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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-11-03 - Orange Coast Pilot' . . • -• •• .. • • ea I IXOD • • . Vietor Must End ·War!J . . ... .. .. - .. . "t -,, .. . l'RIDAY >i,l'TERf,IQON, ~VEMBER 3,_ 1972 .serelt ·Says ~~t IJCI .. .. '"°'"'Mo.NO.~ 4 ~ .. PAHi :~-----..~...,..---------------~,----------... ~ .. L l ... ' • • • • •• • .. • • • • • • -. I Two _ Valley Councilmen Blast Battin , No Forced Lefi.ng ·Over in · Newport Lies About Park Lands 'I Sriys Nixi)n .. ! Alleged TALKS POLITICS Newport's R-.. 11 From Wire -WASHING TON -Presld011< Nl:lon !ell the White House todly for a one-day campaign swing across half the country after vowing he would not rush. into a hasty settlement of the Vietnam war. The President headed for stops In OlicaBO, Tu!Sa, Okla., ~)'!d'"""'~ R.l, touching off • 11x .. 1a1e '7iropa1gn spurt. which will wind up In Calllornla where he will vote Tuelday. In a television speech Thursday night, Ni.J:on said the United States will sign a Vietnam setUement "when the agree- ment it-right--not one day before." He said amblgultiel in a dr8ft peace accord with the Horth v--. must be clarifled. '.' I· <'We ""' not.toilll lo allow an .eleotlon f M t E d deaclpne or any other -of deadline lo 1 1 1 ar us. n , krt<! )JI 1n1o m agromnent which - he onl1 a tempanry lruce and not a ' a· l T ll Wtlng peace," he &aid. !. · ooseve t e s Tuday'• trip i. lnlmd'll 1o bolller . t Republican chances of capturln( closely ul U CI . contestad Senate -.... lleld by t " ac ty at ~with bll ~ nego1111or, ! 'T By Gl!OllGll! LED>AL He111T A. Kllllnpr, befln lelvinl the . ot .. '*"' ,.. -White· Hoqse tll1I mornlns. Tiley don't . 1pend ~ ere•t .deal of time In tbe ()r- anee Coast,area, bUt again lhla year tbouoanda of ducks are 111!ng'lhe Upper Bay u a temporary rest· ing spot darlnt their ilJIJ)Ual mignUon 1011tbword for tho winter. A few . It appears. are lttemptlnl I nonrtop fight. 1 Uri, _..i.nt elected ~ who llllalng~ theli waIMd will> Nim• from • -to wind down the war -"rua the PtelldiDI'• olllco to a hlllcoplet oo tllt rtll< of lmPe&dliilelil" 1IC irvlne • tho -la1!n-> I flCulty _.. told 'l'brindil• . llu:wblle, Sao °""'8 I. -.. {-J-.-..It-ll~KO•~?-b .. -1llJl.&0coe----~ 19 .. of the late ~ ~ D. diarie ~ lliml ·1i1111 llll1dllll a I ...... Jt, --u thei will of the "dolour --clay" Jn bJI Vletf• S•o.u Self Ai1i>erican people is adfldenlly clear to' QlllOdl an 11111.,...... Wor, an -lllld. lilite It .,,,,., dllflcult lw eithet· l .. dllll )(c0ovem, -tolllac· -... Po~ceman Holds Fire, • cllldidale lo not end the •ar H eleot.d.. mini._ and "'1 -."In the -. t'tlie -came In ,..,....,to a .ll@Dt II' ~-II dlmdl In ;;....: = ,.::=---=· i§;··-= ~ "O'; ·~ll:ty Club. • • .f .. __ " flPI 1111 :"'; Foils Coast Duel Death • wu uked lo evaluate the, 0 1 •4' -..-a path ........ ,~ .lbet .~ldent : .. .-. 1lul ...... ,,._ olectlon 1 Jaloll'• •21u 111ti~ boPel were in dly". Prak. ~ llleGoYern'• a 1111&-ra' 11el1Ai1•f\tee and that ( .. NACS, .... I) It .-..i he bu .. plan to war. By AllTBIJll R. VINSEL ............... A man """ failed to provob 1 policeml!l Into -ill« blm clown during .. ~ Pl-""" -·lend the RO ~D BLOCK . • down conlnlnlalloo at aunpolnt In 1 ltt. ~ It NilllOI& tllo rill: ol lmpeacbment A U• Newport Beoch park fal1"' apln to- ., naI Nl'Ulll"""" -..It -ad-• dly ........... -.. the olllc<r '•be ..... ,__,. -1n H ~tTS C ~MELS nlcbed. ........... Md tbi -· A A 'ftlt --... I' lJ" 1tldD1>llnc "lnhl Ill' )llri•11r Dr. ~ Dubin REDWOOO CITY (AP) "I.Ill..._ IUlclde. in,.tlplln -Iller 1a1k1ni ... ,, ' ..... wtiat ~ ..... -It ...... Odo ~._. ...... , •• wtlll • .....,,. ,_ • :;:~ ~ ... ..:: ~i..""':.r-=.::···· ~:.i .. '1'4 ·,•r-1:..-·~-.~ *" ... ..-... . ~ """' pollce ....... ·callbor --tlnup the Jl9--~•1 1 1111Dldl1wb. ~~1!"'1'1,':"-~111oc:' _ -, .,.,_.._.lllllla'..,olbll • YU tliift ·'""' -. pioJ:e 1 CCI> .~ -..:"'t:; _.. _. w --;Ill ...... - -but m811nc --m••iot 11111 -_....... -,., ·--·c~ -1111-. • ---pnanollJ" molftd In tbe . r_,lllt' Md lop ~IOI II Ione. "All 'I did -clw GUI 1111 -:· :t".::..=~=:. ~~~.Word Ille :=:i .... o:"'1n111°:.=•~ • ,,~..;... ~. ::=:re: t"'..:.t.= =. ........ ~ .. the :t-pllnlllY for-.-· lnlo the -ol 11'* ._.. --~ .. ..... ... ~-1 .. .-+&T, .... I) dlopoldled to a port at -· • ' • - • RivenkSe Drive and Rfdlands. Avenue about 5: 45 a.m., to check a report ot 1 man with a gun. "I WU right thin ln tht area. IO I parted and then .-Ved I man fllllnf hi• description," the ol!loer eirptalned . "II was jull letlin& d I 1 II 1 b t , " Patrolman Cllandltt ---"lie bod I molvtt in hit rllbJ'-." Craucblnf ~ a port bencb for ....... the,_.,.. lllld be -t.i_mao to drop tllo -pan or llit - ··n. jull -tblft and -bis head. Ile -palllled the ..... but Jult waved It aroml," uid OMitt a.ndser. Re ldded that be urpd Iha Yictlm to pul ohe ,.., clown for • to • -wblle 1Wlltlnl backup ofl1<0n, tolllnf the DWI 1-11 bont Oii IUiddo bl aoly....wd io belp him, not burl ldm. ornc.r Cbandlet Mid tbe man lloallJ" pllced Ille .... oplnlt bl1 *-t. ftrtd (!Ill SUIW>B, Pap I ) Catholic Priest Fatally Stabbed Inside Church LOS GATOS !APJ -A ~ Roman Catholic pr1<11 hll be<ll raoan r llabl>ed In the conleaslonal bo1 ol St. M1ry'1 Churc:ll here. poUce «parted. The n.v. Henri Tomei , Ill. 111tmnt pattor Ines' a n.atlve of MarMOle, wu •tabbed at kNt four Umel in the head. bock llld dlat by an-. wallaot • pol!CI! r<ported Thunday. The c:hurc:b _...,,. told olllcen 11111 Father Tomtl hid -to the ""'1dl to aee H "'1 par1lbloneri wmo then !or --· 'Enlt!tne lhe -. the oecnlar1 IOld. .... -• -. ..iJanl tldlloc .... ~ ...... ··-ol , tho -. Ille -...-. Ille llev. --lry. -lnlo Ille-Md Iha oUochr fled..-,. __ .., -lat Itta to Iha ~ prt.ot .... belled • ,...... 1mllulanco. PoU.. T-, --PMlor for flcbt JWS lltn, --• arrtnl at I ..,..., h11pUal, Pollet ir.t. Jim -oalcl Iha -Cfoo PlllDI, .... I) By MICHAEL OOODRICI( Of .. Detlr .......... ,.... Fountain Valley city COWlcllmen Thundly 1flemoon bla&ted Orange County Supervl10r Robert Battin for workfng against the lrttemt al their city and spreading .U.1ed untrutbe about the future of Mile Square Park. In a preu cooference at Fountain Vall•y City Hall. Mayor Al Holllnden and Mayor Pl<> Tempare Gears• Scott chug· ed Battin hll dellheral•l1 -k<d oplnlt.,he city In order lo cOer<e ctty councllmen. Ballin, of Sanla Ana '1 Flrll Olstrict, ii runnb:W for l"HJectlon nut TUe.day qalmf challenger WIW1m Wenke who outpolled him by nearly 4,000 votes ID the June Primary Election . The Finl Olstrict ailO Includes portlonl of Foun- tain Valley, Holllnden planned lhlt Ballla bod rectnlly warMd hJm at a bolpi.tll dedkaUon that, "You IUY• art never going to -'et any help from me until yoo get Ed J1111 of! my back." Just, former mtyor of FOWlllln VaJley and pre9tr1tly a councilman. hu been a Iona: lime ;>oUUcal foe of S.ttln . Holllnden ailo <horsed lhlt the redlatricting of superviM>rial UU1 JU. October ..-wu a deliberat e ser- rymanderlng qlneored by BalUn lo t....,, J1111 fn>m rumlng opln&I him In the curnotelectlon. Tbe redlltrlctlncl -Id the -ion Ille YAU.SY, ..... II 0r .... • I \J' • s Laos Tale of Tertor . M is~ionarU?s T. ell Red Attack on _Vi~llJ,ge VIENTIANE. Laos lAP) -"We got up Bl 5 o'clock on Saturday and were doing our devotions when we heard a MKirt burst of automatic Ort. It was Qflite close." •, Thus began a diy o(. turor (or \Vesley Chopard, 49, of ~ Moines, Iowa ; his wife Emma; and ft!W' other miS!lionaries of the Christi an MiS.!l jpns in Many Land!. as Pathet Lao ani! North Vietnamese forces moved lnto the small town of Kengkok in southern Laos. The bodies of two Americans, Evelyn Anderson, 20, · Q Qulricy, Mieb. aftd Beatrice Kosin: 35, of Fort Wa~kie. Wyo., were found In the ruins of a bume&out house in the town Tbunday, their hands bound . Samuel Mattix, 19, of Centralia. Waib., and Lloyd Oppel. 20, of British Columbia, were taken priSODU and are still miss-ing. ~ .. , · · -· "We ~liard r..rfng before and believed ll'W Ibo 4o Army ftrin for fun or :llf ~· "liiOoh or lo cluu• sp'i:f,. away;" saw. ~· . : whp has spent 15 ye8rs· ai a • ' .. ry in Laos. •• ·~Just 't>«:ffiri "o"t:l&ck , two of four Lao.- Christij'ns. $:JtHed ns from the rOaa . to alert_J,1~ tbllt insurgent rorces were In the town.~ ~ · - .. We. sent one of 'them to get the gtrls from tbeir house further away. "There is a bi g lagoon beside our house and the Laos suggested we escape to the lree1 on the other side. Our neighbor paddled WI across 1n a Cl.DOe and we hid in lhe first line of trees, "Be£ore we left , we had one of our men go and alert the seven Fill~inos at the Operation Brotherhood"'""Hospital btcause they had a radio and could call for help." Chopanl learned from his Lao con- gregation that the North Vietnamese soldiers passed the house of Mat:tlz and Oppel on their way into town but made no attempt to enter and seize them. nte two missionaries, one a carpenter "'ho had just finished buildin.i:: a small schoolhouse. jumped in their truck and headed for Chopard's house on the other side of town . At the main intersection. they were stopped by a bur:st of machine.gyn fire across the front of thelr vehicle. "'Ibey were bound and taken away to an audience with a higher commander," Cbopard said. "The Lao Christians visited them and prayed with them even though they were prodded away with gum. "We don't know what happened to the girls. Some reporb said they died in the attack but we doo'r know." An American doctor who examined !he bodies Thursday said they were too badly burned to be idenUfied. but that they be.longed to Caucasian females of tbe snme physical build as Miss Anderson and Mias Kosin. The bodies were sent to Bangkok for an autopsy. Although both bodies had their hands bound and both women appeared to have Slayer of Bar . . Patron~'!~~~~-. In Buena· Park died before lhey were burned, Chopard does not think they 'f'trt executed. "II seems their deatbs were lnrldentel -lo the nahlJni," he said. It appemd U..y might have l\lf/ocated whtt! ttie hoJ,Pe was set afire during flgit!lng for the town , and being bound they could not escape. Chopard and his wife linked up with the Filipinos and were rescued 1iY an Air American helicopter later S.liiiday. The captdre ol Ken(lkok, ·a_ .town ol about 4,0IO; took the Lao'"!6rm[ by surprise. '\be town was UD6eflmilei As it is the home of tbe'tllducation minister, .tmd of six memberalol the Na- tional Assembly, the govenRiiillt,Jauncb- ed a determined effort to gef'il bick. In three day; ol !'eary fig'li!lnrr~ ),rge part or the town wu set OQ(V8 @Pd more than 60 v.·ooden houses des~. Government furces finally dedated the town se<ure Thurscjjy. In.their ...rdl'ol .. --. . .(... ~ ... ~;; the hou>es they !oun'll the bodies of the two American glrls . "They loved Kenglmk," said Chopanl, 'Abo bu Uved tbere seven yean. ''They have been ·there le~s than a year. ETetyn was a nurse and Bea was a teacher." Chopanl plans lo return to Kengkok· and his mission Saturday. His house survived lbe fire but North VJetnamese troops rep:irtedly &eaJ'Cbed It. "I'm told ll has got a few bullet boi.s 1n It," be said. At ber home In British Col-la, Op- pel's mother said Swiss aulhnritlea In- formed her that the Communists we.re holding her son and Mattix in a village 30 miles east of Savarmakbet, in southern La~. I She said !he Swis.s authorities have sent two men lo the village to bargain-for their release. Drug~·~ve_rdose ' Mrs. Bropliy Rushed to Hospital I LOS ANGELES {AP ) -Si.tsan Marie Brophy, wife of Los Angeles area Assemblyman William Brophy, wu hi.shed to UCLA medical Center early to- day suffering from what police described as a drug overdose. Mrs. Brophy, 19, a former model. was reported unconscious and in a coma by hospital officials. Doctors refused to comment on whelher Mr!!. Brophy suffered a drug over· do<e. Hospital officials saJd she was suffering "acute respiratory distress" and refused to comment further . Sh~ faces a Nov. 13 trial date here on manslaughter and drug charges stemmmg from a traffic accident during the swnmer in which a Cudahy couple was killed near Pacific Palisades. Brophy dropped his bid for a seat in Congress after the manslaughter and drug charges were filed against his wife. From Pagel PEACE ... political adviser, told newsmen at Grand Rapids. After the taping, McGovern was to drive to Gary, Ind., for a rally of black leaders and return to ChicagQ..for a two- bk>ck motorcade and an appearance in the Auditoriull) Theater with Mayor Richard J . Daley tonlght. The half-hour address on Vietnam by the Democradc presidential candidate was to be broadcaat at 7:30 p.m. P$1' on CBS. McGovern scrubbed an appearance in Lansing, Mich., and another In East Chicago, Ind.r to spend tlme on the preparation and taping of his Vietnam speech. Mankiewicz indicated It would be a major statement. It wat known that McGovern consulted closely with Clark M. Clllford, defell!t! aectetary under President ~n B. Johnson, and Paul Warnke, a Kennedy administration defense of!lc\al a n d McGovern's national security adviser. One of them was said to be Oyrtig to _Clticoga. • Ero•Pagel ROOSEVELT. • • suggested the President would get 55 per· cent of the votes and Sen. George McGovern only 45 percent. In California, where Democrats lead Republic.ans by a 3 to 2 margin in registrations, Roosevelt suggested the Nixon cam;>aign W()u}d result in fToin 52 to 54 percent of the total vote. "A McGovern upset is more litely in California than in any other state " Roosevelt said. ' Although he supports the President's ~ection, Roosevelt finda one area of agreemen with McGovern - a d1ltute for political polls. "I personally I e e I polls cmtrlbut. nothing to our national life, or our political life," he said. He recalle<l Ibe 1936. electloo race when the Llberly Maaazlile poll predicted All Landon wookMieat hill father. 'I'lttlr poll was wrong and "McGovern says the same things in 1972 as Dad said then. Polls are not reliable indlcaton of the way people will vote." Advantages President Nlmt bal over McGovern In thi! camt>Olln cited .by Roosevelt ranged from bia running with a S xi Co • t "'1easoned i.am " lttamtbency and bis Buena Park pollc. .... hunting a man e ess . llV!C 'atni.cy to "Ill ~. the battle and not known only u "K•lth" lo the murder of · !DB~ In the i.a.... with bia oppooort -a 1--,.,..,.,_~lohb .. W L __ ,,._n_.,. F...v..:I ev .. my lather did .that ooce In a while "> '3<--nie b'JriW'°iiiii>o;ct' alleiedJY~· ;: ·~ ~ -I~ '"~~gn!;" -.Veit ~ed. beer glass at Jack H. &ck, M, of208 Bel Air St., Anaheim. 1be glass shattered ' when striking Beck's Jaw and cut a vital artery on the left side of his nee!, ac- cording to an Orange County Coroner's autopsy. • Beck died at the West Anaheim Com- munity Hospital a little more than an hour after the attack. Officers said the suspect ned the Hum- dinger bar, 6260 Mission St., while Beck was still on his feet and may not know that he had inflicted fatal Injuries. He is described a!I .vhite, 24 to 28, five feet ten. with curly brown hair and brown eyes. Police called tM death "freaky" saying ii was highly unlikel y that a small beer glass would kill a 1nan . OU.NM COAST IT DAILY PILOT Ttle Ort..,. C_, DAILY PILOT, wl"" llllflld\ .. ~ tflt """"'""--It ..,,.Ir..., .., ""' Of'-. c... l"Vll/ltlllfll ~. l..-, ..... 11-. ., ................... ,..,.,...,. Fr¥ty, fW Coate M.,., H-1 •udl. H\11'11'"9!0fl ••klll~lft V•I...,, Ut<iM a.di, l"'lnt/kdcl~ a S•" C"""""t11 14"1 JllM C1oltlf'-. A e)r.oi. r"ltNI ldltlM .. ,.,.i ..... .lllllfHYI, .......... , .. t11t l"'ioiclMI .... 1111'"9 JIMI It _. 130 Wftf •11 SlrMI, c .. 11 M.... Cllllfomlfl, fHM. ll•lt1rt N. W•-4 ,., ........ "" ..,..~ J111r l. Curl1., Vk• Pr"llNnl af'lll 0-rll ~ Tllo"'•• .,.,,a .~ .. ThomH A. ""'''lti"• M ..... il'llhl• C .. •rfH H. Lo•• afclri1nl P. Nill .......... MIMt ........ -Qoetlt ~I D W.I .,,. Strwl ......... 1Mct11 SW ,.....,.,. ...,.....~ .....,_, lltodlr m ,..,_, ..,_.... ~ ........ litlcfl1 11'11 hodlc ...,_,.. 1111 t""""9ol aN Mltr1fl 11 CtM1n1 lt .. I '*'•••·· (7\41 '41-4111 Cl Mb4 ......... Ml-'671 ,,_ c.-. .,.... ...... L.fllml .... . .,.... .. ,,_...,. OrW-.., Clua11u ..... 141-1UI .....,....,.., "71. ~ c:.MI p~ ~. JM ... .,.,.... lflw1r1t...., ..,.... --"' ••"-"*•'-llltrltWI Ml'J .. ,..,..... .. ' Wllfllllt tpelltl .... ......_ .. CllPJfllfM ... . ...... cit• _, ...... 11 CMlrl Mnit. ~ ......... "' c...,... ....... ..........,, "' "'9111 ..... """''"'; ~ ..... , ..... ., ""9ftflll1. NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -Tb< Loulliua Suprome Court bu ftluled lo frfe an Inmate who contended be could not be rehabilitated wit.bout aex. Billy Wayne Sinclair, .. Inma~ lbe IAuislana Stat. Pl!nit.nllary at · ola, said the deprivation of normal ac- tivities wu "cruel and u nus u a I punishment" and prevented any chance of rehabilitation. The court dWgreed and refused Thursday to order a lower court to grant Sinclair's request for a habeaa corpus writ. From Pagel PRIEST ... was about s i x feet tall, and wearing black clothes an .i high \acid black boott. Police said there were no suspectl and no apparent motives. Paper Reports Hand Cut Off NAHA, Okinawa (UPI) -An Okinawa .. wopaper said today tltet llx black U.S. Martna tied up a wllite Navy •llllatecl man IPd cut oH hia left baml with a ImUe. The report appemil In Ibo Okinawa Mornlni Siar. whJcb uld its lnfonnaUon came from unof- ficial U. S. miUtary ..,.,,,... There was no comment from the U.S. military spokesmen here. · The newopoper identlflod the vi<> !Im aa Hoapttafman 3rd ciuo Richan! M. Bridges, II, ol Sllelby, N.C. Industrial. £ample~ ~~ • . . , ' Fluor Purc;hases Option On Large Irvine Parcel F1uor C.OrporaUon othciala sakS today lhe Loi Angeles mu Orm bu 1 fou..,· year optkJn to purchue a 105.1-aere alte in Irvine. Melvin A. Ellsworth. pmldent. said pun:haR of the proputy "tbould avm- 1ually lead to the rtlocation qi tluor'a corporal< hcadqlllrien and Southeni Cailfornla operations lo" • the Irvine lnduatriil Complu lite witldo a ....... year Umt hmt." ~ · Tbe firm II Involved In llltmtattooal engl-.Inc. coostNCllon IPd drtlllnc for na turat rwioee lnCI ~ ......._ • Ett .. orth said con\lnU«I -t 1" nttd !OT l"luor 9'"1 ... WOO ·dtdate llio exerclae ol~ to.r-1ear ~· .• AlthollP Orm baa not 'l'ade a llftal rommttmen to putcbaao.llll'lnl. Piuor will pay taxet and property m1Jnt-.nce for the .00.veloped ~le durtna the option l period, according to Thomu C. Wolff Jr .. pc;taldent ol the Irvine Induatrlal Complu. Wolfl declined lo dbcloeo tho option price. Tho parteJ II loaled at tlte IOUtheast corner ol Ibo San Dteeo ,,..,,ay ud Jamboree Road. It --Ibo UC Irvine campa. . Up lo OM mlllloe , '\I"!'!" Ifft of butidJnC -llltpl ... ~led on the 1lte ... Elllwai1Jt ...,.. ht amount of -wtlJ -F\ooft '"""" lmrtlt -· -,,,. nnn ..,. ~ 1,11t peop1e 11 two -In the 01J al CDmnMroa In Los Anldea County. 5houli! rtuor relocale In 1rvlna. d>t firm 'liiluld Add lo the ~ tu - • of the -· city of lrvlof. ~_}llOll lt located In the 2.500 ..... al 11'.o !>'°° acn compln which 1111 Wffltln,illo -city. • -· • .. .. • '\). J• ......... ~ Whflt 'ife Said:· j· ' r ., · • :ll:.~ .... . ~ \. . ' :... . ·~ ., "Senator, Nixon's .going to beat yo1:1 so bad you'll be :sorty yo6 ever left South Dakota." That's what the heckler sald lo Sen~ .(;eorge Mc- Govern at Kellogg Airport in ~chigah. What Wa:t~the .senator's whis- pered reply? See· story Page 4, · · · ' Prop. 20 F~es' Tactic Common Cause Target ~' SACRAMENTO (AP ) -The people who came up with the "Don't Lock Up the Beach. No on Prop. 20" jingle ere targets of a Common Cause complaint filed with the nationwide Fair Campaign Practices Committee, 8 spokesman says. Thursday, Ken Smith, Western regional director for the consumer group, satd too\ his organization told the committee that Whitaker and Baxter, a public rela· tioas firm handliag the aqti-Prop. II campaign, violated the elections code. . "Their tactics have violated a basic provialon of the code wllich condemns 'any dishonest or unethical practieeS Girls in Scanties Not Rajlroad im:lige ' LONDON (UPI) -Bljlliah,,,llailnYs has taken dOWJI !ltatioo ~ ---\JblCb allow IJlrll In tmtr pont19 adverllxlng In· terclty exprel!.!I trains. ' Stitched on tbe panties was lhe ·s1ogan that the express service "makes the going easy." "This is OQt the im&ge that we wish to p'ODIOte,'' a f.8llway spokesman said. . '· Which tend to corrupt or UJJ<lel:t;nine our American system of free el~·~ , ." ~ complaint reads in part. · · . .. • • .'Ille Sierra Club and otJier ·en- ilii:onmentallat gn>Ups back. Pr~. 20 Wtnoh wOUld aet up on0 Ill!~· iltd'oI; regional coQUnlasiooa,... ~ • ftto -y er o<ltr developments ~'. !lit.!:'~'• 1,(187-mile coas:Uine. . ::;'the committ.. that eoniin.O Caw. directed its complaint to Is a noDl»'Ofit, nongovernmental organizaUon with no legal clout over offenders of the elections code. But Robert Girard, a California C.Om- moo Calf!e official, said be thought it would be a good thing U the Fair Cam- paign Practices Comtnitt.e held • public hearing on tlie issue. Clem Whltaka" Jr., ho& ol the San FranciSOo ad Jgency, bas, said crltlcism of the anti-Prop. 20 campolgn aria.a because · backers don't like anyone to 9uestiou or threa\en·tbeir ppslti:!Jfl, · In a r~ed ~evelopment Thul'!day, the Federal c.ommunlcatlons Cefmrn!sslon ruled th8t two San Francisco area television statlQM should give Prop. 20 backers more time on the air to tell tbelr story. The FCC admonlsllment was directed at KRON ud KTVU. • ,.......,,..1 VALI~X·· of Jountalll v.u., Jual .....,. In flom Blttkl'I Flrlt Dlltrict. JloDJ""'n cl•lmed thLs reduc<d the city'• polltlcal lD\(llCt In Ille COUDl,y. • • ' ~ !Wo '~:t~•d dilo;nq. al Ba\lit'' ~ -~tbe ~" '(I'll\" '"1111 Opm i:..tter aboul M!I; .... " llupld ... -tlte mabop.,o/ tbe man. lie'• dtber lllllpld or lie ~'I clone b'•· '*""...,t; m lllie SQutre," loO~ dlafltd. ' ' . . 'Jbt ........... WU nflrrll!l·lo a ltb- t.,r·i, I IDlll pub!Iclllm ii! ~ie ~that•·"-.....,.,., :"tbe"=~t't~ were about to gl'Bb. a pared of the land. Ralmtng " Ille Illid ~ SOOlt !Bid lhll ll!Jraa Jl!!podslble ooiltf"Uie • exJning i .... dr u.. jlnlpooed ..... , .... ol the title. Scott also said Iba! Battin had moved in June to have the Jease·area divided in~ to titree llr more partell to ·ladlllat. bid- ding by amaller tam.rs. "He bu never · IUllested tbe fm. media to d<velopnail ·Of U.. put 11 a recreation area,'• Scott lllef'ted. ~ · Fountain Valley 1-lo dofflop • recreatiooal aru In tho peril alkr It Ia turned over lo U.. county by tlte ~ g<ivernmeat. The transfer ol MUe Square has )>ft!! apparenUy delayed by a land scandal J&. valving two W.estmlnster city officials. 1 The turnover has ~so been a '°J>ic of controversy between Battin a n d supervisor David L. Baker. Baker claln\: eel Tuesday that Battin'• 0pm ~had jeopardlud U.. county'll acqulaltla& of . the -park. . " Ilollindeu IPd Scott abo '8ld that l!a~ tin bad refuoed lo 1Upporl -· "'""" IPd road Widening for the put ind. Uilll only BaW'1 lnterv.ntloo had 11rwcltl abolll their ln!tallatloo. · · Tb<y also charJed Battin has - lo onler the sheriff lo police the pujt althQuib thi! had been provided for In on agMment between the city and the county. ''Mr. Battin, who was cbainnan at the time of the negotiations, rehaaed to pau tbol order lo the sheriff and U.. city bas been stuck with the responsibility ever since," said Holllnden. · · 'Ibey sald the supervisor has ,.r....i tO dlsaJss the matt.r aJnce ltl'ro. E...,,.Pilgel SUICIDE ... and collapsed, just as Officer Jim Gol!os arrived on the scene. "We laid him In tlte baclt ... t ud drov• blni to ifoal llolpltal Code S," aid Officer Cllandler, In rd"""" to nodlo code for a pollce car nm llllni red llcbta ud m.n. . . Desplt. tlte ..Verity or bit.Injuries, Of- ficer Olandier said tbe 16-y01Mld vlctlJD remained · llelllk:omclOWI llld lciUllli' finally aat \IP. . "We beard a noise jn Ute, bock," he said,, '!ddini that tbO bian •. bad llred .1~ ,Jt'ainl of lead OU.,.,b hla bNd ""' slttbig up with all lo llngeri clUtclWlg through tbe win separatlJig frool IPd rear seata. "When we got to the bospllal he IWlllll bis 1 .. t around and was trylnl to get out and ~.·· the young officer added. • 1Jrexef; Pre-fioAJa'J 'Gi-C:k;:" Sat • WINICI 779. .... tlL JU1t on• of • l1rq• MIKtion of pl•c ... from Of..zers femous Et C.t•r• cinfftton n. M.e Is flnish•d in hancl ptlnttd mlmose yellow with hen .. clKoretlonl. This pi.ce ii i •,• ,I~ 1h11¥" 1nd Int.Mot fMJhfs.. •0 • • 11 r • • 1~•• OREXE~EllTA6' HENREOON-WOODMAAIC.-UIRASTAH • NlWPOltl llACH e 1n1 WlolfctJ" Dl.. '41-t .. LA6\INA HACH e •141 MOHH COAST HWY • .......... TORitANCt e 2)"4t HAWfHO•°NI II.vb. ' .,. .. .,.. "' \ I I l I ' / .VOte:;1Re ults Seeil by I · P.M. County :Q fic_m l·;Predicts 698 ,8 ~8· W:ill Cast Ba·llots O.vld HUchcock, 'Orange Co u t y are 7;..114 .,g~ed voters In Orange turnout la ~ ~ the ......... \for the been oroenid In be used If needed In ... r<f!lllr.it of vote<• predlMed l<ldoY that coWilj. !fU',;iti)s election -,-an all time put 11 ,..,.. During that perlod.'ilt.;per-preclnc,. experiencing an especially briil, unoffle"'tal eleCtlon ;result! wW be hi# · ' , cent o tb1 voten caat . ba\}otl In htav)r 'vote. ~vlllablel>y'l p.m. Wedriesday. And he 'i>rec!i¢ed lhat II pen:ent or presldentlll decllo•llke Tuesda)I'• and -Two addiUoool voling booths have "-"Bul, he said, the outcome of all but the 698,'73 .. "0f 'ttleae registered voters will only 78 ~t ~ ~ alternate election dosest otraces wtU be known Wecme,,day .turn 'out 00 1'uetday. years when the ~~kt .qoctes~ 1!14 been placed in every precinct that has morning when approximately 70 percent ... Last June,' the primary election ballot thal of governor~ PiUfotnla. ~~~. i'. more than 800 registered voters. There of the .votea ahould be tallied. , coutt: was ®,mpleted bi'· 12: lS p.Jb. But The ~~ar ~ a.:·s~ ~ ire live voting booths ln all precincts. ·~ Hltcbcock, In a Pf'{H!lection briefing_ for there wtrt only 476,M4 peraons voting counting operation'' .•.nd io·.insure ttii~~ -A 3,600-square-foot tent has been ilew1men, explained t~at the delay in then. . r has taken the8e addi~ precau~: :.. leased and· will be erected on the rear 'ftnal resulb Is due to the fad Utat there Hitchcock's prediction or an 88 percent -250 additional votmg booths have parking lot of the registrar's head· J , • . .'. quartecs, 1119 E. Chestnut Ave., Santa W lk • Pl k ..: A~a. This additional ballot handling . -· . 8 JUd . 80 CITIZENS URG811 •pace w111 help eliminate snatus which ~ · have' plagued the registrar's staff in TO VOTE ~J.Riit.~· o~ :~~::.::~r~;:':'~roblem for •• Harbor . 'Pirate' Wa ves Farewell By ARTHUR R. VINSEL • Of tlM Dlllty 'lltt Sltff ~ Standing by Harbor Boulevard with a century-old sword in hand, waving ·at cars passing like ships in the night, he .resembled. the ghost of Long John Silver, iignaling a captive ship to strike her col· ors. · Some motorists unramiliar with the · 'Jolly Roger pirate standing a lonely ·watch on Halloween Night might have ;lbought him just another nut in costwne. His weapons were real -including his tr.usket -but be had 01_1.ly the lollipops ;and Happy Face pins :1e tra(jitionally tave away in the booty bag slwtg over his shoulder. · And he had a lump in his throat beneath the ruffled silk scarf at his neck. During the past rour months, Jim Fink, 32, has met thousands or Southlanders on bis roaming voyages representing the ·restaurant cha.in. ' CUtbackS in the promotional "u~get forced hlin ·to abruptly walk the cor· .porate plaak, hOwever, and,on,Hollo}Veen Night the burly brigand of tbe bounding main was really waving farew.ell. "Aye, matey, 'twas really tough to be cheerful for awbne today," growled the good-natured pirate .who on 99Qie f~Y days handed out !,000 6f" those mppy Face pins with the bllick eyepat~h. · He pinned them on tbe bodices . of young maids and old; dropped them into youngsters' outstretched bands like gold "doubloons, and passed out lollipops 1yce ·pieces of eight. • Jim Fink, a Costa Mesan currently rmoving to 7311 Seashore DrlTe, Newport Beach, claims he got far more out of it hrwever than he ever gave. · And herein lies h1s story. : · . 1 1 Following eight yeans In tile Army - 'five of them as a personnel sergeant raJways close to the fighting in Vietnam ~-Fink left the servlCi! a year ago, a tired, changed man. He was walking into a Newport Beach ·store last summer, a rotund, long-haired, bearded, beach bum, when advertising man Bill Fawcett flagged him down: "How'd you like to be my pirate?" "Five rots" lli vi<tnani'wliiped my rnlnd ," says Fink. "I took the job as a W~Y._to get back to reality." :··ro· uetng shanghaled~lntO service •• • Court Frees Four f:~~~ ~!~g !:~~: WALKS THE PLANK Ex-pir1te Flnk the~· R. pii-ate came in the nick or time, two days before fle_ plapned to get a st".ave and haircut and hea!f for Flo'tida. His subsequent erperieoees, intended as .a method of getting back to mli~y, wer~ freqllebUy a Uttle 'UIU'eal and in rare·eases bad overtones of being back in Vietnam. , ' • _'''.IJ)l!,Di\t*~qUo kid Who, ~V!<•\Jlr<aJen­e,; ltle ~~. going In tliroW Frcist<!e all over mf"co,c;tume," says Fink. "But 'be ~!lack lllld.apologiU!I the next day." Teenaged hecklers have oceaslonally caused a problem. One groµ~ surrounded tbe Jolly Roger in a shopping center and announced they were going to dlsarm him of hii 100-year- old sW-ord 8nd pistol. "l'll use ,it befo~ .J.'U-19M . it!," .be [&.Sped back. '11 spent five yean in Viet· n.im, and if the VC didn't get me It would ~-~~dy }or you--lads ~ .1~, to Fink says they threw penrub instead, so he played real pirate and kept them.• Once a frequently·brok:e y~ QI, Fink also says be is guilty of picking up hitchhikers and by pure coincidence gave a ride to one of tbe hecklers a weei later £nd 30 miles awaY,, while ln ofJ-duty clothes. "Areo'(~.,!!!1'.' J]!lly .. ~tr1" the be4:kJ ' ~~;J . -··· . . ... ·~ F~· with the ~st·-~·' istra\ic!n In counl hi~" . l'el! . . y ' " Registrar of• Voters David _ ·: cock today ilppeaJe:d IQ cllizeos.tq,; wte early. : · ..... ~ '. With 794,174 registered voier. . aiid his prediction of;.an 88 ~-; • voter turnout, Hitchcock urged ear-· ly voting to ease tile last hour jam at precincts. Pelis will be open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Women's Group ' To Meet Monday In Lag una Beach The newly formed Laguna Beach chapter of the National Organization for Women (NOW) will hold an open board meeting at 11:30 a.m. Monday in the Coast Inn. Topics for discussion will b e establishing a local headquarters, fuoc:I· raising activities, the formation of a day care center to aid working mothers and steps that may be taken to get the state's equal rights amendment out of the Senate ruleS COin.'.Ilittet and onto the floor for a vote. Chiding the DAILY PILOT for a typographical error that heral~ed last week's 10 a.m. meeting as a 1 a.m. af. fair. convenor Dolores F~ aoted, "We don't bold clandeflile meetiop at I o'clock in the morning. NOW meetings are held at bouts we hope will be con. venient for all interested women -'and men. too, for that matter." ' IniarmaUon regarding WOW activities and membership may be obtained by calling 4~ · ' . ,- political candidates and their supporters. There will be no parking spa.Ci! on the headquarters grounds for visitors. There are 1,864 precinct.J which will dispatch their ballots to headquarters on Tu~y night aod early .Wednesday. Ballots from ~vidtia.J pr&:incfs will be transported to 17 tollection centers in the county, all but two of which are police stations, for security reaSons. The other two will be guarded by Sheriff's deputies . Ballots will be trucked to headquarters with a deputy rldillg "shotgun" on each truck. There the baUob will be fed Into the vote tallying machines and results translated to puncbeQ cards. The cards are taken to the county's computer center on Broadwaf near Civic Center Drive West and there cumulative tally sheets, will be churned out by the electronic machines. These will be in groups of '20 preciiicts. beginning at about 10 p.m. A3 additional precinct results are punclied onto cards they will in tum be fed into the com- puters and new cumulative totals pro- duced. This is the process which HitclJcock predicts will go on until l p.m. Wednes-- day. In addition to the offices of President, con gr.es s m ("'n, state senator,·. ai- semblyman. 1 supervisors and the · 22 state propositlons, tt>ere are seven olcal elections on the ballot in various areas. For exampl~; the Saddleback, Irvine and Capistrano =choeJ. .district bond issues. These seven: consolidations demanded 81 different kinds of ballots which Hitcbcock's group had to have printed. 'l1le registrar predicts that up to 30,000 voters will cast absentee ballots. Almost that many have been mailed to persons requesting them . AU absentee balloU. must be returned to \be registrar's office before election day and they will be run through the machines during the day on Tuesday. Results will be available by· 8: 15 p.rp . Tuesday. Hltcll:x>ck cautions hopeluls. however. Absentee ballot results have seldom tieen indicative of the 'fiqal results. DAILY PILOT DAILY l'ILOT "'919 .,_ ,ttrkli O'o....11 BRIEF KIDS ANO THEIR MOTHER THE HOMECOMING QUEEN . No Humdrum Life for This Huntington Beach Housewife Mo111~s a Queen OCC Homecoming Beaut y Has Kids By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of 1fM Dtlltr I""-! Staff The day When all homecoming queens were In thei~ teens, unmarried, and championed by a campus fraternity a~ pear forever over at Orange Coast College. La.st week OCC students turned out in overwhelming humbers to pick Mickey Brief as thelr 1972 homecoming queen. That was no surpri.Je to anyone since she Is charming, pretty and blonde. But the fact that she 13 28, married, ~ mother of twins, and tblt she wai' nominated by the OCC Parents Club wal. "I WU completely ourprlaed. I didn't an~te lt ·at all.1lt hit me u t ,.al. lboCt when they amouncec1 my ...... But u· was a pleasant k1nd of lbocll:," Mn-:-Brlef;-riluntlngtoo Beach '"'Iden~ confeaaed. A health education student, Mrs. Brier is the first married woman to be named homecoming queen al OCC. The ~year· long tradition was broken last Saturday night when her victory over rour other finalists was announced during the OCC· Fullerton College game. ~ An Orange County resident for four ye.a,rs. Mrs . Brief studied at Cal State Long Beach until she "dropped out to become a mother and a housewlle." She dropped back lnln education two years ago at OCC after having her two children, Cameron and Garett. both three years old. Her husband. Michael, is a marketing and sales u:ecutlve. Marty Pate, associate dean of student affairs at OCC believes one ol the reaaons Mn. Brief wu cbooeo queen Is because the average ttudent aa:e 1t the Colla Mou campus II hi&her than It us- ed 'In be. ~ghest court has cleared four persoos ccused of descrating the flag by priri~ i ctures of a nude woman partiatlY aped In the nag. : ·• The Court of Appeals voted 6-1 Thurs--1iaY to overturn the convictions of the''\ "Jpu_r. lt said there \f~ little "potential ot i~ublic disorne," ' f1ie photographs, -·.,A;f. lliii,lhat I -imd thinks for the-~5---,cents h'otp.14.st week," he replied. "At firsJ I felt rtdJculouS," says Fink, who started the brief pirate'• career he ~ may, . continue at t h e · chal.u ~taUrant in Dana Point, which once really was a pirate'• cove. LINCOLN-CONTINENTAL ... Ma1~k IV ~blished in the ~~15. 1969 edition of Rochester luMitute of Technology gazine,'"l'he R4pol1er." ~ · The three stall .....,,.,., and EUzabetll U"rter, the modtf,Jiod,pWaded giiilty disorderly conduct IU\fr los!ng a enge In the , leg~.lf.'f t~ io-flctments. .,... · . \ . •.' ''Those litU. kids reoJiy educated thi• penon aboUI p~i!O'"·lore. Tbe kids iully madt it all worthwbile,'1 he u · plained. "In four short months I've met so many greflt. people and bad 10 much fun;" ~· . Fhlk. lddlrll that be'• em-. . batrassed ... ,... lob. t_.1 .. ~ ·~ Pilot W t it er· Tens· ·Visit . ' ' 'f o Germ~~AA~~-Cent~' ":. ,4; .. ~ .. ~ ·~ ... . " ' ... ~ . '_, ~AILY :,Pl¥,n\ 1ports editor .Glenn' A'soo,f. ~~~ _Jciliii w ··.:: ~lte, whO CO'fer«I the Olympic games Soc:iti:yDi'enilO.n-Job-.ud Johll "' - I~ G<rmany, took the opportunity In go n-----lot -M••• -·~ •-'--1~ l>Flnd tbe Iron curtain and visit the -are ,_ •• ,. ~·w · · • """" ~ Apchwtlz-Blrtenau extennlnaUon center to head the American party ticket and a6 Natl Gennany. He' writes his 1m-Rousatlot to run for rHlectlon-to oon- .-aion In thls week.'1 Sunday ,911per. greu u a Republican and to support the .;flere IN I f.., of the oll>er Stories tbe Republlcao ;erlJ lldlel. -artkle Ql!LY PILC7I" will 'offer Sund 1 y on the same A --..U. how the reden: JBS I! sta;tilc alool lrom polltlct aglla tSL()OD FEAR -F0< !I00,000 penons !bi. election yHr, but oall' aorl of. Tbe le«lranc• County h<ltn• II In l!IO patb of. JBS ·~ Hlam'1 --1 a ad intandanl pn>jecl llOO<I -'""' thit may MeGoveril'1 I Commuolot, ""1le ScM!l!i uo expected to occur "ery • J11!111 -is lauded. al the coWity ii tn no pooottloc to protect LIFDAVERB -They'll •!of JOU In !lem tn>mlUch an lnundatloo. ~ the 111111e'd U., In In 11ve 'f9'Jt Ille ; It will be IO yean before SA river thal'• om way' of lookb!c It tho roil ee• can Hi llmt,utened or the Prado Callh.mirfllghtraJ P--mote rabed In com.In IUch 1 Storm. It'• •Pol motor vehicle lnlpe<tloll9. Their job 'h featm ""''>' written by Jollll Ziiier ii delcrlbed by Joanne ~on Pap • lbe_Vou Section. 83. ~ · ~lN MOVE -"'-Kloo 20 . INSJDli: TflE WAU.S -Teimaltt the wrl~ln campllJn of Dally Union boll Jun.. R. Hoffa and ex..,led readerl u lhoy give u.,jr vlf'l!I of , oU kind Atltbooy de Al\Ples ho"!O dll--1tlona In lelten In the ferent Yl<Wi offtfe In a ledcral penlten- edttot. They are publllhed on Pace A7. tiary. The~ 1tory ii on page Bl. • • • • U>ntinental U>upe -- 1973's ARE NOW HERE! --LEASE -- SPECIALIST IN FULL MAINTE NANCE LEASING! SEE ONE ... TRY ONE ... BUY ONE ... TODA Y! • lame or '!lit N"' Cir •• , "filellle1I Tellda" 2lal HAlllOlll ILvb. COIT.A lllUA • 141- .. f ~All V PILOT '"""· ~-'· 197? wealthy Nixon D.qnors Listed; orr to one side was a canv<U: beach chair, perhaps as a reminder to mate a few free days to visit the sborellne and sun. nlE WALLS lN Senator Carpenter's office are pleasant, covered with memen- tos of his days in the FBI, politics and the Legislature. A color portrait of Gov. Reagan. A plaque of the Bill of Rights. Many photos : even a display case of medals. Directly fa cing !he senator. however, was a large poster that probably came closer to depicting his real mood of the moment . It was the much-celebrated photo of the cat with bugged-out eyes. desperately clinging onto a clothesline with its front paws. The inscription beneath reads, "Hang In There, Baby ... " Senator Carpenter is hanging in there these days. He's been on the campaign trail, speaking and making television a~ pearadces from El Centro to San Fran- cisco in an effort to defeat Proposition 20, tbe so-called coast.el initiative. THIS IS TIIE propQJal that, il pwed, will e3tablish six regional state com- mist.lans whose members will beeome the coaSW tzars. They wiD tell you what can or clf!i'I be buill oloilg Ibo coast. • uH~.~.· "L:Blt week the· California Poll asked ),eop~~w~} they thoµ&ht of Prop. 20." carpenter ·refi~ed. ~·Seventy-seven P;t· cent never beard of it. How many have read It? One percent? Next Tuesday the volers "Ill simply make an emotional judgme,nt on the try to 'Save Our eoa~· ·~ - Train Surv.i_vor _::·: .. ; Beiiuie•Carpenter oppa&es Proposition 20's '7.arilt approach to controllina: our C<Jalltline, the proponenll havt ~ted ::;.:,:~~,~~Ja;:g~:~WJm.~·i;; ip~·~.l•B~ we~~ pinned, but doctors say she will recover.compJe . y. dar•'" tlltt ~@ -· · -, . po~il!id"biS' .-,., , , '. i ~Ir.'. Tbotp1 jurt ' .fiii..Yl, had •'IOoney bul • · , tt{ii~~i;"' It hMfit..,~"1~." .~. • :i ,,.~ W~I, ~~~:be ... u lhe ~:~~:;r~b~ Throughout Battle Areas regional government that wtD be apr,otnt· ive -not el-b'y)""·people,' the , ., senator replied. Ji~· ··.' "' ~ SAIGON (AP) -More than JOO U. S. A bombing halt rjnalned tn effel:t Carpenter says tlle oF:·lhe least-known 852 bombers ranged aCl'OIS North and above lhe 20th PfOlleJ, keep•Jn11 thre~ts . if! .!.f!: murure tr Jn appe~l sec-~tb Vl~ and Laos today attacking American warpIMel'!;'Clwv~ ~ ~""'·l!JIL 'iiilh7f.1. · ~-' ~ .,., ~tp!iol. Comn>'"1ilt-><-'foliot-Hall>hon'l•l!idiiiiio1....-..Ptet,. . ......_,I "II you w .. t lo build aometbini, you forces ol!D....t no letup in their attacks In Fightlng erupted M6w this morning in can. get all the approvlla. even from the South 'Vietnam, .with fnOtt than 100 ' rubber plantations jud to the northeast regional bo~rd. But a~ybody can file an reported ror the moth successive day. of the once besieged provincial ca pl ta I of appeal against you without posting any The B52I dumped 2,500 tons or bombs An Loe, 60 miles north of Saigon. kind of bond. Anybody -even from out at targeta In the southern half of North ~r stale. If they lose .thf'.re+~.r-cu take Vietaam, akmg the Ho an Minh supply ·~ t.o. tbe stale commlSs~on. Still nc;i bond. net~ork in Laos, and in all four military F a1hng that , they can f1\e a lawsuit regions ot South Vietnam. "THUS IN nrEORY one man from About two thirds of the raids were in out of state could g~ up and down tho:? central highlands and the provinces California to regional commissions and north and south ol ~lgon .. The . Com- stop ar seriously delay all projects of all munl!t command has 1ntens10ed its at- kinds." tacb in both regions in recent wee kl. It's a scary theory to even con--A dozen or the B52 raids struck at template. · North Vietnamese troop posltk>ns a mile Despite this, Senator carpenter says to lv.'O miles ncrtbwest of t~ air fleld at lhe polls show Proposition 20 will pass. t':'e Due Co border camp 1n the cenl ral But he intends to keep campaigning highlanda, which Wll! overrun Thursday . against it. The U.S. Command also reported that American fighter-bomben flew about 140 OUT BEHIND his Campus Drive office 1trlkes against supply routes trucks and sits a A1ercuey ataUoo wagon wllb depot.a in the aouthern J>inhandle of Ca\l(omia plate S-S4; Senator, S4th North Vielnam Thursday. District. It's going to get some more The Command reported that 51 trucks miles on it before next Tuesday. a %$,<JOO.gallon fuel tani and a helicopt.e~ Dennis Carpenter Isn't ready to cloae were alJl:Onl the targetl dettroyed or do"'"1r"Callfomta yet. damaged. - DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtllvery Of the Dal!y Piiot II ;uarantetd ""'°"*""'' .... ~ It "* -not """' ~ 1>1111<1r 11.,. J:» 11.M.. un Md Y'Olll' c:DP'f' will M ""°"9flt licl roll. l"•llit .,, letC11n unHf l :JO "·"" Teilo!IOna Mtll Or-. c:.ity. ,.,.. ••..•••• toUtl ~Hwrt....,_IMdl .... W.11••--.................... , .. 191'1~~ ..... IM "-~ 011r11 ......... 18'1111 """"' .................... ....... Storm Front Moves Out l11dia1i Summer Returns to States of West Te111peratin·e• ..... I ?I • .. " I I ............ t0t0e ..... 1 • (COQ.ltal iummarv 011d tidal data Cl!>IJ<<tr today on PaQ• 2$.J " • .,. _..,........I DONATES $1 MILLION W,Cl-15- My ' • • • McGove~n .fells Becki.er 'Secret' , ......... ... . -"· .. \ . -BATTLE CREEK, Mlch. (AP) Democratic presidential nomloee GeQf~ McGovern has told off a beckler. • A youth wea,rtng aevefai ~ buttons . ' . . crowded cloae to a fence u M.c<{9vem walked olong sbalctng band.s durJnc an appearance at Batlle Creek · ~ Thursday. As the South Dakota &e11&tor ap- proached, the youth told blni: "He Will beat you so bad that you'll wish you'd never left South Dakota." Saul Koh1er of Newhouse Newspapers, who W)'Qt.e a pool' repart for · othtt newsmen, said MeGovern Said' to the youngster: "I've got a secret for you." As the yooth leanecf (orward lo hear, Kohler 1:1!lated, McGovern said so/Uy in ttae young man's eai:: "Kiss my aa:,. Al McGo•em continued down the line shaking hands, the yowig man """Ued and, according to McGovern press secretary Rlchard Do u g h e r t y 1 ex· claimed: "He said a profanity!" m Rn s Pl s La·s, •FULLERTON • HUNTINGTON BEACH • ORANGE t .. . .. ' 1 ... • ... • . _, . . • I ~. The dilling room of:your ' ~ . . ·dream.s at the years '· lowest price! .• :'"· ....... . i,.'J,~: t • .\ . ., .' 'v-ur ..... • Ml .• C~oice! - ···----·· . . .. " He.e'88 dining rooii)to thri!Jany "gourlneL" ' TABLE and Jt will be like dining in a Spanish castle! Note the depth of '•rllitl&·lbe al)~~ .. ! .• ;:. 4 CHAIRS or t.op and the elegant iiilfj 1!"' on.. ·~ ftATCHING CHINA Rla .~s door fronts. J.nua. tb·e:re.1"1~~- s helv es ancl even a li~ht. The ovlftabl8 $199 mcasn™ a lar;e 7-2" with extra leaf. Finished in rich wann brov.'Yl tones. ITTR·n fULlERTONt 225 N. Horbor Blvd. {d-l\IOwn)(714) 171-5720 m.lllll -l'UIQt HUNTINGTON B!AC>l, 18582 Booch llvd. (714)962-«77 .. CUN dll.ANGE, 1838 N. Tu1Jin Ave. (1/2 milt So. of Oro"g• Moll),71') 637:8•20 l.T s!otE HOUIS, "'EN I to. •M '""-·"".I!!-I",,. O>IN suear 12 If I I'll ' ----i ---' .. ' - ... .. Trqdeau Hanging in There <ri-rAWA (AP) Ptlme Mlniller Pie~·' E 111 o t t · Ttodeau say1~ be won't quit ~ despite the tie vote I n Canada'• general election, and the leader of the N e W· Dornocrnllc party pledged the supPort Trudeau needs for a majority in the House of Com- .tnons. - Trudeau told a televised news oonfere:ice he would ask Gov.-Gen. Rol:ind Michener to call Par~ament into session as ' . . IN .SHORT ... DAILY PILOT ,f , .. Jobs Up; Rate Same ~ WASHINGTON (UPI) - ~ Jlllllo•'• unanploym..,1 {ale ttmalned Wx:banged In October at 5.5 percent, but the number of persons with jobs went up 290,000, the govern- ment said today. The .Bureau of Labor &ollsllcl (BLS) Qf the Lal>or Department said the jobless rate showed no improvement despite the lncrease i n emPIOYment. It e:xplai.ned that thejllgher number of jobs was offset by a continuing influx of new workers into the labor force. October was the fifth con- 1 e cut iv e month that unemployment had hdd at abotlt 5.5 percent after hover- ing around I percent for 19 consecutive months. Coming four days before the presidential t.lection, t h e reporl'J· poulble impact on voters was dUfieult to assess. While unemployment has fallen half a ptteentage point during the administration's Phase II ecohOm.k controls, It is stiU far above the 4 percent jobless rate target origlnally set by the White House. · On Thunday, the BLS ·issued a somewhat more favorable economic report - from the administration '• standpoint. It said . wholesa1e pri<ft aJowed doWn I a I l month, with the ntt O.l per· cent below September. In today's report, tbe BLS said the number ol. unemployed workm ~ unchanged in Ootober II U mJlllon, while the munber of '. workm with jobs bit a .5 million .lith the tio,lllO In- crease. There was little or no change in the )obless raiet for most categories of worll:en. Adult men 3.1 pm:tnt; ~t women , 5.5 percent; wbttt workers 5 percent; Negroes 10.1 percent; beads of households, 3.4 per«nt, and married men, I.I peroent. ARTISTE de la Rue J as possibJe ao bis Liberal .. ernment could detlnnine U-d !JI of'i l • . late with a vote of con-... enne " etn a C!oath ~··st ,. .... Now Thru S•t. ,,. ________ .., ________ .\'i fldence in Commonl: CJ 96 .1 1 ~ • ":!l'he prime minister said the Mrs. Ethel Kennedy looks up . at bust of late hu s· . f :·,,, • &. • • • , .. HOu.se CJllflOl meet before the _baE;n~d~, ~R~o~be;rt~, ~f~o~ll;owi:·!n~g~u~nve~il:in~g~c=e=r•:m:o~n~y~in:__~--=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ \I Japanese Stragg'._r erid ·.or lhl<,fznt week In,_ Brooklyn civic centerThursd.ay.. -·, W December.~polltlcal . , ..• <~-P•ld Pouuc•I Ad.Jen'-'-' f, \ ~ . observers. aaid it may not con-1------------'---'--'...:.-------'.::..====='----------~---------- M , s • vene until~uary because of /. ·atr•ne pinste. r recounts scheduled in al least , ~ m~-I NAGOYA, ·Japan (UPI) -spinster from the old Japanese Sholehi Yokol married the old· capital of Kyoto. • .....,_ .... Burietl \ VEil!CE (Al>l -Poet--EUa /jfi . like· ,/ fashioned girl he wanted to! Y~i married her today at day, , .a Shiitlo Shrine wonbiped by t :Vok~i. 57, nturned horrie 'Jaeanese as a symbol of vic- almost a year ago, a national fory. Pound was burled today.In the . • y~u same V~ian Island U cemeter.y where composer Igor Slra\'lnsky and baUet Im- i hero alter two bunters on Yokoi and his bride stood in ' Guam captured him -and en-front of an altar ·of Atsuta ded the longest holdout of· all Jingu, a shrine in a forest by Japanese soldiers who did near Nagoya, llK> m I I e s not know or did n o t . soulhwest of .Tokyo. acknoWledge that World War The couple stood in front of ~~~ · to spend leisure hours Maggiore, and then a black I II was over. a pri_est, sipped SJ]te three He said he wanted to get limes ~ the. ·wegoom first married, but not to one of the and followed by his bride. He modem Japanese &iris In thelr then read a written SCatement miniskirts and makeup. Then saying he and .~ wife will live friends arranged-a-meeting together~until,4eath separates gondola decorated with m t~L .Ill b h ·=:r::r .. z~i:.E on , ie ocean eoc, of San Michele. with Miholro lfatashln, 44, a them. '· eC•111puFuss GRAMBLING, La. (UPI) - Grambling College students Indi S H · ~1 d' u • set mattresses on fire in a · ans· tay · o e · p :.~~~=;.~~:::'.~ • • 1 • • buildings and smashed :,..i WASHINGTON (AP) permitted after the White furniture late Thursday -the A b o u t 3 0 0 I n d i a n House apparent!~ overruled first violence in a week o( plan.. to ey@: th"'1J. :· • • 'peaceful protest<. demonstrators remain bar· ricaded today inside t h e Bureau of Indian 6.ff.~ir-s_ building they seized at,4wk Thursday, thelr night'J '!lay • -Asians Ar~ ... ·-NEW YORK (UPI) ~liilh few J>0S13eSSions other the clotbes:they .. -.,_82* eIJ)eiled by Uganda ar- rived in the UrUted ~ take up a new llfe: • They were the van~,ijl of 1,000 stateless Asi~ ;the Untied Slates agre<d t~epl of the est i ma t·e d' @1,000 banished from the "AfriCiti na- tion by President ldl Amii;· NegotiitO:fs for the Indians About 200 state police were ti.-. summoned to 'Gfamblirig; but said . u~. would l e a v e dld"hot. actually ~e onto t~ JIO"'el•~Y· °' •. caippus. Campus police said It was,.,~-~!'~ver, , ~~:Jllid!lighl the disturbance whether the "'~""~ would . 1¥1d··.ended. . • . resumetheprearranged • ,,, __ , ca·'' schedule for the Trial of ...,. ti • M Broken Treaties car Iv an MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -A wbJcb !pl() been designed to major U.S.\ grain •uiJorter dnnriati.ze what they called says, It lost some $661,000 01 a their fight for survival in 2-mJllion·ton wheat sa1e to lhe ,;hite ~a"', I ' , , , Soyif~ Union loot swnm.elioir.""".": Amoitg tne actfvil\es set for Catgill, Inc.,' Said liqJ>J.' today was a spiritual service day 1t was breakidj(..A 1'07· at Arllngt.QA_Cezneteey for In-year-<ild tradition .or not · dian vk;tima: of war. 'Ibey bad revealing details .of i t s vowed to hold the service in transactions because okllega· defiance of an Anny ban on . tions that exporters reaped ... "partisan" events in the windfall profits on the grain cemetery. sales. . ......... . ' Sunday, Noy.·5 PARK NEWPO'RT . ' Enter Cycling Events ' WIN 1().SPEED SCHWINN BIKE . ~··· In door prize drowlng .• .. ;-.. ... .. STARTl~'f ,1ff •.,..,. On-bike( llol:·· Bike!.Radea Wh8*Contest_ Sia!~'_ Sprirlt.-ece Opel\li8ria· PriX Balk9ftlre bike race Hill c:llQib Tredl:fli tiunt :; ·"' Cla~ males anti ftmalee:, juniorsJJ)CI adults, and Yeri0u1 bike~,,. • , !Otn.rA ..... I •· ""· ,., ... ...-:;'";.• , DRAWIN!1!R 10.SPEED . SCHWINN ft-~ Display of 0,000 worih of ,... bil<" - fl11t tlm<t.evtl' In.or.-Coll•IY Contea1' !of 11>eCla1ty blket>-· 01~ ~=~: Most outstanding tricycle Lioenafng by Newpo<I BellCll Pollco • w ENTllYFEE:t1 .00AOllLTI • , · • t .50CHILDllEll UllDlll·11 ' Fe9 inch.Kie• entr~ to Mntl *'Cl door prize drawl"IJ . SpectltlriQ la 1Net All procaedl 'will go to ouP!JO!f-•conlll)ulng cycling aafety program. • Eveiyone under 12 must be """"""'"lod by parant. All antranlt under 11 mual bring w•I-(avallabio et Ne""°" -"-park and ....,.,lltton conter1, and COOl*Slng morch1nlt) algned by -'· ' . ' ' f ' ' ,-,o..~ ' '1 .......... ,.,.....,... ....... =:;:i:i:=.:~=i:: c,..," ..... • • ·ON PROPOSITION ·NO:~ Proposition No. 20-the so-celled Coastal Initia- tive-doesn't make one dime available for new access roads to California's beaches, or for any expansion of camping, picnicking, boating, and other recreational facilities for the public. Actually, Proposition No. eo could clamp down on any new recreational development on the beaches by public agencies for as long as five years, just as it could stop a lot owner from build· Ing a home on his property, or a city from building . a sewer treatment plant. It Imposes a virtual moratorium on bulldl~g for any purpose-public or private-within a permit area that extends as far inland as Sacramento and Stockton. It does this by superimposing a time- consuming, cumbersome new permit procedure, controlled by appointed State Commissioners, on top of existing local permit procedures; and by allowing any person-who need not even be a reeldent of Callfomla-to tie up In the courta, with-• I " •PRRS1••• • ... ••• out even posting a bond, any propo1ed project, large or small. All of the Cellfomle shoreline up to the mean high tide Is publicly owned by the State, or If pri- vately owned , Is subject to a public truet. Of the half mile land area along the Pacific Ocean, more than 75 per cent is In open apace and more than 41 per cent Is In public ownerahlp. But only a small fraction of the Coast-lea than 1 per cent-has been oi>ened to the public for camp grounds, picnic areas and accesalble parU. The problem Is to get to the beach. Proposition No. 20 doesn't unlock any of this vest area for the 'publlc: enjoyment-It does Jll9t the opposite~! development of beach parks by public agencies. II can lock up the beaphes from the public. Proposition NO. 20 benef~ only a favored feW now fortunate enough to own beach front h- in exclustve areas. • CITIZElll A8AlllT THE COASTAL INITIATIVE "°""""""-' MHFlWICllc:o.CA .. 1• 11v W1t.1HtM &YO, LOI AHOELU, CA IOOf? m A ITflUT, IOITI: 1101 SAN DtE.GO, CA "101 --·-:-,.=.,,~l;':Pc'r' ·- -,.~~-=-~ A.L~1'1.~f S\ I "-, .,,.., ... ··--.. , " . • '~ , ---- • ' ' ! I ' • 8 D~.y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE 7 I A Barrier--At Last!·· No traffic deaths are more tragic than those involv· Ing motorists and passengers who are innocent victims of head-on collisions. And the San Clemente ,area has probably exper· ien'ced more -such tragedies than any other freeway community in the county. A freeway motorist ~ould lose control, and his car would then shoot across the unguarded center strip, slamming into onroming traffic. State hJghway officials recognized the problem for years, but complained that funds were not available for a center protection strip from Mission Viejo to the !Outh county line. Local pressure -along with a sicken ing. toll ol fatalities . -apparenUy caused the state to fmd the mone y quickly.' The last of a special concrete barrier was going up along the freeway this week. The project will save countless lives. One example of how badly it was needed lies in the deaths recorded since the job startea. . Seven persons died a)ong the stretch in the some thre.e months they'Ve been \Vorking on.the barrier. A Decision to Be Faced After a period of quiet. _a ne\V ~la~ for deve~op­ ment in Laguna's Sycamore Hills area is m the m8:king, and it seems the current Planning Commission will be faced with evaluating the project when it is formally prese nted by Newport Investments Inc. Needless to say, any plan for opening up Sycamore Hills to residential -development causes dismay among . supporters of the Laguna Greenbell Tho 622-acre Can- yon pattel Is regarded u the keystone of tho greenbelt they bope will encircle Laguna. As ouUined, the new p_l_an would Include 2,000 dwelling units arranged in vt11lge-lllle clusters, leaving 72 pei:cent of the acreage as open space. This seems generous, but there are those who feel any develop- ment involving lour to five thousand residents, plus a shopping center, would be tantamount to letting the camel get it.. nose in the G""'nbelt tent. Since there seems to be no money available to buy the land at this time, Laguna has no choice but to con· sider the prnposaLPerbaps the planners can come up with some sort of open space zoning that could not read- ily be removed at a later date. Props. L and M ..• YES Voters in the Capistrano Unified School District will have two .extra school-oriented propositions to con· sider, Nov. 7. " Proposition L wouJd realign trustee areas to pro- vide a more equal balance of the number ' of voters in each area. A yes vote is supported on this is.sue. Proposition M would change the method of electing trustees. They, would still be required to reside' in trus- tee areas, but would be elected at large by all district voters. This would prevent a trustee from being seated by one-seventh of the area voters. Capo Unififd is the only school district in the county still electing trustees on the ward system. •· The DAILY PILOT urges a yes vote on proposi· lion M. • • • s (.; ' ' .. -· "' ' J U.S. Cultural Snobbis1n ls. Dear Gloon1y Gus Deficit Financing Is Basie Cause of Inflation Disappearing ~YDNEY J.HA.RRIS) When the Metropolitan Opera opened its season in New York a few weeks ago. with an apparently smashing production of "Carmen", the cast included: Marilyn Home, Marcia Baldwin, J a m e s f\.1cCracken, Tom Krause, Raymond Gibbs, Russell Christopher, my old neighbor Donald Gramm -and ·IOme foreigner named Adriana Malipoote. Thirty years ago, 20 years aao, even 10 years ago th!! no-.., menclature would have been reversed : there would be a doz· en names like Mall· poote ln the cast, to one like Gibbs or Baldwin. The United Slates may n o l yet have come of age ln Its cultural dimeruiloa, but at least we have outgrown the 1100bblsh xenophllla aod the national inferiority comptu that have. plagued us """" our orlP>--'-In decades past, aerious American singers were forced to go to Europe and make something of a name there tor themselves before they were accepted in American operatic circles. Some subse- quently famous ones went &o far u to change their home-grown American names into exoti c European ~mens, both as a deception and a "glorification" of their identity. !THE SAME WAS true, and petbaps even more so. in the esoteric f\eld of ballet. ~·here a little Jewish glrl from Lendon named Alice Marks felt sbe bad lo transform herself into • • A I i c I a ~1arkova ·•.) •Opera C<>mpanies -and the ~let more With the tv.ay food prices are going up it could be that the Irvine Co. has second thoughts developing Its land for homes. Maybe they should continue being farmeni? -P.O. Tflh ...... rwflKtl ~ ........ Ml MCeMrity """9 _, 1111 M#lflflr. SWWll .,_ .-t """' Iii .._,. .... o.fty Pli.t. than any -would tum up the.Ir noses at any American name, DO tnatter how fonnldable the talent that accompanied It, to that our native performers were ~y forced to 10" abroad and return jiielidonymously._"Achievlnl a name" in European opera tot an American often ~t achieving a name other than your own. PART OF THIS, or course, was reaU1Uc: the U.S. simply didn't provide the tralning-ground for ltrlo1.11 11D1en that E!urope did : there were few placet for an apprentice to learn his trade, and even fewer opportunities to sing in public with a working company. But just as much was an ingrained cultural snobbishness that respected European performers even if they were no better than, or actually Inferior to, our !tame-gmm product. You bad to be twlee as good I! you wanted to get half as far with a lineage that went back to Kansas or Iowa. IT 8AS Alt. changed now. ~arilyn Home, and BeverJy Sfill( and that robust Australian, Joan Suther and, are as Im· portant "names" in opera as any glottal Serbo-Hen.egovlnlan or Oorid Florentine. An:i when the Met opened Lbla yUr, the costum~ were by David Walker, the choreography by Alvin Alley, and the conductor was a Lawrence , Massachusetts boy named Lennie Berns- tein. Miss Mallponte must have wondered where she was. W orJd in Money Crisis sacnunt.t• Bet II is difricull to simplify the many ramifications of the cwrent world monetary criai3. with its Impact as great upon !he United Stales as upon any of its \\'eslem world trading partner1. One thing is clt:ar: Basi c refonn Is needed. Th is is what Pruldeat Richard Nixon and Treillllry Secretary George P. Shuh.z seek to brlflg about In 1 proposal to lhe finnnce minister1 of Europe, and whatever the ultimate arrrui&ecnent.a: prove to be It b a aa'rutary 11cp tn the right direction. As Nixon pointed out., trade daficit.s cind currtncy dhsparltles -In which U.S. gold reserves have been 1 major ¢tim -lDUmattly affeet the !Ives and jobs of ordinary worklng mm and women, ln- vestort, larg e and small bustneu By George ---· Dear Geor10: I would like lo beC()mt 3 pol.JU.- clan l'1'f nm for th< u.s. Corer• or """"hlnc· However. J don't efC!r" lbe difference be!Wttn a ~t and a Rtpubl\can. Doti thit mke an) diff erence to my palltbl f\Jturt! llOrEFGL " Dear HoporuJ: Hot at all -all you bavl' to know b . tbl dilferenee betwee n a ~ and 1 nonreglsttred -· rr.anagen and, ultimately, political leaderllllp ev.rywbe,.. Nixon and Sbultz have proposed that Instead or the 'dollar, and its KOld reserves, being used u the monetary stabilWng factor, the Western world should tum to valuing cumncles In tenna of son. (opeclll tlrowlnl r1111111 wblcb "ould be rqulated by the World Monetary Fund. Tbt lluctuatlnl val1111 of ony &lvtn ~·· -would be welgbted apnt SDRI, Ind 1111 time ill - surplus rucbed an Wlduly blgb lev~~ Ill currency, In terms of SDR, wowa be revaluated . Thi• lhoold do much to llablllze thl culTl!!lt wild fluctuation In ...,-, which Ms had a a:reat brunt upon the .dollar md aar1v11ed lbe problem o( our cldldt belanc:tl. no. European finance mlnlltrles will -ii yet ll>COrUin. au .. 1y thouch. lllii:f ouPt to ... It ii lo 1111 .. - ot·llie ....... -_,.,., to ....,. .. ,..,._, Oil 1111 crtllcal - fa< .-laly llllllllty. 1'J NfJon puJ It, -In Ill dtl!*t -meam the iilClll)' law of tho-. the hoUtehold of -.. llltbo ... He Midod: "Tb11 ......... u .. In -thl• community of natk>m -needs t•r better Jantopldeourtu:un-- duct.'' We an only hope the European natlon1 wlll rllc above ouruolvt _.. 11lf· lnltftlt, .. the 1J.S. lltlolf -·~· and pettttte et11alUc bll indlJ t;;h8. btst lnttre:tt ol an. ,J Big Spending Destroys Oll:r Savings To the Edltor: Inflation II cheating the lnnocenl old, retired and widowed people who live on returns from savings accounts, annuities and Social Security. ne resources o! all of these helpless people are being shamefully and pitilessly expropriated via the shrinking mini dollar. THIS IS AU. brought on by the spenders in Congress, who are wil~ly spending beyond tax income in what 13 known as "detlclt financing''. Acmrding to Congressman Wilbur MIJIJ, "otficlt spending 13 the sole basic eause of ln- fiaUon." We must put an end to &his ahameful eurse of apocalyptlcal govemment ._ ding. . ' C. C. MOSELEY Prop. 14-NO To the Editor: The Laguna Beach branch ot the American AsM>ciaUon of University Women Jrges a NO vote on Proposttion 14. A few of the lm"1tcatlons of Proposi· tion 14 are: 1. Since · 271> peiWlt of the totai· &sessed valuation of tu.able property in California Is owner-occupied 81.d the rest is business and income property, lowe~­ ing the property tu iate is oI greatest btnefit to large, large land-owners, NOT homeowners. ( MAILBOX ) Letters from r~:r. .. are welcome. Normau11 writers ~ conve11 their m.e1wge1 in 300 taObb or ltu. The right to condense lttkr.t to fit space or .eliminate libel is Teserved. All ~tun mwt include signature and mailing addTess, but names m.a11 be uttthhtld on request if sufficient rea.son ts apParent. Pot!t.!11 will not be publi$hed. countablUty Ii~ at the .very roots of our democratic fonn of goyemment. . ' GAY VAN WEY. Good Team Captain To the Editor; .. Americans are inclined to be man· worshipers. No man is perfect or all wise. A politician is as good as his organiza. tion. President Kennedy never even wrote ~ own apeedies, The great words tha~ you heard him aay so elegantly were written by a speech writer . The President's cabinet is actually more im· portant than the President himself. A well-organized executive department would run Itself. !. HOMEO'f,"NERS will not really gain, because !Onsumer tu:es will increase as much as property taxes decline. 3. Ttrere ii no dlrect benefit to renters. RICllAJlD NIXON learned to operate as an executive team under Eisenhower. There were times when he was the top . man In that department during serious 4. The expected average of atate and local upendJturea for education ln 1973- 74 throughout the atatt. ls estimated at 1995 por ADA. The 1825 guaranteed by this proposal would fund education at a lov:er level than at present. 5. SPECIAL educatlon Jl"lt!i"llllll for handicappe( children would receive no e.xtra funds . All special programa wou1d be forced to compet.. for funds . Opposition to Propooltlon If ii an estaOlilbed poo!Uon of the CalUomla Slate Division (19,000.plua memben) of A.A.U.W. OORan!Y J. BACKUS, Preaklent BECKY BERGE and MARY CORNEUUS, Educatkm Chairwomen Starr. 1.efblat&e• •To the F.dltor: 1'J a sher, I am tn the Jh<m of · developlnc objectives for my C!Ollrle.~ at-- cording fo pnxodures lnaplrod by the Jecllll1lon wblcb made the ..... ol Ane1n111Jmon Joltn Stull a -Id and c'· -:.rm~ all-tori. rr OCCIJRI to 1111 Illa! Uti1 -t -fa< dollnlnl Ind proJectlnl peilw-~-~ ulend lo other _,, ])Ull~y JW&!atlve. Perfonunct ml ~ ol Cllllomla ~fe l'Stml baft b!tlD IQnMt)W ... u.. _....., ..... etda>atloo al tltt moJorll1 of ~ ........,... litd ell-re<ently. Accard!nlly, k Is my 111Qe11lon, u a C.11/omla tupa)'<rJO< many yta..1, that lealllr.tor. draw up ob- Jectlv .. II the bei1Mln1 of the aeulon, ~Jete ~h gufdeltna for mcuurtna II. • Tlllll WJU. ENTAU. many how> and mucb paper wort ume and efJon which '-ml)' wtU fetl mJCbt be betttt openl I In .. ~ out primary and portlnont dulles. H0wtver, we all know that ac- I , illnesl!les of the President. Eisenhower learned lo operate such a team l!iS General of the Allied Annies in the defeat or Hiller. lf McGovern were elected, he would doubtless appoint those who got him nominated or the ones who they would suggest. Most or them .are idealists who have little experience in practical mat· ters of government. HE . BAS PROMISED that if be 13 elected be will appoint a certain number of um or that minority to his cabinet. This Is hardly a proper consideration for plc.ldng the absolute best penon to htad a department and advise the President. The belt possible persoo should be ap- polnted without regard to race or sex. Nixon is not all wile or otherwise perfect, bul be doeJ know how t6 utilize the lntdll&enee of our nation Ind tllorotly· • hilt ac<ompllllhed mucb. lit ii a p>d team caplaln. He ll wile enoup not to ·• alwaya oarry the bell (litd do ,tlt6 llptC· liladar, Ile ltoldl l""'1 1JCor11 above ln- dlvlcfual ...... -• l believe be la the belt man for the job. JIM BOLDING. Be'a fer Po.,.. 18 To the Editor : Your '"dlicus.loo" ol Plopooltlon U (10123172) wu dlNPP<*tllntfly lballow. You are eilhtt rrdllnknntd or you 1tlecled partill -ii illJlllOit "' .,..,, _u.. potlUoa. MAIWllANA, aloobol. -and uptrln all are danl .... ·tt used to u- ceu. Propc11ltloo 19 doa not tOCOUrage lhf Ulfl of pot; It r11ll1tlo1ll7 decrtmlnal!Jes the J>O!IOilll .... -tlon aod cultlvatlon. Aller the DtGll _le.. lludf ..... made of the medlc1I and aoc:ial evidence about ~annabi1, decrimlnallu110n hns be<n recommendct by Presldtllt Nlron 'a Commlsalon on Marijuana, " well as by lite Loa Anl•lco Collnl7 Grand Jury, the N1tkmal Imlltute or Mtntal Health, and the American ~Jedical Asso<:h1tion Drug Committee. These cautious authorities all agree that marijuana is not addictive, does not lead to other drugs, does not d8I"'.age the body, does not produce mental illness, crime or violence, does not have a lethal dosage. PROPllSlrlON II ha~ far reaching ecOnomie and 90Cia1 significance. The present marijuana lawa cost California taxpayers apWoximateJy $100 million each year. The arrest, prosecution, triaJ, iocarceration and ''tehabllitatlon" of harml~ marijuana·~ consmnes tens of millions of dollani, chokee the capacity of law enforcement ~ agenci~ and our courts. The rtsult is that individuals w.ho are privately doing nothing more harmful than the socQi.l drinker, are de-- meaned, harassed aiid degraded, while drug traffickers and criminal element.! go untouched for lack of resourees. ProJX>sitton 19 does not legalize mari- juana; it does not affect existing statutes regarding sale, possession and cultivation for sale -these remain criminal of· fenses under stale and federal laws. It doeJ allow Individuals to grow and possess small quantities for p.araonal use -just .. with beer, wine and tobacco. I AM NOT a "pot !lead" (I find no need fer riiarljuana, aJcobol or tobacco), but I have taken the trouble to examine both sides. I believe It ls esmitial that we stop this ostrich philosophy, generated in tbe ·l930s, and place marijuana in proper perspective. To pass Proposition 19 will allow us to constructively 1irect our legal efforts to significant maltenl of crime and hard drugs. ROBERT C. KAUSEN All ¥ear School To the Editor: I When the All Year School Committee made Jts first report to the board Of trustees, Nov. 30, mt, "a contlnulng study ol all year school programs" WU recommended. Tbe committee "also reeommatd(ed) pendlng 'declslon .. to the adoption of llU<b a prosrsm by the Capistrano UnUled School Dlltrlct 1mtil October, Im. At that time ....w11 of teJRa to tletmnlne acbolulk: achievement wlll be available." , , Tbt lofarmallon DOW avalloble>'lt not eonc:lllllve. There ' la · no itlllltantlal mea!Unlble e.-that the •1s Plan ls superior co tha tndftional. Neither is there evidence that It ls not. The district's achool enrollment ls growillg rapldb:. ln limeJt wlJl.ceue to grow. 'l'bon U WU! l'eCede. We oould tbtft have ldldlap no kltpr DiModed: 'lbe boai:d Of lnliiMt --decide our future dlltcllon. DOODLE lll!SSIONS, addlllonal con- ltnictlon, polllble buJld!itp, the 4>t5 Plan. all afford rnt1111 of eoplne with the growing •nrollment. Mtmben of the committee have visited lhree ocbool l)'lltml with schools oPer•ilnc Ol'I the 45-1& Plan, We wtre well·lmp«Did with the leadenlllp in tll three. 'l1te .WC.ton with w..._ we met told .. they believe tho '615 Plan IUperlof lo Ille tndJllonal boca1 .. Ibey have .-M Ind -ilel 1D both and be .. fOOlld lhe 6" Plan -men lot tho-Wo -..! -· We lalked with teacben. What we saw and beard fM. d<q<od ..... dlatrlct educational ldvan-taau to the 41-tl Plan u compar<d to the tradltlonal. The 41-1' Plan la growing. Mora dlatrlcta are adopt1111 It. ll II 1proadlnl . to ....,. llCboota In dlalrlcU that have tried II. WILSON RIU!8, Siii• IUperlnleodenl of public iltllrUcllon, bu pubtlcJ1 U · pmsed Illa b<llel the 41-11 Plan may be universal .Jn. Cllllomla within five years. With few e.ceptions, memben of the All Year School Colnmlttee have children in the CUSD schools. Our interest In the 45-15 Plan is baaed on our conviction it offers the best solution to the sUuation with which the CUSD Is confronted. Some members believe the pl.an should be employed in all schools within the dis· trict because of the advantages it oilers. Seven meetings ·have been scheduled within the district. They will convene at 7:30 p.m. on Nov. II, 9, 14, 16, 21, 28 and 30. We hope parents, teac>en and the other one-half or more -of the taxpayers, tbos& wbo ·do not have children In the CUSD scboola, will attend one of the meetings. "nlere they can hear about the plan, its advantagai and its dllad· vantages. They can express their opi· nlons based upon factual knowlqe. Such opinions are needed and wW be helpful to the board of trustees in ar- riving at ita decision. HILBERT FRYE KEISKER Cbolrman for All Year School CommUtee, Caplltnmo Unified School District Drt1tJ Capital To the Edltdr: Stroutng·m a main stret at a !tone's throw from Ille police station, a young girl 13 overpoweied by a rode wielding assailant He dragged her screaming into a car with a waiting accompllee, and at a very short distance In a hilly area tbey proceeded to rob, forcibly rape aDd sub- ject her to perverted. acts. Under a massive JX>llce search in the confined area aided by neighboring helicopters combing the canyon secured by a high- way patrol blockade along Laguna Can· yon Road, it remained only a matter or time when the capture or surrender of the culprits was lmminent. IN THE COURSE of three hours, the steel trap, a boy scout operaUoo, wu I lranlfonncd into a Keyatooe Cop fiasco -the forces of the celebrated Chief ~ Kelly whose first confrontation under I crisis resulted in chaos. The desperadoes oot only eluded the paper tiger of tbe Marine Corps, but drove unmolested I through highway patrol-inf-11.tewl}') Into Hollywood reie.Jng. the viellm it , lheir leiaure, l' · Cout <!>'llJ!lwtltles are a fa~ and lucrative field in many waJI far crirnJJlal I operations, partlcularly Lquna Beach : inasmUch as the terrain aflonll Ideal undercover contact ror distribution or ll-1 licit drup \fl~ .... amp1o, 11111p1,ir. of 1oca1 L money. The increased acttvity' over the I yem can be credited to ;the paatng porade of lncompotent pollot ruda who \ ltave. made ua the dNa apltal of the I cout now coupled with bur&larJ and l vk>lencc. I SPERO JANISE ---T DAILY PILOT Robert N. Wtfd. Piobti.m T,,_, Kt..U, .idilor Albert W. Bolt• Bdllorial !We Edl!or ' . :Mothers In·Spe{l . At .. Birth . •· PHQENI;, Ariz. (AJ'.) - Most of the, Jlabies delivered by Dr .• Ji;~ .. B. Hamblin come tftml. metbers who att hypnotlted;,,_ " . . "The principle is that if · a , person with the use of hyp- nosis is mentally occupied and 'in their imagination somewhere else, then they cannot be in the room for pain," says the doctor. 'nlrough the use o f recording tapes played during labor and delivery; the general practitioner says 85 percent of his expec1ilnt patients are us- ing hypoosls. HAMBUN SAYS the ad· vantage of tape recordings is that they produce a deeper state of hypnosh1. Earphones keep out other noise and pa- tients ., ,~t.ain stronger coo- centratloo, he says. They also are used when patients visit him'. . (' "I have the tapes timed, the footage marked and carry a stop watch in my pocket," he said. "I know when to go to the patient, open the miet()phone and give whatever live lniitructions I want her to 1-.--- receive that day." Mrs. Norman Gallion, 29, one of the doctor's patients, says she always wanted to ex- perience ·a natural childbirth "as much as possible." •'WJIEN I HEARD ·about hypnosis to produce a type of aneslh-by suggestion, I -said ilhat's ·for me," Ille aa)'!. '"l'here are risks involved to the ~by and mother with any kind of drugs. And, I knew already•that l was susceptible to hypnotism." Mrs. Gallion, in checkup visill, wears earphones and listel\I to induction tapes in a reclining chair. "lt was just " like in the movies," she says. "He held up one finger and asked me to atare at it." Then the doctor started the P~'· iqdoctrtnation.. ' ~"Alter a whlle, my ~'got so heavy they closed," says Mrs. Gallion, who expects her baby in about three -0. "THE DOCTOR LEFT the room. I heard the door click. I was aware be was gone but very !'elaxed, Uste~ ' " Ing Jo the tape. At a recent conference of nuraes,' 'Haµiblln hypnotized ·Mrs. Gallion. When he ran a pin tbrough flesh In her rlght wriat and left it there, she didn't flinch. KNOW YOUR CANDIDATE VOTE ... " FOi MARY DEER . . - wUrw ....... qa1n n lO'Wllft'd to s;1ve others Nht to vote. Glrla and ys ·a1tendln~ an)' tchool In Newport~Maa area can In a U1p _ to Stc:ralnento 1a AJr .Cllt!omto. _,. vaJlable In Westclltf PWil. Pl at l,'1lh A lMM AWrr .,DtpolSt Om! only ln thf ot bo'f .,, Jett'• Pett.Ins appeUlha Oct. 31 thru !!l!I'· II. : . Proposition No. 18, a Statewide Initiative Statute, is the most drastic censorship law ever attempted in California. . It will appear on your November 7th General Elec- · tion ballot under the title "Obscenity Legislation." No one wants obscen ity. Present laws are not perfect. ... But Proposition No.,18 is CHAOS! -. Many of America's most popular magazines would be c·ensored. Three recent issues of Time would have been banned 6ecau-se of art reproductions and news MAG._AZINES THRF•TENED BY CENSORSHIP photos expres.sly prohibited by No . 18. ' Unbelievable? It's true! It's raw censorship, and it's coming to California, NOW! • HIFSS WARNS AGAINSI N0.18 "It's a bad case of overkill .. : The way would be clear to set up little censor- ship boards all over the State." -KNXT (CBS) Television, Los Angeles "It deserves .. Ahe vigorous opposition of the librarians, educators. law- yers, district attorneys and church groups ... " -THE CHRONICLE, San Francisco "Local jurisdictions would be free to have widely differing standards ... the State would become a patchwork of varying laws ... Proposition No. 18 is too extreme." -KPIX Television, San Francisco " ... the most drastic censorship law ever proposed in the State · ... paintings,_ sculpture, records and even libraries would be affected if Proposition No. 18 were <o pass." ·-" -HERALD·EXAMl!ifn '..os Angeles JUSI A.FEW -MORE WHO SAY: "VOTE NO ON 18" Nl!WSPAPERS The Bee Newspapers .. ,. Sacramento, Modesto, Fresno The Los Angeles Times The San Francisco Examiner The San Jose Mercury-Herald Bakersfield Californian San Diego Union & Tribune AND RADIO In Los Angeles: KFI, KHJ, KFWB, KNX, KABC,KLOS In the Bay Area: KFAC. KCBS , Elsewhere: KAFY (Bakersfield), ·- San Bemardlno Sun r San Gabriel Valley Tribune Glendale News Press Long Beach Press·Telegram Alhambra Post-Advocate Oakland Tribune Pasadena Star-News AND TELl!VISION In San Francisco Bay Area: KPIX-TV In Los Angelet! KNXT, KNBC, KABC-TV Elsewhere : KGTV (San Diego), KFMB (San Diego) ~ . . Robelt c. Kirltwood, No. Cll.¢<>~111)111 Wll111m M. Roth, No. Cal. Co-Chairman Frederick C:Dockweiler, So. Cll. Chllrman 8-40 aau.ry StrNI San FrancllCO 114111 (416) 381-2870 •_; ' I • FILM CLASSICS BANNED! TV5HOWS Bl "CKED OUT! N0.18 WOULD PREVENT ntE SHOWING TO ADULTS OF ntESE Fl' 'AS: "LOVE STORY" :e:o:•:• t:e; ......... 1 •• ·~--~~ ...-. • • ~'V _'4 , . .... .. ( ~ ...:.. t:· . ..,.. ~ ·' ' ' • ' . l -...... f I . , I ., ' ... , ~ ... ~ ·• :.i. -'· ,_,,.EO AND JULIET" . It would ban the re-run of these and scores of other films on TV. And ii would also prevf:lnt the broadcasting of episodes of "Marcus Welby, M.D." and other television serials and plays which ran afoul of the Initiative's harsh strictures . 279« W. 81h Street LOI Angolee 90005 (213)388-1107 DAILY PILOT 1 1 • • • .... . • • I DAILY PILOT Adoption Thre.at Battled From Wire Services Victor. a 6-year-old 1'1exican-American • boy i n Houston. wouldn 't eat his breakfast and had trouble .sleeping. His f011ter mother, Mrs. James Adams, a N~o. said it's all~a113e the county wants to take him away. And Mrs. Adams, 51. said she will keep Victor if she has ( PEOPLE ) to overturn a Texas law that rnakes it illegal for a black family to adopt a white child. "Victor is a happy-go-lucky kid with a big smile but this is affecting him." she said. * Las v e g a s oddsmaker Jimmy "The Greek" Snyder said the odds a g a in s I Democatic Sen. George S. ~tcGovern's \Vinning the presidential elect ion w ere 1,000-to-l. President Nixon should ear· ry at least 47 states,"· Snyder said. "He should carry California solidly. and the only states McGovern has a chance for are Massachusetts . South Dakota and Wisq?nsin." * A Chicago woman sued entertainer Flip W i I son , saying he fathered her child. · Mabel Robinson filed suit in Los Angeles asking t h a t Wilson be declared the father of her son Joseph and be re- quired to pay medical ex- penses and support tf:le child, born in May. A hearing was sceduled for next week. 1- * A man who claims he is the rightful emperor of Japan has been indicted for failure to pay t.070 million yen. or roughtly $3.57 million, in in- come taxes between 1969 and 1971. Nobuhlko Kumazawa, 52, was indicted by the Tokyo district prosecutor's office which said Kumr..zawa, board chairman of a private research company, earned 1.091.5 million yen, or $.1.6 million 'from larxl sales and other business deals between 1969-1971. He reix>rted total earnings during that period of only 25.5 million yen, $85,200. * A man who was Mlami's policeman of the year in 1969 and twice has been named policeman or the month since then was fired because his hair and mustache are ·too Jong. orncer Daniel Zell, 26, was officially dismissed e v e n though he had his hair trim· med around the ears last Wttk. Police offlcials aaid Zell's hair. sideburns and mustache were still longer than allowed by department regulations. * Mrs. Alice Badeau, '19 and an invalid. won $1 million in New Jersey's lottery. Gov . William T. Cahill drew Mrs. Badeau's name and Lillian M3diSon, her nurse, ac- cepted the award saying Mn. Badeau was unable to attend. A man who said he b a relaUve of Mn. Badeau, but refused to further identify himself told newsmen "Mrs. Badeau is elderly aod very conserwtive, and not ln· t.e:r:ested In. publicity." * Britain's royal family hit the front pages of the nation's new11papen with a dazzling gallery of oolor pllolographa mode by Queen EIJJabeth 11'1 COOlln, jet...t cameraman Lord Uchlleld. The pllo ... ~ luued by B~ Palace to mark the 25\b wedding anniverary Nov. JO oJ.,;lht qUffll and Prlnot Philip. The Dilly Exprea, I strong IU(lllQl1« of the rnonll'Ch1. wrapped Ill edition In a four~ ~ aupplement fronted by a bJ1 color portraM of the royal eouple ·•mllln& lo ca au a I cklitlla on lhe llwn o f _, Clltle In Scolllnd. TAX•I POR WHAn .. "°"" IUCI ... ca111n51 =-1w·.:r=.::. _ .... Lo...-..... -- - annual- stasts tomonow, satarUy, ..... a.m. to 9:30 p.JD., all stores I ' men's furnishings, 7, 81 Men's Polyester Knl.t· DRESS SHIRTS ...... ., ....., 5 99Mwlo11w 7 99 IM.t.... • ........ • Re9. SI0-$1 ). W1rp knit polyMf•rt ,to 1•sy-c•r1. Critp 1hifN1 11rtcf i•cq11•rch: t i19t: l•Ya-17. .. -e,·33-------------. Save 20°/o Imported ITAUAN LUGGAGE 27.99-35.99 lronn vinyl witll cr111hed v1lw.t lik1 fNnel 111 .. rt. e.-ras,13 4.50 Perma-press c:lress shirts, short sl•eve -···········----·-··...i.H 99 99 ~ •F J 588Z n .. I 8 · · t ,. H D h, I I •/7 50 · 'i:ll'"' ""'• movie pro1•c or .................... -. 6.50 ress s 1rt, on9 s ., perme-press --···-·············-····--' • 7, 99 A' · 63 I d · 40 H 6 So D h ·~ h ~ I • p ''' 2/7 50 "'· 1requ1pt 5 remote s i • pro1ector ................ ,.. . ress s lnS, s on I ., p rma-r ........................ • $4-$5 Ties, qreet assortment .................................. 1.79, J/$5 207.48 SRT 100 SLR Minolte camera with ceie' ....... -..1'4.99 men's sportswear, 5 109.99 GAF STl02 super 8 movie c•mere .................... 84.tt ;,...--------------------... !-79;99 Minolt• 800 autopeck camera with case ······--·--49.H Men's COTTON FLANNEL PAJAMAS ---~ti;1;;;ey;·15 ··-··"· ----- Our own fin• br•nd. L!~g~:::"•· lon~;~oet or middy ,+yle•. Fen• Brother ••3500•• -EUCTRIC TYPEWRrTER cy p•ft•rn1. A-l ·C-D. 119 99 .... '"·" . 1.50·2.50 Hosiery, all lengths, femous n•m• ..........•......... 89c $7-$8 Pa iemas, famous name, coat or middy -·--·······-·····4.49 $7 Cotton knit pajamas, long leg, s-m-1-xl ···················-···4.49 $5 Slippers, famous maker, solids, fancies ................. -.. ..2.ft FAMOUS MAKER GOLF CARDIGANS .... su 15.99 Golfers' f1 wo1it1 1w•1ter in • soft blertcl of Alp1c1/wool. Full cut, 1i111 s·rn·l-•I. 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Silnmons, S.rta, Sealy Centvro® SIHp Sets $50-$90 Twin ••ch piec• .................................... $39..65 $65-$95 full each piece ........................................ $4§..$65 $65-$95 Twin ~xtra long each piece .................... $45465 $180-$240 queen siz• set ................................ $135-$235 $250·$330 ~;"9 ul ---·-----------------------------------·----$1854235 Men's si,,.,.. ....... c Nn..,.. ,.,Dm:c.5 ftYsnRnS f•ir tr•ded it•m• lt(lt Included'. · " '""~ '"'""'." .V-. Y.!\l'h "!: ~ ' ·>Jn~ 15"" e:':~~ ..... oil Stmn!OM Hldo-A-Bedl ... ,,. ..... 2 .99 . _______________ .. Pure pl11s11r• •foo! with u1btle cornbin•fion1 of suede •"' 1 •• th.r. earpethtg r11gs 32 45 H•nclsorn• O•ford with bwll'lp tot. ..,_.._ _ _._, ____ , __ , __________ _, yal"Bfl, needleC!raft, 29 ·$16 Wall htingin91, Hummel figur•s, enimals 16"x20" .. 10.tt $12 Crewel picture kits, asst. d•signs 10x17" ................ 1.H $11 Crewel floral picture kits w/freme 5"x6" ................ 7.tt f 15 Cotton corduroy bedrest, zippered mechine wash 11.H notion•, 4 Flllffy Orlon ® Acrylic GIFT ROBES .., .. , ......... su 9.99 C.rlte, turqvol1•, pink. \l•llow. ru1t. w •• h.bl1. Sl -$5 R. G. l1rry'1 An91! Tre•d dipp•rt ..••••••.....•.••• J.Jt toys, 28 Mattel's "Big 0 "FAT TRACK ~CE SET .... "·" 8.97 "lil 0 '' f11tur11 ••tr• wide 1trip for r11I P••1i119 1ctlo11. l11clud11 2 11n 1r c•"· juice rn1chin1 1"4 12' of F•t T r1ct BIG WHEEL BY MARX ,... su ... 11.97 Lew 1lu111J for r1c1 ec:tieft fw•. No +ii' 1t1bllity; . PLAY FAMILY SCHOOL, GAlAGl,iFAIM • ,... 14." 10.67 -Fish•' Prlc:•'• flllillfpul•tl•e pl•v •ctlYlty. 2·1 ...,.... 5.49 Monopoly 9arne by Par•er lro1 •••••••••• _'"':':: _____ J.17 11 .49 Play 'n l•arn Comput•r by Pley1kool ___ 1..47 ~ 5. 99 Mu1ic•I Beer by ~monwHtth ·····--··--····---!,." · 4.99 TNch o..d Pl•y Ro99tdy "'""by Kn;ck&rbochr ......J;t7 11port1a1 1..U..43 Re9. l7.99 Rollaway t1bl1 t•nnis table ············-·.,··-····.2t.ff l speed 26" d•luxe bikes, ••••mbled ··--···--···-·········-··19.ft 4.99, 4 player table tennis ••t, peddlts, btlls, n9t •.. _ .. _.J.tt Du Pont Dacron® Polyester St;tAG PILE St ..._, tw .. tw 1•"""4 7.49 1411• y4. S1w1 15 %-21 % 011 instellecl Kodel@ poly11f1r pile c•rp1t1 I O.olc1 of 4 look•: hi-I t1lftur1, ridi •h•t pile hi 9rifht color1. Solidi ot multi teflff, let• $9.ff.$12 • , • •, , ••••••. , , , • , •. ~.49 .... y4, ........ Ar1besque, I 00 "· Dacron® poly•ster pile, 6.x9 ' ........ 39.9' Erica with the sh e9gy "rya' look, 6x9' ..... : .............. 59.99 Spring Fever, nylon pile oval, fringed, 6x9' ............ : ... 29.9' eu11tom draperies, 82 DRAl'ERIES CUSTOM MADE FOR THE PRICE OF FABRIC .;:-::.. le99-4.99 yd. H1111drecl1 of colors, ll'llllV tett1.1re1I Aho loc-Lo"® in1ul1tecl 1iftl119, 1.29 lebot l11clUllMI. ''le:•• b•1ed 011 70" mlnlnutrn fini1hed l1119ffl • ster~e••• ree9"'8, 18, 77 .... ~ ..... ~-------~-~----. Uoyd's FM/AM/FM STEREO RECIEVER .... '"·" 149.99 With bullt0l11 4 •,..ed hirllf1bte, I tr•ck pl•v•r. R•t· IJ9.f9 I tr.1ck tap• stereo playbec• d.ek, wol..t t .. 1.h c&blnot ·--·-· .. ----·--.. ·-------·--· .. ..26." 3.91.5.tf S-LP'o, I trock t•,... ...... ~·--·-'---·-·-1.H tetevld .... 71 aa 11" COLOI l'OITAILE ' ........ 2'9.88 11'" ~II ... 11t1a .. -..,..._ 0.-. ... YHP' t.i-.. 5H.U -voluo .. Z..ltJ, 2S:"cl119. CJ.-o·Color® -------Mt.II RCA 18'1 dle9. me•l Accucolor®. portable ..•.........••• .JJt.11 R ... 329.91 P•,..1onic 16" dlt9. mHI. color -····-JU.II R~. )29.91 • •" RCA color-poriobfo-w/nondt ........ 2tt.ll 11' dit9 •...... l 1cretn Z.nlth l>/w ..... ·-···-················M.11 "~·---11•,• s-&llll:ltl I •re •7 -ft. r.121...-f 299.95 . J111t JO" wWe. 16' Ht. t., ,,....,., twl• .,.h,_,,, ,.,.....lilt• 4 .. n . .. . .. ' . 1 ... • . -· . ' Save f50 W•stin ghouse 21 cu. ft: •"'-tr'y-sld-:.·~v··~.tS Save1,20 Frigidair• 18 lb. Autom•tic washw,...,2·~ JOt,,I Sav• $20 Westinghouse l;i cu. ft: frostproof .. '.~ ..• i-... .JJ+.ts Save $50 We1tin9house 17 cu. ft. w/icem•ker -... .••.• ___ J29.f5 elthoa, II 'I FINE CHINA, OUJl OWN JMPOIJS . " $77 ,... $150-$200 pc. Mt Se,.,i~e for 12 in a cliolc1 of'11w1r•I p,Hern1. STONEWARE SETS, SERVE T2 ' . .. $48 ,.... $71 pc. ChooM from J p•tt1rn1 in fin• qu•lity 1ton1w1re. glassware, 36 Special purches•, lead crystal bud ve1es, c•ndlestic•s ___ S.H $6 Imported l•ad crystal handcut stemware ··--···-·····M· 3.ff Handblown gourmet wine glass•s, 3 sites .............. 1.19~1.fl Set of 6 hendblown crystal Irish coffee glasses .......... set 9.H gifts, 70 BRASS PLANTER W /ARTIFICIAL TREE • .... $65475 39. 99 l•rnboolf rwblar pl1nt, 1plit ph ilodettelron ot m1911oli• ft••· $8 Whjte doves, bisque finish pr: .................................... 3.ff $20 'our handsome folding chairs .................... l2.99, 4/49.H sllveJ"Ware, 59 ALVIN STERLING FLATWARE by~ SAVE SOo/o S1rwice1 for 8 or 12. Sawe 11 /3 on open stoclr •n d1r•wing pi1ce1.'"Sil. wer club termi •w•il1bl1 . $9 3 pc. English crystal salad set, silverpltted servers •... 7.ff $15 Silverplated 24 i'. lead crystal mini ice bucket ........ 9.88 housewares, 39, 95 . Wearever 11 Pc. "BOUNTY" COOKSET _ .. ,,, p•kod 24. 99 H1rw11t gold or 1woc•do porc•lo11in on •lurn inurn. T•flon® II int1ricpr1. I•;,, 2, ], qt. c:ow•r.d ••ucep•n•. I 0" op•n skilled, 8 qt. cow. s•per pot 5 qt. cow. dvtch 0"11t. $40 values Stainless b4 pc. for 8 w/hollow handles ••...•. .24.H 80.50 value Revere 12 pc. copper bottom cookset ... , .... 49.9' 41.85.-value. R•gal I 0 pc. stainless cookset ................... .29.tf $70 Health 0 Meter waist high sc•le, in white .......• 54.ff $20, 8 pc. cutlery kitchen set with wood block ····-······ 12.n $15 Oneide 6 pc. steak s•t, hollow handle, pistol grip •... 9.ff Reg . 157.99 Modern 5 pc. dining set 119.H $22 value, Digital alerm clock w/repeat alerm ............ 14.tt $20 GE automatic 2 slice toaster · ................................ 14." $15 Sunbeam 12 cup automatic perk, avocado ............ 10.H $26 R•9al automatic 11 1/2" sq. electric frypan ............ 18.9' $13 Regal automatic electic corn popper, Teflon® lined 8.H $15 Remington hot comb, dryer/styler ............................. 11.H $18 1-ftmilton Beech electric "Switchblade" knife ........ 12.H ParSOJ!S tebles, white, yellow, poppy, mar-resistant .... 5.49 sheets, bedding 2, 55 . .,,'--~NN@; N@rluH ?Rnm. '16tttrs9"" ' 1 twin fl•t or fitted .J.49; Full flit or lltt.d 4.49: •ing flat or fiH.ct I.ft; Pillowc:•••• 42"•l6" J.tl pr. 42"•46" .J." pr. CANNON NO IRON WHITE PERCALES twin fl1f or fitt•d .J.79! Full flit if flHta 4;7tJ-qu"iin fl1f or-flfo tecl 6.ff; king fitt•d t.4f: king fl•t t.tt; Pillowc•111 42"s:l6" J.71 Pf•, St•nd•rd, queen or •ing Dacron® polyester fill pilows, 4.H Berkeley House POLYESTER BLANKETS 66"ri0" l .tt; 10"•90" 10.tt; 90''•100" IJ.9t; 90",dOI .. 15.tt Haem, 23 SAVE 25°/o, LACE EDGED TABLECLOTHS S12 !IJ"s:70'" oblo"I 8.99 lln1ft/D•cron® pol\11tf1r, p•rlll•·pr111 1oil rele••• fini,h1t . White, lwory. gold, y1llo .... , 1woc•do, ••d. $21 61"1'18" obi. or ow•I 11.191 $27. 61"1104" obi. orOw1I 19.99; Sll 61''11122" obi. 24.lt: 11epkin1 1w1ilebl1. , • ~...C t -".l. -\... llraperlM, lledllp.readll, IO lnfoi-mal white entf~u;'W~i~, l erire wi.d• widths. '" 96", 12~11 or J44" .~--·-·······················-····-· 1"9 pr. Terlured r•yOn tnffque s•tln· draperies in whit•, 1t•nderd 48''•84" .... --····-···········~···-·····-········-····················-···-7.ff 72''x84'' ··-············-.. ···-··-·······-··············-··········: __ 11.H , . T•riured "Marl V" 1hort 14" ~ 41" wlcl1 6.ff• 72" 11.ffi f6" 16.ff; Pichlr1 Wlndow1: 1<4" le'ft .. : 41 " w~1 l .ffi 12" ''·"I 96" II.": 120" JI.ff; 144" 29.~1 •er to celllnl ti" l~l 4f" wide '·"I 72" 17.ff1 96" JI.ff; 120" UM1 14<4" '·"· er "•t1t,1I, .DUTCH CURTAINS' ' Whit. b11~, -..cffo. Dvtdt •llri•ln1 •0"114" JM ,... t0"1JO" a.4t ,.., Or-.... ktOM~l1 ht ~.11" wl41 I• M-111.......,. J.4t- ..... t!,eJa•e IAf. . ' . ' Prlot, 1ollclt ouff••• ,..1~oc1 bodtP<Hd1 twfo 24.H, k'"9 It,,, ''Mountain Side", w•shebl• no-iron •nsemble, twin, full b.d7read1 9:n ;14t11Jt<4S" dreparies, pr •••• -.. A." 15-16 Pilk;w ssortment ·-·-···················---·--.J·" ... ---'$ ----~~ll~~ anll ttiln<J9 . I1DIP®~ , II ' !) AIWlllli NIWl'ORT HUHTl ... tON llACH 4" N. E11cli4 f71•J 1J1.e111 41 f•1hl•11 hlen4 17141 '44·1212 1771 WlfltH A.,.,_ f1t41 "t.Jl)I SHO, 10 A.M. t1 f1JO P.M. MONDAY THlOUGH FllDAY. SATUIDAY 10 A.M. ff• P.M. • • OM ... l. MALL Of OIAHQI ' JJOO N. f1ttf .. Sfrlo ... 1714) "9·111 1 SUNDA'f 12 NOON te 5 P.M. ' .. • \ • .<\ \ 'uftl .T ....... • °" the ..... . Prime M.lnlster Pierre Trudea u, clrryiug son in right arm' lite a football, da ahes across street Jn Ottawa on way, to appointment. Devices Proposed For All . LONDON (AP) -Tile British government said it is considering providing f r e e contraceptives . to' everybody because of sharp lncttases In pregnancies a n d a~ns among young girls and ming ·~disease. Tb e govemement's ~ nouncement came as a draft law provi~ free vasectomy -male sterilli.ation - awaited formal assent by Queen Elizabeth II after pass- ing through both boo= or Parliament. SIR KEl'nl Joseph , secretary for bMJ.th and social security, told the House of Commora he expects to make a statement soon on extending existing services for birth con- ltol. , The first stage is expected to be more money for local authorities to brotden free contraceptive and a d v I c e 'senices especially to the wr married. 'Ibe government Is also being pressed to enable doc- tors to prescribe free con- traceptives in addition to the birth control advice they a1eady give. -~~i!-?~· -. "• ABORTIONS IN England and Wales totaled 141,132 in the 12 month! to March 31 this yeai according to a recent government report. This com- -pred with 33,~ in-1968-49, the- . first full year of Britain's ~ li~lized abortion act. The report al3o said that seIUally trarwnitted disease in girls under 16 is be&ming a caU&e for concern. KNOW YOUR CANDIDA~ ·VOTE FOi CLINT CHIMP The voUng •P hu a&tin betn lowered to g.tvt othen the right to vole. Gb'la and "' boys. atitncllna' any 1ehool In tM Newport-Mn& uta ean win a trip to Sacramento vi& Air CalllomiL BlllloU aval~ble Jn Wntclltf Pm -at J'!th 6 1fYW ;A;.. nue. Oepoeft. Ont OnJ1 ln the btlJot box •t Jett'• Pettlnil: zoo, ,_.i ... 0« 81 °"" ,, •,St ' ' . ' m!Mes' s.;lei, 2 I sun, CCEARANCE • • • MANY STYLES ' 29.99 Gre•t ¥5orfm•nt of 1tvl•1, f•bric' , . , •II s•l•·pflcH. Suits; speci•I griS~p~from regul1r st~c k ................. ,_ ...... 39.99 ':,.~,. ,PANTS c .oATS •. ~ • SALE-PRICED I ' ..-y folwkl 29 • 99 ~ . . Cotton tued•1,, wool1, •II in tfiil gr••t new co•t l•ngth. .. . ' Fall coats, woOls, new looks at savings _ ......................... 44.00 All weather co•ts, very specially priced ........................ 19,99 . . ' , mUllnery, .300 THE ·MID .• L;ENGTH DYNEL;® WIG .... .,. 14.99 C•pl•11, lightw•ight Dyne!@ mod•crylic wig ln n•+ur•I 1had~1. P•rf•c+ holid•y look, 'f'ery speci•lly prked. $59-$b9 Full skin natural mink hats .... ··············~------·••.oo plaza dresses, 73 Special Purchase! NEW LONGDRESSES 17.99 Porfect for holid•y1. Mi1111' and h•lf 1i1e1. Knit pantsuits, holiday colors. misses~ sizes .................... 19.99 eareer dresses, 27 HOLIDAY PANTSUITS reg. SlO·IJ4 22, 99 wlndsor women's dresses, 62 PRINT TOPS, POLYESTER PANTS • .... $16-$11 10.99 Sporhwe•r 1•p•r•i•1 for 1i1e1 36 io 44. W1uti.,bl• print top1, r•t• $11, 10.9f. Poly•1ier panh, n~¥y, brown, blec~ r•9: $16, $10.99, ~.J'X; or m•kh! $26•$40 o.. ... ., 12.20. 14 V, -22 V, .............•..... 19.ffrU.'9 qaaternlty s hop, 68 · ' $12-$14 M1te_fnity pants, tops ................... 7.H·9.99 . ' $I 6-$20 Mat,rnity dresses, sizes 5-1 S, b-16 .............. , .. 11.n junior world, 64 ANGORA BLEND PANTSUITS . _ ... 25.99 5,.,.,.1 1upM 1tyle1 in 1oft •t19or•/11mb1 w~ol/Mylon, n1w p•le colors, ,~.-~ P!!lt• 1iz•1 5 to I) . miases'. sportswear dresse~. ·12 LACE-ICED HOLIDAY PANTSUIT ---~-....... 19.99 .. P•.+,-perf•ct polv•st•r p•nt111it with l•cy touch~s o il sle'"''· vo•e. Purple, hot JMnk. bl•ck, gr•1n, whit •. a.16. junior sportnvear, 97 TOP MAKER KNIT '.COORDINATES ,.._ s11 •• s10 7.99°16.99 l l8Mfl, p•nk, .llirt1, 'f'eJt5 to put to9•ther. W•1h•bf, •crylic doubl• k11it. Miry, b•ny, c1m1I, 5·11. street floor sportswear, 65 CARDIGAN COAT.SWEATERS .... '" 9.99 Werrn, we1h•bl• c•rdig•n1 i11 1crylic. lyorv, b•i91. blu1, n••y, lllec~, purple •!'Id mor•. Sins l6-41. • $12.._ Proportioned •crylic knit pents ............. ,_., ..... -;.1•'9 Sl2-$1·8 Print tops, color-m•tched pant1 ...... -....... 7.ff-9.H •Im•' sportswear, 40-89 WASHABl:E KNIT PANTS AND TOPS ..... fl.$11 4,99•12.99 I , • feJl'lotrt 1'11.t.er coordin•t.1 (11it of 11.,1011 or o.cron® potv••fOf'. r.,., ·..iw .. 11-11-J ..... o. Pull.,. 1olid P•fl••· 10'"• cuffed. Si••• 1-16~ $14 Lecy.look cardigans, Wintu~ acrylic, •I 8'"'20 yop maker wool 1klrts, I 0-18. $11 P•ftt-tops, polyester prints , 10-18 . lLMlell •••p, 52 16-40 ···········'·" ........••...• 12.H ···············''·" . ' .. blO•!JeS, skirts, 86 • . . P4NT TOP SAVINGS SPECTACU!-AR ,... $11411 5.99-6.99 Top off P•nf1, s•irh with •••Y care top1 In 5hort or lon9 ''""• 1tyl11t. lrl9ht print.; ml15••' 1i1••· $1 0-$1 2 Famou1 lady shirts, m•ny ~tylas ········-······4.tt-5.H $I 0-,12 Holiday blou1es, prints, solids .................... 4.H4.H aetlve s portswear, 78 PROPORTIONED KNIT PANTS . .... ,,, 9.99 Sb.cl to your height.,. 100'.4 polyester pull-on p.tnk 111 •hit., Wee•, brown, red. M•chin• ••diable. Short, 1-16. M.diu'"• 10·11. street ""r lingerie, M ··VAN "RAALTE .. KAYSER LINGERIE ....... ;,. 2.99-7.99 s • .,e 1/4 to I/) •.• 1teep•ear end li119erl• f•5hiol'll, W1lt:r: or ong_ gowns. p. _j.'s brus.h_ed f1brics, s-m-11 .3H-4.H Gown,, b y dolls in nylon , si:r:es s-m-1 .................... 3.H-4.ff $5 long h1lf-slips, nylon taffeta/nylon tricot .................. 3.H boslery, 3 Bel-Air® PANTYHOSE And STOCKINGS Pantyhose: , #1040 Soflon·hylon Knit In® bikini .................... 1.H, 3/5.50 #I 080 Sheor-to-w•ist s1ndal foot 1.H, 3/5.50 •2210 Sheer-to•waist support, save 20 "f. ........ 3.95, 3/11.50 •1250 Flat knit sheer suport, seve 20 9/, .......... 3.tS. 3/11.SI •2330 Control top sheen, re9. ,l. -······-····-·-.2.4t. 1/6.SO Stockings: #2190 Sheer Soflon® n~on lc:nee high ................ He. 6/5.50 #)20 G•rt•~•H Solton® nylon thi-hi ·-········-·.1.49, 6/1.50 eostume jeweiry, 20 HALF PRICE. DESIGNER JEWELRY ... ~ ... 1.4f;7;49 CROCHETED. FRINGED SHAWLS ., " .. ' . ~ .;..· ... ,, 5.99" l••rrlifal 9ro11p of 1'•++•rn1 il'I w•,ft•ble ecryfic, Whit. pl111 •11ort.HI c6lor5. M•rv1lout 9i~1. • -· . • I $6~$8 Knit shells; m•ny types, w•sh•ble .................. J.n-4.tt $.1 4;$16..,._ ACtyffc knit clpes, weshable .............. _ ....... __ ... t.tt ' . ' t~~~~t ~!f, -glove sot1 .........•.............................. J.H ' '.. '' $14 Luxurious ur lined le•ther glove• --... -... : ... _ .......... 1LH $3 T$4 F1mous ram• fabric gloves, m•ny styles __ ,_..Z:.9, 2/$5 . •• • l pers onal leatlser goods, H r-AMOUS MAKER PURSE ACCESSORIES " -SJ.Si•-1.49.S.99 Ch1ck 4 ti: ... ,, cliitche1. frel'lch pu,.••· billfoW1, uedn oerd c••••· tey c••H'1 •• treat ••tlety for 9lh1i.,i119, , $5-$8 Umbr•llas, niw loolts and cles1ic shapes ..... i"-4.n $5-7.5.0 MeJl's Billfolds end foldover1 ... ~ .................. J.n-1." $10-$T5 Jiw.'I l:ioxes, hoJfday colfe~tion .................. 7 ....... ff ba11Aags, 37 HANDBAG GROUP 5.99 Shoulder b•9t, 1w•99•r 1tyle1. C•tu•I loolu or dr•11y. 61-e•f leo•lltf 'f'il'lvl1, ..,. .. , clor•. M•ny 011e of 1 kiftd. Vinyl ' •"d leether should•rs, sweg9ers ····---····-·· ... ,,_,·" Leethers1 luxury vinyls, shoulders, totes ........... -... 12.tt-16.tt .... -ties, 17 OUR OWN HAIR, IATH PRODUCTS. _ ......... 99c-2.49 l re •4"f•Y• ow11 beth oil1, rid. ... ........, t.ti..-.. Broadway brend cello so•p, 10 per bo• .... -............. -··-··'·" Styling comb/brush, b1ttery-operated ................. _ _.,._ ___ ll." w-•'• , ...... u••r, a.J5-Iel•I• IEL-AlllP GLA' ·SANDAL $20 l•l-Air(j welker, moccasin ttytln9 .......... ·······-·-···11." $1• CoWer't soft ,"Cr.t+" w•lkhtt shoe .. ·"· ....... 11." $20 Pen'liljo "Monte C.rlo'", black, na¥y crin•I• ............ 11." . SZ7 "Ro•tler Porl'' 1pectatwpof!IP• "'"''I color _..Jl," '21 ~!<lt•r~O:' lri-/ooo p•tchwork 1oodo P""'P ......•. 11." starts tomorrow, saturday, 9130 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. all stores,. SUEDE CLOGS IN THREE COLORS ........ 8.99 lrOW111 ••"'I er ceinel •....de on cor• wM9ea. Sa"• l'low} Stretch pant-booties, soft •rinkl. vinyl ............................ S.tt $19 "Medici'' ltr•pster, black p.aitent , navy calf ............ 12.H e•lltlrell' allees, $1 $11.50-$14.50 Boy's brown blucher oxfords, 81/1-12, l .H 12 1/1 -4 ···-················---.................................................. ~ 9.H la'wear,90 SMOCKS ' FOR TODDLER GIRLS . .... ........ . 4. 99 F•mout meket IMoc•• 111 ••5ori.d 1tyl•1 •nd prinh. Perf•ct o•er p•1tk, or••• ~re11 •Ion.. 2 to... • .... v , ........ "' •• YASSARETTE CREPELON~ BRAS -............... 2.69-2.89 Soft cup1, 1fretch 1tr•p. A-l ·C·D. Or conlo1u c11p1, A·l ·C. $b-6.50 Wemer's Smooth·•s-you bra, beige ~ ........... 1.49-3.69 $6 Ol9a Freedom Front br•, white, e.c .......................... 3.69 $8 Youthcr•ff bri11f, pine/ front, s-m-1-x l ........................ 4.ft rohes, SI SHORT ROBES _ .......... 11.99 Two 5f'\'l•1. E'"broid•ry·ffi'"med Ar,..18) fri•c•t;t,/nylon fl••CI, pi11• Of' b/11e. Or nylon tricot q11iltecl to p•l't'•1ter filtflfiU, •cel•te, li11.d, red or bl11e. W•th•bl•. 10-11. davwear ll•"erle. 63 BRIEFS, BIKINIS, HIPSTER PANTIES 1'<, 6/4.SO 1.19, 4/4.50 Nvlon crepe. ,,,Ion 1•ti11•tte1, l'lylol'I, totton. Pl•i11 or f•ncv, pri11h. color' •nd whit1. Si1•t 4-7. $6-$9 Antron® Ill nylon inti.static 1lip1 ........... ! ...... J.H-5.H $5 Str•tch briefs, white, nude , mint ............................ %." $4-$6 Famous meker •nti-static petticoats ........... ..1..tt.J.tt Wx Is' wear. 83·96 LrnLE GIRLS' TOPS And PANTS $PICW PUICHAlll 1.49•3,99 $6 Cardigan swtat•rs, I 00 % •crylic .. . ........................ 4At $7-$11 F•mous mek•r dresses, •-6• .............. 4-r-'·" $124 1] lont dresses for the holidays .......................... _a.n $12 Nylon hooded jacket, w•rmly lin•d ......................... I .ft 7·14 lllrls' wear. 44-47 SUPER PANTSUn SALE FOR ·GIRLS --8.99-10.99 A fr"9•1 1ro11' of 1tv!•1. Wei1iteble euvlle ., Dect"® pol'f'•ll•r/ col· t.• bitt. s1 .. , 1-14. $11 Novelty c•p•i, ona.,_Y:v' lit.s, •U .. ~--... • ... ·-··· ......... 6.tt ./, $14 J .ckets for 9irls; cotton cord o; nylon . . .: .. ·- ,. Dr•11e1 , eesy care a<rylic knits, 7 -14 ·-· . .. .. 5.H little -~s• wear. 74 _EAMOUS NAME l'ANTS _EO.R .BOYS .... ........ 2.99-3.99 1.,.1,, ell4 11;.., flt. M • .., felirl1:1, ••'-· 4-7. $5-f7 Acryfic sweeters, cotton velours, ]-7 . . .l .tt-4.tt $12 N~fen jac•ett, f•mous meker, 4-T .......... I.ft $1-$4 nit 1hirt1, famous meker, 3-7 ..................... 1.69·1.H a.r .. u• f•ralt•re 81 · OUR OWN IRAND MATCHMATES $65 Crib, double drop 1ide1, pine, yel. or wht. fini1h, 49.95 $70 Or .. s•r che1t, l draw•rs plus metchin9 p1d, saftey starp, 1ame colors •s ebo.,, ..... ....... . 59.H $27 kantwet mettr•••. 102 colts, 1ip-off--c-o.,er . tt.H llO Strole• deluxe napp•r-stroller U .ff 'lJ l'l•y Yi'it.10•40, padded 1..... . .... ····· ....... .U.'9 S22 Automatic 1win9 with music •nd canopy ........ _ ... 16.tt $22 Hi9h ch•lr, thick p•ddin9, pl•tllc tray ................ 16.ff a.f••W'll'e8r-42 IUR01'£AN HAND KNITS -250fo.3lo/o OrMMt. ••N,.,.., ,._,,..,,.. ~ .... ,. IH41e ._ li:.Wtt , fet "'4114.., t lftlftf • , , ... ttt. wt..I. 1ellectie•. 15410 Diaper , .. s. boys, 9irl1. 1-m-I ....... ·--·-·· ... ---1." ..... 10 P•rty Dr•ss", f .12 -18 -24 mo"th1 -··· ·-~HJ.n 5.50-6.50 lubblot for 9irl1, 1--m·l .. .. ............ -... -.-.--1." ,.--I POLYEmR DIL KNn JAC9UARDS .... ~ ... ,.,. ,.,. 1··~··'4· ..... ,., .... ,., ................ ... e.ai.-e .... ...., f,_. .. , ee•M 1 ........ . ...... -4.99-5.99 ~ flt.ti Wool s•mplt piec11 by Ste,en·1 ~ ...... _ ....•. -.J.ft y.i. '2.JO Luscious A.1treHa v•lour .. · . ·-·· 1..lt yd. tl.IO IOI '1. Acryllt Mn+. . .. -· . ---· ---Ut p . .. ----All-AHll_ll ______ ,._._;_...,.,M.,~-~!!'' '!'J ---"'lfil~ .... • .. ,_ ..... t~F"'~ ... ~~~~11-®~.IP.~ ...._ ... _ t11•t1JM111 ••--11141-1111. 7m-•-1n••-1 • _ ... __ 1n•1-1111 &1»7 ·--.. -· .. •&..--Cllll-1 ' -......... ,,..,_. ilM•t-'T'it•11111wt. aa1111"11,_.. ..... fJ 1r 11-• 1 P& • ' ,• • . . I I l 1 1 -Destination South S'eas 14-mil e Race Set Saturday The Lausen Semount, com· monly known as the 14--Mlle Bank, \Y,ill be the wealher mark and/or destination of a BOATING large ocean racing fleet o( '-""-------' sailboats in Newport Ocean Sailing Association's 14--Mile ·, Bank race Saturday. GI , gJ Fleet Championship, The underwater peak is 58 Solings, Saturday and Sunday. fathoms (348 feel) below the OCEANSIDE YACJIT CLUJ! surface off the east end of -Jessop Serles, wt!ide Catalina lslanil. clasaes, SUnd.al; Predictil! Jog The annual race is open to race, power cruisers, Sunday. yaebts qualifying under the North and Inland: International Offshore Rule, ANACAPA YAClIT CL.OB - Pacific Handicap Racing Fleet, Fall Series No. 2, 'Sunday. 1'1idget Ocean Racing Fleet SANTA BARBARA SAILING and Ocean Racing Catamaran CLUB _ Summer Series No. measurement rules. On Sunday ·NOSA will holdl;;=5 ==· Su=nda==Y·======i its annual meeting and Com- modore's Appreciation Race from Balboa Yacht Club. Top feature on the Southland yachting front Saturday will be the start of the 1.000-mlle KNOW YOUR CANDIDATE A quartet of Harbor Area sailors set sail ... this week in a 42-foot Angelman Los Angeles to Mazatlan race ketch for a two-year adventure in the Sout~. They will call at the Gala-off Los Angeles Harbor with 47 pagos, the Marquesas, Tahiti. New Zealand and Australia. Bidding friends fare-of top racing yachts scheduled ' Drumbeat Quits Ma zat"!n The Los An.geJes t o The race is JCbtduleci to start Ana el•• Brukwater. I.Giii Beach Mazatlan race fletit dwlDd..led Saturdiy tt nooo oft the Los slighUy this week with tho ' wltb«awal ol Doo A,,... Jr. '1 Er!eson-46 Drumbeat from Newport Hartlor Yacht Club. LA YC race officials said three other yachts are un- certain starters. They are A. L. SchoeUNman's Ana Marla II from Bahia OJrlntb.lan Yacht Club; Tony Cruz'• 39- foot !loop Viva Cruz, Califomla Yacht Club. These · dropOUts w o u l.d reduce the slartinlf n .. t to I.I. MARTY'S CORRAL CARNIVAL COSTA MESA HI SCHOOL fRJ., NOV. 3 -3 p.m.·12 p.m. I SAT., NOV. 4 -10 a.m.·12· p.m. --z'°'"" SUN.1 NOV. 5 -12 Noond p.m. //41 ., ...... .,,.-... ,~..,, ' ' II you mtsaed , work more than • • ~· well are from left: Jack Kimble, 25; Ga ry Gruettner, 25; Al Nelson, 29 and Jim to ensWer the starting signal. • Francken, 25 . Sixteen loca l yachts are en- -'-----------------------tered in the race. VOTE a third 'ol the tJme, wouldn~t your boss lire you!*· · . • Yachting events in other FOR Southland areas: U.S. Backing Indians on 6oat Races Bahia Jr. Yachtsmen Open Winter Slate The juniors of B a h i a Corinthian Yacht Club elected new officers, kicked off their winter sailing program and viewed a film on "High Speed Saili ng" at their October din- ner meeting held in the clubhouse, 1601 Bayside Drive, Corona, del Mar. holding the sessions and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Langer are in charge of the program. Santa Monica Bay SANT A MONICA Y ACJIT CLUB -Santa Monica Bay Championships, OR, MORF, PHRF, One-Design, P MA , Saturday and Sunday. • ' Sun Diego CORONADO YACIIT CLUB -Fall Regatta, small keel classes, Saturday aod Sunday; ( GORDON GOOSE ,.... '··'. /~·· ~ "l;'~--­ ' ·;. .Well, this year,· you're the boss. BOULDER CITY, Nev . (AP) -The Bureau of Reclamation Thursday gave- its support to plans of the Colorado River Indians to con· vert ao acres of marsh into open water suitable for stag- ing boat races. Regional Director Edward A. Lundberg, in an en· vironmental statement, said the Lower Moovalya Recrea· lional Development, upstream fronf' Headrock Dam near Parker. would near I y eliminate wildlife habitat from New officef3 elected are Larry Pawell , commodore; Roger Rawlings, vice com- modore: Leanne Miller, rear commodore; Stacey Johnson, secretary; Bruce Larson, fleet capt.~ Rick Pawell, port capt . ' ' Fire Assemblyman Badham U Hire • Mayor Jim Thorpe Suits, Coats Dresses The votin~ a~(' has again been towert.'d to giv(' others 'the ri~ht to vote. Girls and 71st ASSEMILY DISTRICT the 80-acre site-. The winter sailing program is ·an extension or the suc· cessful s~er junior pro- gram. SesSIOns will be held one weekend a month through May 20 with concentrated in· struction in racing tactics and allied subjects. Terri Taylor and Marc Schreyer, summer program instructors, a r e 99c · bo~ attending any school In the Newport-Mesa areA can win a trip to Sacramento via Air califomia. Ballots ·available in West.cliff Plaza sho~ .at 17.th & Irvine AVJ?- nue. Deposit one on1y in tfle b&llot box at Jett's Petting z.oo. appearing Oct. 31 thru Nov. 5. •statiStics taken from the "California Journal'', indicate that Assembly· mah Badham has been absent more than a third of the time during the last _three years. The actual statistics are: 1970--Absent 34.1 %; 1971- Absent 33.7%; 1972-Absent 36.8%. Howeve r , h e said simultaneous nhlbitttaUon of other marshe! would offset the toss and fiahing would be enhanced. ,, ~ ....,.. ___ _ .. 1111 fM ly CHI-le ftld ,....,,. t9 tM 1uemllly. JIM L .... ld, T,__., -21'3$ ....... It .. s.111 K -Lit9M .. ,,.., "'11 • • O.N ·~-' It's YOU1R· Sc.hool System A-r«>-Vote on PropoSition 14 Will Help UsKeep-lt -1hat=Way , Proposition 14 if passed wilb funds will be . turned over to the County Board of Result in a loss to Newport-Mesa schools of almost Supervisors in the event the Legislature fails to (1) 7 million dollars {$7,000,000> this equals 545 teac~-act. t ing positions. Larger classes and elimination of nu· Proposition 14 will not lo er your taxes. It coulcls merous procJrams would be inevitable. ( 1 ) Raise your state inco"'1 tax by, 6()0/o. . Eliminate local contro.1 of schools by prohibiting (2) Raise your Federal income tax because of the local citizens from voti n CJ property tax increases • sliift from deductible ,o non-deductible taxes. for current expense of education. · {3) Raise .sqles taxes by j2l/4°/o. · Provide a means wher~by apportionment of school (4) Raise cigarette +axe~ by 10 cents per pack. (2) (]) We sincerely believe that Proposition 14 wlll bring chaos to our local. schools with ~o benefit to you in lower taxes. These citizens are emo119 those 11pportln9 the above statement and ur9ln9 a "NO" vete on ProposltlOn 14 for the sak.' of th• Newport-~5!1 Unified School Distri ct: Donald Achziger . Mr. and Mrs. Milan M. Dostal Don Hout John McGowan 'Wllllift! khml<lt L1rry Alfo rd Fay. encl "AltMrt Ecclff, J r. Mr. t nd .Mrt . Rob9rt L. H\lmphreys Mr. and Mrs. Donald Mt tnnis L·. E. Shue~ Mri. R. L. &.con Lew fannon Elvln Hutchlton Georgi1n1 Mcleod 1 Don1hf E. Smillwood Mrs. Barton Beek Tilden J . F1rrl1 Gordon lml.,. ... 0 . Carl Mltchtll Mr. end Mrs. Verlyn Sod1r1trom Gr1nt Belnap Letllt Fergut0n Thom.1 lacobson Mlch"I Moran Carl Stev9fts -. Garth and Mlrl1n a.r....,. Mr. & Mrt. J1me1 S. Fit1 .. r1ld Mr. and Mrs. Dile Jeffries Dr. W1llace Muelder Norm•n Stillwell Mr. and Mr<. Robert 8. -nl ~ Francy Wiii Jonlan R. E. Nath John Stora Earl Bltll1nd • Ralph FNlt.. Mr. and MrL A. Vl.,..,,t ,,.....,_ John W. Nicoll Stove and Mary Lot Taylor Dr. and Mr<. D••ld 8Ut1nall Ray and Jean GarNtt Law Kidder R~rt Nool Dr .. ai"' Mn. Arthur f . Thompten Warnor Carloon Dr. and Mn. Ed Gm! Donald M. Koll ora,,,_ County L ... uo of -n Voton Sharon ~ · frtd Cartor Ja,_ Olavn Batty Krahl• Dr. Wallor Par10I wa.,... ond Mulile Th-tad Thomas c. Caaay Charlaa God1hall Mr. and Mn. Carl Kymla Scott Paulten Dr. and MrL lt..,al D. Tuckor Ch1rlH Cat•nete Chuck end Velma Gord0n Biii and k v.,.IY L1ng1ton S.r1h PHH Keith Vef'I ttolt ·; Arthur Chrl1t t nMn Nod HaO Mrs. Sydney A. Lucas ·. Alvin Pinkley Htrllort W.;.J John Clark e Wiiiiam Hamilton Mr. and· Mn. Rtynold Lindroth Jorrl Popo Richard Watt& Terry Cole Jeck HMnmett Norm1n R. Loeta Dom Raci ti John Wellnt Jack Coleman Marie HanMft ftt'n L. and Wiiiiam I, Loih Hal Roach Dr. Gerald T. Whlla Or.al and Gwon Collins fay Hart.loon William I . Lolh Thaodo..., Robins, Sr. Rita K. Whlto Id and Marva Conry JMn HanMlt Joannlno MacKlnnon Di,. Tom Robinson Wiiiiam M. Wllcoaan llchanl D. Croul floyd HarryMan Dr. Tom MacKI-"'1. and Mn. Howard R9rt "'1. and Mn. Arthur Wllllam1 CSllA, Chaptor 11 Larry Harvey llodoridt H. MacMllllan "'1. and MrL Carl RAltman ,Robert Wllaott Joyce Dnl~ Dr ...... Mn. Lonn Hoathtr "'1. and Mn. John Macnab William Ritter Dale Woolley L ... DaYi1 Mr. ond Mn. Thoma& w . Handa..-, Jr. Adel• 'Ma,...tt ~ _ • Wiiiiam L. St. Clair Lou Yantorn Mr. and Mn. JamM Dodd• Mr.. ld9or R. Hil l "'1. and Mn. Ja-W. Marron • William Sanborn Al z.w..,.n Mr. and Mn. K•rmlt P. Do rlus Mlk• Hill Doran• Marlliall · llebort C. Sang1ttr ' ' < ,.,._. Father Says ·'Marjoe,' Movie ESCONDIDO (AP) -The lather of a 11.Hhy young dropout evangelist whoae life ls lbe IObject of a hit movie ll)'I bll aon ...,.. and the movie -.,..,, telliq 11 like it was. "Somehow, fie came under the l.nfJuence of S a t a n , ' ' Vernon Gortner says of his son Marjoe. "A tnatter Qf money -'that and lifugs." · Gortner tiya this explains why his aon, the subject of the docwuentar!:atyle riio VI e "Matji>e," !iidl'1J • evang~isin aa a racket and aqyt bis Jllll'•t.I forced him I n t o preaching u a chUd. · MARJO, B, WHO was a 98nltlon u a diild eva.ngellst, has quit to puboe an acting career. He has said in in- terviews Chat he earned p million a{te.r being ordained a minister at age 3 but was never given any of it. He says his parents took the mnney. pt his al~le~.ed healing of the la1tblill, MJll'joe 11A4 paid, "I believe ttiey were poycbollnaUc aliment.I." Illa lather, ff, a llropplng wblte-halredj)l'eld>er, aay1 he went to see the movie llld "It wu all l coliJd do to choke back the tien." lnconllNO"Sly, lbe lather appears brieOy ln the movie but says he did IO only because he thought It was "a Christian movie_·_:___; __ ! went along, never drcanung he'd use the film the way be did." GORTNER DENIES Mar- joe's clalms about lbe $3 mil- ltOD and U)'I, "There never WU such a 1Wl1. If It WU i:non-- ey I 'W8I alter, I'd hav41 been In lllOlher bus-Ul4»t of 1111 Ille. Yau Just dall't make thal tlnd ol money preochlng." 1be movie f~tures film clips of Marjoe as a small child, whipping up audlen<e11 with his lrollJied pttacblng. But Gortoer denies the son's clalml that his pareoll made him tell kisses ror Ill! and held hJa bead under wattt until be memortz.d hJa IUIJIOlll, . Started In 1950 Cyclists· Violent Not True truths he'• alrak1 &o face me." Re«Otly, he -.ays, he wrote l\larjoe I letttt and "I told him I'd alwaya pray for him, no matter what be'• 11k1 or done. l told him l know - bow David Jett "1letl hJa -Aboalom cleotrtocl him and even tried I'!~ the tinidoin from hbn." •' ' ..... JOHN llLAC:K / / • DAILY l'tlOT New Shipment ew Variety Of K~i -lllAMOND IOI ••• ............... u ..... ....... & ............... ... ., .. ..,. FANCY KOi ALL SIZES Pacific Goldfish Farm •IW LOCATM* 14700 GOLDENWEST, WESTJllNISTER . Since First Days fer C:ONfiUSS OPIN DAILY 1 ... J 'MM 893 7105 OPEN SUNDAY IU 714 • Ul'I Tt._,,.tn Campaign Pause cameras catch candidates at relative quiet moments as the election beads towards its clif!lax. George McGovern Signals for silence while President Nixon takes time out to re-. fleet • ----1:.f.:19" tll;, ,"f"I°': Ordeal Eases He mo philiac Geis Help HARRISBURG, Pa. (UPI) -Bonnie Marshall bas learn- ed that she must recruil 36 blood donors every month to earlier was rejeeted for the prograrn__~IJ§e he does not live in that city. IN LABOR DAY weekend "runs" on mountain and coaslal resort toW111, they us- ed broken beer bo!llea and steel chain belts as weaporui In brawla with townspeople, the 1965 lnvestlgali<Jn report aaid. The Hell's Angels now have grown Into big llCaie operalofl In orgaolzed crime, aaid a new attorney general's report made public this week. They have been Identified as a major distributor o f narcotics, said Atty. Gen. Evelle J. Younger. save the life or her 12-year-old WHEN OTHER stale of· hemophiliaa...son and keep the ficials co n t a c t e d Mrs . family Q{f welfare. Marshall to explain the details .. "THE HELL'S Angels no "I know lhal's impossible,'' of the program, she was longer are merely a group of Mrs. Marshall, of suburban didisappointed. loosely organiJed bikers," he Caroll, Hill, said Thursday. ' ' Everything was so said . "I've been begging blood for beautiful yesterday and now Later that same day, three 11~ years." this. But-l., can't complain, or bodies were unearthed In OFFICIM.8 SAID this was they will say I'm not Northern California in a case ' tbe only way the state can live · grateful.'' which bas Hell's An g ~ l.s i!p'-lo-GoV.•MJttOri "'J:srutlfp"'~""'"'-::::--::=:xc:;----,.,,..-w'.'..rt'.'.......,--,-,--.,.-i:..---·---1 • I promise to help her son, What d d to d "K~. donots a!ao must tN1vel 0 0C rs .reconunen ' · JOO miles to the Phila.delphia ~orpai:"Dts m' pam· ' 1 ? 7 )ospltal that agreed to ~upply J• Ii-.UC 1 • 1 Kevin with his $1,()(IO..a-month , , , • , 1r~atmen1s, Mrs. Manball Doctors all over the ·country dispense over 50,bbo,OOO " ~!!n..t means a 13 turnpike of these tablets to their patients each yliar. toll, lunch and gasoline," she 'said "l can 't get people to do that." There are many medications a physician or denliAt' can pre- 11Cribe for pain. Some are nar- ~ MRS MARSHAL(. Met be attic, .many are .ljlvailab.lie;J.WI~..-, . r on prescription. But there ia one busba.nd, Franc~s, exbaust~d pain reliever, available without all pnvate donations for Kevin prescription, dQCIOrs dispense 1 and were faced with living on again and again ... Anacin. welfare when they received a Each year, doctors give over telephone call Wedne s day 50,000,000 Anacin tablet& to ..from Shapp. :h~ir patients in!"'!~· I_f doctors The governor arranged to ~ink enoug:k about A:naclft to ll K . . . t state-d11penae au U.818 tablet., what enro evm in a spec1a better recommendation can you .federal pro gr a m for uk when you are in pain? hemophiliacs at Philadelphia You aee, Anacin contain& Children's Hospital Kevin mor~ or the pain reliever doc- ' ••Id POlttktl Adv. RE-ELECT tors recommend moet than any other leading tableL Headache and dental ~ Ui ..ii.v.d inc!'!'CliOII!, '"'°llJ\IDl!o paina' of arihritil -are d(tplnd- ably eased ror hours; even thrt achet and peU. ol cold. and h r.espond to Anacin. So the ten· . 11ion and depresaion that can be caused by auch pain will be re- lieved too. And nillliona take -Anacin without-atom.ch 11peet. ~ When you're In 'pain, why don't you follow the practice of so manY doctor& and P,lte the tablet a doctor miaht rive you in hi.I own ol&ce. Take Anacin•. Assemblyman ''70th District'' The Man Who Auured Coda Mela • -1'he .. l"'lew Park Ille ~ .............................. _ ........ .... ' •• • • Cemml"-te altd w. a11e11 -~ .. 11rtttt, cMi. 111n Miiite V..W, ~ ........ ~till hffttul ACIY. (IWtll ef .. IM '*If fl-VI ARTISTE de la Rue Now Thru Sot. Help cure the doctor shortage. Vote Yes on proposition 2. Did you know 11111 W. lou 111C1r• doolonbycleothl!ldriUretMnt.-y ,_, -we tr.in? Y041 !'!!! ... lhll ....... yourull 1111 .... ·~Id tNllfng IOOIM 111 IO·-docton' Of• • ftOeo. And 1r1 getllftl WIHM. We 1100 ___ .....,_. .... '"'. lnorlone, denlleta end other hHllh --~ If_....,_.. _yeeon propo- oUlon 2, the Unlverolly at C:111!ornl1 wlll otart trolnlng 1lmo1t twlc111 many docto,. ond other hNllh .. ,. proleulono!a •• they con now. Th1t e1one w!M help 1 lol to -the coat ol hNlllt .. ,._ And• yeo wta on propoelUon 2 Will ........ the ..... 1 .. 1-rdl needed toft•Jll!YltoprewnldlMMHwlllch might •itiiwwtie llrlke rou ond your Governor Aona'4f Reagan All of U.. publlc otncl1l1, leading cltl- zena end 11111Jor orgenlutlonll •re 10- tlvely aupporlln' Propo.lllon 2. No!lf, • Proll0iffl9n 2 Jl'licW.Yolll'. Mlpporl and your vote. W4:tlte blll lieltffh care In- ·. · -!mint yoli ian make. Vote Yea on 21 -· LI. Governor.Ed Reinecke Ano...,o•et!_Y_r Controller Houlton 1. Ftoumoy 8ecretlrY of Hum1n A1l1tionl l!l~W. Brion lupM'tntendent ot Public hlottuctlon Wtl"°" C. RUH Amor\Clll IAglOn • . -. CITIZENS FOR HEAl TH John A. McCone and Theodore R. Meyer, c~eha lrmen 625 Market Street 812 So. Flower Street Room 500 Room 872 llln Fronolaco, Calif, 84111(5 Loa Anget11, C111lr. ll0017 (415)41154207 (213)826-4e01 Cllffornl1 Oantot Society, Northerl C1lllomla Callfomla Dent1I Soc~ty. louthlm C.llfomla S!Jltomll,.,,, eu ... u • ...:~ ~ih!a:Ho.ttll_ll_ ' f1mlly. Think of tho !11mlliff who'YO 11vld thouNndl of doll1r1 1nd ye1r1 of 1uft1rlng b1c1u11 their chlldr1n didn't get polio. W•'\9 got to plH propo1ltlon 2. ll'H coat you onl,. about 50c 1 y11r and not one cent Of th1t wtll come from prOI>" erty llDL Tl11t'1 1111 thin th• prlco ol 1 bottle ol uplrln. And thl• SOF Will cure • lol moro thin 1 heldoche. C.llfoml1 Labor Flder1tlon, AfL.Ct.0 Cllllomll Mldlcll --ca11toml1 NurMI AAoclation ClltHomta OplOINlrlc ----Califoml• P.,..,.1 TNCMr -Ca1Homl1 PhMneclUtlcll ANoc:lltlon C1lltomt1 ltnt c:t\mMtr ol eo-rco Calltoml• Taxpayers A1tod1Uon C1llfoml1 VetlflftarJ Mtc:Hc:ll ~-..... "' ,. ' ' • • .. • . ' ' , .. 12 DAILY PILOT ... ' F.td,Q, -lier 3, 1972 • .. I Black Fights Uphill BattJe . ·:·in -Super~GOP District ~· ' By O.C. HU$TINGS ..... ...., ........... Newport Bead> atJOrney Jolll Woodl8Jld llla<t Ill the fin& to odmll he'1 wMl.ng an allilolt lmposllble uplilll bittie for election to CongreS1 from the 39th Dlatri<t. He Is a Democrat running in what he calls .. the most ! :Repqblican" district ln Orange ~Count· , y. The 39th is the o n I y i Congressional district located , entirely within Orange County. { Republicans outnumb er J Democrats by 53,000 according ! to the late&t voter tally. I Orange County As sess or Andrew Hinshaw of Miss.Ion ' Viejo, Black's Repulican op- ponent, says he is cam· palgning hard despite his massive edge in voters. I He is sWJ glowing from his primary victory over John Bircher John Schmitz, now a candidate for president on the American Party ticket l The 39th District covers : Tustin, Orange, part o f ·: Anahe.im, Santa Ana. Costa : Mesa, half of Newport Beach : (the line between the 39th and . Greenbelt Talk Slated STRONG OPPOSITION John W. Blodi ~· the 42nd Ci:>ng re ssi ona I District runs down the middle of Upper Newport Bay and the Saddleback VaHey as rar south as Mission Viejo.) Al though Black is a decided Aides Trade Positions Top aides in Supervisor Ralph Clark's office and that of County Administrative Of- ficer Robert Thomas traded STILL GROWING Andrew Hinshaw • underdog he .., thinks he will win. "We have a number of real good reasons for thinking so," he says. One is his contention that he is better qualified for the -job. "Andy Hin shaw has done nothing all his life but work in a tax office," he said. "He has neve r held any party office - except in the John Birch Society which he won 't ad- mJt ." Black, on the ot her · hand. says he has a great deal of background in n a t i on a I politics. .. He served for aeven years in the U.S. Travel· ¥tee under Presidents -K~ a n d Johnson, wu ljlgal counsel to the U.S. Senatt Committee on loterstate and Foreftn Com- merce for six years and spent another sii: y~ in the foreign service. "As a result of my exposure to such things, I have a na- tional platfonn," B I a c k boasts. "! doo't think Hinshaw has any idea of what he would de> il he is elected," Black says he plans to do a!I much as he can to trim. the budget, reform Congress and bring military spending, into line. "I plan to make some waves when I get back there," he said. "I don't think Hinshaw will make any waves because he de>esn't even know where the ocean is." Hlnshaw, on the other hand, claims he ls infinitely more qualified than Black. "John has kind of flitted from job to job and despite what he says, none of them have been Very high up in government," Hin11haw said . "On the other hand. I have been consistently involved in a single line of work and have moved up. steadily until my election in 1965 as assessor," he said. "I am able to design long range programs and I know most aspects e>f government • DRAllGE COllNTY • membership In the John Birch but says it Is not a potent George McGoVm1'~~. but So<.'.lety. force In lbe contest sald he 11 not In favor of cut· "lie could dispose or lhil ' : "'nlero • .,....ey 1 few hun· Ung the ~litary budget to whole question ln ten aeconds dred votes there and no bare bones. • H ho wlahed," Bliek .. 1d. "So mote." he said. "We need l ~ AAllSe why\doesn'l he?u Hlns'haw lnalstl he ill not · ai1i aturi ~· ~~ lt, Hinshaw Aid he will pro-overconfident. but th~ m ar~ !~.home, bably never answer the ques-"We a~e working !larder 'Wet\ u Joh er.tkln ~ ittrier lion -than we did irl the prllnari on pfoblems that need more .. .;...;. ba "'--1_..:.. this electioo," he sa.ld. "1bere emphasis,'' he-~ld. .. ,lo!;> s ~n ra6M:U every · Id sa ·•• 'never !ool<•-----.....-----80 often ~ver since my race 11 ~n ° yi.'O • · • H . ii"ii·•· .. t " •. .,_ ... .:. Id behind because s om e (I n e .?' assessor• nw:maw 88 • mill.ht be gaining on you' and I .-• It has no ~ on OU.. race believe ln that.!' ftll and '&>e,,n t ,warrant an Black says he'll s~d no ~~·J bn 81 h Soci . more than $8,000 on his cam-• .. uc o re ety 1s a paltn rinky-dink organitation that "That's a heck of a lot more serves~ meful purpose." he than any Democrat has spent ad4ed-in this area for the last 15 1 Black has al.so &aid he ex-y•a-," he said. and people's problem!!," peel! to swing most or the ~tunrs&idbedidn'tknow Hlnabiw said. . 6 hard-line , c o n s e r v a t i v e offhand • bow much · bis ~- "I .ha•e been &old I know Republicans to his baMer paiglt wijl cost, but, ")twill be Oranle. CoUn.tJ~ ·~ than because they are mad their a l9~mOre than $8,000." any.one in office," be said. man Schmitz was beaten by AJ far a!I national issues are "I'Ve dealt with everything Hinshaw jl1 a, primary cam-coiJt'et"lled, t:pnshaw say11 ·he from schools to businesses. -pelgn which pul heavy em-gOes right down the line with " • ctiM!m.1 ,. .,._. w, • eladl -,. .. •i::;.~ ~ a1n )~·· \linlt,, .!' .... KNOW "YOUR "Aa.~.aa Bla&11 iltUorm· ,Phasl~ ~n r }g ht · w Inge .r Preslden\ Nixon • except in is conceme·a, ·be his :· done SChmitz failure to back: Prest-some areas of domestic policy. what McGovern ls doing," dent Nixon. "J don't ~think ·a new ' . Hinshaw said. "He bu c.hang-"I believe these people ~ill ~ngres.vnan can ever. say be CANDIDATE eel hill mind on almolt every vote for me because they think will work closely )Tilth the 1 tssue we bave talked about at they can get me in and ·then-President," Hinshaw 'sald. "He v 'TE" public forums." dump me in two years," Black works for his own district wlth 7 0 . Black baa been lrying·ltard said candidly . other Congressmen." ' .~ , ' to make Jl campaign 9'11! out Hinshaw has cooceded most Black says he is in agree-t of . Hinsbaw's· alleged~.1.,er of the Schmitz bloc to Black, ment with most of Senator ---l..., ... ' .,, ' ·····••••••••••••·• .. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• FOR .... · . OPEN~SUIDAY, 11 to 5 r;?;~A~,. SANTA ANA -Rod Sackett, • coordinator of Orange Coun- \. ty's plan for the greenbelt along the Santa Ana River and Santiago Creek areas will speak to Sierra Club members locations Thursday. , ____________________ _ ,;·.4 .B CUSTOM FURNITURE DARREL~· AARDVARK· .. at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 14 at Vallev High School at the corner Or Glenwood Place and Green- ville Street. A Sierra Club group. lhe Ski Mountaineers, afterwards will discuss "Ski Touring and Winter Mountaineering Techniques." For more Information, call John Harper at 847-2391. The public is invited. Two Con1plete Cade t Class Robert L. Hag land of Costa M~a aod David R .. Price of Huntington Beach have com- pleted 16 week.I of training as California Highway P a t r o I cadets. Hegland llas been assigned to duties ln central Los Angeles and Price will serve in West Los Angeles. 'Dick Eckert, ooe or Clark's executive assistant!! for the past few months, has me>ved to an unnamed special project in the administrative office. Tim Mullins. who has been program coordinator r 0 r health, education and welfare in the administrative office, will move into Clark's SJXll. Oasses Offered The Santa Ana Lodge or the Polish National Alliance offers weekly Polish I a n g u age classes and folk dancing classes. Polish is taught from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. WMnesdays at Our Lord of Beatitudes School in La Mirada. For more information about the classes or membership in the alliaflei!, contact Joan Chudy at 529-7034. • • 12091 llACll RYD. l•~RDl'Oll -M.W. COIQlla Of CMANUH &. NA.QI a:.. LA MAUITA CIRQI TO ADIOll'USH VITAL PURPOSE OF PAYlll OFF CEITURT IAIUFACTURERS •.• {ti'ISH MUST BE RAISED DESPITE LOUES! l1i\9t¢ca;•1i11101 :J H!·' S!'i' :J ! t 01 EITIRE 1311,000.00 STOCK OF "COLOlllL-SP"llH • TRAN· I SITIONAL FURllTURE BT RENOWNED CUSTOM MAKERS" II SOFAS -2·PC. SOFA SETS • LOVE SEATS, 2·PC, • 3·PC,' CORNER SECT.IOIAl.I, DINlll FURllTURE, BEDROOM fl'RllTURE, CUS· : TOI HIDE·A-ILEEPERS, 'FAllOUS MAKERS' BEDDll8, IUIK BED . : SETI, 9·PC. STUDIO BRClUPI, TABLES, CHAIRl-ROCIERS • i llAIY STTl.ES II FINE TAILL-FLOOR • HAIBllB LAMPI, ETC. llONAllDE SAVINGS ARE 45%-.55%-<11% ON THE DOUAR/ FINEST co1TouR RECLINERS. cus:ro• DESKS • 1001cAsE1, 1 • r , MON. THllU Fil. 10 T,O 9-SAT. 10 TO 6-SUN. II TO 5 • tllfttttftlllllllllt.•t•tlMllt••••••••tt•ttllllttlll•tt CS.C. •ttte•t: • The voting age has again been IO\\'t'rcd to give others ·the rii,:ht to vote. Girls and boys attcndinii: any ~hool in the Ncwport-~tesa area can >A•in a trip to,. Sacramento via Air California Bal.lots available in Westcfiff Plaza shops at 17th & Irvine Ave-nue . Deposit one only ln the ballol box at Jl'tt's Petting Z.00, appcarin1:-ore 31 thru Nov. 5. • 'HELP YOUR LOO·AL ;C'GMMUNITY COLLEGE What Prop. 1 Wiii Do For OCCs Literature • Language Building Lect!We Hall cind Art Bulldlng Music Bulldl119 · Addition D,_ Worbhop Admlnlst1 atlon BulldllHJ . . KEEP COAST NUMBER · 1 V'OT!~~· ¥ES ·ON. 1 .,· occ "25 years service to students and community by offering a high level of opportunity in education and occupational prepara~ tion, and for achieving national recognition in education as one of the outstanding Community Colleges in the United States rank· ed with institutions of learning of the highest quanty. Their innova· tive progr~ms directed by an excellent steff have contributed vitally lo the growth and development of Costa Mesa." Costa Mesa Chamber .~ Commerce June 29, 1972 ' "Orange Coast voters will have an opportunity to vote 1n fa"!Or of a real bargain in education on Nov. 7. Pf'oposition One is that bargain. It assures our Community Colleges -Orengo Coast, Golden West and Saddlebeck, -will heve 'room to offer education to eu r young people for the years immediately ahead. The bonds would not be a blank check issued to tho Com- munity Colleges to use as they see fit. Authorixation for Commun- ity College Building Programs must be bosOd on demonstrated growth. A YES vole on Prop . I is·ono of the best decisions Orange Coast voters c.an make on Nov.7." ' . Daily Pnot Oct. 19, 1972 Ciiis .... for Proposition One d'1anl:1atlon1 for P,.Posltlon One · WIN ... ....._,,.Ir J.,,... IC.. CarMft. Ore ... CMtt Col ..... _._,_, ........ IL He.IN..,...,.. -'·----Wls.nl T. hnl•n lkNN Mkheett -L-T .. ......,,,k lk ... ,.. .... ,.,.... Lawttnc• ..... tt -.. ..... ... JoM A. tlvlleN ....... c.c...,., .,.,,.,.. c....., ... c. Dent• ,.,,,., M. Dlmll• .. ,rank L. ~~':"" ... Mrt •• Karen Mortlllare Kon_L_ iupM w. o..rhett AllrM W. '•'""' Henry P•nlan ·0-. J. P1ull •• ,...,.. •• , .... Mft Or. Chr1WIM C.htll Pkk1rt , • .,.. A. "'""" '· 1Mrtlft1,.. Loul1 hccew J•mtt .. .... Dt .......... L. llnMM• Dr. l4lttli 0. lmlth GI.-' L. lmltft COlttl ..... Q•ll•r of Connerc1 c.11or• c._.., of c ..... lf'C. c..1..-.......... of LalMr c.lhnlo i...hol1 of~" c.11..ni. LI I 1 of Cltlft c.lforole T_.... Alucletloo L A. C• 111•• of C-wce L~H of Cellfenole Cities .__ of c ........ Scloool ........ , ... ,- Mnl-hortc.. ..__ AMOCi.;,.oo 'Newpoot.M ... _.... _..,_ Ntm•Ct iW.tC1 i' i--.. 0.-,.. C... Cil111~Stml•· .... hllltfv1 C•IMt i. Pacific, .......... k ' S.. JoM Cli••ll• ef t11:n1.-c. padftc T1iap•111 C....p.ly SocrantMte c ..... of c:.o.n..rc. s. Ft9clscc. c•-..... ., eon. ... tre• \ • .. " I For :The . Record • ll!LLllllOADWAY 1 MORTUARY 111 111 ... •11• ,__ M-U-~ ' • McCOlllllCX LAGUNA Bl!ACll llORnlARV 11'11-.Cu1oo Rd. ewus • PAIJll'IC V1£W ..-mPARK c-. .,, MOftW'J' --°"";' .... Drift Now,.n -· COlllorWI -· • -FAlllLY OQUlNIAL PIJNlllAL _, 7111· -Aft. ·----. • ·-_.yuAl\Y 111-111. R---· •• P.U~INote. ' ' -Iler Heart Was . Not In the Call * * * 11IE EXECUTIVE Com- mittee of Orange County's Health Planning Council has Offici&ls Will Meet Etct JOHN RACK fw CONGUSS FINAL LECTURU FREE leaf ~tale !kve:Jlmt!nt Serie:J Nov. 8th ~'i"J.ltal ConsenaUon Throu gh Exchanging m1z1na Taxl'f" Lecturer -Bruce Howey "Tailoring Your '73 lnvabnent" · LecMer -Randy Mc:Clrdlt TICKETS AVAILAILI AT TICI DOOR IACH SISSION MllTS 7130 ·NO r .M. GOLDIN WIST COLI.HI • . SeoiooC~lr 0r....I. c.-. u... w .. 1 DAIL~' PILOT e . Ctl .... Huml""°" ltoch • ,._tin Vtlley -...,,........... - • ' Frida1, Nowmbtr 3, 1972 OAJL V PILOT J :f 32n_d · Distri·ct R~ce , --CANDIDATE Incumbent, Neu1comer, Unk1io ·wrt Cornpete ... VOTE About Here Are the ~niwers to the $lick Propt9anda Put ,. 0 .ut .by the ~'Tcax .~penders" ~d.Sptcti~J ln'"s+, Proposition · VETA LLAMA t ... _.,,. • ' Thl' vol!~ age ha.s qaln ()."t·n IO\\'Cred to glvt-othen the richt to vote. Girls and boY!I attending any llChooJ In thr Ne'll.'l.IOrt-~tesa area can \\'in a lrlj> to Sacramento via Air california. Ballots available in Westcllff Plan shops at 17th & Irvine A\re-. nue. Deposit one only in the b$.Uot box at Jett'a Pettlna Zoo. appearing Oct. 31 lh.ru Nov. 5. 14 Reason: the tax spendero and the special inter- est lobbyists team up to defeat property tax re- duction , .. just 111 they ere doing on Propo,tion 14! R,ed the list of supporters of the opposition - special interests end government bureaucrats, everyone! Before you vote your facts! .• know--your'en..ny encl 'kh'ow t ·~ 1 i 1 ;, Caljfornia has the highest property tax in • the nation. In the past I 0 years they have son for rent increases. Further, rents must be re-) duced in keeping with property tax reductions i according lo a ruling of the Price Stabilization Board. . doubled and tr.eblad, while the Legislature hes promised but failed year after year to give relief. The intolerable property tax load raises rents, makes home ownership impossible for many end stifles business. 2 Property taxes will be reduc'ed by 40°/0 un· IJ der Proposition 14. The major benefits go to homeowners and renters because residential prop•rties pay more than 60°/0 of all property taxes in California. I Source: U.S. Department of Commerce.) Only 28 °/., of the benefits 90 to business end industry. 3 The welfare burden today is thrown on • property. Homeowners and renters fece e constant squeeze. Proposition 14 shifts the entire load of tlie welfare fo the state where it belongs because it is the state that mandates the relief programs. 4 The high cost of ed.ucetion rests squarely • on property to the detriment of the home- owners end renters. Under Proposition 14 the school property tex is limited to $2. About two- thirds of the cost of education is 1hiftecl to the state, i o be paid out of increased corporation and insurance laxes, not • statewide property lex which is prohibited. 5 Tenants benefit. su~stanlially . P·ropo.sition • 14 stop• ever-spiraling taxes, 11 major ree- 6 Insurance companies will lose their special IJ exemptions and' pay taxes like everyone J else. As of now insurance companies pey no state , income tax, no personal property tex, no utilities ~ !exes -end they ere for9ivtn taxes on their f elaborate home office buildin91 -for example, l Occidental Tower in Los Angeles end the Trans-4 emeries Pyramid in San Francisco. ~ 7 The property tax money lost to government ! Cl is made up by increasing corporation taxes 44°/0 , closing the loopholes by which insurenc•' companies escape their fair share of taxes, im-J posing en oil severance tax, adding 2¢ lo the sales lax end an added tax of 10¢ on a package of cigarettes end 11 fi#h of herd liquor. These ere taxes based ~pon ability to pay, relht1r than soak· ing it lo the property owner. 8 Oil companies will pay huge amounts in • severihce taxes from the oil they pump from the ground the same es they do in Texas, Oklahoma end Louisiana. In California they now pey nothing. 9 Corporations face 11 44°/0 incree•e in their • stale income lex which off1ets the reduc- tion• they get in property taxes. Proposition 14 operates under the principle that ell property i• . taxed too high , lo the detriment of everyone. CALIFORNIANS PAY THE HIGHEST PIOPEITY TAX IN TH~ NATION ... STOP IT! ¥0lE, VES ON . 14 ,,,,_ 1'• M l'nlf> tt• (I Illa· -....... __. -Ul*lf ........... II • .,._. a.....,.........__.,....,.CMfl'w -•111.-.....,....,...,... • - t - ' • • " QU • • ,De Waits to· Get Worse .. -l ~ ' . ' t:t.:=-., Olr=. "l.!! W ~ WM ~ .. .., ' E*'Mct, ar ..... 1 ewntv. C:•lf{onQ. ,.. .,.,.. ......... d9dl • illld ...... ' ' sAN FRANCISCO (UP I) Luull' Clilmpo.,.in "'Id all his worldly~lons to come lo the Unlled States from Franc; , to blly a new beart. But ll v.·as aoaale. I Stanford University decided that because he is not ''in im· minent danger of dealh" he "'ill have to wait until such a time arrives before a transplant operation can be pe.rformod. want to be bothered'' while ht wilt.I for bis heart to weaken so k can be replaced, a spollemnan for Jlte meclical cenrer sakt Chatnpoussln was discharg- ed Wednesday after four days of testa by a siX·man team of cardiologists headed by Dr. Nonnan Shumway. them twict, and the longest- 5Ur\'ivini; patient lived almost four ~ars after the surgery. ClIAMPoUSSIN ARRfVEO with bfs wile last Friday along with 125,000 that he raised from stlllng everything he owntd. Ban Set; Mosquito Hazards SAN Dll!:GO (AP! -'"1e """nty'1 public heallli director h8' disclosed that h • unilaterally put a moratoriwn on development In lhe Alpine, Santoe and Lakeside are .. east and northeast of San Diego. .,... .... _ -........... .!! ~ := r~~.._'\am-.;; twelMln.-.. .,.._ft_iM ................ to fllfl'I.. al'MI In ~ or l'tt~ • ..U\ll't to 611 so -4tf1111 ftfl (IOI "'"' of "°~ of M.1tf1 •wllf'L tM (Melt _. llN llDlldo • t"9 UM mt'f M, al'li)I .. '9tflllW to tM Oltl'1tt, '\: l /t.. ,., ___ ...... ,.Olto!&&k lll"tflf'...,.. 6t'~iifnllf1Mr •I "'7""'..:::. .. -~ ·~ ::I: ··-"'llol"•Yi~'=.;;:.,: ctuunpouMin, :19, had been told by bl! doctors In his native Marseilles that it \\IRS necessary for him to get oew heart to replace his own diseased or~a n. But lhe f\1edical Center at Good News CHAMPOUSSIN CAME hero from Stanford lo stay in seclusion with friends -and wait. He is "tired and doesn't Sbwnway's team ha 11 perforn1ed transplant opera. lions on 49 perS0111, two of He suf f ers fr om card.iomyopathy, a disease of the heart muscle ltse.lf. THE\ STANFORD hospital heart transplant candidates who have dilflcuJty even Pr. J .B. Mkew, lo a letter to the Board of Supervisors, sa1d he has refused sinca.Sept. .. , "'" tht --"" ~. A ... Tiie 111t:.t1,11u1 !illdftt. 'ilr.wll.nt..iN Wlllr"ltll...-.utlo.i of ,._ -at""*"·' •lit ... "*""~ to flll'tlllll • ltbor ll!ld ' ,,..!ill.. bo!WI 111 et\ .... ~~ ~ toJlflV perOflW .. tM -ltkf j)l'l(t, and I 111 flll> ll"")OrrNltleit llOftd 11'1 '" •mourit ~I to .,_. ~ ,.,-cent (100"4) of .... '<Olltr~,..ic .. \llllliell bonda ,,, mor-hlll'f dttcr~ Iii lnfonl'lallon kif 11ddtft -i. ~·r ~ ..... A-7 Tait~ ~Wiii .M ,._ 11111'.-i lo PACllR a.nd fflollflttlrJ' "*"'•r<•• wllkll lfiwrffl('e •• MOr9' • Nl'tlc•i.rt"f' dfKrlbM '" ..... l~nM~b" llddtre .... _._ ... Ca1npus Studied brushing their teeth, according ( J lo the center's spokesman, ECO LOG y Gary CavUJa, Champoussin ~ , can perform tasks to get him '--------- through each day and walk for long distances. 6 to accept all subdivision and parcel map;! because of '- health hazard created by mos- ...... Hottt. )t 'tw.w°•'*' ""'la '° "" ,,...,... crf .... , .... of ' •• or loc.tl llW ~ aCIPll~, Hit rd ot Olreicfonl et lllflti AM .... rw. c-tv W•W Dlslrkf.L ,_ ....,_lllMI n. ~., ..,....nine r•I• ot ..... diem w...,, efld retM tor ..... hll~ •M -'!me wwt. In tl'lt loceltr lri Wlllch Jhl• --•• hi llt ""1or-C. "' Md! a-•rT or ·typt ol ~ er l'l'leC:Nnk ""°*' hi U:tc\lhl lht -"kl-~ Wiii tie '"'"'"°"' 10 ..... ~ .... By Geology Firm THE OFF1CIAL term for his condition, Cavilla said, Is "stable." How long that will remain so, he said. doctor's do not know. quitoes. ~~":"'~.;;.:~:=.:iiai~,;.;":"'_~~::;:~:;:=::::: Approval ()f the director is "I do~'t like-to complala, but t think-you~-OvfJt- required for subdivision and watenng your plants." parcel maps, mandatory for TM llA\ltllfflO t•tel IO O.tw.mllled .,., •• folloWt; Trustees of the Coast Com- munity College Districl got son1e good ncv.·s this \vcek from n geologic and seismicity report prepared for t h c Orange Coast College campus. According to Converse, Davis and Associates, the engineering and geology finn that prepared the $1,500 study, "there are no knO\\o'Jl geologic conditions which w o u 1 d preclude the construction of additional units at the site." Dr. Norman Watson , chancellor of the community college district. told board members that the study had to be made in accordance with the Field Earthq\lake Safety act. He said a g-eologic impact study was required before ad· dltions could be constructed to Busiriess May Slip SAN DIEGO (AP! - Talk of impending peace in Vietnam bas left 100.000 bracelets inscribed with POW name.5 sUU un~ld. "1be manufacturer was on the telephone this morning, and he was wor· ried," suid a spokesman fol" Concern for Prisoners o( War, Inc. The nickel and silver bracelets sell for $3. the campus' World \\1e1r II buildings. AFTER ANALYZING the soil conditions and earthquake faults in the area, the engineers came to the con- clusion that :'the. probability for earthquake damage from causes such as sudden or slow slippage along a fault within the site, landsliding. lateral spreading, I ur c hin g , dif- ferenti;:il compaction, ground cracking and liquefaction ap- pears tO be lo\v. The prob-- ability for damage from seismica,Jly induced tsunamis and sieches waves is nil." The report lists the major faults within, a SO.mile radius ol the school, including the San Andreas fault. which at the nearest point, is 48 miles away . DEMDLAY LEADER Steven For1h•y DeMolay Re-elects Forshay "His condition is bad but not bad enough,'' he said. "He has a type of disease that is going to require a new heart some time in the future. We don't know how soon he would lit into that category. If his condition remains stable, it could be a tong time." In the meantime, he said, Champoussin will retum to Stanford for periodic checkups. T H E STANFORDhospital can 't do anything to help ease the financial burden on Cham- poussin. either. Cavilla explained t h a t construction. Aller getting Askew's. letter, the s upervisors voted unanimously for a n ·in· vestigation by the county ad- ministrator at once. •-2•1••w SCHEOULI! 01' Pill~AlttHO RATES OF WAGES AND All'PR.EHTICE $CHEOIJLE SCHl!DULE OF l'lEVAILING RATES 01' WAGIS Tt ... Or ~ti,., ... , .. ,:......,, tllt. LAllO«Eills Hetlth Mii( Wllf-• .SS Otnl1i Dtf hovr Pen.Ion · SJ.JO ptr ho\lt V•c•tlon • 30 eet'rl• ·• hGlll' Foremen: Hot In• .thlin '° ~'JMll' • '"'o A--ss hOur more than tht lloVt1Y '''-of ttie l 't' ._._..:-; 1110llnl cl1Mlllutton OW!" Whlch lie 11e1 For the Record SANTA ROOA (AP) -The 1(!':~-.. ..... ~l1ndon 1-Sm proposed Sea Ranch develop--,.,., ••• #!S:'Oll"•-·"'·····-···-····=··="'"!'~·-····•t••www ... _ Fl"lln\ell J.MS ment bas been approved by J)i H•m, Jutta A. •nd C•VIM c. ;i:t:~:;-,iek1111 -··· r t~ the Sonoma County Board of QQOluti...,.• ... , • ..,.., · Doro1t1.,. LH •nd P11r1c11 w•1ct11r11n UJS S· .... ~· but t ~0 .... .., Ju'nn. OPERATING EHGINE"!:illS . ut"'-' .. l.SOl'S, pt 0 p e f Y Ruo.dw, Jei:r:-"· 9l'ld Anlte L. P'tM\111 efld Wt!ter• . 1J CM!• pv owners may not have to worry Of Jtl rria L.1111er, eu111tiet11 •nd Tl!eodor• G. "°"" . Uutt •'--'decision 1'ill turn ··-. a ne 9-fl91, Petrld1 I.. lll'ld k_,.,,. A. Vac:•llon -Holldty Sevl~ Fund -30 \.IJt; uic :1 John1loll, Ei.1"" Lllllen .nd Andrtw cent1 per hour beach area into a Coney Geatw P'!Mlon Fund· ll.20 iier 11ow Island. IHTl•LOCvtoaY OICRlll o.c11.... Mia-I Devld Mid 11:11• F-: Nol 1"5 the" sa ·<91111 per EllMM Oc ...... 1' R•ll'IOna hou!" mo•e l'l.ln TllJ l1111111'y t•,.. of !l'le- While the SU per V j S 0 r S Elllot!, Andre K. 1nd ll:oQet' L. LMCI\, Jollfl'll:oberl end Horm.t G-highest ci111lrk1Tlon over """kh hll Ilea ErrlNIOll, Heier> E, tNI ll:kllerd J. ,..,,.._.,.,Lor-F. •nd 1(..-intll II:. ltll r•·· 11 n. . agreed there should be public SctwnTc:n1 J-·M . .rid lwr S. HIJI, J-Jfw l . end \.relg L. SklploNu · WlietJ T'fPI -~ ytrd or access to tile beach through Willie • .oudllh ~"'° FrWllr.11" K. TtlWll., Jl.ldltll A. end J•IMS E. le:)'i {wl:': I':'~ All·•(fltnenl) S7.f7 ~=·:.',11:'so..1e":'J"'R~· Altierto J°'*' L.Oul11 end JI.Obert A. Truck Cre.,. Oller 1.'11 the neW deV1!lopment, the)' H~ Sr., Mwtfl AM end John L lllievlnt, Borlnle MH elld How•rd Scoff A-Fremt or WlllCh Truck Oper1tor 7.JI refu.~ to ~wr· e parking """"~·&art A. •Ml Edlttl e. • ll:etitr, P'91W A. •nd Devld II:. Ford, FertrU$011 or Slmll•r Typt (wttb, ~ ·~, · Frw. G. end eufflct.G. Juvh, ll:llberl Ltw111nd Manhl Lynn Or•nhPt A!1rc;,....,11) , 7.51 That means the nearest Price, Altew Ind Jtek Thomll Perkln1. Jr. ll:ot.rl Dell"I ano 0.dt""' ll:ol191" Op9rl!or, COfTIPKllnt 7.6:11 >;•• f Ill . f th · C1r1511n, /Nry M. Ind Vernon I(. 1Mr11 Tr.....:Mno olnKhlnt Opt;~10f (lilP lo jo par ..... '6 aC ties Or e neW '°'1::..~· Joseoh ll:occa end llldlel Afc:e, 0.rlel'M J. •nd ll:ayrn<ind 11:. fool depth celJl(lf'i, m1nUllC'lunr'1 access road will be seven &e1-~o.orw E. and Georaett•f.· Hottltl", P•trlcl• c. "•nd Cher1•• W1r· r•ltr><11 1.,, • V•u. elmvlt 0... end EdWtnl OMDh ren MKll!M Tool Optrator 7.11 St v Fo ha f M miles away making the area Hott, l•lnt M . 1nd a.n1ern1n orvlll1 Wiit*, Lovtti• •nd JOl"ln w.1~, Trtcior O:lt!r•ror -OrtufVD9 Showl'I. e en rs y, SOn () r. dJffi uJt f bli Emlev, Ari-~nd J•mn Ollv.r Wright, Terry Lynn •nd Pnlll(p LN 8Ulldor&r, T1mptr, kr1per 1nd Pu11l Americans w i t h o u-t the necessary funds can have the operation for nothing because of a grant to the center. The terms of the grant exclude use of the funds for noncitizens. and Mrs. James Forshay 'or c or pu c access. Ga~=1.,~•trleli LY'llft ~ Stwort &Mrd. 111rbtr1 end R•vmond ste~n 11\11~!11• nao F1yw1-i H.P. Of' THE NE\VPORT-lnglewood • Lewis, Bettv L. and Jama T. Mllen, ll:tboce• 1nd Larios wub<n l1r11er) 7.91 Fault. Whl"ch caused the 1933 Costa Mesa, has been installed 0 C Plant Out Germ•ln, 11:1vrnondtl end cr1vd9 ~~. Gl"fQlll'Y w11111m •nd Erflfl1ine Tr1ctor Opeo-eror · wllh loom At· range oast Peuev1n1. Stttrl1v Louise Ind Herman Mirltwl l1thn>1nlt , 7.fl Long iJf:2ch earthquake, is an. for a second consecutive term SAN LUIS OBISPO (AP) 11 .. u1e T•rlot, J-w.i11on •nd Llnd4 Gall sttove1. e11;11 H~. o-~11n,, c1.mw11 r G!iQe, Linde L.oulp ln.d C1rroll.WJILl1m MtdlMI, $ylvl1 Ann •no"'""">"!' ~.~n· ()per1lor (over~ v•rd ln.d up 11 5 cu. proximately 2.5 miles from the as master councilor of the Rep. Burt Talcott, (R..Calif.), ~~w•r, r1•1> Ann and ThectlCI"• Jowon cit v•rd M.fll .<".i 7_91 d h · II Slates Tests says the Department 0 f QuallJ, llettv Louise •nd 0 '"11"f' Lynn 1re1.nc1. Andr-wiui.m •!Id J•m!e Mo1(W" P1tro1 °'P'r1tor <•lngl• campus an t ere is a sma Orange Coast chapter of the · Ject'°", u Donn• M. •nd Jt<rv ll:•v eu..n ...... 1ne, '·'' f lt th t !. bo t f"fth f I ter" h d lded t t Pete ..... ,,. Lourdls H. end Joh1111v s. y ... . au a Jes a U a I o Order of DeMolay. n Jor as ec · no o Howard, s11ven 11. •nd Elk<J 11.nMy, Ol•n. Lynn •M w1,,..., tEAMSTE115 ') th f th Ed · l p-~• at th"ts tim" e w"tth CO ll:Vll!I'". Suuonne M1rl1 end 04vld n..._, MlchHI He1lt1'1 ll>d W1tl1r1 · '' ttn11 ~ a m1 e sou o e campus, Other new officers from the ucabona. vocational and '~ n· l:dw'•rdl, Ewen A. •md P.r''tw -L"."" ,,.,.d.,.,., 11:ot1trt G1r1i.1d •na ~'°" houl' , but the report states that "the Harbor Area are st even guidance testing will ·be con. !trucUon of an ocean water ~=.':..r=:-!r }.id'r.,...:ini ..:111111e111.,"" 0c-... u ~·=er. 1ni:1 Holld1y Func1 . 75 cen•• ~ site js slightly less· seismically Eastvedt. ·senior councilor; ducted at Ora.op c 0 8 8 t desaHing plant at Canyon f:~. PH· .. ~~ Lr:,: c';,:r.,.w~~l•m H~. urw ceror '"" Emil i>.r1iion . .., cint• pet-11o11r active than the average ....or Gl-'eanes, l"";"r .-.no1..... College Nov. 7 aJd t al. 6:45 )>lablo. C•P1111r>0. T""'"M·A. •nd Rulli M. 11111en\.i1nei T. •nd GIN 0 . Foremen: ~ ctn11 per Ml.Ir more •. I. ....u. ~ ......... ... ..... r He ""'d th d artme t 71&1, Dl•n• Mt•I• IN Oef'I ll:khtrd cumm.... !Ootlly Ann •ml Oavld '""' ti. hourly re11 of "" hlQhesl Southern Ca ifornia." cilor·, Jay Jeanes, o••i·-p.m. , "'°"' e ep n s1av..,., '\'oa.ri L. and 1rme · ~. cliulffcetlon O\ier .,,,.1c11 11e 11es ......,, v• ....1--..1 I I d t •t wou.,..,, onnl~ W. 11nc! Fr•nel,.. 5. ROPer, EdM MH nd Che le E Wl'lf't"Vlll Watson said that current deacon, Mark Huntington, The tests are (or tbose with P1t:U:1"1~ ns ea 0 awai o.u .... n, JaneH •nd stevtn J. 111ac:klM!rn, 1M111n! Ann ~ Rot1Jtr1 Dtf-..r ':; vel'l!cl• or Cornbl"'''°" rA building codes do not require a junior steward; Bill .Wilson. educational or vocaUOnal pro. deye.l@Pment of a new process · ll:'~i.in Rotitrt• L" •nd H•rrv Rt~,,,. AJex•ndrl• M. •nd <.>eorg, E. v.n1e1., or: similar study for Golden West ~~r steward; and Bradley blem.!1. They cover tfptltucte. rather than ·go head and spend FHltl Odoller ,. a= ~ ~M~J·.r::· Michael i ~~e: -:~ College in Huntington Beach Crane. 1·uni"or steward. ability, interest and _,.,'-$60 ~D to produce water at Strafford. Consl•nc:• M. and Chl'h 11:. £-'or more A11.1n '-«:I .... --I t ''el•r~, Uowrenc:e J. Ind l(Jlrtn He-. llll"dle A. •nd J•rnse w. Driver "4 Tr1nilt-Mhf Truck . una.r 3 because tbe buildings On that Steven Rhoads, 0 rat 0 r ; ty and Will be foUOWed Witb aiJ ..,_,per 8Cre. ()() " 0•'"°"· Horrne LOUIN end DennlJ J~ Bonnie JNh end K.,.ry Klm \'dJ. •. 24 camno .. are new. Stenhen c-~-n,.n, scribe·, i"nt-'•iew and ,.,..-11..... . 1 The Canyon Diablo sit! is owavnt I:°f.oy:-kfc8:;',r-~ ~93'1lld L. Ori....,. of T,..t\S!f.MI• Trvd:. 3 yd, . ... ,._ r cu::11e: ""• ~'6 --I':.'-of M n. h Monehen, Maroaret T. tnCI Wtlll1m J. c.:r,er, Gr•vaon F. lfld 11:.oe<;~ L or"'°'""' ,_,. "But," he cautioned trustees Anton Large, marshal; Dctnald Interested persc:iis· m..a..,.. aana , Ol1'0 C¥JY w ere a W1-11n11, httv Jo tne1 Lortncr c~tt N ..i. Mef'QWet MIC! Thornll F. water or T•nll-Tvpe Truck 0r1v..--2 W~---•· · b • I k ~~;;' Dl.ICllar """'er plant is being R.lddet, Rabl<:c• 11:. 1o<1 J1~ o. Al!Jier. U•WI• M. end J,,,_ v. Axln ,,,s Q,.1,1-Y rug t, "its i ely Dunning, standard bearer; register for the 1~4'1,the M ., -~ M0111an, Allen J . •nd M•ro•ret Ann ... riv, ,,..,.. Ckt!/1 end Rooert W•ter or T•nk·T"f'Pe Truck Df1Vtt . 3 that at some time in the Jay Jones, Richard Large." Evening College 0 rr1 c e bdllt. Jarvi$, Mtr\ennt end WI.,,.,. GIS.muel. or ~NI.. I .. ~ 6.2J f I he Sm11ti, l~ Lou •nd ll:endeth Mertrn Li=': ~~~'?C'·:V,:C: II, A. • Wifocti'. l't"uc:t"• Drlv« -f1M Hiitl Pl< uture. we wi I required to John Murray, Bob Evans and located_ in .the. OCC Adntin. ' j. • Suit Fll-d Goedert, Slaven L" •net ve1er1e May KowebiJ;-1,., 's'ren•"' °rrit1n •nd hour. '4dlllonel lflll'len O!Mf"•tlno POWtr h stud d r Gold J ph u ·11 · f" hr h Bulldin """"-.:-; avert, Tommy 11:•1 Ind Tommi• G~ll M•roerel Loultt. wind\, or tlmller IP'l:lel •tl•dllnMtt ave a Y one or en ose •uJ 1can, irsl I oug stration g. i1icre 1" a Huff, Marwl J"n •net John Edlllerd Flu-, WHl~ld and e.uiati AM. PIPE TRADES '============='-~W~est~~too~.'-'---:-:::;:--:::::;:-::--=f~if~th':_!)lrec~~e~p~to~r~s':_· ______ m~a~ten~·a~ls~ch~ar~g~e~o~f~IS~·-·~·~"'l, . ~EZ (AP) State Kn~•. &ettv J. end c:11ar1 .. it. =~"'·Mi.~ ,,,., Rot1er1 c1v111. H••lllt ,.1111 w.1*-·. ~ fl' flros• -' ... Attf,i ('.;fQ. Enliii ,J. Younger llredec, Ttan.1 Fr•nk JR. Intl Utile Me~-;..~ 11. ':'Ml~~ f'•Yroll' ' . 1 l •• ? 1---------------------~"~'~":..:;"~"~"'~'~'o,.::::O"~"~'M:::;-:;.:>:,1 -------------------..i•a':.jj• ~-. ~· .. ;.(!I;~., sui·t l M•rl• oi-~.' :JtWS Arnlllfa •nd MMr. Pemlon Pr.n · ".,.. or Gron Pevntr1 THE FACT -01 LEGISLATIVE AnEIDAICE ' Look at the record ••• "the following figures were compiled from the ~ssembly Dally Journals, the official records of the Cantomla-State Assembly." .• / •• Sincerely Yours James D. Drilcoll · Chief Clerk In Uii 10 Legis~i.ve years from 1963. to '72 -As~Bldham was present on the Assembly floor 0r·on l.egiSlatlve business 1418 . . days out of a tot.IOI 1s·c11ys- ' That's 91 .3% of the flllle RE-ELECT A Real wortln9 reprfle,ntative! ' IPOHSOMO ~ IADHAM Pott AIRMILT 7t CMriti1 ,, T1 0 ytor, CP\lllnne" 9t &, C..t Hwy,. ~ ftl M•~ \' . ' • *******'******** , '~ 1~ .,.~ ..,..,,, Sl'lllron F. •nd Plte Trln-ldld. Veafkll1 • l~ ot Gro. "•Yroll a-tftst.Philli-. . m Oil Ha~klni, Alie• Jtan •nd Sutter Jlmts Locke. k•r1111 k•v •nd Danekt Gr•"'· Appranll~h!p .. J 0 urn. y m." o-~ iJ Cullen, Sonni• l end !Cavin ThomaJ B1ton. P•lrl~ll Je•n •nd Edw•rd L.M. Tt11111.,.. 1.,., ..,;0r .. l'~yrell Co. for allegedly sp Uhg up to cv mmln111. Richard L•wr1nc:1 1n<1 11"111 Petfl~ w. •n4 ll:k:l'lard o. Plll'mllli:. ~• · , ' • •JO 200 -·Io f il into the c M•ry Anne Mart ":'"iBoObv 0. ·~ v . WEL.OE"ltS . acu rtS 0 0 Br· Servi"' Vklorle .Solo IM .Salv*dor ll:OIS. rat~ e R~lh1'Melllne. Sime i.c:ale 11 cr1tt lo wt!lcl'I weldlno;t quJnez St("aits here last spring. Za~• .Scti,_, • lllr1• o. •nd orrnen 11, lt lnc:ldentet TJte complaint, filed in Con· Flallev, Jfl!ln LeWl"lnc:e Ind Mlfl PIQt, Cfi.irln M, •nd 8etly J. Any cllJtlllc•llQfl omltltd i'llrl'ln nol Loulle A1IOP, Ell-Mae •nd Clwlrtff. Ewrttl. I ... Ill•" ,.IJJ tra Costa County Superior Kelly, Claire M. •nd Arm.ell L. ll:oUlna, hndr• g••nt •nd 0el)llll JObn. P!u• 1mploy1r 111rm«i!1 ••t lo<"tll In Blxen1teln , Jnn Ann end Frank M1rvln Torr.,. Flerldll • •nd Menver P. ttie cdledl"• 1>erg1lnlno 10,,_nt IP. Court by Younger on behalf of Dunlap, Trlne Joy •nd w11111m HamHlon. Merilyn 11:. •nd Lvle Oe1n. pHcible 10 ll'lt ti••• or c'-"'' '" -•'-"-"'"' · I W I Q 1· Remuur Petr11, llllli. JOI-and Geor"De. . ,. c Oft v• uar; .n..::g1ona a er ua 1ty Gl'e«I, Mer'I• 11, enc1 Rlch•rd M. MeM, T1m•r• J. 1tte1 Elmer GIOr1ll ~man "' mectiank In~. 11 Con'-l Board for San Fran· Atuaio. Fr1nel1e• c. •ncl w11n1 •. Jr. n S«•lon lm.1 ti' t11t l•bor l.IU Sl•rdlfleld. FrM>CH end~ f , Code. clsco Bay, says the oil spills Murrev, 01'""' •nd Ktnneth 11. 111k.r, Clft•llllM Ann ~·r. HlltltV. o...,11rn. sund•v• •nd Harld..,. _ not Beronl. Joen Meri. end flllchlrd JOltpll f:'"°'I Atdl• E. Ind IC. lea tlleot -Mid oni..fletf II~) "'"'9 the occurred on March 27 and 30 FT1eu1. ll•rt1ar• o. •nd John ,._ n LI li•n H Ind J•l"lln bill ...... 1 """"· Pllr1cl• Ann Ind Frtd E. DPI.,. O•it Hutlerl and H•len c """' y .,,, Dll'S •PPllC•ble lfllployt<' and A"prU 7 as a --·•t of ~Ei1-;T"~. peyrnenta. Tiii llolld•"f'• upon wNch wct1 •=w 1"91fNll, Rkherd A. Ind Norm• J. ~:.-..·._...., Fav• fi>d 11:1-Ard ,,,., 111111 be~d •hill tie •It llelklll•• 'llllloadlng operations at the s~ SOCC!n'"b E. end Vlnaint 111. 1.,_ ---1·· ,, ...A;."1;"'. -·· . -BvrdMll, Petrlcl1 !I. end EM1 J. Dunlle ' GIOf"vf l.tlt.IJ fld Slll'eft _ _.__ ~ --..Int;•• Amoco Terminal. ~. ll:ld'ltn:I J . encl Mer;eret c. ktltllm, • M ' .._reemant •POflceor. lo 1111 "jllltllcul•r Und t Otil!men. JOhn s end Leurel A. CedtoU Bobbe Jun •nd Arthur er•I!, clttflllgl~ w tvJl't ol -".men er 8 new S l a t U e • Ill~~ SerlN A. tmtl Tllorel G. ei' e<f>OIO'fld on lhe 111"0/ltl, • penaltits can be imposed G!ffont, Thclr'ne1; "· eN Mildrid 1. • M~. enct Vlclli. L-The ~""' ~ult flf · -.... '* Sttlelltlod, Bobble l , end Jo.tllll• c. • TrudV · end R.lcNrd D. beMd Upon I work1119 dey of 1Jglff (IJ regardless or whether the spill H1w11.r.,.. v1ne1e E. •nd ll:lcl\erd f . v-end RllJlll M. hollr1 · was intended or negligence irt-L~••IM!d, sner111 A~~ end 1v1n ouene ~1~,=.t·B':"= '!~~1."m°"i:~'· . AP1'11:E"71CE SCHEDULE Jflll-. !Carolyn M. efld Robert L. AonOMv. Pauline ltull'I Ind Wlltrk1 o . 1 A~en/kn m11y De ...,ptey9d In con-volved, Younger said. vouncr. ee-..rty.Ann end J .. rv L•tl<' Wll!ldt, TnMtv Lvnn •nd Oenlel Allen. or ...... ty. wlll'I Section 1m.s (If tM ll:ou, And,., ;o,11 end ll:oberl W1rd, Dalt F. Ind Edlll'I E. Celffor1'1• Liiier c-.. Ewry 9UC:h ep. • S .. .! L1Wr811(f ~:J· Lindi f; •Ml JOhOl'I c. '""1k• thett tie petd v.. 1teno.n1·wap. Otne ....-.mits 01n1.i, Ootield J1U. end M•rlll• AMI """ · s ...... n •vlor <11nd Auou't L. "'1d to 1PCH"ant1cn \lflct.r t111 revul•H•nt ~/d!MIJ, E<Mlrd Antnonv •nd ,_,ildrN ef t111 tr-'9 11 w!llQI 111 10 • LOS ANGELES (AP) ';.':;ft.,. c.:;~1M.'::::.S':t1:~dn J. P1~":' Gior1e CedUI• W Mkl'llel lnform•llon ,..lellv1 tb ~oYfll':t :?:'p'. Land ..,, .... ~""'"'• Can continue Wllernot1. Hel.,., L. Ind Jee.II 0. Gr9QOl"'I'. t Pl\llfltlUl 1'1111 bf •l .. llM fl'om f'hl I'-"'"""""' WlnlfQll.; Mary L-end Doftlld W. Gr""*POfl, Sharon L. end ll:ober1 L. OlrKtor of 11111 Olllolrtrnent of' lndl.lllrllf , fqr the pr~ $1 billion 11*-. p 9119y A.,,.. Crtlf A. ~· OOneld E. end J1net JOl"Qerl,._:;i Releffont wtio 11 t111 .t.dmlnl"ritrw 01• P • I m d a I e Internatl·onal Heyfl, Ctr'I Rober! a"nd P"'1'I' Jo UfllD• Mtrllvn Don:ll'llv •nd o llolr of '"" Calllanll•. ~II Davenpori, De.lloreh t. Ind lilf;Mnt E. HI. Coomc:IL .AJrport, but the' city or Los Rlgp, RDblrt K•ltll •nd Lorlla YVOJ'I'"" PUBUC Nal'ICE It tlltll IMI !Tltndeftlry \111111'1 lllf e-'"•e! .. m··-p~•e •• Oil· Garey, Vlr;lnle C. Ind Jot+n S. tr..,.,, IO wt;orn 1111 COlllrtct I• ~erded, 1 .. '6 wt~ • ~,..-au 8.-n. S~lvle end cer1 E". 1----==-=-=~--I end uoon 1ny tub<ontrector under him ,,. yla...nmen•-1 lmpa t t P'ICTITIOl.tl ll.ISlfllllS PIV not tell lhlfl IM Aid llJl'Clfttd Niu u u ..... c repor P'llltl otlo!Mr u NAM.I IT A ti MINT ID •II ••tier•,.., -llm911, end INCl'llnlce before any construction can Wr!Qllt, Jalln .MtncrTy,\nd Linda su .. n The 1011ow1no per., 11 dolno tKnlnnt ""Played b"f' 111em '" 11111 •xkutl°" of'"-___ a Super1"or Court 1·udge ew, f'fODV J. •"-'Chert• H. as: contract. ina.r~, 9tedvlce, John'· entt Sareh M, AHCHOll: WAKE UP OF ORANGE A_, The Contrector wilt bl ""'°""" f6 S8fS. Ander-. E1t1le M. end Larry Gilt COUNTY, 21t Ho, 1 a, 1. Vktorle SI., llC-ll'll prfrn.,.,t o1 tOfTIMl'latflor; 111 The city had been ordered Rudolbll, Joa11 L. •nd wiiuem L, Coot• MtM. C1lrlor<Jt• "°"· "'' tmlllovN1 In tcctr"llll~ w1111 tht ,,. • Wlb"", Lw1 E. end E•rt H. Slal'lley J, M. Vouler, 212 Vletorl• St., vttlDM of S.Cffon 3'W of !hi le.tlOt Codi Oct. 6 to halt land purchases Gor•J, P•ffkl• M¥Y " "'"'',.., No.'· c11111 MIN. c.111orn1e mM. '"" prfor 1o Der1orm1ng 1111 _.k of lh4 lo be J,.mn Thi• bullnHI II belfll eonduCted 111'" en contrett ll'll COfllrecior WU •ton •rid 11i. r l airport pending the GeC11NM1. P.vllne 1..-ci. enc1 Roy 111111v1d\Ull wltfl •h• D111r1c1 tne 1o1111w1119 c1rtinc •• OUtcome Of the heann. g Wlll11m S!Mh'f J.M. Vouler lon; "I lft'I ew.re ol fhe prt\lllfeni ef ' ~. 8erber1 J, •lld 1"1Cl'fd H. Ti\.11 11111'"'"1 n1tc1 wltll 1111 l':ountv secnon ·3100 Of 1ti1 L•bor .CMll tlflkh r .. Tbe Sierra Club filed suit to roiw. T..-,.,. 11an1em1n •nd hD!t1t c1e11r. o1 Ore>rioe County on Oct. H. 1m qufrn ftlf'Y tmp1-to tie "*""• .-vent tile city from buuing EH1ebtll'I WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, COUNTY CLl!RK, ..,,, ... blU!y tor ~ ..... com-,..~· J • Kr:::;hHll.o P•ft Jf,.,.. Pemt!• Jo • .,. h¥ttty J. MHdolf, 0.puty, lltflMllon or to lllldeneu ... ,...,,_""""' more land until the impact cr , e.ratr• MICI llao.n E. MIM1 ace~• whll "" ll"IYl•kwil _. tnat noporl WU nJed. Gr-, Hltlo' Wevt1t •Jld V"""'11 Publlll* Orenite Cotll Delly ,.llof, C"Odit, eftCI I wMI ~ W!lfl Mh JIP"> /Ntt.i Oc.t. !7 Md Nov. 3. 10, 17, 1rn .,_,, vlt-lorit before ~lflt ·:; An· attorney for the eon-Clfflnr'd, "'~· F, ... """-. INntl of IM Wit Of tlll• ( ' tfo B 0•1"(1•. Oebor11; Jene Md .Ifie PVBUC Nc'.mCE trect.M ~ serva n gro\lp. re n t w•t11o1•1 TM Coti"lrldllr w1n elM bl raqulr~ Rushforth, said Jt would 1p-ketfWfl, ••rMr• J. end G1t•ld o. A. A.DV'IRTts•MIMT 'Oil 11os . -tur~'tj' •~~9t11'1c11e that "'c.,.r, .. c peal. ~ercv,.v .. orole E. ll'>d Ot-y C, A·l In 111.1'-l'IC• ol • 111 .... utloft of 1111 ~:. l!Mend eo¥erl11Q h I 11---------------'-'-rtw_,_ ...... __ ._"-""--"-""-"---""''-l lloerd Of Dlf«torf 11/f Sant• AM ~ the COl'llrec:~ -11 to bf done lalftt COi.Wi"' Watw Olltf1Ct, edeotld ~ 11111'1 end Ille '""'~d ~ lftl:'ld I Sofl:ll,..;.ti.,. I~ 1'12, dlrec1111ft !till flCll1c•. ~•11r11'c:tJ1111 of Mfcl W:.. lff I tor ·1 NOTICE IS HEll:El'I' GtVEM ~ IN A·!O He bid wlll lWf KUplld from IOll"d of Dlrector1. of Senl• ""' Mootlf'. Cer!IP.ctw wflo tt net llclftMd 1(1~ lllM County W•tlf Dl1!rkt, wlll re<tfllf CordeM• Wltll "" ••• under"" I FamU11 Cire111 .. ·}; ., ...... bu Bll Keane· '' 1111 !)!fie• et Its Con1t,1111no EllGh'*'• ol' DfYl•lon 11J, ~1 .. ' ol ..:::.1 A. o, w~. corwtr1111 E111Jf""'" IM Ind ~roltlMOn1 c• . ... the ,,,,, "~"'· *"• W..t ~n:t llr"Nt, S1nt1 C•llternla. , Ana. c.fl-flil ,t2'Jl1, NNfd 111$' for A·ll lldt 111.tlt bf l\W tum/11'11"9~ funlllflWlt •1 flOOf", 1e1111omen1 11.11or, ~l'Md lfttltr!Mt In · tr1tllClllffeMn, rM!lf1el1 llftd -II ClllW con:lellC!f wlUI ~•ft SPl<llk•I tei;lllttft el mey Ill ~Ired llftd lor c""' tlllrwfor W .... f'llllaWti'IO -•· 11n1C11"' """""41!t TrKI H .. 7Mll W""' 1"9nt ,...._<.., · s~"""· "'· .......,. "'""""" A·f C~ ol IM(...,._.~ 1.MOLl/l.flt.~ ! ... ) 10 ,,,.., bt e•1fftlM1 at ... offic:I ol tht e (..,,_ ~,... C~lll Ellll"""• lou• tt .. Wn! J. Cl Liil l't. ltfl~ (t''I 1 Tlllnl Slrwt, kllt• Ane, Celtfonlla. A ... """ · . If "" .... ,,.. IMdflc•'*-dM ~ (llt>o ,.,.,. lined ·.,.. ,,.., ~ti ~ ... '*""*' ,, ,.,. ... ...,.,lftf •OOW hlti•ltolllfd ~ ltMn ...,....._, of J. 1 Iettt f"j~ lrlMelfl L lll.IO W ............... ,. Sl>ftlA Ant a.M . V,.W. A"""°' ~eW. C-1"f' W•flet'" Ohtrkt. Tilfr9 '· l EICll FIN .,..., .. ~iii"~ w111 tie "' tlNl'd fol' tlW r~ or ~ J. , l'kfl ~ .,...,-,. 90tVIMl'lhl ... """" It MOT requ1._,. a Ill..,_ ,. c ......... ""·'',,..."' IOfcillt•Tl!l'll. l"Miii ., ..... , ~ llllkl ttiM ~ tf l'Vblk ~In tfld '-2 Etat Ofoll.)N:h 11"1 A>• A-i.iloM -N WI ~ end .-c111e1ii.M'liiiir" '9 llW' ,. u ..... end Alt R JM111 I~ ~· -... '· 1 ft>tfl = 11"} "'""'"'' ":°:r'1~""::.."M':"'~ tiot1 ~. A·" T~ ;tS.n.·~ ~ --......... "'1fi Ill 1 ............. r,... ,. .. .....,. " .... non ... INilerl. _. Wlfl'I .. -"-.cl l9r • .. 9hlrty UIOI *"' ~ ~ " """ ~ .. ,.i..,. .... ~-dlecb .,. ... .................... "" ................ ~ """""" llfttlM Wiii .,,, .... ' ,,..., -.......,, :::'::'=':.: """""'.-.. " etrt "' T1~~~ ·"'-' w..;:' A-f' lllcJI W •II' Ill "'-Oft fl'lf """ 1"* rWif W !Ll"!"".-e.w \ro -,,.......~hi 1ti1con--WM"1 -.., ~....-. h'kf .... ..,.. ,,.. ... n " -. '' ...-" ...,. • ''!f"""'' ~ C ....... lef f1¥ I C.ntltfll er c.>Uller"1 N111e ..... -...Illa . ~ dlWll ., ...... ,., ""' "'" ,,... ""' Otlltlcf °'..,.. <;Mty 'c::.u1or111e. llll ,.,_, " 1M -' ... ,,.. 11111. -~ u:. ,,,,. ' . ~ ...,.,... ..... ""' ~.... ·-·y,i hi ....... c-..w . 'W•tW Dh1rl(I, °'"''* '""""' ~ _, .., Cttl~, M'llt 111111 llt flttlt tn a~IMliil ._,..,,, Clh-etiwl " .,.,..,.. Wlfl'I JIW .......... of fM Dtr.Md I ~~ -.....1 " 111• .mm ....... " • W.tl TilirO ;"&-:.""'" or.tikt .:.~-,,;~J~~ =:· m or=:r .. er.ti~,.,. . . ,., I • f . Friday, No•tmhtr 3, 1972 ~All Y PILOT J .. .... 3"_~o~~~t in. ~µ.r~~r~ 'Fat Cat,s' Rare in Sc h.mitz I Manhi!ni ·VitiUr Way for Mowrcyclists American Party Campaign Elect JOHN IL.ACK for M~ (AP) -A na-'1'"'1'!"1'' tionwlde eear<b has been 11.,,. cbod for tbr.. men, two of them known Hells ·Angels. 1 wanted oo charges of murder·· ing lWO ~811 molott:)' llsl11 wboU· bodlel ...,.. .uhlimad Iron! ·, .. ~· ,Me~Jno ., Councy ranch oW!lj;d by two. former HeUs Angeli. A "°"'plaint filed . In Wesl Contra Costa County MuntclDll Court T b u rs d a y listed iwo COWi.ts .or murder agllnst Rollin Boyd Crane, %9, and Rldlard Allen Barker, 28, · identified as :Richmond Hells Angell, and against Paul j: Francis Mumm. 26, • o I Berkeley. who was not further · ldentlfled. a year, were unearthed by Mendocino Cl>wlty ~rHl's deputies Monday on 1 llkcre ranch near Ukiah. The uni.den- t Ufled body ol a woman also waa found, t>qt au~lties , ' ' CALIFORNIA -,be~ llhe die<( o(, a drug . ~~ov . ,, , .~ ~;·~Contra-,:posta O:>unty Dist. '--------J .,/AV.y. WIWaQI O'Malley refus-• -:'«119 .. Y:Wbal evldpice led to ~· -kilkd' . ' '!l!ln-'Puke' Ge ts .,Ike' <;0mPlalnl \Jll,I l!lld, "0Ur •'lnlom>alloo ~~ vie- c;;;;..;,ted area Jikb-• t;;;:.r. a100fl Sin : ~ I F Bay.•· • • ilto racas ,. ~1 The. rahch's ownera, George . , /Jllld ltelen Wethern. ~ : , 10d · · various drug possession ' h .... ' . ·re argea, were . see .... 16 un· On J>rop. 18 FOUR JAILED members of ' .munlly from proi;ecuUoo land LOS ANGELES (AP) -. ~. • protection in return Or John Wayne·s name got in'· the outlaw motorcycle club VICTIM' OF ANGELS? testimony oit the acUvliiea ol. ..., were arraigned Tb u rs day 'Bl T I the Hells Angels. (See related the act as the forces for and I om. ' Shul , 24 under ·bea'Y Se(urity guard. • story oo Page 11) against Prop. 18, the anti- They wore leg irom ind were obscenity initiative, traded SACRAMENTO '(APJ 'The chief Wnt Coast fund-railer for the _American P a r t y laments that his "is the party of the thin cab," but he seys he still has about it million to show for his efforts . ' "THE CAP.1APAIGN has not received a dime from the so- called org a n iz ed con· servatlves," Larry Abraham ta id in an Interview Thursday. But, he said, "we've ex- ceeded o u r expectations. We've been very. very pleased with the over-all success cf cur fund-rais ing efforts." Abraham said the party's presidential nominee, Rep. John Schmitz, of Tustin, bought his first 30 minutes of netWork television time for $8S,OOO from NBC earlier this week, and that the campaign shackled to each other. Nov. 10 for further ar-MEANWBll.E in San Fran-verbal blows . 'I1te complaint placed tWo ralgnment. ~ ... cisco, U.S. Atty. lamei L. . Opponents or the contro--G' J N counts of ~urder against Green and MitteA-were' held Browning Jr. said th& J ustice versial measure a 8 8 er t e d Ir S OW Edward Junior Carter, !4,-and on $lf»,0001 bail each. Moran Department wa1 enter,ina the Thursday that proponents in- II putting oot anot!ler "5.Goe to buy hall an hour ,OD ABC next 1rtonday night for en elec- tion eve talk by Schmitz. THE $1 MIWON Schmitz warcbest compare11 with 1oall of $.a million !or President Nixon's campaign end $25 milllon for Sen . G e o r g e McGovern's race. But Abraham said it has been enough to put on major drives in 80IDe target cities and buy llmt radio, televison and ~per advertising In almoet all .tales. ,Abraham .said he has receiv- ed no contributions from th e Jahn Brkh Sodety or Olher COlllen'tllve poilllcal groups Oil iwm; Abnlwn, a former Bln:h Society sfall member, did say be knows tbit a numbor ol hiJ indivkhull contributon are memben ol lllo B:n:b Sociely or other conserv atlv .. groupe. CON~RESS I c_..,.,... tt ._. w. _ I 1a.c11 -·Pet ..,._, dlM. ttm 'fTHE BlRCH S«lety oever1~~-~·~·~-~·~·~·•:•:·~·~-~~ has and never wtll make con·1; tributioru;i to candidates ... simply because it would be contrary to the constitution of the society to do s o , ' ' Abraham said. Plan ·Backed · SA C RAMENTO California citrus producers ha ve voted overwhelmingly in favor of contimdng t h e California Citrus Improve- ment Program, according to the State Department of Aerlculture. Under terms of the Jtrog,ram, a neferendum to determine whether producers favo'r contiouatlon or tennina· tkln ol the program must be held every five years. KNOW YOUR CANDIDATE VOTE· FOR KENNY KANGAROO $AVE OUR SCHOOL$! W!Ulam John Moran, 38, and and Carter •were held wl~t in~ es t i g.,a t ·1 o,ti··Bc:f had dulged in·tbe "big lie" and had T p one count oC being accessories bail in the sta)'iiigs'of Tbomas ''dlspitched a i'epie!elltatlve falsely sugiested that Wayne, OSS a perS to ·murder against Chester "Big Tom" Shull, 24, and to Me~ino County for the alo_•• with L"ow act 0 r 5 "Festus" Green, 29, and Ch J n.c -ho · l --.1~-· .... l~ ares Uo!U.er,· .w, W . came purpose · o. J 1·i::i1UC1·ll1g any Robert Young and Clint SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -' ' WilUam Mark "Zorro" Mitten, to California last y.ear and federal ass1stallc!' possible. to Eastwood bid been conned in-A "newspaperperson" may 32. All were identified as Hells began fraternizing, wit b . loca! ~uthorites-', there, in-to makbig television · com· soon be delivering the dally Angels , from COntr4 COsta motorcycle group.s. vest1gat1ng possible homicides • merclals opo_psing Prop. IS. paper to Callfomlans. ''I think Propostion 14 is 1 vicious holx on all --. Counif. 1 ~ " and other crimes ~~ The ......._.. .. ts abo said the A state o£ficial 'Ibl.nday Their ca.. was continued to THl!IR BODIES,ilead i boul wtlh !he Hells Anpl1. . P~~b"':"bad . I a Is e I Y IUSpended provlsiooa In the of us; I know Propostion 14 could destroy the --{:r -ff * '1f .;., , *· asserted "that Prop. 18 would law that prohibited girls In tbe best larve Khool system In C1llfo rnl1I" ' ' The voting agl' has ai:;aln • .,. p z · H ld oot ban motjon pictures such 10 to 11 age group from being JgA"e Refu ses Dela.y· s 0 ice · 0 ~~t c~1· ~~= ~~: :;;";r~i:c1o~1~~· But be ~ Time, .N.ewsweet and the Na-"l pereonally would be NO on Proposition 14 been 10\\'erf'd In i.:1\"1' o ther'!! I the rli.:ht I•• \'"h'. Girls 11ncl boys atlf'rKhnL: Any s•·hool in I lh(' N~·11011 -:\le,,,11. lll'f'll <·an "'in a trip 1,, Sa ~r111nrnl11 via Air California. Bailor~ available In \\'Ps h·liff 1'1111.a shop& at 17th & Ii°'l·in1• Avr· nu~. Df';oslt 1111•• 11nly Hl !hi'.' ballot box al J1•lt's p,•11111::: Four y ouths tional Geographic.'' g•avely concerned II my .... In B tht" _ L D . th. c· Supporters, 'led by statewide daughter were wotking as a _ a UU ea , . ase chairman Pat Boone, said that newspaper carrier on these J,ohn W. Nicoll OAKLAND (AP) - A judge has refused to delay the trial of four · Hell's Angels in a baQrtub murder case-· after Anieb 1.ac1er Ralph "&!My" Barger said he didn't think be could ever get a fair trial "anywhere in this state because of my name." In Bar Death the proposition indeed dark mornings, regardless of a . wouldn't ban the movies and neig'1borhood's reputation," had become .'1a celebrity" and magazines cited, or even said State L a b o r Com- hi8 preseoc. :wtlUl.d ··subject COMPTON (UPI) -Four Playboy magazine. missioner Aii>ert J. Reyff. Zoo, appearing Ocl. :J i t hru 1 Nov. 5. I themt<>"gulltby.aslociation.'' yootbs are charged wlih kill--1--'-'-...::.-------------'-----' The defeiR;bad Biked that ing a bartender who refused to the _trial tie-' continued or serve them drinks by spearlng charges dropped ' because of him with a piece of 1lass from "iriflammatory am prejtidicial hi.s bar's window. publicity" ~ the Police said b a r t e n d e r d~verY ti1'1 .. lfftlt of three Manuel Mora, 34, ord.ered the bodies on a fancl:ulear Ukiah. · A L A M E D A C 0 UNTY , The ranch, which. State Al~.. lour to leave Wednesday night Superior Court Judge William Gen. . Evelle. Younger says because they we.re under the 1 'WU rumored ·fo be a ''Hell's legal drinking age. On the way J. Hayes Thursday, also ~eb bur)'i.og g r 0 d , , declined to let the other three belonged to two f ~; m 'e r ( J, defendants sever their case members ol the motorcycle BRIEF:S Crom Barger's oo grounds be g~ anl! !Oii!' other members Nude Setup . .. ' . - Testimony In Bribery OMI IACI BOYS have been arrested in con-..._ _______ .,,, nection with the slayings. THE PUBLIC d-efeoder representing tbe ranch owners said authorltjeii were e,ager fo get · inlormallon .from · them . abOut Bar'ger and llis "three ~ defendants, who are charged with killing" a suspected Texas narcotics dealer . who was !ound ·sla)n wtth a single bullet in the bathtub of a burning Oakland home JUI May. · Teen Held -w...-. WAIN 'II WUI IVY • out, the gang kicked apart a large plate grass window, poUce said, ~nd one of µie youths picked up a big frag- 'm~'nt and hurled it at Mora . ,It ~ROJlred him through the che~, ldlllng him. eAmfJ ... laCaae ONTARIO (AP) -Charges against a man and young woman arrested in conoecton with tbe ambush escape Or a Chino• prison Inmate last month ware dWnisaed on a technJcallty, and the two ~ reanated momenta lat.er, · Judge ltonhelll Z1 e ba r I b dlsmiaaed the cbarg .. Tburs- dey -,a1n11 Bent<>o D. Hart, 30, tid All<ltta Holman, 18, after ·the defense contended that the law r<quJres a preUminary hearing with!!> IO days of arrest. TOYS! ' SUITS LEAGUE s.mooo PANTS s3•s ~OFF ..... Te Mt.le WHH.I ntlY U.STI .... $1. .. $11. ON ANYTHINCi ON OUR SUPD SAYINCiS . Slll@VALI< TAILES I VALU I S U, TO ••• 00 IAMAMlllCAle IN MIS.A calria IU I. 17th ST. ·r..www•r n. ,., ...._ S4W4S4 ... ..., ......... M. ... ' MAITll CHA- COMING SOON SEVENfH SOJOURN THE MOODY BLUES ALBUMS 369 • . ' \ ·,f· • ' .• ' ~ TAPES ·4aa ' ' We ~~!~!J~~ng for. -Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the following storea: UDID the SHE slUJp ~~SKIRTS .~1: , , $499 TURTLENECK $499 BLOUSES ~ -:~EET D"ESSES :;:: Sf" ~~-~~SES :;t. sr LONG WOOL ..._ $898 .SKIRTS -· ..._ 0 . the SJ!E shop. DISCOUNT DR ISS SHO, ~· 17Jti. St.-Mesa C...,_, .................. , ..... AIRSTEPS v.1 .... 9M to 21 .fl '7U ------CHILDR!N'S-V•I-to 9.95 SAllllALS l" & 4" SUMMER HANDBAGS 25°/o off lftCDllTIMIM DANCEWEAR --------.... ... &.tlU BABY SHOES ... uu.a TO IJ..H -----225 E. 17th ST. COSTA MISA 5 48-2778 • aaMu-c•au•o • • .... ,.,. c.U... • -• . .J . • q ~ • t d t I· I I n [ . . • • ' l I ' ' ' • I y ' r " -. d d ' ' • • I • • l • l " • • I ' 11 I ,-_ . • ' " • • ! . • f • . . J • ) • little girls' sportswear I 1.49-3.99 Reg . $4-$6. Groot sportsweor separates at savings, little girl~' sizes +-6X. Knit tops, ~sst. fabrics, styles, colors, 1.49-2.cr,1 • Pont>, osst .. 1.99-3.99. Little Girls' Sport-sw .. r, 83 little-lloys' spert elot~es,, . l.69-8.99 ~j 5.50.$7 Ponts, osst. cotton • I corduroys, denims , brushed twiUs, requlor, slim, 2.99-3.99. $3-$4 Knit shirts, 1.69-1 .99. $6-$7 s..-.. ters, 3.99-4.99. $12 Nylon jocket, foll cOlors, 8.99. · Little Boys' Weor, 74 • • • ~ . I I little girts' holiday dresses • 8.99 $12-$13 values. Long dresses for the holidays, in co~on voile, sd\ne with flocking, asst. colors. Shewn . is just one oi the four styles ' in this group, sizes 3-6X. Little Girls' Ores'!''• 96 el*iitt~N : v ./\ , ,..::;"'-aa1• -"••·•iii ttlb· 5 ·9_99 Reg. $80. Child Croft "Dpjl "od.' " ib of he v ,,._~~·' -y "'~ ~ ... g t, , ~-~~ ..... structuliil plastic, wit~ doul5Fe:<lrop · • · .. sides, stabilizer-bars, in salem maple, yellow, white finishe s. Shown with Kontwet mattress, reg. $27.19.99, Infants' Fumiture, 81 .. -. ,.. . . toddler glr~' dresseia, ·sweaters 2.99-4~'19 " Orig. 5.50-$1 I. Gre!lt coU.Ction of famous maker dresses·ond sweaters. $8-$1 I Dresses, asst. fabrics, styles. colors, 2'4, 2:99-4.99.'5.50-$6 Acrylic sweaters, asst., 2-4,·4.49. Toddlers' ,Weor, ·90 • ,1 • Infants' fameus ,aaker di'es8e8 U9-3Jt8 • Rog. $6-$1 O. Beautiful infonts' dresses by fomous mokers,.g""'t selection of-day ond·P"r!Y,nyles. Show n is just one ofthe.groop, sizes 9-12-18-24 months. lnfonts' ~ear, 42 ' ' , . ,-t ' • • ( ' '· . 7 v.1,.i';'icliea'-..ssortment . -of•qirls .. 'wOU.aile cotton/ .,. · polyester. Lia P"ntsuits ill'severol styles . en<!colors, 7 -14. . ' ~ .. Girls' Spotitswear, # ' ).• " ' :I •.•.··: , ...... , .• ., $.'mies · ;.,..-• • .....1.... - 'i0.99 Girls"""'9 gingham polyeiter, perfect for drestof cotton/ evrey special occasion. • Easy care, woshoble in red, sizes 7-14. Girls' Dmses, 47 --, -~-~119~·m -ttiln<19 Ilon®mlm&W .: ANAHEIM 4" N. EllCIW t714) IJS.1121 O!Wlel, MAU Of' OIANM IHIN.J_.,..,_. "f714t ftl·IJll .. .. NIWfOllT •1·•..W•·ltl•-4 t7141 .... 1111 . . shop this Sunday, 11 a.m. tO 6 p.m. • HU•t11NW1•1•lffCIOlt .. llACH 1711 w--11141 .,..,,,. ·• • ··, • 1 ' ' ' '' / I ·, ... •1 1 . , ·' '.\ . . t .... .. • / . . i I ' ., .. • I>. I en f f I I 1· , ' .. , i(' 1' . \,t · I r, \ .. ' ~ .~ \ -· r' The re's. plenty ' t>f topics· . . a·nd' :text ures to talk about ' ' ·in•. this conversation pit . that '~i;cents 'the home of Mrs. W. Scott Biddle (left). 'Mrs. William Jenks shares ·the dialogue about tlie Ebell Club's tour. .. • • ' I .. • • • ... •. . . --~\ Memory La me' •• 'J. Moat borne lours 1pan the bayltont but the Thursday, Nov. 16 itinerary schedul- ed by the EbeU Oub of Newport Beach spans a century as well. The four residences to be shown from · it'a,m:to·~~.m. ....PJrom Vlclorisn architecture to contep1porary stone with aeceMOries to match the timeline - .. created a quaint but livable a~ ~in which each family member is eag~ ..... describe his part In the project. .;::: ..... ·-.1: •, ... ''• . landmark spiral staircase, matching houseboat, indoor !Wimming poor or whirlpool in the masRr bath. Updated elegance ~dent In the~ ry Axenea' rambling> iloUlo on die Jaai1it side of Linda Isle overlooklnti u.d ~ basin. Viaitors, like the ownen, may ~ tbe urge to board the ~alching ~ houseboat, appropriately namw Playhouse, when the panoramic vieW' 111: the bay becomes1oo inviting. •• ' ., ·, . '· . :_ •• , i Mrs . Richard Ho<fJJe; "chairmen, escen,•( · !'Victorian steiry:e~ .. ; 'in the Croul i ~qine "es Mrs. Williain. · Hildreth Jr. < · .. stands reedy ·to greet more . home tourisb. < • Mrs. Clayton Thompson, president, and Mrs. Richard ~e. ways and me8Jl.'I chairman, have arranged for Junior and ~ • Senior EbeU Club hostesses to greet ".-gp"\su at each JocaliGn. : } Tbe ' Richard ~· hom'e in Corona del.,lUr is a montage of Victorian hff- . rets, to1ren and triminings that offers a Dost:algjc . ••peet'' tqto past furnishings and -.bu~ embellishments. .~ • : .. A Santa Ana landn\ark, built in 1fi f0< tbe F~h family, 't' the incenlltt that · atarte<j the Qools ii"' their q"'1it for jpeipora~llla to decorate their te&t-life '''qtstle." ~ '\•,, That search bu 1¥ken them lo dtafe •. l-. . . aales, sntlquo smpo, the Salvdust Felllyal, razed houses and a Sunset ~ard "be.ad" shop. • • 'Adding redwood superstructures and 'Iron decoraUON to their beach house fneant extensive remodeling a n d refinL!lhing for the Q-ouls and their cblldren. SOmetiIDet they used a blowtorch to •remove 100 years of paint whi le comers and crannies required precise hand . ' . chiseling,. 30D'lelimes with toothpicks. ' Layers ol paint, which preserved the Victorian artifacts so beautifully, were. nevertheless, a problem when it came to matching corbel.s and ne'wels retrieved from various locations. Even the scale of the house had to be revamped, resulting in a new 16 x 26 foot living.dining area, a patio-turned-powder room and a small sewing room in the · ·tower that jutted above the second floor master ~m .. The house is ent~ in itself as the sanding. j)tilnfug ____ and·· painting ~· .. • Among the focal points in the boose ln the !triking yellow-black-white livinl room a r e scu!pturea, a s~ bar and a French manteled fireplace t{iic is shared with the master bedroom. :;:~ "Natiira.111 is the word for th:e W ... Biddle residence on Cypress view poinl-frr Blg Canyon. The description is derived from U)e muted autumnal tones that dominate tbe decor, the lw:urious use of stone and the pool that is a choice slice of ~ nature -complete with waterfall and a tiny island with palm tree. . Mr. and Mrs . Cecil Shirar·s two-story house in Dover Shores retains its showplace image, having been built as a model home. Mrs. Shirar's artistic talent has personalized and punctuated the in- terior. A recenUy completed indoor pool It a a ' further enhanced this bayfront property that clisplays a collection of art objects acquired during worldwide travels. Tour participants ma y pause here for tea and rerreshments to be served by the Mmes. Thompson., William Tritt, Edward Hogen, Harold Hammer and Raymond Kent Harvey. Flrther asaist.ance· in · urrangiog lhe parade ol homes bas been provided by the Mmes. Thomas Baume, Charles Haley, William Hildreth, Robert Jacobs. L. W. Jenks, L. IL McBride, J ames Barclay, Fred Loe'kes. James Murar and Lulu May C&sey. A map brochure will be given to guest s at each home . 1be $2.50 tickets, which are available 'from Ebell memben, will benefit UK- club's variou.. philanthropies a n d scholarship funds . • • t Which view Is belt WW be de i.table wllen the Women's ArcltlW<tural 1-JU• and Or an at ·O>unty ch1pter of the American Institute of Arthltecta.tponJ10r a home tour tomorrow .. In terior as well exterior vlew1 win vie tOr attention froin noon lo 5 p.m. 11 the lour....,._ lhroullh IJve homes for the benefit of scholanhlpa for an:hl11octural ltudenll. The Bruce Killian home In Huntington Harbour epitomizes bayfrool li•lnJ 11n .. each room hu Its own deck and secl uded land1<1ped .uta. Mn. Thomu Moon . luguo presid nt. and Mrs. J. Herbert Brownell l•J left. left lo rlsJlt~ ad m I re the coutal panorama and il•red lnlerlor dollp ot Ibo John Hamilton rtsiden<e on a bluff above Ne"IJOl'l H.arbof. The matthlng of Inside spo<e lo jutllnf niMllne and i•ued pool and pa t i o Is one defall of Ille llkhard H.....Uor home in Corona del Mar. lndlreCt ~::" • c/f bouquel canyon atone. Jade Ian and red f . The garden room of the Robert Lynd\ l'lllclnce on · !Jodi We .. t111pllllea lhtlr bleftdin1 ol contempanry llyle and Early California bnltqe . ' I \ J ' t II I I • " I l If: DAILY PILOT Friday, No"'!mbtr 3, 197.! 'Wife Dealt Out of Game Only Two Can P'la:y DEAR ANN LANDERS ' ! lost my hus- band to another man. Before you j wnp to • condt111on11, let me explain. We are botb 52. Arthur and [ bad 1 gilOd marriage un- til ~, lew yean -. Out dlildNo .,.. arnn and on their own. Arthur ts what y.,, mJcbt call peculiar, but be b not queer. The "other man" l.s hls baCbelor brother. · l1tt minute Arlbui' gets up in ~ momlng be tel~ ,~, to ask U be bod a good nlgbt'a .W.P-Then Ibey plan what they're ~ to do thaL eve- nlnc. - 1be two of u...n ad like teeftl&<(S, I am DOI Included IQ 1A1 of lheir actfVilles. Brolber bas -w1lb u. .,.ry llighl, U111ess be and Arthur decide to eat out. Bn>lher r.,.q speob to me and 1 have Artists Judged Huntington Harbour Beach Club's new wing will house exhi~lts Of the work of Hunting- ton Harbour Art Af. · IOciation members be- -ginning Saturday, Nov. J.O, with an invitational .open in g reception. )!ringing early entries '.for the show are Oeft :to right) the Mmes. ),orr aln e McCune, \Terry Banzett and Fran ;Solum. • . • • • • ~ • j f ~ ~ ~ Little Marcy NOY. 4th HUNTllltTON CENTER Aw•N wlMll'f dtlW tMotdlrit rtftt MMq!Lllt"..-,.,,, pwppat ' ·uttte' M.,..,. wUI •PP••t '" given up trying to be friencijy. r consider him an arch-rival who has taken my hus· band aw11y. Please give me some advice before I craclt.•"1). Or have r cracUd up -already -IMPOSSIBLE &JTUAT!ON. DEAR I.P:: Volar sap.bare de1Cribe1 your dilemma,.. What 1Gf. · f1U to un- derstand II that do one tar be-taken over unJ.e11 h~ Wa8ts to fle, Yoat 1a-"Dd Is a wWlng partner ta Ws ll'OMlYi•oaaftlre ln,·olvemeDt. , · ,; \\'ould YOGI' ille be ~· er worse without hlm? Tblt ls the q.e.uc. you must uk younelf. 'l womaa Cll IZ II too youag to dry ap Md bktw away. Base your dedsiol ... WU&· .. bOt for YOU. Artllur has alludy decided wbat Js best for him. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Here's a word of encouragement for "Hooked in Lllns· u1g" who will soon be a teenager and Is still sucking her thumb. When 1 was six years old my folks tried evel")'Qling to get me to atop. Nothing worked. The doctor told Mom to leave me alone. I am 18 now and wiU be manied in October. I quit sucking my tl>Jmb three months ago wtieb l anoounced my eng1gemenl It happened a I m o s t overnight. 1 doo 't know if jt was my pride, love, being loved, or a combination. of all three. If I could kick lhe habit - can. Please tell "Laiising" J'm rooling for . her, Ann. -UNHOOKED JN OAKLAND •• DEAR OAX: NoWoc heJpa lll<e .. vloC IOJDeMe A)', .. [ dW le, )'Oll CU, &el." ftla II tllle ~ ti AJaab:.UC. .U.ym-Wei,M W11<Mn 11• .a-v.,-, Ille.~ ltt .IM -.....,.....L • . '• . . . ~ DEAR ANN liAl.'0)!!3U!: 'l1llf . U. lcw ' int .-Gl'!lft, .U I eanled pa-prs to baodred mUtt u 1 ,....,., tlloald of· that broad who lblnb people art-lllilo Jo!ll~ or baro dances, lhey had fer to .ur. tile -ol lhe 1•• and oU II they don't take _,s...., "u:• to cblP.''!I (ff, lhe gu and oil. I! a Ure bal 1llort trlpt oloH!d lie lavon. favor" a1nce lhey were"'Coi!>l ' .. yway." ~. U.W, ~to lick In for that, too. In , Listen, Lady, lhe '"'"'' "~ •• ......, no floeloldlng. These are Don't get burned by a ''line" titllt '< too dep<edat~ at lhe rate of 7 emla a~. -~1.Mea to live by. -FAIR IN hot to handle. Play It cool wl!b Ann You dido t aay how _far tt.,.... to"""'!!'• • SAii" O , Landeri guide to "Necking and Petting andtculmagine'tillll""1~~ J>IWl F : I 1U)iocl you'n obooll What Are lhe Limits'" Send~,. re-lew peraonal -:tf." ~ t • miJ ~la -tlaJo (uledelnlu, -· ,._ aewlng mechlne, I~ ~i·l' ~of . o1 -1 ~·· Hct wu a Jot !w*r to --queat to Ann mden la care of lhe DAI- w!g boiea and a bfrd caae--lit w a ear -1 We ...,. I LY PILOT, atcloolng 50 cenb In coin and When I waa In blcb ocbool 1111' dad Pvt ..,.. -ii'-""° lraYds aeYeral a loog, swnped, oell .. ddreased envelope. . No Dull Dinner Ho11rs Boyds Share Joys ,9f Work By JO OLSON Of .. DellY' ......... AIUlr nine years ill attending school board meeUngs as a parent and PTA member, Jane Boyd decided it was time to sit oo lhe other side of lhe table and really get Involved. She ran !or lhe Laguna Beach school boar<! once and lost, ran again using all her experience from lhe Orsi try and finally was victorious. And as if one public servant in the family weren't enough, her husband Charlton (Charlie for abort) lhrew bb hat Into the political artna and became Laguna's mayor. Dinner conversation is never dull at lhe Boyds'. with two governing bodies' antics to dlscu.ss, but tbey 1'udnerstand each other and our problems oo our boards," Mrs. &yd noted. 1bey work together during lhe day In lheir downtown Laguna travel agency, go their separate way!' in the evening to meetings or study groups, and like to stay home together when they can. SUPPORT NECmARY Teamwork is esaential in politics, they realize, because without family support JX>-.can- d.ldate can run a successful campaign and be an effective public servant. The Boyd.s, wilh Scott, 26, Alan, 24, and Lucy, 18, came to Laguna from Pac i f i c Palisades in 1957 when bis company moved its offices to Orange County. Both are Easterners, ahe from Maine iixl he from MaswtU'u1etts. The hardest port or' being a board member is "ltamlng to be objecllve about the total district," Mrs. Boyd llld. "Jn PTA you're used to "l'Oln& In on one acbool. On lhe ochool boar<! you must be ready to open up." Abo, It la dilflcult to find lhe Ume to study all that b nece!l8fY. she said. The twice-&-monlh meetblp and "as-needed" study lelliona aren't as time coosumJng u lhe individual preparation. PICKING COLORS More women should run for school boards, she feels. "lt'a a challenge for ~know what's going on In tlQn. Women can play a l!l'tlll port on a boar<! -oot ~, plctlJJi · colors for walla:. We lo at lhlngs a Utue dlHettnUy than · men do." . Her campalgo was l:un with malllogJ, ap~at can- didate forums and -per articles. "I'm oot atra1d of going door-to-door and meeting the people I'm going to work for face-to-face," she added . Mrs. Boyd admitted that she was nervous during the cam- paigns, "'l"Clally In ,lhe sec- ood which was a cldle race. The 5'8" blonde wiio thinks she is "too heavy,".; likes to take short jaunts to S9n Diego, Hawaii and other pQints with her 'husband, tries tO. squ eeze in .some needlepoint :and en- joys just being at twine around the pool. · She loves Laguna because of ANOTHER VIEW OF SCHOOLS B~d Member Jone Boyd " its village ,Btmosphere and its w relaxed; casual qualtty where mE~ lllT.ERIDRS,, iii you can "be yourself." \ N And, Mrs. Boyd added that f'i she and her husba nd "both en- joy people very much," \Vhich ? is p r obabl v her un-o derstatement of the yea r. 1:11 . . ~ l ll"' th..-. 011 our 1t1oll of . 12 a.M,. I I l p.m .. 1114 wlll 011t.tro,t. olbuMt. H.r thow ~ ft tpo111or.O !.y ~ Tllo Fo111lly look Ster• ~ •M •'""""•'• '*'-•'•· " H1111flllff•11 Ce11ter, a.ect. • et Ecfhit•r & Coast Groups Work, Take Time -for Fun _ .. SUPER SALE! CLOSE OUTS • DMp ITwy. H:.L ltJ ... lt ' i For A Career • : :. NOT :IUST A JOB f BE A ''WOMAN IN WHITE" ~ IJ....• ll«lic.l or Denldl A11&al4nl ill 4 or 7 mortJlu. ~ ~ NJVNK.m ~~ ~RfGlmATIOH . REQUIRED • :: N1W CLAHIS STARTING Nov•mber 5 -Jenuery 8 lifetime Placement A11istance R.N .'1 •"' Mciitol pr1101111tl CUit u. 1«ciU111 di~ lab. & "''01 u.inin& U. 3 1M111Af. ":-.:::=:::·::..:: 623 W. 17th, SANTA ANA 'S41-4461 YmtAN'S 11Nf1'TS AVAii.AiU • Idea Needle Saf1S ••• ~I' .,., ' Ci I l J :S Pttl ~ O .• ~· ·.: : -, . *· Fa~1c., Bargains * .. * ·--~ ! . ·i ')fd". 't :.~ ' ~ ·,,.,.,all these-. beaadfal fabrics I01did-.Acryllcs 199. $4.50 :-... NOW-Syd/81 Collons & Homespun "'";. ·~" NOW-Syd/81 .Acetate Prints R99. $2.98 & ., NOW-Syd/81 Plaln & Pi"9~ SlaHrs ..... ~" $01f-3yd/81 SATURDAY & SUNDAY .ONLY -07~ ~ F~BRICS ~~OUTH COAST PLAZA • CAftOUIEL LEVEL .. Ol'EN EVENINGS I SUNDAYS ' .. King Boss Orange County Harbor Area Legal Secretaries h o n o r e d ti~ 'Beacb attorney Wllli8m N". Walker as Klng Bou of 11172-73 and his secretary, ·Marilyn Grogan as Secretary of the Year during a rece nt diMer meeting. BSP Mr, and p.rs. Lee Nick'• Garden Grove home will be the setting for a Las Vegas Night party Saturday, Nov. 11, at 8 p.m. Attending will be members and guests of Beta Alpha XI Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi. On Monday. Nov. 13, at 8 p.m. Mrs:. John Sanger, presl· dent. wm host the chapter , meeting in her home. ' I. Mesa Harbor .At Home in the 20th Century will be presented by Mn. Carol lleinz of South(l:rn Ca!Kornia Edison C<>. -she apeaka before the Mesa- Harbol-Club. The group will meet at 10:·30 a.m. 'nlunday, Nov. t, in the Mesa Verde Country Club. d~r, and conductor of the or c h es tr a Is William McDermott. Grandmothers Newport Harba r Grandmothers: will iostall new officers dlD'ing a 'luncheon meeting at 11 :30 a.m. Th.un-i day, Nov. 9, in the Mesa Verde f Country Club. = Mrs. Richard Green will ac· g. ti!pt the presidency and on her · boar<! will be lhe Mmes, Glen · Dysart, Anna Seck l er,:. Madeline Morello, R u t h ; Hamilton and Artemio A vi lla. !'.t · IS Hoon: Dally 1-8 Kltcbena and appliances from!;::=========================::;;:; the 1920a to lhe lllltla will be di-. Dance Theater Dance Theater af Orange Co unty will present Dtvertlaaement de Dance at. 8 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 11, and at 2 p.m. Sunday, Nov. Jl, in Plummer Auditor i um, Fullerton. Michel Panalel! is artlstic Antique £Iver · Collection NOW ON DISPLAY ONE WEEK ONLY ' ' We tw. .. just acquirad an· exclusive coloction of oxcop- tionally fine antique silver holow.... M.ny are one-of+ \ kind pitcos. Prict1 r1n90 from 15. lo 2500. A few of tho unu1uol pieces •rt 1 spoon wormer, o f,.,..., ,.refine warmer, •n •utomatic candle lllllfftr • Pltt11 atop in and -this uquWt. col1ctioft, ' . an HOWFSand SON .. JINtjlWILIU Joa 'Dill& O&NIL\TIOQ ' - 14 11 VJ~ LIDO -- NEWPORT IEACH 675-27)1 ' ' I I I j Your Horoscope Sagittarius: . , Visit Shut-in SATURDAY NOVEMBER 4 By SYDNEY OMARR Leo l• C'llObl• of making remarkaJ>le cpmebacks. Natives of this d y n a m I c zodiacal aign may be knocked dowh by blows of fate bUt lbey invariably rise again. Winds of p<>pularity blow bot and 'cold where Leo Is concerned, but seldom lui:ewann. Leo b eJJ». tlonal, dramatic, sensuous aod a showman to the fingert ips. Some famouJ persons bom un- der this sign include Leo Durocher; Mae West and John HustOn. different now ex pressea definite interest. W e I c o m e contacts, challenges. Tauras, Libra" persons play featured roles. SAGITl'ARIUS (Nov. 21- Dec. 21): Work behind BCenes. Lay groundwork for solid prog· ress. Visit one confined to home, hospital. Adhere to principles of Golden Rule. ActiVity iiidicatea in CX>IP nection with ~lion, club, organization. • CAPRICORN (Ile<:. 22-Jan. 19): You may be torn between duty and desire. Key ii to strive for balance, timin4 and pacing. Friend can offer sage · advice if you are willing to ARIES (Marth 21-April 19): listen. Heed voice of ex- Concem with finances of perience. Don't give u p mate, partner comes to fore -something of vaJue for mere get facts and get them in whim. wr!ltng. Don't play &'!Jiles AQUARIUS (Jan. 20,. Feb. ,;here security is 'Jnvolved. 18): Accent is on what you Search for truth. RelatioMhips want to achieve. In order to will be tntensifiecL Special advance, yod mwit get rid of burd<n not r!ghtly your own. agJMment . .-is due to be M~ streamline procedures. reoCbed. nOb't fall for aob story. Set TAURUS (April 20-May 20): sights on goal and move Obtain hint from A r I e a ahead. measage. Fromises are fme. PISCES {Feb. IS.March 20): a.it you do need something in Obtain hint from Aquarius pbaae message. Look ahead.· Add to wquog. A of activity i.s knowledge. through ·special belnl concluded. Refuse to be study course: Travel is on left boldinc proverblal bag. agenda . Clear communication Let o.tbers k;now you are oot lines. Be recepUve. Develop without allies. pbi}osopby. Protect your owa GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Inquisitive associate seems to put you through " t b l r d degree." Maint~ri aplomb. Don't reveal all. Keep something in reserve. Your own style, creativity should be emphasized. Air o f an· llcipation prevails. CANCER (June 21..July 22): Good lunar aspect now coin- cides with children who play Jmportant role in your lire. Youth, ideas, sense of ac· compllshment -these can be Interests· IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are intense, creative, willing to tear down in order to rebuild. Recent emotional set b a e k will ultimately work to Your ad- vantage. In December, you make important, new contact. Romantic · i nt er est s are highlighted. You are a warm. giving individual. But many times you give to the wrong persons. featured. Look beyond the im-l-----------1 mediate. Refuse to b e discouraged by what is pe\ty. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ): Ac- cent is on end of situation. Means you c a n n o t pro- ductively hang on to past. Seek alternaUve!I. Be fl exi ble enough to broaden horizons. S.&fttarlan ·plays prominent role .. You may have to poe!pone trip. VIRGO (!,ug. 23-ilept. 221: lf9n out details of long-range project. Don't succumb to temptation to skip essentials. Display determination. One you respect will be impressed. Idea can be devtloPed into workable procedure. LmRA ' (Sept. U.Oc"-221: IF you really want to lose weight ••• but you enjoy good food and a lot of it Accent on income, payments and collections. Gemini and vqo indlvlduals are involved. Basic change is ht offing. s~ itinerary. You can make ~ 5 / •lgnill<:ant gains if aware of ... you II love budget roquir!ments. W • h W. t h I SCORPiO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): e1g t a C e~. S~ Independence, . originality. per 8 0 n 8 11 t y The Weight W.itchcrs sparkles. Lead way _ take in-prog~.im offers .Y1?u an endless jtl " On ho ed . variety of delicious foods, ai.ave. e w appear m· including meat, fish, fowl, Betrothal Revealed Mychelle Marie-Lydia De Vuw r wlll become the bride of Robert Edward Leonheart Dec. 2 in Sts. Simon and Jude 'Catholic Oturch, Huntington Beach. 1be engagement was en· nounced by her parents, ~tr. and Mn. Henry ~f. De Vusser. Hi,s.-perents are Mr. and Mrs. Bert E. Leonheart. All are of Huntington Beach. The couple graduated from HunUngton Beach Hlgh Sc:hool. s.il.i.ds, fruits, vegel.lbles, polatoes, p.ista .and wonder• ful desserts! And ii really works. Over 4 million luppy people have lmt weigh! with Weight W.atchers. So why waitr Come le.arn how to slim down s.afely, ~n11bly, t'njoyably. CLASSES NOW OPEN Coste Mese C•nter , ....... .tWI .... n--.. t :11 •·•· ... 1:J1 , ••• M.. 7:Hp.•. EOR INFORMATION AND FREE BROCHURE CALL: 835-5505 WEIGHT@WATGIERS. Wtl""'W ........ nl._"'l.......,l••-"•ol w.,,..w01<Mn1t1__....,...C..•-'"·'· fl ~ A_ ITALIAN DELI e BAKERY ol..ucci .,l.J11li REST AU RANT • 1911 AUm1 at Magnolia, Huntlftgton Beach, OM " "" ....... a.ti o,.t'...._ .. (a~ Siii Ill ....._ -:n ...... D.-1' tM: M . , .. ,, .... IM1a.-1,._,:961-MU Jlfll' 1' ....... Prw ...._. ._, "'911 M•1 ,._, .... VI ..... JTAL&Mf 1 LI. I.OAP -.... 41': IRUD .... II OW Ol'tl ...,,. .... 1111 lllCllD JTALIAM CN••N-«•e. ti .. PROVOIJIE -nn •• . ... • • . ' ~ I I nal· .. crocheted shawls 5.99 reg. $9 I We hove o lovely selection of shawl s in delicate patterns, all with hand tied fri nge. Of acrylic, in white end assorted colors. Good gift ideos. Accessories, 41 tailored, fancy slippers 2.99 reg. $4-$5 We hove e wonderful group ronging from simple tailored designs, perfect for holidoy weoring. A. Metallic stretch, gold end silver toned 8. Penny Moccasin, red, black, white, beige or navy • ._ C. Leother skimm er, red, navy, pin~ or blue D. Esp1ino skim mer with gold ·tones. black. red end novy · Not shown: E. Embos10d velvet, gol den . red or block F. Embossed mylar. golden or silvery G. Grosgrain tapestry. block O( beige A:;.'.;, woshable slipper~ reg. $3-$5, now l.W Hosiery. 3 ANAHllM ....... 1 .. 1w 1114• 1J1.1121 ct•arros 100 l•• C.,ri1 .. Mell 121 JI •• o.o-4 t I • I HlwtOIT 41F•JM1 ...... I 11t4t t44,,'IJll • .-. . . -··--- --..--. . . Frldat, Nowmber 3, 2q12 DAILY PILOT J9'. -~ shop today aad sat1U'tlay 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. cozy warm sleepwear . ~ l '"'-'" 3.99- 4.99 .-·~c'/ p.m. You 'll love worming up to winter in ou r brushed nylon end ecetete · · sleepweor. Long gowns, 'u poiemos. end wolh: gowns included. Mony styes end COOfS. We show just o few 'from o ltirge collection. Street Floor Lingerie, 5-1- """'' ... __ I-• • 1111 ~ .... (7}41 "1·11M OtA,.._I, ililAll Of, OIAHSl , ...... , ..... s. ... 11141 .... 1111 • .. ' I I ·1 ,. __ _ " U"IT ........ ·:iPJTTSBURGH'S GREG POLIS GOES HEAO FIRST INTO ICE OURING 4-2 NHL LOSS TO PHILADELPHIA. ' . "':5ports In Brief >: .. '.~:= Emerson Ousts Rival; "' ... . ·.· ~ ... '.:'·~ Longshot in Golf Lead ,. .": -~ "· ;.i . GOTEBORG, Sweden -Newport ~·s Roy Emerson defeated Cliff ·1~ale, 6-2, 6-4, in the second round of i~ $50,000 World Championship tennis ."tournament here Thursday . Emerson is 10th-seeded whHe Drysdale .,... fourth-seeded. ·~·M"Jeff Borowiak, wbo upset second seed-' .. :~ ~ l'fJ!'~~,,cf~\,1· Borowiak.. of Berkeley, survived a final ~ ·tle-bre8ker for his 6-4, 2-6, 7-6 ~umph over the favored Rlchey from ~rasota, Fla. ,~ Sil:th seeded Mart Cox of Britain ::.defeated 16-year-old •Bjorn Borg or )j!weden IH, &-7, M. But Bob Lutz of Los ·'Angeles was eliminated . Haroon Rahim of Pakistan triumphed over Lutz 6-~. 7-6. Earlier, top-$Cedcd Joh~n Newcombe of Australia, third-seeded Tom Ok:ker of the Netherlands, and unseeded Roger Taylor of England and Allan Stone of Australia had. reached the 1tuarter fil1als. • .,, i;;AN ANTONIO, Tes:. -Longshot ~ bj-Loy, winner of only ftlS all aeason, fqed a superlative seven-under-par 65 for the surprise first-round lead Thurs- ~ In the $12S,IXK> Texas Open golf ~cnl. . · :Lfhe 32-year-0ld Loy, a long-time clu b lJfO at Burlington, N. C. he.Id a one-stroke ~ over veteran Dan Sike~. \\'ho took a #,' .!n the mild, cloudy weather at the i,bft-yard Lakewood golf club counc. 1 ~ump.ridden former U. S. Open cham-:.»JOo Orville Moody, ~like HiU and rookies ~ WbUe and Tom W1LIOO. wue next a( 17 as lhe t"""-C,tool< odT1ni.1e QI the neaNdtol condltlom to @eamoctny W · ., •Jn the p-oup et ~were Dole Dougla.oa, ,.diorl .. SIHord, J. ~ Soud, Bob Shaw. tleorge Johmon, Lebron Harris. Gary proh and Ron Weber. , 'c' Lee Trevino hid to r1ll7 to salvage a ::{(: "'·I '.I ·1.,. ~ Graebner, the former Davis Cup star from New York City, overwhelmed his opponent even though he was still nurs- ing a sore shoulder. .,, PARIS -Stan Smith o( Pasadena defeated France's George Goven 3-6, fi-.3, 5-1 Thursday and joined l\\-'O countrymen 1n the quarterflnaf!!J~ti ... ~·,(XX) French International open indoor tenuis cham- pionships. Jimmy Connor of Belleville. Ill . and Tom Gorman of Seattle won Wednesday and advanced to a higher round of the. tourney, which has a nrst prize or $10.000. In other matches Thursday, Patrice Dominguez of France whipped Jaime Fillol of Chile 7-6, 6-3; Jan Kodes of Czechoslovakia trimmed Francois Jauf- fret of France, 6-4, 7-6 and Australian Barry Phillips Moore defeoled Jlri Hrebec of Clecbo.sloyakia, 7·S, 7-~ . .,, LONG BEACH -Pete Gullernt i.s a 29--.)tear-old former Sacramento clerical worker who got tired or sitting back of a desk from· 9 a.m. to S p.m. Don Crowell is a 46-year-old COO· structk'Jn company executive whose busintsa activities permit him the luxury of Soll on a Thunday arternoon. Gutierrez and Crowell joined pro Bruce Wyalt of Friendly Hills Golf Club In WhltUer Bl the three shared the first round lead In the $20,000 Queen Ma,,_ Long BellCb Open golf tourney with -or Ill, four under par. The lhree-round tourney offers fl,000 as a first prize. The players raoce over the 6.17~yard El Dorado Counlry Club COW'le and 2S ot them did It tn pir or better Tl'llraday. Play concludes Saturday. A f'tld of Ill started,...bul only nbou t half wllt hnllh afterihc cut. Lakers Trade, Hope to Solve Rebound Woes LOS. ANGELES IAP) -The U>s Angeles l.ekers of the National Basket- ball Association hope they have solved their rebounding problems with the ad- dition of 23S-pound forward Dill Bridges from the Philadelphia 76ers . The Laker.; deall away reserves John Trapp, a forward , and 6-(oot-11 center Leroy Ellis to the 76ers Thursday for Bridges and center Mi?l Counts , a former Laker.~ l: 'I'..· ..::..---~v1-"'""'- The deal is e~pected to do two things for Los Angeles: -Give valuable bench !ime to forwards Jim McMillian and Happy Hairston . -Give the Lakers a tall center who can shoot from the outside. Last yea,r w h e n Los Angeles won its first National Basketball Association title, Hairston and McMilllan had little rest because the other Laker forward s, Pat Riley and Keith Erickson, aren't very tall and aren 't great rebounde.rs. Additionally, Wilt Chamberlain , while one of the league's great rebounders and defenders, is no outside shooting threat. The Lakers said Bridges will be in unlfonn tonight at the Forum when they play host to the Detroit Pistons. Philadelphia, loser of its first 10 games th is year, gave up a 6-foot-' Bridges for Eltis, wbo is considered the fastest big man Jn the league. Trapp was a capable, atron(I reserve for two seasons. In an unrelated move, the 78ers waived Lulher Q:reen, a former ABA player with the New York Nets who was picked up as a free agent this season. Ellis, 32, has played wttb four clubs in his 11 years In the NBA. ~ Trapp, 27, is e Uoot-7 defensive apedallst who averaged seven point!: a pme ln his four NBA seasons. Bridges, 33, is the only active NAB pllyer to grab 1,000 rebounds Jn each of hlt last six seasons. He played nine years with the Hawks in SI. Louis and Atlante before coming to Philadelphia last season. Counts, .JI. came to Philadelphia In a trade earll<'r this year. lie stand! 7·foot and saw limited action with the 76ers. , , ---·-- LOS ANGELES (AP) -"fl'1 nice lo bt la ftnl ~ wllllbu you're a rooltl< or aid .llQ me," oal4.Ralpll Backstrom. The •year~ld llUl<d u~ •• rookie In lhe bapplest Los AnielOJ K\nil' dresalni room la year• 11Jt¥adlY nlcbl. Backstrom had """"'1 two goals In . a 1lx-oecood span aa the Kings upeoded·the de!todinfl NatlGml ~J L .... u e cbamplonl, Bollot!'• Bfulm, $ol. The Kings nOICllod tbtlr 11!1>.1pow<r play goal ol the Y• ln,the -., they jwnped Jato tbe lead la tbal del>oitinenl u well aa In Uie Weotma DMaloo. Olympic ·Coach Raps Pro~am For Gymnas~cs . . . " -:;, Rabbit's. Foot OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) · -Muriel Grosafeld, coach of the U.S. women gym- nasts foe the lasl two Olymplca, said !<>' day llbe wouldn't coach again In frig unless aome drutfc tKanges~were 'mide. .. :L~cky for. ·.Jones ~;\'t'· ;<'I\' PAZ, <M;,-(AP) -Wby does o . ' • ~~ . ~ man ·jump•..,· a ooupid.<ip veliicle .end , She would lake the job again, llbe &aid, "onljl U this country musters up a 0pro- (lram that· ls wwlhy of all the work these girls put Into ll." "1be last two games . we've been bulldfng a reputallon for our gymnuls." Miss Gn>M!eld said the Unll<d Stales bas not won an Olympic gold medal in am- nastiC{__ alnce 1111% and the Jut two Games 6ad been devoted to building a reputation. "We're tired of building," she said. "We're ready to win." But it will take more money aod different training pro- gr&m5 before the United States can ex- pect an Olympic-winning gymnastics squad, she said. Miu Gl'OS!feld, in Oklahoma City fOr a physical education seminar, said some of the six-member leam that went to Munich this summer were disappointed with their fourth-place ftnish. "But they really .Were the first team to make the big breakthrough for the U.S.," she said. "I think before we left this country for Munich, they would have been quite pleased had they ltoown we'd finlsh fourth." The 32-year-0Jd fonner Olympic gym- nast played for a moment with her curl- ed Mnytails , swung her leotard-clad legs across the desk top and commented on the Olympic judging. "Sure. it's politiC'al," she said. But she denied it was the Communist bloc, as some had said, that defeated the U.S. 1.~1omen gymnasts. "It's the smaller countries that have ha~ the reputation in gym.nasties," she said. "They are the ones that aren't hap- py." She said much of the judging iB based on the country's reputation in that ijeld. "On beam, we're probably the best team in the world ," she said. "But it just takes building a reputation and having more of a program than we have to win." To improve the U.S. program she SU&· gested having a solid, small group of coaches for the team, rather Utan in- dividual coaches with trainlrlg spread around the nation. , ' "The ...ii-.=-_, tllose gymoasls liie Calhy Rigby and Joanie l\foore get together are for gymnastics meets when they compete against each other." she said. She said she also thought it would strengthen the team U the members trained together in regional meets. "With an the effort and devoUoo these girls put out, we've got to do something to strengthen our program," she said. "We aren't being fair to them." ~mid jounc:ie O)'il",lllo.~.ci! the ~< ~ af Ibo! ~!'~"'f" o!l~j-· race? ~ · ~ 1 ~ ·~'"'·;.•' ·1' :-.4 ··t To be ID· t . • ~ce",ilt<,jlll•~ · ,,,,_.,, ~ti.-, 'ioii!<~· . .,.. ' ,'l!",;,T,~'i ' ~.::L..,-:;::~·· ~· . I'• ' ..... . .f.J'. 8:1 w1:Y~•;1 o.au · ,.'"'· ed after ~·~i~i4m-. the Baja"' W#><JliOl"'l!M«lil'~'· 81 ---~"':i..:.__;,::.J') -::-"""""· ,; s. eepy ~-~ .i.,. '= ···;: •• ...... : If lhe ~.fii:e 1Jefn8.lr!'a·:iiice · with ParMIJ( -wiey c!Oel" .i&.ei, the 38-... year~ld Indianapolis IOO 'lf!nn<r from Rolling Hills lite being la it! "Because It's a heck cl. a lot of fun," said Jones alter taking bis aecmd Mu- ican 1,000 in succession, becoming the first man to win two such tests 1n a rqw. In fact, Jones also won Wt June's: Mei:- ican 500 offroad race_\n~muth ·tbe sufte kind of terrain. Two Orange O>ast erea residents fared well with Ne!jOl'l Beaf!i's ~ll l\U!h. win· ning the !°""""heel clVlsioi and pi.clng; fourth overall wblle Westminster's Bruce llarm was third In the molorcycle (IZ>- cc and under) aectioa.. Jones had a toogher -rood to bounce on Ibis year, according to most of the, en- trants. "It .was a lot tougher this yui," said Steve Hurd of Montebello.. a· motorcycle rider who won his class for the second year in a row. "There was no powder on the course. It was so hard-packed, Jt wu like-driving on rocky cement," saJd Hurd, who team- ed with Erlck Jenson of Eagle Roclt. Jones was the favorite ~ win his sec- ond race in a row when thlng~' got UOOer way Wedncsd.ar. He was dry~· the same Bronco irl whtcb he woo fast 1~ and the same vehicle which carried blln to triumph in · June. "I told mt crew to leave-the engtne alone. I didn't want it toucbed,11 said Jones, who said the enetfte waa encUY llke it was -etcepl for a tune-up - a year ago in this race. But even being the favorite wasn't enough for the veteran racer'. He 1till managed to get his hand! on a lucky rabbit's foot. America 's triple gold medal winning girl swimmer Sandy Neilson of Long ~·ch lenl. her'fl~·il..."bl!I!'.' f90l _ to. Paruelli. MiSI NeffiltiD .. creania. the foot wllh aiding her three victories at Munich, Gennany. The only top name to fall to finish the race was Mickey TbomP900, the 43-year- old driver who races everything with wheel! and some without. Tbcmpson's CIJeyy Plclrup had meebanlcal problems and he was forced out of the race. Benson Ford Jr., great-grandson of Henry Ford, was unhurt but his co- r;..:;;a-;;~;:;m;;n8~4nl "- ~ UCLA Grid Stadium? It " LOS ANGµ.ES CAP)-.;Constructlon ol a u .ooo.eil mull!-purpooe alhletic stadium at the University or CalUornla at Los Angela Ls namlwly favored by 1 student.! but apparently not if it is to be built with student funds, a straw· vote showed Thursday. ; 'l'loe questloo 0( whether IUch a '"-dium should be buUl ""1 approval by ~ a 141-vote margin but a aeCond quesfton asking tf k was 'leglUmate use of 1 student funds was opposed by 1,703 voters and favurtd by 1,:.xl. The Bruins have basketball, track and baseball lacllltles oo campus but ~ play their football games In the Los Angeles Memorial Qillseum., aa do the University of Southern California Trojans and the Loo Angeles Raml of lhe National Football League. ~ SIJilhtly "'°"' than JO -t of UCLA'• students cast ballota Clll ~!la- dlum 1..,., which had twice been de!ealed In the put. · 'n\e results, however, are ln no· way binding m UCLA administrators or UC Regents, who would malco the decision to bullcl a stadium, a Cll!llpua :,.: spokesman said. · , Student funds are not, tn tbeDry, a necessity In bulldlng a camrm.....stadfum. ~· The flnanclng could com~ from ihe' reeents or throuP private IOUl'ttl. PARNELL! JONES driver, Elliott Kaplan, suffered a mild concussion Wednesday nig~ when their Ford Bronco orubed in. the race. Race officlals &aid Fon! found anothor co-driver and continued the race after the accident in which the vehicle rolled over near Punta Prieta, about hallway to the La Paz finish line. Kaplani 211 and Ford me roommates at~ Whittier C.Ollege in Southern Callfomla. Kaplan's father, Dr. Marvin Kaplan, chief , of cardiGlogy at Long 'Bea<h Vetenns Hospital, said he was notified lbat the injury waa a. mild concuas:lon. Won Wife's Love: Affection Suit Hits Bob Feller CLEVELAND !UPI) -Bob Feller, rormet' Cleveland lndlans plldoor """ Hall-Of-Famtr, waa named In an $800,IXK> alienation of alfec:tlon suit flied Thurs- d•y. Donald W. Thorpe of IUburban Got .. WEST L..AfAYE'ITE. Ind. -Doctors '&dded to permit Purdue! foolball coach -W DtMoss to accompany his team to ~. Mlcll., todaJ for I be Boileniioken' Bl1 'r.. pme Sllldrday trfth Mlcblpn Stote, .Key Baee Looms for Tustin~s Diss Millo filed tho lllllt In Cu1•holo County Common Pi-Coull, clwilDI tbal Feller won the love of hit wife, Ame, "throoaJo loll renowned booeboll fame• and becoulo Feller bod -o ~ vlaltor to tho '!horpe --Joie 1118. "" De.Moss was lll1rken with early ~ Monday and e1cept for two brief vlalll to practk:e this wttk, has '*'1 ccnllned to his home here> . .. ' --~-· .,, .~t.fi.oRT TALB0r. Wales --i Clari . e · who .. llMd lhe firat n" -ent.I on Lhl 0e.,.ar cll'C\llt and ' ' 0ellmlaal<d la the llPl/llnfl """h or jiolher1 lllOYtd Jn!o,lllt oemlflnals ol the ....,....~lflnl .nur.L1.J tr!th o H, &~ !Jlnnpb over Jobo Lloyd of Britain. ~---·-· PHOENIX (AP) -Mite lllaa, slo'lltd by a broken leg much of the 1euon, needs a I~ finish in \he Best Western 150-mUe race Saturday to become the nlOlt successful rookie driver ever In champmn.h.lp auto rldng. The lall, hand'°""' Hiss, from Tustin , tokes • gJ1t1er1nc.r1rst 1w rec:on1 into the '50,000 windup for tndJanapolls type t'Ars of the 1.Jnltad Stites Auto Club at l'hocnlt tntttnotlonal Raceway. Drlv.lng an EagJe-Offy owned by Tom and Mary Page, of Costa Meu. Hlss cu"'. renlly rf.Db fifth amona: USAC'1 elite In . -' . -. the polnl llllndlngs, and a hlah finish could move him Into third= and a sizeable payoff rrom the pk>nshlp polnl fund. Moreover, he's in Une lor a lop con- tr.ct next yur -very posslbly u the No. 2 driver behind Mark Donohue in the W"1Jy 10phlstlc•te<! _11 ab I e of Phlledelphlan R<lfler Penslco. Hbs, a graduate of the am•O·tlnie road racing rank.I . consistently finished among tht top JO lo '1SAC events this year. wns rookie of the race at Indianapolis and placed Htond Jn one of Penske'• McLatens In lhe caJlfornla IOO at Ontario. mu 1 lmoal dldn 'l mate Phoenls. The Paaes. who live ln Colli MHI over-ex· lended lbetr ~llC!ng budfl•t and bad ... nounctd thtlr c• would not compete ln lhe ,..,..., flllOle. The)' chanced their minds ll!t week And Hin wlU be In their car \\'hen prtctlct opens at the one-mile ovnl today. lllsa mUlt bctlt out such top contenden as Cal 5tlO wlnner Roger McCIUlkey, In· dl1n11polls ctwnpton Donohue a n d . ' • - ··---·- lwottme Indy -Al u-la lhe healed haltle for thH place IJo.Jhe ston- ding1. Tho USAC dr1vl0& Ulle 0..dy haa been decided. Joe IAooard """ tt for lhe oecond yur In • .... Moroovtr. Billy Vukovich, oon of the lole, ....i lnd)r champion, olroady_ bu lockOd" up leCOnd plllct. Tho driven wlll ~ atatr!lq pool- In tlno!! 1t1ol1 S."'1!1of momlai. :nit aflemfOn r.C. will bt IOlecNt llve over lhe ABC nelwort. The sult, whlcb ...U llOOiiiotlO In com- pen111t017 end lllltl,otlO puoltlvt clamqes, staled that Mn. '!horpe bu sued fior l>Dbond foe dlvm:e to ~ Feller. ' ·--.,, Feller, $4, currmtly opeelol .- m&nagu It a downtown hotel, wu dlwwced b7 his trffe list yur -fl yean pl mon1qe. He Mid bo bod - 1dvlled 11y aUCorneya oo1 to -i .. the llull. . -- .. ·~··-·-·--- ( . I ' ( - , • NEW YORK'~ P+flLJ:Uj:itONOVO DRIVES ltT OCIR i'l:llS.WEE~E.ND. ..... 'Ftpals .S..t~y . . .. f '. .... . • . "Funny Car Qualifying ' Set Tonight at_ OCIR Qualifying began today for the ~th into tbe field . which includes some of the • . annual Manllfacturers Funny Car Cham-top drag racirig talent In the country. ,. pionsbips at Orange County IntemaUonal Oi-lvers ~II inClucie DannY Ongais, Jim Raceway. Libennan, Ed McCulloch, Gene Snow, Qualifying rebounds will I a s t unl.il I Don Prudhomme, Tom McEwen, Don p.m. with finals slated [or Saturday. Schmacher, Pat Foster, Dave Beebe and Tonight's admlssioo is 53.50 for adults, others. s~ ror: children .~12 wliile ~ildren under Driyers who qualify today wijl begin SlX will be admitted free. Pit passes are their warmup nms at I :30 Saturday with $1 each. , dmi . ill be 16 1 . racing beginning at 7. Gates will operi at Saturday s a ss1on w . _Qr 1: 30. , adults, ~ for studen~ and serv.1cemen, FiVe of tbe' pre-r8~ favoril(!s are $1 for children S-12. Pit passes will be $2 McCulloch, Foster, Orlgais, LibennJn r and reserved seats $1 extra. ahd ~mme. Eighty entrants have been accepted .Md::ulloch Plade the fmals of Lhe Costa Mesa, Los Alamitos Clash Tonight East~m ,F\mny C:ar and Pro Stock Chain· pionshiP a't OCIR two weeks ago, but1last traction at lJ:ie starting lipe and was beaten by Oogais. Foster established himself as Dile of those to beat When be turned in a 1.73 second practice 'clocking on t h e quartennile track at only 191 miles per hour in a Chevy Vega. Foster won last year's Manufacturers Championships and will be out to become the first driver ever to do It two times conseculiveJy.. . Costa A1esa 's football team, still Prudhomme encoontered some trouble ·wln,less but ~ hopeless, takes Wt~'~' ~".'"-·~!1!§1(1"=-.a."iM .a·~:.-J ... t Alamitos tonight in Irvine League actiOD week. 1be car was drlftlng io.'lhe.idt at at Western High School. mid·track, but Prudhomme is expected Game time is a o'clock. to have the prohlem worted 0out by race Coach John Sweazy's Mustangs have t~. . an o.g record, but extended highly· ~berman 11 the most colorful of the regarded &,landa to the final quarter driven and one of the favorites O! the last week and have showed signs of an !1· torS ·~~th his wildly designed offemiVe tejuVenatlon in recent games. gle Jim fUp!IY car and pre-race '. Whether they'll have what it takes to anti · upset Los Alamitos remains to be seen. Fourteen of the entries have bettered l Mustangs coach John Sweazy isn't selling the existing raceway elapsed time rte0rd · the Gr1Cflns short anyway. of 1.47 seconds. Foster holds that record . ''They were picked by a lot of people to . The conteat has been run at OC1R 'win the league, 80 you know they're a since ~967 and has become its foremost potentially good football team," Swe;ezy and r1che!tt event. It ii billed as tht says. "I don 't know what' has been their largest funny car championship race 1 problem and after talking to their ever· co8e;hes I don't think they've been able to / The lniae Lt.quo football cbazn. ploaibip la _.-.Jy on the line !0< Edlaoo\ Illa!!'• Clllr!JUI tooJcbt u they lDYldo s.ni. Alla Sladlum !or a .,... mdalloo, W\lh wideleated 5anll Ana VaJ!ef; Klc""1 Is ljlled !or I and II the Charpn o1 ...ch Vince Aam> llumbl> Jn Ibis cme tlley can klsa off 11\Y cbance o1 a Dottlon o( the clrcult Utle and CIF AAAA playoff pooelbWtlea. F.dison ia a three:polnt favorite to dump t be Falcoru:, according to DAILY PILOT oddt. 'J'llO C1wgen trail Santa Ana Vali.y by ooe.!UIJ pme In the loop ataJ)dlnaJ ,a!ter CoroM del liar denllJed the F.dison ~ .. Big ;Test For CdM's Defenders C.Orona del Mar High's sea Kings and the Barons of Fotmtain Valley, two Orange Coast area prep footba11 powers with pride more than anything else. at stake, collide tonight at Newport Harbor High. Kic.kolf is at 8. Both teams bave lost twice in ln-ine League bostillUeo and appear out of the running !or the league cbamplomblp. But both are coming off convincing vic- tories and seem to have their oft'emea in f~ gear. Coa~ Dave Holland's Sea K.inp have been tabbed as one-point favoritel. 'Ibe Sea Kings are coming oU a 17·7 upset victory over previously undefeated F.di9on and they dJd it with a rock bard defense keyed around the front four or Pat Lynch, Bob Jones, Mike Frost and Tom Pole. But the offense has m a t u r e d significantly with quarterback Joe Tosti and running backs Skip Lauderbaugh aod : Bill Mohr hi the plc:bn. Lauderi>augb rushed for 102 yanb in the Edison victory Md Tosti's aeuon totals in the passing game have ac- cowtted for 486 yards and four touchdowns. Fountain Valley, meanwhile, under the direction of ooacb Bruce Pickford, likes to run the ball down the oppoattioo's throat with its cocps of strong runners. Fullback Les Becher (lllO) leads the pa~ with his imposing 7.1 yards per crack average. Re's scored three times (once on a 77·yard nm). HaHbact Mike M8:Jcolm's stat!I are nearly as imJ!lMsive ~ 32t jrards Jn as carries · figurmg oot to a 5.1 average. He's acared ~ve times while Ben Dodson tw seven touchdowns to his credit with a 5.2 aver8ge. Still aocther top back is Bill Ogden. Ogden's nmning was a key factor in Fouritain Valley's 21-15 victory over Magnolia. \ Augmeotin& this toogb running .attack is quarterback Bill Hatfield and bis aerials to brother Rick or Nly of bis trailing backs. Founlain Valley's defense haan 't been as spectacular as Corona's, giving up 135 point.!1 i{1 six-games, Magnolia's 15 WU the low~t any team has been held. ~l a " LI H --- P<• 11111 -. 17-7, Saitta Atta \'alley rWed .111111 la 0..... Cotmty: earUer de!eoled eor-dd Mar; JU. Two cootrulJDg l\)'leo ol pr.; are-on tap lmJPI delplte bo4h -· ..... of the!~. ·• . &dllitla'• forte "la the 'bord ~ o! Fred. -and Joe Demetrakos over Ibo tackles aloof with the abort paulng pme ol quaiterbock Q-alg Way to bto wide recelven, Bob Granath, Marl< Weathe111ee, . JOe Morado and Ed w-.... Spead lo Piil domiM•fb! the <llargers' ._ lltd lho-...i driTe ol 7IJ yanls . -ol 1t leoit 10 playi. ~ Diet lllll'• '"""""operate !rvm Ille -oelup, '"" --opeed ;,,..-··-to.bruUOu thowayGlllll\Yoe<:alioa. '!'beF...,_;_ be stopped eo1d cm -two •ci:wl'to "'"'1, tben nui or paaa a-die di- Aa one Irvine t_.. COICh JlOI k, "Santa Ana Vali.y -~do 8ftY1b1ni at all -WJtll they get behind.., Santa Ana Valley came from behind to de!e&t Colla M.,., CUma clel liar and Loo Alamitos. Tiie Falcou' ·-hasn 't put the clampo to -and . tonllbt doesn't !lgUI< to be ·111 uceptlon. Tlll'ee ImDe elevoill bave ocored ~ tlmel .,..... the Fllcons. DAil y l'ILOT If ' ' A:.t La Palma Stadiu m MVTries Estancia Favored To Maintain To ·Bag Sixth Win Loop Lead Eatanda ·High'' Eagles b!vade La Palnia Sladium· 'toitigbt for an Irvine League !oQ1baJ1 test wjth Magnolia in an attempt to 1tay witbln lllootiog range of the league crOwb. Kickoff. is slated for a and the Eagles are 11-point favorites to chalk up their sirtb win of the 9e8SOD. against one loss and fourth cimtit' triumph. Estaoda is Ued with Edisoo with a 3-1 loop mark, one game off Santa Ana Valley's pace. Santa Ana Valley and Ediaoo collide at the same time at Sant.a Ana Stadium. Coach Phil Brown's Estancia ele¢en· will again be banking on the st1perlt run- ning game of tailback Dan Prtnceotto. · quarterback Mike Magner and the pew- found inside· attack from fulllack Roy Buttellng, a ..,.verced tanback! Butteling is slated to start·for the second straight week with ai.line . Scoti Gayi'ter (190) hopefully ready to see some acUon. Estancia'• big-weapon. -ha 1 been three-fold out o! the ttjple oPtton with Princeotto able to breu the 91JP01ition inside or outside with pitches from Magiier, Mag11er's ability to nm or pass eUectively and Butteling's quick darts in- side. Estancia's defensive task w it h Magnolia is to stop the one-two threat of quarterback John Kindred and tailback Mark Miller. Miller wu on the end of a 42.-ya.rd sailing pta'y from Kindred in the first half against" Fountain Valley and is a prominent nmnirlg back. Princeotto's yardage totals through six games are 9'UI yards in 149 eanies for a 6.1 average. He's scored seven -~.. . Magner :s running totals are 234 yards in 58 cary-ies for a 4.0 average and two PHIL llRO,WN TDs. H·s passed for 345 yards with 19 completions in 53 attempts and seven tou chdowns. · Estancia has come out victorious against Magnolia football teams only once in five previous tries. The 1970 ron- tingent which swept to a t-2 record and CJJ-' AAA quarterfinals action against Bonita whipped A1.agnolia 16--0. Coach Glenn Thomas' Sentinels did in Estancia last year, 22·14.. I?#.!'!" .. Off-. .. !Mei. ~ 'l' r.:; m iln :~-~· ~G Mon'-'-¥ 1 • 0 . $1'1'1'119• "'° ICleH 21 15 (:.,.... •T c; Jac:otMon 1u 11s ..-Mc:u,.,. •s ~\ ~ :;" Ji l~ f!= TB .;ff'ltCfOl!O I 1"5 -l11 Fl a.,,1iiiU1111 1t ns _,... s l'l. P•rsel 1 171 0-. F Stanhra .Stands Out • There's Neve r ...a Doubt . . -Mat er ~e i Romps, 3 4 -6 By DENNIS CAMPBEU. Of .. .,..., ..... ,,.,. Mater O!i Hlgh Schoothimect brawny fullback Mark Stanbra loose for the lint time this year and the 195-p>und senior re1poQded wilb 188 yards as the Monarchs muscled past St. Anthony 3H at the Santa Ana Bowl Thursday n;ght. Stanbra, who had galned juat 192 yards all year, packed the ball 28 time1 in lhe Angeles League football contest 01 Marer Del improved its seasm record to S-1 and tts leaaue mark to %-1. Uted mostly as a blocker for junior tailback Jim Gardea thls year, Stanbra matched Gardea's t'o\·o touchdowns as the Monarchs po .... -e red for 287 net yards on the ground. Quaterback Steve Martindale added the final Mater Oei acore. He ran for one tw~polnl conversion and passed lo Garden for the other. Running behind a punishing offwlvt line. Stanbra had gains ol 28, 13, JO and 18 yards and was not stopped for 1 log all night. Gardea. with 709 yardl goina into the game, added another 76 aa he ap- proached 1.000 yards for the wa10D. ~flssioo Viejo, the surprise team of the Crestview League footbaU ae.uoo, 'Wlll be fightlnr to maintain a share of the leque lead lonlghl against Foothill at Tustin Hilb School's field . Coach Bob Hlvner's Diabloa, licblly regarded In .,..... .... plctlai@d •2 Jn J non • leque play, bave re<Orded three leape wins apimt one defNl. and cur· renUy &bare the top •pot with ~ A win In tonlgbt'1 I o'clock game ooold set the Diablol up for a showdown hltUe with Orange nut week at Mi.akin Viejo. But of primary coocem toJhe Dtablo,, is the Foothill challenge, a serious one ~g 10 Hlvntr. "It'll be ·a clole 1ame, I'm llW't.~· Hivnef'> aays. '"They have a power run, ning prrie, a fine runner In S...m Peek and • good tint to block for him. "TbeY doa1 do uythtng dl!fe<ent from other J fonnaUon teams, but they're stUl tough to stop runnlnC tbe po..., 1tu!! tbe way they do." ·Peet, a nturnlna: all-league selection, Is a bruising lnside threat at $-11 , 175. He has scored m toucbdowm for IM Knights lhil aeaon. Tun llndJo!o, I !lo.pound opeedater' is nbo a m11jor aftenllve threat, hiving . scored Ove Umel. The Kntg!u' nmttlng lllack. may ..be somewhat hlthpend.thfa.--'1lll- league cente~ Andy ltltili.k will be -OtJt with a bid.: Jnjury. Kltnfk provides much ol the blockbt( lflr tbr niahes o! Peet.opit ~. ~fission Viejo Nu.d benlly on iU ground game untll 1111 week when quanerbact Randy Ectholdt poaed the Diabkw to a I.alt minute win onr SID Clemetrte. Ectholdt emeriacl u I paufnl threat last week with tot {.anb Ind two touchdown lOHel. Hll avortte recel"Vttt include Ktvln Elton, Kevin Mt'Garry and Mark Maurer . Dave Caldwell Is the learn nultl'g lec.der with 397 yarda and ._. touchdown . A M, lu.pounder. Caldft'IJ ~ cooaidered to be antOllll the belt btcU In the league by Hlvner . The two team1 have mtt five Umts previously .. Ith Foothill w!onlni each lime. lncluded In the win1 baw bf!!n lopsided 4M and ~ tbraablnp In 1'17 and t•. . figure It out either. "They're a 1trong, physical team though and they'll be toqb ... An established league rushing leader in , the per90n of Los Alamitos' Mike 1 Schwerdtfeger and an up-aixkmner in Coota Mesa aOpltomore Wayne Vering provide an int.resting sidelight to the Dolphins, University M·ix ~later Oei 's domtnatlon ol St. Antbony wns complete as the Monarchs llM<kd !heir l.ong Ot!ach vil:iton their 11l:th CCA· ~Ute «felt thlt year. The Monarchl plektd up 111 nrat downs 10 eight ror the S.lntl and outc1ined St. Anthony ~ net )'ll'dl l.o 151. St. Anthc ny picked up S2 ol Ill y1rda on a tow:bdo'o\TI fJ01 11)<,Rldl Lopu, the ....Wt of ...... carelna def1111lve play by Mater Ot1. UCI Stages Sneak Preview · Of Cage Team . c.o.cb Tim 'nft toot a Pl4' lrom a llollY'"Jl)d ICrlpt '11tunllly ntlht to llafe • .... t. prewlew o1 the tm.n uc 1rv1ne bull<lbittl tum !or mentbon ot the team and ldtool -.r ... b. • ·game, · · J Dana Hills , Trojans Matc li Winless ·Records Schwerdtfeger, the key U1aJ1 to Los Alamltas' powe~I o!!enae, Is a retqrnlnj! Dana Hiiis and' Untv.ralty hlllt ocltools, all-leapr, and is just olf'a Illa-~ el· with two !Oolbtll tams that 'hove !litind fort lasfweet against Santa Ana Valley. success dlfflcolt to come by this year, "He's a ltroJMl:er runner than most 1-1..w CSemert.e bacu we've riictd, bUt. be's no1 as 1$!1Y :"t.!.i :;iT;.C:t. San Hieb •• Dan Pllitceotto ol Eltancta ... ~ The. e<pblned ...... 1oa niiOard ol the Hemaodez of Edlsoo," Sweazy aa~. two -..11 0.12, llld It'•.-certain "We klolf at the game as 1 lf"ll op.. portmtlty to wtn." uy1 Dant HUii oooch Tuay Leon. "but I'm afraid Unlvtnlty thinu the .,.. way. "l thtnt ti will be. pd football pme. 1t may ao1 be tbe 11nett Jn Orona• eou .. ty but k ctrtalaly will be an emotional game. Both tams att aware that thll may be thetr onl; opportunity to win tht. tealOl'I.'" la the lblrd quarter, Matu Del'• ball- '"'""" olfenle hoped the !oo<btll for all but 1la o1rens1ve plal'11 by St. Aolhooy. lncludJ"ll t.apn• bunt. Afte:-hlltrina on Its nnt olfenrfve x rict, Maier Dtl had Jillie trouble mov· Ina the football, e11illc to I lU ~.alftlme le1td u Stanbnl bu1lld hfJ WI)' for 2' yanls the nnt tlrlle he carried the boll. The t \0-bour ICrlmmtp In ()awf<Jld lfall WU !allowed by • IOdal hour In '*' Gold Room It Mela Qiaw1Qll. • Finl publtc "-"" ol Ille .,......., Anteatm tum that opom 11 * UntVttlHJ of M-. m Nov. IS. wtll lite place on 'l'lllldor, Nov. :It . .. Wt alltad Iba -!or -buMI· ball .. _. -ti> lel them ... .J . qualnted wlllt the t-anti playon .. . 1 ver1n1, meanwhll>, hod the top that the io-of the CQllteot wtU not win I performance by 1 Mustanp ,,_. Uil ~· I lealDD Jut ~ AgAm.t Estancia. I pme Wll te&IOft , Judge Sa ys No To Gal Runner "I tlttnk our tlds pro/>obly bave a llttl• more lnceoUve !or thla came boca- tbe7 don't 'A'tnt to Joie to a nrst·)'tlr ICboot," 11ro Untvmlty'1 Jerry Red-man. """ ....._ """""" -" ...................... t .. • • • • •• penonol _.. 1111 Aid '"""""' t .. ocmunqe. A tarp 1JWP ol r-. k eQllCttlt to 11111to Ille~--trip to Hawoll rill Playing in only his aeoood •arallY pme, Untvmlty lo I lllm, ~ la\'ortte '((.~rambled !or 100 yanls and -..! to band t1te ftnl.Ye&r Oma llllla team ill -~ ---ol lho -'": • didn't w;,,,t to brlna blm up too Boll! teoma. lleldlng -ol· earl he llbowed UI he WU rudy !or !emtve llaeupo ,(Duo Hllll bu no the vonlty, and he certalnly -be leltlon 8lld llllWontly bu .iarleli a1 SACRAKENTO:-A !edenl )"die her. can handle the oompetltlon last~" martr <lt'llllfi.-i ltove ffiartOd to Is 'rMc II ...-. t l.,_14ld l~I Sweazy says. the Piii UU t11111:n m;, ccmtry Nl'IM!f auh the all.male Los Alamitos ...... illto the --Untv.rolly'1 lllu O'Loo11blln, I dulky lilh -Ind< -- petition wtth a :1-H reoonl o9enll el.I• t• pound jonlar, ba tltrvirn Illa bell Ill U.S. ~~ a.at ....._ Pltlll• C. --~ '----~·-U-el~Cr.t"a.nrdLBe -~· ·-T :z.t lequc -·-111 ---_ .. Is -10 W•mfm!tr't llll Ao-. YIWllalllfl.Jto.-.aot -to "fn. come ~,J'Nllain VtlleJ ~~ 1• t ID <Ir-. ~ -....... llljod tMo -la*'! Iba OIFIJ n ... t ol Vallq, llld Illa G-,_,_ ->• llil · del liar to t 7-7 Ila. 11'1 ·: 'I 1 1 t.,.,. 'Dolt _. a llflli .,__" n.::t J~'~·~whT. -·•< I ;.,;1.: .. ,..) 6.t~Z';': •• ': ui.~ ~ Pl"" --1111 _ .. .,1 .,, ..... ., l~~, , ,~I· ·=:.'!9' !'· ..... --bt;.~~~u;, .. : ~ ...... -.... ... .. _., ......... lb«rlal .. , ·,a.w ::; i1r :.Z:. ~-ldioal·•--. ., A!!:' j .. =1~.i:~ :::= ~-::·:~·:::,:".:"': Ur=... __ . _ _ .......... :. . .....,. ___ _:_ __ bl...,. .. .,---. .. .L . --· ------ "Doao HUit has a IChppy bunch ol kids. Tbey'rt well -and Sprtna-man lit I pod 1thlete. Tbey have a lenadous ddenee and kidl who cto11·1 qui! ... ... _ " -Lf (- LI> -' -.. -IT-.. "'" , .. ..._ ,. _ ---- ... -In,,,......._. .. .. ._ .... _ 1• 14' ~ ,. ,,,. ._. ,,. .,. v ....... , ......... ...... _ "'* um NM ...... ...... _ " " ... 11 .. I.I LI .. .. DI .. ,................ . , ..... ~..... . v.,.. ,,,.,..,. .,. T........... '9 T....... '9 ........... ......, IO "'-·--,.i,t-c:• I ~ .. _.....,..,..... ....... ,... lfl ,...._........... ""' tJt _ ... M ---· ......... -----,_ -. -~.,.. ..... -.. -• • • • •1.1~11111• _ .. ... M .. • ' • ' ' • • M.-• 'I .. -_ ... _ " " .. ~ ' • • • • •K • .. I •• • • • , • • • • " • • • • ,, • • •• "" " .. -.. ,, u " •• ... ... ... ., .... .. •• .. ...... " .... . . .. -··--" •• 0 .. := ::a It t~ ar.I~ Dakola ...... ' IVhh II plaJm -·kio\r ... tllt -.... 1111 -plwed wliil lllL--. o1 the llQUOd -~lour al rltt ....,... ___ ..,~ ·. ii ~?~-=· a n:; ~,~ P ....... I oquod .. T .... a,.., .... k "" wttlJ • .,..,. • : J«ry-...-. &Ottl ... _ -· Illa I ... I , -"' .. -lltd In I = Dot ~J:. ~....., tmPI wltli I • .,_pd fir ... Ml 'O:..ti -Mu--· IWr .., Clllt,. ... -Iii . ---· ,,_ ...... tot1t -111 -'as • • .._"" ·e;~-· , •.• I ... ' r ,\ " ·~Y PILOT Checking Wast Area Gal GoHers I ... Edith Carpenter defeated Jackie Wal!on to · wln tbe pmiideot's cup competition at El NllU'l Country C I u b recently. Mrs. Carpenter was the run- nerup a year ago . Marge Howell copped the president'a flight coosolation award. In the vice president's Oight, Helen Holabird won over Agnes Gouin for the top spot with Mary Williams copping the consolation award. It took 28 boles of match play to determine o winner In the secretary's night with Bionda YOUQt finally con- quering Elaine Tully. Dcrolhy Howard won the cooaolat.ion bracket. Carolyn Swartley defeated Lee Ginder for the treasurer's award with Dorothy Hester the consolation winner. Millie JOOnson toppled Sally Bruce for the directors flight crown with Peg Herten the consolation wiMer. -. ·-- DAILY PR.OT IWf ...... Battered Oilers '-Test ~ .. . i ' ' Huntington Beach H i g h s0pbomore 0,.. NlUkDnkl. ~ bl l'tlul1>ed a iNnJ fO ft alQtlll wllll. ""'°"' MI Sc b o o I may have Its also out for the -,-far a _., -tlilt ft dliltt'I -a Int last chance to eteape a >Olo L aat weo.l a1Unll· ...-wcarriedthoNI! ol • IJ!''tlol "'' \j-.er berth at the bottom o1. the Westminster, tbe OUjn lost mltt•W." · • &msel League football staJ>. their sllrllnf' qwterbock, °" """'!'".slpal \1111 ..-ler lill1 !eell 1111 ~umo amt " dlng.s tonight when .the Oilers sophomore Gree N!IJl<nwlll, &II yarot and a t.4 avenage. ~· .. • ....... enterlaln the Loar• Suons also out for tbl -· Ho has ~ !Ive toudldowns · ...... ..._ "I" with kl<.koH 11 a •'clack. Mike t.lcAdlmt liai ftlled In lncludi!>& ecrfmmatlO PJlops this • to -ll! - The Olien att currently well for V~O!'I and In of 'Tl aha 40 yll'ds. "We ieeoa to play a Int of wlllless In lour ootlng,s wblle the B«Ond 'half 11a·ln1t His counterpart al ·Loera, If," liO 11111, AAara bas pasted one victory Westminster last .ftek. Bill Dan Balley,. bu carried lbe 11 n 1'11' --. agalnot three deleab In league Harbin did a creditable job for ball 102 limes this campaign tJ :.'1:" • ~ play. Nitzkowski. for 38S . yards and low-LG MC..,_ ' . 'lbe Saxons are favored by "I rea)ly can't tell any dlf· toudJdowns. He has..Jllo been ~o =~ . four points w I t h the Oilers f er e n c e in the two a pall receiver for *tie Saxons. RT c.., - missing 50 percent. of ~lr quarterbacks they nin/' coach c.oach Roy Bnuxunett. at t~ ~1~" original s t a r t l n g backfield Herb HUI of I.oars says of the Huntlngtoo Beach feels b I s ~~ :=-, ____ _ "' "' "' combination. Oilers duo. "It really doesn't team will have to play up to LI •-'~ R ,,,.., .,.,... Kyle Van Amersfort was seem to make inueh difference the caliber of game It ~!. EMW ;u sidelined several weeks ago to them." cHsplayed against undefeated ,._ a.i • when be was running neck-Fiskness, the leading OUers Westminster a week ago in a =~ ~=-m and-neck with Paul Fiakness ground gainer, ls also the 21·1.Z loss. L• :::• 1u in a battle for individual team's leading punt returner "We have to oontrol the ~ ..::? 1;~ rushing honors. and a valuable man to the football and not make a lot of g: ::-... Last week against defen.sive secoodary. Last foolish mistakes. One reuon ~ McA01M1 ~= Westminster, the Oilers lost 1;;;i~~~~ii;ii;iiii;i;oii;;i;;i; ___ ;;;;;;;;;i-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;i;;;ii;;ii;iii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ their starting quarterback. aoa · HEUSSIR PRUuns Dot Egan was the tourna· ment director for the suc· cessful event and· Beverly Hendersan has been named COSTA MESA WINNERS -Frankie Durst "eft) defeated Vi Hoskins for the pro of the niontb. , \l The three--month ringer ~omens club ch~pionship .at Costa Mesa Golf Course recently. Mrs. Durst Vikes Try For Upset Of Colony SUNSET FORD~S ·FOOTBALL -FoR£CAST. competition ended ,..cently _f_ire_d_a_2_5_7_f_o_r_f_irst-'p'-la-ce...:..wi-,-.lh:__M:::rs.:..c_H:.coc:.s:.ckin=· ='=c=a::.rdin='=g~a.:.2:.c6.=2·:__ ______ _ with Esther Nugent the 'A ' Marina continues to run its gaunUet of ouf.s~g ;t-ball teams tohigbt, ho flight gro.s.s winner with a 74 and Midge Moyer the net vic- tor with 60. r · In the B fllght it was Anne Wright the gross wlnrfer v.•ith Tl and Kay Horn the net with 60. Merle Beeby won the C low gross award with 85 and Sally· Bruce was the net winner with 70. Sybil McDevitt won the D ftlght gross award with 91 and Mildred White the net with 60. Mesa Verde ~ident's cup action is under . way at Mesa Verde Country Club with conclusion of the competition set for Fri- day, Nov . 10. In a better ball of foursome competition, two teams tied frr first place at 58.. Oo ooe lqbad were Lupe Sutton, Maey Ratlkin, Sylvia Pranauski and Peg Maull. On ttie other were June McC.onnell, Arlene 1'[aricks, Barbara Pegg and 0..tcl>en Cannon. In third place was a team <0mposed of Mary Singer, Pllyllls Smllh, Marlon ScbullA! :ind Barbaro Malick. Mary Ralildn broke 100 for the first ttme in her playing career to aid her learn. M-11•.,ltrrJc Harriet Glanville, women's elub champion for the past 10 ~ at Meadowlark Golf Coune, won a club champions Went recently played at four -Long Beach-Huntington Beach • OOW11eS Including Meadowlark and Old Ranch (Seol Beach). Mrs. Glanville bod a !bur· l'OWKl total of Sl3 with Millie Stanley of El Dotado In Long Beach aeemd at 3!f· .A>latr:1 _,., 10 club champions competed in the tournament. tn a guest day, three best ba115 of fOUNOme competition at Meadowlark, a team of Bea Ander!on, Bormie Nuccio. Pat Iorio a n d Barbara Hankey were the winners at 212. Secont1 place went to Kathy Bransford, Pattl Newhouse. Kltty Mullen and Audrey Brown wllh 215. Two team s tied for third at Z22 inclllding Mickey McKib- bln, Pat Hemphill, Marion Darling and Lorraine Butcher on one squad. 'MK! other was composed of Dottie Mulllgan, Roeemary Erickson, C u b a Curl and Mabel Chlistianson. In a tin whistle tournamen t at Meadowlark Golf Course for the wmnm'1 club. Pat Eor1o was the A Oight winner with Y1 followed by Dottie Mulllpn and Flo Baker, each with !!I. ~ .... _,, M«nhen ·of the Laguno Beach women's golf club stag- ' ed two tournlmentl recently with Gracla John.son winning lolf groa honon In A lllght In a 54-hole competition. Helen Drexellus wu the low net vtctor. In B fltK)lt it WBI Doris Fau the low lll'OS8 winger with Thelma Toomey coppln1 lolf net. VM(le Oiristlonaen wmt C Olght grosa with Mary lclu Yager low net winner. Jn a better bill of twOIOflle lam'nl.rnmt, m-11 Johnson and Marie Davison capped A fll&ht wlth 511. I d a M I y Schomlker and 1' h t: I m 1 Toomoy toot IOCmd wliil 50. B flllhl "" wan by Donata Pluallo7 and Allee Brsbyn Wtt.b'""\1. Helen DruellUJ and Sblriey Heu ---' C "'"hi With 511. ,.,..... ... • , 1 Coast Area Football Teams • Plagued by Key Injuries liiji.iries to key personnel are playing large parts in Orange Coast area football team's successes this )'ear and just about every team in the area has been affected by the injury bug. Disaster has hit Laguna Beach and llun- tington Beach, but other schools have also been hit hard. - Laguna Beach lost its top running back Dave l\1arriner to a broken collar bone and he'll miss the final three games for the Art- ists. HWltington Beach lost halfback Kyle Van Arnersfort (knee) in !ts apentr with Marina ROGER CARLSON for the duration and now quarterback' Greg Nitzkowski is through for the balance of the seMOn with a fractured wrist. Estancia 's Scott Gayner Js slilt doubtful after missing three lrvine League sames with a twisted knee, He's the Eagles full. back and placekicker. Jon Hartley and Joe Dinatale have missed playing time too due to in " ' ' jury. Mbsion Viejo bas ·mt a Mst of nuggets off and on and most prominent have been l!\l.l~·'•houl-~Ooo).....i>.1-""L i11:er&OO~fkilee), Jeff -thUrchln cshohlde'r .. ais- Jocation ), Guy Reeves (ankle) and Ken Rob- ins (booe bruise). i'ountafn Valley's Ben Dodson (auto ac:cl· dent) was 1051 for two games and Les Bech- er operated on les,, than eight cylinders against Edison. Brad Varney (back) ls out for the balance of the season. Corooa del Mar got three running plays from .Brent Ogden against Newport Harbor before a knee injury knoCked him out for the season. Westminster lost tailback Tony Accomando [or two games to a knee lnjury and Marlna'1 Injury li.9t has included Nick Vorono, Chuck Sliney, Charles Tweedy, Dan Wells, Don Spreeman and Frank Kalin. New additions to Westminster's list of woe Include Gary Maddocks and Marty TrujUJo. The loss of SteYe Goodrich has hurt Uni- versity defensively. A gimpy knee has kept Costa Mesa's Paul Desmet out ~ oonsiderable action. And Mark Schrupp is out for the year, Mesa's Plll'ler, tight end and safety. * * * U FootbDI mp coach Bill Saydet' leU through this seuon wttboat a severe eue of the nerve• be sbonld be alright for somt Ume to come. Illa lnnlhalLleam wblpped Unlvmlly, %1-7, then tied Kennedy M. cretiview Le a g u e actlMI Ml Itta 11111 Knights beat SU Clemente, 1'-1!; deleol El Modena, ZZ.M; lose lo Tnstla, It~ 1- to Orange, 15-1!. * * * University High sophomore quarterback Guy Beck mu.st have set some sort of record when he pa89ed fOf' 418 yards on 25 comple- tions in 40 attempts against Sadd1ebact High.. Speaking of Uni....,lty, Ille 'll'ojans try their luck agatnst Tustin in their vanity opener for 1973. Estancia, which bas met Tustin the past six years, travels to Vista mgh In Its '13 opener. * * * Tbe CIF wrestling ftnal1 are slated for r ... 1a1n Valley High. Included among rt entries la the annual Five Countltt Invitational at Fountain Val- ley will he Ml Mlgael Hip (San lllel•) and Sllaftet mp (CIF Ceotral Seclloo). CoruGa de! MM'• CJF. dlam)!lom wlll also he at the meet, a -..Y that rttah Ille Col Poly (San Lais Obispo) InvltatkraaJ In status. * * * What a shame such rivalries as F.dlson- Fount.aln Valley, Newport Harbor-Huntlng- ton Beach, Western-Anaheim, Corona de! Mar-E8taruca, etc. are no looger the finales of regular scheduled sea90llS. Administrators do an Injustice to the play- ers by doing away with the traditional wrap- up. Can you imagine USC and UCLA play- ing In September! * * * And have you checked oat tlM! terror of the Cllnlt Belt Leape! San (lorlonlo 11 rolllq -mD<h to Ille lhock of oace ml&hty Red- lands, wblcb II M for t.he ataion. Cage Season Nears For Area Jaycees Dedication Lures Top Swim Stars All three area junior college teams: -Orange C o a s t , Oolch.i wen and Saddleback -open Ille 19Tl·73 basketball season Friday Nov. 24. ... Golden West wtU ~ a 1Irong Cerritos aulflt while Orani• COUt wtn he at the College of the Canyons 1uld Saddlehack wlll he playing Mlr• Costa lat Groasmont College. Wtd.. OM:. W.I., CH<. t -Or-<i••! ~t l'lu ... , Dtc. l~SC FrOlll !homt) !1!:i ~" -" A.flt !homt) f\;' ' '° -I I'*"') Col-: .. Clf ·M·~~ Ill - WH., Jtft, 'J -11 Cttnll' ~ ..... ~ ' -'"""' (l'IOft'ltl' .. '"· . -'""" ... Ill. -1Y IMIYlll" . -II .. 1tn1• ·• fr· ( _ II tn 8ffNnllllO' I .• 1• an. 24 -n DitOo Clf\< ~.~,.~_,,,,_ ~··.t~·,S'_ -.,11=1de ~l ' ~. l!t, ' -'"~:'..'.. t:J:o.'.,..' -t' c ti'· ... ,_""' I ~J• ,_, 11 -s..n ._..,. ~l'(!tfl -,11 Stn Dlmt City• f.t,;' . '4 -''°""" !'*Ml· ' Ml "" COriflrtnc• lll'M. Olympic swimmlng stars and a number of nollooally- known tennla proleslllonals will he on hand at Mltalon Vie- jo Sundoy, Nov. 12, lo cledlcate a ll00,000 add!Uon lo Ille M•rsuente 11ocreat1on Center. A 50-mt:ter pool, a 5,000 aquan1 fool px>I, a cbam· ponshlp tennll court with bleacherl. and llx other tennla courta are among the new f1cuttles at the mllllon-dollar Marsuertte recrallon com- plex. once-be&:ten Anaheim a WestmlnslA!r High School al 8 o'clock in a Sunset League tilt. The Vikings have fallen to Westmillsler (SH) and 8anta Ana (3U) on consecutive weekend!, and lhlnp don't figure to get mach better. Anaheim (5-1) bas only a lf.. 7 setback to Santa Ana to mar its record. Marina is 2-S with wins over El Rancho and Huntington Beach. Santa Ana· may have the cowtty's best running back in l~pound senior Ho w a r d Carson, who's picked up 574 yards this year. And coach C I a r e Van-- Haacebeke hBs hyped• up Anaheim's running game.even more by adding ooe-Ume sophomore sensation K i r· k Belhk.e to the offensive backfield. Bothered by injur.ies all of last year and part of lhlJ seaBOn, -has been playln.< defense only, but last week Vanlloorebeke Installed him in the offensive backfield and he and Carson allernated between tailback and Oanker. Marina's big offensive threat may be junior quarterback Greg Foster, in his second year as a starter. The big (Ill!; pounds) quar- terback tias more ability than his statistics (28 of 8'l for 389 yards) would indicate. Foster draws consl!tent raves from apposing coac~s. "Anaheim ls heller In dif- ferent positions this year," s1ys Marina coacll Leon Wheeler, "11ley may not be as large, but they're quieter." Wheeler has added speedster Rick Merigold to the starting lineup In Ille place of Chuck Sliney at halfback in ari attempt to put some juice in Marina's running game. He also gel3 215-pound fUllback Dan Wells back from an in- jury. VanHoorebeke is concerned that ·Marina will get Its of· fense untracked against the Colonists a~r a pair of non· productive games. "'Mley were inside Santa Ana's 11) three or four limes and didn't score," he says. "This time they may do that to us and go ahead and ' score." Mlr1M OfftMt Lf TWMOY 200 LT Ktlln 7CQ LG Link 19(1 C K<ctl!( 170 RG Wt!IOft ll'O RT $.llltr 1111 ltl!' A. LCl!lfJ ~ QI "'9ttw ~19S ... w.11.1 21$ H8 Mlll'loolof 1•5 we str.w. no M--LE IC~ lto LT Llflk 190 MG ~lilPPI 16$ RT htrlt no ltf!: MeMurtry 115 La w.._ 111 I.Ill TweoKv 200 08 lttnlnlw UID 08 Wlldtt••11n 140 08 H1wn UO 08 Strtubt Ito Area Prep Grid Results Already in use are f&elllUe1 which lnclude a large free-- form pool, four tennis courts, nu... championship ' Indoor handball , co u r t 1, uerclse rooms foir men and women. .and volleyl>all caurta and cblldren't pla= ~·... ochedul-ed to. allml Include l!hlrley ·F==--===-= Babaabolt ol l'ouotaln Volley, LOCAL • Sanday Nelllon, Flip Dirr, Dena"&choenleld1nc1probab1y EOITORIA' Q Stev• Gtnter and D a n a J,,.;, :.r=;i.~::"~~ The DAILY ~LOT Ray Woods. Quite O~en · Ed Newland, swimming 1nd Fi9hh City Hell See MV Dedlcatlae Piie n wtt11 t--M 4 .t ........ t...w. ..,.._ 10 1111110 Cl k<1ft11 ......... .. ........ ....., .......... Dliljllhitlt -tor ... _footW _,._.._. ... ...... ........ w. ................. 94 ... .... fe• Sohlrdcrys, !Kt.di .. Otl9 " 11M9ik19NI .. ..... nk wwll Nelwcllke ..-ts Cojoroclo oed lo-Stote llosh Oltklh-a. rw1 llt lkjllt Madll ..... 2..cl.rmlled N._.a Is 111bse11• 11 tti. "' •... c ....... #17, ... "-....... by Mfaonl -41 OllW..-S..,._ '1119 pewer- h l Conill....,._ w1te ..._ • .,.... relled ., Jl1 pol111 ttils -·· .. 1J.,ob11 f•cullft o• Ille hffolM1. Howe'IW tltlt cffld M OH"'4r 1Hchr, wltll C11iorado tlYI .. Neb r.Ua a c-of t .. "wllClt weittt .,...._ .. ' ' 1 ..................... .., ... --.... .. .., ................ c- c' 1l1••IJ. n., .... U.C.LA ,. #I.~ ......................... Cef W ""' ... ,...._ ... UCLA'• wlll M wry --,. ,... ...... lat .... ,.... .•• Shlltford k fM ii••r:4ot • • ....... s.... "Ht ~ • -, .. Do .... ' UCLA ••• 111k .... UIC .... .... __ ....... _ ...... for use. ,.. c....,. wll ,.., Md. "*" use • ,... ,.. w,..... ....,. w..u ... ~ ,._.,. ......... ..,,., .... wfll c ....... lh ....... _,...,.,,..,..,... Lod ...... J!to7. TW'• It for ttils .... ~I t.., Mtp tfloN cardl & '"'-' c .. I .. ; ., ....,... f9t, •top .. ot S.-t Pord. W• .tweys llne ,.._ , .. t•lll ..... fMtball ..... . ' • , Saturday, Nov. 4-Major Colle&•• " Other G1me1-Mldwe1t All fore. ' ll I Army ' :!r:rn-W•U--, .. , lndl•rie SUIU u Atlbam• JO Mlululppl Stitt 7 • ..-Mount U"lon ' Arl;wl\8 Stnt 45 El P&IO 1 I ll Sfatt 11 ww:· IUlnoll 1 Art1n511 m• Texu ,., • M lS ~~t,~•, "'• .. tllodld 20 Col ctf l!nlPGrla 1 Mlnrto" Abl,.,,. Ctul1U.!\ ~ 21 ._., r11 lpi, • 1111 = u lowrllln11 ..... II -1o u lJ Centr11I Okl81'1aml 24 If 6'ti. JO -· 20 COior.do eon• a tc.-~~-~r~7~:uvou111 ~ =11'uat 13 De"9uw i1 inct1.,.. c.n;;r H &\"'",.1~ n,. !'!<,""',,.'"" '°,, g:= ' • i: ~~.... ,•,-... E. Centni1 Oklalloml 21 • -npton ~,:.1~ :? ~~mbl• ~~ ' Ettt•rn Ml~Pft 31 \ ~i. ~rt 'g omon 11 ""'1'' u . Jrr:fi:v'!"' 111 1 . " u · 0.llWlrll 27 Vlllll,_-. 1 f 1J E91t C.rolllll 20 Ctiattlnoop 14 rll"kt n JS • 7 flof'ldl 23 Aubum 20 g:«1•11d 14 Mluourl Valltr ,. .. fl'91no Statl 2 21 5 Loro& BNdl 11 H ~W• 21 SL TI'lomn Funn•" V.MJ. 22 Him 111 2' Maai.ttr 1 Geor1l1 Ttch 20 DuM 10 lllO'lll'· 14 Al!iMr11ct11 U H1rv1rd 2J ~)llvtrN"I 14 Heldelbert 2.f Wllt9rlllllrt 1J Houston 211 flotl41 !taibl 23 Hlllsdtl• 20 NOrtMrn Mlctll-" 111 llUnol1 26 Northwut.m Zit HOPI ..L... 13 Mnl,," Kent SU.hi 21 M•rsti.tl 6 Kllll'IYUVG 20 Albion u Ymir 21 N-Mexleo ltatl 6 -~= 2024 £-~rt! Ml-.iti 10 LS.U. 24 MIUIUll)IM 10 Mttn• -·~ U LCK!llYllll 35 TUl51 7 n. 42 Notttl 0 Mtmphl• Stltl 26 Wlchltl u MIJ .... uk• 21 Wl)'ne, M di. lt M!lml, Ft1. ., N ..... d. Ila• V1111J 0 MllSOUri SOUtfttm 42 Ml~rt w.nr.m • Mlemi (Ohio! 22 W••blrn Mlchlpn 16 Mrnktn~ · 2l Ohlb · we.1ey1" ti Mlchlpn 31 1nc111nm 7 ~ra,•,.._ Wi1i.,1n a2 ~n ,."! Ml11ourl 17 KlnlMll Stat9 7 .,.kotll U 21 Mlnbto Ntbl'ISkli 31 ColofJldo 12 NE Ml1soun n SW MlllOU!i North Cltolln1 21 Clemson 21 Northt1nd 11 BltMI Minn. No. C1rolln1 Stahl 21 V!r1inl1 7 NorthWOOd 17 81utrto'n I Notre O.mt 21 NIV)' 10 Ohio Nortttem 21 Dlflllnoe l? Ohio Stltl 21 Mlnnnotl 7 Perv 19 CulftNitDdctlln u Olo;lihomi 35 I Slit t2 S!. Missouri 2J p(W M'-Mlrt U Okllhomll Stltl 20 ~..... • I SW Okl1hom1 10 NW Oklthornl ' Ore"-'n 2s C.tlfor!\ll 20 sovtttwutem, ken. ts &etftlny Kmn. u PIC'flc 42 Loa Anni• O WUhl>um 22 PJttlburi: 20 "-nn &1Jll• J4 Mil)'l•nd u Wlthlnaton, Mo. 21 Roll• 6 PtlFIC*IOlt 21 arown u Wllll1m .llWlll sa Blkllf o . Purdut 17 Mlchlp" StMll 1' Woostt1 H C.pitll 'I RiltPrl 2J ConMCtlevt s VouniPtOwn 15 C.ntrlll Stat. hi\ Ol110 ltlt9 26 Wffl Tuati 17 sin Jose stat. 22 New M111k:o 20 Other G1mel-f'ar Wtlt SOuth Clrotll\8 31 W1kt FOftll 12 southern Cll 41 W1.t11n11on Slaw 13 C.ntr:mt W1ahlnlton 21 SyllCUM 15 lostol\ Col'"9 1A Colondo WllStlm 2t Ttmp.11 45 Floridl A & ~ 6 DllYlt 17 Teftnff.Mt 24 O.Or111 14 E&stlm Wuhlnlton 21 Tlllll 2t S.M.U. 14 Fullerton 14 T.C.U. 22 81ylor 21 H1wal! 24 Te•11 Tech ll Rle-10 H1YW11'd 21 Toledo 2l North.em ltllnol1 21 Louisl1ne T..:h l5 Tljj•l'lf 16 t<1ntucb 14 N .... ld. (R•no) 2J u.~.LA. J; su.ntonf 11 NorttMim CoJorHo 20 "u\!hh ,........ """ AtlZOM ll Drll9!'fl Colll.. 14 .. ..,.., ... ld•ho o P1c1rre Luthtr11n n V.P.L • SOUlt!lm Mltellllppl 9 Pultl .Sound JIZO W11hlnlton n ONIOll State 7 R.cll1nd1 Wiii Vlr'I!""' 20 Pllt1bul'lft 7 Sin F•m11'1do 21 WUU1m M1rJ 3' Dtvldton 7 SW loui1l1111 2• Wl1CC1n1ln 2S lowt 21 U.S.LU. 22 Whlttltr H SUN DAY, NOYIMlll 5 ..... lciy •••••••• 16 s.. ,... .......... 10 11 mt Pkt! I..,.. Hl;ll, """',. rt111n1111t 1wt111ty t•ll """'r --.cl...,.r c.edl, Dllt Dtvlllli. Ctnlrtl DM'lllOtl !Int 'ftllf, lfMY'il bounct tttiri lty 1lx, ~ •••••• •. JO Chic,_.,. • , •• , , , • 17 LMCI Ill ..... , c"''"' DlvltlM .,. "" Un•. tt ......... '"""'" .IM!MI "-t ........ ,. "' ..... , •Ytltm1, tl'll• IM!lllll MW!i. cltM, tr J Jllfl1ll1 flit tlfltf' w1yl • ~ • N"' Y..t • ._... •. , .••.. JOI .,.._,. • , , , ••• , JJ Gllfth' ,..._ llM!Hlfllll ~ ... lftll Jthn lllh..,... '"911 ll"flld!M. 0.ftf' n..u .......... ltl J--... Ntw YMt'I .•fl lftll ~ ... ...,. l.ltllt. , -, .... ~•• • • o • • J7 ....... • • • • • • • • 17 ' I ' 81111 '"""' 1191111 '"" ~ "f ""'""'*' ... Mftf'f illlllt tty I .... Dtlpflln. Mlllftl .....,-... M "'tMf dMI tllif; "'"'· • I:, . -' °'I"••• ........ 24 ...... Cltf ..••••.. JJ Al'C W•ttnl OIYhilll ..,... Q~ f'f911 tlllt ~r, """"' ...-ity _,-•.. ..... 11aw-111111 aw. tlW•.,S .. rllftl,. 1" .......... 1'Mlil Wliil tllt .. ll WIM! --.. It.~•,,··~··. J6 l'ltUo•slpW• .•• ,, •• , Jt . ...... , ~•tt U9111 ... CtNt' ..... ,i.-t fl 1!nlnlf It 1tty ... , ti' ltf'C Effttnl Dl'flllml ..__. """'---~·~......................... . , C......_.. .,, ••••• 1J H.-.. ••••• ,., 16 AH!fltf' ....... If ........................... WI ' 11tlllt Wll -011«1 'fR .-... ..... Mf1M ,."'"' """' ... ,. • ( ............. --... It ••• : tt" ... ; ......... ,,,,,,,~ I NewY.t ..... ,,,,,,,, 1J 11 ..... IM etolfl""' fll tMlr w1y ft fMI ..... , .. , Hl'C lftllrll Ph'ltltrl ttk Tilt (f.INll ... wM .... •fl llltiil N•Mtllll ... J.n. '. ·.' .; I · . Ma. ••••.••• l•~·'t ............... 6 ~'~::. ;;;:.= .. ~~..r--11111 tlwr'• "'" ...... ,.,. .. ,,. ~ .... ~ ••.••••• 17,' ................. 11 •• ,,.. , • ., .... , ~ tllMllC!llflS llwr .... Ill ....... "'""' ........................... .. IHIJtrfM. ""' ...... .... ....... . ,1 t; .......... ·••••··•JI HewOr"'-...... ,.14 II VOl!lllll "'' 111,...,1 ft iMll• ..... 1,n ,,,...,. .... -... t i" -I it ~It f ..... '*flM ........... 1111 pme, Vlk• ...... Cl .. 1 .... 111-1 ti' 71 ....-. , ' . ................ n ·c......,.. ..... 1 •• M ACIYO(t It LllMI -.Ka fW ........... fMt flillCI INll • , .... t Ma,.,...,.. .._ ............. •t•,,,......,.,. ............... Si....... • .. j MONIAY, NOftMIU M. .... ............... 14 New ................ 11 ~t'"9h" Mtl ................ h c.ltl ............... I ....... -tM1t1 ..... ._, Ml .......... """' ....... ' , . ., . . ' Viii TR ·on tn. . r111117 ' / ' • I Frid.17, NowmGlr 3, 1972 DAILY PILOT l Area ' rep · F oothall Log Volleyball T S ~ I....,, 'I Wtler POio !dl911ft II Unlv-llY Ourney et fwtlNll -~ ik.tCll vt Sonort f!G t m . UC Irvine Vl UK II 11 U Mdl'I, Ill'~ 11 .. II Ht-I ~rlOr Ill t ."'°I' Area Sports Calendar • I -..,,I V\lln',..,. lppe&n w tf wr:IJ' c;t;;,. 11 WllMft U), l'ovnl1h1 V11Ny at C.• At19e1 ... 1.e.,11e II'*"' AMAT , .. , ... -11·1.efape ...., J'·""•ll •• ~t::· .. ~.,tr,[!! •.• , ..:.~ .. " -.. "' i be lbe futest growin1-tport ln -C-1 Coll-. •ti I I f:"~ ~u C6l I.al AJAml• vt ..._ If ••· CIF •· .. them Section with •• ~'E Ii~~" • torN• ft11nc11 tJ:UI, l111nc:i. 1t SA ve11n 1 Wiii ~ (f111t ~ry -U( lrv!M ., ~ U-141, El Cami,.,.. 11 Ort• ~ " 1) " e-=c11. • • -· 'I ' ' ,. IE ....... " -........ • • ~ ii ' " tbt acbec:uJ!no of a cham-1rw1111i.n.1 111 •·""·'· Huntt1111on COi'--t>J. Gaklfn w.t ., L.A ...,... >.t o IMdl, 1:1..a.i, Mttlftll .,_ MllMilt UI. ... ........... 1 • 0 . : ' p1oDJbip tournament in May . ~!:!~. '' w.1m1netw' llWh•flDMI •• ~~~~' "'&.:l:..-'-:~ ~t Included ~ the setup is thelpi;;;i;;,.;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;~::;,;i;iiii;;iii~iiiii;;;;;;;; l ,'/ .. ''· """'°"" 1• Mfllet °" MATt• Dat ts hnN AN " """" l'tt Lllktwold ft t.o!ll 8etcl'I WlllOn '•4 SI ....... ···-"11\11' 1 ,, " " 1 • P'IUI X P'IDMef i*eJ .. , ... , .. It. Jlllln lolco ...... IMch Jordtl'I ....... ''· l'Altll llltVtTI ' ' 1' 17 " " . i " " ' ' • 1 " " ,: . " . IS ~ " " . • II • • 1 lriltM! l.e•9ue COllCNIA ML MAR ·---........ """"" U. AMltlllOI ltlel SMlt M.I Ve!My . ... • 1 . ' . " • COSTA MIU • w-. I . -- " SMMet UG!JUI!! u 0raoae County League, which GOING IALD 15 NO JOKE! ,/ will biclude Orange Coast area SAVE YOUR HAIR! 1 1 0 .,...,.,., """ ,. sdJools Corona del Mar, 111 IJ M•I.,. Dll 21 ~°"· !NI MM ' Laguna Beach, N e w p o r t ll ' w::::r'n1i... il• Harbor, EAU.son, F o u n t a i n U A,..lwlm o :k M•tl<1& Valley, Huntington Be a ch , J 2, La M1im.'!:"• 11ud1 ,. ,, tot•• ,J::"•1t" , Westminster and Mar ina along ~ i ~7~~ v.u... f' 21 k!f:~ ii with Pacifica aod Orange. 11 1 ~~ HM"bOr ~ ,n,· ~~:' i ' Other Clrcuils upeci:ed IO be 1 12 w..1m1"'i... 2, ,._,..,, Htl'llOt 11 • ~petlng art from the South &.0a1ta wnTM11ts•, 11 Bay area (two leagues), San A. 09'f ,._ Clll lulka ..... '-... JMF IC.., Met .............. ~ ...... . L .... 1 ........ 11 111l11w ... ffr t r11 ... .......... ,.. -.., .... ...,. '• •• I •"· IN ... ...----· c. w ..... ,,_ ....... ., ... •t ... ,., .... ..,. ,.. -'" .. pr.-It"' ,....., .. 1 .. " .. 1 •· I a . " " " ' LA MAllA ......... ..... "" ---..... ... _ ' • 2:1 IMlt Ml Vtlif'f' 1 0 11 IE._ t ;.2 I~ 1 ...... I SI fuNwtllt , :i ~E'"~ J! lj ~ I Fern>ndoVa!ley·Nortbern SIR WALTER'S 'l = """' • ~ IE-fir '1 •ru , San Gabriel Vallau~•Y;·~a:ndliiiii205~~2~N~.fti:""'i"~B:lwd=.,~c~ .. it~•=Mot~i,.~iiii~ !li~·~·i"'~-~·~ .. ~Mi.iiiiiiiiii~1'~n~i'~hll~"1~11·i'iMiiMiKi'i.iiiii.i'i' i·~W~-~-iAngeles City. i ,_, """" Mllllltift Vlt!CI TUSTIN ' & Elltnel• IEI Dor.SO & MIMlon VltlO f Sin Cltmtnft! " Ll"wthlll I Vfft1 Pfric VILLA l"AIK . !? .Lt Quint• ... S.•tnn. M El~ . .._. ' LOWIU " " " • 0 1 0 • .. • " " • • • . •' " " " " 1 " IOI.SA CNlAMDI 1 ... ._.. 14 ... ~ I 21 LI Qutn'9 21 13 ~ Gt'ow ' '' !blltt. ....,,n1o1c1 0 ,, .... flu • eA•D•• oaov• lS 0 El Modlcl4I 11 Sloddt••dl; • o c~ 1 12 lcllN Gnllde 0 20 l"ldfb • 22 Loi. All1lllOI U LA QUUfTA 12 IJ V19la 1'1l'k " -7 21 .... Grinde 1 0 Padflu 14 10 Loi. ... ,,. ... 1 tt llMldlo A~ I I.OS M'IMI t1 : ~~'; Vlllty 2f 4 ••rK:tio Alarnltro. 10 7 kntl-vo ' 1 u Quinta 23 31 G11'1Mft Gl'Oll't 'XI l"ACIPltA 19 .sJ G'-lele 'D Mlulbn Vlelo 1l 14 5&1111119(1 • 4 l! LI Qulnt1 21 44 Gerdln GP't!Y9 • a 7 Bdw Greftd9 • MV D~DICATION . • • 1 0....1"") t 1' l"twlt.it1 VIM..., I• D C.lt ,_.. 7 1 llllMClt 1 1 C.,_ dll MM 14 QTA*IA • !t T.tln .. -· 13 14 c.r..... ... Mar 41 2S ..._, .... v.-., . ....... . 1 JI CM!• MIM it HUlfTAHI VALLI'( a Jt Rrille Alamitos JI HUll"notcln IHdl IJ 1 l:dl-1 » EttMd1 ,, • lot Al~lkll ~ M ~ ALAMITOS • 11 Kl!MIS. "' .,_ ' fl ~rioU. . Q 1 · ~ dill Mtr IN•I a ti "-t1lll Vellty I 21 '-"• An1 VI""' 14 . MAelltOLIA ,, . --lJ T""' I la NMllM l'I s.nt1 ~ VelMy . """ -15 ,Wfttlllft v ..... una AllA VALLEY ..... _ "·-11 ,, c:.t1 ~ '' 12 MelMtle 20 1) eor-~ Mer 11 27 lot Aien\I* " 1 H " " " .. .... .., 14 ~· :M UnlwnttY " 21 ~ iMCh a 11 0-.. 11 a 0-Hll" 'D DAU HILLS 21 12 """"'"'"" u ' •Wn °' .,. w..rtd 1 7 V11tr1ci. 14 4 El 00..edD 1 -· .. I 4 8r11 II ll U IO " n n ii . " 1 10 10 0 ll • " '! .. " •L DORADO Silrmy H11l1 Tu1!111 ....... ._. g:;: Hllll 5adcll•back LAGUNA •IA.CH G1.i11oM Army·MIY'f' ' ~~ V11tnc!1 ...... ~•&CIC .!M, E.~ ~Buch I <I ,,,._ , I eaat111...i r-P1re u ·Water p<M:o coach at tfCI, will llrtng m-ra it the 1971 l>an Alnet1<an and Ille UC! 'Pier polo laam !or an ex- •bltloa. G le D McCormick, \'oach of the Pbllll111 ·M Loog Beac~ .diving . t+aa!,. wlil brh1il team . memben, Debbie u~ man, Jane Ward, Julian Krug SOHO•A :,:,:,..Salness for a divine J =- ' v .... ,. nae new lddftlons to the • °""' Hiii• fl Uttl¥wtlty ~ie Becreatlon center 1 ~111~V11sm will push Mjollon Viejo Com, I .., .,._ pany's invlltment in ~ 1 ..... facllltie0. wen· pu1 the 1:1.1 mllli<lll mart. Prep Polo V1"lty Hunflnoton INdl 1 Edi- 17 • 1 1 -· 1 • • There ..,, three other <ml- pleted recreation cmtora at Mission Viejo: Moolanooo, which empbubies Indoor plan- ned adtvitles; Siem, which baa beell the site o! swim • evf!Rb and , beadquarten for the Nadadarell -Team ; and the Aliso VlJla cetler. HWlttnofM INCh tcorlno: Holm1n 0 1. J, Wtlr It), D1l1 (1). lidl10!1 scor- lno~ ~ .. 1101, MeCown 111, Html'MI_,.... CJ), l~rll (11. ' Under -and scheduled for complettoo early ln ms ts a new center at Casa .J!el Sol, the ad ult nelghliOillood. • IF n's SKIING ••• WE DO n lmER THAN ANYONE SINCE 1924 ·sPORllNG GOODS • ,, .• SKI GOODIES 11. IOW ' • Wt n experts on fitting boots, fOllllitlg boob, helping you choose sltis - hllldhlp, poles 11111 sltl togs . ., ....... llD ·IQIOOL ' ~ ;u bola,. Y"" -··~"' .... ~'" " 1• INSTANT CRIDIT t AVAILAllU ON ~MAIOI SAW •LAYAWAYS INVITED ·-Huntlngtan '-1\ I I J 0-6 &:di-JJOt-• HunHl'l9ftln ~ lt«l111111: Clllhm1n (4), MooMY (1), ~ OJ. Edison ..:orlno: Oer1eg (IJ, lt lley (1), W1tltNI Ill. SKI PACKAGES TENNIS IUfFS •t I ............. ................. ~··· •155" • s-the fabulous - • Heod Xll Tennis llod<ll • • • • ""'..:, ,';:.::" 'ISll S,idll lllll 1 IJll1t t Mee • I :-t "°' _ ::···. ,,.... :r.i:z:-i . ' ' SJ6• ; I I . ! . ......... ,a ....•.•. ,.· ... -, . ..... I r 11lmoU$' lity General lire ~LS ·90 ,-$ i ONLY for GENERAL-JET " • 4-Ply Construction • Popular Dual Tread Design • Famous General Tire Quality INTERMEDIATE CARS STANDARD CARS 2 *44"' ....... °" ....... P'lu1 n.a., U.3<1 PM. .. r •• -..... ~,. ' for ... .U:1. • BIG CARS Charge ltlliiJ•lmat General Tl ----""'"' ctilCK: Sheuld °"'' M1P01J Of IOllll 1111• or 11,.., r\111 .rtort llull"IJ thlt •-•,-•Ml _,,....,Ofderw plwd -lor""""" ...._, ..................... COMPLETE BRAKE RELINE 95 NOT JUST A BRAKE RELINE But w• do an ttils . I. 1.-NEW lterty..., ..... oo a114wloNlll FRONT END .ALIGNMENT ~ ONLY $850 Compjict A-lc•n (•r, (C•r• wUl'I Air Cond. tntJ/or tor1lon ti.rt Cll'lf .. , .... Croo~ed wt.eels rob your car of meximum p1rform1nc• ride, st11rin9 ind tire w••r. We correct c11t1r, c1mb•r, toe-i n, toe-out to your c•r m1nuf1ctur1r'1 1p•cific1tion1, ind 11f•ty check ind 1djust your 1te1rin9. BLACKWALL SPECIALS JUST II•~ IJ.-J 7Jall--Oh•ll T ...... aL FIT ll.7M! M DllCONTINUID DUIONS WHILI THtY U.ST I ·---· 2, lobulldlhcytlodortoooll .. Hhl '~ 3. --.. __ ....,dilly Mo.! U.S. COlft(loKf C.l'f Bl:AB --AUNIMINT TIRE SPEC~AL •• ~ •. DIK Br•kn SllQl'ltty H'9J!tt'. lwake flllcl. (~4. lnspoc:t b<oke , ... .;;.,,.i.,.. &u.LA-513~~ ... \. "-~s. Tum and true an 4 b!'ok• drwM. ~ 6. Repock front whffl ba.,i.p. •••••c• ~ < 7. Adfvst b<akH aad cile<k .,..,._., tl•kat•· 8. koacl test '/OfM automobile. VWSPECIAL General DURA-JET• $ WHITEWALL 95 4-f'L Y N'IUlN COAD BODY ONLY ... LOW PRICES ON SIZES TO AT 9 OUT OF 'IO ·IMPORT CARS CAMPERS-TRUCK5-PASSEN&EI CARS TIRE CHAINS PASSENGEI CAlS srmi 12tx11,. ,...,, -171111 CAMPERS & TRUCKS 71h11 1711l6ol ,, .. ,, '"'"' ..... , , ... ,, _, ... ,.., ... , .. ,, 1S.16ol LJ USED TIRE VALUES ' Loh Of NonoSkld T,.ocl • 2 ,..,_ COid R9dWll loo, ~ • ....,, ~Coo• hit ......... lvt ...... ,,.... o..r 2rors4~e lllft TO"' I OU1' Of M .a.T CMI _ AS ..• LOW •• s5•s Don Swedlund lll•l~S.1~775111 IUCIWALLS - TUllLIQ TllU WHIU 9UAflf1'"111 U.STI ,0110 • CH!VllOLET PLYMOUTH · DATSUN TOYOTA U,5. INDY MAG WHEELS SET OF 4 ~-·-I halo "'"9• ov•llNl<i ftw Y.i a ~ ""' C•mpor1 •nd Pldr"'f'I, ollfhtly hit!-, BATTERY SALE! s ••• 20 'l •" "'• -""'·· , •• ,.i&• •' '"' 0.1&• .. "~ 111 ...... l1t:ll•11t• """"-'· ... IMSTA&.LAnON Hll &AnflY TEST .... ... ...... '"" "''".,., .... ~HIM1 W•'ll t'9tt It h .. I LET US SAFETY CBJOOKt' COAST · GENERAL TIRE . ~ ~ 64 .. 1033 .14.0-1710 • • \ ..... , .. .. _ .. ._ YOURCAll flOll ·WIN I W .,,,.. . • • I ·\ I I ( • , I ,. 4 DAllV~llOT Frldaf, N-3, 1972 Cross C~n•!f Mesans RollOn; t Diahl9 s 1 l1pended . 1. . Costa Mesa continued it!J cross country superiority in the Irvine league, but defen- ding Crestview League cham- pion Mission Viejo was nipped "'by Foothill to highlight a full .slate or actiOn Thursda y. Mission Viejo was dropped from the Wlbeaten ranks in dual meet action 27-28 by Foothill despite e x c e I I e n t clockings for the H o w e r brothers. Mark and Ken . The brothers checked in at 9:46 and 9:47, near-record clock- ings good for secoOO and third place . in the meet. 1be meet was close all the way, with on. ly a three-second gap between the final runners deciding the outcome . Costa Me s a , meanwhile. stretched its league unbeaten dual meet string to 31 with an easy win over Los Alamitos. Mike Holliday tied a record for the Los Alamitos course with 9:47, and the Mustangs. had only a 27-second spread bel"'cen tt;ctr rirst five run· ncrs. Sunset league leader l\·larina stayed unbeaten also. and Laguna Beach dcfeat£'d l\\'O opponents to set up a sho"·do\\11 \vilh Valencia next week for Orange league pre- eminence. v .. nur E1t.,11cl" n , M~q11otl1 ll l. W11l1m!rt (E) f :SI. 1. Rotfl,.. !El l. F R1m!r0!l (Ml A Co"""' IEI. 5. °""nl\Pfl !E). 6 Murillo IMI, 7. Adarn5 (M ), I. Mlsnlma !ML 9. Kln!l (Ml. 10. Ward (El. Ju11lar v~r1i1y M.,911941., 25, Esl111cl1 ll l. Smith (Ml, 1! 01. 1 •~e•c~I! IEI l Mason {M), •· Zunl9a IEl. S. J<:lhn1on (£), 6. P11sserello (Ml. I Mdior (Ml. •. Gel1bush fM), 9. Aiiis (Ml. 10. ltllye11 ~ E). sopn.Frosh For/el! To E1tanc!e . """"" Sarita ""' V1ll9Y 16, Edison Jt'i. 1. G. Aguiler(\/). 9;ll. 2. Wll•On (E1, l . T. Aguiler !Vl. •· Vargll'!! (El. S. McConnell (El. 6. CD<:llra" IV). 7. Teevebll1,111ll (\ll. I. Hun!ln9 (El. f . Munol IV\. lO. Ille) 8uendia (\/\, Caldwtll !EL Junl0< V1r1nv Santi An• V1U1y 21, Edi.on 14 L Kerr (\/>, 10:.a. 2. A. c:;arnk11o CVl. l .llun" (Vl, LIMerolh fE ). S L11ondry !E ), 6. Smlln fVL 1. [itler !El. 8. Porter (E), t, ReubOlt !VI. 10 M••taelll CE ). JL'l'Olh·Soph Edison ''· valley lJ I AlvarlI (VJ. 10;31, 2 Blount fEf. J. LeMllCk (V}, 4 Fl llll•Q•• (E L S GrHn !El, '· Arche1ll !El. 1 H&hn !EDl. 8. 01a11 (Ill, 9. Lun;J(f1 IVJ, 10. Varga• (El. Vll'llly CMll Mtwi U, LM Al1..,IT01 •I l Hollldly ICMI, 9:27' 1. Gufln;ck ((M), J. Prle1t CC,,.), 4. Smith (CM L 5. Lucero {I.A), 6. srutsman CCMl. 1 L1sier ((Mt. I . Slerrt1l1 (CM). 9 O..!ttt CLAl. 10. Welltr (LAI. '!le1 courw rtcord J""ler vani1r COiia MtUI n , I.DI At•mil" .. I. Mllsl ((M). 10:06, 2. Ferrell (CM L J. G~ll~gl!rr !CMJ. 4, Grrlnt1r ICMI, S. G111lry (CMI, 6. l.ldkr ((Ml. 7. Stevens !LA). I. Brown !LAI, 9. Ve!rrl1 lLA). 10. Flguero. (LAI. FrMll·50pll LOI ,1,11mltot. J4, cost• Mesa ll 1. R19by !LAL 10:11. l. Lundd~ry (LA), 3. Hawkh'\IOll (CMl, 4. Elli• ICMJ. s. Heuole (CM). 6. Myl {LAI, 7. WO!lle<land (LAL I. Ay1n <LAJ, f, Wright (CM\, 10. Herrl1 (CM\. V1r1l:r CO<Olla Clel Mir 21, Fovnllln V1U1J J1 1, Knepg (() 10,14, 7. MH1fl"lltf (Cl, J. Wt1therbee (FV), '· Austin CC L s. Oen9., IC ). 6. Moore (FV I. 1. Ftnchill< IFVJ. I. Ha~n ((), 9. West IC!, ltl'o Acosta CFVI. J-lor Varsity CO<"Dlll dtl Mar Jl. FounUlll Valley J4 I. Guy CCJ. 11:11. 1. llarl-(Cl. l Fencl\1~ IFlll, '·An.on((). 5. R_d, !CJ, 6. lllKholl {f\ll. 1. Rulleds (FV ). I. J..,k!n1 IFVI. 9, Ktmtite !CJ, ID While (FV). l'r1t1h·5aph CWMI dill MM Jl, l'-lllft Vatlly 17 I. Lorr" (Cl, II <19, 7. Nolin (FVl, l . h ll !FVI. '· R1ymona !Cl. 5. Ftlock ((), 1. Ba~er (fl/). '· Si>•lew11olt (Fii!, Deep Sea Fisl1 Report • I. Doi"" lCl. t. GVCLa IF\/\, 10. C-Um- rnlni;is (fVl. Vt,,..tY FllOtlllN-27, MIUll!w Vlej11t t 1. Gurkh lFHJ, t :JI, 2. M. Hower (MVl, 3. K. Hower CMVI, 4. Todll (FH), s. 8ell (FH), •. Caf19l•no IM\11, 1. Jol\n Coolr. (MVI, I. Fristoe (l"H), I, Tl'ln.lpp (FH), 10. 11..-n !M\I) . J••Vemty l'ootl!lll 21, Mll.io.t Vleje • I. F1rrar (FHl1 JO:M, l. Hllnft (FH), 3. Bouno {MV), •. 811•• (M\I), J. llllKll. (FHJ, 6. Gtdnor1l1kl (MV), 1. (-tMV!. 1-Iii. Bau {MV), I. Ltnlltl IFH}, lD. Spl!lsbury (FHl. ·--Mluiool 'il'-IO u. l"ootMll n 1. P-(FH), 10,.0, 2. Br..ilrf !MV), 3. Foro!aNO CMVJ, •. SplllSD!iry (l'Hl, 5. Aloerman (PHl, 6. ~r1LMl (M\11, 1. WUffl (MVl ••. Van Horne (M'll. •. Llrloul (M\11, 10. MaM (MV) . . ....,., U9Wi and! It, S-. 42 I. Kilrl W-fU, ll:U-, t. 8erQ (SJ. l . Hul1t (L), 4. ,Tlflllttdt 'I.LI, 1. Navarra U.J, 6. McM•n~ !LI. 7. Berger {$), t. S-y (L), 9, M.IMlll (L), 10. 8n:ickm•11 {L). Cours.e record, .......... _ ... _,, L..,_ JHch U, ...,., l4 1. Glenn Wiison (LI, 11:49, 2. M.lrple ILL 3. Hanco (L), 4. CUdahy tS), 5. Herirv (5). 6. Hoock (!;), 1. Strr•no lLJ. I. ArderMlfl ILi, 9. JCllltlson (S), j.(\_ Lewis (S). l'l'ffhflUlll s-a tt, LafuM lloocll u 1. Cotllen1 (5), .13::W, 2. Stlne /51, :i Gro~• :L), '· McPnkt (SJ, s: Rlrhard"'" lll. 6. Aul'r'IY (S), 7, Cal~""ood (LI. I. LlllHll'Qf\'I (L), 9. P•r-ln• lSl. 10. McCurdy (L). V•rllly L19una BU<h 17, 5Mklleblck 49 1. Karl Weller, IJ:'4 IL), 2. Hul1I (LI, :l T•nsleldl Il l, 4, VIiie (Sii), J. Navarro ILB), 6. MtManul (L), 7. Sweeney (LI. 8. Masot'I !LL t. JCllltllOl'I (SB), 10. BrD<:llman CLBI. ·-L19una llllcll lt, SaddlelNiclf )1 1. Gltmn·Wll..,,, (L), 12:.fl/, 1.1M1rplr Il l. J. I-lance (LJ, •· Wet"'" SB), 5. Se<rll"" (LB ). 6. Jol\n.on (5B), 7. Me<1· cum CSB), $. Ande•500 (LJ, t. Srnltll (SBJ, 10. Johl'\Stln IL8!. ·--L•gUl'll Buch 22, SMldlabltk ll 1. Larry Gross (L8l, 1l:50. 2. H1rpy tSB), J. Richardson (L B), • Calderwood (LB), 5. 5mflh (SB), L Lli: leslrom (1.8), 1. ManlOR (SBI, 1. Mccurdy CLBJ. 9. 8els!lo (581, 10. Metlvle< (SB). va.....ity S•nl1 Ana-21, Nlwp0r1 HarlNr,. 1. Hrldtltl"k INH ), 10:21, 2. K. Scott (NH ), 3 .Maywl'IOr! (5A), •. J. Scott ISA), S. Eddey (SA), 6 . .Slmlk•s INH), 1 Romr!I lSA!. 8. Oodd ISAI. 9, Wllkts (NH ). 10. Ohara (NH). Jllfllor \l•r11ty N1w111W1 Harltor 20, s1n1·1 11111 ti 1. Benny (SA), 11 :01, 2. Minter CNH) J, Hea!hO!r lNHJ, 4. Jorda11 (NH). 5: Kellll fNHl. 6. Gllcrt1sl (NH). 7. Kl"IJ !NH). 8, Pic~rrln.g CSA), 9. Aridr1w1 INH) 10, M. Scot! (NH). Frosll·S111111 Newpart H1rbtlr 20, S1nta AM 4CI 1. Fy1<umol11 !NHI, 11:22, 2. larr !SA),"-"1\ Richard..,,, (NH). •. McCuM CNHl, }. P11ottoo (NH), 6. Bridges CSAI, 1. Ju•lne~ (NH ), 8. Shel)<)rll•on (NH), 9. Belst>y lSAI, 10. Ecclfl5 INH). \111'5Jly EL Modeftl 11, S•n Gl1mtnl1 st 1. Slr•nd IEML 10:•9, 2. KlnkeM (EM), 3. 11.tl\drd (EM), 4, Pike (EMJ• 5 Hedev (EMJ, '· Vroe<1•1 !EM) Hurlbut csci1 •-Zanotn (SC) '· Fink IEMJ, 10. Ke ti! (SCI. ' Jvnlor V•rslly El Moden1 JJ, '"" C1l1mt11t1 5t 1. sr11onj•law IEMJ 11:05, 2. Brodeur rEMJ, J. Monev IEMl 4 Jonn~ \"' i. ShrlH' I EM), 6. ¢1illn11 EM , i Mllltr fEMJ, 9. Perkin• I Ml, i Gonzale• !EM), 10. M•y !FM), . FnllilLSOC>ll ~ El Moden1 lJ, f•11 Cl-It JI 1. ~y !EM! 11 :07, 1. Prllc:llilrd (EM J, J. Goral Ii M), .. 4. M1ru CEMI, ,11.11.,.,. {EMC. :WO, ware! (EM), 7 •m-/EM/, I. Hollft (EM) f Mortimer EM . 10. Norwood IEMl. • ''""l Lo.ra 24, HvnHno °" Batcfl JJ I. Serna (L), 9:l2, 2. All<Mtl tl'fll), 3 Per11 IL). 4, McN1lr (N8), f. ~ !ll. 6. Heln1t'l'lln (LI l WJltcln. (Hiil 81 Miltse. lH8), 9, l('ah1iLJ, 10. P1lm.f (~). Junior V•nlty Lo.ra u, Hunllntlton •••ch 441 · ' > •• Brown IL), 10:73, 2. Gall111hilr (L), · eer (L , '· Davis CL), 5. Wood~ CL\, 6. Krlecier (HB), 1. b1mC1n \Ll, I. BerntlrD<:k (L), 9. Barnett IL , 10. Ward (HB\. Le1r1 lt, =~ lleacll Sll l. Jrn~!n• (L), 10:42, i, l'r•11t• (Ll. J. YIQO {LI ,'· 81nlJQn {n8l J, Hul1on !LL 6. Trainor CHB), 1 D1vf1 CHiil, I Slanclllleld IL). · · Johan.en (Ll. 9. A'lbertlOrl (H8), 10. V1nll' Wt11m111111r If, Wnteni '4 1, Cftuoc• Cernkkv (WM) 10:31, 1 '!\!el (W), ~ Pe..,_ (WM), •. SIKY 1 Chuc• wnld;v IWMJ 10:31, 2. Ko tel (W), P...., (WM), 4. Sla<:1 !WM), S. Prince :WM), 6j ()Ii.I {WM). 1, Rl1lna !WM), L Sl'llrioy WM I, 9. MYr· ray tWJ. 10. Due (W). J1111\or V•l"lftT W11ltnlMlff 15. Wiiien! SO I. Jlm Poss tWMI 11 :12. 2. MIN!or1 IWMI. 3. A. Poss IWMt 4. Gr1vell11 (WM , S. Cord<IY WM j . Bra<:•tll (WM , 1. And,rlOl'I (W ), I . Fltld1 (W), t. Howle ~~~T1pl11 !WI. W111m1111t1r IS, Wnttm so 1. Denn11 V•roa IWM l 12 :05, 1 Turner IWMl, l . Knobtl (WMll " T"'°"'11 !WM!, S. Sl,JmfT>lf'I (WM , '· Torres (WM) 7. 51mlJIOll (WI. I. B8YIH• cwMl, '· Mein (WM ), 10 H1rr (Wol,\J. V1nffy M•r1n• 11, An1i,.tm 42 1. Blume IM) t:S3. 2, AH (Ml. l. C•mobl!U {M), '· G•I~-IA~ >. Tallrn1n IM}, '· Mori '1 IM > H"M\ (A , I. Watlovdl A , f. 1Ui fM), O. Ar1ow. JV11lor v1rs11w MarfM 1 s. A.Mhelm so • l, Wh!lt (Ml 11:00, 2. Codrt CMl 3 Shollr (M). 4, Mll!ftll (M). S. Mlhti IMl. •· HUI (Ml 7, JeriM" (M). I. Mook CM) t . Wl {11rn1 (M!, 10. Allen !M). GWC Erupts Golden West College erupted in the second haU to defeat o team of junior varsity aod freshman soccer players from Southern callfornia College 6--0 ,.hur!<lay at Southern Cal College. Tbe Rustlers, who led only 1.0 at halftime scored five limes in the second hair to notch the win . The sec vars~· ly takes on Chapmcn tonight at Cha,pman.- • ' 155SR12 6.00.12 •28A5 E78·14 's32.6d ' 15.50-13 •26.45 ' UNIROYAL . ' 145SR13 F78-14 •34.00 ., LA REDO ' 155SR13 5.60-13 •30A5 ' G78 -14 s35.oo RETREADS ON SOUND TIRE IODIES 165SR13 6.00-13 '31.45 H78-14 s3aoo •, ANY SIZE LISTED 175SR13 6.50-13 •32.00 J78-14 ••o.oo EVERYDAY LOW PRICE . • l 2 f 522 """'' 165SR14 6.45.14 *32.45 G78·15 •3tt.OO t>lliW ONl s3s.oo •r •• ~" ~ • . or l~,:~c: fRll 175SR14 6.95 -14 H78.15 '38.00 $EGURltY'5 • } e50.13 '125-14 735-15 GUARAtml 155SR15 5.60-15 •34.-00 J78·15 •4·1.09 700-13 855-14 775-15 ..., tltt II'!,... ' 6.00-1 5 I '37.4$ u } II •'*' ,.__.,. l65SR15 t78·15 '44·90· 695-14 885-14 815-15 1tll\ .... ~::1. ,..., ... •) tHI •• ..""' '''"' •• ,, ......... ......,, 735.14 560-15 845-15 .. llo<l> ol to1t• I ;;.;i JI~• rw. fa. T•• 11 SJ.3)·to tl.O. ~ .. n., o. Rell~ .. 5;,, •{ i:: •......... 775-14 600-1'5 900-15 A l'•lloltl• ,..tfPf'm•r f~ ,._ ICONOMY 0mlt1dff. -~ I WISTMINSTH I GAIDIH GIGI! I HAWAlllll 111111115 t ~· :IUht ~· ANA ... 1 llOWIT • wtSTMIHST(l AT ctDAR .:'601 Wl!IMl&tll lltft,.a.N IT. t JMlt •e11ifl:7' 1 M. MAllOl 6lir 11 .--\ 12. •totd (.Of w OlM w1~n µi l40i:«S u•r ot .w;ltf ltlJWIO+ ~•'• .. MOAW4l«I M ¥iii•= tJI ~, ntA•IOI "' 111) • r"'t1 • 1 n~s21 ....... , -... ,.., ~ ,_ · n ....... aN70i -0 I ' } OflN DAllY I·' fAT. 1·1 :j •DAILY 1·1 ~ :> / ~O~ ~~~t~ ~~ne Up for Big Bank Race 1• .,.. -.,._ 1 lr~ · · . . _ ... · : . 1 lfCbty bootl -~ to Newport Harbor o n 1 r • n c e llmeo will be tlken at tlll! ihortad.I yodtt& bdoltgll>g to o r Ifie ~Id> .... -Ocean ..... up on tlio~ line betweeo the entrance booy point. ~ foe the full race ~ ....,._ by a member o( 1 flal:q (IORl. Pacific HAn- lar Newport ~ ~ JJ. ind the committee boat. ia"tDlles and lS miles for the recognlud yacht club and d!caP. Racing Fleet, Midget IOdaUOD'a a~!1.t·Mile Zillgett rtmioded skippers THECO~OOTTEEboatwlll ~oed rac'e. holding a valid meuureme6t Ocean Racing Fleet, end Diak race ~ to ltart and ere~ that ~ the event not remain on station at the lb >;ears pest. the reclng certiftc1te-in her clasa. • Ocean Racing Catamaran. at 11 am Sat .:..y ..; the leading yacht 10 any claa If.Mlle Danie after 10 JLll!· ·fleet •bas beeo hit by Yachls must be ol a cruising · · u • ..,. • bas not rounded the mark on Yachts wblch have not rouDd-everything from dead calms to type with a mt Dim um 1be starting line ...... w~U~ be the 14-Mile Bank before 5 p.m,"' ed' by lhat time will not be lot ,&o storm conditions. One watulloe length of 20 feet or The rltht price on the ritht c•r . ElEV!ER!LY ~SAUDI Fr\do)', --), 1972 DAILY PILOT, 15 GRAND PRIX 5113~! . MO. 1411....... ...... .. • .. c.... ..... U.U.-EMUCT -PM:101 AUTHOllDD DIAUI ""-·"'"' ..... 1:•. "'· .. &~ ., ....... TONY MOIOCCO 546 lt17 Listens to Landers ~ located ln an area Ddwly or if, in the o p I n lo n ot conslder.'ed in the race. year the wind was so strong oveta.11 bull length of 24 feet. between the west Newport'..... the race committee, weather The <0mmlttee boat will r&-tbat. pie. r•ct co,mmlttee boat All safety eqWpment required trance Jetly and !be. Balboa condm..,. w1m1ot , It, the main on.. station at tho could not get to the l~l\!llo I!)' tho Ocean Racing Flett of Pier. The race cornptittee commit• boat't the 14--Mlle ·Newport eqtrance finish line Bank. Southern California must be ..._ ,.,.. ?1 "'' ,,_,.. boat, flYina an RC nag, will bi Bank w~ bol&t the co~r:re-unlit 9 a.m •. Sunday in the aboard. MD ••..=.:t'::~ .. ~ "littt posltloneil near one end Or lh,i-~sho-;:r:ten:ed::·:Oa;;:g::a:od:;:~fu~ush=•=•~en:t::l:he~,cour~:se:::!s::n:•:t :::T:HE::RA::C:E::l•::•pe::n:to:;•:ll:::C:!as::se:•:ar:e:t:h•::sarn::e:a:•:fo~r~;;" ... ;;;";;"';;;"';;·0;;.A;;.c;;.~;;;"';·0;·";·L::;:;;~;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;~;;:;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;;~== Jlne, according lo Preston ~· , . gett, committee chairman·. ~ finish line wl!I be at the • • • ..YCIUilli'.~en wh9 meet the _ cal, mental and moral ~ard:t ol, .the Coast Guard be. accepted for, a two, 1 four or six-year enlist- men\ in· the, Service. During , .j .first ,year; they will a· two-_..yeek basic , . , . ·, . iqstru~lli!O course at the COast Guard ' ' e "Training Center ln •· ,..Yorktown, Va. -. ~id.ites will enter Coast • Reserve Units near ,:.home areas for furthe_r ~ · in clerical or ac- . ting position& du r~ n g , , y ,meetings. In addition, Will also spend two·weeks active duty each year. ·t~AR" enlistees receive -· same pay as men in com- . ble petty officer ratings, e 1n unUorms and are ad- anced·ln ratings through cor- respondence courses and ex- aminations. · Qualified candidates wUl b&ve the chance to become members of tbe Coast Guard . Anyone intereSted in the pro- gram should contact their local Cout Guard Recruiter r write to tilt U.S. Coast Guard Recruiting Station, 212 E .. 4lh St., Loog Beach lloal2. Last Race Announced The Balboa Power Squadron :will wind up ils sail neet rac- ing season Nov. 12-.witb the ~Loo Alamitoa to · Newport x ..aace. . . of!!t;I' 'Ibe race will be ,part the --:,-6<1uadron'•· anDual Die-Hard ·~· • and . .....-al mem· . · . meeUq ~d .at lhe , . Beach )'aflll. Club. A ~ ~-kipp«s' meetlng will be h<ld ~ y·, N'ov. 12.at LBYC. , ~ starting Ume , <>( the race j iOlrill be at 11 a,ln. at the en-~ace fo. litan)ltbs Bay and the ,will be at •the Newport z entrance. _ ~ '' -~ .. ~ ;!~~ .... -· w-tr.er ~ :;. "...,~ .;.,l'f, Uo/TI . vtrt,bl• winch ,_ i'_'~ -* ll'IOfflllill lllul'I bKomll\U 'ill! >A_.."(IY I ~ 15 k/loh In an•,,._,• a ;"'flllll!'f .. •nd S.tyrday. Hkah todt't' mid I ~~ CoMt .. llWftllw•U.. r .... from .. I hi ... lntflnd "'mptrlturtt fll!Qt tram .. to 7&. Watw ...,.._.111,. •i. Sun, Moon, Tides PRIDAY S..Cond h!11h .. . . 1:~ p.m. 4.1 SICOlld low . l :J2 P-"'· O.J SATURDAY First N,it ............. 7::n a.II'!. J.f Flrtt low ....... . .. 1:1t a.m. l.J $«ond l'llllh l ::W p.m. J.I ~ low . • 2::13 p.m. -0.1 SUNDAY Finl llloh . . .. 1:ll 1.m. 6.0 Flnf low . 1:.0 ...... I.I S«llfld hleh , .. .. t :l• p.m. J.t UCON! ... . ... .. 2;Jt P·'"· -0.J wn •1-•:II 1.111, Set• •:5' p.m. MPlll'I .... •:Of ··"'· .... ~:ll p.m.. SALE! 1JONTGOMERY 'MARINE will hove 1 Salo Sit., Nov. 4, I a.m.·5 p.m. -· NINCT PACTOIT llCONDI "SAr'IAfS YACHT \Ems -S'I" to 12 ft. INCLUDIH A NUM•I "" MONT'10Mm 1h llllTGOJIRY MAlll PlmTS ' I' , ' I "t tltW.l!!lolt.-~~ . ' Ad good·untU ..:.. No .. mber 8. lot"- GOllOOll STOllO. (IJng o' tbll lpe1) Good protection tor marble. terrauo. ._G:nd 1late. No abrallv•• to harm surface. Eusr to dpply aerolOl can. LIBEL GUM ' . 'PCIOQ. S~OA"r'/1 'i:\JER '>I t..K I;. -nlAT \Z-i.IZ. F£U-OIV 1t1s. HE:AD Hb J\)S\ AASN ·,- 13~ "\14!0 SAME: GAS POWERED CHAIM SAW • • It uin't tor •awing chaint. Makes easy work of .awing firewood. fencing. etc. Run. OD gasoline •o lh•r•'s no t.ar of •awing thN an •xlenslon cord. ~· Put'J'OUT •.W'1 namM6:D thetr forehectda 10 you cant.Utbom .-~~~~~~~~~-. ......................... .,....~~~-.~-. ................... ~~~~--..--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--I apart. SAFETY ARM LAMP .. l~~~;liio'41 " HARDWOOD PEDESTAL TABLE 4400 Almoet three -and a bal~ ifft acro11 and ct real good looker. Mad• of atrong,hardwood. ' .SCOTCH. GIBD 149 CAN Great to 1pray on yow t\es ll J'OU , drool a lot. Good belor•lt- happ•n• insurcmc:•. Spray on. wipe all •pill• with no prob. CAKDLE WAX 137 You hobbyist• get OD down here and pick up OD this 1hlll. B}IJ 11 PQlllld bloc:k will !cut !Ollgtiao. CAULKIHG GUI &Sc Abeolute nece11lty if you'r• to do cmy caulking. flop in. a tube ol compound <md 1qu••• trigger. RELY.ON CAULKING Thl• l• lhat compound ill the tube to tit gun. 22cTUBE HARDWOOD STOOLS 3 1tool1. 2 •tflea. Th• cute little milk •tool (for tho&• afraid of hetght•), and two bar 1tools. MILK STOOL . . . . . . . . . . . . 99' 24' BAR STOOL ......... . . 1.88 3CI" BAR STOOL ..... : • . . . . 2.'/7 ~ £_ 3Cr. IASEIOJUID HEATER 1488 KMp• to:ot•le1 from lreea1Dg Ga well a.• th• re1l ot tlti• fOO•· Mouat.I down br tM ba1ba r:ad. l'URKACE FD.TERI 39~. Stcmdard 1l••· h•lp1 clean the air your h.ater tnahle• (but lt'1 not ft'e1l a heCITJ omohr). COCOA DOORMAT 'nt••• ar. reo.llr MCl1. u they get dirt on them. lt iall1 rlpht thru to the floor. 10.PC. PET CLIPPERSET 517 Pet d•pp•f'I .,.. I woa.lda't try lt OQ Ibo pm ..... °' tloe d>IM. lladea. llgbt .a. ..... c11,,.... 77c Buckle it on your arm . or leg tor ea1y r.cognltlon wh•n • rld.lng Y°"' bike. at night. Or ju1t w•ar lt to be weird. PRESTONE II ANTIFREEZE 167 Better them water in your cooling 1yttem. O.ters rust. and kffpa the temp. right all year rOWld- AUTO TUNE-UP . lll11I 9~. \ lf yow cm ...... out ot tune. UM tbeN Important lt•ma to kMp lt in. good ·11><rpo. a -IDT EdHI to A·Datl. l.llllERf = 89:R. v • I ' • • I • I ft ~LY l'ILOT Pllbll"'9<1 0.•11(19 CkJC:Mr 13, M, 11 •m Ge~, l'rlh , C1!9' I PMI Mlltt .t.t!OrP•V' .. , L•w lllWf Cr..,,tPww •011!1w1•d T1rr1nct. C1lltornl1 90»1 Toi: OIJI ll).4l2J 711-0C Putinintd Or•noe Co.11t 0111v PilQt, Octooer 71 11\d Nov1mber l. ln. 11. 1912 lB'I0·12 PUBLIC NOTICE 1/lnt .... ::ll •••• ." .,,,,. ...... .... ... J.n '" .... .... 5.0!! tn S.tl .... '·" .S.2J .... ... •.n ... '"'" $11.4' 10.0 .... lfl/,. $7.GJ .u .!if ...... Jo\lrM,fl'l.,I ·" ·" '"' ... tt/lnt ..... u11n .•. •• ~ •bov• lllf JoumrrrNon'• ''" ... ... ... .... '""' s .Jt •"""-Jaurn1yim11 rt,. • TS ttiov. JOUtftf't1'Mn ni. .... .... .... '·" '·" •·'' ... ... ·" .o .. 11in. ~ ,,_ Hwil .. flT»/I '111'9 • I011. tlloott I"* JMMYtnetl r111 ..... ..• ~ to'll. " ,,... ,..,...." ~" ,,.... ,e)ftn I~ " .,_. 1119'fr91/ ··~ • • • / .· Men in S.,-vice Captain Gil')' It. Dlum, !On of Mr. aod Mn. Kenneth H. [).inn of . 19'l51 BrookhurSt, HuntlngtOn Beach, bu """Iv· ed the U.S. Air F°""' <;om- mendaUon Me11al at ~ch A!, Germany. Cait,aln Dunn, a com- m u n lcatlornM.!lectronios of~ ficer, was c It e d for meritorious service w h i I e aMlgned at Galena Airport, Aliska. 1119 excepUonal ability end leadonhlp contributed lo the upgrading of the operation and maintenance of ~ munlcations and f 11 S~ t facilities systems. · :· 1be captain now servr,S~ .• ~t Sembach with a?untt of the~~r Force Communica~ Service whk:h provldel aJbhal communicatiom QCI' alt' traf· fie control for the US~Af.;J. , Amey Private Tl Waller, son of Mr. and . Carl A. Waller, 20l22 Dr., Huntington Be a, , recently completed en ~­ week wheel vehlcl! r,ic course at the U.S. y Training Center, Infantry;' . Ord. • During the course, II< Jea(n. ed to perforri\ organizafrf.' I maintenance and assilt °' repair of automotive vehlc s ai>d associated equipment J=le became familiarized with· the functioning o f auto!ltj e wheel vehicle com~ J operating principles of.' . temal cornbu!tiOn · ' , fundamentals of fuel and eI.4:· trical system!, and tbe ~:,Of test equipment. , " ., .. Ainnen David F. Se-. son of Mr. and Mn. Patl'iCk M, Seymour ol 2 6 H 5 Cordillera Drive., Mission· Yie-- jo, hu been assigned to-hp- parci AP'B. Tex., after ccm- pletlng Air Force b a.a.i'c training. '.' At the Air Training coot-,,;. mand's Lackland AFB, ote?.i.· he studied the Air Ftrc•'.:· mission, organization a n d.~, customs and n!ceiYed specia~~ instruction ln human relations;! The airman ba.9 been a!Slgll" eel lo file Tichnical Tralninlf;: Center it 'She1'98J'd Io~·! specialized tralnirig in the civifj engineering mechanical and:~ electrical field. -?, ' :··· Army Private First Clas~'..": 'Rlcbard E. Frey. son of Mrs:~ Mary L. Gl!lespie, 31032 Callo! San Diego1 ,San J u a n:: Capistrano, recently w a •~: 1salgned to the 5l3rd heavy'~ . equipment maintenance com-;:: pany In Germany. • • PFC. Frey, a reco~ry~~~ specialist with the company'1~ . near Hanau, entered the AnnY,'; 1n April of this year, com-;.· plet.ed basJc training at Ft.,, Ord, and was lut statk>ned ai\ Aberdeen Proving Ground, .. \: Mo. t: ~;I Ainnan First Class Barley~' E. rl)'ll<, oon of Mr. and Mn.\. • Olrls A. Payne of ta:Y.~ Freshwater, Hun t i n & tb-D.'· Beach. has arrived for duty at:l.· Nellll AFB, Nev. · )..; AlrmM Payne, a fuelt°" 1pecl.allltt, ts aulgned tO t:"' turlt of the Tactical Air C)m..I...' mand which provides comba~' unit. for air IUpport or u_s .• ,'. ground f"""'8. He prevloqity:·; aervtd IL Taegu AB, Repu~li~•.' of Kof'fll. ,Y; ...... \· Anny MedlcJI Service eori1i Captahl llovld II. Goold, • Mr. and Mn, JICk E. Im Son Juon 51-. ricenllY completed on Medical Depaitmonl bMlc:.,...... at tho M Plild -ICbool. Arffl1 Medical Center, Som lloustoo. Tu, Hll wife, N~. lives at 1$14 Nnpost Blvd., Ooota - \ . • I ' ' ' , . \ ( ·• '• . ' •, .. .. ., .. •• . .. .. • " ,, • " ' • ,• ' ' •' • . ' " \ -. ' . v.·' '. Friday, NMmbtr .3, 1972 OAJLV PILOT 27 Good Shape ·Farmers End Year ' ' . -. ' ' • Ill -~. ,. . • ' down 1,000 from 19'11. the beat perlontlAnce by c.utornla (armers a J n c e 19,.159." The repo:1 continued·, . "f:ven so, the record net in- come figure IJ'oot as high in real terms as during the 191l'.s.". 1omatots at some county "The gross agricultural pro-toward rrtserving ope 11 farms. duct ii up from Last year due space." Of .. OWty P'llf lttff e Coounly ·fa ri·m e tJ • . wl!I ~ better \Ill! --~~~u · ".a:onl• .. '. .• H~ pricu for most. 111•• Jor crops, •cl4fd tq "" • !•>-: . ciuse in beef p~on, will bring the state's >ffess cash lann receipt3 w ~7 blllloo, the bank report ~; 1'he number of acres being to ' lnten.slried farming pro. Prospects in the future an! larined in the <:OWJty Is down oedures," Howard Norem. ex-also good, he sa id , if the ap- c:ompared to years previous, ecutlve secretary of th e parent turn-around in thinking In 19$1, there were 150,396 Ora~e County Fann Bureau, by many resideol3 who now acres of field, orchard ' and said. oppose continuing unlimited -ui,r. l¢ htghef c;illtl !>:tr om,. COWlty •griculture •• IJ>. t....u agr'et. ALTHOUGH lhooe Involved in fanning locally declined w vegetable crops. Twenty yean Fanners are P,lanUng two or growth is maintained. A O d 0 {l D I N G TO the later, this was r t d u c e d • three of tbe higher ca.ab crops -· agricWtural croP re}X>rt of the mostly by economic presmires •. ·.• tn a year where before they THE mVIN£ Company's , • A recent economic forecast . ~'~! !t'. ~\ions, of· , • ..,. ... • . "'"· ~,., ... , c.uow Farin'BOl'ell)l,.~qe Cjlll}· · pany's agriculturttl division and the Orang~~~ ~ o u n t y Department of ' Agriculture ool1Clll'Hd that lhings are looking up. , county d.e part men t ot to 65,409 acres. · may have concentrated on agricultural activity bas been · JcuJ••-t •·• 1 one, he explained. referred to by one company the Banlt or America said that .. ,.net ·farm returns agr tw"I:, Ot4J. gross va ue VEGETABLB crops, al-official as an ''urban land o( collnty farm products in though de c re as l n g in . NOR.EM EXPECTS the 1972 bank.'' The lahd development : statewide will zoom · by nearly ' 25 pettenl to 11.46 llllllon." 1971 was $97 million or 13.7 acreage from about 16,000 in gross value of agricultural operations subsidize th e percent more than ov,er8.ll 1970 l!lil to 13,000 in 1971, went up agriculture program because J l '.l \ · products W be abool 185 JJ1C10ffi~: in gross value by more than $7 property taxes are so high, he ·: THE BANK, under direction ~ o! !<gional vke-eresldent H.H. ·~Jacklon, '(f,eve!9pa: .a· state · ;; 1grlc¢tul'al olltloot report The bank forecast calls foe.. aveage l)et ,r~btna,of .. ,0004 , per farm this year· compe,~-· w $20,800 in 1971. -• ' A s~tncrea.!te is ex-million in that time perk>d to million higher than last year's said. pected this year, although It is $18.7 mlIUon in 1971. amount If property ta xes aren't shaping \fP~ 'to.. be' ope· of 'Ibis year many farmers are "Agriculture is in a better deducted, the official said. the oemHnnually. California's driest periods. Re-switching to tbe row vegetable position now than it has been 54,000.acre farming operation • (' .. : 'l1ler ti 58 cent . unexpected beavx rains cropB, Which are higher cash-other years," be. said. giving ( 47 ,000 of that in pasrure and " • ..,. ~-'""..~Calily' ,000 ,1,~ opera"""'P 10 orrua, "Wbefl inflation ls taken into consideration, this ·1represents damaged' a few of the more Pl'O<h!clng per.acre Qian field partlel credit for that to a grazing area) increased its fragile row ~ps Ii k e crops. more "positive attitude grQSS profits i~ the period of ~~~~~--''--~~--'~~~~~~~--=~~~~~~~~'--~~--'--'-'-~~~- ;~~~W ei·gh , Tax Breaks J(li •I , ,Ji( '{':;· Small Busi1iessm:eii Given Advice • (,I I • r:.:,;, .B)' S)l.VIA ~TER _. hec;o;use it may affect your .,.,..,If you are .among the. bu~-own ~,..tions: . .r ·~ oC· tho~sa·n_ds of i "'f'hri t11xnaver's monthly 'bWdnessmen operating as ,.:i1:i .... ,..~ .. J-' hiive beeirWUd or cloeely owned corporations, , crerfiti>rl tn his a c c 0 u n t 1~ the f0Uowing warnliig mnnthl" during 1970 without ';~t your own yea!'-end com-fir :i.nci:ll f."libarrassment. to :~on adjustments. !he corporation. The taxpayer ~l ~ ·. · Y .Df1'ou decfde at year· Merely hfld to make the end Whether r'f'~ess~.r" monthly book ' en- to take more !l·irs rf'flecting the accrilal of or le.~s com-his uodrawn s9Jary or the· ac- pensation in tual payment of his salary." the curfent year or in ' ·' IF YOU ARE a businessman t h e . 'n ex t ' who will benefit from '·defer- year~ depen-ing business income becaw;e d i n g , 0 n you expect to be in lower 'brac- which w i I I kets or because you wan 'to de. , 'OllTU. give yoU the i fer paying the tax that Would •. better tu break -but · otherwise be. due sooner; .bete :,'31-"recent lnternal Revenue are some suggestions: ~ce nillng might ·thnlw a : •tf you are. on a cash .~is ~Jr.0.flk:eY WN!nCh · into yoat ~ as so many businessmen ;~v~. . _ and professionals are -8imp.. ly do not press for coll~on ~1! TBIS IRS RULING dealt of bills you send ou~is '~th a stockholder.officer : time and don't mail out bills controlled corporation : toward year-end. until -ge~. If you're· o,n a. cash basis, you can make sure all your '72 bills are P.lid no later - than Dec. 31, 3.nd if you're on an accrual basis, you can make sure that any credits to customers for allowances or merthandise returns are sent out and deducted before the end of '72. Now here's vital advice if you are a closely held · cor- poration operating on a very profitable basis -and f8cing U:ie da'nger of ii. costly penalty tax that rarely bothers the profitable publicly·o.wiied oon- cem. 1be problem · is that after a corporation bas -ac- cumulated a .certain.amO\lJlt of earning~ the tax law says it must hav~ a gOQd business .reason for continuing to ac- c um u I ate instead of distributing its further earn- ings . to its stookholders. Any (urtber earnings your cor- . po ration accumulates without good reason will co_st y_our cor- poration an extra 27~ ·to 38'h: perce'nt penalty' tax in addition to tbe regular corporate·t.ax on those earnings. - ~: authOrized him a salary'of •tf you are on an aCcural ·• ;ooo a month. Dilling the 'basis, it's not so easy to.,.~e_fer ~ .. e of '70, he actually ·c:trew income, but you can postpOne ·l\Jruy $2,000 as pay and did not completion of a job until-1973. collect the other $2'l,OOO. Ris , Or you can hold off delivery of corporation aCCJ"Ued the . goods until .next year Wlder SO 1F YOUR corporation's ... ,000 on the last day of its iCOnditions that wW poa:tpGne retained earnings 'have reach-..,fiacal .year endirig Jan, -31, . passage of title tG the goods ·ed the pE!nnissibte· tOPi )>Ou>re. : l871t. · -· , ~ . ; until 1973. ~::. _:~ · . : ~~' · iii;. a 'iaX · dllemii~. U your ·•!'llR8 aald the sloc!J:h91<1er-1>~ •· ' · urtb 4lc*' had. to Include Jhe enUA: •oa YOU CAN shift in-C()mpany retains f er earn· -«•000 of aµthorized . but un-:·come from '72 to '73 by pafing ings without good teason, it -,drawn salary-in his "JO, return.. ·expenses this year that · you has to pay the extra stiff Note what the IRS_ ~id ·might otherwise not have J)i\id penalty tax on those earnings. w--·--------..-:.--------._ .. '.> If it distributes its further J.~ ~ __ ..............,.._.......,.......,...._ § earnings as dividends, it will :i, 01 -D. E.R .... · 1'0:00, . · ·· · r:: :d·: ~!~~1:.,;:: ".:J• ' ~utiful ~· will pay a personal income tax "'" r on the distributed emrings. ;t you· RS".' <,· Stick-on Bui, says the Research ;.~. LABELS· Inslilule ol America, all cor- porations in this squeeze have been given a safe ~y .out as long as the Phase II dividend control guideUnes, are in ef'· feet. TODAY!' .. ; ' Personalized · • Stylish • Efficient ~;~.' -·,. ,,~ .. ,H''. ·nt: .1"i' 'f ,!>r .. .... r ... ' ' Order For Yourself or a Friend· Mey be used.on envelopi61 11 return •ddress .l@els. Also very fi•~dy as identification libelS for m6"kin9_ penonal items such as 'l:tooks, records, photo,, et~. Labels stick on 91111 end m•y b• used . for m•rli:ing home c•nred, foc:d items •. All lebels •re printed <with stylish Vo9ue type on fine quality whit. 9umm•d paper. . t.·'.':'i".':., -·----------------~ lflM •fill•-. c11; •fllil !NU wltll 11.u tti I ..1 . ,..... ..,..,.,.. u•1 Div., r .o. hll lut I .... , Cm•,.,...; c.nr. ,_ . . •• I 'I • I t I !f-. . l ·;it__~LR! .. ~!~J!~~---J , ' ' ' !"' , c.i:11 .~ 1; ti• ,jl.'.J~· .,,. "'.c.-; r.N~. ' ( . ' ~·~·-l--~ I . , EVEN mouGH. your cor- poration's entire '72 earnings would otherwise be subject to penalty tax if retained, ijtS will not apply the penalty tax jf the corporation distributes the maximum amount ·or dividends allowed by the divi- dend guidelines for a cor· poration subject to t h e guidelines (check with your own' professional adviser on what that maximum· is). 'fbis bolds'e•ell tl\<)Ugh yqur'c;lllM!y held corporation is not ttlelf subject to the div id e·n d guidelines. For instance.. say your c:or· p6ratlon winds up with $50,000 of :n· e'amings, all ..of which would ordinarily be subject ·to penalty tax if retained. Say that the maximum allowable '72 dividend distribution for your rorporation would be $5.000 under the dividend rules. U your corporation di.tributes »,OOO as dMdtnds In "12, It may relaJD !he olher '45,0llO without perialfy tu. My, What Big Teethl • Operator looks on as dinosaur-like teeth clamp onto log to start it through mill at Burlington Northern's facility at Columbia Falls, Mont. Demand for lumber has soar~d on strength or national record for hous- ing starts. i Briefs · Order Lin,ked to Gift •··Lueky Store• NEW YORK (AP) - A rO.N. Y.) said Thursday al a SAN 'FRANCISCO _ An D .e m o c ratic CQngressman news conference that it was bar "cry~-• clear" that t be agreiement by Lucky stores c ged that the PriC"e Com· :.Ml.I Irie. to reduce food and other mission . reversed a price reversal was "payment fur the ·prices wbith were 1n-.. ...... .1 c tt mp a i g n contribution." .... ~~ rollback order on McDonald's Ro ha! If ~• Id without cost justification has sent o ereu no ev ence been announced by t h e harn~grers after the com· linking the decision and the Internal Revenue Service, pany's board ch 8 i rm an reversal. donated !208,0llO w Presidenl Theagreementprovides N. • I that all merchandise will be ixon s campa gn. priced on an item·by-item Rep. Benjamin s. Rosenthal, basis. Under the Ecommlc stabilization Act, retail price ' boosts may be made only on items showing cost increases. e Chlpii Dip AKRON, Ohio -Potaw grower Arden Ramseyer says 1972 was the "worst year ever" for potat~crop damage ln Ohio, Michigan, New York, PerJNYlvania and Wisconsin. Ramseyer, president of the Ohio Potato Growers AMocia· tlon, said area chip producers "are going to rhave a hard lime finding chipping potaloes this year." ' e F0Helo•11re LAKEVIEW, 0 r e , Wolfson Feed Llits lnc., Los Banos, bought the 800,000-ecre MC Ranch for $5,050,000 Wednesday at a federal foreclosure sale. Car Repair Damages Compared WASHINGTON (AP ) Plymouth Satellites and Dodge C:Oronets have the lowest average repair costs after crashes according to the Insurance Institut e for Highway Safety. The Chevrolet C:Orvette Js the mo!t expensive to repair, The study, released this week, reported that model·by· model repair costs f o r automobiles ranged from an average of $282 to J,522. The figures were based on a survey of 89,060 cruh-ril>alr The Travelers Insurance Co. foreclo.sed on the ranch after ill previous owner, M.T. estimates for 1969 through 'Lewrence Jr., failed to repay 1 1972 cars involved ln ·slngle a1 a IS.S million promisory note. well as mulUple-vehicle ac. .Wolfson has been leasing the cldenb throughout the coun- ranch for 1150,000 annually. tryT.h ud .d 1_ • ., .. 1 e st y sa1 ,,,,. cars .,... son were the most experisivt1 co LOS ANGELES -Southttn repair and that daplagt w cor callforuia Edison'• net Jn. bumpen was !Olllld In 60 per· come for the three.month cent of the damagfld cars. perk»d ended Sept. 30 rose 13 Stv:.?nt) modeh: wtte tx- percent lo MS million or 83 arnlned. Four of the moat ex· centa a share, the company pensive American cars -the nported. -Uncoln Contlntnlll, Uncoln Nel Income for the amo Contlntnlll Mark m , C.dlllac period lo 1971 WU $31 mD1lon and Corvetle -bid the .or 7' centl a share. bJ&hett averaae repelr coats. RAY A. KROC. b oa rd chairman of the McDonald's Corp., could not be reached immedie.tely for C()mment. Fred L. Turner, president of McDonald's. ca 11 e d Rosenthal' scharges "outragfously untrue." "We cannot let them go unchallenged, even t ho u g h most people will C()nc!ude that , he was engaged in a pre-elec- tion attempl to gain publicity at the expen s e o r McDonaJd's," Turner .said in a statement issued at the com· pany headquarters In Oak Brook, Ill. He said Kroc's contribution lo the Nixon campaign was "stricUy personal " and nobod y at the company ever knfw of it until it was publici!Cd In the press, ROSENTHAL SAID I h a t since the Price Commis.,}on's N"Venal, Kroc has made further contribution.~ to Nixon, making the total $225,000. The congnos.,man 11aid that la!t Nov. 14, McDona ld'' ral,_ ect· prices on 11, •·quarter· pound hamburger" from S3 to ~ cents and on the "quarter· pound cheffcburgtr" (rom 59 to '5 cents. , On M1y 31, Ro<entlull uld. the! Price Commisslon ordered a n>llbock lo lhe original prices. On July JO, McDonald'• as~ the commtsakln to coned lheonl<r, cl1lmlnc lhal the producta wm ''new ~ dum," ex•111pt f1')m prloe c:.atroll. -~ Western's Lo1v Fare Rejectecl WASHINGTON (AP) -The Civil Aeronautics Board h.as rejected a special low fare proposed by Wtj!tem Air Lines as a means of inducing residents of Hawaii to spend up to seven days In Nevada. The board said Western fail- ed lo provide adequat e just~icaUon for the plaMed fare discounts which ranged from 13 perctnt to as much a.s 25 percent off regular coach fares. The board also dismissed matching fare proposals of Pan American World Airways arid United All' Lines. Weat.e:m bad planned to r:.:· periment, from Nov. I to ne xt May 31 , in providing lbe low round trip fares for groups of 10 or more persons, frorn Honolulu to Laa Vegas and Reno. The group fares were to have been avallable on all fllghLs leaving Hawaii except on Thursdays and Fridays. We.'flem said the fares would help fill empty s.ea ll on s.lack travel days . Cement Firm Earnings Up American Cement Corp. Gt Newport Beach IC'hle-ved a strong improvement in net eettngs ln the third quarter and fint nine monlhl ul .am, W. T. l'aJCOe Ill, President, hu announced. Nel lnf'Ot'ne for the thrtt month.'f rn<k-d Sept. .JO In. creaatd •1 percent to Sl .S.S millk>n, equal '° 22 otDll pc!f llhlre, _,pared with IUM mJlllon, or u -. per llhlro, In Ibo dllnl -" 11171 . \ April 1971 "' April um "' 15.S 111illlo11 rro1n lhe previous year'!> $.1.2 millkn. Fred Keller, assistant vice president of the agricUlture division. said that "as a whole. ... the operation is doing brt· ter this year." TllE IRVINE Ranch has 1,500 acres of C'Om pany- operated row crops; S,000 acres of tenant-operated row C'rops; 5.500 ac res of ordlards (oranges, lemons. grapefruit, avocados). and 47.000 acres()( range. . The company. Keller said, has been ta king the poorer producing orange trees and converting them to row aops like C'annery tomatoes, corn, cauliflower, sugar beets . watennelon. chili peppers and asparagus. Lima beans, years ago a irajor product on the land, are being phased out because. lhey are no longer as profitable. State-•Nide the bank forecast says, citrus revenue will decli ne si x perceht to $230 milliori due to overproduction. BEEF PR 0 DU CT I 0 N profits are up, the bank report st.ates. mainly because prices, not sizes of herds, are in- creasing. With less land for grazing, livestock fanners have to look to new ways to raise their share of the beef dollar. At the Irvine Raoch. KeUer said, one answer is cross- breeding . Ranch officials are beginning to breed hereford and Brahma , cw·s to get brafords, a hybrid cow which supposedly can grow better in the County climates. In 1971, county agriculture department offklals oaJd the total value or livestock pro- duction decreased by 11 pet- C'ent Crom 1970 to $2.S.million . TJIE rtfOST profitable crop, as listed in the count y rep:>rt. i:-nursery stock -flowers, ...irees and potted plants. which grossed $25.9 millk>n in 1.971 for a 19 percent increase over 1970. Bank of Amer~ vke pre..~l­ dent Jackaon aumma.riU!d the statewide outlook for major =I>l wllidl are grown Ill Orange County as: Cash receipts r 0 r strawberries, desptte lowes: oolpul. will lncroue w -., $70 million because of Ngber prices. -Milk sales will rise by MC million to about M01 milllor becau!M! of increaaea in price and output. -Eggs will increase b value, because the Aaietk Newcastle disease decreaec output. -TOTAL LIVESTOClt 111< livestock prodlJCts ca 11 I receipts will reach $ 2 , I l billion. up more than 14 per ctnt from 1971. -rnut Ond oul croJ retw'ns of $1.0'ZS blUlon vdll br slightly below 1971'1 figurt $1.037 bl\Uon. -Vegetable values will bl II billJoo. up ll per<eOl ove 1971. -Field crop recums im .. 0ma1oc1 " 1115 mlllloo, UJ about t t percent over 1'71. ·County agrk:ullure officlal: said !hat lhe field ""'I>' barley and beans. ·~ only three percent In 1'71 °""; lt71l. JN 1111. m~ bank ._ rr...W. It.ft...,.. ltl,00 farms ln Callfomta. compare!' to th1' , .. (, 5',0llO. Bu avertge net i ~ per f.-u In 1181 wa.~ 11.870, Car .,..,., lhe bonll'• -ot ol Sll,t1ll for this ~ear'f fenner. Farm Rurc11u ~. Norfl'n emphaslies th.It dw' biltl(est pnif)Jem farmers fMI .. """'°"y ...... "-often taI a~ri('Ultural land 1 """' they ltd 11• "highest ... ,,... ........ Id be, ho llid. "Tho highest and best .,. • him coukt be a »Amy offici 1>u11d1rc:· -11111 •• ,.. )'OU «row Ol"all(U." FROM Fashion ·· Island Newport Beach STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR I I I I ,• !8 DAILY PILOT 5 Frid.ly , Nottmbtr l , 1972 Ford Slates Tes t Of Stec11n E11 gi11e DETR019 <UPI 1 -The Ford fl1otor Co. hopea: to test in one of \ls cars neJ1t ycn r an cxperln\ontal •·steam .. engine -one of lhe 11Jternatives being studied by the auto lri- duslry in att~mpu; to n1ect govcmment-impased erniss1011 standards. Both the 1-"'ord A1otor Co , and Chr ysler C<lrp. ha ve as.signed cont raels to outside finns for development to outside firms for dcveloµmen1 of low-pollutant external co n1· bustion engines ut1liz1ng ;1n organic flu id 10 produ ce a vapor. FORD SIGNED a conlrJcl with t he Thermo-E:lectru11 Corp. of Waltham, Mass. 111 1968 to "develop the potcnt\ri l of vapor engines for molor vehicles." Chrysler signed a si milar contrac1 in !\farch with Steam Engine Systems Corp. (SES / of Ne '.l•lon, Mass .. to adapt one of its automobil es for use with a steam power plant and then ev aluate the performance of the engine's capabilities. The vapor engine is one of 'the alternatives that will not be ready in lime to meet stan- dards stt by the government for 1975 and 1976 models to reduce e1ni ss ions of hydrocarbons and oxides of nitrogen . DEVEl...OP~1 ENT work for Ford has prngressed to the point where the company was al>le to predict delivery of a prototype engine late next year. "Ford is not relying soley on in-bouse expe. liSL for its broad range of wor k on power sources.'' said Stuart M. Frey. ' chief of car planning and research engineer in the pro-- duct development group of Ford. "Our objective is to have the world's best engine technology -whether this mean! con- tinuing im prov.ement of the coriventlonal Internal com· busUon engine, or develop- ment of alternatives such as gas turbine, sterling, rotary.' battery-electric or r a n k i n - vapor pawer plants." be said . Development programs on such olher alternatives M 1he rotary engine and of catalytic co n verters to reduce emissions on prese nt Internal combos!ion engines have been costly. But General Motor! now expects to have the rotary engine -using rotors that revolve in an e l liptical chamber to power the car rather th3n pistons !hat 100\'e up and down in cycllndef's - ready ror use In 1974 -model sub-compact Vegas. PROBABLY TllE b e s t • known name In steam engines aha Stanley is William P. Lear. who has devoted much of his financial resources -an e!lthnated $8.5 million since 1981 -and energy to develop Vl\'ITED STATES NATIONAL BA N ·K SOllTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH NOW 0"11 SATURDAYS 9 ta 1 P.M. MON.-THUU.. 1 .. 1 P.111, flltfDAYI 1M P,M. en•• 1141-1211 . L.eceNt1 .. i le.C...,...,C...M ... ....... nc. ~ ......... . 0. DEAN HEIS ER FINANCE PRIME R·1 SU~DIYISION LAND • 4.6 Acres ltt1bllol!od ffith Ou.Illy Huntl ....... llNch A.., lvthlrd/H1mllton St,_,, Cl-to -h -Sc'-11 -Shop1 SEALED . BID SALE $130,000 MlllllllUlll Build.rt Info. Incl. Soll• Ropott -$10 Philip '· lloffonHUri, Nowpori llN<h City Hill 3300 Ntw""1 111..i. -17141 67l-2110, nt. 205 1 ·- / • / / OVER TH E (:<>UNTER t:OMPLETE W YORK STOCK LIST ·~ • ' • \ .. ', " .. ' • ' ' ., • ,. ' 1 l t. e T"am Effort SEA'l'l'LE -The Boeing Co. has teamed \\'ith t w o California rums to mate the apparent low bid on a waste water purification plant tx· pan1ion. Boeing, Paul Hardeman, Inc. Stanton. and the H.C. Smith Contruction Co ., Com1>ton, put in ?-joint bid of under $.1.1 million for work to be condocted at Simi, near Santa Monica. Boeing would provide business management on the project. to be com· pleled in mid 1974 . • . I. • ' ·1 DAILY PILOT L .111 •. B!J!'· enFromWe$t I • tc • . ' " ~~~~:.Their Cool • '" j .,. ,.I;; ._ t r , SClentlf)c; .-.l'dlw, looted Into what makes men panic. Ill wm,,'disastus, ~\ever. They analyzed the male population. And cooclucled the men of the higb west- ern plateaus generally appear to possess those character- istics which make them least likely to come apart ln crises. Refer to the men of Montana, Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, Arizona,. New Mexico ancJ West Tens. These fejlows, they decided, seem to be stronger than any others in that ihlng called stoicism. Now they're trying w figure out why. PEASANI"S some eenerations ago in the marshes or northwestern Rus- sia traditionally wore white smocks, white leggings and white homespun coats. Historians say this costume was why those warriors years later came to be identified as White RusslanJ. QUERY -Q. "Where In the Bible doe. it say, 'God helps those who help themselve!'?" ~ A. That's not Biblical. It's the orjginal language of one Algernon Sidney. IT'S A FACT the female beast which here shall be referred to as a lady dog does indeed J;>ite peOple about half again as frequently as does ·the male-dog. THE HUMAN body, suddenly weaned of life, cools at a rate ·of 1.5 degrees F per hour. That is the significant fact that tells the m o d e r n detective when the heart stopped. Internal temperature is taken, subtracted from 98 .6 degrees F., the normal temperature. Answer is di- vided by 1.5. What's left is the count of hours elapsed since death. REMODELING -1f you're toying with the notion of remodeling your house, don 't plan to spend more than l> percent of its current market value on the job. That's the counsel of ooe construction expert. Not likely you'll ever get it back, if you invest more in such work, be says. LOT OF toWns in colonial New England permitted a bachelor only to live in some home approved by the local selectmen. And said bachelor was watched most carefully. Some places, like Hartford, for instance, otherwise taxed a ~cbelor 20 shillings a week for living a1one. AS TO mAT matter of which is the fiercest of all beasts, some authorities, including the greai biologist Cahelane, contends it's the shrew. Weighing in at less than an ounce, the shrew is said to be willing to tackle any fearsome animal littler than a weasel. Address mail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875, New-_ port Beach , Calif. 92660. Fami1y Weekly: An Ally Looks At Our Presidential Election Because U.S. political and financial policies have so profountt an effect on our neighbors, their at· tention is sharply focused on the current election campaigns and 'the clearly diverse philosophies and proposals espoused by the candidates. English newspaperman Hehry Lowrie, writing especially for FAMl.L'Y WEEKLY, offers a European view of the American system for selecting a Presi~ent. With some embarrassment, 11 ••• like ·an American criti- cizing the coronation in Britain," Mr. Lowrie sum· marizes some of the coilcems of our alljes. He ' . · ·eonfesses bewilderment at AmeriCans' puzzling method of choosing, a ieader, a ~tern IO expel!· sive and tlme·consuminti. it virtually lmmobillzes the country for the .better pat\ bf a year. And he reflects on the Europeans' real fears for the foreign paiii:y toward which this country seeins to be headed and for the future of our tommitments to other nations . For an intrigulng'Vlew'irom the other side of the Atlantic, lobk for thitessax on the clear choice American voters will be making this fall and ·the anticipated repercussions of that,cholce on governments throughout the world.• , ' . .• PRO PREOICTIONS -Seventeen top, football broadculers from ABC, NllC, and CBS come lnto play when they predict lbe aeuon'a moat outitando:ng and cxcitlng ~a&nal Fbotball League players. Pictures, l>lotll'IPllles. and com- mentary ..., teamed up to produce an all-star , feature you11 want to save. er THINK YOU'RE,,'CllEATlVI? -Creativity ' 11 pill to · lbe test ln John E. Glblon's Tl'ue-Fal!t Quiz. Find out how creatjve yo~ are. Matcb )IOlll' anNers agalnst the ~rts· Jn Ilia atudy creative Individuals. '·, .. ·' . ·All Coming Sunday Witll_ The ' I ' lllLY PILOT ·. ' .. · . r • ..., ... lllmAY 'Tl •·P.ll lllB 111111*1,. Alll T SIZE 'SI EIPI• BAGS· OUR RIG. PRICE 11.97 , I ft19 Wenzel 5 lb. fill size bag. 100" zipper, ii, poplin cover, flannel lining._ . · '. ., B.EClllC BllN WAIMBI · ' OUR RIG. PRICE 5.97 • ' Help for the hostess with Jasto bun 4 ·99 warmer. Moisture and flavor proof plastic • , • dome. #BB700G · G.l 12-FT. EXllllllll mt oua RIG . PRICE 6Sc • U.L. approved cord with . many house-39c hold uses. With 3·outl et connector. " "' . 32 GAL. PUITlc ·111111 ·CMS OUR RIG. PllC1'3.97,fA. · : or storage. Snap-on lid. Replace' o', Heavy,duty contail11!r for tra sh 2'F s5 old, dented cans now. · ' . • · APaJ.11 PAITY GLAU IEI For entertaining. Handsome tumblers in . OUR SPICIALLOW Pita . . 311 award-winning color and shape. COSTA .. MESA ·I - • .. 11 LU. Ill Jrtt.stl .·~ um:n..ia ... . '"'n1&. , .•. , OUR 5PICIALLOW PllCI • · , : · Prints, soljds, jacqllilrds ••• aU 2 F ·a from famous · mill. 100% totton . ·o 0 · ·, terry or velour.-· · • • ' · ~ • • • I , <' I ~ • .. ' :~ ~ ... :. ••. ,•. .. • ' . . • . . . HUii~' OUli 'PICIAL LOW. PRICE , ChrorM finished frame; black vinyl seat . and back. Folds to stack or store. ' " . ~ '· I . , FGR ' • ••IG.·.Uc F,WILJ, SCOTT ... Tll,001\1 TISSOI. Soft. . wme. ·~i~· pastel colors. mall\ iour 111tor. ~ ., llG. Uc VIVA PAPH TQWllS are made to last. Solt, super abSO<bent. Assorted colo<s and white. RIG. 2tc 5(0,TTllS FACIAL TlisUI a<e suit and 1enltt to the toucl1. ca~ desilnef colon. 200 ct. ' , ' . . ' :: •. •• ·, . • ;,. ' • • ti' . w • . .( ' ·~' ·~. '· ... _ .. ' . ' ,, . . • • ~~:1 , . • . ' ,., . -1 ~1 :.:•';/' " ~· ~. J' .... , 1'" ' ,. ' I J'\ ',? f, Ii • I ' ' .. -6r'•1 " f ANGLES ENVELOPE POOLSIDE . OF CORONA DEL MAR HUNSAKER RESIDENCE ' . -·1 . , By JACQUELINE ~ doing it ulemselves. They Ile jetting tile q<a!1Be coloring •. • The ooe-amkloe-half , Of ... ~lfW' Pl~ .... t ~ surround them. Uke, 4 growing, Story ~J1 ~beams and the in-' .~~~~d ~,~ • mild, soft-_ 1~ ,~~;:~=:-m<!l!ate u.,~~ ":.if::,:'.~:,;;/~-1 • But.hit~ ftlihJ.ifth~Victiori and . belie~ ~that ~each ~amqy; · like church pa_s lbi;oUgbout. . ': • bis grip tightens aroun~ a Utlcl<.;ooden , c;<!lll!!'OCatlono1, has its '!"II ' oet <i .,._ 1Ji!>~ is like an angula~-moon • banniltet supjllirted Jiy,~ inm:b&rso .• 'J*.t.menb !cl a· home.• ¥Bui e<ooomic prqj8'tlar,'jround a swimmhil .. pool and ' ~--•'-'-": " · • ooiilititifO .J!>rce mass-PIWed ~ Pl!!iq·-.'lli!dlrect Jiihlilog UO,changes "U "'6'n &o!nfl.1Dolo'., .. .,,., ... ,.,,,1Dake .,;i,''tiie ma]Oiity of people" ".: o( level 'elihance the alread1 apparent " it uae!ul and let It malle a W!~nt," , . ~So l!tey buy tract bOmfti ·that be!t 11\il . i;eistiorlab!I-ctPch family ll\'.lllg area . Said Miller, ~mbing ihe ~ve:ed ' 'their riii8nclal and functional needs abd I ~"some cl1ezits have ,1very f1nn ideas stairway lead~rom the swikeii llvmg rempdel Or cope." Housing develop-about prospectJve 'homes white others room of~ !1k . .Hunsaker home. ments, in order not to offend a Potential don't have .any too much. I prefer to The r~. wblcti: overlooks Corona buyer, offer ovenized l'QOm8 wl)ich work with a client who allows a real op- del Mar State Beaclt, is one of five buyers just have to fUl up with furniture, portunity to be creative," admits custom-built homes-on an Architect's he pointed out. Miller. ~ome T.OU{ ~ . the ,qr8:08;e,-<:oast. The Miller proposes that be can take the Another stop along the home tour is the Frld'1y, Nowmbfr 3, 1972 DAILY PILOT - • ' .. • b1ennlal.ev~ . ~ . . from lllllil!m!,_o! '!)Ol/<Y !ht a famlly w<>uld in-. Bruce Killian home In Huntington noon I<>, fl~, ., I c '· . ~ ;bf the veall!>;i!t ~ve ·tract,bome and _life ' ~; desiped by Rm Yeo. The ,, DAILY PILOT ........ P .................. . Women 1 · . !,;(u,, .\I...:,.-• ~ i n them a.cllStOm-built home~ waterfront hoIOe bu maaonry walls, ex-~ DRAMA WELCOMES VISITOR IN INTRY HALL ~lkfl v,•:>"· ..,.-,Otanfo} Colmty ''The·'"""'and rooms Will be smaUtr, · · pooed wood beamJ and evory "'°"' has a Chapter Of> ihe .. ~tectural LellUe. and the materials may be less ei:pens1ve · view of the water. "There ls a sensitive Millet; who maliatainl an office'tn his ·but it' will'ftindion perfectly for them." handlihg of spaces, levels and an in- own homir', set abave 1tbe ,Oty otOrange If there ii a limited budget, combine tegrating of the indoor-outdoor rela- oo El ~odena Hill, f1~four1h .maimoJ: on the par.-ol a room. lioosbips," pointed out· Mn. Kenneth the left''J likes '6 .win oli Custom A cU1tpm.built home coosiders the · ~ann, league spotesman. resideoces, c~ ·mid acbools. liket ·and disllkes of a family, ·the way it Edward Gidciing dellgned .the bayfront A recent and favorite _project is the lives, worka JOO entertains. home of Mr. ~ Mrs. Robert Lynch of new building !or C.Wary . Otapet near· "I donol'dl!lign a house to be a big bos liiJllis Lsle, lncluded~on tile lour along South c.o.st Plaza. with a bunch of Uttle bo1:es ln!lde it,'' \vith a contemporary Dover Shores home Pastor Chuck Smith'• following II<> Miller aaid adamanUy. designed by Fred Briggs lor • manded 8 sanctuary that would seat Z,000 "But that doesn't mean there aren't large, aCtlve family. people In: a warm, friendly abnospbere. any wall!." In the Hunsaker house, the Taking tn a panoramic view of the ){aintaining tbiat atmosphere on weekday walls are based on 'an angular design. Newport Harbor from a precipltoua bluff 'nJghts when the chapel was less than ·fill-Other walls are glass window3, allowing is the home of Mr. and Mrs. John ed' to eapac!ty1dou~ ~,~lerp. ":We an nceaa view f!Oll\ the back bedrooms. Hamilton, designed by J. Herbert didn't·ttant a ·le'it.hmdred,people tOl~· ·The H\mlaken•allo wanted to ere.ate Brownell. 1be borne ls entered from Jost 1n a great ex~," added Miller. a warm bUt dramatic atmosphere and the upper street or from an elevator The decision' was· a f8JH1~ ,deiign ca~ tbe view from a many rooms as which rises from an alley below. wt~ ex1enslons ~ the · pulor pooin;le, ~ warmt1b1aa olllalnel! in tile Ticket reservations, at 12.50 per on the pljlplt. ':A!J>st.peop1e 'm~e Into' a building maierlals by, 111ing boilquet can-person, are being taken by Mrs. Charles new 'nuiidln&·when~t's C"'lll'lftely fmfall-yon · otooe and redWood 1idlng, com-Corum at 552-719! and MIT. Ledermann. ed. But tile i)eople at caivlry Cbapet are pie-toe! by rich rust and yellow-137-3$71. Hungarian Pianist Starts Chamber Series • ' - • Dancers More than t4 dancers· from 21 com- munities will participate in lhe spec- taCular Laguna Beach Civic Ballet Com- pany producUon of "The Nutcracker," to be presented In the Laguna Moulton Playbou1t, next to the Festival or ~rt.I groundJ In Laguna Beach. Four matinees and · four t vening per!onlwloe1 are acbeduled1 Friday, Nov. 17 at 1:30 p.m., Saturday, Nov. 18, 21:!0 and 81:!0 p.m., Swlby, Nov. ti, 2130 p.m., rrtd>y, Nov . 24, 11:!0 p.m., Sotur- . day,. Nov. ZS, 21:!0 and l ::IO p.m. and Son- day, NM. •. 2:• p.m. Guest art!Jt for this populal' ballot will be !.,_ Balld RUllO de Monie Carlo pdoclpol aeloill VlciA!r -· -•ldmd by nlllllY to bavt been Argen- t!Jla'•'-outl1andh>C male dancer. Dancing wllh M....,. u the Sqar Plum ·FalfJ ID dl!lmnt por!onnanceo will bO llerllee 11._ w1lo became _, -u Alica In "Disney .. Plrldo,' ....i Loulle "-<. who wu r.tuaed 1D ura1 ,.., BeaatJ" ln Irvine Bowl lut' ..... bor. Hlllnwt will • ,r paJtnet the LqlJnt """flllll''I "baby • I ' batJortu." l.,.....id CyJObla TOlll. , IUI,' lllermlloilally·.; . llo!n.Jn,Bilflipo<t to'I'~ • -.. ~ ' • Other 1-4 .....,.,. .. MidlM . -=-"'fllthp;1111o""'•a' . .. ..... u ~-HU._ ..... ~., .... Calr,...,. · · m;aw~ . •· .. !-~:2 .-~and~Petel. ,. ... • Qtolllnaild~lllN'l 'bllll7~·plai0 '•"~4.tr h ~ e;W.,',.~J.B.·.: ~ is "t_•Teboliov4l1 1 Ho<.It_~.,.tlle ,·otr.~ .. ti'~· lid ~ •• ill -...,_ ... u ... aur-ftidM dloiooji'ifij~:r~zaa.~· _,..., \bll 'o p.If M1ok ~--....... lD JM. , _.t>-'..1 "': . .,,,... , ..u.dc 6'dor 1 ~ ~i l ' Oio!nbir'lllulle ·J111tlbl ·~~.,. ~1 •111 "'""'--' ·fri#'"tht . T-.ldlreclorilOtrl . •• -•·• ' -In NI Jllll --ToW1i llll;ln.19a....... =I -lllt~·..-; 'llCMll ,,. is for ....; lw eonot~t"wti ·lllilo i ...,....,, die ee~dtlll1'• ""Cf r•lfl·oR•W •·P• • ..,..,., ~•lznaodtut!ordll::.•~,..I!; p.m. o1 • Plrll A,.,, NPmtl --'• tht ,_ o..ril lllll IAlllld g I t, Jlrl-. • TleAla m •-ol '•-•, Llpla :delch. .'.: -Xrm9 · au.nded the the "' JI It -Ploio Loulo 11po11r aild Anton °"'"1l Alla <il\ee, a 1-C..,.. Road, Jn 40 yan <i porfarmln&, Vleanl o.n.ntory oC lllllk: -· -"'"' r-dod .., ,,_It. LqlJnt B<oeb ~ ,,... It un. to tllroqbcul the ~ -ad boeon I fill 1"11 or It tr-· 11111 -"'1t -lldoell, -S p.111. qoly. -. ..-"'bu ·cl-1 ..,,_ tllt ... oC SO. --Xlolll 1111lodurld1114.. tllt .w .. 0< MJ.'1111'0< the Mall...,. ... be-to lollY Reovt, t1..::-ot thi _, lier corW wu lnlOmlpttd -led -• ....i aOclety ~t P.O. Bos •. P.O. Bos 141. LlclD lloodt . W. ti tht llloh <i lna,.1 ~ a11tt 1 .. -oC U.1. 111t11m-ml -· ~ 8eodl, W. -. 'Clzdtl obouk1 ba lllllll P171Mt ,to the l lllnctrt . o\ c. n le r b Ir, .......... I ..... .-i,, .. in~ ~ .. •II ond fll ~ .Jloodt a.te a.llot. A ..... "UtJiidnl lli-Llnd, -Utt porbw ml u a pw1Dw • ,._ a.iitifia u .... 111, tar -. flt ., _ _,, ,._ •"llos!t ~be · ••<11111 U SaldlarS a.om~ o..-. wltll Ytol1nilt S17mon In r.t...... · · .._.. ....._ tldllfll, ti ~to ba .-, \, • ond u •Ill'""'""'>' m-• OoldWJ. Nnotod by tht Otlls -loelado die "8llllllo, 111111'-111,......... l'or !Wther -·coll 411-tt• -In ~lond Ind J--mf -In Utt -Qmtol wllo wtll pll7 ti tllt door. All -.. -~ bet-It &.111. ond I p.m. thrOJlP>ut Eur<pl. ' Dutdl Eaol liidlet. • -1111-ltf """" lflid II .... ' fllflJ._ -.. ' ' Do arid , 'Nutcracker' • Ellubeth Snyder,• Robert Peht1 -~......... .. J•nnif•r Engle .,-th• Ruulen dencen in "The Nutcreclt.f.;• • • I . • Ii • • \ DAILY PllOT l , 1t'••t te .De, lt'laere io Go I i I • • • Ski Bllff s Get Taste of ~nqw ·at~9w .. • .. l@!f. i m SlllW -~ lllil .. will, sponsored by the BaI- boo 8'I Qllb, taltli ,plloo No\'.' 5 In the Newporter Inn, 1187 Jamboret Rood, """""' Boocb. Display booths pre- 'lented by stJ *"'-~ ehlb.t, travel agencies and air- lines. Hours: 10 a:m..10 p.DI. Donclo& to live band from 7 to IO p.m. Admission, 'I over u, 50 Cents under 12. ~141. NOY. I CHRISTIAN OONCERT -Every Saturday at the Calvary Chapel tent at the comer of Fairview Road and Sunflower Street. Costa Mesa, beginninnt 7:3G p.m. Appearing Blessed Hope and Denny Stahl. Admis$im free. NOV. I· 5 . CORRAL CARNIVAL -Costa Masa llJgh School, ~ Fair- view Road. Costa Mesa. Marty's Corral c.amJvaJ, annual event v.·i1h game booths, rides, food. crafts, enterte.inment and a baunted bouse, takes place Friday, I p.m.·mldnlgbt; - Saturday, 10 a.m.·mJdnight and Sunday, noon-$ p.m.; Sat- urday Rodeo and petting zoo, Saturday, 9 a.m.-2 p.m. NOV. I·$ ITS MAGIC -18th Annual presentalion at W'tlsblre EbeU Theater, Los Angeleo at a p.m. Tickets '3.ro and '5.ro. An all-star magic revue featuring great WuaionistJ an.d sleight- ci ·hand artiats:. NOY.:i.5 ANTIQUE S"°W -Anllque !bow and sale, Quality Hotel, Anaheim. Hours: nooo to 9 p.m. Admission, fl. lf7.1355. ' NOV. S MUSICAL MEDrrATION -Newport Ullity Cbureb' presents htusical MedltaUon Festival at 10 a.m. Nov. 5, 15th and Irvine Streets, Newport Beach. Organ, piano and guitar music. NOY.5 CHILDREN'S CONCERT -Golden Weal Symphony will pre- sent an introduction to orchestra, conducted by David Arr tbony. in the Campus Theater at 2 and 4 p.m. All adults : must be accompanied by a child. Admission, 50 cents. NOV.W . DUNBAR CENrENARY CELl!BRAT!ON -National con- • ference of scholar.! locuslng on Ille and work ~ poet Pail! _. Laureooe Dunbar, fin! blact American IO achieve dlstlnc- • tioo in literature. ,suteo of events ~ by UC! ElUn- .• sion in Science Lecture Hall Tb111'9day-Monday, .Nov. 2-1, at -· .. .. Fairy Tak Now At UCI Theater ' "Ondine," a fairy tale or the Bertha, enacted by Sands Hal ,, Middle Ages, will be staged by the UC Irvine School of Fine Arts 'l\teaday throogb Satur· da y, Nov. 7-11. Performances are scheduled for a p.m. in the Fine A.TU Village Theatre. of Squaw VaUey. Characters in the drama in- clude a seal trainer, magician, chamberlain, executioner and King Neptune himself. Set- tings and costumes are by Richard Triplett, associate professor of drama. The drama by 20th Century •' playwright Jean Girlijldoux will be presented In a new -translation by Robert Cohen, associate professor of drama at UCl and ~ector of the pro- . • ductlon. Cohen also is the 1• autOOr ol the book, '• "Ginmdoux: Tbreo Faces of ................ _ .. r.........., -: " 'Ondlne' ls both a tragedy '• . and I funny, wile and mock- ing loolt at Ille ," Cohen said. '' Kris Jolliff of Anaheim will ·? play the role ol Ondlne, a " water sprite who entrances a kDlgbkrran~ HIDI. Rans, played by Steven Rotblott of Podflc Palllldes, pa:p with Ills Ille when he abanclona r -OncUne to wed Prlac:e11 ,. Members of the cast in ad- dition to the three lead playes include Henry Kirker and Gary Graham, Kitty Felde, Raul Garra, Ellzabeth Pitt· Reri>ert, Ellen Plckler, Carol Mltben, Bruce Smith and Jaye W1ckham, S t u a r t ' Duck1nl<tb, and Dolo Kranz. Otben are 0.v1d M&naon, Karen B:olavert, Jeff G.-berl, Cheryl Schwartz, Gretchen Van RJper, Glenn Danleia and Randall Ebert, Jamet Horn, Lucken COnlgUo, Allen Garfinkle, Michael Pat· too, Don Ramll\On, Don -1lf!e,JoootbanGroeoman, ~ . 8 p.m. Presentation of papers and fllnu Nov . I, from 7 IO t..a !<> pment lllndel's ora\O~ "--~· dlrecllon 10 p.m...and Nov. U, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Fr,. admlalon of .._urlce A1lant, UIOclal& !-o( mu. Chwford , to publlc with advance reservations. Fee for cr<dit studenta Hlll, I p.m. Sunday, Dec:. l . Admission fl, .. $40. For information call UC! Exl<osioo CUO 833-6tll. I , ·tolOV. )I • • ' .< NOV. 5 ,OANJSR GYM TEAM -Orange Coast Collei•'s Pttonon ' BAND CONCERT L OCC Symphooic Band Concert, directed Gymnulwn at 8 p.m. V~ of modua l')1hmJc&I il'!ll-' by Or. Owles Ruth¢ord, at 2 p.m. Nov. 5 in the OCC aud-nasties for boY• and gi(ta lo vailltio1, ~· ~ping ' itorium , 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Admls&ion, $1. "A rope, ao-obaUc floor extrclles1 1 ~ generl)' -admlas~. $1 Four Dlmensioo.aJ Experience" features singers, dancers tor students. 'ncketa at door. ' and jazz band. ' NOV. 10 -11 NOY. 7 PILGRIM FESTIVAL -Claremont Pag•ant ·traces the COMMUNITY LEC'l'URES -Community lecture series on plight of the pilgrims -their revolt and · celebratiqn of 1 theme, "How the Brain Works," IO be sponaored by UC! Thanksgiving on Plymouth RoCk. No admission charge. Town and Gown In cooperation with Scbool of ~glcal Both days !bowing at 2 p.m. Science. Speaker is Dr. RJchard E. Whalen, 11Bojs and NOV. 11 Girls Are Different: 'The Brain as a SeJ Object',11 Nov. 7. SOCIAL SATIRE -Comedian George C&rlln will appea.r '1t All programa at I. p.m. in Social Science Hall, UCI campw. 7 and 9 p.m. NoY .. Jl at .Golden West College Pavilion. Tickets NOY. $ are '3.'° and f2 .'° with any student ldentllicatlon at all VIETNAM -Antiwar activist JMe Fonda will appear at 8 Orange County ticket agencies and the college bookstore. p.m. Sunday in the OCC auditorium. Sponsored by the associ--NOV. U ated studenta, the lecture admissoin will be fl. TicR!a, at f t, DIXIELAND' JK/2, -Jm; Incorporated, featuring a 111- are available at 1be OCC box office. piece swing band, will ga~r at 2 p.m. Sunday ln the. E:lb NOV. '7 • 11 " Building, 211 E. Cllapman, Orange. Members, $1, noo-inem- DRAMA -"Ondine" by Jean Giraudoux with new trans-hem, $2. latlon by Dlrtc:tor Robert eoben, usoda.te professor of drama, staged by UC Irvine Sc:bool of FiDe :Arts: Fine Arla Village Theatre, I p.m. Tuesday-llaturday, Nov. 7-11. Tickets at $2 available at Fine Arts Bo:r Office, 8S3-66I7 .• NOV. I· IJ DEATH VALLEY ENCAMPMENT -Furnace C!'eek aad Stovepipe Wells Village in the Mojave Desert. A must for wintertime desert lovers. SPeclal activities include dancing, nature talks, guided tours, fiddlers contest and burro races. NOV. 11 HUNGARIAN PIANIST"-Laguna Beach OW.her Muslc Society presents Hungarian pianist Lili Kraus at 8:30 p.m. tonight, Friday, Nov. 10 at the Laguna Beach High School auditorium, 625 Park Ave., Laguna Beach. She will play Jllydn, Mozart, Bartol Chopin and Schubert.· Sublcriptlon tickets "are $14-16 fer four coocerts, single tickets available at the door. 19HI06. HANDEL'S uMDSIAB" ~DE~J!emty £bor:us and ~ NOV. IJ . AFl'EllNOON CONCERT -Sunday afternoon cnacert oe.ries_ in lrflpe Bowl featur.s folk-blu8I arllsts at 1:30 p.m. Art1sta are Jimmy Withe! SJ>Mi and jazz pianist. Tia.ts at f2.H.$, are avaltable by sending cltect or money order to Music, P.O. Box llZl, Laguna Beach. Information, Mt-7477. . NOY. IJ ART WALK -Ari Deal en Asoociatloo .of Southern Calilor- nla will hold Its annual Ar! Walk Sunday Imm I tn 5 p.m> at varioo.o La Cienega galleries an~,tbe Jack. Glenn Gatiery, 3131 E. COast Hwy., Corona de! MIT. A special edition UU.. ograpb by Fritz Scholder, one of tbe best miwn Amerlcan Indian artists, has beeil piblisbed and will be sold at '350. . NOY. IS • PlllLIWIMONIC CONq!J!T -Cott<ert by Royal Pbllliar- monlc Orcbestra of L<iDdoo with La"""""' Footer Cllltduct- ing, spoMored by Orange Coonty Pbllbannoolc Sodoty. Crawford Rall, !:30 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 15. For llct'et In- formation call Orange·Coonty Phllhannonlc: Society, 11111-&111. . . Spef(ks Out Antiwar activist Jane Fonda has been sclreduled by the Vietnam Veterans Against the War to spell< at UC Irvine Sunday afternoon. Two fllms, "Winter Soldier" and "Village by Village" will be shown from 1:30 to 5 p.m. in the Science Lecture Hall. Tickets, $2. She also will appear in the OCC audl· tprlum at. 8 p.m. Sunday. ,Tickets, $1 . November Eases Up Robin Krieger, Deanna Cor-MIDDLE AGES -Above, far left, Steve Rotblatt rea, and Gal)'ll Prescott. and Kris Jolliff, take their places as the leads of Carol GooravitCh will serve "Ondine,'.' a French fairy tale drama to be presented as Dutist and Doug Tbomburg at UC!. Above, from lei~ Sands Hall, Raul 'Garza, as percussionist. · St a t e and Miss Jolliff SUITOWld Rotblatt. manager ls Gregory Silva and,------------------- Julle Haber ls his assistant. Tickets are $2 and are available at the £o'ine Art s Box Office, Un Ivers i t y or CaWonUa, lrvine, 92664. For inlormatloo call the Fine Arla lloz Office (711) a:IH617. Year in and year out, November has been the one month the thel\ler critic 8P' proaches· with t h e a~ prehensloon of a locust hunter anned with a fly swatter. Trsditionaily, the 11th • mooth has marked t h e cresting of the local theater floodtide, usually during the week preceding Thanbg!Ving when one le8SOn found nine playhouses raising their cur- tains m four days. , This month, however, the November entries are scat· tered further apat1 -with the exception of next Frldj)'s four openings -and the urually . jam-packed third weet offen -.only · tw.o ne,, ·countY~•hows. • The ma'jorlfy of the local theater groups either bave already stag;;d their stt<>tM! Rf'Oduction ' ot are holding it until lifter Turkey Day. 'I1lis weekend, the advance guar<I of the November assault includes only Sad- . TOM TITUS '. Intermission -. ·,! dlebsh Coilel!e's ' ' M r s . Mc'l'hing" and tonight's open· irig of "Happy Birthday" at the neWiborinR Loo• Beach Community Playhouse. UC Jrvine takes its first shot on 'l\teaday ,wheo.Rq!Jert Cohen uoveilJ, his new .translation of Jean G~udoux' "Ondine'\ The big r'eekend comes . up next Friday when four county theaters ~'!". in 'with their latest efforts. South Coast · Repertory premieres t h e Polish comedy "Tango", the Huntington Beach Playhouse revives "Wait Until Dark", the Ana-Modjeska Players ' mount Agatha-am.tie's ''The twfousetrap~,apc1-lhe Fullerton Footlighten ]ump on the "Forty Carats" 'blbdwagon. The tblrd.'"JOek,•!ormerly a homestretch·buncbup, has on- ly Orange -Coast ~ge's "Verma" and the San Clem~nt! Community Theater's Orange Co u n t y premiere of "Butterflies are Free " among the newcomers. The Lido Isle players.. who usually occupy that week, ar- rive the following Tuesday with their first drama, 0 Dial M for Murder", the second Frederick Knoll thriller of the month. Israel in Focus Looking into December, the opening weekend Is unusually active,South Coast Repertory unveils Ila' next show, "Moonchildren" 1 on the ftrSt rnnowed on &itUroay, Dec. 2: ~ tbe Irvine Community Theater drama ' ' D e a r Friends''. Abo, the Westminster Commun 1 t "! Theater bas a variety show planned for the first two days of December and the Costa Mesa Civic Ploybouse will be opening a childrea's pro- . duction. Israel in the past and in the present will be esplored al 8 p.m. tonight at the Orarige Coast College Auditorium as the next film in travel and adventure series presented by the Newport Harbor Kiwanis Foundation. Bill Stockdale's "Israel, its Land and its People" will show ancient ruins as well as ilfe in a kibbutz and modem cities. ~ Tickeb will be sold at the door prior to the screening at $2 for aduJta and $1 I<>< students. rums to be shown in the series are: Dee. l, "Exploring Asian Wonderlands"; Jan. 5, ''Ruisia''; and "Pan American Highway,'' Jan. 26. THE CROP'S IN! THE FUERTES ARE FANTASTIC! THE PRICE IS RIGHT! Avocados! Avocados! AJocados ! WHAT A PRICEll ····························~· • • lllf'tM • " 900D SID • W•'re ShlppllMJ • : PQM POM MUMS: AVOCADOS : A•ocodas aocl Noni : • • $,_Joo • er-in • ·~ . :;·:'Me ~d 'Thee' Ends Jlun ORANGE COUNTY • 69' lit ._. • • Now! • . . ......... . ... ...,,....... . u.tt I ldil. LWt I • • • lo TH U.S.A. • · II .,.. ""' "-• -""' C..• • • ... __ ... ____ .... , 10 gal. $6.H I 5 g<il. 11 .50 26 t•I. 11.IO •NEWPORT ER IHN • ' (JAMBORBB . 11.0AD -Jmll'OltT !!ACll) • • • • • tnfJ DAY ONLY • • • • • ' NOV~MBER w i, SUNDAY -~O A.H. to 10 ,P,M. - O LATEST SJ:t EQIJIPllDT O LATEST S~I FASHIONS 0 CONTINUOUS SKI llJVIES 0 TllO FASHION SHOWS 0 DOOR PRIZES O LIVE MUSIC 0 RESORT-TOUR DISPLAYS ADULTS $1.00 12 & under 50¢ ' I ' . --.. ~ --·---·- •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• WHAT A PlllClll .. HAT A. l'tlClll WHAT A PlllClll ··············"'·····~········ a ltc .. IM MOST "-ACD • ,.~~: ~=~~:l,D • MIDIUM LAl•I • • ICEBERG • ORANGE • ZUCCHINI • : LETTUCE : JUICE : S9UASH : : 2 ,.. 25c : 39c q_, : I OC u.. : • """• • '".:J:.~-• "'*'... II . ... ..... .,_ . ---. ---. -·~···························· COWOllS IXPlll NOi .... ltn • fn their never endln9 JMtch to oin their custom.,., the fh,e;t th••• reste\Mnh ,.,.,. Newport Producel ,..,._b:• them, you'll n.v•r r99ref ltf Sp1 .. lftf ._.. w, Newport 1 .. ch: Mor Wm, Newport: G .... , -· Nowport: D• 11 't, lall:tc.a •nd over JOO othtn. How ebout your callin9 ui7 . •O,.,,.!lf Countv'• Jlosl Popvtar Prodvcc and Flower f!oU1t" .--~~ ~~~~ ltlWPORT PRODUCI • 11J.1711 o;. 7 D9Jt o Wotlt t ...... to t P.1"· 61'Mnl 261' Now ..... IHhn•d "" ... P~""' •TM:itl ,.35 Ytctr1 of Prodta:I IOHOtO flUlf SHIPPt• '~Mf'f Qwa.Ut11 it U&f Knw How" FOl 15 YU.RS Order of t>u Houf"' ...... __ _ • • ' • /! Fndar, N"'mbtr 3, 19n DAILY PILOT 33 y ·Meal Gr@a;t at ~Coral ·Beel Leonard Be·r nstein's "Mass", t h e IDOlllll]'\ental c o z· "theatre ·Piece for singers, OntrOVerSUJ players, and dancers", will be · presented in its West Coast premiere as the opening event 1Jf Center Theatre Group's 1973 subscripµon season in ihe ' Mark Taper Forum Jan. 4 through Feb. 18. Tho composer has adapted his work for the intimate en- vironment of the Mark Taper Forum. Local audiences will be able to experience' for themselves a work which has provolted a storm of cormnent to become one of the mos t controversial theater events of our times. Conunissioned for the historic opening o( the J9im F. Kennedy Center for the P erfo r mi n g Arts in W asbington, D. C. last Sep. tember and dedicated to the memory of the late President, "Mass" was subsequently performed lhis summer, again at Kennedy Center, i n Philadelphia, and at t h e Metropolitan Opera House in New York. . ~Gordon Davidson,, artistic ·llirector of . 'the Taper and director of both previous pnr ductions of "Mass", will stage the new adaptation, with Maurice Peress, the original musical director, signed for the Taper production. The col· laborali~ of Messrs. Bern- stein, D/lvldsoo, and Peress earlier brought to Los Angeles the highly successful concert version of "Candide", the Bernstein~Llllian H e I I m a n miisical, wh1c:h b r o u g h t distinction to tho 'lbeatre Group at UCLA in its popular staging af RoyCe Hall in 1966. The English text for "Mass" is by Bernstein and Stephen Schw a rt z, t h e co m- poser/lyrtcfst ol "Pippin" and . "Godspell". The latter Real talltonese Food eat here or teke-home STAG CHINESE CASINO 111 21st Pl., Newport Beach ORlolo 3-9560 ' o,.. y.., A.NUii Dlilly 12-12-Ftt .... s.t .... ,. .... ' LAGUNA'S NEWEST AND MOST EXC ITING MEXICAN/AMERICAN RESTA'tlRA NT S9rving Lunch •nd Oinil•r 7 D•ys • Week 696 S. c .. st Hwy. COCKTAILS ENTERTAINMENT ANDY .SEW Wed. thru Sun. MOJO COMPANY Mon. & Tues. Nlghtl SUNDAY SANGRIA BRUNCH Feeturln9 M1nudo e M1xic111 Om1lett1s e -Hu•"°• Rencheros end otl!1r Me.-icen Fevorii11. Out 'N About NORMAN STANLEY .on 'Mass' . Theater Pkce Begins Season musical was one of the major mass progresses, voices or box office champions at the doubt and protest, so evident Taper last season. ~ .in the world of today, are What' is "Mass"? Is it a ~d as ~y interrupt the musical, a mass, an' opera, or week. It 'too. produced as 1nuch en· joyment u Iha earlier occaalqn. Tho midday menu provides a relttlvely small but well.!Jalanced selectioo of salads, hot luncheon enttt:es a n d llJldwlcbes. Four dally specials round _out the .,I>lll Of fart. In tllll latter ca~ory there's a choice of baril and; cbee56 o'l'elelte, II.IS; vtal · Parmesan, ,l!.Gii; mbiute steak, l !.75; ~. e r u juS, $2.25. 1'11 served with a choice or soup or rolls and butter. HO entrees on the regular menu in- clude deep fried shrimp, 11.Gii fried easten> scallops, 11.75; mixed seafood platier, 11.95. N:K>: ground airloat> steak (bacon wrlpped), $1.55; veal cuUet with country gravy, l !.60; roast sirloin beef, 11.95; ex· eeuttve club steak, 13.95. All Of Uiese are -served with )X)tato, ' vegetable, rolls and 1 choice of soup or .. lad. Salads range from cottage chees< and fru1t , $1.SS, to the marine salad (lobster, shrimp and crab), 12.50. Sandwiches iead off with lbe Coral Roel special, assorted meat and cbeeae grilled on sourdough bread, IUO. Others include tuna salitd, 95 centa; .roast· beef, 11.35; patty inelt. 1us; club house. 11.71; steak (with garlic toast and potato), 12. 95. For the Jo-cal crowd there's ground round, 11.50; fried shrimp, 11.75; roast beef, 11.95; all served with cottage cheese, pineapple and sliced tomato. The ftrst of our two selections was a lof>"rate chef's salad, $1.SS. Generous portions of ham, turtey, cbeeile and tomato proved bolh filling and taaty. Prime rib on the second ordu netted a._ skillfully roasted, 11111!• and leader slli:o of beef accompanied by Pldea fm!l peas and savory Gesman'f\"le!f potatoes. The choice between IOUP ,ud aalad went to the day 's eicellent mlne.strone offering. As noted before, much of Iha crOcut for ml!klng the Coral R><f one of the area '• recommended dining attrac:tfon.s goes to the competent operators. They are tbe huaOOnd and wife leMl of Claude and Jill Floyd, who, since taking over as chef and hostess-manager, have clearly d"""""1raled the direction a motor hotel reataurant can take to win · favor with local residents. 'lbe Coral Reef is located at :l&4S Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa . Lunch ls serv- ed, Monday tilroogh Friday, from 1l tol 2:30. Di.Mer hours are 5:30-10 p.m. Mon- day through Thursday, and &-ll p.m. Friday and Saturday. CI05ed SUndays. an o~loJ'.io? As the composer mass until they finally erupt himself bas emphasized from into a melee of discontent, its conception, lt is all and driving the celebrant ~ a oone of th~ things. lt is a point oi madness. In the end, Work of vivid contrasts totally only through the simplest and without precedent in the purest act of communion is musical theater. faith reaff1rn1ed: Unorthodox,. It combines haunting pop, moving, and joyous, it has . · rock, jazz, and gospel sounds been called, along witb. its with magnificent music that melaoge of musical styles a could be cf!scovered on an ~e betften generatiOns, opera or a symphonic concert " between cuJ,tUWJ between stage. It is above all, a work religionS and ra~ a n d of theater that is a celebration between chasms in oUr art and and an affirmation of faith, culture. creating for its audiences a "Maas" which will begin moving and personal ex-preview ~ on Dee. perience. 26, is' the fll'St event to be an. Its story is one of a young nounced for ·the 1m Taper man and a community of ~ subscription seuon of ·five pie celebrating a ma&'J. As the major productloo.'l. Gwril in Retltttion · . ... ,..., """i · Artist James Potocki hopes to stir up v oles for election day with bis patriotic '. woi:k, "Reflections in Glory." The thre e-dimensional Dag, constructed eDtireJY ! ol mir.rors, is part of a one-man show, Artforms in Plastic. : W~trongBrothe~ • riow th111 Nov. 26 Sonta Ano, Colif. ~ •••••••••••••••••••••• . ' ~ • MR. MIKE 5 lt • • HOUSE OF PRIME RIB :-s pecial-Coupon Vffer : PRIME RIB DINNER . • • JI .,. • • C:-pleto wit~ -.. .-. • ewe. ef ,. ...... or rice. 5195 ! • (l ... lw$1.fSJ .• THE NU·TWO 111~~~~~~~~~~~~1= Q~~ RESTAURANl : V•IW ,....,_ llrw ~,. Ntv ........ I · t wllll lllk CWllM ..... fM' \"Mlf ............. . , •• • • • Paul O'lrliti & Walt Do1ao ........ _ SUNDAY llUNCH 10 A.M, to I P.M. I U.llfUlf fACILlflH J17 PACIFIC COAST HWY. HUHTIN•TON llACH 536-2555 ' OPEN 7 DAYS 209 Palm, Balboa 675-5773 LUNCH . • DINNER • (I f ~ ..... ,en'T LI ... ~. • . COCKl'AILS 8 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ' .. ' . SEA FOOD-STEAKS-PRIME RIB NTERNATION ... ~ .J.NTREES FROM U. J 5 . " B,ANQut1 FACILITIES : IN.JOT \( MW. Wmt Cl.AUDI ·AND JILL "''"" ......... _"-25-.... $J,t5 , .. .,.:J;Wt . ~!c:.-.··sa.•"----· LIVI lli'l'llTAINMllff DANCtN• Nr.tm. T 11=-=-=c~--=-~-~--~~~-~ -1••·················••A • • • • • • • • '• NOW APPEARING : RON : • 'SHY • DON KENDRICKS Co. 11 • • Laguna Beach 497-2300 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~jcocKTAILS ENTM TAINMENT Lunch-Mon. thru Fri. 11 ·.,m. to 2:30 p.nf. . Oinn•r--Mon .• thru Set. 5 to I 0 f .m. Co'"pllment1ry l1ll:H Al11k1 for 1/1 l lriW1)'i A1111iffn1tl11 ZMS H.llor llw<L, C.... M-141-9471 . ..-~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~-. . • COMPLITI DINNERS fOR TWO • .,..,.IAND7P.M. • ~· .. for1ht be!t Food -Cod!Nlls -....-..... --· .. Now App<arfng CHAPTER Ill DON-.11111-DAYI . T ..... y "°"' ·-1:45· 1:31 · Pf'IN,DAILT. •-llftst -, L-h -DI.,,.; --y .,,...h EARL T IUFRT DINND-43.25 lo $1.15 Salad Bar -Choice of 7 hot entrees Sunn,....... .. 7:31 ,..... M.........,~I· ,.Ill. 31106 COAST HWY •• SOUTH LA•UNA-4"·ZUl .....,.._.., ·MEA,DOW1ARK ' ' COUNTRY '"CWI Lark ltoom DINNER SP!CIALS Choice of S.11,. or Safe4 l•lr~ 'ot•t• or lie• 'il•f , e ~ QMfS. ltntl . . . --. .;,.;r,f; .-o...rt . WIDNISOAT -Top Sirloin StH k ----$1.H 'IMUISDAT -Primo !\ii> ------· tlM MIDAT -loof Slrog oOoff ---• tz.H SA1VIDAT-Toum..io. 011 .. 1 fJ.21 SU.NDAT-2 r..stor Tolls --$1.IO 0Nll99 «:_, .. ~ T-. ........... _. . JOE :Ll••INS ' . ·-°'=;''M&Vi .... ,,,.,.._.·,.,..._., .. 4M ~ " . IOllWJtUIAlllll tAt.._I ·HU1111 ... -...cl m41 -II• cJltt ~ ... I =-:=: ·~ tffill ~- .... ..,., 1trltA.M.,. 11:.101 forL -' s.t. It :JI A.M, ,. I rJ0·1- NOW AJIPIAalNG " VIC GARCIA -4 .... U MIDNi.HT "SUPElf:MEX" 909l E. ADAMS, HUNTINGTON BEACH 962.7911 ~. \.i.ci.d Collf°"'ltJ . -~ ~ or fmp<n'trd Wint• llnliled Hillt -. . . $3.51 fwrtl M°"""V Nllt: Ladk1 tellh KIC<Wt ff Prkt on an~ mmti ittm with TAU .td. Oflll DAl.T 11.ao ........ LUNCH Dli••- SHIP AHOY 11727-IO. COAIT HWY. ,IO. LM1111A (HIM -"!IOI MY) ... ll• ' • ' ' TH-E BLACK ·KNIGHT · ' ' ~ESTAURANT INTIMATE DINING COCKTAILS• DANCING SEAFOOD BAR _r ENTERTAINMENT Opmn Dally 10 A.M. to 2 A.M. Lunch 11:30 to 3 Popul~~nd JERRY LAMBUTH ' . AO IAST 17TH STRllT COST A MESA • MZ.2304 TOP SIRLOIN 5 50 • DoCK.A.101 • MAHI MAHI ... •-• ':--------.-------·. • SATURDAY I. SUNDAY PATIO BRUNCH • • CHOICE OF • t. H•llnOS IANCHllOS 51 75 . •a. ITIAll MS • J. MS-let W ,._ llTllnln ll•NCN MlllU .. • • t:AU POI IBllWATIOMS:-14a.11u • 1611 W. COAl1' HteNWAT -NIWPOIT llACN • , ..... ·-· ..•............ ~ ' I • l I /u DAJL V PILOT FridaY, Nowmbrr J, 1~72 Familiarity Breeds S""""ll Luncheon and Oinntr Monday lh••"ll" Sotun14!1. Closed Sundays Wt are locet.ct n•xt to th• Me y Co. in South Coast Plau. Jiii" ...... l40-Jl 40 By RODERICK NORDELL .(llf'l1HMI ~ Mtlllllw ~te Who's Lile b est-Kno wn performer on A ru e r i c a n television! While you're on tenterbocks about that, con- alder whether Walter Cronkite ls better known than Danny lbomas. Whk:h prlme-tJme speclal o( the 1'71-72 season had the higher audience rating -the Academy Awards or "World Series Baseball"? Which movie had the higher audience raUng-' •A Streetcar Named Desire" Cl' "Tarzan and the Jungle Boy'1! It's. Luoille Ball who gels a "total famil\erity score" of 9" to be designated m m o s t ' lfaHaa Cubine · CG4!ktaib 2325 E. COAST HIGHWAY 673-8267 Reservations Open Dall y -5 p.m. to 2 a.m. -cLOSED MONDAY familiar TV pttformer ln a Reasooer and Orson Wellea survey of viewers ail. years are neck IDd De<:k with '79'1 - ' old and older by Marketing the aame ~ u Audrey Evaluations Jnc., says Varie-Hepburn and Katharine Hep-ly. Crooldle and Thomu both gel 9'l's, preceded by a flock of bum, Feq Parker and Paul 93's such u Dean Martin, and Newman, aod teveral others. followed by such 91 's u Jerry 1 Who's last? Of 5 7 7 Lewis and llllchael Landon. (II perfor-. ll'1 Burr De Ben- you say. "Michael wbo?" n1ng with a 8. N~ hlgher Is you've bee.n watChlng too Cleavon Little wllb a 7 ·and mu cb PO)i~'.) Bealrtce Arthur with an 8. ll Nearest contenders to Miss seems safe to ~Y thlngs 1may Ball are CalOI Bumetl and change lllt. -· what wllh Johnny Ca.ah (97'1), ~Glen Uttle's new series, ''Tem- Campbell FHp WillolJ. and peratures Rising," and Mis• Bob HoPf (95's), and M's tn'.-Arthur ln the title role of -" "Maude." eluding F r e d Ma~urtay. Irene Ryan, Red Skelton, The li9t ls full of fillips 9\Jch Sammy Devis Jr., Lorne as veteran.s ~ & Ray having Greene, Buddy Ebsen, Doris the same seen (37) u pop Day. Bill Cosby, Raympnd beroes like Paul Simon and Burr. and James Arneu. Crosby, Stltls, Nash & Young. Variety warns that relative familiarity to viewers does not necessarily mean r e 1 1 t i v e preference or "faYOrites." '111.e marketing rirrn'• "Q" IOOl'e indicates viewer ~· One example obowl Antllany Quinh and Jack Carter with the same familiarity score (63). though Quinn has a Q score of 30 and Carter of 9. The nightly Johnny Carson has a familiarity score of 88, just one point above the com· paratively seldom seen And Ann Miller of I.hose old Hollywood musicals getting a t2 to edge out a current star IJ.ke Robert Redf<ird ( 41 ) . As for the prime-time specials, ·a c co r d i n g to Var"ty's llstingl,. the Oscar show was supr,eme I a s t season, with ' HWorld Series Ba$eball" ne;t, followed by "Miss America Pageant," a repeat~ ot "A Charlie Brown t'hrlstmas," and five Bob Hope shows among the next seven,.. contenders. Richard Burton. Gale Gordon TV'.s own it_wards show, the --~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~= ~ jtist as well known (85) as Emmy program, W89 down in -· Chet Huntle"y ; Peter Graves 34th place. comfortably above r -,-- -Chlo~ cui;in-; -, (64) as Ste" Allen. Harry "N'Wlll'S ~-from Olina," I /,/f.... OPEN DAILY 11 AM-II PM . CLOSllD MONDA'!' I OLD 1111 ' :. I •1!.'!'1'.!. SUMMER I MEXICA LI ~~;.!;!I .. ..._ LUNCHEON SPECIALS CAFE I 1\'-tt-I ~l!J12ztual[f; _,_. Wail Gre1t Mexic1n Food (.;.?~ I ~ · Med a... I 0,.. 11 .... te 4 •·"'-"Finest Mexican Food --• LUNCH e DINNER , In Orange ea.· I rm -·,1 ....... --1l-I A~T~ r~~s c; .... ~~:-;";,",.'• ~ ml I I 106 llc'9dM ..._. Cocktall1 I. PRONE.•• .84S.S550 N.wp::; :_:.•P9rt ":J'1.171f w :n::::~::.,, .. L ·• -I'S' EAST 17TH .... COSTA MESA I CM11.MeU ~-----~----- --~-==-=---· --,~"·:.::":r!.AW»I. PIZZA HOME DELIVERI.ES HAVE CHANGED A LOT SINCE THE ;.OLD DAYS Now Me·'n Ed's mobile ovens speed delicious plpinc·hot pim11 to your door In minutes. Torpt0mpl seM<opllone 646-7136 (Newport Beach/Cost. Mesa-17th and Tustin) /. / or 847-1214 (Huntintlb>n Beach-Beach and Hie!). -~ ..... tb ~' ROYAL STIAK0 0.IOI Cube• of fil1t mii;non Dll •k1w1r, w Ith pi1111ppl1, 11uuhroo11u, 9r1111 PtP· ,_, •Ml +-•toe,, AMOMe 21 llUCT DINHO Dml n VIN A HA•MER DUO E11t1rt•ln(119 SUNDAY BRUNCH tl001 DANA OfllVi OANA P'OINT HAllto'I ..... fff Ol~cOliM'4..-V -T...,n .................... """'** ' Contentment · ' . •anklni 19, the hi8hoal tl"blic affairs sho\1 on the Ust . "Search for the Nile," part> l and 2, was at 149 with part 3 somewhat higher. At 261 was "PGA Gold Preview,". right aJong with "Inquiry: Arm! and Security." At 271 "'Jbe NJmn Years" was M:xt to last, followed only by . j'Political : Sen. Jackson" on this list. AJ for those theafrical movies brought to T\' last season, "Street Car" was 851h in the ratings game, two places below '"Tanan and the Jungle Boy" al 83. The leader waa .. West Side Story," parts 1 and %, follow<d by "Guesa Who's Coming to Dinner" and "To Sir, With Love," both c:ootaining racial themes. Then comes "How the West Was Won" and World War II in "The Longest Day." And what movies were last? "Rapture," placing 222nd aod ''The Yowig G i r 1 s of Rochefor\;" :>.2.lnl. · In the Galleries Kachina Dolls at Bowers J!OWERS MUSEVM-2002 N. Main SI., Santa Ana. The Com· 1ng of the Kachinas, a display of authpitic kachlna dolls made my Southwest Indians, will be eihibited along with the Saga of Prehistoric Man, numerous stone tools used by prehistoric mari. CRAWS GALLERIES -1390 S. Coast Hwy ., Laguna Beach. Recent oils by Rex Brandt, A.N.A ., F.R.S.A., A.W.S. Oct. 1-29 daily from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Exhibited concurrent- ly will be aculpture by Johanna Jordan. COSTA"MESA CITY BAU -99 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. On ezhlblt, paintings by Dr. Fred B. Olds, Olga Steam, Cecila Coburn, Gertrude Mattocks, Fem Williams and Pat Shepard lhroug't November. MARINERS SAVINGS AND WAN -1515 Westc!Uf Drive, Newport Beach. On exhibit, watercolors by Marilyn Millar <K ~ Island through November. THE HATCH DECK GAI,.LERY -2630 "D" Avon St., New- port Beach. Watercolors by Harvey C. Adams through Nov- ember. Open Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday from 18:30 ment only. 642-7575 or 833-1178. f JACK GLENN GALLERY -2831 E. Coasl Hwy, Corona del Mar. On exhibit through today, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., daily, eolnr field painti.ogs~by-Allen-1r4cCallum, David Diao, Dan Christenserr and William Pettit. Also works in fiberglass and plexlglass by Ron Davis, Ed Moses and Tom Holland and wall construction of planed wood by John Okulick. GLENDALE FEDERAL SAVINGS AND WAN -5000 New- port Center Dr, Newport Fashion Island Center. Paintings by WWiam D. Vogel of Newport Beach. MUCKENTllALEI\ CEN1'ER -119 Buena Vista Dr., Fuller- ton.. Houra;.....Tuesday.&mday, 1--S p.m. Western art as col· rected by Westways ~azine during a 46-year period. C.Ollection emphasizes su~jects familiar to California resi· dents and includes the works of Merv Corning, Marv Rubin, Rex Brandt and RUBS Smith. ... · NEWPORT HARBOR ART MUSEUM -2211 West Balboa Blvd., Newport · Beach. Major retrospective exhibition of painting1, large watercolors and Chinese ink drawings of Reg- inald Mir11h, an important American artist &elive from the late 20a until his death in 1954. Recent paintings by Jerrold Burchman in the entrance gallery. m VINE CITY HALL -Room 200, Irvine Town Center, 4201 itn YEAR f.. AREA'S BEST TEMPLE GARDENS Cf"NS:S:SRestauranf RICKSHA COCKTAIL ~~~~~~E ' FeRtuMng Exotic 'I'roplca.l-Orlnkl IUfPIT LUNCH 11 :lD-1:JO Mo•day tlir• frktcry • 1500 ADAMS (.t Horhot-1 COSTA MIU 540-1 937 540-1 923 CULLY IS BACK AT THE PIANO BAR TUES., WED., TH UR S. & SUN. NADRA -Thurs., Frl and Sat STUBBS BROS.--Nov. 9 DAILY LUNCH SPECIALS COllllR OF PARK AND MARINE IALIOA 151.AllD 673-4530 Rel•••d •nd C.1uel lntlmecy ,.,.;Fashion Island Newpon Beach Campus Drive, Irvine. Hours: dally 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Impression. ist paintings by Hilda Allen of Irvine, a graduate of Pratt Institute and the Cooper Union,· New York. Through No-- vember. / occ F~CVLTY ART SHOW -'rl ace Art Center, 2701 Fair- view Road, Costa Mesa. On exhibit throogb Nov. 13-Dec. 8, paintings, sculpture, prints, drawings and ceramics by F.d- ward Baker, David Jotllls, Victor Casados, Charles Piner, Donna Sharkey, Karen Morwtaro, William Payne, Robert Krieger, Lawrence Le Brane, Wayne W. Tennant and Robe"rf • Cwmlngham. • AVCO SAVINGS AND 1.0AN -3310 Bristol St., Costa Mesa. Olis bY Dr. Fred B. Olds lhrougb NoV<mber. · BllENl'WOOD SA VINGS--1565 Adams, Costa Mesa. Acrylics bY Virginia Kling. COSTA MESA CITY ~ Fair Drive, Costa Meaa. Oils by Fem Miller and ~ Long through November. • COSTA MESA l.JBRARY -566 Center Sl, Costa Mesa. Olis, acrylics and dlarcoals: by Tony Marsh. CROCKER CITIZENS BANK -:mil Harbor Blvd., Cost~ Mesa. Oils by Inna Parker through November. DOWNEY SAVINGS AND W AN -3SI E. 17th St,, Costa Mesa. Oils by Venita Bolin, Shirley Ricllardsoo and Marian Ries. FIRST NA110NAL BANK OF ORANGE -16iifl Adami St., Costa Mesa. Olis by Fraocea steffen through N!"'emi>er· GLENDALE FEDERAL SAVJNGS-aoo llad>or Blvd., 0osta Mesa. Oils by Gordon Andrew. MESA VERDE l.JBRARY -2969 Mesa Verde Drive, Costa Mesa. Oils by Lucy Sanford through November. SECURITY PACIFIC BANK -196 E. 17th Sl., Costa Mesa. Oils by Gertrude Mattocks. TRANSAMERICA TITLE C0.-170. East 17th St., Costa Mesa. Oils by Carol Mc Rea through November. GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE -College Gallery, 1574' Golden West Street, HunUngton Beach. Paintings, drawings and photography by_ GWC art faculty on exhibit thrQug]1 Nov. 6--30. Hours: 1-5 p.m. Monday-Friday, 7-10 p.m. Wednelday. The art pleces represent recent work by Robert AI.defett.e, Harvey Clemans, James C.Ongell , Darrll Del>ert. Thomas Hawkins, Thomas Morgan, Kay Mortenson, Phillip Sopocki, Ronald Wood, and John Wordes. NEWPORT BEACB CITY HALL -3300 Newport Blvd., New- port Beach. Hours : daily, 8 a.m.c5 p.m. On exhibit through Dec. 5, watercolor, acrylics, oil, collage and mixed media by ten women members of Torarii Art League: Catherine Blair, Meryl Bonney, Gloria Brade.son, Janet Hilford, Louise Davis Lieber, Helen McClair, Helen B. Reed, Carolyn Schilling, Char Sharpless, and Rutb Andress Stone. ~M~ ANCHOR INN H04SE OF SEAFOOD NOW OPEN FOR LUNCH 11':30 to 2:30 T.... tin Fri. Nigh+ly Oinner-Cockta il1 '4 to I t p.m. Sund•y 2 to 9:30 pm-Clo1ed Mond•ys 1814 N. Coast.Hwy. !El Camino Real! SAN CLEMENTE 492-6571 ~~ •r•aAU Serwd Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday RED SNAPl'ER ....... ,, :. .. . . . .. 1.96 GR ILLED SEA BASS .. .. .. .. .. . .. 2.26 MAHI MAHI . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. 2.26 TOP SIRLOIN .......... ,........ 2.45 NEW YORK STEAK ..... ,, ...... , 2.96 LOBST ER TAI L ................. 3.96 STEA K ANO L<lBST ER ........ ' ... 4.95 ...._ ktclt1dl u/MI, g1rlit ch1118 tO#t. ..... of~,,_, or ric1 H...,;;., 1t?ll~C.. ............... , ......... 1213t•2·1311 .,_ • -• 6""111flJ I• --~---. ----···-----_._.,,,. ----... --------.... TV DAILY LOG TV HIGHLIGHTS KllJ Cl 7:30 p.m_: -"The Gr.,. !s Greener." Cary Grant,-Jean Slnimons, Deborah "Kerr and RobeJt Mitchum star in a '61 drama. . . KHJ &\I 12:30 p.m. -"Never on Sunday" stars Mel- ina Meroourl and Jules Da.ss!n !" a '60 comedy. Friday Evening Saturday Morning . . • -. '-, I . . ' Chicano .T-,_ eater Travels To Cal ate Fullerton T h e nationally -heralded farm workers theatre group El Teatro Cam~ wlll perform on stage Tbunocjay, Nov. 9, at Cal.ifornia State UnJversity, F)lllerton. The theetre gri>up Wilj perform at a· p.m. in the Little 1beatre, k>ca~ in the Music· Speech-Drama Building on the Fullerton campus. The appearance of the group is the second in the classical and cultural arts series "Innovations in the Classics" f!ponsored by the Associated Students. Tickets are $3, with a $1.50 discount for Cal St a t e students. The reserved seat ticltets may be purchased at the Associated Students box f"-obi«IM"' rM n1/ltfe #to illoni ,,.,.,,,, aOolil /lie-~"' ~-"""IOI""""" fir lfllir~ -------~------------ office on campus. Mail order requests are also b e I n g aec<pted. El Teatro Campeslno is e vintage theatre group that grew out of the Delano grape strike. "OUr primary aim Is to combat proverty and op- pression in tbe heart of the richest agricultural .valley in the world," saili organizer Luis Valdez. "We've developed a fast. paced, almost slapstick style of comedy using the stock charaeten of farm labor - the patron, the contractor, the scab, the Cann worker, and so on," he added. Valdez, the driving force behind the guerilla theatre movement, ls himself a pro- duct of a poor callfomla farm worker famlly. He reWll being shifted from oebool 10 oebool u his parents traveled be t w e e n orchards up and d o w n California. But he succeeded in putting himself li>rough California State University, San Jose, on a scholarship. He ma;ored in English and aft~, graduation in 1965 hurried south to offer bis services to Cesar Chavez, head of the United Farm Workers. "I wanted IO do something . for farm workers that would use my knowledge of -miUng and theatre," Valdez said. With Chavez's blessing the Teatro Campesino was born. Propositions Reviewed On Election Special Jess Marlow, KNBC News Voters will th\fl offer pro and anchorman, will host an hour-con argumenls on the pro- long KNBC Election Special, position explained by Marlow . Featured on th.e program "The Propositions," that will from the League will be Nan- analyze each of the 22 cv Arnheim, Hilda Nigro, statewide ballot propositio~, Evon Gotlieb and Darlene Sunday, Nov. 5 at 6 p.m., on Daniel. Channel 4. Thi:!! election, voters will be Marlow will take each of the asked to decide on measures ~ .. •-: .... -..... _ .. FridoJ, N-3, 1972 DAILY PILOT 35 Follow tlae Leader Robin Hood plans action against the Sheriff of Nol· tingham with his grave faced ~terry ?.len, the legen- dary band of honorable ouUaws who put Sherwood Forest on the literary map, in 4'The Legend of Robin Hood," an animated special to be presented at 5 p.m. Sunday on Channel 2. propositions and offer a submitted by the Legislature1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;il------~--- simplified explanation of the and by the people through in-,. • ., hlttluil .,._,....,,.,,, m e a s u r e . Representatives itiatives that qualified for the ® 10 Oii£ uttOE• 17 AOlllmo -;;;f;;ro;;m;;;;;t;;h;;e;;Le;;;;;aoiguiiiiie ;;o~f~W~o~m~e~n~bol~l~o~I.~~------;iJI (Afll U11Hffl\IY ¥11'J -I '" Ct!'llill ll'MS} ' P111d Poll!IUll Adver1lstment TONIGHT! •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• -..a D11-11i-- --~"'- ____ _,_ GEORGE C. SCOTT PETER O'TOOLE AVA GARDNER IN <•> "THE BIBLE" AUO RAQUEL WELCH IN "ONE MILLION BC" Moe. ,.,. FrL "'The ....... 7:15 .,.1y Cowt .. ••n Dow $cit. & s... ,,.. 2 ..... ' SENATOR GEORGE McGOVERN ADDRESSES THE . NATION· KNXT Channel 2 10130-11 po111. ...... fw "" ""' ~St!""" ca ... ._ <MllfttlM " ,... ca1w-i. 12Jf H. W.._ """ ~ ~ flm, Ml"'lll S, lllll'lrl. T,..._.,. WINNER!. S"ECIAl CHILDREN"$ PRICE ONLY$1.SO 3ACADEMY AWARDS flCCCPT FRIDAY,,, !>A TUAOAV ( VF,..INGS < ---CINEDDME 20, .. • ·--z:::.r-1:-:t. • --CINEDDME 21 .. ·~-·-' 1:"'1..., ---.. STADIUM I .. .-.....,....,. ... ----.. STADIUM ,7 . .. ~ . .........--. ----.. i{f4HIUM -.J .. .. . -.. --,, S!Af/!UM 1 .. -.. . - "1""9.,1.l•S Al• Pl•r fH> ..... "_ ...... ,_...,. -""-AV rT AIAIM, SAM'" •lldl!WN ••llllR I I Mtwflltl~ ..... ......,",~" .... ..,.IOOl.t:I .. TM• IOOll'"' ...V.•YTN1•• YOU ft'U WAllT'IO JO ..... ......... '"'WM•.... ,_.., .. C•l "'TMI ... enTVI_.. Cll .. --= c. ... "PLAT llltnY ,OI: Mr llJ , __ '"Tlll 1/'Al.ACHI PAnlS'" (II & T"' c.nst Ill "TN• tOITOJI n•.t.Nk••• 111 ... WllE'' ........ ~ ,. SEE McGOV~RN ON TV TONIGHT mm OUT WHY PEOPLE ARE TURNING TO IDM · 10:30 P .M. ON CBS AW9Mrl19ll ..,. ...,._ ttr ty McOe-lflr....,. C.1m.-.. c-.1'*· IJlt tt S!net, H. w. W1:R11"""", o.c .. JllM. •Mlorllll ,..,..,.._, T-r•r. ..... 2IO ... of '°4• A:'a -- 2nd llG WEEK ,....,.. .. I .,.....,.., ... ,.....,.., ..... t. U f,,Mll.11111 1 ...U•& WIOWllt_.,.....llt'ltl FOR FUNI PROFIT! BARGAINS GAL.QI(! V'-~~ .... ~ ~l~llllOllf lA.M.1t•t-"'l AtO..O.# !&#2l~IM I " l , ~ , • ' ' ' ' . } 1 )' . -. . . . ~ ~ ~ ~ . • • . . • • ~ ··-OAILV PllOT , s7 N-5, 1'172 D.iana Ross Sings Billi~'s Song In •'Lady' 111 11IOllAS PALMER Of .. ~,..- 11 Is a C1011UMn1 perhaps oo the statua ol women_, perhaps oo tbe status of blacU, th.at tbe o8me of Blllle Holiday does not appear ln a recent e<iiUon of Encyclopaedia Bri- tannica. Wilh the Increasing awareness of recent history in the (orm of nostalgia , howe)'er, that oame h a s become.. famlliar ,to more peo.. pie, if on!y as U10Clated with another tragedy In lbe Ille of a singer. . Billie Holiday's l i f e was formed of.a series of extreme highs and low., hsppilieu and sorrow, and. the movie that chronicles her times is rigid in that pattern. PARTIALLY -fictionalized, '1Lady Sings the Blues," now playing at the Newport Cinema at Fashion Island, is stin'ingly effective in making its audience feel the success as well as the helplessness and hopelessness in her Hfe. •Unfortunately. the technical • quaUty and modea <II ""'VO)' d"""' and ..,....wrlten ha•e ¥d this and otber .,.... clo- anc. have tbelr ups an1Uowm 1 fast-!*ced fl1m th.al ll an tract from the highly lnlense too. But ii the film's Cftaton epic. 'lllen> Is no etelPlni the c;odlbllity of most ol lbe film. attempted to st.U mort detail senUinentallty and the beauty But "Lady SingJ the Blueo," than comfortably Ou Into the ol a !>lack star rtalng In a • perhaps because It deals with package, it was sUU a valid ti'· whit&ooly world. a trac.lc figure, stands up fort that worked oo the moot TltO -mominla wm proudly with the i>e<t of dra- importont level -emOtion. _ ~~Ir 'lQllC<ntcated -1n 8_1. "'!'Otte movies of aay yeor ln The acting debut of Diana ...,,.. to ftl\ke the ~>nhoul' !Is depiction of the lady, In the Ross, formerly Ind singer film li&Jit.. Built stricUy for--depths \)I human condilfon. with the Supremes, was a lhe 1912 versloo "«. 1 1938 The portions dealing w I t h delight that overshadowed any star'•~ life, these efforts· dld the singer'• stn.ggles, mental quantity of depression present not translate t>qck~ · in or physical or bolh, were in th:& story. AJ the p~ time well. • , perfection both from lechni· llll>t~ ad1fise, Diana Rosa After Mlss Holiday .grew cal and acting viewpoints. is Billie Holiday. tired eoougb of her cleanup As Ml!a Holiday faded in a UNDER THE ~n of Sidney J. Fur!e, she makes her way through a moderately convincing adolescent Eleaoitr Holiday mopping the steps ol. a New York whore- house to a stwm.ing portrayal of a declining singer, hooked on morphine. w h i n J n g , whimpering abd delirious in the grim confines of a padded cell. Despite constant melodra- matic flaws of predictable, unimaginative scenes, the pro- duties to resort to ielling later scene, due to exhaustion, herseU, an ovetentmisiastic as her body sweated and <ried patron made her re~ pros-for chemJcaJ boosts, she kept tltutlon was not a life she singing until she coold last no could t?lerate ~ither. longer -and the voice, in· In this co~tr1ved scene, the tonation, distant stare, slurred customer qu1ck.1y peels· down d' 1. nd I' ht f . I t . ch to his Jong underwear, qever-1c ~a ~ 1g ac1a wit noticing that hi8 purdlue 'bas of pal~ ajl w~e proof thls was calmly, dressed and-is on her no ordinary film ~k, and no way out the door. average actress. Miss Ross sang a com- bination of Holiday songs, ("Ain't Nobody 's Btliiness But My Own," "You've Changed," WHEN HE runs into the street nearly nude after her the humor is not convincing I Costly Art -otben) I D d .. • feellnp of l lali:!nalkl& Ille typ0 bluet written for the Olm compa11ionately told. by Michel Legrand. And sbe From llUlle IJolklay's debut proved beraelf e rart talent of at Deon's In-Harlem to Ille voice in a style that'• DOI ulUmai.Jy flll!Wed dreal" - he... playlac Camogla Hall -thll lo chooalng to Include too lnterpretatlon I> adequate In much detail, ti"• to Ille -or hlalarlci1 -,uve Uc! I.rue Othe"flse, 0-, -Ible /,<.lo Ill, -<II a-unique - for t~ lllm -.rlly batl to aity. Blllle Hollat,y had m resort 1 ~ -utemivo !JJO of lift k> give when ahe di,d ii montap:11 diaiolves~ ll;til i 4.t ~very mUcb a victim o? die photognphs abd newspaper ' ' headlines to tell part of their. ~irapn.stances she rote above story. · · so often through her talent and IN THE main, these w e r e tastefuUy and effectively uaed, particularly in the f i n a I decline, aJTeats and death of the star. The simplicities in this mov- ing aC<Ollllt probably keep II from being considered a great film. Too many times an ogre melu at the aciuhd '°' the unknown blacl! S!Jiger's voice, and inslanUy, WlCOllvinclngly becomes an angel and hires her. NEVER~, "Lady Sings the Blues" left Jittle but ~Uls. In the encl the obllacles <II the era w..., too much, and those """ klol ...... the pe<lple .she left behiod. But the r<maklog of her llfe OD the screen bas unveiled a talent In Diana Ross that may be equal in stature. "~~Y .sings th& ,Blues," was produotd--by Jll)' wesioo and JBllltll S. White for Para- mount Pictures Corp. and Ber- ry Gonly. Opera Faces Money Woes • j ,. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Getting the public to enjoy and support opera just as it does the public library may solve some of opera's money woes, leading opera producers and critics from around the world were told here Saturday. 'lbe "greatest problem" fac- ing opera companies is finan- cing, said Schuyler.G. Chapin, acting" general manager of New Y o r k ' s MetroPc\lttan Opera. This includes the Met, be said, because even though its box office receipts have more than doubled in the last decade, its expenses have tripled. support in tblS coontry," Schuyler said. He aakl it ap- pears private donations to opera compf4nies are diminishing and predicted government ll'\USt begin to give more financial support. Opera is the most expensive art form , he said. because it embodies so many of the others Including drama, art, sculpture, s i n g i n g and orchestration. Erpenses for the Metropolitan, for example, have Increased from $7 .1 million In 1962 to $23 million this season. Even with dona- tions, the company faces an $800,000 deficit this year, he said. Opera More Popular In New\ Territories SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Adler's senUments were Willf•I Woman Chapin spoke to more than 600 persons Including opera directors, producers a n d critics at a two.day in- teniational opera sym)iostum hosted by the San Francisco Opera for its 50th anniversary season_ General director Kurt Helj>ert echoed by Louis Erlo, director Adler of the San FrapciscQ of Opera de Lyon, France, Opera proves to be a~ the who said, "In my experience most optimistic of those tat-we 'W'!ft· faced with audiences ing part in an internaUonal favoring traditional opera. opera symposium on t6e Therefore I was forced to go future of the art form. 'outside the opera house, to Adler and other o p e r·a factories and schools ... opera As the beautiful <!other woman," Bonnie (Barbara Parkins) talks with her lover to encourage him to carry out his plan in a scene from "Asylum." The Amicus production, now playing at area theaters, is the story of a young doctor who must interview four inmates to find the former asylum director. "We are approaching a very difficult . time, be~een the death of private philanthropy and the birth of government dignitaries from throughoUt companies must spend more the United States and Euroll" time In relating the musical participated in discussions en-dramatic art to our times.'' titled, "Opera T o d a y : Bul Ill'. Marcel Pra-, OI- PrObl .. -· and °""'~"." ~ ~ """"N ~ • .,.,.,_.~ "1'ClltiveprodlJCel'ofStaatsoper Adler told·a weekend Rssion and Volksoper, Vienna, Jiias at the War Memorial Theater, observed a Jong-term sbJff in "We fmd it easier by goillg out inlerest away from opera . to the unreached audiences "~ 1 was a youngster, who have no preconceived no-tions or preferences for ttadi-the most interesting thing British Movie Kicks Off Filmex · • A British f\lm, ."Tile Youn g Winston" and Robert Altman's "lmages". starTing Susannah Yorll..recipient of the best ac- tress award at the 1972 c~nnes Film Festival, will kick off th e Second Annual Los Angeles F.ilm Exposition . · Beginning Nov. 9, Filmcx activities include ':fl feature films, panel discussions and special programs t b r o u g h Nov. 19 at Grauman'• Chinese Theatre in Hollywood. Two other Cannes winners ........... OllWll l 1"'ur1.YAT IOTN CtN IMA . e Wl'flN!I Of 2 ACAOElll AWARDS! by Russian Andrei Tarkovsky. ''Chloe in the Afternoon," clirected by Eric Rohmer ("My Night at Maude's" and ··c1~ire's Knee" are also his work) will -be screened and "La Valee," a ftench film slarTing Michael Gothard and with a musical score by Pink Floyd, will have its American premiere. A love story with politics as part of the plot, "Tout Va Bien," stars Jane Fonda and Yves Mootand directed by OF THE FI NZl.CONTINIS" "LfVE FOR ...... Ce* tll nd BIG WEE "JOHN KNOWlH' CLASSIC , llST·Slllll Ryan's- Daughter l!1J'l BECOMES A CLASSIC "r.~1'J:::~~~~~~; .. •• -112 .A.'"""'' ... --· 1 SEPARATE PEACE 2o4 TOP A n tACTION HAROl.Dand <~ 0 MAI.DE IGPi IMHGORDON Blb CORT -=::- '" HAalOft S~ I ' Jean-Luc Godard and Jean- Pierre Gorin. Albert Finney v.•ill be shown in "Gumshoe," a British thriller directed by Stephen Frt!ars. "Dear Irene," p. recent Danish entry at the Venice Film Festival; a film made in Jamalca by Jamaicans en· titled '''lbe Harder They CCime"; and Henri Glaeser's "A Tear' in the Ocean" will have their Ameri c an premieres. One Week On~ JOE .COCKER ..,.. ..... ,,~ .-i ft•••••• ,. ... --"WOODSTOCK!! ........... s.t .. CIJ "W11 ........ 7:11 .., CMt.S...,,_J P.M. ~-........· /~WEEli ROS$BILUE HOLIDAY --- tl.o" Each year we a-••'-1-.. around was opera," he said. The latest work of Japanese ,.. • .. lllAWli director Hiroshi Teshigahara, our western opera productions "We had no radio or· "Summer Soldiers," reveals throughout the western states television. We spent our hdura the problems of a GI deserted to reach tbese new people. speculating abJut what artu in Japan. The script was writ-''Thia Js where the future of Puccini was writing f 0 r ten by an American, John our art lies. Opera must be 'Turandot', and go.! s i p 1 n g Nathan. the servant of the people, and a1>9Ut bow Richard Strauss we want to serve all these was coming aloog with "Anl-Canadian Paul Almond's people." · ~ ,. bella." · · "Journey" starting Genevieve•,;::=======;:::;======:;c:::====:;:; Bujold and John Vernon uses / allegory to tell the story of a ·• girl's struggle to find herself. Ice ·. skating everyday. MISA. ¥BH I HOf'Ptff Cllfrll 2701 HtrbcJ II .... et Adtm1 Coit• M•t•, Ctlif. 92626 Tel 17141 979- N11~1 !11~~~ II ~a~; Jim!! ~II 1~u~ ~1111w11 100ei1 ~111 low-YI':.!!.., ~(d<.~Q:f( j e:t"" @(f;o@@)~@ lit •k•1111ricer4 e "''..., cltert• 7 ft1hl•11 l1l11d, 11•wport ce•t•r 644.$070 S-'~1 --~---••UIB,18 -..can11 It" U(l.WN ot'lQ.1.S lPQ.-0 STARTS WED. Mow. ltlt ~~s "FANTASTIA' ~ PICMES ~.AlO>I cn:I EiWi' GalOf P"eerll OLANA~ Nl>DiSl'IGS M B.tJS-. cQo ~ euv DEE ........ :UAMS. 00·~ ~ Pl1'I01 F*redn~· ~ca.orl. APl4R~l l'IC1\.SlE !AJ· I CllllGHAl n.M'.)IAAI)( ...v.u...t&! °" i.IOIDNN ll£tO'ID$ "'° TN'IS I Im . I --~--·--2nd EXCLUS VE WEEK 2 •• AT ••N& PAIK "DAY OF ANGER" ' . . ' 'Tlll;D'f' CENTIJlllOKS' !!IC> -~ THIS MAY BE 'YOUR LAST CHANCE TO • SEE "THE GO.bEAJHER!' B.EFORE THE .ACADEMY AWARDS NEX'> YEAR. • ' • •• I l • • I ' ' ' I • j i I ' [ ' . l I ' l . . ' ~CK TRACY ' ' TU~L!WEEDS , : :. ~ ' , lQILY " CROSSWORD ••• by r-~ ~I . ' ~fROSS ~7 ActfHI Yttt~y's Pumt-loMd:, 1 HlrdM:N Betty-. him ~ 'JilCOUI fluid I HM'dng .,. Whir• buua v...-c6trte 10 Communlcltl !O "· -Mth • by speech View" 14 One of In 63 Part of "to 1nclen1A1i1n be" people 64 Cru1h 15 MeryTyler-forcibly 16 M1rg1riil11: 58 Feature of Informal tome 17 -·-mv in1ga:rln11 18 Potltion ln 61 Run out of C1n. football: gear 2 words . ti2 Noun ending 20 Met1lng tor 63 ·euff1krat mlfTYTnaking India; VIK, 22 Went first 64 Sharpneu of ,,. ~Jear.lnt 23 Lend --· language Movie VIP 24 Pin contain-15 Expffd 12 TekllC:op. Ing m11t 66 Active part 39 "°"''" COln9 40 Food ltor• rooms _ ....1. 42 We1ther conditloM Of 28 WelQht of people: 13 The&ter lnclll lnfor911I tection an 1111 'II Fall 11 17 Riv'r ot 19 Glow 44 Hu·rry f~z1n France 21 Farewell: "8 Enga;edfn • r1indropa bOWN lnlorrnal P:illlg .. 30 H1rold--: 1 Hev.: 25 Em"sion of 47 sen..,,., U.S. Arch1ic plll"t ltlim or~n ~ 2 D«:lllre" 29 Gontob9d •Low,. 34 Cott Port# poeltfYety lew: 2 wordll. humming m"*91 J Ut• c.n.ln 'ZI 0.1 wfdl 90t.lnd • Thi-; ... llOflinQ lntcieqltllttft IO Midi I hoi9- Poel,/ 4 P011lbility 28 Thlworting In-one 31 nw.."' I Electrlcll c~ "'' ~1=~ ..... . .. "' ... "'""' "' ·-,., .... 37 Blind•--.IS Sounded,11 m1terntlly • ~tttyo 31 -MM 1belt 30 Slg"1lf0t U ,_coridnll'tt: Yokum 7 Alfr1d ·-: help Comb. fomi 40 Doot p11n.t E"oll1h poet 'J1 Polltital M NotMlpic 41 N9Qflivt 8 Dry subdivlaion 68 8teWeM , word 9 Mon•UITY ' S2 Se1 e1gl11 67 Rtd -: 4Z lndlan of unit of -.~ W1nu .u.ta· C.npd1 C1m~ ' · urg1n1ly oom(tnlnlty Q DecMd 10 Very till ' 315 lnterjK"tlOn. II T..,c 45 kind of wbot ~;,;:_,,....,....,......,,°'.-lhock IO 'NtlCh lr'llclt 1 PEANUTS by" Tom K. Ryan by Al Smith UJCl<Y'FORMUTT 'lTllS IS NOT l'RIDAY 'TflE'ltllRTmllll/ ' by Dale Hale by Ernie BU$1t I'L.L HAVE A PISTACHIO ·1cE,CREAM ;CONE 0 0 0 NO, I FEEL ANE. l'P J U5T LIKE 10 iALJ( 10 · HIM FOR A MINUTE. JUDGE PARKER ... - • .j . DOOLEY'S WORLD GORDO / ~I MOON MULLINS .. -; ANIMAL CRACKERS ~ I I 5EE. by Harold Le Dou 11-1 by ........ 11-1 ( Friday, NovtmOer 3, 1972 IWU PIUI~ ·f1 by ROC)el' lradfl•ld ~"' sn::.-....-n'Jl"'f LIKI 1"" by Gn Arriola by hid JohR•• Y5s? wsu., "!Ml /IW3W~ ,,.....,,,_, 1'3 "°! :t l:llOW • LOl' OF ~llJ!40- 0C»IRIMR" AUlllll iMe11 "°'~et> I • by IOCJ« Ioli• -W.TI• ~lleff1 LJA.E •• ~1! 8GUID 1tl IM&:ll !IJl!MMiS I THE GIRLS ~. "Y•'l'I _. -U1oJ _, lot! 1111--I 1111 U.• .. .-.._ fh-e dd'• Wit" DENNIS THE MENACE • • - • j ' ' I • S.P£CIAL -FACTORY . PUR CHASI_ :~ · :. W "'ad• a great· tiuV OI' '. • I equip-· these \uxur\ous y trtiv• ped factory e•K. th ' and are p"-sint '· caTs ou . ti'•~' Sa"ingso"·toy 'h"g :vo0r chance to save _,...!, 71;MEWf0ltT ROYAL 'l'rftlll . , 4 nnna.,~"" UU'll' , t r·i-Power brakes, ra~ . . t t" pDW8f I ff ,...,, V-IN.au'°"'• ic, "d 111 air conditioning plus diootleeter, whit• s1 ewa , ' N CL"4\-M2C·2blll09 5,,, o. - J:,kE YOUR P/Cf 1 ·s '72 l'LYMOUTH GRAND COUPE 400 Cu. In., vt, autom.tlc, power: 1tffri':", JMnl!f' brakes, AM/FM radio, vinyl top, ct.luxe trim, cru11e control hHdllght, time dsl•y •Ir conditioning, plus mUCh mOre. Sir. No. PP2J-M2D·J411 IO -. ...---'69 PONTIAC '67 SUNBEAM At 1 •I Senfca ..... CATALINA ALPINE .... wek•"'" ... ~ •IOf'. M.T. Vt, ~ • ,.. ......... , ....... .,. I ... eft ClltTI• C..,_.. N a, llrllM. WSW, 1lr 4 '"" tr~mlultto ceM.. ' • ....,. ..,. out MDO tU•Y ) > \~ .... ldel ··~·· ... $1095 $595 . -;;;. 'f I c ........ .., \ ... , ............ ........... ,. ..... ·~. w.-........... '68 OLDS '66 CHEVROLET . c\ooio. _........... 1JE!.TA 88 IMPALA ----w. .....,.,lir, ,.. ............ .. ,, ....... ~ = t'"'1llt ............ 1"'1 ..... II. VI, 1.,._llt, ''" "9W ......... 1lr ri;;-,1~. wsw. uuta __,i;tltAlftl. , tWK01'nl I -··· $895 $595 . truly fin• au~ on • ·11ht · bite. fir1t com•, . choice. . '66 CHEY. 72 '67 FORD' - NEW YORKER ·CAPRICE BROUGHAM WAGON 4DI'. H.T. ve, • ..-.1k, r• c-trt SWI,., Ye, ,, .. VI, ""'91Mllc, rldlt, .... , • ......... " . .....,.~ mttlc, , ...................... er, •Ir CMC., ¥111'(1 fet. ....... _,.. ... ..._.,, WSW, ''"""" 11111 ltr ..... WSW, (6M7t.llt1Jtll 1lr ttM,J ~ .., llM 1\f cMlllllll111h11. ITYW1Ml ILTI ... , $595 ·. $4995 5795 " '66 FORD '69 miE '68 Pl YfllUTH MliSTANG 2 Dl KARDTOP SAJEWTE vt, ....-nc, ,..... ....,.. ... ,._ ...... ·-' '"""'"'· ...... "' Ir- I *· M.T .. VI. """"9tk, ........ WIW, •lll'tl litjl. mlt1118, ~...,,.,,llltl ........ ..,. ,...,. "--__.. ...... ,.,.,.) Wiii ti,.._ I Llll111 ~ •Ir ClfMI., Wlll'tl .... ·~ t Dt:llll $895 .'9-95 '5795 I . -. . . ....... _,_ " . ... / . J • ... -.-''' •oA• o IMM'El>IAtE '.·1Jtt1VE.RY~~- -• I· ~., =~ ' . ' . ' . . . •• ·: • . . . 1· J ·' ' 1.. I. • ,.. . • """"'~-~-~· :-....~,, ·.· , ' ' ' ) ,I ' IN~~RNATIONAJ:/R TRAVELA'f.L8 . . . ' . Loaded l"llh delux• equipmon'i:-VI, out~/1, olr/cond., duol ·~~vst ·1y1t., r.cllo,1 tfff..loc--auxll&try t•nlr, bucket H•ti/ . . ' ' ' . . ~ w/console -Under coating -custom Int .• custom exter1or .... Sir. Ho;-ll?007H241476 ' ! ~ • ... ... . . ., ·------· '· ·:: ... .. r I j .1 ' 1 ·1 :! I " . . . . . CHEV. · •di,, .. 1-, ~ 1 , IELAIR 4J ~1 0 outo. trans. loctory olr Conditioning, llO""ff -• sreerir1og,radlo,h«iltr,litenufilo.6648fP, · "-. . . - ' : -. FORD . . I it" . -· ,, ~ '•, ' • CUSTOMSOO ~ , 10 V-I. "'°· '""· ,;, "·"";,,;,,,pow" 148 8 J .'. . sle~irig. rodio. heo1et. Liten&t 7688NX .· ' ·-. PLYM. FURY Ill , . ''70 .... ,.. . $14 , V-8. ouro. trons, foc1ory oircond1tionin9 , " -' pow&r s!Hrll!Q. License NO. 8'19-AZW , . . ~a FORD : ,J-7 2 VEGA W~G~N $' ~ ' Rodoo, hearer. lully loctofy ~ipped. littn5' • No.752-£AE I .,. ,. I . . . • ~ J • • '. · 1 FORD GAL •. '' 1 · 500 $ ' . if , V-8, 1111'° tront,. IMJWIC' ..... FACTORY 11 AJt (13 11Zi) ; . . .,. . l . '·CH· E-V ' ' ' · · , .. . , I . .. ". . ' • 1 ''t:'" • : ' . . • CAMAIO ' .• ' .,,. . : ';""'"'Jo. ... ~., ""." "'."'11'""'""""'"""· $9 8 8-, I '\ VGRt4:0i _J. • •• ..,. ' . '•· • ,..., '• • .. • • F , ..... ., ' .• ' • . ...... .,,., ... ·"" . . -~ / -. .. 11.5,•':,.; ,~iy,-~l;li~ .-. ·._$.,.··a· a·, ' ., ... :,. LAND CRUISER s19a· , -;-'~ , ~ 1Y.:j;Mo. trans.. foc~l,C:..itioning, poW. • • ;. ·,' • ~ 1 ": •Wheel Drivr. !~~~~tciol wt.His' 7 ' ' ' dHring, rodio, healer. License No. YltN 380 ' ' ~ ' ' rires. lictnse No. TYW-16S '' ' ' ' ' < 1. I • ~ t ,. /6· 9· -c!s9!fsoo $1. ·O· .· s·a· . '6. , iLCAM1•0 :$ 188' ~ , V-8. OUIO. ll"Dn$.., oir tondirioning, tuil llO'Wtr • ., V-8, OUIO. Irons., oir tondi1ioning. power power st~ radio, hlatw, LUnse No • ............... ~~ ........... " .... -~ •.• lie~.·.·~ •.• ~."".'.................. ... •• ,~.,. .............. '!liii .......... .. " ::D -FORD COURIER witli ~PERllS VALLEY SHELL CAMPER ·. ' .. ' I , ,. ' . • ' ' l '• • ! • I : ' ,_. . '~w l ' ,, . ,. llAllD llEW COMPLm CAMPER PACIAIE '72 FORD F250 314 Tll PICKUP CRUISE-0-MATIC. OPT. RATIO REAR AXLE. 800xl6.S PLY H.D. TIRES, HEATER, DEFROSTER. (F2SBRP49531) WITHA :: 11D8' DELUXE CROSS COUNTRY CAI. OYEI CAMP El (#5555) .. ' IM~EDI! • ·DELIVERt Frida)', Novembfr 3, 1972 > • DAJLV PILOT CLIARANC• PRICED ,, • ~72 PINTO I FACTORY AIR . ' FACTORY AIR V-8. OUIO. troos .. power Sfttr- lng, racfjo, he<iter, Like New. (816£AN) IMMEDIATE , DEL•VERt . " CLEA•ANCl-PJllCID . '72 GRAN TORINO FACTORY AIR V-8. oulo., p. steering. vinyl interior, radio. heater,.~ woll t1te1. Like Ntw (014RD) IMMEDIATE DELIVERY . CLIA~NCI .PRICID '72MUSTANG fACTOITA.R v ........ -. .. -.... ........ -. l;l..tllow. (36~) IMMEDl~n Dll.IYllY. . \ • ' ·j DAILY PlUJT Eve ryon e H11 Something' lhat Someone Els e ·W onh DAILY · PILOT ·CLASSIFIED .Ml>S You C1n. Sell It, Find It , Tr•d• ll With a Want Ad ' ' l ·rhe Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial. 642-5678 for Fast Results + • 4 • • ' I ' ~ l~[ _ .. Wt I~ General I • General ofJ"Ja "J6£ PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES • SHOWN BY' APPOINTMENT 3 Linda I 1le Drive Beautiful ne'v 5 BR., 41h Ba. home. \Vater- front living rm. & formal dining. Handsome oak paneled Cam. rm., irplc, wet bar.µrge master suite has frplc. & cozy lounge area. View of Bay & the mountains .... $179,500. 53 Linda lila Drive Elegant 5 bdrm., 4'h baths; on lagoon. New carpets, drapes & wallpaper. Lo11ely garden & large slip . . . . . . .. . . . .. . . . . . $212,000 57 . Linda lslt Drive -Open Sunday Cust<>m 4 BR. 8'h ba. home on Lagoon. Motr. BR. bas sitil,;g area & frplc. Waterfront family rm w/conversation pit around the frplc.; lovely garden. lge. slip. . . . $°189,500. 101 Linda Isle Drive Lovely S BR., 4. b a. home with downstairs waterfront mstr. suite &: lge. game rm. or study. Mexican tile floors, beam ceilings, quality construction, slip .......... $155,000 For Complete Information On All Homes & Lots, Pluse Call : .. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-4161 General General CORONA DEL MAR 221 Orchid SPYGL~S HILL 3801 Ocean Birch I HARBOR VIEW .HILLS 1529 Keel Drive ' 1500 Keel Drive 3500 'Surf view Ln. HARBOR VIEW HOMES 1972 P<>rt l!e~urne LINDA ISLE $86,500 $122,000 $79,500 $119,500 $74,500 $69,500 •54 Linda Isle Drive $289,500 UNlVliflSITY PARK 17652 Ash Tree LaljO $43,000 LUSK HARBOR VIEW Harbor & ocean view; 4 BR.•, fam. rm.; large lot, extra private yard. OPEN SUN. 1·5. 3500 SURFVIEW LANF;. $74,500. Paul Quiet ~ r -. ~ :i.. _. . . . FIRST TIME OFFERED 1529 KEEL DRIVE .-OPE:lf SUN. 1·5. ,4 ·BR , 2 ba's., fainlly-.rm., formal DR, Van· Lull wall covemngs, lush landocaping. Fee land. $79,500. Gary Knox · LIDO ISLE -NIAR CLUB Enjoy Lido way of11Ie, Incl, corn!!. of resort & resid, living. Te.nni1, yachting &: club activities. Charming 4 BR. at $76,500. Char·•' lene Whyte. JUST WHAT YOU WANTED! II Large 4 BR, 3 Ba .• lam. rm. -all on one Door. Desirable WESTCLIFF .area. Big pooll)ze yard. Out of stale move.FORCES SALE. Call Bud Austin . 2500 SQ. FT. TOWNHOUSE JUST LISTED -4 BR., 2'h ba,, lge, lam. rm .. sep. din. rm. Short walk to pools : end unit on lovely greenbelt -nice! -$48,500 "Chuck" Lewis , . ENJ OY FAMIL'f LIFE . . . to the fullest, Jn this 6 BR.. 4 bath, Z. sty. Lusk H.V.lf., an exceptionally fine home [or a family wanting tbe besL Jim Muller ·y~R~BLUE ~·VILLA? A perfect r1)0t with tliilills, J_s. private beach street'. 2 BR., 2 ba. lliHd deck. ln s~ess cond. Incl. lumlture, '62,500. George Grupe ' , . CHOICE WATl.ltPRONT Vacant Jot on 60' of white sandY bellCb. Lovely vie"' & quite exclusive neighborhood -now is the time to build ! $52.950. Marcia Bents BIG CANYON VIEW LOT (deal site for spacious &: elegant home, ov• erlooklng fairways & greens. Priced attrac- tively lo sell today! Call Bob Yorke PRIME LIQ9 NORD ' I BR. bayfroot, with tpllct ior large boat. Residence has beeb neWly decorated & 11 immaculate! Step-down 1wet ~or, ne,., f)ln- eled family room. Eileen Hlil1on ' . t TAKE YOUlt CHOICE AT HARBOR VI EW HOMIS I Bedrooms, 2 baths . .. . . . , . , . . . '511,960 5 lledn>oml, 3 baths .. . .. . .. . . . . te&,000 I Btdroomslt2\!i bal.hs ..... , .... , "9.500 Howanl We • . --Coldw•I!. .... ~ 550 Nl~llT CINTIR DI!., N.I . HARIOR VIEW HILLS A FANT AsTIC sweeping ocean VIEW from tbe lop of Harbcir View·Hllls! Large 5 bed· room home with upstairs r u m p u s room, downstairs family room paneled Jn Iwturlous Rosewood, formal dining room, popular patio·kitchen, heated patio wllh thousands of dollars worth of Spanish tile plus large. heated pool. a jacuzzi, 2 fountains & even a fire ring. A fabQlous home on a fee simple lot, pr~ced. below replacement at $125,000 CORONA DEL MAR Spacious 2-story home on the ocean side of the Coast Hwy. Only 2 blocks from the big beach. 3 Bedrooms plus family, room & form· al dining room; Open beam ceilings & built· in kitchen.' An exceµlnt Yllue al $7),500 CAMEO SHORES Over 3,000 fl. o! beautifully decorated home with 4 lge. bdrms., dining rm. & pool. The view is great - a "MUST ~EE", al $125,0llO . BAYFRONT BEA1nJ · · VIEW ' .. ' FANTASllC , NEW~RT l$6t750~ 2200 IQ, tt. ·~ Jn better than new c.'ODdlUon! .f bed-- nlOmll, 3 balhl. --. room wl~ tnlPlrihc fire- place, addltlonl.l ftrtplace in 1oYely 11&1. '. llvtna room, all electric "Award" bullt in kitchen. Pauo overlook• gorgeous rear yard • plcture- pertect land9capl!"-e. Bkr, M0-1m. TARBELL • 0 0 0 •• •• * BAI.BOA IUD * OPEii SAT/Slk 12 TO 5 542 SO. BAYFRONJ ' Brand new, exclusive llaUng. Ema Iorge1 immaculate 4 bdrm., completely furnlsbea waterfront home plus apt. ,180,000. Excellent terms. SAUSIURY REALTY 6n-6too 315 MARINE AVE., BALBOA ISLAND -··-Gtnttol • COUNTRY CLUB R-2 LOT 81xl57 Feet· with panoramic fairway view in exclusive LaCosta. LoCal phone: 1·729-6824. $43,600 60 Ft. on the best bayfront:, witb a lovely 5 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii. yr. old home -4 bdrms., don & many cus-, tom features you will appreciate . Shown by , . ~ ( . ·~ HARBOFI app'l. ._ BALBOA PENINSUlA , ' Enjoy the bay, the beach, tennis & boating from this sharp 3 bdrm. home -Only $62,500 I' ' ~· ' .. .,...._. INVESTMENT The area's top professionals are at you• service . 675-38118 • ON THE ROCK-TURTLEROCK THAT IS! Majestic home located Jn the most developed section of Tilrtlerock. Spacious four bedrooms surround an airy atrlum full of ferns. Trees and landscaping are mature and manicured. Shag carpets thru-0ut, COMPANY REALTORS I .. 2841 E. Coast Hwy., Corona dol Mor "Selling Real Est•te Jn Newport Har.Mr Since> 1944" 673·4400. General * * * * * * TAYLOR CO LINDA ISLE ~$245.000 J,uxurious custom built 4 bdrm. home. Yam. rm., lge. game rm., formal DR. & 4'h baths. Wired for Hi-Fi thr_uout, electronic oven, cus- tom cplng, & drapes. Pier/slip for 65' boat. . , BIG CANYON COUNTRY CLUB Beautiful near-new 4 bedroom reatdence in this exclusive area surrotlnded by elite B. C. Country Club. Sunken collversation area .ill living rm . Lge. dining .ri.i., f llJl. 1rm. with frplc. & n11ny extra leailres. ·View of uea & golf course. Priced right at .... $U9,000 ''Our 27tt. v .. ~, WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., R•ltors 211 t San Joaquin Hiiis Roacl- NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 ft BAY ' --------------------- General Gener ii ~-S~ ~·aams REALTORS 2828EA8TCOASTl9GHWAY CORONA DEL MAR.CAUF. 644·7270 VALUE CONSCIOUS ? ? ... •.. HOW ABOUT THIS ? ? All wrapped up in this 2.STORY 4 bedroom, 3 bath home. HUGE rumpus room that will talfe your pool table. 2 brick fireplaces, built· in kitchen, large yard &: room to store your boat. VA NO DOWN ................. $89,950. LOAF IN THIS . • . , • • • LOFTY TOWNHOU~E Enjoy this two-story rownhot11e and your own private patio. Larae, loft master suite & blth upstairs, l bedroom & bath down· stairs. Bvlltin Kitchen. A luJ>'l>lace to live for only . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $28,000. AUSTIN-SMITH , GORMAN & ASSOCIATES 644-7270 Gener•I General General Gener•I ~~l ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•I NO YARD WORK e CONDOMINIUM LIVING e FOUNTAIN VALLEY AiiA Patio -Pool -Tako It •y Low down -Low ~p1iymts on · all • 3 BDRlll. very nice, l 'h BA $20.500 lk over FHA $135 + $22 ml or nu loon • 2 BDRM. vacant. clean $20,900 dbl garage, 1 I'> bath, patio e 3 BDRM. l 'Y• BA. vacant $25,700 new shag, dbl gar, dbl snk Jn bath • e 3 BDRM. l % BA, lux living $25.900 tk ovr FHA In $157 mo + $27.50 mtnc . dbl gar. patio, dbl snk In batb · e 2 BDRM , 1 I'> BA, lrg mstr bdrm $22,5-00 comterfull. lk ovr $118 FHA or n~ In INFORMATION BY PETE PETERSEN OR SALESPERSON VILLAGE REAL ESTATE s31.saoo · 531.5ao1 . ~~~ THE ROOM AT THE TOI' General OCEAN VIEW PARK· LIKE t.a euc .... El Dando Modot 50;.; DOWN! ......... , ........... lam!· ..... lY room with fireplace, and ll~D SPANKING NEW! fonna1 dintng Rtta . and OnJy 4 -2 story homf1 left! 13IXI tq. fl . Up!ltain ready CWSE.OUT SAi.Ei Crack!· fur cornph~tlon aa huae rum-Ing hrrl'k fircplace11. Sttp pus roon1 11 d d It Ion a I r1own llvlni:t room andiFAM-bedroom~ 0 n1MI lleths _ nr! l/.Y ROO:O.Vi~ 4 big' bed- Bued on current haM>prlce l'10m!I. Lllundry rooms. Of new unltt1, replaoement Qu11l11y rcn1cnf drh•cwll)'11, cost of thi!ii h111nr \11 av1>1v:<. too! Try 5',;. 00\VN! $47.500. Owner lransfert"C'd i>Rlr ED TO SE.U.. FAST! and will 1Cll lor $45,500. S:.i.lnl to s.31,250 OR MAKE P1e.t1f! phone MG-2313 !or AN o•~•-~R! can now more \n(OntUl.tlon.. mov" in btfo~ Xmu - W>Q303. . -· 1111:1 'I I Ill \II \ Fixer Upper Mesa Yarde $28,950 4 BR 2 BA, cul-de-sac lot (huge), and you can buy at 5".4 down . . . a REAL opportunlfy for !he handy man and v;ifc. V.1can!~ Can 8e<' any time. Newport •I Fairview 64Ulll YESTERDAY'S PRICE Located on a qulet Mesa del Mar c ul ;... d ~-1a c street. Shows like a model with decorator wallpapers and lush deep pUe 'carpets. Comple~ built-in kitchen. P~k 1llce. .fenced rear yard. Heavy shake root, fireplace. Three 1pacious bedrooms plus family l"OOm. Belt of ALL -Just $34,950. Sud- denly ttl 1970. C. F. · Colesworthy & Company 640-0020 23 UNIT!! COSTA MESA • 2 BR Condo, C.M .. $22.950 I $350 000 • 3 BR. Pool, Cnllegc I • Park ••.. ..... . $32,500 EX CLUS IVE WITH •3BR Horne ·+. lncorne -· ........ $43,750 * DUPLEX ,tr. BACH Apt . . . .. . · · . . .. $41,500 * 1 Acre, Eutslde. Room J:ll' unill -•.•••.• ·~1m 9:f21 al . FOirvlow 64Ul1'1 (anytime) ----------- "'sUBURBIA PARK I YON · SPANISH B G CAN ONE-STORY 'COUNTRY CWI Liv• in °"" ot the moet Newport'• moll exclmlve ad-desirable neighborhoods ln 4rea l'\&ll"ded entrancell for Huntington Beach. Posaib1y your l&fety. Beautlrul 4 the tint resale of Oli• model bedroom home w\th thP i 6 t ... _ • •-1 ol ~·~n•~ A n yn., cat .... ""6 ;, •.LU0;9 "'"" ... bitlrooms,-tamlly room W... and Pl from evey lonnal dlnlni and 21.i tiotd w\ndow. I) Roya.I St. Very d09C to 'elementary Georgt -<>Ptn Houte. SIJ. M:hool, park, tennis oourtt. HOME-N· INCOME lhuvl to find lnC'lml" Unllt tn NEWPORT '' {' I r h I •• tdeAI tor °"''*' occup9ncy and you own tht land. Va')' Sh&rP Condltkirt. All 2 BedrOoi'n. I Bath. Front ud SUn. 1-6 Call rn,....122S. bt!Af'h IU1d • h n pp In I · Clu..... ~ """'""'"'' 5'!l'' VA loan. woo~":t:r~ -Q ,?1 \jlll =::=:~· ;·r~,~~ '''"'""'"' 11...i and ''""" ••--,~ ~~THll: R&AL~ ~~"'=-for ·~~ COL WELL l>CIOP\ATll ~ If.If Rl AlTOP:t ------~-1 • dubbouae dH1ped with "1'JllHAIT 0' ·~ (OlWIU. co. a:a,;JLT. .. llaibllllf to wpt to a wide OWNI~' LEAVING amt "fi71;l' -.. 1'lqtllmnenU -• d I n I n r , entertt.lnmenl, S •:A Tl · ......,11on, wmm.n •• i-1y s BR ••m• SPANISH DICOI Ntmtt. All utlllllet ln and dHlplted for boml!ll'IHI, orlltnaily bultt .. an ~x· · on quitt ttrM1: JD Garden dulw country dub wtth CroYe-s:a::.IOO. btautttul olymp\e 1I11 d ~ IWfmmtrc pool, ~ 11 11>,000, ean s.tm lNVESTMDtT DIVISION Reolton NMTu ~ WettcUft Dlivf Op<-·n '!Ill 9 PM a large forJ1)al dining room and a fireplace are included. Stroll 200' to.~ the olympic size swimming pool and tennis courts. This one is a winner. ENTERTAINMENT CE~ This large home on three Peninsula Point )ots is yours if you...iieed seven bedrooms, six baths. Upstairs ~ room and sundecnour -car garage, beautiful tUed courtyard and l!JlllY other fealul'Os. Lo- cated one block to bay or. beach. Was $185,000 -Now at '128,000. , • • DOWN TO SEA THE DUPLEX l!eautlful oceanfront duplex right on the sand. A delightful quieter stretch of beach. Large sun deck a neat dwelling for beach living. YES! NEWPORT IEACH'S FINEST VIEW You will stop looking when you see this beautiful home that has a view that reaches forever. Bl6-B 16 Jot, 3 bed., 3 ba., brick patio and lots of brick in tbe kitchen. Watch the boat pMades and ocean sail· Ing. Willing to trade or you name it! Offered at $70,000. Open SaL & Sun. 1·5. 6 ~Nn'S -NEW! . 6 beautiful deluxe aparttDJ:llt•. )Vlth one over the garage Witb a peet - a-boo yiew of the ocean-al\d large sun deck. Only 1 short bloclt to the boy: '175,000 with terms ,and owner will consider trades -aub- mit all offers. Great tq'sbelter, , " ""'. · RARE WESTCUFFI ~ Wel(~inted 3 bedroom home, 2 batb1n tbe 'very best neighbor- hood. Ni Cely arranged .arourul, a private pool for outside living. A corner lot. ' MONACO? Panoramic view -on a clear day you can see Mexico. Closely located to dQ.wntown LAGUNA. Beautiful home with 2 adjoining lots -tbls is a jml -call now. FAIRWAY -ME$A VERDE On· tj!e gQ)f course. Large deluxe home wltb 4 bedrooms, family room, dining room, and kitchen wt.th breakfast area. Plus beautiful cov.ered patio, atrium wiurfJ'ater fall and many other features. • •• EASY FINANCING! College Park! Beautiful 3 bedrbom, family room, 1 o/4 bath, one own- er, adult occupied, College Park home. Only '33,500. , LOTS OF CONDOMINIUMS .. -HEll'S O~(I , A condominium -Relax & enjoy $250,000 recreal!onal CellJer in- cluding pool , putting green, adult lounges, hobby rooma, and teen cenlel. All this plus large 4 )>ed., family room, 2'h bath home with fireplace, nice enclosed patio, newly ln5talled. continuous clean-Ta~ pan oven, Kitchen-Aid dishwasherL_only $32,800. 10% down terms available, and IMMEDIATE POSSE:;:sION FIX'EM .-UNITS! 3 units -good location -wonderful potential. Only $48;000. SHOPPING CENTER ? Low management Costa Mesa Shopping Center. Less than 6 x Gross, capitalization rate over 10%. $250,000 . OPEN HOUSE DIRECTORY 4 bed., 18962 Rael¥ Dr., Irvine. $51,500. Sat. & Sun. 1·5 4 bed., 1783 Panay Circle, Country Club Dr., C.M. $115,000 . 64M040 Sat. & Sun. 1·5 . 4 bed., Condo,, SS4 Tours Lane, C.¥. '82,800. 645-4040 Sat. & Sun. 1·5 S bed,. 1101 Esaex Lane, Newport Beach, $61 ,000. 645-4040. Sat. 1·5 3 bed., 1311 Kings Rd., Newport Bch. $100,000. 745-l040. Sat. & Sun. 1·5 7 bed., 1511 Mira Mar, Nowport Bch., $128,000. 645-4040. Sat. & Sun. 1·5 2 + Den, 892 Loolioul .or., Laguna Bch. $110,000. 645-4040. Sun. 1·5 "REALTORS" S,IRVINa GRIATIR NIWPORT HARBOR AREA MEMBER MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ·' • ,. ,· ' 'i it if ,. ;f i~ " 1;; •• " ' .. ~ i'f ·~ 1· 1"1 l·l " /, 1. ': '' f I / • f ~ldaJ, Howmber J, 19n DAILY-PILOT fJ t • • •• Tuke adVantage of .Colwell in these 6ways: 1 2 Your Colwell agent will do all· the 1egwork. Handle all the paperwork .. Worry about all the details. And-show you property only in the locations you want. In your·price range. With terms you can handle. 3 And-take care of all escrow details •. ~ And-put togethe,.the entire financing ~package. 5 6 And -offer insurance programs that protect both you and your property. ANO -guarantee the sale of your present home or advance the down payment that tets you close the :.ale on your new home. . ( : ·'. PRESTJGrHCIME CITR~S GROVE HEIGHTS Exceptioriol 3800 sq. h. floor pion.~ Bdrms., huge family rm. & studio, Beoutiful londicoping, 18 x 37 htd & fUrered p ool, circular drive, 10419 Deveron Or., Whittier, 1 block north of Beverly Blvd. ju5t off 605 fr11ewoy. 714/63S.4530 FROM A TH RU C· NEWPORT HEIGHTS TRIPLEX-FEE LAND High Demond Rental Area. Very desiroble fof awner4 occuponcy. Wolkln9 dislonce to Schools and Shopping.An 2 &edroom, I Both. front unit hos fireplace. Wood $iclinQ, Shake Roof. Decorative Brick. We.J I londscoped with fnc!o1ed Poto. Offered for $58,.500. Coll 6"46-0555. All THIS FOR ONLY $25,000 QUICK OCCUPANCT OWNER MAY LEASE-OPTION Spacious Huntington Beach Home in !he Magnolio, 4 Hamilton Areo. Clo1e lo Schools. Space for Boot or Troiler Storage . 3 S.droom, 2 Baths, fireplace. Offered for $3-4,950. Coll 646-0555. r LA MIRADA WOODS " '' .. ,. ' . -" •-_..;: OCEAN 'FRONT! Mognifjcent 3 bedroom, 3 both home on Coronci del Mcir't. Big Beach. Lovely spl it level design w ith lwo 1eporcite enlrances. Private '1t!pl leod to you r own bothlng beoch, The view from every room 11 oulslonding. Carolina is just • long sw im away. Coll 67>7225 ONE STORY CONDO Beautiful 3 bedroom, 3 bath tJome in alovelygardeft Age·3 l /'l'yeors young.Anumable mortgage with law down.Available now·vCJcontJ Bonus room up1tair1 25' )( 11' with close ls cind bathroom. Cleon and convenient to .._.erything. Covered polio. 3 bedroom• and l 1/2 bath. A ffoc9ntio pri11e at $32,000. Coll (714) 870-4040. 3 bedrooms, 2 bath, dinif'IQ room, stone fireplace, gOCJd neigh borhood-even room for the camper-this home ho 1 great volue ond ii worth mor~You won't miss, if you cal.I on this-Phone 528-4772 4 Bedrooms 2 baths. Hardwood,ftoors-woll to wall corpets and drapes. Bh-in range and ov en. Walking d istonce 10 moior shopping. 26900 full price FHA-GI terms or 5o/o down to anyone -phone (213) 868-7717 selling. of well kept recreotlonol foe.lilies. "Good.aiOck.'bcry T.'\.' loco lion in one of Newport'• be11oreo1, fre• lcind o nd '\.,r mode1t montlrill' duel make• thi1 perhaps Our belt b11y, Avo .lbbl1 on o leal*/option purcha~ plan. Coll 675-7225 FAMILY' FROLIC l ired of oportmenl living? We hove whotyou are looking for in !his 3 bdrm., 2 both lovely. Lorge custom built family roo'm with beautiful bor. Your own sporkJing fireplace & country ki1chen. Lorge spacious bock. yard witfl block wofl, d bl garage, covered patio. All for $26,000. Coll 956-2700. IN-LAWS WING Thi1 ottroctive eostside Cosio Mesa home offers a 3 bedroom, 2 both plon with the mo1ter wing practically o 1eporote li'ving area wirh private entrance from ill own e nclosed parking area. The lorge detp lot hos m ature fruit frees, go rd en and ploy orea1. Anxious owner will corrya large 2nd. T.0.Coll 67S.7225 BALIOA ISLAND DUPLEX Very shcirp vn II with f\er.ible flOOI' plonl . Upstair unit hot 3 bedroom I, 2 bo1hs, 2 kirchens and 2 separate entronce1. Oownslair5 ho• 2 bedroom•, 2 bci1 h1, 2 kilchen1 and 2 ieporole entroncel. The 3rd floor sun deck ii r•al neat and the view from the balcony of QU the i1lond C!$ivitie1 is mo1t unique. Avai1C1b!e fer 10% down, or a leosefoption purchase plan. Call 675-7225 ...- PRIME POSSIBLE C· 1 REZONING 3 bedroom, 1 3/4 both home. Ea1y & inexpensive lo covert topotentJol bu1ilies1 u1e. Would moke on ldeal Doctor'• Dentist'1. Lawyer's, Accountont'1, etc, local.don bu1y Edinger in Santo Ana, There ore 4 ou11ide entronce1, 2 doors already face on Edinger, Only a hicade needed lo mok.e this o choice profe1sioncll ~ffice. A reol steal ol only $25,000. Coll 637-9101 SPLIT LEVEL TOWNHOUSE Sharp 3 bedroom, 2 bo1h home withoul'ltonding fealvre1 •'uch 01 3 co r gorag e, lovely go rden1, tpa rkl in g pool 1, private streets, large utility room, attroclive beamed ceilin!J livil'lg room with fireploce, cill freshlyp~in1ed and wailing for you in one of Newporrs mos! convenient locations. Coll 67S.7225 COME HOME Too beautiful cu1tom l br, 2 1/2 bofh home on pre1,;g• Tustin cul-d e-~c. lorge kitchen with brand new di1hwa$11 erond no-WOM: vlnyi tlfe. New wool carpet in living room·ond formal dining roon1, Decorororwollpaper throughout. frig, woth er o nd dryer included in selllng prft, Huge matter both with cerom;i; tile Romon rub. Send 'the kid1 to Tustin school1. $47,500,. oil t•rm1. Cal1 637-910 I ATTENTION BUILDERS or ESTATE HUNTERS Newport Beach Address. 2112 Acre1,con1J1t1 of J separate homesites which you mQy enioy in lotol for plenty of privacy. localed on Q knoll with a Lake View. Home is J Bedroom, 2 Balhs, Fireplace, Shoke Roof. Offered for $225,000. Col! 6i6-0~S5. ' LANDMARK HOME TWO STORY 4 Bdrm~. (3 mcu1er ,,,,.) 1 down, new upgrod11d cp15. drp1. blt-int + !ro\h n1oi1er, lom1ly rm, 3 cnr ol!oched goro9e, t' open & e nclosed polio•. Beautiful prol~11ionotl1 lcindw:c;iped, large double lenc,.if yo rd wi!h 2 utility ,h .. d ,, Super 1uper 1horp home, lett lhon o year old on cul d•\ac 11reet. can 635-4530 -· .. EMJOY THE llG COUNTRY LIVING G.1 oway fr om ii all. Oualiry 4 b.d•oom, 7 botto, lom~v room, home. Rurol tellin g ju11 minu••s l•on• town of Oiom0!1d Bor, lr.ten1ive Iron! lor>dtt.OJ'l1ng un.fi r11ar vo•tl ho1 been cleored for new plon11, to 1akfl odvu.,10\/" of m., view. la1ebaM diatno11d ond playo1wnd n .. n·*'v Ai..,,.,,. lo• !hf entl•e forttlly for '211.7.50. Coll (714) 870. •O•O NEYf~OIT CONDO VACANT focttt your lrftcig lno1;o.. °" rhit ~ Oftd trv!Kfonn It to 'rourway of life. Some work 10 be done, tho not ino;er. TNt 11 on e nd uni1 with 3 Bedroomt, 2 1 7 Baths, Double Own .. Oi1ltwother and firl!Qlnce. Oviet Re1id entiol Areo. CktH ,. Pool. Off11red for S37,580. Coll 646-0555. CUSTOM llAUTYI $52.000 PLACIMTIA l up quohry-~w J h•d•oom, family room, fVeploce, 2 bottle o nd other •tro feature1 too nu "•••OU• la mention. A lov..tr r u•tom buih ham • on I /l aC••·Hor1 e1 oll!Cou"try otmotp ll e re-yel clo1e to e verything. Coll.521-4772 f# greol volv e HOISi IAMCN 1 ocr• p.lu1;l b .. l•OO<'!I, deti, ln•""Mll dlnl"t, 11~ loving room, c.o ihed,ol c,.,1,.1g, ov •• :JOOO squat• I"' odrOC:•l'lt lo •w.I 1'10 t•u•I 868·7711 'ull Prke t /SOOO, of ••. COLWE.LL - Anaheim 2008A E. Lincoln Avenue Telephone: 956-2700 (714) ' 2249W. Ball Road Telel>hone: 635·.4530(714) Ccnna~elMlr 3425 E. Coast Highway TelePl!one: 67!S-7225 (714) ColtA Mei.t '-• 220 E. 17th Streel T e!ePl\onec646-0555 (-71 4) El Toro 24374 Rockfield Road T alephone: 586·0222 (714) Fullerton 1rvine 2041 Business Center Drive, Suite 107 Telephone: 833·0040 ,!714) 8oo E. Commonwealth L1 H1b,. , . Telephone: 870-4041).(714 ).• 163 E. lmpenal H•ghway 1400 No. Horbor 80\Jlevard Telephone: 879·3800 (7 14) TelePl!on•: 879.6900 (714) La Mirld• · 15112 LI Mirada Bo\Jlevard = :::ira Sll'ffl Telephone: 522•5984 (714) Telepllone: 539-1162 (714) 86S·nl7 <213> Or1nce 2660 N. Santiago i oulevard Telephon_, 637·9 101 (714) P11eenli1 1207 E. Chapman Avenur Telepho>leJ 528.4772 (7 14) C6rporati Offlcu 2041 Buslnns Center OrlVe. Suile 106 lmne Telephone: 833·1931 (714)' Pr.opertie~, Inc. Realtors A subsidiary of The Colwell Company • I I I ' ' I • l I ' • --- .... TALK ABOUT SHARP! You won't find thl'm any better. lt'• move-in perfect. New carpets, drapes and pa.int. A pl'rfect 3 bedroom & family room homt". Complete builtin electric kitchen, large well landscap- ed yard, secluded cul-de-sac atret:'t apd a high assumable loan. Full price $34,500. CALL 540-1151 • . EASTBWFF's BEST Beautlfut'.A bedroom 3 bath Newport Beach tdwnhou~ Terrific , end unit location with view of~B&ck'-Bay. Va· cant· and reedy tot. yoi,ll-lnspeetlon. Offered at only $44,950. CAIL 546· '5880. a..,, ..... ....., ...... ' ..... ,.. ......... "' - ,. ... ·•••• ......... All ........... n.tM .... .. -....... .,...., .... "' .... ,..... .... n.r. I• .....,,., DAILY "LOT WANT ADS. ,..,_ ....... .,.. ..._.,., ... ., .. ,.., .......... Ho w t. ............ tMI ul ... ..ti ""4oy, s.t.. -·-· HOUSES FOR SALE '. 3 hdrooms . * 1-8318 Brooihurat, Fountain Valley 531-5801, $25,700 (Sun 1-5) 211 Orchid, Corona tie! Mar 644-2430 '68,500 . (SUn 1-5) 2320 Colgate, Costa Men 540-i720 $28,950 (Sat & sun 1-5) 2216 Anaheim Ave., Costa Mesa 540-1720 $26.500 (Sat & Sun 3 BR ind Family Room or Den 2030 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) NB 646-1550 $112,900 •. (Daily) 2011 Paloma, Costa Mesa 642-8235 $49,500 ·(Fri/Sat/Sun 1·5) 4 BR and F•mily Room or 0.n *4521 Brighton Rd . (Cam~o Shores) CdM 642-8235 (Sat & Sun 1-5) *2118 SanUago (Dover Shores) NB 644-6200 (Sat & sun 1·5) 1907 U9ward (Baycrest) NB 6H 8200 (Sat & 8un 1·5) **1663 Bayside Dr. (Yachtsman'• Cove) CdM 675-1935 (Dally) 1529 Keel Dr. (HVu Hilla) CdM 644-2430 $79,500 (Sun 1-5) 3500 Sllrfvtew Uine (l!Vu Hllll) CdM 1144-2480 '74,500 (Sun 1·5) 1972 Pt. Seaboume (HVu Hills) NB r~ 644-2430 S69,500 (Sun 1·5) 17652 Ash Tree Ln. (U niv. Pk.) Irvine 644-2430 $43,900 (Sun 1·5) 5 Bedrooms ~801 01'9an ~lfch (Spyglais Hilla) NB ' 644-2430 ,,122,000 (Sun 1·5) ·5 BR end F1mll y Rm· or Don ** ~8 Unda Isle (UndA Isle) NB • ~2-8235 · (Sat & Sun 1-5) ..... #8 Linda Isle 1t:lnd1 Isle) NB 642-8235 !Sat I< Sun I ·~ *2401 Franci«o !Off Irvine) NB ' 548-7729 $105.000 (S,i 4t Sun 1-4) ** #54 Linda Isle Dr. (Unaa l&lel NB 844-2430 $289,500 ·(Sun 1·5) . 6 IR and Family Rm or Den 1500 Keel Dr. (HVu Hil!J) CdM 844-2430 $99,500 · (Sun 1-5) . LOTS FOR SALE ttieM Bayside Dr. (Yachtsman's Covo) CdM. 875-1935 (Daily) ·- " SUPER DIRTY bul nlso super· price for t.h1I 4 bed- roont, :.! bath Mesa Verde Gov~ 1nent RC?pOaielllon. All bulltin k1t- chl·n. briCk fireplace, lar&:e family roonl, covered patio and huge ya.id "'Ith room for boat or trailer. Can you bcli€.'ve on1y $28,950. total price "'ith $1500 down? CAU. us tor full details 546-5880. SOMETHING SPECIAL A big famlly home tor the growing family. 4 Oven lzed bedrooms, 2 baths & family room, located on c:uJ.de.MC street just a block from elementary .Mhool. New carpets &: -drapea. Full pric<' $.34.950 with VA ~-available CALL :W0..1 151. • . - . ". ON TlfE 'fo01Nr .. BALBOA l'ENIN. . ./ .. Located less than a block oft the oceanfront It a block frotn Newport • Bay. Large 4 bedroom, 2-story_ bome-. 2 baths, large llvlng room with fl~ place, family room & shaded patio. Some vi~ of ocean & bay from uv- pcr level. Full price ~.ooo. CALL .540-1151. MECHANICS- ~OME CRARSMEN One-in-a-million rare find. 4 bed· room, 2 bath, huge family room with beamed ttlllngs., fireplace. Double garage + bonus of another oversized double. garage-shop with 220 power & Iota of extras. All for only $32,500. FHA or VA terms available, Won't Jut. CAU. us at 540..1151. ,,"~N · DQn't; toM~ a thlng -Moive rl&:bt ~n. Spfll'l.Uhg 4 bdrm I: family rm, lOd ......rn~ J;!l.tj~ al_l b~ w/new vinyl floor. CklBe ta ICboo1I 4 all maJor ohopplng. $30,"50. For de- talll. CAU. -· ' .. . NEWPoRT ' BEACH sparkling, 1i.ururl0us pool home fee.-turei ,3 bedrooml, 2~ bathl, large family room a cUnlne area. oversized 75'xl10' low maintenance yard and '1ieautltul pociI. All the unuaiW Bay- crest t ... turet. Full ·-'64,9'SO. ~or information CAIL 54<>-Wl. EASTSIDE COSTA MESA 5 neat houses on a huae lot. Each ·home with separate prqe, )'1.r:d & l'un4rY room. CboOle ~ h'ome fl'Om ' a 3 bedroom, 'f.bree ,2 'btdrooma or a 1 bedroom .l rent the others. HuttY and see this new lilting~k­ ing $79,500. CALL 540-1151. -. • . ' WEl,COME. TO • . · M~LBORO, COUN.TRY 'and bring your horse to this nee.t ~ bedroom rancb-atyle home on large lot Perfect tor tbe.famlly who wants anlmals It: widl open spaces. Lpcated just a few blocks from Newport Beach. New on the market. CALL us quick. 546-5880. MOTHER'S ~HOICE Ch&rm1ng family home with 4 bed- rooms, family room A patio· kitchen with all built-ins. Beautllul decorator carpeta, wallpapen; A aO many extra touches. Excellent landscaping. It'g a pleasure to see. Alldng $36.950. CALL us at 546-5880. 20'x30' BONUS -IOOM lfttlng on h>pOt thls 1.W(v 3 Bdrm. 2 bath home. Other features include sU!p..down living. rm, _.heavy shake root, 2 ft.replaces, blocJfwall fence & nice ·cul-de-sac location. Priced only $35,750.·CA!L l;.46-QBSO. - I .,,,, ,.. • .J ' ... " • ...... -_ ... _ .... _i11.e11 _....... 1@hl 1 · ...... 11Mr_1 _:,_·· ... ·•_1 ...... ·~ ... @J 1 --~~>§J r:~~- ;;;;;;;;;;;~G•.•.•.• .. •1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;..1~Go!lil .• •.• •• ~.··· ...... Gon!!i•.•.•a~.---... ;. General ~¥ff.it-"' A U"-11001: tlCMI: HI GH ON THE HILL Prance lhru a private gateway into a seclud· ed patio, then on to a wandering 4 bedroom, family room home with a rim of the ocean view. Mirrored fireplace in living room Ind another fireplace l1l the master bedroom inakes this a very Unique home in Came:g_. Hi ghlands. It's roomy and loaded with po- tential. Offered al $67 ,500. PHONI UNIQU I HOMI S, CORONA DIL MA~71o60Clt U~l()UI: ti()Ml:S REAL ESTATE General Exclusive Corona del Mar Considered one of the best areas· on the ocean side of the Coast H,.Y. 'rills older family home is situated on 2 reiidential lots. Excellent appreciation situation. Offered at $'19,500 CORBIN-MARTIN REALTORS 644-7662 INVESTORS BUY OF THE YEAR 4 PL!X $57,500. Assume present VA loan balance $47,600. payable $446.09 monthly. Present income $630. monthly. Owner leaving area, will take $5,000. down & carry bal. at 81>%. 2-3 bdr. 11'.ib, 2-2bdr 1 b. for infonnaUon 8 UNITS REDUCED $2,450 ___________ _ NO OOWN to Qualltl.ed Vet-~-----~......--___... Six 2 bedroom, 2 t..th: two 1 bedroom, 1 bath. All with bullt-11'111, air cond. carpets I: dnipcll. No-\lacancy fac- tor. 7 years old. Spanish archllecturt'. C°OAT$ .. eram. Well located Hunt-G.neral G.neral lngton Beach Home. 4 Bed---------- room•. 21\ Batho. Flttptaoe, -WOW-$27 7501 Wet Bar in Paneled RWDP<1' . ' a Room. Shake Roof. Double HURRY, HURRY Car Gan.gt. ntA·VA Terms, $32,500. Call 646-«& Just lilted. -tt sparklina Nol>ow'IT•nm Near achooll, ahopptrc. 3 bedrooms, 2 lovely bathl, buill·in aourmn )dtchen. a rana:e, oven I dUhwalher. GrackMJs living room • Salisbury ~·. '' , OPEN SAT./SUN. 311 CORAL BALBOA ISLAND 3 BR. & conv. den. Cape Cod charmer. Ooee to North Bay. R-2 Zone, room to build -oppcutunUy for ome " lncome! '82.500· Salisbury . ' "'-"'-'------SWIM POOL .$23,900 No Down Terms "Homelike" a~re with 3 bed.room~. 2 !IE!parate batta, large family room . Bu!ltln kitchen. Beautiful park-like grounds. No main- tenance for you. Bkr, 541).ln!. TARBELL 2955 Harbor, Costa Mesa --.•-.-. ---_, -~ General * J .BDRM near ocean •• $26,!MXI. . * l M MAC air..cond, 3 BDRM, assume $23J PITI, Miasio'n Vie Jo ....... $38,90C! * 4 BDRM near ocean • , ~ $54,!MXI 173.1 WestcllU Dr., N.B. 64$.1221 QCEANFRONT TRIPLEX GREENHOUSES TMl l-Bdrm .. 2 bath unlto; 1 $15 MiJUNE-A VE. 3--BR., ~ tiaJ Udtt, Bltns, BAUl()i. JSLAND FOR cup., 'dntpeo.' -51· .'CALL· 67Utoo · ·turn for ....,.,., I"""-~~-~· I GREENTHUMBERS ... ~ •. xim ""'tat · NORJH' MESA ON % ACRE&: ZONED FOR ~at $170,tm.' ,,~_ ' -· r·· HORSES -House in top Call. ~3-3663 &U-2253 . t sPl!sc311A.oi.:oo • • :~.~.'.':t~-~.~~~ I 20362 Birch, Back Bay Open VA APPRAISED SuPETE BARRETT associated BROKERS-AEAL TOSlS 201~ W 13olbc>a 671 J6i.· BACK BAY -REALTOR- 642...1200 3 Bdrm. Beautiful yard wY ~ picnic I: &,B-Q area. Lota of $25, 900 , fruit tteet. High uaumabl! SWIM POOL . VA loao at 6%. 1167. P"' mo P.I.TJ. Only ~ul<l~ A loYely 3 .bedroom, 2 !><th ' "8;000. , . ·; home, all electric push but· GINNY MORRIS'.>N J ton bullt·ln kitchen, ll&hl I: ****• -REALTOR.S- cbttrtul! Dellgbtful patio, *AM* 1SXi .,_ hu!&inC buktts wlt,b flow· *.w:f •Vft'de Dr. EaJt. · ert, loads Of dedd.rle. lush *• *• OJ.ta Me9& low malntenanoe yard and * * * 557..flll a beautlfUI swim pool! ~. (Open Eveninp) · WALLACE Rl!ALTOltS . 511,114!- (0pen Evenltlf•I Ii~ C~il ~"""~"'!~, ~~~. I Owner ~hl in No. C.dlJ., ~1c:: ~~~=-~~~'.! ~:.1 \111i.01A1T °' THr cotwru co. ""'2921 Eves : 644-1599 SELL YOUR. There ii a reuon lt )'Mn u.me locaUon charm enhanced by tire· New ll•lln& on quiet tree place. Freshly painted in· lined alrHt near schoola: 1kie A out. Delightful 1 and churchet1. 5"% u~um· pe.Uo lor outdoor famll,y fun able loan or try 10% c1o .... ·o fi entertalntna:. Bttc, ~173) to ntw loan. For appoint- f-tl!"!ll'IP"'•!l9'!!1W•I ment 540-im , "SPLASH" , TARBELL 2955 Harbor, ec.ta .Mea BEAUT. VIEW' OF -UPPl!ll. NEWPT; IAY Luxury 3 BR towrihouH·ls etOIUllltel,y dfcore"'1 and tnV\ttrw thruout. P r l c (! $42.900. Le&&e"Opt. 3\'.11.il. Open houae Sun. 10-5 p.m. 11.ooktng for an immamli f&mUy a:arden home wilt{ pOOJ\.. • n d entertalnm~nt Ueu'""?-wt have It. ~ with au tttma at PB.000 . .; hllflO bedroonll. 2 tux~ bathe, clOR to fi'eew1Y1 ~ aboppq. Call ' LAND LOCKED SAILOR Sall, anthor, Jib, buoy, 1allcy, gatr • lo nMX' juat a 1tw. Yoo must see thl1 5 cAbin ll>Mrm•I luxury lll'IM' In ~nat-This la,.... homf' hea 8Cl'et'ncd--ln patlo, A.C., and fllh pond. lmaR(net -~s lldrm• ID< Pt,,,., ID partc )l(U' boat In JW •-'>«! <Ir!"' 'a'itd.'lalindl Into •njoyrn('nt. Bkr/AJt, ml...flS BACK iAY CUSTOM bftutJM POOL oo quiet. -oltlt!od .,.,,_, -· !l«ellent pMl\O home with a Newport Btllc:b addnta. Brand new on the market. U1 ,950, ' -'['[''~ I ..._.,,H I\/\'' ,' ll.lton M~ml 21).t3 \\'i'•lcll(f;.f)l<lvt' _Opttn 'tlll 9 PM_ ... - LAWNMOWER Take weeke nds off. ~lllng taken care' ot • tncludJna lawn. rvot. <!lrtllde palntJnir;, pool, recfti.flonal park and gn't'n rolling hlll a. RURAL BACK BAY Thl!ll lowly condo with •.• • ..... ,500 . Calhf'dml t'rl l l n l(11 , 3 """ bfdmomic nntl J bAthit. Onfo 3 BR. l(llOd cond . "' 1!rp~. RR 1k11o1'n can be a •n for '°~•(Qt~. kits ol_atorage $.'\4,800. Call 64&-71TI. NeW ~ Ooon In klU • '"".:~==:-::-=::::--'.:":" bath. Ciimpt.Wl7 fenced nm •RAI.~ w/hrldt ... lo. lnoil ...... ~ l\oom for boat/camper. ,&&WaKB Corral • bo.ru !or I horat.". ~~ ~ wtUc to . Bayview NEW HOUR"-8chool 4 Brk B ay. ~ 1~1-~1211;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;, Vtty ttharp 3 8«1ntom -I• ltomto, unuaual 3 l1D!'y 4 led,_ u---tfHlan, flrepW..., ahak• ._..... roofs, nnt dme OfltNd, at s batlrle. endoeld patio. doQ. $4S,~. Call fl5--'f225. I ble prt,p, n1W CU'Plll • "' ........ lntmedtot c ltstil OO:l:Jj!I ,';;;"Harbor, Costa Mesa A SEWRS SACR,FICE SVJ\1011\lt Of !Ml (O!,Wlll CO, ~-!!!!!!!!_!!!!,,._ ... --~--~~-- -J -• ..,.. " -· ~,,.,11:1,:.1 I AP Zone $25,000 2 bedroom~ batb homei Ile C Ml'Sll H \:,1 for lculonal ':fn Houle w carry invn~ l"h1le awaltina: devtiop~1 UIJ1\RYI . . " Roy Mccardle RNlloi' ll10 Newport Blvd., c.M,,, Ma-7729 "' TIME FOR QUICK ,cAS.,,.., THROUGH A WANT AD .,:] 642-5671 n• • ' __ .., .. -. ......... . lie! I ~-.. ;'~ r ;;:-.... ~ •I c:-.... ;;!; ...... ~;;;;;;:;~ 1~,~:'.'~ll~.,;[1!!~~: ~l~J!!f!i.~::1 ~Huo~""~l~t .. ~o~n~l~o~u~h;11h~•~lne~:::::1;=~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~AltKLtKI! YARD °''" SA /SUN. 1 ~ w·•uTED I~ PAYMINTS ONLY ~ .. ~· ... ~boa)'anl.door! lllOI~ WHITE SAILS 3,. br l..ulll--. lam rm, l'LA.YGROUND $200. PER MO. J UST LISTED P.19-Granct Opening Sa Nowport IY OWNllt- on •• ..;:_ N~; _,, ~•-l "4!mf., .....,. ,.., Gno! jlln .rm, Prlnc\DOll only. FOR KIDS $ room, YIWI!, lmill<dlate Do you want a 4 bdnn. l • ~~~~--... home or ~ t21ll •i:io1. ~ " poaeaalon.Newlydecorated =.~w'i:2~\:ouMedp1 .. ~ ,,_ Verd•. ~ home In S.aulltlll viow !'f !lit _,, p...,foln V-"-Pot>uW' Ceti""1< Parle < lhnlout. w,,. fenced ..,.. ~ ~ 4: ba)ll $jit.!ll) .... , bedroom borne on the ner lot. Full price only carpeted lamlly rm. 1 'nlli OPEN OAIL Y 1-4•'8 • . .._ lat tn the ........ llll.9"0. Onty llOOO down will lovingly maintained home M2 'GIBRALTj.D" oWllER,,:_""'f;mm~ ment.PlenlyroomtorDOOI, hand!<. on.-'""" lot can be pyrimld ex~ =. waa 1Y. ~ 3 boat or trailer u .mi as . • ready for quick occupancy. * 67L-* -~~ ' ,__ play.,.. for the ld(ls. Ear-~ Near pub, -com~ --'ftO" ~'....,,.·--·-"'x ..-. -... ly OC<:\U)&l>cy can be ar-dub facllltlel, xlnt """""'· l _ ., . " .-... -f~ t1mi!.l~nx>m Wt.th 'iMptrlrw ranee<L 00 thiJ: nearly new Let us mow It to )'OU) this aw.!:..C: , ~" l:fttl.ldut bu. VA Joan. $291. per mo pa)'I --$'2,9'50. l Bdr .. ' Batha. ........ , ldtcbe'n. lAl'p ma• t • t bedroom w I pr1. balb I dreuln& area, ftpk:. Owner mottvaled. Terms Av I • 138,500. 573-.1658 or 66-194. 3 Br. conv. den, tam rm., din nn., near new, Dlulfly. Many extras. $51~500. 645-2552. Coron• d1I Mir ~Ql.'7'~1 ~r.atit~.!r'!-:: home, Takeover exlst111g:J.. weekend. Prica1 at just ·1 • ~ •n·tna ffl4h ~le wall WM:le for all. D.Dnlt~ twr .._.,. prtvacy 1~ the • COA6TS -i•v= 1 ....., 1615 Dll~ RD lovely -f."'"""' pool! No ~ Macnab -Irvine CONDOMINIUMS ir 3 8R -BYOWNER* Over zm MI, ft., 2 BA, tam rm. formal din nn., &~. 2 yni. old, tile root. ale pr dr opeDE'r, wtr toftemr. s p r lnklen, cantalewnd patio overkddng I o I t coune. Many o th• r am~nltle-s $48,900. 492-mt. Realty Company RU\lftl'UllU, ,• down C. L terms, low down WALLACl CAMEO SHORES """""'ts! Bri<. 128,7SO . OWNER muot move ·-$S1,49S SPECTACULAR open ---1·2. 30 -. RIALTORI doeo<ab>r'• dellte. ' OCEANFRONT "t: OWNER de operate . 4 e "1-4454 e bedroom&, t batho. w,.. ''l>!'<!fftm ~ .. ~ 2 baths "'--. EW..a..-family room with lovely Lotty living awa1ls you! Act £wiftly ii' I o ca t lo n on Newport'• amu to Milre' s;pac ...... uauvuma. ' 'f'P'9" .. ._.. cryatal chandeHer and most Bri«bton Rd. withe finest Splu Kurt Knnnpbolz of. ~.t,_ '""'::nwl~~ DUTCH ' CLEAN appealing O..placo. Bulltin ol Ocean VIEWS -steps to ten ' bla 2>Jt33•tt. pOoi• l l t _ k Itc h en, lmklaMlutdoor private beach be Io w u~•Yollf -..... . bu l t -In k Itch en' 3 ._,;,,,,_. 1• Balh, b .. n.,__ ..... -;...,., lJke new cloud --· Undentated elegance in thb -ence;s .... ~ ~ dilhwuher. Pado. No wax ~.....,""" .,.. wu....... .......t-~·-. !BR + 1c oceanvleWI, plus the llMlatfit: roraeous shaa incJudiJll dishwasher, wt w son shag ca.rpefilll'. Loads FLICKERING to select yoor ov1n Newport Beach condominium. Visit the temporary ollices of Ille Newport Crest Information Center, Wntminster "JAJ"l YEARS YOUNG Dutctl clttn 4 bedroom, imp eating area In IUtch, kJtll of :lrtru inc wa1nut panelitw. slorqe cablnets, bookcue'. Stop by and .1ee tht aviary or beautiM birds. . separate guest or roomiest 4 bdnn .tune in carpetlzi thruou.L &aut:iful erpq ·a drps, large cul-de-or decking. Patlo, lush k>w ~al~eriR 5~g ~hs Cameo Hlgt!land1. $18.500, patio awalttJC Yiu' outdoor sac lot, "only steps to a maintenance landscaping FIREPLACE beautltul pool & .. -tio. 3-c.; university rMl_ty p)~I Bk.r, $ 3 2 , 5 O O . lovely' pllrk. 4 yrs new &: and a beautifUI swim pool and a view ol the valley convenlenlly located at 2400 West Coast Highway Suite B. Newport Beach . garage. OPEN SAT. & SUN. 3001 E. Cst Hwy. ~O 962-558(1. • all tmprovements tn. Quick with vacuum I n'c I u de d . belo"'· 4 bdrm., 2 ha., 3 car ~~~---3~.-_._--poeadtKln. FUU price Only BRK, '$33,000, 962-J.371. garage, J)Q!)l, air con- Op~_n Daily 10 a.m.10 sunse!. 1-5 p.m. 4521 Brighton Rd. Cost• Mesi . OWNES.·~· ~m. '$29,500. . SKY BLUE POOL ditMlning, outdoor lighting J (Mll). ., -den, 2 ~th bome. EJ.epnt and much more · in this ftteplace Jenda a&led charm tn Swim aJI year when not en· · tinctio $7S 950 .tart~~~~: •''ii ~=:~~::~~:.::i~ -i 0fr ... ect .. h·1·11 · Ers~ii"Oe-n..:. Near &11 mchoo" & 11bopplng. II~ upgrading, garden kitchen. Macnab -Irvine BRK,. $25,900,. 80-2561. Excellent schools. Only 2 IRVINE TERRACE COSTA MESI' ' BY Owner' Choice < B" BR,OKERS INC. yean old. new llstlnx . a rare This 3 BR home ~ + twn. rm. + 2 ba. + CALL THE REAL gem! 4 BR. 2% ba., with separate, extra-lafge FR ·rre1c:'Nr Mile Sq. Park. 11h 962-8851 ESTATE FAIR 1fu<36 hid. pool. ~· brldst. w/lovely shaded y.a~ d. Yn. old. $3000 down. T.O.P. CLOSE YOUR 536-2551 area in kitch. Badminton ct. Beautltully decorafed In-VA S281 PITI. 833-1103, REALTY Univ. Park Center. Irvine Call Anytime, 833--0820 OUice hours 8 AM to 6 PM behind garage. Absolutely terior w/newly patirted rex. 833-3886. EYES OWNER sacrllice, assume Immaculate thruoul & pric· tertor. Priced at only apr VA loan now on prop-L•QUM Beach ed right at $77,500 Plus • $41,950, Open SUnday 1·5 Huntl"""" BNch after YoU read this anc1 pie· erty at 6% and your you own the land • not p.m. 489 "E. 20th Street. ture a SUPER SHARP, montbly installments are ~ --.: """"ho'•' <M33>. -GONE FOREVER bnght and ,1>eer1u1 home 1... than "n" Gene'°"' Seeing Is Believing! Sharp Doll Houu nestled In one of the finest sized bedrooms, custom clous living rm. w/open IS YOUR RENT H'beach areas. Jogging shutters, bu.Dt-ln dream Excellent condition" • 1 BR, beam ceil. dbl door entry to ftl..'\.LLARS distance to the beach, chip-kitchen, full dining room, den, + extra room for Latui\I 8¥f:h fabulOU!I, private patk>. 2 642-1235 6'4-6200 "'f1'fi' ping distance to the GOLF professional landscaped whatever ... BeautifU1 beam 1 -""---~---- Bdnns., 11,S baths PLUS ~ It'• not too late to ac-COURSE plus many more ground11. Enjoy the view ceilings. paneled, bulltins, Nurty Oceanfront neat bachelor unit in rear. FRUIT SALAD· cumulate ~ for extras. Full ~ $44,(KKI. from the delightful enclosed large level lot with fruit Built for J Units ~~~n~h~s t~~uil~t.l~o~~ In your o\fn back yard. Love-= ~m~l~ve~; ~o: :!ke'1a ~:e;t:;e rn patio. Bfi[. $27,(0),.962-886.l. :~Ji.~~try living for on-: last at $49.500. ly fruit trees, 1 a r g e llvlna room. Beautl:fully trade. lrnRRY. COLOR THIS ENIC PROPERTIES bedrooms, 2 bath, tam rm, d~raklf lhroqut. Large HOME SPANISHI - 2915 E. Coe.st Hwy., CdM _new interior" lots of. pa.net· ldtcheQ WUb p)enty or cup-Red tile roof, 4 bedroom. one I * Building Si+e · * 675-5726 mg, large circular rai;sed boards and dining space. story, on comer lot. Beam . '!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_,I patio, new kitch, .dshWBhr, Located on large lot. Priced ceilings, thick shag, plush \4 acre 111 beautlful Bluebird J breakfast nook, bltins, bdwd at $31500.. 847-0010. Realtors 842-4455 drapes all Spanilh colors. canyon. Gentle slope, trees floors. Brr a cc ea s, ' . .J CALL THE REAL and blue water v I e w sprinklen F&R. Pricod to ('I-.. .,.. T~ $950 ESTATE FAIR forever. A&klng $18,'°!· sell VA/F11A 5%. Call for &_:'~ ~ • mote-intmo. pe I~ _ Moves you in.-No qualifying. 563-2551 tJt ll l bed 3 bath larwln rHlty Inc. .CffN !!.. 9PM • Seller pays all costs. 3 "SKI LODGE'' at the beach. au 1-room, • (714) 968-4405 bdrm., 2 bath, 7 years new. Roarlng firer,lact', 4 s1eep- pool & Jacuui. An un-Surfsld-Condo Elec buUt-in range & oven \ b g -"•kitchen believable niaster bedroom. MESA VERDE • • ""'/w carpets & drapes' ng rooms, ·-· ' y constructed view: OWNER lowers price to J\!51 thhl,k!· ~o ,m<>re yard fireplace. Priced b et 0 ..;; ptdty 01 bath.I. the Be h your cocktail hQ.rr. $6.1,950, OFFERS oew '°"' -,..ode or;;11pkeep. 3 Bedrm, market at $ 21 O ti O R~CiRPETac ntely priced at dQ\1'n ,terms. St!per sliarpt tl~,,'be.th, buUtins, Including Payments less than' ttnt. · w qt.1tnn81.1fe Elaine S v e dee n exec ·ram home, 4 BR. 2 A. -.di!ihwasber. 2 car gar., Just Walk to major shoppmg ~ AT'-~TH.E ' BEACH UQX'IQ ~·-c OPEN SAT. I: form din rm &:. tam• nn' ~ miles to ocean. 5% down center . ~2"1511 Realex Real Ektate 1$\JN. '1-5 p.m. 517 Gan'ett w/wet bar + ~ othef will l1&ndle. Full pnce only J · •1 WNER """'~ G 1 ......, --.----.-~· ~4) xtra.s. % Blck ~.M.v:c.c1 :$22,~. ll!I • 0terms _"';-lo~ .. ~~ ~~..,.- , , "'i · David BOurke Realtor ( -1U lamily room wtth lnsp~ . . . family home, with 4 REAL 494-0561 Blue watl'r view. J•cuzzi ,&: aecluded pool in Polynesian setting. House can convert to 4 or 5 BR. llas a private garden guest apt. plus a 2 rm. artist's w0Tk1hop , w9\ilil!: lor you lo build a ltltchen lo crel\te 3rd unit. l"'loll tor ' price. See a sub-• \Ohl ' ' 494-~ H. McCormick, R.E. .. EMEµLD IA Y FINEST LOT Vll;W -$50,DOO TID l:IUBERT ind Ast0elate1 3-ITI Via L!OO. NB 675-t!IO PORTAFINA LAGUNA °""''will help !fnanoe· ' • mt' · . "",,_..,;,;, , bedroomo • ..,..., THE PERFECT ••• * 546-9950 * I · fireplace 1I9Umlet's pride &: bdrn1s. &: 2 baths; offenr)'OU .. "'!!!!!!'"""""!~""""""'"'I REPO GROOVY ~ buAt -!D kit c hen . privacy without ~lusion. Custom building si!CA .Jr • dishwasher. Well planned Excdlent ocean view from homes, Left on Nyes Place Fixer Uppor . . . CORNER home. Pool ...,. groondll '° H. gla" window In ''"'" to Otrtnn<.. Properti• -ILIOO. DOWN TO ALL. QWet --,_,118Ql(EBS INC, $l2 500 BRK, $36,850, 84Mi91. fortable \\v\ng room. A _, La&w>a S."h • 194.93\0I •• TI!S area hoge lot an bit-Ill.I." H.t) 1 CLEAN & Cozy 2 BR, den, fine home. CaJl Earl Water-OCEAN ' VIEW Real E!taters at Corona ins.' trpl. ' & 2 BA';, Priced ......__ From the superb landscaping near the beach. Only 3 yrs bury. $52.500. · GAZEBO pitl ~ wi!J. help Yoo make undei' all othen 8tr$28,!l50. . -~w.w •tilting to the freshly painted in-ok!. Custom •·pa.Ho. Lowly ~/. , 3 BR, den, 2 baths. Slate en-Y6tJJ" M!lect1on from custom Call 545-8424. so u T H terior featuring c u s t om kitchen, Nice drapes &: shag 0 · h., try, sunken Uv. rm., fpl. HI &int, ocean view propertle!! COAST REALTORS. *<-•lair. Dream* drapes plus wall to wall thruout. Detached double ~16' peaked t-eiL, open beam•, ln Cbrona de! Mar rang1ng 1 ~._,.., carpeU. This 3 bedroom, 2 garage Fenced yard. Room REAL ESTATE glaM gables Blln ktlchen. from $89,500 fee land. Call * f ff.l REPQ * You must see this tantasti~ 3 bath home is the 11harpelt. for tioa't or trailer. AllSUme LJ:' A prize "'·Inner at SSS,000. any one ol our experienced • )*in>o(D, 2 be.th .home with you'll see. Call 847~10. loan or refinance. Vet'a"OK. Glermeyre St. ,Mission Reali)' 494-0731 real estate cotinselors for sepatate master bedroom, $25 900 536-3645 13 549-G316 J c;c=~-,,~-:---- , further d.etails anrl an ap-4 BDFtM., 2 be. on hute Uvln&: room with w~ ~-THB ....,..&T~ ' '"• · SPANISH VILLA Laguna Niguel 1 pointment to inspect. Call corner lot. $25,150. tO"',,Wd fireplace, family «&fl'= EXECvTIVE HOME 171 41 645-6141 -- l1rwin re1lty Inc. <TI4 I !lti8-4405 --I~ Mobllattomes For Sile 125 Motor Hmne Renbls SALES & LEASING full servkt-facility llalU Matar Hames N_.-t 8Mch 531°6100 VIEW ConGttmpo-GF ,_II PRhlek r CUFF DI.YE rool om y or ' RentaU from $G9.50 Nev.' list ing. Ouumlng home 10 mlnulMI from Anaheim on w/spectacu1ar ocean lt bay new Rlvenkk> F'rwy. Takl' \'iew. V<'ry Jge, liv, rm., din· Gret>n River off ramp. 4001 lng nn. lt ram. rm. 2 BR., Credi RJvl'r Dr .. c.orona. 2~t baths &: a 2 BR. &'Uest !TI41 737-7374. house. Sliding ,.shw doors ·n F1ttt~. 2 BR. ti,t Ba. &. a picture win(kn\• tor that llxf!O e:icpando • llving rm. special view. $67,500. CaJi>ort. PatMl. Porch 6' CALL I!\. 646·2414 window awnlnp. Clean. W ~ Good cond. Adul! park nr. ......... bead" ""'°· "1G-Ol91 alt 6 llALTY or anytime ?.ton or Tuc!I. H1•r H•.,ert Pe1t Offl~• 3>x55, CW1lom c r pt Id rps Macnab-hvme l!OOX:l11'1VE. Homor, 4BR. lBA. cul~ St., mo "' ft of custom qualit)"-b!P heam cel!mp, We, Yt'OOd, brick. Fam Rm. Din Rm, Ga.r00/har atta, LrK t>.ck yrd. For sale by owner, 11 $79,500: Call for Sat or Sun appl: 645-4129. throu g hou t awnlnp, tldrtinp It. lndscpd.. $Ox~ fncd. yd •• pets 0.K ldNI for roople. $9,500 lemll evaiJ., 20701 Belll':h 81"'1., No. '1. 5.16-5145. hM' TraUcr, clean. TNa IA biupln SlDJ. Newpor t Dunes Trawl Trtr Pk. Ip T, NB. <Coa•I Hwy •I .Jam· hott<' Rd. I ~1111 or ~2"41. 2hfO Wntmwf', UM .... 2 Br., den, wet" bar, alr mnd. AcroM at. from • I> c: b . S36-U'Tfi or IW2-nn Jb«) P'\emlnp. uw Mfr. 2 BR. 2 bu. Dtn. 't{let bar. blt-111-..-. .... encl. patth. ~ SINGLE wk». 4 yn .okl. awnlnp. patk> mwr. 1 BR. Adi l park, nr Bch. H'B Ifft, .. ~. ' 1 613--8550 · $1,500 down ~with wet bftr, and a&"IWl'BRS 4 large bedroom11, family Overlooking city &: beach. 2 NEW aJNOO on East 9, j. · Authorincf Broker · !#i4.' landscaping: with OPEN~ 9PM rooqi, exquillltely draped, Sty. 11tuoco w/red tile roof 4 view golf roune, 3 Br., 2 ·-R-• T . * S4MS70 * ba ' brook ln private upgtaded carpets, covered BR .. 3 Ba., 3 frplct., lge din Ba., owner, 675-50l1. CANAL OUPLRX ~ ~ rear yard. Price on J Y ''SEPARATE patio. water tolteftl'r, book &: tam rnu1., beam ee.ll'1., Lido Isle With privat~ dock. Extra I~ ---'t°E ~iOI GARDEN I FRUIT TREES, $43,500.' Call now 842-2535. shelveL 5% Down OK. lots ol charm. plUA t BR I"'=-"'-'------&hlirp, 11,"C!U m&ihtalned. WDJ °""' '"' "'te 3 8"1room, 2 bath DINING ROOM" l•rwln rM!fy Inc. """' apt Be au t 11u11 y * CHOICE * Include :is IL """""· house located in forest of ~-ia& Jlll:.-..L~ Huge family room plus 4 CT4) 96MI05 lndacpd, 1ge. lot $89.!IOO. Nord Corner Lot Sito.om lklliMM Pr!p•rty JM C,AMEO SHORES m;hmot.,". ""i'' H"r. lot ·Bb~::.&i bedrooma, u/b 0..pla<e, REPOSSESSIONS * 499-2lllO * s Bdnnl., 3% ba.., p\ua din Tho GERRIE CO. Fanlast1: view, pool, access ~pl:ce ei; n :~~OO)L1PM electric appliances. ~ • nn. plus tge, sundeck. --==-''4~15~~4~400~==-TWO LOTS T 0 TA L : to pnvate beach, 3 Needs aome toucbup · ~ sale, Shake rooof. For information and location fh:tfkalN:t S85 cm UH'xD' OIOJCE J..0CA. Bedroom, 3 Bath, Formal Red Carpet at the""''" . $30,900 all ........ oiler. of th ... rnA. VA bomH, ~ ' LIDO REAL TY llG CANYON TION, lfunllnt1• ... -· dining room, spacious rooms 962-5511 • Mfe Reduced'• contact • -IO. COAiJ "we 3.177 Via Udo, N·pt. Bead! NEW ('tlatom home OYft'look· ZONPROEO>'ESSIOBNU• ~ r NORE 'o'•·: tieautifully decorated with ~~ t.-.,. '"'-"--KASAllAN _...,..._ * 67J.7JOO* In -·1 ~ ~ the fi ... t of appointment" SPIFFYll SP.,.... Vu.l.A ~ ----1 •-""'"'· -~ P'IC&'! 117."" •L TERNS CalShownl ....,,~pointment only . Neat &: clean., 4 BR & tam. : •. ,f1« lonnal ·din-Re"'iiialii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiii51&-liiilil1M.,.1Rul E1t1te MJ..6644 RARELY 3s.,£Atmru3 ,_ 00L..,~1!!_0~~-~~ .. " 3 ~ca.~ 2 4':t wr1Rdt~~I .. ~A.1K.,.~~1Kttm11 viri.-.. rm · CO v d · Pat io· ing room w/wrought Iron -BY OWNER, La CUesta • 0 • ' ' .,., ..... ......... b9 N 1 Pt hu Lane • nu.: ,... ' .,... ..... · I,,,~, ru1 ~~~t~~". E: =i:"~ ~ti~.:.:."""; ~~~.:~%~~ ·~~:~·i=-~~~;:.f. ~ ... ~~~" Appt"' "'~ ~AYm.lta,,~c _.!-:-~':!'!P!!•~!!!,~·-1 ___ .,.!!! #;~"Mt: ~~~t~wy6'~ • ii·· r = ~::"° • ,N;P-; ~~ ~ :r~:~. ~m ~ ,!E't'~~:·~~ ':;':, :,1.'::', ll<droom. i-si~~~R.~11 '!,~':,.. ~ ~'.'.' ~ .... ..!.':::'.' 1i -wuher, dryer, refrigerator, 4 BDRM, 2 BA, Glen-Mar, I Call J 2 bath. tmmacu1•1~. Cloile JI Nov 15th t tOJ fl auuiDl.UT o• JM[ COlWR.L co. BY Owner--~utifUI 2BR, carpets, v a c a n t . Im-by Bltns Uo hag p l' a 1 u re . oe t school.a Price t.Ud !)' drps, frpl., bltns. Tennis, ava · · · • ~ •cetess Charm! ~e ~~:i on1:;, =~ rnaculate. Call 968-4456. th:,r.nr 1eh:, ~rk & Tom~kln900. $.'">t,(O). ~ owner.'5«>-4GJ9 •· '(t~':~LTY :~. ~1.Do1~ndistwb munlty $21,900. eonventtonal ··~. 11oopg. S.12.soo. ~1516· 0 · I~,, Mesi ~·rW HO * orcupant•. Owner l30-715t. = "'.::::l '~::. o':;: =~ av a 11 ab I e . SINGLE STORY ~ Irvine REAL t#ATe 3 BR. 2 BA, $32,000. Wiii !.~~A~O Caur1~ ~ , venlences. Be!;t ocean and HOME &: INCOME . Spark]. 1 BEDROOM ''!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'""""""""' CHOI~, ~2:1:1E .. _~OCK3 BR C'Orlaidt'r VA.JM.I& opUon. 3 Br .• I"'\ b9 w/sr-e. Mn • 50 11. frontqe. NNe"""'°"Clltl 'bay view tn Corona del Mar lrw new duplex $48,950. 11 nt.is po.,....ar 1nuu<:" ,,... 1190 Gleftne)'l'I! St. J. Lock4!rt lte•tty, fUlr. braQd f\f'W room addlt. All Blvd. 2 !!torn totallnl tooo from thiK" spacious 4 Be:autUnl l bdrm owners Older per1Dn for 1 bedroom IT'S FREE It tam rm. + 3 pe.Ho areh. 494-9473 ~16 m.a.14J or 544-40~~ for onlv "2.!i(W) In lht heart aq. ft S!8XI annua.I sr-, bedroom home for only unit + 2 bdrm rental unit. condo tn adult, area. Walle to our time, that ii, lo show you $49,SOO. Terms or w/trade. LARGE VLN> Home Plus in-MltshNt '/leio of Hl:rbor H I & h I and• . Aakhw: S8UOO. Oean. Iller, $125,000.00 Pool too! Call to Xlnt location. 151 E. Bay, bl&: shopping center. Price ju.st the home-you need. AU K1ngaard R.& 64i-2ZZ2 come. A comfortable 2 aty I'-"==-----,....--.,.--Kl~nl Real E •ta 1 e-f75..722!. Re. &73-BSSO. C.M. 645-7131 /642-4837. of only $15,900 Incl'*: you have to do is tell us &-' 2 RT....,._.__. w/2 frplcs, nu dtlu:r ldtch. 4 IORM. SORRENTO ~.a===-~---~· 1 CC.~n;l~l~miii1n1ti;ii0_;..,;;,.0----.1 Ir::-==;:;:;:;-;-;;'\ ASSUME "'" VA Loan. =·,,:.;"'· ..... )'OW' -...... and w• Da1'ly P"1lot ,..,., Pl"'w"~.l'al <harm N ... \y _.., • 8dnn. BALBOA °"""· N ' B ' fw .... .. ~ It inluraDce, Beaut. 3 for app'L l"l"ntf'd tor M15 mo, 2 I.rs: pl, lt'Pf't'9le-dlninr arH. I ftolit. Modml 3 br. m.500. RY Owmr (kauutul m. Pa.vable.$159..84 per.mo. tncl 1. J will do the ruL Call now co lagt". , ... , ... -.. te-rraces, fetlut"'f'tl cu.tom brick nr. wa*1n>nt. Prtw.e. ramp A BR, t ba, home, nu llhac R-2 lots, 150' frontp, 2 bib phtV. w /w <"'1l"•· Ju.ar yd. Olli ownrr. m--o750 klr 1\; BA. k:ftltd bl q u It t *'MMED. POSSEss. ::i-:ms ~ """· Call u1·• u:i ui-• Real--Classified =.:!"it.:: o~.;:; ~" ... ~ .::: :.."".in::;: .... L ........... ""'" = ~..:. ~ ~ :~·,'s! ... t,""~/:. 4 8i{>~~~":-FH~•YA $29,900 "s."u~ldle~-,~ ..... ----=,"-Call="· N .... "Pod"!~ .... , K'A~°i'L'rf':IALTY ~~~~er. =='-'ii"'-"'~~·-·~·-'_1 _•_b_"_·1 Bit-I ns, carpets' drapes. A pane°un1"&: cabinet work, ln-A fUt:Htlo4 bedtooc11, 2 t..th I ~-~=i-;.:;£:1 ====:J!!!!:!~!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!..;:;can~~-~=·=====-I"".-.:! .... Ukt> """ c"''" ll~tn lllrw:f Ouplexe1/Unltt nice hon1e & an xlnt kJca. v1tfl1t patio. SlS,ml. "IWms. home bteely 1'.ndtcaped I· ...,:,w.;._ !!"..!!!.... no.ID> P'rtv PIJ'. tMt Ill lion! Klngurd R.E. 60-22'l2 with mature trees and ..,,,-., MORGAN REALTY OPEN -.............. Detached ...... c;lli!Q-Q ..fl,., -f)-C ~a.· • SPARKLING EVEFUl., • INYESTOU • 7:M'42 '7~ tleantod 4Bt:,. tlen. •ta., and....,.,. boot pte. Call ~\,b ~ ~... ~ pq• p IL V. "°""' -2 br + 01"" : .. ~ ~~ \U"::: ~le<~~~ (IBll!!\.. a-i~ Tl1• Pt1DI• wi/A lit• lulff./n Chdle · '~..;.:°"=iv t!;, ~ ;::.;_• = :::.~ .= ~ i3BR. 2"' BA. Fam Rm, din 551-l&tL. .!_..__"':=""' w 8 ._ ,...._ of ._ • • dally,;· l~·ll.'=====--ICl-l4ll £w.: aa.-liiih. boam octllrc, 2 f>pfc:o. MESA'!-. oa go11...-, • . , mm -..:i:r':.":' ... 1o• -i.., -·~ -_,:..,__ WATIR,ROHT • ..... qn1, drat: landtcap. Beaut 48R, 3BA. Fam Rm,\ :::;;;;·;::;':::~=~iiif'.~ lorle -fow......... •-1 l --5 Bl\. l'I BA + 2 BR opt. • .. _":?' __ Simple l~nd, Ma1111 ,,_, W/frplc, bftno. ht< -· A C L E C -A _,,,.. dlnJ,. U ._.., a.,, l7>G<. 'Ina• patlOI. ear..,.""" ....,. Din Rm. L111 Uv l\ml-1110 CORNllt LOT I II I =~ .=. 4 ~ ./:. "" """" • """''' '""'" Oitonwsn Dr .. S!li1.0lltl. o.mr. :>&--i!llL Bridd.,. _.....,. ....,...,. i I I 1• I I orw. °"*" • ......,.... WATlltPltCiiT inn --.. H.& ' 3 BR. 2 bl. bltns. dbl IW A =~ 1f t,.. 'r; ~/= _ _ . . _ _ . aU ftailt..._ O~ SAt. i I BR, l\i BA + 2 BR apt. -. TH OF HWY. tAm nn on «1rW1r lot ln onto met blc -.11. a dlnlnl: SUN. 12.a p.m. 1221 K...t Pvt bNdl • ltrl"ds UJU11. .. mLllS 2 a: 0rn a new 2 Bdrm. Meu. !taf:lh. s-oa. . uu. Petedled oraae a I M 0 I J Dr. OOI,. u ~ n.y, m-an ...... ,...,.,fie ""'""""' Good BY -~ "'· ........... 2 low .....,., ' 6 E II ' ' • • d c)' • I b&zpln ... ctr-or.~~· PAU~~ ) 1· I I I ~.: ll.ilil5!'~':1:U:'':'~'':'':':'·::1 1W~~~ UM'I' llUILDDl.:;~sa .~ ~GAN ltlAL TY Lit llllif ltlVA OLSON -• -• -· l 14iiii ... -'"''• "'· o.-'1>-7117"' !>'<·th ol """"'.., 1 ....... 61MQt RIALTOlt I . u T 0" 1 • . !!:• ... -·--• ... ton -a."t.. ' •D\IPLIX.iY OWNllt JPLGl-T• .r-~ ...... """'--.!:':111,...!... -off~ UTflONT ".;;;;..._ ...rl,'";;, i.. ''-.-'°"' ......... -l;ol • Lirml TO TRI> 1~ I I' I .":r..::-..,~-.:;:!_,__~:..~. UDOPlllllllllJIA llr ............ w.tL -'~ Lii • ,_, • ...,.1n.-WAVUCltAIH - - - -· ""'" ____ , i..:1ta1•1•--.a,10e.-A11,...w..,u11o-= ... ~ bteu41fUI... "-""~ --~-"""""-"-""'' .,~--:u.•PIP9"1~ dDtntr1s:-: IF~ .. HAR 8 0 R VI•• M~l.•c lrit,,,,;,, t1iut1 A :Jr'• LIVS 'll• ',J' .. l::'li, •A;;awa,;;;;;;; I KI SC EL ~ ro =~ ..... ~ I-• .......... wf paoL __ ,...,_ sm,500. ITS-~ llS-111 . ~~}t'1,:.':..,=t~....;., NEW.r_:t_P•!~; 1--,,~;;,,..;..,;1,;..;1;..;.,1,......~:-._cti::;'!!!~' ~.-nr.-=--n -=~fl'llJS.Mlr• .. ...-. ..... v.vnu, t_~IR wtt11 -Mk.Ml--=: -&::'"'1tos •'-- - _ . __ ..... -~ ....... -· CMHERt.itt:liio or ?llAUORVISWl!Ol't:I :,1",;.,~::-..:..r-~ .....:o~~ ... ""'-·---· ~-t7"T.:.:..· •~::.Ss'""""' r r I' r r r I m~~ ·.r.i'.\i' a:.r....r ~,~ .... ·· am lkfY .. ~f llTAT11 PAllt ... ~ rn ., 1 • -.. -~ -ii,-DUPUIX,}'! Ill. ... ~,.Ry..,,_~~ ....... _ -... ·qwumul 1111J1 --""·----•-.~-~.i::-11r~.:.~·~,.__~-;·~·;"~!!~I :.:.': ""'"' fl:;,~~ 1111, "'·~ ot1" ·-'"' _SC_IA __ M-UTS ___ ANIWa_._ __ l _IN_CLASllRC _____ A_:noN ___ tOO __ ·_. i;.1¥r,7! ......... 6 __ .,i•iiil'Jt ,, • ' ' • ' • J '1 I .~.... .!~[' ~ ](il[ --~ -~( _..,_ l~ 1· ._.k< ... f•l I ··1-···-. llt1 [ ............ ;, ..... ~~-~.....:~;~--~,;---~~! ""'-' ''""' HouN• u~ · • Hauoeo """'"" • 4t>ta. '""" .-MO ""''· """" * •· ""'-w ~· ~""'· 9'!!!!""1'1 100 0 •oortw.ltv 100 l.AN DLOIDSI L"!..,. llM<fl Ball,.. ,..nhuui. CMto. MoN 0.-ol 0 •••1'1 • ' · i;H::;•nl:::.:::I ;,;.::;;...;=:::...- • -Sell hautifuUy Potted Plants w. Speclallio "' N ... _ mo . U'ftL I'd. 'Victoria NF.ARI.'\' ... 3 BR, i BA. 1 Br, ---· --~-BE ONE or THI! Mak• Big Pro.fits ! !1eAoh • c._. ~ "" • Boaoh. u. Studio. 0ceu camp1 tum All elect kl1ch., mo mo. mo n.i.n. IL COllDOYA AP'TS. ro uvt JN nns "' ' t.uauM. Ouo Rl'rl\aj S.r-Vltw. ""1c, patio. BBQ. Loa.. S.. Mcf, ~ , J UST COMPLl!TI U al It r I d with vke Ii J"RiiE ... Thal 1"' llOO • 2 BR., 2 blka beach. t ~ 'u Jun•. $14>. Nkely tum:'lJir .... t. P'.NM ,,.,. • LuxU:ty 1111' apt nu.~u opportun Y or a Y or man Nu·Vtew;.. . Beaut. view. Qu.let. Prtv. 638-8470JS39--8831. AduJI• onl,y. ll2 w. WU.,n. 1 1 '2 ~,.,...,_ • Adllll "Green Thumb'', th•t is a real money·mlker. NU.Vh:W RENTAt.S patio. BALBOA' llland, tum. 1 Br -. Dlllnruber Sha.I CirpeC1aa W,ik ln Cloe-e Dilhwul\en We will 1horou~hiy train you. '""""° 01· <M-12'8 1325 • 3 + 0£1!. 2 Ba. ni>ic apt 11110 por ,... UJll lndd. * BACl<ELOR APT * ell, Jotted Au !felt • J!111ra Lara. R..oma • e Clioki ot 2 c:olor ICM Balboo P1nln1ul• ""N'lrv· Nl•Ew""l.RO<eonENT~Ls· (Tl<) -.. 1113) NO ~ . D-·ullful Game n--m . tt•··~ ..... I. BBQ'• • euitom • ..,...~ We supply a complete assortment _of pots ..,.. "' 281-4411 ...-~,.,. .,.. nuu ~ ..--~ •Jacuzzi and plant holders from all over the· world, m-<000 -32U · m MONTE Vllll'A EnclOMd Ganaee. Quiet aurrnun=• and • H--~~1 2 BR. + Loft, SD). Yearly. or eszs Wk fr Up On Oalan. cl to~·~ (N 1.1 .. ~~L St) -~-all !he Jll"een goods, potting material, tools,• Gar .. •. fncd yard, dlshwhr. ~•!UM Ni!.,.I LoYCJy Bach-1 Bl-Rooms Da __ .. ___ P_ol_n:-1 __ _._ Ole mg. r n"'""' "' D , • Deod-t Joc1<1 display fixtures, all of wh1rh mj!k0s a fceat r blk o,.... & Bay. --· M&ld s.rv1oe. l'Ool • U1ll pd . ulf Ll•lng ·,No "-IL • Only lllO l"' mo. Bo ti I E l bl. h d ho~m oc·· 645-JJ908. 2 llDRll, 2 BA IOll """"' econ 61HT40e l.GE 2 Br, ' Bo, -..,,t, 2W7 Chart. St., Coot• "'"" 642-4470 I .AHIA P UIRTO u que se -up. s a ls e s ...... _, ..-C d 1 ..... _ villa. Leue $295. mo Incl drps, tro.t-lrtt refrlg , tlon now ready for occupancy .. Total c.asb. oron• • nwr utll. !1511 Wett. Nine Drtw: Corona del Mir super clostta. I 190 / mo . HAC llNDA HAI~ ~1th er St.~~ I investment required , $7 ,500 (secured). Run 4BR. 2BA, b1k 10 beach, No 1..quna Nla:uet. 496--1892. %, blb to Blg Corona. .Bach. ::.kzs. Cordova. Open· ,,..., 'StM ,. i your own business in our wonderful fa cility. pet•. c.,,,,. dn,.., bltin" Newport -di-1125. •Ill pd. Yearly. H 1 ••• ~ DELUXE 1 & 7. BEDROOMS * fol0$~ ~ ~8AY i For details phone, 61:Hl203 1 adlt, no pets. 645-11124 uni """" _,, PurnhlMd & Unfumlohod si-2 • 3 ';R i,; <-j' Antiques Exohange 3 Bedroom, 2 Both EASTBLIJFF FURNISHED bachel>r !or ;;;:;~~~~~~;;;; Heated Pool -Gong .. -·Shag Carpeting s.v.r.t avall. ALL · 645-806~ -9:30 to 5 1295· ""'1• P'"""· 1131J. UJll. pd. LaQU(NTA N l lMOSA ·Dishwasher -All Utilities Paid: TRAS. Pool. ,.. blda. l'liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiliiiijiee;u;,1~i ... ;;;,;-------11RE~AL~TO~Ritw1-.: ... ~"~21'> 4 llR./FAM RM/VU 6T.l-8550. Spanish Cow>try _,. lJv-Adulll Only -No..... ;t';,'Ti!,,~~~B" I' -~~~~·!:!_ __ ~100!!!i;;;C;;;o;;;st;;;a;;;M;;;;a;;;,.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I Untumi&hed at ~ per OCEANSIDE of hwy., )T lse, lng &: Spaciowl A.ota. Ta-241 Avocldo St., Cotti ~ 646-1204 blk W. of Beach Blvd. [ Rull•tm. ] \..8) Opportunitv month. ~ pr\ml! property in nr shops, crpta, adl~ only, raced pool; ronktn IU Slater. 9$8.-1510 or 341 GtMf'al <>-auty College NEAR S.A.C.C. Golt Course . outstanding area. Nearby no peta, l & 2 Br. 6'13-4096. 0BBQnl · Unbelievable lJvtnc • VILLA MAllSllLLES 3 'BDRM 2 BA f=a:r II~-~---~.;;;: ButchC'~Shop . Nets $20.000 l Bcdm1 1~·ith yard, patio schools, park, market. Va· Cotti Me.. 'i SPACIOUS 1 & 2 llDROOM APT. .dlhWlhr.'' bltna. Crp~P!Ji 11 PiP<' & Tobacco Store • 1'-i'C\I' and garag£'. l\la1w·e adults cAnt, clean I: waiting, Cail · 1---------1 BR. FUURN. $175 l'urnlthell & Unfumllhed drps. Spadoul. La~y_! o"ly. 11<-0. Cena de Oro 2 BR. F RN. $2!0 Mull Lhr~ part & 1Cb11. ;:-:-nJ Condomin iu ms for u l1 160 NC'cd Mt&. Busines cs R1~ro ~e~rd=vd~•t.'~~ CoALL ~ PAID t 2 !f ·~~~ i~ ~.:'~~erf. ft•~lr 'm~~ 1 app~~doocea .: =~%erztd. ~. , SUPER delux Spanish style' HOL LAND Bus. Sale1 ~7729 mpare re you ren AduUa No Pl!t• .,,,. '."""":",.... • u-DM-.u wardn)ua-r.-1140 mo. 1i1 ml. no. of H . M ri;~'"~· G~ra~n~•',_£C~.M~·-!!'."~!><~le!1'>~j~~!!!!~~!'"" ... !"'!"!!''I custom designed, teaturtng: indlnct I ghtllig bl tJtcben. breakfast bar . n~h. 2 br bl--• Duplex, East Costa esa. _ e Spacious kitchen with in-huge c:ate finced pjtlo. ~ ~!'; llll"o' • ..._ ""'t'" • Eacl> 3 BR. 2 BA w/'h"" * Liquor LicanN * e PRlVACY Auuftd! I Br. di""' llgbtfng 14 bfu S. al San Dl•ao·f'rwy ini . rlclt n ......... ,,,. ..... lar~ •ea•-• poo I t°":.~.yudCpl, ~undl ~ .... crpt. All elect kitchen. Orange On Sale General Sml pet. A,ll utn !Mt. SSS. • Separate din'g area on Beach, l blk W. on Holt Diii' ~-•"'" l.C\I • "4U.,...... • Spanish decor. Kinga.ard !Public Premises-Cocktails! A LA RentalseMS-3900 2414 Vls!a de! Oro e Home·like slonige to 16211 Parbhte Lane.) & anal. Air bondJtfonlng. chlldn!'b oJc.. No pet&. CWI Real Estate. &l2-22Z!. F:n1ergency·Save S$$ (Prlc-N~port Beach e Private patios «tt4J 847...&Ul 3101 So. Brlttel St., S1nt1 AM SS1-l200 842--t664. 1 Incom e Property 166 en ro1· quick sale). Call • 1-IARD to Beal! 2 Br. 644-1133 ANY'I'IME e C108ed garage w/storage .,...,~~""'~!""'"""" COLDWIL t, ~KIR & CO; WALK TO BEACH ~! \\'in.~ton Collect. . . Fnl"d yrd, encl gar. Kids. sm · l BR. Bltns, new crpts, • ~larble pullman $145 . SlS5 MANAGING AOINT New 1 & 2 BR, cp_tllfi»s 11UPLEX Three 2 BR uni is in like 1W'11• t.'Ondition. UppPr unit ha:.t lovely view of hills & lights. Good income. Existing loan ovrr 8()';1· can be assun1ed at 7%. $49,950. CALL e •••·2414 ~"' REALTY N1•r Ntwporl Po•I Orflct (213) 272-t249 Sl.30. chlJd ok Balboa Penln • King-sz Bdnns Bachelor & l _~ patb, dswshr. 316 16th. ~1465 or *LIQUOR LICENSE* A LA Ren!•lt e645-3'llO l2'l5 • LRG. 2 BR, i Bo. • Pool · B""""'" · ,_,. 1,,,1o.,, p•lv. ..,..... • 84h1957. ! Orange on sale general. (Old 3 Bedroom, with large family Newport Shore11. Chlld/sml rounded with plush land· Divided ha.th & lObl of Apt. Unfum. ."5 Apt. Unfum. 365 LARGE, CLE AN · •12 i.~su!" • cocktails 1. roon1 & big rumpus room pet ok. see.ping. closets. Rec hall, pool & BEDROOM $135. p f!l' $18 SOO over garage. Nice cul di:! sac $215 -3 BR. 2 JJA, frplc, Adult living at Its best pool tables, sauna baths. Corona clel Mir COit• .Mtu month. Call~ a~ie Winston Coll~t IZl3) 277-4249 eaitslde tOcatldn. ~.·pr. bltns, deck. gar, child/pet. LARG:0 ~~~ $180: See for younelf! 17301 PM 1 --------.M=I mo. i.t a: last month rent in NU.VIEW RENTALS Keelaon Lil. (1 b1k W. of 2 BR., 2 · BL, upctaln, * SHADY ELMS· POOL • ' · M oney to Loan ""' advance. 646--'lUl. 673-«00 or f9+-3243 365 \V. Wilson 642-1D71 Beach, l blk N. rd Slater). <knmstairs. Atb'act, apt. • Adults,Poolaide S140 up 2 BR. Sl35. lA: l~;f· EASTSTDE •• _ ... _,_..._. '2 ........................... 80-'1BC8 SMdllh trplc. 6 4 4-4 81 0 e Oilldren next block ~hi~~ &ok~307S. 1.J 1 t TD L · ~w·-~ • BEACH Bunu! Ut Baoh· LI VE LIKE A KING MEN, mWJ t..ach hoi.J. day•i m4607 all 6 p.m. Frao Fumltun Plan "!"' s oa ns bedroom sePIU'IW houe, elor. Steps bay/beach. Util d Rooms $2'2.50 week, ....... $95 2 BR apt a-" N.,.••·t, ~-1'-171 E. 2'lnd. St., CM 642-3645 LAKEHuntl~-kSt .. u~·,_ .... t fully carpeted, U96 pr Incl. 1100. At Bu get Prices! .,.... .,.., u Wtul\ c-ai i"' ........ 6314 % INTEREST month. Phone 96 8 - 9 3 8 6 ALA Renti1l1e6454t00 ' per mo. 536-1056. ~l~cb, ~tt. $205. lJPPm Gold Medallion all w/p.r. 1 pel'!IOn or man1lid 2 TD L AFT&R 5 PM. FURNISHED -l•gun• Beach er · elect 28R apt, w/p.r &:: cpl. NO chldn or peb. IN FAST GROWING nd oans 3 Bedrooms, 2 baths. Vf!.TY e COZY Frplc! Spec Bach· UNFUtUflSHED Costa Miu balcon y Jn quiet 536-3972. i PHOENIX : (hvner retiring. • .. A , .. _ f ~ ·-~ •lo' --bch UU! ln•l ~25 BACH. nr beach. "'""'"'"". . ... 1 .. b"'-'---1 adl~ only -• (61 1-BR units, (2 houses, 2 ...... rp . .._...e enucu ,. .... u . ... · .. · •• · * POOLS ~ ,...._...,.,......_ .. • "" LUXURY 2 Br, 1~ ~ . 1 1 · h-·' Lowest rates Ora~e Co. $ 2 3 5 /mo inc I u ding ALA Rent•lse64S.3900 Col. TV. ]4.15 N. Coast. pats. ·$159. 64f-0878/557-3.n2 Crpt'd, drp'd, bll·ln•. . duplexes, n1cc ':' urn1s eu, ~ Ca * ENCLOSED Open eVtt. 6 T 5-4 3 6 7; newly renovated lnttriors. "WE BU Y TO'S" 54G-fuir.Agt U Dave, LRG new cust. 3 Br, 3 Ba . GARAGES 494-2S08. att 4. · HARBOR 6Dmlf 3J!:,hi~.l!!i • .+tn-'2 }!:t" 1_.Ba. Frwy. Close to eve . Uu'bte corner lot, room for S I M C · · home \v/golf course view. 11"'1.J ~·---Y ~· ""'· ... .,IJ, • $175/mo. 847-8873 eves.' more. Present inccune $755, att er tg. o. e NEAR Schools! 2Br. Ne\11 1st & last. $545 /mo. 557.9409, *CONVENIENT BEAUTIFULLY furn. 1 Br $lli0. 6 $135. Avail Nov. L Pill $485. At least $225 spen· ~~~:lJlarbor are!'4~~~ ~~~:.· S~~~ yrd, encl gar. 2 BR p~iv. home. $175, has FRO~' ALL$l lBSEAMOCHESNTH ~ic. ~a:ppl~ ~ ~~~-~ ~~ St., 548-m4; ~. tt-tm652.~~~:;..;· ~'. dRble. $61,500, CTM. or • everyth~ Fncd gar M to bch. $275. 491-2587 ....,.. co:"""' ...,. ~ might take small 2nd. 2nd TRUST DEED LOANS ALA Rentalse'45-3900 Rent-A-H0use ' 91'4ao ..-~~""';-"7=--F $l30 .. 15 DELUX 3 BR, 2 BA, btltnl, 53&-3916, 828-1727. ';' Wrlteo Owne•. mo w. wm 13uy Tru.1 Deed> ADULTS PLEASE Newport Beach rom to .. mo •ncl dbl gar, !rplc, ccv.red BEACHBLUFF AptOi Devonshire, Phoenix 85015 •BROKER ' 642-1491• • REALLY Nice! 3 Br. BLUFFS 3 BR Condo, xtru. VILLA PO"ONA P•.11!>\.~ ehlldttn g)I:,. no pets • or call (602) ~398. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliilliiil Slove, refrlg. Huge, incd, Nr. pool It mrkt. Sm family M We have Winter Rentals BHfte..,1 e 1-..,nftl Nr.' ttarbar &: B-a k er. 2 & 3 BR. Pool. pa.do INVESTORS _ 5 Houses. One Kids/pell. $215, ! $3so. Yr lie ownr &40--0215 PHONE 642·2015 Will Take Students 2 Bcl""I • I ldnno 96&-<»79. D-whr. 8231 Ellis. 842~. 3 BR, Three 2 BR & 1 BR. I JG;;l ALA Rentals e'454900 S.n Clemente (1160 Pomona Ave.) Also oceanfronts avail. $110. 2BR.-individual units, LRG. 2 BR in quiet 4-pltjc. Lge trees, freshly painted. ,..__."-nt ~ EASTSIDE 2 ett hie, $165, 3 Bdtf"~·· 2 bathsl). trplc $275 I Ys er 1 Full Bathe like own home, cl09ed gar, $150. Infant ok. No pm, Inc. $805. mo.wuf5·~ ~ r Xlnt oond. Settuded, Jmmed CHARMIN~2BR, 2BA. U:a' WE&KLY-MOHTtfLY 4 BR.n2 SA·.~~ ... 0$iisJ350 Muter size bedrooins w/ =:-.~ • 3~. '~t a:: ~ End gar. tncd )'I'd. 8f2..4.WJ. Tl'rmS available. tra rt I! occ. Lovely yrd, no Rooma wtk' ~h°ranuc Executive Suites 3 BR. 2 BA ........... $285 high beam celllQga, lari:e ~ 1 STOR\'.', 2BR, c1osed 8'J', for 'House in ;;ewpa ousn Furnished 300 children, 548--0715 oce&n w, 300 to 67~f 2080 N.wpOrt Blvd. I BR. 1 BA ....•.•••••• U73 Uving . roam w/sa.s or crpta, drps. laund room.-~ Hel&hts area. wner NEWLY dee 3 br, 2 ba, lge course, S mo. • Costa Mesa 2 BR. 1 Ba. Penin .••• $250 v.·ood burning fireplace. 3 Br. 2 ba trl-plex, * 842-6046 * 641Hl484. Gen1r1I yd, cov patio. $225 mo. m 492·5120· 642_2611 • CALL; 613-3663 Convenient lal!lldry area crpt/drps. Quiet Adlts, no I 81'. studio, w/w crpt, ~· INVESTORS! Brand llE'!w LEASE. Lido Sands. Pool & \Vil!Mln St. 548-2649 Houses Furn.or STUDIOS & l BR'S off kiti;hen. Enclosed pa· pets. $200 mo. 2281 ~~l:.£8'., $150. ~;or, duplex, fully rented. $48.950, -A..i. across !he itrf!et. Steps 2 BR Unturn house. t.1ature Unfum. 310 ,tios. 2 swimmin& pools, Fordham. Bus. 6 4 6-168 9 ,)()() Sl0,000 down, 1~5'-loan. 1~·be ch ~i-1_1. n adults. $160/mo. 1---------•FREE Linens aauna, rf!Cttatlon fad1i. ~. 646-«939.1 --br~2~1 -----!-~.' Good return. Quick ap-o a . ..,,., ..... ........ to . Call 642-0537 Corona del Mir • FREE Utilities ties, SeCurity guard. No l • 2 BR w/tum. avail. ' bocks to beach. w, ... prfelation. 151 E. Bay St., LAl'gl" 3 bdrm!!, 2 ba., 2 . • Full Kitchen petl. Heated pool. $130 & up. ~~/~tins$1sl ~ • C.M. ~7131/642-4837. patios, popl table, fireplace, * *3 BR, 2 Ba., fncd yrd. ON the beach, unobltructed e 11eated Pool u ~.1-11 "-• 10 Ill 7 pm Adults. 853 Center Sr:. 2 Br 1 berlk. ~.' ESTABLISHED prop. mamt. we I bar, b It -ins, Family only. S 2 5 0 Imo. Vu pP road 3 BR. 2 BA. • Laundry Facilities muu. wt'9'"' 645-8965. , to ocean. ~ .LR..,. firm seeka asaocia-dishwasher, washer dryer. Agenr. 837-1271. rum. Or. Arl1ust for winter • TV. aid il WINTER 2700 ~ w CM shag, stove, t>alnt. $250~. • ~ Partia11y fUml.shed or un-4 BR 2 ~ tam f u · ~ 2875 • m serv ava y...... attncttve 3 Br. ,..,.non •y, Spac. 2 I: 3 Br apt. $140 up utils pd. 613-0731. .J tlon & space In active in-tum! hed ~ Will • ..,., nn, cpts, or ll time. "',,. · e Phone Servi ... ., Pool Vdrp bl1"' kid k ' come proprrty u.le. office. • • your "', ... ,ce. drp5 S245 1.st & lut $100 Condo • · ce Sundeck. Garage. Blt-tna. 2 nr HlrlNw llvd I • cp , • • o :z BR, new crpta:, drpa, yittt.1 wnt inve1t. Newport negottate with ttsponslble clewling d°ep. 642-m2' m1n1um1 BACK BAY 3 BR. blk3 to beach. $250/mo. fn. ,••·..,.· 1996 Mtt.ple No.1 ... 642-3813 No peta $160/mo ~nj parties with references. $475 Unfurn. 320 eludes utll. Can be teen this ,... %116 College No. 5 • • 642-7035 • • ,-Bch/Costa J'\.fesa. ~73.10. yearly, $425 winter. 3 BR. 2 ba, bltns, dbl gar. & EXECUTIVE QUALITY wee~nd at 22:2% 3Sth St. or * * BEAU'l1FUL t Ir: 2 BR. Mlchael, HB. 847.SSTI. ~ 1 OWNER SACRIFICING Children OK. Ph.~. tam. rm on c:omtr lot in Huntington Beech 3 Ba, Fully crptd & draped! can ews ?14:m."1B2L I.ff: MJD O>rlte..,..,__, Gal"den A~ L19una Beach I I 'I ~--~-----1 Mesa No11h. 561-0406. Formal LR! Two car gar. =====7."-c--, '"8'V~ ~-, ~e~o ne~;.\Y ~:1exiie1.l. Balboli Pe ninsula 2 BR, l bath, disp. fenced 2 BR Condo. Adult Jiving, Fenced rear yard! Fam. OCEANFRONT New turn. 3 Patios, frplc., p(lOl. -·-VIEW e ' 000 2 BDRM ocean front 11,·ith yard. lmmed. occup. No Huntington ~y. swimmlng Rm. 16' x 35' Boat/motor BR, 2 BA. frpl. sni. SJBO. C&ll 546-5l6J OCEANFRONT • · 1 SiS, 'eau 642·8520 ~aragl'. No pets. Adults. pets. Rets. Sl15. 6'73·2918. pool, recreation, fr P I c, homt parking. Close to Winter. Adlta only. No pell. How's Your Budget? DELUXE . 2 Br., 1~1 Ba. 2 BR. 2 BA. Lease. 1\-fattlre UtJI washer/dryer stove Lease grade school. 336 Monte 673-8088. Studio on dead-end street. Adults, no pets. Elevator' 10 : EXP. Gen. Contr. seeking ~~~~~lli. pd. $225. 21 !~· .. ::!~C.:.. ~pa"t';,. ~·. $200/tno. 968--°2290. • Vista, O>sla MeBa. Open •Balboa Penln. 3 BR. 2 BA Great. when )'OU &et )'OIU' Crphl, drpl, pool. bltns, beach. Pool. Security. 31755 1 joint venture bldg. project .,.., .. ",..._."' "' "' .,..... N 8 _ _.._ House Sat/Sun 1-5 PM. Joiln over .,,. ... -. ,.._ bay , ~ey'a worth at the Ven-pr.Iv. patiot. $155. 1 child ok. "'·--t H S , ·-·· , , w/lot owner, M3-6148 eves. 3 BR, 2~i bath. All tM!'Yl in· 5'1&-6793 att 4:30. ewport ,....~ G h ... c NI"" •---~ vu dori\e u • ....1... location wilb No ...... SollJ..7154 v.o<L6 wy. · .._ ... ,e. 1 ranat Agt. ~. w/beach. Util paid. $350/mo. ' ...... ....,. _... · e 49'-2135 e 1i • Mounteln, Dffer1, Mterloont',·,.w. l~~ .. ~.tal. 305 RBENT$325or lea.se tohption 5 Br, 2 Bluffs-Llndi1 Model * $27.51 WEEK & UP 213: Gar7233 oolJect. !helots kfof_.~earby lactlvfpltie. for NE'WtY DECORATED -~ I ., R-rt 174 ~·~=• a -•n ...,,. ··Pua •vand 2 Br wl~•. New -•g, NEWLYredecorated2""'12 · · ,..., ' Single level, 3 BR. ~ on-• Studlo • 1 IlR A t ..., •-.... .,. .u•"il 1-==.;..... _____ , Corona del Mar 54<>-1907 ly. Beaut G-nbelt. 1475• • TV • Malllald Setv!P 5 FOR Rent: Tra tler pool area. Inside: Fncd yrd w/paUo. Wtr pd. BA. Beam eelilngll, bltiiil, LOT tn ramoua Lake Havuu. D p I 6?5-5982. ''"" • Servt€e-Rtce Avail w/cabana, SllO + util per * 1500 lqUll"t tett Call btwn 1 A: 5, 6:l6-tlal. dtclc. Really nice! $250 tnO. bome of the world funou• BEAlrf 3 br, 2 ba, Harbor ana 0 nt : ~'U:en &: p:f !fi!11 mo. All adlt ·pk. For quiet * 3 Bedrooms 2224-A Placentia Ave .•• $145 '94-1011 or 4SH561 London Bridge. Located View Hills. Avail 11:15. 2 or 3 BR. 2 BA. frpl &. dbl gar. Townhouq Unfum. 33S 23'16 N~lJl)t't Blvd., CM elderly couple. 5t8-f391 *~~Yin& room wi~ LARGE 1 BR. Apt. Prtv. CHARMING 1 BR apt., St. doee to all llChoo!• A clty. 3 mos. Adlts. 644-lltE Just redec l28S per mo No H Ii"""'" •-··h 548-9755 or 6'5-3967 2 Br, 2 Ba, fully crpt'd, Also .._1.... • eetio. All util pd. Bit-Ins. 'Ann's at Wlllon. $170. CaU S911i:1 or will tnde fur Cbsta 2 BR, 2 Ba. Well furn. home. pet1. TI4 : 639-3883 · un ==s-;;= ~ $100 mqnth a: up. w/frplc. ~ blk to beach. one.,....,_ m the adult SM& cpta, drpR. $140. Sat or SUn 4!M-3841. Mesa or Newport Beach In· :Z~~ ~C::~~~ closc67?3~ Fountain Valley 2 Br, Wllbr/dry, ~v/refr. NEW apta far ndultl only. = afty:a:m lse. Call ~~e!°itf!·attrom $195. M&-4934 or 548-1511. ~AlNT 1 BR. $185. UW ;cl. come prop. 644-4687. ;i-, Crpta. Rec facll. AYI ll/l5, Balconle11, fireplaces, beam-• THE VENDOME LRG. 2 BR. Olttq:e. Sep. o kids or pc1s. ~ CALlFORNfA City, 10 Ac, LltUf'I• S..c:h 3 BR, 1% Ba lwnh!te, new, Dys 968-4195, eves 5$-9565, E'd ceUJngs, wood paneling, WATERFRONT, Lrg. 2 BR. patio. Wuh fm. Gar. $164. • 4.9'1·1Jl65 j nr Hollday Inn le CMc cpt, drpt, pool, r r p 1 c . Duple xes Unfum. 350 carpetlrig, drapes. R.ecrea-$260 winier. $:IJO Yeuly. 1845 Anaheim Avenue Wtr pd. n18-C Meyer Pl.· L•aun.1 NllllYll center. 894-IDM eves. Sl40 . trrIL PD. Fully fum 1 $195/mo. ru: 696-3240. lion building with pool * Call 544.2013 • Call Mn. PbiWps &t2-28U ~ts. 642--1656. ---X~-~="-'-'"'----'-1 W ~.a 114 Br. Nr. beach & town.· H n t i nt a.. h UNFURNISHED 2 bedroom, Furn &: unfurn. Bachelor & $140. CLEAN l Br. Furn. DELUXE 3 BR. 1% BA, $165/mo. $65 LAGUNA NIGUEL . Real Estate ant-S23S . UTIL Pd. So. Laguna l u n., on c: ealltalde location. Carpets 1 bdnna. from $135. 140 W. ulll. pct No kids or pets. 410 APARTMENTS deposit Avail now. 845-0973. Ap•rtments * I'\ .-k C h .. *. Br. Excepdonally n ic e, 3 DR. 2 BA. Condo . Double Drapes, all bullt:ins, ~ WUIOn (Just West 0 f Hlll'ding. 547-1155 Air Cond • Frpk'1 • 3 Swim· 753 Shalimar Dr., No. 2, 1 Br., 1 Ba.; 1185 • 2 Br" l ,,.u1c GI Ocean view. Deck. encl garage . Pool. children, no J>l't•. $165 pr Newport Blvd.J. • Very clean. 1 BR. ApL Nr. ming Pools . Health Spa • C.M. Ba."'! $225. e 2 Br., 2 Ba.: Will buy your prope~. All S«KI ·RIGHT on Sand. 2 Br .. Cl ubhoufl<'. Nr. beach I month. 646-1509 BKR. HOLIDAY PLAZA bay. No pets. Tennla Courts • Gt.me and LRG. 1 BR, hlttna, dih/wsh. $235 \ cash "'·ll hin 12 hrs. Call ~:, .. t b'pJc. ye a r 1 Y • ahop'g center. $250/mo. Corona d el Mir DELUXE Spacious 1 BR 613-4928 Billiard Room. Adlts, no peta, nu crpta, lncld Gas, TV Cablt .I: Wtr Nu Vf>OIE.W RE NTALS 1536-n:n. furn apt, $135. Heated Pool. CLEAN Bacti. apt. Uttllu-lBR. From 1160 $130. • ~ FulJy crptd I: ",_.· Rec tm-.1o or 494 3248 Alone on lot, 5ng!ll or fam-ROOMY 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, Ample parking. Adults. no Included, Sll5 Mo. 3 Blkl. ~ 1 BR. 6 Den From $185 1 I: 2 BilAdiifts, no J>eta. facU. Htd Pool. e'BQ ~ I =='----'---""'·= ,· Illes. $145, ha1 gar. Klds/ ground floor. S350 pr. month pel!I , beach. 615--0144 MEDITERRANEAN BAY MEADOWS APTS. 2900 Aloma Av~. " Lido Isle pell. plus .rpacious 1 btdroom l965 Pomona Ave., C.M. R 381 w. Bay St., C.M'. 846-0073 499-2217 nr 4:954114 ;;;.;:;;..=;_-----IRent-A-Houn 979-1430 UP1taln with prtvate en-BACHELOR1&2BR J:~~.~~L VILLAGE 3BR,:ZB" iihaR-.-.. ~L-:-ldo.--:-lo"lo----"'-=~I 2 Br, 2 Ba or 4 Br, den &:: 4 trance. 1225 pr month. Both FUm &: unfum "" ,_.,., ... .,.., Br. Winter. Open Sat. %11 3 Br, 2~, bh·IM. unlll next to park & tennis, Xtra . Pool BBQ lndry N.B. $250. Lee 613-5415. 2400 Harbor Blvd., C.'1t. carpmt I'll', 0CC. Upstairs. VIR Eb 0 11 67>7667 Ftnced. Chlldn!n ok. call Bailey 673-8550 A(t. C1 nice. ' ' ' NR new bach apt, nr bch. ITI4) 557~ $169/.zno, 5S).9786. BEAUT. appt'd. 180• ~ or 213: 44SM66.' $250/mo. 84)-4821 1 BDRM duplex unturn. eou. Mii=~~~ ~ ~75 SJ 75 mo, utlls lncl. Sail Inn RENTAL OFnCE 3 BR. 2 8A.·PATl0 dpenln.tho1"ete-;e'. SfBIRp.,av'aullo. ~ BROKERS INC. I CllARM!NG 1 9,, lum du· Motel, 673-1841. OPEN 10 AM to 6 PM $17D. Mesa del Mar. 646-1208 mo. yr·,:;:-........ 615.-.•:~ HAVE "'"'er for On.nge Co. Newport Beach * 3 IDr CO~:f'.' crphl, ~· ~alt pre~~ $115. mo. v ~· ~ ·~ M ·-'--'-'--------poo , waa r er, I , or. · plex, new crpt!I, drps &: 3 BR, 1% BA. 1% b1kl to STUDIO 2 Br, 2 Ba. C/D. Mesa Vint. 96Ul51 Inco me, 2-a.i unlbl, or Shop S95 . Bachelor, alao Bayfront retrtg, U'.lO. MS-~. Cast• Mesa paint, Lovely garden sur· oce&n. SlOOlmo. lfe8liJl.AIJ &I BUns. Nr. OCC I: SD Frwy. center atore3 WI i 0 0 d 11tudlo SICS ut il pakf. 3 BR, ~ Fam rm. Cpts, roundinp. $135. Mat u r t ~ End patb. $165, 54&-0t99 return. Pref beach towns. Rent-A-HouH 979-M30 dt'J)9, hltlns. 842-1972. $275 2 BR. Jn triplex: retna:., adults only. 548-:69'a> A.pt. Unfum. W ;·=.: ~ ::3: ••••• = * 2 BR Apt. Crpts, dtpl, ~i.n~~~I~ N. NEW &ecloo.d 3 BR F'U per mo. 847-85.n. Aaf, blt·lns. carp, drpi, 1160 l'lo. * SHADY ELMS • POOL * . ••• ·• . cupcn, upstatn. SUS/mo --~ °'pl . Bf•'~· NEW 4 BR • 2 bath house SlOO l>tposiL Adults. • Adult• Poolside $140 Up lelboa Peninsula Be&utu'IJl new apts. W/pvt Olde? prefd. 613--11.45. . WANT TO BUY l or 2 11nit11: Oeca1uivnt I ex. wa. -'-·~ ' ' Graham Jtea)ty 146-2414 e Child bl k paUo., f&rqe, DOof, • apa. l-'~~""'--7:'°""~-on Balboa Ialand from $4/JS/mo. Yearly. 645--8908. ('Pl•, '"~· lrplc, dlshwshr, ren n~t oc . • OCEANFRONT Town . Lu.ab pnkn aettill&. Aault•, Lp 2 hr, cptl, drps. DELUXE 2 A 3 Br., 2 Bl., -gar, $160 ap. -otc:., 3095 Mace: K9ft., 54&-lfl34. Midway City l'jjv"i;i'"jjj'ilii.,iii.~iii"i·iiiiil nvu • .-. Irvine 177£. 22nd St., CM 642-36'5 ,·~--3 .. &4&a&e5. No pets. fl51·Il70 2 BDRMS., 2 ha, studio ia,t --, 121'! 79.' ·-~~;·;~·~========-=1~t~"'1~. mo~.~531~-29JJIJ~~· ~~;J~H~u~n~tl~nf!On~~~B~oa~c~h~~ F rM Furniture Pl•n .. _ .. aft, fan•··!•'• view, 3 BR. no pets. 151 £, ~. c.M. pzbqe dlrp. $155 mo. II am rm., f11>ICS, 4 Ba. Carp. drapers bl t I a Ganen l IMMED. OCCUP'ANCY 2 IR, UTIL PD $175 2400 ,.. 11. $750/mo. Yr!>. Partr·Llko Surreundinf 3 BR. 2 BA, dbl gar, opu. 0 .,.g..1140 Month~ [ 11 •I 'iES, \\'e have rental1 • P.tay New 2 & 3 Dr •Pt• Attrac. turn. Jlld pool. Adil'!. 67HiOll1. QUIET DELUXE ~~. bltftt, d 1 h w hr, fNncW wl' be of aervlct. to YOU In Dbl gnrnge, d11'""9hr Nn fX'I $. !Infant ok) ACROSS from beach. 2 br, j • 3 BR APTS. PX>lmo. Vacant. 645-4203. Newport e.lch l'iiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.:iiii Cor 11!M!llnirton/Adama. HB. 642-~ yearly, Pvt patio. Wuher & Pvt. Patios * Htd. Pools 28R, carpeted ($150) A WHERE 11 ~IU * $U PER W EEK * dryer. $250. 67;-JM<. Nr Shop'1 * Ada!U Only -· Ollldm OK, No CONGINIALITY A Up. Pool A Jnald 1ervlce. Corona del Mir McutinJque Aptl. p1ta.: SG-5288 PREV•ILS 3•1slne11 Oooortunltv -=--=---=---- Kltch<na avall. Mott! Tablll, !TIT lanta ADI An c.M. SPACIOUS -· 2 Ill'. I ~ ~1·· """1ft' -.l Victoria. !fl"' ·~ ha, nu!"" e<1linc. pr, Oc<an vi.., 24 hourm: FOR S n I e -Fore 1 g n &. Ap.wf!MMI '°'"'"' BACHELOR, l 6 2 Br. apta. ~ a .._ ~ . -.,_.., · pool!. plO !14Cki'19 !!?. . a Dart me -t 1 Dorru.••tlc Cara EI e c t r l c Encl. carport&, htd pool ~ -..,. lf>O:t\i IN~ ** Lrr 2 hr $l!IO PYt tncd with a M " I Shop includlnt lnvento,.,. Adi IJM , newty -.. encl ~~""-ilidl .;. "' _ ·-~-ucl"""" club \r.llb te.lin11: ~pment f o r Theme Art' Ju!lt A l'rw Of "SINCE liM'' .a F •~ ta/no petl. -I: up. ~!•• p&tio. bltnt, c:riit, drpl, -.... ..,.... and ... ...,._..__~. faunfilhl t nd 0 MANY ·--Ar.s ,.ph. urn. -IS! C.-SI. l<W96>. "~ ~-to ~ 11-· •~ . ~·~ ~J.1," atrt(lt'a on a 111t•rtf'rs. ur n.c.i,. • • • • Isl \Ve11ern Bank 8Jda. ......_ 1u ,_ TW'T"ri lat.hr, b 11 11 IP: r y * VnlverJ\ty Puts:, ~ .LARGE 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath VERY nice-1 BR. dplx. ON TEN A~ •-roo. Im Center SL • C'1l * 1 BR. utra llf'I" ~ fi:. of the • a c:hlrarr, h)'dtRullt 1 y p e $90 • llAi.~DYr 1 a n. Slovo, D•y• 5J2·1000 Nleht• clow lo beach. s:m. Al'° QuteL Sep. by llaraa:n: Apta. turn./unfum. Lease aft 3 pm wtc<tys: all day ~-~· c munttya Pa 'I' t men t _. rrtnder drilllnit machine , refrlg. St nalrl' fine . Vncanl. llvollahl<' unturnlti.hed tit 1 adult over 30,. No Jl«A. Fireplace J pl'lv. patkii . wlmd1 60-8340. tu'·~ _..-iv.i1o 1 bed · _ Pn-n cll&1. lt•1Ung Pf\rt!i, * · $1n. Rkr:..6~7225. $48-JQ21, 1'lola TcnnlsCorltnl'I Uktat. DI LUX& EXQUISITE hlY view 2Bed='=~m.-. old nnd ~w 11rmnluf't' $12.i. St~Cl.UOl-:D! 2 Br Cot· 3 BR. 2 bfllht •• ·••····• ~ &lboa Island rMMACULATE Bach. S1Jt, 900 Sta Lan, CdM 644·2811 TOWNHOUSE duJl*ex. 2 BR, 2 9A.. ~ Deluxe 3 btdroom . lesllni;t: pentl. T 0 n 1 ii · IAllr. Lovely gurtk'n. 'deal 4 BR. 2 h•lhs ........ $350 Utll pd. Sncl lf.y, cpt/drp, (MacArthur nr Coast HW)'t • J. BR t\1 BA. COt• drpt '75-1291 or 6Cr~ Moddl OJ)tn 9 A.M. to fi P.)t "'°,.~ andbl'nthol and l;J) fo• touplo. 3 Bil., bom~ rm. • '"' • MXI 3 M. 2 bao, .,,Jc, w-w cpl. pr!. PA!lo. Quid adults. bill>'..,;.., -•· poi1o wi.· I-SIDI 2 IR. $1M VERS •11 1 ES!.. 1 itn s:rnentn"'. * PsUo. 1«'-t 1m{•htd Nr So. ~ I ,.., Bl I It! ~1 "'·· --' Rtadlo tor Ute r.vcrythJng 8 reel hff' I 1 • • BR. Apt. Redee. Fmlc enck>Atd ranie. CoupJ~. fft11 • "'" re 1. rvu . on the BLUPPS .S1u:rfficed! Sl:ooO. 308 N. $1>&:1 . VA CANT ' l't'Ady! 2 ~ I Bay (rorit . s~ mo. U 7~ ••Nice I ' 2 Brt Trsllen. Encl l'atft.gt. C'.a..rden. Wn.1k ~ml doe ok. 116.1 566342. Adult1, no pell. &u.9520 t N E-T Nftmmt BJYd. NB. ... Br. Gar. Jo~ncd Jor kids. Diamond, 67~3281. $85 I up. ~~rl' AduUa, to beach. USO/mo. 401 ''111E VICTOIUAN'' ,1 A J BR. a...,.. Pllol. r--aN__::Bfrv·," ~t -fr'UNDR-•T j, TWOfu11"hlrnSt1D 2b& ehlldok.8'2-Fernl••f. or call ..-... u~ullO uvuo --~· ~ -"""' u _, 2 e,. •/pt. ~ -" . . ~ HQ1Pllol "'1od (j W oh ,.__ Fluff 111' • 01.D 2 BR! Porch. REALTY Apta. \; Bfk to blodl. Coll I Bit, utB paid, $170 mo. no G:S.1'116. yrd w/jlodo. , Dt & -, above Pacl!lc "-• H-al a ,.1 _-;:: -• '' -1 .--..a , E/1lrlr. Kld1/pet,1 welcome. Unlv. Parir: Ccnltr. ln•ll'IC Salllbury RJty . .,,...._, pets. 22TT* !"Ji::.,SI.. NEW '°""ly larp l BR Apt. bib& Wtr pd. can t>aftlll '9lftt 1 u.... J'·) .. .,,.-"• -.,. typo •-ry LANDLORDS I CAii Anyllmo K3).l)!W CUTE I br ... 1 adu1I m ~u Wollt lo beoc1> A mlrt. fl., 5) ---· & dNnf .. MrVlce, Co-i;·nrr, ~-· .. rr"'· ~RVtCE ornC1! hO"rJ 8 AM In 6 :~p1 ~frplc. nice ktt. Yrbt $115 a UP. N\eltb' tum. l • 2 G&nJu• encl. QZ. mo. Yr\y. err-vtctc:41a St "A" ••• l15!5. $190 Sift' mo. 2 Br., 2 B"·· ·~ f ~ ~-."~"'i"ITao~~I .... a dol -""CM1t B!ACON RI NTALS n Incl •Jll. -BR T>ollen. Adult• only, ... H•l-. Gn-1067 "R!'W. v..i,.1 Q(Jltl 2 B~. ..,.., cl>t>o. --pr, Tt !!pl!On!o (714) .. -~· a:t• lncluclo1 * MUI 11 * 4 BR. 2 Baths. fenood )'ll'd. Ba boo P9nlniil1 UI W. WU.00. CM.·-· Wkndo or all < ~ wfcdu.. c.rta, 4'pa, Nfrts, .-. ba1-....... Noof .. In 3 -...... 2 Ba. BijllhO a ll .......... , PETE tt<tt•tlon prlvll'•;;J•rdcn-1 B,. WO A 11«1. AdU!tJ onty. l Br., "1>!<., i...m coil., --S1J5; .... .,... ~ .... l!l.ml. $2!0. Yurly. l'rplc., ...... 100 -.. IAllRI TT REAL TY TIME FOi ••. l!!Olino !152. an 11 BR. Ill BA,ROtlo, ii S/f'ool. Id.al for Boch<-.... b<Jow hlway. Adlta/m adull~ 1295 -... ::111 llUff • -bit.Im, b1( ...... pm ar wkr)ds. 315 E. lJ81, ri:io mo. on 1IQ OllJrdi St., ~ pMs. $215. AvaD 11/21 . SIHl7I. 1"°8 · w. BaJm.. _C,11 · DAll.Y-f'tLOT ..__...,. lloach llO. l~t Apt C 1173, Purn. W: &Tir."ltr MH.'131 Em or-... 1 BR, """°"' prlv. PAik>. WW. tletlpd 2 BR. I Ba. 845-10!1 ·tlil1i,1'ro. R_!!'.i< · i Df.!TIUBttroR, \\'hO,ICMlc NT AD ::::!. • !! 9"!: · eeptktn•lfy nice 2110 2bednmui (ia1:h. u111n,, <'IU"-N~v crpl•, d,.,,.. All elr·" 2 Cflr f:·~ Montb on 6Tr2'1J31'118. · , I tilq>d< ._.... GM! WA 2 BR, don, pello. •""~· 1)60 Wfr'"'· I br newly Now wt lllvd C M "°" A drafll'S, choke lo<•· Roop. adlllto only. No j:!!!ly se. TG:I. CLOSE ., boll:h, t.q 11111". -••I~. $3500. Alt, ~ CALL 642·56 79 Adullo only, "' oot•. S2SO d..,.rat"J. ~· " ' ' lion. Le..,. l200 or month. dlfl<!ftn oe pota. ll2S. A f!OOd ,..., ad b a pd In--yord, -~Pwllllt W-21S2. • mo. 49f-0388, Call 61J.9M I White D.,pMnt DhM·A.Llnt> CAJT 973-mO RLTR. 548-U22. ~. tura. Y'l1J or wt.a I , . ... ---,-. .... --• ... ----~-•• .. <>r l .e i '2 t f ~ I . .. "' ' I ' ' . "' . 1~~ .~ t I .. . ,, . lit. I ~. ,.. ~ ;d. '·. ' ,l ·I • I • I I " .. 1.;· I r: I I· I: : . " 1 • I ' 1 · 1~ " .I • . . • . " ' . ., , " I. I I ,. I. I. I I . •, •• ~ " b ,. , •, ,, " ' ,, ~ , '. ,, ... '· ' . . • I) ··Are You Letting Cash Slip Through Your Hands See If You Have Any Of These T~ings A . . . DAILY PILOT ., W -ANT-AD . ; .. . I . ·. Will ·Sell faD! 1. s- 2. Guitar 3, 'Baby Crib 4. Eloctrlc S1w 5. c •• ,. 6. W••h•r 7. Outbf,arrJ Motor I . Stereo· Sot 9. Couch 10. Clarinet , 11 . Rtfrl~er1tor 12. Pfcku., Truck 1:1. Sewlnq Machine 14. Surfboard 15. Machine Tools 16. Dlshw11her 17. PUOPV 18. C1bln CrulHr .19, Golf C1rt '20. a.~ 21. St1mp Collettlon 22. Din-Sot 23. Pf1y Pon 24. llowtlng Ball 25. w-Skis 26. Fl'Hllr 27. Sullclle 21. <lock 29. Bl~l1 30 .. T,_rlter 3\ •.••• Stool• 32. Encydopodl1 33. Vacuum Cle1ner 34. Troplc1I Fish 35. Hot Rod Equtpm•t 36. FHo C!1blnot 37. Golf: Cllubo 31, s..rn., sn .... 39. VICtorfan Mirror 40.lod-m Sot 41. Slldo Pro(octor 42: t:.wn -· 43. Pool T1blo 44 .. Tlrn 45. Plono 46. Fur Coot 47. Dr1poo 48. Linens 49. HorH 50. AlrJ!11no 51 . Drgln 52. Eurcyclo 53. Roro lloolca 54. Ski loofl 55. High Choir 56. Colno 57. Electric Train 51. Kltttn 59. Cl111ic . Auto 60. Cofftt Tobie 61 • Mo!Orcyclo 62. Accordion 63. Skis 64. TV Sot 65, Workbench 66. Olomond W1tCh 67. Go-Kirt 61. lro-. 69. Camping Tr1ll1r 70. Antfqve Furniture 71. T1po R-rdor 72. S.llbOlt 73. Sports Cor 74. Ml-lox Spgs 75. Inboard SpoodbOlt 76. 5""'11un n . Soddlo 71. Oort Gt- 79. Punching ... IO. Biby C.rrlogo 11. Dr- 12. Rifle 13 • .,.. 14. SCUBA Gtlr These or any other extra thln91 around the h- can be turned -Into cash with a DAILY PILOT WANT-AD' So. • • Don't Just Sit There! •• DIAL DIRICT • ~ Frido;, --·), l972 DAILY l'ILOT a. • ··-ll•I ··-··-lftl ~I --iiiiiiiiiiiii•" ~~""~i EL PfiERTO ·MESA U's all .here !or you to enjoy Satu?days and Sundays "°d all week long, too. $750,000 health sp8! 7'swlmmlng pools, 7 ligbt· ed tenul• cow, b cycle trails, puUlng green, shullleboard, croquet. Spacious lunlor l's from •17f.llU monthly, plus 1 or 2-bedroom plans and Z.itoey town ho.uses with 2 or I bed- rooms. All with electric kltchena, private bal· cony or paUo, carpeting, draperies. Subler· ranean parking,.elevators, optional maid.ser· vice. Gounnel food market, dry cleaner, beauty salon on grounds. See beautUully fur.. riisbed models today, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Other times by appointment. Just north of Fashion Island at Jamboree and San Joaquin Hills Road. FOR BETTER • e1M1.t0Booch • Sun Docks & P1ti01 PARK NEWPO}~ baAPARTMENTS : ~="~1 ~::°., on ..,. y e Glr-~Pool Telephone 1714) 644-1900 for ront1I fnform1tlon, e Roe. R-.. Apt. Unfum. 365 Apt. Unlum. J65 714/646-6505 FOR LESS $130•u• AU ununa PAID 1 & 2 BDRM'S. ...... u.th. ... .,... N1wport B1ach Newport BMch 1959 MAPLE STREET, COSTA MESA 2 Bdrm., 1~~ Ba., frplc, NEW chll.nneltront _ Vle\Y AllO Glragn for Rent patio, bltns, new w/\Y ap~ 4 BR. 3 Ba. or 3 BR. crpts, encl gar, Steps to plus den. Side tie avail. $425 ocean. Yrly lse. 644-759i, Mo. Yearly. Owner 1 615-3906. 675-1972 615-4073 NEAR HOAG HOSPIT AL-2 LOOKING Jor yr. round BR, 2 ba, fourplex apt. home at b:h! Hett It is. 3 Crpts, drps, bltns, dshwsllr. Br frplc ga.r Only $& 11 __ _ $175 mo. Adults. 642-4387 or 7li34.th sl ~1. ~• ---·-----~---I~ IL,__ .... _ .... __,I~ 400 Olllco R9nt11 642-1771. ****** 2 ROOMS, own entranoe;$70. ** ATl'RACTIVE • Lease 2 Quiet 2 BR w/ sundeck. A $60. monthly, "liable Br., 2 Ba., CID, bltns, Crpts, drps, pool, gar. men. 275 F1ower St, Calta patio, encl gar. $1 8 5. Adults, no petJ. $1'I0 . Mesa, 646--9136 548-3708. 642-8001· ROO~IS $18 wk . up w/kit. BALBOA Bay Club. Lux 5anClemente . S27.50 wk up Apts. 2376 Baylront 1 Bl'. A p I . Newport Blvd., CM . $100/mo. deduction on long LOVF.LY 2 BR, 2 BA on 548-97~. lse 645-0339 quiet cul-de-sac, ocean vu, IROO,::,:::c:,1=.---... ---. color ro-ord. Crpts/drps, ... in my me an OCEANFRONT 3 BR, range, dshWBhr, tge din East11dL'. CM. S tu. d f' n t 2BA I 2BR, 2BA, Call Bing area. Priv balcany rec & prefd. 1st It: la.st rna &. $701 days 838-1491. Eves & lndry rms. Adultl, 'no petll="mo"'=. ,;.""~15c,10c.·.,_.,..,..--== DELUX custam otnCH for wkl!llds. 675--2949 492--2259. BALBOA J1dand-Men Sli'.511 lease, 2 adjolnina: llUitea. ~ OFFICE '1'U" tor ..... ex· ecutive altice 1Ulle, 3 luxury olflces &: recepUon fOC)m. over 750 aq It. Newly deconltd, new crpl, air cond, an 2nd story nr. 1•\e\1ator & M11.invay. Aboo- rl1tnt o!f-slreet It. an·1lree! p a r k i n g . "Downtown". Loca tlon on 17th S t . (Weirtclllf) in Calta Mesa. Mrs. BellOW&, 540-4816 2 BR. sliding doon atf LR ta Apts per ·wk." 1'V nn., kitchen. !Kf· ft. each, or wUI com· balcony, close to ocean, F '' Unfu -12T Acate. 6T..r3613. blne, Pridng tac. see lBIT available · til Jul Y 1. urn. or rn. •iv s~·CH 1 -1 -Westclllf Dr, lndwtrJll llofttll 4SO JUST COMPlETED 1600 '° ,.. ~ "· I IN SANTA ANA New Wl-up bid& w/lharp. crpf4, --• alora1e mezzanine .......... loldln( doon, uo. 220-3 ..... ..P.!"'· HUNSAKl!R DIV. CO. st• 54'0 INDUS. Unit. 1lJ(I) 911. ft. NN'pOl't Beach. $110 per mo. Call 646-1724. Stonge 455 SPACE tar Trailer, boats. campen $7.50 mo. Neill Nean, Inc. 5.31-331'4. ' INDUS. Unit. 1LlOO sq. tt. N~ Beach. $llO per mo. Call 6&-1724. Rontols Woni.d 460 EXF.Ct.mVE wanlll to rent, 3 BR. l~ BA. Udo ble. Dt.-c. lat. C&U <2Ul 439-S233 c.-38S-{41}.1. f BR, l sty Me. nr Adams or Mesa Verde lcltl, 1 child. Call 213: 633--1&50. ------ .... ,_IC_ZZ .... I~! \ Announcemenh 500 CA!J.JNG ALL SINGERS The trlend11hip or singing Is fun and f!Xt'ltl n1 . Pt'rform11.nt"e is 1timulaUni &: l't'Wlli"d\ng. P e r 1 on 1 I u.tWac:Uon hi t~ common denominator. Girl!: owir 21 Interested in linltnc with ==m~11="-=I or 6T3--0U4 befor-. 9 am. ! ~,..._ ... iiiiil:I~ Penon1l1 5~ ---------, • HlNDU SPffirnJALIST *' Lfot thn1 ad cha.op your1 whole ouOook on Ille tor the1 betttt Proteaional advice an life. Llc. Rudinp dally. 10 AM·lO PM. a.9"6 . . -· 312 No E! Clailmj Real, San Cemente. 213: 943·2928. c.l"I • year Y .,,., mo ..... s· Costa ·Mesa ·tncL utilltlel, crpta, Ba. ==--*~!I0-=-'3111=°"*""°--=~ TR.AVELJNG • • Are )'OU DELUXE· 2Br, 2 Ba, 1 blk -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j 1809 W. Balboa, 8'13--2223. llf..s:K tPaM> .1vt1lable 150 llOll'll to the Caribbean to Bch. Enclosed garage, • mJDENTS: alnalt a: ihared mo. WtU pnMde furnttutt talandl or Soutll Sftl! Can BU-ins. Utll. Pd. Adults. * * * NEW * * * ftna, view UCI, prtv home, at s:i ma. A~"JI ~ cook, bartend, etc. For '$295 yearly. 646-7213. kit prtv. M2-9314 eves. avaUatwe. 171'1$ f)efldl a'ld. 1m1ll aala.ry. Love to MAGNIFICENT View, 2 Br Rullttnirtan 8"ch. i0-4121 trawl. Call ~ otudlo apl Frplc. gar, LA COSTA •DTs _, Honio .415 PRO~··stONAL ~·"--·•y 1,PR~om.==EM~""""'"""'~=-.-eo=-n.1 Adults only. $115. Kings Rd. IV' I • ' -~ -fldont, • Y mp at he H ' 642-f,889 to go. ltcll at Bolaa Chica. pregnlll'lcy coumiellna:. Abor· 1 & 2 Bedroom H.B. $175/mo. 8'&-1323. tlon • -ttl. AP· $235 . 2 Bdrm., 2 Bath. Big, .±: p I ... R * CAR• ·~·-modern. Yearly. 0 ave, e Bullt·inB e Shag carpets :.,C I' V oorn Buslnn1 Rental c.. ~. 675-1972 or 494-0015. e Drapes e Walk In clolets for -'-'-=-'=;,;;;.. __ «,;,,;;;S SWINGING. SINGL~ ="c="~7--un!7"-,bl=·c:-I e Swimming Pool Ambulaklry Lady or Man '"lliE FACl'ORY" bu 2 Call Jim, 2 to I P.M. 2 BR., 1% ha., urn, tins, e Bar-b-QuH Good. nutrit.iot.I• roon. openinp in tbe Mall --· ~ sha&" cpt, e~l garage. '178 • Enclosed Garaae Nice. chetrM atmoaphere. 1..., from -mo. ,,_:,-... ~ ALOOHOUCS AJa ... 1bld. mo., year 1'""'" 642-3'!3. All Utilities• Paid * C•U !148-<7'3 * .• -~ v EASTBLUFF. DLX. all e\oc. small retail lhopL Antique Phone S0-121T CJI' wrhel 2 BR. 2% BA. !?pie. pool, ~'!1!11--... --,.. I ...... Cindy """" .......... P.O. a.. 1223, Coota ...... I dbllar. pati<>. 64~. Mature adults. no pets ROOM, board "' Catt in 4Z :l)l:h St., Nt"lfPCll1 Beach. cotJPLl3 PAR11ES , . -w-11.4..,. .. 1a0 • ..-to ~. eau Phil, t to a P.ll. 3 B 2 Ba. VIEW. Frpl , , .... -~·~-=.. lov.ly hmM fo,..ldttly lady. ro Carp, drapes; garage Ye&?' 354 ~5 ·c· M San Clemente 492-4089 R Leue (!J 1500 8lf ft 5»-33U Jy ~Mo. 64U\T1. A 642.~., • • R I Shi 430 ~':· c~ ~ ff~ SOCi.1 Chllll W ri BACH. remodeled, like new., enta 1 to re 536-1440, nND YOURSELF Patio, 1 blk to ocean. $150 2 BR Llguna Beach ho\t.9e. 1 550 sq. n. srounct Door at JN OOMEONE l!:LSE yrly, utils pd. 673--0731. LRG. 1 BR. anturn $140: b!k ta heh, 2 trplcs. 1738 An ah et m , 01. DISCOVIR : JBR, 2BA, frplc, bltins, % Fum. $155. 2 BR, unfurn puuamlc ocean vlf'W. Sl.25 Schwom' -m-263it. DISCOYaRY 1 1 mUe ta heh, $250: 646-4033 $162.' Wtr pd •. Retrlg. & all year. Call "94-8546. Mr. ST'ORE-Of0~Dl9play. Coul 714.m.6885 21l-311-Sl9J ar &CS-3829. stovf!. Htd. pool. Adults, • Copeland ~f 4 pm. Man.-Ht.rhwaY. Newport, 2Xll) blk Al mc-n1ionrd tn Nowmbtrj' The DAILY . PILOT ORANGE COAST'S leading Marketplace tant ak. UIS'I' Monrovia, Fri. CllJ. for-info: 66-U1 PLAY BOY. Pap %1. 51Y.>110. '·s~c~L-....,,.--,-n-...i~,-""'-m· ------ BRAND New Adu!t Aplll. 2 mate-Shr c-xpense1. H B * BR. Free Util. Pool. Encl area. garages. 54&-fl627. • call 5.16-6286 * * * * OOEAli FRONT, 2 BR, up. ROOMMATE w1,nl@d. (llJ.301 per, ,:.hag carpets, g:arqe, 4 br, Hie at 146U Hlgherftt, $300. :100• 60-3+0. 11)'.lne $80. mon. ( 2 1 3 ) Fountain Valley __..U4, <'1fll. Trader's Paradise HUNTINGTON G a r de n 1 TRADE 18 Chevy Aps.che Apts. He:U at Bola Chica. Office Rental 440 PU truck. S5IXI va.lu~: tor M&-U2l. C.Ompare • ~ 1;;.;=;;...=.;.;..----' vt.n of same Vl.lut. •hat you're mlt&ina. Fr. OESK lp&CI' tvatllblt S50 &l>i'O day1 StJ).pj(I. ' mo. w1u ~ furniture ~--ll<l--•_14_9 "'-'-'-­DELU~"E. Apt · pz1v, patio. al$$ mo. AMWfilW terY1ot '&2 Jo"ord Pickup Ranchrro, Mullc. 6 poolt Mimi.. teMla, awllabM. 222 FOftt1 Avt, '64 Ponttae Grand Prtx, SUI. Spacious P o o 1 • l d t Lquna Bnch. et-tMI S..•ap rar motorc:yclfo. MUI Rungalaw $1'0. 846--0259. ="=-==-==-:-=-or mlnu. T!!!! NfWport 8Mch 750 SQ.-rr. SUJTE, COf'Tl('r $48-ml Harbor Ir Adami, C.M. .... u. -. "'-" 1 .-. at WILL trade Dall'• atped ·-~· _., u-.... "!lymphonle L. ~. H E R. 1 TA Q E Bicyclelte.. for ad mu1M 1¥e ~~~::-w Ol'f'ICIS ..,.,•nt . Plath "'!!!"...,"' wUI tMq 67J.JSOO, ••~Jt Del~. Al....o:.nctltiontd b. ,_led, Lido ,,.. ft.1 Jot Palm Sorinp, val'°' m-cTIXI llOOO. Can add. Want unit. lg R~nk>nnmicl, Okr. nr will oonakkT bouR. 01',.Cl·ITOlll J. 1''"""' ""'"· Rltr. :!125 ~· ft. 'Urt.I pe.ld. o:.: pf S3MM1 or $«--401). ptarll f . ml N.-."PQl1, OOf. ELEGANT MW 2 BR, 2 BA. $ of Bay ~. Ml-1Z2. Mtn liot'M. Snow llW'lllM · "'om 140 llEWPORT ........_ w-un 2 blko u.ui ,. . .,, t-n 11 1 tJl'Mo. Alr,AP\11 bl,th. r.or Palm Dttttt ~ • 01kwood ,. $1 mlU/on In a-. . ONf: bedroom CONDOMIN· • ~· 1ilO. can ,, + yacht. mmo 0wner recreatlo,.. Swimming i£ii? ..a. dMdtd n.rM • wui tnl SHOO. lflt1 . pool t. He1l1b Glj.lbt. 21t· tia. --ft r ....._. A/C, eor car. boat, mmprr or t T Saunas. Ttnn/1 court1. t1Mtcr, clrliiel. aood partr.. eau lA• Lu:Jmea. ot KEJt. 8illlarclt. Indoor golf driv· tnc. $113. mo.. 60-llm. fTACE REALTOR.! W.USl ino range. Sand Volltyball. ¥ll'J aq. fL Ground Doer LOT tn DrHfrl Hoc ~ Wt11rlpOOI Baths. Al'ld Iota ., """f'qUUy '"~Of N. more. A resldtnt ttnnls lnG Atlalit.lmt Ql.IZ>CW Sen°'* County, homt • pro and ecUvttloa 01rec1or ' 1,,com ... who plans free Sunday TIME FOR 1 brunctips and barbeeuea. SlltUng aa Tow 11 $1 '0 . Singles. one lhd two· QUICK CASH bedroom&, furnished and unlurnl shtd. Sorry no children "' pttt. Models THIOD8H A ~pen daily 10 10 7. Getdetl~ DAILY PILOT Newport~ IMM Md 1ttft 645-0llO• .. 2 .. 110 WANT AD 142-5171 - * * * lines times dollars CANYON like kl<, 1011 aw view. nr. lake. und. U!ll. JI0.00> f~ A cl..,.. Tl'ade ... ,,,.,,,,,._,,,.,.., Brk. sn.ce. . s~ eqty on mo &era nr. Yudapa. Bal MI0,000. lnl = 7':\. Fantutic vWiwa, , vaUtys. For lftc. prop. or ? Bkr. M'7 ..... PRIME tnd. bide. AAA Nat. Tmant, .II 11' IM. '30.000 N.N.N. lno. ""-SUl,000 ....... "" ....... ...... nwrdal, Bkr. Wf .... . Dl0.000 eqt¥ In -.... hldo-.0...MA Nati>nal Tfftllnt, on N.N.H. »yr t.. Want prtme ..... entr or '!'T Birr." WT.._. TIU.DE & ~ COftWr' or 9K1ioft, RoMI oa J ..,., NHr VldorvflJe, lot Cruce eoun.,. "'ft llAVE Jot on La Pt.taM Aw nr flutlor lhd in ~m.W&nl~­ W. Npt. Bcb. WDJ allo ~ !IMtr T.D. &ilamlt. t7M110. STD'llDIS «I' nJl'I Ylldd, Lwcwy AJrw.._. COldo, .... 2810 ...... llfm.t. IQ. ~ ........ .. , mc1 mwa. m-. DIESEL Tl!, FIB, :M' Jlo. ....... -.... 1'raldt W n.t ._.. or !ti----•im. TllAI>! ....... -..-.'10,riii.-• -~,_ ..... Br•)•r m . ....._ .... •lin, * * * I • ' » .:& IWI. Y PILOT ! J!;(';;'""iiiiii·iiiil-iii"~J~[Sl~l[._ ...... lf5Jl...----.]~J...__·,_1 •_•_.mll .,,,:. ~-lllll I lis's" It [. •rs• lltJ 11 [ ··~11,.---J[i11 J.____ .. _ .. w_•__.D ... I.,._, ' - • • I · I ' ·- ' ' ' i I " I I I ~ • ,, 1~ I 1. I I ' )• I I 1. l ,....... ,,_ ..., 550 .. ~ JOflllorlol 14!!! w.....,i. M'I , "!'f!I! w...w. M" , 7M ... I ......... M " ,..n ....... ,. ...... M .. , '" -w~ ~ ~ ':"' ~ w ....... M" !' ~ .. . , " " IAUllDlU!:!S, /ilnte . ,.e.i -a.J1. . '=:Id~~.':'~~ Y~GS:~;~M, ~· ~ ~ ::::"' ..... "=: Doll-T1liai.-Dlr~W. -Fee Paid V-o.iv r -:.~ 11111 _. -Ud U.. lo e .,..,_ Y.1rv -$lllO li,illow ool~/bell; vie~ s. l,'!<oloollonal tud>en. flO Ooltu>e O..••• Serv . Men or Woofen 18 or o•tr wllb.carr, station F-riibbwlpWtlco-C.Ottt St., cM, ~ 1-lleod>f llld .U .. e 1.op1-iljH1iO M '° N C 0 •ta weietty, strm. S.Tm... · waiom, or Uitbt trucU! "PleUiant outdoor ' AdhHivt SalN Rep 10 ~ UlGAL Se c ' e -a r y, • C.'t:ei ~°!tie t" ,!,.t.'~Bookkp,-~ ~ •••!• •w~t ...._ liiiiiYSITl'JNG~home. L•..n°"""' , work. Your 1vali.b11 dal'IWll bours. caut. Mechanlcal Elw!neer $14K oerienced. Part-O m •. ~tebuanoP'l'lna"'""" -u;~~~ ~2842 or 543-°"" or ""'· LoY core. -license plalM ft<jh!M APiili dal1Y for job . Exec. Soc')'-R<ol E. 10 $8!0 l1ewport c .. ter. C •I 1 -~ ..ieomu ·~ !'Ill 4500 -p,,°';! FOUND : 81 a ck • Lrr """' 14-. ~ ;:.!,'"';."!J ll"""1"1f11<1D Ii tralnlni. S:'S"o, lO:SO or l :30 CenenJ Ud(er 4cc1 S11JO M4-<11m. s Oout !lWY. Call Rlia 54jl-2\ll -8eacb i::.~ ~~a U:: LOVING Mother givea ex-Comm tnd trial Ap! P.M. I the ~tlon.nearesl •ou. -Secretart.. 10 SlOtl LEGAL ...,....,., at leut 5 ·--· ' ~ -...._ ~-•llen1 o., Cano. Infant o~c~"'-. lll · · 1,,_ ''°'", .,.,.__,1 •..,'-...: -...... Con. 01<>/Cuhler • 12.:e hr >"' -1-· Call &9TA1E ,SALESMEN r ...::.1.::rplvll r· Oran;:o Ir-u.o11ta Mesa lhru 2 yn. &tM178. ~ _., rw ...-"" ..,.. Aocountiq Oer1f; $450 OaJM 'm.-OM-1333.. Wbr mt iet \II train )'Oii -1 _,... me Stttets. C.M. -BABYSJT11NG P•lntlnt & 6441 Ci bollero -,....,. Pork Cffillt Oerlt '3'15 LlCENam::Jtlllli~' atrl 3 while"°" wori<la tt.. bOl.... Will!, varl<d expoolence lo FND. Blk. Fml def T """''"' .......... v1c: v~ t ~ P•porhontlntl am w. ,. ... St. -s.nto """ A/P o"""'"°tlon ' $1llO ·= wtl . siOan ....., --Beaclt. -ofJlce -· ...,..,.,. old. Part Lab. Wu hit by elem school, CM. &e..2m. at .F•it D rlv• _ Cotta ~ F/C Bkkpr/Cooslr I t1r:tl boa :eQ , b Beauty C8J1 "1'tdl Me Name e; flon co. min.~ tit. per wtc. car vie. Victoria nr. Place,,. *P•inting Special* (Orange Co. Fairgrounds-CU.tonier S.Vlea 1'tXl -. • • YIU.AGE REAL J;:SrATE, Mall "°'l' "1allntl -2< ox· 11a. ""°" o.K. now. Cupont•r E t f N I Bl d.) Aao Fee~ LJVE'1Dbel-~~·. 96>-4f11. per ID delall, lam1ly ...,.., ~5-2654. 1 BR MOD APT $59.:IO Der f9lll 9t'.P . Y (i N~T, room + ~~: R.!f, Se)es • Exp'll H.B. to Penonnei 4.lCA. E. 17th FOUND female Cocka.Jioo. lndu1/Comm'l/RHW Sinclair Paint I-Labor . J 14056 WllloW ln., Wfttm n.tter PerlOIMWlla.wsMy .., ,..,_ _... ... ~--•" to 90% com-St., Costa Meta. Cal.if. l r bai All types v.'Oril:. Remodel, Other Inter-Exler ipecl~ Equal Oppor Emplpyer • -.ii.:-a. ... V'W"'"_.... LO.I.fl " 1~1~1~. ~f~ini;cet!'ter : alleraOon, finish, frame, BENSON PAINTING ! , • 1 • W Do~, N .. LVN't, S·t.o ll lhift.~flr con. ~ ~ty~ ~1!i;~ ra:. Monrovia. Co.ta Mesa. pancl, etc. 960-!961. FREE ESI' lfflp.W4!MW, M & F no Holp Wont9d, M "'"' 711 . ~A· Jlolp!':!-1445 Deli. • phone suppflod: ily ht So. °'"'11• Count)<. 548-7900 or 589-5929. CARPENTRY-SM.AU.. JOBS -.,.-,c•~W.-:""'.-:~•.---ft.I •:e:t ~~--"'• N.u.... Make money •.. call Lee New offices. Xlnt frtnae REASONABLE RATES lnterlor·Ext1r&or Automotive -.Companion-S.C:Ntary Pl~ER~ • MALE A\t-e.nd ant f.or at 81U100. -"btnetlts. Send letter or ~d~~o;lt~i~~~i • 557-6928 • ~m work auarran. Spec. * S.let_ Tra lMel (IS ) to lady in 'ntU'lhte borne. ~· ~ t ~· whffl~ ~~ 5 day ruume tl Classified ad No. wearing white Ilea callar. Carpet Service Prlce on apt•/vacancies, Huee expa1llion program. Must haYe car to vbtt 3 or 4 P ece · e ~ 'Wk. Call •Hr~ ) ·' RECEPTIONIST G, Dau; Pilot, P. 0 : Box 494-7346. Frtt COior Coosultinr I-Career opportunities. Inalde times a week. tab for Afply irn Placentia, CM. MAN OR WOMAN to ~pply Receive our Vlaiton, anrwer 1500, o:.ta Meaa, 92626. CUTE \\'ht poodle, k>ng tail, JoO:F~5wnCarpttpoo 1:eufWSco"tc~ Eat., Won't be ~ld! sell..lnaoftittl&automotive ~ dork~ Flblrwla11 Tooll-con•UJners w/Rawlelgh our phone• & type, Excel-SERVICf;1Statlon Salesmen blk nOse I: eye., gentlP. Reier., Llc. Bondc:u, llll. equJp. Many benefits. Apply •·~i-~ 9wo• u· ..,.. • -• ··• Hoaaehold Products .. Can • lent appearance &: phone UUme eves shift. Alao, guard (Soll Retardants). 642-6005. Mark C. Bloom. Cotta Mesa, .,..... 1lllV ..,..._ • :..,., am. Exper Ma.naa:er earn Kn -"'' ~ -·" Prto • -M Can't kl'E'p. Vic. l\lission 1. all ~ ~ 5 -.,;,. '"'"" ...., ~Y · ~......_..t;y a muaL r p/ttrne eves • Wit V. . 4...:. ~" '" Degreasen ,.. .. ...-.« No Wuti~ 3(Ui Harbor Blvd. Buena or au.o::1 :-pm. ~ $150 ii: up full e. Call PimPrience n@Ct!Sar)'. Sal· have ll\e. mecti. knowledge. it>JO . ....,...""""'. brightenen Ii: 10 minute WALLPAPER * Pk. 6962 Lincoln Blvd. Gar-• Equal Oppor. Employer C415) -444-1833 or write ;icy-to $400 per month. Slib. Neat appearance. Apply AM FOUND: 8 week old puppy, b I e a c b for w h I t e * den Grove, 14040 Brook-Cook FRY COOK Rawlelgh Co., 306 .. Adeline mlt :resume to P.O. B9X S).Newport Blvd..,ic.M. white with black ear . (·~Is. Save )'OW' money by When you call "'Mac" hun.t. .Fullerton, 1321 So. Ex.._ only need 9-.i.. St., Oak.land Ca. 94$)7, .1810, •Newport Beach, Callf. SERVICE Sta'"-•-•---Vicinity Huntinaton A Lin-saving me extra trips. WW 548-1444 646-1111 Euclid St. New Building ,...Co.., Vlf'V 92663 uun "*"""'uau- 1 St H B ·-~•37 clean Uvin .. nn .• ••·•--PAINTING & p•-MG -""'°'='===--=--.,--In lony KJlchen. MARINE engine mechtih1c to · Mechanic, expel'. on I y . con .. ' . J.lU"V'I • hall sit Any ......_fi50 . lt..rf:..(\..l.Juc 8ABYSJTI'ER. OWn transp. 32U Harbor Bl\ld., CM run new shop In 'inarlna. RECEPTIONIST. fnte1:1 nt F/tlme. Lie. Pre1'd. Neat SOLID gray, !!ix·toed kitten, & h $IO ~-·-15nn.15 . ' 19 yn. tn Harbor ~·· Vic:. So. Cout Plaza. Wed.. Newport Center ~ GENERAL HELP · Mu8t: have S Ji: 'tnari~ ·hltv w/ ~ 1yp;...,. in ap...--nce. Ap•'" AM, -·le v•·c Shoal• Mot•! eouc . '-''WlU' • Yl"!ll· ~A''-2356.bonded. Refs turn. ........ -., •··-. !rom 4·.JO pm.~ ,... -'6 ...,...... VoJ "'" ' ' ~' exp. Is what counts, not ,,_... 1 1ru.c. """' 6 • MEN 20 6 UP exp. W/gas le ie&el + be ~ht 'by learning corp. 2590 Newport Bl., C.M, 419760'.2526" s.. Coaal. Laguna. n~. I do work myeelf. ~o°'u"'sE=-'"-pa1-,,.nt1"'"'-"1D""tl=· I ~""iii';· ;i546-6S7lii;i;:~;'·-;:;;;;;;:;--..,; I Loc•I co. hirinn good at welding, glusing A Loe nr · Cal state ~ SEWING machine aperaton: FND. white Samoyed d ..... ~Good __ ,.~t_.~5.ll~--01-01.~---~ccous. ceiling1~ttu . .::ie ·BABchll~~1.,..m 3~· My2 CHIEF COOK PART-TIME EVES~ f:D~c:'!~~~;n5.~~ BeflCh, ~nd--~~~:8:. exp pret. McKtbbin Sails, -· Cement, Concrete esL TI4/5.36-5857 ng1ne exP A: .-. ·~..,. 50-3684. Male. vie. Bushard &: ' -home. 968-7U71 aft 5:30. CHRISTMAS HELP e •· We pay the most it ..Q.ualJied Ad No. 5re, Daily ccSHAMPOOC:.,:::::;~-G=lris~-A~pf~~ht-I • Adams; H.B. 968--3r~ alt 4 CUSTOM cement w o r'k, PAINTING • Honest, clean. BABYSltlER tor worklng For Employee Cafeteria * START NOW you're the best • if not Pilot. P . O. Box 1560, Costa · • · P Y p.m. 1 1 d 1 k guaranteed work. Uce'ruled Experte~ Essential in -f~t it! ~ ~( Meaa, CA. 9'Ji26. . penon. Hair Huntl!rl. No • pat o s, !! e w a s, & insured m--574S mother, my home, c.dM. * ... 75 PER HOUR 70 Fashion Ialand NB FND orange & white mature driveways. tree est., call · · RefK. calJ 640--0365. eral cooking. 'f"'T• RECEPI'IONIST • ·Medical. ' ' · male cat vie Magnolia & Joe, 536-7378. INT. & Exter. Accous. cen. U G-·"ng co. hirl"• -at well MAJH MAJORS' Xlnt typist. To $ 6 O (). SHOP FOREMAN BABY SI l"I ER, ve i n , H 6 AM 2 PM 5 d k •vw• ''6 '"' L •• ndlng" aal Adams Oct. 12th. Flea col-PATIOS.PLANTERS ings sprayed. Lie., lns. elderly woman care for 1 & OUl'I • • ays w groomed men fot CU!!lomer Lakewood (213) 531-'1'43). for company, uuu es lars. 962-6232. All Concrete work. Brick. Local refs. 6f5.-0809, Chuck. 6 Id 963-1.340 service dept.. No expe.r. ondfflce displays far hou!kllng. FND: Small male wht dotZ: !!lumpstone wk. 894-3533. FOR clean & neat palfiti~. I ;;'.;";;;;0 ;;;;:";;;;;;-U'.·=-.,= Apply in the needed. Earn to $4.15 per hr. / ~ knowi ustryledg. e"oafv~-~~~-..1.4~. with Glendale tag No. r,q,57 interior, rea8. ratH. Call BABYStl"l'ER, Mesa Verde Pcl'SOnnel Department CALL DAILY / ~uu1.u'l'V•AM'6 vie. Santa Ana Heights. CUSTOM CEMENT WORK Dick,~. area. 7 To 8:30 A.M., 4 daya 8 am-3 pm NEWPORT .. BEACH b j graphics, designing, ad· 541H1254. Drl;"'~w~~';"· INT• EXT patnt;ng, PBI"' week. Own tram. S'IH.'17. PAC81FUllCLDMIUNTUG AL LH 7-0913 Financial wtltution ha• 1m. eu en mUomistraea~~,,'!;.,,~8 nt "';,"· N 0 R w E G 1 AN EI k poo • · hanging, natural \V 0 0 d BABYSITTER, my home, l mediate o pen l n a: tor n, _....... e a,c · Hounrl-Female, n ea collar _ PATIOS, walks, drives. Saw, finishing. 548-T!rti. child. Prefer per 1 on 700 Newport Center Dr., NB G'E'NERAL OFFICE management trainee. L..,,.. Hiiis" ~~~~ sooit ~ar O~e V ic: Brookhurst & Ellis, break, remove & replace PROF. painter, honest work, w/chlldren. 645-SOIO. Typing 50 • 0· '"'..":.r:rt. resume 01 concrete. 548-8668 for est. .....,..,, Plush Offices. Local MINIMUM I Clasalfied ad NO. 506, Daily• 96S-ml. Child C•re reas. lie/ins. Int/ext. tree K..,Fry, p/time. Apply Call Lorraine QUAI.JFICATIONS Now nt<.'rviewing Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, O:wrta l FND. Med. szd whl. ml. poo-est. Refs. M8-2T'a9. at:" Chow Bell Restaurant, WESTCLlFF * College Degree O'sh sh Mesa, Calif. 92626. ! die. Vic Weshninster Blvd. OULD Can.". Days. My PROF. Painting, also roofs, 2574 Newport mvd, CM Personnel Agency *Math Major I W3 8f$ SIGN Painter, top wages &:: 89.1-4302. home, full or parl time. accous. cell. inter/exter. CROSSING GUARD 2043 Westcliff Dt., NB * 1* Yrs. Work..,ilxper. beneft~. Gold leaf • ot•.1. M LE S . 11 r need Lie/Im. Free est. 645-5191. BEAUTICIAN 1..ar. T70 ~ • • t-E A ~ pr1nger or sm11. l' yard, playhouse, Gd oppty for pleasant, tel-The City ol Irvine -2 Only ttiose with the se ·DaJ & Hite Neill Neon. 531-3.n.t.. ,. ltdlrr type. Bro"'n I while. swings. 18 mos to 5 years. WALLPAPER HUNG ed ~·t /f Uo I is presenUy accepting appU-........ unAn · ---"' pf 6-9 mos. 545-2706. 50c per hour. Ucensed . Carl Rebko 646.2449 ent ' .-•v• w 0 w ng. catiOOB for the """iUon of G_~,orOFFla~~ceGme"a,,.t ,.~tiOna '""""" ap y. SYSTE' 'S t' SET ~ •. I k 548-1395. Near Harbor Shop-Best shop In town. Miss . ard l~h" I I u~L~ •·~· SUbmi /•·•·-· M ........ ,.s er car eys. plog Center, CM Pla•fer, Petch, Repair Prim, H.B. 962-:1666. crossing gu o e P e e-w/flne co. who needs stnll· t resume w --..,. re-F II Or P/Tlm YST I Intersection Park & 18th rnentary school children fng ~"' to work quireme.nt in robtidence lo: U . • ANAL . Crif:;ta Mesa, 64&-3981. Contr•ctor 11 PAmI PLA!n'ERING ~~~~· ~J':i: cross safely at heavily trav· w/great sta1f. $35<1. Call Clas!!ified ad no. 53% c/o I PARAKEET. very tame. Vic All types. Free estimates Des'"""'•. 9907 H ami l ton eled intersections. Guardl Unda Ray, 540-60 55, Daily PUo:t. P.O.~ 1560, Apply In Person NEY/PORT BEACH P'inan- Coa.st Hwy., N.B. Call Additions 11 Remodeling Call 540-6825 Ave':'"' Huntington Beach, are needed from 7:45 am Coastal Personnel Agency, O:ista ?(eaa, Ca. 92628. 24001 ~ ~~lotta cia.I Institution has im· 548--2592 or 494-26Tl. ~'11ck &*&Jn, ~;:d2110 Plumbing , 963-3433. until. appro,x;_~l pldmualw/~f es 7190 Harbor Bl., C.M. Equal Oppor. Employer -(At ••e Et Toro o!I ramp mediate openings fM SR SMAlJ... female gray poodle. "'" varying a ...., v lll er-GENERAL office-trainee. MED CAL .. ~..t~ u• ANALYST. Must have min. JACK Tau1ane • Reparr COLE PLUMBING •BEAUI'ICIAN W/NEAT sections. $2 per hr w/all Must "-·--t ,, ..... .I ~t. X I nt S.D. Freeway) of 5 yrs. heavy ex"°"· wn-Whittirr Ave., Costa Mesa. APPEARANCE FOR ul •.J't"" .............. ~...,. ~ typ 1 ~ •~ •··'··wood ~ '"• 646-554l rem<>d., addit. 20 yrs. exp. 24 hr. servlc..'t'. 645-llGl • neces!!. eq proent furnished figures &: detan • ·work. 111 • iO.. ~ Mu.t: • _ ,......, • computer .sy!!tems I: ability Llc'd. My Way Co. M7---0036. BUSY SHOP. 548-9919. by the City. of Irvine. Apply Health care field nr Org (213) 531-7420. .~8'-Or r. Employer . to_ analyze u.1 er re- RED Dachshund, male, l Yi Dl'l!.\ns unclogged -$7.50 at 1rvlne Police Dept., uro2 Cnty Airport ~t ....,. · QU1Nn'lfllbl. In addition, col· yn:. Vlc &limn Iii Sehl. lllg Dr•ftlng Sewer line to 100' -$'U ~=r one Automotive Zee Street, Irvine. For in-· RN, night· rtllel 1 b If t , lej;e education le familiarity Bch. 5.16·7161 . * 549-2502 * Bookkeeper with OMV ex-formation contact Joan GIRLS & BOYS .»-7:30 .~VN. rl'ltbt· sbttt, "w/GROUP ·INSURANCE IRISH Sell er, male. PLANS-Houlle11. Remod ~, PLUMBING RE:PAIR perlence. Send rel!UmE! to Gumina at 834-5238. IO Yl'8 & older * '• 1!1,l.-7:30 full tlme. Bevuly &/or PERSON- J\fl 5 pm. Room Addltiom. $50 up. No job too !!mall Box 50l, c/o Daily Pilot, DAILY PILOT ROt.rrES m '">. '(~ C.OOv. Hosp. Xlnt .N EL/PA !'ROLL ap- 826 So. Broadv.·ay, S.A, S57-062.6. Eve11. 557-9695. * 642'.-l129 * 330 West hK•• Stttet, Q)sta DEl..JVERY or DA IL y Open in oon ,..;.: ~ bftft.. ~186. ... ~ • plications AlOSl desirable. I FEMALE Croll& German Gardening Sewif'19/Alt•r•ti"lns Mesa, Calif. 2626. newspaper ca.rrien . Re-Call Mr. Busby 492-44ro , , Q..l~..'!"$""a,r,:-~n inwl~s . documen· ~9 PlLOT, SUNDAY ONLY, to San C1emente.. I' ~· n , K h.I .. ......i. • ' Shepherd. fl('ll. collar-llmps. Bookkeeper quires lhe use of a Station GIRL to clean abowroom. 1 ~ t ·· ~ · tat1on, speclficalioh I: co- Vic. Bay St-C.M. Mr3867. * LANDSCAPING * SEWING-DESIGNING We need one Automotive Wagon .Ol' Van. Contact Mr. day week. The Earl's . .., ·' :1 o~tlon of. r)roiJ'lU]UJling MALE Tabby. 4 while feet. New lawns, Sprin kl ers Men/Women. Reas. Rates Bookkreper with machine Harry Seeley, 110 West Bay Plumbing, 1.SZ Newport a er SALES:club wanteflt Full ~• ·in5talla.don oti these Vttr affectionate. Meu del deck!, cleanup. State Uc'd. no min. Call 846-7450 ~ence. Send l'Hllme to St., Costa Mesa. Blvd CM ~ time, permanent. good hrs, systems. Mar. C.M. 546--0150. 536-1225. Alterations-642~5145 Box 501 c/o Dally PJJot, 330 Delivery &: Sales Opening GIRL ., Fri~ lit typ' new ICDl'e opening Fou:dtain till I FND: yng Siamese cal on EXPC . 1 Hawai.l~ Gardener . Neat, accurak'. 20 yeanexp. We8t: Bay Street, Costa p/ttme, $3 hr. start. Olil payroll. etc.'~'!! ~ Weppl•IN ·now ~~eptfng :=: r!~&i<e~ T:~~ni.I: ~ ~ Miner St. between Wilson & omp ete ga.uen !! er v . Tile Mesa, Calif. 92626. Mr. Wilaon, 963-2440. Shop, &12--0632, SQ-0639. • cations._. -' ~ l\feSa. c.a.nt~ Kideratlon pleue submit! Vletorla, C.M. &t2-'05fl(l. K a m a I 8 n l • · 6 4 &-4676, Bookkeeper DENTAL front ofc, prior ex. HELP ted f bl 1 • ~;. · resurtl\? inChlditlg salary re-1 FND. Fm! tiv,er stn cat, « 11•.,.. ............. 16 teiev'ls!On sales. Good pay. -Q me m COi..wut:noe • "ped ..,_tl37. CERAMIC tile new ._ We need One automotive per -•d. App• -·w-, wan or ca e Cao/, * ~~s Man•ger ulre 'nts . -••-to cor. Rider. Nda home ·if not BOB'S GARDENING remodel. Free est. Small ~:eeJ.M:. cl~~~~~~ !Uing, posting, typing, etc. F 1ex 1b 1 e h 0 u r 5 • ~ elec. sto;-. El Tor1. Q~ ad no. 5.14., c/oj claimed. ~. &.1 LANDlndSCAPtrlallNG jobs welcome. 536-2426. ~ W~ Bay Street, Colta as backup to ofc mgr. Teleprompter. An F.qua.I • con~.:a. A190 dp tU'l'le hBoe p. Daily Pilot, P . O. Box 1S60, rvme us Tutoring Salary open le hrly. 646-2481 Opportunity Employer Call \, ...,....._.or sen resume x Costa. Mesa, (::all(. BASSE:Y'T Hound, female, np-Complexe!!. Mesa, caUt. !r.&ll. days. 540-2485 a.ft 6. Al&n Linde S4z..aa;.J. , 612, El Toro. An F...qu!!1pp0or. Employer prox l year, vic-21J:t St., 557-4200 after 5pm. C H IL OREN'S Beginning BUSBOY DENTAL A!!Bil Ex 'd Experienced 1 SAI..ESLAt>Y for jewelry I!!!!!!!!· I Costa Me/18. 642-8264. EXP ...... ....>enJnn, land>cape Guitar Lessons $2 per ", hr. Part·time shi~t avail. tant, p HOUSEKEEPER, LIVE IN. B "I & p -.. , Relit -.•d. 1 ,, • TEWRS • · I. """... ''@> 731 chainide, 3 days week. Chi ld care. Exp'd. Good ror 1r rap ~.. • .... FOUND mue-Cream young &: brick M:>rk, hauling. e 646-1281 • Colony Kitchen 646-4911 References. Udo I a I e , . . t .f ,S..3402 * .., Teller ~p required ; cat, white nra coll11:r. ?o.1esa 847-36fil &ftl.'l' 6 p . m . , 3211 Harbor Blvd., C.M. DRAPERY _ C~t-sales. G75-8399. Niles Full 'llWi · 'll~l:SWOMAN · (Apply in Person) : V~e area. 546-9965. 53&-2394. CABINET repair work. Your Decorator type gaJ to uslst, HOUSEKEEPER, full time. ·~)' bJr f\Jie Otildren'!! store~ · . 642-4001 HALLORANS Lawn/Garden [ lltJi ~ place or O\lJ'L Must have bu.RY' .store, $350 mo. to References requ ired, PleaBe Apply I \"' ~~ 'Mie Red Bal~,. Ud. TRAVEL-looking for sharp Lost SSS REWARD lof;I Sun. Oct. 29, large red male Irish setter, need• medical care. Call 549-3612 aft 5 pm. • MALE <Golden Retriever, .'i yr11 (ll{t, needs medlcaUon. Irvine. REW ARD, No Que. tionll. 5#-6354. - WELSH Corgi. Pembrooke Red & While, Fem, Vi~ Spruce & Pallaades. 10/29. 546-4928. SMALL !!haggy doc lost Mon. vie. He il & GolderrM!At·. Multi colored, mostly blk. Reward! 841-8376. GOID Charm Bracelet w/1 catholic chann, vie N.B. Pier area, 1011'1 Reward. 549--0993. BU< Labrador pup Male, Ro~ &: chain 11.llached, last seen tied up 19th St. phone booth. ~2428. REWARD $25. Lost cat, gtty &. white, wllh IR1t. Mls~1snce 10/31. Vic. Larkspur II 5'h, QIM. 644'"'6430. SHORT hair fl'ml Siameee. 11ealpotnt. Bluff!! a~a. Lo9t • Fri. Reward. 644-1850. PIER Boot bol.rding atept1 loll during storm. sand col· ot. Plea.M! call 6'D-4256. LOST: Dover Shon!s area, e.t.ck mini Poodle, male. No. l.D. . 60-1536 M a I n I n c e , Q u a 11 t y ~n•lt f tnick or staUon "Wg. Call slatt. Perm. m-2254. Newport Beach a r e a , Betwn 8 & 11 am & 2 I: 5 PM, ~~ Beach, Hun,tington yng warnan or man with workmanship. Rel. Reas. ~· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilllifi 64H741 eves aft 6. EARN xtra income, 4 hn M&-1243. BMch It Orange. . -MS-1666 min. l yr. tr ave I exp. Free esf. a.I! 6 • 962-9703. • !oitii;;;iii;~~~~'!"'-• work. GeOOn.I c\-•'•· ht * H kee to do ---'· 18542 MacArtliW' SAWYER home.• Ire e d • Chott% locatioo, salazy AL'S Landscapwg. Tree re-Job Wante>d, Male 700 CEMEET'-(fiV ~"'"111 ouse per, wui"' (Acrou from O.C. Airport,), .m ~t 11 re wom:an 1al' open Reply Clusilled ad movat Yard remodeling. II.I 0range'C.o. ~~·Mon on Thunda)'!I for 5 llrs, Newport Beach . :r-507 -·1 Traah haul=, krt cleanup. TRAVELING . An! you thrtl Fri. $2. per • Call 10-3 . .Expel. &tU887. F,qu.al Oppor Employer .~ & practical c~ 0 8.l y PUot P .O. •···•· ~1166 going to the Caribbean llnd Oeat}'. {213) 685-fl880. HOUSEKEEPER/cook ex· . ~· ~.. . . •Box 1 Costa Me!!a. • ...,.-.. 9P en, u•r ·· I&landt or South Seu? can fUNERAr El • perienced, live-in, $lJJ. NEWCOMER WELCOMING~ SD!REtARY I R £ c E P • 'l'ypisUSecretariel E ~p E R. T J a Pan'• e rook, bartend, etc. For· KtroftlCS 673-18'19 H0&pltallty Hostess , TfO~ ./ BCX>KKEEPER. No. Fees. Immed. openings ~.knowhow, upkeep, 11mall sal&t)'. Love to Immed. Openings . To Call LOCALLY an new Pleasant telephone m&Mer. .fol' short &: Jong tenn ~~· •trim, cleanup. travel. Call 646-3632. COUNSB.ING Inspectors IMM~IATE Opening for resident families btingtng One glI1 office, San Cle-aalgnments or permanent P ROFESSl""AL Jan•-Job W•nted, femile 702 A,Nrftbler1 ~J~t!i u n agb i I rt~ n gifts &: civic lnfo. Good pay ·~erite. ~ OUice M&Jlllger p(acements. <;all u now! un .....--..... Lit.e Experience Perm. employment. w/lT y;. P/':lme. Must have happy for, Interview. 714-492-5163. P;f.S .. Pacific Penoiµ>el Gardener, Reliable. Free GOOD TYPIST Long or short term old C.M. manut. co. Will amile, car, typing abWf;Y, SECRETARY • Receptionist. Sd:vfce!!, 112 No. Tower, est. Call·ID-4974. Wiii clo I t BeauWul Pacific V I e w assignments trllin centerless grinding &: 547....JOOS. ' Electrical contracting ex· Uruon Bank Square, Ora.n&e, JAPANDE Gardener . h•r ho,J:", ~m'ri':k:p :~~:fd:~e~~~':1ti: ~Im ~:!!! (lther machine (lJlel'ation!I; NURSING Assi1tant for semi per. helpful , but not necea. g~hef5~~· A!lt For Complete' Yardwork and ... .n.1-...., ~'->U Good future. Call Darill Invalid lady, 2 d8Y!! wk. Well gl'!)OUled. I mm e d. ''===~·~o-"~· ~-~--Qeanup. Free e!!t. 6'2-3102. •nd deliver loc• H.B., Newport Bay area.. NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO Hope at 545--00-Relief for nurses on reitular openln&."831-1400 .Mon. thnJ WAITDtS & wa.itre5*Cs. EXP J G F .V,, West, 7Sc per Pl• Tempo Temporary Help ' .. . duty dur:iJ>g Dec. Mu.st be Fri. ' , .steady & part time for *s . thapanesejob NBardeCM""'· or wlll work by hour Cemetery lots, crypta &: EMPLOYMENT o ff ered INSURANCdM~.:-P/timf!', exGd-able to lift, Expd. $2.2S hr. ~..,.,....,.... .. .,,,y , .. _ "' private country club. Must Y mon ly Job. • • niche!. before need Pl ·. ..,.., agency. 6n.3547. ~'IU'o , p ""'!:'e wr , be experienced. Apply, in Laguna area. 548-9479. c.11 147..JOtS. purchaAe plan. = :11a:~ ;;ft· tt:t salary. Send resume P. 0, • OPERATORS • CPA ~· Stat·typiilg, Lite person to Don Lynell, '.Big GJ-RDENi:G, H a (:~~ n Rf' SEC. BOOKKEEPER. 1 girl A fast growing company employee. Oppty to grow w-~ 8, Corona del Mar, Ca lilwle needle &: special =Ill'~· ·necetr1. BW Canyon Country Club, 1 'Btg • .,....JO ~~ti upt . .,..,., ...!.1 busy office. Exp. Payroll, ·-"th pl t 1 1 tti eo. MlQ experience req'd. · mach1ne, exp'd on dresse1 ' · Canyon Dr, Newport Be4,ch. ::.J tree .:.o ma e. ~. t 8 x es. u n ; 0 n w• com e e aerv ce ac -$2290 Jlm Oine, wkdu. INSURANCE, pt time, morn-& aportswear. 64&--0308 SF.Cftm~Y • Xlnt typlaL WAITRESS, exper. Apply In Experienced Ga.rden!T r e por t s -A p /A R/ete. tie~ Mortuary, Chapel, tnp or afternoons. Hea\')' OPI'OME:l'RISI' assist, muM Xlnt opporlwli1:1J To $9XI. penon only 8 arn-11 am. Cleanup, Ma1nt. Reasonable C.Onstr. Exp. Ref!!. Joan !:l':n~ ci:lem~~~tory all ESCROW typing, light SH. 644-4844. t:Jp!: Lfve In C.M.. area. Lakewood (213) 531-7.ci. Tun. thru SUn. M~ Verde Call 6*-6852 673-U66anytlrne. OFFICER ~ Mature. Full or pt time. SECRETARY, part time, 9 Country Ch»b, '81 General S.rvlcet NEED help at home? We we want 2 emotionally IRVINE l'.X:Dt'na..ft..,,., 548-«'>55 am: 847-8910 pm. to l, MOD thru Fri. 540-54-¥ Clubhouse Rd., Costa Mesa. have Alde11, Nu r 1 es, mature men. No aper. r U\,J'\..Jl~f~CL PAR1' time afftce work. No ask for Mr. Thomas. ="Dtc""k~EvvlB."""""'°--==='I HANDYMAN • All kinds of HOUAekeepen, Companion&, na-e1ury bec!a\181! of our ()pportuntty to join one or the SERYICf.S~ experience needed. over u . Need a "Pad"? Place an ad! Wai,t t11d reku.1111 ... SC.'618 wotk. small job& a Homemaken. UP J 0 h n • profeniona.l tralrtq'. Do not natlim'1 ~Bt savings A Free F · Poaitiona 548-1479 He Mttec1 M I. F 710 He W' ted M & F 'ID apecil.Jty. 958-9374: 546--9723. 547-6681. ......-U" tbb __.....,1ty. i---........... ~. Min. 3 _ .... &Salee ri'111' • • tlD WI , tlD •n , r, H.ull-..-r .. ___ • ..,, -. ....,... .,... .tt.1u1t:1tve esmen to •ain PBX i Answering Sen4ce. · ... I.DAN M!l'Viclnf, aen'I ofc, sale eterOW' exper. req'd. Exec. See'y/Re«eareh to $1'00 Evenlnp A: grave yard LD- billln&' med1care I Mcdlcal. PHONi POlitlon located In our ea.ta Secretary to $650 duding weekeDd1. Costa TRUCK and tractor, nne fair lmowledp med I ca I f!jj "212 Meu oltlce. Excellent work· &!c'yflJte !ib $500 Mesa atta. 542-1164. j(r&(flnc & hauUnr. Jr.:t tenn11. 496-00. U"t't"\I tna: CODdltions a: frtnee bene-Gbi Friday t.o $525 PRO-~a·s 2 children Latham. Gen'I c on t • tits .. ~--Ung o-~ •~ • ~ 496-:IOlll. 496-5IM. pd~·lnN= a~=e/= Please Call Penonnel P,~ptrr';'llt $2.!iO ~ need ~tttt. 1 di>' Jlft'wk. :io m:r RID OF THAT Pt .,.L Rel. -T36S. DARRELL WARD r .... Appohttm•n• New ""'/Ina ctri< to $560 to 5• rota -· 548-2811. UNSIGHTLY TRASH I< H I W ~ M & w 71 ('13l =1 Girt Fri/Ult lh to $560 DEBRIS. FREE EST. e P •n~, ,.. O Extension 339 US ~. 11th (•t Irvine) C.M. PROOF OP£RAJOR ' COLL. STUDENT 54M428. ACC!'G/Statlltkal Typbt, VP. a Dir. d -'42-1471 [ Ill•) GEN. Haullnr. TNe/lhn>b put Um<, l2l to l2l hn I"' CHECKER Au1D Pvt> Min Glendole P .. r•I .. ttvct.lcin bim.Garl:Yddu.nup,Eat month. Mou!ton.NIJUf!I clft'kl ,·pub men • 'Savtnp l'mii;liiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iii~ I 839-2!03 lll7-l9GI. Water W::-1:11'2¥" • cuhlora. Some aa1eo up. 401 No. lrand lll•d • • Experleflced • Hochman's , Delicatessen & Restaurant 11 SKIPLOADE!I I< dump tnJdl 111 l:: Uth St, C.M. o-.r., C. '1211 5-lt & -2<. Qoncnte, upflalt, Ad..rtl1lng S.Crotuy * CHRISl'MAS MONEY * -°""'" ~ lnttructkwts 575 aa#hw, brt&klna. 846-7110. GrNt appor. tor arnbltlou.a, Earn t1fD.$D) week p/tlme 1--------Haulbtil • d••••P by txp highly lldlled girt. Bratna, .. .,..., ..,u. Call Mr. Mac:. EXEC. Secft...,,..A taJor Gold & Sliver coll~e 1tudent, Ip tric. Ml-lnJUatlve I: ah requited. 5C1"'9M. cbarp sfrl. fully skilled fl Jewolry Cloao 1148 or5J4.2l64. tu.1'71 CLEANING...-,Hewt ............. ~!orl s-Ill wk. ID N<W. YARD ~ a ...... a .. nnp. issEMILERS ""' .... Ole. In Npt c ... ,.... ~ "' W/tl7namlo llrm. Leen kwt wu method. Free f!llt. 7 days. Call Send ftlUme to: Cluall\l!d~ -::Htm:..:::::,.===-.-- Guanr.n. pmtMisionlll niwuJta anytime. !MMI031. lat I: ~ ahtrt iD dectronlCI Ad No. 483, DalJ.y Pilot. $ IXf RAS S trom lht ~· Make YARD, pnce cleanups. ~ly in=~· P.O. Box 1*, C.0.ta Mtta. Al.lo Bit Part ~tta )'DUI" own hr l 1 t m • • Rernavf' u.., dJ.rt. tvy. Altter 6 Blcuaftlld Di v. Calli. 12826. M<Mcil 1V, Comtnm:!iW ~P""!""':;:::~-~=;;;;;1 !~Dri~"""~·~el~!l!!'~·~"~'~·-~1 Alfi'. 1--"" CLEANERS-aD........, p1 CAST NO SERVICR Houaacl....... aJ.11 ~ able to 00 alteraUcna I: NHdt aU ACftl A types San Jun c.~no tl:nd couriter. WUU,. to for ~t I: majoc' I I~ HOUSI OP CLIAH An_~~ .,,a wr -"-APOl1 ht -. ----_..,.... J'loon. -· c:ri>I, walls, ~ tllrl pd .....,. °"""-'137 W. Utb Ll«wd , l\Ocenl ~ l 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim-~-r/ ~8cii)"":~ln~-.ffil~-r.;~·ori D&ure • .-J blilnlO ole I St, Oolta 11-. . Sl'AR ~ II HOUSEKEEPER b' ! or I ~ por -Terrliic COCKTAIL Wal._, Exp'd KISS KISS K1Ll. I .. ~ ' .i.,.. • wt. ll2l a tky, CM J>01, otric:tly -to. write ... --oru,. APllb» ~ ~:\.::!"1n = ...._ Trane. n 10 d ed . p,o. eo. 145lf, -Ana d.ally 10:l2l-ll:l2l AM, e Blaclc-Oold WANr to. Balt>'lfl S to • >" 66-12f2. 17711 MICua. l1tl "& 17th St, e 0...-~ old boy. Dll)'t. b:lun-tlft. Xlnt ~ AVON OtRlSTICAS EARN· O:•t• Meu. • BJ Ramm• i..:.::lblo::;...' c.JI='-'~"'--='-· __ By Doy.-OWll tlon 1NCS <an btlp mUo the COMPANION • hak'!", toe S. .... 4 C.ll'-a · . * -bolld.,, hapPltr1-.;;:-,,..... •ldorlr 1ad7 In OOI. Pm ""' Puc a Uttle "loot" in ~ tritlr!. family! tr1 euy w.U-t.eAllh, . but mcnt.IJb ddl-(mJ "64-312l -UNITED - CALIFORNIA BANK ., Moln St'"t Hunt!..,... llNch S-11 Openl119 111 November • Delicatessen Counter Men it Wallresse$/Hoslesses/Clsbi•t'I • Bal<ery Sales Girls • Sandwtch/Salad Men .e B•11/D1'hwuhers • Caterhl'g Truck Driver , All Appllconh To lie 21 & 0.:.,. Alilzly hz ,,,,._, 1 PM • SPM · 4U I . 17th StrHI . c.... - ' An &qua.I Opportu nlly Employer ll/F , Levl ..... tt.ll U\mlllt ti&al*I Jor P ..... ea,.. CINnlnt Ina'! Jittt Avon JdiifUcl• lot dent, bw~.•lc. Lo¥elJ' T£MALE Wndlna MACh. •t· I "bot:b''. Call llWla.d A1ID wlndoW .0 fti <arf. our ,_hie Oiiiitm.\I lii>tt\e. T11ffil .,~-.-$3521 'ft'Ml(nt:""U!<OJ-1'1111 -· la ML , • l1oll DolcloJill.IMI, lam:!pm C•taJosu<,CaU-~·!041 !NI. Aft 3 f!'", -Exptt pttl'd. 5.1H)64, .. ... ~ 4f""' ~ ··~--, .. ·---..... ----ti1: • • -• ' wk. ... IWI. "" .. .... ng ap-! ' , • 7 ' t 7 2 5 I rm !=·_ .. -· ~ n •! n ·I~ I .. I 0 ~1~~·· ~· ·g;~;/tl ;? ·_·-~";"""~I~~,~! -~-.g:·= ·~·· l~~'!;iiiT~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiil """!!' J U... t TU-, PM tyclol, ...... •' M •I!' 7lt ~. . ltll • Ill °"'• Slllo " 112 Mlo«llhu•• tll MuslcoJ IMt•1111•~1m IMh/Mlrtn. _ Sc ,,.,, m I ' i ~ no •-' FREE. lllA. Sheep doc / Eqvip. -..._ ·~ --Elto'd OVER 1111 ...-... ......... --. "°" -G.AllAGE s.uz • SstunlaJ' * AUCTION * oLOS ·s-triil!U>o1 with O>cbiioo. u.i. ' .,,.., 71 HONDA • " ~ tot:4..t!/1 da1.: 1eb'tafiatch from .95. I dh.wer dlelt wldbL and Sttnd&y 10:00 a.m. to · cue ucl"matn. 0. ... PIQfUJ. Lovet ch t Id re n 2'T Boe.I fraiJer, F.lftdpped in cc 8'l'R.££'t BIKE • 1 ll ..,;-~ ····• ~· !11.W!!Oc ~':, ~ "'t.,! s,oo l'Jll-_ a 111ab Dr., FR4D.!J, l!!DP.M, ::_"!£1"1'"""' ..,.. $140. 99 1193 wloldo podsd"-; ~-•'"" .~ XLln' COND. mt MI. I ' I -rn •~ ••· e DmnfA8111:RS, ........... ,._. lleodl>osrds, chow 1-na ~ooh. <SU111, ·~1 •~ _ .. ; MIXED bnoed ..n,piel 8 w"""'-= -e. -'3SI e •• -' ~ ' . = ft~ pant A :Uie, n1te ..,._ all ~-2 ~1!: Ni:.tt"~~~= Offke ·PumJtu,../ WU. llNn c lii-ldr~n . w.rztg. ; '12 Yamab.1125 ~Don't , ~~A 10CAB~? de• d.;J». ' MMN. walnut. ~ Cllt1ee tble. llf'deD ~ 2 hncb Level ConteJD •i:;~ Pl E!'!P. 124 f:SPfdaD.y YoW'I! 6U-tru. Boats, Ponr 906 buy . new "D un~·w 1 ~):a hours, work $80. l· YR. gum. t dtl '• in-~~pc, lk1 bocfft, Moto porcelln 'beaten, ro.ewood dr)w: MHlt ~ set.I, EX!X' .Mt chr ns . 1' See .f:.'5, .,00 SEA RAY" titon thl• Gnl'. ~ or bett I,. "'~'tie JOUl' own ~~.:~~ c:voe: ~ ~=~ ~ ~~~t~ q>mmod~•. 1cocklall tablN, c:br $8 • 18 deaQ tilel M11 F~l~°iee~. hF~;;:,ej '5501ds, Pack-e-jet. Z>'.100•1 ;'71;;;ol_•·,~=-c:Z33!._ha:-'-;;;l00;;;---;;Entl1ao.== j ~-mi~ eav~ G.E. port ~~ Like no reui>nable otter refuled1 t1rw' and coriWtill tamp. :::Otb.k:esti!'m div-:_: 8S7 W. 19th CM 60-30 mo, X1nt w f c h I I d t e n , ~s, Equipped tor Water l..oolu ~ f\11'11 aood. S5'75. ~ Age 21. ro 'JO, ~ aew. SSS. 203811Cypfrtu, S.A. 615-6060 ' 64+-6lll Allo1 Oat ~ stacked lw't>I, I e ~~t of Pla~JOrtans 126 962-8216. Skiln;:: "' fishing. tand~m MH-0259 dlty1; 6 cs . 0 2' 3 10\Jr lnc:om.e. Drive Hetghta. $1)..'1325 MOVING, Bargains. Admiral gluiJ trmf' _ bookc:ue, oak old ~ea. fruit jan, r FEMALE part Gel' m a n trailer. Call alter 12.00 rvf's. ... In ot mtmt a day. Furnft.,...' . llO v.:alout ~le «tb' TV, child'• -roc1er, rtm o & e dilllei~~latora, trunlca It ORGAN HOBBY· Shepherd, 6 mo. Very noon. 1714) 830-64.82. MUST "· T""'I -"'T"'•"i"u_m_..,., ,.--,,,,.-.01 hl')lel'IOn, Ytllow Cab · $200. Re~ 'JV, $25. dl.ebet. l:ll'au, ~ta!, 2 MUCH MORE. {(11Ue. Good w/ehlldren. SELL! Semkhrome Xtra. Xlnl ~ tE. •16th St., Cloata R.A'ITAN aet,' 15 ~. Includes Wtflut CC?rllOle stereo, 3 pe-~Deb porcelln ' w I n e WlllDY'S AUCTION J)on't buy any organ until 7-70l7. NEED our garage, Mwil aell rorwl. 3000 ml. $ 1 , 2 S 0 · _ 6 CUlbion COOCh. ~If' 8eCI, chi', $35 eL Mpl dilpenaera, contemporary Qin .~ )"Ol.l can pll)'! Non-playen FREE to good home. 4~ yr 17• OwPns FIG Runabout ~ (Tony). WO -to detl&n I: .ell Wall lbelf, end table1. 2 dreaeer I: dbl hdbd., $5.5. turntture, ~ tna~ &:: .. ' weloome to attend !rte Mlrk old Pt:lodle:. Male. Adult.I on-40 hp Evinrude elttl uri MUST sell "72" :ID Yamaha lbadea. We will lamps. game '-table w/ 4 Sliver, alabel, tnlfe. !16 box spripp.-walnat O inch COME BROWSE AROvml shops. For ij:lformaUon ..-ly. 673-91.55 Tilt trler, $975. For qulclc lt't up for dirt. MUil .ell ~, cu.tom Shade .l ann cba!rJ, etc. Must aee. Bro.dway. C.M. &ti-0640. ~ tat»e, Kodak 550 2D15'ii Ne,wPOrt Blvd. , Contact Tom Diet rich 4 LOVELY KIITENS. n1ix· S e I I . 0 t t r r '! l'IO\ll'. "Plr1u1e" make offer!! ~ Df'Dlry Shop, 3535 E. Coast Would flµ . !ra' r o0 m, O.rar, Sele 112 ~ 36'~ ~-~ T°"r I Bldg. Mat 11. 6c..US1 I' ed, 1D wks, trained. 67S-3l3315.f7-5667. M7-8ll.5 " Jhii,ddM. · 548-Ul82. _ 5 3 fireplaCe"'" 'ICr'8eD, 2 brut· ~ Meea * 646-8686 Coest Music Service 545-508'7 'ZT' Sport11shtr Cabin Cniiser, '71 l!ONOA CB 175. Lo\¥ WQ~. Part time, U am MISC. Wahml. dw ntte lamps ~wrought iron OAK tiow front I e C "f · Newport Blvd. at Harbor slps 4, ht-ad, ialJey, S.S. milE'S, slArtM', tTUh bar, _,,pm. Mon. lbru FrL """'· ann. ..... iam,,.. Gara g' e Sa le ,._,;,.,, mt.e. chain A Ann(lh;e. Old -lamp, Costa M•U Ooplh """''· 135 """' Fully $.325. 646-4TI8 diftdlonals. l'Qll'TER'S FREEZE C1ieat; twn "lni:ttras. slat tables, qult~'"''hite drapes, Singer treadle. Mahg ch1na ll~l equip, Sacrif, $29!1). Call nc.k. · .. ~-SI., C.M, bnch, ete. 54MUS, 252-San: large . ..._ ftamod oecy. Olrv, oouoh & chaJ>' *PIANOS.,ORGANS* I -.,. -Jacl< 558-18111531~. 1971 HONDA TRAIL 1!1. - - -ta Dlabel, CM E i of 2 mirror, 3' .dnwer ftJe cab-w/c:otfee table. 72 Yr. old Hammond, Wartltzer, many . 1971 24' SEA RAY FIB crosii bars, Llkl' new. $115. • 7 fl: -gran .-• .MA vel t nt re contents. blnet, beaded• we ate rs braas cba.n®ller . 172 yr. othen. Pre-.eyoo speClals, s PI t •!I hr-r 2 l 5 H r ~ r-..------,~ ~ ,_:::_:::~'" ve fvrnldMd ..,.rtments brio.a brae. ' old brome candlellticb. model close-<>uta. Plano A --.~~=,.--=-,,_......,..,. • ~f.u -1s c j "",· conditJoA ikt.ol~t · · Nttdi,~t k>veseat. Match Organ rentall Money sav· p h o.n.· 1 l50 OMC-Ta.ndem trader -full "10 BSA GOO. Xlnt ccnd. , . IV 557...-.. n. • wee • -· ·• Bedroom Sell llG carv Wald aerv tabk. ing barp1ns ·~e here riaht • ' r• COvt"r-$9.T:iO. (7141 644-5229. w/mlllchlng helmet . ...._,""' '· e Uv:lq room fUrnlture Beaut 6 pc Fr carv. bednn. now at: 1968 TROJAN 26' 190 1-rr. Call 962-5159 aft 5. A IOO lllde+bed , 'w.,· new . • """"'"'""' GARAGE Lovely mlm>n. Oii•. Lou WaDichs Music Cily JHIS WEEKEND ONLYll FWC "'"""''"'· fiybrld,., Motor Homos -Herculon Geld Twee,d . e stove• morel 832-13TlTusUn. •• SS. or, BT. outriggers, SI /R 1 *' ~QUE GLASS SHOW $87.50. * 642-811f • Lamp& SALE ANTIQtJE trunk. ·$25. Comp South Cout Plaza 540-2830 xlnl. ITI-4)8'16-4871 H.11. . a • en •·~11 roU--"blea glass _ * e Dishes UNUSUAL ITEMS.· Baby stereoscope, 191-4, w / 72 . *PIANOS~RGANS All M~tafname Tanks . £lass 15' n-1s 4."i hp Mercury, 27· TRAVCO -•· ' ~u MAPLE ·~= 165 e E 50c • lll"....-· &: metal to El> at COsr! • ~ sbQw ' sale ever held. Nov. ~·e &et, _ , tc. cJothes and acces., lxioks card!:, $15. Xtra cards, Going <?'Jt For Busine&• We don't make our own, elee., tra!ler, ne"' carpt"t, 25· DISCOVBRER 4 A-S. ~t. 10-8, Sun lo-6, Coppertone elect clotbel All in very good condition, (not just cheapiesJ, variOW! ea. Other antiques. Best Best quality. prices . &<!t"V. lhis 1 M talnun lit new lo\\er shaft. $495. 261-22' CONTINENTALS 1nt,1 t. Harbor BI v d ., dryer, • $80, Xlnt oond. At very low prices kltch~n item,, etc. ffter, 723 W .Victoria, C.M. Kawai·Steinway·Baldwin, etc. Ttem· 1 c Reg ~ quaSar~ 6-15-7243. 20· PRIDE & JOYS An8helm. ~7413. . SaturdayNov.: ~5 Y UNUSUAL ITEMS: Several 646-7027 Player Ptanos & Rolls Afri£• Frogs-:_.... '63 CHRIS. 38' trl cabin Con· VAN CONVERSIONS ROBBI'S Antiques, OO!le out TWO 4 tn ~.1 ~ce saver "' ~ some Canadian & MOVING Sale! Beautiful Rentals ....... We .8\Jy-Sell $l .. ') 49c me, loaded. $Zl,<XX>., day11 SaiE'I e Service • Rental• ~~~%~~~!!e~ ~~~W~~ l~~::!t ~e·~(UQUlled,!IOmc ~~~eir:1e2av:~~ Daily~U>'SPIAN~ll-5 Mix~(~~~::: 19c ~~J~~-0757 , ev"e * Danmar Inc.* 5C1 tinter St., CM., Take ry COlll'l>)e $800. Sf7~ Newport Bea.ch· SALE SAT . .l SUN. dryers. Sm. refrig. Mlsc. No cOsta Mesa (714) &45-3250 Silver Anfels-; Sacrifi~ Boat Sale llSOI lla1;,,,'fi~vd., G.G.. ta.1-Tto ·Parlc Loe comer at * So ._ .. , •-·-"'--11 am 'ti! 4:30 pm prices o~r phol'fl>. 2275 PRIVATE PARTY WANTS 69c 5/$1 ~·1 • ** fa &: malCOunlf ~ ~....... · · · · · · · · · · · · 19' Runab:out "-4 whJ trier, Next to G.G. Datinin MO ~tu. 6CH313. seat. never ued, Both Sl.50. :t>24 WaJTen Lane, C.M. Republic, CM 6«r'5438 TO BUY PIANO FOR Pl•stlc plants-; --....t COOll. 835-7-69. R-t A ••~-"-· wA!iflili 1..arge china UsuaDy home, 968--7910. s:a;m~~JO.~s.~ ~~uF:e:i:;, RUG, avocado, green shag. CASH. 69c ............. 29c &;;.,, Rent/Ch•rt'r90I for-· -V ~,,_ 2 C!'':r. Re a~ on able: VELVET sofa, $175. !\tat-boots, m1n1 bib!t, SUrfboard, BIG Canyon Sat Sun 4th =ty~ ;::ru~Pri~ ~O~~:: Model Met•fr•me woof -* ym..u:r * ·=a. ~·~.$llO' = ~·~k.th1::: & 5th, 1~,&Sml bicy-$2. yd~ xlnt cond., spotleu! M.-lll. Walnut. lilarkt!J'Htt 39c · · · · ·' ·''' '' ·' l9c ~ ~ ~~alyrt~ ~ e NEW l.IFE'l'IMESe , .• •·'1"1nco1 I02 LRG COUNTRY FRENCH (Ago 11,12), r--10' de SS, 40 gal aquan·urn $10. Sat&: Sun only. 64&-30n. CL &: crW. $llOO. Eve&. 6"B-5122. 5 Gal. Tank w/Hood-S Pvt p'ty 54"·~ . ,-_ ml + •--·-. All ~~ Appl lamps, Some ru:ooee Elect weldlng kit $5, Elect 12' Oak church pew, $50. CABLE-NEls:>N PLAYER Reg. $6.tl .. Sale $3." . . &--. '""" uiaw .........,, LARGE UPRIGHT DmK ::.rnsJ.~2 COND. tbl, chtb chaln, ironrite sh:le polishing kit $ 2, Antique ac.hool desk, fll. PIANO Collector Item. Mint Lav• Rock-25c . . 15c Boats, SaO 909 ~15 wk. Pvt. pey, FREEZER $15. SOLID le bdrm t nuuite. Mlac. items. 2602 Children Ir: 8'11t clothes, all Antique retrig. S30. L~ cond. 646-Hn. after 4 pm. THE TROPICAL ZONE 25' CAL-25 Fb&ls aloop, 8 M<Mar home for ttnt. • 5.16-3645 • ,._ 00tstanlJ;:P cond. p 0~ i Circle Dr., Newport Beach. :M~k C:OO~sse~ $50,s~~~ ~'t!J1 ~S'x6', 6 ' PIANO, Cable-Net.on. Xbrt 2064 S. M.ln, S.nt• An. HP. OB. $5500. Call Strat "72 WlNNEBACO. 27". ~~AIREhlt iu:n ~r .. black&:: white TV. 53&-2161. PACK Rat Antique Collector 28 Royal Saint ,.. __ Rd. J ·, Nosbltt . ..___. cond. 3 yrs old. Walnut. C•ll tn-Ffsh . En r i I h I, Mkba•hiell, SIHpS 6. 640--0482 ""'.7~• w e,....., ""''· -eelll old pattern £lass. cut, ~5"' . .... numuc•u.i $450. ~ 675-0915. 4!M-8117 WAUWr . t. Excellent crystal, china, bottres, 2 NB.~ =~~ .:~~~~· ~ PIANO, Studio Spinet MONKEYS FOR SALE. 30' Ialander Marie n Trailers, Tr•wf M5 GE tefrig, >-di" w/top s:i'~~m styling guitars, MGM sale decor. HELP! Must Move! DIJI. /h._ .... 1_ .-.i:n 75 keys, $350. Gd lf'lection. Very tame. Year old. Xlnt coadltion, ERN hid te ~. app. l'l c.f., ~ ··~•.t· · Items & more. Nov. H beds, 1-$.20, l·US. White " .... "_....., ......... ea• 962-8220 after 3:30 pm 531-l734 Santa Ana Sips 6. Slip 51, Bayaborc 'TI WEST nt -perttme, xtnt eond: 49&-351S. OOUBLE droP crib & mat-(Sat-8un). 10 am-5 pm. No naUgabyd.e couch $ 4 5. 613-5905. WURLITZER Organ, $39> or Cats 852 Marina. $14,IXXI. 645-1715. =~8u.'::!1' ~p !:~~ LA;i' ~<!,D~ R ~= tress, ~ :~.. f;61es· No · e.xwns! ~~tc~$~~~i~ ~ ~ .. ~~ ~ w5~; ~~ best otter. Wards portable 14' Kona Catamaran. + shell. l yr old. fill Dataltn :;., ~~ VINYL O'LI1t GREEN Hum~al~·· Han~~ preS90l"·hme gun, etc Jl.95. tra fine church gia&I. 2)37 stereo $50, 66-8390. PERSIANS and llima.Jayan lrler. + goodies, 7 mo. old. a P.U. All f.tbgll, tlnted .. 1)!• .. , . , ' I,. ,. " '" . , plr4 -,I" 1,.1 .. •. ·" ' ' - ~ ' 1 l,11 ; I '.~· " I. " JUDE A flED $75 Harbour. Portable aewiog mactl, used S. Coast Hwy, Laguna ** PIANO with bench, hybre'eds, 1 CF~ .. ~g.,dshot11, Xl~: ~·:rilindlcs Ir races wlndow11. U'lS. MfHOOIJ. E·GAS DRYER * ~7250 ,* ., Don'tmla Dana Jilgh ~I once $35. 2569 Santa Ana, Beach -494-2828. restyled, upright. Xlnt cond. many co or11, +->-J an up._ wt -. MUST Srllf '71·18' Nomad dlal.1-0ood cond. -Rummage Sale Nov. 3, 4, 5 CM 548-0516. MAHOG Din Rm table, JU.Ill tuned!! 546-8866. * 892-2970 * 21 Ft. S1oo 4 p. baSleeps 2 1 . lnbrd 1 ,_ Trailer • Sell-contained · .'9t * 644-2951 * Devenpcrt &: ch air' . San Clemente, Eilts Lod, ge LIDO G~ aa.le-PaUo pedeflal legs, 4 needle point S , r__. l30 RED male Penlan. Papers <'ngillf'. g11 o sa ... r.tany Ex1ra11 • llnmaculale. GE Refrigerator Frfezer blue/green. eood cond,l~ New-framea; art & cratta ·w.-soareues·r.i:·w0men'11 chni, $85. Muntl.e 4 l]ld-portu't ..-• & 1hots. $45. 536-9759, 643-4714.. !>31 ·216~ or s.&8--8995. r •GQod (.'Q{ldltlon, Available $75. 962-513'.J. suwUei, prlntl, pottery, ap.. suits, ·books, frames. trans w!Unkage. $185. POOL table, 4\.i'x9'. Xlnt * 546-9965 * ·:11 Glupar Sloop. new paint, •ft'#Nlmrod lent traUcr, 12' . ~. :'50. ~. Oassifi.edi Ads · ·· · 642-5678 pllances, clothes. Beaut. us-~~XmJ:~i~~ 646-3158. cond 1" slate Ques. Qoe Dogs 854 4 cyl: lnbrd, gu en, great Gd cond. IUr. llV lilt>•, pwr .................... ed Items, color TV, GE elec T-;;~ple doll. Much more DINE'ITE aet, $35. Wall hol~rs. &: ~_pool ute . >' cntlsiflt boat. *"5&.14 un. ~-$6-11139 . • . ' , ' . . ·I . range & ovon. misc. 100'• of •ema, '°m' fumaoe w/blm•m'o SlOO. 3 incl Buyer .._., S'IOO. AVOID RUINED FLIPPIR Auio S.l'Vlco, P1rt1 M9 SAT. 11-5. 1218 Esaes: Ln, ,___ Nov 4 • 5 lOant 5pm bar &tools, cast iron, S10. 67;r-2765. CHRISTMAS Xlnt rond · ReL' 644-89.TI • 1., •• For •n H In · WorMn'I W...W Coll IMry Beth M2-N71, .ext 3" •' ,, ' ., , • 11 . .._ '" , One-Sici.cl Cj)aickW ~lftJ NB. (u"""1 .. ...:1 t · Cam u.,.,., . "" ' -' Ca . 20 yd $30 TREES Ir: GIFTS . . ' ' FORD Bronco frnnt l!ftd· brid ·~,....,.~ ) Fun; 201 Via San Remo, Newport. &i~~g, sq s, . TV, Radio, HiFi, Start now to train your dog A .w1n~11'11( ~~ SABOT llou.slllf( and liO gt"an, from ik ge G S:,ks Bl'l:I' Garage in back on Ravenna. Stereo 136 befott the holidays&: have a hrst 71 Ir: n IK'nlOr nnt Car and rt>llJ"·Extra RI of rirw; ~-es'-._,~'_-_.A_' ._...__: 7' Loose cushK!n b a Ck FIBERGLASS kayak, 2 pad· Well behaved pet that you rad<. $ll0. 671-KlJO. and plolon ,car tor rear eniJ .... .,;; .._lln3•u•a.:i U<:Ulr . .,,....., ., ........... ..:ie -fa h·--ise die!!, $125. Gas BBQ $15. EVERY Zenith &-.RCA TV in -''I •--·' of Cl Sh Iner. Queen bed _ .... ,u --' '"''1"" wu "'"' ,..._.,....... · aues • WANTED * l50 eean. !131-2164 OI' /frame · apread bunks blue with matching ?' round Man's bike w/chllds seat, stock on Sale now at Orange. have juKt ltarted you can Sail for 17' Snov.·blnt. MS-89!16. ;:,by • • • nylon area rug. Sniail Oat $10. 24" whl b.lJre w/1teer-County'1 ~ RCA-Zenith join l'IOW'. Mon n I t e a EVES, 548-3134 1---------- turn. top antique trunk. Heavy ing whl, fl. m-oT12. dealer. 3 fr P,Ctuni tube, 1 7:3o.8:30 • Wt'<I nHr11 8-9. Mod H-:28, fUlly l'Quip. SAT lH, ilU 62nd St, NB Spanish coffee table&: misc. STEWING Rabbits 50c lb. yr parts A 1 Yt aervice on MARTJNCltF.sr KENNELS Many xtra.111• Pt'rf ronrl. Glft Items, 2 man we raft, items. 3217 Idaho Place UYe 1'8bbH9 $1.15 ea. Hutch all sets. 90 Day' Cab .ra: . ., MS-0989 See to 644--24.12 I tent,. gold/ctyltal w·a 11 (Mesa Verde) 540-3894. . -.:rl3$2.!0. Berry, Plant1 $1.25.-tthanem'l:I ,~ ... ~~~-"!!!__ces ~ 'nlANKSGJVING SPF.CJAL. appr"te. A-..., .. ~ wrou&ht ._ aoU . . u..J QIMWQ.a.• '"""' 20' SLOOP, wooa. hard · ' --.., POWER mower "1JS., stereo 9'!l'Vlce n.-ott on grooming • chine, sJceP11 2, head, oul· · cluW; lboes, Sears ex. $ZS:, Danlsh' recliner $35. WHOLESALE to .the P.ub&! ~ C:.:-W"~ Atla~, bathing, all breeds of doRw bourd. $200), 83,3.--&593 • '~'· Quality c!ythlng PoriocrJb $9:, Pro(. ..U: HWldmade Candloi 5(lo.l8. 11'-, lJOU:b 968-:1329, wllh lhl• ••· BMng "°"'pot n.-h Sl 'opt/~I tlO Ant ...... /Clo11ia tsi mqc ~· dryer $1D., Ja:e saUboat Jewell'y ~:.P. to the cutest shop 1n town. -• .,._" ~ GWG;~-Sp.le. ~V°". winch, misc. items. :D!9 • 543-1340 . AM/FM Turber with nice a 8padal IOO!I Tues thru F'ri.1--SL_I_PS~-.v-A_ILAB __ L_E_ 191 Pont Silver Slftak, ~ Ce n e • Roanoke ~· C • M • TO.P fashion drel89 at ~. ~= -:J'~. str;_ I~ only. Hn 9 lo ~-642---481!( 4;;• to 60' boata M:.e~~f1.~~~· furniture, reconh,, 979-7654. · prices, 1ize 8&:10. 'Must pay 346-9657 Joe. · KINtA. Poodle !\KC Rf!jl!i1.1 ___ __'!.,.,....!:':~~---l5o;,i;:"iiic.~i0d~Hi;I clothes, ~c-9-brac, AA'I'IQUES: Chests, bed, rnd debts. my loss your gain 20 .. Am Color TV, roll $3'.l. 11 nKl')I ol1'. Nc\\·portl· Sports, RKe, Roch t5' 5. n.t ¥ Oak pedestal tbl; Elder 675-4834. Dunc1 Travt•I Trlr Pk. Sp 7. Boets SPMd & Sicl 911 Ana U'll: down aofa; old steamer SEARS (SCMJ E 'l e c IT i c s1and, 10 mo. old. XJnt cond. NB (Conlll u~·y fl! Jam· , '62 Corwlll'·IM'mi cu1lom.bl1 GE SALii:: Fri., Sat. Ir trnk; Boys lkpd; Mtsc. & Typewriter, seldom uM'd. S4.251 lhvested. $185/oUer. bortt H.d.) 8.13-1674 or 20 f't Sea Ray 200 M!JiH. t wedge eng: .... c;i,q Er.on cam. • Nov. l-5. Rn. ~ furn . .2067 Port Bristol Cr., st& new, $100. Varioul in-fi73-6C99 aft 6. 948-Gfl. ~ar l'll!W. e er Oldsmobile .~.J. htflda, C)'C'iorw. lloUy. m1IC. household ltemt ' Harbor View Hill, NB. Fri-tere11ting cameras.. 673-07'.W. TEAC A-1250. tape deck. l AFGHAN mal<'. 8 TTIOI'. with pack-a-jet ~na:;lnc. Equjppt'd cDf'..rat.io 4-1prl. w/Hunt: • d!O&binl ,prlced to tell. 1211 Sat.sun CREAT Buys! p 0 rt ab I e yr· old, perfect ' c:ondU~ papt'n, Ah'.C ttJ:., Oiamp for fiAhirnr l watfto akllnA:. 4:11 po11_. r.1•. SI 100. To llH, .~de (off Fairview, MOVING SALE; MI s c, Singer sewing mach, $30. ~1!t~~· dust ~r. stock, good w/childrl!n. J•'ull y f!'qlllpped tan do rn cau Chris at ~ C.M.) 557--4508. furniture,custom4Jullt _.._._ dri b'lk ~ · Reuonablc. 64&-3757. tra.ller. 'l'hll outftt ls like •29 Model A Ro.dlttt, aD Sal .,.........._ u.:...._..__. •U un-• MUlTa,Y ,.,...,, ven e_ ~ •--•nut b'---" ,...,,.""'na.I OIMt S82X) GARAGE . e -nJUIC ~ ~. n-.i;•-VOX $15. 988-5329. Avv.n...... H ....... TO Qualified H 0 me I, ~.~ .. ~ p h . Chevy nmnlnA: Rt"ar. Xtna. "J ,·Italian living room t.able, stereo, fn'l/arn $55., daven-watt Record player, Pointer-Retriever puJlll. 8 ;'!!"',;,'!:::...., ........,, one S!50. C&JI ~6. Italian dln1ni' room set, ports, chain, lamps, fan. HS£FUL of l!Xquiaite an-Ir a'.Jnplllier. $35. wka. $25. Call evet, .~~~~~·,,..=-=,.-,-~,I::---:"------:::: ·'bedrootn tet. Mlsc. Items. tinal cJose..out. Friday tiqoes. Palntinp, lampa, 644--2259. 552-7362. Ml!ST .ell 14' Sid boat I Trvcki "2 911.t•l:.Sun. 9582 I...aaen Or, p.m., Saturday. $-4056. cablnetl, tapestry, ctyBta!. · Ti'allrr 1----------1 H.B. 96&-0013. GAME tab&e, coffee I: end 639-G385. I ;---.. ,, V.. 111 Al.ASKIAN •ulmuto pupa, '3i,7J&j 54S.89iO 'l'J Chov1'91ot tab1 dishwuher kiun2e 4 • --Rooms all wool Ttgara lint' AKC, 3 tMk ' * JO"lNT SALE: Fri, Sat. 10 ~ ate-eos, MA NY bl'~""'"p1uall MntR, 2 steei mulu l wolf R ray. GREAT Sid eo..t. U ft . ..,... Plck11p1 & v .. to 4. 2812 Carob, N.B. OOHER ITEMS 1519 ~~l"iar~ n~. -rnlghtyJl.P.E venrude, lit Steck {Eastbluff). TV. water hed, Orange Oilta Mes"a ca1:itnet& Mlmc. 645-21Sl. 3 Linn, 2 Times, U.• GREAT Dene pups if>.. Trtr. OOYt'r. ftJ90. 6'4-29!11. Low Prtce. '\"'!!!~·~"I ~by &12-35Gi ~ !lat. . 8' ~.,he "!"" w-hdbd, 1'""'ttonal CMmp. blood HOWARD c• ~,_,_. co ....... ,., •t"" '7 equ. p, SUPER GARAGE SALE .......... recoraer ..... ._ lines. A.KC t'e«tllttT'l!d SJ.SO. • ..... ._.. SA<'QU!T p,nly&: "!': World Bk SAT. 1: SUN. Nov. -4 & 5 ~: cond. RM~·· ~ ~! ~ KI'ITENpe. 2 1!n~ SQ..5495 ane:r 4. I Tr• .. •l'.1lltillt , ... Newpert llNdt 0 · .ruiu, 1246 Somerset Ln NB (ott ·~ AFGHAN pupt, cru,n1 °" -MacAnhur I Jan1bor'tt Bhld aet OJ!ldrent encyclp. Mille. Highland). Greai Varlety. SPACE for Trailer, boat.I, 1 M>lld blk. M. 492-6644. KOiden, 6 lllO!l-, malr I UJ.OSS5 CharcOI broiler, patlo ~ Ski, Camping Gear,· Bikes, campers. $'1'.50. mo. Neill 6 MOfttbl old female cat fe-malf', AKC, xlnl. $150 UP· ,... 5 LF.Arii or buy thP mw ffB,toya. 17111 F.dwvdl t., Furniture, HOusebold. Neon, lne. 5.11-3374. nertdl boule. SU&ler tritndlJ. ~ Airc1"1ft -,, I """c;-;;-;;;;;;;--.iii'-.,\r""'.:.0..-'-----'-"I TO)"(U hat.I-ton mtnl-plclc. mi A SAT. u-.1 ..... Han-HOUHhold Good1 114 MIW-onll~'!.9°us 54IHl681. BF.AGLE Pups. AKC. 3 A Cth lnb!ftst~'67 TU Di up. Stirprlat> )'OUl"llttf with _. ... ,1; ._ 120 FOUR fluffy kittem nt.'t'd malr, 2 femalf. from jtntle $2llOJ: JI .. ..;..__,., OR Co II• htgh.p C" r r or man c ~ ctyman .ie. Abo ataaware. KENMORE l'.>" elec Range, 1----------home. 1 male. FOWte&ln family pet $50. 495-4939. .. ~. • i;,..;; ... Ti.?'m.3419 of. \'f:nallll1y and «'Of'IOmY ~ -· haeSthld Cm!IC.M 3l6(1n auto, timed OYen. Excel. CHINA Ol.binet or hutch. an-Valley area. 968-1886. IRISH 5fttfto Pups, AKC. ~%1M. opn11tlon<.all 1'Nck o..pt. Rocbntef •• · · cond $50. Tread1e aewt rt Uque or new. La r I e · CdM Momma cat yil!ldl Bttd tor fSeld. ~ a Mf". RUI M••">' Tbyuta. M~G.Rerril·TV.,dinette Wm~ $10. Fl1>Jc9'19-m; W=~"::'7~mfa ':~0~~79~"' ~~:ie:: C•~pers.S.le/Rlfttf21 ::.l&n~. BIYd .• llunt. set, ~..:!.,.machine:.-~· MisceU.neeut 811 hide-a-bed. PLEASE aaw 2 babJ kll· 4 rnontha CJM. -US. SI~ fnr import lhor1bt'd 1 ,. '71 Datun ...._ nJCt. _... ......... many Ulnui<:U MM687 ... ------' hem home *l'J't.-2'7l9* Ir I lrucka. °""1fn llhe ... • -__,. dft ltem1 -1805 ·A * 2 CheTy bckf .e&tl new •.:r....,ve t a • oitnvrrw.. M~ CatnP"'T Vl'T)' Vny ~~. 1..ow MU. I~ CorfanderDr. 51)-'5321 ' bl.k uphol. $50. Gu' lawn * M4.o906 * AUSTRIAN Grnnan Shep SAJ""-Jl36 Harbor, C.3-1. Alf', F:xt"til.-nt Cond. f4U- ., ' Make everybody b&pp)'! GARAGE Sale, lJvlnc Rm mowtr;'SlS. :i>T·M. Musical lnstrvmemsm G=:r ...:-~~ =-c.r-sh!.':.~~· 646-ftm. CA>fi.•·-·· ,Ci' 'fJ 9328 Crochet low bllh al!ppen. ~·~ ~,.., ~ ~.=-~"':.:~ CONN !nun~ $110. Follt H.B . .........,, • WH1PPET ,...;..,,,. AKC SIJDE ~~i;m-..... · MAKE OFFll l~,AL.j~s;:;.:. 5_7&~_w~o:~ ~·Qiota-UOAD\ fl50=-~LEMON ::.=.1.utlM, G~t~~ ~·.;u~~~· ,.,f-:,. l~IJuf91111~ "'f '111'-it Gay tG:11or palhlMcb 4 RMS ot furniture fO'I" IAltt, f'JREWOOD like new. MOO. -GR.EAT Dant, AKC, pa,y. KU>VCED . 1K F..r:'llOOlllM' ~ "ClllO•O..:iil. ~ dcnt'ti 009 ~·~up T'(.cGUtt '*'"'°• i,ms-. pelnfilVt A * '31.U * 5e--2531 '*t=-~~:--~ \tzl'Ss7..:. Wdl Can'IPf/f'. Can _. ~ . • ~ -• , • _ .,:'!r.',rm,thlt'•_..to IHpPeni ~~""PML :~rn*bi~eoew Necda"~"!Placeanad: aaanfkod ~ ... "2...'i678 * ewse • .·Cdllt J1UP11 ~ War~· :6t w. u.y. -,'5 EL CAMI lnt aoclal Ufl! chet. Pa ;. : ..... ' reuoaa .. . I WEEKS. OJ..O. . . t RMD, 4 apnod, camper :~o:e t!'°brlcMwlth ~~ l'ft'l'IVE ......_ GARAGE~ i5 SUllc»-$10-. HHl10 Cyc ... , Blk .. , nil, Nk°'t'.17t628£1. accents ,_wu ... _ ~·z I ~ Dr.,10c1M. JO am-t pm, -.... -.i--$11" , PdnledPal..,;,9328,Im' ~=:·;,.;.;:,... J\1,, Slt., Sim. Ml•e. STAR.GAZEB!1<~ ~~.:;;;;;...."'."~ lcoolws •u a>NNELLCllEVROUll' )l._ 1 Sha 8,'10, 11, 14, 19, Alr ud Special ffandl,. Galore. a.A.l'J. ~ShaW creJttr. "7-«m. 'Tt Yam&J. Di lll'1ftt Bib. 2fl21 llatbot ll.lvd., Siio 12, <,,.., 31> takes ins: _...... --4 -ll'AMILY, Furn, db!!!!. x W~-~ ........ -w, ~ ei6 "'£dla! tod . ._-rioo °'"'" ,.,.. ..... 2 J/l Y-54-lnch fabric. -wt11 --mlac! You name It! t= T •--..,.....,. T ar lldl on ... m-mt. ?J D&ftiiiiOi •rillln·F'lv& Clllft'IJ' ,..., Or men. Sad to van Buren, oor Qatft', Htp lo..,dill, .. t1i9 .... ~ nm pw IDvatiiae *"· 11q 1J'IO y ltM.AllA. m M'X. Like "'..,.. ... -,,. ...... odd 25 :w.-· ... :f1i;.Y -, 'lb ...... ' .. ., ... Soll'"T"• ..-••""" v .. -. -· Lowll<h.sm. ricxur ..... ad wiem~ ~ -I tm. N11~ OAR i& S.t. 1H. Down ~~,·-:· -~ ftt tt1'5. 111-ubtu+-teM. sa..21.19 ' --"--·~ Air llsJI .... -Ill .. .. 8"'t 183, Old Oialle• coadi, --!uni, -.--~ - Jic -.. tb1nk1u1 Slatton. New Ycn.:.N.Y. blebld -DH d11t Dr. J-~~ ' :is ~ ~ 21 'M IUZUIU SS bnuod -titiii:il 'a. 'ilell*Y will take three 1QJU. Prtnt ....._Ail. 111r N.&. ·= 2.JC..W A ........ ~ .... ,,.' Jn * M-4ltt * SSO e Ml-J.:.a •Ur. ~ ==-~iht~AIL; tt~~~· ·'121 ~s.Jeo. . , :Jt•• :::.. #111-1 Spd. LM!n 8Uc•'t IJ~' ~,.,,,,,,7~G""'Mf"'""'l'J.""'T=Oif=r-PIIDI', CC'J. Pattnu Dept., Croehtf Jmit, etc. Free .......... A Mile. Must 11!.lL ,,_ 3'...._. .. ~ ~ Thlnk Chritstm1t•' Pk'k11p Auto., YI. P-' 212 _ ., ... 18U:. St.. "'" db'ec1tolia. 50c. ~ 10,., , w • .swa. ~ i""' 11·•··· ., ~ I -· . I .. ,, nwtto • ...,.. ~ (ftOTDl. '(Olli. N.Y, 10011. Prinl W lllrn' """"' •'dnJ, Cooto M-~~ ~~ :... --1'. RAtt 8PEEDWAV• $16" ...... ADP"nt ..:J!. Bllfc, faney -pq. 15 FAMILY pr Mle. Nov • .,.,., 10A . lff1 J .A.P. rOf Mlfo or ln.itr. COSN'F.L.l. OfEVJtOtZr ..... -ond •••--Sj.OR, • ~ IM pm. -Vlnr I .. .... r Xia! -. •1111.\, 1'21 IJ-llMI.. 1ltlHli=~-r Qal•k W °'="-~; -· 11112"'"' 1.a-. :I:!!.. ~t..., e..t., G•r II ,. "1-9'd. llJll. a..n, OOo<a -Nl-Ulll ,:.... ~~ -one IAlnl ~ H.& ~ .. i':° ' lftl rodlalo -'II i'int _,,, -· - -..... -~· .. -0111-IWllllAGESslt.llow.!rd:" ?!!..... ·1· .. :i: SCl•LEJS -.:-:.-....;.. """.·.~~ .. r.a..e. l!Oc. C.toloS-All ·~ ........ , ....... ce.:~JO. 1IL ...... g-E::l.. 11 ._-11111 .. malot ....... ~-- '1: =~~ i&;·~ .. -:-.: w.:.r.-~ .. -=~ = I ·~ Ir-··~-c..!~~~L a~=.':til = .. ==-~rw"•" ... "'T"' .. "i-"= .. -::,,-i=r"'~"'.".1 ~ :.~~I~ ::'"''" ·~ ~~~'1: ~~ t"'... 1111.. -,::::.;.C:U:.....,, ··.:._FOR '!!!_,,'f>ldVu,~ ..... =..-..11. --··lllf? .......... ---, -·1111--1o..,.om. ·--~--· v ~ ~ -lie. --I . ":,... """"'~-·~ .. ;:~ .. ' = :.~ ':."".:. ~-= DAI.' PILOT l:Jn ...,., -,t'.-~';:= · !=-111;1 ~ .....,.. ~i!lr 11, OIWs ,.. • ®., • :'a!:· -t11r cuacoo CLAUIPllD ADS oo " "" GMC ""* • jii;i:i"ii··~·.. 1 1 • ... & .., Lit --Col & , ...... Adi >' • Nia CALL 642·5'71 d :':'/'!I: I ., I I ' ' I DAILY PILOT rrld4). N"'m"" '· 1972 " / 1_ ....... GREAT -USED ARS '66 VW l'ICK-UP ................. $1095 '69 DATSUN 510 SEDlN ...•.•.... $895 ' o.ot. Radio. IXWH 2'11 '67 KARMANN GHIA ............ $1095 '67 VW SQUAREIACK ............. $995 ARlo, Wfll"walll. 4 s.,...i, Cu.tom G•-• Of"~ T\l'ltllll T•"' T ... ITGM l"l Ntw JIW P1lnt, Wrpl .f ~ f\ID)l 6lll '71 TOYOTA COJlONA . '.? ....... $1650 A11-t>ce 1r11n1., 2 _, 1tdln, r.c!IO, wl\l.la-tllle' Wiii~, Priced lo "'I 1'5-9DlPl '68 VW FASTBACK .............. $1195 llrlgllt Ytllo'ol, Low Mlle., WISJW Tira. (YEI/ I I)) '69 VW BUG ................... $1295 '67 FORD VAN .................. $1295' RMJ'ro) H11111r, Tri,.. Al"9J, ' 5Pff'I 1wve oni co~ rebl,/111 lrlM j, enQIM. Cll<M do-Incl .... ! !~126A) '71 LOVEBUG CLEMINTINE ........ $1895 '70 .VVi BUS ................... $2395 Otlvq a1iv., R6cl19. SMw It~ hrNc'll IN CASI . '62 VW SEDAN ................... $595 '69 VW SQUAREIACK ... : ........ $1795 lolltomtlk. IJr c.oi.dlllolllfla, Low Lew MU-. flD't Ml) '68 GTO . : ..................... $1495 '66 VW KARMANN GHIA .......... $995 lllOlo, Wiiii. 1Jd.t -11 !irtt. Orlol,,..1 tll'11U11'houl. !SIOl W ) '68 CORTINA GT ................ $750 '72 VW SUPER BUG ............. $1995 • Si>eecl. Rldio, Heil~. ()t:LY.(Jf} '116 VVi DELUXE BUS $1050 '71 PLYMOUTH CRICKET ........ $1295 Prk.td "fo Seit Tiil' W-end. tSBL 2'•J 811t'tfl •ell•, ~ •l>(td, rldlo, bri;l!t Ted W/bllt~ Interior. !174DVI) .. '71 VW 411 WAGON ........... $2795 '65 VW BUG . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $595 Undtr F.ctaory W1n'1nty • lollfO., lt.cllo, 1 MICM"'! IC lM1191L Lie. lMl•l 970Aulos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970Autot, Imported 970 Autos, Imported • I GRAND OPENING 1973 240Z NOW ON DISPLAY • SELECT USED CARS '70 DATSUN WAGON Air Cot>d., 4 Sptl ., l ike New C:.lldltlon, V1ry Low Mil••· ftt6 IT6l. ... '71 flRCEDES ' .... -. . ,. -,.~...,. / l " • ' ·t-~' SI...,, Au.._ Tr11111., ,..., .. l-4Mo, ..... , ~ lftt, P•wtt W'i!Ml•wt. '''I· DOVI ;- $AVE '71 PORSCHE 911T l SpJ., R•dio, f•clorv Al1ov 'Wlieelt. (Lt-IS 171) $AVE · '71 DATSUN PICKUP ~•'J Very Slri•~· L-Mi11° ...... ......,, .. Ce& 1415· CAXI. -. MAKE OFFER '71 DATSUN 140I R1dio, Air Cond., M•9t. lltf CfVI '57 MERCEDES 1'0 SL RDSTR. •• '60 300 SL RDSTR. AM /FM Redlo. A11I Coll•ct. or't fte,.,, #6160 l'"ll'l•tU• l1t1. fVCL 1011 SUPER SHARP '72 DATSUN PICKUP A1•I Shat,, L.."" Lew MU .. •t• Mint S... IMO EICYI 1000 W. Coast Highway-- Newport Beach 645~6400 ' -----. . . . . .. AUTOS BOUGHT \Ve pay top dollars fGr late inc><rel, clean cara '45-5940 443 W. Bay Street Costa Mesa Autos, Imported ALFA ROMEO . Alfa Romeo , NOW ON DISPLAY Salt'I Service Parts Body Shop ALFA '72, Spyder, Silver, New, takr-over rr;ymtJ, Pri Ply ~ .... 543-6918. 81W1D NEW '72 Alfa Romeo 200 ~r Very &autlf Low Low ~fl!H. Und~r &ctory \\'ar> ranty (:fM0.102). $4195 '19. IAm4'n1 J"Jcilo, ltUIO, )ow inn.-. mo. P¥t PIY ,.,,._ or Al-J&tl. -- Want •d rt•ulta . . &12-6671 ... . . '71 DATSUN 240Z SiffJll • •<th oo....t \ft 11.11, •PP0t111td ~1tClltn. tlilt~. V•tl. iYIO '""'· PO•U iltfo & D•••tl. ~fllff. l\llly CMl)flto:l S1oc1i •lll27 E1UF. --··--SCllJJ----.. r uw-rmY -'96-Ha:..tmf -mtm1-nnrnt .. aiuY-_,.,_...,..,_(TC. - fl I WWW ----. ·-·· .. __ ii! I 1£1 940 : GRAND OPENING DAN MAR'S , RECREATIONAL VEHICLf SERVICE CENTER· Visit our New S.rvlce Centtr ind get .,Our ,IJ.)! lu.._. fr•• (119thlf'll to buy) ond tolk ovor pny R v . problom1 wllH Rogor. t~r-·:·IJlNIAft INC.· :· "MJ>TQR :HOMES SALES ·• SHY.ICE • RENTALS' 13801 HARBOR BLVD. GARDEN GROVE Next to G•rdtn Grove Oaf sun . .. 71· ••.••• -- -. 7 ~ filWIClng naillble on w llPPllMd cndlt MW 7J llOl'OI -• SCOOT IOIT. ··-'8442 • :: " ' .. " " " • : • . , ' ' ' ' " .· :· ·, ' . - I AFTER 2t YEARS Serving Orange County F.RITZ WARREN SPORT CAR CENTER • -1§1 I _.., .... Auto., ..._..., 970 Auto1, ~!f!~ KARMANN GHIA POUCHI 1971 Karmann 'Ghia Coupe ~ mileage. Xlnl CODdidoQ 11.950 ••• '49Ml51 '64 Ghia, Looks lharp, n1121 greaL ms. . M7--6ltl6 PORSCHES '72 911·T DAILY PllOT e _ ... _" ... _-~!§) I_-_ ... _-~)§) [ IF--l§J ;;[~--;;;"'--;;;:~l§J~1 ~'--... ---.;.;;l§J~I ~[ __ ... _ .... ~-] Q~ A-, l...,ortod '70 ~AUlol,~~b~-~~~i'°"i;,-~i-~"'~°'~·~U~MClijiiiiiiiijiii~f90~ AulOI, UMd 1'911 Autoo, UMd "' Autol, ~ ftO VOLKSWAGEN VOLVO City a1 rC va1i.,. SUICK BUICK CADILLAC offers ~ &t.1e foUowina: ''9 V.W. Compor Radio, ltick. superior coo- dllloo. (YXT8111). $2299 VOTE YE l'OR A ( dr tedans: e ·n OODG E POLJ\U.A •!#1, A/C, Power steer ol brakes. $1.l:SO '70 BUICK RIVIERA l Dr. Au lo Tntn1, J-'actory Air <:and, Po~·(·r \\llnttow1, Power &.·ats, Tilt Wh{'el, Crt<cn \\'Ith n111.lrhin.lj viipit rwt t 489ACll 1. '68 BUICK WILDCAT <:m1vcr1. 41.000 mUes. Air , l'.S., P.B., IPl<'C. wlndow1'" '71 Ca•ac El Dorado :k·uis, new •1l..,S9t. (VSDJ.S4 J. Conv,, PowMr blue ftn • "'llh white top, White IN CONNELL CHl!:VHOLll ~1· lnl rrior, tun l)OW'e:r, is MAZDA Clo1ifig Ill Foeilities ll MAZ -- 0 -A __ ..;_ __ _ Cpe, AM!l'M, 5 Spd, Many Extru. CONNl!LL OHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa ~1203 LEAVING couotr)', m111t sell '68 VW Van (Kombi w/whi· <lows) orla ownr, xtnt me<h '72 VOLVO •. * •• e '711.JOOGE POI.ARA •509. A/C, Power s1C'f'r &: brakes. $299S CREVIER MOTORS 20ll \\', ls! SI., Sl:lntll Ana 2828 !!arbor f:Hvd ., rondiUoning, C~16). Stt Costa '-1«!111 546·12U1 I this one for '10 Bui<"k Custom Skylark $5799 GIGANTIC ~:!E ·nEi';~ SAVINGS 1-od. !7.!6 __ . '72 914-4 AM/FM & 'Much More cond. $U50 or beat·otter. '61 vw led. Good tram. $325. '13 911 -T .TARGA· or best otter. Muat sell before SUn! 6f+.0618 AT Clearance Prices '73'• Here Now 1975 * * * * e '70 i\.IERCURY #518, A/C, Pw•er Steer &; brake&. i3>3171 '67 BUICK Skylark. \\'hite "·/blk. \'inyl lop. 1~v.·r. str•t'r & brakc1>: 1111 : It & II . Wht. Blk vinyl 1011. l'.S. P.B. R&.H. fact nir. UndPr 30!\I. $425 unck>r book. 64fJ-1.Z52. 644--Z22'1. hlANY '-!ORE TO CllOOSE J-~R0~1 SALF:S OPEN 7 DA VS Allen on all Now & Used .Cars Save- NEW CARS -Save '72 TRIUMPH SPITFIRES f ·nln•·• 4 1pcf .. r1dlo, Z200 mlle1. $2599 New with f•tt werrenty '72 PEUGEOT 504 SEDANS· 6-1 ix·6 to choo1e from $3199 New With fedory w•n1nty '72 SUBARUS 2 I 4 cln. Wof\diol 4.fo11r•4 to tltoo•• from $1899 'N•w \.ltl! f•ctery w•rr•11fy I' Save txEC. CARS Save '72 SUBARU GL SPORT CPE. 4 {pcl.o r•dlo, t,000 mil11 $2199 ••• '72 PEUGEOT 504 SEDAN A11tom•tit, •m·fi,, · -• • '72 SUllARU 4 DR. SFDAN 4 1,3.t radio, 2200 ,.,;1,,, . $1999 • • All 11•w c•n c•1ry+ t·t;ODf ll'lile or I yetr w•rr•11tv - AfMt our tlod119 you l'l•V h•¥• ft 1•r1ltecf •t 111y lo· c1tl 'fiiiMfti..d d11l1r. · Al Used-Cars WHOLESALE to the 1740 • Consider 1er1t1s. $ 8 9 5 , 673-1164 . CADILLAC 36 mo. + T & L. For resp. pty. Trades oona. fut CC VW, dooe ratio fl'1 ' .-! • Black rtnlCI, ComfOrt Group, trans. FUteena 1.4 mi. 100 Llllll QUICK CASH AM/FM Stereo, Air Cond, HP. El'Ja. A lraftl, 6,000 mi., Vftlra Interested buyers contact F'tdol'y Mag Wheels, 5 Spd, $2fiOO tiiYetted. $950/otfer. IVI. Capt. Les Rowland, Foun- • * * * • Oldsmobile Cadillac • 72 ROTARY'S ' "Demo Sale" Hurry on this one. 54IHl529. l96G Jlarbor C.M. 641).g30.1 taln Valley Police Dept. Jn-THROUGH A '68 VW Van. Rebli 1'100cc I"-"-'-~~·"'===-spect can; on east parkln.11: BILL YATES eng. New bettet')' ol front '64 VOLVO lot, Civic Center. 1(00} Slut- 10 TO CHOOSE "BIGGEST SAVINGS" "Service 1s the difWence" HUNTINGTON Bl!ACH !:k: ~t~:~-~a:: 2r!1~: '=e m~n:i!~~ tt Ave. DAILY PILOT Inc 54!J.6793 alt 4:30. Q&O. Better hurry for this WANT AD • '69 VW eug,-Good COM, one! IOPF6071 Only 17'9. DAILY PILOT MAZDA automal!c, 'Lea-""'"""· Bill Maxey T.,.ta, 18881 CLASSIFIED ADS Sacrifice, 833-<1434 Beach Blvd., llunt. Beach. 642 5678 ~-'--911 T ""'-Mon thru. Fri 8 to 4:30 847-8555. • '72 ~ -·-••· ='--"'~-,-,--== !142•567S Wan< ad ""ull• ... 642·'6711 Sell Idle ltena ... 64U6'l1 I S37-4800 Sliver, llbr. .Aaume t... •n VW Wagon, · CJ.,.itled Ads . . . 612-5678 i;ji05:T,ii0j;;t;ji'"-ffi poried 970 A · I rNd '70 $224 mo. 675-TI.83. rad AM~ ster1oo 111 Autos, New . 980 Autos, New 990 Autos, I~.. 970 Autos, Im utol, mpo Wll.J.. Buy your Porsche paid ., ..... .,,., mus ae . -p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiOOiiiiiiiii'iiiiiii'i;;;;jjj;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;w for or not. C&U . Kent Allen1 __ 55~7.-i._~*-557~"496'7~~ 837-4800. '64 VW Sunroof. C.ocoa ·'6!t· Ptnche-,~911-S. AM-FM. brown. Nu titts, shock! llas everything! A 1 k t n g $485. Ben Hur Gas, Harbor $6,000. 962-7361. 1.&~S.,,~·~C-.M=·~~ ---~ '67 Pone~ 912. Xlnt cond. '70 VW SunCl1al camper, good ·See to appreciate! Private hrxlr• strong eng. Financing party. Ph, m-864.1. ~~~· or T.O.P. ,-.,....==="'.:"' RENAULT' '64 Van . Partial '71 M' ERCEDES 1---------1 Conv. Camper. '67 eng. Tape FOR sale, 1967 ""nau!t, new deck. Good cond. ""'' offer 250C tires, one owner, S36-X6t.1 ~54~""584..o=~----~ after 6 pm. '70 VW pop top camoer, !ully ~~~~;~utop. Tran•., TOYOTA equip. Xlnt COM. 37,"'1 ml. l'Un.1••I& n.i;lUJU, owe r Pvt. pty. $2.400 or Best of· Steering, Power Windo1vs. ----;;:;;:;---'l,~fer~. !16Ul~~46.!:----,,---, I (995DDVI. . ELECT '63 Bug, New eng, flxod SAVE up $600 or best offer. j~)Uplll1 ~j '72 TAOYOTA 68 ~ :!:~~~~n: •n· L!!i'...:,w.=~J ~500 Blue/White, call YOUR NEXT CAR '60 300 SL RDSTR FOR Sale, 1969 VW Van. AM/FM Radio, Real Colle<<· CLEARANCE SALE Good co~. or's Item, #6160 Immacu- late. ON '63 VW. Sunroof. Great $AVE ·100 NEW TOYOTAS 1ran~~ • '!~rt iatmin l ... vw Bug, -· -. i}~w.c,.:t.;:&,( :7S.re~ ~~Good cond. L . .!!""" -. ' ~ LllU '£() vw BUS '\ '57 Mercedes 190 SL Rd1tr. 2 Tops, Sharp car, MUsr B~ -SEEN (FWR194) ' . $1499 • ·TOYOTA B~~ • '70 VW Sundial Camper. 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 AM-Fh-1 stereo radio, new '67 Toyota Corona """ ~ &'6-1318. 4 speed, auto trans, radio, V.~. 61, Bug. Good con· light blue • Don't pass this di~n. $350. <lr Best offer, buy • bek>w book ITXPL24) 1~67_"'864_2_. -~--= Only $899 at Bill 1'1axey '70 VW Bw, reblt ena:. $1650, Toyota, 18881 Beach Blvd., or tmde for older Bue plus HUnt. ))each. 847-8555. caah. ~7358 '69 Toyota Corona ·iii;-vw-~Bug-_-on.,,,..,..· -. -......,-, xlnt cond. $650. mack vtnyl top over red, lo e 968--7903 • mllet:. See it, try It. buy It! '69 VW BUS SNRF (57nAGGJ Only $1099. Bill Bed n62s ' Maxey Toyota, l8lm Beach * sri.s293 * Blvd., 1-Iunt. Beach. 847-8555.1 -------~-1 '69 c.oroua 2 dr, New tiret. ~~~ Great Reblt tranl. $QX). 642-5864 * 675-3n.s .. * · '58 Mercedes. New or 6tlh3545. pd.lnied. New front ttrea. TOYOI'A '66 ST0T.Tr "-Ton, '67 VW Sq~, Clean, Runs Gd. cond. $900. 673-4786. PICK UP. RA:lf. $750. strong, $750loffer. ·DOT DATSUN DEAL IN' DAYS · Trw•AmCbamp. Dat•un 510 With overhead "m •n11ine, safely front di•c brake•. ind9p1nden1 nar Mdpll'Dlioa. Spe- cially modified. for racing. ValaeQamp.. Dataun. .\)11 witb'~uaaca.m engine, •afety front fl" brak• .. ind•pendht rear .1uspnaion. S,.. cially modified for economy cmd luxury with bucket Melt., full YiaJl Interior, tinted glcna alld wbitewal.1 lirft, all •tandwd. 1 1000/o 'GUAIANTEED 1000/o GUAIAHTllD BUY WITH CONFIDENCE ( ALL CARS LISftD ARE ' GUARANTEED 100°/o . ~ ,. ... a _rwr-• ,... Mlllll. """"'' '" ~ 1n1 1971 -vYt SUS 1111• wlHi wltite .. ,.. ltfft'IP'' fll•rdt, t•dio. htr• tle111! Lie. No. 172 CEL. SALE PRICI $2195 1969 SQUARESACK luff•t• t••ir I r1clio. Li,. No. YPT 51 I. SALE PRICI $, 495 1970 YW IUG 4 1pd., r1dio, .. ,,., cJ.•11. Uc. N•. •••· IHL . IALI PRICE $, 295 -· 196S YW SUG Aulo. 1ticli, r1dio, li1111"1plr 111•"'•· lie. XICT 116. IALI PalCI $ 1095 1970 YW SUS l1i11 & wlrtlt•. $1•1 011 thit 011•. Lit. N•. l 14 IFS. SALi PalCI $.1895 1969 SQUAREIACK Full 111to11"11ti,, f1tf. 1ir, r1dio, whit. tire•. Uc. No. XSS601 SALi PRICI . $, 695 ·1969 IUG • tpd., ltvM!Nf' t11•r41. Wirt.ti riitt•• r-'i•. Lie. XS$ .01, IALI PllCI $, , 95 1967 VW IUG 4 ........ r•~lo, whit, tir", t.v.,., 111••4•. l it , VEJ 177. SALi PalCI $ 1095 DEMO SALE! ALL UNDO FACTORY NEW CAR WAllANTTI •• LARGE SELECTION lUBLIC!! '70 TRIUMPH TR& 1972, 250 air, pwr. steering, ~==,!S<l!i:!•l!,;751~-_,. j---:::64>::;156.1:::;;:---I run/Im, 6.800 .U., a'1ting "11 CORONA, 4 dr, air/COM, VOL.YO 1 11~SG.~750_._.,,_·lll2 __ • ___ 1 aulD., radio, 1 owner, L&e1-------- MG New. &35-1828 . '71 VOLVO GOOD SELECTION fx.,.ple lchtr .. r•clio, 4 1pd. $2499 '67 MG GT C.upe, wire1, r1dio. $1099 '69 TRIUMPH Spitfir1, wir11, t•dlo. $1099 '67 PEUGEOT 4• 4r. w11011, r1dio, f•tf. •ir. S899 ' '66 ALFA ROMEO 1 1600s999cP•• '69 FIAT 850 Rd1W., r•dio. S999 '70 . OPEL RALL YE '69 MGBGT, cbrDme wire whla, FM radio. Clean. Best otter &vJ!r $1850. 66-5073 MGA ** 'fiO MGA. * COMPLETELY REBUU.T * * 646-1011 ** MGI '69 Toyota CCM'olla 145 EA WAGON 2 Dr., '4 speed, radio, shailJ, F.qulpped with automatic cute, yellow -Say goodbye /FM d' · to aa~ stations . (188CZMl • ~ A:-Vf ra JO, ai r only $899. Bill Maxey Toy-concl1U?rung. WSW. d~k ota 18881 Beach m\rd. blue with matching lntenor. Hunt' ..,._..._ ·~ -' 4370TM. Reduced to .~ ..... ~ $3466 '71 Toyota Land c:rur.er. Lo ml'1. A/C, ptrf I 51\tpe. See It -You'll Buy It $3400. 875--0107, 6'5-:IJ"TI. "lD MGB-GT. Top lhape, HP,/A.T., A.C., more. Only ·10 Tow!• °"""" • dr. "' ~ l.tAN 11425. 645-6827; 2400 w. 15,"'1 ml S1ll5. 673-871l. VII.YO Qoost Hlway, Salte 3. Npt TRIUMPH !!ch. l---------1.i966 Harbor C.M. 646-9.10.1 '9 MGB-GT, xlnt oond. lo '66 TRlUMPH * :66 Volvo ~ Gd cond. mi'a. R&H, make offer. Call ...,... • n--:._._ bl lie Mtch611n X tires. Make of· ~. 1 ~\ cwa.u.U<r, ue cu , fer. 830-5190. '70 MGB AM/FM 32""" normal miles, priet"d below·l:N0'_"7'~~.o;.P""d'"'"'°'Pl;:;----;-;I' • • •""" book (U111224) Only ncm .,.,.,,. a a . ace an ~ WHILE THEY !AST '230 6 ' +TAX I ~aNSi 1972 SUPER BUG Equipp•d With Autom•fic Stic:k, lumper Guards R.adio. Whit•w•ll Tir•'· -f ·Low Mile'-•Ot.17 SALE PRICE $1995 ml Beaut. Pvt pty. $199S. Bill Maxey Toyota, 18881 Autos, New 980 ~ or &42-3738. Beach Blvd., Hunt. Bel2!b. ~. ~~~~--~~~iii~~~--~~~iiiiii~--~~imiiiii~ilii~iiiiiiiii~~~~iiiiiiiiiiii~~iiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil OPEL ,.::Mc,,7-8505:=:,·~~~-...,.. ll •eS Opel Kadett. Xlnt cond. • $315. Call64H62!1 PEUGEOT Peugeot '59. Not running, Best Offer 557 .. 1036 PORSCHE MUsr Sell '68 Trl=f 'J"R..-4A, Low mi .• """'-ms. ....,..,,,., JWI, M.7-1102. ·VOLKSWAGEN '70 vw boa, 7 ..... -xtru. Xlnt Olht. $2300. Bustnea hn. 6*-2624 • ·ro VW Sedan. Xlnt cood. Radioi, ~Ill!. $1250 or belt oUer.~ '89 RED VW. Atrl'O R/H. EXCELLEHT COND. • 11400. -• VW VAN. ctr.rroMIZED. MUSf SELL. $950. •a.lllll• •A BARCAIN* Vttaatlle 'T2 VW camper. 9,000 ml. 13$00. 9113-omT ·e V\rBUi, •lr.-1uto, UNI. nu t.JV, Clean, Jt1~or of, fM'. &G-CT86, 9'1l-oCS95 ·n vw bulr. 19.000 mi. SWI .-........... $11QJ .. be.a on ... 567-STtl ii ·vw bodJ'. Ewr)1.hlrw but ·-· 1111.00. * 645-78 • SELECTION + DISCOUNTS SUPER SAVINGS AT ORANGE COUNTY'S NUMBER I VOLUME BUICK-OPEL DEAI.ER SENSATIONAL NIW 1973 IUICK llVIEIA • === * Tremendous Selection * T,.._nclous Pric•s WEEKEND USED CAH <:LEAHA\CE SALE '71 PONTIAC '71 llUICK 71 MERCEDES/ ·n TORONADO 'ff PONTIAC FIRE Ill RD LA SAllRE -0 14 , ... , •• 1 •• ,..Oji, 1111. LI MANS fllD ... vw , .... "'-..... l 11ll., Mt1tl Ct12 CY$1 CUSTOM. llll C~l . H.,ft M ~ •••· l ff4. lTJ I rxW'l( J•1 t. fli1 ,,.. ,, .. 1 .. -... ...,. ,, ....,_ G1t 1 •• .4, •t ..... - $3195 $3195 -- $66'5 . " - S4H5 $1HS $1195 ,. • I l ' " ' .. " " ' ' •• " '! ' ' " • ; ' { 1! If i :! I, ~ .: f ) " ') " :I i! •• i• I[ " I! • " .. . • • • • • I • ' :l " I , I 11 " .1 ' ., ' Step Up To Luxury • • Ex.eellent Selection Of Previously Owned Mark Ill's and Mark IV's 1970 MARI\. III EXQUISITE Ebony black finish, bla.ck landau, and burgundy feather interior. Full power, cruiSe control, climate .control, air cond., individual power front seats, power door Jocks, tilt wheel. (6448IJ) $ SALE! Outstanding Group Of Choice Cars! 1971 Dedge 'AMILY WMON IJ TUVCO . 2 "tolljl!! paint, shag i-ua. sleepa 4, 12T' whl. base, V8, auto., P.S., R&H, raised fiberglass roof, elec. watl'r 1ystem, dual battery system. elec. refrigerator, gas range w/oven. porta potti, butan't. & water tank, Uke new. (511DYUI - $4875 frost "'ith 4 match. In- . Full power, , tiJ t wheel. DBW) '$4375 '89 Continental HARDTOP COUPE Beautllul condition, LL yellow finish, lllht gold landau w/matchlng Inter- ior. £.quipped \•:l Pwr. steering, brakes, w1ndows, .sea.ts, radio, heater, factory air. CS41EYVI $2775 1972 Cadillac FLIETWOOD llOUOHAM 14,000 mllet. like new. Luxury equiir peel ·tbru..oat, Ml power of oburse with individually adjustable power front seats, factory air, AM-FM stereo, cruise control and much, much more. See & drive today, {971- DZK). $7275 1971 Continental COUPE. SALE PllCID Bf>autiful Polar y,•hlte finish with black Landau roof &: black leather interior.· Luxury equipped thru-out. Full JlO"'er, auto. temp. air, AM-F~1 stereo, tilt wheel, power door lock.a. Drlvet like new. (809210) $4575 ' '72Marquls Breugham l•OUGHAM Like new, 14,000 miles. Lux. equipped thruoul Full Pwr .• Ind Adj. front scats, tilt Atrg. wheel, auto. temp. air. AM-FM 1tert'O radio. Beautiful Brazilian Bronze flniah w/brn landau & u.ddle tone int. ( 499EIV) Sale Priced ALWAYS A GREAT SELECTION OF TOP • QUAI.l'I'Y c,.µts ... • .. Ch'onge Couutl('t fi'amflll of l"lnc Cart" r (•1 1 lC~I< ' .. HARllOR BLllD .. cpslA MESA --~-~ .. -- _...-J -- _.., .. I~ I -"'-~ '73 Cadllac '71 Ct!clilac Cpe De YUie Cpe De Ville F'Ull powtt, Air O>nd., Vinyl Beautltul Ftrtmlst Tan ~ Roof, Dual Comfort Seab, ·white vl.eyl roof, While BeauWul Firemtst Finl.sh, Leather Interior Full Pow- 16-way seats, stereo tape er, Air b>ndlili*ilna, 12,24.1 crui8& control miles, mint <.'Ondltlon (600-$176. CUCL per month 36 1110, 0.E.l.. tax I mmodlote O.llv1ry LEASING ALL ~ELS AND MAKES '73's Southern.. ca1ttom1a 1st National Bali Leasitt $5795 MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM SALES OPEN 7 DAYS . Allen •'~Ile • , Cadlllqc San Diego Frwy. at AYV>' Pkwy. t.aa\iiii NlioeJ 831-0800 or 495-0800 CAMARO 2001 Michelson Drive '67 Camaro. New tires & !Comer of MacArthur) pa.int. Recent 0-haul." AU:. Irvine, Caill. 9li64 auto, PS, PB. $ 1 2 0 0 . 714/m.863) 21J/6Z7-<l367 536-3)11 YOUR ONLY , __ C_H_EV~RO~LET~- FACTORY AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEALER Lareett .election of Cadfl. lacs in Oranp County. Salet·Leaaing. ~ Naben U Cacllllac 2600 HARBOR BL, COSTA MESA. !l40o9100 ()pm s...i... '69 Cacllllac El Dorado '6ti Cpe DeVille. Beautiful Cbestnut with black Vinyl Roof & Black Interior, Power Steering, Pov.u Win· dows, AMJFM Radio, Air Cond. $1295 '67 Se d a n DeVille Beautiful Cream with Blk Vinyl Roi:>f, PS, P\V, Blk Leather Int $1495 MUST SELL. 64.5--fi64.4. 1970 Cadillac, 4 dr, de Ville, Fully equipped, Sharp cond. Gold w/brwn vinyl top, Pr! pty. $4350. 546-X&i. '65 Cadillac Fleeh\·ood -Full power, runs good. $795. Z13/592-Xl51 '66 Cad Sedan \v/Landau lop. Xlnt cond. All Xtras. Pr! pty. $1500 673-7690 Autos, New " ( . ' _,,,_ • Last ~hance Huge Stoc~ at 72 Prices Levi's SST &.1vtiful Sil.,1r wittl bl1clr ¥1nyl top. Sh1rp cir, Ill- 456521 51395 '73 DODGE DART SPORT lot• ftl111 tlOO '"llot. 11· 01 FWCl s2995 1973 HORNET Hatchback • Tln!.S wlnd1h!tld, ""'"! di..:. l!Mvy dllly <01llng ("1'°31'Elil- '"s 241g _ IMMIDIAn· DELIVERY 1972 and 1973 GREMLINS SST Ult1 111w. ) o• th1 floOf': fvll Po-r, Atr Cond., P1rf1ct f1'"lly ••r. 1149· low 111110 .... 112t INAI ASG J s2395 51695 '64 GMC '69 JAYO.II Y, TON PICKUP SST l•c1ll111t c11t1Utio1t. I LJ6. 4 Spd. l••4y to 90. IM- 261) ' . 1>•1941 s995 51695 Al w. ,,._ .... ""' •••n • . ·~. --" .. ! ' 1§1 ·---" --~ l[~l I _,,, .... ... ' FORD I ........ I~ • o~ ·n~ &.,,J. In .. ~ 1ll!Alllilf lilllllU I I OVER 60 • QUAUTY CARs To Choose From Just A Few Ex1mpl11 '71 El Dorados Factory Air Conditioninl Full power, Ult~~ steering, sten!O, Vfulll top, cloth or full lee.ther liiterior, most all dlx. extras. 2 to chooee lrom (226CJS1 (998-, CQRL $5999 ' '70 Cpe de Ville , Factory Air Condltloftina;. Vinyl top, full leather inter- ior, all P9'Wer, WJ ,It tele- scopic steering, stereo. An exceptiqnal.~ val~ priced {913B&V). ,· : ~ i; . ~·-~ , ... ,.-')I • \ '10 qcillll rCpe Fact~ ~k>rtin& Full power, all via)1 tnterb', AM/FM ri.dJo, bu:led with extras &: ll!1 outstandlng buy at this11Mr price. (415BHF). $3555 t '68 El DonWo Factory Air .QJndi~ng Full power, stereo,~ °" full IMlher interiot: etc. 2 10 chooee from (aer1f17339> (WJS359). , ): $2777 l '68 c 'de )llle pe .•. Factory Air Conditioning Vinyl top, full power, stereo, etc., etc. Cloth or. leather lnb!r1or. 2 lo chooR from (XT J463l.-(.A.BU009), °""11!7, """'"'· VS, auto-$1999 , matlc,_ faCtory air, power rack,. po11,a' t:ail gate win· .7 u "eer1ng • ....,, .. , luggage Olds '72 ·.'"° · -dow. extremely low mile-LUXURIOUS +DR ... age, \>cal 1 oi.>Dl!l', spotless. HARDTOP .,.. · IZI~ PRICED AIR &'if60ri:J~a ' NAHRS CADILLAC Full""""· v!nyl t ~- a)fiO Harbor Blvd., fut taP"trY lnt , tilt Costa Mesa 54().9100 wheel. Au~~ radio, '611 CoulrtrV~ '18 JMo, • -· W Abeol-All pwr. 6veriJaul~ com-utely showroom wrn-1 pleted. $850/otfer. 613--2400 LESS than 9000 miles. See ,.10 Bronco,;' 4 WD. I..oai:Wd, tp ~lieve. C588EA1?.>· s:.•A?,.": p'::;,· 8"', 128,!5-*!839· * $4999 ·i'. Laguna Niguel 1"71 FORD VAN. hick •7j l-~831"-0!00""'"'or~495-0800~,.-7,,,--~e ~Private Party. Electra: 225 ·~ '71 MARK Ill Vinyl top' vinyl lnt..i;r, IUll Coupe, many fine ·~· "UICIC CASH ' power~ ~Ory air CODdit:ion-menls. Thi• w..icend oriljo. '' 'f" ' mg,-tilt fiieering whell. AMI g»~. <IY89A.842636>. .t.· 1 fY8~•4u a. FM ·~reo r~ ~e side . GUSTAFSON .,. ' ~~_,...-"'" wall .,,,.,, ..C: Vt!'Y tow . .Llncoll>-Morcury DAILT PILOT " mileage. !nunaculate (641· · 16lm· Beach a! Warn" WANJ Al) DZZ). $4999 ' Hnntlooon Beacb 64z;.;56 78 ~ . ' Balck '71 Autos, U-· '90 Autos. ~ 990 1 -~---~~~~~~~ S.U P E--R -JEEHND . SPECIAL ., '64 VOLKSWACHN 2 Dr. SH. A r1 1I 1h1rp on1, Lie. #771lNP $695 71 VW BUG $1799 '69 DATSUN STA. WAGON • ''"'" ~I H. A I. Uc.# ')(THtt4 '$995 71 VW llUS f fltft. -lo Mii••· Vttv clo11t • .Uc. •1711UI(, A 1to1I et $2345 '• '61 DATSUN STA. WAGON A .... .,..._, a a H. lool •"• '''· u. . .JW't14to $1395 .'61· .TOYOTA CORONA • Dr. Sid. Stir. shift, JI: I H. ,Uc. #VHN3tl $995. 71 TOYOTA COROLLA A1tto. tr1M., JI: l H. A r11I mon.., ••-· Uc. 3 13JCTA $1595 '69 CHEVY MALIBU CPE. Y-1, 11tfo"11ffc tr1rit., Rl H ..... lnyl ftiof, •ir condi- H011lllf. lYVC 7461, $1895 70 DATSUN STA. WAGON Awto. .,. ..... t • H. lHf rick. A ,.,1 f1110 cir. LI•. *'97Jl)(V $1995 '61 DOOOE • '14 TOH P.'U' . Ot... .... • •• p • , • .11 .... ...., ... ., ~-.......... .. +r1 fln o ..MIHoa. 111\G-IDI $2395 S.. Our Wide S1loclloft Of -_ 1'11'1 .,,.. """ 72'• ' GARDEN GIOVE DATSuN 1M01 iiA~IOlt ILVD. OAllDIN OltoVa --* 5}4-1255 • -.. • • RlV!ERA CPE, Factory Air Conditioning Vinyl top, full vinyl interior, full pow8', tilt steering, 1te!'e0, etp. (887CTN). $4444 • r-do '71 Dual ~ort 11Cats, full pow-. er, f~ air, tilt steering wheel, ltereo. AM-FM mul· ""'" ,tl!'oOCXU) . . $4777 CINltlnental '70 SEDAN VINYL TOP Leather interior, Ml gowf!r, f~ air condlttonlng, tlll steertrc whet:\. 1tereo, dlal seats etc. (003.ASlJ). I $3666 Buick '69 RIVIE!µ CPE. Yadory Air COndlttonlna Vinyl lop, full vinyl inteM', an poww,,lit ltterlne wheel, ttel"f!t), many dlx. xtraa. «XRG63!!1. $2555 Shop l1rty For llltt S.loctlon Nabers Cadillac FACTORY At.mlORlZEO DUt. t4 SERVINC TH E F.:NT1R£i 9JUTH COAST AREA ' 2400 Harbor ....... Costa M 540-9100 1 -~l.a])El'T. Ol'E:N j. 1:30 AM to t PM -t-- -lhrv ...... 9 AM to t l'M s.f. • fM\. ' ' .~.-lt't • \ 11111 w .. e VINTURA e VINTURA CUSTOM . e 'l'IRlllRD e ESPRIT e FORMULA e TRANS AM e LE MANS , e LI MANI SPORT .i:;ouPI e LUxURY.•LI MANS e' 0MNo AM ,r e UT.ALI~ e llONNIVILLI • 1, ORAICJ VILLE • GRAND l'RIX · ' e SAFARI e GRAND SAP.AU · i • e LI MANS SAFARI' • ' • • • , Ftid1J, NOYtmbtt ), 1972 DAILY rlLOT l BRAND NEW 1973 UM.ANS COLONNA.DI 2 DL H.T. WIDE ·· TRACI, 1 B~~ND 1973 CAT~I HAIDTOP' t '"!' Co111pe. l111nper 1tript, power 1t1111rl .... t11rboltyclr11m11lic tr111umilaio11, tinted 911111. 120J7Dl21001151 Yt, •uto"'11+;c, powor tf1111ri119, powor ''•• br11l111, white w•ll fir111, .f11lu111 wli1111I COYll", 12ll9RlC100225) 1 •• ·'· ... .. 1972 GRAND PRIX DEMON~TRATOR VI, tutom11fic, po..;,, 1t1111ri119-br11~111-willdoWt, oir conclitioniri9, AM~ f~ 1tff110 r11dio, tilt wMel, w1Ho11I coY11r1, etc. l 2K57T2AI 1030]1 •. COMPLETELY RESTORED IConYO.tibl•. You'll just $49' , have to see this 9orgeous , eutomobile to re.ally be- lie.ve it. This is e truly 9reat · -·· ~ice. .. . .. ., 1968 BUICK IU~'JR·A 225 CONVERTIBLE ~II p trw e r , factory air Condition ing, low ~;I es. .:Must see and drive. IVG. 1~7t1 i, IP38 1 I .. .. JUST 1.3 REMAINING '72 DEMOS . .. .. LEFT TO CLEAR ALL . ARE DRASTICALLY REDUCED TO SELL! • And that should be good news to anybody in the market for a better MMd car. You'll like the selection of cars at Dave Ross Pontiac. Come on down today and let 115 st.ow . you how .'!!!ICh you can sav~ ~y buying right now! ' - \ 1972 CATALINA 2,DOOR HARDTOP • -VI, •v~tio. rMio, lwo11+.1, po_,. 1t11oti119, powor.l.r11l111, f.cf.ry. •' 11ir c..ditiffl"9t w/1/w ti,..1. IZU7R1Cl 01lltl 19&7 MUSTANG FASTBACK 2 + 2 VS, automatic, power $1099 slHring, r•dio ud hHI· er, ma9 wheels. IXXF 677 J IP4471 1967 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT 4 WHEEL DRIVE '' ' I"· ~. ·r•,..,~ .,,r..., '{-'l' • • •'"' .i!"". ~.~69~GRA~ND"'.!N~IX~. -.. • I I 1, ,,. I" I I. ' .. ';. " " ,, VI, •utom111tic, p"ow1 r 1t11ri1!.9, ·( f1ctory 1ir, vinyl top. ( Z7657· t1'121'Htl P•oo Kettr s.11111•• 1...n smo $2299 '. . ' ' '70 PONTIAC 1:E MA8$ Sport .H.T. coup1. Vt, r.s .. •uto· m111tic, •ir, vi11yl top, AM-FM riff10. 129llEVJ IPlttl . wiy s111•••• httiH. si111 ~ '• •. ,, ;69 CHEY. CAMARO 6 c:y/irtd111r,, •ulom•fic, ,pow111r 1fi111ri119..., r•dio, h111•tlr (YVN, IOJI P40l leHr 1•11111911 ...... S1t:ll ~·$1 .699 ' '·' '68 FIREBIRD Vi, 1uto111111tic, pow1r 1t11rin9, elr c.ondltioninf, vi11yl r>0of. IVIV19J ) P<426 DAYE ' ROSS '7' J'lifl'flAC JGQM lon11•'ll\ft t IN-. ftll ,_..,, f•ctoiy 1lr, lt199191 r•cL (26· :Z4601t.1)00171 Pll4. ·, ..;, ..... , ........ U4H L '$2ttt '69 ALFA ROMEO GT 1710 cp•. O ;i9. 37,000 . tnil"' 6 •P9.d, r111dio, k11t1r. IZIVl.22 l P<4)1 .... S11111te4 letell SJJJS . .. '69 LE MANS COUPE VI, 111utoM111tlc, pow•r 1t11ri119, 111ir c0Mlitie11i119, vi11yl top • !XSE7461 P<427 laltr I II 1t1t ... ·Ult~ ' -- • . -----=== ----·=--:--. =-=- . .'18 ClfMU.E S.S. ., 4 tP9.J, powl;f',st11rin11, ••dio, h••*-• (XI£ Hit (1'5011 '65 CHEY. B. CAMINO TMs cer h11 ov1r S2000 i11 th1 MO~OI' I frlll'"MilliOfl . <t 1,...I, r1dio, h1111t1r. Mv1t 111. ft<4!1i. OOKI l l'lt71 '69 FIREBIRll 1uio111111tic, r111dl1, h••fff, pow1r ll11ri1t9, 111ir '011dilio11· ing. Jt ,000 tr1il11. !XXJ62t l P'4'22 ..., s.s , .......... ,.. ....... 12J61 $1999 '69 PONTIAC GTO.. VI. 111ulo••ffc, pow1r 1+111i1t9, .;, condi+i1.W.., •i11yl t1p. (662FVYI I 16qA, ..., S ii 114 a..n SZIOO . '70 POlfTIAC GTD H.f, C,., VI . •1tk111111 tic, ,..;.... 111r tf1111ri"tl, f111cf1ry 111ir, wl.yl lop, lo !flil111•1111. 1142)70Rl46- t12 l 1'42] S.Hr 1111 711411 .... UIJI $2399 . '69 FIAT 124$ Li•• Gor.11111. A.4io, ...... ,. 1.,. ·11111• r1111li, 1h cotlditi111l111. (p, !liOJ I f046 $JV). ...,.ff19 l'ill AtNM SZIJI All Sale Prices Effectlv• thru Mondey, November 6th, lm .. 2480 Harbor Blvd. at Fair Drive COST A MESA Ph. 546 8017 11'.i MILE SOUTH OF THE SAN DIEGO ,REIWAY OPEN 1 DAYS A WEEK 8:30 A.M. to 10:00 P.M. SUN. 11 A.M. to 9 P.M. Autos, -980Autos,.,.... 9IO . ' 1913 "' " BUICK & OPEL • !.,• ' I I PRICES ARE ' LOWER I I I AT .. ' . · TERRY BUICK . • o·· . '. • "LOW OVERH,AD DOIS IT" . SEE US BHDIE . YOU ..auY , ,, . " ' TERRY. . BUICK · ' '' t SI-Im • • 5tli a.w ...... < , tf: I 11111• ..... ... ~~-5361588 -• I ' • ' 1. Aulol,U... fM _,._ ____ .._ __ _ FORD '10 h.td LTD Slatloii'Wagon . Be.auttfbl Red wltb ma~ 1n1mo.1 ~ wllb -m.m, tneftldinl alt c:Ondl- ' ....... -rad<. 1!1'13" Al<C). A Nol ........ to ao FORD PONTIAC ~1--~--~...,..-1 GRAND OPENING Im • cyl. Grabber w/elr, 'M MUSTANG, VI, xlnt '71 olduewtiA;" '1'2 0.Ua "' -·· ,.. ·10 a...., PIU MUOI ..It IO PS, UO radio. l ,DI ml. cond. See 1t ArtO staUOn. IG ~r. St(OI below bl11 ,..,... nom io,. rll'W .... '71 T-llRD LANDAU Pvt. ...,.., Moke offer, 2741 N. D Camino Rfol, T-do -.............. .....-. -ar"7·UN-i White w/black iO()i.\it19mded! o.ys 5.t0•40St ; net 81.n Clemtnet. 4l:HT2I Be , ..... ...._..._ . 'MOLDS 18 Sta. \\o'IJI •• r!t· •• ~. ~• w-~ -(llOT "6-5811. • auluw ~ pttn Wltb tru. h i V•ry lllOd ccwt. """" r ........ nl 4 ...... ~..,... · ·· · 'Q c.om.rttble Mud. U matchtlw -I I'* and i,.. -$Jll..l501 ~'*'-8nt Off• r, CJE). HIWJ !"' !his! MERCURY *°or mllll .0.... llllt-'IXI lrrior. lillr=. "" """ ' ~tm. owt ll2. Li:: ... ::, '72 ......... UIS .::~:a;:.,,"iij,)i, :i:.. ). 'R••lly. PLYMOUTH IAMILll I IMIO~-t W.,,.., W"'I" PIS. --. Sita s-$21?9 K -MOUCiHAM • ••L ........ GIAND Ol'lflNG ua ·RA-D\ wACbtl • MANY llORE ' la IMU • Dr HT NI .....,. ,.., "Ill -SZ!fll. '11 VW TO ~~M '72 PLYMOUTH '°l:o, T:i:t"· . •• TO CHOOSE FROM '11 floRD TOlllNO , ""1. au'., Ull wh<el, Afir.FM ll::;. Sllm. -aln'l -· SALES OPEN 1 DAYS DUITIR SALES oPEN 1 oAYs r ep.. w. --· v1n11 ...... -"""'""' _,._ burL --· Aleti """ .-. ,..,., • ........ T •RD A''ll rool, lbll'p bd)', flliAso). Ylroi ~ laPtflry lnrerlor. ~il:' 1~ ~Ut'11 • low-mlb. fJllDfL1 4 90 ''4 1'-B.m. 1,.,.. - • 111 ST• <lllEARI. m u : Ol••••ll .-'dld1••ll CONllEU.CHEVROIZI' .Ml.I PIUCID_ OIM., m.t4N. OUSTUSON • :;;_!l:A!r>nfr~ . Ca•ic =.--· !!~ NAl•IRS-C~~LAC. OLDSMolal lien~~~·~ . 1.-i.-1r>Morcury er.. -. , -~ ,... "'"'Ii" • -r-T JGIOD ~ ar Wa'lk'"' • ... '""",.,..,.. • • 'II cli-·-.. °"'" 11/ '*fioo '70 TOIONADO "'"'""' """'· 1421111 YAUAN'r atA...,.pp,. -.... ~·ba1hk !'1if .. _7 --~-'-· m'-"-• "'RGod -·-:------·I .__ °'"""" ---= 77-1 --·-----dofdl, -.. ~-v ... ---~ 'P.OllO & Call-. t Dr HT, V , Aol 1111 _,,All· --.iii: Air T. I • ""',_., •,. a 1 -. • !'W. = "• u !.:if.: ·""" -· .e::r.;· -'" ~u -eu.ND OPININ6 -:':ti . .,;.-. llpll -P/1, .-0 -...... --::'::·-·:":,.-::.= v-":.:C 't: :..~ -.,_. .... llr1lr, Ille< atr. I --. .,...._ -l!l!IOOi -*•Coll tlNa. v..j 1oW aD--liod ....... .... '11 l'L YMOUnf _. f'l' ":t.Jj8 '"' T.().I'. IAVSUll , ... J;i~ m -l €'.? ... · IWIAPY). IOn' ur _......, -· llHt• t'LUI VllOA • ...._ •-la. m111 OWNU.y;_:. •1!1.i@' .!~ MLI PIUCID ftD 'it.I;" 1t,11f1 hi.,_...,.""·•-"11 or ':ti; Mr 1tn. ~IOllJ:i. '.:. •. .._-= ::::_a ;Jll-...:t· ~-:..~~ ~ . ID ...... ·=· viis 1 fii'F.liM:t. .!'-~ Pl:Y1. .,,.JMiiii:-ltll . U...10-1J);i t c.oa--NAlllll CADILLAC . L~ 11IRMl.-y t; -, .... """ · ....... ~ ... -~ -· iflw>iif 60D,-,.-_ ...,..._ • 11.-111v..._ tl!OO ... ,., •'·"'"""' .,. -.-,., " ._. ....... ., flld AIC. Gf 11 '-r--!!!!J!r•.t...._ .... ....... _ 0.-llfm NHJOt Ja•lt O ir ... M. I l) • • i I 7 • PROUDLY . PRE.SENT·s. ·= the • • OMEGA HOUR r • I •• Buy During Our Introductory Sale and SAVE!! USED ·CAR SPECllLS -. -*100% Money Back Gu.arantee!! s S66 DOWN ' \ • AL.l IEW · 19'73 :~OMEGA • JUST · . . • . • ' (lp.1474) . ONLY '166 DOWN ·ONLY t .3u MONTH ·1"m~ .. $166 is t~n. p~mt. and $63 .~4 ~ t!'l~!~o_. pyml. f~_48 mos. on appr. credit.. · 1 I Def err~ pymt. price $3201.52 1n tax,' tic., aH:carry1n9 charqes. ANNU)t.\' PERCENTAGE RATE 10.98 %. • ' . . ( "· . . ' WE ARE OR·ANG . :co·tiNTY·'S ~ "6 It tote4 d•. 1ttnt'. Md S36.46 Is total pylllt. for 30 "'°'" u oppr. CN41t. DefarN4 ,,..t. ,,.tee $115f.IO lKI. ta. eU corryi9f c ....... ANNUAL HICINTA•l lATI 11 .11 ,-•. FULL S66· DOWN . . . . 'PRICE . . · .. . . _See . our, •IG SE:LE · .1llON ~of ~ TA;~E vquR CHOICE •4954 MONTH . ''NEW COUPES , & ED ANS i '70 FO .• 10 .PASS. I '69 Mere. MONTEGO I '69 FORD GALAXIE ' . ' ·. · ' , \ i Wagon. Fami{y"' sp;cial. f l2 ~:t07 i· MX 2 Or., ~.T. VS, auto., P-1te!rin9 ya, ~~to!"atic, power steering, •ii•· ··d_ • · N-EW HONDA $ . & b•ako., .,. '°.:'d. (ZRE 3601 <on4•t•on1n9. IYQC 5831 ' 2 DOOR SEDAM ' SU II total Ila.,..,. 9H $41.54 h tohll -. pyMt. ,_JO'"'· II." appr. cNdit. Dahu-4 pyMt. pr&c. $1522.20 IMI. tu. lie., al csryllMJ c1io,.... INCLUDES f • L• d II d . I ·ANNUAL PllCINTA.GI u.1111.t1-1.. . . . . ,re1gnt an a . ea er prep. · . . charges plus full factory equipment. • . , '70 FORD LTD '&5 tAMBLER AM. '~ MERCURY 110519501 · DRIVE ·11 .,.oMr toDAt ~ j~~oposl'i" and ,;, <onditioning, ~R6v'i;i~' P.B .• ,;, <onditioning. ::~~~d~:~~~9~tic, p~w•• stee6n!f.' VISIT OUR: VOL'UME \Mc . ;~ :~ $1 ·6 . .$3 ·6·6 . $5-66 ~ . .. _ TRUCK DEP ARTMEN. ~ '70 CHEVROLET . '10 FORD 10 PASS. PICKUPS TO CUSTOM RJGS . '67 OLDS 98 · · NEW MOTOR . HOMES Full power end a ir conditioning. Automatic, power steering, a ir con-w70'191on. va, radio and heater. (124· ' NEW" M' IN' I HOMES 1wow 5111 . ditioni,9. 1526 aFe 1 New & Used Campers & Vans \ . $ .. 6. $1666 $1266 )w ,_ .. Nt MtltfW wftti ,_ ,....._ .t ... .t .... lfMCW.. 'fH • ., ,...... ... w wttw. 41 .... ,.,,,._ 4-of pw I•• ......... '"' ..., ..... S,.CW. ,.M HU .... I,• 1f p.-. ! BUY WHERE THE SA:VINGS ARE! . . . PHONE US .. FOR A 5 MINUTE . : CR~DIT ·CHECK . ' . .. "-~+ us tailor yo,111' financing to yo11r personal needs . . ' • • (· . I ' ' .. • . , \ .2 DOORMARDTOP Full factory eq.,ipped alDClltltlOS11 ' I . $199 DOWM 571 A MONTH · . ~i~Ms , $21 ·88' FULL ~ , . PRICE I ltt iltefWI•. ,.,.,,,,, ,, ___ ,,.. ........ Iii:_ , .. ..,,..._......, .. __ "";' ieo' Mo -1111 .... , , lr-l·•ril•.111SS iMI ••• & ' lcMH AMIJM '11Clll!A51 Ull 11,U), -. 1C:~ '73 !DBDGI ' CHALLENGER__.... 'iDOOR HARDTOP . factory Equipped · Onler Y'ours Now , • FOR~ ~199 DOWN $84 A MONTH .. " ....... M~~.s • 1'69 CORTINA .. j WAGON 4 speed trans., radio anti htaftr. (111119} • . I · I . . '7 '1 VA1N DODGE SPORTSMAN '69PLYM WAGON fwlly et1•i•••• i11<lwtli•t l•n•1• ,.,k end radio. (619105~ $ • • DAILY PllaT 1S3 . 2·DOOR COUPE , Wh11ewoll tire,, 1111 wt.ff{,, rtclinin9 $tot, ful l factory , equipt. 6621K2S30S87J: $199 DOWN $60 A MONTH I FOR 36 $18'88 FULL ~·~;E~;: ""''' ,.., J• -· °"'""" ' PRICE ,,,., rc• ltllt ,...r ••• & ...... -"ll(lllll!Gf l l llll)'' '73DODGE OLAR 2 DOOi HAIDTOP fully factory Equipped Onler Y .. n Now . · FOR 3& $199. DOWN $CJ2 A MONTH ""·~~r"!. ... $2888 .. --......... . I"'"°" & .. c .. .., ... FULL :-:,~o.-=.::'.! PRICE -_ ..,,, ""' -... , CHM.~HICI .. ........ '70 D.OD'GE r PofAiA . Y·I, ••ti:·'tNflt., .ir cM41~ pewer sttfl'iq, pew- "~ .. kt1. (DL41llOD 016) ~1 I '71 COLT 2-DOOR HARDTOP • A9t11111tlc tron1Mi11l1a, r•tll1 ••• llHttr. (lSllllf) . • ALLEN GER IHI clHll. Full f•ctory 111uipp1tl. (19•FFH) ' '68 PICKUP DODGE Nice, 3 l(llfffl '"'"'·• retlio, ltHttr. (OtJ6JIK) • I ., ' t I t I I I ' , I r, '. !· ! SAYE!~ -' \ . . BRAND NE~ AS OF SEPT. 11th, 1972 ! ... 'OUR A· 1 WARRANTY IS GOOD AS GOLD FROM COAST TO C OAST ! ... When you buy• uHCl -c•r with th. n-A-l .W1r. r1nty, .you '"'" vour.-.m .. on·your Ford D11l0 1r'1 <lloontep, H-'• why, ' For1 th1 first JO tl1y1 or J,000 ,.i111 your FotG D1•l1r 9u1r1nt111 to p1y 100')'. for tl'ly '"•ior r1pair1. For th1 n1rl ,24 montfri1, yowr Ford D11l1r 9u•r•t1· t111 1 I 5'% cli1co1111t ·011 r1p:.kt co..,.rM und.1r the new A·I Wt1rT1nfy, You 91t A0 I prot.cffO« ..... u~yot1'r1 out of tow11 tool 111 •YMY S+.+. of ftl. Ua&.A v'u'll fh1d p1rtici0 p1tlr19 Ford 0.11.,.. wk wiU .• ptomptly ind co11rf1-~ 0111ly honor •+M 24 fMllth pro..t1lo11 of your A· I W1,,.1ntv. Co"1• '" our 11l1cffor1 of A·I W1,,.1nt1ecf 111ed Cl"' tod1yl w,•,. A.I w.,,.nty h11cl1pi11rt.r1 In th is 1r11 , · •• the il11lrilp' where. you l1iff your ' wotrits .,.-,.,,. 4oGrtt.;i.: ~ .f ~ • , ,\• .. " OF MFG. SUGGESTED . . . liST PR!CE .. .- SALE ENDS -. . . . . ' '· SUNDAY . ' NOV. 5 HU.RRYJ 6 '64 MERC. PARKLANE 4. door. Full power, •ir cond., breezew•y window, good miles. ITXU459l ~@,: '. ~9 ~· '70 MAVE~ICK 2 DOOR F•ctory equipped, viny l roof, good mil•s. l269EIEI ... .. s~~·v ' "' . ' ' ji .......... 'll . • •• 2 Dr. 4 speed, 900\I' milel •• 6r••n .,,, it h bleclc interior. l672ADYI • • ' . ~ l'I •• ' -~- I • • f I I I VOl..JS.-NO. 308, 4 SECilONS, 54 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA .. 1 ·or-ce . e .. .,_, .. 1n, 1Capo Selioeb Cour-ty Okays New Bound~ry Tbe Orange County Scl1ool Board Thursday approved 1a transfer of 152 uninliabited acres In Mlaslon Viejo from tbc San J.911quin School District lo the Capistrano'Unifled School Dlslrtct. The action moved the boundary line between the two dislrlcta lo the center of Los Allsos Bonlevanl and Trabuco Road. tho transfer, lll'hlcb will Involve 124 • single-family --The tnu:sfer WU llsled 11 fnm tbe San Joaquln and the?Saddlebaclt · Vllley Unified Schoo! DlslHct lo Capo, beclnae Saddleboct Volley will · tUe o,.. San Joaquin's area July 1, 1173. Dave King, facilllles pllJmer !« San Joaquin, said today that Ibis Is the time tc mallhten out i boundary pniblema, before the·people move in. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, '1971 • Ille - \ TEN CENTS I • IXOD • Last Swing Across U.S. For Votes W ASH!NGTON -l'r<sldeot Nixon· left the White Hou.se todl.y for a one-day campaign swing 1crosa hall tbe eocmtiy after vowin&' be would not llllb illlo a ba5ly oettlement of the Vietnam nr. The President '-led i.r .:::r:.,:' auc.,o, Tulia, Okll., and Pt, R.I., louchlng olf a slx..Uto ~ spurt which will wind up In wilere be will -Tueldly. Io a television speed> 'l'bunclly tllPI, Nixon said Ibo UnJled -will llp a Vietnam .tettlement "when tbe .._. ment ls right -not one dly before.'' Be Development ol Ban:elooa Homes by lbe Mi!slon Viejo Compony ls now going oo in the area. If the old boundary line had remained, H would have cut diagonally through 81 lots. Children living on the . atr.et would have had to go 1o different school districts. In some areaa, cul de aaca wouJd have been in the Capistrano District and the rest of the atr.el In San County llCbool olllcW Dewey-lllllman said the act!On "maUs ...,. .. altbougb be added lhal Cilpo may be en the loolng end of the deal because the taxes generaled from Ille homo• probably won't pay for the education ol the children from Ille area. .. aald 1mblgultles In a clrlfl J>OICO .......i wtlb the North Vlelnamese must bo clarified." TALKS POLITICS Newport's Rooav•lt "We are not 1olng lo allow ail elcodloa. ' · deadline or any other kfud of deldUne to fon:e .. Into .. ogreement which -Joaquin. · The •<¥1 boards Involved agreed lo War Must End, Tbe coWrty beard approved the transfer without reaervation. -be only 1 lemporary tnlce and DOI a lasting peace," be ukl.. < Roosevelt Tells Faculty at UCI Staff Bepert San Diego Set,s Study DAILY PM.OT ........ • By GEORGE Ll!IDAL 0 ' p JJdl,e I 1:1~~7i:Jri-~~ :q . 7 l ~ . " l 7 k!n . efll9.rt. . ' ' <, '.f • ' , .. ~nl~.:::.r:::;: UC I1'llne Sanoteio~ie.liir ......... to ae.,Oillily.•_' :"i 7 ' 7 .. ~u:f' u!":f.'•J!r!\~~'. :iu~~l!iil~ ~ ';: .;;t'fl:"J:i ~i:; l!OOleVell, contended tbe will ,o1 , tbc o~=,;~' ' . si1!11J c o11. the eaft. 1iall!1Hl1-1• ~ American people Is sulficlenUy, ~ ·lo trov<nlll County~. . II -cran;, rcllirfni unproclucdve mcke It very difficult for eltbet leading c:nyeji 'the l4ll<>n ..,,fillnaa ~earlier'.~·-· who led tbe candidate to not end the war u electeil. letter ulinllng the Pencil.... Jetport battle qa1nst tbii ~ In fac:Ho,lace. 1be remrtrk came in respome to a .idea, termed ~e!~ millme of ~ with tJ>e Orange Q.lunty of.. question following Roosevelt'• ooon go~ " flciall. luncheon spOecb lo faculty members of He wilted tllal DOI only dots he op-1be ...... ~-"'llng-s catlled Cupe!'I encl ~OCK MEMORIAL AND PLAQUE IN HONOR OF REP. JAMES UTT Suporvleor Cupon ind Cont-•'• Widow 11 o,dl<otlan ' the Unlwnity Club. poee .the eimcepl, bn1 the cHles o1 otbcr county o111c1a1s lo return dismayed Roosevelt wu utecl lo evalqate. the . ~. VIiia encl ~ (and Ibis at lbe licit o1 iQceptaoce ol the plan In Dana Harbor Dedication concern or l'OO!li people llllt'Pr'eslileDt ~San Clemmlo) have vowed lo fight San Diego Coun!J. Nixon's 8DilOUl1Ced peace hopes ...,.. In the propoUlt set forlh by Clrini• County Beside! Ibo trallitional complalnll lhal reality a last minute subterfuge and that Fiith lllsldol SUpervilor. Ron11c1 Caspen. ooile, ~ ml other lormo ol if Nixon Is reelected be bas DO plan lo craven end fellow~· lllP'OOd pollution'llrmmlng flmn Jucb a larmlnal end the war. lo Older U>elr own o:i tbe matter, would be dotitmenlll en-lnslsla lhat • Fete Honors James B. Utt "Any President who doesn't enil the ...ting a report -Ille county. a jelporl m Ille bue ...Wd destruy the .,ar Is running the risk of bnpeacbment stall wllbln 1Jle nut It cleys. • Mar!Des' awarcl-winnfnC CCll-mlon or a real revolution,'' l!OOleVeH said, ads A craven aide Tbunday quoted tbe projects. ding be is convinced Na.oo is sincere in supervisor as believing that Orange Base wildllfe speclall!ts for years have bis desire to end the war. County should be kept from ''shedding its conducted an eztemive envirc:tmnmtal · Soctology porlessor Dr. Robert Dubin air transportation problems oolo San preservation program, be aid. asked Roosevelt what single event aside from assulnallon wonld Influence the predicted success of President Nixon which the prominent Harbor Area Democrat forecast in bis remarks. "U there were some piece ,of con- clusive evidence that would prove Presi· dent Nixon wa11 personally ovolved in the Watergate affair, Tuellday"s election v1oold be a lot closer tliln·lt looks now," Rooeevelt replied. The former Co~ predicted a 111-1""""111 plurality fer NllDn. Roosevelt ' .Ug8ested ,the Prestdelll -gi!l 55 per-cent· of the votes and Sen.. Geoq:e' McGovern only 45 percmt. •. Io California, where o.n-111 !Md Republicans by a S lo 2 -.Jn In regiatraUoos, Roosevelt 1UQe•1~ the Nblm cam;>aign would ~II lo M· percent ol the total 'nlle. "A McGovern upset ii' Dkn tlkely tn CIUfornia than in any otber state," Roolevell said. • Allbouib be 111pport.I Ibo Presldeol'1 ...WCtion, Roosevelt finds one area ol a-wllb McGovern -a dill- for Political polls. · "l 1 persmally fee I polls contribme notliliii lo OW' national . !Ue, or our , (Sae -T, Pqe I) ' ,. Paper · RepDrts Harul Cut · OH N.UV.. °'1nna (UPI) -An <*Ina•• nenpaper aald loday lllol 111 b11ck U.S. -tlld •• 1 while Nltoy --ml cut oil hlJ loft -wjtb • - 'Ille ~ ·~· tn the Olllnl•• lolomlllll -· """"' aid ~ -""' .--.. -· llclal u. s. mllltlrl ---Tbtrt RI DO ••Ni I •Jrmn the \1.S. mtllllt)' ~d 7 ---7 The newz;:·lt at'l't e.,m. Um.. -ar.i ·.-~ 111. lrldpl. .. tf lllel!>J, Council .Turns Down Bid Q:iunty, state and federal official! ptheted u.t the steps of Dana Harbor'! new Harbor District headquarters Thurs- day aftenWIOO to hear praise for the Congressman re1ponsible for the federal 11>e afternoon wu one of rtmlnllcinC about the long career ol the 'lbltln Republican . County rnrector of Harben, 8eeebet and Parka Kenneth Sampeon tearfully remarked during nag-ralllnc rtta that the tale legislator "loved Old Glory. and now It will ny for him at tbll lllrllor f:w f1nanclog for the maritime complex - For Recycling Location the late Rep. James B. Utt. And at t b e conclusion of the ceremonies attended by doz.ens of guests , the ::t!fwwwnan'• widow unveUed a memorl; to tbe long·lime Orange Coun- many years to C'Ome." The memorial Uu at the hue of a towering nauUcal-ICyle (!lllJde. Prop. 22 Ads Hit LOS AW'E'• (AP) --tf ........ Ille --"'6illft.ol -bola ........... --tbrt ., M .Nl'I ' , fer t la I m11 ........ ~-llllbertA. --... Ille .... "**'··. IUlt ....... ~Ille !lllolfldlh Oo11•·-ilf.I.:. i,~'\=! , bu -that mept for tile city llnd, ty poUtlcal leader. DO Giber pon:el c:oald ba -In Ibo city Mn. JllllOI B. Utt pulled the lhn>ud to ...,.""'•""'It Ille reeydlnt oeetor. mm • 11'8Jllle boulder cootainlng a A -will be mode lall!r Ibis -pleque OD It.I --Tbe pleque IDOldll bJ &Ill J-....._...,, m been 1 portrait of Ibo late !Ir. Utt and -"S.'!l" ol·~ ..... city ,... ... lnocrtpllao pnlslng hi& -t 'in wln-mlllll °bt u •pa-spot for ninir Ibo 1pproprialloos that paid for the -· berlior - The l1ai raiJed OD the llMdanl ,,....._ day afternoon wu ooe wbkb bid Oown over the nation'• Capitol Utt, who died In early Marth of 1'79, and finl -t lo ea...-In -. - pralle lr<>cn bis fellow U.S. llepr9<C>- t.tlve, Crlic Hosmer. " Olhen JolnlnC In Ibo ~ -Council Braces for More -r1hh Diltrlct s.p.rvllor -CUpna Md the Ille eorciemnan'• putor, lhe 'Rev. Harold Lce:lma o( Gtrdtn Grove Community Cllirch. Avenida San Pablo Debate .. • I Id lhe ceremon~ ccmcluded. peltl toured thrl! Dl!l:W Hartaor Diltricl GfDoe al the Upcolll tnd ol Dono lat.nd. Tbe bulldinC ...... u ~ .. tor.the llubcf Polrol do!lll ..,.q Ibo hlroor. Lawsuit ·Filed · In Dana Flooding Dornqa lotlllll 11,m.lt ..... -by~OOllQ-.. ~8-<-,W-lll*td In ......... c-t --=Ille dillrtd wllll --111 lctS I _,_ In lllo Dllll ---..!!:.i·~;;.::. ~ t.~ : tho floodlnl .. Jiiiy If, A"?t al • -tndOdlll tenet ti Ult • 1 rt1r1. LI ()eola Jlrlff eed M Mo - 1111 '°"'4 ........ -....... ~ ... ----....... Ociild"tii -.... "i Today's trip ii Intended lo bo111or Republican -of copturinl-clwl1 conle<ted Senlte oealr now beld 117 Democrats. Nixon met Wilb his Vleinlm llOfOllaCor, Henry A. KIJsloger, belon1 ie1Viq( lbe Wblle Rouse Ibis rnonUnc· Kissinger then walked with Nlxoo from the Pmident'I Office lo I bellcoptor OD the IOUth lawn. Meamrblle, Sen Ga-.. S. llcGcmrn wtDgom u-....-=to dlerltl'I___ . ........ around -claJ" In lllo .-., the Vleam Wer, m llldo aid. lllcGoftrn. -WllDc "'°"' .. .......... andle;r-lntho- ment ol • Iara lfolbedlll cllutcll lo Grand Rapldl, llloh. Iha! the Nixon .... nilnlllrtalon wu monu...!d.':; wu to Dy lo at!•~= hlJ . '"l'be ---a-peth lo peoce, but a delOl!r around -day, ... Frank Maus.tcz., Mt!Gotwn'• pollllcal lldvtler, told --11 Grand Raplcls. All« Ibo lai)IJW, McGoveni Wll to dr1v• lo Git)', Ind:, i.r 1 ..Uy of blect leaden and ..tum lo Chicago for I t.. block IDOlorcade and Ill IJ>P<WlllOI in the Audilorlum Theater wllb MQor Richan! J. Diiiy lallgbl. Tbe bell-hour -on Vlstum by Ibo -..-.uai ....... I .. wu to bt broldcut at 7:JO p.m. PST oa CBS. McGovem acrubbed an appurace ln Lanolng, Mich., and -In Eat Cblollo, Ind., lo apood time en Ille proparetlon and laplnl ol his Vletmln opeecb. llantlewlGindlcotecl lt-'d be I lllljor ltllemart. II WU koown Iha! McGovern -11ed clooely with Clark M. Qlffonl. dcll- aecrmry under ~ L,_ B. Jollnoon. and Paul W...U, 1 Kmlocly admlnlltnllon def..,.. olllc:tal I D d McGovern'• nalionll aallllJ -· one of t11tm w11 aid io be f!JDll lo Chlcogo. In IDO!ber devtlopmml. 1 -...,.. Ut nilly .... t Into lt.1our111 day_, la vrry active ~ Ill '•• lllcl loo .............. ~ "'-palltlcol illol ...... ....... - 1 ' • • SC l)ana Point ' . ' • • Hearings • On Growth Nearly' 100 ~ residents in Dana Point Thul'!darl!<ilrd protajses of \WO major problems stemming from growth in the county community. In a meeting caDed by the Dana Point Citizens for Action, rt!:idents heard plans for bearinp lo be IOI by county planning com.m1ss!oners. who wm come to Dana Point within 30 days to hear griev~ about cumol 7'llllbg and lanckile ,.gu1,.. tions Yet another bearing will take place riei:t January to consider the latest plans for the realignment or Pacific Coast Highway. , ~·· sessioo, essentially meding: to ~ ~ ~n. V4lfious ~­ munity battles at the county fevel, yield- ed several bits of m!w Information. ~~-=t months ago on La Crest.a 'l'.>rtvJ ,,.... Richard Henry tlana Elementary School will be built in about six weeks. -Thi! environmental impact stateQ'lent · on lhe eUectt 'of t h e realisnmerrt of Pacillc cOast lligln1ay l'OW ls ~ pttpattd. -No parkinJ! restrtctious are being Comidered for lhe 'Strips; along La Cresta de,slgnated as Jjjcycle lanes. Residents who have opini~ about the ~rk:ing resbictioM are invited to send letters to Brtnt MUchow of the county traffic com- mittee at 400 W. Eighth St., Santa Ana. The· issues arc among dozens of mat- ters which the group has raised before county officials this year, said president Jim Regelbrugge. He added that records show that so far this year the association has held 34 formal mfftlngs; taken a stand -on 45 variance and re:r.onlng Issues and has held at least 30 meetings with county of- ficials and other community groups. County Trustees Weigh Opposition fo Chino Airport Orange County School Board-trustees Thursday aakl they wm consider adop- ting a resolution in oppositk>o to the pro- posed Chioo flills Airport at their Nov. 16 meeting. 1'Je Chino Hills airport site is on the border of the Orange County • S a n Bernardino County line, about five miles north of Yori>a I,jpda. 'Ibe county board received a requiest by lbe Plac<ntla 5diool Illalrlcl lo sup- port Us opposltloo of lbe construction of the airport because of noi se and safety factors. The Orange C.Unty · Board o I Supervisors a few months ago passed a resolution asking Plat the area,_~ af whieh is in Orange County, be ~-as a pooslble.wllden"'51r-. "" . While aaybig · lhelr ~ti.. """' have a musurea effect on the outcome of the ali't)otl, COUnly atbool tMtees In· dicated . Uiey will .oupport Placentia be- cause thoY jyn)pathlu! with the prob- lems the airport ClOUld create. Missing Solon Still on Ballot ANCHORAGE, A I ask i . (UPI) - Despite lhe fading hope of ·finding Democratic Rep. Nick Begich, lost with House Majority leader Hale Boggs and two others in a small plane that disap- peared last month, his wife has continued his M lection campaign. 'lbe wtique situation, however, has mated a dilemma for supporten of Begich, who was t"OMlderecl a probable winner Jn TUesday'11 voting. They face the choice of electing a man who may never be able to serve or voting for bls opponent. Ol:AM•~ COAST IC DAILY PILOT '· 'tMI DI" .... C..t DAILY ,ll.OT, •It• nldl 1~ ~ 1"-.,._,,.,., " ...-.ltMll ... "" °''"' c .... l'IAl!ltll"" ~. ,.... ••'-MUloN 1r1 pwllilllMll, ,..,.,,...r "'~ 1'r14j1y, lfK C-11 Mn1, N-llOfl lt~ll, HVfll ... "°" IMCll/P'-~111 V1ll1\•'. U.-ltildl, IN~~ ... illl C""'-!tf 5" J-(#llW-A •!NII rtt-1 .tl!llfl II ,..-.w.M .. t\Hrtt 1111111 ~)'I. Tiie 11WllW;i,..I ""91ltlllrof 9ltlflt " 11 p) WHI atr '"""· c.11 .v.-, c.~""*· ,,.._ l1Nfl N. Weff "'•"""' ..... l"lllllll!lt J•elr I. C11rl1y vtt. ""''""' .... ~·· ,..,.,...... Th.-.11 Kerri! ·-llri1111•• A. Mtit,,hh11 MINitlflt U ltw CheMt H. L1•1 l:lcher4 r. N1N MllllMI Mtflttlnl l•I..,.. a. c.._.. om. JOI N.nlrl ll Cc11tltte 11111, 'J61J --CM!t .111 ... : nl 't:!!.f '""" N IMcll:SJN ~· lkKl'll ,,.,. hKflt .....,.,. ..ai1 m ,....i ,.....,... 71' ;' 11 ln41 "4MJJ1 a..lflel •••••""'' ·..u.un · S.. etc 11 a 41 D••=• lllU ftllSI II 4fJ""4n ~ mt. °""-CM1t ill'1llll .. k1S ~. ... -.,.,. ,..., ...... fllltllr"4 INtttr ., ..._,...,.....,..,... ..... _, .. w 1£•c• Wlll'liWI .-. _.. ,... .. ~ ....... ...... <'-.... .,., et °"' ...... C.!lfln!IL 1•1111iilWI W gf'(IW lt.b _, "" -"·" -·· ... -.....,..,.. ll'M """"'''" -' • Holiday l~af-.. .. By JACK BROBACK or .. IMllY "" .,.., Disneyland and Nortb A me r i c a n Rockwell maintained their top p1..,. In mart.et value raUng determined by °'"'8" · COW>ty A-.aor· .An~ J. Hlllaha.,, ~t 1 •·NMfPoit'1 .center \'Is crowdl!!j0 lbe ~IQI a!!' u 1 e m •·~ I ceoter iiPlila bl\. par•~,i>!., ~ propertiel. -: ,. • Disneyland Is worth jao. 7 million, ac- cording to Hinshaw, up from $76 mllllon last y_ear; but Newport Center, exclus.lve ol Fashion Island, Jumped from Niii !<I secood place In lbe listing of lbe most val111ble properties in the eounty. The -says the N""""'ri .Beach omce -~;1'on!P1'• Ji.'~ "Y-9 .miljl<m~mll!m~~..,e year~. -... .-. . '.Noitlr.bierican ii topoJndmtrial pro- ~es~wltliflllllllDloa:,<IOim"O 'lllinllcule $420,000 from 11111. ~ · •. / • ~ \ ,) enter • Nt1. . " l The top 10 lnduth.W ~' L Nortll.-Roekwell, Ilea! Beach and Anaheim, 115U·ml11Jon. , i. Buaheo Alr<ralt, Newport and F\lllortm, 171.4 mJllioo. L 3: _L McDonnell Jlouilal, HUIJlinltaol ... _ •. 7 mlllloo. . 4. HUnt Foods, Fullertoo, 161>.8 mDlion. i. Pllllco Ford, Newporl, 145-7 million . .. Beckmut ~ti,~ Pulluton, _.m!!_lloo,, . - 7.: Ktmt.erf)'.clarl:, Fullerton a n d · Orange, 1411.3 million. I. AIJ>ha Bola Acme Markels, La Habra, 1:15.5 mJ1llon. 1. lAldy Stores, Buena Park, 134.s million. 10. Kraftoo Corporation, ·Buena Park, $31 mllllon. . . Alpha Bola and 1"cky Stora ar< newcomera. to.Iba \OP. IL Mlablil from Jut rur'• U.t ... Collins Radio; Newport, purcbaaed by North American, and J. c. Penney Co., Buena Park. They don't spe nd a gre~I deal of time in the Or· ange Coast area, but agai!I· tbi;; year thousands of ducks are using the Upper Bay as a temporary rest· Ing spot during their annual migration southward for the winter. A few, it ap~ars, are altemptlJli a nonstop flight. Jlughos Alreraft al $11.1 llillllon. up 16 mllllon ;dilplacod ~ Dou&)aa In ;;e;,;;l~. 'll!o.~ Beach firm aiJned ~--mlilk>'I iftmn'111 mJlliGI lo !88.f•millllll.but dt-loJlllJ!I. . •·. ,.,.._P,,.el ROOSEVELT. From Page 1 ACCESS ... provements onto Los Bautlsmos if the council permitted it. City Attorney F. MacKenzie Brown ad- vised the council not to discuss any issues in the controversy until the meeting two weeks hence, when the hearing to be conducted for the en- vironmental impact statement takes place. A hint about 'lhe length of the bearings came from Mayor Arthur Holmes, a San Pablo resident, himself. The mayor urged councilmen to keep Thursday, Nov: 16, free . Holmes expects the council will have to reconvene that day to take up business that mlght not be accomplished during the regular meeting -business that wm have to wait until the San Pablo Issue is cons.idered once again. Holmes Proposes Historical Unit In San Oemente San Clemente Mayor Arthur Holmes this week urged citizens. to form .&heir own historical society as a me a n 1 of ·pre.emng San Clemente's fast-<!lsap- pearing Spanish mansions. Holmes, speaking at the end of a lengthy council meeting Wednesday, said _that an active group would serve to help pruerve · Jaodmatks such as the Larry Mansion which late last month was demolished to make way for a con- dominium project stretching down the bluffs into Trafalgar Ca.JQ'..!>it' · "That seems to be the Olllf-Wa.y 1that _some of-these landmarks eould be 1a•ed. We all would Like to see them stay in the city," Holmis said. IR· reCent · years Soaring taxes and repair and restoration coetJ haVe caured the sale and razing' of .several of 'the city's majestic houses. Other landmarks whleh ha ve disap- peared Include the community clubhouse (destroyed by fire) and Las Palmas Schoo l, tom down because it no longer could comply with state earthquake .safe- ty regulations. All Roads Don't ' Lead to Toronto TORONTO (AP) -Alitalia had been planning its inaugural 747 night from Rome to Toronto for six weeks. Thur!tclay afternoon, the . mayors of Etobi coke and Mississauga w'~ •1 ~. Toronto airpcrt to greet the presJdent of the Itali an airline and represtntatives of the Italian government . The 111 men of Italy's leading mWtary ·band were aboard the jwnbo jet to prt>o vlde celebratory .music. The plane landed -in Montreal. Fog. From p_,,., 1 PEACE •.• and ecGnomic news. The I p.m. Dow Jones average of 30 In· dustrlals was ahead 9.6.1 to 982.69. Gaining bluM were ti.head of losers by 2 to 1 on lbe New York Sloct Exdlange. "I think we're having a pre-electlon rally at last," sajd Bradbury K. Thurlow, mearch director at Llidl1w & Co. Girls in Scanties Not Railroad Image LONDON I UPI) -Br1ll•h Rallway1 h11 t""1 do\fn 11auon JI004<ni wlllch '"°" Pll In llltlr pentla adv-I 111-terdly ._ 1roln1. • •. SUt<lied on the panllt! w~o!Oii~ that the upreas eervlct 1 . the gotna easy." "This '1s not the I aee that - we wish to promote.'' a railway .11pckesman said. •• Fluor Purchases Option On L~rge Irvine Parcel ' The otange Coast retained .J t s preeminence with four of lbe top in- dustrial firms will! p~ I!> .ibe ,~taJ area ml five of lbe toP lit..-..W I~ ... ~., ... '. . --. '• . _,._ The lop ten~--. : I ~ Di.me~, Anabelill . · .z. · NewpOrt 1Ceoter, Nemt . . , ~.9.on. . r•'• ·· J._'l'he. Cil)', Centre, Oi:iap~.I nlillioo. .. .' , ~ - poUtloal IHe," he aald. He rocall<d tho 11311 electlm race when the L1lierty Maps:lne poll pndlded AH Landon would beat hil father. That poU. was wrong and '1McGovem ..,. the same thlnp In 11'12 u Dad said lben. Po11o ""' oot ttU.ble lndlcatora al the way people will vole ... Adwanlapl..Emldelll.J!I"'!! bu over. Mi:Govern In 11111 q mpolp -ate!! by -veil ranged fmn lill running with 1 11aeucmed team," lncumbency and hil •lratqy lo "ell ahoVe lbe hallle and not engage In lbe -with hil opponenl -...., my father did that once In a wblle . In hil campaigns," -veil Malled_... Fluor Corporation officials said today the Los Angeles area finn bas a four- year option to purchase a 11)5.~acre site in Irvine. Melvin A. Ellsworth, president, said purchase of the property "should even- tually lead to the relocation of Fluor's corporate headquarten and Southern; California operations to the Irvine Industrial Compres: site within a seven- year time frame." The firm is involved in international engineering, construction and drilling for natural resource and energy industries. Ellsworth said continued improvement in need for Fluor services would dictate the exercise of the four-year option. Although the finn has not made a final commitment to purchase the land, Fluor CatholU: .Priest · Farolly Stabbed Inside Church will pay taxes and property maintenance for the undeveloped slte'durlng the option period, according to Tb6mu·c. Wolff Jr., president of the Irvine lnduatrlal Complex. Wolff declined to discloae the option price. The parcel is located at the southeast corner of the San Diego Freeway and Jamboree Road. n overlooks the UC Irvine campus. Up lo one million 1q11att feet of building spaei! might be accommodated on the site. Ellsworth noted that amount of space wi ll meet Fluor's future growth needs. The finn now employs 2,000 people at two locations tn the City of Commerce in Los Angeles County. .1. Soulll Coest Plaia, Q>olo,,1'1A,.$43.a million . . " • 5.: Faahion laland, ~. ,'38.3 million. ;t . Disneyland Hotel, Analletm, '311.7 ~-• I• ,7. Huntln&t<>n-Center, Huntlollon Beach, $211 million. , I •. Orange Mall, $28 million. I. Park N e w p or t Apartments, Ne"1>0rt, $23.5 millloo, ' . . . · . , lt. Buena Park Shopping center, m.s niillion. Faahion Sq..,.-e, La.Habrll liild"KDolt's Berry Farm, ~ ninth and tenth In 1971 dropped o<f the val~ parade. ROAD BLOCK HALTS CAMELS . . . Should Fluor reJocate in Irvine, the firm would add to the industrial tax base of the new city of Irvine. The parcel is located In the 2,500 """"' of the 4,000 acre complex wbicb liet wtlbln the new city. REDWooD CITY (APJ -"Last -t. it was a zebra, this week the camels. I hope the rblnoo arenl next," said a Anny Defense Rests police ofll<er after four camels ~ from Marble WOrld here. ' ' ' ·' "Nlzori lelmed 1 1e1son In 19!0 m tne Kennedy debates" and lhla year bu worked to "draw an image of a nWl· dolrig his job -being ao effectlV<! Presi- dent," Roosevelt said. Weaknesses In lbe McGovern cam- paign not..i by-'ll<>olevelClnclude 1111 tn- abillly lo bring lbe party together, lbe Tbornaa Eagleton medical history and subsequent dumf>]n9 from lbe Uctet and reliancfl 00 a grusrouts organization Which alienates otbe~ traditional sources of Democratic support. "During the prlmaey be made certain proposals b1 the areas of taxation and welfare and national dtl.,... spending. "1'hose posUlol1I have p.....i difficult to can:y over Into a general elecUon cam- l>&ilD," RoQaevelt aal4, - San Diego Nixes 14 ,n r .• , FT. ORD (UP.1).,.,-.'l'be 11e1 .... rested The canlels tiampled down tlll! pte•to Thursday at the court-martial of Billy D. their pen ·TJ!Ursdly alght and , bumps SAN DIEGO (APJ -The San Dleao Smith, a :A-year-old GI charged with the Sy.'aying and legs lasbing out In long, City Council baa voted un~ly to LOS GATOS (AP) -A French-born "fragging" death of two officers in Viet-euy strides, galloped off toward the oppoee Prop. 14, the Walli:ln Tu in- &oman Catholic priest has been ralally nam. Aft.er Smith's ctvilian attorney, nearby Baysbore Freeway. itiattve. In a re9l.. '.Ion approved by an a.. stabbed In the confessional box of Sl. Luke McKlssack of r..·.\llgeles, dismiss-'Redwood City pollce threw up a hasty 0 vole Thursday the comicll said Prop. 14 Mary's Church here, police reported. ed ~last wi~, the ~y .call~ three road bloek and turned the anima11 back "bnposet arbitrary tax rate limitations rebuttal witnesses ' into the .. A_ ... of their t---upon local .. -ncies without rtmedlee." The Rev. Henri Tomei, 68, assistant 1 __ --:;;;;·~·-~-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimm;;;;;'~;;~;;;·;;;··-;;-·;~;;;;;;;-;";ijjjiiii;;~;::--~ pastor and a native of Marseille, was stabbed at least 'four times in the belld, -: back and chest by an unknown assailant, police reported Thursday. The church secretary told officers that Father Tomei had gone to the church to see if any parishioners were there for • cmfes.!ions. Entering the church, the secretary said, she saw a young assailant kicking and striking the priest. Informed of the attack, the church pastor, the Rev. Richard Howley, rushed into the church and the attacker ned. Father Rowley administered last rites to the dying priest and hailed a passing ambulance. Father Tomei, as.,,istant pastor for eight years here, was dead on arrival at a nearby hospital. Police Sgt. Jim Shea said the attacker was about s i x feet tall, and we•rln& black clothes an.:i high laced black boots. Police said there were no suspectJ and oo apparent moUves . Pqlice lntensif y Investigation In Viejo ' 1D~jh Garden Grove police today joined Orange County Sheriff's ottkers ln a murder investig aUon launched last weekend by the di9COvery of a body ln the MIM!on Viejo area. Their Intervention was ordered when sheriff's investigators went to a Garden Grove home wbett It ts now believed that · Steven Avery Brush, Tl, of Anaheifn, was beaten to death. Brush'• body was found in 1 1>1rked car In lhe Cabot Road aroo. The discovery sparked a wild auto pursuit of two men wt>o are now scheduJed .to fH'll aml~ent on murder charpl Nov. a In South Orange County Municipal Court. Michael McNab. 311, of stinton and Joseph William RU1Chal<. fl. of Gorden Grove, Wert arrt!lted .rt.-tbe:tr car plowed Into a trtfl near ·the Cottage Reslaurant In LAguna Baach. They ..C.lved only minor 11\)urln In thf! 90 miles 1n hour coll.._.. ·So did two U.riff'• ~tla wi-purtlllnc cnli r .,.., wr<dttd beyond l'JPllr wben II hit a wan ...... ""'° B<aclt ill·9olth Lo11Jna. · Sher1ff't lnvestlgotoo lod'1 111d :S""h died of ma"I"" bold~ Hit OOdy hod been· 1trlp~ bf ldilillllQllon . when It wu lblndoned ht the )iorted '" I SAU"'" 779. ... nL Just on• of • 1•'1• •• 1.cttoa ol piKM froin o.-. •• r. ,..,.°"' Et CMere con1ctf9ft. Th ...... pfsce i1 finl•h•d In h.nd fMilntecl mim.-. yellow with hond decor.ti9M. Th i• JH.c.• •110 f o • t y r 1 a 9t.11 1holvo1 tncl lntorJot li9l.ts. , - D•EXEl.-HEAITA&&,.;.HEl>(REDON-WOODMARK-ICARASTAN ••• """""' ~ "INTERIOtS -' WUIDA YS a SATlllDA YS t.00 le l:JI · . RIDA T "llL t:Ot NEWPORT HACH e I n1 WllTCU .. Dl. .... ~ ... LA$1JNA HACH e 141 NOITH COAST HWY. ........ ToiaANCt e , ......... _ kYD. 1n.1 an J , I l I I \ I ! f \ ) \ I t I I I I ' I I I I 11 , I ' ' . • . . . . . .... . . ... '. -._. , .. I~"•• i" ·. 'owttY ·· Farmers End Year ' .. 1. 1 , I~ • CANDACE 1'£AllSON . ' Frklif, NoWmbtr 3, 1972 DAILY PILOT J1 Good ·Shap~ "The gross agricultural pro. ttword """'rvlng op e n April 1171 to Apil )t7t to 15.: • Ill • ' ' • • down 1,000 from 1971. tomatqa: at aome county J itf .. ...., PfW .,.,, ii ' ' •• county ·l1rm•~· ~..u Win do bett" this ye4r · lfi8her prictJ for moot ma- ·jor-<rOPll; e<lded to .. ln- creue id beef priducUoo, will bring tbe state's, grou calb fann receipta to 16. 7 billion, the bank report sakl. ~ belt petfonnan<e by California' farmen t I n c e IMI.'' 'Ibo rOllO'I cootlnued. ~'EVen IO, the record net in- come flgun ls opt as high In real terms as during the lq60'1!1." f11r1111. The number of acres belng farmed· 1n the twnty is t»wn compared to y,Nri pttvlOtJs. In 1951, there were 150,398 acres of field, orchard and duct 1s up from last year due space." million from t?e prevMJu: to intenmfied fmnlng ~ Proo~• in !he future are year's $3.2 miUicli. / c:edures," Howard Norem, ex-alao gOod', he said, if the ap-Fred Keller, wlltant v~ ·-and nee P!'Ollls .thin )tllly liavt ~· r Lt y~, -jte i'P m e VQ!'.lble jiiii~ w ' · · &ioiii.w acre; county . igricultui'e. tn-' ecutive secretary of t h e par«1t turn·around in thinking prtsiderit o( the ~ Orange County Fann Burtau, by many resident! who now division, said that ''u a whole said. · OPP""' oonlloolng unlimited •.. the operation Is dolna bet growth is mail'Uined. ter this year." ALTHOUGH thi>oe Involved In farming locally dfcllned to make_ ~tar projections, of· flciall, ~I tba Or~o Cauoty Fann !hU<au, tllUrl!lte ~· pany11 GgricultuUll division ~ and the Orang!'County Department of 'i A:Jriculture concurred that ·tilings are looking up. vegetable cropa. Twenty years Farmers are planting two or A CC ORD UIG TO tin? later, this was re d u c e d , three of tbe bigber ca'1l crops ~ a&tjcw.ttural: crop rt:p0rt of the mostly by ecommlc pressures, ln a year where before they THE IR~E Company's &.erestl agree. , ' I A recent tconornlc· forecast · t:.lij the Bank of America said ~l tbet "net farm returns ·~ statewkle will zoom by dearly ~ department · of to 55,409 a<n1. may have concentrated on agricultural ¥tJvity bu been ' .. ·gri !lure 1 ta! alu , one, he esplaloed. referred to by ooe company /~ · a cu • o ~ v e VEGETABLE c rop1, al· official as an '1n'ban land 9f county farm products in lhougb d e c r o 1 1 I n g in NOREM EXPF.Cl'S the tm bank." 'l1le !Ind development IS p«eent to 11.16 billion.'' 1 ,1971 was $97 million or 13.7 acreage from about 11,000 in grou value or agricultural opentiollS IUbsldize the percent more than overall 1970 1951 to 13,000 ln 1m, went up agriculture Pf"""am because ·I ·1 ·Tiii!~ unclOJdiNctioo ·1ncom products to be about 185 ~ · e. in gross value by more than fl property taxes ·~ high , he · of recJonal vice-president R.H. · The bank forecast calls for average net returmi of. $26,000 pe< fmn 1hi>·year compared to $20,800 in 197!.'" · · · , A stmllJr ioc:reate is 6· millio~ in that time ~ to mllllon higher than last year's said. peeled tbis Yenr, altbougO it is $18.7 !f.illion ln 1971. amount. If property tai:es aren't · ~ Jacbon, develops a al&te j qrieldtural ouOook.· report · Shaping up to be one or This year many farmers ani "Agriculture is in a better deducted. the official said. the ' aeml-atmutllJ. ' I .., ~ ~ California's driest periods. Re-switching to tbe row vegetable position now than It baa been 54,000-acre fanning operation ceot unespecied heavy rains Crop3, wbtcb are bJ&her cub-other ;run," ho sald, giving (47,000 of that In pe>ture and ~~~ ""1e are curreqUy 56,000 ' ·•"'""8 operatlog tn 'Calilot¢a, "When inflation 'la taken Into consideration, tllii represent.! damaged a. few of the more producing per-acre than field partial credit for that to a grazing area ) increased its .:t·.t·, . • ' ' fragile row crops 11 k e crops. ~ more "positive a t ti t u de gro&1 profits in the period of ~~~~~--'~-"--~~~~~~~~~-'-~~~~~~~--'~-'.-~~~~~~~- ,1;.f. ' 1di·. Small Businessmen. Given AHvice 'i .~·· By SYLVIA PORTER N!c"uSf' it may affect your until ~t. If yoo'~e on a cash ·=~,;;If~ are among lbe mm. , nl>t'r ·~i:tions: basis,. you can make sure all ·O::.dfeds of thouSR')ds o.f '"''hp. t~xuaver's monthly your '72 bills are paid no later ! 'bisinessmen operating . as ~·11:;··· r ... ,.;: h<>ve Deen, paid q( . than Dec. 31, and if you'i"e on closely ·owned ctirpcirnllons. ,.,.e-'itad '" his a cc 0 u-n l an acCrual basis, you can ;!\bled · the following W"rning -... .,,.,pi.· rluti'11:!: 1970 without make llUre that any credits to 1~ your own ye:i .. t>.,~ com· r= ·~n,.-i;i! p .... h~rr:i.i;sment to custemers for allowances or ::utk>n adjustments. the corr.oration. The taxpayer ·· rnerchahdlse returns are sent ! · ~ o( you deride :it vear· r "· ,,1,. • liar! tn m:ike the out and deducted before the end whether , ""r-r ss"r" -iont t\lv book en-end of '72. to take more · h·fpc:: .. .,rectin~ the acc~a1 of Now here's vital advice if or less com-h;c:: l•ndr;twn salarv or the ac-you are a closely beld cor· pensation in · tual payment of his salary." poration o~rati(lg on a Wry the current profitable basis·-and facing veat or in IF YOU ARE .a businessman , th& danger of a costly penalty i h e n c x t who will benefit from def~r-tu that rarely bothers the year deperr ing) business inC1lme because profitable publicly owned con- . din'g on 1 youexpecttobeinlowerbtac-cern . The problem is that which w i 11 kets or because you wan to de-after a Corporation has ac- give you the . fer. paying the tax that would cumulated a certain amount of better tu: bruk _ bJt otherwise be due sooner;' here earnings, the tax law says it -r.ar .. ·recent Internal Revenue are some suggestions : inust have a gOoCi business !ilfJlhttce ruling might throw a •tf you are on a cash .basis reuon for" continuing to ac-~ihonkey wrench into your ._ as so many businessmen c .u m u 1. a t ~ i n s t e a d i;i f ·~:Caaneuvers. -and professionals are _ simp-~istrlbuting its further earn- :iC ly do not press for collection mgs to Its s~Jders. Any 1".:iJ TRIS IRS RULING dealt of bills you send out at this further earrungs your . cor· .. :'*11 a stockholder-officer time and don't mail out' bill! · poration ~ulates without .·~.moee .controlled corporation toward year-end. good ~ason.will cost your cor· .,..llad authorized him a salary of •Jf you are on an atcUral poratwn an ei:tn 2'1'h ~ ~% ·"'"*° a month. During the basis, it's not so easy to defer percent penalty tax ln addJtion .iwboJe of '70, be actually. drew income, but you can poslpone to the regu!Jlr c<lrporate tax Oil ~~ ..$2,000 as pay and did DOt completion of a job until 1973. those earrungs. collect the other $22,000. Bis Or you can bold oU delivery of corporation accrued , t b e goods unW next year under tf on the last day of ib conditions tbat will PoStpone ~ year ending Jan. 31, passage of title to the goods i: ' _ · until 1973. , , ,.7 • liis .. Id 1be stockholdel'<ll-I -· · ·' : fiad to include the entlie •oR YOU CAN shilt tn- . 000. of authorized but UD· . come from '72 to '73 by paying ,, ·salary ht his "ro return. expenses this year that you . what the ms said ; might otherwise not hav~ paid ti:": J >'!gl~ tli ".! '" NI:·· u; ORDER YOURS TODAY! .. ' v ·' 1000·: § !leautiful StiC:k-on LABELS , SO IF YOUR corporation's retained ~amings have reach-. ed the permissible top, you're in a. ta.I:· dilemma. If youf coriipany retains further eam- ings without good r.ea:son. it has to pay the extra stiff penalty tax on those eamlngs. JC it distributes its further earnings as dividends, it will pay its: own regular corporate tax and ita stockholders also will pay a 'personal income tax on the distributed earnings. But, says the Research Institute of America, all <;Or· porationa in this squeez.e have been given a safe way out as My, What Big Teetlat Operator looks on as dinosaur-like teeth clamp onto log to start it through mill •t Burlington Northern's facility at Columbia Falls, Mont. Demand for lumber has soared on strength o! national record !or hous- ing starts. • -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Reversal of McDonald Order Linked to Gift (D-N. Y.) u id 1bunday at a news conference that it was "ery81al clear" that I ho reversal was "payment for the c a m p a i I n contributlon." Rosenthal olfered no evkleoce linking the decialon and the reversal. Western's Lo·1v Fare Rejected WASHINGTON (AP) -The Clv11 Aeronautics Boml hM rejected a !pedal low fare propooed by Western Air Lines as a mean& ol tnducinf( resldentl of Hawaii to spend up to seven days In Nevada. The board aakl Western fail- ed to provide adequat e justlllc.-flM' Ibo pbmed faro dllcountl which raOl!Od from 13 percent to as much aa 25 percent ell regular COICh fans. The board also dismlsled matcblng fare proposals of Pan American World Alnrays ·aod Unllod Air Linea. THE mVINE Ranch ha. 1,500 acru of c ompany · operated row Cl'OJll; t,eo: acres o( tenant-openited "" crops; 5,500 acrei of ord:lard· (oranges, lemon1, grapefruit avocado.!), and C'T,000 acres o range. The com~ny, KeUer said has been taking the -poott. producing orange trees ani oonvertlng them to row crop like cannery tomatoes, com cauUDower, sugar bee t s watermelon, chili peppers ani asparagus . Lima beens, year ago a major product on tho land, are being pbued ou because they are oo longer a profitable. State-wide the bank roreca1 aays, citrus revenJe wl! decline six percent to $23 millK>n due to overproduction. BEEF PRODUCTIO~ profits are up, the bank repor states. mainly becaU3e price5 not sizes of herds, are in creasing. With less land fo . grazing, livestock farmer. have to bJk to new ways ti raise their share of the. We· ... dollar. Al the Irvine Ranch. KeU., said, one answer ii ~· breeding. Ranch olflcllb ., beginning to breed herefon and Brohma cows to gei ~braford". a hybrid cow ..tikt supposedly can crow better tr the county climates. In 1971 , county agricaltcn: departm""l offlclala Mid llx total value of li\'estock pro. duction decreased by 11 •pet· cent from 1970 to $2.5 rnlWon. THE MOST profitable crq>. as listed in the oounty report, is nursery .stock -lloftn, tr,.. and potted pllnls, whldi gn>S!ed S25.9 mW!on In IJ71 for a 19 perce:nt 1ncreue over 1970 . Bank of America vk:e prui- dent Jackson IUlbmarbed the statewide outlook for major crops which ... 81"'"' In Orin&• County u : -Cub rocoipU r 0 r strawberrVs, dolplte -outpu~ wW -to _, l70 million ""'"-ol lqller prices. -Milk 1ates will riaa bJ' 141 million to -.i ll07 mUlloo becau!le of lncreua in price and OlllpUI. -Eua wtll Ines •• 1n _yalue, becaUlll lbe AliaUc NtwCUtle di&tue deal I'~ output. -TOTAL LIVm'OClt ml llvettock produdl c • • b recelpta will roteh tl .'11 bfllton. up more lhln H .,... cent from 1971. -Fruit and 1111 ""'I' returN ol lt.OIS bWlOo wfl1 be stl&IJttr below tffl'a llpre, •um bfllton. ~[~ ~i.J'. 1 long as the Phase II dividend c; control gu idelines are in ef.. I feet. Western hid planned to '"" pertment. from Nov. I to next May 31, In providing the tow round trip fara for groups of 10 or more peraons, from Homlulu lo Lu Vegu and Reno. -Vegetable ..i .... wtl1 be . ii .. ) ~-----.,-- ,::r1rsanali1ed • Stylish • Effidtnt Otder For Yourself or • Friend· ·,'?·, May be u1ed on envalop•s 4111 return •ddress (J.C., label•. Al10 very handy as identification '(I•.. l•bels for mMkie9 personal items such as \:~~. books, records, photos, et<:. L•bels stir;k on JJ r gtass •nd m•y b. us•d for marltin9 home I' ~nned for;-d it•ml. All l•be{s •re printed o:'r.· with 1tyli1h Vogu• type on fjn' qu•lity whit• 9ummtd p• p•r. • 01· lk:r.---------------·-----.... , P'lll Ill ltli9 ~ Ctlf ... ~J wlltl 11.a tfT l'lllt ~ c.IMI Oh',. l'.O. hll UM ' c.t ...... CIW.IMM ·I I -------··!.. Fi : .• , • . -------------I ~ -. -PILOT PlllNTING !1 .,. -------------------~ • i ' I • • • ~i:· ·I."'· ·' J t. 1•i.p. -til,,. •;&. ... ·~.,.;,.OM Fashion Island Newport Beach The group fart":S were to have been available on all fllgbU leaving llawalt tXC<pl on Thunday1 and Fridays. We.•tem said the farts would help fill empty atatJ on alack travel day1. It billion, up ti P«'CtDI .,_ 1971. -Field C<Op relunll.,.. etttmated at • mlllloe, "' about ti .....--1111. County qo1culllln .-.. 1&id that lbt flal4 ...... barley and ............. . only three ...-1n 1111 ;trS lt7l). • ' I t r DAILY PILOT SC Ford Slates Test Of Steam Engine DETROIT iUPl i -Th•,,-------- Ford Motor Co. hopes to lei;t ~In one of Its cars r'text ye;1r an experimental "steam1' ellglne -one of the alternative.s belng studied by the auto in- dustry in atle1np1s to nil·ct governmcnt-imPosed c·1n1ssion su1ndard.!. Both the Ford f\lotor Co .• and Chrysler Corp. have- as.signed contracts lo outside finns for dcvelopnicrlt of low -pollutant cx1.ernal C'Om- busti-On engines utilizlng an organic fluid to produce a vapor. 'FORD SIGNt:U a eontract with the Thermo-Electron Corp. or Waltham, l\1ass. in 1968 to "develop the potential of vapor engines for nlOIOI' vehicles." Chrysler signed a similar contracl in J\l 2rch with Steam Engine Systems Co rp. (SES) of Nev•ton, Mass., to adapt one of its automobiles for use with a slcam power plant and then evaluate the performance of the engine·.; capabilities. The vapor engine 1s one of the alternatives that will not be ready in time to meet stan- dards set by the govemmcnt for 1975 and 1976 models to reduce emi s.sions of hydrocarbons and oxides of nitrogen. DEVELOPMENT work for Ford has progressed to the point where the co mpany \vas able to predict delivery or ~ prototype engine late next year. "Ford is not relying soley on in-housa expe. tist for its broad range of work on power sources." s3id Stua rt t.-1. Frey. chief of car planning and research engineer in the pro- duct developrtlt'nl group of Forcl. "OUr objective is to have the world 's best engine technology :..._ whether this means con- tinuing improvement of the conventional internal com- bustion engine. or develop- mCflt of alternatives such as gas turbine, sterling, rotary. battery-electric or r a n k i n · vapor power plants," he said. Developiilent programs on such other alternatives as the ro,tary engine and of catalytic conver!ers to reduce emiS!ions on present internal combustion engines have been costly. But General Motors now expects to have the rotary engine -using rotors that revolve in an ell ip l ica I chamber to power the car rather than pistons that move up and down in cyclindcrs - ready for use In 197;{ -model sub-compact Vegas. PROBABLY TH E b cs I· known namie: 1n steam engines sioce Stanley is William P. Lear, who has devoted much of his financial resources -an estimated $8.~ million since 1918 -and energy to develop VNITED STATES NATIONAi. BANK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH NOW OPIM SATURDAYS 9 ta 1 P.M . ..... "'°' ,.,. ...... .. D. DEAN. HEISER FINANCE Profits Hit ' . • OVE)t THE COUNTER • 'COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK UST .. .. •• t • ••• "" . ' " ••• ,, ... I ,,1 . ' r:. .. -' ' " ,.. ~· .. • . . . ,- • . .. . . ~ . ·' . ' -..; .. .,1 .... ' ...... ... '•. i • SC • Frid~y's Oosing Prices-Complete New York S~k Eicliange List I I I • t ! • : I . • t~ I I • • • .. l • I • :I • '"""· ··-3, 1972 ' ._ ..... ; I · :.M~n :From ~est ' ' .. 11~· .:t' · i\teep Their Cool ' sclenWic; re·searcbers looked into what makes men pale.: Jn wars. dbasters, whatever. They analyzed the ma1.e population. And concluded the men of th¢ high west- ern plateaus generally appear to possess those character- istics which make them leas t likely to come apart in crises. Refer to the men of Montana, Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico and West Texas. These -...... -. . ': : .•. ''1 'I . " _:_· J .,, fellows, they dec ided. seem to be stronger than any others in that. thing called stoicism. Now they're trying to figure out why. PEASANTS some generations ago in the marshes or northwestern Rus- sia traditionally wore white smocks, white leggings and white homespun :oats. Historians say this costume was v.·hy those warriors yean later came to be identified as \Vbite Russians. QUERY -Q. "\Vhere in the Bible does it say, 'God helps those who help themselves'?" A. That's not Biblical. It's the original language of one Algernon Sidney. · IT'S A FACT the fe male beast which here shall be referred to as a lady dog does indeed bite people .about half again as frequently as does the male dog. · .TIIE HUl\1AN body. suddenly weaned of life, cools at a rate of 1.5 degrees F per hour. That is the significa nt fa ct that tells the m o d e r n detective when the heart stopped. Internal temperature is taken, subtracted from 98.6 degrees F., the normal temperature. Answer is di- vided bv 1.5. What's left is the count of hours elapsed since de.ath. REl\10DELING -If you're toyi ng wiUi the noti on of remodeling your house. don't plan to spend more than 30 percent of its current market value on the job. That's the counsel of one construction expert. Not likely you'll ever get it back, if you invest more in such "WOrk, he says. ~ LOT OF towns in colonial New England permitted a · bachelor only to live in some home approved by the local selectmen. And said bachelor \•:as watched most carefully. Some places. lik e Hartford . for instance. otherwise taxed a bachelor 20 shillings a week for living alone. AS TO 'I1IA T matter of which is the fiercest of all beasts, some authorities, including the great biologist Cahelane, contends it's the shrew. Weighing in at less than an ounce, the shrew is said to be willing to tackle any fea rsome animal littler than a weasel. Address mail to L. J.1. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875, New· port Beach, Calif. 92660. In Sunday's Family Weekly: .. . . . • (' .. ~.. . !~ • ~ .... 4, •f > An Ally Looks At Onr Presidential Election Because U.S. political and financial pol icies have so profound an effect on our neighbors, their at. tention is sha rply focused co the current electioo campaigns and the clearly diverse philosophies and proposals espoused by the candidates. English newspaperman Henry Lowrie, writing especially for FAMILY WEEKLY, offers a European view of the American system for selecting a President. With- some embarrassment," ••. like an American criti· cizing the coronation in Britain," Mr. Lowrie sum· marizes some of the Concerns of our allies. He confesses bewilderment at Americans' puzzling method of choosi ng a leader, a system so expen· sive and time·consuming it virtually im,mobilizes t he country for the .better part of a year. Aad he reflects on the EL!ropeans' real fears for t he foreign policy toward which this country seems to be headed and fOr the future of our commitments to other nations. For an intriguing view from the other side of the Atlantic, look fo r this essay on the clear choice American voters will be making this-fall-and the anticipated repercussions of that choice on governments throughout the world. e PRO PREDICTION S -Seventeen top football broadcasters from AB C, NBC, and CBS come into play when they predict the season's most outstanding and excitin~ National Football League players. Pictures, biographies, and com· mentary 1U'e teamed up to produce an all-star feature you'll "'ant to save. e TH!kK YOU'RE CREATIVE? -Creativity iJ put to the test Jn John E. Gibson 's True-False Quiz. Find out bow creative you are. Match your answers against the experts' in th.is study of creative lndivldulls. · Aµ Coming Sunday With The I DAILY PILOT ]· . ' •I lllEAlHPlfl-BAGS · · OUI tlG . PRicE 'H .97 , . I 99 Wenzel 5 lb. ·fil l size bag. JOO" zipper, poplin cover, flannel lining. BFCIHU: BUN WARMll · OUR REG. PRICE 5.97 Help for the hostess with Jasco bunj 'BB warmer. Moisture-and flavor proof-pl!Stic • · dome. #BB700G , · ,. -t ' ' llUUltfll.M:lJ,11Jal.':~:.~ OUltSP!CIAl'LOW.~E :' ', : · : : : .' ,~! ''. Replace finers oftoo:fur max· ·am· ' imum efficiency. Pop11l1r sizes • · . • to flt most furnace~ . · • · ' • . • • ' , . ' • • f;. r ' - Stl4 ii .... "*'• ' APIJ.l fAm Gull lfJ For entertaining. Handsome tumblers in OUI SPECIAt LOW PRICE • . . 311 award-winning color and sllape. · · . . . ,-' • '' '• 'I.Sp" -·;--. ' . :0"111' '· . ' . -' . ' . 'ctl'I. IEG: PRICJ 29cYD. . · Deeorating lun ! -Start making holiday 1 lC ideas iibw. 72" wide.· YD. lltl itlUMll llfTmto • • tit. Uc FAMILY KOTT IATHIOOM TISSUI. Soft} wem. Assbrtid pasl!I colors'matcl your dioir. HG. 3'c VIVA PAPEI TQWEIS are -lo ~sl. S.ft, supeJ.aJ!lorbefl)..Assorted co~rs "d wlljte. IEG. 2'c SCOnl.ES FAOAl TISSUE are soft and 1ent~ to Ille touch. Calypso designer colols. 200 cl. . • ' • ., . • ·- ' .· .. ' . .. fOOD WHILI 8UAHTrfllS IAST ••• STOii 11,0fllr OAILY MD UT. JO M _TO t M • Slll;lt TO 7 • l'llUft A"""' F~l!'O#f'i",;;•~ll~TOl~I,,,..,~=..,,,.~...., • · ' ~ • ~ Clllll!T-.Wf~l I CAID COSTA MESA 3088 IRJSTOL ~. \~--: . . :a:°.~=·.·~~ . • ' SAN . DllG01'RllWAY AT BRISTOL .... •. -~ ' ' ' ··1. ' ···-- • ' ' I , , VOL·+&• ~O. 308, 4 SECTIONS, 54 PAGES ' .ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRID/< y; N0VEMBER li 1972 • TEN CENTS .. Nixon ,Campaign .\ Trail tO Wind Up on Coast --- ; Paper RePorts ; Hand Cut Off I . . .. . ! NAHA, Okinawa (UPI) -An . Oklnawa newspaper said tOday that. , aiI black. u.s~ ·!.!~ Ued up a , white. Navy·enliated man. and cut off ·bis Jell band with a knife. ; The report appeared in the Okinawa Morning Star, which said ' its information came from unofw i: ficlal U. S. military SOW'Ces. r 1bere was no comment from the 1: U.S. military spok<Slllen here. ,-The .newspaper ideDtified the vi~ tiJn at Hospitalman ~rd class Rlcbard M. Bridges, 22, of Shelby, N.C. , LagiJJia Property Consolidatioil· ..:i. . ~.I neing Discussed By JACK-CBAPPEU; ... Drllfr ........... l>osslble Con.onc1aUon of all coastal ~rties between Laguna Avenue and ~ llollow Lone, to include ,the HolA!I Laguua, llal. surfaced In talks tiy city of· fiCials, Upland Industries, and s m a J I property oWners . • 'Dle discussions by the Coastal Liaison Gommlttee, reactivated by the .cJty coun- eU to draw up · goals for the terTltory, were tenned "quite productive" by g,mcllman Roy Holm during :!. report to 111" city council. , ·Holm said the committee, of which he b a membet, quickly concludec. that ta lk llibut goals for ttie area would be frilfuesi unless the lands were under one ..,,.nhlp. :Jltelently, Upland lndustrie!, a JQl:llldlary of Union Pacific, owns about 4'11 front !<et of the oceonlront bluffs Wbjie o~ smaller property owners bold abOot tlOO feet. At Holm'• lnitlsUoo the council (S.. COASTAL. Page I) said ainblgulties In a drdt peace accord wltll llJ,e• North Vlelilameoe must be clarified." .: " 11we are not going to allow an election deadline or alt)' other kind of deadline to force us into an agreement which would be only a temporary truce and oot a lasting peace," be said. Today's trjp Is intended to bobter Republicao chances of capturing closely contested Senate aeatr now held by Democrilts. Ni.Ion met with bis Vietnam negotiator, Henry A. Kissinger, before leaving the White House this morning. Fluor Buys Option· on. Irvine Site Fluor Corporation officials said today the Los Angeles area rll'Dl bas a 1oor- year option to purchase a 105.tklcre site in Irvine. Melvin A. Ellsworth, president, said purchase of the property "should even- tually lead to the relocation of Fluor's corporate headquarters . and Southern Colif<lrni• ·, ~" Ille Irvin• Indtts&J "COmPJU:--SHe wttlibi a seven.- year time frame." The ftrm Is lnvuJvild In !!llemaUonal ' ellllile¢u«, comtructloa ap¢:dr11Jlng for natural _...., ...r enet1ll lndullrles. Ellsworth said continued improvement in need for Fluor services woolcl dictate the exercise of tJie fom:-yelir option. Although the•finn·bas not made a final commitment to purchase the land, Fluor will pay taxes and property msintenance for the undeveloped site during the option period, according to Thomas C. Wolff Jr., president of the Irvine Industrial Complex. Wolff declined to dl8close the option price. The partel is located at the southeast corner of the San !5iego Freeway and Jamboree Road. It overlooks the UC Irvine campus. Up to one mlllion square feet of building space might be accommodated on the site. Ellsworth noted that amount of space wilf meet F.luor's future growth needs. The firm now employs 2,000 people at two locations In the City of Commerce In Los Angeles-county. Klsslngtt then w~ with Niion from the President's-office'to a helicopter on tbe ""'th lawn. Meanwhile, Sen George S. McGovern will go on natidnwide tP.levision tonight to charge President Nlmn with making a "detour around election day" lD his speech on the Vietnam War, an aide said. McGovern, after telling about 500 ministen end lay leaden in the base- ment of ·a large Methodist cburch in . Grand Rapids, Mich. that the Nlmn ad- ministrtaion was morally lax, was to fly to s;l!loago .lo. Jape his.address. .. Holiday Inn: , . . ' "The Preoldent did not outllne a path to -· but a detour arouod ~ion day," frank Mankiewicz, McG0vem's pollUcal adviser, told newsmen at Grand Raplcla .• After · the taping, McGovern was to drive to Gary, lnd., for a rally of black leaden and return to Chicago for a two- bloct JOOtOrcade and an appearance in the AUdltorium Theater with Mayor Richard J . Daley tonight. 'Ibe b&U-hour address on Vietnam by the _l>emocrattc presidential candidate was to be broadcast at 7:SO p.m. PST on CBS. • McGovern scrubbed an 1ppearanoe ln Lansing, Mich., and another in Eaat Chicago, Ind., to spend time on the preparation and taping of his Vlemam speech. Mankiewicz indicated it would be a major star.ement. It was known that McGovern O>DIUlted closely wilh Clark M. Ollfonl, delense secretary under President Lyndon B. Johnson, and Paul Warnke a Kennedy administration defense ofndai 1 n d McGovern 's national security adviser. DAlt.T PILOT ...... W .... ._ They don't spend a great Alea! of time ia the Or- ange CoaSt area. bttt again Ibis year .thousands of , ducks are using the Upper JlaY as a temporary rest- ing spot during their annual migration southward for the winter. A few, it appears, are mptlng' a nonstop flight. Newport Ceiiter Gaining Should Fluor relocate in Irvine, the • r.nn !'O"hl add to the lndus1r1a11ax ~ Dis neyl.and Rockwell Remain To p in County Value of the new city of Irvine. Tbe parcel Is ' located In the 2,tlOO acres of the 4,000 aCre complex which lies within the new By JACK BROBACK city. Of .. 0e11Y PO•t ''"" Disneyland and North A m e r l c a n l. The City C.Otre, Orango, !S%.4 . million. Victor Must End War,: Rockwell malnlained their lop place In market value rating determined by Orange County Assessor Andrew J, Hinshaw, but Newport Center I s crowding the Anaheim a m u s e me n t ceoter in bi.I bit parade of commerical propertiel. 1be assessor says the Newport Beach office buUding complex is worth '61.9 million compared wltb 137 mlllloo just ooe year ago. North American is iops indUltrlal pro- pertlet With 1152 milllon, down a minllcule $420,000 lrom 11171. .. South Cout Plaza, Ooa1a -· "'·' miUkMl. ~ Fashion I1Jand, Newport, 131.1 million. I. Disneyland Hotel , Anaheim, '30.7 milUon. •• ' -.-_ ... 'f.{oosevel! Says at UCI Disneyland la worth '90.7 million, ac-cordlnc to Hinshaw, up lnlm 178 mlllloo last ,...-, but Newport CenlA!r, exclusive of FUhlon ltland, jumped 1rom mth lo aecond plaoe In the Ji.ting of the most valuable properties In the CQUnty. Nurse ry Pwdges liiftl-of Trees For Beach Park Hughes Aircraft at 171.4 mlllloo, up 18 million, displaced McDoonj!ll lloul)as in aecond place. The HuntlnglOn Beach finn gained IU million from 188 riltillon to 188.7 millioo but dropped lo third. The Orange Coast r.tained I I a preeminence with four of the top In- dustrial firms with plants in lhe coutal .,... and five of the top 10 c:ommen:iaJ Jistlnga. The loP ten commercial propertlu: I. Dilneyland. Anaheim. ll0.7 mllllon. I. Newport C.Otu, Newpon Beach, 187.t mJllloo. · 7. Huntlntlioll Ceni.r, HIDltingtoo Beach, 119 million. I. Orange Mall, Ill mlllJon. I. Park New-port Apartmenta, Ne wport. 12U mlllioo. II. Buena Part llboppbic Center, SIU mlllloo. Fuhloo Squa:., La llabn and Knott '• Berry Farm, Ilolod nlfttb and tenth in 11171 d"'l>f>'d oll the -parodo. The top 10 indultrta1 enter)lnacl: t. North -R.odwdl, Seal IS.. V AUIBI, hp I) Priest Murdered .Stab.bed t.o Deat li i11. Conf ess wnal ( A •• One of them was sald to be flyalc to Chicago. In another development, a stock mar- ket rally went into its fourth day today in very active trading. Broten sakl in- vestors were encouraged by both ROlitical and economic news. The l p.m. Dow Jones average of 30 Jn.. dustrials was ahead 9.63 to ta.•. Gain ing issues were .lihe6d of 1oeen by 2 to l on the New York Stock Exdvange. "I think we're having a pre-election rall y at last," said Bradbury K. 1burlow. research director at Laldlaw &r: Co. ' Irvine Co., State Back Proposal By L. PETER KRIEG Of .. hlfr ........... The Irvine Company and the sllte of California have reached tentative accord on plans to build a new Pacific Cout Highway between Laguna Beach and Corona de! Mar and for the state to buy the beaches between the two towns, it was learned k>day. Under IA!rmt of the preliminary doal the ttate will pmtl , I I'' ibe U Ide -cb of beach and land lilr .... and a ptdtltrtln w1lttay at a price to be del<rmined. It wtll lie lllld at 50 pemlll of --· The Irvine Oxnpany, In tum, will 111e that lnoome lo pay Ill abore of the eoot of reloealin( the highway and maJdllil It a reportedly aiI-lane thorough!.,. alang the top of the coutal ridgellne further In- land . Relocation of the route will becln jUlt north of tbe Laguua Bucb city Umlll and will rejoin the exlatlnc route.at • point juat below the Newport Beacb Oty limlta at Corona del liar. Final dellila of the _...at bave ,.i lo be worked out and lltlto olflcJaJa aid loda7 formal acqullitlon la at leut two yean 1Way. Relocation of tho hiflnn'Y and Ille of the beacbel to the lltllte 10 -. !hot they will r.maln ,Albllc are both omt of the Ione standing Irvine -.cal .... muter pl111 for its 10.IOO 80"e maJD. corporai.d terrlt«y betweea Newport and Laguna. I The property baa been the dJod "' controveny In recent over wbttber It ii to be amexed lo either ot bath II .. communttlel. Irvine Qxnpeay oflldala lllOll .-Jr have lndicai.d they lntml to defl1 "'1 annexation plllll and will f1lo far development with cni.e County ,....... ...... Les McCargo. an ofllcW et lllo CallfornLa Park! and R e c: re 1 t Ion Dei>ortment'a lK'qUlattloo dvlslon Mid tho atato w111 ... federal -f..-the ... quWUon. "We wfD lie mlag flnll from -Uloe IDGllWAY,Pop II Ce•8t , ' I I .. • ! • ' I ' • • • , I I • ~ I ' .. , ' • ' I 1 f I 1i I [ 1• - ........ ,.el ROOSEVELT. •• Democrat !oncul IA bit remarb. "II II-wert -Dlooe ol ...,_ clU1ive efldence that wou1a pnwe ~ d'"t !Ilion w!! ~ 8"':t!&Llle . Walatlatl ont)r, 'l'lllllil!ln , wollldlo a lei -lllM li loalai ,,.. Roosevelt replied. The former O:>ngrtaman predicted a J~percent plurality for Nixon. Roosevelt suggested the Preside.at would gee 55 per- cent or the yotes and Sen. Georg, 1'.1cGovem only t5 pert'eflt. In Calirornia, where -Democrats lead Republicans by a 3 \o 2 margin 1n re&istrations. Roosevelt slJ&lelled the Nixon cam;iai.gn would result ii rrom U to $4 percent ot the totll vote. "A itcGovern upset is more likely ID California than in any other state," Roosevelt said. Although he supports the President's re-election, RoooeY<ll finds Olll area of agrtemen with f\1cGovem -a diltutt for political polls. "I pel'90nllly f e e l polis. contribute nolhlnl to our nallonal life, or our JX)lltlcal life," he said. He recalled thii 1936 election rice wben the Llherty Magaalno poll prediclod All Landon would beat his father. That poll wM wrona: and ''McGovern ·aay1 the same thlnp In 1m as Dad Aid thtn. Polls .,. not reliable indicator• of the way people. will vote." · Advanta1t:f President Mxoa hu over P.fcGovem in this campaign cited by Roosevelt rap.gt d from his running wlth a _.. "seasone<r team," incumbency and his strategy to "sit above the battle and not engage in the issues wllh hl11 opponent - even my fa ther did that once in a while ffi his campligns," Roosevelt recalled. "Nixon learned a lesson in 1980 ln the Kennedy debates" and this year bas worked to "draw an image of a man doing hi.I job -be!ing an effective Presi- dent," Roosevelt said. \Veaknesses in the h1cGovern cam· paign not .. >d by Roosevelt include an in- ability to bring the party together, the Thomas Eagleton medical· history and subsequent durnplno from the ticket and reliance c.ri a graurools organii.atloo which alienates othe• traditional sources of Democratic support. "Durin1 the primary he•made certain proposall b1 the areas o( t.aulion and welfare and naUonal defense spending. "Those positions have proved difficuJt to carry over into a general election cam- paign," Roosevelt said. Police lntensif y Investigation In Viejo Deatl1 Garden Grove Police today joined Cl'ange County ·Sheriff'& oHicert In a murder tnvertigalion launched last weekend by the dilco'le:ry of a body in Lhe MJaaion Viejo area. Tbelr tnterYention wu ordenld when sheriff's investigators went to a Garden Grove borne where It b now believed that Steven Avery Brush , 27, of Anaheim, was bealtD to death. Bru1h's body wa1 found in a parked car in the Cabot Road area. The di1COvery 1parkld a wild auto ~t of two men wbo are ?low IChed~.:~ face arraignment oo murder charges NoV. I in South Orlnffe· Qxmly "Mllllldi>ol Oourt. Michael · McNab, llO, of St.Dian and Joseph William Ruocillk, 27, or Garden Grove, were arrtlted after their car plowed into a . tree nur the Cottage RellaunDI In l.quna Beach. They received only minor lnjurlea in the. 90 mlle1 an hour co111.ak>n. So did two sheriff's deputies whose pursuin1 cnllHr wa1 wrecked beyond.rept1fr when It hit a wall near All.so Beach in south t.gun1. Sheriff11 lnve1t11atora today aald Bruah died of maaalve hald lnjurlea. Ill• hody had been atripped of Identification when It wu abandoned In· the parked car. Prop. 19 Opposed SANTA BARBARA (AP) -The Chier Probation Officer• Alsoclation o f Calllomla oppose• Prop. 19, the eeneral election Initiative to legallr.e the use of marijuana, Presidenl Clifford Remer uld Thunday. OU.M•I COAST LI DAILY PILOT TM or_.. c-t t».l~Y ,IL.OT, •1ftil """ldt II c.9fntllMlll tM N-..~r1'11, h PVllll!Md l!y tllt OAftte CH•• ,v111w.1no ~nr. i.,.. ,. .. •l'OIN ••• F"lbll'lhld, """""''Y """"""" P:rldl'I', fW Coll• M .... , ,,..._, llHdl, Hvntt111""' llt-ch/P:....,.t•ln V•llev, l•""'• a..c.tl, ln1in.IS1Hl9Mcll t!'lll S111 ci.-1,/ kit J..,.,. c.,i.tr-A 11.,.i. •1Vlolo11 •Uklll h pul!IWI .... lllff..,, 1...i 5u...ii11'1'. '""' pt'IN:'"t ,Wlkhhflf ,i.fl! It 11 lJCI Wet! .. , '!'"'· CO.•• "'"'· C.lllW!'tlf, ~. -··~~r+ N. We.d . ,,.. .,.. '"'' ., .. ~ . vi.,.,.....,.,. o.i-MMietw ' Tho111et tl:e••ll lfher 1'l•111•t A. M,,,,lril11• -.. -a..rt" H. Leet ll•lri•r4 I . Nell ~MfMtlrll•fltltt .._ __ 1j1 '•H•t A,.,._. M•lh111 ArUr•tt1 P.O. In•••, tt•ll --c.tl ............ , .,,. ~av.:.-·=­-:::~ .. = I I c.::•-t::.T ,.,,.., fTI4J '4lo4JJ1 ct $1 f Ms1s111k1 '41oNn .............. I 1•1 fcllft FTP ......... , ""' er.. CNll ........ AdMct ... ... __ ~ ........ __ ....., ,, ..... ,.,_ ..... ::...: .,·11:r:= # ~'!' ,.,. =::...::~ """'-"-~·~ -· .. :.t.~ ... rw; ........... ,,....,,. . ' t • ' • ........ 1 • Provoeation ~n 1'.tn • ;!. • au....i I !di.,. ba dra6ad Man Shonts ·self; to .,. ... 11111~· cl "In-' Lhe ,..-blllll com u I ltllil. -. • , " '. ~ CWimllM ·~ 't.a"~lllt' Mid Ute IJleeLlng this week wllll proparlJ.....,,, of the a"a • lltllliHEMd 11a reppott for the first time." Officer .. Watches '--..., ROCK MEMORIAL AND PLAQ E ltl HONOR OF REP. JAMES UTT Supervltor C11per1 and Con9reum1n'1 Widow 11 Dedlc1tlon Dana Harbor Dedication Fete Honors James B. Utt County. state a n d federal officials gathered o.i. the stepa of Dana Harbor'• new Harbor Olatrict headquarters Thur• day artenlOOO to hear praise for the Congreasman re1po111lble for tile federal financing for the maritime complex - the late Rep. James B. Utt. And at t h e conclu1lon of the ceremonlc.::; attended by dot.en1 of gueltl, the congreuman'1 widow unveiled a memorial to tha long-lime Oranse Coun- ty political leader. ' ' , Mn. Jamea B. Ult pulled tlle abroud from a granite boulder containing a bronze plaque on lt1 face . The plaque bear11 a portrait of the late Mr. Utt and an tQacrlptlon praising his work In wln- niq; the approprlatlon1 that paid for harbor conatructlon . Design Review Ordinance to Get Second Hearing Lag~na Beacr.·s proposed Design Review Ordlnance controlling arcttitec· tural treatment of moat new buildings In the town has been passed to the second public hearing hy the City Council. The 11ceond public hearing and prob- able adoption of the ordinance will be at thr 7:30 p.m. Nov . 15 meeting of the council at City Hall. The first hearing Wednesday night found little citize n opposition to the plan which would' establish architectural con- trol on all new construction. u:cept single ramily and duplex residences. Judgmenll on de1ip would be made by the Board of 1.oning Adj~tment, which will likely be expanded from .the present three members to five meJ?berl. The propoled law alml to eocour1ge the belt proresaLonal dalgn and plam practice within the city. Pait diacupion has Indicated that lbe ordinance will not create a unlform.lty of de1ign, but will protect a i a Inst "monstrosities" being built. From Page l . - HIGflWAY ... federal land and water reimbursement fund," l-1cC1r10 Raid. He erplalned that the federal 1ovem· ment makes money available for land and tidelands acqulsi Uons when the land· 01~·ner donatu 1t le1st baU of lhe prop- erty. He said hov.·ever thnt there Is no money budgell'd for the Irvine acqullilkln thla r.ear or ne11:t so the purchUe would bl at eut tv;o ye1111 away. Anuy Defenae Reau The afternoon was one of reml.nlsc lng about the long career of the Tu.ltin Republican. County Director of Harbors, Beaches and Para Kenneth 5ampeOn tearlully remJrked dulinl Oag..-aJalDi rites that Lhe late lesJslalor "loved Old GIOJ;l''. eod now IL will fly for bfn. at thla hariior for many year1 to come." The memorial Hes at the bate of a lowerfng "'"'1cal.,tyle Oqpole. · 1be Oag ralsejl on .llte 1tandard Thur• day afternoon was one which had flown over the nation '• Cspltol. Ult, who died In early March of 1170, and fir1t went to Congreu In 19~, won p1 alse from hll fellow U.S. Repre1e& tative, Craig Hoemer. Others joining in the lrthute Included Firth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers and the late congressman's pnstor, the Rev. Harold Leesma of Garden Grpve Community Church. AJ the ceremonies concluded, pelitl toured the new Harbor District oUlce at the upcoast end of Dana Island. \ The building serves as headqu arters for the Harbor Patrol detail serving the harbor. From Pagel VALUES •.. Beach and Anaheim, $151.5 million . t , Hughes Aircraft, Newport and Fullerton, f7L4 milllon. 3. McDonnell Douglas, HuntiJlfton Beach, 1611.7 million. 4. HWll Foods, Fullerton, l!O.! million. ~. Philc:o Ford, Newport, "5.7 mUUon. I. Beckman lnltrumenll, ~. 14! million. . 7. Klmberly-Oark, Fullerton 1 D d Orange, $t0.S mtllion. 1. Alpba Beta A<me Marutr, 1.a H•hra , 13U mlllloo. 1. Lucky Stores, Buena PJrk, 13U n.llllon . ' 10. Kr11rtco Corporation, Buena Park , ~11 million. Alph• Bet• and lAlcky Storti are newcomer• to the top JO. MINinC ,from lusl year's 'list are Colltna Radkt, Newport, purchased by North American, and J. C. Penney C:O., Buena Park. Paper Recycling Collection Bin ~et A new collection bin for the DeWIPIJ>er recycling program bu ~ Mt up 1t Laguna Beach'• Fint awtltlaa Qlureb on i.qlon Strtel. Mick Blckmon, a 1>7ear .. ld Sen Cltmontean, 11ld lht ~and whlt1 btn ii the flr•t of 11v1ral eoUeetion ttatlOM "I lhlnlt we OOtDlll"*'led lo the prop- erty owners that wt feally sincerely want to strive for a 10lution for the area." Lanphear said. Oiacusslons rePJ"dinl consolidation of the properties lnclilded ,,,,.. Ible purchase of Iha llolel Lquna. '"nMn w,.. lndieatlons Lhat the botel oould be aold. • for a price," Lanpbear said. Upland's j>ast plans have called for development of a hotel-commercial area. hut have been alymfed by the nfllaal of IClllle property owiiera lo ·aeJI out for development whJch they ma) not ·~ prove. . . • The r<eenl meellng lndlcaled a feeling a mo n i property owners 11soinewhert between w1Wn(ll"8 and enlhus!aom for putting Lhla Into ainlle ownenhlp," Coun· cllman Holm said. The nell atepl muat be Initialed by Upland. Local -ntatlvea 'uld that Lhe matter of additional land purdl11e1 wU be brouaht before the company'• New York ofnclila. Holm said that under agreements reached at the. committet session, Upland would not have to present costly detailed plans for the development, but could itve sketches of proposed develop- ment. This would wure the property ,owners that future development would not be out of line with their current dealre!>. • "I think that Lal\llll 'A. ~nate_ to have an organization like Upland to try and consolidate this propert}. They have the knowhow and financial capability to come up with something imaginative," Lanphear said. Democrat Hit Republican Who Yelled at Agnew SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Geor1e N. Kalllaficua, 23, a rqlatered Republican · and an antiwar aCtlvilt, 1ot a flat In the noae and waa amated when· he tried lo 1hout h11 point of vi'" at 1 nlly for Vice Pre1ldent Spiro 0T. Anpw. He denle• he wH btred by ll1)'l>ody to disrupt the meeting. Ironically, the vending company employ• ldentllled by ......,,,.. •• the man who bit Katdaflcul, wu a Democrat, llarT)' ~I '5. He once ran fcir tbituf u ' 1 DemGCrat 1 in Emporia, Kan., and be wu not ar· re1ted or charpd tn . t h e Kat11laftcus cate. ~ · ~ Katallflcul:.11111 -•t ... IJl1. county jall after the tiff during the riilly for Agnew Wedneaday. 1be city attorney's office aald a day later the chargea of unlawful ._,,bly lpd J,dlaturblng Lhe peace were beiDI ~ ' . By AR111UR R. VlNll!L ................. A man who railed to prov'oke a policeman Into shootinl him down during a dawn ooolrpo!f~ at JUDpolnl ID I II~ Ue Newparl Beach park falled qaln· to- 411' wbon 'be "'91 hlmlall u lllo olllcor watched. ' The victim wu delinllely aLLemptlog aulclde, investlgalon .. 1<1 aflF talking with lt!ifapdly. . < :.. ~ • SUfllll'y -'belnc~ performed lhll morning to re~r damaae done by 1-JI caliber hullel which tore throuch tbe undenlde of hit throat, out the lop of Illa head -IJllitlllli hil 1kull '-but mllllnc the brain. j "All It did waa clear out bit 1lnuaes," DW'i!!le<I .. Ollioar "'" .... ho trt"1 ~ taU, 11111n1iu;;;. · .11 ~alJbet\41\'olver'~J.!lit C. '... on Lhe rune. ·~ .. .. Pal~• Cbandler·-,4141 . be wa• ~lapa\i'.llecf to a nellb&;r,~ park at RIVerslde Drive~ ~. ~ Avenue about 5:45 a.rn., to check a report of a m&n with a guo. "I was ri&~bira-i11 ~the area, 10 I parked •!"I ~ observed a man •fitting hi~ descrfptlon,~:tbe offtcer ~. "ll was i:J:lllng d ~y Ii§ ht ," Patrolman · et ·~ He had a revolver in hll right hllil'."1 - Crouching beblnct a-Pllk-bench for cover, the young officer N\tl.he ofdtred the man to drop tbe weapon or be would shoot. "He just stood there and. shook bis ~head. He neverpohrted the· gun;bnt just ~.,aved it around.·~ said .Officer Cllindler. He added that bo urged the victim to put lhe gun dowa for 30;,!!t,45, ~nds vthil1 awaltlna: backup -..m-. .PDlng the man apparently bei)t "On au\clae be ooly wanted lo help him , not h'l'! hJm. Officer Chandler said the man 6naily ·placed ti!!! IUD agaiJl11 hli *'1!il, 'fired and collapted, just u Offleer ;llDl·()ollos ~ved on the scene. ~ "We laid ' him in the back seat and drove him to Hoag Hospital Code 3," l:&id Officer Chandler, In ref.,.eiice lo. radio code for a police car'iiln lllhlC rte! Ugbll and sittn. Despite the seVttity of his injuries, Of- ficer Chandler said the 5&·year-old victim remained GeID.1-conscioua and actually flnally sat up. "We beard a noise ln the bac\;," be Asphalt Coat Laid Along Coast Highway A "blanket" of fresh uph1lt was laid this momlng on a portion of South C.Oast BI1hway bet•een Laguna A~ and Legion Street In Leguna Beadl. · Re1url1clna of the highway will mtooth out several frre1ularltle1 in two traffic lanes cau.ed by a recent break In an underground waler line. The COii of Lhe resurfacing project wlll be borne by the LallUD• Beach County Water lllalrlcl. • aald, acfdlna Lhit lhe·m•n wllOlild flftd .t• ... Jna of illd Lhl'ough hit hod WU siltln• up •llh all 10 fingers -clutchll,18 Lhrough the wire separalizll !Wlot Ud -"ll.r-..Ml1'. ... "Wllltl ... l<!l to tbe ~Ill .. """'' hit feet arow>d /lfld wu 1"'111 to ,.t out and walk~·~~ off1citr -ldded. ,1 SUrge<>nS 1tW working ovep. the victim at mid-morning bad issued no. 1tatement on his condWon but police •ldJbere are' ·•JroD&. lndiciU... lie wW-Wvtve. -.. Transit Pkin . -- Wins Backing From ·SCAG Onnge County Transit Olatrlct'1 e'.x· pansive plans to provide additional tNs service to most of the county beginning in December ggt a big boolt Thursday ·from a transportation committee of t.he Southern California Association o r GovenunenLs (SCAG). A pnaentation by OCTD General Manager Gordon "Pete" Fieldina to the SCAG Comproliellllve Transportation PlaQDlng Commlttee resulted in the dlstrict'J·applications for $17.9 million jn state funds from the new sales tu on gasoline imposed beginning last July 1. Also approved by Lhe SCAG committee was an appllcation for a federal grant bf $16.3 million over a five Ytlt period to buy 162 new bus~. SCAG mutt approve all transit district outlide funding UDder Lhe state regl-Onal control law. Fielding's presentaUon Thursday lo. eluded OCTD'a pllDI for a Dlal-A·Ri<le ...-vlct in La Habra lo be lnltlattd In December; the p~.11 cent.llol lare for but trlpo betw1m1 llDY two polDll In Lhe OOUDty; ID ll·ICl1> par~..and-ride facility In Fullerton for oommutera lo Loi Angelee, 1u1d 1 tw~yur study on the futw'e rapid tranalt modes and corridors. The f16.S mllllon application to ~e federal Urban MaSI Tranaportation Admlnl!lralion illcludea 410.t mllllon in federal fw>d8 and II.I million from local sources including the at.ate gu tax money. . The district to date is operating tl)e fcrmer South Coast Transit Corporation llnea from Senta Ana IO UC!, C..la Mesa, Newport Beach and Laguna Beach and tho Santa Ana city INlllit lines. ' San Diego Nixes 14 SAii ·DiEGO (AP) -The San Diego City CoWKlil has voled unaulmouily w op(JOI<! Prop. 14, tbe WaLaon Tu m. itiative. In a re!\.· ".ion approved by an S.. o vote Thuraday the councli llld Prop. 14 "imposes arbitrary taz nte limitations upon local agonclea wlthoat remedtea." l4U PllCI 779. .... na. • ... Jwt ent of ......,,. aelHtlen of plM•• f'"' °'91!:.r'1 f•Meu• It Cet1r1 ctUMffett. The ....... plHe 11 flfllth•4' ~ htnd p•l"tN •mimo11 yellow with htn4' 4ttetMleN. -Thi• plHe tlte It 1turt1 11111 1h1lvt1 tfltl lntoriOf' 11th+.. DRIX~lfllTA$1-HENREOON-WOODMARIC-ltAllASTAH --------- NIWPO•T llACH e 1n1-.CUH OL, ..,_ LA9UNA HACH e FT. ORD \UPI) -Tilt --IM plant lo ael .up in LtlUM In hit -'l'huraday al he court-martial of BlllJ D. man «ology dnvo. 8-aaJd he 11aa Smith, a :.4-ycar-old GI•~ -II» _atudled the aucceufUI r..ey<Jln1 p...,..m v "fragalng'' death of two offl ... kl Via~ In San Clemente and hopee i. dupllclta It INTlllOIS WWDAYS a IA'IVllAYS tlOI te llM .. ID4Y 'T1I. t100 ' HI --!NY • ..... .. , TOAllANCI e IJ"' WA-1 IL\'D. . .,..,,,. llf'l) Afl« Smllh'a °civilian allofMt In Lal\Ull. . u.fo Mol\i.otlr of Loa t-11191oot d~ For the time being. he aald.-onl1 ect hl1 l11t wltnw. the Anny callllf!line new1p1pon, hundltd or placed 111,lliol> rebuttal witncue1 . pln1 bagt, 1bould bt placzd tn. thl Din. • , Saddlehaek. I T ... y'a F i.al ~OITION . • . . --.. VOL 65, NO. 308, 4 SECTIONS, 54 PA~ES ! -ORANGE cOuNTY, CALIFORNIA .. .. . ' FRIDAY, NOvr;taER 3, rm TEN CENTS I . Hearing Will Be Set on Canada Hi}ls Project . 0r..p Coun1y planning commissioners nm ~ will !IOI a dale for a public beatftlc Oii the oontroversial C8nada Foolblllll planned commtlnil}( proposal in El Toro, at w~ time a county reY!e.. or the deVeloper'1 environmental impact atatement will be given. ·'lbe tmVironmental impact statement (EIS) prepued for the landow)1en by Johq 1-, ~ and Associalet was discl..t l>rlefly before the comliilsslon Wt 'flleldo.1. ........ i..r ·· Although county planning slalf bu only read quickly through the document once aDCi gotten .. Lim impressions," planner- Gener Miller said loday, "the while thing still bas a lot of. problems." . The reacUon of Sao Joaqu~d· dlebeck Valley Scbool Board Trustee Dennis Smith rWIS more em.PlJ,atic. He said, "There are '° many things wrong with Canada Foothills. There la no way this thing can go in without choking the Sadd!eback Valley." · I • The proposed project, wliicb would Ile U miles el!tl of a main runway of tllo El Tnro,Marine Caorpo Air Statloo, woold have ll,700 dwelling units and more than 30,000 people. Owned primarily by El Toro resident V. P. Baker, the 1,92Wcre property la bounded on the west by El Toro Road and on the 90Uth by Trabuco Road. The Marine Corps lw posed no ob- jections lo the proposal, malnly because in 1111 IJak!!r and the Marines signed en . · ~cAan't spend a great deal of time .jn the Or· an1e -COast area, but 1igain this year ~t1s·ot ducks are using the Upper. Bay as a temporary rest- t Ing SPOI during thelr annual misnll8''f0utb 21 mi fo r'. the winter. A few, it appears, "" attempUng a ' nonstop flight. San. Joaquin Hiring Expert on Bus Syswm ~In another attegipt to improve their much-critici:.ed bus system, San Joaquin School District offlciaJS are golng to try to hire a transportation consultant to tell them what's wrong. • 'Ibe district is also going to transfer cj:le of its own employes, Florence Walp, W ·work in the Community Enterprises Qsarter Bus Company in Santa Ana so ibe can direcUy supervise the operation . i 'Jbere have been many complaints by plus expenses to analyze the district's problem and make auggestions for im- provement. Thompson Ui directer of transportation with the Riverside City School District and is considered rui"tluthority in the field ot transportation. • A computer may be used to feed and interp ret data, Welte said. I-le sugge.ted a budget of $$00. To give him leeWa}, t1'l,l.stees okayed a con· sultan!'• budge! of 11,000. ... . Paper Reports Hand Cut Off NAHA, Okinawa (UPI) ~ An Okinawa newspaper sald today that six black U.S. Marines lied up a white Navy enlisted man and cut o£f his left hand with a kn!1J: The report appeared in the Okinawa Mornlng Star, which said its information came from unof. ficial U. S. military 90Urces. There was no comment from the U.S. military spokesmen here. The newspaper identified the: vic- tim as Hospitalman :trd claas Richard M. Bridges, !2, of Shelby, N.C. ~ti arulteachers since the beginning ,rl. the sCbool fear that charter buses are > lite or dOlJ•t arrive at all. $Mn. Walp only came lo the distrid th1s year. For the past lhree years, she worked at Community Enterprises, in Hasty Settlement Wrong, "*1e of bus driven. · ''t looks llke ,re ahould have paid her !PlarJI lo alay there," San Joaquin board ~ Robert Dameron said Wed- -=rintondellt. Ricllard Welte alao ask· ¥ tbe board to autborlze employment ol . !;a<l ~ at allout 175 to. •too a day i'Oraqe ' . . Says Campaigner Nixon ' Jl'nm """' 8enlcet WASIUNGroN -President NIJoo left the White -loday Jor a "Ollt-<laY ca-Igo ,awiat• acroa llaJf the country after vowing lie -would not iuth Into a haaty ,.ttlemebl of·the Vietnam war. ,,,. President -for ltopl in Clllcago, Tulsa, Okla., and Providence, R.I., toucl!ID( ol1 • alx-otate campaign sput wljlcb will wtDcl up to Caillornla where lie will -'lllmdaJ. char1e President Nixon with making a "detour around election day" ln b.iJ apeeoll OD the Vietnam War, an aide aal<I. McGovern. after telllng a~ IOO rnfni.-and 1ay, leaden In the baae- ment of a larie Metboclist churdl In Grand Ilipld1, Mich. that the Nlma ad- min11trtaion WU morally Jal, WIS to fiy lo Clllcago lo tape b1J addttu. ''The Prealdert did not ootline a path lo peoce, but I detour aniund election day," Frank Maoklewtcz. Mc<lovern'1 poilUcal ad•ber, !Old newmien at Grand Ilipldl. -- agreement that said Baker would never develop a 350-acre portion in the northwest comer of hlJ property. The area would be left open as a Marine flight easement . Bater sald Thursday that the agree- ment with the federal government says be "can develop!! the area as agriculture or have boUlel for employes there. A few randl ha.nda live on the acreage. But IOlne school · di.strict officials, notably Sniltb 111d San Joaquin trustee Pr9ton Rowell, have objected to the pro- poaal boca~ of nobe and safety dancers lo futurr.cboatchildren. 1lte atai. department ol aeronautics recenily u.id it could approve of only five of 11 s;JQeated school sites in the pro- posed community and only tboSe II they were heavily soUnd attmuated, at a-iligh cost t'I the entire d1ltrteb Yet the EIS does not m8b relermee to the developrilent's lmpi1Ct•t11 IChboll. John Allday, hood of the planning department's environmental quality tec- lk>n, said last Tuesday that the state- ment does not spell out bow IRUTOCIDdtng areas will be affected, nor doe9 it ~ cenb'ate well enough on aircraft noise or ground tmasportation problems. · The EIS recommends that portloos o! Canada f"Oothills under the otgbl path not wxler constructlon for three to five years after work begins on other portions !See HEARING, Pace I) New Highway Due State, Irvine Co. in Accord on Road By L. PETER KRillG Of .. o.tt'I Plitt Stlft The Irvine Company and the state of California have reached lentative accord on plans to build a new Pacific Coast Highway between Laguna Beach and Corona del Mar and for the state to buy the beaches between the two towns, it was learned today. Under tenns of the preliminary deal the state will purchase the S.5 mile stretch of ~ch and land for parking and a pedestrian walkway at a price to be determlned. It will be sold at 50 pertent of martet value. · The Irvine Company, in tam, will use that income to pay it3 share of the cost of relocating tbe highway and mating It a reportedly six-lane thorough fare along the top of the coastal ridgellne further in- land. The Orange Coudty Scbool Board Tburoclay approved a trllllfer of 1!12 uninhabited ....., in Mlulon Viejo from the Sen Joaquin Scltool Dlltrtct lo the Capi.alrano Unlfled ScbooI District: The action moved the boundary line between the two dlstrtcls to the center of Loa AlllOa Boulevard and Trabuco Road. Development of 8attelooa Homes by the Mllalon Viejo Company ii now going on In the area. Il the old boundary line bad remained, it would have cut ailigonally ~~<.:··· · Children living on the street would have had to · go to dlf(efent achoo! districts. In llOme areu, cul de UCl!I woold have been in Ille Caplalrano District and the rest of the atreet In Sen Joaquin. The school boards Involved agteed to the transfer, which will involve U4 aingle-famJly unlta. The trar.sfer wu listed u from the San Joaquin and the Saddleback Valley Unlfled School District to Capo, becluae Saddleback Valley will take over San Joaquin's area July 1, tmr- Dlve King, fadl.ltiel ~a.oner for San Joaquin, said today that this ls tbe Ume tc atraJghten out boundary problems, before the people move Jn. - Coonty school official V.W.y Hillman said the action "makes 1e111e'' although he added that Capo may be on the looinK end ~ the deal becau1e tbe t.ue. Jt!DUlted !rom the homes probably """' pay f... the eifucatlon or thl chlldtu!romtbelftl. The county board •Pl""""'d the tranafer without raerv1tlon. Hayden in Laos BAN'CKOK. Thailand CAP) -A lfOUP ol American peace actlvllll anived from Copenhagen today for a brief atopover lo male co0necUom wltb I ftJOt lo Vieo- lilne, IAol, en route to Hano( Relocation of the rout. will begin just Irvine Company officlala most ......,uy north of the Laguna Beach city limit! have indicated they Intend to delay any and will rejoin the emttng route at 8 annexation plarui and will rue for po-int J'u.st below the Ne......-Beach City devek>pm~t with Orance County eovem-.. .,... • ment. limits at Corona del Mar. Les McCargo, an o{ficiaJ of the Final Jetails or the agreement have yet CaU!omla Parks and R e c r e a t I o n to be worked out and state officials said Department's acquisition dvision said the today rormal acquisitk>n ls at teut two state will use federa) money 1or tbe ac--.... qulsltion. years av;ay. "We will be using funds from our Relocation of the highway and sale of federal land and water relmburlement the beacbts to the ..tate-to lDllft that fund," McCarJ:o l&kl. they will remain ,ublic are both part of He explalned that the federal 1ovem- tbe long star1ding Irvine coutal aone ment makes money available for land master plan for Its 10,000 acre unln-and tidelands acquisition! when the land- corporated territory between Newport owne r donates at least half of the prop. and Laguna. erty. The property baa been the subject of He said however that there is no money conlroversy in recent over whether It ls budgeted for the Irvine acquisition thll to. be annexed to either or both of the year or ne:1t lK' the purchase would be at commwtlties. least two ytars away. Fluor Rmtbases Option On Large Irvine Parcel FIUOI' Corporation o!flclalt aid -Y the Los Angeles area flnn bu a four. y~ar option to purctwe a 105.~ site m lrvtne. Melvin A. Ellsworth , president, said purchue of the property "should even· tuaUy lead to the relocation of Fluor'• corporate headquarters and Soutbem Callfornla operations to the Irvine Industrial ~mpJex site within 1 seven- year Ume frame ." The lfrm Is lnvol""1 In lntentatlonal engineering, constructJon and drllllng !or natural .._,,.,. and '"'I'll' indullrtel. EIJsworth aaid continued tmrrovement ln need for Fluor tervlces would dktate the 1 exerci.11 of the four-ynr opUon. Althoulfb the !Inn bu no1 made I Ona! commitment to purd'lue the land, Fluor will pay taus and property malnteoance for the undeveloped site during the optJon period, aa:ording lo Tbonw C. Weill Jr .. president of the Irvine 1Ddultrla1 Compl~1. Wolff declined lo dillcloae the option price. 1lte parcel ii located at the -corner or the S.n Diego Freew1y am Jamboree Road. It """'looltl the UC lrvtne Cllllpul. Up lo one millton 11QUa1'0 feet ol building space might be accommodated on the site. EU.worth noted that amount ~ce will meet Fluor'• future crowth The firm now employs 2.000 people at two loc:atJo .. In Ille City of Commen:e In Los Angeles County. Sbould FIUO< mocate tn Irvtne, the firm woold add to the lndurtrlal tu baae of the new cJtj of trvlne. The oon:e1 11 located In the UOO acns ol illo 4.000 acre complex which llet within the new city. Crash Secrecy Set MV THO, Vietnam (UPI) -American offlclail operatina under "onlen from hlgbor up" ba,. clamped a ......,,. lld on the crub ol a U. S. Anny CH47 Helicopt<r near tbla Mekong Delta town ,.,_y that kl1led It iealt 11 Amerlcain -and probably 2:1. Vicwr Must End War, Roosevelt Says a~ UCI . By GllXlllGE Lall.I!. ............ Any president tlocted ,_,. ..... fall• to wind down t.be war wwld .. .,.. the rtU ol impeaoomen~" UC lnM faculty _.. told ..,,..,..,., James..-.ek of Nu,.t -. Ia • televlaloct__,i..l'llunday nlK)lt, Nb<on saJd the Uultod a. will sign I Vietnam -,._ Ille - ment II right -nol one day before." Ho said ambiguities in a drdt puce accord wilh the North Vietnamese murt be clartflfd." Priest Murdered JOr. ot the later~ .,. ..... D;. -vtlt. -the will "' ... ~ ·peai>1e II ltdlldaatl1 dw le nu.ke It very difftfult lot tfflw 1 O d Cl!ndidlite lo not end tbl ... Ill ..... Tbt rtmart came tn 1'1111 w tt a quHIJon followitl Ro 11 ..... - -IPo<dl to !acuity D I I ••1 IC Ille Untm-lltyQall. .._+LA-.... -• . --.... -..:: ':::::"' . ... Cl • ,,. • --11 --. r:-::-~ .. :f ,, " r.-• __ ....... -... --. --.. --~ .. ,. .... ......... ., -----,,... . -.... -. ............ ,,.,, --... • 7 -.... ' -• "We 1tt not going to allow an e.lectlon deadline or any other kind of deldUne to rorce wi Into an agreement which woWd be only • l<mjlorary ir-and not a lasUn1 peace," he 11kl. TodlY'a lrlp. la ln!Gtded lo boliltt Republkm -., capttlrin& dootl1 ____ Mid.., -Nllon lllel wtlb bll VloWm negotiator, Roary A. Ktuincer, before leovin& tllr Whlle HOUM thla ~ JQaalngor then wafbd Wftli' Nlun ,,_ tbO l'nlaldenl'• -lo • llollcople< "" the aoutb Inn. M•wllll: Sen Goalp S. M«loYml will BO on nationwide l#le•llloo tonight lo • Stabbed to Death in Confessional OM.,.,..,, ...... TALICI l'OUTICI .... ,. ........... , -..it--to-... '°"°'m ol FUii peoplit tM& Pr 111 1 Nlun't __ PIOCl..,._11 ....Uly a lul-. ........... f11at K~ll-lltllMM ... le ond Iba .... . "Any ... _ ... --~ ...... -II ......_Iba rlat..fl = I I ...,.,~ .. ,..1.r-. .. dtnl .. la -ilic"4 -la .... lo hlll-tomdtllt-. ' a.dttcu porf Dr •••••• t DIMa ................................ fre 7 QeU. .... M' ti .. ptdd.ed NXW ti J>i I 1 dMI llllD ~ t.M J-"Wll'• 'd -llllW _.,. floe llOOlllVD.T, ..... 1) • • ! .t f • • • I I . • • ' , I ,1 J)MV l'WIT IS MedSchOol Dean Urges •• 'Yes' on 2 Pamge or Preposition 2 on Tuesday ts "the best prevenUve med\clne" for wblt: UCI medical school DeM Warren L. Bostick. describes as a statewide "health care crisia." "Each year Callfomlana experience ln- creasiq difflculiy obtaining adequate health care, due lo an acute shortage of physicians, deniilts, nurses and other health prolesslonal<." Dr. Boolict Wd. "Prop. 2 for health sdeoces facilities ~'ould a.1.leviate this lhorta,e by ~ viding new faclllties Lo train more doc- tors, dealisu, l!llneS, pharmacists, veterinm.m and pubDc h e I I t h .specialilta." Al UCI, --Pim matching ledml dollars wwld oMblt the medical •cbool to ~ Its ciao llilo f<X" I tollJ enniUmeiit . ..,, 511 --... Bostick noltd. •'There are two "•fS to produce more doctors: omdfo.se the requftd material into a shorter time period or increase the class shies ln medica.I schools. "At UCI, .. ""' !eying to do both. We have developed a new medical Cllf"- rlculum wbicb. in effect, shortens t h e training time," the dean said. lncreasing cl.as.! .size depends on ap: proval of the stat"e"ide bond measure, he emplwi2'd. 'Ibe measure provides for SlS5.9 millim for UC btalth science buildings at !eVeD. campuses. Another $97.7 million In federal granb to match the state's com· mitment would yieJd a total building pro- gram of $253.I mllllon. "Almost one-fourth ol the bood fUnds are slated for comtructilll: of UCI's first permanent medical faclllties'' including baslc science classroom buildings and a ~ teaching hospital at UCI. . "'!be iropDSed univeraity hospital would provide ooe-tbird ol the bosplial beds es.m1tial for UCI's teachJng pr. gram," Bostick said. 'Ibat tnean!J. even with lts own teaching hospital, UCI would !Ind It neceswy to continue placing medical students Ill other bospltalJ such as the Orange Coun- ty Med!cal Center and commun!ty hospitals In Orange County and Long Beach. Irvine 'Mayor William Fischbach hu endorsed Prop. 2 noting that no other ballot measure Is "more humane and sensible and necessary." Deacribing the measurt as a "sound in· vestment" the Irvine mayor pointed out local property taxes will not be required lo repay the state bonds. HEARING ... of the project. More than 30 percent of the homes pr~ posed in the area are in noise levels a· hove the 65 di>& (decibels} slandotil ap- proved by tbe !lale· 11 occeptalili .~qr residences. . _. '!be develo-t, -g to the EIS, would ha~ loll open 1poc:o thin rec<>m· mended In tho coanty R-al plao. The Mi)~ declar~ that traffic systems wm ~ "burden<d" by the pr .. ject, altboogJJ H ICld8 .lhlt thla should be alleviated by the (pro_.i) Canada rood interchange on the 9':11 Diefo FretW1y. It a!Jo SAYI that '1if" no(fe 11 going to be a problem, sound attenuation is not lbe best answer. Alter hearing shoot the ,.por1, 'llilstee Smith said thal resideoll of the Sad- dlcback Valley have two major concerns about the project : roads and. tcboola. He added lhlt ll ls """'I to usume that the El Toro Marine Corps Air Sta- tion ll gobJC to go away. 1be EIS men· tloOI tblt the three to five year building moratorium would allow for study 1o the future u1e of the air station. Fifth Dillrict Supervisor R o n a I d CUpen bu 1uge.sled that operations be moved to Camp Pendleton. "There Is still the safety factor ," Smllh said. "I know of one jet that has crashed on Baker property." OIAMH COAST IS DAILY PILOT Tlli9 o....,_ C.... D.t.U.Y flllOT, .. -~ k .......... ~ .... -..~ .,_Or,,.... CM.t "*k'lllll COmNllV. "'-" ,. ..... , ......... llVlll~ ~\' """"" "''"''· .., a.i. Mme. ~ ~Kii, "........ hKIVfl_..ln Y•lltt', L-oww .--. tMntltHril'"'9a: ""' .... °"""""' aa. Jlll!I C:.,._tr_ A ""9te ,..._. •lllM II ~r.IM ktlnt'fl _.. "'°"""' ti. ........ MlilMlll '4Mt h .. »I W..I lat $"-t. C..r• M9t.. Cl'""*" ,,.., R•hrt N. w,94- ,.,..'"'" Md l"vM~ Jeck R. C1Hl•Y vi..~ al'lll 0-11 MfMlw 'fhHl11 ICtt•TI ..... n.t." A. Mur,i.1111 ............ a...t .. H. LMt •1·•·"' '· Neil ,,......... ................ . -Qtt. ,,,_, • = '""' "'\!".!.:'I:•-...... ... ' -"""""' -... ('"""" ... I = 9'kt; 81$1 ,,. ~-lie... .... • Tai Ifft t714J '4lo4a1 nu 'fW .WWUf' • 1 MWn i. Cl I Al ..... Iii ''' u' ••.,. •• s:r .. """ 0...... Qaat 1"1 ..... ...................... •'I' ":':%.:. =---..... ........,.....,, ..... .... ·a: .. -:::r:·-.. er.-...... , =:...:.or:::.~ ... ::::"'...&:.-: \ ' • ,,,..,, ... ,,, J, 1972 ' ' r " l' alue $.,,,,,.• • • NeWpo~ Center ·Crowdi~g No. I By JACK BROBACK Of .. Delly 1"1191 ''"' Disneyland and North A m e r i c a n llo<kwell lllllntolned their top place In 1mar~el value rating detennlned by Or1111e County Aaessor Aodrew J. Rln"8w, but Newport Center is crOwdi.ng the Anaheim a rn u 1 e m e n t center in his hit parade of commerical properties. Dlsoeyl@d is worth 189.7 !llilllon, ac- cor<llng IQ Hlnobaw, up lrom "' million last year, but Nelfpelrt Center, ei:cluslwe r ol Fashion Island, jwnped from llith to second place in the luting of the most valuable properties in Uk couaty·. 11le assessor sa}13 the NewpOrt' Beach office building complex is worth '87.9 million compared with 137 ll)illlon Just ooe Year ag' o ... · 1• • .. • ... , .... • 'Ill--. . ~· .. . -: l'lbi1h ~ la ""' l!tcQltrtal pro-~ wlUI ~52 mlll!oili'<loW•lDlnilcule $420,000 llom 1971. " · mllllon. 4. Siuth Cout Plaza, CO.ta M-, .U.a !llillioo. 5. Fashion Island , Newport, '31.3 !llillioo. I. Diahflaod Hotel, Aoabolm, fll.7 mllllon. . 7. HuntlJ!ctoo Cenlu, HuntlnilOI> Belch, $29 million. I. Orange! Mall, 128 millioo. t . Parll ·N e w p o r t Aw:tmeou. Ne'10!!, Vf·• millllin... ' · It. llllena Park Shopping Center, '3U rnilllon. . Fubion Square, La Habra and Knott'• Berry F1t111~ !lated ninth and '\ollth In 1971 aro'pped off the value parade . '!be lop 10 industrial enterprile.s: L ~ Americon Rockwell, Seal Belch and Anllllelm, $151.5 m!Woo. I. lJugbes Alrcralt, Newport and Fullerton, '71.4 mlllioD. 3. Mclloonell -Douglas, Huntington· Beach, $68.7 !llilllon. 4. Hunt Foods, Fullerton, $60.8 million. ~•REER GUIDANCa EN ' DAILY 'ILOT Staff Pllo .. , -5 C TER TO ANSWlll· Ac;E.OLD QUESTION: "WHAT SHOULD I DO?" Rugbe.9" Aircraft at f!l.4-riilllion, up $6 mi!Jlon , displaced McDonneU Douglas in second plaoo. The HUJ11tiirtpn Beach finn gained $2.6 !llill!on ~ ·1119 mllllon to !ell,.7 mlllion but ·droppecl'.\P th!rd. The Orange Coast ~ retained J t s preeminence wttb four of the top in- dustrial firm1 with plants in tb9 oouta1 area and five of the top 10 conimef.ciaJ 5. Philco Ford, Newport, $45.7 mlllton. I. Beckman lnstrumeou, Fullerton ~Smlllton. ' 7. Klmberly-clark, Fullerton Ii n d Orange, '$40.I l!illlion. Senior Micki Fulton UM1 Reader·Prlnter If University High to Scan Job Descriptions University High Center Takes Look in Future By CANDACE PEARSON Ot n.. DaHr "'• sw One room at University High School in Irvine is the portal to more than 150 col· Jeges and universities and 'at least 400 different jobs. Development or the school's career guidance center i; helping anawer stu- dent questions like "Whe~ am I going?" or "What 1bould I do?" Located in a room which doubles as a group counseling area , the center wu funded to begin this year with $1 ,200 from the Parent , Faculty and Friends Organization (PFFO), $50() Crom the Irvine Company and $300 rrom the Kiwanis Club. With tha~ money, the school bought three machines that magrfify micr~fnm­ ed cards developed by the Orange County Department of Education. ClUed VIEW, Vital Informatk>n for College and Work," tbe cards have localized information on 280 jobs, their requlrementa and aalaries, and da\a on 150 four-year colleges and on six local commwrity colleges. The cards are "by far the best in- formation in this room," Marianne Em- mons, University Hig h counselor said. They are developed with high school students ln mind, updated annually and done locally. Job cards tell where local training is available and college cards give ad- Irvine Distriet Sett.ing Up Sliop -In a Trail.er The Irvine Unified School District will begin operation in its new office -a mobile traller parked at Rancho San Joa· quln lntennedlate School -Monday afternoon , Superintendent Stan 1 Corey said today. The trailer has been provided by the San Joaquin School District, which will go out of business as of July l 1973 when Irvine lak· l over. ' ' The new 1ehool diatMct has been operating out of Irvine City Hall, untll arrangements were made for the trail er. A telephone will be installed Saturday a.nd carpeting, Monday, Corey sald . Of- fice houn initlally will be from · I p.m. to 5 p.m. The mailing addre8$ for the school district office will be the same as that ot Rancho SJn Joaquin, 4861 Mlchellon Avenue, Irvine. The dlsttlct phone number wUI -be SS2-0077. mission requirements and expenses of local and non-local institutioos . One of the machines is a reader- printer, which tost $1,500. A student can duplicate the printed matter he sees on the screen. Elsewhere in the room is an ()c. cupalion i.:xploration Kit by Science Research Associates, which has 400 job descriptions. Pamphlets dealing with. everything from office jobs to dentistry line one wall . In November .. Mrs. Em- mons said, careers in music will be featured. Applications and scholarship forms for the universities of California and the state colleges are kept in the room as are three bookcases of college catalogues. Interest by students in the center so far has been "reaUy excited" Mrs. Em- mons said, especially the seniors. "For them, it's an impending thing. They need help tbe most. .. Mrs. Emm0n!I has been speailng to an seniors in their civics: classes and to juniors in the U.S. History classes, telling them ':bow the information can help them make better decisiooa." , -"' In the ~t. i! seniors waited until tbcir final year' ·10 decide what to do after graduation -they were out of luck . Most of the colleges would have closed ad- missions. Now. more places are accepting students the spring and summer before their entering semester, Mrs. Emmona: said. P.&J:t of the center's work i! getting &tudents . oot of the career-syndrom, which Mr J. Emmons called the "old doc- tor-lawyer, InGian Chief" idea. A test called "Job-0" di!lributed by the Coastline Regional 0 c c u p a t i o n Program (CROP} be.lps. It asks basic questions, like how long the student wants to stay in school, how he !lee! himself, and what kind of things he likes to be involved In. '-. The student then matches b J s characterlstlcs with 100 job titles to diJCOver varlolUl posslbillUes. "Maybe a student thinks all his life he's going to be a palicemao," Mrs. Em- 1norui said, but then finds out what a Policeman does and realizes he doesn't want that. The CROP lest :~en "gets their feet off the ground", she said, and lets the students look into other jobs. Ked Satellite Up MOSCOW (U PI I -The Soviet Unioo resumed launching 1inele ColmoweriM satellites today, but hurled numbef 636 about 200 miles further out · mto earth orbit than usual, the Tau oewi agency , said. ,,,.;, . Irvine Planning Aciion Here are the major actfun• taken Thursday night by Irvine ·p1 ...... 1 .... eom: m.IJ1looers : ... ~ esta~:S~ON REVJEW1 Put off to Jan . 17 further consideration of ordinance n& architectural review body oo Rrounds there are "inadequacies" in the draft law needlJti lludy. To 'l'O:ttcErER: Rec1'ullled the tone change for 12 acres of land In wn r rom 11\o 1eneral commercial cate11ory to planned community ~~mercl&J and dlttcted 1alf to re advcrtise hearing• on the cit)' zooe chanae lindPOUCYpollcyPLANpl : ~llnued to Nov. 9 r!nal review of reviled ~Ill oJ cit)' Ult au -document for the 1eneral plan. NSW LYON MODELS, Approved localloo of 1 new model 'cmnplu 1t SC01ttil1le ltrtot and C.lvw Drive with the condlllon lhlt ,\.S Dev<loplDllCl °"':~Y (formerly WIUl1m Lyon Co.J work with ital! on .,,, ____ ,;.., ,.. (lrd~ lchtrtlllna •lint. ......,...._ ~ ~~ 'IMcts1 c.ntl!ID<d to Nov. 18 acllon on two new bouln1 do-!!.,~~ Unln11l'31 Pork !or lln111er 11udy ol dr•lnli•:dllch locatJon -..... -llllt• rr-.y. ~ P'l1NCE51 Deloyed lo Nov. I further conolderotloll.:al Ji,e ,doolbk waJI ·PrOWtm ' relltec:t to Prealey Development Company'• new trld allutUa.I existing Rlncb bomt1. 'I ' ' • • Stock Market In 1:ourth Day Of Gain, Up 10 • NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market roared into the fourth day of a pr~lec- tion, pre-pea~ rally today . - At 1:30 p.m. the Dow Jones average of JO industrial stocks stood at 983.14, up 10.08 points. U It closed at that level, ft would be the highest finish since De<:. 3, 1968. At 2 p.m. the market still was up 9.25. • At the New York Stock Exchange, some 14.29 million shares had already been traded by 1 p.m. ln September the average NYSE dally trading volume was only 12.3 millJon shares. "Wall Street has been very skeptical. but I think it ~s reversed itself," said Bradbury K. Thurlow of LaJdlaw & Co. Analysts sald prospects for peace, and the probability of President Nixon's reelection were both helping boost prices. Tn addJUon, they said the market's upward momentum has drawn buyers, who want to purchase stocks before prices go evelf lrigher. The Dow fh- dustl"ials have gained more than 3S points in four sessions. r Honeywell·..Protest STANFORD (APJ -Demonsrrators chanted "Make a living, not a killing" ot•tside Lile ~tanford University campus pl.1cement center Thursday as Honeywc'l Corp. interviewed job pp p 1 i cants . listings. · The top ten commercial ·p~: I. Disneyland, Anllbelm, tal.7 JD!llloo. Z. Newport Center, Newpj,rt lloacb, 161.9 mllllon. 3: The City C..tre1 Orange, $52.f ~: ........ , •. l . 1. Alpha Beta Acme Markeu La Habra; 115.5 mlllion. ' I. Lucky Stores, Buena Park, $34.5 irJllloo. 10. Kraltoo CorporaUoo, Buena Park, • $31 mlllJon. . Alpha Beta and Lucky Sto,.. are newcomers to the top 10. MIPlnc frQlll last .. year'a llst are Colllno Rldlo Newport, plll'Cbued by North Amerlcall 0 llld J. C. Ptnney Co., Buena Park. ' R;OOS~VECT-~· ~. °"'"°"••I 1or.c .. , '" hla remarb:.. County Trnstees · "Jf there were aoin.e piece .of tPOl'I· clu$ive evidence that would 'P-t9l1. fteai.. W , h O dent Nixon Wll personatly n1l>lVlid'In.ihe e1g ppos1'ti·on· . W~tergate affair, Tllesc!ay•a.:..ilAtton . would be • lot closer than It lcioU-.1ow " T ri· h · R'OOsevelt replied. . . -' ~. • • . 0 ', ino Airport 'l'he former Co-·predicted a --.• 10-jietcenl plurality for NW., ~It suue•ted the President \vwlfgei 16 ~-Orange County School Board -=l ol ' the vo~ 11ncf·s,tn. GOorge Thunday lald they will conalder Cldop- McGovern only U ~t: ':" , ting a resolution In oppo<Jtloii to the pro- In California, where Democrats lead posed Chlno Hills Airport at thelr Nov. 16 Republicans by a 3 to 2 margin in mettiog. ........_ re_gistratlons,. Roosevelt suggested the The Chino Hll.la airP,ort sJ;e ts on the N11ob cam;:iatgn would result in from 52 border of the Orange Couilty • San to 54 percent of the total vole. Bernardino County line, about five miles "A McGovern upset is DlO!'e likely in north of Yorba Linda. California than in any other state," The county board received 1 reqWert Roosevelt said. by the Placentia School District to sup. Although he supports the President's port its opposiUoo of the constructkm of Te-e.!ection, Roosevelt tindsioue area of the airport because of no1le and safety agreemen with McGovern - a distaste factors. tor Political polls. The Orange County Board of "I personaJly fee I polis cootribut(! Supervbora a few months ago pasaed a notillng •tq our n<1tional life, orj our reaolutlon asking that the area moat of political life," he said. whl.ch is In Orange County, be ;tudled as He recalled th·. 1936 election race when a PoSsible wilderness area. the Liberty Magazine poll predl<;:.ted Alf While saying their opposition w<m't Landon would beat his Cather. Tfiat poll have a measured effect on the outcome was wrong and "McGovern says the of the airporl county school trnsteea Jn. same things in 1972 as Dad said then. d.icated they 'will su'pport Placentia be- PoUs are ilot reliable indicators of the cause they sympathlze with the prob- ,·1ay people will vote." lenu the airport could crtate. \ SAi.i PllCI 779. UG. tJI. • Just on~ of • far9• r•lac.tio" of pi•c.•• from 0re,..r, f•l'ftou1 E+ C.tera coll•cflott. Tit bov. • Is fl"l1hed in h•nd pal Med mimo1• y•llow with ~nd 4'Koratron1. Th ii plec• •lso f •: t • r ''j;• •h•lv•s •nd i"t•rior li9hts, u 1 • t u '. ' DREXEl..-HERITAG(;.-1-iENREDON-WOODMARX-ICAllASl'AH .. , -• INTl!llOIS wwn.1 IAlllaDAn 9.oe ,,, 111t .. IDA 'r '111. f.00 ' NEWPO~T IEACH e 1727 WISfCUF# OIL, '42-JOM LA8UNA' IEACH e Ml NOITH COM! ..... .. ........ TOAMNCE e llMt tjAWTMOllNI ILVD. 1n.1nt , v \ \ ! .I • -'Nude TV ' ~N (AP) -a-111111'1 t television net. ,...k bP. blilned •-COllll1l8¢lall after re- porlt tlaat oolne pl-.! to feature naked mqdo)a In 111elr ~all. · • "!be b!jn was part of 1 strict new TV code established In the wl!l!e-ef Ill' an~l(lil)' crusade -ond an .ap- , ~ ~ la OODJP!~•·fNm televtslon fans that iha~-~~ """'l golifA!ot>far. '!'lie _Inde~ -Wiii:' Authority said In Ila aJID!lll 'l'i*t It ·wool;1.g-estloos of nudily lnr*!r~ts, bow llY,..if ~uc!lty bad no rele\-apc6 to -~ adv "'. or avice," However, the 1BA, ·~ates Britain'• commer- cial TV ne"twoci: ·and whleb will ,nm the country's oom- merclal radio ~' "'hen· l &bey ccmt on me air next year, made no i:iieittlOh ot covering up uUdea. IPPfiirlng in drama productions. But the organization stressed It fe1t ua tleg:ree of un- dress" in conunercials was acceptable in acfverUsinl un-- \ derwear and toilet artJcies -provided It was treated with dlacretklo\. • N 'Dew code al~ banned private detective agencl11t~ slimming ~ pre--cy· teiiing;' s.ei'vices and -vaPial- deodoraot1. · " · ' ' Tnideau Hanging In There <YfTAWA (APJ -Prime Mlni!ter Pierre E 11 l o t t Trudeau says he won't quit despite Iii!! tie vote In Canada'• general e1ection, and the 'leader of the N e w Democratic party pledged the .Upport Tnu!eau needs for a majority in the House of Com- mOlls. Trudeeu told a televi!ed neWa OOl!fettJce be would ast Gov .'-Gen. Roland Michener to call Parllame~ into session· as (I;> SHORT . .-.) , "'' ,,...,..... Ken_.edy ,Memorial DAIL V PILOT 5 i Johs -~Up; ~ate Same WASHINGTON (UPli - The nation'• unemploymen1 rote remained unchanged In • October Ill 5.6 percent, but the number of penons with jobs went up 280,000, the govern- ment aaid today. 11>e Bureau oC Labor Statlst)o (BLS) of the Labor Department said the joble"' rate showed no Improvement despite the lncrease I n employment. It explained that the higher number of jobs was offset by a conUnulng inRu:s: of new workers into the labor fortt. October was the fifth con- s e cut 1 v e month that une.mpklyment had held at about i .s percent alter hove,... Ing around 6 percent for 19 consecutive months. Coming four days before the presidential election, t h e report's possible impact on voters was difficult to assess. While unemployment bas fallen half a percent.age point during the administration's Phase II economic controls, it is stW far above the 4 percent jobless rale target originally set by the White House. On Thursday, the BLS issued a somewhat more favorable economic report - from the administration's standpoint. It said wholesale pric6 slowed down 1 a 1 L month, with the rate OJ per- ctnt below September. In today's report, the BLS said lhe number ol unemployed worken remained unchanged in .October at 4.t ~ million. while the number of workers with jobs hit 82.$ million with the M0,000 in- crease. The.re was UtUe or no change in the jobless: rates for most categories of workers. Adult men 3.9 percent; adult women. 5.5 percent; white workers 5 percent; Negroes 10.I percent: beads of bouschplds, 3.4 percen~ and married men, !.a percent. ARTISTE de la Rue Now Thru Sat. ~ .,... a ••iAn nm:: IOOD as possible ao his Liberal government could determine lts fate with a vote of con- fidence, In, Commons. The prime muilster said the Mrs. Ethel Kennedy loob up at bust of late hus- House carmot ineet befDre the -~ban~d~,~Ro~be~rt~,~f~o~ll;o~w~in~g~un'¥iive~ilin:·:g~c=e:re:m:o:n~y~in~~--,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=--- ~oath Coast ?tua ~ Japlt'neSe Straggler ~(,.,'.1':.,,!~t01r.e/',;~.-Brooklyn civic center Thursday. ,,. "'""'" '""''u-• ·! observers said It may not con-I-------------------------'-------------------,-----------· M , s • vene until January because of . arries ' pinster ~~~uled in at least NAa';;'~A, Japan (UPI) -sp;;,;,ter from the old Japanese • ti P-ml Burietl Shoichi Yokoi married the old-capital of Kyoto. VENICE (AP) -Poet Errs fashioned girl he wanted to-Yokoi married her today at Pound was buried tod,ay in the day. a shinto Shrine worshiped by same Venetian ls land Yoko!, 57, returned home Japanese as a symbol of vie~ cemetery where composer almost a year ago, a national tory. _ · Igor stravinsky aod ballet im- hero. after two hunters on -Yokol and his bride stood in presario Sergei Diaghilev lie. GUam captured him -and en-front of an altar of Atsuta A simple Roman Catholic ded the longest holdout of all Jingu, a shrine in a forest service attended by several by Japanese soldiers who did near Nagoya, 180 m i 1 e s hundred mourners was held in not know or did . n o t southwest of Tokyo. the Church of San Giorgio acknowledge ·that World War 1be cOOple stood in front of Maggiore, and then a black n was over. a priest, sipped sake three gondola decorated with six He said he wanted to get · umes -the bridegoom first wre~ toot the coffm on the married, but not to one of the and followed by bis bride. He ~mlnute trip acros.s the modern Japanese i;:irls in their then read a written statement lagoon lO the island cemete.r)'. miniskirts and makeup .. Then saying he and his wife will live of San Michele. friends arranged a meeting together until death separates • C'••-• .Fu.s• with Mihoko Hatashin, 44, a them. r r- GRAMBLING , La. (UPI) - Grambllng College students Indians Stay Holed Up· 'WASHINGTON (AP) About 30.D Indian demonstrators remain bar- ricaded today jnside th e Bureau of. lndlan Affairs building they seized at ~dusk Thursday, their night's stay permitted after the White House apparently overruled plans to ei.:ief, theo;i.. • . set mattresses on fire lo a women's dormitory, threw bot- tles through windows of other buildings and s m a s b e d fumJture late 'lbursday -the · . first violence in a weei: of peaceful protests. About 200 slate police were summoned lo Grombling, but did not actuall1;JDOve ontO ·the ·campus. Cilmpu's poUce said by midnight the disturbance ' Asians Arriv.e :....1 NEW YORK (UPI) ,-?lith few possessions other*• clothes they wore, 82 ns expe~ed by Uganda ha - rived In the United to take up a new life. ~ ; 'Ibey were the v~n~ of 1,000 stateless Asia111 . the United States agreed to ~t of the estlmated ,~;000 banished from the Afric!n·.J\3- tion by President Idi AmJi. Sunday, Nov. 5 PARK NEWPORT Enter Cycling Events WIN 10.SPEED SCHWINN BIKE In door prize drawing STARTING AT 1:00 Or>-btke~ Bike lliic(eo Wheepe-P,ntest SlalOll\ .. Sprint tace. Open:Giand Prix Ba\l~re bike race Hille. Treasure hunt Clasefff't)tmales and fem81es, Juniors iiilit adults, anti wrioOO bike~ - Negotia~for' ,tbe ~ndia~ said · they -would I e a v e sometime, tbday.'•' It was ~. however, whether the-' proteSters would resume the p r e a r r·a·n Tt'd! schedule for the Trial of Broken Treaties c a r a v a n ·which bad been designed to dramatize what they called their fight for survival in white America. Amo.ng•tbe,.~ctlvjtief set for today was a spiritual service at Arlington Cemetery for In- dian victUps .of war. ~y had vowed lo ooli! the service in defiance of an Army ban on "partisan" events in the cemetery. ~ AjlllWttlN . • _::, DRAWll'IG.F.OR,1~flqD ~ ,, SCHWINN BJKE -" Di1t>l8Y d S~.~ worih Ol rWe bikol'-tl~ time ever in Grange County Contests lor-tfieCiillt\i bikes - Oldesttw<>wheeler anllquo bike OldMf-rd>blke 'e..t~bike Motl Oli!llllldino tricycle LicenlinQ by Newport Beach Police ENTllT FEE: S1.00ADULTI -. ' •• llO CHILDllEN UNDEll 11 Fee Includes entrance to ev.nta IWid dOor · prtze drawing. Spoctltlng It tr.I All proooedt Witt go ti) IUPPo!t ~ conllnulll!O cyottnQ ialoty progrom. • c,,.,Y..,. undo< 12 must be-il<lby parent. All ontnint, urdtr 1 S · must bl1nQ woJwr tavari.ole It Newport bike lhoPO. . pertc Ind r~ion cont..., and .._.ung m81Cl1ant1) 1~ by patOnt. bad~. e 6Nil1t·Clt.l111 MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -A • major U.S. grain expQrler J says It lost some $661\000 on a · 2-million-ton wheat sa e to the Soviet Union last summer. farglll, Inc., said on Thurs--!'a~ day it was breakin( fl~· 107-"°". year~Jd tl"adition Of n o t .., revealing details Ot 1 t s transactions because of allega· lions that e:s:parters reaped windfall profits on the grain aa)es. • • ·- , If you like to spend leisure hou~s on tile ocea~beach · VOit ON PROPOSmON NO. Proposition No. 20--the so-ealledCoastal lnltia· tlve-doesn't make one dime available for new access roads to California's beaches, or for any expansion of camping, picnicking, boating, and other recreational facilities for the public. Actually, Proposition No. 20 could clamp down on any new recreational development on the beaches by public agencies for as long as five years, just as It could stop a lot owner from build· ing a home on his property, or a city lrom building a sewer treatment plant. It Imposes a virtual moratorium on building lor any purpose-publlc or private -within a permit area that extends as far Inland as Sacramento and Stockton. It does this by superimposing a time- conaumlng, cumbersome new permit procedure, controlled b}"'appolntad State Commissioners, on top of existing local permit procedures; and by allowing any person-who need not even be a realdent of Callfomla-to tie up In the courts, with- --. . VOTE • PROPOS11m NO. ' out even posting a bond, arr/ proposed project, large or small. All of the California shoreline up to the mean high tide is publicly owned by the State, or If pri- vately owned, Is subject to a public trust. Of the hall mile land area along the Paclilc Ocean, more than 75 per cent is In open space and more than 41 per cent is in public ownership. But only a small fraction of the Coast-less than 1 per cent -has been opened to the public for camp grounds, picnic areas and accessible parka. The problem is to get to-the beach. Proposition No. 20 doesn't unlock any of this vast area lor the public. enjoyment-It does just the opposite. It can prevent development of beach parks by public agencies. It can lock up the beaches from the public. . Proposition No. 20 benefits only a favored few now fortu1111te enough to own beach front homea In exclusive areas. • CITIZENS AGAINST THE COASTAL INITIATIVE 170 MARKET l"tRl.IT &AH FRANCISCO, CA t4t0l 1127 WU.SHIM avo. LOS ANOELEI, CA Mtf m A ITftEET, SUffE tt01 SAN DIEGO, CA t2t01 ~ RIWIO W. WADE-. C"¥ •I.tot -...... -._ . __ -F.CllOWUY-·T-""-'-COlo<t!N'-.Qllt AL-.TQlt,ta-AnlfMJ .. IAfll C...-. • ........ , -I Fllfd- • --~· ... / • • ' • ' • • r ' • ' f • . • • I ' I l I I \ J ,, ' -. ' DAD.Y PILM' EDITORIAL PAGE • A Wise The enormous ~ and building needs in the soon-to-be-delunct San Joaquin School District are well· known. Voters in Irvine have long supported San . Joaquin bond efforts. For the first time Nov . 7, they will have the Chance to decide the fate of a bond issue for their own schools. School Measure K on the general ele<tlon ballot would approve the sale or $50 million In bonds for a J(). ye~ construction program of 10 elementary schools, three in termediate schools and two high school.s In the new unified di.strict. Unless K passes by the necessary l\VO-t.hirds vote, Irvine Unilied will be virtually penniless for building funds wben it begins operati<Jo July I, 1973. The bonds, wbicb would be paid back over 25 years. would also cost about $28 million additional in interest. But the investment by the voters, althoagh big, is worthy of approval. A unified district can oruy sell bonds worth up to 10 pertent ol its assessed val uation, minus any bonded indebtedness at one ti.me. Irvine Unified, with an asses- sed valuatio~ of about $108 million, will inherit debts from both San Joaquin and Tustin Uni~n .. of . an esti· riiated $5 million. This means only $5.8 million m bonds could be sold at one time. Althou gh the measure 'vill slightly raise taxes, it \Von't be burdensome. A taxpayer with .a $30,000 hom e, for example. would pay about $7.50 more a year in taxes beginning in 1974 if K ~asses. That's n~t an ex· orbitant fee to pay for a building program lrvme trus- tees say '"ill put an end to the inefficient and costly - and losi ng -proposition of trying to play "catch up" with growth. a.tore school s are sorely needed in Irvine, especial· U.S. Cultural Snobbis1n ls Disappearing ~YD NEY J. HARRI~ When the Metropolitan Opera opened , ils sea.son in New York a few weeks ago, Y.'ilh an apparently smashing production of "Carmen", the cast Included : Marilyn Horne, Marcia Baldwin, J a m e s ?.1cCraci.en, Tom Krause, Raymond Gibbs, Russell Christopher, my old neighbor Donald Gramm .-,and IOIDe foreigner named Adriana MaUPoote. Thirty years ago, 20 yean aao, even 10 years ago lhis oo- menclature would ' have been reversed: there would be a doz· en names like Mali- Dear Gloomy Gus ....... 1 lhlnk those rest(uranls across MacArthur Boulevard from · the airport are missing a good bet. With lhe way traffic moves through there they could mak~ a fortune offering curbside cocktail service. --G. A. J. Tiiis tH1'WI r9'llCJI f'NMn' .._, lltf ~ ,,... .. .. ... ,........ IMlll ,_ ,... ......... _, ..... °*'"' Pli.t. !ban any -would turn up their no... at anJ American name, no matter how fonnidable the Went that acoompanied It, llO that our native perfonners were virtually forced to RO a.broad and return pstudoo.ymou.sly. ••Achlevtng·a ~' in European opera Jor an American often meant achieving a name other than your own. ponle Jn lhe cast, to PART OF TIDS, of course, was one like Gibbs or realiiUc~ the U.S. simply. didn't provide Baldwin. the training-ground for serious 1lngers The United States that Europe did ; there were few places may n 0 t yet have for an apprenti ce to lea rn his lrade, an.d come of age in Its even fewer opportunities to sing in public cultural dimension, but at least we have with a working company. outgrown the 1nobblsh xerrophtl1a and the But just as !"uch was an lngrain'ed national inferiority compM!J: that have cultural snobbJShness that respected plagued ua alnce our origin. European performei'I even lf tbey were ----m·belior~........tually lnlerlor lo our . In decades past, serious American home-grown product. You had to be t'wice singers were forced to go to Europe and ood ii led 1 t h " f make something of a name there for a~ g . you wan o ge au as ~ themse lves berore they were accepted in wtth a lmeage that went back to Kansa American operatic circles. Some subse-Qr Iowa. · quently famous ones went IO far u to change their home-grown American names into exotic European cognomens, both as a deception and a "glorlflcaUon" or thei r identity. iTHE SA.ME WAS true, and perhaps even more .so, in the esoteric field of ballet, where a little "Jewish girl rrom London named Alice Marki felt she bad to transform herself into ' ' A 1 i c i a Markova''.) Opera companies -and the Met more IT RAS ALL chang~ now. Marilyn Home, and Beverly Sills, and that robust Australian, Joan Sutherland, are as im· portant "name.t" in opera a1 any glottal Serbo-Herregovlnlon or florid Florentine. An:! when the Met opened thJt year, the costumes were by David Walker, the choreography by Alvin Alley, and the conductor was a Lawren ce, Massachusetts boy named Lennie Berns- tein . Miss Maliponte must have wondered whe re she was. World in Money Crisis --Bee It is difficult to 1lmp!Uy the many ramifications of lbe current world monetary cri1l1, with Its tmpact u great upoo the United States as upon any of its Western world tradinC Partners. One thing ta clear: Basic reform ta needed. Thta ta whit Pr8ldent Richan! Nila:sl and~ Secntary O.Orge P. Shultz ,..k lo ~"'8 about In a proposal lo the finance m.tnlater1 of Europe, and whaterer the ulUmate arrahgemenl!I prove lo be II 11 a salutary step tn the rlllhtdlr!ctloo. Al NllOD pointed out, tr1de de!Jcits and CllTl'efte7 dlop11rttl es -In which U.S. gold NlttVel have been a m1jor vktlm -ln-ly a/feet the llv.1 and Jobs of ord.lnar)r wortlni: mm and womtn, ln- ve1tors, large and am.all business ~--•• Georse ---· Dear Cl<orfe: I _,Id llh to bt<ome a pelltl- <1111 and nm kw &be US ~ or ~ llonYtt, I don't l'f'«l lmDW the dllfamce btlwetn a llel,alM!r'at and • ll<oubllcan. Doet the! make 'Ill' clJ({ettoce lo my polltl<al Mia.I HOPEFUL rr.anagers and, ultimately, political leadership everywhere. Nixon and Shultz have proposed that ln1tead of the dollar. and Its gold n:serves, being used a1 the monetary stabllizlng factor, the Western world should tum lo valuin1 currencies in temi1 of SORs (IJ)OdaJ ctr1wlng rlght.I) which would be regulated by t& World Mo:ietary Fund. The fiuctualing \laluet of nny given coun1ry•s currency would be wel1hted ngatnst SOR!, and any time lt.11 trade surplus rtllched an unduly hl8h level, Its currency. In terms of SOR, would be revoluated. This 1hould do much to 1Ulblllze the current wild fluctuation In currtncles. "'hl<:h has had a great brunt upon lhc dollar and aggravated the problem of our deflclt balances. , How European finance mlnlltrlea will react II yet un«rtaln. Surtly lb>ugh, they ought lo ... tt ta lo the beat lnterut al the Western -.omlc oommunllJ lo come to agreement on the crttrcal need for monetary 1tabWty. As Nixon put I~ eccoomlc In It.I deepest sense muns the moaay law of the ~. the household of e<onomlc nelghbon. He MSded: .. Thi• house we llYt! ln -this community of naUons -needs far better laws to 1Wde our fu~ure economtc con- duct." We can only hope the European lllUons ' will rise abovt •1aresatv.,.economk NII· inltrtll, II lhe U.S. lllt.lf now proposes, and perceive ttanomlc harmony LI to thtt best interest of all. I Investment .. ly In the central areas. They must be planned before the children are on the doorsteps, waiting for the bus to take them to the nearest school -acroos town. Irvine District oUlclala have vowed that bond money would also be used for advance planning. The $50 million is lar~e for one bond ele<Uon, but is in a way, more econonuc. Having smaller, but more frequent bond elections would only cost the dlstr!c~ and the taxpayer'?, more money. School Measure K is probably tbe wisest Investment Irvine voters~wilt have a chance to make in many a year. The D~ Y PILOT strongly supports a yes vote on the Irvine school bonds. Props. I and J ···YES Voters in the Saddleback Community College Dis· trict Nov. 7 will be voting on two special measures - Propositions-'! and J. Proposition I woUld rearrange the sprawling trus- tee area five into areas fiv e, six and seven. Its companion measure J, would then· increase the number or board members from five to seven. Trustee area five now takes in most of th e south county, from lrvine to San Juan Capistrano. Under the propositions, a compromise from a better proposal to have representatives from each community, area five would be Laguna Hills; area six, Lake Forest and Irvine, and area seven, San Juan, El Toro and Miss"tn Viejo. Although this is not ideal, it is much better than the current. extremely non-representative set-up. The DAILY PILOT supports yes votes on propooitiona l and J. ' ' SB ·Deficit Financing ls Basie Cat1se of Inflation ,Big Spending Destroys Our Saving Tu the F.ditor: lnflalloo Is cbeallog the innoceDt old, retired and widowed people who live on returns from savings accounts, annultles and Social Security. The resources of all of these helpless people ·are being shamefully and pitile.Ml)' expropriated via the shrinking minJ dollar. TlllS IS ALL brought on by the spenders in Congress, who are wildly speodlog beyond tax Income iJi wbat Is known BS "deficit fioaodna". Acconling t: Congressman Wilbur Mill!, "Deficit spending iJ the sole buic cause of In· Dallon." We must .put an end to this sbameful cune of apocalyptlcal government spen- ·dlng, -·---·-• . ---. - C. C. MOSELEY Teaeher Otlerloarl To the Editor: Your article on the follow-up study of Newport-Mesa graduates paint. out something that . any teacher or counselor could have told us for years, and they have been trying to. The largest complaint on the part of lhe graduates was the lack of individual attention from teachers Ind COUMelors. Wben teachers are required to meet with 175 -per day, and the -have a student load of. over 450 each, (both conditions exist In Newport-Mesa), it is a. little difficult to find much time for "individual attention". LET'S HOPE THAT theae Kf8duales will now, as citizens, be wlll1ng to sup. Pon educational reform that will bring about the changes that will ellminale the source of their CilmplainlJ. It currently C03ls about 93 cents an hour to educate a child In the NewPort· Mesa system. Now that's not bad for babysitting, much less getting a bell of a, g~ educalion. With smaller cliw: sizes and lessened counselor case loads allow· Ing more lnctjv\dual attention the current educational process could be vastly Im· proved, and it doesn't really cost that much. CHUCK CANNIFF . Repre3e11tatJve California Federation of Teacben AFJ..CIO Thew .,._ D•ltfler To tbe Edltor: Perhaps I.ht Oct. 24 1rtlcle on Colla Me~ . p:illce oUletr Nas h's narrow eseape from"'death, in Irvine, will bring to light the danger• which face our policemen dally . As the wUe of a poUce otrioer, t can trlJ you that there Lin~ a dlJ or nJibt U\at my husband goes to work, that I don't anlicipale his safe arrival home. I am very proud of my hl&lblnd, aa I feel he 11 very ded!cated to bla pro- fts11lon ond feel he is the eplklme or a line officer. I only hope, the public as a whole, who read this article, appreciate th e sacr1fla!s U>ete men and their famllJes make !or lbe lalely and well beJni o( their fellow men. BE:Tl'Y LOU llAMILTON ci.r .. e Seda To Ille Editor: I am wrttlna In def-o( &be 1ow1Jr garage sili. Wb1 II It that • ..,, U... lhert ls a hannJea pattlme llb carace nles, 1w1p meets. etc.. U)tre Ls aome obscure oppoettion force trying to squelch them? I 11,y obscure 'beCauae whoever they are lr)'in1 to &top, they alwa.YI hide behind "law belna dralied" qlloll them. Who lo pll1hfnr !or lhl• l1w1 6-nd hand furniture stores lbal t'harae teVuaJ llmu whit an tttrn la worth, who k.oow lhe per90n looking for, aay, a baby bed when they ·act word that grandktdt are ' coming for a week or 10 days ,they ask $2:9.951or a used bed that in some stores was donated to them in the first place, and the person can find the same bed al a nelghborirJod garage.sale for $10. elected he will appclnt a Certain number of lhi.! or that minority to hfs. cabinet. This ls. hardly a proper coruilderation for picking the absolute best person to h"ad a departmen1 and advise the President. The best possible person obould be ap- Pointed without regard to race or aex. Nixon is not all wise or otherwise perfect, but he doea tnow bow lo utilize the intelligence of our nation and thereby b&s accomplished much. He ls a good team captain. He ls wise enough not to always carry the ball and do the spec· tacular. He holds team score above in· dividual score. I.believe he is the best man for the job. JIM BOLDING Nut11 Polities .THIS JS AN 1<1!!11 ~: I bought the baby bed for $10 after pricing them at the local stores. I sold It at our "garage To the Editor: sale" for the same SIO price. Naturally If ever the cltizeDl of America should the second hand atores don't like th.at be concerned over persons running for kind of eompetiUon. Neither <k. the "an-the hJghest Office 1n the land, the llque ahops" who put out the junkiest presidency, now Is the time. To have looking stuff at outrageous prices and McGovern compare·· President Nixon to call it antique. · Hitler, to crucify him at every tum and People who make the garage sales as a ge t away with it ls alarming to me. Saturday and Sunday pastime, and I Politics has alwa11 been . known to be know lots of sen\9r citizens and. retired nasty, but when they approach tbe act of folks who go to garage sales. Just for traitorous untruths, . then It ls time to ~me low cost afternoon pasttme, and think about c:hanifne our attitudes pick up a vase ~re f~r a do~~ th~ tow.ll.nl ~~ such u would cost 10 um.es that at one or tlie McGovern to be able Tuget away~Wlth above mentJooed stores. such acts. NATURALLY, THE second· hand stores, whether they be antique or not, should not be allowed to put out a "Garage Sale" sign in front of their business, and if that is who the proposed law ls trying to stop, I am all for that. But if big business is trying to stop all garage sales because they don't like the competition, then it is time for all of us "llltle guys'' to stick together and stop this infringement on our rights! If lhi1 law Is al.med at our lowly garage sales, then tbl1 '25 "fee" is outrageous, too! I I could see a $2 fee -even that ii outrageous-but $25 would be criminal! SO lT BOn.s DOWN to this: If this law will prevent the average homemaker 'from making a dollar or two to help out with these high-priced groceries. etc., then I say we don 't need any more Jaws to 1motber us. But U this law is to pre- vent the normal, regular, clty·Ucensed bu!lnts!e! from cashing in on a mlsleedlng "Garage Sale" sign In tront of his baaiae11, then I'm all for it! 1be ctty know1 what business is a busfneu, and shouldn't have to get a few unscru~ uloua buslneu dealers! MR. AND MRS. EARL FERGUSON Geol[I Te•m Capt•I• To the Editor: _ Americans are inclined to be man-- wonhfpen. No m• ls perU<:tor all wlae. A poUtlcian ls as good "IS his orgiuUza.. Uon. Prtsldent KeMedy aever even "1'0t.e. hil own apeechel. The -reat wordo that you beard hlm say ao eleaanUy were written by a lpeedl writer. The President's cablntt i1 adually mort im- portant than the President him.self. A w<ll-org1nl%.ed e>ec:utlve department would run 1t1elf. IUCllAJID NIXONlolinMd 1o~,. an e.-.0 team -!!1-wtt, '"""' ----lie ... tho lop man In that departmmt during oerloul lllno"" ci &be Pm!dent. El"'1hower learned lo opel'tite IAICh a team aa Genoral o( the Allied Anni<I ln the deJ••t of Hitler. 1, McGonm ...,. elected. he would dou-oppolnt t-who pt him nomln1ted or lhe ones who they would aupesl. Most of thorn a111 kleallit! •bo haye llltla uperlenoe In prac:llCal mat. ten of IOYemlnftlt Ht 8"8 PROMISED that if be Is 11IE TWO.PARTY system has kept American mostly honest, by every four or eight years flushing out the impurities an<l starting clean again. However, in this electkll when our country need! real truth ln ii! crlsll to seek peace and end a nJgbtmare war, each individual, in- cludLng McGovern, should sacrifice penonal gain !or hi.I eel!lsh rue to power. GRANT HARDING PHILLJPS St11U's f.e9islatlo1t To the Editor: .U a teacher, I am In the procesa of developJni ob}ectivea for my cow•:: ac- conllnl lo procedures lnlplred by &be legtatatlpn which made the name of Anemb11mao John SluU • houaebold and ~ :enn wftb au educatora. IT OOCIJR8 lo IOI !bat tblo ·-. device kw clellnbif and l"'OJectllltl performuw ~--· -lo other areu, 1J1111cu1aitY llllalat!ve. Performance ml .-.Its Of COIJ!ornia legiilative 1Je1Skln.:; have bc!en aomethl.ng less tban aattafactory Ji> Ille-of the majqrllJ IJI. Calllal'ala ~ 11111 cttlzem ._u,, ~. II ts Ill!' su,,..&m, • a;001foni1a ~ lot n:iany ~~i.~t lqbltloi':..dnilw up ob-Jectlvea •i·1111 lierlnnlna-"Of.111e ......,, C<)mplete wtlh gufdellnei lir meuurJni 1111\111s. TllIB WILL ENTAIL many boun and ..tllucb paper worll lime and effort whfc:h -• 111'1 ... u feel mlrht be -r 1pent In COlT)'IJ1I ... pr1marJ and·;..rtinent duUea. Howtftr, wt all tnow•that •c-- countablll ty U.. al ti>; n:l'Y • .-al our democntlc lonn Of,...,_ GAY 'r4N WEY. • ·~ .... 2'ldu!U To the t.lilor.- IMI Sundlf, the rru1 "Tri-.'l'<I• Races'' we.re held It the Ne"tpOrter JM. Tbt Offl'fJow ol people for th· , "tu:.." cc- .-_ wti1cb -Nnport·Beaeil a sreat place 1o Uve; ..u...s a......,, ·ty porttna prollltm. lJlldeld GI JliO polios deplitllent belnc on -lo ootnil tllo-. ~ mmlJ pmed out J>Utlol -"'*-lo can wbldl _,, not -.,,.,rn, anything. Tiils type o( police ac\loa "" do nothing but, tarnlsh th• inulge o! departDl"nl In the eyea of realdeota and visiti:•rs to our city'. CHARLES F. WADll: ' Be's tor Prop. 19 To the Editor: Your "~ontt of Proposition 19 (101%1172) was dlsappolnllngly shallow Yoo are e.itber misinformed or selected parUal facts in support of you negative position. MARIJUANA, alcohol, tobacco and aspirin all are dangeroll! if used to ex· cess. Propositioo 19 does not encourage the use of pot; it realistically decrtmlnaJ!ra the penonal use, pcmet. aion and ' cultivation. After the mo.fl ct1mplete-study ever made of the medical and social evidence about :annabls, decriminalization has been recommendc1 bJ PresJdent Nlson'1 Commi!Slon on Marijuana, as well as by the Los Angele; County Grand Jury, the National Institute of Mental Health, and the American Medical Asaot:ititlon Drug Commillee. These cautious authorities au ·-that marijuana "ta not addictive, d,.. not lead lo other drup, does not dar-qe &be body,. -·oo1 ~ "'"lll,!l lllnea, -mme-onloli!!«, d0enlorbave-r1e111a dosage. PJIOPOSITION It has far reaching economic and social significance. The present marijuana laws cost California taxpayers appnW.mately $100 million. each year. The arrest, prosecullon, trlal, incarceration and "rehabilitation" of hann1es.s 1narljuana users consumes tens of millions or dollars, chokes the capacity of Jaw enforcement ·agencie,:; and our courts. The rtsult is that Individual! who are privately doing nothing more hannful than the social drinker, are de. meBllod. harassed and degraded, wbJ)o. drug tralfickers and cr1m1nal elemeit1 go untouched for laci of re!OUl'CeS. Proposition 19 does not legallJe marl· Juana; it does not affect emun1 ltatutes regarding sale, posaeasiou and culUvaUon 1.,,-aale -these remain criminal ci· lenses under state llDll fedml ""'9--lt does allow lndll'ldNla lo fll'OW afld possees small quantities fer ptr'IMll use -juataa with.~. Wlneaod·l<lba<eo- 1 AM NOT a "pot bead" (I futl no need for marijuana, alcohol or ~), but I bave Loken the trouble to eumlne boll! sides. I believe it I.a eMeatill lbat we stop thll ootrlcb pbilolopby, _.led In !be 1'30o, and place mortjuq ln proper perspective. . .r. TO JMlS8 Proposition 19 will allow UI to coootrul:Uvely 1trect our legal effort.I to 1 ~t matten or crime and bard 1 <lrJlll. ROBERT c. ltA USEN I OUM•COMT DAILY PILOT Rol><rt N. 11'...,, Nii.her 1-IC•..U,1- Albtii W. Bocca .. • ,_ ""9< ldJltW '""' edllo<lll .... .. .... Dall1 • PUoc ...... to Worm and 1Urn~ I lit< -loy _...., .... ~Ptt'• oplnioftt and '*"" .,.__,. oa topb ol lnitr8t aM .... -...,-~ .. -"" ... ~-.;,-;:, -1....._ .... ...., .... IM • ..... Ylowpaj.,;,"' -... ~ .,.. ,poae ooo on topb otm. .... Friday, Novtmber S, U'72 • t • 17 • • . .. . II 11nihagion ~aeh · i•i• V alle1 · T.edity'• Flw•I • • VOL 65,. NO: 30a, '4 SECTION~, 5-4 PAGES . ' . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1972 TEN CENTS Police Pu;t Down Rioters • Ill By JOHN ZALLER ................... "You're not moving me, pig," scream- ed one .\Dog-haired ~demonstrat(lr above tbe .-. of ··the--wd "F........, .ii " S·~ ' . ~-V • ..... .... ~ • "~." .,.eu,.i, 'IOOlller demonstrator at th. ~i.;tly.slralgtif Police columns ,that were Ciittrmting him. "Soi.eeeee!" ''.l'ilt-.!'Jcl," .joined in the rest of the crowd. .~'Pip!'' apparently not bearing the provocaUons. Then a short squad commander butted: "Move in." With that, the columns waded Into the jeerinlt<femonmaton anc1· this momlng's · mock battle over the admbWitratioo iJuildlng at Golden West College began In earnest. students. "Be professional." "You tnow the pressure bolds and But the young policemen, working tricks to make lhem giw in. Uae them, against fellow law enforcement students · or you'll never last through the kind of who were doing their best to be ob--•· . noxious wen a little too eager. four-hour .. ttuahon you may face some • ' d .. "Look, 30Jlle of you are pailting. You 're ay. out of breath," their instructor, U. John The officers, none of whom have any Moquin told them after the demoostra-street experience. looked silently at their lion had been broken up. mentor. 3ome of them were sweating "'Mlat should never happen. I saw after the short ten-minute es:ercise that Mock Exercise· The 'M young pollee officers, 'including one JWlll)Wo~, looked sttaig~abead, "Not too eagerly. Not too ~erly," warned the squad leader as the ·young of- ficers set about thelr work of breaking arm Jocks and hauling off still struggling some of iOU running up to make arrests. was to be the first of many con-- Wrestling wilh people in arm locks. (See BAm..E, Pap I) ~· \"' Officials Lash Battin ., ., ................ __ . . CRmC:ZES BAmN MoywHolllnden Nixon Pushes Party Label In Noisy Chicago Speech Valley Pair Fire Salvo By MICHAEL GOODRICH The two councilmen also expressed °' ... .,.,,,. '"*' silft dismay at Battin's campaign tactics con- Two Fountain Valley city councilmen cerning the future of Mile Square Park:. Thursday afternoon blasted Orange County Supervisor Robert Battin for "The Open Letter about Mile Square is working against the interest of their city stupid and reflects the make1'> of the and spreading alleged untnnhs about the man.·He's either stupid or be hasn't dooe future of Mile Square Park. h'~ homework oo Mlle Square," Scott In a press conference at Fountain ha ed Valley City Hall, Mayor Al Holllnden and c rg · ' · Mayor Pro-Tempore George Scott charg-The councllman was referring to a Jet- ed Battin has deliberately worked ter in a mail publication in which Baltln ·against the city in order to coerce city charged that a "select group" of fannen councilmen. were getting rich with agricultural leases Battin, of Santa Ana's First District, is on the park and that subdividers were running for reelection next Tueaday about to grab a parcel of the land. against challenger WiDiam Wenke who Referring to the land grab, Scott said outpolled him by ne.arly 4,000 votes in the that It was impossible under the existing June Primary Election. The • Finl lease or the proposed conveyance of the Dtstrict ahlo includes portiom of Foun-title. taln Valley. Scott also said that Battin bad moved Hollinden c h a r g e d that Battin had in June to have the lease area divided in-- recently warned him at a hospital t~ three or more parcels to facilitate bid- dedication that "You guys are never ding by smaller farm.mi. going to <et any be1J> lro!il me unW W<L "He bas .... , , suggooted. the Jm. gel F.41,,.. tiff-~... ' -. I l'I' -II: I M of -port .. a JUI!, for.mer~· Fountain. \rafley iecr1-· U..,• IOott ~ and· p.....Uy a --bu -a ,~ Vallq hopes to develop a long ~ :x>lllicol \tie of Ba!Un. --In the put alter It 13 Hollinden alao ~rged Qlal the tumed owr to the cowity by the federal redi5trlcting of IUJ>OfYllorlal aleaa .... --October w1s a d e 11 b e r at e &er· 'l1le transfer ol Mlle Square bas been" rymanderln& el!jJlneered by Battin to apparenUy de!ayed by a land scandal In· keep Just from running against him in volvlng two Westmlnlter city 'officlals. the current dectlon.. The turnover bu allo been a topie of The redistricting removed the section controversy bet'ftell Battin a n d of Fountain Valley Just resides in from Supervisor David L. Baker. Baker claim· Battin's First District. Hollinden claimed eel Tuesday that Battln's Open Letler had this reduced the city's political impact in jeopardized the county 's acquisition of the county. (See VAUEV, Pqe I) CHICAGO (UPI) -President Nixon o~· party label. 1f 1f 1f 1f 1f fr oJl"'lldbut . ta(lhls-~flnaf·bomb;:-. 1nwm~g~·. t.;w~lth ·g-· ~-Ni .... on . .._alJUso ..... proWmised'!'"-l"'"'to'Wg<..iY .. e ,."""" ..... ls_,.,•'.__ .4 -! .,J. ~ fl lai"ms. Com?H. n -nts ~=o =-children attending private schools tax ti.~-I .f ~ credits to help offset tuition costs. ~rs who almoA arowned him out at He told t h e nlly of about 15,IKXI an aiiport baJ)gor rally. persoos such aid is needed to "maintain Chieago was the first atop on a two-day diversity and keep a stroog spiritual and $b!Jr of campaigning wblcb will take the moral E:Jement in the American educa· President to Oklahoma and Rhode Island tiorial system. \odaY and, after an overnight stay in the But as the President spoke, abouts of *e House, to North Carolina, New "Stop the war now ... ..._,the war ¥«it.co and California Saturday. n(t!IJ" became so loud that :llef were Al O'Hare airport, he a s k e d a ~up by the "loudspeakers and all but boisteraus crowd to help "elect the entire droWntd out Nlion's voice. ~bllcan ticket In Illinois." It was one Horm began blaring aS be started to cif the few times In Nixon's low-profile re-speak_ Nlaon keol taftlng, doggedly lg-~ campaign that be mentioned his (See NllCON, Page Z) . -. . WI•' ·a~ S•l11l . . . "Senalor, N._'a ~ lo be1'I 10l1 oo bid you'll be ICllTY you e•er left 8outll Dakota. Tllat's whit the heckler said lo Sen. Oeor&• llc- Omenl at KeUoa Alrpcll't In ll!thlpn What wu the Mnalor'• wbl• pered~ 8111 llory Pap 4. . -· ( Against Battin False • An aide to Supervisor Robert Battin said today that charges leveled by two Fountain Valley City Councilmen against his boss were false and intended to em- barrass the supervisor. "These comments are their decision to enter lnto the race." said Bill Meyer. Battin ls currently in a heated cam· pa1gn for his seat with Santa Ana at· tomey William Wenke. r..otaJo Valley City Councilmen Al Hollindeu and George Scott charged Thursday afte..._ that Battin hal tri<d to coerce their council and hal IProM alleged falaeboods •bout the turnover of · Mlle Squano Park to the COWJty. Tltey spedllcally cblrged that Battin ·bad-..ru.ed to do anything for Fountain Valley uoW Councilman Ed Just alo!>Ped -'"' the llUpetVi3or. "I wW categorlcally deny that ony rela.-.Jp -..., Ed Just and Battin bu ollected aoocl government." ...,aJed Meyer. Holllnden and Scott said that Battin bad MllOed to authorize the Installation of curbs, llU!terl Ind widened roads tn · the j)lrlt In acldltloo to refuting to O<der the cowity sberill to patrol the park. ' Meyer said he would have to investi- gate those allegaUons before be woukl comment on them. Commenting on Battln's alleged refusal to meet with clty officiaJs to discuss these problems, Meyer said Battin would come out tomorrow, if invited. "Bob's a shy man, though he can be gutty," said Meyer. "He's ltflSitive about nosing Into other people 's affairs unJeu he 't invited." Scott cltllmed Battin had never .:oug- gested the immediate dtvelopment of Mlle Square Part and that Battin's cam- paign letttt alleging mi!ule of the prop. erty WU mporuible for llalllng I .. turnover to the county by the federal gtvemmtnl. '"The publlc reconl -· that Bob urged the development of the park two years qo u eccnomJcs permitted. The open letter bu nothing to do with lit tramfer" replied MeJ!!. Battin bad aflO dalmed tn his felltt that deYelopen ...... tryinl to ll'ab come of the parlt~y 10< homeaftel. 'llliJ was refuted Stott "We've manr ICtioUt tnquirits !let BATTIN, Pap I! Drug Overdose Mrs. Brophy Ruslied to Hospital I LOS ANGELES (AP) -S.-Marie llraDllY. wile of Loa Anplel area AnarnNymaa Wllllam Bropby, wu ,,_ to UCLA medical c.nter eorly to- day IU!fertng from what polloe --u a dr"I --Mn. Bntplty, It, a formtr -~ wu reponed w--=ioua and In a coma by bolpita! olllclala. Doc:ton refuoed ............. -..... Bropby -a.-... ---· lloopilal ofOdafo ·llid alto WU IUfftrinl ................. tory -· and rd\Jaed lo """"""* lurtbor. Sbo -a .No\'. u trtaf data ........ .........-and ..... dtarpl IWn"lloc from I traffic -t clurinl the IWMllr lo -a Qodafly couple ... tilled -Poclilc Pall ...... . 8fOPl>1dr..,.,..1111 bid fer a ... 1 In OOnpw all« the _....,... and dJVC dtarpl ---....... hll wilt. DI.IL Y PILOT Plwte W peft1cll O'~ OFFICERS REMOVE 'D~STRATOR' AT GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE Stitged Eftftt1 Gin Young PollceMen Training for Future 'n:!•'!;f'"f1'~,-,~t'J'~ 3 ~ed Countries Help Resupply SouthYietnam WASHINGTON (AP I -The United Slates has persuaded three Aslan allies to lend South Vietnam U.S.-supplied FS fighter planes for a hurry~p buildup of the South Vietnamese air force, the Pen- tagon reported today. Pentagon spokesman Jerry W . Friedhelm aid !ran. Tai-and South fCoru agrttd'10''~:.:::,_=-.. ir'Olh their inventories and ·that .:>mt deHm1e:t are under way. 'Ille F'5 ii In lhort supply In the UoUed States and for this reuon U.S. offldals the pa.ort few da11 approacbod Mftta! • countries to work out 10me sort of barter aJTangement. Friedhelm did not aay how the U.S. would replace these afrcrafl but Jn. dlcated thls could be with newer n. In the future or poalbly even more "'phtsticated Ft Phantom flahttts. The n ls a relatively 1fmplllied ~ lighter designed apeclflcally for .,. by ~ allies. r .. primary role ii air def ..... Sine< the proposed Vletnamete - settlement wu dilcloled Jut week, tba (See BUJU>UP. Pa1e ZI Prop. 20 Foes' Tactic Common Cause Target SACRAMEln"O (AP) -'Ille people who came up with the "Don 't Lock Up the Beach. No Of1 Prop ..... Jlnale are target.I ol a Common Callie complaint fUed with the naUonwkt~ Fair CamPll&n Practlcu CommJtteti, a tpokeanan ·aa)'ll. Thtnday, Ken Smltlt, Weatern rqlonal director fOr the _,...,. .,...p. uld !bet hll orpnlqlJon told the comm1uoe that Whl"br and Bater, a publlc refa· tk>N firm -Una the 1aU·Pn>p. 20 c&-1D, YJolated the electma cede. '"naelr Lacllcl have violated • buJc pnivillon of the cede which oondanna "tll!l' dlabontst or unethlcaf practkft whJch tend to cam.ipC or ll'ldtrrnlne our American l)'ltem of free tl«tM>nl ••. " the complaint reads In part. 1be Sierra Club and other tn- vironnltfltallst groups back Prop. •. whJch woukl Ht up one 1&.atewkir Ind tis regional commlukN with veto power OYtt dntlopmentJ akq: tht llalt't l ,017-mll• coulllnt. n. a:mmlttet thlt Qxnmon Caute dlnctod Ila complaint IO la a """"""11. , _...,,_,.I ~ wttll no Itta! clout ...... afttnlon of the oloclloN <Oda. But ll<tltort Otranl, a CllJIGnda Com- moo C.U. olllclaf. .id ., U....,. tt ,...Id bl a aooc1 lhlnl ~ the Fair Cam- pa!p Proc:tlcel Com!-lteld • publlc burtnc ... the -· Clem Whi!aUr Jr., W o( Iba &en -•-.llae..Wcr1tlellro of Iba anti-Prop. • -"" aNts --becbn tloD't llllt ..,... IO q-... u.-.::.:i:-:r.r.-11on· • fa a ralatad 'lltw ,., • tbe- Ytderal CGmmi.• 1:11111 M Comtnilltorl nllad tllat 1.. .., ---.. --.......... -· ---.... ilr to lillE -....,. The FCC edmonllhment was d.ncted 1t KRON and KTVU. 1bt ·c.utornLI Coa11al Alllllnce, wftlch bacb the .......... appealed to 111e rec on the grounds that under I.ht f1il'DM9 -the ..... p lllould ..... fne um. to l<lJ their _,. CeuC • • - lll011atth R<>ualty . Candace Baru>n, daughter of Mr. and MI'fi. John W. Barton of Huntington Be a c b, wa! crowned 1972 . Homecoming Queen at Mater Dei High School Thursday night. For story on Mater Dei-St. An· thony football game, see Sports. Transit Plan Wins Backing From SC .4G Orange County Transit District's ex- pamive plam to provide additional bus service to most of the county beginning in Decmiber got a big boost Thursday from • transportation committee of the Southern California Association o f Governments (SCAG). A presentation by pcro General Manager Gordon "Pete" Fielding to the SCAG Coniprehensive Transportation P lanning Committee resulted in the district's applications for $17.9 million in state funds from the new sales ta1 on gasoline imposed beginnlng last July 1. Also approved by the SCAG committee was an application for a federal grant of $18.3 million aver a flve year period to buy 162 new buses. SCAG must approve all transit district outside funding under the state regional control law. Fielding's presentation Thursday in- cluded ocrrrs plans for a Dial-A~rude service In La Habra to be initi.i.ted in December; the proPoSed 25 cent flat fare for bua trips between any two polnb in the county; an 11-acre park-and-ride facill~ 1" Fullerton for commuter• to Los Angeles, and a two-year aludy on the future rapid transit modes and corridors. The $16.3 mlllion application to the federal Urban ' Mass Transportation Administration Jnciudes $10.9 mlUi-On in federal funds and $5.4 million from local sourcea including the atate gu · .,1 money. . •• The dlatrlCI to date !1 "i'!rallng the form.r South Cool! Tnlmlt Corpoi:altbn lln<J fn>in ;Sont.1 Ano , to UC!, Coota Mesa, Ne'"1>ort l!elcb rid Laguna Beach and the Santa Ana dty transit u ..... Sexless Convict Won't Be Freed NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -The t..oulsian, Supreme Court haa i'efused to free an iilmate-who contei\di!d he could not be rehabilit~ted without sex. Billy Wayne Sinclair, an inmate at the Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola, said the deprivalion of normal sexual ac- tivities "u "cruel and u nu s u a I pun..Wunent" and prevented any chance of rehabilitation. The court d.1sagreed and refused Thureday to order 1 lower court to &rant Sincl.alr's request for a habeaa corpu11 writ. ORANH COAIT Ml DAILY PILOT I RedAttcek . · Laos Horror T~Id By MlMionaries VIENTIANE, Laos (API -"We got up at 5 o'clock on Sf:turday and were doing our devotions when we heard a short bunt or automatic fire. It was quite close." 'Ibus began a day of terror for Wesley Qopard. 49, of Des Moines, Iowa ; his wife Emma : and four other misajonaries or the Christian Missions in P.!any Lands, as Palbet Lao and North Vtetname.. forces movtd into tbt amaU ton of Kqkot In IDUlhem Loos. The bodies of two Americans. Evelyn Andenon, 20. of Quincy, llllcl>.. and Beatrice Kosin, 35, of Fort Washakie, Wyo., were found in the ruins of a · burned-out house in the town Thursday, their bands bound. Samuel Mattix, 19, of Centralia. Wash., and !Joyd Oppel, ·20. ol British Columbil, were taken prisoner and are still miss- ing. "We bad beard firing before and believed it was the Lao Army firing for fun or at the moon or to chase spirits away," sakf Cbopard, who has spent 15 years a.s a misskmary in Laos. "Just before • o'cloct, two of rour Lao Christiam called UJ from the road to alert us that insurgent forces were in the town. "We sent one of them to get the girts from their house further away. Suspect in Bar Shooting Ca~e Sentencing Due A Huntfngtm Beach man who pro- claimed "give me liberty or give me death" in a Westminater bar -and then almost received. the latter part of that exbortion -looked on today while his assailant waa found guilty by an Orange County Superior Court jury. The panel deliberated for almost three hours before returning to Judge J.E. T. "Ned" Rutter'! courtroom to find Leonard Calvin Farley, 3S, of Garden Grove guilty of wault with a deadJy weapan. • .. Judge Rutter ordered Farley to return to his courtroom Nov. 22 for what could ~ a lileiltence of one to 10 years in state pri.9o1!. Far!eY !lands convicted of shtiollng Guardians Of Freedom spokesman Vern .SteJ1ka1, 38, of a5Zl Tancter Lane, Hun- tington Beoc~· In the back shortly alter ~j""' d<llv~ the lamld Pab'lck Henry ballle cry. It was staled by witnesses that Farley became irritated by an impromptu ora- tion d<llvernd by Stejskal to patrons in the Circle J bar. 'I'hey said Stejskal was hit by a hail or bullets in the back and hip as the Hun- tington Beach man explained the import of Patriek Henry's me.ssage. ProM .... el BA'fFIN .. . , United Stlio. batboen nJSbblr lo -'Y South~ .wtqi addl~ ~alt ....... ~ irtlllery; llllCI armill..i tqulp- ment bi Od>ance of a ......,lire. In ad<lltlOn ·1o the Pio, sO.rth Vl!tnam is belnt0 supplied wttll C!IO transports. helicopters, AY1 jet c10se support fighters and Al pro-p.drtven fighters . Frledhelm acknowledged for the nm time today that the Cl30. a four-engine aircraft, was being delivered lo South Vietnam. The planes. he said, will be taken from National Guard and Reserve units: in the United State!. He reh!!ed to dlM:UM numbers but sources both in Wallhlngton and Saigon said South Vietnam wlll ~elve about 30 or the Ct30s. These planes: began arriving Thursday. The South VletnameJe air force never befort has ~lved these planet, A)though they ha vu 11erved 11 U.S. tac- tical transports for about a decade. Jn addition, aource! aald about 30 ect.. ditlooal Al71 are being strli>Ped from Ibo Air Guard and regular Air Fotw unlta here to •trtnglhen the South VI-. air fclrt-e. · No numbers were placed on thl n lMI\ It la belie\>fd that Saigon •ventualll' will receive about 12S of these p111H11. 11 now hat one oquad?on of I< in Ila lnvenlory. P'rirdhelm said the delivery of new weapoo.s Js ln tupport ot the effortl to negotiate a peace 1etllemenl and to "enllanco the poeslblllty lor llllCCe,.fllily concluding the hostillllea." "'There is a big lagoon beside our house and the Laos suggested we escape to the trees on the other side.' Our neighbor paddled us acrou in a canoe and we hid in lhe first llne ol trees. ''Before we left, we had one of our men go and alert tbe seven Filipinos at the Operation Brotherhood Hospital because they had a radio and couJd call for help." Chopard learned from bis Lao con- gregatloc th.al the North Vietnam ... soldl•n pused the house of Malti:I and Opp&! on their way into town but made no attempt to enter and seize them. Oiler Princesses The two mlsslonaries, one a carpenter \Yho had just finished buiJdin~ a sma!J schoolboose. jumped in their truck and headed for Chopard's house on the other One of these Huntington Beach High SChool coeds will be tapped as homecomiiig queen tonight. From left are Hollee Shidler, Mila Mjtchell, Debi Phelan, Karen Ahrens aod Beverly Harrell. Huntington Beach High Will observe its 50th homecoming with game between Oilers and I.Dara Saxons scheduled for 8 p.m. at Sheue Field. si de of town. At the main intersection, ttEy ·were ~topped by I burst of machine-gun fire across the ft'Olll of tbetr vehicle. "They were bound and taken away to an audience witil a higher commander." Chopard said . "The Lao Christians visited them and prayed with them even though they wtre prodded away with gunll. "We don't know wbat happened to the girls. Some reports said they died in the attack but we don't know." School District Urges 'No' Vote On Watson Issue Ank~ny Trial Delayed In Slaying of Coed An American doctor who examined the Trustees of the Huntington Beach A t'vo-month delay was ordered today bodles Thursday said they were too badly Union High School District are urging a in the Oranse County Superior Court lrial burned to be identified bat that tbey no vote on PropoSition 14. of a Ne\VPOl'l Beach man charged with belonged to 'Caucasian female.! of the If Propcsition 14, bettef. known as the the slaying of an attractive UCLA coed. sc.me physical build as Miss A,oderson Watson Amendment, Passes. the high Judge William Murray ordered Corli!! and Mis! Kosin. The bodies were sent to school district and its feeder district Kay Anteney, 33, of 3121 W. Coast Bangkok for an autopsy. could lose $l2,?lO,ot6 in funding, ac-Highway to return Jan. :!2 for trial on Although · both bodies had their hands eordini to 8 Jetter distributed by the allegations that he shot and killed Diane bound and both women appeared to have tru!tees. Singleton, JI, in his suite at the Towers died before they were burned, Cbopard 1be high school district would lose an Apartments last Sept. 18. does not tb1nk Ibey were e.ecuted. led 106 .. the Judge Murray ordered Ankeney beck "It seems their deaths were .Incidental estima 18•737• "' measure to bis courtrqmi Nov.10 for a bearlng to.. n .,,._ passes, ttie letter said. to the gh.~," be said. Trustees also pointed out that the level to a motion for discovery and on Jan. 5 It appeared they might have suffocated of per student spending and to 8 degree, for a pretrial session. The defendant la tomey's investigators have branded Ankeny as a longtime major narcotics dealer who sbowernd Mlsa Singleton wtlh costly gifts in the mooths before her dezth. Those gUts included a $12,000 sports car bearing the penooallzed llcease plate : BIZZAR. l'l'OlltP,,.el: B.ATILE ••• when the house was set afire during the educational program ltseH would be oow free on. '25,000 ball. fighting for the town, and being bound in. lb~ hands of the state if Pro-•11on 14 It . Is alleged that the wealthy frontaUom Ibey · !d this lllOJ1lins. they could not escape .. • ~ unemployed art instructor abot the. vie-But )!ten M!J(Jllin •dded, "doo'I worry. -Cbopard and bJs wife linked up with the is approved. · · Under the provisions of tim in his apartment and then later dro~ You did all r:lgbt for yoor first time out. Filipinos and were rescued by an Air is approved. ped the . fatally-woun.ded girl off at Hoag Juat remember what I said about taking American helicopter later Saturday. Under the provisions of Proposition l\1emorial Hoapltal. · your time." The capture of Kengkok, 8 town of ~iiec:S :r 8 s!~~;nt ~I 0 '!].£ : She died eight hours later and Anteny ha>..t M<>qthe mouln~gd ""i re on, ihal wvingas obviousef •boot. 1,000, look the Lao Army by s"-nd--' to San Mateo police upon t s a v ce was an • " legi11lature would determine the amount ..... " ca""' f~ In cb f era1 I ~ surpnse. The town was undefended. learning she bad succumbed. =i.. ea o aev comp ex •u-A.J it is the borne of the education of money distf'lbuted to each district. Arresting officers and District At-tloos the officer became lncreas1pgly minister, and of six members Of the Na-The controverslal proposition would sophisticated. tional Assembly, the government launch-basically reduce and place a ceiling on One officer who bad begun the morning ed • delennlned effort to get 11 back. ~~:'1.1.estaxes while increasing stale l'ro111 P .. e I by trying to pull a demonmator tooa. In tbrte daya ol heavy llgbting, a large from the crowd, by jerking on one arm, part nf the town wu Bet 00 fire and more BUILDUP later learned that by fllck1ng d1 a than 80 -.., houses de!troyed. • • • st\ldent's gluaeo, he c:oold get much Government forces finally declared the M~sing Solon , fn>m developen on the pat1t property," 1~cer, wbo bad tried to u.. town....,,. Tbunday. "'·their llWtb of d "· •·ton to ~·· arm 1-•, found the 11oua!s Ibey found the bodies of the .. W Mey'tr. ' ' ' · •= ~ -~ two American ... 1s. Still on Ballot Scott said the 1 .... 11mits the county 10 1a1er th.al a llti oo. an earloljo 0 -developing the land as a recreatkliual could be much more effective. "'Ibey loved il<!ngkok," said Cbopanl, "' . !lark. "We wanted them to get u...i to being ~ho bu lived there seven years. "They ANCHORAGE, A I a 'ta (UPI) -'1 donl~ knew bow the developers yelle4 . alt ."'Pl~ Ml>llUin. ."l'(e have been~ Jess tbfn a year. Evelyn Despite the fadlna 'tiape M' f~g would gel in, but anything can happen," wanted tbain tO know what to expect tn we! a nurse and Bea Wu 8 teacher." Democratic Rep. Nfck Begieb, lost with replied Meyer. the field so that 1f they ever wind up in a Cbopard plllll! to return to Kengkok House Majority leader llllle Boggs and riot, they'll know bow to bandle 11." . and bis mission Salunlay. two others in• small plane !bat dlsap-Red Satellite Up T!ie pollcefaced an bllagtnarybulldlng His house survived the fire but North peared last month, his wife has continued t •. keover, a grou~ posins: aa labor pickets his reelectkm campaign. MOSCOW (UPJ) -The Soviet Union and a staged attack on a draft bead· Yietnamese troops reportedly searthed The unJque situation, however, ha s resumed launching single Cosmos-series quartera building. It. created a dilemma for supporters nf satellites today, but burled number 536 "They made a Jot of mistakes out there in·~~:~ i:1~~-bu got a few bullet bole! Beglch, who was COlllklered a probable about 200 miles further out into earth today,'' said Moquin "but I hope they got winner in Tuesday's voling. orbit than usual. most of them out of thelr systems." At her ho.me in British Columbia, Op-.------'---,-..:....------------------------------pel's mother said Swiss authorities in- formed her that the Communists were holding her son and Malliz tn a vma,. IO miles eut of Savannaibet in aoutbern Laos. . ' She said the Swiss authorities have sent two men to the village to bares.in tor their release . l'rotn P .. e I NIXON ... noring the abouts, for more than 1$ mJnu tea, ralslOf h1I voice to be heard. Nixon aupp«>rten began acuflllng with the hecklers. A middle-aged woman wu seen whack.Ing 1way at a McGovern algR with her umbrell1. The lhoutl of "atop the war" contested with a salvo or "four more yeats'' from Nixon loyalist.. At one point, the P..aldent toot notice ol the rucl<u!. aaylng, "All have a rtght to be heard and 10 hive I." . 'Mtat statement drew a cJleor and Nbr· on eoollnued, "I limply want to Uitnk tbl& Jn the next four yurs America wQJ ~· \I" laod ol opportunity where Ibo r!Cltff of all :irtJI be respected." 'l1ti ttlop II t:lttcaao'• O'Hare Initm. 11onaJ ~~as I 1Ubatltut1 lot I .fala noontime • planned for Ibo l'Nlll· dent In Loop last Tlleaday. Tiie parade WU <anceled -Ibo day btlore, '4 petlOnl .,.,. . ltJllld In a Chicago commuter train crUh: • He would not uy how thla would ae- compllah that. Thouaands of 8CbooJ children were bu> ed to the bunttn1..troped hangar where the Presiderrt spoke and they eave him a ' rousing teceptlon. ' SAi.i PlllCI '1'19. He would not comment when aaked about reports lhnl the U.S. would con- tract out to clvlll&n.1 the tratnln& and malntenaDOe for the South Vletnamue onca U.S. mlUtary forcM withdraw. The ~ peace ..,...,..,, Cini for tho wfthdrnal or all U.S. military fOIWI w!tbln IO <ilys of ~IDinl a·~ F'rtedbelm Pkl the U.S. ii flllly capable of ,_.pllahJns that. "OUr DOiiey woold not leave any alcnlflcanl U.S. mflltary fort:t In l!olllb Vietnal!>" olbu than 1-~ ~ attachtd to the amboaly, ho said. Honeywell , Pro*t • • STANl'Olll> (AP} -n.n-r.t.,. thantld ~~kt i··IMoc, noi .: lillio1" Ollllldt :lql 8tanlord UnivmitJ '!llllpUo pl:;cemem center Thul'ld11y as ~·1 Corp. Interviewed }ob a p p 11 c a n t 1 . l't"OMP,,.eJ VALLEY ... thr 485-acre park. HoUlndtn and Scolt also said that Bat· tin hod refllled to support surtia, l'lltm And nMld wtdeniOf for tbo park and that oaly Baku'• lnternnlloll hod bfVtlllll •boul their lnatallatloo. . 1!'.l.:'so charc<d Bltlill baa ... ruled to ·Iba lberlll to pellca the part altbooah th~ hod bffn provided for In on a-t bet ..... Iba ell)' and Ille .... I)'. "' . Bat\ln, who w11-cM1rman al the Ume of the ntgotlaUona, rtfUled to pau •• order to the sherUf and the city hoa ~ llllCt With the .--lblliljl ever 1iilc<." said Rnlllnden. They lllld the auptrvlsor hu mustd lo dltcUss the matter atnce trro. IN.n&. ~u•+ one of. • 1•"9• 1~ftcflon of pt.ce1 from 0r. ... r, f•movt Et c.+ef'ti c•ftKtl.,., Tlf• ...... piece 11 finl1h•d in hind p•1nt•tJ mlmo•• y•llrw with MM d.cor-etla1tt.. Thl1 ,1 ... els• feat 11 r •a 91ffa th1IYtl end Interior ll1ht1. · DREXEt.-HP.ITA&l>-HENREDOr-1-WOODMARK--ICAllASTAH . I N-1.E It f.O It S WllllDAJS 6 SATUUAT$ ftOO ,. l1H .. "" y 'm ''°° "· HEWPOU HACH e 1717 WUTCUH DL, .. ,_, ... l.Aa\IHA .lo\Cli e HI NOlTH C0"'1 HWI' • . ....... , TORRANCE e 1JMt HAWTHO•NI llVD • ., .. ,," -·-----.. ~------------ I tj Frldiy, Nowmbtr J, li72 H DAILY PILOf ;J ;li>isneyland, R~ckwell · Still County Biggies llJ J.\Clt -ex Of .. °"",.. ..... and ~ American ~!N!l-malnlJlnedl.llJelr lop ~ In -.... nlilll""iletenniooili by 0rrmc0 Coimly Alleuor And...W J, HJmd\tw, but Newport Ceriter .. 1 s crowding the Anaheim a m u 1 e m e n t center In hla hit parade o( comme:rtc:al pr0pertlu. '' Dlllleyland Is worth $80.7 million~ AC· conling to Hinshaw, up rrom 171 ~ lasf year, but Newport Center, l!ltc1119lve ol Fuhlon l!land, J.un!POd from !11th !o second place In the 1lltlnl ol the most v11Juable propertiel in the county. • The'._r say• the Nftporl Beacll ,olflcO buUdhlg C0111plei la ·Worth 18'1.I mJllJcm compared with '37 rnWlon just ooe year ago. North Americen la tops industrial pro- perties with wz million, down a mlniacule $420,000 !iom !Vil. Ht1ghu ·Aircraft at 17U million, up 18 mlllioo, displaced McDonnell Douglas In second place. The HuntJniton Beach firm golned ''I.I million &om "8 mUlioo to fU.7 mllllon bul'dropped (o Wrd. The Orange Coast retained I t • ~ with lour ol the IOI> ln- duotrial firms with ,P11nts In the coutal area and five ol the IOI> 10 commerclal llllltni•. 1be top ten commercial properties: I. Disneyland, Anaheim, $80.7 million. %. Newport Center, Newport Buch, $67.9 milllon. I. The City Centre, Orange, 152.4 million. C. Sou1h Coal Plar&, O>sta M,.., MU rnllllon. 5. Fashion Island, Newport, $311.S mUUcn. · 1. Disneyland Hotel, Anaheim , 131).7 mllllon. 7. Huntington center, Huntington Beach, $29 million. I, Orange Mall , $28 million. I. Park New po r I Apartments, Newport, $23.5 million. II. ,l!uena part Shopping Center, 122.1 million. Fuhlon Square, La ltabra and Knoll's Berry Farm, listed ninth and tenth In 1971 dropped off the value parade. ~ lop 10 industrial enttrprlses: l. North American Rockwell, Seal Beach and Anahelm, Sl51.5 million . l. Hughes Aircraft, Newport and Fullerton, '71.4 million . :a. McDooncU Douglas, J-luntington Meach, MB.7 million. 4. Hunt Foods. Fullerton, $60.8 million. 5. Philco Ford. Ne\\·port. $45.7 million. I. Beckman ·Instruments, Fu1lerl.Ofl . 145 mUUOll. 7, Klmberly.Qark, Fullertoo a ft• Orange, $40.3 million. • I. Alpha Beta Acme Ma~, ~ H.abra, $35.5 millkln. • t. Loety StOt<I, Buena Park. fSU rr.illion. 10. Krafta> Corporation, Buena Park, 131 million. Alpha Bela and Lucky Stom: are newcomers to the top 10. Missing from last year's list arc Collins J\adlo, Newport , pun:haoed by North A~ and J. c. Penney Co., Buena Park: Roosevelt Vote Tally to Be Sees Win 105-acre Site Fluor Firm Has Option • Ill Irvine Ready by 1 p.m. By Ni~on David Hitchcock, Orange Co u n t y registrar of voters predicted today that final, uoofflcial election re!ults wlll be available by 1 p.m. Wednesday. But, he said, the outcome of all but the closest of races will be knowli Wednesday morning when approximately 70· percent of lhe votes should be tallied. Hitchc<>ck, in a pre-election briefing for newsmen, explained that the delay in final results is due to the fact that there are 794,174 registered voters in Orange County for this election -an all time higl\. ~ he predicted that 88 .percent or 698,873 of these registered voters will turn out on Tuesday. CITIZENS URGED J'O VOTE EARLY Last June, the primary election ballot cot.alt was completed by 12: 15 p.m. B~t there were only 475,944 persons voting lben. Hitchcock's prediction of an 88 pereent turnout is based on :he average for the past 18 years. D.lring that period, 89 per- cent of the voters cast ballots in presidential elections like Tue!day's 1and only 78 perceHt in the alternate election years when the top office contested was that of governor of California. The registrar promises & "smooth vote counting operation" and to insure that be bas takeo these additional precautions: -250 additional voting booths have been ordered to be used if needed in precincts ~xperiencing an especially heavy vote. -Two additional voting booths have been placed In every precinct that bas more than 600 registered voters. There are five voting booths in all precincts. -A 3,600-square-foot· tent has been leased and will be erected on the rear Faced with the highest voter parking lot of the registrar's head- registration in county history, quarters, 1119 E. Cbestout Ave., Santa Registrar of Voters David Hitch-Ana. This additional ballot handling cock tod ay appealed to citizens to space will help eltminate snatua which vote early. have plagued the regisltar's staff in With 794,174 registered voters other years Hitchcock hopes. and his prediction of an 88 percent ' voter turnout, Hitchcock urged ear-_.,. .-I~ .will. however, pose a problem for ly voting to ease the last hour jam political candidates and. their supporters. at precincts Polls will be open There will be no parking apace on the · beadqulliters grounds !or vlaitors. from 7 a.nt. to 8 p.m. There are 1,864 precincts which will Officials Hqnor .r'll'!' Late James 1'.Jtt' . ' At Dana Ha:rhor County, state and federal officials gathered .. ~ the steps of Dana Harbor's new Harbor District headquarters Thurs- day after1K>On to hear praise for the Congressman responsible for the fedi!ral flltanclng for the maritime complex - the late Rep. James B. Utt. And at t h e t'OOclW!llm or tbe cer!monl~: attended by dozens of guests, the congressman's widow unveiled a memorial to tbe long-tllne Orange Coun- ty political leader. Mrs. James B. Utt pulled the shroud rrom a granite boulder containing a bronze plaque on its face. The . plaque bears a portrait of the late Mr. Utt and an inscription praising his work in win- ning the appropriations that paid for harbor construction. The afternoon was one of reminiscing about the loog career of the Tustin Republican. County Director or Harbors , Beaches anci Parks Kenneth Sampson tearfully remarked during flag-raising rites that the late legislator "loved Old Glory, and now it will ny for bin. at this harbor fJr many years to come." 1'he memorial lies at the base of a towering nautical-&yle flagpole. The flag raised on the ttandard Thurs- day afternoon was ooe wbicb had flown over the natlon'a Capitol. Ult, who died In early March of 1970, and nrst went to Congress in 1952, won pt aise from his fellow U.S. Represen- tative, a-alj" Hosmer. dispatcll their ballots to headquarten on Tueaday night and early Wedneoday. Ballots lrom Individual preclnell wlD. be transported to 17 collection center! In the caitoty, all but two of which are rpolice statiqns, for ipecurtty reuoos. The other tll»'W!ll be flfan!M'by !llertll'i d•putl.,, Ballots wtll be trucked to .headquarters with a deputy riding "shotgun" on each truck. 'fttere the ballot~ will be fed Into the vote tallying machines and reSulta translated to punched cards. The cards are taken to the county's computer center on Broadway near Civic Center Drive West and there cumulative tally sheets will be churned out by the electronic machines. 'Ibese will be in groups of 20 precinct!. beginning al a1'out ID p.m. Al ~lonal precinct reautts are punched onto card!I they will in turn be fed into the a:im- puters and new cumulative totall pro- duced. This Is the process which ffitchcoc:k predicts will go on until 1 p.m. Wednes- day. , In addition to the ofrlce!I of President, congressmen, state senator, as- semblyman, supervisors and the 22 st.ate propositions, there are seven olcal elections oo the ballot in various areas. For example, the Saddleback, Irvine and Capistrano ocboo! dilllrlct hond lsstlca. These seven c0090lldatlons demanded 81 different. kinds of bal\ota which Hitchcock_'s poop had to have printed. The re~ predlcll that up to 30,000 voters will cut absentee ballot&. Almost that many have been malled to persom requeslhlg them. All absentee ballob must be returned to the registrar's office before elect.Ion day and Ibey will be nm tbroug)I the machines during the day ee Tuesday. Results will be available by a: 15 p.m. Tuesday. . llltchcoct cautlom bope(uh, however. Aboenltt i>allot reaulls have seldom been lndlcaUve ol the !lnal mulls. ·Pilot Writer Tells Visit To German 'Death Center' I DAIL y PILOT iports edll-Ot Glenn ABOUT BlllCllERS: Two 1ol1n Bln:b Whit•, who cov~ the Olympic games Society members John Schmits Ind John in Germany, took the opportwlil)' to go Rousodot are partlni paths .. , Schmitz behind tbe Tron Qlrtaln and v11lt the AUJCbwitz,.Birkmau o:terminaUon cenlf1" to htad the AmerScan si-rt>' llcket and of Nut Germany. He wrllel bis Im· Roulaelot to run !or ~ to con- preaslon In 1111' Wet~'I Sundly paper. grtU U a Re!>ubllcan and to IUpport the Here tr• a !ew ol the other storl<s the Rtpubllcan party lk:l<et. Anolbor artJc:le DAILY PILOT wlll ol!<r Sunday on the some A oecllon pace teO. bow the readen: JBS Is llAylng aloof !nim polltlo again FLOOD FEAR -For 900,000 penons this electloo year, but only IOrl ol. 'l1>o In 0ra"le County home ii Ill the palb ol • JBS A)'I lliml'1 amonl and a standard projttl llcod -",. lliat may McGovenl'• a Communllt, while Schmltz be upeded to occur every_2DO years -ii iloded. and the county Is In no polllUOn to ptole<t LIFESAVERS -Thly11 atop you In lb<m (n>m IUCh an inundation. Englnotn tbe namo ol the law to save 1"W' Ille: say II will be 20 years belon SA rt .. r lhlt't OllO _ Jl'01 ol lool<lnl at the rete ,,. ... can be 111.....-or the Pn4o Calllomla ffllllWay P-lmtn wJ>o make Dom railed to contain lllCh a otonn. ll'• spot motor..YthJcla ~ 'llllllr Joi> the feature lllory written by Jolm Zaller ii deacrlbed by Joame Reynolds on Page for the Yoo Section. ~ &. WRIT&lN MOVE -Propciilllan Ill INSIDE 11IE WALIS -THm1ltr leadl the wrtte-ln eamoalan ol Dally Unloo bosl Jamee R. Holla and ,..,.lad Pilot ,_,. u !Illy c!Ye dietr Vlewl ol oil l<lod AnthooY de Ml9lla have di!· Calllomla pmpoaitlou In le\1"' to the !mnt vltw1 ol Ille Ill a fed....,.11 ptnlttn- edlt-Ot. Tiiey a~ publlahed on Pill' A7. llary. Thdr .story ii on paae 82. By GEORGE LEIDAL Of ... o.llY Platt Stiff .. Any president elected Tuesday who fails to wind down the war would "run the risk of impeacement," UC Irvine faculty were told 11iursday. James Roosevelt of Newport Beach, son of the late President Franklin D. Roosevelt, contended the will of· the American people ls sufflcienUy Clear to mr.te it very difficult for either leading candidate to not end the war lf elected. The remark came in response to a question following Roosevelt's noon luncheon speech to faculty members or the University Club. Roosevelt wu asked to evaluate the concern of young people that President Nixon's announced peace hopes were in reality a last minute su~rfuge and that if Nixon· ls reelected he has no plan to end the w&r. "Any President who doesn't end the war is running the risk of impeachment or a real revolution," Roosevelt said, ad- ding be is convinced Nixon is aincere in bis desire to end the war. Sociology porfesaor Or. Jt<ibert Dubin asked Roosevelt what single event aside from assasination would 1nOuence the predicted aueeeaa ol Presldtnt Nixon which the pomlneel Harbor Area Ddnocrat forecast in his remarks. "If there were aome piece of con- clU1i .. ovldmce-that -1d p?ove Presi- dent NlJm -peraooally Involved In the Watergate allalr, Tu...iars electJon v;ould be a Jot closer than It loots now," ~elt npllad, 'l 1 " I\ 1 _ The fonn=·· ngrt!Wll8l1 predicted a 10.peromt y (or Nim!). Roooevelt suggested Prealdeot would 1et 15 .,.,... bAIL.'I' ~II.OT Si.ft,... TALKS POLITICS Newport's ROOMYeft cent of the votes and Sen. George McGovern only 45 percent. In California, where Democrats lead Republicans by a 3 to 2 margJii In registrations, Roosevelt suggested the Nixon cam;>aign wou1d result In from 52 to 54 percent of the total vote. ~·A McGovern upset is mo:-e llkely in California than in any other state," Roosevelt said. Although 'be supports lbe President's re-election, Roosevelt finds one area of agreemen with McGovern -a distute for pollllcal polls. "I personally I• • I polls cmtrillute nethinc to our national life, or our PolltJcaJ We,'' he said. He recalled tb.: 1936 election nee when the Liberty Magazine poll indicted All Landon would beat his father. Tbat poll waa """"·"""J.Mc<Jtmm 11111 tbt same thlnp in I@ u Dad laid then. Polls are not reUable ind1cator1 or the \1ay people wtll v~e." ., Fluor Corporation oUlcials said today the Loi Angelea: art8 firm baa a {our- year option to purchase a ;os.~acrc site in Irvine. Melvin A. Ella~'Orth, president, said purchase of tbe property "should even- tually lead to the relocation of Floor's corporate headquarters and Southern California operations to the Irvine Industrial Cotnplei: site within a seven- year time fnme." The firm ls Involved in inttmaUonal ' engineering, construction and drlllhlg for natural resource aod energy Industries. Ellsworth aald CGQtlnued improvement ln oeed for Fluor le:l"ricel would dictate the exerclae of the four-year option. ,. Althou~h the firm has not made a ~ commitment to purchase the land, Fluor will pay taxea and property malntenanct for the undeveloped site during the option period. accordinR to Thomas C. Wolff Jr., president of the Irvine lndustttal Complex. Wolf! declined to disclose the option price. The parcel is located at the aoutbeut corner of the San Diego Freeway and Jamboree Road. It overlooks the UC Irvine campus. Up to one mllUon MIU&re feet d building spacr might be accommodated on the site. Ellsworth noted that amount of space will meel Floor's future growth needs. Ch.Pisti11as Hijackers Get 471 L;.quor Cases No new leads were reported today In the case of 471 casea or gaily wrapped Christmas cheer whJcb vanllbed in a 119,000 liquor truct hijoctlng that .ncted Thunday In a hilly oecllon o! Brea. Gerald D. Hooper, SS, a drl .. r (or the S.mon Levi Lbl. llquo< dilllrtbullDg firm was lreed at Valencia Avenue and Carbon Canyon Road unharmed by hre hi)lic$on who l'OlfOd awa1 wtlll bli truct. The vlcllm who told police one o! hie abducton c:arrled 1 .SI caliber "'volver- lod 1lo ....,.yo( Ibo 111!"1 iltll lllltllell wbeft be spotted II whlle' ~· drlftll lo beadquartera lo< Ill lntnvtew. The vehicle abandoned at an Imperial Highway shopping center waa impounded so it could be checUd over tor fingerprints or any other clues to t h e whiskey hljacken' identity. Hooper said he WU lnitlally forced to pull over In Norwalk about t :JO a.m. 'lbursday, wbermpoo one of the men - both were In their early 20s, be aaSd - took over the whetl . The ·second hijoctlni SUljled lollowed the tnict In a ear tJntil It llloi>Pad al Imp.rial Highway and Puente str.el. where Hooper "" kd:ed bWde befcre lbe trip resumed. lie •a i d !be liljact.n +m-lb<! truck at aome locallon, theft COllllnuod ori to the 1pot whero be n1 left bealcle the !'Old to bltdlhike fo'a ~· LINCOLN.CONTINENTAL ... Mark IV • • • f.ontinental Coupe 1973's ARE NOW HERE! --LEAS SPECIALIST IN FULL MAINTENANCE LEASING! SEE ONE ... ,TRY ONE ... BUY ONE. .. TODAY! I . lfctlm Of TM Ntw Car , , , "tlel .... twJo" Dame Of '""' -e.. .•. "tlel-. r ..... .. HAlllOll ILVD. COITA MDA I l I f OAJlY Pli4)T Wealthy Nixon D 'Hanging In' On Coast Issue UPHILL FIGHTS DEPT. r State Senator Dennis E. Carpenter, the Orange Coast's representative to that august body up Sacramento way, looked com- fortable enough the other day in his of- fice out by county airpo rt. His shirt v.·as open at the collar. He puffed on one oT a large collection of pipes. One shoe propped up on the massive, wood-laminated desk whidl was scattered wi th a few papers. The place \\'3_5 comfortable -green pile rug, tv.·o while sofas with green piping, a pair or black leather chairs for visitors. Off to one side was a canvas beach chair, perhaps as a reminder to make a few free days to visit the shoreline and sun. 'MIE W AU.S IN Senator Carpenter's office are pleasant, covered with memen- tos of his days in the FBI, politics and the Legislature. A color portrait of Gov. Reagan. A plaque of the Bill of Rights. Many photos; even a display case of medals. Directly facing the senator. however. was a large poster that probably came closer to depicting his real mood of the moment. It was the much-celebrated photo of the cat with bugged-out eyes, desperately clinging onto a ck>thesline with its front paws. The in.script.ion beneath reads, "Hang IQ There, Baby ••. " Senator Carpenter Is banging in there these days. He 's been on the campaign trail, speaking and mak1ng television ap- pearances from El Centro to San Fran· cisco in an effort to defeat Proposition 20. the so-called coastal initiative. TIDS IS THE proposal that, if passed, will establish six regional state com· missions whose members will become the coa stal ciars. They will tell you what can or can't be built a1ong the coast. · "Last week the California Poll asked people what they thought of Prop. 20," Carpenter reflected. "Seventy-seven per· ctnt never beard of it. How many have read it! One percent? Nell Tuesday the voters w1I1 simply make an emotional judgment m the cry to 'Save Our Coast.' .. Becoule Carpent<r ._ "'-ilion 20's czartst approacb ·to """'°lllilll Olll' coastline, tile J>l'Ol'ODt"ll have hinted darkly that he II wortdng with bl1 cor- poratJons and bJg money lnterestl. The senator just laughs. "No. I wish I had bl&: money but I'm doing lhis a1one. Jt hasn't been very expensive." What. be was asked. does he :see as tbe main, naws in Proposition 20? "WEILt ALL IT rially does is create a new layer of remote, DOO-re1poruiive regional govemmeat lhat will be appoint· ive -not elected by the people," the senator repHed. Car,>enter ay1 <me of the least-known threats in the meuv.re 1J in appeal sec- tions 27422 and 270S. ... , "If you want to build -•thing, you can get all the approval!, even from the regional board. But anybody CID Ne an appeal against you without poe:tlng MY kind of bond. Anybody -nen from out of state. tf they lose there, they can take it to the stale commission. Still no bond. Failing that, they can file a lawsuit. "THUS IN THEORY, one man from out of state could go up and down California to regional commissions and stop or seriously delay all projects of all kinds." It's a scary theory to even con- template. Despite this, Senator Carpenter says the polls show Proposition 20 will pa!.!. But he intends to keep campaigning against it. Otll' BEIDND his Campu1 Drive office sits a Mercury at.tum waaon wttb ·California plate 844; SC.for, S4th District. It's going to get IOme more miles on It before oext Tuesday, Domlls Carpenter illl'I rudy to cl01t down Calilomla yet. B52s Hammer Stockpiles Throughout Battle Areas SAIGON (AP) -More than 100 U. S. B52 bomben l'l!lled acrou ·North. and South ~ l!ld Loos today •ttocklnc CGmmUlllll, war ~kpllet. Communist '""""' 1hoftd oo letup In their attacks In South Vietnam, with more than 100 · reportod for tile ninth llUCCell!ve day. The B$la dumped 2,!00 tons of hombs at targets In tile ooutliem hall of North Vietnam, aloog Ibo Ho Chi Minh supply network in Laos, and Jn all four military regions of South vretnam. About two thirds of the rai~ were in th~ central highlands and the provinces north and south of Saigon. The Com- munist command hat intensllied its at- tacka in both regions 1n recent weeks. A dozen or the B51 raids struck at North Vietnamese troop positions a mile to two miles northwest of the air field at the Due Co border camp in the central highlands, which was overrun Thursday. The U.S. Command also reported that American fight er-bombers flew about 140 ltrlkes against supply routes, trucks and depots in the southern panhandle of North Vietnam Thursday. The Command reported that II tiucu, a 2$,~alloo fuel tank aod a helicopter were ·l.D'l<lnl tbe targeta destroyed' or damaged. A bombing halt remained ID effect above the 20th parallel, t e e,p l n I Al>)trlcan warplanes -•way !nm tile Hanoi-Halpbong lndustzlat complu. F!ghtlng erupted anew this morning in rubber plantar1ons just to the northeast of the once besieged provlnclal capllal of An Loe, 80 mUu north of Saigoo. DAii. Y PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Oellvtl')' Ot' ltle Dallf Piiot b--Mlnlt~rtdWI " toW • not 119w .,.... ... l 'I' J;)O 111.ITI .. c.I" M """ (Oll'J' Wiii M '""'Vhf '9 \IOU. <':'•Ill .,.. Hllal\ until l:JD p.m. S1tvrd•.., ll'od St,ll'lllVt '" ¥011. Mt ricltw -· copy °" ••. m. latvrclly, .,. • •.m. SUl'dl 'I', Cl ll ll'od I CW'I' will M 9f'tl.llN M V'Ol.I. C1H1 1r1 M.11'1 llllttl 10 1.m. """' °'.... °""""' ..,.. ........ -.an Hor'tflwtilt """"""" .... ...... -•:s•~·-................... ,. '" °"""""" C.lllltrW .... ........ c ,,._c... ...... ................................. ·Storm Front Moves Out . . . lndia.1i Summer Returns to States of West • • " " (Cooilal """"'°" and !Idol d414 ._, todav on P091 2$,) "" ..... OIO(MI. \ ·1 I " . UH~ DONAns $,1 ~LLl°'1 w:ca...n1- My • • • McGovern Tells Heckler 'Secret' BA1TLE (:R!!EK, Midi. CAP) ~ Democnillc prosld!llllal -Gap McGoverli bu )Gld ol1 a heckler. A youth waring '""""1 Nims - """'ded· clooe lo • -u McGooern walj<ed alOlll sbUlni blnda cblrlnc an a~ at Batlle Croek airport 'lbunday' As the. South Dakota senator ap- proached, the youth told him: "He will beat you so bad that you11 wish you'd never left South Dakota." Saul,.Koh)er of Ne-lj'ew""""" -,,_ a . pool ' '-'· ,,.; - newsmen:, said McGovern Did lo Ibo youugster: "l'ft &Qt. eecret for you." Ji. Ibo youth -forward lo -· Kohler related, McGowm said aollly ID the young man'• ear: 11Kiaa my ... • As McGov'ern oonUnueC:I down· the ~ hands, the young man and, at"COrding to McGovern secretary Richard. Dougherty , ex- claimed : "He said a profanity!" -mR n'.s Pl s La·s •FULLERTON • HUNTINGTON BEACH •ORANGE . ' YOUR TOTAL VALUE FU.RNITURE STORES . WHfii GOOD DESIGN AND QUALITY MEET SENSIBLE PRICES , dreams at the years lowest price! • Heie's a din!ng room io.thrill any ~Jowmet. ... ) t will be like cfu\iJll)ll ~· llpl•"" ...... ~ . Note the depth of ca~.Uie~ ~ 'top and the elegant goli ~'ll!ll't cm. lho '" eluo door front .. Inside t1ien\.r. tlaM 9belves and even a Jjrbt. The oYal table meMUteS a lar1e 72" wit.I?-extra Jeaf. Finitbed in rich wann brown tones. TABLE: and 4 CHAIRS or MATCHING CHINA $199 ••• ' r " l I I I l l .. ' Sunday, Nov .. 5 PARK NEWPORT Enter Cycling Events WIN 10-SPEED SCHWINN BIKE , In -prlle drewlng • , ' iTrudeau Haogirlg :In -There • . ar Banned ' • . ' FriU,, Howtmber 3, ~972 DAILY PILOT 5 Jobs .Up; Rate· Same WASHINGTON (UPI) - Tbe natloo'• unemployment rafe romalned unchanged In ~ ii U percent, but the 111D1ber of penons with jobs went up ZS0,000, the govern- ment said today. . , . 'I1le Bureau of L a b o r StaUstlcl (BL.SI of the Labor l)epartment said the jobless tale showed no improvement dupite the increase i n employment. It explained that the ~r number of jobs was offset by a continuing influx of 'DE!W worken into the labor force. October was the nfth con- 1 e cut iv e month that unemployment had held at about 5.5 percent after bovtr· ing around • pereent for 11 conaeeutlve man.tbs. Coming four days be!ore the presidential election, t h e report's possible impact on voten was difficult to assess. While unemployment · hM fallen half a percentage point during the administration's Phase II economic controls, it is stW far above the 4 percent jobless rate target -Originally set by the White House. On Thursday, the BLS issued a somewhat more favorable eoonontic report - from the administration's standpoint. It said wholesale pric<s --It a l ~ with the , ... 0.2 -«!It below Sepftmber. • In loday '• ro;iort, the 1ILS said the number of unemployed workers MNhwl unchanged In October at f.I million, while the manbtr of work.en with jobs bit 11.$ millioo . wtth· the mo,ooo in- crease. There was lltde or no change in the jobless rates for most categories or worken. Adult men 3.9 percent; adult women. S.5 percent: white ' workers s percent: Neeroes 10.l percent; IH!adl o I household.>, S.4 pereen~ and I martied men, :u petteUt. ARTISTE de la Rue Kennedfl . iY:f~al Now Thru S•t. ' . ' ' • .ff you like ., W spend leisure hours on the . ocean beach • t • ~ • • • • • ·ON PROPOSmON NO. Propoaltlon No. 20-the so-called Coastal Initia- tive-doesn't make one dime available for new acceea roads to Calilomia's beaches, or for any expansion of camping, picnicking, boating, and other TitCreatlonal laclltties for the public. Actually, Proposition ·No. 2() could clamp down on any new recreational development on the beaches by public agencies for as long as five years, just as It could stop a lot owner from build- ing a home on his property, or a city from building a sewer treatment plant. It Imposes a virtual moratorium o'n building for any purpoee -publlc or private -wHh ln a permit area that extends as far Inland as Sacramento and StooklOn. It does this by superimposing a tlme- COllllUrnlng, cllmberaome new permit procedure, contrJ>lled by appolntad State Commissioners, on top of mdstlng local permit procedures; and by allowlng any person-who need not even be a reelden\ of Calif om la-to tie up In the courts, Wllh-· ' ... out even poatlng a bond, arrt proposed project, large or small. All of tha Cslilomla shoreline up to the meM high tide Is publicly owned by the State, or If pri- vately owned, Is subject to a public trust. Of the hall mile la.nd area along the Paclllo Ocean, more than 75 per cent Is In open IPBCl9 and more than 41 per cent Is In public owneralllp. But only a small fraction of the Coast-I-than 1 per cent -has been opened to the public tor camp grounds, picnic areas and accessible perk&. • The proble1'! ls to gat to the beach. Proposition No. 20 doesn't unlock any ol thll vast area for the public enjoyment-it does jtllt the opposite. It can pfftent development of b I r • parka by publlc agencies. It can lock up the beaches from the public. Proposition No. 20 benefits only a favcnd few now fortunate enough to own beach front hom• In exclualve - CITIZENS AGAllllT THE COASTAL INITIATIVE ........... llTllCir BAH FMHCllCO, CA .. ,. 11rr.......-aYD. LOe AHQl!H.CA...,. 23'AsnoaT.ufl't!W SAN OtfOO, CA llttt --··~..=·"r.."'·'; s ·--r.CllOW\1'f-·T-..-w.-~ 1.L .. l.'latl.lll..... , ----· - • • , DAU.Y .PH.OT EDITOBIAL PAGE • ' Employment Problems -.... -. .. Controversy has filled the air recenUy concerning the employment practices of the Huntington Beach Union High School District. \ A report iss ued by the state. Falr Emplo~ent Prac- tices Commission charged the district ts negligent in its efforts to hire and promote women and Mexi<;,a~·Amer· icans. It further chided admihlstrators for lacking rec· ognition of minority problems. The report was subsequen~r attacked by Tr~stee George Logan as reflecting the ·lowest depths of irres· ponsibility, persecution and racism." It does appear clear from the . report that employ- ment problems do exist in the district. at least by FEPC standards. But in perspective these problems permeate much of our society and are not limi.ted. just to the Huntington Beach Union High School D1str1ct. \\'hat is important is a willingness to create a'-. eq\lal en1ployment program and trustees have Pn: \. claimed they are anxious to do so. Hopefully, all con· troversy ca n be cast aside so the district and th~ FEPC c.an iron out the problems. Building Trust in Law Th e Fountain Valley Police Department is plan· ning to launch a public relations program that could build a strong bond of trust between the city's residents and la\v of ficial s. \Vi th a $17 ,000 grant from the Comm~i~ Services Project the department would create the poSition of com- munity services officer. . . . The community semces officer would coordmate a ;,ride along" program which would take interested ,_ citizens to the scene of police ldillll wllen he -1d ex· plain the actions being taken by another policeman. He would also establish a grus rooll oommunlty crime prevention program. This would Involve the olfl- cer with going to citizens' homes to discuss local law enforcement problems and methods of controlling them. The program deserves the financW support It l.s seeking and should be lnit!Jlted soon. Job Fills School Need Without much fanfare, trustees of the Huntington Beach City (elementary) School District created two new, top-level administrative positions last -_ One of them -director of curriculum -is espec· ially significant. The city school district has long lagged behind other West Orange County school districts in taking advantage' of modern teaching techniques. Privately, officials of the district admit this. But they claim it is because they simply don't have the adminis-- trative personnel for a systematic updating ot their program. U that was an excuse, however, it is no more. The district now has a golden llpportunity to turn itself around. The person hired as curriculum director should have -in addition to the normal requirements for the position -a · strong committment to the individualiza- tion of instruction for all children, a thorough know- ledge of the teaching techniques necessary to achieve this, and the extraordinary amount of drive it will take to help start the city school district moving in this vital direction. • ' • . it • .1 I' It ·' ., ' H , ' U.S. Cultural Snobbism Is Disappearing Dear Gloomy Gus Deficit Financing Is Basie Cause of lnf.,,.tion (SYDNEY J.H~ ~-the MetropoHt.an Opera opened its seasoo in New York a rew weeks ago, .;u, an appareUy smashing productiCln ol "c.nn..". the cast Included: Marilyn Horne Marcia Baldwin. J am e s M~ Tom Krause, Raymood Gibbs. Russell Cbrl!topber, my old neighbor Dooak1 Gramm -and some foreigner named Adriana Mali...,._ Thirty years ago, 20 yean ago, '9eD 10 yean ago th1s nir menclature would have been reversed: there would be a doz- en names like Mali- ponte in the cast, to one like Gibbs or Baldwin. The United States may n o t yet have come of age In Us cultural dimmskln, but al least we have outgrown the snobbish unopbllia and the national Inferiority complex that have plagued us alnce our orlgtn. In detades past. serious American singers were forced to go to Europe and make something of a name there for themselves before they were accepted in American operatic circles. Some subse- qu('ntly famous ones welll ao far as to change their home-groWil · American names into exotic European cognomerts, ~ both as a deception and a "gloriflcation" or their identity' 1nrE SA1t1E WAS true, and perhaps even more so, in the esoteric field of ballet, where a little Jewish girl from London named Ali~ Marks felt ahe had to transfonn herself into • ' A I t c I a Markova ''.) Opera companies -and the Met more I don 't care what the eco freaks say, I think the Edison plant l<>f:>ks nice, especially at night when it's all lit UP: It's nice to be reminded what wonderful things man is cap- able of doing. ~.T. mi ...... ,....... ,........ ....... Mt ~ ....... ""' ....... ,. '""' y_. ... ,..we '9 ..._., 0.. Dllty ~lot . than any -would tum up their noses at any American name, no matter bow formldable lhe talent that a"""1lpanied tt. 10 that aur native performers were virtually forced to go abroad and return pseudonymously. "Achieving a name" in European opera for an American often meant achieving a name other than your own. PART OF nus, of course, was reaUsUc: the U.S. Siinply didn't provide the training-ground for serious singers that Europe did; there were few places for an apprentice to learn his trade, and even fewer opportunities to sing in public · with a working company. But just as much was an ingrained cultural snobbishness tbal respected European perf'!men even ll they were no better than, or actually tnferior to, our home-gown product. Yoo bad lo be twice as good if you wanted to get hall as far with a lineage that went back to Kansas or Iowa. IT HAS ALL changed now. Marilyn Home, and Beverly Sills, and that robust Australian, Joan Sutherland, are as im- portant '"names" In opera as any glottal Serbo-Henegovinlan or fiortd Florentine. And when the Met opened tbls year, the costumes were by David Walker, the choreography by Alvin Alley, and the conductor was a Lawtence, Massachusetts boy named Lennie Berns- tein. Miss Maliponte must have wondered where she was. World in Mone y Crisis Sacrameato Bff rr.anagen and . ulllmately, political It is difficult to simplify the many leadership everywhere. ramUicatiorui of the current world Nixon and Shultz have proposed that monetary crisis. with it.s impact as great lnlt.ead o[ the dollar, and its gold upon the United States as upon eny of its reserves, being used as the monetary Western world trading partners. One stabillztng factor, the Western world thing ls"clcar: Buie reform is needed. should tum to valuing currencies In Thi> I! what Pnoold<nt Ri chard Nixon terms of SDIU (special drawing rlghtl) aJ\d TToaoury Se<retarJ O<or&eX. Shulti whkh would be rqulai.d by tbe World seek 10 bring about in a propoM.l to the Moncll:ry Fund. Unance mlni.!lter!C of Europe, and The fluctua ting volues or any given whatever the ultimate arranaementt country'• currency would be weipted prove to be It Is a salutary step ln the against SDR!, and any time Its trlde right direction. 5Utplus nacbed an unduly hiib level, lt1 M. Nilda pointed out, trade def'lcltt • currency, 1n tenna of SOR, 1''ould be and ewmicJ' dilpatilles -in whlcb U.S. revalU1tcd. gold retetTM hav~ bttn a major vtctlm Thls abould. do much to stablllze the. -intimately arrcct UM! lives and joba of current wild fluctuallon In current:lea. ordbm7 work.toe men and women, in-whidl bas had a great brunt upon tile vest.on, large aod small business dollar and aggravatl'd the prtlblcm of our deficit balances. ---89 Geel'fle ---• Deir Geone: I -111. lib to become a polltl- clm ,ml~ for the U.S.~ ot ~. ROftVer, I "°"' --the dlflmnce betwttn a ""*••t and • Ropublkan. Does 11"4 illlke 111)1 dillennce to my polllloll fut~? HOPEFUL , Haw European finance ministries will read Is yet uncertalD. SurelJ though, they ouaht to ,.. It b to the bttl lnlemt of the Western econolJllc eommunllJ to come to •rrttment on the erttlcal need for monetary stability. AJ Nixon pui It, eccnomlc In Ill de<p<lt stnie means lhc money law of the house, the boorehold of C<OOOmlc nelghbor1. He Mlded: "Thlt.. house we live in -lhi.s commwllty of nations -needs far betltr 111ws to gukte our fu~re economic: con- duct." We can onty hope the E..._., nntloN will,rba above •&<"Ml" -., Mil· lntettst, u tbe U.S. itlllf now -·· and ptrcelve economic harmony 11 to the bell interest of all. Big Spending Destro s o~·r Savings I . To the &litor: . Inflation is cheating the innocent old, retired and widowed people who live on returns from savings accounts, annuities and Social Security. The resources of all oi these helpless people are being shamefully and pitil...,Jy ezproprlai.d via the sbrlnking mlnl dollar. mis IS AU brought on by the spenders in Congreso, who are wildly spending beyond tu ~ in what ti known 8' "deficit firu•ncinfl". According t' Congressman Wilbur· MUIJ, "Deficit BpeDding is tbe ~ basic cause of in- flation." We must put an end to this sbameCul curse of apocalyptical government spen- ding. C. C. MOSELEY Prop. 14 -NO To the Editor: · · The Laguna Beach branch of the American Association of Unlventty Women urges a NO vote on ProposiUon 14. A few of the im}Jllcations of Proposi- tion 14 are: t. Since 27\1 percent of tbe total assessed valuation of tuable property In California ls owner-occupied aLd the rest is business and income property, lower- ing the property tu rate is of gre.atest btnefit to large, large land-owners, NOT homeowners. Z. HOMEOWNERS will not really gain, because ·~nswner taxes will increase as much as property taxes decline. 3. There ls no direct benefit to renters. 4. The expetted average of state and local expenditures for education in 1973- 74 lbrougboul the statt. ls estimated at 1995 per ADA. The l82S guaranteed by this propasal would fund education at a lov:er level than at present. 5. SPECIAL education program.. for handicappe<: chUdren would receive no extra fund,,. All special programs would be forced to compek. for funds. ~ition to Proposition 14 tx an establi&bed position of tbe California Stale Dlvl.slon (29,0()0.plU! m'mben) of A.A.U.W. OORO'l'HY J. BACKuS, President BECKY BERGE and MARY CORNELIUS, Education Olairwomen StuU'• Le9blctleu To the Editor : At a teacher, I am in the procesa of dcvtlopblg objectives for my count~ ac-- oor<llng to procedu~ lnlpln!d by the lelislaUoa which made the n.ame of Atlllllb(1mln John Stull a boulellold and claarciom ~mn with an educators. rr OCCUll8 to me lblt lhll ....um device for dellnlnc and projeclinl perfannmoe proc:odutta ~ -nd to other are.., Pllllcularly lollllatlve. Pwformance and multi al CailJaroll le&1111Uve 111ef.on.1: ba" blm ..,.,'*c ~ lea lbln .. ~In 1111 .. 11n-o1 the maJor1t1 al ColllonU tuf*t*• and citizens rteently. Accordin&IY· It 11 my suggestion, as a Callfomla taxpayer for n1any yea .... thal lrgla1~tor:· draw up <Jb.. jecUvcs at the b<&lnnlng of the ..,.Ion, complete wtth guldellna fO< mwurlng result•. THIS WllJ. ENTAIL many boura and much -work lllPe and elfort "blch -. may .. n feel iD!itit be belttt open! In carrying out primary and pertinent duties. Jlowever, we 111 know that ac- ( ...... _MAIL __ B_o_x_~J Letur1 from readers are welcome. Normallt1 'toriten .shawld COAWJI their meuagts in 300 words or less. The right to condeme letteT& to fit !pOCt or eUminote libel i.t 1'eserved. AU lttters mwt include signature and ·mailing addre11, but names 1n<lt/ be wlthh<ld on «'1"'•1 if rufjicient reaaon Ls apparent. P~try will not be publtsh<d. count.ability lies at the very roots of our democratic form of government. GAY VAN WEY. the American edical Association Drug Committee. , These cautious authoriti~ all agree that marijuana is not addictive, does not lead tO other drugs, does not damage the body, does not produce mental illness, crime or violence, does not have a lethal dosage. PROPOSrTION 1 t bas far reaching economic and social significance. The present marijua.Da laws cost California taxpayen a!Jliroximately 1100 million each year. Tbe arrmt , prosecution, trial, lncareeratioo ind "rehabilitation" of harmless ~arijuana users consumes tens of millions of dollari, chokes the capacity of Jaw /enforcemeilt agencie.: and our courts. The resuJt is that µ,dividuals wbo are privately doing nothing JnOnt hannfuJ than the social drinker, are de-· meaned, harassed· and degraded, while drug traffickers and criminal elements go untouched for lack of resources. l"'crllsan. A man wbo places partisanship aOOve compassion bas no place in Sacramento! RENEE POLESKY Rebuttal to •- To the Editor: . With refertllce to tbe Guest Report by Or. Ralph Bauer (Och 11), pennlt me to presen~ a few pertinent observations. Geetl Te•m Capt •ln To tbe Editor: Americans are inclined to be man- worshipers. No man is perfect or all wise. A politician is as good as his organlz.a~ tion. President Kennedy never even wrote hla awn !peeclles. The great words that you beard him say so elegantly were written by a speech writer. The President's cabinet is actually more im· port.ant than the President himself. A well~rganlzed executive department would run itself. · Proposition 19 does not legalize marl· Juana · ~ does not affect existing statutes regarding sale, possession and cuJtlvaUon for sale -these remain criminal of-' renaes under state and federal laws. It c!oeS allow Individuals lo grow and -small quantities for pmonal uoe -just .. wtth beer' wine and lobocco- Or. Bauer is a great.person, lnvestlnl time in a J>Ulil!it be believes to be ad-- valilagl!OOS lo )II! Cbll~' ed\Jeation. Beautilull Bulllria c:ommeol that be has penonally aoaumed the reopooslblllly for the · imJirovement in our local schools is political propaganda. He kno!" fUD ·weU that any Jmprnvement locally is dictated by the bureaucrats ln Sacramento, not here. Additionally, It i. noted that he did not list any Improvements. ID fact, Dr. Bauer 1n his letter, dealt ent~ly in generalities. HE STATES .THAT our ocboota i>lm- pare favorably oo a cost-effectiveness basis. That Ui to say that ~ cost of driv- ing. a Qievy and a cadlllac fiye miles is about the aame. But ob boy! That 1Ditta1 COit dilferenoei • I IUCHARD NIXON learned to operate as an executive team under Eisenhower. There were times when he was the top man 1n that department during serious Illnesses of the PresidenL 'Eisenhower learned to operate such a team as General of the Allied Armies in tbe defeat of Hitler. If McGovern were elected, he would doubtless appoint those wbo got him nominated or lhe ones who they would suggest. Most o! them are idea_lists who have little experience in practical mat~ ters of government. HE HAS PROMLSEO that U he ts elected he will appoint a certain number ol thla or that mlnortty to his cabinet. Thit ls hardly a proper consideration for picking tbl!I absolute best person to head a departmellt and advise the PresidenL The best possible person sbould be ap- pointed without regard to race or sex. NlJ:on ll not all wise or otherwise perfect, but he doel lmdw how ~ util~ the intel1J8ence ol our nation and lheretiY bu aC<Ompllobed much. He is a good team captalll. He ii wIH eilcN&b not lo alwaya carry the ball libel do the ape<-• Ulculu'. Ht bDldl aSD acore above ln- dlvklual score. I believe he ti the beat man [0< tbe job., JIM BOLDING B e's fer Prop. 19 To the Editor: Your "dllcus¥ton" el. Propolltion lt (t012S1'71) ..... dlaappoinUJll)y aballw. You ""' either ~-« you •leded portJal -• .. ~ al ,.,., ....... poolti.in. MAJWIJANA, alcollol, lobac:<o and uplrtn all .,.. ........... ll UIOd to ... .,..._ PropooiUon t I doel not ""'°""'le the Ule of pot : U rea l lstlcally dealmlll&llltl ~ "'"• -aloo and cultlva1loo. After the -complete study .. .,. made of the medical and ao<ial evidence ebout :annabls, decrlmlnalizalJon hat been ...comm<ndc1 by Pnoldeot Nixon'• Commioslon on Marl)llllna. aa well u by tbe Loi Ancel<> County Grand Jury, the National Institute ol Mental Health, and , I I AM Nor a "pot bead" (I find no need for mariju&na , alcohol or tobacco), but I have taken the trouble to examine ~th sides. I believe it is essential that we stop this ostrich philosophy, generated in the 1930s, and place marijuana in proper perspective. To pus Proposition 19 will allow us to constructively direct our legal efforts to significant matters of crime and hard drugs. ROBERT C. KAUSEN Nut v Polltl4!s To u.I' Editor: u ever the citizenl of America ahoukt be coOoemed over persons running for_ the hlahest office in the land, the praldelicy. now ta tbe Ume. To have McGovern 'oompare Prelident Nison lo HitlU, to crucify blm at every tum and get away wlUi It ii aiarmln& lo me. l'Olltlcs hai alwayo been known to be nuty, but when they approach the act al tral-untruths, theft It ta lhrie to lhlnlt ._ dloqq -11Utudes towa rd _.., _. aach as McGovern to be able to set away with such acta. TUE tw(l-PARTY -hu kept American mootlf llOOesl, l>Y· fYmo four O< ellbt 1"11'1 fhqh[ng out ihe lmpurltlel and J11r11ns dean ·ap1a.--· In. thl1 e1ecUon when our eountry needl n!al truth in ilfcrlsi> to seek peace and end• nl&btmani war, each !ddlvidual, bJ.. duding McGovern, abould aacrlllCe penonal gain for his selllah rlJe lo power. GRANT HARDING PHl!J.JPS · ••rice's Se•sldeftf Totheli:dllot: who bai md Ibo beautiful Jbort I "F1ow9'1 Ji'• AJeetnon"' Of Mo Ille pglpat morio; ~ ... can ern~lh1 r .. tbe1 memau,. --•dull, ..... il ht hu -rortut11te 1.:nouah not to have mental retardation in his famU, • His statement lblt people In prl~ In- dustry are nol aubjecl to attacb II pop- pycock. Or. Bauer can w ti b bo ld patronage from private Industry. Rn he tried recently not paying school taxes? He exults that our children perfonn better in college than do children from other higb schools. They alao perform worse. But what acboola did he compare them with? Backwater, MlssoUri? But this is all so much nitpicking! THE FACT IS, that Dr. Bauer utilized 40 inches of space in your columns and he presented vety few facll. He made some e.1ct!lledt points, such .as the reference to the dNSS codea. But be fail- ed to convince me that there i. any """I reason to vote yes on sc.boo\ bonds. However, there ts one tncontroverllbld fact Dr. Bauer should be aware of. Lef him talk to any empfo)\er tbat usd teenagers In beglnnl~ jobs. He will find himself faced with I VSJ hliJ> aerced tage of connnentl\ ·' deroptotf-coml ments, about the blgh ~l •iluclenul lnabffity to spell, to mab ...... ci;antl• for a five doUar blll, or • 1mmmmilca by written or oral meao11 lntelll&entty. TUE THREE R's: 'lbat'I what 11ehool is all about. And by and ilrp. an ~ lbe land, ICbooil "" falllDI 'In tbla """'! Uoo. And lblt'• a general,\t)' lblt'• lnMj unfortunately. All tbe' 111 , '"'"'"1_UJ Orlnge County won'I chaniell. Only....,. !'\!;can cbanfle It. YH ab-, Or. Bauer will let a no w14 frcm me In February: ,...,.· f'RANK L. sau." OIUMI COAIT DAILY PILOl Robnt N. Wtod, Nill,..,. Th-. Kt..U, 00... AlbtnW.Bolu Edltorlol Pao< ldltor llmmer, one mutt quostion the lfllllUvlty of Aaemblyman Robert ~ · Burn, m ..ud ap1n1t •• bill wtilch ~ -.Id c:ontinue tr~ Lile "tra1111ble" 5 mentally ...-throuCh the ... ol • • (it I> now tltrouih Iba ... of II ~ t!J1.1a • belRiJll to mike ~ proclllctl-N, iolf. mpec:U111 Clltxn. 'l1lt btU ,..Id (IN) '""' .......... -ol Illa Dalit Pilot •ks to lntorm ud iUm\r l•ht ....... bf prw.entina tJila new8119P"'• opll\iON aml C'Om· nwnt&17 on t01Jk1 a( lninal and 1l1ntncanc1, b)' proMilal • '°""'! for the ~ of our re••• .... .-•nd by _ ........ dlwne ~net of lntanntd ob- M!l"lfft and tpokBmm un '°'*" ot tbt dil,)I. 001 sum. belns one a1 the n• .. 1eado ooo to IWlpeCl that thta vote ,.., totally Friday, November 3, Im ., I ' ,(• ' r I I I f \ • • ' I Uia11ge Coast El>ITION ---- ·, N.Y. Steeb ' . ' :VOL 65, NO. 308, '4 . SECTIONS, 5" PASES ORANGE COUNTY,, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1972 N TEN CENTS Versailles Agreement-. What It Really Says · , I ' • · NeWport Beach councilmen have algn. ed a deal with the developer of the Versaille& on the Bluffs apartments to pt him to. drop his $12.7 million density 1a,,su11. Tbe jlonald Scholz Coml>'llll' sued the tjty boeause the plaJmlng Commission ftCOllllllfJlded the density of the project 1tO trimmed ·from S7 to ta dwelling unit> per.4Cfe. - Tbe ault was filed -and theo aetUecl -even though councllmen bad not acted on that plannin(f commissk>n recom- meoClatloa. While mmellmen have smeduled public -. on the uae permit, height and errvhlJlliDeUlol Impact of the 505 unit project.for Nov. 13, if any changes in the legal aetllemeol are made, the developer . can declare It void · ind reinstitute the lawsu.it Here, then, la a detailed breakdown of what the council agreed to in advaoce of the public bearings: -Scholz can have its use permit and building permits -"subject to the detennin.atloo of a public bearing." -The city has already given .. full, complete and sufficient review" to the size, quality and location of au buidings, and the plan for development. -'lbat the density (24 units per &en!) will be "consistent with any general plan adopted by the city." -That the project complies with all criteria to allow it to exceed the normal • height limit. (Scholz want> bulldtnp 37 feet tall in the :lio50 height zone. I -The project Is excluded from the city's grading ordlnance, wblcb gives the developer the potential right to do' ex- tensive gradlllg and actually bulld it on top of a man-made mound to make it higher. This wotttd allow three living stories on top or a partically-submerged Parking area. -Scholz may increase the number of bedrooms "at its sole discretion" up to a Irvine Co., State Back Proposal By L, PETER KRIEG Of ... O.lh' l"I• Stiff The Irvine Company and the state of California have reached tentative accord on plans ta build a new Pacific Coast Highway between Laguna Beach and Ccrona del Mar and for the state tp buy the beaches between the two towns, it was learned today. total of 1,150, about the same as would have been allowed normally at a density of 32 units per acre. -Scholz ·can line up five buildings squarely along the bluff line. They can have two more at the edge ot the ~ eUy at a 7.0-degree angle. All seven can be within 22 ftet of the property line. -Versailles can have prt·.>ate streets to block public motor vehicle access to the view parks and paseoa planned along the bluffilne. -Scholz must build only one covered parkl~ place for each unit, reglfdlesl of whether it la ooe, two or three bedroom&. -If tM city doesn't approve the en- vironmental impact statement. it has agfeed lo jOln with Scholz in asking the court to. terminate the settlement, IO that the ault wW stand .. filed. In tum, Scholz bu agreed to drop it> lawmlt, build the atreets and utilities to city standordl, col\stnJCt tile paaeo and !See VERSAILLES, Page II ' U.adlr """"° of,.ll!e pnlimluu:y ·deal· ~ ~It.~ ............ ~ mile . ~of ..... llit)llitlnt and ' MllY l"llOT '"""9 W lM ht'M a pedeslrlan waltwlr al 1 price to be determined, It wW be aold at IO percent ol market value. The Irvine Company, in turn, wtll use that Income to pay Its share of the cost of relocatlng the highway and making It a reportedly slI-lane thoroughfare aloog the top of the coastal rldgeline further in- land. CORONA •DEL MARH!Gtt J(:HOOL COEDS ALL SMILES OVER DISNEYLAND WIN Drill Tum IMMort C.pture c.mp.t111on, Wiii Appoor In Holiday Show Relocation or the route will begin just north of tbe Laguna Beacb city :limits and will rejoin the existing route at a point just below thrNewport Beach City limits at Corona del Mar. (:AIM .Drill Team "1vins Contest, Will P erf onn • ~ n was an in the cards for 20 members Ci 111o-Corona dei Mar High School drill team. Tbe girls conipeted recently in the first annual Disneyland drill cootest against 12 -.. Oranse <;oomty &cboot3 and woo in ipodea, hearts, diamonds and clubs. • Their prize will be a tour of duty over ... Chriltmas liolldays .. the mar<hing Oards &om Alice ID Wooderland ID l>ilney's Fantasy on'Parade &bow. ; "Tbe girls are 10 eJCltecl," said Kathy Bomer, drill team kaltructor# '"n)il W81 i llnt for oor &cbool llld li>r Dllneylllld and ... -rlgi>I oll. .. MIA Bomer aald the ll portlclpanta """ -&om thi -drill toom Oii the basil ol .!Jeilbt -'tbeJ bod to be betwoen five feet filar and live feet lllbl lndlel -and Oii grades and mtl.abillty to perfonn over the bolldays. Tbll .... the lint time Dlsne7lllld ipJWiOled a competition for drill telml, llcoolding to Publlclty Manager Boll Er ..... . !'For the put ,.... years the job bu -Loon H1gb seieor •• but this )'OOI', • • bid ... o•..,...lkln IDd Conl'll del ...... -.... -and ~ ·-an tho mt -............ loara," =''" uld .. ............ ~ lfrll 'woI mardl llld dan<e Inside (loe CONl'EllT, l'qe II City Firemen Cool, 'Hot News' ~-llr-~a .............. b' delia"OJWd tbts ..., la'"""' ,,,...,, 11111 , .. _ ..... 811111 .. - ~--Ult-·-' '1'1111 --' • Ult -I I laC .... .......,, 0-:~--·· -:-.-,_ If Pin: -If llllk•11"11U,_FU .. 1no. · 6iat: T 2 ua. 1-: fl. I I • Prop. 20 Foes ' Tactic ' Comnwn Caus e Target SACRAMENTO IAP) -Tbe people The committee that Coounoo Cause who came up with the "Don't Lock Up directed its complai nt to is a nonprofit, the Beach. No on Prop. 20" jingle are nongovernmental organization with oo target! of a Common Cause complaint legal clout over offenders of the elections liled with the natioowlde Fair Campaigo code. Practices Committee, a spokesman says. But Robert Girard, a California Com- 'lbnday, Ken Smith, Western regiooal mon Cause official, said he thought it dliredar for jbil CCIWnntt group, Jaid would be a good thing if the Fair Cam- bi bis Gr11miludloii "'1d the committee {)palgn Practices Co1mnlttee held a public that Wbltabr llld But«, a public rela· ~ on the issue. 1iono firm. hladlq the anti-Prop. lll Clem WbitaUr Jr. bost of the San "'!~t:tedS: =:s a~c Franclaco ad agency,' bu said criticism po..iilou If tbo eode wtdch condemns of the antJ.Prop. 2ll campaign arues '"117 ell"-er wlhlool practices becauae backers don't' like aniooe to which tend 1o eorrupt or undermine our question or threaten their poaition. American Q1terD ol free electtont , .. " In a related development Thursday, the the complahil ...i. in port. Federal Cooununicatlons Commission 'lbe Sierra Bib and other to-ruled that two San FranciJco area ~ 1fOUP1 back Prop. lll, television atatlons alioul< . give Prvp. 2lJ which wudd eet up one statewide and -.ix backers more Ume on the air IC tell their resloml Minni!-with veto power 1tory, °"' dli•*t 1Wil1 aJone the state's The FCC admonlshment was dlrected J,W/...U. -at KRON and KTVU . ' Final Jetalls of the agreement have ye t to be worked out and state officials said today formal acquisition is at least two years away. Relocatioo of the highway and sale of the beaches to tbe 11tate to insure that they will remain .1ub'k: are both part of the long standing Irvine coastal .... master plan for its 10.000 acre ~ corporated territccy between Newport and Laguna. . The propert7 bu beeo the oubject of controversy In recent over whether it Is to be annexed to either or both of the communities. Irvine Company officials most recently have indicated they intend to delay any annexation plans and will file for development with Orange County govern- ment. Let McCargo, an official of the California Parks and Rec r e 1 t I o n Department's acquisition dvlsion aaJd the ttate will use federal mcney for the ac- quisition. "We will be utinc funds from our feder1I land and Wiler re.imburlemenl fund," McCario 11k1 He explained that the l..t<ral govern- ment mate111 money available for land llld tideland.I acquilitlool wheo the land- owner donattt at 5ealt half ol lhe prop- erty. tie said however I.hat there It no money budgeted ror the Irvine acqulllUon thi• yur or nut 90 the purchut would be at leut two J!an 1ny. Expansion of Tract OK'd Newport Planners Back Harbor View Development , dlt ol New MacArthur BouJev1rd Jnd the project woukl haw a detrimental north ol Eutpte Drive. dfect on the enftnlnmmt," e..dt Aid. "Tbe cornnilaaion lldJoa .... tbl ol : .. Afttt a pool deal ol -· lhey a t-_ ........ -t City dKlded It -be -ta! In two Atlomef llr.ld Budt, wllo wu caDecl alUa." • fnqumtly .IO -lop! QIP'tkm ''Tho --tlllnc ii a "'"1 bod -tllo m .....-. p<Obl<om." Bude •Id. "Nobody ii ....i •"ftley 9ICH lint cm whether or not sure where Ihde kids would fO· '' tho Elii -·-it•ll to all ujleett of Baade Mid he Ill 1101 ..,. 11 lhey - Ille eooloo," ba aid. be tat.., "1 tho ~-Unllled -IOld tllo """"'-.... ..... School Dlatrl<t .. ba ............... erail1 quite plHlod with the data In ''Tho ----pnb. Bren's EiR but It wu Gn the-llep lemt In their own ~Ill• - If Ille ...... -11111 111elerm nrr. dlllom lo the Elll , " bo llld. broulbt up. o.dlUw ~ Jiii~ "'l!ley tllm .............. wbethet' ' ( ... ftACT, .... I) , • ' What He Said! "Senator, NIJon's going to beat you ao bad you11 be aorry you .. ., le!I South Dakota.'' That's what tlle heckler Aid to Sen. Geor&• Mc- Govern al Kellogg Airport In Michigan. Whal wu tlle aenator'1 wIU.- pered reply' See story Page 4. Nixon Pushe s Party Label In Noisy Chicago Speech ClllCAGO l UPI J -President Ni ion opened his final re-e.lectk>n pu.VI with a frankl y pollllcal appeal In Ollca&O today, but ran Into horn-blowing, d>antlna hecklers who alrnoct drowned hlm oul 1t an airport hangar rally. Chkago wu the lint atop on a two-day tour of campaigoina whlcb wW take the President to Oklahoma and Rimo Island today and, aJler an ovmilallt ltay In tba While House. to N«lh c...u... llw Mexico and California S.turday. At O'Hare airport. he 11 k e d a boi&terou1 crowd to help "eie-ct the entire Ropubllcan ticket in lltlaoil." II -one ol the'"' tlmea In Nl1M'1 low.,..nie oi<ctlon campolgo tbat be ....,_ own party label, Niloo 1ilo proml>ed to give parftlta If children altendlnJ prtvolo ocboolo tax cr<dlta to help olfld bdtlon cab. Ho lold I h • rally ol about It.• ponom llUCh aid II netded to "malnlaln dlvmi1ty and Jcttp • stronc 11Mrttua1 amt moral elemtnt In the Amtriean educ:> tlonal tyl1l'OL 8"' u the Pmldent apote, liloaU ol "Stop lhe war now .. , ~ war now"' became 10 loud that Wttti pid<od up by the looldopeakm all but drowned out Pl_ .. - lion. bopn blulnir .. be -to .-L Pliloo kept llltq, dllaodl1 ,,. IW>r1nf the ~ lor --ti m1nu1ea, ralat,. hll ....,. lo bo -. "'-aii>(JOl'Un llopol _.., -the bectkn. A mM'r•d WDftWt ftl ... -.. • ...,. al a McGowr'W ..... · with llor umbrtlla. Tha lhoW of "'ttop Cbt...,.,. tot1r•fld WWI 1 lllvo or "lour .-,_.,. fnm "'-~ i\1 ... poll1I. ·tao l'liilild -- ol tho ndu . ..yi,., "AD -a~ .... ...... and,.-!.. 1'1111 ·--a -.. 1111· 00 "1>46-4, ··1 .., nnt .. UifM I that ln the nest four ytan America wm be lhe land of opportunity where tile rtchta ol all wlll be re&pocted." 'Ibo """ • 01lcago'1 O'Hare -tklnaJ airport WU I aJbltJtute for • pla .-ume poncle planned for Ille Pnol-deol in tho ._ lall ,,_.,, Tllo ....... -ClllCOlod --tlia ..,, ~f4-wtn1kDtedlna Otlcqo -traJo ....... er • .,. ..... -. -... ::. . .: : ,.-::, . .:... ., .... .... - -~= ... -..-!~ .. = ........... -. _ ......... l • • DAILY PILOT N Newport Suit Settlement -It's One for tl1e Books By L. PETER KRIEG Of fftto DellY Pllfl lteff Newport Beach and the Donald Scholz COmpany -Versailles apartment developer -have agreed to settle Scholz' $12.7 million denstty lawsuit against the city in one or the strangest deals cenainly ever concocted by this mu· nicipality. FIRST, part or the deal was that Scholz. would file the lawsuit. The suit was entered in Orange County Superior Court Tue.Wly, the day after the draft of the setUement of the suit wll! written. Then tbe deaJ called for Mayor Don P.fc:Innll to call a special meeting or the council to formally agree to terms of the settlement. The mayor, Vice Mayor Howard Rogers and Councilman John Store met with Scholz' attorney. Thomas Peckenpaugh, to review the draft of the settle- ment before the suit was filed . The council's actloo accepting the settlement came at a special meeUng Wednesday night. · THERE HAD to be a special meeting' because Scholz wanted the papers signed before the general election next week. On that ballot, of course, is Prop- osition 20, the coastline inltiative. Peckenpaug h somehow feels the settlement of the lltigation before the election will exempt Versailles from Proposition 20, ibould it. pass. But we haven't gotten to the really strange part yet. ln the 26-page settlement agreement, the city hu agreed to give the de- veloper the density he wants (24 units per acre) and the height he wants (37 feet) -among many other things. YET, THERE still are to be public bearings: (Nov. 13) on the use permit, the height. and· the environmental Impact report (EIR) for the project. Councilmen, at the same time they agreed to the settlement, vowed that these would be valid , meaningful public hearings. That just doesn't seem possible. Peckenpaugh made it plain that if the city changes any of the conditions, and he doesn't like any of the changes, the agreement is void and the lawsuit stands.~ Now Mayor Mcinnis and other counc~men know very well the public doesn't like the density, the environmental impact, or even tbe looks of Ver· sallles. They know there will be tremendous public pressure at that Nov. 13 public bearing to change all three. IT COULD be that the council will make aome addlUonal cbangea, osten- albty a1 a reault of that pressure, and Peckenpaugh will say: "Gee, if you l.natst, we'll go alq wltb tbele changel." . Ir that's the ,.,., again, the very reoJ quesUnn : Why the opeclal meeting? Was all lhl3 other gobbledegook jWll a lillle lbealrlco, Just to excuae the special meellng prior lo the election? C<rlllnly, li !hero Is lo be any valldlly to the publlc heartnga -as the mayor and everybody elae lnllstl there Is -lt'a dllllcult lo flnd any other reason to call a speclal meeting. IF PROPOSmON zo was the very critical rea!IOD far the session, then the rest wu a charade performed for the e:icluslve benefit or a developer, at the ex'pense of considerable public time and money, and It becomes a shim with- out precedent or e:icuse. Whether that speculallon la right or wrong, !he questionl ralsed by It need aome answers. ' DAILY PILOT Miff .,..... THIS IS VERSAILLES APARTMENT COMPLEX ON BLUFF OVERLOOKING WEST NEWPORT A Lewtult, a Special Council MMtinv, 1n Ag .... ment ind a Publle Heerlng lo Cemt· 'Hurry-up' Move 3 Allied Countries Help Resupply South Vietnam WASlflNGTON (AP) -The United States has persuaded three As.ian allies to lend Soulh Vieblam U.S.-supplied FS fighter planes for a hurry.up buildup of the South Vietnamese air force, the Pen- tagon reported today. Pentagon spokesman Jerry W . Friedheim said Iran, Taiwan and South Korea alreed to aupply the planes from their inventories and that so me deliveries are under way. The FS is in 1hort supply In the UnJted States and for this reason U.S. officials the past few days approached several countries to work out some sort of barter arrangement. Friedheim did not say how the U.S. would replace these aircraft but in· dicated this could be with newer FSs in the future or possibly ' even more sophisticated F4 Phantom fighters. The FS is a relatively simplified jet fighter designed specifically for use by Amerfa's allies. Its primary role is air defense. Since the proposed Vietnamese peace settlement was disclosed last week, the from developers on the park property," said Meyer. Scott said the lease limits the county lo developing the land as a recreational park. "I don't know bow the developers would ,get in, but anything can happen," replied Meyer. Firemen Battle Stubborn Blaze In West Newport Three Newport Beach lire engines and more than a dozen firemen wert batU- ing a smoky, stubborn $6,000 fire at noon today in a second floor apartment in West Newport. Nixon, Triumphs In Costa Mesa School Ballots ,R!chard Nlxo~ ""Pt lo vlctory over Democratic challenger George McGovern Thursday in mock presidential elections at two Costa Mesa high school campuses. Nixon outpolled McGovern by nearly a 4 to I margin at Estancia High School but his victory was not quite as decisive al the McNally Continuation High School. There, students elected him to bis second tenn in office by a scant slJ: votes, or an eiibl percent margin. McGovern'! hope for the "youth vote" failed ID mater!al!ze on the Estancia campus where more than 60 percent or the student voters reglatered · 1 a Republicans , according to ASB Pruldent steve Barry. The cancUdates and their votes were : Richard Mxoa ..................... 1'1t Geor1e McGovern ................. 141 John Schmlh ....................... !I Dr. Benj1mla Spock ................ 7 Sblrley Cblsllolm ................... 5 "It was a great turnout. Four yean ago only IOO studenla voled in the election. This year 960 registered lod 7!0 wted," added Barry. FunZQne Statement Rejected Plans for a 47-unit condominium an the site of Balboi:l'a Fun Zone were stalled again 'Mlursday as Newport Beach plan· ning commissioners refused to accept the developu's environmental Impact stai,. meol. "Commilskmers just feel the EIR by JAK Construction Company (a Costa Mesa f11'1!1) didn't address itself to all the items they wanted to see." said Carl Neubamen, the city's advance planning director. Neubausen said there' are four areas that still coocem the commissionen about the controversial project. "ID general, they fell the developer 's E!R dealt nlalnly witn the lmmed!aie area of the project/' he said. "They \vant to have more consideration given to the surrounding area." Neuhausen said the commission listed four points that it felt needed more detail in the revised EJR. -They want more consideration of the .socio-economic impact of the project on the. sw:roundlng Jea and vfue.:versa. -They want more oonslderation glvtn to altemaUve commercial uses for the property. -They want more cooslderation given to the Impact of tbe proposal's density in relation to e:ilsting_ densities in the area. The cWTent density figures are about 23 units per gross acre. -They want the developer to explore the possibility of a precedent that would be set on continuing deyelopment of the arel'. They are concerned with the same type of uses in the area in the future. From Pllfl8 I CONTEST ••. of large, plywood sandwich bomls painted lo look like giant playtog cardl. "111ese costumes are real restrictive IO II lakes a ~lal amount of talent to be able to dance inside them," Eggert 1'1d. Eggert said 16 girls will actually be in the parade at one time and four will be alternates. "Bui we hope they will all gel a cbance because !hero are 28 performances between Dec. 16 lod Dec. 31," be said. l'ro•P ... l VERSAILLES. • • -bib both (1111 nol maintain th~lll) 1od provide accets for lire trucu. The .. 111eineq1 allo decllllll that lbe cl!J CODllden the project aa one, unUled development, even thouah II II being bull1 ID two pm.. Phue 1 of 215 unltl Ankeny Trial Delayed In Slaying of Coed Details were not hnmedlately lamm but llnmen auJpecl tbe bla'ze otarte<l"ln the kitchen of the apartment at liOHI Seashore Drive. . - The only Injury in the lire Wl'I a long- halnd cat which a~U1 , sollt1id some singed fur and amolte lnbal•Uon. The cat was given oxy1en by firemen who aald It would probably be all right. The occupant of the epartment, Susan Cedarquist, was not on the scene at the time of the fire but fire officials were trying to reach her early thia afternoon. They expected Jo have the fire under control wlthln an hour.and smoke clear· cd out of the a~t He said, however, that the turnout might bavo · -booY"d up by the ballotlng , ..... bomecomlng-pr-. Both eJecllorul were held COftC11l'l't111., Eledloo totala .. were'. slgnJflrantlytlo~ at f'lc'N;J)y J1i11! Scl¥!OJ whlcl( bu 1 1!11- denl po'piilltlon 'ol 200, <0mi>are<J,,lo ,the Estancia enrollnienl of Z,IOO. • "We also had a low attendance '11lun:- day," said social studies teacher Betty Shapiro. disclosing that oQ}y 72 students had cast their ballots. This year's marching cards will in- clude: Barbara Babbe, Robin Fllcb, Gwen Sandera, Karen Maloney, Barbara Toatl, Molly Kealln(, Jealca Stall, Del> ble J!!!<lbO!mj ,J ..... Rulh, Nanq EtJclert, Milly Fowler and Janel Sturman. Aloo,. Qp.wn Ma.1Jtoo, :Sue Llmbe'*. Debt'.ie ~ 'c;yulhl.I 0e11edmaat, Karen Quinn, Cindy Hughes, Cindy M00r< and v .... 11 Rosi!. Epert uldi rehearsals for the cord routln~ wl11 problbly begin within the next few weeks because he said the &irl• w!ll need to gel uaed to their bulky ..., tumes. is alrudy buill · The clly ai1o agreed lhll Versalllel)s in "Within a Well N""'lri urbllt· lucl area which ii • reatdentlal area ·IDl*f, •W>lllzed and developed lo a density Of rour unJti 'Per acre on or before Jan.I , 1972." Propo!ft.lOn 20, lht coes'al initiative on the Tueoday tiallol ,"-ioYt that 1 llale agen- cy can e:iempt pro}ecis from needed permit& if they are In W'ban areu developed to a density of four units per acre. The settlement also declares, "The pu'ties hereby waive further flndtnga of act, conclusions or law, ooUoe of ciotry of Judletiienl and rlibl of 1ppeal.". New Seoul Building The Girl Scout Council of Orange Coun· ty will move from Santa Ana into new of· fices al 1620 Adams Ave., ·eosta Mesa, by Nov. 13 or · upon completion of the building. Dedication ceremonies wlll be held ear-- Jy in tm. Tbe new telephone number will be m.mo. OUH•I COAST N DAILY PILOT TM Or9llllit C.... !Moll Y "llOT, Miii IMlktl .. .,.....,. .. '"-"••s. ls l>UClllAWd 11'1' ... °' ..... C-St ~lllllnol ~.,. ~ ,... ....... , ..... W14'1.MO!Wr~ ,.,,..,, .... C..•• Mfte. """""'' le.ell, Hlll'lfh... 9-"l ,._Nlll Y1l'9W, Ltv- e.dl,. 1,.,.._,IMll~ ..... k11 C""'-t1J a. .._. c.a.w-.., ..,.,... ,..., ........ .. ...... ,......,.. -,_,..,.. Tiie .......................... I• 11 DI W"'t ..,. ..... a.Ml Mftl, C.I~ ..... a.kt+ N. W•-4 ~.,.PvM~ Jeck l. C11'41y ""' .,. ....... OIMr9I ~ n ...... K....il -n...11 A. M""'"11• MMliellle lrtlllw L Peter Kr/11 ....... leecll(lll'I .. ._ .... ,... .... o... JJJS N....,.... a.,1,.,,111 • Md'-1 lt.4Wrnt1 P.O. k w 1111, ,J .. J -- A t~month delay wu ordered today in the Orange County Superior Court trial of a Newport Beoch man charged with the alaying of an attractive UCLA coed. JudiJI Wllllam Murray ordered Corllss Jtay Ankeney, 33, of 3121 W. Cout Highway to retmn Jan, 21 for trial on allegatlom-tbat he shot and killed Diane Singleton, !JI Jn his suite at. the Towers Apartn)enll ut llepl ti. . ·Juc!P M\tmY ordered Anl<tney blck . . . Officer Declines To Draw, Foils Duel in Newport By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of lfle DtllY Piiiot 11.n A man who falled to provoke a policeman Into 11hootlng him down during a dawn confrontation 1t gunpc)int in a lit· tle Newport Beach park failed again to- day 1When he shot him.self as the officer watched. 'Mle victim was definitely attempting 1ulclde, investlgaton said after talking with hl3 family . Surgery was belna: perfmned this rooming to r.epalr damq:e lime b1 1 .38 caliber bullet which tore tlltou&b the underside of hl1 lhroat, out lhe top of his head -splitting his skull -but mlallng the brain. "All It did was clear out hla 1lnU1et," marveled Officer Don Chandler, who tried to tal.c the man Into dropping his .38 cal!ber revolver after arrlvtng on the scene . Patrolman Chandler said he W111 dl!!palched to a nelghborhood park at Rivenlde Drive and Redl1ndl Avenue about 5:45 a.m., to check 1 report of a m&n with R gun . "t was rig ht then: In the area , so I parked and then obtervtd a man fitting hi~ deacrii)llon." the ofncer exrlalned . "It w11 Jllll gating da y 11 ht • · · Patrolman Chandler continued. ,;Be had a rev()lver In bis rlcht hand." Croochlng behind I park bench fO< cover, the younc otOcer 11ld he ()rdered lhe man to drop the weapoo or he wuu.Jd shoot. · "He jWll ltOOd then lod &hool< bl• held. lie never Poin1«I the gun, but 11111 w1vtd It arowtd," aid OfOcer Chandler. He added that be urged the victim to put the '"" do,.. for IO to I& """""'11 while iwllllnc bl<lrue . olllCtrl, lellln1 the man 1pparen(ly hint On wktdt he only wanted to help hlm1 not hW'l him. Ofncer t'blndlor oald the man finolly placed tht aun agalnat his -t. Ored aod <01lapsed, Juat u Of1""'r Jim GolfO! UTlved on the llOOlt. to his courtroom Nov. 10 for a hearing in· to a motion for discovery and on Jan. 5 for a pretrial session. The defendant is m.w free on $25,000 bail. It Is alleged that lbe wealthy unemployed art liistructor sbot the vic- tim in.hi• apartment and then later dro~ , ped the fatally·wounded girl off at Hoag · Memori~l Hospital. She died eight hours later and Ankeny surrendered to San Mateo police upon learning she bad succwnbed . Arresting officers and Diltrict At· torney'.11 lnve.lltl,gators have branded Ankeny a.11 a longtime ma jor narcotics dealer who showered Miu Singleton with costly gifts in the months before her dei:th. Those gifts included a $12,000 1ports car bearing the personalized license plate : BIZZAR. Singer-dancer Richman Dies HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Harry Rich- man, Broadway soog-and-dance man whose offstage adventures mltc.hed the excitement of bis show perlonnaoce1, died today. He was Tl. . The entertainer, who set the style for sopblsticoled lingers In the lllllls lpd tll30o, had been 1n m health 1n """"t years. In Octobtr, he underwent neuro-turs· ery and had been under care at a Loi Angeles nursing home. The cause of death was not lmmedlall!ly dltcloaed . l'ro111PetJel TRACT ... tlve buyers that there may be a problem in M:hoolina or thei r children and that noise mny become a factor from tilt helicopter tral.n.ing fli&hta. .~ ... - "! guea they dedded that ohnough the project does hive aome detrlmtnlal effects , they are not '° bid that the pN>Ject should be 11Crapped," 8"8de said. "I think port of the rulOl1 they tonk JO looc In oom!ng lo lhll coaclusloa on the Bno E!R wu that thoy lllll ore un- certalo u 1o mt thet -d bt 1oo1<- 1n1 for ," he odcled. "Once Ibey f.'t the hln( of theto, II should p llller. Red Satellite Up MOSCOW iUPT) -Tht Soviet Union rtsumed launohlnll •ln&le Cotimoe-1erie1 BOlellltes today, but hurlld oumbtr lie about IOO ml1el further out lnio t1rth orbit than UIUll. The Mcally lllp School volea were: Rl<bard Nina ...................... st Gtoqe MeGoven ................. 21 Otber1 . . . . . .. . .. . . . . . .....•.. ' ..... 11 The girls do not get paid for their work. SALi P'lllCI 779. IM.tlL ~"·~ ~n• of a l•'t• ••l•ctiort of piece• from 0t.1".t'1 fefft~I E1 C.tere col1Kfi•11. llit ebove iece "h 11 1rtt1hed I~ h1~d p1 lrtte~ mlmo•• y•llow with hand cl~oratlon1. thi1 piece 1110 f ••tu r a 1 P9lasi I • ••• •nd 1nt•r1or ll9ht1. DREXli~UITA6i-4iENREDON-WOODMARIC.-«AltASTAN NEWPORT IEACH' e I f17 WUTCLIH DI., '42..JOH LAGUNA HACH e J41 NOOH COAST HWY. .... , .. , TORRANCE e 2JMt H4W1'H091HI ILYD. J11.12 n ' /. I I . - I I ......_ ~ ----- • Trudeau • Hailging ·In There C1!TAWA (AP) -Prime Mlnbler Plemi E 11 1 o t I Trudeau saya he won't quit despite the tie vote l n Canada's general ~lectlon, and the leader o( the N e w llemocratlc party pledged the support Trudeau Deeds for a majority in the House of Com- mons. Trudeau told .. a televl.sed newa conferexe he would ask Gov.-Oen. Roland Michener to call Parliament into sessloO as (IN SHORT ... ) Frida>', No¥rtnbtt 3, 1972 DAILY PILOT $ Jobs Up; nate Same W~GTON <UPO - The nation'• unemployment rale rema1ned unchanged In October at 5;5 percent, but the . ~ of penGllS with jobs went up 280,000, the govem- menl said loday. 1be ·Bureau of Labor Stau.tlcl (BLS) of the Labor Department llid the jobl.., rate shqwed no improvement despite the locrease I n employment. It explained that the hl.gber number of jobs was offset by a contin uing Influx or oew workers into the labor force.· October was the (iflh con- 1 e cut iv e month that unemployment had held at aboul 5.5 perc<0t alt<r hover- ing around I percent for 19 consecutive months . Coming four days be.fore the presidential election, t b e report's pcmible impact on vol.en wu difficult to assess. While unemployment bas fallen half a percentage potnt during the administration's Phase II economic controls. it is still far above the 4 percent jobless rate target originally &et by the White House. On Thursday, the BLS issued a somewhat more fa vorable economic report - from t he administration's standpoint. It said wholesale prices lllolted down I a OI mooth. with the ra1e t.J per- cenl below S.pU!mbor. In today's report, the BLS said the numbtr of unemployed workel"I rematned unchanged In October al U million , while the number of workers ,l'ith jobo hit 11.5 million with the 2i!o,OOO ln- cre .... 1'aert! WU little or DO change in the jobless rates for most categO{iea of workers. Adult men 3.9 percent; adult women, S.S percent; white workers 5 percent; Negroes 10.I pettent; heads o I households, 3.4 percent, and married men, z.a percent. ARTISTE de la Rue &00n as possible so h1s Llberal u't ,.....,. . f~v~~!"~1thc:i1e~e~t·C:,: Ken~edfl M~I $ (! '1 Now Thru S•t . .. fidence in Commons. . . oath oast .... ' Japanese Stragg'ler M!J.rrie,s Spinster The prime mlnbteT said the Mrs. EthOl >Kennedy, looks. up at bust of late bus--.. HousecaMOtmeetbeforethe -~ban~d~,!i!i.Ro~be~rt~,~fo~U~owm~·~g~un~ve~ilin:·:g~ce~re:m:•:n~y~ln~_'._-..,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=--end of the first week in 1 • Brooklyn ·civic' center'Thtitsday. December. Some po Ii t I ca I P11c1 Po1111u1 Ac1Y· ... nM1"""' observerssalditmaynotco~I-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ . . ' NAGOYA, Jaj>Bn (UPI) -spinsler frOm the old Japanese Sholdli Yokoi manied the old-capi141 ol Kyoto. fashioned gM'l be wanted to-Yokol JDarried her today at · day. a Shinto Shrine worshiped by 1 Yokol, ~7. returned honie Japanese as a symbol of Vic- almost a year ago, a national torj. t' hero after two hunters on Yokoi and hi!: bride stood in ~ captured hlm -and en-front of al>' altar of Atsuta ded the longe&.boldout .~ all Jingu, a shrine in a forest by Japanese soldiers who did near Nagoya, 180 mi I es not ,inow or did not southwest of Tokyo. . acknowledge that World War The couple stood in front of n was over. a priest, sipped sake three He said be wanted to get times -the -tiidegO(lm first married, but not to one of the and followed by-bis bride. He modem Japanese 'irl! ln tbeii-then read a written statement mlniatirta and. makeup. Then saying be and bis wife will live friends ~4rranged a nleeting ~ together ~til death separates "-witb.-Mlhoko Hatashin, 44, a them. Indians Stay Holed Up vene until January because of recounts scheduled in at least six districts. eP0111h1Burielf .. VENICE (AP) -Poet Erra Pound waa buried today in the same Venetian 1 s land cemetery where composer Igor Stravinsky ond ballet Im- presario Sqel Diaghilev lie. A simple Roman Catholic r service attended by several hundred mourners was held in the Church of San Gk>rgio Maggiore, and then a black gondola decorated with six wreaUis took the coffin oo the 30-minute trip across the lagoon to the Island cemetery of San Michele. ecampusF,,.• GRAMBLING, La . (UPI) - ,_ WASHINGTON !AP) About 300 Ind ia n Grambling C.OUege students set mattresses on fire in a women's dormitory, threw bot- tles through windows of other buildings and s m a s b e d pennitted after the White furnJture late Thursday -the House apparently overruled fK'St violence In a weet or demonstrators rem,ain bar- ricaded today in.side t h e Bureau of Indian Affairs ~ they seized at dusk 'Illilrsday, their nigilt's stay A@ians Arrive . ·h ... ~. NEW YORK (UPI) -•Wilh few pooseas1ons othe'i-$he clolbeo' they w11tt, II · ezpelled by Uganda ha ar- rived. In the Uniled stiiiii lo takt up a new life. ..: 'Ibey wera,. the vanguara of 1,000 statel&s Asian.ti". the United Staie. agreed to ac.,.pt of the estlma (ed ·50,000 llanllllH!d from the AfricoJ> na- tion hy President ldi Amin. Sunday, Nov. 5 PARK NEWPORT !=~e~ Cycling Events WIN 10-$PEED SCHWINN BIKE In door prlle d,.wlng STAl\TING AT1 :00 OiHllu !QllYlllM: ' Bil<e~Rode<> . ·WhHlle;Contetl Slalom H Sprint nee o-:(!rlllld Prix Ball@'llre bike race Hill~ Treasore hunt c1 ..... for males and femalet. Junk>rl'lnd adults, end various blk9~ '<>""'-- plans lo evict them . peaceful protest.. N .: ... _ f •""-Indi About 200 state police were egol.UtWl., or u11:1 ans summoned to ·Grambling, 1iut sald they would I e a v e did not actually move onto the sometime today. campus. Campus police ·~ It was unsUre.. however, by midnight the disturbance -r the j)l'Oleslers would bad ended. resumethepr-eari:a_Jiged , sclledule for the Trial ol . '! 1'"'1'~~-!'.~-" Broken Treaties caravan · MJ.NNJ!.;AYULJS"lilr·) .. ~ A which had been designed lo major U.S. grain exporter dra~tlze .what they called says it lost some '661,000 on a U..lr' .fllhl 10r •urVlval ' In ~on wheal sale lo the wtilte' Amria. · Soviet trnion last summer. Among the ectiviiles set for Cargill, Irie., said on 'l\u1n- tod:ay was a spirituaJ service day lt was treating a 107- at ArlingtQn Cemetery for In-year-old tradition of no i dian victims of war. They had revealing details . of it 1 vowed to bold the service iD transactions because of allega- de:fiance of an Anny ban on tk>ns that exporten. rtaptd "partisan" events in the windfall profits on the grain cemetery. sa17. !;>~FOR 1t>SPEED i)CHWIN~Bl'l,E . • • , ..,. l)fll>lay o!,SJ o.ooo worth of rare blk<lo - !Im time ._.1n_prange Coul11Y com-tor lllOciallY bikes.- 01c1e1t -r lflltQUo bli<e ~-.t.lllka Belt dllCOl .. 1'1S ... Moat OU11!•l)dlng incyci. ~ng by Newport Beach Pollat ENTllT !'IE: •1.00 ADULTS •. IOCHILDlll!N UNDEll 1' FM Include• entronoo 10 •-la ll1d door prize dt9wtng. Spoctlllng ii -I All Ptoaiedl wlll go to IO~ a continuing cycling llfe!y pro1Jram. E1191YoM under 12 muat bl occomponild ll'f .,.,...,. All ent~ under 18 muat bri!lg -(avallaillo II Newport biM .._ · 1*1tllld rectelllon aint-. and ~Ing rant•) lllgned by parent. I ' . /{ \ I \ I \ I p...,....~~C..11-.,;; ............... ~ ... ... = ... ..,, ...... .. ... ,... ....... " ..... .. ow• 0111 r .. ' If you like to spend kisure hours on the .. ocean beach VOit ON PROPOSmON NO. Proposition No. 20-the so-c8llecfCoeatal lnltl11- tlv8-(!oesn't maka. one dime available for new accaa roads to C8ilfomla's beaches, or for any expansion of camping, picnicking, boating, and other recreational facilities for. the public . Actually, Proposition No. 20 could clamp down on any new recreational development on the l;>eaches by public agencies for as long as five yeBl'.8, just as It could atop a lot owner from build- ing a home on.his property, or a city from building a aewer treatment plant. It lmsioaes a virtual moratorium on building for llflY purpose-public or private-within a permit area that extan~ as far Inland as Sacramento and Stockton.. It does this by 111pertmposlng a tlme- con$;1!mlng, cumbersome new permit procedure, controlied by IPPOlnl•d State Commlaalonerw. on t91>. Of ·•J.Clatlng local permit proceduree; and by ,aliOIVlng any person-who.need not even be a retldent of California-to tie up In the courte, with- . VOil out even posting a bond, any proposed projeot. large or small. AN of the California shoreline up to the mean high tide Is publlcly owned by the State, or If pri- vately owned, is subject to a publlc trust. Of the hall mlle land area along the Pacific Ocean, more than 75 per cent la In open apace and more than 41 per cent Is In publlc ownership. But only a 1mall fraction of !he Coast-less than 1 per cent -hu been opened to the public for camp grounds, picnic areas and accessible parka. The problem Is to get to the beach. Proposition No. 20 doesn't unlock any of Ihle vast area for the public enjoyment -It doee jlllt Iha opposite. It can .,,..Mil llevelopment of baach parks by public agencies. II can Jock up the beaches from the public. Proposition No. 20 beneflts only a favored few now fortunate enough to own beach front "- In exclll8MI .,..., .. ,. .. ' CITIZENS AGAINST THE COASTAL INITIATIVE 170 MAMET STRlrT IAH FAAHCllCO, CA '410:2 1127 W1l1Hlftl &Yb. t.OIAHOELU.CA-7 IJS A ITMIT, 8UJT'f" ft• IAH DflOO, cA"'l:ttt1 --··==..'l'f~:::rrr .. _ -'·aar:~-r:"l'.:'C0:..{.tf1.4111 A.L __ ._ ___ _ __ ...,.__ ... • • :· I • I I • r f t I I ' • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • Dozen · Cats Too Many?· Newport Beach cily councilmen will try agaln to pass 11 lt\.lo' limiting the number of small anima.U that can bt kepi al a single home. A simila.r measure was scuttled severtI years ago ,,·hen lhe C'ouncil bowed to pressures from a very vocal group of animal·lo\:ers. The rouncil now apparently feels, and rigbUy so, 1ba1 reasonable people should not have to f"t up with the nuis.an<'t and potential bea1tb hazard o a doi:en or more cats and dogs li\•ing in their neighbor's house. They also sttm to expect reasonabJe people to • limit the number of pets they own all by themselves '''ithout the pressures of g~vern~enl Being an ani!Dal lover is one thing but creating nwsance for your oe1gh· bors is quite another. The latest effort \ras sparked by complaints from thr nei ghbors of t~'O sisters "·ho Uve with more than n dozen cats in a small Corona del Mar borne_ The "·omen claim tbev have never had more than a ctozen c:it s. but admit the Problem -and complaints of up to 40 cats -bas existed for more than ei~t ye~ If the problem is indeed that old. lhe council action i ~ overdue. Fio-htinrr Ba'' Pollution -~ ~ ., Orange County Harbor Patrol boats m.ay now legal· Iv cruise the \\'aters over Nen·port Beach Lidelands look· ing for '~·ater polluters. The city recently pa~ed a law pa~terned after a strict county \\'ater pollution measure 10 an effort t-0 clean up floating debris in marinas and around the bay· front. Until the city law was passed and arrangements for enforcement made, the patrol's ~ua~ ~ere tied. ~d the city. had no manpower to spare m fmding and citing polluters. Now polluters are in for a lougb Hgbl They will face city and county sanctions -possibly fines or re- moYll ol cltr Iller permits If ~ own doth -8hollld Jilter bt !ouild. within their spb6re ol tnnuen .. on the "-1· Unfort1111aW!y u bappe111 In 1111111 efforla to clamp down on 11..,.lnakers. much of the mpon.slbWty !or <leanllnm will Call on the honest clllJon who Is con· corned 1bout cle&n Wiier. He will be the one llJrbtln( lo hep bis morlna. • bayminl or mooring lrff o1 nootlng debris -even IC it comes in from somewhere ~. It Is to bope4 th1t eruorcemont will not hurt in· nocent people. But the only way or ellmlnatlng the problem Is to go afler IL Once the city and rounty make some pro~. the innocent victims or Utter will b~ ~ lilUe to Wllrry about. Safety for Bike Trails The Citizens Advisory Bicycle Tnils Committee is making a commendable effort to familiarize Newport Beach residents with bicycle safety and the newest addi· tion to the city's bicycle trail system. Cyclympics '72. a special family bicycle day to be held Sunday at the Park Newport Apartments, is de- voted to informing residents about the trails and telling them how best to prevent bicycle accidents. -ne event will give special, well-deserved recogni· lion to Harbor Area Girl Scouts, who were instrumental in getting the city to approve and support plans for the 50.mile trail syatem. Bicycle safety bas become everybody's busine'5. The .bike accident rate is soarin'j almost uncontrolled in the city and a vast maj· ority of bike riders of all ages either flaunt the traffic aws or are ignorant of them. Cyclympics '72 is a step in the right direction. II is a community-wide effort to o~n people's eyes to the fa ct that bicycles and traffic will never mix unless basic rules are obeyed. ' • • I • • < • I_, ' • f I N V.S. Cultural Snobbism ls Disappearing Dear Gloomy Deficit Financing ls Basic Cause of lnll4tion €YDNEY J.HARru~ When the Metropolitan Opera opened i1s season in New York a few weeb ago, "'ith an apparently smashing production of "Carmen", the cast included : Marilyn Home, Marcia Baldwin, J a m e s tl-1cCracken, Tom Krause, Raymond Gibbs, Russell Chrlstopber, my old neighbor Donald Gramm -and some foreigner named Adriana Malipoote. Thirty years ago, 2{) yean ago. even 10 :years Bgo this no-· meoclature would have been reversed : there would be a cklz· en names like Mali- ponte in the cast, to one like Gibbs or Baldwin. The United States may n o t yet have come of age in its cu ltural dimeM»on, but at least we have outgrown the snobbish i:enophiUa and the national inferiority complex that have plagued us since our origin. ln decad,es past, serious Americ.an singers were forced to go to Europe and makl'! something of a name there for themselves before they were accepted in American operatic circles. Some subse· quently famous on es went so far as: to change their home-grown American names into e.zot ic European cognomens, both as a decept ion and a "glorification" of lheir identity. ITHE SA~1E WAS true, and perhaps even more so, in the esolerjc field of ballet, whi'!re a little Jewish girl from Lendon named Allee 1'-1arks felt she had to transform herself into ' ' A I j c I a "'larkova''.) Opera companies -and the Met more Gus J In response to Diogenes' eommenta in favor of police helicopter pa· trots I fear Diogenes' bead should be lopped off accidentally by a stray helicopter blade ... in hi! sleep. -Esgaroth Ttlll fNtllft; Rllectl ,......... ¥1-. .... w.....-ttY !MM ., n. _,,,, r. """ .,_ P1f ,...,. N G._.., 0-. DMtJ l"llrlt. than any -would tum up their noses at 8llY American name, no matter bow formidable the talent thal accompanied it, ao that O\U' native performers were virtually forced to g9 abroad and return pseudonymously. "Achieving a name" in European opera for an American often meant achieving a name other than your own. PART OF nns, Of coune, was realistic: the U.S. simply didn't provide the trafning.grounc1 for serious singers that Europe did ; there were few places for an apprentice to learn his trade, and even fewer opportunities to sing in public with a working company. But just as much was an ingrained cultural snobbishness that respected European _performers even if they were no betier than. or actually inferior to, our home.grown.product. You had to be twice as good if you wanted to get half as far with a lineage that went back to Kansas or Iowa. IT HAS AU. changed now. Marilyn Horne, and Beverly Sills, and !hat robust Australian, Joan Sutherland, are as im· portant "name3'' in opera as any glottal Serbo-Henegovinian or florid Florentine. And when the Met opened this year, the costumes were by David Walker. the choreography by Alvin Alley, and the conductor was a Lawr enc e, Massachusetts boy named Lennie Berns· lein. Miss Maliponte must have wondered where she was. World in Money Crisis Sacramento Bte It is dlflicult to simplify the many ramlfication.t of the currtnt world monetary crisis. wlth its Impact as great upon the United States ns upon any or ils Western world trading partners. One thlna is clear: Buie reform is needed. 1bfJ iJ wblt President Richard Niion and TrMeury Secretary George P. Shultz .eek to brinJ 1boul lq n proposal to lhi'! finance nuntsters or Europe, and wblieftr tbe uJtimate arrangement& prdN. IO be It Is a salutary stl'!p in the rlJld cllrecdoo. As Nixon pointed out, trade deficits and cumhcy dllparlllc3 -in which U.S. gokl retervet have been n 1najor victim -lntbnately aJrect the lives and jobs of ordb:W'y workin& men and wo men, in· veiton, large aod amall business ..----•• Geor9e ---· ~~to -• pollt~ cWI and nan for Ula u.~: eong,.,. or '°'1lelbm;. II.,_,, I don't II"'!-Ute dlftennce be\Wffll • ~I 1114 o Repobllcu. Does lliol mall• ClY d!rf.,.,,.. to my .,,illJ.!ol M,...? HOPEFUL rr:anagcrs afid, ultimately, political leadership everywhere. Nixon and Shullz have proposed that inStead of the dollar, and lls gold reserves:, being used as: the monetary stablli.t.ing fa ctor, the Western world should turn to valuing currencies ln tarrn1 of SORs (special drawing rlllhts) which would be regulated by the World Mooelarr, Fund. The fluctuating values of any given country's currency would be welabted Rgalnat SDRs, and any Ume Ila lrtde surplus reached an unduly bl.ab level, Us currency, ln terms oC SDR, would be revaluated. This: should do much to stablllze the cu rrent wlld fluctuation In curttncies, which bas had 11 great brunt upon the dollar Jnd aggravated the problem or our deUclt balances. How Europe11-n finance ministries wlll react ls yot uneol1oln. surely thou1h, they Ollflht to aee It It to Ula -lnlete!I of lho w .. tem ....,...,. com1111mlty to come to • .,..._ on Ula c:rlttcal need for monetary ltlbWty. At Nixon pul I~ -c In 111 deepett ttenMl meMJ the money law of the hoult, the household of economic nelgllbors. He •t1dtd: "This house we Jive ln -thl!t community of n.aUom -needs far better law1 10 IUJde our l)Jture eoooomlc con- duct.•• 'we can only hope the European natlona will rllc above a"reutve ecooomlc tell· lnlerest, •• lbe O.S. Jllell now propoteS. and perceive economic barmot1y Is: to the beat lntere•t of all , . Big Spending Destroys Our Savings To the F.ditor: lnfialioo Is cheating the Innocent old, retired and widowed people who live on returns from savings accounts , annuities and Social Security. The resources of all of these helpless people are being shamefully and pitilessly uproprialed via the shrinking mini dollar. 11llS IS ALL broogllt oo' by the spenders in Congress, who are wildly apending beyond tu Income in -is known as .. deficit financing". According t Congreslman Wilbw' MillJ, "Il<!iclt apending Is Ute aole basic callOe of Jn. Oation." We must pul an end to this shameful curse of apocalypUcal govermnent spen- ding. C. C. MOSELEY Defleopter Hearing To the Editor: Re the helicopter noise "hearing" on Oct. 24 in Newport Beach: It is any citizen's right to be beard and to protest unsound decisians under c,oo. sideration by his elected officiabl who, in tlu!i:-temporary tenn in office, can effect far·reaching and drutic oomequeoces that will damage the democratic corr struction of a tree way of We. IT WAS APPAUJNG lo observe the rudeness of Mayor Mcinnis, who tried to down-grade and negate Mr. Fu:'!I noise study because of the alphabetical jargon Cl.NS and SC~ when the mayor was so lacking i.o erpertbe as a politician that he did not know the number of registered voters in Newport Beach. WINIFRED VOEGELtN Te-her O..erfoad To the EdJtor: Yoor article on the follow-up study of Newport·Mesa graduates points out something th.at any teacher or COWJ3elor could have told us for years, and they have been trying to. The largest complaint on the part of the graduates was tbe lack of individual attention from teachers and counselors. When teachers are required to meet with 175 student.I per day, and the counselors have a student load of over 450 each, (both t'ODdltlol15 ezlJI Jn Newport-Mesa ). it ls a lltUe diffJcuJt to find much lime for "ind!viduaJ attention''. 'LET'S HOPE THAT these graduates wlU now, U cltlunl, be willing to sup- port educaU0011 reform that will bring about the ~ thltt will eliminate tho soutte ol ~ complaints. It currently costs about 93 cents en hota to educate a child In the Newport· Mell l)'llam. ·Now that'• not bad ror babyslllJni, mucb 1.., getting a holl or a good education. With smaJler class sizes: and lessened eowt1tlor case looda allow· Ina more lndivtdual atttntion the current edueatloaal proceta could be vastly lm- pnl\'ed, lltd It doesn't really cost that much. CHUCK CANNIFF Repreaentallve Coll!omla f'-.Otlon or Teachers AFLCIO • A..C--"Jr To the Edltor: Aft~r attending both the Sept. JI and Oct. 24 city councU meetinp, 1 was opalled at tho anlmoolty of the council members we elected to serve us toward the citizens of Newport lltocb who want limited oorvlco of our poflce ltolioollW· Its effectiveness hn never been proven to us and it 1toems tNt Mayor Mclnnla ii delennlned NOf lo -· It to UI I WAS ANGEl\ED ond fnlllrated to think our government ls probably nan In ( MAILBOX ) Letters from readers are welcome. Normally torlten shoul.d convey their m.euoget in 3()0 ~ or ltss. The right to c01UUnse letters to fit space or eliminat4! libel i.s reseroed. All letters miut include signature and mailing addrt1S", but names may be 1Dfthheld on re~st if sufjident rea.ton b apparent. Poetry will not be published. this manner from the city level through the national level. The common peaple who have no mooet: to speak Car them have almost no say. I hope people start realizing this, and start looking into who they rut voting for,. instead of voting off the top of their heads It'1 the only way we can ever hope to change this. GINGER FRANKS J\'011proflt Corporation To the F.dilor: At the rtst of personal reprisal, I must protest the proposed action of the Newport Beach City Council to finance the purchase and development of parks by creating a nonprofit corporation. It is an insidious way to avoid submitting a majar tax issu~ to public vote. Let thi.s Point tie clear: The basic ques- tion at stake is the right of citizens and taxpayers to vote and to control authorization ro~· large capital ex· penditures, such as public parks. The issue should nflt be confused with where the parks should be located , how many, what kind er whether need~. Those ere important but corollary questions. IN GENERAL THE proposed gimmick financing works this way : Ttie council · forms a dummy corporation. Tbe cor· poraUon then makes an agreement with the city (council) to purchase and lease back certain park sites-present cost estimated between $2.5 million and $4 million. With the lease in hand as security for the lender. the dwnmy cor- poration borrows the money, issuing 26- 30 year bonds or 111.Bkint other financial arrangements, and buys the designated park properties. But the Individual taxpayer will tm· mediately_ rind his taxn increased to pay the rent now owed to tbe dummy cor. poratlon, which in tum pays the bond- holder or other lender. Even tho\agh denied the rlglt. to vote bis approval or disapproval on the merits of the park propcl681, the ~ Is locked In to pay higher taxH. ' THIS QUESTIONABLE funding lecl> nlque was strongly pJ8d as the method or rlllll1cing the prOpoled Newport Civic C.enter. Fortunat,ly It wa& later ab&D- doned tn favor of pubUc vote. That mulU. million dollar j)ICk.,., ll will be recalled . was declslvel:f rejected at the polls. tf ln that instance the dummy cor· paratlon or jolnt ~· IP,proac:h had been Uled, the o! lio1'))0l:t Budl wwld bav• udlllod wtih ~ ~tu loocl'-ytan and yeara ... ..-o!U>etr ....... The city counc.U ahcNald take a dlrtct, forthrl&ht a-h to the park lsouB. Pul the question to public vote. llARVEY D. PEASE Cl•I .. Dl1tortl- To the Editor : I have been a subscriber ~ reader or your newspaper r r about 14 yurs. t en- joy readlng news coverage of our local • area in a daily local newspaper. However, your editorial cf Oct. rr and the news ilem of Oct. 2S concerning the City council meeting Oct. 24, and the police helicopter patrol situatian were both so inaccurate and distorted that I am canceling my subscription. UnW I can be sure your ne"·s covera:ge is rMre ac- curate I will ,not waste my time and money on your newspaper. If you can be so unresponsible in reporting this news item, how can I be sure any of your reporting is worth reading? I ATTENDED that city council meeting and sat in a good position to see and hear t: "? entire proceeding. To say, "small wonder Councilmen turned a deaf ear to the helicopter pro- testers again," u you do in your editorial. is, clearly, a distortion of the facts. lt was clear to me that mos\ of the councilmen were indeed listening to the protesters, and sincerely interested in solving this ~roblem of tbt routine patrol cnating a real annoyance ·to many citizens. Al.SO, YOUR description of Mr. Straus's attitude and his reminder that "Initiative and recall are t w o alternallves tr YQll don't follow U.. Wishes of the people" Is thoroughly inaccurate. He dld not· "threaten"' and It WU aot an "angry confrontation". Mr. Straus sllnp- Jy remindec! the council that citizens can and have taken these steps. When it ap- pears to the citizens that the ... 'Ouncilmen are ignoring our v:ishe~ we have a right, indeed, to reml.I:j them of these alternatives. I URGE YOU to write another editorial on this incident and correct your errors and distortion. MARGARET HOWLAND Parking Tfclcets To the Editor: Last Sunday, the great "Trk'Ycle • Races" were hold al the Ne,.,,.,.... Inn. The overflow of people for th:..; "hm" OC· caslon, which makes Newport ~ch a great place to live, caused a one-day-ool)'. parking problem. ' Instead of Ute police department being on band to , 'Ofltrol the event, the:y merely puled out parkln& tlckell wboleaale to 1 can 't;l'bich were not endangering ··~~ of ,,police action con do Isn't It the Tmth! 8f CARL RIBLET JJt. Tbe American people-are .wttneaes to the mJnd.l>oullna.1ame "-the New PolllJCI, but they don't llCl'like they like It; mostly becaWIO the1' can~ find any DtW or excuaabfe reaSODS for tbe llel, m. nuendoes. c b i r a c t e r uuasloattons, .. .,. callln& and cat calllng thlt be&. borrow and steal the votes -just like the Old l'<llltlcs, only with UIOre wttn o.nd on r1dlo, TV ..00 ln the ldloolroom. "OM thing we arc ,w;., to act '" lhls -Id ii more "of aotM if jl Is bad." -!>ictloMrV q/ °"'"""" nothing but tarnish the Imai• ol the departmont In the eyes of residents and visitllrs to our city. CHARLES F. WADE He'• for Prop. 19 To the Editor : Your "discussion" of Proposition 19 00/23m) w .. disappoinllngly ollaJlow. You are either misinformed of you selected partial facts in support of your negative position. MARIJUANA, alcohol, lobacco and aspirin all are c1ang....,. ii U!ed to U· cea. Propesition l!t does not m::oarage the use of pot; II real)1tlcally d~ the pmooal U!e, ........ aioa and cultivation. After the most complete study ever made of the medical and 90C1al evidence about ,.,.,.bis, decrimlnallzatlon ha> been recommend<i by Preoldeot Nbcon's Commission on Marijuana, u well u by the Los Angel" County Grand Jury, the National ln!lltuU! of Mental Health, and the American Medical Associalion Dntg Committee. These cautious autboriU.. all qree that marijuana ll oot oddlctlve, does oot lead to other drup, doel pol-.q'e lite body, doea oot produce mental. lllDea, crime or Violence, does not have a letbll dosage. PROPOSmON 11 bas rar readtln& economic and social signifi~. 1be present marijuana laws 6osl California taxpayers approximately $100 mlDlon each year. The arrut, prosecut,kJD. b111, incareeration and "rebabilltatlon'' of harmless t'!Ulrijuana users consumes tens · of millions of dollars, chokes the capacity of law enfarcement agencie,,; and our ccurts. The rt:sult is that individuals who are privately doing nothing mare harmful than the social drink.er, are de-- moaned, harassed and degraded, wltlle drug lralflckers and crbnlnal elements1 go witouched for lack ol r~. r Proposition 19 does not legalize marl-1 Juana; II does not affect emtlng Slatu~ regarding sale, posses1ion and cultivation• for sale -these remain criminal of-1 lenses under stale and federal laWl.-ltl doea allow Individuals to .,..., ~ 'possess small quantltles•for oenana1 use -just as with beer, Wine and.tob*oo. ' l AM NOT ll 11pot bead'' (1 find no need ror marijuana, aloobol or toblc<o), but I have taken the trouble to examine both sides. 1 belleve 1t la eaaentlal that we: stop thla Ollrlc:b pbilolopllY, prated In the 1131111, and place marijuana in proper perspective. · ' To pass Proposilion II Will allow us to conolructlvely ilrec:t ...-leaal elf-to. •tcnUlcant mattm of crime and hardj dntgs. ROBERT C. KAUSEI( -COAST DAILY PILOT Rob<rt H. Wft<I, !'llblb,..,. T"-Kc,.;J, EdUor AlbcrtW.Bola Edltoriol l'ogc £dil0r ,,,. -.... ,,. lhe lllllr PUot -.M to Worm t.nd adrnu· l&te """*" b)' IJl'.'!ltfttJr:'S tt\11 newapepef"1 O(Jlnkn UJ6 CUT\• • tMnW, on ~ of tntertst &ftd • slfnlftcan<'t, bf prowtdln1 ·• ~ tM aw npl'ftidoft al our ,..,_. _ ... ..,._ ....... 4'Vft'W Vitwpolnta ct lnformtd • ttrven: and tOOkamen on '°l*:a ot lhr dly. Frid17, November s. 1m • • , '. "' EDITION • •·, Tedwy's n.at . ' llOt:. ·~; NO. 308, • SECTIONS, 54 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1972 c TEN CENTS ' . ' 1 , ' P.itlkley Criticizes Mesa Garage. Sale Measure · .1~ # Colla Mesa Cllj' CounclJman Alvin PlntlOy slild tociJY he wants the •cily:S propoeed garage iele ordlnao<e revised to prot.ect perSOllS engaged In legitimate _ .. 1 ... "I doli'\. think thlS ls a good ordinance. It ·w .. 'tc>Od IO·get the ,attenilon Ol the peqp1e·'Uct I'm sure It's a<JCOlllpllsbed ~t. But. I d91d>t H it was Intended that WI)',• •PJnkleY aaid today·., · He was referring to a Jrtatute which ..Jcid1l'iilulte ···~ lk:en80 fee for eecll 1 " • •·" ' ' J .I . ' Theft of Earth ff Pirty Deal . In Costa Mesa ... ;, Someone who 1UpPosedly ·!Oiled his iepulatlon by giving away landom A. ~ 'Steiner's dirt dldn~ Intend to ~le in any theft of the Instant ieal estate after all, it was disclosed. to- day. f ; Stemer., of 440 Riviera Terrace, Corona del Mar, complained, to C o s t a Mesa Jtollce Oct. 23 that someone stole 35 ltllotloads of dirt worth $600 from his lot ln the 1BOO block of Superlor Avenue. He bad g.iven permission to another landowner who needed te dump the dirt to do so on his proptrty, because he ·might be able to uSe ii in future develo~ ment. . , Only the lonocent thll!! party, the truck drl~ who did the dirt.<fumplng, repoftedly told an Innocent fourth party be Could have all the dirt he wanted - dirt cheap. ' . Dilging into· the ·lllSJl8Cl<\dl1 dirl3' dirt ~..tl Steiner -It .... all • inJoiinderJrtandlng. ' . we .. ller ...... -. -... ............. = , ............... 1 a;a;.:t; -.afi: -.... . ----.... . . ............. -• • ~ :=pc1 "-...... i: ..:. . ' -...-. . ---~ . I ! garage sale and (ftveut license holders from having more than one sale every 90 days. The 4;ll'dinance, aibject of oonsiderable controversy, has been scheduled for public hearing at 8::1!J·e.m. MODday In ci· ty councll --"I'm going to suPt that -who wants t.o have a garage sale get a free license for two consecutive weekends. 'Ibis would allow them to get rid of their junk," Pinkley esplalned. "But I'm also going to suggest that they should not be allowed to have another sale for six months and that they be subjected to a sllH fine il they break the law." A poll of three Costa Mesa city coun- cilmen, amoog them Pinkley, revealed that all conaidered the ordinance• as presenUy 'drafted, too stringent. "It's the garage s8Ie pros we're trying to get after and l hope that we WOD't · hurt the good people with this ordinance," extracurricular ·way to make-money," he said Councilman Robert M. Wilson. said. ' "I wouldn't object to lowering the fee. The garage sale ordinance was re-quested by the council some weeks ago I think it was just arbitrarily picked. as a means of curtailing' the activities of This isn't attempted as a revenue 91>-Called .. proteaskmal" g;p-age Jellen:. measure, but it's for control." · It has been asserted by aome coun- Councllman Dom RaciU agreed. "'I'be· . cilmeo that new ltems such as $25 aebns a bit steep to me. We need to typewriters, adding macbines,. bicycles make sure that we're not interfering with and radioa are being 90Jd out of garages a person that's sincere. But we don't on a week·lo-wee'k. basis. want any people who are looking for an Councilmeo.ll'.ad considered lmposing a garage sale ordinance some months ago ~ but abandoned their plans. ~ "Instead we allowed them to take their things over to the swap meet so that everylxidy could sell them all at once," said Wilsoo. "But it didn't work. We have more garage sales now than we did be&n the swap meet. It's not always little old ladies who are having these aalel but professional people." ' . J Air Force Buildup.1 Allies Lend S. Viets F5 Fighters Korea agreed to supply the planes from their inventories and that tome deliveries are under way. W ASlllNGTON (AP) -The United States hu persuaded three Asian allJes to lend South Vietnam U.S::Supplled F5 fighter planes for a hurry-up buildup of "-the South Vietnamese air force. the Pen- tagon reported today. The F5 is In short supply In the United States and for this reuon U.S. officials the past few days approached several countries to work out aome sort of barter arrangement .. Friedbelm did not say how the U.S. would replace these aircraft but in- dicate<! this coold be with newer Fil in the future or pGtllbly e.ven-more.~­ sophisticated F4 Phantom fight.en. The FS is a relatively simplified jet fighter designed -.Htcally for use by (See Bun.DUP, Pase I) Ing opdt during their lllQUal mlgrttlon soulhWard for the winter. A few, It appears~are fllemp!lng a nonstop flight. Air Officials May Expand Impact Zone for County Orange County Airport L:md Use com- missioners are going to look bi.to en- larging t h e currently defined impact zone around the Orange County Airport so they can act on developments outside it in good conscience. Commissioners Thursdat night voted to recommend dlaapprov~l of a change Newport Firemen Cool 'Hot News' ot :r.one request to allow condominiums in 1be Santa Alla Heights area. Currently on the site at Santa Ana Avenue just north cf Pegasus Avenue are renter-oc<?Upied apartments, bu t owners Mar and Lois Cornwell want to change these to owner-occupied units. The matter was referred to the com- mission by the county planning depart- ment because the site is near Orange County Airport. It Is not , however, with- in the niose impact zone as defined by the commission's land use plan. 'lbe commission decided that changing the status of the units could result in complaints about noise from residents and they objected to the change. The land is CU""1tly zooed agricult- ural, but the apartments are allowed by use pennit. The request was for R-4 , IUburban residential zooing. Commissioner Brian Douglas, director of Fullerton Municipal Airport, said ta- Ing actlon on projects outside the land use area ts DOI always tn good practlce. lie ~ that the commlsalon took Into the requlrements of expandln the mne IDclude other areas = mlglit be noise Impacted. A repori 111 the ~ enlargement will be made at a luture meeting. Pentagon spokesman · Jerry W , Frledbeim said Iran, Taiwan and Sooth Priest Slain In Church Knife Attack ~£1=.,<~-~ r,:t'ify stabbed• in the ·-· bas of St Mary's·Clmn:b 1-Polic'I ~ . The .Jleo, lfem1 Tomei, ... asstslant pasto!' and a aailiio <I Moneille, wis stabbed at !eqt lour -In the beaCI, batt aJl!I cbMt llr • uakwwo·ns ll•nt, police 1"ported 'l'baraday. The church sOmtary told ~ that Father Tomei bad sme to the chUrch to see if any partshlonen were there for confessions. Entering the church, the secretary said, ihe saw a young assailant kicking and striking the priest. lnlormed of the attack, the church pastor, the Rev. Richard Howley, rushed inb> the dlllrcb and the attacker Oed. Father Rowley adminlstered laJrt rites to the dying prteJrt and haUed a passing ambulance. Father Tomei, Blllatant pastor for eight years here, was dead on mival at a nearby boopilal. Police Sgt. Jim Shoa said the attacker was about s Ir feet tall, and wearing black clothes an; high laced black boots. Police said there were no .suspects and no apparent motives. Stock Market In Fourth Day Of Gain, Up 11 NEW YORK (AP) -The stock marktl roared Into the fourth dsy of a pn>elec- Uon, pre-peace rally today. The Dow Jones average of 30 In- dustrial stocu clOled at 984.U, up tl.06 points. 1bts i.. the bighett rmllh stnc. Dec. 3, !JU. ' At the New York Stock Exchang•. some IUI million shares bad already been traded by I p.m. In &epcember the average NYSE dally tradlnc YUi.-- ooly 12.S mJlllon shares. Mesans ·oppose Neighbor • Man Seeks .to Bring One-story House Into Area Ownero of upenolft Santa ·Ana · River bluff homes In 0o<to Mela t 0 d a y are campalcning to bop a new 11etchf>or !tom movinl lnb> tbelr tract. lt't DOI tlllt theJ llO obJadlnc 10 Earl alYton ,JblioeU -juot bis ....... . Cl1ytoo -lo ,,_ .... Ol1&"""1 -·-the dlJ' of 0.-.-a, .. Clllt lot .. JIJ.?~ -In the Marina tract. Two ....... .... ... Oaytoo IP- __. .. Ootla -Qty Councillor A;;'.;t ,:;,~ -=-~·="= the = . o: .......... the .... Wlld hB1ao" the •IP"• load by ..,....bll --the ... lol. 'Ille -_.. tltal ii_ ... _ ... - lllld to .......... 1111 ... 'n. ••'Ill JIJE1p12I Wldlmm to • r • and -l,llO oquare letl. Tbe -sayiltoatleulU,..n old and -only !,I'll -fed. 0 EtttJ Ume be .... the boUle WU l'tling llllllt., Ind ol<W ,L'_. the petition -.. It dNlrleo tbet uoyian'a - waid be "the ....... -ptll """ -''"plJ _ .. -In - lilllll -u the ............ =ed. Clayton. a pntl-.i -""" !aid to ""t the -illtor It ts ..,.. ed. -ends thet the aeJClll>orlloocf ta DOI urwnJmaualyoplnolba "I undentand tllcro are •-afJ JIOO' pk wllo n lor me," ilO oolil. "ftlo Is ......, -...s uni.air. _, the ---bt built --"" ,,_end_ I_ I bed - ..w Cll !Mt --" no .....,== 1o1 ...id not (lol ..... ) • Nixon Landslide Mesa Students Stro11:g for President Richilrd Nillln swept to victory o..,. Democralic challenger George McGovtr11 Thwwdlly a mock~ rlul'W at two c.ltO Mesa bJC1! ---· Nbola·oatpolled llcGcmrn by wrty a 4 ·to I maqln at Eil-llfcb &cboof bu\ bis victory WU not qqlte .. clicJme at .lbe Halljr Conliauatlall ._. lcbool. Tlllft, ·-· -ldm to liit--ln olllca· by. a -Ills -. or an eight percent margin. Mdlowm's hope for the ")<Uh -· failed 1o materla1tse on the l1hnda campus where more than 50 percent or !heo llludent voters nCfltend a • Republicans, acconllng lo ASB President Steve Barry. The candidates and their votes w~: -Nb• ..................... S'71 C-,e McGoven .. .. .. . ......... Ill Job -.......... · ........... . Dr. Bnjamta llpock ................ 7 Sl*ley a&rbslm .................... s ''It WU I great turnout. F 0 u r yeara "Ill ooly 200 -voted In the election. Tbls year llO regtstesed and 740 voted,·• added Barry. - He aakl, however, that the turnout might have been buoyed up by the ballOting for homecoming princesses. &th elections ftiabeld concumntly. Electloo totals were aignlllcantly lower at McNallr J11ib School which bas a ""' dent population of 200, compared to the Estan<la -of uoo. .. "We alJo bad a low attendance Tbun- day." said social 1tud)es teacbtr Betty ' . Shnpiro, disclosing that only 72. students had cut their ballots. The Mcally High School •oles ftl'e: 11-.i Nbft ...................... .. Georfe McGoven ·". . ......... ·. II Ot-. .............................. It Campus wide elections are ~ a. ducted today at two other Harbor Area high llChools, the Corona def Mar and tbe ~Harbor-. Oo<to ..... Hlab School -ls .... not portlclpatlng 1n a mock election, H · oept for 300 pupils In teoc:ber Dan (See NIXON, Pa1e !) Sentence Slated l 1i Tracer Trial SAN DIEGO iAPI -Howard F. aarti. 60, of Ramona will be ""''enced Nov. Z1 on his plea or guilty to poMtUln.i meaa1 tracer ammunition found . in-an irt- vestlgatioo of the Secret Anny Ors~ ' lion. The plea Thundsy martied the - convlctkln in connecUoo with a probe ol the paramilitary group described u an o!W-of the righl·wing Mlnutemm. Another of nine ~rsons arrested wu convicted last month of bomblD& an adultHnly movlehoule , and WU 11111- tenced to one year to ure In state prtmn. • -\ • 1 DAIL.Y "1.tf j '"Best Mellk••e' • UCI Med Chief Pa-per Repam Hand Cut Off I Pushes Prop. 2 NARA, Okluft CUPI) -An otioa!fa _.,.. Ail todaJ tbat ~ black u.:;..~ llad up a Miiia "'" ... arid cul off hi. left hand "1th a linlte. ~ The report appeared In the Okinawa Morning Star, which said its information came from unof- ficial U. S. military sources. Passage of Propoi5.ibocl ! 1,'IQ ~v i.t "the best pre\~n1in IIWdJl.•1ot•0 fol" -..b.lt UC! medical school Dtoan "'lm'tl L Bostick describes as ;i st.aitW?dr ··biealtb care crlsls. ·• ''Each year Californiam ~in-­ creasing difficulty oblalru.ng adtqUtt' health care. due lo an acu1e sOOrtage Gf physicians, den tists, n~ ~nd other health professionals." Or. Bmtick said. "Prop. 2 for heallh sciences facilities would alleviate this shortage by pro-- viding new faclliti es lo u-ain more doc- tors, dentists, nurses. pharmacists. veterinarians and public b ea l t b ,,., specialists." At UCJ, bond money plus matching tederal dollar& would enable I.be medical school t-0 double its class size for a totaJ enrollment of 512 medical sludents. Bostick noted. ''There are two v.•ays to produce more doctors: condense the required material into a shorter tin1e period or increase the Punishment Really Fit The Rhyme BEDFORD, England !UPI ) -• t.lotorisl Jack Birbeck appealed in rhyme for the court to absolve him of his crime. But the court rejected his poetic plea Thursday and fined him $4..80 for a park· ing offense, repl ying with a poem of its O\\'TI. When Birbeck, a butcher, appeared m court he handed the magistrate this plea : ·•M'Lord, 'tis my unfortun ate lot, "To have parked my car where should not , · ''So here I am on bended knee, "Beseeching you to bear my plea. "If I swear that this is the last time ··111 part by 1 no-waittnc siall. "Will you forgive this dreadful crime?" After the court adjourned to }unch, cwrt clerk Edward Harding handed Birbect th1a reply. 'The court bu decided on your fine, ''Two pounds to be paid in 14 days time. ''The Bench bas listened to your poem , "You're in the red and now us you're owin ' "U you park ·where no-parking signs arc clearly placed "The consequences must be clearl y faced. "The next time you are in Gravel Lane, "Plei.se don't commit th is 'c rime' again." Fr-Pflflel NEIGHBORS • • • --pemUt construction of a large-sized house unles::1 the floor space were ex· panded by building it two stori~s high, he insists. "That house , as it is right now, would occupy nearly all the building area on th e lot. Jt couldn 't be .substantially larger and II Is actually made of better lumbe r materlals lha.1 those used toclay." Counciln1 l!n, meanwhile. have been prombtd by Clayton that the house "'oold be: fitted witl\ a new stucco coat and 1 new shake roof to mak' it com- pallble with the neighborhood. OIA.N .. COAIT CM DAILY PILOT n.t--c..r DAILY' ~ll.O'T, ~ ~ ........ h ............ a.,,.., ...... ~ .. °'*'99 0... ...... ~ ........ .... ....... .... ,...llJMd. ~, ~ ,.,...,, -C:.hl M.-, firl,,...n ~ 11111 111411 9-d!l""'"1•1ft V•llrrf1 W,- .................... lthcli; .,... .... a.-. .. 1 ... ..... Gttlitlf"-A llfl9tt ,..._I . .... ... ,. .......... &.,.,,.. ...... hr!C•rt. n. ,.,..,.... .-i1111111e P1tnt 11 •I :ue W..I ...; ...... C.t• ""'... C.!Hwtl... .... lt•lt•rt N. W•N l'rw ........... l"llll!lllW Jee~ It. C.,fty \l)C9 ~ .... °""'9it ............ n.... •• lee¥11 ·-n..u A. ,.,.,., .. ;.._ Mien••• Ntw 0..... H. LMe ll•li•..r P. Htll ~ ........... .. tJ.>ss silos In medical -.. . \t UCI , •'e ar"e U'Jin& to do both. \Ve y,-y de\-yklptd a ntW !Dfdk:aJ l:;UJ'- nadum wbictt.. in tlffd. $hortens t b e lraiDiag timt," lbe -Aid. ~=-~OD ap. proo.-.1 ol. the Sl~ldt ~.uurt. he ~ The ~ pnw.d<s fw SlSS.9 milhon fur l 1<. btaltb sclen..."t buildings at ~'-en campu.ws.. Aik>ther $87.7 miJ.lion in ftdenl grants to match tbr state's conr rru tmesn woold yield a IOlal buildini pro- gram o1 mis millioo. ··Atmmt ooe-lourth ol tho bMd lUnds ~ slated hr cocstructioCl. of UCl's first permanent medical laciliU"" tnducling basic scltoce c1as.sroom buildings and 1 350-bed ,..dling bcopital a1 UC!. '"!be propcJOed uoi\..mty hospital would prnvidt ~ of the hoopllal beds ~tia.l for UCI's ''aching pro. gnun ... Bostick said. That means evlell \\'ilh ils own teaching hospital. UCT "'ouJd find it necessary to continue placing medical students In other hospitals such as the Orange Coun- ty Medical Center and community hospitals in Orange County and Long 8'acb. · Iniine Ma}'Or William F'ischbacll has endorsed Prop. 2 ooting !hat no other ballot measurr is "more humane and sensible and necessary." Describing the measure as a "sound in· 1·estment .. the Irvine mayor pointed out local property taxes will not be required to repay th e state bonds. County Trustees Weigh Opposition To Chino Airport Orange County School Board trustees Thursday said they will consider ado~ ting a resolution in opposition to the pro- posed Cbino Hil ts Airport at their Nov. 16 meeting. The Chino Hilb airport site is on the border of the Orange County • S a n Bernardino County line, about five miles north of Yorba l....inda . The ,county board re«ived a rtquiesl by the Plscenlia School Dialricl to SUJ> port its opposition of the cons:trucUoo of the airport because of noise and safety factors. Tlte Orange COunty Board o f Supervlson 1 rew monlhl ago passed a re!Olution asking that lhe area, most of which is In Orange County, be studied as a possible wilderness area. While saying their opposition won't have a measured effect on the outcome of the airport, county school trustees In- dicated they will support Placentia be- cause they sympathize with the prob- lems the airport could create. Rats Get Blame In Tot's Death? ALEX'ANDR!A, Va. !UPI) -Police !n W, ~ o( ,,Washingtc:m are in- vesdgating the possibility of criminal charres in itM; cue of 1 four-monUM>ld boy who bled to death after be was at- tacked by rats. The Infant, Joseph Aletander, was brought to Police here from a nParby communty Wednesday sutferlng from •·numerous animal bites," Police said. He died just .ofter his mother brought him to the station. The baby, one or four children of James J. ·and Evelyn Alexander. had been left in the care or an uncle in the family's ramshackle woodframe house that ~lice said may have been illegally occupied. There was no comment from the U.S. military spokesmen here. The newspaper identified the vie- llm 11 Hoopltalman ~rd c!us Richard M. Brldgeo, =, of Shelby, N.C. Signs to Pay Candle's Way To Washington They may have ~ most powerful can- dle in the whole world, but Costa Mesans Charlie Straub and Jeff Overstreet htven't yet been able to figure out how to tum candlepower into horsepower. They say they will need some guoline for the refrigerated truck with wl\ich they are planning to deliver a 5,000-Pound American Flag candle to the White House thi! Christmas. ''Al first we thought we would take donations of up to SlO for the gas," said OVerstrttt t.oday. "but we've decided to make the maximum donation only 50 cerit.s ... The youths have ordered 2.000 bumper stickers carrying the Wcriptioo, "Candle Power -We Helped Get It To IV asblngton." The bumper stickers will cost 50 cents each and are available from Oventreet, 1605 Coriander St., Apt. D, Costa Mesa. Overstreet, Straub, and a third man behind the project, professional wu: can- dle builder Rick Stock of Huntington Beach. believe they will need about $920 for gas and lodging on their White House trip. "We'll need that and a giant jar or peanut butter. We're going to take the peanut butter and some loaves of bread az,d go." said Overstreet. ~ The candle. meanwhile, is now com- pleted and cooling in its plywood form at Costa hfesa's TeWinkle Park. Its builders hope to take it out <if the form by the middle of next week and attach a two- inch American Flag fascia to the im- menso p-ped ~. Signatures are now being coDected in local schools affirming the belief of YoUlh in the American system. Anyone not oon- lacled may send cards and letters to the Whit. Hoose in car.. ol Over>tleet. All Roads Don't Lead to Toronto TORONTO (AP) -AHtalia had been planning its inaugural 747 night from Home to Toronto for sit weeks. Thursday afternoon, the mayors of Efobicoi:e and Mississauga were at the Toronto airport to greet the president of the Italian airline and representatives of the Italian government. ·The 111 men of Italy's leading miUt.ary b&lld were aboard the jwnbo .)et to ~ vide celebratory music. The plane landed -in Montreal. Fog. l\fotorcyclist Dies ?-.1otoreyclist Richard J. Broaders IV, 26. of l22421h Euclid St., Garden Grove, died Thursday from injuries received when his cycle era.shed into two car1 which had collided ahead of him on Chapman Ave nue. east ot Robert Lane in Garden Grove_ The Orange County Coroner's office said Broaders died at the Orange County ~fedica\ Center about an hour after the acc ident. Pacific Coast Highway Agreement Disclosed By L. PETER KRIEG OI tilt Dllhr f'llM llt>lf The Irvine Company and the state of Cullfomtn have reached tentative accord on plans to bu!ld a oew Paclnc Coast 1 Hl5hway ~tween Laguna Beach and Coron• del Mar and ror the stile to buy the beacllta betwetn the two town1, It WIS learned today. Under terms of the preliminary deal fhe state wUJ purchaM the i.5 mile stretch of Jtach and land for parking and a pedMrtan walkway at a price to be determined. It wUI be aold 1t SO perctnt of market value. The Irvine Company, In turn, will use that Income to pay Ill 1hue ol the coot or r<locaUnr the hltbway and making u • reportedly 1lx·l1ne tho~blm •long th.> top of Jbe coutal rtdrt!lne further In-land. R•locaUon or tbe route WW begin Ju1t nortb o1 tbe Lattuna 8'oclt city limits and w\U rejoin the e1lstin& route 1t • point !1111 bolow tlte Newport Beach Clty limh111t OOrona dtl Mar.· . Fina! J•tlll• ol the .;te..,,.nt lu"'' Yet lo be worked out· and at•te olllcfal1 said loOIY lonnaJ acqlllsltloll 11 at l•11t two }'t.111 '""· Relocltlon ot the ltlghw1y and N ie of ,. the beaches to the state to in!lure that !hey will remt11ln ub1ic are both J)8rt or lhf! long slot.ding Irvine t'Oastal :r:one master plan for Its J0,000 acre unlD- corporaled. tf'rritory betv.·een Ne~wrt And L.aguna, The property has bt>tn the subject or C<Jntroversy in recent over whetW lt 11 IC> be annexed to either or both of U\e comm uni ties. . Irvine Company u!Cicial~· st recenlly have Indicated they Intend o delay any Annexation plans and Ill file for devclopm'!nl with Orange ly aovem-ment. Lfs McCargo, an olrlclal of the California Parts and R e c r e a t I o n De partment's acquisition dvb lon aald the I sl11te will use £edt'ral money for tM I C· qulsttlon. "We wUI be uitng funds from our frde.ral land 1nd water relmburstment fund ," Mc:Ca rgo Raid. lie explalntd that the federal covem. ment m1kt1 money avlJ.11ble for land and lldelaod• acquisltlona when the land· owner donates at least half of the prop-erty. fte ftaid howevtt thllt there Is no money budgeted for the. lrvtne 1equ\1\tlon lhl• year or nett IC tbe Plll'cbaee would be at least two Yffl"I away. • ' Pt••Pil&el BUil.DUP .•. ' . . • America'• .W... !ti primary role Is air --tha~V-mm-"'**--....... loot -. lilt ~ do¥oloporo .. ljll part """'""1·" Mld Mqer. • .. Soott ..id the I.-limits the county 10 developing· the land 11 a recreational park. "J don't lmow bow the developers would get Jn , but anything can happen," repUed Meyer . ... ...................... -.. Mesa • Calendar 0 JI A J: TONIGIIT MARTY'S CORRAL -Costa Mesa High School's annual carnival, 3 p.m. to midnight. · "ISRAEL" -Newport Harbor Kiwanis Travel Seri.es, Bill Stockdale, OCC A1:ditorlum, 8 p.m. 848-2163. "MONEY'S WORTH" -OCC lecture series, Science Hall, 7:~9:30 p.m. OCC FILM SERIES -"Glen and Ran- da" Forum, 7 p.m. Admission $1. "ME AND THEE" -Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse, C o m m u n i t y Center Auditorium on Orange Co u n t y Fairgrounds, Friday and Saturday ending Nov. 4. 8:30 p.m. Reservations, ~5300. FOOTBALL -Mesa v. Los Alamitos at Westem; Estancia v. Magnolia at La Palma. 8 p.m. SATURDAY, NOV. 4 MARTY'S CORRAL -Costa Mesa High School annual carnival. Main part- ing lot, 10 a.m. to m.Jdnight. OPTIMIST CIRCUS -Costa Meu Optimist Club's !3'.11 annual circus. Harbor Shopping Cen"", Saturday only, 1-7 p.m. BARBERSHOP CONCERT -ocC Auditorlub, 8 p.m. Tickets $3.50, $3 and '2. Phone &21-1888. FOOTBALL -OCX: at Cerrllol. 7:30 p.m. Newport Harbor v. Santa Ana, Davidson Field, 8 p.m. SUNDAY, NOV. 5 OCC BAND CONCERT -0CC Auditorium, 2 p.m. Admission fl. · JANE FONDA SPEAKS -UC! Science Lecture Hall, 1: SO p . m . Admission $2. Alao, OCC Auditorium B p.m. Admission fl. MARTY'S CORRAL -CMHS, noon to ~ p.m. F,.....Pfl(lel NIXON ... O'Brien's civics class. Tltey wlll vote Monday. couraging adJjltl lo 'la next Tlte mock elections:~-' at en- Tuesday's election, a · · to .Barr;. "We feel U there ..., a Jood student turnout of voters more adults might be inspired to vote," he said. . "Nixon won by a landslide hei;e but I voted for McGovern," the 17·year-<lld youth explalned. "My. lamlly's split. My mother ls voting for McGovern and my father for Nixon . I would have been able to vote myself Nov. 7 but I Missed being eligibl' by 23 days.•• ... . ' .. )· • • / / / Drugr-Ove1•d e Mrs. Brop~y Rushed to ospiud j • ' , LOS AJllGEI.es (AP) -Susan Marie BnlpbJ, w of W Angele• areo A..,.mblymaa WUllam Brophy, w .. ruabed t• UCLA edlcaJ Centtr early to- da.Y sullertng lrom 11'biit J!Ollce d...,.lbed u a dnJi overdose. • Mrs. Brophy, tt;a former model, was reported unconscious and l.n a coma: by hospital olflclal!. Doctors refused to comment Oil whether Mrs. BrQptiy suffared a <ll'Qg oyer-do8e. . . Hospital oft.lclals said !he was suffering ••acute respiratory cUstres.s" and refused to comment further. Sbe faces fl Nov. 13 trial date here on man.slsl)&hter and drug dtlrps stemming from > lrallll:.. accident dUlini !lie IWllliler In "hicb a ~ couple was killed neer Pldflc Palisades. Brophy ilropped hi! bid for a aeat In Conl!fess after the mwlaqht.r and drug charges were filed against his wife. Cities Boost County. Plan For Additional Bus Lines Orange County Transit Di.strict'• ex- pansive plans to provide additional bu• service to most of the county beginning in December got a big boost Thursday from a transportation committee ol the Southern California Asaoclation o f Officer Declines To Draw, Foils Duel in Newport By ARTllUR R. VINSEL Of ... DMtr ........ A man wbo failed to provoke a policeman Into ohootlng him dolfn during a dawn C<>llfrontatlon at gunpoint In .a Ut. ile Newport Beach park failed again to- day wben be allOt ltlmaeli u the olllcer watched. The victim w., definitely attempting suicide, investigators aa.ld alter talking with hi! family. Surgery was being perf'Jnned this morning to repair damage done by a .38 caliber bullet which tore tbrougb the underside of his throat, out the top o! bia bead -splitting his skull -but missing the brain. "All it did was clear out hlJ sinuaes," marveled Officer Don Cbandler, wbo tried to lak the man into dropping bis .118 caliber revolver alter arr!Vlhc OD the scene. "' ·~ Patrolman Chandler said be -dispatched to a neighborhood park at Riverside Drive and Redlands Avenue about 5:45 a.m., to check a report QI ·~ JIUiJI with a f!Ull. '1 wu right theft In the area, so I parked and tlten observed a man fitting hi• description,'' the officer explained. "It was just gattlng daylight.'' Patrolman Chandler continued. "He had a revol"{c.r In his right band." Crouching behind a pa.Jjk bench for cover, the young officer said he ordered the man to drop the weawn or be would shoot. Govenuntnta (SCAG). A presentation by OCl'D General Manager Gordon "Pete" FleldJng to the SCAG Comprtbenslve TransportaUon Planning Connnltt... """1ted In the dlslrfct's applications for $17.9 mllllon In state ftmda from the new sales tu on guoline lmpooed beginning laal July 1. AlJo •Pf'rOV<c! by the SCAG committee wu an appllcaUon for a federal grant of $18.3 million over a five yesr period to buy 161 new buses. SCAG must approve all transit district outside funding under the ~te regional control law. Fielding's presentation Thuraday In- cluded OCTD's plans for a Dlal·A-Rkte sen>fce In La Habra to be lnlilafed In December; the propooed 25 cent flal·flre for bas lrfpo between 111J1 two pohlll,)D the county; .. 11-acre part....i.rtde faclllty bt Fullerllln for commuters to Los Angel,., and a -year study on the future rapid lransll mode.I and corridora. '!!to $1U mlJllon appllcation to the federal Urban . Mom! Tranaportatlon Admlnlltrat!On Includes flAl.9 mlllJon In federal ftmda and $5.1 million from local llOllJ'<el Including the state g., tax money. Tbe dialrfct to date Is operating the former South Cout Tramtt Corporation lines from Santa Ana to UC!, Coots Mesa, Newport Beach and Laguna Beach and the Santa Ana city transit line. Mesa High Sets M11rty' s Corral · Game ~ food boolhl, rfdea, ealer- tainment, a 'haulted house and an arts and cralts Ale are plonned for Marty's Corral, a_ camlval to be beld ·Frida.I' through Sunday (Nov. 3-5) at Costa Meia Hfl!b School. J. Pe!lny Ante rodeo of l!"'ased-pig and milking contests will be held from 10 a.m. to 3.:30 p.m. Saturday and a petting zoo for childral will be open from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. ail three days. Carnival hours will be from 3 p.m. to midnight l'riday, 10 a.m. t-0 midnight Saturday and noon to 5 p.m. Sunday. SAU l'tlCI 779. ••· ns. Ju1t on• of • l1r9• 1el•dion of pieces from 0r. ... 1·, '•mou•. Ef C.t~r· .coflff+l•n. n. •be.· pl•c• Is flnl•h•cf In hencf palnt•cf mlmo•• yeRow with h.e1ul cftcor•f1on1. Th11 p1tc• •110 f ••tu r • 1 9la11 1h•f••• and inferior H9ht1. DREXE~ERITA6E-HENREOOt+-WOOOMARK-KAllA$)AN •• - NEWPORl lfACH e 1111 WISTCUff D'- "42-2CIQ LAGUNA llACH e 141 HOlTH COAST HWY. 4"44111 TORRANCE e 11 ... HAWTHC>aHI ILV1>. J'll·l17t .. I ( l _ ', WNDON lAP) -BrllllD'I .....,OJJI Wevl..i..\ n.i. _ ... bll banned --.. ..........w. alter ,.. porlt 11111 ...,,. .---. ••lel plo.-ed ID feature -~ldth<if-.iili.' . .. 'Ille ""8. -part ol I llrtlil 1JOW TV code estal>llabed llf·IW'~ol: an anllp\lruoa~ c:ruaade·-·ond an ap-~ ......,. In coaii>"'Dl• • t.lev!Jm !ans that ~~i:olMmclala ...,. llOllll:·""' far. ' \ ,..., Jmlepeilclenl ~Authority said in lts llmliJ fOport ll:;w.uid "~· '"'Uestiool of nudll)" ln.~ta, bo....W , 1f nudity bad M ~to. the advertlled·~or wvice." ,. ... ~., the IBA,, ~ .op!ntes Briti.in's commer-, clAl.. TV network and which will nm the country's com- mercial radio atationa when. they come oo the air next year, made. no mention' or covering up oudel appearing in drama productkms. But the organizatlm stressed it felt "a degree of un- dress" In commercials was 11cceptable ln a(lvertlslng °°"' derwear and toilet articles -provided it was treated with dlJcrelloo. eau • angmg li:t There OTTAWA (AP) -Prime Minister Pierre E 111 o t t Trudeau says he won't quit despl!e the lie vole I n Canada'• general election, and the leader of the N e w Democratic party pledged the aJpport Trudeau needs for a majority in the House of Com- mons. Trudeau told a televised newa con!ere:.ce he would ask Gov.-Gen. Rolnnd Michener to call Parliame"nt into session as (1N SHORT ... ) 500l1 as possible so hJs Liberal . ' 1, FrldaJ', Nowmtler 3, 1972 DAILY '!LOT J Jobs :Up; ·Rate Sam~ WASllJNGTON (UPI) - The naUon'1 unemployment rate rtmalned unchanged In Oclober at s~ percent, but the !llllllb<r of per.om with JoM went up 260,000, the govern- ment said today. .-'J'ba Bureau of Labor Statlstlcl (BLS! of the Labor Depaitment said the johlesa rate showed no Improvement despite the Iner-I n employment. It explained that the hlCher nwnher of jobs was offset by a conUnuing influx of new. workers into the labor force ., . October was the fifth co~ aecutlve month that unemployment had held at about U perctOt al!er hov"" Ing around 6 percent for It conRCUtive months. . · Coming four days before the presklentlal election, · t h e report '1 poslib1t impact on voten. wu..difficult to assess. While unemployment has fallen ball a percentage point during the administration's Phase JI economic 'controls, It is still far above the 4 percent jobless rate target originally set by the White House. On Tlluraday, !he BLS Issued a 10mewhat more favorable economic rePort - from the administration's atandpolnt. lt said wholesale pricel flowed down I a a I ""lllth, with the rtte O.J per- cent below September. In today's report, the-BLS said the number of unemployed wotken ~ unchanged Jn Octobe-at 4.3 million, while the number ot workers with )oM blt IZ.> million with the !80,000 In- crease. . There was little or no change in the jobleu rates for most categories of workers· Adu!! men u per«nt; adult women, U per«nt; - worters 5 percent; Negroes 10.J percent ; heads .., households, 3.4 percent, and married men, 2.1 percent. ARTISTE de la Rue 'Ibe new code' also banned private detective agencies, . slimming clinics, pregnancy ~e...aerVices and vaginal , deodorants. g:oyernment could detennlne K -~ .. ' • I "Its 'fate wi!h a vote of con-etllleufl , ir•.etllOrta ' ~ 11 fidence in Commons. ~.... oast .... Now Thru S•t. ' The prime mlnlster said the Mrs. Ethel Kennedy I.oolis up it bust of · 1ate bus-UlllD. - Hoose cannot meet before the -~ban;;d~, ~RObe~· ~rt,~f~o~ll~oWlll~· ~g~u~n~ve~llin:·:g~c=e~re:m:o:n~y_:ln~_'._-,;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:__ , Japanese Stragg'ler . end of the first week 1n 1_ Brooklyn Civic center'Tbursday. • I· December.SomepolitlcaI 1 _~~~~~~~~~~--'-~~~~~~~~__:'~'="~""="=""='~......,==='~=·=~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 11 observers said it may not con-1-' • Marries Spinster NAGOYA, Japan ,(UPI) - Shoichi Yoko! roamed the old- fashloned girl he wanted · to- day. Yokoi, 57, returned home almost a year ago, a national hero after two -bunters on Guam captured him -and en- ded the longe!t holdout of all by Japanese soldiers who did riot know or did n o t acknowledge that World War n was over. He said be wanted to get married, but not to one of the modern Japan.,. r;lrls In their mlni.Wrts and makeup. Then friends arranged a meeting with Mlhoko Hatashin, 44, a spinster from the old Japanese capital of Kyoto. , Yoko! married her today at a Shinto Shrine worshiped by Japane,,e a.s a symbol of vic- tory. Yokoi and his bride stood in front of an altar of Atsuta Jingu, a shrine in a forest near Nagoya, 180 m i I e s southwest of Tokyo. 'lbe couple stood in front of a priest, sipped sate three times -the bridegoorn first and followed by his bride. He then read a written' statement saying be and bi! wife will live toflether until death sep11_iates them. vene unUI January because of recounts scbeduled in at least six districts. e Posntl Bariff VENICE (AP) -Poet Eua Pound was buried today In the same -Venetian island cemetery where composer Igor Stravirulty and ballet im· presarlo Sergei Dlaghil<v lie. A simple Roman catholic service attended by several hundred mourners wu held ln the Clwrch of San Giorgio Maggiore, and then a black gondola decorated with IJI wreaths took the coffin on the 30-mi.nute trip across the lagoon to the island cemetery of San Michele. eC.•pt1S·Ftu• GRAMBLING, La. (UPI) - Grambling College students Indians Stay.· Hol. ed Up ~'!.n:.~:i.;. i:.~b.~ ties through windows of other -: buildings and s ma ah e d WASHINGTON (AP) pennitted after the White furniture late Thursday -the A b o u t 3 O O I .n d I a n House apparently overruled ftrst violence in a week of demonstrators remain bar· ricaded today inside t h e Bureau of Indian Affairs building they seized at. duak Thursday, their night's . .stay Asians Arriv.e NEW YORK (UPI) ~Ith few po5.'eSSions other 9,the clothes they wore, 82 ~ns expelled by Uganda haft ar- rived in the United StijS to take up a new life. ': ' They were the vangwd of 1,000 stateless As!~, . the United States agreed to accept of the estlmated ,SO,cm banished from the Mrll"Ji na- tion by President ldi Amin. plans to evict them. peaceful protests. N · f the Ind' Ab9ut 200 stale police were . egouators or, 1ans smiunOned ·to Grambling, but said .. they would le ave did'not al'tually move onto the. sometime today. caidpus. Campus police ~ It ~JS: . unsure, however, by midnight the disturbance wl!Other,<iht· i!rolfetm. would bad ended. resume ~'fil"e'll~'iil!(('t.d" .• ,,-·,;..,:,:_,_ c•-•- sdledule for the Trial Of • urw"'' ......., Broken Treaties c a r a v a n MINNEAPOLIS (.\P) -A wll1cb bad been designed to major U.S. grain e.porter llr>?,!1!11> •llhat they called sa)'I ii lost acme 1111,000 dn a their' filbl for survival In 2-mllllon-ton wileat sale ID the white America. Soviet Union last summer. Amoog the acUvitles set for Cargill, Inc., said on 'lburs- today was a spiritual service day It was breekfng a 11)'1· at Arlington Cemetery for In-year-old tmdltion of n p t dlan victims of war. They had revealing details of l t 1 vowed to hold the service in transactions because of. 8Dega- defiance of an Army ban on tions that exporters reaped "partisan" events in the wil)dfall profits on the grain cemetery. saJes. Sunday, Nov. 5 PARK NEWPORT Enter Cycling Events WIN 10-SPEED SCHWINN BIKE In door prize drawing STARTING AT 1:00 OrH>lkeaall¥11ioo: Biko-' Wheelie Contest Slalom , Sprint race Open~Prlx Bllloell!.lire bike race Hill cjllllb . Tre-hunt Cl-IPr ma! .. and femal.., Junlorl;P adults, arid vatt(>u& bike tyipee 'Ot!W~ D~ FOl!'~C>-SPEED SCHWINA Slk~ ' ' Dllf)lay ott\0.000 WO!lh of rare bil<M - 11..i time -in_Ot-ange County contem fo< 11P1Cia1ty bike• - 0-~ antique bit.. Oldotl !lllrldard bike ' --1119d°.blt.. Mootoutolanding trlcycte . Llclnolng by Newport Beacll Pt>lk:e ENTRY FEE: •1 .00ADULTI . •.IO CHILDlllN UNDEI 1t F .. includes ant....,. ti> •-.-er clo<>f pr id drlWlng. Sc>octltl"ll ii irMl AU ~will go to suPQOrt 1 conllnulng C'fdjng aaltly --·-' EvotYOM under 12 muel be t<;COmPlllltd by poNnt. A11 -.-. fa muor 11Mg -(tvli-tt ~ blloa """"' . ptrkond-conltll, and _.ting __ , ligned by pnnt. •• . "O ............... =-=~·-• t ..... .. .................. c;• e111 I \ If you to spend leisure hours ·.oh the qcean beach ON PROPOSmDN-NO. Proposition No. ~the SCM:lltled Coatal 1nnle- tlve-doesn't make one dime available for new access roads to Calllomla's beaches, or for any exp11111lon of camping, picnicking, boating , and other recreational facllltles for the public. Actually, Proposition No. 20 could cillmp down on any new recreational development on the beaches by public agencies for a9 long as five years, just a9 it could stop a lot owner from build- ing a home on his property, or a city from building a sewer treatment plant It Imposes a virtual moratorium on building for mny purpoee-publlc or private-within a permit area !hat extenda•as far Inland as Sacramento and Slbckton. It does lhla by superimposing a time- consuming, cum69riome new permlf procedure, coiltrolled1Jy mppolnl1 d·State·Commlaalonera, on top of eiclatlng local permit procedures; and by all_owlng any peraon-wtio 11eed not even be a rnldent of California-to tie up In the courta, with- 5. .. " • ' out '"" polltlng a bond. 11f1 propgsstl project, large or llMJI. AH of the California shoreline. up to the - high tide Is publicly owned by the State, or II pri- vately owned, is subject to a public trust. Of the half mile land area along the Pacific Ocean, more than 75 per cent Is In epen apace and more than 41 per cent Is In public ownerwhlp. But only a small fraction of the Coast-le• than 1 per cent-has been opened to the public for camp grounds, picnic areas and accessible pertca. The problem 11 to get to the beach. Proposition No. 20 doesn't unlock any of thll vast area for the public enjoyment-It doee jlllt the oppollle. It can PN•Ml development of beaatt parka by public agencies. It can lock up the beechee. from thl public. ~ No. 20 benefits onlY. a favored few now fortunlte enough to own beach front homll In 'exclualft lrNL • CITIZElll ABAllllT THE COASTAL llllTIAIJIVE 110 MAMIT IT,.,- .... -..cieco.CA .... 1111 .....,_ &W>. LOIAllOt\.U,CA-7 m A ITNET,IUl'rC '"' .... 01!00, CA ltltl • ' l -· DAJI.Y. PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE 'Nest Egg' At a time when other municipalities are enveloped by fiscal crises, the City of Costa Mesa discloses that it has managed to build up a nest egg of approximately $1.8 million. It was buUt up over a period of 19 years as "unap- propriated and uncommitteed resources" from preced· mg budgets and includes about $500,000 the city expects to receive under Federal Revenue Sharing. Actually, Costa Mesa's financial ' fortune extends- significantly beyond that. The city has another $3 mil- lion in the kitty but that money is being kept in reserve . It represents about 24 percent of the annual budget, and the financially conservative council beli~yes it needs that much tQ cover emergencies. Meanwhile, the Sl.8 million surplus fund is caus- ing a division among members of the ci ty council. Should it be spent on improvements or Uied to cµt taxes? It depends which side you're on . Those Who argue for a tax cut believe that since the surplus came from the people, it should be returned to the peo~le. It would show both ethical and-politi.cal res· ponsibility. --- But those who favor the improvements point out that a tax cut of even as much as 15 cents on the dollar would do relatively little to reduce a property owner's overall bill. The city's share of property taxes repre- sents about one-eleventh of the overall bill. City Manager Fred Sorsabal has advanced a list of 14 di!!crent improvement projects, mpst of which are merited. These include construction of a new fire station to replace the termite-ridden Rochester Station, median beautification, street repair, lighting for parks, new tennis courts. a community center and establishm~nt of a branch library. Obviously, they do not rank equally in terms of im· a ·Problem • ' portance. What Is nt!ldtld now IJ a ranking In order of priority, to be determ1ned by the city council. It is quite possible that the council may wish to strike a compromise between a tax cut and bringing about the improvements. There appears to be enough money to give the people of Costa Mesa a little of both, even U it is only a little bil Two-man Patrol Cars Sooner or later it bad to happen and the city of Irvine has had its first major erlme of violence, the near-tragic shooting of a Costa Mesa policeman assigned to its fledgling force. No one but the gunman knows if he actually in· tended to ambush Patrolman Steve Nash, or U the offi- cer sent to help an allegedly·injured man stumbled onto a bandit planning to waylay and rob a motorist. The shooting Incident still emrhasizes dan,ers faced. by lone lawmen in the line o duty, especially covenng large areas of territory in the dark of night. While most Orange County cities use one-man cars, Irvine city officials wanted two-miln patrol cars to minimize such increased dangers to lone lawmen be- cause of the semi-rural areas and lack of lighted roads. They hope_ to attain this strength through recruiting reserve officers. Meantime, howevert Irvine officers must continue to do their best bj relying on backup cars and aid from the Costa. Mesa or Newport Beach police helicopters in tight squeezes. The attempted murder of Officer Nash -done through pre-planning or in a would-be bandit's panic - brought predi~ble expressions of concern. c t .. '' • I \ V.S. Cultural Snobbism ls Dear Gloomy Gus Deficit Financing . Is Buie Cause of Inflation Disappearing ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ \Vben tbe Metropolitan Opera opened its season In New York a few weeks ago, ...,;th an apparently smashing production of "Carmen", the cast inclQded: Marilyn Home, Marcia Baldwin, J a m e s :h-1cCracken, Tom Krallle, Raymond Gibbs, Russell Christopher, my old neighbor Donald Gramm -and 10me foreigner named Adriana Mallpan:tt,. ThJrty years ago , 20 yeari ago,· 10 years ago this ~ , ' m"endature would have been reversed: there would be a doz- en names like Mali· ponte ln the cast, to one Uke Gibbs or Baldwin. The United States may n o t yet have come of age ln lts cultural dimemklo, but at least we have outgrown the snobbish xenophilla and the naUonal Inferiority complu: that have plagued LI.! since our origin. In decades pa.St, serious American singers were forced to go to Europe and make something of a name there for themselves before they were accepted in American operatic circles. Some subse- quently famous ones went so far as to change their home-grown American names Into exotic European cognomens, both a1 a deception and a "glorUlcatlon" of their Identity. ITIIE SAME WAS true, and perhaps even more so, in the esoteric field or ball~t. where a little Jewish girl from LA'.'ndon named Allee Malb felt she bad to transform herself lnto ' ' A I i c i a Markova".) Opera companies -and the Met more One need not travel to Europe to watch a dlctatcr work . Only move to Costa Mesa and watch five dic- tate "No Garage Sales." -Tito 11lh ...,.,.. l'ffltdt ,....,... ........ Mt MC.-11'( "*-., ......... ~ .. .... ~ ,.. ........ .....,. 0... o.ltp ""· than any -would turn up their noses at any American name, no matter bow fonnidabl& ~ talertt that accompanied It, sO ~l our naUve performers were virtually forced to go abroad and return pseudonymously, ''Achieving a name" ln European opera for an American often meant achieving a name other than your own. PART OF THIS, of courae, was realistic: the U.S. simply didn't provide the training-ground for serloua singers that Europe did: there were few places for an apprentice to learn his trade, and even fewer opportunities to sing in public with a working company. But just as much was aa ingrained cultural snobbishness that respected European performers even if they were no better than, or actually inferior to, our bome-gmm product. You had to be twice as good lf you wanted to get half as far with a lineage that went back to Kansas or Iowa. IT RAS ALL changed now. Marilyn Home, and Beverly SULA, and that robust Australian, Joan Sutherland, are as im· portant "names" in opera as any glottal Serbo-Henegovlnlan or Oorid Florentine. An;! when the Met opened this year, the costumes were by David Walker, the choreography by Alvin Alley, and the conductor wa1 a Lawrence , Massachusetts boy named Lennie Berns- tein. Miss Mallponte mUJt have wondered where she was. World in Money Crisis -.. toee. It iJ dUfic:ult to simplify the mMy ramlflcaUona of. lbe Ctll'1'eflt world monelary crlall, with Its Impact lis great upon the United States as upon any of its Wutem world tndinr. partners. Orte lhlnl 11 clear: Basic refonn Is neet1ed . 'll1is iJ whit President Richard Nixon and Tl'euUr1 Stcn!tory George P. Shult• s .. k to brtilg about In a proposal to the flnance' mlnlaters of Europe, Md whate\ler tbt uhlmate arr411gements pt'Oft1 io be tt ta a ~lutary 1tep tn the rllbl dlrecllon. AJ Nllql polnled ..,~ trade dellcliJ and CWTfSIC7 dlsporlU.. -In which U.S. gold r-have been a major Ylctlm -lDllmalelj allect the lives and jobs of otdJnarJ workins mm ..00 women. In- v-.., large and anall business .---•• 0Nf'IJe -- nrr .!mi"~ to .;...,,. • pollU- clan and 1111 tor tho U.B. Conlna. or 1 1*6ic. Howmr, J don't -bow tho dflmtftce bftW ... I Deriohl and • a.publican. Does l1tll lloake Ill)-d!H.....,., to my polllloo! lllluret HOPEFUL . Dlot Hopoful: 111111.U-all ,... ..... to l!Mw 11 Illa diflermce bet.... a nj'Clrd ud a~ -. rr.anagers and , ultimately, political leadership everywhere. Nixon and Shultz have proposed that instead of the dollar, and It. gold reserves, being used as the monetary stabUlzlng factor , the Western world should tum to valulns: currencies ln tenns of SORs (special dr1wln1 rlghtJ) which would be replaled by the World Monetary Fund. The fluctuating values ot any alvtn oount11'• curroncy "'!!lld be weighted agolnat SDRI, and ., Uine tta tr'OClo surplus reached an unduly hip level, tt• currency, In lcnna of SOR, -.Id be revaluated. 'll1is should do much to 1tabUl>e the current wild fluctu.1Uon in currencla, which bu hod a great bnmt upoo the dollar aod aggravated the problem of our deficit balances. How European fln811Cf1 mlniltrtei will ruct ii yet uncertalu. Surely thou&h. they ouaht to ,.. It lo to tho -!iJ1ert1t of the 'flOltem ..-mlc """"""'11 to a>me to agre<rnent on tho crlllcal need for mooetary ltlblllty. AJ NlxA>n put II, """""'"1c In 111 deepest sen1e means the money law of the baule, tbe houlehold of economic nelgbbors. lie Mlded : "Thll hou59 we live In -th.ls communUy of natiotia -needs far better laws to ,wde our flf.urt ecooomlc: con- duct." We can only hope the European n1tloM will rlso above ,..,...1vo """""mlc Rlf· lntma, u the u.s. ttaolf .... pl-. and pttttln econornk: i.1 111on1 ii to tbe best lnlA!mt of 111. Big Spending Dest~oys 0 -ur-Sa-vings To the Editor: Inflation is cheating the innocent old, retired and widowed people who live on returns from savings accounb, annuities and Social Security. The resoureea of all of these belpless people ere being shamefully and pitlle.uly expropriated via the shrinking mini dollar. THIS µI AU. brought on "1 the spenden in Coogress, who ... wildly spending beYoDd tu Income In what ill known aa "deficit financing". According t: Congressman Wiibur Mllb, "Deficit ~ iJ the sole bulc caUJe .of In- flation.' • We must put an end to th.ii abameful curse of apocalyptical government spen- ding. C. C. MOSELEY Tecclier Otier ..... To the Editor: Your article on the follow-up study of Newport-Mesa graduate& polnta out something that any teacher or counselor could have told us for years, and they have been trying to. The largest complaint on the part of the graduates was the lack of lndlviduat attention from teacben and coumelors. Wheo teachers are required to -i with 175 students per day, and the counaelon have a student load of over 450 each, (both condlUons exist In Newport-Mesa), it is a little difficult to find much time for "individua1 attention". LET'S DOPE THAT these graduates will now, as citizens, be willing to sup. port educaUonal reform that will bring about the changes that will eliminate the source of their complaints. It currently costs about 93 cents an hour to educate a child in the Newport· Mesa system. Now that's not bad ror babysltting, much less getting a hell of a gooci education. With smaller class sizes and lessened counselor case loads allow· Ing more ln<tividual attention the current educational process could be vastly Im- proved, and tt doesn't really cost that much. CHUCK CANNIFF Representative California Federation el. Teachers AFLCIO Thew l'tlell lhPoger To the Editor: Perhap1 the Oct. H article on ea.ta Me: • pollce oUlcer Nash'• narTOW escape from death,.ln Irvine, wUl bring to light the dangers which fa ce our policemen dally. A.!I the wife of a police ofncer, · 1 can 1' 11 you that there !so 1 a dly or night that my husband goes to wortc, that l don 't antklpate hl8 sare arrtval home. I am very proud of my hulband -., I f .. I he iJ vory cledJcaled to bis' p.-. fesalon and feel be ii the epitome of a fine officer. l onlY bop<. ~blic as a whole, who read tllil I -1ate th e slCrlllces -men mil their families make for the oalety Ilic! well belq ol their fellow men. BETl'Y LOU HAMILTON o • ...,e Salu To the Editor: I am wrllhil In def..,. of tho low\r • ..... aaia. Wl\7 .. tt tlllt e"'1 ttme thent II a harmltss pastime l!lte ,,,.,. sales. swap meets, etc., there 11 10me obscure oppoaiUon force \rytng to 8Cl~lch them? l 111 oblcurt because whoever ..Ibey •nt tryln1 to lloP, they alwl,)'I · hide behind "law belnll drarled" aplnat them. . Wlto iJ pushing for lhlo law ! Se<oncl hand turntture ttorts that charae 1ever1l tima wbat an 1i.m 11 wortll, wllo ._ tht -lool<lnl for, uy, • baby btd when they 1et word that 11andkido art ( J elected he will appoint a certain number of this or that minority to his cabinet. MAJLBO X This is hardly a proper consideration for . picking the absolute best person to head a department and advise the President. "-----------"" The best possible person should be ap- eomtna for a week or 10 days ,they ask $29.951or a used bed that in some stores was donated to them m ·the first place. and the person can fmd the same bed at a neighborhood garage sale for •10. TRIS IS AN actual case: I bought the baby bed for $10 after pricing them at the local stores. I sold it at our "garage sale" for the same $10 price. Naturally the second hand stores don't like that kind of .competition, Neither de. the "an· Uque shops" who put out the junkiest looking stuff at outrageous prices and call it antique. . People who make the garage sales as a Saturday and SUnday pastime, and' I koow lotf of senior citizens and retired folks who go to garage sales just for some low cos~ altemoon pastime, and pick up a vase here for · a dollar that would cost 10 times that at one of the above mentioned stores. NATURALLY, THE s econd -ha n d stores. whether they be antique or not, should not be allowed to put out a "Garage Sale" sign in front of their business, aod if that is who the proposed law Is trying tc> stop. I am all for that . But If big business is trying to stop all garage sales because they don't like the competition, then it is time for all of us "little guys" to stick together and stop this infringement on our rights'! If this law 11 aimed at our Jowly garage sales, then this $25 "fee" is outrageous, too! I I could see· a $2 fee -even that is outrageous-but $25 would be criminal! SO IT BOll.S DOWN to this: If this law will prevent the average homemaker from making a dollar or two to help out with the!e high-priced groci!ries, etc., then l say we don't need any more laws tci smother u1. But if this law is to pre- vent the nonnal, regular, city-licensed businesses from casl'Jng in · on a ml!ltadlng 11Garage Sale" sign in front ot his baslneu1 then I'm all for It! 'Ibe city knows what buSiness is a oo·siness, and abouldn't have to get a few unscrup- ulous buslneu dealers \ MR. AND MRS. EARL FERG USON 6oM Team Captal" To tM EdUor : Americam are fncllned to be man· worolllperl. No moo lo perfect or all wise. A pollUclan Is 11 good as bis organil.a· ·uon. Pruldent Kennedy oever even wrote hll own 81)ffCbet. 11ie ereat wonh that you beard him say IO• elegantly were wr!tteo by I opeedl wr!ler. Thi President'• cabinet is actually more im- portant !Mn the Pn!a1dent himself. A well-orsanl:zed eaecutiTe department ..... kt ""' ltaelf. RICllAllD NIXON learned to opera ta ., an encutfft team WJder Eilerihowtr. nm _. t1met -be .... tile top man ., ~I dtpo-durln1 "'louo lllnes1ts of the President. Ebenbower learned to operate IUCh a team Ill Gtntral of the Allied Annles In the defe1l of HiUtr. II McGovern we~ elected, be would doubll... 1ppoblt thooe who Col him nomlnattd or the ones wbo the.1 waul:d suagest. Most of tbtm are idealllts who ho•• litllo e>:perleslce In practical mat· ten of pvemmenl. ' HE HAS PROMISED that 11 he ii pointed without regard to race or sex. Nixon is not all wise or otherwise perfect, but be does know bow to utilize the intelligence of our natioo and thereby· has accomplished much. He is a good. team captain. He ~ wise enough not to always carry the tioll and do the spec- lltcular. He ...boJ.ds team soore above in- dividual score. , f believe he is tht\besl man for the job. JIM BOWING N uty Polftlcs To the Editor : If ever the citizens of America should be concerned over persons running for the highest office in the land, the presidency, now is the time. To have McGovern compare President Nixon to Hitler, to crucify him at every tum and get away with it Ls alarming to me. Politics has always been known to be nasty, but when they ap;>n>ach the act of traitorous untruths, then It ls lime to think about cb.angtng our attitudes toward condoning persons such as McGovern to be able to get awiy with such acts. 111E 1WO.PARTY system has kept Ame_rican mostly honest, by every four or eight years flushing out the impurities anci starting clean again. However in this election when our country needs ~eal truth in Its crl!i! to seek peace and end f nightmare war, each individual, in- duding McGovern, should sacrifice personal gain for his selfish rise to power. GRANT HARDING PHILLIPS -Stall's Legbl4atlon To the Editor: M a teacher, I am In the process of developlnc: ob)ecUves for my eoune:: ac. conling to proc<dures Inspired by the lefialat!on which made the name of Ataemblyman Jobo Stull a -Id and claaaroom_,;erm with all educaton. rr OCCIJllS to me that tbio excellent device foe · dellnlng t"!l IJl'OJectint perfonnaiq proceduna lbotlJd extend to other areu, puticularly .legbfative. Performance and reau.ltl of Califom.Ja legislative sessionJ tiave been something less than satisfactory in the estimation of lhe majority of cali!omia tupayers and cltlzena recooUy. Accordlnfly, tt ·11 my 1uggeatldn, u a Cllilomia ,taxpayer (or many-~• that leglllttor; drow up ol>- )ectlves at !he bepnnlOI of"the ..,.;on, complete with guidollnel for meuurlng reaulis. 11118 WILL ENT.W. many bouts and much peper -k time and dfort which some mtjl ftD feel mlibt be better opent In clfT1lnl aut primary and pertinent duties. l:loweYer, we 1U know tlllt ac- counti.bllity Ue1 at th~ very roots of our democratic form ol eover111D1D'" GAY VAN WEY. ,._,,._ Tlclfieu To the !t'ilor: Last Sunclly, the l'ffl "Trlo..')'de Races" wtre held at t~ Nn])Orttr lnn. The omfl°" of people for lit. "fu.." oo- calion, whlc~ -Newport Belch a 1rcat place to live, coused 1 cn""1ay • >I)> parklna~ . lllllead ol lho PGlk:o deportment belq on hand to on~ tho fWllt. they mmlJ palled oul parklnc tlcata wbolelale to can wblc:~ ....,.. not --inll anythi ... '111i1 type of pollce ac\lon an do I • nothing but tarnish the image or the deparpn,.nt in the eyes or residents and visiturs to our city. CHARLES F. WADI!: He'• for Prop. 19 To the Editor: Your "disc\Wlon" of Proposllim 19 U0/23/72) ""' disappolntlngiy 8hallow. You are either misWormed or you selected parti'1 facts In support of your negative Position. MARUUANA, alcohol, tobacco and aspirin all m dangerous if uaed to u 4 cess. ProposlUon · 19 does not encourage the use of Pot: it realistically decriminalizes the personal use, pol58CS- sion and cultivation. After the most complete study ever made of the medical and social evidence about ::annabi!:, decriminalization has been recommendei by President Nlson's Commission on Marijuana, as well aa by lhe Los Angele; C.Ounty Grand Jury, the National Institute of Mental Heall.bi and the American Medical AssocUl.Uon Drug Committee. These cautious aut.bortUes .n· agree that marijuana ii oot addictive, doea not lead to other drop, does oot dar-.age the body, does not produce mental Wneea, crime or violence, does not have a lethal dosage. PROPOSmON II has far n!aching economic and soclal significance. Tbe present marijuana laws 03St California taxpayers approrlmately $100 million each year. 'l1>e arrest, prosecution, trial, incarceration and "rehabilitation" or harmless 1narijuana users C0118UJDe!I tens of millions of dollars, chokes the capacity of law enforcement agencle:: and our ccurts. The rtsult is that individuals who are privately doing nothing more harmful than the social drinker, are de- meaned, harassed and degraded, while drug traffickers and criminal elements go wttouched for lack ol retOUJ'Cell. • Proposition 19 does not legalize marl· r Juan•; tt does not affect emtlng atatutes , regarding sale, posseuion and cultivation ' for sale -tbe9e remain crim1nal of-: renses Wider state and federal laws. lt • does allow lndlvlduals lo """ and : "°"""" small quanUtles !or -1 use · -jwit as with beer. wine and tobacco. : ' I AM NOT 1 "pot bead" (I llncl no need ! for marijuana, alcohol or toblcco),1but t • have taken the trouble to enmlne both sides. I believe It la eSRnUal that we · stop this ostrich phUOIOp"1f, generattd in · tbe 1930!, and place m1rljuiria tn proper ' perspective. To pass Proposit ion 19 wtll allow us to 1 con1tructlvely 11rect our 1egal eUorta to : at.gnUlcant matters of crime and hard ' dnlp. ROBERT C. KAUSEN --DAILY PIL OT Robm H. Wood. !'llblloh<r T,,_ Kr..U, E'dllor Alb<rt W. Botu Editorial ~' Edl!M ..,,. editorial ...., or the Dali> Pilot aeeks to lntorm and ttlmu· late ""'*"' by pntentlfts thb MWIPI•• apfnlonl Md corn· tntn&uy on IOllks of lntnwt UICI ~. ""-· . '"""" if« OW u:p 'oe ot our nMl:n' -... "" ,,,_ ... the •vtrtt vWwpolata ot lnlonnflil GI).. wnws and •pMiln•11 on tapb ......... ' Frld17, November 3, 11172 ' f