP) -Vice President Spiro T. Agnew reod a 19'/1 Chrl.st-mas gift list before an audience Tuesday. It !ncluded: "For George ~feaay, an introductory lesson in the Ebenezer Scrooge Scboolof~arrn. . 'Tor Martha Mitchell, a brand-new Pr1nctss phone: "For Jobn MJtcbeU, 1 padlock for 1 brand-new Princess pbooe. Ollna ~'For President Nl:roa, in preparation for his trip, 1 complete history of ' "For Chairman Mao, In prepa.raUon for the Pruident's visit, a complete history of the National Football League. "For RaJpl:i Nader, a secret ~rt from Nader's Raiden demorl!lratln& that the human toot is unsafe to walk on. ) "And for AmbaS11dor G<orge Bush, ao that he con eni.rtlln all ~ friends at the United NaUons, a two-place dinntr 11t. • "I'« Rlcbll'd Salut, president of CS N..,.1, i. -diU .,itJ> lep cut m lhe biss so that documentaries will come out stralgl>l ''For the New York Times, Daniel Ellabtrg's unlisted telephcme number; "for Danltl Elllberc, 1 lifeUme subecripOon to Look magatine. "And flallly, lor the hblle -lllq ~ -a collector'C llAim -a piece ot videotape which reveall Sandor Vanoc:ur, in an ungillrdld moment, mUlng on objecuve llatement." ' • and there wookl be 00 effect Oil -· 3 ,~,..a....ls to B. _ eoei~:~!"!~" l~:n~1.= ~""= ~~~ In terms of mQlt other natio~ cur-• . • . t'fl!Cies, " " I "' • · · Tbe ellect on the American COllllll!IU Val or Awards for ' 'Rescue ·~1": ~:i:·:.i~~.:i..1mu;:; '111ree JUeguardll who~reacued 1 JDIJI, Crom a churning whJrlpool of mud and debris carried into Huntington Beach waters by t¥ Santa ~ River during the 1961 flood will be cited for heroism by Governor Ronold RMgon ~ursday. The Medal ot Valor -one of the state's highest honors -will be given to Eric Emery, 39, of ·Huntington Beach; Knut Skjonberg, 29, ·of Costa Mesa;Jand to Jer- ry Bennet~ 25, now living In Australia. They were· singled out ioi; the booor by rescuing 1 U-year-ol<l Placentia man who had drifted out to aea while taking a joyride with a friend on the flooded Santa Ana River on Jan, 26, 1969. "It was the most terrifying day of my life," said Emery, an Edison Hlgb'School teacher who was worldng as a part-time winter Weguard at the time. Emery said that Charles Sarrett and his friend had planned to "shoot the rapids" of the ·river to its mouth with in- flated innertubes and then disembark near the jetty. "The St!C9nd man made tt to the bank, bUt Sarrett didn't and washed a quar- ter mile into the ocean," said Em~. ''Someone spotted him bot we couldri't ' get • boat in or a helicopter do,wp there." Emery and'Skjonberg decided to swim out to ·Sarrett, braving flve to· ail loot 1Ug1i surf which had created a vortex effect around the victim. 'There was a lot of debris In the water -trees, telephoae poles an<t dead animallll. It was dilficult to breathe. Whenever a.swell would come through, all this stuff would press down on your body. Jt was terrifying," Emery recalled. The two guards', assisted later by Ben- nett, worked for more than an hour trying to free Sarrett from the maelstrom. "When we first looked at the pool, he was just another piece of debris floating around tn there. But aomehow there was aomething Juel a Utile bit dllierent about Redevelopment Hearing Slated Downtown Colla Mesa Redevelopment and lorthcomlng plans to 1ccompl~b tt will be aired by two city olftclals '!'burs· d1y before the C!ll2<nr Harbor Area Reseorcb Twn. Pla-g Director Williozp Dunn and Public Sen<ices ~ James Eldrldge will dlsct111 the !au• when CHART gathers at 7:SO 1.m. at the Mesa Verde Coiintry Club. · A ~lie helrltlg i. scbeduled Mondoy before the city council to determine· whelber It· ahould ..tabllall • downtown red .. elopment •"11Cl'· to be8ln the multlo mWloa doliar, lllreeoplwe plaa. . ' 'WINS VALOR MEDAL · c .. 1,· Mo11'~ Skjenborg that piece of debrts,"·said Emery. Skjonberg finally manoged to place him.sell into posiUon to catch the whirling vlcti.dt, and together, the three men swam him into shore. · When he was brought In~ Sarrett WU discovered to be nearly unconeclow:. Both Emery, 21382 Sand Dollar Lane, Huntington Beach; and Skjonherg, 580 Hamilton st.,.Costa Mesa, plan to attend the 1:30 p.m. ceremony In the governor'• olflce. to discourage Jmporta and boost U.S. ex· ports. It also will make It more expensive for 'Americans to travel abroad. &Ince It will take more dollars to buy the same amount of foreign currency, tourtst. In the end would pay more, for example, for. that tailored Savile Rll'I' suit in U>ndon. All of this has been happening to a degree since Aug. 15, with foreign cur· rency increasing in value and the U.& lmpoalng a 10 percent surcharge on im- ports. Ni:ron's announcement was a btg step toward setting new official exchange rates for U.S. and Coreign money. Even as the President returned to Washington aboard his jetliner, "Splril of "16,.. leeding members " Congr ... m. dicated they would support devaluation, possibly in a hurry before year-end ad· journmenl Among those repOrted wiling to go along were ReJ>ll. Wilbur D. Mills (D- Arl<.), chaimwl <l tile House WaYo and Means Committee; Wright Patman (0. Tex.), chairman of the House Banking Commlttee; Sen. William Proxm1re (D- Wls.), chaicman of the Joint Ecooomlc Committe, and House aod Senate leaden: Of both parties. Agreement on new currency alignments, opening the way for lifting the 10 percent impart surcharge which Nixon lmp0sed in mid-August, could be • reached this weekend when f1nance ministers of the free world's lG wealthiest industrial nations -the to- callesf Group of 10-meet in Washington.. Devaluation of the dollar by raising the price ot gold would tend to mate U.S .• exports cheaper and imports more U• pensive, reverse the present heavy fknlf of investment dollars overseas and help correct a chronic U.S. balance of payment. deficit. The United Sia~ ill beading toward Its fir1t world trade deliclt -an extess of imports over ez .. (See NIXON, Pip I) * * * Foreign Trade Pinched Most by Dollar Squeeze lly BILL NE1X1RK ... ~ .............. W.llllllNGTON -U the United States devalueJ the dollar, u Preslctent Nixon hxllcated lodoy that 11 would, the biggeat and JnOll lmmedille Impact would bo on foreign trlldes. Amerlcona would ftnd Imports men espenslve, U.S. exporters trying to Hli their· good! In foreign markete 1 would have an easier tJme, slnce thelr products would be relaUvety cheoper. Behind the facade of \he highly acadef\llC field of curT<llC)' devl!ootloo and revllU1tlon II lhll biale ecoilOVllo lid: It means getting either 1 trade » vantage oc disadvantage. Otherwise, devaluation of the dollar will DOt be rw>ticed by Americans unleu they travel abroad. 'lllose will find IO!'<lgn goods and services more ... pensive, since the.lr dollars will purc:hiR fewer foreign currencia. Al. part of any aireement, currencJH of other countries would be l'llaed In relaUon to the dollar -by bow DWCb, no one knows. &valuation would achieve Jht ame (!Jet UFPX,TS, .... I) ·. ,. ~I • , - • . . . c .., Indians Move on Dacca • Battle Rages as Bombprs ,Strike Targets r~. follo"1fnq dilf)otch fJOOl•d b¥ fMtio,. Com1pondents tD04 received· outti<U· normal communicatfon.s. •' • DAc<!A. im Pakistan tAPl -The JilWt lot Dloc.a bfgan today 11 Indian Newport Bid bombing att.acka hit th& clty, oet ... .,.. ment b0u561 downtown 1Hre and •bit 1ever1J other tara'eta within the city. One cciturnn of India~ troops advanced withio seven mlle1 Gf the city with only one. more river lo croaa. . ' -B~'• ... ernoc and councll ol mlnlltm mtgnecl' and with their f1mJllt1 fled to the Red er... °'oti;lllied iooe at the Rote! Jnterconllnental, where 1bout 6S were given sanctuary. .. ' Collin s to Seek Hotel, ·In mlda(ternoon a tran!lport,plane new over the ?ity dropping leaflets urging non·Be!1fall! given arms earlier by \he West Pa kistan army to "leave your area and !IUTender to the nearest army unit. Your lives and property Vo'ill be pro- tected." Jt was reporled that Bengali policemen were disarmed Monday night to prevent a possible uprl11ing. < • Office s Near AiI·port Red Cross officials reported a growing scarcity of food for city dwellers, who once numbered 1.5 million but are now probably less than half that as many !led to t.he.ir ancestral countryside village1. ' • By L. PETER KRIEG Of ltM DI{" "ltH ltlH Collins Radio Company Is going to ask Newport Beaeh for a . zone change that will all~w construction of a nine-story, ~room hotel and two million square fttt of offi« 1pa« on its 14!1-acre tract Jjl!ar. Ora~e County Airport. ! Com]>.lnJ offictals confirmed today they wlll go before a study.ses,sion of the planning commission Thursday with the prOPoS&I. ; Less than a week ago, a Collins vice president said lt would be one month before any plans would be. completed. ' Development of the Collins Radio Com-p.ny proj>;erly for commercial use would be ~ third m1jor project of its kind in f!te vicinity or the airport. . Newport Beach approved a 200-acre @mmtrciaI development a c r o a s MacAkhur Boulevard one year ago aod Orance County aupervi!lors last month .apProved. a contro~rsial zone change for the SO.acre McDonnell Douglas tract between the Collina property and the Alrport.r IM. AU three. Sites propose major hotelJ. Noted Inventor .. . Arthur D. Hill Dies in Mesa Arthuf o. Hill, 68, inv.entor of 1 popular brud. !Jf marine automatic pilots, died Monda;y._at. the.Port Meaa Convalescent Home in Costa Mesa. Mr. ·Hill invented and manufactured the Hill Cunningham Auto· Pilot found on pawer bo'.lls, aaUboeta and larger fishing vesaela. He wa~ a netiye of 01\io, but 1pen~~the past 51 years in SoutherJt. CalUornla.· Fu;neral services will be. held at.I p.m., Wednesday at the Westcllff Mortua ry, Colt.a Mesa.. with burial following 1t the Good Shepherd Cemetery, Huntington Besch. There will also be a deep sea memorial Hrvict at 3-p.m., Wednesday. Boats will leave tht Newport jetty and head three miles out to sea. Survivor a Include the widow, Ann Hill, 495 E. 11th St., Colta Mesa; a daughter, Patty M1e Hill, a 1tudent at C1l State Long Beach; ind his brother, RoJ,and C. Hill of ln&l•wood. Auto Mechani~ Lose8 Tools to Burglars A tuneUp ryiechlintc who went out lo hear a little rock band music at a nearby nt1htclub lost todls to the tune of $3,000, when 1 burglar visited bis Costa Me!a apartment garage while he was away. David R. William!, of 151 E. 21st St., reported the Joss Monday to police, 11yln1 he returned from The Pier alter only a short time and discovered his equipment missing. DAILY PILOT CUN .. co.uT PUll.1~1MG COM.P>.Jrt l tO•rt N. Wtefl ,,. .... .,.. ~i.w J1clc l. C11rl1v Ya ,,_INnt ..,. 0--1 Ml~"'r n.'"''' ••• .,a (dl!ot n,,,,,, /4., Mur•lll•• M...-.ltll f fllllt a., ... H. l•M l icll1ri "· Nill ""'"*': ,,...,..." ••ttn c ... M ... OMt• SlO We.t •• , sn • .t M1iliftl A.litMU P.O. l •1 15•0, ,2,21o --..,,.., ~ ml tt ....... ....,.,.. "-"" 1.tKto1 nt ,_ A-ttlliM ........ dH 1M1S I~ ..., ....... a. '*"""9; al N#Jll 11 c.tn1M llMI Another hotel la scheduled to ht bull! al Newport Cenler. Collins officials this morning 1aJd they have not detmnlned how much de'velo~ ment of the property will cost. Collins executive Roger Hopkins also disclosed this morning that the Irvine Company, which owns the Collins pro- perty, has agre~ oot to oppose the rezoning request. Irvine officials led strong opposition to both the Emkay Development Company and the McDonMll Douglas zone change proposals. Hopkins said terms of tht lease may even require Irvine Company support of the Collins request. An Irvine Company spokesman this morning refused to confirm or deny Hopkins' statement. "We have had no discuuiona with Collins Radio on this m a t t e r whatsoever," he. said. "We have no further comment.". . The:, proposed planned community development {or the Coll.fus property would. place the high rise hotel on a 10. aC,:e 1lte at the intersection or MacA:rthur Boulevard and Campus DriVe. It would be located at the 'far en'd of the pan::tl from the proposed Harbor Judicial ~i1trict courts that are to be built on e1ght acres at the corner of Campus and Jamboree Road. The deve lopme nt plan. prepared by a Los Angeles firm that provided details of the project this morning, also provides for up to 60,000 square reel of stores and restaurant! to ~rvlce the area. No timetable for construction was an. nounced by Collins officials although they connrmed that, depending on the out· come ol Thursday's work session with the planning commission, they hope to apply for the !ormaJ zone change in Jan1,1ary. Hopkins paid the fi rm has given up OOpe or • de velop ment the property in· dustrlally because of an overabundance of empty industrial buildings throughout Orange County and Ule nation. LA Woman Hurt In Mesa Crash A Los Angeles visitor suffered major Injuries Monday In Costa Mesa, when she was struck by a Fountain Valley girl's car on a busy street and tossed onto the cen ter divider. Rose Veglin, 65, was listed In fair con· dition today at Costa Meaa Memorial Hospital with a ft_actured leg and pelvis resulting from the 1 ~50 p.m. aceldent on Adams Avenue near Rofal Palm Drive. Police sak! motorist Jeanette A. Thompson. 18, of 16755 Mulberry . Circle Fountain Valley and Mrs. Vqlln both denied seeing each other prior to the im· pact. F rom Page l NIXON •.. A Pakistan\ army · doctor reported m)litary wounded have been brought Into Daeci hospitals, "more th.in we can deal with." Til)le magatlne'1 Dan Koggin and Jack Folsie of the Los Angeles Times reached the front line fighting At Demra, the crossing point of the Lakhya River seven miles southeast of Dacea. They witnessed a brave ferryman mak- ing crossing amid geysers of Indian army shell fire and flapping fish to evacuate a Pakistani's army rearguard unit from an east bank village being entered by mixed lndla n army and Mukti Bahint, Bengali gutrrillas. The ·Pakistanis were identified as being with a frontier force unit In retreat for days) from Akhaura on the border. The men were looking back toward Dacca as they settled In the pre.pared west. bank defensive positions for new delaying action. . They soon came under Indian artillery, mortars, cros.s-river machine-gun fire and inevitable Jndla'n air force jtts, which rocketed and strafed. The. Pakistani• have only an antitank gun to meet the oncoming Indian army forces. Returning to Dacca, Kogg ln and Foisie afoot were slopped by Mukti guerrilla band armed with Sten guns who when learning they were America n journalists demanded : "Why are Americans not sup- porting us?" But they let them pass with a gay wave saying : "We won't harm you. You are guests." A mldafternoo n bomb attack on the government house caused a f'OOfto p fire, apparently by a hit on the generator. Bombing of the center of the city cau11· ed new pre!'sute.s on the Red Cross to iill the neutral hotel. Among those admitted was East Pl!kist.ani Gov. A_ M.,Malik. Some refugees tried to break their way loto 1the .hot,:I py vaulting the guarded wall. Reaga,n Suggests Youn ger Voters Have Op en Minds SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ron1l d Reagan said today some young voters are rtgistering in greater 11umbers as Democrats instead ol Republicans b'- cause they lack a "balanced historical concept" of the Democratic party. At 8. ceremony ''here he signed a bill lowering the legal a11e of ad ulthood from 2f to 18, the Republican governor urged y0ung ~pie to "open their mind11" and "maintain their independcnC'I!" before they join a political party. He said if they did this. they would .. discover that a great deal or what they are agsinst in government .. , wns ere· ated by our oppone>lts, the. Democra!J;. They are against the very same thing . port.9 -tor the time since 1893. !hat the Republicans are agai nst.'' The joint statement did not list th• Reagan insi:;led he wasn't ''trying to sell them on a viewpoint," but licked olher currencies to be re.valued, nor did it off "impersonality, huge size o! govern. gay how much the dollar would be reduc-me11t, undue regimentation," as exam- ed in value or how much the worth of pies of what he said the Democrats 10me other curreacies inight ·be. in·~ created. creased. "I think they would discover that I ' There was no mention of the franc In great man y ot them are lacking in a th e communique. balanced historical concept," Reagan told Although the communique specified the newsmen . "I think they would be quit e dollar would be devalued, It gave no surpr~sed to find out who fa vors contln· timetable. Presumably add 111 0 n a! _ uauo.n or centr.al_lied authori!r and lm· negotiations witb major U.S. lradlng . pos.ll!on on Jnd1v1dufl rights. partners will be necessajoy. Afte r ~evaluation, the dollar would be worth fewer francs, West German marks, Japanese. yen and other currencies. The United States previously had demanded an increase in other currency values to ease Us balance o! payment11 problems. The two pre11idcnts said they favored new world monetary machliltry that would permit tbt vllue of currencies to --fluctuate rmre lhao ts no w theoretically allowed in resPonse to the laws of 1upply &JJd demand. Viejo Hi gh Boys Now Wear Wigs Boys 1.lteodlnl Mlulon Viejo High Scl:loo\ are weiring wig• 1(1 covtr up Jong hair that \'lolatcs the Tustin High School Dlstri<"t'' dress and gnioming code. Tru1tee Dickr•n Boranian asked MOn· day night lC students wtre being allowed to wear wigs. Prlncipal Robert Bosanko confirmed that 1tudentJ were wearing them . Governor Signs Bill Creating Ne'v Judgeships A blll creating 15 new Superior C.OOrt Judgeships in si:r: Southlr11d counlies, fivt o( them to be added lo the bench in Orange County, w1s signed Mondiy by Gov. Ronald Reagan. The number of Orange County Superior Co urt jurists will rise from 14 to 29 under term1 ol the le1l1Jation 111uthored by Assemblyman John Knox lD-Richmond ,, ii was announced. No immedint~ prediction wu madt on hof' IOOn G . Reagan wlil 1ppolnt nominees fro. Orange County's flve separ1te judicial districts. Aacmblyman Knox 's mearure only In· creastt suptrlor court judges from JO to JI lo his own.Contra costa Counly . • --l ~-dtiudA~ ,'2 .~i!dL ~~ ~ ----··----------________ ________.. Harb0r Liglats Newport Harbor's annual Chrisimas Boat Parade starts Friday. This year, the parade, which runs nightly through D.ec. 23, will be led on opening night by Jerry Thompson's 65-foot Pacific Clipper instead ol one of the Balboa ferries. Spokesmen for the sponsoring Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce said they expect 60 to 65 entries in this year's parade. It starts at 6:30 p.m. each night 1t the Balboa Island ferry landing, circlin& the harbor and returning at 9:15 p.m. Mother, Son Flee Inferno Irvine Heiress Gi ves Rebuttal In Talk Tonight In Home OverlookiI1g Bay Crackling flames and 1 banging door blown open by furnace-like heat blasts awakened a Newport Beach mother and her son early today, routing them Into lhe cold as a $12,000 fire swept part of their home. Na one wa s Injured Jn the blaze. that broke out h1 the William R. Thompson home at 2003 Barranca, overlooking uir- per Newport Bay. Investigators blamed household Items stored In a closet housing a forced-ai r heating system for the predawn fire in the Eastbluff development. Responding to a 1:48 a.m. alarm, Newport Beach Fire Department units found names shooting lrom the. point of orlgi~' up throu~h the sedlnd floor to the roof. 1 lnves tigators were told Thompson was a1vay in Palm Springs and that the sound of the fire gettine furiously under way aroused Mrs. Thompson and their young aon. Damage estimates included $10,000 to the structure itself and an additional $2,000 to household contents , which suf· fe red from smoke and water exposure. Fire department crews had to tear through the reaidence's tile roof to thoroughly extineuish names and steam- ing embers in the structural interior. They also pointed out storage of flam· mable Items so near the household 's heat Two l\l esans Arrested Two Costa Mesa men were arrested early this morning by Gard en Grove police on suspicion of burg\ari:ii ng the Jolly Kni ght restaurant, 8666 Garden Grove Blvd. Jailed were Erie Robert Nelson, 12, of 21~5 Canyon Road , and Donald Eugene Grae of 2MO Newport Blvd. source was extremely hazardous, as 1 warn ing to other·~tential v\ctim .. s. Only a month ago, a family Jiving in nearby Ha rbor View Homes was awaken- ed by similar sounds in ti me to nee a major blaze, believed caused by an elec· trical malfunction. Investigators said they were lucky to escape with their lives, while a pet dog trapped briefly inside was also rescued. Front Page l EFFECTS ... economie effect as a dollar devaluation - increase the price of imports ooming into the l'niled ~tatt5 and reduce the price of U.S. expor ts sold in other countries. The President's announcement, Jong expected. despite official denja\s , also recognizes a basic economic fact of life : The economies of Europe and Japan have recovered from World War II. Japan 's economy has become so strong, in fact, that its currency, the yen, was regarded by U.S. officials ·to be grossly undervalued, giving the JapMese an artificial advantage in 1elllng in the U.S. market. That is one reason why Treasury Secretary John B. CoMally pushed the Japanese so bard to revalue the yen. Nixon 's decision should smooth the way for settlement or the international monetary crisis, wh ich half persisted since Aug. 15, when Nixon announced the United States would no longer redeem dollar:i for gold . But just what kind of system will be forged has yet to be determined , for the announcement (rom the Azores failed to specify v;hether the Uni ted Stael! would resu me paying out gold for dollar claims. Such a move is considered highly unlikely . Neither did the President aa y when devaluation would lake place. Mr~. Joan Irvine Smith, majority (!. dividual stockholder in the Irvine Com- pany and critic of company management.• will speak at 8 o'clock tonight In Turtle Rock Elementary School, 5151 Amalfi Drive, Irvine. Mrs. Smith's attorney, Lyndol Young, said Mrs. Smith Is returning "for the specific purpose of responding to all of' the prevaricated statements made by Irv!ne Company officials following my speech at UC Irvine." Mrs. Smith last week · addressed students at UC I and detailed the p a 1 t history of difficulties between membera of the Irvine family and the Irvine Founl dation. Noting she ho~ to overtutn the loundatlon~s present "control" of the IM!\e Company, Mrs. Smith tiri:ed V'rA.«"1~ to ttini. &>wn the lncorporaUOn. The elee;. lion 1s'·fleXt Tuesday; arid will determine'! the fate of a proposed 11,000-acre City ol Irvine. Young said Mrs. Smith will be in· troduced by Dr. Jay Martin, 1 UCI English profeslllr. Unlike the UCI appearance In which ft{r s. Smith responded to written ques- tions from the fl oor, she will conver11 with members of the Turtle Roci au• dience during a coffee hour lollowlna tonight's speech. New Airline Fares Get Fonnal Approval GENEVA (AP) -The International Air Transport Association -IATA -has formall y approved a fares package that includ es reductions of nearly 20 percent on some North Atlantic flights but a S4 increase on first-class rou nd-trips from and to Ne w York. The accord, agreed in broad outlines in Honolulu last month, wa s published Mon· day. It goes in erfect next April I. The reduced rates apply on some economy . class and e:r:cursion and group flights.. The J.unk Business Addre11in9 tho Central Indiana Floor Coverin g Associ1tion, an in dustry spokesman, W1lt1r Guinan .. id: "Too many people in the floor coverin9 industry are co nvinced the public only wants to buy "J ,.. I " uni carpe . W1'r1 1fraid that you mi9ht also 9et this impressi on fr om the ads which specify unbe:ievabl1 low prices. Investigating these ads will determine one of two thi ng• -either tho carpel IS junk, or they will try to sell you something more expensive! Wo don't ••II junk al Ald on's, but wo do h1vo q u1lity 1+ competitive prices, and the best inst1fl1tion in tho county. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 f lacentla Ave . COST A MESA 646-4838 HOURS: Man. thru Thuro., f to 5:30 -Fri .. 9 to 9 -S.I., 9:30 to S Wl11 haven't ye.l btei1 dttmed to be dimlpti•o. Booanko nld adding, "when they do we'll take 1pproprlate action." One new jtldce each will ~ added Jn San Bern1rdino and Mo"tery counties. whilt five 'frill be n1med In San Dleao and three Jn Santa Cl8ra ~nUes. 11.-----------------------------------------..J ' " -. ' I 1 1 \ I , I \ • l 1 I Ir ii I t ' I I 7 I j .VOi:. M, NO. 291, 4 SECTIONS, 60 PAGES . ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFORt~IA· JUESOAY; DECEMBER ]4, J97:fl 7:.· ~ . .... ... ' : I .. -- C'ritic Levels Blast at Fire Statio·'.·:~: PrOject Outlpoken San Clemente building de1iper Bric Boucher met Monday's constnictloo start al the new fire head- quarters building with .angry charges that design services for the $140,000 pr,oject ' . ' t:ttst the city nearly twice as much.as the community clubhouse which ' Boucher designed. In an angry blast ·at City Manager Km Carr, Boucller pointed out the bead-- quart.rs building deslgnec\ by Architects Willard Jordan and 'Ma·rym Renfro was basically "a garage." Boucher, long ' a crltli: ol city design services practices, charied that bis work ' , • t OOD1Ututed a bargain for the city at the . new clubbou&e -f1U7 a aquare foot for a complex structure which includes air conditioning. In an -angry letter to oowicllmen.,,thls week Boucher addl that the new fire faclUty wtll•cost the city P'l.T1 a square foot. Besides the fire 1-lqnarters, Boud!er cited . the rece,nt , City council contract given to local archltect Leon,lfyzen for a serles of designs for the Dew city yards at the :aew wast& treatment plant In the letter eipecled ID be fonnally received by COWlCilm<n on W-ay, IXOD Clemente lnridlmt• Blasters Found -In Drug Arrests A niatlne series of weekend marijuana arrest5chancec1complnion~astic~rm San ~ ~ .... po1lee Iii'"· nounced the aeizure of· _)Jaltilg caps1 and a detonation cord llilm an A"'11dl Palir.ada aPattmint OCCllR[lil by r<oo cil' the JU!l)eC'fs. ·.. ~ On the aame day a man who wu ques. tinned. In the D<l&lnal arrest produced a large anUairtraft shell fDr pOlice -a piece which had recently been emptied of two pounds of eiplo11ive pOwder. The development! caused police to seek District AtfDrney's C001plalnts today Charging possession of illegal explosive devices against Chris ,D. McKnight and Raiidy William Cornie both 22, and both residents of 224 Avenida Pallzada. The men orig~y were arrested by patrolmen last Saturday altu police in- vestijated complaints of an auto parked in a red zone neii-the residence. After officers , entered the residenc9 they aDegedly noCicell oeveral marijuana c\i!""la and. a roach clip and arrested -.\.. rita J the -'-••-UY'llll OOCJlliplL UllO J~. • _,,,. tilmmgcOp. .---~followup -.fll thla]lutmenl .Poll<o nporta thlt-..Jnr stiled that the aotiatrcralt devlct, a slieU with Its nose portion mtsilng, was sent to nillitary authorities at Camp Pendleton for examlnaUon. Late Tuesday the Provost Marshal's of· fli:e !Did police that It appear~ that \he device had been recently dismantled and a two-pound charge of ezploalves had been removed. . Police now are aeeklog to determine where those two ~ ol powder are, they said. Federal authorities also are ifl. vestlgating, police said, be c a u s e possession of the explosives violates federal law. Lei-ing It On Hawau Trip Cost Sparks An.tics For the head of a city which finds Itself ln the midst of a torrid controversy over convention e~ses, May~r Ton Y Forster 's invitation to the audience Mon- day was bold as brass. "Does anyone want to speak on any subject not on the agenda?" he asked at one point in the meeting. "On • • . any ••. subject?" be said emphatically. Presto. Forster then whipped out a lavender Hawallall lei and dangled It from a finger. · ed . Loud but nervous laughter well up tn council chambers. Everyone bad expected some reference to the controversy over the number ~f delegates and the tab they ran u~. m Honolulu to attend the League of Cities convention in HaWail recenUy. But a real version of. the traditional symbol of Hawaiian welcome wasn't.ex· peeled. . To some the lei may.have symbolized the $3,000 tab for the trip. City Finance Director Paul 'Lew had predicted that the voyage of five city of- ficials would cost about $4,000. Uproar followed that prediction. When the bills came in, city staff Poiflt... ed ID a smaller amount, just under 13JOOO. Thus, 1he f,000 resaoents of San uan Capistrano each gave their fair share for the voyage ol Mayor Forster, Councilman Ed Chermak, City Manager Donald Weld· ner, City Plamer Bob Johns and Plan- ning Commission Olairman Gerald Gaf- fney. In a comparison of sorts, the City of Laguna Beach, which has a population four times larger tha11 the Mission city, sent a lone delegate to the annual con- vention. No one wem from San Clemente. . . San Clemente to Decide , On Clubhouse Leasing The months-Old, vexing question of who should operate San Clemmie'• city golf course clubhouse for the next five year• will be answered b1 city councilmen Wednesday. Councilmen ~ve mulled over their cl>llce· for the poJt wtit aftM Jul Wednesdll,)''S wlJ' morning Ibid)' ouslon wbere three prospectlva leaoeholden mtde their pltcbel. The three operators hoping lo win the new lease for the facil ity are the eristing concessionaire, Peter Berger, Jocal resi- dent Vern Oakley and the W, P. Stewart Company of Fullerton. 1 Councilmen called for the -bidding on the new lease alter inontbl ol dllcusalon on metllocls ol lncr'els!Jll dt1 revenue from the restaurant aDd inack •! bar which bas .not paid !ta own way In <Umntyean. Proposals by bidders last week came with some hanh cr!Uclsm of one another,' particularly, commenta directed toward J!er1er'• eliltlng operation. The ellsllll( lease formally apU.S at )'t&t'• end. Other Itani oo the council'• qenda for the 7:30 p.m. ~Include : -A letter from p 1 an n J o g corn. mlaskloers Dking that a P.milllon-plus fDil road Idea for the base of the bluffs along the city beachlront be acrapped. The plan. wblcb was only a prellmlllary Idea, has won llUle favor and could be replaced by • moro !Inn project -a bleytle trail fol~ the beach frontage from North Beach ID the state part. ., ' • Boucher leveled a blast at Carr, who recommended the award of cootrlct_to Hp.ea at a fee cf~$16,000, or I pement al lho'eo1t for the new city yard complea. C<imcilmen bave budgeted !20Cl,OOO for the buildings. "I kaep hOaring or reading nlerrals 0 fD Mi'. Carr's economy program. "I know that yon started. oil this budget year with~ the laying oH oJ two engineer-• mg employes under the guise i>I ' economy," Boucher slid, "and yet I see )'OU throwing thousands of dollars away on building costs a,nd ·plan fees." Accordlng to Boucher's, figures, the • I , square-loot COiis-ai the ctt,'1 IUl•maJor coostructlon projects are: _-Civic ceotu built In 116Z, more than p,> a square fool -Golf """"° Clubhouae in lte5, more than !ZS. -City' lifeguard beadquarterl• In -1918, by Boucher,. $15"19. (By. comporlson Boucher' cited the NeWport Beach l~eguard olaUon's .119.IS ,...._.foot cost in 11165, and RwitlngfDo Bea<h's In 11163 at 135" square foot. 1 -The·COmmwitty.CJubbouse a llU7 a. square foot in 1971. .-The city fire. s)aUoo wblch llarted -' ~ --__ . ;:; t. Presideµt, Po~pido~: Tell Accord ANGRA DO HEROISMO, Azo;.,. (UPI) -President Nllon lllllOWIC<d to- day a direct devaluation of the American dollar ID help IDlve the lnternatlooal monetary crialL The bcmbohell .............i, niOde In • •co~ foUowillg Ill boon al ta1U --Ntson and P..otdent Geors• .-P.•·q· of F1'1111, ....... tbl . denJulion woalll be accomptllhed or bl bolrmach. ' 1 PniUmably, It would come through an """-ln.lhe'll.S.-set world price al._ an OUICe In the price ol gold. , ' l ,. , ' • ; 1 • ; ' ' • ' • llAIL:Yj'-"'OT'..,;~~ . · SADDLEBACK COLLIGE BOAr!P HE/iRS"DISSE~oN.MiTHob oF:ll:Ec-Tlf!IG•TRUST.IU • ~ ~· -Prflldent .Alyn Br1iru19n, Aotrlck!Bockua, ,Jehn;-1.uncj ·and· Hana· Vopl · · ·• '· · ' Trustee Assails . . ' Capo District's Election Policy . . ' i .• ' ·111 f1l\EDERl!X •SCHOGllEHL Of ni. Dll,_. Pllet ltilff .. Saddleback Community College District trwitee H8.iis Vogel Monday rUght charg• ed that the Capislraoo Unified , School District, which elects its trustees by area ''is well out of step with the rest of the county, if not the state." Vogel continued hls attacks by citing statlStics showing that some per90ns liv· Ing in the CUSO trustees areas are under-represented, while others are over• represenied. The elaborate presentation by Vogel was made during discussion of the ex· pansion of the: Sadd1eback board to seven numbers, rnade necessary by the popula· tion boom in the Saddleback Vallef. The CUSD trustees have supported expansion or the college board, but have been at odds with Saddleback on whether the trustees should be elected at large or by area. Dr. Rober\. Beasley, a CUSD trustee was the first to respond to Vogel's com- ments. "I want to see this junior college district be successful and effective. That's why I proposed a resolution in May whlcb passed our board that Sad- dlebact change the method of electing trusJeer. My feeling is that there has been a lack of communicaUon, not only between our twu boards, but between the cltit.eas and the college. "Many people feel U trustees wera elected by arta that communication would be better, .. Beasley,as.aerted. "We are one of the few districts whlcb elect lruslto.s b1 area, and we bave found !\. -.-.i. _. "" are one of tbe few, 'doem'l meall it'• bid." A*ed by a -In the audience why Capiotrano lhoUcht there waa a lack of communlc1t'lon , Beasley ~ed: "lo· I~ to the meat of I~ tbri'1 I d!H..--e of phllosopilJI." "Art yOu aayin& that our lack of agree- ment with your philosophy ~ causing a Jack of communication?" asked Sad· dlebaclt trustee John Lund. Bwley responded, ''yes" but retuaecl to alaborato on the-oubject. I I " ' Capo Trustee Scores Poorly Aligned District · · · Hana Vogel Monday·nlgbt ,. .. more of a staUstlclan than a copege tru.Stee In pl'e8ellting a1fiv&J>88e analysis of voling patterns In the Capistrano Unllled School DlalrlCt. , Vogel scored the apportionment of CUSD, noting thAt all trustee areas deviato from llaJ>c!ards 1or the·"ooe man. one ..te dedalon·banded down b1 the Supreme COurt. .. Using a projecfDr ID dlsplll,)' his llOtlltlca Vogel oaid that , each of the Capiltrano truatee areu·sliould -II> pmimaJely ~5 registered voters, ~wm;r.be ,'~5hul,Ollln<n Blan II abould -~ ta..under b1 307 voters. • "The.&ipr:eme Court·Jiu indicalad that deviations of five percent are allOwule but here we have devtatlons of U per- cent, 18 percent and 4.1.9 percent," Vogel claltned. • Vo1e!' !Mlntalned ''that !Jnmedlate siepl bl taken ID mpportloo'the trustee •i:us In ti/I CUSD ID conform ID the ooe JllOll, ooe vole edict of the court!' 'l'bt Tuotln -lllo od!iplayed \, . • CITJS PHn.°OSOPHY DI,,.~ Dr.~......,. figures 14 ....,. the 11Ulllber of ~ - dleback truoteei received In Iha C11SD aa , ' ro_.,.t to the OIJSJ) lru~~e11 tbemJtlvn. • . Nixon and Pompldou did not mention the matter in a meeUng with newsmen following completion of their third and final lace-to-lace meeting. · N~on did say "we made lfplflrant progresa In the problem of Iha fD. ~ monetary illuatlon." Like other major U.S. trading partners, France has been pressing United States ID devalue the dollar. by raising the price of gold, while the United State. waota them ID raiae the value of their pr!nclpal cunucies. The U.S. aim l!I to mate prices of U.S. gocxls more attra¢1ve overseas and reverse the erowln& American deliclt in world trade. Nixon beaded back ID WuhlngfDn aboard his "Spirit of '76" jet at 10:35 a.m. (EDT), m-hour and a half behind his original ache!lule, and Pompldou Jell for Paris aboard his sleek Co~ wperaonlc"jet about half an hour latu. Nllon arrived at the airfield ahead ol Pompldou and accepted an Invitation f .. a quick -of the Concorde before ho left. • AnOther major seasion Is l!Cheduled·thls weeileM In Wqbjngton ·of finance ministers of the 10 big non-Oimmunlsl trading nt.uons. Nts.aand Pompldou agreed fD.aponsor Jointly ellorta wllh other natlona to permit a wider fluctuation of cum~ ra~, giving more play I<> the market forces of 10pply .and demand la tletmnlnlag the relatfve values ol money •. Ronald L. Zleiler, White llDuse Prell . secretary aod his l'n!ncb counterpart. Dinis llaudoln, read the joint ..,.. munlijue In. Eqllth and l'l'tDCh to newsmen In the sundrencbed courtjlard ol ao !Bib Century bu1141ng where Nixon and " Pmnpldou met ~ and fDday, .------------....... ....... lt'eatlter SUiiey but slJahllY windy Is the weather word for Wedneaday. Look for femperatures dropping a couple notch.ea to 55 alone the coast and !IP to GO Inland. I II .. INSIDE, TODAY llfoiiam-Amerlaml "' '°""' IGi• ValkM aro becoming more •-• of !Mir polillon ancl ll<riCog• lh~h ..... C1lkdno awarint.11 prpgram -=. ~ bM A.nglot 41 tDeU. s .. Page 9. L M. 9"f .-11 ,.....,.... , . c....,... ., ... _,., 'I c-, --. ....... , .... ---. ....... , .. 1. -.. AM ll.._ II --· -. ._....,..... ,. .......... .._ M --' • .,.... """' ll SWta , .. ,, ..... ...,., .. , ~ : -. ........... ,,.,. --a l ' ' I '. -r I I -lOT · •SC . ' . . - ·Tuetdll.f. '*tiAW 141 19n " Peri;nissiy~ 'Jlax ·Pushed for Science ·Building A plan b)' t.rual.eca of lhe Saddl•back Com~ C.lftp District lo levy I . a~lal onotar J~nt,ptmdsslve tax lo tuftct a sclinOI inalhtroiUcs center ""•• again In t~ ipOtUght Monday night-and It appears trustees wlll stick to their guns tnd adopt lhe tax at budget tlme in Av gust. ''Saddlehlck College his not taken ad· vanta·gt: Of the permlsSive t.i," obSuved trwtee Hans Vogel. Ov~ the past four ytan; he •aid. Saddlebtck' has levied on· ly 11 ~ in permiN1ve whlle the CoaJt Oom1nunity Colltee District · hu levled 11.u; North QrJo11&i Coupty Cooimuolty ,Collqe Dittrlcl, n cenll and Santi An•· JlaOCioo Santiago Colpmu. • Call•it l>istrlCl 40 ....... ~ "I received a letter Crom the chancellor of the community college district! in· forming us ·thal Saddleback now has the lo West tai · rate of any district In the state," Vogel said. The preseht tax rate is ~LS7 cer:ils per $100 •assessed valuat ion. "I can't speak for the boa.rd," said Dr. fHd H:. Bremer, 1uperintendent·ptt:1i· dent cl ti. .OUeae this mornlllc, '1'! It appean lrom lhe t•nor of the meettn' tlioY plan to ao ahead with the bulldinc uftllztna lhe -tu." F.red Newhart, a trust.ff 011 the ' Capistrano Unified School District board asked .Vogel during the meetlng If tJ,te assessed valuation of the district has kept up with the growth in students since the college opened. Vogel replied that the "um b ~ r of students has tripled while the assessed valuation has doubled. ''We haven't kept Foreign Tra~e Hit Hardest Tourists lT1 ouUl Feel Dev aluation, l 1n pact Overseas By BILL NllUURK An.-111 .. ..,.... Wf\191" WASHINGTON -If the United States devalu~ the dollar, as President Nixon indioited today that It wotlld, the biggest' and most immediate impact would be on foreign-trades. ' Amttltanl would flnd Imports more upenai\le. U.S. exporters trying to sell their · toods in foreign markets would have an easier time, since their products would be relatively cheaper. Behind the facade of the highly academic field or currency devaluation and revaluation Is that !>&sic ~nomic fact : It means getting either a trade ad· vantage or disadvantage. Otherwise, deYaluallon of the dollar will not be noticed by Americans unlesa they travel abroad. Those will rind .28 Join Event Winter ·Festival Plan.s Under Way With Laguna Beach's Winter Festival still two. months away, 28 organizations already, have announCed plans to sponsor lbe 50 acheduled events. The ninih annual festival is scheduled from Feb. 18 through. March S, and a co.inpleted program of events will be off PrQgrams Slated ln.:Many Joaquin · Di~trict Schools Holi<biY progranu and plays have been ached.Wed this week throughout the San Joaquin ~Elementary School District featuri~ the work of school choruses, l>Ands, And aspiring drama students. ' 'I'he iCbedule of evenlnjil: programs, all of whlcb begin al 1:30 _p.m. includes : tooig}\t, lrvine Elementary and 0 I i v e w J> o d Elementary; Wednesday, A1iso .. Element.ary . and Un1ve.rsity Par)! EJeme'.nt.ary; Thursday, De.I Cerro Elementary and Rancho San Joa·~wn Intermediate. Cordillera Elementary has acheduled programs both tonight and Thursday. the p'tess late this month. Films, food and art· will contribute to the event's international flavor. During the first ~eek of the festival, local travelers 1will present slide talk shows .in an aflerpOOQ travelogue series in the· Forum Theater. Prlze-wiMlng travel films will be shown during the se- con4 week. . · A lwo-daf infematlonal art exhibit will be featured on the feslival grounds Satur- day .,,d Sunday, Feb. U and 21 and chairman Flora Bass reports entries alreadj have been Uned up from artista representing a dozen nations. The Jntemalional Gootmet Dinner, always a festi~aJ highlight, will be presented Feb. 29 at the Victor l-lugo Inn, with consular representatives from several counlties as guests or honor and seven art colony restaurants participating In the service. An innbva.tion this year will be free Saluz)lay Ao In lhe Forum ~ater ~~ ~y !Jon Country safatt - complete with live lion cubs. Tho SS.pi,.. Wes~ Covl'I', Sym1"1<!'1y Or.chestra ·~~In wfll .present a c:on~rt ~4 n~lionallf'fatno~ Laguna Beach car· tooniSll,,autbbrs and photographers will be-·, i"ecognited .in s~lal uhlblta on the festli'J) .grounds, along wfth' fegulir art displays jrid the craflamen's fair. Day programs include: El Toro Marine School, 8:SO a.m. and Gates Elementary, 1 p.m., both ThursdayJ · Turtle Rock Elt:mehta'.ry will give a perfonnance of "The Grinch Who Stole Chtiabnu" on FrJday at 9 a.m. Rpard Ma y 0rder ' BRD Restriction Boxer's Brother ()n Dana Bluifs ' S kin Di County au~isoi-s will act Wedn°"esday ee g VO rOO on ¥:., ordfiii&e imposing the aeach • :.. . · ' ll~Olion .alld O.,.lopment District H · I ht -•--• J n,,_.._,, tptfl(ll on..:,PrQPerty fronting on Dana eavywe g COiuo;n\ler erry "'-.u" 1 Pob;lr.'Harbor behr~o the Street of the brother filed 'for diyorce Mondly in · ~ LaotertJ. a.ad t>o"heny State Park. Orange County Superior CoW'1 citing ''.lr-...._ . reconcilable differences't1 \> !! t w'e en .me &RD district b being belatedly ap. himseU and the Anabe.im girl he mArried plied to I.hi area because or var1pu1 nine years ago. .. • ' . • 4•• awtment and restaurant projects in the ~ bhifl art1. 1 James M. Quarry, Long ne:ach, stats ln the lawsuit filed by Beverly HilJs, ·~ . '11:te di.strict imposes restrictions on all r blitldlpg ai>d i-equlres a 10-foot wide tomey Palli Caruso that he and hls wile, pubJ(e; accns· tg the idjoinlng beaeh Roberta. separated May 31. She lives in areas every l,OOO feet. This will probabty Anaheim with the couple's four children. be waJved inasmuch 15 sufficient a·ccess Caruso said Jim Quarry is one or his brother's trainers. The lawsuit has yet to to the harbor is provided by a county be set for pretrial hearing. roadway. DAILY PILOT ...... CDAIT PU1l1JHl"G COM1ANY ll•Hrt N. W.~ P'r•ldt!l'I .,,. """" ...... J1 tli: II. Cu1l'T Vil:t ,,....._ Ml Cl-11 Mlllltw n-., K •• ,u ·-n; •• , A. MISl',t.i-• MllNttw lf•ll• a.a. H. L'"'" klctr.•N: r. w..n An"'-111 #1 .... ;nt 1Efl"'1 ........... , .. Offk• 22? f•r11t A't••w• Saddleback 'Y' Lone Bid for Viejo .~cres Saddleback Valley YMCA was the lone bidder for a lease of three acres of the Ba"'ker schOol site in Mission Viejo. Tustin Union High School District trustees voted Monday night to accept the $2:5 per year lease bid that will allow .• !he YMCA to use part of the unoccupied school site for a year. The luse-cont1ins a 31).day cancellation notice and an oplk>n to renew for an 1dditlona1 year. should lhe high school district not need the site for a new school. fortign goods and services more ez- pensive, since their dollars will purchase fewer foreign currencies. As part of any agreement, currencies of other countries would be raised in relation to the dollar -by how much, no one knows . Revaluation would achieve the same economic ef!ect as a dollar devaluation - Increase the price of imports coming· into the l 1nited States and reduce the price ol U.S. exports sold in other countries. The President 's announcement, long expected despite o(Jicial denials, also recognizes a basjc economic fact of life: The economies of Europe a~ Japan have recovered from World War II. Japan's eeonomy has become so 11trong, in fact, that its currency, the yen, was regarded by U.S. officials to be grossly undervalued , giving the Japuiese an. artificial advantage in selling in the U.S, market. That is one reaso n why Treasury Secretary John B. Connally pushed the Japanese so hard to revalue the yen. Nixon's decision should smooth the way for settlement of the international monetary crlsi.!, which has persisted since Aug. IS, when Ni.1on announced the United States would no longer redeem dollars for gold. But just what kind of system will be forged has yet to be determined, for the announcement from the Azores failed to specify whether the United Staes would ~sµme paying out gold' for dollar claims. Such a move is eonsidered highly unlikely. . N•llher did 'th< Presld•nt say when devaluation wou\d'lake place. · The United State! could devalue the dollar by raising lhe official prlce of g6ld, now set at S3S an ounce. Raising t~e price , of gold ~.~.50, for example, would be a .. 10 perceol devaluatio.n, one figure men· tlo¥d pi;:omln~ntly by participants In in· ternaUori"Bt monetary talks. The monetary system of the non·Com- munist world has been based on the value of the dollar -and its tie with gold - since It was put together at Bretton Woods, N.H., a quarter-century ago. The exchange rates of all other cur· rencies were related to the dollar, in other words. Shopping Center Theft Suspects Nabbed in Capo ' Two· men who alleged!}' burglarized sit SlQfts and a bank In San Juan Cap. istrano s El Adobe Plaza early this morn. jng before two sheriff''s officers stepped in ito cut off their getaway are in Orange CoUAty Jail today. Booked on multiple burglary charges were Marc D. Burkhart, 19, o( 235 Lower Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach and Bud L. Hunter. 21 . of Garden Grove. Sheriff's Lt. Robert Griffeth said both men were picked up by patrOlling depu- ties Ray Karr and Fr3nk Petronella as they prepared to drive away in their loaded ,vehicle from lhe El Adobe shop- ping center . Offlcers said the car contained loot taken from several stores in the complex. The haul is still being itemized by sheriff's investigators but Griffet.h com~ mented this morning that "it wasn't very much ." "They smashed the windows of most of the st~s and took whatever they cpJkl reach," Griffeth said. "We hope to tiave the final tally later today." Sheriff's officers hoped to arraign Burt· hart and Hu11ter in Santa Ana Municipal eourt late today or Wedne&day morning. M•1'l111 ••4tt11: r.o. 11111 •••1 t l'S 5-C......_Offk• an N.rtli 11c •• 1~. ~ •• r. t 2•1 OtMr Offtc" on ,.... a w"' '" '""' ........ I a.tll! lU> N~ ~ tf~ lhKll! ''"' •M<ll ...,......,., Tip Leads Laguna Police . To Teen Btirglar Suspects Ad.Ing on an Informant's Up, Laguna Beach detect1ve1 Mon.jay arl'ested two teenasers on suspkloo of bur&lary and recovered several thou.t.1nd dollars worth of audio-visual and office equ1pmtnt believed stolen from 1 Laguna HUis "hoot. Sgt. Neil Purtell said the two suspecl!I, 11n adult and a juvenile, were taken Into custody lo an apartment at 18$4 S. Coa!t lllghway, The properly, much of it slill bearing the school's idenliflcation tags. WAI stored throughout the apartment, the detective claimed. The adult llU..pcl"t wa.'J Identified as Bry111n Lee, 19, or the addreq where he was arrested. Purcell /ara lhe male juvenile, who ls currently on probation for burglary, is 17 ~a.rs old and from the Riverside ma. The property was aUegedly stolen rettntly from Vale.ncla Elementary School, 2$6Gl J>aseo de V1leoclt1, Purcell explained. Jt Included adding m a c h i n e 1, type\frltei"S; 1llde ind movie projectors, tape ~rders and record player11, he noted. · Purcell said much or the eq11lpment l'flCOVtrtd from the apartment bore the nAmt "Vale~t1'' written with 1 felt pen or wa1 affixed with 1 u1g ldenUl)'ina It t11s property of th~ San Joaquin Eltmentlry School Dtrtrlct. { ' 'up111 V01el uld. Newhart lhen ut<ed tr lhe J4 cent tu could be JevJed over a t\ll'o-year period ln- 1teaci of 111 1t once. "The governor recenUy signed a bill which allows permissive taxes to be levied over a ~hree.year pe,rlod," ;Bremer said. . .Richard M,ichaels, 26951 Ti.erra Circle, Mission Viejo, pralsad the boar~ for ilgreelng at its October meeting to levy the tax. "The people in the community have abrosated their respoosibilify 10 .provide for the students,': he charged, Down the M •• IS SI OD Trail Saddleback 'Y' Sig nups Slated Youngsters si1 through JO years old may now sign up for the ijoliday Hap- penings to be sponsored by the Sad4 dleback YMCA Dec. 20 through Dec. 2.1. Activities will include Christmas craft!:, tree decorating , a surprise movie and a v~it to Santa's elves. The happenings will run fro m noon lo 3 p.m. each day at Olivewood Elementary School, 23391 Dune Mear Road. El Toro. Parents must provide tra nsportation. Re~istration will continue through Thursday, Cost is $5 per youngster. Further inform ation is available by corr tacting 830. YMCA. School Gills EAST IRVINE -Two gifts have been accepted by trustees of the · San Joaquin Elemenlary School District. They are $600 donated by the Linda Vista Parent-teacher Organization to be used for tumbling mats and audio-visual aids and a portable ticket booth valued at $110 donated by Mrll . Carolyn Chapman on behalf of the Leisure World Foun- dation. Mom• Neede d SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -Thirty. seven bright-eyed, eager, energetic young boys need ·a mother-on a temporary basis. An overwhelming response to the Cub Scout program ln San Juan Capistrano' has l>rought a rtc&td Dumber (i( boys lnto S<XMJting, bu'~ they may not be aJ>!.e to coqtiny.e if additipnal ~en·mot~rs are not found. AD'/ mother wtio ls wlllliig to ·donate an hour a week and ·one committee meeting night •a month to help is asked to call Glenn Olsen, 493-3'1Z5. About four "oc· cask>nal moms" are needed. Jlo11teo1v11er's Choice CAPISTRANO HIGHL.\NDS -Robert Bevacqi.ia has been elected president of the Capistrano Highlands Home::iwners ' Association. Other officers will be 01uck Bennett, vice president ; Robert Gertz. treasurer; Ge.ii Vickers, secretary ; Eleanor Price, Dave Parris, and Robert Watson. board members. Other directors are Pat Fearon and Charles Wydner, Jr. Librnr11 F1111dh19 EAST IRVINE -A federal grant to set up an "exemplary" library at La Paz Intermediate School in Mission Viejo is being sought by the San Joaquin Elemen· ta;y School District. If approved. the district will receive SM ,665 Lo develop a model school media center which can be used for demonstra· lions within the district. Application is being made under Title 11 of the Elementary And Secondary Education Act ol I~. rtfcnln& to ,lhe deleat of 1 1%U milllon bond l.asue in Septe.mbtr. "l'm still opposed to this tax:," alttsse(\ .Edmund o·nuey, 220 Calle Marina, San Clemente. "You're drivh\g me out of m·y. home,'' he continued pointing an accusing linger at members of the board. "We don't ha ve enough money. Do you .know' that 58 percent of all ta1es go to schools? I sa"y It behooves you to find another way instead of taking from us poor properly owners." "J can't agree with you more that pro- perty tax ls grw.Jve,'' Voge.I rupond· ed. "But l'm •frald your ariument ll with tbt legislatu~." O'RUey also chided the board tor vollng last month tp refuse to apply tor federal money for the $4.S million science ·mathematics building. "I voted for applying for federal aid,' commented Vogel, "but we have to fa~ reality. We are too wealthy to get It." Alex Cherdey, 24916 Via Largo, Lquna Niguel. said, "you are going to bave to tighten the belt. Quit building c::ountl')' clubs and st.art to leach kid!:." Board Defers Action Trustee Seeking Identity Of Critical Instructor By GEORGE LEIDAL Of !tit DllllY l'llM lllltl Tustin Union High School District trustees Monday took no action on a re. quest to seek the identity of a teacher who criticized an economics textbook in an anonymous survey. Robert Bartholomew, a member of the John Birch Society and trustee from Tustin, had suggested the board should find out which or the district's nine teachers ol economics "is oot en- thusiastic about this course." The course is economics. The district recently completed a year of requiring the course of all seniors at University, Mjssion Viejo, Tustin and Foothill high school s. "'\\'hen I see there is a teacher in our district who says we don't leach enough Marxism and who objects to flag waving then I want to know who that teacher is," Bartholomew declared. The remark followed presentation to the board of comments solicited from nine economics teachers who had been asked to evaluate the 1970--71 school year trial or economics as a required subject. The report did not Identify teachers who responded to the survey. L. Jay Ingall, assistant superintendent !or in· struction, told the board that numbered written statements in reply to four ques· tions did nol necessarily correspond. Board members indicated they believed the answers nWTibered seven and eight were from the s3me two teachers. Ingall said they were not, noting "They've been mixed up." Bartholoo'!ew said. "I'd like to see the original reports then. There are one or two teachers here we should talk to." Trustee. Dickran Boranian, who earlier had suggested the district consider mak- ing changes in view or the criticism. ob- jected to Bartholomew's request to find out which teachers said wh3t on the sur- vey. "This is their evaluation of the course as they see it," Boranian said, "not a statement of their personal philosophies." Eight of the teachers agreed the course should be taught during the senior year and that it should remain as a one· semester offering. Seven said the course should remain in the curriculum and that the present course outline meets the needs of students . Seven of the nine rated the textbook as being "poor'' to "average" with only two teachers saying the required text was near excellent. Supplement al reference materials wete rated more highly by the teachers -six said they were average to excellent. One unidentified teacher s h a r p I y criticized the textbook -"it is insulting to the intelligence of the students , .. Marx is dismissed in five superficial and misleading paragraphs. "The book is obviously one·sided and appears to students as propaganda and flag-waving -which is self-defeat!Jll," .. the teacher wrote. Several teachers commented that the course probably would be better if it were elective rather than required. Some suggested that a course· in con· r sumer economics w o u I d better serve slower students. while college-bound ~ students would be helped best by a course that is more theoretlcaJ in content. Among "other comments" on the course was this lone statement from a tea cher who indicated the course pro- duced "extreme boredom" in students: "How long IT'"~' we bear this albatross about our necks?" Aoother tea cher commented, ' ' I f capitalism is a superior system, it can 'se.11' itself in the open market ol kleas and will not unduly suffer by an objective comparison with other' systems. "Those who, feel that economics must be presented in the. current fashion, with · this particular book, are apparently capitalists of little faith!" the teacher concluded. Superintendent William Zogg sum-· marized the evaluW.oo as district staff viewed it. He said it appeared the district could do a better job of grouping students according to intellec~ual levels and find a better textbook or books to suit the needs of students. Boranian urged the district to consider Involving students in the textbook .aelec· lion process. The board took no action on the economics evalua tion. Youngsters Set Fer Story hook Parade Saturday Laguna Beach youngsters wishing le partic.ip~te in Laguna 's Storybook Parade on Saturday may fill out entry forms at the. cbam~ or commerce, 205 N. CouC High"·ay, by 4:30 p.m. Wednesday. When the completed form is handed in, each entrant will be given tickets for the free movie at South Coast Theater which. u·ill follow the noon parade around the Santa Claus · house at GleMeyre Street and Park Avenue. Free tickets also will be available fo r family members who are encouraged tct accompany the youngsters to the movie. After the noon judging, the parade will move down Forest Avenue and Coast Highway to the theater "''here judges will award prizes following the movie . The parade is open to children aged 3 to 12 and judging will be by age groups. In case or rain the entire event will be h~ld in the South Coast Theater, begin· n1ng at noon. The Stoi;-ybook Parade is sponsored by the Junior Woman's Club and the Mermaids of the Chamber of Commerce. The Junk Busine ss Addressing the Central Indiana Floor Covering Associati on, an industry spokesman, Welter Guin1 n 1aid: 1'Too ma ny people in the floor covering industry art convin ced t he publi c: only want s to buy "Jun k11 carpet. 11 We1re afrai d tha t you might also get this impNssion from the ads which specify unbet evable low prices. lnvesti9atin9 these 11ds will determine one of two th;ng• -e;ther the carpet IS junl, or they will try to sell you something more expensive! Wo don't ,.11 junl al Alden ... but we do havo quality 1t competitive prices, and the best instaH1tion in tho coun ty. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave . COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS: Mon. thru Thut1., 9 to 5:30 -'rl.1 9 to 9 -Sat., 9:30 . to J ,. ' l • ·1£.agn11a , YOL 64, NO. 297: 4 SECTIONS, 60 PAGES ORANGE COU NTY, CAUliORNJA JEN CENTS ' ' Festival Cool to . Banner Finaneing; ,Questioll A chamber of commerce propo<al that the Festival of Arla underwrite the cost of some SO new street J>anner in· atallations to decorate Laguna during its summer and winter festival season was greeted coolly by Festival directors Mon- day nigh!. It was decided to defer action pending further examination of cost of the project and alternate banner designs. • Director Glerm Vedder, who serves as Festival liaison with the chamber board said the propooed bannen would consist of two arms affixed to utility poles, as approved by the F.dison <;:ompany with strips-of muJtl<eJonid nyJon material ei:- tended rro,n lbe brackei.s to the pole in a triangle sliape. Banners previously used to advertise the Festival were removed after the elec- IXOll 1972 Staff Chosen Pageant Drops Some Personnel Several wen known members of Laguna's Pageant 1of the Masters pro- dudion stall will 1not be backstage in 1972, it was · revealed. Monday night following an executive session of the Festival of Arts board of directors. With the ~pproval of lbe board, 1"<>- ducer-directot Don Willlamson announced the 19'12 ~uction staff without auch famiijar uimes,as'EmaUe ~~, irt 'clirediit' ml backgroilpd ~ Berl Pettey, bead;dmslnr,imd properties diredor;' Jlarla 'Alleit,. cUthC cllr.dor; and Jo Williamson, wardrOl>e director and wife~ot the producer. Rem8iniog on the producUon staff, in addlUon to Williamson, are Howard "Hap" Graham script writer and ·n&r· • . nd rator; Vie Schoen, CQmposer a con· ductor; Carl Callaway, technical direc- tor· ·and ·Dorothy Brookbank, makeup . ' director. A new title, that of scenic artist, will be Joaquin Awards School Contract San Joaquin Elementary S ch o o 1 Distriti trustees have awarded a conkact far comtruction of an elementary school to a LonR' Beach finn. The· school, to cost $959,600 will be built on Preciat:los Drive just off Marguerite Parkway ln Mission Viejo. School of· fiCia1s hope to begin classes at the new facility in the fall of 1972. The low bid for the school was sub- .mltted by the K and F Construction Com-pany and was well below the cost estlmate of $980,000. The school ls one of 15 facilities now in either the pJanning or construction stages in the sprawling school district. P olice Studying 1 Garage Looting given Ed Miracle, artlst and loogthne Festival growJds exhibitor, who will paint both backgrounds and costumes, jobs in previous years band.led separately by Mrs. Schneeberger and Mrs. Williamson. In charge o[ fitting, cutting, draping and sewing in ·the wardrobe d<partment will be .Dorothy Bishop wbo bas worked as a· Pageant volunteer· and living· pie- ~· )ll<lCli!l, Mrs. Wllllaml fornlerll' waa ln dwi~ of llila ~ ' ~ "'-iDI &11!1 ~will. be. bandied by lloa ilert>ert,'•dllplay artlal long asil9Clated with the Pqeant as a v-0lunteer, who takes over trom Bert Pe~ tey, Casting director Karla Allen, wbo is planning a trip to Europe next summer, will be replaced by Sue Anderson Vfho handled the pageant casting cast' in 1967, Williamson. said. At1the Monday night meeting, Festival directors set a tentative date of Jan. 21 to go over Williamson's prwosed Pageant program for 1972 and meet tbe new department beads prior to. the annual casting party Jan. 29. Car Talks Back To Motorists GLASGOW, ScoUand (AP) -You're driving along and a voice comes out of the dashboard, saying: "You are break· ing the speed limit." ' Or: "Your engine ts overheating •.• Your oil pressure is falling .•• You are running out of gas." Glasgow University has developed a talking speedometer that checks your speed aod analyzes the condition of your car. . It works with a tape recorder, a library of prerecorded tapes and a bat· tery of gauges under the hood. A statement from the university said the gadget could cpnlrlbute to road safe- ty, particularly in heavy traffic or fog "when the driver m~t not for a moment divert his attention to reading in- strument5 on the dashboard." Irie -compaey ruled the inslallatlon unsafe. • The new brackets, Vedder said, would cost'$2i'to 130 each and would lut !0< 20 years. Cost of the nylon strlpi waJ not immediately available, he said, but it1 would be a "QPe shot'' investment for the F.esUval, with the chamber laking. over maintenanee and a.ssesa1ng merchants no a year for replacement material. Director William Martin, noting . lbal .. • I the F!lllfyo) Is alwaya aold .oat,-irilb or without banders, ~. "I acit't aee bow anyone going lbrougb taguli& COll!d fail to know there ls a Fesll.nl IQlnc on." Paul Griem disagreed. "'lbo:~t la always aolil out," be sail!, ... but tbere are literally ttwmnds of people drl\ting through here in summer wllo mlibl. fll1I the~ u ~ey-knew ~~""' a .. i..,, on up there " ,. · -e~, . --·1 " -· . . .. ' . ,._. ---··-... -- ,., ---cbam~ [el~lbft. -1d be II) (ll1llllmll gelltog merchantl io lllppor\ the project. Director Helen Keeley wondered tt the plan oould be IUnded on a matchlns baalo w1t.b the chamber.·~ chlDillir runs on apfelty narrow bud&et." Aid Vedder, "ilid we would bave to uk the dty to put the banners up.•! It,,.. agrJto ..u a·'llrltton -posal and DIOR fPOClllc aC aotlmata, , . . _.::.--=-· ----. 0 ar • - President, Pompidou · Tell Accord ANG~ DO HERO!SMO, Azores (UPI) -Pmldenl Nixon announced t... da_y a direct devaluation of the American dollar to help aoive the inlemallonal monetary crisia. The bombohell IJIDOUllCelllOD made ln a communique following 10 hours of talU between Nixon and Pnsident G.orgeo Pompldou of France, did not ..,. bow tho deva!Uatlon -14 ba accomplllW or 111, ..... ""I"'-f Preo!jmabfy, It would come throush aa lpcieUg in the 11.S.-let wmlt1'flce., .. .• - -.to a. prko ., pld. , ;1 ~'!d!l,o ,. · Nlsoo and POIJlPldou dld not mention > :J.-"" ~ ·1 ."'< ~ ·a;M ~~· '. tbe matter In a ineetl.ng with newsmen · 1 ' 'SADDLEiAcic coi.l!id adARl))~IAflSql;SENT'.ONMmtOD ~-IU', .o.11~ii· ··.~. ~:T:c~:.01 lbelr thlrd and . : , , Preok!Ont Alyn llra~non, Patrlcli llackuo,·Jolin' LUl1d ~ricl>Ha"1' \IGtOI • "'; • • '-· Nix di'.d " ting. d ,_,.. 1 • . . • . , , , " ... on say we ma e 116 .... 1canl . ·~· "' · ~ i progi'eu in the problem of the U.. ARMED WITH STATISTICS 'S.ddleblck's Hans V090! T~ As$ailii · . . ' . '• Capo· District~s Election Policy -" By FREDERICK SCBOEMllllli Of .... Del!r Plllf lllff Saddieback CommunilyCoJ!ecellillrict lnlatee.ilana Voit! ·Moojo:~l-chFI, ed that th~ eaptatiaoo ~ed. School Distrld, which elects lio lrUslees by •l:u "ls well out·of·step wiQi.tbe·.test 'oLtbe county, 1f not the atate." ·Vogel col:itinued bis attacb~by;citini"'.. 11taU.SUcs showlng that sOme perlODS liv-. Ing in the CUSD tcuSteea· ·areaa· are • . under-iepresented, Whlle·others are'ovir- repNHnted. temlUonal monetary situation." Like other mojor U.S. tradlnj portnm, Fr&llf' bu been ""'"Ing llnlled sta!a liJ devalue the dollar, by raising the price of gold, whlle the llnlled states wanlll them to raise the value of their principal currencies, The 11.S. aim la to make ~ of 11.S. gooda more atlractlve overseas and reverse the growing Amerlcan defldl in world trade. Jliron beaded back to Washington aboan1 bis "Spirit of ?6" jet at 10:35 a.m. (EDT), an boor and a ball behlnd bi.I orlglnal schedule, and Pompidou iefl for Paris aboard bis sleek Concorde 1t1peraonic Jet •!>M half an boµr later. Nixon mived · 1t tbe airfield ahead ol Pompldou and accepted an invitation for a quick tour of lbe Concorde be!o]e he Jell. Another major. &e88ion Is scheduled lbla weekend in Washington of finance mln!sters of the 10 big oon-Communlsl ·trading nations. . • N.ixon and Pompldou agreed to sponsor Jointly efforts with otber nallons to permit a wider fluctuaUon of currency rites, giving more play to the. mirket !orcea of supply and demand in determining the relatl.ve values ol money. u,guna Beach police are Investigating the theR ol aboul $1,500 worth of tools , fishing equipment and a boat from • resident's carport. Pollce said William R. Lutes of 1601 N. Coast Highway, reported the items stolen Monday but 11aid they could have been ttolen M>me time during the past five · days. fi h' Lutes said the tools and 11 1ng gear Vogel Off e1·s Statistics To Support Capo Attacl{ The elaborate presentalionl by . voge.1 was made during dilcuuion of the es .. pansion of the Saddleback board to aeven numbers, made necessary by the popula- lion boom in the Saddleback·Valley. The CUSD trusteei have supported eipaosioo of the college bbard, bUt have 1>een 1t odds with Sadd!eback on whether the trustees ohould be elected al large or by """· Dr. Robert Bouley, a CUSD lnlalee waa the lint to respond to Voeel'1 com- ments. "I want to see th!J junior college dlstricl ba success!ul afld eflectlVe, That's why I proposed a r..o1utjon in May which passed our board that Sad- dleback change the method of electing Ronald L. Ziegler, Wbile HOUie ~ ~ and hla French countezput, Denis Baudoin, read the joint com- munique in English and French lei newsmen in the sundrenched courtyard ol an 11th Century building wbere Nixnn ml Pompidou met Monday and today, ]ieltber apokelman would go beyond \be language o~ the communique lD Geacrlblng the asreement. ...... were stored in tocked cabinets, which had been pried ope.'n. In addi~ion he told police his eight fool sail bbat had been taken from the carporl. ·Catamaran Flip Chill s Crewmen A Canadian sbipplng man and bi.I aon, vacationing in Laguna Beach, had a chilly apertence Monday when lbelr 14- lool Hobie Cal copslzed oil Emerald Bay and dumped them into 52 d-water. George Monrulet, 51, and his son, John, 22, of Port Albeml, Britl!b Columbia, were helped ashore by U.guna Beach tl!eguard Bruce Baird, who swam to ~ rescue when the boat tipped over lq • •tUI wind ahorUy before 1 p.m. They were chilled, but u n b'\I rt, llfeguarda reported . Baird belped the victims rigbt the boat and _,,. it io a -. buoy, be!ora guldJn& them to 1hora. Hans Vogel Monday night was more of .a statisUcian than a college trustee in presenting a five-page analysis of voting pattema in the Capistrano Unified School District. Vogel acored the apporllonment of CUSD, noting that all lruslee areaa deviate from standard! for the "one man, one vole 'Cleclalon banded dnwn by the Supreme Court." llsinfi a projector to iii.splay bis statiallca VO(el said tbal each of the . ' Capistrano IMlie .,... aboaid haVe ap. proximat<ly S,315 reglatered voters, However, he noted. area 5 has 1,018 more than it should whlle area l Is under by 307 vplers. "The Supreme Court bu lndlcatecl lhal deviaUon1 of fi•e percent are allowable but here •e have ~vtatlorw of 13 per· cent, 18 percenl and '3.1 percent," Vogel claimed. • • Vogd maintained "thal Immediate liepl be taken to reapportion the trualee \ AGRIES TO COOPE~TE . . ,, L...,..'1 IUIT11oma~. ' . areas in the CUSD to conform to the one trustees. My· feeling is that there has man, one vote edict of the court. 11 .... been a lack of communication, not only The ~·-tin trustee also displayed between our two boards, but between the 1W1 citizens and tbe college, • • figures to show the number of votes Sad-"Many people feel if trustees were dleback trustees received in the CUSD as elected by area that communloation ~ compared to the CUSD tr u a I e es would be belier," Beu!ey .-led. "We Unifi«! Districts 111111 . wllb the. lld- themselves. m one of the few dlstricllJ wblcb elect -llll><omplltlll to ·fllrlher ~ There are an average o[ 10,s!S ~~ ::::U,.azid we we .,..a..:,.~ U: ·!be llll,tllr. l1>e -ni "l!P'-1:1, registered voters in the Capistrano few, doesn, mean 11'1 bed• wllh trualllo .Alyn -cllA!nlfiig. district, said .Vogel , and during the pas! Aaked by .a wcman in the audieDce ""1 ~·lllcbael Ce!1Jna ~ ~. ~ pa~ ·u...lh!, tlilre ...,. • lick ·•al ti llndln(. 1 -·, ~. Saddleback trustees !hive Of com.9'.id..-alca1fon, ' BenJq · • • ' ""' averaged 2,022 voles from the.cflalrlct or; rtapo1idool! "to' gel to \ht. in.Ir or U. ~ J'a!i'fd' lllrkm ·..W both It.I percent of.11>e'votes casl. , lbera'L,dllf ... nce ofp~ . ..-, ifli•tatives ~·the CaplHriqo liJd, In the ClJ9I) board elections Vogel co"' "~ Yl'U ia111111 that~ lacl: Ill.,,.,.,·. ~ .Boarda ff ·°'1 ~--a tinued the average lnlslee nceived only menl with your pbllooopby II '?l,DinJ a commlllee would beip IOIVI thO pn\lllem. f5i •Otes from the 10,565' voters or U ~~~~ ~~t:,;: u!Oil. lied" t.ouJ1am 'Q>omu, . Pnlldenl i•l the percent of lbe voles cast. Beasley mJ)O!iiled, .. ,.. .. but ~ Lacuna .Board sald,"We '1111! I" al\iill q , Memberl of' the C.piltrano bj>ard wbo to elaborate on the' aul>J«I. , !' otbor dlstriClll dn. 'l'be ma]erllJ 41-w.,.. present at the meeting made no at-I Vogel finally pnt forth a motion, *!ling board will' INtclt ~/ on any <I the tempt to challenge Vogel's fisulea. "W• 11\at no•cliciaionl'·on Ille method ol'al""'° ~mate.•· • •. • are overdue for reapportiomn~. -1· eon ~.mode ~I lbe~and:U-1 • .. ""'l"'-l'led .New•-' ; ~.i,l mented CUSD lnlalee Fre4 l'lelrlJart. coDODillilo ...,,pooe11 41' ~illllm ,., • ...,.... , -. ' •-'--" v w .. dler ~y but 1lilblJy windy la tht weather word. for Wednesday. Look for temperatures dropping a couple not<ba to 55 aloni the cnut and ap lo eo Inland, l!'SmB TODAY M'1ziam..Ameriaml fn Fou• tam Vallq art btcommg more °"""' of '· llldl' podllOll a1l<I ' ' hmtog1 lh""'llh a ..., Chicano cnoartnen J)rOQ'f'am -attndtd bu Anglos ...... u. sec Pull• 9. L M. left II CMlllnlil It C:l..i.... fl•1' """" " -" °""' ....... ' .......... ,. ... ' _.......,..._... . -... ~ ' ::'T::.-. :: ..,...." __ ' ·"!l's aomelbing we will Jlt J¥1'c .t 1 ~ fll!i,'fl!ltln ,.llflbl 111111~1 =.;~ •board !¥-;-l>la • very IOOD.". ~ BelC!I -Uidrfld• llllt ' woWd1 ~ea Mbla.c1 m~ '------------! \ ' { I I I • ~ .... - I ' OAlt'nllbT ' Per_missi;ve ·Tax Push~d f ~r ~c~ence Boil i~g den I j)( Ille colleae this Ill"'""'' ''.J>ul II up," V0&d ,.Id. referrin1 to the defeat ol a 12U million ~ plan by trust~ ot the Saddleback l'.ommwlllJi 0>110$• Dillrl<l lo levy 1· 1peclll OM Year M«nt1*"fDIJe:lve lal to fund 1 science malhcmallcs c:enter wae again in ihe spotlight Monday nlghl,--and lt appears trustee~ will stick to their guns and adopt the tax at budget time in Augt4Jt. , . 1'Sad41ebac\ College has .not taken ad.- vfnta&e of the permis!l~1·1ax," observed. tr}Lstee. HarJS Vogel. Over the past four yea.rs, he aald , Saddltback has levied on- ly 11 cents ln ptnnlsstve while the Coa'st • CcNDmunity CoJlqe Diltrlcl hu levied JLll; North Oranae County Commonll)I llollea• Dlslrict, 7t cen11 1J111 Sant• An•· ,Rancho-'StnU•p O>mmuiilty~ O>llea• Dlsltlct 40 ctn&. "J received a letter from the chancellor of the cornrnunlty college districts: in-- forming us th'at Saddleback now has the lowest tax rate of any district in the state." Vogel sald. The present tax rate is 41.37 cents per $100 assessed valuation. "I can't speak for the board." said Dr. Fred H. Bremer, superintendent-pres!· appun from the lellor of tliO meetlnJ ·llewh1rt ib"' ubcl If the $1 cent tu bond llsue ln 6'pttnlhe.. they plan to-~ aht1d with _the buUdln( , could bJ levied over a t~year period in-'·'I'm sUll opposed to Uils tlx," stressed ut~~ 'the ~In blx." ,atead or . all 1;t. once. "Tht governor Edmund O'Riley.~ 220 Cllle MariR11, San Prtd Newhli"t, a ltUstee OD the rtct.ntJy 1lgned a bill which allows CJemetite. "You1rt driving me out of my Capistrano Unified School District board pennlsslve taxes to be levied over a home," he continued pointing an accuaing asked Vogel during the meeting if the three·year period,!' Bremer aaid. finger at members of the board. "We assessed valuation of the district ha.s kept Richard Michaels, 26951 Tierra Clh:!e, don't have enough money. Do you ·know up with the growth In students since the Mission Viejo, praised the board for that 58 percent of all taxes go te schools? college opened. agreeing at its October meeting to levy J say it behooves you to find another w_ay Vogel replied that the ·Au m be r of the tax. "The people in the community instead or .&.a.king from us poor property 1tudents has tripled while the assessed have abrogated their responsibility to owners." Va luation ha! doubled. "We haven't kept provide f~r the studenU," he charged, "i can't agree with you more that pro- perty tu 11 regreuive," V0&el rapond- ed. .. But I'm afrakl your arrument 11 with the J,gislature.'' • O'Riley also chided the bo~d for votfna last month lo rdUie to apply for fecl*al money for the $4.5 million science mathematics building. "l voted for applying for federal 1Jd.' C<lmmented Vogel, "but we have to fact reality. We are too wealthy to Ret it." Alex Cherney, 24916 Via Largo, LagWll Niguel, said, "you are going to have to tighten the belt. Quit bui,lding counlty club.s and start to teach kids." .1 Foreign Trade Hit Hardest To"urists Jr' ould ·Feel D~luation l 1npact O'verseas Down the Mission Trail Board Defers Action Trustf(e Seeking Identity : lly BILL NEIKIRK A-111 ... l"r-Wrlltr WASHINGTON -If t)le United states de\'aJua the dollar; u President Ni.Ion indicated today that It would, the biggest and ml,)St immediate.impact would be on foreigp tr{ldes . Amerl~an-s would find imports more e~nsjye. lf.S. exporters try'lng to sell their goods In forelgi'I markets would have an easier time, since: their products would be relatively cheaper. Be.hind the facade of the highly academic field of currency devaluation and revaluation is that basic eeonomlc fact : It means getting either a trade ad· vantage or disadva ntage, Otherwise, devaluation of the dollar will not be noticed by Americans unless they travel abroad. Those will find · foreign goods and services more ex- pensive, since their dollars will purchase fewer foreign currencies. As part of any agreement, currencies of other countries would be raised in relation to the dollar -by how much, no one knows. 28 Join Event Revaluation would .8.chieve the same economic effect as a dollar devaluation - increase the price of imports coming into the tinlted States and reduce the price of U.S. exports Sold in other countries. The President's announcement, long expected despite official denials, also recognizes a basic economic fact of life: Wint:er Festival Pla11.s U1ider Way The economies of Europe and Japan have recovered from World War II. With Laguna Beach's Winter Festival still two months away, 28 organitations already· have announced plans to sponsor the 5G scheduled event&. The·ninth annual fe.stival Is scheduled. . Crom ;~i,, II through March 5, and a completed program of evenU; will be off Progra1ns Slated l1i .Many Joaquin District Schools Holiday programs and plays have been ICheduled this week throughout Ult Saa Joaquin ~ Elementary School District feabJrin&' _the work or school choruses, bands, and aspiring drama students. The schedule of evening programs, all or wblii~ be&in at 7:30 p.m. ln~lu.des:, torught, Irylne Elementary 1 n d. 0 l i "-,e '1? o f1 ,E em,en~ry; Wedn.esday, Aliso 'Etem~tt and University) Park' Elementary ; Thursday, Dtl Cerro Elementary and Rancho San Joaqulir Intennedlate. CordJllera Elementary has scheduled progf"aina OOtn tonighl and Thursday. Day programs int!lude ; El Toro Marine School, e:SO a.m. apd Gates Elementary. 1 p.m., both Thursday. Turtle Rock Elementary will give a ptrformance of "The Grinch Who Stole Chtbbnas0 on Friday at 9 a.m. Boxer's Brother Seeking Diy.or~e Heavyweight contend~r feITr Quarfy's brother. filed <for divoi-te Monday in Orange Countr Superior Court citing "ir· recon.cilible-dill~es" bet 1w e en himseU and the Anatielm g\rl be mlQied. nine years ago. , , , , James M. Quarry, Long Beach. slatei~ In lhe lawsuit filed by Beverly Hills at-· tomey Paul Caruso that he and his wife, Roberta, separated May 31. She lives in Anaheim with the couple's four children. Caruso said J im Quarry Is one or his brother's trainers. The lawsuit has yet to be set for pretrial hearing. OIAN51 COAST DAILY PILOT fMN!oti COAST PUlllSHIHll COMrNrr . ~•Mrt N. W11• l'rltWtllt .,.. r.Witr J•c~ JI. C111h't v"' ""'*"" ""' ~., MIMfw' Th:•lfl•• k'•1Yil ... h llot ' TiiO:""'' A. M•rii"l11• Mfflttl!!t llllOf' CliwltS H. Looi Aiclo11d r. Nill AJ1l11At11 M•llt91nt l!•llttt l.et1H a..11 OHie• 2J:r: F1111t A\'lftVI M11n111 •lld,.111 ,.o. I•• 666, t26S2 S. Ci....t. Office JDS N•ttlli li Cam in• '-••I, t2i72 Otlw OMcec OI .. Mm.• 2» Witt It? ll!'Wtt _t;; ....... ~: »» "'"'""' ..,,'"'" tYI,..._ .. UIJ Wt hlCJl sw1n1,.; the 'press Ille this month. Films, fooQ an'd art will cOntribule to the event's international' flavor. Ouriog the fll'St '!,eek of the festival, local travelers will present alide talk shows in ab afternoon travelogue aeries in the Forum 'Theater. Priz~Wlnnlng travel films will be shown during the se- cond ,week. A. two-day lntemaUonal art exhibit wlll be fe~tured on the festival grounds Satur- day~ and Sunday, Feb. 28 and 27 and chairman flora Bass reparts entries already have been lined up from artlsts represen_ting a dozen nations. The lntemational Gourmet Dinner, always a restival hlghllght, will be presented Fe.b. 29 1t the Victor Hugo tM. with .consular represenlltlves from seJeral counti1el f!-gueaU of honot and seven art colony rest1ur1nts part.jcipating in the strvlce. An innovation Otis year will be free Saturday. show1 in the Forum Theater Pl"f'll!lll<cl by Ubn Country sMari -. complete rwith live lion cubs. 'l'be · SS.piece iWest Covina Symphony ~a •1•ln. ·wWJ present a fedncert and nationally famous Laguna Beach 'Cir· t.oonista, authors and photographers will be recognized in special eihlbits on the fesJival"jroqnds, along· with regular art displays and the craftsmen's fair. Board May"Order BRD•Restriction On D~a Bluffs I . County ~sors wlU act Wednesday on ~Sf!: onimanCe , ·imposing the Beach Ritftatlon ·and Developmen t District "'llinf .., ~. l(Ootlng <>n Dana Point Ila-' he!freen.the Stnel of the Green Lantern tna 'Dobeily St.ate Park. The BRO district Is being bolaledly 11" pUed to the aria because of various apartment and restaurant projects In the bluff area. Thi -district imposes1reslricllons on ell building and requires a 10-foot wide public· aecess to ~ adjoining beach areas every J,000 feet. ThJs will probably be wafved inasmuch as suffictent'access to the harbor ls provided by a c'lunty roadway. Saddlehack 'Y' Lone Bid for Viejo Acres Saddleback Valley YMCA was the lone bidder for a lease ol three acres of the Baker school site in Mission Viejo. Tust.i n Union High School District truslet'! voted Mooday night lo accept tbe US per year lease bid that will allow tht YMCA lO US< put of the u"'l."cupied school site for a year. The lease contains a »day canctllaUon notice and an option to renew for an add itional year. should the high school district not need the alte for a new school. Japan's economy bas become so 1trong, in fact, that Its currency, the yen, was regarded by U.S. officials to be grossly undervalued, giving the Jape.ne:se an· ertiliclal advantage In selling In the U.S. market. That Is one reason why Treasury Secretary John B. Connaily pushed the Japanese so bard to revalue the yen. Nixon's decision should smooth the way for settlement of the international monetary crisis, which has persisted since Aug. 15, when Nixon announced the United States would no longer redeem dollars for gold. But ju!t wbat kind .of system will be forged has ylt lo be determined, for the announcement from t~ Azores failed to specUy whether the United Staes would resume paying out gold for dollar claims. Such a move Is considered , highly unlikely. • Neither did the Preside.at uy when devalultton would take place: . The United Slates could devalue the dollq1 b~ (~lalna )he olflcial price of 1o)d,, how set af$35 aq,ounce. Raising the price of gold to $38.60, for example, would be a 10 percent devaluation, one figure men- tioned promineotly by particlpanta_ in In· ternational monetary talks. The monetary system of the non-Com· munist world has been based on the value of the dollar -and its tie with gold - since It was put together at Bretton Woods, N.H., a quarter-century ago. The exchange rates of all other cur· rencies were related to the dollar, In other weirds. Shopping Center Theft Suspects ;Nabbed i11 Capo ·Two men who al legedly burglarized six stores and a bank in San Juan Cap- i1tranp's El Adobe Plaza early lhis mom- li1g before lwo sheriff's officers stepped fi1 lo cut off their getaway are in Orange Cou nty Jail today. Booked on multiple burglary charges were Marc D. Burkhart. 19. of 235 Lower Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach <ind Aud L. Hunter, 21 , of Garden Grove. Sheriff's Lt. Robert Griffeth said both men were picked up by patrolling depu- ties Ray Karr and Frank Petronella as they prepared to drive away in their loaded vehicle from the El Adobe shop- ping center. Officers said the car cootained loot. taken from several stores in the complex. The haul is still being ilemized by sht.riff'11 investigators but Griffeth com- mented this morning that "it wasn't very inudl." "They smashed the windows of most of the stores and took whatever they e®ld reach," Griffeth said. "We hope to have the final tally later today." Sherilf's officers hoped to Jrralgn Burk· hart and Hunter in Santa Ana Municipal Court late today or Wednesday morning. Tip Leads Laguna Police ·To Teen Burglar Suspects Acting on an Informant's Up, Laguna Beach d'tectives Monday arrested two teenagers on IU!piclon of burglary 1nd reeo\'ered sever1t thousand doUan worth of audio-visual and ofClce equipment IM!litved stoltn from a 1..aguna ffills l!Chool. Sgt. Ntll Purcell sald the two suspects, 11n adUlt and a Juvenile, were liken Into cuttody in an apartmtnl 1t llM s. Coast Highway. The property, much of It still bearing the sehool's ldentific.allon t1111s. w11s stored throughout tbt 1pa.rtment, the detective claimed. The adult suspect wa11 ldtnllfifd 11 Br)'ln Lee, 11, of •lht addrlu-•hlr• ho was arrested. Purcell old the male r, juvenile, who Is currently on probation for burglary, Is 17 years old and from the RJYerside area . The property was allegedly stolen rtetnlly from Valencia Eleme.ntary School, 25661 Paseo de Va1tncla, Purcell expJalned. rt Included adding m a ch I n e 1 typowrlttts. slide and movie projectors. tape recorder• and record players. ht noted . Purtell 1eid much of the equipment recovertd from the apartment bOrt the name "Valencia " •·rltte.n wlth a felt pen or w11 offlled with• lq ldcnUfylna It 11 properly of th< San J0tquln Elementary School District. 4 Saddlehack 'Y' Signups Slated Youngsters six through JO years old may now sign up for the Holiday Hap- penings to be' sponsored by the 'Sad- dleback YMCA Dec. 20 through Dec. 23. Activities will include Christmas crafts. tree decorating. a surprise movie and a visit to Santa's elves. The happenings will run from noon to 3 p.m. each day at Olivewood Elementary School, 23391 Dune Mear Road. El Toro. Parents must provide transportation. RegistraUon will continue through Thursday, Cost is $5 per youngster. Further infonnation is available by con- tacting 810-YMCA. Srhool Gifts EAST IRVINE -Two gifts have been accepted by trustees of the San Joaquin Elementary School District. They are $600 donated by the Linda Vista Parent-teacher Organization to be used for tumbling mats and audio-vis ual aids and a portable ticket booth valued at $110 donated by Mrs. Carolyn Chapman on behalf oC the Leisure World Foun· dation. Mona• Needed SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -Thirty· seven bright~yed, eager, enef'getic young boys need a motijer-on a temporary basis. An overwhelming response to the CUb Scout program in San Juan Capistrano h11 ,brought a r~Jluin~r.of boys into scouting, bot they may not be able to continue If additional dm mothers are not found. • . • , Arr/ mother who Is willing to donate an hour a· week and ~,committee meeting nig ht a month to help is asked to call Glenn Olsen, 493..3725 • .About four "oc· casional moms" are needed. Hon1co1v11cr's Choice CAPISTRANO HIGHLANDS -Robecl Bevacqua has been elected president of the Capistrano Hlghlahds Homeowners' Association. Other officers will be Oluck Bennett, vice.president; Robert Gertz, treasurer ; GN I Vickers, secretary; Eleenor Price, Dave Parris, and Robert Watson, board members. Other directors are. Pat Fearon and Charles Wydner, Jr. Llbraru Fu11dlt1g EAST IRVINE -A federal grant to set up an "exemplary" library at La Paz Intermediate School in Mission Viejo is being sought by the San Joaquin Elemen· tary School District. II approved. the district will receive $54,665 to develop a model school media center whlth can be used for demonstra- tions within the district. Application is being made under Title 11 ot the Elementary And Secondary Education Act of 1965. • Of Critical Instructor By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 1111 Deity l"U1t Still Tustin Union High School Dist rict trustees Monday took no action on a re- quest to seek the identity of a teacher who criticized an economics textbook in an anonymous survey. Robert Bartholomew, a member of the John Birch Society and trustee from Tustin, had suggested the board should find out wh ich of the district 's nine teachers of economics "is not en- thusiastic about this course." The course is economics. The district recently completed a year of requiring the course of all seniors at University, Mission Viejo, Tustin and Foothill high schools. ''\Vhen l see ther,e ls a teacher in our district who says we don't teach enough Marxism and who objects to flag waving then I want lo know who that teacher ls," Bartholomew declared. The remark followed presentation to the boartl of commen ts so licited from nine economics tea chers who had been asked to evaluate the 1970-71 school yea r trial of economics as a required subject. The report did not identify teachers who responded to the survey. L. Jay Ingall , assistant superintendent for in· struction. told the board that numbered written statements in reply to four ques- tions did not necessarily co rrespond. Board members indicated they believed the answers numbered seve n and eight were Crom the same two teachers. Jngall said they were not, noting ''They've been mixed up." Bartholomew said. "I'd llke to see the original reports then. There are orie or two teachers here we should talk to." Trustee Dlckran Boranian, who earlier had suggested the district cons ider mak· ing changes in view of the criticism, ot>- jected to Bartholomew•s request to fiDd out which teachers said what on the sur- vey. "This is their evaluation of the course as they see it," Boranian said, "not a statement of their personal philosophies.'' Eight of the teachers agreed the course should be taught during the senior yea r and that it should remain as a one- semester offering. Seven said the course should remain in the curriculum and that the present course oulline meets the needs of students. f. Seven of the ni ne rated the textbook as being "poor'' to "average" with only two teachers saying the required text was near excellent. Supplemental reference materials were rated more highly by the teachers -six said they were average to excellent. One unidentified teacher sharp I y criticized the textbook -''it is insulting to the int~lligence of the students ... f\.farx is dismissed in five superficial and misleading paragraphs. "The book is obviously one-sided and appears to students as propaganda and nag-waving -whicli. is the teacher wrote. ' self-de.featln11 .. , Severa l teachers ·commented that the .. course probably would be better if it ' were ell!i:tive rather than required. Some suggested that a course ln con- sumer economics w o u I d better serve • slower students, while college-bound . students would be helped best by a course that is more theoretical in content. Among "other comments" on the course was this lone statement from a ', teacher who indicated the course pro- duced "extreme boredom" in students: "How long rr""' we bear this albatross about our necks?" 1 Another teacher commented, ' ' I f , capitalism is a superior system, It can~, 'sell' itself in the open market ol ideas ., and will not unduly suffer by an objective .~ comparison with other systems. "Those who feel that ecooornics must .; be presented in th.e current fashion, wi th ""'. this particular book, are apparently capitali sts of little faith !" the teacher .: concluded. Superintendent \Villiam Zogg sum-• marized the evalu2J.ion as district staff viewed it. He said it appeared the district 1 could do a better job of grouping students 1 according to intellectual levels and find a better textbook or books to suit Lhe needs - of students. Boranian urged the district to consider involving students in the textbook aelec· .. tion process. The board took no action on the ,~ economics evaluation. Youngsters Set For Storybook •• " ' .. -. ,. ·I Parade Saturday ' ' Laguna Beach youngsters wishing to ., participate In Laguna's Storybook Parade-• .'t on Saturday may fill out entry forms at,:1 the chamber of commerce, 205 N. Coast " Highway, by 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, ·~ When the completed fonn is handed in, each entrant vo'i!J be given tickets for the free movie at South Coast Theater which will follow the noon parade around the Santa Claus house at Glenneyre Street and Park Avenue . Free tickets also will be· availdble for family members who are encouraged to acccmpany the you ngsters to the movie. After the noon judging, the parade will \ move down Forest Avenue and Coast~ Highway to the theater where judges will ' award prites following the movie. The parade is open to children aged 3 to 12 ~ and judging will be by age groups. ,, In case of rain the entire event Will be ' held in the Sout h Coast Theater. begin-· l ning at noon. The Storybook Parade is sponsored by the Junio r Woman 's Club ;, and the Mermaids of the Chambe r of • Commerce. The Junk Busi11es s l Address ing th• Central Indiana Floor Covoring Association, an industry spokesman, Walter Guinan s1i~: ''Too M.!lny people in the floor covering industry .!Ire convinced the public only wants to buy "Junk" carpet." W8're afraid that yo u mi9ht .!ilso 9et this impression from the ads which specify unbe:ieveble low prices. lnvesti9etin9 these ad s will determine one of two things -either the cerpel IS junk, or they will try to sell you something more expensive! We don't sell junk al Alden's, but wo do ha ve qu•lity et competitive prices, end the best insteR•+ion In tht county. ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Plac1ntla Ave . COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS: Mon. thru Thurs., 9 to 5:30 -Fri., 9 to 9 ~ Sit.; 9:30 to S ' I ( ,· ' ' • • • ' ' ' ' San f;le111eit1e isirano vot:. "64, NO. 297' .. SECTIONS, 60 PAGES . . • • : ORANGE COUNT.Y, CALIF.ORNIA . . ' 1 JUesp>. Y, DECEMBER :1 .. ,cil97;1;, Critic Levels Blast at OlltsPoken San Clemente building designer Bric Boucher met Monday's construction start of the new fire head-- quarters building with angry charges that design services for the $140,fXKI project cost lbe..cilyJ>earl)ctwlce as much as the_ community clubhouse wb.icb Boucher designed., In an angry blast at City Manager Ken Carr, Boucher pointed out the head- quarter• building designed by Architects Willard Jordan and Marvin Renfro was basically "a garage." Boucher, long a criUc ol city design services practices, charged tbat h1a work • consUtuted a bargain for the city 11 the new clubhouse -$14.47 a square foot for a complex structure which includes air conditioning. In an angry letter to councilmen this week .l!oucber adds U!aJ -~ -.Jiro laclllty will cost' Ute city ffl. 77 1 squaro loot. llesidee"Ute fire heedquarter>, Boucher cited the recent city council contract given to local architect Leon Hyun for a series of designs for the new city yards at the 11ew waste treatment plant. In the letter expected to be formally re;ceived 'bY. councilmen on Wedneeday, IXOll C~te Incidents Blasters Found In Drug Arrests A routine series of weekend marijuana arrests changed complexion drastically in San Clemente 'l'ue&day when police an· nounced tlie ieUUre of Jllaalin( ca(lO a"'1 a detonation card fnm au Avenida l>•li~~t -_plod by lwo ol the . . • • 'fe' I • On tbe.&ame 'day 1 man wbo was queg.. llooed m Ute ori&iJ>al mest produced • large antiaircraft she'll foi' police -a· piece whi¢> bad recenUy been emptied of two poundi'. or explosive powder. The devel~s cauled pOlice to seek District Attorney's complaints today charging possesskm of illegal explosive devices against Chris D. McKnight and Randy William Comte, both 12, and boUt resklents of 224. Avenida Paliiada. The men originally were arrested by patrolmee !all Saturday after police In- vestigated complaints of an auto parked in a red wne near the residence. After offlcm entered the residence they allegedly noticed several marijuana cigarets and a roach clip and arrested five occupants of. the residence. 'lbiO :6fulll!g · W.... d!icoYered dur- q follawup .~of, the·~ -,j'.ollce reports mi. -'~lilted thlt Iii! antlalrcrlll deTice; a wttb Its nose pqrllon ml._ waa aent to mllitary author!tlea at Camp Peodlelon for examination. Late Tuesday the Provost Matsbal's of· lice told police Utat It appeared Utat Ute device bad been receoUy dismantled and a two-pound charge of explosives bad been removed. Police now are seeking to determine where tboae two pounds of powdtr are, they said. Federal authorities also are in- vestigating, police said, b e c a u s e possession of the esplosives violates federal law. Lei-ing It On Hawaii Trip Cost Sparks A1itics For the bead of a city which flllds itself in the midst of a torrid controveny over convention expenses,. Mayor Tony Forster's invitaUon to the audience M~ day was bold as brass. "Does anyone want to speak on any subjei:t not on the agenda?" be asked at one point in the meeting. "On ••. any • , • subject?" he said . emphatically. Presto. Forster then whipped out a lavender Hawaiian lei and dangled it from a finger. Loud but nervous laugh1ef welled up In council chambers. Everyone had expected some reference to the controversy over the number of delegates and the tab they ran up in Honolulu to alleiid the Le8l!)lt of Cities convention in Hawaii recenUy. . . But •a real version of the tradiUonaJ symbol of Hawaiian welcome wasn't ex- pected. To some the lei may have symbolized the $3,000 tab for the trip. City Finance Director Paul Lew bad predicted 1hat the voyage of five city of. ficials would cost about $4,00>. Uproar followed Utat prediction. When the bills came in, city staff point· ed to a smaller amou~t1 just under $3,000. Thus, the 4,000 reaiaents of San Juan Capistcano each gave their fair share for the voyage of Mayor Forster, Councilman Ed Chermak, City Manager Donald Weld· ner, City Plamer Bob Johns and Plan- ning Commission Chairman Gerald Gaf- fney. In a comparison of sorts, the City of Laguna Beach, which has a population !oar times larger Utu Ute Mission dty, sent a lone. delegate to the annual con- vention. No one went from San Clemente. San Clemente to Decide . . On Clubhouse Leasing The months-old, vuing ~stion of who altould operate san Clemente'• clly golf course cJubhoUse for the next five years wUI be answered by city councllmen Wednesday. Councilmen have millled over their cho~ foi-the past week anu last Wednesday's early morning stody tession where Utree pro1pectlV1 leaMbolders mode Utelr pllch<s. the 1be lhree operators hoping to win new lease for the facility ore Ute extsilni "°"ceuion&Jre. Peter Berger, local rest. d<nl Vern O.kley and the W.'P. Stewart Company of Fullerton. Councilmen called for the 0{>8ll bidding on the new lease alter inonths of dlscuukll on melbods of lllcm•lni city revenue from the restaurant .and suck ( bar which has not pild its ·own way In wrrent yean. Proposals by bidders JaJt week came with some harsh criticism done another, particulorly, comments directed toward Jle!ger'I existing operallon. Tho existing lease formally uplres al year'• end. other Item• on the coondl's qenda for the 7:30 p.m. meeting Include: -A ietler' frcm pl an~l n eomo mJlsionerl llking Utat I toll road idea for Ute bole ol tllf I along the clly belChlront be ICrapped. 1'he pl11n. wbich was only a prelimiMry idea, has won lltUe favor and could be replaced by • more firm project -1 bleycie troU lollowlna Ibo beocb l!Mqe from North Beocb to Ute •late put. . . ..... _..,__ -... Boucher leveled a blut at CarT, who • square-foot ootts of Ille cllJ'•llst !Dljot. recommended the award ol contraot to construcUon projects are: Hyun at a fee of. $11,llllO, .;.. l'J>e"""11 , -{)ivle center built In 1962, more than of. the cost for the new-city yard complex. . $20 a square foot. c.ouncnmen have budgeted $200,000 for , -Golf course Clubhouse in 1965,~more the buildings. • · Utan $28. "I keep he¢ng or meiTnirerefr.is-~---'Cl\Y !Heguard beadquarlm lD19118. Mr. carr·s economy program. by Boucber, ~.19. (By ~' "I know that you started olf this budget Boucher died the Newport Beacb year wiUt the laying olf·ol two engineer-ltteguard slaUon's 119.35 a squaro fool ire emplPyes under ' the guise of cost in 1965, and Huntiniton BeaCh's 1n economy," Boucher sald, "and yet I see 1963 at $35 a square foot. you throwing thousands of dollars away -Tbe Community Cubbouse·a $14.47 a on bull4ing costs and plan, fees." square foot in 1971. • According to Boucher'• figures, the -The city fire &laUon whldl started ' . • l ._ .. _ . . . -- . r . . . , .-. ' , . ... . I l I -4 • '' ' DAll.Y,PtlA'J .,,,.,.., SADDLEBACK cOl.i EGE BOARD/HIARS 0 ·01SSENli qi.i ,MitH<>D °" !Llal'ING-TRlimi s \. . Presldont Alyn Bran...,., Petrkk, ........ ..{olinA~ anil H~nt-Vogef '· ' . ' ' . Trustee Assail~ Capo District's Election Policy By FREDERICK ~QEMEHL or'ttte oe1~·r11tr 111t1 Saddleback Co1J11Dunily College Dislrict trustee Hans Vogel Monday night charg- ed Utat Ute Capistrano Unified Scbool District, which elects ifs trustees by area "is well out of step with the rest of the county, if .not the state." Vogel cootinuOO his attacks by c!Ung statistics showing that some penon! liv- ing in the CUSD trustees areas are under-represented, while others are over· represented. 'itte elaborate presentation by Vogel · was made during discussion o( the ex· pansion of the Saddleback board to seven numbers, made necessary by the Popula- tion boom in the Saddleback Valley. The .CUSD trustees have supported expansion of the college board, but have been at odds with Saddleback on whether the trustees should be elected at large or by • STATISTICIAN' VOGEL CRITlQUIS CAPISJ'R:AllO .sv.staM. , ~. Jlolnt1 Out Rlfllltrotloft·Dovlatlon In C.~'Trl/llM -· · ," . • ' ~ • I . .. area. Dr. Robert Beasley, a CUSD trustee was the first to respond to Vogel's com· , ' Capo Trustee· · Scol'.es Pooi:lt , Aligned District , ments. 0 1 want to see this junior college Hans Vogel 'Monday nigbt·was more of district be successful and effective. a , slatlsUclan than a college truStee in, That's why I proposed a reBOlutlon In preaentlng a nve-)>81e.inal1sls of~ May which passed our board Utat Sad-patterns In the <ra.rlislrlno Unlfllll School dlebOck change Ute method of electing Dislrlct. · · trustees, My feeling ts that there bas Vogel scored the apportloim\enl ol been a lack of communicallon, not only CUSD, noting Utat an trustee ·....., belween our two boards, but between the deviate frOin tlandllrda for1be "Olt)nd. dU.-and the college. one vote decision binded doWn lfy the 1 "Many people feel if trustees were Supreme Court." · "' ~ elected by arel Utat communication IJslng a projector to d~ his would be better," Beasley asserted. "We statistk:s Vogel , aald that. eaCh of the are one o! the few districts which elect Caplatrano trustee oreaa sbollld blVI IP' trusteea bf area, and we have found It proximately 2~1~ reglatmd vol.is. 11.1ccessllil. Bec..e we are one of the However, lle noted, area 5 bu 1',018 inore few,.dOesn't mea tt's bid." than Jt abould whfie area 1 ls under by -by a ...., .. 1n the audience why 301::.?!8!.".::__ ~---~ ~:. '·"·a•~ ii..; C.piotrano , thooClil th!l'e wu • lack "~ -•""~ ~• noa1•~ -or co~ m u..n i cat t o n , Beasle{. deviat.lens of five percmt art all01'able rapm!Od: ''to get to tlte meat of I , &qt ,bere'.we bave detlallon& of.• IS Ptl'.1• lllore'1 • d!rt..ence of pld!-hy." cent, ll i>erc<nt and O.t percent, Voge "Art you 11ylng that QJJr lack of agree--. cl~. • , • '- ment wlUt your philoeophy 11 causing 1 Vogel malnlained "11).at Immediate lick of communication?" asked Said· •steps be taken to rea.pportlon the trustee dleblck trustee John Lund. areosin Ute CIJSD to cobform lo the one Beasley responded, 11ye1" but refused man, one vote edict of. tbe e0!.1rt." to allbonte .. Ille .. bJect. 1be 'l'bltln -allo· cllspilyocl • ' .. flcuru to obow' Iii!· JJID\ber ol vofos, Sldl dlebock lru-recel'(ICI ln ,l!>e C1JSD I! compared lo-the '.CIJSD tr•-•~• 1 thtmlll"9. .. . . • JEN CENJS ar President, Po1npido1:1 _, Tell Accord ANGRA DO llEROISMO, Amreo (UPI) -President Nixon announced to- day a direct devaluation of the American dollar to help solve the international monetary crtsi.. 'lbe )>ombobeu announcement, made In a communique foUowlng 10 houra of talka between Nixon and .President Georgea l>Ol!lpldou ol frln<e, did JIOl uy h>w lhl ~woaJd be,NQ•'lpilitlwd or tlfi .-. '-8blr. ll -W ..... throuih .. lnci irs! ta tbe U.S.«t world price ol '35 .. -la tile trice of gold. 'ljlmn and Pompldou did not -1 the matter Jn a meeting with newsmen following completJon of tbelr third and final'-lo-foce~. Nilan did say "we made aign1ficant progre>s In the problem of Ute U.. lmlational monetary lituation." Lllce other major U.S. trading partners, France bas been pressing United Stateo to devalue the dollar, by raising the price of gold. wbUe the United States wanla them to raiae the value of their principal CWTeDcies. The U.S. aim L! to mab prices pf U.S. goods more attractiV• Overseas and reverse the growUie American deficit in world trade. Nixon beadOd .back to Washington aboard hll "Spirit of "II" jet at 10:15 a:m. (EDT), an 'boor and a half ~ his original schedule, ind Pompidou left for Parts aboard his sleek Concorde 111pmonlc jet about ball an hour later. Nixon arrived It Ute airfield abeaa ol PompldOu and accepted an invitation for\ a quick' tour of 'the Concorde before be !ell. Another major session ls scheduled 'thiJ weekend In Washington ol !lnance mlnisten of the to big non-Ommmnlal trading oatlons. Nixon and Pompldou agreed to sponsor jolnUy efforts wlUt otber natlona to permit 1 wider nuctuatlon of currency rotes. giving mon ~y to Ute mark41 forces of 111pplf and demand In detennlnlng the relaUve '!•lues of money, Ronald L. Ziegler, White House ~ aecretsry and his Frmcb coilnterpart, Denil Baudoin, road the joint com• munlque In English and French to iltWlilleil In the lllltdrencbed courtyard o! an lath Century building wbere Nixon and Pompldou met \Monday and today. Oraafe SUnny but ~ windy· It Ute ftlther word for ' Wedaeldoy. Loot for lem"'8tures dropping a couple notches to 55 alone the cout and liP to eo lnl1ncL INSIBB TODA 'Y Jlt<fca"'AOICll"""' In 1-. >(aiio V ollev .,... b<comlng "'"'" .,..,. of -poritio!I and lleriloQ• thn>Mgh ..... Cltl<mlo cnoarlfte11 program -attcndtd bV Anglo$ GI ,..It Sff Poge 9. ~ l; -..... ...... . I C.......,.. 11 =-~ : • ....,,:,:r ti ,..,.. l .. ,, -" Miii~ II ---· ' .. -. --" --.. ...... c.., t ........... ,_ "'" ,,... """"" M-1t ,,,_ . -. -. .............. .,.,. --. I I I I I ' ' I ' ' ' . . J-IW~OT Per~issive Tax Pushe.d for Science Bllilding A plan I>)' tru1lees of lb< Saddlebock COmmunll)' Coll<at DUlrlct lo Je,ly 1 1pecl•1 Ont year Sktnt ptttnlQ!ve tu to hmd 1 actence mathtmallca center Was qain in the spotl(fht Monday night-and ii appears truslttS will stick to lhtir guns and adopt lht: tas: at budget time In Auglllt. '-S.ddleback C:ol.ltge ba1 not I.ii.ken ad- v-aptage afihe-permWlve·tas:;'' observed trostee Harts 'Voge.I. Over I.hf' past four ' yeu1, bf' said: Slddlt:back has levied on- ly'•tl cMta In pmnlulve while I.be Cout . . Community C<qlle1e Diatrlct ha1 levied 'lt.14; North Or1n1e Coon!)' Community <;olltie ~ct. 71 centa.and S.nll "'11· ll1ncho 8onll110 Conununlly Coil4(• Dia:trict 40 cents. •·t received a letter from the chancellor of tbe community C-Ollqe disltlcb in- fornting us that Saddleback now bas the lowest tax rate of any dilltlct in the aJate," Vogel said. The present' tax. rate is 41.31 ctnl! per $100 assessed valuation. "I can't speak for the board," said Dr. fo'red H. Bremer, 1uperinltndent·pre5i· • ' I • • dent 9f the OOUese thlt morning, "but it up," Vo&e.l said. rtfurin& to the dtftat of a $24.8 million perty tu ts recrtaslve," 'Vogel rupond· awe.rt ttom the tenor of lht mttlln& Newhart then uked if lht..J4 cent ta1 bond luue 1n Stptt:mber. I fd . "But I'm afraid Your araument 11 th<• plan to "" ahead with LIM bulldlng could'be levltd over 1 t~year period ln-"I'm still opposed to this tu,•• stressed -,ltb the lt.glal1lW"e." , ow , O'.RUey al!O chided the board for voUne utiJWnt the ~t tu." 1teid of all at once. "The governor Edmund o. ru1~, 220. ~alle Marina, San last month to ref'ust to apply for federal .1'red _Newhart, a trustee on the r~nUy algbfd a bill wblclt allows Clemente. ·You re dr1v1ng me out of my money for the $4.5 million sclenct Capistrano Unified school District board permissive taxes to be levied over a home," he continued pointing an accusing mathematics buildiag. asked :Vogel during the meeling if the UJre~-.y~ar pt~iod,". ~remer sa~d. flnger al members ol the board. ·•we "I voted for applying for federal aid,' auessed valuation of lhe district has kept Rlchar.d Mlchaet;, 24951 Tier:ra ·cttcle, don't ha ve enough money. Oo you kilow commented Vogel, "bot we have to rice up with the airowlh io $ludents slnct the Mission Viejo, pral~ the board tor that sa percent of •II tall'.es go to schools? reality. We are too wealthy to a:et it." college opened. agreeing at its October meelii!.g t(I levy l 11y It behooves you to find anolher way Ale.1 Cherney, 24916 Via Largo, Laguna· V01el replied that the 1 u m be r ol lhe lax. "The people in the community instead of taking from LI! poor property Niguel, said, "you are going to have to students has tripled while the assessed have abrogated their reaponsibiUfy to owners." tighteri the belt. Quit buUdirig country valuation has doubled. •:we hiven't kept ·pro vide for the stude.nts," he char&~ "l can't agree with you mort that pro-clubs and start to teach k.id.s." Foreign Trade Hit Hardest Do1v11 the Mission Trail Board Defers Action Trustee Seeking Identity Of Critical Instructor Tourists Wou.ld Feel Devaluatiou l111pnct O·verseas 87 BILL NEIKll\K A1-lflH l"'rilie Wt'Htr WASHINGTON -If the United States dwalut! Pl~ dollar. as Presi dent Nl1on indlcated~today that lt would, the biggest and most immediate Impact would be on fonlgn trades.· •Amet1ca111 woa)d find importa more es:pensive. U.S. exporters trying to sell their goods in foreign markets would ha ve an easier time.J since their product• wOUia be felaUvely cheaper. Behind the facade of the highly academic field of currency dev1lualion and i'evslu1tlon is that basic economic fact : It means getting either 1 trade ad· vantage or disadvantage. Otherwise, devaluaUon or the dollar will not be noticed by Americal\I unless they tra vel abroad. Those will find foreign goods and wvlces more_ e:r.· ptnslve, since their dollars will purchase fewer foreign currencies. As part of any agreement, currencies of other countries would be r1ised in relation to the dollar -by how much, no one knows. :l8 Join Event Revaluallon would achie:ve the same economic effect as a dollar devaluation - incrP.ase the price of imports coming into the l1nited States and reduce the price ol U.S. exporl.S sold in other count ries. The President's announcement, Jong expected despite offici al denials, also recognius a basic economic fact of life: Winter Festi,val PUi1is Under Way The economies of Europe and Japan have recovered from World War JI. With Laguna Beach's Winter Festival 1tUI two months away, 28 organizations already h&ve announ~d plans to sponsor the ~ SchetfuJtd eVents. • The l);iJlth arµiull ·r~~tiv~l is scheduled from Feb. 18 through March 5, and a completed program of events will be off Progra1ns Slated ln·Many '}onquin District Scliuols -' Holiday programs and pla ys have been acheduled. this week throughout the San Joaquin Elementary School District featuring the work ol 'school choruses, bands,' and aspiring drama students. The schedule of evening progrsms, all of whlcr -~gl~ at 7~30 p.m. Includes: tonight, Jrvine Elementary a n d 0 I Ive wood 'Elementary ~ Wednesday, AlJso·..Eiementary ·aJld University Park Eltmeiitaey; Thursday, Del Cerro Elemehtarj and Rancho San Joaquin lntermedi1te. Cordillera Elementary ha!' scheduled programs both tonight and Thursday. Day programs include : El Toro Marine School , 8:30 a.m. lnd Gates ElamenJary, 1 p.m.,·both i'hUrlday. · · Turtle Rock Elementary will give a perfonnanee • of "The Grinch Who SUile Cbtlltmu" on Friday at i a.m. Boxer's Brother Seeking Divorce Heavyweight contender Jerry QL1:frry'11 · brother filecl ti.or .divorce Monday In , Oranae· County SUP,!!tior C4urt citing "ir· reconcilable -dHlere'nu•" & et we 'en him1ell and tile Anahehn--&lrl he married nine years 1go. · .. ~. James M. Quarry Leng Beach. states in the lswsuil filed 'by Beverly Hiils at- torney Paul Caruso that he and his wife. Roberta, separated May 31. She lives in Anaheim with the couple's four children. Caruao said Jim Quarry Is one of his brother'• trainers. The lawsuit has yet to be set tor pretrial hearing. DAILY PILOT ~ CCA.Sf PUI LllHINt CDMP'Nt't l•\o•rt H. W•M ,,....., .... """'"'*' J•ck l . C11rl,,., VU ,._... .... <>-ti M.,..., 111.•1111 K,,,jJ .. ,.,. fti1t111 A. Mw11lii11• MMIPll e..i..- c::litrlet H. Li•• ._;,11.,.r P, Hill #.l•iN<ll #111tt:"f lfiiw. i...-a..11. OHie• 222 f•r•1t A.,.•"~• M.tr.11 ..ic1,.111 P.O. 111 6li, tl6SJ S-Clcw1a OHkt> aos Nwt9 t1 C••i11• •••'· t2•12 °"" 0 ..... an INN· aa Wnt 1., IWW .....,.,.. IMdl: ».IJ " • ..,.,, hv.....,., .......... ,.,,._.,,,.,. ... ~ ------- the press late this month. Films, food and art will contribute to the event's intemalional flavor .- During the first \'leek of the festival, local travelera will present alide talk shows in an aftemoon travelogue series in the Forum Theater. J'Ttie-wiMing travel films will be shown durin& the se- cond week. A lwlk1ay lnternaUonaJ art exhibit will be featured on the festlvai grounds Salur· day-and Sunday, Feb. 26 and 27 and chairman Flora Basa reporta entries already have been lined up from 1rtists representing a dozen nations. The lnter:national Qourmet Dinner, alw1ys a festival highlight, will be presented Feb. %9 at the Victor Hugo Inn, with COfll\llar representatives from sev'er,al ~n"trJes a.i gUest~ of honor and seven _ art colony restaurants partjcjP.1tlng ~n tbf seivlce. · -· • ' An lnnovatJon this year will be free Saturday shows in the Forum '11leater presented by Lion Country Safart - complete with live lion cubs. The M-piece, West Covina Symphony Or$estra ag~ will present a concert al\d natlop.allY. ·rariioui Laguna.Beach.,car· , t~lstJ, aulhOrs and photographers will be" recognlud:tn special ~hlbJt.s on the festJval around!; along with regulat Jrt displtya and the craftsmen's fair. B9ard Ma y Order BRD Restriction On Dana Blq.f fs County aupervlsott will act Wednesday on an ordlnat>ct imposing the Beach Recreation and Development District uloing on property fronting on Dana Point Harbor betwetn the Street of the Green i:..nttTn and Doheny State Park. Tho Bill> dlJtr!ct Is being beloli<lly ap. plied._ to the area because ol variou1 apartment and ·rest1urant project.!! "' the blutl are.a. 'Tbe dlitrlct llnpose$ restrictions on 111 bulldinc and ,.requires a lG-foot wide ~ acceu to the adjolnlng beach ar;tas every 1,000, fff:l. Thia will probably be -.yalved Inasmuch as suff icient 1ccess to the harbor 11 provided by a' county roadway. Saddlehack 'Y' Lone Bid for Viejo Acres Saddleback Valley YMCA was the lone bidder for a lease of three acres of the Baker school site In Mission Viejo. Tustin Union High School District trustees voted Monda y night to accept the S2S ptr year le1se bid that wilt allow the YMCA t.o use part of the unoccupied school Ille tot a ye11r. The ·1ease contains a 30-day cancellation notice and an option to reneW for an 1ddltional year. should the hi£h school district not nttd the site for a new achool. Japan's economy has become so strong, in I act, that its currency, the yen, was regarded by U.S. officials to be grossly undervalued, giving the Japenese an artificial advantage in selling in the U.S. mirket. -:rhat Is one reason why Treasury Secretary John B. Connally pushed the Japanese so hard to revalue the yen . Nixon's decision should smooth the way for settlement of the international monetary crlsis, which has persisted \since Aug. 15, when Nixon announced the \!nlted States would no longer redeem dollars for gold. But just what kind of system will be {orged has yet to be determined. for the ~nnDllncement from the Azores failed to specify whether the United Staes would resume paying out gold for dollar claims. Such a move is considered highly unlikely. Neither did tht President say when deva \uatlon would take place. The Unlfed states could devalue the dollar by raising t)le official price of gold, now tel at $35 an ounce. Raising the price Of gold to '38.50, tor txam'pJt, WOUJd be I 10 percent devalu1lloo, one figure men- tioned prominently by participanll In in- ternational monetary talks. The monetary system of the non-Com· munist world has been based on the value of !ht dollar --and its lie with gold - 1inc:e it wu put together 1t Bretton Wood1, N.H., a quarter-century ago. The exchange rates of all other cur· rencies Wfre related lo the dnllar, in ·ofher words. Shopping Center Theft Suspects Nabbed in Capo Two men who allegedly burglarized six 1lores and a bank in San Juan Cap. istrano's El Adobe Plaza eatly this mom- ln'g before two sheriff's officers stepped In lo cut off their getaway are In Orange County Jail today. Booked on multiple burglary charges were Marc D. Burkhart, 19, ol 235 Lower Cliff DriV't, Laguna Beach and Bud L. Hunter, 21, of Garden Grove. Sberif£'s Lt. Robert GrUfeth said both men were picked up by patrolllng depu. tJes Ray Karr ind Frank Petronella as they prepared lo drive away in their loaded ,vehicle rrom the El Adobe sho~ -Pini center. Officers said the car contained loot taken from several stores in the complex. The haul i!l still being itemized by sheriff's investigators but Griffeth com· mented thi.!I morning that "it wasn't very much." ''They sma'1Jed the windows of moiit of the stores and took whattver they · could reach." Griffeth said. "We hope to have -the final I.ally later today.'' Sheriff's otncers hoped to 1rratan Burk· han and Hunter in Santa Ana Munic ipal Court late today or Wedne9day morning. Tip Leads Laguna Police To Teen Bu1·glar Suspects Actlria: on 1n lnform1nt'1 lip, Laguna Beacb detectives Monday 1rrested twv lttnqer1 on susplck>n of bur1t1ry and rtcOTtred ttveral tboUPl'ld dollar1 "'orth or audio-visual and office equipment btlJtved stolen from a Laguna Hilla tcl!Ool. Set. Neil Purctll aaid the two suspects, an adult and a juvenile, were taken Into custody In an apartmtnt at I~ S eoa~1 Highway. The property, much of II 111111 bearina the achool's ide.ntifica1 io11 ta~s. was stored lhrou«hout the apsrlmtnt. the det~tlvt cl1lmed. T'ht adult suspect wa~ idcntlf1td 111 Bryan Ltt, lt~ of the addre111 'A'htrt he wa.!I arrtstfd. Purcell said tl'le m11le ~ Juvenile, who Is currtntly on probation for burgl1r y, Is 17 years old ind rrom the Rl~erslde 1rea. Tht property v.·As 1lleaedly stolen rectntly from Valencia Element1ry School. 15661 Pasto de V11lenci1, Purcell t.:r.plalned. It lnclude9 1ddlng mac h Ines, typewriters, slide 11nd movie projtctor11 tape recorders ind rfe!Ord players, he noted. Purce.II said much of lht equipment recovered from the 11p11rtmtnl bore the n11me "Valtncla" written with a ftlt pen or w11s •fftxfld with a tag klentlfyln1 It as properly of t.ht San Jo11quin Elementary School Dl•lrlct. • Saddleback 'Y' Signups Slated Youngsters six through 10 years old may now sign up ror the Holiday Hap- perrings to be sponsored by the Sad· dleback YMCA Dec. 20 through Dec. 13. Aclivities will include Christmas crafts, tree decorating. a surpri se movie and a visit lo Santa's elves. The happenings will run from noon to 3 p.m. ea ch day al Olivewood Elementary School, 23391 . Dune Mear Road. Et Toro. Parents must provide transportation. Registration will continue through Thursday, Cost is $5 per youngster. Fi.trther information is available by con- tacting 830-YMCA. Srhool Glfo EAST IRVINE -Two gifts hive been accepted by trustees of the San Joaquin Elementary School District. They are $600 donated by the Linda Vista Parent-teacher Organization to be used for tumbling mats snd 1udio-visual. 1Jd1 snd a porlable ticket booth valued at $110 donated by Mrs. Carolyn Chapman on behalf of the Leisure World Foun· dstlon. Mona• Needed SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -Thlrty- seven bright-eyed, eager, energetic young boys need a mother-on a temporary basis. An overwhelming response to the CUb Scout program in San Juan Capistrano has brought a record numbe.r of boys into scouting, but they may not be able to coolinue If 1dditional den mother.!! are not found . - Afri mother whO is willlrig fo donate an hour a week: anG one committee meeting night a month lo help Is asked to call Glenn Olsen, 493--37U. About four "oc· cask>nal moms" are needed. Botneo1c11er'• Chofre CAPISTRANO HIGHLANDS -Robert Bev1equa has been elected president of the Capistrano l-lighlands Homeowner s' Association. Other officers will be Oiuck Bennett. vice president ; Robert Gertz, treasurer ; G2jl Vickers, aecretary; Ele-anor Price, Dave Parris, and Robert Watson, board members. Other director! are Pat Fearon and Charles Wydner. Jr. Llhr11r11 Fu11di11g EAST IRVl.~E -A federal grant to set up an "es:emplary '' library at La Paz lntermedlate School in Mission Viejo is being sought by the San Joaquin Elemen· tary School District. If approved. the district will receive $M,e&S to develop a model school med ia cent.er which can be used for demonstra· lions within the district. Application Is being made under Title 11 of the Elementary And Secondary Education Act of 196~. By GEORGE LEIDAL Of !tie Diii'/ ''"' l!ltf Tustin Union High School District trustee:s Monday took no 1clion on a re- quest to seek the identity of a teacher who criticized an economics textbook in an anonymous survey. Robert Bartholomew, a member of the John Birch Society and trustee from Tustin, had suggested the board should find out which of the district's nine teachers ol economic!! "is not en· lhusiaslic abou1 this course.·· The course is economics. The district recently completed a year of requiring the cour se of all seniors at Uni versity, ?\1ission Viejo, Tustin and F'oothi!l high schools. "\Vhen I see there is a teacher in our district .,..,ho says we don't teach enough ?o.1arxism and who objects to flag wa\'ing then I v.·ant to know who that teacher is,'' Bartholomew declared. The remark followed presentation to the board of comments solicited from nine economics teachers who had been asked to evaluate the 1970-71 school year trial of economics as a required subject. The report did not identify teachers who responded to the survey. L. Jay IngatJ, assistant superintendent for in· struclion. told the board that numbered written statements in reply to four qucs· lions did not necessarily correspond. Board members indicated they believed the answers numbered seven and eight were from the same two teachers. Ingall said they were not, noting "They've been mixed up." Bartholomew said. "I'd like to see the original reports then. There are one or two teachers liere we should talk to.'' Trustee Dickran Boranian. who earlier had suggested the district consider mak· ing changes in view of the criticism, ob- jected to Bartholomew's request to find out which teachers said what on the sur- vey. "This is their evaluation or the course as they see it." Boranian said. •·not a statement of their personal philosophies.'' Eight of the teachers agreed the course should be taught during the senior year and that it should remain as a one· semester offering. Seven said the course should remain in the curriculum and that the present. coorse outline meets the needs or students. Seven of the nine rated the textbook as being •·poor" to "average" with only two teachers saying the requ ired text was near excellent. Supplemental reference material.!! were rated more highl y by the teachers -six said they were average to excellent. One unidentified teacher sharp I y criticized the textbook -"il is insulting lo the intelligence of the students . , . ~,ars: is dismissed in five superficial and misleading paragraphs. "The book is obviously one--sided and appears to students as propaganda And flag-waving -which is self~eleatina,• the teacher wrote. Several teachers commented that the course probably would be better If lt were elective rather than required. Some .suggested that a course in con· • sumer economics w o u l d better serve slower students. while college-bound students would be helped best by a course that is more theoretical in content. Among "other comments" on the course was this lone .statement from a tea·cher who indicated the course pro- duced "extreme boredom" in students: "How long ll'""' we bear 1his albalrOS.!I ·about our necks?" " Another teacher commented, ' ' I f capitalism is a superior system, it can 'sell' itsel£ in the open market ol ideas and "'ill not unduly suffer by an objective comparison with other systems. "Those who feel that economics must be presented in the current fashion, with • this particular book. are apparently · co:pilalists of little faith!" the teacher concluded. Superintendent William Zogg sum- marized the evalu2lion as d~rict sta(( viev•ed it. He said it appeared the district could do a better job of grouping students according to intellectual levels and find I better textbook or books to suit the needs of students. Boranian urged the district lo consider Involving students in the textbook aelec· lion process. The board took no action on the economics evaluation. Y 0UI1gsters Set For Storybook. ' Parade Saturday Laguna Beach youngsters wishing tt participate in Laguna's Storybook Parade on Saturday may fill out entry forms at the ctJamber of commerce, 205 N. Coast Highway, by 4:30 p.m. Wednesday. When the completed fonn is handed in, each entrant will be given tickets for the free movie at South Coast Theater which \\•ill follow the noon parade around the Santa Claus house at Glenneyre Street and Park Avenue. Free tickets also wil1 be available for fam ily n1embers who are encouraged to accompany the youngsters to the movie. After the noon judging, the parade wilt move down Forest Avenue and Coa~t Highway to the theater where judges will av.·ard prizes following the movie. The parade is open to children aged 3 to 12 and judging v.·ilt be by age groups . In case of ra in the entire event will be held in the South Coast Theater. begin· ning at noon. The Storybook Parade i!I sponsored by the Junior Woman's Club and the Merma ids of the Chamber of Commerce. Tl1e Junk Business Add ressin9 the Central Indiana Floor Covering Associttion, an industry spokesman, Welter Guinan wid: 11Too many people in the fl oor coverin9 industry •re convinced the public only wants to buy 11Junk" carpet." We'rt afraid that you might also get this impre1sion from the eds which specify unbe:ieveblt low prices. Investigating these ads will determine one of two things -either t~e carpet IS junk, or they will try to 1111 you something more expensive! We don't sell junk at Alden's , but we do hav e quality et competitive prices, and the best instaHation in the county. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 64 6-4838 HOURS: Mon. thru Thura., 9 '• S:3D -frl., 9 to 9 -S11., 9:30 to S • ( '· I I • I I ii • I ,''Chaµey ., I • • ~Clash !' •. . ·nat.e Chaney. San Joae sbt.e•1 All·Amerlcsn llnebicker, bu two more rcottiill qageml!nb bl!fore •'he lt.trtJ lookini toward a pre>- • fesaioul career. He and his spartan teammates tancl• with Memphis Stole Sotunl.ty In ' the PISlden& Bowl, bo!ore he l6el his final collegiate ac- tion. In the E.ut-West Shrine Gune lo Sin Fr1ncisco. Oiaftl!y followed up I briWant junior aeuon with the Sportana by galniog .........., All-Amer¥:an honor1 this year. -tea Pr... and the N.E.A. picked him on their lint "dream" team, while t.:lnited Press had him on theli' ~ric;I eleven .. The $-loot, ll·inch, !IS.pound leQior ·linebacker bad a fan-w,tlc oeuon ·hlghlighted by 1 brilllonl performance In Son Jeee's · 13-12 upet ol Rose Bow~bound Slonfonl. All lb! Grttnfield, Calif. . ' . . ' .. , ' ' All-tournament Sele~tions utive did was make 17 Eaison High captured the •third annual Aztec In vita· tacld-12 unaasisted-ack-ed the quarlerhack """'· In-tional basketball c)Il!lllpionsbip with a 61-53 win over lej'oepted 1 pua, deflected Mission Viejo. >JI-tourney' players ue (from left) anothtr, recovered two Edison's Mark Harmon (outstanding player), Rod Snook. Saddleback's Ed Lazar (Dave Horcek stand· ing iri), Los Amigos' Keith Stowers and Jeff Keslar and Miss.ion Viejo's Gil Normand.ie. fumblet, forced 1 third and -----------'-----"--'--'--"----------------------- totlled·the stanronl punter on the oneoy.ard line lo ll!t up a 1COre. ·Stanfonl coach John Ral•lon WIJ ~bin& but 1mazed at Ch>ney'1 perlormance. "That Chaney bu been 1 tiger ..apinlt ua for the past two .e~" said Ral&ton. "HI! ~: be an ace with aey team 1n our leagul!." Arizona State dumped lb! Spartans during th! 1970 cam- paign but Sun Devil head man Frank Kush was mighty im- ~ with Chaney. "He was al,I over the field against us. He's quick, a sure tackler and waa in on two-tl'lirda -of the plJy1 in our' game," recalled Kush. Chaney's own coach, Dewey ~; goes evl!n further, "Dave is the best collegial! lint backer I have ever aeen," uid Xin,g,·who ii 1 nation1Uy-reo:cnized auihority on defmse. "He -plays with a tremen- dous amount of inner drive.'' Kini continued. "I-like to d-=ribe him ll I footb&ll pill~ . wbo pl1y1 witli great · erriotion.11 tw'ge. HI! has a rreat· foot.ball instinct and ht I.a· p:WtJvely lnsplrational." . ~y interctpt~ .. sex~o pas·ses ·and returned Uil!m for 136 'yards during the 1971 season. Two of h i 1 in- tl!l'Cflpt.iom q:1inst Cal state Lpng, Beach were returned for M yatd touchdowns and spark- ed a. 30-28 Spart.an victory th!tt ultimately provided t b>e Spartans with the bid to the Pas1den1 Bowl. One of the Memphis of. fensivt linemen that Chanl!y will bl! facing in the Rose Bowl, Dec. 11, ls Mike fMulel Slark, I burly ~1. 250-pound t.iekJt. Stark, 1 rugged homegrown ballplayer, is corulide~ td be one or the bl!st min-on-man blockers in the nation. He ha! !'-bl!en a regular starter in each of hh three Rasons on the rTiger varsity 1nd has eamed IJf•Milisouri Va 11 e y Con- rfererH:e honors each year. ~ -StJrPitisingly agile for 1 man bis-siu. Slark uses great ~ngth to rend off enemy at- t:ackets: He h1a bench-pressed seo pi>und•. t .. : Lib Chaney, Mule Stark is 11. ireat proapect for the pro- 1ft.Sal.OnalJ;. 'Ibey should ~ Vid.e·•.&ood matchup In th! Papdeni-Bowl . Biles Await ',fough Mat ,,_Opponent · 1he No. 2 ranked junior 'coUeie wrestllng team in the :liate is nt1t on lip for et>ach Vern Wagner'• Orange Coast lc'ojJege gi'applers following a :f(lhrtb-place finish at the Cal 'Stitt (Fu11ert.on) Invitational Situroay. J' El Cimino lnvad6 Orange Coast Thunday evening in a double dual that will also in- '\IQl,ve prep powers Marina and \1'C)Untiln V1lley with 1etlon •otarting 1t 7' 311. ,.Golden Wert •om back to work. Wednesday In I «iadraniular metl 1t Pierce •Dege (3 p.m.) Orinae O:ut finlahed fnurth ~blrdoy bohlnd tht cham-~P sOOwlnp ol Don ·Lcwia (117) ind Tim Bandel (1771. · Lewts, 1 former Fount.aln inf)' lllandOllt. pinned th .... ~Ql-b,l.s four victims en route to Pftc uu •. "'And Bandel e1-Coron1 def \lior "'" pinned two or thnt -II 1ftu 1 flrsl-roun!f by .. Mesans Step Up in Class, Slate CIF Grid Finalists Costa Mesa High hu altered its non-league football schedu1e a bit for nea:t•year, replac· ing first game oppon«1t Katella with Westun. West.em? The same Western which is ,CJF AAAA finali.st 1t -the lar·Angelea Co~um aga,in!l Bishop Amat -Friday? That'• righ~ pal. Mesa , which has never had a winning au· IOl'I in 1 ,dozen campaigns and which hu registered five victories in the: lut 27 ttarb!, ;,, stepping up it. l!Cbedul<. Alt.r lb< Mustangs ore through with W...t. ---ROGER CARI.SON -=-------1 - em it'll be Newport Harbor, then Irvine Litgue play. Eight of ttie Orange Coast area's 15 prep football teaml!I will continue with the wne f~at in non-l~gue action .u in the put Ytar-~ . , ·Five others have changed aomewbat ,and Dana Hills will be brand new in die fall. The otber tchool1 which have made 10ml! switches are ~. Estanci.1, ~Irina, San ~ti! and Lagµna Beach. Estancia has dropped Buena' Park in th! second game and will play Marina , which dropp,d Hawthorne. F.di3oo repla"ces St. John · Bosco and Santi· ago with "Fullerton and Orange. San C1emente'11till kloking fur 1 first. game and meet. &Isa Grande in the second tesl Here's each sd>ool's non-league ske:b Corona del Mar -Newport and Santa An1. Cost.I Ml!Sa -Western and. Newport. Dana Hills -Anny-Navy and Rim of th! World. EdiAOn -· Fulll!rton and Orange. E:stancia -Twtin and Marina. Fountain Valley -Rancho Alamitos and Huntington Beach. Huntington Beach -Millikan and Foun- tain Valley. Laguna Bea~ladstone and Army·Navy. Marina -El Rancho and Estancia. Mission Viejo -Saddleback and Pacific•. Mater Dei -Santa Ana. Chaffey, Lake- wood and Long Beach Wilson. Newport Harbor -Corona de1 Mar and Cost.a Mesa. San Clemente -open and 8olaa Grande. University -Foothill and Los Amigos. Westminster -Lakewood aod Loog Buch Wihm. * * * Around the be<I: It'• iatemtta1 MJ note tbt Rancho A1amJ.. te1 High'1 ba1ketball ·team II J.I. Dartn1 die summer eeech. Pat Adams' crew w11 wift. le11. Adami dHmplaa1lled 1ammer activity In IUJ'Ch of lite value of 1ummer lea1ue basketball. · Foot.hHI High's basketball wins over Sunny Hills and Troy are no fluke. Coach Hank Hummel bu a pair of 6-6 underclaumen in the fold to aid guard Rob Tuvell. The tall limber are sophomore Jeff Wel- shans and junior Stan Hanson . Fallbrook must have set some sort of record 1g1ln1t Lianna Beffh wbell It acored +c points In one eight-minute quarter of ba1ket- baD on lhe w1y to a N"'4 win. S1y1 Llpaa coach Jerry Flir: "Every. Uilng they 1bot went ln. L1yup1, ouUlde abot1, the works." Mission Viejo baseball coach Harry Hilk! IJ forsaking Easter toumaments in '73, in- stl!ad going for 1 tw~game Rt at Avalon High. Hilke says most or the prep ba.!ll!ball tour· neys are second class with much or the com· petition played on junior varsity fil!lds. So true. Look for San Cleml!nte to drop oat of the Crestview League ln '73-7t. Dani Hlll1 will take a major portion of San Cleml!nte'1 lalenl ne 7%-73 year is 1llble with 1en5or1 1tayln1 at Su aeml!llte. Area Cage Results Yikes Laud Top Runners Chargers In 63-54 Setback By HOW ARD L. HANDY Of tlM "-llY ,.llM 1'-" Edison High School l>a!kel· ball ....,, hit. a dry llJ>ttl In the third quarter while War· ren High 800nd 11 points and went on to post a 6.1-54 open.. ing round victory in the 4.'lrd Huntington Beach invitational t.oumaml!llt Monday afternoon. ln another afternoon. tXln· lerl, Millikan High ol Long Beach toppled Villa Park, 81- 54. and will race the Bears Wednesday at 7. Villa Part plays Edison in the consola· tion bracket Wednesday 1t 8: 30 in U1!t O.arger gym. In Meod•y's opener with Warren,· coach Dave 'Mohs' Edl""1 squad fell ·Wind Nrly but mamged to·ltay .even or l!ltghUy aheed ol the CoMt Lelgul! · contingd until mid- way ~gh tho thin! period. At this · point, the Cllargeni were leading, 40-39. and ap. peared headed for their (ourth victnry in 1 row ·lhcluding a championship in the L6 Quinta tourney Jut weekend. Thi! Bean: put .on a !Odden scoring stn'fl!. however, and rattled the Olargers with a 'run-court pl'l!Sling defl!nsl!. 'IJtey fon:ed five straight turnovers without an Edi30n "'""· During the satnl! period. J oe Howard hit for ll!Vl!fl point& tJ'ld the Bears tallied It in a row to lakl! 1 56"'40 ed@:I! lhAt was nevtt again chat· Jenged by the Cllargen. In the fourdl stania. · WRl'- ren WOfkl!d the bf.II M.11 with 1 passing game and took ·only the SUJ"I! shot underneath. Sl!veral bed 0U1es. forcf!d by the all!rt Olargtt defen9e, turned the ball ovl!f' to Edison but th! cl08ed Moh!' crew coold .Ret was iiix poirit.s U 59-53 with 1:49 left to play. l..a Quinta atl-toumey selec- tion Rod Snook ol the Charg· ttS, kept his IMm In the run- ninj!' with 1 fanlasti c striOA ol fl"'!e throws in the rirst stanza . He hit Jlk>l-10 in tht.t stanza a n d the Otergen tr111led by only fi vl! pOints. Fllr the ~me. Snook was 11 ror 21 at the charity toa tin! ind closed wtth 24 points ~Ol'I! fouling out with 1:21 loft. ••I-INI • • .. ~ = • • l • ' .. " ··-I i ' • """' I • Whi!ll'llt ' ' ' ll.,.....,.,,,n 1l ' ' Tot1r1 n " ~ Wtrt"lll IUI 1 • " ~ ~·~-! ' 1"11!1111 ' • ~~i:::-1 I • l '! C""'IOtkofl' I " Wllll•ll'lt ,! I • 11;;:r, • • J " " Ian" Oll•rftn '""" W1rl'9ll ,, 17 11 " -~ l 11 ,, ,, -... Clll Y "tJf Jf! Oilers Stay Pe~f ectt :Top Tustin, 91-73 , ' By ROGER CAIWION tettennu In the starting five, .. ... ..., ..... '"" turwd in I n:Jce job at both 1gne<I wltb Combo' ~ m! u'Id, "\I'• • ~ .. eviluate WllJOn " after wit' chlng them qalNI Anollalm. Tilt flnl ol Ill MJMI ,.. -Ol lbe COUl'I.> I ....... to f8ll01Yt the quelf.ion ComtJs bo I t or Wbo'• ·No. l ln Or1ngl! Q)lst ~0;; pl=· ~~ n hiJ -'"'°' -!boll. clrctu lffm'• defet11iv0 effort wu . accomplilhed Monday . · · "But I know 1M1~ro The queatlop .tli CM njpf u undefeated Hun-And rather thlll dwell on the· tiniton Beach Hieb'• Oilers: victor)'. over TulJln, bl! seem· rolled t.o lllelr fifth ainoeaJtiva '<! ~ -..11 h Wed- Yict.ory -.ay I ~nl -Long Beech --limn! uid Trotter. ,_ CMcb Elmu O:>mba' Oilers BNch, Willon. Tht Oller• canned :I3 ol 1" 1Ueinpts, lt'Clm Ille floor '" 47.1 percent and hit 2$ ol 11 tre. tbro)l>1 (IO.I percent ). ,1 blued by 'J'Ustln ti-IS In· the "They're alt quick and they optmng round of 1thelr Ord an-wort hard on the boards," 11,.l Invitational, putting them uld Combo. Tullin, meanwblle hit • oi(i u fiom the field !or 42.4 ..... ) ,,..l one ltep closer to the ultimate Tult1n coach G*lrg:e Trotter lhowdown Friday with Conm1 del Mar, providing the latter can mat c b Huntinlton'• loumey performances. Huntington and. Coron1 1port identical 5-0 m1rks ind 1hate the top •Pot In Or1nge Coonty With t. Habra in Che official county r1nking1. , Jfuntington's next obataele in ttie: path of th! dre1m game la Long Beach Wilson Wed· Maday night (8:30), a team that rambled past Anaheim, 75-48, in the other nocturnal feature Monday. Anaheim ind Tustin batt[I! ln COl'l30!atlon action Wed· nesday at Edison (4:30). It seemed ill too ea1y for Combl!I' crew u the Oil City quinte:t raced to a Sl·l7 1d- v1ntage early in the second quarter, then aeemed content to keep a to to 14 point apread th! rest of. the: way. · The imposing front line of Jim Wilrtby, Stl!ve Brooks and Bret White accounted for M points as they "took tu1111 shooting from. Inside ind outside. It didn't seem to matter if they occasionally m i s a e d , another would 1imply t.lk! the rebound and put it back up. White, the· only non-varsity Corona, Sailors ,r uf .u 'I hi Action Tonight .} Unbellen Corona del Mar l>'l'roma._ ol · 5-1 - and Newport Harbor close out Mike Sevier, 1-2 guard euey.ff the final salvo of first round Jones, 1-5 forward Jo h·wd 1ctk>n In the 43rd annual Hun-Sumner and a host of othen tlngtoo Be a ch Invitational who 11temate In the Sea Klnf l basketball tournament tonight. attack. " Coach Tandy Gillis' Corona Jones and Sevier have belft" dl!I Mar Sea Kings are favored In doubll! fil'Jl'9 each tirre tn make it sis: in a row in the out and Gilli.s is hopeful that " 1:30 feature against Servile. guard Scott Cameron wtll bl And if the Sea Kings are ready lo roll tonight. ~ 1ucceuful they'11 qualify for a He's the spar t p I u f a quarterfinals btrth against the playmaker who maltea the Sela IW'Vivor of the 1 o'ck>ck clash Kings' fast break click. He bftften . coach' Dale Hagl!y's missed the first four l~U Nl!wport Harbor ,Sailors and and pl1yed briefly qa~ Ruu Hawk'• Sunny Hill.! Villa Park Frld1y aft t.t1l Llncen. ~ecovl!ring from an ankle ~' Aftunoon· action included Jury. PaclfJc against Arcadia (4:30) Newport's Bill McKinney ~. whlle Q)mpton draws a bye In the big noiSI! for th! Sailor1. ..~ th! first rOund. He has treml!ndous scorlni Gillis' talent rich Sea Kings potential as displayed 1lready11 are ranked nm in Orange by canning 24, 19, 28 and 30 in County 1long With tourney leading his mates to 1 2·2'3 1 ho!t HunUngton . Beach and mark. · ·: Frttway League 1powl!r La McKinney is a 6-3 letterman ·' -· ""'"' ""'"...,. ... tit ('11 • • . ~ H1bra. for Hagey'a crew and couplel ~ .,, • 'lbe Sea Kings have posted with ~1 muscleman Jin\ t • five wins in sparkling fashion Swick, the Sail on prtSent f. '1 ~ ~ behind: the all-round tough eombinetlm. ·:'1 ' . ' . ·-· """' .....,,,lfitld ...... w ....... ... _ ' . . ' • • ' • -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ij ) 1111 ' . ' . .. """" ·-· Tl.till ltll:fterdl Clell"*I ....... ,_ c-~ ,_..,. Av1lel ....... ''"'w T .. 111 • • ' ' • • • • n • twtttit cn1 • • ' . . ' " " .. " "' "' s • t ,. 1 J I I • , , 11 1 I J 1• ·~:;': I I I 4 t I I 4 I I l t JI 11 If '-' le-...,. .... ,..,, u ,, u 11 -n " n 11 tt -fl Basketball ResuJts fU•H SCHOOi.. a_... 1-lh T•- f l Mo811nt 0 , 1'tortfl ll:Mnlltlo ee C_OLl..101 w"' Cit st• IU.I lM. 'Wt!_, tt. a S.!I Dllil• st. 1111. """-'-" • D.AYE ROSS PONTIAC Lease or Buy All Models .. , DAYE ROSS PONTIAC 1411 HAllO~ ILYD, • PA.11 lllYI COSTA MIU. Ph. 546°8017 .,..,. 1 DAYI A WlllC l:Jll A.M. TO lltH ~.M. IU•DAY1 11 AM. TO f ,..M, . ·~ I " ., ,, ,{ ., ' .. .. ,, ' • IUll9 ... n. air ~.,.,!'"""-, Jlll~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~======!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~F·· VC-l1100l ... 11. N«ttwft~73 Vlllt\' If. f't, Lrfol9 71 Htndt (Lfl V-tl lln, Hent!ffll ·-" $9" 1"rlflr.lta1 II, '1, S... J-11. 71 W111Mneten 41. 77, ..,,., ft Gan-• 100, Cen1 .. 1 WMl'llrletoll 10 s..ttt1 ~•dflc n, 1.,.MV1111 u ... '"'-fflllld 79, c-.w-IDC.) 41 t..1 S.l!t II. Wfft O.,ter 41 Mel"8 ,., lthDOI lflMMI D NI....,, 107. lllfflle U ·-· X1vlll' IOhlel to, Otd Olwnlllle!I • 1-1 11, Nl'Yfd1 l it-I h Wl-111 tel, l"lll!'lde Tltdl .M Akron•• TolMID 74 MlcNfl" tl • .t,u1tr1lll11 N1tloM!1 to C*I~ ''· Aleb9m1 n KIMll 61. 90, Criti.tl'8n 41 Ml-1rl lo.l, I I, l"r1roc:li !~1.l " T111111 U!I ~-I SI, W'-111 (MM· WIUltM) 41 .... Mlc hlun It, '1. ICentunv H IE"! T...,.._ n, "-nllt1 6' MtrWll 105, Monfle9d II. II Aullum 11$, MIU ....... M. II -· Ttt11o 11J, Allll..,.. h'I Attl9ft ti """"''' '°' Oil..._ 11. " '"'"' N• M•lu St . .,, ArkMI n Mom• ...... MlctoiNltlnl If .__.. T .. l"llllMllf Iott.-, 107, .... u. 71 (diem"'"' .... btoll Cell-•• Nor'ltltftftrll II CeonlOltlftenl A GREAT GIFT FOR CHRISTMAS! GAZELL~ $19.95'. OLYMPIA $18. 95 HAILLET-$14.95 Tl•• most popular Sport ond l.oi- 1uro Shot in tho World. Eltvtn super slylts in 1i1t1 from Chi~ drtn's I to Men 's 14. WI OLADLY Gin WIA, A.NY ITIM 1051 lRVlNE e $41-1614 WISTCLIP' ,LAZA I NIWPOllT llACH ' . ' 11 l 1 ' ;1 J " ,, " " ' " ., ' ' " " :· I " ' • • J• OA!l V PILOf ' BBB Now Awar~ . , ' Of Shortcomings :. •:• Ill' SYl.VlA PORTB'R •• "'Ibe Belter 8 u 1 I n t • 1 .._ BuruUJ mmt be rearaanlz.ed, • • modernlz.ed •nd UPiJ'lded to • Ml'Vt the eon.sumer," aid '. E1lW Gray n. chairman or ,'J Wb\rlpool Corp .. as we munch- • eel cl.Mamon tout alter a Red •• Crosi board 'metlln& I n : Wuhincton P.arly t.n lt70. "By : rtlavtgoratlng and supporting • the BB81, businessmen can ~voluntarily meel the hffds of ":the consumer. We had, better #' do it voluntarily -or ebe - • 1nd now." ~ .. As we told Co"IJ'eum1n • Roaentha.I, we know our own ;. 6hortcomlf18," emphash:ed H. ~Bruce Palmer, the first preal· ~·dent ot tbe now reorgaajud Council or Beu.r Buslneu • Bureaus, when I asked him about the critical report issued tn Washington yesterday by the New York City Democrat. • "We have conducted and we <are continuing to conduct our . own investigat ions and wt: havt: committed 11 t t: r a 11 y millions of dollars to correct the deficiencit:1 we ourselvea have discovered." Perhaps the most re:frt:ahing upect of the current broad at- 1.ack on the structure and operations of the BBs is that, 1t the very top, businessmen ··realize much of the attack Js • .;uaWied. And perhaps the "":tmost encouraging aspect to ua ; u consumers ls that under the ,·Prodding of Gray, the Coun- ~ cil's fir1t chairman, and of ,.Palmer. the CBBB is moving ; visorously to answer the ·aitleirms. To illustrate: .• Indictment: The bureaus • 'are weak, ineffectlve, staffed : \With seeond·rate people and ' almply not capable of handling ! the job they claim they are doing. Answer: Without doubt , IOmt of the bureaUJ deserve every word and more of this • coodemnaUon. The r e a 1 o n .:there Is such a wide variation In performance is that each .~ureau has been completely ,A1utonomoua unUl nGW, with Its own funding by 1 o c a 1 ~)uslnesaes and with :,rtsponsibillty only to Its own !·board or directors. To pull all the bureaus up to . new high levels of achieve- ment, the old assoclaUons ', 11f!.re dissolved and merged ln- · 't<i the new Council Ot Better j Buslness Bureaua u n d e r :fGray's leadership in Aui_ust fi tl?O. Palmer becam,'l)rh).: ""dent In January '71. The full ::tioard of dlre.ctors -with ::representatives now lro'm con-!; ~er groups and univer~itles *:&1 well as from bo11ne" :; organizations -has been in '·aittence for only a few 24 Hour TELEP.HONE ANSWERING SERVICE 1•,...lnt -Cer•n• i1! Mi r, ••t• Mt1t. N•wpert 111,h, nlll $1(1t1 ""' •'•••· OIANGI COUNTY ODIOTILIPHONI Sl'lVICl, INC. 835-3305 Forecast Bid BEDFORD, Mus. -EG & G, Inc .. h11 obtained from the FederaJ Government and a group of companie11 a contract to develop methods o f foreca11tlng possible co11lal environmental problema caus· ed by using coastal water for reactor cooling in nuclear electric power planta. The New England Electric and Mlddlesex-Euer 1y11tems are the principal companies in· volved along with t h • Atomic Energy Commission. INCOME PROPERTIES WITH TAX SHELTER UP TD 88 % WRITE OFF FOR 1971 $5,900 • $196,000 INVESTMENT : .. --' T•k1 .,..., •In frt191 1111 ct1111Mtl1 l • ,_ tf ... ~t 1n LN1lll ...- M"""""' "' JM< f ... ~t. Wt l tl 1t>lt -tf'ftf ,.. -fVll "'91!1tW\lflCt ""M ,,.,,.. ,,,..,.. .. ~ ,..._. -.. ~-FREE BOOKLET • ...... WI 1M """" M "''"'' wr "" ........ 11111• ..... 1n ,..., ·-•: llMt ""'"'" ttllllll ... •~19~111 . • : ,. ......... ~ ................... . . .............. ······ .. . : .t1.001al1., ................... , •. • • • CJTY ............... .,. ... ,. , ,.HONI . ; '···-····· ············ ....... ······· ............................... · ' ...... • ..... --. . ., . .., ...... OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New York Stock List •..i .... h• ............................................. , •• ,. ............ _...... . ..,..,, ---.,. ........ .. NASD Ll1tl"" fer Mond•y, DocemNr U, 1971 • DAILY PUT Jl t -- \ ,,, .. ,~11~~ .. ,. ""' . .... • • ~ .. • • I , • • .. .. Chililren' s Xu~ .. " . Show~ Revived '· . . .. • " •87 CYNTHIA LOWRY e~ . ~,.i· """·: dJMp. · 1'jEW-:YoliK' '(AP) -·-peon. l'rolrama Ilka lho · ~ -·-:.. '--·= · I _,_ · eharlit Brown seties seem to ' Teleylaloo• -"!v• oped-Ila bO as 1iidertruCtible u QWn holiday ~oms. 'All)Onl redwood . tree. I -'CbanninC I Qio~aie\ spI~.<!id In Yule ~ro~am ""-•· tbfP, are · tbt Olrlstm11 pro-1dulll on-the tee0nd and even H""' C · ' ,gr1un1, . ..-,. dlll1ned for fifth time-aroWld while new I vpe, ~ravan yo.-, . viewer$, and 1 h • yo'¥111 viewers are added lo -' " • · i>tlworb"~ect "t11em· li1if ·lbe ~· · • J,8 ~4 ;IJ'.o, ur briJi'tlioJJi ·out.each year for In Ille most .recenl ,Nlt!Rn • ',9'· anotber'~ut. riUnga:; ABC'• repeat of"'S.O..· • ~YWOoO•(~ -Bob 'Iii -days the1' bay• la OaU..la Conlln1.1o 'IY>Wo" Hp., ..... ~ biilir«peat'iliowfnpo('"S.0-.r.anl<ed .fUth ln,lbe popularijy 1 ....:.l....,iipjart 'Wed" ''".on ta C11U, !s ·~c to Town" list , and CBS' "P'rmly ihe ~ .. ,. ..~ '"I'be littlest -.A n g ~ J , ~ • Snow1111n" w1s lixth. ~ .did the ·~··~',Jlfl .-al "RudOIJ,b, ''ilie )led Nosed . beJter lbep "G\JpsmOl<e-" • > Oatibafa •tour 'of OYerltal Reihdeer" and !'Frosty.· the Ow'les Dic.k.ena'''"A , ; An'.erieM ,ndu,t&ry ba.et.' Snowmaii." <Jooili!C .up ~I Chrbtmaa Ca"'1'1 aeems .lo . .......,,cl'tb¥:ytlrt1mow ~'11be.LltUeDrUm~Boy,"_).••c).l'l~te producers, , . uri T..._... ~.Jim Nahort, aod.thece will be .more belort aoimalon and olben Involved . , ·"SHE'S!M.WAYl•KIP,.T HIR CLOTHES ON pi~'V\da Jllee, lfl¥,, World ·the .boliday IWon·li over.. · · .In eni.rtalnJneql.. E a ch' . ' • · Altar>.30.•Y..lrs,'.lllta 'Still 'God.._' ll&*~lh;· ... 1'1 · ··Networb -appr.eclate •pro-Chrlsb:Jlu ·~ ii a •!ll'&!t.Of . ,· .. · 1.7 ... ~ , t; .... <:1'""' • BUiit; uiff90j-wood Delt SW., grams lb.It can. be repeated ''.C'h.9stpiar Carol" rtnuw -• ., . ' , ..(f / .• . · , 1 By TOM BAJll.llY Of * Oll!t rlW IMft . : II WU very filling lbal the complier .. r tl!O• Irvine Muter 0>orlle•1· Cbr~u , Fanfare program should wrlte of the "glad shout of n:litation" that ts the heart of ·our muaical 'trlootu..'at ttiis festive 'season. ' For that ii exact!y ;what this iplend.ied~cboral group 'gave us from.the moment they march- ed down the aisles of Orange'r lovely Marymoun:t Co I I e C e auditorium· to aet the pulses racing with a ·stirring "O Come All Ye F:a.Itb(ul" to the tM1iiUe <Str..W 1.mJbe La year aft-. year~ so,r JllUCh of o~ p,ov~, 'Ct~ita and ' .F· ·~ ·· · ·. ~. birirl.' . ' thelr prJduct gets oni or two • r~lngs. • . . ,,_r-.,--r 1 ·iiiiiiii'il'iii •. ii.iiiii'liiiliiiiiri"il·r·;ii;·~;;;;;;;;~!ii· ~~ii ··The 1~,. °' Di'*en.· ~:>: · -~ c;~• .:..- -. --finll;-awe-inspiriDg "Glor;ia'' with whlch they ~luded a weekend progra~ _that was also offered to a delighted au- dience in Aiiahelm'1 Metooyla"nd· Theater. Female -~ Chi11tmas Carol'' ~y-be Y« v t\ 'to ,com~.·ABC'sChuckJoMI.' · -l'·:': ,· '.' ' · · ·. · · · ~ '' ·l~e lriple Oacar winber who Is Rita .. lla:vworth . R·eturning 1 now •in charge of upgrading . '..J . the nelworkl,J .children'• ~ 1 ·~.:. I . " · · . ' gramnUng, has produced a By v~QN. SC01T the camera. Althou~b abun- We are fortunate indeed to have· a choral enSemble of this . caliber in our county. And we are even more fortunate that they take time out f(Ml the classics with ~!ch they fre· qu.ently and flawlessly regale us· to offer a Christmas pro- gram so impeccably geared to the musical tastes of young and old. r• ' . lMlll. A·'itttftc·lrflUN frolltllf ICOUt · alld 111111val'1 d\lllllonll rwMr •tt ...... tt'')lil·rforOllS· te fil4 I ..... tltl..- .• llRll '"" ,.... . •Ill 1W . ____ ,. '- ,,... Millt '.St1ttanr'1tiln1ihlr tt ..... f'ubllc'Aidr' • Blioat'' r.· . . ' . _ti T1 !ti tit Tnltl ·-II"° 9 C1J ... lollll llH!llDW....c- G (jj CIJ Ill ""* -J"""' -- . half·hour 'program ·w:itil c·h, · HOLL~OOD:(UPJ ) -The · dantly ' endowed, Rita ·has judglna: from tome bill and on1y .orUJOnable etplanation never appeared in a movie in-~plecea .1llmpsed J~ .ivance, foi ruta, '.Hi~·· btaiqty volvi.IJtg 'anything more 'daring promises to be a classic ·of _.1 ~:c....1. :c1 ~ 6'---.. __ d than..a plunglna neckJine. animation.' • • · •QQ,ap.-.i;a~ .wu.11:'1:' uco.;8i es " , 1 • • • Richard Williams, ·the ilrtist as .a mo~e~ atar ia that the I d never think of disrobing who crea~ed the animated bat-· wu.born .wlth a'nleJtra female for a plct1:11'e," she added, ''not .tle~~e~·of "Tbe .~rge · 1~.· . · .. ' even 'my bfa. I think ~ll ~ Uie L~ht Brlg1~e, ha1 ""'--1 · ,,.; i women have a c e r t a 1 n worked w1th the original steel .i.i1t1:111< • • eome~nc n-, . . plate' lllustl-ations used when defin1bly feminine about the elegance about them which JS the ;tory· waf first printed in red·baired b t 1 u t y lhit destroyed when they take oU lhO · · thelr clothe.s. .. · , . , transcends o'r'd-1 n a r·y stan-"What'• the fun when tliere ."LPW PRICED• J'R~IEWS : .·DEC; 'l,5 .& 16" "TMa MOIT "°TPUL. llYILY, •HT••TAIN .... ,,, llKll WINI,. U'91'lwc1 Ill ~ry" l · • • -LA• TIMl!I "$0UTHLAND l•.UON'I IMAIM MUllCAL HIT" • ' dards. . isn't a secret left?" Ills in~'.her .. imile, the small Reminded that t o d 1 y ' s n:lOv.Jrqe\it!'-Qf' Mr hands, the younger .actn!sses jump out of tQS'itof;ber;·bea~, 'the demu.re their· lingerie· at · the drop of .'laugh. · , ·. · . 1tlidlo's ecfict; Rita said she They ·gave us a little of everything in this r i c h l y varied Yuletide offering : con· temporary and old English carols, spiritual and folk carols e.nd offerin~ on The lines of Arnold Freed's superb "Gloria" and Ron Nelson's "'Glory to God" that fully catered for those who look for a little classicism in their Christmas music. They were admirably back· ed in two segnienls of the pro- gram by a brass ensemble that overcame a shocking start -"What Child is This?" -l'llESS TEtEo•AM "'Wll.L P•OIAIL Y WIN OUT Al ' lllNO llTTlll THAN NAiil" ~ .She 1haatj>een ·ma·rried five thouiht the riewcorOers were I l!rR~I. I('i1a Wopde~11he.hasn't short~nilig tht,ir careers. ·been: wtd 1 500 : times. ' Old There Isn't all that much for fisbion'elf.' press : ag"ents -once audlence.s fu look f~rward to ci.lled ·~er .._ .not · too , in· after:an t1l4it," she said. accutaleJy -·a~· goddess.!--..,.--~-~------------ .: And ·IO, she,remaina. · -YAlllETYt : · ENDS .TONIGHT . ' ''SONG' OF NORWAYi''. ·', ... "ON•A•CL!AR DAY . YOU' CAN SEE' FOREVER'.' WAllRE1:4 OATES· l CMOH ............. t#!t ~ MCTllOCOl.Olt' MGM. AIM CiP ' ' , ••• ""'... I ''CO(>L'. HAN~ L.UKE'' . 'BARGAIN MATINEE ) . . . . Wj'D. 1 p.M. ADULTS $1.00 No·longer youPij:, Rita stilrli ~·Pl~le ~f e!vtn&. lessons in feminity lQ, 1ay, Jane Fonda or1Mla Farrow: I 'Mked •bluntly •what ·quality mak'es her·· so 1urpaaslngl7 female, . Rlt,i .. reacts with ·ailrpriae: "Get, I don't know: Maybe Jt'1 becau'se I 'v e alwa'ys•kept my· clothes on for NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES might !$• botn better 4abel· eel "Whal Key la ThJa!" -lo fiV<! 0s allnini .. ~Uons of Manger" and ·a " beautifully played 110 Come, Emmanuel." One of our 1grutest joys in Irvln"e Master Cliorale of- ferings hu alwaya , been Ille wialli~'hlgh -of its toloists and, ·a.cam: we ..were not disappointed. Mary Gilbert's clear, strong alto 8dded a ne.w dimemion to "Mary, Mary, Where ii-Your Baby?'\ Luella Smith's sweet ~prang: Vol~as 1~ ~t· tuned tq the wistful "The • Shepherds Had an Angel" and Roy Dunbar's commanding bass v9lce was riChly eloquent In the lovely "I Wonder as I Wander." . Twyila Flanders, Dorothy Neff and Darrellyn Mellili were the soloists in the Ana.helm perfonnanc;e which we regrettably bad· to forego in the light of a well filled Christmas calendar. Pride of place in the solo department must go t o Maurice Allard. 'who sur· rendered his baton to ·the very capable associate conductor Jonah . JGiewf:r ~or t h e s e Christmas Fanlafe concerts. The Newport Beach man pro- ved to be a most capable deputy througho,ut the pro- gram and a most effective liaison between the choir and its soloists. · But back to Allard and his fine rendition of "Sweet Little Jesus Boy," a charming spiritual that enjoyed a sym. patheUc and fluent reading in Allard's capable hands. It was, for us , the high spot or our splendidly delivered solos. "A glad about of exaltation" -yes, it was that all the way through this memorable Christmas program and we hope ilia~ the Irvine M2Bter Chorale's Cllristmas will be as bright .as. the spirits. of the au- dience who so wannly ap- plauded their Christmas Fan- fare. Son Sup.ports .. HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Peter Ford plays a regular role in fathtt Glenn Ford's • new televi.sion series "Cade's Cou~ty." • c ENl>S TONIGHT "A'NNE· OF THi THOUSAND DAYS" " ~ . . . • ·~ii, .• '•. J.. • t lt•rt. w ........ , Dyan C•n!"'R . ..,.,, "''" "THE LOVI MACHfNI" Ill & "DOCTORS WMS" CIJ llLllUTIDI 1111111 · -· ·-'.to. ~ cntia • • • • • • • I . • •• • • • •• ,• .. • ...... _. Tlll 10. 1 5015 !: NO, 1 ALIUM 'Ir, MO. 1 nLM,' IUTPICTUll · · llST MUSICAL SCOll llfli . In <'YCl')'Oll<'s lik there's a . SUMMEROF'4 IRJcii_=,I :,-:.::_ RJtMt HOWlOVERS START AS. .. "fri d II ii en s I~ TECHNICOl.06.' 1\1.BERTJINND "SCftOOGE• TN etntn. llUlicll ,..........~Do .Also-THEPWlrnGAHG in 'A IOT lllAMID CNAllll IJOWN" AUO Pl.A Yk'.i'JNlMA VU) M~SIOH VIEJO.IJ0.6HO ""'-" Ol<fMY \!!lo """"-~DJ\WIQ" • -OUT.IA.Cl" W 11 c.&lfo , I , I Y ear.-round Scl100I Ey~d By Trustees All-year school will be dumped Into t~e laps ot the trustees ot the Cap!Straoo Unified" School District at toftight's 7:30 meeting ln Serra School Capistrano Beach. ~ 1 ' The all.year school committee already has Jound. the idea · "feasible'l but,. will l~axe .f1J11.ber decisions to the board, l I • ' . .\ -~.;.,,I ;t Iuorid·e Issue'.:.,·: , I I I . I .. . ' I l I I ·Before C.ouncil ' ~ · l I I San Clemente city: councjJm~n Wed- nesday will decide on the .P,reCise language of a ballot.,ltem tor qert' April seeltlng public consenku1 on 'the matter or addin~ nuoride to th~ c}ty Witer supply. The measure, long; a simmering con- troversy in San CleD"\ente, finally won IU place on the ballot two weeks ago after councilmen deadlocked 2-1 on a motion to actually start adding the compound to ci- . . I plinl alllictioo. · t A hali dOUri local dtrtu.ts ~· 1111 the um. meetinJ ind voJctd U>Olr·~! endorsement of Dt'."'tower•s' suftet1tton l that -ulacturld Ouorldt.ciimpow!d 1iel added tO tht existing Mturit content I already found in the city "1;tersupPly. : Th.; district ls investigating chances of laUni::hiilg its own "4>15" plan Which has been Successful in Chula Vista and La Mesa-Spring Valley districts. ,. ty water. · Preliminary estimates lhow that tM-clo ly rupply ave.rages about .7 parts 1*1 million in natural ftuorlde compuuod& I About ~1 PPM more of ·an aitlnclaJI Variety would be added if V'Otllrr ~ a 1 Under that concept children would go to ,~! for 4S days (nine weeks) and then have 15 days (three weeks) vaca- tion. The cycle would continue so that OetWej!rl in-scliool Ume-tllere' would .be follr three-week vacations, one in each of the four seasons. While one group ls in school another would be on vacation, so buildings would have year-round use and the n~ for neW schools would be reduced by 2.5 percent. The <;ommit~e studying all-year schoo1 was divided 'infu two subcommittees-one on curriculum and instruction and another on fiscal and personnel matters. The financial committee Jound that based on master-plan proj~tions the district ultimately would need 67 schools to .house its population. , This means t~at taxpayers in the district. would have to ultin1ately pay for schools costing $128 million. Debt service w~d Qouble the amount. '!Jt is the conclusion &f this sut:rcom- mittee th~ we have no ~lte~tive but to find or develop a program that, enables maximum use of all school buildings and reduces the need 'for new school con- struction to the absolute minimum," said the report. ~ Based on future project.ions1the all year schpol would save district t.axayers $.12 million in ultimate school coostruction. The committee also ·round that operating costs would not be greatly in- cre,ased ii at all and would be outweighed by.the savings on buildings. In La Mesa the staffs of three schools using the "45-15" plan found1f.hat after a few. months' operation the junior high projected a five to six percent increase 1n costs and the two elementary schools projected an eight percent decrease. A five-year projection by a district in Plymouth, Wis . estimated the aMual in. crease in cost per pupil for kin- dergarteners through 12th gQide to be i11- creased by $17.40 annually. This pro- jection. is three times that of La Mesa's projectjoo which they h~ve .fo~d to be too hlgh. The committee approached the study mainly on a financial basis. The study, however, also points out there is evidence that the "45'-15" plan may be educa- tionally superior to the present school plan. . . . . . Turns Turtle The driver escaped injury Monday when this heavy earth mover laden with dirt overturned ~in. Capi· strano Beach at a construction site along the San Diego Freeway. The machine had been gouging away earth at the top oC ·a siee.p incline when it rolled. The driver was protected by roll bars and a seat belt, officials said. Hogs Jogging, But Carefully LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) -Even the.hogs are jogging these days at the University of Nebraska College of Agriculture. Under a research progiam to determine the effects of exercise on hogs, a treadmill has been set up for h6gs to get exercise. "The ho'gs' were pretty lired the first few days but as they got into condition they enjoyed the daily jogging," said Dr. E. R. Peo, pro- fessor of animal science. "Some of them were pretty smart.' They would run up to the front of the treadmill and ride back, so we rigged it with a screen connected to an electric fence. Then they quickly learned to stay away from the back gate. , "They took tq jogging along, sort q(.looking over their ¥ioulder. back at the screen to be sure they were not getting too far back." Water Christ1nas Trees, Laguna Fire Chief Warns The best way to keep a Christmas tree Vitamin B·l helps the tree absorb fresh and from becominj a fire hazard moisture and keeps it healthy IORger, is to insure that it gets 1 arge amount of Latimer noted. water, reports Laguna Beach Fire Chief "It's also important to make sure the James Latimer. tree is well supported and kept-away "Fresh Christmas trees of all com-from fireplaces, heaters. television sets monly used species present no significant or other sources of heat," he said. fire hazard," the chief noted. That is, un-Latimer stressed that ·lights use~:on-the ti! they are thoroughly dry. "Then they tree should be laboratory approVed and become the most flammable article you that candles shoula not be U$ed under atty could have in your home." circumstances. "Check frequently for He suggested that all Christmas trees drying of needles around bulbs and should be kept cool and moist until they relocate bulbs if this occurs. Don't leave are brought indoors. When ready to be the lights on for long periods of time or trilrlmed, the trunk should be cut off when away Crom home," the chief cau- diagonally about one inch above the tiohed. original cut. He also pointed out that lights sholild Trees, said Latimer, should be placed not be strung on m:etal trees because o( in water or wet' sand and kept as cool as , \.the hazard of elect~cal sh~s. . .. . ,., ·' " . -Another alternative, Latuner sa4t,· Ia to possible. Commer1cal stands w1~h. water buy a "flame proofed" tree that hf! been reservoirs are recommended. Be sure (o treated with fire retardant chemlcals. keep the water level up as the tree Such trees are .required in public absorbs water continually," the chief ex-assembly halls, schools and institutions, plained. the fire chief noted. After the formalities and resolutions are passed, some sort of. measure pro- positig the addition of enough fluorid~ to bring the cOnte11t u~ .to one ~rt per million l PPM) will '·,appear: ~fore the electorate alOQg with a 1Jate of candi· dates for two council seat\. Controversy alreadr SL.ll'rounds · the· matter, with bitter foes of mass "medication" protesting: The council's most Staunch advocate of nuoridjtion, Dr. Wade tower, voted for placlnt the issue on the ballot after his initial motion to add the compound to water dea4}ocked. : ~ ,.; But despite ~is 'Vqte,. the 't-etired:oral surgeon lamented the expectation that the controversial matter would cause tempers to flare duriria: the campai.J!;t season. ~ • ·tie warned Citiiens··~beware of·11sci~ tactics and propaganda" thai generally acrompany Ouorldation controversies. At the, meeting two weeks ago , when Mrs. Eva Riley, an angry nuorldation fighter, passed around a photograph of a gnarled · ·youngster suffering Ir om rheumatoid arthritis. She hinted that nuoride rompounds aggravate the crlp. ' Suspect Shells Out Evidence MENLO PARK (UPI) .-Palroil!llll Bradley Jones had little trouble in solv: ln2 the theft at Head'1 Market. He just followed a trail of peanut· shells. Jones traced the: shells wbout two blocks where they ended at a dOOJ!. The officer Docked and ·an IS.year:Old answered. The youth denied any knowl- edge of the theft. However, he could not uplain where he got about 25 pounds o{ peanuts and a large stock of popcorn., Two you11ger boys were; also implicated. simple majority ot ayes. .• ' . I Propane Fuel For. New City .1 ;.·,·:.: :,;.· Buses Prop<>SOO I .• ! I . ' wsu••· B<;idl'i' • .-. nee1 ~ buseS 'riiay becomenot'OOl; the~ ~' but the cleaneet attachments to lOeM streets if a proJIO!!.( 40 co~verf tMm. to1 propane gas fuel-~b. .. ~ . ' Fo.r environmental pdrpote1, cre.ater effJ~ency and reduction . in OperaUonaJ' !'Wntenance, the, conversipn ~ ~, 1s being conslgered~ reP,Orted. .. Alvtn O. Aulry,. adDlinistra~ve ·~t tl).i atY,; Manager Lawrence D. Rose. The 'final decilionv~ the r»oCfMlt ~I version offer by a local Pl'Oi** ltlee ~ firm-will be made by ·Mondly, Autry ad· ded. . 1 The firm wonld pay tbe eoe:t ot. eon-' vetting the four new mlni-bu&el to· P"O-; pane, and set u~ the neceuary futJ tlllb 1 and service eqwpm.ent in the dty yard ta return for the city'•· patrona11 in ' ptirchaSing proptne. · . Au"lry term!d the conversion tt.t ~ pane "a tremendpwl step ,ton~ tm-, proving : the en'(ironment." The pl'Oplne, he said, burns much more efficiently. tn . a combtlstion engine and ·tberefart.-tM · amount of pollutants sent lnlQ . the air Ui greatly reduced. Autry also relealed the HgurM lot tbt first week of the municipal trinlit service whlch show 2,765 peclONI took ad--. vantage of the buses which· covered: ~oi1 miles. "We found fmm. our analy1ll of , the· number of passengf;r1 that the Top·Of the World runs were more tif • tuOCeU , than we could hilve hoped for," he said., • The 'rieW service',• Autry nOted, ~ · Aj.rline Loses Plea l\iute1 , .. veral 111nes a day to. S.Uth " , • ~111. ~nd noz:th Lagun1 Beae~ .-, ,..ii WASHINGTON (UP!J -Th< Supreme l ••·tbO.Top n( Ille World ind l\j'y.llie Court today rejected an af)peal by Uni~ Hills area. 11We'vt increased the mmii-. ' Airlines, which was found to have of runs, the number of buses and the fre· violated the Civil Rights Act by requirifig quency of the runs over· ~t Qt l thl that stewardt¥es be unmarried. former service," ·Autry said. The financial subcommittee, 1n its final recommendation, suggested the board wait until late next year to make a final decision. By that time a yiµ1r's operation In the San Diego County districts. woul~ make detailed information available on cost as well as scholastic advantages. Stamp Albums Now, Available "Mini-albums" containing the 24 com· memorative stamps issued during 1971 are n~w available for purchase at both bran~hes · of the Laguna Beach post of· fice, as' well as the Laguna Hills and Souih Laguna branches. The ''Better Idea'' Christmas Gift Viejo High Boys ' Now Wear Wigs Boys attending Mission Viejo High School are wearing wigs to Ct>ver up long hair that violates the Tustin High School District's dress and grooming code. Trustee Dickran Borani'an asked Mon- day night if students were being allowed to Wear wigs. Principal Robert Bosanko conlirmed that students were wearing them. Wigs haven 't yet been deemed to be disruptive, Bosanko said adding, "when they do we'll take appropriate action." "The albums are primarily designed to encourage stamp collecting by young peri;Qns," qoted Don Rose, Laguna Beach Postmaster. Each mini-album, he added, costs $2.50. "We are pleased that we can make available these attractive mini-albums throughout our area, partlcuJarly at this time of year, since they make sn ideal Chi'istmas gift for collectors or as a starter for neophyte philatelists," the postmaster said. Would-he Journalist Wins Clemente Jr. Miss Title A 17-year-0ld San Clemente High ScJ10ol coed With a wide range of school ac- tivities and sights set on a journalism career Is San Clemente's new Junior Miss this Week. Cydthia Johnson, daughter of William Johnson and Mrs. Janice B. Johnson o( San Clemente, won the tiUe from a field of eight contestants in the annual Jaycee· sponsored pageant last w~ekend. The blonde, a native O( Pasadena, will compete in the state finals of the annual compeUtion early next .rear OR Santa Rosa. An eslimated 200 person, attended the second annual observance of the local competition Saturday evening at San Clemente High School. Miss Johnson told the audience she en• joys participating in the A Capella Choir at the high school best. Her other interests and acllievements on the Trilon camp~ 'l~clude ':>ral"!a. Club. Thespian Honor Society, "Cahfom!a Scholarship Federation, stu~ent counC!_I, nrst place for two consecutive years in the America n Legion and Lions Club apeech contests in San Clem~te and third place in the Legion's stale finals ol the speech competition. SAN CLEMENTE JUNIOR MISS Cynthie Johnson, 17 Miss Johnson hopes to attend SOuthern Calih>111Ja College in Costa Mesa Ind study joumallsm or another phase of writing. pearance were Suzanne KAhal, Sandi journalism or another phase or wrlUng. Schltger, ',I'heresa Rhyne, Naomi Pen- The. other contestant.s ln the pagunt nlno, Orrie Olien, J ill Miller and •lreflng achievement, poile an<1 •P-1 K1thryne Lock•. \. For Your Year 'Round Driving Pleasure CAPRI • • • Our Sexy Europen Import Unbelievable & Unmatched ln This Price Class ••• From only ... $2699. -... ·.· Motor Trends "Car of The Year" ORDER YOUR CHOICE TODAY! l I~' r ( H • 2828 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA ·• &40·5830 · .... MONTEGO • • • : Priced from Only ••• $3323. ' .. . •. COUGAR e MARQUIS e MONTEREY e COME1:_ e CAPRI •• ALL 1972 MODELS •• I ' '' • __. I • I ' I r I I I I i I '· I 1 1 ' 'J I ' I I 1 I I ' I I r . , l I I 1 I I • I I • I I . I ! I • •'• ' ., • ... --· ...... , • f DAIL V OILOT T.....,, °"""bw 14, 1971 Allies Join In Attacks OnN. Viets SAIGON (UPI) -A !wee of S,000 Cambodl111 troops bu joined a 6,llOl).man South Vletnamea. tuk force seeldng two North Vietn.amese dlvlllons ln the ruin! ol ibe Cbup rubber plantation ln eastern Cambodia, mlllt.ary IOW'ces nported to- day. 1be IOUl'ces II.id SOuth Vielnamese reconnailaance teams of up to 30 men each jumped today into the. plantation from the at.eel ladders of U.S. helicopters to try ID l\llde lhe allied task l0<te ID lhe 10,000.man Communist force. ' U. Col. Trin Va Phu, commander of South Vietnam's 9th Airborne Battalion. a.aid government paratroops killed seven Communists today while p a tr o 11 i n g around Chup but "we don't exp@Ct much &.."'tion today or tomorrow." He said It would be like Dambe -"two or three daya more and we'll make con· tact ln a bl& way.'' Many of the same troope in the Chup area batUed for four daya last week around the town of Dambe, 20 miles to the norlhea.5t, and the Soulh Vietname.e &ald Ibey killed 750 Commllllilt. and loot 75 Saigon troops killed and 100 wowuled. The allied action was centered around the tiny town of Olup which was occupied without 1 f11ht two and a half week! ago by South Vietnamese paratroopers soon liter the start ci. the current drive. Baek ln V.S. China Prisoners Find Big Change . . PlilLADELPHIA (AP) - A YOUlll wt>nll.D who had bef:n given up for dead by htr parents and a government clvlllan empl:oye who spent mum ci hla It years cl. cmfinement in solitary returned to the U.S. mainland today after their release by Communist China. One was 6Tniling and exuberant, the other withdrawn, cautious. Both ?i!ary Ann Harbert, a slender, at· tractive woman who celebrates her 24th birthday two days after Chri.slmas, and Richard Fecteau, Lynn, Mau., expressed ·wonderment at teehnological changes. An Air Force officer who accompanied them on the 27-hour, 10,000-mile flight tc freedom said Miss Harbert waa anxk>u1 to know "if we had put a man On the moon yet." "l tcld her yes. we had put six men on the moon," said Col. Leonard W. Johnson Jr., commander of the 9th AeromedlcaJ Evacuation Group at Clark Alr Base in the Philippines. He said she replied, "I really don't know, I hadn't heard about it. Many peo- ple in Chlna don't know that. The last thing we knew about apace waa that Russia had something circling the moon." "I feel great, It was a fine trip and I'm glad to be hame," MiM Harbert uid In the only words apoken to newsmt!n since ~ ahe and Fecteau be1an lheir lll&hl from Hon& Koog whert they were treed Moo. d&y. "I'm so happy to be back," a mtllin& Fecteau said as he and Mill H8">ert ar· rived by helicopter at Valley Force Military HospitaJ, 25 milu northeut of here. The p11ir arived at 5:40 a.m. after 1 short nJght f r o m McGuire Air Force Base, N.J., their flrat maln1and U.S. landlall 1in~e b:larding a U«S. Alr Force C1 41 ,t Hong Kong. Newsmen were not permitted to talk. to them, although one reporter managed to get close enough to exchange a few words. An Air Force apokeswn aaid it wu their decision not to talk to Bll:yone. Fecteau, served 19 year1 of a 2G:year sentence on Chinese charges of 11pyin1. Miss Harbert, whose parents live in Pafo Alto, had been a captive of the Red Chinese for three years. "They are in very good phyaical con- dition," Johnson aaid. "This permitted them to go half way around the world without pause." He said "Milis Harbert is lively and outgoing and both are congenial and alert." He described Fecteau as very quiet and reserved. Storm Builds Up • Ill West ' Red River Threatens . (o Spill Over Banks COLD U '' WtAfM(I f010CAS11} the. Zev-o KiV\<j VJ iV1cl ~hi rt 7 fashion island; newport center 644-5070 -~ -:.----' - • • W iill Street Blaze Hurts l 36 Firemen NEW YORK (AP) -Two bulldlnp were ravaged aQ<1 36 firtmen lnjW'!d 1 Monday by a spectacular fire that smothered sevtral blocks in Manhattan's financW district with a curtain ol thick smoke. IJ l'I Tilt!llMM MARY ANN HARBERT, FLIGHT SURGEON LEONARD JOHNSON One of Her Flr1t Questions: "Did We Put Min on Moon?" Irish Extremists Attacl{ Homes of Public Figures 1 About 17~ Oremen aupported by 30 pieces of fire apparatus poured thousands of gallons of · water into the burning buildings for more than five hours. Several thousand Wall Streeters were evacuated into the streets, service was cut off at a nearby nooded subway sta· lion and traffic was blocked up in what became a monumental tieup complicated by the enveloping smoke. "You can't see your feet in front cl. your face ," said one bystander ~s others hurried away with handkerchiefs and scarves pressed tlghlly to their faces. The lire broke1 out about 1 p.m. in 1 grease duct of Schwarti's Restaurant at 29 Trinity Place and spread through tM ZO..foot·long restaurant Into a rear ad· joining building on Broadway. The flames were finally brought under control about fi p.m .. but not before partl" of the fifth and sixth floors at the top ol ~ the Schwartz building collapsed. ' Firemen reported rescuing four men trapped in the 19th century atrudures. > There were no reported civilian injuries. ) The fire destroyed about $2.S0.000 worth ) of Xerox equipment and spare copy ~ machine parts th.at were atored ln the~ Broadway bu,ilding. BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UPI) -Barnhill and blew up his home. Fire ofncials said the rtre fighten: auf- Gunmen and bombers today struck at "It appears they were pickina: mosily fti;ed f:O~ .smoke Inhalation and more ) four privat.e homes mostly belonging to on public figures today," army aources minor mJunes. 1 public figures and including the residence said . 1. of another Northern Ireland senator, the Shortly before 11 a.rn. two men forced , army said. lheir way inlD the home of David U.N. Adopts Egypt 8 Three extremists, one with a gun , hi· \Vilkinson, former chairman of a Protes-~ jacked 1 achoolbus near Newry, County tant Unionist association. ordered the Pullout Resolution ~. Down, ordered out the 14 children and the family out and blew out the front of. the driver and set it afire. house. UNITED NATIONS (UPI ) -The U.N.~ In the incidents in the residential Extremists also planted a bomb at the General A s 8 e m b I y overwhelmingly~ Malone area, a religiously mixed district Malone Road home of William Christie, a adopted an Egyptian-sponsored resolution near Queen's University in Belfast one justice of the peace, but it fail. to go Monday night urging that Is r a e 1~ gunman fired a shot into the home of off. withdraw from all occupied Arab ter· Mrs. Edith Taggart. a senator, when her Another bomb that exploded at a home ritories and demanding a ''jusl and .. bu.sband went to answer the door. on Springfield Parade set fire to the lasting peace:" in the Middle East. The man hit Taggart on the head. He house. The residents were not im· The U.S. abstained from voting . was taken to a hospital, Mrs. Taggart mediately identified by the army. The resolution , sponsored by 22 nations. J was suffering from shock and an armed Gunmen earlier bombed a hotel, Masonic also urged reactivatio~ of the Middle . guard was placed at the home, the army hall and a custom! post near the border East peace talks under the guicianc4; of • aaid. with the Irish Republic during the night Swedish Ambassador Gunnar V. Jamng."' Sund m•"men i.ai-.1 Sen. John In escalating violence along the frontier. Israel broke off those talk! in February. ~ ~~~·~Y~·J•'.'.".'.'.-··'.'.:'.'..·-~~~:._:::::_:::::_.:::.::::::~..:.:::::::..::::=.:::::.::.:::::.::.__:::::.:.::.:::.:::..:::.::...:=..:_~~--'-j ~ ·-·--... :• Now '.that.~the.,7% excise tax•is ·repealed, you'll save money on all of our cars. But thats nothing new from us. For th&-past 24 yea rs, Volkswagen& hav• hod the justirted reputation of &avlng ~cple money. And now thot the 73 federal exelst ·frax hos bee!'I repealed, you con sa ve even more. In fact, even if you hoppaned to hovt bought one of our carj before now but ofter Aug. 15, the 73 wi l still be refunded lo you otyour Volkswagen deoler •. If you bought one befort Aug.JS; do,,ii' feel dei:irived. r You're stHI sovi!'lg over the overa9i"COt" obout $1.500 on the car Itself, over $100 o year on gos, ond $who·knows-how-much on repoiri. HUNTINGTON BEACH Harbour Volkswagen, Inc . 18711 Beach Boulevard ~842-4435 I ' NEWPORT BEACH Chick Iverson, Inc. 445 E. Coost Hwy. 673-0900 SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO Bill Yates, Inc. 32852 Volle Rood 499-2261 • Kissinger <lase Court to ·study i --Pentagon _ ' Politres Wiretilp Issues 'Costly' . . ' WASHINGTON (AP) WASHING TON (AP) -The tHeir claims al Illegal wiretap-David Packard, •'I<> ralgned Supreme Court aneed today Monday U deputy defense to d . It' ping. Federal appeals courts secretary in the NI :r o o ec1de whether grand jury in ~ew Orleans Ind ~ Fra'n-AdminlstraUoQ. 11~ya 1he Pen- wltnesses have a right to cisco, ruliog in other cases, ~lenge the legaUt1 O·f have held wltne83el do not tagon could save $1 bllllon,a -•-• • year by closing military baaes government wireta..,;.,. bti have the right lo ,refusa lo that are being kept aellve for fore testifying. testify on the bu1s of wiretap political teuODf. A unanimous court took on allegations. In a farewell news eon- the wireta p issue In twu cases' ference, ~ multimillionaire one involving the alleged kldt Sister Jogues, 52, former California e I e ctr on 1c 8 nap 1plot against presidentlal provincial of the Sacred Heart ~anufacturer referred to con- adviser Henry A. l,Gsslnger of Mary religious order ln.-i gressmen who block Pentagon and th e other a grand jury in· New York, and Mlss Wal5b, • plans· to shut down , military vestlgation of Las Vegas ~. declined· to help the Har-facilities in their districts. gambling. . ~ts burg, Pa., grand jury that 1 f'There'I 00 quesUon we The court agreed to lake a mdlcted the Rev. Philip F. could make savings if we look at the actiqn of a federal · Berrigan and seveD other! in could take actions without appeals court in Philadtlpbia th.e alleged plot 'a g a 1 n st constraints," J>ackard said. which reversed civil contempt Kissinger. Th~ y had been But Packard's former boss convictions of Sister Jogues grant~ immunity from pro-Defense !Secretary Melvin a'. Egan and former nun Anne secut1on with respect to any Laird, lndlcated there are 00 Walsh, balking witnesses ln m~tter about which they immediate plans for shut- the Ki ssinger inquiry. .nu~ht be compelled to testily. dQWDS. Some congressmen feel The appeaJs court held Stster Jogues alleged that the Pentagon already has witnesses may refllM! to the telepho~f her o~er Jn · movei:I. to fast in· eliminating cooperate with gn>nd. juries New Y~rk Rome were 2.7 million military and until there is a hearing tm tapped illegally y the FBI. defense-related jobs with the ARE YOU HAVIN!; A PARTY So Good It Will H11unt You 'Ti! It's Gone! • , • ••. bee-inn • wt pl1nntd ti that w.v. ey using only fresh llln"":I trorn Iowa's cor11 ltd pork~rs -OOJr $low..iry wring method, r111 Wl1con1ln llld<atY and SP$>11wood 1mok1r>v, :JO.hour iw1n bllklng, hont'f •n 1p!c• 111111. So deJkla!A Ind 1ppe!11ln11 w1 lust W!lt.lldn'I knilw how 10 lmpr<>~ this pr<> d<Kf we've been m1kl!"lll for tllt 11111 l-1 ve.rs. Spiral 1llctd too, from tOP to llallom for 111.y r..mov1I ol sllcn, yel r1lllns 'Wholl t>am' 1ppnr1nc;1 tor Mrvlng. Every 1llc1 llM Ml/l"N! d1lecllbl1 ttllckMU. Complt11ly bektd end ready IG 1erve. Ordet" YDU• Honey fl•ked Ham tod1y, •n aClvtn!ure In hamlGYITl«ll YGU'U newr ~t. I AIL STORU 3700 E. COAST HYM. 1222 S. BROOKHURST CORONA DEL R ANAHEIM (1 Ill W. l"l'ff (......,.) f1 (911 1111 in VHl"lt C.,ltrl QS-Hll ~. ' . l winding down of the Indochina war, Laird said, Packard, wh> said he w a s quitting for strictly persona] reasons, told newsmen he would remain in Washington for several weeks before returning to California· to take over as board chairman of the Hewlett-Packard Co. of Palo Alto. Firm Sued For ·River Pollution TALLAHASSEE. F1a. '(UPI) -Phosphate slime on the Peace River is settling but angry Florida officials have filed a $20 mJllion damage suit .against Cities Service on Co., whose equipment allegedly unleashed the fish-killing tide. The damage suit. largest ever filed by the Florida Pollution Control Department. asked the Polk County Clrcult Court Monday to shut down Cities Service's Fort Meade phosphate plant unless It com- plies with 1tate anUpollutlon Jaws. Biologist. and c be m 11 ts from the Pollution Control Department's regional offlce in Punta Gorda reported that 60 to 70 percent al the murky· gray slime bad iettled lo the bottom. . · ' • ' . Leciding Marijuana Camp~igner Freed . JACKSON, Mlclt. (AP) -Aft<r having ..,.ed more than two years of a 10.year prboti term for poaession of two marijuana cigarettes. John Sinclair bas been released from Southern Mkhtgan Prllon. vowing to conUnue b1J cam- paian for Ieglllzatlon ol the 1U1n»tlc. The State Supreme Court, which ls conalderh!g Sloclair's ~ppeal al hill conviction, ordeftd hla .. 1eaae on 12,l!CIO. bond Monday. The 0DWt .said lt ~ Ii, action becaust ol I drug bill paS>ed by the leglalature Jail week provldeo much milder penalties for aome marijUjna offenses. The high couit prevlollaly bad r.luaed bail for. Sinclair, leader al Ille Rainbow Peqlle:a Parly, fonnerly lll1own aa the White Panther Parly. -Sinclair bad twice beforo been charged with nan:oUcs violatlooJ. The Ami ArbcN>ased party advocai<& !egallzaUoo ol marijuana, As Sinclair was releaaed he waa greeted by his mother. his wife, Len.I, an~ his cblldrtn, Sunny, 4, and Celiea, 2. A small group al hla followen welcomed him with yells IJld dancing. · · Sinclair ·contended in hla appNl lo Ille Mlcbigan Supreme Court that the state law under wblcb be was m1victed on July 28, 1969, violatei equal proleclioa clauael al the Michl· gan and U.Si constltutkm: by treating marijuana u a hard drug. He further claimed hll pmllahmmt was inhumane, cruel and unsuual. Help on Wa11 She Must Force SeH To Breathe-orDie SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPI) -Sandra Bobbit, 25, who bas a rare disease shared by only about 30 persons ln the world, must consciously mate an ef. fort lo breathe. ll llbe doe.n' think about it, she doesn't breathe. Today abe bad hopes of al least a ~ cure. "We are going to 1eod her up to Connecticut for a speclal operation," her mother sal"' Extra Pay Benefits? Monday. She said a ipOcial w•~~'GTON (UPI) •-"gadget" will be Implanted in · ~m -~ Miss Bobbit" body. estimated half-million Jobless "I don't know bow the Americans would get up to U gadget operates, but you in--addilionll weeks of unemploy· sert it into the nerve that ment checks when. their initial regulates the brathing llld ellglhlllty nlllll out under a bill then insert the other end into . , a pacer which •be tapes lo ber . approved by a Holise-Senate chest. She must turn tt on at conference commit.tee. night wbe!> sbe goa lo sleep," Both ·bouaea oou!d -·Jbe M'8. Bobbit aaid. rneuun today In the clolintl Moot ol the ._ have hours al the l!nt .... ion of been taken care of, but the the l2nd ConlrUI-• · Bobblts atil! are trying to nlae Ellg!ble for the additional •t,500 for the trip and opera· benefit. -1cl be --In lion. . alai<& where unemployment, Miss Bobbit bas been In the counting only inlured workers lnlenllve· care unit al the Bu· and thole whose regular 39 ar County Hospital for tbr<e wMka of benefita have nin ·>nontha. During that time ou~ baa reached 1\1 percent of nand-:lbave been alerted 17 the . work lozie. . Even a tiny cut wouldn't-if it weren't for calcium. Surprised? Because you thought calcium was just t.o build bones for kids? Even an adult needs the calcium in two glasses of milk a day. glJJssesc{ milk. (Children need more: up.t.o age nine, 3 glasses; up t.o eighteen, 4 glllll!PS. Pregnant and . nursingwomen also need the calcium in 4 gla!!ll'JI of milk daily.) Can you get enough calcium from ~foods? Because calcium-the calcium you get mainly in milk-is one of the chemicals you need t.o make your blood clot. And t.o make your muscles contract. And t.o send the signals that Jet you see, hear, feel and smell And to keep your bones strong and healthy throughout life. How much calcium should you have? For adults, the National Re- search Council recommends 800 ·milligrams a day: about as much as you get in a normal diet if it includes two CAUFORHIA MllJ( AOVlSOftY BOARD . . .. Noteasily.Forewnple, two glBS!eSofmilk give you as much calcium as each of the following: 20 eggs, 14 sweet pofQl.oes, 20 cups _.,..__. of oatmeal, 11>7 pints of ice cream, 16cups of cabbage, 212 cups of cottage cheese. When it comes t.o cal· ciwn, there's no real sub- stitute for milk. Every bodyneeds calcium. . .. , - TLMlday, Cteombtr 14, 19n DAILY PILOT f f ; Ex-pilot Kills All In Family . . --···--· ---~' Do Something Beautifui .... Amtrcl111 Exprut ltnl!Amerlc;tfll 11111 MIJIW Cll•l'9t tDD. ' . You may have heard o! energy shortages hitting parts of the country. Slioitages .thatintlude natural gas. Can it happen ·here? As far as your home needs are concerned, no. We'll be able to supply all our 11.firm.11 customers, such as same West Texas from which we've hl'PUgl:l~~ gas for nearly 25 years. We're~ping finance exploration for new gas .fihlds there. But whether by pjpe or by ship, gas from Orle Or iilOl'e'new sources should be bolstering present supplies . homes and btisinesses and most · industries. (Since we don't have an overabundance of gas, we may·havc to interrupt deliveries more often to our industrial crustomcrs, who are I prepared lo mtch to other fuels • whenever 11.firm" custotners', · needs require.) But in a ~years, as . Southem California grows, ."( "·-· ~.El:'t~~~~c;"~ :C ~·''1 ~ expected gt!>Wth. · #' •• ••• That's why the Gas company \ is lining up added supplies now. ; We're loOking in Alaska. And .i Canada. Al)d in Central and South ! America. These places offer huge ! potential natural gas deposits. With ! within a few years. · · . We've.been setvingS'11Jthem CaHfo!nia.for over 100 years now. And we intend to go on like this for another c;.nZ,:&~ Southern .. ~ . __ ..... _ ~ ~ ·problems to match.· '· The terrain is either roadlcss ice \, W.-1111".; l"'I' "!1Po ·~ and tundra or road.less swamp and ...... ,.. •• '° k.p you stap~lid. { jungle. Tu get the gas out, we may ii have to build thousands of miles of ! i pipeline-being careful to maintain i \ the land'• d;licate balance ol nature --~ \ \ Orwcmay.liavoto buildapcnsivo \ •, plants to liquefy the gas at minus •-. •-., 2S8°F, thep. ship it home in tankers -. ••••• ••••••••• built like ""'"' ..... t tliennos bottles. t'V"IQ. ••••••• ••••••••• AnothJ~ing source is the ll:J= .......... ., •• ~.tafieltbi&tn.tom.,.,_ ·,_ __ • ! ' • . ... .. ..a.;.. ......... ~----·- . . . . ,. ' .~ ... ~ .. _.,... ____ ... ~ • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE -A Sorry Performance In 48 hours of the special session caJ.1.t·ftx,G9v. Ronald Reagan, the Legislature accomplished more than 11 bad In 11 months of the regular ses,ion -long· est in Calllornia history. t 1 Angrylartisanship had left the two key· issues ol taxation an reapportionment unreso·Jved w.ben the two houses adjourned week before last. It waS a display of legislative irresponsibility almost unparalleled. AQ.d all the more so since our legislators now are well·paid, full- time lawru~. . Reigih ~o(taction when he promised the Demo--' cratic le4~ers h~ would consider rea,Pportionment one. the tax bill ~s passed. • 'i 4 ••· 1 Ove"11.'.Jteagan came out of lhi'l'l n\onlhs ol bick ... erlng and l'llb1i1rJ1~ging looking <onsiderapiy belier ·'I• than the . ~jnooratic leadership and · the rank-and-file members ot both hbuses. A Pr"l!CISai td .cut off the legfsl.ators' $30·a-day- lax·frte expense allowance .as of, say, July 1 each year looks_ •• i:!flt~· apd better the more we-'r'ev1ew the Legi5-latare'f<•~sgracefully ,da~.dling performance this,yoar. For thr t,,,.fi\ion it.iWill 'ci>st: them to operate the Leg- islaturt1 ·"· W1 the. taxpay,ers of Calilofnia deserve a lot ~ter._; · ·~ ... " t4 I ' -l'i., I ' ' 4 ~ -., •.•• ···-· •• &~ ,li~m ··:Ox~r Theory · ~ ,fittally t~'mphed qver theory in Governor Reagon'• mind when.' e accepted withholding of state lnoome taxes. Once damantly.·opposed to withholding and declaring his "leet were· i~oilcrete" on the issue, the governor came to-llct>gnize~these facts of the situ- ation: -t·y. • ' ment payments, found it more than ever dlfiicult under the tax boost to come up with a lump sum payment on A~ril 15. The habit of squirreling away money !or a ramy 1!ay or for a big annual tax bite \jn't what it once was, lamentable as that may be. .!.... A serious cash flow problem developed for the state. It had money April 15, either ).ess or more than expecte<I and liudgeted, but not in November. · ""'A $330 million · deficit In the current budget meant 4lither going to withholding or Issuing scrip - for the first time since the Great Depression -to pay its current bills. -Not least important, as the only one of 38 states that levy income taxes not to have withholdln&1 Cali-- iornia bas lost counUess millions or dollars in legitimate tax revenue due to the escape of transi ents. These per· sons come· into the state, earn money, use tu.·s.upport· · ed servi~es, then leave without paying any income· tax... That will end Jan. 1. when tp.e new Jaw goes into effecl _ >;rnong other provisiQDS of the new meas_ure is a .requirement that $150 million earmarked for capital outlay must be spent by 1974--75 for these programs: -$80 million for higher education. '-$40 million !or beaches and parks. ·-·$30 million for local school earthquake safetr.. · .The penalty against the executive branch for fail· • ure tO follow this directive will be a half·cent reduction in the siite sales tax rate in 1975. All this is ·a:ri1Qye in the right direction. But as Controller Houston I. Flo,umoy pointed out last week, it's a '4stop-gap measure at best and gives little, if any, 'breathing roOm in our·tong·ran~e need for tax reform." Failure to come ~ grips· With the problem of com· prehensive tax rcforin;includ~g real relief for properly taxpayers and new answers to' schoo~ -finlrtcing, bluntly " I -Unrealistic stile ffnancingl. i'1 the prior admin· istration of Gov. Edmu'nd ,G: (Pal)·Brown brought on a hefty increase iii the ~t,e.incom'e tax in Reagan's first year in office. -·, ,., .:.~ .:...: :-:·_ · -Taxpayers, tfiitd.lC)·a.~i-eConomy with install· • _..;;. . - and simply means that both the Legislature and·' t~f .. , administratioO blew it, and bidly, despite the belated- breakthroilgtr.On withh~ding. ·. ~.,_ "I NOW P~ONOUN(E YOU ~N· AN~· MS.// Lilleral-Canservati~ Division Over lndia·Pd'kis(fin Dear . ' , . <#. -J • . ' .Pointle.s·sness of Pious Partisans -~--· 1 ! A colleague just back from England / , lent Mme .. ~ :~M1bill 1 l\001 the Apollo '"'" fl•fll? ;..t.m _,..._. ....,... ., TheaTer 1A LOrlclo1\, by way of recom-MCIUatltJ p. ., t11e -· ..,. mending a new play he enormously en-,... "' ....,.~.,.._ .• .._.. .... Deur ....... jo~ there. ("Forget,Me-Not Lane" is, ' -r.. ' the tlUe). • ~ .,., • -s .,. llut I.ha! inlerest.d'm<10st annoch.in '"' • . tbl,iJ..,bjU WU f<lllll·PU•·•d !Or '[ii:m With all this, •gll" llalk of the of MO~ap b.rokcrl illustrated with' a ~ 14'Xmericani:r.aUontt .of Enala,nd, It's good ph6fcjcr'aiti of twb 'jctvlld 'tneti' 'sipping "lq'know then'a a·blt of old Britain left in bra-..,.,, "'nd ufl'i Jermyn Street.: 1°"'• whlmsv, the off. 1"",. • ~ in · 'bind manner, the'~] 'and i....'L'i .. se""" of 1t cigars in a PoS """''"" '""' riataurant. v1l.lues -all 'tlJese traltJ we · have treasured, from early Fielding to· late,· ' THE CAPTION OF Wodehouse, 3till "Setaln their vesUglil the ad read eagag-4 'tOot.s in even io Improbable an enterl!J'i!t in&Jy.:. ·~would ~~ as· mortgage tirokering. 1er ih!'.se' me~ 1...,.; - an • !fUU!' · moz1gNJe "'NO DOUBT, AN AD of this sort would problem?" And the fall flat in the States, where the naUonal · ~f copy· con tin-pi.ell es compel us to regard the pursuit ol '.~A.,t' first sight -. _..probably. ""~t.~ .. business as a solemn, almost holy, Frankly, these days Richard Croucher· cr~~e, involving enof!OOUS s~eat, uif" f>av1d Redch!I t8.n ·think ot more .sacr1f1ce a~ the subordination Ofl an amusing things to do than si1 in tbeir of· . __ other values. Who are these two. brash fice day·ln ind day-out, b r o t i n g ·jackanapes, Croucher a~ R e o c h , mortgages and insurance. Over the a~yway, and why do thty flagrantly years 1uccess at solving impossible YfioJate our <;an®l of bypOcrlsy by naun-bouie'~rchase problems.for peQple ga, .. t ~g "long l~hcil" and "more amusing ma"'ae them rjch, eccentric, given .to Jong ttung_s to do f . IW1Ches, ~ • Uie .• cbnrmlssibnlrrg ·of· • ~This t~hnlq~e or nonchalant un- wuteful advertisements. derstatement, apparently, Is still ef· . , (~tive int Englana, ~at least for certain .. HOWEVER, IF YOU have ·a mo~age· kinds of gbc!,ds'8nd strvlces. It bespeak! a pr.o.Jll,ant•Ddi'J>U..Can catch them'durloii . more cultlvatedi public and possibly a q!lt of their lnfrt<Jllent visits to their of-' more humane "perspective on the totality fiet, they wtft"lls1erft0 yOur case-::al'ld to . bf what we call "the g~ life." Here, to endlea trouble on your behalf to make Croucher, Reoch and Partners would be 1ure You cet the vuy ~,possible (.ates . drummed out of the corps Jor corporate available. , • " heresy in the first IC!egree. . -' .... ~ .~. ~-, 'A Question. of Madness ' . '-· . . . ' .. ,_ . . ~. : ~ ' ' Kafka · ·lives: :.Tw& .,Stviet RUSSiar\· brothers, Roy and Zhores Medvedev, rupectlvely prominent In the fields of history and biology, present a documen- tary cue of the use of psychiatry as a weapon of Soviet reprisal against dissent In an extraordinary book called "A Questton of f\l1does1." It was sn1uggled in manuscript to London and •published thtre last year. It suggests a blend of Kafka's "The Trial'' and Koestler's "Darkness at Noon.'' Yet it is all too true, the brothers· ;~Perhaps most extraordinary •. vedev, the principal ac~L · victim ln ' shady drama, Js pr€!enUy not In some Si68(ian dete_otk>rfCamp, e.s a WOilam rea<ter . .Jlllght'iusptct, but '!ill holdl a key :.,_'folilion ; at the Lenin AeriCUltural ~y al Borovsk (or did, u this Aml!k'n edition went to preuJ. . ' ~ ·r -· . t-• i, 'fh,e lJool..•111a11 ' ) protest. Like Zhorts 1 good Marxist, Roy believes th~ .soviet Union Is old enough and a sophlrtlcattd enou1h society to abandon 01;1tdated Stalinist ideas and to permit l~vldual liberty and heated ·d I SCUS$ton, polltlca\ly, sclentlflcally, hi~torically, whatever. But a clique of .stallnlsts rs still very much In charge and Zhores, we find here, was only one of many avant garde thinkers, or ••'aissidents" housed ln such clinical detention statlom. . I ' ' • 1i " WASHINGTON -Refe we. go again at lhe favorite American pastime of choos- ing up sides. If you are a~liberal you1are lot' India; jf you 11re•a conservative you t._te for Paklsla."n.. .M,iddle-of·the-roaders are neutral. , . L1ttle purpose is served except· to ahlrpen the divisions ln Amtiicai'I life al a time when this is least nt;!ded. Part GI. the blame rests with the • Nixon ad- nilnlslration for having br3nded India the , aggttuor without ·artne same time hav: •lni\ ~ied lhe context · in which blame waS actd on Jnd,ira cCltJbd.l's govern---.. menl. • ·. • · l: . .;t- That ...permltted the DtlD oc rat l c preside'1liai ciaidt-,. . . dates, who llaY• until' ' · ' now been r.eachlng JO vain for a.foreign policy. issue, to de- nounce the . Nixon administration for ·· JfRingllp 'with a mil- Jlary dictaiorsgip ~gainat 4he SUPP95"" edly benevolent so-~ialism of the Chandi ONLY AS AN APPENDIX after the row had started was it revealed that the NiJ:on admini stration was arranging al :the lime a reasonable settlement !or ... ·• ·. • •· ":"..,.....,.~.,~.ftt:p 1~ ·~ 'India. Their e!forts make it more dil- 1· R .Wi, ril:<'. ··;"'~,·f¥>,1j'." fi<ult for Nixon to resort to the only • -, weapon he has, a permanent aid cutoff l ' ~ . .!:' ·~. 1 . • , ', .:.t ' • h~~r na~~~e~ Yf~~a~n Th~~~h f;o e::~h ' ,.;, ~ ~ -.-'€ blame to go all the way around in the Bengal poliUoal autonomY ."f¥hich Indi;f · religious-based conflict between India , rejected in favor of ap .unnecessar:J ' .and Pakistan which reaches back into ·"resort to arms/India counterclaims .of, misty emotion!! about Kashmir and ir- beffig traductd'by PrtsN:lent N'il:on\rini reconcilable differences of the centuries. · hollow. . · ·: . Atavistic hatreds beyond America n com- 'Ille realltt.!s of what ha~ ~weaed . prehension and international ret3tionshi_ps shouldcstal)4iout stronger .:twi~ JOI' a of as yet unfathomed importance are m- nioment cOtiloning what Ptk · · dld ti,~ voived. F~~Pil<lst1n in trying to P!t'.~:. The readiness of partisans to choose up • B~ug\a Desh movement,,,Ji.~~ ·,~/,. · 1ides on the basis of much overslmplilled IOlig before, that lnd\a.sougltt~ -suppan · lnfonnation should be somewhat cooled of Ru.ssia !or sev~e :.&sl, ~ akistan .. ib)':(re:fltcllng on past Incidents when from West P.J1klst~n s. f~'far-control:_, · '"'f'c.o IrC er n ed • • people became , _Tbe ·pt;ce lnd1a wUJ ;~ ~·rt, un-"'1.overwrought. De Gaulle-, Franco, Peron, d1sc~s.ed: RusSl!Jl • ~-s~ 1n ttie ~u~ :, the Greek colonels, ooe side or another in continent may be. one~ But, tbe .Prle;e, ~go, Nasser, Ch.Ieng Kai-shek have lndia t_does not_ wl -~:~to -.pa~J i'c::tt~ r .. '.llt one' time or another figured in emt>-~rnia~ndtitermll¥'t~ ; 1~~(4~7~m,' .tklnal bate campaigns .In this country. ... M1:.C1N11 goveQl.mt iljliJit"'::7':" ... -·- et¥ilonal and or ten un=n~ ·. tT w AS THE MEASURE of liberalism . lo the United State~ to ~ ~t tha~ ~~ · • to oppose all the aforenamed with bum- TJDS-IS WHv°' SUCIP pri!idential ing rhetoric while such as Mao Tse-tung, possibilities as Sens~Edward.M,. keb.nedy &nd at.one time even Stalin, were deilied and ..Edmund Muskie 'ttong wi.th ottiie.r pp-. as 5:1viors of lhe com~ man. The_ long ponents of Nixon's forelP,_pollcy are., now e~lonaJ Ue to the ong1nal Ghand1 _and performiD& such a val~* ~ f~r . lattr too Nehru now color1 Amencan '. . ,· . ' Jl~ral atta"'chment tO the Indira Ghindl govemmene. It Is too holy to do wrong. Jf the Ghand.I government were as holy as all that , the NiXon administration reasoned, it would have honored sincere efforts to provide all that it wanted ot needed in the form of autonomy in East Pakistan. But. with the strength of Soviet arms, the h:ny)s of New Delhi were em- ~ldened to settle once and for all the .ISslles·. whi<"h have festered since the British divesUture of India. : What stands out in all this Is the ~rlessness ol.· the United States to do 4riythino; about it and the polnUessness ot P,iou:s partlstms seek.Ing an j~sue: •gainst Nixon. Jt wwld be hoped that through all iJs experienres this country would have JPatured enough to wrangle no longer qver internal issues ol the right and left in· foreign ' courrtri~. . 4 •• ,. ' • • Tl{E POiNTLESSNESS is further ~mphaslzed . by the h o w I i n g in· ~onsistencies involved. Those who say we l'l)ust let Viet.pam go its Com munist way are among those who say we must &up. port Indira G;handi. Others are hawkisb about Israel and dovish about Vietnam. Tbe _ Nixon adminlstralion has pr~ claimed strict neutrality and undoubtedly m~t people in this country would agree. I { .. , l Alternatives , i i ' ·ip ·r .oblem Pregnancy To the Editor: 1 found the letters regarding. Jackie Combs' excellent article ol November 11 most Interesting. Unfortunately, problem pregnan cies are not as easily solved as the letter wrilers indicated. Whichever alternative a girl chooses, her choice In- volves guilt. anguish, remorse and soc\11 rejection. There is no right or perfect answer. Each female with a problem pregnancy must decide for herself Which alternative best suits her situation. ABORTION HAS always been ... 111' alternative. Before the Tberapetllic Abor· tion Law wa9 enacted, girls desperately seeking an abortion went through the anguish of searching for an illegal abor· lionlst. Maiming and death were not un- common. Because abortion allowed her to keep the knowledge of her mistake from M>Ciety, and kept her from eotng U1rough an unwanted pregnancy, she was oflen willing to take this risk. . ~ _ : Another alternative ls.lo have-her 1baby and give it up for adoptiori to one of t0011e five to eight couples Wilting for ber chlld. TI1e desire of these couples t.o adopt a child does not guarantee U1at her child wlll have loving, stable parents. Also, atre. suffers the social rejection of having given birth to an illegitimate child. A FURTHER alternative Is to keep her child. Sbe then must feed, clothe and care for this child. Often she does not h1veJ.he education to find an 3dequate job. Many )'{lung girls find that after a lime they n1ust relinquish the.Ir child for adoption. . - :0 available, Be understanding, com· 1 if'~cl" ormunh:1uve; loving, a~are: parents. M . t't._ .. !.: •"' ,1"' , ·, ~."' CARMEN JOHNSON t 8 l lDU"J,, ~1'"'·· "'.' <,.·,~:)~, APCARE Pregnancy Counseling Service ••. ~· .!!... _,. ,-,,_cu.~. .1! ·"<-> ,. (in ion Rl1 etoric ;. :t't. . The mental anguish 1urteted can scar her for life. The final alternative ls lo marry . SOclal and family pre1Surt1 often force this. Tbe: • staUstics on the rate of divorce in youthful marriages ol this type are ex· tremely high. It is time we did something con- structive to prevent problem pN!gnan- cies. Allow sex education in the schools. Find more effective means of birth con· trol. Make birth control devices readily To the Editor: Many union members feel that the Republican Party is against the union, especially now that the President is trying to cul'b the: Inflation spiral. When they come together as a group, a few of the more demented ones, thinking themselves to be in a majority, beg in le> deride the good name of Richard Nixon with nasty Utlle four-letter words. They usually add Ronald Reagan lo their Proving Oral Contracts (" Law in Action rhetoric (Or i! Agnew the only one wbO uses rhe:tor{c? ). ,l·SUPP.OSE• that this is the only way that their dility little demented minds know how to campaign for their own can- didates. I'm sure that they do not persuade . any Republicans to change parties with ttlis abuse. 1 believe that if these rude examples were members of lhe Repuplican farty, that it might make me ash!med to'·tie numbered in the same party with them. IT'S .PROBABLY true that under the Democrats the un ion will have a freer th8nd and PIJSSitilY a higher scale, but ·when I go to lhe. polls, I vote as a citizen, a father, a grandfather and a husband. I ,am interested in . what is good for m1 country and I do not ask George Meant how I should vote and he had better not try to tell me. JAMES BOLDING Letters 7rofn reodtrr are welcome. ·Normally wnter1 1hould convey their 'message1 tn 300 word! or less. The right ~o condtnse lttter1 to fit ipact or eliminate libel is re.,erved. AU ltt- Oral contracts are just as valid as writ· ten ones, with a few exceptions. The main problem Is proof. ll is more dif· flcult to prove an oral cootract, especially when the words are In dispure. The "statute of fraud!" requi(es that some contracta be in writing. Ont com· mon provision involves the sale of goods valued at more than $500. Such contracts should be written. But evtn here, if there is a "memorandum" or some "part performanct," the contract can be en- ron-ed. , ters mus& inc~ude signature and mail--'°' 1 fng address, Out names may be toitfi. made. The oral agreement for more than i held on req11,st if ·sufficient rtcuo" '500 Is then enforceable. " apparent.' Poetry will not bt pub- In another case. an oral contract was / luhed. ~ANGI COAST DAILY PILOT IN A RECENT CA!Jt Mike saw an ad Robert N. Wted, Publh:Mr A BRIWA/l't~~I. Zbore9 had written• revllton -cr:lUc1l of T.O. Lyten~. lhe Stallnllf-' nfllclsl DOW pntty much dllCrtdil<d inl1!1'11alionllly. The book .... poblilhtd ·-(Colum- The intensive campaign actually work- ed, as word swept through the Soviet acienllflc community. Roy enlisted the lr>- Ouence of Olm directon. academiclan1, writers, old Bolsheviks. The affair was leaktd into the International -press, em· barrwlng the Kremlin. ZhorH was released without compWJOry · l.n!.almelJt ~-- ,.. ,· • (or • uud Rolls 119Y"' for IIt,000. lie By u f!O"flfi -. ---~ ..nswe~ !he '•d alld dickered wilh the owtttr: to buy tbl tar for tht asking price. made for the salt of standing timber. The buyer agreed to cut It and pay a percen- tage ol the tale price for the logs. The owner of the land tried to back out. But the buyer w•s able to enforce the oral contract becau.w he had alre.oily, with the owner'! knowledge and permission, started t.o cut the trees. • TRoma.s Kte.11il, Editor after only 19 daya. bia Unlverolly Prtu htte) but no1 in the IN THIS FRANK 1nd lucid document USSR 1bil and othtt ''*bnonnal" (translated frorri lht RlWlan by Elle.n de bthav°kw .,,artnlly Irr Ital e d ~ Xldl), Zhorts tells his story from the ln- terVltlve buc'.puc;fll In MOllCOw. PK. then Roy explain.a his role outskle Ono etetmC -fioopltal mlnlbiir, c6D-· ilie lxlopll•i. In the int•naiv• campaign in oltte wttlt ~ever11ment ~.i.ou. dtfemeofZhotet.· ·· •DIJ<ililtrilll" .-Uct, IPirtled :The mull ii I qutlllon of maa ..... all ~ from lie lplrlment. The Idea: right; but the madness Is on the side of .....,. llllpilllll".ll for "poydiological bu ... aucracy (look al the w r i t e r *"' ' 111ns1" ~appropriate 11trtat.-SOlz.henlJayn). The ,dangtr Is not ovf'r, ..... • •• -111bt11 taetic than the · .. YI Roy. "Many people or• In ho•pil•is .,.. et 1 ,...re trial. for polllle&l reuons. Who will be nut!" (Knopf: 11.11$). 112 •• aar 1rsr -Md an urgent WWialll Bo1u Dear George : Mike made a down payment ot $100 and I loaned some pliers to this new w•~ to get a blnklt?ln for tht rest. Allot neighbor. Then some vr:rmouth lhe agrttmr:nt~' were oral. when he w119 having a party. NOW The owner changed his mind and decld· he "borrows" my power tools all ed not to sell. Ile re.turnf'd,.. the 'JOO to the time, belps himself to my ; ¥Ike •nd tried to c•ncel Ult dee!. Mlli mower and, whne 1 wa11 ·taking a sued, and was met wllh;the defense -that ahower, he.' just hollered In .thst he the contra~ was oral and for ~ th\n wa5 botrowtllg a couple of quarts or .~. and. therefore, cwld not be e:n- Bourbon and c•me In and got It. forced. Mike won In court. The-down paY· What should l do? ment was part performance, thus show· DeRr Tom : TOM Ing the contract ,was made. , . we1i fifit, send your "\(• hq_D\-. to her motb(l •••• SIMILARLY. 1F PART of the Cood• have betft· delivel'!d or accepted, that allow• tlllt an oral contract baa be<n IF mERS: IS a signed or Initialed , ''memorandum" -.any writing that Iden- tifies lhe parties, the subject. matter and some ol the: tenru of the promise-the oral agreement Is t.nlorceable. Oral agreements dealing with real pro- perty, leases for over a year, a guarantee or another's promise or the mailing Of a will are 1111 subject to the statute of frauds. All shou ld be in writing. Reliance on "exceptions" to. the statute of frauds ls dangerous. ~tit tn~rltlng . . . . .. ' '' Nott: California law11tr1 offer thi.t colf'mn 10 ~ou ma11 kTioto about our iows. :i , Albert lV. Bate1 E(litorial Page Editor Thr rdilnti11l JMIJ:'e of the lltltly Rllf)t i14fl!b w lnlorm 11nd J1Um11· J,a1e t~di'rS hi' ~nl\nr lhl! llC\\111~1 .. r'• 1·fJlnl11ni' fnd com· mrn1811· on li~1lc:ii or !~e~t and ~li:'f'liri~nrc, by~1rovldln1: a forum i) f,'! U? txt11~I af10(1r Tr'fldcra' ai11ruo • and 11rl'!li>ntlnr the div"~ vlcw polnb1 nt inronn<!d nb. g<'r\"<'l'll And tpokesmen on toplca ot l!'e ~ly. Tuesday, December 14, 1971 ' r I ' ' I . i ' I . , I I ... ... ,-... , ' - .- ' -" " '· k • • • ·- '" ,. " ~ I i I I i I • ' 1 l . L~A .. Pollee : . • ' "! ' ··Revolvers .. Modified .. ' " • LOS ANGELES (AP)' -''l'liO office< jumpe from hil qr; pistol In hand, Ju he·li!V~ 1 . into a tenMl:11lfuatton M.tloicb the hammer of '.his itivolver;i ~is thiimb draw.Ing lt ~~"Qll-tll it clicb . . ·~ It may be familiar 1 on '+TV, ' \ but it's agatnst1tbe rules here ln real lift. And dui;in& the nen few weeks t1lt Loi Angeles police armoftr will finish work on nqrl)' T,000 police revolvers, matfl wre tt never happens. . AfU.r Feb. I, a. police spokesman said, no L o s Angeles city poll«Mfll will be able to cock bis revolver. 'Ibe police want to make sure that police pistols are never firt!il by accftent, ·and they are willing •to sacrifice a bit of accuracy to do it. In single action fire the pistol's hammer iJ cocked with the thumb ; then a slight pressure on the trigger allow1 it to spring forwar4 and fire the cartridge. The armorer ls converting the pistols to double-acti~ fire. 'Ille trigger must be Jllll· ed fa rther . The first part ·of the pull cocks the harnqier against its spring; tht last bit releases it. . Armorer Harvey Cable says that it takes about a nm. pound pull to fire ·tbt 9t1ndard police revolver double: action, but the single action pull is three "pounds or leu. The lighter pull ·makes thi pistol more aceurite,. bot r'- cent police . surveys show" that most firii;i.g rt '1J.SP.6C1':. was done double action. ... Ud that many accidental fii'.lnis ' were caused by "the, WeaPQri being cocked for , inglwctD fire . · ' ~ A directive m,;. the-pllilie· chief slid that no 'p~oJl were to be ·cocked, b\it it ·wu~· ficult to enfo~ce, pollce.·.•lo because police pis~IJ w~ capable of either single-+ or double action fire. ;-i Cable cOnvert.s each· ~ by filing off a not~ on,"t.,llllr base · of 1he--bam~ei-ft.Qat allowed lt tO be cocied.~ .. ~ During 1969 there were 47 accidental discharges of-'City police revolvers ,.,~ spokesman said, and 4S dunng 1970. with two policemen, but no bystanders, lnjured. Mortuaries Chang~ Role Baltz Coro~ del ~It ·and C.Osia Mesa Mortuadts ~ve changed their ~e to Baltz;. Bergeron Fu~Jl Homes to unect. lhe identify of ill more active owner, Eugene a Bergeron, a mortuary offfdal said today. Although a state boa.,t governing funeral home prac- tices approved the chanle Nov. 9, lt only went into etfect Dec. 3. "The Baltzes are no long ac- tive in the bulit'!u,'' the of- ficial said, "and Mr. Bergeron J1 well-known in the com- munity as beJng active wtth many organlt.atlons.'' In Corona · del Mar, the mortuary is located at SS20 E. Coast Highway ; in Colla Mesa, 1741 Superior Avenue. 1 Sewth Ce11t ~·•• l rllf1I et th• 51111 D•'t• fwy, C•d• Mff• ....... 4 • • ' l " ' ;' . . , . -•, \~ . ~ .. ..,; ''1\~ I ... ;, ' Ill ~ '"" ... • "'~ ,·•.l•J;r"'-}' • ., . ' ' . , • 1 ". . : 'I I !I'! \ ., l ' f ' •• . ' • • • ' -. ' , . • • . -- t • ~ "" .. I , • { ' . ' .._ ( .. .. ·. .-i{ I " . "' I • j •• 1'1 : • ••I··~ •,l l' .. i•14'"f; J ' ' •I t ";,'I .:.• <t"° I , '.1"!\ 1 f . ' • , ' 1 . ' .. ' .. ' ,A~AHJfN -11 holi' lt14l ISf.1111 '· ' ' . .o '. \;•f•" ,,.~, ..... I,. !i . I , J ... .;it , J ~1 .\ ~ I ~. -. _, ·~ J ~·1 • .f.: \ t I :~··"i' ( ' ) • f-·.i: • i 1t • ~ I . r~· .. f·'-1< t 't' ' . -· \ ~ ., .... '-· '. .... ~ " Jl, •, '' I' ~ \ -\ tJ I ... l ... ··~ ,, ..... ~ . ' l ~ i , , ; I . .f:'" ,l , t ,1._, I~~ ; '";1 •••. ," ""' •. • ,,., './ ~ . . ..... " .. ~' . . .. . t i~ ._j ~·· 11\· f'· ,1"' ,l\\ ,, ' • • r;. J ! 11 ! 11 •• I . .' : ·.-:·t_ ~,," . . . . .... . -~·1 , ' ..... ,,,; ... ~ , ~ .) . ' ,i,l •. ' ' ~· • I :_ 'r . ' ' .~ .. . ....11.: ,..• ""'' j"' If • ...-• >-J, .... ' ... .. • \ '(' .. . ··~' .. _ ... ··:·~·f ···· • ....... • "'·i. ~ ' I .C.'"I r • ',._ : . . •. 'b... ' . . ' .. .. " -, . 1 ) • I , .... ,. .. ' ' .• ' ' 'f· ' ' ' . ·:..· •' . ·--,• ·v•· '· ~;~·, ~ I r~ I }', .. , .. ' .... ~ 1· :!l i r.,$ ~ \ , 1 I .~ ~·. ' ,. . ~ ' ......... ' . -• _,_ . . -T ' I: ' .. . ._ ' - " t ' . t;BRISTMAS-! ... \ •' -. " ~· . .. i: f .. . . . , .. ~ .. ·-• .(!"{' • the-·~"e '1if: guerlabl .., . . .. .. ' ' ' A frogrilll'• tha.t ·v,eils · 1n~ ,.v.-ls, . ~' ~ _, . . .ani:fhoiq~tens·tha'nfy~f;o'Y;ef 1.Wcim•"· ' .1 . • ,\. I ~ e1uuna11.I --_ , ' . • A rare blend of -fi1l~rs-•,;a ·Ori· eQtol unguents ·fOr . lie·-wom•." whe senses with her heart •. ,.; -:.·· . •,·· ' ,• -vo"I lie· a.tt :· ' ;. · Dedicated 'to the,_w~he· 1.;v.,....., tho edge -of o.-gieet-O')lil:s• life; · -. . I ~bl!llff bl-~ i , Be·tween light0ond _nlght, 1 speci1I ilou~ when no one fells . o.ut.ef l""t· ebant ll'aro~~ : _ , .. ' A love song, composed ·of' suO'lfermecl flowers, for thos e t~ · sliy fe ' 1i'n, It. --.. shallmn ' . . ' The cop_tured essonc···f • G'rt4iift ex· otic garden in ·)(asl;lltir,~uilt fer love. • ., r --. l . ~ ' ·1. • ., • .:;!J~t · at the JJr ., ... dw ~ ~· NfWp0lT HUMTIN$TON IEACH \ • ORAN!ril .. _ CllllTOI •• !,, .. tff t...C:.rrW.. .... tllll ,_, • )'"'"'•·~:"·; • .. 47','~••hl•• hl1H 1111 E4111191r A"'"'"' Mt H 1f Ottlllt• " 11 ' 1 ,.,,; •• 1f114t ..._..1111 •• 17141 1•t·JlJI '2JOO No. Twttifl ~ C714) ttl·lll I' ' -.. .., ,. -l~P~H· A.M. tt 10:00 P.M. M0~0A.Y THl~$t-1 S~Tt!~DAY, &INDAY II A.M. +. .... M. • I • • " • • ... •• "!.. ·~····· • • • - • ' ..~. '• ... ~. ' • ••• ' ., ~~f Begin,ner's i4~ Film Fete Always Answered Scheduled The Jlunllngton B e I C h l>ubUc Library'• annual film compeiltioa ts being launched with • beilnner's f I Im worll<op. 1CCOrdlng to audJo. vllual-Ullnrtan Sarob Glu. 'Mrs. Se•ta' N. Pok Letrers • LONG BEACff (AP) but some come u early a1 •' "Mra. Santa Claus'' dedicate• July. •; her life ee::ti Clrisbnu aeuon Every chlld who writes to trying to see that thouaands rteelves a reJpODllfl • printed -•n•-· In Amert-can who pamphlet · from , Santa con-~-= talnlng ...,. and poem. and 'te to Santa Claus receive often a penooallzed ootf, 11 e answer. well commenting on t b • the competition mt accepted It the . ... Main • 525 MaJn st. Deadll• for -entries 11 ________ _ May 1, 1111; • '.'You ~ ~ , child's letter. 'l,fhlldno," said Judy Fairfu, Because ol the volume of • grayln& housewife who mail, Mrs. Fairfax' wGl'b day decided to help Santa'• mall , and night ll'OWld Qlrlltmu service when she learned seeing that Santa'a letten are many letters failed for one • anawered. Sbe cllll hefself ruson or aoolber to reach the Mn. Santa. North Pole. Chlldren who write are ex~ Jn 1963 .me stMed reuotnc peeted to encloae a alunped, letters that had langu!lhtd at ..U·-env ..... and a llie Long Beach Poll Office ctllne to <'OV'f -of Mn. and two years later began to r"alrfn'• CQlfs. erpand the service. • ~ Her ~ .... ..,., Iii "North Pole Mail ~ Ille Jol' abe llndi In. the ltttarl. Box 54, Calilomla 90IOL," ~ l ~:, I, ot South Gaie, hand!e.s nearly so 000 letten ~· I have snore tGn.Jiu from throughout ihe United I really need'.' bit tbaf a DIW States. Moot of the letten ar· plaYDllla ''I! t"'I' poor: 1'.d be rive in the Christmas .uon. fullilfted lf ,you'd. oaly divide toys wttll tile llllle girl next I • \ .1---Ji ' r"'.--------,J uuuc'(T , I LOCAL EDITORIALS .... , kidJ admit lliey hnm't been good l>Ut promlMo to be bettar-<1t lwt until Chrlstmu, 11 Mra. Santa sa.ld. Mrs. Santo Wd . she is The DAILY PILOT ~!!I•:= =~f:; ~ Quite Often ' Fights City Hall The Wm......., II epen to 25 rtsldenll "' all--The -will ... lltld Saiurday momln!• ln>qt 1:111 ..... to 12:111 p.m. ~ Jan. 15 to Feb. It. Mn. Glu llld the aeal0111. will cover tlio JIM of the video camera, . eamera tlcbnlques. scrlPI Wr!Uog, anlmaUon and the doO\inc and ;valuation of the ftld\. 'l'hett will be no chart• for the workahop and l\IH. Glu nld ownership of camera e</ulpment I! not a Nijulsita but will be helplul. Further information I 1 available by callint Mra. Glas at 536-MM. City Agenda At Library CopitJ of the agenda Gift Idea: Park Permit Want to give an unusual flmlly Cbr-a• gilt thiJ 1'"'1 Larry A. Moore, supervising ;anger at Huntington State Beach, sugg,.ts yoo think about an annual day use pennit issued by t h e C.llfornia State Park System. The permit entitles the bolder and his family to use any facililies ol the 81Bta park system Including nearby Hun· tingtoh State Beach and Bol>a Chica state Beach. Permits may bie obtainld by smting a 110 check to Hun· tington State Be11ch, P.O. Box C, Huntlngtcn Beach, Calif., 9IM&. 'Space Helmet' Aids in Driving_ Test SACRAMENTO (AP) -and meway.. "Tbts I> Ille thmhhold of a for ezample, oo that '°'"" "Gol.DI JOO mllea an hour ''Tbl.s is the flrlt t1me we've new era," said Bieber. "What could drive on freeways while aounds ridiculously fut to "'"' trJed to tab a look at driver It leads up to ls new freeway others could just drlvt on cltl ... v behavior," taJd Bieber. d I J'-'·• of drt ~-~-" wUe, but I don't get excltedli---..:....:...::..::=.:::.. __ .="~1~:"::.• .:~=~"'="=:'"·=-:::...::.:.:.:ven:.::.,....:.•~:::=:....:.'----- about tt," says Alfred Jones, one of 52 C&llfomla Highway Patrol olficen tested to see how drivers' brains react to hlgh-speed driving dangers. Just how excited he gets has been recorded in the form of J0,000 bits of data on such things as brain wave activity, heartbeat and eye movement. "The only thing l was con- cerned about was keeping the car on the road," aald Jones after zipping through S.turns and straightaways at the CHP's l • 7 -m I I e high-speed track, hitting speeds up to 110 m.p.h.". But as he drove, a rese'1'C}l team from the Space Biology Institute at UCLA was col- lecting data by monitoring signals from a space-age helmet worn by Jones. The helmet contains eight electrodes that transmit in- formation whUe allowlng the driver to get out of his car WHAT ARE THE AREAS OF CONCERN TO BEREAVED FAMILIES THAT KNOWLEDGEABLE FUNERAl HOMES ARE PREPARED TO RENDER? by EUGENE 0 . BERGERON ANSWll: ~ s.cw S.Cinity ......... wWew°• ,..-...... ,., ......... ,., .. ,.,.. .... __..., ~. "-'""' ........... Dttft ll'Mftt ............ ~ ·-·-ta .. Ufe ~ ~ ,., ..... ,. IWeftfftl .me. ,....llMt MNtkle11'a lfrihlde CMC& ...... •tt'I&... llPfs ef 1 c.,..., or Medkel .......... .rte.' ..... CIYfl s.n-fc. ~ ...... ......._ Lec.atJM of .mhlt Nl""-a di Sodlll Sec1rfty. Wa,-t te 41! ......... KC ... ..., ..... Ito-. MelcN .. S.Cllll Sec.try ... , ...... A••••···-......... If .,.. lin'I • ........ -... ....,.. Mntce. ,a... write ., call. w-..., ,.WW.. .............. -........... ni .... Balt:·Bergeron Funeral Home COSTA MHA 2 LOCATIONS CORONA dtl MAI '46·2424 673·9450 quickly since there are oor"""':-~·---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ wires. The method was fU'st used in testing astronauts' reacUorui:. Robert Bieber, commander of the CHP's analysis section who supervised the testing, said the data could lead to a set of "average" driver reac· tkmS to stress -and a way to bar potentially d an a: er o u a drivers from roads, itrtets · 86 STORES BRIM-FULL Of Christmas Gaaclles 'loath foast!Im never mabl abootut• pro. m11e1. AnoUier · of · s.nta·• helpers, the Salvallon Army, is contacted and looks into hard!)ltpt and usllts Santa If needed, she .sakf. packets for llie Huntlngtonl ,.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ... ·.ff_ CHRISTMAS TR!!S a s100 OFF .... , AD , , BEAUTIFUL-U~G C,.IF1' "" JAPA~~!~NSAI £W . SS~, · Beach Cily Cooncil meetings. complete with supporting in· formation, wUI be on file at the public library for public !nlpectlon beg l n n l n· g Im- , mediately. r City Clerk Paul Jones Nid council meetinaa .,. beJd the lint and llilnl Monday• 'ol llie monlli and the agendo will be available on the Frldly prior 7H IAID ST. fNnt .. Fh StwtlM) to the meetings. ON lllSTOL AT IAlll -COSTA MISA Patrons will find the qenda, TAKATA. NURSERY 14""724 • packets al tlil recordl dtalt at ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~m~~~the-llbnn. 525 Malnst. r ~ ~ * ~ ~ Dof!N(Ef:Jwilh dstmashi1g hassle! Tbis Frigidaire Blllt·ln gets llshes slloller-cle•. • Sus*'-Sbrll • ···----tM tfick. Dishes ..s-. or• Pf"'•·• Soft·foodl pu ..... • 4 C)ltles. Ewn • PSeti1 WMMr. • Rinse condltlontr dispenser helps Mtp 1l1ues •nd snver. from spottin1- • Order lnttrth ..... ble frant ~Mia MP9rately. ~ or Bnishtd ChromL • OplloMI ---,.. .......... Frigidaire Microwave Oven: fast, cool, clean, easy, fun "ay to cook INCLUDES FREE STANO • ,..,._. tJ E. Sftenteenth Street-0.fly f·f, Set. 9·•, a TOllO-L.9u .. H;H, Pltu lnutto Stv.Onl-Dtily 10.9, Sit. 10·6, 117·11JO N~eTON llACll-llrookhunt & Gttfi1lcl-01lly 9.9, Stl. 9·6, '62·1121 Jhulle ...,.telle• Sert!lri PlaeM 54a-3437 • . . . COMMUNITY• EVENTS Wo take this . : \\RTIST OF THI MONTH ' . . D.llJNI ' opportunity \t '(M,1. LOWILL J. LIYRIR) to wish • Happy , , 'DHI ~ "•MCI-City Ctllllt>, Or•,..e CMll Ctl ..... ~ ltkll ldlM4 'If Aft · Hol"odoy Season to oil . ' ........ Ille .... INlrtkJ..-i'-" "' •1111 ....,,. ...... , .... °'"" c-ry ... Ir , ......... 1d ..... AM,._ .................. W ,rim), Rtdiatllll Alt MMI, Mwl'f Miii .. Ml11I SDlblr, UIVlll hecti Art Aull. A" ttl;e "41 Mn. 9f S.Bel .. colltnt ' ,,,,..y Memki .... , c..ta M .. Art L= ....... n....-.... Arfl ....... alnt:\: llM ~~ t.f .. er ....... at flle ~ Art....... ""'"' ......... c.lhi .... -~ IM Ml~ ~Ill Llfletlft, NeW. ~ 19 t If ut-M IMCll Art .. tWr tllftY w.k pl' ....... ;.=...• IM ~Pree. If c-t.'"M .. An M-Cit '1 ti Ct••••·•· rr ,\ = .................. .,, .... ! ~· i;..::.:.-.::.:.:.": ...,,,... ' ............ ,-' . . - ' ., t • 6 nL.nnu11 '70,.,. certttlcete· Accounts• $5,000 minimum depoolL 2-year minimum tenn. Dally comJ>OUnding. Eam from dale of deposiL 6 25 QL annual • 70rat• 80 0.y Certificate Accounts• No mfnlmum deposit. Dally compounding. Eam from date of deposi t. EARN HIGHER INTEREST AT CALIFORNIA FEDERAL! • Certificate Accounts• $1,000 minimum deposit. 1-year minimum term. Daily compounding. Earn from date of deposit. 5 QL0:~~~' 7CJ rate Passbook Accounts No minimum deposit. Dally compounding. Interest day-In to day-out. *Wlthdr1Wals, before maturity permitted blJt subJ•ct to som l!I loss of Interest. CaJ!f.!!!!!L~mI~4.~!!!~1§.~!,!ngs NATION'S LARGEST FEDERAL , COSTA MESA OFFICE: 2700 flarbor Blvd. near Adams • 546·2300 . . CLIFFORD M. WESDORF, VI CE PRESIDENT & MANAGER '1 , •• Conventent Dme1s ,thtoughqut lot: AnQtltl, Orsnoe and Ventura CountllS Moaunaa n I....., 1111' tt fll.000...,. ,,..._el fl& Ftderll lw'MQI & Lo.n lmurtnei1C..'°'9tkln, & l>WIM,,.11'. •Oll'ICY' ol 11\e Unit.It 5tll• OO'l'ltM'llftL .. ..... CALIFORNIA FEDERAL SAVINGS .......... -..... For the .. Record Births lT, .IOSIPH HOSPITAL O.U1t1 .. r 4 Mt. Ind Ml'I, Tllon\•s E. Wlllt'f !toll AnllOth Drive, 'lrvll'll, twin 1lrl~. Mr. 11\d Mr.. D1nl1t T. DlrlnQdv, 163«1 lloltWOOd $1,, l'"wnt1ln V1ll1y, 1lrl. Mr. llld Mr1. I(~ Miiier, 2.Sll Newp0rt l lvd., Cost• Mts1, tlrl. Mr. 11'1Cf Mr1. 0tY!4 L. l"lkll, 2:W c1• nyOl'I Or .. Apt. 0, COS!I Mltl, boy, Marriage Lieeiises Merritt• 11ct"Ht were luued\o ft!e followlnl 11 Df DK. t: LANE-TALBOT -8vron O .. •1, L""9 1..m. Ind Tooy L., 32, "901 Hill Ave .. Huntl~on 8th. l"ELDMAN<AMIRON -JtrOl'l'\1, lO, LO!lt Bttcll, 1nd Miry E , 2(1, U~3' TtOlln Circle, HUl'llll'ltJOft Be.ch. P.ir.STEltN.-.IC>IENOER -Josei>11 E., 25, 111 Bilbo& ll lvd,, NeWPOl'I 8tlci1. 1nd Ntncy l ., 20, 1"91ewood. OASHER·FRENCM -Gerald O. 3•, Norwtlk. 1l'ICI Pnyll!s A., XI. 11301 1("1$Gl'I, HUnll1111ton lle1d1. Mcl{INOLE'f·MENDOZA -ll~n H,. 2!, HlwlhoorM, lllll e11+ ... R .. IS, 1"511 L1no1u Ll'I .. Hunrlnth'" Beath, Death Notices MATTIS MlcM•tl C. Mat1Ts. 112 W. Co•sl Highway, Ne, 9, New..e..i Be•rh. D~!e or li••lh December 10, 191!. Survived by dauetittrl; Pl!r!cti L. Gr•v, cl Ro1evlllt, C•lll.; Marv K. Pol1l, o.~1.,,11, '""' Mlchltl G M•llls. 01v11, Calll.; Dromer.. or: G~'/,' E. M1ttts. Lteunt 6e1ch; John Matt 1. LOf'lll ISl•rl<I; sisters, ROSI Ann Numtnl, Mrs.-!Clem RoDerh. Mrs. Strati Orr end Mrs. Fr1nces Robb· U ' rtndchlldren, Ro~trv, 1oni9ht, Tu1~1v. t M,. RtQUltm M111. Wodn.scitY, 9 •M, bolll 11 St. Boniface Cl!hollc Cliurch, An1/\elm, ln!erment. Holy S~ulcller Cemetery_,, 81lt1·BorgerM Funer1I Home, Ceroni de. Mir, Oirec!ors. WATSON ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY '27 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa 646-<m • BALTZ BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar 673·9450 Costa Mesa 643-2424 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa Me1a LI 8-1433 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1'195 Laguna Canyon Rd. 494-9415 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pacific View Drive ' Newport Beach. Calllonla 141·!100 ·-PEEK FMfiLY COLONJAl. FUNERAL 110!'/IE 7101 8olsa Ave. Wt1tmlnster 193-3sts • SMITHS' MORTUARY 12'7 fl.fain SL Huntington Beach llMlll Phone 6424321 For Weekender Advertising I ; T11esday, December 14, 1971 w DAILY PILOf I Chicanos Form Up Rea~ing Leader • ' • f j Awareness ProgramBegun in Valley. Schick · Honored By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI 01 ti" OtllY l"lltt ST•tt Waht is a Chicano? Apparently a lot of people - including the C h I ¢ a n o s themselves -are interested in finding out. A Chicano awareness pro- gram started in Fountain Valley's.Colonia Juarez about a month ago has been drawlng a surprising attendance, ac· cording to it! director, Juan F. Balboa. '.'We've been getting about 40 people for each of the meetings. About one-fourth of them have been Anglos and . ... they'rl coming · out of the ~ city In Orang!! County that has FULLERTON -A Cal State The biggest threat to pro. sessions with a lot better a high Chicano populailon " Fullerton teacher who believes gress in this field, he. believes, persJ>eStive of the Chicanos,,. explained Balboa ' tod•Y',1 student reads we well Is the lack of reali""lion that sald nalboa, a 22-yeaNild ., ' -or better than his parentl did .... Golden West College student. I go to G<!lden West COilege at the same age has been the twa basic needs in educa· The three phase program is ~au:ie I want 14? be,,a teacher g]ven the Oscar S. Causey tlon are mathematic:! and aimed at acque.inting Mexica.n• 1~ Chic~?O. studies, he con· Award by the Nation a I reading, _ Americans with their history hnued. Right now the <lnly Reading Conference r o r and Cultur •• teaching them persons who can study our "Opce these are mastered," T , l S outstanding achievement in how to deal with social .pro-. people are those Who go. to COi• na et t.:!Uit reading instruction, he satd, "they can be Used. as blems, and welding them into Jege, But , the trouble is that Dr. George Schick came out building blocks r or com- a political unit. mos~ Mexica n·Amerlcans drop of retirement in 1970 to teach petence in other fields." ·sponsored by the Huntington out m the lOth or !Ith grade. Jn Police at Cal State Fullerton. He Also ·hampering the ex- Beach Community Center, the "So if we can't get them to taught for more than 30 years panslon of reading programs, AT HEAD OF (L:AS$ Chicano series i& soon planned teach Chicano studies in grade et Purdue University , where Schick said, is the orientation ____ R_•_•_d:..''-S_ch_l_ck __ '~"- to move to otller com'munities, schools or the high schools·, we Br1• b~ Tr' y he holds the title of pro lessor f · t tod f including S t a n t' o n and have to bring them out into 0 socie Y 8Y away rom Anaheim. the community, And that's emeritus. reading. the lack of good "We Want to go into every what cur program ls all SANTA ANA -Two men Dr, Schick has long been testing procedures and in· abo.ut)' d f ff 1 h 'If' concerned with adult reading . struments tQ de ter m In e accuse o o er ng s er1 s and training high s c h o o 1 reading levels, and the lack ol ., " Guidelines Under Study For Housing Authority 0® o(. the mail) purposes of investigators $100 a week each English teachers to teach intere1t in ' ihe home. the awareness program is ta to turn a blind eye to bot· reading. At the Fullerton cam· Despite .these problem s, he enlist Me1ican·Americans ·into tomless activi ties at Orange pus, he works with the Cal said, more books are publish· California's new Chicano par· County taverns will face trial State Fullerton Read Ing ed and sold in the U.S. today ty, the La Raza Unida (United Wednesday in Orange County Institute. than ever before. People). Superior Court. Statistics show, Dr. Schick "\\1e're also learning more "This is ne ither a radical Judge Byron K. McMillan said, that the national average , abou t how to teach reading, party or a moderate party. set the trial date for Morton of reading skills is on the sixth are armed with better It's just a regular party like Gold, 49, and Terry House, 24, grade level, primarily because statistics and are developing the Democrats and t h e of Garden Grove after hearing the needed reading skills are better m e a s u r i n g in· Republicanll -but for our testimony that the defendants not taught after the sixth struments," Schick said. l\'Jeeting Set WESTMINSTER - T Jf e Orange County~ TMAAY~'s Association will meef at 7!10 p.m. Wednesday 1n t ft e Westminster •Ugh Sc ho o t caieteria to elect members:4if the group's 1972 Boar.cl" *Of Dire<:tQ{:;. A. discussiOn ot the U.S. Constitution Is a1so on Hie agenda, The public is inVited to attend. -· SANTA .ANA -Guidelines for initial operations o[ the new County Housing Authority will be studied Wednesday by Orange County Supervisors. Also up for discussion will be methods by which cities in· terested in participating in the authority might appoint ·two members of the Housing Authority Commission. The authority was · activated last month by county supervisors despite strenuous opposition ~om real estate and building· futeresl.!. The'. 3-2 vote followed lengthy debate Nov. 24. own people," said Balboa. atten1pted to bribe sheriff's of· grade. Nobody pays, attention He believes that the interest ''We're trying to get this ficers assigned to surveilance to such skills after that, he in speed reading has also hurt. party recogniied by the state. of taverns featu ring nudity in said. "They prefer to con-He is interested in com· registered voters and we their entertainment. centrate on literature and prehension, rather than speed would like to have 60,000,'' he Officers testified that the composition.'' alone. A committee report was added. "We want to get &ome bribery attempts look place at The Cal State institute, is Though Schick feels today's JCPenney -. COSTA MESA STORE 2300 HARIOR ILVO. Specl•I Holld•y Store Hours ordered and , the guidelines of our own people into office the height of t h e i r in· designed to correct this pro-teens and young adults proposed by that group will so they can voice the concerns vesligation into alleged bot· b!em, by emph~sii:ing the are better readers than their be reviewed Wednesday. Com· of the barrio." tomless dancing at the Tuscan teacher's need to assume parents were at the same age, mittee members are represen· The Chic an o Awareness Room in Tustin. Gold is a greater responsibility f or be fe.els it is due more to a SUNDAY tatives . of the county ad· sessions are being held from 7 former manager of t b e reading. Dr. Schie~ hopes that trial and error process than ministrative office. County p.m. to 10 p.m. Monday night!' premises, every English teacher in the teaching itl schools. The 12 I 5 • - Counsel. County p 1 8 n n in g at the Fountain Valley Com· Both men are free on $1,250 will be required to have a . institute, he saidt is designed 0 . P,•m Claim Filed Over Tustin Annexation Department 0 f Supervisor j~m~u~n~it~y·Ce~n~te~'~··liiEiiiim~~b~a~ll~-ffiFiiij~iiJ~iimmiiJiiii~be;lo;r~e;be~in~g;c;•;r;ti~(i~ed~to;t;e~a~ch;·;·;t•;•l~im;ln;a;t•~tr~ia;l~a;n;d~e=iro;r~. ~~:;:;:;;;::;:::;;;:;;~I Reibert Battin's office. The housing authority plan was adopted over the o~ position of Supervisors Ronald W. Caspers of Newport Beach and David L. Baker of Garden SANTA ANA - A 1194.000 claim _ has been filed against the Orange County Local Agency Formation Com·_ mission Wednesday by three property owners who charge that annexation of their 7.6 acres to the city of Tustin three months ago has resulted in a loss in value of $65,000 an acre. LAFC commissioners re· jected the claim, usually a preliminary to a lawsuit. It was filed by Daniel and Elliott, of Santa Ana, Highland and North Hollywood, respec; lively. The claim states that the annexation. approved over their vigorous p r o t e s t s resulted in a devaluation of the ·market worth of the pro. perty: from $85,000 , to $20,000. an acre. The property annuation to Tustin was completed last Ju~ ly after LAFC.approval on las( JI.lay 12. The two Joheses''lnd Mrs. Elliott protested at botq the LAFC he;iring and Tustln City Council &essions. The· 7.6 acres in ·question are part of 18.5 acres annexed to Tustin located at the southwest cor~ ner of Prospect Avenue· and 17th Street. . Eddie Meredith. owner of the 10.5 acre parcel was the petitioner for the annex. LAFC's counseh \Villlam McCourt said that the claim is probably unique in that it is the first ever filed agaimt the LAFC in this county and possibly the first in the state. Both Sides Of Drugs Grove. Supporting it were Battin and Supervisors William J . Phillips of Fullerton and Ralph Clark of Anaheim. Battin, who pushed the plan, suggested : . -A declaration that there is in Orange County a shortage or safe and sanitary d w e I I i n ' accommodations available to persons of low in- come at rentals they can af· ford. -The authority should con- sist of five commissicners named by the county Board of Supervisors, with two of the five recommended by the cities. Prior to supervisor&' action, a poll of county cities showed that about half of them op. j>osed the authority and half were iii favor. Strongly supporting t h e authority were members of the Mexican·American com· munities in the county plus the Community Action Council and the County Human Rela• tions Commission. Indian Lore Meeting Set SANT A ANA -A slide II· lustrated talk by Ann Boulter on Zuni Shalako Kacbina In· dian ceremonial dances will highlight the regular meeting of the American Indian Lore Association this week. Mrs. Boulter also will show a unique collection of dolls representing the v a r I o u s phases of the actual Shalako SANTA ANA -A University dances. or the Pacific pharmacy stu-Also on the program will be dent ls literally seeing drug solo dances by members of the usage from both sides of the Red Dawn Indian Dancers. counter here. under a special The public ls invited to the internship study program. meeting which will be held at San Bernardino resident 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at Santa Yumon Kwock is enrolled in Ana Bower's Museum, 2002 N. the so-called Preceptor·Intern Main St. projec t. specializing in drug,;::=========::; abuse studies. I He is learning how the Orange County Methadone Maintenance Clinic ror heroin addicts operates, while work· Ing in the da y-to -day pharmaceutical busi ness too. KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN SATURDAYS IN THE DAILY PILOT Tod1y'1 most beautiful t•ble model1-1n with 1 a• diegon1I measure screens I A. Contempor1ry- model 6282. S. E1rly Amerlc•n-model 6284. C. M1dlt1rr1n1en styling-model 6286. ., ' ••• an , each ·of these :~ TOTAL Ji AUTOMATIC I COLOR f table models! j Your Choice. NOW s41a Matchin!) Pedestal Base $30-both for only $448 TAC ls a comp/eta electronic tystem that 1u.tomatic1fly keeps flesh.tonelf1atur1t: . and pictures sharp. No more jumping up and do!J..n tO adjust cOntrols •• ..,you'll get a perfectly~tuned picture-with the r!ght1tofori~n every c:hannet,.evefY time! The new ultra-rectangular and Oltt•..,,·brfght~Yix fUbe-:'unlike mlny ?thers-has a ~lack, opaque sub.stance S~J'i}O(lhdih9 e~i:;ti ,~olpfdot-resul\!pg 1n far better picture contrast, sflarpnes's, lfid.1 /,~ mare, brightn'f!'~S. ThB rtfw Magna-Power Chassis. With· i:t~e<:torriln.an\ly .SQl+4-sfate compO- nents, assures better perfdrmanC& and great.er reli~bility. And- convenient Remote Contrcil for UHF N HF01s'0Plionlllly availeble, also at great savings. It lets you tum your set on /off, adjust volum e and select stations-an from the comfort of your easy chair. It even t..._..J::;.:...J automadcelly turns off your set after the station leaves tht air I ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ¥, -J! ~ ~ ,. 1c -1.l t1{ •, 46 YEARS OF DEPENDABLE SERVIC.EI GOLDINWllT & WARN IA HUNTINGTON llACN SALIS •LY 142·1s'fi 401 MAIN STAllT HUNTINGTON llACH &••YICI • IA.Lil. ..,. JJ6°7161 llOOKH Ul5T • WAlNlk fOUNlAIN Y~l.LIT . WIS ON\Y f62·2416 l ' • I ! ....... ~--. . ~ . -- Jt D.llLY l'ILOT I LEGAL NC111C!l LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE "''""' fl-IUM l'lCTITtOUS llHIMlll l'ICTITIOUI IUllNISI • lU.Sl N•M• ltATOM •T NAM• ltATlMl.NT •ICTITIOUI I UllNlll --• ·-... _, i'JM fltlewl111 .._ It #lllf bwilrobl NAM• ITATIMINT J/:,,._ ,. ..,..... _ _. ttl TM ~lllf MrMm ar1 "°'"' lllAHO 1'f.ALTY, ~ l'ark ,._.. .. \111.11!111n a1: Rap Brown In Com1: I ALTJ .. ••GllOH I'~ N 11 AL lll'!Ot 1ii.rw:t. CatJf, nkf Miit. M't 11U ... ,... flllt ... •11, =.; _.U:., l•lf c..a """'-'• Gr~ 1.. w1u.,..-, it .. ttor, 110 c.1 n1ornlt '2'10 llld-,..o, IOll ...OJ .. ltl MDIM;., ., c.--WI ,.,,.,, Woodl .... Or., UfUl'll IN<ll. C1Ut. Kl11t M1tloll. kn!1 AN. Ctllfrofnl1 tflC t C.lw..ml1 cw-1ll011 _,. NS\ t27M. ... ( .. It Hltflwl\I C.-1 Ofl 'Mw Titll bu)lfttU It belnt «nel11cttd lw W, ~. fllWllt1 1* Ito.trio. flllc111!l1, T111t ._._ It "'"' COllll\l(:l..S b, tl'I l!Wlwlfl.o1I, C1lltoo-nt. ~10 t --•llOll Gr.ct l,.. W11~"91!11fl fl. O. IGK ..a.I. 1(1~ &!Ilion. 111111 IAl.Jl..M01.TU41!1tV o,.-,.11.11 tlt"-I lllld wllto *'t (O\lnl~ AM, C1!llornl1 t170I 'Innocent' ~A "O(L.MA!t ltfC. Cltr1< Gt Or1""9 COlll!ly Of'\O M1v. II, w. L. P1w11t, \JIU ll<!oNrlo, Pllc1111!1, 111 •• ..,..... 0 ..,.....Ofl 1tn. •v l•Yll"lw J, ~. OIOUf°'J c1111ornt1 '11'8 NEW YORK (UPI) -H. ,,._..,_, • C.Olllllw CltrlC. I. I, WYll•, U11 W. $unltirw ... , AJI. L R B h I ded I i. ,11........, fllH ~th !ht Gel.lntv flubllll'llCI 0•1111• C.011• 0•11• PHo•. '· s,1111 An•, C•ll!4rr111 n~. ap rown as p 9ili nno- llf 0r • .,.. c..,n1v °": Hool, i 1, Mo..tmblr n. '° 11111 o~~· 1. u, T1111 bu\lflfl• •• 11e1n1 cont111c1..s 11v • cent to charges Of e.ttempted ..., ''""'"' J. "''°°°"' ~ ,..,, su'-11 .. r1Mr&r11D m .. ~., and ~-ry stemming Cltril.. LEGAL NOTtCE w. L. P1w111 w·u . 1vuvc Or•11t1 c..tt 0111v f111o1, r1111 1111tm1n1 111..i w1t11 "'' C011ntv from an alleged tavern holdup n, • aNI OKtl'l\blf" 7. 11. 1'.-l4\U CIHIC of Orl"91 CllUntY on Mo..rmber ''· nd )\Ing ball) • . ---c-c------='c'»:·c":1 ••CTITIOUS IUSIMl$1 1t11. •• llVlf'ly J, Mlldtl<I•. OePlllY a remi gun e In -NAMI STATl:Ml;NT Countv Cllrk. which Brown and two pollce- LEGAL NOTlCE TM tonowlns HrM!fti ••• dol"' Pllblfaflld °''"" C01•I 0111~ Pllot. men w-w-··•~. .~,..---..,,,..,,,.-~=~----)but1r.tn 11: N""""'blr JO Ind 0.Citmber 1, U , 11, "''° VWIUQ..I PH• Na. l'-4QI HU·WAV PRODUCTS. ld? E•ll Cot.ti ,,,, J1'l·'1 Brown, recovering from a IAll JIJI Hwv •• Coton1 dtll Mir. '2625 TtMaNT °" AIAMOCMIMIVT Of' J''""' 'k. '"""· *' ,,,. Gr..., stomach v."Ound received in the Ofl l'ICTITIOUS •ut1N•ss MAM• Or .. Cot-11e1 M•r . Oct JS ~~-·1 t ed hi·s LEGAL NOTICE foli.wtnt --11.-...., ... otd ll'lt J..,,,. M. Moor1. int Port M•r'Nlt.1-------------1 · 1111U1Jwu • en er """ fldlttw• ai11--C05"TA ..__., •••do. plea. Monday elter admitting Ul't T•MllMM • Tl1'f CIHTEll, •I lfM H......-1 T~ll buJlntu 11 belllt c«lducttd b'f MOTICI TO <•IDlfOllS he H D-Brown ., &f d c:..11 """'· C•llWl!I.. • l'lrttWIM~. SUflllllOI. COUll1' Of' THI was . ~..... . ..:hange• rr. a e tlc1lt\or.11 Ml"-...,... rtttt•..i to J..,IU M. Mnot• ITATI Of' CALl,OllNIA 1'011; ., ~ l' r h" tu • --fllil Ill Ottfltt COlllltr .. T~I\ lt•l-enl tlltd With Ille County TH• COUNTY 01' OllANG• ,..,.. w•e 1me 0 1.5 cap r • ro.1t, 1m. c1111C et 0r11191 cou""' on: N ... , No, ,..,..u Brown claimed his name was 1'1rs. Paula Grossman is Lt:• &.owAito 11ovLAN, 1•1n 1tn. aw ll•v«l'f J. MHdo• ot1111tv E11111 et e0rnuf,4 e1111c111. 0«11..0. n ..... Williams, but later was appealing the New Jer· ..... \rvrne. C•llhlrll\I Couf'.., Cl•tlt. NOT ICI!. IS HEllE•Y GIVEl'I ·~ -~WT rt.b ~ ..... Ol:llldllttM lw •n P11bll-°'"'""' CO&tl D•Hw flllol. trtOllor• or -•bov• Mme<! dtcfdl:lll identified through his finger· sey Department o{ Edu-vldull November n, JO 1fld o.t ... btr 7, It, !hit Ill llettoM fl1vl119 tl1 lm1 1111111'1 1M nrjn(S. CatiOO'S SUSpeDSiOn O{ Lii !:OWAllO •OY'l.AN 1'11 3\Y-11 .. Id die~ 1r1 r1<111lrt<1 let 1111 ,.....,, r •Mr••1:1N AND SYLVIA w1t11 th• nrce111rv -..cM ... 1n 1111 o11ke As Brown limped into state her because oi her sex :=~R'-:'!--LEGAL NOTICE :='tt;e'!:..~ ~h::.•"!r~ '11,•~:..:i ,:u.;::_~ Supreme Court, a small group change operation. The ~ c.1""1111 ~ VOIKtlln. 10 lhl 11..,,,,1,_. 11 tn. ottje1 of his folloWers greeted him teacher holds tenure as , ...,.,. "ltnf GI' htr Atlornev. GeorN w. l111dl, Jr,. k ~~ ... ~-;; 0,-•-C~•I Dlll'f Pllol. l'ICTITIOUI •USINl!SI •11 SO\llh Hiii $frNI, Suitt MumM• 102' . with the clenched fist "blac a male teacher; the jury ao. 11111 o~ 1, "· 21, NAMI! srATIMl:Nt LOii• llNdl. c1111orni1 l'OOU, wh1c11 11 m1 power" salute. Brown retum-1•5 still out on whether Sltt-11 Tf\1 tol-1119 l)eHOll 11 dolnt bv1l111H pl•ct ct! butlnlll of !fie u"61•1!1fltd Jn 111 ~-----------'-"-"I'" m•ttff• 111r111111111 10 '"' 1st11e "' wid ed the gesture. she'll retain that tenure ! , ,LllG" NC111C~ DEEP ROCIC W,t.,TER CO., •U N. dKldllll. w!lfllll lour monlht llltr llll 8 f ~ · 8 ~ ~ . s.n1e Ff', S•n•• A,,., c1111orn11. 11r11 1111buc111°" of 11111 l\Clllce. e ore o1~er1ng rown re· as a woman. Art Shtw Arte1l1n Pvrt w11er. l11c. Di!ld Olc:itmbtf", 1t11 turned to Bellevue H05Pital's --------------..... fl ICTITIO"I aUSINl!ll MAMI ITATI M•NT .'nle to1!0Wl1111 l'trlOfl• 1r1 iu1ll'ltl1 ••: '" c.1111orn11 c.,.....,,,11°"'· 4U H. s1n11 W•r>CI• e11i~kl prison ward, Justice George Fr. S•nl• An•. CtUlornll. E•K11lrlJ Tf\11 Ml11111 h Wint cOllOl.lcttd b~ • 01 ,,,. wlll of «amey reduced the b I a c k dolnt COl"Hl"•ll011. thl 1bov1 111mtd dectdent militant'! bai'l from $250,000 to Artflur SfltW Gl"OllGI W •uJtCM Jll Unlwr1ltv DhlrlbvlO,.. U.51 W. at1t1r Pttl"""11 t17 '°"'ti. Mlit SI 1 s U ·• llU $200 ()()0 $1., Cctlll Mau. C1lllotnl1 92'2'. 7hl1 st1teme111 ll!ed wl!fl 1111 Cou11tv Ln Anlllll, c11j':!-~11u .:.11 ' ' ' Jollrl C111r1e lrnlor. 1'51 w. ••kw Ci.rt: °' °'"'" Cou11t• on Dec. u. 1'11 Ttt· tun •tMHJ The bail ol three codefen-11·· Coll• MtM. C•Ntornl• '261'. 11v er. ... 1y J. M.t<IOooi, Ofl>utv C01111ty Att0r,..... "' • 1rt dents was reduced from P1mt11· t 1<1M•• s.111or, u.s1 w. c.i.111 •~c~ ~"" ...... St .. C.Ollt ,,.,..., C11llornl1 tMM P11ti111111c1 °''"" COii! 01llV Pllol, P11bU9"ed Or•flff" CNI! 01lly Pllol, $150,000 to $50,000 eac:h. 11~t':..':~'::~r. btl"' oondllttlll by • ~amw i1. ti. 21, n11 •M J•r111~ii o.:1m1Mr 1, 14, 21. ,., 1J11 :m1-11 1be four, n<?.med in a 24· ,._i. s1111or count indictment last v.'eek, Jttw1 c. s.n1or LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ni11 ,,.~ 111t'd with "" C011nw•1-----,..,. ... -----I-----==:::=-::::::=:___ were accused ol robbing at f:;'-by et.:..~ J.~ o!:':"ct:n~ fltCT1T1tU~ .. :'ustN•ss gunpoint 25 patrons of tile Red C.ltrk NAMI STATfMENT .... A-7•151 Carpet Lounge, a tavern on Tl\I fOllowlltl Pl""IOll 11 clollll \111.11IMU NOTICI TO Clll!DITOlll ~,..,.. Or•-c1111 o.n,. Poor. ,., su,.1:1t10• cou1.T o" TNE Manhattan's ,....,_. West Side. ~ 1, u , 21. a. ,,,, :ru1.71 ,,.-, , ,,,0 , ,0, -,~-JOAN'S BOUTIQUE, 1111( Rlwrslde ..... 0 " It IA Police responding to the LEGAL NC111CE Avt .. N-1 B•ldl. Ctlll. TNE COUNTY Of' OllANGr: .JOlfl Ch1vtor. AP"!. 'A', ?le IL 161h Eltll• ol OLGA FAHNEMEL. Oec:t1.-robbery said the four suspects "'"" ~~i. c:~r11e~' ~r:!:· con6\lded bY '" 111Hotltr !1 h4!rfby 1lvrn to trfdl1or1 OI ned the bar. guns bJ2.?.ing. l'ICTITIOVI a\JSINlll lncHviOl/11. 1111 -• n.,,,..i 1111;.o..,1 "'" 111 Brown was captured on the MAM• ITATIMl!NT ' Joen Cfll'(lor 1>1•~ fltWl"ll cl1lm1 lttlntr lht 11/d rooi o( rb rt t Tiii tot...,1 ,.. -'i-1011 11 dolnt bu11Ma Thi• 1111em1nt llltid w!ll! 111e COlllllv dK9den! ••• '"ulrtd 10 1111 them, with 3 nea Y apa men ••: c1n GI' or•-C011111y on: Nov. u n11 . '"' """""' YOl.ldl«1. 111 111e oltk• of building aft.er being wounded ,.,_r1y Dfrltd10111, 20t1 lutl!ltll IY er~rly J. MtdOolo:. DrPutv C011n1Y lhl c1 ... k GI' ,,,. 1bo.-. 1n1111ed cour!. or in the exchange ol gunfire. C......,. Or .. I"'!"' Ciek, , lo Pflltnl ftltm .,..qth Irie lllKfH""' w11111m CJ11r111 H•r-lnktl. 11~ PubllJlltd or111M CNll Dtl!Y Piiot. vOIKhtt"1 to 1111 1111d1rJl11ntd •t "'' ottlce The other three suspects e~e Mlrl•olll AY~. Coron• dtl Mt•. Hovitmber 311 •r\CI Df(em11« 1, 11. 21. GI' SflNflr•d. Sf\fplltrd " °"'""'" 01 So. ,. ... 1• Valen"'-. Sam Petty Tf\11 bual-It btlnt Condllc:ltd 11'1 •II IJJI .J200.71 SPfllll Slrell, Stl. !100. LO$ Art111l1S, JA'Y ,.,,... h!dlvldlltl C.1!llotnl1 9001l w1111;11 11 lfl• Pl•c• 01 e.nd Arthur Young all of St WUlf1m cn.,ltl H11-tn•1I LEGAL NC111CE bU9111t11 ol th1 11nc11r&l1111d Jn 111 m1!!1r1 ' " .-TTrlt •ttltn"nl flied wlltl l!lt C011nlv Pl'll)nlnp lo th.I '''''' GI' ••Id dH;tdl!tll,1 __ Loo __ ~c·c__ __________ 1 Gterrt of Or1no1 Cou111Y on OK1mbtr 1. f'·IUn within IOUr "''"'"' 1fllr lhl tlral pybt!c•·r ''71 ev l fYtrlw J. M.cldoJI OellulY COlll\fJ l'ICTITIOUS '"'"''' !!on of lflt1 noll«. LEGAL NOTICE Cltrit D•l..:f DfttmW, '· 1•11 .Pl,lbllllltd Or1llN CNll Dlll'f flOctl. MIMI! ITATIMENT MALll'IOE CLARA 1.111.NUM, ft...1m11tr 1, 1•, fl. 21, lf71 :1242·11 TM lollirwl119 .,erton It clol119 bu1!n111 ExtculrlK GI' lhl Wiii of Hid I' 1'1'f C 11: Cl«ldlnl fllCTIT IOUS •UllNEIS IALTl-llEll.GEll.OH F u NE It AL '""'*"' Sh""" ..... Dvnd•1 HAMI STATaMl:MT HOME, 11•1 Superior A¥et>lle. (Olll .... Se ........ ,, ...... si.. n• Tiit lolloW!llt Pfl"IOll 11 dolr>1 bul!l\IU MOTICI TO C1'1DITOllS Mr.:t.,~111~~-TUAll.Y 0" COSTA ~...=::, c:!~:::~x fctllJ is: llU51NE5S M.IHAGEMEl'IT-IN-.... A·JH" MES.t.. IMC., a C1l!lorfllt cor11or1llon. flll..n\lt STITUTE, 116'1 8rvolchursl IJdt. , ... LE(lAL NC111CE • IUflllllOll COUltT Of' ,.,.I" 1111 So,;pfrlOI'" A ..... ,,., Co:1!1 M.... f111bl!llltd or-COISI Dlll'f flUOI. t-1unt!119lon 8...cfl. ITAT• OP: CAL IP:D1'NIA l'Oll C111tor11l1. O« be l'-Jolln Cfllltl<lt C1111tft, 2 I'' 1 TMI CDVNTY Ofl 01'ANlil• Tflfl bu1Jntu [1 ~ft. condudtd In' 1m~ r "· •• 1'11 Ind Jll'l\I:;..~· lrool<hurst. lllft. 2·•· Hu"''"''"" .EJt1t1 Ill FAV CNo\ll'IELL WEl5TE1', 1 c:orpor1tlon, 81~cto. C1l!lor11l1. ,i .. ,_•I l'AY WEll!llTEll, Oec:e1Hd. IALTZ MOllTUAllY Tlll1 111.tslnrn II btlnt tandtlded bY 111 Notlcif 11 IM<elrf tlV9fl lo cndlton OF COSTA MESA, IMC. LEGAL NO'I1CE tnc11vid11~1. • "" ~ 111t'Md dtc""'°t ""' 111 aw E1111-o. &trve•on Joltn Ct!lett ....._.. hlVlllf cl1lnu 111ln1! TM ..,111 Prr1ldetll . Thl1 1111.......i llled Wlftl !he Cou~t¥ Olcldeflt .... ,_!rtd let 1111 tr.em. Tfll1 ,,,,_,,, !!ltd wl!h 1111 C.Oll'nly NOTICI °" ,..UITliE I SAL• Cl«I< "' Ortl\ft Counf\I on DK. n. 1911 •fl!I !ht flKllMry "°"'d!lrl. 111 tht Cltri< 01 Orllltl COllnlY on: Movtmbfr Ne. Mill bY 8..,etl\' J MIOdo>; Ol!>utv Cow111w tfHct llf tM .Cilrtt Gf "" -· rn!IUMI 11, ltn. llV lleverlY J, MtOdolt. ()fp,/ly On J1111,11ry ltd. 1m •I 11 00 O'dodt Clerlt. . '6urt, or to ,.,._111 -. wllfl lfll County Cltrk. AM II lflll Solllh front rnt•1""1 let IN Pulll!1fltd Ori""' c.1111 DtltV l'llof, 91tnurv .....cl'l'I Ito !fie 11ndtf1ltflfd flublllhld Orsntr COltl Oilty flllot. Old Ol"l"'M Cct1111!w COllrthoilH 1oc•1td In DKitmtlft" U, 21. :JI, 1t11 Ind J...u1rv ~. ii 1111 offic• GI TlwN1 c. Wrb1l•r. Hov..,btf" n. .10 tlld DlcM!btr 7, u , Ille 20C1 blodl GI' Wnl s.1111 "'"' llOllllY•rd 1m 31"·11 '1JI wn1111r1 atvd.. lr.erty lllll1, "71 2u2.11 !lorro>«ly Wttl 61h SlrNU. Slnt1 An1,F-'----,,o---c-c.,.,,,,.,,,,--::____:.\ C.1tfwtllt whldl It 1'111 itltc• el bull111" C1Ufornl1, LOS Al'IGELES TITLE AMO LEGAL NOTICE Iii 1'111 llNll"11.,,... In 1H m1ltlrt LEGAL NOTICE ll!ISTllAC.T COl.PORA.TIDM 11 Tr111IN,, --------------) ....... ~ti !flt 111111.tt uld • .,.,.,, llf'lllll' TM cllld of lrvtl midi bw Rabtf11• El'I ftur "'°"'"' 11111" thll fir.I M!dutfl H•H •'Ill SUMllfll' Sliker Hltl. NOTICI Of: Tll\JSTll'S SALl tc:1non "' tfl!• notlu. S\Jl'lllOll COU!tf o~ TM• flulb1nd •nd Wiit, Ind , t c 0 , d • d Ne. MJl'C t• ,....._.,... ,,, 1971 STATE 01' C.l.Lll'OllMIA 1'01. NOY""ber 1t. 1'10. 11 lntl•umtnl No. On Jin. 4. lt11, II lt:OG l"IOOll It tlOl'lh lloMI o. Wfllnl« THI COUNTY 011' OllANGI! u1n. In ftool< tt61. Pitr t61 of O!llflll front enlrtnc:• let 0.-IMll! County Adf"l'lllllttr1tor Wiii! !ht Ne. A-nJIJ RKor<l1 of OrlnN (Ollntw, C11Uornl1 llV COllrtl'IOll~. 7fl0 Civic Cent.,-OrlV• W11t. Wll\.Aflllftld ct1 thl Etlllt MOTICI 01' Ml!AlllMG 011' l'ITITION rt11on ol btttc~ of c1r!lln ot>llpellon1 !otmerlw W, llfl S1 .. S1nt1 An1, C11lf, IM· of Mid dleedlnl 1'01. flllOl ATI! 01' HOLOGI APHIC 1«urM1 lhrrl!llY, noHce ol wh!cn WI' l'ERIAL MORTGAGE COllPOltAT!ON, 11 '"'-C, W ... I., WILL AHO 1'01' LITT I! ll I rerordt<I August 30, 1'11 11 lnilruminl Truft8 utldfr !ht ~ ctl tru1t m1cl1 by fnt WlltlllN a!W~ Tl!ITAMENTAllY ' Ha. 714'1 Jn Boo!< •llJ P19t !J3 ot 11ld J0t-IN C. l'Ul TON Ind ELISABETH R. ,_.., HUis, C•lllwllll t121t E1l1!r of GL.,OYS CE II M I C. H , Olflc11I llecord1. ~UL TON and r«ordfd t/11/6'. In 80DI< ~IMl'"lfltY tor Aflftlnl1lr•I., wlftl t11t Wiil· 0Ke•H'd. LOS .INGELES TITLE A l'I D \IOIO, Pate 'ltl. GI' Olfic!1t lltcord1 of AllM•.. l'IOTtCE IS HEllEBV GIVEN 1hll J.M. A1$lllACT CORPOllATIOl'I, 11 Trus!tr 0~11191 Coun!y, C1llfornl1, 11IYrt1to1.curt "'""'™ C1mPt>tll ~•• fllP<I h•reln 1 091lllon far will 1ell t! PUllllt 1ucllon lo t~• h!th~•' 1n lM•blMI~•• In ltYor ctl Morrh PUblllfltd 0•11111 Caeil 0111v fl llol Prob1tr ot HolotraPhlc Wiit end far bidder fa<" CIVI, p1y1b11 In l1wtu1 money Wlnorur ind Cl••• Wlnot\lf" now -Md NoYtmblr u, JO illd o-.nbll" 7, 14. IH~1nce of Le'llrr1 ''"tament1rv la Ptll· ct! the U11llM Stl1H 11 1111 llmr of 111•. and fllld bv Morr!1 Wlnoc11r Incl Cl••• tt?I ll5'-71 ttoner rl!lrt11c• la wflldl 11 m•d• for w!lhaul w1rr1nly at lo 1111•• POIHUIO!I or Wlnocv• bV re1son of Ille brrldl of c.,. ----------,,,----)l11rtflflr Pt1"11cul1r1. 1r>CI 1h1I tM lllTll incl 1nc11mbr1nc:11. lhl lnl«lll conYtVld to l1ln obll1111,,,.. ..:urfd ~ftlv. notlcr of LEGAL NOTICE al1cr of f111rln1 !fie 11me flll bNn HI tncl illlw lllld by Mid tr111IN under 11ld """ll;h w11 recorded 9/11/10, In IDOi< t4111 . --------o:;:.,,-------I fOl'" Dec:..i1ber 2f, 1911 . 11 f::IO ''"'" ln lllP. dNd of lr11M. 111 •lld let Ille followl"ll P-2'1, at ttld Ofllclal llKord1. COVr"-et DeP1r1mt11I Ho. 1 of 1111! dtKrlllfd prOl>tf'!v. loulld In Ille COlllllY IMPERIAL "IORTGAGI!: COllP win ••II l'IC.Tltl:~:usa\lllNIH court. •I 1'00 C!Yk Ctn•lr Orin W111, In of Or11111. st1t1 GI' C11!lorn11. lo-wll: ti Pllblk llK!lon"1o lhr hlllhnt bhlclr, tor •... 1 ITA,IMlNT tM City of 511111 Anl, C1lllornl1. l'A.11.CEL I; LP! It GI' TriCI M01. 11 c1ilf\, PIYlble !n llwlul m--.. of !fie ..... Oiied Otttmber 10. nn Plr m"' rKctrdlcl In lloolr. n1 P•tft Cl Unl!MI s11111 11 !fie llmt et u11, without .1..f!'!I fOlioWlnt ptrlDlll ''1 dolnt W. E. ST JOHN illd 41 of MIKllll_, M1Pt ' In Ille of· Wtrrtnlv 11 lo !Ille, --slon or t,.. _,.... •1: CO\llllY (lel"ll llt1 of !fie Covnly fltcordir GI' 11ld cumllr•~. l!lt lnlwflt ton'°"" la ind t.119 Foodt. 20Ml1t S1rtt1. N-rt llOGl!ll A IAl!VIO Ort"91 C11Un1Y now Mid bY u ld Tr1t1IN 11ndet" llld Oted l udi. C1lttor11l1 ,,..._ 1'1 Melt/le AY-p,_,.,., "*• commonly known 11· of Tr111t. In 111d to t'fll lollow!n1 dncrlbed ll•fllllll H. J.,.._. no 'llld '''"'· C1!fttrlllf. c111 ........ .,.,. 1]Sl 0.-dlld HHI Pl.ct. Stllff An•; pr_.-ty. "-II: N_, l eadl, C1lllor11i. '26'0 Ttf: IM:fl la...... Cilllornll LOI 1 lft tr1cl N 1111 CorO!lt l!:liUbllti H. Jol'H\IOn. t20 ~ Slrfff. ArterMJ Ill" fltlll!-PAllCl!:L 11 : Lot 'L 1~ llotll lJ ol Hltlll1nd1 11 ..,..,,. on 1 m1p •~ar- NrwpOrt IMdl. C1Htornle '2660. i4M RuvbdlYlllOll of Stcllon 1, lilbot In bOol <IO H-1t .,,.i 20 GI' MhC. "'-01 , Tiiis ::.:-It Mlllt condUCllll "1 1 Pllblllt>ed O••ntr COlll D1llY Piiot, tiltnd. In lflt CllY o1 l'lewport ltlf,,, 11 rec«ded lft rt<ora1 OI Or1n111 C-1¥. •-1111 11 H JGll Oet:""IMr IJ. 14. l'O, 1'11 3"3-11 "" m1D rtcOt'dlcl In look'· Pt9t JO of C1lll., commonly i.nown ti No. 111 Tllll ~· • .:...i · lllec."-=:111 "" COlllllY Ml1ttll1nt0111 M1P1, In the office of •rie Sl..,.•rd 11a .. Coron• def M1r. c1111 .. Clri ,) ~ ,... CounlY on NovitmOO 1' LEGAL NOTICE Countw lltcoraet of ltld Ortnctt C011nly. Ill!" lhl PV•-of PIYlnq obl191!1on1 •' ' J •-~-0 ..; Pr-r1y rnorf commonl~ known ti! IK!lrld 111' Nld ~ lno:lucll1111 !Mt. 1'71 . Iv twr 'f • .... -. '""" IJO Too11 A~rnu1. llalbOI l1l1nd. <h1•9f'I e...i ••Pe111e1 ol ,.... Truit.e C_,nlw Cllrli I l~ fllkll SUll'l"lllOI. COUll T 01' THE CtlllO•n/1. Arw! 11f 11IP. Jult 10, 1970 ""Wmll'! GI' Publl1'1111 Or•-CPll °" 14 ,1· ITATE 011' CALll'OlllUA 1'011 For lt!t PUrPOst "' PIY•nO obl!te1lon1 SlOG.111: ..... •If tUbllelllelll Pf'\'ITlrtllt ft.,.....,.blr :Kl, 1¥11 ~blf" 7, ' · THE COUMTY 011' OllA,..01 1tcur~ by s1ld Of"d 01 T•vtt lnclll(lln1 th•r .. l!ff 10"<0 !n~••JI !rom 6110/10 to 1m '193•11 Ho. A-41111 ••••· ch1r1111 1nc1 1•,..ntt1 ot the Trul!N, Hit thKk 11 •«•1¥ed '"'" llonu• on .,.,. NOTICE Of' ADMINISTl.ATll1)( WITH 11<1v1ncto U A"Y u"°1r !hi !PtlTll of stld Pt ld beltnct at ~\ .. N Trl.11!1e Fee1 THI WILl AHNEii.ED'S IALI!: DI' Dffd ot' l 1' 1 tfl ~ .. •l!AL PllOl'EllTY AT PlllVATfi iAL• . ru i • n1tt1'9I lrlOfl '",. For«lo1ur1 CM!I 1dYtno:e1 fl lllW, 1 1111 ""'" ol E ctl SJ,t••.17 '" ~n,..!d pr lnclPll of !hi no!t O.fed: 12/f/11 (II 141n oo"llOTHEA ELrAMOll s'~'HEll~;!I I IKUrfd by 11ld Df;td al Tru1I, WI!~ 111· IMPERIAL MOllTGAGE CORP .. ,,CTl'l'I0\11 IUllllll SI . A to tt•MI thrron from Aueu11 '· 19~1. •I 10 Truitee fl!AMI fTAJ•MINT ~nown II OOROTHEA E. SCMEllEll, 1Hrtlnl IH• AMUm 11 11'1 "'Id note Ind by llW AUrt<I SplvAk TM tollowllll tNrlOfll •r• Ootna OKeisfd. law orll\l!dtd tJUS ""'"'"II! NOTICE IS HEllEllY GtVEl'I ftla! Dttfd: otcemtt.r 1. 1911 Pulllllfled N.wporl Ht•bor Ne-w1 PrH1 Glll!Y ll'UILIC 1tELATIOHS AMO l(AllEH WAllCLE, ti 1dmlt'lltlrtt•I• wlftl· LOS ANGELES TITLI! AMO combfn.il w!th t~• Orin111 CNll Dally AOV .. 1601 Ho. CNJI Hltflw•v. Llf\11111 fM.W!t\.l~t'IU~ of !ht tlllll o! Ooroffllt All$TllACT COllPORATIO"'· Pll111. NfWPOrl ,,M;~. c.' I lo r "1 .' l flCll Ctllflrnll tHSI. Elrinor Sdle tr. 1100 kllOWt'I 11 Oorol~ll Trv1t" DKrmbe• II 21 1f 1'11 Jl'tJ..11 Albt'ri Ortv, Hiii W1t11UI Aft .. E. Schtr•r. d«ffttd, Wiii tell,, IH'IVllf Geor11 'L, M••lnolt. ' ' . M111f11tt1n lelCfl, C1lllorfll1 fDM6 ult, lo flll "1"''" Ind bHt bldde<", unclt• l'r11ldrtll I. M. fl•r••• 11111 Ho. c.111111 "ltflWIY, tf11 ftom11 Ind conditions flerr!Mlltr f!Mft· fluOl!thfd N_.,..llOl"I HArllor N~• p,.., LEGAL NOTICE Na. s. L"°'"' llld\. C1Hfornl1 ti.SI. ti...ed. ,.,.. aubltcl lo conn""et!Ofl In' lfle combined wlltl 011i.. Piiot. Ntw...,..r c1111a,nlt •"llMI w11 ... oui t11Y ffl lt 11u11.,.. 11 Mint ctnd'\l(ttd by • Sv_.lor Court, .0" J1n'""' 6, 1f'1, 11 lh• 1e1cti. c111tor1111. Dec:tmber 1. u . 71, Centrlfl a..n o;,.,o..i Hrlntrlflll flaur ct! 10:1111 ct CIOCk A.M .. ct• IM'1!111Pr 1'11 l1ll·l1 S H fllrltl Wllflfll llw lime allowed llW l1w. et lhr OI· l1nll AIOI 11..itfl Tiii• 111t.inttt1 ftfeoll wltfl 1111 Countv lie• of Mellly .. At'ldetsoo, 11tornry1 for NOTICE 01' flU ILIC. Hl!o\l lNO Cl-llf Or1nwe County ltfl ~ 'Jt, Mid ldn11f1!11r11rhi: wt!Mhr-wll)-•..i, LEGAL NOTICE U.S. M~=1::•c~"'~::-._ o."TATION. 1911 8Y e.-1y .J. M~ DllWIY " m E••• ••OldWIV, Gleftdelt. c..tt.tv C!trk, ;.'1:~~··..::1 Z:'1':' 1:• 1~1'J!11'11~1--------------l A l'ttarlno p~~ITo:o "'' C1lllort1l t LEGAL NO'l1CE Bribe Rap Denied By Sown BALTIMORE (UPI} Testifying less than an hour after leaving the hospital, Rep. John Dowdy (0-Tex.), has denied accepting a $25,000 bribe and said he rebuked the contractor whose associates allegedly gave the money to him. Dowdy, 59, took the stand Monday In U.S. District Court .11fter his release from University Hospital, where he had been since last Tuesday for treatment or a stomach disorder. He repeatedly denied taking a $25,000 payoff from Nathan Cohen, president of Monarch Construction Co., or any of Cohen's associates, to in- tervene in a federal probe of the Washington home im· provement firm. Defense attorneys were to recall Dowdy today to explain a face-to-face meeting with Cohen on Jan. 20, 1970, in which the alleged payoff was mentioned. The meeting was recorded by Cohen with an FBl·provided tape recorder that was strapped to his back. Special prosecutor Stephen Sachs was to cross-examine Dowdy afterward. Cohen testified earlier that two associates gave Dowdy a briefcase . containing the money at the Atlanta, Ga., airport on Sept. 25, 1965, and that he met with congressmen on subsequent occasions con· cerning further J u a t i c e Department inquiries. Dowdy said he was at the Atlanta airport on Sept. 25, 1965, but that he met only with BUI Thompson, a f e 11 o w passenger, and Leon a rd Wilson, an officer of an Alabama segregationist group. He said they met in the Delta Airlines hospitality suite •·on another floor from where the exchange supposedly oc· curred and accessible only by an escort." President To Get Two Yule Meals Innovative Study Valley 'Hotline' Projects in Gear ' By JOANNE REYNOLDS Df lfl• 011111 , .... '"" At Arevalos School, kJn- dergarten students are learn- log to .read. At Newland SChool, students in the upper grades are learning con- struction skills. And a t Btt!bard School, a photo lab iJ being set up for the students. These projecta: ind a half a dozen more like them are the brain children of Fountain Valley School District te.11chers that were lmp.Jeme'\ted through a budget.11ry device known as the Hotline. • are eager." Arevalos Principal JI m Freda la as pleased with the project as his teacher. He says recent atatewide test results indicate that students in the first and second grades who were Jn the SWRL program accounted for an average high scort on the test. He acknowledges t h a t without the Hotline money to get the reading program started it would have been delayed by a ye.11r, if started at all. "As it was, we had the · money and were reuly to go almost immediately. "And the planning was suc· cessruI enough that we were able to then keep the program going through our regular budget," he said. T o Hflnd School Dr. William G. Bowen, 38, an internationally known economist.., has been selected as presi· dent of Princeton Uni- versity, eflective July 1, 1972. He will succeed Dr. Robert Goheen. Bo\ven has been Princeton p r o v o s t since 1967. · The $10.000 Hotline fund was set up three years ago by district trustees so t h a t teachers and administrators who came up with innovative ideas could implement their projects without having to wait until August when the next year's budget i s established. Since the fund was set up, 10 projects have been started us· ing Hotline money. Southland Shoplift Totals Skyrocketing According to Bob Sanchis, Ust year s 0 u t h e r n assistant superintendent for California spent $200 million education services, the proj-on presents they never bought. eels must be set up through That's one of the messages the school principal a n d being circulated through the presented to trustees for final Huntington Beach Chamber of approval. Commerce as part of a "The two criteria we look massive anti-shoplifting cam· for in these Hotline projects," paigri. said Sane.his, "is that they The public relations cam- must be innovative and they paign was originally designed must meet e. state objective in the school's educational plan.'' by the Los Angeles Chamber At the end of that school of Commerce, but it has been h · 1 1 adopted by the Southern year, t e pro1ect s eva uated California Association of and if judged successful, it is then included into the school's Chamber Man<?.gers . regular budget. Hunt i n gt o n Beach's So Car. he noes, all the proj-manager, Ralph Kaiser, said eots that started oot with the idea behind the campaign Hotline funding h.!rve been car· is·to stress the seriousness of ried over into the regular shopllfting during the holiday budget. season when the stores are "The whole idea is to give usually hardest hit. teachers the opportunity tn n11t Huntington Beach detective ideas ino practice wihout hav· Ed Wilson is one of the people ing to wait for bujget time to who is aware of the effects of roll around every year," shoplifting. With seven mi:ljor Sanchis said. chain department stores in The cost to the Hotline fund Huntington Beach, he is has ranged from $150 to $2,500, something of an expert on with the average running shoplifting. • around $500, be added. "The value of times taken The Hotline idea has been ranges from $1 to as high as met with enthusiasm by Foun-$25," he said. "But the lain Valley instructors. average stays right around $10 or $12." One of them is Cheryl Angel. a kindergarten teacher at He said the kinds of things Arevalos who is also a reading most often taken are the specialist. Three years ago she things that can be easily be was one of four teacher11 who concealed, such as cosmetics, applied for Hotline funds to jewelry, wallets and clothing. being the kindergarten reading "Then of course there are program. the thefts carried out by That project cost the Hotline organized gangs or rings," fund $150 and today Is used in Wilson noted. "These people three other schools beside9 will go into a stor'e, grab an Arevalos. armload of clothing and run outside to a waiting car." see to it that expensive items are placed in locked cases and that a control is kept on dress- ing rooms so that employes know what goes in and comes out of the dressing rooms. Students, Police Ai.d Toy Drive Eight West Orange County police departments a r e cooperating with the Golden \\'est College Law Enforce- ment Club in a Christmas toy drivd for cl)ildren. Deposit boxes ha\•e been placed in the poliCe departments at Los Alamitos. Fountain Valley, Hunlington Beacll, Costa i1esa, Garden Grove, Ne1vport Beach, Seal Beach and Cypress. Boxes also have been set up in the Golden .west law en· forcement and administratiou buildings, college affairs office and library. Students, police officers and the public are being asked to donate new or nearly new toys for children up to 12 years. Toys should be ,.,,rapped and labeled "boy" or "girl.'' Deadline for depositing toys on campus Is J'riday dnd at local police stations.-Suriday. Divorce La w The reading curriculum for He said the amount of the kindergartners was writ· shoplifting in a given store is SACRAMENTO (AP) ten by South West Regional usually directly related to the Alimony payments between Laboratory after testing it on amount of surveillance in that 33 000 Students divorced couples will go up or • · stores. The basic philogophy is that "The major stores work down if one or the other's there are some children who their surveillance much . financial status changes under are ready to be taught to read heavier during Christmas. but new state leg islation . But before they enter the first the smaller businesses have to alimony can't be revised if one grade. rely on some prec<?A.J.tions to of the \\1'0 involved is living Currently Arevalos has 24 cut down on shoplifting," he with another person, Gov. kindergarten students usin~ said. Ronald Reagan said in signing the reading program and by He suggested businessmen the bill. the end of the year there mayl----==------------------ be as many as 45. "I really enjoy using the SWRL program," Miss Angel said. "And the children really like to read. I think every one of the kindergarten students has asked to read. They really Now .••.• Plastic Cream Invention For Artificial Teeth Artificial Teeth Never Felt that.ha' revolutionized denture S N .. 1 ••f wearing. h C 7 8 I n -ore It l<IS you bite h~rrler. chtw bet• w 0 ares Now,forl.hefin.lti~.M:ienceoffen.11. ter, t tll more natur.illy. F tXOO!':NT No other nev.·spapcr In the pla~t ic: cre1m that holds dent unit as !~st~ for hnul"" Res1&ta moisture. ivorld c11.res about your com· neverberore-ronns11nelasticmem-l)en1urr• lh:;l fit are tsStntial to flvell""°' Or•-COlll DIJIY !"!kit. '11 • 1 1 rt • •OTl '"'-·• wo•• ~.,,,-<-••• 1-••0. lot0¥emb1r ...... ~ 1, "· ,I. ""'· ln,Nrnt, ... onl1t1 ti.11 lfll l'lll!t Cl TO Cl.lDITOllS --.... ·~ ~· .... ttn lJl').7t of Donottle1-Elt....,, Sdleret. 11111 k-n SUll'l!IUOll COUil 01' THI: Sa111a A ... llP91on .... 111 -I 1111lllk -'--------------)•• Doroltll1 E. ~r«, dtefflld. f\11 ITITI 01' CILll'OllNIA l'Oll l>Ut!M on Tl'tvrJCl8~, J1...,1rv 13, 19'1, 11 munity like your community bnne lhal J1lp~ llold Jiu"' to till health. Src your dent11t n:aularly. WASHINGTON (AP ) •---I . P1al11r•l tiJsua of yo11T 1N<111/lr. It"s a Gtl easy-to-u!IC FUiOOE?oo'T Denture daily newspaper ........,,,_ ts unique discovery called F1XOO£t-..,.• Adhe51\·e Cream. LEGAL NOTICE acquired b\' -1tlct11 lf4 1-or oll1erwl1•. TN• COU ... TY 01' 01.Al'IO I! 10•00 l .m. In,.._ CJIV Count/I Ctwmlltrs. otMr thlfl. or In IO<IJ!lon to. ti.et of wla I'll. A·JllU C•tw 11111. N_.I IHc:h. Ctllfoinl1 to --------------)dKrlMdo •I !flt tlmt of l'ttr !kith, Ill 11111 E1t~te al $AM LEVl l'I, OKr••NI. Otlllill tt!lkn<t on """"lhet or rlCll !fie M• lo tit 11111 c1rt1tn rut pr-rt¥ k!c•llill lh NOflCI! IS t-iEllEllY GIVEl'I let !ht U.S M1rine Coro1 A,jr St1!lon. El Toro, Is fll(TITIOUI I WllN•SS !fir COllfllY of Or111H, S1lll ot Cttltotnll, Ufllfltw1 ctf !fie 1110ve nlmf'd OP<tclent dlKhtrt\119 w1s1e. or lflrttlrt1lllf le MAMI nlTlll\I NT desc:rtbld 11 foll~; lhll 1H HtlOlll h1~l119 CllllTll 1•aln1! lilt d1Kh8rte wa1!1. In Ylol1llon OI w11l1 ,..,,. llfllo'#IM ..,._ It .,.,... tiu1l11111 Loi -In lllod;.Slll ct! Sunwl It.ch, Miii O«edenl ••• rl!OUl•f<l lo 1n1 t~. dlKhlrQe ,..,ulr""Mll W'l'lldo werr l1Wld It! • • ••"-on a """" raurdlll In lloolc 1, .,.Ith tflt ntcllH•Y vouci.1r1. In !fie ol!ke In Rft<llulion 61-1$ on 5-litmlMr 7'. 1967. WHIClll! Clrl"rnodlt'f AllK/1111, 1... Pl ... 3' 11n1141)11f Mkull-1 Mfps, of -dtrk ol IM lbo¥o Mtlllf'd COllr!, or Tllf Pl~I will 111111 recomll"llnd la !flt 11111 Wlllcllff D'lvt, N._, I I • C fl, rKct111J llf Or.,... COlllllY. to llf"-nl lhl'm. with !hr Mt1111ry bOl•d whe1l>1< 1 vtol1Hon f\11 occurred C1ll+ornl1 Commontv k-n " Sffl and Solltfl YMl<flrfl, le lh• ll nilf'l••Mll ol tht ol!lcr tncl wl\f!h!" 1 Cffll end dt1!1t otdrr Don L. SOl"lflHfl (0-tl lltrtner), P1<lllc, lv1llfl Biid\, C1tllornt1. at fll1 Allor'My1, Lt¥1n incl Pokr11. 2ttl lhould be f11utd. The 11>1Clllc •t· tte lff \..IM. A.i. )I. Coront Olf4 Mir. SlitllKl to: cvrr..,! t1KH. C0"1!111~111 Cltrlt AYfftllt. Long lo11efl. Celllor~I• oulre1T1rnl1 In ou•11fon 1•1 tho lallowln•, TJllJ bullMH fl tirlllf CllNflKllll by • cond!llon1, r•1t•lclloni. ,.H•Ylllon1. ...au, ~ldo It t~t ~t1c1 of bu1l111t1 ol ti C°'11tlned 111 Reoolullon 67·?S: 111111111 Nr1ner&r111 rlD1t!1, rl"'!•,.i' WIY, 11...,,,nl~ '"" 0 • )he u""tt1!1ned !n 111 m11n•r1 pfrt11111n, •·01 The dl1t.1'11r1r1 1v@••Df!d OVf'• Don L. httnltfl hl!!ll t11<!.lmbrt11t.tt Of f'9Conl. le lflt n1•!t GI' Mid dletdtll!, within tour lh• <>erlod ol ~ vt~r 1fl~ll not h~vt 1nv Tiii\ ".._' 111111 Wllll ltw COl,INy lM ttrms. 1/tod tondf!IOlll GI' 1411t •'t' manlfl\ 1n•r tho !!•\! PUbllc1tlan of tni1 01 I~~ bPlow n11T1ed 1ubtl1nce\ wfllcfl (lft (JI Or•,,.. COii,.,., ·on M~ 1', 1\11 In .. w~I ll'IOM1' Of lhe UnltMI ~lllt1 ne!ltt. ••c~ 1n1 tonce11!rll!011~ o! 1ht ••mt 1171, aw 8r11r~ ~. M..,.,,., Otouly ot • ...,,..trlu or Nrt c1P1 11'111 p,srt credit. O.ltO OK""'"-' '· lt11 •ub\•tn<• In lhr •tatlon w1!fr 1111111Jy by ~ C.ltR lllr ,.,.,,.,, al Wcfl crldll to bt KtllM1blt Alvo!\ L1vl11 more th~ll 1111 Yltutf t11!td: ~lllltd Or1111t C."'' D1l!,r ~llol. to tlw lldmlllltlr1trl• 1nd to 11>11 Court, E•tcutor E!ntr Sotub1t Mlltr11l1 1Smol1 M~ 20, llld Ol<""'btr 7, 1•, 21 , Ttn ,...-!;Ml Of lhfl •fl\Ollnl bid Ito IC-OI !ht Wiii ol of'd: lt11 31'4-11 c-ny "'-ctlfff 1nd lflt. bl lal\Ct let be IM 1bov1 Mmtd dtctdtn• {t i Thf dl1Cf'IArff thtll bP con!ro!ll'(I 1111d 0!1 Cortfll"fl'llllon o1Ml4-b¥1111 Covrl, LIVIN ANO flOl(llA~ 111 Wdo I min"" lhll wrt&ao 110"", ct! LBQAL Nt1l1CB T1•"• rent1, 0Ht111nt 11111 fl'ltl~•tn~ tttt 'l•rfl Aw'*W -1(!'1 thi1 w11 t1 11 • 111rt. wlll not -------C0'..,.-------1111 ......... llflCI .,,. llfetfllllll'\I on h•tt1,,tfl(1 Llnw aHdl. 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Niii "lctl••ed. or 11r1 '1.11.,. fl M•LVIM T, LAM!., ti!• Al llldt •NI oHtf• "*"bet~ wrltmt LEGAL NOO'ICE tfl,...tened lp bt YiP!ltfd, "'"' -""' •nd MIL.VIM. \.Miii. ~ '"' wlM liol l'tCl'IYtd 11 11>1 etnc. al tl<Tlt Kllf<llllH "" ob!elnlnt (O'l'\llll1no:• 'fOTICll IS ttElll!aV Otvl!N Ill llM ito't:lw & ~ 1ttor..,,y1 lier Miii Id-•I 1111 •trHnt Prl<llC:1blr 0111. TM ~ fl N .-.. ,........ dlClilMftll mlllltrtWI•• tt :m l!al lrlldw..,. Gllfto di.d>irtrl'" 111d -lnl.,n!N --1 .... all --"""""' dtlltlt -tnll .... , C11lfctnlla, w """" lllld wtlll IM 11r Mll' ..... .,. but nt111 l'Wlt. bt r1-11t1 bV ... ui. ~ ar,i ,_,...... tt tllt (1"f1l fl Mid "'-ltr C.Urt or *II_.., f'ILI 1110. 1'·1toll1t (°'i!"ltl. (flit 1111111 Wiii lvrlfllf COMldrr ~ .ttf1 "'9 _...,.,., ~ In .. 11111 """'4nl•lr•""• ~ II ,.., ~tCtTIOUS IUStMlSS """""'' lo rtcornmf'lld le tl'tt lul1 bOlr4 .. ""'"' tf h dtrt! ., !Ill ""'9 llrrll 111., MM 111"11 M!luotlon et tflh NA.Ml ITATIMINT !flt;! lhf' OlJ<'llerW< bt r-.ol ...... to rntrlct ew11, " ff _.,.... l!lf!l!\I wtl!t l'lll'k• tf'lll btfort IM 1'11_1,.. ol ,id Mlf '"' lollowt,. Htttlll It dOlllf llUllMll D'" .... ~11111 "" vql11m1, tvPI. or c:,,... .....,,.. ~.. to th I l'V fVf1M'r ,.......,,,,.... tnd ............ It: C"'lrlhon OI WfSll lflll .... , bt lfddld " .... ~ Gt -•ltclnlt'ft, '"""' II """ ilfl\ft "' #If "'°'"""" tor C..lt ~ Tltt (:lllttr. ,,,. " "" -•n•-.1 !lllt#oAJll /.HD IN•MAlf, .. Wltllllr"• lllt ldl'l'llfll"'"'ll'll, Mf!W-9 lovle'Yclr!S. (O.lt MI 1 I , 'Wrtltf.n Ctlctl•s ctl tp"lmonv to be lliilili·;;o•,,..., lulft •· ._.... .-iu11. Tiii rltttt It ,....-ti 111ltd Mii' lfld C•llt.fl'll-9 "'11 ll•tlll!Nd 81 lht "•••Int \fl(l\lfd bl -..., Ml!, Whldl It Hit pll(t 111 Miit. Al"!IWt fl, '""'°"'• Hl!llt I . C1ri.ton, lvrl>llf!H toe lht 11Mtd In tdv•i.t• ti lflf fl ....,._ .. 11'11 ....... ~ IR .. I Dei..t: ~a. 1m, ~. C1ff..,.., '*1 f\e'rfflt. --~ .. ... """ .. K•rrn Wl h ,..,,,, ........... 11 ""'"' condut"IMI rw Ill "" '"lon•I IM'le•cl'\ lli. "" '"' Wlllt ... ~ fovl' ,,_,... .,..,. Admlftlfll'irlrl"lt wtlfl !flt IMlvt0111t d!l(f'lll"ff 11 -lo &\IOI!( l~•tw>CllOll ti ""l'k'lt 11f It'll• Nlt!Ct. wtll A,,.,.•ed A'lfllt ~-lll'tf'fll m1 bolrd'• Ol'llc' from 1.00 t "'· 11 t100 0..... ,._...., 1t, Im. Gt 1111 IE.11111 ot OorelMt Etf>t"O< Thl1 tl•'-111 111111 wt"' ffll COii""' f ,11\, eft WMllOIYI. r __.,,. Ynf, kMftr, 11M ll-11 Dorotht1 Cltrt et Ot"ll!M c..u..tv on "'°"""'"'' ti. llcllMd A. 8Uffrm1~11. ~fl l'flit Wlfl flf £, Sdlfrv, Otf:H... 1t11 '! llt¥1f"IY J, Mffdo•. Dfpvtv EH<utlvt Offl<rr fllt ...... !WT*~. MILaY" & J.NOllllOM Cl!ljnty 1.,k C1lllt11"1111 t~ll(lflfl W•lrt .................. I TV9MAlll lb I• ........... , MtOWIN, OlllN • l\l~Vll D11tlllf' Control e111r11 • -.............. 11111't M ....... , c.tl*""'lf tllN ATTOltNIYI 4T L•W &.jl11t1 A~ llttl~ ,/ ...., ,.... c.a.•• r•• 1ru1.....,.... JM 1111 ,,...""'""'¥•• ....,Munoti• "~· ,.,1.4 1 .,.. • ....,,..,. "' "*"''""'•"'' °'"'"' c1ft1tr1111 n... "'-•"'~· c1u1or~11 ttli'I& tr ,_. wtll tM Wiii AMhMI T•h IJl-11" '11.bll!JIM H-1 H1rbol" ,_.., flr-ttl °' ... C..-Dll'• "'9f .M11 l'llbjltllftl 0••"'• C.DIJI D1I~ fl!k)t, C'Ofl'IDTriid" wtt11 Dt l!y ll'llOI, ~,_,,... a • ... 0.C: 1:ee1 1. 1.t. ,...,.._. Ot"-C.JI D1!1y 'llol. N01"1l•'Mr )0. tnil DtctnlMr f, '" 1!, llldl, C.lh-n .. , ~ lt. ltn "" a1a.n 1a. '" & 1m ~n 1•n ,,.,_,, Y ,.,,.,, President Nixon plans to eat 1~t;h;•~D;AI~L;Y~P;ILOT;;;·::=:===.'.!:======================= two Christmas dinners -one : at the White House and one dining out in New York City, his wife Pat says. Mrs. Nixon said Monday the President will feast on turkey at the executive mansion with his family and in·Jaws, in- cluding Mamie Eisenhower. Julie Nixon Eisenhower and her husband, Navy Ensign David Eisenhower; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Eisenhower: Tricia Nixon Cox and her husband, Edward ; and hls parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Cox of New York, all will spend Christmas Eve and Christmas at the White House. But. Mrs. Nlxon said, the President 1190 has promised to take his f,11mlly to New York to see a play. eat out ttind al· tend c.hurch where Julie was married. Although gilt-giving will b< limlled to the family, Mrs. Nixon aaid, she and th• Pre.st· dent will donate a load of toys for children w}1' ttire wards of the city. "We do for others rather than ourselvtJ," ahe said ol the famlly's Chrl11tmas tradl· Uons. The gifts to I.he children wlll be 1tnonymous "beceu&e. we don't want tQ be pattonlzin&," Mr1. Nlloo faJd.. 300 RIGISTERED ORIGINAL OIL PAINTINGS Will BE LIQUIDATED LESS THAN WHOLESALE NOW OPEN TO THE PUBLIC ART DIALIRS INYITID •t-111 trithtlt •1t• c,......, , ....... uthh. ~ ef ••• (ll•ittM,t 91"1 "" tf "'"'°'' c11!1et1H1 •....ii "r ............ ...,..tiff f!k t.n '''"' c.t-"ttk1 •M "ttt c1lltcr.t1" fNlll •r"M tt.. Wtl"l• • •Mfft,..llltMlll .. , ... ~.,_..I •hftl JI% h 1S% OlKM1t 1H ratcill ••ll.., •rklf •AJJ _.,,fl .. 11 .... U.•ttk•nl,•11"' c111,.1 l cc.,t..i. ¢~ A'!!~!~!~!~!'!~:!e,~~~ER (~ ORIGINAL.ART WAREHOUSE SHOWROOM 867 W. 16th (BtlWHll Place11tia & Monrovia) COSTA MESA '°'.:',t'-~::::!.°' PHONE 548-7296 NeWport Springs ~Aromatic' Le·aks '· By TERRY C.OVILLE Of IM 0111~ l"01t Stiff can an earlbquake smell bad! Yes, In the case of Mackerel Flat! (Newport Beach), bi.it no, In the case of Goat HUI (Cotta .!wfesa), says 1eologl!1t George Zebal. "Back in 1912 the only .non-agricultural busine.s.s in Harper (a forerunner of Costa Meu) was a health spa that ran on the phil090phy that the W()f'H ~ a 'fll:lrm CdM CofC Sets Home , Business Lighting Contest A residential arid business lighUng con- test Friday and a "Call Santa" night Dec. 21 are Christmas season activities !ponsored by the Corona del Mar Chamber of Commerce. Winner! In the residential and business liahting entries will then C<lmpete in the ".a Miles or Christmas Smiles" contest, c:o.sponsored by the DAILY PILOT and the Orange Caunty Coast Association. Head ol the chamber's judging com- mit!~ is Bob Bartholomew. Children can put in their last minute requeats to Santi Cl1ue Dec. 21 from S:40 p.m. to t p.m. Chamber officials said special lines to the North Pole will be open through 675- 5010. ~ mineral bath smelled, the better the curt," Zebat txplalned. 11 ln 1914 Harper wa11 visited by a bad earthquake and lhe well with Its aroma, the health spa and all of Harper dried up And vanished -e:rcept for Mayor (Alvil!I) PinkJey." · "On the other 1\de of the coin is Mackerel Flat.. Ttlere a series of earth- quakes have opened rwureJ along the bayfront to allow noxious gasea to escape," Zebal told members of the Of· ficlal Greeters Clllb of the Costa Mesa Clamber of O>mmerct, lut week. "And we have the well-documented an4 well known Newport. Belch odor problem. It's mayor11 come and 10, but the odor lingers.'' Zebal, who holds a master's degree In science from Cal Tech and spent 29 years In field research in mining, petroleum and space geology, has offices In Newpor\ Beach. He explained lhat the noxious gas odors in Newport come from the underground petroleum deposita which have a high sulphur content. "We also live on the Newport· Inglewood Fault, a part of the great San Andreas Fault, which over the years has opened a number of fissures for the escaping gas," Zebal said. "Many people think these odors are caused by marsh gas -bacterial action on vegetable material from which o:rygen is excluded. Except for the Upper Bay area, this Is simply not true." 7.ebal predicted thot the odor problem would be continuous, though he pointed out there are ways 1o stop such gas leaks. "There are method11 ta stop this seep- ing gas, and they can be appli"'1 much · more easily to a'n area before It Is developed than afterward!." SMELLS SOMETHING ROTTEN Newport Geologist Zebal Costa Mesa doesn't ha ve the same pro- blem anymore -to include a detailed geological survey in its masterplan to p i n p o l n t areas wher2 noxious ga1 seepage may exist. "The smell is often like rotten eggs. But getting rid of that rotten smell Is my business,'' Zebai said. Under private contracts in several parts of Newport, Zebal has installed decorative gas lights uUltzing the gas seepage. In a question period at the end of the luncheon, Zebal rapped those who feared a major earthquake as a result of the re- cent Amchitka nuclear teslJ. "They were apparently not knowledgeable of earthquakes,'' he said. "A quake that measures eight on t h e Richter scale releases energy equal to thousands of atomic bomb&." Bltf• "1f .Jan....,, • Promontory Bay . Project to Start By CANDACE PEARSON replenish the beach al Balboa taland, said 01 ,... O•!lr '''°' tNff Snyder, while Over 100,000 ·cubic yard! Construction of the Irvine Company'• have gone to Huntington Beach 111 fill for mulU·mlllion dollar Promontory Bay pro-a park sile. 'The rest has been used In ject ls expected to begin next month or other company projects. soon after, fl company official sai<! today, The lagoon will have private moorin~s All phases of the project -lncludlng and 111ips but will be open for public final excavation, construction Of road11, recreation. Allhough future water quality utility systems and a bulkhead -have will then depend on city or county agen- been put out to bid and will be awarded cles, it is now lrvine'1 responsibility, in January, Robert Snyder, manager of Snyder said. residential enaineering, said. The company will be filing this week Depending on union strike conditions, for a permit from the Santa Ana construcUon will start shortly thereafter, Regional Water Quality C.Ontrol Board. Snyder said. Analyses of the waler are taken before1 The entire $2.S miltlon project, in· during.and after the project's completion. eluding dredging an<f filling an II-acre Snyder contends {hat slllaflon or run. lagoon, developing 62 11lngle-lamlly Jots off Into the bay will not be a problem and realigning Bayside Drive, will be with the project. CQmpleted by April , or sooner. he said. The lagoon will have a depth of seven All phases could be awarded ., a single to 15 feet depending on the Ude and the project or to separate bidders, he said. land aurrounding it is at a level flat Related develoi>ment ot a $15 million , enough "to cause no increase in present SU.unit apartment project on the bluffs aUtation in the area." above, overlooking Balboa Island, will He added that silt basins to catch run- begin in July. off wlll be constructed for the separate While there was little opposition to the project ol Promontory Point. single-family home proposal before "A larger problem than the siltation for municipal bodies, island resident! fought this project is the debris and things that for months to block the r"'tlU-family come through the storm drain systems ," h eel nly · 15 Snyder said. plan. T ey aucceed o in winning a "We are trying to provide something percent reduction in the density of the within the pipe system so these things· apartments, however. wc;>n't gel Into the bay ; to collect and sift The realignment of Bayside Drive llO the trash," he said. that il will follow the bottDm of the bluffs An earlier concem that water going In below Promontory Point is scheduled for and out of the l~foot wide channel completion in late summer, 1972. would cause erosion to Balboa Island The lagoon and the 62 home, around It beaches has been proven false by studies will then rest between the t'ld and new by two consultants, Snyder said. Bayside Drives. "Both said there will not be enough The total project is 24 acres, with the force In the amount of water -which density about 2.S dwelling units per acre. will be small \n relation to the channel Snyder compare11 the development to size." he said. J 'Old Fitz' Free •• .. •• • Charles J. Fi,tzgerald, 85, illso 1 known as "Old Fitz", le£f Fol· som prison a (ree man rec~nt· ly after serving .mor.e than .,_ half century for mui'dering two policemen . Fitzgerald was California's oldest inmate .and served the longest stretch. In '.,~ Folsom history -45 Years. He ' began his prison career in 190~ ., Hotel Planned \ Near Hospital The chamber is asking merchanlJ along Coast Highway through Corona del Mar to decorate their buildings, following the 1Io1an "A Boulevard of Lights.'' The geologist urged Newport Beach - ··'The blast would not start a quake, and if one were due to happen anyway, the blast would not have affected It." Linda Isle, although It will have no guard The company already has grading and gate. Army Corps of Engineer permits for the Ne~·port Beach p I an n l n g com- Lots will be sold to individuals "in the project and Its lmprovemenl drawings missioners have approved a prqpos'I f~ L. M. Boyd Adultery Thrives In S. California "What men call 1aUantry, ind 1od11 adultery, Is m•di mon cnmmon where the cllmate'a sullry." Gtorge Gordon Byron Consider thost married women who step out of matri· moolal bounds. ln this country 1till, they are a minority. Only one out of five wives, to be specific. And among them, two out of five confine their flak romancing to but one other ma n, who gets sent on his way in less than a year. Or !IO report the researchers of such int imate matters. They t\ISO say thi s sort of fence-jump- ing appears to be s\ighlly more popu- lar in Southern Califomia and northern F'lorlda than elsewhere. NUNS live longer lhM women out· side the church. On the average. That's also a fac t. JF YOU don't like the odor or cook· Ing brussel11 sprouts, toss a piece of bread in the pot, suggests one chef. NEW STUDIES nationwide now indicate only one woman in every 14 is a natural blonde. QUERIES Q. "Could Jackie Onassis be buried in Arlington Na· tional Cemetery?'' A. Supposedly not. Wives of military men, even com· manders-in-chlef, lose their eligibility, if they remarry. Q. "HOW r.1ANY widows of U.S. presidents have re- married?'' A. Just two. 'The aforementioned Mrs. Onassi11 and Mrs. G!'Over Cleveland Preston . · A SINGLE GJR.I. In Sacramento asks how she might Jou 20 pounds. Nothing to it. Ride to and from work on 1 motorcycle. No seriously, motorcycle riding is said to be auperb i110tonlc e1erclse. What old Charles Atlas used to call dynamic tension, remember that? FOR SOME peculiar reason , the scientist ~oes. not tend to remember his dream11 as well as the non-sc1enu,t. Or so reports the sleep researchers. Doesn't mean he drum1 less, they say. He just can 't remember it. THIS CONCKRNS the fellow who underg003 that birth control surgery known as the vasectomy. Some_ medical men contend he becomes therearter more aggressive. more domineering , more hostile. No positive proof o( this, under11tand. Just theory. INITIALS "Why is it when the Democrats are in power, our newspapers 1lway1 refer to our presidenta by their Initials~ such as 'FDR,' 'HST,' 'JFK' and 'LBJ'? Yet when th~ ~ publicans are In power, our newspapers never uae DD1 or 'RMN'7" A C.llfomJan asks. A peculi1r coincidence, true But just that. Headllne writers use initials to save spa~. if neceP&ry. 'Ike" was fit to print. And "NiJ:on" Is not as Jong, say, as 1 le11I brief or the weather report. AM STUMPED. What pray, did the key on Benjamin Frank.Jin'• kite unlock? Addre11 maU to L. M. Bo¢, P. 0. Boz 1815, Ntw- port 8e4Ch, Calif. 92660. Phone Firm Asks Court Bike Plans Due Jan.13 range of $100,000, with It costing another are before the city , he said. a 108-bed senior citizens residential hotel tt50,000 to $200,(1()(1 to build a home near Hoag Memorial Hospital. · there," he said . Herbert Manasse of Los Angeles ·pJari• The trvil)e Company will maintain Students. Do Beller to build the facility at 333 Placentia Ave. "arChitectural control" he added. He said it will serve only healthy, arm The company has had a harbor permit LOS At~GELFS lUPI) -Test scores bulatory senior citizen&, providing social R ehear;l·tg A masler plan for bicycle to dred1e and bulkhead the lagoon, which from lhe state's major special education activities, but not medical care. will be connected to the harbor with a program for dlst.dvantaged stud~nts show The proposal was opposed bc£ore city " trails through Hu~n Beach will be presented to the SAN FRANCISCO (AP) 100-foot-wide channel just east of the that particlpanlll have greatly increased planners by operators-o( nearby con· Balboa Yacht Basin, for over a year. their scholastic achievement in the pro-valescent hospitals who sald' th'e. ne\f The Pacific Telephone Co. has public Jan. 13 by the city's asked the. California Supreme Environmental Council. "We are just about finished with the gram, it has been reported. 'The state !acility will result in "over-bcddi~g" ai; mass excavation," said Snyder , adding Department of Education said S4 percent 1s not needed . : ... Court · for a rehearing of its The plan will be shown at decision voiding a Pub\Jc 7:30 p.m. in the Murdy Park Utilities Commission order Community Center by council authorliing a tax-saving ac-chairman Mni. M a r g a r e t counting system for ra~mak· Carlberg. that about 400,000 cubic yards of sand of the students in the federally financed Planners· overrode the objectkms·ln a~ have been taken out. Compensatory Education Program 2 'vote, with commissioners · Will~~ Over 30,000 cubic yards of that sand scored a month's gain in reading for Mart.in and Don. Adkinson cast,ing t~ went to the city of Newport Beach to every month of instruction. negatjve ballots. • .-~ STARS ing purposes. Mrs. Carlberg says the plan The -company's attorneys Includes listing of trails and Sydn~y Om11.rr Is on~ ()f argued Monday that the routes, marking and sign the world'i; great astrolo· court's unanun· 0,, deci·sion .. 1, plans, and safety ideas for gers. HIA colu~~Sone ot in serious en:or and needful or about 30 miles of streets and :!1:tu~e~:U-Y PUAJi ireat l~-~-~c:-'-~ -.~-..... -. :~--=--·-T· ~-.~-. ~:-:-~,-~.,.____.,~ reconsideration." 1-b::yc_:w::•::Y:::'·-------...'.!:===========! The Supreme Court on Nov. 26 annulled the P UC ' s November 1970 order on the ground that It failed to con· sider alternatives to "ac· celerated t a x depreciation with normaliiation.'' The PUC after the court's decision ordered proceedings "for the purpose of con· sldering lawful alternatives to the method used by the com· mission in c1lculatlng Income tax expense11." The company said that despite its request for a court rehearing it will not seek delay and lntend11 to participate and cooperate fully in proceedings before the PUC. Commissions pokes men estimated that the disputed ::i.ccounting procedures ac· counted for $54 million ol a $143 million rate lncroo~e granted Pacific Telephone last June. Teachers Honor Marina Senior Lucy Tucker, a 17-year-old Marina High School senior, ha s been cited as one of the outstanding high s c h o o I English students in the nation. Miu Tucker, 16102 Spring- dale SI., recelved the oom- mendation from the National Council of Teachers of Engli11h after writing a one-hour im- promptu eesay. LET'S BE FRIENDLY U )'OU ha~·e new neli;:hborK or know or anyone mnvlng to our area, please lt'll us IO that v.·e may extend a friendly welcome and help them to become acquainted In their ?M!W 1urrounding1. So. Caast Visitor 4'4-tl7' 494-Uil llarblr VIsltor 1Jltt5 the $easen ta be $avtn~, wttn a ~Iendale Federal gnrtBtrnas g1ub Jl[[Bunt No\v is the tin1e lo start saving for an even bigger Christmas next yedr. Save a lot by pulling av•l~Y a little each \vcek or n1onth in your Glcnd.ilc Christ1nas Cluh Accoun t. Unlike rnost,Glt'ndale Federal's Christn1as Club earns interc~t at the same high r.ite as our regular savings dCCounts, 5% current <1nnuil rille on a day·in, d•y·out basis. \.Vhy wait, stop by Glendale Fede ral and st~rt you r Christm;is Club. Whlle you're there, pick up a free "Holidtty Card Record,"a grcilt vvay to keep your Chrislma! card list. LA -Z-BOY" RECLINING CHAIR FACTORY AUTHORIZED SALE Take advontage'of this genuine LA·Z·BOY.SALE today and SAVEi Sole Pni:ed 513950 Store Hours.·· 9 to 9 'Till Christnias "Buy your family a .... •• genuine la·Z'.Boy" Reclina·Rocker' and let them know that you really .care.0 ' ., ( .. .. "" •.. . _, ' ' .. • "" "' " .. ' "' .,, ·--------JilllifMi,., & ALL LA·Z·IOY'S I Reduced From · 530 TO $75 '' ON STORE I INVENTORY FOR ,. ~ CHRISTMAS DELIVERY· l!lli::,,,_..••--:,.ws.w THE WARM. COZY PLACE GLENl4LE FEDERAL Newport Office: 500 Newport Center Or. Costa Maso Olfic•; 2JOO Harbor Blvd. •:':~ •' -.. T11 Shop 1865 HARBOR BLVD •. e COSTA MESA-548-5131 loapt.C~•?Jua • I~-~~-~ ·~ I l I I I I I • • I \ ( DAILY PILOT TutSday, OKtmbor 14, 1971 ' •. 2 t:_,,•t at Wall Ingenious Schem~; Democrats File Suit · r-0U....,EEN~,E-.-. ~. =--.. -=•L.:;:Ph~i_lnte=r=a"=--' a T • • A • • • , a . ,Q .. • • ., ~ ~ / /. • 0 .. •• ·convic~ at L~rge Court_A.sked t.o Halt GOP .Rentap E!f.or~ J • •/./f:: ·.~~ • • /-JI "' . .,. . " .. .. . -, . ' . ' SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Tiie uppree.dent.d mov&lll ~ !or' quiet' 6-., f~tu.~~~~~ !!r~~or~epl~ -gloomy, .. "· ,;:.. .. • t:> Cl .~ ~ ... . . ' q ./ /. • ' . MN QUE1fl'IN rbPI) -A omrided DMdcitr was at llrse eerlJ Jllllal' IS the resalt 11 • ~eocape ICheme ., -Bu Quentin Prison .... tes wbo placed homo- IUde clummlel in thet <>ells ud tbon 1ried lo scale ·a 411-lool wall •. jobs 1n 1he prison p1inting shop and hid 1tbere awatttng a chance to .escape, hoping to. · Jool guanh wilh the dumn1ies • SUpreme Cow;t In prohibit a authority In reapportion the .. ~ Res>llblfCJl!l f.I o o r Republican • dominated com-Assembly and Sena!< U tho .....,. Fred 'M~ Jr. m- mbsloO from r.,pportionln' Jeglslautre l•ils top¢..,. Ille ~uc:' the Assem~ slain. Senate and Assembly wk during Ila regular Oeaim. Wlllch -.id 8 ~ib . Districts. • Gov. Ronald lleopn. II Ibo ,..,.~. • , e • • • • • • ·• Tiie "'*two~ captured aod guards searched ror Jaco b Zllaer, 27, serving a !He tum for Ont degree murder from Loo Angdes Coonty. l'rflOo duty officer Keith Jlayboll saJd )le wss nof <ure . Zitmi ~ it over the wall. • Solons·G i View Lt. Goo. Eil.Reined:e,.com-request of lawmakers, agreed ~ • ~~·!'I . mission chairman, was ..,.,ed lo ldd res~ In Ille · , wit!> the papers ·Monday and . leglsiature's special --~-Henry Was • promptly declared the suit ageado al1er lawmakers ""' ....,, one of the lawmakers made no dill~nce In bj.s jouroed Dec. 4 w ii h o u 1 wbo dralt.d the ·suit and plans to act,ivate the 'C9m· redistrlctiflg. cha1rman .of the AseembJy ·mission. by Jan. 3, .when the -Four days fater, fieiDeCG Reapportlo~ent . Co~ttee, $100 000 S 1972 JegJSlature convenes. announced his intention to con-meaaldt It wlasd bepc>ss1bhlede b~ . , pe1it on Offices · The suit was brought by the .... lh• co~lon, slating 111; .. ~u. bill :;~pted y Fr•:.. DetnocraUc chau:men of the the constitution required the -;, , • legislature's Reapportionment commlssion to act. . ~u.t ,! ~ not . ~vetly .op: SACRAMENTO (UPI) -new lighting and drapes. Cmnmittees agalnllt an live "! thinl: they loot tbelr t\fnWic, he addOil. ' • " During a ~>tar when · the 'Williamson, a i or mer members of' the State Reap-~ constitutionally to do Basically, the suft ~es legislature searched I 0 r D e mocratlc Assemblyman, portlonment Commission on any reapportionment;" -he told the corhmisaion ls invalid b;e.. .. --~ said the COllSOlidal.ion · would grounds_ .Ute panel _ waa un-newsmen alter being served Cause ~ was an integral part ~ 11.-llf money to balance the buliget, insure that all 40 Senators Constitutional. The action was with &OOpy of the court suit . of the sectipn of"the state am-' the Senate Rules Committee ha Ve art ofOce with a window expected to be filed formally by a Senate sergeant-at-arms. sittutiop; 'Which. -created,' tilt found $100,000 in one month to overlooking Capitol Park. He today. The J e g i s 1 a t u r e will geograpbJcally• based •state • 0 ' . ,,,. ••• • "Our mtn ~ now .....,.,.. outside the will and tbe 44 IO'ts inside the prison," he said. Hayball said he didn,i beUeve tbe convict WU ann- ed. Jock <;. Dubcan, 27. and Juan C. O>lon. 21, were ap-)lf<heod"! .. they tr1ed lo climb over the w~ by means ol a rope fashioned of ·cloth and a bomtmade grappling remodel offices with thick said they also will be closer to ."This was anticipated, of reconvene for reap-Senate. The Sen ate' s rugs and wood panels. their staffs. course," Reinecke Isa.id. "We portionment Friday after geographicg1 composition was---~--------------- "Everybody's got a window more or Jess welcome the op. leaders of both parties have ruled lnvahd in 1965 on ground ' John W i 1 I I ams on, the now,'' a · smiling Williamson portunlty to get this before the at~J?ted to draft com· that both houses must be bas-Kids L1"ke to .I. .:k Andy Senate's uecutive o ff icer , said. court to-.clarify." l>1'9mise redistricting olans. ed on pooulation. ~ book. • ' said no formal -bid ad-K{f . . :~~se;~·~ ~"~~.~! 1~:J:s 111:u1111a11;11 111:U1lUIOt\t'i'll•J~'I(1IIJtflU!l11~U•llJliOifl'.l'Jl•l~U•llJ:ilUll•1~U•Il{lilm fil~'I<•1Qm HaybalJ. said an ·-·had was simply hired to tlo the work. ' AREHOUSE .·PRICES PLUS 100/o Death Row Gets Manson In Slayings LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Olarles Manson's long day in · court finally ended Monday and be arrlved today on Death Row at San Quentin, where be will probably spend the rest of bis !He for masterminding nJne murders. • More than two years after bis l!TeSI for the Aug. 1969, alaying.s of actress Sharon Tate and ail: other persons, Manson Connally was sen- 'tenced. to life imprisonment ' for the death! of two others - ., movie stuntman Do n a I d •4 "Shorty" Shea and musician :·Gary Hinman. • He was condemned to death fer the Tate-LaBJanca slayings ' after the longest criminal trial In Los Angdes history -JO monthl -and opeot the last me months beJns ....... for the HiJunan.5bea ~'"\ ' Lea than an hour al1er Buperlor Court Judge Ray· mood Choat. formally handed down the sentence, the 'ST- year-old hippie cult leader was taken from the Hall of Justice en route to northern Callfomla. Choate called him a "wffin. Ing, complaining delinquent no different from dozens of others who come into this eourtroom each week." Burgie Sells h. To Han:tni's SAN FRANcJSCO (UPI) - Beer drinkers in the 10 ~ 'stat.el will soon be drtnklfta "Burgie" that i! ac- tually Hamm's. Me1lter Brau lnc.. o f CbtcagO announced Monday it will close its Burgermelster bt;ewery here and 1 sell the brand name and business to the Theodore Hamm Co., for an undlsclosed amount or cash. "We don't bid it because time is such a factor with us," said Williamson, the lc!P ad· ministrative aid e to Senate Leader James R. fl.1ills (0.San Diego), chairman of the Rules Committee. "We do Jt on a time and material basi.sl' Two contracts were tn- volved. One was for . con- version or a hearing room into an office and the othe r was for consolidating five offices Into four new larger offices. Kimmel Construction, Inc. was hired at $29,159 to transform a Senate hearing room into a six-room "suite" of offices for a Senat6r. Sen. Anthony C. Beilcnson' (D-Beverly Hills), moved himself and a six-member staff into the new suite soon after it lvas finished. Beilenson, a leading liberal in the Senate and chairman of the Health and Welfare Com· mittee, said he did not ask for the plush new re<karpeted woodpaneled office. He said ii waa usigned to him on the basis of hls chairmanship S<<tioflly. ' SoOn afte Beilenson's new office was completed, the con- 5truction finn began knocking down walls and tea ring up carpets in the offices or five Senators on the second floor. The $79,9.;o contract calls for consolidating the five into four new offices, which will also have thick·pile rugs, wood paneling, insulated doors and Cal Western Puts Campus Up for Sale I SAN DIEGO, Cali!. [APJ _I United Slates International University is asking $ 2 o million or so ror the original campus which has been e.x- panded to eight throughout the world. Dr. William C. Rust. prcsi· dent, said at least seven offers have been made to buy the California Western campus. I part ol 140 acres of San Diego's pictu resque P o I n t Loma overlooking the Pacific. I ' -. . FARMER JOHN'S CENTER CUT LOIN CENTER CUT 0-BONE WHOLE BODY U.S. GOV'T. INSPECTED 59~ RATHS RA-CORN 35c FRESH BACON lb FRYERS LONG GREEN CENTRAL Alt;1ERICA CUCUMBERS BANANAS c ea 7-BONE ROAST lB. ss~ . BONELESS FAMILY STEAKS .. s~ ~ ....... -~· .. ( FRESH LEAN GROUND 53c LB BEEF · :·: 1b LARGE!; STUFFING SIZE BE LL I PEPPERS Now yoy to o can become a professional shapper and save hundreds of dollars per year on your grocery bill. No need to rcn all over town hunting far bargains ••• You can be assured that when you shop at Top Yalu, yau are buying at the low· est prices in town. Naturally, we carry all of the famous brands ••• Top Cj)uality, Meats and Garden Fresh Produce. 'J C(:N IS MORE ai:.1i;;@RTANT TO The }:lamm's ftrm"will not get the big Burgenhelster brewing plant ln San FT~ cisco, but will produce Burgle at It.I own breweries hett and in Los AngeJes, s a I d Clristopher W • Carrluolo, Hamm'a board cbJlrman and group vice president of its parent company, Hliffilein Inc. The campus, which occupies only 56 acres of the land up for sale, now houses 1,000 of its 2.500 students wh'l wil l t-~ given the choi~ of transfer- ring next fall to the 411>-acre Elliott campus about 15 milel ! north or downtown San Diego. -Y€i:U? m"s' SERVICE SHOP IN A ''"'REHOUSE OF FINE t;IUALITY FOC AT 535 W. 19th ST. AT HAUOR, <...,TA MESA. IT DOES- N'T TAKE A LOT OF NERVE TO IE THE ONLY STORE IN TOWN THAT DIS. COUNTS THE DISCOUNTERS. EYERYTHll(G IS MARKED Warehouse Prices WE CHALLENGE ANY MARKET TO .MATCH T TOTAL SAVINGS! "We will produce Burgie un- der that label and to the exact aame batch formula that has made tt a popular seller for more than 35 years," he said. BehJnd the decision l!'I a 3,000-student limit imJIOSed by · the City of San Dictto for CaJ Western, Rust said Monday. ! I See by Tooay's Want Ad s e UN D E R f1.J"'R!'ll'IL"PI. FUR SALE. Jl'l"Tlt rtry.-1 i bedroom tumlrury, aJWt odds 'n cn<k. You """""' kTlow What )'l)U "'-1 find. I e TIJERE•S t •&J D.atsUn 5!0 for &alt. Jt'• ~ fQUr door ~n rtidl: lhift' with 4 fipeeds. A ndto and ~I· er ma~ it moni a>rnlOr· table. trs betnc told ey a private party. • @~ • LOWiST r-~acres • NO MA EtEY CAN GIVE YCU BOTH. WE ~!VE PRICE STORE HOURS 10 AM TO 7 PM l DAYS A WEEK CLOSED SUNDAYS AND WEDNESDAYS WHAT IT TAKES IS THOUSANDS OF LOWER PRICES! we welcome .FOOD UllW STAMP SHOPPERS Thlft tho Checker Adds Just 10°/ •• To Arri•• at wltat you pay. ,5o If you wound up .with $10,00 Worth, )IOO'd simply pay that, plus 10% or $11 .00. THIS .on H>l manHING ocm THI FEW ITIMS LIG-ALLr CONTlOLLID Liii MIU: AND U9UOl. STORE HOURS: 10 AM TO 7 PM 5 DAYS A WEEK Closed Sundays and Wednesdays e A11'EN'l70N! 11 you an tntermed m rare l}tin\8'1, SUCh as )'(!Ung 1eop1rd1, monkeys, blrd1 1uld rrp. .u ... thl, """ .... rum-We Make Dl1cC11unlers Look Ev-ulve \Ml thml. Wb11.tcvrr )'OU -r-::~i::r~~~~"!"' ~~ ll~iilri1Til'T.'lmS~3n517'WfS.:Tn1~9f~h1"1S~TT,.Ta!A~TW'l!HmAr.Rr.TTSOnl'iR•,1't:C•O~S~T~Ar."1mM~E4"S~AllT\'l'llr.Tr.PJ:rm"nrrmr,,:rfa~1f7~iTTl'a:o!!r.P.:i,,..::= """'-------~_...,, __ -.. __ """,..' __ _.tt)l11E«•llllill:tl•1E1J•lllllll;tJ'i'll•J'U•lllUIUll·,1,utJl)liil;tl'.11l1fER•iill£1illl1]~ft•11!filt;ttW 1•1EU•J i!IJ ~ r I • t • . ·~ \ Elegance Trimm·'e·d: .. The . trend toward elegance groWJ as ·we at>' p_roach the' holiday· ~on .-w:omeQ want to dee· orate their homes, trim trees with,a· tu.teful toudi and serve meals with a-gourmet flair. All the trmmings need not be on the ttee~iS women take to elegance in the ·evening, wearing shinimery fabric! and jeweled accessories. ' 1n time for the season, a new collecUdn of jewel trims bas been designed. They run ·the g~m\lt . from icy pastels to golds and silvers, crystall, to chunky beads -all exclusively designed an.d·band· made. . , What .better v.:•~ to join in the holiday !esUvl· ties than by weann~ a berry·red dress,, strapped with red and gold trJDJmings; or perhaps' a beauti· ful eveping pantsuit wi\h !CY pastel jewels;. or uµ .. or collar and cuffs accented with jewels for ·easJ sailing through the .....,n? . .• : For creative gilt giving take an ,ordinary.g: .. nlni bag and.~orize it_wif:bgold~ lS!'_el rat>' ping. For the &oliday entertiining, mip up' match: ~ covers or sparldt> '!fee ornamenta. The ·Idea,. are ftmlUeu. · · "'\-! ~ .- Anilahle In home ilwill& lhopo. '1• ,, ...... " 6 ' " . ' . ~men BEA ANDERSON, Editor • Ann Landers DEAR ANN LANDERS: A group of us just kept on. -all parents of teenagers -were hav~ Liter that nl&ht' .the four of· U1 were Ing a dlscu!sion ~ oµier night and ""'!"' playing cards. About" 10 Maryj111e said, of the kleas pre1eJ1ted were vel)' m-. "I'll be back ln minUte " Indeed 'lbe teresting. 1bt question was this: Given a • 1 • choice, would you prefer that your was -with the bl)>y1Jn .bu anna. She teenage children smoke pot or drink noncbalanUy ~ her boolell colt, alcohol ? whipped out a bre8ol aac1· proceeded'to Someone asked, "I wonder how Ann. • '-Landers would IDIWtr that?" I said, "I'll nur9e again. . wrlte and ask her and let you know.'' So Tbe next day there waa aoother what'• your answer? WE.ST COASTER performance. By this time rrq hulband WHO CAN'T DECIDE. and 1 ...... Jftlt)' IUIDOyed by her lack o! DEAR W.C.: 11Llt's SOME qaeatita. consideratkln fer our ... ~ and I U'I De a•ldq "Wbldl woa14 1GCI ndler decided to tell~ her IO. Maryjane wu ' oottag<d $he Mid'! WU dirty minded, - lave, amaDpo1. or typltold Iner?" My unrer ii WI: W11J mnt 6ere be a dlllce? Who ..,. _...., ban to do dtber? I am oppooed to UJ mlaHllerlag •seat for .-sen, ad Ntti ..._ llld pol eome aderW.--.. l'llreall wllo OK pol bee--.W. ... e lokl -lllllen•armfwllUa~ falllq Into a trap. No --,.. ""' llannlnl po111 lleeaue a.e.. uve ------... -.... lie .. ~ ollldally, ad I predict a IP""I -lier of ,..,io (_dlq _ ,.,.._ --1 .... beta ....... fer lh'a :r-.11) ... .. Niptllll • Jearw 611 ~ .. ID«"e bumtlf ... ... lint • DEAR ANN I.ANDERi!: -y my ltulband and I _,t to vllll bb brolber and wife ind their newborn infant. When we arrived It wu nearly noon and Mary. jane was in the living room, brtast- leedlng Ibo baby, She greeted UI cwdiall)' and made no alltmpl to cover her..U - '• " • that nuratn1 waa "a normal function" and ahe saw .. -to oeek privacy. !J she ri1ht -or are we? -MR. AND MRS. ' i • PllAil Mil, AND MRS.: Nanlq 18 a aonnal faadloe. -boil I caa WU el levenl 90l'IDl1 ,fadl•• tat all ftr prlvaey. --i-.. la -., diem. I'm_... 1"· Aad-: ._. .... _....,IA ~ 1-. ·Ploue -I a .NOr aplMI . ..n...t feedla(, I _. .. ....... It .... ,,, ... 11. n. ..._: !el ballr• a t ,, ,~ .... ...,oleallr .. __ .., _ lool'l leel 11 ....... 1111 be -hi ... ,._".-. DEAR ANN LANDE!Uh May I u7 .a wwd to New York ldlol? She dalms the _wants to tell ber . .....,1about a now.e- ded -wllh•hll bell -,... ... ber .,.,. IM"' la bolbellns blr. I bopa Iba -)'GUI' -and k-..... JDOUtb at bee•• if lhe doem't ••• going to Ila -by a. ltt --·than bfr C'Kmeieate. I made Ibo mlltate ol con!ealn& to my 'hasbanfi ad he bu made me e1t my words a lmndred times CMI'. 11'1 boen five yeara now and be attn thnni• ll up to · me wbeoever be pll mad. I -·t ac- complish one lhliic by· b r l n 1 ln c everytbin& out In the opm. ,.,, \. ' . • , ' \ ·-w e.art~·· Beats In to Jewelry ' ' ' . ' ' ~· ~ CBRIBTY , If y ' NEW:YORK-It was an end.of a Jong' love affair for Italian-born model, ~ Peretll, and her Sponl.sb sweetbearl,, a sculptor. The two,, once .passionate and now cool~ Ing, ·were caiJlng Ii quill •. Elsa was tryilJg desperately to be logical about the pierced romance. B u t candlelight dinners-for-two ~ere 9ften punctuated by terrible vacuums of dead silence. They had nathink to say to.each.other! AHbe end hO Wanted to buy her a mint coat, a never-to.tie rem. qµlsbed tlalus S)'!Dboi among Euro- pean men. No, tham you, she &aid. It wasn't furl-ahe desired from life . and love .. All.she wanted , with all her heart. was to live every mo-ment· to the fullest. 'nlat was hap- pj.r.~s. Not a fµr. With words hurling badly, she went home to her all -white G~nwlch Village apartment and ha<l a ,good cry. Next scene: A thoroughly• rect>Vered Elsa ·designing a necklace dripping a silver tear. It'• among berbesHellett at Halslon's atudio and Bloomillfldale's. And Eba Peretti juat """ a 0oty Awanl !or ber creativity in jewelry des!P'· "\'iben I cried a few teen, I • made some realizations," she says behr ... deep inhalalloos from • chain of cigarettes. "Tears art an erttnsion ol lbe deepest o! human emotioM -dislrels. They are pn>- duced by the body. They fall oul. You can aee tean. Touch tears. And now, Wtth my necklace, you can feel a teer." Elsa, a i:ebellious Italian whom her rich father considers the black sheep ol bb arislocraUc family, talks ·dramatically. It's in her blood. Her ol!beal jewelry, owned by !ashlonsbles like Ja<kle-0 and Mrs. William Paley, is fiercely ~ihe oecklaces wbicb most , ~sed Ooty Award judge•.ia, inde:iid, sentimentally memorabte . It's a skinny sliver 'NJ in which ·water and real flowers are worn. '!One time I was riding in a Rolla Royce," bubbles Elsa breathlessly. "AM I saw a tiny va&e with !Iowss slllinc 00 • da-l'd. Rlghf then and there I thought: Whal a lovely Idea lo ...ar fresh, -... a cilllin. 11'1 impoiant to --ol blpplnoll." Ella, who la no spring c]\lcten, didn't anlve at her<p.-1 level o1 IU«ell easily. Her father, Nanco Penlll ol Rome -pre~deol o1 an oll company -neither accepted nor understood her penchant for fashion. 0 He wanted me to star, borne and wait for a hulband, ' say1.Elaa..,. not wllllOlll blllemesl. But Elsa, tall, attrlctive, strong .. willed. left bome Ibo daY Ille came • i~ • ., • , • I . • • • • • l r • I • Elsa Peretti puh tiny fresh flowers in a sil ve r vial necklace, drops silver tear from the neck. ol 1ge. fn typical Elsa style, ahe wrote father 1 goodbye-forever note and simply walked out with a llllle mooey and a Joi ot clothes. Next slop wu Gtlaad, ·Swllwland, where she got a job 1s 1 OJ in- structor. From tlaere she went to London to model. That's lfhere Wilhelmina dllcoYered her. "Modeling WIS forbidden ter- ritory," she reminisces when taJt· Ing 1boul Ibo strained . falher- d11~ "'''kmhlp )fben l • mid< it big, my beerl leoped:" 'Ibe tey word la •'heart/' And how ll!o without love II a dread!Ul exlatence. "som.day ...., I bopo my'llfe will be full of Jove .,aln.11 Meanwhile, ahe has don6 a turnabout. She has bad all her hair cbopped ol! by Paul McGregor and slicks ft close to the head wlth oil. She has 1otlen herself contact lenses. List month she went to SardJnla and the Greek lslands to ICUba4lve. r • • • • . • • • • • • l Sbl<9 Illa OltJ .-.... .. -""'"' ... ciamanll for ... Jn<l'l -la mada Ill lpalll. El• , ... to ·Modrld _, .... moalhs to-per-itJwtlb 1111 allnnmllhs. She'• -to liuJ • IS,oot bouse ln a dealrted Yillap 111 the O>lta BravL "It Wlll be my bo1.,11 she N)'I tn typical byerpbole. "I wlll pal all my lblngs Jn It aad _. for lll1 old age. It will be a place to la" lea and pot Dl1 doca."~ .,.> . I l • J • .. ' • ~ • ' ' Horoscope: ans era way . ' . WEDNESDAY YOI\ may be drawn In lw'o' dltectl<DI 1imult>o6ouJly. At> DECEMBER 15 , cent 11 on dea!r• 10 "get Jy SYDNEY OMAR,Jl ' away;" But needa: ol relaUve 1. . may dictate thlt you "slay The next 'llrne YJJU vtsli a put.~· You do have 1.Ue of your ~Ital, check ~al algnl own kl live. st re I I In-I \>1 the penonfiel; 'l'l1e ii'"' clf~ellC<. , blibilily II that ao •bundance TAURUS (April 20-May JO): of penon! Collnected with 111< · -H-'-lnatitution weri born under Be cauUowl lll money ~uu••· Vlrtfo and P~I. Let me 'Important now to provkte eJ• L:r.· tra protecUon for -.u ..l. ~• w·our flndln,p! \,. and "CUJhion" 111inst ln- ,YUES ~Marcll ll·April 19): fla~ I! you don'! know what 10 do, i1o ootbln(. No nf6d tO l'lllh docillon1. GEMINI {May II.June JO): Some penons who oppose your views may sink to threata, ln- tJmldaUOn. Hold fut to yrln- ciple1. Law la on your aJde. St~u versalillty, You are not stuck wlth one metho,, Proceed -accofdlngly. , CANCER (June 21..July =:1 :t Apparent restricUollll may be nece5'ary and, ultlmately1.;_fA? your advantage. Study Geaum Ora.ng·e Coa~t Caters To Holiday Happenings -Holiday partiea:, mU8ic and fund-raising boutlque.s still hiJhlight gatherings of area organlzstion.s as Chri!tmas draws near. exchange are planned. Mua:ic -tiet the paci--for the-annual and a Christmu ruding: are Christmas party of the Orange on the a1enda. County A s s o c I a t I on for NOW Retarded Children Inc. Fri- day, Dec. 17, at 7-:30 p.m. in the Disabled American Veterans Hall, Santa Ana . Entertainment will feature dancing and refreshments. meuqe. Avoid panic. You are not bein& .,cloeed in." Relative ·woo talks much may have lltUe knowledge. LEO (July II-Aug. 22): !boet who attempt to toss cold water on cre.ative en- dtaW>ra should ho Ignored. c.ommurucate in your own way. Don't be influenced by threat.a, . promlse1, cajolinJ. Ge.miDJ and Vlr10 persona are involved. VIRGO (Aug. II-Sept. 12): What appean bloc:ked by circumstance may actually be restricted by design. Know this and hold off on final decisio!ll. Those in authority te.nd to disagree, Don't get . caught in middle. IJBRA (Sept. 13-0cl. 22 1: Some financial pressurt is relieved. But you may now have to contend with relaUves. Key is to maintain sense of humor:--See in realistic light. Put off journey, if practica1. Take special cart with written word. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): AQUARIUS (Jan. JO.Feb. 11): Trust hunch. One wile claims to be "on your l.ldefl pllY merely be talklnJ. Friends could quarrel, call ort you to be referee. This is a role that will not be ap. preciated by e.ither side. PISCES (Feb, 111-Marcb 20): Spread efforts. Means fight tendency to be confined. Break loose. You have mort of a solid anchor of security than might be realized . There is M need for fear . Begin dancing to your own tune. IF TODA'V IS YOUR BmTHDA Y you art com- pleting a cycle, on the brink of new adventu~ and challenge. You draw to you talented persons, those with something to offer. Your sense of drama is highly developed. You ara attractive and key Is to perceive, your owp potential. T• find out who'1 l~tlr.v .tor ... ~,Jn -iv and IO'<'f, ord~r SVdntw .,,,..,r1 book ,1. 'Sacre! Hln1} tor Mom •nd wom.n.M Se~d blrlfld•1• •nd 75_ Ctnll !fl Om1rr A1trol011¥ Secr111. the DAILY PILOT, SOJ< J2«1, Gr•nd Cfnltll St .. lion. NIW York, N.V. 10011. ORANGE COUNTY PIONEERS" Crall!, baked goods and handmade Items are being of- fei'ed ea: tut minute Jilts and Christmas parties are belng teamed w i th instaUations, community projecta and fUnd. Growing Up Female, a documentary film on the op- pression of the American woman, will be featured at lhe Thursday, Dec. 16 meeting of the National Organization for Women, Orange C o u n t y Chapter at 8 p.m, in the You are in better position to get across ideas, policies than might be imagined. Key is to deal from position or slrength. Means play your own game. Don 't pennit others t o maneuver you Into unfamiliar Mr. ·ind M,.,., M9rl1 R• muy of Laguna Beach DENISE HALBERT ·.~Hal berts '·1 Tell News 11\~. fl , ' I Of Troth Denise Halbert of Costa "t ., Body Moves . . . .. ra_ising. • Repub.Jicans Golden Years Reap Honors ' Officers will be installed and members will ' gathe'r around .; ~ wassail bowl for !ii gift ex· '"' , change tomorroyrlt 10 a.m. at , Huntington H.arbour Republican Women's c 1 u b Federated'• annual Christmas Celebrating their 00th wed· ding anni versary were pioueers, Mr. and Mrs. Merle Ramsey of Laguna Beach. Family and friends gathered in the Lake Forest home ol their son, Kirby Merle Ramsey . Jr. They have three daughters, Mr.s. Bruce Johnstone-'ol Las Vegas, Mrs. BerrUce Delaney, Costa Mesa and Mrs. Jean Allen of Mission Viejo, 11 grandchildren, and five great grandchildren. The Ramseys were married in West Union, Ohio in 1911. Ramsey had begun ranching in Santa Ana in 1902 and the couple made their home there unlll moving to Laguna Beach in 1936. Laguna B~ach had a sen. timental meaning for the cou- ple as the)' spent their honey- moon in the village, after driv- ing through the canyon in their new 1912 Ford. Members of the Community Presbyterian Church, the cou- ple have been' active with Ramsey serving as president of the senior Bible class for 14 years. Mrs. Ra'~ey is in the women's club, Garden Club and Toastmistress Club. Since retiring from building and real estate eight years ago, Ramsey has been work· ing on a history of Laguna Beach. Patron Names Listed For Fashion Parade party: . The social room of the Harbour LightJ Apartments will be the setting. for the 1ih- stallation of the Mmes. Gilbert Thompson, president; Robert Heisler, Roy Hughes, Albert Walsh and Robert Bro\fn, vice presidents, and Klt.wl Schwarz .oo ~ .Les Brocki_nan, seci:etariea. ~ CoOkbook&. POW and MIA .bracele!tr will be sold. Beta Sigl)'la Phi Santa Claus will v i s I t members of Beta Alpha Xi Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi and their children Thursday, Dec. 16 at a Christmas party in the home of Mrs. J im Rennels at 7 p.m. New members, the Mmes . Jay McMi~an, Brian Barrett 1 and ·Larry Martin, , will be honored Sunday. Dei;.119 .• at 2 p.m. In the Garden Grove home of Mrs. Allen Marbut. BPW KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN ' SATURDAYS IN .. ::i~~:ciJl8:;~!sA;a~d; ~n · Officers for 1972 will be elected. ORT Sansom Chapter A traditional S o u t h e r n style. Christmas will be recalled by SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· Emma Sansom Ch a pt er, Dec. 21 ): Tie down financial United Daughters of t h e commitment. Means get pro- Confederacy when members mises In wrltlng. Don't be gather at 1 p.m. Thursday, satisfied with sweet nothings. Dec. 16, In the Santa Ana Others will respect you ii your home of Mrs. L. A. Arneson. position is fair but firm . Mrs. C. A. Nisson will Modernize approach to pro- present a r e a d i n g of blems. "Christmas on the Plantation" CAPRICoRN (Dec. 22-Jan. and Miss Virginia Carpenter 19): Throw off burdens that will discuss An Old·fashioned are not rightly your own. Take Dixie Christmas. a more independent stance. -~·- Dealer in t.8.st!"ful holiday 11..ssortmentJ for little people ""'"<Cif'Jl!'i"' !lo ••ol ololls)oofolly ...... 1 dillhou'• ............... 11o1. •• BunUngton Harbour (711) " .. '"' Town & Country Orange (711) 558·1591 Orange County Wes! ORT (OrganizatiOR for Rehabilita- tion through Trainin8) will pre- s'ent Merrie Holidaya, a cook's tour Of holiday recipes present- ed by the Southern Callfurnia · Edison Co .. Thursday, Dec. 16, at 8 p.m. in the Mercury Sav- ings and Loan building iJI Hunt- ington Beach. Recipes, hints in preparation and slide illustrations are planned. Samples will be serv- ed. Honored guests witl ·be the Emphasize originality, five members who a r e creative endeavors. Pacing daughters o f Confederate now is more important than soldiers. l;::~us~u~al~. ~A~'~oi~d~e~d~re~m~e~s~. ==,!::~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ NH BPW Boutique H y • L o n d Conva1escent Hospital will offer craft items. made by hospital patients. at a boutique salt Friday, Dec. 17, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the hospital in Westminster. Mesa Verde Country Club will be the setting for a boll· day dinner and program for Newport Harbor Business and Professional Women's Club. The group will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday. Dec. 16. Members will bring gifts which will be distributed by the Orange County Ruman Outreach Center to teenagers with drug problems. Serving Or•n9• County Fer 12 Y••rl SEA FOODS: LUTE FISH • EELS • SCj)UIDS • SMELTS OCTOPUS • GIGANTIC SQUIDS FRESH COOKED SHRIMPS FEATURING EASTERN OySTERS IN BULK O•Dll UILY FOi THI HOLIDAYS AVOID DISAHOINTMINT ORIENTAL FOODS DEPT. We offer th1 mo1t cemplete 1•l•ctie111 of i111te,ted lood1 from ell the f11t e1ll11rl'I co11ntrie1. JAPAN e KOREA e CHINA e PHILIPPINES e INOONES!A e VJETN"M, ETC, FEATURING: FOODS FROM HAWAII MAY WE SUGGEST A JAPANESE DINNER SUKIYAKI • TERIY AKI • TEMPURA l11tretllent1 e11tl Recit • l rech11re1 ""•il eltle SAKE (J•p•nHt Rice Wlnel A MUST! ALSO AYAILAILl i DllP ••llD SWllT·SOUl PISH !Ch!11•1• Stvl•I GIFT DEPT. Shi'1 lm,ertt4 Wlf+w1,11 1rt the evth111tlc.1d e119 the IHICtl ere the tlew1111t. Com• tri4 ltr•w1• i 11 e 11r erie11t1I •itch•n· w•r• tl•pf, surs FISH MART Call Now JE 4.3333 9n6 GARDEN GROVE ILVD. e OPEN SUN. 10.5 GOLDEN NEEDLE ·--FABRICS-~ SNOOPY KNITS polyester cotton blend ~450 . yd. (60 " wide) e?~ ~FABRICS SOUTH COAST PLAZA MALL• CAROUSEL LEVEL OPEN EVENINGS -SUNDAYS 12. 5 IN HALF·SIZES ••• 14 Vi -26 Vi To mike her fnl 1bsoluetly glamorous, we recommend one of the new lono dresus. Some go on-th•town. Others help to give 9rut _parties From $26.00 : \: [ Otlsel" Giit Suggestlou e PANT SUITS e DIUSU • lOllJ ANJI e SLIPS e CANIS e ILOUSft , LAYAWAY e •IPT IOXIS e Gin; CllTIPICATll I , •B[la Nor'sHALF-SJZE SHOP / o,.. 111 .... ,,., 'tff f ....... tll ' ,.. . C~~~~~.~f~!H.~~0~.I ~ 84 HUNTINGTON CENTER iiii HUNTIN•TON IU.CH I Nut,. ledttt lret. hn'1hl,.l I.Ill: nt OlllANllltAtl MAl.l. fULLI:lllT014 • OICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS ' e AAH! CAttfFOOL ,_ WHUf'S Ll1'fLE (; ME! •.. iHl'V AIN'f VER.NAME:, l'O·PUP NO SH!:!:PS 'Tl!IN A HUNNE:Ri 51RAA;t:R? fl MIU::S dflm'l MUTI AND JEFF O.K. YoiffiE~IREOI NOW I WANT YOU iO GO OUT oN T~E ROAO ANO SELL! FIGMENTS 1\i!JT TILL l Y1lU A\EIT . ltlllMY..JiES TRA\W'D AU. CNEI< THE \\ORLD ! PLAIN JANE • t~ '" o ~u;_:~:..>.....:::.._ "'!L. c •0 0 • • I =1 oA=1t:-=v""""cR=o=ss=wo=R:oo-D .-•• -by-•.• -. •0 -w•• I ACROSS ~ 1 Ancient '! p~p!e of ~ Gaut ~ 5 Str1dlvarl's ~ teacher 10 Vehiclt used O\ll!f Sl'lOW ; 14 Its capital Is Teheran ~ 15 Ecclesiastical J law 16 Sacred ~ 17 Airplarit ' sec:lion: 2 words : l<J -or Sharoo 2b Unbfoktn • U Conrerenc:e 23 D1u9g!d t\ 26 Mountain pass • 27 Enteql'ising ptrSO!l: lnfll'ma1 3tl Except under lh' tirtumstil/l'CtS that 34 Mi ss Gabor, , el 11 35 Tht Stales 37 Ttnnls itmplre's call 38 State : Abbi. J't Flll with iOf' 41 Turning point 42 Sl~lt '°' 43 Nomadic 1 ! Mongol tr ibe. :.. . 44 Mange in domtslic animals Ytsll!fday's Puzzl~ SolYed: I' 1S O•(A O CV [[A l£ EV~ 4S ln a dormant state 41 lnflanwnation of ii lobt of !ht sort palate 50 Snake • 51--Nero: Popular pian ist 52 Ceo5111ed: Slan11 56 Narrow 9 Not safe southw.1rd 10 K!!to to any exte nsion or the senses of Asia 11 Simpl e-minded bO Kiln l)trsoo 61 Olsgrac~ 12. lion In 64 Stone: S~fflt "Born Fret" 65 Gt!ius of b!ars 13 CoifftlH''s Ob Kind of s\etl emplayt' girder 18 Gait between &7 Perfume ;i walk and &8 Saucy: Dial. a run &'t Not one 22 SirJglt-(e11!d DOWN l Prevalent 2 Emerald ls1t ) MarUt 4 Interior parts 5 Receive a thlitg 6 Bad : Prefix 7 Llttrary collecllon 8 Pitch to an4 fro' Ol'IJanism 24 Dnr fishing for l'llOl'iJVS 25 Patched 27 Port of Italy 28 Stove compartmer1.S 21 Judge's mallet Jl Singltd out 32 Caravansary )) Pllllgts a dagger into • '°" E N B ~ 0 I' u ti 0 ~ " l Z/14/71 J& Mark ovrr a vowel 39 Part of the body 40 Intensified: Slang: 2 worth 44 Kind of strait 4& Rtllgious season 48 Most t•lrerne 4'1 Not fleshy or lat 52 La1ge knife 53 Reclined 54 Concrrni119: 2 words 55 Fatal 51 lllfkish oxcart: V11. 58 52 Wf'fkS 59 Thirsly: Archaic 62 Social Sectwi ty .A.dministra· tron: Abbr. 63 "Bt:i -" ; ,. "j: ... 7 • .,,, 11 " " . " 116 11 " " " * I • " " ... I >~.' " ,. " " ·' 't: " " " " " " " . .. ·~ " -)1 ~ ~ .. -. • ,, .. .. ,, .. .. - lj ·,, " ' L "'_1l !I I ... , .. M " ,. . 'ii ,,., 'ii ·-" •i .. I ir-1 -1 ·-· ... lu.a69 I t--" I SHOU.p\t; K~ I COULDN'f P!JU. THE l\l?OI.. MR '«>!JI t:Yi:S! PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER POtrrl'T VOU UNPERSTA.NP .. t POW'T W,\NT JEEP OR ,\!&EV lNVOi..VEP 1N ,\ SITU,\TIOW ™"T C.OULP PROVE veev EMBAl:R,\SSlt.16? MISS PEACH By Cliesfft' Gould By Tom K. Ryan lWT'S ~ '<ER lllLLY 1'ROOLY NAME? E By Al Smith By Dale Hale By Frank Baqinski • • • Al'Tl<U~'S &EEN Tlt'llNG 'IC 60 INT?> IJUSIN~SS SINCE LAST J-.V.Jt.Y .. ! -AND ~E FINAi.LY OtO ! l10W'D ,,. IC;· ' . l 1 • PERKINS MAPPIN, ,AfeTMUft:? U'L ABNER SALLY BANANAS I'""" Su.i-P~\ 1-Mve X-R'!'6 ~-TM ffYW..&t ~ Q ~~-<in~ I cam......., ~~%ii ~-mi. . GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS By Charles M. Schulz By Harold Le Doux C'Jll.AV •• nL USTBf 10 '«>I •• IUT STOP S~Rl1N6 WITH ME! TElL ME WHAT~ &UG61N6 \IOU ! By 'Men !IN 8ANK LOAN FINALLY ~ 'TMROU<;M ... . ' . -. 'i. •• ': .• GrlANt> 0 PfN !~&. ! All.THUR'.> OV1YO CAL..E .NDAflS oN S'ALf f+fl2f!! ~ = .=. =:::::::. =-==--==:;.-=-="" .... '--=-=· -= - ly Joh• Miles -· ( Tutsda.v. Dtctmbtr 14, 19n DAILV PILOT JC ' . By Charin Banotti • ------~ By Gus Arrlala , ;~ ' ' By Ferd Jobnion By Roqer Bollen . THE GIRLS ~-(~ y_J::J. ~ o~"i'!'lfltfit{ ~·~ "But Edna, lf lbey're so light be can bold tbem all wltai one band, we won 't pat on any . we lg: ht eatlnc j11st one." DENNIS THE . MENACE ---- 't I • -24 H DAll!llLOT · J ~;I IF .. l~lm Allen Serves Crow-Pie-tui:ritics, :We Played ' . ~Proihro ,,. • ·1 ·By HOWARD t.. BANDY If °' .... ,,..., ,..., 11.., . LOS ANGELES' -' The gbol lo the • ilk &n,el<I Rams' dresaing room 11 the d)liJetim M0nd1y n;8h1 WIS thick enough , : lo cut with a knife and a haggard coach, Tommy Prothro. was the flrlt to admit blJ team had an off nlgbl "We just bad a bff footbaD game aod they bad a goOd one," Prothro told a group of reporters. "We were keyed up for this game,'' he t'Ontinued, "In fact. this is about u tight •s J ~v, .ref: teen a football team before a same." The Rams coach calmly puffed on a di(ll'ette Md reflected the events that· ~ transp~ed durin& ·the. past 1hree ... .. . .. ;!) lhought Bill ·Kilmer played a great 1wne and threw the ball well but Wasb.ington didn't do anythln,g we didn't -1.. , ~'·Their comers beat us and l have no qplanation," be added . .wheO'asked about the four1h down rlay In 1he second quarter wllh 1he ...... tied ••10 aod the Rams ·n>eding a yard 11 the RlldslM Ill, he ,.piled:· P!I wOUld go for lbe yardage most of the tllDe iMtead .of a field goal." JWbat about the punt near the end of the fil'st quarter on a third dOwn situation ana ~Ram! leading 10-7? "It WU third down with eight yards to &f'on o~.12 but th~ quarter .,..u about to end "and the wind was ·with ·us at the tilfe." -• · 'One Qf t!te most diScon9olate Ra.ms was q~rback Roman Gabriel who took a 1otlg Ume to shower and return to his ~' .cubl.cle that is shared with "WJ"D Qben, hli ~partner. (Ped if thJ.s was the, most passes be b4ll ev,er. had. dropped by teammales, be rehected a moment before answering. .'..'.Yes. But it is .allo the mo.st iDo epUons 1 can remember iu one 1ame a }ft110 •i-&\ too, 11 t L -'"'lf'I· t Rams dropped at least six passes t slJ<?uld ~ave been cougjlt and Gabe three inlercepled. 'Two of u.· fl\lert'eptions were real delensive pays.~b)' WUhinglDn but t lut ooe was a bad tbrow (It ·went I 1he final ~l<luchdown)." · about the pcwlbllity ol a n.m. tin rematch ia the playoffs? 'I'd llke I<> IJIAY lhem again," Gabriel ·d. "I feel, if,"° P!ay lliem again, 'We beat therd." w about hit veriiton of the fourth running play 01uvhlch he was stop. for no gain~ 'lt wu an o~ run or J)BSs play and y got me before l@utd get the ball to le EU~." Ellison wis lrailing Gabe tbe-.oOlside. "JbiLil.just Jlke last year. Now we ve lo depend on someone else (Detroit) put ua in the playoUS." Detroit must eat ~ Fr~ Sunday and the ~ve tq tie or win at Pittsburgh to tlJett.• I 'We fta better teem than San Fran- :• Gabriel aid eolUy" "but here are::~-.. ~ . •-:--qimtoerlJack Jeny .,,.,Uf.u Gabriel-but4or llclW caller u mucb as ... Whl!a.I -IW ~e a t~ that Is 2l ti down and get them back in a game e he did tonl&ht, you have done a great . U our guys had held tbe ball, we Id have been aheai:I at haJltlme and wouJd bav~ won the g~ But yau 'I drop Iii; Posses like w~ did tonight beat a.b&m,~ef~" .. ~ ' :l'"-• 1 . -i #I .. • ' . 'THE RAMS' LARRY SMITH (31) RUNS FOR EIGHT YARDS AGAINST REDSKINS. Fight Champs Tabbed to Beat Ri vals Tonight INGLEWOOD (AP) -Qlallengers Hedgemon Lewis and Jesus Pimentel aim to up!et the odds when they batUe tonight for world boxing titles at the Forum. Lewis, 2i, of Los Angeles, counts on speed in his fight against the heavy hit· ting welterweight champion J o s e Napoles. Pimentel, 31, from Mexicali, Mexico packs power but the big question remains his age in his fight aiainst bantamweight titllst Ruben Olivares, a 23-year-ol<l who has been beaten only ~· A crowd of 15,000 is expected to watch the two championship fights, each slated for 15 rounds but not expected to go that length. The champkms, both from Mexk:o City, will get $90,IXKI apiece for putting their titles on the line. fk>th 8.re solid. f~Vorites; NapOl~ '4-_1 t1,> wtiip ·Lewis and OJ.ivares. 3-1 over Pimentei. The challe!l&eis colleC:t $25,000 apjece. · · . · Lewis is expected to· keep Napoles 9ff balance with speed and a good left jab In the 147-poond battle, at least early in the light. "I'll be boxing all around the-ring all night," says the challenger. "I'll keep him waiting to counter all dwing the · fight." Despite the optimism on the part of the challenger, Napoles has proved to be a hard puncher with fasL hands, a fighter expected to catch · up with · h1s foe sometime during the fighl Those who've imtalled Napoles as the heavy favorite also remember that he stopped Ernie U>pez in a tiUe bout and that Lopez lcnocked out Lewis in two of thei r three meetings. Pimentel first was rated the No. 1 challenger In the 118-pound class hi 1964 yet never has been In a tlUe fight untU 1 now. •• J feel real good," he said, .adding, "but I've got to understand that years have passed." . . ' . ' ... Sports Clip ped Short Pimentel boasts a record or 78 victories In 84 fights and won 72 of them by knbckout. •Olivares lists an even better one -66-1·1 with 62" knockouts to his credit. Napoles is M-5 with 46 foes stopped and Lewis 4G-3-l with 21 knockouts to his credit. A Bids for 22n·d i:n a Row I -, -• I When Olivares heard that promoter George Parnassus had said he'd give 'the champion a new automobile U. be stops his foe within five rounds, Ruben declared, "I'll just do my best to ride ln a new car.•• ' ANGELES -BW Sblnnan g.11 Cl'.)!dlt for .lftPll'lnL !!» l..s Angelei en phyalcally, but his players say the ~1donday that Lane"" suspei\cl: · WasbllfCloo ·(~!) al NFC Celttral cllam· ed for the~ iemainder of the season "in pion Minnesota (lo-3). · , Although he sufrerecl an eye ~ in bis last fight , the little champion says the wound has healed completely. ntal preparation was more important. Laker1 go after their 22nd con- tive victory tonighL tn Portland, hop- agalnat ,an emotional letdown arter ~ I-victory su .. nlght over Atlanta. In the w1ke oM t trllllj>jlb, praise aod ·champagne 0 eel for\ tllo fln~year eoach who has de 1he -play•rs feel 111te winners. 'The mala nlfllOCI we're winning Is that 're mothw the bill, hlttlng 1he Ope. , pll1'al defense," Aid aophomore ' llnl Jllll llcMJllia4. "'lllis ta truly a , not a group of lndlvldlllls. "Ibis tetm nms like Boston did a few ra aao. Each man koow1 l'hlt bia job ud be does It, bot mora 1hao lhat, we we can buL anybody." · • 1ame will be bn>ldCf•~over radio KA8C (190) It I. ~ ,.... . LOUIS -SUJpellde<l ninninl bock ...Vlllur 1-plamad to 10 home "' 1IDd _,, ao doobi I<> J>!lllder IODle •• -ud hll tuiw. with S&.IAlll~ SUMay11 ... lt-7 loss to the lpllla """' Line crltlciMld al1 vice pttoldent WWilm V. ill for hi• lelm'r-troubid. ~riil Md -Boll Hollway an-.. ' l the best ihterests of the team." AFC Eastern champion Baltimore (10- 11le·~su$eflSion came despite Lane's 3) or Miami (9-3·1) at AFC Western apology for his peevish reference to champion K11nsa.s City (t-3-1). BidwUI as a "fat bleep" and the charie: . Sunday, Dec; U "He's the cause of all this trouble." AFO second-place qualifier Baltimore HOUSTON -The Houston Oller coaching iWf bas been caught in a crost· fire. . ' {; . The tint t was fired last month · 'When Oller general manager John Breen and owner Bud Adams decided tO fire or. fensive line coach Ernie Zwahlen without fiead c6ach Ed Hughes' coosent. . A valley from the other side dropped another assistant coach Monday-when Hugbei relieved offensive backfiela coach Walt Schllnkmln, who had been wllh 1he Qilen .since their formation and had been oo good terms with management. ,.... NEW YOAA -'Ille National Football Lague'• divisional playoffs wUI open at 11 a.m., PST, Seturd1y, Dec. 25,~at Min- nesota with 1he Vll<lnp playing 1>ost I<> the champions of the Amerletn COn- ference's Eastera Division, either Dallas orw~. The playoff schedule: ' Satardl)'t Dtc. t5 'NFC E111'nl champioo Dall~• (JO-I) or (t0-3t or Aflami (f..3.1) at AFC Central champion Cleveland (U ). , NBC second place quallller Dollas I llhl) or Washington {i-3-1) at NFC Western champion San Francisco (8-5) or L.o& Angeles (7·>1). MONTGOMERY, Ala. -John David Crow, a fonner Helsman winner at Texas .}.&M: and-presently a football coach at ~ Afibama, says reports that Ile will leave the Crimson Tide staff to be bead coach of t1'e Aggies are wUOWlded. ''l havm't been contacted by Teras A&M," he said in Tuscaloosa Monday nlgbl. MINNEAPOLIS -Paul Giel 1ppolnled Ken Yackel u inlerim hockey coach ol the MJnnesota Gophers Moni:lay. and said it wou.ld probably' take about two wet:ks before he could find t new foolbaU coach. Gell resumtd duUes -s athletic dlrec· tor, after a misunderstanding was resolv· fJd on the hlring · of c::oaches with Dr. Malcolm MOOI, university president. Still there was some cause for concern. The only defeat suffered by Olivares came at the hands of his coootryman, Chucho Castillo, and that was after the- champ suffered a cut near his eye .. Olivares beat Castillo in their title re-- match. The CUban·bom Napolea also lost his ti· Ue once -to Billy Backus -and then won It back when he stopped the New Yorker in a Forum bout. If the bouts go 15 rounds, scoring will be on the California five-point system with lhe referee and two judges deciding the outcome. The wlMer of each round gets from one to nve. poinls depending on his shoWing, the loser nothing. College Cage Poll ASSOCIATID ,It.SS Ttlfll .., ..,._ TMlll "4 rt.. 1, IJCl.A .0 "' 11, IJM: >I INll t. Matqltll'fte .... 7111 12. l!ldltlll ...0 1" J. S..C1roikW Ml JOI lS. CtlSleMflll i-1 11' .f. f\IO,ClnlllM >1 41 111. Jtd.IOllVJlll 4>1 IM l. ,._.. ..0 .:it IS. M9tYIMf t·l UI '· lr\t.'l'Olllll .f.0 2'4 IA. SWUultillM 4-l IJI 7. ICtnllldi:J i.1 "5 17. leull•Ult ).1 101 t . Sl,Jolll'l'ttPN) 4-f 25' lt. Prlnc.ttrl U tt t, l"IOr\OSI. M m lt, Vlrtll'llt U IS 10, OhkloSll!tl ).I tll io, l:fOllllOl'I ).2 II OIMr ftlmt, rtctl ... lnt ...Ulft. II•"" 1kllll'-'1C· i lly: .t.r1mn1 $t11t1, o.orvi., H•..-n. 11111101t, 1C.111- w1. ICfllMI• Sttltl, Mt"""ll' M~pilll S!lte, Mlc:tll- 0111, Ml_I., NllH'111Y SllN, NllOrltl .. NI'# M9111- CI ~1111, Ofl19, ft.wi It.It, ftJIOff lllellll, 51. l.ovl•, I f, ,,...,,.., (Po.I, $ytK....., VH~ WatfllntlOrl. LA 'aces Uphill Battle To Earn Playoff ·Spot . Ill' OLENN W111'111 r.lt 1here were two key clefw!W pla1' la or 89 0.111 P11tt '''" the 'game. -• LOS ANGELES -During live ........ . The !Int came wllh 1he ll<Ott uee 11 )I as Rams head1 coach, George Allen wa~ In the aecond. quarter. Tb& llamJ bid ~ oflen cflticb:ecf for oeiklnt 111.a teams too bill a1, Jhe WuhliJgtoo II, fourth - llOOll and lhus,nqt bein( Ible I<> win 1he ud •. yllnl io go. • bill aamet lat<> hi 1he ......._ Gabriel tried a nveep bul wu cul dpWn ·Too. blJ detracton c1llded blm lot· 11 lhe tine of scrimmage. · · going 'w!lh vet.ran players Instead. of · The second big play came momenl.I working wdh younger men: and building later with 00 change in the score. The for the future. WISbinglDn defense cnuhed lh""'8h I<> . However, hi the one (almost) year block David Ray's :If.yard field goal try. Allen bu been held colOI! of the 'l1>e ticl:· -"' ....... ilQilT · be Wuhington Redskins, he'• aerved heallhy polnt9an1he board !rum lhat cloH. heiplnp of crow for all blJ crltlcl_ I<> But Ted Vactor CIDlO lhrougb I<> bloct devour. -. tl Then Waah.Jngtcn took over on ttl S8 And be dished up 1n especlally ~e and lhree.piays lat...BUI IC11mel' hit Olf· aerving Monday night a~ 1he Cc?lilelili1 U too McNell wllh 1 31-yllnl ICOring strike. 80,IO'J chilled fans watched 1lla lledJltln1 That made it !Mt wllh 2::13 left Ill 1111 blast the Rams out of fltst place in their half National Football Conference division, 3tr Then came the back-breaker on the 24. enaulDg kickoff when fto&er \Vlllilml Thus be won the big game (Washington fumbled on the.Rama' four, the Redlkllll clinched Ila !Int. playoll berth in 2t ncoverlng. After a • defe111lve holl!inl year>), ""'late in 1he llUIOll aod did tt penalty and 1 quiet wb1lllle averled .a with the so-called over·tbe-hlll gang. . Rams' fwnble recovery in the end zone, The Rams are mw faced with an uphill Washington sconid from a yarit out. battle to make the playoffL They must 'Ibat upped the 'count to 24-10 wttl)' 2s heat or Ue Plllaburgb Sunday ud 1he 11~ second& left in \he half. The !Dirlln ter has los\ ooly once at home 1hla swelled fQ 31210 in the l!l1rd q1jlr\er &eason. "before the Rams got; oa the·Upnrlne. And even U Ibey win (or tie) at Gabriel who had Con,pleteiroo]y.tlve al l'ittsburgb Ibey have I<> sit bock and~ his lint 21 atrial•, lo! 'em JIOhil·ln \!'" that later lhat doY Detroit will lmocl: off last half. Loe Angeles sand \wlce lo 1he host San Fraodlco 49ers. otblrwl~ illce the gap fQ 31·21 wllh IO::io ,... their 5elSOll wW be concluded. . maintng tn the game. · U the RamJ somehow mate it back on However the Redaklnl held on "ID4 top ol u.;· divlalon, lhey'U go Into the capilallr.ed'on a cllj>plng penalty anctlol- playoffs and •.. hold onto your hats . . • fensive interference .infnctlon to 1f¥m1e ther'H play Allen &: Co. again at the the Rams. Cohseum. · Gabriel made one last bid to pull out ·a At any rate, Allen was ecstatic Monday tie in the Closing minute and completed<& night after hls forces rallied from a 10-7 pair or passes to move to the LA st. But deficit. Olle reporter who somehow had then Speedy Duncan got Washln&too'• gotten past tight dressing room security, tbird interception of the night and retum- heard the . ex-Rf.ms . coach ~I his ld it for the flna1 m potnll with 2f Redskins, "We liave ·so much · to be seconds to play,, , thankful for," and he was hugging them Kilmer had a fantutlc nl&hl He hit on and shaking hls players' hands-. Then the tl ·of his: first .14 pa11es and e.ndlld. the scribe was marched outside to join the even.bur: with 14 of 19 for US yards and ' other legion of newsmen who were await-three toucbdown1J · ing Allen's more formal statements for And it wu a wild game wHb big P'&YI the world. commonplace. The Redskins scored on a "It was a .great win -the biggest of 70-yarif pus, ooe fer 32 yards, a 52-yard my career," Allen Wd. ."I don't have to field goal ind a 4:6-yard interception say anymore -you know what I mean." return. . Yet he said there was no bitterness, no . 'lbe Rams struck: on Kermit Alex· vendetta on his part for having been fired · ander's 82--yard return of a stolen pass less 1han a year ago by tbe'RamJ. and bad a 44-yllnl·noo-scortng receptloG. "We were the underdogs but we pulled • .,.._ •• ...;. together and w~. We bad complete Flrit d-. 11 11 defense and we know we beat a tr1'<>s:1t lt""-"Y'•rft •n .,. .... e--P1u1nt YltMea 2• · !lt football teain." . ' .. ...,,.. ~ . 41 14 Allen 1titJ!be J~. 'his defense lili"d to" • P•-1~t! 11-:: stop Ram1 qaartirback Roman Gabriel. ~::=,.. "'' · 1 • ' "He bad ~ ~Ing so well lately we 'l'•rd• p1na11nd JI · 11·· ~ we b44'to stop hbn. LA -Ntxf..,.,-'et •u 1nt1rc1p11o11 tit.., kldll . "Aaforouroffwe,·weknewtbeRams ti!r"' -°"~ 11 "11 trom '"'-c1en1oJit ell LA -l'"G lttY 2t 1 . dn't thin~ too much of our passing w1.n -PG Knlollt S2 game SO We thougbt We might be able to =~ = a""~l lll'1111119flC= r~rr (Kl'lltflt kid!) throw," he said when asked If be didn't W•tll -J.,,..._ s ,.., 1rom Klllflll' llCni.rit klckJ . '4-om · go With a more Wide OJM;l)_Jnnd_q{ ittack. t: = ~~,.:.:r,:i (by r:r (ltlY kldl) ••. than he customarily employs· · . . · w1111 -Duncto11 ... "" 111tw""'loll cicn111111 kldc1 Allen, who said President Nh:on called him Friday night to wish the·team luck, A-to.«12 · 1111l'-• t• • 11-M Bulldogs Mliklng Waves Big Fi,s .h in:Little Pond?. . . -Not USL Cage Team LAFAYETTE, ta. (AP) -LSU Is a well known athletic power, but it won't be a typographlcil error II USL st.rts pop. ping up in the headlines. The University or SouthweJtern Louisiana -USL -moved up Jnto major university basketball compeUtion for the fjrst Ume this year and b rapked 11th in the nation only ~wo weeks into the season. The Bulldogs seem deatlned I<> outahlne Louisiana State University -LSU -in basketball at lee.st for the nat year or ... Southwestern has been an tstabllsbed. small-college basketball power for most ot ·coach, Beryl Shipley'• 15 yem at 1he helm wbmtng coosolatloQ hooon hi lhe NCAA college division tournamoot Jut Year at Evans.vllle, Ind. ' just not hitting .the -basket as well u we .know he is capable Of doing." But Lamar ru.J 24 points in 1he aeoond • half of USL's victbry over Loog Madi laat Saturday nlghl. "We lhlnk be'11oing to get in the groove," laid Shipley, "and when he does that Will be an added bft. provement to the cllib." In fact, 1he beat 1hlnp should be alleod for Shipley an IL blJ yowig team. Four el thia year's five starters are beck neU )'tar, incluiling-Lamlr, who ta 1 jtinJoc; • ·Losing Streak Stretches to I 00 But Shipley gr<w tired of being 1 big fish in a little pond and bepn pushlng USL toward major status. 1be big break came last summer when the State Board FRIENDSVILLE, Tenn. -David Hill of Education gave USL permiask>n to ts a member of the Frlend.sVllle Academ7 leave the old college division Gulf States basketball team. He ls also a verypaUeitt Conference and move into the Southland young man. · · ' · Conference. Tbe >loo~! 1.nlOr parl!clpaied .in bla All Shipley and blJ )'llllll& team bad fQ .. achool'I IOOlh <Ol\leCllflve bUkOttioD Ioli do 1hen wu win, and win they have -Sabliday nl(hl. a ·IWt delul. 11 1he uJ>6tttlng Houslon and Cal Slate (Lolll hands ol IUrTlllm-O>Ullowee. · . Beach) en rwle to 1 H tt<:onl. David ls, looking fonrud I<> the mzt "We !ell we had a good enough·team fQ game on 'l)lcadl~, Jan. 4 agalnJt G,_ go out and play qai111t aoybocty and do.a back lbllow)lll llte holidays. . good job, but we. didn't know whether we "I had a c1'anCe to graduate Jut June. would be good enough I<> beat HOUllOo boil I wanled f<>,come beck ao I OOllld pl11 and Long Beaeh wit~ 1he people lhey 111 I winning buketball tame." tllo had," said Shipley. dedicaled young man IB!d. "I jUll - USL wu a talented team Jut Jealem, we can do. lt." said Shipley, but with 1hne lrefhmen Coach Joe· Fink COOClll't ud feell 11111 starling moot of Jhe time "I doo~ 1hlnk game wllh Gr<enback mJcbl be jull 11111 we could have done as well beca\111 one for that tictoFJ. yoo've got I<> get under lino fQ alin e&• "We led Greenbllck In the llnaJ ..- perience... · lut year,'' be N)'I. "One ot our boyt'WU 'Ille stsr of 1he USL tWn ii Moot-I dribbling ud the r<lena got In blJ w11.• guard Dwight Lamar, le•dln& amall .col• "Tbe boy tried fQ cut haek Ind doulMo leg. scorer in 1he naUon Ibis year. He ii dribbled . G!oenback JOI 1he bill Ull working with a 34.a average thll yw and acortd and beat us by a point." hal!"t been shooting well. The Loe ~el .. Labr win atr .. k mq • f don't think Lamar Is lhooting 11 1111l be going when tilt l"rlonds .. .well at thJa atage as he did last ytlr." Academy blsketb&D team·cJoses the bool said 'Shipley. · on Ila """'"1 loH mtn •lnct 1he - "llt'I takln& 1he same lhola, bul be'• 1won. But don'I bank on It. ' 1 ! • ~ev · "' 'In Bowl· Clash ' Dave Chaney, San Joie State's All ~Amerlcan . lintbacker, haa two mor• rootball engagements before , ho.otarts looking towanh pro- feulonal career. He and ht. Spartan teammates tangle with Memphis State Saturd1y • In. the Pasadena Bowl, before he.tees hia final collegiate ac- tioo In the Ea.st-West Shrine .. G1me in San Francbco. Olaney fnllnwed up a brilliant junior atUOn with tbe Spar.tans by lainlnl CO!\lf:l\SUS All-American honors thla year. Auociated Presa and the N.E.A. picked him on their ·flrzt "dream" team~ wbllt United Presa had him on their second eleven. The.$-foot, 11-lnch, 218-pound ""senior ·linebacker had a fan· 'tame aeasOn highlighted by a 6i'lllh1rit performance ln ·San JOl'e's . 13-12 upset of Raae Bowl:bOund stanfnrd .. ,,, • It All-tournament Sele~tions All U.. Greenfield, C.lif. native did was make 17 Snook, Saddleback's Ed Lua! (Dave Horcelc stand· ing in), Los Amigos' Keith Stowers and Jeff Keslar and Mission Viejo's Gil NonnancUe. • ~kles-U unassisted-uck-Edison High capturect the lhird annual Aztec Invita- ed the quarterblck nnct, in-tio_nal basketball.championship with a 61-53 win over tercepted a pass, deflected Mission Viejo. All-tourney players are (from left) another, recovered t w·o E~on's Mark Harmon (outstanding player), Rod fumbles, farced a ·third and -~---------'-----=--'--'----"--------------------- t.acltled ·the Stanford punter on the ·ooe-yard -line to aet up a ....... Stanford coach John Ral!ton wu anything but amaud at -Olaney'1 perfnrmance. ~'That Chaney has been a tiger .against. U1 for the past twn aeasona.," aaid Ral.!ton. "He ·would bt an .ace with any ·.team In our league." · Aritnna State dumped the :Spartans during the lflO cam- paign but Sun Devil head man Frink Kush was mighty im- J)ressed with Chaney: "He wa1 all over the field against us. }fe'a quick,· a sure tackler and ·wa·& in on two-thirds of the 'plays in our 'game," recalled 'Kush.' Chaney'a own coach, Dewey King, goes even further, "Dive \J the best collegiate "llnebacier 1 have ever seen," aa.id King. who is a nalionally- rec;ognized a u t h o r i t y on deiense . ".He pl.a}'• wit.h a lremen-ckM... arMunt Of Inner dr1ve,'• Kidg cotttinued. "I like to delcribe him a11 a football player who :play1 with great emotional · sUrge. He his a great football instlnct and he is .,.Wtively inspirational" Chaney lnterce~ seven paues and returned them for 136 yards during the 1911 season. Twn nr h i s' 'in- terceptions .11gainst Cal State l:xmg Beach were returned far 35 yard touchdowns and spark- ed e. 30..28 Spartan victory that ultimately provided ·l'h'e Spartana with the bid to ·the Pasadena Bowl. pne of the Memphis Cll- fensive )inemen that C'haney will be facing in the Rose Bowl, Dec. 18, ia Mike (Mule) Stark. • burly 6-2, 25&-poond tackle. _ stark, a. n&gged homegrown ~II player. ia considered to be one of the best man-on-man blockers In the nation. He has :J>een a fegular starter In each of hi!: three seasol\9 on the ·Tiger varsity and has earned ,All·Mis1oort V a I I e y Con- fetenct honnni each year. ' · Surpri11ngly agile rOr a man bis size, St.ark uses great strength to fend nff enemy at- tackers. He bas bench-preued SlMl ~·ney, Mule Stark is 1 jreat pro!ped far the ~ ·feS&lonals. They 1boald prO- vidt a' good matchup lo the PUadena Bowl. Bucs Await :Tough Mat Opponent Tbe N"o. 2 ranked jwiior college wrettlln, team In the state is nt:icl on tap far coach Vern Wagner'• Orange Coast :COiiege ifapPlers fnilowlng 1 fourlJl·pl•ce finish at the Cl! State (Fullerton) InvitaUonal Saturday. El .Camino Invade!' .orange dbist Thursday evenint ln a double dual Uiat will Also ln- •olve prep powers MArina and Foulitaln Valley with 1ctlon ·starting 1t 7:JO. Golden Weol R.,., bock to •otlt Wednddav In a •eiuldra~lar meet .11t Pltrte Cc'>tl8'1'.e (3 p.m. l Orang• O.st fini.oll<d f...rth .. Sa1urd1y behind the cluirn- ploml>lp -··· ol Don Lew11 (117 ) ind Tim Bandel '.(117\. Lewis. a farmer Fnuntatn Valley otandout. pinned three nl hi! four victims en ""'"' lo Mo title. And Jlan<\el. ·u-Coron1 de! Mir ace. piuned tw~ of three opponen~ alter a tlrJt·round bye. Mesans Step Vp in Class , Slate CIF Grid Finalists Costa Mesa High has altered its non.league !oolball schedule a bit for nut year, replac· ing first game opponent Katella with Western. Western? The same Western which la ClF AAAA finalist at the U>s Angeles Coliseum against Bi&hop Amat Friday? Th.it's right, pal. Mesa, which has never had a winning sea· son in a dozen campaigns and which has registered five · victories bt the last 'll start!, is stepping up ita acbeduJe. After the MUJlanls are lhrough with w .. ~ ---------RQGER CARI.SON ..___ _____ . ..,, It'll be Newport Harbor. then 1rv1n1 League play. Eight of the Orange Coast area's 15 prep football teams will continue with I.be same format in non-league action as 1n the past .year, Five others have changed somewhat and Dana Hills will. be brand new ln the fall . The other tchoola which ,have made eome 1witches are F.di.!on, Eitancia, Marina, San Clemente and Laguna Beach. :Estancia has dropped Buena Park in the second game and will play Marina, which dropped Hawthorhe. Edison replaces St. John Bosco and Santi· agn with Fullertnn and Orange. San Clemente'11till looking for a fiMlt game and meets Bo:lsa Grande in the RCtllld test. Here'a each school'a non-league 1ked : C.Oron.11 del Mar -Newport and Santa Ana . Costa Mesa -.Western and Newport. Ollila Hilb -Army·.Navy and Rim of the World. Edi8M -Fullerton and Orange. E.stancia -Tustin and Marina. ' Fountain Valley -Rancho Alamitos and Huntington BeAch. Huntington Beach -Millikan and Foun- tain Valley. Laguna Beach-Gladstone and Anny-Navy, Marina ~ El Rancho and Estancia. Mission Viejo -Saddleback and Pacifica. Mater Dei -Santa Ana, Chaffey, Lake- wood and Long Beach Wilson. Newport Harbor -Corona de! Mar and Costa Mesa. San Clemente -open and Bolsa Grande. University -Foothill and Los AmigO!. Westminster -Lakewood and Long Stach Wilson. * * * Around the beat: It'• ln tere1ttn1 to not.e that Rancho AlamJ.. to1 Blgh'1 basketball team 11 J.G, During the summer CMCh Pat 1 Adam•' crew wa1 win· le11. Adami dMmphaslsed summer acdvlty In aearch of die valve of summer le1gue ba1ketbaJI. Foothill High's basketball wins aver Sunny Hills and Troy are no fluke, Coach Hank Hummel has 1 pair of 5-6 underclaSBmen in the fnld t.o aid guard Rob Tuvell. The tall timber are sophomore Jeff Wel- s~ans and junior Stan Han!ICll1. Fallbrook mast have set aome sorl of record against La(llDa Buch when ff acored +f points ln one eight-minute quarter of basket· ball on the way lo 1 N.ff win. Say1 Llpna coach Jerry Fair: "Every. thing they 1bot went in. Layups, outside shots, the work1." Mission Viejn baseball roach Harry Hilke ii forsaking Easter tournaments' In '73, in· stead going far a two.game set at Avalon High . Hilke says moot al the prep baseball tour· neys .11re !leCOOd class with much of the com· petition played on junior varsity fielda. So true. Look far San Clemenlt: to drop out of the Crestview Lugue ln '71-74. Dana Hll11 will take a ma)nr portion of San Clemente'• ta1ent. Tbe '7%-73 year II 1table wltb senior• 1taytn1 at San Clemente. A rea .Cage Results ·Yikes Laud IVl&UttMM ,, ,,..._ '"' Moll'-.,.. 1'7) l MPyw!lltt (fl ' •r.itfl.IU Oil Olrlttiaptw 12) I' l!«l• (I) Wllftlitde Ill C ,........,...,. !tt1 0¥1111Y !•I & ll:lcD !41 l'r-f!) G W1ll<l(I nl k:wlnt IUbs: l'I ~ -Sll'llk• I. IM!w (Ml -McAV!ft' !, 18'1..-l. IWfftlfM t(fll'e! ~"' 09' "· II Mfl6lne n. C...-"4 Mar (lll Ull Yl/l9 ''"' Wlhl-1111 I' Cl! VewMM Wt)I (I) I' !14) Ht&tw Cler'll: 0 11 C If) ~ S'-rt ft) G (21) McMUlt~ kv .. t (fl G fOl T. IClll'lll' l1alf!lmt: VI/It l'.,.k t7, CenlNI ftl Mir-. Cer-_.lfll tvbl: GrtM., '· &It! c.....e..111 (HJ IUJ Matlllll1 HHtl I•) I' fl ) ll:our ···-fl ) ,. (4) Ill ...... ~ ltl . c (t) C9'!t Yoetf lll l G IUI '"-~ Heffl'M~ C111 G 161 ~nn $Clllrl1)11 111111: 11111 c1..,...i. -w.11 L llW_I .. -l(l!lclrwd 1, .,..,... J, A.ii f , ~lftlrM: ............. lf.tl. Top Runners Bob Phillips wu named mast valuable an the Marina cross eoontry squad Monday night at the school's fall sport.. award• banquet. Chargers In 63-5 4 Setback By HOWARD L. RANDY Of H'lt n.Hr ,flet Stiff Edl!OO Hlgft School Wkel- baU teem 1hit • dry SR<ll In the third quarter while' War- ren High 800red 11 pointa and went on to poet a 63·54 open- ing round victory In the 43rd Huntington Beach invitational tournament Monday afternoon. In another· afternoon ron- lest, Mlillkan High ol · Loog Beach toppled ViltJ, Park, 11- 54, and will face the Beera Wednesday at 7. Villa Park plays F.dison in the cons<lla- tion bracket Wed.needay at 1:30 ln .tht Chargll" gym . Jn Menday'1 opener 'With Warren; coach :Qave MOha' F..dison squad fell tiehind early but man~ to afay even or slightly ~d ol o the Coast League' contingent until mid- way tl\nltll!h lbelllird period. At Uii.r point, the OlargEn were leedin'g, 4049, and a~ peared headed for ~ir fourth victory In a row trlcluding a championship In the Le. Quinta tourney last weekend. The Bean put on a sudden scorlni:;: surge, however. and rattled the Olargers with a full-court prea:lng defense. They forced five straight turnovers without M Edison score. ' During the same period. Joe Hnnrd hit for aev81 poinlll r.nd the Bean tallied 11 in a row to take a 50-40 ect,:e fhRt wu never again cflal· lenged by the a.,.gers .. Tn t.he fourth stanza. War· ren wor~ed the beJr well wtth a pasidng game..and took ooly the sure shot underneath. Several bad oasses, forced by the .11Jr.rt Otarger dt.fense. tumerl the bell over to Edi!on but the closert Mohs' crew could aet was 1ix point! e.t S9-S3 with 1: 49 left to play. La Quinta all-tourney !'lel@C· tlnn Rad ~nook ol the a,arg. eni. keot his tflflm in the run- nin~ with .11 fantastic strin11 ol free throws in the first stan.u. He hit to.d-tn in the.t stanza s n d the Chargerw trAlled by (ll'l!y rive points. Fnr the aame, Sr!()llk was 18 for 21 111t the ch.11rlty m line and clOM!d with 24 poinl• bfof'nre fouling out with 1:2J !ell. 1 ers er ect,_ Top Tustjn, · 91·73 ' ' • !'>'·ROGER C~RUION leti4nn111 ln the lllrtlna five, ot • ....., ,.... ..... tUJ"Dld ln ' mce job at both •arted wllb Combo' oplnlOlll ana uld "ft'• ha.rd ·'-~ .firlt of •ix' 1tepe r.> '•end& of tbe·eowf. qufred to raolv1 1be queition Comtie however " 1 1 n 1 t of_ who'• ~o. 1 in Ol'a.na' Coast eipeelallf pleJ!eed• with bis at:H.: Pfep . baakelball circles teim'• delen1iv• effort. ' ~ eviluate WUaon alter wa~ chin( them 11a1not Anlhelm. " 1'U • accomplished Monday • nigbf' ·II undefeated Hun-And rather thln·dwell on the "But I know they're toql1. ~.quutioo la can Hun~ Beach" -with !him?" oaid Trotter. t!Dgton · Beach Hiah'• Oilen, victory-over n.tln, be seem-fi:llled to thelr-(ffth.~ive e4 co~rned · w l th Wed- vietory. . netlday • opponent -Long C4ech Elmer C.Omba''Ollera Belch Willon . The, 0Uer1 canned S3 nf 'It attempt.I from the floar lot 47.l percent ind hit 21 of IL rr .. tbrowo (!O.f percent). I bl11ed by Tu.Un , 11-71, In tho "The)"re all quick and they opening round of their Crd an-work bard on the boards," nuaJ JnvltaUo111J, J)llttlng them uld Combs. Tuatln, mwtwbll• bit 21 oCr M from the field for IU P'\I;'.) one step clORt to. the ultimate 'J'w;tln coacb Geot(e Trotter ahowdqwn Friday with Corona cent. del .Mar, providing the latter «;an . m. at ch Huntington'• tourney perfonn1nc.!s. Huntington llld Corona apart identicA.I 5-0 marks and 1har1 the top spat In Orange County with La Habra in the official county rankings . Huntlngtnn's nelt obstacle In the path or the dream· game b Long Beach Wilson Wed· nelday night (8:30), a· team that rambled past Anaheim, 7~. In the nther nocturnal feature. Mnnd1y. ~hJ:im and Tustin battle In COrt.!!IOlatinn actinn Wed· nesday at Edisan (4:30 ) .. It seemed all too easy for Combs' crew a1 the Oil City quintet raced to a 31·17 ad- vantage early in the RCOnd quarter, then seemed content to keep a 10 to 14 paint 1pre1d the rest of the way. The impasing front line nf Jim Worthy, Steve Brooks and Bret Whit~ accountei: far 54 Point5 as they took turns shoc:!tlng from inside and 01,1tslde . It didn't seem to matter If they octaslonally m I 1 1 e d , another would simply take the rebound and put It back up. White, the only non-varsity Corona, Sailors hi Action Tonight .3 r Unbeaten Corona del Mar performanct.e ~ g.5 ·centM13 and Newpart HMbor close nut Mike Sevier, 5-2 guard Cue~ the final aalvn of first round Jnneii, 8-5 fnrward Jo h''4 action In the 43rd annual Hun-Sumner and a host of other1 tlngton Be 1 ch· Invlt.atinnal who altemate ·ln the Sea Kii!f~ basketball tournament tonight. attack. •'II Coach Tindy Gillis' Corona Jones and Sev>er have beed1 del Mar Sea King1 are favnred in double figuru each time . to make it ai:ic in a roW In the out and Gillis 11 hapeful thdt 1:30 feature against Servile. guard Scott Cameron will ~ And ii the Sea Kings are n1tdy to roll tonighL .'ii 1uccessful they'll qualify far a He'• the 1 par It p I ui1c quart.rfi9als btrtb against the playmaker who makes the Soon IW'Vlvo~ i>fvthe'7 o'cklck clash Kings' fast break click. HI · betwetn coaCh' Dale Hagey's missed the flrat four PJM1iJ: Newport Harbor Sailors and and played briefly qalnll ·Russ HaWk's 'Sunny Hills Villa Park Friday 1 f t 9<11\ Lancers. recovering from an ankle ta.1 Afternoon action included jury. Pacific against Arcadia (4:30J Newport 's Bill McKiMey S.a while Compton draws a bye in the big noise for the Sallor1.n,1,. the first round. He has tremendous ~U Gillis' talen_t rich Sea Kings patentlal as dlspl.11yed alrea~ are ranked first in Orange by canning 24, 19, 28 and 30 p County al~g with tourney leading his mates to a t host Huntlngtnn Beach and mark. . t Freeway League power La McKinney is 1 6-31lett.umiii{' -· ..... H1111HHltfl INtill ltll ... Habra. for Hagey'1 crew and coupl~~ ., ,, The Sea Kings have posted with ~1 muscleman JUi( ~ "" five wins In sparkling fashinn Swick, the Sallor1 present tr( : ~ behind tht a 11-r o u n d tough combination. ' ' " ' . ' . ·-· """' -lttleld ""'""' ·-· A•el- • • ' ' ' . ' ']i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'i J "11 . f \ \ l)AVE ROSS PONTIAC 1 G1rl111d 11:.rlkln Tet1lt ' ' ' ' ' . l ' ~ . ' . ~ .: Lease or Buy All Models ... ·~,. ci.n...-1 °"""' Trott..-" '""'"" ,.,_ ..,.,.,.,,. '"'"' T"'• TONI It T•t111Cn1 .. " ' . ' ' . ' . ' ' ' . ' ' .. ' ' . . ' . " • • ' " • • ' " • " ·' n , • , • • • '· ' " " I"" IW 9ll1rton u 17 u M n " ,,_,, n-" Basketball Results HIGH ICHOOL ._ ll!Hl11 T•PMY I I Mlldlftl .,, Horttl l"""111M Ml COLL•OI ••• cir SI••• [LA) 16'. .....,....,., It • ., ...,,.. oi... 11. 100 ............ ,,,,., • DAVE ROSS PONTIAC 2411 HAl lOI ILVD . .t 'All DllVI COSTA MUA Ph. 546°8017 °'•JI 1 DAVI A Wl•IC l:•.uit. TO tl:N ,,M, SUNDAY; 11 A.M. TO t l'.M. •9""·•'· "' c..1 "olY !,_, "ii~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!:!!!:!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~· UCSinDi-17, "'°""-nlC.WHon Y1lley 11. ft. I.mot. '7 H ... ldl tl.H V-11 lot, ~ Mktol<ll..," S.11 'rwic:llCCI II. fl , IM J-St. 71 W1lhlfte1l:ltl ·M. n, ld9llO .ff GorlU111 100, c ... 1,..1 W•""""" to ... Hit '•elf!( 72, E\'1 ... .,11i. " ... Menotel!d 7'. ~ltelt.n !OC) .. LI S.llt' "' Wfff (11•111' ,, Mel,,. '9, ltl'locM 111..ic! A HI...,.. 107, llJff1lo '5 MllWtll x • .,1..,. !Ohio~ to, Old De1nlrt11111 • I_. II, NWldt {llltN) 16 Wltc0n1!n to, l'tor!U Tltdl a Air"'" ID, Tel.00 7• .toU(tll .. 11 t 1. Auitr1Jt.11 NttloNls 10 0.1.nern. ,., A•~• n "·-II. to, Cr...,,ton .. Ml_,rl 104, SI. l'rtMll (,1.) ~ Tn11 CEI P'-1 J7, W~ln {Mii· w.ul!M) ~1 .... Mldlkltn II, ti, 1(..,tvn:r If ltSI T--11, iltMnallt 6' ,.,.,....,_., 10J, Morll'lted SI. 112 AlltluNI liS. Ml111t.ai.r Sf. 1' -· r .... llJ. Alfllttn h• AdlM ti Atll!_.1 to, Ole,.._ I t. H ...... N .... Mtllkl II .... Arir.n. n Noar!ttN to, Mldwffl11'11 llf ...... , .. ,...IMllf Htrwnl 117, .. ""' u. ,, (rlt1tn'I~ llttlt) IMtorl Cell-D, Her1'1Htt-II (~tlero) J aycees Play t, A GREAT GIFT FOR CHRISTMAS! GAZELLE $19.95 . . . OLYMPIA $18.95 HAILLET-$14.9 5 The most popular Sport ond loi- suro Shoo in tho World. Elt••n super styles in sitts from Chi~ dren's I to Men's 14. WI GLADLY Gin WllA' ANY ITIM 1052 Ill.VINE e S4M684 WISTCLIPP ,LAZA e NEWl'OltT l l ACH ' I! • ' d • I t ' ' b ( I l • • •• "' . ... . -. '.I DAILY PILOT --, s YONr Mone11 T • • BBB Now ~wace : • r BJ SYJ,VfA PORTER • "The Bttter 8u1-ine11 :SU:eaus must be reorganiud., • modeittlted end upgraded to ~aerve th6. COr131,1mer;1 sald ~Usha Cray n, c-hairman of WhlrlP09l Corp., as we i:nuneh-'ifd cinnamon toast after a Red ·Ctou board meeting t n :Washington early In 1970. "By ..reinvlgoraUng and supporting {lhe BBBs, fiuslnessme11 can ~luntarily meet the ·needs of ithe consumer. We had better ;do It voluntarily -or else - ,and now." 1 ; "As we told Congressn1an ;.Rosenthal, we k.no\v our own ;thortcoming." emphasized H. :.Bruce Palmer, the fir st presi- :dent of the now r~rganized !(:ounc:il of Better Business Bureaus, \Yhen I asked him ~bout the critical report issUed \tn Washington yesterday by :Ute New York City Democrat. •:we have conducted and we ~fre conUnuing to conduct our own investigations and we have committed 1 i t e r a 11 y millions or dollars to correct the deliciencies we ourselves have discovered." Perhaps the most refreshing 'aspect of the current broad at- -tack on the structure and .operations of the BBs is that, I t the very top, businessmen 1ealiu much of the attack is ~ustilied. And perhaps the ;most encouraging aspect to us ·.&S consumers is tha t under 'the ..prodding of Cray, the Coun- ··'cll's first chairman, and or tpalmer, the CBBB is movlng vigorously tQ answer the ,.criticisms. To illustrate: '; Indictment: The bureaus •are weak, ineffective, staffed ~!"ith, .second-rate people and :1imply not capable of hand.Jing .the job they claim they are !doing. ,· Answer: Without d o u b l • t.lome of the bureaus deserve every word and more of this copdemnation. The r e a so n !there is such a wide variation !.,_in performance is that each bureau has been completely !autonomous until riow, with its {Own fund ing by I o c a I ~bus iness es and with 1fesponsibility only to its own •board of directors. ~ To pull all the bureaus uJi lo tJlfW high levels of achieve- • ment, the old associations ~ere dissolved ancl mfrged in--io the new council or Better fpustness Bureaus u n d er ;,pray's leadership in August 31~970. Palmer became presi- .. Qent in January '71. The full i board of directors -with f representatives now from con. sumer groups and universities 8s well as from business organiza tions -has been in ~~xistence for only a few , 24 Hour TEL~PHONE 'ANSWERING SERVICE •rvln1 -Cq,ront cltl Mer, 011• M111, N1w,.ort B1111;h, nd Senft A111 •r111. OllANGI COUNTY I ADIOTILIPHONI SIRYICl, INC. 835-3305 • • F orecast Bid BEDFORD, Mass. -.EG & G, Inc ., has obtained from the Federal Government and a group of companies a contract to develop methods o ( forecasting possible coestal environmental problems caus- ed by using coa'1';l water for reactor cooling in nucJ,ar electriQ power plants. The New Eng land Electric and Middlesex-Essex ·systems are the principal companies in· yo\ved along with the Atomic Enttgy Commission. INCOME PROPERTIES WI TH TAX SHELTER UP TO 88% WRITE OFF FOR 1971 $5,900 • $196,000 INVESTMENT Wel~on & Company 21411. COAJT HWY., CORONA DIL MAl 675-6900 .~ T•ll• '°"' "'II lrtl'l'I 1111 ttm•ll'- tlH ., ... 11111111 -l llle•lll ., • ,. • • M-.vm ., ,..,. Cl'ltkt. We ... "'" .. ... ., J911 t'llr tvft '"URltlll Mt ltfff '""',.'" tllltNd It """' ,.....~·· -'11-----FREE BOO KLET •' ltf'lll 111 tri. C:tll!lfn ff l"t(tlYt ..,,. /l'ff Mfk!" tru-..rlflt Ill l'ftf ·-t ! ,.... "'l•rdlnt 1t11lnt 111 111t.mftllf. '. . f ! NAMI, ••. , ........... , •. , ... , .................. , ................ ,.,, ....... • •O: .t.0011u .•••••...... .,, .•......•..•. f ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ,, •CITY ..... , ... ,. •• , •• , .... • ........ l'ltONI .. "'"' ....... . • • •····· .. :-····················---· ..... -····· .. -.............- • • ·~- + •• . -. .. . .. .... • .., ... . ' ... . " • • • • ....... OV.ER THE COUNTER t • • ,. • , .. • • Market Re:veals . . ,. • .. ~•.v im ' ! ... CAILY Pit.Of JI :, ..... -~ ,. .. ..... l l \. , J t:1iilaren' s Yule Shoivs Revived .. ,, Tuesdqy ' Evening ' · • Kreskl. A stro111·wlMed fl'Qfltlet scout 11111 an eq11.1lly stubborn rancher art f!Ntfd It> )olll forcti to find · 1 t mlulna; 1111._... • • .... DtCE14'8Ell 14 ,'f:ll•<ll••- ·GI h.W frtd _Show @I @ Th• AdvaulU "Shou!d Con· rre,,. M1k1 Sh'ikm 1 Ineligible to RKf:i'lt Public Aid?" 1 ·-.. '"'"'-.. •IJIWIWWll- li.n, .......... a-· ' ·er lrll• If ,_.ail: llSl•llO_,,. .• " .... ,.,.. l.t411 ··-QIJ-llD ..... l:JD. aM A1t1 .. Gisttts: Monao t:~ fJ @C.11..011 Fritz ~1.ver tuests · 51¢11111ri1, stm Mtrtin, Fosler •s a dlstnch1nl!d 1ccount1nt who ~'Jack C.11tnl1r', Dtni'lli Hop-11eals I ..c1nnister of de1dl1 ne.rw per, [ddi1 RJd•r. ras. 8 Wt: (C) (la) ~ Jolt. .fJ lutlf Want Nm _,.,, Mlllll".P1rt I (1dwnt11rt}''50 ID II f.US I l1111I. J>i!:bwati Ktrr.,Shflrt ·Grant•!· · f.E@.lltck Joun11I "A Blick (l)tlfB""' Paper ott ·While ·Radsm: Part I" mMlrlrlflltkDtw ~ll!lfillJChildre11 ti Com111 ... ... ...,._ ""'' -waut, . , , '-IO:OOOtflmtlill§!JTh1 Co1111n1 ~ • a.. ~lqt tf Cllrtst (R) A Project 20 produc- "' ·~ult ··tiOll-u.lilizinf 300 painting master· " 8 . lflljl km p!ecei:. · I • 111""' .. ........, om• ... . fJ CI!@ Ef) Martus "Welby, M.D. l 7~8(1)9•"-· "Cross·Malch"'A bltt~i'youn1 black ' (I) t1111 • t1n1if11•••~ nilR takeS 1 · ntw''Vftw 'nn life when • • ~ of 1 while boy. l 1.i)·tnnft he. 1i¥u Ills blood to 1avt the: 1111 ' •1111 = llJ ~f O MW: "'T1le list Mile" (dram•) • -'59-Mlttey P.Goney, A11n Bunt!. tll .... loq • ID FREE"SILENT YEARS" I Gii 11\0tO" 1¥1•• *PHOTO ALBUM AT AL~ ·!llllloc.un.110wno., OFFICES 'OF·CREAT , 9 ~ '"'I"' H"hcock WESTERN SAVINGS ... ,,.,. . t m D£9Uf " Silent · Ye us ''Th1 ,1 -~ "'911 • Gold Rush" 'stirs Chulit Chaplln ~ ftllMe"""-··· t . tnd ls'the first film in 1 12·'«9$ , ,... · serleS of site-I film claulcs shown J.:Joeil.1* C.(IMll laul Lynde, tsncut with -MW music tracks Ind l' Y!llli , H1rper 1nd nt R1ldm co!or lints. Orson Welln hosts. ,, . f'lliL Q)T1p Tip I . D~ 1Dll!W!UT•1 tllll• . 1SR1Her 81111• ~ .... .., a., An!m•ltd -rnuslcll ail ftsfuahMulunt { Qriptri11s sjl1ti1I ttllin1 tht SIOfY ol . I • JW boy whow on!)> rift for th• JJl:lO IJ Th• Cold~piR Eddi• Albert Ud4ln! Ctfriit 'Child' Is . t son1. Aiice Ghosl!ey ind BUty Bulat sp!!Of J _'t"!_r Q1~_!s_of!·c1fti1r1 n1mtor .. · th• wi1d.wesf. · · 1 Bl])Cl)UJT•• Mt• SQu1t1 · Q ·Monty N1sfl ."Brother Z•chal)"" • .. Jiii ff Cl.,.. Dal Arn1r Jr. 1uesls 0 Movie: "1orest ff1nf1n" (mus{. • n I;_ fl!' malt 'lfhoH htrolam In • _ cal) '42-fred. MecMurny, P1 ulett1 -.'fhOUsl flfl mulls In 1ttempts Goddmt -on Ills IH1;· -' - . ([) I .,._ If Jeliilt (]).Al tuut ... -..... ;.~ <t)•(2hr) "The GjS.. Dltp'hllOrllM ... Qtlke" (llr1m1) '55 -P1 ul m N-. Bill .lohr? ~111, Ylrflrri• MIJO, Pier An1ell. €E El fttlrlto d1 Dorl1n Cray ·-·-.... ,..._. · m Call ti thfWnl . f' f. o'il VD: JIM EfWl•lc" U. '"'' ll:GG U @ O !!>Ill Nm ; Cl niii UM "Who Owns An'ltr· . 0 (I) @l m News "'" I ............ ,,,_ . t ..... • ' IJ i.1Na:cROSBY HOSTS ~, * •EU SYSTEM • ~AMILY THEATRE cil M1rthtl Dillon m Tt Tell tM Truth QJMalrtnp 11:3111J ()) Mtl'.W Crilll11 p ®) !!! "'"" ~-0 CI) 00 a> Okk C.vttt J1cques Clusfuu fUISlL ''THI! MOST JOYFUL, LIYEL Y, ENTERTAINING .,, loc•I tll"lrt· tx~lewc• Ill mitm0ry" -I.A TIMES "SOUTHLAHO SEASON'S SMAIH '""USICAI.. HIT" . '-PRESS TELEGRAM ''WILL,f'ROaAtL Y 'WIN OUT'AS ll!UUi al:TTEA THAN HAlll" -VARIET.V' "SONG OF NORWAY'' . and "ON A CLEAR DAY YOU CAN SEE FOREVER" Pll.N~VISION" t.<;M lft;. ~ElROCOlOR 'tiiif · Also G' Pa11I NewMC11t "COOL HAND LUKE" BARGAIN MATINEE WED. 1 P.M. ADULTS $1.00 ; 81911111 U!tt1!!J lri I Cm1of 11• .. IMMft If Qrbtlln Muy Cotta, bbtrt Goul!t. Th• Mitcll1n $1111!111 Boys, Kllllry11 C~bJ Ind tlll Crtab)' Child1tn )ol11 Bini for his 35111 !fln1t1l.Chri1t11W &how d11in1 ~k It rMlo days. m Mowi1: "Tiit. Key" (dnma) '5! 1~111!'!111!'!111!'!111!'!111!'!111!'!111!'!1111 Wi1U1m &Iden.. Trevor Howard. I: ··~ >1 l ' • . ~ 8 Mnlr. (2't) "11tt WMflrffr" Cll!ttltm) '40--C.,y Cooper, W11te1 Q) M9'it: "1111 llldt Olvils of Kiil" (1dW1nhir1) 155--ltx BarkM. OJ Ftr Ad~.lls DnlJ ~1111111. Doris fl1l'tftpart. Dena 11:45 O Movie: "'Thi Pltd Piper"" (drl· Antltl'l'I. mal ,•2-Monty Woo!ll)', Attnt Bu · ~ Tllb It TM Uft ttr, Roddy McDowlll. IZ:ISON ... W.ednesdoy ' . ' . ' ENDS TONIGHT "ANNE OF THE THOUSAND DAYS" & "LION IN WINTU" St•rtt Wedn•H•J Oyan C•nn•n Robert Ryan "THE LOVE MACHINE" Ill & "DOCTORS WIVES" (RI , NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES ,, I I Son Supports HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Peter Ford plays a regular role in father Glenn Ford's new television series "Cade's Count.y." Al10 Playlnt "Outbacli~' ·. THE NO. 1 SONG fitf NO. 1 ALBUM '•~~N0.1 FllM B!ST PICTURE BEST MUSICALSCORE i1f,,\ F!YI ROO: HUDSON in 'PRETTY -MAIDS ALL IN A ROW" ,. .. f/" ; -. . .; ' In ever}une's life there's a SUMMER OF '42 !R!r:.:-.::..., I ~::.:-;;::::_. RJNNY HOW LOVERS START AS.,, "fri d II ~~11f en s I& lECHNiCOLOR.: l\l.B£RTJINNEY "SCROOGE" ~Ghnslrnutnul.IC.il. PaNVIS.,,.. l~" (G!C> A150-THE PfAtJUTS GANG tr. 'A SOY tlAM fD CHARllE BROWN" Al50 PLAYlr.::O.cnitMA VIEXI MISSION VltJ0-130-6990 ~o ll1rTtd Art1111 Plut·OOHAlO ~lEAW«:l ft "OUJ.tA(l" (I) la Ctlor ' ' 1 -· I • Everyone Has Something 'That Someone Else Wants DAILY. PILOT CLASSIFIED : ADS You C.n Sell It , Find-It, Tracle-It With ,. Want:Ad . . -. . . . ·The :Biggest Mark~tplace qn the Orange Coas,t-:Dial 642·5678 fQr Fast R~sults . . TRIPLEX! IN CORONA DEL MAR A rare find for this area! 2 Nice bedrms in each of the three units. Elec. blt·in stoves & ovens, near-new cptng & drapes & 6 carports. Won't last! Hurry! $69,500. -. "Our 26th Year" . WESLEY N •• TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 General Yeneral BAYSIDE DRIVE WATERFRONT Linda & Harbor Island View .From this lovely 4 bdrm., 4 bath home. On a 59' lot, with pier & fl oat. Custom drilp-eries & paneling. $139,500. 341 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR Islanders Bldg. at Lind• Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. Isle 675-6161 '( . YOUR BOAT AND FLOAT '- ~ Right on the w ;;~R~i~ this 2 ~droom, ~· f. 2 bath, builtin kitchen, FIREPLACE, car· pets and drapes, with your own PIER • •AND FLOAT. Only .......... $72,000. i'. ~. HORSES & FRESH AIR ~ ~ That's A Pair ~ ' IN CHERRY VALLEY. 4.57 acres. LOVE-· LY 4 bedrdom, 31h bath, fantastic land· • .......... ,. I ORI.\ I [ Ol\OX '" ll ~A L TQ/'15 NEWPORT HEIGHTS Clean sharp two• bdrm. on seclllded cul-de-sac street. 'Large pie shaped Jot. Choi~ starter home or perfect re- tirement location. Clase to all grades of schools and 17th St. Shoppi11g Center. ONLY $21.SOO. 'GfcHlge "1sta PROPERTIES _G_•n_•,.•_•_• _____ I General IN THE CENTER scaping & a VIEW you can't believe. ~ Formerly La.Borde R.E. t• Caretakers cottage, auto. sprinklers, 120 llO E 17 h s c M Ch Tr WILL TRADE FOR . t t., . • • err y ees. · •, 646-0555 "&" • sEAc;;:~:R;· l~i.~EviN~5,ooo. J Ev.rungs caii .. ...,,. Eastside C.1.'f. location, Gran· ny can hop Skip & jump to \Vestcliff 'Shopping, Jr. walks to school: recreation at home. 1JX3.1 hid, & fill. pool; 2 bdrm. & den plus guest house; in immac. cond. \Von't last long at ~31,500. FAMILY HOME Lots of everything; 5 bdrnu., 3 ba's., formal dining; huge family rm.; 2 frplcs.; 3 car ga r. All done in the best -01 decor. Plenty of room for everyone to ha ve their own n iche. Localed in Harbor Vie\v Homes. 01.vncr leaving stale. For details.call . LOT WITH VIEW . • . of hills & ocean, located in-best v.·oodeti' area of·La- gu~ Beach. ' Priced at il6,5tll. CORBIN- . MARTIN REAL TORS 644-7661 BEDROOMS « · this beach cottage . I Owner Transferred ~ CUTE 3 bedroom 1 bath, ·living room, European cuHured with ~ FIREPLACE, front patio, one block to charm & quality 0·1 crafts-~outh Bay on BALBOA ISLAND. A good .: manship. Ankle deep car-1nve~tmentat ..... , .... , ... , .$32,500. \ "'"·Candlelight dining ,m. 6,'/: 01 LOAN AVAILABLE DUPLEX • 2 •mall bl- Huge gourmet kitchen. TWO ~· 2 10 from E. 17th St. SFJPARATE FIREPLACES. on this townhouse ,. 3 BR Chalet type home, 16th Authentic par'lor. -Uke .fam-in BACK BAY AREA. 3 . Bedroom, 3 · & Tustin. Uy room. Tovoer111g stairs to t• . bath, builtin kitchen: COMMUNITY 4 BR, pool, beam ceiling, huge Bdrms. 3. Bath~. Much PO'OL & REC ROOMS ·including billiards,· • fam rm. N.B. . more to M!e including a 3 d d . CARPET & DRAPES I C2 • home &: b1.uune1s 1 blk CAR GA'R:AGE. J ust listed. : car s an sewing. to 17th St. So take at'lvantagc, Call ~ allowance. Only · · · · · · · · · · · · ·, · $26,250. C-1·:1 ·Convertible bldg on 64s.o3o3 ~ PUT YOUR DREAMS AWAY ·i,· i'.;;'~~;,•~, ~!,k" si. ~• · · in this · NICELY DECORATED 3 •bedrom home'-JUST ONE LEFT FORl:ST E OlSON '-.< • R£A i. TO/JS , P.LAN AHEAD FOR 1972 \ wi~h. lovely 12. X 30 SOLARiu,M, 3 baqls,. In a delightful area you may qu~1~y carpeting & drapes, kitchen with • never have seen. Like new built-llls,, COAmtJNITY .l;JQOL, RECREA· ~· 3 bedrooms 2 tuu baths with , TION 'HALL &·PUTnNG·.GREEN. OJ;lly . ._ sll'iinn tub & huge rooms . • _1 •• , , , , 1,., ~ .............. , , . .$59,500. Plenty of room for boat stor· ..5 · age & poo! (f Cleslred. Avail· REALTORS 644-7270 ability of horse boarding only 3 blocks away. For in- formation call ~n71. $46.000 • 10THEREAL '0-E~'.f ATE~S U/'lll()Uf: t1flMH Rell Es&aW, ers.aooO SACK BAY ESTATE l.13?'d. Acre • bir tree 1, $P!rklin& P,OOI , with 4 laqe bedrooms, open beam ceil- inp and massive tittplace. Move in now. U/'lllVUI: f1flMts Aral Eltlt•.tl7s.6000 2Ul E. C1»1$f Hwy. Cofollll Oll.Mar,C&Jtt "Discriminating Clients" Only! In Shoreclifts • Custom built • 2 level 3 BR home and huge separate den with wet bar • Immaculate like new condition. Quality aold w/w cpts thruout • Ocean view trom liv room and den. 2 Jlrplca High vaulted. beam ceiling. A t:M.le value a t $93.soo -Make offer • 673-~. IO THE REAL l~ESTATERS ' r •. r. 1 • L • > v~ $1.oo TOTAL DOWN Owner bought new home-will pay all your costs. Te!TWc location in plush green re5idential area. 3 Bedroom, 2 Baths, fantastic paneled game room; all builtins and sparkling condition. Govern· meni. appraised ' at $29,950.-S201 No. P&~. Cal\ 545-8424 (()pen eves) \outh .{-Odst -~ General 4 BEDROOMS VIEW· POOL One of the finest views ln Cameo Shores. Immaculate S,(Q) gq. ft., lhows like a mode\ home. Warmth ex· pressed thruout with the iene~ 111e ol loovely pan. eling 'A wall ocrverinp, Fn· place in living & family rooms. 3 Bathe. W /W car· peted & draped. Safety fenced pool, 3 car prqe . . •lzi. $95,!lOO. c.11 ~m; ~~ O~D ENGLJSH STYLIJ NIW Ll$TllllG PANORAMIC M.,. Vol'tle" Pacesetter. 2 OCEAN VIEW '""'· ' ~ lamlly ln Newport He!Ott. Front roorn, aeMte dp!.i.n&'.room. exterior' completely done in Owner ~. fU,950. used brick, billaide tocation ROY J. WAR.ti, RLTRS Wll\1 ' --cioutt ""'· ~==''-"'='~=· ~·=--""""· brick tireplaee, tTEPS TO·OCEAN dqwnltaits recreation room 2-Sty. A..Frl.JM. 3 Bdrma. + , with wet bar, 2 baths. All beaut. family room ... Home · ?!'modeled 6 years ago, Far\-Jn xlnt cond.! $36.900. tutio """•for ontetUlntni<. CAYWOOD REAL TY ·$47,!Q>, Make otter. Owner 6306 W, Cout HW)' .• N.B. anxious.. . 5":12to GRANNIS ASSUME 6°/o R11idtntltl -VA LQAN- RNltor1 Sharp 3 Bedrm. home 'on P'onnerfy Farrow lqe lot. U62. ~ pays 262!) tlarbor ~lvd., C.M;.. all. Full price $24,900.' l&~~i,ii;l~~~I FULLER REALTY Hom• & lnvtstment . ~IRECT FROM S1S-0•u • - RHlty · . SANTA Bargain Hunting? 1 3$5 E. Coast Hwy., OiM Assumable 6% GI loan. $185 Thep look' at this lbarp .+ ---------- VA FOUR·PLEX AU 2-bedroom unlts: ~ an ex- cellent area plll! inw-51· ment for a veteran buyer at $45,950, EL TORO MISSION VIEJO • LAGUNA HILLS. No Down Vets, We have 5everaI 3 and 4 b@d. room, 1 and 2 story hOrnes. Call for more deta.iJJI, per month pays all, 3 Bed· ·Bdrm home l>1UJ suest room room ranch • style with + pool + ~e COV!'ftd p&· ·~ate family room, heavy tlo, All tills and more I« shake root, oversized livin,r only $30.<IXI. 841-6010 1 room with !!replace a n d clOse to schools, New FHA or no down VA terms alao available at only Ul;,SOl'.l. See anytime, 540-llSl (Open Ewnlttp) • Macnab -Irvine Realty Company WATCH THE CHRISTMAS Cor,M "' f:e\lr" ,. OCEAN Vll!W &>. o! HW)'., chann!nc J bd· rm., J.'4 baths. Frple. F.A. heat, Carp. A drapu. Beam· od C<il. l;ylng ml-1 ~ ..... buy tor $42,500'. • • IMMED. POSSESS. So. of Hwy .• R.2 lot:, 3 bd· rnu.:nx tt up A'~ some money! :'34,950. MORGAN REALTY 67S.664l 675-6459 C~t• Mes.a BOAT ' PARADE I Magnificent Views o! Bay & ·EASTSIDE Oo<an, lmmac. 3 BR., ·r. LmE NE\.V 3 Bed.rm 2 bath, chef's kitchen • gpacious FOUR BDRM. located ., quiot banjo r;t. lnd&cpol. ground,, $55,000. CHARMER New shag crptg, ne'Nfy painted • vacant and ready $25,450. for~ 'YULE LOG in your 642.-8235 044-6200 Terrific valUe • Room for : fireplace. Bring log & check· t .!!!!!!!!"!!'~~~~~!!!' 1 Boe.t, Pool, etc. S~ book, and' be in for Christ· 4 BR. VACANT Clean • Owner-Anxious. mu. DESPERA:rEI I 646-nn. SUBMIT ~MS. $29,500 ·I all terms) Seller will pay, $500 your costs and MOVE. in BE- FORE XMAS!! Your family r..;,~ THE RFAL \"1'. ESTATrRS ~ •·'" ·• r ,,, N rt will know Santa Claus is 1 ":;;:;'='="=""===;:=c= HOME WITH '. IWpt> alive when lhoY ... thl• COLLEGE PARK. loYely 3 at spacious holne v.1th brand BR, :t" BA. b om e ·INCOME? F•lrvitW newshagcarpetandcusl<>m w/oveniud dbl prage. 3 bedroom, 2 bath home with drapes 1 Chruout plus 'all of Redecorated inside '&: out a large family.room, built·in 646-1811 tomon;ow'• o;:invenle~s on w/niw cpt, Warm "'walnut stove &--oven. Breakfast l ) •huge deep lot. HO! HO! paneltns & .~nt nook Jn kik':'hen. Mother-in· (•nyt ml .HO! ~ today. $29',500. , driveway •• !Priced ~ only law room addod .. doub••1 ---------1Walker & Lee m."'°·"'~-. · garage on large corner lot. , Daily Pilot Want Adi have 477,!lOO: Call 54S.23!3 -~-11ea1.... bup!ns ..-. IO THE RE.1\1, I~"'-ESTATERS . ' ', ' ' '. · ,U Fount$ Valley Office I '!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!~I DEUGHTFUL rn•1 9118-33n or S<s.tiM • I' , · TWO DUPLEXES Prime EASTEIDE LOCA- TION. Near E. 17rh SI. Shop. ping Center, Mesa Theatre and St. Joachim Catholic Chu1·ch. TifREE • 1 bedroom Units and ONE -2 bedroom Unit Below average vacan- cy fac!or. Tf you are· looking .Available in J anuary 1972, ooe-stof)' 4 bedl'QOms and family room home located in choice neighborhood in Huntington Beach. Very Close to elementary school. park I playground, beach, and shopping. Exi&tent VA loan @ 6% may be assum- ed. Full prlci? $39.900. For additional info please phone S«>-2313 Reduced to $49,995 Peninsula Pt., steps ·to ocean. NeW!y decorated . &: ca~terd, comp. turnlshed 2 BR., t' ba. Huge· 1'pt., opon . -VETS- beam eeil. ImmedClal\e $1.00 down moves you ln. po s s'e·s s ion I a . Seller pays all your coats. 3 673-3663 ' liffi..8886 Eves. bedroom, deh and , family HARBOR VIEW 4 BR DUILEX ~==9iNEJEX. J HOMES WILL EXCHANGE l . General for 2-4 unils·in this location! I ..iiiOo;;;;::;:;;:::;;::Oiiiiiiii:::Zl--;;-;;:;;7,;;;;;;-;--- CALL NOW! OWNER IN A LOCATION 'Grange Vista PROPERTIES Formerly La.Bord R.E. 220 E. 17th St., C.M. CALL 646-0555 Evenings 642· 7438 VA REPO 3 Bt'droom fixer upper bar· gain. Excellen! North Costa Mesa location. Full price $23.500. Anyone can buy \Vith payments less than $200. per month incl truces & ins. Hurry • Vacant - \Von't last long. Call ;,40-1151 {Open eves.)' HDllTAGI I llAl m•n FHA· VA Large R-2 lot wirlt neat 3 bedroom 1~2 bath home, PINCH MAKES THE Ho ;., driving too for to wo'k PRICE TWICE and is most anxious to Gell . AS NICEI thi11 'beautiful 2 5tory 4 bed· . • room home This outstand-The Bel-Aire of Orange Coun-. · · Be ty. Near the' golf course, 1ng Hununflon ach hof:1e floor ta ceiling brick fire- features . 2~ .baths, family place Country kitchen with room with fireplace 11. n d . · NEW SHAG CAR.PETS? A bu~lt ins, Three bedrooms. Fwly grov.'n trees. Full price .•. $31.SCN), <::all 546-2313 'truly "move in'' condition for $33,950. Do'vn payment of only 10% required. THE BIGGEST BARGAIN IN MESA VERDE '4.).,'i 4 3 Bedroom single story home, ~t•lt~~ ~ across the street trom golf course. New 6hag Clll'pet in living room, large lot, Im- medlate possession upon credit approval, 10% down with present lender, $39,950. CHOICE lovely patio, double garage, Charming family home on p·Jans !or m ore units, • • • over 3/5 acre, in Corona de! $27.jOQ, Mar. 4 'Bdrms., fa mily rm., ")llcstl\rr6c::RrnCtr 546-5990 PETE BARRE-TI ~:.i~®.& a dream kltch-l•F'"o'"R""""T""H~E"'LA~R .. G~E REAL TY · 675-3000 1605 WESTCLIFF . FAMILY DR. This prestige home h~~~ry NEWPORT BEACH t-.. thing you need for corrirort. 642-5200 A housewife dream kitchen, I"""'""'""""!!!!!!~"!"""""' i.:=:=:=:=::;:~:=:=:01 For more information call "TRUI y A EASTS I DE 841-<010. !" TRIPLEX SPACIOUS Old", ""thenUc Span l1 h HOME'' units. Xlnt. location nr aho~ ping. High income, I ow or '"'" ... 1gn. ,..·n r... maJntonanS38"'· .!.""• on1, LARGE 4 BEDRM. 11. because It's 60 versatile, .,.,,., 50 comfortable a.nd roomy, C'.a.ll 546-5880 '(Open Eves.) 1100 Redlands. Open ?ally so generous \.\<'i.lh doset anrl _______ .., 1An opportunity to acquire a v.·ardrobe space, It \\'On't l~AGEl custom built home at leu last! Call Now 342.2535 llAl llfAll than u~u~J price. Large se~ • • _ erate bv1ng room plus fam- NEW LISTING Duplex. Prime rental arta. 3 & 2 BR. $29,500. LO\V 00\VN. CALL TODAY! George Willit mson Re•ltor 548-6$70 645-1564 I• Executive Living Designed for ('ntertainment. 4 lafbe bdrm. + bonua room with wet bar. Located lo Jlunt. HarboUr, Fnr more ily room overlooking large back yard v.i th heated pool. Lachenmyer Rea ltor lnfonnation cal 847-6010 l8ti0 Newport Blvd., C.M. E~ll!dm E :·::·~"· 6~1821 4 BEDROOM, 2 BATHS $24,250 $TJO dO\~·n and closing costs moves you Into this unbe- ltevable bargain. IU!re's what you get • 4 bedroom, family room , 2 baths, buill· in kitchen, covered enclosed associated BROKERS-REALTORS 1025 W Balboa 673-3663 "IT ISN'T WORTH IT" room, shake roof, garden kltclien and oversized dou- ble 1araee. $1.00 total cost to vets or assume existing 6% loan wilt\ total paymen'ts of $204 per mo, taxes and ins. 540-1151 (Open Eves.) Beautifully up-graded 2 bed· Choice location in CdM. Only [ JI~ l room and convertible den 5 yrs old -:m Baths. Fir-HauNs.f«Sale · home, View of Newport pie •• Mod.Un b\rihin lCitch· Center tha! spa.rkleS &: ens • O\f!r 200l sq. feet each Ct.ssific;atioi;t IP , -149 twinkles at night Steip.down unit ·Garages -·Carpets k 1 1 [j] living room with wood burn· drapes • $79,500 -Ca 1.1 Rut Dt.tt,, . ' \ng fireplace. Motivated 111!11· · 67~. . Gtneral • .. er wants Action, $49,900. Classification i,60-184 CALL 67>4930 I 11•1 patio, fireplace, fo~ed air Cried the wise man when heat. double garage, near Manhattan Island sold for new carpets and paneled liv· 8 flOJlf and e. dance. p!u11 11. ing room. This won't last. string of beads, And '-Jew Hurrjr! dollars, But it could not be ~&CO.I . ·FNnclal . -.....,.flt~,..,,.. OED '------..! SECLU Cl1ssifieation 200-260 !~=I ~~;~~~s~~~~ ~~!!!;'.:~~~ _,.._ JI.el · $25,950 Otu'rch & shopping. 0 n I y location with .country at· Cla11ific:•tion 300.355 GRANNIS ,.,d. aboo• •hl• , bodroom home, only 1,.1 mile from the beach Cs.'11 Now 842-2535 $199( " mosphere. 3 big bedrooms I~------4 BEDROOMS l l500. tin . mo: paym . I --• in tio I [ . ]rt] $23 600 p"' '"""'~ pa . n. ' . ' • R11ldentlal RHlty Formerty Farrow with 2 pullman baths, fan. 1 c'lud.lng refrig1 & washer. ApartmenttfotRlnt tutlc kitchen, bu ilt -i n PERRONREALTY 642.lm 0wnrT must aell! SUbmit · · . .-'ioTHEREAL ·"-ESTATERS range, nven, dishwahser, --===,.,--::c=;;:--1 your tern\!, Call Cl•slifice+ion 360..370 Jnvtti"g lireplace, banquot ROOM FOR S4S."1l<l (()pen Evod [ . J~ d!nlng room. p • ti. . MORE . • .... ,. ·~ Sprlnklers. Many e:ichtras. Besides the 2 bedroom eutee l~ltlRITAGI I Cl f . . • "'0,0 "5 ~ Hart>or Blvd., C.M'. '" ' ' L > ( WATERFRONT STEAL IT $85 000 IN MESA.VERDE Pride of ow n e r ' I p. IUl aT•n assi ic:•t1on "' ""'" on this 621$ x 3171$ lot, )'O'l • • SpaciOUs • BR .. FR, DR. & & SA VE $$$ 1anai. Slip, Sandy beach. The most desirable are~ of Immaculate! Costa Mesa oHeyw this 4 """fARBELL i:'.!!~::!1.7~hJ:';: Big Canyon [ ~. '.llijll] of Costa Mesa. 'For more in· FiVe bedrooms, 3 baths, !am· Clessific:etion-sOo.s 10 VACA:l'li"T Lot ~ Galaxy, bedroom, 2 bath horr:ie with 2955 Harbor, Coat& Mesa. $'15,000. Fee, Best available. built7in kitc;hen for ~,900. The faat:ea:t draw 1",tbe Wfi!St ffi:A-VA terms available, ,formation can ~-q.n Uy room, laundry room, 3 Cl•s.sification 5~··519 --11'1 priced to se.11 fast! Call , •• a Daily PllolOanllied .............-............... now. Grannis 'Residential 1o 'THEREAL I'.', ESTATERS Coldvw&D,Banker1,;:'"'~a21~~·~~;:;:~·====::::~A~d~.;64~~;~;~;;;;;;;;;:::i:::=;::::::;;;;;;;;:;;;;; ~I~ l 833-0700 644-1430 e©~~M-"':"l&"B~s·· . "' ... , . YOU WIN!!!! Doctor must sell this year !or tax reasons: Check these features-. * 3 Big Bednns. * Huge family rm. * Beaut. finiplaoe. * Carner lot * Separate garage *Boat access. Specially prjced at S29,900. FUL~ER REAL TY 546--0814 ' Anytime OCEANFRONT DUIL~X Owner anxious 4 will cONld· er all offers on, thl.a: 3 bed· room deluxe duplex. Both units ere In mint condition & fully furnished. FUll price $!3.l<IO. 540-853.'; SHERWeeo REALTY 18964 Brookhurst, F.V. Like to trade! OUr Trade.r's Pa.radlH column. ta !or )"OU! .. 5 Une1, 5 da,yt for$ bUclcs. • The Puufe wifb the Buiff.fn Cbuclle 11 T El\.TlW t-I I I I :.1J I HlLET 11· _ I I I 1• . I I TAVEL 1~ -· Sign In a Miami Beach re$. I * I I I.. ""taurant: ''Our, Silverware: Is r--;:,-:-~,...,.,..,,.-., Not Medicine, Don't -• I K I L H U E !After Meal1.• tt•t't I I I' I, 1., o eon;,,,. 11oo c1ouc11. • ..-~' fillt'! 1' the mtu; ...... dt - - - - - - -Yoll d..,.•lop tom a!•p N~. 3 &.low. e PRtNT •UMSEREO lETIE" lN ,, ,, 1• 1• 1: r 1 THESE seu••1s . ! ! ._ . . _ _ •• ' ' SCRAM-LETS :ANSWib. IN CLASSIFICATION 900 car garage. BeautifUI corner I ]~ lot • t Hermitage Lane and Lott and 'Found • Royal St. George Road, This . _ home is bein& tlnlllhed now Cl••Jifict+ion 550-555 and should be avallab!• ln mld.Januacy, Drlv. by ond ' [[!*] see it .. then call owner &t ...__ .. _irv_"_""_-"-.J. S44-ll40. Price $92,!m. ClissificA+ion 17$·580 c~:J~~s 1-... ~ I~ for the whoie family in th.ls CleUlfic;ttion '600·699 eheerM 4 Bednn., lrt: fam- ily rm home, l" bath! and I .. ](I I J all th@ delightful touchea o1. .,,...,n•ll t • f' . a truly finf hOme.'FuU price $29.S®. -Ml tenris~ Clessifice+fon 700-710 SHERweeo REALTY _ ·.[~I 18964 Bl"OOkhurst, F.V. V VACANT ' $2',JGO ' •ulficotion 100.1~· Oarmin,g patio w!pl.anten, fnllt ...... a BR., lli ba. [ ,......,~ II'-"] Paneled fall'Uy nn.. bar. . . " Quiot ""'$iMlllde. Cl••Jili~ti~n 150..H ~~ll>attHwy.~ [ ~~ llttl HeYtn't you • I w • Y • Clustfictti•n 900' .. t I 2 wlshtd you could llvt tn I mode.I ~):ttft? I Trwpori. ~ ](et See thl.t 4 BR .• l ltvol,cboice · 1 "'L Ti'y $3,000, dn. $!96 Cltulf;<0tlon .... J.94f mo. Doris Orakw'larwin ~ Pilot CIUlllied. '-::::--._,,,.,lttr.., .......... ....,.,r.!~0 I Cl111iflcatiol'f .., Ad.~ I ' I ' ........ ·' ·~ff~·~o.w.~v~111L!or!;:.~!!!!!!~~·~·~·~'~'~~~.,..~·;..._~1T4.~1,,.,,~~!!!!!!~·~~~ . -C ~~"".... :~ [ ~~ .. II!! I .-· .. '~'~.[~ ...... ~~~::--~l~~~l~ .. ~ .. .:....~.!~ .... ~~--~1~~1~[~-~ .... ~--~J~~~:,~~~-~.~ ... ~-~l~~~I ~-~ ... ~-~-~,1'8~-~[~-~ ... ~-~]~11!~.·:1· ceot•~ .. • Coote ,,,... IM•l"'9 .... -I ·-Pr...,., 1661ncome-Pr-nv 166 .._ un1...... 305 H-· Unfum. :IOS Houoas Unlvm. 305 Qupltn• Unhlm. 3~ t ' .. .. t • • 1-.,..,,.,,:::,.,,,....,.·~"°',....1,--:-:':::=~::~"-:'.=:::-:-:-::::":-"':::::::--·1::---:-------.. :,. . 0. • " C. THREE CAR GARAGI J IDRM. -lo POOL 9 GARDDI TYP£ BUNGALOW APTS. o-rol Costo'Ma.. lrvlno ·c~ ... MeH l • . .... -........... _ 2 $21,000, 1-,,...-...-----1;...,.,.....,,----1.;;:;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;1 31111. -·"' lar&o ballw, .._ _ .. Pl4eo -$SlO..., this • e HARD TO 1'INO 2 111',I " *** 2 BR DUPL!:x *** · _ .... ,. .... wtw ..., wtw ...,..im.. wood --"""".,,.. 1 4 separale bulldlngs. Shal:o rools. Prlvale -., -., 'clllld " pet 5 BR..l b&lbo ......... 131\1 !>rl'•"' yaro, a.,.... <:Pll, .• 4rp<: .~~· " ... --· -t t-.......... patios. No stalrs. All l story bungalows. 2 & RENTAL FIN.GERS O.K. 1140. • • BR., 2\1 botha \,,,,, $.150 540-0178 • 4145. ......, ......... ~·-~ .....,. air hoaL &lld ..,.. Include-...,.,.,""° S bedrooms. Some have fireplaces. Tl\• type 411w.1 ... c01T•-ALA Rtfttals • 64~ i~'i.::.'1~ .::'.":,',!,;.~ Newport Heights _ .! ~ to IChooiL w..ide a.r. ..--I• did· .....,_,.. ...,._ ~ of buildings that altract and hold good fen. Hou-* AJlh. .. ~-~!00. SIM«• .... ~only lhmblut· •• ;,,..\Ill, .. ~,;;.:;;:: ants. Income $16,740 yr. $145,000. Excellent * 645-0111 * • ~v·~ IN TOOAY 2 "'" 1 BR." deo .......... $250 DELUXE f"" find 'BR. 2 Bv OWNER-479,Walnut Pl. S "W the bpacb. and...,_. ,..•-~~11•-Down-..... financing ' T--31 • .J. !.'!'! )Td, e:nct car. uttJ pd. i eel h•11 81, ma;z xtru, vu,. deck; '" _,.,. "-i...-• ,._ ,,,_.., ' ''Ou 26th Y '' 1'" «o ..__ ............ ' J I d Ud OK 1 3 2 5 BR, 2 BA., lee yd w/belut will P4Y. P!'lotl 'IP ~~ meat ti lea: thin me montN r t•l' -FURNI!HED-ALA RMl•lt e 645-3900 ~.0nr,;,...,, c. • ' . ...,, -. '"" uro, ..,.IBA ·q.c~;:~~"· ..,.,nlA,.VA...._Call WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO;, Realton 1&<>1Na.UD1NGUt11.~1 --1 IJG,SOO, *1892. ~~ ":.-,a;~ ~~ JIEALTY ino 2111 Son Joaquin Hiiis Road BR. Fnod )'J'l. Pet al.. Vs-$200 PER MO · REALn " ~ ,,?.~~~ ~'it,~~ :: inlo!>t be -... -r,. Beadl Blvd .. Hunt. )Id,, NEWPORT CENTER 644-49lt ...,u _ 2 Bad...;.., _ EH!tlde Ul'\fv. J'a'1c .Cen,.,., Ir>illl/ nu drpo, ,,,,.., SZlS. .543-0082 .i < DAILY PILOT • • ORANGE COAST'S •leading ' - "' "'"· ""1 pt1ce 0 " 1 Y Mo* ,,I Law' ~~~ ~ ft-a~ • ft"·· wJ1Jullt!n ldld>en, on'"1I m· Cal! Anytime, ~ ., ' "8.SOO.Calltoda,y. · .--n· s ~I !~~·-·--~--.-w lk & L Hi.. [ _"'.... I 18 """"" • Oompl tum. Baclldor w/ yard, ....... UNIVERSITY PariL 3 BR, r. . . l '""' ' a er· ee You'llbe =~,,., .,,-~-~---~ ldtcb<n,ulilpd, EdRiddltRI~. -2\1 Ba,,,.......,,. w/cl"b : ... ,, .... ,,.,M,~t l'e' ll<ol""* ,.. """ 5 bedroonu. pool ------••lpso.PAJm.Y""" 1 BR w/ 2 BR. DUPLEX :::~.$300 mo. 83l-18'l8 or -·--.; 21'90 Harbor Blvd. at Ad&ml bc>me ftttla'tilr lormal dift-Newport S..ch Bu1ine11 gar, CdM, Fncd for child/ Crpft. dl'Jll It bllnil l MS--0465 Open. 'tll ' PM'. in& area. lePU'l.t. Nmpas ~....... OpPortunlty 200 peL LARGE FENCED YARD 1gun1 Buch 2 BR •. ..ftJ'/,900" ....._ 3 ..... batb.,... 11 BY ANXIOUS OWNER =:------1 _ FOR 011LDREN 11 PETS ·-·- ·Apts. Fum. • mc.t important. .eparated EASIBU»T ex e e u t I v e ARE you & manager! Let -t.1NTI.JRNISREI Pvt ~. $155 · • DOU.HOUSE 1 BR turn, EastskSt t.re1. ·Eady a.ta lMn( quarters tor Dear Old bOme, s Bdrm, 3 Be.th, iof... me abow )(IQ how )'Oil can ~LARGE 2 Br. 1s10W Ill Paularinq, C.M, 549-1746 n~ yrd, end gar, ulil bx.id. Gener11 Mesa lt)!le, Good lival:ff Mom. Full priee SS«.OCO. All med DR, ukra epacious, now manaa:e a business of your cpb kid&. t."t.......t ~ ' VACANT M del M mo. bcme1&: a llOOd; JM.~lltrneat. Tennt! 5tl).1565 vacant. Sen or_lease op6on. own with an income poten-• "'""&•C'S ~· ~ .eaa ar ~ ALA Rentals• 64$.3900 A 4 BR. $29,900 SHERW•eDR"EALTY 6'<-0530 Pric<d redue<d ID tial.of SlllXl per montb tbe Avail""":..__ l::',.~i::.-:::.i~: • SPARl<Ul"G VJEW 1 hr, Brll_!'rt ..:..~'!,~~d! 18964 B,...._ F.V. _S48.-;::~,-~·,,,..n.,..t ,-Jot,-$150=,-=oxi::--I ;::,,:';" '::; ~tial ~ $140-WON'T LAST! 3 Br. Pr!• F•~ .. r .. r yard & ,..,. yd "'°"'· relrig, Irids,""'· $150 FURNITURE RENTAL . Bold New Concept . '" -· ~~, ~ $800 MOYE IN --· Earey ,.,,,..m•nt poalblt • """" Fncd yard. C!fldml for -"· Near -.,, & ALA Rentals • 645:39QO , park, ... ., l)'Pt.b!R.-_F 1, • • ~~~I,&~ TraJnJng and rul da ••• welcome. Hurry, obopplnr, S300. 847-7136. Laguna Niguel Bathe. ~KHdien l:ns1 • A9J.ri:1e ex1lt\ng nM. loan. -2 B tio * Month to Month heat!JW, new carpets.: large Vacapt 4 BR, 2 BA, $28,000. Newport Heights given. Call 49!)..ll.86. $175-3 + FAMILY ~· ~·. ~. ~. ~i~f 4 BR, 2 Ba, Jiv rm. & dining * 100% Purchase Option fenced yard. ' .-.• F'P, no quellfy1Jll, lmmed. e NEW I.JSTJNG • huge fned yrd, gar. IGc!a/ tropical setting for adults area, fam rm,, lrplc., bltns, * Wide Selectlon- CAl.:L :§) 'fC•J41~ occ. ,Bltin RIO., tirepl., VIEW , LOTS G!JASS & OCR'.EEN SHOP. pe~ ok. on)¥. 1 blk to shops, $lfi0. fenced, sprnkl. cpts, drps, 2 St)'le-Colon • '1: •~~ 'faml TO\., crpt.., drps dbl 2 Lots In Newport Heights To .buy or sell 646-l7'i5 or 6f6..29lO. car gu. J.rnmac. $310 mo. * 24. Hour Delivery J8ti. gar. Xlnt toe. • with view al ocean 5: bay a bus1neu, contact $235-SPACIOUS 4 BR, 2 a&,. V 3 BE ROOM First & last deposit. ,·: a&ALTY ' I' . HOLLAND BUS. SALES UCI Bltns dbl kids/ acant D ·HOME 495--4244 I H••" N• ... rt •••t orrlee $17,sco"' $3>,000. .. • nr · • rar. with bltins, firpl, crpt. &: in-• • CALL '=" ,4,•1414 The Broker with Empathy' students fine. cl de re1rig ~ 3 BR, 3 BA luxury OOme. rt2 ).{) ·• . Prilng For81os~r.e "2o+f71 (=)14MllJ ,.,,~ .. !tJ• 17160rangeAw., C.M. BEACON ~ 645-0111 ~er' tDO.'u'ase ii b-= 2Ul', Ocean View. 496-370'l LICI' ..-: l!:f ~. OWnor will "°' -. °"" ': •• ~TY-645-4l10 f>I0.-0008 .,.., HOME FOR RENT per mo. Call.,..,, 516-4141. alt <pm. $350 monlhty. ~ reuonaliie tJtltt, Primt·Jo.. SHARP 3 BR 1314 BA.. din Nt•r N••P•rC Peit orrlce WOMEN. Do you have ~l2 LARGE 2 BR Mission Viejo 517 W, 19th. CM • 548-3481' •,' cation. 3 latte bedrocmtt, rm, bltins, dahWlhr, fpl, hours per month that YoU OR LEASE OPTION · 1 BA. home. · 2756 N. Main, SA 547-031 2 hattls, 2 h\tge ~. c:rptl I: drpl. Vacant Mu.I Newport ShorH would like' to turn into cub? Large 4 Bdrm., Mesa Verde. Le.rge living nn pl.us dining FOR Rent or Lease Option 1 '-"'a-.,.,000 The Executiw-Women's Brand new crpt.s A: <frP.I. area ,.fenced yard . 3BR&&in,rnfn.View Balboa ]sland , large "'~""'.._. Sot. lel)IU'ate sell! Xlnt tmu. -. ' SPF..CIALISI'S in home sales Council will prov i de Larre horne. $325. mo. $115/MO. •167 Flower PH_: 1'7'7': Mo. * * 492-0&S " RMce parch and l.u"p tiled *'* ~ ** N 673-7Ul •• .,. I""" I $33.500. _ Best terms P»-FOUR m'AR REALTY &: renWL eWpOrt Shores. training, help, and fun. Call -ALSO -· N Be h . 2 BDR.i\f., )'early, $225, Vie"ai 11 kiteben. 0..,. delperate -. Caywood Realty 543-1290 '49!}-1186. 3 Bdrm, N. Costa Mesa. Close $175 MONTH • l BR ~ Now ewport ac ' f ! Bay. AvaU Dec. 3'.)th. .: sible. Cab 5680t. Copen Irvine S.n Jun C•pistr•no 1_, T W •t Off to cruntry d i.lb, $275. ind. 'vacant · lnuned. poss. Could BEACON Bay 2 Bdnn. 1 ba. Salisbury Realty 6~900 ~[ 1 ·-CO w·1• ax r1 • garden€!!' use 80m , t $45-8424 Frpl I I $300 B 10... . ' eves. so..,~". ASr W•DuTH I. CHARM LAST OF A TRACT Partner wanted to share 1m • ALSO e Ptill • ·year Y ease: mo, a """a Peninsula ;; REALTORS ;. • -:. ruvn t ' did· 6on b f I t --Bkr. Mr. Robinson · """-_,__ Here is )'Olli' chance to ,Pick ax uc en e 1 • 3 Bdrm home 'freml.y paJnt-• RM DAVIS REALTY 642-7000 '0"'.,.,....._------1 .. FIX.ER U~PER Pt.SOD. Noar Frwy 11 1'ah< view, -· l«m.-Ln: - Fountain Valley -4m>ROOM· 6°/o FHA LOAN Hunllft91°'! S.adl 1n "'-spa.~ cohtempor-. t1P a four bedroom like-new $10,000. to $100,000. tt'-ed. 2 blocks 'to 9bnpping I: 2 BO house in court, •$25 WK & Up •• On Ocean.," ary 3 bdrm., 2 ha. home. borne. Blt-in rar:we/oven, quired. Mr. Harris 547-2613. park. $215. mo. : crpts I: drps, garage. 2 3 BR, fam rm, 2 ba, $375. Lovely Bacft. 1 BR -Room! f: F'irepliaiet, tom.I dinina" dishwasher, end carpeted HEALTH Food Store, Near -ALS),,.... small childttn, no pets. Avail 1l1J'l2. 1807 Por t Maid SE'rvice. Pool Util. , room and niln!ma1 Sandsoa,p-family room at • bargain Disneyland, doing we 11 , 3 Bdrm. nr. Vista shopping $1-45. 2077 Wallace, 646-2719. Owies Pi, Harbor: View · PJi. · ,, tnc edd up· to• bolmbuyen: price. Euy terms! '$17,500 WJterms. Or make Center. $190. mo. CLEAN 3 BR, 2 Bath. !rplc, flomes. (213) 670-46(Jl. • Call 6'&8140 • ;~ treuure, ~'150. FULL PRICE $29,500 cash offer. Need qulck's:a.le. ~9521 OR ~31 b!tins, dshwsbr, epb, Irg 3 BR. 2 Ba, fam rm, Nr Costa Mesa :; 8.. . •eel ···11 CAPISTRANO VALLEY 553--0242. Ew• 633-1963. N1chQIS Real Estate patio. Nr ma.Jor •oopplng. commmtlty pork & pool .. ;: 11 REAL-r:Y 493-1124 UNION ou Service Station & lnveStrnent Co. :S.~·:~as:,.· ~549-1783 =View Homes, $375. Casa del Oro ;: South Laguna for lease in Fountain Valley, . · · '; good g8.llonage & hack room $105. Pvt. cott:age, ~ 3 BR older· horM, no rt:s, 3 NEWPORT Shores homes, ALL U'l'ILITIES PAID : 1! REALTY OCEAN view near shop, ca 11 0 0 n Mar I a r ; drpt, tirepl, paitio, C.M. ma.rrted cpl w/chlldren on-for rent. $275 to $350, <:omjlare before yoU rwit .. ;ii t.Mv. Park Center. Irvine beach. 21562 Ocean Vista 714:523-8900. $1!15, l BR, pvt home wile ly. $160. 2188 ~. B Caywood ReaJty.~1291} ~ Custom designed, featuring: ., CaD 'o\n)11:hne, 833«a'.I $45.900. 49!J..33XI COFFEE SHOP In San tot. H.B. ' C.M. 3 BR Back Ba.)> area • SJ)ac~ e =~~gh~i:n with in. ~ PACESETTER Mobile Homes Cleme'nle, xtnt area, park· '.i-!· ~· drps, b1tns. H.B. East Bluff Mod. 2 frplcs, 2% Ba.. $325 e "Separate din'g area !I HOMES For Sele 125 1ng !ipace. Illness forces $145 2 BR. crpts drpe patio mo. Lease. 213: 968-59-15. e Home-like storage ~ At The Irvine Ranch FOR quick sale 35• Imperial ule. 492-6872, 6 am-1 pm or g~. Tot ok, c.M:. ' ' e THE BLUFFS e $295. 1 block Imm beach. 3 e Private pat:ios .· 1• Im.med oc:cpy •••• Save $1.COJI Trailer w/12x24' patio, all 4~41, 2 pm-9 pm. fl~. 2 B!l '+ den w_/eveiry. 4 BR. ~ ba., f~y kiteh.. BR, 2 BA, fplc, bltru, patio, • Closed garage w/storage ~ --.,,.-'°"'~.....,,..--~I For information call encl. yard (pr i vate ), ESI'BL'D Int. De 8 t g n tt11ng. Kids&: pets o1c, H.B. l.€'e. pnv. patio, Cost> by compl fenced. (213) 831-1483 • ::_~ length marbla P\41· ~ POOL + S•l•s Office ·544 1157 548-.3993. Sl.400. BulinH!. Newport Beach mT.m Agt. poo1, lhopplng, ~·Va· Slntl An• ........ = RUMPUS ROOM Modol~:.,;'~~ & LOVEtY 2 br den, 2 b&, area. (213) 33>-1>16 altor 6 FREE RENTAL ;::"L d":: "'"""'" 1375 : ~~ =.,. . t ~':t ~-~~ba:-1 BY OWNER Yr. old. 4 '4'x54'b'ISS~Park,Cx>l, pm. 3 ~RVICE ~=r~tnvUedl 2de~e~RV:.t!u~.i;!~ rounded W'ithphuhJando." UWI~ .............. Ul:W fam. pool high over ocean Call FOR Sale Art Boutique, s, 1'4 batb1 , EASTBt.iUFF 'JEALTY Jtent or ·iease, $300 !mo, scaplng . I carpe'ling 2~ over-Bdrm., rm. • SCS-7912. · Newpoi't Beach In New Can-Cll'pl!ta It draJ,)l"S, gas 644-1133 Anyt:ime Aauit l iving at lta best ·, .. . IQ> srr. tL rump11s roam•ln" lacu.zzl, nea ua $51,000. l>erY Village. 673-7562. built-ins, patio and closed · · · 8Z1-6554. Large 1 BR SI75 ~ ~.~-quat:if1-;;.83><)720::...:=·'-=-o:----lio·:w ·~; ,.* h:ana M to L 2to backyardforchlldren.0n1y Huntington Beach Santa Afia H1ightl· ~ ·_ UTI~ITIES.FREE .' ~ !!:_~~~: ... ~_takeG.I, L•ll'UN Beedl 3JGOA17NewportBlvd,CM ..,!!!•!_ oan . S225 per month. cii.11 3BR.immedlateoccupancy .. 36SW.W1~n 642:1 ~ ... , -·~' ~ """''""' .SA TILER WALKER & LEE, Roalton, 3 BR, 2 BA, eloct bit-In R/0, lZlfilMo, Coot>ct Agent. . * $30 WK. & UP * . ," · =~~= ... ''Vivo kl j· RN1£~ ll..81 MTG. CQ~_, ~~STA MESA i.!..ib~t.~~~.!J: · -· :~d~•Jp"~.:!~ .£ CLASSIFIED peyment. l'MMEDIATE OC Difference'' ._ __ .. _.,._._., __ ..,. 336 E. lml STREET EASTSIDE Vacant.Move In today/$225 !~!'l,~s~_U?f~rn., 335 •TV & Maid &rrvice Avail ~ HOURS . CUPANCY, • 1ST TD LOAN 3 bdrm with 2··baths,. dbl per mo . · • N·:w'~ ,.t•Beech -•Phone Service. UtU Pd , r·: Walk.er ·& Lee ,~. 7% INTEREST garage, fenred yad.'.New 2 BR, elec. bit-in RIO, FA, po • Free Linens. Free Cotf~ • 8:00 a.m. ti) ts p.m. • . · NOT FRENCH •• o •• • • Acruge for t•le 150 2ND TO LOAN green shag carpeting, newly heat, carpets, dbl. garag~, * FACING POOL * • B or Afl.f.<."harge/O!ners . \i~= • MHors BUT DIFFERENTI .-.,, ...... """' 1 3 Lowest ratn Orange Co. painted. Forrentorleaseat 60xl00 fenced lot. Move P1 3 BR., 2 be., 3 car garage · 237fi_NewportBlvd; 54S·91~ , Adftrttstn m•r.r pl.a~· t790 ff.arb3r Blvd. af .Mama FOREVER OCEAN VIEW ' F~ • ..," approx O. WE BUY TO'S $205 per mo. Call WALKER today. $175 per mo. Ask for REALTOR · _ 54s.6966 This Ad Worth S5 on Rent ~ads byte~, 56HJ1 Opeti 'til 9 PM Wltb prnent income and Aerts. Avoca.do. oranges, 642·2171 54S.06JI & LEE, Realtors, 545-9491. Rental AgenL 962-4471· Duplexes Furn 345 LOVEL.,Y Lge 1 BR. apts. ( CXlSTA MESA OFtICE CONVENIENT additional room to build, plus small lake. Prime! Serving Harbor area 21 yn. BEAlITIFUL ocean view •WE have a large selection ' Shag rugs, elec srove, g ., 330 w. s.y CALIFORNIA and stfU have gracioUs llv-Auume 6*~ loa.n • $92,700. $2S 000 A-frame 3 br deck of! &pd 4 bedroom hoplea Balboa Penlnsula heat. Furn. UtU pd'. ;1 6'2a78 CLASSIC tng (could be a 6 bedroom, MS-2583 ma. F rmI ' tat 1 ~ ~ms ',;;; m 0 ' that can be moved Into . . c~. lndry rm. N :: 4 bath home). Private en-160 Beaut. green rolling mt. Mr A:in B: 7f41;_2130 494-0512 aft 7 ·pm. · almost immediately on our 2 Bedroom,. beam. ceiling shop'g. $150 & $155. 998 t NEWPORT BE.A.CB ~In "f!l'J _detaJI, tranr4!' patio with outside acres. TAKE tor only $100. s Rent.Opt ion plaJ1. apt., pal1iaDy funUshed, 50 Camino Dr No. !_. CM.>' ~ ~ ~vd. Decorated~. 3 spac-fireplac!e, beautiful beam down $100. mo. 968-0047. Money Wanted 250 TEMPORARY rental, 3&f SHERWOOD RE ALT y , ft to the beach, refrlg, wa-546--0-151. i: ~ ..... !J..~~~tor,..E:-. ceWn&a, doee to the beach. ~C---,-1 ,,-.1 ------'----M-,..--I BR for 2 to 6 mo's. Most 5404555 ter .l elect included. Gar. ,: HUNTINGTON BEACH ._,__ ...... -r-.. -~ and churches. ommerc a NEED J2,000 at 10 :111 payable reas rent, various atta&-ono age & deck. Call Mark .. "11875 Bea.ch "Blvd. 1al "Conversation Ana,.. Owner attting on llrltcue! Property 158 SlOO/mo. Security $2600 2nd fee Agt 546-54111213.59U211 3 BR Condo, 11ii Ba, :roots S46-2Jl3 1 BEDROOM APT. . ~ $µ2Q AMUme 6%9'-ic.n. Pay· 0n1y uklna: $58.SOO. Broktr. TD at 8%. 6#-1932. 1210· le 3 BR. 2 BA Patio, dbl gar, frplc, nr Furnished $97.50 J mentl: $214 per mo. $29,IJOO. Call Ginzl1, 5'5-8424 or 9.7 NET Return, $36,000 · mo ase, • ocean. 962--0986 aft 5 pm. Adults, No Pets ' LA.CUNA. BEA.Cit * CAIL 847-8507 *. "'-......,, below apprai.W, Newport firepl, comm pool, vac. Agt. R M C rdl R It ;i m Forest Ave. ~-1~ 5t6-5411/213-592-l'lll HOUSE for rent 3 br, 2 ba. Of c a e ea or 494-9'66 ~ Beach commercial oornE'r Hous.HforRent ..... . Compl dl!cor, Nu. paint I: '48-7729 . CHILDREN?? with 23 yoar leue, TIC1 Corona del Mar crpt, frpk. $230, Ca ti Newport Baach :: SAN. cu:m:NTE s·-Realonomlcs, Bkr. r;rs....&7(1() iiiilliii -· M., ., 3m N. ~ .... ~O ~ \:'" ~----{ Thia; ICOUld be the family NICE, Ige, 3 BR. 2 ba tower ~ · $125• Cozy 1 BR. 1h blk to FURN 2 Br. Clilldren OK. No ., .__._ ~ hOme for you! 4 Bdrms., 3 Condominiums Hou111 Furnished 300 duplex. Newly decor. Ocean 3 BR, den, 2 ba, pvt yard. bch. on l6th St. Winter-pets. Heated pool. L~ ~l NORTH CQUNTt baths, over 3iOO 9Q. 1L· Pc.ot for sale 160 side of hwy. $300 mo, $225. Yard care Incl. Clean-June. Abbey Re a 11 y , rm. 126 Monie Vista CM. ·: d1al tree 54.0.1220 3 BEDROOM+ table s1Je family room w\th l·B-Y-Owoe--r.-lm-ma-c-.-Ea;t Balboa Island DELIGHTFUL 2 BR. home. Ing fee +. 962-9805. &i2-3850.· -VERY nice 1 br dplx. Qule J: FAMJLY ROOM JnU!rtve fittplaee, r:• Bluff Condo. 2 BR. 2 BA + Bayfront furn 3 BR 2 BA. Large patio & yard, Near Irvine 2 BR, 1 BA Balboa Pt'nili. Sep by garages. 1 adult o \: CLASSIFIED BRAND NEW :!n be.,!°,~~~~ Den. Custom wet bar, drpg, Yrly $450. 403 N. Bay Front Bayside Dr. $275 mo. S185 winter or $215 yearly. 30. No pt'ls. 54S-102L '· DEADLlNES $27,995 Stone fireplace, built • tn cpts I: ~rTaZO floors. Call 67~0 AL.SO· Balboa Island 644-3303 or 540-0316. XTRA Lsrgto 2 Br, 2 ba, SI ~ t>eadune foreo_,6 JdJls Featutts inclue 2 beth areu, ldt~-·• d; .. 1-·-~,.. eves. 675-3036. Balboa Penlnsul• renta1s available' 3 BR, 2 ha., atrium ..•• $325 -I 350 incl util 's. Adults ovrr 35. •; ., •··· be G11cu .,. ...... _ .. _ ..,,..., . Salisbury Roaity 67H900 3 BR, 2" b&., fam •••• $.125 Duplexes Un urn. la 5 :30 p.m. tbe ~ • brtdc fireplace, dream ldtch· $S1.9Ml. call -Income Property 166 n 64fr.4292, 5-18-2407. : rore p\_lblleltlQl'l, except en with all tht goodia, car· . ~...-HOMEY & Qarmlng 2 I: 4 BRAND NEW H A RB OR 3 BR. 2'Ai be.. fam ••• •• • $350 (o"';f ;Me'ie ., for Monday EdiUOn pet&, large bednJoma, spec· ~I LOVELY Clean 2 Br duplex Br hse, walled In patio, nr VIEW HOME 3 Bedroom 4 BR, 21i9 ba, tam ••·• $350 PARTLY {urn,. l\.ii BR apt, : wbendead.line!ISl.Wf. trailer ~O,,(Z4 w/'l hr home+ 4 closed wate r. Unttl 6/15. famllyroom,ibath!.c.om: WE HAVE OTHERS 1--....,..-----..., $I25moinc1 uti l. • dq. l21K>On. ~ ~ e~. B~~ eEAL. ESTATE garages. No Vac. Xln'c Joe. 713:243-5316. munity pool, courts. etc. 2 BDru.1, garage, yard .. ,,,_==""'""=,..'.,'=-==I·: CLASSIFIED ......... u MW-Su'-_"...... ft $550 Income. 0., n e r' Corona del Mar ·--· month. ..._ ..... _ Adults. Prefer couple. $135. * BACHELOR API', sm. ~ S , .. ...,, """"'T-1190 Glenneyre St. ~· .. -orvM:.I'. 5!1&-8835 {w, kda)'s after 6) lst,& 1--1 mo·s rent. ~ ' REGULATION ""'"'· eau 847-1221. 962-7137. 64<-7'10. ~ , ERRORS,-Ad"""'""' SEYMOUR ft~" TY, 1nn 491-91'1> s&<MG ==---,.,,...,..1 =-n.-o-cloEtUXE 1 BR. Compl. "'UICK CASH Call 64&-3'89 ; 'should check thclr ad& ~ ¥ SELL OR LEASE e 2 BR Hse. + (4) DI apt + F'um. incl utlls & gardener. New 3 BR. DR, FR, Harbor ,.. , _._,, .._ ..,..... __ Bffdi Blvd,. Hunt. ~ · • 63.xlOO' Jot. Inc $677.0. $54,DOO View Hom•s 1395 incl THROUGH A 1 BDR..l\f. furn. apt. Water It ! u.auY • re.,_. ......... 220() Sq. Ft. S 'BR, 2* BA. S3Xl/mo lease. Re!p. adult • J ul hnmedia~ THE SEWNG auume 7%. Ownr. 557-2300. gard ner 644-1963 evt:t./ gatdener urn. Ad ta onb'. ~ jl.\lffi°f,,1or',..r.:.~~:,! YOUR HOME? ~;':°':;,~b.:';:i:i Lots tor Salo 110 ;111" ":.™"· ~. . 11t~!:".;,"B~';,':"Bi11r. DAILY PILOT 1110 '"~'"· l I •-··rtt ,.. bar etc Immac $4'7950 --..,=====,..--1 _0_11_• __ •_• _____ 1RUSTIC3bedroom&den,2 UaiwnltyP-..1r In1ne WANT AD· NICELY furn. 1 BR. Gar. c:orrec 1L11M: on on..,. ~ apprajsal, , .We buy • · • ' · NEWPORT BEAQ-1 .... .., $14"/mo. Quiet N CANCE:LLA.'TIONS: equities. Pel"90MI attentioh. ·FUii prt ce, MISS 10 N WATERFRONT LOT l BR. House, qulet area, bath, bit-ins, f Ire place, Days Q3...0_l01 Nights 642-5678 chll~n or ""ts. ~7~9sJ.7., 0 -1 WbeD kUllng an ac! be 25 yn, ext)er. 96'2-$23 REALTY 494-0731 wrrn SLIP SQ'.},000 furn, no clllldren or pets. walk to town. A.gt. 675-49l), ,.-*"'" to m•k• a W<onl COLLINS & WATTS MONARCH BAY AG ENT 532-2>l0 Gor.,.. $125/mo. 837-9517. 2 BR, 2 Sly, 1\1 Ba., nr ~vi the ~~ NUMBERd -REAL TO~S - A Q\arnrlng 3 Br ii lee dan Mountain, Desert, Leguna Beach Fashion Island. $195. C213> .., ~ ~;~.....i.1~r~~. c. & w. custom-· w/pool. Ea R•s0rt 174 782-ll5.'l"'t"""· STAR GA'ZER:l<.~J tancellaUon. This \(,Ill ---~~~=--1 Toort'l opene .to deck w/ OCE_,_A_N_rnD--,-NT-.-,-b-,-.,·tl 2 BR Duplex Avail 111/72. F =.!,!;'::-T---)t.POJUN 1 ... nwnl>er must be J>rf. R. E. SALES Ot'WMl. *.BIG BEAR LAKE* w/TV, parkiniz. Win ter or Lease. $175. without garage. »raAY kt iJe · }{ Liil.\ !sen~ by the t.dY~ l'M LOOKING FOR $100,<KX> * '99-'2974 H1pplnes1 ls spending Christ· )lf9rly, 494-57!1"2. Call 67$-4308 a.gt. )/. r-I>oily rvir, Gt.I' y -Sf'1. ''m ha ~ of• 4ilpUte. PROFESSIONAL Lido Isle I ,..._, -\. "tt0rJi"i '°th• Stan-. -oct :n b.NCELLA.TION OR ~~~own f;.....,.sa";G' Lido lite Cost• M1se Todtvelqt~fOr.Weifriesdoy, .._1s_:JP.3.f OORRECl'ION or •~" SALESMEN n. t cme • · """"""""""'"'""""tonunbe.• 2.,,,.87 !in nr.n BE YOUR OWN 80SS l Call Ross Cn4) 536-1738 or --------·l·-----.,---1 (lf)'C&l'ZocGocbirthsigl. · iAJ>BEl'ORE RUNNINGi CALL ED 847.911>41 QW501l Wl'lte: S~nctt Rel.I Ettate, l sty S BR, 2 BA, deluxe. 3 BR home. Cpts, drpa; 119 ~T~ 61 ~ ~~taamnewadoatod KASABIAN . Alw•-• -....i -ecUon of P.O. Box 28:28, Big Bear Yearly. Quiet !lteet to pa.Uo, gar, lt'OYf, refria:. 2H!Gh .. ~ MoNo, •.,2~ !klUGt· ..,.. •""""' """"' •-'--, n.1,·t • strada. Jone~ Rea l tv S215/mo. 646-6951 or 311'• -" · · tbat bu been crdered. REAL ESTATE tine Udo Isle homes, CUr-£AlO\C ._. aervice, 6T:>-3rr1. ~ 646-1246 aft 5 pm. ' :~ ~r:' ~=1<1n1 ~i:'do~~~d $26,000 rent lteti'J:efJ:O • • ~ Newport Beech NEW Spanish 3 Br. 2 Ba l""'~"."--1 ;~imi. ~~ ~t:,...ct !',!:~~":'! ;=.appeared Jn th• p11ro Y.A ·No dn. • 3 BR.~. FA • F1nlncW I• duplex, &hag cpl, drps, yrd. 1._, 31TD 61n ht, crpts. ttrps; Poo.ellk>n bocoaR&toweooj& --------E/side -548 44 24 ,~, 3tfn.ndl MY• on crei:Kt appmval. 842.+a '-;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;; • FRESH le CLEAN, 1 br, • _., -• 10Huroch AOWho)-70llll, ~ ADS: 3tl& Via L':°'C. ~ • on "'•ch. kidc, pets, util 60-2222. ?~;;. !i~ ~~-e:rtn ~~ ~~ 8Utfness lndd. S~. 1'1~B~D~RM=--u-llfllm,....--,h,.o-u-1-e 11-"io.t Alt.it 7J()\ t~oneotourtlf. Opportunlty 200 ALA R.nt1ls • 645-3900 w/ga.ng~Nopets. $75. clng 1~~ ~=.. ~~:: ~11 ~ MO 1*ICllliO ~ 4 BR. 3 be. 60x90 STT.500 fee. $l8S. lNO Pomona. 1,Goln A6i-nt 16Mtlf J • n 3 BR. 2 be.. 42:d8 $79,500 e COZV 2BR. w/f'rp'lc, slel)I ~~-~~~~-"' 17"-9W o47FN 77Don't AN: bA!LT t'D..oT "°" FOR &I« By 0Mw: J>ret.. 4 BR. 3 ba. '70x88 $125.(MXI 3 CANDY Vendin& Macbinet, to beech, ut'll tncld. St~ 2 BR Home.~ back yard, 11Addld 41F.-?IF.......,...._. S. 9-3)..S.4 tbf. ..W.t to._.. UC-barnl!, model :noo. LIDO REAL TY INC. dnt cond. Bet otter. Ask ALA Rentals e 64S..-3900 Cl08e to lhopg. epa, dfT)C, ~~ :~ ~== 6UNIA5 • .Ut. C1'!M01' Of' n--Chmn1ns C br. 4 ba.. nmm-, ••n VIA UDO ~ r •, .,. ~-or 6~7850 ~~-------1 stove. $165/mo. 83'7-9517. 21 llttlt 51 °"'"' 11 Hoodllllnlt AQUA11us - ~· ~ ...._._ - 2 ~., .w ""'....,,. .......,...., .... , ,,,... SHORT ttrm l'lf!, rent now =,....-----,..,.-~I ........... _ ...... QI~ 12~ J//11.Jll ' ~ --""" ·~ ' 61•7300 2 BR ---catpeL l•noed -~ · .,..,. • .. et.nee ttt Tlla ('Oft'n!d. p&Uo 6 Je.ni!IC&pq =~-'-..:'_,.:.:,;,,,___ PUB UC Sttno & Secmarial wh.le your home !>ting 00"1· • 6"'-~' ~ ~ ~ f::.. 14 R~,..;,, '''· 11 . N~Uotw wbbout lm:l aidewalJcs. ltlJ.4192, Mission Vielo Service. pletl!d. $436/mo. 3 br, 21,ti yard. Slf5. Wi~ pd, 21.93~ 2551_,, !St• e~ VtN J.. 6-19·.22 ~, -II ·==~====== ~1'76 b41_, O/R, ;~JR. Frplc. Mllple St. 642-765!1. '6W~ 56,bol!uid 860ill(:Mf'ld -'1-71 C• -"-IPllD CAN'T BEAT THISYi Overstd klleh. AllO avall 3 BR. 2 BA, O'pts, drps, :uG»d ~~tlortol~=n l • • • . ' ' • > • • . . ' • • ' I.Ma Ortp~! VACIJYli OWNER. AfrtU Htlla, ''Wblte Elephants" over-untumi 64.2-4&89. •love 11: laraat· U1S mo. "u .. 11 ~t !i,,._ .,~ ~~~_:;~Rm 5'1~~:-1 ~~=;:~?.~: E"1£-~1f'~J:'r:l oc.!2"~EA~~~~:~~N-r~~~·~~bed~<""'~,~,m~i':il1~::"~·~,:;e11~':1rd~·~:;:'.:~,121~Buy:·~tl!e~l.--.... J~~~"~"'~··~·~..,~®~c.~-=~~:®~"~~;;~:()~ .. :::~'t:~~t=~~~~~--_! -~~ -Jlwl, 51!.:ko; -·· 133.9'0. 811-«>ll!. 1!!1,.lfted. M~ ""4021 ---• ---., .. ... --.. ·----·~ -... ,,....., l'llotd>f. -1" 1971 , &·-•'-I[!] [ ... ·-··-I~ 1-·.:.. liJ f·to;, ·~·-I[!] l~---"l[!l -~~~ ... ;; . ..,;;,,.__,~. ~;;~;lr~~-~~~~9~;1 ~~-~liOil~~I ~~l~~;;;::;;;I -.;;;..~'-=·;;..· _......;.· .:•= Apt. Unfum. Ml Apt. Unfum. • '*·· Unfum. • Apt. Unfu'rn. • 1.=~,~u!'.:;.,~·.!"'~Unfu~m.~_:m~1;;R;:;""';";;'•;;W;.;;;an:::W~:::"'=-..... 115 Carpot ..,,,loo 1,c,..""'..,•-~.,,'-"..,"-_,.. .... ,.. Caito ,... Celt• Mooa .....,......, --.. rt 8aach NaWpo -R&T11IED Air """" cp1o WBl'mifr1l1dl.Y;j;k;'"iu.i'.:iliO:o:"&SL;;,..;1~s1~·1e<iOM~~ .. ;=-: ... ~m;-;poo:::"":;J~ Pum. Boch. & I lr'l. I:::::::::::::::, I DILUXI NEW Dllun -. rt -3 l>r uldmo ....., Ana lflh'" -S Gmnaa carpolo el•anl QllllllJ .,, I-lolly "Ice, SIJl I• APARTMINTS ON BEACff 1 w/pler A !loo~.-. 1'11111 OAKWOOO OAltDIN In N.B. Olm, "" '-"" -. Male, oil Uwr at o ......,.,..,.. pricft J'ne • up.2110Newportllvtl. NEW .llrOood·J'rpi<:'a.slw!Jn. • ... IL. Br'•,! Ba'~ ddll. Apartmenll lkll. WU!""" lit ol Fob. eallar: famll< •POiied. ----JI CM. , 2-... -mlns -• llooltll lpa • 2 BR Unfurn Fr. $230/mo. Drp'd, crpt'd. Avall J'" L (Ba-Llvlnc lo< Sin&le A -I RAward. Call 2U:tl5-1'80 C-CW..: -,I l""'-·"'WJNTEa==-11.A-TES--*-' . Ooa•ldliadJ IDutecl 'l'.mnll O'tl -...Game • Bil-Flqalrur. Avt.11.abll Will 1se flt aelL 350T !'Wey Manied Adult.) ooas.ct or nf: MO-lt5f eft 5 ' .; • : Attnc --·IUS, t CaJplo, ...... bullt·lm Ulld -~ Ave. NB. fTMIG. Newport -I l~ pm. T Tba -· -.:1 Br'• 1125. Ad!tl:, .no ,.ti. Ehclwd ..,... 1 UDaOOM be•*! poo1....,.. • .......,,,, SEACLD'J' Mlllar Apta-S l9tb at l:Mal: . -"•-....a 7' · Lost AftCI Mined 6:lon. patlol. d r 1v•1, : ILl5 !:Iden. Mer Apt 8. --FJIOu,IJS nc --BR. $U11 Uni. $115 -. '6«illO or to-11'!0 t -Ftra1ly MIOX .JQtlu -· OO..MM514. .:t . '1'15 J'lr -MEDITERRANEAN ... .._ ...... JUlditr epto. dr!>a. l>l..., pzb lllapl. VISTA .DIL MISA Loot vie. Bay ~ Rmor PAfi-. -· -•I ~~. 2 't:.'t;:. VILJ.A~E H·su"'NT1mr111N.-..GTON l5Z ~ Ave. ..... .Aper-~,..,.,_ IOI N-madlcai •lien--1a ......... , ~ ;. Jurn «a Br uni. $115. MIO-SW.,CJI. aboutour--. 1ASllR.,_AIJll.Dl<l>nu; l!i:tCTiiOLiiX oUke l'IMMCa11!4'1111 -_...5'8-l!&llorat. .; --(114) 151-PACIFIC . Santa AM -• -" Roll1c • In Dan. Point will -i.. LOST ll1k cat"""""'°' 00 CEMENT WORK. "'jell too ' • Ul\GE 1 Bit $135 IQ:NTAL otncz 1l1 OCEAN AVE., 11.8. · lbaa oPl'C-1.ri Roe -· ..,.. -lbru Sat w. Stop •""'!. Vic. 13th st ldla,.. mW1. ftuooabl<. r r u l' • it6oMY 2 BR 1155 OPEN.10 AK TtJ I PM • (114) W.141'1 FAMILIES 1ll!:NT -Sllll by er pllocie a~ Ana Avo C.M. ps --. II. Slllllick, 54Mllll. • Adlto. MWlll, m-«m JUW.'IORS 3 Id * J Balli Ole..,.. 10 ...a Pill Dolli Tustin & Mooe Drlw OPJ:NiNG N...;; ~ 83&-"22 ~ ·-QUAUTY c-.i Worlt. ii ! FURNlSHEI> tnller, 115 utll 6SIN'Cl!:73 44-00 , .:..: q Ai WlWAJl WALTZRI <XI. * IQ aH * . ca1n1. i.;,. ..U, A.it~.: WllT, ..., " ...,. S MO: old a-do II. Llc'd. -; .,old. Ma-~ >dU!t -----·..,. -Wfal callildnl -1111) O>ut Rwy N....,..; cat wlthoot a· tall. V.lc "6-i " Ol!b'· -.. -flll!~!!!!!IJ!!I __ , = ~Eocl s.i:-.: Kl~~ 1!,f_~YI • WELCOME'. I II .. , --' =Ave, C.M. Reward m.oac Wolll, llrlve,..,. 1~D"" ...... .., ... ,...;..""..;.:... ___ I FAllAY -.qpoo111-· pots-.lllR. . ~-. -... Notices 510 • -Pa~-~.!1~--JIQlroalld. -I $1S9, AlJ 'extru, Pool. pr, -~ -v• L- YW llllff IWUIOlt GR!ZNI p&1jo. """1ture Av a IJ. SINGLi: rro1tY NOTICE [ · I~ Contrector * SINGLE. '1V-l'OOI. P<tl ok. O~A J\IAJIJNA INN, 3U1l Cout Hwy, D. Pt. N'I.,); -1'1362·A l<Hbon Ln., H.B. South Sea ... ~-RMmo -400 s.curlll'--~ Na~ .__. ~ 1,_,,,-------·I 983-1510. MM2!S. ..,....,. -~ -~· . NY Way, quality - 2 & S llR'1 P1rk-Llb SUtroundl"I. 2 &•! ,.., ~40 VP -· 2 BDltM·2 BATH SLEEPING :Raomt. SU 1'ic. !lled Decembft 3 1911 Vic-mnod. Walh, coll ha. !'molt _.._ ~ -QU1ET DELUXE . · _, ~ ' ~ Cet>ela and DrQoa _tr t II -.i..cL _ 981 El •~ -u • .._, 'ft-•---·-•---:;.· --• • 1·2•3.BRAPTS Chrtatmu "°""'· MOM Air~ Can>lllO Dr. No;-1, CM. ·;;.t~~T= -Sdlools&-...,.. •• •tc.Nojob)oo....a. . ._. _ _._ ~~ i::: .,1-8!. N-°"*Co."""'"" A!SJ· FUJIN BACliELOJIS KAI Apto .. t888l Mora Kai i: ~y; 5*-<MSI. -vane,., Otuft .:.....,., lnstrvct""'• 175 IHT'WS, lllil''iDs. """'· UC!. ·~·•ts ~. . . Prv ~ ·* HM Pao'· Ln., 112 blk E. o! Beach. ~~-Additions * Remocl-m Qicqo. 511-1501, --..--~ ~ 962--8991 Carport. -ROO-wk \Ip w/ldC -·-PtA!IO LESSONS Gorwlck .. Son, Lie. • 847-6169 S012I Sanla AJa A,.. Nr llhop'r * Adults onlJ • Nr. So. Cout P!ua II<' wk Up Apts. 2376 llegin..,. 10 l•am o_,, m.;;ou * se.2111 ' ~ Huntln"9n -. FREE utlliti.s. 1 Bit llrir. Mn. =-A:< W. Martlnlq• Apts. ~~~DS::PJ~k HIDDEN VILL'AGE Newport Blvd.. Cll. 1 ~ ~""°v , sr,bll'eadinr, ""'· Electrlcai r, $U0/1tudlo $8$/Block 10 1m1antaAnoAve .. cM 10B!lAa!!Cpts,drpl.!Jffnl, 250&SouthSolts 541-9755 . -1· '""" -. Colla-I""=..;..;.;;.,.. ____ •• r .. ..,,_ 201·10th SL $3&-3171. New • Ylla Pedro Mar. Alt 113 "'""6 111'<· 125 1'th St., HB. Santa An& e 516-1525 1JDO 1SLE • Wat.-it .. Call Brooe 54Ml1I ELECrR!CAL. Inatall&tlono. = .. ;;:acb. 5:6": 2 BR, 2 llA. APTS. . VILLA CORDOVA :-::.2 Br •• cptw, m,. .. 1-~~ BBQ ~ •• ~1in~1.·.n':': PerlWll 5301---JGif'l ~ .. :=;. ~ -polnt..r ill hlxurioua Supor-O>m11>rtable·Qulet ~.sar. polio. .... nn., 17542 Jet. Gnat -1 s a a Bdrml • . . ~ ' l>ldl.'llOllthSt.,11.B. 'Nr Newport Bock Bay. Gu I & 2 BR. $140 Up !<non Lane, Flom '1ft APT SIJo m> In Ip-·· l>IBOOVEll OlllCOVEllY , PlllNTED clteuit -' OLX.'1BR,1'plc 2 -•WtrPd. lolo. .. Mo.From Furn or Unlunl ~7/842-2834. SOUTH COAST Own .......... lull bath. Flnc!YOIJRSELrlaSomeone ·-"labrlcat!oM. -i l lo ... -. ""': 53S-11'5, $185. Cblldren ...icome. Gu A Wat.r !>aid 2 BR, Ip priv -·BIO.. VILLAS Nlpnv. <9f.037I Ello Accountl"I nm _,. 1 or 100, i 516-'Mil. See BaJi>ara Davis • Mer. . See Mn. Sketch cpl, -$135/nio. No ,.,... 11aJ llaaArtllur Blvd. GuCllt H°""' 415 c.n "°" • No obllptton CO KHl>e Enterprilea. ~IM. B•CHELOR •PT.· 2332 Ddon e 645-1182 l32I D .. n e ~• n-1503 A'="'= ·-~ (114) 835-MS5 ~ 381-3393 MPLEJ'E A•••untrnr Oudeill.. . I ~ ~ ~·· ;;;~-~~-~~r_;~·-~;j,...., _ _!516-88ZS~~---1 *PRIVATE ROOM NAT!ONALY NIZED Servicet.Exper!eaced,1-~~~;;:=:-·I $1«1. mo. c.u Ne-Br BAY MEADOW APTS. LARGE 2 bedroom, 2 bath 2 BR apt CiOSed gar, cpll, Apt1., For eldeJ!Y person. Brigbt. ALCOHOlJCS Ano""""'"''* .. ~ = .. ~ .. "~ ._ ~~a'!"°imall ......... llN<h --polldlrir. apt wtlh l>loolk, cpta, m,., cllllm•innall pet ok. l'um or Unfum. m _., _""""""""' ···--,_ -·-~ ----. , . · pr1v pat1oe, -Uoo. to. -A bulltlna, encl°"" $140/mo. 847-2940. • Nutrl--1 518-4!53 PboDe 5G-'1217 or wri.. and -pins needs. Ll!t la-pjOs ICl!ool, ea1J SUS/rm. ~ wlc up. Btdt. dlltta AU ~·Do petr. prqe,'~ ta• p&rk right 2 BR. 1~ Ba itudio. Encl s. • P.O. Box 1223. O:.t& M«aa. ua take care of )'VUl' boolD-.......... illrrblS Hnpor"' ~ color 1V uttl pd. Cruent e 2 BR'1 J'ROM AS LOW ac:rou the street fer tht lit. gar., fnccl yrd. $150/mo. Costa Mt.. * PRIV. Room avail w/Wv-OOUNSELING le info for keeplnc and tax headaches CdM a.ta M-, nro..: I Bay Bcb 1435 N. Out Ai $159/mo. tie one.. Sl.56 pr. month Lndry facll. 842-4549, ing care t>r ambulatoey abortion. vuectolll)' a: while )'OU tolve the bta'Jll'O-.... W..tdltl. 11 49f..25<MI. 111 W, BQ' St., CM. phone 557~ after 6 p.m. LGE. l BR apt. Patio, encl. -lady. Balanced diet• adoption. ApCare. MJ..443G. hltma. No account too PROFESSIO~ ,.._. Newport IHch O\ll 6t6-0013 eBEAUTIFULGROUNDSe gar. Adults. $125/mo. Call 60-9S62«5tQ..2S62att&. EN<X>UNTER GROUP small. Special otter! tree work. prunln1: ~ *TOWNHOUSE* SPANISH DEJCOR 842-1549 BRAND NEW Vacation Rentals 425 For poople -Med ttal 6'13-7002. Newport "--oprlllklan, ~ lobl. I 2,._~-~ apNt. 2nd fioOr, 300' to 2 Br.. l'Ai Ba., cpt/dipa. Atr/ecmd. Gu, wtr. pd. WALK ~ Be ch Deluxe l & From $145. Dishwasher, sbq PUERTO Vallarta, Mex. rtlationlhlps. A dlanoe to :~ and Bookkeepq I a~d 8 c & pl DI• G-.., f Qll:'ll\;Uo 0 pell. Adib. $160 patio. Adlts. $160. 130 E. , Garage, PooJ, Rec. rm., a ' carpetlag, W&lk·ln doeeta. Avail J 3 $300 for 2 kl be )"OUl'81!'\f, 546-'7G2T , 6f&.5893. t :ZOO. To T/11'1'J, « $2.15 mo. Melody Ln. 5U-S.986 or laundry. 1 BR $140. 2 BR 21 BR2i_gP;;'~ s~B cpta, Farced air ~at. extra large Furnish:: 5• bu, ' ~ . .+ Babysitting TOM•1 ~. Exp, t )'l'ly. 642-3831. ~1768. $1Ql.$175. b, tns. • . . rooms. Beautiful game room. maid. 615-4450. lal THE Educational Readine111 Japane11e -La w n Mtb ~ OCEANFRONT Winter, DELUX 2 BR, 2 BA, Bltns, HacltndadeMesaAptl Lido Isle heated pool, BBQ'1, enclos-R..t I Sh aa I tAdlftdr.nt Centre Prwchool, 2070 temnce A Clean-up. i Varioua Loe. 1.J..3 bn. Dab~ Sha 1 crPta. 1fiO W. Wllson.,See M;r. No. 1 BR. d 1%. baths, fpL ed garages, quiet IUlTOUl'ld· • I to I"* . . Maple Ave., Colta Mesa 531-HM. 839--9585 aft .f. I Multi only, no Pe ta• troatleu rem,, Elec frple, 6 UNITS -2 Adulb+ ~:: $290. Yearly ~l:it 'iiv::e noto ;t~plng. GIRL w.anted to abaft furn. 2 will otter special day care AL'• lAndacaptng, Tr•• : 6'l3-30!3. . ....... Nr So. Oout Plua, ALL ELECTRIC ASSOCIATED BltOKERS EL CORDOVA APTS BR. Klil• & poll O.K. $80 found (!,..ado) 550 tor lhopplnr ""'"""' on "'movel. Yard.rimnd•llnr· • 3 BR, 2 Ba, all xlrll, 1325. 1185. 54$-2321. IJPSl'AIRS $150. 673--3663 963-2505 Ev<•. :ion Cl>arl• St 60-44io Unfurn. $88 turn. 963-mtl ot Dec. lOth. 21at •22nd 9om· Ttub haultnr, Jot cl•._ On -an. ...UC tb beacb LO ER OOWNSI'AIRS $165. • 842-Q35 Hntr. Bch. · -•'--...... R t l"--• •-·tr ~-wm -.,_ Owner (2l3) 791)..nT3 • + L· W * t'..AIL Manager aft 6 PM. Lagun11 Niguel Near Harbor & Hamilton. St. FND. Fountain Valley Elem. .,.... .... -.,.. • .....,. D wll,;ll • ....,.,... -~..... • 111~~ · • AU Electric .. 2 BR Cpts, --r '42--1l3l FEM~ 18+, nice ltP BR Sch:>ol>; Sat. A.M. wbtte lncludM. 6f6....Wt. EXP .lapeue Gardentr, BAL: Pt'n1D Deluxe aptl, drpt:, car .• patio. Nr. bus le LAGUP!IA NIGUEL in Meaa Verde Nr 0CC. $20 male -pqppy w/one beige DO )'OU need a babyaltterT I !Chow lmv, up-keep, plant ;trp1, nr ocean. 1 .. 2 a: 3 Br'a. thttter. Adultr, no pet&. MODERN 1 Bdrm. apt. Cpts, APARTMENTS wk $85 mo t1JC uW. 557-MOO. ear, la.rle breed 12-16 wkl can. help! ~Tb~ pe1t, trlmmtne. cte.an.Q .Yearly rates. MUlct aft 5. $155/mo. 66-3515. drpl. cbbWlhr, bl t·I n1, l BR, 1 BA * 2 BR, 2 BA. 'nlE EXCITING FEMALE to ahare 2 mt, 2 old, 968--2416. 4PM~lDPM. Cclllep Pk A 9&8-M86. , ON mE BEACH DELUXE 1 BR. Iii'· Avail pn.re. 1 child ck. All utll tuny carpei:ed 1c draped PAL"' MESA APTS. BA, oceanview home. SI'RAYED out ot area. 6011 Mesa. del Mar area. Your EXP. Hawaiian Gardetle. \ : 2 BR. compl flam, 1riY now. Adult:a, no pet£ $135. ~-t !~~Avocado, From $175 ~ ~ ~ BCH. can 673-1437 after_ 5 stubore Or., N.B.; .Male home. S51'"69U alt 3:30. A1k Oim'Plete -tudenln& HZ'f, ; Ill' thru .June 30. C'rrrm2 150 E. 21st. &tM016 p ' -· • Ind 1u, TV ct.Jife, ...Jrtter, Unbellevabiy 1 apta:, h SHARE my 'Mltftfront borne kitty, wht w/belp apotl. tor Sharl. Kamal•nl, M&-4676. Newport tfe19hts LRG 2 BR &pt w/sund.eck, Ntw •dult l•nieft aptl. all Jc:it bltm, lndry, areu, pool, Jacuzzl~ect bl= w-dock man 3().60 yn. $150. Approx 6 moa. No collar. EXPERIENCED cblld care JIMS GARDENING . • e111ta. A drpt no p1U 2 flBO, · 2 BR 114 BA htd awim. pool, BBQ 1, prlv 9bag erpts drps aauna mo. 6'ffi-433L &t6-Un. in hly North C.M. bom.t Complebr Glldentng servso. CLEAN 1 or 2 'BJt.. Mltl, no -OK. ',...., -·-fl55. 2 BJt, den. 2 BA patioa A balC!onln. Open Adul ' ' ' FOUND PUPP w/yerd. Lunches .A lll&Ckl. ._ Cle ' • .,. --~ti,}& tit. $125-W0. "21 · -..,._,151E;21st. 6461666 l OAMtotPM*<tM""'2T2 ~tc. ta,mpets. M-FSh&rek>vel)'homeln. Y, male, Tenderlovln& • aft.UPI.~. ',E. 16 th St., NB. MS-1801. Monte Virta. . Wtstffy JI ~rtmentl $227T * 290il Alonia SINGLES • • • • • ••• From $135 CdM. No smoktn. $125. black A white, 2 to 4 mo, ell San rnt. c.zt. ~ just Expet J~ Glll"de:W f..,..-,.,-,'----~= l & 2 Bedroom, l bath. Sl!U _ . all Crown VaBey Prkwy 1 BED RM • • • • •• From S140 Re~s. 613--0£9, vie. Newport Ir. 17th, Cost& tree ~t~" Npl Comple~ yd service. Neat A;i. Unkrm. :MS el . d' b hr * $170 * 2 BEDRM ...... From $160 G lo R 435 Meoa. ~3887 W8"•· ... "Rel!L-Frte est. 642-4388 eaninr even, is ws , 3 90 l'ii BA potio l>l.. Ne........,'INch You're right """-"re under-1r19•1 r ent . WILL to -·"~ • A--I sundeck. sbq' crpting. .... • • I ... ,_.. . • un::;y '" ,_ .. FOUND brown I.: black p~ care r """""'""n JAPANESE Gard _,_ ... hu -:ii-r• m w wiltoft * 5'8-3005 crpta:, drps, Aak about our • Pl"lced! 1561 Mesa Dr. Single car garagt! PY w / wtite feet V1c rtSUlar.1¥ or fer vacatlom, aard eeo·-~pl ~ · • d1toOUnt NA--. ~n~ (5 blka. from Newport Blvd.) 1 H ti~·· Be cb · ,_ ,,_., ..., ,,.. _A_ ... 1. exper t!'ller. m ''"' 3 B1l,. 1 Ba GAJU>EN APT $17o..2 Br 2 Ba Studio. .s.i ....,... cov .u 54fi..9860 n un "&""' a • Orange O>&st ~ae C.!d "& 3•"• '........ ,--.....,I'!' )'d work Clean u ~2303. 'IUO mo. Forcod 111r bt: v . st., cM. MU340, 543-21182. 'Ii NEWPORT 'Ii . $l0. mo. Call 646-'687 545-5027. ' • Call Weney 6llHm. · • P· . . dwhr, bltns. ldW tor ~ cpalt.,,. ~ ''THE GABLES" SHORES ' 2 BEDROOM * GAltAGE tor ,....._ BEAl1nrUL BABYSl'ITING 2' 1n. all FllONT 1l'd !an -... ! .ntfrtd. couple. Nr. Knott'I 'CJOI. ' J.ce. 2 Br w/prt car. Adltl. 3 Bdrm, 2 Ba, drettitW area. ~ Ba ~ eoneepL cn1y, $25. per mo. black cat, ~ -~ Al"· B1, A fenced b&cll: rard ~· ~ allO. Berry Farm. On bus 1top. IOUndpr(l(lfed. Fncd. )'Td, l..ar&e deluxe a'Pt. W IW am ......... ,. .. , extra lrl lfS..326' Corona del Mar are a yard. 6(3..1592. 1-":~0:: ... ;::"',;,' ,:;:;:;;;::,-II '1..Qf·'D63 D~~ 2 1 81\. BIPrlvtnL w~patlo.. Wtr pd. carpeting, a.Bdrm e.K. ~.encl s:1tlo, ~ Office R--al .... ,. 675-t8l8. • am.o or lnf&nt care in_, GARDJCNJNG SERVYCE • .---.. ... ·Dl'pe: w"' ept, • Gadnlr/malnt. Call btwn 1 $235. monlh. tk>n rm, 11&Wla baths, etc. -" '""' · --. CLEAN--OP. 1RIM Back Bay bale. Gar. Lndry rm• A~ &lMllO. CALL 546-0370 Adults. Our, SUnday alter-NEWPORT CENTER FOUND Femol'. w.im.,.,,. ~~""'~to e -e BEAUT!FlJL & ... View 2 ·-· 21370..,,..Ave."G" $1l5 noon B-B·Q• & ...... A.it GROUND FLOOR er,"'•· w. Wilom, Cool& ' • G IS -d u..;y • Lnaooa starting eoon. Meea. Owner tdeontify, 79$ BABYSJTJ'ING my home lfHlrA •n-•ce9 BR, crpVdrpl. bltns, pool. SPAC 2 A 3 Br apt $140 up. ATl'RACTIVE Twnhlo. l t.' BRAND NEW t.' HARBOR GREENS 2,500' .. ,894 Fully ln>1>rowd. W."WU.O. Colla Mesa. q !llcd yd hot mnJa. d.; • I ' ; .11'!0/mo. m.3690. :Id pool. l"' m: ;:'-Bit'•, 2 BA CAD, bltns, dbl :11432 Sani. Ana Ave CA.,... !546-5025 Prtm. Jocatm tor r.nant FOUND ~ pe ~ 8th. " "''"· ~. T~s %.:!""t:i Lt.,~ ~ Balboa 1 I lllf. ... po ' pr, awlmmlDr pool. $21S. from S.A. Cow>lr:Y Club) "'""""' id•ntlty. Excel. n · \lnl • • r, --~ .· 1 • 2l06Cloll ... No.5 · llC-'!035. 5'&-7414. Spacious 2 Bit unito. ;::s. *BRAND NEW* po'1dll(. 60c per month per Newport Bea.b area, Cablnotmeklnv carpentry. point etc. , 1--------1994 Mlple No. 3 IG-3813 FIREPLACES. Prlv patios ft. 613-25!!6. • ... ji 545-0820. awtl4JNG A ~I WALK ., -e<nt<r. 2 ';!.2 :!' ::: ~· ~ loadt o1 c1ooeta. Heated La Coste Apia. WHley N. Teylor Co. FND. Kttr.ns, 2 b1k male~ Qi.i. = WO K CARPENTRY, Plilltlnr. ... , Br., 2 ~ ~ttlt A • bedrooln $185/mcmth wtth aeron · al fl'Onl shop'& Pool. Ad ~ l ta. Manqer 1 A 2 BR, bltns, rwimrn1nl Re1ltor1 Fcuntain. Valley, £168..7154, wca1c. &f6Sl1S ment. etc. Sm. Jobi OK. Grand "° • ..., patio. recreation room and Wse Carport. lndry rm. AduJb 979-1268. pool, lanai, bar-l>que & pr-2ll1 San Joaquin Hills Rd. SIAMESE kitty, by Poat OJ· C•rpenfer Bob_, ~ J J:.~O::ii:,""' m-llll wall<-111 doaell. A I e • t • onr,. $160. 998 Et Can>lllO e NOW OPEN e :i: ~ ll50 lo '1'!0. Nowport Centor 6U-49IO lice CM. &U-SllM, 64>-2850. EXP. llemod.U.,, cabinets, HouU,. ' -Dr.No.1Cl4.'5fS.4451. BltANONEW1&2BrFrom 354A...;,... cM -LIDO Blda. 12l "'It '°'SMALL -Dot: M ..... jlliro matoL No lob ... 1:.::=:::..-----11 UNFURN. do W n I ta Ir'• f/ f/BIG IUM)' t bdrm u:ppu, NR ~ l Bt lilts $148, Prlv patio, bUllard • • MD er Dentist -1200 11q. tL Verde area. 5f9-0627. cm. Rl'u. 64&-422f. Maulin&, tie;anoUP. Io ca I Carpeted. 3 BR, 2 BA. South new cpt, drps. bltim. $135. new • • rm, heated pool w/ Jacuzzi, on crnd tlr. for ottlce, beau-movea. exp d eo11ep ltu-<\ 118" Front. l«!Q. !'<mo. By ....wo or 1133-3Mo ~-vi • ~i ahar cpNL ~~ hup c1 ... 1o, c1oep pie car-HACIENDA 1y thoJ) etc. SUit< tor nice LCllt 565 Cupe! Servlca .. nL i.r. truck, ,..., , ovmer. 644--2922. te ew • ..,.. pr. 0 .,.._ petlnr, lush landacaplng. cfftce& up1tail'1. Prkg. See • 53t-1M6. ~ YEARLY spadout a pt 3 BDRM, 2'ii BA. ttudio, $155 mo. 64S-M35 aft 5 pm. Adultl. Yoo Mutt See Thia HARBOR Jcnea Realty Service on REDISH brown We\maraner JOHN'S Carpet ti Upholfieey YJJU>/ de&nups. Re-t Adultl ~nly, No pell, $1'15 bl~ ;o '::.i~D NICE 2 BR upd&tn apt. · One! lll.02 Birch st., New· 2fm!;'~ r::::; premilea. 3355 VI.a L!do, lab mix. 12 mDI old Vic Oewn. Extra Ori-Sham· move ~dtrt, tvy,-Skip. mo, 675-325L , on ............. r. • w/prap, 1tove I: refrla:. port Beach. !li7-4246. Deluxe 1 a: 2 BR. Pool 6TS-3171. White Front <Colt& Mesa) poo tree btchluard (Soll bder, backhoe. "1..-. C dol Ma •WILSON GAllOENSe Wa_.,_. lam. Adults PARK NEWPORT G ...... D-. Paid utll. DESK ,._ anllabl< ISO ~ Rew.!anlo), lle_..n I< TRASH• G -7 orona r 2 BR. 111 BA, cpt I drpl, only. '145. "'°· 518-6954. APARTMENTS FROM $l50. 646-llOC mo. Wlll ....... -LOsr male Irloh Setter 211' ell color brllb'"nm A to clays. PM°": ""1lllM· encl. patlo. $140. 60-6811. oiiPLiX 2 mt, small yard, ~. 1 or 2 Bedrooms, at $5 mo. Annertrc Nl"ite tall named "SnJpe'', CMke minute bleach for whlt.e 5'8-5031. · Sharp Clsan 2 BR. $140 pr., vul<t. no dop or calo and Townboulel. Spa. pools, AMAZING 'Adult LI v 1 D a available. 222 Forut A.._ chain, 646-33111, Bad< S.,.. carpelo. Savo YoU1' ......, -INrll ~ Bltna. drpc, w/w, btd pool. or motoreydea. 5C8-27J) 1emda. 1'rom $170. Aeroa Beaut. 1 &: 2 BR furn or unt Lagana Beach....._ "SAMANnIA" Poodlener-by Avina' me extn. trips. ftl f. AdlU. E/lide-. Dana Point :;:.r:_-hlonlalan-dat~ Apta. Sell dean. ovem, AIRPORT CENTER rlorloot In-Ctr. Sal. :':'.:.ii~~.!!°" dlnlna1150 HOLIDAYS AHEADI . t 1 Bednlozn. ~ Coe tD •• Sen l ~ D/W On 2 Br) dlapla, lhl& Deluxe 1, 2 a: 3 room ~ces Reward. 546..()483 aft 6 ' ..... """' nn • I Have a Oean Holldt.)o1 Call n o c C. A U.C L $13 5 *I.GE. 2 Br., 2 Ba., din rm., ~. <TU) 644-lSOO. cptf. drps, 3actmJ. A sauna adjacent Airpor'ter Hotel · couch $10, chair is, 15 )Tl., Dl.ttcb Maintenance 8erYict I , ON TIN A0ES s5'f-1:a. . • bttn, cpt/drp. , Ocean. View EXCLUSIVE Park: L J do • baltls. Hup pool. Lowest rates, full llm'iceti: LOSI': Female Sea!polnt exp is what countt, not lor all floon, wlMows & f ~ A t BR. hra. A Ulftnr.. Balcony. " ml. to Dam Townhouse CQndo, Hoai Merrlm1c Woods 833-2840 or &U-3223 Wkdaya ~!1'1is1~· Mesa method. 1 do work\mJHU, carpet duninr. Xln't wen: f 1!..,ia-I pr1v. ,.-2 BR. 111 BA, sharp crpts, Mulna. $llO. 837·3927 • R"'I'· atta. 3 BR, 211 BA. 42; Merrimac Way, C.M. BAY VIEW OFFICES -. Good ftl. 531~ clono. No'"", !l.lT·llOlaJl1' J ...... 7--Qetnt'l llldlt. :: :r..~65 mo. 913 831'~71. frpl, pool, patio, also lrg. 2 ~ • MOVE IN Allowance Deluxe, Air Cbndidoned. GERlMAN Shep, aUver/blck, SELLING Your bolt! olu.r· tune. . I ~~~ UNFU'RN 2 BR ..... l11tll~ BR townhou1w apL Odldrtnwe!IXn'Dfl redecorated.Udo.Area !,:1~·=1~~ =t~:11~~r>.Jl1 ·om16ATEJ> CLEANJNG • apt, -, 14&--1231/MJ.4590. I NASSAU PALMS Realonomlcs Bkr. 675-6700 • a • * We Do ~ * NEW ...... ~ ..n NEWPORT BEACH 2 BA apt with dlob ........ 1n ~sit-~~ DESK -·-ISO 21 hr .. Call m-4072 2 BR., 2 balhl; -· eu. LAllGE 21111. 111 BA. llOldlo VIII• Oranode Apia. llhatr, pool, !'r 1 or 2 adlts Fum 6 Untum 1 " mo. WU! _... lurnltun * * * * * * -E>iperle....S """Pl• to pe(ed & draped Encl. Pl'· Apt No flt'U. SUS. 'r.IS Four ~· wttb baleo,,. without pet. year around, 2 BR:1 1rom siis UP a~_r:-Anl.!f•bwNo.lll'Ytct OZAN 'yotm HOM!: •ae Comp bltnl Private · iet abbve a: below. Gracioul only min from beach. $115. av... • -EJ • &15-4384 e • • • Joann St. e 14&-1514. Uvm, A quiet itllTOIIDdiJW 1401 superior, N.B. j;I DRIVE BY Camln.o R•al, laa ; :!'th,~ Oz'Cbld. $Z50 Per LARGE 2 BR. rr Wntcllff. fOr tamily with cblldren. BACK Bay atta. 2 BR Sha& 147 l1owtr St. 1 Bit. F\rm or Oernente. 02.....ao JAPANESE HouMmakt. .. • Lndry., -· Adults, .. Near o..ona de! -Hi&h ..... -. .,.0o. Amii. No unrum. -location 1n DESK ..,... ·-ISO Trader's Parad"is"" Exp. .... tranp. ll)i <Sq. ' I • ,nueA 0 polo. $145. -· School. ,.,..,,..,., .... bar A pots. Avell 1110/12. Pl7. C.M. 6f6.0!l:IO, 646-381>. mo. Wlll provide lurnltun g -7 e1t S. FREE IO l&ndlordlt Let u bailt-ln kitchen appliancea. 642-22S7 NEW apt 1 BR. fncd )'l'd, at '5 mo. AJ:ntrinc .erv!ct Kela Qnnlrw 8lrvb -... llll ,..... ,...-Aa<nl. 13$ AMIGOS WAY 944-2911 • Cpt&, dra .... l51S Eld•n avallal>le. 11115 Beach Blvd. Ii nes Cari>eta. w-. ,,_etc. * BAYTIIONT -. ~....!.Co. *~'f aa.'.":..=Nw..:. Aw ...... 1657. ::= ::"'o:'::. Roldd. llem-1. Sil WI t * BAYVIEW 2 BR ..... s balhll VllW encl .... Adults. '115. Huntl"""" -·--nd ·~ t" Malntona- -lhll crulat openlnr -... tlol. All 1or 2 Bdml~ 2 bathl. u.,...... 51&4108. La 11..... H ~;;;.. ·m':.i."Wt:.t.· · 1 mes ~~:".uci.iiYi!: $1'51oll50. 516-7331 viewapLCarptted.-. ewESTCiiiT2Br,lllBa Un11• ermosa DAVIS l\EALTY &U-7000 ~AL I' ..,i.t openlns ol 8ayvln SHAltPI 1 Br, Ip cloo•ls. bl..._ 2 --Twnl>le, $l00. Adltl only, no SPANtSH COUNTRY E'S-3 VERY nlce MOOnd floor of. dollars Dak'I Meints....,. - Apts. for lamlllea. ~ ~~ta.188f lp8Ctl. $250 MoaGl )'earl,y. pell. 1728 Bedford Ln. TATE tMng 4 tJPldOUt flee.. 17117 Bnch Blvd. · e ~ e Call coo l4Mllli ln.Hio 0 so.7533. .. ... Terraced poo1. sum..n 1,0wnu~~c~2U~l~!94--00l5~~·!?;Da,ys~ . .l"--------------.ll:-a1nt1nv & I ~~~:!'c.':':i: s:!r~!:,i.r-:,~~:: _•;,; 1 1a.a n:;..::" ... ~~ux;.a~~~'. J::.~•livtnrtorONLY Builneoo Rontel ~ Trade-Craltsmanm•tal **RAVE: Oelwrol·Pkoc Popaih.,,.lnv 'from s picturt windows Ltr Dll ~No. S 64,._TOSS Yearl1 rate1. SG-1148 aft 5. 1 Bdrm. Untum $150 SPAC!": Jar rent in the niar. lath w/ltand and attach. ln Anabelm, all 2 Br 2 8& PAIN'MNO/p..,.mw, 11"' I , llv rm, din's rm, Jdk:hen, 19!M Maple No. l MJ..3113 H...t~ ... Ch 1 BR. near beach, )'ftrly •. Furn nn. • ~· x 15' • ~ Centllr for tnduatrial tableaaw. ltwlhra, aJr/oood, ~ facil'. 1n Harbor .,._ Lte A boafi. , bathroom, bdnn. J.cot pr. • LAllG!i 1 Bl\. $12S i-. $135. No .,.._ 2 )!dr!!t un!Urn. '115. Bart>en.!M!H917. GI _.,....blo valU<t. WANT: 'l'Nlt 1leedl. Equity ad. ltd• turn. -. llOO mo. Incl utll. Sbown by e llOOMY 2 811. $140 • an:z ORO APTs. • * Call 518-1940 * Fum. $210 Industrial Rental 45G -:r 115.500. lllSl429. PROF. ~,...,_. •PP~ 613-11'!. Adi.. I0-2111. m.Oll7! 1134 &-. 144 BR'~ 150'., beach, polio view of ALL tmLJT!ESINCLUOED PALOSVerdee411R.4-. OllUS O:>nn1o II' l!POrty -""'1r. Lie/too. VACANT: f Ir A alltdy + 1135 A -lb In°"'"-. Pool. Prlvata -pr. Catal!M. dt!llS 3 BR. l260 ADULTS NO PEI'S 14-L UOO ICI· ft. w/olllce A don. blllialll nn, S '1'I new, "rs, Sl mpb °"'"'• -50-2718. lMG-K '11'd· Dix. ept. dip. lrplc. 1-w!thpool. Aaat. W_/_,, -mo, Incl utU. ;rty. m.1421 VISITOU!t MODEU bath. '1S) mo. llOO IQ. IL r~:·=·= 4 +. LOwUmo.Cltlr.$!!000 Walb>lpo ... '•tv/ffirla. $ll5 mo, Incl s• ... BIACHILUl'I' APTS LAltGE 2 BR, 2 BA. crp!I, 162U PAllKS10E LN. wJo!!lco, 2 balhl. .frr ...... Cll4! llM-leil (213>° •47•!3T :"~ ... -~ so~d. ·~!.;. ~ um. Adulll. no P• to. 2 Bit ..,._ Pvt. pr • yard. &po. 2 Br, 2 Ba. Pool. Pado. mp.; ....UC • In c1 ... L nr 4 Blu (~) ';'5:!:; ~-door, $325 I""· 1240 Loran 21' a.la~: nbrd /trtt Brancf'-·-~ ~-~ -·-C - '4UllO. Cblldrtn A pall ok. lllO. DIW. 1331 E11ta I0-7644. -n. llOO mo. !l4M190 1'rwy • Be.ct.. I bUt -w-· SL, CM. Dylt --., ...;;;;:'' 1 $!1!11., 'l'lil ·~-~-·-~ Cj)UICK 41H 2 Br, bl .... "1>l. 2 carporta, -_ MS-ZH. 1 BR T...-, bl .... doae lo PARK Llclo , 3 Bit, 2 BA, l Hdt .;,o;arillld•. •on evu, -L to< touo, 1rg .:.,, ca'mpor -..... lfand.mede J>O'I, nr. ocean. llOO up. i 1 Bit -now crpt. .... n. Dbl -pr. $Ia5. car pr. Pool. Adults only. Lid 1 1 Rentol1 Wa"ttd 460 .,r, mllc. mdoe &loo 2 IOO~ -· S'lct'. Vol. $350. THROU4'H A Amil."° po1o. _,_ !130-No-53&-1090(53Mln. 12ll/mo. 51M301 cu>. 0 •• am1. boail. !Ilia :':'~ii:°~ DAILY PILOT 2 BR. Near beach. $199 Mo. ffl.21163 2 Bl\. nr. -fftr. Garop. 1 Bit Adulil. no -no LIDO BAYFltONT. Aplo A GARAGE « am1U builcltnr * WANT AD Oranp C<>< 3 l!r, I Ba Apt: Cpta. clrpe, NIWIJ d-. 1135/mo. oblldren utll pd, rar, ''150 hom" PIO ., $1.:l>O mo. tor ,_. In 0.... def * * * * * 1l"1 r:. .. 11 -11111.illlo. CTHml. Reelcnomlcl 8'1'. m.mG iiSmj alt 4:Sl Brom, f!S-2723, Mar. ,.._, --------------.i.-_!64~J.:::56~78:!.,__:. .. 1. j DAILY PILOT i-~~--,~--i1-~·L·,_..;1-~~~....:t~--~--=1~·h~i~svarie of fm J.._~--'--ll":~~~fffj~ ,-could introouce -1r L......... I " c 00 s an . you to a new tomorrow. ~--~~ -~-f ~ · Help Wonted,'!\ & fl nt I.nstructle ons ~ unner lnlormof;on r090NllnJ Iha Deily Pilot School1 •nd Jn1truction Dl,..ctor( t CALL 642-5678, m. 325 i...a1 s.c•y voe EPr '-1 Roe. '!'me $4'0 !J'T .. CONSERVATION CAREERS Entry level ·Positions • Environmental technician • Pollution control tech. • Water quality technician • Landscape improvement • Fish &! wildlife ald • Tree farm assistant • Private patrol For Free Brochure Call: 635-9300 or write NORTH AMERICAN SCHOOL OF CONSERVATION 1100 S. Cl1udln• Ploce Anaheim, Calif. 92805 ... ...,~-~-·~ Real Estate School PREPARE FOR STATE EXAM IN 4 WEEKS Children discover great things at our school·. Themselves. Llceruilng Preparation for : • Jo • •J • Real Estate Salesmen & Brokers • Building Contractors e Insurance our schoor:Early Achievement Center. Unlike most pre--schools, we do more than keep little hands bilsy. We keep little rolnds busy. With science. Math. Language. Art. Social" Studies. • Day & Evening Classes Ca!Hornio Department of Education Approved-Muter Charge and BankAmericard Accepted. Things like that. Impressed? Don't be. It's not what we teach that's so sp ecial. ' You May Start At Anytime It's the special way we teach. We encourage children to discuss things. For lnfonnatlon--Brochure-- FREE GUEST LECTURE p~ Mi-3229 Touch things. Act oul things. So they will better know their capabilities. And themselves. Sunflower Early Achievement Center 2515 West Sunflower Avenue / Santa Ana, Cali[omia 92704 (Which is just about the greatest lesson of all .) Ok, like to discover more about us? 7141540-4750 ANTHONY SCHOOLS OF NEWPORT BEACH Call or write for our free brochure. Or drop by our Sunflower school. 325 North Newport Blvd, Newport Beach • 646-3229 Edmond F. Jackson We're open year 'round. So parents Can eome in anytime. And children can be enrolled anytime. Pi1lntfng & ,_ ~ Job W•nt.cl, Fem•le 702 Paperhenglng NEED HELP AT HOME? HANGMEN, II.lea A I111tl., e we b ave Convalescent Pa.per, vinyl, !lock, p&lat. Aides • Nurse 1 e Store <»mes lo ~ door Housekeepers e Com. Schwartz, 547-5146. ' pardons No Wastuv HOM EMAKERSJUPJOHN~ * WALLPAPER * When )'OU call "Mac" 547-6681 548-1444 646-tru NURSING Compan!On for FREE driveway seal coe.tfn& semi invalid, live-in. Lite w/exter. painting. Neat, de-hskpog. Aae 39. Cl) cn4) pend, Coll• 1 tu dents . .,-993-0265,'-'-""·-~---- 548-4549, 545-1512 aft 5. Jobs Wented, M & F 704 30 DAY Special. Intl't/Exter -,,,.._,..,, ____ _ painting. Llc'd/ln&. Local •These kids Wll.Jlt to work refs. 30 yrs exp. Free est. Eager & capable help for C&ll Chuck, 645-0lm. Office, Industry, & Home Youth Employment Service FOR. clean It neat pa.indng .eA2 interior or exterior &: reu'. V'I --0414 rates, Call .Dick, 968-4065. Help Wanted, M & F 710 PAJNTlNG -Guaranteed work at fair prices. Llc'd & Ina. 61>5140. PAINTING, prof. All work euarn. C.ok>r •pe clall•t 962-6143. 547-1441. Plumbing Accnt/F IC Bkkpr $800 Girl Friday $!iOO Sec'y-Constr, S!i:iCI Acctng-L.A, $495 Sec'y-Insurance $475 Acctnir Clerk KiO St. Accountant $14K Software ·Manager $20K PLUMBING REPAIR NEWPORT No job too small Personnel Agency • 642-3128 • 833 Dover Dr., N.B. COLE PLUMBING 642·3870 • MMflc.ti Anhl•llt e Dtftlll A1t1M1nt e "'1111111u 1111 ,.._,,,. ·T9dM!killl ly a recent acquisition of Newport Business School, California Professional Colle9e now off en: e Tr'3lltl • $1ter1hllld DAY AND EVENING CLASSES Enron Now For January 10th Afternoon Classes CALIFORNIA PROFESSIONAL COLLEGE 1101 """"' tlwd .. Colt• 111 .... Calif. 714/'41·2922 S'""" "'v-1 ,.11......0rlld .. ll ,.tee:_! AHllllllUI 0..-& °"9f"U9111 ~ M.-.en II 1111 Prelellllll C.•11 "" Writ. fw ,.,... ~••let AIRLINE . ' AND TRAVEL CAREERS FOR MEN AND WOMEN e R•s•rvations e Air Fr•lght Cargo e Operations Agent "DAY AND NIGHT CLASSES" ACCREDTTID: N1tion1I A11oci1tio11 Tr1de I T1chnl· c1I School• • Approv1d for Vet1r111t. Eligible inlfitu· lion ul!d1r th1 F1d1r1tly ln111r1d St11d111t l oin Pro9r1m, Airline Schools Pacific 610 East 17th St., Santa Ana 714·543-6596 21 hr ... .....,,. ...,.u61 I ~~"""'"""'"""'""..,.""" Remodel & Repair AEROSPACE MGMT Need man w/management sales background & ability Addltlon,..Alterations to make decisions. xinrt u Help Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wont-•, M & F 710 Help Wonted, m & F 710 \ •=~==-=• \ ~=...:.:.:::::..::.:.::..::.:....:.~ - New construction. Concrete, earning potential. al.abs A pe,ttos, Block, itone C.all for Appl BAR MAID, no costume " brick'NOrk.. <n4) 497-2051 832-4821. 1562 NIN'pOrt Blvd., CM Roofing APP RAISER TRAINEE: * 64&-9935 *· National co. will train you REPAIR. ftmVeJ' any roof probleml. Weneda Rootina" Free HL &4>1691. • T. Guy Rootirw. DtaI Direct. I do my own wtltlc. &e-2780, MS-9590. S.wlng/Alter•ilon• ~NG.panf;;tt;,' altuatlons, etc. Reuonable. Done Pt.4'1>4>53. Alterations -641·5845 Neat. accurate. 2> ~ exp. : Telm1lon Repolr * BLAINE'S TV * 8<rvlclnr All - Authorbtd M&cnavox Known tor honetl)' 540-4313 r,_ s.rv1 .. -,, ... _ tllAL 'l'ni SOrv. Yan! ~ ...... houlq, rprlnklar t'fpafn. 1t6U. ~ . . in the Eut while on salary Bei1uty Operators + full expenses. A BIG op. Udo Fuhiona has opening portunlty! To $7000. for two operators w/cllen· can Bob Wilson, ~ tele. Top commluion, fringe Coastal Agency benen11. Plea1e e&.IJ E5teUe 2790 Harbor Bl at Adams 673-1970. AIDES. exper. 7am-3pm lhlft BEELINE Fa1hlonl Dlrec- lc llpm-7:30am shlft. Apply, tor, full or pftime. No In- Park Udo Corrv. Center 466 vat We train. Car ntteu. Flaphip Rd, N.B. 642-80H. Call 636-084.2 or 53&-5435. AVON CALLINGI BOYS 10.14 For a wonderful earnlna op. to deliver papers ln the San portunily, in l'O'Jl' own ttt· Oemente, San Ju.an C..pil- ritory, no ~. nece&&. tratxt and Caplltrano Beach Call 540-7041 ...._ ASSISTANT Mgr trainee, DAILY Pl~OT clea.n cut, over 21. apply 492-W.o Thursday, Dec. 16, In CASJ-llERS; Car \\'ash, part person. Me·n·Ed's Piz.%t,, &. full time for t..aauna 16S32 Beach Blvd. H.B. Beach area. ExPf:Y. req'd, BABYSITI'E'R. • Daytime OC· ~""'=~' ,,!18,,.. _64_ .... _60~--~~ caaklnaly for 9 month old. CASHIER, pa.rt time. Salary Jn Laauna Bch. Our home 4>p!n, Colla Meaa Car Waah, or )'Oijrs, Rd,, ~·9862. Mt>-1030. . . Counter Girls For fast t•keout food O!M'ratlon Full Time THE ISLANO HOUSE 82 F•shlon Island Newport Beach Equal Oppor. Employn DENTAL RECEPl'IONIST Want exp'd person capable of managing ~thlca! practice. If you are the BEST then apply for the excellenl op- EARN xtra money for the holidays. E-Z, fun to do. P'time also avail. Start Now! Call 96S-5448. · ply. AJI replies wlll be EXECUTIVE acknowledred A coD-p I A fidenUal . Send mume to eraonne SJ•,ncy, Classified Ad No. :m, Dally Sec'y to $575 Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Type 70-75, SH Mt Mesa 92626. 410 W. Coost Hwy., NB DENTAL Asa't/Recpl. for l Suite H 64.>2716 girl office. Exp. Laguna ~~~~~~~~~ NIKUel atta. 495--4245. ExPER. power mach. oprs. DENTAL Recept.IQnlst, expe.r for drapery v.'Ot'k room. Aft Ir capable only, Newport. 6 PM Call 4~1095. m-o893. EXPERJENCED 90lderers. 6 COOK, EXPER. DENTAL Aaslstant, mo. to l yr exp. Moblle e BLUE DOLPHIN e chalnlde, Laauna. Some Commun ic ations, 293 3J.l5 VI& Lido, NB exp. %1 or over. 494-3596. Collete Ave., (Harbor &. COUNTER MAN: Local auto DENTAL secy 25 fo 4~ exp. iBai&ikiierillii, iiC;;;.>;;;!.;;;S40-i&im5704;;iii .... ,. parts atore will train person or college. ~3000. Opty lo meet ~ greet patrons. -'-"-' _a_n ... lc:..'.Jf'c.;_'"°-"'-ll-'ty'-.-- Baslc knowledge ot parls DEPENDABLE woman to required. St. $2.SO hr. care for 2 children •fter call Don Benson. ~ school. Hours 12:30 to• 5:M, Coutal Agency Corona dtl 1.far • r e •. 2790 Harbor Bl at Adami 6'1&--8174 alte r 8. F /C Bkkpr $ISO wk With cost accounting beck· ground. RUTH RYAN AGENCY 1793 Newport, Of 646-4854 17931 Beach. 1-tB IW7-96TI GET THE BENEFITS NOW! A MeUlod For I,Jvlng! There IS A Scientific Step.- By-Step .Procedure For Experiencing . GI-eat Vitality. More Will Power &: Inner Peace. Bharat! (left) & Kalldas Teach YOGA Postures A: ?.:feditation People From 12 to 72 Take Our Classes. Why noft•t You? (475 Students This year!), · FREE DEMONSTRATIONS Are Now Being Scheduled For January, Start A New Year With A New Living Experie.nce. Bharali &: KChr~das Wish You The Profound. Enduring Joy Of 18bnas ••• Call For Information, 646-8281. (Good Typlot) Adv. Aast. $450 Yee Nt!r (A 4 day \Vetk) Rercept, to J450 Fee Nea Order l>Hk $'ISO .APF ""°"'" Orlt S4llO APF (Free & Fee Poctt:lon1) If you are j.O hunting, Iii u t i1 r e concerned about •n i19ency fH ••. Ti1lk to us •bout the Employ•r FH P a id (EPF) lobs •v•Dable to you tftr0U9h .• ~ NEWPORT P•raonnel Agency 3&11 Campue Dr., N.B. (Branch Otfice l Nona W. Hottman 540-06.15 M A NAGEMENT positions avail for qualified decision maken who have the desire to nm up tD $2500. per mo. Call ?.tr. Shephard 637-1649 for inl'enr~\v. MANAGEMENT ,young Calif. Co. expandlna rapidly, needs people with mana.;ement pofentfa.I, for fuD' or pe..rt time, will train. 963-8633. MACHINIST: Top no t c h local Co. has a secure &t rewarding spot. Be1t work· irig oonds. in brand new quarters.' $700. ":::l=:=:=:=:=:=:~I Call Bob Wilson, 540-6055 • C.OUtal Agency SEW-KNITS ' SPECIALIZING IN STRETCH & KNIT FABRICS aod LINGERIE All Br•nds Str•tch Patterns Vogue & Butt•rlck Pattems Original Knit FabriC Store In The Harbor Area With Finest Selection Of Knit ~abrics On . Orange Coast. 2790 Harbor Bl at Adams MATURED lady lo work ia our kitchen It dinlng room. Parkhurst Retirement Residence, 96i-5531, r.v. MATURE woman for relief on 11 pm to 7 am• shilt, Sayer Home. 646-fin.6 . MECHANIC for Shell Service station, Corona del Mu area. Al ignment, tune-up, brakes. Refs :req'd. $1000. mo &: up. Ask for Dick Williams 675-0533. e e NEEDED Two Office Glrl1 Must be 2S Jtnd able to drive S T R E -APPLY -, J C H l l=""IB6"""E.,..... '..,.""-·'~·· c_.>_1. -I NEED. 2 hard Y.Orkina:, men. S ·E W I N G Top money can be earned, Drop by ""'""· 24671 0.1 C L AS s· ES 11-Prado ...... Dana ........... Point....,. --1 Morning-Afternoon •nd Ev•nlng 2199 FAIRVIEW ROAD COSTA MESA 540·3268 OFFICE GIRL PART TIME. Acxurate typ.. ins-, lite shorthand, car. $2.00 pe1r-hr. Call 962-4471 and ask for Jan. Fee Paid HAIRDRESSERS wanted, OPERATORS A/P·A/R $550 Sun & evailngs. Salary. Single needle, exper only Good typing skills & other Fountain Valley are a . swim \\"e¥, terrific pay. 4001 #F Birch St, N.B. £t!neraJ ofc duties. 968-4877 or 968-4589 ask for nr 0 .C. Ai""'rt Free & Fee Positions Kay. """ · RUTH RYAN AGENCY PAINTER also a maid nefd. 1'1'93 Newport, CM 1146-4854 HEALTii Food Slore: yng. ed in exchange lor apl. 2376 17931 Beach, HB 847-9671 f!l!ln It woman needed full Newport Blvd, C. M . time. Apply 1072 Bayside 548-97~ Dr, Newport Beach ~--· ------1 FURNITURE delivery man HOUSEKEEPER Cook live-P/~e help J days wk. experience nece!l!8.ry. Call in for couple. Pvt room & Ser-vice .Sia. AttendanL Ap- btwn. 9-10 am. &u.-2050. bath, must speak a litUe ply, Bob Botts Enco. 3003 Gel Friday Trainee english, 642-9600 Newport Blvd, Costa i\1esa.. Unique spot Jor well groom-HOUSEKEEPER 4 days a PORT Theatre, Corona de! ed. quick to learn individ· wk. Park Lldo Convalescent Mar neetls girls fur Cashier uliJ w/personalit.y plus to center &12-&H4. & conoessloli. 1ntervw aft 6 train· in .change of pace pm. firm. Call Penny Ryen, PRODUCTION TRAINEE: 833-zroo, Dennis & Dennls Fine local co. will tral01 Personnel Agency, m l\t ichehion Dr., hvlne. dependable gal. Cit'an air cond. ore. Permanent , GAL Friday wanted In 1 girl non-<lefen.te \VOrk. Start office. Call South Coast YM· n.IKI hr. CA, 494-!Wll. Call Helen Hayes, 54G-605S GENERAL OFFICE: 'J'hig i.s Coastal Agency the chance in a lilclime to IRYINE PfRsONNEl ' 2790 Harbor Bl at Adami work for a great cc. p•nFESSioN .. SCD\N'"[Sl)Arnv-v •-. '~ p hone Bencfita too numetoUA to LI'\)'"'-r\\.JU ~I 101.:citor • Dana Point, San mention. start $475. Free & Fee. Positions Clemente, Capistrano area. Call Jean Brown, ~ Gen'I Office-AIR to S55I) Work in )'00.r own home. Coastal Agency 029 I: 129 Keypunch to $475 Beet deal in aree,. Phone 2790 Harbor Bl at Adams Marketing &ec'y to $540 835-1400 between 9:00 .1..m. GENERAL OITICE: Grow-&Htor Tme, typing $Bl and noon. ing local co. No typing reqd. TypiM, 01cm. Scbt $4251.P=vr=-"N'-'urse=-,~.-.-.,...~-..,.-I Posting exp. helpful. Nice Mcd/Tecii Writer $500 culonally when re g u I a r pleasant ore $350. F IC Bkkpr, lo.ffgr lo $700 nurses are ill or on vaca- ca.11 Helen Hayes, 540-6055 <188 E. 17th (at Irvine) CM tion. Patient 11eml-lnvalid " Coa!ta1 Agency 642-1470 requires liftin&. J or <I hrs 2790 Harbor Bl at Adams per wk. Until needed u GIRLSTRAVEL canplace5 INYW'N substitute $2.2S hr. gic-1• 18-23 ""' lo travel. YOUR RE :.O~R"3-""3;<_T,,. ~~~~~1 Above averqe earnings t QUICK Order Fry Cbok. plU5 $500 bonus yearly. BE iYOUR.owN BOSSI Stca(fy Employment. Apply Parents welcome. See Mr. Men or Women In per10n, Mesa Lanes, 1703 Mcl.ane Sheridan Beach Superior, C.M. Inn. 21112 Pacific. GIRL Friday-Bookkeeper for High pressure contracton ofc. 548-3154. GIRL Frldt.)', mature fDr ua- ed car ofc, S. A Lite bkkpn&". P/llml. 96&-53-\S. le••• A Yellow T<1xi Cab Call for Appl 546-1311 GOLF COURSE JANITORIAL -"-riencod GROUNDSMAN only. MUil know hard 11.cxr For prlyate countJ')' club. Ex· 1 ~-=·~·~64~"-=-=·--~-1 perlenced In mow:lng equip. JOURNEYMAN Machinist, ment operation .l around.I small sbop, H.B. Stl!'fldy maintenance. • work, Wages open. SJG-8624. Apply In peraon, 1972 Lake St., H.B. 1850 Jambon!e Rd LADY to work in Fish ~rt Beach Markel. Musi be able to Wkday/helwn km Ii 12 noon work wknds. Pl\: S4fr.I0:>8. HAJR atyllst w I dlcntela MAN or woman "'/teenage wanted In SUnHt BC!ach boy• for penn. pltime work area. 592-2093. 9.'fL.A. Times. 642-4800. ' SANTA ANA mw lntervlev.'inc for Day . & Nlte Busboy1 & Dishwashers Apply In Prr11011 Betwee11 3pm A 5pm 2312 No. Br0<1dw<1y S•nt• Ana El'.(ual Oppor. Employtt + • • .... • • • .. ... .. • •• • '4' • , A-• . ,,; . - I~!.__ .. _ .... _•·_!~ _r _ .... _ ... ~_l~-~ ~-~ ... -~~;-~=t~=~·~·-~..r.~,· t~. ;; ......... ;; ..... ;;-~ ' Help W1nhd, M & P 710 Help w.-, M & '711 Applla-111 Ml.all•-111 Ml-II•-111 Pl•noo/Ort-· 1H O.,a , UC ....._I R°"'/0..rt'r.: Cyc'", lllcol, RICEPllON'tST. Maru~ ~ S.C'y/lleekk .. ,.r D ISf\YASJ.IER repairman ~vw Urtt 00 rim.I $1.-; BLUE clllp books • l'ffD NEW tlaJnmond Pi;'. M.rtlncrttt k9Mlll "'"n0Liii¥ sEAsoN Seo.ten tlJ ltJ:ly, i>vkh11nt Retirement $830. • .Fee P&id .has ~Int lt)~lkln 0( NCOnd. p!ea. 4-VW hubeapt M. , tt&mPI $2.1\ New blkt .tutochord 0rpJi. P\lrchu-1W'JIOr oocldlJ1. C:rUiteL S SP E 6 D St l n Ir' ( Ra&mct, ~l. Herl! 11 a tremmSout arowth d1hwbra. Reuon, Guam. ~ and knoekott-. tor ••ti .$10, Skat.baud . $3. ed July, eo1I .SUI01 tell $50. Chrl1tm•t S~lal1 l ~··Call~ '~ Serftmer, _... condl · I PG9ltM>o w/a stable ~nd· •'*-1•~ ·-•~1 ~--IJO ~ ••• '!"° r--' -· •-rt.E. Land Slle1 • , Ina o., Grtat advalleeme'irt! ._.. -or -· • ... .. .,.,"" rlnu . .l spetd Raque I• bad11"mon SS. -.-'"' ~ IMtl Sall tOf ~ &)i's 216''. 2 a&>d ftEAQY TO CH~GE? Sbarp attnctivr ,enon. v.·/ Cameret A • Sllnrray blke $10. 2 twin P.1etal bunk l>td• i)), Dtsk PRACTlCE PIANO $110, * Grtat Dann, I wkl , . Schwinll.,.115. 54G-2W. • • Wa, have It iar you! {l'enohslltv plus"'" •tart to . lt11ul,ment IOI mattttt1t1 al)(I box 1:prlnp, 2x4 antiqued $25, '2j l'ord ffl..7471 fawn femlln FA M1 Ly 'w In r. K • e I '69 HONDA CB 160 I ! ,,., Wlnteri be.•t·~lllna de-Wotk lm~td, Call P•t Kipn.I . ...,_ ·.... S15 • '1el. CJ: '.J'\T..,portable wttetla . A , iJres $15 each . -. ~ Mlnla'ture Sctu>auun, t ' traiJerabl1 11.llboat, · 1969. Na, ~ ~ ~ ~0'::: I~ I Ila , I ..... , 1 w.lopme.it, mlnutei from ne(ly,-1 833-21()0, Alao 'rte1 Tenhn'color lm!D projector 6 S15. '• ttt, Ntw 14'' ctieV (WIUlnr lo td.1 stpan.~ SpOrtlrt ·~ -mo'a. cropped e&r1 • Mint c:ond, loailt<t. lleepe •. F' 90 dirt blltt $151! ~ { downte1vn Ptlm Sprln,p. Jobs, Dennis&: ~nnts Pet-.. cue, JJ~ rew. f25. WhtfAi, ~ ti ~ #>. Wheel We1ttrn boots .U. f ll 59•1" O&J:lPER Vfiilina__,.~ * 10' ,PQOclle, S wt:a Sell or trlde for Oami!'I • ' ' Giant ad e11mi>a.lift will 11t· aonn~J Ag_ency, ~ MicMJ. 1 * IA2--WJ 'I' ~ver:,..,::1No1 ·4, $lS.M.lj) rec. 1198-oMlh 'St., N.B. oo.rd w/custdm handltf. * ~~ mai. • lt.00. C21l1 ) 3,jTw32lj, ~1 244, ,::::,_ .. u~. u. 1.., tr-• fr!"~.n~-,~~· n!:~~ '°"' Dr., =iy ~ 'urnlture a11 $i'~~" er" me-:,, :::·~ ~~~e l=•e, ~y~~ :;t~S • ,!";u'"t:--s ~'01 . ~ rm:oo awm-~d! yr ;A:~.s:-1•: eves~ os 4 bikir. 3-.;. m;;ffil~ K-.. .t .... ~-c:::rlntho-~N BS. Girl Ftjq&)', at t ra. ct Ive.,' DRAP•-S, -·. •--, •-,Mh. ~~.~~:. ..... ,.,""1ldou. bit Grand Piano, I'' l1ble aaw, .1'1!" HA!\llOUR' , . • ! • PQet. 1 )'l', brlndle ElcMnlaub built ·dNcol~ eond. Stro Call SJ3..17&f ...,"_,.._.. .......... "" •IUU .. ·'' nUU'u.i:. ....,_., Cbar 8oy BBQ, 'Mct.e.(M. · 5urfboud .. dapl'*"'-•IOct hull, 2 tulta North ail& new after S PM. (lfflcea. A branch of ~~ Pl~an.t title~ ~&.iu~rl ll'ff.n $15. &' cockta.IJ tablP, solid pantl bead a.ncb foot JJOt"tt lawn edam', Ke.nmore ~' ~nd ~ "'°"k! ~. * ~ Ratrieven, t 1"dy .,. $l(Q) "~INI biJtt:" .;tOOcc H ONE BIWON oo••• .. a must Good , typi.st, Sh wht IQld, Jl&tian'$15. 2 bllc ........ ,.,d.8'bl••-•r••• cabt-1 .~ •• m• hi 6'7>1345.vH. • ' • ~for<llriltmu mu, .raor, . N •· ~ ~ ht\ptul oot nect 1 Gil' ffi ha' • ~ • ·~ Htr•·• c M, '"' E TSU1T • "' p' IJJ\EB. RED DOGS f75.3460. -' ew P.lu•I, .•~ ru --nt co. • . u. .r 0 ' et c In, s1.. c.. quilted davenport, --11 •• 1 ·-·11,.~ -~ ........ ~ ----~-. ........,. --·~· -· ,.-.-office San Ocm nt Sal • .., "I'" "'"'"'" "v ~ ~-.. ' ~;.--<"'""'• · · SABOTS ~· ~1 ' PALM DESERT ' e e. ary ~ '"' condition. Beige d1venport. cabtnet. All e~lmt. -111111. ~. ~ JoM. It ,GRlili(r ·1j>ant: puppies, 4 ! • . GREENS opert Pt.one 4n..5l6.1, )tr. SOMETHING differe.nt ioc New eltctric 1 ab e r1 ,.._, ' 5f0.%U2 llHVn,.Jf.5. ~13'5 •~ -be&lil.tµuJ llilden faWn, &: 1 ~facturee: Ch rlJ't ift a 1 n HONDA.IL 350· Lilre ne"r 645-3030, E11:t. ,, Ecclu. Christmas 100% leather 547-3182. SHlP MODELS .. Fine TV R•dio MIFli _ I :brif'lllt, M 4 J', champ .. SaJ~:~~tl~~· ::·~C\»~iwNever ~ ;:;-;=====-,.,~-1 Secret.try S60I banocb A cameJnddles, CUSTOM ··-'-hand~ "" acaJ All ' ' ' ·~ Top doc on Weet ')'II, .....,.!Ola,, -· ' · RIGHT Product, R[,ht place, Young Co. Good .lkil'-839-49G4. wroW& .. t ilm'l·room ,.~ •··"-, ~can·-· '·11.,_ Stereo Ul ~ •• ·fleuon. at.i .. --..i, BAfAOA ~. Trollor, ~---Jt i &ht time, \Vh.lsle .a dividers1 rates, b'rass .......,,. '""... ...., ua. ~ ""''-=' - manqemtnt, m11rketing, Otl!'Lorra.ine MUSI'~ Hen::ulon SDfa l lampa. Gilts. 511-Sll,l, Muaeum quaJlty. Not 1rom Gattird Sy1tem' unclaJhfed ~· ' 1 3* hp outhrd. Otht'r' op.I · 1- 1&ift, distributor posit.ION \VE.)~ love 1eat, plu1h v'lveL Call Stai'oer ~•lions, .13772 lcils -by old,',Eu'ropean lay..a.way, 1100 waft~. TOY Nodle• for 4'1idatmu tiona1 llemi. P6$0. Ml.·lilO • Trwpertatlon . - epen. Salsry/commisalon 214~~if~ncyNB 64~1101. H•rbof, G.G. cralUman. PrtVatr col· a.m /fm atttea: 1· ~· mtke happy 1lfl&! f? ""P•1c,'r.';-"""629'"1.liM.icf"i'liiit;:&l ~;~;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~i l 961-3531 &t.S-:mo ·• VERY aid Bdm fun!Jtutt DIAMONDARE rint. 6 carat lection belns ll•uidaMd, slide controls. '12 'l\•ay · air l>ld. l .Uver, l apricot.1CAL 2-24, bead A i'alley, 6 ~•-• ,_,_ M 6 ....... -r+.:.:-· l300 979-14.24, t-6 p.m. s41p spkn; oompJ I u 642-'8lt, 113 Broad w a J, h.p. outboard, _main· A la .. Motor -w~~~~s~:n.~a=::. ~ -SECRETARY -~ ' ;fy .7t 5?341 ~.;~:NB G~;t~~. ~U::, -lilt. M lscell•ntoUI Gari'aNf~ 1'1M!ta'ole', Rer. CM. or~ aft 6. , per Jib. $4100. 968-UT9. , I 64~343·i Jewelry 115 lotM:e offer. 546-«78. Want ed 120 $3.SS. Now Sl99.97 oompl:. OLD Ena1b.h shffpdog p~ lJOO 14 ull boat. XJnt>~. *Mamn Pearce* Shorthand, Girt Friday, car. BRIT~NICA, 38 volumes to Save S-155. U.S.A. Slef'1\0 pie• e: wks old, 2 females,• 2 No trailer. 303L New cover, 121 RN'S ll·1aT., medir.s\ sqrgleal WARD CLERK S.llpm, nH!dicaJ &Uf"JicaJ RN l·lJpm, 08 RN I to 5, 5 day1 a ~eek, $400 dat• + wOrld Atlas 4 2 TRUNDLE BED Equip Warehouse, 179 E. lT maJes. AKC. Avail. Dec. S900. 613-0815. Motor Homes I per month, Start immediate-c:;L :-!.~!n a~'r,v~= !~ valun1e dictionary wlbook· i:'~~:1r!;rSa~;.~, ~~244c:,1· Open 7 <b-1, 17th. 53&-254~. S48:-l~ aft ~ HOBIE Cat 11 Fut 4, Fun. ' , Jfiia1e R.E. 962-Un Jan. •tie • 1tt ctn1.I piamond caae. Bes.t otter. 962.-71'37· , 546-0898 1972 ZENlTitS at the lowest pm. Xlll.t cond. Work 83.1--ioltl, SC.rel • Rentall t ring, Tiffany setting. Wed· hlO GOLD rug $35. Mal· WANTED _ .Older wooden prices in So. call!. All AKC Genmn Sbtpherd Pupi: OOme 644-6593. SERVICE Sta. Attendant, d!:lg band• included wllh m ehlnr blue 6x9 and 5x6 round colfee table wilh ode! BlkJtan1· blk/1il~. Wht, UDO 14 No 2220 trl ' 558·3222 ~;;~e :~~· AppFlyull ~ charee. Savel S-28.'>. Firm. throw 1'U.P S'7ll. Sno"1 ~ glaq top; Abaul .co Inches. ~t:'•in i:::t a~~~ Ready ..tir ChrillTllJlll T wU ~Ip. Xtra~. c.ll ~~ 1411 S. Village Way, S.A. W r ~ 0 • d SlD 644-,'""" ...... _ bl .,.,. .... , on Dec. U,l.h ('A3J ,6'J&..38U. • _ -..... _™"AM . Station, lTth IE Irvine, NB. nere to DUY 1•mon 1 · µv;r. ~na ir. ~8 Eve1. Dealer. JS" Olromacolor, A.!REDA" ~ · 1 ho · BNts, Sll-/Dockt ' 910 ~ . otor Home, J alt U·7am, 1.C.U., C.C.U. units ...... ,. l.c,. N•pp es 1 w ,..-• nd lo u ' L VN'S \ &Jtium culler 1tlll * ~'"' .. lmu Gilt Idea * GD ladles &. men'• blkts C4030, al $395. ABC Color r ,-• co ,, w m e1 . . SER\'ICE srATION AT· dla-.. t u·•-, whol···'· •·or the ""'" w &al who has I tv. 9011 Atlanta, Hu~ cfual., ~nt tor SUan:! or pet, BOAT aliP1 avail. 2.5'..fi;5', Xlnt ~ I llpm-7am, Sub acule unita TENDANT-Part time. Neal ""'".., ,,.... ~ ....... w 9P<f, Ci<l Splne1 piano or' Dell·--alt ~--· --~-tio •· RN'S price~ fTI4l 642.{Ul eveeythiJI& BUT a unique, organ miaple ·11e1 w/hulcb lington Stach. ~3329. .... ., ~. 41/uii acc<><w ...... nt w ne w T fl T I Mt in appearan~. e.Xpetienced ornate brass case National ~3-0063. Marina. fi'13-6606. r.t ert, r .tve · =~E~l~ES ·only. Apply .iseD Newport, M.tchfne~ 116 Cash Rl!'flst!Pr! We h.a~ W~~:..:t~n.I~~=~ cJ!~.!'.:!: ~-:rn. POODLES, AKC, black, 2 F. 25' SIDE !nr,.Ntwpltt Beach KENSKiL Trailer., ... ~p. ij Exper. 3-llpm C.M. -one, In beautiful cond. It. In llhoulder harness for VW. lable, tape deck, GOOD 1 M. ll wks. SlOO. Depas~t .12.2.5 pe-tt. CU Udo Park nice pu:k. SpkeWatlL.a~ LAB TECH s::i!~:~ ~.~.1~; ~~ ~P:;t~~= =~~ ::;er!~deal toJor Call 548-5380. COND. $300/ or bst otter. ~ifl ,~~~~ays, Dr, Apt la,~-~~ ,.,.~e&7 ~· tJS00. Experienced, licerwd to S160 wJc4r to' •tart. . ""'67>-7063 • boutique, etc. No '&Ui'ta~e~ CRll.D'S.~houte, and cat 646-.c671. ' ' ' SAILBOA1\4LIPS _ · ' U-8.pm Weekends Only _ .... ,,, MAPLE RCA stereo with MUST SEl..L ·AKC femalt 24' • 40' · 67J.3570 TR.AILER •l°'M .l mm o t 1i. 1 X·RAY TECH --........ MIKellaneous 111 place In our preaent horn!'. lfte. W!PlmaraM'l', 14 mo, old.I CQmP!eltly 1¥ In terl 1e d 1 •· Exper. F/tlme, 3·1lpm STENO m . ID $450. R~nt for it Ii must WI! Askins Phone &if.4687 AM /FM stereo. Sl;Al. Xlnt Good tJome w11p yd want· slee}ll t frplc, M~~ And (11 X·Ray Tech high ~ grad. Some STEREO, 1971 GUTard, bu S.325. 642-3589 Eve/wknds. Muslcal lnstrvment1m cond. MZ-3457 aft• pm. ed, 9611.ao75. I 1)wport.ltlen , 11~1 67~10. For wetkend days. knowl~e ol figures, good full stereo changer, ab' SHAG CARPETING lux· REX:'ORIOlWG Studio-Muir!/ DA~SHUND ~Jlll. v~ Tr.tlfert, Utility CENTRAL phone penon&lity. Typing s u • p • n 1 Ion sp.!akers, urlou1 wh.ire shag nylon [ , [I m1n1ature. Shots, AK c , . · SUPPL y TECH fiO, SH 80, eoo<I spelling, AM/TM 1tereo rad Io carpetin(. Have 72 square irack Ampex. Nunnon. Sony. ,,... to You J • mahogany red. M It F, . t1l1LJ'IY trailer §~' bee'tlent workinr Canditions Call g7s-3551 N.B. w/FF:r + tape deck, still yards available. W i I I Altec. AKG. By hr. or :fta't • 63J..4018, · Camper-,·S•le/Rentf20 w/r. 1ldt1.' ·New tire TELLER br1nd new, was left sacrlflc!! at half price-Just rale11esaion. Avail. lorn!nl. spare 11-.. Jdnt eon& I It frinre beflf:'fil . . • Phone day or night, 548·3694 3 Lines, ~Times, $2.00 AfGHAN Pup AKC, champ ,69 CHEV y llJ l2xl.C' 1·~ ........ .;uo: IWT ... 1 5, MISSION P /Tlme unclaimed on layaway. Sold S4.!15 Pf'r yard. Install llltl!d show or pet : -, " too •.wv ...., ... i COMMUNITY • for $321, pay oH balance of ' before Christmu. PTlvate * 5"I'RING Baal!, Kay 5 RflalOnabl~terms. 645-t».J. w/Westways 10% camper. "A-u"'to'°S.c-rv-'-,lc:o:-,-P..-•"rts,-,Mt""'' t HOSPITAL Growing Savi1111 & Loan ln Sll5 or take over amall pa.rtycaU83T-423SEIToro. string. Chubby Jackson lPARTCocker,1cockapoo Reasonable. Ask for E4 , · !' + 27802 Puerta Rel.l Hwy., Costa Mesa tee.king p/time payments. Collection Dept. s u 1t F a a ARD 1 • 6 ., model. Good condition. With type, Good w/children, Low GREAT DANE AKC fawn 536-2121 or 673-78.10. ' CUSTOM Whetls • I ho~ Millian Viejo, Calif. teller. Exper. pref'd. Excel· n4/~1. HARBOUR. Good shape. case. Price S225. 536-&'>23. able, Niet" Christmas Gift J>UPI· Champion lint. Start SPORTSC::AB 8, Sh 1 Porsc~ type with cap•. CE. on San Diero Frwy, &: lent pay, pleasant working HOLIDAY GI FT Worka Si"i. Knee board 59 .. GIBSON Elect. Baas Guitar. 646-0070 at i15. 968-4262. CIUl'lptr. c~ doar, boo~ ~ Gooi! conditktn. Fits Font of' Crown Valley Pa.rkway) conditiont. PROBLEMS? DEEPER VISIONS, cu91om Model E~ Exe/con: WELCH Tt.'rrier mother SCHNAUZERS avail. now w interior · llJ'"bts ~ Chl')'ll.11'. S6tl lor set of 4 or PHONE DOWNEY Want Somethlnit Unique? handles, •"Orka e.xCE!llent 545-9584 w/days aft. eeeks home for femaJt pup. bold 'til Christmu. Groom-546-1819. ' · S35 for 2. 675-1345 eve1. I (714) 495-4400 DECOR'ATIVE G E ODES, $EK), Wet 1uit MIL, lone 7:00pm. py, 6 wks old, good natured. lng, stud service. M6-M\9, I' WESI'WAYS %; Cabovtr WANTED '6T VW frmt (714) l~noo ·SAVINGS & LOAN MJNElRALS. FOSSn..s. joh.ns & sleeves like new ** TROMBONE ** 494-8992. HorHs 15' w/Jackl , ndnt cond: $800 fenden~I· Jt. xlnt con- t· Call ~2:-~:;;nport Visit our Mlneralla !!bow· S.C5. 6'f>.ll45 eves. GETZEN, rold, mule l case CAI.JCO cat1, mother Ii mn, 3 Yr. old buckskin 1i4 mare. Pvt. p~. 557-3111. . dltion. m. I· RN, tull tim,, ni.(hl shift room-ware~. 1307A Lo-MOVING : Solid map l 1! Excellent condiUon 2 It. 3 yn, to &ood hotne. Rf'glstert'd, broke. We 11 'Tl EL Dorado Mlnl·home. --· --- l! 7-11. Rn, pl limt, relief TALENT HUNT gan, Q.f, ne-ar Harhor Ir aecretary w/hutch. Cost San Clemenrit 492---0963 499-4lll 1ft 6 pm. §] nlaht 7-11, xlnt triogl!'bnf!a. For Fall Production. Non B«ker. 979-1424. Monday $350. Take $150. Slim-Trim FLUTE. MANHATTAN bred & v~rygoodlooking.14 Self-cont., llpe 6, all pwr, \ Aut"farSala \ !"":!. Beverly Manor, Ca Po union, motion picture co. thru Saturday Mi PM SJn· SlO. I antique cowbella S25. Great Otrlatmas GUt MIN Dachsund bred female, hands. Asking $650 terms or Winll!r raleii; 543-9313. ..,, Besch, 496-5786. seeks new faces. day & Evenine" by app't. Pedal-Trim Exercycle n5. For A Student. Good Cond. papers, :S.4.sood home 'trade. Call M().$.10 days or Cycles, Bikes, I ~-;jjjjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;iiiii;\ ' RN If 11 ... (21J) 461-3051 Maple occ . .\ end tbl SS ea. ••o. 962-4370 ~eves & weekends. Scooters m l ! ~ ' u um&, nlJ:hl ahlfl 10th 240 E 6th Pl ,,.. SMA:LL female black puppy. QUARTER lho-·'""''--.. ~~/.Claulcs ts) !. 7-11, RN, pt time. rellt:l .TRAINEE for pharmae@uti-, . l . C.M. Apt GIBSON SG Standard Gui-•vuauu•._1-:;::;-:::-;,--.,.-.,,..,,,,.=,_.,j:::-:::::::::::-;:::;:;;;:;;;:--j ~· 7-ll, xlnt fringe bnfts. cal mariufactu~r. High ANNIVERSARY SALE No. 2. ~. •·· xi I~ .,M 2 "-SN~ ltOOd home. Call after mare. Spirited. aw itetlTRAlt. Breaker,"W'l:dianve ""'"" 1-17 WIUYS P.w'. • ~... HJ'-wa,. ..._.' n •:uuu . ........-. Ou>e:r ' .,..., .. 1977, d'-poaltl•• $375 C 11 l Beverly l\fanor, Capo Schoolgrad.,strongjnl!Jath. r • •u"er uuu • E~ train, 'Ameri~n guilara S2S ea. s.E;.2932 .. ""· · a all ll!'rnln vthicJJ A Honda ~· 1 ~ Stach, 4~5786. T14/557-8ll6 tankuda, charm1, men'• Fty!f (9.~~~ a1ea.rri' enc G i G 'Id L I 3 FEM'. L&borador pupples to Laut'l!'l'I 67S-6t64 a.lt'r g pm. 305, Strfft letal.''botli ln top ' .. 1 T I 1 F 'sh E ,jeweley IE executive cifta. 12 ftt'lght' cari, _t switches U t•r• .. UI & Y e good homes. Will hold lo S6RREL Mare T yrs. old, notch cond! ~ ~t offer. ·OVERLAND I ROllNSON"S rop ca 1 xp. Ha.ni!! .I: machine engravinr on 4.xs• board plut 25 .~-. Reaeonable, 641·7-™ Chrbtmas. 897-12-42. Pltssure ridinr $300. Good 64s....434l. ~. Man for pet store. Hn J:30· done on premise!!. """ Offl f f /' .o.=..::::=,=c-===---1 · ~. •· NEWPORT e , 5:30.~pply ~o SB, ~~. NOACK'S xtra lrack. Ca .. ~. ce um ture 2 MALE kittens, approx. 2 used uddle & bridle $100. TRAIL BIKE A dU.le Horself!lls C~ •I.. BEACH • ~~. N,B, ·• \ -· ~" 102· E. 16th C:M. 646-3141 DESERT. Air Lamp. Try tor . Equip. . , 124 mo old. .,.,. S Tatty, 1!M-96!M. !;XV• <:ltMo frt.tbl¥ painted, J.uat ~w.&i~~ ~ ~~ trulll > , :WAITRESSES ' cl1ouPf"1c:idS:. Ta'b!io m6clel . IBM''' 'Model 41 E e1:x c. .......357 SELL OR LEASE. Gentle, -.iptt n.:il;d t~~· S hp appf'l!d{liv't cpn , . • , e- ;_. Has opening !or " ~lween hours, 7 to 11 a.m, * AUCn Like new. S-20. A I ' 0 Typewriter &: IBM Ex· BLACK dor medium large, pleuun!' horse. Good tot BIS engine. eompte~ with stored to liki new Colt(HtiQo. i ll 1.o 3 pm, 3 10 1 pm, No ON * DeVilbi11 .vaporizer S.1. Eve. ecyrary model 713 dlctatlnr with food.? young girl. 536-2482. Dew lnli"-le ratip lorgue .M~ ~ 's"2,3. 3rs.3.r· •l2l4l RECEPTIONIST holidays or ~~YI. Arpy'i Fine Fumlturt 54M362. niach. 831-1410 or 496-5.529. 54()..~91 Bl.ACK .I: W!Ute Pl nto converter. Full IUSP.fns!on. Coffee Shop, Sm.9 W. Eding-~~~·;fce~w NATIJRAL T&ur-rnall'ne BURROUGliSBkkp'ngmach. •••'REE Ouistmu pu~ Gelding, 8 yn SIPll w/nc:f. New rear.It tire&: m~.e:x. . L For Our F ashlon I a land Baauty S.tlon. Must be 1 e x p • r . & know lite bookkffpl"t'. Xln't s•I· ary & ben•fits Includ- ing frM hairstyles. C•ll For Appl. Mr. M•rr•ll 644-2/IOO, ext. 326 er' Eudid, Santa Ana. Mink, lrg dbl fur shawl col· S.100. Victor adding mach pi,PB, Le.b/Shepherd, !58 w. die It. brldlt. ~2. tras: ~u r .ee thf) one Jo Nabers ca'dlllac WAITRESS for coUtt: 1hop, Auc&';!";i~~,'~~ p.m, J1r jacket ·W/full tum back SJO, 3M eopltr 2 yn old $50. Bay, Costa Mt's&, 548-5164. appreciste. ~1879 evei. AU'IHOfUZED DEALER exper. ApPly in perton, W indy's Auction Barn rockt11il cuffa. Make-ot:f~. 673-,9510. CHlHUAHUA's, licensed [ ~ · J~ BICYCLES 2600 HARBOR BL., Mesa Lanu, 1103 Superior, 642.752".J. BURROUGHS Elec. adding w/papers, female It. ma.le, ....::-~·--I'll: ,.,e HUGEftockotR<lghChop. COSTA ME.5A C.M. ~15~ Newport, CM MG-8681 EARLY American daw,.. machine A: stand. •JS. . 545--3745. ' ~~ 1' , .. 0n ·.t Tourenl.oy. Mal>' a few 541).9100 Open SUndaJI .. ~ Behind Tony'1 Bldg Mat'l '" _...._ .. way for w .... ~, .,,., entf'l'etic peoplr port, maple hutch. m1ple 644-1091 ....... "'""' ' . Dune luniet '56 Who ·-"-'of -r'"•• l"• DRESS form, hand erdpr, t-•J « '-Id Chriatmu. Slan 1 Bike Shop ._. .. w~ -vlU • ._..., d step ... e. otue JIUl day MONROMATIC Rot•"" I ll~l General fOO am~ .. ""'·1.,w .. 1mina:',,_ ........ -..._.,-;·,-----I ... -..,•want •---~-•1,. ru ryer, rur •hampoott, .. _. 2 hand ~wn _, _ ... _ ~""~-'· '"I ••• ~--I """'· ,.. mowers, Calculator 6; stand, Model I· . -ter 194-2588. TANDEM U e tn.l1u -will dependern. WI'. tnin. Call map e huteh. lge recliner, bet llcht 642-6771i . SCRAM LETS ,.;;;;;,..:;:;;,;~;--::--..,-,= .I: make appt for person.al clothes hamper Ii mist. am fNag · · N, SllO. 644-1091 . 1 • Hor Dirt bike Kaww.kt 90 hold dunebud)' · a: 2 •··t•·-. <~ =••. Ml-1116. 23" ref:rig freezer, fi5, Gas Pl /O 126 ·port~. T175, NIP• pi&n'. l!\(ltorcycl~1. Alk for :Ed, .. ··-__..... stove Pl. abo stroller &. •nos rg.tns Pets, General .ISO ANSWERS FuU .Mi.'"1521. ·; S.%121 or ,6"ll-71SO. EquaJ Oppnr, Employf'r WANTED: Neat appearing 2 Tourmaline Mink stole1, walker. At>t sz ntrig $25. . , VW RAIL ... _, ,. h. like new, tialf --'-S350 .t PIANO & ORGAN AT'l'ENTION rare anlnWs. ·n HONDA 115cc Scrambltr. • UU6U• ~ p. ----~-~ ~~,,.~-ROY Alvarado naw in-shltt. Newport Center Tex· $300 Kingslze blul!' velwt * * SALE * * yng leopards, monke)lll, Entity -Uthe -Vliet -Mlleagt 160. Sac. i:iso.'Mu1 ;t''f a:md $450 &75.DIMf. ' terviewinz 1h•mpoa itlrl1, 644-fili') IJ)read $35. Te11 Wagon $50. GENUINE Beaver hat SlS. Tremendous dlJ1COunt on fam-birds IE reptiles. Whah!'ver Unlike -. 'JIAKE IT tell. 673-5654. · · · · h · ' • · uaistants, ityliall, recep-aco, · Ste.el file with sale $20. Cktail dreues. new S5 to oui brandi. Christm .. de· ?-' want we ha~. vtry Sign ln a Miahll Beach BIKE 10 Speed ·n OUNEBUGGY nt'!1''1urbo tionist. manlcuriat, broken WANTED exp'd ~n for 873-6932, 673-.8591 $15. Lead crystal ballVI, livery ruaranteed. No p.,y. inexpensive. Place )'OUr restaurant: ''Our Silwrware Call aft 4 chara:& ,Corvalr. Wei · than dawn hairdres54!1'~. Ir: lOlots Mobil Service St at i o 11 . PAN 0 S 0 N IC 1 1 e r~o, marble bue, new S22. CoaUI ment 'til F~ruary. on:ler now 548-5484 aft S pm Ia 'Not Medicine. Don't TAKE . ~~O pm 600 mt xtni eond. '133-1996. •t H11.ir Hunters, N.B. Harbor Ir. Gf!isler ,C.M. l dreuts S5 up. 644-5442. ChOOAe from: GOLD FISH IT Alter Meak." • u~ lad! 3 .. • Trucks Platinum ring. 2l dlsmond1. ELEGANT le everyday y h • Chi •--~ < 12" b--bl M . C It """' ne.w, ea • . $30. ff2 644-1151. Pr. 0 1 d .tmbe.r bracelets, ams a C1<1!r1Jll • n.e1190l'la e price ar1ne ontu .tnt Boy's BUut S3J 170 DeJ ~-· i· SAL ESMAN Il l\..) Chinese rosewood chest. clothea Womena sz:. 16-18, Conn • Thomas Dlll Cove Circle, H.B, INDEPENDENT CM .aft 5. 5'8-6419 .. mar, )'ounc, aure•sivit. experi· Mwdilndile V Carved con110le tab I e Estate aale. Thro Fri. Fl&cher • Schlmmcl 963-2022 e Purcha1lng-' • ence ml necessary. Full 675-3959. 642-365.'i. Kohler I: Campbdl *SHERRY'S POODLES* Counseling on purchulng fill HODAKA, frail or st bike IH. commission pa.id while train· CUSl'OM built loC ca.bin CHE51' type freetf!r S75. * See & hear the Optiian HOLIDAY PYPPY SALE boats A: equipment wry tail, .many 'Xtru. M111t j Ins. Management 1uis1anC1! Antiques IOO ihakir r 0 0 f electrlcallJ Slingerland drum & •l•nd ~~:;Uy ~o 'tll 9 St&-28411 e M .trlne Surv•yor sell . Belt offer. 6!3-3J15. ~t:lonal Harvelfer at all times. SallPtl Jl()lition __ ..... ______ w i red. 'v:. :x8' Sl 00 . $25. Adju1table gym~ stand cOAsT· MUnsi~5 LARGE black Arrow an a ~2977 1970 KAWASAKI, 600, xlnt R~TION CENTER I with. future. Demo A.Vlli1· WVELY rosewood piano. Naugahyde mra hide-&~. 'brushes ss. 548·2$5, NEWPORT & HARBOJ't fish, mull see to appreciate. • ... WANTED*** cond. MUlt ".IL .Detperate! ROY c•RYER,'ln~. able, insurances. C • 11 Circa 1860. Xlnt cond. Beau! gd rood $25, lrr book rack WATERLESS Cookware, 19 "--ta M"' * ""2851 962--011'.1. J11vestmeol trust& wlll ~dt . :Beil oUipr, 64:>-29919. ~ u ... ~ B".J . r~-7 ton!!. $950. Will deliver I ....... in.-Ull 4''1~ n-.1--IVU. ~·-· SS. 147-5002. pc., lJ.S triple PY· Stainleu Dogs 154 $50,000 In diamonds + cub '65 HONDA 305 Costa )fega ' ~ SALESMAN NEEDED .::.~::. c;;~:~· ~a21 NEW records 15c. used 2Sc. 1te1P.I. Guam. mo. 646-0l!M. * SALE SALE * for 45' lo 65' ve1sel suitable Must fflll Best offer! 1963 CHEV. ~Too P.U. <New , MISSION VIEJO N rt Bl"d c M Brid• dren, ,,.,, s . ..,11·.. flREWOOD FOR SALE PIANOS ** ORGANS for Oceaqraph.ic ttffuch. 548-SHlfi after 5 pm pa.int, tires, clutch. olhv ewpo .. , · · ~ , .,.._ 1WO Poodle puppie1, J male, ; For sales worlt in MiMion .,~,.__1970. 15. New clothe!; ~ ..... _ ' Oranre-.I: Eucalyptu1 Steinway, n.awat, Hammond, Phone Mr. Smith C714) '70 KA w 4 s Al<! JOO e1>1:tn1.s ind"•11-air cond. v· jo nd c .,..,.. .. '6• AU •-•d 1 female, qe 1 weeks. ....... ... :; tf! year arou . anv.11 s~· UNUSUAL colltttable iilVtt S2.75. Baby tum., nN' , 544-7653 en, °"' llVin, ~. From Phone 894-3S6f alter 6 P .M. ~~ Greemtreak. Comp). o'haul. SH ti) api>reclate!-~1871. : ~m~x~i ~9 f;1f~~ Russian. English, Du tch., jewelry, etc. Tr. stampe DINETTE ff't. & chain S25. $295, ~~~~:~up, MIN Schnauzer pups, AKC. 13' BOSTON Whaler, 40 HP WO. 557--3289 alter 5:30 pm. 1950. STUDEBAKER. Xlnt ,_ ttrvlew. also other a ntique •. O.K.147·7923. Z gallon IE 5 tallon Sa.tlG-6 Sun12-6' t'tl.lmp blood line. R!ady Johnson,Topcond,S-1000. '69 BRIDGESTONE mech. c:ond. 6 ~-Good SALESMAN 838-5866. CUSJ'OM Wheels • I holt1 aquarium SJS/$6. 831).1(136, FIELD'S PIANO CO. tor Christmas:. 714: 963-3100. • * 645-0!llM ** moforcych1 . Ii:x-c Good tins, RltH. m. 657-61.17. * CKIUST ....... ~ * Porsche type with cape. 19" PORTABt!E 1'\T, UHF· 1 ..,:t Ne-Bl··•. h.tts •. M.tint./ cand. UJO, '46-3062. •n CHEVY Vari, aht wheel 1 r You"-Ch. Gd potential ~ ~ ,._... · """ -t<U•• vu AKC Mile, 6 mos. Irish Stt· • :1 Call Mr,, Schmidt Enti~ Stock Discounted vuuu condltion. Fila Ford or \'HF SJS. Boy's 2>'• blkit Costa Mesa 714/645-3250 S~rvlce f02 Hond• Mini Trail $125. baH. air vent, ~t 11>- ; , WESn:.'LlFF Omarr'1 AnUques 548-3713 Chrysler. S60 tor •t of 4 or Sl5. M8-652t. HAMMOND Org11n, walnut, :~~ske~1!J s~J~54~~ 847.()458 daya sulatlon, $77t!O, 19'-!\«. 1. Perwonnel Ac:ency 410 N. Old NewPort Rd. NB $35. for 2· 675-ll45 eves. 19" P 0 RT ABLE 1'V 25 pedal&. full manual1 OLD Engllsh Sheepdog pup. BOAT bottoms clellltd ~ 'Tl HONDA 175 Motorcycle '10 FORD Super-Van, V ... I,; 1'.)43 Westdltt Dr., NB Appl/an•·• I02 Water KinJ", full aui.:i, w11ter UHF'-VHF S.15. Bay's 20" .,,./tcarCI!' chimney LeaUe + be 1 r _, per Ft. of fe"flh at water 700 ml. Xlnt cond. 1500 •r Auto. paoeled insul. $2.195. 7T7 -rt till I t bike $15. $48-6.529. H nct py, au · em ... e. 1l wits. I " be ~1$25 I ~ ·---=-w,,.;.,..='---COST + 10"!. :v:;e"~~. Fa~ll;ar,~:~ :'ms~09.~ speaker, xlnt AKC. 968--6114. ~ne. ~552.1. b1r oUtr. 34T-62:lo. or it. ·6 tNB. ' SALES APPLIANCE .... ~ 54:l.f:J81 I' WES1WAYS % cabove" co c'OULD. MUSIC 3 BLACK male Ox::kannn 8o•tt/Marfne ·n 'Yamal\a, OT-l-MX 250 '67 ECONOUNE. Heavy dU· : , At SCRIPTOMATIC, ""·e look ~! ! . . , w/jacks It. boot. Mint eond. S!nl'.'f! 19U puppies SlO. each. .,....... Equip. 904 wfxtru. ! mo'1 new. Mwt ty V':n <;:amper. Sl2l0. or :. tor csrttr men ... men who ENTIRE STOCKI I POOL TABLES Warehoute $800. Pvt. pt;y. 5.li~l13. 540-l.l75 tell 675--8783 all 5Pm. best 'offsr, 4f:ll-4870. want tD 1e1 olf the strttt via Rl!frlaerat9r1, Wuhtts, Dry. Sale. Freight damqed M9 QUALITY HO Tnln. Unlted 2>45 'Na Ma in, S.A. 61 E , promotton lo alf!ll eupervil· •.rs. TY'1. Convenient to $199. New alat• fa ctory k>i:o. MRC lrans. powel"-" * S4T...a61!1 * **XUfl\.quaJlty Auslralia.n WE buy used. outboard GREAT Ouiltmu Gilt ' oooo .... ,v~ A.l~~J . • -. --•., m•"·-r • bn&ndl Termt. ted S195 I 1 3 9 5 _.. S I Sil!Q-s, 6 wkl, Call 6'4-2465·. moton a: parts, running ar ·n Zebra mini-bike owner. AM• QIJIU• ...,_, ... .., • ._.. ~__,;. """ •• ,,.. 0 • .I: •ettss. 147-4954 altM. peel• Holld•y S..le not. Mesa Boal Center, 00 XInt cond 675-1753 615-1623. ma.naier. A1I U 1ake1 ia Fi1'111one Store, 47$ E. --. .....--. Jo'REE Glf'T'S aft S, 548-MM. C M •~-~-~---=~• bard wont, tmart ea1" 17th St., C.M. 6f6.UU POOL T1ble• llate -up. DBL maltnu A box spf"J•· wtnl PURatASE GERM SHEP P"P•. '"C. Nl!'W)>Ort Blvd., , • ·n KAWASAKI 250 E, l mos Aute 4a1lnt H4 I .i.... ..., -Never ulecll. Cbst SUIO. f15, IUI> 64&-62i9. Id -.eme, pr'OJler organ u.._. FORCED fo 1t.D tltt:t 23(1 Chuck's BowU. & Bllliuds 536-lll4S, ~1651. HAMMOND Be1ut, healthy. champ line. n--t p ~ :_,; .,'..,':"J~'s'' like M'W· $625. GI A ~ rtabt e.ttilude. lt \'Oil wall fie.ttrr, like' new 27SO Harbor Blvd. at ORGAN STUDIOS Bred for lemperament. Do. t, ewer ~ __ ,.., •u • LIASIN "°"n 'n! )'0Ufll 2 125 to 35\,: SlOO. Gu ran,!' 1150, Singu Adams, C.M. ~1303 Opt1t DRAM' Beer li>me dispenser In CORONA DEL MAJ\ 644--0263, 2 MINI Bikes • Very good SAVE on lmmlcut.te sr-- td, have )'Mn OU Golden Touch a: SIP.w 1110. Sun'•· equipment, new. ~. zs:;4 E Cout Hwy 673-39..l> •nnn .,,.LE .,..., ...., 1912 16' Enltrpriae tri·hull eoixl. New moton. S125 tor driven vehicles. uJte e:xperlence. looklnt tor 142~ • 642-7643 • · · n.vvrvu> ,,,....... TE:t· Bowrtdff w/U'I llP (.0 .• both. 545-42M. •rr Maverick f di. Auto., • QC'# Wnntns January · i' UR.EB R. E 0 German LOWREY Pianos .I: OrzaN; R!ER Pupt-Ch. Bred.~Nn P.S Uk "12. a.nd the above prollle CLEAN lat e model Shepbf"tds, 11 wb, female• roR aa1c uted motel thfft• Yamah&Pl.no4Dra:ana; A: abed/amt.II. Aft 4 .. S»-1732 fuU canvas A trs:. whet:1HDNDA 1910 Q..115 Xlnl air. " · Pl'tdm911 titA ~ •. ,Cf.U Mr. Co~·. wuhu / tlt)'tn I mtch teti. $25. Old iron bed $125. n 11!11. cuea $.15c, rood cond. Steln.w-17 Pianoa. Best bu.YI $17$. trailer. Tbe moat popular cond: t.ow mllta.ge $'50 :px. t,000 mlltl. $1' nio. Sll-$1J' for confldentitl In· Oel...tO ~ par. 5.11-1637; 9'1-2336. s..l&-2$13. • in riew It: usaf, Sdtmldt SR.EGOR GERMrn SKEP. bolt al winter pria!I, only Prtv~te party ~ . mo. open Md. ' ' •~ m "', '3495. BU1 now It .. avt. ' '71. LTD• dr, H.T.'1"1lll PoW. tHview. -1 DOMESTIC A au!o mechaate TRAIN 6 car RI HO. Mu1lc Co., Est. 1914, 1901 H. KENNE LS . Be au t. Men Boat Center U9l OJOPPER' '69 Triumph er, tt;ct. air. Ver, few mil· USED Apartmtnt silt tools, Ma~ wubtr, yard moun!td on Ir& t1bte. Xtra Main, Santa Ant.. Cbriltnw pups. Terms. Newport Blvd., 'c . M . Bonnyj'-600, xlnt c:ond. ts. m mo.,. mo. open end. '· TIME FOR Cj)UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY f'ILOT WANT AD 642-5671 STOVE. I.Iii mo ... equip. HOW. Wllaon, con, ""'"· ~l&Q. PRIVATE PARTY WANTS 527-<93!. ~ . Mutt 1tll. · 1600 iMS-3600 WE Wsi; ALL POPULAJI *Call 6'1340l3 * CM. Otcllllscope $)0, ~09tJYPIANOP'ORC\SH. SJLKY tfiniers, -;3 adult SUMME~ will be here '68 TJUUMPH Trophy 500cc ~MA~TCQMPETl· USED Doubll!! Dool" I' SLATE, POOL TABLt 5.>i·T16' e1t 1 PM ' S.U.22TI ftmale1, ru~n•ble to IOOd btlore YoU know It! BU1 our ~kf' • nins grea,l. Ce.II Cf.11 ·Maleolm lteld for JtEFRIGERATOR JOO lncld icce.arlee, $2'73. Xlnt * * AQUARIUM, !ill 1atJon 'WURLITZER. homt1. Baby'• al I e rs I c • 1972 GltslJ'OJI It Sabrf Craft 612-1310 b~n. 1 6 ~ pm. f\Uiher detil•, .. r.11 613-8088 * 'oond 1 yr old M• -· ~-.. ·, ~nd -. -" lilt•, eltclronlc piano ~3."4J. =-=".,;;-::,.,c:...::."7-::::.-1 · · · --· 1ml1I"' <n• ,,.._ mi 200 * 644-723f1 ,;;.;;.:.;,______ bo6tt at winter prltfl• A Vacancltt cott money1 Rent THEOOORI GE Bulltln oven, aood cand. UVING CHRISTMAS OirT, MUllt .ell! 673-1981 S LmLE dolls for Chrlstmu. aave. Me&& Boll.I Con!er }'Ol.lr houH,. apt., 1tort ROllNS•,ORO m. 31!" 1tainleu 1tte1 stLLTNG MY $ 0 NS A I A aood want ad ta a aood Turn unllttd lttms into qukit 1'1111 ~ aprlcoi male1 159$ NtwtJOrl Blvd., C.M. bldJ., etc. a\N • Daily Pilot _))60 Har be, Blvd. r&ntf! vtnl "5. 645--2%15. COLLECTION. m..14~, tnw:mnerit c:uh, c.ll &UaTI 2 tno'I old • '4M685 ~ O.ulJied Ad. Colla Mt11 ---Mi«no -'-"--,----------~,--' I • I I I \ ! I • I I • I l ' ( • . . n.u,, 01a111l1 14, lm •• 1§1 --ti f;:~:i I§} I ....... 3 I . 'C I ,.,.. • .,... ·• .._ m -·'"•'1"' m~lhld "° ~"'-"'.....,.._ 1'lod "'·~~ ~ il!oo•-.41191t . ~~ U 'ii'AiiX 11 'G. ·-'72 18YIJA , fn!m, lully 'equlp'd, air, 1968 SEDAJI DE YUE 't8 CONT: 1-.. PA **"*'64 Mercury ' dr '66 . dtDS '18' '81 l'Ol<T., -Clalllc car. 'lllln whoell; • > · JMtber, oil xtru • A1lo '69 , >JC. a111o, 11111 pwr, 2 ...-; ,-.,, lull•pwr,. air ....i, ·~~ ,M lo <Ir Au!O; . ..-. .air amd.1 ' .-, s.." drl,. to ap-Lo ... Solec:tlan For Coupe de Villa e '10 FACTORY ·ao1<1. bit. vm,t ...,, Dr • ., '1111 DUii! ... u , l5liO. ~ Ff," .; j. i<I> JOOG21"l ' =.":"1e-:.:.=..-;;:~·:.::~""l' lmlflediclte \!°":.4~11~ AIR CONDITIONING .;:w:l548 :... -~~;:.. XRT :r:...=--t:,~· pAY(R~POHnlC _,.. CHEYIOlEJ Jd, .... " 1'""v, $850. .,.. Delivery! Authorioed Doalar Padded 1Xlp, -" JM-, ~ auO. !ull pW,. ;i..ar jfllO no.. -<>'P>'Mnls. , _ -~.......: "80'-Bl"1. at ~air Dr. -•n ~· .,..iii{ (ll.523-~ ~~· full -· ...,, ....; 1>11< ~·-·J ~ ~tblo.1 " '""''"''*'·-· ", .. ,. ,;_.,_,. -r-r,-;:;; a.la Ilea sa.aorr -otr : Blf!:l::l:' On AMX :.;;:&: ~."= ;;,'i.e.-.,...... , , ~AN_. .Ip.;~·~ : :' "'.' , , * Sl'5 * Alt for SU. MtDtpr 11211 a..... Bl"1. . -~-·JENSEN •11 ToYo3s Sentinel • ..,, 1.ow. ,..,. -• COiYAiR • · ~ • 'IS orAS: P.s:.>.B. • • 11162 ""'*• · JENSEN . 70 AMX .., cvsxm) . . . < Brand --l4SO lluno ..... 516-1145 MT• ~ KINm Atm!ORIZED ~ L•...:1 F1c1ory a>r, ••tomatte """'· Nalien CadlDac 1961 COllVAIR 2 D•"'r ~ 1'7t MUSTANGS • 557-8158 • , RAMBlER . SALES:.smVICE 11nro-1·1 .... -....... i-· -AuntORIZED~ Moma,,spdtdclc,All/FM Hll1Z:CORP. "<180kkllelmbnt88Sl>oil... n·•·~·-·. dr ,.., : IUI• II •Vtey ..,.,., 691DlZ • -· HAlUlOR m.. ---.......,. m w. Kof<lla, Anaheim ,..,. ml..E><oc. car, May .. '61 ~~. • • .... Pald ,;. """ deu .,.. cu S239t 1 COSTA MESA lmn!'<o tnl' Current In-•(n4} ~ -8-6. 'ihmnobu. Corp. new ......._ ~-• , TOP DOLLAR ·IN CASH NEWPORT IMPORTS po;,!· tor er bOt. , -. • • 540-9100 Opon &ul4ty -ttlclcer. $ 3 ~S, '61 ..._, !IT V,,1 .ir' 1';3-W, '18th Sl -84&<ICIS 1 SAN;rA A~ DODGE t9lll -· °""'" Mea ·ss ·00> eonv •. Saer111'ee. "5.l810· ' ' ·.-. "'· .au1o, ·,,.,. ·iu.;; PLYMOUTH STUDllAK 1401N,,...tln YOU<SW~tEN W"!"in owner,., ml., CORVE11E '.'brkt.\.-$900orofter ' • ~ • 1• • :i • . 135,3691 3UIO w. Cout HW)'. ' , .. BUICK I """''·. lWI,' .... -. '64+-<321· . ' '<18 F\1rY ID $500.2 dr hd !<>P.· '52 STUPllBAKER _picl<..,_ hni'i'pP:;<liY;;'l'OPro;;;;;,ll();m:LL.\RWt 1-_.:N~e!'!wpm~rt~,~Bea~ch~~ ---,,,,....----! · 1'vt· party. ~· ..014 ~VET 327 AM/TM reblt '65, Auto. Shfft PIS: R&H,1 auto, dian. with .campe_ri_ Exe: mech;- , FO~'J'C!PUSEDCARS KARMANN GHIA 81"11 Yates . ''· nnnnnnuu EL~,'69 ;!l<c.......r .e ...... cluh:h6 .. 1mtn!fr.. ·-* ~. 61?'>-T48l'btwn9pm&6am oond.&olO!fer,833-2603. ".:::., 11 -"'-''·oo_KARMANN ____ G_hia,,__-... ,.. ~·= ~~ ~~.,.,:. .. ·~ =··~::.)o;!, "f. r;.~r:; =.:x~ .:-~: PONTIAC T-BllD > . ~u:'1;1: ,,,_ , . T'r,; ~·t:,)h ~ ~) $399 • , CAMARQ .:i~~VETl'E Conv~. '$1290.0LD8'Mll!51SMOPvl pty, TRAN~·,;.;,,;;u-..1GTc>, '66*T~~!:;".!.i, Oltta'-, ..._.,,.. LOTUS , DJ.VE ROSS PONTIAC '67 CAMARO. Roll>I ~ Jun/tm. 6 l!lO't o14-Mu.t BILE r • new paint(-. 3 tpd aulo, 'bucket ,..,., maa·. whll& · . fiilCSRTSWANTED . 2ta>Harbpr-Blvd.atFairDr. 327 engine-. P/,S. P/B. aell.675-3985.Unoans. 0) • xint<cOrd,Sl~.,.m-1221. clean, orlJ o~ )90Q ·-' -oran,e Countiel LOTUS Costa Mesa 5f6.8017 Bucket seata. Needc aome Cn4)' )G:.34,tt aft 5 pm, U1o Olds Delta 88, 2 Dr., A€, '68 PONTIAC Flreblrd, low 64!>-2562. ?. TOP J .BUYER Atm:JORIZED. .. '65 J3UJCK WILDCAT. ~ body work. Allldtv $800. '63 'STINGRAY ; all powu, 'vinyl top, $2,00'.>. mi's, many xtru. Xlnt .IJ'um UINlld .._. tnlD ~ BILL MAXEY TOYOTA SALES & SERVICE , . ~· 1a6tory alt condi· Must Sell this week l New ~t/engmt,' map. \' , "<. .. ~7Zl , cond. ~. cub, can·--· . 1888llleadl Blvd. Authoru.d 'Salas A_~ ti<min(, CPIXG29) . 551-4861. . .c.n alt 5 pm -· A·-·1-980 .. ~. N 980 SA•"-Now no H. ......_ < P!L UT4555 321152 ·Vallo. Rd., · $595 • • ' · .. .., --· •w · ' .. .,.. · San Juan ca...,._ DAVE ROSS PONTIAC '6T CAMJ\RO. Rally SpOrt. COUGAR AutM..1-1M 970 837s48ll0/~-"'8Qllarborsivd FaJrDr 3'T • ..,.., P/Ss P/8,' ' • '!1,.»Z. ll,llllO m1•1 e '70 '68 VW CAMPER . Coot& Meoa 'at 5f6.80li ~ ,:;',;'.,.... I::; r;:;, lll67 COUGAR , l"Cll'ICDe 911::.x Tar1a, JIOOW.CoutHwy. ' . ~ ,'67 'BUICK . Speciji} 4"Df,; Must Sdl thll week! Goodcond~ ,J12X) flawlea • •n Alfa vSpyder ~='N°"....,..'="'°'Bea"'cli"'== Pop 'top 4 apd dlr Fully Very ·&OO<t cond. Lo m1'1. 557-4861.: ~ ~4 G-r: ~ MERCEDES BENZ camper·tQUI...;., T.ike'<>ld, ,...., P(S.. P/B, A/C,l,,6=7~CM!AR,,:.,.,.=o-,..~,~,.-onl)'~ ·DODGE er 'foreign .car. or ~ '~ cond. Lo nu'•· 17,000 mu,;: ~ new. ~,..,,;,,,,,,,....,;;--~-,..~: MORE · down. Can tinanee. 546-8736 , · Qll'Ome' mags stick. Mllft ~64 DODGE, Good Cond. A~~ 5~ Dealer or 49U8U. CWJBOO&) · '66 BUICK ~ Sa,ber, new sell, $12>0 or <liter. 540-4013, $325. pr •totter '69VWBug,·Mr,Aut0Trans tra.ns.,Xlnt tires, air cond..,I~-',,=====--6'>s5.181 .~LFA OMEO. fi~.:"'~te;; t:~~u.!.:Z.~:$650·"' _ ~~~~~u' FORD ''9Al!aRomeo.G. SJio1ut• -otter 64es26911 d.,.. -. CADILLAC. *'nCHEV;,1"1~ALA*l---1'7-0-·""Fo""R'°'D-- 1't,o'head cam, 4 .pa. 56745t0 eve1. Cus'lom Cpe, 350' VB, &Ir, GALAXIE 500 -·~•-8• ' ...... -............... ... -""'"""._.. ..... :,,pm.•. 1961 VW Bug, httden:, es, vinytmtertor. 5tocboole 2 Dr. H.T. lmnlaculate -AUSTIN HEAL:EY '10 MERCEDES. BENZ · 280 chrome whll, roll bar, no LARGEST · from. Hum'.' 0 low.. sporty attractive light ivy , ' . SE Coupe, lS,OOO·ml'•· ,;..,,_ top, extra body, ·rwuo good, SELECTION OF, ..,795 yellow with . gold lnrerlo'r, '60.~"'iln Healey 311110, Good ~ tulf --L ~ $300. 212 Ogle St No-,C, Cr,! , CADILLACS IN •• """' brown landau roof. :SIMPLE PRICE FACTS Ford -Motor Compa11y'1 ,AppJlcatlon for, fair price 'In-. er.cises on 1972 models is now a11proved by the Price ' . ' . Camll!!ss!on. As of now, howevtr. we ,t1a 1 !Jeni• .row ,lljlo'11 row of beautlflil new '72'1 .held at 19~1 ·~" 4i& prices LESS OUR REGULAR •: YEP· . r> ?' A R 0 U N D VOLUME SALES Di5-IJRi'i1 cou.NTS. Come In toctai and oond. !700 "! 1>eot otter. dri,.., Toba~ b r n , , att s. OSRAA.LNEGS.ELECASOU1NNTYG. , Macffoward Auto. trans., radio, boa~ • . ,P<Jl>!o:.i:;-o::.:'"'~·;;,· -~·,.;-·--I w/Cogmc Jthr inter. (tt.f) '69 vw SUndlal c&mper very , power .steer., fadot;Y· a Ir •, BMW' 526-4570 clean mt 11 triuned AUTHORIZED 8.19-9600 or 531-0608 rond., hU?Ty on this one. · · • m 11 ' .. SERVICE.. Corner 1st &: Harbor Cea.ranee Priced (3$.AUH) ~ SAVE!-. ' ~& ROY CARVER, Inc. ,-292f5 ~ Blvd. Cotta Mesa ' 546 4t4C. , CORTINA . MG &st otter, Ms..58<4 . or . N be CadiDac Santa Ana $1175. Jolmson & Son, 2626 ~3273. a n I '7() CHEVROLET IMPALA. Harbor Blvd., Ollta ·Mesa.: MO Atrm0PJ1Jl:D • SA1.Es ii sERVICE NEWPORT IMPORTS ·n vw ~per. AM/FM 2600 HARBOR m... vs .A _,_ 540-5630. radio. to,® -".-like . COSTA MESA ' aulo., ~ctncy ~. pow, 1969 FORD ~-... er ateerfng. (l~G) new. $3595. 64&s5033 .,.,.., 5tJn9!00 · Open Sundall $2199 LTD COUPE 646-0;81 """'· 1969 SEDAN DE YJLL( DAVE ROSS PONTIAC Style, leador. Cool orctlc * '69· WESI'P,HALIA poptop •2480 Harbor Blvd. at Fair pr. white with dark blUe inter- . AM/FM., ~ xtras! Like FACTORY Costa Mesa 546-*'IT i?r &: ~u ropt, .A1'to· new. Muot oelL Dralled! AIR CONDITIONING * '71 CHEYY'1 * 1tans., radlo, beater, lactocy 597-3808 673-0694. . IMPALAS • CHEVELLES air cond., pwr. steer., pwr. ll.00 W. Cou:t Hwy. POputar Alpine white 'flth , brks., pwr. windows&: much Newport Beach 1965 VW black vinyl top. Beautiful CAMARO S more Clearance pr t c e d 'II FORD .CORTINA GT.' · Good Condition black don>& leather trim, HERT.Z' CORP. ~)·$2175. Johnoon· & ~ radio. <YPV145J MGB.., , New Brakes -New aufch tuU JlOWl!f', AM·FM ra~io, 221 W. Katena:· Anaheim Son, 2626 Harbor . Blvd., , , $199 . . '68 MGB-GT' I ~-Wire !$0. 962-0262 tilt & tel""°"'c . •teenng, (714) 77J.4050 Coot& M .... 54().5630, DAVE Ross -n1AC , • ...., '66 VW, &d cond. Nev new door lock, etc. Local low . . . '*'.'7'711 FORD'S* r-. .-heels xlnt. ~ ttre Pvt. party Call "mihqe: gem.that l'bawa U• '69 Chevy Klrigswood Wiil ~ · · 3Ck~.Blvd-l!!':-:1 ' * :~ ~-ii ~ii4B. : ' quisit., care. {817AG~) V-8, air,·g pus, delqxe in-~~ANGS ~ :"""D· ·-·n.. PEUGEOT W~t b<lta with Nciben·eacr.nac: ~~':.."'7ic':i.m H"'"'T.Z CORP "''~" ' ' • ~ ~ for VW. AtrnroRlZED DEALER •~v • ...,. ,..........,, SI\ • " P.U.IQT ' Coll 5M-5.180, 2IOO IWlllOR BL., eves. !Ill W. lla.O.. AnoJ>elm . 1'EW :n P1CKUP • Neri. '66 vw Sundial c 'cosr4 MESA '70 IMPALA 350 Cust epe. (7141 77MOSO ' spd. dlr. •cnt Bumper.~Ra· Demo,!!'~., In ' XL.NT c0ND • am~ Sf0.9100 Open &md&y PW•Bll/caredP s • Xlnt I t,llhapel . l'A "10 TORINO Squitt Wagon, dio.Mirroni.-'PL'721UO.TUe ...... --*** &15-5568 *** >g'fCAOJLLACSe&m.deVille. • n g a.is, fullpowtt .. XlntcoDd.$21Xl. smalldOwnortrede:-...m SalULServlot. Parts Fun power ta'C!Ol'1 air ' Polyglas. $2450 •. ~. Wkdays . after T pm &: ~ -FRITZ WA[lREN'S '70 VW BUG • ' -~, ·-altr 10· -·-·-Sl!clRT'CAR.CENT,Jili AM/F"M • XINr COND. (ZWOO!S) ~0 CHEVY Kin-Sias ~ ~· '69 DATSUN 510 4 dr. _,, TID ~ bl i!A. S<ls(!lll '$1>'i;o M4s8117 $2199 -Wgn, P/1, P/I>, air, Xlnt. 1961 FORD G<lule. PIS, :...-:-~= radlO O,,.:,•PO· t-RS'l,.-iHE~ lS!l~Bu&.xlnt-.for:::~O~!,~.~J!~ .:-i~ ._-, T, ~. ~/be~ll~ '.1'> DATSUN P,U. 12,llllO , , C $G5. Pr!~. Coot& M-5f6.8017 hydro, PS, air <0nd. $19) .. 5IM880. mt·~ tamper DD. 1mlP. '68 CADILLAC SEDAN DE firm, 892-4IM1. ,-*""'69=-=ro=RD::-::Ranch='"""w:-....,= AMjm, XlnL 5f8..7988. OYDR 25 WANTED: VW racjm for VILLE. Full power, fa<."tory '63 CHEVY Statton· Wgn., 327 $550. 352 V-& Auto 1rf.ns. ·-:;:;;=.·"=:-=:-.:-==,I '., · surfboard,Call!fi-1817 aircond.fZBU7S5) eng stick shift, air, Xlnt aircond.P/S.Goodtires& •= Cle•n, Reconditioned, afte 6 PM. $2599 cond $400. 833-1527. paint. Orig owner. 64z..8795. :.::~~ &P.OG.uRorSonteodCHES. '69 vw Bug, 22.000 ml'o Pvt DAVE ROSS PONTIAC '6GCh 1 pa1a gooc1mnd JEEP • """---a-VICll 6""' ""15 party. $1!i00. • 2480 Harbor Blvd. at Fair Dr. evy ~-'air ··~· ~-~ ... .....,..... ~.,...,,.. ' ** 962-'1'948 H.B ** Costa Mesa 546-8017 pwr stee ... '6• • ..,.,.,. -=----,....,.,...-,~- · ,' •:, FERRARI 911'1 ' 912'1 • 914'1 · · • 494-7170,atl T pm. '42 JEEP ooft lop, roll bar. 1957 to-1971 ·n VW pop-top Camper '68 CAD. Convt. Must sell for Hubs, many extras, $EXXI. AM /FM, wammly, Xlnt ""' at once .. $1950. Orig. CHRYSLER Call >;3-1043: alt 6 pm " 'FERRARI AUTHORIZED ~r· a:RVICI: NEWPORT IMPORTS cond. $3600". 548-.2527 local owner. '"5 E. 17th St., ICK '6' VW Bua, ""'1600 .... CM. '* '68 CHRYSLER MA~R , NEWPORT IMPORTS cl..., runt od. D>a10' xtru. '70 COUPE de Ville, top NEW YORKER * 'lO MAll'l:RICK $645 or bet o!s. 6'15-S&t8, cond. Private party .• 4 door. Fun ~'.t: f&ctoey '" ' ·3100 ·W • .-o..t lfwy, . I '69 VJi/, .-uto stick $1100 islOO/be1t' offer. 833-4725. air. YCP210. As is l"fewp:>rt Beac'b_,,. . 4 Chrm VW wh1s w/radlal1 '68 CAD El Dorado. A real $1295 2 Door. dlr. Dix coupe, Un- • .._2.9405 Sell or trade. * 646--1875 beauty. All xtru. $2995. der 12,000 mi. ~by lit- -3100 w: Cout HW)'o PQ~ '62 s. .,,,. .;,na; 19'11 vw Sta w .... llke new, 673-9266. MacHoward ~· ... ~:')';;,,.-;:: Newport Beach $2, ' ll,OOll m .... Factory wm1y. 1970 EL DORADO 839s9600 "' "11.otilll 49!-6811 aft l1 am 51>!716.' FIAT , • 84Ss71185•ves Call 6'z..tl911. <Jorner 1st & Hari>cr '70 911-T Poroclie, Top eond, '60 · vw s..,, ,,,,. throoot, ONL y 20 000 MILES Sanla Ana MERCURY 9'72 FIAT Magg, AM /FM, tangerine, new tires, needs 90me ' '68 CHRYSLER NEWPORT . I • $6lll(), 527-1258. engine wm'k. $450. 673-2lSL FACTORY Full power factory k '70 MERCUR"Y COUGAR. V8, •rl Ponche 914 3 mo'• old. *** '70 BUG*** AIR CONDITIONIN~ cond landa~ root <v-:o_ factory air, power steering, '72 su·aARU • ' • Beautiful Ftremist blue with .. vinYl roof. (S32582) Low mi I. Xln t · cond. $1600 • .' 546-6461: white top, blue cloth & lee.th-835) $2799 ·. 67-~. '61 VW Xlnl Canel. er tntmr, lull pow,.., ""' $IS99 DAVE ROSS PONTIAC '71 DEMO .SALE l969 PORSCHE 911 Tarp ,5· 1395 Alt 5 pm .,,,5006 .., J.M,FM, tilt A teleoeop-DAVE' ROSS PONTIAC ,,.,, -Blvd t Falr Dr B I Sportscar Center .... $4300. ,;..7 vw SEDAN le .... rlng, door lock. Local 2480 -Bl"1. at Fair Dr. Coot& M... • • 5f6.80li • .. , ' 544-5107 EXCELLENT CAR $1000. '(1) owner beauty, (175AKU) Costa Mesa MG-8017 1971 MERCURY -. :1!33 !Wbor, C<r'.i M.,. '61 Poroehe, 1600 1ype B, 64&-8049uktorArt Nabers Cacllllac: CONTIN.,NTAL STATION WAGONS J4M491. O>e.cy cond, $2400 llrm. ,60 vw but AUTHORlZED DEALER HERTZ CORP. JAGUAR 494-8960. '64 Engine • """ ""' llARBOR BL., • '63 Contlnontal 4 dr., VU)' .• ~ WE Need Your Porsche a.nd * 545-2860 * ' 'COSTA MESA good ·cond. New tires &:: ps. 221 W. Ka.tella. A'aabelm BAUER BUICK will pay top dollar. Call Bill 5411-9100 Open Sundall Orig. ownr. $575. 5M-"33. (714) 77M050 1969 vw 9 pus bOL Lie YVL A u 990 A u 990 A 'l'be Harbor Areu or Cluck ~ 895• $2195 + tax &: Uc. u~, MCI utos, MCI utot, Used Only AutOOrl:ied '58 1000 Super, nu tires, reblt Dealer 521-7211. JAGUAR DEALER eog, 1oob & runs fin<, vecy 1969 vw Vai> Always bu an excellent se-depeQdable. 673-7085. Xlnt cond. Olstom camper l.ctlOn of both New AU,.. ' TRIUMPH *** 67><;515 *** J....,.. · I NEED A HOME 1963 JAGUAR XKE Coupe. ' tZ'l . . I I 1966 vw ~ Cimper ::::t;~":i: !XI lRIUMP~ . --=""'=vo=Lv""'-~"'"=.;.;..;..·_ :tu"saf r:;,,"' Wre new. YI ' STAG ' "Spod&Ilzlnf tn Quall'>" IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! ~72 VOlYD .. BAUER NOW! Bulck.QpohlOfU•• %14 E. 11th St., Oleta -543-7165 HURRY 6 BEAT 'mE toll PRICE INCREASE! I FRITZ WARREN'S , SPORT CAR CENTER '53 JAG. SK 120 . CLASSIC 710 E. ht St., S.A. 517.m&< Witt wbee!t, ere., entlr<IY 0pendallyg.9;elOHdSw>day Cll'tiinal'tltruout. Mechanic-TR 4. 1963 Hrdtp, nu paint, oily p<mct thruouL Head -.....is. lo ml. Xltlt ll«btl -,,..id --..... $12)1), --$ll>O "'· "I'\<"'· Pb•" • JOYOT'" 18S-IS4C .,.,.,, ewt 53Mll3:l. , " SANTA ANA L•rt• Soloctlon For Immediate D.Uffl'Y Big Sovlnt• On Rem1tnlnt 71 VOLVOS ·~ rYIJl,vo -JM Harbat; Oalta Mesa TIME FOR 9UICK CASH THIOUGH A DAILY PILOT TOYOTA '16 VOLVO Station Waaon. WMIT AD '4J.167B --.... 1:30 ""' 122 s. ' Dr., 11111, -'tit I J101 ~ -Fr> oood. Prlv. per!y, $975. ~. Sllc4m PHONE. le.2511 IA ,F:,,_'7 ... ...,.=-:-.. :-:-:,.c-•:-::-:::. GT W, WU91r, 8t.llta Ana .;;-==;;;;! ___ _ • B THE PRICE RAISE ON . BRAND NEW '72 MODELS All Cars In Inventory At Freeze Prices. Choose From Cougars, · MontecJos, Capris, Mercurys & ~omets • .__... . ......... ~... -.. . 3 MAVER·ICK~PllWTO ·. SALEt EXAMPLES: . '70 MA YERICK , '71· i!l~O full'(. f•ctorv. •qljipp.d. Redio, h11ter. 1611,IEPJ. 4 spHd, to.d .,;llM. llJ7CAXI 1(U1 IOOi .. llCI sl"11t • $314.6 :. $If~ oua PllCI • STATIO" WAGON , SALE! . _ 15 TO CHOO~ FROM .... ,..,. & -lcs. Coolltry ...... l'l!>lrosl TorlH, Y.W, Yoho, ~ Okls., More., Tff .... OpiL'M llft 71· ....... ,-... 1 .. 1u1,.... ... a.o1r....i. ' I EXAMPLES: '65 FORD WAGON · '69 FORD· W~GON Co11ntry: 1.da~ R.lH, auto,. eir, f ,'S .. llalrl111•' 'loo. •ufo., R&H, power , ... ,.. tood rnil••· ·1WWK769) . in9, 1ir" colid., 9ood mhir. C'111 l~X>I ' .. 'oua PRICE $750 ~~~E $l~50 LT.D.-GALAXIE-T:BIRIJ+.TORINO SALE! . . ' Many to ..0.-ftom. '65·-"71 Models. Sport ,...1s;·1...,.1s, 1-a. 4 door "°""""·' ,-. M _.,, alr'coMltlool ... Warrant111 nlabl•. EXAMPLE: 1971 T·BIRD HllRDlOP. Auto,. P.S., P.I., P.winclowi. P·Duc.k1t 1e1tl, AM-FM 1t1r10 r1dio, •it cond., tilt whtel, WSW, body 1id1 mld91., remote mi"or, 9ood milts. 169-ilZJI ILUI IOOl PllCI $4715 OUR PRICE · $4096 '4 dqor, radio, hHter, auto.,..._ '63 IUICK SHCIAL good ·milH. ( KLC790) < • ' I . '4 door. low miles. Original '67. SIMCA 1000 . thru,out. IVTM86Bl , '63 .PONTIAC C~T~UNA , · 2 Dr. H.T. R&H, •uto., power . steerin9, 9ood miles. IOJV8921 '65. PtYMOUTH' FURY Ill 2 Or. H.T., R&H, auto., P.S., air ·c:ond. Good miles •. IPIT4841. '63 THUNDEHIRD lmmaculete thru-out. New paint, Full power, air cond. (UEZ879)4 '66 MALllU S.S. YI. 2 DOOR Hardtop. Radio,• heater, , good mil••· ISLV4151, ' . ·• S•I• ''I"* &ood for 72 Ho11r,. C.r. S1d1i•ct to Prior s.1 .. ,,. .., . .,