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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-02-10 - Newport Harbor EnsignUTH YUR, NO. 25 • B • ISSI G · PILOT 673.0550 JOe COSTA MESA A 13-STAR FLAG that pre4tea tbe 1 'M6 Betsy Ross fiag is dUplayed here by Hubert and Frances Keesling, at left, and Harold Hotf of Costa Mesa, the newly installed commander of El Bekal Shrine Temple's Legion of Honor. P.O. • HISTORIC FLAG GIVEN A pilot shot down over Laos and mlsstng since 19691\asbeen picked to represent Newport Beach prisoners of wu and missing servicemen. ch.lldr@D, Michael, 17<W1 Kar- en, 16. ·•J have not heard a word about Stan since he vr•s shOt down," Mrs. Clark told the Ensign, "and 1 have oothing to go on except hope." By BRICE WORTHtNGTON The collecHon of flags fea- tured by the Legion of Honor, omctal color guard of El Bekal Sl\rine Temple, gained a sig- nificant hlstorical boost Sat- urday, feb. 5, as Harold Hoct of Costa Mesa was formally Installed as commander of the untt. Commander Hort was pr~­ sented with a 13-star fiagwhtch was a forerunner or the origi- nal Star-Spangled Banner de- s igned and completed In 1776 for the Continental Congress by Betsy Ross. The presentation was made by Mrs. Frances M. Keesling of Long Beach, past president of the WUmtnr;ton cl'lapter of the Native Da ugttters of the Golden West. The fla g 1\ad been a tre<asure of her family for mor e than 100 years. The tanner Is worn and ti- ded, but wUI repose as a prized display among Legion of Honor trophies. Although this march- Ing unit presents and displays colors aDd marc hes In parades throughout Southern California dozens of times throughout the year, Commander Hotf notes this valuable banner wtll be re- tired to protected display, A special day OOnoring Atr Force Colonel Stan ley s. Clark' and other POW ·M lAs has been procl.a.lmed for neil MoOOay, Feb. 14, by M?yor Ed Hirth. ColoRe! Clark's wt!e and 2chil- dren, now living In Newport Beach, will be hooored at a City Council meeting that night, exactly 3 years after he wu shot down over enemy terri- tory. She said Presld£>nt Nixon's recent peace proposals had raised her hopes somewhat, but that "everything Is so con- fusing, It 's hard to know what will happen next." COM freeway speed-up asked The flags displayed r egularly by the or ganlu.tlon In Its color - ful appearane!es include thOse of the United States, Canada and Mexico, plus a growing list of states representative of loca- tions of Shr ine Crippled Chil- dren's Hospitals and Burns ln- stUutes. Mrs. Keesling traces at least 121 years or OOckgrouOO the fa mily knows of this flal': with a 197 year tradition, Colonel Clark, a.n Air Force. career man, entered the ser- vtc E> In I :14!' and logged more than 100 combat missions to Southeast Asia. His decora. tlons lncllde the distinguished nytng cross, the bronn star, the air medal and the Republic ot VIetnam campaign medal. He has been recom mended tor the silver star, the nation's third highest combat decoratioo. A hmcheon at the Balboa Bay Club Monday will also hon- or the Clarks. Mrs. Ht>ed Bauman of the Liod::l Isle Worn. en's Club and Mrs. Ri chard Ri~ of the Juruor E~ll Club ot Newport Beach are eredited with originating th~: idea or a special day for the family. Mondiy night's Council ses- sion will lncltxle the reading of THROUGH THE SPONSORSHIP of Phllco.Ford'J Aero- nutronlc Division In Newporl Beach, the Z4 members of Science Ex:plorer Post Z09 have been lea.rning about space- age electronics and science. During a recent luncheon held tor the h.Jgh school students at Aeronutroolc, Cary E. Pooler, center, 19'72 pr esident of the Post, presented one of the electronic puzzles batlt by the E:rplorers to Loutse F. Heilig, Phi leo-ford vi ce pr esident and dJYI&lOO general manager . Mr . HeiUg In turn presented tbe Post with Its 1972 charter, slgnttylng continuing sponsorship for the comillg year. Holding the cllarter Is Wllliam H. Spurgeon rv, assistant director of Exploring tor the Orange Empire CouncU, Boy Scouts of America, and son of the late founder of Exp lorer Scouting. Object of the puzzl£> Is to turn orr the eight tights which a..re controlled by logic circuits and require that the switches be de- pressed in a uniquE' sequeoce. The post members--boys and gtrls.-meet at Aeronutronic once each week to work on projects and att~nd lecture.demonstraUons given by Phtlco-Ford engtneE'rs and scientists. ~i:~o::~:~~~g~~e~:t~rc:n~ C M PROTESTS Cc-~.mty supervisors reversed a stand taken 2 weeks ago and decided Tuesday to ask the state to speed up construction of the Corona del Mar freeway, at least as tar as University Dr . 1n ltvtoo. Both Costa Mesa and New- port Beach nave otti.cially gone on record, through City Coun- cil action, In favor ofthe speed- up, be<'ause of trafnc conges- tion a.round UCI. Supervisors voted 3-1 to ask the state to give the highest prlority to the freeway, wtUch Is St.IPOOMd to eYentatty Unk the san Otego freeway to thE' proposed, but now defunct, Pa- clllc coast freeway. The basic route adopted In 1968 calls tor the Corona del Mar tteewa~· to run trom the San Diego tree- wa y near South Coast Plaza to the Newport freeway, thE'n along PaUsades Rd. by Orange County Airport tr:~ MacArthur Blvfl ., where II Is s~sed to turn southward to Corona 11el Mar. Two weeks ago, BoardChalr- m1n Ronalrl Caspers had rlrll- culed the route as a "freeway that goes nowhere," because or the vote of Newport Beach citi- zens to stop construction or the Pacific coast freE>way, with '<lt'hlc h the Co rona del Mar free- way would have linked up. Mr. Caspers said he oow believes the UCI traffic problems dictate completion or at least part of the route. Sl{)ervlsor s heeded the ad- vice of Airport Dir ector Rob- ert Bre snahan and asked the state to re-design the section of the freeway which runs past Orange County Airport. Mr. Bresnahan had warned 2 weeks ago that the route, as now planned, would chop off 400 feet of airport land and bring the roadway within 1,200 teet of r unways. "This flag dates back to the time or the Grand Union or Cambridge flag of 1775, thus pre-dating the Betsy Ross nag," she r eports. "It was brought around Cape Horn In 1851 on a square- rigged salllng ship by Phineas Banning, a Wilm lngton pioneer who contributed much to the history of this area. My pa- ternal grandfather, Anthony v. • • Sylvia, was with Bannin~t on The Industrial Development the trfp and later was an em- Association, Central Oran~ ployee of BaMing. County, has approved a ruo. '·Amonr Banning's many ln- lutlon siClPQrt1ng the early terests LDcluded vast landhOid- "furti'Unr,· ronstructlon, and ... ·t.nl8 aDd stapcaaeh liaes I'Mm completion of the Corona del wh.Jch he developed a trans. Mar h'eeway (Highway 73) link portatlon empire. At one time between thE' San Diego freewa)' he had 500 mules and 15 stage- and MacArthur Blvd." coach Unes that ran to Los The Industrial group, refer-Angeles, San Bernardino, Salt r ed to :1s the IDA, cited Its Lalr:e City and Phoenix, and my concer n with the stoppages and grandb.ther was a driver on the r!Ptays In surfa ce tratnc ex-Phoenix line." perlE>nced in lh"! area encomp-General Banning e;ave the ass1n2 UC I, the Orange County flag to Mr. Sylvi.l, whO In turn Airport, and South Coast Plaza, turned It over to Mrs. Keas- T he lOA views the congestion ling. When she learned of the and dela~s In traffic as ''detri-Legion or Honor's rledlcated mental to the conduct of bust-program to collect flags she ness and the movement of goods decided to r emove the treas- anrl services upon which com-ured banner from the cedar mercP depends." The freeway chest whe re she had stored It link would serve to reUeve for 35 years, so Us historic traffic whtch currently excE'eds slgnltlcance might be enjoyed the capacity of MacArthur Blvd. and shar ed. between UCI and the San Otego freeway, and causes congestion on the Newpor t freeway. The resolution will be sent to the California Highway Com- mission lor the Feb. 17 meet- lop; In Sacramento. Mrs. Clark, a native of Czechoslovakia, now Uves at 2030 Hollda}' Rd., Baycr est.She married Co l. Clark In 1953 when he was stationed In Get- cern tor all POWs and MlA s. • • ~~~:,~:~:~~£t~~l~.~:~ ONE-WAY heads a national or ganization COL . STAN LEY CLARK PLAN of POW-MlA 11dves, and to Lt. Protests lry merchants on the • RECEIVED lE>IIcrs rrom 2 many . She came to this country Robert Frishman a Navy pilot east skle of Newport Blvd a 2 years a~ wtth the 2 Clark who is a former~' w bout prnnnsed tratfir ro"·tln,-peopl£> woo praJsE'd the Council · ........ for urgln~ the ab&.ndoomrot of A EN WE LOVE You I tt r ompiE"d the Costa M<'Sa Ci ty the country 's n(J-Winw<trpoUcy. "K R _I Council to call Monda\' night • EXTENDED the life or the • for ~ special 90-<tJ ·, study of Costa Mesa street llght1ng dis- The spirit of St. Valentine The Newport Beach pollee, message was le ft. the problem. trlct for 5 mor£> years . struck a Uttle early this year In the person of detective Mr. Maloney got rid of the The protest . erupted when • SE T a MruC'h ZO pubUc tn Harbor VIew Hills. But the Geor ge Coelho, entered the ceme nt be forf' it could ha r!ien. bustnes,men discovered ttw.t nea.nng on the proposed Re<! mesace was clear. da.rkeni.Dg mystery and rotme~ But. tbe message is suu fr'onta~ roads on both stek>s Hill aonexauon. The eimtly of Albert L. Ma-Karen.StJt's 15-}'ear..old Kareo outlined, perbaps for maa}·St. o1 the Newport treeW1l} would • APPROVED subdl.Yislon.of toney heard nolsesoutsidetheir Quinn, whO Uves at 4000 ln-Valentine's Days to come, 011 be OOfo-•·av •h(>f\ thf tree•·a) 5 Jots oo the southeast roroer home at 3806 Inlet Isle Dr. let lsi£> Dr ., Harbor VlewHUls, his driveway. Karen t•an go re£ches the 110"'otown area. or l9tlr St. anri Tustin Ave. last Sunday night. They went --In l houSE' that looks just by anytime and see that some-They claimed th.\t lhE>Y rwd been Tne rlev£"1QPE'r wa s denied an·· outside and found a message in a bout like the Maloney house. bOdy, somehwere loves her. led 10 believe lront.age roads '1Uest to subdlvtoie the propt'rty tll.eir dr{ve.,-ay . It said "Karen, She's prP«~·. and she's pop-would have 2-way trafnr·. 1n to 6 lots. we love you." ular and she's on the dr ill POLl CY PLAN p RIH TE 0 The current frE"P"""' o~.gtM>-• GRA:"'TE D a t.oninr eX<'£>P- ''The mes-~. ·•·as ,·n Ires .. team :11 Corona del Mar hl.... ment between the city d.Dd rtle tron to St~mt' Ua) Auto Pamt-;>A>:>~ " "'" Beginning this week on pa~ su 11 r 11 cement letters 2 feet wide and schOol but she says she "does te ca s or tra ll on the in& to r PdutF parking spares not ~·,. ,,1• tdea w""' wo"ld 2• the Ensign Is publishing tht' frontage rO;tc1 .don!!. the wes« from ZS to 21 and to !l"diK'e a coi.Clle or Inches high," says ,... uv "' entire tut orthe ~ewport BC<lch ., 1 tr Mr . Malone)', It was ""lie ,·m-have don£> such a thing." si e o the l'E>'Na~ to mo\'e f;ont proper!}' sethark rrom -. general plan polH') report, t• d ·o f 80 f 68 t f presslve, but there wa s just one Pollee are looking for 2 young whir h w\1\ serve as an outline sou "• a n east st e ronta~ eet to et>t or constroc. problem--the Ma loney family men whom neighbOrs saw drtv-r oad trarrtc to ffiCIV £> north. tlon of an .tuto pamt ShOll at from t•e Malone,_· for the clt}·'s g£-neral devel~-2956 Bnstol St. doesn't even know anybody ing away " ment plan. The r lly's traffic enginE>er s named Kar£>n. resrdE>n•·e just an er the bi;; "''er~ or rU?r E'd by the Counril YOUHC COP ELECTS C r son "•n court MRS. KAY AKUTAGAWA to met>t •Uh sbte hJtCfl"''•) dE'-H. B. BUSIHESSWOMA.H asP e r S p.utment representatives to Ne•~rt Beach D"Sinesswo. OF COSTA MESA DIES determtn~lf2-~~o·anraff!L v:ould ,..... " man ElltabE'th Sperlin£-, 35, ..,.as The 18-yearold son o!Coun-San Clemente, ~~o-:ls picked ICl ftr~eral services wJU beheld be possible on tlott, !rootage elected cha1rma.n of the Calif- ty SIC)ervlsor Ronald W. Cas-Jan. Z b)' Newport Bea.ch po-Saturda.y tor Mrs. Ka} Akuta-roads, anrl whf>!her this ~~o·ould ornia YounJ: Republtcans Stm- pers Is expected to appear ln Uc£> outside his father's Lido gawa of Cosb Mesa, ..... hO died Oe beneficial to the cny. An I1J}'. court feb. 17 for arraignment Isle hOm~. Pollee said they unexpectedly Tu~sda~ a.t Costa engm~r hired by th•· com -Mrs. Sperllne, who !Jves in on a mari juana charge, a found about 15 grams of marl-Mesa Memorlal Hospital. pl.alnlng merchants ''Ill! also Huntincton Park, t£>prrosented spokesman [0 the SIJPI"rviso r 's Juana In his ptclrup truck. They Services schedu!E!fl lor 11 sUm on the talks . a ··onsen•ative state at lhccon- otnce said Tuesday. said the youth was sleeping In a.m. at P~rific Viev.· Chapel, In other action Mnurl.n ni¢\t, \'entlon. She ~~ 130 or the con- Young Kirkland Caspers fall. the trock when they accosted Harbor Vlevo Hills w111 be coo-the Cit)· Councrl: Y£>ntlon's Z35 votes 10 ~efeat Park gets boost 'FUNNY FACE' HE RE Sandy Duncan, television's "funny Clce," will establish her "home away tram hOme" in Park Newport, the apartment and townhOuse commiDI.ity fronting on the Upper Bay. She wtll maintain ller resi- dence In Hollywood to be near her work, but she plans to speod most of her leisure ttme here. Her TV series .-... s ln- terr~ted last tall when she under went eye surgoery. She lost the sight of one eye, but she w\11 resume shOoting in April tor "Funny face.'' ed to appear FE>b. II in munl-him. dueled by Or. Vin~ent Gottuso. • PASSE D an onhn..ta•'£> g~.v-T<'r r; Huper, 32 , of Hanfor d. ctpal court 1n Costa Mesa to He was released on his own lnurnmenl of crem.lled rema.Jns In~ thf! Coun rU the 0\Jtlnn or Both caodlc1o~tes had pledtred answer the char~. and a bench recogniz.ance several hours al-will be In Pacific \o'ie·o~.· W.em-granting ta.xicao ,Inver" per· earlier to support a :"'lxon- warrant was Issued and ordered ter the arrest. orLa l Par~. _ mils to pt>rsons c:onvl,..ted of Agnew ticket 1n the :o;ovember held to give him a chance to RECRUIT GRADUATE$ Mrs. Akuta~wa, whov.<lsJO, feloni£>s. "lecUons. show up for the rescheduled Navy Fireman Apprentice is survived by her husband,y M "k "II • Costa Mesa's plans for a park beside Fairview State Hospital got a boost Monday night when Mayor Bob Wilson told the Ctty Councll that stale legislators had assured htm of tnetr coop- eration. Mayor Wilson described a dlMer meeting last FridaY with state assemblyman Robert Burke and Robert Badllam as "opU mlstlc" and said both as- sem~lymen and other county and city ottlclals who attended the meeting promised thelr ~rt to rettlDg 260 acres ot surplus state land ad)lceot to the hOs- pital turned toto a reg1onal part. The 1aJvJ could be leased trom t he state at Yery 1o1f' cost or could be purchased at halt of Us muket n.lue by Ute etty or by a jolnt powers set-up tn. yotvtnl surroWM!IDc commuol· ties, Ma)"'r Wtl.oo l&.ld. To Q\&lllY ,.. ... ot lite land, the c:,lty mUit oomt 'C) 'Wlth a ceoerat plu ~ de· tek!umtDt tor the ar-. ac- cor ding to Information gath - ered by the 2 assemblymen. Ma yor Wilson got Council ap- proval Monday ntgbt to han the city manarer•s om ce start wor k on such a plan. Meeting wtth Ma yor Wilson and the assemblymen were Wa- yor Ed Hirth of Newport Beach, Newport Beach assistant city manager Phil Bettencourt, Ma- yor Ed Just of Fountain Valley, Ne...-port-Mesa schOOl district s.._,t, John Nicoll aod other county a.ad local oMclals. Mayor Wllsobsaldassembl:y- men Badtam and Burke both assured blm that the state's general serrtces administra- tion 1.1 read)' to tt111l the land over to a pubUc areoc:J ror recreational tJSfl and that onJ:y a definite plan tor tts use ls ·needed to start the tranafer paperworl: moYtnc. U I J:&fk II bu1lt OD the ltte, tt would become u elteQSk)n of a "creen belt'' stntebtnc acrou tbe nortbera part ol the eltJ from eut to wut. MRS. DUFFIELD DIES ,_1 .m-..... bOld T...-, ll Paelfte V""' Mtm· orta1 Part u llro. Doooo 11&- pil'e llallkld, 54, --~ at lloq 11-11.1 Ra••t, .... a.., USun Mrs. Dldeld l8 Wtlfid by 11tr t h..,, Mu..U....,.Id, U J..-Dr., Uodo loll. llr, _ ...... -aD..Aol · or! ........ u -at IIIC. 00. ........... ... 11..-u lr.,olll"-'-; t dt.-.ro. lira. lobo Gobtl>l ot Coola II-ud lin.- "-ot 11....:-; h• rDOthtr, Mra. JOIII.Mat*'t ot LOo ..... ..., ud a -. lira. Patricia SlllrlaY, LOo ........ c•IIUU ltdnet ·-warr• &ow'Ud ~tat -·· Mf'L ~ wu•aaUM "'"-· hearing next Thursday. [f he Dean A. Socall, son of \lrs. ~t::..::~.~~·-!e;~r:;,~~~h?~ oung I e Sll 10 coma falls to appear on the 17th, Ja.ntne y. Wheeler of 112 w. -.-...._. Judge Everett Dickey said the Sa .... p .. wOOd, and a sister. Hlroko Coast h.lgt~way, YSuure u,.. Yamamoto of Los An-tes. warrant wm be turned over to .... d ted from recruit .. ~ Prayers wer£> mingled "''Hh lt1P windshield or the truck. • .as gra Ill The family r esidence Is at arresting omcers. tr&Jnlng at the Naval Trainlng 285 E. Wilson St. tears at Mariners Church Sun-Steve also was thrown from The youngster, who Uves In Center at San Otego. day ddtlng praise and healmg thP motorcycle and suffered Candidates' sponsors listed ~~:~;.;:~"E.;.~::r.:i:~:::~'·;;STRICTNOW A surprise candidate who OJ-Leonard C. Hall, 416 39th St., ed minutes before the dead-West Newport; Marshall Jottn~ line last Thursday noon be-50n, 5112 RIYer Ave., West came the 1th man to eater Newport; Don A, Beckley, Z25 the race tor Newport Beach's Canal st., Newport Shores, and 3 City Council seats ~ for Dorw.ld Foster, 127 36th St., e lection Aprllll, West Newport. Retired real estate investor • 5TH DISTRICT James A. Crane, 47, ot U3 Edpr F. Hlrtl\, 61, Is theln- DrlttYood Rd ., Shore CUffs, cumbent and now senes a.s the will oppose Dee Cook aDd JotG city's mayor. He Is r &tred and Store tw the 7th district seat Uns at 319 Ave nJda Cerritos, now held by Llodsley PvSOR$, the Bluffs. NominiUng Mayor wbo unouoced last week that Hirth ~re Roland Vallel:y, 501 he wlll not seek aaother term. S. Bay front, Balbo& Island; Tbls •tU be Mr. Crll)t'l EIY1a HowtU, 204 S. Bay Front, nrst try tor poUtteal omc.. Baa.. lsland; AlbtrtKer.o, !07 Here ar• tbt candldattai.Dd N. Bay Froot, Balboa tsl&,.;t; the aames of thoM who llped Woodrow Umtr, 519 Vista their oomlnatiAC p~Cotrs: Fkn, tbe Blultl; Arthur Hut. • 2!<0 DISTRICT lnp, 1$58 Blsnood st., Eatl Ooaakl A, MclDAll, 51, iJ Blldl, IDd MarttnMt.ngold, Zlf4 lilt IDeu-""" I< -Viola Condo, tllo Bhllls. b r. ... ltc.Uoa. Ht tau elec~ ~J 0, Pe&se, Cl, I R•l- trOQiea: tltriiDNr ud bY .. at tor, tl"' at S04 Colllns A .... , 4105 ....... Dr., .... ""· Ba-....... "' .... 001111- po<t. !~toUr -~oo~~ar_. ...., "'Ellalltlll eo,..,, uu •well-ud GorMMto, 'If, ..._ Bml., ...-; Vtr. GOI ,__ Dr, ... lltw • .,.. Alllrcl, In Coral "'"• pon; -101 atW.., MlO 'If, -.-.~-F. Klml>la, 0... ,.... -lf.....,.n; 401 Soor-R4., Clllllla- T--· 4101S.-tll;loltoY-r.:;··-Dr., Welt Jtt.,.n; .Iaiit W ... Aft,. ..,.,... ...,.., i S1lto, 411 -IL. llupall Rallll W, IJIIa ud lin. Alllll, 1-•leliord CllloU, -III·B C-1 A"• aaa. r.- hu't • Dr., ., .. M.....,.n; -·an.. 1aa. 1041. 111J Hospital since a trattlc 3."<'1-PUBLISHING A PAPER Froot, Balboa Island; Muy Cliffs; Wtlllam Coleman, 3£4 dent Jan. SO. ~t'wport-,Msa. UniftedSthool Breen, 317 Onyx Ave., Bal. Morning Can)·on Rd., Shore Thf' prayers werP leo t<y Dr. o 1stnrt !'las started aQuuterty bOa Island, and Mr. PeaH'S CUffs; and Roy Andersen. 404 Joe Aldrich, church pastor, and newspaper 10 b~ mailed to pu- wUe, Barnell. Serra Dr., Co rona Hlgnlands. One Holland, football coach pnt s and varinus orpni&atiou: Paul D. RyckDff, 53, of \ZOO James A. Crane, 47,a retired at Corona del Mar ll.lgt\ schOOl. tn the district S. Bay Front, Balboa lslaod, real estate tn•estor, uves at Praise ns gi•en to Mike for Til£> first Issue of the 4-i*P Is a retlred buslnessman.Stgn-323 DriftwOOd Rd.,Shor£>Cwts. his enthust.a.stic enngeUsm at paper, called "R!$Qrt to tbe tog Ills nominating papers were He was nominated by Robert L. the church and at the high People ·• was mailed lutwttt. Richard T. Ca.rtlDC\Oil, 114 Geyer, 3\1 Dr1fhrood Rd., and school, wher e he bad been bust -A("co'r ding to the om.ce tl Amethyst AYe.; Paul W, Gr HM, Mrs. Geyer; Nathaniel B. Ub-ly promotlna-piiDS for Cttrlst-SJ.C)t. Jotm Nicoll, one more 11 6 Amethyst AYe.; E1euor bey, Sll Dritwood Rd., and ian leat:l!rshlpw@ek.,Ctw.chHol-edition wtll be prlDted _..._ Taylor, 117 Amethyst AYe.; Mrs. Ubbey; Casey Conway, laod recalled Mike's comfort-this schOol year, wttb 4~ John Mel(IUeo, lzt Amet.hyst 310 DrUtwood Rd., aDd Mrs. ing greetl'Di after a Sea Klnr; schedu)ed for eachtuttreiCMDI. AYe.; Maybelle Andrews.. 10& Conway aOO by Burton Lowe of loss UW.C had blocked tbem out year. Amethnt At'e.; Ratok1 Cox. 318 Drtltwood Rd. aDd Mrs. of the le&cue lead. Mike waiQd PrlnUne cost Is ..x1 110M 110 AmtthJ'II A Yet.; Jewel Cat· Lowe, all of Shore CUtrs. oat oo the field aDd sa1d "Praise $400 per Issue. rlnCflem, llC Alfiethyst AYe.; Jonas (JOhD )Store, 44, Uves tbe Lord\" The Sea Kings weot Circulation for tM nrst W- R.C Flrdey, 11 7 Ocu'J: An.~ a.l +tl IsabelLa Terrace, Co-on to Wbl the rest of the pmes sue waa 21 000 c~Jes. aad Helea Wben'y, 112 Oll)'1 rooa Htgtda.ods. Ht hetds his Ud tbt ._..title. ' An,, au of Bal)oalab.nd. own COQSQltlne •nctneertnc .. lb • .c. of Mr. llld Mrs. DUTY IM AMTAICnC • 7TH OLttRICT firm. Hls nomlnatln& papers Bob Mwrytni.Jl of tbe Bluffs. P.O. (DH) Cool, aa, 129-1/Z were stped bJ John kllltflr. wu a 11&5.118C1CK on a motor . Caut Gtard s..,_ &-. Or cldd An., Coroll. del Mar, tCl SlloreeiUf Rd .,ShoreCUJfs; eycle ctrr.-b1 SteYt Sctmel-D4!lth R. C&rrut:o. .. af llr~ He la I nttred mtrCU. ud lAbel Ptut, Ill EYtllJ.ncC&n· de', M1lor at COM lli&!lldlool ud Mrs. Robert M. earn.. alor'merdtJ~Nom. JODR4..SIIoreCutrs;lraSmlth., Ud.,. oiMr. UdMrs.Rob-of IS1 RobtlloHoodLUe.C... IMtlo( liT. Cool! """ ~ 45e II-Ttr., C.... ol't Sc-ot Nooport ~~-Ia OC-Jod to - Kero, at-be. Co-H!ploodo; GtnldiM st-.t, S-TM t lodt ww. ,.... lo 1111 "'*"'"< 00111 - roa dtlll&r; G. Eliot Sooo!>le, liS Sloonelll! R4.,Sioo<oCUJ!b; tonllt( o-a -lo -t r-,. ..-., lloo C.. 5'11S.110NR4.,C.._IIIII'· CwlooPortoo,_Orr...,._ ~.m. aod w.o rldltll olooc ___ ._, lllldl;; AtS.U-.liZ'rCdhn go~ CuMO Sllor•· MonDu 81'1*1 a. ..,. •........., 11oM ,.... at •••· ,.. ""' .... eor.. dolllor; LoU bh.,--,R.., ea-A tnc1; -lit'~... ,.,. I 1tu-err •- ,_.., 1'111 'If-Dr. s--CUIIDr<l, tt0 Jr. a1-Aa 11o111i1o Ill· -II .. S lo I loll - llarllot Yin Hilla; llol' -· .. _ ... Dr. lllr1latr V'"" wOd .,._ ltea -IL l,.la-IDIM&WIS .. aoll, lit ~lllf Aft. c-Rlllo, ud llr)Ut Clrl I ••a. -trW lo ·-1110 tncl; --~~I~ 0111-it delldr1 ...,.._ Dtefp-,. fS.II TriHIII Lui. c.,-._ IIIII ... tJdl lilt a....... - -... -~~~- 11--~ 114., -.-w. lllltt wu-.....,. ud·eltllloll-~~--. • • TEXT OF NEWPORT BEACH GENERAL POLICY ' n. ......_ u a ,..,..c ..mce. udupuot olb ooeHwl•r -.. ,. .............. -.. "'~ -· ..... ~~~ -..... " ,..,..... ... -· lui "'tllo ... oloall 6o llllllld &ad -llal lo _.,. ...... &ad -IJ ···-&ad to ... -.., _.. dloo-trlolcll -odHrooiJ aflod 1M qooiiJ • lftlct.aJ oC .... , cw pii.Med plllbtlc ...,... .,... • ._ •> ...,.... _., --1 -ioplloolllall !no -to-.,_-.--· ..... --&ad •Mn ...., .. Mill ~••ltMt oo•--*1 _..... 1M ~ poiCf -"' .... !It-t _.,. ._.. piiJI. no _.. pog., •-w111 1no 1101 ,....._ a.. -----------------lopllcltlt _.tplu. no _..PILl,--~~~eo~ c) Tho CIJ au -.. till ..-or -·- dU<Iar denloptnooto lo _.. I IIIII! ---lor 1111 proorllbl or pablle -oomeoo OillJ w11111a -ar-•bert tbe character, amouat 1M Delta at RCD Meklp~ m..U an eorQP~.Ub)t "db ~ lud ... ud tM elllttar eharatter of tbe commud)'. -:sort.,......-u ..-. ...-c, ...-. tei!OOII ud .Uutlel are, ·cw wtll be, "'*QM'te to_...-.. c) T., fl._.. Ike Milfllborbood a ten $1111"• ud ''J IIIJ oleliltiae~lanulballbeprJ rrNudwiiPd. THE OFFICIAl NE-»EA OF THE CITY OF NEWI'OAT IIEACH THE HARBOR AREA 'S OFFSET NEWSPAPER OfRcc a.nd printina pbonc in che Enlian hildinc. :Z721 s. Cout Hwy .• ~Of'. del Mar, C.lif. 9262.5 TElEPHONE: 87U660 tAtoo Codo 11•1 "nn& NEWPORT HARI!IOR !lNSIGN l11 he only ne-p&pr:r printed And prl' .. ,d in 1he a cy of Newpou an<:h, ;1111d the CJnly loully o-ed ... ~ud M-papcr in th1: Newp<WI Kubot.CO.ta Mota Nn. P ·r hd -ltly, on Th!Mio<by , ~1:ond dau ~tal" pt~oid u Coro~ -......... c.tlf. 'nil N!WJORT HAR80R ENSIGN wu adjudccd to be a MWifW'ptl' of ...... drculrtion by CC¥oll'l dccrte No. A-20178 cUtcd Moly 14, 1951 , i. llftckN Co&wt fCH the Counry of Otan1e, State of C.Jifornia, and by , .... ...,_( il qwlifwd to publi~h all public noricn rcquWcd by law. AR.VO E. HAAPA . . Owner and Publisher PEG.HAAPA . .Auoc:iate Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES hi tbrbof Aru: One yur, 15.00:2 yun, S 8.00 0\*1 o(H.ubor Atu: Onr ynr. 16.00:2 yean, SIO.OO ctl.. .lot ~ -"¥ ARVO E. HAAPA, owner and publ isher of the Ensign * DON'T ADOPT A BAD LAW Why adopt a bad law ? The Newport Beach City Council still has a chance to eliminate the glaring Inequities in the proposed service station ordinance. For example: Requiring 15% landscap- ing on service station property is clearly beyond the legitimate scope of the Coun- cil's legislative authority. U the Coun- cil can do this to service stations, it can do the same for any business ..• even requiring all store fronts to be painted chartreuse and orange, or a checker- board black and red. U the Council can decree how many tires can be displayed, it can also limit the number of bras and panties and dresses in the display window of a women's shop. All businesses in Ne wport Beach should be concerned about the attempt to im- pose drastic controls on service stations. You may be next on the control block. • • • • FREEDOM OF CHOICE IS ISSUE The basic issue in the renewed attempt to fluoridate the public drinking water in Newport Beach is freedom of choice ver- sus forced medication by government edict. Let each family make its own de- cision on this extremely personal subject. The fallacy of the fluoridation argu- m ent is clearly exposed by the fact that all who want fluoridation can have it--with no infringement on the rights of anyone else, and at no cost in tax funds. They can buy flu oridated wate r, or mix their own, thereby safeguarding against harm- ful over-dose. Wh y the insistence for fluoridation of public drinking water when such an easily available and sensible s olution is at hand? • • • • LESSON IN E CONO MICS NEEDED Understanding the cause of inflation is absolutely essential for the survival of our free nation. As long as the problem is tackled on the basis of economic myth and fallacy, so long will our nation con- tinue along the spiral of ruinous deficit spending, toward ult!mate bankruptcy. U the vote rs in sufficient numbers would come to the understanding that inflation is caused by continuing deficit spending by the federal government, then they would kick the profligate spenders out of office and bring our nation back to fiscal sanity. Read the article by Howard Kershner and Edward Rowe on this page, also the analysis by Congressman John G. Schmitz, and spread the word to others. • • • • DID WE GET THE MESSAGE? In the mall delivered to the Ensign of-· flee last week was an envelope from the "California Committee to Re-elect the President," sent from the Los Angeles headquarters. The envelope was sealed, but quite empty. Is someone trying to tell us something ??? • • REAL CAUSE OF INFLATION • .. lnO.rion iJ 1101 uuJed by 'f•ror by bulineHJJe<ed. fnnation __.only from ao•cmmenl m~nufaelurtna money (1nd eredft) a..•,fbn we !Nnuf•c:turt aoocfs. II purpoac:ly tutt dll&ml ia 1 .., ..,. will not 1111pKt '"d for u.n they wouJd DOt paomk lf ..., 1hey wt!fe footJna the bill ... -Le,,u;t/ R. llot~lwrt, ,.,. bJ t11o dl)''o .. .,,._ -••-.n-11111 -Od 1>1 111o City c~ will !no IIOIIofll .. _ plu" a..-· do .. lopmeol ood--or111o ell)'. PISbH.e IMII.rl.Dp ue .:~ oa the poUcy report tor Feb. 14. 2! uti Jl at ?:SO p.m. lD CltJ Co.mcU chambers. Boca-ol tbo 1--e ol till polkJ rop>rt. tl>o Ellllp llrl" Us -· to nod 1M rop>rl, I* -tllooo ptii>Uc bearlDp ud mab tbetr dNtrM tDoft to UM CCMU11. Boea..e lite pollaJ -YID !no M)e<:l to ...... aolll beulocs ban beea coq~tetld Uld the couoeu bu approytd the docllmtDt, tbe tnt we are pd)UihlDc will DOt bt the tiDal. omcl&l •ersloG. HoYe•er, tf'lls 'ferdoo baa beeo ~O¥ed by the Plalll1Dc Comro!sston_ &ad tbe chaapl naestecS at a Jan. Sl jotat meettnr of the comml.ulooeu Uld tbe City Council a.re couldered mtoor, ez.ee!ll)t W'tNire we ban lnaerta:t edlml&tiiOiel. d) The apllmiUll fiiOIFIPhiC Umlta ol 1111 City olla1l !no tltabllaMd to euun tbe reteaUOa at tbt CttJ'• tmklut e bl.ncttr aDCI tdeDt.UJ, e) 1ft oadl _.uai .-JalloO, 1110 ara•o rolalloaoh'41 ood 1m_. to tho City ood&ll-oiJid-11 O>otll-le aad 80Yiroomeotal) ohaU !no -..II>IJ ldnWial &ad "1111*1 for a.tUMDtiDD or DODo&1lDIJ&tioD • d) no City illlall -tw a -<~••oilY o1 load -oo1fllloelo01a, ,_,.. .._ cbarcbooudaol.....,- -~J -.., .,. aftllll>lo Iii c-prolllalllf to eac:IJ ru:ldeM of tM eonalmlq. o) no typo lOCI ....,.. or commorel&l u.o 111011 !no Umllocl to -'Oblcll c:u loulbiJ !no _. ·IIJ •tllolr -1ndo .... ood • -tibiCII ... --lad ....,.lll>lo !11111 111e lltlme COllctPI Ull 1,.... or 1M Tbe EPSip wW repor1, La detail, fUture ebaaps as tlley are made at each pd:!Uc hearLDc and '41011 flaal City Couneu approval. • • • PREAMBLE IN PLANNING FOR THE FUTURE Of THE COMMUNITY, u Shall be the bl.sle uoderlytng pl of the City of Newport Beach to protect aDd enbance the City's speci&l charm aDd ehancter; its unique uaturala.Dd mu.made physiealenriroo- meot; Us attractive YiSIIll en.,.lronmt~nt. and the wide range of soelal, ecooomle, cultlll'a.l, educational a.od recreational opportunities wh.tch have contributed to the hlgb quality or life enjoyed by Jts ctttzeos. • • • FUTURE GROWTH o GENERAL OBJECTIVE It ts the objecHve of the City of Newport Beach to assure, through the assertloo of posltln controls oYer urban growth, the preservation and enhancement of all those present assets which provide for the high quaUty of Ufe enjoyed by Its citizens, aDd to assure that an support systems such as transportation, parking, recreation taciUttes, scbools, tlre and pollee protection, and ut1Ht1es can be ma.1Dta1Ded at optimum levels of ecooomlc and functional emctency. o SUPPORTING POLICIES a) The City shall set specl.flc limits on populatioo am dwelling unit densities and the intensity and elieot of com~ mercia! and ln:!ustrlal development for the general plaJlnlng area as a whole, and for each Individual planning area. through- out the comm·Jnlty. (NOTE : Wording of this sub--paragraph will be changed to refer only to dwelllng unit density, NOT to spectf1c population.) b) The tlmtng and pace of future developm~nt or redevelop- LETTERS TO EDITOR· · • WRITE TO NDCON Editor of the Ensign, I have just sent the followlng letter to the prestdent: Dear PresldentNI.Jon-~lbave just nrushed reading the ju- diciary committee report by the late Senator Dodd entitled "The human cost of commu- nJsm In ChJ.na," and, Quite frankly, I am even more ap. palled than before that you would gi..-e serious thought to going to Red China--much less go. This report qootes Profes- sor Walker, a llletlme student of Chinese a.tta.lrs, who says that commWlism in China has cost a minimum of 34 million lives, aocl the total may run as high as 64 mtJllon. To bring It down to a more personal llvel, would I sip tea with a murderer? Never! But, stnce It seems from all reports that you wtll be going to Red China, I Implore you oot to gtve dtplomatJc recog- ott1on to Red China, thereby fUrther betraying our Chinese trlends on Taiwan. B. J. Woodward P.S. I urge others to write thP president oo this subject, tor aJI of Asia is In jeopardy. FIOII THE Now when all the: people: were: baptized, it ca-ne: to pass, that Jesus also being baptized, and praying,, the: heaven was o pened. And the: f-l ol)' <llost de. scc:ndc:d in a bodil y shape: like: a dove upon him, and a voi ce: came: fro m heaven, which said. Thou an my beloved Son; in th ee: I am well pi eased. (St. Luk c: 3 : 21 , 22.) KERSHNER-ROWE COMMENTARY We Must End Inflation , Not Merely 'Fight' It By HOWARD IERSHNIR A.ND EDWARD llOWE (Reprinted from tb e Santa Ana Register) STOP 11\'FLA'nON money hal nlue oaiJ u it We don't need to fight infla.. sharet the J)UI'ChaaiDc power tlon.. we need to stop it. ol the oid money, but iD • Bow C&D ""' be_, -""-power" Two things are essential . the old 1D00e7 il diluted, or 1. Tbe government must JtoleD.. .top blcrea&ing the quantity The belief that DeW money ol mooey and credit. II beiDa created. or wU1 be 2. Stroog groups fi orgm-cruted. ltim:ulatel b-MineM b:ed workers must stop iDst.t-actidy beaUM people fear iDg upon wage adv.nces that rillnc: prkw aad. nub to bay are in excess of productivity ccmmodltlel before the par- .......... cbollaC -" thea' dollar Consider No. t . When the dtriab. M the parebublc quantity ol. money and credit power t:Jl tbe dollar appra.ch- ia iDcreased, the new 111fD!1 a t.ero lDerMaiDI tbe Q\IUIU- dllules file purobaoiDg """"' I)' ol .....,. will DO ""- ol tbt old IDOMJ'. Lut year'• tttr .. w. I)Qea-aad tbe tD- Fecleral deficit exceeded a:z flatkury boam cilmel to u billlon. That It to ny, that eat. At tut poiDt: U.. wbl mueh ne.r money and eredlt Mn ~CCU~Dulli&ed dollar • wu ertlted. ... ..,. beea tetirel7 .. ~mg th1l we bad teD Ji I I I 1lbitl ol. mcmey before m:l 'Die ~ ttl Pi~ DOW created ODe be'W' unit, the ty dur1nC u ~ ...... -will .... tho --"-lho lid .._ purd>uing _.. .. .... 1101 pon:boolac -or the p~e+iool ten. JJa other ._ drllblr ...,... U. be.- -· "" -.....,. boo ~ ·-·"' lo --I put ol fhe purdlll-- --tal till - ... power " "" old ........ -· Ill --. .. ~. prloto tloo u "" ---ooloJittl llfll>. ··-" _,. ood c:tdt _,. -,. -n-. ..,.. .. tile -" ...... lD ...nty, lnllalloa, or t11o lor---for IMw loo>•m» ol-.._,.,lao •• .,_..,. __ -" llleolmc""'" -.. 1101 -" .... -who Un aceamtl1a&ed life ....,. IMt ~ be tl na:-.. lraiuiiiDte, ~. IDiftd,. td.fta .. 8t _ _,. lloo, ....... b •• k ....... --to lito It-,_ --boado. -ltt•-llalllltM-b-* ad but ~. '!tle w1*t1 .. No I ww'SS eommuattJ u a qtaUtJ, low ..deMit)' rutdenttal u-. f) lD eooperaUOa wlth otber lOCal or repoaal &poe"' Ud district•, the Ctty JhaU neourap tbe IUIDUitioD 01 fU'lDaa Isolated are.. within the Couaty wblcl'l aaturaUJ tall wttblD tbe plaiWnr and ~ervtee respoDGbtUU•• of tbe City • f) Commeretal recr..UOa or deltiatioa todr1.lt facSW., to particular, bll be cartfUlly ~ned 10 u to ...-« the quatlt)' rnldeDUa.l ebln.eter of the CMnm.-ry ud the opportualty of local fHidenta: to toJoJ (lD a llle, ~ .. aod e<~Weallllt muoer) the eoetlnued UM ot tbe barbOr'. •bor•UM &Dd 1oea1 traqportaUon am puttDr tlei..IWN. r) Tbe dowDco&lt area, ID ~cular, aball be IDe laded u a ;JUt of the pnenlplaDarea,udertterll.lor ita dPelopmeet shall be prf!PU'etl. The quest:toa of W'betMr Ul.tl area •111 be annezed w111 be considered after tbe oeeeuary eeoaomte aDCI physlca.l resea.rcb has been co~leted and determtD&Uoa can be made as to tbe adf'a.Dtages aDd dla.df'IJit:&CM of uoeatioa. c) Ia new of"llle City's attraettooua regtolll..l aoct .t:ltewidt recre&Uoa area: tbe crowtng rectonal and ltatntde dtiDlDd for nter....orhmted recreattoaal fleiUtles, and tbe u·mtted cq~&etty of tile City'• harbor and oeeantroat 're.aareH to tuUy attsty neh demands, the Ctty shall eoeoarace the opening aPI1 def'tlopment ot ad):l1ning ocean and ftter&Nd areas outside Newport Bay ln a maDJier whlch may best aerYe to distribute the Increasing pubUc need tor water...,orleotld recreaUoul fleWUes, h) BecallH tbe school system and Ua .-rYtces play neb a ..-uat part lD the Uns of the e1tt.Ho1 ot Newport Beach, the City shall retnJn from anMYIDg aoy resldeDUal area wbteb ts not wltbtD the Newport-Me• UDI.flld Sc.hool District. (NOTE: This $Ub.paragnpb may be chupd to reneet Council concern onr whether anneatlon boiiDCiartH ~ld bt set before or after school district decisions. The mayor asked for wordlnr that w.ould ID'ge city cdft.ctala, aebool district· represeotaUves and developers to get toptbM" and work out an agreement oc school dtstrlctlDg belol"e a.zmeatioo 1S appro..-ed.) I) City growth, both 1D terms of populatloo aDd pographlc Umlts, shall be coordinated wtth other appropriate Joca.I aod regional agencies and wtth the local school district to best serve the needs of the residents of Newport Beach. h) Conststeot With all other poUeles to protect and enllance tbe Q18ltty resldeotlal character of the eomm~.muy, the City stllll eocourare both pubUe and prlntewater-orlentedrecrea~ tlooal and eaterta.lnmeri Cl.elUUes as a means of prOYldlne maximum pubHe access to tbe waterfront, 1) Pl'O'f'lslons shall be made for the presena.Uon of suitable aDd adeqtate lites tor commercial and lndustrlal marine· related tac1Ut1es so as to protect the City's historical and mutttme atmosphere, a.Dd the charm aod character such ltxtustrtes han tradltlooally provided the City's growi.D( residential eommunity, {NOTE : Due to the coocern of several councilmen that the worcttngofthe two toregolnrsutt-paragraphs gives too much eocouragement to onr--development of water recreaUoo t.lcllltles, there couJd be some miDor chacres In wording.) LAHO USE o GENERAL OBJECTIVE It Is the objecUn of the Ctty of Newport Beaeh to provide lor an orderly bllance of both public and prl-rate land llSeS within converUent and compa.Uble loca.Hona: throughOUt the commurUty, and to ensure that all such uses -their type, amount, design and arrangement -each serve to protect aod enhance the character and Image or the commtmlty as a low-density residential-recreational area, j) Gene"ral Industrial development within the community shall be Umlted to those areas and uses which are appropriate to and oompaUble wtth a qua.Uty residential community. ll) The City 1hall develop a.nd maintain suitable and adequate standa.rds for JaOOscaping, sign control, site and building deslgu, pa.rklnr aod the under grounding of utllltles to ensure that au eJ1sUnr aDd future commeretal and ladusttlaldevek)pa ments are compatible with surtoundtnr laud uses. o SUPPORTING POLICIES a) The City shaU preserve aod mainta.ln the predomlDant one and two ta.mi ly resldeotlal character aDd density of the commtmlty within existing and future neighborhoods thrOUgh· out the City. CCONTINUI!D NI!XT WI!EIC) STRAIGHT TALK Rep. John Rarick reports TOM ANDERSON dent Nixon performed for the President NUon stated in hls voters ID order to toouc~ their state of the union message: ''All Yotes and support, he led them ot my recommendations, hOw. to believe he was opposed to wtU be rooted in ooe forced bussing to achl~ve ra. Why I'm Upset Mdilm.~otal principle with eta! bllance, and yet his rec- there can be no compro-ord, made not on what he has Local school boards must said bUt on what his agents "A re yo u against everythinl~ What are you so upset about? Have you ever had it so good? What are you for?·· These questions are continuous.ly propounded by fuU·beUied and empty·hc:adc:d friends, enemies and neutrals who can·t imagine: anything betng wr ong as long as "bc:ezness is good .·· 1·m for learning fro m the mistakes o f o thers, si nce I can •t pos.sibly live long enough to make them all myself. For old age. because I'm against the alternattve. For understanding lift backward and liv mg it forward For domg what IS right and diSregarding "world opinion." For wmnmg the war in North Vtetnam as soon as possiblt by whatever means are neces.sary . For sendtng our Seventh Fleet to Nort h Vtetnam to blockade: all ports and to sink any ships. incl ud.ng British , which try to deliver supplies to our enemy. Britain sc:Us to the Viet Cong, Cuba and Red China and anybody else with money. Britain will do anything for money. For blockading Cuba and helping anti·Communist Cubans and other Latin Americans return to Cuba and dest roy the Castro regime and the Rus.uans and the mis1ile bases pointed at us. For reassc:rtin1 and maintaining the Monro(' Doct rine. For retaining our ownership and control or the Panama Ca nal . by force if necessary . For retaining the Co nnally Resenation , restricting the jurisdiction of the World Court. For a re-definition of treason to determine where One·Worldilm ends and treaJOn bepns. For 1ettin1 o ut of the Unit ed Nations (the Utt bill , H.R. 164) and aettin1 lnto a council of free nations. a1 suguted by Herbert Hooftr. for peactful non-n.iltence or the UN . It will oon-eUt when and it we quit payin1 its bllls. For restoring to Conaress the u cluli•e ri&ht to make treaties, tariffs •nd wu. For endina "un.flaterai'J disarmament and for restorina our capacity to defend ouraehes •aa i nat any imaahuble combinaUon of enemlea. For U.S. withdnwal from the Gene'tA Dlurn'llment Conference. R c: s e r v e S y s t e m ; t he cootrol over local haYe carried out, Is the great- Department o r Health, IChools... est bussing of schOol children Education and Welfare:: federal Certa.Lnly 00 American can in the history of the world and aid to state and local disagree with thls statement the greatest exodus of white (IOVemments. of coostitutlonal principle. people and lndustdous blacks For a research p-ant to However, the president has now from the Amerlc:~.n clUes to determine why il il that the been 1D offtce 3 years. Why the s~urbs, boy you were sure was not must be walt ~I re-elecUoo U the president wut.s tO car- good enough for your daughter year to relterate the law of the ry out his state of the union turned out to be the father of land? Especially Is this 80 when recommendations on local t he w o r I d 's s mar 1 est the cleat record of his ad~ schOols, he doesn't Deed "htde- g:randcttildren. ministration ln the publlc and behind" committees and ad- For Urban Renewal for prln.te edocaUona.l tleld has vtsory commissions, He needs every city where the people been ooe of more federal coo-only to comply with the law or who own the downtown real trol and lntervenUon, denying the land under his sworn oath estate: an d get practically all a voice to local elected ol~ of offtce and he wouk1 have the benefits will pay for all the flclals, than any president pre. the support of the ma~rtty of costs. "Save: the downtown:· ced.Jng blm. Congress aDd the overwhelm- Wh y? Decentnlization and Mr. Nlzon Is the president. lng ma~rity of the American di~persal of city populations It he truly means what he has ~le who still beUeve In the ahould be the goal. sUd about restoring local con-coostltut1on and have not bten For returning all public trot over local schools, then hoodWtnked by the federal court '"welfare·· to state and local why doesD, he do it? Why superiority doctrine. Federal governments. ~·t he simply told his "'-judges may be able to rule in F o r r e s t o r i n 1 t he pointed R. E. W. otneials his De· aecordaoee with what fits their soverc:ipty of our 1tates. partm.:~t ol Justlce appointed personal whims but the n.st which is our stronac:st blliwark otftctals, and yes, even his riiajorlty oftheAmer tcanpeople against Communism. For less "strict COilStructtooist" fed-tmderstand that all of the ted- government control of people era.l appolatees, ID<:1Ud1Dg the era.l officers executing judgea and more people control of chief justice, to stop their fed· made df'! ta.cto la"'i' are of the go vernment. For keeping eral usurpation of the people's uecuthe department, answer- government small . honest and educatlooal SJII:em and compJ,y able directly to the President poor. with the law of the land, which of tbe United States and sworn For pubtiJhinl pc:riod1cally is the COI'U>11tutJoD and the laws to s~rt the constitution ra- t he salaries and expense enacted punua.ot thereto by thertbanthedlctatesofagr~ accounts of public employees. Coogress which probtbtt such of appointed poUttclans who For public disclosure by all fedenl cootrol aM lntermed. happen to occ~y Ule bench ol public officials or all sources or dUng? a federal court at any partie. income (for campai&ns and Four years ago when presl-ular time, otherwise) and investments of ::~;;;."~ ... wb;~dwh~~-m:d~:~~ Report from Wash'1ngton wh«e, why •nd how muoh: and public disclosure of their income tax statements. The presentation of the Ad-sbort.term loans to flnance the for returnin1 1U control of mlDI.ItraUoa's proposed budget defleU. eduCition to state and local for n.eai year 1973, wb1eb It Is essential to understand 1 o " ern men t s as the beciu tb1a JalJ, ~led wttb clearly just What a large and Constitution intended. for Us admtaioD that tbe bwSpt C(I)UnuiDg federal de.t\elt does puttina an end to "police lor tbt earrtDt flscalJeu YIU to our ecooomy. The deficit brutality" before aU our police rao u almolt l.Deredlble $38,8 ta the excess of upebdtturea set ma.imed . For the poor btlUoa lD tht red, maru the Of'"tr renoues.-of mooey come sweet little female almon who nrr..,.,. ol oar poUtk:al ~-out ot pernmeDt Ofer moo- lays 10,000 eus a year and on eratdp .. ..at llut lor tbe Ume ey comlag ln. Tbe ellra moaey Mother'a O.y doesn't aet even bttor~~to fe!ltnl deCeits u a beinc speot Is obtalDed from one louty card . for a study to way ot Ule. H1llory.,.,... UD~ Federal Reserve buts 18 re~ determine why automation ma.tl.bbiJ tbat tbe ultimate tun for tbe IOf'"trDmeot's nner cautcs unemployment eoa..,..·e at tbat n:t ctll1111 promt.e to ttpi.J. Thlt prom- amonJ aovemmc:nl workcu. II ,._.., llliii.Uoa., tbt col~ IN, like a percment bond, For b o y cot t in 1 • 11 llpet 01 tM nl• of tbe na~ lmmediately becomes u .... t newldea.len and stores whkb tloa's tne*J. of tbt but, oa wbicb It may sell filthy rnapzines and lead riiOQtJt.Ddobt&lDc.arrac:y. books. For that short bul H..tlert SttlA, er.t.ma.o cl TbU IIW tnODQ' I• bl.cttd bJ aoldcn aae between lhe time tbt ~~ CtMD:U of eco.-DO acta.l economic prodllct- boys 1top atkjna where they IOIIlle ad'rlalr&, toW the HOUM lflty. TWebt, It dUitta tbe came from and JCart refwina to ~ com.m .... lu-f'"a.JM at all tbt ®Ua.nDOW Ia teD when: tbay're eoinJ. 111'1 W.'•ID't C... UJP• ~ by tbe pr"CCIIIO'tkkD pooplo ---l'flol. --· -. lla --tl. -do llllt looo -. lor II----.but-----·-·-...... , •• ,....., ... ,.....,.-ur ..... .. lllcr'IIJII»f ,.., ., ...... -........ ,, .. flf .. pa: I,......, w I '' ,_,_, .... -. ..... ,.., ts,... lflllllll._..•••-. ., .. _..,. __ ........ ....., ..... _. ----II :~?~I=•:IJ:·:Ior: ······-----a"'' I' I fort tl. 1J -lla ..,,, ____ ...., ...... For enctlnc the Civil PJP.t• Acl ; ''rentlean;" Utban Ruawtl : sandwich c:oiu; to<a11ec1 "F•it Tncte" ltwt.; double: taQtiOn of OOfJ'O'Itl -do; fldet'll price llld .... COIItrolt; poltal •btid. ... ; wltll•oldh& hau ; *lttoy~..... Ia tho Willi• Jtoa. poolj ,,.. DtJIIU't ... l or 1/tMo AITaln; llotro; r-.1 ...,..,; tMdlcut; tt.• Ped«al f« maklnt il a feden.l ...... .riD eTV ...... trJ to tltat tbl deftclt btUI liD W. crime to de11crate the lalucetlillt.dptWllleltlleeoo-total·-&..-_, Jlptfta• pro. American flo a. _, lo IOIII!nolo'l'fllll-""· --• tllo dollelt Ia p., tbe 11o-c-.. m.. •oat.• ._lniJ 1111-">J-_,IJ $40 llfllloa. Tbllt- on Un·ARMrican Acli'lida For ..... flrtal.b' -*IMNI .an tob,. ~ 01' ~ oupportlq out-pollco, IIIII --llu flf.:1 Ia-~ or -.r· l)dee -.. -.. ... --"" &ad --lo ... lrJ to ... !_n .. r 1lb~~rk!!_le1 !!' ..... 1 JIQrf&lltU' ... U ,..,... ... U.colllroUIIJl. --·-~ .... -.......... Os&111-s. tltla u ....,. -nr do,-." toodiDt oad Pl't• 10 pobfjc •-tor aD~.,... --· To 1M a-IC~. ,.._ •t '• ...... ua tilt .. ...., •trlldta..,.. lorutop-nodtforoer _.,....,, ,.lltarorl-lal;rloottclonooioro-- aodott ... _ .... oplritllol -....... lo - --...... "'-. --....... -J . ..,.lot., ..-., -..::: IIIII --.,.. .... Ia 1111 ,...._ tlae p,.,.,e..w """· ~ IIIII .. tlllt .U... tnllld II sf Ilia, lf::& as .., OOp)fllllt 1972, no "-• -on 11.., tor .. -'"'-.. ...., JO'' • * 1o •• ,,..... u.s, ......... -..., .. , ..... JR. EBELL GIFTS GIVEN ___ .. Lo_..... ~.·· lt&ced b7 tM JUDIOI' !btU Clllb Of Newport Beech, YlU be 4lltrltMaed u fOllows: Tbt Boy'1 Club, tor a table -1101. Cater tor Law In the Pub- lic loterest.-a membershlpwas parcbued In tbll orpntuuoa of artorneya who participate ln legal battles tor the preaerva- UoD ot our oatural resources. Envtroameotal Nature Ceo. ter--a touoders membership was purchased for tbls Junior Eben sponsored project, IrvtDe Community Theater, for operating e:q>enses. KCET Educational TV, lor a membersi\ID. Mardan Center, for a tape recorder and one dozen tapes. Pennies for Pines. atudtes textbOok& wt.U be dft:D to thi.J &ehool for the de&J'. Youth Employmeot SerYlce. for the cost or telepbooe aod lllft'etlnf ser'ftce for a month. Youth Problem Ceoter, to raY for mail permit, aDd postage tor newsletter. Veterana' Charitable FolDl- datioo, for food stamps for a needy bmtly. Token donations wtll be made to Orange District s~ philanthropies. These lnclude: c aurornia Association for Men- tal Health; Orange Coonty Jail. for Bibles; Orange County WeD Baby CUI'IJc; PartlaoeResiden- Ual School; Project Concern. Tijuana; aDd CARE. How do we read prescriptions? -·-··- ..-;_ ;.:z..,.i-., -j~ r,. 0' r•• .... .,.. Accordina to some of ourcuatomers, pracrip- tions aren't written- -~ they're doocUea. Ye1 ~..,;:;;;;,;;;;;:;_,;;;,;;;...~ your pharmacist loob J).(J4.).6 MICHAEL AHD HELEM RAY Orallllgua Sci'IOol --social The receJptents •ere selee· ted by a ftnance committee, headed by Mrs. Harlow Rlch- ardooO. at the eryptic scribbks and calmly reaches for a bottle. The right bottle. Prescriptions arc written in a special international language known to phy- skians and pharmacists ... a lc.ind of universal, standardized shorthand that's g.rammar-aod penmanship-proof. It exists so any re&istered pharmacist anywhere can fill your prescri~tion accurately. That's how W(;'re always able to ,aive you just the drug your physician prescribes, •nd why the directions are always correct. We arc plc:ascd to serve you whenever pre5Cription medi- cation is requ1rcd. Helen Davis is bride of Michael David Ray Michael David Ray '•recruit- ed" Miss Helen Marte Davts as Ills bride In an aft ernoon wedding cer emony held at his- toric San Diego Mission de Alcatl Dec. 29. The reception was held at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot omcers' Club, San Diego. The bride Is the daughter of Admiral and Mrs. James Rob- ert lnvts of El Cajon, The groom 1s the son of Harbor Area builder James David Ray and Mrs. Ray of Cameo ShoreS. Miss Patrtcla Davis or El Cajon was her sister's maid of booor . Brldesmatl1s Included Miss Katya Smith and Miss Carol Selllc of Los Angeles~ Miss Kathleen Ray, sister or the groom, trom CameoShores. the Spanish style '•hunting dress" designed by the bride, short fttted jackets In green veJvet over matchtnglongsld.rts wUh white ruffled blouses. Brown Edwardian suits with white ruffled shirts and brown boots were worn by the groom's men. The bride's nephews, Casey and Greg Tibbitts, wer e train bearer and ring bearer, respectively, Special guests at the wed. ding Included the brtde's bro- ter-ln-law aDd sister, Lt. Commander and Mr s. Jonathan Tibbitts of Port Hueneme, and Dr. and. Mrs.Chrlstopber Davis of Washington, D.C., the bride's brother and sister-in-law. a RECYLCING CENTERS have been set ~ 111. Newport Beach by the ''Citizens to Recycle Useable Dt.scards" at East Blutl Town Center, near the tennis courts, aDd at Westc llff Plaza. These centers accept only alumlDum and glass. Newspapers may be taken to Richard's Lido Market UCI or the Harbor Blvd. recycllng site betWeen Witso'n aswi Vlctor la, Costa Mesa. Pictured nere at the East Bhdf recycling center are Br uce Kale. at lett, WUllam Johnson and Ryan Wood. Maintenance or the sltes wtU be the r esponsiblllty of volunteer local cl'fte organizations. Each group wlll monitor the center s for a 4 week period a.nd will receive Its share or the gross rennues. The steering committee Includes Mrs. Alan Tracy of the Slerra Club Mrs. William Kitchens of the League of Womeo Voters: Mrs. James E. Murley aDd Mrs. Lowell Ereostoft of the American Assoclatlon of Un1Yers1ty Women, and Miss Judy Kelssy of the Newport Beach city manager's omce. {Photo by Bruce Derflinger.) Roll back the years Farmvtlle, Va., through the years to the present. Christensen _. IL COAIT -Y. -t.-. ... 01IIOU,... Serving the groom as best man was his brother, James (Walkie ) Ray or Newport. Gary Long, the groom's foster bro- ther from Los Angeles, was an usher along with Jack Fr eeman Fowler of Newport and Hoyt Wilkinson or Ann Arbor. Following the reception at the officer's club, the co!C)Ie left. to make their home In Los Angeles, where the groom Is compleUng his work ror his master's degree at USC. The couple are planning a honeY- moon trip during Easter va- cation. JUBAL THE LION shares the spotllght with Hoag Hospital employees hOnor ed by the hospital tor a combined 500 years of service. Getting acquainted With the cub ire Mari- lyn Eadie, Mary McNulty, an awardee, and Dr. Ron M lbordin. (Photo bY Jack West.) "Zeta Memories" is the theme chosen tor the annw.l Southern California. state day of Zeta Tau Alpha Sorority to be held Saturday, Feb. Z6, at the Alrporter Inn. The North- ern Orange County Alumnae Chapter of ZTA will bethehos~ tess group. Tbe order of the shield cer ti- ficates will be presented to 50-year members, lnc lud ing Mrs. A. W. Cr lselJ of Lido Isle. Mrs. Burton Grant of the Blutls, Federation president, wlll preseot awardstooutstand- lng alumnae and collegiates. The brll1e wore a sheath gown ol whUe crepe with whlte vel- vet cape and cowl ed~ In white fox llD". The gown was designed by her and made according to ber design. She carried an 1897 helrk:Jom rw:.dkerchief, carried by 14 brides In the groom's family. Her atteodants wore The new Mrs. Ray attended Maryknoll School in Hooolulu and graduated from Occidental College in 1970. The groom also took his B. A. degree at Occi- dental College, graduaUng in 1970, He attended Corona de l Mar high school and grammar schools In tbe Harbor Ar ea. Hoag employees honored "Let memories roll back the years" --these words will set the stage for the after noon's program feature, "college fashion collage," which will Include fashions, songs and commentary cover ing the per- Iod from 1898 when Zeta Tau Alpha Sorority ..,·as founded in Seventy -lour employees at Hoag Hospital, whO have given a combined 500 years of ser - vice to Us patients, were hOn - ored r eeently at the 14tn an- nual employees' awards ban- quet. Card party for PTA Each year employees who ar e retiring and those who have worked at the 19-year-okl hoS- pital for increments or nve, 10 and 15 year periods are recognh.ed. A 'ubUc card party to raise funds tor Estancia high school's PTA will be held next Monday, Feb. 14, at the Tale of the Whale restaurant, Balboa. The party, which Wilt run from 10 a.m. to I p.m., will cost $2 per person, In :luling coffee, dessert and door prizes, according to Mrs. William NrJwak, P'fA president. All klnds ot card gam<?'i, ex- cept poker, will be avaJ\able, Mrs. Nowak said. The PTA's m<".jnr require- ment for funds Is for Its s~holarship program. Tickets m;y ba ~UJht at the door or from Mrs. Now.tk.. F:.t ~ther Infor mation Is a vall- able by calling her at 646-1478 or by c.alllnJ Mrs. Ralph Bagel at 545-2418. Democratic Club meets This year the Ust of honor- ees was headed by Dorothy Compton and Marguerite O'Al- esslo or Costa Mesa and Es- ther Welch of Balboa, who have r etired. They received Sl}eeial gifts and shared the spotlight wit h Brenda Easley, youth co~ orrtlnator for Lion Country Sa- tart. She entertained the 200 guests wUh a slide show, Ju- bal, 8-month-old lion, came along with Miss Easley and quJetly mingled with guests throughout the evening, The Harbor Democratic Club •Ill meet at 7:30 p.m. today, Feb. 10, In the all-purpose room of the Harper SchOOl, 18th street aJid Tustin Avenue, Costa Mesa. Jobn W. Black, th e new president, will preside. All tbe declared candidates for ttle Costa Mesa City Coun- cil baYe been invited to be there at 8 p.m. to atr their fleWs. A question and answer period will follow. Richard J, O'Neill, chairman of the Orange County Demo- crau c Central Committee, has been Invited to speak. on voter r e&istntlon, A registrar of Yoters wUI be available to take care or those who need to be registered U they navea chang1! ot name, occ~tlon, party af- filiaUon or tllled to vote In the November, 1970, guberna- torlal election. FE BRU.I.RY FLIHC. Anchor Lodge of the Vasa Order or American will bold Us "February fling'' on the 18th ln the Halecrest club- hOuse, 3107 Killybrooke Lane, Costa Mesa, beg:l.nnlng at 8 p.m. Valentine's daY aOO the birthdays or George Washing- ton and Abraham Lincoln will be celebrated. A prize will be gtven for the most authentic costume representing Llncoln 's ttme. H~len Bock.master , Hiroshi Hattori and Cl\arlotte Zielke received 15-year pins. Ten- year aw:uds went to Eleanor Buxton, JacqulUne Hall, Elea- nor Harvey, Luthera Jolul9on, John Jonkers, Barbara Lloden, Anne Kavulic, Mary Lou Ryder and Beulah Sweesy. The following 59 employees who have completed 5 years at the hospital also reeeived pins: Anita Atvarez,Caro!Ames,Ar- lene Bauer, Catherine Salley, Alberta Been, QueeDie Brown, Loulse Bodvltls, Ellr.abeth Buf- fington, Erik Carlsoo, Joan Chamberlain, Josephine Co- "AS THE WORLD CHURNS " Can a poor tired out. overworked housewife, career girt or society belle find happiness while waiting for Spring to arrive? You Bet She Can\ By attending our clearance. Mostly 'h price\ TURN ON! TUNE IN! "TIIAT'S llllf raKS. · FlllfiU IOUCl*Sl" THINK BIG SAVINGS THINK SMALL PRICES AND FIND YOUR THING AT JA...aOUitOAO "'' IAYSIOE 01 FASHIONS AT THE BEACH NIW,Oili!ACH 67).)113 Hours. 9 :30-5:30•Su-ys; 11-4 LEGAL H!ll1CE ber t, Sheila Cooper, Kathryn Danniels, Charlotte Davis, Rita DeBilzen, Dorothy Dismukes, EvaUe DuMars, Delores Elt- ler, EILt.abeth Field, Ted Foutch Jr., Jante Hemmln~r, LUU- ame Hester, John Heying, Den- nts Henderson, Keith Meads, Beatrice Mertens, Donna Mor-FICTTTIOI.fi: BUSINESS NAME rts, Margaret Morris , Ma-STATEMENT tllda Mulheron, Cecil Nelson, The Io\lowin~ persons are Margie LaPerle, Catherine Le -doin g business as: Lolita Gar- veille, Ruth Lewis, Peggy Lit-dens, 12192 Edlnger,Santa.Ana: tle, Thelma Lock.h.lrt, Law-Mrs. ThOmas W. Doan, 225 renee Loughen·, William :.lorth Star Lane, Newpo rt Loughery, Mar y McNulty, Joan Beach, Calif.; Or. Thomas W, McNaughton, Vtcto!'ia Penland, Doan, 225 No rth Star Lane, Marion Pernie, Joseph Ptatt, Newpo rt Beach. Ronald Platt, Joan Poirier, This business Is being con~ Evelyn Raab, Kathleen Raines, dueled by husband-wile. Shirley RhOdes, Janet Robuck, Signed: Mrs. ThOmas W, Mercedes Russell, Kenny Sa-Doan. CAN I PLAN MY ESTATE TO AVOID THE RED TAPE MRS. RAMSEY WENT THROUGH WHEN HER HUSBAND PASSED AWAY7 by EUGENE 0 . BERGERON ...... ,....k•• ,., .................... _,,. ... __ .,....._ • -· --. ..... .,...., .... .... ...... ... •• -......... ....... ""'' 0 ......... etc.. -.... -....... "" .............. .t ....... , .. _,, ....... _,,,, • ...., ..... _..,....._klt!MIMsLn.tc.... .,.c r ,....,. flf .......... ..:..,., 11•1 ...... ,.,,, ... ty ........ . .. .......... ..: ............. ef ,_ ._..,. ................... ......,. .. M a .. ,... " ,_..,.. ....,. ,..... c_,. """ .......,, rw ,,..., Of'flcst .t ~ .,... er,.. lsaooir1 c....,.......,,._.....,.,.._ ... ,, ... n.s.-c-lw....,. ........ , ............... ,_ .... tf .,.. ...,.. • ~ ....., .__. --"-· ,.._, _... ., c..a~. w-..-.,.... ... ............ -. •• N.IWtul-. Balt:·Bergeron Funeral Home COstA MISA COlONA 4NI MAl ~·J4 ! LOCATIONS 67J.MSO tudes, Mary Serraoo, Frieda This statement filed with the Shook, Ruby Spangler, Robert county clerk of Orange County Spellmeyer, Mary Vehrs, Pat-on: Feb. 4, 1972, by Betty J. rtcta Wa llace Arm Winnett Bargsten, deputy county clerk. and Margaret ' Zalesky. Mary Publish: Feb. 10, ~ 7, Z4, Lee Skinner's pin was awarded March 2, l 972 , ln the !liewport I..:.:..:Ullilit.i:.J:i;.,,_ __ ... .:_,~:.;.a,,IJ..,;.t;.jr..,.,&.,;;;., ___ .. Jl~,....;.,g~ posthumously to her ram!ly. Harbor Ensign. F -15717 A NEW McDONALD'S - McDonalcfS u U,. WEST COAST Y, NEWPOIT IUCH (IETWEIN D0¥11 lr IAI'OA lAY CWil NE1IPORT HARBOR ENIGII lltURSOAY, FEB. Ill, 1!72 Showdown for jr. cagers -..... ....., .. ,...an Oil tbt apodl. todt.J, Ftb, 10, .. 1110 juoiGr hlp capra co IIIIo 1110 ftatl z .. -of their 1ttpo oebodute. Httdtlolac the A actiOa are TeWlDtle, 3-!, at LlaoolA, 4-1, IUld Gisler. S..Z, at Rt&, 4-1. Feature p.mes lD the 8 loop ue TeWlnkle, !S-0, at LIDcolo,4-1,&adDwyer, 4-1, at Kat.er, 3-2. The top acttoo LD the c•s has Gisler S-0, at Rea, 2-3, andTeWlnkle, 3-2, at Uocolo, S-2. The sbocter last week was TeWIDkle's 36-S3 "'set wtno•- tr the preYtoutr undefeated Ensign A te&m. This threw the A •s In a 3.way Ue , with En- sign, Rea 'and Llncolft all at 4-1. TeWtn.lde coottnues to lead tbe 8's wttll a perfect 5-0 but botb LincoLD aDd Dwyer are only a pme out at 4-1. Gis ler continues to lead the C 's at 5-0 wltb Kaiser the nearest rival at 4-1. coac11 stew F._ aw JU Ra -'"" o..,.. 44-n. TeWlDkle TroJI.U fall bllilat Ltaoola bita•ld Gil._ a.n IS-8 at tile Olld al 1110 llrlll U14 JW.r ..... DtYIIIII-n. q-t..-but ralllecl -II• tt...U LoRa 1011 Ra wltll 11, llaeCI .... y•a -.. 1o -Guy ~ bad 8 -ud t It 22-22 at blH-Ume. Eutp lloe Ftem.., aeored . t pi• coacb Jack Keultr 1o1t bla plcti.Dc oft 7 rebota!l tor tM btc ace Joe Dttt:aaqlo •• Ramt, Rick TboratoD wu b1cb lle fouled out at the la.lfwlJ tor Dwyv wtttl. to, Tom Haw .. mark of the 2od qUil't• after ttu led Ka1Hr la tbt wLD aff/1 scoring 8 points, Euip btltl Da'lll wtth '1 Geld pll &lid I a s Ught lead of 29-IG cotDc tree tllrow1 for & total of liJ, Into the ft.oal perltld, Tbe Tro... Terry Orate ranr IC> 9 b' jans outscored the Sea Bees Ka.taer . Mart Tomita Uld DaYt 11 to 4 Ia the Onal period to Cooper both had 8 for DI.YII, topple the Eallp caprs oat Rteb Nebb fed Lllleola to lt. of lhe undefeated rants, Tbts 4th wta u he was top m&D tor was the first lou EUip bad tbt W eers with 10, followed sunered in teacue competttJoa by Guy Gulsoess wttb 9 and In 2 yeara. They swept lbe Pete McKenste with 6, league aM ptayotrs 1ut Ytlll'. • • • Mark Fedocta led tbe Tro-• 8 OIV1SJJN HICfiLIGHTS jans with 12 polrlts. Pat Pat-TeWt.Dtle cootlnued IJtlde. rlclt had 9 before tou11ag out ftated, rwming Its wtn llrlDC with 1:15 left 1D tbe p.me. to 5 strailbt by cllpptDc En~ Dlstantslo taWed 8 prior to stga 33-12. RayOrctUlecl~cb his ejection, Chuct Merrill's carers wttb 10, Stu Van Horn bad a and. Bo*e Ree<l 15 for the Trojans, LlncolD presents the biggest road block for TeWIDkle as the Lancers warmed ~ for their big p.me wUb the Twlnks by swamping Gisler 4%-20. Steve KObler led the balanced Lincoln THE ENSIGN &Del Kaiser C teams 10 all oat lor a reboand as Rlclc Clark, No. 12. aDd Mike Me.Neese, No. 11. of Eulp compete wttb Scott CoshOW tor poueutoa. On the left Mark Keys, No. 1. of ED.Sign and Jeff Broker. No. n , for TeWinlcle watt to see who gets the basketball. Scott Wil- son. No. 33, on right, Is another TeWinkle player LD on the action. (VIc Opalek photo.) SOMETHING TO SMILE ABOtrr-Pretty Pam Higgins, center, bas lots to smile about aft er setting a new course record 65 at Irvine Coast Country Club, The ladies PGA tour- ing pro bettered pro Dave H1ll 's 67 over the new ICCC layout aod woo first place check for her impressive victory in ICCC 's 2nd aMua.l women's pro-am tourDament. Team- ing with Katie (M r s. Robert) Gardner, seated, of 320 E. Efenlng Canyon Rd., Shore C utfs, and standing, from lett, club prexy Woody Smith, Jerry Tully of 129 Turquoise, Balboa Island, and Madge Milum, 1100 Rutland Rd., Westcll!f, she ted the team to vic- tory with a score of 122. The 5-5, 26-yea.r-old blonde Miss Higgins ts LD her 4th sea- son on the LPGA tour, playtng out of Palm Springs. She has played in 90 pro-am tour- neys but this Is her first victory. Twenty-sli women pros and 104 ICCC amateurs played attack with 10 a.Dd Mark Mc- M urtie had 6 for the Lancers as they rolled to thelr 4th wtn. Dwyer coasted by Rea 40-20 is Mike Jones and Mike Wolsteln scored 18 of the Rams' 20 points. Kaiser won the match wtth I>uts 48-26 as Chris Shulda had a hot hand throwing in 8 baskets for 16 points. PhU K~ler rang ~ 8 with Jack Tus and Mark Muwell both re- cording 6 for the Knights. • • • ANNOUNCING A FIRST IN ORANGE COUNTY In the ann~al event. (Rich Bassett photo.) Ho\HDBo\LL TOURNEY WIHH ERS o\HioiOUHCED Orange Coast YMCA's one Old stables renovated day handball and racquetball Tile "old stables by th~ 5ea," tourname nt produced the fol-that rami liar Coast Hwy., land- lowing results: Handball Class muk just south of Cor ona del A: Dudley Frank defeated BIU M:t.r, ha~ tleen ~ompletely Hansen 31-20; Class B: Ted transformed Into th e irvine Shinkle defeated Don Brodie Equestrian Center with com- 31-25; Class C: Geor ge Pet-pleUon or the first phase ot erson defeated Terry Sheward a major Imp rovement program. 31-22; and Class D: Randy "Originally, mtJst o~ the Wri gh t defeated Chris Chris-hlr se owners buut thelr o·.v :1 t ensen 21-8, Joe Corvt de-structures out of odds and ends, feated Mark Sussom 31-18 In and the effect, I'm afraid, was Racquetball. pretty unsightly," E. A. Sand- ling, Irvine Company marinas NAME TOP GRAPPLERS a nd recreation manager, said. Four Orange Coast College "Since lrvlne took oYer tne wrestlers have been named to place about a year ~go. it has the All California tea m. been engaged in an extenst•e Guy Morrison and Tim Ban-program of remodeling and 1m- del, who wrest le In the 150 provement. Eventually, we hope and 177-pound wei eht classes, to have the finest rldlngb.ciUty wen• selected to the All-State In Southern California." third team. Steve Joannes, a New fences and hitching ralls 11 8-po_under, alld Dan Lewis, have been bllilt, new lf:;,.lkways .,.,.ho t1ps the scales at 167, put in and many new wooden wert· honorable mention picks. and metal paddocks installed H1e team ·~·as selected by for th e 20oJ horses currently tl•e 90 junior college wrestling boarded. Irvin.:> has built OnE' coaches thr oughout the state, lar ge ridi ng rin;;: 120 by 260 and published in the Jan. 31 feet for lnstructton and train- issue or California Junior Col-tng, and plans to add another. l e>~ Wrestling News. Somo: of the other new fea- HEALTH NEWS: IGIORAICE IS "BLITZ" II A WHIPLASH Recently this colurr'ln report- ed the wa rnlnR: of Dr. Gary L. Couture, D.C., of the Couture Chiropractic Center In New- port Beach , of th e consequences of Ignor ing treatment for whip- la sll In juries. In hls view, It Is foo lhardy to forego exami- nat ion following any auto acci- dent or ran as the tell-tale symptoms of a whiplash can be hidden for days, weeks or even years. However . when a whiplash 1s ignort'fi, at Its Incidence, It can be devastating In the final analysts. How devastating'" In what way" '•Devastating Is your word," said Dr. Couture. ''But a good one. '•c onsider such problems as traumatic arthritis, nerve root compression, myofibrositis, c hronic disc re-injury, to name only a few, a II can result from an untreated whiplash,'' says Dr. Couture, "And you can readily see 'boW devastaUng'." He DOtes that foUowtng a wWplash jOint Uga.ments can heat with scar tissue II treat- ment Is not sought following the InJury. ••Scar tissue there forces a. lou of elasticity In the Up- meats, wblch ln Itself can re- auH I.D -spinal )>I.Dis,"" Dr. c-. poi.Dta out. ··Wlloa tho -)>I.DI be· com.. ......., .. , traumaUc ar- tbrltU oe. , ..... , .. bl addl. "IIJCfti~MiUI o cc•r•," ..,. Dr. ~ .... ,. .. .. _. ••ell_,_.~ u,.r 1 r• an npllced br tart .-ru-e.·· Tlllt-CJFP.CLI.-- Iilll .. d•t• .... ....._ ............ " ...... _ ... _ ciating," says Dr. Couture, ··as it radiates over an entire area such as an arm, leg or head which is serviced by the par- ticular spinal nerve. "A whiplash jolt can render the spine susceptible to any number of disc Injuries from subsequent jolts and shocks. Chronic discre-tnjurybecomes a logical changeoftheuntreated whiplash." Dr. Couture points out that the list of untreated whiplash problems is too lengthy to de- taU here, Neuritis of the arm, shOulder or neck, extreme ner- vousness, and enn eventual brain and spinal LDjurles usu- ally result. ''I toow It souods as 1f I'm o•er-stmpl1f)1ng to say: 'to lc· oore a wbtplaSll is to play with fire,' but that Is such an ac- curate description. "In other words, don't com- pound the problems of an :lCcl- deot wtth your own lndllter- eoce." "You know," says Dr. Cou- ture, "Just about lfery day I see a patient wbose dlftlcul- tles are traceable to old acci- dental Injuries. Tbey lpored the warniDC sicu ud are pay- Ing for It now. As f1Lr u I'm ooncerD8d, tbelr Afttrlnc II ~lloolutely ___ .. (Note: Tbe wblplallb OJ"'I>· tom•. wbetber lmmdate or delaytd, aro _.1111110 - DICk, -or DOcl< polu, llld u -.JIMtl--01' t.Mioa·- partleOiarll' -.......... Tbl IDOft Jtrloa QDC*Jiml -unCI...,_......., llleadacllle, • .., mMClt lptFI, tte., Ul cmef1ered &IIIII de) Dr. Collin ..... .... .. at ...... ? .. om.. If..,.. a.cra.n re .... uoo • tures at the equestrian center include washing racks for the horses, an elevated stanchion that lets an owner clip his hOrse tn comfort, and a hOt walker, an ete::trlcally-drlven exerciser thai Woi lks tour hor ses tn a circ le. There .1\so is a new lounge area where snacks and son drinks are available. Con~ructlon will start soon on a new 150 foot by 300 foot riding ring sultab~e for com- petitive events, s•Jch as jump- Ing, roping, aod barr~l race.:;. A judges' stand and a public ad-tress system will permit this arena to ~ used for soows aDd other specialevenlsplanned for the future. "W"! also ~1an to acid many more llgtrts to f.acllltate hand- ling horses at night, plrtlcu- larly In the lackroom ar ea, which will be dressed up with new ·.valls and roofs to make them mo re attractive," Mr. Sandllng said. H:~rse ow•1ers have a broad choice of stabling fa cllltJes to c hoose trom at the center. These Include a 35-horse cor- ral, a 25-horse corral, a six to ?lght horse corral, indlv)dual wOOd padd)cks, individual metal paddocks, and metal box stalls enclosed with W">l1 planking and a 12 foot by 24 foot run attached. All enclosures pro- vide over head proteclion trom the elem·.nts. THE BASKETBALL gets a lot of attention here in the B 11vlslon game between TeWinkle aDd Ensign. In the fore- ground, ten to right , are Phil Tupy, No. 15; Mike Pant- uso, No. 12 ; and Gordon Adams, No. 13, of the Ensign Sea Bees. Fighting to get control for TeWlnkle are Stu Van Horn, No. 51, on left with Gr eg Gust, No. 11 , 1n the center of the action. The TeWinkle team ran off its 5th straight win. (Vic Opalek photo.) Sign up soon for baseball t:uy schOOl for grades 1, 2, Registration for the Harbor 3, 4 arvt 5. Area summer baseball program March 10--Davis middle will begin March 3 at Call!-school for grades 6, 7, 8, aDd ornla middle school, Costa higtl school boys. Mesa. The program serves the March 11 --Davis middle entire Newport Beach and Costa school for grades 1, 2, 3, 4 Mesa area for au boys, first and 5. grade through hlgh school. March 17--LLDcoln middle This year the baseball pro-school for grades 6, 7, 8 and CWC S T A'( S IN SCC gram will find over 4,000 boys high school boys. Golden West College wtll re-participating. First graders March 18 --Lincoln middle ma.lo in the Southern Ca Wornia will play In a specially de-school tor grades I, 2, 3, 4 and Cooference, the state athletic vised T-ba.ll program. 5, committee of the California Registration fee for all bays March 22--Katser middle J unior Co llege Assn. has ruled. 1st through 7th grades Is $3.50 schOOl for grades 6, 7, 8 and The Souther n California re-for the season and a $1.50 unl-high school boys. leaguing subcommittee earUer form shirt charge. Boys Ln the March 24-·Ka!ser middle had recomm~Dded that Golden 8th grade and above pay the school for grades 1, 2, 3, 4 West join the Sout h Coast Con -$3.50 registration fee and a aDd 5. ter ence in September. $2.50 shirt fee. Baseball hose. April 7--Ensign middle The only change In the South caps, and pants are also oo school for grades 6, 7, 8 and Coast Co nfer ence was the sale for those requiring them. htgtl scllool boys. switch of San Otego City to Registration dates and places Aprll 8--Ensign middle the Mission Conference. Or-are as follow s : school for uades 1, 2, 3, 4 ange Coast, Santa Ana, Fuller. March 3--Callfornla elemen-and 5. ton, Cerritos, san Diego Mesa ta.ry school for grades 6, 7, April 1!--Enrett Rea mid- and Mt. SAC remain In the 8 and h.lgb schoo l boys. die school for all IJ"ades &a! South Coast Conference. March 4--Callfornta elemeo-high school boya, dLPIIIG f"'GBT r.:ca ... ..., ... li<tllla, •• ••• or ...... ,. ..... K-CtelltiO_O_ -~~ GowiO -.... riiM, ---.~~~~-ri&M, ol .. ..., .... Dnl PIWi &• TnllllrC C.., .&•lilA•. lllllllc Dill Jl' II 2 J•e a-:. Jfed liD of ... JtiWall dr 'C ea•• .... at lift, ud K.tniU Jll'••••lf: Clllrlll ~~an. no -. ,,.. l"c no --local Klftalu,-..,. ,.._,., t11t cWI--lllr• or,_ TM Me..,lud CHter tnlM *-1:::1li .. Md .... a•atll4ll•? '11Gt~to .. lp)C J'¢1FIIItraelrl.(l'llllll ...... • C DIVIStoN HIGHLIGHTS Gisler ran off Us 5th straight wtn by overpowering Lincoln 42-23, Mike Samulln aDd Kelly Ga lla.gber contLDue to head the potent Spartan attack but they could have problems today U Rea Is at lull str ength. Dwyer sUpped past Rea 38-33. Don Thornton led the Oller marks- men with 16. Alan Braevender bad 8, Jim Wllllamson 10 and Dave Case 4 for Dwyer. Kaiser edged Davis 36 .. 29 asJohD Wal- den led the Knlpts w1th his 111gb for the season total of 18 and Gr eg Custer had 6. Martin Stidham was high for Outs followed by Dan Duddrldge wtth 7. TeWinkle iUrprlsed ED.Iip by sweeping all 3 games at O'le Tro)ans' outdoor hOme court&. The Twtnk C's completed the sweep .tth thtlr 45-27 duke onr the scrappy Ensign C's. Greg Knight cootlnued hts hlgb scoring spree as he swished t he nets for 18 and Scott Co- show recorded 9 for the Tro- jans. The TeWinkle and Kaiser C teams have been invited to play the preUmtnar y game at Costa Mesa high schOol Feb. 26, when the Los Anreles Rams present their 1972 basketball team ver- sus the Costa Mesa b.culty and pollee department team. Roman Gabriel will make an appear. aoce but w111 DOC beabletoplay. Tickets are now tvaJlable at Costa Mesa high schOol and other JocatiollS. CUSTOM APPAREL FOR MEN FEATURING PHOTOMETRIC TAILORING "for Gnrn!PIZL~ .o\., fnri ll.'ldUdl A.s Your s~anatur•'' Of NfWPOIT lEACH I!U WESTCliFF PLAZA '-------------.:...:'' Of NEWPOU lEACH WHTCL!H PLAZA NE.WPO~T lEACH I II~ & UVINl ,,. 1 Ti-2Ti-• 3·Ti .. s -Your okl bikes 1D trade for new. BM.cb Bl- cyclea, 806 E. Bilbo& Btfd., 81.-. 675-"128Z. Z..N••I•n .............. l5D Ul 3.DD ,,_,,,.3D_,,······ l.DD S.DD 4-DD 31_. .. .,_,, ...... 3.DD 4.DD !.DD Eech ...4 .,., ., ....-4• .. .05 . ID . I$ FOR RENT eiiUSICAL FOR So\LE PRE-TAX SALE Wurlltser splDet plano, beau-SE VERAL commerctalaodpro- tltu.J Cberry cue, $545. Ham-feulooal ot!lce1 -from $50 mood 8V CCNUJO!e orpo, ez-"' • oo North Newport Blfd. WANT BEACH PROPERTY lbr three hOmes lb Rlnrslde. owner--Hal Eny,3S7Soutll Van Ness Aft., Los Aqeles. celleat ooaclltioo, $1!95 w/ ~lte Hoag HospitaL JobD -·· Btldwi.DAcroooolcFr. VCJtO~ 6441-16'15. I-;II;I~S~C~E~L~L~AN~E~O~U~S;;-;; PI"O'I. IJI)IDet, JUit $495. Ham-IE btcrc .. rtll&lriDc oa moad 'M-100 Ml'les or•n• -· KEW larp moaata1D bomt. ttl -·• Tit -North sbo Lake AJT · uaadS, H 1 ud all re- models iu eacb style " tlDI.Ib bead. For ~~at w:eebDcll~ placement puts. Beach 'tl- --)'our cbotce $995. cycles, 801 £. Balboa Blfd._ New 40"couolepluoa, Wai-ftftl7, 5.fi.st1! ml sao. I _Bt~-~:..· !P~-~~~~=--out or Pecan, $195. Yamtba 8Z'I5. I· api.Dot orpo, walllut cut, with 1-:-;.;;;:;;;::-;:::-:;:=;:-=---ALCOHOLICS ANONYKOUI •• Automatic Rb11bnl ' Scia•-,;•iEcWiOiRiK~W~AN~iii~;.;;;;: P-54!-?ZI7. P.O. - Souod, tm. Stoi.Dwty lloclol """' .. mlmoo-Mo. 1221, COlla 11-. • "L" _..,.. ptuo, Wtlllut, ·--. liiii;)1;i"Ei£i;oii!roiiii£ii£ii: ,._ lfli1III.Df. -.,, ud amau 5' 10-1/l", an t775. War-bootblplq aecoat. Call BEFORE YOUR tuaor aptlltl or..., llapte, tao 671-4050 ,-. '"' yow -CUI>OI -"""'" MW, tor oo)J$St5. tiMm wttb Blue Lutrt, Rlllt SCHIIIDT IIUIIC CO. Yara al-loaeo tltetrlc --~ $1.DD. 190'111. llllllst •• -Aot 011 tn>oo .,.--, ud Cron llardwan,l D7 Eut YlJII&bl IIIOIDway l.mTay 1-...... ~-, C_H..,,,eor-dolllu. Ill. ltl4 . ..,........, --• -· .. 1.50 por br. ilabte l--------- 11111111 lll<*lr<l --10'1 11"-'!t, ear.. dol liar. l'lt-11"14. "TTil: IIA1t HBIIID Till .-... "' Guy .w-. IJitelll tOa-...._ b1111Jr ..-· • •· ••• •. -n. t---------• .,z' .. LIIICOLit •.ooo ~~~~a~, • -...., _,. ___ _ ... A tzrrtu,-• llllllt ......111-HU . • • '· .. lliURSOAY, FE8. 10, 1917 QORQ!!A QEL MAR, ~F. 100 I. A Tl TO CLAUI fT BOYS ORr,QIUI(IO·iiJTI.Oid) Wt Mid I or lO UteiJ JOE SPILLER pt1 off a side court shot tor ~ Harbor ftosh ap.tnst Lolra as the local t•m rac:ked ~ aootber win ud eonUDoed to lead the Sunset frosh dh1slcm. Oann Foreba.n, No, 13, and Mike Rolettl, No. 51, under the bas~ tet. are all Nt to pt a posatble reboUDd for Harbol'. NEWPOR. T ·MESA SPORTS SCENE Tbe countdown begfna tor UJe local prep eaprs as they enter tbe ftDal 2 weeks oft heir sched- ate. Corona del Mar ttcures on being the only Joeal team who wlU make the play..otfs but tbey have 3 tough hurdles on their way to either a share or the Irvine tlt1e out-rtgbt. Tbe Set Klnp hOst Magnoua today. feb. 10. Next Wednes- day they lnvade Costa Mesa &nd then wlPd down the regular league play with their ftnale at Estancia. from the k>oks of tbings rlgtlt now, It could very well eDd ~ with a couple co- champs for !he Irvine leaguers u botb Corona and Los Ala- mtrbs continue to out-class the field. TooJaM'• actloa allo buCo- sta Mesa at FOUDb..tn Valley. Sa.ata. ADa -Valley at Estaocta aDd Harbor at Westm.lnster. Tuesday's acttoa saw the sa Kin(s post thelr loth leap win and bring thelr .seaaoo mark to a sparkling 19 wl.nl with but 2 losses as they breezed past Foootatn Valley 57.43, Jeff w barton bad 14 to lead the Corona offense. Casey Jooes came through wtlb 13 lor the Sea Kings as they mounted a .,ell bala.nced attack ttw: saw Brett Marches, John Sumner, Mark Sevier, ScottCamerooand Dan Grigsby all contribute to the wtn. Estaocia continues to play some good basketball but drop- ped aoother league game to Magnolia 64-54, The Confer brother team combined for 27 points while Scott Hayer came .., wtth l3 for coach Dave Car. liSle's Eagles. Estancia Is cur- rently 2-9 In league eompeHtion colng lnto tonight's game with Santa Ana Valley. Costa M ~sa lost a high scor- Ing 102-72 contest with Los Al Tuesday night as the Mustangs continue to have defensive prob- lems but they still manage to score a lot. Jack Archer and Rick Browning both hit lor 24 but it wasn't enough for the Mesans who are oow below the • 500 mJ.tk with a 6-7 record. Marina continues to lead the Sunset league and posted Its 11 ttl win wtth no defeats, winnlng easily over Santa Ana 70-56. Huntington Beach looks like a clnch for the runner-up spot with a 9-2 mark. Harbor Is 3-8 now as the result of a 71 loss to Western. Kurt So•••n returned to the Tar after suffering a leg tl\at kept hlm out of a games and tossed In 18 ii)C•Inls. Bill McKinney hit for BRAD KRIJZ gets off a zo rooter tbat connects for toe Harbor soph team ln first qua.rter action with Loa.ra. Harbor won the game 69-SZ. (VIe Oprllek photo.) aDd ~Y C Une tallied 13 for Harbor but It couldn't off- set a cold, cold start for the Tars. Tile Tars weredown20-0 before they beRlin to hit. Center M Lke Dwm had ooe of his biggest nights for Western a.nd ended up with 38 points to lead both teams. • • • The Harbor f'rosh team con- tinues to r oll toward Us league IItie and a trip to Pboenlx to participate In the World Series there would be a littlng c limax for co.ach Jake Miller's team . Practice games are be-lng checked out oow tor this nne collection of f'reshmen. Qutte a few or the boys were mem- be-r s or coach Jack Kessler's dream team ':.ast year at Ensign that polished orr the league title and then topped that wUh the playotf championship. Dave Brochmeyer , Jack Straw, Kevln B!ssoonette, Mike Roletti, Rick Dosta l, Jim Klingensmith and Matt Spa.ngler are members of the Harbor "s\¥)er f'rosh" who graudated from the Ensign team. Dave Becker and Dave Seymour are both pLtytng oo the sq>h team but are 9th grad- er s. The only game the frosh lost was to Uartna whenSpang- ler missed that contest wl.th &D Injury. Thts team could provide a fi.ne nucleus lor the tourr.- ment team to the World Series tn Phoenix. HARBOR FRaiH action sees Dave Brochmeyer score on a. lay ~. other Harbor frosh are Jlm Klingensmith, No. 35, and Doug Eccles, No. 41 , with Tom Straw in the right foreground. Brochmeyer and Kllngensmtth both recorded II points In the wln over Loara, and Eccles hJt for 10. (VIc Opalt>k photo.) CLINIC FOR COACHES HIBACHI SAlLING RACES ANNOUNCED Coaches of the Harbor base- ball program wlll participate In a cllnlc f'rom 9 a.m. to noon saturday, Feb.26,atCosta Mesa Park, 18th St. and Ana- heim Ave., It Is announced by Rod MacMUllan, baseball com- mlssloner. South Shore Sa.tling Club has set Feb. 26 as the date lor the first race of tile 4 race Winter Hlb&chl Series, opentoal1New- !~o.1 Harbor y:a.chts. The series will be-sailed inside Newport Harbor on the following Saturdays: Feb. 26, March 4, April 8, and April 22. The best or 3 out of 4 races wtU be scored to deter- mine winners or thenewandun. usual "Porcelain Tankard" troptlies. Hlgfl school coaches from Costa Mesa, Estancia, Co- rona del Mar, and Newport Harbor will put 011 the clinic ••• for tile coaches of the youths ~~-..... Tate a little Ume to tlnd the r.atxdous taste adventures antttng your Va.lentlne at RldiiU'd's ••• Prime are<f beef, produce spec.l&lUes like Belgian En- dive, a flbulous selection ol flue wines, candles. pies and putties, tool SomethlDc srpeelallor your ValenUDe from Rlchlrd's. '"£ .... · ~~­marKets. LIDO CENTER )411 VIA LIDO. NEWPORT StACH. CALif CJ2ta¥.1h71_.Mt0 HARBOR VIEW CENTER 1660 MAC ARTHUR Nl wflQitT Bf.ACH. CALif 926M.I b7 J·l1SS • of the Harbor baseball pro- gram. Hank Moore, varsity, 4A and 3A cb.ssll\cation chairman, will mOderate the clinic . Tom Tra. ger ll'l.U cover bunting and hit- ting; Ken Millard, pitching and catching; Jim Hagey , the de- fensive strategy, and Andy Smith, the offensive skills. Registration !or the Harbor baseball program will start March 3 and goes through Ap- ril 12. PIRATE CAGERS WIN JRD IN ROW , 90-55 Herb Livsey's Gran~ Coast College cagers made It J in a row and 5 out or their last 6 as they rolled to an easy 90 - 55 vtctory over Tart Co llege Saturday afternoon, Feb. 5, in a non-league contest. The vic- tory gave ttle Piratt>s an 8-13 season mark. The Sues recorded the win despite the absence of start- ers Skip WIIUams and John Seymour. Williams suffered a bone chip in his right thumb, In OCC's 88-87 win ovpr Sa.n Diego City last week, and Sey- mour was out with a bad skin rash. Last n!ghl, Feb. 9, the Pir- ates tlosted Fullerton JC, thE' state's No. 1 ranted team. CIF rules proh.lblt the use of the higtl school coaches aDd thelr team for any post-sea.- soo blstetbllll games but an all-star team composedofptay- ers trom several teams 1n the a rea Is okay. If enough teams are Interested a regio .. t am an Orange County tournament •Ill be held or a series ot practice games wl.th other tap notch teams In the frosb cate- gory are belng arrangad. OCCWRESTLERS ROUT FULLERTON 31 TO 3 The Orange Coast College wrestlers e•ened their South Coast Conference record at 2.2 Feb. 4 with a 31-3 rout over fullerton JC In the OCC gym, Steve Joanoes declsJoned Fullerton's Jim Myers 8-3 in the ll8·pouod class. Paul La- BlaDc won onr Ken Sarkis 8-Z at the 142-POUM wetgtt, OCC's Steve Mohulsk:l won It by torten ud Guy Morrl- son copped the t 58-.poood cU•· tston with a 5-3 verdict Oft!" f JC's Ertc Boprt. Randy Heuf-ne and nm Budel woa rw occ in the 167 &DI! 17'7""1)(Kmd classes, rta the torfelt route. Du Lewis woo at 1 ill for the Bucs wtth a 15-1 dee1aloa OYW Zacll: Tatum, wh.Ue OCC's Bob Fate lo.c the '-TJWelPl Utlt to Fullerton's Roy KriMMr. 14-6. TOP HAT U, ~114/a, ~'""f and LAUNDRY HARBOR AREA SEtMCE 20% OFF ' TUESDAYS & ·FRIDAYS FIRST ORDER If •• ·-.. ····-·&·-., . ....................... ........... y-·1&·1,. 673-48 Mens Sulta $1.60 •• aa-1 ••·· ••• a aT Penta IY VIC OPAL!K ,_pltro •liD -UU Tbl Jrtt~U&t.loaa lor the Va..lley tnvtta.Uooa.l at the oc to tU"D •me eJtr& mcMJ pity -<I! ---lo -1 tllft!IMII&I Nortllrlllp. Thlohu ($5 or MJ Ill lUll & .,...lo ~le r'lll'lfl I UYe t.m1 to &lnJI beta 008 oftbetopbiU. ot bouts alter .ebool or the •Uoa&I boJI toarama:tt La etblll tour111.meot1 Ia the lb.te Sahrdiyl. Bonus priMa, toot PbOeDI.J: H!l!ttut. Beeule ot wUh some ot the ftDest p:oep Call Ooa Ro•t at tM Eutcn tbe are re.trteUoa that tbe eaprs from the Los Aaples tor detaJIJ: • 673-0550. World Serle• Imposes oo the and su Fernando VaHey -----------teams, It was decided to tuD schooll ~Una. 111e Orup c...., iouroameat ~=====-===== Ill Z -.Tbo .... &loo (CYF -BCI) .UI &!low ... ......-.~opor~~_.. ~.rv DO ace reqqlremeDU: or cut-otr ~ J.iY.l...l:..l datH. Tbe DiUooll dlYlaloa m (IIBBA-BCI) 'fill eomply • tht ap da.tH the PboenU u.ment ill eailrelnc. there wtll be 2 Otaagee ~=~ ct:w.mplou and 2 r1 champs. Tbe reiJiooal teamswtllcom-· pete for the other berths t ntlable at the nationals , lnfttationl being uteoded to teams from Rf,erslde, San Bet-1 oardiDD aDd Los Angeles counties. Tilts l.ocl!Jdes the Sen Feraando Valley but e~:cludes the Central Los An~les zooe, -.:hlch Is eooduetlne Its OWD playoffs. Sao Pedro, Rolllng Hilts, Palos Verdes, Hawati&o Gardens, Hawthorne aod Loog Beach are belng contacted tor possible lll'lttatloas. Newport Harbor, Estancia Costa. Mesa aod Corona del Mar are elpeeted to s~ly a lot of tateut for the b::al Dat- lonal team. Roo Starkman has agreed to work with the Es- tancia-Corona del Mar-lrvtoe league combo. Frank Spangler and hls "million dollar coach- fng statr'' of Btll Dooovan and George Yardley •Ill take over the Newport Harbor Nationals • Harbor's outstanding h"osh team wl.ll supply the nucleus for the 14 year ,;,Ids. The Sall- Ot.!; are breeW!g through to the Sunset Jeague title and have only Stlft'ered one loss In reg- uLar season play. Tile ktss was to Marina, whose team, inci- dentally included several of our 1971 Orange County aU-stars who were l.nstrumental In lop- ping Harbor by 4 polnt:s. Man Spangler sutrered a dtsloca.ted shoulder and missed the Ma. rina game. Spangler was the team's leading rebouoder, led the team tD assists and was ooe ot the top scorers before hJslD- jur y In December. Boys signing ICl from the Harbor team IDclOOe Dave Sey- mour, o.ntn Pautsch, l..A!oe Ho, Jim Klingeasmitb, Brent Kruse, Dave Broehmmr, Oa.-e Beek- er, •ute Rolettl, Joe Spiller, and Doug Eccles. A coach wiU be needed for the open d1 Y1.sion team. The hlgfl school coacbes were not eUgible according to our latest tnqutry as higtl schOol teams are a.Uowed a marlrnum of 20 games. To comply with CIF regula- tions, the teams tbat pa.rtici. pate 1.n aft~r sea.soo games and tournaments cannot do so as a hlgfl school entry. It Is oeces- sary to have a.n outside coach or tather take over. Several prospects ha..-e been forwarded for Ute two coaching jobs open. Any other people Interested please contact us at 675-0061 or 18Zfe your name and phone number at the Enslp omce, 673-0550. This shOuld be a very interesting and n- etting ezpertence for all tD- .,olved as there is • strong posslblUty both teams will be entered In the big San Fernando IVERY NEW '72 IN OUR HUGE STOCK NOW DISCOUNTID TO SA VI YOU HUNDREDS Of NEW '72 T-IIIDS lUSTED UP TO ~402 ftOM WINDOW Ill CUI FlO Ill WINDOW STIC:kll •oo• WINDOW StiCIIlll noM WINDOW STICICU NEW '72 GALAXIES BUSTED UP TO $901 ,.o .. WINDOW STICIU PUBLISH YOUR FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT IN THE NEWPORT HAR&OR NSJGN Official n•wspaper of the City of Newport Beach. ONLY $25.00 (Plus $10,00 for the Orange County filing fee ) We will take care ot both the fillng and the publication If you send ua the 3 copies of the Fictitious Business Name Stitetnent, filled out and signed, and accotnpiUiled by a check for $35. Or you can cotne to tbe ED81gn office to fill out the fortna. Notarizing 1a not neceanry. Z721 E. Cout Bwy., Cor~ del Mal' ~at Fel'lllnf Aft,) Telephooe: m .. e&&o • O!f 111E BEAT --Deteettn Dan EWott, at lett, and patrolman Dave Ion chat with Burt Ul}'ts, assistant mamger otSu.oo•s Westcutf Plaza store, while patrolling their beat. Newport Beach detectives don uniforms wben accompanying patrolmen as part of the city's new system of assigning deteeUves to "beat" areas. (Ensign photo.) NEW BEAT SYSTEM FOR N.B. POLICE By FRED DAVIS assigned to · his beat area -- Instead of dealing with specJ.al- lsts In several crime cate- gories. I~NARIOR UIIJI HI!ST El10!! n -Pw f TIIURSIIAY, FEe. 10, 1!72 OOROIIA DEL OW!, CALIF, AUTO DEALERSHIP OK'D II-Beaellp~ooaa­ mlalloDerslut'hc"DJollu- od plus tor • ,_....., - mbllum 1D the Lido Sbopa arta and for'tht nut auto dtal.r- •-ln Newport Place'• D1W "aut:omottn eeater." Shelter lndutrles Joe. of WeRelltt sUd ~km costs would run about $ZOO.ooo on the 4-unl.t condoml.n1wn, which w1lt 1\aYe 5 boQt •UDs. Construction wtu start within abOut 6 months. Tbe property, located at 3300 Via Lido, Is owned by Byroo Palmer of Los Angeles. Howard Rlcha.rdsoo of New- port Beach wtll be the owner of "Howard's Chevrolet'' ID lftwp011 Pilee. Hte-..etatobl _,.. -.. ........ lheood of tht summer. Curreat planl by Emllay Dtnlopmeot Co, eaU for an nto "s~CJotr market .. ta Nrwport PJ&ee. wttb other maJ- or dealersMps expected to tot. knr that of Mr. Rletardsoa.. The Planntng Comml.s&IOD continued wrtll Ita ned meettnt bearlnp oo cM.nging parldng requirements In 2 areu of Harbor VIew Hllls, and dented owoer Ed Plsonl's request to permJt an accessory building to eJ:tend about 8 Inches above the lepl maximum of 15 fHt for a bu.Udlnc at 2Z09 cwr Dr., Newport Helgflts. The Commission's next meettnr Is scheduled tor Feb. 17. DCC ENVIRONMENT CENTER CDMPL ETED HAMBURGER HELPERS--Admlrlnl arlblloo of 50 $1-bllll The Coast Community Col-adorning Miss Newport Beach (Naney Smith) are Roo lege Dl.strlct has completed Its Julla.no, a.t left, manager of the new MeDooald's rest- 10,000 .~quare foot environ-aurant which opened last WHkend at 700 W. Coast Hwy., mental center. The structure, Mariners Mile, and Don Muhllg, director of New}Xlrt Beach located behind the OCC tech-YMCA. The YMCA cot the $50 "ribbon," which was cut nology bulldi.Dg on Merrimac to formally open the new restaurant. U Is the 236th Me - Way, cootatns 4 large class-Donald's to CaUfornia and the nrst ln Newport Beach. rooms, 2 complete chemistry-(Ensign pboto.) bloiOO' type laboratories, a RO T recepllon area, private omces, BER BADHAM REPORT FROM a conference room, and In In-· THE ASSEMBLY '! " I ( 1 1/ [ ' ~ I ,I • A Dew system being tried by tbe Newport Beach pollee department to bring the cop on the beat and the detectlve dlvlstoq closer togelher seem;; to ~ working well. "It's too early to ~lk about any dramatic results," says pollee chief Jim Gl.avas, "but there Is plenty of enthusiasm ~or th'! program." For the detective, the sys. t ern offers the chance to get to know one area of town In- timately and to concentrate ll:l t he crime problems of that a r ea. To help detectives an!l uniformed men get a chance to work together long enJUJh to become a more effectlveo team the department now keeps patro\m-':1 >Ll one beat for at least 6 months. and ttaud Investigators, who still specla!Jt:e), is th~> ;ray the n crimes have Increased and cha nged. Captain Oya.as calls to:tay"s thief "a differ ent br eed or cat" who doesn't specialize In crackinJ safes or burglarizing houses . /, ·'He is more apt to steal mone)t wh~n .t.rl1 w'tere he can und er dtrreren t kinds of cir- cumstances,'" the captain e ~lims. t structlonal materials SIC)IX)rt In view of the thou-·•s of office. -.....J calling for a statewide Ucens- Beginning the nrst 0~ the year, detecttve;:s wer e taken from spcclaU:teH assignments, su•:h as ~urglar ies and homi- cide, a.n1 put Into '•beat'' as- signments. A 1etectlve oow Investigates all kinds of crimes Ina speclfk area of the city assigned to him. This means working closely wtth uniformed officers w!10 patrol the same beats. It gives the unlfor med patrol- man the advantage of talking to just one detective --th"! one Cap~aln DonOyaas, who heads the deotectlve division, feels that the new ~rogram ''im;~roves c:ommuntcatlons in t h~ depart. ment ~ and down the line by having the same patrolm•'n ta.lk i n~ to the same de(eclives every rtay." One reason for doing awa ;• with 'he spacialized detectives (exCE'a>: narcotics, bad l"heck P.EDUCT~D~~ S ~LE AT B.~LBOA /StJ;;:a ST c:l E o::LY f or thts ~rctt:1l £>\ cnt our 5tN~ h•)ur:-\\ ~!! he 9 0 0 <1.!11 to) r. 0•! 1·~11 \\"p ·,•,"i :;i~n i,(' l•h·n l•ll Sun rla.v r:c hl•Tl(' :!t f'~C h• :r ;: \\lli ;,l-'!• 1~1(> adnl!ft(·d \ d:lfH''Lf p~r;.;.dl2 ~.i.ll:!l!llil :•t;d ,,,. lO\\ VlliJ !O tal\:c JU •.a :1 t;;._c-o: a r:.\J\;: ~ \LI:. .\T U.·\f~fi S· EVERYn::::G IN THE BALBOA /SLr~::o STOnE 1f2 OFF This is our own 1-tock, regularly sold in our own stores. Uu Yovr B.~tnk.-mtrico~rd Ch .~trgt,. All S.~tl n Fin.-l. S.~tle 5-!.~trh Frodo~y. F"ebrv.~try Bttt SeletToon. 11 Come E-ilrly For REMEMBER BALBOA ISLAND STORE O NLY! CHARLES H. BARR "' BALBOA ISLAND Consequently a r ttmtnal who commits armerl robber y, then cr.v:kc; l safe and later Lur - gla nzes d hOUS'! "'''JUJd haVE' 3 rHtrerent mvestig:Ito~s Jook- wr for him under the old sys- tem or speclalltafion. The big mt::rease in resi. rtenttal burglaries is cited as otnothe r ma ;or r eas::m for ;p.~lng b.1 •·k. to the '"bl'at" sy stem. :\""~>}ther mnovarton in the '·area pollc ln~" systel'n is the assignment of a juvenile of- flr·e r to each beat area. This give s each pa trol area a de- t e·tJve ser ~eant , 3 lnv esttga- tors ..1M a juvenile offi cer, all working as an Jnvestlgative team -...·itfl llle u1iformed patrol- men 1n the arE"J. To w J~k ou t the area as- SifZTlmFnts for his dE'tectives, Captam Oyaas !l 1rl .t stu ly made of the number s of crim~s which r equired lnvestl ~-,oatLon af"ltl di- vided them intoarE>as to balance t he r.ase load among his ln- vestlptors. E1d1 rt<>tecllve put s on a unl. for m J 11 n rles -...·tilt patrolmen to his ~rea ?1 ·:arh or the thrf-'!' H-ltour watches at least on•·" d momh. ThE' field po!iee~ man IS Invited to stop by the detective rllvislon any lime for a '"liP or cllffee anrt some ron- versa!Jon. "'(rrn 1 •·1 ''<tt mn !~tween the unlfOrm."'fl 01.11 .i'l l the rte- lecttve is ttoe ke} to sur-Less In tr1is system ,'" explam-; ·:ap. ta in fJ}aJs, "anr1 we enrour:~ge. II In evPq way possihl~>." Som•~ oth.>r j)11we l~>t')a rt­ ments arP IT} in~ VPrSIOOS Of the t...eat c;}stem, but Captain 0/a.d S s:ns he loesn't know or .10)" that o·~ni z es it ex- act!\ the wa\ :'\o?wpor t Beach 11oes. fhe rteC E!<'IlVe ~llier, w~.o "t 37 nas 14 -1 !2 years with the lo('a.t rtep:o rt m('nt, blames the p..tra .!Tul\Uq str ucture of po- ll("f> rtPpul m~>nt s ror the m- r t.~"l[tbLllt\ ·•·'de~ :eslsts chan ges In organization. The "ommanrt strurture has tradi- tio·utty marte It difficult for thP avera~~;e pollcema n to com- m•HiJr ate with hi s co-workers, C<lpta.ln Oyaas says. H<> believes that a couple of months more experience will be ne€f"led before a good evalua- tion of the new program ispos- stble, but uniformed patrolm"!n and detectives seem lo agree N1th him that "things look pretty good so rar." r-------------------, 1 READ THE LOCAL NEWS IN i ~ COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER I I THE NfWI'ORT HARlOR I i NSJGN ! I OHl ci al nowapap., of illo Cily of H.,.,.rt Bead!. I I 7711 1!. COAST HWY., CORONA DEL MAR. CAUP. I I Send in I I YOUII TODAY 1 I suasall'noM RATE: O.lp -• ,_._ ; MAIL Dt1'11110UID .. YOUl QIZCit .. ~ 'niiMY I I ••• ~---DP ; -~-~ ,, Two of the c lassrooms can bicycles that are stolen 1n Or-log syst~m--the rtrst ln the AIRMAN John D. Settles Jr., be quickly converted Into an ange County each year and nation--so thol.t the state Jus- son of Mr. and Mrs. John D. Instant lecture hall wJthseattng throughout the State, I have tlce Department's computer Settles or 3065 Johnson Ave,, for 80 students. The ceotero Introduced a bill In the legis-could be utlltzed to recoverlng Costa Mesa, has completed his was constructed to study en-l.ature which may help allev-stolen btcycles. U.S. Air Force basic training vlronmcntal problems and their tate these thefts. The bill also would require at the Air Training Command's possible solution. The 2 labs ln discussing the r ising bike that all bicycles sold by re- Lackland AFB, Texas. He has are equipped to m~asure pot-then crimes with loca l and tatlers must have a serial num- been assigned to Keesler AF'B, luta.nts In the atm•>sphere aOO statewide Law enforcement ber stamped Into their frames Miss., for training lnthearma-water atrthorUies, I found under pres-In a manner to be determined ment systems liek1. He Is a 1971 · eot condttlons U Is Impossible by the Department of Justice. graduate of Costa Mesa hlgtl 6U SIN ESS WO 'A EN TO to ident!ly. bicycles once they In addition, au bicycles woukl sct.ool and attended Orange HEAR TRAVEL TALK ar e stolen, because they have be re-Ucensed every 2 years. Coast College. Slides and a talk other re -no ldentlrtcatlon or serlalnum-The Department of Justice cent trip to Taiwan wHI be bet sta.mped on them. This a.nd local Law agencies told me gt ven by member, Mrs. Wilber leaves the pollee, s herllf's of-that more than 400,000 blcyc- Gardner, at 1 p.m. today, Feb. fl ees and bicycle owners help-les were stolen Last year In the 10, at the meeting or the New-less when they .a.re stolen. state, and the Incidents have port Beach Charter Chapter of With the assistance of these grown rapidly. From 1965 to the American Business Worn-agencies, I developed a bill 1970 California witnessed a BOOK AND AUTHOR AWARDS SCHEDULED Entries are now being ac- cepted for the 7th armual book and author awards sponsored by the UCI Fr iends of the Li- brary. Tne event Is open to all Orange County author s who have had a work or fi ction, non- tlctton or jUvenile literature published during 1971. An official for m along with 2 books should be forwarded to t he friends' ornce no later than March 10. Chairman of the awards Is Or . Giles T. Br own or New - port Beach, woo Is dean of graduate studies at CaUforn1a State Co llege, fullerton. As- s isting him are Miss Zada Tay- lor of Newport Beach and Mrs. Her man Romm of Corona del Mar. Winner s wll1 be announced Ma y 12 at the awards dinner at the Balboa Bay Ctut. HOMEOWNERS GROUPS WILL MEET SATURDAY Homeowners' associations will discuss common problems and asplrations this Saturday, feb. 12, at the Newporter Inn from 8 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. at a conference sponsor ed by the Irvine Company and the asso- ciations. Woody Linton of the Bluffs Assn. Is chair man. Andrew Hinshaw, Orange CoiJJlty Assessor , will speak on "Assessment practices as r e- lated to community association properties•· at the luncheon. Professor Geor ge Bla.lr of the Clanmont Graduate School wlll address the opening gen- eral session. His topic Is ''Gov- er nment and the community as- sociation.'' El,WARD SOWERS tU'oiED BY PARK LIDO ASSH . Park Lido Assn. members held their annual business meeting Feb. 2 at the Island House In Fashion Island. E1....-ard Sowers of 4e5 Bolero Wty was elected president; Ar- thur Wllllilm.: Jr. of 4210 Spln- drlft Way, vice-president, and Mrs. Bruce Denton t>f 43 1 Bo- lero WJ.y, secr etary. en's Assoclation. --40 per cent increase in these The meeting will be held LIGAL MOTICI thefis . The Increase for the at Richard's coffee shop. Am-NOTICE OF SALE first part of J97t was 90 per- ertcanlsm mont.b will be hon-In accordance with the pro-cent. ored. visions of the Callfornl.a Uni- The 3 month attendance con-form Commercial Code, there test will begin at this meetlng. being due and unpa.Jd s torage Team chairmen are Mmes.Ar-for which Fred Coury ls thur Stuckey, Paul Bentzlneand entitled to a Hen on the goods J. J . l..(lng . hereinafter desc ribed and due Members are reminded to notice having been given to make aoo bake tblngs for the parties koowo to claim 1.n m.. sp~lng ba.z.aar to be beld 00 terest therein aoct the time Saturday. March 25, In Rich-specU'Ied to such notice for IlL"·"'"'" ard's Jllltlo. paym ent or suchhavtn gexplred, BAND WILL PLAY The Newport Harbor Sailor Band will help va r ious schools In the uea commemorate their patriotic day. The band will play for the Horace Ensign rounder s day program at 9 a.m. Feb. 17. The next day the band will be at Lindber gh Schoo l for the red, white and blue day at 8:45 a.m. The band will play at Harbor VIew S<';hool at 8:45 a .m. Feb. 25 for patriotic day. HEADS DECATHLON James w. Decker, district manager for Southern Calif- ornia Gas Company, has been elected 1972 president or the Orange County academic de- cathlon, a contest of academic strength which tests school stu- dents In 10 academ!c areas. The decathlon was founded in 1968 by County S~t. Robert Peterson. AARP MEETS FEB. 2~ The annual m e mbership meeUng of the American As- sociation of Retired Persons, Newport Beac hChapterNo.121, will be held at lp.m. Thursday, Feb. 24, at the Newport Harbor Lutheran Church r ecreation h.aU, 798 Dover DriYe. notice Is hereby given that these gOOds will be sold at 275 Broad- way, City or Costa Mesa, Coun- ty or Orange , State or Callf- ornt.a, on the 11th and 12th days of February, 1972, between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. The following list Is a brief description of the property to be sold: 10 boxes of personal items, inc !tiding bedding, cloth- Ing, glassware, dishes, books, records, and other miscellan- eous articles. Dated at Costa Mesa, CalU., Feb. 10, 1972. By Fred Co ury. Publish: Feb. 10, 1972, in the Newport Harbor Ensign. BANK OF AMERICA EXEC ENDS 27 YEAR CAREER Huntington Beach resident Glenn E. Carter, vt cepresldent and senior press relaUonscon- sultant In Bank of America's public relatloos department, retired Jan. 31 after a Z7- year career with tile bank. A •eteran of 4 decades of experience In all ;>uroalisttc media, Mr, Carter served 9 years as publicity manager ln the bank's Sao Francisco head- rare Dim tllat ot the family • And a ta.ntastic In suspense ..•.. I "ANDROMEDA STRAIN" ............. "NEVER A DULL MOMENT" quarters before transferrlng to IF.~~~55~;~;~ the Southern California Head- quarters Last year. He is a o 2ND GREAT WEEK 'The Hellstrom Chronical'' "On Any Sunday" Feb. 9-15 CONTINUOUS SUNOAY SHOW 2100 ~do --..a.-·--.. ............ _ ....... Criti c Awerd HELD OVER AGAIN THE FRENCH CONNECTION oo- """ IY ..-2oo r.o., ... . -. ' ' ' ' Other board meml>ers are Anthony DeSousa., 455 Bolero Way; Henry Brenoels, 405 Fl.ac- ship Rd.; Ed Hedrick, 453 Bo- tero Way, and Mrs. Hal EYaM, 4227 Patrice Rd. Officers and dtrectorsw111be elected. A shOrt orlgillll mo'f- tnc picture of Charles Lind- bergh's historic solo fUgtrt oY- er the Atlantic wlll be shown. The nlm COTers the takeoff and returu. past president of the Los Ange- les USO aod rw.: rece!Yed a number of citations tor hls efforts on behalf of se"lce- men. He hils also been bobored by tbe City of Hope and Sigma Delta Chi national jouroallstlc Gene HockmoQ-GoJdtnGiobt Award WIMer "BEST ACTOR" The board of directors meets the nrst Wednesday of each month. CEOL 'oiARKS HONORED ON HIS, RETIREMEN T Special tribute haa been pakl to Ceell J. Marts. former president of the Oranp Couaty Fa.lr, with the presentattoa by the board of director• ol aa enuuecl plaque oothtoeeulolt of Ma rtUrtmeot trom lbt boUd. Mr. u..uu had aenttt OD lbt board IIAee 188? Ud bad uolltod 1110 lllr Ia lq ll'ootb IIICt 1914. Tlloploqoo wu pr-od b7 1110 earrltlt fair ""-· RlcMrd L. H-. Bon IJI ~;~ morred to J bee:IM ~~~:~::;~~J~;; •let sa lroal ISle IJI 1111. Ill ----.. 11101' .... I diiJi .. ...,._ LIG4L MOTICI fraternity. COt..ut.fi!IAPICTUAEs- • GENE KAREN KRIS N011CE OF ELECTION JOINS OEAH 111TT.R HACKMAN BLACK KRISTOFFERSOII NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN James Seo1t Ca-ll of -"CD#-_ • that a GeDeral MunJelp&l Elee-Fouotaln ValleJ hl.s jotAed tbt -__,., ,_ tloo will be hekl In lhe Clly of Newporl cenlor omce ot De&D Of I PfCTUREJ NnrportBeach oo TDtiCII.Y, the Witter l! Co. aa an aeeocmt 11th dlJ of April, 19'7!, tor tr.e executl•e, aecordiDC to BreatoD ii~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~;~l~ tolkJtwtne" omces: R. Ogden. •tee presJdent ud City CouocUmaa, Dlstrlcl manager. . Two--Fall tour-yau term. Detore jolllinc Deu Witter, CIIJ Couoc:ilma.n, Dlstrlct Mr. Campbell ""ed u a &o- Five--Full four-year term. CIJtlc:s aad sapp)J otllcer lD City Couocllmu, District tbt u.s. Air Fore., ••• be Sf1'feo--F1dl tour-rear term. attaloed tbt r&Dit of ellltalD. Tbt poQs wtll be opeo be-Prtor to tt.t, be wu: a trader tweeD the hours of 7:00 A.M. for TSC EDterprlHIJ, a •· aad 7:00 P. 11. ewltill tnd1.ac ftrm. He Ia LAURA LAGIC6 a aall~o o( Ntw IWN1 Ud Clly Clork a lftdlall of Cal Poly Colloll Cfly ot llnport lleaell 1J1 ,_ wlllro 11o r_.,od Ptlblla: Pill. 10, 19'11, ID M1 blellolor of ocloDco dop'M tM flcwpoc t 8Ubor Eulp. 9nc. COMPLETE IHSURAHCE SUVICI! WI!·CAIItl! A80UT YOU-VOUft ,.AMILV YOUR HOM I!-VOUft AUTO-YOUft 8UaiNI!IS THE ULTo.t:ATE IN CONOOMINIUM LrvtNG. UN- EXCELLED VlEW FROM THIS BEAUTIFUL TWO BEDROOM CONOO. SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT. • • • • NEW HOME Close to Beach PICK YOUR COWRS FOR THIS HOME WITH FOUR BEDROOM, FAMILY ROOM , FIVE BATHS, TWO FIREPLACES, PATIO DECK, AND LOTS OF Ct.a:ET A.ND STORAGE SPACE. BlN TODAY I! \I ONLY $84.,500.!!1! • • • • DUPLEXES SOUTH OF HIGHWAY. BOTH HAVE 3 BEDROOM FRONT UNITS WITH TWO BEDROOM GARAGE A- PARTMENTS. GOOD LOCATION WITH EXCELLENT INCOME POTENTIAL. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT TO SEE. • ••• HUNTINGTON BEACH BEST OF SOL VISTA HOMES . ATRIUM MODEL. THREE BEDROOM, FAM ILY ROOM, FORMAL DIN- INC ROOM, QUlCK POOSESSlON. l~~~~t:.~!.,' Coror11 dtl M.,., Cfliforn11 Ptlflnt: 67].2'222 $ III.Y 1140DI:L J.OI \ Quantity!! --.... ._. .. _ .,.. • """' m11. ~~~~~'~ ._.,,.. . ._ . . --. ............ -..... ···= ............ ... ..................... • n.....-.c•~-·---c!JC'- .CJ •••••oooo.-••••• oCi,.JaJ~ PRESn&E WATERFRONT HOM& 1H0W11 BY API'OINTM.NT 11 LiMe lt l• Orin Elegant nf"w ~ RR ., 41-'J blil . knme \l' formal din . rm .. fam. rm .. wet hAr . lmprts&l''l! en- try c-ourt w lA ft. maknt. rlMr~ ... t179.509. $1 lind• hie Drive ~ RR .. 41/1 h~t., on IAJ:Mr'l l.JtP . \utr.rfrnnt famllv rm. & li\·in~ rm F'nrmAI dinm~ rm. custoin decnr, deck &. ,c;l 1p. . . $189.000. t1 Lind. hie Drive f\Paul. ~ RR 4 hA . hnmfl w form-.1 c1Ln rm. k lamtlv rm. :1 Frplrc; ()ut•qciP .clturu.·!!ly. BUJit-1n 'gun CA~Hn{'t & bonk~hel\'e.s. $U5.000. 106 Linda ltle Orho~e CU.(Inm ~Ln~IP .(I Of\', .1 Bcirm . :\ bill.h 1qler frnnl 1\llh ruer -.nci.,(llr r .~rt,. rnafter bdrm . Wtth .(AIJM nmlnt. kllrhen &. IJVtng room h;we \1 All!r vipw. ~2· lnt $13~.000 . W•terfronl lots f\:n VI Nnrt h 1 ,i!Jtl'\('ln t"xpn:oourt> ...... 180.000. 401 AAyllicie, 70ft. l1Anr1y ))p.:.rh . . . . 143.9:10. BILL GRUNDY, Realtor ldend•rs Bld9, at l inda hi• 3<41 BAYSIDE DR., SUITE 1, N.B. 675-0161 BAYCREST NEW LISTING OUTSTANDING CORNER LOCATION · Thre{' hedroomo; 1" n bath~. tam \!~ room a net l'l tnm~ r()('lm Heatfd and !:!!cn~d rnnl hobby rnom anc1 hoat :ootora~:e. . . . . . $53:)()(). OPEN HOUSE, SAT. & SUN. 1·5 1820 IRVINE AVE ., N .. B. J Visit us this week! 2706 Wavecrest OPEN DAILY 1-5 P.M. SPACIOUS 4 BEDROOM BROADMOOR lfARBOR VIEW HILLS HOME LOOKING OUT ON WIDE GREEN- BELT. OtrrSTANDING PLANTINGS GIVETH~ HOME AN OUT-rN -THE-COUNTRY FEEL. OCEAN AND HARBOR VIEW FROM FRONT DECK. OPEN SUNDAY 1-5 P.M. 967 Sandcastle TOP QUALITY LlBK HOME . FOUR BEDROOMS, DEN AND DINING ROOM. OWNERS HAVE GIVEN THIS HOME THE BEST OF EVERYTHIN G ... ()I.- MACULATE ! OPEN SUNDAY 1-5 P.M. 4332 E. Coast Highway TRI.PLE X IN HEART OF CORONA DEL MAR TitRE£ TWO -BEDROOM UN ITS, ONE WITH FIRE . PLACE A:-lll 1-l /2 BATHS, SOME OCEAN VIEW ... LOCATED ACROSS FROM EXCLUSIVE SHORE- CLIFFS .. WALK TO THE BEACH. NEED A TAX SHELTER? WE HAVE I i t.'N ITS l BLOCK FROM OCEA:'\ 1:-. COR{)~ A IJEI MAR. COMBINE TAX SHELTER BE~E- FITS WITH PRlDE OF OW~ERSHIP PROPERTY YOL WI LL BE A WI~NER! QRANGE COAST REAL ESTATE UOO E. COAST HWY AT DAHLIA, CORONA DEL 'AAR Love It E' Forget It DEUGKTFUL BLUFFS, S BEDROOM Z~l/2 BATH HOME, LOCATED ON GREEN BELT, lN SECLUDED AREA. WHEN YOU LEAVE TOWN, JI.ST Ct..a;E THE DOOR & WALK AWAY. OFFERED AT $42,000 . * New Listing LARGE 4 BEDROOM, Z-1 /2 BATH EAST BLUfF VIEW HOME. CALL FOR COMPLETE DETAILS, OFFERED $49.500, ~ * T Park Boat in Front 0 R B PARK OOAT IN FRONT ... YOUR CAR IN REAR; RENT Otrr AN APARTMENT; YOU REALLY HAVE IT MADE. OliTSTANDifi'G NEWPORT ISLAND DUPLEX. WO~'T LAST LONG, SO HURRY! O~L'I $82.000.00. CoRBIN-MARTINil ====1644-7662====:.1~ BUDGET BLUFFS LOWEST LEASEHOLD LOWEST MAINTENANCE DUES ILH £> .IOU :~h·;,,,· \\iUtltod ,,, h1c rn Jh r h..•:Ht· t iJII I. t .•I'• ,·, · J:luff~ lut! ffll \ftll t ,,u)t!n l aJ;'c,rd 11 · .\( ,\' \Ol ' r \\'' ) h·a·,f' ~ lo'l'''· {·r·n drtullnlll•o •n l hl" 1'1 .•\Z \ .\HF \ 1 n("f' ~flU f;t1···~1~. ·, l'nol p::ri.. :.dlntrh ,\ rr.,•l,"l, llfll'f-i Ito :-P ' .C so··· •.• 21.] BATH · $33,750 3 80• .' .. l 1 l BATH · SJ3,500 ~~~. 11 d!' l:-: . .t ~~~.\ ·•.Jll••~ Onl\ 3 ~ .... r·. lo)rl H•ol ll \ ol :l"l\t'·l!l •'1'1!0'11 "I •', o'l ~(t . tin\ '1 1'\f. .\HlSTIIU 1'\\'.ll'\'1 "' 4 f•l•l'l•\ 1,~·· . ,, 111'1',1' ~~~111 -· HELEN B. DOWD 6«-41148 REALTOR 644.0134 ~----~~~------~ ROY McCARDLE REALTOR RELIABLE SERVICE SINCE 194J 543-7729 1810 NEWPORT BL COSTA MESA Curt Dosh REALTOR 642-6472 -eve. 6'73-3648 1730 W. COAST HWV , NEWPORT BEACH SEIIPX.. BEAL ESTATE a&JIDBHTIAL AND 8VSIHBSS PROPeaTI8S ·-/'Oa IHTUBSTBD, l'aOI'BSSIOHAL COHJIDBUTIOH su HIJ 1. Cooot ".,., c.--.. _ IJ~Jitl "'•• ht Yew o•, t.r • s.ltactfptl•: C.ll673-0550 Quick to reserve an apartment m one of our new .sections. (The quicker you are. the better your chances ol getttng the lloor plan and location that lit you best.) Park West apartments lend lo fill up fast. With adults over 30. (And under 30 ) They l1ke the adults-only sections wtlh prtvate pools and JacuZZIS and barbecue pits. With Moms. {And Dads. And k1ds ) They hke the family sections with tot lots. The pre-schooL The teen center. The Juntor Olympic size pool. With athletes (And IUS! pla1n good sports.) They !1ke Park West recreat1on II outdoes every other apartment complek m the area. There's a three-acre activtfy park Ftl!ed w1th swtmmmg and ther- apy pools. N1ght-lighled tennts Volleyball . handball A large tur1 area tor jogg,ng and touch football There's a two-story clubhouse Complete health club faC1I1t1eS and tramed attendants. lounges. game and party rooms Full·hme recreatton manager. Park West has something lor everybody So. no matter what your age. or manta! status. or athlehc abdtty you re sure to ftt 1n If you hurry 3883 Parkvlew lane. Irvine. Just off the San Diego Freeway at Culver Road. Adults only. from $110. Family apartments. !rom $115. -THE MANA&EMINT AND STAFf OF C. F. COLESWORTHY & COMPANY, REALTORS ... ,. •• ., -:~:·:~:·:·~ ............ -•••• efllce ..... ,..,., ••• , •. ..... ,....... hiiUI 4 I .... .. LecatMI ill ... laatltalf Willi a.,IIJ C•ter. 0.. [lll'efeulaaal ..... II raaip .. II II .,_ • ht .. krff Drive-l40a0020 laysWe Office, 1032 .., .. Drive -67So4930 U.F. INSTALLS DR . MOORE Sus p e nded a ttorney is praised for help NEIPORT HARBOR ENSGH FIRST S£Cl1QN ~-P111 l lltU RSilo\Y, FtB. 10, 1972 COlliN A DEL MAR. CALl F. 'he tlltbor UM u.atedl'.:l llold Ill~---. .... l .... dl ..... lUI IIJ&tll&l ltlt 110-PIVIUOO. More lllu ZOO ..... d..ted till lweal, boD- orliC a.e who pity«! aD lm - ,.,..,.,. -Ia lbe 19"11 U.llod . .., ... _1 ... A tob.t of $3%7,000 WU col- I-4arlll( lbe 19"11 Harbor Ar• drln, a 10 per cent ln- erta.se ~•r 19'70. Or. Robert B. Moore, presi- dent ot Orange Coast college aDd chaltmtn ofthispastyear's cl.mJI&Ip, presented tht> a- ytrds. Follow lag the presenta- Uoas, the 1972 HarbOr Area Un- Ited Fund executive committee •u chosen and tO new members wert added to the boll rd. Dr. Moore presented cam- Pt.IID leadersbtp awards to Mrs. Merel Amundson, Clarence (Ch1c). Clark, Mr s. Richard Cramm, Robert Heild, Ed Hirth, Mi's. Robert Krome, Vic Sher- reltt, Fred So rsabal, Leon Meeks, Cliff Wesdorf and Lou Y1.ntorn. Speclal awar ds went to the employees of the citiesofCosta Mesa and Ne111Wtl Beach and employees of OrangeCoast Col- lege and the Newport-Mesa WLI - fied schoolliistrict. OUIItl""'nc campaap •· ellleYtmMt ,..._,.. .,.... PH· __,10 c-lbatpla,.. tm.portant roiH ta tbt drl'•· Tile)" Loci-lhe t1e1 Co •• Seus, AYCO FLDiociiJ Ser~ Ylets, Soutbtn CalUonla Ou co., Phllco Forct.SoutblraCal .. lfornta First NattoMI DIM. 8an.t of Amuiea, H)'IUd Lt.bc, Pactnc Telepbooe ud Soctth. ern CaWornta Edlsoa Co. Other eampaip achievemeDI •tnners were Newport Ma.rlne s~ty, u.s. National B1J:1k, Butrums, Saffell and McAdams, M ~rrlll Lynch, the Automobtle C tub of Southern CaUtornta, Union Bank, United CaUiotnl.t. Bank and Security Paclhc t.nk. Robert Perkins, outgotnr president, turned the pvel ov- er to the new presideot, Dr. Moore. other offic ers are Rob- ert Shelton, nrst vtce presi- dent; B. James Glans, second vice president; Mrs. James Dodds, secretary; and Bev Ben- son, trea surer. New ooard members Inc lude Mrs. James Schafer, Mrs.Jotm Owen, John Spear, Fred Sorsa- ba I, Bud He\Ug, Jim Felton, Jack Curley, Vic Sherreltt, Norm Do lby and Robert Hield. The 1972 campaign will run through October and November, HISTORY MONTH --Showlng ooe of the h!storlca.l pictures beiDg placed In harbor-area Ubrartes to mark February as National History Month are Mrs. Ricliard K. Hammond (left) and Mrs. Donald K. Sloper of the Col. William Cabell chapter of the Daughters or the American Revolutloft. Sorb ladles are Balboa lsla.Dders. (Ensign phOto.) Church News The First BaptJst Church of Mesa, 301 Magnolia St. Ana Ave,.-Dr . James I Co"•h• will preac h at 11 a.m. 1 ~:!~! on "How lo receive t'tom God." At 7 p.m. man, wtll be working with all committees. The committee c hairmen u~ J:lmes Albin, Robert Kelly, Gar y Snidt>r, James Lawrence, Levi Rod- r equez, Bert Shultz, James Hutter and llov.•ar r1 WeavH, Balboa ltlud tttOJ"Mf Dltlr about 50 tu'dshl,p CaMS to Mr. HlJble, IUspeoded from IIJ.alaw HIJblt • pracUce tor a year becauae ot "He hils ne1er ahOWD a.ay LOAN O.K. bta aUepd tnvolftltlto.t In a. btttuneas toward tM pern-Hole Hosptta.l'a board chltr ~ ma.rljtana amuqUnc ICheM@ mtDt or Jocl&t Curtis," Mr. man aid Tuelday th&J 11\ tn~ In 1968, cot some prabe tbls Mooahan DOted, "al.tboucbtherl teroll ~bble betWeen doc· week for being a ''helluva good has always bfea a question ot tors Ud admlntstratora at the CUY·" whelM' or not ht really did lKispltal bas no bearlnr on the Tbe praJse, which eame trom anyttUnr morally wrooc." lnsUtutloo's $11 mt!Uoo lou IllS former probation ottlctT, Tbe State Supreme Court dl-to add a patient care tactUty, must nave soooded good to the elslOc'l Last WeE'k waa based "Tbe 10&11 Is signed, sealed 40-yea.r -okt member otaprom~ upon whatthe court called '' ren· and deUnred," A. Vtocent Jor. lnent Newport Beach lamtly. eral conduet refieetlng moral genseo told the Enslp, ''and Last Friday, 2-1/Z years of turpitUde.'' The court held that we have the money." Stories heartbreak over what he called mere possession of marijuana last week twt linked the klu ''a silly mistake" had been Is not a morally depraved act to certato medical proe:rams e Umaxed by the State S'4)reme under today's code of behav. at the hospital which start doc· Court decision that, althOugh he tor, but tnat a lawyer who al-tors wanted kept under their had been convicted of oothinK lowed h!mself to become to. control. more serious than talllng to volved with people who dealt Doctors had given the hOsplt- pa y taxes on marijuana, he In drugs shoulCI be punished al's admlnlstratioo a "no con- would be s uspeud ed !rom law hy losing Ills practice for a 1 fir1enc e" vote after the)' had pr;~.cltcP for a year. year. heard that the loan tl'om Equi- The string or events wh ich Dick HiRtle saidTuesday ttutt table Life As~urance Society led to I be coort decision be-he looks forwarrt to continuing of New York carrit'f1 conditions gan In November, 1968. Fed-his law practlce anertheycar's that the hospital must continue era! agents picket! up " Gar-s uspension. Its programs on tamUy prac . den Grove man at U1e Palm "I t1oJM' I . can forget this tlce, out-patient surKt!rY and Sprtnv:s airport and said he, mistake in judgmt!nt which I staff doctor instruction for Mr. Hlgllle and another Gru'-m;uJe," he toldtheEnstgn. the duration of the loan. den Gr ove resident wer P try. tng to smugg le $1.7 mllUon worth of marijuana from Mex- ico, CM incumbents optimistic topic wtll be '·How to back- slide,"' • • • The P!ymouth Congre.:a tlonal Church, 3262 Broad St., New- port Helghts--"The 3 m~>an· lngs or grace" V.'ill hf> th(' sermon topiC' of the Rev. f'Oor- man Brown a! 10 a.m. Sunday, The Rev. Garner has held meetings In almost ever y state and has seen thousands of li ves chanj1:{'d . An unr1ercover a~ent, J. W. BaglE'Y, v.·ho had known Mr. lilRblt> for }'f'ars, was flying the plane and ht> implicated the socially prominent la.wyf'r. He said Mr, Hi gbie hari intro- CORONA FOR DEL MAR RENT Spectacular views for your family. From this llarbor View hilltop above Corona Clel Mar, Three mC"umbent city coun- cllm~n In Costa Mesa feel that they have had their chances tor rE'-Piection on Apr il ll strenKtheneo-t by the re1 ord number of candidJ.tes. With 17 other canf11datt>s splillinl!' the "dissatisfied '' votE> among them, Ma vor Bou Wil- son, Alvin Pinkley o~nd B1 ll St. Clair .tit told lttP Ensign that the}' s:~w their own <'li.lll''E'S improved. "I'm 'laPP )' to see so rn.tnY people interested in theh local governmt>nt," saitl Ml}''>l Wil- son. "Sometimes""'!? don't nave that man}' people shOw up for our f'Ouncll meetinC!s." Counrilman St. C l<~.i r . .J unut- spokPn critlr of the rounn t's 'old guard," S<~.id he llf:l1eves dlssatlsfadion with tht> r1 1y's operation has promptMthe rush to rilt> ror eh:ct1on, bur he 1sn't sur e whether action-; of thai group art> to hla mt• or !I the newcomers want to toln v.·illl t he ''0\tl gua r fl'. Ill IJI'In!!:iflR more cohesiveness to the couu. cil. With so many m tht> r a~:e, :: announced candlrl<itt:s madf' news this week by <1ropp\nv; out of U1e cont est. Mary NJian. an educa tor, salrl ·'per sona I "Om- mltments" madt> her w1 thr1ra11' after she had alr~<ldy filM '1er nomination )Jolper s with tt,p • It} c krk. :'l'lnett>en -year -old E r I,.. Funston, who hlr1 hoped to re- pr esent the town's rn ln} col le),>t> s tudents, changeo1 his rn 'n1 and w!l l .tgain JOin student ranks t:ly enr olling in the l'nlversll} of California at San Die~o. Rut, there are ~till atm'1sl r~~o·lr"! as man} ~an<1idatto!> as :lt an~ time In the city's nis· tof\. E \~ven people flle<l for t he oun~llma nir race in l 9ti2 and the s.~me numller r.w in 1964. A !Yin Pink[>;>'., WhO ha S I'IE'en on the roun,·!l o~!! or its 18 YE"<H S of ex1slt>nce, says he is LECAL NO TICE NOTICE OF' PUOLIC HEARI~G :"ollf'P is he r»by ~v~>n that the Cit}' Council of t11e Ctty of i\Pwpor! Beach w\11 hokl d pub. llr heartnr re~or~ling the <!X- periSes tnvolverl in the r1Pmoll. lion anr1 rrmova l of a bul\11\ng at 1920-1 /2 Court St .. Lot ll, I:Hor k 11 9, tn r ludlnii! lnridenlil.l and over heaC: e~q>enses, In ac- r or danct> with r esolution No. 741 2, and pur suant to Munici- pal COde Sertlon 15,28,070. Notlr P Is hereby further giveo w at sa1d public Maring wtll be held on the 14th rtay o f Feb- rtl.'lrr, 197:!, at the hour or 7:30P.M. in t11e Couucll CI\;lm- bers of the C1ty Hall of the City or ~ewport Beach, California, a t whlr h time and place any and all persons Interested may ap. pear and be heard ther1:0n. Laura Lag:los City Clerk City of Newport Beach Publish: Feb. 10, 1972, In the Newport Harbor Ensign. LIGAL IIOTICI FJCTITtOlS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following persons are doing business as: Curiosity C loset, 177-G Riverside Ave., Newport Beach: Audrey Mar - lene Donnan, 22892 BeiQuest Dr •• El Toro, Ca.; Betty Jane Vu Ausdal, Z%902 Be}quest Or •• El Toro, Ca. TMs bustDess Is betog coa- ctlittted by a genera I p&r'tMr • •hlP· Slptd: Audrey Marlene Don-.... TIIIO alemoot aled wtlh U.. c_., Clert or OrU&O c-- 11 .. , , ... '· 1172, "' Artbw E. ~. dopGt1 _,.clerk. Pd lrt Ftb. 10, 17, 14, --~~Ira: llltlt ~: 0 completely stumped by the tact that so many sud(!en ly want to run. 0 A run-oft ~lel'tion, wh.ic h som<"time-s result s In other .treas when oobodr !!ets a ma- jorit~ of votes, is not possible in the C.;,sta Mesa elPd!On. Three seat s arP up for gralls J.nrl the 3 top vol€' getter s w:ll wtn. MA RCI A YOUNGL O VE The Lutheran C~urc~1 of the Ma ste r, 2900 PacifiC '11e11o· Dr., Th 'II d Harbor View Hills .-TJ•~ Rev . ey we Mlrtin Olson Will tJr lnK the messagE.-, Was this the last Tiler~ is some t>VIrlence th;;,t spe' l.l l·lnterest gTOups might have BlPlr own pet candidates . L .. w,s Bowden, 51, s.tld he Is runtll n~ to ~:"~t a better r1eal for ..-eterans and older pt>Opl~." HP • rltlctzer1 ~~o·hat he called th(· 4 !I} 's r estrirtive ,;,ttitude tov..IP1 tra1ler parks, whic h he sal'~ pro\' ide low-cost homes for man> retired peoplE'. • A t ~hance"" at the 9 and 11 a.m . U gUS Sunr1ar services. Phillip L. Evans, chai r man of the Chamber ol Cr:lmmer~;:e sernc» stallon commiltee, promises tv m.i!ke the m.tjor oil com)amrs clean up their st llior:'i, but pled~:"ed he would )!Ulrcl , ~lOS! .tny r lty lel"isla. tlon th:lt v.·ould makt> ttnnl!s ~arller for station operators. Mr. [;J.ns, v.·hu op»ratfls.ts~r ­ vlr•· stallon on B!'isto l St., also <>ecks ear \v C':ln.;>I~Hon of the Crm:m:t llel M.u antJ Nt>v.l)Ur\ Hea~'h fret>v.·oys. C.Jnrlldate F'rPr1E'rlk 8os, on the othe r nanrl, v.·.1nt::. o.~ll tr ee. ~.~\ •:onstr uC'11on na\tPr1 JS ~~ui•·kl'. as possible. li e ~~o·ould J lso hJ It .11! wtaemng of str eets. Wh;ot about thr trafflr · "Let !I <;It ftJPf",' says Bos, ' un- til we S"l up " tram S)stem >lmil .. r to !II(· onE' at Dlsner - ldnrl ... Mr. and Mrs. Bf'n Young . love or R\V Pr Sir1e have an- nounced the ene:a ,cement of their dauKhter, Marcid, to C'lmsto- pher R. Cooper or Ba\tlQ.I. Is- land, Mr. Cooper IS the son or Mrs. Jeanne E. Cooper of B:ilhOa Island ant'! the late Roti- E>rt W. Cooper , Miss Youn glov e ~actuated from Riverside Po lytechnic high school, attE'nded T€-mple- Buell CollE'ge 1n Co !orarlo and Is no~~o· attt>nrlln~~: the l:niversity of Ca!Hornta J.t Riverside. ThE' groom-f'lf'l't also Is <;tutl\'inl!: pr r -Iaw .at t.:C Rtver Sifit>. He ts ,. gradual~ uf Corona ctel M tr high school. The intt>ndl"r1 bride IS tht> niecP of Mrs. Hruce Nordlund of West ~ewport. H·'r paternal ~randpar t>nt s, Mr . arnl Mrs. Hov.·arct Younglove of River. s ir1e, have malntainer1 .1 t10me on Balbo.1 PE>ninsula for m.tn)· vears :m1 are pa rt -llmt? resi- dents of the Harbor Ar Pa, Mr . Cooper 's m.Herll.dl Rfan(!mother is Mr s. C. L. WtPrsma of Ld Jolla, a ft f'· QUPfll visitor to CorrJil.l rlel Mar :1nrl ~ev.']XIrt . Land rJe·.·e Joper 03vlt1 Leigh. The ,....l iJillt> h:IVP ~·t1ose.n ton, l former d t) planner, Au~st for th.,1r weddint:: says r·ouncHm'?n shoulrl ·stay • home anrl !!ef thE' JOb r1one CHRISTIAt-4 WOMEN ME lnsted•l of runni nl! around the Bill Roberts, former actor country to vanous t·onf H . and dancer, WI II addre~s the ences.'' He nott>dthatontyabout regular momhl) lu n•heon or tWO-thirds or the Cit}' IS dt>-thP !"e'A.-port Beach Chr istian I'E'lopE"l .1.nd tho~! there Is plenty Women's Club ne xt Wednesday, of work to ne done a ion ~: those Feb. 16, al the Airporter Inn. lines. Mr. Robe rts, ~~o·ho has trav. . . . e led extens h ely with a Shakes. lti;~;ls~ai iOn for the April pearean repertory cornp:tny. II Elef'!IOn Is open at the City wrote a book, "From ma kt> be- Cif'rk's ortice tram 8 to 5 lieve to realitv " o~bOut his dally until Feb. 17, Anvone whO Hfe. · · has moved or has not voted Preceding the 11 :45 lun rheon since the last gener al eleetion will be a •·white elephant sale" will need to r e-regis ter. at 11 i.m. CLIFF TOP VILLA above the waves. Catalina view. Large 4 bdrm., 4 bath, balconies & terraces. 1200.000. BIGGEST 4 BEDROOM 2,600 UNIVERSITY PA.RfC TOWN HO USE. OS GREEN BELT, CLOSE TO POOLS ... ANXIOUS TO SELL. &43,9:Kt. LUXURY RANCH $225.000 26 acres ot plea!;ure for !he gentleman rarmer. ~la m housP. '·' a 4.000 ~q It. Spanish by Cliff Mfl::. Ph'Jne for photo pre\'iew. HOME SHOW REALTORS J.nS r-C.. Hi!!lowoy ., ••••••••••••••• MLS SALES REPORT Sales through the Multiple Listing Service of the Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa Board of Realtors totalled $108 .4 million In 1971 -an average of over $9 mtllion a month! THIS IS A 9'/% INCREASE over 1970. 2,413 sales were made, 4,449" new listings were processe4, of which 54% were sold; 61% of s ales were cooperative . List your proper ty with a Realtor. •••••••••••••••••• The Nt>wport Unity Church, meeting at 15th St. anr1 Irvine- Ave., Cliff llave-n--Th£' Rev, Lor('O Flickinger will preach a t 10 .tnd l l:l!i o.m. Suuda~ on the toplf', "Gorl so loved the world." St. Andrew 's Presbyterian Church, 600 St. Andrev.·'s Rd ., C Uff Haven--Guest preacher for the B, 9:30 aud 11 a.m. Sundar SE.-r vices will be Dr . w. Sherman Sk.innE'r, mtt>r im exf'cUIIVP of the S}·nod of South. Pr n Califor nia, United Presb}·- tertan r hurch In lht> IJ.S.A. His sermon topic is Go<i's turn to ask questiOns." • • • RE VIVAL IS PLANNED Moncbv nl ~ht a number of men from the F'ir st O..tptist Church of Costa Mesa held a plannim: sess1on for a cominl!' rev!val rJ.mpai j::ll Marcr, G-14 wit/1 111~ Rev . Jack GarrK·r of Dallas , Texas, as thP €'~·o~nj::C· list. Ron .4.llison, rarnpai~ chair · Furtht>r ln for mat!Qn may he obtainccl from Mr.Allison,&42- 2lB3 or 548-6743 , or the first Baptist Chur eh at Santa An:~ and M a~;oolia In Costa Mesa, 548-1733. 0 0 "L IVE NOW" CRU SAD E Ev:m11-elist J im Hyl ton, of West Plains, Mo., v.•ill open a "Start living no.,.,··· ~'ru~d(' Sund.l.)' l t the F1rst Baptist Church or Newport Bear h. The c rusade w\11 run lhr oul'h F'Pb. 20, Mr. Hylton -.·a s pastor of several Baptist churchf'.'i in Ml ssoun OOfor e de>ddin~. ln 1969, to devote his full time to t?vangf'lisrn. He has cru- sat1ed in Austraua, Taiwan :.tnd India and ha s spoken at sev- en! evan~e lislic rr usades, Ri ble conferences oind Christ. ian ltre conre renf·es ln this countr}. ThP churr h is lo<:.i.ted at 2:i01 C litr Dr ., Ne wport Hel gt1ts. PANHEL MEETING Mrs . PPter Pa scJI, area ad- visor for colle~ Panhellenlcs In Callfonl.J , will :lddr£'ss the Newport Hllrbor Plnhellenic 4l t 10.30 a..m. Feh. 16 on · College women of tud:l}, at the home or Mrs. OUJ.n Sullh'an, 346 ViJ. Lido Soud, Lido !sit>. Tile ho sh"<;<; -.·itt lit' o!:o:.istl'<i b)' Mmes, Lawr encP IT.r.nvcr, Hart Hhkman. Frank T}·ler , Lyman M. Kin~;, L. F.:~.uJ Du Hols, WQr ti'Jnc;tun Lee, Kenneth Sampson, W\!\iam Stauffer. anr1 Lawrence Kittle . duc·M him to thE' smuggler~. Mr. Hl ~le, who has always maintained that· th~ lntrodoc. lions were part or a client- lawyer relationship which he ctuJ not knOw would implicate hi m in any marijuana dealln~s. ended UIJ spendin~~: 'JO da}'S in }ail and was· given 3 ye:i rs proh.·ltlon h~· Jtl(1t"t' lf'SSt> W. Curti c . After 2 \'f'ars oD probation, Mr. lli >!blc, who is the son or former Newport Beach d ty councilman Clarence (Chick) Higbie, had so Impressed fed- eral prob3 lion officer Stan Mon- llhan, thai Mr. Monahan got his pr otxa.tion terminated a yea r earl}', '·Mr. 11\gb\t> always went out of his war to help people who wer e In trouble,'' Mr. Mon<l- han told the Ensign yesterrtay, DramaUc ar chlteeture. Handsome lnteriors. Privacy. Pool, gar d€'ns, play areas. Close to schools, shopping, Two and thr ee bedrooms, two baths, From $245. Gas and cablevlsloo Included. Bayview apartments SA.H JO A.QUIH HILLS RO AD, EAST OP' IIIA.CA.RTHUR I OULEVARO t\ TION C ALL 644--JHJ 'Jaul'e ~lomrr~ or all occasions We SPBC IA.LIZE IN P ARTIES AND WEDDINGS Free estiMates. Wt ,.. c..cl Dell.very Servt ce -and ht> has contlnuPd to do DAy 5 this even art er ~rcttinj! off pro. 644-3990 OP EN batloo... ~~;;E;-~c;O;;A~S;T;H;W;Y;;. ·~~;;~c;o;R~O;N;A;;D~E;L;;~ The probation officer , who handlt>s fefleral cases In Or- ange County from Ills Santa Ana offl re, Slid ·mone}' was nev er a problem" when here- ferred destitute people In troulll+-to Mr. Hi gbie, who prad li es law votth his Cather J.t 229 Mulnc 1\Vt>., RaliXla lslanfl. "ill: nP\'ef turned an~·U(ld~ down, :wrl people -.·oom he helped dlwars t••n:l oothlng but ..!00'1 thin~s to say for him as J.n illllivlt1ual," d airne<l Mr . Monahan. He sa1d i1e rdt>rrf'f1 MARINERS CHURCH Df. Jot Aldrt cb, who rtc:e!Yed hJs Tb, D. dll!lgrM from Dllllal Theoloe1cal S.mtD&.ry, Dalla&, Taus, lJ the church pastor. Tbl Rrt. Wllltam Acton Is auoclate pastor aod Is an.llable for vtsttatloo and coun&eUnc. SUNDA Y SCHOOL ....... 9:00A.M. WORSH IP SERVICES .. 9:00 & 10:15 A.M . EVENING SERVICE. . . 7:00 P.M. 2200 E. COAST HWY ., CORONA DEL MAR Story No Me N rt h od a dt ttnt Word foC" her ahd &ht f>'l.IOd b.r tim• c!Jo• ... ing dbout mAKinz Kisse.s Sht Wtre not ..,.,.. d wiu.. Cary Grunt. ~ocll. H.lslo•"" ,.-.~ l•<l• t•"""Uog· &t W~en Sot n llodtil ~•rs•lf m til• mirror She Could e~JJI..y su thll Sh• YUre l"st ' 1•u&.y ugLy girL wita. Very Cur"~ hair. ..... A!: " }1. !I A'i a \•st. T~tlort . Sht bo~Aght a r~•l leet.n drtU -t.-Dtn ~··~ 0 ~r d 1d Sht p&.~f. Jt Of\, Wh rn a blg cig•r Wi t,., 4 man N Nnd it .tte,-,..d up .... "LULI<y yo u."· >a~ tho ma n bohind fht hu~ cig•r . ·· 1 ar• a bi,·t iM• Scowl for tht .famoa.S mohOh P'itturt Jnigg•t, ltwh A. Dc .. iLLe . Th1t rea&. l(e•n dr•ss looX Sa y lh• to bo Ju>l wl.>t ht ,.,a t o stor in his n ut tti< .... 'lou HollyWood f.,. a Sctt•n tt$l .. prowdL y and I W t it 3 Ll to ,J{f.~,"llt •.•. .... and s~e did ~·. " ~U4~ J &. ¥'/e. ~-rr #-.I~ ~'lf'N" .PA M44' ~7r~/t#.JD NEWPORT BEACH JO( 10e COSTA MESA =-o\IIIL Harbor Hi concert tonight Newport Harbor h11tuehool's Debbie Elias a.od Patrtela Pet- mUiie deputmeot will present erson. I a mld-wtater concert at ?:30 Senior Rick Englalld, plantst, p.m. tdy, Feb. 10, in the 'oftll perform works by Gersh.. blgtl school atll:lltorhrm. The wtn, Debussy and £bert. Rick procram Will feature the SaU-has won many musical hooors or Band, school orchestra, in the area and Is also a mem:- llrl's choruses, Rubor Chor-ber of the American Guild or -;;:;;o-'o.; alte aod tlle Chantelles. All Or ganists. .., J proceeds wtU beusedforscbol-A WOMAN 'S VIEWS OH IDA McCLINTOCK of Newport arsllfp awards to be preseoted on March 1'1. LAWS 480U T WO~EH Beach, at left, women'sdivlsloo The program will tochJde "A feminine vtew on laws clla.irman of the United Jewlsh GILLIAM SYMONDS VICKI CLUC,AS AUDREY MEWMAf'4 KI-KI BOWRIMG "Tbe creatloa," a rock cant-relating to women" is the title Welfare Fund, and co-chairman ata, performed by the Ehor-of a 4-part ser ies being of-Helen Aaron of Santa AJJa dis- aile wttb assistance ttom John ter ed by Orange Coast Even-cttsS details of the 1972 cam-T~Y. doel:lle bass, and Seott lng College as part or its worn-paign. The women's dlvls1oo )( c Naughton, percussionist. en's morning lecture series. wlll have ma.jor respooslbiUtl.es This work wtll also fe.at~.ae The lectures will be held on in the 1972 drive, tbe most soprano soloists Nancy Gray, consecutive Thursday morn-ambltlous and lxoadly based DI!!PAftTMI!.NT ~ ....... 't'I¥L .,.. ... LEGAL MOneE FICTITlOtli BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person Is doing business as: Home Base Realty, lngs, Feb. 10 through Marc h effort or Its .ktnd to Orange 2, from 9:30 to 11:30 a .m. mC __ ounty __ hl_sto_r_Y_· ----- the Island House at fashion !~:;;;:::::::::::::::::::4 Island. There Is no tuition LIGAL MOTte! charge and persons may reg-FICTITIOUS BI.SINESS NAME lster at the lecture. STATEMENT The lecturer Is Mrs. Betty The followlng person Is doing 513 Knoxville Street, Hlltltlng-Farrell Costa Mesa attorney business as: The Wood Shed, ton Beclch, Ca. 92648: Dr. Her-' • bert L, Beierle, Broker, 212 BALLET P ROGRA.~ 425 3oth street, Newport Bea ch: Muguerite Ave., P.O. Box 711, Three ballets choreogTaphed David L. Des Combes, 2909 Cnrooa del Mar, Ca. 92625. by UC I graduate sttxlents will W · Willits, santa Ana. This business Is being con-be performed In the Village Th.is business is being con- ducted by an individual. Theatre on campus at 8:30p.m. ducted by an Individual. Signed: H. Beierle. this Fr iday and Saturday, Feb. Signed: David L. DesCombes. This statement ftled with the 1 t and 12. The choreogra.ptlers This s tatement tiled with the county clerk ot Orange County ar e Victoria Barrett of New-COUJlty c lerk of Orange County on: Ja.n. 14, 1972, by Beverly port Beach, Catherine Miller on: Jan. 25, 1972, by Walter M•.11•6 ONE HOUR CLEANERS CORONA l)[l Mo\11 2939 E. COAST HIGHWAY AT HAf'4CY WOLFE VICKI AHf'4 McCARTY SUZAMf'4E SMITH COHN IE HOLM J . Maddo:r, deputy county clerk. of Irvine and Robin Osborne T. King. deputy county d E"rk. i7S-3J06 ~~DI.11_1:. ntall ....... --1 PubUsh: Jan. 20, 27, feb. 3, Duncan or South Latrona. Stu-Publlsh: Jan. 27, Feb. 3, Zonta girls named for 2 months 10, 19'72, In the Newport Harbor dents In the SchOO t"·of fine 10 • 17 • 1972 • in t/1.,,~,~·'2"""'§'~'Jb,;!!!~l!!~!;;.llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll~!i~~~;~~~ ,E,n;,si"'"'"·~-----"F.::-"l5'-'3"'3<l'-'A'-'r-'ts"-"•""i 1,_1 "be'-"tn"e"da""n"ce,r_,s~. ___ Har_bo_r _E_n_".:.. gn_. _ f -15486 The Zonta girls or thf' mooth for both December and January were hOnored at the Newport Harbor Zonta Club's Amelia Earhart Inter-c ity meeling in January. Here are the ~rls selected for December from the 4 local high. schools: • GILLIAN PATRICE SY- MONOO, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Symonds, 2408 Bonnie Place, Costa Mesa, Is e<Utor.fn.chter or Trident, Co- rona del Mar high school news- paper, secretary of the se:tlor class, member of CSF and of Thespians, designed 3 pro- rnms for the drama hOIIOr soetety, acted In :'. scenes aDd In one tun length production. She Is a Candystriper at Hoa g Hospital, senior honorary so- ciety member, r eceived the Rotary Club award In 1%8, national merit scholars/lip commendation In 1971, aud wo~.s named "girl or the Quarter" as a sophom 1r e. She plans to m'lj:lr In English at Pomona, C laremont or UCI, preparlnK for a teaching career. • VICKI CLUCAS, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Clu- cas, 4403 Seashore D:-., Wi!st Newport, Is editor -In-chief of the Newport Harbor high schOO l yearbook, CF'S vice-president, and member of CF'S. Prevl01.1s activities have inc luded student congress, Pep C lub, Ski Club, school bookstore mana~r, president of Spanish Club, poetry editor ofthe schOOl titer- ary magazine. Outside activi- ties Inc lude the Tri.HJ~Y Club, president of Episcopal Young Churchmen, and SOS tutor pro. gram, teach..lng migrant rarm workers to speak English. She recelYed tile Quill &. Scroll journausm :~ward and was se- lected for Girls State last year. She hopes to go to Stanford, Pepperdlne or UC, aiming for a )ourna.Ustlc career. • AUDREY NEWMAN, daugh. ter or Mrs. Estelle Newman, 1 '731 Labrador, Costa Mesa, Is editor -tn-chlef of the Estancia hlrh school aewape.per. El ••• Aguila, She Is a ml!mber of CSf and is participating In a college honors program, taking c lasses at Orange Coast Co l~ lege. As a junior she was cl\ll.irman of Eco.SO, a s tudent group that set up activities for ecology day . She has a lso been active In GAA, Gi rls League, freshman and sopl\o- more coun cils, and drill team. She has done volunteer w•Jrk at Fairview Hospital, reepJved the journalism student of the year award as a sophomore and is now a national merit semi-QnaUst. She Is a Janu~ a.ry gnduate, plans to work tor one semester to save ror college, and start at OCI in September wtrh a IPntative bi- ology rna. jar. • KJ.KJ BOWRIN G, daughter or Jack Bowring, 228 Tulane Rd., Costa Mesa, Is GAA presi- d·mt at Costa Mesa high schOOl, served as track captain as a tunlor and rP!'eived awards as most outstanding basketball, baseball and track competitor and most Inspirational In track. She also received basketba!l, ho!'key, baseball and tra!'k awards as a sophomor e. She was named Mi ss Cosb M,.sa and Miss Mermaid at lhe 1970 L!O'IS rtsh fry. She Is a vol- unteer at Fairview Hospita l. She is a January graduate anrl is enrolling at San Fernando Valley medical assistant s ctJool, where she will study for 6 months, hoplng to obtain a position here 1n the beach cities. Here are the 4 Z•:mta girls tor January: • NANCY WOLFE, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Wolfe, 1800 Dover Drive, Harbor High - lan1s, Is associated student bodY secretary at Newport Har- bor high scllool, Key Club sweetheart, member or AF'S and constitution revision com- mittee. She was Spanish Club president a.nd yearbook busi- ness editor as a freshman and has been active tn tbt1 Anchor Club, Pep Chlb, Onma Club, Keynotes and Spanish honor society. As a sophomore she received honorable mention in the schOol science fall', won 4th place In the r egional sci- ence fair, and 2nd place in extemporan~us speaking at the Florida state Spanish confer- ence. She Is a DAR award winner this year . She plans to attend UCI, majoring in Spanish. • VICKI A.'IN McCARTY, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. Vance McCarty, 303 Orchid Av e., Corona del Ma.r , Is mem- ber or the senior honorary SO· clety at Corona del Mar h.igh schOol, founder of the Bicycle C lub, and has been named girl of the quarte r. Other school acttvU\Ps have lncltll1ed GAA, Spanish Club, student body preslrlent In 197 1, student for environmental action, vice- president of the junior class, student advisor to th e super- intendent in 1970. During 1970 - 71 she helped care for a girl with cerebral pals}·. She Is taking secretarial courses so s he can get summer employ. mE"nt and part-time work dur- In g the schOol year to save m,,ney to attend UC Berkeley. She is aiming for a profession In reereational the rapy. • SlJlANNE SMITH_. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Sm ith, 2518 Littleton Place, Costa M('sa, ts Girts League publicity commissioner at Costa Mesa high school, associated stWent body secretary, aDd member of the varsity debate team. She Is a Candystrtper at Haag Hos- ptlal and president oftheYM(;A HI-Y Club, and has served as an offic er for the Novl ce.frosh Medical Careers Club. As a junior she received the ASB award for French and GerJ'I\.'ln, nd the National Forensic League avr.t.rd of honor In de· bate as a gophomore. She plans It> go to UCI, maj:lrln~t InGer· man and minoring In French. She hopes to spend a year ln Europt to perfect both langu- ages, and work In a foreign embllssy or reb.ted activity after rece!Ying a master's de- lfee aM teach.lng credentials. • CONNIE HOLM, thedaugfl • .--- ter of Mr . and Mrs. Wayne Holm, 3000 Country Club Dr., Co!la Mesa, Is Girls Leap n ee-president at Estancia htgb schOol, president or Wrestle Sprouts, senJor councilma.n, CSF tre&s\D'er and AFS mem. bel'. She has also been act1Ye In the Pep Club, drtll team, and Spanish Club. She has ap- peared In dancing class re- citals, baa done Yolunteer work at FalrYiew Hospital, and hOSted a ,trl tram Argentina thrOugh Cadle. She recelnd the E. l Moore Masonic award as most oatstudlnJ treshma.n ctrl Ud aa award for most out:staDdlDC tr•lhmu maUl sUadeot. SlMt bas a c.o lfade potDt nerace &Dd •tu be ftledietorlu ot ber P:Od"Otlae ......... plus lo atload ocr. ~~~~ ·= r ""' .... The you can go! (with insured savings) Interest rates may be falling, but at The Big M, Mutual Savings we're still paying as high as 6-fr • and 5"'% .. on insured savings. And we're still offering a host of free services, including a FREE Safe Deposit Box with a minimum balance. Take the safe climb to higher interest at The Big M . Corona del Mar: '1.&67 t .. t Coast Hllbway, 4 blocks E.ut of Ma<.Arth\11 Bl•d. (At the Time and Temperature tlpl ()tbet offices ln Ccm.na,'Wat Aradia, Paudc:na, Clc=ncbJc a.nd C.nop Pa.r\-chauworth ""~ lfto"l"'!lol'l\,11iel0yoH., -~$1.000 l'l'llM'PIIIfl\, 1to l0...., 'COme Up Or. Wllllem CUib•Won'l '-t pubHc m I lUge __ ..,,__,,m Reviews PROM "CIIIUJTIAN H BJfSH NBW HAVBN, MO. IIE1POIITHAIIIOR EIISICJf lliUIISOAY, FE& 10, 1!72 IECOIID lf:CTD ·'AG£ 2 JXlllliiA D£L MAR, CN..IF. 0.. ~ 6, ollllk -• "-two_,.. bot- lie -Ctlll-.1 to I>< wlrh IN LoTti, Dr. WI-CoJbm. ...,, O.....U/Jot of Mr>Od~ Blbk IMfiwu, brl•fly tJd.. tlr-.dlhe -...r C<N~frre,. of rite A""'*"" A,_ -for l.wUh E,_.lism wltlr which M ...., tusoclottd Ill dttlif'lrllllt o/ Iu advisory cou-Mil. In a WJice o/tn. luulty wltJr .,.,;on M fltlV• flo< followin1 """",.· hU ltur 1><- IDIY the ~neral pubUc. A r«ordlng of the orig/nQI meJ· _,.,, l~ther with several taped intervhwJ in tribute to Dr. Culbnuon, ;, available on casette at $4 from tM MotHly Extension Department, 820 N. LaSalle St., Chi~ N10, IU. 60610. "WUUIIIPI AND C- ft.Yitr&mLJ17---·-·---.. mJI: .. ....-............. .._.. P' tftst .. Ctt ISQ, -.nt .......... •• ..,... wttll Cbarl.. c.. a,ne •Ito 1t11te• ill tblll boot'a IOI'..ard: ''Dr. Dt.vldbei.Mra .._ 1a 1101. the 11r.t ftlch bu tried to 1UCP0M tbe ckftd•Cl .. u~~~· oaotndieUoDI lA tiM! no· liltlollarJ tMory' but 11 "' aD eXC"d' ncl1 lmport&Dt &Dd cUI .. tiDctlw ooe." Dr, Ryrte sdda; "lD UNt ftrll place, tile author I• emlaeotly cpaWied to write oa tllU IUbJeet. W. doetorate trorn THE GREAT APOSTASY Pto• "CMIIITIAM I lACON" 1u .. _.,.. A ... * c.111.,.-4 M .. J • ty Or .• Dml M .... r4, M~, - ,,.....,., of .. Sc ........ ,,...,.., c;o~• M4 • 1ict-~ of tt.e , .. ..,_.._., c-.cA ef Oototioo Clt- (COMTIMUEO PaOM JAM. 111UUI) •.L , Some hue thoulht N1~ to be Anttutnat, otbtn ICIPPCMCd Hitler and Sialln to be him. Thete i• no cbabt ·that thae men were (MeNMf:rs of Antichriat blat it ia 'rn.n.aifeat that Aaciduitt bimaelf haa not yet come. 0.. tbe other ha.nd. we cu tee very dearly that the world it ri~inJ (or blm. It may be •ulici~t ~o refer to the world a1tuatioa todaJ. All peoples hve 1n feu. They bow tbat a third world war maJ cau~e uaspcabble dettntetion. Apie and apin we bear Yoic:a who declare that there 11 on.IJ one waJ out of thi• drudfvl tituatioo---. world KOvcrnment which in fact meana a world dimtor. We have been thinking about the coming of the Lord for His own, when "the Lord himself shaD descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, and with tbe trump of God," when "the dead in Christ ahall rile fint~' and "we which are alive and remain shall be caupt up together with them in the clouds , .. and so ahall we ever be with the Lord'' (I Thess. 4 :16, 17 ). I remember a number of years ago while in my study thinking about the co.ming of the Lord and contemplating what it wiU be to look on His lovely face, the thought came to me, "I wonder what He will say to us all?" And I began to thumb through my Bible to see if there is any suggestion that might be applicable to the question I was raising. Ultimately J turned to the Song of Solomon and 1 found what I believe may well be what the Lord will say to us all when He returns. Now I understand that the Song of Solomon is a book all by itself and I agree that it is the story of an actual coun ship which has been preserved for us because of its spiritual application. It tells us somethiog of the love of the Lord and what our love for the Lord ought to be. Let me also acknowledge that what I read and the ap- plication I will make is not its primary thrust. But l want to take a section of chapter 2 and think about it as sug- gestive of what the Lord Jesus may say to you and me when He comes again. In this portion of the Song of Solomon the bride is speaking. She says ; "The voice of my beloved! behold, he cometh .... " (Song of Sol. 2:8, A.S.V.). I think the application I am making. even though it is secondary, is fully substantiated by these words. '"Be hold. he cometh, leaping upon the mountains, skipping upon the hills. My be loved is like a roe or a young hart : behold. he standeth behind our wall ; he look- t'th in at the windows; he glanccth through the lattice. "'My beloved s pak~.:, and said unto me''-notice those words-"Risc up, my love, my fair one, and come away. For. lo, the winter is pa.'IOt ; the rain is over and gone; the Rowers appear on the earth; the time of the singi ng of birds is co me, and the voice of the turtledove is heard in our land; the fig-tree ripcncth her green figs, and the vines are in blos"'m; they give forth their fragrance. ""Arise, my love. my fair one. and come away. 0 my dove, that art in the cleflS of the rock. in the covert of the steep place, let me sec thy countenance, let me hc:ar thy voice; for sweet is thy voice and thy countenance is comely" (vv. 9-14) Tiu:re arc just three things I would like to bring to your a!tl·nt ion. First, it see ms to me that the word the l ord speaks to the bride is the expression of an in- vitati on. Second , it is the expression of the cessation of trial. And thi rd, it is the expre!t>Sion of deepest love and ho liest ardor. · Notice especially that it is the expression of an in- vit ati on. You see it in verse 10: "Rise up. my love, my fair one, and come away." It seems to me this is ve ry suitable language for our Lord as He comes . We arc told in I Thessalonians 4 :16 that Hl' will shout. Wh at will He shout? Well, perhaps it is this. ""Rise up, my love. my fair one, and come away!" Yo u will rcmcmlx·r that it is "th e Lord himself' who d~.:scends from heaven and Sj)l..'aks, "'Rise up, my fair one. my beloved. and come away." I thin.k: we have a sugges- tion of this also in Revelation 4 where we begin the sec- tion whtch has to do wit h the coming days. John says. "Afte r these things I saw. and behold, a door opened in heaven. and the fi rst voice that I heard. a voice as of a trumpet spe aking with me, one saying. Co me up hither . . " (Rev. 4 : I ). And that e,;perience of John has been taken hy many of us as exemplary of what will happen when the l ord comes for us. He will ~ay. ··come up htthtr." Or in the language of the Song of Solomon. HL' will ~ay. '"Rise up, my love, my fair one, and come away." So it is th e sound of His voice for which we wait. Did you notice in the Song of Solomon that two epi- thets. two appclatiom arc used. "my love'' and "my fair Clnc"? Thinking ahout that, I remembered how that on occasion the Lo rd would repeat a name-He was not JUSt content to usc jus t one exprC!i!iion. He would in repe- tition speak a name twice. For e xample. you'll recall that Abraham and Isaac were li ving in Beer-sheba and God's word came to Abra- ham. So he left Beer-sheba and made his way northward to the land of Moriah. He took: with him Isaac his son and his servants. He took wood and the fire and made his way northward to the vicinit y of Jerusalem, perhaps to the very place where the temple later stood, And as he made his way there, you will recall, Isaac plaintively asked the question. "I see the wood. I see the fire. Where is the lamb?" You'll recall how tbat when they got to Moriah. Abram buill an altar and laid the wood on the altar and. then was stayt:d in what he was about to do in giving lnae a!l a sacrifice. ''And Abraham stretched forth his hand, and toot the knife to &lay bis aon. And the angel of Jehovah called unto him out of heaven, and said, Abraham. Abraham; and he aaid, Here am I. And he said, Lay not thy band upon the lad, neither do thou anytlting unto bim: for DOW J know that tbou fearest Ood, seeing thou hal not with- held thy100, thine only son. from me" (Gen. 22:10.12 A.S.V.). Tile -' ot the Lonl, a p<eincamate manUestalloD ot the oeooad -ol the holy trinity, stay<>d the band of A"""'-. boo opob Ilk..,..,·~ Abr'aham.• ~-lrkd 10 -olbowlbat--opotaL I daiU .._ .... -looM laaaile --in it ODd YW'/ -, ...... ot the 1111111 ot A"""'-. Alld Oad .... Wo __ Dr. Culbtlrtaon In "I• Ol'ftot Or do you recall bow that in the dclen of Sinai at Mount Horeb there was a man by the name of Moses who wa.'i keeping the sheep of his father·in-law, Jethro. One day as be sat there a1ooe he suddenly became aware of a bush that bumed and was not consumed. And u be drew near, God spoke to him. "God called unto him out of tbe midst of the bush, and said, Moses, Moses .... Draw not nigh hither; put off thy shoes from off thy feet, for the place whereon thou standest is holy ground" (Gen. 4:4 , S). 1be name was repeated, "Moses, Moses." Or go with me much later to Shiloh and to the taber- nacle of God. to the days when Eli was the high priest. Remember there was a little lad who didn't know the Lord, who had been left at Shiloh to tend the needs of Eli and to be instructed and trained by the high priest His name was Samuel. God spoke to Samuel, but Samuel didn't know who it was . You remember the story, how he thought it was Eli who was speaking to him. Eli. after Samuel had come to him three times. said. "It's the Lord and this is the way you shall answer.'' You'll see it in I Samuel 3: tO: "'And Jehovah came and stood, and called as at other times. Samuel. Samuel. Then Samuel said, Speak; for they servant hcareth." It see ms th at often it is the custom of the Lord to re. peat the name tho ugh sometimes, as when He spoke to Mary aft er His resurrection, He did not. But He is com. ing someday and I believe He'll caU us by name-"My love , My fair one." I remember a verse I was taught by my mother that even as a lad brought great comfort to my heart. And through th e ye ars. again and again. God has used it to quiet my soul and to give rest to my spirit. '"Fear not: for I have redeemed thee. I have called thee by thy name: thou art mine" (I sa. 43 : 11). The Lord knows our name. We are of more value than many sparrows and even the hairs on our heads are num. bcrcd . And so when He comes again th ere is goi ng to be the expression of an invitation. "Rise up, my love, my fair one, and come away!" END YOUMEi4N Br NIGEL GOODWIN li•p.tnt•cl f....., OECISION lll .. ••ln•, tJOO Homoo n Ploc .. 111/n....,..tia,llllnn. the lobu Hopt1na: Uni-versity ta 1n ZOoloo wtth s spee1.s.lty 1.n O.O.Uca, IUa eooveratoo to Cbrbt wu out ot a theolOcfeally liberal baekiJ"(IUDCI aDd d1d not oca~r until .arne time after be bad e&med bUI Pb..D. In otber wor~U, the author doea not write tl'Om a aense ot need to defeod b18 cb1ldhood faith by .upertlc1al lnvettlpUoo• 1nto tie leU 1.n wblch be ta DOt competent. Rath.er be writes uatratnedooce-cooYine- ed evobltJoniat wboae doubts 01 that tMory grew out 01 patn- sta.k1ng research tnto Ita teach- lnp.." Dr, Davidbe18er observes: "The buJs ot. Chrtattan ta.Jth ta the sacr111daJ death of Christ on the eros• as a vicarious atonement tor sin, followed by HJ.a resurrection. The ocea.aloo whtch made thJ • redempUoa necessary waa the d1aobedlence ot tbe nrst pair ot human belnp. Beeause ot tbJ• disobedience all people bave a sin natu re and are sin- ners. To bE' acceptable in the atctrt 01 Ciod It Is necessary tor tbe mtmer to be redeemed. He mvst acknowledge that Christ's aacr11lce on the cross was the payment ot the nn80m prtce by tbe 8.1nlesa-ODe tor the sinner, and accept this :u; the atonement for hia own stns. "According to the theory of evolution there never were two buman beings wbo were progeni- tors ot tbe human race, tor man emerged gradually trom an ani- mal ancestry, According to the theory ot evolution, that whleh the Bible calls sin Is merely a r em- nant of a bestial nature, wb.lch wUI be overcom e 1n ttme u man continues to Improve, "These two views contradJc:t at every point. "It Is common for authors or college textbOoks tn biological science to say, :u; Darwin did, that there Is nothing abOut the theory of evolu tloo which 8hould cause any reUpous dU'tl.culty, It Is saJd that the apparent coo- ........... 111.' ruet betweeo the u..o,., Olnoiu-uc:m u:~ C'lar'Utlaa tall.b aa diM to a ml.uDderll"""'nc ol ter.u, IIDd U II Uamed tMi tM au. .. UDderiteftdtol .. oa tM put Of. tboM Ybo are ..._.MIt..,_ tbe reupou .w., bit tao. wt1o aay tbere II DO real coatuet be .. tweea noll:ltloo uc1 CltiUUaa faJtb are Jporaat 01 tbe IDOM butc Chrt.ttan doetrtae-. or elM they repudiate them" {tl-ZZ). Accord!JII to tbe tutbor, "Ewro· lutionWt• CU1DOt accept tbe Jlrat buman tamlly u real, w.torteal peraone:, but ratber u ~boUe typea. But the Lord JeM&a ctuUt aDd the wrlteu 01 tbe Btbla COD; .. atdered them u real. Tbe ..,.,_ .. tie Paul aaystbatAdam..,..made before ~e, aDd that abe wu de- ceived and that he wu DOt (1 Tim. 2:13 and 2 Cor. ll:S). Paul lllso declares that becq,ae of the diSObedience ot. Adam, au are stnoera; but beeauae ot the obedtenee or Cbrtat 1n IUbmtt- Ung to the rOle ol aacrtflce, many are made rl&hteou• (Rom, 5:14-HI). Death came throalb Adam, but We eame throap Jesus Chrl$t 0 Cor .15:22Y' (2S). Davtdbetser pol.ata oat: "In summary. the iae"ue I• two Ibid. In the ftrst place, the theory 01 evolulloo canoot be reconcUed with the b.lst.ortcal aCCOUDt ot creation u preaeoted 1JltbeBtb- le, In the secoDI!place,tbetheory o! evolutioo cannot be reCOOCU.ed with the baalc ChrtstJan doc:tr1De of saJ.vaUoo by erac:.e, bec..aUM tbis Is baeed UJ)OII tbe IUtorlcaJ account ot the ran of maa.. It there never wu a blatortea.l fall of man through dtaobedleoee to God, then there Ia oo need 01. a redeeme r, and Chrtllt there· lore w:u; a martyr lnstead ot the Savior, Acceptance ol the theory of evolution leadJI IOClcally to a religious position wh1~ltcalled Christian, ill Chrl.atlan In oame ooly., (Z4). ? • • Born m Clap/on, England. Nrgel V J Good- wm was educa/od on /he Isle ol Wrghl, and rs a graduate ol me Roya l Academy ot Drama/rc Art and All Nat<ons Chrrsrran College He served /wo yea1s W</1"1 Brr/!sh lo1ces m Cyprus A Baplr$1. he 1S /oday drtec/ol o/ lfle Arts Centre Group rn London He replied. "Je!lu~ ('hri~t died fo r you." "Why are you as king this ?" he ~aid . Religion ()n a Saturday'.' You mu~t be joki nK." M.v mother had telephoned a nd invited me to join her in li sten. inJ! tn an evanKeli~tir preacher. At the time· I was li ,·ing with ~orne nther annrf-' in a flat in Putney, re. hean·dnK for a Sunday night RBC teled.•dr,n production. For the past five-and.a-half years Mother had been pruyin)l for me daily. b~t r wa:;n't interested. In my carele~~ wa y I had told her t o take a long walk on " 51hort pie r . But Mother did n't take my ad vice for she loved "But th.&.t was two t hou,.and year~ <~.go," I protested. "What '" that to do with me?" "He is not dead." Mr. Shnw ,;aid. "Furthermo re, w hat he did wa" done for you personally." By thi ~ time <tn internal battle wa~ going on, and I d idn't really want to hear a ny mor e, ~o r ~a id politely, "Thank y nu ve ry much," and left. I continued thinkin){ about h i~ re- marks, and on the foll owi n~ Monday afternoon. as we d id not have a re- hearsal ~cheduled. I went to the af- ternoon meet inR at t he com mon. The campai}Ol w:u1 i!ponsnred by the Childre n's Sunday Schoo l Mis,.ion (CSS M). I listened to the children m~~o thi" tlnl(' ~he said to me. "You !'\in Ring choru~es. a nd t hey ~ee med have nQthin){ to lose." and 1 thought. ~o convinced a bout w hat they were "W ell, t hal':;; true.'' Then she added, ~i nging tha t I ha d to admit I d idn't "You've ~ot everything to gain," know anyt hing aOO ut th i~ Je~u ~ who a nd 1 decided tha t was not so. How- was the subject of thei r chor u~~­ e ve r. I al.<~o decided I would go for On t he ti na! ni ght of the meetin ~ a bit o f a ~i~gle. It seems God never the ~peahr w:-~.~ Arthur Pa ge. a law- mind~ for what rca~on we come, !ItO yer and lay preacher. He told the long a !'\ we come. story of BR rt imae u~. the bl ind beK· "Because I want to know who he i,:;. I want to know him." "Do you r eally ?" he said. ''Then a.-.k him." ;'What do you mean?" J a sked. ''Talk to him," he said. "You mean now?" ''Yes." Well, I didn't know God. I knew about him. and I thought J would tell him about myself. I s uppose that i~ what prayer i~. really -telling G1)d what he knows already, for he want~ us to know that he knows. That's communication. So I began a nd it was, as Shakespeare says. like holding up a mi rror to nature. The Holy Spir it started stripping off my mask r ight there in t hat marquee, with my family and all the other people wa tching and listening. And I bur~t out crying -25 years old , and crying. Mr. Page took my hand and knelt with me as I told Chris t what J was and what I needed. Jn thia conn.«tion it ia impooible to overlook the role plaJc:d by Communism i ~ ~r d~y. It It active. !n enry part of the world, and tt 11 us1ng every mean• 1n order to ret the whole world under it1 tontrol. All of us bow 10 mUch about Communi1m that we under- ttand that nothin$ !n human history i1 more. like the. coming antichristtan empire than the Commun ist 1y1'tem. It i1 completely dear thar it prepares the way for Antichri1t. To be able to ;4n1wcr th ii question ";\( must attain remember what the great apost:11y n1c:ans-the great falling away from Christ in the Christiar. ch urc, at rhe end of thi• age. The great apouuy, then, sho•Jld not hf" identified with the rising godleuneu in :f,e lan day1, and thert i1 cutainly a connectior: l>ctwrc:n this godlessneu and the great aposta sy. Therdvr~ l think it riJht to say a few word1 about the theoJrr:ical and pract1cal atheism of our day. Of course, ther: hn e>.isted wickcdne11 of every kind in all put agu. Neverthelen there it a (undamtntal difference he- tween the. religioua and moral tituation in this age and that of all earlier centuriet. In every past age the majori ty or men were in lome senu and to tome degree religious. Practically everybody believed that there i1 a God, or at leur some kind of divine being, that there were divine commandments that man mun obey, and that there would be tome kind of retribution a fte r death. , Earlier, 11! \\-'cstc_rn nations pre-tended to be Chris- ~.lan .. ~ old S~ed11h law ,.begins with th.e sentence, Chrl!t If firtt 1.n our law. The ('hrittt:tr> uticlu or fai~h and r.od's commandrucnts wrre offi cially recogn1zed by the state1, ahhough Vt'n · man v citizen·: were far from being true Christiana. Never fh elcu , it wu or great importance that thc \Vestern n:J.ti?n ~ ronfe~u:d !fl be Christian. Chil dren \\cr .: instn,;,r.: .., !>rlicve in (~od and to !tonor tl.c \Vl<rrl "I l ,.,,! mrl C'l risti.tn rno;ality ;.,.as oflic iall i a.-cept cd. f!,e situation rd our day is radicalh· :liffcrer.:. )\",n\ th e majority of n:cn :n the \ll·calleJ · \Vc3-crn -:,..•!, :~.crua~l;· rrjcct cnry kind .-.( ~d i gi1,n, clo nnt bdicvc 1. an extstenle after dc :~th, _3nJ d'l :-~nt n "l"'"P' :.nr rj;,.·,.,. comm_.lndments. Th~ earlter piace of -eligion hoa b~e , ocCJpted by a practical and !hmcf i;nes also theo rl'"tic:a : :!hen~. Our age . !>a,. ~rN"Iuccd l co mpletclv r.c11 ~1nd <'. man-the trrehgl")l<~ ruan, ~he •nan wi:hnw :::ny religior.. Thi ~ modern pag2nism undoubteJiy prepares thr way for Antichrist and it oerb itt inlluenc:e also 0:1 thr ~urches. Rut we repe:u, th is rising modern he athen- ISm should not be called apostasy, 1incc only God's ptople could apostatize . The church-and in this co nnection Wt" use the word "church" to denote all Christian church bodic.._ profe-ss~• to be -~od's people. Every church in iu cof!feuu:~nal ~rttu.g. m~st emphatic ally dechrrs :1 beltevcs 1n Chr1st as He 1s revealed to Ul in the 8ibic. _ Can it be proved that an apo~t:uy is ~a king p!ar:r 1Q the Christian church today ? Perhaps somebody would 2nswer, "Thcr(' :.rC' surely ~any Cales of l,a ck.)l idi ng a11d m:tny kinds of heresic, 1n all churches today, but this h:1s been the situ:~:;ron i:t nt"a rl y t"vt"r:· past age. Tlu-r:-fo ro' there. is no fun- dame-nta l diffe-rrncc !>ctwct~ uur d.ly and p<Ht otge:." Thosl· wht' 1!1ink S•l o•·r-r:.wk >J:t exrr-:l't'iy i·:1r'· t:t nl f:~r r-mosr Prr)[r$lan• :!ttln·t>~·, :od;~) 1rr d .. 1 .• natcd by :1. mo\C:Illt":lt ClllcO '"oJ r,ri.•m It h:~s 'I cuup:e <.d other n:1.mn. o".J.:., rar:on:1l•sr.•, H-.t-r,lisn. ::nd nco-orth l"'<l••-.y I p rcfr~ :o us:-rh-nJ:1u: .. ,,,.,.1. rrnis;n." That r..•mc :-.Ji. i\Jcs tha· thi,. n·.nvcnu·r.t 1 • somr1hing new. Noth ing lii.:C' th ;s nu_,vrmn1t .. 015 kno\\ n in thl· chu rch in the Jir.tt ~nt uriu of the Chri1. tia n era, in the 1\ fidd le Ages, or :o.t the r i m~ of rile Rd;)rlnatiron. . There is a fundamrnt al diffC'r e-r:ct" belwe-e:~ mod~r r­ llm and :1.1! e.ar!icr heresil!'s in the church. ThosC' ~eresie• co_nsittC'd in_pe.rvcrsion of Bibl ical ttxts. hlse 1nte rpretatron of 8Jbl1cal pana~·· T ht 1\rians of the fourth century, for instance, interpreted Scrip- tural paaugcs concc_raing Christ to mean that our Lor~ .•• a create~ be:t.ng. I~ the. M iddle Ages human tradittona were glVen more Importance than the. Bible The Roman Catholic Church and the Greek-OrthO: dox: Ch~rches put traditi~n over the Bible. Jn doing to they Interpreted away 1mportant Biblical doctrine5 but thq never denied the Bible co be the WorJ oi God. To the Roman Church, u well a• to the. Re- ronncr., it wa• .elf-evident that the Bible i• God's iupircd Word. The dile.re.nce.1 between them did DOt touch upon that 111bjc:ct. When w e a rrived at t he marquee, gar. a!l reco rded in Ma rk 10. Mr. o r tent, we fou nd it filled with a lot Page ~poke of J esus confronting of people and a c rowd of teen-ager'3 Bartimaeu~ who had caJied o ut. a nd down front. After the usual cere-Jesus as ked him. "What do you want monie!l the man !ltood up on t he plat-me to do for you?" That question form and began to speak. The made me sit up straight, for I youngst ers then began yelling and tho ught. "l~n 't it obvious that the screaming at him. and I wondered man was blind ?'' But then I re- why no one threw t hem out. I heard fleeted further, "Wait a minute. He li ttle enough of the message. partly is a man, not a robot. H e may have because of the noise and partly be-a disability but he is a human be- cause I d idn't want to listen. I went ing. He has to recognize his condi- home a nd thought no more o( it. tion before God can do anything for h t"m." Again my mother rang me up .. Something happened at that point -rm not sure what it was. but that WHS the t ime of my conversion. F'rom that moment I knew who C hri ~t was, and what he had done fo r me became 'a very personal ex- perience. I stopped crying and said. ''Thank You, Lord, for fo rgiving me." J was given a Bible to read for th~ tirst tirYle. The man never did fin ish hi~ sermon; people just began ('Oming forward to give their lives to Christ . Modunin. on the other hand, denica the Bible to ~.the Word of God. Thi.• i~ ib dcciaiye charactei- J.CX. Whst dac can be u.rd ill order to define mod- cmi-il ~f ....U importance.. There are 1 nriety of modernilt scboola. Tbey d&aaaree in many tatet but ..U of than 1.1fU that the Bible i• not the Word of GocL There. are put dtfcrencn between the _.noel old..laabiwwd modcraitm, Bartbiani-. aod the Laade.eaian theolocJ, but they unanimoualy de- dare that the Bible ia a purdy bum.aa book. "Would you like to go again?" It The speaker went on to relate that happened that I hadn't planned Bartirnaeus said, "Lord, I want t o anything for that Saturday, and I see," and Chri.!lt answered, "Your had .'liOme socks t hat needed darning, faith has made you whole." Fan- so f gave in and consented to go tastic! The man see.'li, and he follows with her. This time the speaker was Jesus in the way. But now I was frorri the East End of London, and asking myself, "What do you know his name was Ray S haw. I do n't re-about the Lord JellU8 Christ"? You call a thing he ~id except that he are blind, too -not phys ically, but spoke author itatively and personal-s piritually.'' -. ly about God, and about God being The things I had heard, the lives personal in Jesus Christ. It upset of the Chri8tiane I had been watch - me becauR"e he seemed to be talldne jng, began to add up. I saw that to me. nlmo~t a t me, in spite of the C hrist eared about me peraona!Jy crowd. and individually; that hie death on After the meeting J looked for the eroNJ had been for me ; that he him and said. "Mister, you've been alone could open my blind eyes. J mucking me about a bit tonlrht." got out of my .seat and came down "What do you meant' he uked. to where M1. Page wu apeaking. I "You've been meuing me up." don't know why I d id it. The m.ah "Well," he oald. "I'll pray for wu In the middle of h lo oermon Since then t have spent three years in t he All Nations Christian College in Easney, and have contin- ued my acting roles, while witness- in!( and taking part in Christian hou.'le parties aud working with youth organizations. I played the role of Cliff Richards' a ntagonist In Two A Prnny and participated In "The Why Generation." a dramatic presentation at the World Conpu Ma.t modcrnista. ·~· thiU. that the Bib!« on Evange1ifJm in Berlin In 1966. contaias the Word of God.. They are convinced that Last Augm1t I wa8 uked to produce thcrt: arc lftaDJ'lllOtC w laa mi.ttakea human ick•• ia ''The Revo1utionaries .. (written by tbe Bible bat ill the. midtt of theM iden there an: abio Dave F 06ter) at the European Con· dmne trvtba. Hmr ahould we. then. be tble to draw grey on Evangelism in Am8terdam. • dear lioe bctwttn the human aDd di~ne eltment I have al30 spoken In Mveral British ill the Bible 1 No modemitt an 1nnru that queation. and American unlver~itltiJ. God hu If we meet three moclemisq, we oftm find •mona given me a wonderful prlvflege them f011r or &n dilnat opinion. in thia mattltt'. through thia mlnlltry. Some •I !hera diliolr. ilia~ .... the deity of..,. Lord, Now we have .. tabllohed an Arts H it .;~ Wr111, ucl Hia hocb1y r.,..rroctiOil b<iaftc Centre Group In E~~U, two houro to the _,_ bumu idno" Itt the Bible. you." when I came up to where he wu I thought, ''Hello, there'o lll7 and touched him on the ann. He mother praying for me and now he ·stopped preaehinr. want& to p~y for me. What'I·WJ"''rrf, "What do :rou wantT'' be asked. that I oeem to ,...... all thia pra;rerr• I aajd, "If Jeout waa relevant to So I ul<ed hlm, "Wb;r will )'OU PI'IQ' that blind man, h-can he ba rei• for me t" •ant to me tn t.ne 2oth oe.ntu17r' from London, and alec a centre,fn If we tMa .. the modrr11itt the old ~ioo. the Weot Epd o.f London, where we "What fo lnldil"' Ito cao li" oo raJ -· He can be avarlable to all people, par. -kil • ~ ~ theOria ·-::.:::: aloottt ll<ularly thoeo In the porformlnr 1M ...._ of ~·-.-tho a · aloottt arts. We try to .,.,., them that it 'H.-_. ltoD. Bot 'he ..... P • ....._ wWdo Isn't a matter of NChrta II U. u-. 'ie •' •• IJ.II'Wf. wltidl wiD .._. .ell Bt:aw:a IWU, what la the ~l"' 'bvt , ........ --· that Jh anawe.r to their qu1'"-, ,.. .. uriw :t .. a-' ·• chat modallli• there la a panooal God 'Who..._·-.. • 1llf6. • 11oa1 -.m,. Moder""'" 1o them In J_. Cltrid. c:>c •• 1 ,_IMileltlri' .. _.. F rom the Police Blotter • MONDAY, 11.11. U · PI,, Co.la II .. , WU &r'rfthd &t 11:45 LID. at JQS W, CGul at 1:10 a.m . at 9aJslde Or. HWJ.. MarlDtta Milt, Ud u:l £, Cot• a.,.. ud eblrcecf clll.rlld blm wtttl dri.Yiac' ..w with driYI.Df tDJH tbe lDilMDee tht ~ o1 alcobol •• , o! lloollol ••• Pollee -A bolt nlaad at $450 boloocbc Gt:nrd Joaepb Butn, 53, or to Ran"eJ Somera, 1 '708 £. BIJ IUO lath st., Newport HeleM~, A,.., BllJbora. waa atolea b'onl at Z:lS a.m. at 15th St. aDd tbe doek at bl.srnldeoeeckii'LD& II'¥1De An., a~M:t chlrcec:t lllm tbe ll1(tlt ••• A paue oootalD· with lb'ivingwwter thHDflueoce lDC .,.eglasses Ud other per .. of alc:ohot. sonal pouealou .,alued at • THURSDAY, JAN. Z7 $114 wu stotu from tbe reii- Sbella Ptlllllps, Z2, of 1905 deoce ot Jou M. Osterkamp, W. Balboa Blvd., Ce11trat New. 310& W. Oeeao Front. Welt port, ns arrested a~ 8:10 a.m. Newport, sometlmt between at zotb and M( F~en, Central 10:30 p.m. Jao. 29 and 10 a.m. lfii'ORT HAiftiOR Ellllfll 1(00110 IECliOII --..... J llttJRSDo\Y, FEB. 10, 1!72 QlQA lltl..t!M CAUF. A nre eJ:ti.llpl.lblr nlMd at $1'5 wu ltolea from tbll wall of aa IJ)Utm.:.1t at '730 Amlp Way, tbt Bklfrl, be. tweeo S p.m. aDd U p.m •••• A l>fl>e-tlu'lldto( macbl.ao ru- IM!d at S?OO ,.. rti!Oried mlS~tot from Bob Lel.,otrtou PJumhlDg at ZOO St~~trior-A'le., W'!St Newpol't Hetcbta, a&JDU• entty stolen betweea 11 :30 a.m. Jan, 21 aDd 2 p.m. Ju. U ••• A burglar brok'! toto the 8..-cer restaurant at 4501 W. Coast Hwy,, West Newport, durlne the ntgbt and toot $154 in cast ••• Pollee arrested Freddie D. Bello, of 34Z4 Seabreese, Harbor VIew Hills, at 11:15 at the Jamaica Inn, 2101 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar, and charged hlm with being Intoxicated In p:..?lttc ••• ToolJ: valued at $80 were stolen tro:n the r esidence of Douglas Kevin W• •• :-.;.ier, 508 Orange A,e,, Newpo:t Heights, between Jan. 23 aDd Feb. 1. Newport, and charged lfl.thpub. Jan. 30 ••• Tools valued at A[R FORCE Lt. Col. Robert lie drug tntoslcatlon ••• Pollee $20 were stolen from Alan K. E. Gardner, son of Mrs. E. R, arrested P:o.ul Henry O'Shea, Brook's truck wttUe It was Gardoer, 228 Fountain Way • 43 , of 468 6Znd Sl., Newport parked to troot of htaresldence East, Costa Mesa, has received 1770 NEWPORT Shores, at 12:35 a.m. at 3445 at 170Z Clay st., Clift Ha.veo, the meritorious service medal COST A '-'ESA Via Udo, Lido shops area, aoo from li p.m. Jan. Z8 to 9:30 at Tloker AFB, Okla., tor out- charged him with drlrtng under a.m. ,Ja.a. Z9 ••. Auto acces -standing service wtlileassigned ~~!:::':":·:9:31:3::!~ the lllfJuence pf alcohOl .•• sories valued at S37 •ere taken to the t@9hn.l ca l en.luation A.'lou: $Z.40 •orth of gasoUne from Gtrbert MclDtyre's car branch, directorate of lntel- w::..s apparently slpMOed from whtle It was parked at his Ugence appllcatlons, headquar. a car bekmgtng to Anila Louise r esldence at 198016thSt., Ne w-ters, !.SA F. He .oow serves at DeMaio of 205 Vla J u•:u , Lido port Heights, from 5 p.m. Jan. T inker as a mtsstle s}·stems !s le, while tht" car was par~ed 29 uot11 ooon Jan. 30 , •• A manage r. He is a veteran of a ~ her residence from 6 p.m. telet1stoa set worth abott $400 Wor ld War D and has ser ved Jan. 27 until 9 a.m. Jan. 28 and sao to e urreacy were bur -12 months In ViE>tnam • TUESD,\Y, JAN. 25 HO.\G HOSPrTAL'S board president, A. VIncent Jorgeuen, standing, confers wUh the newly elected board members at their nrst meeting. Miss Apa Blomquist, elected to her ftrst term u secretary, Is flanked by Dr. Aroold o. Beckman. at left, representing the ~om muntty.at.larg!!, and Dr. K. J. SmaUwood, representing the me-Heal staff. Mr. Jor gensen Is senior hls 3rd term as president; George Hoar 0 , vice-president, Ills 11th term; Charles Flshtack, 2nd term as treasurer. The 317.member medical staff Is r epresented on the board by Dr. Wallace Gerrie and Dr. Albert Pizzo, in addition to Dr. Smallwood, New mP.mbers of the board also Include Roger AUson Earl Harda ge John H. Porter Jr. aM RaMaH Presley. Dr. John Dean, who Is dean' of education ai W ~.tttler Collece, was elected to the board to nu a vacancy In the Los Ranchos Pres- bytery's representation. Re·elected tor additional terms along with Mr. Jorge nsen, Mr. Hoag and Mr. Fishback, are AlbertJ. Auer, James E. Ballinger, Francis E. Grlset, Dudley R. Furse, John Macnab, John H, McNaughton, James F. Penney aDd Willard D. Volt. (David Ross photo:) Pollee arrested Ro~ert Char. les For Jr., 53, of Z012 Tahu'la Ter ., Irvine Terrace, at 11 :15 p.m. at Harbor Island Dr. and Bayside Dr. and charged him with drtvlnz u~er the Influence ot a lcohol; pollee also arrested Barbara Ann Power, 42, of 300 Heliotrope Ave., Corona rfe l Mar, whO was charged with bE!lng drw1k ln :u automobile ••• Jack Allen Rust, 24, of 303 E. Bay Ave., Balboa, a!lo:l Dennis Lee Po~.lmer,2Z,ofSanta Ana, wer e arrested at 7:50p.m. at Rust's residence and charged with possession ot marijuana • . • Auto hubeaps vai001J at $20 were stolen from a car be'.onging to Veroa Rima, 1875 Sherington Place, Newport • .• The tront wheels and ttres glarl.zed from the residence of ~=-=-=--==-:::-:::-:::-=:-=:-::--, were stolen from W ''"d w:tsey's MH tan Banes at 921 Citrus MATT R E 5 S E S car while It was par ked In his Pl., East Bluff, sometime be ~ JrfEW -I.EIOILDIXG d:lvewa.y at 445 Santa :.naA,e., tween 5 p.m. J;~.n. Z9 and 4:10 Irreg ular Shapes Newport H ~lghts .•. Lumber p.m. Jan. 31 • • • la.oenpriag -c.ttoa valued at $375 was reported • SU:'iDAY, JA~. 30 COSTA MESA ... AnlESS CO. ta.k'!:l from a B. H. M:Uer Alan L. Pinkerton Jr., l S, 11SON .. portlt ..... LIIMrtyl-llOl PTT calls centralized Pacific TelephOne Is now answering calls trom the gen- eral public at a centraUzed answe ring point In Ga rden Gr ove. Ca \Is rtom the uiiUty's cus- tomer s to the 7 public omces In the county that hanr1le tele. phone business recor ds !or 24 comm uni Ues will go through a new tnnk or switchboard po- s itions at 13062 Euc lid, accord- ing to Di vision Manager Stand- tee Kautz. He said the new system will be "customized" for both r est. rlenlla l and business accounts. An average ol more th an 100,- 000 ralls a month are received by th e fir m's otrlces In the count;·. For calls regarding resi- dential service chan ges or bllJ- Ing Information, the new number wilt be 636-5101. Bush1ess &C• counts will call 636·3101. Both of the new numbers wtu be toll-tree tor Orange County customer s. RELIEF FUND DRIVE Local committee members of the 1972 Jewish welfare fund campaign for Orange County are Sheldon Appel of Newport Beach, president of Appel Con- struction Co., general co- chairman, coordlnallng special gilts ; and Mrs. Ida McC lintock or ~ewport Beach, general CO· chai rman representing the wo- men's division . while the car was · her apartment pa rk. tot behVeen 6 p.m. Jan. 25 nJOn JUl. 26 ... An $80 radio was stolen trom the res \. dence of Randell h nes at 4240 Hilaria Way, Park Llch , somt•- tlme between 8 a.m. and 3:50 p.m., .. About $70 in currency was stolen !rll:n 'he residence of Ken Llm.1 H 211 33rd St., W ~st Newport, between 4:10 an:J 3:45 p.m. • WED~ESDAY,JA~ 2~ Clot tt:ng valued al $44 W'd s to len SO:llc~Jm.-.j ;u lnJ th ? yre _ vtous ni ght from a porrh 1t -__ .:L.:f~G';Io.~L:-;N~O~T~I~C~E=:::::::-:::-,-::-cL~E~G~Io.~L~H~D~T~I~C:.'E:___ t he r esidence of Gladys Mtl!tlz, CITY OF NE WPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA NEW COMMA NDER of Newport 310 \:vua1·) S!., Ba lboa .. , NO'f'ICE INVITIN G BfDS Har.bor Amer ican LejOon Post JJ!Iy's Tap R·>J m at 7'JO E. SE A ED 291 Is Tom Porter of Garden Bay Ave., Balboa, reported $1 46 L BIOS will be r eceived at the office of the City Grove, Mr. Porter served In m:Ssing from ,~. Jo.:ked cash C Jerk, City Hall, Newport Beach, California, until 10:00 A.M. th 20t h da f M 72 the Ar my, lnc ltxllng acttoo In r egister, apparently nloc ka 1 on e y o arch, 19 , at whieh time they will be Wo r ld Wu II. He was first w!th 6 k<>y during the previous openert and read, for perfor ming wor k as fonows : ALLEY IMPROVEME NTS IN NEWPORT HE IGHTS Vlce-commanrler ot the post night ... A 3t ereo tape player AND BALBOA before takJng his present valu ~·l .It $140 ·n.s stolen from (Assessment District No. 54) pos ition last month. The local the car of R.:~':>?rt B~itler, 1741 CONTRACT NO, 1415 post has more than 600 mem ~ T us tin Ave., Co5t:a M,~sa . while The work under !his contract .,.111 be accompUshed under bers, making It second in size the car v.·o~.s parked at N-.•.v;,:Jrt the authority of and ustoc the procedures of the Improvement only to Santa Ana 's post in Harb:Jr high school from 8 to Act of 1911 , Payment to the contractor Is made by the delivery Orange County . 1 ) a.m .•.• WJIUa m ThomJ.s Mor ris, 53. o! 433 Woodland Construction Co. sHe at 747 of 1126 Ebbttde Rd., Harbor D<•ler Dr ., N?.v;_,Jrl Heights, VIew Hills, W.it.S booked In ab- sometlm~ between Jan. 19 and sentia at 9:30 a.m. tor pos- 27. sesstoo of dangerous drugs .•. • FRrDAY, JAN. 2g Alezande1' Roy MJ.ckenzle 56 Jack Ray Taylor, 19, ontes -of 6007 SeashOre Dt., Wesi slah Mansto1, Co3t.a M.~sa, was N'!r,>;:~rt, W'.J.S urested at 10:45 arrested at 5 p.m. at Zlst St. p.m. at tile Stag Bar, 121 Me- and McFadden PL, Cea7al Faddm Pl., Central Newpo rt, Newport, and cha r ged wlthpub. and charged With public drunk. lie lntoxtcall o:~ on drugs . • • eoess • • . Tennis raquets Aut o parts valued at $75 were valued at S1 0J w~restolenabout stolen !ro:n :; :ar beloogtng 9:45 from the residence or JOhn to Thelma Ed wards, 800 Sea P. CiparoDe,319DiamondAve., Lane, Harbor Vie w Hills, whlle Balboa Is land • . . A ship's it w:.'i :n the Fashion Island radJo and oth er accessor ies paril:lnJ \o: !ro7n !1:20 a.m. to with a :ob.J ulue or $420 were 5:30 p.m. , , . A 1971 Dodge stolen tr om .:a boa.t beloogtng van belonging to Builder s Ap-to LeonE.lst,l514 Balboa Blvd., p\ia.lce S .... ,)DIY Co. o~ Tustin Central Newport, while ~he boat was stolen so m~tim~ between was moored offshore mooring 9 p.m. and II :4J _:~.m. while 846 from August of la st year parked at 300 Baysid~ 0:-.••• uatll Jan. 29 ... A television A 1970 Toyota belonging to set valued at $400 was stolen R1ncho Consultants Inc. was from a boat be longing to Harry s tolen betwe:~n 9 .1.m. aDd 7:45 Johnson, 2801 Circ le Dr ., Bay p.m. wtu le parked at the nrm, ShorE's, whUe the boat was 4533 MacArthur Blvd., Newport ancM:ed trom Jan. 24 to Jan. Industrial Park .•. Auto ac-30 at 1353 Bayside Dr. cessorles va tued at $2~ were EN SIGH PTA TO MEET s tolen rrom I!JTJrd Larsen's car w:"l lle It was parked at Annual "founder s day" cert>· his residence at 535 Fullerton m Xlies are scheduled at Enstga ~ve., Newport Het~·s, fTo~ ~~~~:?. scbool next Thursday, . p.m. Jan. 28 to 11 :30 a.m. Tb h 1, PT 1 Jan. 29 ... A guitar valued e se oo s A wl 1 award at $75 wa s stolen from the an honx-ary We memberShip music departm'?nt at Corona to a teacher or c.,)mm un.tty del Mar high school between leader to be selccte-j tor out- Jan 24 .lll1 28 standing service to the school. • sArURDA y ·JAN Z-1 Ceremonies will begtn at 10 Poilci!' arr;sted ·Kevin Me -a .m. ,.J.no::l ~!II include the Keel Sebra, Z4, or 441 N. New-scDool s student bJj}' and th~ port Blvd., Nellt',)ort Heights, =.rt Harbor high so;:boo . aper mg, Painting & Decorating ' INSUltED * Gf"N!ItAl CONT".t Damato&So 2-1677 to the contractor by the city of a warrant, assessment, aoo diagram after the work Is completed and the assessments spread and confirmed, The particulars of the Improvement Act of 1911 are found In the Streets and Highways Code of the State of California, commencing with Sectioo 5000. -----------------------------------------LEGAL NOTICE L EGio.L NOTICE -------·------------------------------------ NOTIC E !NV/TINS 9ri)) PROJECT 015 BUSINESS DIRECTORY The City Council In Its Resohrtlon No, 7576, adopted December 13, 1971, has provided (a) that the property owners may not take the contract, and (b) tha t the payment In advance by the contractor of a ll Incidental expenses Is wal'ted. The re Is no land to be acquired under this assess ment dis trict proceedings, therefore ther e will be no acquisition costs . Bids must be sub~J~Itted on the proposal form attached with the contract documents furnished by the PubUc Works Department. The additional copy or the proposal form Is to be retained by the bidder for his records. Each bid must be aceompanl.ed by cash, certitted check or bidder's bond, made payable to th e City of Newport Beach, for an amount equal to at least 10 percent of the amount bid. The Iitle of the project aoo the words "SEA LED BID" shall be clearly marked on the outsid e of the envelope eon- talning the bid. The contract documents that must be completed, executed, and ret urned In the sealed bid are: A, Pr oposal B. Designation of Subcontractors C. Bidder's Bond D. Non.collusion Attldavtt E. Sb.temeot of Financial Responslblltty F. Technical Abil1ty and Experience References These documents shall be a.lft:red with the slpture and titles of th e persons signing on behalf of the bidder. For corporation, the signatures of the President or VIce President and Secretary or Assistant SecretuJ are requlred aB:t tbe Corporate Seal shall be aftlsed to all docwnents requt.rinc s ignatures. ln the case of a Partnership, the sipature of at least one general putDer Is required. No bids wtll be accepted from a cootractor wbo bas oot been Hcensed ln aeeordaace with the proYlstons of Chapter 9, Dl,l!!ion m of the Blllltoess and Professions Code. Tbe contractor shall state Ms Uceue number aDd clasal.llcattoo in the proposal. Pl.lns and contract docamtab, loctudl..q Speeta.l ProYlsk»u. may be obb.lned at tbe PubUe Works Department, CltJ Hall, Newport Be&cb, Callfomta, at DO cost to licensed coatracton. A non-renmdable ebarp of SZ.OO wtU be rtQalr4d tor •cb set of plans and eootract documents tawed to otbtrs. n Ia requested that the p!us and contract documentl bt rtturoed wltbln Z weeks after trtt bid opllllnc. The CltJ has adopted tbl Staattard Spec:iftcaUou tor PubUc Works ConstrucUon (19'XI EdltlooandS~Jemeot.)upreputd by the Southern Call.tmUa Chapters of tbt Amtrlean PabUc Worts Aaocl.atloa and the Aaoclated Gtotr&J Cortrt.ctora of America. Copies tnaJ be obtl.lDtd trom Bulldla.' Hewa, IDe~ 3055 OferlUKI A'reaoe, Los Anples, Cal1b"al& 90034. (llll 870.9871. I.n aecordanee .ttb tiM prorialoas ot Arttdt I, C~ 1, Part 7 cf the ~--Labor ~ (Soc-I'MO at IIIQ,), tbe CltJ Counell ot tM CltJ tJI HtwpOI't Beach bu uclrt:allled the _.1 pr..UU., rato ct per dlom -Ia tllolocaii(J in wrtlell tbt W'OI't 181Dbepwb IMdb eae.b-cn.ft. ctlaat"a-ttoo. att type ot ikli bu cw meebuie Mldld to nee• tbe COPtnct .... bU -l:lrft ..... n.. ............ 'MD adopted W., I 7, 11'11, A -cf --Ia lftlllbia Ia 1be olllu cf lbo City Clift. AU putta to tile -*II bo p..-...1 b7 aU ~ ol tile ea... ~COde nlattar 0> pr...ular--(l«:tt<.l'I'IO.I'IIIio<W em OF IIRWPORT BUCR, CAWORKIA 1£ .. ,......, CIIJ Clark P ... llalo: '"'-10 ud 11, It'll, • lboll--'""P • HA RBOR DISTRICT DO:KtNG F'ACIUTIES DANA PO!Nf HARBOR ORAN GE COliNTY, CALIF"ORNIA S NOTICE IS HEREB Y GIVEN that the Board of Supervisor s EC:TCIR''S SIIOP or Orange County will receive 5ealed bids on Ule 28th day of r-.. •II•, •1••·-~ ._.,_ Febr uar y, 1972, at 2:00 P.M. o'clock for the following work: ···"'·''-•''""'• .,.. ..... , •• ,.....,. design, fabr ication and lnstallaliOD of floating docks, including I.LL Ott TllADI: utiUiles on the floats, at the Harbor District Patrol O~lce, 11:"{;'5!,.-::..u.fM' Dan:. Point Har bor, OT.1nge County, Catuornla. SUM. a MOM._,, .. ONLY All of sa id work o~.nd materials shall be furnished in 6.C2 .. 9251 accordanc e with plans , specifications and form of cootract to be executed by the successful bidder , all oow on tile io the • Be•uty S•lonl Office or the County c :erk, u-officio Clerk of the Bon d of Super visors . ~ 1 • Plans, Speciflcitions and other contract doc umr nt forms ar e available for examination without charge a.nd copies may BEAUTY NOOK be secured at the otn ce or the Orangt! Cou lty Harbor Dtstrlct, 2732 E. Coast Hwy 1901 Bayside Drtve, NE>wport Beach, California, ~n depos U Corona del Mar ot Twen ty.Flve Dollars ($25.00) per set, Which deposit Is a Phone 644·7336 gi.&:U'antee that the plans and specifications will be returned 1--=:-:---:--"--:..C.'-- In goo.1 c.:~nMton to the Har bor District not later than ten (10) • Bicycles days after bids on the project have been opened, alld Is liable 1 -::;;:;:::;;::'t:;~:;::;<::;:=<::;~:;-­ to forfeil ur e If the drawinl s and s;>€cifications ar e not so returned wilhln said tim-~. No bid will be accepted rtom a contractor who Is not Ucensed in accordance wi th the law WKier the provisions of DtvlsJon 111, Cmpter 9, of the Business and Professions Code of the State ot Ca Ufor nla. PREVAI LlNG WAGES: Bidders are hereby noutted that pursuant to pro.,lsions o1 the Labor Code or the S~te of Ca Ufornta, the Board or S~vlsors ot Ora nge County has ascertatoed and adopted the prevaiUng rate of hour ly wages for each craft, wortmu or meehlln.ic needed to execute the contract awarded to tbe suecesslul bidder. Said pr evalling hourly wo~..ges are on tlle ln the otnce or the Clerk of the Board of Supenl80ls. UNIFORM OVERTIME RATES : ~LES & $ERVICf 420 f . 17TH ST . COSTA MfSA '"-7706 -"''-4115 ... l.COUO _,c:una periods, shall cons1Uute a day's work, beglDDID' oa Moocla.y EIJht hours o~ cootinuous emp loyment. e1cept for l110ch J~~~~~~~~~;= aDd through Friday of each week. Where work Is reqnlred 1a eseess of elgbt (B) hour s oo a.ny one daJ or on boHdaJS, sucb Dl...-t '" ·-.. , ...... wort shall be paid tor at one an1 ooe-hAlf times the buts ,.. .-. .._ • •-• rate ol waaes. ....._, ..,. .... II shall be mandatorJ ~n the Contractor to whom the Ller Coatract Is awarded aoo ~ any subcontractor oodV Mm ~ to ~)' DOt less than the specltled rates Ia the eneDIJoo of 1M IN7 w •a.ld eonttaet. MIS a. M&A The JUectssf'U:I bidder wlll be required to turDisb a tltthf'lll perJormuc. bond In an amount equal to fttty per ctDt (501) of the caatrt.et prlee, and a labor aDd mate.rlal boad Ia •• atDOalt eq•t to My per eent (501) ol tbt eoatraet price. Said boads to bt MCIII"td from a surety co~ Ud Ia a bm at~~taetory to 11M! Board ot StC>emsors of Oruce c..,, Dalad .1aouarJ 15, U'IZ BY ORCER OF THE BOARD OF SUP£RYI!IORS OF TilE OIWIOE COU!ITY RARBOII OOTRICT ORAJ(CI COtniTY, CAUFOR.HtA (SUL) W, E. ST JOHN CO., Clorl ud u-eto CleTl "' ... Boord"'~·"' <lruet co.,, ca- BJ -~ L. cue ... Do(>otr P-: M..,..l Ratllor ENip, Fatnary S ud 10, It'll ,._ 1 .,.,. rh 'a ...... • ......... ' ' . , AI __ .... _.. • •' o I t S a •Fiorl8ts FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS DeM•rl T11sh FLORISTS -E:..- 2a.Nupat.-. c:-- • Au to Repair GENERAL ifRANSMISSION TUMIE·U~S'J'S Rf·HA.LS2J'S lehill Traaslissiall .. S79 .95 2173 IAIIIIILY1 ."· CISTA IESA-142 ·7!11 DIRI!CTLY ACROSS I'ROIII THt:O ltOIINS I'ORO HAL AEBISCHER ~~ Ptoper Fhtif'l9 .A.uured 3409 E. C01st Hwv CoroNdtl M.- 175-3133 •Health Foods · JV cwport utrition 54~271 NATURAL VITAMINS, PROTEINS. PURE NATURAL FOODS l~t-« IIIV ERSI DE lo.VE. (,., • .., 10 Gr•y•o uJI ·-rtneH•rdw•r• .. c• ·e a ........ CJb ......... ....,. o,oo_..,. __ ID ..... T .. -.................... 6'J1.1711 Call these merchants for the best in service oQfficeEquipment I I a ~ ~ . •••.. ' -,.1,. -u t • ' ,.., .)Ott N• ••o"8htd. N-l8-to • Nurseries .................... l'Mpicai&T..., I r•M :1 -a Fettill:ra .....a.....--. •• mrt .. F'RE£ DSLWERY Coroaa del Mu Nursery 21_.. E. Coat Hwy. 67s-4160 ..P•Int •••• ., ... RAIUIOil PAINT 6 WAU.I'Anll PITTSBUitOH PAINTS Ow::' fB ....... I~I'AT17!11MS .... & It Y,.._ Tet.l S!t;of~etie•l ....,..,.,._AitM-.. SINCERE SEWING MACHINE 1171 Horbor lllwd., C.M. 646-9742 • A SHOE SERVICE COMrLITI SHO!, LUOO•O·IJ AMP "AMOIAG RIPAIRI 3401 E. Cout Hlpw.., Coroaa..dtl Mar Pbooe: 87S.4840 Ot'•' Loc•lloru: • UU VIA LIOO, NI.,ORT • 14 ,AIHIOI'4 ISL AMO • 110111VINI, .... ,,O.T • ROaiMSOM •s OI,T. STOlt• I'.UtUOM ISLAND • FOR LOCAL HEWS O~L Y IJ,OO A OFWALL/'M£11 .& NEW .& U SE D 2t11LO..IIwJ. SalotlSonlca -AU- 0.. 11 ... IJioi. H TEARS' ElPERlEI!C£ _..,___ s-_,.., 0a1ar ,_, 1'71.JIII COIIOIIIo. D!L IUol IIWIMG & •Piun•IIIIHeeltc ncuUM c111na A. L MAUAC PLUIUII:R 700 C..1Doa Aft. Oooooa41o11W • ~-•a.an OAT a.NJOHT WATEil IlEA TEII8 ns-na • il. COUI~IwJ~,. s ...... J&J-- c..tw..l IIIII'OI!T !WIIp~ all eM SlCDIO llC'IIII • • P111 4 11111-Y. F£1, 10, 1!12 C01111A DB.IAit, CAUF. Ll!" !Wfta. FICTJTIO .. B._IISS NAME ITATEME!ff no ioUowloc '*-"-" ·r n 1 as: ~ard xuacemeat . c~. t'IO'f WtlleWI'Drt••, 1(..,..-t Blaeb, C.W.: DoaaJd 1:, Ward, lltKIDp Place, New- -lloaeO.CtUI. Tb1s bGidaess ls being coo. -.:ted b7 an lDCIJwlduaJ. StcDed: Dorald R. W:ud. TM1 statement ftled with the cOlDly etert of Orange County oe: Jaa. Sl, 19'12, by Beverly J. Kaddo:a:, deputy county clerk. P..,H.sb: F'eb. 3, 10, 17, 24, 19?!, 1n the Newport Harbor Boolco. F -15602 )!,~ .. ~~,men at Hoag :~~ .... ~o·.t~:..: Girl--lit. aDd lira_ J..... BoJ-IIr. ul lin. Rlelud A. or-ot JUt H,' Yaut~c. 110'7 Port Sdrltac. 1,....,.. tl5 lltutoo DrlYt, Colea II .. , bu ll&tt)or VIeW Homea, !s, Colla..... Cbuaf:e AF8, Bo]'~·lfr. ao1Mn. WaUace WEDMEBDAT, JAM, It Atr Force L. PtAtll)', 1511 Connor, co~ 8oY--Mr. &ad Mu. CUfb'd rtpdriDIII 111111-. Clarnlo, IS! E. B&r stroot, !be Air 8oJ··Mr. aDd Mrs. CbariH Coeta llua. aJrmu, W1» wu to re ... H. Ntu, Dl, 205'7 Wall&ce, Co. 8oY··If1'. aDd lfrs. BradleJ paJr atruatt bJdtaallc aad lb. lieD. C. lfont-. 2350 Harbor, paeumatle wu, ta befAc' u.· Gtrt.-Mr. aD(I Mrs. Matt :101, Costa Mea. llped to March AFB, CalU., Siler 108.1/2 18tbStreet Cen. THURSDAY, JAN. 20 tor duty wltb a unit Of the tral NewJ»rl. • Glrl-·Mr. &Dd Mrs. Mery Alr Force Reserns. He ls a • TUESDAY, JAN. 18 CbaYt&, Zl94 Piacentll, tO, 1971 lf&date of Estancia llttb Gtrl-.M'I', alld Mrs. Tom P. Colt& Me•. ::•:boo:l·:_ ________ !:::~!:~~~!!::;;!. Tate 1021 V2tencia IC Costa Boy •• Mr. .tnd Mu. Deu M e~. ' ' HC1P1!1-ns, 2833 ClubHouse &ad, Glrl--Mr. and M'l'to. Rodney Costa Mesa. J Neske 2005 Anabelm tC Gtrl--Mr. and Mu, Paul c'osta Me~. ' ' HoerDic. 328 Vista Suerte, tne Giri.-Mr. aOO Mrs. c.a•·· Bluffs. :_.:·1,.?1, ~1 l0Sa (t'.. Ana AYeDU!·, Gtrt •• Mr. aod Mrs. Er.~est Costa Mesa. KUn :, 18053 Gllll"'an, Irvine. Ofl' thN fob. Ofl' thrv fob. II • GOOD NEIGHBOR If you an il newcomer, or, lmow of il newcOmer to ·tM Harbor Area who has DDt been weLcomed, do blr • faYor by ca.llinq the Hlrbor Vilitor between 8 aDII 10 a.m. mel she will Cilll on your friind with _.uable intonnation and -'b from friendly busi- DIA finru which stand" rudy to help her become acquainted with her new surroundings. '•TIRED OLD COMMODORES" of the Balboa Yacht Club get together to talk about the 48th annual omcers ball, to be held Saturday night, Feb, 12, ln tbe clubhouse, 1801 Bayside Dr., Corona del Mar, They are, from left, Wllllam Campbell, Ralph Deaver aDd Doo Franklin, all residents of Corona del Mar. Boy.-Mr, and Mrs. WJIII.:.c 1 Bean, 207'1 Tustin AYe., Costa Mesa. Gtrl. -Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Compeau, 228 Ster ks, Costa Mesa. Boy--Mr. and Mrs. Henry Vasquez, 2660 Elden, Costa Mesa. 72 72 '"WORLD'S LARGEST11 EXCLUSIVE GUARANTEED DRAPERY SERVICE City Building Permits • FRIDAY, JAN. 21 Gtri--Mr. and Mrs . Paul Klng, 2378 Norse AYenue, Costa Mesa. THE HARBOR VISITOR PHONE: 494-9368 01' 646-0174 Newport Beach started off the 1972 butldtng year with $2,190,827 In permits Issued during January. This Is almost exactly $1,000,000 more than wa s recorded for January of 1971, but to keep ~ with the 1971 pace, the total will have to be more than $5 mi!Uon CHIJRCHES F I R s T 1~ THE ~EWPORT -MESA AREA ~ POR INSPIRATION 9:45--Bible Sl>.ldy 11 a.m. & 7 P.M. -Services DR. JAMES COMBS Pastor u R c H Stl~tttl !&~ttl A.v~r. 111 M•t"olitt 548·1733 COSTA. MESA 548-1733 BAPTIST HOME OF P. G. HEUMAHH CHRISTIAN SCHOOL FIRST OiURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 3303 Via Lido Newport Beach SUNDAYSOIOOL 9 ..... aad 10:30 a.m. SUNOA Y SERVICES 9 &.Ill. nd 10:30 a.m. WEDNESDAY EVENING MEETING 8 p.m. LUTHERAN CHURCH OF THE MASTER Lu'lher.n au,~dt in Anwric:a 2900 PKific View 0... Corona del M8r, Calif. DR . WILLIAM R. ELLER Phone: 644-2664 9:00A.M. Family Worship 10:00 A.M.· Church school II :00 A.M.· Festive Worship NURSERY PROVIDED READING ROOM Week day s: 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Wednesday : 9 a.m.-7:-45 p.m.IL-----------' T~Ksday and Friday: 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; 7-9 p.m . Sunday: 1 p.m.· -4 p.m. SECOND CHURCH OF OfJUST, SCIENTIST Newport leach at Ccwona del Mar ·3100 PacifK Vie• Dr. SUNDAY SOIOOL 10 a.m. SUNDAY SERVICE 1'0 a.m. WEDNESDAY EVENING Rudina Room: 8 p.111. 1500-B 1:. Co .. tRwy . Eu .. aca oa Mardaaaa Mon.-Fri.: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. n.unday evcninci: 7 to 9 Sat.: 10 a.m. to -4 p.m. You arc COf'dially invitt>d co attend O.urch Sel"f'icu and to ute the R.eadina Room. ,. 7 .. •c 'I I JJZ ·~ 4 3262 Brood St!Wt NewportHei.-,u A Fru Gnd Ind~pend11nt Congr•gDtion•l Christitm Chvrch REV. NORMAt"i BROWN MINISt'ER. SUNDAY SERVICE AND CHUROt SCHOOL AT 10!00 A.M. Nwnt>ry care provWkd PHONE: &-42-27-40 Central Bible Church 2311D ST. ot OIIAMG!, COSTA MUA • 541·5303 '-dlr ......,1 • WorUJp .•• t :OO ud 10:10 a.•. ... .., ~~-·· Jlorolllp •••••••••• ,:00 •.•. •-..., BIWo lladl' • Praror ••... 7:00 •·•· 41 illtrr••••• o~uab wtu. .a.e ••*•• .... ..., FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH __ ... __ _ A HEW CHURCH WELCOMES YOU THE REV. CON L . IN GL E, PASTOR lUNDAY IOIDOL ........... ......_ IIM.IITUDY -_ ....... • •• 11 A,.M. •II 7 ,.... JtJO P.M. WID. in Febrtzary and more than $10 Campus Dr., add roof, exterior million In March. arches a~ walls, $80,000, Permits issued during the • BAY SHORES last 2 weeks of January, valued P. Smoot, add and alter,2771 at $1,000 and over , Included Bayshore Dr., $6,000, Glrl--Mr. and Mrs. David Butterfield, 345-1 /2 Flower Street, Costa Mesa. GtrJ •• Mr. and M1·s. Arnold the following: * NEWPORT • BALBOA ISLAND Dana Smith, 122 34th St., ......_ Knopf, 3801 Parkvlt~w La1~, Irvlne. K. Anderson, 117 Gralld Can-2 story duplex, $35,200. al, new dweiUng and rem>del • BIG CANYON AIRMAN WilHam E. WUcoxJr., son of Mr, and Mrs . WHUam W. Wilcox of2301 Private Road, West Upper Bay, has completed his US. Air For ce baste train- In g at the Air Training Com. mand's Lackland AFB, Texas. He has been assigned to Shep. parrf AFB, Texas, for training as a m>!dical services special. tst. Airman Wi lcox is a 1964 graduate of St. Edwuds high schOol, Austin, Texas, an1 re. cetved: his B.S. degree In 1970 from Louisiana Polytechnic Institute. apartment, $30,000. W, S. Biddle, swimming pool, Peter De Baun, Zl-1 Abalone, 5 Cypress Point Ln ., $2,500. c hange building to confor m to W. L. Hlggtn, 23 Hermitage setback alld 2 car garage; add Ln., 2 story, l unit dweiUng, 3 bedroom house in front of $60,000. lot, $38,886. Jay Mahoney, 3822 Camphor, Robert PricE>, 304 Diamond, 2 stor y dweiUn;:::, $200,000. remodel and adrl 10 existing • HARBOR VIEW HILLS dweJUng, add garage apartment, Harbor Day School, oew day $34,400. school bui lding, 3443 Pacific Joh.1 Bolsseraut', 11 6 Garnet View Dr., $400,000. Ave., aplllrtm·~nt over g-arage, "CORONA DEL MAR $16,600. Ja ck Dazz , 2224 Pacific Or., Mrs. Pyle, 322. Rub) Ave., used brick veneer and retain· 2 story duplex, $43,000, ing walls, $1,100. J. A. Bartell, 90 1 N. Bay Ft., Raymond Paiml'r , 500 Fern- 3 story duplex, $59,750. leaf, repair lire damage, $2050. $317,000 IS COAL • LIDO ISLE • WEST UPPER BAY The Orange County Heart F. E. Cowie)· Jr., addition at Bank of Newport, 74; Dove r Assn. has set ·a r ecord-high 335 Piazza Lido, $10,000. Dr ., bank building, $75,000. February heart fund campaign Jurl~;e J. E. T. Ru tter, 941 Rod_y Bukich, 3 Hampshire goal of $3 17,000, a 5 per cent Via Lido So ud, 2 stor y, 1 unit Court, 2 s tory, 1 unit dwellin g, In crease over last year. Last d welling, $82 ,000. $111,000. year the campaign came within • EAST UPPER BAY Leon Lyon, alterations, 881 $300 or reaching Its 1971 goal John H. Cover, 542 Vista Dover Dr ., $1 ,500. ,o::.l .:$:::30:2:,:,0::00::.:_. _____ _ Gra!XIe, addition, $1,500. Ivan Wells & Sons 2018 Gal-- ·r.o.H., addition at 462 Vi st.. a&y Dr ., swimming Pool, $4256. LEGAL NOnCE Trucha, $2.,000, J.nd 260 1 East----------:-:--- bluff Dr ., $5,665. LEGAL NOnCE • NEWPORT CEN TER FICTITIOI.!S BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT Grant Cor p., addition and al- teration at 500 Newport Center Dr., $12,000. Pacltic Mutua l Life Ins urance Co., 100 Newport Center Drive, tire sprinklers, $18,000 . • AIRPORT AREA Golden West Airlines, 42 00 L!GAL HOTIC! NOTICE TO CREDITORS SUPERIOR CO URT OF THE STATE OF CA LIFORN IA F'OR THE CO UNTY OF Of~ANGE ~0. A-71476 Estate or MATT DIDAK, De- ceased. ~OT IC£ IS HEREBY GIVEN to the cr editors of the above named decedent tlla Ia 11 persons having c la lms agatnst the said 1ecE'dent are required to tile them, with the necessary vouc h- er s, In the oftlce of the clerk o! the above entitled court. or lo present ll1em , ~~o·Uh the nec- essary voocher s. to the under. signed at tile offi ces of HAR- WOOD, SODEN &-ADKIN'SON, 550 Newport Center Drive, Suite 434, Newport Bea ch, Cal- ifornia , which is the place of bus iness of the undersigned in all matters pertaining to the estate of said decedent, wUhln four months after the first pub. Ucatton of this nollce. Dated Januar y 18, 1972. EMIL DIDA K, Executor of the will of the above named decedent. HARWOOD, SODEN &-AD. The following person is doing FlCTITIOI..5 BUSINESS NA ME busioess as: Commercial Fur. STATEMENT nlture sates Company, 1707 The following persons are WE>stcllff Drive, Newport dolng business as: Hemollne Beach, Ca llr.: Donald R. Ward, Instruments, 2308 So. An~ St., 116 Kings Place, Newport Santa Ana : D">nald L. Bailey, Beach, CaUf, 3582 Carmel Ave ., Irvine; Rob-This business Is being con. er t T. McCauley, 3611 W. Ke nt dueled by an Indi vidual. St., Santa Ana ; Edwar d J. Low-6068 r. .1 C t A da Signed: Donald R. Ward. C"Y1, d '"fual our • rva ' This statement filed with the o ora o. Th.is business Is being con-county clerk or Orange County dueled by a partnership. on: Jan. 31, 1972 , by Beverly Signed: Robert T. McCauley. J. MaddOx, deputy county clerk. Thl tat t filed ll h th Publish: Feb. 3, 10, 17, 24, s s emen w e 1972, In the Newport Harbor connty cle rk of Orange Co unty Ens! F -!5601 on: Jan. 14, 1972, by Beverly ::.::::::::'"';:· _____ ..:._.:.:= J. M'lddox, deputy cou~t y c lerk. L!GAL NOTICI Publish: Jan. 20, 2 1, Feb. 3, ME 10 1972 tn the Newport Harbor FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NA En'sign. ' F -15329 STATEMENT LEGAL IIOT1C£ F ICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATE MENT The followi ng per son Is doing business as: P.M.C. Printing- Machinery-Cutlery, 1873 Santa Ana Ave., Costa Mesa, 92627: M lchael Lee Frolsland, 1873 Santa Ana Ave., Costa Mesa, 92627. This business Is being con- ducted by an individual. Signed: Michael Lee F'rois. t>.oo. This statement flied with the county clerk of Orange County The following person tsdolng busloess as: Moreno Factors, Ltd., P.O. Box 103, 2400 Elden Ave., Apt. 13, Costa Mesa, Ca. 92.62.7: E. J . Babson, 2.400 Elden, 113, Costa Mesa, Ca. 9Z627. This business Is being con. dueled by a Umlted partnership. Signed: E. J. Babson, General Partner . This statement nied with the county clerk of Orange County on: Jan, 27, 1972, by Beverly J. Maddol, deputy county clerk. Publish: Feb. 3, 10, 1'7, 24, 1972, In the Newport Harbor Ensign. F -155-46 on: Jan. 25, 1972, by Walter lEGAL HOTICE T. King, deputy county clerk.. --------- Publish: Jan. 27, Feb. 3, 10, FICTITIOI..S BI..SINESS NAME Boy-.Mr. and Mrs. Gary Jennison, 229 Pearl Ave., Sal· boa Isl&OO. • SATURDAY, JAN. 22 Boy--Mi . aM Mrs. WIIUam L. Simonton, 231-D .\vo:ado, Costa Mesa. • SUNDAY, JAN. 23 Boy--Mr. and Mrs. Michael Aston, 19().5 T::restta Lane , Harbor Hlghlan1s. Glri-.Mr. and Mrs. Robert Coop, 4035 Seton Road, lrvtne. • MONDAY, JA~. 24 Boy.-Mr. and Mrs . J ohn Ralphs, 19:!-t iiollday Road, Baycrest. Gtr l--Mr. and Mrs. GleM Paulson, 17931 Angell, Irvine. Glri-·Mr, Lnd MIS. Glenn Montgom~ry, 2Z23 Pomona Avenu ~. Costa Mesa. Glrl--Mr. and Mrs. Donald Nelson, 995 Hartford Way, Co. sta Mf:Ja, • TUESDAY, JAN . 25 Gtri-·Mt. ur1 M1·s. Donald Hudson, 2217 Lau··el Ptace, Newport Heights. Boy-·Mt. and Mr s. Robert Wilson. 283, Apt. B, Cabrlllo, Costa Mesa. Boy-.Mt. and M:·s. Joe Coons, 295 7 Andros, Costa Mesa. Boy--Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Dlcldns, 311 Marguerite, -c. Corona d'~l Mu. Glri--Mr. and Mrs. Law- rea ~e Somer s, 1205 West Ba.Y Avenue, Balbo.l. • WEDNESDAY ,JAN , 26 Boy--Mr. anr:l M1 .;. Armando Flores, 546 West Wilson, Co- sta Mesa. Boy •• Mr. and Mrs . Philip S Doane, 421 M Street, Balboa. • THURSDAY, JAN. 27 Boy·-Mr. and Mr '>. Co·1el Allen, 18911 Via Me ssina, Ir- v!ne. • FRIDAY, JAN ,_28 Glrl--Mr. a,:)j M1·s. Leslle H. Carpenter, 186 8r')o)kllne Laoe, Costa Mttsa. Twin gir ls--Mr. and Mrs. Daniel MeJia, 2221 VeraM Pi., Irvine. Glri--Mr. and Mn . Richard McDonagh, 1335 Baker, IB, C•J- sta Mesa. • SATURDAY, JAN. 29 Girl-·M::. and Mrs. Thomas D. Carlson, 518 Avocado AYe., Corona del Mar. Bo-,--M;·. and Mrs. James W. &rk.shlre, 34.')0 Via ()porto, Newport Beach. • SUN:>AY, JAN . 30 Glri-.Mr . aod Mrs. stev.an J. Pinney, 1635.D Iowa Street, Costa Drapery Oecning. Perfect r•gardl•u of the og• of your drapery, or 100% r•plocem•nt is deanob$•. • No Wltttll Heads •F!.ot ..... ft"f • INutlful DKorttor PIHh • New Drtptriot wlltl Colt'• Exchnlwe 5Y_G_ • No Shrinkage • DraptritJ 1_.. or • P..-fect hen Hems Alterttl • Water Stein Removal • Dr.,-rits lepelrM Dra,.,-y H1nlware lnstelltd erMI Repalrtcl VALUABLE COUPON /)_~'sf] WORLD'S WIEST ~ l.!lJ DRAPERY CLUIIDS THE BEARER Of THIS COUPON IS ENTllTEO TO 10% OFF ANY DRAPERY CLEANING ORDIJI. CAU 642-0270 OR 540-1366 TO HAVE YOUR DRAPERIES PKlEO UP AND REINSTAllED. lOAN DRAPES AVAILABLE AT NO CHAitGE SAVE 10Dfo OFF SAVE OffER GOOD ONlY UNTIL MARCH I, 1972 OUR EXCLUSIVE SERVICE PROFtSSIONAL INSTALLATION PROFISSIONAL REMOVAL LIT COft INSUU NEW DRAPES w. ~ o co"'lfl•t. M!Mtioft of ,..,.;c, 10 pi-• lh• _, dhtrilllirool•"!ll toile 540-1366 642-0270 1702 NEWPORT BL YD. at 17th, COSTA MESA CHURCH OF RELIGIOUS SCIENCE OF CORONA DEL MAR I!L.IU,NOR C. JACIC.50H, R.~.,.,.-., MIHIST£R Slmday SerYice , , .. , , , 11 :00 a.m. SuOOay School ...•... , 11 :00 a.m. 24 11 f , COAST HWY. U6-10l2 KINSON, 550 Newport Center Drive, Post Offtce Box 1907, Newport Beach, CA 92663, 644-1313, Attorneys for Ex- ecutor. 17, 1972,1n the Newport Harbor STATEMENT Ensign, F -15487 The foUowlng person lsdol.nc L !GAL HOT1C! FICTITIOlS BUStNESS NAME STATEMENT business as: Owners Cootraet- lng Service, 1707 Westclllf Drive, Newport Beach, CaW. 92660: Donald R, Ward, 116 Kings Place, Newport Belch, CaUl. 92660. Publish: Jan. 27, Feb. 3, 10, 1'7, 1972, ln the Newport Harbor Ensign. This busloess 1s being coo- dueled by an IOOI'r1d181. F ..................... The fotlowlng person is doing bus1Dess u : Big Beef Hotbrau, 2 885 Bristol Street, Costa Mesa: Gesyl Co,, a CaiUornla corporation, 2926 snnr Lane, Newport Beach. Signed: Dooald R. Ward. Ttlls statement ftled wltb the county clerk of Orange Co.mty on: Jan. 31. 19'7%. by BeretlJ 531 CEHT!II UR!ET • COSTA MUA • P'HOME M6·1919 This bUsiness Is being con. ducted by a eotpOI'atloo. Slg:oec1: Gesyl Co., G. A. De. Vries. President. Tbls statement tiled wttb the county clerk of Orante Couuty oa: Jan. U , 191Z, by Bever}J J. Maddox. deputy count)' elert. Plt)Ush: Jan. Z'7, Feb. 3, 10, 1 7, 19 7Z, In tt>o Newport Harbor Eostp. F -15470 ...... _ .. .... _. .. J. Madclox, deputy county dark. PubUall: Feb. 3, 10, 11, !4, 1972, ln tile Newport Harbor Enstp. F .15600 FICTITIQUS BUSIJIESS NAME STATEMENT The lollowiAc I*""' 11- buiAtM U : SCbatl DtJ•Jt.fted EqulllH, tU Llado lllo, Ktw· port BtlcO. CaUl. ntt0: --ard s. llollrloc. tat 1Joda lllo, """""' a.eo. caw. -· Tllll --· II bolatr -doelod bJ ulldi.-L • ~· lloftr4 .. --nr. --lllod dlllllo ,._ elotk ol 0n1t1o C.., oa: Ita. It, It'll, liJ _., 1. 11-. dlpotJ ..-clotk. , Mia: .raa.. 11, ,... a; 10, U, It'll, 11 lllo IIIWJIOOI Harl>or Eulp. F-IU71 ennis 10's to 26's Te11is Slloes 7's & 1A95 • Ill IS ,_ WILIOM STilL ITIMICUIYLOM LADI!S' TENNIS SHORTS .so 6'S Tuais 95' 115