HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-11-21 - Orange Coast PilotI
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·CJ-:a1l1nW·s · Elljoy
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At N~w.pa.-a Beaeh
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MAY,....,_. .....
CVMMIRS CLAMMING IN SHALLOW WATERS OFI' NIWPORT
hh••• I.ow Thllio .... o.t. i..ftn 4if. S11f1ill Dollcacy
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' Home Fire
Loss High
In Balboa
Fire in U., home ~ a Balboa interior
decorator Monday night caused damage
to art objec)s and fumishtogs reportedly
valued at niore than $100,000.
A prelimim.ry Newport Beach Fire
Departmeot-esttmate of a $20,000 Joos in
the bedroom' blue, believed caused by a
cigarette, ls ••extremely low," said
Thomas Evans, owner of the ocean front
home It 1213 E. Balboa Blvd.
He daiml the km topo $100,000.
Fire 1Wlbal W. C. "Bill" Noller said
this moroin( be intendl to stick to hts
original estimate ol the damage.
"He (Evw:) bad three paintings in one
closet and they weren't consumed,"
Noller said.
"And there were 90me bronze art ob-
jects that weren't damaged at all to J
don't know where be gets the big lou,"
NoDer said.
"But I can't dllprove the value be puts
on thole picturel,'1 Noller added.
Evans Aid be and his wife were in bed
'l'<tdllng the Monday night tdevtMd
loadloll game when they melled llDOM
and dtocovered the raging fire In the
doWlllllln bedroom. Evans said the
bedroom la . oca;pled by hts ... durlnc
(See FIRE, Pop l)
C.la I I I I ·ers Bit It Ri~h
By WILUAM SCllRElllER perl«t." said ~ Lopn Locl;abey
Of .. °"" ,., "'" II lillt watebid tbe crvwd& ol c1ammen
Ul<e 1 rq-tq army, .... ol ~-pob ·1n1o the lli!d In bopel ol httting
dJigers hive -.., N'twpaot ........... olher -anck.
Beadl oands in enjoy whit qiiertl are ., ,1-.., llld the beoYJ oar! ol a
caJlllig the bdt cWmnln( -· ID -• pllad ... 1 .... -·
--· ..... -~"Pier and tho 'dam Tbe cl•o•naen are • .., cnw, ••• ~ .... IMM-ed
di-In eftotbiDa !tom -..... • Bo ..... ----ltlP tides -
bore-feet and &ftalllib Iii to ...... ... -- ---lallowed bf ....
wellU!ts. -~ ... Uda-•..-cl 'l'lley are equlppad wltb a wlle••lolr ..... --.-wp;-, ii -'-a, ceo•td
ol lliall ........ -. """'*"· .. ., .. ' • -. '
-and ..... _ .. ___ °"' '••··· "'·-·--and1-a(~l·1 u ___ ... __ r' .,,
to ..... tbelr tUe a( --... .... -""' --tllt -.......
Tbeclammen1
ooltp;tjllt ....... .... ...... --·· "{; ...... b chilly ...., .... 11.... ..... :"'l ·r lllJ -,.. .. ... .. 11\ld ii tl;e.caplwe GI -'t1ld f!;nio M••
.ia..,. at -four ..... ..., ...... .. Clllonllli P'llli and Gema o.i--
-..... the..... -----........... -''Heme tf M C!9 II f CI,_. .. Na&pwtBwla ... ,. ...... .,.
-tlltd ~<•l'l -· ....... ,..,.._ .. __
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or clams that art too nnall. wan:... a.et Gall aald -I• alttady
have been caua>it with clams under the
Iecal Ille.
"II., --clam ii calllht. It ~ boo to IO -In Ibo bole It
came !tom," Gall Aid. "But uouallJ you
. paob It -Into tho aaad .. . ' ,
Gall iaJd • ts -Inc -la ;e-
qalred lor - -II lilld any --"'llil lilli ... -coda ......... lldlred ml.tm'EIMI.
By -_,, Ibo ocean
.. .... 11 1
-in mid. pier and
-ol ..... -adv•tq• ol Illa
aalt-.... loll behlDd In tho -· IMbbey llld pd clammlno ..... -~-ilaofor....nl,....
• -tidal -. ore ~ -l"rldl1· •
lie Aid. -ol-'< 11a .. -( .. a.APDONG, .... I)
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, Bla111ed in Firi 11g
By DST!>s Daug-.te
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Trt1ma.-Kin Coast CofC
MacArthu·r Fired Begins List
Mter Panicking_
NEW YORK (UPI) -President Harry warfare -the Hiroshima bombin& In
S Truman fired Gen. Douglss MacArthur 194$.
as U.S. conun:inder in Korea lo 1951 "No," &be replied. "He had no leCOOd
because he felt MacArthur "sort of thcucht1 because it did 11n hundreds of
panicked," Truman's daughter aald to-thouaandl of American lives."
day. -Mn. Doniel had access in """"'
Margaret Truman Daniel 1 a I d her
father concluded that ~hings were too
shlky" for Allied foiUS at the time be
decided to recall MacArthur.
'I1lis took place April ll, 1951, and set
of.I a storm of protest among backen of
the World War II hero.
Mn. Daniel said her father fomaw
that bis deciaion would be unpopular, an::I.
cbole to say little or notbing more about
bis actteo In the days and weeks that
followed, not lnlerferlng in a bl& welcome
home for MacArthur.
MacArthur was relieved u U.S. com-
mander 'ofter threa~ pwnd
and air attacks Jn Cblna, In
punult of Chinese forte1 who llded
North Korea.
MacArthur made Ibo tlnoil without
clearin( statell1«\ts with Wublncinn, u
Truman had orderea.
Sin. Doniel, who his written a book
about her father, was lnt.ervlewed oa tbe
NJ!C.TV Today Show.
Mrs. Daniel said of her father'• view of
Mac.Arthur'• unauthorized ltltements: "Hi• reaction was lhlt he (MacArthur)
was a man who aort of panicted'. All or
hit predlcttons 1bout the Far East, and
Korea. were simply wrona:. . . He
(Truman) thou ght thtnp were too
lbaky."
MICArthur's lhreatl about a OUN in-
vulon, which Truman !tored wootu
1mU7 widen the Kor.an oanflld, came
Man:h 25, 1911, n days bdon his
removal and fOW" mootbo -• -fire and • start ol neaotJatliml to end the -· Mn. Doolel •bo ... -~ -
had .., -tholllhts --. the flrit "" ol an ainmlc bomb In
Heart Patient OK
STANrol\D (UPI) -Stan1ont Sledical
C..t..-'1 IOth bean tttnlploot reclpi<llt wu ._-tec1 lo sot!lllCIO<y _. • .., .,_
..,_ Dr. -Slumr07'1 ;oqjclJ
tum -..... bean lllto llil 11-,.....
old catllGmla -1uoda7:,,,. recipient
Ind -In Uie , l.....,iant wno DOI idmtilled.
,,
hitherto unpubllsbed mot.rial. from
Truman'• private recordl, In writing her
bool<, Utled limply "Harry S Ti:umao."
An esCOllJ( WU publlsbed Sunday by
Life M:lgulne in which Mrs. Daniel said
her father agreed to become Franklin D.
-vtlt'I nmnlng mote In 1944 ooly
a/tor beovy ix-re from -.ett lilld
others. '
S1ie said Truman felt Roooevelt _,)d
die in olllca, meaning be -id -
ltoooevelt -and that he did not want to
enter the Wblte llOUIO "throucb the back
door."
. 'Live' Evidence
In Court Trial
Raises Problems
SANTA CRUZ (UP IJ -The judge 100
cl«t did their best to maintain
courtroom de<onun, but Jt WIS difficult
with a bq ol evldtnce crawling 111 ovtr
them.
Aller a papa big ol blrdleod ,,... In-
troduced at • thtft I.rill, a small army or
wteVUa marched out and btlded dirertly
for the bend;.
•1 felt _.... <mollftl over my
ann ~oo f loc*ed ""'1i at the table aoo
there were all ~ bop," said cl<rk
Mn. Pot l"lot. "I ....... bniobJn( Uiem
oil Oil in tho lloor lltd ltOmpinC Oil them
u~ulcould.
"f -"" 11111 -lade• (Charles• ~ .... tho -~· lie told mo lattt Ila was ..._they...,. cn•lin&
Ill Oftl' b1m ..... \la robe.11
F~ a brief -. the packsge
WU """9ad wlCli tapa lilld •lled in I
beo'7 plullc ...
But die ...U. •" tbllr' •I!' out qaln 1n the derk'1 n'.d11 M locMr • the Judi• ..... 1111. 111111 IO lind • ""1ld
metal ... for tlit ~
Tbe dllOitdaat -coo•lded but the blrdleld 11 lllll at the Santa cnu eo...11 c.un-. todo)' •walllnc the oatcome
ol-lblt-11
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Of Effects
Directors of the Newport ~
Chamber or Commtrte agreed Monday
to start a douitr on the problems
created by CalifomJa'1 new coastal pro-
tectkln law wtth an eye toward mounting
a statewide lnlllatlve campaign against It
In two yean. •
Tbey indicated the new elfort "-'OUAI be
an ulemkln ol their unsuccessful ctftve
to delut Proposition lO eorller tllls
month.
"We knew we were fighting a loalnc
battle when we started worl<in& oplnll
tht1 thlna." aald Richard 5-,
longtime Balboa Bay Club e1ecutlte and
one ol the clwnber dlrectorl fto
spwbelded • Jut-ditch c 1 m p a I 1 a
aga.lnll Proposition 20.
"I've llUl beard noihlng that chancel
our or!plll l>ellef that this thli!c will be
a dlautrous curb on sane devtiopmtnl
ond a cottly new l1yer ot pvenuneat,"
be said. "God help u.s aod God help tbooe
DeW rtgknaJ cortunlatonl."
Approval ol the measure ..._ m
;qionll .. -will be tstablllbed
which will hlYO ftto -owr m;y
developmfnt -• n-ot;lp tl!el IN111AnYI, ..... I )
•••••
The W<ltber out1ool< for w-
day Is contlnuld amy lklet wt ..
slllf\Uy warmer tempenllnl, ..,.
con!Jni to tha -lbu -
ltigbl •t tho -· ~ •
;I Ing to 11 -LoQ 1'"'lcbl -· ll'VSIDE TOD.t 1r' ·
Chill ntriu ftlcfUdfd n;W..
make c1'IU nd Tnwnwc rac-
COOll clllll. Tiie .,._..,. -1"""
Colon>do, ~I that ....,.'I ...
polot.o/ IM rlnli °"""°' lotn-"°"""4l ChUI Apprcclalloo" s.,.
cllfJ. II -111< llolt<uu la
llolJl""la. s.. """ .. """ "·
UL ..... d -~ W c.-.... e -... • ~ ........ ,... ti ~ ......... _ . =--1 =-. = ..... :•=,=--~ -
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% DAILY PILOl s l""'1<J, N-21, 1972
l(issinger, Reds Parl
GlF.suR·YVE'l'l'E, France (UPI) -
Whit• H""" aide Henry A. Klsslnger and
North Vietnamese llfgollntors Le Due
Tbo and Xuan 111uy met today in this
village outside Paris ror lbeir second
round of lalll aimed al ending the Viet·
nam war.
The Hano! negotiators drove up In two
black: Citroen cars with a French
plainclothed police escort. at 2:40 p.m.
(5:40 a.m. PSf) and Kissinger arrived 15
minutes later, leading a convoy of some
30 newsmen who followed hlm 15 miles
from PariJ.
The two skies entered a white stucco
red-roofed v~ belonging to the French
Astronauts
Rehearse
'17' Takeoff
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -With their
rocket "ready to go", Apollo 17's
astronauts rehearse their part of the
countdown tonight for launch Dec. 6 on
America's last planned journey to tbi:
moon.
The towering Saturn 5 rocket and its
three-module space&hip paned a loog,
realistic countdown test Monday by
simulating .blastoff on schedule lit 6:53
p.m. (EST).
"It'a been a very nominal and
uneventful test," reported launch direc-
tor Walter J. Kapryan. "Everything
looks like we're in real good shape. We 're
ready to go."
Because the Saturn was ·filled with
more than 10 million gallons of explosive
propellants, astronauts Eugene A .
cernan, Ronald E. Evans and Dr. Har·
risoD H. "Jack" Schmitt waited until the
fuel was drained before rehearsing their
part of the countdown.
The supercold liquid ozygen and liquid
hydrogen propellants were drained dur·
ing the nlgJ>t under th, light produced by
_a battery ol 130 seardillghts surrounding
the oceanside lawich pad.
The atrD08phere was hazy and from a
distance the 313-foot apace machine bad
a strange orange glow to it as it stood on
the oceanside firing pad during the
nighl
' ceman, Evans and Schmitt plan to
"follow their laundl day tlm<table tonight.
aimln& toward another mock launch at
~:53 p.m. .
,., Their IChedule called for them to don
. their 11p111,esull> 311 houn be[ore launch
time, leave their quarters at the KeMedY
·Space Center at 3:47 p.m., board their
t~pacecraft at 4:13 p.m., and then nm
(through a aeries of c:ommunicationa and
'lt instrument checks.
~ 'Ibe countdown test began Wednesday
'ind included virtually everything, but the
t actual ignitkm of lhe Saturn'• rive first·
stage enginel.
l The count4own stopped Monday night
·at the T·mious 8.9 second mark in the
,;COWltdown -the point when the engines
~oonnally would start.
t The real countdown Is scheduled 10
~begin Nov. 30.
l
~ASTRONAUT GETS
1 'CABINET POST? ,
: MIAMI (UPI) -Former astronaut
-!Frank Borman Ls under consideration by
.President Nixon for appointment as
Zsecretary of transportation, It was
:reported today .
~ The Miami Herald quoted "high
~Republican slurces" u uylng Borman
:wu being oonaidered, but added that the
•WhJte HOUR said "no declslorui" have .:been made on any change.a at the upper
:-Jevels of the Nixon admlnlatratlon. . . · .... ~~~~~~~~~~~-. ;
I
t . •
O ....... COAST IT
DAILY PILOT j • t Ttlltow.t C-.t Dl\f&.Y PILOT, wttfil 'fllMttl
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Ill ................ , .......... ..
... ~Ollt ........... ~ ...... « ,... ..... Wt, .. , ........ ......,.,....... ,,...,., .. °"' .............. ~ 'iJ llclfhClll ............... Y...,, Utln.t
-; a.dti. 11'¥M'I ; A • :t .,., llft ,...._,.., i: ........ , ....... ..,.. .. ,.. .... t iMlflMll ....... ......,. ............ f n. ,,._.., Mltdlllll ,..,,. It et aJI Wnf J .. , .,,..,, a. ,... ClllflnUI., .....
! lalNrt N. W11' l ,.,...... aflllll P\IMlllW
J•ck l. Ct1tlay
I Vla9 ,.,........ .,,., o..rwt M.....,r
1 n..11 ac.nll ·-t ......... A. ,..,,., ..
J Mlfl••• ...... ! Clot~" H. IMO llo .. .4 r. HoR ......... ,,.. .......
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Communist party to begin their negotla-
liom.
Kissinger has said one more round of
negotiations would be enough to wrap up
the cta~fire agreement, but there were
mounting indications from Saigon of
President Nguyen Van Th I e u 's
dissatisfaction with the course of events.
There were hints that he might (I)
dispatch an envoy to Paris to look in on
the negotiations and (2) send a personal
letter to President Nixon 011ce more out·
lining bis opposition to ctrlain tenns ot
the agreement.
Kissinger amved in a black Cadillac
embassy car and waved to some SO
newsmen gathered by the wall around
the house, formerly owned by P'rencb
artist Femand Leger.
The newsmen shouted qtlfllloos but
Kissinger only srniled as be drove
through niJle.foot·higb green metal gates.
Wearing a gray suit and carrying a
white raincoat, he got out of his auto to
shake hnnds with Vietnamese officials,
then turned, smiling brightly, and pointed
to the milling journalists.
Kissinger bad a unifonned police mo-
torcycle escort of four men, along with
the newsmen who tailed him from the
:e:ans embassy in a cortege which broke
tlirough red traffic lights on Ute w1y
here.
DAILY PILOT lf1ff ......
FIREMEN LOOK FOR CAUSE OF BLAZE IN BURNED OUT ROOM
Couple LoMI Valuable Art in Balbo• Fire Monday Night
Fonda Requested
Not to Attend
Palestine Show
NEW YORK (UPI) -Peace activist
and movie star Jane Fonda has been ask·
ed by fellow actor Theodore Blkel not to
attend a Palestinian film festival in Iraq
because her presence would "most ce.-.
tainly be construed as endorsement of
such obscen ities as the
Munich massacre." '
Sikel sent the telegram alter "Varie-
ty," an actors' trade paper, reported that
Miss Fonda had been Invited to the
"First World Festival on Palestine Films'
and Programs" scheduled for March.
The Teport added that some of the
fihl\S "were strongly anti·lsraell."
Bike!, first vlce-pre:iildent of Actors
Equity, senl the telegram as ro-chainnan
of the national governing council or the
American Jewish Congres1.
Slayer Dra~s Life
REDDING IAP) -A ShRSta County
Superior Court jury has found a 32-year·
old sacramento laborer. guilty of lint·
degree murder in the slaying of hla com·
panlon at a Shasta Lake campslle last
September.
From Pagel
FIRE ...
Graha1n Talks
l1uli.a1i Trib es1ne11 Hear Gospel
KOllIMA, India (AP) -About 100.000 Nega lrlbeamen -descendanll ol
llldlan lodllunlerl -Died onto 1 football field to beer Dr. Biiiy Graham
~ the ~I ho a aervlce that had to be translated Into 18 dialects.
Graham'• words echoed throuiJ> the lush vall•y u be opened 1 four-day
cnlllOde M_, In N1galand, an Indian otate celebrlUng the lOOtb anniversary
of the arrival of the !lnlt Amtl1con Bapllst miuiol1ery.
TBAT rmq AMEll!CAN, the Rev. E. W. Clark. had to walk for -ks
to reach Nocallild, In the norillealt on the Burme,. bonler. Oraham made the
trip In 1il< boun, tlll'llO by plane !Tom C&Jcutta and Ihm by road. ne l'ndlan gov«nmtnt allowed hi!ll to bring si:a: fls.tOCl•tes. includln&
planlot Ted SmJUI of Slim Sprlnj,, Md. and linger Archie Dennil o[ Pill>
burgh, Pa. •
THI!: CBUSAllll IS COlll1NO the N•&• BapUsi. more than 1u.ooo. Most
of Ille -llU rallled tM>l!Cb donations. Graham atopptd alter each ...,....,. to 1llo111 for translation.
"We'll 111 11pellt the same laniua&• In heaven •.. we won't 11ave lo have
I transblt.or I" he llkl,
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for 2nd ·nay
Llgbl blued ID the villa behind wtilto
-u .the meellop conlinued Into
the •veolnf.
Newsmen could ,.. fllures bilide the
houoe but tall pine trees oblcund th•
view.
Doz... of llChool children . carrying
books aod l)'ltUllllwn boga pthered
acroes·the street after scbOo1 was out.
·A group Of 9-year-old boys, asked by
newsmen if they knew who was inside,
chanted "Kissinger, Klss~er. We saw
him on the telly last nJib1. •
At 5:45 p.m. (1:15 a.m. PST) g)agtnger,
his d•puty, Gen. Alu-· Haig, and
William H. Sullivan, deputy usiltanl ,..,.
retary of State for liclutheaat Allan Al·
falrs, emarged from the houle ln over'-
coai. and otn>lled -the lfOllllds. Five mlnulell later, Tho and another
Vle-cam• out of anolber door and
Walked around another area of the s:ar·
den.
Pollce lllandlng oui.lde said that lo
their knowledge 1'1sslnger and the Hanoi
dJplomats had never met at this villa at
lOR Avenue Gen. Leclere until Monday.
Kissinger and the North Vietnamese
met for 4'°' hours Monday.
lt wu thought earlier the two sides
-111 meet again lh1s momlng but In·
Sleld they decided to hold the second
meeting 1n the afternoon.
Prodigy Stars
Boy, 6, Whip8 Tlirougli Mozart
WNDON (UPI) -Leandro Aconcha's Visitors who saw him at his hotel said
legs were far loo short to reach the piano he and his brother Mirko, 3, jwnped up
pedals and bis hands were tar too small and down on their beds screamlng with
to span the man-sized chords Chopin. excitement and pulled down their pajama
Mozart and Bartok wrote . trousers to try and shock wellwlshers.
Bu• nobody laughed when the 6-year· "Tbe overwhelming publicity · ...
old sat down to play. makes people think he is Jesus Christ or
After he rippled cheerfully through Mozart come alive again," said his con·
Mozart's Sonata No. 11 and -other in-cer'. pianUt-compoger father ~rto
tricate works Sunday, a sell-out audience "But he is a veey ordinary child. His
at Wlgmore HaU oohed and aahed, made public appearances in futyre will be very
the place r:ing with "bravos" and ap-limited."
plauded wildly. Aconcha said Leandro began playing,
Leandro waved nonchalantly and played when he was 3 after hearing a piano tune
an encore. on television. After three months or daily
Then he went back to his hotel room to lessons with his father, the-boj had
cuddle a teddy bear. mastered a Mozart sonata.
The pianist prodigy lrom Colombia did What struck him most about his son,
not play the toughest music ever com· Aconcba said, w a s the "courage and
posed, true, but did move with apparent discipline the baby showed -more so
ease and command through such daun--than bis purely musical qualities, like his
ling pieces as Bach's Partita No. 5, fantastic memory and sense or rhythm
several Chopin waltzes and etudes and antf music."
Bartok's "Arpeges Di vises." Aconcba said Leandro, who made bis
.,. ...l..ike man¥-gen.iuses, Leandl4 bas-an-first.concert tour last year, wJU make no
artist's temperament at times. ~ore ~<;,h tours in the near_ future. · •
Savage Elements Cut
From Denmark's Symbol
,,.. .. r ... i
CLAMMING. • •
whether the t1m< of year Is right to eat
clams because ol pollon dangers.
Hnat LI a conur.m ~
because it is mussels that are MUOnal,"
be said. "Clams m open to hunlbl& all
· ytar and are 11lw111y1 good eating."
' i..ckabey said a 1ood rule of ll\l1mb is
to throw the clam away If the meat Is
shrtvelcd or discolored.
"The good meat is usually a llghl tan
or pinkish color,'' he said.
Loc)\abey said another extreme low
tide is expected ·in mid-December, but
the clam population i~ unpredictable.
"There are more elams than we could
dig up in · a year now," he said. "But that
could change real fast."
FrerrtP .. eJ
INITIATIVE . • •
ol California's coastline.
Any project 'Within 1,000 yards or any
waterway will have to be scruUnized by
the regional panel in additlon to any ac-
tion by local agencies.
Dr. Nolan Friuelle, who worked with
Stevens to rally forces opposed to the
measure, said Lhe chamber could set up
a committee to log all the Ill effects of
the proposition over the next few years.
"Maybe then we can have enough
material to start an initiative of our own,
in two years, to undo what's been done,"
Frizzelle said.
Meanwhile, directors said they \Viii
look for some Way tfie chamber can
assist city officials in dealing with the
new rules and regulations. _
Auto Accidents
Claim Two Lives
In County Areas
Two -were killed In Orange .County · ~affiC-accldentJ M.o D d a y ,
, ~~..-Qfl~ice-Hl<lk0!111!!!1.. re119J1ed.,,_ Dary) D . Hjorlh, lllo or 13332 Diamooo
Head Drive, Tustin, died Monday night
after tbe motorcycle on which he was
riding collided with a car at Woodland
Drive and Bryan Avenue in the Tustin
area.
Officers said the driver or the car, a 17~
year-old girl, made a le.ft.hand tum lnto
the path of Hjortb's cycle. The accident
is under invesligation.
Robert H. Trembath, !7, of Long
Beach, was killed wllen his van-type
vehicle smashed Into the rear or a truck
on the San Diego Freeway, south of Seat
Beach Boulevard.
The Calif<lrnla Highway Patrol lllld
truck driver Joseph R. C&mJ>bell of Santa
Ana had itappe4 on the treewa~ ~"l"
of a stalled motorcfcle.· ·
Buying A New Tract Home?
•
Many people buying homos are under the impression they HA VE
to buy carpeting from the home sales cent .... In the majority of c1sos
this is not true, 11though the saln office wiU try to mike you think so.
The minute Iha home centor tries to upgrade the st1ndard corpet,
then you are free to shop for carpeting. To prevent shopping should
constitute restraint of trade.
In many .. sos thay win toll you that the carpet aTiowance does not
1pply if you buy carpet outside. If they feel th is is legal, HAVE THEM
PUT IT IN WRITING.
Ordin1n1y, we con save you • lot of money over what the home
center O~on. We provide I Jarg ... sefectiO<I -Ond WO usuany COlnO Up
wah leu yord1ge, pt.n • wperior instillation."
ALDEN'S
CARPETS o DRAPES
1663 Placentia Awe.
COSTA ME~A ' ,......
646-4838
HOURS: -· Thrv Thim., t le 5'.30-FRI., t 19 9-SAT .. f:JO 19 S
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Devil Seeks
Equal Time
To Pontiff
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -As a sell-
appointed spokesman for the DeVil, Anton
.. Szandor LaVey, asked for "equal tlme"
to answer Pope Paul's recent attack on
the Prince of Darkness. ·
LaVey, who started hia Oturch of Satan
about six years ago and achieved lnitlal
notoriety when he insisted on keeping a
full.grown lion on his porch, labeled the
Pope's blast against Mephistopheles an
"old chestnut out of the ParaI fireplace."
'l1ie pontiff last week said the Devil
was "dominating communities" through
"sex, narcotics and doctrinal errors,"
and criticiled "satanist cults" for lead-
ing people astray.
'"The fact that antisocial acts and
heinous deeds come from man, and not
the Devil, has been firmly enough en-
trenc.hed by contemporary logic so as
not to require further elaboration," said
Beelzebub's man in San Francisco.
"We Satanists now have our own book
ot rules, the standard of avowed Satan-
ists the world over -the Satanic Bible·-
which is presently outselling the Holy
Bible, five-to-one, according to some ~
ports." he added.
LaVey wrote it.
Drugs and such are not the Devil's bag,
LaVey said, but rather Lucifer is an ad·
herent Of the pursuits of "wbat may
loosely be termed Magic."
LaVey's devilish reply to the Vicar of
Christ takes the Catholic leader to task
for blaming Satan's minions for churchly
vandalism, saying:
"Vandals are· vennin to society and
shoulcll>e ei:teaninatq:t.. _foi:_ ev~rr..._ act
or supposed Satanic vab<laliml there are
countless acts of non-satanic vandalism
ranging from schools to flow« nurseries."
The self-described "world's most fam-
ous Satanist" added , "To blame such ac-.
lions on aggressive and disturbed mal-
contents is one thing but to assume
diabolic conspiracy smacks of an old
man's folly."
LaVey said the Pope's fear of "a surge
of Satanism in the world today" was
correctly grOWKled, but "not according
to his patheUcally outmoded definition of
Satanism.''
Landlord Gets
Call Girl Out
ST. ETIENNE, France (AP) -Annie
Pommier rented a small apartment and.
set herself up as a call girl.
The owner of the house complained to
police, but tfley told him Annie could
receive as many men as she liked as long
as sbe didn't create a disturbance.
Prostitution -wilike procuring -is not
illegal in France.
The landlord then took Annie to a civil
court and applied to cancel her lease.
The court ruled that the girl had turned
her aparmtenl into ''com mercial
premises" without the landlord's pennis-
sion and ordered her evicted.
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DAILY P'ILOT Slaff .......
SEEKING CHANCE TO COMPETE IN SWIMMING EVENTS
Bobo Johns of Golden West College Eyes Trip to Sweden
Deaf Laguna-Coed Seeking
$2,000 for Sweden Games
A drive is underway to raise $2.000 to
send a former Laguna Beach High School
homecoming princess to the 1973 World
Games for the Deaf.
The money, according to coord inator
Will Hitchcock, would cover the expenses
for the trip to Malmo, Sweden for Bobo
Johns, 19. so she may enter swimming
competitions. fl.iiss Johns, now a Golden
West College student, has been deaf since
birth.
More than 1,000 deaf athletes represen-
ting 41 nations will gather in the Swedish
city in July for the athletic competitions.
"The real tragedy would be if she were
denied a chance to participate because
of the cost ," Hitchcock, a 1968 high
school graduate_. said.
During her high school career, Miss
Johns was a song and cheer leade r and in
her senior year was a homecoming
princess.
Lail year, she was a member of the
homecoming court at Golden West.
Though unable to attend the national
trials in North Carolina earlier this year.
Miss Johns has been promised a position
on the 14~member U.S. team to the
games, because of her outstanding
S\vimming ability.
Her times in the 100-yard butterfly and
the 200 yard medley are better than the
World Deaf and American Deaf records
set during the 1969 World Games in
Belgrade. Yugoslavia.
Hitchcock said the goal of the fund
raising committee is to collect the money
by Christmas.
Contributions may be sent to the Bobo
Johns !)ea( Olympic Fund, Laguna
Federal Sav~ and Loan Association, 280 ~•n Ave., "La!lmfa Beach. Plirther
infonnation is available from Mr. and
Mrs. Dan McFarland,· 494-4736 or Will
Hitchock, 494-4569.
Tutsday. NO¥tn1btt 21, 1Q72 s DAIL V PILOT :J
Thieves Get 20 Years
Ohio Men Sentenced in Niguel Bank Job
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Of ... O.ltt ,.... 11"9
A federal judge Monday sentenced two
Ohio men to 20 years impri5anment for
their role In the $5 million burglary to lhe
Laguna Niguel b r a n c h of United
California Bank.
U.S. District Court Judge William
"Matt" Byrne, Jr .. in pronouncing the
sentence, cited defendants Amil Alfred
Dinsio, 36, and Charles Albert Mull igan,
38, for showing no remorse for their ac-
tions and making no attempt to return
the stolen loot.
A third Ohio man convicted of the
crime, Philip Bruce Christopher, 31. will
be sentenced on Dec. 4.
Federal investigators said the three
defendants may have been Involved in
other bank burglaries in the past five
years. Officials said they round about
$30,000 In cash in a closet i n
Christopher's Cleveland !:tome. Some bills
were traced to the Laguna Niguel rob-
bery and some to a $430,000 burglary in
Lordstown, Ohio, officials said.
The trio was found guilty of con·
spiracy, bank burglary and bank larceny
OCt. 27, following a seven-week trial in·
volving the looting or 450 safe deposit
boxes.
The sentencing: hearing, normally a
routine court procedure, had some
unusual aspects.
When the hearing opened , Dinsio, a
pinball machine company owner, gave
the court a handwritten document ex·
pressing his dissatisfaction with his at-
torney, Victor smma.n. and requested
he be allowed to represent himse lf.
Mulligan, an unemployed barber. made
a similar request against his attorney,
Ronald Minkin.
After a brief t~ Byrne granted the
motions but denied otiWr pleas for a new
trial. _
·While asking for a new trial, Dinsio
charged that a key government witness,
Motorist Dies
l 1t Good Deed
OCEANSIDE (AP) -• Virgil
Overall was killed trying to do a
good deed, police say, and the
young woman be was trying to help
died, loo.
Overiill, 44 stopped Monday when
he saw Joda Remington , 17, strand-
ed by the roadside, officers said.
While the t~·o Ocean side
neldetl were pouring psolille in·
lo Ml.lJi ll<ft\ington'> vehlcle, they ' .. _..A•rack~d tttled by .11; car
whose driver, William Jenkins, 63,
said he didn't see tbetn, police s:Ud.
Richard Gabriel, "'as "a liar" and that
he and Mulligan had been "framed" by
the FBI.
Gab rie l was lhe last government pros-
ecution witness in the case who testified
that Dinsio admitted his par. in thf
massive. "Mission Impossible" type
break-in "·hile the '"'o were jailed in Los
Angeles.
· At the time of his testimony, derense
attorneys tried to impeach h I s
statements by arguing that Gabriel. "'ilh
nearly 75 burglaries to his name. could
not be considered a credible "'itness.
During the hearing. D!nsio asserted he
had proof from an l'Ye\vilness th at
To Opeta Dee. 3
f~eral agents had used electronic
surveillance a11a inst him as part of the
effort to link 1.lm "'ith the crime.
Roth Dins io and ~1ulllgan told the court
they plan to appeal the case to the 9th
Circuit Court of Appeals in San Fran-
cisco. Dinsio indicated he has retained
attorneys from his home state and from
New York to se rve as counsel during the
appeal proceedings.
ti.lore than SI million from the bank has
been recovere<.:. Police still are looking
for lfarry Barber. 31, Youngstown, Ohio,
and his brother Ronalct. 29, of So u t h
Gate, for investigation of burglary In the
case.
'5 Ni gl1t s of Christmas'
Set in Mi ss ion Viejo
The ''Five Nights · of Christmas" in
Mission Viejo. sponsored by the Mission
Viejo Activities Co mmittee, will begin
Dec. 3 at &:30 p.m. in La Paz Plaza ~·ith
Santa's arrival and a tree-lighting
ceremony .
angels awards will be given from 1 lo
8:30 p.m.
La Paz Plaza is at La Paz Road and
Chrisanta Drive.
The "First Night of Christmas." Dec. 3
"'ill include choral singing by the ~1i!5ion
Viejo High School chorus, lighting of a
community tree, music by the high
school band and the arrival of Santa and
his helpers.
His helpers will be children in the "Elf
and Angel" contest sponsored by the
Rancho Viejo Women's Club.
The "f.'ifth Night or Christmas." Dec.
24, is Christmas Eve or "La Noche
Buena" !he night when families are sup-
posed to light luminaria. sack candles. in
front or their homes. symbolic of legen·
dary fires that lit the way for the
""isr men to Bethlehem.
Chairman of the lum1naria is Don
Campbell . ~fission Viejo youth groups in·
tcresll.'d in selling candles may con-
tact him at 837·5316.
Other "Five NighLs" chainnan are:
Jir · Dornan. program : Bill 1i11tchc!J,
treasurer : Bob Aldrich. master of
ceremonies : Jim Toepfer, "first night";
Tom Stout and Wendy Edgren, Santa's
The ''Seoond Night of Christmas.'' Oec.
10, will include choral singing by the La
Paz" Intermediate SChoOI choir and the
opening of Santa 's workshop from 6:30Tci""""'"
8:30 p.m. for visits from community
· workshop : Thom lifartin. Christmas
children. ,
Santa will also be in his work shop
receiving gift lists Dec. 13. Dec. 18 and
Dec. 20, all from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m., and
on Dec. 23 from 2 to 4 p.m. and 6 to 8
p.m.
The "Third Night of Christmas.'' Dec.
16 will be highlighted by the arviual semi-
forma! Christmas Ball from 9 p.m. to I
a.m. at the ~1ontanoso Recreation
Cent••· The theme will be ''Dancing lo
!he Music of the Fifties" "'ith the
Drifter's Band and comedians Skiles and
I lenderson appearing.
The "Fourth Night of ChrlstmM," -Dec.
11, ?Vill be "Lu Posades, '' a 11~111 -
Mwcan Cbrlstrau ceremony ·i;4lliolic -
of Mary and Joseph's ioUroty to
s.tblellem. In Mbslon Viejo that Shi.
the home decoration and elves-and
Ball : John Pyefmcir. ball decoration!':
Art Hamer and Bud Gonzales, Las
Posadas: ~ Ruecker. music director;
Jerry Hibbard. ho me deroration contest:
~tart;' Russo and Vince Esposito, publici-
ly.
Badha1n to Address
Clcn1 cntc RcpnlJiicaIJ.s
R e c e n I I y re-elected Assemblyman
flobert Bad ham t R·Ne~·port Beach) wfll
11dclress members of the. San Clement e
Hepublican Club At their monthly
meeting No\'. 28 at the San Clemente Inn.
&idham, now entering hiJ sixth term
in the t1SS<'mbly, ~·ill answer questions
frorn the audience 1'.fter his formal ad·
dn!SS at the 7:30 p.m. meeting. The
public is wekome. said club president
Paul Prtsley.
KOCE, Huntington Beach
In just 2 years .••
outselling ever y
European car
1st County Television
Station Goes on Air
By TOM PALMER
Of """ o.llY P'llll Sllff
tr you were switching from Gilligan's
Island to the Bogart movie Monday after·
noon, you may have noticed something
different.
Llke a new full-color channel. And if
you did a double take with the channel
selector, you may have noticed that Or-
ange County's first television station is
on the air.
After a couple of years of planning and
bullding, but only 11> hours of tost pat-
tern, KOCE, Channel 50, broadcullng
from Golden West CoUege's new $2 mll~
lion studios, signed on at 4 p.m.
"It was really tense," said Don Gerdts,
director of production services, as he
nervously awaited the big moment. I~
f111t stations usually have about three
weeks of testing before any program-
ming is broadcast. "We weren't sure
two hours a.go we could send a signal."
The low tost tone -t sllent. The
screen wtnt lo black. Gert> aquJrm<d in
his chalr. The 111auon ldentilkaUon uni
appeared. Jn oolor. even.
Gtrtz' voice, taped earlier, came on :
Good afternoon, tltia Is KOC&TV, Oian-
ntl 50, Huntlncton Beach. We now bealn
our lirst day . . . .
Qieers and jubilant clsppJna -
him out. Some of the D rqular ltaff
members, plus usorted vtslton and weU..
wtshers, congratulatod each othtt In
near disbelief.
The Elcctrlc O>mpany, the station'•
first olfcrJna, wu on the air. A pllonc
rang. "Our Ont complaint.'' a at.after
sp«ulated.
"Too many commerd1J1." (KOCE ls
a noncommercial Nlkln. J
0 Ktep )'OW'" finetn croaed,"
"l1 worka. It worts."
'Mae phone, Q1in. Gn'tl, wi1h not I
IttOe pride, announctd thal the cn&ine<'1
' )
had put on full power, 2.7 million watts.
Another call. "They're getting us loud
and clear in Downey." "'Radio Fre e
Downey," someone added .
"PeOple's faces are supposed to be
purple for the first few days," Gertz said.
"l don't know what went right"
Problems had developed last week in
the intricate wiring to the transmitter.
three miles north of La Habra in the
Puente Hills. "The technicians have
s\oehed through the mud night and day
since then localing the problem and re-
pairing it," he said.
KOCE was originally planned as a
black and white station for student in·
struction. After certain state leglslallon
and with the successful beginning of
Public Broadcasting System (PBSI in
1969, the decision was made in IV70 to
expand it to a production center for
teaching ml'terials for the IS.000 students
in the coast area.
And then one more decision "'a., made
-tO create a televiJion station 10 fetd
the entire area with educational mattrlal
from the Coast C.ommunity Collea:e Di•
trk:t, to which tbt staUon iJ licenstd.
"And we already have a national base."
Gertz explained , "with contrlctJ to pr~
duce materiall for UIC ln Plocida and
Tex11s 1nd elsewJw:re."
"Eventllllly wt plan lo be aix wtt.U
eheld in programming. Today •·<'re
lucky to be six hours ahead."
KDCE la lwoadcastlna toped programs
1upplled by PBS, which it will eventually
be tied lo dlrtelly. The ... ,, Ix pn>duclns
about one show ptr_..day locally, ....UJ
portlont of .. rtes mr UJt In Pellruary,
"when wt'll be&ln our full loc>l pooture,".
Gerta aald.
Until January, the <CUDIJ't bomf.il'Dwn
leleriston will be .. the Air lnlrn only
4 lo II p.m. Attrr that lntinl ptrtod,
lull PfOirammm,, eventually partially
<OOIJ"llCJ .. <Olllrollcd, Ix planned.
•
(except one)!
LOOK WH AT'S STA NDARD EQ U IP~IEN1' ...
e RADI AL PLY TIRES e FRONT DI SK BHA KES
e FRONT ·BUCKET SEATS e FUL L CA RP E1'1\G
e RAC K AN D PI NION STEE Rt:\G
SEE ONE • •
•
Rome Of Tbt N.,. Cir , , ,
"GeUea r • ..., ...
• TRY ONE • • • BUY ONE ,
"Omlgt co .. 11(1 r ... u, of r1 .. c~
2alHAllllOltlLVD~COITAMUA • MOMlll
•
' TODAY!
nome OI '!be New Otr , •• "<'••._ r-•"
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DAILY PILOT TLlndlJ, Novtmbtf 21, 1972
Israel Claims Win • Ill
Better Booze
Than Bullets
ORANGE COAST. WILD COAST'
Donald Goodell , a gentleman who resides
in Huntington Harbour . has been
reported as interested in aMexing a
\\'orld \Var 11 artillery command post to
the city of Huntington Beach.
Goodell owns the old U.S. Army em·
placement 'vhich is on six or so acres of
property in county territory southeast of
U:is Palos Avenue.
What Goodell apparently wants to do is
get some pre·zoning so he can turn the
surplus command post into a bar. He has
suggested to some parties that the bar
could "retain the historic fl avor" of its
"'orld War II begi.Mings.
By Ulllled Prm l ... rwaUoul
Israeli and Syrian tanks, planes and
artillery fought la11escale battle. along
their 25-mile Golan HeighLs cease-fire
line today in the heaviest outbreak of
fighting since the 1967 Six Day War.
An Israeli military spokesman in Tel
Aviv said the Israelis shot down six
Syrian M1G2ls in their greatest victory
sinoe July 8, 1969, when they bagged
seven without a loss. He said 14 Syrian
tanks were knocked out by Israeli tanks
and artillery in the IO hou r battle that
ended at 6 p.m. (8 a.m. PST).
T wo Phantom
J ets Downed
In Air War
SAIGON (AP) -T\vo more American
Phantom jets have been lost in the air
~ v.•ar against North Vietnam, the U.S.
Command announced today. Two of the
fl iers \\'ere rei:.cued and two were killed.
The lo~s raised to 124 the number of
American planes reported downed in
operations agairu>t the North since full·
scale bombing was resumed nearly eight
months ago. A total of 131 U.S. ainnen
have been killed or captured in the
crashes, the U.S. Command said.
THE OLD COMMAND post is prelly
big, with some 1,500 square fee t of floor
space, walls or 10..foot reinforced con·
crete and a roof some 15 feet thick. Oh yes, it is also all underground. Once ONE OF THE losses announced today
it was used for growing mushrooms after v.•as a Navy F4 from tbe carrier Saratoga
that was hit by a surface-to-air missile
the war. Later, It was filled up wit h sand just below the 2mh parallel. The pilots lind sealed off to avoid its use by hoboes. hippies, lovers or other undesirables. p3l'achuted into the Gulf of Tonkin east
Well, In this day and age, t don't know of Thanh Hoa ~ a hcllcpoter rescued
A Syrian military spokesman ln
Damascus said 14 Israeli tanb and five
artillery em placements v.·en? destroyed
and two lsraeli planes shot down In the
battles that were the most serious In Tl
months of Middle East cease-fire.
THE BA'M'LE -THE second since
Nov. 9 -was still raging at nlghtfaJI,
mil itary spokesman on both sides an·
nounced. The situation was so serious
that Israeli Defense Minister 1t1oshe
Dayan sped to lhe border area to tour
army positions and civilian settlements.
Tho daylong bottle wu touched oil
when Jsraell war planes attacked a
Syrian army pooltloo and throe Arab
guerrilla hues seven miles inside Syria
In reprlJal for guerrilla rakb agalnsl
lsraeH settlements in the occupied Golan
Heights. Syria replied with artllltty and
tanks and Israell artillery and tank.I went
into action. Syria sent up its air force of
Soviet-made supersonic MIG2ls and a
series of dogfights followed, the bottle in·
tensilylng during the day.
UPI correspondent Richard Gross in
Tel Aviv said conununiquet from head·
'
Syrian Battle
quarten ~ the only tsraeil losses
In the day· flchtlna at.oi a 15-mlle
front of the Ian !feighta were two
clvlllam wounded In a Syrian shelling at·
tact.
It. MIIJTAJ\Y spokesman said two of
the MIGl!s were downed In a mldal·
temoon docfight and the four others as a
formation of Syrian planes attempted to
attock ISl'Hll poollloos oo the OC<Upled
hel•hts. ,r.111 Israeli pillru!s tttumtd safely,"
the announcement aatd. Syria also
reported all ol lts planes .. tumtd safely.
1bere was no immediate word en
whether any Syrian bqmb8 had fallen on
Israeli positions, the spokesman said.
1be Syrian air raid came a s
artillerymen on both sides of the line
slugged It out along the battle front , with
tanks blazing away into each other's
ranks.
UPI correspondent John Sims, in
Beirut, aa.id Damascus Radio reported
batues the entire length of the cease-fire
line with a mllltary llJ>cikesman reporting
two Israeli warplanes shot down by
Syrian aircraft and ground fire.
THE FIGll'l1NG followed the Nov. 9
pattern of cluhes between the two coun·
tries. The military spokesman quoted by
DamaSCUJ radio, said today's clashes
started after Israeli air attacks on a
Syrian army border post at 9 a.m. (11
p.m. PST} and the bombardment of
"areas inhabited by civilians in the area
JOI DAN
Vl"tT....,..._
ISRAELI AIR ATTACKS
Four-Syri1n Positions Hit
of Jinenn" an hour and a half later.
"In retaliation to the Israeli air ag·
gressions or this morning out heavy
artillery bombarded enemy positions in
the Mansoura and Jibbin areas of the
Northern and Southern sectors -of the
front. Our fire inflicted direct hits on
enemy targets," the spokesman said.
Reporting on the dogfights, the Syrian
spokesman said 16 planes from each alde
were involved in an aerial battle over the
Golan Heights at I p.m. (S a.m. PST).
"ONE ISRAELI warplane was shot
down and was seen falling in flames west
ot al-Kbllllsieh, near the cease-ftre line,"
·the spokesman said.
Buflittg Power Dips
October-Prices Ger-Push -
From Clothes,·Used Cars
·r M ~~ 11 .11 ha t 1.1 them about 30 mmutes later. They were
1,, r . ............_e wt ve o 1e lin led! ood nd" ~-·" 1 1 ,_"° t ,.1.,1 ... _ repor n-g co 1t1on. ~ronmen a ..._.,..c .:->.....,. .. ent or..not . ~ . .-111..
on"'hls -propos-al. Tf he-does, he might try :---_-~ . .._.1!:.. o~.F4 cr~shed :-lust~ ~fter _ ·_ 31 ASlilNGTON (UPIL • .lli&ber prices_. def .. t, Jlu!JJ\Jler,1'1o!!!!Jl'..S~lem0111)be
forclothmg, umt--cars-and heatth·;n:·--!aid--it-Was-t~f-ety-o~pariy.!i ..::::::.-
suran ce p_ushed the cost of living up 0.3-ref Orm -rules that she was Interested in. somethln like this· dawn today 40 miles east of ,its base at
g · L'dom, northeast Thailand and both
"PROJECT: C.Onvert old artillery com· crewmen were kill ed. The Command said
mand post into saloon . Positive impact it \vas returning from a mission over
on environment. It is better to serve North Vietnam, but the cause of tbe
booze than bullets ... " crash was not known. Monsoon rain! limited U.S. fighter·
bombers who new less than 50 strikes in
the North Vietnamese panhandle for the
fourth successive day. But the high-
altittide B52 bombers fl ew more than 30
strikes against largets in the panhandle,
and nearly 50 more just below the
demilitarized zone, in the central
highlands southwest of Pleiku and north
of saigon.
Anyway, one news report on Mr.
Gooden·s proposed project suggested that
the underground artillery headquarters
was never used for its intended purpose
of "defending against the rumored
Japanese attack and invasion, which
never occurred . . . "
Well now , I consider that bit telling us
that the Japanese invasion "never oc·
curred" as sort of being a gratuitous
footnote on history.
SOME PARTIES, however. while
agreeing. lhe Japanese never invaded our
region, might argue that the question of
whether they ever "attacked" is open to
debate.
Long-time res idents of our region
sometimes recall that at one po int during
World War II. one of those Japanese sub-
marines surfaced off Sant.a Barbara and
lobbed a few shells into the oil fields.
Other persons who lived near defense
plants in the LA area swore 1hat from
time--to-time at night, antiaircraft bat·
teries would tear loose with barrages,
lighting the sky and sometimes dropping
scrap metal on nearby roofs.
I recall once that all us Civil Defense
types were called out at mid.day in
Laguna Beach because otan air ra id. Our
air raid siren had worked well in drills
up to that very day but this time it
sounded like a gravel truck dumping its
load.
DESPITE THIS, we all reported to
headquarters and then stood out in the
middle of Forest A venue trying to spot
the alleged lone Japanese plane that was
up there. tr it was. it was flying too high
ror any of us to see it. We y,·eren't too us-
ed to real air raids. This was obvious
because it \vas not considered prudent to
stand in the middle of the street during
one.
All these n1mors aside. no Japanese at-
tack was really ever confiMTied along our
coastline. Thus it is unkno.,..·n If Mr.
Goodell"s underground artillery com-
mand post ever came to any real use .
So perhaps it wi ll noy,· beca use an un·
derground tavern ; a plaei! for tinkling
glasses, laugh1er and merriment.
The government thus could figure its
effort wasn't a total losa.
THE 8511 DROPPED nearly 1,000 tons
of explosives on stockpiles or war
materials in the panhandle awaiting 1hi~
ment into South Vietnam to beat a cease-
fire. Hanoi charged that the bombs fell
on populated areas and faMTi s, "causing
many losses in lives and property to the
people."
Ground action in South Vietnam in·
tensified as cease.fire negotiatons con·
tinued in Paris.
Communist forces shelled Da Nang
before dawn and made a se ries of hit·
and-run attacks in the Saigon region .
Heavy fig hting was reported for the fifth
successive day just sout h of the
demilitarized zone. and there was also
hard figh ting in the centra l highlands
below P\eiku.
'/ thought upital punishnMnl
wn banntKI in this st•tef'
Golden Gate Rush ••
A surprise brief strike by mechanics wiped out bus service from
Marin County for 7,000 riders to San Francisco Monday. A morning
monstrous traffic jam ensued. Loads of motorists brought their cars
into the Bay Area and the result is sho,vn on the Golden Gate Bridge
as they tried to get home at 5:20 p.m.
Rifle Leads_ to Suspect
In 2 Revenge Slayings
KENNETI SQUARE, Pa. (AP I -An-
cell Hamm, \\'ho has a series of prior
arrests, was in jail today on charges that
he killed two policemen. One of them
had arrested Hamm three times in the
past 13 moo ths.
Hamm, 2.8. was arraigned Pi.1onday
afternoon on two counts of murder and
was being held at Chester County Farms'
max imum socurit y unit under $250,000
bond.
STA.TE POLICE Commissioner Rocco
Urella said Hamm was linked to the case
by a high powered Belgian hunting rifle
f~nd in a clump of brush two miles from
the sceoe of the d'ouble shooting In this
rural Philadelphia community.
Urella. who indicated the motive for
the slaying was revenge, said. "The rifle
was the murder weapon and this morning
(Monday! we linked it lo the Hanun fam-
ily . .,
Hamm is accused or killing KCrmett
Square patrolmen Richard Posey, 38, and
William Davis. 'l'l, as they left a patrol
car behilfd the Mllllicipsl Building before
dawn last Wednesday. Each v.·as felled
by a single bullet.
Davis, according to police records, ar·
rested Hamm on Oct. 21, 1971 and Dec.
4, 1971 on charges of operating a motor
vehicle while his license was under sus·
pension. The charge3 later were dismiss-
ed.
THE RECORDS also show Davis and
another officer arrested Hamm on Sept.
21 and charged him \\'ith assaull and
battery, resisting arrest and motor
vehicle charges. The Chester County
grand jury is to consider the case Nov.
28.
Hamm was laken into custody in a
raid cA his home here. T\\•enty.flve police-
men wearing bulletproof vesLs and carry-
ing btgh powered rifles blocked .off the
area around the house shortly before
noon.
Heavy Snow Ices Plains Urella then shouted, "State Police,
you're under arrest," drew his revolver
and burn through the door.
Hamm was led from the house barefoot
and In dungarttS.
' ,
Cloud y, Cool Ac ro ss Nation Exce pt State, Florida
·-
: ·~
1t Ot MI ____ _,
m ••tH ~·.;!a~w '.,. ~'"°"""" ''°"
Hamm. in addition to other run·in!
with the lllw . al&o was arrested last
Wednesd:iy. the afternoon of the crime,
a.fl.er polk:e [&ldcd his home and con·
fiscated 35 weaponJ. He was charged wllh
trafficking In machlnt gurui and violaling
lhc firearms act and released oo $1 ,000
bo ll. according to police.
DAILY 1'1LOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Dtt1"1"1 ol lllt 0,1117 Pilot
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percent 1n October, the government
reported today.
At the same time, the purchasing
power of the average wage earner took
its first dip in five months.
However, the Labor 'Department's
Bureau of Labor Statistics said prices
( IN SHORT ... )
declined last month for beef, some fresh
fruits and vegetables and gasoline.
The Coru>umer Price Index for October
stood at 3.4 percent over October, 1971.
The 0.3 percent Increase in the CPI last
month was less than a 0.4 percent ad·
vance in September and about average
over the past year.
e Gra11 Resting
NEW LONDON, Conn. (AP) -t .
Patrick Gray, the acting director of the
FBI has been hospitalized for a possible
intestinal obstruction, b ut doctors say
t~ere are no plans to operate at this
tune.
Gray was t a k e n to Lawrence Me--
morial Hospital Sunday night after
complaining of abdom inaJ pains while al
his home in Stonington, Conn.
A spokesman for the hospital said Mon-
day night that Gray was in satisfactory
condition and resting comfortably.
e We1t1Dood Softens
WASlilNGTON (UPI) -Demooratic
National Chairman Jean Westwood a~
parently has softened her earlier position
that she would fight effort! to remove
her by party leaders distressed by the
landslide loss of presidential candidate
George McGovern.
The Utah woman, handpicked by
McGovern for the party post after he
"'on the Democratic nomination last
summer. said Monday that her future as
chairman "is subordinate to con·
siderati oru> about the future or the par·
ly."
For two weeks following McGovern's
trouncing by President Nixon, lttrs.
Westwood had been aaying that she
would fight for her job and would not
serve as a "scapegoat" for McGovern's
Amarillo Slim
Begins 4tli Ride
01i. Wild River
MIDDLE FORK OF TllE SALMON
RIVER. Idaho .(AP\ -World champion
poker _player Amarillo Slim, intent on
taming one of Idaho's wildest riven. ·was
set 1odt1y for his fourth ride on the v.•ay
to 131.llOll.
T. A. Prtston Jr .. nicknamed Amarillo
Slim . spent Monday night campin1 ak>rl1
the river mort than halfw1y to the
Salmon River.
The Siimon Is called the River of {'io
Return. but the Middle Fork ii c:onsld-
tted by Idahoans a UtUe IQllher to nm,
especially In late fall and winter. Qb.
attVen at the Flylnc 8 Ranch, Slim'•
ilunclltn1 point last Saturday, r<porled
that Slim w11 spotted ,_ a helicopter
more than haU·way down lhe stream's
Pl•· Slim. under the trrm1 of the bet which
he made with t0me aambllng cronies,
must malte the run with only the help
of river runner Jere Chapman of BolH.
Federal reculatlons prohibit a helicop-
ter ol"'ratlng out of the Flying 8 Ranch
from landln& In the primitive ttt• of
central Idaho. Ila mw picks up me&-
saecs and film from the raft• In a bocktt
:Htac:.hed to I line.
•
e Panel Named
BATON R()UGE, La. (UPI) -A
biracial state commWion was named
Monday to find out how two black st.u·
dents at Southern Univenity were killed
during a showdown with police 'lllunday.
The FBI has already begun its own. sop.
arate investigation cl. the incident.
"They already have 40 FBI people in
here investigating," said Sheriff Al
Amiss. ''They're going lo talk lo
everyone involved.''
Louisiana Attorney General William
Guste , saying the state's "image and stlf
respect" were at stake, announced the
12--man ~te commission, which includes
two students.
e Perea l'iolentt
BUENOS AIRES (UPI) -A milltory
patrol ftred into demonstrators Mon&.y
as. they tried to approach a luxury
restaurant where fonnu pre&ident Juan
D. Peron was conferring with about 70
political leaders on the future oC the
country he ruled for 10 years.
A police spokesman uki one civilian
and one policeman were wounded in the
clash, the first such violence since Peron
ended 17 years exile last Friday.
Walter Cronkite
Out of Hospiwl
NEW YORK (UPI ) -Walter Cronkite
managing editor of CBS News un:
derwent surgery last week for rtmcWal of
a benign throat ,tumor , the network said
Monday.
A CBS news spokesman said Cronkite,
56, was resting at home on the advice of
his doctor and "the only effect of the
surgery is some temporary hoarseness ."
Le•"•Clleer •
Senator William Proxmire (0.
Wisc.) lead• children In a
Green &y Packers football
cheer at St. Malllle""' School,
Oa kcreek. Proxmire Is on a
1.200 mile bllce through Wif.
consln IO win future votea.
(
.. ··~··-· ... . ., ... -·· .... ·-.....
DAILY PILOT §
' Animal Lawmakers Discour~ged Wba dod .. ..,,....._, t octors recommend ' ~::;:; Tax Plan Redehated --~~Z-.j
nlCHMOND CAP) -Th• woold be adml.sslble 11 tha SACRAMENTO CAP) -Dis. sides agreed upon was that or a new set o1 amendmenta of these tablets to their patients each year.
slender life-span of a key wit-trial if he died before It be-couraged Senate and Assembly both bills are headed for de-propoeed by the ~ocratic The~ .are many m_edications a to~ re-commend moet than any J
ness dylng of throat cancer gins. SAN DCEGO (AP) -The tax refonn negotlato-•""A...a feat un1eS3 negotiators make ton ho bl ked fi 1 phys1ctan or denll~t can pre-othi>r lea.dins: tablel ' has prompted a judge to set new wlld animal park run by '"' a-~ a new breakthrougb in the sena w oc ma acribe for pain. Some are nar-l·leadache and dental pain W
a speedy hearing in the mur-'Mle hearings were set for the San Diego Zoological i.O make one more try today to next few days. passage last week on the Sen-cotic. rnany are available only relieved inC'redibly fut: minor :
ders of two meo tmearthed at Wednesday in Richmond Mu-Society Jo.st $565,000 during its salvage a $1.2 billion school Both bills would increase ate floor. on _1>reacription. But there iB one pains or arthritia are depend• ~
led H Us A I burl l nlcipal Court. first fiscal year even though finance • property tax· relief r pain reliever, available: without ably <'a.led Cor boun; even tho } a repu e nge s a Calfee ordered that psychia· unds for local school.!! by more THE SCHOOL finance b 111 preecription, doctor. dispense aches and 1)8in• of cold• and flu
ground in Ukiah. tric examination.a be given to attendance was higher than b.ill from a tangle of conflict-than $500 million a year, but passed by the Senate on a 21-again and apin ... Anacin. retpond to Anacin. So the le.n·
Judge David Calfee took the Pifer, of Antioch, and George expected, the city auditor Ing demands for school !Up-they differ on how the money 15 vote is a heavily amended Each year, doctoni cive owr 11ion and depret11ion that can be
Trial Pushed Due
'
To D~g Witness
unusual action Monday as an Wethern, a former Angel and says. port • . would be raised and Mw much AJsembly measure which 60.~.04?0 A!laci'!-tablets to c:-u!K'd hy •uch pa~ ~ill be re·
eighth member of the motor-owner of the ranch where the "It was anticipated the park But backers' of the Assem-of it should be used. ould f th hool their p.atienta 1n pain. IC doctors heved loo. And mdlion1 tak• would lose money at nrst," bly • passed tax plan said "'. pay or e new sc think enough about Anacin to Anacin wit.bout atomach uptet. J cycle gang was charged in bodies were found. d U Sa The Assembly-passed bill is aid by, in effect •. lmposlng a di.spen.e all thNe tabJeta, what \Vhen you're in pain, why .
the slaytnp. Wethern and his wife have au !tor Wil am ge reported amendments demanded by a compromise between Repub-statewide property tu. betWr recommendation can you don't you follow the practice or J
Judge Calfee said it may be been granted immunity in ex· Monday. The sprawUng fac!H-some senators would "b 1 ow lican Gov. Ronald Reagan and Districts would be forced by uk when you are in pain? i;o many doctors and tak• the
necessary for a court-appoint-change for testifying about ty opened to the public last four months of bipartisan n~ Democratic Assembly Speaker that bill to share part or the You see, A~acin . <:ontaln1 ~bli;t a doctor mi&bt ciY9 f°"
ed lip reader to interpret the the alleged criminal activlUe.s May, but the fiscal year ex-gotiations up into a puff of Bob Moretti. It wou\d pay for money they raise through I<>-more of the pain reliever doc-1n his own omo.. 'Ikb Anacin•. f
testimony of William "Whis-of gang members. feathers." added school aid and for prop-cal property taxes with other 1
pering BUI" Pifer, 41, a form-Meanwhile, Thomas A. Wat· ( ') Meanwhile. fOea of the mas-erty tu relld witb a on&eent districts. er Hells Angel deputies credit roos, Contra Coo-ta deputy dig.. BRIEFS Si'< tax shift plan squeaked hike in the sales tu and by In the first year of opera·
with leading them to the trict attorney, said a murder their own $S7S million school using the surplus in the st.ate tiC11":' 10 percent ol the locally
makeshif' graves three weeks warrant was issued naming ..._ _______ ...,,. finance bill through the Senate budget. raised money would go into a
ago. Francis Raymond Hennan, 311, penses started in July, 1971 Mh ond!JY and seblnt it back to a It woold increase state sup-statew:ide money pool for re-
Attorneys for both aides reportedly a Helb Angels when construction and animal osti e Assem y. he port of local !IChoola by $535 distribution on a per~hild have agreed that P1fer's t~sti· d Ny They said their plan was I million a year, but about half basis. At the end of five years.
mony in """llmin .. ..v hearings ~':w ~ef~n::~· th~ c~s!~ a care still required large sums. only bill before the l..efrialature of that money would be ear-50 percent of the local money ii~;;;;;;iiio·· ... -..,·~-'~;::~;-;,;:;,:i;;;;;;;:;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;:;J 0 peratlonal ei:pend.itures which meets State Supreme milrked to roll back property would go Into the statewide j ~ were $1.1 million while in-Court guidelines for reforming taxes in school districts with fund.
ff. ONGN•port-K•~~ONG comtrie but! fromt thet park and schoobll financesed abndlll tf.!_t the ~ high school tax rates. That mea sure now returns
----'CUS=T::.OM:::c;lAc;;llOIS PERMANENT IM SANTA ANA
~ T•ll··-c............. SALE 2 '°liliil' s 135 t_...--· ...... 111-
fAU SAll Ieg. MIW
0..bloo K~lt ••••• H .. o.,...., Wool ... ,t2 6S
Siik Mohofr .. , ••.• 10 62 Sloorbki11 , .. , ... tJ 61
SHt WMI ....... II 56
C..to-. ·······'" 6S , ............. 110 7f
OIDll NOW POI. ·XMAS
SAVI UP TO SO'Mo
Oii c ........ svm.
1,.nc.-., s~. stilns
• WI PIT ANY SID
• ANT STYU COf'lm
""""' ........... 10 6 1 •flU AlfraATIONS 1---f-, .... -~.,a.,i.,,, ;; 8B DAILY f •f 7000 rlMISf lMl'OltTID -1 " SAT. M
WOOl.flfS • 1oun Sl.lr<IDAY-10-S
-,;;-.,,.,._;; "'-133-0111 w l».01M
IUS2 MACAa'JMIM ILVD •• aum Ml • SANTA ..... f•lt., .w.c.Atf~w ''"'· .., s.11 oi.,. , __ ,_
G. -· '9 I• roll Mi ...,_ ~'-Ito. _..1,. O.C. Ar.,..f lt.tf-11 .......... ., , • .._....,..,'ht s...tW.. C.l;f. ~I
con ons o 1 -was sem y-pas ~,ores u•e It remaJned ln limbo before to the Assembly. where Jead-
$623,000, Sage said. needs of big city school! and a Senate -Assembly ne~otiat-ers of both parties are critical
e Sel'loQJ Lobby
puts too much of the burden or ing committee after rejection of Its major provisions .
paying for schOOls_ on the poor.
SACRAMENTO (AP)
More than 2,500 Oakland ABOUT TRE only thing both
residents have staged a .----------,
massive one-day lobbying ef.
fort at the capitol ln an effort
to pry more mobey for local
school! out of legislators.
As they swanned tbrough
Capitol corridors Monday, an
As sembly-Senate con-
ference committee struggled
to reach agreement pn a
finance package branded by a
Reagan administration official
1J! "the only game in town."
Man Guilty
Of Murder
TORRANeE (UPI) -
David fl.foraga, 19, charg-
ed with beating a man to
death with an ashcan
because he refused to
serve drinks at h i s e laU Tona Vp da•g)Uer's wedding recep-
tion, was convicted Mon· WEED (UPI) ~-The small day of second degree
40 Chicanos Occupy
Area at Santa Clara
SANTA CLARA (AP ) -
About 40 Mexican·American
students occupied parts of -the
University of Santa Clara ad·
ministration building today
after walking out. of a Board
of Student Conduct hearing, a
university spokesman said.
School officials made no
hearing and left , followed by
others. 'Mley then proceedecS to
the administration building a
block away and occupied the
women's lounge ln the base-
ment and the hallways. All of-
fices had already been locked
for the night.
DIAMOND JEWELRY
OF EXCEPTIONAL SPLENDOR
ls thl.s the year of yea._, the time of
times. the onc&-in+lifetime moment of
. moments, when you present the important
diamond to the important woman? A. Triangle
cut and pear shape diamonds Jn 14 brat
yellow gold pendant, $2.550. B. Heart
she~ diamond with tapered baguettes, Jn
platinum , $4,995. C. Brilliant-cut center
diamond with two tapered beguettes, In
" '" .,
•:
•
l =====' ~!Qliiiice""1fo~r~ce of this northern murder. orn1..--munrlF'Jt-l\f.I:=_ ,,;-~•11i:JoliCe~"'sa"'ld"·MO~fio!lt
some mopping up to do in the into a rage b e c a u s e
move to oust the students __ :;__~_ --~·--uOMra ...... at-
ternoon apparft'ltJJ w a s
related to the failure to rehire
seven staff members. Police
were not called, the
spokesman said.
. M. qn Quizz"d',, __ ..:.P_latlnum. $6,750. D. Baguette-flanked
ass a:s .., "'• morqulse dlamon lii:Pli --·· ----.t;::=::i,1
• Ring, $9,300. E. Bridal set: 11 diamonda " local jail Monday. Thomas Kinney, 44, refus--
Whlle officers made round-ed to serve the drinks.
trips to a local residence to Sentencing was set for
haul in 24 exuberant party· Dec. 11.
goers, the arrested persons
wrecked the jail. '----------'
One policeman left at the
jail to guard lbose being
brought ln was unable to con-
trol the partying crowd, which
kicked In the ceiling, smashed
furniture and ripped out
plumbing.
To Go Free in 14 karat whit• gold. sa50.
Marion Leon and Sal Mur· SANTA MONICA (AP) -A
rietta. both students, had been former mental patient de--
cited by officials for allegedly talned for questioning in the
disrupting a meeting of Board biurre murder of a young
of Fellows' members with the drama student will be releu-
Rev. 'Ibomas D. Terry, S. J., ed. police say, but they did not
president of the university, on say when.
Do Something BeautHul..
a.,.. ..._,. """"" -~ •• ,,,.. ...... ~ ........ ~ °"9lo ....
SLAVICK'S
Jewelers Since 1917
18 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH -1>4-1-1 llO
Open Mon. and Fr i. 10 a.m. to t :lO p.m.
Wllll _., .... of: T6'f6f'IU, °'••· l.6 C.,.,,., I.I ........
AIM: loan Dltef 6nd U.1 v..-.
"
,.
,.
When the pollct force finally
got everyone be.hind bars, the
suspecta were restrained, but
not until one officer had to get
a tetanus shot after a young
woman bit him and the Ooeirs
were flooded from broken
plumbing.
Pair Die, 4
Hurt in LB
Well Blast
Oct. 24. At that time about Officers apprehended the
eight persons surged into the man Saturday, three day1
ofDce while others remained after the nude bOO:y of
outside. Kathleen La Chance, 24, of
Leon and.,Murietta were cit· nearby Long Beach, was found I'====================~-,
ed. and the conduct board aet a on the beach here. N J E
e Pregmmey Kit
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A
bill to establish standards for
sell-testing pregnancy kits was
on the desk of Gov. Ronald
Reagan Joday.
The caurom1a Assembly,
saying that some such kits are
"dangerous" and often "inac-
curate," sent the meaure to
Reagan on a 54-4 vote.
e Pinaptng Case
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
Welt Los Angeles attorney has
been sentenced to one year in
the county jail after being con-
victed of encouraging pros-
titution at massage parlors.
David DelAach, 36, was
sentenced in Superior Court
Monday after he was con-
victed Sept. 19 on two counta
of pimping and two of pan-
dering.
c_Airporter qnn CJlotel
MEDITERRANEAN ROOM
Atl di11Mr If...,, irtelud• eholee of Soup or 5•1•4
SOUP -Cr••"' of Tom•to with Chiv11
SALAD -To11M Gr••rt S•l•d, Crouto111, Choie1 of Dr111irt9
INTlllS
IOAST TOM TUlllY. Ovt"' Ro•tt•d To"' Turkey, J11icy •rtd T•rtd•r, Old -4.15
f•1hlon•d Dr11tln9 with Corrtbre•d •rtd 011t1111+t, G•ld•11 'Glbltt Grtvy,
S11owy Whipp.cl Pet•fo.1, or 61tied Y •"'• P1tlt1 Gt••l'I '•••·All T•1tef11lly
C."'bi"-' f., yotr Dl11lttt t11joy"'e11t.
Chlld't Pl•to IUrttltr 121 l .00
IASTU:N CHOICI. MIW YOll SnAI. Fl•"orful •"4 flllh'9· n.1. Top 7.SO
llltrtitl11t Stt•k will b• Top,... with &i•11t Mt~oOflU •114 E1sorio4 with
Lw011••''° PotofM• •Ml Wllol• &r..,. k•11•.
P'llMI II• OP lllJ -AU JUI. Ow Ptroul•I f•••rft•. S.IKI Choico 7 .00
Pertl-Corvo4 h•111 ew Sro•t St•"41ttt Ill.I~ lll•••h wlll "-Acc-p•t1i6'
by Cto•"'-' Spl11och, Yorblrilro hicldi"t •114 Cro•111y Whlil'pM Henore11i1lri.
ClrilW'• "•t• lUH., 121 J.lO
IO.UrD HCWff, lif•r•dt. SucctlOll't O.C.tllflt lN•foMl T_..,, ~... I.ts
... ,. .. • StlW"' Mell4tlf0 .f WlW lJc.o ... $•nMtW wlllri 'Thy M•.ttl•ri•
0.-1,... Soctlo1"-Di11!ftt ot lt. tt..tl
IMPOalD DOM SOU. Veroit'4!11•. Po•ch.4, hllet.. •-' s-....1 Pipl.. S.11 ~et wlftio TI"T l•y ~~ Wirlel• M111c•f &,.,,._, • 0.hc•t. M•171•Y tt....
&1 ..... to • ~ htf.Cti .. :AP"ett.11•1 N•orlte,
IOAIT ue Of LAMI. 0.1•~· .. snc:o •• r LM.., s..-.-~ Ow OW· 1.21.
f•1lril011td Dr.11J11t, UdlH 0•., wltti ih -• No•ol.)tilen, n.., ....
P•••· Wl!lppod P.t.t..., •-' • SjHclol H.+ Ml11t S.wce.
ChlW't "•"' tU•r IJ) l .00
....,.,.. .Ultlo11•l. TtodltlH•i "''"'" t.d_.._
11700 MAC ARTHUR BLVD., NEWPORT BEACH '°"' 11' .. Or.,... C....-ty ~) IUlllVAnotlS IJJ.Jnt
I •
'
LONG BEACH (AP) -One heart., Monday. Authorllles ,.Jd Miu Lo ear y Veryone
man was killed and four A! the beartng was In prog-Chance, formerly of Chicago,
others injured when • twe>foot ,.,,, r.eo. reportedly lltlle, had heen stabbed u um .. and Listens b) Lande-
p i p e bomb exp lod ed said he couldn't get a fair raped . , .ac
prematurely while It was I ------'---''------''-------------------~~--------" .· being lowered into a Terminal
Island oil welt to seal it.
Clarence Owings of Long
Beaah was killed instantly
when he was stru ck In the
throat by flying steel during
the explosion at the Chapman
Petroleum Co. on Monday,
police said.
Hospitalized in critical con·
ditlon were Virgil Everly, 29,
of Lakewood , and A. J.
Milliman, 34, of Downey. Max
H. Greene, 46, of Long Beach
and John Thompson, 25, of
Carson, were hospitalized In
satisfactory condition.
Investigators saJd s t a t i c
electricity apparenUy arced as
the bomb was placed in the
hole, touching off the blast.
•Minimum $100 p.e1son1J IGC.O\lftl
Hop in your
car and come
as you are I
T('le Imperial
folks are
waiting for you!
•• iperial Bar*
eo.taMMa
Harbor BM!. et Fair Ori'l9
(714)979·1000
htviledto a grand ~ening.
"
And t.o join us in plenty of refreshments, free gifts, and a
t.our of our new Santa Ana facilities.
You can even sharpen your eye for fake cash by taking a close
look at the display of counwrfeit money provided by the U.S.
Secret Service and Federal Reserve. •
And you can win valuable prizes by guessing the correct D\llllp
ber of quarters in our giant fishbowl
Come see us .on Wednesday, November 22, 10 a.m. t.o 3 p.m.
Then ask about all the ways United States National Bank
puts real money t.o work for you.
BANTA ANA (1" A Ba-.) Ol'l'ICF. 200 So. llarl>M BM. (71') 5'7~1
J oe M.. ~Vb Pruilknl, M~,.
I/
DRIVZ IH
BANKING noun
Jo.ion -Thurs 8-0
Fri. 10 ·8
BANKINO ROUJI&
t.f oD • 'Mna:n 10 • I
Yrl 10 • '8
UNITED
STATES
NATIONAL
BANK ........... ,, .. _ .. ,...
-
"
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• D AD,Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Clarification Needed
When the state Legislature adopted the Enviror>
mental Quality Act or 1970, it was we I com• d as a
needed curb on indiscriminate building of freeways,
dams and similar major public projec~. with insutii-
cienl regard to their impact on the envtronment.
veloPers to hire their own experts to draw up impact
statemenis. It is fairly apparent that a firm hired by a
developer is not going to blast his project as an envir-
onmental catastrophe.
But when the state Supreme Court, .considering a
suit filed against Mono County by the Friends of Mam-
moth, decided lbe statute could be applied equally to p,n-
vate construction, the result was chaos.
On the other hand, understaffed city and county
planning departments are hardly in a position to make
microscopic examinations of every pro_posed project.
The hope has to be lhal they can spot omissions, and
challenge vague or undocumented findings.
The Environmental Quality Act already has bit
home in Orange County. Two big road projects in the
Laguna are'a, the proposed extension of Campus Drive
to Coast Hi*bway and of Alla Laguna Boulevard lJ&.
tween two hilltop neighborhoods (both public projects)
have run aground because of it.
The Mammoth people maintained the eounty had
failed to consider the environmental impact of a huge
condominium project in the mountain community. They
argued the mile-long stretch of tall buildings would ruin
the view, create an impossible traffic situation on an in-
adequate road and despoil the virgin landscape.
The Supreme Court agreed' a n d the project was
halted midway.
The landmark decision also broua:ht to a halt an
estimated $800 million worth of projetls throughout the
state, according to developers and spokesmen for the
construction industry.
And a couple of major private projects, the Ver·
sallies development in Newport Beach ·and the con·
troversial Canada Foothills development, also have run
into environmental roadblocks.
The oria:inal act required that an environmental
impact study and report be made if it appeared a proj-
ect might have a "significant" impact on the envrron·
menl. The problem for counties and municipalities, fol·
lowing the Mammoth detision, was to determine how to
interpret the term "significant" whic~ the court f~iled
to define. It obviously could have different meanmgs
for would-be developers and for conservationists.
The matter is of particular importance to Orange
County, which is grappling with a raft of its own en>i·
ronmental problems-potential flood hazards, the need
to preserve open space and protect the ~oas~line, !he
encroaching smog threat, and the traffic ~rrculatio~
difficulties that accompany a steady increase m popula·
tion density.
Assemblyman John Knox (D-Richmond), who au-
thored the ori~nal bill, now says it was aimed only at
public construction." He has introduced a new measure
which can be used to change the act, but it ~ay not
come to a vote at this session.
To avoid getting into trouble, some government
aJ?encies put an immediate freeze on all development,
then proceeded to draw up their own guidelines for the
preparation of impact statements.
Interpretations still vary widely from area to area
and no one really seems to knO\\' .iust what is expected.
Most authorities agree on the advisability of look-
in.iz seriously at the environmental impact of all major
developmenis, both public and private. But 'the exist-
ing legislation needs prompt clarification to avert po-
tenial economic chaos in the vital construction industry
and untangle the confusion in city and county planning
agencies. One .obvious flaw is the practice of permitting de-
What ls 'Significant' Impact?
·-E-nvironment Law_ Tangle
8\' PHIL BA1'"NA
CaPi:tal ~'I Strvice
The stkky problem of ¥.'hat to do about
the Sr.ate Supreme Court decision in the
case of Friends of Mammoth vs. ?o1ono
County is now in the hand,, of the Senate
Committee on Governmental Organila·
lion.
Lawmaken have less than two weeks
in which to deal with the statute which
requires an environmerit.al impact study
aOO report to be made if there is
"signilicanl" impact on the envirorunent
from any construcUoo or development,
public or priva~. ;
~ CONSTRUCTION lnduslry spomm<o
say that $a10 million wcrth of project!
are being delayed pending changes in Ute
law or the preparation of the impact
statements.
Assemblyman John Knox (0-Rich-
mond ), original author or the 1970
Environmenlal Quality AC\ which he ad·
mits waa intended to afrect only public
construcUon, has a bill in committee, AB
889, which can be used to make changes
in the acL <>nee again private builders, utility
companies and develapen, plus the con-
struction trade unions, are battllrig the
Sierra Club and other conservation
groups about the language of Knox's bill.
Kenneth Ross, legislative advocate for
Associated General Contractors, ii hi.ghly
critical of the court 's decisiion as 111 Paul
~1cCarron, lobbyist for the califomia
Builders Council
"ENVmONMENTALISTS have the
best of all possible worlds," Ross said.
CALIFORNIA'S
CONGR ESS
He indicated he didn't trunk the con-
servationists cared much for the
economy of California which "would
greatly feel the ef(ects of a shutdown of
the construction industry."
Anticipating the need for "urgency ac-
tion" on his bill, Knox called together op-
posing factions to try and get a con-
sensus. ,.. •
;lie.re are some of the problems ·facing
t!ML~te, with some suggested solutkms.
-~There should be some way to protect
projece which were given a go-ahead
prlor to the court's decision which came
on Sept. 21. ... assuming the project was
not already subject to some litigation.
~t a 120-day moratorium on the
court'& decisioni to give state and local
government a reasonable time to gear up
to handle th& environmental impact
studlea and slatements. Procedures are
needed to handle private projects.
-Don't let interpretation of the act
become broad by limiting judicial review
to strict procedures. Conservationists op-
pose thi.5 move.
-Set up a general 90-day statute of
limilalJoao to pmoent haphazard a~
taco on P">)oct•.
-Develop some exemptions to the act
which, if a project fell into a particular
category, it would not need the en-
vironmental impact statement. This will
certainly cause controversy since logging
would be one or the first categories seek·
ing exemption, and when was the last
time timber people and conservatiOnists
agreed?
-Use impact reports as informational
documents to minimize t h e en-
vironmental affect of projects but not to
stop or eliminate them.
THERE DOESN'T seem to be much
chance that courts will agree to change
their collective mind on the issue.
Already the Slate Supreme Court has
ref~sed to rehear the M~oth decLsio~.
When the assemblyman held his
meeting he had Car from unanimity, as
could be expected. Conservationists want
· to limit development. ... and they'll use
all means to achieve their goals.
There is no real agreement on the pert
of Ross, McCarron or other represen-
tatives of the construction industry. 1be
court decision, Koox's proposed revisions
and his original bill creating the 1970
Enviromnental Quality Act didn't cause
them to jump for joy.
This means that there'll be a great
deal of hard bargaining to gain a con-
sensus so that a bill can get to Reagan's
desk with some chance it'll be signed and
not vetoed.
Developers wil be in a worse position if
the leglslation is held over ·Ul}tll 1973.
First, major construction will continue to
be delayed, and second, they'll face a
state assembly which is divided 51·29 In
favor of the Democrats rather than 43-36
as now is the case.
Plotting Europe's Future
The polit ical face of Europe is chang·
Ing. It may not be the kind of shift Ol)e
can draw on a map, bul that doel ol
make il any less real. Expansion or the
Common Pt1arket from all: to nlne
members is bot one example of what Iii
happening. An event of potentlallJ far
greater significance will take place ln
Helsinki, Finland, on Nov. 22, when the
ambas,,adora of Sf 1t1tes b t I I D
prelimlnary t.alU on the future con-
flguraUon of Europe.
The Hcbinlll pthlrtng will &el the
stage for a ml.nllteria14eVel Conlt:rence
on Security and C'Aoper1Uon 1n Europe,
10 be held In tm. Bri)aln, France and
the United States· rtm1ln skeptical about
the conference, but the CommutUstJ
already are halllng It as a mlle5toot In
lnternaUonal claUona.
' THE RUSSIANS havt bt<n puahing fO<
O•ANOI COAST
DAILY PILOT
' Robert N. \Vttd, Publisher
T,lt.omoi Ktt'1il, Edllor
Borkra. Kreibicll
Ediu,rW Page EdUor
'
The fd1tOn.1 J>Aitf' "' thr o.11Y
Pilot Mt"k• to Inform and &tlmu·
latP rc1uitn by 11rtttntina thi•
l "'-"'J>IPtf'• oplnlons a~ ('Om ·
mqnt•r') un lOJ1lct nf ln~t and
1hcnltlc1nce, by pl'l>\'tdl"K: a fnNm tor the •xptt11k>n of ou r nadt:n' oplnlona. ~ b>' PN'1t'ftlln1t Hu·
dlvtra vttwpnlntJ of lnrarm<'d ob·
ttrwn and fl)Oknmrn on 1111111;1
ol tho d<,y,
'l'llllUy, November 21, 1972
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EDITORIAL
RESEARCH
1 European security conference ever
since Poland proposed lhe ide1 Jn lhe
United Nat\ons on Dec. 14 , 1964. For
DW'ly sis years, the United States and
Western Europe cold-shouldered lhe oug-
gesUon. Then came the Sovlet-We.,t
German treaty ol Aug. ti, t970, by which
both parties renouneod ~ ust ol force
and ~IJed • the exlsling Pollsh-
Germ•n border.· Finally, when lhe
SOvieta qreed to end their perennial
pttMUre on Wtst Berlin , Pretldent Nixon
told Communist Party Secr<tary Leonid
I. Bmhnev that lhe Untttd Stales' last
objection to the conferertee had been
removed.
The Econombt suggcsta that "•
declaraUon on the prlnclplH governing
relalJOlll betwttn states Is going to
r.11tn praminenlly" .. the conlerBlce. AmonC other fhlnCJ, the declanltlon pn>-
bablJ wtll Include • pledle to ........,
the -ol -and provlllonl for the rre.r IDOl'-ol people and ldfu-1n,l:°'m>e111 ol Eut-Weat trado Is UMlY
to ~allo.
Tbe moln to .. ,,,... """" or !be vlllllla o1 World War II and lhe Cold
war Is pralse110rthy. But there are
cloublen just the wne. Roy Hauenley,
the aMdow minlM or defenoe !or
Brli.n'1 Labor P1rty, amrll !hat the
coafemlce agenda II • mixture of the _...i. ('"""' declarationl .., Ille
reouncllUOo ol loroe), the t-(II>
...... trade) and lhe 11..-i,o111o
ctc111 wlthdrlWll or Sovie& i._ -
Eallem Europe!.
THE UNlTZD STATES lnlllll tbot lhe
European 1tCUrily conference bo Unbd
'
to mutual and balanced force reductk>m
In Europe CMFBR). Discussions to this
end are to take place early in 1973. One
reason why the Nixon administratk>n
wants MFBR talks is to forestall a
unilateral reductM>n of U.S. forces in
Europe by act of Congress.
The Soviet Union freely adtruts that Its
long-term objective ls withdrawal of
American troops from the continent. But
Yuri Kostoko. Russia's 1 ea d Jn g
spokesman for MFBR, ts well awart thal
the NATO countries oppose any weaken-
ing of America's military prtsence.
Britain has long feared that the aecurl·
ty conference will have the ertect of en·
dor11lng the status quo In Eastern
Europe. 1t need worry no longer. The an-
nouncement on Nov. 6 th1l East and
Well Gtrmany bad 1gmcl to eotabllsh
normal rtlltJoos did more to rtlnlorce
the status quo than any multilateral
meeling could. The West has 1bancloll<d
all ldeos ol "llberaUng" Eaateru Eu"1pt:
and now Rlwla must aettpt the reality
or • unli.d, anti-O>mmunlst Common
Markel.
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Why lloo'l lbe Wuhinglon poUUcos ~ ''m't'llUe sharing" b)' leav-q It 1t home lo start with?
• -1.N.P. ,.... ........ ,..,_.. ,....,.. .......
xM•lftr ........ WCW I • S.-
............. •i.n .... DlllW' ,....
Money 'Smell'
Replaces Old
Venice Odors
(smNEY J.HARR.Is)
The -last time I saw Venice it was sink·
lng, but. ~ longer stinking. This was in
195~ and the U.S. Army Corps ol
Engineers had ·come in just after the war
and removed the
noxious odor from
the canals. "
But th& lovely city,
though no longer
malodorous, ls still
sinking. In the last 15
years alone, it has
sunk two more inch-
es into its lagoon. At
the present rate of
settling, our grandchildren would have to
visit Vellice in a submarine.
11IE IRONY in this slow disaster
is that $400 million was allocated to save
the city almost two years ago, by pro-
viding a flood control project to be built
at the three entrances to the lagoon from
the Adriatic. 'The amount was raised by
an international consortium as a loan to
Italy.
This "Save Venice" drive, however,
sponsored by UNESCO aftef a frightful
flood in 1966 -has ground to a hall,
because the commercial interests around
the city insist on mo r e irldustrlal"
growth, while the conservationists pro-
test that the industrial growth bas been
the prime cause of the envirorunental
degradation of Venice.
ACCORDING TO a dispatch in the New
York Times, "lhe oil re f i neries ,
petrochemical complexes and other
plants in the Venice area are being" de-
nounced for polluting the air and the
lagoOn and for pumping huge quantities
of fresh water out of the subsoil.''
At the same time, the business ele-
ments are clamoring f<r ezpanding the
Industrial poru on the bonlers of lhe
lagoon, on the theory that Venice must
"grow" and not turn into a mere
"museum city."
THIS SAME confllct is going to be
repeated in large cities everywhere,
though not In so dramatic a setting as
Venice. This Is the bind that industrial
ci~lllution finds itself Jn : growth brln,ga
prosperity, but It al90 brlnp deteriora-
tion. What may be profitable in the abort
run may turn out to have long-run
disastrous consequences.
We have acarcely begun to race up to
this modern dilemma. In his ftew book,
''The Mat.,. Society," Denis Gabor, lhe
lnvenlor ol the bolognpb and winner of
a Nobel Prt2e In phyllCI, comu oul Oally
on the Ilda ol llmltllll growth aevtrely.
Althou&b blmotU a tecbnologlsl, be wama
that "'JllndlOI teduloloC1 pott1 one of
the .,...iest lhruls to modern ooeiety -
not mettly to tho unique beauty or a clly
like Venice. but Lo lhe very survivability
ol ..,.,., urban ll'M In the -Id.
JN ms EDUCATED opinion, "'hat we
need Is 1n "orderly retreat" -which b
the hardest maneuveur to execute -In
popul1Uon, ln ~on, and In con·
llUmptlon. Qir -or llvln& must decreaM, be asserts, In ordtt !or
our ...utJ al living to locrea!le. Bui.
u In· Venice, we. art going to ODd It
much euler lo take the smell or garbage
out or tht canal than the smell or mooey
out ol the land.
' '
<R055FIRE '
Federal .Windfall
May Have Strings
By ROBERT E. BADllAM
Anemblymaa, 7Jst Diltrict
We can look for a real hassle in the
Legislature -and in the local a:ovem-
ment entities -when hundreds of
milliOns of dollars come pouring into
California as a result of the federal
governinent's revenue-sharing program.
(GUEST REPORT J
then use the revenue-sharing money to
replace those state funds. Actually, state
experts see little restriction on the use of.
the revenue-sharing funds by the state ~~ TIIE pictu~. During this , and also aee no real.problem ol bow local fJ.ll~.l .y.ear, the state .~ sched~ei:t.~to ... ·goVernmedf·. Q:Hs; "-the .moQey 'on recil;~Ve sq1;ne $210 mill.ion,, witli .'local. ·reasonable programs.
govemmen~ to get upwards of $.500
million. Tb&t's only a part of the so-call-. ONE OF ;OUR U.S. Senators agreed
ed windfall. Over the five-year.~. that "t~·strlngs are·very , very loose" on
the state government will re~ive some how the money can be spent, but he ad-
$1.1 billion, while local goveroments·.;Will ded· tha\ he would have preferred that
get $2.1 billion. · some restrictions be placed on the use of
Our legislative auditor, however, ,has the money. lricldentally, be took iMue
warned that because or the huge deficit with our Jegislattve. analyst's warning
facing the federal government at this that the fed~ral. government would cut
time there will be "real pressure" to cut other appro~tions •and thereby reduce ' I'· r· -~b other appropriations, so the state !ind the amount o new mone rece1v..u . Y
local government should be extremely the state aJ)d local governments. He sald
watchful on wliat their "net increa!es" he is certain the revenue-sharing pro-
wW be each year in federal appropfia-gram Will not end in five years.
tions. Already,with .these fwtds in the offing.
HOW WII.J.. all this money be used?
Some say it will be used either to assist
the schools or provide property tu relief.
And therein lies the dilemma. Certainly,
the schools need money. But then the
majority of the property owners feel the
funds should go to relieve their tax
burden.
Our State Director of Finance has
warned that the federal law setting up
Tevenue-sharing does n o t appear to
permit the state to use ils money to cut
state income taxes. But be conceded
there could be a way around that by us-
ing state funds to cul income taxes and
some cities are complaining the money
they ultimately receive will by no means
begin to solve their problems -that it
would help only in the short run. As an
example. one mayor said his city needs
$10 million for its streets, but will gel on-
ly $1.2 million.
THAT'S UKE looking a gift horse in
the mouth, What would they do if they
got no federal money?
Anyway, it's a problem the Legislature
and the governing boards of our cities
and counties will have to work out But
there 'll be a lot of pulling and hauling
before it's all over.
ls It Male or Female?
Sex must be getting less important in
this cowitry.
Otherwise, why should it become in-
creasingly difficult to tell the sexes
apart.
It is becoming harder all the time. 1be
boys dOn't seem to care ii they are
-mistaken for girll, and the girls seem to
enjoy being mbltak-
en for boys.
But now and then
a stubborn, old-
rashioned person
comes along who still
prefers to know what
the sex is ol olher
peraoM he meets.
Among them a r e
employers, ec~
teachers. c e n 1 u s taken, poli~
men a n d anybody gettlns: mar--
ried. Certainly, at least when one is
CMStdert.11 getting married for the first
time, it ta not unrt190Dlble to want to
know lhe oe1 ol ti-under con-
sideration.
Yet, when everyone today dreacl.
talu and ICll alike, how can this be
done! WeU, mlttakee ;vo always possi-
ble, but Ibero are ltUI some clut1 u to
how to lell the IWI apart.
FOR EXAMPLE:
ti II can put • NOk on whits stancllna
on one )iq,,\1'1 • man. lf It bas to tit on
the .eds• or tho btd and then fall over
backward 10 l\l'U(gle Into ill 11\oekings.
it's a woman. ·
Does It usuallf tbate above the
sbouldml lt'l a py. ~ it .... lly
shave below the lhouldm! 111 a gal. · tr U bom you by alnys w•nllnt lo
ltll you Its drellnl, tt'I a btT. tr tt bom
I
-( HAL BOYLE )
you l)y always wanting to brag about its
hangovers, it's a him.
Does il carry a blanket lo lhe football
game? That's the boy. Does it wrap the
blanket arou{ld Itself while the one who
carrle<t it shivers himself ·blue? ThaL's
lhe girl. •
If it says it wears the pant! In the
rami)y, plJt It down u the papa. II it ac-
tually wears \be panta in Ute family, put
it down as the mama.
IN AN emergency, of course, you can
always ask the father or mother of a
ptl'$0<1 what the. se1 or their orr'l'rina Is.
tr lhey can't agree, you mlahl be wbe to
drop_ the whole matter.
Al\tr all, there Is a lol more to human
lift than ..._ -II uys r1&ht bere. All you
have to do ~ to find out what that could
possibly be.
~--•• Ge•rwe ----
Dear GeorJe:
Do you suppcne the ""'°" I'm nol popular wllh glrla 11 that I don' I
d8n -·~·••1 ~~-DAN
Doar OM:
Gee, Dao, I haven 't the logiest
nollon. M•Yhe )'Oil dance loo mudl.
!or all I -· Hu II occumd to you thal I doll'I Ovtll know )llU!
L<lill:; kid, )'Oil want m1 adv1ce!
Stttr clear ol advko columnills.
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<f.;.,.""I •,-., ••• ,,.•,.,.~.'1 ... tl~l'Y•./i>#l t\·• -
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' DAILY PILOT 1
No Action Taken LOSE W EIGHT
THIS WEEK
Od1iltx C111 IMlp,.. '*°'" the n. For the Record County Debates Bus Ads • ., ...... Marriage
licenses
By JACK BROBACK
Of .. DtUJ ""' ....
SANTA ANA -Advertising
on buses, Its pros and com, "~ ~:5.7.~!. c.T:a=. '::cl was discUssed at length Mon-
Coj • ,t:!.', 20, 210 i'Mnl• vi.i.. day by directors of the Orange
SNlLL·l"AIOt! -1t1cMrd F•roo. n. ORAJIGE COllflY County Transit District They 1201 C1llJ0r11i. SI., H1111tl1111ton 8"cl'I , 1"" tt1111 o.v. u. sn.a Nortit T111t111 came to no conclusion but the HOPv;ort'.rl\~i:1ta:R -o .... ., debate was spirited.
NcwTMft; 2A, m c.llfomi• $1., HUl'll-Dir to n ---U "--f l"lfoll a..cti n ,...,., J-. n, 11, ec r !.1Wtuuu ~pers o ~fv~~ 'li'i~~ ~.iw Newport Beach said signs on
Fr..wc, 1•, n.1 ....._ WMlmliwtw "' the outmde of buses were ~""";:...~·"' •••...., '" Peace· Officer "v~ pouut1on."
WA1Tl!·W!.rnt:N -Mii"'" w~. eas-. who has attempted '°' 15150 M.99Mll.. ~. *· r-w w.n.111 .... , .,., ........, LOlrtlo 1112 G d unsuccessfUlly to have the ot=1f•4° ~°'!:. u. uc ra Uftfes. advertising agency W h I ch ~·· £1 Ton and Vll"lllnt. LM, serves hiJ Keystone Savings WRAal..l~~Lr..-~.:. .Jolwl Wlllltm. Announced and Loan Association named tt. m Allam.. Hu11tl~ a..cti ___ to sei"\le the dlstrlc~ also
'"" Min: .. Louisa. 2S. 121 ..... 1wn1.. ·u~--· the • 00 H1,1nt1:gJe11Ct1· en ~ agency c sen ·~1 "",,.;,, ·ec~a.~.;.A:;--Police-o~ICll'I -from .•. nve_by...a.majorily_0:Uhe.board-He. TI~ Dl•M1 II, lf3 Olk St., COlll Orange Coaat Cities have Objected to an evaluation Of
cmmi.llARlt -Jolwl L-r SMl'Tll, received diplomas from the bus advertising prepared by
301 ~ N. sm1111 Rd., o\ilt. 4 u, Orange County Peace Of-the agency Hallman and
9Jomnlngtcn, Inell-•nd Vlf9lnll '1 --In • ' ~ ~ 1ts7 1t1111arw1 ••· NtwPOrt ficers' Acadernf iD:, a:~UJC:S Associates of Santa Ana.
HEINE·iACIC -lhm-41' A.Nirtw, "· at Golden wes.t college In Director John Kane!, a
1ntt s11ntrav UM, Hvn111111ton Huntington Beach. · Cypress councilman asked
11..cti '"" P•trkll Ann. 23. un Grad •-ncl' their · "-Frlllkl sw..t, Or#!OI. ua.....,. a · po.Q\."\': caspers about his criticism of
•~1e~~Yc~.'-:"~~~ de~ta Ments ~Cral:. 'I!' ,..A_ the agency. =.~ ~ u Mllllc c1rc1.. """' eu.. &· ,.. ~r. "Based on my experience In
llAR8ER-AUSNIAN. -,..r•d•rlck WL.c!W!K l .. ~· ,.~MIA,. Plleonisllng advertising and the slogan for
Frnlln, 73, I.SI FtoricN St., HWll· orau. .. :"-'~ae • 0 • the dis'-'ct th 1~ a..m '"" Hat1 ""'"''· 11. Gary E welt and Edmondi 5 _ u 1 e agency sug· lllJI FlarkMI s1., Hunllrlflwi llHdl. • • • • gested : ''l1le two bit bus
ll'R:ERIC·IJDRICLUNO -T • 11 " I 1 Zuontl. lin "' C l'ed "Tha '°'"'r, '°' "°', ..... LIM. Hllllf· Huntington Beach· William e, aspens rep 1 . t 'LI~ r;::c"..:.:,,.~~ 27·" c. -Barthr:lemy, John s. is a cute slogan but it is bad."
SERNA·TOOl.E -~ Wlllltm. u. .............. rg and era;~ E Kanel said that if signs on ,.., LI HKI ... "-'91n V•llrr ITll,ll U'I:' • --• ba "Wh • '"" JKq11111ne P1tr1c11. it, 1mo LI Robison buses were d, y don t
Hldelldl. Fount1111 ..,,,...,. • cond mn th TV net •-a1c E·1C1TcHEN..-Ar1'M" Gwy, 32. IS? Laguna Beach : Terence A. we e ~ wor~
c111nr111 st.. UvuM ltMd\ Mid MacAdam for the obno11ous ads they r""''°" =:, :w. w c111111111 s1~ San C&emente: Timothy L. bring into our homes?" VOlt~..aALKOVATZ -LltTy 11...,, 'll, Ho.J..1.. Marilyn J ••A.1.an1, Board Chalnnan Derek 21~ St., N~ h id! Ind >""''• • mauuv
1<11t1ryn Edr111, 21, 514 J11m1ne. Apt. and Russell R. Rice. McWinney tried to get the c:i-s~~ -M1w'ii111m Colef!Mn, "· Seal Be_ach: James R. Lano discussion back on the track 1.':. -.. ___ , • ., ... ~H1111trnvton caster and Richard w. Welsh. with a statement that the sub-
.... fl< .. Jf, 21112 'ect d t" MO .. starn,. ~. Huntlflll'!Wt &Hdl. } was a Yer tstng on .......,.s
KE.SSOJHl:U$HFELOT -R 0 b. r t or not Elrl~ ... $712 °''*" Gnlw Shld., M D . ~ m. w.stmklstw Ind Norm•~ all raw· S KANEL persisted however =-..•· 2211 Ho11111tt TttT1e1, GIM-. arguing· that advertising com:
CUEVAS-lECHUGA -S1lv.sor, 24, es under the heading of free
lS!t s . D11!Nllld. Slnl1 An1 Mid Luz 6 D ; · ~111, 21, 204 S. Cltff Orlve, L1911r111 0 ays irr expres.sio.n, and is a form Of KL~ONl.IN -ICl'Ylll Slllwn. 11, private enterprise. !::2 .. ~~';;~ "!'.·c~;, ~I:,""~":!: Both the dlstrict staff and
tk'-· AMhllm MoJestin" g the ad agency bad evaluated
ICELL Y<LIFFOllO E. d w I rd th d [ .... Gllblrt, u. 1'30 ,_ SI., COii• M... e pros an CODS 0 11\Q
1nc1 M1r1e. n. 3350 Nl'Y~ Aw.. advertising.
•lint PlflOll JOll irllll lo ... OdrilMl ..
I Uny t&Wet lllll'•lllJ ........ ~
h illl llO dlnprM dnlp. No ataMICo
Ho IPIClll 1utebl. Cit rW ot ue.
was that the district could use Riverside fr e e w a y 1 In -two were ln Garden Grove, l•t 1nd llv1 loflc•. Od1lnmc 1111 '*'
the signs on sides and rear of Fullerton. It would serve two in Orange and one each in 11nd 1UCC1Ufwtybrthouunda1IMr
buses to advertise its owa cammuten to Loe Angeles. Santa Ana and Weslmins ter -""country tot 14 y1111. Odrtna ,...
servJces. -St.lected a alte In Garden he fa vored a Garden Grove cost1 $l.251ndtt111trp1C0110n1Ytbt
Another plus factor was the Grove aa the moet acceptable site adjacent to the Garden $5.25. You m111t loll 111'1 lat Of )'OW
possible revenue to the district for a maintenance and ad· Grove Freeway. It is an In· mDMYWHlbtrtlundM!tly)'OUrdruWIL
from sa les of space, estimated mlnistrailon facility for the dustrial area with 12 percent ·No QU111ions ••~tit. Accept "° ault-
at $80,000 a year. di.strict. J>iltricl G e n e r a t unemployment. The board ac--stltutts. Sof4 wtth tlllt panltttl W'I THRIFTY ""'" "" Ul\(u1, .. ! ~l\!l'I" • Supervisor Ralph Clark of Manager Gordon ' • P e t e ' ' cepted his recommeodatlon
Anaheim, a district director Fieldlna: uld about 80 possjble and ordered an appraisal of
said he believed there was sit.el had been studied and lhe property. I r,~;;;~~=;:::==~
good in bus advertlsing bot narrowed down to sb. He ,Said -Heard a rep:>rt by the I G'--' D d
ca utioned that its content criteria included 10 to 15 acres County Counsel t h a t en-~••
must be screened to keep of land, a alte removed (tom v i r on m e n t a I i m p a c t make the sc:ene
messages "in good taste." He residences, access to a statemtnts were not required Sundays
urged that the idea be studied,1-~1r~ .. ~-~""~·~llJld~~pre~fe~ra~b~1~y~an~jon~an~y~act~iv~itty =·~' ~th:•:distr:· :tc~tu==;;~~~~~~·M not just killed. area of blgb unemployment. other than those cooceming in the l1J.)jfi ij!ill
The board members finally Fielding said of the six sit.ea the use o( land.
agreed thal the staff should be
directed to prepare some skel·
-che.s .. of_.J10w_•_• m o....v:.Ln g
biRboard" ads would look on
the district's buses. A report
wa1 called for at the Det. 4
mee ting.
IN 011IER business Mon-
day, the directors :
-Saw a s11de film presen-
tation on the So uth ern
California Regional Aviation
Study being aired in public
hearings by the Southern
California Association o f
Governments (SCAG ).
-Approved an agreement
with a consultant firm to con-
Unue work on the prOposed
Park-N-Ride facility to be
located on 11 acres at the
junction of the Santa Ana and
-
YOU TOO
Can Drive
Perfection
LEASE A
MERCEDES
Lt'a1,11q FramS 12771
1o10.
'.>0 USED MERCEDES
O N Ol'lil-'L4Y
HOUSE OF IMPORTS
MEllCEOES·ALFA DEALER
6962 Monch.,ttvr, Bueno Parll
on Santo 4no frffwoy
What you
need
is a littl e
t
I
T. Monteom••Y
Agency Associate
NEWPORT BEACH
Tel: 558·1500
Financial Elbow Room.
We've got great plans for you.
Call your nearest Manulife agent.
• Man~Life
The Manufectur'911 Life Insurance Comp.an'(
H•ad Olftce: bon10, C.n.da
K. LCro1by
Agency Assocla!e
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Tel: 558-1500
Bri• J. Tower..,.
A1•ncy Assoc)lte
NEWPORT BEACH
Tel: 558-1500
Cost• MIM. SANTA ANA A man '"-One pl . t h ·--• Cl.AlllC-HEATI4 -Homtt' Gltflt'I, "· -.. ..-us porn emp a SIJ.CU 1"4 "Mtlflr P1.e. cost•~'"" dieted by the Orange County1----'--'----'-------------------------------~----------------
~~ ~. a, ""' ,,....,.... Pi.ct. Grand Jury on Z5 counts of --------, 1621 Madr'.w Ave., Apt, 7, WHI VNina s••-'•ugb•--bas been Sier-JD Ind lrMllPldl G•ll, 20, 45 .r--e ...:.....-~"
HOll:TON-l.IEAICE -DIMh 0.¥11, :U, se:IWll offenses against his tWQ r--
H=~~~~S ~ Mlclwlt sentenced to 80 days in jail.
cfJtfla. 20. 1:iw ,,..,_ Drive, Superior c.ourt J u d g e ~= ~ ~°" ~·· William Murray ordered· the c :N~~:::::~: Entsi~::::~1 ...-amous
,,, n:n Hillllllut or1..... H1111t1no1°" on three years probation.
General 4-PlyTires I
BMc:ll w l"•trkl• "-· 1t, ml Loomer was aITeSted a y-• N1"'1l111 Ori.,., HV!lllnvtDn 8ffdl. .._, ·SAUGA-HAtcH ..,. Jotin ~ ,,, Igo and accused Of sexual ~ 'i:-~·,,, ~r;· co1: c.::: tensei apiDst bis two lcteP. I; Mffl. daughters., ages 7 and 10, dlD'·
HA1tAMAT1u1<-c:A1N -Rk tllrd Ga,..,, 1• •• the period Aug. 2 through 21. tAl2 DoWnlng Circle, Wn!mlmter ''O
•nd LllW$ll K11hlffn. lt, 1$710 Ir-Oct. 9, 19'11.
W1y, WHlftllMttr, I al DAY·llROOIC8ANIC .. -. MllUl'1C9 Ev.rt, Al the legations were
SI. 1h,,..i 11:oui. 2. ...o. ao){ HI, felonies. He pleaded guilty to ~. Florid• •llCI Dorothy I t.lllllei", 56. 1411 ~, vi.,, w11• miademeanor charges of·child
L191.1M llffch, I ... . OAVl~IST -Rld'lffd Hlllll\. "· 416 mo es ... '6. s. onw, or.., lfld l"atrlce, 11, 611111
Wnl Wll'MI' AYI , Apt It, Hllntlng!WI o~li:SON.coMIHS -R-ld J-. $500 Grants U. 51• l"olflM'llll A.,. .. c--. c11t
'
,; Famous· fOr l11·ileage I· r Famous dual tread design I r Buy now at our low
ARBUCXLE le SON
~MORTUARY
42'1 E. 1'1th St., Colt.a Meta
H• 1111
MM " ~I~ K•l'tll, 2.f, 514 I :~~~~.:.=. Given to UCI
111C1 c1,.,., Let, 11, 1CD12 1ti.t., The Irvine Town Center ~
Wfttnllllltw. JAC09SON.soRc1 -Erk P .• n. 1m1 Branch of the Bank of a.-. u .. HUntl""'°" lldl. n P..-Amen·ca •--gt · f tv ,.., 11, .5i.rr1 M9dn. 1~ ven a pa tr o
THOMPSON.ftmMAN -Georee e.. $GOO grants to UC Irvine for I ~pair-price '
1·
I
I
I
1.
1;
• BAL'J'Z.BERGl!RON
F1JNPAL DOME
22IMIO w..._, Hvnn"lfoll 11HC11 and education IV'njects. SllkWf c .• 22, Whlltlei'. ,.. v
CANNOM-BOETTCHER -DOl'I A., 26, One will help pay for tutors. Vlll'NllYI> 'llllCI t_.,,, M., JO, 411
Coniu del Mar l7Ullt l2nd s1 .• Newport a..m. The other will pay for toy• for
DIXON·FOllTIN -Rli'ld'( e .• %J. 72" a day ··-center CoataM.,. M1-ZC4 MllMI" SI , COlll M91. ltld Jloldy A .• , ______ ,iiiiii.iiiii--1 • BELL BROADWAY
MORroARY
22. lllll'blflk .
lMO l"M Nl'Wpewl, ,._... a..ct1.
Ind Llndl-M.. 11, LA. Wlt:.LtAM50N«IN8ALL -MlcllMI A., HO\.IDAY
111 Broadway, Coata M ...
ALSHVLEll-GREEN -Jolwl 1t .• a, I
22, 1'10 OC.... Av., HWl"l'Olll'°"
&Nd'I, •lld A.my L •• 11. cO'tln•. Uquor LI HID • MeCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1711 Lqaaa eu,_ RL
-IS • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery MorlomJ
Q.,.t
DLIVEJW)UCHENE -SI-F., 22,
and 0-M~ 1', lloTll 1505 OllQ,
Huntlntft111 llHCll. 1-l
CAALSON-Ruo•••• -w·-,_ v -10 I .0. ..OS SIWl"lfoll Pl., N"""1POl'I
9Mtll •lld Jlldllll J., ~. "''°' Off v-. vaOMAN-allltTOH -Nori'nlin L-.
3S,. 3'11 W. MIMIWI, l"Clml)NI lind -...
Sh/111ry sue. 11'° W•t wueon, ""· ., ... ,,.COii• Mn.I.
Sl"llOSl-WRIGKT -~" Tilomlt,
Miii 9ncl ~ LM, lt, ID77 ALL THI Pl BT a.ti SI., .vt. 11, c.olt• MIN M
HOltTON-FISCHEll -DININ 1"11'1ck. TllMMIHS.
2:J. ittt-11'11 st .. Ao!. '"• H""""""" WIND I
-Pacific View Dme
Newport -· CaUIGnla
2t. ,.,, °""" SI., ApL '°• COii• WI RATUU 'I
a..m. and ~""-Mlr"llllllll, , ..
2110-11'11 SI , Apt, 21t, ~llfkln t ~
a..ctl. • ~-
HU811All0, J1l.-sHAFER -A....,. I
" '
-• PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
ROME
7111 Bolla Aft. ,,_.., --• SMITHS' MORTUARY
117 Malo 91. 8111111--• -
I! .... 2'. 15652 WllDllN St., T1111ln,
~ ·-· •• 11'1 ......,_ ....... ,.,,. ,, •. C•• Mell. M•~r JHEllMAN-WESTEllN -l"N ..,.., llUlll) D, 1511 ......... St., Apt, 1-. A1111
NW n v...,i. Lytwl. u. , .... s.. SUP£I IU£T ,._.. SI., ........ In VMi.y.
81ANCMIETTE.aAY -._..,.. T1lelNI,
n. • c-1 H.,...., . ._.. ,,.., I ......-i ._,. .... "'--.........
21, 1111 GI'""'"' Orlw. ~ .. .._, ......, • c. -"'~..,;;,,:::;'..."'=:"'..:0 673-3510
L\IM. JI, IOU1 llltw, ,._, 111, ........ -v-. 91U)Wlf.CClfl8 -RIMild o.lt, :12,
17"' Sift ..._. ,._.,.... Vlllley '"" I 0..... ,..,.., 1L f1'9I .. ~
~•v.....,.,
IS IT PERMISSIBLE FOR A VETERAN'S WIFE TO BE
BURIED IN A NATIONAL CEMETERY?
by EU6ENE O. ll:R6YON
' -~ ...................................... ~ ... ,_ .... . ,....._ .............. _ .......................... . .......................... ,.,, ..... ..... .......... ... I...... .... .......... ..,................. .. :::.: ........ , , ........................... . ... a ............ ._. ... .._.. .... ___ ,.,,,..,~
.................. 7 ............ ......... • .. .
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0. pr '• .. I., ••uw• ,_.. ..... -*4 l''t ....... ......, '"'''''' ..... _ ...................... ...... ",.. ...................................... ,., ·;,
e <-••• ..... ..,. .....
B.U~Ber,,ere•-F-end B•Hll!
, COSTA ....,. 2 LOCA,._ COI09IA ... lllAI HIMM .,,..._
\I
only
Size l.50-13 h,lbMel bl•ckwllrl, plu1 tt.75 Fed. II. To,..-dte.
o.n.81 JETaAIR•m-General's famous 4-ply replace-
ment tire. With 1 ro1d hugging dual tread design. Easy
steering contoured ahouldera. And long miltfage Oura-
gen• tread rubber to keep you rolling.
m1 ... <MM LOW PIO. fl. TAI ......... ... -
COMPACT 1.50-13 ........ St .75
CARS 7.00-1S/C7•14 ......... $1.M /2,0I .
INTERMEDIATE £7 .. , .. ... _ .. U .24
CAAS F71-14/f71-16 ·--$2.3112,Q .
STAHDAAD 011-141on.1s CAAS ......... U .5112.1:1
BIG CARS H?t-14/H71-1S ..... , .. ~75/J.lt
WMtTIWM.LI OILY 91TO11 lllOM NII TIM
M* ......... .,. "1 • M _. It -oitt C..-•
90
SifA-88 IED RADIALl'6
. , , Dlt'I ied fOI AINric:M Cenl
Gena<lll Ctllbrt1tc1•
DUAL·STEEL RADIAL'"
• "9lllill MdY' ..... '°' ........ ~ r .. ...-..... tot '"""" w ,,,.....
DON SWIDLUND'S ,
COAST GENERAL , TIRE
~I W• 1fili. Cuk Mi• • Piii• 540-ITIO er MMIU -, -Destl/t-driwrtile ..... --
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8. DAILY PILOT
• .,,.,----1
For the -
"4 s • . Going My Way?
: Costa Mesa artist George James spoofs his painting "First Baptist Bus," a win·
ner in the current Fall All-Media Show at the La guna Beach Mu seum of Art .
• The show \vill be open through Nov. 25. Dec. 3, the museum (formerly the
·:A.rt Association) will offer more than 150 wor ks at a fine art auction. Further
• •
information is available from the museum at 494-6531 .
Fashions Importer Dead;
Orchestra Hired-Big ·Risk
From Wire Services
• Organis t Carlo Annibale
-cays he's nlways wanted lo
;,1ay witli a sy mphon y
-orchestra, and he will -at a
.:Cost or $4,000.
: Annibale. 41 and blind since
early childhood, hired the Buf-
falo Symphony Orchestra for a
,concert .. with himself and a
'.fellow artisl Nov . 27 in
.Kleinhan's I.tu.sic Hall.
: "I know it's the biggest
;gamble of my life," said An-
:nibale, an organ teacher and
:·club performer. "But if I go in
; hock, I go lnlo hock."
* : NatUn P.1. Ohrbacb, the
·department store owner who ·broueht high tashloo styles :··
( PEOPLE )
turers and placed on clothing
racks In his store a t
reasonable prices.
* WaJter PadJnstJ found a
man searching an auto in an
apartment bouse garage.
"What are you doing ?"
Pudinski said. "I'm a police
officer.''
"That's too goddam bad,"
replied the intruder, shoving a
.38-ealiber revo!ver Into the
unanned Pudinski's stomach.
Pudill!ii grabbed lhe barrel
of the p!Jtol, disarmed the
man, wresUed him to the noor
and arnsted him.
Ronald F. Ha yward. 29, of
Gibbonsvllle, Idaho, was book-
ed on suspicion of burglarly,
assault with a deadly weapon
on a police officer and
possesskln of narcotics for
sale.
Pudinski, 45, i s com-
; from f'aris for sale to missioner of the California
! American women at Seve~ntb Highway Patrol.
Avenue prices, has died in *
·"New York. He was rr.
· Obrbach opened lhe firs ' The widow of Robert F.
l his chain of II stores on New Kennedy vilited the Kennedy
Washington in crisp but sunny
wea ther.
She then walked to rormer
President Joh1. F. Kennedy 's
grave a fc\v steps away and
knelt for aboul three minutes .
*
m-----10Ik.!s liULS:b:e.f.LHiulOlrut...._~V~ite in Arllni10n Na·
•WU "A bu1inea tn milUool, tional Cimetei'y in Virginia on
1 a profit ln ;>ennle!." what would' have been Ken-
Olten personally going lo nedy's 43th birthday.
'.Paris' famed Rue d u Elltel K e a a e d y ; ac-
: Faubourg, St., A n t o I n e , companied. by six of her
'Ohrbach would bring back ex-children. her maid and two
pensive creaUont which he family dogs, knelt for about 10
Would then have copied by minutes at Kennedy's grave
. Seventh A v e n u e manufac· on a hillside overloooking
Election a Grand Victory?
'ne GOP State Pro Doesn't Tliin.k So
By CHARLES R. LOOS
Of .. .,., .........
Wblle Rl!publlcans are sllll
1lowlng ln the arterlight of
'.President Nixon's big win
'Nov. 7, some of the .party pros ~are looking at the election ln a
:diffemit llChl.
: Callfom.Ll's GOP controller,
'.Ji Uih P'brnoJ, 9eell It IS "I
'debacle" for hls party.
CONSIDER TRESB oold
·facts, saya tbe former Clare-
'.mont College pollll<al eel...,. P"of-r:
• ~-Mr. Nixon eirrle d
~llfomla by more than a
{NEJfs .ANALYSIS)
mlllkln votet. Yet in the
AQembly lhett are now only
21 RepubllcAM, the lowest
wmber lince the JM2 election
"""' ~oocnlt r e -ap-Portimed tbe ltlte and even lower thu the II Repub!l<an
•-.mNJIDfJl who survived
the lllmocnllc lanclaUde of
11111.
-TBB STATE !ally for the
GOP tbls ytar wu mlnut
eight ,..It In the Assembly
alld plu.t one ln the Senate.
-Whll• much II btln1 mado
or the GOP'• oae ae1t gain In
the 1tale Stnlle, It II lm-
poitanl 1o reooplre !hot no
Democrauc lncumh<nll were
delealed 1n1where In
C.Ufomla.
-At the 111tlanal level, the
STAT! CONTl!Ol.L!ll
Hugh floumoy
Republican Party lost lwo U.S.
Senate aeolJ, p1cUd up ooly II
1e1t1 in the Houae o f
n.-taUvu and nelled
one 1oa 111 tht sovernon' «>I·
umn.
0 SIMPLY STA'11CO," 11ys
Flournoy, "the elfctfor: WIU an
1m,,.....1ve pmonal vlctory
for tht President, bul a defeat ror hlJ party.
"And it was a mwlve
penonal re)eellon of Senalot
McGovern, bul cert.Inly not 1
defeat for the Democr1Uc
Party."
The 4S.y .. r<>ld f'loumoy, of
course, bu more than a pas.
1111 C1U1t for .,.._,, 1bolll
Agency Poet
Record
PUBLIC NO'l1CI · PllllUC NO'l1CE PllllLIC N<mCE
I
•
PUBIJC NO'l1CE
PUBIJC NOTICE
flCTITIOUt a USINl!SS NAM8 ITAT•M•NT
,
Tiie t'olW.1119 pen.on1 •rt dolrot
IWll-··= MESA ,AWN a. MESA SALVAG!, 17U NtwpOl1 11...0., Coll• Mesllo
Ct llf«nl•.
WIMIOl'I J°'""" Vmfutt, C_,
Ul4 0"-.:1 loutfl, ,._... IHcll,
C•llfaml•. Artllt.lr Vll'lfult, '-• Ul4 0.k• WllOd SOUth Ntwpll'I IMdl, c.llfomla.
HollMn Uh.Ill, 1763 NtwpOl'f &IYd.,
CO.I• Mewi, C•llfoml•.
Thi• blllll'IKf •• bllnt aincli.M:ted by • parlntt'ltllp. _
W1Mton Vttdult
Tht1 1t1t1ment Ill.ct w",,. l!'tt Counh
Cltr1t ol Or•not COllll!y 111'1 N.,_,. 20, ltl1
WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, Coonly Clerk, bt
&IYMIY J. MIOcloX. Dlputy, .......
,UDU$11ed Orenot CNll Dilly Pllol. NcrwmDer 21. 21, and Dtcembtr s. 11.
1972 3101·11
PUBIJC NOTICE
•<"" • ''··· ··~""'· •1• I ••••r ·•\,. ~• •. o, • •, ·, • t, I •;' ' • ' ••' • '• "·•~• • ' • ....-. •
TONIGHT'S
TV HIGHLIGHTS
KTl'V m and KCOP m 7:30 -Santa Claus Lane
Parade. ''Toys and Joys of Christmas" is t~s year's
tbenie, saluting the Marine Corps' 25th anruversary
.of Ju "Toys for Tots" program. Blll Welsh hosts on
C ... nnel II, while Hobo Kelly and Bill Burrud cov·
er the parade on Channel 13.
NBC Iii 8:00 -"West Side Story." The 1961
super g1usical returns -in its entirety -tonight.
Natalie Wood, Richard Seymer and Oscar winners
Rita Moreno and George Chakiris head the cast of
the modem day Romeo and Juliet story.
,NBC U 8:30 -"Brian's Song." One of the TV·
movie highlights of the past season, the award-
winning !rue-Ille story of football players Gale
Sayers (Billy Dee Williams) and and Brian Pic-
colo (James Caan). Also featured: Jack Warden
and Shelley Fabares.
T
, Te%an in Lag.,.•
Organ· Recital Delightful
BY TOM BARLEY .of,... °'"' ....... lletf
Lqcat lovers of organ muaic
can be excused for thinking
that Christmas came a little
early thi1 year.
We have already been regal-
ed in the opening days of this
young music season with
memorable recitals by two in-
ternationally a c c 1 a i m e d
keyboard artist!: Notre Dame
organist Pierre Cooherau from
Paris and Britain's brilliant
Gillian Weir.
Hard on their neets this pa.st
"Grit~
weekend came Joyce Jonea, a
demure South Te1:u girl who
quickly demanslrated to a.
Laguna Beach Community
Concert Association audience
just why oraan music is so
very much lo vogue these
days.
Her recitaJ Sunday af-
ternoon in the Laguna Beach .
ll)gh School audltoriom amply
demonstrated this charming
art1st'1 versatility in • wide
rsnging program that Included
works by Bach, Haydn,
Rameau, Marcel Dupre, Max
Great
Reger and Jean Langlais -
vtrsatllity conflnned by any
yardstick.
SHE ENHANCED a brilliant
performance by taking the
trouble to explain to her
capacity audience just what
the composer had in mind and
how she chose to interpret hls
work. Plus, we might add, a
Jones.tan anecdote or two
deUvered in a Texas drawl
that was an undoubted, but not
unpleasant, contrast to the
nature of the program.
Miss Jones, from t h i s
critic's seat, was at her best CBS D 9:30 -"The Gargoyles." Corne! Wild
and Jennifer Salt star as an anthropologist and his
photographer dau~hter who encounter hor~ic ";
creatures rese mblmg the gargoyles of ancient
legend. -... ....,,,.... ,, __ _ Wayne Flick Tops Ratings
in the massive Toc c ata ,
Adagio and Fugue in C by
Bach that so dominated the
first portk>n "of an immaculate
program. Her obvious affinity
for the work of the great Top Stars
Johann Sebastian was no less MIA!i11 BEACH lUPl l
• •
'
NEW YORK (AP) -"True
Grit," the John W a y n e
TV DAILY LOG western that was a hit at the
boy office, also proved a win-
ner on national televiilon, ac-
cording to Nielsen raUngs
made public Monday.
Tuesday
Evening
NOVEMBER 21
The 1969 film, broadcast by
· the ABC Television network
eight days aga, topped the list
of the 20 highesl·rated shows
doomed bfc.a use ol their ditftrent on televisian for the week en-
tthnic hackJrounds. ding Nov. 12.
fJ @(I) r@ T111'1ptrltllrt1 l is--===========;, in1 "Li&lrts, Camt11, Action" Or. Ir
Noltlld btcomu a TV star 'l'htn hi
unexptctedly apptars in 1 doai·
evident in her shimmering Singer-actress Liia Mi nnelll
CBS' "All in the Fa'mily" "Jesu, Joy or Man's Desiring" and actor Gene Hackman ha ve
and "Gunsmoke" came in tee--sensitively and tenderly ti-been voted box af£ice stars .of
and and third respectively, terpreled on her R 0 g er s the year by the National
followed by two NBC specials, American Classic organ. Association of T h e a t e r
"Snoopy at the Ice Follies" Her interpretation of the Owners.
and a half-hour cartoon about Jean Langlais works she in-Jack Mitchell, a spokesman
comedian Flip Wilsan's da ys eluded in her program was no for the association, said the
in public school. leas immaculate and that is two stars would be present at
The 15 other winners, in hardly surprising for a young the Americana Hotel tonight
order of their ranking, were : lady who has had the privilege to receive the a"•ards.
"Sanford and Son" (NBC), of sharing the keyboard of the ~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;~5j
"Bridget Loves B ~ r n i e • • bllnd, French genius. rriilAAAIA.~Q t )
(CBS). "The Fl ip Wilson LANGLAIS W 0 UL D l:~ UC) &S
Show," ''Jr onside'' and doubtless endorse this critic's 11 ~
"Adam·l2" all (NBC )• evaluation of his yowig guest; Flltl&AY' "Medical Center" (C BS ) . h d · I that s e 1sp ays an ''The F .B.I." (ABC), "11turs-astonl!hing maturity and dex-
Tutsday , Novtmbtr 21, 1q-n
NOW IND$ TUISDAY
"Nicholas and
Atexendra"
tl'GI ...
---. -...::.•:. S !AO/UM • I :.'.
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--. -..:.<•· SIAOIUM •I • .. ~:!'!I"'-...-----
D•ll V PILOT ff
NOW THRU TUESDAY
sn:tt
MCOUHN
AS ~l)ULLnT'
l•cilfiW.. 1......-1 ..... 'N• lltvnl ... Stllt • .._ ., J Academy ..... ,...
""IDOt.llt 0.. THI! 11:00""
M•rtfll••""'9M ''THI! O<)D,ATHWll" t•I • "CHATTO'I I.AND" t"GI
Ooltlit H1-"IUTTEl .. l.lll AllE ,1111"
& ''THlllE'l A 01111.
IN MY J.OUI'"
"TMIE NlW Cl!NTUltlONS" tit! w\111 ca_... C. Iott ....
"l'LAY MISTY l<Olt ME" ti t
(lltorfe• ..... _
''THE YAt..l(HI l'A .. 1.WS" jll)
.. , ... ., (ltl11• "'
''THE IOSTON ITIANGLl:I" tll
NATIONAL GENERAL
THEATRES 1:00 B 8 D Ill m al Rm mentary on hospitals.
ffi(I) 111-m ......... "'"' "'~~;;~~~~~J D ......... "Enter Muti Tw1ln" fD @ f111lly Ci1111 "Oizabeth•
day Night Movie" aod "The terity in all her keyboard work
f.1ary Tyler Moore Show" and ~w~l~th~perh~a~pe~h~e~r ~fi~nest~~bour~~s .!::==~~~~~~~I "Here's Lucy" (all CBS).1_
"Saturday.Night Movies" and E'' IT! ltt lalft III ~Ill COi Plporn ~ m-• . D WM Wiid Welt m Movie: (2111') ''SI• Queltill" I ::.:i:MC (dra) '37-Humphrey Bo11rt, An11
Qj) Clrmceltndai Slierid1n.
QJ Ml DM blllOfldl 1:3011 1]) Mntii FM-0 Tiit Vashoft
fl) 11111..,.q. lAdp F1mlly hurtes youn1 Chris Vasllon
QI Mlybeny RfD Ind l&unclles I vendtttl 1g1Jnst
G!) Dn1111 McGarrett, whom they hold rt·
lf) DfM ...... spGnSible !or the bny's de 1th In
&~(I) ........ Heron · the second p.art of 1 tri!OIJ dt•I· G 1111¥it: (C) (90) "'the" (d11) inr with 11 undeiworld dyna1ty
Omar Shlrlf, Jae• Pal111Ct, Cesare In Hawaii.
"'"''" Robort Loni•, w""' 0 TUES MOVIE OF WEEK
Strodl. Blrblr1 Luna, Lind• Minh. *"BRIAN'S SONG"
The story of thl tumultuo1.11 Clftlf Returns! James Caan
of Or. ErMsto "0!1·· Gu1rv1r1. Billy Dee Williams
()) C1S Ml'n ti alter Clonkitt 1J (])@ GJ UC Tuud17 Mtvlt= a Mn lfltflt .... (C) (90) "lrilll'• Soni" (dra) ·n
GJ Mir lriffttll -.lame:s Clan, Jack Warden, Billy CD ...... • llllN 0«'Willi1ms, Shell!'( Fabares, Judy ~Se-... Wltlllvt Ftih1n Pace, David Huddltstnn.
£) .... .,I "Planets, S" Ii) Q]) lill N.,ers' .lomal m ...._ C.n111 Show @II LI Maldlcion dt It lllfldl 9 .,_. Acm 9:00 fl) U11 Verano P1t1 Reeordar m c.11 ciutt m QIJ StM111. ttl• Una
UI Dll 42: PM m Mwie: "lolln11y Cultlr'' , EB Uttll ltlClb Q!! Tiit Vir(ini111
7:tlODCIJDl!,)N.., E!DDn•• a ..,..,., 1or ..... " !1:30
@ Trutll ., CllltMquenm IJ Watch Out fior
{j)Slftlf te AMnturt *"THE GARGOYLES"!! CJ Wbt'• My lint? I) C1J cas fUlldlJ Movie: (t)
ID I LM Lucy (90) ''C1r1'G71el" (llor) '72-Cornel IE I Drtn tf'kannil Wilde, Jennifer Salt, Grayson Han.
t1j) M1w DI f111r Clliklrtt CJOW 0 hpper hdttn SMw r~rn,;
fBLt ""'8 Sii Ptr hirtililfl!J from the ND'I. II Pini fD Die fNlldl Qltl 'flith USC. 18 [I a.. TllM C.11 dt Muitt" 0 News
ft flllrM: (C) "Wtllllll Oblllltd" m I l6¢1lL I Tiit DuM aflll I Mtl'I
Gil Mlt$I PnMntl: twi,w..I Grlffin visits .lohn Warne.
Lltllle at t IJtCaL 1 nr nanbliNI UJ s,.8' Rl<'lf Thal AlnttSl Wtsn't An 1nim1ted
78:30 "t'VE GOT A SECRET" stnry of the first Thantsa:Mna. ED !Hl l\ack ltilmal * Steve Allen, all-star 8) JtMst1 Musiul panel and celeb. guest 10:00 II Nnn
MILTON BERLE U CIJ@ ti!l M"m Wolby, M.D. II rw W 1 Stutl Kaye 81ll1rd -Witt! a Shout, Nat a Wlllmpe('
111ats. With Dr. Welby's ht!p, an 11ln1 D hkt Sllrpon famnus 5ur1enn le11ns that his
... g llM!t: (C) (Zhfl "Dtlbty All Hie is not over e...en lhnuth ht
.....,... (SCl·fl) '68-Aklra li:ubo. can no lon1er practice.
(IJ T1 T11l llMI Truth D ltfis ~rloff Presenb Tilrilltr
(I) f1Mllr Clmla ID Ntw1 O 11111111 $ Mlvte: (C) (2tlfl '1tM @Spllkln1 ffM/J
Htllflpttrs" (dra) '69 -John f.E YINnt Hort11utra
W1yn1, ll1t11Jrlne RO$$. Ill) "'1hDtlst Knr foR "Tht Ust O tw.,..._ lqU1n1 Journey'' (R) at 116<14 I Slnlt C11111 Line &I Luci• Sornbr1
,.,... "TCl)'I tnd Jon GI Chrtst. Qi) Fatkll Mnlu111
m11" ls this year's ttltmt, 1111r1. fl) lll11,.S. ol tht SH
ln1 tht Marine Corps' 25th annl· 10:30 II Tai: lad
'9tll1J of '1oys far Tnts:· Bill 0 m Mews
Wtlsll llosts. Grand 'M1rsh1I Gtneral CD Slf1ri to Ad\ltll1ufl
Robert l CU.sllman, Comm1ndtnt OJ Mwit: "TM Klriltr Tilty Fall"
Df !ht Unlttcl States Marlrte Corps &J 0-W.. Sportsman wm "" hot! to HGnGl'llJ Grand 11:00 II (I) 0 ... ea m ...
Narlklls, tht Supremes. 8 0. '"' llPIM aJ ! IHCIAC I S.lt C.us l.111 (j) llWsbtl Dil..,_
..... Hollo Kelly and Bill Bumid CJ ...,..: "\.ti NiMralltn" (dta)
wilt host this eover111 ol HI• '52-Robert r:ewton. O.br1 P•rrt.
pertcle, wWch wH1 lnducle downs. (II""' •
lloats, m1rthin1 bandt, equts· m ~ Ctlltt ,......
tri1111 Incl celdlrttl1s from thl Ill· Q1J h1 Sllltf Hwa (R)
t11t11tvMnt worlll. fE ltrMf l8' ArwtrMc aJ .._.... 11:1511) a. .. M
flj to -DdM ll:IO II (I) CIS "" -: !Cl ID Cllfw1ktM1 "Mulltlr'1 An 1tt llllln(' (dra) 70 ID OmMtll R -Burt ftey110lcls, Su11nnt Pltshtttt.
e;i -.... a l!!!I m 1o11,,,, c. ... -• ID tt 11 Wlitlt• D (}) CiJ GD Let's c:.1t11t1tt
ti) ....... flllUJ GI Truth tt Conttquenm
1:00. (J) ..... M111da'1 UftUlllCllcl fl)"' Ch!Kk Jtlllltitn Sllft
Pl'INllCJ Wrtlkl· lll'l'OC In lhl fii) ftNtl
!Im ol' Ml\161 111d W11ter whl1• U:OO D Mttk: *Mlll*I Dtlllf Lap"
lhtr try lo 11telcl1 1111htl to do (CM) '32-W.C, Fillcl\, ).ck tilkie.
11tout It, In !ht conclusion ol a m l1 Ttll the T'rvtll
two~,.n 1pbocle. CD tt•11try ll'* a 111 m-• _, tci P•~ '"" m""" -""'"" .....,. sw. ....,.. I'"' 'll -l:tJO (J)GO (l)-
"'1111t Wood Rlclltrd Btrmtr. II.._.: "lltlar Fa tt u ..
Russ Ttiftltly~ Gt0r.. Ctltklrls. ._. ........ 14'1) '4& -,io.11
Rit1 MortllO. TM rnllltlei&e ktcitl!lf follltiM.
Alnnl·•tftllh~ xrttft dank tree• l!ll 8 .._..: .,...,.. tf &di" (Ms)
lq "" "'"" ol' ""° IOVM, '51--lid!a,. lutfltl1.
I 1
"SEADREAMS"
THI MOST ORIGINAL &
IMITATID SUlflN• FILM PlODUCID
rerlomtMICH
7:30 & 9:15 loc• lw•I ..
All Seats S2.ll '
INDS TONIGHT
"DI RT GANG"
off (l)
"UNHOLY ROL_LERS"
STARTS WIDNUDAT
I : I
JfM:.f.~
~ .. ;::;:::.::.-~
_..,_.m•1llllltUllOlllC9.lllt r.Mft\ Olt1f lftll .._ """"'""' ~
l1tE llUlll'fLlltE IUQDll mamn IV,... --tQJQ ~
TUM:1•· !al•
"Search" (both NBC). "NFL ... ''IEOU -..... -"
Football" (ABC). "The Clrol
Burnett Show" (CBS) and
"The Partridge F a m i I y ' '
(ABC).
FIRST RUN
"Joh11 H111ton'1 mo1f powerful
pictur• in y•trt! Tht 111rpritt hit
f thit yttr'1 Ctrints f ilm ftdi-
1" •• -L.A.
... Ill .,....,.,., .. ,
"X,. Y and Z"
"COMES ON LIKE A
FIRE ENGINE ! I SHOOK
WITH SHOCK AND
LAUGHTER!"
-NEW YORK TIMES
T...,..,._ W
1""'911 G"'J~t "UNHOLT aOLLl!•I"'
""" "OlllT GANO~ a.ti! 111 Ctllirl IWJ
"SONG 0" NOWwAF' ,., J"''''.......,..... lltdl ".,..... "OAllLINO I.II.I" (0)
laugh till you
C@(lbm?
S1111i11 AUii URfllll l1lll1i11 l1 Riu Un i1 G1lh1l111 PT1j11d 11 011 ij J1101s ici
A9ULJS OllY (X) Ui11mU1JUHI GAVllOSll A CAll!ISI fllll in COLOR
·--
Plus• LOVE STORY FROM DENMARK!
'.'ltElATIONS" (R)
-••c._,
lmftDICW I ~-~--••
IO'ftllnlBI
I
AJUI i-1 nu
BURT
LANCASTER
STARTS
WEDNESDAY • NOVEMBER 22
OMLI WAU-IM :::,••n
ULZANA'S RAID
STAITS WID•ISDAY •OY. 22 AT IOTlllllUnD
•
-.
'
....
(
~-·
,, •
,
Higl1 Com1 Ni xes
Progi~am Patcr1ts
WASHINGTON (AP) -'111e ,,--------
Suprtme Court bas rultd out
patents for programming
digital computus.
"If the5e programs are to be
patenlable, considerable pro-
blems are raised which only
commilltts of Congress can
manage." Justice Wllllam O.
Douglas said ln the &-0
decision .
The ruling, which will havt
a broad impact on the still·
d eve loping computer
"soft"·are" field , supports the
governmf'nl and rejects the
claims of t"·o Bell Telephone
Laboratories' employes who
wanted a pa.tent ror pro-
programming a g e n e r a I·
purpose digital computer.
The patent seekers, Gary H.
Benson and-Arthur C. Tabbott,
have developed a method of
programming a· general -
purpose digital computer to
convert signals from binary
coded decimal forms into
pure-binary form. The U.S.
Patent Office said this was not
more than a set of mental
steps ror carrying o u t
mathematical procedures.
Wome1iHear
Director
At Meeting
The Nationa l Association of
\Vomen I n Construction,
Orange County Chapter, will
hear an address by Director
Betty Genung next Tuesday
at the Hyalt House in Ana-
heim
Mrs. Genung is a charter
member of the Pomona Valley
group and a past-president of
that chapter.
The mee:1ng is open lo all
women employed as office
workers in the construclion in-
dustry and will be an excellent
opportunity for those in-
terested to ob~alr a "cap!ule
view" of the activities and
civic projects of the associa·
tion .
For reserv.ations call Mar·
jorie Weil : 827·9S75 or Pat
Rich 540-8833.
PERSONAL
RADIO PAGER
TON! or VOICE
.... (.,.,... ...attt \11111
LOW COST
MONTH te MONTH
IEN'(AL IASIS
.,
Ol!ANGf tUUN Tl
IMDIOl!llPHUNf
Sl UVIC[ I .. (
F'c1tture1
printed rcadoull
for calculation and
resu lt.a. Add1, subtracl&.,
muh irlif'• and di•ide1.
Automatic cont11an1 key.
Operalt.!> on hou!IC.hold
current or rrchargeabJe
batteritt. l .n lh!!.
A compucl R"'x4"'x2".
1 Year Part~ itnt1
IA.bor Gunrnntee
FINANCE
Reg. 8300.00
SALE
817949
•
,
OVER THE COUNTER COMPLETE NEW' YORK STOCK LIST
NASD Ll1tlnp for Mondoy, Nowmbor 20, 19n
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. . . •~•••.,,,I••~ 1 • • r •I •<'> . . .
.H-. ,1972 DAILY PILOT Jl
,, , ,
\
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-' . JI OAIL V PILOT TutsdlJ. NMmbet' 21, 1972 •
. •
QUEEN I~ lly Phil lnterlandi 'Rolling
Stone'
Bullish
Chili Good Bui . . • • •
Colorado_ Farmer Wins, ls Ovenhadowed
TERLINGUA, T•x. (UPI) -
A .,.. wllo irows cantaloupe
In CokJrado f'1t • llvlnl and
brews cblli al a hobby baa
won the world's chili cookoff,
but -as always -It waa the
sideshow 1booplil of hostesses
. . in hol pants and a former
1
Revenues of $4 .5 million are _ stripper who stole Ui show.
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
The Rolling Stone begins
celebrating its fifth birthday
today, and the publishers say
it 's really rolling.
~pected this. year by the Asked who the winner was,
biweekly tabloid. Ray Potts, manager of the
OVtt, every_l>ody blew outta
town!'
Tbe winner .... Howard
Winsor of Roclcy Ford, Colo ..
but that WU not tbe point of
tbe sixth Mnual ltitemattonal
Chill Appreclatfoo S o c I e I y
Cookoff. Tbe event 1t · the
thing, not the winner.
~' former Pteeldett Lyn-
don B. Jolmoon. Jolllllon had
)ft.lied Wtlgbt'a chill u even
better than bis Pedernales
Rlv.r clt1JI. and tbus WU
automaUcally •disqualified by
otber competitors for hlJ "poor taste ...
...,.., t •
""'"" I c~·'"::.,'::;,'o.IM Founded by Jann ·~enner Study Butte LQdge a n d
with~ borrowed $1,500 111 1967, orgahlzer of the cookoff,
the paper bas a circulatkln of couldn't tell the rattlesnake
250,000, a staff of 76 full·tlme • chili from the Tennessee rac-
employes, a book·publishing coon chili.
An estimated 4,500 cooks
participated this year, and
most arrived in the ~
ghost town in the low moun-
tains of 90Uthwest r-e~ by
private· plane, and left as
quickly as they cotiJd when a
winter stonn blew In SUnday,
New Name
ForB~u IOlllAppi.V.iteyTU.UV ClbtolC:..,i ...... °""""' .,,.,.. •. 91
adjunct, and 30 pages of
advertising per issue.
THE ROLLING Stone's
fonnat is a newsprint tabloid
"I THINK HE was some
dude from Colorado," Potts
said. "But right after it was
. ' .-...~.._ s..0•1lrf . .i,.4.75
...._locly,.._ttaMTW l••tip•n• 1 4'.75
lwt PthN a. of lcef ,.,. Jw 6.50
llOllN-YlllcSI'* IAllll1D'llo4tl 6.95 ---"°"' """"'
....... _ ......,._
"foldover" of 80 pages. Its ~---------.
stable of writers consisb of
skilled craftsmen. mostly with
successful records elsewhere
before roming to the paper.
Illustrations are m o s t I y
"funky" photographs an d
drawings. · ·
Copllol N.,.. Servl<e
SACRAMENTO -Tb e •
California : Deparbnent o f
ctm: HOSTESSES tiptoed AgrlCulture's 78 • ,year -old
through !be cactuses Jn the Bur<au of Dairy Service will
briefest of hot panU. ha~ a new name after Jan. 1. It will tben be cslled tbe cand y Barr, who wore only 0 Bureau of Milk and Dairy two slx guns and a cowboy bat Foods Control."
-.. Hot_,,.___ ..........
"Are you trying to tell me you're overworked?"
L. M. Boyd
Turkeys Meant
To Be Peacocks
Each issue contains only a
few , long articles written with
detail and word precision.
Subject matter, in addition
to anything connected with
rock music and rock music
groups, has included such
topics as McGovern politics,
the "Hippie Mafi8." homosex-
uality and Hollywood brawls.
"Five years and who would
have believed it," says Alan
Rinzler, vice president of the
business. "We're feeling quite
stable at last, and bullish
about the future ."
6 Priests
Resign
TOULOUSE, F r a n c e
{UPI} -Six,priests have
resigned ftom t h e i r
churches because their
archbishop fi red another
priest for living wi th a
gti:l, c~urcb oUicials said}
· Archbisliop, Monsignor
Guyot retired r a t h e r
Bernard Forestier because
"he is living in free union"
with a your.;; girl.
"In our eyes, the situa-
tion ... is symptomatic of
the persons who currently
reign in the church," the
six who resigned said.
when she walked the runways 'lbe name change-was made
in the 1~. was there, ped-because it better describes the
d.llng copies ol11 her boot. of bureau's fun c tion of
poetry called Gentle Mind guaranteeing and enforcing
Confusod." written when serv-• state, standardJ of 'l'ilk and
Ing a prlson term for · marl· milk product quality and saf~
Juana possession. ty tor the consumer, officials
Only one cite! identified tbe -said,
meat portion of his chlll, and·=========-1
he identified it as coon from
the hills or ~: No one
else woul6 say ' what they
cooked with , ·\Ill! one penon'
said he saw t!)e rattles of a
rattlesnake floating in a pot.
DUB RHODES of Clevelru>d. Ohio, placed second. Dielt
Solocumb of Glanea Park,
Tex., was third and George
WriJZht of New York was
I ANTHONY SCHOOLS
HAllOI CIHTll """•""°' c ....... C..11 Mn.I, C•Ufwll'-
... 1714) t7t·2JSJ
fourth. 1nr s .• ,......,. st.
........ ""(.II. nlM
............ , ....
Nearly Everyone
Listens to Lmders That single girl who pos.sesses a cigarette lighter which
she always keeps in perfect working order can be expected
to make an exceJlent wife. So advises a student of feminine
character. No argument. Still, our Love and War man
would like to point out that a girl who possesses a cigarette
lighter that never worts is apt to marry at an earlier age.
Wright's entry eliminated , ft. 1114J 776-1111
ROWNG S T O N E was the possibility of a well-known 1 never an "underground"i'==========--=::....o::=::.::::...::.;:.=:..=:==
Not much else, says he, so swiftly
attracts to a )'Ollllg lady the belpful
attention of eager genUemen.
JN HEBREW. the term "tukki"
meant 0 peacock." Christopher Colum-
bus, that decisive fellow, tl\Qught t~e
turkeys he picked up in Ameri ca were
peacocks. Jewish merchants in Spai n,
• _ swift with their own lingo, therefore
"" identified the bird as the tukki, and
translators eventually corrupted it into turkey. Had ab-
solutely nothing whatsoever to do with the nation of the
same name, please note.
HOW MANY? -Q. "How many higb school football
players hurt their knees c.' ankles every year?"
A. About 140,000.
Q. "BOW many recessions since World War Il?" '
A. Foor. In 1953-M, 1957-58, ~I and 11169-70.
Q. "HOW many Amerlcan3 will kill tbemselves today?
J mean on purpose?••
A. Flgun 50.
MARIJUANA -Our Chief Prognosticator sayS he has
reason to believe marijuana may soon be bought legally
by prescription to treat migraine headac~s, high blood
pressure and even epilepsy.
DON'T KNOW HOW the medical £ellows found this out,
but they te ll us now the average man's skull can be de-
pressed about 10 percent in width before it cracks.
ELECTRONIC TESTS prove even the best of the pr1>-
fessional singers rarely can hold a note On exact pitch
longer than a tenth or a second.
Addres1 mail to L . 31. Boyd, P. 0. Ben 1875, New-
port Beach, Calif. 92660. ·
Health Unii
Writing Law
'Jn Corpses
paper, starting out just above
the surface.
"Rock and roll was the main
focus of the paper's early
years," says Rinzler, "but our
editorial spectrum constantly
·expanded."
Rolling Stone gave politics
extended coverage this past
election se8son.
The lead article in the an-
niversary issue is a lengthy
report on a San Francisco
grand jury investigation of the
Weatherman.
RJ NZLER, SOMEWHAT
defensive about the
magazine's dependence on
companies which make money
out of the youth mu.sic fads,
emphasizes that onJy 54 ~·
cent of Rolling Stone ad·
vertislng -now comes from
reco rd companies. ~
1 Rolling Stone and its book
subsidiary, Straight Arrow
Books, are part of Straight Ar·
row Publishers, Inc., a
privately-owned company with
about 50 stock holders.
Wenner, 27, is president of
the enterprise.
In an interview three years
ago, Wenne r said he con-
sidered hi~lr "basically a
writer, not a busiIJessman."
But as a businessman, Wenner
bas done pretty well.
All YOU
CAN EAT
DES MOINES, Iowa (UPI I
-The state Board of Health
is v.'Ol'king on a "mausoleum
law" which may Include
regulations for freezing human
bodies.
THANKS.IYING
·auFFIT
State health ofncials sakl
the board decided to push for
statu t es governing
mausoleums be c a u s e con·
structlon and maintenance
standards are "sorely lack·
Ing" for the above-ground
burial buildings.
In oddlllon, they said that
since Cryorilc tn,.nnent -
freetlng bodiet In hopes that
they may be brought back to
life by future medical deve lop-
ments -ls becoming popular,
they may 1lso seek laws
regulating cold s t o r a g e
laciUtles for human bodies.
Authorltle! said there are no
such facilities in I o w a .
11though they said several
J~ans · have made Inquiries
about the detp freeze proceq
deslped to preserve the orpns of tbe body through
cltemlcal Injections and
vacuwn l&orlge after death.
•
•
SeRVED FROM 12 NOON TO 8 PM
Cholc. of or combination of 1ovp or 1olad
ROAST TURKEY with DRESSING
ROAST PRIME RIBS
BAKED VIRGINIA HIU\
INQUDINQ.1 •
VEGETABLE POTATOES
RELISHES ROLLS
APPLE CIDER
A11orlff frvlt & Ctt.... Platter
Holhloy Nvt1 -.... •47s CHILDllEN UNOElt 17
$2.75
OUR REGUV.11 MENU1S ALSO AVAILAfll £
AMPLE PARKING
. HGOHMM'S .delicate sse n ft res taurant
BAKCAY. C• f(R!NO
645-8900
HAt1G
" ... s. ...... _.._., .. .,.. .... -."
ORDER NOW
FOR THANKSGIVING
,
e ._,, to S...o wlllt _., .. Spice -
........ For -1., No,,.,.. ..... ... . ""-'"" c---• D......._w"'S•,.....T•Go
JJMLC...H.....,,C....tlmfM•-611.fMI , ........... c.... .............
1Wl.•a:Wa:ll,' rttl• 611-WI
' ... '\
WE COADiAu.v INVITE 'tOUTOntE
..
Now there's a Keystone Savings end Loan
ready to serve a whole ·new area -the
Airport. Center.
This is our oHlclal Grand -Opening time-
now right throu gh pn November 24th. So .
be sure to come by end join us !or the
celebration.
Free gilts for Mother Nature.
Keystone has a deep Interest In ecology.
n at's ~hv everyone who comes by our
new branch at Airport Center can take
home a unique free gilt. A young seedling
tree ready for planting wherever you
choose .•• plus a !ree booklet with com-
plete planting Instructions. Please palf
us a viSlt. We have enough t'?ees for
everybody (Including a supply at our
Westminster and Anaheim oWces). . '
At the same time wen be continuing <Jtl?
tree planting ~rogram In Orange County.
When vo.u come in we11 arrange to 'have
a 2-year-O!d tree plantild in your name, at
Olll expense, by the Division o! Forestry.
Every single tree helps Orange County.
We11 give you a map showing where your
tree Is being pla nted plus our special
certl!icate al thanks •.
'
ort
Something for the
whole family.
Keystone has planned a big housewann-
lng. We 've put toge ther a number "of
surprises for you. There 'll he displays,
llterature end items to make the time you
spelld at Keystone really worthwhlle.
A few words to savers.
Keystone gives you the highest Interest
possible on every dollar you deposit at
Airport Center. The only quesilon II ·
how much Interest do you want end !or
how long.
Open a regular passbook a<;count end get
5% compounded dally !rom the day your
!unds are deposited to the date withdrawn.
' Deposit $1000 or more at Keystone and
· recelve'5•/,%;0ri ,.i yea~ deposits~ Pµt .lit
at least $5000 •!or :2 years, .or more and
your ylekl is 6'1i c;ompi>l!llded dally. All
lUnds Insured. 1'o S2Q,000.
• Casa Keystone~
If you lll:e aulltentJC Spanlsll decor:yol1·11
lll:e the way·Ollr lnterlilr decorator hal
hanill8tl"our n"" Airport Center branch.
l~s an attlftlc ,delight. Most items "°"
care!ully &elected in Mexico and cocml1-·
nated !or voiir 'pl88sure and com!olt.-
., '. ...
New c;_onventence
at the· airport.
' " -
! • ' • Drive rlgltt in ofl MaCArthur Boulevard.
We're between Gampus end Jamboree On
the north slde.1:1tere's plenty o! palllJJg
end en easy drlv .. ln !aCWty.
Of course you CllJ!.deposit orwlfli!lrawllf
mall end :we pay the postage. w~ of!llr
many tree ~ceo yoti11 llbl: la!e de-
posit boxes, nQlary s~rvlce, travele~a
checks, use of our' spacious commUDitf
room. And many other serilcea ax.cltt·
slvely !or you. ·
We're open· for business now •
See us Monday through ThUl'!day .lrolll
9:00 a.m. to. 4,00 p.m •. and Frld•YI 10,qo
a.m. to s,oo p.m. Manager Jim Clark and
Ids stall ~ be waiting to show vo•
~ti. Come and get your frea l1'8tl.
KEYSTONE SAVINGS
U'D UWI lllOCl&nO•
lonald W, Clspen, Q\alrman of tile ~ -dN ~ WIS' I I 4 14011 --.. next to ffl.,.,,,, btL -llNtlt. ...... om. 4$5 .N. Eltl:lld. C!JlllOl(ll ~-· .. lltiO.tll 77>7 ... ,&kJld C I t '301 'lflelr!l!gr .... fttml ... •
I • -'
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•' -IQ-AHIJlll"""' ldltw "--~.., 1 ·~ _...,, ....,., ' ~ -
i. HQ.me Is
-~·~Where ' ....
~ ·Heart Is
·' .
_1>EAR ANN LANDERS: Tho Spotane
·Spotesman prtnt..i • letter in lbelr ~
Uon Comer that puts Wom<11's Lib in the
·-pmpect!Vi. -jitlnt it. This ·pl -8 for me and mmm, more rn
"liel
~· '·~ReUo;. World. 'Scime women want
.,_!l'.qual ~ts· bUt ciount me out. U you
.. Womep'1 Llbberw inust Uberate us, please :.,., me 111 riYiiie.
-::~:..~11Ubente me f(Om aching feet, cranky
-. ---· lmd-to-llnd baby-titten, • unba(ipy cblldren .,..... bate comlnc home
.to. an empty bouse._Put 'me baci in.my
own kitchen. Give me an air-conditioned
1hame, aboppi:lc sprees, noisy kids, a hm-
-·to nm my r.et at nll!ht ·--
"Gift me bact 1be time I bad to cope
----wttb cbDdbood dileue1, friendly, well-
:.:_.., nelcbbon. a~~ Ume
to catch up cm the irClllDg IDll mending,
reading IDll vllltlng.
· "Let me smell fresh bread from my
·OWD ...,,, cul ..,... in my yanf. wet
·puts, dirty kldJ llld frelbJy · washed
• Clolbes. Give me back the Ume to say 'I
loYe )'OU' to my family. What ..Wd. be ·more important than that~" -~v:F .•
;RITZVILLE, WASH.-
DEAR FJliEND8 IN Sl'OltANE:
Nt6iq'. A•111111ely ~ 1'Ullb for
-~ ..........
DEAR ANN LA$DERS: My. g!rllriend,
aie 25, wants I IW1tan all year round.
from May tbrougli ·September she bakes
--.,,
~ . t~ .. ..
' ' _,.
berself outdoon. When there-is · DO
1vallab1e aun she baub out the.am lamp.
This Im been.going on for at I.,..i ,. ....
)'08ls.
.Lui JIBle Ille noticed ..... red .,
paicbes on ber lace and """t to a doctol".
He told w lbe bad akin canc:er l!om too .
much aun. He said It was not -and
111mp1e . ..,....,. -~ cal9.al' ii. 'He
told lier to Illy out of ihe-SUD or risk
mare lktn cancer.
Now my friend is V"J' depmoecl .
became she bates the way lbe loob · ·
wlthool a IRDllan. Yesterday Ille was
boil< -the IUll lamp, IDll .. ,. the
lamp la not as bad • lbe sun. ts Ille
right! -EVERY DAY IS SUNDAY IN
'l1t\ VERSE· CIY
DEAR EV: i!lle -.d 1111< her-·
Be wUI tell lier -•Ida ...... ,.._
~ NOi' Rlljeel lllemse1-to ...
lllC;elill'J ~ ...,. -aatllre't or -"""' .. -MWIJ perlecW -.......... "'" ... __ .,.
.... wHIMilit die d:bp ,..,.. G•
~ I ftM II ? .. 6em.
' .
., ..
-·-
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~-. .
Weinbe'rg's route to daytime
dressing for spring, 1973 is ' e
tettersall cerdigan coat . .
over ·a 'shirt-vest-skirt
combination I abOve I. At
· right, he offers· •a crepe
·_dinner .suit. with •a wrap-on
jacket and side·wrep skirt.
AM Waller shows tM details
of a gown made by her
hu.Nnd. The wlvat and
"satin rob." ·it a fa•orit•.
•
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Simple Clothes tJnclutter Life
' '
Wome·n Li ·er.ate .....
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By lllARIAN CHRISTY
NEW YORK -Deolgoer Chester WeinberJ.
a revoluntionary at heart, was sitting in bil
&howroom and ftunlOg a little.
"Ob," he said, "bo'w I hate the word ~
wear. It's okf..fashJooed. It's as tacky as call·
ing a pants&lit slacks." Explosive We.lnberg, a
highly creative fasbJon ploneer, made a lew
other obseravtions on fashiQO 's llmiting pbru&-
ology llld too-set lileas bul lbey're unquotable.
Weinberg, through hls spring, tm, collee-
tioo, hopes to start-the wheels ol change
churning:
•"EmbUsy balls and black-tie evenings are
almost nonexistent .'' he says. "I'm not making
fUS.!y gowru: anymore."
•"People are entertaining at home more
and more -it has to do with the deteriorat·
ing state of cities. The cocktail dress ls mat.
ing a comeback. But the term cocktail dres.s
is woefully obsolete."
SPRING IS MOOD
'"Spring isn't a season. Spring ls a mood
ot dressing that can span many moolhs into
the dead of winter. And spring certainly lsn1
synonymous with an Easter Sunday outfit."
Weinberg believes no elegante wants to be
Joaded with a complicated, extenatve wa~
that adds chaos to her already complicated
life. He has created a collection of unlined
and unconstructed clothes that free the fema'e
silhouette and psyche.
''The name ol lhe game is total liberation,"
be says.
Weinberg even uses nonseuon colors llte
\\'beat and grey so that the ck'Khel promile
to go on and on without the "spring" label.
Typical look Is the cr.pe mul·ieslgth lkirl
that comes with a shirt that wrapc on ..,Jtb a
crisscroM waist. Weinberg, who -brlglll.-
ened pastels for' this look, lnalsts bis models
go -"Clothes ahoWd just <Ovolop the bare body effortlessly."
LIKE JACKETS
The saine look Is translated In a oen,. of
pastel wool jersey tinlined sweaten that wrap
and· tie like jackets. They come with claaalc
A-line plaid skirts and coordinated lhtrta.
tr there's a chill in the air, Weinberg n-
pects-lhere-will-be no stallc about the11ccom-
panylng knit vest that makes the outfit •
four-piece layered costume. Does thls Impugn
the concept of simplified dressing'?
Weinberg thinks not.
Weinberg, innately adventuresome, thlnks
women shouldn't be frightened oil by a mis·
lure ol patterns dalhod tog<lber in one out!it.
His Idea ol a standoul spring pantsuit is the
tattersall llannel shirt jacket and pants that Is
puoc:tuated with a striped shirt llld pottemed
vest.
SUMMER, WINl'EI\
• Weinberg ,... women ,...ring bis -
In the atarlt lil!hl ol the mldswnmer -.. ...u .. -pole fun tor winter. He -expoda that elegantes will have _.p
imaginalioo to inv09I In his white cubtnm!
WfllJ>-00 sweater jacket ao that lbe same dma
can be worn as a cool-weather costume in
spring or r.JI.
"There iJ a 1felinlte mystique to clothet,'' he
says. "Women want comfort but they allo
want the excitement without the worry,"
Fashion designers aren't suggesting a spe-
cific length. Tbe "nonn'' is IOl1ltWhere around
the knee. Weinberg's is at midknee. "Women
must adipt for themselves what's righl In
terms of how they look. No designer can pro.
ject niles. Only sugg""1ons can be made."
Weinberg's suggestklna, bowt'ver, come on strong,
Mesan Oh , Sew Smart
II)' JO OlM>N .... _..,,...,...,
One day about 12 yean qo, Jack
Waller got ltred ol seeing bis wile'• sew·
in& machine sitting out with unflnisbed
c:lothea clulterini the table around it.
He lold her he .... sotDI to llnlab the
..-alllbeclidn't.
Sbe aaid be couldn'I do tt .
lie aald be eoulcl •
·He did it 111c1 pro11ed to experi that he
Im ...,. made quite a few ol bis wile'a
-· atlrts llld -· Sewing la jllat -ol lbe c.ota 11 .... •• l1lll1I' ~-"I ltke to
erea1e," be aptalned. "ll'• ae11 ... u ..
l)q... He boilcls lumiUn, painlt, dab-
bleo itl ~. ii lbe bo:u • ild
~and~ the .... nmlD&. W.U., m electrical neer., -... met bec:et•
alitlo ...S--. -be Is adept II ..aw. ....,.. o( -toptber with
-tlcal --· Tbe .-cWllcillt 1arments for him ... -. Waller ao lu 1111 ..,.. !or his wile bul
not la' ~II. "II'• men elllllarattng
to malle ~for -elat," be oalcl.
Hilcolarcholc:elare-bec••ht
..... lllal ba -not baYe I lllod .,.
1or .... Ht --ba tlllob wUI
........... Iii """· Tbe -...... ..,_ ... ,.JC ..... w '1:9 r1iC .... .
• -.... --..ietitll • -... " .... "1 ltlro lo". all al
-.· ....
3 fd _ .. , .... __ .....
~--·--..,.... ..., I 111 lllhM," lie 9114. --·---·---........... •ol-.. 11-! a-. ls:; 11'1• 1o 111m t.W 1111 .v. ba _._... .... .., .......... . ,.,,, ................. _
11111 ·--... __ ..
Ao .. '., .. -• ltlo almpla
-·· ·~Alm ..... ii..,.. .prh. ...... I ,.,_ ·----* ... ....., . ·attn-..,., .•
.. •
•
Jock Waller started 1ewi119
on e dire from hiJ wife -
and got hi.mJ11f a
permanent job melcing
her clothe•,
.,,
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J4 DAIL V PILOT 1 TutSday, Nowmbtr 21, 1972
.---wise Gift ,Buys
J
Pretty as a Christmas card i.s .this scene of
the Three Wise Men , one of the manr items
created for Newport Harbor Tuesday Club's
annual holiday boutique. The even~. planned
to raise funds for the Corona del Mar Youth
Center and for art scholarships, will be pre·
sented at 11 a.m. Tuesday, Nov . 28, in the
Newportcr lnn.
.)
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
Capricorn: Caution Stress~d
WEDNESDAY
NOVEMBER 22
By SYDNEY OMARR
Bright unique glfls will
please Leo. Natives of thls
sign appreciate wrappJnga,
packaging, the manner of
presentation almost as much
as lhe girt• thenudv ... Shop.
ping for Leo means theater
tickets, subscrlptlollS for
magazines dealing w i t h
drama, books conlalning In-
formation about outstanding
people. In buying (iftl for tbis
natlve, you will have a learn-
ing experience. Unusual wear-
ing apparel, toilet articles also
will fill lhe bill if the
trademark spells quality.
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
Accent 19 on responsibility.
property values, security ln
Silence Heavenly
connecllon wilh hojne. Uilllze
pas! exptrience. 0..1 wllh
older ptl'llOllS. Tako Ume to he
thorough. Get money'• worth.
Don't cJ.ve up aomethln1 for
nothing.
TAURVS (April Ill-May 20):
Chect spendlq I C b e d u I fl •
Fund5 should lie ICCOWlted for
-you bave ril)lt to gtl more
foe YDlll' 1llOlley. Protect ldw.
RelaUve1, neigbbon moy he
well mwllDJ but you require
expert advice. Act ac-
cordingly.
GEMINI (Ml,y II.June ZOl:
New •pproacb could result bi'
profit. -SU... oeiglnallty, In-
dependence. You pay IDCI col-
lect. You put Into effect
lessons learned ln put. You
deal wilh Loo, and you !mow
where you stand with member
of oPPoSlte ....
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
Lunar cycle b such Jhat you
can trust huncll and Judament.
Accept challense,
ttsponslblllly. You can ad-
vance if you press. EntUte
IOClll'lty. Gel aomelhlng of
value ror efforts, services,
product.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You
could gain through social lunc-
tlon promoted by club, special
ll'<>UP. organlzaUoo. C<>operate
ln. project aimed at 'raising
lubcb for charity. Display
humor, versalU!ty. Give fUll
play to Intellectual curiosity.
VlllCO (Aug. ~pt. 22):
Accoot m desires, ambitlonl.
Oole attention to details can
bring goa!J closer to reality.
Key ·ls to he practical, yet
flexible. Friend can provide
needed information. Be recep.
Uve. Analyze wbat Is received.
LIBRA (Sept. zs.oct. 22):
Obialn hint frOm V I r g b
mesaqe. Be ~iv~ to
Jdeas. One you IMPo<t Is •
keen obaerver. Be ready for
change, posslb!Uty of . travel.
Gemlll lndlv1¥•1 could, play
key role. Bt'llew bllic am·
bltloruo. I
SCORJ'fO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Good lunar upect oolncldes
now wilh trave~ 1peclal ltudy,
comapooclence, loni-dlslance
calla. tomlly member bu re-
queat which lhould be heeded.
Domestic harmony is essential
for ultimate progress.
SAGJTTARWS (Nov. 22-
Dec. 11): You ore lntdgued
now wilh mystery, lhe occult.
Key Js to dig deep for
answers . Reject the
superficial. Quenton could
arise cooceming f u n. d 11
associated wllh mate, partner.
Be conctmed wilh facu, not
rumors.
No Harps for Angels
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan.
19): Mainlaln low profile. Lei
olher1 show their handl. You
gain now through careful
observation. Be awa?'f" of
public n1ctlon11. s n ,. 1 , I
agreement Is on agend· •1y
By ERMA DOMBECK and 18 boala. Six horse1 and .
I know what you're going to their riders from nearby Soo-
say. You're going to say I am of-a-gun Ranch. Th Ir t y
emotional and upset, but J campers in a caravan from
mean it. If there a re Hawaii.
motorbikes and stereos in Despite the crowd and the
heaven, I don't want to go. fact that there were only two
I have had it with noise restrooms, things were not too
pollution. I roll out of bed to hairy until over the hill came
be assaulted by amplified a character I caned BroDICID.
guitars and drums. He rwmed his motor .00.
When 1 turn on the motor of ing horses and children
my car, the radio volume screaming in all direc:Uoni.
makes my eyeballs swell. All Then he came to a grinding
day long the mo~blkes halt within inches of my
"vroom" up and cJoWn Jhe polato salad .. Alter looking
street until afternoon when around, assessing the crowd,
their sound is diminished by " he began to unpack the bag on
the roar of the To(J 20. the .rear of bis cycle.
Last weekend l told my bus-First, he hung . a large
band "If I don't get out of this speaker from the hm~ of a • . tree. He walked off a distance funny noise factory•,, I am and hung the other speaker to
golng to lose my hai~ · . the side of the shelter house.
"I know a beautiful ~tile Satilfied wllh his work, he
quiet spot north of here, he then turned on his stereo full
promised, "that no one has blast and spread his body
dl5covered yet."
AT
WIT'S
END
between the two speakm.
It wu like .an earthquake.
Numbly, I acooped up lhe
food, tlnw It in the turnk of
the car and went over to
Bronson. where I knelt at his
side for just a second.
"What did you say to him?"
asked my husband.
"I told him l hoped a bee
got trapped in his ear and
hummed Lawrence Welle for
five days."
"What did he say?"
fiile print; read betwee •es.
AQUARllJS (Jan. ~Feb.
11): One who perfonnJ unique
service could•malte special re-
quest. Accent ls on health,
work, JX'•cUcal iuuf:s. You
lin!Jh project and could feel
slightly let -.. Key i. pac.
Ing. Don't foree or push.
Pl8CES (Fe b. !!I-March :JO):
Creative abillties are ac--
cented. You are able to ex·
prea yourae1f in anlque man-
ner. lmprlnl pononallty. Ex·
ude confidence. Young penon
could fl g u re promlnenlly.
Strive for the new. Discard the
outmoded.
"He took the cotton out ot,r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;-.
his ears and asked me to
repeat it." SEIKO
The only peraonJ who bad
not yetOiscovered his quiet
little spot north of town were a
visiting Russian dance group
who were confined to a New.
York hotel by security guards.
Clubs Spice Agendas
Everyone else found their
way."Three chartered buses of
kids from Wayward High
School. A group of_Qlb ScoulS .
from Pack 118 who were lost.
Twelve beginning s cu b a
divers .
The Women of the Moose
who were staging their annual
picnic. The Fahrentrap reun-
ion (who ootproduced the King
Family by 85), 16 water skiers
With Varied Program~ .
'(' -
lain Va!ley will travel to South
Gate Wedneoday, Nov. 1,t;-·to
attend the lA5 'Cerritos
Auxiliary
Mrs. Charles Hostler and
Mrs. Roland L. Perron, both
of Newport Beach, have been
appointed vice president and
p a r 1 i a mentarian of the
Women's Auxiliary of the
Orange C.ounty B r a n c h ,
Arthritis Foundation.
District £_0Dferince. • . ' ' DAR
Thanksgiving i. lhe Iheme
aelected for lhe next meeting
Newport Zontians Honor Coeds
Concert
South Coast Jwtiora of Foon-
Steak Still
Buffaloed
of lhe Col. William Cabell .J./i Chapter, Da ughters of lhe I
American Revolutlon. Mra. Ollda
MUI M. Sampson will host lhe JEWELERS
12:30 p.m. event 1n her S••o11'1 •IHI v~1 Co11t•r
Newport Beach home on H1111tlrttto11 hoch
Wedneldl:y, NOY. 29. l rookh11r1t & Alllamt
Each month the 7.onla Club
of Newpcrt Harbor selects a
senior girl from the four high
schools in the Newport·1'1esa
district as Zonia Glrls-of-the·
month.
The selection is based upon
leadership, c i t I z ens h i p ,
scholarship and service to her
8Choo1. The glrls and their
mothers are honored during
the club's monthly award
luncheon, and at the end of the
1ehool year the glrl1 select the
Zonta Girl-of-the-year from
each school. Honoren receive
a $50 Savings Bond.
NEWPORT HARBOR
Sue Murdy, daughter of Mr.
and Mn. John A. Murdy Ill of
Ntwpart. Beach, is a senior at
Newport Harbor Hl&h School
where sbe serves BIS class
secrttary, ls a member of the
exchange council and is on the
honor roil.
Owing her other years she
has been a member of the drill
team 1nd Tar1 and Stars, has
,.. been a banner carrier. n1g
i twirler and an editor of the 1 school paper.
I Ml" Murdy plan. to major 1 In education at rlther Stanford 1 Unlverilty. the University of 1 Southern Cl.llfomla or UCLA.
CDMUIGH
Edltor-ln~le:f of the Trident
1 at Corona del Mar High
Crafty Sales
NH HIGH
Sue Mu rdy
School. Catherine Grier is a
member of the California
Scholarship Federation and
the American Field Service.
Among her honors are being
named glrl-of·the..quarter In
the spring of 1971. She receiv-
ed the salute-U>-youth I n
voluntw atrvlce award 'and
the Jun ie: Ebelb' spoUight-on-
)'OUlh award.
The daughter or J\.1r. and
t..1r1 . J\.1llton S. Grier Jr, or
Cosla ~ten ha1 been a Girl
Gift Ideas Swapped
Antiques. nrts and crart.s, under 14 accompanied by an
rummHgt and oolleetlblel wl11 adult. t-be displayed on the Faliv1I ot Some txh:ibit spRc!'I are st111
Arts Grounds for Laguna avalllhlc for Individuals 11nd
Beach'3 tir~I Swap Meet and organJuiUons which •re Jn.
Flea lltarket 1pon!IQred by the te rested. Refreshments will be
Lyric Opera AssoclatJon of available on the ground!.
Orange County . Other featured ltem.t will In·
1---.1.--, The ~venl..ll-1>lannccl_for_clud handmade fU<nlturo and
Soturday1 and SUndoys, Doc. I jowolry, rare .OIN. jiali\llng1
and s, J •nd 10, trom 10 a.m. aod sculpture, toys and a wide
to I p.m. Almluloo will he 11 variety of Chri1tmaJ boutique
for ~Ila, free for children and gift l~as.
I I
l • •
CdM HIGH
Catherine Grier
Scout, Candy Striper and Is a
Sunday achool teacher, She
plans to attend a liberal arts
colleae after graduation.
ESTANCIA
Sherry Angel Is edltor·ln·
chief of the El Aguila at
Estancia High School and
editor of the Ecology Com·
mlltee Ncnlettcr. She alto
servu as second vice presi-
dent and mem bership
chllrman of the Parent·
THcher-Student As9oclaUoil.
The dalllhtar of Mr. and
M11. Donald Angel of Colla
ESTANCIA
Sherry Antol
musical and d a n c e pro-
ductions, served aa class
president In her freshrmn
year and clau treasurer the
following )"'ar. Cumntly lhe
is the asslltant tecrttary of
the camomla Scholastic Pr.u
A!soclatlon.
A recipient of the E. S.
llfoore 1'1emorlaJ award , Miss
Angel ~lans lo m1jor In
political science to prepare for
a Joumnll!m career.
CM HIGH
Cynthia Humphreya ,
M• bu been acUve lnl----------1
~ FRANCIS-
\,,ORR J'
f"INI:: STAT1 0NERY
lfJJ I tt.Ut ..... , tll·!UI , ...... Ill·-· ·tHYlll(IT ••n1n
~ f MAD ~'lpf.S
~O~u•n••To•
HACH
CUlUNT
FASHIONS ..
DISCOUNT PlfCIS .......... , .............
"""''". '""' C...11 ... .,.. ~ '"°' o.+l't lM-''*' Ill t ~14.. .......
CM HIGH
Cynthlo Hui~m~ph"'•~"I-"
d1qhter of Mr. ond Mn.
Robert Hwnphrey1 of Costa
Meaa, 11 a member of lbe
achoo) orcbettr1 and Jbo GAA
Jennll team.
Sho ls a Candy Striper •nd
iJ • recipient of the American
Legion IChool oward.
STURGIS, S.D. (UPI)
The cullnary berllal• of tho
Plalnl lndlanl ltlll b atronc
In Soulh Dokola, where mony
nlllaurinla lll'Vt .-band
bur&m llllde lrvm tho II>
dlanl' illaplo lood1 bullolo.
Trlboo lttCll u ... -UV• ad ~ 1t1tlrely Cll boll•lo
producia, MY• tho Bloclt Hllll, l!adianda and tho L a k e 1
Altoclotlon. They did little
fllhlq. DO farmlna and mode
little· 1111 of wild botrl.. and
roola.
By tho tlml of the 1178 pld
rulh In tho Blick H!Da, etbnlc
and rectonal foocb bad been
Introduced by llltlm,. but not
to everyone'• utllflCUoa.
A dJlcru!ltlod J!!, llllner u-pmoed hll dlsoro ol tho
b In bll mllllnc camp
lhll.-: lo of loothor,
.. And Ibo plol .... llllde of
tin: '
"Thi -...... ...id ttol cut lt wtlh r ......S.
"Thi butter wun -whllkerl+
11The «Arte'• very tbln,
"In tho little --bull bouae whm lllVt."
Specfol guolll will he Mrs'"· I~==~'~"~"~'~"~==;~ Jooeph Vllnok, DAR stale In-,
dlo.o a..trmon; Mrs. Andrew II, "
Mloo, wile of lhe presldenl of Caring looaylng "Thank You" with our Orona• County Ind I an ,,........_ _ -1-R..~1
Alaoclotlon and Center; Mra. J,B llmll\IWw\Ch Franca Llttle Keener, the
flrll ...,.ltJdlan to be named
Jn d I a n ll!other-of·lhe-year,
Mn. Jolin Knllechief and Mra.
-~W<. Membon will contribute
lood lw bollday basketa for
Ibo lndllD -lion.
SC Auxiliary
Plano are under way for lhe
lllh lllllUOl Valentine Ball,
IPOlllOrod by the Silver ind Gold OJapler ol lhe South
Cout Community Hospilal
Auxiliary,
Tho •Vltll II ICheduled for
Feb. 10 In tho Newporter Inn.
Mn. Bert Kamper! 11
cbalnnu, and oervlng on her
-are lhe Mmes. lloaold Fnmo, Don Seal,
Vlolel Adami, Edward Qulrut,
80ln Gant, Mlldr<d Farmer,
Cleor(o W. Wold, Wllllom E. lmlloll, O.C... H o ff m a n ,
Robert do Ford, Betty
CUtrtooal and Miss Fem Ran-
dolpll.
C.11bratt Th1nk1Qlvlng with
thlt lesllvt floral arrangemint
In !all'• w1rm Color a. Spr11d
your gr1Utudt to friends and
loved ones: Nearby 01 msny
tnll11 away, we'll guaranttt
dlllwry almost 1t1ywhtft In
limo lo< TlwlkigMng. Tho--It evallable In
threttlztt,
. SID, S12.llO, '111.
C.11 US Tod11 .
DiPFeleNTll
"""..,,,, •f lllllJMllOll -~· _.,.......:.
~llu Hum phrey• pl.., to
•nroD ot Orona• Coatt College
In the fall and theft tr..,fer to
UC! to lludy the hwnanlllff. ~~---~~ ....... NHdle'1 DEWIE All·CONDITIOIED COACllU
AIRPORT BOUNDt
putlCT lllMCll
To Loe Arlg1l11 1111'1 Alrpott "°"' 0..11 COUlllJ Alrpott
................... 4 ... 00 .. , ... _ ... ,_u-•
,..11....,oocnocAa:A ~ .. ,, ••
.... ... .., I
:..i~ ... _:-~r"=· 11ia
AIRPORT Sl!R'llCI! INC. \\~
1ri7l W.1(811111t Mil M ~ ~1210l
...... ,, el ON91M/~ AIMl1eM ec.
DIRECT • RELIABLE • ECOllOlllCAL
~Io/ 1/u W.l
NYLON TRICOTS & LACES .... 1,,,..,.
REDUCED THIS WEEK ONLY
... 'IJull o ...... tl,_M ..... I
II Dlalor Ttlcol,....... . ................ NOW 17« ~
• Dtidor Trlcol, ,..., 11.11 .........•... NOif fl•,._
Sll" C:lllOOll 1-. ttg. 11.10 . • . . . . . . . . . . . NOW fie ,._
1 , IW' Stretch Looe, "i· IOc ... NOW tie ,._
n-prl"" aoo4 u.,....n Nov. 26, 1117'.1
~~QI(~ PAllllCI
Y"':aufN COMT l'lM:' • IMOWI&. &.IWL
_111¥'81-11 .....
•
'
. • • • :: ·. :: •. •. :· ::
< }
~ ' •,
~ ~ •, '· .,
.
DICK TIACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
MUTI AND JEFF
FIGMENTS
-.... _ -·--
NANCY
GET AWAY
FROM THAT CANDY _ _,_,,l'l
BOX
:: ~~
::
JULIUS, WHEN YOU S0L.c
ME "™19 ONCE BL.LIE
SHIRT SAID THE
COLORW/a
FAST!
HOW PIP SHE
l<NOW WHAT l
WAS I>OING?
by Tom K. Ryan
, wet.~! IT SEEMS weve ~EEN lliROWN .
'TOeElliER AGAIN I
'THE COLOR
CAll'E OUT
ATTHE'
°FIRSr
WASHING /
..
by Al Smith
WELL.,
'rnATWAS
FAST.
WASN'TJT?
ll·ZI
by Dale Hale
by Ernie lushmiller
-BUT 'YOU MUST
HAVE E.YES IN
THE BACK OF
YoUR HeAP
PEANUTS ,..-,.---......
TODAY'S CIDSSIDBD PUZZL~
Vesierday's Puzzle Solver':
Of(,11(, fRJE)IP,
iH~ 15AS fAR AS I
60-..
,· • t
' '
' ' .
l • ' )
I
! ~ • • ' • ' ' • . •
ACROSS
1 Cul1ure
medium
5 Formal pcem
9 Srrongbokea
14 Crescent·
ah&ped flgur1
15 Uncivilized
16 Encourage
17 Sligh1
coloration
18 Verily
19 Highway
20 W1rning
sign ti
22 Made IO I
deaign
24 Go trequ1n11y
26 NFLotCFL
t111m
27 Sanction
29 811lor11
JO Th1111er
section
33 Swindles: 2
words
37 Sp1ni1h
house
38 Open low
"'" 39 Not good
40 "Meuage
reCllved''
41 Summit
42 Glve1 bKll:
44 Mile hum1n•
45 S1rlll: Abbr.
atatistic .-1 Ekpended
49 Floor
covering
63 French
Salnte:3
words
57 Reel 111111
contract
58 Senior to
59 Young whale
61 Actor James
62 Ovirte sound
63 P11v1rfcator
64 Fu1ure user
65 Yellowish
"' &6 Heating
apparatus
67 Gnat, for one
DOWN
1 Church 1r11
2 Crilllineu
J Bancrot1,
Franci1, 1t al
4 Benl
backw1rd
5 Time period
6 Kind ol 1hoe
7 GOBI
8 Woun~k•
anhropod&
9 Unrulllld
10 Then: French
11 Rural deity
~.=. ~I "°'A 0 0 II C
O A H Jl00 4 A '
s lf&O JI OD
!IELI KVS llO S TJI U !
12 Feminine
1ulfit
13 Plan! in soi
21 W1rble
23 Ivan--·-:
Moviemak1r
25 Follow
cl01etv
28 Jewish
1111liple
30 EmplOV!I or
Congre11
31 Tributary of
1h1 E1bl
I A T A s . '. RR I O TES
37 Conc1al1cl:
2worcls
40 Competitor
42 Shoal
43 Shellac
ingredient
45 Flashv
47 GoHtt Sim
•8 Ch1r1c11ri11ic
50 Temporary
r111phe
51 Anglo-Saxon
laborers
52 Oqgm1
32 M1rin1r1: SJ T11k1
lnl01"m11 54 E11thenw1r1
33 Nol genuin1 pot
34 81 confid1nt 55 A1i1n guff
35 Equ1lly 66 G1oup of
m1tched t1m1Ut1
36 F11n1lc 60 Brother
'
•
1141
JUDGE PARKER
&fCAUSe l ~EW IT
WHY DIDN'T YOU WAS A. MISUr.Kl THE DAV 1 I.ET ME KNOW VOU AFTfR ntf CfR£MOHV!
HAP MAAR1£D, LVHN?
MISS PEACH
PERKINS
~.'T'Hl!n~
YOU' Fl"ST
Ll'l'TU, Lf!'S
S61Ht:W
Df""AT'W
'ICU ME.
T~, -21, 1972 DAILY PILOT J5
by Roqer lrodflelcl DOOLEY'S WORLD
GO!
,,.z,
.,""'!~I Wli'vr ..UP'
A>o11JAU
HI~ •.
'1(/i MU
INTERaPl7D ~• NFli'lt'Sll'r BACK'/~LD ,,
~·"*° .__,,.
GORDO
MOON MUWNS
~s, t>f>-R~ Yes ...
2'3°0·'
UNDSI>:
"THE
CLOC::_K:_.·"//-C
ANIMAL CRACKERS
by Charles M. Schull
t l<HEal
~ HAMN!
by Harold Le Dou
I'VE: &EfM A PRISONER IH M.'t VOu'LI.. &! ALL lt16MT
OWN HOM!:, ;..eeEY ! A~TTMIS HtRf! l>OH'l "l'OU
MINUTE, Hf PW&Ael.V HAS tU5 WORlt'I A&OUT
PEOPLE LOOl<.IN6 '0 fl ,:f'. A. 1141W1l ,.-+.A
by Mell
:t
QUIT.
by John Mllel
WELL,
I
ALWAYS
AM ...
by Gus Arriola
/CAflAMMf
PIZESPNING
·cu12 WI.WR/!
IN 11/t! 1'Af:,E
OF VAMfliJI
/JJ~J.J)JWQ; ..
/fl ...-;;'{AW/J'f;:
CtJTT/N!q
#/TO MY
6/1£STA
TIMJS./
by Ferd Johnson
MOW ELSE CAN
l G•T SOM• ·
LOA FING IN
W ITHOUT
fEELl~G GUILTY
A 8 0Uf IT?
by R09er Bollen
_t 1.,.o;iue 'Rll'o
PIOJl,\l!IJI !Clll<!R
llJj.Tc~ n.1.EV15IOl.I !
THE GIRLS
,
ll·ZI
ur rully ... 't lttd a 1t1r bl bit tl'I ... I rtltd .. M,
~I dial ... ·1 !Jtl a little tld*r • me ~ ,_,,..
DENNIS THE MENACE
'I
)
I
I
• • • ,
l 04ll Y PllOT TuHdi.y, Nattm.btr 21, 1~72
'Skins Topple Atlanta
And Rams Back in 1st
WAS~IINCTON -The Los Angeles
Rams and San Jo,rancisco 49crs regained
first place in the NFC West without
playing Monday night as the division·
leading Atlanta Falcons dropped a 2-l-13
decision wilh a second half collapse at
Robert F. Kennedy Stadium.
The Falcons are now 5-5 while the
Rams and 49ers boast 5-4-1 records to
lead the division. \Vashington ~·on its
seventh straight victory, the longest
streak for 1he Redskins since l9U when
O.C. had its last world champion.
Coach George Allen's aging scouts are
~I. one game better than current Na·
tlonat Football League king Dallas with
t~e Co"'·boys meeting a rising san Fran·
~sco team on Thanksgiving.
In ~1onday night's struggle. Billy
Kilmer hit 7·£or-7 in the third quarter.
topping an 89-yard march with an 18-ynrd
touchdown pass to Larry Brown and
later hitting tight end Jerry Smith on a
12-yard score.
A IG-7 Falcons halftime lead vanished
arald the · Kilm er barrage that put
\Vashil)gton into 21·10 command. Bill Bell
kicked a fourth-period fie ld goal and Curt
Knight matched it with a 37-yardcr that
drew a standing ovation.
Knight , you see, had blown six stra ight
field goal attempt! and had been
showered \\-ith boos for two earlier goofs.
"We 've got a lot of old gUys who 've
played on winning teams and losers,"
said linebacker Jack Pardee, a t~year
pro al age 36. "We enjoy winning. \Ve
know lhe dUference. Great teams win in
all ways, coming from behind or leading
all the way."
Falcons runner Art Malone cooled his
team's hot .!ltreak with a fumble that was
covered up by Chrll Hanbura:e r,
Pardee's fellow linebacker, lale fu the
second quarter.
Kilmer hit Roy Je!fel'90n for eight
yards and Charley Taylor made 14 on nn
end-around to set up a one-yard scoring
charge by the incredible Brown. It was
then 10-7, setting the stage for Kilmer 's
third period heroica that erased Atlanta
hopes for an upset.
Brov.·n muscled for rive yards on his
first carry of the game, hitting 1,000 for
the season with four games to go. The
crowd gave a thunderous ovation and the
referee banded Larry the ball for a
souvenir,
Spor ts Clipp ed Short
Despite tv.·o huge losses on wide plays,
Brown finished with 82 yards Monday
night and a four-season career aggregate
of 4,038 yards. Only Cleveland's Jim
Brown did better In his first four pro
seasons. Judge's Order Stlll, he followed: Allen's party line by
refusing to welcome the individual DC·
cola des,
"I "·ent into the huddle when 1 hit 1,000
ya rds and shook my teammates' hands,"
he said. "They all had a part in every
ya rd. Some teams like to brag, but not
us. Walt until you win the Super Bowl
and then tell everybody how good you
are."
Ignored by Hull
CHICAGO -Hockey star Bobby Hull
says he will continue to play for the Win·
nipeg Jcls despite a Circuit Court order
restraining him from playing with the
new \Vorld flock~ Association team.
"I just found out about the court
order," Hull said ~1onday night in
HOuston where the Jets are scheduled to
play the 11ouston Aeros tonight. "I
understand I would be enjoined from
playing in Illinois. But as far as I'm con-
cerned. I will be playing the game here
tomorrow night unless I hear different."
The action against !lull. fonnerly of
the ChicagQ: Black Hawks of the Nationa l
Hockey League and now a playe r-coach
for Winnipeg, stems from a suit by the
Black Hawks to keep 11ull from playing
for th<' Jets.
"" CRANFORD, N.J . -\Villie Young, of-
fensi\'e tackle for the New York Giants,
\Vas released on $150 bail ~1onday aner
he "'as charged with resisting arrest
following a high speed auto chase .
A police spokesman said Young was
arrested Sunday night and held overnight
in the munici pal jail. He initially was
stopped for a speeding violation . the
spokesman said.
According to police, Young tore up the
summons and beca me abusive. II \V3!
then that the resisting arrest charge was
filed. He is to appear in court Nov. 28.
"" CHICAGO -Butch Boper. a rookie
from Tustin, nred games or 256, 234, 235.
169. 237, 230, 213 and 253 Monday and
with an eight-game lotal of 1827 pins was
the leader after the opening round in the
$85.000 Brunswick World Open bowling
tournament.
The 23-year-0\d righl-hander. a can-
didate for rookiHf·the-year honors, and
trying for hl.J first Professional Bowlers
Association triump h, rolled on the second
64 ·man squad In the 194-entry event His
average waa 228 as he held a lead of 42
sticks over Don John~n. Akron. Ohio.
veteran who Is trying to win this tourna-
men t for a second straight yea r.
Costa Mesa's Barry Asher was IOI pins
off the pace of young Boper in I Ith place
\vith a 1.728 pinfall . He is 43 pins out of
fifth place in the prestigious tournament.
"" NEW YORK -Sugar Bowl-bound Penn
State was voted a unanimous winner
~fonda.v of the Lambert Trophy, awarded
annually for outstanding performance by
ri major Eastern college football team .
\Vest Virginia, 8-3. fini shed second with
72 points, followed by Dartmouth. Penn,
Yale. Army. Massachusetts. Comell.
J(\Jtgers and Holy Cross.
"" ,BALTIMORE -The Baltimore Colts
refused r.1onday. lo grant veteran ruMing
qpck Tom Matte's public plea to be taken OV the team's taxi squad and be pl•ced
nri waivers so he could play with another
T'\BUonal Football League team.
i"~1atte is our only insurance:' said
~ch John Sandusky. "I told Tom we
needed him for protecUon ." . "" 1 HONOLULU -Paul Neilson, n 21 -yea~
ofd wave rider from Australia. rode
P,werful 8 to 10 root no rth shore su rf at
Qahu's Halelwa Rench Monday to win the
fourth annual Smirnoff pro.am chnm-
olonJhlpo.
·-;NeJllon, getting the flr.!11 -place nod
six of aeven judges, bonl~ out the
ored H1w1U 1urfen in lhcir own
The man from ·Kansas State dressed
ment has begun. university officials said slowly Monday night. He complained of
l\1onday. physical fatigue.
\Vood, whose Aggies plunged to a 2-9 "Everybody thinks we're an old team
record this season , said, "I leave New and will tail cff in the second half," he
Mexico State University with no bit-said, buttoning an orange, green and blue
terness and no regrets.'' silk shirt. "Hell, man. we get stronger <IS
This year's record was the worst in I& the game goes along." .
years. Du ring Wood's five years as head Brown is a mile ahead in NFL rushing.
coach, his teams were 21-30-1. but admits the yards are cowing
a" tougher.
BURKBURNETT, Tex. _ Jn what "When you hit 800, people start lo
v.·ould be a tough choice for many Texans notice. It gets rough for each yards: It
to make -between oil and football -comes hard. But, I can take the pun1sh-
the Burkburnett School Board has decid-ment. I protect my knees. Nobody gets a
cd to go down the line with its football clean shot too often at my legs."
team. On Brown's touchdown reception of
The board vcted unanimously Jl.1onday Kilmer's 18-yarder, it appeared he shov·
to fight oilman' Sam Walton 's plans to ed off against Falcon linebacker Don
drill a well in the middle of the high Hansen before clutching the scoring
school football field . throw. v -\.., "I don't remember." he smiled. ''He
SACRAMENTO -Two of the top·rank· v.·as pushing on me earlier in the play
ed small college teams in the country -and even grabbed my face mask. He's
third-ranked Cal Poly San Luis Obispo not that good on pass coverage and ob-
and seventh-ranked North D a k o t a viously realizes this. J tried to keep his
University -have been named to play in attention on me instead of the ball. I
the Camellia Bowl here Dec. 9. acted like it wasn't coming my way and
v' then suddenly I had it for six points."
PHILAOELPHlA Francix X .
Heagan. a rormcr pro football player and
collegiate coach. died Monday at 53.
Reagan, a standout e<>llege football
player at the University of Pennsylvanµi ,
served as head foot ball ccach at
Vi\laoova from 1954 to 1957, when he also
became athletic director.
Reagan played halfback for Penn from
1938 to 1940. He played professionally
with the New York Gaints, then joined
the Philadelphia Eagles.
Allent1 l"lk:ont 1 J 0 3 -IJ
Wft1/llnvton Rtd1lknf o 7 i. J -?•
All, -Mlt<;lllll, .)6 PIH Iron'\ Berry CB•ll kick)
All. -FG, Bell »
W11h. -l'lrown, 1 n.tn (l(nl9h! kick)
W1'11. -Brown, ll Pol:H from l(llmtr (l(nlgl!I
kick)
W1J./I. -Smllh. 12 P<IH lrom l(l!mtr !KnlgM
k!ckl
All. -FG, Btll 11
WI.it. -FG, KnlgM 37
IMl¥iclu1I LNd11"1
•111111111 -Alll!lil, M•I-JS.7• r1rc11, M1moton ,,.,,; W1 $/llnglofl, B,.wn 2'-lf, Hfl'r•w•r IS.6.1.
"'"'""" -At11nt1, Mliol'le '-ll 'l'•rd•, Burrow :f.42; W1lfllngfDn, T1'(!ol' '-11, J rffHWl'I .. 4 .
""""--Atllnl1, Barry 11·21·1, 1311 v•rds; Wlslllroglon, K!lmar 10.19·7, lot y1rds.
• •
•
. .
Ali, Foster
Mix It Up
In Nevada.
STATELINE, Nev. (AP) -Am1lld
the corner lrom lhe nlcbl llol ma-
cblDN In lhe Slbara-Taboe Clllno, MU·
bammad All and Bob F~ fllhl ~
night !or hl&ber llabf and a poulble
sl10! at boxlnl'• blQ"81 Jackpot -lhe
beayywelght Cbompionahlp.
0 l'm waJUng for Joe Frazier," said
All, !be for-heavyweight dlamp, on
lbe •ve ol hlJ ocheduled II-round boul_
with light heavy champ Fost<r.
"I don't know what to expect from
Foster, but he'll give me trouble for a
few rounds," he said about hll SS.yur-
ol<f opponent, ezpected to wei,11 In ii
about 180 poundo.
All has predkled he'll stop FOiier In
eight round> and says the 1lgbt« but
taller fighter_ "his to ttly en a lucky
quick pundl" to 1<0re an upsat.
All Ill lighting for a 11UAran1ee ol llSQ,·
000. Foster for $125,000.
11le :JO.year-old All will have a weight
advantage of about 40 pounds. Footer
hU held !be light heavy crown 41' yean,
but was lmocktd out by Frailer In two
rouncb in an attempt to take the heavy~
weight Utle.
Ali's only 1 ... In 40 profeSJklnal fl&hl•
was 20 months ago to Frazier. 'Ibe-15-
round decilioo spoiled his bid to recap,
ture the tiUe taken away from him for
a draft evasion conviction which later
was reveraed.
"What should worry Foster, if he
lbinks about it, is what I did to Fruler
and what happened when he fought
__ him," Ali said in a last.npnute pytch-
UP'I T....... ing attempt.
WASHINGTON 'S LARRY BROWN BREAKS 1,000 YARD BARRIER. Fr.U.r l!pl!llt a lew days In a hospital after the rugged match with All .
Easy Way Out
Parseghian Blasts
Alabama Bowl Choice
CHICAGO (AP ) -Notre Dame coach
Ara Parseghian took a swipe l\1onday at
Alabama 's decision to go to the Cotton
Bowl instead of the Orange Bowl.
Parseghian said that "Alabama took
the easy way out" by choosing to face
once-beaten Texas in the Cotton Bowl
rather than taking on defending national
champion Nebraska in the·Orange Bowl.
Alabama's decision paved the way for
Noire Dame, 3-J, to get a bid to play
Nebraska in the Orange Bowl.
Parseghian said Bear B y r a n t ' s
Alabama team had its sights on the na-
tional championship in picking the Cotton
instead of the Orange, where Nebraska
swamped the Crimson Tide 3" last
year.
"I guess Alabama figures oo beating
Auburn and Texa s for an undefeated
season and then hopes that Ohio State
beats Michigan and We beat Southern
Cal." Parseghian said, ''which would
leave Alabama the only 1Dldefeated team
in the nation."
Bryant was not available for comment .
Speaking before a Chicago Today
Quarterback Club gathering, Parseghian
said, "1 was surprised with Alabama's
choice. They were undefeated and in the
driver:s seat. By their own admission,
and from what J have read, Alabama
took the easy way out."
"We were in the same position two
years ago when we were undefeated. We
chose Texas in the Cotton Bowl because
they had a 30-game winning streak ... "
"I just wonder what kind of criticism
we'd face if we had made the same kind
o{ deci.!lion Alabama made," said
Parseghlan, adding that if he were in
Bryant's shoes, "I'd go after the com·
petition.''
Notre Dame has two weeks to prepare
for undefeated and top-ranked Southern
Cal In their Dec. 2 meeting in Los
f>nge,les. Parseghian warned Southern
car that the Irish are ''.going out to win"
the game in spite ct SC's tarik and
reputation. "We have a football team
-that is not easy to beat," he said.
Bryant was not available for a dlre<:t
reply to Parseghian . But he told a Binn·
ingham quarterback club Monday that he
told h1s seniors last week that he would
let th~ make the final deci11ion put, "I
kind of hope you 'll let the old man pick
this time. ·
"I poinled out that Texas already had
a good record and was making a strong
linisb. They agreed.
''Our aim was to get the team that had
the best chance of finishing with no more
than one defeat. Of course, lhere was no
w~ to find a team lhat had.not lost.
"We f•ll that by going to the Cotton
Bowl we would be playing a major con·
ference champion.
"I haven't done well qainlt Darrell
Royal's team," Bryant continuetf, "and
I'd like to test that again. I've played
Kim thl'ff times and tied once and lost
twice."
The Foster4Ali bout is aet in a virtual
television studio atmosphere, the High
Sierra 'lbeoter at thlJ ....on hotel In
ski and gambling coonlry on !be aoullt
shore of Lake Tahoe.
... ,. wanted the fight because or the big
money. But I think I can beat him and
there will be more money," !aid Foster,
a sheriff's deputy In Albuquerque,
betwetn ring appearances.
Neither man would appear to have a
shot at the heavywelght title until at
least next spring. Frazier will defend
Jan. 22 in Jamaica against George
Foreman, the: unbeaten fighter from
Hayward, CaHr., ranked No. 2 behind Ali
among the contenders.
Ali, Frazier aOO Foreman are all
former Olympic boxing chaJVpions.
In 1960 Ali, then a teen-ager from
Louisville, Ky., named CUsius Clay,
sparred with another Olympic team
member, Bob Foster, and was knocked
down.
"He wa.s probably better than me
then," Ali said Monday. "He was 21 '&lld
had a Jot more experience than 1 had.
There are lots or fighters around who .
gave me trouble as an amateur wbo l
can just play with now."
MALINOFF ASSISTS
IN V.S. VICTORY
P.lANAGUA, Nicaragua -UC IMne'g
Jefl Malinofl was one or the hitting stars
for the U.S. entry in the 20th World Am·
ateur Baseball Championships Monday
as the team blasted Jlaiy, IJ.l, with a
14-hit atW:k Including lour triplu and
t\\'O doubles.
Malinoff and Tom ~tcMilland had sev·
en of lhe 14 hill between them. The win
was the lifth for the U.S. whlcb Ill tied
for the tournament lead with holt Nic-
aragua, whlch beat Pu•rto Rico Monday
night, and Cuba, which shellacked Braz!!.
Baseball Seeks
To Restructure
Playoff System
~: .·
NEW YORK (AP) -Baseball would
upand rather than cut its ex.ten.live.post.:
""ason playolls under ptopouls to ~
brought before the owners at lhett
Winter Meetings, acheduled to open nett
Monday in Honolulu.
Under a plan for restructurln& t~
playolla, !be lint lwo !<ams In eacli
division of the two major. leaps would-
qua!Ky. 'l1te oecond·place team In •ac~
division would meet the wtnnu ol tbei
other dlvla!on In a beai..IW<M>l-u.r,.
series, the Winnen to meet in beat-three-.
or.rive !or the leque champlonahlp. ;.
The current lormat c.Us !or bett-ofi
five series between divlsM>nal wtnnen ~i
detennine portlcfpants In the Worl4
Serio. ~ Two oilier propQllls for ch1nglnj I~
playoff structure are on the aaenda: ~ yard as he picked up '5.150 in pri~l'
money. BOSTON RED SOX CATCHER CARL TON FISK IS AL 'S ROO KIE OF THE YE AR.
Coach Bob Devaney ol Nebraska said
he talked to the Bear by phone about the
decision. '"He said it was up to the
players lo make the choice where they
wan ted to go. He said : '1 think the
scnlon ahould have the choice because
Ifs their la1t yea r lo compete.· They
chose to go to the cotton Bowl. .. -Two teama, trrupecttva of dlvlalor!;
with the b!lbeel percentqe outside lhe
diviJlonal cliamp!oos pllly a bett.of·ftve
seriea for the r~lo meet the wlmm of the di-11. •
'Hawaii '• Jeff Hakman. 11urflng's lnp
oney winner In 1971, finished second for
, followed by Grant Oliver of
straUa who collL'Ct.ed tl ,250 for third
"" INN~APOLIS -Mlnntsola Twins
r Harmon Killebrew underwe nt
gery Monday for vartco• velm ln hl11
I leg.
A team spokesman 1ald the 36-year-old
Deb~w would rtm ain In St. Mary's
tal until Wedneaday.
'The operation wl!ls preparatory to a
• 4 optratroo on Kiiiebrew's big toe to
ve 1 bone growlh.
too Injury bothered Klll•brew, the
leldtna home run hitter In major
ldltory, moet of last season.
~ W CllJCES, N.M. -Jim Wood, head !lolliMI ....... at New Mezlco State, hu· ...., !Ind ..r Illa ,..rch !or a replace-
r
Boston Catcher Fisk Top AL Rookie
NEW YORK (APl -BOl1on Red Sox
catcher Carlton Fisk beclrnt t~ first
Amtrtcan LealUl!r in hl1tory P.1ondoy to
be unanimously 1tltct~ Rookie o( the
Vcor by Ult 8.ueball Writers' Associ3·
tion of Amerlc1.
Fisk. who batted .293, •lghlh·bctt In
tht lea(:ue ln 1972, hit 22 home runs and
drove in 61 runa, garnered all 2~ e·ewA
votes.
l'e joined Frank Robinson and Wllllo
McCovey of the Nalionnl League 11 lhc
only major league pl1yer1 unanimously
eel«!ttd -alnce the award wa1 &lven an·
nually to a player In each league in 1141.
Rcblnson \\'00 lt in 19SS with Cincinnati
and tttcCovey in 1959 with San fr~ncisco.
Fisk's batting 11vcrage and home run
and rbl output wert. tops amonc Anltri·
cm [.(!ague ca1chtn. And he recenlly "'".!I
voted to r~cive thl' Cold C\lp award of
mnnogers and to1che1 ns the league's ·
best defensive catcher. He also waa nam·
ed to the 1972 American League AD.Star
te:1m by manager Earl Weaver of Baltl·
more.
The 24-year--old native of Bellow Falls,
VI., who al 6-2 Is blgg<r llwl moot catch·
trs. had brltf lrials with the Rtd Sox In
1969 and 1971. The fint time he failed to
1et a bit in fiv~ at·bats, the ~d Ume
ht hit .31l ~·ith IS hits -including l\\1>
doublet. • triple and l\\'O homeni -and
six rbl In 41 at-bals.
But at the start oC lhfl 1972 St'a50n .
F'l1k, nicknamed ''l)odgc ," "'31 the thlrd-
strtna catcher behind Duone Josephson
and ""Bob Monlg:omtry,
II• played only occ•slonally until
Joeephson pulled " groln muscle aod was
stdtllned ror sevtrat games. Thtn Fl11k
alternated with Montaome11 w h t I e
Jottphson, in order to avoid 1gravating
lh• Injury. played !Int -· But on May 11 In Dtlllllt. lhe Red Sox.
looking !or stronger ddtnllve play !><hind
the pllle, gave Fisk !he lulltlmt ~ -
and he nevu" rtlinqulabtd It.
Other American 1 .. ..-rookln of lhre
year since 1949 are Roy Slevtn. Watt
Dropo, CU McDoua11d, Ha"1 BJrd, Har·
vcy Kuenn, Bob Crim, Hetb Scott, Lull!
Aparicio, Tony Kubek, Albie-· Bob
AJlison, ltoo Hansen, Don Schwan, Torn
Tresl\, Gary Pettn, '!'any Ciiva, Curt ,
Blefary. Tommie Agee, Roel Ctrew, Slan
Bahnsen, Lau Pinlella, '11turman MUNon
and Cllrls OwnllllJs.
l
-'lbe Pr-nt vision ol Ills I-In
each leop Ila carved up Into ~
divisiorMI ol lour l•ama In each ._..,
The wlnoen or eocb d!vtaloa .....W-bi
joined by lhe l<am with the bett ,...
tip ...... the -_,._
!lnlsban !or b<tt.of.fift pme ...-. Illa '""1tvon to -I bett.ctt-llft lor Illa
league dd•.
Final Grid Ratings
•
,
6 ' Dlablo~ 3 Trlto118
Nine Area Aces
Make All-leagoo
•
• NlDe Orange Coast ma high Lonnie Hutts of San Clemento.
school football players have Orange halfblck C 11 n t
been named to the DAILY Skaggs ·and bUrly tackle Ran.
PILOT 1972 fill.Crestview dy Harris of El Modena were named back-of·th&year and
L!!ague team. Uneman~!-~year in t be
Six of the selections were league.
from MiS!lon Viejo, three Both Skagp and RarTis, the
from San Clement.. only --IOlectlon on the
· San Clerriente'1 Cb a r I e y team. were DNl'~
Dargan (end ) and Mission choices by the league coacbes
Ylejo's Dave Caldwell (run-as the top hack and lineman.
nlng hack) ·and Rick Curtis The Crestview Big '11iree -
(linebacker) each made the Orange, El MDClei.i and VWa
first team. Part -domlnat.d the 12
Second t.am selections in-first-team selections with 11
eluded end Mark Maurer, pleb, six from Orange and
guard Martin Gover, fiveeachfromEIModtnaand
ltnebacker Rlct White and Villa Park.
.defensive back Kevin Eaton of Coach Vlnce Deveney of
MJuion Viejo aod quarterback league champion Orange was
Bill Kenney and defensive end -named coach4.U.yur.
Pos.
E
E
T
T
G t;
G
QB
B
B Ii
E
E
'I'
T
T
G i:.B
LB
DB
DB
DB
E
E
~
G µ c
B ll
B
B
1i1
I!:
T
T
tl
G
LB LB
l>B
liB
DB
Player
All-Crestview League
Ftnt Team
Offense
CUr1eJ Darp.a, San Clemento
Steve Rasinsti, VWa Part
Randy Harris,· El Modena
Paul Walthers, Orange
David Sztaradek, Foothill
Mike Leyrer, El Modena
Andy Katnik, Foothill
Kirk Reidinger, Villa Park
Clint Skaggs, Orange
Sam Peek. Foothill
Dave CaldweU, Mission Viejo
Defense
Keith French, Orange
Dirk Stewart, El Modena
-· Randy 11arria, El Modena
Gary Harris, Orange
Rod Kenece, Villa Park
..... Kent WilJon, El Modena
Tony Kincaid, Villa Park
Rlct Curtta, MJs1ion Viejo
Dan Timmnn.!I. Orange
Wayne Griffiths, Orange
Brian Hester, Villa Pai'k
StC'ODd Team
Offense
Jeff Deweese, Tustin
Mart Mam-er, Misaion Viejo
Mike Kelley, Orange
. Don Rodrigues El Modena
Brooke Dunn, Tustin
Randy McGinley, Villa Park
Russ Dix, Villa Park
Tim Tivenan, El Modena
Jim Ford, Tustin
Tony L<iPlccollo, Villa Park
BUI Kenney, San Clemente
Defense
-Paul Nelson, Ketella
Lonnie Brrtts. San Clemente
Jim Barnes, Orange
Ron Sage, Villa Park
MarUa Gover, Mhlioa Viejt
Jose CUeto, Foothill
Lee Hackett, Orange
Rick Wbtte, M111ioa Viejo
Kevin Howell, Orange
Kevin Eatoa, Muoio• Viejo
Kh:k Kennedy, El .Modena
,
WelPI
Ill
170
231
195
JM
175
186
170
165
175
145
110
!IS
235
200
220
!BO
110
l?I
1115
150
170
160
119
l!S
200
240
110
190
165
150
115
ze5
170
113
190 :
116
155
1?1
155
170
155
\ngelus Cross Country
ea.
Sr.
Sr.
S<.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
S<.
8r.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
S<.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr. s..
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
8r.
Jr.
Sr.
An991n t.Nt9t ~...,. v ... .,
TMIW,_..
lllthop Anllt 16. Matw Dll 6'
1. Joe Oowl lnt. (U l. 9:31), Mlltr Del
f(n111w1: f . M1r1I Twry, 10:05, ll.
TOlli Htrold, 10:U , 1•. Jtrry Kf 1!lng. 1'0:2•. 17. Miki lorm.n, 10:29, 29. Jotln
Chr11t, TO:n. 2'. Dillon Pittman, 10:17.
TNlfl Scerltll
-Bishop AIT'tll 27, M.lltr Del $3,
S.VO• 12, Plus x t s. SI. Paul Ill. St.
Antnony 1Jl
J11111lor V1"'ty
1. •ob Garcia, (l!IA ), 10:22, Malt'r O.!
hnl.n.n: s. 1111dtrr•""'• 10:"', n. totohl,..,, 11:21, 14. A~. 11 :2t, 15.
MCMlff, ll :lO, 17. Turay, 11:37, 20. ll'Md,12:00.
. '13 OIPRI COUPE
·--I, DIV!-(IA), 10:00, Mai.r o.I
llnl,......: $. Scnm!I, 10:77, '-lerTY
10:39, I. MlllO!'POIO. 10:.cJ, t . Du"'0p, 10:.._ 11. Ole~, 11:00, 13, HIMI.
ll :lt, 1•. C:oiem1n, ll:tt, IS. ,.lttrntn
11 :11. ,, Non'\1, 11:2'. 17. h9d\,
11:30, "· Mectutron'I. n :.io, 4. f91'· rara, 12:SS, 4. Turl\llUlt, U:S7.
T•-.._.
8lth0p Amit 17, fMW o.! Jt, ~""
X Tl, St. 1".ul ,., s.r.ot,_ 112, St.
Atlftlon)' IJO.
su
'13 FORD Pim SQUIRE s 79
. '13 DODIE IAllYAI s 88
'73 CHEVROLET Mm OIRLO s •
'73 BUICI REGAL COUPE •111
.. '13 DATSUil 240-Z '111
'73 PONTIAC IRAllD PRIX '121
'13 CHmoLET COllVEI IE '1•
'73 FORD THUNDERBIRD •149
, ...... 0,-... .._ -........ c...-
CAIH IACll fOI nMll _,. CAI
Tuflday, -mbtr 21, 1972 D.\ILY PH.OT JI
Anteaters
Open Play
With Frosh
oa.. Bal:er will spearbeod
the UC ln'lne varslty butet-
ball team tonJahl in • preview sbo"1nl in Crawford hall
aplmt the Anteater•
,_n with Uool! al 1
o'clock. Adm1alon' ls free.
BQu, a w letterman
oopllomon, will be -· from a otar1Jng cenlel' post to
a forward poolllon. He has
trimmed don from 2 8 0
pounda a year ago to Z2toto get
the cumnt campaign under
... ,....-.,.. ....
•
iidll DISTMCE Oii LONG PUTTS
way giving him.-mobility, Many pi.rs mlstakenly put too much emphuis
occan!llll to coach Tim TUI. on dirtclion on Ion& putts. I don't mean that you
TUt ls ltartlne a team that shouldn't bl cautk)us in lining up these putts ..•
averages M ;t, one of the Sut I do fHI that over-emphasis on direction can
tallest ttartlng nves in the lead to unaer-emphasis of distance. "I had the
schoohi_...!,•, brief but brilliant lint, but I forgot to hit lt,'1 is the ~ommon cry.
~._:r M1kt It a point to judae the hne and ahgn the
Replacing Baker at center ta putterhtMi accordingly when setting up the putt.
.. 11 Scott Mag nu• on. Thereafter direct all of your attention toward hitting
Mal!Duaon played high ochool tht ball ,;Ith just enough fQ(ce to make ·it die at
baD for assistant vanlty tht cup. • • ~ *-..., _
coaeh Jerry Hulbert al 1'ftll' !=~;;~,;;=========:=====I
Hlgb tn Fune-mo before Arnold ,..,,..,.., "HOW TO IMPROVE YOUR PUTTING." A cow matriculatl~ to the Universl· of ttll• hlnt•,peckecll bool'-t is }'Olin fot 20C when )'OU •ltdoMd ty of M1nnesota. • slllmped, Mlf.addrelMd ennlope alone Jrittl your rtc1uelt tD
After a year with the Arnokl ,....,, In cat• of tMs newspaper.
Gophers, Magnuson returned
t". lhe &l'ell and attended Fullerton· Junior College for
· one aemetter. He had an ankJe
operation and wu at UCI la.st
season. He will have two years
of ellgtbllity with I h e
Anteati>rs.
At the other forward is Jer.
ry Maras1 another sophomore
who played frelhman ball al
UC! lul seuon aod broke
most ol the achool's yearling
scoring reconla. He I! M.
Pickeroo
Ray Grant of Costa Mesa, in
a fiye-way Ue for first, came
out ahead In the DAILY
PILOT Pigskin P I ck e roo
Contest by coming the closest
of all five to guesalng the total
number of points scored in all
the cootest'.a games.
Grant plcked 24 winnen and
nudged second place Bob
Vergllio of Huntington Beach
by six points in the u ..
breolcer.
Runners-up were B r e t
Bernard of Balboa Island,
John Turner of Santa Ana and
Robert Fellows of San Juan
CapiJtrano.
Dickens Leads SoCal
To Win Over Biola
LA MIRADA -Sophomore
center Ruaaell Dlckena led the
Southern California College of
COi~ MH& Van g uard s
basketball team to an upset
victory over host Blola College
Monday nlght, 9M3, to start
the tmn aeason.
Biola bu an experienced
team with five of its top six
playen from last year back in
the fold aft.r flntshing bigb in
the NAIA ratings.
"This was ooe of the most
pleasing victories t think J
have ever had in coaching,''
coach Paul Peat·of SoCal aaid
after the game.
Dickens was SUperb in the
fmal two minutes of play, get.
ting a Up-in, four points on
one-and-one fool zltuations,
grabbln( a pair ol rebounds
and stealing the ball ..
another occasion, all during
the hectic final drive,
'lbe 6-7 center played one
year for Sin c l a Ir Junion
College in Dayton, Ohio and
spent the past two years in the
Army.
He was given a big usist by
letterman Jim Payne who hit
sev_gn _of nine attempts from
the noor and had an outstan-
ding night on the boards.
Thi! week end the Vanguards
wUJ bolt• four-team , two-day
tourtlament in the SoCal gym.
CalUomia Baptist and Los
Angeles Baptist play the first
game Friday at 6 with the
Vanguards hosting Pac If I c
Christian of Long Beach at 8.
Losers play at 8 Saturday and
the winners at 8.
SaCa1 Cen.te CWI i n-;~ = f l 1:
f I i 1! 1 0 I 2 :l't I 16 W 1ot11tu,,...~ SaCtl Colleoe 40, 8lola »,. JV scor1: 8lola '2. $0C9' Coll-.., (Overrimel.
........ """ e ,.·r-:Ao: • . · .. -~ : . . _,,
' .
Lions Gain
Playoffs,
Win 12-9
By RANI[ Wl!:ICR .. .. ...., .........
Westminster earned • spot
In the CIF ""ter polo playoffs
with :i 12~t victory over
Arcadia before toO fans 1t the
Golden Wes t College Pool
Monday.
The Uons broke loose from
a 3-3 deec!loct with four goals
in I.he third quarter and five
more In the final period to
upend the Apaches and eam a
spot opposite top ranted
Downey tn the C)J'enlng round
of the C!F playoffs Wednes-
day. The game i.1 3 o'clock
at Downey.
Frank Haselton, J o h o
Frankhouse and Steve Col~
stein sparked the Llona to a U.
6 lead with just over three
minutes left to play ln the
game, and then Westminster
played ball control to clinch
the win.
Haselton ocored on a penalty
shot just 20 second• in to the
second half and Frankhouse
followed up with a steal and
breakaway goal IS seconds
later to give the Lions an ad·
vantage they never relin-
quished.
The duo each scored again
in the period, Haselton from
the bole three meters out in
front of the net. a n d
Frankhouse on an assist from
Dave Juedes with l :45 left in
the quarter. .f"~Goldstein the n took over to
score two lightning qukk goala
In the fourth period ... the
Lions pulled awa y.
Haselton and Goldstein had
thret goals each for the lJons,
Doug CoghW aod Franthouse
bad two and Blakeley aod
John Huntley one each.
GWC Gals Win
Gold<i. West College'• girls
baaketball team defeated In-
vading Orange Coast College,
35-%7, Tuesday to up Ill Cout
League record to 5-3.
Sue Lehman led all ICCftf'I
with 11 for Golden West 'l(lth
Jodi Mebler ualR!q wtil
nine points.
The Golden West junior
varstty wa1 also vlctoriom,
winning ~18.
...
Wen it snows,
it
• ltlnWl'I' .... ~ Ill, ··-...
"
Pilot Pigskin
PICKEROO
HARBOR VIEW
CENTER
Sin Jooquin HIHs lteod & MKArthw llMI. ... ..,.,,_
Alld Tiie
DAILY PILOT
BE A PROPHET FOR PRORT
Top Weekly Prln In
Men:llmldlH Certlflcafft
For W11kty 5'cond
Plac1 Wlnntr
Each few Tlllfd, Fvw1•
and Fifth Place WINMl'I
Plus IONUS PRIZE ..... -..... _ ..... _,_..__
DwJ .................. Csa:My et ... eMY MOT,
a. 1 p;9s•;n propl>et for profll. l'loy tho Piiot P'tfS•l•
PICKEROO 9•m• for w•eltJv priu1. Top wlnNt Heh
we•lc recel••• '25 9lft certihc•t• ff'On'I the tPOftlOrlftf
1hoppin9 center. Secol'ld pl•c• winn•r t-!' SIO c.,..
tificate and third, f°"rth and fifth pl.c• w1nnert each
get $5 certificate. Uch certificate 11 •fMndabl•. just
like money, at eny 1tor• In th• lpoftsoriftf 1hoppln9
center.
Spon1or1hip rotat•• with • different center lpoMOf'•
lng each weelt'1 c:ont•sf. Partici patin9 cenftn •r•:
We1tcllff "•u, 17th tnd Irvin•, N..-port k•ch;
Harbor View C•nftr, San Joaquin Hilf1 Road •rHI
MacArthur Boulevard, Newport a..chr Ustbhtff
Village Ctnftr1 E•stb&uff DriYt, Newport INch; lly·
side Center, laysida Ori•• and JamMrH RoH, New·
port IHch: ind Un lvonity Por• Shopplllf c...t.r,
Cul"•' •ncf Mlch•l10n, lrfh••·
W•tch lot this pla.,.r's fonn t1<h WM• In tfto DAILY
PILOT Sport1 S•ction. Circl• the +t•m you thtnlt wf"
win in ••ch r.•lrin9 In the list of JO ,.,..., and tend in
the pl1y•r'1 °'"' entry Wa11li: or a r••sonablt ftc1imil•.
Thon witch tho DAILY PILOT oports po901 for t1ch
•••k'1 list of fiY• wlnn•rt.
B1JLES
1 ........ ..., -.... tr• r1111 1tll......,.. If ••..., ..................... 111111 11• .......... -................ ...................................................... ..........................
L .... •' •1 '11..0T ,,,.._. PtaCI ... COll'flrr, ,_ D•111 ,, ....... a... .... CA.-. L_, .. _., ............ ..... ........... _, __ .......... .. .........
._.. " .. MM.'Y """°" ......... t _... W I I f p.
L PM'tk ..... 4* II h ... 06.ll'f,,.,.,. __ ... - -..... ..-............ .
t. Tll lllMal M.M• Mt1' 81 •UID .. OI ltfTIY • Y9tOr.
•••••••••••••••••••• • ENTal' 8LANK • • a.. .... ,.. ........................ . • •
, ................ _....... .
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
LA Rw YI New Orlma111
Homoti YI San Dflto
NY ..... YI D1trolt
Clndnnall YI Clilcato
Ml1111nota YI ~
Grlltl lay YI WcnllhMJtoii
San FT•iclsco YI Dalas D•-YI .........
Ka-City YI 011ila11ll MlclikJ.. YI Olilo S1a11
~ YI N111N111a
DanlllOllftl YI ,_
PlllsbunJh YI '"'" 5c.s, .. ., ... ,
TCU YI llc1
T-AlrM YI Tn• 1 ...... , YI T•••••N
LSU YI Aorlclo
Yai. YI HarY•d
M••• YI T-Tldi
layloJ YI SMU
ConMll YI PrfilCllOft
MlnilllOla YI WkcOllll11
10-srare YI Oldi111111111C1 ~
lllnols YI Iowa
MMmcm,yt,i.cti.G YI Mlanll (Fla. I
In•-YI '•d•• Sad .. INlcll YI lie H11llo
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Every~ne ·Has
Somethin g That
Someone Else Wants
DAILY Pl:llaT CLASSIFIED •DS
\• f 1 ' ' 0 I -, •' • '
'The Biggest Marketplace on ttie . Oragge _Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
; ·You Can Sell It,
Find It, Tred e'1t
·Wit h a Want Ad
' '
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A114ti# • Slllfd,
~ lllASSOCllTES
REALTORS
2t121EASTcoasT~Y
CORONA DEL MM.CAUi'. A lJMVUf tou:
-~~TTHOURSITASTS -COST· MES& Oc.. View """' RAILER ,. " From t1U 4 bedloom ..,.,.
LOVERS .. 5 neat houle• on a huare Jot. on tee~ with me warn'itb
WE HA VE THE HOME Each home wilh _...te of beam,ct celllnp, aanct
FOR YOU -First aaraae. yard & laUlldry bluled -uaed ""''"
Ume room. Choose )'OID' home and heavy ,iw;;; rooCA
SOUTH OF HIWAY, ~M 644·7270 MESA VERDE MODERN
This is a family home with a master suite
that's 19'x25' (that's big). There's also a
formal dining room, a super living room and
a family room you'll never want to leave.
Deep pile shag, rock fireplace, wet bar and
all that! This four bedroom home is excit·
ing. You should see ii al $lj7,500.
to see this one from a 3 bedroom, three 2 tirt'place .in family room u ,
year old 3' bedroom bedrooma or .a.1 bedroom & well u in the 1pecioua nv-'
home on quiet street ttnt the olhera. Great w lnfC "°'*°' Priced Ill only
in Newport. 5 Garages ~~ and r><ie<d •nl> 1119.SOO. Call m.asso.
2 cmrts. Offered Thll'54i5880 <Open Eve1.> ®TIPE REAL
al '58, · , ESTAI &RS
ConvenienUy located , well designed 2 bdrm.
home plus small bachelor unit off the dbl.
garage. Fee land (nol leasehold ), zoned R-2 $61,500 . •
Rooni to Roa1n
in this one
2-STORY 4 bedroom, 3 balh home. HUGE
rumpus room that will take your pool table.
PETE BARRETI °"'" ·rL -,,.. : . HERITAGE -REALTOR-. ~ ~~
· REALTORS
"SPLASH" Bl& CAHYON 2 brick fireplaces, builtin kitchen, large yard
& room lo store your boat. VA NO DOWN
Spectaclllar
. View For Lease
Coast.line, Balboa. Wand and
PeMlnau!a. Sparkling ll<hts
of Pavilion at nl.i:ht . ~tlge home completely
turnlshed with beautiful
things Including llqen, china
and 1ilver. 3 bedroom and
office, 2% bath, private
H&F pool. Large view· Ter-
race with gourmet Bar-b-q.
$1600 per month lease. Call
613-3560.
Looking for an immaculate
family garden home with
Over 18,000 sq. It. of lovely VIEW hom.,.sile
in STATUS location! Price in fee (not lease-
hold ) $59,500 Lofty
$39,950.
*
c .. tt1et UNIQUE HOMU OF MIU YllDI -146-ltff
A ...... ef HM McC,..,
U~l()UI: li()Ml:S
~as! a;ed ha:teft~
with all terms at $216,000: 3
huge bedroo1Tl5, 2 luxurious
baths, cl08e to freeways and
shopping. Call The area'!! top proressionals
are at your service. 675• [~mas~ .. Toivnhousel!!!-!!!!!!!!-!!!l!!!R!iEA!!!L~ES!!!T!!!A!!!TE~!I!!!--!!!!!
Enjoy this two-story townhouse and your General General
own private patio. Large, loft, master. suite
& bath upstairs. 1 bedroom & bath down·
stairs. Builtin Kitchen . A fun place to live Newport•Outstancllng
Harbor View Home, offering all the refine-
ments lhal make a happy . fanilly! 4 Lge.
bdrms., 3 baths, lush carpeting & drapes,
family rm. w /brick fireplace, paneled in
choice wood & a wet bar. Profess. land·
O ·W ,\C l(~•I t I
Realtors 545--St91
Open Eves.
IUHtOIM!~ Of f'Ml COlWIU CO.~
CAMEO SHORES
"PRIVA.TE BEACH"
333 MILFORD • OPEN L-5
CUSTOM bullt 4 bedroom,
2'ii bath 'l't!Sidence. An opp.
to ~ a quality prop at
a most nlodest prlce.flS 000.
646-3921-or Eve. 6~1 Gu_
General !or only .. . .. .. . . ............ $23,000.
AUSTIN·SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCIATES
644-7270
s<'ape design. See !his house soon -offered GONE
* * * *
al $74,WO including lhe land!
WITH THE WIND
JlnJa !J6/e General General
* *
ROWNG HILLS
Beautiful 3 bedroom, 2 bath
Condomonium in Laguna
HUis. Assume 7% loan and
move in before Chrlstmaa.
Only $25,500. U pg r a d e d
complete. Loch enmye r
Rl'.llrU! Co099e. Park Beauty 1a what you'll find u,...; wait ~ COATS
TAYLOR Co This large Mesa moilel ·home, lying behind too long to see this beautiful
101 Linda Isle Drive • a courtyard & wrought iron gate, has 4 4 bedroom home in · & 1---------,
Lo I 5 R b bdrm' & de 0 I t I d I d Baycre•L 2,500'sq. ft. In Im-WALLACE COR~• DEL MAR ve y B ., 4 a. home wi th downstairs · · a n, c mp e e Y remo e e maculate condition on a REALTORS .....,.
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
waterfront mstr. suite & Ige. game rm. or kitchen. On lush , lndscpd. grounds. It is huge lot in the best area of COTTAGE stud~. Mexican .tile floors, beam ceilings, LIDO ISLE -$74,900 squeeky clean, ready to move into. Offered Newport Beach. Price Jwt -~141-Perfectly bnmac., prof.
quality construction, slip ..... , .... $l 55,000 Immacu late 3 bed room, 2 bath home on a at $39,500. ra:tuced from $67,500 to 1 •••'0.;p.••n•E-von~in•g;.•.>.. decorated doll hoU!le in
F C .1 1 1 choi~e Lido Isle corner lot. Brigh t & sunny CORBIN MARTIN $6l,950. ! 1 ~~· i 8!!nnfu;· :::: or omp ete n ormation & with a lge south patio. Excellent condition. • NO mauer what you've been "'·alk to beach. $66,500.
On All Hornes & Lots, PleaH Call : Mast.er bedroom opens to patio. Owner will told before we believe all Trlona Bergin d 1 / I Realtors 646-m.I thiogs a.re possible to tho6e COLDWELL. BANKER BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR conSJ er ease opllon. mme d. possession. ~ w .. tcllfl Drive who believe. Fo< the borne R<alto" 644-2430, 833-<J'iOO "Our 27th Yoar" REALTORS 644·7662 Open 'till 9 PM you wan• for the '8le you 550 Newport Cen)er D<. ~34...,1 "l'Ba""ys""ldtl"'"''"'Dr• .• ,.Sv....,it'"•!'!l,;,,N,..,.8,.· ...,,.6,.7u...,16;,,1~J WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Rea1tors 1"."'"'"'~"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'l""'"'~"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"' CHOOSE YOUR ~~ ~2643now. a"'·i=-=-::::-::::-:::::::::::::::::::::::l•!ZJ ,o.. __ .,. __ r•_I _____ . ,_Ge_n.;.or_a_l ______ I 2111 San Jo~uln Hiiis Road lbononl ~-I FUTURE H Serving Ou• ot State Clleots NEW LISTING
,. ,-~N~E~W~P~O~~~~~-~,~~::_:-=~~~~liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ;-="";;;'.:'~lD;;;--1 OME W.A. El\.l!ryrlse• Inc. In CCH'Olla 0.1 Mar Meredith Gardens $25,750 ;; RT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 .. '•RGE 5 BR. iwo.otory spect. * HAWAU * A little Jewel located on General General WWL Spyglass. $l22,cm. . IN COSTA MESA Waterfront st. in old CdM. 3
4 BedrOOlllS . -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;! -EASTSIDE-FAMILY HOME 4 ~~· bopool, fi~ 500''"" 1-•--1 4 BR. 2" ba BR. plus ••t. qtrs. Recently 1 N Do T H T rk -SPECIAL · yon ar r V1ew. """' • ,........,._ poo; nr: ' redecorated by top derdgneJ. l y2 Baths o wn erms ave u ey HOUSE + DUPLEX $38 500 • BR, ,an1en rourtyml; gr. PaJat1a1 estato. owner anx-8 't n1 ~· •
Prime <Dita Mesa location. By this crystal clear pool TWO SEPARATE HOMES _ • view. $74,500 ious, will trade. Best k>c. toa:.~ ,Y· B~AN.500KE. R.· 3-Car Garage Assume apr loon now on with jacuzzi and e:icciting EASTSIDE on a large lot 66' x 770'. Immaculate condition with 4 4 BR. "Sandpiper" -brand ~.:)(XI. Realtors,'."~. 833-0
Look at the combination of property and your monrhly gas tire pit bar-b-q to help COSTA MESA I-HOME-faces 16th Place, apack>ua bedrooms, all eJec-new. $79,900. bALbOA BAY PROP. 550 N"1iott Center Dr. ,.
features in this home! Huge installments are legs then keep you cozy. Surrounded $20 OOO THE OTHER _ faces 16th bic bulltJn kt t c h e n, La.Vera Burns --·-* 642·7491 *--· A
walnut-paneled family room not. Farm 11t,yle kitchen, 3 by maintenance rree patio 1 Street, C.M. Call for details =w=-~ilfu.ei=. Re~~:.~ DUPLEX-BY OWN"
with 1tone fireplace, fonnaJ bedroOms. com PI e I e I Y and very private lllock wall. Unbelievable butitrue! Needs how to buy. Sun coated windows. Room 550 Newporl Center Dr. B.alboa · Penin1ul1 708 Larkspur, remodeled &:: r= :im~~~ =1:: ~=~2 co~J pa~\:S~ Jex:~~·~ mo:~ =~u::iuta ~~~1se 00~ $54,500. tor boat or t r a 11 er · I"""'""'""""'""'""'""'""'' ! •• ·;.;·;.· .,;-;;;;.·;.;;·-;;·;;-;;;;:::;:;.~ I ready 10 move in. Shutters;
In prestige neighborhood, Boat gate to rear yard. with detached do u b I e plus 2 bachelor units for on-Sprinklers front It rear. ' ' ""EST BAY beautiftd new kitchen, bath
very cl<WJe to elementary Wide d r I v e w a Y . Brk garage on slow traffic ly $3) 000? S d . Ne" port Prestige Costa M e II a I~ & carpet. $66,500. 673-1658;
school, park, tennil CO\trts 54()....1120. street. All this is available terestin'.g'!' PH. f~ru~mpl~~ _,, location. Brk 540-lnt. =--w th pi•~ .. ~losli~, BR. ~6'°15-"""16=16~. --~---· and beach. Prefer to sell with lmmmlate pouession d tallJ •f r '""5l l.'Ol'uer -u t. ;. BY 0 w n er. Spe!ctaculu
quickly. $49,900. Plea_, e In Costa Mesa, convenient --Open Eves. Realty Company Jiorue &: gin. suite 011 gar. Spyglass Hill forever view
phone S46-23U. to shopping are&... 4For Fairview U-r 8av11 Finest ~t v~ue 1;, 11~·~· from t:hl!! kururious, new 4 $34 !£J0 Call 646-nn. 2955 ,..,.... 1 ...... a v .... uc or ..._,.....,. Bdrm. Medltt. home. Seft. ~ Rai:.bor. Costa Mesa • · 646-1111 Harbor, Co11ta Mesa Spacious 2-atoey 5 BR .• 3 J:;ugene Vreeland. d'-' ~ ,..
5 BEDIM.
$42,000!
Beauty with every comfort to
oUer for large lamlly living
& entt.rtai.ning! Lup fami·
ly room bout.s elegant
fireplace, builtin kitchen, appliances. dishwasher. EX·
quisite deep p added
carpet.J.,., w a 11 paper
decorator accents.· N e w
water 801tner. Beautilul
potn Frelhly pointed.
Heavy shake root .
Beautifully landocapod. Brl<
541>-tm
• bath -FR -formal DR. CUl...D_Wlill..., BANlCER sU-l'Ofo room. ...... 950.SJ0..1050
UNHAf!PY r•THB: REAL~ (anytime) c.-Over 2100 Sq. tt. End of R<altors 644-2430, 833-0700 _
EMPLOYEE BSIAT&Rd ~,~;r.~mrr:1:::::::::1 -...... qulet cul*aac. Lois Egan 1.,.,;550""'N"'ewpor"'"""'',;;"'"'n"te"',.;"'..,·.,.JHARBOR View Hills, beaut. 11 i'°'' that lho doesn't llke <ffii 'ii t PM GORGEOUS 3 Eastsldl -(PI9) 1, ocean vU,w 3 Br, 211 Ba,
her Y.'Ork; she doesn't Buv! I ;lla;;;;y;;shorM;,;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I ci~•n=,:~=1'19"7'•-'500'-·----Il30--Ev-I
Ufl<lerstaQll . why her home1---------$29 950 Ontu -1 -···--;;;; ....... IUB. ~-•t .,td ' W·'t Mat'n-• lmBRine a cute 3 •-•-m, 2 Cosio -~. 3 ·eeru-:,m. t!( Beautifully upgraded 3 bathhomeinEaa;';jd~sta 642-8235 "4-620tl BAYSHORE DR. 1.0="-'=:;;...----I
baths. Excellent Acee". bednn., 2 bath home located ~~21 Me11 for •nit $25,500 -1:::::::::::!:::1!:::::::::::!::::1::::::::::::: HOME BEAUT. CHEAPIE
.\uumE!' 5*% Loan .. Owner Realty Company ~ excellent 31a o~. c:ta ~~:'1u~ ~ -~ NEEDED AT E Spacious rooms • n ea r COLl...EGE PK. J29
May'Help Finance. ~ffcred LINDA ISLE rl~ =ledtlt~mil~tcrm~: every-other home on the ONC private beach. 3 BR., Im· 3 BR, 2 BA, big yard.'
for $32,500. Call 646--05a.5. BAYFRONT both balh11 have elegant block. See ll today. Won't be TWO SALESPEOPLE macu1ate no m e w/very OPEN HOUSE ~ I Bcautilully appointed -fl<'W 5 pulmans, cozy used brick * 8-UNITS-Room for 4 there kine. 646-nn. Contact office mana&er, let's = J~ly nn. $64,SOO. Sat, & Sun. E···~4 . !: ~=~r~~E~·~¥: ~t&:~i~i:Z!~or~~ :-~BDRM HOME!:~: ~ALL~:~E 11<~~~~:~00 H&ll.Y<':°=·t~~.
" , ~ Luxurious mast" •ulte. kids to play. Don't mi,. It APr. _ Euulde. $4~ ISO. (~UNTl.pR~ l Newport
wfF/P. Gallery entry with priced t $29950 Red ~ >e:B" tPMo~ Corona .dol "-r
sua$tOIAll' Of THt <otwtll co. stained brick Door, Maxine Carpet, ~ton'~. ~ 2 BDRM. DUPLEX & m-..
MESA. VERDE Wllllanu, 642-8235. 11'21). ESTATE PRIVACY BACH. APT. UNIT -ABANDONED ! ! ! F11.....W
Enjoy 2!.1. Acre• of Lake East.side. ~1,500. Owner tn.nderred to Phoen-CORONA DEL MAR
ORIGINAL View Property with a ix! Vacant 4 bed., 3 balh. I ~!!'!'!""'!!~~~~~ DUPLEX 64Mlll
When construction was bet· 642.a235 644-6200 Newport Beach Addreu. 1797 ORANGE AVE., C.M. condo! Carpeting, drapes, Most attractive home plus (~
tcr, the equipment morei'::z::::::::z::=:I Large 4 Bedroom, 2 Bath PHONE: "2-l m builtins, patio, oversized aharp, new 2 bdrm. apt. A s~. the owner added iD-li Home . Ottered for $225,000. a:a.rage! Ideal for kids ~ must to aee. $79,500. Mary *STAR of the EAST*
_ Harbor, ~--M.,. 1ulauon, •n Intercom, an SOMETHING Call 646-«;;5. PRESTIGE large family room . recrea· Lou Marlon "· dean I -'-=-=="-'~=~=--"='-I olarm .,..iom, a """""' c . tlon center A pool Included! COLDWELL. BANKER New~ led Eu1'1d Ds:P=~~, ~ 1f,~~f'~ A~~n~;~~~~~~~ ll!!I ~Ttrl "M~:6.:::DE" ~~0~'"·~ ~;;;:.:;;:: ~];1izi~~
TARBELL
Uf)Rrade bclore you move iil. bedroom8• 2 bathJ & ramily -~-·~A beautiful home ln "?o.1mf' liij• day at 56-8424, sOUti'a
W-•• to --•,·.. ~-room located on _,, •• 110 · condition. King 1 I zed Sharp 2 bdnn. home OOAST .REALTORS. J
lllUli ~ .... ,,.... • , , .... ..,. • "" """" •Ua1101A1 Y o• 1Ht <0Lw1u. co. bedrooms, 2 e I e Ran t 1 I 1 I R·2 Lot 4 BR, 2 Ba-·· Faml'" 11nd family. $31,950, Call street just a block from ..,,. MS-2313. elementary school. New fireplaces. Large family MESA VERDE F.A. heat, frplc, II ta 11 /lrpl Roo for
carpe" & dmpeo, Full price SEE HAWAII? ~,,.. .. for h ~I J':' 1 "~~ fM 5081 2838 T•bago Pl., C.M. ~R'C:-.&"R~L TY P.., . On. mFortln ':i'~·
(eTHIE •!AL~ ~i.i~ble with VA tcnn1 Spectacular 180• view of tertainlng ideal here near ... , • BY OWNER . Open daUy 1·5 673-6642 '75-6459 642--500:). D tA!l m Call 541)--1151 ()pen Eves Harbor and Catalina: 3 bed-the sparttll':, b Q l 1 t • l n 3 BR sharp Pace!etter, 1" BY Owner • Nice 3 Br., 1<
CHNL!f!\•PM :::·r!:.°A'~U: =~ic~th.~~ SWIM POOL ::tionA'~t!an~~~ ~tra-=~~r ~·~~&nn.ews
lack Bay for a POOL. S7U,OI)) • Don't drapea. Bric S«>-ln>. Well malnWn!d home with 3 poll. $43,500. 5t6-2'l59. 5 llnes, 5 daya for 5 buckl. 60--2!12. • let thil otie riet awa)'I spadoua be d r o o m 1 , 3 =.;:,;;:=:=;:::::;=::==:..;i;;;;;=::;;:=;=::=;;:;:=::._~;;;;;======I
J Bedroom • cute home on ~ aeparate bathl, deluxe built·
tJ'ff shaded Rlvenlde Or.'"''""""'""'""'""'""..,""' in k Itch ell, dlahwuber.
I =======:::1 nty $28000 1" ~ Eleriant fireplace . 11 CUSTOM UNns
0 ~1::" ~~!:.~RS-/"_,_'IV fum ~~~Hc;E;A ~~~~~-uk~fa~:
.... •• llOI M... '-"' llU.,,21 OWNER U'1lM!omd, loveb> .,_CIAL
Six cwrtom 89Ml9h 1t)llC1 •'.11 •Vmf• Dr. East. ~ area. 11lfuatcd on a quiet ~5 • • • '
rental unltl, Enst1tdeo.ta .,..ws;i. Costa Ml!tll. ~ 11 o.li--Ot"-Ac 1 trret . 3 $31 000
Meaa. 2 Bedroom1 fireplace. **•*'* SSl-'130 * Oct-.an llOUM! • Newport bedroonUt 3 RpM"Btc bathS • •hake roof, bui lino, a•~ (Open Evenfnp> Shon'a. < B<tnn. Walle to elepnt tin,slace len<lo od'. YA APPRAISED
agn. Beautl.tul low main· -ocean. $39.llll. dcd dwm· to the. ltvlng Immaculate 3 bedroom 2
tenance. Near new. 1'1.111 $1500 moftl you 1n 11 1 • 4 BDRflt, 2~ hath, 3 cat room, Farm style kitchen, bath wHh aep&ttte ~ly
price. $103,00J. Sclla Pl.)'I an C011ts. And this ear, on " cre111 wllh a IOftdll of M1pboardt •nd ~k 15x30 family room (1800 1141.
CAU. *-Wl Opon £\;ta. ~ hu lt all, built-In view, near ocean. SM,900. In )M'nley. RAnge, oven & h ) tropicll landlCBPi.nK All
kildwa. •new ca r pt I , 1733 Wttt llff Dr., N.8. wutir:r. BRK, $ 2 • , ~ 0 0 , thll fl."ll' only s:l87 per ~nth
tlrep&.ce, double aange. SG-1221 !.4G-l12t. with no money down to vets.
coVtted pttlo, new paint Jn-Call · HE RITAGE
l?F Al TORS side end ""~ beautifully BUILDER'S 4 BediOOlll MIMI
''W!l!!!l!l!!l!!!!llllll!!!l!!!l!!!!!-l landlcapod llof>t and mr. ATTENTION 2 ~·~ ~ .. ~, ~. .. Out:ttandlrw • a I u II at v R 2 k>C 30x90 -'"' .. ~ --$29,500. Act now 11 "'OO't acanl • ' • 11"" bM pnp, new caJ'PICI • Re It 545-0'6S
-' ' ....... ,,
HERi' lllAL
TUllKIY s.u.• Cnrtttd It nl!f'dl: work but
11'1 In a pr!-. Mclud«I
-ntlAI -~ th&I ~tr!~J.9·2~
..... atrium ner,, floor IO
nllref!:'.i. I b I i a ltltcben ... --.--... bt-bar, :s beds-IU1te v~ ... ""8 I dioJ.
Ill b••
' ,
last. call Red Cal'pet. lo the oqean, Newport dl'll.pta. I m m e d I • t e a on
n ••• 1 ,,,_ ____ -.. &\tch. $45,000. popee .. \nn. F.ut Co 1 ta ()pea Evel. ~~ on. ~ c.Jl: 673-3663 919-318& Ewt. M .. o. 128 500. SPLIT LIVIL
Roy MCCardle RMllW l'IX LT AND SAVE $$
1110 N"'1'0" Blvd., C.M. 810 SPACIOUS 4 bedrm LIDO ISLE'
RMsonably Prlud associated
"lllO'o'.FAS llEl'I LTOllS.
l01~ W lolboo •11 l ••l
L New llJI~: I BR. on Wukrn. 35' Lo!. a.ms. "f· din. nn., !&"· pollo. $7 ,Stl).
2. Neor dub ~ -~ 4 IR -$3B,500 LowH! price ; Bii. I bo., Walk bea h li'.R, m,:ioo to c • tennl• It
Charlene Whyte pools. 2-Sty ., rrple., ~ ..
roLDWEl..L BANKER drpe., bilna, t Pftrioli.
RHlton 6*24lfl, 833-0100 CAYWOOD REALTY
lilll "'""°" oier or. * 548-1290 *
•
J41.772t home with ...2 be Iha, elec.
&e _ __ bu\Jl.ln ldtchen, I o v e I y
Ylr9lnla Wffl Tell ~~n::r~!. i:.~ ~=
.•• Yoo about the11e lovtly --.r, Iola of potenOal., need• homca. 4 UR.. 2 batht + ~-! •• ~~ 3 BR. minor deftn up lo be vt':fY ,!:"'uu1~°';'j34 950 ' sMrp. Value pl'fttdl Cal~ REAL ESTATE Rat Ctlrpet, Rtaltor1 ,
TREASURES 1,;=146"08640."""-,....,....-,--.,,-.,,,,....,.
11.11 weitcnri. N.e. 66mO ~ ~~\:raPUor &'::~
Ntred a "Pad"T i!lllC'll an ad l Ad. 64~ .=::::..:::,:::_ __ _
TARBELL
2!li6 Harbor, O:llta Mt"Sa ·
Newport Hell)hts
Duplex
$27,500
Two quaint one bedroom
apartmenll with RCOd in-
come In dfflnble Newport
He!Dta. To M c1ll 64&-'ll7L
HOUSE HUNTING??
Here It It .. \'~!to lute l y
be1utllUI 3 h . vim, 2 bath
home only 3 . old. II ha.I
a \'tty roo· h ul lf .tn
ldtcht.n. ul)lrnded carpets
ind dr1pet, lute 2 car
.,.,...., qu~t cul<IHlc lo<.
Thia home is rtal1y tpt!IHS,
owntr uklrw $21,500 . MAKE OITER · 8UT
DON"f MISS rr. call Rod
Carpet, ~altors S4&-ll«l.
$@~4U~-L&t-trs·
The Pun/• with the Built-In ChucJ.le
I • jVI Al L IE NI I ? While It -• si lly to ....,.
_ _ _ _ _ _ tion It now, this country W01
,_ _______ founded •• 0 "'"'""against I. W 0 0 RAT , .. ~---"-.., ..... 1,_1~~ . l'I l'I Iv ~;;~ ... ._; _.,_ YoV .,.q, 1,,.. .., No. 3 below!..
s r~.~~~u. r r r 1· ·r r 1· r 1
6 ~r:=,~ umos1 I I I I I I I I
...
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SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CWSlflC.ATION 700
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THIOUBH A
DAILY PILOT
WAIT AD
142-5171
\
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CAI.II
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DAILY l'ILOT J 9
c_ .. _._, _______ 1,Hunt~~!'!!'!'!iiiiiiiii~l~H~ch~-~H~~~~iii:i•li;;oiiriiohiiiiiiiiiit~-~::--lo-K-=-h-~-=-Ne.;.,w...:"'°'":"rt_l;.;•-::rc.;.;,h~--c;::::lumr llG C~::lvm1 HO Money~;,;,:..,;.;to;,..,;;;Loo;11o;"-...:;;o;I
MESA Verde, on aolf '°"""·I• 1-:;;;;========:;;.llsU D Loans Beaut • BR. 3 BA, Fam WISH...,. YOU A aaanv TllA1111l'flMUP Pre-Grand Opening Sale! 1-Rm, Form Din Rm. Lr& uv · llQI Mrr 1 n1W11111n11 ~='~.im.bl~~ s23 ,500 STOP PAYING RENT!!! 2 ~;f'TDEL:ns
Fount•I• Volley 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, oversized double garage, Walnut <-uare Condomlnl-cement driveway, large fenced lot, 8 years '"'I $48,750 new, electric built-in range&oven, dishwash-
$HORECWT er, eaUng bar, dining room, fonnal Uvlilg
Design tor yoWw executive room, wall-to-wall carpets, drapes, FA' heat.
family llvlrc and extensl,. large palip with 11-B-Q, payments less than :.'r~m. ~ 2: rent, won't last.
=;-=~"'!I~'< SINGLE PERSON CONDOMINIUMS ~~'tus1o ian11°::;a."1ng•~ Lovely German llicly would like to sell her I
low maintenance rear yard. bedroom condo. This home is in excellent ·-$51,495 Finest bull-in k 11 c h e n , cond. Crpts, & drps. like new, cheery kitcb.
dishwuher. Fo<mal dining & din. rm. Price also inc. refrig., wsbr. &
room • plan -holiday dryr. Min $850/Down, paymts. of '173. COV· ~~~~ F~~~ ers all. Ideal for single person, close to
Lofty living awaits you!
Act swiflly
car garage. Brk 842-2561. shopping.
~~~~~~~~~
TARBELL VILLAGE REAL ESTATE
lo select your own
Newport Beach condominium.
Visit the temporary offices of the
Newport Crest lnforma!ion Center,
MqnoUa 6: Talberl
Fountain Valley
S31·5llDll (open evu.) 531.saoo
conveniently located at
2400 We st Coast Highway
Suite B, Newport Beach.
HAPPINESS IS
HOME! $33,900!
Huntln,iton llN<h Huntln,iton llffch Open Daily 10 a.m. to sunset.
First time ottered and Its a
beauty with 4 spacious
bedrooms, a11 electric push
button built-in k I t ch e n ,
TOYS
NOISE
.BOYS
Jr. Estate
$39,500
el~ant fireplace in RJ'&Cious There's room for all three
living room. New plush pad-and more in this beautifully
ded shag carpeting, freshly decorated 4 bedroom 2 bath
painted. Easy maintenance bolne with large ' added
yard. Prime location. l.D\-e-!amily room. N i c e I y
ly pa~ too! Brlr:, 962-8865. landscaped with mature
Exquisite Oriental deslgn
rear yard. Subtle elegance!
Lavish use of Palos Verdes
stone facade. planters lend
added Chann to t h I s
beaWful 2 story home. \Valk
to schools and parks from
thls spadou.s 4 .. bedroom.
CracioUA living room enhan-
ced by massive fireplace,
deluxe bulltin k I t c h e n ,
dishwasher. Lovely patio for
relaxing or entertaining.
Brk!J62.&566.
TARBELL
Hamilton l Brookhurst
Huntington Bch.
e HOUSEWIFE'S
DREAM• ·
All Oil one floor, 3 BR, big
ldtcb w/loads of cabinet.a,
custm floor to cell firepl,
dbl door entey, big la""""' rm, encl patio. Lot big
enough for 2 pools. Even
has a tioat gate, OJl cul-de-
sac lot. Only $32,500. No
down t 'd.
REALT5TATE FAIR
536-2551
$32,750!
Most appealing 3 bedroom &:
den home. Gracious large
living room with inviting
fireplace, zoonnel's pride &
joy built-In range, oven It
dWlwa.sher, formal dining
area. Jr. estate grounds •
loads of privacy! Lush low
maintenance landscaping.
Prime Fountain V a 11 e y
location. Brk 962-1373.
TARBELL
18884-
Fountain Valley
$36,951
3 BR, 2 BA, 2 frplcs, «lO sq ft
fam nn, formal din nn, lge
patio & yanl. °""' • crptg. 1866 sq ft. °'11 ~ aft
3:~ for appt.
Huntlnvton llN<h
e OLD ENGLISH e
Huge customiied 3 bdrm.
with Italian marble firepl in
huge Uvlng rm., gigantic
tam.Uy rm W /free 1tanding
Monterey firepl. So many
xtru, like elec gar. door
opener, wateraonener1 huge
back yard patio ana rear
entrances. It looka like a
Ho~ setting • walk to CountrY C1ub J: horse
stables. $36,600. REAL ESTATE FAIR
536-2561
CUSTOM
DECORATED
. . 3 Bedroom, 100\.~ln
condition, 9C~te laundry
room, nice pet.lo, big trees
and l!leCluded neighborhood.
treff and plants. Detached
garage and boat storage
yard. Only $29,CKX>1 •
FHA/VA 5% down. Call
11;12-2535.
FOR
THANKSGIVING
WE WISH YOU
Would you look at thiJI cap-
tivating Pi'Httge home .. Just
listed by our office at a
price you can't afford to
pass up. Some of it's
outstaoding features include
huge spacious living room
with fireplace, family size
kitchen, 2 baths and 4
bedrooms. Total payments
$llll.OO per month. 847-&110.
HOUSE FOR A
SUCCESSFUL
MAN
Are you looking for a
substantial home? Stately 3
bedroom home Is situated
only 1 mile from the ocean.
This lovely family home
features a fonnal dining
room, cathedral <!eilings,
Pa1os Verde fireplace, thick
shag carpets, and beautiful
wallpapering, And you must
see the landscaping. . .
Price only $41,00J. Call
NOW. 842-2535.
ATIENTION ALL
TY FOOTBAl;L
WIDOWS
TARBELL
Adams I: Magnolia
HuntingtQn__Bch.
Spiral Staircase
Hard-t~oome-by! You bet!
"Franciscan Fountains hy
the Sea" S Bednn I: family
nn, 3 tile baths. Over 2600
sq ft or super comfort, up..
graded thruout. Laq:e patio,
prof ldscpd yards, fully
sprinklered for low maint.
Price only $53,900 with only
10% down. 962-8851. .,
BROKERS INC.
-·-
;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•I .. this home needs is your
FORMAL
DINING ROOM
.... Lots or living space plus
E-Z-care yard, room for a
POOL. Step-U\) living room.
k>ts of Wallpaper. 5
bedrooms, $44,650. CALL
968-4456.
artistic green thumb ror it's
front yard &: that finishing
touch will turn it Into the
perfect hnme for the entire
family. 3 Bdrms. & 2 ele-
gant baths. A Lruly magnifi-
cent view of the gracious
blue Pacific. See Cricket!
Taul. $68.500.
..A-Gian
REAL ESTATE
Thill home bas so many ·~ places to hlde your husband .,. . , while he watches football on
the weekends that yoo could
entertain and oot know the !!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!'I 1190 Clenneyre St.
TV wu on. This home baJ 494-9473 a49-0316
many extras loo numberou• $28,000!
to mention. Priced at· Most popular area near IRVINE COVE
$4.5.500. 847-«nO. beach. schools and shopping VIEW
centers. 3 spacious This 3 bdrm .. 3 bath I: conv.
bedrooms, 2'· baths, family den home overlooks the
room very convenient with finest prlv. surfing beach in
handsome fireplace oU the the area. Quality thruout is
.:::=======~I built-in goW'tl"let kitchen, shown by many f i n e dishwasher. Gorgeous features. $195,000. Kathryn
TARBELL
grounds. Brk ~1383. Raulston.
COLDWELL. BANKER
Realtors 644-2430, 833--0700
550 Newport Center Or.
Uve in a
21 acre park
Fabulous I Iv i n g wilh
beautiful Swim pool! Like
new beauty with 4 &Pllcious Bolsa Oi.ica J: Heil THREE ARCH BAY
bedrooms, elegut fireplace Huntington Bch. Superb ocean view • beautiful
in 1arEe family room, built· 1 ---------I decor -Mexican We Doors. in aream kit c hen,1-wood paneling, hri c k
dbhwuher. 3 car garage. CUSTOM tirepla ..... 3 B<lrm• .. 2 baU,,,
BeauWul patio. Garden of FIREPLACE atrium. $135,000 • r·ee. Carol Eden landacapin&! Br k Tatum .
M6-0iOf, , .in a .eparate family COLOWEU.. BANKER
room. Lovely comer Jot, Rea1tors 644-2430, m.-0700
TARBELL room for boat or trailer. 550 Newport Center Dr.
Freshly painted in and out, new w/w crpt&, $28,000.
CALL 968-4456.
w ....
. BROKERS INC. The $42,soo11
DAILY
PllOT
ORANGE ·
COAS.T'S
leading
'
Lovely 2. ttory home with 4
bedroom1, 1tttluded den on
upper I e v e I ove11ooklng
cathedral celling I I v I n g
room with elepnt tirTplace.
3 bedrooms on UJ>Ptt level,
muter IWte on ht floor.
BeauUtul '1"fft. Enjoy swim
pool, ""' 84i.e&lll.
TARBELL1
l8W '8each Blvd.
Hunlinlton Bch.
1714) 645-6141
Take Advantaqe of Our
"NO CLOSING COSTS"
Expires Nov. 26th -Tract 7'°3
30 Day Escrow
• Minimum $950 MoVes You In.
• No Closing Costs.
• Immediate Possession.
IN ADDITION, you get 2 & 3 bedrooms, I'>'
& 2 baths, built-in range, oven , hood, dish-
washer, disposal , iaflividuaJ ..laundry area,
enclosed private garage, private entrances,
choice of carpet color, cable TV, swimming
pool , gas B-B-Q & park-like recreational
area.
PRICED FROM
$11,950 TO $13,450
Wwest ratrt...()raMt Co.
"WE BUY TD'S"
Siltier Mtv. Co.
642-2)71 54.5-0611
Strvtng llarbor area 21 )TS.
2nd TRUST DEED LOANS
Will ...,. Trust llftdl
•BROKER 60-1491* -----------]e
HOVHI Furnithod 300
B1lboe Penlnsuil
3 Br, 2~ ha, all new inttt.
~ler ttnLal.
<I) 1179-5991
$130 -tmL PD. illt Bach nr
ocean. Full kitchen. New .., ...
UXI • UtU pd. 2 Br., frplc. 2
blks beach. Child/small
pol.
S325 • RIGHT on Sand! 2 Br.
2 Ba. Avail Yearly. NU.VIEW RENTALS
67l-4030 or 494-3248
Newport llN<h
y
I
•• . . '
20 DAIL V PILOT r......,, Now-n, nn
( l~i=_::-lr;el [ -b--l~ l ··· ··-l~-L ..:~ ..... )~ .__I -..._-_·-__.!~ ! ,... ··~·-.!tr .__[ _:::_· JP i·, ~ -!fl -·-----~ -~~~~~--~;!·: :;;;;;;;;:;;;~~~ I•--I '----:.:-=:::~~ ---
l~Ho=-;;:;;...;;;U;;.nf;.;:""'=·-...;30=5'<..;•.;.,UMt.;.c;.:....;U;;.Mvnl.=.;.;;..-;;;30;,:.5 Ap11. furn. UO Apt, Unfurn. ~.~P.!· .~~!_~~-=---. US AP..!· .~ntvrft. MS ~ ,, ...... im w., P~.r1an1lt 5'o
..,.,.. Point .. ~· Uftfvm. 365 ....... v..w·-;:-:;;·~~ wi .u~. "IUNOU SPUUTIJAusr t General General li>tthMt• Pe11tn1ul•
ThoM Aro Just A Few Of Our MANY RENTALS
$105 -NEEIJS FIXlN ! 2 BR. Collage. Huge
yard for k(ds & pets .
* * * $145 -BY THE SEA ! l BR. Furnished Col·
tage. Fenced yard. Utilities paid.
* * * $145 -WALK ·To BEACH! 2 BR. Home.
** 3 ROOMS W/bay \ltcV.'.
$170 mo. Incl. ulll.
67~
~§Tlill=~10~.~,~. 2 le ! -BR aptt:.
Yellt'ly. SlZI to S.iOU lilt>.
~hall, Re~ty-67H600
Capl1tr•no Beach • ¥• _....,...
WlN'f~R rental Sn1ack on
the a.and, on ~liuttfu!
Capi.Jlr&O Beach, Duplex. 2
!:»", .l."9 bll. 4:,1().;t:).1.i.
Corona del Mar
i'v1t n1an, hli•:uclor
clOl>C lO !i.iOPll, ~JC>.
tM·i'IOI ----Co.t• MeM
apt.
General Gonorol
EL CORDOVA APIS.
From $145
1 .. l --lllshwa.her • Shag c.;arpetlng · Walk-in Clos-
ets, Forced Air Heat · 1':xlta Largo Ruoms •
BeauWul Game Room • Heated Puol · BllC.i' ..
Enclosed Garages. Quiet surroundings and
clo•e to •hopping. (Nr Harbor & Hamilton St)
Adu)t Llvl"tl ·No Pott.
1077 Chorlo St., Costa MoM 641-4470
' -HACIENDA HARBOR
F""" $154
l>EI.UX.E 1 & 2 llt:UHOOMS
Furnished A Unfurnished
·-----Mownort llaoch .... ~ •• ..., ..... _,, Let lhll ad ch&np ,..Ir w~a:; ~BR. ocean vtew·I·;;-~-~.._ _______ ,,.,.,.w~·l u tv \&, \..W· wboltoutlookonllfefgrtbe
•P'·• tundeat, ·w/w t.1>4, SEAQJ1T Manet Apta.. 2 ~"'.,,;,), better Proft11lonal adviQe 51&1'· $i::IO mo. &.! La en.. $1&4. Pool, Crp11, rlt,.,., ..... ":.. ---4-1 on IUt. Uc. Readlna1 daily. bl••• -~ d'·pl •K,. vv.•I nvtM ~ 10 AM·lO PM. ... ~. Apt. A. T • J • Pt;;nu!fl£AW. Ask. ab:'t ---· ----·· -----··... 4'UOM, 132 No. !.'I Can lno
Eist Bluff our di1100Unt. Mt-2382. Real, San Clemente.
BALBOA a.,. Cub. Lux * Prlvot,~. Room * .,M REWARD •, • DELUXE • ..,lr<>nt 1 B•. A p: . -.,..
3 li11., :.i1 .liA Apt tor teue. Luft dHlucdon on lona 1\uu1®1.....a't ~ ur Mi;.n F'or the penon WhO tlnds ~
1ncl(I. ,pa.c. mlllltt:r tulle, d1n 1.M, &&5--03.'9 ·vwu, uuu.·auv ...... ,rwu. dOW: or Information leld!J¢
mt Ir. dbl 19J'1.ie; auto door Sin Cltl'l'Mnte •• ...:..:, ..:.U..'l.!l.'iw.l a.;..uu:i~~r.i... to him. Sot Iott column.~
opener avail. Pool 6 --• (.;-.u. Wj··u~ • ~Bl.EM PrtltW1c::Y. con-rtecreation area. $180-2 BR, ~paint, •hae naent, 1ym-p a th etlb
• ;:l /S ~ cptm, be.lcony. Ocean view, --===----•I prqnancy counae~. Aboll
&ia Ami¥Of Way, NH nr beacb & shop'g. 117 i~.L:.L,~ WI.' Nut\:u. don A adoptjona ref. AP-
Iit8.J..li.&(.'li by }J&odon, Apt "A" 492--08'19. rr1v. ik 11.1wly :.1 Hr. Iii>~ CARE. 60-iUS.
\~11..l.JA;., WALTk:RS CO. Apta., Wipl'tV. J*uu. ~ W'. w.i· If )'OW' famil,y curiet out a EU. d Vc.u.t!lll-~nl cue I: any AL· very WWIUll Ouiltmu
W ' esl&ned 2 BR. 2 Ba. Fum. or Unfurn. 370 let~l ltl'\'jl.<e:a r • q ' u . tradlUon call Allllon at
2 Car ~· $300 Month on -~1*· 642-4321, ext. 245 to tell her
Stove, refrig. Fenced for kids & pet.
* * *
Casa de Oro
~ w•U-4•,.._..., ··.n...1..,
\,,.UIUlkil't: UC•Ul"\:: y\JU l"t:lll
L w;,uui u.:ai..,nt:u, lt:at...rui":
... :,pw.:10.a IU•~nen 'lt'IUI tn·
Heated Pool -Garages -Shag <.:arpeling
!Jishwa:;her -AU Ullllties Paid.
Adultt Only . No Pola
141 Avocado St., Costa MoM 646-1204
.)'fllrlL._~_:_644-TUl. Corone clel Mar Vacation Rentals 4~ "•:::ll,.:•:::bou=t"'ll". ~=~=~I l !:!_;;:u~nt;::1"';::;'°";;::a..c=;:h;;;;;:;;I SPACious 2 BR.. beam s;.,0w--~~---5~--aear PALM & CARD READINGS ~ll'1., pool. So. of Hwy. . ~ .. , ~....... "barm ..... . Past, present & futuft. 1
UVER 'l ff? ~,. M h Adu!'· -' _.u • ' _.I.Ii. Advtce & help ln m•nv -·• $200 -ALONE ON LOT ! 3 BR., Built-ins.
Carpets. Drapes. Family or singles.
l.UreCl UgulJlijj;
LANDLORDS!
FREE RENTAL SERVICE
Bi:ACON RENTALS * 645-0111 *
• ;:)i:V<U'l:ht: u.tl ~ IU'CJI.
• 111,1.l.llt:·llJI.~ lhlJ•'~t:
W •'l'IV<!.I~ PlhlUll
w 1..~ a~i: W1 ;c,1ur~e
W •.• oll ult: ~i.l&IWI
w ........ -~ LX.&J"IH.. I
"" • ""' -l>uJ·0t..~U\.:~ -i!IUC-
!:I~~!'!!.~:-. -~30~~ HO!'ses Unfurn. 305 I :~~~~~. wiui i"W.U i.u.u-
H I 0. D. h <\U-.l• "'"le lil.L IU• l.o.::il unt ng~~~~-·--~wport ~ac l...\k.Ul:. 1 litt. ~lll!l
• GREAT Pad! s.... lo THE BLUFFS I "" ' '~ Beach. Small pet. All uUI .,.... \~h •ll•U.:• __ O'U·1:1:
lncl$110. l ror th e dlacrimlnating l W1r:.l:::.K ... Y·M'-'f'4lt1L.Y
ALA Rentals • '45-3900 lc~ee. 4 Bdrml., 2~ balhs. 1 ~xwcwuv.., ~1,11te1 ~Month. I
e SEA Shanty! 2 Br. Stove. re'flia. Klda/petl ok. $145.
ALA Ronlol1 • 645-3900
e 2 BEDROOM, full y
upgraded, xlnt crpta. Inc.
carport, tncd pa.Uo. W!hr,
dryr, retrta. Xlnt loc. $230.
Per mo. Inc pool & t'eCl"tt·
tkln facilities. CAIJ.. Dale
AGT. 962-44TI.
NEW YEAR'S PARTY
?ttove In after Christmas.
Owner already transferred,
wanta h\a family \vltn hull
by Jan. Bia: "S & S" hOM<':
4 BR, 3 BA, huge: paneled
recreatio n rm. Open house
every day BICR. 962-5511
2uoU ..... wporl DIVd. ~'-(;01t• Meta
(': ~ Ml·2'11 urst ~} flJurr .• ~~~~·-:..·~.~ • Bw.·s
f( t\ ~~r W t 1~.t. \Jli.UUt:I V W t UJI •~lt.:•J..!n
.:!414 \'11ila de! Oro W •H: .. 4,,.-J rUOj,
!'llcwpon lieach w '-'w.i~ry i• .caJ1ui: ..
&t+~ ANY 11ME j w 1 , o.. uuuu liCJ.V 11.vltl.il
RARE BLUFFS-t "' • ·~1-:.._~~t:--
E-MODEL LEASE
Large ~ s·ry, J lir, tam r n1, 1
.'1 )-2 ba, ilJli.:. u., lil.Ut l s I
v.1.11 lull up~r .liu.y view.
ti Puerto Mesa
aR'I -~I.JO & UP
r-urn11n.cl Ap11.
All U1111l1e1 t'•kl
----VILLA MARSEILLES
SPACIUUS I A l BEDRDOM APT.
Furnished & Unfurnished
Adult Llvl"tl
Uishwasher color cuordmulea applia nces
Plush shag carpel mitt\Jred wardrube dours-
md1rec.:t l1gblmg m kitchen breakfast bar ·
huge prlvate fenced patio · plush landscap.
mg brick llar·be-\IU•S larie heated pools
& lanai. Air cundlttuning.
1101 So. Brl1tol St., Santo Ano 557.alOO
COLDWELL, BANKER & CO.
MANAGING AGENT
Apt~~n~·---'"UO~ Apt. Unfurn.
Newport Beach Cost• Meu -I ~~;;;;;;;;;; 4 BR, 2 ha., 2 car encl
park'C· w/lndry avail now.
3 BR. 2 ba-turnish«:I Steps to ocean ......... Sl/5
3 BR, 2 Ba . . $285
l BR, 1 Ba Util pd SlliO I 2 BR, 1 Ba, Pentn $2:lO
We Have Winter Rentals
Will Take Students
Alto Oceanfronts AvaU.
CALL' 673-31163
1111
HARBOR GREENS
Fuml1hod A
Unfvrnlahod
From $1311 to $215 mo
8Khelors • I Bdrma
2 Bdrm• e J Bdrm1
I ~ or 2 Full B•th1
Master aiie bedrooltlli w1
.11"11 beam cei..IJJ.ii•, large li11~ rou1n w1~u or IMMED. OCCUPANCY '
New l Br $:00. mo .
lo or1,.. art:li u11 1tu1t:l ..:W· 1
•!t:•l>al:. \,11t, crpti; UU'UUlol,
drps. uppl, blt·i!I "ar, si ... r·
a&i:. l>ci.;r;, J)dUO. l.IOll~ lfJ
pvol $:;50 1nun1J1i,;. lncl. 11.s-
,;..,.:. t..1u..:ti. 1.....1.li l'lll'I , .Stemc1,
~~ .. ., "1"'Y"· ·•Viol., "·'• ! \VINTI~R-3 BR, 2 BA, 'iii b!k 1>00t1 bumuli' (ITT:pluce.
• "'"""" ..... -~~ ''"'1 • '"~i. to Ot'<'l\n. $250/rno. C.'\11 ..... unvc111e1H. ial.lllUl'Y ~11. Dbl 1;aragc, dshwllnr
334 Pord:1nd r.lr ·le, LB. I &12--9485 uu kHCllen. t.llclO:K'Ci l'U· * $2/.)Q Wi:::.i:::.K 4 u~ <1CJ'.,\1\ Fr.oNT: 1 Rm Ant . I liUll. ' i;w1nuni.iii pouj.ij,
... -·-'"'v "' • •·· ..... ,, :·ch'ii',. ~. nio, in"I \T'"I.;., l>.J.wilU, 1·1.:cr t:kLWll 1lil.!l.IJ· SJMlll \t'H-Oti2U.
~c-.tH~~. iar. Jci. Sea
\VET bar, pool table , J 1't:c ..... s .• ~ws, pt"<a.
w ~, -i ..... u ... ~•··~.. ...... Yrly. G73-l24.1. •il·:., :iecur1.y ¥YilfJ. ,,..,
0# • •IU•>O: olO.:i v1 .. ~-, .. ,.. • VVI j.11..'o.!>.
ttreplace .l blt-tna. 3 bed. 2 Rent·A-HouH 979.8430
ba, pool, park. ocean. s.t35 WALK to-beach --Newty bt. 4801 Bruce CrcBccnt. 3 NB ~ ~ .. r.M.r ~"Or BR, 4! bl home 111 · " · or ...,.,_... N'pt Shores. $-100. ~2924
w ...._.111.1..<•1."ll "' .·ct ii;c..:u .....
"->•U 1~.: .. j.11.ii'• '-'IV\.l.1 ....,,.
a-to-.i1a..i Or u-t..i-.,,,u,
~'W 1111.1.1u1 °' "ti·
-HULfLIAY PLAZA l .-~· all2 ":.·.= c .. ri:~· 4 BDH~1. 2 be.., tam~. .... .,., • ' pool privileges, occupancy u~ .... ~ ~·ui ... lilt poola, teMia c ou r t•, ,...,._ ,,. ••so a .... """'~ iu.rn 11.pi. $!.,),J. tu:ku!U rUOI.. children welcome.. $ 2 2 O . ~. wlh, .-. · ............,..
Sen Juan C•plstr•no
!~: New 2 BR, pool,
!1:rn, $2'1(). Untum, $200. \\'tr
pd, Casa de Capi.stnno,
3.2105 Paseo Carolina., SJC.
493-7078 or 213:894--2321 .
Apt. Unfurn. 365 545-7403 ArupJe l*fKUl¥· AOl.lhl, 1.u
Alo~ on lot $14.\ aar. Newport Heights ~~ 1-'o~~v!.:!.._C.M~ _' ~albol lsl•nd
lddalpeJ.pdGar. Unit walk IMMAC. & cozy 2 Br., 1 UNIQUE Oppty tor mature VERY attrac. 1 Br. upper R':it~i.HOuse 971-14lO bath, blt Ins, cpl, drps, dble Gent. Lge J-Jed-t.itting rm, YP.arly. l ll\iltul'e aduJt or gar. sm. 644-0030 kit, bath. Prlv entr., Rell, cou ple only, no petl. nss +
HOUSE trailer, 3 BR. 2 BA, HoUMS Furn. or req'd, $12.;. mo Utill pd.u .,,tt"'l.-'67>-=-"150=3. ____ _
nr beach. $225/mo. \Yater & bat.side. &48--6355. '
pd 536-3435 Unfurn. 310 CUTE 3 Br. upstairs. Sto1re, lnUh · · 1-..;...._.;;,;,. ___ ..;;.;..:;1* $2.IPER WEEK* ,..,,;,, d.,,.. 1250 I mo. * LEASE 2 BR, 1~ ba, Newport a..ch °' Uloh •""'OYJ w ni"-'t..1 11t:J·ll icc. Yearly lease. 644-8856. crpt~.1..!rpl.c, bltns. $225 mo. • . ..1 .... 1t:rui lit.Villi. J¥JU•~I .auu.1, Belboa Ponln1ula 968--~ or 962-1965. LIDO Sandi, 3 BriJJ bl, cu.-.1cr i.11ifuur Iii: vu:w .....
3 BR, 2 BA, trplc, 2 car gRf. ~ 1~~~r pd. ~ 1 BK, }'w:n, 2 lrJ, clO»cli, 1 Br &: den, new crpt/dl'p!I,
bltlna, fenced yrd. kids OK RI A NB qUt:en ~ bt.'d, priv tire~ stove & retrta:. Yrly. No M~ mo ·-··~/""° .,......, ver ve., · · ""'' 642 3519 ,....., . ~~ _..., ... ,..,, 1.1" l"I•~· AJ 'll l.1'5 l\A.tuili, ~.,cl I ~~=:.,·=-'-::;:"·~---
J:l;";;lno;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I Condominiums il.l' wt•wraice. Auw1.1 only, Coron• del Mar
11 Unfurn. 320 •IU ~u,. I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
cond _ :t..s Fult•rton, C.M. I 2BR.28a.AJr/ . _. 3 BR. 2 Ba. alr/cond S28S Huntington INch Furn. B•ch. & I Br. Ex·
3 BR. 2 Ba. alr/cond. $310 · ~---·-·~---·-----c .. prlon•Uy nlc•. 2110
3 BR. 2 bo. Atrium 1340 YI MILE TO BEACH N•Wporl lllvd., C.M •. :
3 BR. 2 Ba. Atrtum S350 3 Br., l~ Ba., full 2 car gar.:.
3 BR. 2 Ba. Atrium S365 [rplc, shag crpt, all bltnl, , * SH.Al>Y l:l..MS -POOL *
4 BR. 2'ii ba. tam. rm. $400 pool.s. $25(1. mo. • Adulta Poolmlde $140 up
6 BR. 3 Ba. ram. rm. $475 1 ___ _,,_S36-00'ro • t.:hildren 1Jt'Xt block l n E. 22nd St., CM 642-3645 Lopuno NI@!'!! 1-8R,-ll30---,-1140-. 2 -eR, ('I : 11I1 I I I' 11 ii
~· .. -I I 1·11ll1 1r
"SINCE l!HCI"
3 BH., 2iii BA ln Sea Terrace,
f\llly lndscpd, ocean view,
1..'Plt:, drptl. l.le· $425 mo. lnc
Alan. dues. 213: 772-1037.
~qn Vt110
116$. S/Pool. Ideal for
bachelors. 19!D Church SL ......n. '
ON TEN ACRES
Apts. turn./untum. Lease
Flttplace / prlv. patios.
Poola TeMla Contnt'l Bkfat.
900 Sea Lan, Cd~f 644-26" .. t
!MacArthur nr Cout Hwy)
-----
PRIVATE l Br., l Ba Apt.
$185 yrly. Avail Dec. 1st. -· lA:f Weslcrn Bank Bide· Unlvcf'!lit~ Park, Irvine
Doy1 551·7'00 Nlghtt
FURN. l BR. Apt. Pool.
Clole to lhop1. Adults, no
pets. $160/nw.
2 BR, 1% BA, turn avail! l9oU Pomona. C.M. * GREAT VIEW-2 BR. *
playaround, ~--P !!: 2 Br, 2 Ba, turn. $155/mo. ~c, bltna, .undecka, pool l.villf. Mo/mo or I.ft, ..-,i. Adults, no peta. m Center .. ~o up. 644.6344, 675-3535.
837'"9500 dly1; 6 7 3-IS 4 41 51 642-5848 Coste u~~ _,.,...._ -
2 BR. 2 Ba.
3 BR. 2 ba.
4 BR. 2 ba.
:: B::. 2 be.. lam. rm.
ired hill
REALTY
Univ. Park Center, Irvine
Call Anytlnte, US.OD>
Omce houn 8 AM to 8 PM
3 BR, 2 BA. paoZ I: rec atta.
II'( bock ,...U. Chlldttn DIC, sm. m-uro, m-oou.
$160 • SECLUDED 1 Br. rear
bouall, No. tnd. Woodley .eturw. 12SO • QIARMINC:: 2 Br,
trplc home. Gar. Yard.
PatlO. $325 ~ trrn. PD. Vletorta
Bach. 3 ez.. 2 Ba. frplc. Faml!y home.
NU.VIEW RENTALS
87$-4030 or 494--12"8
~Po" llaoch
IASTllLUFF
eve1. · '=7"'~~~ ___ ..,...=;;;... ___ _ ** STUNNING 1 BR, 1 BA ~D,.;u.:;p.;.l•;.;•;,;•;;•00F;.;;;u;.;mc;. __ .345 Garden apt. Pool. Rec.
Balbo• Peninsula -_are __ a._no_w_ .. IS_th _S!:.._ CM.
1 BR furn apt. $140. No petl
ot no ctilldten.. 820 Center ATRACTIVE 2 BR, newly
decorated. Q\l"'t be a c h
atta. Adult environment.
$2251 mo. 673-7615.
Duplex•• Unfum. 350
Coron• del #Mr
St. 60-5848.
NEW 1 & 2 BR'a lrOm $100 to
$22(1, Nr. beach a: 1hop'g.
11'1 E. nh, CM, 548--0137.
NICE 1 br dplx. Quiet. Sepr.
by aaraaea. l Adult over 30.
No pela. 548-1021.
ltOOMY 3 BodJVOm, 2 bath. 1 BR apt, n:zs mo. Single
growxt t:loor. S3!0 pr. month '<''Ol'ldn& adult, no -11. 274 JNua 1paciou.a l bedroom E 9th I 6 -~ up1taln with prtvale en-.::. 1 • 1 ter ! ~ pm.
trance'. $2Z pr month. Bolh $79.50 Small furn cottage.
unit. next to i-rtc .t: trtnn1a, Utila pd. Adults, no pet.a,
call Balley 173-e60 qt, Nr. lhoppln&. 544-1539_. _
Cost• Mesa BEAUT. roRN. 2 BR.$170 up UW pd. Hid pool. Adulta, ro
2 BR, bU!n1, cpt, -gu. peta (Infant okl, 64M52>.
No yard work. $135. mo lat H tlnateft hMh
A Lut mo + llO cln. ,,., I ;;;u;;;n;;;;=!:;;;;;;:;;:;::;:;;;:;; SenU-rettred ot r&Urtd cple, I 1
no poll. ~14. LoQUINTA HIRMOSA
Huntlntton IHch SJ>llnbh Country Estate Uv· :_;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;:;;I tng A $tl&ck>1.11 Apta:. Ter-• need pool; aunke:n g:u IMMED. OCCUPANCY BBQ. UnboUevable L>vlna .
N«>w 3 Br aptl SZ50. mo. Onb:
Dbl ..,... -1 BR. l'URN. $115
334 Poriland 1:Ii<Je, H.B. l aR. l'URN. $215
The Maturo Family
will appreciate the Ven-
dome's way of life. Well·
arranged 2-3 bedroom units
with 2 bathm, tlreplace.
patio. Outside are &ardf'ns,
pool , putt.Ina: and nearby
lhopplni and activities.
Uvt> eiuy, from $195.
THE VENDOME
1845 A.nahelm Avenue !'all Mrs. PhllllPI 540-07ll
lle81iB.AU ZI
2 Bl'droom, 1 Bath , $1~
2 Bedroom, 2 i,.th ...• $3)5
3 Btdroom, 2 bf.th . . . $225
&autUut new apta. w/pvt
potlot, ....... pool, •P<· Lush 1arden 1ettlft&, Adults,
no pell. ~1 E. 21st, C.M.
646-8686
Modol1 Opon 10 Ill 7 pm
2700 Peterson W•y, 'M
nr Harbor Blvd'&
Ad•m•
54&-0370
DELUXE
APARTMENTS
Alr Cond -1''rplc's -3 Swlm·
ming Pools • Health Spa •
Tenn is Courta -Game and
Hilliard tt.oom. l BR. !o~rom $160
l..lJtt.. &: Den t 'ro1n $1M5
MEplTERRANEAN
VILLAGE
2400 Harbor l:Hvo., L.~l.
'114) $5 /-80:.lO
H.J:.:N'fAL ul''Flt:I::
U~h.N lU AM 11J t:i ~·M
NEWLY DECORATED
BMutllul Grounds
i oJ M111u,1..'1 lu Ul.~v.11
Close lo bus line J: 1inres.
tiu Heat & Stove. Wall!I".
Garaae, Air Cond. Swlm'a
Pool. Ht'c. Rm., Laundry
ttoom included.
LARGE I BR. -$140.
2 BR. $160, $1~. $1 c5
Hacienda de M.1•
100 W. wdaon No. 1 t .M.
Pork-Llko Surrounding
QUU!."f 1.>.c.l..u~
~ &: 3 BR AP'l'S.
Pvt. r'alloa * Hid. Pool•
Nr Shop'a * Adllit• Only
Manlnlque Apts.
1777 Sa.n1a Anv. Ave., 1....111.
1~q;:r._,\pt. llJ b40-~
BEA1lI'IFUL 3 Bt., 2 Ba. condo, llvina: rm., dining
area, ldtchen, bltna, patio, 2
car aa.rqe, newly decorated
in & out. Oubhae, 2 pools,
adull area, no . pets. $XIO.
mo. lit Ir: lut. $50 cln;: dep.
Ava!! ~. lJ:t. 846-8103.
CHARMING l Br u n I t
w /flREPLACE. Private
patio, atovt, rtfria, drapes .t: carpeted llvlna room.
Adultt:, no pets. N e a r
Harbor Blvd. Rafmnct1
mfd. $110 per mo. Avail.
Dec 1....213: ..... JMl
BRAND NEW ADULT
APl'S.
2 Br, Free w. Pool.
Garage1. 11119 Monrovia, So.
or 19th, w. ot Placentia -D"1.UXE 2 Br., Ill Ba.
Studio on d•ad•nd abet.
Crpta, .i.,,. ... pool, bltnt,
prlv. potlos. 11!!. 1 child ok.
No peta. Ml--TIM.
$1401Up IPIC 2 Br, Ir 3 Br,
Ill Ba. pool, cpVd'1'. bltns, plyrmd. 1996 M>ole, No. 1
Rt!YIN.ED ??? s';'ktt°"J.:.s.s. ~. "'""· uwNi.:R 64&-0oll> ten . 21.!: 89+-usO:FUit:u.;'.
>UCIAL SECURITY ?? "Weed It l Reap" Konr•!~. "'. 5!1-ro <IJU SWINGING SINGLES
t-'EN::»ION ??? From treuures to traab WANTED, Fem. roommate Call Jim, 2 to 8 p.m •
turn them lnto cub to share W·wotklna air!. ~ 53S-3I22
VILLA YORBA CAIL DAILY Pnm ""·' ""av1. ~. """ ""'" COUPLES PARTIES Cl..ASSlFlED -··· &U-M18 ~.flti"AAak tor Micblll.le , Call P~8 P.M.
141-9622 Cotta Meu 1 Ill\. -1123
2 BR. -1144
3 BK. " $164
MM-eeeks hointt or "'-'t. ALCClllOWCS A.non.Ymou.1;-with Fem. 1ot aeU & PMne 542-m7 or \Vl'lte
SPACIOUS ~wi iUtlt!1rlltllll.~ ex.· P.O. Box 1223, Costa M{'<u1.
Luxul')' 'apts. ~!!!_ ~ evcru.na:1. c; I I C
For Adults only t lAVJ:!. &lo''· WliL\)l 1 or~ Klri.11 oc a lubl * !\iuv.i... i., ivvAli: • 1 Or 2 Bed.rooms W ltllt.n!. lSeacb area. Ail 1··1NU YOUR'.:J
AlJ.. UTUJTU.:S PAID 53!
$139 A MO. Shag carpets, bulltlna 1"'1'tV~tiai. ~-au-.ur1., .. • OOf,.fF:ONF. '
Spac. ~ BH. in i·plex. Pool, encl ;aro.gea Vtr1ce kent1I 440 DISCOVER ~Vt!l'id 1tvaiJ. ~ .t.Ji:. Stop by 23ll Elden Ave. !'1~. Poot, rec W....;. Kkl• Call: 645-5?30 u.i:..SA a~e o.'t'w..iult! $;A1 DISCOVERY
weJcon1e. l''rom $~ . .see From $160 Per month tu w 7~4 ~ 213·
Mg. 1"1:i71 Keelaon "B". l olilu~ 0:. !':::::~~~:As mentioned In Nn\
bl& W. ot licach Blvd. ou HARBOR kVAilllllle. ~ i•ui:e:j:l AVt!., PLAYBOY. Pqe 23.
.sater. ~7:UU or 847-UitJ. 1.l:t.¥Wl& lieacu, <t_!t-~__.___ l ~~~~~~~~~~I * FRESH AIR u""" gpace av ... uie ~1;
Walk 3 bloekm to Beach mo. \ltl.J.l proviue turru.i.ire I Lost and fUlll lal Lra; 2 & 3 BR. Apts. Newly .Ill ~ mu. AlilWer~ ~rv1 .. :e
d ..• d availiwl.: . .llOC;,J tk:<'Clt tilVll. I'-------'
ecora\CU, w/w crpts~_l!_rpa, tt .. --•••••••I bltns, except refrt&. '161" &: _ ~~wn !imt"n. O'M:-4.M.t..
~. No lin&lea. no pell'. :,...,..,.., ... ..,..,.,.,...
1
6:11.1 Sq tt. 4 ollice awte, Found (tree Mis) 550 53&·ln.t 1~ crpt/drps. Utll pd. Off st ____ .......;_.....;..;
-WALK TO BEACH TilE i-::·crriNG I""""'· U>r""r """"" " TWO male _, So>ttiall
New 1 A 2 Br, cpt/drp, PALM MESA APTS. Ada.ma. f.cio mo. 541:H.r.i7L Terrier C!), grey, recently
ct&wshr, frpL 3l6 lSth. t lINUTES TO NPT. SCH. PLUSH. small a.otu1..-e swle, clipped, wearing. blk ~· 841-3957. FURN. OR UNFURN. Nt:wport l..'.tluLer tiM-l:llU4~or Other poodle nux, clipped, ~=-~~--Unbelievably lute apts.. ~au1a, · blk & wht. Found vie White ~ 2 BR, 2 BA, $205 mo. huge pool, Jacur.I elect bit. ---1''ront, C.M. 549-1507.
Uas indd. Pl Iv ·pauo, elec Ins, ahag crpta, cl.rps, aaunn AU'i l bJ<1g, Attpo~:l, :i Ou.M.:t: ~ll ;1 do 'II bolh female •
gar door. 2 l 7 J :.l S. etc. Adults, no pets. 8uJ.lt:, crv~. Ul.'t-"'• . lid' 1..uuu. l hn Uar to 0Golden Retrlev· b~klllU'8L ~18. SINGLES From $150 ~; evt: ~1..i1 1t r , ou il'l' similar to curly
LRU 1 Br. w/patlo. ln quiet l BEDRM. From Sll;Q 1~t ,ru ,vcr 1vlth reddish I
4-plex. t:pl or l sll¥1 atilt, no 2 BEDRM. From s1 ~n ov:o1neu kental +.;.1 :...1:1. .• ..:l1cs1, Call &16-5.137.
pul8. $1.:w/Jno. 841...fa49 Unllltl1 Apta Avail From SLD
$:t10. New Plush 2 BR Condo. lo SfS LESS. , shag cpts., drps, dbl gar. You re r ight, they rt undcr-
Lil11J. ~-5328. !141-b:.lSl. orlced t 1561 Mesa Dr.
HUGE 2 2 -(5 blks from Newporl Blvd.)
BR, BA. deluxe 546.9SC11
puoh11de ll.Pl nr. bell.Ch • .$.1.llO. LA M.ANCllA
~ l''1orUI&. ~'6· Brand New Oelux Units
I I Rent now for your con--"-"'--------I structlon allowance of l BE the tirst to occu this mo'• tree rent. l BR. 1 BR
new 2 BK, 2 BA C.Oi~. oor Ir. den, 2 BR's &: 3 BR's.
lot, 1ar, prtv rear yard, From $155., Dshwshr, er?
w/w apl• AJC. ;&1-2428 "*'• IWlm g pool. BBQ • or s.G-2321. Peta acctptable 642-XMn 778 Scott Pl., C.M.
Lagun1 Belch EXTRA LARGE 1 Ir. 2 Br.
UNJQLJE Laguna Caatle Apt. unf. from $140, turn. from
Wide ocean views, acre1 ot $158. Retrlg, range, crpt,
gardens. Close to beach & drps. wtr pd. Htc! pool. shopping. 2 BR., 2 Ba.; lge. Mature adults, lnfllilt ok.
rma. & storage. Custom \Valle to abopplng. 1887
w a l lpapers, chandelleni, Monrovia, 64!'>-4267.
mosaic tile, abutters. $4SO Huntington &.•ch
Mo. partially furn. Mature· I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;
adults only. Also ava.u.11
soon, other luxury aptl:. $250 L•Qulnta Hermou
to $U:'lO mo. By app't. only 2 Bdrm Split Level Studio! 494-4653. 11,S BA. 2 ac:ret beiwtilu
M V-p a r k -I t k e surroundings. wt• erde sunken pool, BBQ'1, sparkl·
U"' uv<· 2 'Br 2 Ba lng Spanllh foun tai n i. .:.1... ,/\.£. &: "' •• ., Townhouse Living. t'ncl gar, $160 up. Rental 2 BR. Studio $2:e Unl.
uac., ~ Mace Ave., 2 B l. Slud lo $240 F\Jr1 •.
:>411-l034. ALL trrn.mES PAID
Newport Beach Allulta, No Pet!l -., 15211 Parlullde Lane PARK NEWPORT m4> 847-5441
APARTMENTS !4 blk• s. ol &"' Diego ..,...Y
on Bach, l blk W. on Holt
Oft fhe bay to Parkside Lane.)
Luxury apartment living ov· BRANO NEW
erlookina the water. EnJoy QUO VADIS 111 t750.<m health spa, 7 swim-Luxury Garden Apta.
mlna pools, 7 ll•hted ten· Bachelor, 1 lc 2 BR's.
nla court•, plUll miles or Sl.35 to $1Sl
bicycle tra.lls, putting, shut-Htd Pool·Jacuul-Saunas
fieboard croquet. Junior l's Re .reat1on Room A More?
from $174.50 monthly; al!o 1 Adult~ Only • No Pett
and 2-b<droom plana and BRING IN THIS AD &
2-11tory town hoURS. Elec· SK ABOUT RE trlc kitchens, private pa. is A F E
or balconies. carpctlna:, dra· DECEMBER RENT!
pcries. Subterranean park· 18992 Florida St. 847·9448 In& with elevators. OpHona1 ("" blk. W. of Garfield
maid lel"Vice. Just north ol and Beach Blvd. I
Fuhk>n Island at Jamboree OCEAN FRONT 2 BR up.
and Sln Joaquin Hillm Road. per, shag carp811:, pi..,e,
Telephone <tt4) 644-1900 $300. mo. 64.2-3443.c. __ _
for rental lnlonnatkln l BR.. l b1k tO htach. Shag
WHERE aptg, d,.., lndl'V Ille. 1135.
CONGENIALITY on 14th St. 53&--0.152
PREVAILS Nowporl Beach
Ocean view, .superb house
lfC\lrlty, apartment. d•
•Janed with a Muter't
touch, exclusive club with
unJque Aquabar, rountaln.11
and formal prdena. All par1
af the South Coast'• lint.II
apartment community.
1 Bedroom/studios 'rom $195.
~ Bedroom lrom 1295.
Model1 open 9 A.M. tU duak.
ON THE BLUFFS
AT NEWPORT
Live
big
from $140
Oekwood I• $1 mlltron in
recreation. Swimm i ng
poo ls . He 1lth club a.
S1un1s. Tennl1 couns.
•\Vl~W:.. n • ...i·: .i...._ .. ~ ....... I, L~l,\LE pup PY . on
'-Ml ~· '" \.1.JJ,,l:!J. '"1"•'"· i~eninllula Point 1''riday. L"l'\:M:o~ ~"""'"• ...a.u.i.:;, ... Lf'(.•y w/blacK & white
.......... J.>.i. """' llti· ••· t..1wl'....,. markings. Flea c o 11 a r,
WUIUOWli, 'IV i.. •~...:d)f. .._u.._., t11;;t-::IJ77.
rtwy., !>a l " SIUC :.,i·l"1:• .>i ~--------
jiG..l'U(>fl, p1muu", otl,k; 114. "· FOUND, Yng fem do&,
A.IJo uwce ""'"~• """" lllll· u . Collie-Shep cross. Blk w-l:>c. Xented w1aiore or sep-brwn paws, Hu Dea collar.
arate1y. c . w. Maau~rs. Vic Jamboree Ii. Palisades,
kealtor, 613-4Ul. 644--0352.
"'IliE FACTORY" bas 2 BASSE'IT bound, struck by
openlngs ln the Mall rang-car -Edinger & Gothard -
1ng from $flt mo. Ideal for Took to v.: -Is OK!
small retail shops. Antique 540-8478 ll/21
shop, candy lbop Wllilled. FOUND about 3 wks ago vie.
425 30th St., Newport Beach. TU11tin A 23rd St., N.B. Kit-
67J..-9600. ten w/coUar &: bell. Gray
OFFICE w/storaa:e garage w/some tan. 548-2688.
attached. Stall shwr, re!rig, FOUND Fri. night, black
air coDd. 1652 Newp0rt Labrador, m.aJ e, in Costa
Blvd, C.M,. 548--9'166, l.'ves Mesa. Call & identily1 6' ;.1()61 962-7054. ~~~~-----· OFFICETSI'ORE nr . N'pt. FOUND: Young, female dog
Post Offict!, 450 Sq. ft. Good reRmbles cockapoo verY
PIU'kin&-$120 Month shaggy brown coat,' v1c ot
t;;rah!!D_ ~~ty 64&-2414 Laguna NJ&uel, 40Cr5531.
!o'UR Lea.te (3) 1500 1q ft FouND N ovT"10, yng male
........ ...,11. '-"" ...uut!, 1.-Vr '"""" Sliephl'rd mix, black & tan,
.. 'tiiu .• Of. AtJW.iio_ nrl Brookb11 r1t /Adams. """""'":I. ~. .FC5R i:EAs:E C-1, central FOUND Sat. nlgh1 Newport
loc&Uon. lll6.1-87 Park Ave., Riveria Townhouses, Costa
C.M. 11"..0 aq fl All or part. Mesa, pretty £reY female
Pti: M&-1811 AGT. kitten. call m-0534.
cpRNI:!;Jt !:l0Xl20' M-1 zone Ui.:.tt.MAN Shon Hair Poi.l'.lt-
w/ 000' bldg. $250/mo. 991 er, Female, 4~ mo. old. Vk.
\V. ll:lth St,, Colta t.fesa Warner & Sunset Beach.
642-3490 536-4674 11/21
IDEAL Costa Mesa Joe for NEAR clty dump, shagay
ofc/atore. 1200 aq. tt. Days orange female cock-a-poo
~3437. 548-7398 eve. n1ix With silver atudd
Industrial Rental 450 brown collar. 673-7511.
FND: 1''ml rag dog puppy,
1300 Sq. Ft. M·l apace coloni: Be)~«: & Wh ite vie
w/tront office, lrg. rear Newport Heights on Sat.
door, $177/mo. 3 ph.ue, 1240 64~7132
t.oa:an St. Daya 646--5033,l=~="·-7.""'~~-~ Eves. 646-0681 fOUND small blk & white · kitten, abort hulr C.OlleEe 3IDJ SQ. Fl' M-1, 2 oU!.ces, Park area.~~ after 5~ large rear doon. Crptl, set up. tor lab. $415.. mo. Very tley smokey gray male 64&-sm3 days, 646-0681 eve. kinen. Vic. Mesa Verde.
-----• ----557-4605 11/21 R1nt•l1 Wanted 460 TOY~. found in Corona
WANTED TO RENT Big de! Mar 118.l, Nov, 18,
Bear cabln for Christmas 0'615-'="cl='964:.=:. -,--,---·I we~ ken d , (Fri/SaUSUn BEAGLE mix male puppy,
nltesl Mu.st aleep 8 com-yle. Victoria B e a c b •
fortably. 4 adultl, 4 Laguna. 497-1643.
children. Call 551-fill. AUSTRALIAN S h e p h e r 4 --------·--female puppy-Vic Victoria
~ ~ F'OUND, male Irish Setter, l~ Beach, ~· 49'1-1643.
•• vie 16th St. C.~L Call alt 6
pm. 64&-5.183.
Announcrertaentl 500 Lott $5$
TENNIS club In San Juan LONG fl\lfty haired kitty
Caplstrano fomtlng. T\\'O beige and ot'Ull{C. Answers
N.T.I. pr'OI, private court.a, to the name of "Fugle."
many bcnerfts ofiered to HR11 white flea col.lac on.,
charttt mt!'mbcnihlp of 50 Strafed In the Eutblllfi
propJe. Kickoff champagne: area. Child heartbroken!
party planned Die. l Pleue call 644-2188.
ILS.V.P. Scb001 ot Tennis, LOST: Small fem. dog,
49!H282. Brown A !An, Sltaa:Y llU". l
bl~ eye, l brN'n... Vic.
TIME FOR
Lup f.bedroom or 3 nnd
dea-FonnaJ dlninl roon1
and Wn.Uy room. BHutUul tront pano am reu yard,
UMIR l llR. Stud...Unl. $205
AU. UTILITIES PAID AdultJ; No ptt ta
LARCE 2 bdnn. l'n ba. 1hq:
crpt., bll•lns., frplc.. patio
lncloted 1ar. 634 1-lamlJton,
8'5-6345, 645-832.l or ~·194.1
3 Br, 2 BA trlple:ii:, cpt /drp,
quiet, Adl ts, no p f' t I .
$.200/mo. 2281 Fordham.
Bua. 64&-1&119, R~. 646-4939
2 BR. den. crptd, lg kitchen,
lup yard, adultl: SJ.BS mo.,
alt 6 pn, Ml-0851.
NEW l A: 2 BR 's trom $170 to pto. Nr. beach A: 1hop'1.
114 E. :Mlth. CM. Sl!-<>137.
l>'rom Newport Blvd. turn at *'* BEAUTIFUL l • 2 BR. 1-tospltal Roo.d ti block BUiiard•. Indoor golf drlv·
Contempcnry Garden Apl1. 1 above .Pacltlc Coast Hwy 1 10 Ing range. Sand Volleyball.
Padol. hie., pool, $l!i5-untranct. 900 Cqney Lane, Whlrlpcol Baths. And lots
84)-3113.
QUICK CASH
N<"P"! Helghl11 54H513.
LOSl': Malt, Tan w.JJW. Blk
Shephttd l G,..t llano. 10
mol old, w-floppy llft et.rs.
Aft ' pm. 64&-48M.
BROWN-Ir whlt t'
She......V-Io, ""' vie. ol 1111 A On.nee. C.11. 642-230L , boCb com~~~-_!~nctd. 11 , J =~~o ~Ila~ I ~;';";";";0'ltl•l•iiiillolliiii~~~~)
lll«mbor J. tm ""' .... lh. 11
Call ~ ... -· AptL '""" uo TENNIS, Pool. Walk 10 -'B""i"'L .. --.;;.11.;;_;...._~---
-. 2 atory I BR. 1% a -,,;;_I=""";;;;.---~~~· """· iBR. ll!O: 2 Br 12l!l. uw OCE~ dll&I nd . Y•IY· Nr. ""'""· ~ E. • ft 4 Br Jti. e.' -il>llboo lllYd. l'!HIS), r.!v. lS>O y-1 ..,. c.1i Balboa ,..,IMUlo
-.. tlll2"' flH.ll3. e1z; Wk A Up ~-;;-HAJltBOR Vtew HOIMtl 1..1&.-i. Loveh· Bacb • 1 BR·Rooma: J ad din. A Y -11 • h I c ltllld Scrvke • Pool • Utll Pd ,,_,, 7~: ... cou 1111·.10 .
·::hiti OA.-N 2 BR, 111 BA, J*llo, bokony. ..... 315 £. 8a)>, "'° mo. .. yl'ly ~ ~ :-·~"1nt1·"" .c 613-Wl
(' bUu S. ol San DCftO Frwy on ~h..1. 1 blk \Y. on Holt
to 1621.1 r~ Lane.)
!714) 1'1-5<11
110 • $165
Bachelor A 1 BR, potlOa, il'J>lc's, prlv. rara11<1 •
D{vldt<J bath • loll ol
clOM~. l\ae hall, pool I:
pool tab-. sauna baths. 9ee for )'OIU'lltlf 17301
Keel.-,n Ln. (1 !Nk w. al
Beach, 1 blk N. or st&ttrl.
84>-7148
LRC. 2 Br, blam c.:iU., cn1.
drpe, l.lltn d-whr, dllpl, paol
I: utll pd. A.dultm no Dt\1',
N•. lloopltol. Avait Nov. 19.
1210/mo. 1'1'111 Cant<ron. !0-61112.
'* N5. 2 BR, upper, cpt., drtJs, carwrt. Older Adulta preL 6'D-l145 evn.
2 BR with appllancfl 1135. llD Slatrl!y. 20<9 Walla..,, -L DELUXE TownhouMl ' 2 Bt
apts. Pool. Dlrwhr. Adultt:.
32' E. :IOlh St. 645-t'm.
$11). call 97-(l:301 Newiort B-.ch Ca. hlOO. more. A resident tennis
3BORM. 1 Bl. arow • Tt lepiiont: 1nt1 M>OO&O pro and activities director
ftlr'c, "1>ta A dlw. Pvt 4 BR. 2 bu, OcMn View who piano free Sunday
pnae. Kida oK . WO. Gutce • Laundry rm. brunch•• and barbecues. -1.!0I YUl\r, 1121. -h. 548-1586 or tn-1343 St1rttng 11 low as $140.
2 BR, 1 Bllc to Ocean. new Slngl11, o ne I nd two-
Iha&. alo'.te, P&lnt. SZIO. bedrooma, fum lthed end
I Br w/dtn. Ml ~1 _2 _Ila.
6 2 Br. 1lAY Mu..uuWS
A•ta, :111 W. 8a1 St.. CM. 846-<lOll.'~"="~~~~~ e;-CKELOR. 1 A: 2 Br
w/f\.lm. avall. Jlel.led pool.
SU> A up. adulta. 111
C1ri ttr Af. ~. * "':'~fA'r)y fllfS -POOL •
• AduJta Poola:ldt Sit) up
' ''. ,llt1~n r ·1 11I01Jk
117 E. 22nd St., CM ~
l BR. crpta, d ... --;-bllnl,
pool. )Io J>lla. Sl50. 2SI C&tt-
)'On Dr., A.Ill B, m.&\13.
.,
rrli. Utila pd. m.om. unturn l1hed. Sorry no
Ntw 2 Br. 2 BA, fnilc, ch1ldr~n or pets. MOdels I~. ,...-1Y. ne-2tat St. I ope" de ny 10 to 7 • 961·-0.'\49 • '' .
OCE ANFRONT 2 b•. Cpl,, 0.kwood
d:~ d ·plex, u"'""'· yrly,
13T!. ~-..... 2':!'" Garden AJNirtmenta
NEW delwt• 3 en. 3 blu,
trplc A t:tttu! 1n.r. arU. wa1~,. Yrli • G, ·ml,
sell Wt-Items nowt Call I 6'Hm Howl Sall
Newpoti B11c:h
!Nine arid 11tl't
MJ.0$60• 1424 170 I
hlj, I ,m , 042,5673
i .
THRO IRQH A !i~Ji!!~ U Ri"wARD tor return of
"Sllllo", MW Irish aetltt,
call $2509 or 53H791.
'11A~L Y PILOT ~ ~i;r;:..~~ ~ _.reward cttmdl &e 8112
r~
642..5578
. '
TIMI FOi
• lUICk CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
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'"" .. -l@l -.. -1~ 1---l~ I J[IlJ I 1(11] ( ... , ..... lll1J1.__I _ ..... _. ··•__,l[Il]I .__ _ ....... _ .... ___,J[ff 1:-1 ~~
M Holp Wanted M & I' 71 I 555 _.J;..;r•;...ft;...l"I;;:..._____ Hole W...i.t, M .. "710 Holp Wonted, M .. "710 ~·!!'-~·ntod, .. "710 Hole Wontod, M .. F 710 ~!!'.!".~~.!..!"_~-~. ~ S.7.:i:T ..; -
$500 REWARD d BABYSI'M'ER. neta.d. 1 to 5 COMl'ANION • HOUlekeeper FOOD Mana.rer Aut. Perm. NURSES AIDES exjJ'a &~nlnllt l m 11 j ' PLANs.Houtet. R • ~o •' PROF. painter, hontlt work, pm. my home. Mother w. tor~, tor e Ider I y O.C.l.R. $3 br. C&IJ 838-1103 l:.Jrit><r-....... r d. o""-torJ, exp'd. Job ~ ALL Dachshund, male. Room Addltm.. -up. reu. Oc/lrw. lntJext. tree htld k ~-~ -~--w t ~1 ,.. ~-Bllr: wttan marldnal 16 557-<1626 Eves 55T.gs95 ue....me c o ' ...._, ex ::lJ reur .u ""'· a n ...., Ol'\e noon. 11Wltu1,ion Beach . experience. S p a c e -T" mo.aid named "Schnuj,pl''. · • · eat. Rib,~ • mornlaa cttt, Ve & ma 'A"Oman w/rof1. Flt.Y COOK EXPER Swln\: Cunvalt:iei:n1 J-lu.plW tnduttritl um Plaoe.nti&.
1 Uc M6 vt FV Electrical Pla•ter, P.tch, R•lr Broadway ' TUIUn, C.&1. ·~ Reply to Cl8:"1lled Ad I pveyd,lhUt. .sua"n $250 !&Ill Floridn, H.B. Co.ta Me&a. , :, P.ewa::i· a..?Os3. c .. ELECTRICAL, Ii c en a e d ' * PATCH PLABt'ERING 6*-0TS3: --ennt. ~ 3&-1:.l!J~e~~~ Box _per hr. 562 \V. 19th S1., C.~t IH7·3fl~ .;V=:l:;E::,T::.N"'AM=~V-E~T=E~RA~N
1 MALE ShelUe. trl-colorod. bonded. Small Jobi, ma.int. All~ n. ..umai. BABYSl'l'TER·~eeper, ' · FUIJ.. charie bookkeeper, NURSES Aides, 7-3 f/tlmt, Stan a ~tanaaernent caret.r
wht legs &: paww, wht dla· &: repatrs, 54&-5))3, Call 5«).-6825 ~ aci;,:, 3j!1 si :c:· 2k Computer Operetor receivable. payable & 11·7 pftlmf!. Exper. ~f'd. ln " local branch of a na· 1 mood chest. blk back. Gardening l ·p~~1 -~bl;::;:'-'-""-'=---C&llr. l4n. ~ · y h • l'l'G-145 exper. Top 1$. Lona payroll. 894-5375. ?ltt'S& .. Ve1·de Convaletetnl Uonally known co. On tht
"Boot1". 4 broken-hearted I----";.....____ um "I E:moloYment Serv. 13,..\, n.nid tenn asiu&run(!nt. GIRL F RIDAY Hoap, 661 Center St, Of. Job rn!.lntna pqram oUers
.,:· ~~bo.YI mlu him ! BOB'S G'ARnENING 1--Dra-lno---"----_-17-.l!O-M2'-0tft. ~=lm ~~ Prolo'l'WU manftS({'r l\N'da 548-M85. salary of $5700 -t . Gl
II . & LANDSCAPING Sewer line to 100' -$1S BABYSITTER for 8 yr old NEVER A }"EE AT TEMPO rlihl hand gal to help run P',\RT Tl?.1E IM!nefll!-Call Helen Haye1.
REWARD: 2 male Cock-a· Residential A Comtnf!rdal * 5&-2502 * Sa p I A T•"" .......... -~ llel new division. Lot1 o! v11.1·t'· GROCER'i ~. CA:uta.l Ptnonncl J>OOI,, loet 1Ul8 vie Mesa Irvtne Induttrial tirl TUei thru t nil.Ct. arsonne a'811CJ ... po ,.,, .. !""ary_ P_ ty Ute sh Snl&ry to $Gl0 SHLL.F ST0t 'KER Agency, 27!r.I Harbor Blvd.,
1 del Mar. 1-blk Ir whl , 1 Complexn. PLtr.4BING R.EPAm mature woman pre f · i CUNSTRUCTION Mc.aR c&u Jan Pa.11:e, ~: ExpcrtcnC\.'<l on1y. Apii-. Ct.1,,. =~=-~---I
·1 'Tanish·gray. Both clipped. 55'1'-4299 after 5pm. No jo~~~aU BAB53&-Y~R . ~M lm'ne W11Ce •Pt devt!loper nee<Ji1 Coutal Pertonne-1 Aflcn<;y, 111on-1\le1 only. Lucci l)ctJ, Vl::fl::RlNA.'\Y aulltant tor
' 5&-8559. FRONT yd. lawn aerv. $10 * -· '"' prvven ne11vy. ~uu Kt!1wnv :rnio Harbor Blvd .. Cll1. 89U Adams at t.tagnolla, animal hOtpUal, N.B: wm. ·j· PLEASE will the gentleman back )'di alto wftdina' COLE PLUMBING to e1rt tor 1 cb A .s.J.iir)' reqUU't!ment1 to Girls H. s . Ask tor .P.lr. Rufus . tng to tra!n nun1J1a, lab,
1 who found my Silky Terrier ~·cln up, tree irtnunlna'. S4 hr. eervlct. 6'5-UGl da.,Ya/wk, CdM.. 6'T5o-2936 P. U. 11<1X 4d•ti, Irvine. •• PICK Up A Delivery pharmacy, duUea. S&iary to
,• near Robln&on'a in Faahion haullna. Free est. Let the Sewl"1/Aiterathnl BARTENDER, Pl'!"ferably COOK Easy. f\ln job. lmmed open-iratnee. ~lust have valld "'5(). Send re1Wne to
·11 Island on 11/17 call me. profealonall do tt. 962-8612.1---'--------9lder. Deart locatton. $20 Bank Fut 100U service, lnp. Full. part time, day or Calif. Driven lie. & be bon-Clwsslned ad no. 537 Dally
., 644-~2 ar 4!J2...4476 coU. Alltrotlon-.._..._ ..... 5h1ft + food 6 kidging. C.all Mldnl , . d nfgbt. Apply in ptl'90n aey dable. Apply tn pel'90ll, Pilot, P.O. Box ua>, Colla ROTOTIU.ING. New lawna, .--~ n4:497-1188 for interview. Kfll w am, b a,ys, aft or e~ at 2930 \V, CoMI ,... .. _,;_, lnc. 1MS So . M Ca.llt LOST: Plastic bag con-sprinklers, treea & shnlhll Neat, accurate. 20 year1 exp. Teller Tr•inee JA~t< IN THt. lil.Jh H "B ~ -~'"'"~· ~~· ~===-I ·.'1 taining red A. gold stadium Yd J BEAtmCIAN, EXP'D Buer & t'airv1ew l.:.M. wy., ~, · ~tanche1ter, An ah e 1.m · WAITRESS, EXPER. , blanket &: rain coats, on ~~· · c eanup. Tolovlslon R-fr Full time incl eves Thie purr.feet 1pot tor a real ' GIRL -71 to 30, $2/hr E qua I o PP or tun 1 1 Y Must be o~r 21. No Pbone
•1 Coast Hlwy, vie N.B. & · Sandcrab 96.1--3433 H. B. tiger! P.tove forward In thil CPLE"'OVer 26 manaae 30 Ho1te11 & Barmaid. Must employer. Calli:. Apply In penon, Sw1
., }\unt. Bch MS-4004. JAPANESE Gardener. CObOR TV repaired In yoor BEAUTY Opt • lull time ten1nc Job w/labuloos ~lmc..!' nl:t ~~cy. be dependable & anractive. Purchasing Expedltor Ir: Slrknn, 5930 W. Cout
, \VHITE Husky Samoyed, Complete Yard~<i and home or there lt no coat to Shampoo girl. Apply 1610 W. bank. Exper. not n e cc' 1 a r Y · 2 yra. recent experlel'IC<!. HI'.)'., Ne'A-port Bcb. . al Sa p M 1 M k Cleanup. Free est. ,,..,.3102. AU --• , mod I ~---HJ ~ B Call Lee •••••••••••• IJ3.2700 646-9407 "~nd I 1 • · m e, t .. v c ar et )'OU. A~. uaao.1s ox es. .......ul way,... . DATA PROCE$SING ...., cover et er re1ume WAlTRESS~ I \VAlTERS " Basket, N.B. Re.,vard ! EXP. Hawaiian Gardener. 6J8..8481 GROOMER. 1.twit have exp to Classified Ad No 444, ovtT 2l. Cockta.DJ; I l'Q:ld,
675-5649. Complete garden 6421er v, Tiie BOAT REPAIRMEN Ace"'-Clerk to ~LM EAM OPt::RATUR &t knowled&:e In handllnx Daily Pilot l,.o. Box 1560, ALOO Buaboy1, dithwuh·
'. LOST: Woman's Prescription Ka.malanl, 646-4G76, ·1337. Carpenten, Mectlanicl. Mu.at "'1' .,_ shop. Apply ll.l Broad'A·ay Costa ?.tea.a, 92626. en, & kitchen help. No Exp.
gtaues. Green cue, Brwn * EXP. Japan@se Gardener. have exp., watertronl boat Fee Paid 1·1~ Years-f'per. Unit re· HARDWARE Sales Oerk. -Real Ett•te Sales Netu:W')'. Neat appear·
frames. Hun tngtn Bch By monthly job. NB, CM, repair )'ard, hauloutl. Gw;1 Ftne firm seeks sharp In-cording equpiuent O!sls COi· mllture, stable pel'80n, mu.st RH ance, Apply blJtwn 1 A 3
89l--0821 Laguna area. 548--9419. jobl tor top men. Blackle'1 dlvidual for . ten111c spot. later, rep1'001.1Ctr no. ~14, have plelllallt disPQl'lition. f 1611 Westciill Dr, NC!wpott . * CALL Us Flntl lioat Y8"1, 2414 Newport Lota of varle''" here. tor.er OO, Need koowled~e Good kn ° w I edge of Beach. LOST area of Baker & al n. bl 81 • ...1 .. , 673-6!134 ~ { wiring. hardware, plumbing, elfoc· T I I ~""'"'"-~~-~-Fairview, CM, brown & Cleanup, M nr. neaaona e V>I, ,,J:L · Call~: 'F~·~1tio~2700 tr!cal & tools req'd. Apply LlcenH ran "I Werehouse Supervisor
white male Ma I am u t c. Call 646-6852 Bookkeeper For Appointment In person; to 11. \V, \\'right Limited Time Only Growlnr corp. In bMhh C&N"
546-3932. General Services h\I .~ one Automotive Contact ~•rol Smith Co., 126 Rocheater St., CNta ramoua i.lct.'nae LVW°9e now field tw poalUon for txptr.
LOST: Thurs. Dalmatian, 1----------Bookkeeper with macblne $650 M('sa. 41.VlillnDIL' thru Tarbell Com· performance oriented ln-
LI v er.co I o red Fem., MINOR repairs, carpentry, Job Want.d, Mlle 700 ex~)C..<e. Send reswne to Art Director to AVCO HOUSEKEEPER, S:.30 to paHy. AppUcanu1 tuHy re-dlv1dual w/rapld promoUon
"Fl'eckles," 646--8168. paJnllng, ceme~. etc. 18 Yl"I BoJt 501 C/o 1>aU,y r'1lat, 330 A$tltre1tlve flrm tceka bright 4:30, !I dll)'s week, take care unourtea upon qwahticatkm: potenU&J to m a n a " t .
exp. Bob, 646-6446. SCRAM-LETS Weit Bay Slreet. C.olt.a Jnd!vldU&l to lead art dept. Fin•nclal :Hlrvice of 7 yr old boy in AM . Call l~ew or t!Apcr1!.!111.-ed Wei; Admlnis1raUve backa't\i.md --------
I-"""'-""'-'""'='=".:"="="':::·'----Super O'O'lP of tun people 545--8756. people. Operu.Lia" 11.vail&Ule. hf'lplul.. ITI4) ll> m.541.Q. H•ullng ~per here ~.r•-Lo111p1ete uiunin,w progra1u. WHO WANTS 10 WORK1' _.,._ ---=------ANSWERS U ....... n....."". --"""""" -HOUSCl<EEPER v.·anted, 5 t>u1 ure managemenl oppor-DRIVE A ~·•1 'liiiiiiiiiiiiliiiil•liir•• SKIPLOADER & dump truck We need one. automo ve ...,..."""..v;r .......... _....,w ~ual vppul , 1:.mployer daya Wt('k, 11~. Some ba-iuruues. l'.aU ~tr. Sloan at CHOOSE vno•r ~. -~ JI \\'Ork. Concrete, aspha1t, ~~pt:r. .;eoo ,..., ... uu: I ..,,,._ .. ,.. _____ I by1llting req. CalJ bef. 8 ~o. JY-........ ww"
:, B•byslttl"I sawing, breaking. 84&-IDO Italic -Exult -Navel -IO tiOX :>Ol, c/o UiiU)' 1-'ilut, UI::LIV~Y of DA IL Y a.m. or alt . 8 p.m. MS-7663. JAHBELL for your.etf, be 'P1Z own i 330 West Hay Sli't't!l, C.:011Ut. Fiie Clerk boll Men or women. CM be YARD, garage cleanups. Toward -TAXAnON \A.LU ~ t'ILOT, SUNDAY INLY, to HOUSEKEEPER v.·anled 2 all&htly handicapped. Vta. 1 1~ Ye~ Old WY \Vill ~&it Remove trees, dirt, Ivy. While It seema liU).o to men-=~:... .. · . · Wonderful way to start in the n~1paper c~enS ~ hrs per day to care !or han-REALTORS retired. Age 21 to TO, sup.. our ome. --vcr ·• Drivewys, gradJng. 847-2666. Uon It now, this {'()Ulltcy waa ..-business world. Co. la In· qwre1 the uae o a tat n dlcapperd aentlemen i n plement )'OW' tnoome. Drtw:
1 reliable. Even In g s & YARD &: Garqe Oeanup. founded aa a protest against We need one AutDmoUYC ternatlonal. Good chance 10 Wagon or Van. Contact lltr. Balboa Cove• are•. Mn. RE SA1£S.Exp'd F V Of· a cab 6 bn or mort a ~· :,~ ~~~e1 1:'i!~ Fis~W:ti Free est. 1 daYs. Call 1 .T_AX_A_TI_o_N_. -----=~~;:th~~~ e~~ advance. Alert attractJve ln· ~~e.!3° West Ba~ Balley, C2l31 498-2210. fief. Hi&h commlMIM ipUt. Aeoppl~~ ~~lb· Y:~ ~~
675--5691. anytime, 548-0031. :iUl J UatJ t' 1 dividual aought. ' . HOUSE\VIVES or husband I LQui •Y p.atJc1pa.uon. No ., .._ E. "' °'"'• .......-. area. · Job W•nted, FMtale 702 Ho.X ' c 0 Y 1 01• Call Kim •.•••••••••• 833-2700 DENTAL Chalnkle usls-wife _ work part time broker compctillon. Sta.n· Ateaa. WOULD like to care for your HAULING A cle'lllut by exp JJO West Bay Sltt!et, Uii1ta tant. 2 yn, exp., some eve manage dlatributin&: eenter dard R.E. Call Lee , yc~=~--.,-cl-eon--A-maln--~:
potty trained child. Hot colle~ studenl, ge trk. NEED help at home? We '"~!Iii, UwJ.. :i~~. hn. Good salary A .trln&e from home. Supply & train 8Ja.-.8100, taln btl. Must be over 18,
lunches, snacks, lrg tncd 534-1846 or 534-2164. have Aides, Nu r • e •. Ji.N~INU-hte, pel'n1. Escrow Tr•inw bf'neftt potential. ~ order taker• of food & house clean-cut wi no Iona hair.
yrd, 557-0-121. Housekeepers, C.Ompanlons, posJUOn in realll.urttnl uUll'l', 1 betwn 9 a: noon. holcf)roductt. Car req'd. No H..~. salesman, ex Per · Call M&-«16t ·
MOTHER of one wUI sit tod-HouJeclean1ng Homemakers, Up john, n.yp1y in _(M!n.on uruy, t>.....i l.Hdder of suece11 Is never DENTAL Aallatant Exp'd ln lnvE."ltment. LarJte com· Laguna Beach area, 1m&ll
dlen daily or weekly, 1''ivE.' Dod"tt•lod Cleonl-547~. LJUO .Park ur., N.B. crowded at the top! This ex· X·ra~ A: oral e~acuation. mlulon. Wrltt: P.O. Box ~~·~~{cw M1:1.IU'Cy, rth.r. ~~ ~•nts ........ 84~2'51 ... EXPERIENCED beautician .... ,.., 1v...5, Utime -0 r citing l!eld offer& chalh!.11 •• ••s-. . 23781 01\ldllnd, Ca. HG2l. _'W"I....,._. _______ _ '"'"' ..... ,.: . ' * \VE DO EVERYTHING * ...,.. .. A gv"' ""3 nd "" -.-_ --------, -c_1rpet Service I Refs.-Free est. 646-2839 YIOUld like ...,.. ....... n a& recep-p/wne. Must be ava11. & xlnt pay to career m1 • Uk:l)!UN~R or draltsman . ----~------1,;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:,;;;.:1 tlonist In busy shop. Xlnt i.,..,,·,.11ig1• "vpiy 111 pe1·i;u,1, ed . landsca-. Xln't OP""'" Will l~NE PERSONN k•CttptJO.ft1St I C M I I manicurist. Pref. 4 day "'k. l<:••n•iO•n·· Lloo M11.rket, JW Call Jo •••.••.•...••. 83J..2700 r~ ...... EL S"I'EAM Wrty o osta esa ~:..••;;•;;;c.•9, ___ -:---Call •~ • 38 ,,.,,,..... lraLI. 546-12!!2. '"'11.y u1· "'•"" ... u vr p...rl S \v .. lh 1· 1 AvaU now. o.w-ol v_... uuu, J'li.o. " team ay -e 1nes DlNNER COOK SER.Y1Cf5•AC,EJ1.V""V tulle, nu l' ... p nccdllir)', nt: IOO
name in carpet&: upholstery IRONING DOCTORS back office in the t:A::iri.J.J:it<S: bper. Pd. vac., Cl k T I t uso Ex..-need '"4\...1 1.r .. u1, nu 1_yp11~. 11 o "i' .. UR Fanden 4 You think clean!nr coast to coast. Cheap • 645-7487 Fountain Valley atta. Ex-11UllUd.fll', lllt'u. 11111., ~di.OU •r YP 1 to""" r-••e Ftte & Fee PollUons 11111r11WK1, <'I... /'l.VPIY lu tnpn
557-7123. perienced, own tr an 1 . W ., We ins. & protlt lhaJ'. S the head f the 1aa e BLUE DOLPHIN e Adheilve Salesman to $11K pt!ra111 k.llY k.11. vr t!ve Ill ii:' ~nly E:r~ 111 '~fuc:s~
I C•rn.anter Painting & 9112-1.865. uig. APPLY tu pen.on, Mun· le~ up all~ frte~s in 3355 Vla Udo, NB Carpenten, 2 yrs exp to $4.~ ~ \ieiil l.Dlu.t Hwy, /lid. made to order. HoU 6 RM.-
I""' P•~rh•nglng Help W•ntec:I, M & F 710 · r ·r1 ~:;jtj am-4.:JO pm. Na· thia Kf'eat 1pot, Variety a: DISHWASHER for AM Screw Mach Oprs. to $8.00 KU.I.U' Cook: l'ull time, tttw ' Co-Men. anliQul>,
I MINOR home repa i rs . ...;:..::~~~""""''---uUUll.l .l.oWU"'-'l' I.A., h.W fun group wait far )'OU. boun. Apply in pel'IOll, FJC Bkkpr/P A L to sa:>O UiU Aton IM\I F'n 7:30 w J IUptt <:Oll, Gtnulnt brDaid
P-umblna: • carpentry • Interior-Exterior AC'CTS RECV. CLERK, with lirookburat,_H.e..____ super benettta. Snack ShDP t>lo. 9, 3444 E. Recepl/T~t, IP.ton, t'~I. lltelMl Yeroe Couv. clofh, lined w/iO Muskrat
palntina. tile. Call 5f0.5560. custom work g.iarran, Spec. oollectlon exp. M •nu a 1 U:tJ:.MICAL Operator &:: C.ll Lee •• , •••••..•• 8J3.2700 Colt Hwy, CdM. An equal Wed, F'rl, t, Sun) $550 IUMipiW, li61 I.inter St, P*'-I a beaver oollar. ln
I C•r-t S1r11ce price on apta/vacancles, l,YStm. Irvine location. u..00111.wl')' Tecnnw11a for oportunlty employer. Glrl F'Mda,y/lh to $550 ~.M. ~. pt'rt. cond.. A quality piiecl,
I ...... Free Color Coi:aultlna a: Mn. Wood, 833-m7 &mail chemlcal man u f . DOUGHNUT -$tioo needa all E1erow Tralnee/typr lo s.5(0 KN. 3-11, Jt time OR. RN all Nh' ~ Aakkw S350.
OHN'S Carpet &: Upholstery Est., \\'on't be underbid! ANTENNA INTALLER l)Wlt. H. e q 's ded.ic.auon, Cashier Tr•lnee around help. Mllit be W t & IBM Kcypunch/uper 10 $475 lhUt1, Jt time ICU. Pacttld& "m-"'-=J511= <&tt=l"-.----
Dri-Shampoo free Scotc~ Refer.,· Uc. Bonded, Ins. Top ~. Must have ex:r,r-cbem. knowledae, meetina; depenrtable. 698 w. 191h Gen'! Ofc/tlgun! ap lo $375 Hoap1t&I, iirnu DelawlU'C,
I -·-~ (Soll •-·-~--11) •-' ·~ le-. Some •• ,,, ab ·ru. c111u1en&e1. UL1I E I mer Great crttce lookln& for C.M. Betwn 10 am .l 1 p~ Comm·1 Loan Stc'y to $000 Hunt. }kb, W-OSU. Apptlencet 112 •-· ~~-· · ~~~~:::ooo:·c....----:---: ~·,-2963• alte• 5-pm. ., Leellerts,"-, 829 w. vldual onloY> 0, call 5'7-91Jll ., $!8-0858. !ti E 17th <at!Ninel C.M. SAW Degreuers &: all color THESE ............ cash onlfi· '1-'-""'=c=co'~=~~ ' · • ~· br1ght lndi I ~ L .. 4 1470 EXTRA 1·-•voc:.do -.. b..1,,bte n & 10 minute ., .... " i :':"::"•:•·:":·~·~~====· I meeting pec>p e I ui eager -~ -r _ ...... 1 •'6 ne 8dnn apt~. acc. ce Ina: APT -Alst Atgr & AWnt. toleun.F\lnipot l °E:OP--------1~~!!"~~~~~~ 3 door K•n~or e 'i ~~a;t'~rn::ebyc~~ ~~~ef~.tr&;pe~u~~1~:~ =leMe!:'~~~nitl. 1n i.:terlcal Cal1Marlon·········811-2700 IEDP ~ AGE JSANASSET ~~0t'":'~~p:
me extra trlii-. Will clean Incl. No waitlna; 894-5103, SR. £DP JANI1URS for • t e • d y ...,.. .. ~ ........ ~· ·•-4 or 11 Ing nn dining rm &. ASST. CUSTOMER SERV. p/llmt \lr'Ork. 6-10 pm \Ve nctd a aood mtture .,,.,._ ~ .. "".
I ~ $15. ·•Any rm. ti.so, '842-41""°""79;·::--;==:----MEN 20 &: UP Temporary Gen'I Office Trainee l\.1o~rrl In Orartjl;e Co. Call person 4(>.{.() yn 01 qe. "'eekend• .
. couch no. Chair $5. ,,. yn. No Wutlnt PART-TIME EVES. CONTROL c• rnr Cl••ry, 12131 -' Newport 8-11 Co. wllb Rent WUhOH/Dryen I exp. ts what counui, not * WALP.t\PER t Your sense of humor mo1t LUU\ J • . 1 m111iy benctita. $2 Wk Full mal
method. I do work myaeU. \Vhen ycu call "Mac' CHRISTMAS HELP Wllll im portant here. Great iroup UNIOR 8ateamen. 0.15. Good ~ 1 • weakly ciuh · * e».m * nt.
Good ref. 531--0101. 548-1444 64S-tn1 * START NOW seeks compaUbl« 1plrtt. Earn S»f40 per week 1t t· bonut pian.
Lota (If public contact, ao ting new cuatomcn for the We have peoplt! wtth UI over • DlSHWAIHERI, wuhen,
1 SOLIDED CARPETS? lSf CLASS painthla:, decor-$112 PIR WEEK must M attractive. DAILY PILOT. 11'1111 DOI a l:l yrs &t ei.U07 woridnM: In d~ nblt, ~le
, Youni man willS::make ~m atina. pa~1 •1 brush1 Growtns cc. tilrill¥ 11eat men 11 You. Axe A· Call Marlon ••••••.•• 811--2700 DUTIES: newspaper route and doea lne local ana. de v'd ... 11».
look new. Sat. ar. n.o::as. roller and spray. n · ex ·• tor customer aervice dept. • Jecret•ry Run EDP ltl'Vice delik. not Include coUeettrc or Please phOne tor 1 n $80. 1 Y'P.. pun, 4kl • ln-
' ratei.73 For in ca 11 : tree eat Eve. 648-5283 er No. C!:XJM:~t. needed. Start • ·1 ypiit Chick Jobi lD l OIJt of dcl!~rina. Tranaponallon ll m erview stall. Lall mod. au cYcle
8"l'H1 • 541).6248. Malcom. SW Per WK. General Ofc. to $525 operationt area tor com. provided. \Ve v.'Ol'k lour l ' KentDal'9 waablr. Drl11t. , Cement, Concrete PAINTING a: PAPERING, CALL DAILY " boMt<Mper pletenea. t'et1orm I a Pe houri after achool and 8 on '44-02l2 19 yrs. in Harbor area. Lie LH 7-09U • K.cttptlOnttt Your da)'I wW 0)' by In this llbnrtan ~PciaBalanoe fc;'rt~~"v~":Y T=~ KENP.fORE W....., A au
PATIOS.PLANTERS & bonded. Rd'• fUrn . I..,..,_,..,..., ..... .., .. • urc. ... inner run office. Loll of varlefr; 1 ~= ~b ~ ~ Hunllniton Be•ch llttu on-•a•i•uau 1.!r~olda57~Mrl·
: All Concrete work. Brick, ~&1!:!~~2356~·=-==-:-= ASSEMBLERS Come See U1 At IU~ co-worRn aeek ght ly. You mu.I: bt out of ~ ~ MOVING! G.E. Dtctric
I alum]&IDne wk. 894-3533. INT ~ .. .?T paintur' altlna'w .. o""• dr Assembler Faaoi011 Lliat.00'1 Uni,)' ~r}~ .............. 833--2700 EXPERlENCE:5: school by 3Ex M1_ t ~ v.,~lc Si&nl. Every TbuJ. dt)«', tcp ot tht Unr.. · PATiu:s, walks. drives. Saw, han ... ,. na 1'emponr)' Help :$ervu:e 1·2 Yrs. prior control derk pate. r,r..-nce. neu man a proaPf'C1. tr· 1 yr o&d SlfXl. !m-'l'm_
break, remove It replace t1nisbin& 548-790.l. ex per. tn DOS and OS en-r.ven pr o r 11 y . rifk com.million A bonus
1 concrete. 548-8668 tor est. PROF. Painttnc, also roofs, Interviews Secretary to $6SO vtronmt'nt A knowledge ot [ proaram. Other llnta OK. ~~1:o!w' :i, l CUSTOM CEMENT WORK accoua. oell. l.ntt:r/exttr. 8:30-ll:.)(J AM Only lana\l.llif. Others need not Keypunch H.X.t.. lndullrlf1. Inc. cit•n. 93-fOIO, j Drives, WALKS, patios. Llc/ln11. Free est. 64.Hl91. T • Fee Paid •pply. ~714) 87M'r.15 /Dryw bnnd
I pool dtckl. Don. ~4:.. WALLPAPER HUNG ra1nees P. P. 5, Rqtona! oWce o1 nat~nal Apply ~12 Moo-Wed •+~_;;~~~.7.113•.,..•'tlmc. SALis.APT. i:i~ .... 8-4 ~·
1 Chlld Care Carl Rebko . 646-2.449 Pacific Personnel known flnn .eek• attractive PACt.nC MUTVAL Irvine ~50 RINTALS •961-t!Ol•
I CHILD-HO~fE c&re while INT. & Exter. ACCOUI· cell-Hrvlcet polled lrxilvtdutl. D e 11 I 700 Ne'Wpol'l Center Dr AN-ht.lm • • .~2322 AltncUve <la wllh •r: OVER ni v.·uhtrw, drymi.
th tnp sprayed. Lie., Ina. fol' mlcroelectronlc a.. w/cllenta • oo. reyresen. Newport Bt9Ch Nk.~.t.:li A FEE I I l'.M1 u pe.Una ala p o 1ent1 a . rclrtittalon bollt $39.il · '~::un~w;-ai!d~:h~0~tb L4cal ·refl. 64Hkl9. Chuck. 1emblt opt:r•tlont. 500 Newport Ctr Dr, NB cJ.:3~ thll ~~ ·~-1100 L '---Tempo Temporary Jkle 1•1e...e tend rnu.iroe to Rffl· ~-
'
r.I. ·--··. J!cJ., Mill. API'. Jnt. Painting, Carpet Must ••• __. oyo-("ui·ro 950 ) Alao --~111o.... EXECUTIVE N'EEOS 1111 Oe-p1 .. P. O. Box 1810, Furnltvre 110 ·-· ~., shampoo, cleaning. Rei.. r-• ·~ ~ ·• ADMINISTRATIVE Newport Beacll, Cal. mu. ;.;;;==---...;.-'I
'Controctor 1 '"~~~-~7059=·==-:o:= sight end 11 ... r dox-'4Uol910 ASSISTANT KEYPUNCH Sol" Clork-Plumb'-CNTRY Fr. din "'· • pc ~ 1 terlty, _,.,, a valld _ .... 1....... hi k ""' sem. wu1 .cu all or p&rt.
JACK Taulanc -Repair PAINTING -Hones~ C•llfor;i~-driver'• 11. AllO In Or1np Secretary &:~ ro!.U ... ;;lk~:'r !xperienc.d Only l.~ room teet. sz,o. All
; remod add.It. )) yrs. exp, suaranteed wor"4o I 541""446 E:ri;ctllent t),,1at, almp19 Jt.e.a.11 Pana s.J.1 llke new. Al.I 4-)' 9.&n. aft S ;·hiLlcjii:'di .. Mi' ~yiWi•~>i°'ii· 54ii7.-jji~",.i&i ln&ln&iijuuitredii;. ~;ii;;i7ii.iiiiiii cense, incl be eb • to L .. al Trainee to $650 book kt t po I n I · Good * ~lel * wkdfl 6C5-&m. ~" • rigid ~yslcol y •-J 1 a ~ """""' 1 ••• ml".tlon. nl"IS & 'ullerton Dell.ahUul •ttomre)' 1Hlu telephone manner. Business Dey l Swl:\!hlft SALESU.D _-l."Wf .1"'1 1' RE~~ . '"'"" ~1 170-IW lhatp 6 ttract1 blclqp'OUnd to Include u -A II bl .con. RmNnott, R<1 d. I much •nd matdWW kJ\,. 2nd shifts. ~ to joLn 1hla ha:! 1>9rieT'ICt with Ad Ac<.')'. v• • I C.0.it. •feta, ~3402. IUI. 2 wttlcl old WUl 11e.ll
ptcked atAff. X 1 n I op. Publ!Shtt, ,\tanuf1eturlna 6 ~10·1 actual .. 'Orte t'XPM'· on SECRETARY tor UJ5. Call $.ST-Mil .
portunlty to learn hllh Co'•, ind Salf'W. o!Uw r • keypunch, kt')'tlpt t\l:\G list OrUio matt.ras 1
* .
* * * * *
Trader's Paradise
Work In • clean, •Ir·
condltlonod ohop locot-
od noor tho booth.
lnloy top componr.
bonoflts. Thooo ~ •
tMirl1 offer •n exceJ.
lont fvturo with •
growing commorclol
division of H""'" Air-
craft Com,-ny.
CLERK TYPIST
PURCHASING DEPT. oaYlnr fteld. $4500. or key di~ df-vltt!. M.tur•/'•rt Time bm: ~ -new condition
Call Tracy · · ••••• ·• .833-27fXl Bl.IT E:xP WORTif t.tORE! lnle?'V'A'I Aion-"'C'd 9 am•l2 fllattu"f' 1a.cb who can takf' . ullf'd MM ·111an 3 Wftkl $2n.
CAU. GEO. COl.LL'JS shor1hand 6 t)1lt' v.'f!U 1n Call atUT 1:00 ....
: HA VE $87 M el[Ul9' In 6
• houael •ad 2 d\iplexes In ; Ore.nae. Want 1ara:er Pl'OJ·
1 tct or local land to deveiOp
: 6]5-353ll
: 1V10 ISLANDER V.O'l'OR
· JIOME, Jeu than 2>,DQ) ml. $7900. Tt•de for pick @, van or bolt t?T ~ or m-0230 alt. f
lines
times
dollars
TRADE l3IOO equity In Ira
mobUt home 24xlO ln •dull
Santa Ana Park, for real
ulate, lot, au.to, ot 11%\31ler
lrlr. etc. 646-2586.
HA V£ clear land by Red· ~ $17,000. 8)' Santa Crut
. By Lancuttt $5500.
Please appl)-In pl!nl>n.
BILL ZAHN
HUGHES
Aircraft Com,.ny
500 Superior Avo.
Newport lloedt, Collf.
'2663
Want lb.lie, ~ prop.
M&tcllam Rltr MM8!7.
WOODED lo~ LaU 0"8·
ory, nwmbcnblp lnd'd, AU Equal -NII' ornploytr
uti!, F /C. lltOl volue. l•:::=:i:i::-: ~ow'::.:.= I Aou.JJ!f TrolMM /
PurchUina: or marl con trol
exper. helptul. 60 w.p.m.
elec. typewriter. Must havt
top caerlcal lkllll.
Call for APQt
Industrial Rtiatlonl
(714) -1
TELONIC
INDUSTRllS
L ............
Equal a-. Em(>lo><r
CLERK!I • run A p/tlmt.
ConwNtnoe ll'Ot'f!T'Y •torr.
Hunt. &h atta. Phone ..,.1!16'!:.. ____ _
a:EiUCAL-Reat.aiaant f')l· per. p/thM cuhlfr. = Mn. noni<t'
Coco's
Production Artlot
Talmled creatlvt 1t1U wants lndlvklual Mitt to .. 1.1.
Idtll loc:a"'"1. StJarulaUno
&r'L-. ....... ,13H!OO
n+-mo-l4*> for Appl. PACiFIC MUTUAi. = :; !~~m-~ MULn colnrl'd Ooral ~!ltd
t.."XEC. Secnlat)', musl be 700 N~•'PO't C•ntn Dr prn, _. dayt;. l..«n-'t'b olOCt: Clltletl, m. Pr. wVw beck
lnttllltent, organbl'd • wlll· Newport Bea.ch k>calN on faatuon ltl&nd, blue I•~ dwln $11, pr. Inc to auume inordinate ~....n:i lblll·•~ ,..._1, N"twpOf't h eh. 8 a I • r )' -""::.=;:..--......,-~-l"ffPOlll '--Ulllep «'11• LAUNDRES!I A H 111 k p I 12.50/hr lt> 1wt. Phonr ***lofA ll rnMdlJllc kaw =tome J ~..!.ri,t I. Comb. F'ulltlmt. M •• a Joan JOftll'9 &l m-«m f.cr ""'· nnw med. 8otJa SUIO.
• ..... ._ h :i Vmst Conv. Ho 1 p It• I . appi. U1WAlly home. •m.o.
t TYPu..r. '4.Mlll3. ----~ EXJ:CUTIVP: ....., 11 i~Z'bnfac:'~~·~ L .. •I hcNtary ·~D»--f! deM, tra1nui ;,..: .:
to $5GO abUlt to woR: w/peopMI i. EJl:ptntnoed • l'I~ Conltr •rte fiOO" ..:~=·~145-=D:=:=----
helprul. Localkm Clly of C.!Ue,."?lne : ~-~~ /:::SUK DIN!:Tl'E SETL r.ble lour
Rocoptlonl1t
Color fhlt job ha PP Y 1 ar.np, In etwrp cf 2 otts. ....~~1 1-.i rr L.h Re:I r's Aam:t °'9ilf'l. P«an nn\llh, Sl&O.
Chetrf\11 attractive, brlatlt Ill.I. c 0 m m ~ n 1 u r, 1 c r""V~nl'M' ".e~ COO Campu.. ·br •ta:10 =r:~nu.alott~t b' ll'OOV)' W/lbllhy. (n4t !47-otM. ~ "~~¥7f " B ~2118 NtwlJl)M 'BHth MOVJNO, "°'* rUU of
c.JI Debby ••••• · • • • .m-2700 r p Id ... a -...-~ fumllart Incl. piano. Mon.
" • MAINTl .... NCE N BIXIU:TARY, ~.,.._ l/tl<'DO. thnl Fri. 1411-l.ltl.
Rotoll Soltt
Al•lstont Monogor
Very poob dlle I b o P wf~tront 11ttkl "" ansau .. at· Ind Individual ... My ..... -t!llol--
f'or:'an U $UIK Mu11 bt r.mll w plumb-l~'I ~Jkllla. ~noMll 2 Nf'W niAlth.llw fr. Pro\lt~ Rub r/pla• 1c.'I tt-10 I ll lnr l'lrt'trlral A lr:f'n 't t.'ar· Dept. lfo.p. f(.L cW lm<Ml.U. PDO b Adhtllvrt Sil t.1 ..... ., lln -n'1-. llot•l 1t•l"'"r. rtf'CC"U. • ' -~ £1c.cironk ~ l ltK !;. '11"cnonnrt ll•MJ•r, both. ~· -n.. • ..,..._. :1'0::~~'!."""' l: .. , ...... y Clu~ Seolrily HoullOfleifi 0... 114
Cffltlt °"" to Im 1221 w. Coost H • NB I WANTl:D: "'""" .. -
'T'yplll MASTER TIUor ' T•Uorf>u Office.. kr I.up Jltl1«'t 4'&lnocw'I
Bun"OU(tll 1,,.3000 = .-a.n1ed to ""°"' In fiUl'Pon 1 • ml caM. "nae Or 1 b'xl
R3 VICI'ORVIU.E Imp.
Lot -Grtat potnlill.. 90x
14 w/alle)', $2.500 eq. I«
condoub!Jt, hte, CU', bolt, camptr or 1' t W-7133 aft a
U15.IXX> N. TUltli\, 5 Ac.,
-borna. Tl'odo $211(),t)CI) ..,,. for aoUd lncoma ,...,..
:::..."'"'--==-F"-7.c=-1 '"' ...... pa..:'"*"*
HAVE obanniol po<.! -1'op jU. Pmo. ·-pon:y. In Rancbo Mlrlco. """ All lhllll. ::r' m1a1 "".:.r.:t"~ P .P .S. NO PIES
LAGUNA HILLS
~-M~ '°~~ .. · ..... Call f lllJ hrtt1me•l'\!tldmo ~.o.'lt..~.== -·· W llM't Vl""" -A\"tf'alt StOO pl"t wMk to =· Stcntary °ji; MOTU. llla'dt Nf!rfded WOl 11.111, J»id ., •~at I• 11 , ~~=::..:,ry-='-----Tii~SI s.a.wy llOl rntn. Apply tn ,,.._ ..i1. -tal to uto ""'"""· ....., Free A y, Poalltona ,._. MN lnn. J 2 o !l Opport\U'ltf to advatlC!t to -•
C&lJ llrbl:ra ••.••••• m-2'1GO
tf1ll. Pr1nMT"tie Bltr.
SKl--!Umt,
bnat C'Ulll;m built. for In or
oulbo9rdJ....... MW trtr, eo11
_, 11"'1. FOR p!<kup
tnlt'k or w . MWttf.
I '12 001..(>R 'rV Combo. o:>m·
• plete. ~~•~or A 14'1r, 'Cl ront natllPo nw rar
vu, aunllkw hir, Jt&. win ort?T**'4.
12),t)CI) """"' to -..... .. .. .
Bkr. sr.>?221 ......... lenlooo •n MO'l'l'O Gull!. 11dtll1 ill !'lo. ,_,
bqs, -Id, OR "21 Ii> u---dlan ~'o/-Scout, ...-. C.-go, CallL
Trad< -=..!..'" " 147•6446 boor. ; ........ .n~
Uke to tnde! our 'l'nwlilr• AM for Jllebel Ng
Pand!N ootumn 11 tot )'O\l! AVON ~A.nY~ I 11-EAllN .MONEY
Hae '""''' ..... °""'"" , ...
DISHWASHD
Apply tn-
:Nll)l ..... Da l.oCutll>
(At t11t 'r Ton tna:u ramp
&D. """-1'1
,,,/a~ ~ • .=,.,~ Pvt • 1tt11o ·1oo1· "'"
2112 lclll• Dr.
C!CJ1t1. Y • q_ a_ I I o n • 1AN-ttD lNlll bllV'Dlll b I 1 ...
111111
11!!1•• * 1r * * * * .--. cau -1cr ·w. Call Oadhd1! -................................ dtlahlill-100. ~...,=:::=""=-~~~-· ==-:.:.:::::::.; ...... :::::::::
I
Jlanor Bl'At. OI. • dt14!t'ltw. CW s.rwt1y "£r~t: ::."&-':i
NIWPOltT :llO'fEI, MA!d, run ,IJl$U.. .....~ ""'" ~-"llocT, ~ ...2!! &.•~---l'-wwl ~ ~ -!~ Bl ~ ml ~ HalW Anaholm ~ ••---· --~-Dr N _,.. \ ' f-'r"iM;~ NO\'ffllh.-r 2Hh. Ii 1 bttC '°"" DI • mo n d IU ..,...r ,, • • l<Ha. • llnotolt< ""-,_ NI
6Q.ll7I AM· -. I • (TIO.,... l•~!!"!l•"'!:~~"!"•I A dtPff1t:llblil, JMNn • •. v1c::r. 91"' -'\liNmtn M•;ce1 -.. .. w 11 1MMe C.. Otr1 ~ •i>CIWI 1ar a 111n 1111n:1t "'" ·i JJ.o, -
llcntary tt do lllft'I olt tJme poehbi llt Pain• lfM" p,,IMe """""' I )(uac ~· 1)..lM nir.ld A.,.,..•
lMtl i\""" Colt• MIU 4IC. bor i~1.I In GtldrM a."" OM mrrll ~. t'lt tNdl t.._ A •hJ1 Ml tL a.... 11111 ablfo ao l.&k O'Wf" Orow. 1i1WJ to ti. 4t.-• r 1t "Pll"•t'!HY''" APOIY AM ,.._.. n-iw fnud A ~ 1n .~ oc mll'. n,,.,.... M• r , .... &PPI t.a Mliti mo·· ll\'d,,·e.M.. 1lr8 ll0 a ••ca.
<0. -· pl'fl'.d. Coll Mr. er Jo AJto at IU1 m .1111. SEWtNU • Op< ,,,.,. -,;;. 'ni -It: lt.uldl w-. ..,, ... till>--"-..,. .-. --. -= ... ,,,,,.,.. .... -Dall1 PUoc Want Adi ha'ft f'IQ'dl. J ID 11 A 1 ID U ti..t•MM who 1 TI S I '991 ........ llt. !!!pl!!! pl!!· ...u;., J(.JI, .,... I0-"1!1 MllioMo. C.M, flOoU!t ~Colli!!!,!-!!:!!!8!._ ____ I
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USED
POOL TAILE
l..ADIES 3 spd Bike $3>. Wool
fringed shag area ruit. bU,
$45. Dble mattress $10. Den
lamp $5. 644-4005 aft 3 p.m.
POOL Tables -Fttl~ht
damaged. All n'f, $49 to
$1 99. Chri !lmas
Lay-A-Way. 639-8623.::::.. __
POOL Table, 4x8' sl11.te,
·Anllq, Stype. $.12!1. Will
deliver-free. Ph: 83fr.8102.
BF:DROOM set • romnlete.
$50. 138 E. 18th St., C.M.
824
SCM MODEL 44 COPIER for
saJe. Xlnt cond. Best offer.
R. L. Foley & Associates.
675-1800.
SEC. chn $8-$23. wood desks
$21}-50. st or cab $40. 1167 W.
19th CM. Pierce, 642-30.
RI .UE PRINTER. Bruning
MOO -16, white printer. l yr
n\rl S.'500. 548-3486, ~
27' TRAVCO
2S' DISOOVERER
lO'~ CONTINF,N1ALS
lO' PIUD!;. • JOYS VAN CONVEllSIONS
~ales e Service e Rental• * Da-'r Inc. * 13801 Harbor Blvd., G.G.
531-6800
Next to G.G. Datsun
'67 PACER 21'. Setf.a>nt'd,
..... deck, air, lndult'J 6,
reblt motor. X1nt cood. AT
---~-MG ·Lllil Chrw-. ~ ' l ~..:.· ';I:".; '-:; 1960 MGA.. BEAU'W'UI., . •• '71 'CQRVltiE .
cancellation, $12:; + 5c mi. wire wheels. lfult lell: COIJll'I :
-Irvine. NOW ON D!SPl..o\Y HHDU, • ..,_ ~. C.M. HMl303 1JKE. B!UND NEW
Roni A Motw Home Sales · Service MGI VOLVO Spart c..ioe·NIO 4 4 Spsl 350 V-8 1iJ ' for your v .-tion farla . Bocb' Shop lpd over drive,.lfte ,,blu call • . • • -' * _, "l H. . '6b MGB;. orily 35 OIO mUe9 .......... 541,.. Wheel, R~1ol•,· " 4
Molor home tor ren-.:--.J!:ttlpOrfB~ m1111 ..U. $1000. ' ' 1'61 Volvo 122 ._.. FM . Oronge' MetoU'
'72 WINNEBAGO,' 27', * 673-64t6t * Xlnt cono. * Call 615-1691 ' · • Sleeps 6. -~,.;c.,o~ "10 MGB GT .xlOt cood. Power w·, ~:d o.w ~,
1m SHASTA'"°'°"'°""' tor · -· , • .~~ ~ A~-~· 990 Brokes,-St~in9, _l :1i!·~t~n~pos,a1r, ~Uql ; . PORSCHE . ·a"'" . •$.5195. ' ··I.
FISHER • • • Boots,.S.il 909 Auto S.rvlce, P•rtl Mt AUDI .'1f z, dr, 'JOO LS, ** 'CT Bufdt.-Skyl&r~ . •• . •
PR ICE IS RIGHT IT FI G Sloop 11200. Float•· WANTED TO BUY !:-nl ~ -· '60 PORSCHE, ......0,, new Convert. , •4WIO mt. 'Ill •••"•' Pretty mwlc for the holi· tion,, alum span, dacron 060 ~r piltona ..,.,,.....'....:~to-,_ ~· fll.•. radials, l:nklel, ah>cltl, ~ ~,..~ , ~:, AO» .&VMJ• days. FISHER KX-90 stereo sails. 3 hp Evin., air, In the J 350 Chevy Block e.~ . • .. 646-ti833. ohau.st. AY-FM..M, extra nu. ~! tVH, pwr) & £. ltib. 'a.Ii ....
amplme. {powor only). <O water, can be oeen 'JOW· l ~~or~Call~~-~lm~~~~I AUmN HEALEY de&IL $!600. or oite..,, ltrK-. >(Int ltz.,.! 84}-2446._ • · ; -.. watts RMS, 4 lune. sel. tape 833-8473. -~374.1 after 8 p.m. '56 Buick Special; cherry
mon. loudnesa cont. hi filter, UDO 14, No. 1773 good con-*'* 1962 AUSTIN HEALEY WILL Bl.I)' your Porsche paid conditioa. ~ l'f.<m inI. $495. concentric baa& Ir treble & dition, new trailer, $950. 3(0).. fOr or not. Call· Kent Allen 6'1S1-0091 -No calla alter 6:30 ~::e· J~.ud~~~;;,~ c!~ 84&-3:~IES. CAT l.f' f W.forS. JI A J $795 ·-· Call m.4459
83·~ 912, -~ PM. ~II.LAC coUVk, ~
fast for $75. Ph. Mike Xlnt rond. $850. IMW new palht, '3(!00. ' 1--...:.;..;;;=-.,::=:..:.:::__
675-1527 aller 5,30_ 5.13-6310 (Orangd 6@-1)27 * ~ YOUR ONLY 'till COUGAR.~=
EVERY Zen.Ith & RCA TV In 24' Sbarlc: w/trlr, jib, genoa,T c;..ruc~k;;• _____ :.962= vi.tr oC1r DftF borMI '71 PORSCHE 911·T, 5 spd. owner,, :ir..J-'X&.~-f'....
1tock on sale now at Orange main sail, spinnaker, anchor -I 18M mUes. ilnmac. oond. •il'M..•J.'VkY · .,~_..,
Co u n t y ' • I ., g e • t & line. $3000. 615-0616. '73 ChoYE'Olot ISOO. otter.-mJ4M ·AUTHORUS> WAN'l'l!ll ~~1:~rt~.&~ 'gr -~.~~~m~"J."""'r:..."·"'mo~Maln"',""'::;f_6!15_jlb: Pick~ sf.o.Y-RJOY ·C~:.... •· Inc. ·~ . .:..~-~ c~ AC : ~'r~;~M~•-ae:imll·
Doy cash or terms to 36 Term.a. 675-fi675 L P •-'-"-oc-=.:•=•~=·-'----1 -·-w1·.-~ · ·u-;..., -, ...,
mol. Prices teu lhan the KITE. No. 893. Excel cond HOWA°:.o crh:--•-t ,. .Al,1. .. L ~uuil "w l.MdlJ: -·-
dllcounters with our own $600. Terms. 304 S . ...... 2Ji1 J!vttth St. TOYOTA =n-~. VllW4# '··••1W.u..)'. ~'e". ,b,,._,~. ?-·--lf
quality service! ABC Color Bayfront, Bal Isle, 675-6675. Newport BNch ~ Meu . $t6 4444 :11
1'V 9021 All•oJ•. Huntington '72 AQUARIUS 23' '1oop MaoAru•"' " ,.,.,..,,... Blvd -U~·-BltfW'-SEE Ir DRIVE " ii'·. .._.__ .. • , .. • .. BALD\VIN Piano Model 46 Beach 968-3329. w/'72 9,L HP eng. Loaded 13M555 S ·~-• '&I~' . =· , Jtl) • HP. abM>lutel.v nerfel't ronrt. n · lt Th AD H '73 -Pl" 1 •u .. -' · RCA Color Con!Ole $325. w/extril. $4800. 548-ll31 1972 OIEVY El Camino -~ • · ·. •· · ~ -.'" ~ 8 e.w '-'ClulllMIC S. 'r.&IO.i • _....• This is a professional in-C PIS P/B • ,.., ¥ ... "~1M1 New ~ •' -... n_;;.
Piana!l;/Or~an• 826
strument, cost aver $.11'm. rest Electronics, 2OO1 , , air co ft d -' -TOYOTA ' · ..... _ a.uw; -Will sell for best oHer. lf arbor Blvd., C.M. &o.t1, Slips/Docks 910 fiberglass tonneau cover: '' · • • · """""' !u\a..&>V'" JM.a, 1 :1·~. · 968-4505 646-9389. Make otter. Days 557-7851, '71 tlliO -SI DAN l ,,...,.,,"'v,,,A "~ ~-:iCall,83&-1'17 aft 5:3D -~~===-=--,.-..,~~-NEW slip takes 35' motor l.~ev;:•~•,,,5J&..'1245~~~----~-1 CREVIER BMW ...:.1 w u~u :,WICIM,t-_;.., * 2 Chevy bckt seat•. new WURLITZER Spinet, Ma~. RCA 25" console, walnut C8W 1970 Carlill 4 -~ one owner blk uphol. $50. Gu lawn Excel tone $395. 968-7079, cabinet. late model, xlnt boat, $75 mo. 4459 W, Cst. '69 CHEVY % ton heavy duty Sales • Service -Leasing Fullac ~. DeVllle. Dodge ~. 2 dr, ~r. t15. 557-'869. 893-5!K8 cond. $220. 96.1-2963 aft 5 "H"-wy=·..:.N:.:B.:...:6'15-:::...;'185=1·:___ pick-up, 3.50 engine, PIS, ~ w. ht ~8i71ta Ana mOTA W/~~.:~ belted ·ttrea. AJc. PIS.
548-4485.
•••••••••••••••••••• OLD,J;;~: = =.1. $l0 Boofi, Speed & Sid 911 ;,/ct ~i:ng "'!10:,'. · · upbolalery. ·Am-Fm,.IW'Oo.1''62:;tru.;;;,r.,0000,;;:-""'1:;;::,':'-'1,..-:Dr:-. -:--1
11800. ~2881 DATSUN 1966 H.-, C.M. 646-9303 Sliarp coad! Owner """' --· --1115.
645-2031 20FtSea.Ray200sertes. l 'S9%T.ChcvyTruckw/lf1 • • • EXCEi. one owner 1969 ldl.$3950.M&,1&. .ue:tt •• ·~'aas .
A COMWNllNT IHOPPfNC AHO
SEWING GUfOE fOJI TME
GAL ON THE CO,
l'---r ... '-' v .. -.JJ[I
3 Lines, 2 Timn, $2.00
year new. 445 CI Oldsmobile bed 0 ...... 1..... -L Toyota Corona. 4 dr, Rood 19'10 CAD. EtBORAOO -i!ftaft pock-a-jet ..,.;ne. F.qWpped · ·-·-~ &ea1' pe tires, R&H, below Dlue Ful\Y equip'd. lllat coad. ,-v__. · '
tor t1shing &. water skiing. ~ 797 59651 EW bJok. ~1629. Orig pvt owner. W/rac. tor
Fully equipped tandom =.::...=·==-==;,•c_ N POil •n CDROLLA, 2 dr, 4 spd, $5295. 1Jt eorme.. 'lit Ud. '6i FORD Van.,Good.:iMPt. trailer. 'Ibis outfit is like '69 % T Intern'l Pickup Rl:H. Jo miles. Shelby 644-7895 or &trl'nl\. Cpt)d.: Jlne\ecL , $MllWtieli.
new. Ori&inaJ. oost $9"DJ. w/10' cab o/camper. Fully ••• ,. SUN Map, 'nu.tire&. Extru, Xlnt CAD '66 EldondoiOmv, full oder. lit& 1131 4'ay11
Sac:rtt:ice $500). phone eqUip. Sacrif. $1'l5 0, ~ cond. $1550. ~-pwr &. air, Joadied W/Una. 5t9 6331 Cll'1 ,,....,,. d .
831).6482. 842-0176. ~ 19'10 Toyota C0roaa Mark U-~ tires A battery, wry I ,,,,p=.m.::=..--, .;.. _____ J
HAPPY, htalthy t1J1Y pop MUST &ell 14• Sid boat .& FORD 250 % Ton P.U. It I' Now .Open Air AM1F1!f. lo mt. l111IO clean. SJ240. Pri .pty. Ill )URD ..,. ..._ -
For a n M In Woman's World H.B. Vet, Beach Blvd needs Traller. .cab over camper. Hu 4 spd .1, ln ~. · ti44-6510 Jittecl Ud.· motor;·.scL tlfts;'
c.11 Mo.., a.111 '42-5678, .. , 330 iamny&Tl£53(;.'J591 531-2164, 548-8995 ~:'2~ .. ~· Good NfWPORT '71 ~Land CruJoeN.o 1912S&DAN·DE.VILLI ::;· :::::--~
Everywhere Dnul Crochet A Cape! ":..,"= t'7.r ~bfi:: 1t. %: ~~':"i! '59 FORD P. UP. v-a. • ""'· B~H =;..,_ ~·1.-=· ~ ':::'~Ell'.!!..'""""-i96a., OALAxIE. 1111c · ::Tg;"OOG German 1.11. l ~than~lll~bn.~S"/95.~~54&-~lll56~-~l;i~~""ii,;~1~~uils:l-~$55tl~1152.~-~Pvt~;pty l*'W.,CNd Hwy. TRIUMPH ~~ · · l!f~illi] ~ ~i ·%ti. P/:: .. alrl-
7463 ~-2\i ,.,... ....... Ii 1l 11•1 ~~Jj,ck~u/;~~ ~~ '68'l'!l-4,._,.b1t ..._lt ~U~VJr~.:+ .:-~~waa.~ts.
GERMAN Shop puppies need ~;;;';;;;';' ;-;;;;;;~:; calt"'-'6'-"pm=·-----WI£· HAW THE chlldL N-ong. ..rt. ~ ~-"""' neWi!in!t..'llott • · good home. Good &tock. 8 NIWEST 01' Make olr. 6)-34!19. ~R .. v o '611 loodod l -~ ~~41,_· ~-..,...,..· .,..·
wka. Autos W1nlttd HI .D-'1SUNS 1.N TIUIJMPH SPI-'Tl,. Low lnlnMlc"!"iiia. blue-IN!u. bill •et1FOi.l-wor.::::111;,:;"'ilj';;;;; ==""""5.1Hll%~-=---c~~ S.lo(Ront 920 '73 Olds c· ... -· INVIN'tORY l'OR .... El=llenl oondltlon. •'-'•• • -· -.. P/S,. $j'IS. Good "' BEAUT. lrlM S.tter, male, -YOUlt llL. •"Tl 1146-'151( au,.., •1338 OE: 113'>~ tioq·air 811-JJIOI mixed breed,_ I yr old, to ~-""~m"":.'IT:'. Sup-' -ON YOLKSWAGIN EL.' DOllADO lfi2 L;; .. 'nrolii>i:TO::;Cty.,--. ""-.-_ ... ,,.._ ....
older child. :x>7-2038. caboven Liesa Ca A to 1-------..;.-1 wilt ~ Jot. SanH. lo .,, .pnll!I' •BIB, flct
FREE, Golden male Coe~. Sales, ~ Harbor, C~ ~fTrans, .Air Cond, Vln)'I '72 KARMANN GHIA mi., mtkie offer &G-3121 oood. 84rll62abr1 ~-~~.~ ~-1:iJ. yr old, Good 646-<002. • 590.16 .Save $1,0IO. and &tl1I .. t lac-. CAMARO 19 FORD ~ ~
SLIDE in camper deeper. tory warrant)'. Only 10 10 Pau 8&I. = Ol1&., 8l~e~~~:~!r.~ INSULATED ~tax ior mo. month, o&d with kwf mu.. MUST i1ill tr.day beirt ofter ow'°"'-=·-'Jl!!G.=. '-"~""''--"t
whl'". uo -$295 lm--11"".1e· !;~LIL-~ .... AM/FM radio. Must lS'llfCanwv cPe 1•••••: .. Galult.!1111,.~ -~ ~•••• 531-2:JOI ~ ~ •~· , ""' to appn!Cl&Je. C..1 -Air "IS. ' • _... 1 ownor ~ L~··1NG $3,250. will .. u "" "·"°· ...._;_. C · ..... IWI. ~ ~-.. ..... PI~ Up C.amper Shells, ~ .,. v•~ _.. ___.,., • ~ Built to ·-· 18 options ALL MODELS Pvt. Pl>-.._ . '611 CAl!fARO 327.--YIEll'I .... GUMUN l 'L. avail. 89H556. AND MAKES-,., V W C bucbt .,..., &Ir, PIS, ~ Cycles, Blkn, Southern ,...-;. . . •mpor PIB, 1 ....... a.... 0o1y 19'12 GmniJn, vi. Boot Scooters 925 W:llUI lld rtadlo, stick. auperlcar C101> $159S. ~ eves. over $JM. nm..
di-(YX'l'O(l2). Im cAiii.io Rally. Sport. -
P_o_t..;1,_0.=no:c.r.:;•lc......_&so::; e 1970 Harley Devtd"°n 65<:c 1 St National $2299 xloJ c:i>nd. $2995. . · . hu new ""' U.. & tube co•~~• CHEVRO' ~ 61H800 Or .~_ -.&i'S. 2 STUMP tall Monkeya, 2% $1?5 1,1,c.Ml.o ......:.1 . ..._.....,.,...
& 311 ~old, tame. & Rao-e i967 Italian ma k • Bank Leatim "'28'Harbor Blvd., CHEVR0'-'1' '67 Jeep, Waaon. au1o, • wl1I :'°~~e.~~~ Best oiler motorcycle frame complete -.. •n DATSUN JtO-Z. Xlnt COila Mesa 54&-WJ ' . ddw, air coad. .PS, p
C I
-no eng. will tan up to 2001 Mlchelmn ~ve oond. Air, litap. Pvt pty. 1~-OOF!ltVW, clOlt ratio . 173 Monte Carlo N...,. ena: '2.IXI0•54B-l11L
I I 852 2SOcc eng. Good cond. $25. "''' " 83Q.4l94 ·-.-eeTl8 ~ ml. 100 · · · ~~;;;;,;:;;;-;:;;::::;: J ~712~V~l~ct~orta~548-0900~~~-:.:: (Corntt of MacArtlna) **'6S ll&t= 4 dr ...i HP. Eng. A trans: 11,0IO mt.. S ,.._ MlltCUll't PERSIAN kltten1, CFA rq., Irvine, Calif. 92664 "1 .. ..a. w'-.. _ • $2500 Dlvuted $950/offu -,.... shots xlnL ..... all -•-rs. 4 Rall motorcycle trailer, n4/833-8620 213 --0367 -, .. '-"'--=-• nu ena: 54G-9529 ' · Auto Trans Alt Cond I • w•., ·~ hu ne U.. ·"uatabl ,_, work, $300. Ol-4891 . $89' .88 . '69 ,Morcyry Mar q u I
S75 Ii up. w s, ...... e REW •a.a•. '64 VW Snnroot Cocoa B.toUPam * 892-2970 * =Ju~ u~ ARD IJUll'I brown. Nu t1Ns. lh:>ckl + tu per 'mo. $1695. ~· xtra t Dov• 154 10 4 motorcycles. Can be ·-=· -· . _..._ -· $485. Ben Hur Gu, llari>ar 36 mo: O.E.L .COMET lJll la -·~-teen at i12 Victoria, weirt ol uiu ,,, .. t ...,,. w--Map, 1
• SQ-, CM. lmmedlet. o.llvwy * otler --.-
tx, ('\n 13· n . COCKER Spanlela, AXC, 1 HarborBlvd.54H900. WILL PAY OVER radlo~_!.le_c"~ -~Deal!' 1969 vw LIASING • :ru'/f'' 1-f{]u -black 11 moo., 1 clioc 111 67 top. -· ~ee. 640-18115. <••tol • New in., """ ALL MODELS ~ ma1ea. 1100 •a. Trat; J..~A .:: • Kelly 11ve look JAGUAR = ........... l8iO. -.; AND MAKI S MUSTANQ
Latest fashion new I MIN cha.ln. Nteds qtne work. For .... model. cleen, t--u.m c• ria 1165
, ........ _
l I
9147
8 18
fef\\!'n's rolortul capet. · Schnaui.er pupplea, 8 $125. • su.sti91 low m f..... ...... .. '68 Jacoa:r-~ bet.arty! White "1U VW Sundial cam__,.., pod -1UllUllll.. * OrW =A.NC-~
• INSTANT CROCHET C':r1.~. ~ ~ '67 TRIUMPH tlc1,lm-...,truck,., XKE ~·--~t Ntw body,'lln>ncel"C-llbancbc 3&,000 ml. Llke f. """...,; .... """...-'-"""' lor Mom-da.,.hler or 63<>-4025. -Runt1 --'I * .... ,...... ~~...,.... lfnc< &V&ll. $2IDG. « T.OJ>. lst.llztill llf 5111\'laUdo~~""'N·•~ "'f 1141 1114 'll• sisters. Single, double .-.,_ C•mpers. ~CalltJrapptloaee1 86-7'121. . 111-1•-..-. J:S.
aodoet Jornu '""'"""'· P•<-SILKI E TERRI ER S4M30I Call and uk tor 8'ott -11111 v.w. BUS. --'811 !lli*'Wo lldtp. Jlf,
Love variety! Then, whip 1ern 7463: child's 2-12; teens, AKC, lemaJe SJQ:>. 5«9-0933 SUZUKI, 1966 55 ce, itep DAYE ROSS 'ST XIC 140 J..,.,. Prt pty $370. m-m., aft I A 88 f U-P.S.:. A.!'1_ •bOD mL
up eeveral scarve• In llnging mlsses' 1 ... 18 included. Euy call alter 5:30 pm thru. Runs excellent. t-n: or Sl50 Cll' best otter. Hi..ea wkndl. -., OwDlr. ....._ ~ colon IO &lid!!' lhru the tab-directioM. ..... dlys. ·~-~----~-· '85 wsr•...r I bed neckline ol oklnuner. SEV~NTY·f1VE CENT!! * PUO PUPPI ES * otter.151 E . Roche'1•r, Apt. POllTllC l9e1I V.W. BUS. Excel cond, 2001 Mlchelaon Drive · -~ OIEly
Prlnted Patlem 9147 : NEW for rarh pattern _ add 25 A~~~7971R<t! .. 11 wkt old, thotJ. C, Cotta Mesa. · n1111 KAR~ .. N &HIA ;r_;.'*i:Ve ~miles, Da,)il <Corntr of MacArthur) ~· ~ g~ *• .. ·l
Ml.ue•' Sbft 8. 10, 12, 14, 16, cent• for each pattern tor "'"' FORD 250 ~ Ton P.U. a: 8' •.. 1901. lrvtne, C&llf. 93&M "
4
18. Size 12 (bust 34J dreg.'I Alr ~1111\ and Special Hand!-SHOP ea.rb' rcr au;.imu-cab Ovt!I' camper. Hu 4 spd 2409 H•rbor llvd. '12 Karriumn Ghia FOR Sale, 1989 vw Van. n";ij4/833fc~--;•~~n;;;2ZUA;;.:0;._;;'038:;;:": l--...!PO.!:. :!NM~~C~--2 1/8 yards 54-lnch; 1Carf inJ[; otherwl!le third-class Toy poodJe pupp6es AKC 1 A 352 V--1 engine Good cond. Cost• Mese 546-1117 Save $.19 and 9tUI ,att tac-Good Clllld. Sl,.,,_ · 1970tdbiY, Ctlal.'ourl &late,
518 yard 39-lnch labrtc. dellvery wlll take three male, 2 fem. M2-3i.ts. ' $.1.300. ~a W E p .a· tor)' wuntQ._ :db t c:iond. ........,., 8 Pui.. St-. Wsn. Pwr
wecko or """"· S.nd to p d' Af L • "9 YAMAHA 250 • ~v TOP 1'1111.W.. ~-. ..U $2lllO '69 vw sus. SNRF St-Uoe" bnJ<ei'.w.l'M :r.::~= _ :~ All<"t Brook.'!, the DAJL V 11 1gret gnan Pups Xlnt Cond. $300. CASH Pri/pty, ~-Bid. 411Z. ' ~ rndk>, tilt ale;. whL head earn. &OOd. ll1ft1onn-~ ~nl• fDr t•ch pattern for PILOT, 105, Needlecraft $100 8l2..ai38 84&-1822 or %13: SE0-'514·1 MAZDA it * 61J.l2ll' *' 1 Factory Mr. klgan rack, =&nee, ~~~--q ~ ~
Air Mall and Special Handt· Derif .. Box 163• Old Chtlll!& e MINIATURE SCHNAUZ. 28'' RALEIGH Grand Prix 10 ' 11 'VW ~ VM new-tires ' bnka. Pantl· ....u alter
1 ID-I ~ ~-lhltd 1 Statton, New York, N.Y. ._._ £Uc ~ -~ t --~-u .. n. --1-... ~ -~ -.ozaa. ,. ; Ou ... ,-..-..., -c A&I 10011. Print N""'6. 1.,,,,_. i:.n. pu~ A.Kl,;, 6 wkt. WUI ..... ""'• au o liai"l"OCI" ( Uled A .. ~" •. '* • ~ ..,,. --..... ..,,_ .,,.._,
de very will take '"'°" Zip, Pa.._ Nom.... hold Ull ChNtmu. 646-1195 Incl. 111$. 612-16113 ~all.., r:"ir.. -=~ · LIAIJ, SPEC IAL , , •!Ill 1 '68 NOMAD Wp. V-3, l!fUBr oell. ~ • •
-er,,...., Send to NEEDLECRAn' '72t or640-17115. J!lllllond&~SLE>cellont l'llllTll NtrllWn ....W·'72 OJ 'M•~S..•llll.._-.1111w.u,'ll,llOml.l =-~~I
-PILOT ~~ .... DDeAILY Clochl!I, lmlt <t<. l'lM SAMOYED IKll', I mo'• old. coodttloo $51(). alta 5 pm. llllUIR lomJ~I ' -. <M>' ll<Altll ........ °"""1oo!J -· Pvl ..._'. .. _ · _.t '..._.-.. tern pt., directions, Sl)c. $lZ. Good CQrl1lma1 •21S1 m·a, ... t4HU1,...._ .... ,.,,.,.,.,,U7·14T8.PCimii! t I !~~~·~ =',_,~ ... ~=;;:T-~~PPIES. ·~,Y~:-~ -~=.~~ ·-~ROT·=-y ~ ~.~:...-..... ""-~= ~l'IB.--:.i:,:::1• •-,.,..11,.00.~.., -l!folft.No~-IO-l!l84e&rlyn...,._ HWlt-llHch --power&.-11ra·~-·-·--· SIP, tPI& atld ITY'tll •• ~ _ -_ MT.QT JO • ._. 31 lftO. + T 6,L.,J"w fttP. ' ,.....H -JOit? -~ ~ Loam by p1ctum1 1'••· M1N1BIKE.xlntcond.4HP ~· )'I)',,_..._ ·wvw-.-Xlnt_, -.,,,._·.,,;:· ·~ ,
SD MORE Quick te"".11 .IJO. AFGHAN -baollllllll helmet • e&r ndr. i15: WE PAY TOP DOLLAR ~ ....,,1 dililN, ~,ml W '--..,., ........ • ····IElj Fullia and cboooe o..r ~-.. Olft -Redt w-Blll muL 1-, low '*'5!G FOR TOP USED CARS '11 ll!ISi<* .. !!W!G-1 P&. !'I>, air, wtlll< wlbhl -~ =,.::,.,::. """' our -mora than 100 ..... ---GIRL'S Styn Bleycle. Like II your car lo uin .,,..,,, "hat n .. Ill&, -·-It ...,., top, <b'I S3'1·MI: lfll-·GJIAllD PRIX· ' C&t&loc. All 11 .00. L.\11 pupplH. lD --· Lllbt • ndl. Sl5-,.. • llnl· e _.....__ldlolbontl, llWJfl-. f!Mm.._ dot •••4 , llflrrZfl{ SEWnro BOOK CJom-..,.._ --AKC, lit Ellot. Ytllow • 946-1®. BAUER BUICK -1111.· -HHllS '811 Mallflll. 4 dr -Nt. ' er!!!;!!;!:.___")
_ lodoy, _,_row. r,-~i11y Rae-.."°"· blaok. ....... hl•.664182. mu Hond& ~ 15. eo.i.i:5 ... -811i,.:J!500 .,81~~.:0s" '63V.w:iid:~-. ~~·;g_-•tn.. t id ·' 'Jim.A/IT P''ASHlON __ .. IJPrbeAla ..... AJ<C .... 1 .. Sl!lup. ':i'!~ .. ~-OOorbest !MPORTSWANTED .. _ .. Ille_" ~.tl":-,..91Has-'fTO...~fill'W.1111T~ .........
BOOK --ol ~-t-t6patterm. 112S. 5Jll.l302 551~104'71Nortnn'l50cnmmando. ~;a;~ HUNnlMl1:!,I MACH·•a..r11111.--. ~p.-.pn.C&ll ~·1·/•I•••••· -~'1· llOc. OERMAN-PllPl>lea. =~.,..ctoopP"d . .ir°' BJU,MAX!YTOYOT. A Mfl•niA -.... "'ii'iio.~~ -·-·~---·~ :A"s.-~lfJll'!.!'"I>' M s a Q9lt: 8clelr 'I .. All thot&. $25. M:d\J to 11881 8Mch 81 11331 ___ ...L. ih.t. _,.,.., "" ~ ~ -,_-ill ,._.,. -~I ~' ~ 1 quallnod holno. • •. '"ll'eed I! A !!Mp" H n. v.. ,_.,, PS/PB -ollor iii! "Uol" t la . ""911 w -· lMw • • ·~uh I'll. MT-8S&! -1-Mir• Mr, ny VW I.,.;.......... .-, au.a, ' ,
., _ _, 15beuWlllP1ttt.:...50c. -SPAYED Siie nl /Colli. ,_ _ .. truh PllJVATE J>uty -low Ille .. -!~-·-IG-'USl'f::°: Jn (mitAll ............. :-1··············· ·• .. • ~ -Wl!O ~I= ~~~~ m~c:nDrJ_armr;,;, ~~~::-'~~-·Ii&....... .0.1111· .... -....... ~ -WNk .. ~ ..-.. ......
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El>tT·ION
VOL. 65, NO.' 326, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES
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Aneal:·-l!p~·.
'C.hi~itgo ; ::Sev.~n'
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Due. New · Trials
CIIlCAGO (AP) - A. federal. appeals
court •today reversed the convictions· of
the five Chicago Seven defeodants found
guilty of ·crossing state lines to incite .
rioting at the Ume of the 1961
Democratic N.ational qoo.ventioo..
Clear<d were David T, ~;AhblO
Hollman, Rennie Davl,I, Jerry l!Ubin and
Tom Hayden. ' •
Unit Opposes
The 7th U.S. Clmlll Court of Appeals
l!lled that the defenduta' coostltuUonal
rl(!lta; !)acl been violated. Ii said,
however, tliat the eovemment may retry
t&e five.. . . . · · The ·n~ ,were raJDQag tlgbt ~Uwar ac-
tmsts indicted on.oeveral_ cbarges'ln eotr
nectlan wllb ,~·vlolence at·the Demo-·
crl&lc l cammtidn. • . .
'Tbe ·!rliJ Of.·°"" of the o!&bl· BIUI: ~-leodeli lliJbbl' .s.m..,... -iMicame -al·bll' courtn>om outbursts.
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Je.tport Plan
Of the rema1nJni aeven, five -Del-
Inger, Rubin, Hayden, Hoffman and
Davis -were convicted on Feb. 18, 1970
of· crossing state lines to incite a riot at
· the time of the oonventioo.
At Pendleton
'Ibey and the I,,. addiooal defendllnta,
John It Frolnes, ~I, and Lee Welner, 31,
were found innocent of the main charge
of. COllllpiring to plot the · violence that
~~place.
1 Froines and Weiner also were found in-
~t ·;of teaching the use of an in-
An Influential plannillg council In Sa~ ceqdiary .. ~ Diec• County Moodily·come ·out stroog., Tbe ortglnal faar·month trial beforo
against proposal> for an 1 lnternatiooal Juclp. Julius J. Ilolfman was a stormy
jetport at ·camp Pendleton -adding its · -marlled by the defenoe hurlliig
name to a growinc Usl epithets at the judge and the judge
Tbe · group, the san llielo eom. -.. wllh hlnh ..primaoda.
prebeJ)sive PI an n l n g Organhatian, A11'11Ven·defenUnt11 plUI two lawyers,
r._i!ng 13 .san ~ Couatf. qtlea ,.... i.-o !II npl by !loflman
MwellatheCllll!ll1 '-taidPll!f lier . ...W: lea~ been l'eiidlif'ioalliiiilir~li 'i _, ____ . .•• . . . -. ad a
-between la-.t\ .. r!•'·"" ._.. ·~ . .. '* . -, &;;
tiea.to ~ Ddrtb and . ~. , ..... ._,~
the-llOlltlL .. -'Oil'*'ll.&..Qilcu!l .Caurt of Appea1I
Pendletoo, the organlatliln' ca l.d, 1e1i1~itbe ..aiempt cmvicUons of all "~ re~in· a, it' ~ to 1cro1111rumte-· it-this ,_., Tbt coo.rt clted a 1971 U;S.
milllar)' actlv!ties·'Whidt may otl!orwlle s,iji.m11llart dOdsloa that'oald ·a trial
come Into ,!°"'""'Ing coofllct wllb urban J!*lle abduJd dllquaJlly blmaelf from con·
land uaes. · templo_.;.tlttp• U•the>eitatiolll art no\
Tbe reaolutioo enacted Mooday ~ ·:. lllllde~lllilll the ·One! of;the tr1al
moot gov~ qmcles, In• affect"!& In·~ before the appeals panel for nortbent San l!lego County ag~ reveraaJ Of.1he coovlctionl of the five, at-
Orange County aod the Southern tomeys ·dalmed'that ·tbe antlriot aecUon
California Asaoclatioo ol ~ernmenta of tbe qvil Rights Act of· 19111 under
(SCAG), wblcb both art actlVely punu-wlifih , the defendants were Indicted
ing a terminal 101Dew\tere oo the lS,000 vlolatld their cllenlll' rights under tho
acre military reoervatioa. fust'-t to the ConllUtuUon.
Supeniaors Otalrman Rooakl Coapers, 'I'!tl!y aJao . ac<Uiec1 U :S. Dlltrlct Court
of Newport Bead!, ~.the lat.I op-Judge Hoflman of "blatant antagooi.ml" JIOll~Wmte /l8ld H was and fa~ the ~Uoo over the
the san .,._ • " "v· to dof..., """"' grouP ,! -•u e The government contended that the ac-
make such• declaioo. ..~--•·~ u~-were He added that the ataod "-nd ha•• CUI&~. .......... ..........
no effect oo oor efforts to ~ obtain an ~;: ::i =.~:-al~ airport at camp .Pendleton,. -J-ee ...... ~ .
'Ille latell alflcial actioO agafmt the the ·v~ b0c1uoe the jury rendered
jetport dip the trencbea ~·In.a bat-tmoe aeparate verdicts. ile which could last for years: · The main tlinlll of the defense appeal
Many northern san Diego County cities concei'ne•hthe _.img•of the law which
hlive fonnally opposed CUpers' sug-U-"crooslng·state'llnes with the Intent to
estions incite rioting." The ~fense argued that
g San Oemente thus far la the only this is the only federal statute that
Orange County city to olfldally cooclemll D!8keM It a crime "to have a state of
(See PENDLETON, Page II mind."
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ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2f, '1972 TEN CENTS
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J""unior Miss ~1£opelols
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_Capo_ Vote.rs_
Lose Chance
JANET WILKlll Hl•I• YOUM IM•LLIY •l•lCN•ll KATMl•INe KLUO
LY1SA IUCK •ATTY tclGl8llH LISA VANCI! tlEllle MOlltlSOM
Junior ·Miss
14 South Coast Girls
Vie for Jaycee Title
F-lou!lt. Coast 'wea llrla wm 'lllls year's cmteataota ·ar<:
vie for the ·tllle-al Jlllllor Ubl ·fn the --Patrtda Ttn· al San Clemmie
tb1n1 -1 .._ iet Im; W-OY wbc, la ~ ,,,.._ -. slrl'i
nllhl by tfJe lliib, COMt Jaytw. Loque and -..... -; .,,. 'tl1e ·Oeld of eootestants for the tlile Is hopes to become a tetcher:. ·
the largest in, the history of the annual -JoAnn Johnston, daughter of Mr.
event which selects a local winner to and Mrs. Louis Johnston of San
r~present the communJty. at the state Clemente, a biology major at San
fmals early next year in Santa Rosa. Clement6 High. She is active in student
The · pageant wiP begin at 8 p.m. in government and athletics and hopes to
Triton Center at San Clemente High major in sociology in college.
School. -Lyssa Black of San Clemente, presl-
Eacb contestant will be Judged for dent of the Orama club on the Triton
academic and social achievement, poise, campus. She hopes to earn a degree from
talent and other criteria. the American Academy of Dramatic arts
Jaycee President Jim Ortler bas and pursue a singing career.
stressed that the pageant is not a beauty -Jan Patrick, daughter of Mr. and
contest. Mrs. Joseph Patrick of San Clemente, is
The winner of the competition Wednes-vico president of the Drama Club. Sbo
day will receive a $500 scholarship to hopes to study interior design ..
further her education. Other prizes also -Della McGan-y, daughter of Mr. and
will be awarded. Mrs. Jolm McGarry of San Clemente.
Tickets seillng for $2 for adults and It She I! a former SCHS songleader. Sbo
for students and children, will be hopes to become an airline stewardess.
available at the door. -Katherine Klug, daugbltr of Mr. and
JAM Pi\TataC Ma.Ml• ll••MC•S
D• ANN ltfAMC PAT•tc• KIL.&.liY
'Mts, Jiiljl JOq al Saa J-:n· :wmr•r'tr....,•·CM ~
-lllo llowpart a---11 • temted In arcbltecture and llapes IO
study at 8teftm College In ui.....t.
-Patrice Kelly, a dauchter al Mr. and
Mrs. Olon Bray of Dana Point, IJ a port.-
time employ• for the Clpiltrlno fJllllled
School Dlatrlct and plans to audd Cal
State Fullerton afler graduation from
San Clemente High. Sbo upirea to I
teaching caroer In phywlcal education.
-Lisa v ance ol capiltrlno Beach IJ
active to rfrl's 1thtttics on the Triton
campus. She plans lo llludy art and In-
terior delign.
-DeAnne Shank, daugbttr of Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Shank of Dini Point, la 111
active drama student IDd next IUIDJPer
plans lo atucly with tho South Cout
Repertory Cc!npaoy of Colla -II I special coot'Se in Guadalajara, llellco.
-Melanie Serences, daughter .of Mr.
(See JUNIOR MI!IS, Pap 11
Did MacArthur 'Panic'?·
-Truman's Daughter Cites Version of 1951 Firing
NEW YORK (UP!) -President Han-y
S Truman fired Gen. Dougl£a MacArthur
as U.S. corrun!lnder in Korea in 1951
because he felt MacArthur "sort of .
panicked," Truman's daughter aaid to-
day.
Margaret Truman Donlel a a I d hor
father coocladed that 'lhlnp were too
shaky" for Allied forcea at the time ho
clecicled to .recall MacArthur.
Thia toot place April 11, 111:11, and set
o11 a storm of protest amoog backers of
the -World War ll hero.
Mrs. Daniel aaid her father roresaw
that bis decision would be unpopular, and
chose to say little or nothing more about
his action ln lbe days and weeks that
followed, not interfering in a big welcome
home for MacArthur. ·
MacArthur wu relieved as U.S. com-
man<Ser after thru.tening ~ ground
and air attacks ln mainlanc! China, ln
punult of Ollneae forcea wlto aided
North Korea.
MacArthur made the lhr<1ta without
clea ring 1tatemenll wltb Wubinaton. u
Truman bad ordere<i.
Ml'I. Daniel. who bas written a book
about her father, was lnlervtewed on the
NBC:TV Today Show.
Graha1n Talks
Indian Tribesmen Hear Gospel
KOllDIA, lodia (AP) -Aboot 100,000 Naga tribesmen -dcocendanta ol
Indlao --filed mlo a football field to bear Dr. DUiy Graham
prwcb the Golpel In I -that bad to be tnnalated Into II dia1ecta.
Graham'• -Oc:boed Unqh tho huh nlley 11 be opened a four-&ly
crusade Monday In Nqaland, an Indian atate cdelntlng the IDOtb annlvttlary
ol tho arrival of the flnl Amerlcao Baptlat mlalonary.
' TllAT Piii!' .ue!UCAN, Iha Rev. E. w. Cart. had lo wait for -a
to readl Napland, In Iha -oo tho llwmeJe bonier. Graham made Iha
trip In tds ........ throe by piano from Cllcutlo and three by rood.
'Ille D1dlan ......,....t allowtd him lo brine sb ._tate1, includloc
plla1at 'hd &mi~ of S11wr Sprini, Md. and singer Atcble Donnla GI PUtt.
burP, PL .
TBB CRUSADll II OOITING the Naga Baptista more than 113,000. -
of Iba -.... nlted tlwooP dooatioo1.
Orahant_ ~ after ---to allow for tra111l1Uoo. •iwe1l all lpUk. the .. -.... ln heaven .•• we won't bav1 to 11.ava
I traDll.ator I.. be llkL -
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Mrs. Daniel said of ~r f1~1 view of
MacArthur'• unauthorbtd ltltementl:
"Hls reacUon w11 lhlt he (MlcArthur}
WU I man who IOrt of pan&cbd. AU ol
his pr<dldlons about the Far Eu!, and
Koroa, were limply -· . . lie <Truman) tbau&bt thlnp -. too
aha!Qr."
MacArihur'1 threats about a Otlaa Ir>
vision, whkb TnaMn ft.artd would
1r<•tly -the Kortan -...... Mar<h lS, 111111, t7 daJI be1oro bit
removal and four months befotw 1 cu.
fire and a atart of neaotJatlona to end the
•·ar.
Mn. Doniel also wu Wed ·if TNman
had any lleCOl1d thouahta about onlering
the fint uae of an atomic lunb In
warfare -the Hlrolhlma bombin( in
1915.
"No," aha nptied. "'He Md no ltCOnd tliouchtl boca111t It did aave bundttds ol
thouundl ol Amerian Uvtt. ''
Ura. Dlnltl had ICCetl to -hilhel1o unpubUlbed ma!Oflal, from
'J'nanan'I pr!ftte -. In ~ 1111-
-_ Utled llmply "Harry S TnnM."
An Uttflll WU p-Nftd 8uDdaJ by
Ufe M~ In -lln. Daoltl Aid
her father acnied 10 -Frant1iD D.
-ftlt'1 ntmlnc mate In 1M1 ooJy
after htlvy _.,. from 8-vtlt and
others.
SF Man Dies in Fall
LAKEPORT (AP) -A Saa F'nndaco
111111 WU tllJed WIMft be f<ll from 111 It•
foot • wan at J• a., .., a.or Liiie,
tho Loa Caouley -· -....,nod Monda,y. llanlq J-Kolor, .. -
f-lato Satunla7 -I dq alW
be Id! bis r.-1 ---far I waflt, dlpelaa aald. ,
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To Air View
By JOHN VALTERZA °' .. DllJ ..... lllff
A 125-mlWon bood ISIUe termed crucial
to handle explosive growth in the
Clpl!trano Unified School District wW
come before voter1 Feb. 20, but the con-
troversial all·)'ear-school concept will be
absent from the baUot .
That aolutlon came after trustees
wrestled with aeveral altemaUva Mon.
day amid a large audience compGled
primarily of oppooenta to the 45-15 -
gram (nine weekl in clau, three ol vaca-
tion over a lJ.monlh cycle).
As originally proposed, 4S.15 wu to
have had a spot on a bond ballot -ldded,
a5 an information Item to seek a deflnUe
community aenUment about the coo-
trovqslal idea.
But trustees •creed that adding the !IOI
Issue onto tho flrl; bood i..ue In .....i '
years could spell dealh lo the finance meaautt.
During a series of intricate parlllme:D-.
tary maneuvers, Trustee Fred Newhart
moved to tcrap 45-15 enilre:ly for t.bl
coming lcbool year; to COIDmelld tbe
citlun'1 advtaory committee oo 46-11,
and ult the lf1IUP to _,,.,. Ptl'lrlnc
infonnalon fnlm other llCbool diatricta.
lnfonnatioo !rom other school diatricta.
Tbe -· whlcb -ba?t: aupport from -Monda But tt will return al ~ ••
---Doc.~ . Othot -toot Uttlo ~ wltlt °"" . •d'ltiice of Nowlio.1'1 -. bat ...
...... --n ,., lltt ll!lbllc ...... i: ....... ..: ........
II It i..rd'1 !Int "*llnt In Decelnllll-.
"Wo've IOld ....,._. that ft -1d
decide at tbal time," Aid lnlltee
E<lwanf Wl!lll>er&, and ft bavt op-
pooenll to tbe plan bore 1on10L We
oucht to live Iha -Ill I dianoa to
-up. loo.'. If then"' any."
Tbe -aetlinl the date and dollar
amount for the -llale WU f.I -
WllllUaf fer -· who _.uy ltand in uniloD jn lutbarizlnc f 1 D I D C e -And 'l'nilleo Wlllllm Enqulat'• no vote
drew coaceni from Board Preaiclent
Robert Hunt, wlto aald that llPlm tho
board cut I """'rnolll vote "a bond
-wmld probolllJ fall ...
But Enqullt /l8ld tbal be -aplnst the date, not Iha bood ..... ltaelf.
Ha preferred lo place the laue on the recu1ar April a.Jlot to llVt the COltl of I
IJIOCia1 elictJoa,
Other board memclen dilllf'led,
however, lnll•inll thot the April tu·
PIYinC -WU the wont time of the
YffJ' to 1e1t voter approvals f« boodl.
Althouch the bonds spell a much more
Important function f« the dlatrtct tbaa
al~year school, the finance meuure tool<
a bKll: ttal to the controversy .......
roundin& 45-t5.
Grudc!ngly, trwteel admitted that
with I seriol of public meetlllp baH
over. mulit of poUa LWn of the II'!'
-lbliwed a dllmal rllo al ...
C<plalft by pa-. and lolcbon.
Although no uacl ~ weo sr-
trusloH alluded to • --Ille d!luft'• all-J<ll'«bool ad_, -
mlUM wbk:h IUM11d dlll Cllll pwp
-not advocate -_.. a1 • !Seo llOND lllllE, .... II •.. .,. Cl•I&
......
The --lor "-clay II -~ 1 I ....,. -'11111
alJ8'1U, -tomper-.... cionlinl lo Iba -tbtt -. mp. at die ll•cha. lfamd •
Nine to " --"""" ..... -INllDB TO•A Y
ChUI "lriu hod--l!lllA:tchlllnd2'....,..•-'°"" cll Ul file --,,_ Colonldo, ht IMC -·t CM
polltl of lltt aid.\ -""' l•Wr-
""'"""" CIUll Apprrdodoo lo-
ciftJ, It -'!At --'" "°'""""· s .. rtorr .. ,.... If.
~ .. --i I ~m,= -· , ----' e:..-= :·.'::: p_. • I =! -...
... I M ---
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Public Use Jury Urges
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l' ocal llJillOrit,: t •
Of Marine \Land Probe . All-year &~ool . . '
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Road Eyed
While some city official s this week are
planning a return trip to Camp Pendleton
to see if Marines would allow public use
. of Christianitos Raad. others continue to
insist that trying to adapt the highway to
serve 1 a large bouslng tract in San
Clemente would be "almost impossible.''
The use of the roadway, often sug·
gested as a final solution to a tract as ac·
cess controversy that has raged for
years, wa s resurrected by councilmen
last v.·eek. Thf'y gave themselves 60 days
to come up wi1h a final answer to the ac-
cess problem.
But _City_ Engineer .:.fb!! ~~t~r warned
councilmen that the road was a p00r --
choice to serve Presidential Heights.
Today Peter amplified the remark.! by
emphasizing that two major factors rein·
force hls behef.
Steep slopes would have to be graded
and filled in order to build C<lMecting
street between the highway and tract.
"And even if that were completed at
great trouble and expense," Peter cx-
pl1ined," once the road reaches the tract
it would be impossible to link it up with
other back country streets.''
In other words, the road would amount
to a dead-end at Presidential lleights.
Arguments In favor of other routes -
amounting to extending or expanding ex-
isting roadways leading to inland hills -
point out that many of thoSe alternatives
could serve as collectors to further
developments in the unimproved hilly
portions of the city.
"The Christianitos Road extension,"
Peter said, "could never link up to major
inland network because the Presidential
Heights streets are private."
Despite its drawbacks, however, the
Marine Corps highway at present re-
mains in the spotlight.
Its chances, however, could be slim.
Past city overtures to the Marine
Corps have drawn a lukewann response.
The Corps presently m a i n t a i n s
stewardship or the two-lane highway
parelleling the southerly city limits and
the county line.
Technically, it is the property of tbe
State of California.
And the roadway shows up OD master
plans for San Onofre State Park,
calculated as a major feeder route to lbe
proposed campground developments at
the upper portions of San Mateo Clnyon.
It also would continue to channel
Pendleton traffic to and from in-
itallations at Camp Pendleton.
Harbour Rul.es
Made Tight,er
Jn Huntington
~ Sshh ... The sound you are about to
;..miss is the sort flush of heads on boata in ~Huntington Harbour.
J. Well, Huntington Beach Councilmen
!didn't exactly break the chain on water
losets but they did attempt to mu.fDe
:potential pollution ln Harbor channels.
: A new set of Harbour sanitation rules
:was adopted without opposition Mondqy
~ghl. ! Thirty days from now all boats must
... have :
'! -A holding tank designed to retain
:human body wastes until they can be
Jdischarged into a sanilary sewer system.
-Or, the boat's head is connected
'.directly to a sanitary sewer system.
: -Or, the head is connected to an on-
: board sewage treatment system which
;produces an effluent acceptable by the
~county health officer.
: The new law also requires commercial
:marinas to provide permanent holding
l tank pumpout facilities or equivalent
1service, capable of serving all boats in
! the marina .
: City officials said there was little op-
: position to the holding tank law because
~there are no real "live aboard" boat
; situations In Huntington llarbour.
.
'
tc
DAILY PILOT
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DAILY l'ILOT Stiff 1"11119
CLAMMER$ 'CLAMMING IN SHALLOW WATERS OFF NEWPORT
ExtNmo Low Tides Brl1111 Out Lovers of Seafood Delicacy
Cla111s Galore
'Best' Coast Season Possibl.e
By W!LUAM SCHREIBER
Ot .... Diii., ,., ... lttff
Like a rag-tag anny, scores of clam-
digger1 have descended on Newport
Beach sands to enjoy what experts are
calling the best clamming conditions in
recent memory.
The clammera are a motley crew,
_ dressed in everything from soggy jeans,
bare feet and sweatshirts to hlpboots and
v:etsuits.
They are equipped with a wk!e variety
of toob-lncluding hoes, shovela, pilch-
forks and bare hands in 90Dle cases -
and a rainbow of brlghUy~tored buckets
to store their take of oceRD dellcacies.
The dimmers' soJe purpose for wading
tflrou&h chilly surf and grubbing in the
sand is the capture of hard-shelled Pismo
clams at least four a11d a half inches in
Wameter, the legal minimum slze.
"None of us can remember ·a year
when the clamming conditions were '°
perfect," said Lifeguard Logan Lockabey
as be watched the crowds oC clammers
poke into the sand in hopes of bitting
something other than a rock.
Lockabey said the heavy surf or a
month ago piled up a huge sandbar
around tbe Newport Pier and the clam
population boomed.
Fl'Olll P-.e l
JUNIOR MISS • •
and Mrs. John Serences of Dana Point, Is
active in clubs and student government
a·. SCHS and hopes to attend Stanford
University where she wiU study marine
biology.
-Deborah Morrison, daughter of Mr.
and Mn. Hilliard Morrison of Mission
Viejo, hopes to be an alrllne stewardess
and also study modeling and Interior
design. Among her hobbies are Polyne-
sian dancing.
-Shetley Birtcher. daughter of P.1r.
and Mrs. Ron Bir\cher of San Juan
Capistrano, has been a cheerleader for
the Tritons and preJeDUy is aenk>r class
vice president She hopes to obtain an
el~mentary teacher's credtnlial.
-Janet Wilkes, daughter of. Mr. Md
Mrs. Robert Wilkes ol Sau Clemente,
plans to attend Chapman C.Olle1e and
work toward a teacblns credenlial in
special education.
-Debra Young, dauaht.er of Mr. and
Mrs. Don Young of San Clemente, ia a
sports enthwsiast. She hopes to study
marine biology at cat Poly San Luis
Obispo. At San Clemente Web she has
been active in girl'• athletlc1 and 1tudent
government.
lte also said extreme high tides -
more than seven feet -followed by ex·
treme negative low tides have exposed
huge stretches of sand normally covered
by pounding waves.
One clammer sloshing around in knee-
deep water said some clams actually
were lying out OD the beach when be
started digging around noon Monday.
~·1 got my limit in no time," be
shouted.
California Fish and Game Department
wardens have been making regular visits
to Newport Beach the past several days
looking for people with too many clams
or clams that are too small.
warc:en Chet Gall said people already
have been caught wUh claJDJ under the
legal size.
"U an undersized clam is caught, It
theoretically has to go back in the hole it
came from ,'' Gall said. "But usually you
can just push it back into the iand
anywhere ."
Fl'Olll P-.e l
PENDLETON • • •
the plan.
The Marine Corps has opi-<[ the con-
cept for years and in its most recent an-
nouncemenU! bas said that the Corps has
not cbang~ its opinion over the pro-
posals to use Pendleton lands for a
modern-eoncept tenninal. M i 1 t t a r y
training, the Corpe has said, would be
drastically jeopordized if cM.lian jets
were allowed to use Pendleton acrea~e.
Caspers has insisted that the terminal
could blend with military uses of the
base ..
He stressed that preliminuy concepts
call for only the Installation of runways
and minor support facilities -that the
regular business: support complexes
(motels, ttstaurants and the like) woulJ
he located elaewhere.
Modem rapid transit, he added, would
be developed to move passengers to and
from a Pendleton tenninat
So far, no specific acreages have been
suggested by advocates of the Pendleton
proposal.
But one suggested area, a canyon south
of San Mateo Canyon, would be only a
few m.lles from the southerly city llmlll
of San Clemente.
StUl another, a Oat terrace area on the
southerly 1ttttches or the bast, would
bring the jets to within a few miles of
Oceanside.
Crlllcs have argued thal both clllea
would suffer from nolae end other
nuisances, no matter which site wu ut-
cd.
Living Costs Creep Up
Resklenll of Orang• County were inld IO<lly that the coot of living con-
tinued lta upward climb during October, registering a one-tenth of one percent
rise .
..nm U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics said the increa9e matches that of
Lot Angeles Olunly. Higher lranaportation coils were bllmed for lhe rlae in
both ccuntJes.
The rate of lncruse over the 12 months ending Oct. 31 was 3.1 ptteent,
slighUy lo1ru than the p«vloos IZ.mooth period.
1be October increase pushed the eoo1umcr lnde.: to a new hllh thls year
at J.23.9. 'l"his muns that consumers 1pent $12.39 for goods and aervlcu ln
OclOber that COSI 110 In 19'7.
A BUREAU ~tcsman said trMsportatlon costs rost fouf'otmths ol one
percent during ~tober, prlmarily btcausc-of higher prires for used cars, aulo
Onancb\a and auto partJ. Ouoline prkca remained at rtt0rd high levels dur· ioC Oetcibtr, the 1poktsman uld.
Food ~ bx!rulled 0.1 percent over the month, while health and rtere•·
tJon cooll climbed 0.2 perttOt.
HOUSING corll ftll 0.1 perc<nl, chlclly bl'<aUJe of declines In bom< pur-
c:Nise prlce.t and flnanrina charges.
I
'
In Anaheim
Alter a three-month Investigation of
the land dealings of the Anaheim city
ma.nager and public works director, the
Orange County Grand Jury will not issue
an indictment for state or city ordinance
violations.
In a leUer sent to lht Anaheim city at-
IOmey, jury foreman Otto M. Schmidlen
said there was enough evidence of mis·
conduct to recommend "the Anaheim
City Collncil conduct a thorough probe"
into the possible violation or lhe City
Charter by City Manager Keith Murdoch
and Public Works Director Thornton
Piersall.
Tbe two men's land dealings were first
detailed in June ln a Los Angeles Times
article wblch alleged the men were able
to realize substantial profits from their
prior knowledge of city projects.
In a letter dated Nov. 16, Schmidlen
noted "there are sufficient questions
regarding the ethical conduct of Mr.
Keith Murdoch and Mn. Tl)omton
Piersall to warrant a thorough in-
vestigation by the city of Anaheim into
possible violatioos."
He said the probe shou1d be undertaken
by the city attorney, or should be refuse,
by the state attorney genera!.
The Gnmd Jury investigation, which
was requested by City Cow)cllman
William J. Thom, was conducted by the
District Attorney's staff and covered
Murdoch's and Piersall's land deals over
a three-year period.
"11Je investigation revealed no dispute
with the facts set forth in the Los
Angeles Times article that Mr. Murdoch
and Mr. Piersall did have fmancial In-
terests In transactions considered by the
Anaheim City Council and that they did
not publicly disclose their financial In-
terests at any time," Sclun.ldlen's letter
stated.
Jury was unable to return an indict-
ment in the case, the letter said, because
ther..; were no violations of state laws and
the jury does not have jurisdiction to
return an indictment for a violation of a
city charter ordinance.
In recommending the city's probe of
lbe case, lhe jury suggested lbe In-
vestigation not be limited to violations
"occurring with the past 12 months. The
Anaheim City Council's responsibility is
not limited to investigation into possible
violations of law uneenforceable because
of a ~year Statute of Llmitalions; and
not limited to violations of laws only; it
also includes scrutiny of possible viola·
tk>na of standard& of proper behavior ruid
morality In the conduct of elected and
appoinlcd public officials." .
SchmJdlen'a Jetter also raised a ques-
tion involving the City Council's vote of
confidence given the two ,men shortly
after the story of their land deals was
broken.
The vote at that time was 4 to 1 with
Thom voting with the majority. He later
attempted unsuccessfully to have bis
vote changed.
Orchestra Set
For UCI C.0:0.cert
The Prague Chamber Orchestra will
play Saturday nighl in the Fine Arts
vmage '!'healer al UC Irvine and not
Crawford Hall as originally scheduled.
The 36-member visiting chamber group
wil! perform at 8:15 p.m. Saturday.
Tickets at $2 may be reserved by calling
the fine arts box office -833-6617 -
between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. Wednesday
or after 7 p.m. on Saturday.
Tbe shJft or the concert provides a
more suitable setting for the chamber
concert, a university spokesman noted.
0
. ' >
Support 'Quiet.'
Although 4!>15 (all-yeaNChool) did not
receive a formal defeat b e f o r e
Capistrano Unlfled School D I s t r I c t
trustees, it took a beating from audience
and board alike Monday.
And prospects of even a pilot project
ror lhe nexl school year appeared grim.
Dozens of oppooent1 to the all-year
concept watched trustees grapple with
the controversial issue.
Although few debates emerged from
the meeting, comments were abundant.
Most centered on a means of ac-
curately polling the community.
Trustee Stephen Smith insisted that the
best way to poll the residents would be to
hire an independent survey firm.
Board President Robert Hurst argued
that such an approach would cost as
much as a special election.
Trustees William Enqulst and Dr.
Edward Westberg said that they each
had receiv~ about 15 phone calls in re-
cent days and each caller opposed 45-15.
None received any calls from su~
porters.
Fl'Olll Page l
BOND ISSUE • • •
15 if the poll results were used as a
sampling of commtmity oplnio~.
"What concerns me about 81e entire
issUe," Hunt observed, "ls the inability
to reach an accurate polling of the com-
munity on this thing."
Hurst was one of two trustees who
sought to place .45-15 on the bond ballot.
He wanted such an inclusion "so that
this thing cen be put to bed once and for
all."
But the majority of the board insisted
that a bond issue and 45-15 vote would
confuse voters and lead them to believe
that by passing 45-15, a bond issue wou1d
be unnecessary.
"That would not be the case," said Supt.
Truman Benedict.
"No matter what were to happen with
all-year school, the fact remains that
more finances are needed to cope with
extensive growth."
The next step in the arduous road
toward the pollB will be the setting up of
the machinery for a bood election -
formal actions to be filed with the County
Superlntendent of Schools and the forma·
lion of a cithen's committee to push for
bond passage.
Hurst and other trustees wPmed.riii..t
the 1Upporters of bomb in the commbrufy
should not be lulled into thinking that the
recent tax~verrlde landslide Would rub
off and push the bonds over the top in
February.
"We're talking about two entirely dif.
ferent things. People worked extremely
hard to pass the override, but they will
hav" to work three times harder to pass
$25 million in bonds," he said.
After their dlscussions', trustees agreed
to hold a special meeting early next week
to set the machinery rolling. .
If the bond Issue were to pass, it would
be the first such approval since voters
authorized sale of school bonds in 1965,
shortly after the district unified.
Character Actor Dies
BIBMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) -Funeral
services were planned today for Donald
Clayton Driggers, a character actor in
some 400 movies who died In a hospital
here Sunday. Driggers, 79, played in such
films as "Sergeant York," with Gary
Cooper, and "Reap the Wild Wind," with
Paulette Goddard, during his 32-year ac-
ting career.
One of the strongest discussions ensued
when long-ti111e board observer Ray
Campbell of San Clemente urged tnl.Stee:s"
to make their own minds up about 45-15,.·
tenning the opposition 11 ''vocal mlnorl·
ty,"
That aMertion drew a few groans !nlm
the audience.
Campbell stressed that at the ootset of
lhe discussions oo 4$-15 "we heard
nothing but suppOrt for all-year school
" ''Then we saw a vocal minority creep ·
in ... there's always a few who make a
lot of noise and they're here tonight.
"1bere are thousands of supporters
who may be home watching TV tonight,
bul they elected you lo make the de-
clsloiu for them,• 'he said.
c.ampbell warned that if trustees killed
45-15, "the bonds would have no chance
of passing."
At that, Enqui.st cited his 15 phone
callB. "If that was the vocal minority,"
he said, "where was the silent ma-
jority?"
"They elected you to office /' Campbell
retorted.
Wife Sentenced
In Garden Grove
Shotgun Death
A woman convicted of voluntary
manslaughter after she p:>ked a shotgun
through the window of her husband's car
and shot him in the chest was sent tO
State prison today for the full term of S
to 15 years.
Orange C.Ounty Superior Court Judge
Walter Smith Imposed the sentence on
' Rose Marie Jayne, S3, of Garden Grove,
just one month after a jury in his
courtroom rejected murder charges and
found the attractive defendant guUty of
the lesser allegation.
Arresting officers testified that the
Jaynes quarrelled Man:h 25 and lbe hus-
band, Jerald G. Jayne, 33, left the home
in bis car.
Police said be returned to the borne a
few minutes tater and was met at the
driveway by his wife who carried a ..
sbolgun. II was testified thal she shot
him through the chest before he could get
from behind the wheel of the vehlcle.
Work·· Completed
Ori. Storm Drain
In San Oemente
Crews have CQmpleted work on a 575-
foot section of huge stonn drain pipe
along the fl:oor of Im Lobos Canyon in
San Clemente, colDlty spokesmen said
thiS week.
The $73,000 projecl paid for by the
county FloOd Control District i s
calruJated to control runoff waters along
the canyon. Previously, the area faced
serious erosion and landslide problems
during heavy rains.
The crews working for ECCO Con-
tractors of Santa Ana installed siJ:-foot~
diameter ·sections . of pipe from the
oceanfront railroad right-<11-way to the
AUesandro storm channel. It I.inks ex·
isting drainage structures at each end of
the canyon.
Flood control aides said that one alcle-
effect of the new installation will be to
enable property owners to fill·ln part of
the canyon to reduce the steepness, and,
hence, the chance of earth slippage.
Buying A New Tract Home?
Many people buying horMs ore under tho improssiOll they HA VE
to buy carpeting from tho home ,.les center. In tho majority of cosos
thb is not true, although tho soles office will try lo make you think so.
Tho minute tho homo e<1nter trios to upgrade tho standard carpet,
then you ore free to shop for carpeting. To proven! shoppin9 should
constitute restraint of trodo •
.
In many coses they will i.I you that tho carpet oAowanco d-not
apply if you buy carpel outside. II they feel this is legal, HAVE THEM ·
PUT IT IN WRffiNG .
Ordinarily~ we c.on save you a lot of money o-whot tho homo
center offers. W • pn>viclo • larger soloctlon -ond we .,....11y come up
with Ins yardage, plus o superior in1tdotion.
ALDEN'S
~ARPETS o DRAPES
1663 Placentia ,;, ..
COSTA MISA
646-4838
HOURS: Mot>. Thrv Thurs., 9 lo 5:30-F•t., t lo 9-SAT., 9tJO lo S
•' I
•
J 0 DAILY PILOT SC
Hi gh Court Nixes
Program Patents
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Supreme Q>l.art bas ruled out
pattntl f O·r programming
digital computers.
"If these programs are to be
patentable, oonslderable pro-
blems are raised which only
committees of Congress can
manage,'' Justice Wi!Uam O.
Douglas said in the H
decision.
The ruling, which wlll have
a broad Impact on the still·
deve lo ping computer
•jsoftware" field, supports the
government and rejects: the
claims of two Bell Telephone
Laboratories' employes who
wanted a patent for pro-
programm ing a g e n e r a I·
purpose' digital computer.
The patent seekers, Gary R.
Bemon and Arthur C. Tabbott,
have developed a method of
programming a general -
purpose digital computer to
convert signals from binary
coded decimal forms into
pure-binary form . The U.S.
Patent Office said this was not
FINANCE
. more than a set of mental
steps for carrying o u t
mathematical procedures.
' ' p . ' ~ •
WomenHear
Director
At Meeting
The National Association of
Women i n Construction,
Orailge County Chapter, will
hear an address by Director
Betty Genung next Tuesday
at the Hyatt House in Ana·
beim
Mrs. Genung is a charter
member of the Pomona Valley
group and a past-president of
that chapter.
The meetlng L! open to all
women employed as office
Workers in the construction in-
dustry and will be an excellent
opportunity for those in·
terested to ob~ir a "capsule
view" of the activities and
civic projects of the associa·
tion.
For reservations call Mar·
jorie Weil : 827.-9575 or Pat
Rieb 540-8833.
PERSONAL
RADIO PAGER
TONE• YDICE
NIW C....-ct hdll't Unll
LOW COST
MONTH to MONTH
UNTAL IASIS
ORANlif COUNTY
l!ADIOTrllrHON[
Sll!VltE '\4
Lithograph
Firm Gets
Contracts
Canon "Pocketronic" AC/DC
Features
printed readout•
for calculation and
resuli.. Addo, aubtract.,
multipli<o ind dividea.
Automatic con1lAnt key.
Operatea on howehold
current or rechargeable
bo tterieo. 1.8 lh<.
A compact 8"x4"x2".
1 Year Pa11111td
Labor Guarantee
Printing
Calculator
SALE
s17949
145 IAKll ST., COSTA MESA ""° •-11n,1A111111.., •· m.,..
•
. ' , -· .. .
OVER THE COUNTER COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK LIST
NASD Lbtl"91 for Monday, No .. mbor 20, 1972
•
•
TONIGHT'S
TV HIGHLIGHTS ,..
Texnta ln Laguna
Organ Recital Delightful
KTIY ID and KCOP m 7:30 -Santa Claus Lane
Parade. "1'oys and Joys of Christmas" is this year's
1 theme, saluting the Marine Corps' 25th anniversary
~ or its "Toys for Tots" program. Bill Welsh hosts on
_.. •. . •• .Chaoncl.11. while Hobo Kelly and Bill Burrud cov·
,. er the parade on Channel 13.
By TOM BA RLEV
OI 1111 Dilly "!lot f llff
wttkcnd came Joyce Jonea. a
dtmure South Texas girl who
quickly demonstrated to a.
Laguna ... ~Jlch COmmwtlty
Concert Association audience
just why organ music Is so
very much in vogue these
da)'.i,,
I
'
' NBC O 8:00 -"West Side Story." The 1961
super qiusical returns -in its entirety -t~night. rl
Natalie \Vood. Richard Beymer and Oscar \Vtnners ~
Rita Moreno and George Chakiris head the cast of 1
the modern day Romeo and Juliet story.
NBC O 6:30 -"Brian's Song." One of the TV· ~ movie highlighls of the past season, the award·
J. winning true-life story of football playe~s Ga.le
Sayers (Billy Dee \Villiams) and and Brian Ptc·
• cola (James Caan). AJso featured: Jack Warden
.. and Shelley Fabares.
Local lqvers of organ mu.!IC
can be excused £or lhlnklng
that Christ1nas came a little
early this yea r.
\\'e have already been regal-
ed in the opening days or this
young music season with
memorable recitals by two in-
tema1ionally a c c I a i m e d
keyboard artists: Notre Dame
organist Pierre Cocherau from
Paris and Brilain's brilliant
Gillian Weir.
Hard on their heels this past
Her reci tal Sunday af-
ternoon in the Laguna Beach
High School auditoriwn amply
demonstrated this channing
artist's versatility in a wide
ranging program that included
works by Bach, H a y d n ,
Rameau, Martel Dupre, ~tax
Great CBS O 9:30 -''The Gargoyles." Corne! Wild
and Jennifer Salt star as an anthropologist and his
photographer daughter u'ho encounter hor~fic
creatures resembling the gargoyles of ancient
legend.
~ ............ Wllyne Flick Tops Rlltings
TV DAILY LOG
NEW YORK (AP) -"True
Grit." the John Wayne
western that was a hit at the
boy office, also proved a win-
ner on national television, ac-
co rd ing to Nielsen ratings
made public ~1onday .
The 1969 film. broadcast by
the ABC Television network
eight days ago, topped the list
of the 20 highest-rated shows
doomed t>eu11u ol their d1!tuent on television for the week en-T uesday ethn•c bact11011nds. ding Nov. 12.
o moo mremper1tu1n flis--===========;, Evening in r "lirhls, C1mer1, ,t.ct1on" Dr. 1r
t1011nd becomes 1 TV stir when h• NATIONAL GENERAL
NOVEMBER 21 une:..pecttdl, 1ppe1rs in 1 ~ocu-THEATRES
1:00 II 0 0 mm CD Ntws mtnt1ry on hospit1ls. 11~~~~~~~~~~11 r .. , r~ rtftl Nm Ei) HtfllltllOS Conje ~ U!.J Ill!" CT'! ,..., ' .• ' "[lluibtlh" O hndfrw "[n1tr Mir~ Tw11n" ~ <UJ 1m1., ame
(!i Qtt S1111rt ([J At111 ton PipolTO
0 Wild Wiid Wtft ail ND'l'elt m Tiit fllntltonti ffi MOYit: (2hr) "Sin Q111ntin'" m 1to111..-P'ylt USMC (dra} '37-Humphrry Bo11rt, Ann
(Jj) Ctm'KOltndu Shtfidan.
A_, ____ A>fJCC!l_I_ fE Ml Dulu [n1mor1dl l :lO 8 (I) H1w1 ii Five-0 The V1shon
fl) HodRIPOdl• Lodi• Family b~ries young Chr11. Vashon
a M1Jbt117 RFO 1nd launches 1 vendett1 1g1lnM
··--=--!ti; llr===========;I lmlT1 llPll '"41, STA In 7oM& till: lAT,4111. OfUI hl l, S111TI ... 4>
U. ,,,,, t :IS a!) Dra1111 McGur,tt, whom the, hold re ·
Ef) Th1M Sloatts UIOl'l~ibfe for !he boy's de1lh in
6;30@ Ktpn'• HenMJ t~e second pan al 1 triloo deat-
0 M.¥11: (C) (lO) ''Cht" (dr1) in11 with 11 underworld dyn1st}'
Omar Sharif, Jae~ P1J1nce, Cesa1e in Hawaii.
01M1¥1, Rabtrt Lo11i1, Woody 0 TUES MOVIE OF WEEK
Strode, B1rb1r1 Lun1. Linda M1rs11. * "BRIAN'S SONG "
Tiie story al tnt lumultuoU1 c1r1t1 Returns! James Caan
af DI'. [rntslo "'Che" Guer.-1ra. Billy Dee Williams
(I) CIS Nns Walter C1ankilt 0 Q'@ al ABC Tuesdty Mow!t:
@) Muv Criffln Sho• (C) (90) "lri111'1 Son(' (dra) '71 m AIHfr Ciriffilll -James ~In. Jack W1rden, Silly aJ Cilli11n'1 l1l111d Dee Williams, Sheltey f1b11es. Judy
(U1 Sthools Wltllllut F1ilu11 Pict. David Huddleslon. ED Aslt1nomr I "Pl1nets, s·· tD (lj) am Morrn' Journal m Joannt Ctrson Show €!) La M1ldkion de la Biondi
~ lir«n A.ens 9:00 fil Un Yer1no Part Recordlr
a:J Cttla Club fD @ Behirrd ttlt Unes
al Dot 4? PM m Morie: "lohnoy Guita r"
g) Little R1suls Q! Tht Vir&ini111
7:00 8 (]) 0 FD Nnn (ID D11m1 O ltwlln1 to1 Ooll111 9:30
({)Truth or Con11qu1n(.t1 fJ Watch Out for
"SEADREAMS"
THf MOST ORIGINAL I
IMITATED SURFING FILM
PRODUCED
l'orlormaMH
7:]0 &. 9:15 ltlCh lwe11i ...
All s-ts S2 .1S (l)S111ri to Alhtnlurt *"THE GARGOYLES"!!
0 W\111'1 My Unt? fJ (]) C1S Tuttdlf MOYie: (t) !';~~~~~~~~= m I Love l11q (90) ''G111oylt1" (hor) '72--Cornel ID I Dru• ii ltlnnil Wille, Jenniler Sal!, Gr1yson Hill.
(ii) Mow Do Y1111 Child"fl Cmr O Pippei Rodren Sllow filmtd
Eil lt hn\I Sin l'ir h1if11igtlts llom tht NOY. IS l •mt £D Tiit frwnch thtl with USC.
€I) Cl AIM!' T1111t C1r1 dt Mgjtr fJ """ i!l~ ltfti1: (C) ''Wamai ObMUtd"' m I l•ICtlb I The Duke 1nd I Mtno
r:E) Mlllhl P'tntnll: Holtywltd Gritt1n v1sib Jolln Wayne. ... , .. '1) Sptrld Rwr tD I lPIC1lL] lht TlianUriYIRR
7:)(1 Th11 Almoft W1sn't An anim11td
II "l'VE GOT A SECRET" story 01 the 11rst lh1nks1ivin1. £D @ Slit'-loum1I * Steve Allen, all·star €D Rnistl Musittl
panel and celeb. cuest 10:00 g Nn1
MILTON BERLE U (D@ Q) M11c111 Wilby, M.O.
II r ... 'at I Stuet Kaye Bal!ud ~with I Sl'IOut. Not I Whimper"
111est1. With Dr. Welby's ht lp, 1n 11ln1 0 hllc1 SU1111n llll'IOUJ sur11:eo11 !ea1~s that his O Movlt: (CJ (21u} "D11ltl!'f All lite ii not over even lho111h ht
Monllttn" (~i Ii) '68-Alo.lr1 K11bo. c1n no longer oract1tt.
(])To Tt11 lh1 Truth O lolls Kalfofl PreHnls Tllrll\11
(I) F1111lly CltSsiu tD Ken 0 Mllllon $ MDYit: (C) (2hr) "Thi ~ Sp11kin1 frttlf
H1Ull1ht11•" (dr1) "69 -John w YMtn• Hortlrue11
W1ynt. K1th1nnt Ron. ED Pl•Jhoust New Yort "lht t1sl
~ Holtywoad Siiu1re1 Jo111nty" (II) m I lfi(!AL I Santi Cl1us La111 a;) Luclt Sambrt
r1radt "Toys ind lofs of Christ· ai) Ftttiwal Me11t1no
m1s" iJ lh11 Ytlr'1 Iheme. Il!UI· '1) Kin1dn1n ol tht ~I
ln1 !ht M11i111 Corpf 25th annl-110:J0 0Ttlk Bilek
vtntry of '1oys !or Toi\." 8!11 CJ m Nt.-1
Welsh ho1!s, G1.nd M1rsh<1I Gtnt11I m Stllrl to Mvtn1urt
Rolltrt L Cushm.in. Commandant Gfi Novh: "Tiit Harder fhty Fili'"
of tht United Stilts M1nn1 Cofpi g) OIMoof Spotb111111
ENDS TONIGHT
"DIRT GANG"
and IRJ
"UNHOLY ROLLERS"
I
f lf ITTUD!of!r
I Nhl"ORT IU.CN • OILUJ50·
"Joh" H111ton"1 rnosl pow11ful
pietur1 i11 y11r1! Thi 1urpri11 hit
f this 'l'••r'1 C111n11 Film F.sli· .,,,,. ..
-L.A. Times
l=ATe CITY/JZR : .... __ oc...,. __ ... __ ~
.... Ill
llltalMtti Taylor
UA ......
""'" CIMmt ....
"COMES ON LIKE A
•
A Gen11lne Hem r T1111 "TME OTHER" (PGI
Collr -"CONQUEST
0" THE PL•MET 0,. TME APES"
FIRE ENGINE! I SHOOK
WITH SHOCK AND
LAUGHTER!"
-NEW VORK TIMES
will pl"f host lo Honorary G11nd 11:00 I)(]) 0 b Et) m Pkwt
M1nh1l1. tht Supremes. 0 0111 st_, llJfnd m I l•l<IXL I Slnll Cl1us u.. (jJ M•nllll OlllOl'I
eoo:-.,:,::;:-:.;..-TICHMICOLDR"
.. _... .. '" .. M •-•1T& Ol\,.111111000 tO . •-C. {AND) •11111 .. "p,_, __ laugh till you
P1rtdo Hobo Kelly 1nd Bill Butrlld G Moftl: "ln Mittrtblts" (drt)
w111 I.mt lhii COY11r1111 of th• ·sz-Roti.rt r:ewton. Ckbr1 l'11•l
IM!flltt, •.idl will include tlo-.ns. ®l """
11111ts, m1rchln1 b1nd1, tqUQ· ID CnllMllll CtUore F"tlMM
tli1ns tnd t1l1brlt!t1 ln:Nll th• tn· Qll In Stntt Moun (R)
ttrt1inmtnl •or\d. f,E'j lllnltr ltd Annstron1
(JJJ lleldsllrt 11 :\S ttl CIMllll l4 mu Medi. Odtoe 11 :JO e C1J cas L111 111m.: <Cl
(l!) CitJ'qtchtn "Hunttr'1 All !or IUllln(' (dr1) '7D m lllttbttlr It -Buff R!'lnolds, 5'J11nnt Pltshtl1t.
ml Pn1untr Usttd Q ~ m Johnnr Clr!on Sho• a> II It Written 0 r r~~ GJ le\"1 Ctltb11tr
0) Addt1111 F1111lly m Truth 01 CC1nu1111t nc11
t:tO 11 Cl) Mtllde 11hude·1 unt~oedtd tl} T~t Chutk JchnJOn Show
Pf'tlllllH:J Wltl~S hlV()( 1n !ht( £ID hn1ki
liwts ol M•lldt and w111er 111h1l1 12:00 O M0Yi1: "Nimon Dolt11 lip•
lh'7 try 10 dtelck whit 10 doj lcom) '32-WC. Field$, lttk 01k11.
tboul it, In !ht ccnt!11,10n cl 1 m T1 Ttll tht Trutll
1'#9·Pll'I epbode (D Ctullt!l' llhllk ,
D im m Special Mo.tt: {t) (lhr) lZ:lO m Alfftd Hitt!Koct "'""ts
"Wttt 'SIM Stor(' (dra) "61 -1:00 (.j) GI 0 CJ) Ntwi
N1!1llt WPod. R11;hud 8tym11. m Mtillt: "ltntr fraM 111 Un-
111111 T1mblyn. Citor11 Ch1~rl1. lnown Wo•••" (dll) '4! -,loin
Rlt• Mortno. Tht 111111!1,lt Ac1dtmy ront11nt.
A••r•·•l11nl111 KIMll dl,llC lrll;. l:JO 0 Mlrie: """'" "' liullt" ($11$)
1111 tM Plllht ol tw'o !own, 'SO-Rid\ard BaHll•rt
Wednesday
"''"""D'"'A"'vr"'1"'M"'E"'M"'o"'v~1E"'s~
.... IC) ..,,. ..,.. !d•l 'S&-
WlllllM Holdtn. Soph11 lor•n.
tJI D "St 11(' (dr1) '53-Jlnt Wf
"''"· Sttf1!111 HIJdtn. .. (JJ .... ., ...... _ ...
"'"" tCllfl) '57-0.bl* Rl)'l!Old•, Ut
lie "lt!M!I. ... __ ..........
;; pa) ·40 -JoM ,....,.._ £nu
°""·
,,
12:00 0 (C) "Tllt SIM ol kn!lel" (ldvl
·st -P1111tnt Godd1rd, Gt0t11
J'ladtr.
1:00 m "Ttll Tll'1tt" (dra) '5 1-01<•
1'"""11. l'•ul1 A1ymond
·1~JO 0 ~Mt)1" flCI II} "51-How·
~rd Duff, [w1 Barto-
B (C) "VI•• l•s ¥1111" 1mu1)
'64-ll••' P1tllty, Ann·M111rtt.
J:OIJ 'I) (t) "Nlllo Ho11'1 to 1ts1111" Cttl<L
(d11) '63-HofJl BtKilno11
®)"II W'.attf to111n" !dr11 '41-
Wttter P>d1eon, Otbllflh Kttr,
4:00 8 (C) "1'4 RttlMf It ltic.h" (COlll)
'54-S.ndr1 Ott, Aotitii Goullt.
4:30 StMt II l~M lit\1111
I
Tiff. HUIUlR-THE llUllllDI @;V(!lnmf ~i~---~ ,··'1 ·. S1111i1 1 AlUN GARfl[lO M1h lri11 Ir R111Oni1611duk11i P11htrl ~l On il J11 Oisi t~
ADUIJSOMLY IX) 0111ml k1JOH I 6.AVllOS[N A CAM BIS! fll M in COLOR
f{~· ~c:>
IARG-AIN MATINll
Wedneeclay, 1 p.m.
"'""• ..... ,,...., ..... c,..._.
()_ .... , ... ,,
A4•1n Sl.00 Chlld 7ie
Oll4HGl111M(\ w".._,' Ottft too, M
!.Ol &Suoi ~r-90,~
Ylo"'GI. JO • \.IMft 11 f•l'f
-·~~~ 11"'fllRFWES
ARE FREI! (RI
°1 '1l fll"l0<! ........ ... ..,. ... ,, ..... ,, .. ,~ r· ................ :
Plus• LOVE STORY FROM DENMARK'
'.'RELATIONS" (R)
\ •
.. '··-., 211• NIT 41~0 . fl.t.tU "' \ll[ISAhO , ... ,~ "'iC•tOt~
f¥11 MONfAJIO
llll "OlllOIAl•AT 'l'OV (Al Sit POllYll,.
NOW INDS TUISD4Y
''Nlchol11 and
Alexandra ''
IPGl ...
--· CINEDOME 21 I .. ..... =·~
--· -'...l,llr• STAOIUM ·2 "I .. ~~c:.--
--__ ,;r,
STADIUM "! " -·','"C.£.----
DAIL V PILOT 9 ~
NOW THRU TUESDAY
SltVf:
MCC2Uf"fN
AS ~fiULUTT'
M1rl9n lrl""" n ''THE 000,ATitlR" lltl • "CMATTO'S LAND" t,D>
Oofflll MIWll "8UTTl!ll,LllS Aill:E P:IU!E" ·a "TtU!llE'S A Gll:L
IN MY SOU•"'
"THI! HEW Cl!NTUlllONS" Ill)
Wirt! 009,.._ C. klll
"" "PL.t.Y MISTY ,-01: ME" 111 1
Clllrtlt •-11
"THE Y•L.ACHI P•PElll" (Ill & T..,'I' C•rill Ill
"THE BOSTON STR•NGLEll" 1111
anavision'De Lwe COO-· Fr001 Wainer Bros .. a warner C~nmJ'lica11oos Cor~n.
STARTS
WEDNESDAY
NOVEMBER 22
EXCLUSIVELY
WllJDIDIT?
Miii's best hil!rld."
·'&ii or a man?
:, ·~ j,\M"f's""GARNER
-· ATHARINE ROS
r ' r.:::'m=rt=o=N=LY=Kl=-=-LL=TH=E1=R MAST==ER=t
' EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT
IN HARBOR SHOPPINQ Cf:NTEll
Omt man alone
undtJf<;tood the savagery
of the early
American
west.
4
BURT
LANCASTER
STARTS
WEDNESDAY
NOVEMBER 22
ONLY WIL!·IN :~"~
• ULZANA'S RAID
STARTS WEDNESDAY NOV. 22 AT IOTH TllUnll
,I
I
I
• . .
Tuesday's Clos~ Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
· Another-Higli-Set
On Wall Street
' ,,
I
•
SC DAILY PILOT Jj
•
.,.
I
,
I
'
'
J2 DAILY PILOT Tuesday, NO'ltmbe:r 21, 1CJ72:
QURNll! By Phil lnterlandi
.
~ r-~ ~ itit:Y..w ~ ~
"Arc you trying lo tell me you're overworked?"
L. ltl. Boyd
Turkeys Meant
To Be Peacocks
'Rolling
Stone'
Bullish
Chili Good Bot • • '
Colorado Farmer Wins, ls Overshadowed
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!l -
The Rolling Stone begins
celebrating its fifth birthday
today, and the publishers say
it's really rolling.
Revenues of $4.5 million are
expected this year by the
biweekly tabloid.
Founded by Jann Wenner
with a borrowed $7 ,500 in 1967,
the paper has a circulation of
250.000, a staff of 76 full-time
employes, a book-publishing
adjunct, and 30 pages of
advertising per issue.
THE ROLLING Sto ne 's
format is a newsprint tabloid
TERLINGUA, Tei. (UPI) -
A man wbo grows cantaloupe
in Colorado for a living and
brews chili as a hobby bas
woo the world's chili cookoff,
but -as al\\'BYS -it was the
sideshow hoopla of hostes.ses
in hot pants and a former
stripper who sto le the show.
Asked ~·ho the winner was,
Ray Potts. manager of the
Study Butte Lodge a..n d
organizer of the cookoff,
couldn't tell the rattlesnake
chili from the Tennessee rac-
cooo chili.
0 J 1111NK HE was some
dude from Colorado," Potts
said:· "But right after It was
"foldover" of 80 pages. Its .----....,.-------,
stable of writers consists of
ski.lied craftsmen, mostly with 6 p ' t successful records elsewhere ries s
before coming to the paper.
111us1rations are most I y Res;gi• "funky" photographs and " a.
drawings.
Each issue contains only a TOULOUSE, F r a n c e
over, everybody blew outta
toWn."
Tbe winner was How8'1
Winlor ol Rodcy Ford, Colo.,
but !hat -DOI tho point o1
tbe sixth lllUllal llltemaUOllll
Qllll "-IMlaa society
COokofl. 'l'be event Is tbe
thing, not !be winner.
j\ldp, former Pmldent Lyn-
don B. Johnson. Johnson bad
Jnlsed wrtghl'I chill .. evtll
bettor than his Pedemal,es
River cblJI, and thus wu
automaUcally dl8qualilled by
other competitors for his "poor taste.H
New Name
For Bureau
An estimated 4,500 cookl
partlclpated this yur. and
most-ani•ed In. the -ghost town In the low moun-
tains of '1Uthwtsl Tena by
private plane, and le(t as
quickly as they could whon a
winier stonn blew In &md"J.
C.pllol News Service
SACRAMENTO -T be
Calilomla Department o I
Cl1l'E llOSTESSl!S tiptoed · AgrtcullUn!'s 71 • year • old
through the cactuses In lhe Bureau of Dairy Service will
briefest of hot pants. have a new name alter Jan. 1. . · II will then be called the Candy Barr, who _,, only "Bureau of Milk and Dairy
two "" guns and a cowboy bat Foods Control."
. -. . . ~ . .
_,,.
' . a.kwtl ' (.,,......,,,...... ,_.a.. ... w---AppleV•lley~lbMIGmy,
Sop or-Dnulfts
llbd ~Kam Sauce OunberW
loM'-lodry Monnl1M nout-Stlltt ......,,, ...
--• ot ...,_,,.,.. ·lfolltcl Hew Yft ..... Misn D'KGMI
...... ._..... C....WY ..
C-Olo* --· -""_,,. ___ ..........
fftlhttnc••••J ....
Sptdll Cllikho'• ~ ... ..... ~o...• ...... ......... -v ... """' $3 '5 ........ ~
R...,..tlonl 644-1700
4,95
4.75
1,Z5
b.50
b.95
few, long articles written with (UP I) -Six priests have
detail and word precision. resigned from t b e i r
Subject. matter, in addition churches because their
~hen she walk«! the runways The rtame change was made
m the 1950s, was there, ped· beca.,.J t bettor desaibe$ the
dling copies of her book or bureau's ( u n ct i 0 n of
paetry ~~ed . "GenUe Mind gua).antoelng and enforcing ~· wntten when sen:-state .standards of . milk and
1DI a prison term for man-milt Pf'O'.duct quality and $8.ft-
fyana J>06SeSSlon. ty for the consumer, officials
m~y~ :":/1~ ~·-S81_.d_. ________ I ()///~a/MP
to anything connected with archbishop fired another
rock music and rock music priest for living with a
groups, has included such girl, church officials said.
topics as McGovern politics, Archbishop Monsignor
the "Hippie Mafia," homosex-Guyot retired father
he identified it as coon from
the hills of Tennessee. No one
else would say what they
cooked with. but one penoo
said be saW the ratUes of a
rattlesnake floating in a pot
uality and Hollywood brawls. Bernard Forestier because
"Five years and who would "he is living in (ree union" DUB RHODES of ClevelRnd,
have believed Jt," says Alan with a your.;;:: girl. Ohio, placed second. Dick
Rinz\f:r, vice president of the "In our eyes, the situa-Solocumb of Glanea Park,
business. "We're feeling quite lion ... is symptomatic of Tex., was third and Geor~e
stable at last, and bullish the persons wbo currently Wriiht or New York was
' Nearly Everyone
Listens to Landers That single gi rl who possesses a cigarette lighter which
she always keeps in perfect worlting order can be ex~~ed
to make an excellent wife. So advises a student of feminine
character. No argument. Stil~. our Love and W~r man
would like to point out that a gll'l who possesses a c~garette
lighter that never works is apt to marry at an earlier age.
about the future." reign in the church." the fourth. 1nr s. •r•1111""' s1. J~~::::::::::==-~~==L_~~~~~~~~~~!'!~Au~ ... ;~·-~·~~·-~""';;!'!!"'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ six who resign sai • Wright's entry eliminated "· 1714) 776-Jllt
ROLLING S T 0 N E was the possibility of a well-known
never an "underground"
Not much else, says he, so swiftly
attracts to a young lady the helpful
attention of eager gentlemen.
IN HEBREW, the term "tukki"
meant "peacock." Christopher Colum-
bus, that decisive fellow, thought the
turkeys be picked up in America were
peacocks. Jewish merchants in Spain,
' swift with their own lingo, therefore
identified the bird as the tukk.i, and
translators ev~ntually corTUpted it into turkey. Had ab-
solutely nothing whatsoever to do with the nation of the
same name, please note.
HOW MANY? -Q. "How m8ny high school football
players hurt their knees or ankles every year?"
A. About 14-0,000.
Q. "HOW many recessions since World War Tl?"
A. Four. In 1953-r.4, 195'1-SS, l~l and 1969-70.
Q. "HOW many Americans will kill themselves today?
I mean on purpose?"
A. Figure 50.
MARIJUANA -OUT Chlel Prognosticator ,.,.. he has
reason to believe marijuana may soon be boug~t legally
by prescription to treat migraine headaches, htgh blood
pressure and even epilepsy.
DON'T KNOW BOW the medical fellows found this out..
but they tell us now the average man's skull can be de-
pressed abou\ 10 percent in width before it cracks.
ELECTRONIC TESTS prove even the best of the pro-
fessional singtrs rarely can hold a note on exact pitch
)onger than a· tenth of a second.
Address mail to L. A-f. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875, New-
port Beach, Calif. 92660.
Health Unit
W ritin.g Law
1n Corpses
paper, starting out just above
the surface.
"Rock and roll was the main
focus of the paper's early
years," says R1nzler, "but our
editorial spectrum constantly
expanded."
Rolling Stone gave politics
extended coverage this past
election season.
The lead article in the an-
niversary issue is a lengthy
report on a San Francisco
grand jury investigation of the
Weatherman.
RI N ZLE R, SOMEWHAT
defen sive about the
magazine's dependence on
companies which make money
out of the youth music fads,
emphasizes that only 54 per-
cent of Rolling Stone ad-
vertising now <X1mes from
record companies.
RoUing Stone and Hs book
subsidiary, Straigh t An-ow
Books, are part of Straight Ar-
row Publishers, Inc., e
privately-owned company.with
about 50 stock holders.
Wenner, 27, is president of
the enterprise.
In an interview three years ~
ago, Wenner said he con-
sidered himself "basically a
writer, not a businessman."
But as a businessman, Wenner
has done pretty well.
ALL YOU
CAN EAT
DES MOINES , Iowa (UPll
-The State Board of Health
is working on a "maUSJleurn
law" which may include
regulations for freezing human
bodies.
THANKSGIVING
State health officials said
the board decided to push for
s tatutes gove rnin g
mausoleums b e c a u s e con-
struction and maintenance
standards are "sorely lack-
ing" for lhe above-ground
burial buildings.
In addllioo, they said that
since Cryonic interment -
freezing bodies in hopes that
they may be brought back to
life by future medical develop-
ments -is becoming popular.
they may a1so seek: laws
regulating cold s t o r a g e
facllitle1 for human bodi".
Authorities sald there art no
such facilities in l o w a .
1ltboagh they said severa l
towans have made inqulries
about the deep freeze process
dalened lo preserve lhe
orgaill Of the body through
cbemkal Injections a n d
vlCUWI\ atoraJe alter dt1ath.
·auFFET
SERVED FROM 12 NOON TO 8 PM
Choice of or comblnotlon of soup or solad
ROAST TURKEY with DRESSING
ROAST PRIME RIBS
BAKED VIRGINIA HAM
INCLUDING:
VEGETABLE POTATOES
RELISHES ROLLS
APPLE CIDER
Assorted fruit I Ch .... ,lotter
Hollclay Nut1
hvero9•
$4T5 CH1lDREN UNDER 12
.2.75
OU .. REGUlAR MENU IS Al SO AVAILABLE MMiE PARKING ~tessen 645-8900
& restaurant BAKERY· CATtRIN(,
HAl1ti ", .. 11i-... ttWltl..._., .. "111 ............
ORDER NOW
FOR THANKSGIVING
e RMlly lo S...o wltlo H .. oy '• Spice G>lau
• -fot -1., No ,..,. ... 1oo . . ..
·::-~---• wfft Sa lwidMt To CH
J7Dt LC.. Hiftrw9¥, C..... .. M• -6fMIOI ....... 111.c-.......
1m s .......... ,, '•"••• •1"'2461
(
WE CORDIALLY INVITE nJ10THe
G
Now there's a Keystone Savln8' and Loan
ready to serve a whole ·new area -tho
Allport_ Center.
This Is our o!llcial Crand·Open!ng time-
now right through till November 24th. So .
be sure to come by and join us for the
celebratloo.
Free gifts for Mother Nature.
Key11tone has a deep Interest In ecologv.
That's why everyone who comes by our
new branch at Airport Center can take
IIome a unique free gift, A young seedling
tree ready for planting wherever you
choose.,, plus a free booklet With com-
plete planting Instructions. Please pay
us a vJ Slt. We have enough trees for
everybody (Including a supply at our
Westminster and Anaheim offlces).
At the same time we'll be continuing our
tree planting program In Orange County,
When you come 1n we'll arrange to have
a 2-yea!'-<>\d tree planted In your name, at
our expense, by the Division Of Forestrv.
Every single tree helps Orange County.
We'll give yau a map showing where your
tree Is being planted plus our special
certll1.cata of tbankL .
en· ol
11nd l.01111
ort Ce1der.
SoD1ethlngforthe
whole fmnlly.
Keystone has planned a big housewarm-
ing. We've put together a number "of
surprises for you. There'll be displays,
literature and Items to make the time you
spend at Keystone really worthwhile.
A few words to savers.
Keystone gives yon the blghest !nhlrest
possible on every dollar you deposit at
Airport Center. The onlv question ls
how much interest do you want and for
how long.
Open a regular passbook account and g0t
5% compounded dally from the day your
funds are deposited to the date withdrawn,
Deposit $1000 or more at Keystone and
receive 534% on 1·2 year deJlQ81ts. Put In
at least $5000 for 2 years or more and
your yield ls 6% compoundlld dally, All
funds insured to $20,000.
Casa Keystone.
If you like authentic Spanish decor.you'll
!Ute the way our Interior decorator has
handled our new Alrporf Center braru:h.
(
It's an artistic delight, Most Items were .
carefully selected In Mexico and ooord1o
nated !or your pleasUI9 and comfort.
f t, .... . ·-..... ..
New convenience
at the airport.
Drive r!gl\t hJ oil MacArthur JioulBVllld.
We're between Campus and Jamlloree on
the north side, There's plenty of patk1ng
and an easy drlve-m faclllty.
Of course you can.depotit or w!llidmwby
mall and )'Ve pay the postage, We otter
many free services you'll like: ea!• de-
posit boxes, notary service, traveler's
checks, 1ise o! our spacious communltv
. room, And many other services exclu·
slvely for you.
• 4 ' I
We're open· for business now.
See us Monday through Thursday .from
9:00 a.m. to 4,00 p.m, and Fridays 10,o_o
a.m, to 5,00 p.m, Manager Jim Clark and
his staff will be waiting to show yO.
around. come and get your free tree.
m -~ ,J
KEYSTONE SAVINGS
llll UWI AllOCl&nllll
lonald W, ~ CbllnNUI Of dlt llomd. Ex-w Olllcoi W.PI II •z 14011 JllldI 1ll'fll. ~ to H•'l'wmlY Jan, -11$.2Atl.
f•!"'• Olllot. $» H. Eucllil, ....... ~nlll..,.,t.1'llAIW m.7'40. ..... C • 1 Oil MKAz!!mr IM. lllllle l»GW
r
' : •
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• • .. . . .. • ... ~ ..... ...... "" •
N.Y. Steeb
VOL 65, NO. 326, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PASES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, '1972 TEN CENTS
Disrupti<>n Charges Make Recall Leader 'Mad'
. . .
By JACK CllAPPW.
Of ..... Nit ....
Charges tbat the Concerned Qtisens
group seeking recall ol two La~
school t r u s t e e s is compolfld ol
di!stdenta wbo disrupt_ acbool.meetinp
have been denied by the lftlident ol the
recall group.
"It mates me mad," Thomu Claidy
aaid In re&ponse•to char( .. ibade by an
organization called F ACl'S wbich ls biclc· ~ trusteea Patricia Gillette "*'' Gerald Liiiie.
•·
,
A.recall ~ la oet lor Dec. S and
thrte candidlte11 LucWe Whitaker, Fran--
cis Crossen, and Mtclwl Sagar are ruir illac !or' tW. pooitlooa wblcb would be
opened tt the reclll. la lllCCtsSlul.
JliO ~-were made In' literature
naw beini cl1alril>uled by FACl'S, and in
..... statemenll made by the trustee.
IUbject to tlae iecaJ): .
Culldy said be maot ·vehemenily ob-
ject.cl to being called a dl!sident.
lie said 1bol ~ board meelin;:s
were dilrupled by the -ol the ma-..
1ca·
jority of the boar6 in refusing to move to Theresa Yale Eagles is representing the William Ullom, district superintendent,
bigger quartm when overflow crowds organization, but she had declined to might he llrtd.
··--•-• the school ~-~ Iii other "U Dr. Ullom goes, so go the Jn. im:uut:U Ul,Nl.lu meetings. iden Y members. tematlooally acclaimed 1 c b o o I s , ' '
"'!be organization called C4ncemed "U duly, elected representative5 tum a CUsldy said.
Cltluns !or Schools is a grass-roo'.s deal ear to the people they are suppooeJ Cassidy userted tbat tu letters sup-
organization oCdedicated men:.bers ol the -to-represent, anil listen ffiSteacrtOa small-porting Dr. Ullnm and other top ·3.J.
Laguna Beach area. cltque who use them for very selfish miniatrators were aent to the board.
"Well, Juli wbo are they and wbat do reaaons, wbal Joes the bones! man do," "The majority board pub Ii c I y
they stand for?" Cassidy said refen'ing said Cassidy. acknowledged ooly one letter, that One to the FACl'S group. lie said his group was formed alter the from the Laguna Beach Taxpayers
Solar, only one member of FACl'S bas majority of the school board indicated by Association which disapprovtd ol Dr.
come forward to act as spokesman. Mrs. their actions and letters, thal' Dr. Ullom.
• even Ill
Did . General 'Panic'?
'
Truman's Daughter Enters 1951 Controversy
NEW YOllK (UPI) -Preticlent Harry
S Truman fir~ Gen. Dougli..s MacArthur
as U.S. conun:inder in Korea in 1951
because he felt MacArthur "sort of
panicked," Truman's dailgbtor sald to-
day.
Margaret Truman Doniel s a I d her
lather concIUded that 'thinp we. too
shaky" !or Allied lorce5 at the lime he
decided to reclll MacArtlalr.
-Tbls look place-April ll, 195~ and set
oil a storm ol protesl among backers ol
the World War II hero.
Mrs. Daniel said her father fi>resa w
that bis decision would be unpopular, and
chose to say little or nothing more about
bis action in the days and weeU that
followed, not interfering in a big welcome
-le< MacArtlalr. MacArthur was relieved as U.S. com-
mander alter threatening !iotb ground
and air · attacb in mainlanc! China, in
llW1Uil of aw.e. l_orc05 who aided
North Korea.
• I l !
All·YeiQ" ,Sla!!!« . •.. . .. CaiJo -D.iifF.rot~Pmm ··
' ~ ' . .
1973 Bond Issue Vote
By JORN VAL'l'l!RZA
Of ................
A 125-miDion bond issue termed .crucial
to handle ............ grOl9llt In 1llle
Capistrano u.;Jfied &:boo! i>1strtct Will
come before voters Feb. IO, liul Ille ...,.
troverstal aD-year«bool concept will be
abeent from ~ ballot. ·
. That .solution came ,after trusteea
.....ued with oevenl ---day amid a large aucf!e!>ce' CCJl!lpooOd
primarily ol oppooellla to the .46-15 pn>-
gnmi (nine weeks In class, three ol vaca-
tion over a IJ.mooth cycle).
Aa originally pt'O\)Oled, ~IS waa lo
have had a spot oo a bood bellot -added
as an lnfonnaUon item to seek a definite
community aeiitiment about . the coo-
trovefslaJ ~ea.
'But trustees agreed that adding the bot
Issue onto the fin: bond iaue in aeveral
years could spell death to the finance meuure. .
During a aeries ol Jntrtcalo parlJamen.
t&y maneuvera, Trustee Fred Newhart
moved to ocrap 45-U entlrely !or the
comlng school year; to Nlii!iend tbe
cllisen'• adriny committee • ..~.
and aak Ille group to -ptberlnc
lnlonnatoo from other acbool illlllklL
lnlormation -other llChool lllilllictl.
Tbe-. ---~ aupport from -Monda • But It will roturn It ~ '1
meeting oo Dec. 5.
other trustees tool: little ...... wfth Ille
subltance of Newhart'• -.. but I&
lllsted that lor many monlhl, the publlc
llld been prmilled a flnll decision, Oii ~
16 at the board'• llnt meetJnc In
December.
"We've told everyee that we would
decJde at that lime," 11kl trUl&el
Edwanl Westberg, and we blft 01>
pooenll to the plan ..... toolOI. •• ouPt to glva tbl propoucatl .I diwo to mow up, too •.• u u.e are-.,." .
Tbe -oettllll Ille date llld dollar
-!or the --...... , -... ....i1or~ ..... _..,-
A.STRONAU T GETS
CA.BINET POST?
llLUll (UPI! -l'ai---
!l'nnk -.. -' t' ... ..,. Pr-rn.. fir :'ft!? ... • ~ of (r I -loo. M -·;;;...1;:r. -..... .......
llepallOcal ._ ... ...,_. ...... ...
.... betas-........... tlll& .. Wbl1e How lllcl ..... I I .....
--Oii OiQ' ,. '" ....... 1m1a cl. Ille -.. I I •Illa
") ..
in · unison in" autborizlng finance
measure&. . .
And TnMtee William Enquist's no vote
drew 'cmcern from Board President
Robert Hurst, who said that unless the
bJ>ord cut a 1!DID-vole "a bood Issue -probably !ail." But Enqaist said that be VOied against
the,llat., not the·bood lssl!e. ttaell .
Be .Jrilerred to place the Issue Ob the
ripJar April 'blllol to save the coots of a
specill-.
other board memdm dl!sgreed, however, hiolatq tliat the April tax-
paying aeaaon WU the worst lime Of the
year to seet voter approvals for bonds.
Although the booda: spell a much more
important functic:m for the district than
all·year llC'bciol, the finance measure took
a beck 1e1t to the controversy su:·
rounding ~15.
Grudgln&ly, trusleet! admitted that
With a -of publlc meetinp ball over, nsults of polls ta.ten of the au-
diencel lhowed a dlamal rate of ao-
ceplance by porenll and teachers. Althoulh no tDcl ligures were glv .. ,
lrulloel alluded. to a memo from the
c1'ill!n'I · an ,.......tiool advlaory com·
m11tee wldd> Ill a I tblt tbO group
----_...ior .. U If the poll -111 were 1llOd as a
(Bet JIOND l88W, Pip Z)
PTA Book Fair
Events Slated
' In Laguna Beach
'.A Book l'air wUI be betel In Lquna
1IOlidl by i11t Top~ 11\e Wlllid PrA lrom
I to I p.m. !loo. IO IOd Dec, I at the
llChool amlU.,W-room.
P11marJ-. -·· dalllcs, ...... ...-.--------....--wlllbl ----·-""· llon-111 ...... bylourUl,Mh --... --.iq 1'11 I a'I boib 11111 allo bl • dllplaf It
IM I*, II 1-Mnl and the
llinrJ.
ftl .-11... 1..i llJ Illa PrA and llliallllillltlll ___ ...
~ .......... ,, h•-.. ..., ..... __ _ ......... _ .. -~ ..... _._.._ ............ Top
cl. ........... ~ ~-.
lllnly ''lh• II Tep ti Ula Wcirid
--· 1 lllldpl-!MBooi< '*·
MacArthur made the threats without
clearing statements with Washington, as
Truman had ordereci.
Mn. Daniel, who baa written a book
about fler father, was interviewed on the
NBC.TV Today Show.
Mn. Daniel said of ber father's view of
MacArthur's unautbeirized. statements:
"Hi! reaction was that be (MacArthur)
was a man who sort of panicked. All of
his predictioos about the Far East, and
(See TRUMAN, l'qe Z)
Health 'Officials --Douht-·Flu Pe ·
In New Strain
' 'Tis 'l'he Season
DAILY Pll.OT ........
Orange Coonty will probebly not be al·
fected by a rare strain of influenza never
before recorded in the continental U.S.
which has reportedly s t r i c k e n
servicemen in Colorado, according to
county health olllcials.
The report that !eVeral hunded airmen
at Lowry Air Force Base at Aurora,
Colo., near Denver, are suffering from a
rare strain called A-2-Eng!and has not
yet been officially verified.
Gogi, San Clemente's dog for all seasons, dons his Thanbgiving en·
semble which includes something new thia year, a felt turkey and 1
pine cone. Gogi, 11 , is o.wned by Mrs. Ch1tlotte Peteraon. She Dllkes
his rostumes, with appropriate attire for ~ ho~ys.
"One can only speculate on this. We
~.ave oo basis !or the story yet and the
Center for Disease Control in Atlanta Is
checking now," said John R. Philp, coun-
ty director of pubUc health.
"There ha5 been no Influenza outbreak
to date in California this year. It should
not be a heavy influenza year because we
have bad enough of types A and B or the ·
Hong Kong Ou (three years ago) so there
should be enough residual immunity to
make a large outbreak unlikely," he said.
Water Age ncy to Receive
Revi sed Impact Statement
Originally identified in England, the
rare strain is a new variation of the
former Hong Kong virus and requires a
different vaccination. Philp aald a new
vaccinlUon Is now being developed but
will not be available for 1evtral months.
"lnOuenz.a vaccinations are relatively
ineffective at best, on the average
penon," he said, adding that they 1te
never ldmtnistered to children.
The best thing nu sufferers can do, ..,.
cording to Philp, la go to bed and -A
fever, joint and back aches and "general
malaiJe" are the usual sufferer'• com-
plaints.
A revised Environmental Impact State--
ment for the Aliso Water Management
Agency (AWMA ) regional project will be
presented at 3 p.m. Wednesday lo direc·
tors meeting at the South Laguna
Sanitary Oistrk:t, 31652 ind Ave., South
Laguna.
First draft or the impact ttPort had
originally forecast s year %.000 population
ol about 381,000 for the south coastal
lancli in the AWMA.
Thole esttmata were attacted u
being too high and encouraging ucuolve
development of the torrttory which now
haa 1 popul1tlon ol less than 'I0,000
peraona.
The revised statement projectlng
230,000 population ii .. peeled to bl
adopted by A WMA directon, and then
forwarded to the Orange County Plan-
Graham Talks
l1tdia n ·Tribes men Hea r Gospel
KOllDIA, lndla (AP) -About tOO.OllO Nap trtbeJmon -de>ctndlDU of
llldlan he......., -!lied onto 1 football lleld to bur Or. Billy Graham
preodl the Galptl In I -.1ce that had to be tramlated into II dialecll.
Gnlllam'I -«hoed thnJach Ula luJh nlJey II he opened I lour-daJ Cl'1llldt .......,. In Nl(lllnd, ID lJldlan olllo celebntlng the IOOth IMiWnlry
of the -of tbl flnt Americln !llptlot mlaionltJ,
TllAT PllllT 4IOQUCAN, the Jiff. E. w. a.rt. bad to walk for -1tJ
lo .-Naplnl, In the -aat on the Bo"""" -· Graham lllldt lhl
1rip In lb -.. Uno bJ pllne from ~llld • by rood.
ftl -....,,.,_i lllowed hJm I btinl lix _la.... lndodJnc = ~ lllilldt of Silver SprinM, Md. er Ald)le lleMll of l'tll>
ftl ~I IS Clll1mNG the N1g1 Blplisll ._ ihan SIJ,IOO. -
of lbl --roiled t11roucJ1 dcmt1on1.
Grallom ~ after ucb --to 1!low for tranalatlon. "We'D all ..... the aame llogua&e in beoV<n ••• we -·t baft to have
a tnllllatcr 1" be llld.
nlng Commission ror consideratlon next
Tuescby.
The AWMA project ii I reglonll 1p-
proach to collection, treatment and
reclamsUon of waste nter.
It calla for expansion of newer-ltWlge
lreaimenl pl1nt1 in the Laguna Niluel
and Mlssion Viejo 1rea. -down ol
Lagun• Be>cb'• trutment and o01llll
facllltlel and construdlon of I lartt
treatment plant ln the AlllO Cfttk area
with I reeJonol outiall llao loclted off
Allio ere.It.
Pat!Jdpatlng in Ille ll"'Jed are lr'vmo
Rlnch W1ter District, IM AU.. Wiler
District, the South Lquna Sanlt&y
Diltrlct, Laguna Beoch City, -
Bly -District, lhe -Ana Mountatnt Water DiJtrict, and liblJton
Niluel W1ter Diltrlct.
Truted wute ••ter will bt uoed for
in1&1tion and noncontact recrutlon.
Fo rm s Available
Fo r Tournament
In Laguna Beacli
Entry lonno .... -rnllable for the
l"illh -..J JW1ior T-11 '-t
rnxn the 1.1...., BoldJ Recmtion o.,.r-.-. Ill N. C-ffllliw>y.
,,,. -w!D bl bald Doc. I and
10 II the LI&>* -lllcti -....
nll-U.-, le ii St r. .......
IZ !er-A-will bl 1"011 ~old
to-ond-uplnucll-. ,..,.. ...... I-r-""'
-.. Art 1'11111 al Ille lli(ltl ...... "*'
It ,,,._ .....,_, !I llom, Top
of the Wlllid, Allio IDd !It. Clllllaftl.
l'talher lolannatlon II l\'allabto hill
the ........ ~ •11K.
•
""nle public interest v1as no k>nger
being beard. The only recaurse left wu
to offer the vote~ of lhe community
another chance to consider who they wish
to have represent them on the 1ehool
!Joanie
"Tbls was accomplished through the
recall process. Recall serves u a
legitimate check-and·balance system in
the voling process. Without this recourse,
an interpretive mandate could easil1 lead
to lasclam," CaS!ldy sald .
ea,
Conviction
For Five
Overturned
CHICAGO CAP) -A fedcrll appells
court today reversed the convictions or
the five Chicago Seven defendants found
guilty of crossing state lines to incite
rioting at the time ol the 1111
DerrtoCl'ltic National C(lnvention.
Cleared were David T. Dellinger, Abbie
Hollman, Rennie Davis, Jerry Rubin and
Tom Hoyden.
'!be 7lh U.S. Circuit Court of Appells
ruled that the delendantl' CIJDSlltutlonat
rlcJlll had been violated. It said,
-..... that the snemmeat may retry Ille ftve.
'!be ftve were 111m1C elaht mUwar ac-
-lldlclld .. -cllula ill -..U. "'* the dr'eDDI 1t dae Den.
cnlic-
Tbe trial cl. -o1 the dsJtt, Black Pantbw leader Bobby Se1Le, wa1 se•ered
becllllR of his eourtronm outbuntl.
OI the remainlq ,.ven, live -Del·
Inger, Rubin, Hoyden, Hollman Ind
Davil -we:re convicted on Feb. 11, 1'10
of croalng state lines to incite I riot It
the Ume ol the cmvention.
They ud the two MdiGnll defendlDll,
John R. l'rolnel, I~ Ind Lee w.-, II,
were found ._t ol the main c:blrp
of conspiring to plot the viol-that to.. pile<.
Frolne5 and Welner alao were found in-
nocent ol ......... the use ol 111 il>-
cendilty device.
Tbe origlnal !Gar-month trtll be/ore
Jucfce Jullua J . Hollman wu 1 stormy
one mark<d by the defmae burtiol
tpithell It lhe Judie llld the )\"1ce
counterJnc with henh reprlmllldl.
All 1even ddendantl, pb&s two laWJ'ft'I,
were aentmced for contempt by Hoffman
1fltt the trtll ended. Se11e bad been
sentenctd for eontempt ea.rlltt and a
mistrial declared in hl1 cue. The
aovernmtnt did not retry Selle.
The 7th U.S. Circuit Coort ol Appall
revel"lfd the contempt convicUom of all
10 tbla y...-. The court died I Im U.S.
Supmne Court -that said a trial Jucfce ohouid dilqullify him•U from .,,,,.
tempt proc«dillp U the cttallolll are OOI
made unUI the <tlCI of the trial.
In lllUinK before the 1ppeall pone! for
revtnal or the cmvictkN of the ftvt, 1\-
tonilyl claimed thai tbl --ol the Civil RlPll Act of -under
wblch the def-won Indicted -led tbelt ....... -tho Finl Amendm<nt .. the ~ ......
.......
The --OUllaot !or w-daJ II --umy Ilda wttll lllghUJ .,,,_. 1e1nper1-. oe-
conlln& .... -ther ......... = : :-=-tA..-:i.: -. INIJDE TODAY
ChUI .. in.. t...i-nJtUc.
"""'4 dllll aod Tn-. -
COOft cJolll. The --,,_ Colorodo, hi tllot -~ JM ,,., •• of JM riil!I -,.,_
.. ,~ OIU .4pprc<fodo11 ~
dciJ. II -tht flotlf•• I•
hol)lollll. Set •torr °" ,..,. JI.
..... _ ft
g_ i
. ............
.... tr 17 '
.. Lllfllft " =--~ --. --' ...... ~ &:.:-I ..... .. ,,
•11 " -. ---
• '
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I
DAILV PILOT LB
Jury Vrges
Land Probe
In Anaheim
•After a three-month investigation of
the land dealin gs of the Anaheim city
manager and public works director, fhe
Orange County Grand Jury will not issue
an indictment for state or city ordinance
violations.
In. a letter sent to the Anaheim city at·
torncy. jury foreman Otto l\t Schmidlen
said there was enough evidence of mis-
conduct to recommend i·the Anaheim
City Council conduct a thorough probe"
intD the possible violation of the City
Charter by City Manage r Keith l\turdoch
and Public Works Director Thornton
Piersall.
The two men's land dealings were first
detailed in June in a Los Angeles Times
a rticle which alleged the men were able
to realize substantial profits from their
prior knowledge of city projects.
In a letter dated Nov. 16. Schmidlen
noted "there are sufficient questions
rega rding the ethical conduct o[ 1lr.
Keith ftfurdoch and Mrs. Thornton
Piersall to warrant a thorough in·
vcstigation by the city of Anaheim into
possibl e violations."
He said the probe should be undertaken
by the city attorney, or should he refuse.
by the state attorney general .
The Grand Jury investigation, which
was requested by City Councilman
William J. Thom, was conducted by the
District Attorney's staff and covered
Murdoch's and Piersall's land deals ove r
a th ree-year period.
"The investigation revealed no dispute
'vilh the facts set forth in the Los
Angeles Tim es article that 11r. 1\1urdoch
and Mr. Piersall did have financial iJl.
terests in transactions considered by the
Anaheim City Council and that they did
not publicly disclose their financial in·
tercsts at any time," Schmidlen's letter
stated. '
Jury was 1mable to return an indict·
ment in !he case. the Jetter said, because
!her w "'ere no violations of state Jaws and
!he j4ry does no t have jurisdiction to
return an indictment for a violation of a
city charter ordinance.
Jn recommending the city's probe o1
the cose, the j ury suggested the in·
vestigation not be limited to violations
"occurring with the past 12 months. The
Anaheim City CAuncil'1 responsibility is
not limited to investigation into possible
violations of law uneenforceable because
of a one-year Statute of Limitations; and
not limited to violaUons of laws only; it
also includes scrutiny of possible viola·
Uom of standard! of proper behavior-and
morality in the conduct of elected and
• appointed public officials."
Schm.idlen's Jetter aJso raised a ques-
tion involving the Clly Council's vote of
confidence given the two men shortly
afteL· lhe story of their land deals was
broken. /
~ The vote at that time was 4 to 1 with
Thom voting wilh the majority. He later
i ttempted unsuccessfully to have bis
t ote changed.
I
Ji'ree Dinner Set
c On Thanksgiving
I
~ A free Thanksgivin g dinner, both
t urkey and vegetarian will be provided at
Laguna Beach's Hacienda Hotel begin-
~g at 4 p.m. Thunday.
J The dinner ls for people who are away
from home or alone In the community. t ood is donated by the hotel.
~ The hotel ts located at 1289 S. Coast
ltlghway. Last year, a similar event
lrew 150 persons to the hostel. >
Slayer Draws Life
< REDDING !AP ) -A Shaste County
t uperior Court jury ha s found a 32.-year·
lid Sacramento laborer guilty of first·
legree murder In the slaying of his com· ~ion at a Shasta Lake camp1lte last
feptember.
DAILY PILOT
1'M°'*"'9 O.tt D#.ILY llllOT, wllfl •tdt
k ~ .. H .... llreu. II ,...... W
..,. er.,. ~ ... , ~ultllllllfll ~-s.,,..
rtl9 f!IMIM:t •r• ~I.,.., M...S.r tll"'Wft
llr111f'f, fW CO.It Mn1, ........... IMdl,,
"""flnliM 1-.c:ltl f'eunNll'I V11i.y, L11un•
.. Kii. ll"ltMl'5*1•Ck Md S1n ~W
h1t J11t1t C'9111f-. A 1lt11I• l'ttlloMI
tdlllorl It tuelltlltll .. Nrdtn tnd Slil"Clt'flo
Ti.. pr!MS.I Millft1"9 ... !It It •I Dt W..t
a.y S!,..I, c.ta M-. C.HfM'IJt, f'K)l,
••Mft N, W1.4
""' ...... ltNI ""''"'*' J•elr R. Cu1l1! VQ ............. a...~ n-" IC•••ll .....
Th~•• A. Mw,..l•• MWtl!llUltiw
Qtrln H. Lt.. A119i1N '· Nall ,.......... M1•1""' IMI._ ---JIJ: hr.tt AffltM
M.m .. AUtet1: ,.0 .... "''· tl6J2 ----,--... -~,-~._ .. ,...
Htffll """"' ,,.,, .. di ........... ._ • ""* II C.-.. ...
T .. 1.•111 (TI4t MMJ:l1
Q UW ..WocortJq 642 ... ft
........... Al ..... 1•1 ,,, ....... ........
~ ltrl. °'Mtt °""t ... 2¢ ftb ..
"""""''· l't* ~ ··;... ............ .....,.. fNtlW .,., ................ ....
.... , .. •9'~ ......... .. .......... ..,.,..... _.,
..... , ......... •14 • c..tlJ ..... C.""""'9. ,.....,.,,. ., ..,.. ....
~L w fNfl u.11. ....,, MttlrwT
-JUlllll I .... ,,,.,,,,,.,,
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DAil 'i' Pll.OT S ...........
FIREMEN LOOK FOR CAUSE OF BLAZE IN BURNED OUT ROOM
Coupl• Lote1 V•luobl• Art In B•lbo.I Fir• Mond•y Night
Laguna Planners Facing
56 Additional Matters
A laundry list of 56 specific item! of
unfinished business now ln the city plan·
ning department bopper was revealed
during a Laguna Beach Planning Com·
miMion sutdy session Monday night.
"We have bad some quite crucial mat-
ters at an hour when we're all tired,"
Lois Jefirey _said.
The Ji.rt Includes Hems u diverse as
completion of General Plan elements,
Sycamon! Hills and Arch Beach Helgbls
Community plans, and newspaper rack
standards.
She suggested. selective placement of
especially important matters at, the first
of the agenda.
The matter of setting a time limit for
speakers before the commission was
discussed, but no fonnal limit was pro-
posed.
"We want to critically ei:amine what
we 're doing," Commission Chairman
John McDowell told f .e 11 o w co?J'F.
missioners.
McDowell said be would alt.mp! to
solict new information from each
speaker and attempt to keep them from
r&mbling.
,.
McDowell noted that frequ enl1y the
Planning C.Ommission meetings go on to
the late hours and asked what com·
missioners would recommend to reduce
the length of meetings.
Orchestra Set
For UCI Concert
The Prague Chamber Orchestra will
play Saturday night in the Fine Arts
Vlllage Theater at UC Irvine and not
Crawford Hall as originally scheduled.
The 36-member visiting chamber group
wil! perform at 8:15 p.m. Saturday.
Tickets at $2 maf'be reserved by calling
the fine arts box office -83S-6617 -
between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. Wednesday
or after 7 p.m. on Saturday.
The shift of the concert provides a
more suilable setting for the chamber
concert, a university spokesman noted .
Bible and Bookstore
Will Open in Laguna
Live music by the "Mustard Seed
Faith" along with gifts and refreshments
wW be featured beginning at 11 a.m. Fri·
day during the openlng of the Laguna Bl·
ble and Bookstore at 234 Broadway,
Laguna Beach.
Thr Rev . J. Michael Montgomery will
preside at the dedication and opening.
Activities will continue Saturday.
C.Ommi.ss.i.oners determined t h a t con-.
tinuances would be granted on a liberal
basis before the matters reached the
planiling commission, but that the panel
would Ughten down on requests for con·
tlnuaUons after the matter had reached
!hem.
Steps to further i n c r e a s e com·
municalion between the commission, !be
boa rd of adjustment and the city council
were also taken.
William Winter
Of Laguna Hills
Dies at Age 75
William J. Winter, Laguna Hills resi-
dent for seven years and fonncr board
member of California Federal Savings
and Loan, died Monday at the age of 75.
Mr. Winter, formerly of Los Angeles,
owned and operated Winter and C.Om-
pany, a photo supplies manufacturing
company. He was a member of Rotary
No. 5 and Al Malaikah Temple of lhe
Shriners Club of Los Angles.
Mr. Winter b ·1UrVived by h is wtfe,
Leoni, of the flllllly home at ~ VI•
Alhambra: two daughters, Mrs. Joan
Schnelder of San Marino and DorTaine
llerbert of Corona del Mar; and seven
grandchildren .
Private serviees will be held Wedne~
day at Pacif1e View Memorial Chapel
in Corona del Mar. The fam ily hu 1u1-
gestl'd memorial contributions to the
Hea rt Fund.
Living Costs Creep Up
RHidenll of Orange County were told today that the cost of living con·
tlnued lte •pward climb dtlrini OclOber, reglst•rlnl 1 one-tentb of ooe peroent
rl.se.
THE U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics said the increase matchet that of
Loi Angeles County. Hlaher transportltion costs were blamed for the rlat ln
both counties.
The rite of ~rease over the 12 months ending Oct. 31 wu 3.1 puctnt,
slightly lower than the prevloul 12·month pertod.
The October tncrease pushed the consumtr indeJ' to a new hllh th is )'tlr
at 12S.SI. This means that consumers spenl $12.39 ror p:>ds and serv~s In
OclOber that cost 110 in 1967.
~ '!_UREAU spokemian ••Id lt:OMPOrt•llon costa..J'OR.J®~trntbs of ... percent Clurlna October, prtmarlly bcc•use of higher prices for used cars, auto
financing a.nd auto pa.rll. G1M1llne prices remained at record high levels dur-
ing October, the spol<esm1n .,Id. , ·
Food COits lncrealed 0.1 per-amt over the month, while health and rectta-tJoa COit.i cUmbed 0.2 perctnt.
HOUSING com ftll 0.1 pr:rctnt, chle:ny because of declines In home pur~
chase prices •nd financ lna charges.
Home Fire
Loss High
In-Balboa
~
Fire ln the home of a Balboa interior
de .. "Orator Monday night caused damage
to art objects and fumlsltlngo reportedly
valued at more than •100,000.
A prellminar)""' Newport Beach Fire
Department estimate of a $20,000 loss in
the bedroom blaze. believed caused by a
cigarette, is "ei:tremely low," said
'Ibomas Evans, owner of the ocean front
home at lZIS E . Balboa Blvd.
He claims the k>ss tops $100,000.
Fire Marshal W. C. "Bill" Noller said
this morning he blteDds to-stick to his
original estimate of the damage.
"He (Evans) bad three paintings in one
~loset and they weren't consumed,"
Noller .said.
"And there were some bronze art otr
jects lhat weren't damaged at all so l
don't know where he gets the big loss,"
NoUer said.
"But I can't disprove the value he puts
on those pictures," NoUer added.
Evans said be and his wife were in bed
witching the Mynday nlghl televised
football game when they smelled smoke
and discovered the raging fire in the
down.stairs bedroom. Evans said the
bedroom is occupied by his son during
breaks from college.
"We ran out of there as fast as we
could and I was wearing nothing but a
bathrobe," Evans said.
Evans, wbo owns a shop called
Interiors by Tomi, said the heat and
smoke from the downstairs fire did more
damage upstairs than at the point of the
f jl"·
"All the windows upstairs were popped
out and oil paintings on the wall were
completely destroyed," Evans said. "The
n1ost valuable painting destroyed was a
$6.000 landscape."
Evans said a number of paintings
stored in a downstairs closet were also
destroyed but be said no value could be
placed on those because some were more
than a hundred years old.
"The bronzes around the house were
scorthed but I think they can be cleaned
and those are the most valuable objecb I
have," Evans said.
FromP,,.el
TRUMAN ..•
Korea, were simply ~wrong. :--. He
(Tnnnan) thought things were too
shaky."
MacArthur's threats about.a China in-
vasion, which Truman feared wouJd
grea tly widen the Korean conflict, came
March 25, 1951, 17 days before hi!
removal and four .months before a cease--
fire and a start of negotiations to end the
war .
Mrs. Daniel also was asked if Truman
had any second thoughts about ordering
the first use of an atomic bomb in
\Yarfare -the Hiroshima bombing in
1915.
"No," she replied. "He bad no second
thoughts because it did save hundreds: of
thousands of American lives."
Mrs. Daniel had access to some
hitherto unpublished material, from
Truman's private records, ln writing her
book, titled simply "Harry S Truman."
An ei:cerpt was published Sunday by
Life M:.gazlne ln which Mrs. Daniel said
her falher agreed to become Franklin D.
Roosevelt's numlng mate in 1944 only
after heavy pressure from Roosevelt and
others. '
She said Truman felt Roosevelt would
die in office, meaning be would succeed
Roosevelt -and that he did not want to
enter the White House 11tbrough the back
door."
• , ••• :--· -1• .~. ~ •
l'fH?tll~
All-year School
Suppo-rt-'Quiet'
Althouib 41-15 (all-yeaMChool) dtd not
receive a fonnal defeat b e fo r a
Capistrano Unified School D I s t r i c t
tnp1 ... , 11 IOOk • beaUna from ••dienoe
and board alike -Y··· And -pectl <ii even • pilot projecl
for the next St:hool year appeared grim.
Dozens of opponents to the all-year
conce:pl watched trustees grapple with
the controversial issue.
AJtboUgb few debates emerged from
th e meeting, comment.. were abundant.
Most centered on a means of ac-
curately polling the cammunlty.
Trustee Stephen Smitb Insisted lhal the
Unit Opposes
Jetport Plan
At Pendleton
An influential pl11U1ing council in San
Diego County Monday come out strongly
against pro~ for an international
jetport at Camp Pend1eton -adding its
name to a growing list.
The group , the San Diego Com·
prehensive PI a n n in g Organization,
representing 13 San Diego County cities
a; well as the county, stated that Camp
Pendleton should remain as a buffer zone
between Los Angeles and Orange coun-
ties to the north and urbanized areas to
the south.
Pendleton, the organizaUon s a i d ,
"should remain as it is to accommodate
military activities which may , otherwise
come into increasing conflict with urban
Janel uses."
best way to poll lhe residents would be to
hire an independent survey finn.
Board Presidenl Robert H•rat argued
tha~ .uc:Jt Qn....approach would etist as
much 11 a special ell'C'llon.
Trusttts William E:nquist and Dr.
Edward Westberg said that they each
had received about 15 phone calls In re-·
cent days and each caller opposed 45-15.
None received any calls from sup-
porters.
One of the strongest discusaions ensued
when long-thde board obsttver Ray
campbell of 5an Clemente urged tnlstees
to make their own minds up about 4>15,
terming the opposition a "vocal minori4
ty."
That assertion drew a rew groans from
the audience.
Campbell stressed that at the outset or
1:.e discussions on 45-15 "we beard
nothing but support for all-year school
" ''Then we saw a vocal minority creep
in ... there's always a few who make a
lot of noise and they're here tonighl
'"lbere are thousandl of suppcrters
who may be home watching TV tonight,
but they elected you to make the de-
cis ions for them,' 'he said.
Campbell warned that if trustees killed
45-15, "the bohds: would have no chance
or passing."
At that, Enquist cited his 15 phone
calls. "U that was the vocal minority,"
be said~ "where was the silent ma·
jority?"
."They elected you to office,'' campbell
retorted.
Fro111P .. e1
BOND ISSUE • • •
The resolution enacted Monday . · :s
most governmental agencies in affecting
northern San Diego County against
Orange c.ounty and the So u t b e r n California Asaociation of Governments sampling of community opinion.
(SCAG), which both are actively pursu-"Whal coocerns me about the entire
ing a terminal somewhere on the 25,000 issue," Hurst observed, "ls the inability
acre military reservation. to reach an accurate polling of the cozo..
Supervisors Chairman Ronald Caspers, munity on this thing."
of Newport Beach, took the latest .. Hurst was one of two trustees who
position philosophically. sooghl lo place 11-15 on the bond ballot.
Caspers aide Paul White said it wm HP wanted such an inclusion "so that
the San Diego group's "prerogative tn this thing can be put to bed once and for
make such .t decision." all ."
He added that the stand "would have But the majority of the board insisted
no effect on our efforts to obtain an that a bond issue and 45-15 vote would
airport at Camp Pendlelon." _oonfllle_voten and 1 ... Lthem lo believe
The latest official action against the that by~ 46-15, a bond issue would
jetport digs the trenches deeper in a J>al· be unne:Ctisaty. •
tie which could last for years. "That would not be lhe case," said Supt
Many northern San Diego County cities jruman Benedict.
have formally opposed Caspers' 1111· · "No matter what ,..... lo happen witb
geslions. all-year school, the fact remains that
San Clemente thus far is the only more finances are needed to cope with
Orange County city to offlcially condemn extensive growth."
the plan. The next step in the arduous road
The Marine Corps has opposed tbe con' toward the polls will be the setting •P qf
cept for years and in its most recent an-the machinery for a bond election -
nouncements bas said that the Corps has fonnal actions to be filed with the County
not chang~ its opinion over the pro-Superintendent of Schools and the forma-
posals to use Pend1eton lands for a tion of a citben's committee to push for
modem-concept terminal. M i I t t a r y bond paasage.
training, lhe Corps !las said, would be HllrSt and olher tl'lllteel w•med tbat
drasllcally jeopordized d civilian jets the supporters of bonch In lhe commwlity
were allowed to use Pendleton acreage. shouJd not be lulled into thinking that the
caspers has insisted that the tennlnal recent tu-override landalide would rub
C011ld blend witb milllary 11ses of the ofi and pl!Sb tbe boodJ over the lop in
hase. February.
He stressed tbat preliminuy concepls "We'n! talking abo•t two entirely dlf·
call for only the installation of runways ferent things. People worked u:tremely
and minor support facilities -tbal lhe bard lo J>8S!I lhe override, but Ibey wtl1
regular business support complei:es hav .. to work three times harder to pass
(motels, restaurants and the like) would $25 million ln bonds," be said.
be located e.IJewhere. After their dlscussions, trustees agreed
Modern rapid transit, be added, would to hold a apeclaJ meeting early ne:J:t week
be developed to move passengers to and to set the machinery rolling .
fro m a Pendleton terminal. If the bond Issue were to pass, it would
So far, no specific acreages have been be the first such approval since voters
suggested by advocates of the Pendleton authorized sale of school bonds In 1985,
proposal. shortly after the district unified.
Buying A New Tract Home?
Many people buying homes oro under the improuion they HA VE
to buy carpeting from the home sales c•nler. In tho majority of casH
this is not true, althoogh tho sa!.s office wi! try to mako you think so.
The minllio tho homo contor trios to upgrade tho standard carpet,
then yo• are free to shop for corp•ling. To prevent shopping should
constiillt•· r"'lroint of tr.do.
In many C<ISes thoy wm t.tl you !Mt the carpet .11ow.-does not
opply if you buy corpe! outside. If th•y fffl this Is legal, HAVE THEM
PUT rT IN WRITING .
On:tinorny, ,.. con sovo you • lot of money over who! tho home
ceni.r offeri. W• provide • lorgor .. lection -end wo usuolly CO!(!• •P
with leu yardage, plus o superior instolletion. •
ALDEN'S
_CAR_ms 0 DRAHS
f66l Placetltlo Ave.
COSTA MISA
646-4838
HOUR S! Mon. Thrv Thun.. 9 to 5:!0 -FRI., 9 to 9-SAT" 9130 to S
IJ r
Saddlehaek Today's F mal
EDITION N.Y. Stooks
-
VOL. 65, NO. 32 6, 2 SECTION S, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2f, 1972 TEN CENTS
Wind-machine Vandals Strike; Groves Periled
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of ttM Dllt1 .. 1111 I ....
Irvine homeowners who appreciate the
. beauty of orange groves near tl)eir
homes today were urged to help curb
vandal.ism of the $5,500 wind machines
which on 10 nights this year are expected
to prevent frost damage to the orange
crops.
Dean Buchinger, manager of the
orchard ~ivision of the Irvine Company,
today said four of six wind machines
located in groves near the Racquet Club
bomes in norlb Irvine "have been
des"troyed by vandals in the past month."
"One wind machine protects eight
acres of oranges," Buchinger said. "But
if it is inoperable because of vandalism.
there is a serious economic loss to !he
company.
"Realizing wind machines o(fer a ce r-
tain attraction (or mechanically-inclin~
young. boys, a parental word might help
eliminate a particular problem for us."
he said.
In all, the ranch company operates Ga
VIind machines -either gasoline engine
or electric. The gust-makers are turned
on only on nights when fruit-destroying
frost is expected.
"We 're budgeting for use or the
machines on only 10 nights this year and
lhat is more than the average number of
nights the frost is sufficient to damage
crops," Buchinger noted.
Of the 66, five are located near enough
to Racquet Club homes lo spark com-
plaints by residents trying to sleep, be
noted.
In anticipation of city regulations on
the use of the wind machines the com-
pany is preparing to study tbe decibel
levels produced by the two types of giant
fans.
Equipment to measure the sound levels
produced by the crop saving devices will
be installed Dec. I and readings will be
1nade public, Buchinger said.
.. ln order to keep avocados, oranges,
lemons and grapefruit from freezing, it IS
essential that the wind machines be t~
ed on during critical period!!. A drop of
only five degrees below the safe tem-
peratures could ruin an entire crop,"
Buchinger said.
In recent yean, progressive fruit
growers have turned to the wind
machines to protect crops by circulating
air around .trees. The fans keep frost
from settling on the fruit and damaging
it.
Formerly, groves were protected by
the heat and air cu rrents produced by
smudge pots w h i c h coincidentally
polluted the air.
"'Because smudge pols are such
notorious polluters. they v.·ere replaced
with the wind machines." Buchinger
said.
Frosts which damage fruit have an Im-
mediate economic Impact on housewives.
as v.·ell, he no ted. Fruit prices rise v.·hcn
weather damages crops.
TrumanlGn
Cites Dad's 'Chicago 7' Upheld
'Decision' Appeals Court Ret,erses 5 Convictions
NEW YOllK (UP!) -President Harry
S Truman fired Gen. Douglf.R MacArthur
as U.S. com1n1nder in Korea in 1951
because he felt MacArthur "sort of
panicked," Truman's daughter said to-
day.
Margaret Truman Daniel s a i d her
father concluded that 'things were too
shaky" for Allied forces at \he time he
decided to recall MacArthur.
This took place April 11, 1951, and set
off a storm of protest among backers of
the World War 11 hero.
Mrs. Daniel said her father foresaw
that his decision would be unpopular, and
chose to say litUe or nothing more about
his action in the day.s and weeks that
followed, not interfering in a big welcome
home foc MacArthur.
MacArthur was relieved,.,as U.S. com-
mander after threatening ·~lb ground
and air attacks in mainlant: China, in
pu=it of-Chinese --.. aided North Korea.
MacArthur made the ·-II without
cl¥aring !ltatements with wUhlngton, as
'\. tµman had ordereo.
~s. Daniel, who has written a book
about her father, was interviewed on the
NBC.TV Today Show.
Mrs. Daniel said of her father's view of
MacArthur's unauthorized statements:
"His reaction was that he (MacArthur)
was a man who sort of panicked. All of
his predictions about the Far East, and
Korea, were simply wrong. . . He
(Truman) thought things were too
shaky."
MacArthur's threats about a China in-
vasion, which Truman feared would
greatly widen the Korean conflict, came
March 25, 1951 , 17 days before his
removal and four months belore a cease-
(See TRUMAN, Page %)
Bond Election
In San Joaquin
Given Support
Saddleback Valley Unified School
District trustees Monday night endorsed
a $2.8 million bond issue by the San Joa-
quin Elementary District.
By approving the agreement as did
Irvine trustees last week, the two new
unified districts allow the elementary
district they will take over July 1 to re-
main qualified for state board building
aid. ,...
By committing the $2.8 million or
locally approved bond funds the old
elementary district may proceed with a
$9.2 million building program.
The elementary district will build $5.2
million worth or schools ln the new Sad-
dleback Valley Unified Wstrlct and
another $4 million in Irvine. The board
action was unanimous. ,
Ir vine Seeking
Adult-juve nile
•
DAILY l"ILOT Sl1H ,,. ..
CLAMMERS CLAMMING IN SHA LLOW WATERS OFF NEWPORT
Extreme Low Tides Bri ng Out Love rs of Seafood Delicacy
Cla1ns Galore
'Best' Co ast Seaso11 Po ssible
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
Like a rag-tag army. sco res of clan1·
diggers have descended on Newport
Beach sands to enjoy what experts are
calling the best clamming conditions in
recent memory.
The clammers are a motley crew,
dressed in everything from soggy jeans.
ba: c feet and sweatshirts to hip boots and
v:etsuits.
They are equipped with a wide variety
of tools-including hoes, shovels. pitch·
forks and bare hands in some cases -
and a rainbow of hrightly"°\ored buckets
to store their take of oce~n delicacies.
The clammers' sole purpose for wading
through chilly surf and grubbing in the
sand is t6e capture of hard-she.lied Pismo
clams at least four a11d a half inches in
Wameter, the legal minimum size.
"None of us can remember a yea r
when the clamming conditions were so
perfect," sald Lifeguard Logan Lockabey
as be watched the crowds or clammers
cAn just push it back into the sand
any\vhere."
Gall said a $3 clamming license is re-
quired for anyone over 16 and any viola·
lions or the fish and game codes are con-
sidered misdemeanors.
By midaftemoon Monday. the oce3n
had retreated almost to mid -pier and
dozens of diggers took advantage of ~he
saltwater pools left behind in the sand.
Lockabey said good clamming con-
ditions should continue for several more
day_ because tidal exlremes a re
predicted until Friday.
He said a number of people have asked
v.·hether the time of year is right to eat
clams because of poison dangers.
"That is a comn.on misconception.
because it is mussels that are seasonal,"
he said ... Clams are apen to hunting all
year and are always good eating."
Lockabey said a good rule of thumb Is
to threw the clam away If the meat l!!
{See CLAMMING, Page !)
CHICAGO (AP) -A federal appeals
court today reversed the convictions of
the five Chicago Seven defendants found
guilty of crossing state lines to incite
rioting at the time of the 1968
Democratic National Convention.
Cleared were David T. Dellinger, Abbie
·Hoffman, Rennie Davis, Jerry Rubin and
Tom Hayden.
The 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
ruled that the defendants' constitutional
rights had been violated. It said,
At 6, Lea11dro
Erids Concert
011 Right Note
UJNOON (UPI) -Leandro Aconcha 's
leg!! were far too ~rl to reach the g.ia_no
pedals" Ind Ills hands were far too small
to spao thl"' man-sized cborda Chopin,
Mozart Ind B.-,... ...
'. Bu• nobody laughed when the 6-year-
old sat down to play.
After he rippled cheerfully through
Mozart's Sonata No. 18 and other in·
tricate works Sunday, a sell~ut audience
at Wlgmore Hall oohed and .aahed, made
the place ring with "bravos'' and a~
plauded wildl y.
Leandro waved nonchalantly and played
an encore.
Then he went back to his holel room to
cuddle a teddybear.
The pianist prodigy from Colombia did
not play the toughest music ever com-
posed, true, but did move with apparent
ease and command through such daun-
ting pieces as Bach's Partita No. 5,
several Chopin waltzes and etudes and
Bartok's "Arpeges Divises."
Like many geniuses, Leandro has an
artist's temperament at times.
Visitors who saw him at his hotel said
he and his brother Mirko, 3. jumped up
and down en their beds screaming with
excitement and pulled down their pajama
trousers to try and shock wellwishers.
"The overwhelming publicity
makes people think he is Jesus Christ or
Mozart ccme alive again." said his con-
ce1 pianist"°mposer father Roberto.
•·But he is a very ordinary child. His
public appearance!! In future wlll be very
limited."
Aconcha said Leandro began playing
when he was 3 after hearing a piano tune
on television. After three months of dally
lesson!! with his father. the boy had
maslered a Mozart sonata.
What struck him most aboui h1s JOO,
Actincha said, w a s the "courage and
dl•dpline the baby showed -more so
than his purely musical qualltJes, like hh
ranta1tic memory and 5ense of rhythm
aM music."
Aconcha said Le&lldro, who made hlJ
first concert tour last year, will make no
more such toun in the near futurt.
poke into the sand in hopes of hitting
&0mething other than 11 rock. Graha111 Talks Lockabey said the heavy surf of A
month ago piled up a huge sandbar
around the Newport Pier and the! clam
populaOon boomed.
He also said elltrtme high tides -
more than seven feet -followtd by t:JC·
l11dia1i Trib es nten Hea r Gospel
;4.vocado Tliie ves lreme negative low tides have t:xposed KOHIMA. India (A.P) -About 100.000 N11a tribHmtn -daomdaDLa of
huge stretches of sand normally covered lndiAn helldhuntt:n -fll«I onto a football flt!ld to htar Dr. Billy Gl"lllam by pounding waves. Irvine police are looking for an adult One clammer sloshing around in knee-preach the Gcspel Jn a terVlce that had to bf translated Into II dlale<1I.
and child team who theJ believe are ..1__ kl cl 11 Graham'• words echoed throdgh the lu!!h valley u he opened 1 fOllN!ly "'~•ible for a recent wave of 1vocado 'Ua'P water IA eome a.ms actua Y cru.sade Mondiy in N•natand, an Indian ttate ctltbrat'"'" &ht lOOtb ..... w--.._, Vt'~·-were lying out on the beach wbt:n he -.... --·u-r theft! from local groves. atarted digin& e""'"'1 noon MoodAy. of the arrival of the llnl American Bapl]Jt ml.uionlry.
Grower Mervin L. BoiM 11( Santa Ana "l _. mv limit ill no time."" he r<ported Mondly tbal .... t.1w1 125 •·· • THAT PlllST AMEllJCAN, the X... E. W. Clart, bid ID Wilk I,.. -
pound! o1 FUtrte ·-hid bHn I~ tobouted. IO rucb Naglllo4, in tho oor1llwt., tho 8umMI -· GnWni tlllde lbe l<gally picked fnim bis pove II 8ty1n Calilomla f'islt llld Game D<partment trip In llx -.. lllreo by pllno from C.lculta Ind lhnl by "'8<1.
and Yale avenues ovor tho WftMod. wanleaa hive be<o mMllla rqular viallJ Tht ~ ...,.,,,.._ lllow<d him ID brlq s11 --"tea. lnclocllni Jlolse !Old officen thet tho p1ion1om IO NeoPoCl Boch tho put teytral dlYt pianist Tld Smllb of Silver Sprina, Md. ind sin&"1" Archie Donn11 of Pltll-
plckenJ have hit hll orcblnls oo lltVmll looklof 10< P"'Pl• with too tlllltly dM!I IJurab, P1.
-I nv-~' ,_ • ....,-I or clams lblt m too amaJI. . -occ•-.--...---. a 11-U~"'::~:"-''='~f.7.'~T""-.-..---..,--l!-~n1 d"B.-CllU!IAtll:-il t'OmMl Uiif1ial• Bl~IJijft '13,1111:-llOit-amounll. 11le tn09I ..,.... ... wu Wania> O!et GaU .. kl people alrudy of the -•u nt.ed lh""'lllt donation•.
y-lued by the gro-11 '15· blvt bHn caugllt with cl•ms l!"der the Gl1lilanl atapped after udl ,...._ to illo• ftr b"lnllatlol\.
Police aald they spoCUd lootprinll "!11 m.. "'We'D •II opeOlr tho "me Ian-In h:tvon ... .., ...,·1 hive to have "l!hlch appeattd to belong to on ldull Ind 'If M undmlzed dam 15 CllOlh~ It , b:lWlltor,. bl llld. ~ child mund the !ml ~ the i.. thoortllcllly hli to fO bocl< In the hole 11
Ot"CUm.od. came from."" Gall 11'4. "But uiually )'t'U
• • J. • >
.
however, that the government may retry
the five.
The five were among eight antiwar ac·
tivi!lts indicted on several charges in ron-
nection with the violence at the Demo-
cratic convention.
The trial of one of the eight, Black
Panther leader Bobby Seale, was severed
because of his courtroom outbursts.
Of the remaining seven. five -Del-
inger. Rubin , Hayden, Hoffman and
Davis -were convicted on Feb. 18, 1970
or crossing .state lines to incite a riot at
the time or lhe convention.
They and the two addional defendants,
John R. Froines, 31, and Lee Weiner , 31,
were found innocent of the main charge
of ronspiring to plo1 the violence t.h.ot
to: place.
Froines and Weiner also were found In·
nocent . of teaching the use of nn in-
cendiary device.
The original four-month trial before
!Su SEVEN, Page %1
International .Jetport
• • San Diego Planning Unit
Opposing Pendleton Bid
An Influential pl11111ln1 COlllldl In San
Diego County Mondly come wt llnlnaly
agaimt proposals for an International
jetport at Camp Pendlet<m -adding II!
name to a growing list.
The group. the San Dltgo Com·
prehensive P 1 an n l n g Organl.J:alion.
representing 13 San Diego County cities
a.; well as the county, stated tblt Camp
Pendle ton &hould remaln as 1 buffer :zone
between Los Angeles and Oranae coun-
lie!I to the north and urbanized areas to
the south.
Pendleton, the organlzaUon 1 a I d ,
"should rtmain as it is to accommodate
military activiUes wbk:b may otherwise
come into increasln1 confUct wtth urban
la~ mes."
The re!Oiullon enacted Mondly . · ~
most governmeotal 11encln In alf<dlng
northern San Diego County agalnst
Orange County and the s o u t h e r n
California AS90ClaUon ot Governments
(SCAGI, which both are actively pursu-
ing a term.in.al 10mewbere on the 2$,000
acre military reservation .
Supervisora Chairman Ronald Caspers,
of Newport Beach, toot the lat.est o~
position phlloeophlcally.
Ca!!pcrl •Ide Paul White Aid It 1\'U
tht San D\ego group'• "prerosallve to
make such " decision."
He added that the stand "'would have
no effect on our efforts to obtain an
airport 11 Camp ~on."
The latest official action against the
J<tport digs the lr<ncbos d<eper in a bat-
tle. which could lut for years.
Orches tra Set
For UCI C.Oncert
The Pra1111< Clamber Or<heotn wW
play Saturday night In the Fine Arb
Village The1ttt at UC l"lne and not
Crawford H1dl 11 origin.ally teheduled.
The lf..nwmber vliftlnj: chamber group
wll! ptrform at 1:15 p.m. Saturd1y.
Ticktts at n may bt mtf'•ed by t'alli°"
the flne 1rt.s box offk-t -m.Ml7 -
between 10 a.m. and J p.m. W~)'
or 1!1er 1 p.m. on Saturday.
The &h1ft of the COf"ftf1 pnnildes 1
more sultab4e 1tttlng for tht cUmber
CDr'lttl1. a unlvtflit)' spotmnan noted.
ASTRO NAUT GETS
CA.BINET POST?
Ml.UO (UPll -Fannor -ut
,,.,. Bonnin Is ..-<I I let-bf
Prftldoot NI""" for s.ppolntllllOI u
_....,, of lllrwportalloe, h -'"'.i:""l IOdey. ,
Mllml ffenld cp If!$ "'illlh-
llej>ublicon s.u .......... llytoc -
... bd111 -· liUt -11111 !ht White -IOld • .., -· bavo i-, mtldo on M11 ...._ 11 t1t1 -..... olthlll ..... _
~ northern San Diego C<lunty clll<s
hive formally oppooed Cupen" sue·
gestlonl.
San Clemente thus far Is the only
Ori.nge County city to ofrlclally condemn
the plan.
The Marine Corps has opposed the con-
cept for years and In its most rtcent an-
nouncements .bas &aid that the Corp!! has
not chang.?d Its opinion over the pro-
posals to use Pendleton lands for a
modem<oncept terminal. M 111 t a r y
trainlnll. the Corpe bis said. would be
dtaatlcally jeopordlud ~ civilian jell
(See PENDLETON, P11e II
Lumber Stolen
At C.Onstruction
Site in El Toro
Twenty ca1e1 or lumbe.r valu«t by the
ownen at MOO we.re stolen Monday
night from an El Toro construction site,
Orange County Shfriff's olfil.'t:r1 uld.
Deputies saJd the lumber was stacked
on a rnidentlal t'Mltructb'I 1ile at
Trabuco and Toledo roads. Thf klSI wu
reporttd by of/kills ol the R. E. Jewett
ConalnJ<tlon Company.
Floor linoleum v1lued at about mo
wu canie.d off al about the UITllll! tlmt
from a MWion Viejo. construction aht:,
deputies uld.
Of"ficen uid the Intruders broke Into a
home under COMtructJon at 21121 Carlot.-
ta Drive and removed Unmeum xheduled
for installation kldaJ. The klP waa
report<d bl' the Wentz F1oon Compt111y.
........
The wuther -~ fllf W-
d1y ii --llllMY Jkl<t wit.II sll&f\tJy Wilma' temperature&. ~
con!Jn& In the ... thor -· ltlght at tho belclleo. around •
min& to n Inland. i-1 ronllht --INSm E TODAY
Clailj ~nrtila inctMMcl rorfk.
tMkt cl'lilt o"4 T,,.,.,,_, roc-
COOR cll.Ut. Tise ..m.iwr llOCll frt1M
Colorado. but lloat -~ ""
poi•t o/ "" rirth "'"""' lokro .. tiooal Cltfll Appnclodoio 5oo
dfC..-. It ft.I tht IM>nC'JNI bl
hOtJIO"ll. St1 tlOTy Oft /'oOf JI, ....,_ ~ ._ . -=---: ~..:... •; -' ............. •a tanm t ...... •" .. arr w
' I
\
I
,
'
2 OAILY PILOT IS
No County
Flu Effect
Forecast
Orange County will probt1bl)' not be af·
fected by a rare strain of innucnza 11eve1·
before recorded in the contint'nt.al U.S.
which has reportedly s I r I c k e n
servicemen In Colorado. according to
county health offlcials.
The report that sevcrnl hundl'd airmen
at Lowr y Air Force Base JI Aurora,
Colo .. near Denver. are suffering (rom a
rare st rain called A-2-England has not
vet been officially verified.
· "One can only speculate on this. We
rave no basis for the story yet and ~e
Center for Disease Control in Atlanta 1s
checking now,'' said John R. Philp, coun-
ty director of public health.
"There has been no inrJuenza outbreak
to dale in California this year. It should
not be a heavy innuenza year because we
have had enough of types A and B of the
Hong Kong flu rthree years ago) so there
should be enough residual immunity .to
nu1kc a large outbreak unlikely." he said.
Originally identi fied in England . the
ra re strain is a new va riation or the
former Hong Kong virus and requires a
different vaccination. Philp said a new
vaccination is now being developed but
will not be available for several months .
"Influenza vaccinations are relatively
ineffective at best. on the average
person," he said. addin~ that they are
never administered to children.
The best thing flu sufferers can do, ac·
C<1rding to Philp. is go to bed and rest. A
fever JOinl and back aches and "general
m;1laiSc·· are the usual sufferer's com·
plaints.
Irvine Council
Will Consider
Staff Tonight
Irv ine citv councilmen tonight ,..,.ill mull
pnorities rOr assignment s of city staff
time and energy. . .
Councilmen mt.-et at 7:30 p.m. 1n city
hall. 421ll Campus Drive, Irvine. .
The session is expected to resuJt 1n
direction to city sl11ff as lo which of the
many projects assigned to them since in·
corporation last December, need to be
tackled first.
Some areas are expected to result in
additions to the city staff, includm« the
filling of two key vacancies -the pubUc
works and public safety direct.or po!ls.
Also set for tonight's study session is a
status report on the general plan pro-
gram , including an update on the bill by
State Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter {R·
Newport Beach) which would exempt
new cities from meeting the Jan. 1, 1973
deadline for completing general plans.
From Pagel
. TRUMAN ...
1 fire and a start of negotiations to end the
war.
Mrs. Daniel also was asked if Truman
had any second thought s about ordering
the first use of an atomic bomb in
\varfare -the Hiroshima bombing in
1945.
"No," she replied . "He had no seeond
thoughts because It did save hundred! of
thousands of American lives."
Mrs. Daniel had access to some
hitherto unpublished material. lrom
Truman 's private records. in writing her
, book, titled simply "Harry S Truman."
An excerpt was published Sunday by
L\fe M::gazine ln which Mrs. Daniel said
her father agreed to become Franklin D.
. Roosevelt's running mate In 1944 only
after heavy preuure from Roosevelt and
others.
She said Truman felt Roosevelt would
die In office, meaning he would succeed
Roosevelt -and that he did not want to
enter the White House "through the back
door."
OIAN61 COAST 11
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•
'Tis The Season
Gogi. San Clemente's do g for all seasons. dons his Thanksgiving en-
semble whjch includes something new this year, a felt turkey and a
pine cone. Gogi. 11. is owned by Mrs. Charlotte Peterso n. She makes
his costumes, with appropriate attire for all holidays.
Frona Page 1
PENDLETON • • •
were allowed to use Pendleton acreage .
Caspers has insisted that the terminal
could blend with military uses of the
base.
He stressed that preliminuy concepts
call for only the installation of runways
and minor support facilities -that the
regular business support e<1mple:1es
(motels. restaurants and the like) woulJ
be located elsewhere.
?i-1odem rapid transit, he added, would
be developed to move passengers to and
from a Pendleton tenninal.
So far , no specific acreages have been
suggested by advocates of the Pendleton
proposal.
But one suggested area, a canyon south
or San Mateo Canyon. would be only a
few miles from the southerly city lim its
of San Clemente.
Still another, a fiat terrace area on the
southerly sb'etches of the base, would
bring the jets to within a few miles of
Oceanside. ,
Critics have argued that both cities
would suffer from ooise and other
nuisances, no matter which site was us-
ed.
From Pagel
SEVEN ...
Judge Julius J. Hoffman was a stormy
one marked by the defense hurling
epithets at the judge and the judge
countering with harsh reprimands.
All seven defendant!, plus two lawyers,
were sentenced for contempt by Hoffman
after the trial ended. Seale had been
sentenced for contempt earlier and a
mistrial declared In his case. The
government did not retry Seale.
The 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
reversed the contempt convlctlom of all
10 this year. The court cited a 1971 U.S.
Supreme Court decision that said a trial
judge should disqualify himself from con-
tempt proceedings If the citaUons are not
made until the end of the trial.
In arguine before the appeals pantl for
reversal of the convictions of the five at-
torneys claimed that the antiriot aec1tion
or the Civil Right.s Act of 1968 under
which the defendants were Indicted
v~lated their clients' righl.1 under the
First Amendment to the Constitution.
They also acaised U.S. District Court
Judge Horfman of ''blatant antagonism"
and favoring the prosecution over the
derel'ISt.
The governmen1 contended that the ac-
cusations against lloffman were
unwaranted and ~iid l'l(llhlng done by the
judge durlna the tria l could have affected
the verdict because the jury rendered
three separate verdicts.
The main thrust of the defen se appc;il
concerned the wording of the l11w which
I~ "crossing state lines with the intent to
Incite rlotlng.'' The defense argued that
this is the only federal statute that
makes It a crime "to have a state of
n1ind .''
Mayor of Irvine
Will Be Late-
Seeing New Son
Irvine Mayor William Fischbaeh today
put fellow councilmen on notice be will
be late for tonight's study session in city
haU.
The mayor excused his intended ab-
sence. on grounds that he will be visiting
his wife, Dinah, and their first-bo rn son,
William Morris Fischbach II, at Hoag
Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach.
"Visiting hours are from 7 to 8 o'clock
and I don't want to miss a minute with
my son," Mayor Fischbach said.
The mayor's son wu: born Sunday
morning and weighed in at six pounds, 10
ounces.
Mr~-Elnora" Tibbet of Dearborn, Mich.,
Mrs. Fiscbbacb's mother, is vi.siting the
University Park home. Mother and son
are due to be home Wednesday.
Irvine Planners
Tackle 2 Parts
Of City's Plan
Irvine city planning commissioners
Monday night tackled the land use and
housing portions of the city's p:illcy plan
but continued lo the Nov. 30 meeting
consideration of the rest of the 114-page
document.
Portions of the proposed general plan
policies remaining to be heard by the
commission include circulation, transpor·
tatkm and noise; environmental quality,
conservation, open space and parks,
scenic highways and .seismic conctms;
urban design, and public services and
safety.
Commissioners are weighing the draft
completed by planning consultant Ed
Haworth. The policies are drawn from
recommendations of the citizen advisory
committees and the ccmmission Itself
'>'"h.ich aat for several study sessions as
lhe city's land use policy commlltee.
Toot for Nixon,
Sticker for Foe
ROWLAND HEIGHTS (AP) -George
Koenlgshofer, a l~year-old trombone
player, ll8ld he waa willlng to blow b1s
hol"\ for .Prtsldent Nixon and doesn't see
anything wrong with putting a McGov·
em-Shriver bumptar sticker on it.
School authorities, however. upheld e
ruling Monday which kicked the youlh off
th< band of the Rowland Unllled School
District. The band director aloo bad told
him to leave when the band played for
the President at nearby Ont.erlo Nov. 4.
The Student Jaid he was willing to play
"Hall to the Chief,'' but felt -aa a sup-.
porter of Democratic Sen. George
McGovern -he was justified Jn putUng
on the partiS3n sticker.
Living Costs Creep Up
. Residents of Orange County wert told today that the cost of Hvlng con-
u.nued its up word climb during October, registering A one-tenth of one percent
rise.
111E U.S. Bureau of Labor St1tistlc1 said the lnttea!lie matches that of
Los Angelrs County. Higher transportation costs were blamed for the rlle In
both counties.
The rare of lncrtue over the 12 montN ending Oct 31 wa.s 3.1 percent,
sltahUy \owtr than the prevloua tZ..month perkxl .
The Octobtr lncr,ase pushed the consumer Index to a new high this year
at 123.9. Thia mtana that coo1umer1 spent Sl2.l9 for goods and 11ervicel In OctobeT lhat cost 110 In 1167.
-A 8URE-AU'--spokesma:na11a lranspOnallon cos ro91! rour-tent I of one
pttttnt during October . prtmarily becau.w of higher prices for used cars, auto
fioanclng and auto p.rta. G1ao1lne prices remained at record high levels dur·
Ing Octobtr. the ~esmon said.
Food COila ln<:realll!d 0. t percent over th! month, while health and reata· Uon costa cllmbed O.t pettent .
HOUSJNG easts fell 0.1 pertf)nt~ chJefly becauSt or declines In home pur·
c:h11se prices and finand n.a charges.
.. •
Jury. Urges
Land Probe
In Anaheim
After a three-month Investigation of
the land deallngs of the Anahelm city
manager and public works director, the
Orange County Grand Jury wUl not issue
an Indictment for state or city ordinance
vlolatlon.s.
In a letter sent to the Anaheim city at·
tomcy, jury foreman Otto ht Schmidll'n
said there was enough evidence of mis-
conduct to recommend ''the Anaheim
City Council conduct a thorough probe"
into the possible violation of the City
Charter by City Manager Keith Murdoch
and Public Wo~ Director Thornton
Piersall.
The two men 's land dealings were first
detailed in June in a Los Angeles Tlmes
article whjch alleged the meo were able
to realite substantial profits from their
prior knowledge of city projects.
In a letter dated Nov. 16, Scbmldlen
noted "there are sufficient questions
regarding the ethical conduct of Mr.
Keilh Murdoch and Mrs. Thomlon
Piersall to warrant a thorough in·
vestlgation by the city of Anaheim into
possible violations."
He said the probe should be undertaken
by the city attorney, or should he refuse,
by the state attorney general.
The Grand Jury investigation, which
was requested by City Councilman
William J. Thom, was conducted by the
District Attorney's staff and covered
Murdoch's and Piersall's land deals over
a three-year period.
"The investigation revealed no dispute
u·ith the facts set forth in the Los
Angeles Times article that Mr. Murdoch
and Mr. Piersall did have financial in~
terests in transactions considered by the
Anaheim City Council and that they did
not publicly disclose their financial in-
terests at any time," Schmidlen's letter
stated.
Jury was unable lo return an indict·
ment in the case, the letter said, because
ther ¥ were no violations of state laws and
the jury does not have jurisdiction to
return an indictment for a violation of a
city charter ordinance.
In recommending the city's probe of
the """· the jury suggested the in· vestigation not be limited to violations
"OC<tlrring wtlh the past 12 months. The
Anaheim Clly Council's respoll!lbllily is
not limited to investigation into possible
violations of law uneenforceable because
of a on~year Statule of-Limitations; and
not lim1ted to v:lolatlOWJ of laws only; it
also includes scrutiny of possible viola~
ti-Ons of standards of. proper behavior ;md
morality in the conduct of elected and
&ppolnled public officials."
Schmldlen'a letter also raised a ques·
tion involving the City Council's vote of
confidence given the two men shortly
after the story of their land deals was
broken .
The vote at that time was 4 to 1 with
Thom voting with the majority. He later
attempted tmSuccessfully to have his
vote changed.
UCI Blood Donors
Rolling Up Sleeves
UC Irvine students, faculty and staff
will roll up their sleeves Nov. 30 to give
blood to the American Red Cross group
oonorship program which provides free
blood to members 011 the university com·
munity needing it.
The blood drive will be held from 10
a.m. to 2:30 p.m. in room 150 of social
science tower.
l' ocal Minorit12'
All-year School
Support 'Quiet'
Allhough 4$-15 (all·year-school) did not
receive a fonnal defeat b e t o r o
Capistrano Unified School D i s t r i c t
trustees, It took ii beating from audience
and board al!ke Monday.
And prospects of even a pilot project
* * * All-year Bid
Not Included
In Capo Vote
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of ... Deity Pllel Stett
A $25-milllon bond Issue tenned crucial td handle explosive growtl1 in the
Capistrano Unified School District will
come before voters Feb. 20, but the con-
troversial all-year-school concept will be
absent from the ballot.
That solution came after trustees
wresUed with several alternatives Mon·
day amid a large audience composed
primarily of opponents to the 45-15 ~
gram (nine weeks in class, three of vaca·
lion over a 12-month cycle).
>.. originally proposed, •~I! '""" to
have bad a spot on a bond ballot -added
as an Information item to seek a deflllite
community sentiment about the con-
troversial ~dea.
But trustees agreed lhst adding the hot
issue onto the ftrS: bond issue in several
years could spell death to the finance
measure.
During a series of intricate parliamen-
tary maneuvers, Trus~ Fred Newhart
moved to scrap ·45-15 entirely for the
coming school year; to commend the
citizen's advisory committee on 45-15,
and ask the group to continue gathering
informaton from other school districts.
infonnatlon from other school districts.
The motion, which would have placed
support from trustees Monday night.
But it will return at the board's
meeting on Dec. 5.
Other trustees took little Issue wllh the
substance of Newhart'a motion, but In-
sisted that for many month!, the public
had been promised a final decision on 45-
15 at the board's first meeting in
December.
"We've told everyone that we would
decide at that time, 11 said trustee
Edward Westberg, and we have op-
ponenls to the plan here tonight. We
ought to g!ve the proponents a chance to
show up, too ... if there are any."
The vote setting the date and dollar
amount for the bond issue was S-1 -
unusual for trustees, who generally stand
in unison in authorizing f i n a n c e
measures.
And Truste ~ William Enquist's no vote
drew concern from Board President
Robert Hurst, who said that unless the
board cast a unanimous vote "a bond
issue would probably fail."
But Enquist said that he voted against
the date, not the bond lssue, itself.
He preferred to place the issue on the
regular April t.allot to save the costs of a
special election.
Other board memders disagreed.
however, insisting that the April tax-
paying season was the worst time of the
year to seek voter approvals for bonds.
Although the bonds spell a much more
important function for the district than
all-year scOOol, lhe finance measure took
a back seat to the controversy su:--
rounding 4>15.
Grudgingly, trustees admitted that
with a series or public meetings half
over, results of polls taken of the au·
diences showed a dl.smal rate of ac-
ceptance by parents and teachers .
for the next school year appeared grim.
Dozens of opponents to the all-year
concept watched trustees grapple with
the controversial issue.
Although few debates -emerged from
th .. meeting, comments were abundant.
Most centered on a means of ac·
curately polling the community.
Trustee :itephen Smith insisted that the
best way to poll the residents would be to
hire an independent survey firm.
Board Presldenl Robert Hum argued
that such an approach would cost as
much as a special election.
Trustees William Enqu!st and Dr.
Edward Westberg said that they each
had received about 15 phone calls in re·
cent days and each caller opposed 45-15.
None rect.lved any calf! from sup-
porters.
One of the strongest discussions ensued
when long-ti.111e board observer Ray
Campbell of San Clemente urged trustees
to make their own minds up about 45-15,
terming the opposition a "vocal mlnori·
ty ."
That as,,ertion drew a few groans from
the audience.
Campbell stressed that at the outset or
t~ . .: discussions on 45-lS "we heard
nothing but support for all-year school
"
"Then we saw a vocal minority creep
in ... there's always a few who make a
lot of noise and they're here tonight.
''There are thousands of supporters
who may be home watching TV tonight,
but they elected yoo to make the de-
cisions for them,' 'he said.
Campbell warned that if trustees killed
4>15, "the bonds would have no chance
of passing."
At that, Enquist cited hia 15 phone
calls. "If that was the vocal minority,"
he said, "where was the silent ma·
jority?"
"They elected you to office," Campbell
retorted.
William Winter
OJ Laguna Hills
Dies at Age 75
William J. Winter, Laguna Hills resi·
dent for seven years and fonner board
member of California Federal Savlnga
and Loan, died Monday at the age of 'I!.
Mr. Winter, formerly of Loi Anples,
owned and operated Wlnter and Com.
pany, a photo supplies manufacturing
company. He was a member of Rotary
No. 5 and Al Malaikah Temple of tM'
Shrtners Club of Los Angles.
Mr. Winter is survived by h Is wife,
Leona, of the family home at 824-C Via
Alhambra; two daughters, Mrs. Joan
Schnelder of San Marino and Dorraine
Herbert of Corona del Mar; and seven
grandchildren.
Private servlc<!S will be held Wednes-
day at Pacific View Memorial Olapel
in Corona del Mar. The family has sug.
gested memorial contributions to the
Heart Fund.
F"°"'Pllflel
CLAMMING. • •
shriveled or discolored.
"The good meat Is usually a light tan
or pinkish color," he said.
Lockabey said another extreme low
tide is expected fn mid-December, but
the clam population I!: unpredictable.
"There are more clams than we could
dig up in a year now," he said. "But that
e<1uld change real fast."
Buying A New Tract Home?
Mtny people ~uying homes are under the im pression they HAVE
to buy corpeting from the home sties center. In the m1jorily of cues
this is not true, 1lthou9h the sales office will try to mile you thinl so.
I The minute tho home center tries to upgrtde the sl1nd1rd carpet,
then you are free to shop fclr-carpeting. To prevent shopping should
constitute re1traint of tr.de.
In many coses they will teD you that the carpet aOowence dots not
apply if you buy carpet oukide. If they IHI this is legal, HAVE THEM
PUT IT IN WRITING.
Ordinarily, we can save you a Jot of mon~y ove r whit the home
center offers. We provide • larger se~tion -and we usually come up
with leu yardtge, plus 1 superior installation.
ALDEN'S
CARPETS o DRAPES
1663 Placentia Awe.
COS'TA MISA
646-4831
HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 to 5:30-FRI, 9 to 9 -SAT., 9:30 to J
\ ..
Bnniington Beaeh
Fountain Valley
Today's Final
N.~. Stoeks
VOL 65, NO. 326, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1972 TEN CENTS
Deeding of Mile Square fostponed for Study
By JACK BROBACK
Of .... Oeltt ...... • ....
Deeding ol the 465-acre Mile Sqt18re
Regional Park property to Orange Coun-
ty bas been indefinitely postponed and
federal official$ are giving It thorough
study beca111e of recent publicity.
SUpervilor David L. Baker retur.ned
Monday fnlm a meeting In Wasblngtoo
D.C. with beads of three federal ...,..
cies. He said there mre "strong reserVa-
tioos" on the part of some oUiclals
becallle or the bribery scandal and
sublequent p o I i t i c a l advertisements
. criticiz1ng the county's development of
the property placed by First District
S!Jpervisor Robert Battin.
Battin and Baker have dashed several
ti.mell over the Mile Square matter.
1lle perl: In Fountain Valley was
formerly In Babr's ae<ond district and more tlloD nv. years ago be spearheaded
negotiations wttb the federal government
for use or the land surrounding Uie
Marines' helicopter practice lleld for a
regional park.
He achieved a long tenn lease of the
land to lhe county and it was to be deed-
ed outright by the Federal government
until the recent odious discussions.
Plans bad been made by the federal
government to turn over the 456 BCl"H to
the county on last Oct. 24. But those
plans were delayed when the bribery
scandal involving two Westminster clty
officials over temporary agricultural
leases on the property surfaced.
Former mayor aod Councilman Derek
McWbinney and Planning Commissioner
Tad Fujita have been indicted by the
Orange County Grand Jury on charges of
trying to "shake down" George 1'1ural,
who leases 213 3Cl'es for farming
vegetables.
The alleged bribe was to be paid in the
fonn of a $10,000 campaign contribution
tfl Battin's re-election campaign.
Baker prtviously stated that be had
been able to aUay the fears of federal
government officials that the bribery
scandal might cloud the transfer but new
fears arose over an advertisement placed
by Battin just before the Nov. 7 election
alleging that the county bad plarui to sell
some of the property to developers for
home or apartment building.
Battin also charged that the entire park
-230 acres have been developed into a
golf course, picnic areas, fishing lakes
and other facilities by the county -
should be planted and devoted to recrea-
tional use at once.
Terms or lhe lease with the federal
government call for use of developed
acreage by rarmers to keep down the
dust and weeds until the county has the
money to complete the development.
Revenue from t h e ranning ventures is
shan!d by the county and the U.S.
government.
Baker said ~fonday that he had receiv·
(See PARK, Page ZJ
Parking Lot Dead
Beach Council Kills Battered Pinn
DAILY PILOT SMM .......
By TERRV COVll.LE
ot 1M Oe1tY Pllel Sfllff
For sale: one broken, crumpled and
tarnished plan to build a IS.acre asphalt
parking lot facing the oceanfront in
downtown Huntington Beach.
City councilmen officially crushed the
controversial parking lot concept Monday
nighl and dropped all condemnation suits
againsl downtown property owners.
They did not. however. abando11 the en-
tire ''Top of the Pier" master p I an.
Harbor Unit
May Tackle
Coastal Law
JOHN WILSON OF SUNSET B.EACH ENOURES OESPITE HIGH TIDE IN HIS PATIO
Along the Ocun front This Momht9, It Was Wintertime and the Living Was Wet
Dittetors tJl. ·the Newport Harbor
C1iamber of c:omm0rce agroed MondaY
to . start a dossier on the problems
created by California's new coastal pro-
tection law with an eye toward ~ting
a statewide initiative campaign against It
in two years.
Habeas Corpus
P etition Denied
To Newsman Farr
UOS ANGELES (UPI) -Newsman
William FBn" lost aoolhel' attempt today
to · avoid the jail sentence he faces for
refusing to disclose the source of a news
story during the Manson tria1. .
A court of appeal denied Farr's petl·
tion for a writ of habeas corpus, clearing
the way for the 37-year-old newsman to
be returned to j~I.
Superior Court Judge Charles Older
held Farr in contempt of court for refus--
ing to disclose the source of a news story
and ordered him to jail last week when
Farr again refused to refeal bis source.
Farr was releMed from jail after a few
hours while his st!Dmey appealed Older's
order.
In Its ruling, the three-Justlce aP!l<llate
court ordered Farr remanded to the
custody of the sherifts department.
~There was no immediate indication
whether Farr's attorney, Martin Hurwitz,
would make further appeals.
Jn the petition for a writ of habeas cor-
pus, Hurtwitz argued that the contempt
of court sentence Is illegal and that Older
never advised Farr of his constitutional
right to remain sllent under provisions of
the Ftfth Amendment.
In rejectln& the petition, the court of
appeall said Hurwtt>' arguments ....,.
.. without merit."
2 Robbers Fl~
In Huntington
Two YOll!li men, eech armed Wffh
pistols, htld up a 1·U Malbl la llun-linstoo B<acb Monday nllht and ..:opod
with llO In cub.
Pollce otld the two Din tnCmd the
S1Qfl!, locaUid &r1he -loo of
NNlaod Stret1 aod lndl ...... lt A'f ...
..... O<dtred the ..... dn into •
rutroom In the .... ol the .-.
"Keep out al -" dlq -... ..... keeper.
Tho two -°"" rlllod the ....... cuh ,...iate< aod fled, pallc:e Aid.
f
Ho111es Flooded
They indicated the new effort would be
an extension of their unsuccessful drive
lo defeat Proposition 20 earlier this
month.
Tides Cover Coast Route in Beaclt,
"We knew we wert fighting a losing
battle when we started working against
this thing," said Richard Stevens.
longtime Balboa Bay Club e.1ecutive and
one of the chamber directors who
spearheaded a last-Oitch c 1 m p a i g n
against Proposition 20.
By JOHN ZA!LER
Of .. D9lfY Pl191 .....
High tides spilled up to 15 inches of
wit'er an Pacific Coast Highway in Hun-
1 tington Beach and Oooded at least ten
waterfront bames. Jn Sunset Beach this
morning.
A tide nearly as high is expected
Wedoesday.
City officials reported flood damage
minor, although flooding on the Pacific
Coast Highway nearly caused the road to
be closed for a brief period about 8:30
a.m.
Despite a three-foot sand embankment
built up along the highway by city
bulldozers, the tidal surge breached the
makeshift, dike in several places and
flooded 300 yards of highway near the
Bolaa Chica bluffs. In some places the
Harbour Ruks
Made Tigliter
In Hunting ton
&bb ... The sound you are about to
ml.ss ii the 90lt nush of beads on boats In
HunUngton Harbour.
Well, HunUnaton Beach Councilmen
didn't euctly ~ak the chain on water
.-but they did attempt to mutne
potenUal pollution In Harbor ehanneiJ.
A new set of Harbour sanltaUon rules
WIS adopted wltbuut OjlpOS!Uon Mandqy
niCllL
Thirty cia,. from -all boats m111t have:
-A lioldinr tank dellcned to main
human bod)' -unW dlq can be
dllctwaed ltlto 1 sanitary sewer ayltem.
-Or, tbe boat'• bead ii connected
dlrectly lo 1 unitary sewer l)'lttm.
-Or, the beod ii ~ed to an °""
boant -ace tnetm<nt l)'lttm which
produea u -aceeptable by the ..unty beallli ofll<er.
'!'be -law aiao r.qulra eommemal
-mortnaa to Pf••lde permanent boldla&
tank pumpout faclUtlea or equivalent
..moe, capable al ..... 1nr all boail in
thtmarllll. Cil1 tllidall Uld lbert WU UW. OP'
paoltlall to tbe liolcflnc tsok law beca-
thtte an no ml ''llve aboard" boflt
litilltlool In HwiWlctGn llartJou1·.
water was IS inches deep, according to
city workers.
The Oooding in Sunset Beach affected
more than a mile of low-lying roadway.
It also affected at least ten homes
along the channel front, according to a
resident, John Wilson.
"I have an inch of \wa ter in my living
room and right now I'm trying to keep it
from getting under the house," Wilson
said this morning.
''They built a bulkhead several years
ago to try to protect WI ," he added , "but
when the llde gets this high, it doesn't do
any good."
Wilson said ten of hil neighbors have
the same flooding problem be does about
th~ or four times a year when the Ude
is higher than 7 .0 feet.
This morning 's tide was 7 .2 feet, with
7.1 feet expected Wednesday. Nut month
another Ude is espected to be 7.3 feet
bigh.
At the peal< of the tidal surges, aboot
haH of Bolsa Chica Slate Beach was
under water.
The high morning tides have been
rollowed by equally dramatic k>w tides in
the afternoon, which has brought
thousands of persons to the beach for
clamming, according to officials or llun·
Ungton State Beach.
"I've still heard oolhing that changes
our original belief that this thing will be
a disastrous l'\lrb on sane development
::ind a costly new layer of government,"
he said. "God help us and God help those
new regional commi!slons."
Approval of the measure means six
regional agencies will be established
which will have veto power over any
development within a five-mile-wide strip
04 California's coastline.
Any project within l ,IXKI yards of any
w:.terway will have to be senrtlnlzed by
the regional panel in addition to any ac-
tion by Joe.al agencies.
Dr. Nolan Frizzelle, who worked with
Stevens to rally forces oppolltd to the
.,..,....., said the dJamber could oet up
a committee to log all the UI efftcll of
the proposition over the next few yean.
"Maybe then we can Mve enough
material to start M inltlaUve of our own.
In two years . to undo whit'• been done ,"
FriueUe said.
Meanwhile. directors sakl they will
look for !Orne way the chamber can
.,.~, city olflcials In dealing wl1b the
new rules and regulations.
Livin g Costs Creep Up
Residents of Orange County w•ro told today that the COil al umi """
Unll<d llJ upward climb during October, tt&lllA!rin& a -tenth al MO percont
rill!.
THE U.S. Buttau of Labor Statistics said the -matclJes that of
Los An& .... County. Hi&Jier transporlatloo -is -. blamed for tbe rile la
both ecuntles.
The rot. ol ln=ue over the 11 montha ftldlnc Cid. JI wu s.t pette1t,
allfhtly lower than the previous 12-monlh pttlnd.
The October inettue pushed the """"""' Inda to a -IJllb tlila )'HT
II LIU. Tbta -Iha\ ........... spent ILi.a for '°""' and lttViclel In
October that -110 In 11117.
A llUUAU apolltsman uld transponatlan COiii -f,,.,......th! of ..,.
perunt Uinl ~.primarily beclu&e ol bigber prlcoa for -can. auto
floW!lc--paru. Gasoline p<icos ....alfted at .....i bfP iofflo dur· Inc Ootollor. lllt apokHman aid. •
Poad -11 lacnaled 0,1 f)<ttefll °'" llie month. wlilJe beolth and re<tt•·
tlall -.. elhMed 0.1 percent.
~
ll005ING .... ftll 0.t -·· cllldly -ti -In -pur· dwt prlcel and !laand"i ~
•'
•
Instead, they asked the city PlaMing
Commission to review and change some
of the zooing in the mast.er plan.
The full "Top of the Pier" plan in-
volves the zoning on 330 acres of land, in·
el uding all of the downtown and
periphery neighborhoods.
Some of the concepts kept alive by the
full pier plan include locatiorn for a
potential convention center, high rise
hotels and tourist-sty le commercial ac-
tivity.
~1uch of the periphery area Is schedul-
ed for heavy apartment construction.
.The parking lot was to have been the
spur for hotel and .ourist activity, but it
quickly picked up opponents, especially
downtown property own ers . who con·
sidered an oceanfront parking lot a waste or the land.
A final blow to lhe pcoject "''as landed
last year "''hen the \:OSt estimates for ac·
quiring the 15 acres ranged from 5"
(Set PIER. Page %J
Huntn1gton Action
Here in capsule form are the major actions tllken 1'1onday night by &he
Huntington Beach C~y Cooncll :
DOWNl'OWN: Scrapped plans.for a l~acre oceanfront parking lot, but re-
fused to abandon UM entire "Top of lbe Pier" master plan.
llUl!TINGTON BAllBOOa: AW!d for an envlroomental Impact statement
prior to COllltlUctian of ZIO -around ~ private llgom. but auow.d wort oo Ult lqoon to continue. _
BOLDING TANKS: Passed a llw that makts holding tankl:, « some form
of safe sewage dispoul, maodlt«y oa all boat! In Huntington Harbour.
IMPACf POUCV: Approved interim guidelines for environmental impact
st.atementa whk:h require either a full llatement or a $hart declaration from
bearly all developers.
SCHOOLS: RequC!ted a meetlng with trustees Crom the five school distrLcU
within the city to dl.sctw popufaUon growth.
GARAGE SALES: Decided to enforce a law against garage aale slgnl.
REVENUE: Asked county aupervlsors to aplit the county's ah.are ol fedtral
revenue sharing fWlds 50-50 with the cities.
Environmental Report
Required for Harbour
An environmental Impact 1ta1nncn1
wlli be required prior lo the construction
of 220 townhouses around a private la-
goon in HunUnctoo Harbour.
lhmlinltoO Bead> Oluncllm<n lmpoaed
that candltloo Mondor nJCht, but !her r ..
fused to llifle current wort on bulkheads
for the lagoon.
The vote was $.2, wi1b Col.ncUmen
!l<nry Duke and Nonna Gibbs oppoaed
bees,.. tl1ty wanted an lmmedlale halt
to Ill worlt 00 the J.fl«n ~·
All '""'" c:ouncflmm -a.,...i to halt any fl.In.her wort on C bolt .Ups -
a oeparate project -In Rllllllncton Har-
bour until 1 complete envlronmtol.111 ~
port ii mode .
Both the lagoon and the bolt •llPI •re OflPOllOd by the Huntlngtoo Harbour l'fOI>
erty Ow-. Aaoc:latlon. Offldala of the
homeownen l""'P beli<ve the develop-
menll will harm the water quality ln the
dlanneil.
Jim Benllon. pm!-al the .-Ia.
lion, told coundtmm that Harbour rtli·
dttl:..S won 't be lltllf)fd with I mtte .. re-
port" on the bolt allpa.
"'l'be EIS la not -aaly ...,....., " ht
said. '"""1 .,. bufidlnc • eonvnerdal
marinl In an aroa ......-by R·I
--.., hdfdial ponnll ~ quired.''
Tho a bolt 1llpa .w cw1fllde the ma-
rina -alr9dJ -In tbe ~ port Oiannel. 'l1lo -Ii on nt<,r.
wl!J dedicated to Ult dQ>, bul the fflml-
inl""' -Oorporatlao --~ to build tbe -.......
'Ibo la1oon _,........, ---the pot"1Ual tllect al • priYll• ._
on ••Ll'r In lbt rat of ~ k....
boor.
Some~.__.. .. , tboJ 1 .. r the
1., .... irai«iilll iliillliCi llld u.-
-.,. ..._.. la -lht ...
ler will -k-M<lal al Monday'• --
'""""' the -ti the dl1 liulldlnl prnnlts ,.. --ti the ~ bul-•
'
Councilmen criUcittd city st.air mem-
bt:rs for granllng grading and bulkhead
pcnnill whm the plannlR« commiulon
had said !hey shook! ool be IP'•nled unlil
after the U.S. Army Corps of Englnffn
gave ill approval .
Sevtral councllmm said they felt the
l11oon w11 a fine project. but they were
upoet with the 1loppy pn>et<l1lr< falloW<d
in 1110.'lng It.
Millan Beyc:l>ok. 17141 Courtnoy Lane. a
Jluntlngton Harbour resident, told coun-
cilmen an envlronmental bnprlCt ltlleo-
menl shoold have 1-> required prior to
!Ste LAGOON, P ... ZI .......
........
The wuthtt outloolt f0< W-
day ii ""'""'Jed IUMY -with ll!ihUy wamwr te.rnperanna, lt'-
cordln« to tho -tbtt 114nlot •
Hlgbl ll lhe lioacbH, ......r •
r111n& to n Inland. i-. tonlcbt --INSIDE TODA"
ChlU ••lriu Included rotu ..
no.kc elaJU attd TnauHt rac-"'°" dlUI. The --from Colorodo, b•I &.Ital llOOl:ft'I IM
pohtl of 1111 rirth °"'"lllAI l"J.rrt. .. u....i Chili Apprccfatlotl s ..
rit"lr. II WI llt• hOlflllCI hl
holpmiu. St• 11.,. Oil Poot JJ.
...._..,.. a ._a..-.. u
~ • ...... t <....-.. ... ~ ...... c.... , ........ _.. •
a • '' .._<-. ' _.. ....,. r '""' ...., ~ ............. " .......... ; ;=:-1· ..... ... ,. w....r
-M _... .......
I
' '
I
,
'
•
Jury Urges
Land Prob e
In Anaheim
Arter a three·month invcsligalion of
the land dealings of the Anaheim city
manager and public works director. thr
Orange County Grand Ju ry \\•ill not issue
an indictment for state or city ordinan<.'<'
viotalions.
In a letter sent to the Anaheim city at-
1or11ey, jury f8f"C1n an Otto ti.t. Schmidlen
said !here \\.'as enough evic!cnce of mis--
ronduct to recommend ··me Anaheim
(.'ity Council conduct a thorough probe"
into the possible violation of the City
Charter by City ~tanager Keith ~1urdoch
:ind Public \Vorks Director Thorn ton
Piersall.
The l\\"O men 's land dealings v.·ere first
detailed in June in a Los Angeles Times
article \\'hich alleged the men were able
to realize substantial profits from thei r
prior kno\\·ledge of city projects.
In a Jetter dated Nov. 16, Schm idlen
noted "there are suff icienl questions
regarding the ethi cal conducl of ~Ir.
Keith Afurdoch and A~rs. Thornton
Piersall to warrant a thorough in-
\'estigation by the city of Anaheim into
possible violations."
He said the probe should be und ertaken
by the ci ty at!omey. or should he refu se,
by the state attorney general.
The Grand Ju ry investigation, which
111·as requested by Cily Councilman
\\'illiam J. Thom . v.•as conducted by the
District Attorney's staff and covered
~lurdoch's and Piersall 's land deals over
a three-year period.
''The investigation revealed no dispute
~·ith the facts set forth in the Los
Angeles Times article that h1r. Murdoch
and A-Jr. Piersall did havr financial in-
terests in transactions considered by the
Anajieim Cit y Council and that they did
not publicly disc lose their finan cial in-
terests at any time ," Schmidlcn's letter
slalcd.
Jury \\•as unable lo re turn an indict-
1nent in the case, the letter said, because
rhcr _ \Vere no violations of state laws and
the jury does no t have jurisdiction to
return an indictment for a violation of a
city charter or::!inance .
In recommending the city's probe of
the c<ise, lhe jury suggested the in-
vestigation not be limited to violations
"occurring with the past U montbl. 1be
Anaheim City CoWlcil's responsibility is
not limited to invesUgaUon 4Jto Possible
violations or Jaw uneenforceable because
of a one-year Statute of Limitations; and
not limited to violations of laws only; it
also includes scrutiny of possible viola-
tions of standards of proper behavior imd
~orality in the conduct of eleCted and
fippointed public officials."
. Schmidlen's letter also rai sed a ques-
t.ion involving the City Council's vote of
eonfidence given the two men shortly
after the story of their land deals was
broken.
The vote at that lime 'l\'as 4 to I with
Thom voting with the majority. He later
attempted unsuccessfull y to have his
vote changed.
3 Held Follo1ving
Higli Speed Cliase
LOS ANG ELES (AP ) -Three men
"•ere arrested after a high speed chase
.hrough Los Angeles and Long Beach ci ty
;trcets that ended with IJ(lhce ramm ing a
~an carrying the men, police say.
Authorities said speedi; or up to 100
niles an hour were reached durin g the
:hase ~1onday night.
Booked fo r investigation of kidnap and
-obbery were Da\'id L. ~1iles, 25, James
t>. Bell, 19. both or !<.1ont ebello, and
Richard P. Jimenez, 22, of LOs Angele!.
OIANGI COAST ..
DAILY PILOT
'Tht Or"'" eot.11 D.t.llY ,ILOT W'ITti Mlldt
11 t omlltnff l'f\1 Ncwi..Pr"'-It Jlllblltlled b1
ttlt Of'trooe C•11t l'\IDl!tlll!IO COfr'olllln'P'. S.M-
r.it cd!Uans .,, P\lblklleo, M~y 111rw1111
f rld1y, fOf" Cotl1 Mtu, Hewporl 81.ctl,
H11r111no11n .. edl1Fow.111n v111t-y, Uout1•
k«tt, frflM/SffdltO.C.tr. I nd S1t1 CltlN"llf
Stn Ju•n Car>111r1M. A 1l..ql1 reolor-11
edHIOn It J1Ullll1Md Sfll.1ri11y1 1"'1 SIMCI•~
ll>t pr"'d111I PVtMlt11'"9 Pll~I It 11 JJO w~·.1 ••f s1r111, '°'" Meu, '•lllorni•, •:ttl•.
Roh1rt N. W11d
Pr1,lo.<!1 ll'ld P11t>ll1n..-
J1ck A. C11rl1v
Vkt p,_lft111 11'111 Get\9111 M1n111"
Tiiom11 K11.,a
I Clltw
Tho"''' A. MIR'pl'li111 MaflalllfW 1411W
C1!1rl1s H. L..111 -ich1rd '· Nill AM!t .. nl M"'*9'"9 ECllton
TM"' c .... 1111
W"I 0retlfl t-11y l"dltOt
HWl .... • ...... OMc• 17171 l11ch a.11f1Y1rC
M1iUflt A4dr1111 P.O. ••• 7tO, t2641 --L-.wie hlo• m f'lfnl A.....,.
Cetlt Mtw: »t '#ftl a.y lrtett ,.....,.,, IMcfl: AU ,,........,.. 9-1.,..,...
1M (..,,_.ltl lOJ Horfllc l!I C..fl"I'"' tl .. 1
T•1p•11a C714J 642-4121
Cl•WW A ........ 642-1671
,,_ ,..,. -.... c-ff c"""""""lft
· -UH
CMrltltf. m2, °"""" CM1I ~lltlllnf , .........,.., .,.. ,.,,.. ''°''"· rnw1r1,_.,
'......... IMtlW _. M1""1IMmlrltt llwtM ft? .. ,........ "1tNut .-i.1 "'" ....... ~-. .... <I•• :::= HW •I CMtll Mt ... :,-:-..:) """,.,:.;J ~~-nlfll~ _, ..... ......,,.
-·
I
Did General 'Panic'?
Truman's Daughter .Enters 1951 Controversy
NEW YOltl< (UPI) -President !larry
S Truman fired Gen. llougi... MacArthur
~it U.S. com1n1nder in Korea in 1951
because he fe lt ~1acArthur "sort of
pa nicked," Truman's dnughtcr said t~
day.
hlargaret Truman D!niel s a id her
father concluded that 'things \vere too
shaky '' for Allied forces at the time he
decided to recall ~1acArthur.
This took place Ap ril II, 1951, and set
off a storm of protest among backers of
the \\.'arid War II hero .
~1rs. Daniel said her fat her foresaw
that his decision y.·ould be unpopular, and
chose lo say litlle or nothi ng more about
his ac tion in the days and weeks that
followed. not interfering in a big welcome
home for 1'facArthur.
MacArthur ll'SS relieved 33 U.S. com·
mander after , threa teninb !>oth ground
and air al!acks in mainlanC: China, in
pursuit of Chinese forces who aided
Nor1h Korea.
MacArthur made the threats \Yilhout
clearing statements with Washington, as
Truman had ordere<i.
Mrs. Daniel, 1\·ho has written a ~k
about her father, was intervie\ved on the
NIJC. TV Todly Show.
1'1rs. Daniel &aid of her father's view ot
a.racArthur's un4aufllorizcd stateme111s:
"His reaction was that he (MacArthur )
was a man who sort of panicked. All of
his predictions about the Far East, and
Korea, were simply wrong . . . J.fe
(Truman) thought things were too
shaky.''
ftiacArthur's threats about a China in4
vasion, which Truman feared v.·ou ld
greatly widen the Korean conflict, came
March 25, 1951, 17 days before his
removal and four months before a cease-
fire and a start of negotiations to end the
war.
ft1rs . Daniel also was asked if Truman
had any second thoughts about ordering
the fi rst use of an atomic bomb in
\varfare -the Hiroshima bombing in
1945.
''No." she replied. "He had no second
tho ughts because it did save hundreds of
thousands of American lives."
Mrs. Daniel had access to some
hitherto unpublished material, from
Truman's private records, In writing her
book, titled simply "J!arry S Tfuman."
An excerpt was published Sunday by
Wlaeel-O·Rama Nixed
Plan for Do-it-yourseH
Car Sale in Mesa Refused
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of 1tM Dllllr P'Uol Sllff
A proposal for a "~it-yourself" used
car sales operation at the Orange County
Fairgrounds, wa s firmly rtjected by the
Costa Mesa City Council Monday night.
Jn denying t?Je busillf,lss license ap-
plication. for Charles Wheeler's weekend
"Whcel-o-Rama ," councilmen made it
plain they were opposed to having any
further swap meets in the city.
"I think we've gone too far," said
Councilman Robert Wilson who motioned
for denial or the Santa Ana man's pro--
PoSal. "We're beginning to tum the fair-
grounds into a gigantic swap meet "
His motion passed with a S to O vote.
Councilmen, who have been openl y
dissatisfied with the existing fairgrounds
swap meet, cited potential sales tax
losses ttnd unfa ir competition with
bonafide auto dealers as their major ob-
jections to Wheeler's plan.
Wheeler argued that there would not be
any loss of sales t.u revenues to the city
since all the transactions would be con-
From Pagel
PARK ..•
cd the approval of the land grant from
Dr. Robert Kuppennan, administrator or
the federal Legacy of Parks program
and from James Watt, director of the
Bureau of Outdoor Recreation.
But Darrell Trent, chainnan of the
Federal Land Review Commission, was
htstitant about the propriety of the grant
in view of the bad publicity.
Baker said that a decision on the
turnover can be expected in the next 30
to 40 days. "The federal officials may
decide to deed to the oounty only the i30
acres upon which development is co111-
pleted," Baker reported.
The supervisor said fed eral officials
are concerned over anything which might
cause a negative reactk>n. The Legacy of
Parks program is one of President Nix-
on ·s top projects and the officials fear
any adverse pubLicity might reflect on
theJr boss. the President.
ducted by private parties just all they are
daily through newspaper ads.
His proposal ealled for the renting of
fairgrounds spaces at $~ each to persons
interested in selling their vehicles. They
v.·ould have sold the cars thetnselves .
Wheeler said the "00..it-yourself" type
sales are being practiced in supermarket
parking lots and that police are being
called in to ticket the sellers.
A used car sales headquarters at the
fa irgrounds. Wheeler implied, would give
these poople a legal place to dispose or
their vehicles.
Mayor Jack Hammett suggested that
the swap meet co ncept was a good idea
originally but that it has been abused to
create a "gigantic multi-acred retail
busi ness.''
Hammett added that he wa s upset o\'er
continuing applications for more swap
meets at the fairgrounds. He joined other
counc ilmen in requesting a meeting with
the fair board to shut off further swap
meet requests.
Three other swap meet-type vehicle
sales operations have been rejected by
Ille council so far this year.
From Pagel
LAGOON. • •
any type or construction.
Robert Krueger, an attorney for the
Huntington Harbour Corporation, argued
that the company already had $1.3 mil·
lion invested in lagoon construction.
Krueger agreed that his firm should
submit an impact statemenl before build·
ing the townhouses, but he wanted work
on the lagoon to continue.
The city had issued a "cease and de--
sisl" order on the lagoon work lalt week,
but councilmen let it expire Monday
night.
Beychok warned the city that it ought
to have an impact report covering future
projects next to the lagoon, such as a
new, manmade island, but councilmen
did not spetify just what the report should
cover.
Not-so-rapid Tran.sit
An 80-loot rail car bound by truck for !h o Ba y 1\roa Rapid Transit
Dlslrict (BART) in Oakland was sidetracked in fountain Valley today
when the truck developed engine trouble on tit~ San Diego Freeway.
A crane came to help swltch tru cks at Broo kburst Street and Slater
Avenue. Th e $300,000 BART cars are built In Chula Vista .
Lile M:ptlne In wltlch Mrs. Daniel said
her lather agreed to become Franklin D.
Roosevelt's ronning mate in 1944 only
after heavy pressure from Roosevelt and
others.
She 1aid Truman felt Roosevelt woukt
die in office, meaning he would succeed
Roose velt -and that he did not want to
enter the White House "through the back
door,"
From Paue I
PIER ...
1nilHon to S9 milUon and the city did not
have the cash.
City Administrator David Rowlands
said Huntington Beach has acquired 1.2
acres to date, at a cost or $522.000.
No decision was made on what to do
\l.'ith that land.
Rowlands sai~ the city will not press
any more condemnation suits.
Councilmen made no comment as they
closed lhe book on the controversial park·
ing lot plan. A short executive session
\\•as held prior to the action.
"Now [ think the city must help create
activity downtown," Rowlands said thJs
morning. "There must be a join effort
between the city and private interests."
While several councilmen have publicly
supported the concept of private develop-
ment the past few months, no comment
\Vas made Monday night on the future of
downtown Huntington Beach.
One hangup not solved Monday is an $8
million damage suit agaimt the city
brought by downtown property owners.
The suit is still pending and auto dealer
Bob Terry, instigator of the class action
suit, said today it will not be dropped.
"The lawsuit will move ahead. It's a
suit for things that happened in the past,
not for what might happen in the future ,"
Terry explained.
Property owners are seeking damages
against the city because they claim they
have suffered hardship since 1966 with
their land under variou!': moratoriums
and the threat of condemnation.
Terry said the $8 million figure is not
significant, since they must first prove
they were financially damaged then prove-
how much.
"It's just a rough figure and no one
knows what it might be," be said.
The downtown leader said he was hap-
py to see the council kill the parking lot,
but re tain the rest of the "Top of the
Pier" master plan.
"It's hard to object to something as
general as a master plan," Terry said. "I
never oppased the plan, only the parking
lot."
Man Found Dead
I11 Automobile
At State Beach
A 54·year~ld Palos Verdes man was
found shot to death in his car and
clutching a .38 caliber pistol in bis hand
ft1onday afternoon in a parking lot at
Huntington State Beach.
Orange Qiunty Coronor's officers this
morning ruled the death or Louis Lee
Wtssler a suicide.
Two young swimmers at the beach
found We.ssler slumped over dead in his
197%-modtl compact !oreigr: car as they
were leaving the beach about 12 :30 p.m.,
pollce said.
The door of the car was open and
Weuler was seated in the driver's seat
with a gunshot woUnd in his left temple,
police !laid.
DAILY PILOT Sllft .......
SEEKING CHANCE TO COMPETE IN SWIMMING EVENTS
Bobo Johns of Goldon WHt College Ey11 Trip to Sweden
DeafLagunaCoedSeeking
$2,000 for Sweden Games
A drive is underway to raise $2,QOO to
send a fonner Laguna Beach High School
homecoming princess to the 1973 World
Games for the Deaf.
The money, according to coordinator
Will HJtchcock, would cover the expenses
for the trip to Malmo , Sweden for Bobo
Johns, 19, so she may enter swimming
competitions. Miss Johns, now a Golden
West College student, has been deaf slnce
birth.
~tore than 1,000 deaf athletes represen-
ting 41 nations will gather in the Swedish
city in July for the athletic competitions.
"The real tragedy wqqi~ be if she "Fe
denied a chance to pirtlcipale because
of the cos!,'' Hitchcock, a 1968 high
school graduate, said.
During her high school career, Miss
Johns was a song and cheer leader and fn
her senior year was a homecoming
princess.
Last year, she was a member o[ the
homecoming court at Golden West.
Though unable to attend the national
trials in North Carolina earlier this year,
Mi ss Johns has been promised a position
on the 145-member U.S. team to the
games, because of her outstanding
swimming ability.
Her times in the 100-yard butterfly and
Frisbee Contest Today
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -Eleven
youthful Frisbee !lingers from across the
country are coml-Eling here today in the
fourth annual national junior frisbee
championships.
Judged in 11 events on their style, ac·
curacy and distance, the youths -aged
13 to 15 -are shooting for a $1,000 sav.
ings bond as top prize.
the 200 yard medley are better than the.
World Deaf and American Deaf records
set during the 1969 World Games in
Belgrade, Yugoslavia.
Hitchcock said the goal of the fund
raising committee is to collect the money
·by Christmas.
Contributions may be sent to the &bo
Johns !leaf Olympic Fund, Laguna
Federal Savings and Loan Association,
260 Ocean Ave ., Laguna Beach-Further
information is available from Mr. and
Mn. Dan McFarland, 494-473& or Will Hltchock, .i94-4569.
Man ''Faces Trial
In Wife's Death
John Roger Alden has been ordered to
face trial Jan. 20. in Orange County
Superior Court on charges that he shot
and killed his wife during a quarrel at
the couple's Huntington Beach home.
Presiding Judge Bruce Sumner set the
trial date for Alden, 42, of 20622 Goshawk
Lane. He is free on $25,000 bail.
Alden was arrested by police who
found the bullet-riddled body or his wife,
Arlene, 39, last Aug. 5 in the master
bedroom of the home. Investtgalor!I later
found the empty, .22-caliber pistol
allegedly used in the killing in the
hallway.
District Attorney's officers unsuc-
cessfully opposed bail on the grounds
that Alden was mentally unstable and
should not be free.
Buying A New Tract Home?
Many people buying homes are under the impression they HAVE
to buy carpeting from the home sales center. In the majority of cases
this is not true, atthough the sales office will try to make you think so.
The minll!e the home center tries to upgrade the standard carpet.
then you are free to shop for carpoting. To prevent shopping should
constitute restraint of trade.
In many cases !hoy will teR you that the carpet allowance does not
apply if you buy carpet outside. If they feel this is legal, HA Vt THEM
PUT IT IN WRITING.
Ordin•r3y, we can 51ve you a Jot of money over what the home
center offers. W • provide a l.r91r selection -and we usually come up
with less y•rdage, plus • superior insteO.tion.
ALDEN'S
CARPET~ o DRAPES
1663 Placntla A we.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS: Mon. Thru Thun., t to 5:30-FRI., t to 9-SAT., 9:30 to S
..
' I
..
I
I
I
Tunday, Novembtr 2.1, 1972 H DAILY PILOT 3_
l(issinger, Reds Begin .2nd Round
Appeal lJpheld
'Chicago Seven'
Due New Trials
CHICAGO (AP) - A Iederal appeals
court today reversed the convictions of
the five Chicago Seven defendants found
guilty of crossing state lines to incite
rioting at the time of the 1968
Democratic National Convention.
Cleared were David T. Dellinger, Abbie
Hoffman, Rennie Davis, Jerry Rubin and
Tom Hayden.
The 7th U.S. Circuit COurt of Appeals
Motorist Dies
Iii Good Deed
OCEANSIDE (AP) -Virgil
Overall was killed trying to do a
good deed, police say, and the
young woman he was trying to help .
died, too. .
Overall, 44 stopped Monday when
he saw Joda Remington, 17, strand-
ed by the roadside, officers said.
While the two Oceansi d e
residents were pouring gasoline in-
to Miss Remington's vehicle, they
were struck and killed by a car
whose driver, William Jenkins, 63,
said he didn't see the10, police said.
Apollo 17 Crew
Rehearse Parts
For Countdown
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -With their
rocket "ready to go", Apollo 17's
astronauts rehearse their pai1 of the
countdown tonight for launch Dec. 6 on
America's last planned journey to the
moon.
The towering Saturn 5 rocket and its
three-module spaceship passed a long,
realistic countdown test Monday by simulatin~ blastoff on schedule at 6:53
p.m. CPSTl.
"It'::: been a very nominal and
uneventful test," reported launch di~
tor Walter J. Kapryan. "Everything
looks like we're in real good shape. We're
ready to p."
Because the Saturn was filled with
r.1ore than 10 million gallons of explosive
propellants. astronauts Eugene A .
Cernan, Ronald E. Evans and Dr. Har-
riS(Jn H. "Jack" Schmitt waited until the
fuel was drained before rehearsing their
part or the countdown.
The supercold liquid oxygen and liquid
hydrogen propellants were drained dur-
ing the night under th . light produced by
a battery of 130 searchlights surrounding
the oceanside launch pad.
ruled that the defendants ' constitutional
rights bad been violated. It said,
however, that the government may retry
the five.
1be five were among eight antiwar ac--
tivlsts indicted on several charges in con-
nection with the violence at the Demo-
cratic convention.
The trial of one of tbe eight, Black
Panther leader Bobby Seale, was severed
because of bis courtroom outbursts.
Of the remaining seven, five -Del·
inger, Rubin, Hayden, Hoffman and
Davis -were convicted on Feb. 18, 1970
of crossing state lines to incite a riot at
the time of the con vention.
They and the two addional defendants,
John R. Froines, 31, and Lee Weiner, 31,
were found innocent of the main charge
of conspiring to _plot the violence that
to ." place.
Froines and Weiner also were found in·
nocent of teaching the use of an in·
cendiary device.
'lbe original four-month trial before
Judge Julius J . Hoffman was a stormy
one marked by the defense hurling
epithets at the judge and the judge
countering with h~rsh reprimands.
AU seven defendants, plus two lawyers,
were sentenced for contempt by Hofbnan
after the trial ended. Seale had been
sentenced for contempt earlier and a
mistrial de<:la red in his case. The
government did not retry Seale.
reversed the contempt convictions of all
10 this year. The court cited a 1971 U.S.
Supreme Court decision that said a trial
judge should disqualify himself from con·
tempt proceedings if the citations are not
made until the end of the trial.
Jn arguing before the appeals panel for
reversal of the convictions of the fi ve. at-
torneys claimed tha t the antiriot section
of the Civil Rights Act of 1968 under
which the defendants were indicted
violated their clients' rights under the
First Amendment to the Constitution.
They also accused U.S. District Court
Judge Hoffman of "blatant antagonism"'
and favo ring the prosecution over the
defense.
Orchestra Set
For UCI C.oncert
The Prague Chamber Orchestra will
play Saturday night in the Fine Arts
Village Theater at UC Irvine and not
Crawford Hall as originally scheduled.
The 36-member visiting chamber group
\\'ii! perform at 8: 15 p.m. Saturday.
Tickets at $2 may be reserved by calling
the fine arts box offiCi! -~17 -
between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. Wednesday
or after 7 p.m. on Saturday.
The shill of the concert provides a
more suitable setting for the chamber
concert, a university spokesman noted.
KOCE, Huntington Beach
1st County Television
Station Goes on Air
By TOM PALMER
Of t11t o.lly '11•1 Steff
If you were switching from Gilligan's
lsland to the Bogart movie Monday after·
noon, you may have noticed something
~merent.
: Like a new full~olor channel. And If
you did a double take with the channel
.elector, you may have noUced that Or-
ange County's first television' station is
on the air.
After a couple of years of planning and
building. but only I 1ii hours of test pat-
lern, KOCB, Channel 50, broadcasting
rom Golden West College's new· $2 mil·
ion studi05, signed on at 4 p.m.
"It was really tense," said Don C"rtt<its.
director of prodoccion services, as he
eervou!ly awaited the big moment. ln-
fanl staUoos usuaUy have about three
,,eeks of tesUng be.fort any program-
ming la broadcast. "We weren't surt
two hours ago we could send a stcnat"
The low test tone ftnl sllen1. "nle
ecrttn went to black. Gerti l(lUlrmed in
his choir. The lllation ldentlllcation card
•ppean:d. In oolor. even.
Gerti' voice, taped earll~r. ctme Cll :
Good al""'°°", thl& ls KOCE-TV, OloJ>.
he! IO, Huntington Beacll. We now b<p
""'fin! day ....
' Cbten and jubilant clsppblg drcnm<d
him out. Some of the 32 rtgUlar ltaff
momb<,., plU& ........, villton end wdl·
wlshen. congratulattd each other in
bear dbb<ll<I.
t The Electric Company. the 1t1tlon'1
llrot offer!ni . wu on lhe air. A ,,._ f•nc.-"Our first -plaint," a staffer
llll«Ullted. .
I· "Too meny commerd •lt ." IKOCE ls
noocommen:lal NI.Ion.)
11 Kttp your flnattt crcmed. ''
' "II woru, II worb."
"'Ille phalo, again. Gert&. wiih ... •
lltU< prtclo, llUIOUDC<d that the enlllo<m
•
had put on full power, 2.7 million watts.
Another call. "They're getting us loud
and clear in Downey." "Radio Free
Downey," someone added .
"People'• faces are supposed to be
purple for the (int few days," Gerb. said.
"I don't know what went right."
Problems bad developed last week in
the intricate wiring lo the transmitter .
three miles north of La Habra In the
Puente Hills. "The technicians have
sloshed through the mud night and day
since then locating the pfublem and re-
pafring it," he said.
KOCE was originally planned as a
black and white station for student in·
struction. After certain state legl!lation
and with the successful beginning of
Public Broadcaating System {PBS \ in
1969, the decision was made ln li170 to
expand It to a production ctnter for
teaching matmals for the IS.000 students
in the cout ma.
And then one more decision was made
-to create a leltvlslon staUon to teed
the entire ma with educational material
from the Coast Community Coll<ge Dis-
trict, to whlcll lhe 1t1llon b llctmed.
"And"" •lttldy hive• natlonal bu<.''
GertJ explained, "with <lllltraclo to I'""
duce matttiala for tllC in Flortd1 and
Tuu and tllewbere .. ,
"Ev..,tually we plan to be Ille """'
ab<ad In pnicrammin1. Today • 're
iucly to be &tx hours ahtad,''
KOCE ii bnlldcasting tlped pnicrams
ouppli<d b)' PSS. which It wUI ""°Iuaily
be Ii<d to dltt<IIy. The staff It produdnG
about one allow per day locoU,. -tly
portions ol l<fleo f0< ... In Febnlary.
"when ,,.·11 bqln our full kaJ pootur<,"
Gertz Aid. uncu JlnUAt'7~ the county '• ~11
t•lovilloo wW be "' tht air '""" only 4 lo II p.m. Alt<r that Ito!Jna portod, ruu _.....,.., ..,.11111y perll.IDr
-putc;r-contnlli<d, It plann<d.
f
• '
V,I T1 ...... lot
Director Restin9
FBI Director L. Patrick Gray
was stricken with an intestinal
obstruction at his Connecticut
home Sunday and will undergo
surgery. He is presently rest·
in g at Lawrence Memorial
Hospital in.New London.
Healtl1 Officials
Doubt Flu Peril
In New Strain
Orange County will probably not be af·
fected by a rare strain of influenza never
before recorded in the continental U.S.
which has reportedly s t r i c k e n
servicemen in Colorado, according to
county health officials.
The report that several hunded airmen
at Lowry Air Force Base at Aurora,
Colo., near Denver, are suffering from a
rare strain called A-2--England has not
yet been officially verified.
"OnP. can only speculate on this. We
rave no basis for the story yet and the
Center for Disease Control in Atlanta is
checking now," said John R. Philp. coun-
ty di rector of public health.
"There has been no influenza outbreak
to date in California th.is year. It should
not be a heavy influenza year because we
have had enough of types A and B o' the
Hong Kong fiu (three years ago ) so there
should be enough residual immunity to
make a large outbreak unlikely ." he said.
Bank Job
Pair Get
20 Years
By FREDERICK SCllOEMEllL
Of "" Oel!Y "'llt Sltff
A federal judge P..fonday sentenced two
Ohio men to 20 years imprisonment for
their role in the $5 million burglary to the
Laguna Niguel b r a n c h of United
California Bank.
U.S. District Court Judge William
''Matt" Byrne, Jr .. ln pronouncing the
sentence, cited defendants Amil Alfred
Dinsio, 36, and Charlet Albert Mulligan,
38, for showing no remorse for their ac--
tions and n1aking no attempt to return
the stolen loot.
A third Ohio man convicted of the
crime, Phil!p Bruce Christopher. 31 , \\'iii
be sentenced on Dec. 4.
Federal investigators said the three
defendants may have been involved in
other bank burglaries In the past five
years. Officials said they found abou~
$30,000 in cash in a closet i n
Christopher's Cleveland !lome. Some bills
were traced to the Laguna Niguel rob-
bery and some to a $430,000 burglary in
Lordstown, Oh.io, officials said.
The trio was found guilty of con-
spiracy, bank burglary and bank lareeny
Oct. 'l'l, following a seven-week trial in·
volving the looting of 450 safe deposit
boxes.
The sentencing hearing, normally a
rou tine court procedure, had some
unusual aspects.
When the hearing opened .. Oinsio, a
pinball machine company owner. gave
the court a handwritten document ex-
pressing his dissatisfaction with hi! at-
torney. ViC'tor Sherman, and requested
he be allowed to represent himself.
Mulligan, an unemployed barber. made
a similar request against his attorney,
Ronald Minkin.
After a brief 1·~. Byrne granted the
motions but denied other pleas for a new
trial.
While asking for a new trial, Dinsio
charged that a key government witness.
Richard Gabrie1, was "a liar" and that
he and Mulligan had been "'framed " by
the FBI.
Gabriel was the last government pros-
ecution witness In the case who testified
that Dins.to admitted his par. in the
massive, "Mission Impossible" type
break-in while the two were jailed in Los
Angeles.
Rese11teneed
Richard Speck. convicted and
sentenced to death for the
1966 murders of eight nurses
ln Chicago, \vas resentcnced
toda y to 400 to 1.200 vears in
pri son in a move necessitated
by the Supreme Court ruling
against capital punishment.
Auto Accidents
Claim Two Lives
In County Area s
Two persons \lo'ere killed in Orange
County traffic accidents ?.f o n d a y ,
Coroner's Office spoke.smen reported.
Daryl 8. lljorth , 18. of 13332 Diamond
Head Drive. Tustin. die<: ?.fonday nig ht
after the motorcycle on which he was
riding collided with a car at Woodland
Drive and Bryan A venue in the Tustin
area.
Officers said the driver of the car, a 17-
year-0ld girl. made a l'!fl-hand turn Into
the path of Hjorth's cycle . The accident
is under investigatk>n.
Robert H. Trembath. 27. of Long
Beach, was killed wi1en his van-type
vehicle smashed Into the rear of a truck
on the San Diego Freeway, south of Seal
Beach Boulevard.
The Csllfomia Highway Patrol said
truck driver Joseph R. Campbell of Snnta
Ana had stopped on !he f~way because
of a stalled motorcycle .
Thieu Envoy
May Arrive
At Talks?
GIF·SUR-YVE'M'E, France <UPl 1 -
White House aide Henry A. Kiss..ingcr and
North Vietnamese nego li.:Jtors Le Due
Tho and Xuan Thuy me t today in !hi!'
vi llage outside Paris for !heir second
round of talks aimed at ending the Viet-
nam war.
The Hanoi negotiators drove up in lwo
black Citroen cars "'ilh a French
plainclothed police escort at 2:40 p.m.
(S:40 a.m. PSTl and Kissi nger arrived 15
minutes later, leading a convoy of some
30 newsmen who followed him 15 mil e.s
from Paris.
Today 's talks lasted 41".l hours . Kissi n·
ger aAd his assislants "'ere .~mi linug and
relaxed \\'hen they returned to Paris at
7:35 p.m. ! 10:35 a.m. PST L
The lwo sides entered a wh ite stucco
red-roofed \•ilia belonging to the French
Communist pa rty to begin thei r negotia-
tions.
Kissinf!er has said one more round or ·
negotiations "'ould be enough to \l."rap up
the erase-fire agreement. but there were ·
mounting indications from Saigon of
President NF:uyen Van Th i e u 's
dissatisfaction with the course of events.
There were hints that he might ( I 1
dispatch an envoy to Paris to look in on ·
the negotiations and f2) send a personnl
letter to President Nixon Of'C"e more out·
lining his opposition to certain tt!rms or
the agreement.
Kissinger arrived in a black Cadillac
embassy car and waved to some SO .
newsmen gathered by the wall around
th._ house . formerly owned by French
artist Fernand Leger.
The newsmen shouted question.~ but
Kissinger onl y smiled as he dro\•e
through nine-foot-hi gh green metal gates.
Wearing a gray suit and carrying a
'A'hite raincoat , he got out of his auto to
shake hands with \1ie1namese offi cial s.
1hen turned, smiling br ightly. and pointed
lo the milling journalists.
Kissinger had a uniformed police m1~
tnreycle escort of four men. along "'ilh
the netA'Smen who tailed him from tbc
Paris embassy in a cortegc "'hich brokr
through red traffic lights on the 'A'SY
here.
Light blazed in the villa behind "'hite
curtains as the meetings continued into
the evening.
Newsmen could see figures inskte the
house but ta II pine btts obscured thl!l
view.
Dozens of achoo! children carrying
books and gymnulum bags gathered
across the street after !Chool was out .
In just 2 years ..•
outselling every
European car
(except one)!
LOOK WHAT'S STANDA RD EQ UIPMENT ...
e RADIAL PLY TIRES e FHONT DISK BR A KES
e FRONT BU<.:KET SEATS e FU LL CARPETING
e R AC K AND PINION S'I'EE Rl-"G
SEE ONE . • . TRY ONE • • • BUY ONE , , , TODAY!
Romt 01 The New CU •• ,
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Better Booze
Than Bullets
ORA NGE COAST. WILD COAST'
Donald Goodell. a gentleman v.•ho resides
in ffuntingt on lfarbour, has been
reported as interested in annexing a
\Vorld War II artillery comn1and post to
the city of Hunlington Beach.
Goodell owns the old U.S. Anny em·
pla~ment which is on six or so acres of
property in collJlty territory southeast of
Los Patos Avenue.
What Goodell apparently v.·ants to do is
get some pre-ioning so he can turn the
surplus command post into a bar. He h;is
suggested to some parties that the bar
couJd "retain the historic flnvor" or its
\Vorld War II beginnings .
THE OLD CO~U\1AND post is pretty
big, v.;th some l.500 square feet of fl oor
space. "'alls or 10-foot reinforced con-
crete and a roof some 15 feel thick.
Oh yes, it is also all underground. Once
it Y.'M usro for growing mushrooms after
lilt v•ar. Later, it y.·as filled up with sand
and sealed off to avoid its use by ho boes,
hippies. Jo\'crs or other undesi rables.
\\'ell , in this day and age. I don'! know
If ti.Ir. Goodell y.•ill have to file nn
Environmental Impact Statement or not
on his proposal. ff he does, he might try
so methi ng li ke this :
"PROJECT: Conver t old artille ry com-
mand post into saloon. Positive impact
on environment. It is better fo serve
booze than bullets ... "
Anyy.•ay. one ne'•\."S report on ~lr.
Goodell's proposed project suggested that
the underground artillery headquarters
y.·as never used for its inlended purpose
of "defending against the rumored
Japanese attack and invasion. which
never occurred ... ·•
\VeU now, l consider that bit telling us
that the J apanese -invasion "never oc-
curred" as sort of being a gratuitous
footnote on history.
SOAlE PARTIES, however. \vhile
agreeing the Japanese never invaded our
region, might argue that the question af
y.·hether they ever "attacked " is open to
debate.
Long-time residents of our region
sometimes recall that at one point during
"'orld War IL one of those Japanese sub-
marines surfaced off Sanla Barbara and
lobbed a fe\V shells into the ail fi elds.
Other pe rsons who lived near defense
plants in the LA area swore that from
time-to-lime at night. antiaircraft bat·
teries would tear loose with barrages,
lighti ng the sky and sometimes dropping
scrap metal on nearby roofs.
I recall once that all us Civil De£ense
types were called out at mid--day in
Laguna Beach because of an ai r raid. Our
ai r raid siren had worked well in drills
up lo that vrry day but this time it
sounded like a gravel truck dumping its
load.
DESPITE TlllS, we <•ll reported to
headquaners and then stood out in the
middle of r orest Avenue trying to spot
the alleged lone Japanese plane tha t was
up there. If ii was. it "'as flying too high
for any of us tu sec ii. \Ve \\•crcn't too us-
ed to real ai r raids . This was obvious
because it "'as not considered prudent to
stand in the middle of the stre<>t during one.
All these rumors aside. no Japanese at-
tack was really ever confirmed along our
coastline. Thus it is unknown If Mr.
Goodell 's unde rground artillery com-
mand post ever came to any real use.
So perhaps it will now because an un-
derground tavern : a place for tinkling
glasses. laughte r and merriment.
The goverrunent thus could figu re its
effort wasn 't a total IO$s.
Tuesday, Novtmbtr 21 , 1972
Israel Claims Win • Ill
By United Pre11 lateroaUon.w.I
Israeli and Syrian tnnkJ, planes and
1H1illery fOl.Jght largcscale batlles along
thfi.r 25-mile Golan Heights cease-fi re
line today in the heaviest outbreak of
fighting since the 1967 Six Day Wa~.
An Israeli military spokesman 1n Tel
Aviv said the Israelis shot down six
Syrian ~11G2 1s in their greatest victory
si nce July 8, 1969, wh en they bagged
s1!ven without a loss. He said 14 Syrian
!<inks y.·ere knocked out by Israeli tanks
Jnd artillery in !he 10 hour battle that
(•nded at 6 p.m. (8 a.m. PST),
Two Phantom
Jets Downed
In Air War
SAIGON (AP ) -Two more American
Phantom jets have been lost in the air
\\"ar against North Vietnam, the U.S.
Command announced today. Two of the
fliers \1·ere re~cucd and IY.'O \Vere kill ed.
The losses raised to 124 the number of
American planes reported do,vned in
operations against the North since full-
sea!e bombing was resumed nearly eight
months ago. A total or 131 U.S. airmen
ha,·e been killed or captured in the
crashes. the U.S. Command sai d.
Oi\'E OF THE losses announ ced today
"'as a Navy F4 from the ca rrier Saratoga
that was hit by a surface-to-air missil e
just below the 20th parallel. The pilots
parachut ed into the Gu\£ or Tonkin east
of Thanh Hoa and a helicpoter rescued
them about 30 minutes la ter. They \.':ere
reported in good condition.
An Air Force F4 crashed just after
da'vn today 40 miles east of its base at
t.:dom. northeast Thailand and both
c:rewmen were killed. The Command said
it ,..,as retu rning from a mission over
North Vietnam, but the cause of the
crash was not known.
Monsoon rains limited U.S. fighter·
bombers who flew less than 50 strikes in
the North Vietnamese panhandle for the
fou rth successive day. But the high·
altitud e B52 bombers flew more than 30
strikes against targets in the panhandle .
and nearly 50 more just below the
demilitarized 1.one. in the central
highlands southwest or Pleiku and north
of Saigon .
TIIE B5h DROPPED nearly 1,000 tons
of explosives on stockpiles of war
materials in the panhandle awaiting ship-
ment into Sauth Vietnam to beat a cease-
fire. Hanoi charged that the bombs fell
on populaled areas and farms, "cau sing
n1any losses in lives and property to the
peo ple."
Ground action in South Vietnam in-
tensified as cease-fire negotiaton s con·
tinued in Paris.
Communis t forces shelled Oa Nang
before da wn and made a series of hit-
and.run attacks in the Saigon region.
Heavy fi ghting was reported for the fifth
successive day just south of the
demilitarized zone. and there was also
hard fightin g in the central highlands
below Pleiku .
Wlcks
'/ thought capital pun/$/menl
wn l»nn«I in this stllte!'
A Syrian military spokesman ln
Damascus said 14 Israeli tanks and five
artillery emplacements were destroyed
c.1nd two tsraell planes shot down ln the
battles that were tbe most seriou.s tn 'll
rnonths of Middle East cease-fire.
TllE BA'M'LE -THE second since
Nov. 9 -was st ill raging at night fall,
mllltary spokesman on both sides an-
nounced. The situation was so serious
that Israeli Defense Minister h1oshe
Dayan sped to the border area to lour -
army positions and civilian settlements.
The daylo"i balUe was touched of[
when lsracH war planes attacked a
Syrian anny position and three Arab
guerrilla bun ,.~ mUes Inside Syri'
In reprisal for guetrilla raldl acaJnst
Israeli ,.lllemeots tn the.occupied Golan
Heights. Syria ,.plied with anillery and
tanks and IsraeU artlllery ~ la!lks weot
into actJon. Syria sent up lts air force ol
Sovlet·made supersonic MIG21s and a
series of dogfights followed, the battle in-
tensifying during the day.
UPI oorrespqident Richard Gross in
Tel Av iv said communiques from head·
Golden Gate Rush
A surprise brief strike by mechanics wiped out bus service !r~m
Marin County for 7,000 riders to San Francisco Monday. A morning
monstrous traffic jam ensued . Loads of motorists brought their cars
into the Bay Area and the result is shown on the Golden Gate Bridge
as they tried to get home at 5:20 p.m.
Rifle Leads. to Suspect
In 2 Revenge Sl.ayings
KEN NETT SQUARE. Pa. f API -An-
cell Hamm , v.•ho ha s a series of prior
arrest!, was in jail today on charges that
he killed t~licemen. One of them
had arrested amm three times in the
past 13 moot .
Hamm, 28, as arraigned Monday
afternoon on two counts of murder and
was being held at Chester Count y Farms'
maximum security un it under $250,000
bond.
ST ... TE POLICE Commissioner Rocco
Urella said Hamm Was linked to the case
by a high powered Belgian huntillg rifle
found in a clump of brush two miles from
the scme c( the double shooting in this
rural Philadelphia community.
Urella, who indicated the motive for
the slaying was revenge, said, "The riOe
was the murder weapoo and this morning
(Monday) we linlled ll to the Hamm lam·
Uy."
Hamm is accmed of killing KeMett
Square patf()imen Richard Posey, 38, and
William Davis, 27, as they left a patrol
car behind the Pi1unicipal Building before
dawn last Wednesday. Eac h was felled
by a single bullet.
Davis, acco rding to police records. ar-'
rested Hamm on Oct. 21 , 1971 and Dec.
4. 1971 on charges of operating a motor
vehicle while his license was under sus-
pension. The charges laler were dismiss-
ed.
THE RECORDS also show Davis and
another officer arrested Hamm on Sept.
21 and charged him with assault and
battery, resisting arrest and motor
vehicle charges. The Olester County
grand jury is to consider the case Nov.
28.
Heavy Snow Ices Plains
Hamm wu taken into custody in a
raid on his home here. Twenty-five police-
men wearing bulletproof vests and carry-
ing high powered rifles blocked oll lhe
area around the house shortly before
noon.
Ure Ila t~n shouted, "State Police,
you 're und er "rrest,'' drew his revolver
Rnd burst through the door.
linmm was led from the house barefoot
and lri dungarees.
)
Cloudy, Cool Acros.~ Nation Exce1)t State, Florida
IOI \.CK A ..... h W""""•1. ll'lt tlh·•1 lllOft MOl!fh" ..... ni.
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l{am m, in addition to other run-ins
with the Ja\v, also was arrested last
Wednesday, lht afternoon of the crime.
after police raidl'(f hi s home and con-
f!M:a ted 3S weapon.!. He \V8S Chafged with
tr11fficking in machine guns and viola ting
the firearms act and released on $1 .000
ball . according to Police.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
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Syrian Battle·
quarters tt~ed the only Israeli losses
tn the day· fightinr aloog a 2;.mile
front of the olan Heigh ts were two
cjvilians wounded in a Syrian shelling at-
tack.
A MlUTAR.Y spoke11man said two of
the M1G2l.! were downed in a midaf·
temoon dogtight and the four others as a
fonnation of Syrian planes attempte<J to
attack Israeli positions on the occupied
heights.
"All Israeli planes returned safely,''
the &MOUUcement said. Syria also
reported all of ils planes returned satel.9.
There wu no immediate word en
whether any Syrian bombs had fallen on
lsraeJi positions, the spokesman said.
1be Syrian air raJd came as
artillerymen on both sides of the line
slugged it out along the battle front, with
tanks bluing away into each other's
ranks.
UPI con-espondent John Sims, in
Bei rut, said Dam81CUS Radio rtported
balUes the entire length ol the cease.fire
line wllh a military spokesman ,.porting
two Israeli warplanes shpt down by
Syrian alreraft and ground fire.
11IE FIGHTING followed the Nov. 9
pattern of clashes between the two coun·
tries. The military spokesman quoted by
Damascus radJo, said today's cla shes
started after Israeli air attacks on a
Syrian army border post at 9 a.m. ( 11
p.m. PST) and the bombardment of
'"areas inhabited by , civili ans in the area
SYllA
0 JORDAN .......... ~
Ul"I Tt_.,..
ISRAELI AIR ATTACKS
Four Syri1n Po1ltion1 Hit
of Jinenn" an' hour and a hall later.
i·1n retaliation to the Israeli air ag·
gressions of this morning our heavy
artillery bombarded enemy positions in
, the Mansoura and Jibbln areas of the ·
Northern and Southern sectors ol the
front Our fire lnfllcled direct btta on
enemy targets," the spokesman aa!d.
R<porting on the doglighla, the Syrian 1 spokesman said 16 planes from each side 1 were involved In an aerial battle over the
Golan Heights at l p.m. (3 a.m. PST). l
"ON E ISRAELI warpl ane wa! shot J
down and was seen falling in names west 1
of al Khunsieh, near .the cease-fire line," J
the spokesman said. r
Buying Power Dips I
' I
October Prices Get Push 1
I ' ' From Clothes, Used Cars .:
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Higher prices
for clothing, used cars and health in·
surance pushed the cost of llvlng up 0.3
percent in October, the government
re parted today.
At the same ti me , the purchasing
power of the average wage earner took
its fi rst dip in five months.
However, the Labor Department's
Bureau al Labor Statistics said prices
( IN SHORT... ) ----------declined last month for beef, some Cresh
fru its and vegetables and gasoline.
The Consumer Price Index for October
stood at 3.4 percent over October, 1971.
The 0.3 percent increase in the CPI last
month was less than a 0:4 percent ad-
vance in September and about average
over the past year.
e Gray Re•tlng
NEW LONOOr-1, Conn. (AP ) -L.
Patrick Gray, the acting director of the
FBI has been hospitalized for a possible
intestinal obstruction, but doctors say
fhere are no plans to operate at this
time.
Gray was t a k e n to Lawrence Me-
morial Hospital Sunday night after
complaining of abdominal pains while at
his home in Stonington, Conn.
A spokesman for the hospital said Mon-
day night that Gray was in satisfa ctory
condition and resting comfortably.
e We•twood Softens
WASHINGTON (U PI) -Democralic
National Chairman Jean Westwood ap-
parently ha s softened her earlier position
that she would fight efforts to remove
her by party leaders distressed by the
landslide loss of presidential candidate
George McGovern.
The Utah woman, handpicked by
r..1cGovern for the party post after he
won the Democratic nomination last
summer, said Monday that her future as
chairman "is subordinate to con-
siderations about the futw:e of the par-
ty."
For two weeks following McGovern's
trouncing by President Nixon, Mrs.
Westwood had been saying that she
would light for her job and would not
serve as a "scapegoat" for McGovern's
Amarillo Slim
Begins 4th Ride
On Wild River
MIDDLE FORK OF THE SALMON
RIVER, Idaho (AP) -World champion
poker player Amarillo Slim, intent on
laming one of Idaho's wildest riven, was
set today for his fourth ride on the way
10 131.000.
T. A. Preston Jr., nicknamed' Amarillo
SJlm. spent Monchay night e1mping along
the river more thin halfway to the
Salmon RJver.
Tbe Salmon ls called the River of No
Return, bul the Mlddlt Fork ls conskl-
ettd by Idahoans a HtUe """'1<r lo run ,
.,peclally in !ale fall and winter. ()b.
Jentn at the FIYint! B llancb, Sllm's
launcblni point last Sat~. reported
lhll Slim wu l(lO!ted ln>m a hellcop!er
more than hill·..., down the 1trwn's
gorge.
Slim, under tho tmns ol tho bet which
he made with -• 11mbling cronies, must makt the run •Wilh only the help or river runner Jere Chapman of Boise.
Federal re,ulallons prohlbll a h<llco(>
ter operatln1 out of the Flying B Ranth
from landtn1 In the primitive ,,.. of
ee:ntraJ Idaho. Its crew picks up mes-
s.ages and film from the rafts ln a bucket
attached to 1 Line.
defeat. But in her Monday statement she
said. it was the safety ·or the party's
reform rules that she was interested in.
e Panel Named
BATON ROUGE, La. (UPI) -A
biracial state commission was named
Monday to find out how two black stu--
dents at Southern Unlverslty were tilled
during a showdown with poliCi! Thurs:lay.
The FBl has already begun its own, sep--'
arate investigation of the incident.
"They already have 40 FBI people in
here _ investigating," said Sheriff Al
Amiss. "They're going to talk to·
everyone involved."
Louisiana Attorney General William ,
Guste, saying the state's "image and aelC
respect" were at stake, announced the
12-man state commission, which Includes
two students.
e Pe...,. Vlolence
BUENOS AIRES (UPI) -A military
patrol fired:;.btto demonstrators Monday
as they tried to approach a luxury
restaurant where former president Juan
D. Peron wai conferring with about 70
political leaders on the future of the
country be ruJ.ed for 10 years.
A police spokesman said one civilian
and one policeman were wounded in the
clash, the first such violence since Peron
ended 17 years exile last Friday.
Walter Cronkite
Out of Hospiud
NEW YORK (UPI) -Wailer Cronkite,
managing editor of CBS News, un-
derwent surgery last week for removal or
a benign throat ,tumor, the network said
Monday.
A CBS news spokesman said Cronkite,
56, was resting at home on the advice of
his doctor and ''the only e!fect or the
surgery is some temporary hoarseness.''
...._
Leflb Clleer
Scnalor IVlUll1!1 PrOl<ltllre (D·
Wisc.) leads children in a
Green Bay Packers football
chee r at S~ M•tlhews School,
O.a.kcreeJc:. Proxmire is on a
l ,200 mile hike through wr .. comm to wi n future \'Oles.
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Orange Coast
EDITION
Today's Flaal
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 65, NO. 326, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1972 N TEN CENTS
Gen. MacArthur Fired •tor Paniclaing~
NEW YOHK (UPI) -President Harry
S Truman fired Gen. Douglu MaoArtl!Jr
as U.S. cooun:ander ln Korea ln 1961
because be felt MacArthur "sort of
panicked," Truman's, daughter said ~ day.
Margar.t Truman Daolel 1 a I d her
father concluded that 'things were too
ahally" !or Allied forees at the time he
decided to recall MacArthur.
This took place April 11, 1151, and set
ott a storm of protest among backers of
the World War U hero.
Mrs. Daniel aaid her lather foresaw
that his decisloo would be unpopular, and
chose to say litUe or nothing more about
his action in the days and weeks that
followed, not interfering iD a big welcome
borne !0< MJoArthur.
MacArthur was relieved as U.S. com·
mander art.. tbreatenlng !ioth ground
and air attacU in malnlanC: China, in
pursuit of Ollneae forces who aided
North Korea.
CLAMMER$ CLAMMING IN SHALLOW WATERS OFF NEWPORT
Extreme Low Tides Bring Out Lovers of Seafood Delicacy
Cla111s Galore
'Best' Coast Season Possible
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
Of tllt 01Hy Piiot lteff
Like a rag-tag anny, scores of clam-
diggers have descended on Newport
Beach sands to enjoy what experts are
calling the best clamming conditions in
recent memory.
The clammers are a motley crew,
di"essed in everything from soggy jeans,
ba: c feet and sweatshirts to hip boots and
v1etsuits.
They are equipped with a wide variety
of too~lncludlng hoes, shovels, pitch-
forks and bare hands in some cases -
and a ~inbow of brightly-colored buckets
to store their take of oceM delicacies.
1be clarnmers' sole purpose for wading
through chilly surf and grubbing in the
sand " the capture of hard-shelled Pismo
clams at least fou r &i\d a half inches in
~meter, the legal minimwn size.
"None of u.s can remember a year
when the clamming conditions were so'
perfect," said Llleguard Logan Lockabey
as he watched lhe crowds or clammers
poke into the sand In hopes ol hitting
something other than a rock.
more lhan seven feet -followed by ex-
treme negative low tides have exposed
huge stretches of sand nonnally covered
by pounding waves.
One clammer sloshing around in knce-
cieep water said some clams actually
were lying out on the beach when he
started digging around noon Monday.
"I got my limit in no time," he
shouted.
California Fish and Game Department
wardens have been making regular visits
to Newport Beach the past. several days
looking for people with too many clams
or clams that are too small.
Wart:eo Chet Gall said people already
have been caught with clams under the
legal Siu.
"If an undeni.7.ed clam is caught, it
theoretically bas to go back in the hole it
came from." GalJ said. ''But usually you
can just push it back into the sand
anywhere."
Gall said a $3 clamming license is re-
l See CLAMJ\IJNG, Page l i
Monopol" Cited
J\.!acArthur made the threats without
clearing statements with Washington, as
Truman bad ordereo.
Mrs. Daniel, who bas written a book
about her father, was interviewed on the
NBC-TV Today Show.
Mrs. Daniel said of her father's view of
MacArthur's unauthorized statements:
"His reaction was that be (MacArthur)
was a man who sort of panicked. All of
his predictions about the Far East, and
Korea, were simply wrong . . . He
(Truman) thought things were too
shaky."
MacArthur's threats about a China in-
vasion, wbl.cb Truman feared Would
greatly widen the Korean conflict, came
J\.iarch 25, 1951, 17 days before his
removal and four months before a cease-
fire and a start of negotiations to end the
war.
Mrs. Daniel also was asked iI Truman
had any second thoughts about ordering
the firs t use of an atomic bomb in
\varfare -the Hiroshima bombing in
l!MS.
"No." she replied . "Be had no second
thoughts ~use It did save hundreds of
thousands of American lives."
Mrs. Daniel had access to some
hitherto unpu blished material, from
Truman's private records, in writing her
book, titled simply "Harry S Truman."
Ao excerpt was pubUshed Sunday by
Life M.::.gazine in which Mrs. Daniel said
her father agreed to become Franklin D.
Roosevelt's n.tMing mate in 1944 ooly
after heavy pressure from Roosevelt and
others.
She said Truman felt Roosevelt would
die in office, meaning he wouJd succeed
Roosevelt -and that he did not want to
enter the White House "through the back
door."
Newport Violated Code?
Conflict of Interests Seen in Versailles Deal
By L. PETER RRIEG
Of Ille o.lh' Pllet Sleff
Newport Beach attorney Roy B. Wool-
sey said Monday that city councilmen
may face conflict of interest charges un-
less they cancel a deal they made to
settle a $12.7 million suit filed against
them by the developer of the controver-
sial Versailles apartment project.
In letters mailed to councilmen and at-
torney Thomas Peckenpaugh who repre-
sents Versailles developer Donald Scholz,
Harbor Unit
May Tackle
Coastal Law
Directors of the Newport Harbor
Chamber o! commerce agreed Monday
to start J dosaier . on tbe Proble!lll
created by Calllonda'• new t'OUlal pro-
tection faw with an eye toward mounting
a statewide initiative campaign against it
in two years.
They indicated the new effort would be
an extension of their unsuccessful drive
to defeat Proposition 2Q earlier this
month.
"We knew we were fighting a Josing
battle when we started working against
thb thing," said Richard Stevens,
longtime Balboa Bay Club executive and
one of the chamber directors who
spearheaded a last.-Oitcb c a m p a i g n
against Proposition 20. 1
"I've still heard nothing that changes
our original belief that this thing will be
a disastrous curb on sane development
aod a costly new layer of government."
he said. "God help us and God help those
new regional commissions."
Approval of the measure means six
regional agencies will be established
"'hich will have veto power over any
development within a five-mile-wide strip
or California's coastline.
Any project within 1,000 yards of any
w.:.terway will have to be scrutinized by
1:1e regional panel in addition to any ac-
tion by local agencies.
Dr. Nolan Frizzelle, who worked with
,..Stevens to rally forces opposed to the
measure, said the chamber could set up
a committee to log all the ill effects of
-the propOs:ition over the next few yean.
"Maybe then we can have enough
material to start an initiative of our own.
in two years, to undo what's been done .''
FriuelJe .said.
Aieanwhile, directors said they will
look for some way the chamber can
assist city officials In deallne with the
new rules and regulations.
Woolsey said the arrangement violates a
9ectiOD or the state Government Code.
"Sec tion 1090 or the c<xle provides th.at
members of the Legislature and city
officers or employes shall not be fin-
ancially interested in any contract made
by them in their official capacity," Wool-
sey .said.
Woolsey, once a council candidate,
claims councilmen became "financially
interested" in the project by virtue of the
fact that Peckenpaugh had threatened
el'!ch of them wit h federal suits that could
have meant personal lines.
Peckenpaugh had delivered a sample
copy of the federal complaint-which was
never filed -to city attorney Dennis
o·Neil before councilmen met in special
session Nov. I and voted unanimously to
settle the developer's density lawsuit.
In the threatened federal action Scholz
was contending that councilmen were vi-
olating his civil rights by not allowing
him to build on his property.
Living Costs Creep Up
Residents of Orange County were told today that the cost of living con-
tinued its upward climb during October, registering a one-tenth of ooe percent
rise.
THE U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics said the increase match~ that of
Los Angeles County. Higher transportation costs were blamed for the rise in
both counties. ·
The rate of increase over the 12 months ending Oct. 31 was 3.1 percent,
slightly Lower than the previous 12-month period.
Tbe October lllcreue pushed u.e. coolUD1er' ind9: to a new hl,gh this year
at W.9. This means that consumers spent $12.39 for goods and services in
October that -f!O In 11187.
A BUREAU .spokesman said transportation costs rose rour-teoths or one
percent during October. primarily because of higher prices for used can, auto
financing and auto parts. Gasoline prices remained at record high levels dur-
ing October, the sJ>Okcsman said.
Food costs increased 0.1 percent over the month, wh.ilc health and recrea-
tion costs climbed 0.2 percent.
HOUSING costs fell 0.1 percent, chieny because of declines in home pur-
chase prices and financing charges.
Planners in SD Oppose
Jetport at Pendleton
An innuential plaMing council in San
Diego County Monda y come out strongly
against proposals ror an intematlona l
jetport et Camp Pendleton -adding i ~
name to a growing list.
The group, the San Diego Com-
PANEL CANCELS
PARKS MEETING
The Newport Beach P ' r k s,
Beaches and Recreation Commis-
1ion meeting tcheduled for tonight
:at city ball has been canceled ror
lack of a quorum. PBR Dlrcctor
Cal Stewart said todey.
The next meeting of the commis·
don will be held two weeks rrom
:onlght. C.mmluioners are expect-
ed to discuss ftdditlons and revi·
dons of the proposed master plan of
bicyc le trails In the city.
pret-.ensive P I an n I n g Organiz.aUon.
rer.resentlng 13 San Diego County c.ltits
aJ well ns the county, stated that Camp
Pendleton !lhould remain u a buffer :r.one
between Los Angeles and Oran1e coun-
ties to the north and urbaniud areas to
the south.
Pendleton. the organization s 1 I tJ •
"should rtmaln as It Is to accommodate
military ocllvitJe1 which may othcrwlse
come Into increasing conflict with urban
Inn<: uses."
The rtsolutlon e:nactM Monday . .s
most govmunental agenclH in 1Uectlng
northern San Diego County l&llnlt
Orange C:OOnty and the S o u t h e rn
Caljfomia AMociaUon of Governments
iSCAG I, which both are actively punu-
Jng 1 tennlnal 10mtwhttt on the 25,00J
acre military rettrvatlon.
Supervl""' Chairman Ronald (;.uptts,
of Newport Beach, 1ook the latest •
position phliooophlcaliy.
Ca~pers aide Paul White p kj 11 wu
the Snn Diego 1roup'1 "prcroffatlve Ill
make such ,,. decision ."
lie added Iha! tht lland "v.'Ollld ha..,e
oo crrect on our cfforu 10 obt.aln un
airport at Camp Pendle1on:·
The latcsi official atllon Against the>
Jtlport dip the trenches dctper in a b;iit.
Ile which could blJt for years.
While agreeing to settle the original
suit, councilmen have since delayed a~
proval of the apartments adjacent to
Hoag Memorial Hospital in a renewed
effort to reduce the dwelling unit den~ity.
"If the contract i! not cancelled,"
Woolsey said, "any pennits issued for
Versailles will be attacked in court along
with the contract."
City attorney Dennis O'Neil this morn-
ing declined comment on the letter rrom
(See CONFLICT, Page ZI
Loss in Blaze
In Balboa Set
At $100,000
Fire in the home of a Balboa lnterior
de~..irator Monday night caused damage
t~ art objects and rumtshings reportedly
valued at more than JI00,000.
A preliminary Newport Beach Fire
Department esllmate of a $20,000 loss in
the bedroom blaze. believed caUJed by a
cigarette. is "extrem(!Jy low." said
1bomas Evan11, owner of the ocea n front
home at 1213 E. Balboa Blvd.
fie claims the loss tops $100,000.
F'lre a.farshal W. C. ''Bill" Noller said
this morning be intends to stick 10 his
original estimate of the damqe.
"He (Evans ) bad thr<!e palntln&• in one
closet and th@y weren't c:orllumed,"
Noller said.
"And there •·ere some bronze 1rt ob-
,tfctl that wem1 'l damaged at all ao 1
don't know where he get.I the big loss."
Noller said.
"But I can't disprove the value he puts
on I hose pictures," Noller Jdded.
Evans said he and hjs wife were in bed
w:.lchJng the P.fonday night televised
football game when they smelled smoke
and diJCOvered the ra~lng fire In tt'K-
dov.mt.a.J.rs bedroom. Evans said the
bedroom is OC'CUpied by hi!! son during
breaks from college.
''\\1e ran out of there as ra!t as "'e
could and I wa.• .,_,·earing nothln& but a
bathrobe.'' Evans said.
Evans, who owns a shop called
Interiors by Tomi. said the heat and
smoke from the doWNtalrs fln:! did more
damage upstairs than at the point of the
for ·
"All !he windows upstalrt were popped
out and oil palnllng.s on the wall Wtte
compleltly destroyed.'' Ev•ns ukt. "'lbe
nW>St valuable palnlin& dtltt'O)'tld wu •
IUOO land><ape."
Evan' 11ld a number of palnllnp
IS.. f'IRE. ..... II
0r .. ,.
.......
l.ockabey said the heavy surf of a
montb ago piled up a huge sandbar
around the Newport Pier and the clam
populatlon boomed.
He alao aaid utttme hlgb tides Air Cal Merger Opposed
~lany northern San Ditgo County cilie•
ISft: Pt:t<i:Ol.£TON, P•se ZI
Vic tirn Suing Ci ty
The W<ather outlook Int Wed,,...
day is ccnllnu..i IUMY okJot with
slightly warmer ttmpttturet. ac-
cording to the wuther M'Ylce. l!Jiha ,, the bucbot, around •
riling to 1$ Inland. i-. ton1cJiJ -· No Collection
For Thursday
n.m '11'111 he no refuse collectron
In Newport Beach Thunday, Jue
M,__ general """'°" dlree-
tor. llld tod.<y. """°"' -truh Is nonn.aUy plcl<ed up "'
Tbunday Wiii not bAvt a colledJoa '"""'Monday. • Cll)' Hall wlll be closed bocJI
Tbu_nda, and FHdOy"' ~
of 'l'lllNrCivq:
•
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Tho &Ute
Public Utilltlet COmmllslon't &tall""""'
ocl stlOOllY urges !hat the PUC deny •f>'
proval al the ~ """" of Pacific
Soutbws AlrllnH aod Air C.Ufomla.
PSA'o acquloltlon of Air Cal woold
booot PSA't lhan! of lntrUtal• Cal~omla
air -m to II pertent ond thettbf clearly crute a DlOllOpOl)', uld Soocl I(.
Carttt. &tall .,.._!.
He aald PSA11 prcsmt lhntt cl eaJl-
forula commuter air 1ervice ii 10 pc,...
cenL
Caner'• stall brio! In the PUC hearing
""tbot loiDI ~ bJ PSA and Air
Cal 1or the .......,. -oo nr. toc1ay.
PSA -.Id P01 '1!.4 mlllloo f°" aboul
152.000 lham al Air Cal stoci.
Carttr aaid the PUC could approv•
the merg~ under state l1w only With 1
showing that Air Cal faced "imminent
00.lnm !alluro" and that Ihm ara DO
oehu~...-n.
lie dtclAred the eviden<'o lhowtd lhal
Air CaJ, f-Jn 1117, "DOW hal tumed
the -lo pR(ltallillty." "'Ille OYldmce II dlot that Air Cal't
future llu-....,. loolled-bl'lth,.r.,'-' he
ukl. "?h!rt bu been no ft>win& ol
Imminent butinHI !Jlllure. There has
bem DO tbowln( that oeher purdwen
cannot be fowM["
Prmdent Phllllp A. Toft or w ... 1a~
Calllomla COrp., --" _,
-
After ewport Crash
A Sin )o'rlmcdro '""'"40 •ho cblms
W w11 "'Daly ln}urtd In a 11"'0<lr
roll-In Newport Beldl July I hat
IUtd lbe eJty and one of ltl rmployes for
SJS0.000.
Mr-. lllrl>iln a.q Palton ~ In
INSIDE TODA 11'
Chllf .. tn.a hlclod«I fGtJI<.
INl'ke ~lll oltd TnMSH• roe-"'°" chilL TM ttPtMr too1 /rotn
Colorado, bw' llaal K!0.111 't ,,._,
poi1t1 of th• ri.r1JI "'"'"°' 1 .. r,..,. na11aaol ClliJI Appr«iltioft S•
NI~. II -t"4 h...._, I• h•'P"""· S.c rtoty °" ~ JI.
htt Oranp eo.mty S..perlor Coun octloo ~
lhll 'l1iomaa ftkhl.rd Sle-wart WU ~
mponalble for the collilloo, al JU wlllc::ci:i'1e:--t-<i.,iii,.•,,
with her IUto It the lnlenectkln ti =----
nrutol Str8t aod Jambone no.d. Mn. ..,"' .,.,..
PaUoo cl.tlm1 Uv1t htt I n J u r I e , =., 1
-11al<d ......,.., hoopltaJ .... -rnedlcal lrtat--.
I
'I
I
I
I
TuesdlJ, "°""'* 21, 1972
DAILY P'ILOT $!1H l"Mle
SUCCUMBS AT 66
Bilbo~ Druggist Gunderson
Services Set
For Drzi ggist
Gunderson
Graveside servi ces \~·ill be held
\V('dncsday for long-ti zne r a 1 b o a
pharmacist Donald Gunderson \\'ho died
Saturday at !he age of 66.
~tr. Gunderson. who "'SS a native or
lo\\a. came 10 Balboa in 1934. In 1940, he
opened Gunderson Drug Company and
Opt'!rated the pharmacy until shortly
before his dea th.
During his stay in Balboa, Mr. Gun-
derson became a .,.,,ell -known figure. He
\1·as an active member of the Balboa
Jmprovement Association.
One of his contemporwies, Phil
Dillman of Dillman's Re s tau rant,
rMlembers Mr. Gunderson as a man
\\'ho liked to collect things , particularly
antique drug s!ore paraphernalia and
decoy ducks. "though he wasn't a real
.avid hunter," Dillman said.
r-.~r. Gunderson is survived by his wife.
Georgia. of the family ho me at 1703
Ocean Blvd.; a daughter Dona Ferry: a
brother. George Gunderson of Long
_Beach. a sister, Gertru de Strong of Iowa,
and a granddaughter.
Services will be conducted at 10 :30
a.m. at Pacific View Memorial Park.
Corona del Mar.
The family suggests memorial tributes
in lhe form of contributions to the Hoag
/.lemorial Hospital Cancer Wing.
Funeral Slated
For Mrs. Kier
Who Died at 56
Private funera l services will be held
Wednesday for Mary Elizabet'.1 Kier. wife
of th e manager of the Newport Harbor
Yacht Club, who died Saturday.
Mrs. Kier. who was 56 years old , had
lived in Corona del Mar for 11 years.
She is survived by her husband T~omas M. Kier. a daughter, Mary Ali~
Kier and a son Thomas M. Kier. Jr., all
of the family home at 1315 Bonnie Doone
Terrace; another daughter , Mrs. Ray·
mond Rose, of San Diego; her father.
Sylvester L. LeChasse, of Santa Ana and
a brother Sylvester L. LeChasse, of Seat·
ti e.
The family suggests memorial con·
tributions to the Southem California Club
Managers Association Charity Fund, 340
N. t.1aple Drive. Beverly !·!ills, 90210.
Suspect's Kin Slain
WOODLAND IAP J -A Texas man has
been booked for investigation nf murder
after the body of hls brolher was found in
a blood-spattered West Sacramento
motel room. Yolo Count y deputies Iden-
tified the victim as Jack Orville Whil·
beck. 38, of San Antonio, Tex .. found late
Sunday. Officers booked hls brother,
Donal Ray Whitbeck, 36.
01.t.N•I COAST N
DAILY PILOT
Tht Or .... Coll! O°"ILY PILOT. wll!I ~
h cornbl!Wd fll• N•ws·Pr.t.\. 11 PUbllWltd by
""-Or•noe a.11 1Jv11-11,111f!Q c~ny. ~
nt• tdllklf'lt .,. 11111111\l'IM, Mond.iy 111~11
f"rtlNy, for CO.I• Mt1•. N""°'t h t-ell.,
Hlll'lt1119ton Br.tell/Fout1rtl11 ""''-Y. L•911"8
BNQI. lrv.,,.ls.«llfbl(ll; ...-$tn C""'*'le/
'J.1n JIHln (t pl""'"" #.. 1n..9•~ r119ion~1
tdll'-n h putiUtl'ltd Utllr91~ .ind $11"°~''·
f"-prlntlJ14I PUbll1lll111J Plllll 11 ti l ll) Wt>!
~1 SitMI, C•I• Mt.a. C.1!110tn1•, t1111,
Jlobtrt N. Wttd
.. rttlf+nl Ind P1111l1VI ..
J•tle R. Curlty
Vic. ,,.,ldtnl tl'llll ~nor•I Ml~
lhoin11 kttYll .....
Tltoint1 A. Mvrplriit10
M•N9lfl9 fdl""
L '''*' krio9 .,...,.... ~ Chy fdl""
... ., ........ Offlu
JJJJ New,.rt lo11 l1v11d
Mlflhlt M4m11 ,.0 . I•• 1171, t266.J --°"' .. Mall: a W...t .. ., Str"'1 U..-11Md11 nt ~I • .._
"-"''"""' .. Kiil 1"1l IMdl IOvltvt•• W OiLll tMi as Nl'1tl 11 CllTllnt "Ml
•
Park Change Delayed
U.S. Officials Cite Mile Square 'Reservations'
By JACK BROBACK
Of fllM Deir, f'I~ Stotl
Deedin g of the 465-i.lcre ~-Ille Square
Regional Park property to Orange Coun-
ty has been indefinit ely postponed and
federal officials are giving It thorough
study because of recent publicity .
Supervisor David L. Baker relumed
~fonday from a meeting In Washington
D.C. with beads of three federal agen·
cies. He said there were "strong reserva·
llons.. on the part of some officials
because of the bribe ry scandal 311d
subsequent po I i I i c a I advertisemcnls
cnticiz.ing the county ·s development of
lhe property placed by t .. irst District
Supervisor Robert Battin.
Battin and Baker have clashed several
times over the Mile Square matter.
The park in Fountain Valley wa s
formerlv in Baker's second district and
more than five years ago he spearheaded
negotiations with the federal governmen t
for use of the land surrounding the
~larines' helicopter practice field for a
regional park.
He achieved a long tenn lease of the
land to the county and iL\\'RS to be deed -
l'd outright by the Federal government
until the recent odious discussions.
Plans had been made by the federal
government to tum over the 456 acres to
the co unty on last Oct. 24. But those
plans were delayed \\'hen the bribery
scandal involving l'>'"'o Westminster city
officials over temporary ag ricultural
leases on lhe property surfaced.
Former mayor and Councilman Derek
~1c\\rtlinney and Planning Commissioner
Tad Fujita have been indicted by the
Orange County Grand Jury on charges o(
trying to "shake down" George Mura i,
\\·t:~ leases 213 .::icres for fanning
vegetables.
The alleged bribe was to be paid in the
form of a $10,000 campaigri contri bution
IC\ Battin's re-election campaign.
Baker previously stated that he had
t.een able to allay the fears of federal
government officials that the bribery
scar.Jal might cloud the transfer but new
fea rs arose ove r an advertisement placed
by Battin just before the Nov. 7 election
alltglng that the colmty bad plans IO .. u
some of the property to developers for
ho1ne or apartment building.
Battin also charged that the entire park
-230 ams have been developed into a
golf course, picnic areas, fi shing lakes
and other facilities by the county -
sbould be planted and devc ted to recrea·
tional use at once.
Terms of the leaSe with the federal
gove rnment call for use of developed
acreage by farmers to keep down the
dust and v.·eeds until the county has the
1noney to complete thf. development.
Revenue from t h e farming ventures is
shared by the county and the U.S.
government .
Baker said Monday that he had receiv-
ed the approval of the land grant from
Dr. Robert Kupperman, administrator of
the federal Le1acy of Parks program
and from James Watt, director of the
Bureau of Outdoor Recreation.
Bui Darrell Trent, chairman of the
Federal Land Review Commission, was
hestltant about the propriety of the grant
in view or the bad publicity.
Baker said that a decision on the
turnover can be expected in the next 30
to 40 days. "The federal officials may
decide to deed to the county only the 230
acres upon which development ls com-
pleted,,. Baker reported.
The supervisor said rederal official s
are concerned over anything which might
cause a negative reaction. The Legacy of
Parks program is one of President Nix·
on's top projects and the officials fear
any adverse publicity might reflect on
their boss. the President.
Anaheitn Officials
Jury Won't Indict After
Study of Land Dealings
After a three-month investigation of
the land dealings of the Anaheim city
manager and public works director. the
Orange County Grand Jury will not issue
an indictment for state or city ordinance
violations.
In a letter sent to the Anaheim ci ty at·
tomey, jury foreman Otto M. Schmidlen
said !here was enough evidence of mis-
conduct to recommend "the Anaheim
City Council conduct a thorough probe''
into the possible violation of the City
Charter by City Manager Keith Murdoch
and Public Works Director Thornton
Piersall.
The two men's land dealings were first
detailed in June in a Los Angeles Times
article \\'hich alleged the men were able
to realize substantial profits from their
prior knowledge of city projects.
In a letter dated Nov. 16. Schmidlen
noted "there are sufficient questions
regarding the ethical conduct of ltfr.
Keith Murdoch and hf.a.rs. Thornton
Piersall to warrant a thorough in-
vestigation by the city of Anaheim into
possible violations."
He said the probe should be undertaken
by the city attorney, or should he refuse,
by the state attorney general DAILY PILOT SIMI .......
FIREMEN LOOK FOR CAUSE OF BLAZE IN BURNED OUT ROOM
Couple LoMs Valuable Art in 81lbo1 Fire Monday Night
Newport Delnys Action
The Grand Jury investigation, whi ch
was requested by City Councilman
William J . Thom, was conducted by the
District Attorney's staff and covered
Murdoch's and Piersall's land deals over
a three-year period.
"The investigation reveaJed no dispute
~ith the fa ct! set forth in the !.<ls
Angeles Times article that Mr. lt1urdoch
and Mr. Piersall did have financial in-
terests in transactions copsidered by the
Anaheim City Council and that they did
not publicly disclose their financial in-
terests at any time ," Schmidlen's letter
stated.
Habeas Corpus
Petition Denied
To Newsman F{lrr
FromPage..J
FIRE ...
On Limitation of Cats
Newport Beach councilmen t.1onday
night got a glimpse at what the next ma·
jor controversy in their city is going to
bt like and promptly put off for three
weeks any consideration of an ordinance
aimed at controlling the number of cats
people can keep in their homes.
Unable lo agree on what a proposed
Fro1n Pagel
PENDLETON • • •
have form ally opposed Caspers' sug.
gestions.
San Clemente thus fa r is the only
Oruige County city to officially condemn
the plan.
The ~tarine Corps has opposed the con-
cept for years and in its most recent an-
nouncements has said tha t the Corps ha s
not chang:!d its opinion over the pro-
posals lo use Pendleton lands for a
modem-concept tenninal. M i 11 t a r y
!raini ng, the Corps has said. would be
drastically jeopardized If civilian jets
were allowed to use Pendleton acrea,e.
Caspers has insisted that the ternunal
could blend with military uses of the
base.
He stressed that prelimlno.ry concepts
call for onl y the 1nstallatlon of runways
and minor support facilities -that the
regular busine11s support complexes
(motels, restaurant! and the like) woulJ
be located elsewhere.
h1odern rapid transit, he added , would
be developed to move \)8Sllengers to and
from a Pendleton terminal.
So far , no specific acreages have bttn
suggested by advocates of the Pendleton
proPQS81.
But one sugges ted area , a canyon aoutb
of San Mateo Canyon, would be only a
few miles from the southerly city limit.I
of San Clemente.
Still anothe r, a flat terrace area on the
southerly stretches of the base, wou ld
bri ng the jets to within a few miles of
Oceanside.
Critics have argued that both cities
would suffer from oolse and other
nuisa nces, no matter which site wa1 US·
c.d.
Neiv port Okays
Sun& of $2,500
To Pay Ra1igers
Ii Orange County and California's Fish
and Game Department wtll kick In their
!:hare or the cost, Newport Beach will
hire range r! to p&lrol thct Corona de.I ~tar
~1ar1nc PrE!Sf'rve 11t Uttle Corona t3cach
in lhe near future.
Coun<'ilmt'n f\tondny night authortied a
$2,600 expenditure. one.third the total
l'Ollt, for lhree part-Ume rangers to
'ol'atch out for starfish pilferera.
Councilmen were enthu!llastlc 1bout Cl·
ty Manaaer Robert t.. Wynn'a. proposal.
Wynn stressed the rangen would be
there for tducatlnn purposet 811 nfueh as
cnfotttment purpl)ljes.
They wtll work stven days ' week dur·
ing the summer and pan-time durlng the
winter. he said.
cat ordinance should say and after hear-
ing nearly 45 minutes of testimony when
they were only supposed to be setting the
date for a public hearing, councilm~n
told the city staff to get some more in-
formation by Dec. 18.
They told City Attorney Dennis O'Neil
to find out what other communities do in
the way of regulating and licensing their
feline populations.
Councilmen were told by severa l
residents, mostl y from C:Orona del Mar,
that public education about spaying th e
animal! is as important as arbitrarily
limiting their numbers.
Councilman Richard Crout asked for
the delay, citing enforcement problems
rising out of the fact the ordinance will
not be retroactive.
"It seems unworkable in its presen t
fonn. We should have more study of the
possibility of cat licensing. We would find
some place with a licensing ordinance
and see how it works,'' Croul said.
Former councilman P. D. "Dee" Cook.
urged the licensing approach and sug·
gested the same $6 fee that is charged
for dogs.
"You can't discriminate, that's a bad
no-no," Cook said.
Several Corona de! Mar residents said
they thought a low limit would prevent
them from caring for stray cats. They
urged a crackdown on people who dump
strays in the hills.
From Pagel
CLAMMING. • •
quired for anyone over 16 and any viola·
tlom of the flSb and game code! are con·
sldeffil misdemeanors.
By mldattemoon Monday, the ocean
had retreated almost to mkf ~ pier and
dozens of diggers took advantage of the
saltwater pools left behind in the sand .
Lockabey said good clamming con·
dltions should continue for several more
day~ because tidal extremes a re
predicted until Friday.
lie said a number of people hove asked
whether the time of year is ri11ht to eat
cla ms because of poison dAngers.
"That is a comn.on misc:onceptlon.
because ii is mussels that are seasonal,"
he said. "Clams arc open to hun ling an
year and are always good eating.''
Lock.Ibey said a good rule of thumb 11
to thl'("W the clam away if the me1t ii
i;hriveled or dllCOJored.
"The good rntat Is urually a light tan
or pinkh1h color." he said.
Lockabey &aid anothe r extreme low
tide I! expected In mld·Decembtr. btll
the clam population It unpredictable.
"'?'here are more cl1.r111 than we to1.1ld
dig up In a year now." he sakl. "But that
could chllnae real fa1t."
Suit Filed for Paper
LOS ANGELES iAPI -A sciilor at
Hamil ton High School haa fllod •
SuPf'rlor Court suit setkinc:rrmlulon to
distribute an undergroun new1 papcr,
"The Red Tide ," on campus. The atu·
dtnt. David Hammerstein, u ld principal
tl~pht~ Jimenez told him to cease
distri buting the paper bec1uae an article
on birth conlrol was unaccept1ble.
Jury was unable to return an indict-
ment in lhe case, the letter said, because
ther -were no violations of state Jaws and
the jtJy does not have jurisdiction to
return an indictment for a violation of a
city charter ordinance.
In recommending the city's probe of
the case, the jury suggested the in-
vestigation not be limited to violations
"occurring with the past 12 months. The
Anaheim City Council's responsibility is
not limited to investigation into possible
violations of law uneenforceable because
of a one-year Statute of Limitations; and
not limited to violations of laws only ; it
also in clul'.95 scrutiny of possible viola-
tions or standards of proper behavior and
morality in the conduct of elected and
zppointed public officials."
SchmJdlen's letter also raised a ques-
tion involving the City Council's vote of
confidence given the two men shortly
after the story of their land deals was
broken.
The vote at that time was 4 to 1 with
Thom voting with the majority. He later
attempted unsuccessfully to have his
vote changed .
LOS ANGELES (UP!) -Newsman
William FaJT lost another attempt today
to avoid the jail sentence he faces for
refusing to disclose the source of a news
story during the Manson trial.
A court or appeal denied Farr's peU·
tion for a writ of habeas corpus, clearing
the way for· the 37-year--old newsman to
be returned to jail. ·
Superior Court Judge Charles Older
held Farr in contempt of court for refus--
ing to disclose the source of a news story
and ordered him to jail last week when
Farr again refused to refeal bis source.
Farr was released from jail after a few
hours while his attorney appealed Older's
order.
fn its ooling, the three-justice appellate
court ordered Farr remanded to the
custody of the sheriff's department.
There was no immediate indication
whether Farr's attorney, Martin Hurwitz,
would make further appeals.
In the petition for a writ of habeas cor-
pus , Hurtwltz argued that the contempt
of court se ntence is illegal and that Older
never advised Farr of his constitutional
right to remain slJent under provisions of
the Fifth Amendment.
In re jecting the petition, the court of
appeals said Hurwitz' arguments were
"without merit."
stored In a downstairs ·closet were also
destroyed but be said no va lue could be
placed on those because some were more
than a hundred years old.
"The bronzes around the house were
scorched but I think they can be cleaned
and those are the most valuable objects I
have," Evans said.
Evans, who designed interiors for
many large commercial buildings in
Newport Beach, is also a Newport
Harbor ciiilihber of C:Ommerce director.
He said he is building a large new
home .in Big Canyon but the fl~ at his
current home may change his plans.
From Pflfle l
CONFLICT ...
Woolsey, but said he will have an opin-
ion on the allegations sometime this week.
In his letter to councilmen, Woolsey
also criticized Board of Supervisors
Chairman Ronald W. C&spers, who a~
peared at the council's Nov. 13 public
hearing on the Versailles project and
spoke in oppasition to it.
Woolsey said Caspers' statements that
the county ask for property donations for
public use in return for development per~
mits Is a 0 dangerous practice."
In the Versailles project, the developer
had originally offered to donate a small
park site at no cost to the city but has
since rescinded that offer.
Buyin~ New Tract Home?
I
Many people buying homos are under the imprenion they HAVE
to buy corpoting from the homo sales center. In the majority of cases
this is not true, although tho sales office will try to make you think so.
The minute the home center tries to UP9rade the standard carpet,
then you are free to shop for carpeting. To proven! shopping should
constitute restraint of trade.
In many eo1es they will ton you th1t tho carpel onowonco does not
opply if you buy corpet outside. If !hoy fool this is logo!, HAVE THEM
PUT IT IN WRITING.
Ordinarny, wo can ,.vo you a lot of money over what tno homo
center offers. We provide a larger selection -:-and we !'su•Ry c:ome up
with le" y•rd•ge, plus • superior installation.
ALDEN'S
CARPETS o DRAPES
1663 Placelltltt Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS: Mon. Tllrv Tllu,.., 9 to 5:30 -fRI., t to t-SAT .. 9:30 to 5
I
l
'
Grange Coast
EDITION
VOL 65, NO. 321>, 2 SECTIONS, 22 .PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, '1972 c TEN CENTS
•
Costa Mesa's 'EagleS' Keep Resident Awake
c.osta Mesa's two "'Eagles" -~
police department hdlcoptera -are not
living up to their nicknames as silently
soaring birds1 according to allegatiom of
one eastside resident
Alu Takacs says when they fly over
his house at 11182 Tustin Ave. they flap
their wingJ with such intensity that he
•
Jury. Urges
Land Prob e
In Anaheim
. After a three-month investigation of
the land dealinp of the Anaheim city
manager and public worlls din!ctor, the
()range County Grand Jury will not issue
an lndictmeot for lllate or city ordinance
violations. •
In a letter sent to the Anaheim city at-·
tomey, jury foreman Otto M. Schmidlen
said there was enough evidence of ~
conduct to recommend "the Anaheim
City Council conduct a thorough probe"
into the pooalble violation of the City
Otarter by· City Manager Keith Murdoch
and PubUc Works Director Thornton
Pie...U.
The two men's land dealings were first
detailed in June in a Los Angeles Times
arUcle which alleged the men were able to reallie 111bstantlal profits from their
pt'lor lmo"ledge of city projects.
In a I,uer date<Ulov. 16, Sclunidlen
noted 0 tbere an{ sufficient questioos
regarding the ethleal conduct of Mr.
elth !furdoCh iiid-·Mn. Tbomton
PieraalJ to W8lT8111 a thorough Jn.
ftlligalloB by the city of Anaheim into
poatble violations."
lie Aid the probo lboald he -by the city lltol'lley, or sbould he ,.,_,
by the -ojl ..., _.;i. . . Tbo Grand Jury Investigation. which
.... requested by City CGuncUman
William· J. Thom, waa cooducted by the
District Attorney's staff and covered
Murdoch's and Piersall's land deals over a three-year period.
"'Ille investigation revealed no dispute
with the facts aet fortb in the Lo!
Angelea Times article that Mr. Murdoch
and Mr. Piersall did baVP financial Jn.
. !<!~ in ~ctlom COll&idered by !he An8lieim City Council and that they did
not publlcly diJclose their finlnc1aJ In-
terests at any time," Schmidlen's letter
stated. . -
Jury wu Ulllble to rotum an Indict·
snent in the cue, the letter aaid, because
tbet .. were DO violatkm of state laws and
the jury does not have jurtsdicticm to
return an indictment for a violation of a
city charter or'..lnaoce.
In reoommending the city's probe of
the """'· the jury suggested the in· vestigation not be limited to violations
"occurring with the past 12 months. The
Anaheim. Ctty Council'• responsibility is
not llmJted to investigation into possible
violations of law uneenforceable because
of a one-year Statute of Llmltatiom; and
not IlmJted to violations of laws only; it
(See LAND DEAL, Poge %)
Habeas Corpus
P etition Denied
To Newsman Farr
• 1 LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Newsman
William FllT lost another attempt today
to avoid the jail sentence he faces for
refusing to disclose the 90Urce of a news
story during the M.,_ trial.
A court of appeal deoied Farr's peU-
(ioa for a writ of habeas corpus, clearing
the way for the 37·yellNlld newsman to
he returned 10 jail.
Super!,.. Court Judi< Charles Older
held Farr in contempt ol court for rofuo.
lzw to dllclooe the IOlllOO Of I news atory
ud onlered him IO jail wt weell when
Farr 11a1n rofllled to re!eol hit ........:
Farr waa noleued fnlm jail afUr ii few
Jloun wblle bis •ltorneJ '-*' Older'•
onler:
·· In tu NIJna, the three-julllce appellaU
court onl<nd Farr ,_,..... lo the
C1lllody of the lherill'• deplrtmeot.
Thero -no -lndlcalloo "'1ether Fvf'I atlarlleJ, 11artJn llurwtU,
-.Id mab fl1rtbor ._is.
• Jn the petition for I wrll ol -..... puo, Hurtw!ll llPOd that the COlllOIDpt
of court leftloftCe ls Ulepl and thlt Older
....,. advised Fvr of his --
tJ&bt to -m lll<lll under --ol IM rtlth Amendment.
In nojoctlno Ille petition, the court ol
1_.11 Aid Bllrwlt.' ...-......
"without mwlt..." .
.~
can't sleep.
City Manager Fred SorsabaJ , however,
says the.noise might be the fau1t of New-
port Beach police hdlcopten.
1'1 was forced to leave my bed and
move into the living room and sleep in
a aleeP,ing bag," Takacs complained to
the Colla Mesa City Council Monday.
night. "1 feel disturbed that I have been
placed in thi!I absurd situation of having
to leave my bed."
Takacs said chopper flights over his
house have increased in recent weeks
and that the pilots Dy the machines at
tree-top level.
He asked the council to change the
night pattern of the helicopters to allow
him to sleep and to reduce the ha?.ard
of low-flying aircraft.
Costa Mesa City Manager Sorsabal
challenged Takacs' judgment of the hell·
copter altitudes, saying that pilots are
ordered to fly at a minimum beliht of
500 feet during daylight hours and clouble
that at night.
He suggested that Takacs' problem
might be caused by Newport Beach as
much as by Costa Mesa. "He'• on the
flight path or both helicopters," Sorn·
bal said.
A1tbough they declared themselves un·
able to solve Takaca' problem immediate-
ly, councilmen asked Pol~ OUef Roger
Neth to look into the possibility of
changing the Oying paltem .
Sona bat as well as IOf'Oe memben or
the city council claim they rtttived
harrassing telephooe callJ about the
choppers from Takaa at odd hours of
the nighl
Takacs denied making those calls.
No 'Wlaeel-0-Rama'
Fairgrounds Car
Sales Plan Axed
DAILY PILOT l .. ff PMt9
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of .. 0.llY Pli.t Stiff
A proposal for a "do-it-yourself" used
car sales operation at the Orange County
Fairgrounds was firmly rejected by the
Costa Mesa City Council Monday nlght.
In denying tbe business license ap-
plication for Charles Wheeler's weekend
"Whcel-o-Rama," councilmen made it
plain they were opposed to having any
furt~er swap meets In the city.
"I think we've gone too far," said
Mesa Firm
Sues Bank,
Bookkeeper
CLAMMERS ·CLAMMING IN SHALLOW WATERS OFF NEWPORT
Extr-LO.. Tldu Brint Out Lov"' of Uafood Doltc:ocy
A --wllo Vlllllhed five
monlbs ago and the Newport Beach bank
accused of accepting her alleged
forgeries bave been sued for $1.25 million
In an Orange County Superior Court ac-
tion filed by a Costa Mesa marine
engineering !inn.
R4bert Fish Marine, 761 W. t6th SI.,
names Judith Marie Waters, 43, of 2f66
Santa Ana Ave.,_ C..ta_ Mesa _...t ..
Southern California Finl National Bank,
formerly the Newport National Banlt, as
defendanll in the complaint. Cla111s Galore
'Best' Coq,st Season Possible Authorities allege that Mrs. Waters
embezzled It least $15,000 from the com-
pany during her employment in late t971.
'lbe bank is bllmed for pemiltting the
transactions since; the lawsuit asserts. it
had orders to accept only the signatures
ol Robert Fish and two other principals
in the firm.
By WILLUM SCHREIBER
Of .. .,..... '"" lllff.
Like a rag· tag anny, scores or clam-
diggers have descended on Newport
Beach sinds to enjoy (What experts are
calling the best clamming conditions in
recent memory.
The clammers are a motley crew,
dressed iQ ~rything from soggy jeans,
ba:e feet and sweatshirts to hipboots and
v1etsuits.
They are equipped with a 0wide variety
of toolo-including boel, ahovels, pitch-
forklJ and bare bands in -· ..... -and a rUibow of brighUy<01ored buckets
to 81-ll>eir take of oceon delicacies.
The dmnmers' 10le purpoee for wading
through c:hllly surf and grubbing in the
sand ii the capture of hard-shelled Pismo
cl.amt at 1eut four a.Kl a half lncbes in
UiaJDeter I the legal minimum tile,
uNcne ·of us can remember a year
when the clamming conditions ...,. "' perfect.'' Aid Lifeguard Logan Lockabey
as he wllclled the crowda of c1ammers poke .... the sand in hopes of hitting
sometlllnll other then a rock.
Locbbly said the heavy llllf" of a
mooth ago piled up a huge sandbar
around lbe Newport Pier and the clam
_..tlonboclnad. •
He allo Aid extreme hlcb lldd -,,_ thaa ...... feet -follow..s by ••.
treme -U.. low tides have espooed
huge lllretcbel of -nonnaily oovered
b1poomdlal ....... .
ODI do 4•« ........ arauncl in Jmee-
deop water aald -claw ICIUllly ..... l1lilt oat .. Ille -when he
started dJulal .....i -llollday. ~ 1111 limit In llO time," he
~ Flab and Gome Dtplrtmonl
··-- -llllltiq rqu1ar vtslll IO Newl*t -tho JIM! ....,.., days loolllll tor ...... with too many c1ams
.. -thal .,. IOo amalL
Wll'llll a.t Giil Aid peOJ>le alrudy
baw -.....,. wilb clams -Ult lepl Ila •
"If m UDdenbad cllm Is callll>t, It
thewellcllly .... lo JO boclt In Ibo llole ii
ca.,. from," Oll1 aald. "But ,..Jly you
CID jllll puob tt back Into the sand ...,_... ..
Gill Aid 1 SI dammlnJ lic<nle ii ,.
quired for anyone over 16 and any viola-
tions of the fish and game codes are con-
sidered misdemeanors.
By mldafternoon Mooday, the ocean
had retreated abnost to mid -pier and
dozens of diggers took advantage of the
saltwater pools left behind in the sand.
Lockabey said good clamming con-
ditions should continue for several more
day:. because tidal e1.tremes a r e
predicted until Friday.
He said a number of people have asked
whether the time of year is right to eat
clams because of poison dangers .
"That Is a conur.on m.isconceptkln,
becallle it is mussels that are 1!8IOGll,"
he said. "Clams are open to buntlq all
year and are always good eating."
Lockabey Aid a good rule ol llaunb iJ
to threw tbe clam away if the meat ls
sbriveled or dilcolored.
"'Ille good meat iJ usually a light 1an
or plnt!Jb color," he aakt.
Lockabey uid another extreme low
tide Is e~ In mid-December, bul
the clam populaUoo Is unpredictable.
';There are more clama than we could
dlg up in a year now," be said. "But lhat
could chani• real fast." •
11 is rurther alleged that lhe bank
should have noted that $t0,000 in col·
lateral was missing when it checked the
Fish firm's records twite during the
period of the alleged embeu.lements.
11'le lawsuit also alleges that the
undetected foraeries led to the firm ·s
Jou of credit with a comP.aDY that IUP-
pllet the Colta Mesa Unn with marine
eqineL
'lbe Joa of thal dealenblp and -venion by the supplier lo a euh delivery
baat.s meana I Joa ol It lelst 110,llOll I
year, the oomplalnt llatel.
Mn. W1ten wu arrtlled lut Jan. ~
and charged with 12 C!!UlllS of '°""ry
111'1 IJl'and theft. She failed to -!or Superior Court arratpnmt JlllO llO and
a bench warrant i5IUed for her antll is
stlli oulltandJn&.
Mrs. W1ten WN convicted of grand
tbeft three yea,. aao In SUperlor Court
and ordered IO ..,.. two yttrs pro-
bation. Her Ille indlcalet that lhe wu
ot•blequonlly coovlcted In San llil&l>
eo.n1y and aenl to Iha · Dq>artmel>t ol
Comctlons for 1n umpecilled ,..,.,
Mesa Coun cil Action
Here In Clpeule form are the major actions tll<o by Iba Olala -Oty
c..mciJ _,, nl&ht:
SWAP MEET: Da>i<d a bullneaa llcenle for IUIO, Clmpe<, and.-.cyde
Nleo at the ~ Coonty Falqrounds IO &¥old hlrinJ --awt
In Ult city.
PARIS: "-ed reduction ol the II CWftlll part ...........,,, dlstrlctl
to dx. Tbe m '"" will aUow poollnC of partl -hindl.
lll!UCOPIDI: l'!ornlaed police ~ crtUc AJa 1'abca the• Piiia
Oll<f ~ --_.i1y ln¥1&11pta the ,..1 lilt ol ..... Ins
O¥elfllJhta ol 1111 -·
PLANNING: B1i11w 111 .... ..., et• ....... •# F
would baq lire 'n I II& -ef IM citr ... I .. I
'
Councilman Robert Wilson who motioned
for denial of the Santa Ana man's pro-
posal. "We're beginning to lurn the fair-
grounds into a gigantic swap meet."
His motion passed with a 5 to 0 YOte.
C.Ouncilmen, 'lf'ho have been openl y
dissatisfied with the elisttng fairgrounds
swap meet, cited potenU1l sales tax
losses and unfair competition with
bonafide auto dealers as their major ob-
jections to Wheeler's plan.
· Wheeler argued that there would not be
any tau of sales ta1 revenues to the city
since 111 the transactions would be con-
ducted by private parties just a111 they are
daily through newspaper ads.
His proposal called for the rent.ing of
fairgrounds spaces at r. each to persona
interested in seUing their vehicles. 'Ibey
would have sold the cars themselves.
Wheeler said the "do-it-yourseU'" type
sales are being practiced In supermarket
parking lots and that police are being
!See SWAP, P ... l)
ae~s ·untrusty!J
Man Flees in Mesa Aide's Car
An untrustworthy lnllty ii snmewllere ty'1 Superior Court.
on the I-In Colla -In the.... "We don't know wby he wu in )all."
auto of Ci•• u•••••r Fred •-~• -"1d LL R. Mlcba\!I Healey, "but with ., •• _. --· lbll, he'• In deep trouble."
police ~ today. A ,...,...nct.a.i.au •So another Coala
The man, ldenUlled IS Vernon Gtrald Meu tnisty .-ped with I police ol-
Buzick, !Ill, bad been wllflinl the 1172 Ocer'1 prlvale car. 'lbe car wu found In
Mercury Marquis tht.s morning whee lhe San Diesc> after an estenslve -""1
lure of the blue 1ky apparentiy proved tho fug!Uve esiradlted from 11juana.
too lemptlnC. Trust)'S "" uaed •I the C..ta M•sa Ci· Buzick, poUce uld, toot orr with the ty Jail to waah city cars and do other
ear at 10:30 1.m. He had been xot to taaU.
Colla Mesa for trusty duty by !be coun-Sonabal's car iJ owned by the city.
'Devil's SpolCesman' Asks
For Time to An swe r Pope
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -M a self·
appointed spokesman for the Devil, Anton
Szandor t..Vey, uked for "equl lime"
t~ answer Pope Paul'• rtCtnt attact on
:he Prince of Dartmes..
La\' ey, who started h1t Oturch of Satan
about 111 year1 ago and acbteved tnltlal
nol<!l'iety when be lnlilled on liftplng a
futJ.grown lion on his porch, labeled the
Pope's blast ogainst Mtphlsto"'1ela an
"old chestnut out of the Papal llt!ptace."
'lbe ponWf last -k said the Devil
WU "dominating tOmmWlJUel" throu&h
··ses, lllltOllcs and doctrinal enon,"
and criUdud 1111tanllt ('U}ta" for lfed...
Ing people lllray.
"The fact that antllocW -and he!oouo deoda come tnim mm, IDll ,..
the Dtvil, bas been flnn17 _,,,, ...
lrenClied by conlemporlr7 logic IO II
nol •• r<qUire furtber tlabontian... said
Bethtbub11 man tn Sin Frudlco.
''We Satan1lll now blw our own boot
of :ulel, the -ol --illla Ult -1d ..... -the Satanic 8llile -
-" J!t'l'llt17 outaolllnJ the Hot1 Blble, Ovt-1...,., .....m,,, to -,...
pottl... be added.
LoVey """•It.
Dnlp Ind oU<h aro not the Dl!vti 'I bog,
LoVey said. but ratho< IAldl.,. ii ., od·
herenl of Iha punulta of ·-... ,
College Chiefs
To Extend Role
LOS AN<ll!lZS (AP) -Slate eoll<l'l
and un1ttrs111 •-hm -to ... 1"111 fiw -,.., their .......... -the!
tlltY bt ... ·-· .. ---lmitm kl n. t.ail\J -... paid tnOl't'
!1::11 It•. vt-* Cbwtilor W. B. 1-pbl Aid
1o""'411 Ult Miit WU adopl<d I 'lffT ...
to ICb1rYI a ..,....,, ol YlewpolDLI and _ .. __ ....... ..... r:ld I hip fee, wm ~ ,,_ o1 the ...
dim -_ ....... -*"--°""''"'"" .. ,::-1 ....., .. dlwatnw ti.lie llM 1 ' r c:::z .,,.,.,., ... , .......
Ioooety be tmned Magic ."
LaVey'1 devlllah reply to the Vk!ar or
Ouilt Ilka the Catholic leader IO lllk
f,.. blaming Satan '• minions for ·churchty
vandati.sm, aaylng~
"Vandals are vennln 10 10Citty and
should be uterminltl'd. For l'lf!l'f act
of suppoaed Satanic vandalism there are
countless act• of OOH1taruc vandllllm
ranging from IChoo1a to flower nurltritl."
Tho seti-deocr1bed ·-Id'• moot l1m-
OU1 Sallnill" 1dded, "'To blame IUCb ac-
tiCXll oo aa-Jve and dJstutbed mal'
contents ~ one thing bul IO -
dtabofic coeap1ncy amacu of an old
man'1 f°'ty."
LoVey 111d the Pope's fear of "'a surp
ol Salanl.sm In the ...ns ""'"1" -
con-ectly IJl'OW!ded. but "nol -~ to his palheUcally outmoded clellnltlan
Satanism."
•
•
I
OAILY l"ILDT llllt ""•M
SUCCUMBS AT 66
S.lboa Druggist Gu.,derson .
Services Set
For Druggist
Gun.derson
Graveside services will be held
Wednesday for long.time :-a I b Q a
pharmacist Donald Gunderson who died
Saturday at the age of 66.
11-1.r. Gunderson . who was a native of
Iowa, came to Balboa in 1934. ln HMO, he
opened Gundersor. Drug Company and
operated the pharmacy until shortly
before his death.
During his stay in Balboa. ~fr. Cun·
derson became a well·known figure. He
was an active member of the Balboa
Improvement Association.
One of his contempori.ries, Phil
Dillrr.a.n of Dillman's Re s t au rant ,
remembers Mr. Gunderson as a man
v.·ho liked to collect things, particularly
antique drug store paraphernalia and
decoy ducks, "though be wasn 't a real
avid hunter," Dillman said.
Mr. Gunderson is survived by his wife.
Georgia. CJ! the family home .at 1703
Ocean Blvd.; a daughter Dona F'erry: ·a
brother, Geor~ Gunderson of Long
Beach, a sister, Gertrude Strong of Iowa,
and a granddaughter.
Services will be conducted at 10:30
a.m. at Pacific View Memorial Park,
Corona de! Mar.
The family suggests memorial tributes
Jn the form CJf contributions to the Hoag
111emorial Hospital Cancer Wing.
Merger Opposed
Of PSA, Air Cal
By PUC Staff
, SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The state
Public Utilities Commission's staff coun·
,el strongly urges that the PUC deny a~
proval of the proposed merger of Pacific
~thwest Airlines W Air California.
, PSA 's acquisition 1l Air Cal would ~st PSA's share of iMraslate California
air passengers to 81 ptrcent and thereby
clearly create a monOpoly, said Scott K.
Carter. staff counse l.
: He said PSA 's present share of Cali·
fomia commuter air service is 70 per·
i:ent. ~ Carter's staff brief in the PUC hearing
'" the joint proposal by PSA and Air
Cal for the merger was on file today.
PSA would pay $12.4 mlllion for about
852.000 shares or Air Cal stock..
• Carter said the PUC could approve
the merger under state law only with a
showing that Air Cal faced "imminent
business failure" and that there are no
other prospective purchasers.
•le declared the evidence showed that
Air Cal. founded In 1967, "now has turned
the comer to prof!tability."
"The evidence is clear that Air Cal's
future has never looked brighter," he
soid. "There has been no showing of
Imminent business failure. There has
been no showing that other purchasers
cannot be found."
OIAN61 COAST CM
DAILY PILOT
TM Or-.. 0..1 DA.IL Y Pll.Ot, Wtw1 wMI$
It aimtil,,... "'-M-·l"ras. ls Plllttl ...... W
.... Of• .... ClNlf l"lllllltlllne (Ofllolny, ......
n i. •1tt.. .,.. Pll'l!lkMd, ~ flll"llUOl'I
F'1d41y, ,., C:-1• Mftl, ,,.....,... -..di.
~ htcll/,ovn,.111 Vtllfofi LMVM
1.-d\. ll'VIMt'SNcl~ " s.., c--. .. ,
S•11 ~ c.itl•h"-A 1lntl1 f'MlloMI
• "'" .... ,, 1Mt1~ .. .....,.. ~ llllld•1'·
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l1y Sir"', C-11 M-. ClllfWTlll, fl!UI.
lob.rt N. Wa..I '"" ...... ,.. ,,_..,_
J 11t l . Ct1rl1y
\I~ ..... """' ..... °"'*"' ~
Tho"'•• K•a,.11 •dllW
Til111'11• A. Mw,11111
M ...............
ctiarlH H. I.oat Rlc.h•nl '· Nan • AMhtlllf "-""' Mlttn
, c..e. ... OMee
)JO W"t l rt Stnat
M ... "'4,.t.n ,,0 . la1: I S~. •2•1•
...... -......... IMildtl »».....,.,, iwlntnl
L.lfllW 9-d'I: m •••' •-....,.,..... """""! 11'.n ~ ......,,,,. IM ~I Jn Htt1't al ~ftMM ....
Tt' Cf'tnl (Jt4t '41-4Ut
C$ ......... I I '424671
CllJf•Willf ,.... o.w... C..tl ........ 11 .... ~: ...................... ,,., ....
_... .......,. "' .......... _1111 .......
1 "'". .. ,....,... •I"*-' lofl«ilf _. _ .. _-i"'·
t ...... dell 'C.:"" M Cail!e ~· = . ----· ., c.""lw .., ... w .... a .1t ,...,,.i MllitltY ........... ,.,.
'
Publisher
Hit; W riwr
A.rreswd
A local author was booked by Costa
A1esa police Monday on charges that he
beaned his publisher with an unloaded .45
automatic pistol In a dispute over
business.
Police arrested Allnn Myron Goldbert(,
39, of 425 Merrimac Way, for usault
\\'ith a deadly weapon following the
fracas at Goldberg's apar tm ent .
Goldberg also uses the name Allan
carter' poliei! said.
Harvey Brody, of 2908 Andros Way,
Costa Mesa, bis alleged victim, told
police he'd gone to the apartment :it
about 11 p.m. with 8 rriend, John Hill or
Van Nuys. He saJd the meeting was call-
ed to try to iron out the pair's business
disputes.
Brody alleged to police t h a t after
about 30 minutes or discussion, Goldberg
became enraged and pulled the gun and a
full clip of bullets out of an air con·
ditioning vent. While he was trying to
lo<id the weapon , Hill and Brody tried to
get il away from him.
In the ensuing struggle , Brody told of·
ficen he was struck several times on the
bead with the unJoaded gun.
While ;i1.s companion grappled with t e
enraged author, the publisher fled the
apartment and called the police.
Hill reported no injuries in the fight
and Brody was treated for lacerations
and a possible skull fracture at Costa
Mesa Memorial Hospital and released.
Harbor Cham.her
Readies 2-year
Prop. 20 Battle
Directors of the Newport Harbor
Chamber of Commerce agreed Monday
to start a dossier on the problems
created by California's new coastal pro-
tection law with an eye towa rd mounting
a statewide initiative campaign against it
in two years.
They iodicaf.ed the new effort would be
an exte.nsion of their unsuccess:fu1 drive
to defeat Proposition 20 earlier th is
month.
"\Ve knew we were fighting a losing
battle when we started working against
th.is thing," said Richard Stevens,
longtime Balboa Bay Club executive and
one of the chamber directors who
spearheaded a Jut-ditch c amp 1·1 g n
ag&inst Proposition 20.
"I've still heard not.bing tba t changes
our original belief that Ibis thing wit! be
a disastrous curb on sane development
and a costly new layer of government,"
he said. "God help u• and God betp !hose
new regional commissions."
Approval or the measure means six
regional agencies wm be established
which will have veto power over any
development within a five.mile-wide strip
oi Galifomia's coastline.
Any project within 1,000 yards of any
w:.terway will have to be scrutinized by
t:ie regional panel ln addition to any ac-
tion by local agencies.
Dr. Nolan Frizzelle, who worked with
Steve ns to rally forces opposed to the
measure. said the chamber could set up
a committee to log all the ill eUects of
the proposition over the next few years. .
Living Costs Creep Up
lldldenll .of Qnnge CCunty were told today that lhO <91t of living con·
Unued Ill upward cllml> tlurblg October, roibttrlni • -Ill ol ..,. ..,....i rilJe. I • '
Tllll U.S., Bureau of Labor Slatlltlco ~ the -matches tllat of
Loi Allnl• Oounty1 ll1aber traJllPOnaUM -were blamed !or the rlae m botll llolmlla. • .
The rate of increase over the 12 months ending Oct. 31 was 3.1 pe.reent,
sllghUy lower than the previous 12-month period.
The October increase pushed Ule consumer index to a new high this year
at 123.9. This means that consumers spent $12.39 for goods and services in
October that cost $10 In 1967.
A BUREAU spokesman said transportatioD costs rose four-tenths of one
percent during October, primarily because of higher prices for used cars, auto
flnancing and auto parts. Gasol ine prices remained at record high levels dur-
ing October, the spokesman said.
Food costs increased o. 1 percent over the month, while health and recrea-
tion costs climbed 0.2 percent.
HOUSlNG costs fell 0.1 percent, chiefly because of declines in borne pur·
chase prices and financing charges.
TONIGHT
NEWPORT-MESA SCHOOL BOARD -
Regular meeting, Costa Mesa High
School Lyceum 'Theater, 7:30 p.m.
SQUARE DANClNG -Community
Recreation Center, Fairgrounds, 8-10
p.m. $1.25 per lesson.
UC! LECTURE SERIES -"Plannin~
for Services to tbe Mentally Retarded, '
Rm . 167, Steinhaus Hall, 7·10 p.m.
Admission $4.25. .
From Page 1
LANfrDEAL •••
also includes scrutiny of possible viola-
tions or standards of proper behavior and
mora1ity in the conduct of elected and
sppointed public officials ."
SchmidleD's letter also raised a ques·
tion involving the City Council's vote of
confidenei! given the two men shortly
after the story of their land deals was
broken.
The vote at that time was 4 to 1 with
Thom voting with the majority. He later
attempted unsuccessfully to have his
vote changed. ·
After Big Party
He Really Goes
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Before John
R. cayetano surrendered on charges of
bank robbery, his friends and relatives
gave him a going-away party.
Cayetano, 31, was . honored at a
farewell dinner at bis parents' East Los
Angeles home after bis family learned be
v:as sought by authorities.
After dinner, Cayetano's brother,
Femando, telephoned tbe FBI and said
his brother was ready td surrender.
Police detectives, wbO worked with the
FBI in the case, said Monday that
Cayetano rose fro m the dinner table Sun·
day night when offiei!rs arrived and
walked to the offiei!rs ' car while friends
and relatives waved goodbye and wished
him well.
Burglars Steal
Heavy Equipment
At Mesa Project
Burglars with Samson • like strength
who h3ve been able to carry off several
pieces of 700.pound construction equip-
ment are being sought today by Costa
Mesa police.
According to investigators, the thieves
have stolen steeJ .. bridge plates from the
stonn drain construction site o n
Fairview Road over the past three
weeks. The equipment is valued at $1,500
by the Hood Construciion Company, vic-
tims of the thefts.
Company spokesman Gmza1o R. Baiz,
ol Anaheim, told officers the plates
weigh• 700 pounds apiece and it takes
three "full grown construction workers"
to move them a few feet.
Baiz said be believes the equipment
could only be removed· from the site by
using heavy equipment and no such
un usual activity has been reported in the
construction area.
From Page 1
SWAP ...
called in to ticket the sellers.
A used car sales headquarters at the
fairgrounds, Wheeler implied, would give
these people a legal place to dispose of
their vehicles.
Mayor Jack Hammett suggested that
the swap meet concept was a good idea
originally but that It bas been abused to
create a "gigantic multi·acred retail
business."
Hammett added that be wu upset over
continu.ing applicatlon::i for more swap
meets at the fairgrounds. He joined other
councilmen in .requestmg a ~ witlt
the fair board to shut off further swap
meet requests.
Three other swap meet·type vehicle
sales operations have been rejected by
the council so far this year.
Art League in Mesa
Will Hear Artist
Artist Virginia James will give an egg
tempu ra demonstration f~ the Costa
Mesa Art League at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 28 at
Adams Elementary School, 2 8 5 0
Clubhouse Road, Costa Mesa.
The meeting is open to the pubJic.
Blatchford to Run?
2 Suspects
In J1Qmbi{lg
• • ' .
Face ·Trial
The two suspects In iaat T)lur>day's
pipe bombing al Corona del Mar High
SChool today are facing separate court
dates on fe.lony cbrages stemming from
the early·moming incident
Glenn Leslie same.on, 18, of 2140 E.
Balboa Blvd., was freed Monday on .
$10,000 bond followlng his arraignment in
Harbor District Judicial Court. He faces
a preliminary hearing Nov. 27.
Paul Bernhart, 17, of Z527 Bamboo St..
is still in Orange County Juvenile Hall
pending his detention bearing Wednesday
at 1:30 p.m. in Juvenl1e Court.
The two ,youths, botll former students
at the high school, were arrested early
Saturday morning by Newport Beach
detectives and a snowy Big Bear Lake
cabin, where police Sltid they had gone ror
a skiing trip.
Pollei! are still uncertain as to the
motive for the bombing which blew out
windows in the office of Assistant Prin-
cipal Belly Townsend.
Detectives Investigating the incident
claim tbetr questioning ol the youths'
friends led lo the dl>covery of a quantity
of gunpowder a n d pieces of pipe in
Benmart:a 1arage.
DelecUVe Sam Amburgey said the
youths !014 police they bad already
detonated 1tvera1 smaller p;pe bombs In
the Upper Newport Bay tiefore making
the big one to try out at the school.
Police estimate the school bomb was
made of a silt-Inch piece ol Sled pipe
stuffed wttll !IUJlpowder and armed with
a fuse.
Altbough nobody w a a injured in the
blast, police 1ay the oUense could carry
a llvc-year nµn.Imton prison sentence for
Bameaoll. .
They are not sure what penalty is fac-
ed by Bernhart.
Bameson is a eraduate of Corona del
Mar High while Bernhart was expelled
last year and was attending McNally
Continuation School .
Sirhan Refuses . .
Parole Hearing
At San Quentin
SACRAMENTO (AP ) -Sirhan B. Sir-
han, convicted aasaa ln of Sen. Robert
F. Kennedy, re!Uled to appear al a
scheduled parole bearing, the cailfornla
Aduh Authorlly reported ~: •.• , ._
JOltJlh ·A.'· Spaniler; ""•-"" officer ior the authority, said Sirhan bad
been scheduled for a parole bearing Mon-
day, and l110lber parole bearing in bis
caae was set for November 1975.
Spangler said Sirhan also refused to
sign a waiver stating he refU9ed to ap-
pear, and declined to state wby he re-
fUsed to appear.
Sirhna was sent to San Quentin's Death
Row In May 1969 for the June 1968 slay-
ing of Kennedy.
But his death penally and similar pen-
alties for 109 othen were overturned by
a California Supreme Court decision Feb.
18 outlawing capital punishment in cal·
tfomla.
The decllton resulted In aut.omatic life
impri.sonnlent tenns !or Death Row in·
mates, meaning they would be eligible
for parole after serving a minimum of
seven years behind bars.
Ul"ITI .......
To Do Bit
Entertainer Elvis Presley has
announced in Hawaii that he
would perform in a benefit
concert, to be televised world·
wide via satellite, Ior cancer
research in Hawaii.
Final Authority
Bid Gets Study
By City Council
Further study has been recommended
by the Costa fl.fess City Council on a new
ordinance aimed at clarifying planning
and building appeal procedures .
The proposed statute was held back
largely because of an CJbjection by Coun-
cilman Alvin Pinkley. Pinkley asserted
that it would give the Planniilg Com-
rniSsion too much power.
''This is an ordinance which comes
from the planning commission every few
years. It makes the Planning Com·
mission a bigger deal. I'm not interested
iu making the Planning Commission a
• bigger deal, I think It's doing just fine as
it is," the councilman said.
Pinkley was referring to a section of
the ordinance which would have given
tbe Planning Commission final authority
on appeals of planning stafi decisions.
The Costa Mesa City Council bas his-
torically been opposed to the strong plan-
1 · .. commission concept. Planning com-
missioners are allowed only to make
recommendations to the council but they
may take no final action themselves.
Suit Filed for Paper
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A senior al
Hamilton High School has filed a
Superior Court suit seeking perm.isslon to
distribute an underground newspaper,
"The Red Tide," on campus. The stu·
dent, David Hammerstein , said prtncipal
J~phine Jimenez told him to cease
distribUtlng the paper because an article
on birth control was unacceptable.
ASTRONAUT GETS
CA.BINET POST?
MIAMI (UPI) -Former a!tronaut
Frank Borman is under consideraUon by
President Nixon for appointment as
secretary of transportation, it wa1
reported today.
Federal Aides Studying
~ile Square Park Deed
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Joseph H.
Blatchford has told the White House be is
resigning as director of ACTION, the
government's volunteer service con-
go\merate, and probably will run for
mayor of Los Angeles next spring, the
Los Angeles Times said today .
Under new Adult Authority policy, pa-
role hearings are held within a year ol.
confinement for prisoners "when practi-
cal." State voters reinstated capital punlsh--
ment under the California Constitution on
Nov. 7, but It had no bearing on previous--
ly condemned priaoners.
The Miami Herald quoted "high
Republican Sources" as saying Bonnan
was being considered, but added that the
White House said "no decisions" have
been made on any changes at the upper
levels ot the Nixon administration.
By JACK BROBACK
Of .. ~, ..... ,,...
Deeding ·of lhe 4M-acre Mlle Square
Regional Park property to Orange Coun·
ty has bun tndeftnitely postponed and
federal officials are giving It thorough
study beeau,. of recent publicity.
Supervisor David L. Baker returned
Monday from a meeting in Wa1blngton
D.C. with heads of three federal agen·
cies. He said there were "strong reserva·
lions'' on the part of IK>me offldals
because of the bMbery scandal and
subsequent p o 11 t I c • I advertisements
criticizing the county's development of
the property placed by First District
Supervisor Robert Battin.
Ballln and "Biiker have clashed several
limes over the Mlle Square matter.
The park In Fountain Valley wa1
ronnerly In Baker'• JeCOnd dlatrtct and
more than five yean ago he apearheaded
negotinlions with the rederal government
for use or the land surroundlng the
Marines' heli~pter practJce Oeld for a
noglonal park.
He achieved a long term le111t of the
lnnd to the county and It wu to be deed·
ed outright by the Federal government
until the recent odlowl dlJCUWonl.
Plana had be<n made by lbe fedenl
government to tum over the 4r5e acres to
the COUDly CW1 lut Oct. 24, But those
plans """' delayed wheo the bribery scandal Involving two Wrstm.lnster city
officials over temporary alrlcultural
leases on the property aur1-a.
Former '"8yl>r and Coancllman Oettk
McWhtnney and Plannlng Comm!Ulontr
Tad FUjita have be<n indicted by the
Orange CCunty Grand Jury CWI chargH of
trying to "shake clown" Cleora• Mural,
w~· · lca111 213 acrt1 for fanninl
\'t getablts..
The alleged bribe w•s to bt paid In the
fonn of a 110,000 campatr contrlbulloo
'" Batt\n's rHlectlon campallfl.
Baker previously stated that he had
teen able to allay the fears of federal
government officials that the bribery
scar.Jal might cloud the transfer but new
fears arose over an advertisement placed
by Battin just before the Nov . 7 election
alleging that the county had plans to sell
some of the property to developen for
home or apartment building.
Ba ttin also charged that the entire park
-%30 acm have been developed \nto a
golf course, picnic areas. fishing lakes
and other facilities by the COUDty -
should be planted and devoted to rtcrea-
tlonal use at once .
Terms of the lease with the federal
government c.all for use of developed
~creaae by farmers to ketp down the
dust and weeds pntU the county h111s the
money to comf)lete the development.
Revenue from t h e farming ventures Is
shared by tbe county and the U.S.
goveml'tWmt.
Bake.r said fl.1onday thnt he hAd rece.iv·
ed the approval of the land grant from
Dr. Robert Kupperman, administrator or
the federal Legacy of Parkt-,program
nnd from James Watt. director of the
Bureau of Outdoor RtcreaUon.
But O&rrell Trent. chelrmnn of the
Ftderal Land Review Commission, was
~tit.ant about the propriety of I.ht grant
In vtew of the bad publicity .
Baker Mlid that a decision on the
turnover can be expected ln the next 30
to 40 days. "The federal ofUcl1l1 may
decide to deed to the oounly ooly the 230
acres UP.Oft which developmen1 Is com·
pleted," Baker reported.
The supervisor 111\d federal offlclAll
krt concerned over anythlna: which might
e1u~ R neaallve reactloo. The Legacy of
Parla1 program 11 one ol Pr<1idtllt Nix·
on'a top projects and the offlcllb lear
any advtnt publicity might 1<nect oo
thei r boa. the President.
(
Buying A New Tract Home?
I ,
Many people buying homes ara under tho impNUion they HAVE
to buy carpeting from tho homa sales center. Jn tho majority of cases
this is not true, although the salt1 office will try to make you think so.
The minute the homo center trios to upgrade tho standard carpet,
then you are free to shop for carpeting. To prevent shopping should
constitute restraint of trada.
In many cases !hay will toll you that the carpet allowance does not
ap ply ii you buy carpat outside. II they fttl this is legal, HAVE TH EM
PUT IT IN WRITING.
Ordinarily, we con save yo u 1 lot of mo11ty ov1r whet tho home
center offers. We provide a lorgor selection -and we usu1 Ry come up
with loss yordage, plus a superior instalotion.
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placelltla An.
COSTA MISA
646-4838
HOURS: Mon. Thru Thu1'1., 9 lo 5:30 -FRI ., 9 19 9 -SAT .. t:JO 19 5
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